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                  <text>Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va. ·

.

Alexander Methodist Church functioned from 1822-1970s

.,

By JAMni SANDS
Special Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS - Alexander
Metbodlst Eplsoopal Church was
organized on February 21U822,and
remalnl'd In exlstence unw the
early 1970s. The
church. located .
&lt;11 Stale
T/5, was named
for Alexan
Waddl'll.
Waddell carne to GaU!a County
about1817 !rom Greenbrier Cou nty ,
VIrginia (now a pan ri West
VIrginia) . Alexander was born near
Glasgow, Scotland, In 1732 and
carne to Amerlca In 1755. Around
1770 he married Eleanor Roush .
Fer a time the couple livoo In
Augusta County, VIrginia, moving
to Buckeye Mountain in Greenbrier
County before the American Rl'voluUon. Waddell was a weaver by
trade.
In 1774 Waddell joined In the
march of Lord Dunmore to lace the
Indians which resultoo In the Battle
r:i. Point Pleasant. Waddell was a
member of Captain Matthew Ar·
buckle's Scouts who defeatoo the
Indians under Chief Cornstalk and
others at Point Pleasant. Waddell
remained a part of Arbuckle's
Scouts for some time and was no
doubt present at Fort Randolph
(Point Pleasanll during the year
1777 when Matthew Arbuckle was
the commanding officer of the fort.
It was during Ihal year that Chief
Cornstalk came to Fort Randolph to
speak with the Americans about
British maneuvers_ Some ri Comstalk's family were detained with
Cornstalk by the Amerlcans and
later killed.
ACCORDING TO some of the
eyewitness accounts, Matthew Arbuckle did all in his J:OWer to
prevent the murder of Cornstalk,
but was unable to. It must be kept In
mind that many or the frontier
scouts obeyed only the orders which
seemed logical to them. This crder
of Arbuckle's was dlscegarded.
Arbuckle had to take the blame and
he was relieved of his command at
Fort Randolph . Later In the war
Arbuckle's Scouts servoo in the
I:Bttles of Guilford Court House and
Yorktown.
When Waddell came to GaUia
Coonty In 1817 he was about85years
old and he lived near his son, Joseph
Waddell, who had ccme to the
oounty at an earlier date. It was In
1822 that Alexander Waddell gave
land to the first Methodist Society d
Green Township. That year the first
Alexander Methodist Church was
l:llfil. About 1878 tbal first church
was rroved to the land where the
present building sits and was
turnl'd Into a school. The present
church building was put up that
same year.
Some four years prior to the
buDding of a church (1818·18221
Metrodlst services were held In the
homl' d. Alexander Waddell.

WADDELL WAS BURIED In
1834 In thl' 102nd year of his !He In
the Hulbert Cemetery. On his
monument Ulese words are writ·
tm: "A man that fought for liberty.
but nowhlssoutdothrestlnpeace."
Alexander was never a large
church and closl'd Its Sunday
School for a time In the 19.lls.
Worship was held there In the 1940s
only In the warmer weather. The
Gallipolis Dally Tribune In 1942
printed an article about how In
Ajl'il "the people dusted off the
pulpit and pews, lit the fourolllamp
chandliers and the old Burnside
NumtEr 3 Coal Stove and had
church I:Jr 13 persons led by Rev.
James Lane, a student at Rio
Grande College."
During much of the ~th century
Alexander Church was on the

Rodney Circuli which lncludl'd: ander came to America as a soldll'r
Rodney, Centenary. Cora, Falr- In General Burgoyne's army to
neld, and Alexander. In 1969 fight In the French and Indian War.
Alexander Church had an average It was also bellevoo by some In \he
attendance of 10. It was shortly family that Eleanor Roush Waddell
after this that All'xander, Cora, and was kidnapped as a chtld !rom her
Fairfield Methodist churches were home In Ireland and brought to
closed.
America. She never saw her family
ALEXANDER AND Eleanor again. Eleanor, born In 1752, dll'd In
Waddell had 12 children, some of 1827 and Is also buril'd In Hulbert
whom became !X'Omlnenlln Gallla Cemetery.
County history.
Jack Nlda and later Mary,
Of two traditions extant In this MOdred Green Wood and James
family that have never been proved Allen Wood have written the story
or dlsprovl'd one says that Alex. of this most Interesting family.

By the Bend ........ Pages "
Classllleds ......... Pages 6-7-1\
Comics-TV ..... ......... Papl9
Dealhll ................... Page 10
Editorial .............. ... Pap! 2
Sports ................. Pages 34

e

BEIUND THE GIANT tree stood a buDding which Alexander
Methodist Church used !rom 187111o about n, llle year tbe cburch
was closed. Alexander, named for Revolutionary War Soldier
Alexander WaddeD, was the first Methodist dmrch bt Green
Township, GaiDa County, 1Utd can be dated back to 1818, when
sel'\llces were held il the home d. Alexander Waddell.

Vol.36, No.25

ou're eaUy ·
lass o '86

Road.

I

•

enttne
1 Section, 10 Pages

25 Cents

A Multimedi1 Inc. Newspaper

Ohio union facing
financial woes; dues
increase most likely

We'te mlfhlg pt~ud ol ou, e/111g emplogu1.

:

'

/

HELPING HAND - Lisa Marie Henderson,
president of the Eastern High School graduating
class, left, getsahelplnghandlnthe ad.tustmool of her

cap !rom classmate Terrie starcher as Easte.-n
seniors prepared lor that long processional to
graduation exercises Sunday evening.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - An
Increase In union dues Is likely for
up to 21,00l members of the union
that won bargaining rights for most
state workers this year.
Officials of the Ohio Civil SPrvlce
Employees Association and Its
afflllate,Amerlcan Federation of
State, County and Municipal Employees, declined to discuss details
of union finances. but union sources
told the Columbus Dispatch that
during a recent executive board
meeting, officials said theorganlza·
tlon has a deficit of $250,(1X) that is
growing.
The amount of the Increase in
monthly dues would be between $5
and $8. More money Is needed by
OCSEA-AFSCME to pay for a
campaign wagl'd this year to defeat
the Communications Workers of
America in a bid to represent stall'
workers.

organization for three years, he
cannot run.
Murray said the n!ormers are
undermining efforts to shore up the
union's finan ces.
Murny's Immediate concern Is
Russell Murray, executive direc- the problem of paying AFSCME
tor, said the officers have not had International an affiliation fl'l' . The
time to address the money Issue, union takes the fee from monthly
which also Involves polilk:s within union dues, which have been $10.83
per memtEr for several years.
the union .
Now, howE'\Ier, tbe union will
Members who call themselves
have
to Increase the dues - Sycks
reformers say spendtlrKt ways
said
by
as much as !ll percent to $18
have caus€d much of the financial
a
monthto pay the affiliation fees
problem and are using the Issue to
and
addltlonal
ccsts of representing
try to take over union leadership.
about
37,&lt;00
state
employees CO·
Richard Sycks, a ~ -year emvered
by
collective
barga lnlng
(ioyee ri the Athens Mental Health
agreements.
Center, Is the reformers' candidate
Murray said the Increase will
for union president, but he ls not
have
to be S5 per month just to pay
recognized .
the
affiliation
fees. Any lncreaSI'
He was a memtEr of AFSCME
must
be
approved
by union dele·
!&gt;?fore it merged with OCSEA, but
gates
at
the
union'
s biennia l
officials of the new union ruled that
ccnventlon
in
August.
!&gt;?cause Sycks has not been In their

Officials estimate that as a result
of the campaign, the union has
18,&lt;00 to 2l.(IX) dues- paying
members, and represents 37,&lt;00
state workers.

EHS graduates told to 'plan Challenge fairness of tax bill
wisely, develop talents fully'
Dan Brown
Ohio University
Ohio Valley Foodland

Kelly Browning
Gallla Academy High School
Ohio Valley Foodland

Bryan Korn
Meigs High School
Big Bend Foodland

Katrina Johnson
Buckeye HUis Career Center
Ohio Valley Foodland

~'

Melalne Niday
Gallla Academy High School
Gallipolis Foodland •

Tim Neekamp
North Gallla High School
Gallipolis Foodl and

Amy' Davis
Gallla Academy High School
Gallipolis Foodland

Rhonda Carter
Gallla Academy High School
Gallipolis Foodland

Todd Wiseman
Galli a Academy High School
Gallipolis Foodland

Michelle Mallette
Point Pleasant High School
Pt. Pleasant Foodlan d

Ronda Halley
Rio Grande College
Gallipolis Food! and

,John Scarberry
Pt. Pleasant High School
Pt. Pleasant Foodland

PICTURE
NOT
AVAILABLE

Shelly Nutter
Rio Grande College
Ohio Valley Foodland

Usa
Pt. Pleasant High School
Twin Rivers Foodland

Janet Bennett
Pt. Pleasant High S~hool
Twin Riv ers Foodland

You're teen lbem wo,klng in ou, ,,,,, when lheg
we~en 'f In thel, blln,ooml. Now fheg ·, g~BdUif·
Jng ''om high lbhool 1nd 6ollege.
·

FOODLAND'S
GRADU.ATDtG

CLASS OF
1986

Steven Bledsoe
Pt. Pleasant High School
Twin Riv er- Food!Wld

To Mch 1nd BN'Y one of gou, Cong~lulalions and
But Wlthe111 you enfhutlslfle~llg go f~t~m one ph111
of you, llrs1 ,;ght Into fbi next. Cood Coing, C,ads/

LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED
BY BOB &amp; SHEILA EASTMAN

Ohio Valley Foodland
Bend Foodland

By BOB HOEFUCH
Senllnel News Staff
Addresses by the Valedlctor1an
John Wetzel Rice, and Salutatorian,
Ronald Gene Jacobs, II, were
among the highlights or the 25th the
annual ccmmenCI'ment of Eastern
High School held Sunday nigh!
before an auditorium packed with
friends and relatlves of Ihe gradual·
lng class.
Eastern High commencement
was the final highschool graduation
of the 1!)g;-86 school year In Meigs
County.
In his talk, RJce emphasized the
nero for his classmates to develop
fully their various (alents. He cited
the work of Archimedes In
developing a Sl'l of mirrors to focus
sunlight and henCI' destroy the
Roman fleet which was about to
beselge Syracuse. Rice stressed
that although Archlml'des had only
a few materials with which to work
In saving Syracuse, he used his
talent to the fullest extent . As
another example of stressing the
nero to use talent , Rice told of the
Bible parable of a master giving his
servants money to Invest while he
was away and how two of the
servants usl'd their talents to make
more money for their master while
a third burll'd the money given him
and as a result used no talent to
make money for his ma ster.
"But !rom the man who uses
111tle. even what 111tle he has . shall
he taken from him ," Rice said.
"So we shouldn' t be afraid 10
(Continul'd on page 101

SUNDAY GRADUATION SPEAKERS- Ronald Gene Jacobs, D,
left, son of Ronald and Allee ,Jacobi, saluWorian, and John Wetzel
Rice, son of ,John and Anna IUce, valedictorian, delivered adtb'Essel
Sunday evening when graduation ceremonies were held lorthe Eastern
High School Class or 1986.

By SEAN McCORMALLY
WASHINGTON (UP! ) -Critics
an11clpatlng today's full SPnate
debate oft he tax reform bill say the
plan Is a lopsided ccntest for
eccnomlc relief between America's
rich and Its middle class.
• Sl'n. George Mitchell, D· Maine,
said Surxlay he would offer amend·
ments to boost t11e measure's top
tax rate and make the plan
embraced by President Reagan
more beneficial to the middle class.
But Sl'nale Finance Committee
Chalrman Bob Packwood decrll'd
efforts to further tax the wealthy
and inslstl'd the elimination of
shelters exploited by the rich would
balanCI' their savings from lower
rates.
No votes on the plan were
expected until tater In tbe day .
MltcheU and Packwood appeared
Sunday on CBS's "Face tbe Na·
lion," where Mltchell said the
FlnanCI' Committee's plan "would
benefit the very poor by taking
Ulem off thl' tax rolls and the very
wealthy by giving them enormous
tax cuts, while the middle class gets
very little."
"For example," Mitchell said,
"President and Mrs. Reagan will
gel a $24,&lt;00 tax cut under this bill.
Middle-class families who earn
!&gt;?tween ~.(IX) and $«J,(IX)- that's
the heart of the middle class In
America - they'll gel a $130 tax
cut. "
His argument was echoed by
Rep. Richard Gephardt, D-Mo ..
who wa s Instrumental in the House
passage late last year of a similar
tax reform plan. Gephardt said a
final bill must "really help the
middle class."

Packwood, R-Ore., was adamant
In his defense of the current plan.
He caUI'd the ratestructureofthe 15
percent and 'l1 percent brackets
"the absolute glue" holding the
package together for bipartisan
support.
He dlsmlss€d eff0rts to tax the
wealthy at more than '1J pe-c:enlln
order to cover the cost of maintaining Individual Retirement Acccunt
deductions, which 2ll million Amelican hOuSI'holds have us€d tosaveas
much as $2,(1X) a year.
The ccmmittee plan woo ld ellmi-

nate !RAs tlr anyone coverl'd by •
private pension plan - a provision
that has sparked much of the
opposition.
Gephardt said he dlsagreed with
Mitchell that I RAs should be saved
because "Ill percent of the benefits
from IRAs go to people making
over $35,1XXl a year."
" It is very much an uppl'r·
inccme deduction, oot a middle·
class, middle-Income deduction,"
agrero Packwood. "I will oot
ccnslder raising the ratts so that
thoSI' who have IRAs can continue
the dl'ductlon."

AT&amp;T strike enters
second week. today
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -AT&amp;T
enters another business week today
saddled with a nationwide strike
thai has strained Its operations,
with strikers promising louder
protests and a federal mediator
carving a larger role In the dispute.
Kay McMurray. director of the
Fl'deral Mediation and Conciliation
Service, said he would meet again
today with negotiators for Amer1·
can Telephone &amp; Telegraph Co. and
the striking Communications
Workers of America.
AT&amp;T spokesman Herb Unnen
said both sides met with McMurray
during the weekend to discuss a
new contract lor 155,0CKJ workers,
and tbe company "look Into
ccnslderallon some Ideas that were
brought forth ."
CWA spokeswoman Francine

Zucker said pressure was mounting
on AT&amp;T. "I'm sure the company
doesn't want to go Into another
business week facing the problems
it's facing," she said.
The strike has strainoo operatorassisted phone service and has
halted production in 11 of AT &amp;Ts 24
manufacturing plants In 17 states.
CWA President Monon Bahr said
any talks would not alter plans for
other unlons such as t11e Air Line
Pilots Association to join rallles and
marches this week In cities from
Los Angeles to NI'W York.
Bahr has said his group enjoys
"the full support of every union In
America" in the nation' s largest
work stoppage since lhe CWA 's
three-week wa lkout against AT&amp;T
In August 1983.

23 Meigs residents receive Rio degrees

Meeting slated
RU'll.AND - Leading Creek
Watershl'd Association Inc.. will
hold Us annual meeting Thursday, 1
p.m., at the Leading Creek Conservancy District office at the lntersec·
don of Ohio .124 and Corn Hollow

at y

1----------_JL-------------~-..:.:.....:.:.....:.:..._:..:.:.....:.:..._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!'!'

Seeks judgment
POMEROY - Palricla Ann
Morgan. Langsvilll', has flll'd an
action for 5100,(00 In Meigs Cou nty
Common Pleas Court against
James D. Caldwell, Scottown, and
Caldwell Coal Co., Gallipolis.
The action ste(lls from a June H.
1~ accldmt on Ohio 124 in Meigs
Coonty In which the ~lain tiff allpges
Caldwell, during the course of
employment with Caldwl'll Coal
Co., npgligently drove a coal truck
Into the rear of a vehicle drlvl'll by
JOSI'ph Morgan. in which the
plaintiff was a pasSI'nger.
Plaintiff alleges she was thrown
against the front of the auto,
causing hl'r to suffer a mlscarrtagl',
as well as other problems which
requirEd ml'dlcal attention and
numerous expenses.
Filing for divorce In ccurt Is
Paula J. RI'Uter, Rel'dsvllle, from
David A. Reuter, Middleport,
charging gro" neglect of duty.

••

Senior Citizens

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio, Monday. June 9. 1986

Copyrighted 1986

7.
The younger Oller was treatoo at
the hospital for minor inju les and
lmm€dlately relms€d .
Edna N. Barton, 18, Pomeroy,
was cltoo for failure to control the
vehicle she was driving on Ohio 7
Friday, troopers said.
Barton was northbound on 7 at
11:40 p.m. when she los! control of
the car whik&gt; rounding a curvl'. The
vehicle vel'red off the right side of
the road striking a trl'l'.
Barton recelvl'd only minor
injuries and the car was moder·
a tely damagoo.

Pap~

'

Youth injured
GALLIPOLIS - An 8-year-old
Bidwell girl suffered minor injury
and was taken to Pleasant Valley
Hospital Friday after she fell out of
a car while It was rounding a tum on
an entrance ramp to U.S. 35.
Rebecca A. Oller fell out of t11e
passenger side d the car driven by
Juanita 0 . Oiler, 38, Bidwell, when
the car was turning left exiting Ohio

MUS class reunion

Inside:

Gallipolis Foodland
11av Foodland

Pt. Pleasant Foodland
Twin Rivers Foodland

By KEVIN KELLY
OVP News Staff
RIO GRANDE - The largest
graduating class In the hlslory of
Rlo Grande College and Commun·
lty College was advised by an Ohio
Board of Regl'nts official Surx.lay to
beccme silent pariners In the
hlghl'r l'ducatlon .process.
"To thoSI' to whom much has
been glven , much Is expected In
return," said Dr. Elaine H. Hair·
stan, vice chancellor lor academic
and special programs. "Become a
silent. or not so silent, partner.
Remember Rio Grande College,
and also remember. you have a fan
club behind you."
The guest SJll'aker for outdoor
commencement exercises for
nearly 300 RGC.CC students dlscuSSI'd higher l'ducatlon and the
greater goo:!, especially In the
changing face of the clvUlan work
force. Citing statistics from educator Dr. John MUlett, HairSton said
the number of blue collar, service
and professional jobs· have In·
creas€d and the need for education
has also beccme greater.
"Higher l'ducatlon Is one or t11e

safely valves of American society
by relieving rhe pressu res on
J:OVerty-bound groups," she said.
"Higher education will continue to
reach out to minorities. because
without such access, the melting
J:OI of America will boll over."
Since the crea tion of the board of
regents more !ban 20 years ago,
Hairston said the goal of Increasing
Ohioans' access to higher education
has been achievl'd.ln 1963. she said,
5 percent of every l,(XXl residents In
soulhern Ohio pursued a college
education. That has Increased to~
percent of every J,(IX), she said, "a
remarkable achievement."
Hairston also cited the public
belief that higher education Is
Invaluable to the nation as further
pr1JOf of · the ccmmon good II
provides, evidenced by the support
of family and friends, slate and
federal grants and donallons made
lo Institutions such as RGC-CC to
continue education.
She emphasized the needforgood
preparation for college on the high
school level.
"True access lies In thl"adequate
preparation for collpge, for high

school student s to take tbl' hard
road In preparing for higher
educallon," she said. " We In Ohio
have paid the price for the easy
route In remedial educ.atlon. but
!hat cost pales in comparison to
wastoo minds and unfulf!UI'd
ambit Ions."
Following the conferral of degrees, Dr. Clodus R. Smit h, preside nt ri both collpges, ccngratulated
the graduates and presented the
President's Award to Nikki L.
Thaxton, a graduate of North GaUia
High School and recipient of a
bachelor's degree from the School
ri Mathematics and Natural
Sciences.
Twenty-three Meigs Countlans
receiving degrees, by college,
were;
Bachelor d. Science, School of
General Studies and Uberal Aris G!na Rae Tillis, Rutland.
Associate of Arts- Ronald Klm
Browning, Middleport.
Bachelor d. Science, School of
Education, Health and Physical
Education - Dorotl\1' Ellen Bentz,
Racine; Jenny Lynn Manuel, Ra·
cine: Kent Duane Wolfe, Racine;

Richard Keith Wolfe, Long Bottom.
Bachelor d. Science, School of
Mathematics ilnd Natural Science
- Tawnya Michelle Larkins, Long
Bottom.
Assoclale d. Applied Science,
Computer Scll'nre - Rhonda
Marie Bell, Pomeroy.
Bachelor of Science, Emerson E.
Evans School d. Buslnt!liS Management - James LeRoy Bahr, Long
Bottom; Angela Kaye Payne,
Middleport; Kimberly Diane
Payne, Middleport; Kevin Eugene
Smith. Pomeroy: Klla A. Young,
Reedsville.
Asaoclate d. Applied Science,
Holzer School of Nunilng - Heidi
Lee English, Pomeroy: Loretta
Ingrid Powell, Racine.
Bachelor d. Sclenre, School of
Technologies- John David Frank,
Racine.
Associate of Applied Business,
Secretarial Sclenre - Sandra' Kay
Archer, Racine.
Associate d. Applied Science,
Automotive Diesel Danny
Wayne Davis, Rutland.
A'""'CCate d. Applied Science,
Continued on page 10

PARTNEIISHIP URGED -Dr. Elaine H. llalrslon, al podium, of
the Ohio Board ol Regehlll tqed p-aduala at Rio Grande College and
Conununlly Collece to help fot~e 111ent partnerships with the higher
education proce!i&amp; To her left ill Dr. Clollls R. Smith, pre~ldent of the
oolleges. RGCCC graduated nearly 000 !ltudenls il Sunday
colimlencement exercises.

�Monday, June 9, 1986

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy,Ohlo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher
PAT WHITEHE .W

BOB HOEFIJCH

Assistant Publisher/ Controller

General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

News Editor
,\ M EMBEH of The Unll«&lt; PI'&lt;'SS Internation al. Inland Da lly Pr('Ss

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Monday, June 9, 1986

Assoeta~ -J·

li on and tht' Americ-an NE"oo•spaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF' OPl NION are welromt' . Thf'y shou ld br less than .UJ words
lonij . Atl 1£&gt;1ters arf'subjE'&lt;'I toed ltlng and must tx- signed wl lh name , address and
tl'l('()h one number No unslgnt'd !Pliers will be publlshed . Lett ers should bE' In
2ood tash&gt;, addrrsslng issues, not pt.&gt;l'sona lltles

The Isr.ell ambassador to the
United Nations Is, as most Israelis
are on the vital questions, strictly
no-nonsense on the matter of
terrorism. His recently published
book, "Terrorism: How the West
Can Win," has a sad-fascinating
provenance. It almost slips the
memory, so much has happened
s !nee, that in 1976 an Air France
plane was hijacked and taken to
Uganda.
What followed was the legendary
Entebbe raid . A squadron of Israeli
airplanes set out In the dead of
night. Mission: rescue the pas·
sengers of the airplane. They did
this, but of course there were a few
casualties. One of them was Lt.
Jonathan Netanyahu. In his me-

mory the Jonathan Foundation was
founded. It Is an Israeli think-tank
devoted to devising means of
combating terrorism. And the.book
by the dead man's brother, Benjamin, Is a keenly edited re(Xlrt of
th~ most recent meeting of the
Jonathan Foundation, In Washington In 1984. Participating in the
seminars that led to the book were,
among others, Michael Ledeen of
Georgetown University; Secretary
of State George Shultz; Sens.
Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Alan
Cranston and Paul Laxalt; former
U.N. ambassador Jeane Klrkpatlick; Yltzhak Rabin, George Will,
Paul Johnson, and Jean-Francois
Revel. Match that, If you are In the
business of braln(Xlwer gathering.

It becomes lm(Xlrtant, along the

line, to define terrorism. Mr.
Netanyahu's definition Is a very
good start. He defines terrorism as
"the deliberate and systematic
murder, maiming and menacing of
the Innocent to inspire fear for
JXllltlcal ends."
Flashback. In 1973, at the United
Nations, tlheU.S. delegation, myself
Included, struggled to get the
General Assembly to deplore terrorism In a eomprehenslve way.
The great windbag of the U.N. In
those days, and Indeed In every day
In the quarter-century In which he
figured In the U.N .'s history, was
Mr. Jamll BaroodY. the ambassa·
dor of Saudi Arabia. I kid you not
when I tell you he offered the

All out of place
Somehow they look out of place. those television ads in the major media
market areas. describing the virtues of Rep. Thomas Kindness ri
Hamilton and Chief Justice Frank Celebre:zze of the Ohio Supreme Court.
Even more startling are the 10-second SJXlts that kind of sneak up ooSen.
John Glenn, D-Ohio, whack him over tlhe head and vanish Into blackness.
After all, the primaries were a month ago, and the general election Isn't
until November. Why the (Xllitlcal commercials now•
"Our goa l was to basically boost his raw name lden!Uicatlon," said Mark
Mills of the Kindness campaign for the U.S. Senate agalnst Glenn. " It was
more or less to lay the groundwork for our later advertislng."
Jim Gravelle, campaign manager for tlhe beleaguered Celebrezze, said
his forces felt the last half of May was a goodtlmetogo rn the air because II
was network "sweeps week" with tiE big TV shows prese1tlngthelr season
finales to large audiences.
Now, It will be re-runs, Gravelle (Xlinted out, and in the !aU Celebrexze
will have to share air time with too many ottEr (Xllltlclans. "We wanted to
get out there first with a very JXlSitlve Introductory message- 'may I
Introduce you to the chief justice,'" said Gravelle.
The commercials showed a smUing Celebrezze with no robe and an qJen
collar; a regular guy and not the black-hat (Xlrtrayed by opponents of the
Democrat-controlled Supreme Court and the news media.
Gravelle said 40 to 50 percent of Ohio voters have no opinion on the
Supreme Court races despite the intense adverse publicity which began In
1984. It is Celebrezze's job to mold JXlSitlve opinion before tiE election, he
said.
More curious are the ads for Kindness, who has a steep uphill battle
against the well-known Glenn.
The national Republican Senate Campaign Committee poured $4!&gt;l,!XXl
into the four-week media presentation in nine major markets
"We're not going to win the election on this buy,'' conceded Mills. "We
want to be in position so that when we get into the issues, people wUI know
who he (Kindness) is and pay more attention to what he is saying."
Early commercials showed Kindness beside an Amertcan flag, favoring
limited government, limited taxation and a balanced budget, and working
with President Reagan for all of it.
The most recent commercia is, short and tart, have tEen like a tiackjack
over Glenn's head. They said he q1posed a constitutional amendment to
balance the budget, Is Ineffective for Ohio and missed more votes than aU
but six senators In the last two years.
"John Glenn, trying to be president. John Glenn, following the liberals.
John Glenn, a sideline senator."
Only the trained eye or the insider can see who's throwingthesezingers
at Ohio's national hero, because tiEre's a mlnlmum of Identification. It's
"Tom Klndness, the fighting frontline senator Ohio needs."
.
The early message seems clear. Glenn's abortive bid lor the presidency,
his campaign debt and his record in the Senate have given Republicans
some legitimate ammunition to use on him tlr the first time in 12 years.
They are not letting the op(Xlrtunlty pass them by.

Berry's World

r
-1==--

"Stay tuned for a special -

No celebration -----------------------------------lack Anderso::p&amp;riJ~l;oov~~ Atta
WASHINGTON - In 1961, Brl·
trtsh lawyer Peter Benenson was
shocked to hear of two students In
Portugal who had been arrested for
drinking a toast to liberty at a local
bar. Benenson decided the world
needed a special organization •o
Investigate and publicize governments' violations of human righlt
- and Amnesty International was
born.
"We are ambivalent about the
25th anniversary," was the wry
comment of one Amnesty Interna·
tiona! official. As she explained to
our associate Lucette Lagnado, the
fact that the organlzallon stU! exists
Is hardly cause for celebration; It
means that governments are stU!
killing, torturtng and harassing
their citizens for the mere act of
criticizing the regime in JXlwer.
Have conditions gotten any better
in the quarter century that Am·
nesty has been stubbornly calling
thew world's attention to state·
sponsored abuses? "The only differences between now and 1961,'' the
Amnesty official said, "Is that a

' ~ .,1

$lll!lllby NEA , lnt:

"If I was being kept from leadership positions
because I was a WOMAN, I could understand
it ...

.Today in-- history
Today is Monday, June 9, the 160th day of 1986 with a15 to follow.
The moon is moving toward its first quarter.
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They Include
composer Cole Porter in 1893; cartoonist George Prtce in 1901 (age !6);
Robert S. McNamara, president of the World Bank and former secretary
of defense, In 1916 (age 70) ; and actors RotErt Cummings In 1910 (76), and
Michael J. Fox In 1961 (25) .
On this date in history:
In 1898, Britain leased the Crown Colony of Hong Kong from China for 99
years. The territory returns to Chinese rule in 1997.
In 194J, Congress passed an act providing for "pay-as-you-go" Income
tax deductions. It authortzed employers to withhold tax payments from
salary checks.
,
In 1959, the first ballistics missile-tiring submarine, the nuclear-(Xlwered
George Washington, was launched at Groton, Conn.
In 1982, Guatemalan Gen. Elrain Rlos Mqntt dissolved the country's
ruling junta and declared himself president and rnllltary comman~r-in·
chief.
In 1984, an Italian prosecutor's report linked the Bulgarian secret service
to the 1981 assassination attempt on Pope John Paul II. Thrre Bulgarians
were IndiCted but a trial faDed to prove charges agillnst !hem.
·
A !bought tor the day: Com(XlSer Cole Porter said, "My !Dle Inspiration
Is a telephone call from a producer."

r

......... ,, '
"" "

'"

person need no longer feel that
nothing can be done."
For while Amnesty International
hasn't turned back any holocausts,
it has had more modest successes,
obtaining the release of vjctlms on
an Individual basis. While they
pursue the Individual cases with
persistence and some success, the
"Big Picture" Is constantly changIng through forces over which they
have no control. "It Is always
dYnamic," one AI veteran explained. "Some countries go up,
then they come down . They have a
sharp Incidence of torture and
abuse, then there is a relaxation,
and then It gets bad again."
One recent victory wasespecially
gratifying to us. It concerned Lu
Hslu-Lein, a Taiwanese feminist
and Harvard Law School graduate
whom we wrote about three years
ago. She was jailed after speaking
at a human rights rally In 1979, and
though seriously Ul, she was held In
deplorable conditions.
Our re(Xlrt prompted tiE Taiwanese government to Improve the

conditions of Lu's incarceration, we
were told. But it was Amnesty
International's prodding and years
of appeals to the regime that finally
secured her release a lew weeks
ago,
Unfortunately, there are many
more cases that AI has been
working on lor years without
success. The organization's admirable rffilsal to give up the fight is
about all the victims have i'Jingfor
them; eventually, perhaps, it wUI
be enough. Here are some of AI 's
toughest clients:
-In the Soviet Union, Tatyana
Semyooova Oslpova, a Jl-year-old
computer specialist, is In a labor
camp for engaging in "anti-Soviet
agitation and propaganda" and
"malicious disobedience." Her
crime was that In 1977 siE joined the
Helsinki Monitoring Group, formed
to check oo Soviet compliance with
the Helsinki Accords. She helped to
document Soviet violations and was
arrested In 19!ll. Sentence: five
years in prison plus five years'
internal exile. But she joinro In

protests and hunger strikes In tlhe
camp, and has added several years ·
to her sentence.
-In South Africa, ThozamUe
Gqweta, :W-year-old Jresldent of
the South African Allied Workers'
Union, was arrested In February
1985 and has been held slnee then oo
charges of high treason. In 1981, two
of his relatives died In a suspicious
home fire. A week later, (Xlllce
opened !Ire at their funeral and
Gqweta's fiancee was ktlled.
-In Vietnam, Nguyen 011 Thien,
53. is a hard case. He has spent 23
years In prison because he refuses
to stop writlng poetry. He was first
arrested In 1958 when he tried to
establish a literary magazine In
Hanoi. He was sentenced to two
years at hard labor for "trying to
discredit the regime bY romantic
poetry.'' He has been In and out of
jaU ever since. After one 13-year
stretch In a "rE'Mucatlon camp,"
IE was pardoned In 1978, only to be
re-arrested tlhe following year for
slipping a manuscript to a foreign
diplomat.

Arms race waffling
The Reagan administration is

Gi-~

'Adult Illiteracy: A Growing Problem."'

following amendment to the
simpler definition of terrorism
backed by the United States and a
few allies. The resolution, Ambassador BaroodY said, should read,
"Measures to Prevent Terrorism
and Other Fonns of VIolence Which
Endanger or Take Innocent Human
Lives or Jeopardize Fundamental
Freedoms, and StudY or the
Underlying Causes ct Those Forms
ri Terrorism and Acts of VIolence
Which Ue In Misery, Frustration,
Grievance, and Despair and Which
Cause Some People to Sacrifice
Human Lives, Including Their Own
in an Attempt to Effect Radical
Changes.''
Well, that will buy you a franchise
to terrorize McDonald's, If you are
Burger King. And, of course, the
movement to condemn terrorism in
a comprehensive way faUed, even
as It continues to fall today. The
measure ri the failure Isn't the
U.N.'s paralysis (tiE U.N. is
forever paralyzed on lm(Xlrtant
questions) . It Is the apparent
paralysis of the free world to make
common cause, the explosive example at which came when, in
April, the United Slaies dld take
modest action against Khadaty In
LibYa. only to awaken the next day
to pronouncements In West Europe
that gave the Impression that we
bombed not only Libya, oot England, France, Spain, Italy and West
Germany, and maybe even
Bethlehem.
Mr. Netanyahu believes It Is a
challengf.' ri focus. His JXllnt is that
It is creepingly self~ldent that
there is no excuse for terrorism,
and that terrortsm can't be dealt
with by dilettantes. He says It right ·
out: I) No concessions: ~rver
acquiesce In terrorist demands. 2)
No appeasement of easygoing
countries that tolerate transient
terrorists, let alone resident terrorIst training. 3) Insist on common
JXlllcies among allles 1he means,
obviously, try to Insist. .. ) 4) Dlplo·
matlc sanctions (close down the .

playlng games with the most
serious Issue of our age - the
control of nuclear weapons.
From the beginning tlhere has
been an aggressive faction within
the administration that has qJJXlsed
any form of genuine arms control
with the Soviet Union. This faction ,
typified by Assistant Secretary of
Defense Richard Perle, despises
the whole concept of anns control.
Indeed, they are opposed to serious
negotla tlons of any kind witli tlhe
Russians.
Perle and his school believe the
shrewdest course for the United
States is not mutual restraint on
arms spending, but an all-out arms
race. The Perle view is that the
United States is so much richer
than tlhe Soviet Union that we can
bankrupt them and destroy their
system In an unchecked armsspending competition.
That Is WhY there Is no COf\celvable weapons system from the MX tp
Star Wars that Perle does not
support. As long as a wea(Xln eosts a
great deal of money and Is capable
or terrifying the Russians, tlhe Perle
faction will sup(Xlrt It as a means r1
bankrupting the Soviets In their
effort to match us.
This formula also has tlhe advantage d. keeping the wea(Xlns
manufacturers happy. They can
cheerfully watch the taxpayers
squirm an(! the deficit multiply
whlle they rount tiEir Increased
profits, all the while oonsoled by the
knowledge that all ct this is hurting
the Russians even more than It
hurts Americans.
Another advantage r:J. this arms
rol)lpet!tlon Is that It ronvlnces
many Americans that all of this '
spending - and the deficits and i
debts that go along with It - Is

making us stronger and more
secure. In the Reagan scheme, the
way ID bring America back so that
we can stand tall Is to cut taxes, cut
back oo such Jl'ograms as environ·
mental protection and open up the
floodgates on arms spending.
The ooly trouble with all ri this Is
that It won't work.
There is no evidence that the
Soviet economy is suffering any
more dramatically from tlhe arms
rompetltlon than the American
economy.
Neither Is there any evidence that
the Soviets will permit us to leave
tiEm In the dust In the arms race.
What there Is evidence to suwort
Is that neither side Is getting
relatively safer as the nuclear arms
competition continues. Each side Is
In greater danger d annihilation as
the wea(Xlns stockpiles accumulate. The cnly answer that makes
any sense is a rrutual, verifiable
agreement to halt this mindless
nuclear race and IEgln reducing
the arsenals on each side.
Mr. Reagan has just Indicated
that he IS about to put aside the
nuclear weaJXlns ceUings negotiated in SALT n unless tiE Soviets
end violations of the treaty and
agree to cutbacks In nuclear

George McGovern
nuclear tests. The Reagan adminis· Wars scenario.
trat!on has oontinued test exploThere is of oourse a rertaln
sions and shows no Interest In a al!llunt ri jockeying for Jl'opatesting moratorium.
ganda Jllrposes on both sides. But
As for Mr. Reagan's caU i&gt;r the the record of the Reagan admin!S·
Soviets to agree to substantial trat!on to date Is longer oo waffling ·
mutual cutbacks in mutual wea - and hypocrisy than any previous
(Xlns, this has been the Soviet administration ol e!tiEr party since
posi!Dn slnee Mr. Gorbachev carne the Atomic Age began more than 4l
into (Xlwer, with the Jrovlso that the years ago.
United States abandon the Star

.

By BilL SCOTT
PARIS (UPI)- Two years ago,
Ivan Lend! captured the French
Open lor his first Grand Slam event
victory. Sunday, he trtumphed
again in Roland Garms Stadium,
building momemtum for
Wimbledon.
The 26-year-old Czechoslovakian
native returns borne to Greenwich,
Conn., with $168,750 for his twohour, 45-mlnute victory over un·
seeded but dangerous Swede Ml·
kael Perntors 6-3, 6-2, 64 In the
finals of the $2.6 mUllon .French
Open Tennis Championships.
"This victory has given me a lot
of eonfldence," said Lend!, a finalist
In eight of the nine Nabisco Grand

"He hits the ball harder than
'(fellow Swedes Mats 1Wllander and
(Stefan) Nystrom,'' said Lend!,
who has won 11 tournaments since
capturing the U.S. Open last
September, and wbose match
record for 1986 stands at 48-2. "He
cl:lesn't serve great, but he's very
steadY and has an Incredible
passing shot.''

Pl&gt;mfors, who turned pro less
than W months ago and who topped
his total career earnings to date
with his second-place check for
514,375, was pleased with his elton
despite the loss.
"It feels great,'' he said In a
decidedly un-Scandanavlan drawl.
"I'm capable of beating almost
anybody In tlhe world. That makes
me feel great. "
Lend! bogged down llllmentarlly
dut1ng the match because or a
rowdy Center Court crowd that
whistled him as he look the !UU lJ
seconds to serve during the third
set.
"I thought, 'I'm going to fight
until I dle, just so I can win,'" he

ByWURABUO
UPI Sports Writer
Too bad Sunday wasn't Seat
Cushion Day at Yankee Stadium.
The New York Yankees and
Baltimore Orioles treated a Bat
Day crowd of 52,021 to the longest
nine-Inning game in American
League history. The 4-hour, 16minute affair was less painfUl for
the visiting Orioles, who blasted the
Yankees 18-9.
The game's duration, which did
not Include a 40-minute rain delay,
broke the old mark of 4: II set July
10, 1983 by Milwaukee and Chicago.
The major-leaguerecord was set by
Los Angeles and San Francisco Oct .

!~ ~'
LENDL DISPlAYS FRENCH OPEN TROPHY - Ivan LencD
displays his trophy alter beating Mlkael Pemfon ol Sweeden In tlree
sets, lh'l, &amp;-2 and 6--4 to win tbe IB86 Fread! Open. .(UR),

Scoreboard ...
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ROCK SPRINGS- Meigs Ufted
Its' record to 4-1 over the we&lt;&gt;kend
\\1th three straight wins Including
an 18-3 bombing at McArthur
Saturday and a twlnbUI win over
Glouster, 5-0 and 4-3, here Sunday In
American legion ooseball action.
Meigs 18 McArthur 3
Brian Durst hurled a complete
game seven-hitter and Meigs
pounded out 21 hits In the one·slded
win over McArthur. A scheduled
second game was post(Xlned when
the rains came following the
opener.
Hannan Trace's Dave 1.1lckhan
had four hits including too doubles
and two singles to lead Meigs while
GAHS's Robbie Young cracked out
a slngle, triple, and home run and

~

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II

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r\•trolt 2, Toronto 1
Sunda)' 'l!l HMdla
f'~cl;•nd

11, rai Kornla ~

Tomnlo 4. Drlroll 'l
Mln..-:11111 5, KaMaS C'lly 2
('hlcago 8. Oakla nd ~

MJM·atJk'f' 7, lk»&gt;lon 3
BallllnOrr 18, r.;,...... York 9
Tl')liiS ~. Sfattlr'

Donnie Becker also had three hi1 s

t Jl 1111111\W-&gt;

South Carolina driver
.cops speedway crown
By Scott Wolfe
MINERAL WELLS, W.VA .
Veteran Mikr Duvall of Gaffn ey,
SC., nipped currmt Stars point
leader Jdf Purvls by one car length
tl&lt;'rc Sunday afternoon to claim ttl&lt;'
So.!XXl fi rst place priZ1' money In the
"S&lt;&gt;cond Annual Mount alneer Special Olympics 100" for Stars late
Models at the aliTCW West Virginia
Motor Spr«lway.
Duvall, driving ttl&lt;' Freddie
Smit h-owned iC. J. Rayburn/Smith
Racing Special. grabbed tiE lead
hum early leader Pat Patrick on
lap li and was nrvrr ~Padro until
Purvis' late race charge at the
. finish. Duvall. normally at the
whc•t•l of his own "Flintstone
Flyer". was subbing for an Injured
Frrodlr Smith In the familiar
blu&lt;•-and-whl!e 1100.
Jubila nt Duvall staled In victory
lane•, " I won this one for Freddie
Smith. He had the car ready ID go
and it worked super. I dido 't change
oothing ... Not ttl&lt;' tlros or the~'""
or ;mything. We just iladed It up
and raced it ...
Despit r threatening skys and
torrential rains less than flft ren
'1ar-studded field of 47 late roodels
and 15 Hobby Stock cars we1·r on
hand for ttl&lt;' STARS sanctioned
evl"n1 .

Pole setter Pat Patr ick of Saylor
Park, Ohio gr·abbm the mrly k:&gt;ad ,
but had that advantage erased oo
lap six when DaveYobe'senginelet
go In tum two, causing a sklrrnlsh
that rUminated fanner STARS
champion "Rarln' John Mason".
Rodney Combs suffered sheet
metal damage, but was able to
cuntinur as several early cautions
slowed the pace.
Patrick continued to set a
~lsterlng pace, momentarily yieldIn g the lead to Davey Johnson of
Clinton, PA before finally bowing to

Lacy's three homers gave him
five for the season. It was the first
time the 37-year-old veteran has hil
three homers In a game during his
14-year career.
"Any time you hit three homers,
It feels great." Lacy said. "The
thing that has kept me in the big
leagues this long Is that I know how
to stay within myself. I'm capable
of hitting the ball to all field s. If I get
a ball that I can drive and hit it OJ I,
that's great."
Lacy JXlWered solo shots In tl1!'
first and sixth innings. He sluggC'd a
two-run blast In the fourth and
added a two-run single in the
seventh. The Orioles collected 22

Glouster to sevro hits. Collins
raised his record to 2-0 with tiE 111n .

early casualtif's.

Phil Hall of Mt. Airy, North
Carolina set fast time for the day
with a clocklngol22: 65. Pat Pat rick
won ttl&lt;' DUs' Dash-lor-the-Cash.
Heat winners in cluded Bob
Adams, Jr., Larry Moore, John
Mason. and Mike Duvall. Delmas
Crnk:&gt;y claim('(! the last chance
race over Ben Hess and David
Speer.
Gary Coon of AliEns, pu sh('(] his
Ford pow&lt;•red /Coors beer sponsored ca r Into the lead and never
look('(] back, outdistancing Joe
M~mel,
Stev~ Burnside, John
Harris. ahd Lany Holmes. RoundIng out the field were Chris Yeakle,
Lee rloyd, Wayne Mcf'l&gt;ak, Keith
Riddle, Sam Adams, and Benny
Hickle.
Heat winners were Ga1y Coon
·and I&lt;Pith Burdette.
The next event at West Virginia
Motor Speedway will be the
highly-touted "Din-ROC" Race of
Olarnplons to be held June 22.
Dirt-ROC Is a four-race series that
ll'atures NASCAR Winston Cup
greats In dirt late models.
Drivers entered In the Dirt ROC
event are Daytona 500wlnnerCeoff
Bodine, David Pearso~. Kyle Petty,
Davey Allison, Morgalo Shepherd,
Joe Rullman, Buddy Baker. and
Rusty Wallace.

•

BAR.GA f"' 'lAT itiEES

s aruR~tY

&amp; SUNDAY • All SE ATS

ADM ISSI ON EVERY

S2 50

fJESD A ~

12 50

L JUNE 6 thru 12 _j
FRIDAY thr1.1

THU RS DAY ~

tw IIIII WITH
Ill lim If 1HE !1St

Sh&lt;Jm har1. Da\'ls r4l. und Kl'rn s . Am ·
h ur~w.\' and Barn·lt. WP·Amburgt·y fi ! 1.
LP ·Shamhil!'l .
SUNDA\' 'S SECONI&gt; (jt\~E
Glou slrr . .
. ....... 100 (J'_'() !J-.1 i 1
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rn

Durst and Bissell led Meigs at the
plate with two singles each while
Young doubled and Jeff Nelson, LP·Kovarh .
Snyder, Rod Roush, Collins, and
Bartrum each singled once. Chuck . - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - _ ,
Davis IC'd Glouster with a single and
double.
Meigs hits the road again Wednesday when they travel to Parkersburg lor a single 7:30 p.m.
game. Thursday, Athens comes to
town for a 6 p.m. single game.
s ,\ T URDAV G,uu;:
M&lt;'lgs .. ..... ..
.. ... ... o:r1 00'1 o-18-21 -3
M&lt;"ArThu r ................ 020 lUll 0- .1· 7· 5
Durs1 and GhN'n . Harkin s (LPl. Ou_.,\('v
t-1 •. Williams. r~ 1. and Ba!f'S . WP- Dur~t
d ·Ot .

---

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The gas company doesn't like it.

a hard-charging Duvall, who led the
rest of the way.
Rounding out the top ten were
Purvis, upcoming star Joe Mea001\!i , Larry Moore, local Mike
Smith, Pat Patrick, Kris Patterson,
Ben Hess, Delmas Conley. and
David Spear. Meadows had been
running second most of the day in a
Bne Individual effort, whUe Smith
and Patterson posted great t1des.
Last year's Stars point champion
Jack Boggs was sidelined with
engine problems while Ned Lucas.
Dick Pot ts. and G!&gt;nr Ferrell were

VETERANS .MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

([)1-bWNEA, ItlC .

hits.
Lacy's slxth·lnning homer gave
Baltimore a 7-1 lead. The Yankees
ralliC'd wl th live runs in the bot tom
of the Inning, before thP Orioles
replied with a seven-run !\f'Vrnt h to
take a 14-ii lead.

with two singles and a double. Phil
SUNDAY'S FIRST GAME
Bailey added a single and hQmerun G1'"""' ....................... ooo 000 o- o J. J
while Joey Snyder had a single and r-M_"_
'•·_'_..._.. _..._.. ._..._.._..._.. _..._.0_30_1_I0_•_-_'·_7_'.L.------------...L-----------~
double. Former Meigs High School
student (now Alexander) Paul Duff
cracked a home run for McArthur.
Meigs 5 GloWJier 0
Coach Jack Welker's crew
oproed their home season with a
brilliant one-hit shutout by Southem's Dave Amburgey. Amburgey
had his no-hit big broken up in the
The electric heat pump.
final Inning as Shamhart singled
between third and short In the
The gas company doesn't like it. Because it doesn't use gas.
sevent h. Amburgey struck out 10
Yet in the winter it can heat your home twice as efficiently
and walked five.
as a gas furnace.
~
Scot Gheen smacked a pair of
In the summer, it gives you the bonus of central air
solo home runs to top the winners at
the plate while Becker added a
conditioning.
single and double. Amburgey.
It's all you need for year-round comfort. So, call us about
Mark Jenklns, and Scott Miller
the only all-in-one heating and cooling 3ystem.
each singled once.
Meigs 4 Glouster 3
The reliable, flameless electric heat pump.
Newly acquired Brent Bissell
We're making sure you can get the most out of life.
tEastemt paid dividends In a hurry
as he singled home Durst with I he
l'Ventual winning run in th!• fifth .
breaking up a 3-.3 tie.
Durst led off the Meigs fifth with a
EUCTit!Ctn:--~.-:-:-:'\
single, went to second when Mike
FLAM!LfSS ,EFFICIEHT, DE~
Bart rum was safe on an crmr. and
rode home on Bissell's single.
Eddie Collins wrnt the distance
. on the mound for Meigs, fanning six
and walking four while balding

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.
... And, 'When Rip Van Winkle
woke up. the NBA playoffs
were sttllgotng on.
.q:. ~

said. " It 1jeering) can work two
ways. It can work that It knocks
somebody down, but It can also
work to pump a person up.
"I tried to lake It In a positive
way. I looked a tit that I want to win
so badly because you were hating
me from the beginning."
In the women's fin al Saturday,
Ollis Evert Lloyd held the trophy
for a record seventh time as she
stopped Mart Ina Navrat Uova 2·6,
6-3, 6-3.
The comeback was typical of the
31-year-old's efforts all during this
two-week toumam('nt. Evert Lloyd
has won twice in a row at Paris and
has taken at least one Grand Slam
title in eac h of the past 1.3 yea rs .

Meigs Legion ups record to
•
•
4-1 with three wms In a row

Hoo!doo IDI&gt;Shaolf ~ 1·21 111 San DWgo
cShuov .\..11, l():lri p.m .
C'lnrlnn.1t l 1RrrM·nlnJ( :l· ~t at Los An-""rs
c H1•n. h~ ·r ~ t. 1fi::Jfll}.m

Majors

2, 1962, a ga me that lasted 4: 18.
"I've been In this league going on
15 years. I've played ln IO,tlXl of
them (games) just Uke It," Orioles
catcher Rick Dempsey said. "It
feels the same as If It was 2-0. You
just take your hacks and look to
finish . The way things were going, It
didn't look like It was going to.
"You just hope you get a hit every
time up and everybody else hits a
line-drive out in the game and you
go home."
Sparked by Lee Lacy's three
home runs,and six RBI, the Orioles
took a threegame series sweep.
The Yankees fell tor the seventh
time in their last nine games.

Dally ........................... .. .... 25 Cents

arsenals.
Apparently It Is true that the
Soviets are In violation of some
aspects d SALT n, but It IS also true
that !hey have for the most part
kept wea(Xlns levels within the
treaty limits.
What Is also true Is that the
Soviets· signed the nuclear trea t:y
more than a decade ago while we
have refused to ratify the
agrrement.
It IS also true that since last Aug.
6, the Soviets have been adhering to
an announced (Xlllcy of halting ail

Prix tournaments he's entered this
year. "I want to work even harder
for Wimbledon.''
Lend! broke Pernfors, a two-time
NCAA champiOn at Georgia, nine
times, holding off a charge by the
22-year-old from 0-3 to 4-3 in the final
'set.

Orioles belt Yanks in 4-hour marathon

milf's away, a large crowd and

Berry's World

The Daily Sentinei- Paga-3

Lend) reclaims French Open title
.

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

Ho-hum terrorism ------------------------------William F. Buckley Jr.

Ill Court Street

\

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1

IMidt' Ohio
13 Weeks.. ................ ............ . Sl4.56
26 WPeks ................................. $29.l 2
52 Wecks ....................... ........ .. $.')8 . 2~
Outside Ohio
13 Weeks .......... ....................... $15.60

26 Weeks .................... .... ....... .. . $31.20
52 Weeks ......... ............ ............. 15UJ

Ohio Power

Part of American Electric Power

�MQnday, June 9, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By The Bend

Expos blank Phils; Mets edge Pirates
By MIKE niiLY
UPI NatlouiiiMeball Wrller
Floyd Youmans straightened wt
his recent problems by abandoning
his curveball.
After going two weeks without a
victory, Youmans took the advice
of pitching coach Larry Bearnarth
and Sunday threw nothing but
fastballs and changeups. He allowed only one hit - an Infield
single bY Glenn Wilson In the fourth
Inning - and also hit his first
major- league homer to spark the
Montreal Expos to a 12-0 triumph
011er the Philadelphia Phlllles.
"I guess the strategy really paid
off," Youmans said. "It really
helped me. Over the last few days, I
was realty working hard on my
changeup."
Youmans, 5-5, pitched the first
complete game of his career,
striking out eight and walking
seven. His home run was a two-run
blast In the second Inning.
Tim Raines hit a grand slam, and
Ruble Brooks chipped In with a

two-run homer as thf. Expos tagged
Mike Maddux, (). 2, with the loss.
The Phlllles used lour pitchers,
Including outfielder Greg Gross ,
who hurled the eighth.
Wilson's hit came without controversy. The outfielder hit a
grour¥ler up Ute middle and easily
beat second baseman AI Newman's
belated throw to first base.
"I wasn't even wonied about a
no-hitter," Youmans said. "I was
just trying to complete the game.
Sure, I came close, but that single
by Wilson was a clear basehlt. II AI
would have thrown him out, that
would have been an outstanding
play."
Youmans hit his homer In the
second with Newman, who had
walked, on base.
"All week long In batting practice, I felt llke I would hit one out,"
Youmans saJd. "I've always been a
good hitter. In high school, I had a
.406 career average and hit about
nine homers a year."

In other NL games, San Diego
defeated Atlanta 4-1, New York
edged Pittsburgh 4-3, Chicago
clobbered St. Louts 14- 2, Houston
nipped Los Angeles 3-2 and Cincinnati and San Francisco split a
doubleheader, the Reds winning the
ilrst game 7-3 and the Gtanis taking
the nightcap 3-1.
Padres 4, Braves 1
At San Diego, Mark Thunnond
pitched a three-hitter and drove In
four runs to lead the Padres.
Thunnond, 3-4, notched his second
complete game of the season. Joe
Johnson, 6-5, pitched 5 2-3 Innings
and sUITendered all four Padres
runs In taking the loss.
Mets 4, l'lratei 3
At Pittsburgh, Kevin Mitchell
drove In three runs with a homer
and a single to back the combined
four-hit pitching of Sid Fernandez, 6-2, and two rellevers as the Mets
won four games of the five-game
series. Jesse Oroso gol the last two
ruts for his lOth save. U.ny
McWilliams fell to 1-4.

Cube 14, •::ardnala 2
At St. Louts, Keith Moreland's
three-run homer htih~Jihted a
nine-run, eight-hit sixth Inning that
fueled Chlcagn. The Cubs ripped
loser Greg Mathews, 1-1, and tll'ee
reUevers for 20 hits. Steve Trout,
3-3, allowed seven hits and walked
two In seven Innings t&gt;r the vlctol)o.
Astroll 3. Dodael'l 2
AI Los Angel~s, Mark Batley
snapped a 1-1 tle)lllth an RBI single
off Fernando Valenzuela, S-4, In the
sixth, and Mike Scott hurled a
five-hitter and struck wt nine 011er8
2-3 Innings lor Houston. Scott, 6-4,
needed last out rellef help from
Dave Smith, who got his 15th save.
Reds H. Gllllls 34
At San Francisco, Mike Woodard
and Rob Thompson delivered consecutive suiCide squeeze bunts In
the eighth, giving the Giants a spilt.
Jeff Robinson, 4-1, was the winner.
Ted Power ~U to 3-4. In the qlEI!er,
Dave Parker drove In thrre runs
with a 44().foot homer and a double.
John Denny, 4-5, struck wt 10.

'IWO-Rl!N HOMER - New York's Kevm MltcheU gets a hand!lhake
from Coach Bud llarrelsen as he rounds third after hitting a two-run
homer In Sunday's 4-3 vlct&lt;Jry over Pittsburgh. (UP!).

High school AAA
.toomey in fourth
day after 7 •7 tie
slammed a homer In the third
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) Cincinnati Western Hills and Wes- Inning, when the team earned half
'terv ille Nort h battled for 10 Innings of its score.
In semi-finals Saturday , Aleron
Sunday evening In the Class AM
high school baseball champion- earned Us finals bid by defeating
ships, but were unable to break the E lyrta 7-2. Elyria finished the
dead lock before the game was season with a 21-6 record.
Fairfield , which finishes 31-4,
suspm ded because of darkness.
The game, being held at Ohio added Its 3lsl win In the semi-finals
State University, was scheduled to Sa turday by rou ting Casstown
resume at !0: 30 a .m. today wit h the Miami East 12-1, leaving Casstown
with a JJ-4 record for the season .
teams tied at 7-7.
Westervil le North pitcher Tim Chuck Werner blasted a solo horner
Smith went all 10 innings, stil&lt;lng in ttl:&gt; fifth Inning and added a
out six, walking six and all01•1ng 13 double to conUibute to the win . Also
hits. Hi s team managed only flv~ for Lancaster, Scott Mast went 2-3
hits, bul nine ~rrors by Cincinnati . with four RBI. Pitcher Jeff Porter
Western Hills contti buted four st ruck rut eight and Is now 16-0 for
the season.
unea rned runs.
In Class A action Saturday,
Both teams had oppottunilics to
Ottawa Hills broke a 7-7 tie In the
clinch the title.
In the boll om oft he seventh with li th inning to win its first state title.
Lehman jumped In front bY
one out, Westerville Not1h la Ued to
score with the bases loaded. sco ring four runs in the first two
Cincinnali retu med the favor under Innings, while pitcher Tom Froning
the samr cond it ions in the top of the held Ottawa to one run. Ottawa
ca me back to score three times In
eighl.h.
the bottom r:i theseventhand tie the
1\'es t~tY ille , 25-2, earned its fina l
spot ll'ith a n 8-3 win over Barberton, game when Mike McCormick
19-12, Saturday. Cincinnati, 28-6, scored the tying RBI with a
ent!'red th&lt;' bid with a 12-6 decision grounder.
With two outs in the bottom of the
O\W Ment or. 20-13.
11
th
Inning, Ottawa 's Jeff Ray
in Class AA fi nals, Akron St.
singled
to right fi eld. scoring right
\' in&lt;('nt -St. Mary bl anked Lancasfielder
Rod
Coojl('r from second
IN Fa 11iieid Union 6-0.
base.
Cooper
had reac hed second
Fa itiirld managed only five hit s
on
an
error.
· to Akron's nine. and thtT&lt;' Faitiield
Lehman finishes the season at
errors cont tibutcd to tiY:' win for IIY:'
IR
-7,
while Ottawa brings It s record
Fighting Irish. Akron's Jeff Pubo.
to
18-9.
who wa s 2- lot&lt;! wit h !\\·() RBI.

Three-man squad cop
state AAA track title
COLUMBL'S. Ohio IUPi t When last Wf&lt;'kend 's state high
school track and field championships began. Gre&lt;&gt;nsburg Gtwn

nati Academy of Physical Educa tion 1CAPE 1 in Class A boys and
gi rls: and Columbus Hartley In
both AA boys and gir l&lt;.

wasn 't among anybody's favorit es

to win Ihe boys Class AAA title.
After a II. the Bulldogs from
Summit County had finis hed only
third in their own Suburban League
meet.
But track can beast rangtosport ~
things break right lor you and
ASHLAND, Ohio !UP! I - Akron
Grt'Cn Coach Francis Kelly did a
Hoban already has made a name
good job of scl llng that point to his
for I! self In gi rls high schoolsoftball .
thre&lt;&gt;-man state m('('t team - high
jumper Mark McClure. pole vaul- Now the school Is making sure no
one forgets lt.
ter Brian Kelly and distanrerunner
Hoban, state champion In 1983
Ma rk Croghan.
and 1984, garnered Its third Class
"I told them if they worked hard.
anything could happen," said Kelly. M title with a 7-0 decision over
Newark Licking Valley Saturday In
"They pulled for each ot her !he
whole weekend . They weren't going Ashland .
Pit cher Amy Madrln went all the
IO be denied ."
But the Bulldogs defin itely way Sa turday for the shutout
ne&lt;xled help in winning the first victory while holding LICking Valstate track title in the school's ley to just six hits with 10str1keouts.
Aleron scored five runs In the
history.
S('('Ond
Inning on two homeruns.
Exe&lt;&gt;pl for a dropped ba ton by
F
lrst1j~aseman
La uri Natco scored
Dayton Patterson soptitmorr Eric
the
fll'S
t
four-bagger
after teamRespress in the meet' s fin al event,
mates
Missy
Sturm,
the
designated
the 1600-meter relay, Gree n easily
hitter,
and
Dina
Gllnsky,
third base,
could have tied lor the title or even
got
on
base
with
back-to-back
finished secorxl to Patterson.
walks.
The Beavers, with 400-meter
Shortstop Rachel Cowley hit the
champ Benford Clay waiting to run
second
hOme run of the Inning after
the anchor leg, needed only a
outfi
elder
Tamml McDermott
second -place finis h in the 1000 to
reached
base
on a single.
share the champions hip with
Akron
Hoban
ftnlshed the season
Green. A first place finish would
21
-5,
while
Licking
Valley was 31-3.
have given them the title, but the
Brunswick
defeated
Jackson 3-2
mistake dropped them to third
clinching
the
Class
AAA
behind Cleveland John Adams.
championship.
Sa turday's other team chamIn Class A action, Archbold took·
pions were Cleveland Heights
its third state crown ~ defeating
Beaumont In Class AAA girls;
Dayton J efferson and the Cincln - Hillsda le 6-2.

Akron, Brunswick
and Archbold win
softball crowns

The championship was perhaps
sweetest of all for Celtlcs backup
center Blll Walton , obtained In the
off-season from the Los Anf&gt;"leS
CUppers. Walton led Portland to a
championship In 1977, but was
plagued · for years by injul)l,
missing three full seasons and
playing sporadically In several
ottErs.
"I never gave up hope . I never
had much hope," he said. "It
seemed so far away. The opera tions , the pain , the therapy, all are

oow made worthwhile bY this.
"I thank my teammates. I thank
Red Auerbach. and !lllst or all I
thank the Boston fans who welcomed ml' so much."
Walton, a fan favorite In Boston,
provided crucial rest lor starting
center Robert Parish, who tired
badly In last year's Boston-Los
Anf&gt;"les series.
Celtlcs mach K.C. Jo!ll's said he
was confident of wrapping It up
Sunday, and " was not surprised" at
the margin of victory.

HONORED - Herb and JWJe Mattleny are pictured at a retirement
banquet held In their honor at the Redwood Restaurant In Belpre. They
have sel'lled as custodians of Riverview School for the past nine years.
Gifts were presented the rouple !rom scltool persoonel ~• weD as the
student body and the local 1'1'0 unit.

CELTICS CELEBRATE -A happy Boston Celtlcs
'Red' Auerbach (right) holds the Lawi'EIIce O'Brien
NBA World Championship trophy after the Celtlt'S

recruitin g. It Is a necessary lhing in
the recruiting war. (Othercollegesl
used it on us this year."
New ffiU basketball coach Gary
Williams became the first Ohio
State co ach with a multiyear
co nt rac t. He signed fo r live years
March 15.
"We will continue one-ymr appointment s for tiY:' othe r coaches
for the time being," Bay said.
"Football and ba sketball are the
revenue-producers. They are my
main concern."
Bruce has a 65-19-0 !&lt;'Cord at Ohio
State. His teams have gone 9-3 six
consecu tive years aft er an 11-1
record In his first season as Woodv
·
Hayes' successor In 1979.

Plan tennis tourney

CINCINNATI (UPI 1 - The
Cincinnati Reds Sunday reactlvated.pltcher Mario Soto from the
15-day disabled list.
Soto pitched seven Innings of the
second game of a Sunday double
header against the Giants In San
Francisco. He did not figu re in the
3-1 b ss.

A tennis tou rnament has bem set
for .Iunell-July 6at the North Park
courts in Ravenswood. W.Va.
The tou rnament will be for flll'n's
sin glE'S, women's singles, mr n's
doubles, women's doubles. boys
and glrls 18 and over. men and
women over :l'i and mixed doubles.
For more Information, cont act
Ron Crouser al :m-273-4768.

won their 16th tkle In the loop's history Sunday with a
114-97 victory over Houstoo. (UPI).

FREE FILM
AT FRUTH'S

94th birthday celebrated
Halley, Paige and Bradford. Upper
Arlington, the hooored guest and
the host s.
The Halley famil y spent the
weekend here with her parent s.
Mrs. Halley attended the Jlth
reunion of her MHS Class. Mr. and
Mrs. Halley's daughter, Paige, will
graduate from high school on .June
12 and Mr. and Mrs. Knight wlll go
t o Columbus t o att e nd
commencement.
W.W. Wilson came from F1ortda
especially lor his llllther's birthday
observance and to visit with her and
the Knights.

A family dinner party was held
Memorial Day weekend at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Knight
In observancec1the91th lirth:lay II
her mother, Mrs. M.C. Wilson of
Middleport.
Following the dinner, two birthday cakes and Ice cream were
served . Gifts. cards and flowers
were presented lo Mrs. Wilson.
Attending the party were Mr. and
Mrs. C.S. Wilson and son, J))vld ,
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Wilson ,
Charleston , W.Va.; W.W. Wilson ,
Venice, Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. R.L.

Erin

r··-;uiuc·ioiKi·--1
Tri-Stlte Educttion Department placed orderJ in anticipation of this
11111.
be aotdl All m•chlnes
the moat modern Mwing
in the
are
of
end
flbric1.
I,
upholster, nylon ,
W~h
)ull

magic
blindham, monogfam. utln 1thc:tl, embroidery.
lfllpo, topll~cll .

ot~ch.

MW on buttons

I
1I

1
1
I
I

I
I
TRADES ACCEPTtD
I
I YOUR PRICE $149.
lAYAWAYS WELCOME. I
1 DAY ONLY
HOLIDAY INN
.I
WEDNESDAY
uo PIKE n.
1
I
JUIE 11
On lt. 7 I 35
1
I
11 AII-SPM
GAWPOLIS
are

Showing In conjunc·

MIDDLE PORT - Bethel 62,
Int ernationa l Order r:i Job's Daughters. will meet at 7: 30 Monday night
at the Middleport Masonic Temple.
Initiation will be held.

~ Golden
FREE!

:
:
•
.

can Veterans of Meigs County meet
Monday 7 p.m.. chapter home at 124
Butternut Ave .. Pomeroy.
CHESTER - Vacation Bible
School begins Monday 9:30 to ll:JJ
a.m.. Chester Unit ed Methodist
Oturch. Ages 2 to grade 6.
LaLeche meets
POMEROY - Point Pleasant
U.Leche League meets 7 p.m.
Monday at 3003 Brook Drive,
behind VIllage Pizza In Point
Pleasant. Topic wlli be bringing a
new baby home and ways to get a
good start at breatfeedlng. Interested women are invit ed to attend .
Information bY calling Elaine
Matheny, 675-4439.

Rule Class has meeting

The birthday of the Rev. Earl
Eden was"observed at the receni
meeting of the Golden Rule Class of
the Middleport First Baptis t
Oturch held at the home of Louise
Thompson.
Jean Kiat'S had devotions on faith
and closeness to Chtist using
scriptures Including Psalms 34.
O!llcers' reports were given and
plans made for a picnic on June 19

at the home of Da le and Marjolie
Walbum. A contest was held. Gifts
were presented to the pastor. Ca ke
and Ice crea m were served to Coke
Ambrose, Jean Thoma&lt;;, Marjotie
Welbun , Manning and ,June Kloes,
Marilyn and John Fultz, Sis Van
Meter, Louise Thompson. Glenna
Reibel, and the Rev. and Mrs .
Eden.

DARE awards presented
Er in Marie Anderson and Phillip
Roger Klng. juniors at Meigs High
School, have beE•n awarded the
national I Dare You leadership
awa rd in recognition of excelien&lt;r
in charac ter and well -balanced
personal deveopment as well as
leadership j:Qtent!al.
Making the presentat ion was
John Rl.'llovian, a guidance munsrlor at the high school.
In addit ion to the nat iona l
recognition, the award provides
recipients with a copy of William H.
Danforth's book, I Dare You. and a
personalized cert ificate. Young
peop le receiving the award have
the opj:Qrtunily to apply for scholarships to attend the two wPek
nallonal leadership conference of
the American Yout h Foundat ion
which emphasize personal growth
and leadership.
Anderso n is the da ughter of
Jennifer Anderson, near Salem
Center, and Bill Anderson. Colum-

TUESDAY NIGHT SPE~IAL
COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY

pineapple slices.
Thursday- Meat balls In tomato
sauce on spaghetti, tossed salad,

FOR JUST

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

brownie.

tional

Friday - Salmon patty, brussei
sprouts, f&gt;"ialin vegetable salad,
·
peaches.
Choice of milk, coffee. tea. or
)lice available with meaL

i

$3.25

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

PH. 992 -5432

POMEROY, OH.

fried Chi&lt;ktn

.WEIGHT WATCHERs~· OPEN HOUSE

l -

---JUNE

~S_J

2

I

3

5

4

.,J..

6

7

REUNrrED- BeUy Lee A8len Annenlrout, cenler, and her mother,
Qulnllella Neltlhardt, rlghl, were reunited lor lie lint time In • yean
8uJidlly allhe home~ Sarah Fllll&amp;er,lell, bt Malon, W.Va. 'lbe mother
aad dau&amp;Jaer were aeparated when JleUy Annmlrout ~ two aDd .
after repeated allenlptllAIIocale each other the two were rw~ lui
week prbnarly lbroup the efloril of Mrs. Foller.

QUICK START PlUS CAN BE THE PERFECT ANSWER
TO 'lOUR WEIGHT LOSS PROBlEMS.
lM&gt;ukJn 1rr oe ~noertul ro ~art~r~ secret ro ~le!OrlQ Y. e.gnr
control?

SPECIAL SUMMER OFFER!
10 WEEKS FOR ONLY S59.

That s what WerWlt Warche r\ Ou&lt;• StMI PI~Js pr ogr a m can
00101 voo F1rs1 V01J Macr uallye o l)l'fre&lt;~Ce ldster we.q111 •oss m

tne lrrsl rew weeks Then. '( Oli 1111e, ·• uo nultly rlewea tmg

You save S24.

ou~es.

MIDDLEPORT
OHIO

ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED
CHICKEN YOU CAN EAT

IrJO. .ecWetoJ•I•
e 28, 1988,
bue'a u oll'ert••t caa't bolto•ll

Mr. and Mrs. John McCloud,
U.ke In lhe Hills, Ill. are annou~ ­
lng the birth of their first child, a
daughter, ' Dana Marte, born oo
May 10 at the Good Shepherd
Hospital In Barrington, Ill. The
Infant weighed seven pounds, 10

NOT AVAILABLE
WITH TUESDAY
DOUBLE PRINTS

GALLIPOLIS
OHIO

Granddaughters
of Sanford W.
Williams of
Colorado, wish to
become
acquainted with
relatives while
visiting in
Pomeroy June 17
&amp; 18. We will be
registered at a
motel.
Anna D. W.
Wagner
Beulah M.W.
-Biackstrum

POMEROY - Bookmobile service In Meigs County Is brought by
the Meigs Cwnty Public Library
under contract with the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries.
Bookmobile Schedule for Monday, June 9: Burlingham (County
Mobile Home Park) , 3:35-4:05;
Harrisonville !Church), 4:35-5:05;
New Lima Road (I mi. oouthof Fort
Meigs) , 5: 15-6:00; Rutland (Depot
St.) , 6:4().7:10.
Bookmobile Schedule for Wednesday, June 11: Thpper's ~alns
(Lodwick 's), 7: 25-8:10; Rlggscrest
Addition, 8: 25-8: 55.

McCloud birth

Compare us with the other guy ...
Shoot, we're not afraid!

POt NT PLEASANT
W. VA .

bu s. King Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Lloyd King, Pomeroy.

Bookmobile set

Dana Marie McCloud

ABSOLUTELY FREE!

LIMITED TIME
OFFER WHILE
QUANTITIES tAST

Phllllp Roger King

Anderson

Tuesday - Turkey slice with
gr avy, mashed potatoes, carrots,
cake.
Wednesday - Chicken salad on
lettuce, jl('as and cam&gt;ts, tomatoes,

Simply bring in your roll of Color Print
Film for processing, and we'll give you
a roll of Colorcrafl Film to play with ...

I

·-----------------~

MONDA\'
POMEROY - Vaca tion Bible
school at Mt. Union Baptist Church.
Monday through June 13, 9 to ll :JJ
a.m. each day; lor lnfonnat ion call
- mB-3411 or 742-2185

POMEROY - Disa bled Amerl-

We ' ll even furnish
the tllm

POMEROY- The Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, has scheduled
the following activities for the week
of June 9-13:
Monday- Organizational MeetIng to elect dfleers for square
dance group 12: 45, Square Dance
1-3.
Tuesday - Chorus 1-2.
Wednesday - Social Security
Representative 1~12. Bingo 11,
Bloodmobile Vtsltl-5: 30.
Thursday- Ceramics 1().2, Film
"Room To Uve" , about seat belt
usage at 11.
Frtday - Trip to Blennerhassett
Island, IPave Center at 10, Bowling
1:30, Round and Square DanceB-11,
music by The Strlngdusters, admission $1.50 per person.
The Senior Nutrition Program
menu br the week Is:
Monday - Weiner, sauerkraut ,

~

rom, pears.

TUPPERS PI.A INS- Vacation
: Bible School. TuWf'rS Plains
Chu reh of Christ. J une 9-13 from
: 9-11:45 a.m.

r------------------ -------1

I SURPLUS SCHOOL MODELS
I v•r'• Thill machk'lel must
offered •r• new
machines
USA . These machlnet
I tnd
mede METAL
Sew on Ill
Levi' conva1
aUk, EVEN SEW ON LEATHER ! Tholl machineo oro now
I llretcllo vinyl.
25-VEAR WARRANTY .
this now 1988 CUSTOM BUILT
SEWING MACHINE, you
oot tho color coded dial and Ito
I CLASSIChappen,
l!lroight oowlng, zigzog, buttonholes lonv oizoj, invloibte
applique.
I ond
otolllc stitch, l!lralghl
profooolonoloerglng
oil ofthlo, ond more wlthoutthl-dolotdfuhionod co moor pro I. llltcll.
grommoro. Your price, w~h thio od •148. wlthoutthlo od •&amp;29 . M11torC1rd
end
checkt
welcome .
1 tion w~h
Trl·lloto Sowina.
01110 T,.Q0-.331 ·9051-AU OTHERS 1-100-331 -9062
II TOU r•ENATION
WIDE SERVICE POLICY INCLUDED

. FIVE GENERATIONS - DanleDe Marie, left, and Michelle Leigh,
a1ne month old twins of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Thomas, are held by their
p-eat-great-grandmother, Sallie Cadle, durin~~: a visit to her
· Shrewsbury, W.Va. home. Completing the five ll:efterallorw are back,
left tAl right, Thelma Banks, Pomeroy, great-grandmother w the twm,
· Unda Rapp, Racine, their grandrnotler, lllld Fonda Thomas, their
mol her.

Calendar/ happenings

Soto reactivated

Vl11 eccepted. Your

Charles Pickens with Mrs.
Pickens, Newark; Jane Priode
Swatzel witll Mr. Swatzel, Pomeroy; Charles Rickman, Columtus;
Catherine. Roush Brown, Middleport; Eugene Schaaf with Mrs.
Schaaf, Columbus; John Stevens
Jr .. Richmond, Va.; John Swisher
with Mrs. Swisher, Vinton; and
Hazel Thomas Bowers, New
Carllsle.

'

Bruce signs three-year pact

w~h

Member of the class present were
Clifford Cunningham with Mrs.
Cunningham, Lima; Robert Darst,
Dublin; Lots Diles Bush, Colurn·
bus; Charles Gordon, Groveport;·
Mary Hennesy Harris , Columtus;
Robert King with Mrs. King,
Bradbury; Jean Lama Moore,
Middleport; Lindsay Lyons Jr. with
Mrs. Lyons, Tuppers Plains; Elizabeth McClain Haley, Columbus.

Senior Citizen Center
plans week's _a~tivities

The Celtlcs' 114-97 victory over
the Houston Rockets In this year's
deciding Game 6 avenged a 111-96
thrashing bY the Rockets In Game
5, played Thursday night In
Houston.
"Our prtde was hurt," McHale
said of the loss. "People were
saying maybe we weren't that
great a team,justanaverageteam .
We proved we're a great team."
Houston forward Ralph Sampson, Involved In a bench- clearing
brawl Thursday night, was held to
only 8 points, while center Akeem
Olajuwon was limited to 19 points.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPII- Ohio
State head football coach Earle
Bruce, who has worked under
one-year contracts In his previous
seven seasons with the Buckeyes,
has signed a three- year pact.
The contract, worth $87,120 In the
first year, was signed Friday. The
OSU Board of Trustees Is expected
to approve the pact at a meeting
Wednesday.
Bruce, who earned $82,200 In base
salary under his culTI'nt contract
that expires June 30, believes the
longer pact will help the tea m most
in recruiting.
"It's great for our IJ'ogram ,"
Bruce said. " It will help ou r

Page-5

Seventeen members of the Middleport High School class of 1936
enjoyed their 50th class reunion
preceding the annual MHS Alumni
banquet on May 24 with a party at
the home of Jean Lama Moore, 598
S. Third Ave., Middleport.
Attractive orange and black
decorations were placed throughout the Moore home. Refreshments
were served from a table with an
orange and black centerpiece.
Each member ol the class was
presented with an orange and black
momenta of the occasion.
Guests of the class were 19li
faculty members, Robert McKay,
Bowling Green; Walter Prlode,
New Lexington; and Gordon Harris, Columbus. Gene Grate, Middleport , who was secretary at the hlgh
school at that time, was also a
guest.

'jWe're No. 1."

The Celtlcs' victory In a boisterous and sweltering Boston Gar~
capped a season In which they I · t
only one game at home, to t
Portland Trail Blazers In
December.
"I think It's 0111' II the greatest if
not the greatest team I've i&gt;vl'r been
associated with, especially over the
long season," said Celtlcs President
Red Auerbach, who received the

Monday, June 9. 1988

Middleport High School
conducts class reunion

Boston chalks up 16th NBA crown
By CJIAitJES GOLDSMml
NBA championship trophy In the
BOSTON (UPJ) - Angered at Celtlcs locker room from NBA
doubts that they were not a great Commlsslo!ll'r David Stern.
team, the Boston Celtlcs leveled the
Johnson drenched CBS lroadcas"Twin Towers" Sunday to comter Brent Musburger with champlete their quest lor a Sweet 16th pagne as McHale kissed the
championship banner.
· handsome trophy.
"We started working on this
"It's oo sweet now, and when I'm
championship when we lost Game fishing this summer the fish will b"t
Six to L.A. last year," guard Dennis a Utile bigger and the beer gets a
Johnson said of the Los Angeles little bit colder and the (!Ish ) ~orles
Lakers' 111-100 win on June 9, l!llfi, get a Utile bit better," saia
which eliminated Boston from last Minnesota native McHale, who
year's final series.
scored 29 points In the ftnal game.
"It was a magical season," saJd
forward Kevin McHale, who
worked the crowd Into a frenzy late
In the game bY swinging a white
towel over his head and poln tlng
skyward with both arms to signify

The Daily Sentinel

Maternal grandmother Is Marlene Gllmaldl, Las Vegas, and
maternal grandfather Is Thomas
Gavitt, new Mexico. Paternal
grandmother Is Dorothy McCloud,
Middleport, and the paternal
grandfather Is Charles McCloud,
Sr., Middleport Mrs. NeUie
McCloud of Point Pleaaant and
Mrs. Alice Gavitt Las Vegas, are
great-grandparents.

Registration
First Meeting Fee
9 Additional Meetings
Regular Prke
YOU PAY ONLY

hatllls that WlU help you m.unTHI your rle..,red we.ghl
Now. here's tilt 019 PL US,, the OJ•Ci Sran Plu5

' 13.00
7.00
63.00
'83.00
'59.00

nw

·-•er, be sure to have
Wti,Cbt W.tcben there lfhen
yea ate&lt;~ It •oat.

GALLIPOLIS

prooram oor Personal Cnorc ~ ·

ooo ~.rers

let V01J cusrom!e

your eat1ng to yoor 111e s!')'le Tncse b00klers are packer! t.1t1'1
'"Our ()ulfk .~turf / 1/uJ program

givts you the choices that
actualfy muln! eahng enj11ycJbk
urhile you 're lo.Qng uoeighl '.'

So. now you Wrow 'NfiJtto uoec r 11om our t,lll\JIOu s Ou+e ~
Stan Plus program

Florine Mark
Area D1rec1or

A.ll you netd to do 15 l~ lo.e

MEETING SCHEDULE :

ST. PETER'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
541 Second Avenue
Tue: 7p.m.
Wed: 9:30a.m.

flew de&lt;tS lor oea~n g «lftl hOIIdJy~ rl no:ng OtJI and fl\Jch
more l'ou 11 see ll.lw looels voo ~tw.~~ ~ ltxluyflt l'.ere on
l1rr~ts .. can De enl(l~ed . now ana tnen l'lll~tJ ! QU'II
Fooos hke bacon nuts codt~~~~ Pit' ~ nd c~ l.e ~ m1nt e99
rol15 potato salad cream cheese '"!•€'~ chocol."lte tlro,.,nes'

th ~ 1 1 r~T

SlfD

rnd~e

thE

commument nQnt rtOW JM s11ck .... 1m 11 fh1S can oe tt\f'
t urra !tl.Jt COJer haooeoed to aretm(J ,ma lolUU 1

0~&gt;51

POMEROY

SENIOR CITIZENS' CENTER
Wed: 6p.m.
,

_, .

�•

...."'

•

•lege 8-The Daily Sentine

•

"

Meigs County property transfers
WWiam Calvin Goorey, Vh·ginla
Ma\leUne Goorey to Carol Ann
Harper, Lot, Salisbu ry.
Mildred Lucille Smith toT\mothv
A. Baum, Martie Y. Baum. Parcels, Chester.
Barbara I. Smith, Dec, 10 Sh\r lc\'
A. Smith, Atfld., Rutland.
.
Ma~ine Durst to Fannie Dw·s;,
Parcels, Lebanon.
Richard M. Reule,-. Patricia E.
Springer, Earl J .Sprtnger to Verna
Sturgeon, Parcels. Salisbu rv .
Diamond Savings &amp; Loan Co. 1o
Martha Stutler. Parcrls. Lot o.
Sutton.
Dora F. Hysell, Norman :VI.
Hysell to Norman E. H'~cll.
Pa tricia A. Hyse ll. Par·" ' b.
Chester.
·
R. Mlck Shaw, Irene Shmr,
Karen Lee Hood, J anet K Compson
to J ames E. Diddle. Right of Wa)·.
Letart.
Dorothy M. Du!&lt;'kcr, aka Do·
rothy M. Hess, Howard Duecker to
Prent ice Hess, Carol Hess. Parcel&lt;.
Bedford .
Edna Mae Summerfield, by
Exec, to Columbia Gas Trans.
Corp, Right of Way, Cheswr.
Elton L. Hodge to Roll'r1 S.
Hodge, Sr., Phylli s A. Hodge , Lois.
Re Record , Colu mbia.
Danny Lew Meadows, Karm S.
Meadows to Milchell H. Meadows,
Pt. Lots 24 &amp; 25, Midd . Viii.
Harry S. Yarbrough to Riehard

Public Notice
nut Avenue: thenCI In . il

A. Liebmann . Paut K. Strauss,
H.8SA, Rutland.
.
Roll't1 S. Hodge, Sr ., Phyllis A.
Hodge, Dorothy Perry to Donald K.
Lew is. Lots 26 &amp; '!7. Columbia.
Carl Schuilz, Jr., 10 Adrninlstralor of Veter ans Afflars. Sheriffs
J:)('l'd, Sutton.
Genevieve Swam to Leo r.
Young. Jr.. Mae Mayle, l)·aci ,
Porn . VIII.
Cleatus Amett to Herald Oi l &amp;
Gas Co.. Righi of Way. Rutland.
Columbia Gas Trans.Corp and
MichaPI Kinmld. Agree, Leba non.
Jm;pph M. Magnott a, Carol An n
Magnoli a Ia Grcgmy L. Walbum ,
.Jacqurl\np A. IV albu m , Pt Loi. 412,
Midd . Viii.
Pat E. MilchPll, Marrella Sur
Milchell 10 Rol:x&gt;rt L. Williamson,
Donna L. Williamson, Lot 9.
Ruiland.
iliby A. Marlin, rta l 10 Cenlral
Trust Co. of S.E. Ohio. N.A ..
Sheriff's Df&lt;'d, Porn. Vii i.
\ 'irgiJ H. Roush. &amp;&gt;tt v J . Rous h Ia
Jam£'s A. Heaton, HPie~ L. Heaton.
parcels, Chester.
,
James H. Heaton. Helen L.
Hea ton lo .JamC's E . Watson.
Debor ah J. Wat son, parce ls,
ChPsler.
Hou sehold of Fait h Mission
C'hun;:h lo Roll'rt L. Searles. Loi 8,
Rulla nd Viii.
Mrs. Albert (Velsia) Roush,
Orlando J . Andreoni. Manna J. Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy, is a
Andrron i lo Ohio Power Co .. Righi patient at the Holzer Medical
Cent er. Her room number Is tl2.

Hospitalized

moroy . Ohio. 46769.

By virlure of an Ordar of
Sale inued out of the Com·
mon Pletl Court of Meigs

FIRST PARCEL: 8oing the

County. Ohio. in tho

0110 of
Ollmond Savings &amp; Loan
Company, Plaintiff. againlt

west one· half of Eight· f ive

.Dwight E. Con, ot ol .. Dofendlntl, upon • Judgment
therein rendered,
being

C.11 No. 85 CV 376 in sold
Court, I will offer for sale. at
the front door of the Court·
houJe in Pomeroy, Meig1
County. Ohio, on the 11th
·doy of July. 1986. et 10 :15
1.m ., the following lands
1nd tenements. located at
162 Butternut Avenue. Po·

S ituate in the Village of
Pomero y, Cou nty of Meigs
and State of Ohio .

(86) foot off tht toll lido of
Lot No. 606, locotod on the

so uth side of Butternut Av·
enu e, seld abOve desc ribed
piece being all of Lot No.
506 formerly owned by Elle
Bigg1 Rappold , except that
pan 10ld to Clara M. Bing.

SECOIIID PAR CEL: Being

in ontl hundred acre lot No.

303 In Town 2. Ronga 13:
Beginning at the southeast
corner of lo t forme rly O'Nned

Un~ ••cept~n•

are fil-

ed thereto, utd eccountt

to u id eccounta or to matt.,. pertelnlrtg to the excu-

Molgo County, Ohio
t61 9. 1tc
Public Notice
IIIOTtCE
Con•er-

vancy Dlatrict will eccept
IHied bidl It ill office

located ot 34481 Corn Hol- will be Monday, Juno 9.
low Rood, Rutland, Ohio 12:00 Noon. ~
4677&amp;, for purchtoe by
Further information. it relt1dlng Cl'lllt Con11rvoncy quired, can be obtained from

District of one new motor
vehicle a followe;

wN!om mlrroro. H.O, ltont

IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS
PROlATE COURT
M.EIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Account• and vouchers of
the following named fiduci ·
ariet have been filed in the

Probtte Court. Molgo Coun-

ty . Ohio, for approvll and
setUement:

fuel tonk. H.D. btttery. cargo

tight, candy tpple rod, troillr
towing

ptekege,

receiver

typo hitch.
All bido mult be filed ot
the office of leading CrHk

dty of Juno, 1981. mwelvo

twelve o'clock noon . All bid•
will btl oponed on the 18th

Louloe Martin. decouod .
ESTATE 1110. 26.094. Fi·

and 58, being record of

tor of the Est1te of Nellte E.

wife to Benjamin F. Dyke
and being the same real es·
tate herein de s cribed.

naland DlstributN111Account
at Mildred M. Cam1han 8ld
Ruth C. Simpson. Ancillary
oo-admininrator• of the Es-

toto of Rolph C. Hill, De·

S~uoto

on Sug~r Run in ·the Village

Wiled.

of Pomeroy, Moigo County,

ESTATE NO. 24.928 FI-

Ohio, bounded a1 follows :
Beginning at the 10uthwe1t
corner of Mechanic Street
end
Sugar Run Street;
thence southerly with the

thence in a northerly

HOME OPERATORS: Persons in Gallia , Jackson and
MeiJS counties who are
willm&amp; to participate_in a
foster type procram for
people with emotional pro·
blems. Reimbursement is
1450 a month . Must be licensed by the State Dt·
partment of Mental Health .
For more information contact I!Jrbara Cox, Coordi·
nator of Community . Sup·
port Services at Woodland
Centers. 614 -446 -5500.

and anow tirn and wheel1,
8-pty. tran1mi11ion cooiM.
gauge•. ammeter end oil. H.
0 . knitted vinyl Mit, aux .

ESTATE 1\10. 25,001. FI-

Dtods of Dec. 20. 1869, Ru11ell, Oecoutd.
from Josiah Huntley and
ESTATE 1110. 24.016. Fl-

direction along Butternut
Avenue 69 V2 feet to the
place of beginning. See Re·
cords of Deed• of 11id Meiq1

the office of tha District.

39561 Bor 30 Rood. RoodsSPECIFICATIONS: 19a7 ville, Ohio 45772. The Dio·
V. ton Stylttlde 4x4 pickup. trict has the right to accept
302 engine or equivalent. au· or reject any or all bid s.
lllmotlc tronomlolion. Nm- (51 29; (61 2, 9, 3tc

nal and 0 istributive Account
of Etta E. Payne. Executrix
---::--,--:c-.,--- l of the E1t1te of Margeret

THIRD PARCEL:

IQcated at the Trell!tment
Plant. well field and the Suecell tank. All blddert ers to
U1llize the u1e of,radio, giwe
detailed specifiCation&amp; to installation and prov,de new
wiring diagram• to match
existing prints. The District
will require a performance
bond on the in1tellatton;
warranty all hardware and
one year guarantee on parts
end labor. Bid opening date

Probate Division,

nal and Di1tributive eccount

of Clarence L. Atherton, E~ ­
ecutor of the Estate of Arthur C . Atherton. Dece11ed .

ESTATE 1110. 21 ,517 So·
tine of Sugor Run Str•l lor- oond end Final Accoum of
tv-throe (43) feot til Butter- Marion F. Ebersblch, Trus·

II

I

INTERESTED IN BUYING
APPROXIMATELY 2112
ACRES OF ST. IT. 7 NEAR
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL?
IF SO, PLEASE PHONE
HOME NATIONAL BANK

POMI

TRENCHING IS OUR LINE
Trenching of Any Type

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

Cullom Welding

VT,

WlUAMS lREN&lt;Hr.G

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

24 TABL£TS

NOW

I lit 11111

221

367-7S.O - 367-7671
CH!5HIIf, OHIO

EUGENE LONG

TOWN &amp; COUNliY

SUPERIOR

VEmiNAIIAN

SIDING CO.

Paul E. Shockey, DVM

CUNIC

VINYl &amp; AWMINUM

PT. PLEASANT OFFICE
30 5 JMkstll lwt.

Complete Gutter Work
Comp le1e Remo deling
Roofing of all Types
Worked in home ar ea

SIULL &amp;-ll HOUIS
Mon.-Wod.-Thun. 3·5 pm
IUH. 6:30·1; Fri. 1·2 pm
loturda1 10- t1 :30 om
LARGE ANIMAL &amp;
SUIGIIY IY &amp;PPI.

20 yean
" Free Estimates "

CAU COLLECT:

Ph. (614) 843· 542S

5-12-'86-2 mo.

PH. 304·1175-2441

BEND AIEl CALL
Ripley Office

U! VIIU! .

TUIS

· AFRII

IIULIPIII

••o womo

..
NOW 2

-1 Ol. ·HCIIW. lflnlk

1

'IMI"

... 111

NOW

4~&amp;~VALUE
FILM

NOW2!~UUE
241

U! VIIU!

IIWIIIII TI..O
ILIE FIIEYEI Til
12 oz.

..
NOW 3

POMrROY
992 2181

5-10-' 86'1 mo.

Help Wanted

FRENCH CITY LIMITED
TEMPORARY JOB SERVICE
Providing :
• Janitorial Services
*Bookkeeping Services
•secretarial Personnel
*Computer Operators
'Interior / Exterior /Painting
*Wallpaper / Stenciling
*Farm Help
' Mother's Helper
'Handyman
*Yard Work
have a need, wt can fill it with qualified

54 OZ. SIZE

NOW2~!!UE

If you
people. whether for afew hours or afew days.
For -further informatian, call us al 446-101 II.

ILD SPICE

am•••••
LOTIII

4Y• Ol IOTil!

NOW

41

3

TMTIPISTE
It~

NOW

U!
VIIU!

Oil Fioitf Str•k•,

FllfE ESTIMAliS

Call
992-5006
or 742-3147

6-4-'86-1 mo .

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

10·8·tfc

• IPPreciatt. tn e~~c . cond~ion.

0"
Rt. 1M
Crown
C itv114
OY•IDP
Eu on
St.,.ion.
Ca~
·211·
1711

....

t171

landscaping, lose~~entt,
lon&lt;l Clooring, hnols. lopti&lt;
lytt.,.o, Ho..y Hauflng.
Stt111 &amp; GrDYti Htullnt
lltctrtcal Werk

RESIOENTIAL, COMME"CtAL
6 INDUSTRIAl
!Cenified Ele&lt;:trlcitn)

DOll 10$1,

o-r

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUAITUS FOR
•ZENITH

IUSS
ELECTRIC
MOTOR
REP AII

•SYLVANIA

•SP!!D QUf!N lAUNDRY
•GIBSON R!FRIGEUTOR
•IATnuTE SN.ES &amp; S!RVICI
Wt Hn.! -. hll Tl•
Silo~ Ttt~elel..

lt. 1, lox 27-1
32933 lomint ld.
lutland, Oh. 45775

••lily .

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; AI'PLIANCf

PHONE
(6141/7 42-2070

CHEITEI- 91S·3307

5-29-'M-1 mo.

HUTCHISON
CONSTRUCTION
Milo I. Hutchison
Contractor
NEW HOMES,
ROOFS . DECKS .
ELECTRICAL &amp;
PLUMBING

PH. 742-2306
or 742-3171

5-19-'86'·1 mo.

4/ 1/ tln

RADIATOR

MANLEY$
TRASH
SERYlCE

A/C

SERV1CE

APPLIANCE REPAIR

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

Microwaw Ovens.
Rarces, Air

We can repair and re ·

Experienced Service ill
Condilioners ,
Refrigerators. Washers
&amp; Dryers , 1Vs &amp;
Satellite Systems.

PAT HILL FORD

24 Hr. !m«gtn&lt;y l orviot

992 -2196
Middleport. Ohio
1-13-lfc

949-2145

Servicin1 Middleport.
Pomeroy &amp; Five
Points Area
•Cemmonial Conloiner
Service Available•

CALL 992·3194
!/ l-1110.

S-12 ·1 mo .

3 AnnouncemeniS

•.

2~9~ALUE

C

leaning Services
om mercial &amp; Re sidentia l

IIOT IIU

,

. I....

Call SPECIAL TOUCH C ~aniot SeNices
for all your cleaning ]o s-

!.S oz.

No job too

NOW 1ll

WATER
WELLS

'VINYL SIDING

2 CAR GARAGE

• ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULA nON

T-111 Sidin&amp;. 2 Overhead

DIIUED &amp;
SERVICED

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

FREE ESTIMATES

Ph. 992-5006
or 7U-3147

5-19-'86 -tfn

Compelilivo prices
Senior ci tiz en card discount

2

11

One -tim e, occasional, or·long-term options
Trai ned , uniformed personnel

4.H iMlf!

Thorough ' lop-lo-boltom ' cleaning
Tri-State area services

disaster, or special cleaning jobs
Sati sfacllon ovaluallon

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

24'x21' Complete
Wood Doors , I Entr1nce
Door, 5 Windows . Built on
Concrete Si1b.

$6,49510

New Homes Built

_

PH. 949·2101

J&amp;L INSULAnON
&amp; SIDING CO.

or 949·2160
No Sunday Colis

992-2772

"Free Estimat•"

.........

'

'

3 hmtty V•d Sale, 501 First
StrMt. apartrMnt A, Tu•day &amp;
Wldn•day. Junt 10 • 11 . Little
bi1 at IYMV1hif'lg.

co,..,.,V

w.-

Go~emment

Aee.l nioe • yr . blaclt It tilver
G1rmen Shepherd to fOOd c ountry hOme . c.n 814·388-8800.

Kitten• to good home. Cell

814 ·448 -23 16 .
6 1i11 week old puppfn. 1 m .. l . •
fem ales. Fuzzy brown Huskie.
Collie mi.a-.1. Call 814 -992·
niB.

1747 .

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TYs, Antennas
Satellite Sales

6 Lost and Found

jobl tUI.040 ·
lri9. 230 yr . Now hiring . C111
106-111 7· 1!1000 11111 . A·.\&amp;82 fof'
cunent tederlllitt.

Ar .. SYperv ..ors netdtd to hire,
lnd men au• toy p•rty pertonn ...
P~ect job f or 1ho1e who would
lilt• to work •t home 1)1' at a
second income . C1ll today col·
lect :Jl"-138·8330 .

LlctV wtntl mldd!Mgld lldy to
••Y with "" 2 day• • ~.

All major appliance ra-

poin (including micro·
wovnl . Atoo Ltwn

L01t: Large male Chow. Blo nd•.
Lost in Long Hollow ''" ·

mower repair . Mobile
aerv ice.

614-IU-5241
614-949-2145

&amp;-4-'86-11110 .

DON'S MOBILE HOME

REPAII SERVICE
UNDERPINNING &amp; SOUP

$ptlng $p•el1/

" At Reasonable Prim "

985-3561
All M1ku
•Washe rs •Dishwashe rs
•Ranges
•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE
4~

BISSELL
BUILDERS

MOBILE HOME ROOF PAINTING

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

$9 5

OFFEII GOOD THIIU JUNE 5, 1'86

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

992-3361

4-16 -' li tfn

~~ ~

IIClUD!S "INT
&amp; LAlOR

614 -992-5809 .

F11 AU

SATEUITE
SALES

y,., Mlfifl Nuh

&amp;

,WS: Offict Suppin &amp;

Signs, lubbor Slamps.
lusin111 Forms,

Copy Sonicts, ft&lt;.
255 Mill Sl, Mi441tpOrt
104 fltultooorry ••.. '•moro1

992-3345

SOUTHERN MILLS
CARPET OUTLET

Lott. MHOn at'. .. fllld l enji·
""" 4og with btecll toll•. farnitv
pet . Rew-ard t 304-773·5043 .

Wanted To Buy

992-6173

33482.

We PlY cuh for late mod~ deen
Uled cef'S.
J im Mini! Chev .-Oid t Inc.
Bill Gent Jotm10n

0!4-«6 -3672
TOP CASH paid fof '83 mode l
and n...-81' used cars . Smith
Bu idi · PontiK. 1911 E11tem
A~1 .. Gellipc&gt;Jit. C•ll 81 " ·446·

2282.

WANTED TO BUY uHd wood &amp;
coli Maters . SWAIN ' S FURN I·
TUR E, lrd. &amp; Olive St. GaHipo·
lis. Cell81• ·441·311t.

742·2027

2U Of 312 cu .in. ford motor in
good con d. C1ll 81 " · 441 · -4063 ,

Couple would Ukt to purch111
property ckt1e to ftJwn. lit.
Pl...ant . Preftr lerte bu*fr,g
kat or small ec,...e. Cell
175-4054 tvanlnp.

30•-

JEFFERS EXCAVATING

PO.IOY, CillO
lackhots, llllltlours, End Leader, Dump
Trucks, Self L.a4ing P1n, Heny Hauling and
Winch Trucks
•Water Line
•Ba111ments
•Limeetone
•Gas Line
ot.and Clearing •Fill Dirt
•Top Soil
•Septic Tanks •Ponds

59 N. 2nd be.
Mltldltport

"Frtt Estimates"
lnstallalien AYailablt

Nut D11r 1• Wnttr" Auto

filE ESTIMATIS

992-6714

992-3525

5-20-' \16'1 mo.

IUft.D

PLUMIING &amp; HEAnNG

U~

MILLE I

•lOCAl

Now LtcaHtltli . ·
161 Ntr1h Second
MiiWiopart, Ohla 45760

Metalltii4inp
*l'all

ELECTIIC
SEIVICE

SALES &amp; SERVICE

*Slintt ltildnp

FOR AU YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

We C....-y Flthlng Suppll•

Pey Your Cable lo
Phone Billo Here
P'IP _ : IUSINISS l'ltOHC

-oalila l'ltON!
·(.141 992-

~

-

Residentiel &amp; CanHIIIrclol

tM! SIZ'ES AVAIIAIL£

WAMSLEY l GRAY
S·l4-llo.

IIS-3316

i ·
I '

E••ilflatd body shop peln1M
IIRd front and Hgnment ttchn i·
citn, witt~ deal..-thip ~..-ianc.
only . ContectJedl Collins, P.rts
and Stntice Director. Sind
r..ume to Jim C obb. 31({ E.
M1in St .. Porr.roy.

Govemme"t Job1. 116,040 .
t 59,230-yr. Now hiring . Call
10!5-e87-8000 E111t . R-9805 fDf
c urrent federal lilt.

12

i l~idllw 'II •1:

EXOTIC BIRDS,
TROPICAL FISH,
HAMSTERS.
KITTENS. BIRD
SEED, CAGES 8o
AQUARIUMS

EASY ASSEMBlY WOitKI
171.\ .00 per 100. Guer1nt..ct
peyment . No~al• . DetiHI-Stnd
ltamptd erweiOp t : Eltn· 715.
3 418 Enterprile, Ft. Pi1rc1, Fl.

Situations
Wanted

Pr ivett ho me ca re fo r Ienior
n c llld references .
C.IIIU· !I92· 3&amp;91!i.

citillltr'll .

Sw im lnso ns private Of group ,
Red C to u Uf111vin g 1nd W.S.I .

8-1! tfn

THE IIID CAGE
&amp; FISH POND
Pn SHOP

catl you . hcetlent Hmtnt•·
Ptrfact ,.tir...·Anyon•. kay
Brown 1-913-539-3387.

9• 12 or lllfger rugt . Prefer blue
Of' brown . Calll14·143- 6149 .

5/13/ 1 mo.

3/2/ Nn

Sllnmen : Ttttmlltltting, Th'ey

z

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

Holuon ld., Mi&lt;Witport

Eny Auembty Work! 1714.00
per 100. Guarentetd P1ym.-.t.
No S1l11 . Deta ils·· Stnd
stamp~ tn~elope : El•n·68•7
:M18 EntlfJ)ril e. Ft . Pierce fl.

I will do Odd jobs 1nd mow fn g.
Call ., 4· 446· 8268 .

::c Licensed Clinical Audiologist

LARRY'S

dantlal irlterviiWt, ahtmoon ,
collet4-44e -3615 .

- LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~

pda1e Your Systems Now

In a.t.. ro w 7 Keep pr..tnt }o b.
Mike mo re II Plrt ·time than

Buying d.tty told , liNer co inl,
rintl. j.w-'ry, 1ttr1ing wars, o' d
coin s. lqe curr.-.cy . Top pr i·
c• . Eel . Burkett Berber Sho p,
2nd. Ave. Mid disport , Ot.. 81 " ·
992·3478.

a:

REPAIRS

Furnitur1, W1dding

and GrDIIualion
Stationary, Mognoti&lt;

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
C!l Co~uterizad H•rin&amp; Air Selection
z Swim Molds · lnteJPretinJ SeJVices

Saturdey1. Call

33482.

LOST brown ri m PfHCription
ala11• in Se•r, cau, 30•-875·
1943.

Wan11d junk auton. Call 61 4·
311-9303 .

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

•

114-4"6· 1"1" or IU · "~6 t023 .

you • re now. Local ludl we.
mlk• the IPPOintmenu. Confi·

FOUND eyeglsaset . Name on
fr1m Jeremy Zimco. Sr. Cl
814-379-2408 .

Installation strYict

5-20-'li-1 nro.

311t Ill•

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

(tl41 "2-ll50

SPEC IAL TOUC H. A C\~sion o! Guinfl er·Kiser Enlerprises.

... ... PfPiiiiiiiiiiif ·····
&amp; Vicinity

(1 1 C•• Mlnager • (11 Part·
NOAH 'S ARK ANIMAL PAAK. time Ca•• Manegllf-Pirt-timt
C ieri~ . 12 month• poaitionl·
Schoo... church",
pic:n ics, birthday pt~rtlll and qu11ific1tion•: BA degree in
fllfflity reun ions. Clll 814-384· rtl1t«&lt; field. &amp; lbla to meet Ohio
Daputm1nt of Mtntll
2101 or 1·100· 282-2187.
Ret trdl t i on - De~ t lopmt nttl
llutgr111 and country music 11 OislbilltiM; OMAP ctrtiflcltlonl
Potton LHe New Enttend, Ohio requ lrtments, or willtng to obon Jur'le 14th ttartlng at 1:00 tain . S1lary as per ul1ry tch•
,m . llftdl 1ra Lany SparU ~d ~ • • Upllfi.-.c», {I 14,000·
The Loneaome Rambltrl , The I 1 9 , 000). The G1Ul1 County
R011 JUg1br,t land, The H1rts Bo•rd of MR ·0 0 thlll ensure
Broth.,.. 1nd othtrt. Direction I , th1t on go.,g &amp; consistent
At . 50 hst to Guysville, Ohio appropri•t• training will bt
end follow the sjgnt . Adm iSiion pro~lcllded to CueManegemtnt
t10.00 . Childr., under 12 free . pertonnel in IIPICific 1kill ar1at
to miJiimize lht efftcttv.,..•• II,
Br6ng your own latWn r.t.&amp;irs .
efficienCY of thuerv k:edelivtry.
Trlinln g • tllptr'-nct in tht
4
Giveaway
follow ing 1rNs will be cont ._
dertd Mlpful if not • .-.tial: A.
Nature &amp; needs of MR ·DD
Cuddty puppies, labr-' or mi•. indlvidutll; B. Counseling of
Cell 61 ' ·MI -28215, lo cated on MR · DD individuell&amp; thtirf~mi­
lies: C. BlhiVJor Mtn~g~emtnt at
St. Rt. 180.
indi'liclutll who have MR -00:
3 tone haifld white llittent . C111 o. Delivery at strY ices to
per10n1 with MR -00; E . Knowl11"·441 ·0403 call~ny time.
edge rag ardlng 1~ •~•llebllity of
2 long haired wh;te cltl moth., rteaurces &amp; how 10 "lin k up "
• kit1tnt. CeUI14· 441 -4831or indiYidu1 .. ao thoM lentOO: &amp;
F. Knowtedge rtglrding intllf ·
814 ·441·1810.
tgency oooper•tiant clusttrt,
! wh ite m1le rllbblts. Cell potldivt &amp; .:lvocacy HrVICII.
All app li eetionl tNatl.tlle It:
114 -446 -1149 .
G111i1 County Bo1rd of MA -00
P.O. Box 14 Chnhire, OH
6
old JtUpp6n. Call 61 " ·
-41820 • Call 814· 387·0102.
:189 -83 34.
A"'lc.tiDn dNdlin• June 13,
Good home, solid whit e m111 1918. " An Equal Opportunity
Employer "
house c.t, nMtrtd, h11 hed
shots. Cal 11•-4At·0085 .

9
(CUT OUT FOI FUTURE US!i

Services include:
FREE estimalos

" family y•rd ..... Jun• 8th.
1Oth •nd 11th. 42_15 Spr~gA~a ..
Pom.roy . From 9.00 ·4.00.

«e-D294 .

--------"'1 .- - - -- -

992·5232

5/ 23/' lti/ 1

(614)446-8016 . 24-Hour Answering

IWIJIII
111UMIIIATDR
1!.! 01. WI

flOW

big or too smalL

7th . Morning Star Sub Division,
Cou nty Rd. 30. 81•· 949-2137.

• TuMdiYI

FEIIICI CO..lNf
'"·Altwr
992·6931
S Call

SPECIAL

· lcLarge glrtge tale. June 8th •

SWEEPER ~nd tWiinl m~ehWlt~--------­
repair, p.rts, and 1Uppli• . Pick
.._and
deiN•ry. Dwis VKuum 11
Help Wanted
Cle•ntr , on• half m i le up
_ __ ..:__ _ _ _ _
Georg• Cr ... Rd . C• lt 61• · -

Kitl.,. to goetl f'KKM . 304-175-

ACCENT

Rou~ ne.

'

taro, bldmm"''"'· Como to ••

Clll:
tt2·517S Or·
742·3195

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SEIVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUfSVllf, OHMl
Aulherilld Jthn DMro,
Now lltHolntl, hsh Hot

Pert. &amp; Serwlee

YUrll

Al p.,iln ife

Ca ll 614 -448· 3011 .

Oete il Cart. Motors, in1.. trtg .,

trunkl , pain t rubber, polit"ed
.,d wutd . C1ll eo.~ en ingt ., till
11 :00 814 -387·0488 01' tel It
101 Court St . Atk fm J am•.
!'to~ .

M arcu.ms Garage 11 tvPII tul o

wor~j Spec laltlt on GMC d l•et
1r1gmes. Cal 81 " · 2• &amp; - 6821 .~

Help W•nted

Certified Nur1ing A11ist1n1 will
~ priv ate duty nursing - In
A~ON .

3 op., t811'itori•. Ctll
l0"· 176-1&lt;4 29 .

W1nttd

m1turt rtiPOfltiblt

.clult to c•r• tor 2 1chool age
cMdren during tumnMf dav
thlfl. ~" - Roo . 304-175-7179 .
Matu" ltdy tvltve in end c•efo r
tid.,.,_ men. rl'f...-, ctt. cell
304· &lt;M18 -1721 .

1-Dme-hospit • l.

96 35 .

c.n eu-..a.

Will do an y yard w ork. miftor
rep1in . painting in l icle or ou t
H• ~•

references . 304 · 67!) .

7 991.
Will be by1it in my home, ftneed
ylfd, h av~tr eftr., ces . 30" · &amp;76-

2784.

•

Now Hlr.,gll kteettDb for mottr.·

.,.., former, .. ~ . .. ,.,., plan
- "'"'•
ro1 Lltrd.
rwtne
wl104s.
. . . ,roc
...,..

f lll. illl' ,d l

.,P•
""- "*'•• _.... In home
- -· ·Gr'llt ,..,,

llfn

HIWaii

trip. Trtlnlt pno.Wooi, Coil Col-

loci

lor doooolioo, 304-744-0924.

21

8usine11
Opportunity

*100.000.000 Co... ony N-

Div lllon Hlr.,g, ground ftoor
qtportunity far hD,.. ba1td job.
Top polition a1 pert plan ~upervl ·
IOf. FrH trM!Ing IUPPIIM 1nd
Hmpln. Call oo""' fOt' dllalll.
lolly Voroloi3041744-0U4.

•. ... ..,. =="·
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
:..,
.-;
,.,.......,
......
,. ,,

, . . . . . . . .1111

Clr1 if itd . 7

C.ll614· 441 · 1426 .

'

11

18 Wanted to Do

Will do bllbytitting in my

.) t •r 'o~1• 1 ,

IETEIIEIT
50 OZ. BOX

t Gl. NK

121

MovO.gSolo J uno7. 111loold ou t

Fumitura, picnic tabla. canning

DI SHWI.IHrNG

-~!i!l!;iil! YALU£--1

COLUTE

llrgt . ltwnmower , )t werly ,
m•te rial. st ro llllfs , misc. 150 Neil
A...

Division of Guinther·Kiser

NOW

flOW

MGM Farm City

992-2772

LIMIT 2

10 OZ. SI'IAY

BUI K OR BAG Gill

J&amp;L INSULAnON
&amp; SIDING CO.

WI

CL110.24 !Jf'OStiRlS

....an

Priced

FREE ESTIMATES

lEAn lin IETIIIEIT

39

KODACOI.OR VR

11111' IIIII

W i ndow •

under '300

8 .ROLL
PICI
NOW

Size Box
NOW

YIOinll SPIOIILS
~ODA~

•Mo1t

BIG

42 Oz.

FREE ESTIMATES

•Refrigerators

BATH TISSUE

2!4~ALU£

YOUR NEEDS
PLENTY OF
SPREADERS

2.15 IALUI
TUMS -ISO'S -2.11

1• Tlii.ETI

1

[_...:.....:.
' ~·[.:_
·~~!!~II

ROSE EICAYA11NG

BlENDED TO

Insulated Gless

11

HIIHLAID IUDOW
Ill I-ROLL PACK

PIE·IUL fiiLITS • 3D'S

PRI CES7

Bot

EICEDRII

DEllTRIM

WANT THE BEST
FERTILIZER AT
THE lOWEST

•Tilt I n To Clean

' OL son ltMSI

STRENGTH

NOW

54 Misc. Merchandise

FOR THE BEST IN
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

PERil
SOFT
SHMiroG II CIIIDITIOJI(I

7$ '5 · P(PI•UJIIIIIT

304-372-5709
10- 14-llc

Window•

• ! .H VllU!

_ _....;
4 ·.:.1:.
~ ·.:'8:.6·~
1c

For Hours

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

e 3,4"

Now411

_

1q loaoor Itt.
~. 0.

Michi91n Sale Antique dilhtt,
toy1, cloth ing , newborn , X-

UCI., aHtt

IF NO ANSWER CAU:

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

2 fam ily yard u le, 1520 Fourth

WATEI WELLS
SERVICED
AND
DRILLED

•Vinvl Replacements

IIGUUIIO'S
Ofl 0 ws

L _

~~

1123/'1511 ....

1-17-86-lfn

OIL
TRITE
t'OIIIOKlOI'

OXY 10
Kill ,11111rtJ MI DICI1101

IUPRII

3-24 -tfc

-IICiliiii

~

949-2493

949-2263
or 949-2168

JUIE.16th

992-6215 or 992-7_3_14_
Pomeroy, Ohio

'7

,

Home 143-5340

o• HIS DAYt

To Limit Quantities

eGA 'flU

V• ( • YOUNG Ill

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

•PINS
-TIAU
eCHAIMI

•MIDALS

[free Elt imetes)

fUll

NEW- IEPAIR

w, Reserve The Right

'f'LAOUIS

work

Alte Trmmlulon

Emorgen'y 949 -2516
5-29-16 I mo.

ROOFING

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

- Con crete work
- Plumb in g and • le ctrical

lintn

a£1rtoa

HONOR DAD

- Roofing 1nd gu tter wortt

'73 -'10 OM Fuuder• .. . Ut
73·10 OM
Rock• Panetl ...... .... ... .. 11
73· 11 Ford Fender1 ..... 139
Trudl Bid

POMEROY - 5 acres ol
wooded land lo entOY are
grea l. Add to lh rs a 3 bedroom , 2 balh horne with basemen\, garage, and barn
makes il ideal lor you' Near
lawn - good condition .
Only $28 ,000 DO

rn

Ph (6141 ,92-2834.
192-6704
FREE ESTIMATES

······· p·o;n·aroy--········

- Addona and remocWing

RACINE, OHIO
Office 949-2431

PRICE REDUCED - On this
6.05 acre lract and a nrce 3
bedroom home. Close to Pomeroy but sec luded Ow ner
needs losell At $19,!XJO.OO.

992-6191

Rr. 4, ~ysell Run Rd.
Pomsroy , Ohio 46769

·· ···· Giillijjona-······· ·
&amp; Vicinity

RAYMOND E. PROFFm (MAC)

NEW LISTiNG - CHESTER
- Sri on your screened
porch and view a 3.61 acre
lot dotted with abundant
sh ade trees or rela• in this 3
bedroom one floor plan home with I ~ baths. All applrances rncluded , washerdryer. add lo the convenience of being rn the country,
pond, storage buildin g-eel·
lar. What more could you
want lor $34,900.00

Jean Trussell .. ... 949-2660
Doll re Turner ..... 992 -5691

SERYKE

'1'afd SaleS

CARPENTER
SERVICE

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

5·7-2 mo.

Howard L. Writtrel

HURRY Ill! THESE s-_LE·
PRICES·GOOD THRU
JUNE 15th, 1986 OILY!

The Daily Sartinal Plige 7

YOUNG'S

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124,Pornoroy Ohio

licanood 8o Bunded

NEW LISTING - BRAD ·
BURY - Fa rm with nrce 2
story, 4 bed roomhome. This
prop erty will pay for nself.
Free gas tohome, royalty tn ·
come lrom tw o well s, rental
income fro m 2 bed room
house . farm has trllable
acreage, barn, ga rage, oul·
buildings. Some fencing.
Call for an appointment
$63.900.00.

Henry E. Cleland, Jr.

Backhoe Service
Plumbing Service

Lowboy Hauling'
Septic Syltem•

0.

!9~ · 2259

949-2210.

tee of the Trust under the

GREAT BEND ELECTRIC, Inc.
E . Mainl~

LANGSVILLE AREA - 2'h
acres rn the country &amp; near
Mrne ij l Thrs 3 bed room
ra nch type home rs a true
ba rgarn. Ca rpeloo , lor ced
arr lurnace. ce llar house,
gard en sp ace, hurt tree s &amp;
woodburner hookups.

Real Estate General

County, VoL 38. pages Sa of Colvin Lone, Admlnlotra-

thence southerly along said
Oavie1' or Peoples' line 35
fset to a ltake; thence ••·
terly along the line of lot
formerly owned by Andrew
Reid 100 feet. more o r less.
to Butternut Avenue to a

1111

Common Pleao Court.

Leeding Creek

Ohio

Business SerVices

LEGALIIIOTICE

The Tuppera Plalna·Chet·
then live doyo prior til tho tar Water Diitrict 11 inviting
date tet for hearing.
bidt for the replacement of
Robert Bud!, Judge the telemeterinu system
tkJn of the trult, not

Pomeroy- Middleport,

o.' clock noon , et the office of
leading Creek Con1ervency
Di1trlct.

will be for hoiorlng before IPtK:Iflc ations can be ob·
oold Coun on the 10th doy t1ined It the Leading Creek
of July. 1888, ot which limo Connrvancy Di1trict Of11ld ICCouAta will bl conald· flee ,
•
•ed end continued I rom doy (812 . 9. 16. 31C
111 doy until flnolty dlopoood
of.
Any pe'*'n lnterolled
Public Notice
moy flit written ••coptlono

- - - - - - - - -1naland Distributive Account

owned by E. W. Poopleo;

Monday, June 9, 1986

TERMS : Cosh. Copioo of

opringo. {51 7:00x15 Olld

Public Notice

by George Black on Butternut Avenue: thence wntarly
along 11id Black ·, line 100
feet . mo re or le11, to the line
of Alban Davies lot, now

Jean W1rner,

Doceooed.

Connrvoncy Dlltrlct on lho
17th dty of Juno. 1986, by

Public Notice

post

Mer~n

9, 1988

Real Estate General

and rear 1hocks, aux.. rur

Ill Cmt St.. Po111eroy, Ot.r~ 45769

Public Notice

Will of

• f, June

Public Notice

iled slip rtlr exle. 1'81r step
bumper, bright low mount

Public Notice

D~d l '

IIIOTICE OF SALE

Public Notice

ooulhtoottrty direction along
of Way, Rulland .
ltld S1 lwei, thonDt
J ames M. Gregory to Millard north 30 dog , .... u~ a&gt; Mochtnlc StrMt; thonoo
Burke, parcels, Colum bia .
In I WMttrly dlroCticn Whh
Frank Cleland, Delores M. Cle - Moclionlc .,..., 81 '"' 111
la nd, to Jonathan Scou Rees. tho pltco of beginning.
Thlo convoyonot II mode
Michelle Renee Rees. 0.437A. Ratubject to 1 reHrvttion concine Viii .
tolned In thtt ctrttln dttd
James R Brown, Lucille Bro wn from Thalma P . McMurray
to Mason Brya nt , parcels, Pt . Lots ond J. Wllllo McMurrey, htr
huobtond, to The Prenktln
7U &amp; 72. Porn . VIII.
Root Eotltt Company doted
Harold R. SetI)', Betty J . Setty to September
18, 1984. ,..
Buckeye Rural Elecl. Corp. Inc .. cordtd In Volume 222, Pogo
Righi of Way, Columbia .
171 oftho Ot~d Roco;do of
Joseph W. Scraggs lo Buckeye Mefgo County. Ohio.
Being the Nnw prtmitll
Rural Elect. Corp. Inc., Right of
ocquired
by Tho FrtnkNn
Way, Rutland ,
Rotl Eototo Company, from
Ja mes D. Euler, Dec., Ethel Thelma P. McMurrey end J .
E uler, Cerl. of l i'ans., Porn. &amp; Willis McMur ray, her hu1·
btond. by warranty dttd
Mldd. VOL
dtttd Soplombtor 18. 1984.
Muriel M. Young, DE&lt;?., to Rufus recorded in Volume 222 .
W. Young, Affld., Rutland.
Pogo 171 of the Ot1d Reof Molgo County.
Inez Claire Aboiln, Theodore corda
Ohio.
Abolin , Ma rvin L. Keebaugh, MarReference DHd: Volume
jorie J. Keebaugh to Marvin L. 289, Pogo 13. Meigo CounKeebaugh, Marjorie Keebaligh. ty D•d Rocordo.
Approilod •• •30.000.00.
parCl'ls, Orange.
The re~l8111te e~~nnot be sold
Marvin L. Keehaugh, MarjorleJ . for 1t11 thtn two-thlrdo of the
Keehaugh. Inez Claire Abolln , apprailed 'value.
TERMS OF SALE: Cuh.
Theodore Abolln to Inez Claire
Howord E. Fronk. Sheriff
Abolln , Theodore Abolin, parcels.
of Mtigl County. Ohio
Oran g&lt;&gt;.
,
(81 9. 1 8, 23, 3tc

-- - - - - - - - - - - - -- - --,
The Daily Sentinel
PHONE 992-2156
Or Wule
Sentinel Clmrlrtd Dept
Public Notice

..

,., Ohio

••

"C~rill--

dot-··

1

-·--~~-..­
Fi~-~;..':
.

1 NOTICE r
•
Tl£ OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. rteonvntndl1hlt
dD butirl l!ls wh h p_,lt YQU
~t.ow . •nd NOT to Mnd money
thtougfl t ht "*! until you hl(rl
""'....... lilt ........ .

ypu

Tlltllft fer ... In Mld••cn.
D1 , D2.DJ-tt.~--o.
tvon-

Col doy: 11 4-112·N71
lnfiii4·8U-2173.

�Page- 8- The Daily Sentinel
21

P~-Middleport,

Business
Opportunity

44

LAFF-A-DAY

Priced to sell. Ni9ht C tub o n At

JACKSON ESTATES APART·

7 . 3 mit .. mrth of Po"*"*Y· or.
liquor lic.naewithuny-outbeet

MENTS (EQUal Housk'l; 0pfl0"·
tunlty) monthty rent at1r11 11
t171 for 1 becfroom and UU
tor .Z bedroom. depottt UOO,
loclted nHr Spring VaHev Piau
and Foodland, pool and CableTV
available, office hours u poasl·
bl• 10 amto4pmnd7pmto I
pm Mondi'(-Frkley, Clll 11 4·
441 -2745 or IHve m•sage.

and win a, newly remodeled . Call
61 4-992 -6891 evenings ooty.

23

W11t1W

Professional
Services
w~~tlll

Apartment
for Rent

Nic.ly furnished mobile homt,
eff. apt .. centr•l air and het1ln
clw, adults only. Call614 -441·

aerviced and drilled

Fru est imatet . Cal l 614 -992 5001 Of 614 -742 -3147 .

0338,

PIANO TUNING AN D REPAIR .

46

redisoow&amp;r you r piano ' t beautiful
tone. ca ll today, Wards KtrY ·
board . 304 -675 -5500 or 6715 3824 .

46 Space for Rent

31

Homes for Sale

4 bedroo m house. fireplace, 3

mi '""'h ol Go11ipolio, 029 ,900,

Call days 614·446 · 1615 or
even +n g~ 6 14 · 446 -6222 .

COU NTRV MOI!IIlE Home p.,fl.
Routt 33; Nor1h of Pom.-oy.
l1rge lott:-·c all 114-992· 7479.

"How sick am I? Give or take

a thOUSand dollarS. 11

---,---::----:--,-.,.-:-. f-----------T""-----------1
1' 1 story 4 or 5 bdr . 2 baths. full
baumen t, fireplace , 14 •2 0 .
building with gl!lriQI on 8 .1
acres. loca ted in Rio Grtnde.
Call 614 -245 -5197 after 5.
3-4 bdr .. carpeted . remodel8d .
basemllflt. nice. '12 acre. ';:Z mile
fro m city. $22,500 Call 6 14-

446 -2034 aher 6PM.
Government homes from lll 1.
(U -repair) Daliqu&amp;nt tax prop arty Repossessions Call 805 687 -600 0 a.11 t R-4662 for cur rent repo list.

Ni ce t~•8 c utivft typfl home, 3100
sq.tt . liv . area . ingrou nd pool .
with or without acreage, S .R.
160 . 4 mi . from Holzer. leu&amp;-

opt ion • pOU ibility. Call 614 ·
446 -7322 .
3 bdr large kitchen. batn.
utilityrm. single gMage, 2 car
dri\leway , nice yard, garden
spac:e. finistled ga r~~ge . Can btl
con\le rt ed . f11mily room. Call
614 · 446 · 1358 .

1 bedroom Muse in city, nice ,
many impro\leml!lnts. large out ·
building . price reduced to
$12 .000 . Call614 · 446-3150 .
Wa lk t o t own . schoo l• .
churchet. libra'l, one story , 2
bdr ., attrac tive bath. formal
diningroon . good carpet int .
large kitchen, good gas furnace ,
stor m win dows. Call 614· 446·

0530,

Must se ll ! Fou r bftdroom rni·
dence on approx . 145 aeree
within eety drNing distance of
Ga ll ipolis. Owner financing wi1h
no down payment to qualified
buyer. Property is fen ced and
has 50 acres of crttek bott om.
Priced at S75,000. Call 814·
373- 114 7 ext. 75 .
3 bedroom. n8Wiy redecoratll'ld,
siding . larg e carport.
garag e. on lf• acre lo t in Chesler
One-fourt h mile on 248 off Rt
7 814· 985 -.U6&amp;.
~tl uminum

3 bed roo m. lg. kitchen. tleat
pu mp , air con d. c arpeted, gar·
age, Syracuse. 6 14 -992 -3402
aher 5 pm .
Quality ho me. newly remodeled
choice location on College Rd.
Syracuse, new complete kitchen
and laund'l . air conditioned ,
large lot 614 -992 · 5324.
2 bedroo m Duple• hau te par·
ti allv furniahed . l ow utilities , in
Pomeroy . Call dayt, 814-99 2·
2381 or 614· 992 · 2509 11'\/en·
ings
2 bedroom houte in Pomttoy,
1200 furnistled , $1 815 unfur.
mshed . Pay ow n utilitie1, w ood
burner . larg e yard . Call days
6 14 -992 - 23 8 1 or 614-992 ·
2509 evenings.
1 on ly . New lot mod•t

All
Ameri ca n Ran ctl , J bedroo m,
reduced SJO OO. fo r quick .. le
614-992 ·5587.
Re&amp;tored home, Vine St . Aa cint.
J bedroom , b.th, living room,
kitchen , dining room. Price
S35 .000 . Phone 614 · 949 ·

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALITY
MOilLE HOME SALES , 4 MI .
WEST , GALLIPOUS , RT 36.
PHONE 81&lt;&amp;. &lt;&amp;48 .7274.
121160 Shultz covered porch.
rvrel water, metal ttorage bldt ..
with lot , Crown City . Celli
614 - 251 · 14•4 or 81• · 25·8 ·
1389 0( 304-875· 13U.
1980 liber1y 14x64. 2 bdr .. 111
gil , underp in ning , ttaps ,
bloclct . Mutt bemovld, fl ,500.
Call114 ·448 -0963.
Bamco room -e1teli\lingroom 12
tt by 20 ft . with tliding gillS
doort . Bedroom 12 11. by 12 h .
e11 c. cond. Call 114-441-9552,
S1 ,800
1973 Holtv Parle with lot chain
link fence and outbuilding, CI A,
lo cat ed Gallipolis Ferry. 304·

3 bftdroom Good condi tion. Hu
mo bile hOme on lot . Call 614 ·
742-2291 .
Goverment home1 from 81 . (U
utpair). Del inquent tu property.
Repos1enion1. Call 805· 687·
6000 E11t. H-9806 fo r current
rapo Us t.
- -- - - - -- --lc· 7 ro om housf! 1 •;, bath , C
bed room , garage. 770 A1h St.
M1d d lepo r1. Ohio 614 -992 ·
57 14 .

'•

8 HP 11d ing mower UOO . 3 Vl HP
Sears outboard mower 1150. 8
h . inJulatfKIIruclc topper UOO .
8 h . tru ck ra chl t60 . Telephone
answering mach ine t76 . 17 h .
Bau Boat 1 50 HP Johnson
Moto r $5000 . 614· 696 -1227
ah er 4 :00pm.
Two story house 3 y..n old , 3
bed roomt , 1.800 sq . h . ,
163 ,000 .00 . 30 4 · 882 -2 999
eveninga.
2'h yeer old home , 7 rooms and
bath on 1.8 acrt, G1llipol is
Fer'l, W. \11. 304·876 · 228•.
3 bedroo m. all alec, central ai r,
alte che d garage , Gallipolit
Ferrv. 304· 675 -2932 .

Very ni ce 1973 12 x815 . built
Utopia, 17,000. C-'1 81 4 -UI ·

96C6 .

183acraoffRt.87. 198t U•70
three bed room Skyline mobilt
ho me. large machinery, c at11a
sheck.~5 acres p11Ui'f,73&amp;-idr81
meedow , balance t imber, 2
po ndl . t prlng•. e111c hunting. tlalf
mine ral rights . 165,000 .00 .
304·895-30 60 .
House trailtr, 4611110, 1961
good co nd, new storm windows,

f2 , 100.00 . :IOC·675·C631,

House treiltr. 45x1 0 1986 Good
cond, new storm windowa,
02,100.00, 30C·675·413 1.
1 2d0 Granvi lle mobile homt,
ell electric. lilt &amp; d. air condl·
tionlf. underpann lng, redwood
porch , 304 ·896· ..............
3038.
~

At hton Road are&amp; 1 1h10 mo·
bile home, 2 bfilroomt, 2 full
baths , 1 'h acre land , cona.ta
drive, 2 atory building, appralted
131 ,000 wiN "'' •21.000 or
take houN Of land .. uldt ln .
Owner will help with finandng.
Potlibly no down paym.,t,

1-582 -6840.

Furnitnld haute. 2 bdt ., f 195.
131 rear 4th Ave., Gellipolit.
Ctll 441 -441 I aher 7pm.
2 bdr. homt in excellent neigh borhood , new Will to Will
carpeting &amp; curtain• provid.ci.
Plua many 111traa. low utility bills
S. 111rden spot. Call 614 -288·
6110 for turth.,- detailt .
Hou11 in counti"J', y1rd, garden.
KC area. UIO . Reference~ tnd
cle!fosit. Call 11•-387·0440 or

614-.UI-3780.

3Ba-9650.

1986 14.70 3 bdr. all elec., CA,
liv ed in 6'h months . Call 1114·
367· 7216 Of 814-317 -0622 .
1978 Fairmont Bayview ,
14•68. All elec. 2 bdr., au
con d .. underpinning, wood dedi
I wood sleirs, 18.500 tlrm. Clel
61 4-245 ·1581 5 .
1972 12• 46 Challenger mobile
home . Remodelled. new carp.t.
vei"J' good conditton. Call 1114·
367· 01 71 evenings.
Kirkwood 12•10. 2 bedrooms.
partty furnC.h.t , nM carpet.
e11cellent condition. matty • ·
ttas. Must see U .&amp;OO. Cell

614-4C6 ·a010.

Tr1iler lot1 tewer •nd wtt..furnlthed , smelt children accepted. Rt . 1 locud Rd .. back of
K It K, 304-875 · 1078.
Tr•iler tpac:es. Stnd Hill Rolld
convenient to tchools, atore•nd
hospital . City 111wer available.
InQuire Rosa111 . 304-675-4800
between 9 :00 and 4 :00 waek
days.
Tr~iler

ap•ce for rent G•llipol ia
Ferry, city water. garb191 pick
up furnished, 304-676·6335 or

878 -3241,

Trail•• tpact, 3 mil• from town
jut l eboveold "V" on At. 2. large
lot. 304-675 -324B .
Trailer ~t. water and sewage
lurnished, 304·876-3407 .

House in country, ytrd, garden,
KC eraa, U&amp;O . Raflfencee tncl
depot it . Call 11 4-317· 0•40 or

Merchandise

6••·••e-3no.
7 rm . house. Inquire at 918
Second Ave ., GaMipotis. Ohio.
2 bedroom furnished house in
Middleport . Call 614 · 992·
6304.

42 Mobile Homes
for Renl

1978 M1nston t•x70 total
electric with fireplece and lots of
extras ni ce. 111 ,000. Call814·

Fully tum ithed . AC , all util1i81
paid , 1dult1 only. Caii&amp;U-44141-10 or 114-44&amp; -2003.
2 &amp; 3 bdr mobllt hom• . AC,
cable TV . Bulevilla Rd. Call
1114· 446· 0527 after 3pm ..

14x70 tra iler for rant , 1260 mo .,
3 bdr., totalelec ., CA, 1250 dep .
Call IU -4&lt;&amp;! -3793 , bath &amp; 111,
washerS. dryer.
2 bdr. tot_. 1lectric Call IIU·

U8-0722 ,

2 bdr . tt Evergr ..n. Call S14-

CCI·7032.

Uppll' River Rd . efto double
wide. Call 8 14-«6 -0508 or
1114· UI · 2•3o.

2 bdr. turn . or unfurn . eonva----------------1
19BO Uberty 14x54, 2 bed·
niant locatkiR , Upp• RNer Rd ..

51 Household Goods

County Appll1ncl!l. In c. Good
used appliances end TV sets.
Open BAM to 6PM . Mon thru
Set . 614 ·446· 1699 , 827 3rd .
Ave. Gallipolis. OH
Valley Furn iture . new &amp; used .
large lettion qf quelrly furni ture . 1218 Eutern Ave .,
Gallipolis.
For sa le: Harlequ in Romance
270 tor $75. wnite
wooden tlble U6, yellow kit ·
chan china cabinet $50, all in
good co ndido n. See 11 258 So.
Fourth Ave .. Middleport. Oh.
boolu

Raccoon Ad. Furn;.h.t 1160 6
dep . Ia ref . Call 814-446 · 9341 .

Queen size held &amp; footboard .
Soma II waterbed mattreu . l ikl!l
new . Call614· 446· 4495 .

12JC 60. On 1 acre . \ltfY good
condit ion. Great country setting
near town . Ca \1614-9!12 -7020
Mutt aMI.

2 bedroom mobile homeRacine . 814· 3&amp;7-7141 .
- - - - - - h ,b2.fcl•07

sssoo. Coll i11419a5 ·3926

MOBI LE HOMES MOVED: in·
tu red , flltonable r.-... Call

:IOC·578-2331

1982 Clayton 12x60 all l!l ltc.
S10,500. J04 -571-2486.

. 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Campsitt at llig Foot Park. No
money down. no mo. owntr
finance, will snow eve. &amp;
weekends . At . 7- 8 mi.. batow
Galiipotit, turn right &amp; foUow
signs .

P" acree with 1 2x60 mobile
home . Rt . 218, 10 milte from
Gal lipolis. Call 114 -245-6049
evenings.
35 ICtll. 3 mtles wnl of HMC
C1ll 614·446·8221 .
1 to 6 acr ... p1rtially wooded
lots. Tupper Plairtt and Chester.
w1ter and IPProved ro..:t to each
lot. R81son•tv priced. will
finlnet, 10 percent down. Cell

81 C·9U-359C,

7 acres witt-! complett mobile
llome hook -up. Barn. in Chntet
area. Asking 110,000. Call

1614)985·3926,

Attlton building lots with publ ic
water, mobile horMI .,.-mitted,

304·578·2331,

Redmond FUdge, 3 1h mll• from
town . Hou .. 1 Vr story, tppro• . 7
acret, ttoragt bldg. 30•· 87&amp;-

6117,

2 lou for 111eov..- 1 a cre In nch.
Will ntl together or •perlte,

304-87&amp;·3407

RrJllol s
41

Houses for Rent

Rent , IUie. l1nd contract, lbr' aRodney Vlll-.;tell ; 2 br ' t · Eureh:
3bt bent Heighta: Dapotlt I
referencft reQUirtcl. lleclcburn
Realty -61 4 · 441· 0001.
Attractive two bedroom hou1ein
Pomeroy. Fully carpeted. driP•
and curtains; stove and refriger·
ttor. Full b .. tmant. low.ty a~n
porch. Sorry no petsorchUdrtn .
Horne ideal for tingle or couple.
f225 pk.IS IICUflty deposit.
Phont 614-192· &amp;212 aft..-&amp;.
Newly d.corlted . 2 bedroom
hou1a. fully c"'eted. Unfutnilhtd. Storm doofl ''"' wifl ·
dOW e. WtM tecept 1 or I
childr.,.. Oa,otit r.,6r..t. 11•·

---~------ ,

Ceiii1C-992·3809.

44

Pidc en s Used Furniture . Good
quality uted fu rniture . Open 9 to
6 or call for appointment .
304-67!5 -6483 or 175- 1460.

2 bdr. utiiitlee partially furn .,
8176 mo. Call304-175-5104.
New 1 ~room apartment . CaM

Bunk bftds , Pl•avy. d1tk wood .
bundbads, e11c cond, 175 .00.

30C·I75 -18C5,

11 C-.UI-0390 ,

Furn. 1pt1. 1 bdr. t225 utiliti•
paid , 607 2nd. Ave . Gallipolia.
Call 441 · 441! aher 7pm.
Furn ithed apartment, utllitiee
paid , 108 Vi ne St.. 1236 . Call
814-446· 92•4 between 9 :00·
6,00.

2 bdr. upsteirs apt eur1 nice.
cantril 1ir. ,;=all l14-44&amp;·.21151.
Ap1rtment for rent Crown City,
It 76 mo. plut d..,ntit. Call

52 CB.TV , Radio
Equipment
Channel M11ter 11tajlite rectp t io n equip. with 10 in ch dish &amp;
remote con trol, t1 ,500. Call
614 -446 -955 2, !11 ,800.

53

2 bdt. tpt ., downtown , 1 190
witt-lou t utilitin, 1296 with
utlllt in . Deposit requirtd . Call
614-441· 2129 8:00am · 6pm.
Co"'CIIf1ely fumtlhed, all efect ri c. 2 bdr. apartment, 8225 mo.,
1 bch . 1200 mo . ldutta, ,.,.,.,.
ces. tee . depotlt. 458 Stcond
Ave. Call 814-448-22311 or

114·CU·25a1 ,

1 bedroom apt . tor rant. Batie
rent st.rts t216. 1 month that
Includes all utilitiet. Depotit
requit'ed of 1200. Conttet VII ·
l1ge Menor Apt. Middlepo" .
614-992 -7787. Equal Housing
Opportunity.
2 bedroom, total tlec. apt. in
Pomeroy. Acro11 from Firt
Sta1ion . 814-992·8216 or 114·

992-731C,

Pomeroy 2 bdr , Nl'florl Run ,
8175 mo . 8100 deposit. yard.
pMio , Cell ef1er lpm 114': 112·

1111.

2 bHroom 1par1ment in d own town Middlepor1 . 1225 . P•
month . Cell 114 · 992 -1111
d.,-s and 114· 1t2·8713 ntthts.
Two· One bedroom ept , rqdy
for lmmedittl occupancy, total
electric, Wl1tf' furnithed. 114·

992·209.,

AII'ARTMENTS. mobile hom•.
Pious... 11'1. ll'l111ant andGIIiipo·

llf, 114·C.S·I221 ,

1 or 2 bedreom a,tt, udtkl•

Nice one ftoof in PomtrOY·
Living room, cHnlng room. kit·
chen, 2 bedroo,.., ..,.,.. ., en·
ckned sun ,cJJch. Carpattd,
dfiiP8t . and CUI"'IMnt. etave aftd
refrigerator . FuNNument. lfllll
for lintle ~ 00141t, lorry "'
chfldrwn cw
•221 .-M
t.curtty ~· Jlhon• 4114·

171·S801,

fut'nilhM.

...... pllrt lolly

304·175· 31 00

ot

Unfurnlehed one bedroom and
liiiii'O bedroom .,.nm..-tts. 304·

112·2121.

1o ~"'""' 2 -..m lin·
1'111"1111

•'""*"·1110 2 room

furnlthM .,ertmenl . 1 · 304-

992·8212 (Hoollidl)oft• 1,00. 112-HII,

For 11le model 12 Winch•t•
1:,, 11. &amp; 20 gauge~ . AMor'tlnal
t500 &amp; up. Other gunt also. CaH
814· UI-9.07.

Larga new sl'lingled dog hou11,
840. Call 1514-UI-920&amp;.
8 foot ahowcese, $ 100 . C1ll
614·.U6-021 2.
1980 Honda Aspencadt 1100
motorcyclt . 1970 Hand• Tr1il
90 2 spd., 1983 8ig Rid Hond1
3 whMIII' like new with re¥ene.
1972 S11r1 V· bottom alum
fis hing boat with trolling motor
&amp; 2 swivel .._.ta. Tetnie titt
traillf, 9HP Evenrude boat motor. 1919 Dune buggy convertible radial tires turbln wheels A· 1
condition. Call 614· 441 -4919
after 5PM.
1971 1h ton Chev . standard, 6
cyl ., newWhirlpoot20,!1008TU
AC. c.n 814-379 -2883 .

Fiberglass camplll' top. 8 ft .
S300. 6U-986 -4418 ,
Nice electric Tappen electric
range with "lf· cleaning oven.
1 11J yr. old . Will ull or trlde for
gal r1nge. Call 614· 992· 35915 .

For ule; New en closed trailer 6
h .x10Ht . 13 indltir•Just '-.lilt
See 11 114 N . Second. Middle·
port or call 614-992 · 7841 .
New Winch.,ter 3030 Rifle, 7
mm world w1r 1 Mueaaer, Buck

Knife Blcentenial, 65 ouncepufl
silver, lottofforeign coma. 1971
Chevy Clptice W19on. 11100.,
(2'h cubic h . ~frigerator , Mice
new lar11e stereo. Both for
S126 .}814· 9.C9 -2801 .

~~=========~=:;::~~;~~;;~
'

I

1

)

71

II

,\ I I.' I·' k

61 , arm !quipment
CROSI.IONS
U.S . 31 W•t, Jadlaon. Ohio.

IH-211·1411 ,

Mil illY F. .uttn, JMw H...Inti.

'""'""'•-••.mc..o-

40 ..... tftteM" te eheOM froM
• oo,.. ..,. Une el MW A uHd
equlllment. LlfWtlt llltctlon In
S ,E, Ofllo,

JIM ' S FARM IQU1PMENT
CENTER , Sll 311 Ill, Oo~lio.,

Ohio, CoN 81 • ·C.I-1777, IVt,
114· 441·3892 .

u, ..."'

tDn wtlh Wftr!'lnty DYer
tTecters, 1000 .a ...

triC·

u.-

11

lidwatl Cah fH.I ltor. JUfte
Specill't . Getklen IN C•rna·
tion tou_, twill Hit twin• MW
only ., ?,110 .,d .. ln . ...Wool
whe U2.80 . Cat! IU-311 ·

a

9818,

tUIO, Cd H1C·ZII ·H2Z ,

II N• HeUancl ltller. ct...
WH . U T JD •eH. MF

No. 12 Mler 11 . 1H . Ml' rafle
t3H . JO rille tift . 101 Ford
n'Dwer MIO. I ft. tllldtr Mil.
1 ft. dNm mower 11 . 418. Cell
1 · 11 C-211·•22.

-.u•·

Farrnal cub tr.cter &amp;
ment. Ctll 114 · 211-1140.

$malt fi)ld., model Cub Cadet
lewn tr.ctor in fOOd th.,.
KoMer eng. t500 . CaH 114 ·

3S7·0170.

310 J .D. duer. 6 wey .......
wtnd'l . bcebftt eonditlon. lOO
ttem11ional Tr~etorlo.:ler . Ntw
rebutlt hydrMallol. 700 ......
Ford lot TNdl. hllttn extfa.

Coli 11C-14a-2128
9Ct-2121 ohlf . ,00,

114·

Of

62 Wanted to luy
or ••

Now buying IMtl com

oom . Callforllfe.tquotet . Aiver
City Farm Supply, 814-44129B5 .

63

Liveatock

9379 .

Good work

m~~te

• c.lt UOO .

C.l1114·251·1711.

55 Building Supplies

Blodl , bride, monar 1nd ml·
sonry supplin . Mountein Sttte
Bloc'- , Rt. 33, NIIW H1ven . W.
\Ia. 304-882 · 2222 .

2 Nifers for life. 1ye• otd. ce•

11C·II2·2C82,

- 1 bb8a ,· d ~lied Hereford lun
for aalt, 19
okl, 30•·

"""'the

875·1111,

64

Pets for Sale

lmpe~iel Candlewick dishes ser·
vica tor 6. many .. tra piect
tot1ilng 100 . f1 .000 . Caii6U ·
440 -7508.

54 Mise , Merchandise
Mc Daniel Custom Butctleri ng
will be clo18d until Aug . 16th fo r
vacation ,
Buy RAWLINGS Produ cu
wholesale, Da le and Wilma
Wood. 304·67 5 · 1090.
Wor ld Book C hild Crah repre·
santltNe, full -time or part -time.
Guaranten Availlbl e. 304· 892·

24a5.

Rabbit cag es fo r sale, feeders.
wire e. etc. 304·675·8704 .
SLIGHT PAINT DAMAG E
Fla1hing arrow sign t2B6 . Ugh ·
ted , Mn -anow 12661 Nonligh ·
tid f23 91 Free lettlt'sl Few left.
See loc al tv 1 (800) 423-0183 ,
anyt ime.
Surplus · Army Camouflage ·
Den im - Rent al Clothing -lar;est
Selection Army ClOthing in Ohio
\/Ill.,, printed T-Shlnt, Ctps,
(Fri . Evenings.) S.t, Sun 1 :00·
7:00 p .m . S1m Somerville'aEIIt Ravenswood Junction .
Independence Road Old At. 21 ,
(Free Delivery Pt. Pleuant (304 ·
876 -3334 .1 Plenty Kids · Jr .
Clmoufl .. e.
Wi ll lamton Mea t Mark et .
u .s .O.A. Primelaet S1l1, Sldee
11.29, Front qtt . •1 .09 , Hi:Jl d
qtt. t 1. 70. U.S .D.A. Choice
Beef Sale, Sides e1 .26. Fronts
11 .oe. Hinds 11 .e2. Price In·
ctudM: cutUng , Wflpping ti1CI
frH~:k'lg . WhoM Primal Cutt.
Who l1 Rib-ve• 12 · 141b IVerage
t3 .90 lb. Whole New York
Strip1 12· 14 lb IYitiiCjJI $4 ,011
lb. Ctlolce TendtrUon 86 .99 lb.
Shor1 Lofn tl .51 lb. Full Loin
U .28 lb . Price Includes cutting.
Deposit requiftd . Ou1ranteed
tendtr. Call 304-67&amp; -131:1,
,.oint Pleaant, w. V1.
Ch1ln uw, 18 " bar, 304·111·

1808,

Oragonwynd Cattery Kennel.
CFA Himaleyan , Pers ian and
Siam•• kitt.-.a . AKC Chow
puppin . New puppi• I. lclttent.
Call 446 -3844 •fter 7PM .
AI&lt;C tri -colored B111ett Hound
pups, redu ced pricet on ldull
dogs . Crown City, 8~ · ~~ ·

Hay

a. Grain

Hay for s.. e 90 Qlftta.ut of fWd .

nzo •11v- 1 .,.....,. co11

IU-.UI-0373,

Mixad hay llrge ...1r1 ltal•.

f1 .21i . 304-171·1171.

71

Autos lor Sale

1971 FMd Muttq 4 cyl., new
rebu ltt motor. llw miiHI•· Clfl

114-:111·1417.

Jt" lftUihtNn't 1t71 untln·
ishM rntorM NOVA, 327
chrofM entM•. • phont kl ·
quiree. Middleport {lrldHfl).

••c. con4.
C.l1 81•·31S-93U,
Thundtrblrd

1175 Do4ge Dart 8450. 3 04·
1177 Oldemobile Cutlns Su'''"'• lrougham. 304 -17&amp; ·

8113 ,

t7 Ferd Mustan; 80.000 ICt
mH•. Duel tlthlult , good body,
fW inttriot . t1 ,100. Firm. 304·

178-1U8.

72

Trucks for Sale

1112 Dodge pickup 2 25 c ubic
engine, 3 epd .. with 0\lerdri\la,
ftb•gllll tOPP•· Call814 · 367·

03U .

1182 D1tsun 4 spd., S2. 999.
1979 D1twn 4 tpd. , S1,799
1978 OatiUn , 4 1pd .. 11 . 499.
John ' s Auto Saln, 8ulaville Ad .,

i)o111po11t,

J A!IIIS

~~111!111 1~' DOOR~

'VOTI:. fOR CIIUCI&lt; lt'!.Tf.R
FOR DISTRICT AT10RIIf.V...

(HI Privale Benjamin
@ Wheel of Fortune
7:30 II Cil Cll New Newlywed
Game
(!) lnolde Baseball
fii(!)Taxi
0 (l) ®I Wheel of Fortune
(]) Bunerflieo
8 [j) Entertainment To·
night
(HI Major league Beaeball:
Chicago Cubs al Pitta·
burgh
@ Jeopardy
7:35 Cil Sanford and Son
8:00 IJ (l)@ You Agaln7 (A), In

Sleeps 6, bathroorn·shower, gn
stove. relrig ., u ll cont Rin MI
Call 614 ·446· 1358 .
1983 32 f1 . Sh&amp;n nen doah tr•vel
trailer , S6 .500. Ca ll 614 -44 61766
1974 Prowl er 28 h . self co nta lined , air, pa rk ed at Big1 Fout
Camp Gr oun d . Ga ll ipo l is
Shown by appointmflnt on ly
814· 742-2577.

S1ereo.

CD Falher Murphy
(!) National High School
Chae~eading Champion·
ships {A)
' (l) 0 (I) Insiders ICC)
fl) (!) MOVIE : 'Reunion Ill

19B4 SutcraH . uce llent co nd i·
t ion . Stove. icebo11 . do set , can opy. 1leeps 6 . 82900 linn Br ick
ST . Ru tland 61 4 · 74 2· 2276 .

Fairborough'

15 h . Scottie. Selt -contain ad ,
reirigerator, stove with ov~tn,
furna ce . G o o d condition
11000 . 080 Call 614· 247 41 22 .

(l)

end
Mrs. King Amanda and lee

investigate the mysterious

1972 Tl!lg·A-long Travel Tra1ler
Sleeps 6. Very good ctlndit ion
21 ft . Call 614 -992 - 2941 or
614· 992· 6461

disappearan ce of a correspondent work ing on an ex·
pose of a fo reign village

,, I '

leader. {60 min.t \AI .
(jJ) In Search of the Trojan

War: The Women of Troy
(CCI Hos1 Michael Wood
travels to Mycenae, Sparta

ALLEY OOP

17 h . ce mp e r . sleeps 6,
S 1,30 0 .00 , e11c cond. 30 4 - 576-

and King Nestor's coun in

Pylos. (60 min.)
8:05 Cll MOVIE : "That Touch of
Mink'
8 :30 U (I) @ Valerie (AI. In
Sweo.
9 :00 U Cil @ MOVIE: To ·ae
Announced'
(1) 700 Club
(!) To Be Announced
CIJ IJ (l) MOVIE: 'Prince
of the City" {CCI Part 2 of2

~~963

1815 Ford Ranger 4 cyl.. tuet
injKta:l, 6 1pd. overdriwe. long ·
bet!. 7.000 milel, axe . condwittl
e11tra1. Calf 814 · 2ii-

Services

•me

S.,7 ,

1910 ._. Dllltln long bed plus
fiblfgllll topper. New tires.
good shape. C1ll 614 -367 ·
7800 ,

81

73

BASEME NT
WATERPROO FIN G
Un conditional lifet 1me guarenIH. l ocal referen ces furn is hed
Free estimates Call collect
1-61 4-237 · 0488 . dav or nigflt
Rog e rt Be semont
Waterproofin g.

Van1 &amp; 4 W ,O ,

1979 Convertlon van, 1965
Chevy truck . nice. 1978 Chevy
lu\1'. C•ll •her 5. 614 -446·
1171 Ootlge 4114 318 IUI O, '11
ton, fM cundhion , t1 ,800. Call

IU·211·1·27 .

1110 Chevy window v1n. 8
•lllenger. dual heat-air. tilt.
CfUite, U .ll!i . Call 614· 3792341 . No Sunday caas.

1112 Chevy 4x4 305 V-8, auto,

Itt. thort bed , sell th i1 week
M ,IOO. Clll614-445-7019.
11H Chevy conversion van.
ra•ed roof, kltded, low mil eege.
18111 Chevy convettion v1n, low
miiNge. AT, AC, AM -FM axe .
cond. Call 114-oMI -4141 af1tr
I &amp; on WMI!ands .

Home
Improvements

17&amp;1 , 114--381-9811

8,oo ,

after

192·7020.

71 Chevy 4M4 pickup tn.tck with
tGHif, 350 engine, a11c. cond.
New body 1nd paint . htrll
ifldudld. Must S.e. U ,7150 .
304-175-&amp;171 .

82

1112 Her!., 01vidaon FxR. Call
114-441-1331 .rt ... 5:00 614·

Ul·11157,

R:LWIJSA1URAAD CUERT'
JUI(t. AtJD SALT·FREE DU
MIIJERN... \AJC\ltR ,, ,

IT'S CPUWAIJ

~IC

W ·lR· AIJD · GOBK

THA"$A
BLANK PIECE

15 OOING 10 PL.ITCN ,

SCRJPrTO
5TLDY',

OF~.

\

I DIDN'T SAY IT
WAS A 5P5AKIN&amp;
PART.

I

r--...

1he Chesapeake Bay , (60

85

gins' old friend , a Brit ish In·

. -. IU-2"8·8177.

1111&amp; ATC 250 81g

198. P::ord LTD atatlenWifOft.
V· l . auto , tit, entilt, tit,
AM· FM, tl, 41t. Jetu•·s Auto

1182 Kawnaki 1100. Excellent
condltkm . Clll 814-742· 2066
• 11 4-742·2703.

hi", lu11Mfto R• ., 0 .........

04&amp;Q,OQ, 304·C68·, us,

11s3 c,_., 1..,.,. 2u ""''"'·

avtornetlc. " · Jll, ,....,..., In
vetY Nee con4tlloft, 11 ,Itt. Clfl

lanett Hound , 1 year old. tri
co lorad. 176 . 00 . 30• · 876·

11C·C.I·M07,

2671.

1171!1

,ontl~~t:

UI·13SS,

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

1100. C.tl 114·

19M ,IYIMIIth Rolilon •

*··

alno, air, cNiee, AM -FM t1pe.
Q , 711. John 't Auto I.._
lulwlllo lid .. Oolipollt,

l1ylor' s8arry Patch. You pick or
we pick. Bam · 7pm, Mon . lhN
Sat. Call 114·441· 1892 or
614-245-5178.

*··
f'latdiHclt, NM Ike ,.., ene
Sfllny rllf C_,..1a71. 2

owner IinDe 11 •• h.. 17,ooe
mi., , . . Mtlllf\', ntW tif'H,

Str•wberrlet p ick your own. C•ll
Cleude Winttrt . 11 4 · 24! ·

UOO. -

I•• TlfiO II T.,.

aDndltion.

General Hauling

c.., 61 4 · 742 · 3068.

J ames Boys Water Service. Also
pools filled . Call614 -256· 1141
or 814 -44 8· 1176 or 61 4 · 446 ·
7911 .

IUIUikl 110, 4 cycl, IIIC cond.
CtUiee control, d .. et:tl gear, retd
out, ..ectrlc fuel 11uge, garage
k.t. auper shaip 1nd sup., fast
must 111 to appreci1te. 304·

Ken's Water Service. Wflll s,
ci1te rn1, pools and watarbedt
filled . C1ll 814-367 · 06 23 or
814-38 7· 7741 or 304 -876 ·
1 24 7.

1t74 Kownold KX480, good

Coal. limestone. gra vel. I!IIC.
Delivered 1 ton 11nd up. Jim
Lanier , 304 -876 -12 47 or 676·

175-1131 ,

cond., f.,der aquira ttr1tt gui·
w , mulic man. tube amp.

10•·•2·3235,

1178 Honda Ooldwin11. Under
book wholeule . 304-676 ·
2119 .

711

lo111 and

87

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 163 Sac. Ave .. Gallipo li a.
614 · 448 · ?83 3 or 614· 446·

1171' Q. pty11 1 lilt hry . 11'7t
Meroury ...,..,.., IMfl 4 ...,,
•k Col 114·•2· 7071, 1:011
1m.· 7:00 pm . ~

1111 Starcraft aid boat 86,
E.-rucle, wry good cond ..

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

302 FCH"d engine, complete.

R &amp; M Furnitu re ManLJfacturing,
St. Rt. 7, Crown City, Otl. Cell
014· 256-,470, call E\le, 614·
448 · 3438 . Old &amp; new
Uphosterltd.

tlmt, ond
-1 woo~ -Lf1M,
· UHII1
CoM 114-992·
1017,

Mowrey's Upholnering serving
tri coun1yaru21 y&amp;ert . Theb11t
In furniture uphol aterlng. Call
304 · 676 · 4154 fo r tr ee
n timatn.

814-.US-3989,

1171 11oolt ZH, 171·ZIOll.

•-

Hor1ty_fLH.- CJ 11 11 4·C.I·

··----- · --.,

n .ooo mllof, •4oo. Col1114·
441·3131 .. 114-44S-S211 ,

I

or trade for car· 1111

""

, 833,

U ,SOQ, Clll 114·C.I·21 U ,

OF

·n-u::

EAST
AFI&lt;:tCAN PYGMY?

MAV I SIT WITI-i '(OU

ANC7

LUNCH?

I DON'T
KNOW.,WHEN
WERE ~OU
BORN 1

I WAS
BORN IN

OCIOSEIC

I WAS BORN
IN

mNo"Wi

.

2:00 (1)700 Club

C1J Mazda

Sportaloolt (A) ,

Cll MOVIE; 'Whatever
l

i~af

Times" 21 Palm

22 Short
swim

- ~"

25 Maturf

35 "Erce

26 "Hannah
and

37 Church
part

- Sisters"
28 Newman

38 Athena's
1 title

39 Wrest

film
30 Drooping
32 Outland ish
33 "All Long Needs Me·
34 Meat cut

from
41 Old Glory
color
42 Iran's
"capital"

37 Swiss ri\w

40 Randy
Newn'lan

song
43 Winslow 44 Gone aloft
45 Lyric poem
46 Guide
DOWN
I Auditorium
2 Potpourri

3 Composer
Nino

4 Emmet

llAfi.Y CRYPTOQUOTES - Here's how to work it:
AXYilLBAAXR
Is LONGF EL LOW
One letter stands lor another. In this sampl e A IS used
for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Smgle letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints . Each day the code letters are djffer ent.
CRYI'TOQUOTES

6·9
LU IZ

TI U

s

f

N D M

II

l ' 1· A

YIJOUIM

AilZZ IM

F. II I ' A

t:

Y I" VI

E 0

EI'IW O I

I H T l'

N D M

Z

I .

l) ])

11 ,

I '1. l l 1, I' 1·

I ·' .

f\ ZLJ S

E I M R 1 11 C ti N - T M C P II 1 1 ll &lt;I I Z
Yeotertll1y'o Cr)'J&gt;toquote; THE RIN&lt;i iNti &lt;IF 'fllf:
TELEPHONE IS ALWAYS WUDER IN AN EMt&gt;T\'
HOUSE. - JOYCE CAROL OATES

David lattannan Tonight's

I-ll ! MV NAME IS LINUS..

ter's

Yesterday's Answer

outcry

®) MOVIE: 'To Be An ·
nounced'
t 2:30 U Cil (jJ) Lete Night with

Cll ABC N-• Nlghtllne
Ill (!) Rawhide
(HI MOVIE : 'How to Mur·
der Your Wife'
12:40 a CHI MOVIE: 'Between
Two Brothers'
t :00 CIJ Dobie Gillis
CIJ Archie Bunker's Place
Sl (!) Wild, Wild West
1:30 Cll Father Kno- Best

18 Carpen·

36 Arbiter
(sl.)

Rawhlda

guests are Tony Danza and
Doc Severineen. (60 min .)
IRI, In Stereo.
Cll Bill Cotby Show

16 One of

river

Tonight's guests are Jenni·

1!11 (!)

hometown
14 Merit

33 German

II Cil Hawaii Five·O

Upholstery

Motor• lor Sale

Str1wbenl• pi ell your own this
wtak &amp; ned . Ctll Carl Gllltept.,

C~Y

7397

'"'"I''"""'
.. .,....... "
d.,.
or •••·- ·till - ·

6121 ,

WHA'f 'S 11-IE C.A:rCH

story
15 Mauna -

27 Evergreen 24 Within
tree
(comb .
28 Depend
Form)
29 Back "bf
.,--,,..-,-..,.the neck
30 RecenL
31 F'rench

telligence agen1. 170 min .)
IRI.
(HI Trapper John, M.D.
12:00 CIJ Best of Groucho
C1J Soccer: World Cup !AI ,
Cll Nalionel Geographic
Explorer
Cll Entertainment Tonight

SNAKE!!

13 Alcott

wife

num must stop a terrorist
group which plans to kill Hig·

Red , Good

• 9" . 3

stockad e

8 Over again
9 Solitary
J1 Mom.lale 's
childhood

23 Jacob's

drough1 in E1hiopia. (60
min .l
11 :30 U (I) @ Tonight Show

1113 XR 10. Motor Cyel1. Lika

7 African

"-

min.l IRI ,
(jJ) Newawotch
10 :30 CD Taking Stock
fill (!) INN Newa
(jJ) This Old Houoe {CCI
@ News
1 t :00 IICilCIJ IJ CIJ®Ia W®

71 Oodft Omol G· ZC. 4 IPd ..

dance

t.he Wests

tempt to gain evidence on a
robbery suspecl wh ose doting mother provided him
with an ainight alibi . (60

Trenching Service: water. gu.
and electric. Free estima tes
304-773 -5839

6 Niger ian

I 7 Dread
need
18 "M" star 19 Choice
20 Chaplin"s 20 - Dieu!

C1J SCTV

Excavating

5 Grovel

1 Israeli

site

(jJ) Faces In a Ftunine Au·
thor Robert Liebemian ex amines rhe catastrophic

NOBODY READS
ANYMORE

ACROSS

10 Isolated
12 Maine U.

(Il l Spy
Cll Gunsmoke
• m Love Connection

BARNEY

.KI 0765
+K

SOUTH

6 Junto

New a

CARTE R' S PLUMBING

•Q•

by THOMAS JOSEPH

iana bluesmen , (60 min.l
®I Iii CHI Cagney &amp; Lacey
!CCI Cagney and l acey a1·

E!AVI;MEA

EAST

+ AJ 2

~"ua'!Jtr

sound is traced 1hrough interviews with several Louis·

8CE1'THEY

WEST .

South grabbed East's diamond king
+ Q3
with his ace and led the spade queen .
• A 93 2
Since East was in no hurry to take that
t A QJ 6
trick, he allowed th e queen to win. A
+ AQ 10
second spade was played to the 10, and
Vulnerable: North-So uth
now East won his jack, He led a heart,
Dea ler: South
which was dncked to West's queen, and
another heart was played to the jack Wes1
~orl h
Sou1h
Eas l
and king, South let East's king hold
I t
that trick, Although one more heart P'ass
I + P JSS 2 NT
:\NT
Pass
Pass
played would give declarer the chance Pass
' to put in the nine lor his ninth trick. Pass
East was having none or that He re·
Opening lead + 10
hm-ned a club. Try as he might, South
could not find a way to take more than
eight tricks .
Yes, East made a nice play when he
held off taking the spade ace, but it
was the declarer who had a chance to queen with dummy's kmg, assuring
hit a winner but missed the ball in· enough tricks lor the contract And if
stead. At trick two, South should have East allows that small spade played
simply led a low spade from his hand : from dummy at trick two to win the
and played low !rom dummy, East trick, decla rer simply plays a low
mighl win the jack and play hearts as spade right back to his queen, assuring
before, but now declarer can win the the ninth trick whether or not the desecond heart and overtake his spade lender ducks again.

ment of the Southern blues

I 1-Vl.V!;A ~INA
PI.AY TH-\T THE BOTS'CL.LJB

1-1-U

• JB
I 5 43

make an error?

min .)

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

NORTH

Have you watched tenn1s lately' A • 6 5 4
rally ends with either a winning sho1
or an error, In today's deal, did the de· +10 9872
tender hit a winner or did declarer • J 7 2

the new Virginia settlement

11 Honda 860 in good condi·
tion . 1150 C11! 114-992 -81U.

sun · roof , AM · P:M , 10. 000
mllee, one IWftW, fOOd con4.
Call 114-441 -7113 ev.,lngs.

+K6 5

and John White sets sail for

1878 Lincoln Contlftantel In
;oGd tond., tow mil•. C..

IU ·&lt;I41-1UI .

By James Jacoby

@ Ill [j) Kate &amp; Allie {A) ,
9:30 (jj ii) I]2J Newhart1CC)(A) .
I 0 :00 Cll Wanted : A Room With
Love
Ill (!) Soap
CIJ Rainln" In my Heart: A
Blues Mosaic The develop·

I PUT UP ALL

........,.,o,

+ K 10 9 8 7

Raleigh refuses to give up

1171 Hond1 Eltinore MT 2150.
Enlluro e.a. cond .. tiiOO . Ctll

8U·4&gt;41 ·C.98 ,

-f'OSSESSION

Clean winner or
unforced error?

tion's problems, Sir Walter

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

AN 0 HEATING
Cor. Fourth "n d Pine
Gall ipolis. Ohio
Phone 6 14 · 446· 3888 or 614·
.48 -4477

(An s wer s tomorrow)
Jumbles: SWOOP BISON STOLEN ASSURE
Answer A collector usually lias an obsessoo wltl'l thls-

James Jacoby

house: Roanoak ICC) Part
3 of 3 Despi1e the expedi·

EEK&amp; MEEK

AINGL ES ' S SERV ICE . e•perienced carpenter. elec tucian.
mason, Pl!linler , rooting linclucf·
ing hot tar l!l ppli ca tio nl 304875-2088 or 675 -7368

Rotary or cable tool drilling
Mo1t well 1co mpleted n medav
Pump 1aiM 11nd service 304

I

I I I 1 X1 I r

BRIDGE

Cil ® American Play·

Fetty Tree Tnmmtng, s lump
removal. Call 30 4-675 · 13 31

Carp entry , remode ling. room
tddition, all OOIIding repair s
.cemen t and blodwork. Pl int ing and roofing. 30 4·675· 5152

Motorcycles

I

RON ' S Tetevis10n Ser v tce
HOuu c all s on RCA. Ouazar.
GE Speeialing in Zenith Call
304· 576· 2398 or 614 -446
2454

1171 Ford f · 1104x4, 400 auto,

Sa lurday·s

{A ),

Exterior &amp; interior stu cco. Pl aster &amp; pla1ter repairs . low u11e1
Call 614 -256 -11 82

\ t arks Tr ee and l awn Service.
landscaping . 304·576· 2010

MacNeil -Lehrer

Newshour
@ Ill IW Scar..,row

Ca11 814 ·247 ·4292

Print answer here: "[

a IW Divorce Court

'llltXnKIENCUt. LAl'i...
WII&lt;'IPV...

1978 Starcraft 21 tt . new AC,
caretree awnin g. b11th . shower .
gu , elect. ret ., etc . Stor8d under
10of. perfect con d. $3,800. Call
614 -446-1495 .

1974 Dodge Camper Convor
sian , by Tio aa . Sto\le with oven.
icebo•. 1ink. deeps 6 S 1800

iHAI CHAI!:'M IN :S.
MOVI"S. 5iA~
WA~ A'S L..II&lt;ABL.E
A5 5HE WA-5 iHIS&gt;,
Now arrange th e c1rc1ed letters to
form the surpr ise an swer. as suggest ed by the above ca rtoon

New.,hour

Good · 1 E11cavat lng, basemenis.
footers , drlvewayt, sept ic tanks,
lendtcaping . Call anytime 614 446· 4637 , Jamal l D•vi1on,
Jr . owner.

4Ul 't .

''1,.

naao

i\N~

THe THREE MEN 'TRU&amp;&amp;LE VAL IANTLY
AC:.AIN~ T THE WAT ER PRESS URE ... ,

1815 )CA 250 Hond1 dWt bike,
t1 ,:ZOO. CaiiiU-.... 1 · 1151.

1177 Ford Or.,... a 41 door,
70,000 milet, ntw engine with
20 ,000 miles. t1 ,000 . C•H

~ela

••*·

1182 Oa1.,n 310 dtluu hatctl ·
Mdl.
lM-FM casette.
axcaM.tt condition, no rust.
firm. 114 -742 · 2681 .

ARLO

lNOBENT ~

m

.JI:&amp;--'1

1978 llide· in t ru ck camper, ic:e
box, furna ce . stove. goo d co nd ..
. good buy . S75 0. Call 614 -38 8·
9780.

I I

1

8:05 Cll Down to Eanh
8:30 II Cilllll NBC News
Cll Wagon Troin
John Fox Outdoor•
(l) D CIJ ABC News
CIJ Doctor Who
®le!BI CBS Ne(jJ) Body Electric
(HI Wtk:ome Back. Kotter
8:35 Cll Gunomolte
' 7:00 II Cil PM Magazine
(!) Spc&gt;rtsCenter
(l) Entertltnment Toniglrt
Sl (!) Hogan" a Heroes
D(l)J-dy
CIJ Nightly Buolness Re·
port
®I Newo
(jJ)
MacNeil -lehrer

fer O'Neill, Gallagher and
Doro1hy loudon, {60 min.)
IAI, In S1ereo.
(!) SportoCenter
Cil WK RP In Clncinnali
til (!) One Step Beyond
D (l) ABC Newt
®Taxi
8 IW Magnum. P.l. Mag·

Dutch Atbbitt for 11le. 12 .00
each . 114·9•9 · 2835.

59 For Sale or Tr1d1

1111 Corvette Convertable.
Whtll exttr6or, black int•rlor.
leth tops . • • .:~. 327. 1000
tni'" on completely rebuilt
engine. Good condition . 11000
or belt oiJfer, 114· 247 -4181 .

(!) Slllr Trek

83

f2,900, CoH 11H71-HI2,

58

~ - ·- -- ...

N-t
CDGreenAcrn

1111 Honda XR 10 IIICIIIIent
condition. Call e14 -448 -2149.

304· n3-5a39 .

Buuti fu l young Bluefront
Amazon Parrot. 1\and tamtd

au .sooa.

74

1984 Chevettt 11,000 mil•.

2581 ,

1171 'tvrmuth WlfOn for sale .
Runt good. t175 . Phone 614 -

1171 Jeep CJ -6 . Soft lOp. Good
aondition . 11500. Call 6 14·

I I ·11 ' ',I' I I 111 "'I

Black female Labrador Re1riavtr
pup . Pick of 11 t1er . 10 week s old.

Wolf tlybrid puppias. R..dy
June 22. Shots. worm1d . UO.
Too cute 10 bafiev al 814· 742 -

r
--rr

I I

(jJ) Bodywatch {CCI
(HI Ono Doy at a Time

W~ HAVE THREE MIN UT E~
OF AIR TO·GET U!' AT LEA~T
"300 FEET:

by Henri Arnold ana Bob Lee

Unscramble these four J umbles,

CIJ 3·2· 1. Conuct !CCI

CAPTAIN EASY

THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME

one lmtef 10 each SQuare. to form
four CKdlnary words.

11 CIJ roe ro~» e1B11111
•

1976 Starcreft fo ldout camper,
sleep• 8 . cofll)lete with stove ,
ice box . lights &amp; !lin k. ex c . cond ..
like new . Cell 6 14 · 388 · 9756
after 6PM .

996·3802

un

AK C leegln . 6 weeks old. 3
mel" . UO . each . Call614· 91&amp;·
4143 .

1111 Datsun 200 SX. 5 spllad,
AC ., other e•tr11. Nice condi·
lion. t2300 . CAll 614 · 949 2513.

PI , 11'1, t2, 100. C1ll &amp;14-C41 ·

1862 .

5 baby raccoont, 2 adult rae·
coons for 11le. Gary Tr ibt,
Albany , Oh io. Ca ll 814· 8182764 .

o.

C.1111C -311HIII67,

Bricks , 304·875· 6619 .

56

••o

1110 G. Pty,..,uttl Fury, AM FM. •r. 1
Datson 21
15
spH·tf . Call 114 · 182-7075
ROOifl'l .· 7 :00pm.

2Ua ,

AQHA ..19il.ter.. Ouener hef11
stu• tervice. Dir~ Mit of
" Charttt Polite" . Call 114·441-

Wood barn type building. 7•10,
3 04·!75· 1664 .

Auto• lor Sate

··8·3113S,

1870 1000 l'ortl ._.. tractvr
with 3 botteM ,...,, M , 710.
31'0 lntem.tienll trtctof with
p6ow1 a I ft tldlle ._ mewer,

TONY 'S GUN REPAIRS . acope
bote sighting. factorv rtblueing,
hours 9:00 till dlflc, call 304676-4131 '

Build ing materia lt, cemant ,
btodcs all sizes, y11d or dtltvery.
Gallipolis B~ck Co., 1 U YJ !tine
St .. Gellipolis, OhM) Call ftU .

e:oo

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

~

l9 ~~ •

6/9/86

&amp; Campers

8 HP riding mower t400, 3 '11 HP
Surt outboard motor t 1 &amp;0 , 8
ft . insulated truck topper t200,
8 ft . truck racka S50. leleptlone
answering 175 , 17ft. bass bolt
160 HP Johnson motor 16 ,000.
Call 114·696 -1227 after 4PM .

Building Materialt
Bloclil , brick, sewer pipes, win dows, lintela, etc . Claude Win ters . Rio Grande, 0 . Call 614·
246· 6121 .

e~~s~~

79 Motors Homes

3 block nw mill 12.100. Call

8U-31S-118a.

OOTHttJe&gt;

4 rocket wheels and radials .
· Un i-lug. S250 . Call 614 -992 ·
6 974.

Echo trimmer• US . 71 to
1299 .95 . Husqvtrna nwt.
Echo aawl, Y~rdm.n mowers .
NIIW • used. all mHe1. Chlders
Sew Supply, koontr:-SIIilor Ad .,
Vinton, Oh. Call 11 .C ·311· MI4.

3 deluxe triple triCk white storm
windows, 1i1e 615 in. x 32 in.
good cond., 8100. Call 814446· 1118 .

~IJ,

~

(!) Mazda Sponalook

&amp;1C-286-M96.

Co11114·.U8·2J7S.

M

FOR ,w;,..

C AI M Auto Parts. State Route
160 · Portar. 814 · 446 · 8227.
1973to 1981 GM&amp;Fordpickup
tandert SJ9 . 73 to 86 Chev. PU
door t79. 73 to 86·ford PU door
&amp;99. Chev. tail gates 869 . Ford
tail gete 73· 79 876. Ctlev . t ruck
rocker pllf\81 $ 15 . Chev . truck
cab . corner $15. Chev . bAd sidat
$1B6. Ford bed ~i d es 73· 79
$126.

Antiques

61.·256·8495,

,old, ....00

Ford riding mower UOO. 75
tent camp.- ex . con II .
f900 , pnctice piano 1150. CaM

rMiiiiiiiW, electric lawn mowtr,
Movtngwood
Sale2stove,
antique
shotouns.
tablee,
cook
1tove.

~ AOI&lt;.'1~ OOTlli~
AAS~R\~...

\lfl\11.\.ft ID\1

Television
Viewing
EyENING

Sta~craft

446·2783 ,

Furn. apts. 1 a. 2 bdr. 8220 I
1236. ut iliti• pd . 701 4th
Gallipol is . Call 446·C416 afttf
7pm.

992-3090,

P•·

Country oak furn lturl!l now in
stock. Coif• 1nd and tables,
round pedestal and drop leaf
tables , corner cupboard. 2 pc .
Cttpbolfdl, dry Jinkl , MCretel"'j'
dHks , chest of drawers, chairs.
l ar11e selection . Conkle 's, Rt. 7,
TuppMsplains. Oh.

Two b.droom treil., remodeled,
cou plee one srNII child ac cept..:!, reference~ end ct.posit. Fancy 77 RCA Color Con to le ..
At. 1 locust Rold . back of I&lt; Ill&lt; , 26 inc:t'l TV. walnut wood
c abinet . Asking UOO . LikenM.
Evffan Schwaru .

Apartment
for Rent

76

2 bicyclet, 1 utcy cte , hobby
horse , doll hou se, childs kit ctlen
set. draperil!l'l, bed s preads. bad
frame, aquarium stand , car· teat,
ttroller , redwood traillf ttep.
Call 1114-992 -6624.

2 bed room , 1'h bath , 12x70
SJOOO. Call 614 · 992 ·73152.

1974 12d6 electric 2 bedroo.n
mobile home . AC , underpmnlng,
partially furnished . Asking

PIMtlc ciatam ltatl approved,
pl111tlc uptic tlnkt, pllltlc
culwtrtt, m,t1l culverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jtck ton,' Oh. 114· 288 -5130.

GOOD USED APPliANCES
Washers , dryers. refriglfetora.
rangea . Skaggs Appliances ,
Upper Rrver Rd . beside Stone
Crest Motel. 814 -448 -7398.

Couch . Cell 614· 446· 11 49 .

2 lledroom1. cioN to storM lfld
school, Call 114·992·5914 for
mort inforrnetion .

19 ft . ski boat. 228 hp inboard ·
outboard. l!lc cestotie!l included .
11lcing $6.800.00. 304 · 77 3·
6081 .

74 Chevy wood hauler pickup.
SJOO. Rldlal arm ti'W . Call
6U -379·2162 after 8.

8658,

all utilities paid e11capt electric.
Sec. dep . req . Call 814-441 -

Callehen' t UHd Tlr1 Shop. Ov1r
1.oooura~ . lliz1112. 13, 14, u ,
18, 11.5. 8 mil• aut"" 211.
Calll14-25t· 6251 .

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St .. Gallipolis . New &amp; u!led
wood -coelstovea. 6 pcwoo d LA
suite 1399 , bunk beds S199,
antron recliners t 99 , nM &amp;
uud bedroom suites, ntnge1 ,
wring er wathen . &amp; aha... New
living room au ites S 199 · S699.
lamps , a lao buying co al &amp; wood
stoves. Call 614 -446 · 3169 .

room, unturnilhed, vinyl under·
pinning included . Must uti. Cat!
304· nJ -15873.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
Two bed room houae trail.,- on
half acre ground . c all 304· 458·
1617.

Houses lor Rent

675·2029.

2540,

For Sale: House and lotonHy ..U
Run Rd . Call61&lt;&amp;· 992· 7708 .

41

&amp; Campers

Furnished Rooma 7011.

0758,

Real Estate

B&lt;1RN LOSER

79 Motors Homes

54 Mise , Merchandise

Gen1r1l Electric 1utom1tlc
wllhet 180 , Sears dryer Ul ,
11ereo 1126. can 114· 441-

For rent Sleeping Rooms and
light hou11 k"pinli roomt . Park
Central Hotel. Call 114-448·

Monday, June 9, 1986

Monday, June 9, 1·986

Ohio

HaPI'"ned to Aunl Allee·
• (!) MOVIE: "Ki11 Me
Deadly'

® CBS Newo Nightwatch

• CHI N1- IRI.

2:30 ffi SportsCenter
3:00 Cll MOVIE: W inlersef
C1J College Baseball : 1986

4 :05 (I) World at Large
4 :30 CD MOVI E: 'The Private
Ufe of Henry VIII '
(!) Get Smart
ThlngSIIrl! tw=ln' In 1l1e

~ADS

World Series From Omaha,

NE , 13 hrs.l IRI .
(HI Comedy 8realt

·3:30 @INNNewo
·4 :00
(!) MOVIE: 'llalrayal"
@MOVIE: 'Neath Arizona
Skla1'

e

' \

�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

r--

Monday, June 9, 1986

Prices of
gas climbs

Local briefs:._____,

Application deadline June 19
June 19 Is the deadline for Syracuse residents to submit
applications for the Carleton Memorial Scholarslilps.
The scholarslilps are given annually to assist ywng men and
women In financing their educa tlon heyond high school.
Awlicatlons are available at the home of John Lisle, trustee
secretary, Church St.

EMS has I 0 weekend calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports 10 calls over
the weekend- all on Saturday.
At !2:35a.m. Saturday, Tuppers Plains to Reedsville area for Jack
Brawley to St. Joseph'sHospltal: Tuwers Plalnsat2:23a.m. toRt. 7
tor Lisa Barton to Camden·C!ark Memorial Hospital: Syracuse at
2:44a.m. to Minersville for Marie Wlzer to Pleasant Valley Hospital:
Middleport at 4:33a.m. to VIllage Manor Apts. lor Etollla Cassell to
· Veterans Memorial Hospital: Racine at 1:58 p.m. to the Racine
locks and Dam for Floyd Cummins who was treated but not
transported: Middleport at 2:27p.m. to General Hartinger Park for
Shannon Halfhlll to Veterans Memorial Hospital- then transferred
at 3:52p.m. by LHelllght toChlldren'sHospltal, Columbus; Syracuse
Fire Department at 6:46p.m. to a brush Ore on Rt. 1.24 -Eva
Pickens and Dav ld Lawson were treated at the scene: Racine at 6: 57
p.m. was called to assist: Pomeroy at 9:26p.m. to Welshtown Hlll for
Amanda Perkins to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Girl injured iri softball game
Thlrteen·year-old Shannon HaHhUI was listed In falr condltkln
Monday morning In Children's Hospital after being hit oo the head by
a softball. The Incident occurred Saturday whlle the yooth was
watching a men's softball tournament ai General Hartinger Park,
Middleport. Middleport EMS was called to the scene at 2: 27·p.m. and
transported the girl to Veterans Memorial Hospital. She was
transferred to Children's Hospital by Llfefllght at 3: 52p.m.Shels the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence HaHhlll, New Lima Rd.,
Rutland .

Announce lodge meetings
Racine Lodge 461 F&amp;AM will meet In regular session Tuesday,
7:30p.m.
Pomeroy Chapter 9J RAM and Bosworth Council 46 R&amp;SM will
hold meet In regular session Wednesday, 7:30p.m.. for electkln of
officers.
Middleport Lodge 363F&amp;AM wUI hold a special meeting Tuesday,
7 p.m.. with work In the E.A. degree. Refreshments will be served.

Frank Wolfe
Frank E. WoUe, 60, formerly or
Middleport, died June 7 In Orlando,
Fla.
Born May 14, 1926, Mr. Wolfe was
the son or the Ia te Edgar C. and
Blanche E. Wolle. He was a veteran
d the U. S. Navy and had worked
for Appalachian Power Co. In Point
Pleasant and Huntington, W. Va.
Besides Ills parents, he was also
preceded In death bY a sister,
Juanita Pierce.
Surviving are Ills wHe, Edna
Koblentz WoUe, 10.lXl Charles
Llmpus Road., Orlando., FJa.
32819: a daughter, Betty Wilcox:
rwo sons, Michael and Patrick and
three grandchildren, all of Huntington, W. Va.: a brother, Joe WoUe,
and two sisters, Lena Martin,
Middleport, and Audrey Haley,
Rutland .
Friends may sent donations In his
memory to Hospice . of Central
Florida, Orlando. Fla. 32790.

Alva E. Johnson Sr.

Survivors Include a daughter and
son-In-law, Paddy Jo and George
Doolittle, Berea: a grandson and
wile, Steven and Gerriann Dooilt·
tie, Lakewood: a granddaughter
and husband, Connie and Rusty
Gold, Berea: a granddaughter,
Krlsty Doolittle, at home In Berea:
a great grandson, Christopher
Doolittle, Lakewood; and a sister,
Gladys Lambert Walburn,
Middleport.
Besides his parents, he was
p!K'eded In death by his wHe, Mae
Knight Lambert, In 1!134, and a
brother, Max Lambert.
Services will be Wednesday, I
p.m., at Rawllng-Coats-Biower
Funeral Home, with Rev. C. Sonny
Zuniga officiating. Burial wUI he In
Chester Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home !rom 2 to 4
p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.

Deputies cite driver
Sarah E. Stapleton, 29, :JI Chilli·
cothe Road, was cited by the Gallla
County Sheriff's Department for
failing to stop In an assured clear
distance Friday In a two-car
accident at the Intersection of Ohio 7
and Ohio 554 In Cheshire.
Stapelton was southbound on 7
trailing a car driven by Ann J.
Glenn, 21, Racine. According to the
report, Glenn stopped at the
Intersection for traffic and Sta·
pleton was unable to stop In time,
st riking the reardGienn'svehlcle.
Both vehicles were damaged
lightly.

Alva Ear l Johnson Sr., 70, 423
Second Ave.. Kanauga, died Satur·
day In Holzer Medical Center.
Born June 15, 1915, In Gallla
County, son of the late Frank and
Etta Mae ·Johnson, be was em·
ployed for 20 years with Maggie
Brothers and was also self·
employed, retiring in 1968.
He married Marjorie Broyles,
who survives. on Feb. 25, 1937, In
Gallipolis.
Also surviving are four grand·
children ralsed In tbe home, John
Johnson, Sharon McGuiness and
Veten118 Memorial
Sandra Allen, all at home, and Alva
Saturday Admissions - Etoilla
E. Johnson III of Henderson: two __ Cassell, Middleport: Michael
brothers, AHonso Johnson and Pierce, Nelsonville: Eunice
Edward Johnson, both of Gallipo- Christy, Pomeroy.
lis: five sisters, Mary Ann Logan d
Saturday Discharges - Edna
Gallipolis Ferry, Sarah Stewart Deem.
and Anna Mae Stewart, both of
Sunday AdmisSions - None.
Waslilngton Court House, and
Sunday Discharges - None.
Fannie Gar linger and Roxie Stout,
both of Columbus: and three
great-grandchildren.
He was preceded In death by a
son, Alva E. Johnson II: bY three
Continued from page 1
sons In Infancy; by a great·
Electronles
- Billy Joe Garnes,
grandson, Andrew-Scott Johnson:
Langsville.
and by five brothers and three
A......,ele ~ Applied Science,
sisters.
Medical
LaboraiGry Technololl)' Services wUI be 1 p.m. Tuesday In
Paula
Jean
Long, Syracuse: Cathy
WilliS Funeral Home, with the Rev .
J.
Moore,
Syracuse: Elizal)f'th
Alfred Holley officiating. Burial
Jean
Welsh,
Middleport: Laren
will be in Pine Street Cemetery.
Mae
WoUe,
Racine.
Friends may call at the funeral
hOme from 6-9 p.m. today .
Pallbearers will be Dave Henry, Lottery winners
Terry Johnson, AHonso Johnson,
Gary Lambert, Russell Johnson
CLEVELAND (UPI) - One
player correctly picked all six
and Ilenjamln Allen.
numbers In Saturday's Ohio Lotto
drawing to win the Sl,39J,(II9
jackpot.
Glenn Lambert
The name of the player will be
Glenn Howard (Paddle) Lam· announc~ after the winning ticket
bert, 9J, of Lincoln St. , Middleport, Is redeemed at a regklnal klltery
died Sunday at Veterans Memorial office. The ticket is worth !I annual
Hospital.
after-tax payments of $55,203.56.
Born In Hobson, a son of the late
The winning numbers were 7, 10,
Dana Monte and Ethel Carrie 12, 28, 39 and 40.
McElhinny Lambert, he was an
Some 325 tickets had flve correct
avid fisherman and hunter, ·a numbers for $8)4 ~ach, and 15,287
member of the Heath United tickets had four COITect numbers
Methodist Church and active In the for $46 each.
The esttmaled jackpot for tills
Meigs County Senior Citizens
Saturday's game Is $1 rnWion.
program.

Hospital news

23 Meigs ...

PRE;;ENTS FLAG -Ed Turley, right, an officer
representlng the local Racine-based American
Legion post presents Racine Flre Chief Hank Johnson
with an American Flag rompHments ollbe local post.

Know your schools
By the Bend ........ Pages 1i-6
Classified.• ........... Pages i-8
Comics-TV .... .......... Page 9
Deaths ................... Page 10
Editorial ................. Page 2
Sports ................. Pages 34

LOS ANGELES (UP! ) - The
average price of gas has gone up
more than 7 cents a gaijon since
bottoming out In Aprtl, and the rise
Is expected to continue as retailers
(ry to "get well" after months or
dropping prices, an Industry expert
said.
Prices have swung wildly tills
year, reaching a high of $1.22 a
gallon In January and dropping to a
low of 89.96 cents a gallon In April,
Industry watcher Dan Lundberg
said Sunday In Ills biweekly survey
of gasoline prices In all 50 states.
Lundberg said the average price
for all grades Is currmtly 97.1Jl
cents per gallon, which "stU!
represents a drop of 24.37 cents per
gallon since the first of the year."
But the average price of all
grades of gas rose more than a cent
and a haU In the past two weeks, he
said, and a similar rise can be
1110 post has ·been active In many projects~ late and
expected by the July 4 holiday.
has made such nag presentatklns to various
The prices are going up nearly as
organlzallons Including Racine Grade School and
fast as they went down to the April
Southern High School.
251ow, Indicating thai "dealers are
doing their best to get well after
months of declining margins,"
_c_on_t_ln_ued_tro_m_pa_g_e_
1 _ Lundberg said.

'

Vol .36, No.26

giving some of their wisdom to .
young people through their teach·
Jngs thus giving young people a
head start. He remarked, however,
that the rest of "our wisdom must
be earned through experiences in
our llves."
"Wisdom can guide us In making
decision so that we do not make
mistakes or repeat those made by
earlier generations. By telling us
what Is right and what is wrong.
wisdom will make us responsible
and thus make us more adult since
an adult Is determined by how
responSible he or she is and not by
age," Jacot!; said.
"Finally , wisdom can help us to
remember and we must remember
our past mistakes because to repeat
them could be wr failure. We must
remember that by wocldng to·
gether we can achieve anything .
We must n'memher oor Lord
because without Him we cannot
truly achieve," Jacobs concluded_
The Class of '86 B1 tered the
auditorium to "Pomp and Circumstance" played by the Eastern
Band, directed by James L.
Wilhelm, Jr., and the invocation
and benediction were by Rev.
Thomas Kelly, a faculty member
and pastor of the Full Gospel
Lighthouse. The high school choir
presented "A mazing Grace" and

To end maJTiage
J immle Dean Allman and Linda
Lou Allman, both of Albany, have
llled In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court for a dlssolutkln of their
marriage.

Softball tourney lo be
held al Marietta field

charts and diagrams that chronicle
the · grim details of Challenger's
brutal destruction. called for NASA
Administrator James Fletcher to
report to Reagan in one year on
progress made in satisfying the
commission's recommendations.
As expected, the commission
blamed the Jan. 28 disaster on the
rupture of a fuel segment joint in
Challenger's right -hand solid·
propellant booster rocket and
blamed NASA and rocket maker
Morton Thlokol Inc. for glossing
over a clear history of deep concern
about the safety of O.rlng seals in
the joints.
It listed management problems
contributing to the accld e n t and
said, "The Commission concluded
tha t there was a serious flaw In the
decision making process leading up
to the launch."
The report's recommendations
Include a co,mpietely redesigned
booster
joint,office
establishment
new safety
to m onitor ofkeya

A men's USSAD rule qua!Hylng
softball tournament will be held at
Marietta's Buckeye Park (Hadley
Field) In Marietta June 28-29.
The winner will qualify for sUite
tournament play, to be held Labor
Day Weekend. In Cincinnati.
Entry fee Is $60, and two game
bailS.
For more Information, call Ken
O!lenbverger, 374-29oll or Jerry
Hook, 678-280!.

Middleport receives additional project funds
By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall
Middleport Village, as the admlnstratlve unit for
the relatively new public transportation system In the
Middleport and Pomeroy area, has been approved lor
an additional $33,347 to cover increased costs for this
year.
Mayor Fred Hoffman read communications from
Warren J . Smith, di rector of the Ohio Department of
Transportation. announcing the additional funds at
Monday evening's regular meeting of village council.
According to the letters from Smith, the village 11111
receive an additional $18,679 in federal funds under
the Urban Mass Transportation Act of 1961. and an
additional $8,15lin state funds under th(' Ohio Public
Transportation grant program. The depa rtment also
··-Increased $6,517 the amount to be paid to the village
wider the elderly and handicapjl('&lt;i transit fare
.
ass1stancp
program . '
Discussing the new taxi cab service. known as Blue
Streak, whJch Is operating in the Pomeroy Middleport area, Mayor Hollman commented that

the need for additional fund s was apparent In that the
service handled 13,774 fares in the first five months of
1986 and at that rate will handle over 3.1,1XXJ during this
year. Mayor Hoffman pointed out that the sala1y of
Mrs. Opal Kaufl, office secreta ry, is paid two days
each wl'l'k out of th&lt;• fund plus then• are funds for
offi ce supplies and there are other frlnw benefit s for
the town in serving as administrative agency.
Mayor Hollman said that he would like to 51'1' Ilk'
S&lt;'rvic&lt;· provided by th&lt;' taxi company go county-wide
and he will make that suggestion to the county
commissioners who would be asked lo pick up the
costs for such additional operat ions by the compa ny.
Council hear·d a ddf'galion of four residents of the
Beech St. area near the Super·America service
station. They complained of loud music, excessive
noise. nowers stolen from their homes. drainag e,
damages to their gardens b.v patrons of the sta tion
and chargrd that patrons at the station are using the
outdoors near their homes as restroom arras rather
than the rest rooms provided at the slation.

Councilman Allen Lee King said that he Is aware
wtth the problems the people are facing. He charged
that he has sim ilar Incidents taking place near his
home on First St. King stated that pollee mu st be
geared to take care of these problems. He urged
residents to sign complaints against offenders.
Bringing offenders into court does crea te a de terrent
against future offenses, King said. King chargt•d that
resident s arc afraid to be on .the stJWts of the town.
The group discussed esta blishment of a crime
wa&lt; ch program and Cou ncilman Bob Gilmore will
contact Meigs Juvenile Officer Carl HyS&lt;•ll about
working up such a program. Gilmore sa id he has
lk'ard from a number of residents who would be
lnterrsted in participating In such a program. 'I'hf'
program might help to ~et poiic&lt;' on the scene of
incidents sooner. Gilmore opined.
Mayor Hoffman said that there were problems last
year at the Super-America station but that personnel
had been coope rative in work in~ them ou t. He asked
all members of village counc il to look at the problems
and he will mntact thedistticr management in regard

Due to financia l problems. ll'ood·
land Centers is reducing its Sl'rvices
to two days a wwk In Meigs C'ou nty.
Dr. Bernard F. !';irhl. cxC!'utlve
dir('('tor, a nnounced toda y.

Dr. Niehm said limited senices
due to the lac k of fund s will ix' in
rfiE'C&lt; in Jackson. Gallia and Meigs
Counties.
For the past 10 yea rs. Woodland
Centers has bl'&lt;'n able to provide
menta l hea lth setvices to all in llE'Cd
~·ithout rE-ga rd to their ability to
pay. Dr. Nirhm report s. Se-rVices
have been available from 8a .m. to5
p.m.. fivr days a Wl'('k plu s
additional evening hours. Emer·

Ohio weather

Registration lor summer school
classes at Buckeye Hills Career
Center, wlilch began last week, Is
scheduled to continue through June
11, with an evening session scheduled June 10.
Junklr and senior lilgh school
students wUI be able to obtain
makeup and new credits through
Buckeye Hills programs. Makeup
credit can be obtained In three
weeks and new credits In six weeks.
More Information concerning
classes, tuition · and schedules Is
available by calling 245-5334.

gency S('J"VIces through Crisisllnf'

COMPUTERIZED ENGRAVING -Gall Feny,
daughter of Middleport · residents Bob and Jean
Gilmore, tries her hand at computerized engraving.

By NANCY \'01\CHAM
Sentinel News Stall
What do you do when your small
family business outgrows the ll\J&lt;'S·
I room in your houSl'?
You move to the garage.
And what do you do when you
outgrov.' thr garagr?

GIVE BLOOD THIS SUMMER THROUGH

RED CROSS BLOODMOBILE
WEDNESDAY I JUNE 11-1:00.:5:30

POMEROY SENIOR CITIZENS CENTER
..

FATHER'S DAY

SPECIAL .... A NEW CHAIR.
SEE OUR FINE SELECTION OF RECLINERS,
ROCKER/RECLINERS, SWIVEL ROCKERS AND
.WO&lt;lD ROCKERS.

FREE
DELIVERY

ELBERFELDS
POMEROY

The Glbnores say the computer Is "a lifesaver" In the
operation of their business, Middleport Trophles.

r '

You build on.
That's the point whlr h Boh and
Jean Gilmore of Midd!epo11 Tro·
phirs ha ve reached. Middlepor1
Trophi&lt;•s has grown so much in lh&lt;•
rwo years since it opcned that the
Gilmores have gone from the house
to till' garage and are just about
tl'ady to sta rt building on to the
ga rage to crea te more work space.
With no trophy shops in the
Immediate vicinity. Ilk' Gilmores
knrw there was potent ia l for
Mlddlepon Trophies when they
started the shop in March of 1984.
C'rratiw people by natull'. Bob
and .Jmn were somewhat familiar
wit h the trophy buslnrss because
they had opcrated an mgra vlng
busincs~ srvcra l years ago in the
Cinci nnat i area, spcda lizing in belt
buck les.
And even though Middleport
Trophies is still the only trophy
business in the local area, Bob says
he runs the business as if t t.:-re were
another trophy shop In town "to
keep pricPs compet etive and give
customers value for· their money."
And he adds, "it' s paid off."
The Gilrnores add to and change
displays from time to tim!' to giw
customers a choice of more popu Ia r
items which are ava ilable. In
addition to a lull line of trophies,
plaques, plates. medals. badges
and ribbons, th('y can also 1111
special orders.
Right now Is their busiest time of
year comments Jlob. -·with orders
from schools and summer ball
leagues.
Recen tly the Gilmores added a
computer to their vast amount of
equipment just to kl'l'p up with
Increased orders.
The computer "does the mechan·
lcs cl the engraving," explains Bob.
And when It comes to !llilng large

ordNs, he calls the computer "a
Jifpsa\'PI'."
With tl&gt;:' comput er, Ilk' size and
sty le of INters, the margins. and
oos!'lines for eac h line or print, can
br programmed for up to 999
rl'flruts. For example. if Bob Is
working on trophy tags for a schoo l.
Ilk' nam~ of one student can be
ck'lctr&lt;l from Ilk' computer and
anotl\cr nam(' programmed in just
as fasl as the information ca n lx'
tyjl('&lt;i.
Graphics ca n also br drawn by
computer and when 1&gt;:' ha s the
sparr lime, Bob works to pertect
till' comput,er ·drawin~ of such
''mblems as Southern Local's
"tornado."
As the business grows. Bob and
.Iran cont inue to make improw·
menr s to better m&lt;'&lt;'l ttx• nA'ds of
customPrs.
Recently. Bob and hi s son built
SI'Veral tables and numbered them
to create an assembly line arrangt•ment. As trophies progress from

have bl'&lt;'n ava ilable24 hour.; a day,
S&lt;'Vl'n da ys a W('('k. thr rxecutive

and ·or Increased state dollars it is
impossible for Woodland Centers to

dir('{'lor statPS.

continur prov iding comprf'hC'nsive

ThrSC' S{'rvicrs wrre made p:&gt;ssi hle through the years primarily
through federal and state funds and
the fede ra l funds have now decreased b)' two thirds and have no&lt;
been replaced by state or local
funds.
Local levy funds an• non-Pxistl'nt

mental health Sl'rvices or to even
kl'l'p basic outpatient services
ava ilable on a daily basL'i.
Dr. Niehm states he is announcin~ . with mncern. tha &lt; the Meigs
Clinic will be open two days pcr
wC"Ck until additional state or loca l
funds are aga in avai lable. Emer~mcy S&lt;·rvicr. he sa id. will continue
to be offered on a ~4-hour. Sl'venday
a wl'l'k basis, by ca lling the
C'risisline number. Meigs Clinic will
be op('R from R a. m. t o~. p.m. on
Mondays and Fridays only until
further notice.

rven on a token ma lching bcisis for

sta te dollars. the execu tive dir&lt;'C ·
tor. pointed out.
Today. the majority of prople
tx•Jng sc1ved arc una ble to pay for
all or evrn part of the costs of tlk'
services and without a loca l levy

Ohio lawmakers may call session
to override Gov. Celeste's veto
LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Repo~r
COLUMBUS, Ohio rUPii State l&lt;ogislative lmders arr
planning to ca lli he Ohio General
Assembly back into session.
perhaps later this month, to

Family b~siness growing by
leaps, bounds in Middleport

CHAIR
SALE
TREAT YOUR DAD TO SOMETHING

Registration set

to the situat ion.
Council approved the report of Mayor Hoffman
showing receipts of $.1.828 in fin es and fees for ttx·
month of May. Council gave a first reading tn an
ordinance to provide for a drilling lease and
advertising for bids on the drUUn~ The ordinance
provides that bids will be accepted for Ilk' dr illing and
production of oil and gas under the real es tate owned
by the village, situated in Salisbury Township. The
onlinance provides that no well shall be drillrd which
will intf'rterc wit h the sewage disposal facilities
situated on the real rstate and the village reserves rt.:rlght to approve the location of any drilling sites and
the location of any production lines and-or eq uipment.
The third reading was given and approved
providing for the abandonment of a part of 13£'ech
Alley near Broadway. Mayor Hoffman reminded
council that it is n('aring tiirre to prepare next year's
budget a nd requested all cou ncilmen to Jet him or
Clerk-Treasull'r Jon Buck of any unusual expend!·
turr which might be forthcoming ne., t year.
Continued on page 10

Woodland Centers to reduce
senrices to two days a week

SEASONS CHANGE
BLOOD NEEDS DON'T

.,

• 1 Section. 10 Pages
25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

•

the Rev. William Middleswarth,
While the average retail price has
pastor of St. Paul's and St. .John's risen 1.51 cents since the last
Lutheran Chu rehes, used as his survey, the price dealers pay fort he
topic, ",f Will Not be Just a same gasoline has gone up only 0.79
Passenger" in his baccalaureate cents, Lundberg said.
address. The band and the choir.
Retailers, Lundberg said, are
directed by Valerie Ransbottom, using the dHference to Improve
presented other selections during their operating margins.
the commencement and Valerie
"Overall operating margins have
Lynn Woods, a member of tt.c· risen to 11.43cents per gallon, which
graduating class sang "The Grea· Is what stations pay their billS
test Love of All" .
wtth," he said. "Atthebeglnnlngol
Class officers, Lisa Marie Hend- the year, the margtn was 14.46 cents
erson, president: James Terrance per gallon."
Ca ldwell. vice president: Joseph
Self-serve sta tklns, which acGranville Runyoo, secretary and count for 77 percent of retail sales,
Pa tricia Ann Sams, treasurer. posted an average price of 84.75
carried out various functions for the cents per gallon for leaded regular
commencement ranging from in- gas. Unleaded regular Is averaging _
troduction or speakers to the 90.65 per ga llon , meaning there are
turning of the tassel.
still prices at or below $1 a gaHon,
Principal William L. Buck ley Lundberg said. Premium unleaded
recognized Ilk' top ten scholars of gasoline Is averaging $1.04.10.
the class who Include Rice .. Jacobs,
Lundberg attributed the steady
Lisa Marie Henderson. Terrie Ann rise In gas prices - 5.5 cents a
Starcher, Veronica Sue Provo, gallon since Memortal Day - to a
Kimberly Ann Schul. Ange la Marie public that Is "reluctant to travel
Pooler. Melissa Ann Barker, Dawn abroad, meaning In creased
Rae Grueser and Aleshia Lynn driving."
Holsinger.
Supt. Richard L. Roberts ac·
cepted the class from Prin cipa l
Buckley and Mrs. Carolyn Susie
Heines. president of the Eastern
Local Board of Education, conSouthw.est Ohio
ferred diplomas.
South Central Ohio
Mostly cloudy today, with a
chance of showers and thunder·
storms and highs In the low &amp;B.
Mostly cloudy tonight and Tuesday,
with scattered showers and thunthis trend can only be described derstorms. Lows tonight wiH be In
(as 1 a failure of the program to the mid 60s, with highs Tuesday
preclude an avoidable problem. U near 85.
The probability of preclpltatkln Is
the program had fUnctioned prop·
erly, the Challenger accident might 40 percent today and 50 percent
tonight and Tuesday.
have been avoided."
Winds will be !rom the east near
The report dPscribed ttl' disaster
10
mph today and from the
as "an accident rooted in history."
southeast
near 10 mph tonight.
"The testimony revepls failures
in communication that resulted in a
Ohio Extended Forecast- Wed·
decision to launch 51-L tChal·
nesday
through Friday: A chance
Ienger! based on incomplete and
of
showers
and thunderstorms
somet imes mislead ing lnforma·
Wednesday
and
Thursday, with lair
lion, a conflict between engineering
weather
Friday.
Highs mainly will
data and management judgments.
range
!rom
75
to
85 each day, with
and a NASA management strucovernight
lows
ranging
from the
lure that permitted internal flight
upper
50s
to
the
mid
60s.
safety problems to bypass key
shuttle man agers," Ilk' report iiald.
The rcpnrt's release now kicks off Chamber to meet
an" lrllt'irS!' Investigation by Con·
The regular meeting of Pomeroy
gress. Rogers Is scheduled to tes tily
Area
Chamber of Commerce will
Tuesday lx'fore the HouS&lt;' and
be
Tuesday,
12 noon, at the Trinity
Senate and Fletcher wUI testify
Chureh.
All
inembers
are urged to
Wednesday on NASA's reaction to
attend.
, the
_ report
__:___. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

systems, Independent review
boards, study of crew escape
systems and Improved Internal
communications.
The report ruled out sabotage or
any other shutt le system fa ilure as
a contributor to the accident.
"Even the most cursory examination of (0-ring) failure rate
soould have Indicated that a serious
and potentially disastrous situa tion
was developing on ail solid rocket
booster joints," the report said.
"Not recognizing and reporting

entlne

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 10, 1986

Copyrighted 1986

Report calls for sweeping overhaul
By WILLIAM HARWOOD
UPI Science Wrker
WASHINGTON iUPI! - A
sharply critical report from th&lt;'
Rog&lt;&gt;rs Commission tnday ca lled
for a sweeping overhaul of NASA 's
seriously "flawed" management
and safety programs to prevent a
repeat of the Challenger disaster
and ensure a sale return to space.
The long-awaited report, formally presented to President Rea ·
gan today, said the Challenger
accident could have been avoided
and that America's space program
must end Its reliance on the shuttle
as Its sole means of carrying heavy
payloads Into orbit.
"Our objective has been not only
to prevent any recurrence of the
failure related to this accident but to
the extent possible to reduce other
risks In future flights," commission
Chairman William P . Rogers said
In a preface to the report, the resu It '
of a fou r·month lnv&lt;'Stlgatlon.
The 256-pagc document, com·
plete with dramatic photographs,

.l~~AA champions

•

at y

e

Eastern graduation held Sunday...
develop our talents: we should
utilize them to ourbestabiHty. Also,
If we develop our talents to their lull
potential we will never have to
wonder- 'wbat If I had tried a little
harder, what would have happened
If I had put forth a Uttle more
effort ?' And If you do your best and
fail, It doesn't matter. You did your
best and no one can ask for more,"
Rice commented In conclusion.
The salutatorian, Jacobs, used
wisdom as the key to the future In
his address stating that America Is
a great nation and that Its people
are equally great but charged that
the nation has fallen Into a slump.
"We llve In a nation where our
brothers and sisters starve in the
streets: where convicted murder·
ers walk the strA'ts within a year:
where a good man cannot keep a nd
protect the land that he has worked
all d his life to plant andbulld upon:
where bureaucrats rule. We must
change cr this natkln wUI fade from
the earth," Jacobs remarked.
Jacobs stated that the nalkln can
be chang&lt;&gt;d rut ooly If everyone
works together.
"We need a guide to success,
whether It is to the success of a
nation or just one man . I think tha t
wisdom Is that guide . Wisdom is the
key to the future," Jacobs said.
Jacot!; credited the elders for

•

Page5

ovrrridf' a gutrrnaloria l if(•m
veto in l£&gt;gislation on r eSl'arch

and treatment for Alzheimer's
diSt•asr.

one step to anotlk'r. they a removed
accordingly from table to tabl!'.
Also in an effort to better ser'Ve
customers, Bob and .Jean rnw stock
most of the items used in tt.:- shop.
Says Bob. "I used to order itf'ms "a
ha ~ dozen of this and thrre ri that.
beca us!' I was afraid I might rot usc
•vcrythin~ ... Now he orders ~ophy
parts "by the case."
It wou ld Sl'l'm that b&lt;x·auSf•
Middleport Trophies is vea l, many

Gov.

Richard

F . CPil•stP.

cit ing ex('("ssivr costs. vrt()("(j

last W&lt;'&lt;'kcnd a section oft he bill
whic h h!' said would have
opcned the way for "at least
2.1XXJ addit ional nu rsing home
beds at a cost of at least $16.7
million to the state."
But House Speaker Wrnal G.
Riffe Jr., D·New Boston. in
calling for the ovrrtide Monday.
sa id Cell'S!!' rrcrived inaccurate

cust omers wall W11 il l hP last minut &lt;'

to call or bring in orders. In the past.
Bob and .Jean have always accepted last minute ord('rs, however. tl&gt;:'y ar&lt;' fast approaching the
time when they will haVI' to ru rn

cos t statistics from his adviSPrs.

The govNnor's offic£' said if

stands by its ligull'S lor now, and
ma y cont!'St thP override
attempt.
S('natr President Paul E.
Gil lmor, R-Port Clint on, said he
agreed wit h Riffe that the
lawmakers ' hould be ca lled
back for an override, after
Celeste acts on all bills sent him
by the Lcgislatull' during a
post-primary session In May.
"If we can, we'd like to wait
unt il he dea ls with ail the bills
tha t he has before him ," said
Gillrnor. adding he knows of no

last minutr ordrrs away, simply

becauS&lt;' thl'y have so many other
order.; to fi ll on dead lines .
Health problems forC!'d Bob to
slow do"n a few years ago and
rPiire from till' trucking profession.
Now he is busier than !'Ver as
Middleport Trophies expands. But
(Con)lnued on page 101

ck'adlinr for ovvrriding a \'('10.

The bill was au &lt;hored by Sen.
David L. Hobson. R·Springfield.
and was sponsorr&lt;l in the House
bv S(ll'aker Pro Tempore J.
Barn!'y Quilter. DToledo. a
cloSl' friend of Riffe's. Quilter's
wi fe suffers from Alzheimer's
diseaSl'.
The rest of tl\c bill. signed
Saturday by Celeste, took effnct
immedia!Ply. It proviclcs $1.&amp;
million to the Ohio Department
of Aging tor research and
trealrnent of Aizhrimer's dis·
ease. an irreversible and degenerative condition of tlk' brain
affrcting mainly older citizens.
Und('r the new law. $850,000
will be used by tl\c department
to develop train ing programs for
professionals clcallng wtth Alz·
helmer's victims and their
fa milies. and pilot programs for
respite ca re and support services for family members, whO
are subjected to extreme stress.
The other $1 million is desig·
nated for grants to hospitals and
schools of medlcinelor research
on the disease.
The por1ion vetoed by Cclrstc
suspends tlk' "fl'rtificate of
need" program lor nu rsing
home co nst ru ction or additions
applil'&lt;i for prior to June 15, to be
used e'clusivrly for tlr rare of
Alzheimer's patient s and which
will not result in Jmt't' than 100
beds.

Any health care faci lity at·
tempting to expand or make a
major equipment purchase
must obtaln a fl'rtifica teof need
from the Ohio Department of
Health to eliminate the possibilIt y of duplication or excessive
beds.
Celeste sa id the item veto was
necessary to preserve the integrity of the healt h care cost
containment he has sought for
thrA' years.
" I am extremply disappointed
by tlr governor's line item vrto
of provisions of Substitute Se·
nate Bill 256, " said Riffe.
"The goverror appears to
have based his decision solely on
inaccurate cost statistics supplied to him ," said Riffe. " It Is
unfortunat e that Ilk' go\'ernor
has relied upon lncorrec&lt; lnfor ·
mation from his advisers who do
not understand the intent and
pu11J0se of the bill.
"The General Assembly has
carefu Uy calculated tlk' fi sca l
impact of t hJs legisl ation and
approved OV!'rwhelmingly withou t dissent Senate Bill 256."
Thomas Kiltzcnmeycr. the
gG\'C'roor's p:o.;rcuti\'r

as~i~r ~.m r

for legislation . ' 1id his offin~ Lo..;
rf'Studying tht' tust figun · ~.
which caml' from ttk: Oh1o
[)('partmrnt of I Iuman S('n ICt' '
Katzenmeyc1

m"'nt

"st&lt;J nd~

~• tid

the dc'p,111

b.\ thosl'

figun~ . "

Probe bomb threat at area school
Meigs County Sheriff Howard
Frank reports Deputy Kenny Klein
was dispatched to Rutland Elemen tary School abou I 12:45 p.m.
Monday for a bomb threat. AccordIng to a sher~f's deparlment
spokesman, the building was
cleared of students and a bomb
search wa s made by authorit ies,
however, nothing was found .
The sheriff alSO reports that
Cll!lord (Bo) Whittington, 53, ofRt.
143, Harrisonville, and David E.
Arlx, 26, of Rt. 4, Pomeroy, were
both arrested Monday night and
charged with disorderly conduct by
Intoxication. The arrests were
made about 9 p.m. in the Harrison·
ville area by Deputy Donald
Snyder. According to the sheriff's
report, the men had open cans of

DRILLING PROCEDURE - I'Uttmg together a trophy or plaque
requlmo several stages of work. At the drW press Is Bob Glbnore o1
Middleport Trophies.
.

•

beer in a public plact•. They were
released from custocly and will
appear June 18 In Meigs County
Court .
Also arrested Monday was Do-

nald Fowler, '&gt;). ol S)TaCUSl', lor
hauling an insecurl' load of gruvf'l
on a tractor-rraiiPr rig . Fowlrr wns
arrested in the Syracuse arra ahout
5 p.m. by Deput)· Snyder.

Shuttle hearings begin
Wi\SHINGTON (UPI) - Vowln~ ID chart a "new start" lor
America's belequered space program, congrESSional leaders today
ldcked oil a round ol key heartnp ID probe the concluslom of the
Rogers ConunL!lalon repon on the ChaDenger disaster.
"The problem (for) the nation Is where do we go from here,"
conunlsslon Chalnnan Wllilam Rogers told lhe Hoose Science IUld
Technology Conunlttee. ''We were not asked ID deal with that
subject. That's really a subject for this L'Onunltlee."
Rogers !onnally briefed President Reagan Monday on thoi
oonlenls of a 2116-pap analy• ollhe Jan. 28 dlsasler, a repol1 thai
chlll1ed a long history of management and safety problems wllhln
NASA,

'

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                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
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    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="40339">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="40338">
              <text>June 9, 1986</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
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  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="126">
      <name>johnson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="178">
      <name>lambert</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="14">
      <name>wolfe</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
