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Conners
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·Wimbledon
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enttne
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Vo1.37, No.40
Copyrighted 1987
Showers and thunderstonils •
again tonight. Low between 65
and 70. Partly cloudy ThuFSday. Scattered ·showers and
thunderstorms. ·nighs near 80•
2 Sections 20 Pages
25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Nelll(spaper
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 1, 1987
Ohio General Assembly adjourns Tuesday
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) - State law makers .
are home enjoying the first day of their summer
vacation , having approved a 65 mph speed limit, a
gasoline tax hike, the.two-year state budge! and a
variety of other measures affecting government
opera tions and tht.> publtc.
Adjournment came Tuesday afternoon , follow Ing approval of the bill raising the 55 mph speed
ltmlt to 6~ mph on rural fr eeways. The new speed
llmills expected to lake effect about mid -July .
Before going home. the lawmakers also adopt~
a massiv(' o erhaul of the sta te's savings a nd loan
r('guiatlons which Includes a four-year ex tension
of the 25 percent interest cap on cred it cards "nd
~ma ll loa ns.
Also senl 10 Gov . Richard F. Crlesle was a
494-page bill spelling out policy changes In var ious
stat e agencies to accompany the 1988-89 state
budget. That bill also contains pay raises for
judges ranging from 7 to 17 percent, and It moves
·the planned March 19880hlo presidential prfmary
back to Its original May date.
·
·
The governor Is expected to sign the$n.5 billion
general appropriation and its accompanying
la nguage bill later today. the first day of the new
fiscal period, along with a $2.4 billion trans porta·
tlon appropriation containing a 2. 7-c~nt hike In the
state gasoline tax .
.
Celes te a lready has said he will allow the 65 mph
speed limit bill to become .law without his
signature. 10 da ys after he receives the bill.
Motorists will have to obey the posted 55 mph limit
until the road signs are changed.
North
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STERNWHEELER--Charleston's 8ternwhf't'ler, lhe P .A. Denny, wa<~ moving up river
fa~~t
on Friday afternoon past MlnersvUie.
-Restricting vicious and dangerous dogs, wit h
automatic sa nctions against pit bull terriers.
-Providing for a $1 state income tax voluntary
checkoff for state and coun(y political parties .
-Giving the Ohio Department of Human
Services the authority to audit providers of
Medicaid serY.ices to cut down on fraud .
The budget language bill, approved 62-35 in the
House and 18·15 in the Senate, proyides for cost
containment in the area of human services, and
. stepped· UP. enforcement in child support payments and state tax collections.
Some sponsors were concerned that lawmakers, primarily Democrats, refused to go along
with an emergency clause. meaning the cost
savings programs needed to balance the budget
will be clelayed by 90 days .
Continued on page 16
The House and Senate are not expecte<l to
return until r.utumn, unless it Is to override a
governor's veto or to act on a conference
com mittee report 0n ·Civil justice and ins urance
reform ~ the one major casualty of the spring
session.
A six·member panel on that subj ect failed to .
reach agreement with the gover nor's office oit
provisions in the area of civil justice and product
liability. ·
The conferees will cont in uP to meet informally
with Ce leste's representatives, but . House
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D· New Boston, said
If the committee cannot produce a settlem ent in
three weeks; it will be dissolved and a new set of
negotl<itors' w!ll be appointed.
Also sent to the governor on the last day of the
s pring meet ing were bills :
COUleS
forward today
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Lt. phone logs, appointment calend· described by his former secte·
Col. Oliver North was called ars and notebooks s u b poe n a e tary , Fawn Hall, as tantamount
to a diary of his activities while
before congressional investiga· d by investigators.
he directed secret . operations
W~aring his Marine uniform
tors today to tell for I he first time
whal he knows of President with medals gleaming on his from his NSC office in the White
Reagan' s awareness of the chest. the fired National Security House basement .
As part of the formal procesc heme to divert money to Council s taffer avoided journal·
dure
Tuesday, the committees
ls
ts
and
met
with
four
lawmak·
Nicaraguan Contra rebels from
formally
grahted North limited
ers.
In
all,
he
surrendered
seven
secret U.S. arms sales to Iran.
immunity
after he invoked his
black
binders
filled
With
..The embattled Marine at the
.
J:ifth
Amendment
.rights agafnst
heart of the Iran-Contra scandal mat eria l.
self-Incrimination
in response to
Rep: Lee Hamilton, D-Ind.,
was summoned to testify in a
long-awaited private session lat e·- chairman of the House commit- token questions from
in the afternoon before a select tee <probing the case, described investigators.
North has maintained his pubgroup of interrogators eager to · the sess ion as ·'very congenial.''
ask him a limited number of Sen. Warren Rudman. R-N .H., lic silence ever since the divervice chairman of the Senate sion was exposed Nov. 25 and he
questions under oath.
The meeting was scheduled to panel, termed it "polite, friendly was fired. Limited Immunity
compels his testimony under the
follow a court appearance by a nd bu sinesslike."
Upon entering the closed ses- threat of jail but protects him
North before U.S. District Judge
Aubrey Robinson, who has over· sion with his lawyer, North shook from pros~cution on any evi·
seen the Marine officer's chal· hands with Hamilton, . Rudman, dence he reveals - meaning
,lenge of the law by which Sen. George Mitchell, D-Malne, Walsh must prove his case
Independent · prosecutor Law· and Rep . Ed Jenkins, D-Ga .. against North. was prepared
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('nrr Wa ls h was a.ooolnted for a members of the Iran· Contra lndept>ndently .
A spokeswoman for the p~osec·
ct'lminal in ves ti gation 01 the commltwes ~>J .. , •.I?CeJVttl ' tue
documents.
Ulor said Tuesday Walsh has
case.
Under the deal struck with been filing evidence under court
North a ppeared on Capitol Hili
for 15 minutes 'I'uesday to receive North last week, the committees seal at least once a week In recent
officially a grant of limited agreed to turn over documents months and would "continue to
immunity from prosecution in relating to him ttiat they obtained take precautions" that could
include a filing late Tuesday or
exchange for his testimony and from other sources.
North's
notebooks
have
been
early
today. .
to turn over his personal tele-
United States, Soviet Union close on new .arms agreement
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WASHINGTON tUPll -The
Unllrd Stales and 1he Sov.le t
Union wE're ret>Orted close tod ay
to a n('w arms agreemenl lhal
would sc rap th('lr mOdium· and
s horter · rHng e mi ss ile s
worldwide.
U.S. officials responded fav orably to an Informa l SoviC't
suggest ion on lh(' dramallc arms
rrduc t ion, I he n o-pori said. and
ad mlnls lration officials wrrr
walling 10 see If Moscow would
ubmil lhe compromise plan
formall y .
Whit(' House ch ipf of slaff
under discussion In Geneva.
Howard Ba ker refused to com·
Such a n agreement between
men1 on th(' rPport that the
Washington and Moscow could
Unti ed Sta tes and 1he SoviN
Unio n have reached an · agreP- make possible a third s ummit
ment In · principle o n lhC' ar ms meet lng between President Reacont ro l Issue. lelling journalists ga n and Sov iet leade!' Mikhail
early today as he relurned wilh · Gorbac hev in Washington later
this year.
President Reagan from an t.>ven·
The new offer - ·cor each side
lng function : " I ca n't comment
to elimina te a!l medium- and
on 1hat. "
Ttic report in The New York shor ter-range missiles world·
Times ci ted unidentified U.S. wide - would m ea n the Soviets
were dropping their demand that
officials as say ing lhe Soviet
suggesl ion could breach m a jor they be allowed to keep 100
mE>dium -range nuclear war barriers lo a superpower accord
heads in Asia.
on int ermediat e-ra ng (' a nd
But In retur.n, the Unfted States
s horter·range missiles now
.
Gallia wo01an dies in blaze
A Ga llipolis woman was found
dead at her home on 1096 Su nset
Or. Wednesday around 4 a.m .,
according to lhe Ga llipolis Fire
Department.
According to lhe Gallipolis
Volunteer Fire Department's
repor'- Judy E. Haskins Clifford
Pollock, 67, was in her bedroom
when fh·emen found her. Mrs .
Pollock's death was believed to
have' been caused by smoke
Inhalation, according to Fire
Chief Ra y Bush.
Dr. Edward Berkich, ·the act ·
lng coroner, could not be reached
for comment Wednesday morn·
1ng as to the exact causeofdeath.
Four trucks and 21 men were .
called to the scene:
According to the fire report. a
blaze started In the kitchen and
burned the contents .and the
kitch en walls. Building damagE'
was estimated at $62,000 with
$30,000 damage to the contents.
Ca use of the fire has not been
determined. The fire is still
under investigation by the Ga.llipolls Fire Department and the '
sta te fire marshal.
Surviving Haskins are 1wo
brothers Frank L. Haskins of
Gallipolis and Harold P . Haskins
of Fl. Walton, Fla . She was a
member of the Gallipolis Emblem Club and was a veteran
member of the women's golf club
of Gallipolis.
would have to forgo conversion of tendered Informally several
its European' based . ground· weeks ago by CoL Gen. Nikolai
launched cruise missiles to sea· Chervov, head of the Arms
launched cr uise missiles and . Control Directorate of the Soviet
renounce any Pight to convert General Staff, in a talk with
U.S. Pershing 2 medium-range Maynard Glitman, the chief U.S.
missiles to s hort er range Persh· negotiator in medium-range
lng 1Bs. which could be turned arms.
While both sides have ironed
over to West Germany, the
out most of the main elements of
Times said.
Currently , West Germany has a new arms treaty, U.S. officials
older Pershing 1A miss iles with cautioned that conflicting Soviet
warheads under U.S. control. sta tements and other questions
While this arrangement might be remain unresolved by the sugpermitted to conti•.ue under any gested compromise.
formal Soviet arr.1s control offer,
Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind.,
the Kremli~ ha• given conflicting who has just returned from
·Europe, said he was · "very
statements on the question .
U.S. officials, according to the familiar". with the Soviet propTimes. sa id the Joint Chiefs of . osal and that U.S. negotiators in
Staff supported the administra- Geneva. Switzerland, "are
tion's interest in exploring just optimistic."
"The Soviets have not tabled
such a compromise offer as was
this officially." Lugar said in an
interview o'n NBC's "!oday"
program. "There have been
some unofficial visits. I would
say we are moving toward a
sltua t ion in which all the shorter
range and (medium) range wea·.
pons are going t9 be a 'part of the
agreement, which means they
arC' going to be destroyed ."
"The protocol for that destruc·
tion and verifications of how that
is to be done, the phasing of how
rapidly and how we are to know,
of course, are the major points of
the negotiations ." Lugar said he
reviewed details and was optim-·
lstic "that both Soviet and
American negotiatlors were moving very steadily ahead with
a protocol for verification that Is
substantially better than we've
observed in previous treaties ."
.M eese must act ·- to~ co01Ply ~law .
WASHINGTON tUPJl -Attor· by t he Ethics In Government
Act," Martin wrote to Rep. Gerry
nC'y General Edwin Meese will
have to itemize the holdings he Sikorski. 0 -Mlnn., head of a
House Post Office and Civil
placed in a blind trust with an
ex-officer of the scandal-plagued Service subCommittee.
"The Etbics In Government
Wedtech Corp. In order to f:Omply
•; with federal ethics law, the Act contains specific require· ments for the creation of blind
government says.
The decision from the Office of trusts, Including the necessity of
Government Ethics was promp- approval by our office," Martin
ted by release of a letter Tuesday wrote, saying such approval was
.
·
from its director, David Martin, not granted.
The deputy director of the ·
who told the chairman of a House
subcommittee that Meese had ethics office, Don Campbell, said .
not complied with the law In · after Sikorski released the letter
setting .up his "limited blind that Meese had committed "no
partnership" with W. Franklyn violation at this point'' but he now
Chinn', a former . Wedtech Is obligated to disclose the assets
administered by the trust.
director.
"In 60 percent to 80 percent of
· · "No 'limited blind partnership'
:ha·s been or could be approved the cases we review, we have to
· under the statutory scheme as ask additional questions," Camp·
·creating a qualified blind trust or bell said. "The ~ltuatlon here Is
'other arrangement authorized no different. He'U·hav,etogo back
/
.
and tell us what's in it."
Campbell said . setting up a
blind trust meeting government
rules is costly and rare and fewer
than 50 are now In existence In
the entire executive branch. For
a tnist to comply, his office would
have to screen all assets that go
into it as well as the trustee, he
said, to assure complete
Independence.
Shortly after becoming attorney. general, Meese sold off all of
his holdings and Invested the
proceeds $60 000 with Chinn in a
limited bilnd ~partnership that he
listed on his 1985 financial
disclosure form.
That Investment as well' as
Meese's possible work within the
government ~ on behalf of Wedtech, Is under Investigation by
Independent prosecutor . James
Continued .on page 16 ·
she was overcome *lth smoke In her bedroom. ~
Four truckll, and 21 firemen were called to the •
scene. The blaze Is under Investigation by the fire •
depart111ent and the state fire marshal.
SCENE OF TRAGEDY - JuciS' E. Pollock, 87,
of 1096 Sunset Dr., Gallipolis, was found ilead at
· her home early Weclne~~day morning accordlni to
Gallipolis Fire Chief Ray Bush. Fire fighters say
.
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Poi1:l8foy Mlddlllport. Ohio
'
lll Coa rt•Sir eel
Pomeroy, \Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS o·F THE MEIGS·MASON AREA
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WASHINGTON -
The sup·
pressed story can now be told of a
showdown In the' Persian Gulf in
the a utumn of 1980 when thetwo
superpowers maneuvered dangerously near the edge of war.
Now a new military confronta·
lion Is developl~g in the same
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager
·PAT WHITEHEAD
-Assistant Publlsher/Contrllller
Wednesday, July 1, 1987
,,
Nuclear ~war at
The Daily _Sentinel
~
hand
place. Lest the .lessons of 1980 be ·
)o.st, here is the .chilling story:
Alter the failed attempt In
April .1980 to rescue America~
hos tages from lr,an , then President Jimmy ·carter began
preparations for a second rescue
mission. His national security
adviser, Zblgniew Brzezlnsl\1,
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
: Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association,
.
But · the Nation~ I Security
Agency also has the ability to
Intercept and decode · secret
Soviet tntelllgence cables. It wa s
clear from these Intercepted
messages that the Soviets were
fully aware of what was happen·
lng. They had advpnce warning
of . President Carter's highly
secrPt plans.
He went ahead, neverthelf.'ss,
with the quiet deployment of a
strike force primarily In Egypt
and Israel. The.Kremlln reacted
by shifting men and material
from Europe to the edge of Iran
and deploying half of its forces In:
Afghanistan closer to the Iranian. :.
border.
'
~he Ol~pics
.
By DICK WEST
:wASHINGTON -Despite all the bad things tha t have been said
a !!out it. July need not- be a totall_oss this year. For one thing, on the
16t h. we can join in celebrating Orville Redenbacher 's 80th birthday .
:. suspect. however, that a n agent for the so-called ·'Prince of Pop''
w'(!s engaging in a bit of hyperbole in descr ibing a card that is only 7
feet high and 240 feet long as the "World' s Largest Birthday Card .." .
When the agent says the dimensions of "t his personalized card"
cQ.ver "a total of 1,680 square feet," the math is impeccable. I be lieve,
h<YWever. tliat the facts may have been misrepresented in a statement
tMt "t he largest card the Guinness Book of record has in its Illes
111)?asures 1,200 square feet."
·My only copy of the record book admittedly is out of dat e: Before
ma king claims of this nature', however. the agent should hav e
cfiecked wit h Spalding College at Louisville.
()n the college's 60th a nniversary in 1980, according to Guinness, a
"iSirthday card" measuring more than 8,800 square feet was
utjveiled. Since C.3 by !66 feet is considerably larger than the birthday
tribute io Redenbacher, we may ass ume the Spalding card remains
Hie world's largest.
"rhPre. Is no doubt, however. thai the individual Is older tha n the
i~tltution .
.
•
l al so quarrel with the concept'- nowhere expressed by the agent,!"
m]ght add, but appearing in an otherwise reputable publication toot his birthdaY· !:1Xpress will make a "whistle stop" tour.
.Among the cities where s\opovers are scheduled are Cincinnati,
C~veland, Boston, New York. Washington,. Charlotte, Atlanta, New
Orleans. Memphis, Chicago, Minneapolis and Denver.
:!iome of those cities probably have stations large enough that trains
wOuld stop there to pick up -passengers. I questlon .whether they are
whistle stdps aLthe type where President Truman made speeches
during the 1948 ca mpaign.
.
l\"IY dictionary defines a ,whistle stop as "a small town along a
. railroad line" where trains only stop If flagged down or to. permit a
p&>sidentlal ca ndidat e to speak.
·
'grew up In a town where the train station was scarcely larger than
Spalding's greeting card. So I should know a whistle stop when I read
alilut one. But Truman never gave 'em hell In my hometown to my
krtowledge.
,
.!;peaking of the age of presidents, back when HST was In the White
HOuse, 1 automatically assumed our chief ex~l\tlves were old e_nough
tO" know what they were doing. Imagine my chagrin to learn from
R;nald Reaga n that age has nothing to do with making mistakes.
}llchard Nixon, who resigned from the presidency in 1974 owing to
th!' Watergate scandal. turned 74last month, vowing to outlive many
of. his critics.
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1\nv\l'ay: I w~h for Redenbac her a happy 80t,h. He_Is old enough to
rut\ for president himself.
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Ivan Lend) and
•
WIMBLEDON, Eng! ana
tUPl) -:-Throughout his career, ·
Jimmy Connors has approached
tennis with a wonderfully simple
strategy : pound away until the
enemy ·gives up. · ·
·
This Inelegant. doc!rfne gave
tennis one of Its finest moments
Tuesday at Wimbledon's Center
Court. The 34-year-old left· .
hander, punching the air to
emphasize every winning point ,
scrambled from n,e ar-certaln de·
feat to shock Mlkaei Pernfors
and adv11nce to the quarterfinals
before an adoring cr.owd.
Connors rallied from a two- set
deficit - and a 4-1 margin In the
third - to defeat the Swede, 1-6,
1.:6. 7-5, 6-4, 6-2 .
"He just raised his game,"
Pernfors said. "He's known for
doing this; he's such a great
hustler. If he gets the opportunity
to comeback, he'sgoi ngtotakeit
~like today ."
"My ggo was hurt so I had to do
somethli)g to counteract what he
wanted a larger, punitive mil- name "Positive ~ap 80." . _;
·, The same code nalne 1111 been
Itary assault.
·
In th,e strictest secrecy, Intense given to a military ~erclae that
had been conducted a few wee~
pteR,aratlons for a rescue raid
began a.t training camps In .earlier . This was lnt4!nded. tl>
mislead the Soviets Into thinking
Florida to ·California. Some eleall references to "Positive Leap
ments of this scattered f.orce
began training under the code 80" had to do with not!Jing more
than a training exerciSe.
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The Russians were hot at all
fooled . li's now kn<iw11 that the
KGB had laid hands' on thl!
P~gon's secret codes and
wei'rdeclpberlng Its most sensl·
tlve messages.
•
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Strategy simple: pound .away
u~til _yourT oppo~ent gives up :: •
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The Soviet commanders a lso
went through ~o rne menacing .
exerc ises. These were later des· ·
crt bed by the Joint Chiefs of Staff
in a top -secret report : "In
August 1980. an unusually long
and complex General Staff·
controlled com mand post exer·
else featuring a mock national
Soviet Invasion of Iran was .held
In the tr ansborder area."
••
Of Crime, COIDIDOn
Se~se _....--
__S_a_ra_O_v_e_rs_tr_ee_t
The furor over Lawrence Stn- prison. Ltke everyone e lse who Interpret for us , didn't care any
gleton, ax-hacker; has for the read about the case, I gru mbled . ·more about the case. I can only
most part di ed down. Hels living But I didn ' t look any further Into guess why no one gave much of a
on the grounds of a correctional the cas!'. The headlines dlsap - hoot a bout Mary Bell VIn ce nt and
lnstltutlon under the questlona· peared after Singleton was sent - the lousy sentence Lawrence
ble guard of a parole board who enced, and I forgot about him Singleton received for robbing
couldn't find anyplace else to put along with Mary Bell Vlncl'nt. her or a normal llfP, both
him .
the 15-year-old learning to live physically and psychologically .
Singl,eton would have been with plastic arins and hooks
But I round a c lu e In Amanda
getting .settled In his own dwel- where her .hands had been.
'Spake's " The E nd of thP Ride:
ling and learning to live as a free
When Singleton .was paroled Analyzln ~ a Sex Crlime" in
man again, If It had not been lor
and people rose up against his Mother Jones. Spake was on
the reactions of the people In the
living near tt)em , 1 became target when she talked of the
communities where he tried t ~ ' . interested In thecase again. I ca n male rage and rear of dominance
m~ve, after , hl~ , release fro!1"' '"·cqnl~- ~xplaln, u as the curiosity ol by women that drove Singleton.
pnson thiS spring. Those people outrage, .tlie 'd l'slre to know what She ma y ha ve also been on targf.'t
went 'lvrong with the saleguards when she painted her portrait of
said, simply; that It didn ' t matter
to them . thalthe'd s~ rv ed part of we take for granted. But after an VIncent , a "seductive c hild, " a
his 14-year ·s entence and been evening at the library the tough r unaway that Sinl(lcton
paroled for model behavior . No outrage turned to rag~. I'd twisted around ln hls sick mind
one who haked ·the arms off a expec ted to find numerous artl· as a persgnlflcatlon of hi s ra1!e
teenager and left her for dead Cles on the case and on Mary Bell ' and fea r . And here. ! think , Is the
was living in their towns. One by VIncent's life after her attack. bottom line tha t. drove us as
one, the communities protested_ Instead , I found only a couple of journalists a nd people to ·ignore
so vehemently his parole officers Nf.'w York Times account s, and her : A crl me thi s helnm,Js, and a
gave up. .
one article In the April 1980 lssuP sent ence this ludicrous, Is more
th an we can comprehend and
I wond ered, whpn Singleton of Mother Jones ma gazine.
m
ake se nse of. Maybe,
want
This ·time, I wanted to know
was spntenced In 1979, how a man
to
believe,
so
that
we
don't
ha ve
can rape and hack a young why my fellow journalists, those
to
believe
It
cou
ld
happen
to
us.
woman and only ·get 14 years In empowered to c hron icle a nd
we
AIDS confusion
WASHINGTON - Six thou sand medical experts gathered
here .recently for the Third
Inter n•a tlonal Conference on
AIDS. Had someone attended
that meeting not knowing much
about the disease, they would
have left In almost total
confusion.
Start with the most basic
question : How potentially devastating Is the threat of AIDS?
·
At exactly the same time
Surgeon General C. Everett
Koop wa s calling AIDS "the most
devastating epidemic since the
Black Death ," Dr. Albert Sabin,
Inventor Of the polio vaccine, was
saying otherwise. Sabin claimed
the whole AIDS threat has been
vastly overblown by the media
looking tor headlines, gay act!·
vlsts looking for a political Issue
and researchers looking for
grants.
. Public health officials from
. New York told reporters that
AIDS Is now the No. 1 killer of
women aged 24 to 351n that state.
. Th'ts shows, according to them.
that the Incidence of heterosex'ual transrrifs's!on is growing
dramatically.
At almost the same time,
though, Dr. Harold Jaffe, chief
AIDS epidemiologist at the fed·
era! Centers for Dlspase Control,
. was telling the conference something else. Though AIDS can be
transmitted throl!gh normal
heterosexual Intercourse, Jaffe
said, national surveys hav'e
shown no ,evidence of a major
spread of the diseas.e among
heterosexuals.
Moreover, Jaffe put the odds
against a woman getting the
- disease at l,()()().!o-1 f she has
unprotected Intercourse with an
active AIDS carrier. That's
much lower than for other
sex\lally transmitted diseases.
Much has been written aboUS
the· spread of AIDS among
female prostitutes .. Statistics
about them are ofte)l quoted as
proving the spread of the disease
through heterosexual cont act.
But a g roup of rpsearchers
from the University of Miami
tested two -groups of prostit utes
- one inner-city stree t prOstl·
lutes, th!;! other a like-sized
sample from expensive escort
services . Forty-one percent of
the former group had AIDS. but
not one of the escort -service
women did .
Every one of the Inner-city
prostitutes with AIDS admitted
they were IV drug users. None of
the escort service prostitutes
were.
The concluslqn; AIDS Is being
sprpad not by heterosex11al contact, but l)y shared needles.
One group of scientists wa s
exclt!!d about a newly developed
~ ~bstance , "Peptide T," which
they said could slow or stop the
spread of the disease In Infected
victims. The substance, an artlfl ..
clal prote in molecule, was developed at the National Institute of
Mental Health In Wakhlngton.
NIMH scientists believe Peptide
T can be used to block the AIDS
virus from entering white blood
cells.
But another group of equally
reputable scientists, led by Dr.
William Haseltine Of . Harvard
University Medical School, all
but dismissed the potential of
Peptide T . Haseltine said that
neither be nor scientists at half a
dozen other laboratories around
the world have been able to
duplicate the NIMH results when
testing the substance. Haseltine· '
said, "Peptide T !)oes not work.
Period: Nothing. Nada."
·
Hundreds of papers were pres·
ented during the AIDS
conference. ·
The headlines coming out of
these sessions talked abOut
numbers of victims and transmission rates; about potential
cures and what can be best
descrlbed.as the politics of AIDS.
But to many experts, what was
most disturbing was how little Is
The Daily 'Sentinei-Pagit.....>.3
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
.
,
: telephoni' number. No unsign OO letters. will be ptbllshed . Letters should be In
• good taste, addresSIJ:tg I:JSUE"S, not personalities .
•
·Save
me 4 slice
.
c)f popcont cake
,'
Wednesday, July 1. 1987
1
. ·lack Anderson and Dale Ytm 'Atl~
LE'ITERS OF OPINION 8i-e welcome They should bE> less than 300 words
• long. All let ters are subject to editing and lii.ISI be signed wJth n"me, address and
·"wASHINGTON~ It may well have been, as ·the claim goes, that it
w,as just a routine cal) to th~ Connecticu t office of Sen. Lowell
Welcker, R -Conn. , from a lawyer asking a special favor for a client.
::Except that. in·this case. the client was Ivan Lend!, the No. 1 ranked
t~his player in · the world, a nd the favor req uested was a
~ngressional exemption from the five-yea r waiting period for
ci.tizens hip.
·
:Lend!, a native of Czec hos lovakia. wants' to play for the United
States in the Olympics next year. And 'he can't , unless he is a U.S.
c:it !Zen. .
·
·;To help ou t one of his constituents. Welck!"r introduced what Is
· known as a privati' relief bill on behalf of Lend! that would stipulate
•tliat the tennis star had fulfilled the "periods of residence and
p!tysical presence" in the United States to qualify for citizenship.
,•It wa;; an unlikely endeavor for Weicker. who is the bE>st known for
.::ioquent a nd te nacious fights on behalf of civil liberties and
iqdividual rights.
: But then, Weicker is also an avid te nnis ·fan. and a somewhat
ifllposing player in his own r ight. and perhaps he fell the bill was the
ot)ly sa lvation for American tennis.
.
:·With John McEnroe fading fast with naggi ng injuries and Jimmy
Cunners .finally over the hill. the American contingent on the pro
tEnnis tour poses no. threat for a trophy In ·a major tournament ,
a}though Tim Mayotte flashes periodic signs of excellence.
.:In womens' tennis, Martina Navritolova, a Czechoslovak ian
~lector who has U.S. citizenship, ranks at the top of the world , but the
o'Jily other American who poses a c ha llenge is Chris Evert. and she
rrlay be close to finished.
>That kind of a lineup poses serious concerns as the United States
looks a head to the 1988 Olympics (wherever they may be heidi and
tt!nnis ·once again becomes a part of the quadrennial games.
·sur making Lend! an "instant cit izen" falls to correct thefallingsof
the U.S. tennis program, i nj ~ct s still one more dose of politics into the
p61itics- tainted Olympics . and does a disservice to t·he many
Patiently waiting !OJ' coveted U.S. ·citizenship.
·:Such an overt effort to bypass the law in an effort to win an Olympic
nt<'dal could a lso prove as embarrassing to the United Stat es as did
tlte gran ting Of citizenship In 1984 by Great Britain'_to ~tar longdista nce rupner Zola Budd whose homeland, South Afnca. ts banned
!rp m the g~ mes .
·
·
.
·The Senat e Judiciary Committee, which must process the Lend!
blll, is not likely to grant the tennis superstar his exemption. The
piJnel has written the U.S. Olympic Committee for a justification, but
the inquiry so·far has received· no response.
~ spokesman for the pa nel said the Judiciary Committee has a
"Strong history" of not waiving the requi re(:~ waiting period, saying
"i1's just inequitable to take the!Tl out of the que ue. Wh y not a
ballerina or a businessman ?" ·
.
:;:He sai<l'Congrcss has acquiesed only once in recent time - for a
Russian pilot who defected - . a nd then only at the u rging of the
pi:es ident , the CIA and several other government departt:nents a nd
agencies .
·
•
-Lend!, who has been making pit stops at his homes in Connecticut
aiid Florida for ma ny years when not touring the world, will very
probably have to pass up the 1988 Olympics.
::Sy th e 1992 Olympics, Lend! s hould be a bona fide citizen, eligible
fQ)" the games. The only question then will be whether Lend!, who
could be on the down curve of hi s career after four more years on tour ,
w~ll have enou~h left to make ,the U.S. team.
~
.
..
Page 2-The Daily Sentinel .
I.
Com entary
.'
she brought It on herself.
The Amer ica n system of jus·
lice failed Mary Bell VIn cent and
lh<? national journalistic com·
munlty virtua lly ignored he r.
Th£' system of justice -a lso failed
the people of the. towns where It
tried to place Singleton, but this
time the peoplt> had some power
over ihe situa tion and wouldn't
be fallPd. They took the matt er
Int o their own hands and sa id .
" Enough ."
Some would look a t their
actions as vigilante justiCE', a
group of upstarts trying to be
a !love thl' law. Instead , I believe
the case or Mary Bell VIncent and ·
Lawrence Sl ngleton finally came.
up against a wall o r common
sense. The rl'sponsl' or the people
was a natural and right"reactlon
to a dangerous thrPat . When that
common sen.s e works Its way Into
our attit udes before we are ·
threatened personally , we will
havP camP a long way In our
trPatment or victims llkP Mary
Bell VIncent- and the sente nces
we Impose on their ·a !tackers.
Robert Jf1agman'
really known about the dlseasP
itself, let alone how to cure or
prevent lt.
One paper, for exa mple, des·
crlbed the spo111aneous remls·
sion of the dls~ase In flv P gay
men who had previously tested
positive.
A National Ins titut es of Health
scientist, Dr. William Polls, said
the fiv e had previously tested
positive on a whole battery of
tests including the supposedly
infallible ''Western Blots" .test.
Now they don't. Polls has no Idea
why.
One theory Is th at. somehow.
the virus may have been c leared
from their systems . Another is
that they are, · in a period of
rPmlsslon In which the dlseasp Is
present In a latPnt form th at does
not show up on tests. ElthPr
answer , If true, could have
profound ram ifications.
Another paper, presented by a
South African scientist , Dr. Wai·
ter Becker, was extraordinarily
omi nous. Becker said that South
African doctors hav.e recently
seen two sudden deaths apparently caused by a previously
unknown herpes virus that at; ,
tac ks the body's Immune system ·
exactl y like AIDS, but even more
rapidly. What is so ominous
aboufthls, If true. Is that herpes
viruses are much more easily
spread than the AIDS virus.
. ·'
"
'
Berry's World
l
SHOWS EMOTION - Jimmy Connors ollhe
United Slate!< shows hls · emotions after beating
Mlkacl Pcnrol'!l or Sweden in a live· set fourth
Evert in
' .
•
"/ want something that pays big money, but 1
don't want
work for II. "
fo
'
.'.
'
'·
qua~erfinals
WJMBLEDON. England
1UPII - For just a fleeting
moment (luring the final stages
of a difficult match. Chris Evert
'began to· think about history .
Standing .In the ,brilliant sun' s hine of a crowiled Court 2,
struggling for surwlval against
an unseeded South African
playPr, Evert suddenly thought
a bout who she was and how much
s he has accomplished.
To what extent this flashback
affected her game not even Evert
knows, but she ilid weathe.r a
dilflcult 'moment to defeat Ros
Fairbank. 6-2, 2·6, 7- 5, Tuesday
to reach ·the qua~terflnals at
Wimbledon lor the 15th time In 16
years.
,.
PNnfors had rallied !rom a
two-set-deficit only a day ear lier ,
to upset Tim Mayott e.
" He's known for doing thi ngs
like this, " PNnfors said . " He
managl's to raise hi s game . Hr' s
such a great hustler . You know If
he gets the opportunity 10 co me
back, h<•'s goi ng to dolt. ..
If Connors had lost, thP Un itcil
States would ha\'e been le ft
without a representative In th e
quarterfin als for th e firs t timr
s ince 1967. Ins tead, the two-tlmr
c hampion returns toda y to play
his thi rd ma tc h in as many days.
. Ivan Lend!. the seco nd sel'd.
won in st raight sets for th<' fi rst
time whil e Swedes Mat s Wi ·
lande r and Stefan Edberg ,
seeded Nos. 3 a nd 4, l'ac h
dropped a set forth<' fir s t il mr .
Among the women. seven of
th<' top eight seeds made It to the
quarterfinals. led by fiv e- tim<'
defending champion Navrat liova
and No. 2 Steff! Graf.
Ev~rt st rugglcd for 2 ~ou rs and
7 minutes on Court No. ~ . lhP
so-called jinx court of Wlrh·
bledon, before !'merging with. a
6-2. 2-6. 7-5 deci s ion over un·
seeded Ros Fairbank of South
Afr ica.
Shriver , the fifth seed, su rvived two mat ch points to over ·
come No. 16 Sy lvia Hanik a, 6·7
H · 7). 7-5. 10-8.
Navrat ll ova, see King to equal
the Wimbledon recor·d of eight
s lngll's titlcs. crushed Gig! F'er ·
nandez, 6-:l. 6·1, and ha s yield ed
·t~ ~ames In four matches . She
has won 38 sllccesslve s tn·gles
matches a t the All-England Club
since 1981 and has reached the
quarterfinals 13 's tralght years .
Graf. with43consecutlvevlctories since November. was tes ted
for the first lime here in beating
17-year-old · Jana Novotna of
'czechoslovakia. 6-4, 6-1 .
Wliander overca me some
early proble ms to d~feat 14th
seed Emilio Sanchez of Spain,
2-6, 7·6 (7-11 , 6-3, 7-5, and Edberg
beat J a kok Hl asc k of Switzrrla nd, 6-3, 6·7 [5-i), G- 1. 6· 4.
Neither Wllander nor Edberg has
made It past the fourth round
before.
Also reac hing the quarterfinals were No. 9 Henri Leconte.
No. 11 Pat Cash a nd two
unseeded players , Zlvojlnovlc
and Anders Jarryd. ·
•
Lend! , favored to win Wlm·
bled on for the first time following
the dis missal of Becker , meets
I.Pconte In today's quarterfinal s.
Ht' holds a 6· 5 advantage over th P
F'rench lpft -hander, but lost to
.Lrcontp in th eir o nly previous
meeting at Wimble don in 198S.
The oth er quarterfinals send
Wilandcr against Cas h. the man
who beat him here last ypar. and
Edberg aga in st Jarryd, his dou ·
hies partner .
HPie na Sukova. the women's
fo urth seed. gained revenge for
h!'r loss to Raffa e lla Reggi in 1he
fo ur·th ;·ound of the French Open
by routing the No. 15 seed from
Italy, 6·0. ii-0. Sukova a tlowPd
Rcggi only fnur points in the
'second set a nd 14 for the
31-minut e matt'h .
The quarterfinal bracket was
filled by sixth seed Gabriela
Sabatini, No. 8 Claudia Kohde·
Ki lseh and unsecded Dianne
BaiC'st rat.
Today It wilt b<>~Navratllova ·
Balestra! , Graf-Sabatlni, Evl'rl·
Kohde -Kilsch and Shriver·
~ · · ~p~ 1-ll-~fltl)
:\ 01\ b>lon of Mulllinf'dlu.. In~ ·.
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.
25
round match at Wlmbled9n Tuesday. -Connors
advanced to quarterlinal play . (UPI ).
Connors overcomes .deficit;
advances to . quarterfinal play
WIMBLEDON, E:ngland
t Pi t - .llmmy Co nnors fi rs t
ovcrc·ame a two·S('t dcfidt, tljen
a bruised PI!O a nd finally leg
cramps Tuesday to advanCf•IO
the quarterfl•nal s of Wimbledon.
Conn ors . the . las t American
man In t he tournament , seemed a
d!'>tro cd o ld warrior when hP
trall<'d 4-1 In the third set. 'then
thrilled an adoring ent er Court
crowd with a 1-6, 1-6, i -\ 6-4. 6-2
vict ory over Mt ·ka~l Pernlors.
" My e~o was .hurtin g. so I had
to do some th ing out ·there," said
C' onn or s . whost• ri g ht ll'g_
cramped In th<' flnat s t of lhi'
1 hour und .19-mlnut P mat ch and
who hacl difficult~· si lting during
his pn' >s confere nce. "I don ' t
th ink I'm su rpr·lsN I won. I ran
still pia~ .
" I fe(') the IX>st thing I did out
th r·e was grin d a nd fight. "
Connors plays hard'servlng
Slobodan Zlvojlnovlc of Yugosia vl;t toda\', whit<' Ma r tina Navra tllovt~. Chris Ever t ' tnd Pam
Stirl v<•r also won TuPsday to give
thr UnItI'd Stat rs t hr<'<' players In
thr women 's quarterfinals .
Pl'l'nfors. t hP S~e who wo,.
two NCAA Champi onships for
the nlv c rslt y or Cror~ta. swept
through thr fir s t tw o sets with
ras<' and wa s In co ntrol a t 4-1 in
the third set. Connors then took 14
,·point s in a row as hP won s ix of
the nex t ><'V('n gamt's.
1\ga ln In thP fourth set Pcrn ·
fors surged ahcad as hP came
wi thin a point o f ~olng up 1·0. But
he double fault ed on orcak point
In th e fifth Aa mc a nd Connors
fo llowed with anothN break In
the sev<'nth.
"O nce I br·okc bad in th e
fo urth . I bcg11n to dig and grind
a nd do what it takPS, " Connors,
:14 . said. " I didn 't have tlm r to~
r mbar rassed . I was getting my
butt ki cked and I had to do
somPI hlng."
In the final set. Connors needed
treatment on his right leg during
changeovers . He broke In the
thlrd a nd fifth games for a 4·1
lead. Pernfot·s got one break
back in the s ixth gamP, but
Conn ors broke one more time In
the next !lame, raisi ng his left
arm In triumph.
"Willpower came into It at two
sets-all." Connors said . "Then 'lt
was a question or who W!IS
stronger me nt a lly. 1 don ' t think
t 'vc been down that far before
. hPrP a nd won. I wasn't doing
anythlll'g wrong at thf.' beginning,
hf' was just beating me.: ·
Connors did not commit a
s ingle do4ble fau lt, -and was
successfu I on i9 per rent of his
first serves .
was doing out there,' ~ said fors: wiping -his racquet with a :
Connors. "Once I broke back In ~towel as Pernfors prepared to :
the fourth. J. began to dig a nd serye;or otherwise W;istlng time .
grind and do what It· takes.
to break his opponent' s rhythm. :
"I didn't have iime ' to be
" WIIl~wer camp Into It at two ·
embarrassed. 1 was getting my
sets-all. Then It was a question of :
butt kicked · and 1 had. to do
wbo was ·stronger mentally,"
soml!thlng."
Connors said ..
Connor-s, the ~eve nth seed, said
He described the splky-~alred :
he never considered himself Pernfors as "a fighter - be'll :
outmatched in the first two se ts, stay in there with you and dig and ·
despite \\'Inning only· two games. grind."
.
.
"I didn't do anything bad at the
Connors, the lone American· :
beginnln,g, but I was getting native m~le player left In the ·
beat," . he said. "I was losing · tournament, added, "I ' don't ·
points but r never felt I was · think I'm surprised I won .
getting beaten badly ."
After breaking back to trail4· 3
EASfEIN HILL FIIIIC SlOP
in the third set, Connors held
A11l•ert1ry Slit- J•lf 1·2-S
servic.e.. in the following game,
then capturer! three more games
Ofo Off ON ALL POP UN, liNEN,
to· slice his deficit.
DAN IIVU STIIPE! & PLAIDS
"I felt I was siriking the ball
Calic:o Prints T·Shirt lnit T..W. ..._.,,
'1.98 yd. 11.89 yd.
50' ...
much cleaner at that point ," he
On
St.
Rt
.
7-S
milo
north
of
Chtstor
said. "When I won the third set ,
.
PHONE
915·3909
my co nfidence lifted."
OPEN : 10-6 Tues.-Wed .- Fri .
Connors the11 used some tricks
11 · 5 ThUrs .; 10-2 S•t .
Closed Sund • Mond
from his 'past to distract Pern-
POMEROY .
Affordable Financing Available 9n Both New and Used Cars
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"We Ha-e The Keyt To ABetter Deal~~
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' '
POMEROY, OH.
.•
�Wednesday, July 1. 1987
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
. PeGa 4 The D8ily Sa elinel
Niekro shineS as Indians ·__
win·. 2-1 to stop, losing ·s treak
·-,
.
.
CLEVELAN_D !UPII - Phil
Niekto came close to notching his
first shutout since ·hls ~300th
career yictory, bur Cleveland's
veteran knuckleballer shrugged
off a ny disappointment a nd ~ in.
stead praised his catcher.
.
"He (Chris Banda! was out·
standing," said the 48-year· old
· Nlekro: "He's just getting beiter
every game. A couple of times. I
tried ·to overthrow the ball. He
·came out to me and he kept me in
tune."
Nlekro scattered seven hils
over 8 2·3 innings for . his 317th
careec victory_ and _!'a t Ta_bler
lined a two-oui RBI single in the
sixth Inning Tuesday nlght ..enabllng the Indians to halt a n
eight-game losing streak with a
· 2·1 decision over the Califor nia
Angels:
The loss snapped the Angels '
O"lght -game winning s treak;
Niekro, S. 7. struck out four and
walked one before being re·
··~
,
,. OUT AT THIRD .- Cleveland Indians' third
baseman Brook Jacoby puts tag on California
Angel' s Devon Whil e during a steal attempt in the
first inning. (UPI)
••
.fJosox's Boggs blasts Orioles
By United P.ress International
Wade Boggs h"d a better
~ month of June tha n some blush·
\ng brides.
Boggs went 49 fo r 101. a .485
• average. to boost his season ' s
average to'.391. He hit sa l ely In 25
of 26 games. had a sluggin g
. ferrentage of .762 a nd drew 21
walks.
Th<' Boston thi rd baseman
went 3 lor 3, includin g a homer.
knock<'d in three runs a nd scored
three runs Tuesday nighi ' to lead ·
the Red Sox to a 13-9 triumph
ilver the Orioles.
· "Hilling is contag ious," Boggs
said. " You get up there and take
your swings and the hit s s tart
tai ling in."
· While Boggs wa s bus tin' out In
June. the Oriole~ were a com·
plete bust.
.
' Tuesday night's loss ended the
worst month• in Orioles history.
They finished 5~2:J for the mo nth
-and the pitching staff. since Ma y
29. has given up seven or more·
r uns In 1B of 31 games.
Boston collected 17 hlts Tues·
da y a ight to send the Oriol eo to
their 26th loss In their last 31
games.
·· our pitc hing .staff' s In a 40.
gam<> rut," Orioles ra trher
Te rry Kennedy said.
Steve Crawford, 4·2, pitched 2
2-.1lnnings for the victory . Ca lvi n
~Sc hi ral d i went 2 '1·3 innings for
hi s fifth save.
The Whit e Sox didn't fare much
better than the Orioles in JunO'.
They closed o ut the month with
successive
v ic1orles over thC'
Oa kla nd Athletics. inc luding a
12~ 3 romp Tuesd ay night, b~t it
marked the fir st time during the
mon th that . the Wh ite Sox put
together two vic tories in row.
Chicago finished 7-20 lor thl'
month.
"Everybody is glad the month
of J une Is over. .. Chicago Man·
ager Jim Fregosi said .
Stevl' L,yons had lour singles
and Scott Nielsen scatt ered six
hits over e ight inn ings. pacing
the White Sox victory Tuesday
night. lt was the first time since
May 29~30 the White Sox won a
series.
Elsewhere in the AL, New
York blanked Toronto 4·0. Cleve·
land downed California 2 ~ 1,
Detroit whipped Milwaukee 8·1.
Minnesota downed Kansas City
J-1 and Seattle topped Texas 5-2.
Yankees 4, Blue .Jays 0
At Toronto, 'Ron Guidry scat ·
tered six singles and s truck out
nine over 7 2·3 Innings to record
.. his fl rsl victory since las t Sep·
tember In leading the Yankees to
their second st raigbt v ictory
over the Blue Jays.
Twins 3, Royals I
At Kansas City , Bert Blyleven
and Jeff Reardon· combined on a
seven-hitter and Kirby Puckett
homered to pace the Tw ins .
Mariners 5, Rangers 2
At Arling ton, Texas, Mark
Langston pitched a fi ve- hitter
and struck out 11 to he lp th e
Mariners s nap Texas ' five· ga me
winning streak.
Tigers 8, Brewers 5
Rookie Mat t Nokes hit a tworun homer and Darre ll Evans
drove in two runs to p~e the
Tigers.
"'
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,
An array of w e ll ~ known
By MIKE RABUN
coaches and athletic officials
UPl Sp,orls Writer
s poke. to the co nvention Tuesday
DALLAS !UP!t - Had Tu es ~
in an attempt to head off
<Jay's standoff between the na·
scholar
ship reductions ~
lion 's major co llege at hl et ic
Nebraska
football coach Tom
progr~ms and the NCAA Pres!·
Osborne.
P
enn
State footba ll
dent s Commiss ion been a foot·
coach Joe Pate rno. BYU footb all
ba ll game, the crowd would have
coach Lave ll Edwards, Nort h
le ft at hal!tim l'.
Carolina, State bas ketball coach ·
It was no contes t.
Jim Valvano a nd Sun Belt
• The Pr<'Sident s Commiss ion;
Conference commissioner VIc
which had ca lled a special NCAA
Bubas all made their point s In
convention in hopes of making
fa vor of keeping scholar ship
maj or c uts in athle tic bud gets, ·
_ limitations where they were.
saw one proposa l after anot her
"Basketball Is a t Its zenith ,"
either defeated or tabled beca us<'
Bubas
told the convention . " It' s
of lar k of support.
ex posure Is at Its greatest.
Div is.iQn I sc hoo ls not only
Revenue Is high. We mu st do
failed to r ut any cos ts. th<'Y
· nothing to stop it from keeping It
added to them by reinstat ing two
the great sport It has become ."
sc hol ars hips in men' s a nd
Outgoing NCAA executive dl ~
women 's bas ketball that wer e
.rector Walter Byers said he was
WALTER BYERS
e liminat<'d at last J an ua r y's
s urprise d at the zeal with which
NCAA co n,·enti on.
some
of the proposals were
"We made a mi stake. " said to ~fl. 1t was rejected by a 69-39
attacked
by coaches and athletic
· President s Commiss ion rhair- vote with most of the tradiJional
directors.
.
man John Sla4ghter, cha ncellor power house football .s chools vot·
"
Perhaps
it
would
have
been
of the Unlv<'rsity of Maryla nd . ing against the cu ts.
better fo r them (the P res idents
··we s houldn ' t hav(• co me here
Commiss ion ! to stick to ques ~
wi th specific numbers in mind.
- Deferr ing a pian to tr im as
t ions of fundam entals and not
" l wouldn ' t say It is frustrat ~ man.' · as 27 scholarships in 21
deal with s pecifics." Byers said.
ing. But it is disa ppointing. You non· revenue sports.
.have to be rea lis ti c. Ther.-. are
Defe rring the would ~ be
issues here that are very lmpor· re duction of the size of ass ista nt
tanr to a lot of people ...
' foot ba ll coac hing s taffs from
Sla ught er himself voted with nine to eight .
~
the m ajor it~· in Increas ing the
Division I ~ AA di!l cut an
basketball scholars hip lim it assis ta nt coac)l off its footba ll
(rom 13 to 1 5~
staffs. but refused to cut a ny
" I thought it was a mi s take sc holarships in footba ll or any
when It wa s cut in Janu a ry," ot her sport. Division ll sc hools
Slaught er said.
br ie fly trimmed a number of
• In a ~dltio n to boosting th <' sc holarships in the only ma jor
;basketball scholars hips. the Dlv· cost cutti ng proposa l approved,
· ls ion J actions included :
•
but when they saw what Division
· - Voting down a proposed c ut
J wa s doing, they soon ca me back
of foot ba ll scholars hips !rom 95 a nd cha nged th eir vote .
has ·hurled 5,356 1·3 Innings to
Perry 's 5,352. Cy Young (7 . 3.~61 .
Pud Galvln (5, 9411 and Walt er
Johnson (5,924·) are the top three
on the list.
·
"Niekro's always pitched well
against us, " said California's
Doug DeClnces . ·: He had out·
standing cant rot. "
Wllh one out In the CIPveland
sixt h, Bando s ingled but wa s
forced by Brett--Butler. <lullo
Fran.co singled to cent er. se nd ing
Butler · to third. Tabler, followed
with a line single to left , scoring
Butler.
Tabler broke fo r seco nd_a_nd
was caug ht stea ling by Lazorko
but- sta yed In the ru ndow n long
enough for Franco to score and
make it 2~ 0 Clevela nd .
" You can't make the third out
when the run is ·crossing the
pla te.'" said Mauch. ·
Ca re less base runnln g cost
eac h team scorin g opportunities
placed in
the gave
ninth.upbya ~ott
Balles.
Balles
r un· rr=:~~r:===~;::::::======;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l
scoring slr\gle to pinch hitter
George Hendrick before st riking
out pinch hitter Butch Wynegar
' to end the ga me.
"(Losing the shutout) Is .nobody's fault bu t my ow n," said
Nlekro, who blanked Toronto 8·0
on October 6, 1985. and at 46
became the oldest ~ pitcher to
fas hion a s hutout. " But. we won
and that 's the impor ta nt part. •·
Clevela nd manager Pal Cor·
ra les had no qualms at lifting
Nlekro.
.
.
"I gave him three s hots to get
that third out. bu t I couldn't give
him a fourth ," said Corrales .
" Phil pitc hed qui te a ba llgam e.
GOOI 111111 lillY I I 01 WMI\1 OUIIIIlltl lAST!
Balles is my b(>st r e liever. and he
was strong."
Niekro's effort s did not sur·
prise Gene Mauch.
Refrigerator
" tNie kro l mu st be the best
tknu ckleba ller! ever." said the
~t.,'C'i
-- 1111-tl
California manager. " He's won
~.:~ ~
'300, well, 10.000 ga m es. It see ms
' C::: · tCI MAMU
' ~
,, Ulliti.MI
like that , a nd I 'Ire seen a lot of
them ... _
Jack La zorko . 2· 4, took the
loss, allowing seven hit s In
-~ '6299S
1 - 1- VUIIIIt llt
pitching his second co mple te
- ClOSIOUT P'IIUD
AU .,..U ~ '-11
game at' th<' season . Th<' right·
COW& Cf
ha nd er struck ou t two a nd
-.<IOWIW
walked none.
. "It was a good outinR, " sa ld
Lazorko. " I had good s tuff. lt,wa s
just a m att er of r unn ing Int o a
tough pitcher ."
llj)ekro moved past Gay lord
Perry into fourth place on th ~
a ll-tim e Innings pitched list. He
·,
CARS &TRUCKS\ .
· oUCT\ONS
\NCRE:DlBLE RE. .
SPECTRUM
Bargain Price!
~
14----'
NOVA
~·,
CAVALIER
I. ....
.
"But thi s was not a de( eat for the
President s Commi ss ion. They
have changed the a ttltud(' within
the NCAA .
" We didn't affect bud~ et s a t
this . meeti ng. That Is a fai r
s tat eme nt. But it doesn ' t mean
the Ideas are going to go away.
We didn ' t save any money, but
the Ideas ha ve not been laid to
r est. ...
Unlversi tv of T exas women' o
a thletic director Donna Lopia no
s uggested rat her tha n coming to
the co nvention with proposals on
scholarships, the co mmission
could have simply sa id - " cut
your
budgets."
"What
th ey sho uld do Is co me
to the co nventio n with a proposal
that says you s hould cut your
cos ts by a certa in percentage a nd
leave It up to the athl etic
directors a nd coaches how to go
about · reaching th at .per cen·
tage. " Lopiano said.
" That happens all th e time. My
pres id e nt came to m e the other
day and said he wanted to see a
budget that cut costs a nd he gave
me a percentag e figure . Th en 1
go about doing It ,"
Amar~a
•
CORISCA
CIID~
IIIMl
CELEBRITY
''
"'"'
I"'"' • ,. ,., ,. ,.
"'"'. . i
l~flf>fll ~ ••1 C~taY
'
ClOt~ · 1' 1,_,
lelf CIMn Ov• "
__
'0.0 0 filii If•
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INGELS FURNITURE
MIDDLIPOIT, OH.
992·2635
l~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~::::::::~
MONEY SAVING COUPONS .,,.
Basehan
·
' ca use paralysis.
• Robin Ventura, .the Oklahoma
Former i.su basketball star
· State thi rd baseman who ha d a Nik ita Wilson has been named In
· ~game hittin g s treak this
a Baton Rouge, La.. lawsuit
· :Spring. was nam<'d 1987 College , clai ming he beat a man May 7 In
: flayer of the Year by Baseball a fight over a bottle of beer: If
America. Derek Lljliqulsl of convicted of the second· degree
-fieorgla. who was 14·3 with a 2. 24 fe lony charge, Wilson- who was
,f:RA , was named Coll ege dni fted June 22 by the Portland
; Pitcher of the Yea r .
Tra il Blazers - could face a
•;
,
Bodng
$2,000 fine a nd maximum five
:. Cruiserwelght champ Sher~ years ill jail. ... The final two of
:"man .Bernard Griffin Is rec.over· six defend a nts - Kirk Friedman
p ng in a Houston hos pi tal from ·of Sauderstowp, R .I .. and Ml·
,!lve bull~! wounds. Fo~r da ys . chaei Kowa ls ki, df Klll)ngworth,
. :after winning . the l).S. Boxing Co nn. - ~; harged In connection
•)'\ssoclation title, Griffin was s ho.t . wlth 8 post-World Ser ies brawl at
. : when he tried to rob a couple at a' the Univers ity of Massachusett s
:fnotel. He · has a bullet lodged
last fall. have been sentenced"roa
:(lear the spine and surgery could
year's probation.
*
.
OLDS DELTA 98
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''"I ....... ''" ,.
••
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.
KINDERGARTEN thru 6th
Now ·Accepting Enrollment For
1987-88 School Year
*
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•
WE HAVE EXPANDED OUR
FACILITIES AND STAFF FOR THE
COMING SCHOOL YEAR
FOR A SCHOOL BROCHURE, SCHOOL .MANUAL
or APPLICATION
CALL: 614·992·6249 or 614-992-2457
I
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•
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OLDS/DEL TA 88
:
nEE Myrtle Beach Vacation
:
When You Purchase A
New Or Used
Car Or Truck
Froni Jm Cobb
' ,"1 •
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p
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;tNNUAL IF
r AGE R!l ·
PEI~CEN NCJNG
F!N A1
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CAMARO
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GRADES:
'· '------·- Sports Digest------
BERETTA
•
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own
$549__,. ' - $299
,.._~~.-ry:=:::J
:::::;-.,
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ou• fAUn !
BAPT.IST
.CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
..
ON ALL AMER\CAN
Cool Comfort!
No NCAA Division I scholarships cut
I
. In the fir st. California 's Devoll,
Whit e doubled bul easily was ouj
trying ro st(ill third on .a soft
infield, Butler th('n•was doublE'!!
off second base after Frarie\l
lined out to first baseman Wally
..Joyner.
.
The A ngcls loaded the bases
with two ouls In the ~ ninth.
. RUppert Jones lined a single to
right a nd took second w hen pinch
hit ter Jack Howell singled to
deep second. Nlekrothen hi t Dick
Schofield with a pitch 'to load the
bases . and was repl aced by
Bai les.
Hendrick lined a single off
~Bailes'S" g love to -~drivenom<' ·
Jones !rom third a nd re·loa d the
bases. Balles the n ~ s t r u ck out
W~ n egar on t hrec pitches to end
the ~am·e.
In tonil(ht's series finale. Call·
fornia 's Jerry R.cuss (2·0, 0.52
F:RM f;;crs Clevela nd's Stell<•
Carlton Ui- ~4.:14 ERA! .'
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CLOSED
SATURDAY,
JULY 4TH
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HOURS: Mon .• W~d., Fri. 8:30 a.m.:-8:'0 0 p.m.
~ Tues., Thurs. 8:30 a.m. - 5:00p.m.
Saturday 9:00a.m. -. 4:00p.m .• Closed Sunday
~-
CALL (614) 992-6614
LOCATED ALO"G 1HE OHIO RIVER IN POMEROY
308 E'MAIH SIREEI
POMEROY, OHIO ..
r
1
�•
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Wednesday. July 1. 1987
Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio
Page-6-The Daily Sentinel
Fenner indicted
in,. drug-slay!ng
·Met rally.
defeats _•.
Cardinals -.
UPPER MARLBORO, Md.
tUP,I) -A grand ju ry Tuesday
·indicted University of North
· Caroli n a · tailba ck Derrick
. Fenner on murder Ch:lrge$ In a
!lrug-relatcd slaying over thl'
Memorial Day weekend .
Fenner, the Atlantic Coasl
CoQigrence's leading rus_her la st
season, is accused of bl'mg part
of a gang that opened fire May23
on another group in an apparent ;
battle over drug tra ffi ck ing turf.
Marce'llus Leach. 19, was f a·
tally shot In the head . Another
youth, Kenneth Robinson. wa s
struck in the leg.
' By '!Jnlt!ld Press International
· TheN~ York Mets, grasping
to stay In CQntent.lon; put togeHier
the kind of performance Tuesday
,night that made them ru naway
winners In 1986.
The M ets ·combined timel y
· hltt1ng, ·'Solid starting pitching
arid head).' defense to defeat St.
Leuis 3-2 and move within 6 1-2
games of the first -place Cardi nals In the National League Eas t .
That lead cou ld be much larger
if Dwight ~ooden · had failed to
step from a drug reha bilitation
. clinic into a form .reminiscent of
Ills 1985 Cy Young campa ign.
. Gooden allowed eight hit s.
· struck out nine. walked two and
;held New York In the game until ·
~ts hitti ng go t untract. The
:Cight·hander completed his !irst
·month at 5- 1.
"This is a better s.tart than I
could erw lsion," Gooden said. " I
expected to do all right but to win
;five already really helps."
: Gooden escaped w hat might
"have been a crushing s~venth
:w~n third baseman Howard
'John son m ade an alert play.
With the Cardi nals leading 2· 0.
losing pitcher Greg Mathew s.
5-6, failed to bunt with runners on
· first and second. New Yo rk
·Catcher Gary ·carter trapped
Curt Ford off second. Shorts top
·Rafael Sam ana fi red to John son
. :ro nail Ford and Johnson gu nned
· ~own Tony Pena tryi ng to adva nce to second.
• "The double play was 1he
:whole thing, " St. Loui s second
'baseman Tom Herr said. "Yo u
:Oever know if we get the bunt
JJown but it probably cos t us a ru n
and it was a rally ·kill er. That
.yould have put t hem away ."
• Instead, Sant ana, t he No. 8
liitter, delivered a two-out. two·
run single i n t he bott om of the
Jnning to tie the score.
• In th e nin th. Gary Carter
wa lked and Len Dykstra pinch
;Fan . Kevin McRey nolps sacri·
ficed before Lee Mazz illi wa s
Intentionally wa !ked. Johnson
i hen detlve;ed hiS third hit of t he
!lam e. a l!ne single to Jeff to drive
m the wi nning run.
"
· " A lot of cl ubs this year don·t
...·-~--.-J
--.-~espect me from the r ight side."
the sw it ch-hilli ng · Johnson said
alter prod uc ing his hit batti ng
(lghty against left· hander Ricky ·
.Horton. "I've feast ed on th at
"because they·vp turned me
'around quite a bit. I 'Ve been
'.S uccessfuL I welco me th e left hander."
E l sewhere. Montreal edged
Chicago ' 5· 4, Philad el phia
downed Pitt sburgh 6-4. Cinc inna t i nipped Houston 5·4, Los
:A ngeles bl anked San Diego 4·0
'lind San Francisco topped
·Atla nta 5-2. .
Expos 5, Cubs 4
At Montreal, Andres Gatar·
·. raga hit his ma jor leagues·
Jeading . 26th . .doubl e to . c~ p a
·four-run third inning, helpin g
nennis Martinez, 3·0, rem ain
-u ndefeated and pace the Expos.
'
Phillles 6, Pirates 4
· At Philad elphia, Von Hayes
tripled, doubled. scored two r un s
and knoc"ked in one, and Steve
Bedros ian ex tended his own
major-league r ecord wit h his
-13th save in his las t 13 appearan··
ces to tiff the Phillies to their
fourth strai ght v ictory.
Dodgers 4, Padres U
: At Los Angeles. Ore! Her shiser
llurled a seven-h!IH,> r to concl ude
a sterlin g month of June and
Steve Sax contri buted a two· r un
:single to lift the Dodgers.
·•
The ' grand jury returned two
Indict men ts against the Oxo n
Hill Jilgh .sctwpl stanqo uL One
charges hlm with murder, at-
The bail Sentinei- P
Pomeroy- . Middleport. Ohio
Wednesday, July 1, 1987
OPEN
·EASTMAN'S .. Your ladepe.n ,lently Owned · .
· .-
Lo~·Priced Supermarket
tempted murder and two lesser
handgun charges.
•
The second Indictment stems
from his arrest In April on drug
and gun possession cl!arges. The
two cases wJII be . tried sep~;~
at ely. sai d Mary Scherstrom ,
prosecutor assigned toFennerby
the ~ta t e. . . ,
that ·
Wltnessl;'s ha\(' t old pollcP
a gun-toting gang, whiCh al·
tegedly Included Fenner. entl'fe~
the Kirkwood Apartments cout
yard In Hya11svllle and opened
fir e while shouting about ~on trot
of drug trarnck tn g tn the a~e~ .
"I can' t say ,there wont be
more indictments aga tnst othet .
people," said Schers trom. who
declined to say if Fenner Is
believed 1Q b.f' thc_gunman~ who
fired th e fatal shot .
-'l
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SATURDAY
.•
.JULY 4th
a:oo A.M.- · 1o:oo '~M.
Double ~~~~'i~CJ§!!~1'iCo~_Jions
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ASST.
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4 Roll · 9
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Pkg.
ALL THIS WEEK .
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CRISCO SHORTENING:
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$225
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Baby Swiss ..............12.95 lb.
Smoked' Cheddar .....13.00 tb.
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Mild Cliedar .............s2 .95 lb.
Pepper Cheese ........ S2.40 til.
WIENERS
Amish
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Cheese ......................!2.7 5 tb.
Trail Bologna ........... 3.00 tb.
Amish
Country Sausoge ..•. .s3.25 tb.
I
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POMEROY
Bill Robinson after he k nocked In the winning run
In the ninth Inning. (UPi)
METS CELEBRATE - Mets' Howard Johnson
is congratulated h:V Gary Carter an d Met Coach
.
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Ga rofolo, 27, who had been
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last Wed11esday after three years
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Garofolo. a native or Pitt s·
bur~h 'and a graduate of Ohio
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t~ Force In 1980.
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Beer & Toboe<o
20< OFF LABEL
TOP SIRLOIN STEAKS •••••••••••••••••••••••
$A29
metal surfaces . Rusty metal primer and topcoat
up to 4 months. No mess.
'
. lB.· $349
BONElESS
Gives tong-tasting l)e&Yty and protect•on to
No-Pest"' Strip
Insecticide II ·
•
With $10.00 or More Additional Purchase Erdudi
Spray Paint
20" Portable Fan
Plastic grilles and blade. Steel case with baked
enamel finish . 2-speed. M4714
Jar
Polished Brass
Entry Lockset
SPECIAL PRICE
Trims up to 50 minutes on a full charge. Comes with
battery charger and has safety lOck switch . MEGS-1-~
At San Fra ncisco. Eddir
Milner · and .Joel Youngblood
stroked home ru ns to spark thP
G iants.
Salad
Dressing
32 Oz.
$~99
ffil
$
Heavy-Duty Cordless
Grass Shears
.
KRAFT
MIRACLE WHIP
Interior has pu sh knob. Latch reverses to lot oght
and tefi hand doors. Standard 2¥1 " baekset.
MA500DLB3VP
Brushed stainless steel utensils with e)ctratong oak
· Giants 5, Braves 2
32 Oz.
Box
W55-5 15
SPECIA~ PRICE $79"
SPECIAL PRICE
49(
Handy tool to' pry,ng. pulhng and lif1tf!Q 121h"
- forged sfeel ber w1th two beveled na11 slots
handle and chrome-plated cooking grid. 24,000 BTU.
Some assembly required. 19097
oz. POTATO CHIPS..;....$179..
(
Wonder Bar"" Prying Tool
FeatUres lite-A-Matic push-bunon ignilor, stay-cool
'-
HERR'S 14
General purpose t6-tooth blade lor
panicle bOarel, heavy -duty framing ,
rough ·C~tling plywOOd, chipboard,
composition boarel. W27150
-82.00
$499
.After rebate
~.
71!4"
Carbide-Tipped
Blade·
YAYetmont American ••
Waterproofs, retards swelling, warping
and shrinking. Gallon/clear. *110903
SPECIAL PRICE
Lessmfr. .
mail-in rebate
. .
8 ct. pka.
LEG QUARTERS
ll.
2 Liter
Bottle
)
�'
'
·The Daily Senti~I-Paga-9
Gamble ,by Stillwell pays - off; ~
Reds post 5-4· victory ln lOth··
',.
•
'
Riverfront Stadium Tuesday night. The 5-4.Reds
~
WINNING RUN - Cincinnati's Kurt Stillwell
•llde's behind Houston catcher Ronn Reynolds to
score the winning run in the lOth Inning at
win kept the Rhlnelanders in first place In the
NL's Western Division. (UPI)
., .
Clippers lose, 3-2
Scoreboard ...
Mlnltf'Nolll (\'iolll 6-6f Ill
!Sh1ddard Q-1) , lt:3~ p.m .
Majors
R~·
St·utl.., cMora-an &-!11 1d
:\:,\TJOS ,\1. LE..U:l'F:
1"nill•d l"rt"!<i In! ~'l'nai lunal
~:o. 11: :u
f:a:o;t
I . l'l"l . (:8
\\
s·,., -
Ill !!.) ..;:ct
til .•
J(l ;ll ..\:1.1
Ill ;
111 ;r; .3 1!1 ~I!
:l.i :19 . li~ 11
:11 1'.! . II-; 1:1
-
1:! :u
..u:t
""''"'""
IU :1.1
:IM
;fti 10
:16 411
!7 .il
..1:1:1 Jll
..·,ou I
' 171 li
. 1;1 li
. :1-16 Ui
;f)l
1\u .. da) ·.,
.\l~>nttt •:ll
;,,
R•~ul1"
( ' hit-a~::n
I
l'hil.ado•lphla li. l'ittstiur,;l1 I
:\"o•w \ "nrk :1. St. l . oui" ':!
llndnrlu.ll ;;, Hnu~ton I , 16 lnntnjil!l,o,. \n~d,.,. I. Sa'n Dh•R;niJ
~lin fo' rtUi i·\." 'tl :1, ,\tlanta '.!
" '' dhi')oda,,- ·., (iunH~
1\ tla.nt ;1 ( Mah11•r 1- 14) at San F'ran<._- j,., ..,
l l .af ·n,, t>-11 . I :IJ.i p.m .
~ hit 'UKH C\1 ;1ddul. 1·7 1 a t Yluntn•ul
t :o•dwu 1-KJ. i : ll~ p.m.
l'ltt .. huq:h ITa,\· lor ~- -! l al Phii1Mklphl11
1 Kavo lt•) ~:\ 1. <::n rr-m.
• Sl. l.mr i... 1:\la,.rant· :i-ll at :'\"1'"' \ 'urk
·· c l''••rnantlt ··,_~ 11. 7::Li (1.m .
Hu11 ..1un t lla~in 1-1! at fln1 ·innati
('l"mq•r n- :11 . 11: :1;, p.m .
:OO;~n llh •to::\1 i!'ihuv. :t-~ 1 a! l,t,~ \n~t• · lo..,
(U .. no ·~· · t•ll ~ - ! l. lt i : IJ~p . m .
nm.....t ::,\ '., (ianlt ...
' "'" l'nr k :tl CIJwinnatl, ili!l'hl
lluu .,t un a1 l'hiladt•lphiu. ni~ht
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Tnruntu
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Tt'1UI~< w r"'it"-'' \ 'ork. nl~tht
fhka,o lit ( 'll'\t'lwul. oi•hl
Mlnnt"!"OC• al k11.ns~~o,.; 4'11,\'. nl~tht
Mllwa.ukff' ..t l 'a1Uurnl11. nl~hl
RO!Olon ai Oaltlaad, nll(lt
Drlrotl at l'M·IIIlllr. nl~thl
1:'\TERS.\TIOSAL I ..EAG~I;!
(Majur L1 •a ~tUt• a lfll lot ll on
runs on six hits and struck our
six. Ron Mus sel man worked the
ninth. Richmond starter Ma tt
West. 1-3, surrendered fiv e runs
" How can I say we pl<J\'C'd
on fi,·e hils and four walks in
good?" hi' asked. " when we had
t hrPe innings.
Ron Sa lcedo and Carl Nichols one-third as many errors (2 ) as
each drove in a pair of runs for . we did hil s 161·. But we played
Rochester. R!'d Win gs third a J<gress ive ly and I'll bet tha t last
baseman Craig Worlhin gto n play mak(]S the highlight s film
thi s week."
went 3 for 4 with an RBL
Hal Lanier. m a nag er of th e
Dale Holman led the Bravt's
with two hits, Including hi s Astros, thought .Jones was out at
second home run of the year. a fir st. Th e manager cha rged onto
solo shot in the ninth.
the fi eld to confront Rennert with
At Columbus. Garv ·Mill er- his side of the argument ·.
" Dutch that's a helluva way lo
Jones blas ted a three-run homrt
in the second inning to lift the e nd the game," ye lled Lanier.
PawSox .past Charles Hudson " Hal. I got it right." replied
and the Clippers . Millc r·- Joncs' RC'n nert qu il't ly.
"I think he missed it ," said
fifth homer of the season d ropped
Hudson to 0-2 since being dP· La nier la ter after conferring
moted by the New York Yankees . with his first base coach. Matt
Steve Curry improved . to 7-8. Galante _ Hou ston 's Davis. who
Elsewhere. and Tidewa ter took the hurried throw from
bounced SyracusE' 10-6. Main e at Thon, agreed with his manager,
. Toledo was postponed becaU SI' of sayi ng, "he ca lled him sa fe but 1
rain .
·
thO ught he wa s out. ..
lo
W L Pd .
.J~ J:\ .57i
.J:t :12 .57:1
.J3 :" · .!!70
( '.,Jumhu,. tSl'·o\L)
Tldl · ~att•r tr'liY -SI.)
t(.tdu.,.lt•r !Bah
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Tult•dtl fl)t•IJ
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l"uwt\H'kl't t8oro;J
Syrut·U!Ot• ~'l'nr!
fUt·hmund tAll)
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26 t9
Ttuosdu~:·s tk'sutl:oo
l'uWIIt("kt1 :t ( 'olumhtl!oi t
Rot•hPSCt•r 7, Kh·hmond ;1
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)lhdn .. tU Tolt'do, ppd. , min
\\'t•dru.,.du.," ' :oo Gamt.,.
S,\· rac·u.,.. at Malnr
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Ko t•ht'!Ott•r Ill Pll~" l ttll'kt't
4'u lumhu.• at Tnh•du
1bur.>dii,J'• G~tmt~
Mulnr
H.wht-Mf'r al Puwtlll·kt>t
Hh'hmond at , ~·wlitt • r
l 'nlumhu .. at TBII('do
S,\ 'riU "UI'ot' ill
Transactions
1\al<t•ha.ll
I 'hlt•aJtn ( 1\l . J - lkt•lll!••d pltt·ht•r ·ltll'l
)lt ·N.t•lln front Hav.all oft ho.• l'u,·lllt· l 'ua.•l
l ,j'liC\W I ,\ ,\ ,\ 1: ~·nt Pi! t•ht•rRli)' ~ · :.~.rap:t •
I. 1'1'1. 1; R
~~~
T1•xa."~
Pllfi'RIIws~l
I lndnnal
San t 'r a n
\llunt a
l.n• o\ngl'l:oo
Sun IHt ·~n
K~~onsu~< C ' ll~
nun;dli,.V'" G~ntl'!>
tA ll Tin1j-. EIJ'I' I
St . l ..Huh
~1.,nt n·al
:-.;, •.,., \ 01rk
f "llinq::n
l't11la
l'itt ..hrl!:h
p.m.
By United Press lnlernalional
Ken Dixon pitched eight in nings Tuesday night for his
second straight victory s in ce
being demoted from the Baltimore Or ioles. lifting th e Roches ter Red Wings to· a 7-3 triumph
over the visiting Richmond
Braves in an In te rnal lanai
I:.eagoe game.
Dixon. 2-0. allowed two ear ned
I
:\'• '" ' \'nrloi I. :r'urnniOJ n
nu:o lnn l;t, 1\alllllltlrt' !I
l"hlt · ; t~u I'!, hakland :1
~'lnnt• o; nt :l :1. Kan~a~ nt\' 1
)oio•:llllo · .J , 1"t•xa":!
·
llt •lrnit M, :\1llwaukt•1• ;) - ·
'""""'ail.
l~•lroh- S•• ld pitt•ht.- .fohn Pa... •ll :tt o
"l'nkyn nf !ht·
· lapant~f'
Prott ..... I41Plll
Ru:oot•lau!ll.<~·a,_"w.
Mil""llUkt't' - ,\t"I!Uirt•d plh"ht•r l '11r1
llru• n lr<mt \lontrt•al a nd a... _,l,;e:wd him
In llt•n\t•r nf tiM• ,\nu.. lt•:lfl ,\,.,.ut · l~kon
, ,, ,, ,, J.
Area youth place high -in
Montrt•u l -
t\l'lh att•d pitt"twr f'IH\"d
\"oumiUI'•'rmn tlw 13-d:t.,\' dlsuhlt•d li~t ;
~""' plh•ht·r ·ll'lf Fl'ot' hl'r to lndh,n apnli.,
n ll_ht· ,\nwr lt-;ut A~soo.'illllon t r\ 1\ 1\ J,
Nt"'' l "ork . I ,\L J - Outrir;hh•d uut flt·~dt· r H1•nr.\ · ( "nUu lu ( ' nlumhu:oo of thl ··
lnlo•rnatl11nal lo~• :ll\lt' cr\ \ 1\ 1: rt•t·allo •d
lnlh·ldl'f Puul Zlll't•Ua fr'"om ( "ulumbu~ .
, llaliland - i\t·ti\'llt••d t 'llkht·r .Jt•rn
" 'iiiiU'd frum tht• '.! l ·tt:.~.,v dl~alllt·d 11... 1 and
ut~~trl~ht"d him to Tat'tlrna of lht· rat·llk
( 'ull!OI lo~•a~n~t • 1,\ ,\ ,\ 1.
Na n llh••n - l'land plh•lwr · Sl11r111
O.n .,_,'" tlw IJ.ilay di.'oahlj•dilst ; r•"t ·allt•d
pltt•ht •r F'.d \ 'usi'N•r,; frpm J.a., \'t•c:w. nl t ht•
Pildfl!-( "nulii l .t•a~tu · t Ai\,\1 .
l'lll o&ml t l "SIILJ- Sll(n••d t•o•nlt•r Kon
Mtwrt•.
"'''' l'alm Bt•l«·h il "SBI. t - ,..;i~~:nj'tl
t·o•ntt•r -lt•ronw llt•ndt·rson.
fo' oothall
MlntM'!'I<ula - ~·:tt · ht•d 11!1llrad lt •rrn.,
" 'lillh dr!ltr-•·hukt• r unni n~: had, ILl.
llw~ lo•r ll1r hn.o j·t•ar:oo plus an llpliun.
I f 'lo •lllt•h., 6-ti ), i : !l.i p . m .
Ra~ll•r
Hor·kt'\'
Sa il l.ulto • l 'll ,v CIHL)- 1\io'amt•d t•aul
I"CI"'' h.
Jaymar golf play at halfway point
Play In the Jaymar Men 's
Tuesday and Wednesday Golf
LeaguP has reac hed the halfway
mar k, according to Bob Freed.
Tea ms in both leagues are vying
for the four top spots in order to
. qualify for the playoffs at sea·s on's end.
After eight W<'eks of play the
following tea ms are the leaders:
Tuesday Le ague: K. Frecker.
Co nn ol l y, 95 p ts: RupeBoxdorfer. 93 pt s: Burt -Frances,
87 pis; L. Sayre-C. Sayre, 82'pts.
Wedn esday League: Morgan·
Foil rod, 91 'h pis; Miller- Musser.
Tourney dates
are announced
Tim Sikerski announced tha t
the six th annual round robin
softba ll tournam\'nt , sponsored
by the Glouster Merchant s. will
be held July 25th and 26th. Each
team participating Is assured of
playing at least four games. Tim
has indicated this is a plus for the
Glouster even t since, in many
tournam ents, a team could be
. e liminated after two games.
Teams that qualify aftl'r Sa turda y's game will . play In a
sep:tratl' tournament on Sunday
th e .26th with sponsor · trophies
going to the first three teams.
Windbreaker jackets will be
awarded to members of tl\e first
place team with plaques for those
on the runner-up squad. Entry
fee is $65 and two softballs per
p!>rs·on. ·.
· If you desire further lrlforma•
tlon, you may contact Tim at
767-3'706 or Phil Faires at 767·
3153.
90 pts; G. Snyde r-Moles , 89'h pts;
O'Brlen-Stivers, 88'h pts.
the Sixth Annual Ohio Athletic
Congress Junior Olympics ttack
and field championship com pet!·
tion at Dayton. During the two
day event , · 1400 athletes competed for the right to represent
Ohio in the Nation·al Junior
Olympic Competition .
Four local lads placed in the
top six qualifying spots necessary to conti nue on to ~ he national
competition. Adam Krawsczyn
.Placed second In the boys ten andunder shot ·put; Ryan Williams
placed sixth in the ten and under
long jump; ..Tucker Williams
placed sixth in the eleven and
twelve year oids discus throw
and Mason Fishet placed sixt h In
the ten and under 800 meter run.
tt-tttttJtttt~
by Erin Krawsczyn who took
eig hth 'in the 1500 meter run:
Tucker Williams eig hth In the
shot put : Graham Hoffman , a 100
m e ter · seml ·finali s t; Mason
Fisher was seventh in the 400
m eters and in the long jump and
Rya n Williams a 100 me ter and
200 meter semi· finalist .
Rya n, Adam , Tucker and Ma son will now represent Ohio In the
National Reglonais against stale
winne rs !rum Kentucky , Michl·
gan, West Vlrgtnia and Lake Erie
on the 11th and 12th of July. A
first, second or third place finish
will earn them a ' trip to the
National Junior Olympic Championships at Brigham Young
University in Provo. Utah.
..
' ***
STAR SPANGLED SALE SPECTACULAR
~-
•
THURSDAY, JULY 2ND
SPECIAL SALE HOURS- 6 P.M.-11 P.M., OPEN 9-5
40°/o
OFF ALL SUMMER MERCHANDISE
SANDALS
SUPER BLEACHED JEANS
SHORTS
(for tho Entire family)
TOPS
MEN'S & WOMEN'S CASUAL PANTS
BLOUSES
SWEATERS
DO~S NOT INCLUDE GYM SHORTS & REGULAR I-SHIRTS
400/o OFF
'
By Jim Soulsby
The Meigs Maraud.ers Baske t·
pall Camp ·c a me,_ to a Close last
Friday with twenty eight girls in
grades four thro 0,g h nine completing the final week of lnstruc·uon and competition : Approxi mately one hundred boys and
girls attended . the 1hree week
seminar sponsored by the Meigs
Athletic Boosters and und!'r tht>
direction of Marauder Head
Coach Mick Childs.
Named to the all defensive
tea m · were Tara Humphreys,
YvPtte Young and Kristin Stan·
ley . Jennifer Taylor and Daniclle
Crow captured the one on one
championships and Amy Rouse
and Ms. Crow were dec lared free
throw champs.
Jennifer T ay lor wa s awarded a
plaque as most valuable playt•r
of the week . Others taklnng part
were Verna Compst o n. Vanes sa
Compston , Kell y Satter-field ,
Mny Wagn er. Mega n Bartels,
~
'
Salute to Battelle...
s
reports
'
Bl(eflteflfila
·
· 1 PC!fade_S(hed
}d
_ ..u e_ .
clinic ends
Heather McPhail , Melissa Wll·
tong , Aimee Lemley. Anna Chapman , Abby Blake, Annie Jessie, '
Amity Dixon, Eli~ha Meadows. ·
Heather . Franckowlac . Kell y
Grueser, Rache l Bales, Mi ssy
Nelson;. Kim Ewing, Joy O'Brien. ~
Raquel Gomez, Tara Gerlach.
and Co urtney Midkiff.
Ali who took part In the three -'
week camp received a r ibbon and ' a Mar4uder camp T -s hirt.
'
Coach Child s expressed plea '
sure at tho' success of th e ventur
a nd wishe s to th ank Bob Ashley,
Mit ch Meadows. Rick Edwards.
Mike· Edwards , Cliff Ke nnedy
and Ron Logan for th eir assi st·
a nce . He also e xtends his grati tude to the followi ng b lgh schoo l
helpers Missy Wood s . Tamm;r .
Wri ght , Shell y Stobart . BrNt
Little a nd Joey Snyder.
Special tha nk s to Jim Hill or
Pleaser 's Restaura nt a nd Dick
Owen of Locker 219 for the ir
donations.
~t theRo~kSprings
begl.~nmg
H arrisonvifte .
v~ry
onM~~st. i s~ippi
.
+ o:o·,
Sp eC. ·-8
• I 0f fh e W·ee k
'
PIZZA BURGER
$ 1 19
l
Willing· Wo.rkers .meet
ADOLPH~S
DAIRY VALLEY
"UP FRONT SALE"
Summer
Merchandise
•·
I
' Community calendar/area happeninf!,S
20°/o to 50°/o Off
'
.
BEGINNING THURSDAY
JULY 2, 1987- 6 P.M.-10 P.M.
WEDNESDAY
HARRISONVILLE - Harri·
sonvllle Holiness Chapel wll~ .be
honoring Rev . Gilbert Ledsome
of Point Pleasa n.t. W.Va . at the
Eblin residence. :l91H Stat{'
Route 143. on Wednesda y at 7:.10
p .m . Ail are w~lcom<' .
Corner
Collections
MIDDLEPORT
ST.
1!9 Mill
RUTLAND- (:;uest SJ)('aker at
Wednesday 7 p.m . servlc£'s at
Rutland Ribi.e Methodis t Church
will be Rev . BI"IICC Hawthorn, of
Barberton. who opPrates a home
· for alcoho li cs .· Everyonc
. wE-lCOme.
· THllRSDAY
RACINE - RacinP L<'gion
Post 602 will hold it s regular
me<'ting at 7 p.m. Thursda v.
R!'frcshments will be served . '
'
'
- Only
1982
1982
1984
1985
1985
1986
1984
1.985
198 7
$1 7 838 Month
VW Rabbit .................S9061 ~o.
Mercury Zepher ...... S11 011 mo.
Chev. Celebrity ....... s1471o mo.
Ford Tempo ............ s1471o mo.
Ford Tempo GL ....... s.l SS-45 mo.
Ram SO Pickup ....... S16468 mo.
Chrysler New Yorker ... S18.348 mo.
Pontiac Grand AM ........ S.20 )32 mo.
Plvmouth Sundance ..... S20411 mo.
"'
.
ONE ONLY
.
9.2&~~~l- S~ool ~w~S s~~~~~ e2o
lncludea Tex. Title and Rebate
7170.000 Werrenty .
•
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HARRISONVILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees meeting, 7
.p.m. Friday at township
building.
....
COOPER
290 North Second~ Middleport, Ohio
992-6421
• ,.
•
'
POMEROY - July 4th dance
for members of th e Hoyal Oak
Ballroom Dance Club and guests
from 8 to m l dnl~ht Saturday at
Roya l Oak Re sort Club with
mu s ic by the Mel tones.
TUPPERS PLAINS -Chicken
barbecue Saturday at the
Tuppers Plains Fir(' Stateion
sponsored by Eastern. Athletic
Boosters with serving to start at
II a.m.: dinners will be $3.!\0 . .
Terri crusade
Chicken barbeque
A chicken bar beque, sponsored
by !he Eastern Athletic Boost!'rs,
will be held Saturday, July 4, at
the Tuppers Plains firehouse .
Serving begin$ at ·· 11 a.m .
Di nners, Including chicken,
baked beans. slaw and roll. will
be $3.50.
Sutton .trustees
Sutton Towns hip Trus tees will
meet Monday even in~. 6: :lO p.m .,
at the Syracuse Municipal
Building.
Orange township
Orange Township Tru stees will
ml'<'t Monday , 8 p.m. , at the
home of Dorothy Calaway, township clerk.
Family reunion
The Susan Jan e and Leonard
Roush reunion will be held
Sunday at the Broad Ruun Camp
Grounds in New Haven, W.Va.,
Covered dish dinner at 12:30. Ail
. famil y a nd friends welcome.
YELLOW
RED
GREY
' PINK
•
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"';.
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SATURDAY
TUPP.E RS PLAINS- Eastern
Athletic Boosters are sponsoring
a chicken 'barbeque on Saturday
at the Tuppers Plains firehouse.
Serving will begin at 11 a.m.
Dinners, for. $3.50, "'Ill Include
chicken, baked beans, slaw and
roll.
ROCK SPHINGS - The Ch'a·
rles and Fannie Wolfe Beaver
'
GIOUP OF
GROUP OF
2 PAllS- FOR
SJSOO
GIOUP
ALL
CHILDREN'S SHOES
1/2 fiRICE
.
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I
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· ~·\.,.)
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BE SURE TO VISIT~ THE RIVER
RECREATION FESTIVAL AT
GALLIPOLIS PARK FRONT
FEAT,URING:
.
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'·-~ .
..:
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."McGUFFEY LANE''
THURSD~ y I JULy 2MD
.
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BROUGHT TO YOU WITH OUR COMPLit\ENTS
• _.OPEN FRIDAY 9 A.M.-7 P.M. CLO~Et( SATURDAY IN OBSERVANCE ~ OF THE 4TH, RESUME REGULAR HOURS MONDAY.
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Of .
SJ200 PAll
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MEN'S SHOES
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TENNIS SHOES
. $J'Q00 PAll
WOMEN'S SHOES $800
OR
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Pony league
A Big Bend Pony League
Tournament. sponsored by the
Meigs Jaycees, will be held July
6-14 at H,artinger Park in Middle·
port. Anyone Interested In enterIng a team should cal!992-7582.
1/2 PRICE
BLUE
;
Office closed
Planned Parenthood, on Mul'berry HPights, Pom~roy, will bE'
closed Friday, July 3, throu·gh
Friday, July 10 for vacations.
The office will reopen on ·Monday. July 13.
All Women's Spring & Summer Shoes
WHITE
BONE
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STARTS THURSDAY, JULY '2nd, 9 A.M.
---,
SEE CAROL OR MAliC
MIDDUPORT
FRIDAY ·
ROCK SP.RINGS - Meigs
County Pomona Grange meeting
7: 311 p. m. Friday at 7:30 p.m .;
lecturers' program Inspection:
refreshments.
POME;ROY - Meigs County
REACT Team 3837 meeting '8
p . m. Friday at Pieasers
Restaurant.
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CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-DODGE
Will leave the high schooiat 8: 30
a.m. on July 4.
Su111iner Clearance Sale
IASiD Otl LOCAL lANK IATES & TEIMS .
1987 D150 PICKUP
reunion will be held SaturdHy,
Juiv 1. at the ~range hail on th e
Meigs Count y fairground s. Po·
tluck dinner will oe· served at
noon . Ali l'elatlves and fri ends
are invited to attend.
Word of LifP Ministries l~nt
crusa de, on Route 681 west of
. CHESTER- Annual picnic of Darwin, is in progress through
the Chester United M<:>thodi st ' June :10 at 7 p.m . nightly. The
Women will be held Thursday , at
gosJl('l group " Manna" will be
thE' homl? of Mrs. Clara Conr·oy, · featured Saturday evening .
12 noon: Husbands are Invited
and members arc to take coVE'rPd
Missionary services
dishes and their own tabi<'
Harrisonviile Holiness Chapel
service. Hostess will furnish the will be having Rev . Gilbert
drinks. ·
Ledsome of Point Pleasant
W.Va. for missionary service~ to
ROCK SPRINGS - Salisbury
be held at th e Eblin residence,
Township Trustees meet!ng. i
39144 Stat e. Route 143. Services
p .m. Thurs~a y at township build- will be Wednesday, July 1, 7:30
Ing, Rock Springs .
p.m. Pastor David Ferr E'II in vites everyone to att('nd.
RUTLAND- Rutland VIllage
Council meeting 6:30p.m. Thurs - Band practice
day at Clv ic Center: he aring on
Meigs High Band practice, for
1981\ budg!'t will be held.
the Fourth ·of July, will be held
July l, 2 a nd 3, from 6 to 8 p.m., in
POMEROY - Meigs Count y . the high school band room . Buse~
Litter Grant Advisory Board will
meet at 7:30p.m. Thursday atthe
. Meigs Cou nty E:xtensior. serviCP
OfficE'.
1984 D150 PICKUP
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11
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CORNER COLLECTIONS
MANY CLOSEOUT ITEMS REDUCED EVEN MORE .
· NO LAYAWAYS
VISA - MASTERCARD - DISCOVER -
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M
' et'g'.s 4-·H'
.oo+ ._._.••••o
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.VALUES
8.00 TO 520.00
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PORCH SALE FRIDAY WEATHER PERMiniNG
.g· ·
Thirty-two Meigs area:' stu- Jopb Da le Zurcher,
Twenty-two Meigs area rest- Cozart, and Joseph Richard
dents were among the 1, r10 at area .
,
dents were among the 2;112 Freeman, Pomeroy.
Ohio University, 'Athens campus
Bruce . Don&ld Johnson Por- .
By BOB HOEFLICH
stu?ents receiving degrees from
Graduatingwlth•honorshaving whowerenamedtothedean'sils!' tland; Nick Lee Bostick, Gerald
Sentinel Start Writer
Paul Council, a membe; of Boy
OhiO University; Athens campus, earned an accumulative grad!' . for the spring quarter.
Lee Dill, Jr., Lois E lizabet h Ihle,
Billy R. Allen, son of Mr . and Scout Troop .340, will receive
thrs month. .
point ~verag~ of between 3 and
To be named to the Jist ·a Veronica Provo, . Dixie Ka y
Mrs. Clayton
..scouting's highest honor - the'
Debra Keebaugh Buck, Pome- 3.499 were Rota Marie Mathews student . must have earned a Wolfe, Racine are·a·; Karla Kay
~lien of Chester,
Eagle- in ceremonies to be held
roy, was the only one listed in the . Almona .. Coolville; Christine A.
gra<je point average of 3,3 or Brown, Rutland ; Kathy Alana
was one of 41
. at _"3 p.m . -Sunday at the Langs· .460 candidat~s for graduate S~nJiago , Coolville ; Stephanie better on. a scale of 4. for the Jones , New Marshfield: and
.Battelle ' .Instl vllleChristianChurch.
degrees earnmg at ieast · a 3. Jean . Alexander. Charles Gr~·
quartet and have ear ned 16 Julia . Patricia Houd ashelt ,
Paul is the third an<:i' final sonbf .grade point average.
. . . . ·go.ry Bush; M!ddieport; Juh~, hours , 12 of whi ch were taken for Syi' acuse.
t u t e · (a f 1
members pic Joanna Council to earn the rank
'Included in the stucte'nts gra- · Elberfeld, Gregory · Todd Tho- a letter grade. . ..
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tured in Mon·or Eagle. The other two who
duatingwlthhlgh.honors, having . mas, Fret)ric Louis Young.
Named to the dean lists were
day's Columbus
eariler received the rank are earned an accumulative grade Pomeroy.
Deborah Elaine Hdllon, Che-Dispatch as honorees of Battelle. Robert. who Is serving in tile U.S.
point average of 3.5 or better on a
Other graduating seniors were shire ; Matt Eric Arnold, Brli,n
The 41 staff members were ' Air Force in South Carolina and
4. scale, were Suzanne Elizabeth
Lawrence Brian Collins, De- . Keith Law, Do.ugla E. La-1\!i. Chad
Nay,' Cheshire; Matt Erfc Ar- borah L. Boatright , Chris Jay ' Williams Richards, ChrisHna A.
saJ.uted Monday night for recelv- . wlii be coming home fo r the
ingU.S. patenlsduringl986. The Sunday ceremony , and James.
noid.Coolvliie: Judith Ann Sauer
Bostick, Racine; Michael D. Santiago, Coolville area; Ran . patents represent unique new
Sunday's ceremonies are open
Crooks . .Mlddl!'port; Bernad!'tte
Hauber, Timothy Ray Roberts , daii David Bahr, Long Bottom;
Ideas which are the lifeblood of to.all·scouts, scouter families and
H~>nnessy _ A_Jlderson, Charles
Reedsvliie: Karia · Kay Brown Stephanie Jean Alexander, Cha·
Battelle's business and cover a
friends.
Morton Butcher, Ronald Clair
and Kevin Lee Gibbs, Ruiiand.
ries Gregory Bush, Judith Ann
Thf'·Sa lrm Crntf'r·Gn \.!' ilf'r~ mr t .Junf'~
at thf' SalC'm Fi l-f' Ho uS(' wi th fl. mf'm brrs
wide are!! · of sciencE: including
----Sauer Crooks, Sharon K Wil son a nO -1 ad,·lson <lll<'ndi uj!. Th1• f e~i r cla i r
w a~ !llsc ussf'd . II I r ip to King's
engineering and nianufactli!'ing_
And this month we can all look
_
~HMauw ~eny,MP. dednlenpyorEt. l a..ine . P rice ~ juctgln_g
l ~Yd mi....,..,,.,H. plan nro.
11w ~roup · aiJoio
forwarei to trips by oul' town not ·
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technology , advanced materials,
work NI on l h f' n f'W fl owf' T' bf'(l at t hf' fin •
electronics, Information . sys- only by the impressive Delta
A bicentennial parade on the
All entries are to be on the
Bern~dette Henn essy AnderCryst al Va ughan gavt' a n•por t On
ueen but also the newer , larger
I heme, "200 Years and Stili
fa~rgrounds at 10 . a .m. The son Deanna L. Laney Aplr' ng. stnllnn.
I:Jwn mowN silfrtv . Mrs. S h('n f' fif'l<l
Q
t ems, bi otec h nology and blologi'
vrcl cooki<'s C~ nd bc-vNa_g('!ol Thf' nf'xt
cal and chemical sciences .
sister vessel, the Mississippi . p. ·toneer 1ng " ' has been sc hed u 1ed p~ra de w ill. m
. ove aroun.d th e
Sherr
Renee Arnold, John Der I sf'r
mrPtl ngwas srt ror July 13ut2:00 p.m. ul .
Dr. Alien received his bachelor . . Queen .
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forlO : 30 a .m .
hrlltop
at 10:30 a.m.
Beavir , Ronald Clair Cozalt . tht•Stl('nC'fl('ld honir. fko th and 1\ml Cla rk
of sclericedegreeat Ohio UniverWhen you want to know about . Farrground~ by the Meigs Blcen- and the "rnners Will be anJulie Elberfeld, Teresa M. Pratt ~•nd Mi chrli l' Yo un g will all givf'
slty and his maste r's and docto- these things, you just call Geqe
tenn.Jai Committee headed by
nounced at 11 a .m .
.. . .
Fi.e lds, Terry Ann McKee Sim- fl f' mqn st rut ions. M ic hf'lf' Sc.·o11. Rf'por tN
rate from Lehigh University at
Grate - he knows! And here is Chairman Patty parker,
.
Ms. Parker Is encouragmg
mons . Timothy Wa yne Sloan
what Gene reports on the two
Trophlt>s will be awarded tn resrdents and orgamzations to - - - - - - - - -·- - - - - ·- - - - - - - - - . , - - - - Be t hi ehe!Tl. Pa. He joined Bat - boats.
four categories for best th eme. suppOJ;t and.activeiy participate ,.
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telle on ,1uiy 5, 1976.
The Delta Queen wt' li ieaye c 0 m mercia 1 and non . in the var.io.us observances of the
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He and his wife , ·Karen, and ClnclnnationJuiy9andarrlveat
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bl centennra
· i ceI eb rat ion .
commercial,
on" 200 y ears Ago "
their children, Kat I!' and Bobby,
~
live in Westerville. Kiiren is an Pittsburgh on July 14. The ret urn
and " Stili Pioneering.Today. "
trip wlii be from Pittsburgh on
Entry deadline for the parade
.
editor for the Merrill Publishing
J 1 10 · h b h
·1 1
d
Mr.- and Mrs. Raymond Chap1
July 14 back to Ci ncinnati on July
s uY
wtt
I
batI mar n tand
man , Silver Springs, Md. spent a
co ·
18. In September, the Delta
phone e ntr es ·e ng accep e .
----h
d
~
Entries ma y be te 1ep one to week here with Mrs. Stella
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ueen will leave Cincinnati on
Meigs County. Bikers will have . Q
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h
id
b
Atki~s
and
Miss
Ruby
DiehL
2264
992
992
3810
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or
or sou
e
the 27th arriving at Plttsburghon
a "blood run" on July 10.
Mr . •and Mrs
· Oct. 2. It will start back 10 ''"l'f\al.1ed to th e Me 1gs Museum . p .
_ . Don Updegraff
··
Now the expression "blood
B
p
Oh'
457S9
ant!
granddaugher.
Amy.
of
10
0 · ox 14
run" migqt sound a bit repulsive . Cincinnati on .Oct. · ;; · arriving
· 5' omeroy,
Alabama .. spent a frw days herr
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-::vebnutt.actual,ly it 'sa
humane th;,rhee
Queen WI' II
with Mr . and Mrs. Rober t All\ir c .
WITH FRIES••••.•$1.7 4
,
Th e Lend -a-Hand Circle mer·at
The many bikers making up leave Cincinnati on Aug. 3
A donation was made to the
the home of Mrs. Pauline Atkins
the group will meet at 3 p.m. on arriv ing in Pittsburg on Aug. 8 family of Steve Erwin who wa s
with Mrs. Sha ro n Jrwell a s
the parking lot in Pomeroy and and will make Its return to recently injured seriously in a
co-hos tess.
then will travel In a caravan to Cincinnati on Aug. 10 arriving fail when the Earl Dean Willing
C'harldine Alkire. Ste lla 1\tkins
the Rutland Am<'rtcan Legion
there on Aug. 14 .
Workers Sunday School Class of
and Ruby · Di e hl a ttended the
"At the End of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Hallwherethey wlligivebloodat ·
I think many of us enj oy the the Chester United MethOdist
Ohio State gradu<l'tion Friday of
POMEROY, OH.
PH, 9.92-2556
an American Red Cross bioodmotreat of seeing these boat s move Church met at the home of
Da \' id Ra\' Riggs. Hr received a
bllr being set up there. The up and down the Old Ohio Howard and Wilma Parker.
degree in engineer ing.
bikers invite you to join them In
hopefully, they won't pass us at 3
Mrs . Parker had devo tions
Mr. and Mrs Danny Young
or 4 In the morning .
with Harry Hotter conducting the
h a\'~ movl'c 10 Racine.
giving blood that da y .
· A party at the .Rive rboat Inn ,
----bu siness meeting. Summer acMiddleport. will follow the bloodAnd .- family reunions ar<' t ivitles for the group were
mobile visit.
really In full sw ing and I think di scussed . Games were pla yed
that 's wond e rfuL You folk s wil h with Paul Karr and J. M. Gaul
--- ~the big families should look winning the prizes. A weiner
Judy We ll of Darwin. ow ner around you a nd co unt your roast was enjoyed by the 15
and operator of .Judy's Country bless ings. If our family ha d a members attending.
Curl. has undcrgong surgery a nc;l re union there aren't even enough
Next meeting will be an ic!'
you can drop a card to her at of us to consume a bucke t or cream supper hos ted by Sid and
room 322. Holzer Medi ca l CPntc r. chi cken. Do keep smiling . ·
Madaiine Branch at the church.
Gallipolis.
commented Gulllekson . "If I
keep the bail down I do ail right: .. ·
but I'll just havetokeepgolngout "
there."
'
&ott , who went into the gamE' ·,
with a 9'· 4 record and ihe National -''
League's best- Parned run aVer- • '
ag·c', 2.28, said, " I didn ' t have my ''
good fastballat a li. I just tr ied to
survive ."
..
Cincinnati, now I 'h games in
front of Hous ton in the NL Wes t.
fsscheduledtosendTcdPower,
6·3, against Danny Da r win. 4-4, In
tonight' s final e of the two-game · .
series.
-Meigs_ bas~eJball
$300
SHOES &·'BOOTS
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JEWELRY GRAB BAGS
1 GROUP MEN'S
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Pitted against one of the
premier pitchers 111 th!' majors,
right -hander !Mike Scott, the
Reds took a3-0lead ln the second
inning and were in front 4·1 after
. ·Bo Dlaz hit a ~oio ljomer,hls fifth,
in the' fourth Inning. ..
. . . .:. .
The Astros. closed to 4-2 in the
fifth and used back-to-back homers by Jose Cruz, his s!'ve nth.
and Alan Ashby's sixth to tie it at
4-4 In the sixlh and knock out
Cincinnati s tart er Bill .
Gullickson.
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" Every pitch 1 get up, it seems
like It's hit for a home run "
Wednesday, July 1, 1987
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···~~ · .OU r~duates named. rl Dean's·list announced .at 0 UPomero~
Befit of 'th'e bend
s~~o~l !u~:~d~~ll ~ u~~~~lg~a~~e~e:a.:rn:e~~d~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Ru~lwtho•ll
"••dm·Miay ·, c:amt ...
s ..~ l"url. t olutm 7· 3 1 ;d Tnrnnln t l\ t• l
-~-H. 1 ::1~ Jl.m.
·
llt•trnil tT•·rro•ll ft.7 ) at ~Uiv.allkt 'l '
{\\ l' l:nm.n l>il , :!: :t:,p. m .
IJ.1 1oil ;rn1 / :o;lo·v. ;ul ~';J ; ol l "hi n lll;"
t Ut • l o~•un :.. ~! - ~ 11-111.
f 'alilnrnla 1111·11"" :! -11 ) at 1'11'\l' land
t f" :1rllnn :t-:i1. ~ :.'l.i p.Jn.
~l lt ilnuro • t l ; rllfin t~l l
a l Ro:-.tnn
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Kurt
Stillwell turned oil the ·afterburners, accelerating in a mad
da s h for home plate.
Thi? 22-year-old Infielder slid.
under the t!Vow in a .c)oud 'ot dust
·to carry hOm~ the ·most Important run of his big league career
Tuesday night as the Cincinnati
Reds squeezed out a tO-Inning,.5·4
vietory over their closest pursuers in th e NLWest. the Hou s ton
Astrp,s .
" I knew I was safe," said
Stillwell. " but I didn 't know
about the play at first base until I
hea rd the crowd noise .and
realized that we'd . won thegame."
-~- Tracy Jones. 0-for-4 at the
plate and playing centerfield in
the absence of the injured Eric
Davis, stepped to the plate with
two out In the lOth and ninne rson
fir st and second after Astros
re liever Larry Andersen had
issued walks to pinch-hitter StTI1
iweil and Ka i Da niels.
"I've been stinking·up the fi eld
in the last three games," said
J ones, who hit a high hopper to
Houston shortstop Dickie Thon.
"lf you can't get any hits at least
you_can hus lle and that 's wh_;l t
Kurt a nd I both did . I was safe at
fir st a nd umpire Dutch Rennert
made a gusty call, but he was
right .
"Kurt never stopped at third
base and he bea t the throw t from
fir st ba seman Glenn Davis!
easily aft e r getting the s ignal
1from third base coach . Billy
DeMars 1."
Reds manager Pet!' Rose. who
watched his club lose leads df 3-0
a nd 4-1. admitted that " we stole
the game. It's a great way to win
with two walks and an Infie ld hit .
You don 't see many like that one.
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
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Wedi"Mttddlly; July 1, 1987
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
participant~.
·4:-H leadership
.
Bennett-family 'gathers ·
and Karen. Columbus: Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Brush and family,
Centerburg: Mr. and 1Mrs . Ter·
renee Johnson, and son, Eileen
Snyder. Middleport ; . Charles
Johnson and son, Reynoldsburg;
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Knott s and
famil y, Reedsville; Mr. and Mrs.
Randolph Moore and family. St.
Paris , and Jan Bennett and
daught er. Canton.
Chauncey; Roy, Rosem ary and
Cat herin e Hendricks. Rock
Bridge: Polly Martin and Ra l ph .
Con nie and Rachel Bales, Rutland ; Gene, S heila.. Marissa,
Brent, Sandra and Pam Wh alev
Darwin; Junior and Rita White:
Kyger; Brenda Cogar and son,
Syracuse: Leonard , JoAnn and
Bill Scarbrough, Darwin: Do~
rothy Coulson; Gallipolis, and
Iva Stewart, Middleport .
Golden Rule c(ass has
Mr. and Mrs . Jack Ambrose
and M r. and Mrs. Norman Van
Meter hosted a picnic of the
Golden Rule Cl ass of the Middleport First Baptist Church at the
Ambrose home recenlly .
The Rev. Earl Eden gave table
grace and follow ing the picnic,
m embers were seved cake and
homemade ice cr eam . Attending
hesides the hosts were Mr. and
Mrs. Ken net h Imboden, Mr . and
~i\REN
Ka ren Jackson, who min isters
through mu sic. will present lhr
program at th e .I ul y 9 meeting of
the Pomeroy Chapter. Women's
Agl ow Fellowship to be held al
the Senior Citizens Center in the
Meigs Multipurpo'e Building, 7
p.m .
Mrs. ·Jackson is frequC'n ti)'
fea tu red nat ionally on Chr istia n
radio and televison program s
such as "Rev iva llime" with Dan
Betzer. Ca nada' s " 100 Huntiev
Street" an~ wa s s!'en daily on th'e
" N inety and Nine Club" thro ugh
the U .S. and Ca nada. In the pas t
several yea rs. she has shared h e~
• singing with thousands of every
denomin at ion i n chu rches and
l ellowshps across the cou nt ry .
She has recorded fi ve aibu)'lls
wi th music rangin g from co ntem·
porary to tradllional.
Reserval ions are to bo made
by ·Monday with Beverly Rupr.
742-3003; Carolyn Scar)s, 992 - ~4()7
Marion MichaeL 992·3219. or
' 13re nes a Phillips, 992- oOi.l
Mrs. Dale Walburn, Mr. and Mrs .
Randall Davis, the Rev. and Mrs.
Earl Eden, Gerry Pullin s. Mr .
and Mrs. Manning Kloes and
granddaughter. Amanda, Mr.
and Mrs. John Rlebei, Howard
W.llgenhals, and Howard Barr.
John Riebel had devotions.
Next meeting will be a pool part y
on July 23 at the Kloes home with
M r . ancj Mrs. Da vis as hosts.
Meigs County 4-H news reports:
'
Thr Mf'i g!' ('nunt .\ · Sht'phr-n b C'\ub m l'l
.Jun r ]() :1! l hl' hnmP nf L nri B ur k<• with 7
m t • mbr- r~ ami 2 . uh · i:--nt·~ u tl r ncll nc . Thf'
~ h parln g
or
L1mh~
a n(i wool tr.'ltur<' w,1"
di ~c u .o; ~ t '( l. R 1 •h ' t · ~hmf'~t!' w f'l' f' ~f'r\ ' f'd
.Jun r-
:~th
ac tivis l is suing
the ChemLawn Services Corp.
because one of it s employee
allegedl y misread a street sign
and des troyed the activist's
organic garden w ith lawn ~ pray .
Margaret Greva tt s said she Is
suing ChemLawn lor $500 pius
court costs.
Greva tts. a m ember;. of th<'
Council on Hazardous Ma terial s
and the Nor! hern Ohio Coalitipn
Against Misuse of Pesticides.
sa id th e cycles of nature were
disturbed by chemicals spray!'d
on her law n and garden, whic h
she tqok 10 yC'a rs to cuiliva te.
A ChemLawn worker made the
mistake April 21, Grevatts said.
T he worker checked Greva t ts'
house number and began spray in g. The house number '\:as
correct. but l he worker was on
the.w rohgstreet -Or mond Road
instea d of Dellwood Street .
_ Grevatt s sai d many pest icides
·have not been adequately tested
to determ inr if they are possibly
hazardou s.
" There is more and more
information emerging that sub·
st ances previously thought safe
actua lly are not ," Grev,a tts said.
Practice mak es perfect:
ATLANTA tUP]) -Pollee said
they bel iPvc a man who bo tched a
bank robb<'ry returned t o the
sam e bank the next day and
apparE"ntly profited from · his
mistakes to fl ee with an undetermined amount of cas h.
\\' liS ~r t
tnr
<IT t hf' .homc< nl Sl ('ph anir Hlll
will
wo rk
on
Mind .v SpPn Cf'r . R~'POI"Il'r
Quirks in the
e n viro nm ~n ra l
m N'llng
whr,rr· r hf' gro u p
showma n .. hlp.
b.' ·
By United Press International
Environmentalist sues over
· mistaken lawn: CL E VELAND
HEIGHTS. Ohio tUPl l· - An
nPN T
JACKSON
Aglow names
next speaker
meeti~~g
the Burkr );. Th£'
Advertisments. All Of ou·r · Products Are
Everyday Low Prices!
..
the a'uctlon wa s a major boost for
t-he four-week-old !undraistng
· dr ivto. Fletcher said the money
$1.000.
donated to the Hall of . Fame
·" I ·guess I was j ust Jookihlf f or
more of a bargain," she said . • . projeci would be ·poured back.
The sets of first -class and Into the com munity.
.
"This is gooing to be on'e more
coach tickets donated by Continental Airlines were part of an reason for people to come to
effort to promote the compa ny's downtown Cl eve l and yearmove to Cleveland as a new round ," Fletcher said . " Right
regional hub city. '
now, people just come for one
" ) think . (t he Hall of Fame ) Ind.i"ims gam e in the Summer or
signifies 'the positive changes · just one arowns gam e. T~ ls Is
that Cl eveland is going through going t o be a one-of a kind I hlnjl
r ight now," said Ned Walker. a and it 's going to be r ight here in
Continental spokesman. " As Cl eveland."
·Cleveland co ntinues to grow. l
When completed, the H all of
think people ar e going to find th at Fame is expect ed to. attract
the Rock Hall of Fame and 200.000 to 300.000 visitors to
Continental are twoolthe bigges t Cleveland each year and is
.c iJi2ens in this com munit y' ·
expected to' bring $20 million to
F ra nk Fletcher. Hai l of Fame $30 million into the loca l economy
prom otiona l coordinat or, said each yea r .
$12,192, were auctioned for
$5,500. Joan quit bidding at
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We only change prices when the . mar~et changes
nevvs----------~
.
containi ng a small ca nister of rPd • day and the numbers and singing
will grow to a peak this weekPn d
dy"e triggered to explode w hen it
passed through the bank door.
when th ~> fin al s of the con tes t will
" The dye went off and ca used be held.
him to drop most of the money," · Barbershop quart'et si,nging
Miller said Tuesday . "He proba- beca me popular in the l ate 1800s
biy got away with less than $300. and emphasizes .traditional ba l·
That was probably what promp· lads and It s trademark four-pa rt
harmony . Th e group boas ts more
ted him to hlt again today .
. "He told the teller (Tuesda y 1 than 37.000 members in 82:i
not to give him any money in chapters in the United Sta tes and
binders . That's where the red dye Canada .
is, " Miller said .
Husband leaves wife at se.r vice
Harmony. Invades Hartford : station: LINCOLN CITY, Ore.
HARTFORD. Conn. 1UPI1-0n IUPil- Leona Kimber is a bi t
street corners,. In restau rant s angr~' with her husband . He
and el evators, more than 11 ,000 apparent ly forgot she wa s with
barbershop quartet singers wil l him and left her st randed at a
serenade the ci ty wi th the sound s service station for more tha n o
of !our-part harmony.
hours.
The singers are all members of
Kimber of Gerber. Cali f., sa id
the Society for the Preservation she had been ly ing in . the back
and Encouragement of Barber sea l of th eir station wagon when
Shop Quartet Singing in America · her husband, Franklin, stopped
and are atJending the group's to get ga~o lin e Tuesday.
49th Annual Convention and
She wen t into the rest room,
Contest.
and when she ca m e back the car
"If you come In here Thu rsday was gone.
" He should have looked before
or Friday you' ll hear groups on
every street corner, every res· he took off," she l amented.
tau ran t . every hallway-,..aJ.I over ........ .Sh.e . ~lgc tgd police to stop her
this city ," William Longstreet. husband and tell him to come
the operations director or this back to the station.
The ca r returned and Mrs.
year's convention said Tuesday. ,
The singers will takeover most Kimber climbed in to the back of
of centra l Connecticut, having I he wagon. The couple hea ded off
booked mor;,r than 3,800 rooms in together to .visit relatives in
33 hotels. A fleet of 150 buses wlll Empire, Ore.
take delegates to and from the
H er · hu sband didn ' t say
event's focal point in the Hart- whether he had been stopped by
f9rd Civic C,enter.
police and reminded of his wife or
Th e first delegates to Jhe whether he had just discovered
convention began arriving Tues - she wa s missing.
By WILLIAM C. TROTT
United Press International
BUBBLY BEAUTY : ThP new
Breck shampoo woman . foii ow in g In the tracks of Cy blil
Shepherd. Christ ie Brinkley.
Jacly n Smith. Kim Basinger and
Br ooke .Shields. is ·a 28-yea r-old
m ar riPd mother from Conyers.
Ga . Cecilia Houston Gouge. was
di scovered on th ~ job at the
Ma rr iott Marquis H otel In
Atl anta in a L ana Tur n er's l ~' le
story.
Gouge says Roh Anderson, the
Breck port rait artist. was on a
nationwide lour in sear c h of the
"Breck look." and wa s c hPcking
ou t wome n in the 'ho tel. whi ch
disarmPd the guesrs . A hot el
officia l as ked Anderson if he
would il kP to check th e offi ce.
where he spotted Gouge.
" 1 had not hPard of this search
and it sounded like a hoax lOme,"
she sai d. "Bu t he showed me
som e cl ippings and conv inced
me it was legitimate M y li fe wa s
gr ea t before ali this happened. ·
Thi s is icing on my -c ake: "
Breck discontinued th e Breck
Girl in 1978 but M elded to bri ng
her back in an upd aiNi 1980s
Y('r s ion.
SHOTG L!N " 'ILS.O N : Soul
man Wilson J>ickelt is in troubl e
because of guns again - on trial
I hi s t ime in Hackensack . N .J .. on
a cha r ge of possessing a loaded
shotgun . Pi cket t. .J6, who hHd hi ts
wi1h "In the Midnight Hour."
" Funk y Broadway " a'n d " Mu s·
ta ng Sali)'," tva .s arres ted in July
1984 af! Pr hC' drove his 1974 sil\ r r
Stut z Bla ckhawk ont o I he cur·b of
f hC' 0\'al Bar in Englewood and n
po iicC'm an found a loa c!C'd Sro\\·n·
ing semi -au tom a,ic 12-ga ug C'
shotgun on t.he fron t seal of I he
NEXT FIGHT WITH JUDGE:
Former boxing champ Mar.,e·
lous Marvin Hagler had a date
\vith his iawyer ' to discuss wife
abuse charges. Bertha Hagler
appeared l ate last week ·to say
Hagler had ab11scd her in their
Hanover. Mass .. home but the
hearing was del ayed until Wed·
nes day. Ha gler has been in
secl usion since losing his midd le·
weight tit le to Sugar ~u y L ro·
nard In Apri l in Las Vegas.
" This is a domrstic r eltlll ns
matt er and it's a mn t IPr ol'
pri vacy · in thC' famil y,". sa id
Morris M . Goldiiigs, Marvin's
lawyrr . ;· t rea lly don't havC' a'ny
commen t on it. We ha,·r not ye t
SC'PD th e paper s as yet."
RICHlE SCHOLAR: Sonya
Braddy had to get through high
school vir tua l ly by herself a li r
her pa r ent s diro but shr'l l be
goi ng to co ll e~P wilh Uonr•l
OLD MISSOURI
BONELE.SS
HAMS
PiC'keli's atlornry savs th e
si nger Jd m its ha\' ing a gu n•but
was unaw ar 0 ,it was loa dP<I.
Pick<'tl was ;;cquittcd of assault ·
ing a former member of his band
with thr butt of a shorgu n in 1979
and pl ea dNI guiliy 10 a c hargr of
reckl ess endangerment in 197>
aft !'r fir in g a pistol into a
Ca tsk ills motel roqm occupiC'd by
1he I sley Bro1hers sin ging group.
w ho
Wf'r0
on a hunti ng 1rip \\d t h
pkg.
PickC't t " ' ihP lime.
Whole
'fully
dozen
Idaho
POTATOES
10 lbs. $}99
24-12 oz.
cans
cooked'
Wilson
Seitz
Hillshire Polish or
Smoked Meat
Sausage Wieners
12 oz . pkg
1 lb. Beef·~
J99 89~
Savory
Bacon
per
lb.
lib. pkg. MILD OR Special Recipe
Pork SauSage
Prrt•t !
STOREWIDE
"
t t) W.
-I Pnrl' 1
THURSDAY & FRIDAY
I Price.'
J
I Macaroni & Cheese
Golden Wh eat 7.25
Emydur l
.
L ow
€hitken Rice A Roni
l.o ..v
OFF
E·,,,ydu r l
Oz. Box
"' 23c
l Pna !
~~~r;.
.
1
hnyduy.l
I
SINGER
Low
Ptrcr l
E'myduy l
Lo w
PrtC'l' .'
I
f, ,erydoy l
APPROIIED DEALER
Low
I Pmt' I
Farm Gold I lb . pkg.
l:. "'N JdO)'
Low
1 Pncrl
Spread Quarters
1£v.iy day ,
Sweet 'n Fresh I lb. tub
E\•eryduy
Lo w
I
l
I ~~~;, . Soft Margarine
Em yday
I
.
Low
Pnct .1
1:.\•f'r)·day
Lo w
I
Pm•r !
Emydu_v ,
Fresh 8 oz. pkg.
I Meadow
Cream Cheese
Low
Pm·e!
Everyday'
l
Schreiber 8 oz. pkg . Cheddar Or
$
Creamy Peanut Butter
Ralston 16 oz. box
Low
' Prtce!
n~rvdav I
LOw . I
I Price.' I
·Fveryduy l
\ Low
J
Price! I
1•19
Bubba, Tubz, or Crisp Diet or Reg.
12 oz. Soda
Defile 7.5 oz . .bag All Varielies
Potato Chips
Guesl Rdnch /40 ct . pkg.
Napkins
Leisure Way 100 cl. pkg.
II fn ce.' II Paper Plates .
Everyday
Low
Fireside 31 oz. pkg.
I
l
Pann er 18 oz. jar Crunchy or
Salad Dressing
)
t
B BQsauce
Fig Bars
Fancy Ketchup
Low
fmyday l
Dry Detergent
--~
C hicken & Ribs 11allon jug
Marcin J] oz. jar
K11rfl 32 oz.. boule
£v.,yday l
l
I Whirl 42 oz . box
heryda} I
l Lnw
' Pnt ·(•/ 1
49¢ .
LOw.
8 oz . box- BEEF or -
£.vrryduy l
£y,.ry(Jay
Lo w
Pnr.-!
. E1•eryduy
1 Low
( Pnce.' ,
Pr1ct .'
Pork 'n Beans
'
I
•
I"""'"'"'! Mustard
' E~-er
.y d.oy I
L uw
I
Saltine Crackers
.
Pnce'
Diamond 25 sq. ft .
AlUminum Foil
Sea Maid 6.5 oz. can
Chunk light Tuna
Ranch House 24 oz. can
Beef Stew
Everyday
Lo w
II
Butoni 15 oz. can
Beef Raviola
Pr_in:'.'
f very.day
I
Ginger Evans 32 oz. box
Pancake Mix
_
Cook 'n Fry 48 oz boule
1.79
5
Com Oil
Low
PrKe .'
I
I
Sunbright I] oz. can
leiJlonade
I /0 oz . pkg. All Varieties
E'<ryduy l
Lo w
12 oz. pkg.
American Hertiage
Cheese
.
..
.·...
... .. .
..
High Liner 16 oz. pkg.
I Price.' Ocean Perch
Holten 5 lb. box
X~tra Value Beef Patties 54.49
..
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'·
.,
.'
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• • •1 .• • •
'
..,
'
Loggins Flavor Best
Charcoal
Rib Eye
Steaks
$
19.
'•
20lb. bag
Old Salem
3 lb. box of 4.8 oz.
Briquets
'
•
Jeno's Pizza
1/2 Moon Colby
! . Prtn•.'
~ LB.
LB.
79
Kurtz 20.5 oz. jar
Quick Time 29 oz. can -r
SAVE UP TO
oz. pkg.
BACON .
Sweet Peas
Low
· Pr-wt .'
Sale!
99
Jimmy Dean$
GROUND
BEEF
.STEAKS
•
Harvest Fare 16 V, oz. can Grade 'A ' fancy
£\·,.ryday l
Extra Lean
T~BONE
•
GRADE '·A'$
Ha,rvest Far!' I 5 V. m:. can Grade 'A' f anc-y
I ·Pr,u ! I Cut Green Beans
July 4th .
Bang Up
, 10 Wu t Main 51 ,
Pomeroy
992 · 22P4
59¢
79¢
12 oz.
"SUPER CASE"
Evtrt'dily J
Low
0S>·
_EGGS
R.C. COLA
· Ri chie' s hclp.
Rich ie show('d up Tuesday at
Miami' s Jack son High School to
name Sonya , 17. the llrst Lionel
Ri ch ie Scholar . For the pa st year
Braddy has been part of Cities in
Schoo ls. a national dropout prevention program.
_
" Wh at I found out abou t thi s
lady is determin ation," Richie
sa id. "She . has ih<' grea trst
drlcrmination in the whal<'
wor ld. I care about peopl e w ho
arP 1r;•ing 10 m ake lt. Sonya
Bra ddv ha s made It and s hP'~ on
hPr way to co nquer the world ...
The .<c hola rs hip wa s aided by .a
$fii.OIJO chl'ck !rom Rich I<' and is
open for student s from 2~ cit irs .
Rra ddy. whose fir•t co llet:!€' <"hoicr is Tuskegt>e Institut e in
Alahoma . was selcctPd out of a
final licld of 12. 'Shr hopes to
lx'co mr a INicher,
25°/o
EXTRA LARGE
~HOTDOGS
Old Virgillia 16
car .
HANGING ROCK
CAVALIER
REGULAR OR BEEF
People in the new.s.__________~
Hendricks reunion held . . . .
Descendants .of Ruth Hendricks ana the late WaUfr
M atthew Hendr icks ga thered at
I he Route 3:l roads ide park for a
family r euniOn Sunday .
Following the picnic dinner at
noon. the afternoon was spent.
visiting and taking pictures .
Attending were Nondus Hendricks, Racine: Dorsal and Ro·
semary Randolph, Bashan Road.
Don. Denise, and Maria Freed,
and Alliso n and Danielle Wolfe,
W~ Do.n.'t .Offer '"SpeCials" With Fancy
still _rolling in Cleyeland's
Hall of Fame fundraising· drive
By BRIAN MOOAR·
CLEVELAND iUPI I - The
National Rock-a nd-Roll Hall of .
Fame has Inched closer tO its $40
m1lllon fund~<aising goal after
promoters raised an estimat ed
$60,000 at downtown charity
auction.
H all of Fame offi cials estimate
they have raised $5 million of the
$40 mlilion needed to complete
the 10o.oop square-foot facliit y.
Nearly 400 bi dders and specta tors crowded into a downtown
Clevel and hotel Tuesday for the
auction of 5,2 sets of airline ti ckets
to cities ar ound the wor ld.
Joan Has tings, a 26-year-old
legal assistant from-Say Village.
said she had hoped to bid on a
ticket to Melbournr. Au.stralia .
The first-class tickets. valued at
.
.
. ~ock
.
the M eigs Swine Club.
camp, Joe and Amy are expected
Locai4·H members Joe Parker
to develop knowletlge, skllls and
and Amy Ritch!!" will participate
understanding wpicb will enable
in the 198'7 $t,ate 4-H Leadership
·· The two youths Will be taking
Camp under.' sponsor.slilp of 1~ part in ·a . series . of indepth . them io- be· 'better leaders. Mrs. .
Ohio Farm Bureau Federation leader ship development work- · Ol!verl said .
State 1-H Leadership Camp
and Natio nw id e Insurance shops and experiences while at
.Companies . ·
' . Camp Ohio, July 1-6. Dr. Gabe · also helps delegates reill!ze the
According to Cindy Oliveri, Campbell of Akron wil l ea(! a . degree Of control they have over
county extension agent , the spon- hal[-day leadership seminar with
their lives. encourages them .to
take the Initiative to tr y new ·
sorship w ill provide lull prog.ram all delegates. and Ohiq State
costs and tw o camp scllolarshps University faculty and. staff will
things, and to not be afraid of
for the Meigs 4-Her-s . .Parker is conduct leadership work shops
failure or success. to understand
the various dimensions of leaderthe son of Mr. and Mrs . L eland from which ca mpers may
-. sh ip. to enhance their leaders hip
Par.ker, Pomeroy, and has been choose.
abilities In areas of communicaan active 4-H m ember for 10
In addition. Joe and Amy will
year s. He is a m ember of the · be Involved in hands-on leader·
tions, mot iva lion and recogniton,
Meigs R.owdles and the M eigs ship experiences in actually
to ex~;>erience personal growth
Dairy 4-1:! Club. Amy Ritchie Is planning and conducting parand become better people, and to
the daughter of Mr . and Mrs . lions of th e program Including ' gain ide.as a]ld methods ·1o shar e
Roger Ritchie, Reedsvil.le, and
the evening programs, lnsplrain strengthening local and county
has been an act ive m ember for tlons. and citizenship' ceremo·
programs, Mr s .. Oliveri
nine years. She is a member of nies. As a result of leadership
ex olained.
The descendants of Silas and
Lera Bennett enjoyed a reunion
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ira
Eblin in Syr acuse Saturday.
Attending ;vere Mr. and Mrs.
H aven Johnson and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Johnson of
Vi enna, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
John Motley and son s. Gahanna;
Mr. and Mrs. George Moore and
son; M r. and Mrs. Gregory
Moore and fam ily. 'Roger Eb lin
•
The-Daily Sentinei!-Page-11
- .Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, July 1, 1987
Page-10-The Daily Sentinel
9
9
. .
he's~ rr;;;;;;;;;;:~~=~~~~~~~~~;;;;!~~~~;;;;;;;~~
," Ifand
It was
the
sam!' young
guy. man
bold
very
brazen
~-~~~~ll~~d." said police Sgt.·
Miller sa id thP suspect used a
differt"nl note each time but the
hHndwrl.t i ng and misspelled
• words indi ca!!" the same man
was ·rcspdnsibi e for both
tn~.i~~~~-the evidence, notes that
were written. that ' s the concluslon we've dra wn, .. Mliler said.
·'He spelled wrapper wllh one p.
The notes said. 'Give me all the
mo)ley in your · cas h drawer-no
do'uar bills:" '
'
Police said a man in his late20s
First ~Natlonai
orearly 30s en teredthebranchof
Bank of Atlanta
Monday, gave a teller a note
dem·an·cttng money an·d walked
out with a tJUndle of cash
•
FREE DELIVERY
(DAILY)
.
We will be ,mak"•ng da•·ly del•·ver•·es·.
to the West Virginia area during
the • periO
• d 0 f time the bridge is
• US. Q C:UII Wit h YOUr
C:I058d• JUSt giVe
order.
•
o
\t'ALLEJ
LUMBER &SUPPL J (Q.
1J
5)5 Park St.
992 ·6611
Middleport, OH.
J
I
I
I
SaveJO~any I•
:I
I
I
I
I
·Nestea product
2 oz. or larger
To the Dealer: You will be reimbursed fo r the lace value ollhiS coupon
plus ae·, _if sub~itletf In tomplianfe with Nestle Foods Corporation
Re~tempttOn Pol1cy Incorporated herein by reterertee. Good ·onlv in
U.S.A. Consumer must pay Sales Tax. Voia where Rrotllbi1edffaKedt
Restricted.. Cash Value'tiiOOC. FOR REDEMPTION . MAIL TO: NESTLE
FOODS CORPORATION, ~0. Box 20340 , EL PASO, TEXAS 79998.
~
.
W.VA.~~~
& MANUFAlll'UH.r-'R
.'
I
I
I.
COUPONS '
(3_~4)
•
''
.,
.GUARANIEE
FOOD STAMPS,
••
,
.MONEY-BACK
WE GLADLY ACCEPT
•·
. . -------.•-.•----. .•-•.------.
30¢
LIMIT: ONE COUPON PER PURCHASE
lOOOJo
WE ACCEPT PERSONAL
CHECKS FOR AMOUNT OF
PURCHASE ONLY
I
I
•
675-1155
Point Pleasant, W.
. Rt. 62 North
.,
v...
Prices guaranteed through . tly 5, 19lr7
We reserve the right to limit all quantities .
�.
-
..
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/
'
:Bakker: We are· committed to 'a
.'
'
Wednelday, July 1, 1987
Pomeroy-Middleport~ Ohio
Page-12-The Daily Sentinel
'
)
televi~ion
Wedhesday, July· 1, 1987
ministry
p
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
•
SAI'\TA FE . K.M. r\J PI 1 . - .
" from scratch.
Mill, S.C., for tile Fourth of July : .
matter of weeks," Jim Bakker munity. It would be a perfect sludio" and a remote truck.
said Tuesday during the place to live."
" We are committed to a
" We have a volunteer staff holiday.
GATLINBURG. Tenn. (UPII
' "Plus," he added. "There are television ministry, " he said. working with us:right now, but all
sO will thousands of fTL ~
- Fallen PTL founder Jim
Bakkers' first public appear~nce
. Bakker says he and . followers
in a week:
··
'
· very few places' where Tammy "Thal'·s ali we know how to.do." I c~y them is ali the cheese "partners" - people who have ·
working for. cheese sandwi<.'hes
··we are a<>liv'ely looking in this can shoptoherhearl'sdesirelike TammY. standing beside him·· sail~iches they can eat," h.e do.nated at least $1.000 to PTL'-" ;
.. .
wlio are dissatisfied with F~l· '
· ar<> laying·the,gro.Undwork for a
arl"a." he said. adding he also is she ca n here. .ln fust a short walk .with her blonde hair dyed light said, .
new TV ministry, probably· in
considering Florida and Caiifoc' she can get out and shop. shop, brown, us ted some other employ - · Tammy, calltng herself "a well's running or the ministry.: '
.
· ment experience.
small town girl" .from Mlnne-.
"He's going . to be so <ijit·
this Smoky Mountaiq resort
nia for the site of a new ministry . . shop." ' .
. ~· 1 used to . work at F.W. sola, sal!! she could adjust to prised, " said Paulette Rice of ;
where his wife "Tammy can shop
Regardless~ he said, 1\e and his . Bakker, , telling teporters he
' Lilburn, Ga .. a member of the •
wife, Tamfl)y Faye,. pla.n to take . was unawatetheJusllcf'Depart- woolworth's, , ·and Jim sold change. _
lo her heart 's desire."
"I decided to change my. hair Association of PTL Partners, '
"We hope to start the minlslry
up residence in · Gatlinburg, · ·ment h'as taken up i tax. fraud shoes," slie said. · "He :was a
for1!1 little cHange of pace," she formed to ~onibatFalwell.
as soon as possible, and it looks
" where mid-America and family investigation of his PTL opera- busboy when we J11et.' '
like it's going to fall together · America comes by the lens of · lions, said his first requirements
Bakker said he probably would added. " I don't want to bore
"In my heart, I think we will
very, v~ry sooiCposslblywithin a- thousands . It's a Christian com- for a new ministry are a " proper have to start his new minls lry myself.''
have 100.000 ·people there, but
Bakker said he has reached
more conservallvely, we expect
agreement with PTL builder Roe 25.000," she-said . Messner, who took over the
She s~d Falwell, a fundamenBakkers' Gatlinburg chal et to . laUst Baptist, has created an
salisf)-1 debts. to buy back the
Invisible wall around the PTL
that Bakker founded as .a charts- ·
house.
The Bakkers -Si!id they would
matte ministry.
remove their belongings from
their house at Tega Cay , S.C.,
near the PTL's Heritage USA
theme park within a few weeks .
The Rev .. Jerry Falwell, who.
at Bakker's requPsl, took over
PTL when !'lakker resigned in
March following disclosure of a
' 1980 sexua l liaison with a church
BAND fiOM POITSIIOUTH
secretary, says the $1.3 million
" parsonage" at Tega Cay Is PTL
FIIDAY &
property and must be sold to
SATUIDAY NIGHTS
meet the ·bankrupt ministry's
JULY 3 & 4 and 10 & 11
debts.
·
.
12.00 Cover ~harge
Falwell, meanwhlll', said hE'
Mu" be 21
would be at Heritage USA In Fort
By DENNY HAMILTON
..
. Remains niay
·be soldiers · ·
spur, a signal mirror and Union turning the thing into a circus."
bullets .
'
' The burial site was discov ered
Museum of New Mexico direc- early last week by landowner Kip
tor Tom Livesay said Monday llie ~ller . _ He was dlgglnj: a foundadiscovery is "one ·of the most tion for • a log cabin with a
significant a11d .exciting finds In machine that scra[)E'd a human
'
.
years for t.he museum ."
. sku ll.
.....1 always knew there was a
Livesay said rf'searchers have
been at · the site since last graveyard out here some. .
Wednesday but ·kept Jt 'Secret • wh~>re ," Siler said. " But I nPver
from ·the public "to keep from though t I 'd find it <!!,YSeif."
--
I
-.....:.
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5t-.f/..:l: 7: ";c.;• E ~-:
k .. -~ ...~ ,~.~: : '" ~ .::. e~· :-• .-:;
11 '/\·,
.
'
-
V4aterme\on
POIIRII
.
t
NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE
19
.'
.•.
'·~.
.,,•
t.
·,
Diet Seven-Up
or Seven-Up
>~
ggc
.·•...
..,.' ..
'
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'
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Mill, !!.C. PTL officials have threatened to close
down .the amusement park In light of the recent
financial crises. (UPI )
Roberts says more miracles coming
TULSA . Ok la. IUPII - Evan·
gelisl Ora l Robert s says it is
possible a child he claimed lo
liave brought back to life never
really died, but' maintains mira. cles such a s raising the dead are
beco min g ~ore common as thr
Second Coming nears.
"As WI' near the end of time
and the Second Coming of Christ ,
there's going IQ be quit e a bit of
it," Robert s sa id during a.tele·
casf Tuesday of hi s son's telev i·
jf'rkf'd in . my hand. a nd II was
still. And I called oul' aga in. II
jerked. and the little thing
opened Its. eyes. T)le mother jus t
went into orbit," Roberts said.
, He said the example drew 1,000
people to "come forward to
accept Chr.ist ."
Roberts on Tuesday also
backed away somewha t from his
earlier claim lhal he wou ld be
resurrecled lo rule over Oral
Roberls Un iversity .
"What I was s~ying was .
wou ldn 't it be grea l. or I wouldn ' t
be surprised. if God did not bring
me back lo lhese400acresof0ral
Roberts University He's bu lit
and would let me reign over these
400 acres. I don't know that He
will, bul it would be a joy, ..
Roberts said.
" When I die, the real Oral
Roberts will just slip out of his
body and jump on the passing
'.'
1/2 PRICE
•
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,·
SUMMER DRESS, CASUAL
and TENNIS SHOES
By United 111-ess International
Television evangelist Oral Ro·
ber ts, describing what he claims
was thl' faith healing of a baby
believed dead :
" I held that little I hlng In m y
hands . I had a way in those days.
I said 'God resiore this life.
Res tore this little baby.' And It
jerked In my hand and it was still.
And I called oul again. It jerked
and the litt le thing opened its
eyes . The mother just went Into
orbit."
.FRESH "StlVER PLATTER "
Western
Style Ribs
Ice Cream ·
Y. -Gilloll
aac
MEN'S, WOMEN'S and CHILDREN'S
Quote of rhe day
_OPEN
,
Regular
Hours
---1'===1
•
NEXT TO ELIEIFElDS IN POIIEIOY .
CUT FROM BOSTON BUTT
JULY 4th.
,
CHAPMAN SHOES
$,.••
· Pound
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I
winds and mount up on the w in gs
of eagles ... and be with Jesus.
And when He comes back to rule
on this earth. I'm coming with
him, wilh aliol he sai nts of-t he
ages," Roberts said.
sian program . "The Richard
·
Rober ls Show.' '
"There's going to be millions of
God's people who are go in g to be
raised from the dead in th e
Second Coming." Oral Robert s
said.
Roberts told a Charisma tic
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI\ a job as direclor of thE' Edison
Biblr Ministries conference las t
Former Ohio Development Di - . Industrialist System s Cent er.
we<>k that he had raised people . reclor Clarence Pawlicki , will But last week, I he Ohio E th ics
from the dead, say ing -once he
begin work Monday as director of Commission said his taking thai
''ha(l to s top and go back in the
the Toledo-Lu cas Count y Porf job would be a conflict of Interest
crowd and raise the dead person Author ity. · ·
since the facility Is funded In part
so I could go on wi th my service."
Pori officials confir med Tues- by state money.
The claim drew criticism from
day they appointed the 60-yearThe commission said stale law ·
fe llow evangelist Jerry Falwell,
old Toledoan to replace Ray prohibit s former s tate em·
who said he did not think anyone
Cadwallader who resigned In '"Pioyees from working with agen·
had been raised from the dead
Mav.
cies that rece ive state money for
since " apos tolic times."
Pawlicki left his state position a year aft er they leave state
Robert s told viewers of his
Tuesday. a nd had planned to take government.
son' s show Tuesday that he
brought back to life a child that
appeared to be dead, but con·
ceded he could not say for sure
whether t he child was act ually
dead.
"Whet her or not I he child was
Name ______________________________________
clinically alive or dead, I don't
know, " Roberts said. "The
Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ __ _ _ _ __
· inolher lhought il was dead. I
thought it was dead. Th<> people
in the congregation lhoughl it
Telephone No ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___,_ _ _ _ _ _ __
was df'ad."
·
The eva ngelis t said he was
Organization - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - -delivering a sermon to 10,000
people when the mother rose
ENTRY CATEGORY
from her sea t screa ming, " My
"200 Years Ago"
"Still Pioneering Today"
baby's dead." ·
(
)Commercial:
(
)Commercial
"I was preaching when I heard
(
)Non-Commercial
(
)Non-Commercial
a blood-c urdling sc rea m .. .. She
Mail to Meigs Museum. Box ~ 45, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769 or telephone
threw the. baby in my arms. I
(lldn't know what to do, " Robert s
entry to 992-3810 or 992-2246 before Fnday, July 10.
·..
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Universal}ftttk
t;
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Do you have an
account here, ·
sir?
BICENTENNIAL PAR'ADE
ENTRY FORM
•
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·-
!jettii1fj a cliecf
·
· casheiout ftowa
can .be a rea[fuijsfe.
,
r~===::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::==~~
With a UniverMJI 'lfonev mrd .from Peopl~~ Bank: .vou ron now f{f!l ro.•h .from anv
automatic teUer mac~ belo~J~Cilllf to the Cirrw IVetWIJrk. includifll{ The 'O.d
and Cashstrefim. There are ·riu!.tUOnd.• "'.f location.• nationwide, avoilablt> 24 hour•
a dav.•
H Y P .N 0 SIS
The Universal 'lfonev i4 T'lif is ·also a saie. quick, and easv for mu to do mur
bonkinlf even when the bank is closed. (We'd be !dod IO shoul' :vtJU how/). .
. Lonnie W. Moore, H.T.
MEMBEA Of lltATIONAL SOCIETY OF
HYP~OTH£RAPtST S
.
Unitff>.r~al
''
.·• •
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--~ ·~·
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'lifoney curds are provided .free o.f charl{e
10
our aulofliRr.•.
•
LOSE WEIGHT fOREVER
. . 6 p.m.
$45.00
' 1
'.'''.
Pawlicki hegins job·Monday
sai d. "His little body was co ld.
·•J held that little th ing in my
hands. I had a way in I hose days .
.. ~ I said, 'God restore th is life.
Restore this lillie
' And it
Polar Pak
.' •''
Stop in and order ynur Univerool Card rotkt:v!
Lose 10, 20, 30 or more lbt. You decideI
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Only 1 ct... nH<Iedl 1001. to 10% oucceul
NO ADDITIONAL CHAIIGI!S 'Cost above includes
r£,.~a cassetiEi tape to play tor-reinforcement
TUrSDAY, JULY 7th
HOUDAY INfll
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For mora lnfonnsllon Clll (501) 453·2334
ACCIPTED
NO CHECKS PLEASE
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•A
'THI BITTIR BANK"
IIIISUM
New Bawa, W.Va.
SIUI
n.oo !ervice chilli is ,
1 Oil
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•
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sg·c
Kroger Grade' 1\ Large tggs:............... ,~ . Doz.
REGULAR OR RIPPLE
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$119
Country Oven Potato Ch1ps ...... .... ...... 16-oz.
•
· kS·..· .. .. .. .. .·.. ..... . 12-oz. Cans ' 9l
.a·1g K s0 tt orln
••
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Pollll; nn•nt, W.Va.
Lean . ·,
Ground Beef
~
12 · S1
Kroger Cottage Chees..........................
ggc
I
I!U ,.._..... .t.w..
IJI.Uil
'
SeC"llll 91 wt
Mwm, W.Va.
. TJI.IIlt
lrlnsactittos II insltutions «her lhan lite Flloples Bank
.
••
2-Liter
wHOLE w/'TERt.IELONS
EI>CH $379
.
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v
Cut
SEMI-ANNUAL.
SUMMER CLEARANCE
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RED ·RtP~
1.'
HOLY WATERS - Over 6,000 children and
adults zoom down the walersildes at the five acre
Heritage Island Waterpark each weekend in Fort
.
--,\( .•·_L.-:_
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~~1-.e r
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MIZWAY
TAVERN
WALL TOWN .
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Glor!Na, about 10 miles souRflsearch(>r s say thf'v belic,·C' a
thea st of Santa Fe.
Glo rieta lundo_;·ner · ha s disCO·
The burning of a .supply wagon
vercd lhe bu ried r<>mains of
during the bail ie denied the
Confederate soldiers killed .duJ··
Co nfederat es th e resources
ing an important Civil War
needed to ca pturp' Fort. Union
ba ttle.
· a nd. from there.totakecontrojof
Archaeologists digging at I he ' th e Wesl a nd ils go ld fields.
site sa,· lhey have found whal
Officia ls said other Items found
appear to \l<' ll\e remain s of'20
at the sitC'SO far includl' button~
Confederate soldiers who fought
. cloth ing, a rubber comb, part of~
In the Ma rch 28. 1862. BatHe of
. The Daily Sentinei-P
c
•
24,oz.
•
PACK LB . 11.1»
I
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• Page-14-'-The Daily Sentinel
.
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ollio·
:,Toshiba executives resign over illeg'al export
•
TOKYO (UP I) - The tw o top execuli\'es of .
electronics !(tan! Toshiba Corp. resjgned .today.
sayi ng t~ey were ultimately responsible for a
. subsldlary's- !llegal exports of senSitive techn91·
. · ogy to the Soviet Union .
·
:
Toshiba • Corp .. chairman So ic hi Saba and
·' com panf president Sugfichlro Watari said ' they : .
resigned ~cause of the "t hreat ca\lsed to western
national security" by Toshiba Machine Co.'s
illegal sales or milling mac hines a nd com pu ter
:0
progr~m s
to the Soviet Union.
.
Toshiba Corp. owns 50.1 percent of Toshiba
'l'he.equlpment: sold between 19S2and 1984; was . Miuihlne Corp.
.
.
· r
used by the. Soviets to produce submarines tltat
The executives denied any link ~tweeit the
are .harder to d etect by sonar.
. res lgnalions and a v l~ll by Defe~se Secretary
. "We were. not invo lved In the Incident. We have
· Caspar Weln~rger to Tokyo earlier this week.
b~en saying that we are se parate companies. bin ·
Weinberger stressed to government officials the
as new development s tmlolded, we.could not help
Illegal sales did considerable' damage to U.S.
. but to feel. respons ible for our .s ubsldiary,".Saba
securlty Interests.
sa i(.l at a news conference to announce the .
Saba also denied Ihe timing o,f the move was
resignations.
·
·
connected to the senate's passage Tuesday or an
a mendment to trade legls lallon that would bar
sa le of Tos~lba product s In the Untied States tor at
least tw o years as punis hment for the Japanese
company's role In the .sa les . The· amendment Is
· all ached to an omnibus 1rade bill on wt)ich debate
continues today.
Joichl Aoi. 61. a senior cxPCutivP , was named
Tos hiba Corp.'s new pres ident. No replacement
~ w~s ·immediately named tor Saba..
'
..
. Britain blocks Europ~an . Community ·reforrit plan
.•
By HERMAN SAEN
BRUSSELS, Belgium (UPI JBritain stood Isolated from its
. European Commuriily"l)artners
: today , having refu sed)o.;lpprove
-.-financial reforms- aimed at en·
: suring sufficient funds to pro·
mote Communit y policies over
I he next five years.
• The other 11 mem~r sta tes
backed a document prepared by
Belgian Prime Minist er Wilfried
Martens, who presided a t a
two-day summit or European
Community heads or govern·
. ment s that ended lat e Tuesday.
. The summit shelved a pro·
· posed tax on veget a ble oils ahd
fats that had ~en strongly
opposed by Britain, Germany
a nd The Netherla nds, mainly for
its poss ible int e rnational
repercuss ions.
The tlnit ed States had branded
the tax as pro tecllonist and
t hreatened to take counlermeas u.res . Developing countries had
protested II would deprive them
of valuabl e export r e\'enue.
Jacques De!ors , president of
the Com munity's Executive
Co mmiss ion th at. proposed the
tax . criticized the shelving as a n
express ion · of "fear for the
United States."
.
He told a n ~ws conferencE' the
tax was not proteclionls t at all, as
it was to~ levied on community·
grown commodities as well and
was part of a system to s tabilize
production and avoid costly
surpluses.
. "II w~s aimed at combatting
overprO\Iuctlon," he said. "Now
the . outpul can develop without
constraints. Those who were
against the tax will regret this
three years from now.
,
"But when the United States
and the multinationals frown , we
are 110 longer 11 or ·12 fn this
Comm unit y , but only five or six,"
he said.
British Prime Minister Margaret· Thatcher refused to ap-
prove the medium -term plan that
was to provide the Comf(luplty
with more money , particularly to
boos! the economies of Its poorPr
regions. She argued th~ Community was already grossly
overspending and first of a II
needed strict budget discipline.
"I regret we were not able to
obtain a un;mim 0 us decision,"
Martens told rhe closing news
conference.
But he said the other 11 EC
mem~r nations had committed
themselves to the program, and
specialized councils of ministers
- budget, finance, a nd econom y
- will now have to work further
on the document to draft propos-
als in time for t he next EC
summit, to be held In C0 penha :
gen. Denmark. In Decem~r.
''I am confident wewlllevt>ntu·
,ally reach a consen s us In Copen·
hagen,· · he said.
The shelving t>f 1he oils and fats
tax removed one of the main
obstacles to the approval of a
fa rm pr ice par ka ge propost~d by
the Commission for the current
ma rketing year. which should
have s ta.rted on April I. .
In addition. a tt 12 count ries
approved basic p ri nciples for
budget .min is tPrs to fi nd a wa,·
out of the 1987 budget shortfail
es tim ated at aroun d $6 billion.
MARGARJ;:T THAT<.:HER
i; Sikh extremists Js torm hOstel, ·kill five
AMRITSAR. India tUPI I ~ · lo miles nort h of the Sikh holy fired shot s Into the air as they
Si kh militants stormed a reli·
ci ty of Amritsar.
fled throug h the village, author!·
gious hostel in northern Punjab
Abou t six militant s e ntered the ties said.
•
s tate today and sprayed it s v illage at 2 a.m. and burst into
Four men and a 5-year-old
sleeping occupants with bullets.
the hos tel. which Is adjace nt to a c hild were. killed and two other
killing five- including a childshrino; in I he predominately Sikh people w~e seriously wounded
and seriously wounding two ' sta te .. Police would not identify ·· and hospitalized ln. Amrltsar,
pollee said.
• others. pollee sa id.
the re ligion or the victims.
: The Khalistan Co mmando
The dead included the head of
Th e gunmen opened up wit h
Force , a separa tis t group light·
semi-automatic w.eapons. u.n- the s~rine , Baba Maqboot Shah.
ing· for fhe creation of the lt'as hing in fivr minu1 es a t least 60. hls ·tather, Saba Sante Shah,
independent Sikh nation of Kha t ~
50 rounds a t the hoste l' s victims. 80, and two oUter religious
is tan in Punjab. claLmed respon·
who had . ~en as leep before · the leaders who had stayed the 11ight
sibilit y for the a ttack at Ajnala.
a tta ck. !X!Iice said. The gunmen to finalize arrangements lor an
upeomlng festival. pollee said.
Elsewhere in Punjab. pol!c.e
said they killed a suspected Sikh
extremist during a gunbattle In
Garshanker. a village near Ho·
s hlapur. 70 miles ea.st or Amrlt ·
sa r . They said the two ot hers
suspected extremists es caped .
Pollee al so said Si kh militant
Balwlnder Singh had esca ped
from pollee custody aft er drug·
ging his gua rds .
Singh was raptured one week ·
.
-
:Nazi
.
r bomb forces evacuation
da~~gd~~rdersweresparkedby
:Soviet Jew
em•gratio:ri
_high
• GENEVA , Switzerland (UPli
· - Jewish f mlgration from the
:Soviet 'Union conr lnued at a high
rate In June with 790 arrivals in
Vienna, the Int ergovernmental
Committee for Migration said
today.
• Of the tota l, 121 went to Israel,
; while the others awaited process·
· tng at the. Viennd reception
cent.er for set tlement in the
Unit ed St ates a nd other
. countries.
Soviet Jews allowed to leave In
:June brought the total for the
' first six months of this year to
:3,092 - more than In any of the
7prevlous five years.
• That Is a .monthly average of
515 so far this year - fiv e 'to s ix
times higher than the monthly
averages In l981 I hrough 1986.
Committe" officials said SoV'Iet
· reader Mlkhafl Gorbachev ap·
: parently Is abiding by ~is past
· promises to make e mlgratrlon
easter for ~ewlsh cltiens.
Figures this year were 98 · In
.January, 1461n February. 470 In
' · March, 71.7 In April. 871 In May,
: and 790 In June.
; The 'c ommittee was estab·Hshl!d after World War II to help
resettle refugees and displaced
~sons . In Europe. It ~gan
al8!ng Sovle.t Jews In 1971 when
there were 12,680 arrivals In
Vienna .
BARGAIN MAT INE E SAT/SUN I W
ED
Al l S EAT~ 12.75
AD<t SSJONtvERI tUESDAY 12.75
L IIOOW N10WN'J iJ
rRI
t~ru THURSDAV ~ ~
violence that officials sa; is
mostly aimed at. INrlfying th P.
mino r it y community Into flcl'i n~:
the predom ina tcly Sikh stat(' .
ca tl i n~
for the resignation of the Na ·
Ilona! Covernln>: Council. which
Is hea ded by Namphy .
Municipa l and local elect io ns.
'the fi rs t sl ncr Duvattrr fiPd . ar<•
sc heduled Aug. 2:1. National
afternoon grew Into a genera l
protest against the government.
Thousa nds of people roamed
the downtown banking district.
shouting "Sarney out " and "elec·
lions now ," referring io popular
demands th at Sarney step down
and mak e way for direct
electto.ns.
• ·
Late Tu esda y. a judge ordered
the !are hike delayed for 30 days.
Pollee spokesman Maj . Lenin!
de Freitas said there were more
than 1,000 riot pollee on the
streets . The army sent troops
w!lhautomaticwea ponstoma ln·
la in order among evening rush·
hour commuters all he main rail
station for the city of 6 million
elect ions arc- set for.. November~
The UnltPd Stato•s 1"111 giv<•
Halt! $99.75 million in aid dur ing
the current fi scal ·
1987 SCHEDULE
flEA MARK.ET·-··· . ·~· ·
MEIGS COUNTY FAJR GROUNDS
POMEROY . OHIO
JULY 2-3·4 · 6; AUG . 6 -7 ·8·9
SEPT
· 3-4-5-6; OCT · 1· 2· 3.·4
NOV . 5 ·6 ·7 -8
DEALERS WANTED - BUYERS WANTED
COME ONE - COME ALL
Reasonobl• Sel· up Rates- Indoor Space-Outdoor Spo<e
We 'll See You at the FLEA MARKET
For Information Call: (3041 422-4169 - 614 742 -2 812
people.
~p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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o wl ues.
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· .
THURSDAY and FRIDAY ONLY . ..
.
OPEN THURSDAY 'TIL 8 PM: fill;). Y 'TIL 6 PM
WOMEN'S
SUMMER
PURSES
SANDALS
1/2 · PRICE
55 and$10
MIXED
·GROUP .
ONGROUP
NURSEMATES
=-=$~1~0;;..0_0~
· · All CHILDREN'S
RED GOOSE SHOES
~
&
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...a~
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OOfo OFF
~:c~
GROUP
APPAREL
1/ 0
MEN'S ·
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4\'"' /,. ~-~-;:2~;.;;.;F~F~-=$=1=5=00=!
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MEN'S
DEXTERS
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SHOES
;::=lf=2=P=R=IC:E
"'
LARGE
QUANTITY
LEATHER HI-TOPS
NIK£ • CONS. • IROOKS
$34!5 SAVE SlODO
'Two of our spectacular new girls class rings
avatlable for summer only at this low price.
. Promotion tndsfuly Jl, 198?
Rongs wiii be dtlivertd in September.
NIICE-CONVEISE-8100~5-PONY
INCLUDES
and AYIA
OFFEREOUClUSIVELY BY
R JOHNS, LID ..
(
.
1Tef1eJeN ·
eJ 212 E. Mlln -
. Pomeroy
. .
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- -· 4524
s:incP January 19H6 in r:-:trrmisl
and !ssuC'd a statemf'n1
GROUP
R
~3 1 t.ACI(SON Pft(E · AT 35 WES I
A spokesma n In San Juron . Puert D
res idential areas .
The sou the rn s ubu rb of CarrP·
Rico. sa id FIJ ght 9il from Miami
four was cut orr fro m the city by · 1o Port -l.lu ·Princc and rPlurnlng
Flight 00 wPrc can ·cled.
barricades and mobs .
A commi twc reprcs<•nt !ng 57
Radio Metropole reported tha t
five people died In Clashes wit h polit ical groups ca lled a 14 hour
genera l s trike Mo nd ay to protest
pollee Tuesday.
Eas tern Airlines · canceled its I hr Na t iona t Gover ning Council's
flight s Into and ou t of Ha it i decis ion to scrap e lection gui de·
lines dralted June , ~> by lh<•
because of the s trike and rioting.
Ptovtsional Elect ion C'ou nc ll .
It ex te nded the strike Tu esday
Brazil .bus fare hike
sparks street protest
By ED LION
" It took a great deal longer
LONDON tUPIJ -Defusing a tha n antic ipated because the
RIO DE JANEIRO. Brazil
tUP ii - A sharp hike In bus
one· ton Nazi bomb was s uch a di s posa l team ha d no t come
• dangerous tas k that 2, 000 resi· across this typP of bomb before,"
fares sent tens of thousands of
: dents were eva cuated. but some a police spo kes man said. "They
commuters rampaging through
the · streets. burning buses. bat ·
• of the older folks r efu sed to leave ha d to go very care.fully - it was
tling police and calling for the
: their homes, . saying. "Hitler a delicat e a nd co mplicated·ope r·
didn' t ge t them In the war and a lion. Th e danger was grea t. "
resignation of Pr,eslde nl Jose
there was nowa y he was going to
But so me old-a ge pens ioners.
Sar ney.
get them now."
who surviv<>d I he \YOrld War lJ
Much or downtown Rio was
The 6-fool·long bomb was un· Nazi " blitz." refused to leave the closed to traffic Tuesday after·
• earthed Monday afternoon as half· mile rad ius tha t was clea red
noon as some 1.000 riot pollee
cons truction workers dug to a · around the 2.200-pound warhead.
locked harris with thousands of
depth or 2I feet a t a building s it e
"They sai d Hitler didn ' t get
proteste rs In Brazil's worst
near the hist oric Tow e r of the m In the war a nd there wa s no street violence in live years.
Authorities said ~lleast37 prople
London.
way he was goi ng to get them
For 14 hours, 60 army bomb now. " .s aid Police Inspector were in jured and 21 were ar·
. rested during s ix qours of run·
experts melted down 1he ex plo· Roger Pool.
nlng battles.
· slves with a special steam hea ter.
Robert Asht on, 87, sa id he was
By .the e nd or the day. buses
~causE' the. World War II relic
evacuated only a ft er aut horities
was too dangerous to move.
" d ragged me out kicking."
burned and damaged by rioters
The es timated 2, 000 evacuated
" We s ur vived two wars: This
much bumper
of half-mile-long
Ri o
resident s were g iv en the "all · li tt le bomb' s nothing. " he said.
were
to bumper along
clear s ign " and pe rmi tted to
Authorit ies said , the bomb is Branco Avenue. Ra dio reports
return to their homes Tues day, one of the biggest d ropped by the
more than 30 hours after the Nazi Luft waffe during the war . sa id more than 50 bJJs~wrre
bomb was di scovered, . police,· Wart ime London residents, who
said.
'took she lt e r eve ry ni ght in the a 49 percent lnctease In the bus
Lond on subways as Nazi planes fare that took effect Tuesday
bombed the ci ty , nicknamed morning. - boosting the fare
such bombs "Herman" - a lt er from I1.5 cents to 17 cent s.
•
•
•
Nazi Luftwaffe Air Mars hal
Isola ted demonstrations ~gan
Tuesday morning and by late
Herman Goer ing .
ago in a secu rit y swecp ot Pu njab
that bega n aft er New Deihl
sacked the statP's moderat o' Sik h
government on Ma y 11 a nd .
assum ed dlr<'c t con trol o f
Punjab.
MorP tha n 1.000 pt'Opte, most I;'
Hindu s. have died In Punjnb
fle<J
Haitian turmoil at worst since Duvalier
By MICHEL LAMISERE
The fight O\'e r th e electoral repor ts said .
Troops and police fought to
PORT -AU -PRIN CE, Haiti
guide lin es has presented Lt. Gen.
control
mobs th at raged through
1UPTt
Mobs
dema ndin g ·-Henri Namphy's interim gpvern.
: changes In elect tOn r ules ·stoned
me nt with Its graves t cr isis s ince the streets of the capital Tues·
day. hurling rocks at . cars .
· cars. blocked streets a nd clashed
it took power on F~b. 7. ·1986.
· with pollee in running st reet following dictator .Jea n-c;'laude Flamiog ba-l'rtcades blocked the
Avenue Jean -Jacques Dessabattles that left a t leas t five
Duvalier's flig ht into ex ile.
: · pPOple dead.
Shops and btJsinesses were. lines, the capital' s major bOule·
· The dis.orders came Tuesday dosed arid public transporta(!o n vard. as well as sever~ ! cross
on the second day of a general grouQd to a ha ll, iso lating P o rt · streets and thoroughfares in
strike called to prot es t govern· au· P r inc e from the r est of the
ment changes in the election count r~·. Most ' other cit ies a lso
were shu t dow n by the strike,.
· rules .
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Wednesday. July 1 . 1987
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MASTEI•VISA
992-5627
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MIDDLEPORT
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.Wednelday. July 1, 1.987
.,
Ohio
Reagan
·honor8 ·
NEW.SUNDAY
HOURS ..... 8 A.M.-10 P.M •
.
volunteers
WASHINGTON !UP!) - In
recognizing 18 people a nd orga n!:
zatlons for volunteer efforts,
President Reagan lashed ouf at
those whq crltlct:iP the United
States as .a sell!sh nation' - and
t09k the opportunity to str ike a.
famili ar the me.
" What a lot of th ese people
mea n Is not that the American
people s hould give more but thai
t hP government should take
more," Reagan declared at a
:White House ceremony Tuesda y
for the Volunteer Action Awa rds .
"Somehow," JJ u;ald ..c.JrecJ.y
given. personal charHy .does n' t
count for them - only the public
. dOle. bureaucra ti c largess that ts
backed up by the coercive power .
of the state."
The · president' assailed a n
unidentified te lev ision comment·
ator who sugges ted that Amcrl·
ca ns ha ve ·beco me se lfis h and
look out "only for ourselves."
The refer ence was apparently to
a January comm<'nt ary by
NBC's John Chan cellor.
'.'All I ca n say to those who
pontificate aboutthP new se lfi sh·
ness list may~ th~y should get
• out of their TV s tudios a nd get out
a nd Introduce themselves to the
real America ," Reag a n sa id . .
The volunt eer awards wPnl to:
-2'0 Good Men. an organlza ·
lion In Kansas City, kan .. that
doPs home repair work lor low·
tncomp an d etde riy residents.
~Th e Corporate Volunteer
Counc il of Los Angeles a nd
, Qra n~r Count y. Calif. . for a skid
row c lea nup projc~t.
,• -The Ca mpu s Outreach Op·
.por t unit y Le a ~u e of Washi ngton,
:ror help in g s tudents become
in volved In local problems such
'4s homeless ncss a nd lllil<'racy .
· -Capital Cl! lcs-ABC a nd thr
. Public B roadc aslln~ Service for
.Jointly developi ng a public ser·
-v ice advertisement campaign to
.fi ght Illit eracy.
• -R~ th Johnson.Col\'ln or Syra·
cuse. N Y., for her work In
llehtln g Illiteracy.
-stephanie .Joyce Kahn o f
l.ong Beach, N .Y ., a bllnd . ~rso n
•.who dev eloped a progra m to usc
' 1alklng books" and ot her rc·
~rded material as therapy for
seriously Ill s ighted pl'Ople.
-Grorge WaRer of Anahl'lm ,
·Calli.. who created a wear·
l'f.'Sistant Identification tag to ·
at.t ach to childr en's c loth es conhllntng tltelr names. addresses .
med ica l Informal to n a nd a mcdl·
cal consent form.
-SYlvia Lawry ol New York
Cit y for 40 years of fighting
OJ
multiple sclerosis,
-Dr.- Robert Hingsonof Octt ta.
Ga.. who developed the gas·
, powered jet gun t.hat made mass
immunization possible.
·
-Jack Glover or Rosebur~ .
Ore.. for hJ s work In he) ptng build
a tra il a long the Nor th Umpqua
River.
- F ra ternity ol the Desert
Bighorn. a group In He ndPrson.
Nev .. that helped develop water'
·in the desert near Las Vegas for
use by th e endan gered desl· rt
til~horn s hee p.
"-·
- Ronald McDonaiO'fl ousc Vo·
lunt eers. lor setting up res id e n·
C.l'S for th l' fa m Illes ol seriously Ill
children ~ing treated away
from hOmr .
·• -Talkllne·Kid$ Line Inc. of
Elk G rov e, Ill .. the first 24-hpur
crisis Interve ntion hotllne for
children under the age of 13. ·
- North ·central Mental
Hea lth Serv ice Tee n Suic ide
Prevention Volunt eer Program
of Co lumbus, Ohio, for a 24· hou r
suic ide hotline for tee na ger s.
-Hexagon In c., a Was hington
sallte t roupP whose annual
shows have raised hundreds of
thou sands of dollars fo r local
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.
c harities.
-Local 25oft he lnternallonal
Brotherhood o r Elect rica!
Wot·kers In Melville, N.Y .. for
sy's tematlc Involvement In com·
munlty charities.
-Exxon Co. for sett ing up a
,c learinghouse that m atlc h em·
ployees a nd retirees wit h Hous ·
ton agencies needing their help.
Gasoline rising
~hove'. $1 in Oh~Q
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP]) ,The average cost of regular and
unleaded gasoline In Ohio ·· Is
·tisl ng above $1 a gallon' for the
first lime since late 1985. th e
American Automobile Assocla ·
lion says.
• Gaso'ilne prices during the
Independence Day weekend will
. ~vt'rage $1.02lln Ohio and $1.026
nationally. according to the
' AAA.'s July 4 Fuel Gauge Report.
The state average reflects a 4.8
11ents a·..J allon Increase since
Me morial Day, when the avPF·
age was 97.3 cen\s a gallon. The
Aallonal average lnrrea~ed 3.2
,, rents a gallon In the same period.
.• -Last year at I hi§ time gasoline
prices averaged 96.7 cents a
1allon In Ohio and ·99.7 cents a
calion nationally.
I
We Reserve The Right To
.. • Li~ it Qtia titities ·
STORE HOURS
Monday .thru Sundtur :
8 AM-10 PM
298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY,. OH. •
PRICES .EFFECTIVE THRU
. SAT., JULY 4, 198 7
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NEW ~ORK .
Str1p Steak •.. ~a~.....
$ 419 ,
,
Chicken .Breast .:~·. $1
LONGHORN COLBY
$
.
·
Cheese •.•.•••.••• ~8~
•••••
MIXED
39(
Fryer
Part.s
99
Cubed Steak .~'no••• . 1
~
BUCKET
19·.
~
9
5
Chuck Roast •.....•• 1. . .
USDA CHOIC'E BONELESS ·.
LB. .
.
CRISPY SERVE
Bacon ... ~ ••••. ~ •• ~~~ ...•. 99 (
FRESH CHICKEN
Livers ..••••••.••• ~a~ ••••••· 49(
8/~1·
:Corn ..•••••••.••...••.•
EARS .
BROUGHTON'S
2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••
AMER., SWISS, SHARP,
$ 49.·:
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Kra f t S1ng es ••••••• 1
...
LB.
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~IMENTO
12 OZ.
a
" DAIRY LANE
$
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0
9
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1.
·Ice Cream .............
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LAYS or RUFFLES
12 GAL
Potato Chips•:::~:-:.. 69<
NABISCO
.
: ,·
12
oz.
1
'
BANQUET ,(Except Beef & Hom)
' .... ~!~!·.... 79.<.· '·
TV Dinners
$)19
Nil Ia ·Wafers..... .·
...
...... " •
·····couPON·······• •·····couPON·······
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: MAXELL HOUSE BONUS PAK
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NESTEA
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71NSTANT COFFEE : : INSTANT TEA.
~ 9 oz. $ 279
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D£CAFFEINATED ......S3.99 s oz.
.·~ ~ oz. $239
... .-.. .............. •··
3
:
Limit 1 Per Customer ' .
0
Good Only' At Powell's Supormorket ' o
Offor Geocl Thru Sat., July 4, 1917 , 0 o
----:Jlt.A . '
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:
Limit 1 P.or Customer
Good Only At Powell's Supermarket
o . Offer GoOd Thru Sat .. July 4, 1917
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BOUNTY
HUNTS\.
PAPER TOWELS
BBQ SAUCE
• · JUM~O
ROLL
69(
limit I Ptr Customer
Good 'Only At Powell's Supermarket
Offer Good Thru Sot., July 4, 1987
18
oz.
7·9<
Limit 1 Per Cuuomer
Good Only At Powoll's Supermarket
Oftr Good Thru lat., July 4, 1987
�f»ege-16-The Daily Sentinel
Pomerov- MiddleP'ort. Oheo
Wednesday. July 1. 1987
1 1987
•
---Local briefs----.. Cold front bringS ratn
into Ohio Valley ·
..• . Meigs License Bureau to close
By United Press lnt~rnatlonaJ
Stm m s al ong a slow moving
cold front In the Ohio and
Mississippi va lleys brought some
b'adly needed rain car. l y today to
parched a1 eas but dropped snow
and t01e up hom es In Pennsylva
The M e1gs County License Bu1 eau located at 186 Mulberry
Ave , wilt~ closed Fnday a nd Satu1dav Jul~ 3 and 4
Persons with their last name beg1nnmg with K or L must
renew their hcense plates dunng the m onth of July Hou rs for
the bureau aft er the holiday weekend are Mondav Wednes day,
Fnday. 9 a m to 4 p m Tuesda y 9 a m to 7 p m Thursday 9
a m t o 12 noon. Sat urd ay 8 a m to l2 noon
ma
Squads have .'> even calls
Meigs Count y Erne• gency Med1cal Se1 v tces 1eports seven
calls Tuesda' Tuppe1 s Plams atl 43 am to Route 7 for Althea
Barton to Camden Clat k Memm tal Hospital M1ddlepor t a t
1l 14 am 10 a ptckup truck fi re 1 uppers Plams a t l2 28 p m
transported Floyd Hawk to Cam den Cla1 k Memonal Hospit al
, Pomeroy at 3 36 p m tr a nspm ted Wilham Roush from a
motorcycle accident at E nt erpnse to Vetera ns MemonAI
Hospital MJddlepoii at 3 56 p m to South Third f or Pauli ne
Taylor to Pleasant Valley Hospit al Pomeroy. at 4 10 p n'l to
Bailey Run Road for Char les G ilkey who refused treatment
Middlepor t at ti 02 p m to RlverVIe" A pi s for A dam Hanm g to
Veterans M emona l Hospu al
Dress rehearsal set lonight
Dress rehearsal for the va1 Let~ sho" Celebra ll on II' a part
of t he Racme Vo lunt ee1 F 1re Departments Fourth of July
cel ebratiOn w JII be held tomg ht (Wednesday\ at 7 p m at t he
JUnior high school Bruc<' Wolfe dn ector annou nced that all
who plan to take part are to be at the dr ess rehearsa l Cost umes
are to be broug ht not worn he Said
Church to host Bible school
Th<> Pomeroy Ch urch of Chnst W Main St "Ill hos t a
rommumty ..!!~J I Y \aCal 1on B ibl e sc hool beg mmn g Sunday an d
runnmg throug h July 10
The [l\e day progr am " 111 featUie cla sses for c hJldien of all
ages nursery throu gh ; outh and ts open to the pub!Jc
I he
supen tsed achvltles will Include crafts s1 ng mg stud v
creat tve ar ts a nd o1 her lt'a t nmg acrtv ttJes Th eme wtll be
'Halleluj ah ' Jesus 1s Kmg
"\
The school w 111 be g r am 6 30 to 8 30 eac h evenmg The1 e IS no
charge but a free Will of!e1 mg fo1 a mtsswn pt OJect will be
accept ed
Fm fUJ ther mfor mat1on or to em oil students Pat Th oma IS to
be co ntacted at 992 2277 after 3 p m eachda; 11 anspo1 tat Ion to
and from th e chu rch and home" Ill be provided to those need m g
th( set vtce
T hl r l) one cases c were pro
cessed r uesda} n1g hl In the court
of· Pome101 Ma yor Rl cha1 d
Sey le1
Fmcd m rhc court were K eilh
Musser Port land $113 and cos ts
ml oxtcatio n Mm t er Fry'\r .Jr
Sv 1acusc $~ 8 and cos ts speed
mg Da' 1d Si gman M•ddl epoii
$50 a nd costs · no financial
1 espons ibJIItv $63 and costs no
fllOiorcycle endorse men1
$1>3
and costs opera ! mg w h1 le unde1
suspensiO n
Cl e( us A t no tt
Pomero1 $11~ a nd costs In loX!
ca t10n Dd\ td Doer rer Pome
10\
$6:1 an(! cos t s expned
pl at es $3<5 and cost s, d!lvlng
11 hile mt oXIcated and a SO:! bond.
forfeJted on a c ha1 ge of not
Th e Po mero; and Middl eport Public Ltbl aiJes "111 be closed
all day Sat u rday m obsen ance of Jul\ 41h and
1esume
1egu !ar hours on Monda v
'"II
Man injured in moped accident
A W es t V11glma man was ti'!Juied m a moped accJdent
Tuesda; at approXImateil 1 3; p m o n US 11 1n Saiis bui \
Tmt nsh1p accord ing to the Gal!Ja Mc1gs Pos 1 o f thp State
Highway Patrol
Wilham J Roush
of Wes t Co lumbia W Va was rldm g
cas t when he sa 1d t hat h1s front bt ake g1abbed and foJ ced h1m to
fall on the 1oa d H e was t aken to Veteran s Memm wl Hosplla l b;
the E MS He was la t e~ 1reated and 1eleased
n
havmg an operators llcrnsr
C.t>OI ge l enktns Pomero; $30
and costs speedm g, Tma H en
di Jcks Midd leport $20 seat belt
\lO l a lion
I
Area deaths
I es tPr R etg le Hatch 87 o t
Little Hockmg d1 ed 1 ues da' a 1
Ca mden Clark Memonal Hosp L
tal Parkersburg W Va
Born Apnl J;i, 1900 m At hens
Co un t; he was a son of t he la te
Osmer a nd Sarah Ellen McGI'e
Hatch He was r et1red from the
former Amencan V1scose C'om
pany and frodt rhe Ca mden
Dar k Memon a l H ospit al mal me
nancf' department and was also
a. form er desk c lerk a t the old
B lennerhassel Hotel m Pa • ke1s
burg He wa s a member of th e
Ltllle H ockmg U m ted MethodiS t
C hurch and attended th e Word of
Fallh Chns11an OutrPac h Ce nte1
Belpre H e wa s al so a m embe1 of
the Free and Accep ted M asons
Lodge 3~7 Coo l\ 1lle and a l
tl' nded the Lillie Hockmg Se mo1
Citizens Cent er and the Mapel! a
Nutnl1on Center
Survtvors m cl ude IY.O daugh
ters and sons m lav.
V1rgwJa
and Ray Baldauf of Sa n Fran
c osco Ca !Jf and Ber tha and J ohn
Stone of Little H ock m g e1ght
grandchildren
seven grea1
grandchildren two meces and
three nephe" s
Besides h1s parents he \\as
preceded 1n deal h by h1s "1fe
Sara h Coggeshal l St ace; Hal ch
In 197!\ a nd three sisters
Se1voces Will be 2 30 p m
Thursday at the Wh1t e Et hndge
F unera l Home 12a Lee St
Belp1 e wJ!h Ca rl M c PheJson
.1nd Re' Ani hom Atk mso n off•
Ciatmg Bunal '"111 be on Rock
l and Cemctcr' Bel p1 e Fnends
rna\ call '' th e funeral home
toda' 1Wednesday! from 6 to ~
pm
Eu~riaJohnson
r'unc1a! se rv 1ces for E ugta
IJ?hnson of MiddlcpOJ 1 v. 11l be
co ndu c tNI rhUI sday 1 p m a I
Hope Baptist Church on Gra nt
St1 eet There wil l be ca llmg
hours '" o hour> pnor to the
srt\JCP at the ch urch Fncnd s
m ay also call a t !he Foglesong
Fun rr a! H ome o n Wednesda; 3
to'l p m
.,.....
Judy E. Pollot·k
Judv EIJzabet h Pollock 67 o f
10% Su nse t Drhe Ga lhpohs
d lf'd Wednes.da\ a1 her res 1
dcncP Born Dec 2 1919 m
Ca l ilpoiJS she was a daughter of
the la te• Jam es Preston a nd Eva
!.a nl(~t
Ha skms
She" as pt t>ceded m death b'
he hu sband s Paul Cl ifford and
Rov P oljock
Sur\ 1vmg nrc l wo brother s
F'r Lnk I Haskins or Ga JIJpohs
und
old P Hask in s of Ft
Walton Beach Fla
ShP was a member of th e
Emblem Club of Ga lhpoils
Se1v 1ces v. til be announced by
McCv\ Wei her holt Moore Fun
rral H ome I n Gal hpo! Js
H"'
Oh..;O General... _
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contmuect f•om :.....:..:._
pag<
II may affect th e budget m
some areas but I thm k the s tate
Will continue to function
satd
Rep Wilham E H1mg D New
Philadelphia
Senate Dem ocra t s sabotagf>d
th e em ergency clau se because of
a provis ion m the bill sett m g
strict reqmrement s for the Oht o
Public lni Prest Ca mpa1gn t o
follow m makmg door to door
Meese ...
Coni lnued from page I
M cKay Wedt ech hJred Chi nn
.now the target of a $1 mllho n
• lawsuit by the co mpa ny as a
cons4 1tan t and later el ect ed ht m
to !Is board of directors
' The terms of the partne1 sh1p
with C hinn s firm, Financial
Manageme n t lnt er naiJOn a l ,
hllve not been discl osed But
after McKay tobk o n t he M eese
probe May 11, the altorney
promised t o end t he
1 general
pprtners hlp by Tu esday
•
sol JC'J t at Jons
R1 ffe aelm 1tted to bemg behond
I he prov iSIO n H<' has fought
openl y wi iit OP JC over the cov1 1
JUSltCf' and m suranct"' reform
bi ll believlng.- -ElP TC has nul
\\OJk ed co ns truci ively t owarda n •
agreement
1 he budget l a nguage bill al sJ,>
1equu es p1 ofJcl ency t estmg for
pU J)Ii S lfl fourth SIX th and ei g hth
g1 ades a nd requu es h1gh schoo l
Sludents to pass a co mpPt ency
tes t sta rt m g m 1994 In order t o
gradua te
We r e set tmg a dangerous
precf>dent saod Rep Moehael C
Shoemaker.
D Bourneville
a
/
forme•
school teac her who
pom~ed out the stal e Board of
Education wi ll be devlsln~ the
graduation test
These are not all educa t ors "
he sa1d
You re going to have
people that m ake soap powder
and auto m obi le ti r es tellmg you
how to educat e your kid s "
.
t
Folfr1Hng bo nd s o n spccdmg
cha rges "ere William Doolllll e
Pom t Pl easant W Va $45 Jo L
L1berator0 Hu n! m gt on W \a
$4R Ro bert J Law 1encc Ra
Sout h ( ent r .11 Oh10
Showers a nd 1hunderstm m s
"'th hca v\ Jamfall toda v and
h1 g hs bel\\ cen It; and 80 Shov.er s
and thunderstoJ m s aga m 10
night With a lo" between 65 and
70 Part ly cl oudv Thu1 sday v.llh
sca tt ered shower s and thundrr
st01 m s and h1 ghs ncar 80
1 rh e probabt ill } Of precJp !l a
liOn 1s near 100 percPnt tod ay RO
percent t onight and 40 percent
I hursda y
Wi nds will be i •g ht and va 11 a
bl c loday and to m g h t
Extended Forecast
Fnday through Sunday
Sca tt ered showers and thun
de• storms Ftidav with pa1 II;
cloudy
sk1 es Saturday
and
m ost ly sunn} Su nd ay H1ghs w1 11
be m the 80s each day w 1th
overm g ht lows m 1he 60s
A lot of roads are still c l osed
and there are sporadtc power
out ages m the wes tern pa11 of the
count y - Fox said
E l sewhCH', a t hunderstorm m
so uth ce nt ra l Oregon produced
go lf ball size hall at Klamath
Falls Tuesdav even lng There
al so were repor ts of "'evere
"eather In Utah and Co lorad o
Tuesda y a fie• noon a nd evening
A few showers and thundershow
ers lmgered In lhe northern
Plai ns
Earlie• Tuesday a n J8 Inch
snow f all on scen1c P 1kes Peak
was cleared off 1oads and tour
Isis we1 e al lowed to r et urn t o the
mount am
The top six miles of 1he 19 m1le
Pokes Peak H1 g hwa v toll 1oad t o
the 14 110 summ i t closed Mon
da y and ear liC'J Tuesda}
opened at 11 a m
\\ell?
cm e $46 plu s $16:! pos ts on a
1eckless operation chargP Cha
oll m s Reedsville $4~
1les
Cha ri<'' Sa1 I(' I ong Boltom
$48 James E Keese<' Middle
J>OII $41 Jeffr ey E
Brow n
M1ddlepm t S44 Cecelia Mea
dow s Ma so n $55
Maq I
Bu chfi<'ld Middleport $4'> M1
r hael J Brown R.tc •n e $49
Ra lph Offenburge1
Marietta
$41 Ea 1Ic Wood Pomeroy $47
K arla Che' aiiPr ChC'ster $4R
Jod 1 H all Addison $4!\ Jenn1fP1
C JPm f'a ns Cheshu e $4H
Th oma s H arpPI
PomC'J O\
\.\J S
OJdcrpd
10
makf' rcstnut!on
on a dPsll urtlon of p! Opcil\
c hat gc Ot hers folfeJtl ng bonds
""'"John C l ngeb Mlddlt•pol t
Si~ slop Sign vJola tJOn M c nlfcr
B le\ m s PomNOI $210 assaull
Rng<'l S Ci a1 k Porn<·• os• $30
SlOp Sign \LOla liOn
Ril l y I
Ga rn t's $Cl{t stop s l~<n liola tlon
I homa s C Payne Pomero'
Kathl\n Hubba1d
PomeiO\
Helen Mtllet
Langsvi lle $11
rac h s t op s 1gn \ 1olat10n s l e 1 n
Coll m s Middleport $1• \ rxpir<'d
pla tes
(As ol Ill 10 ,, m )
Jlrov ldf'd h)
Hr~< ~and Mark Snuth
of Blunt Ellis & Locwl
Firm
A m E Ieel rIC POIA.(' r
Pri< P
27 1,
27!<,
A1 &1
Ash l and 01 1
Rob
F:va n s
6J Y-1
24
Fa rms
JO Y.
Charming Shoppes
Federal M ogul
Goodyear T&R
HPck s In c
LimJted I nc
M ultim ed ia In c
Rax Restaurants
Robbms & Mye1 s
Sho ne\ s In c .. .. ..... .
Wendv s Inti
Worthmglon lnd
11
b7 ~4
-P ~
42'1,
59•,
1\,,
11
21Y.
FRI THRU THUR
... of liM.I
8JC l&uflul! Unll h1.nl
____
On~
__
fOOIIIIOVilnLI~I!
Lottery numbers
Dally Numher
31i
Ticket sa l es totaled $1 252 728
with a payoff due of $1 9J4 583
PICK-4
0948
PICK 4 llck el sa les tot aled
$181-;-229 50, wot h a payoff due of
$81,559
PICK 4 $1 straight bet pays
$6,816 PICK 4 $1 box bet pays
$284
MATHEW BRODERICK
IN
P~OJECT
XPG !3
OPENS FRIDAY JUlY 3
•
THE
GOLDEN
CHilD
'"
~SNOW
FRONT$:
~ fa3
-RAIN
fl Warm
"
Cold
. . . Staltc
SHOWERS
"
Occluded
WEATHER MAP- Showers and thunders torms are for ecast for
parts of the upper Great Lakes Region , Ohio Valley and mid
Atlantic COast States Thu.-day Shower s und thunderstorms are
possible In parts or th e central Intermountain r ~glon, central and
northern plain• Mississippi Valley. Ohio Vallev and mid tu so uth
Atlanlle coa.• t stall'S (UPI)
Judgment sought
Jon<; A Rupc Ru tland has
flied <Ictlon In M efh Cou nl/t
CoUit <~gamstNat h a n J Wl sea nd
Marth a Joan WJsl.' R ut land
seekin g a judgment of $25 OOOand
del•veJ; and possPsslon of ceo
1a ln rea l esta te and for a
mandat OI\ Injunction ordering
I he dNendants t o rcmov(• a septlr
s1 stPm f1 om the propert y of Ihr
pldmtlffs
the ras1
oJ Mcu v
lndJ\ JC!ualll
~clmmJsl ralrlx
and
INSURANCE
111 Second St.,
PoiHroy
YOUR 'INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
.IGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868·
19 24 26anda4 Fracllons
1 13 11 18 19 23 24
30 31 32 33 34 and 35
The propoaed underground
worklnga area encompaues
2 35& acres and 11 located
on the Wrlkeav1tle end Ru
tland Quad 1 '17 mtnule
U S G S quadrangle maps
1 000 east to
2200 southftlll lrom Wrl
epprOJumetelv
kesvtlle Oh10 The apph ce
Robert E Bu ck
l ion proposes to expand the
artu for room and pjlltr
underground mm1ng and
ptovide for p11lar removal on
those ar••s and on areu
prev1oualy approved to be
mtned
The application is on hie at
the oHtce of ttl e M tugs
County Re corder Metgs
County CouM Houte Se
cond Street Pomeroy Oh1o
45769 for publt c VIewing
Written comments or re
quests for •nfor:mal con fer
ence may btl sent to the
OivtiiOn of Reclamatio n
Foun11m Square 8UIIdmg
8 3 Columbus Oht o
43224 wtth ln thtrty day s of
the Itt\ dat e of pubh cat ton
of th11 hot•c•
Probat e Judge
Lena K Neuehoad Clerk
or the rsWi f' of
wit ho u 1 d Jst mr11o n
Mergt Countv Salem Town
ahrp Sections 1 3 16 18
County Oh10 45779
as
dlld appilcablc metc1 s to l n ~ u• r
co mpl la ner "llh the co utt s
01d~ J 1 he co u11 fuJthet fmds
Iha l plaJ ntttf h,ls th e 11ght 111 use
the gas for domest ic pu1 poses
Perm11 numbered R OJ64
3 to the 0~10 Department of
Natural Resources Drvrsron
of Reclamatron.. The pro
posed coal mmmg and reel a
mat1on operat1ona w1ll be tn
J.m('
rPI n D Talbott ,tgalnsl Not
man 0 and v<' I a A We1X'1 the
cout l hd s o•deJrd that the
defendants h.1\ r the ttghl to
ut•hzc the subject g"s \\CII fat
one ctwe ll mg on!) .Jnd must b>
1od 11 d rr idP "hcthrr 1he 11 ell
" Ill sc1' 1cr <'I th e• the hou •r or
the m obi le home which a•r
sltuatl'd on 1hP propert) adjarr nr
10 the well The platntlff shall
1rtol n the tight t o lnSJX'CI tht' '"' li
16) 2 4 171 1 8 3tc
t--------------
r------------GOOD USED
WASHERS DRYERS
'
REFRIGERATORS, TVs
GAS & ELEC. RANGES
COUNTY
APPLIANCES
1>27
3rd Ave , Galhpolis
PM. 446-1699
HOURS: 8 A.M••• I'M
1&1 24 171 1 8 16 4tc
~==============-
Pubho Not1ce
RUTLAND
Phone 742 -21 00
t.Hf:CTIVE IHRU SAL JULY -1 I 1JH/
IIIIlCH
Turkey Breasts .............• 11. S2. 99
SUPEIIOI
Bulk Wieners ................. ~l. S1.4 9
SMIT~FIElD
SHREDDED l2 .2 9 LB. $
Boiled Ham .•..•••.•.•.•. n~nu,. 1. 99
HOMEMADE
m Salad •••••••••••••••••••• :11 ••••• 89<
1
i2 01 PKG KRAFT 16 SLICE
PIMENTO CHEESE ..... '1.89
10 lB BAG IDAHO
i6 Dl CHEF SP READ
BAKING POTATOES.. SJ.99
MARGARINE ... om ... 2/99•
llB GOlDEN DELICIOUS OR WINESAP
24 Dl CTN BOUGHJON S
COn AGE CHEESE ..... SJ.49
I DOl BEAVER VAllEY GRADE A
LARGE EGGS .........ml ... 79 •
APPLES .............. PAO... s1.69
16SCI SUNKISI
LEMONS .................. 3/99c
f""t:::o
pany - Raccoon Mine No
l P . 0 Bo• 490 Athen 1
Oh•o "'15701 ha& &ubmt11ed
an tppiiCIIIOn tO ri!IIYtlf!l a
Coal M tntng and Reclama
tiGn Permi t numberf!ld R
0..63 10 to the Ohio De
Plrtment
of N•lur al
Resources Otvtsto n of R ec
lamatton The proposed Coal
M1n1ng and Rec lamationOp
trtt lons will be 1n M e tg s
County S alem To wn&htp
TV Dinners·•.•....................E.'.. s1.3 9
2 LB. BANQUET 10 PC. BOX
Fried Chicken Dinner .•........ S4.19
12 01. CAN
Juice ............ :.•. 99<
Welch''S Gr
21 01. VAN CAMP
Pork & Beans ..••.....••... 2 cANs S1.49
32 oz. HuNt's Ketchup ••••.....•...•.. S1. 79
2 LB. SKUI FINE
Brown Sugar ....................... S1.29
250 CT. COIONET
Lunch Napkins ••••.....••.....~~~. s1.69
32 01. VLASIC
Sweet Pickles ..••••...•.••••...J.~t S2 .29
10 LB. BAG
Kingsford-Chifcoa[.•.•........ S3.29
5.5 01. AIMOUI w/5 1 OFF LABEL
Potted pteat
..................: 2 cANs 99<
•
Hotdog Sauce ................. 2·uNs 99<
u oz. Instant Nestea ........ JArt,. S3.49
7 OZ. PIINGLES
Potato ·Chips ....................... Sl.S9
16 OZ. amY CIOCICEI
RTS Frostina ....................~~~. S1.79
19 OZ. DUNCAN HINES
'
Cake Mix .......... ~ ......l9E. S1.39
to the DIVISIOn of Reclama
toon Foun<omSquare Bu>ld
rng e 3 Columbus Ohoo
43224 wnhm th1rty days of
the last date of pubhcat1on
of t,hts not1ce
16124 171 t 8 16 4tc
Public Not1ce
PUBLIC NOTICE
B1ds Will be rece1ved unt1l
4 00 p m Juty31 1987 by
ma1l f or the 'ollow1ng sup
pltes and products ~eeded
for the 87 / 88 school year
BREAD AND
BREAD PRODUCTS
MILK ond MILK PRODUCTS
GASOLINE ANO
DIESEL FUEL
38 and Fractton 19
10
VInton County Wt lkesvtlle
Townah ip
Sections 1 2
2E 3 4 9 8 10ond16•n
Gall•• CotAnt\' Hunhng ton
Town1h1p Snc tton 1 The
:.pr opo&td under g round
worktngs area encompaues
"' 1 924 acres end is located
on the Wtlkesv1lle Quad 7 Yl
minute U S G S quadrangle
..maps appro•lmttel'll 1600
IOuthetst from W1lkesvtlle
•Ohto The appltcatt on pr o
poaet to expand the _..tets
for room and pillar under
1Jround m1nmg and provide
for pdlar r emoval on those
.areas and on areal pre
TEAFORDm
Real Estate LJ:!
RlAllOi
216 E 2nd St
Phpne
1 (6141 992 3326
RUTlAND - Swtm pool
sa telhl e diSh lg la wn db!
carport ! ~re pla ce He atola
tor elec 88 heat 3 BR 2
baths tange relng carpet
mg Modern ra nc h
66 ACRES - In l rmber wrth
the mon erals West o! Rut
land and very prtvate
100 ACRES - Salisbury
Townshtp On good gravel
road 2 gas 011 wells !ree gas
and 2 wat er taps
POMEROY - 5 rms wood
burner stac k mod balh gas
furnace panelin g carpel
rng new root and plumbing
Garage shop Only $18000
COUNTRY - 6 yr old bnck
3 BR 2 baths wtlh showers
cook units mce carpeti ng
lull base ment pa!ID msu
lated Wrth 5 89 acres
RIVERFRONT - 100 acres
on Rt 124 Souther n
sc hools Farm bld gs and TP
water Ntce for develo p
ment
POMEROY ~ 7 rms 2
baths Jange ref ng base
men! 2 porches storm s gas
hot water heal and vrny l
s1d1ng Oiler may buy
REEDSVILLE - Small 6 rm
home balh gas heat TP
water extra lot setup for
mobile home Ask ong
$16 000 What wtll you gtve'
CERTIFIED APPRAISALS
HOIISttlfJ
H('.Jdq uarll'l:..
~::::::::::::::::::~r;:::::::;;;;:::::::il;:::~::::::::::::~~
THE
DENNY c'ONGO
ICOUNTRY GOLF
CLUB
WIll HAUl
~
LESSONS
JUST CAll!
•8 OD
NEW
heater cores We can
' 992-3410
alSO actd bOil and rod
I
GRIPS
out radtators We also
' 3 DO
LIMESTONE
TROPHIES
repair Gas Tanks
PLAQUES
GRAVEl · SAND
p
OR
BADGES.
AT HIlt f D
JOHN TEAFORD
TOP SOil
992 2196
Professtonal
0
FIll 0LRT
Middleport
h10
CHESTER. OHIO 45720
J
q
1· 13 tfc
SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
VINYL & ALUMINUM
Comple t e Gutter Work
Comp lete Remodehng~
Rooftng of all Typ es
W orked m home area
20 years
Free Esttmates
EUGENE lONG
CAll
Ph.
(6141 843 -S42S
5 22 87 2 mo pd
HOMES
FOR SALE
•Lacalecf on General
Harttngtr Parkway
tn Moddleparl near
the pool.
•Lacaltd 1n L0f19 Bat·
lam near CurtiS Hoi·
low tnlran<e to Fork·
td Run.
FOR MORE
INFORMATION
CALL
FARMERS BANK
992-2136
Rea l Estate General
POMEROY,O
992 2259
NEW LISTING - MORNING
STAR ROAD - Wan! to
buold your own home but
cant ftnd th e perfect place'
Well we have >11 5- 5 acte
lots located on Mornr ng Slar
Road Wat er & electncava rl
ab le Call us and star! build
mg your dream home Today
ASKING SIO 000 00 ea
POMEROY - Nrce I floor
plan home rn town 3 4 be<1
room s 2 baths lull basement
tndrana Stone fireplace Extra
lots of parkm ~ allrn good con
dtiJOn $39 900 00
OUT OF TOWN - Everyone
loves the country and l hts ts
your chance to ltve there'
Ntce 3 bedroom trailer w1th
new ca rpel m l1 vmg room
l ce•lrng tans 1n kitchen and
'!tvrn g room A/ C un rt on mas
ter bedroom I bath woth
washer & drye r Newer lron t
porch Also Includes satellite
dish lots o! cabtnel spa ce
bar and many other nrne
features Call lor our show
1ng today' $14 500 00
CALIFORNIA CONTEMPO
RARV - tln over 5 acres rn
the country 3 4 bedrooms 2
baths over 1300 sq rt slor
age bwldm g. woodburner
hook up elec B B heat Car
petmg garden area many
other mce leatures PRICED
TO SELL $39 900 00
ST RT 33 - R1ght on Ktngs
bury Road 2 acre bwldrng
Slles Water & electnc avatla
ble Terms avarlable MAKE
OfFER $6 500 00
LETART- like new 1nsrde
& out' Comp letely remo
del ed ho me on large Jot Ex
cellent cond•lion Garage
new rool & s1drng Must see
to appreetate $27 500 00
Henry E Cleland Jr
992 6191
Jean Trussell
949 2660
Dotloe Turner
992 5692
Tracy Rtlfle
949·3080
OffiCI
992 ·2259
CARPENTER
SERVICE
~ Addons
and remodaJmg
- Roofing and gutter work
- Concrete work
- P1umb•ng and electncel
work
(Free Estimates )
SERVICE~
985-3561
All Makes
•Washers •Dtshwashers
•Range s
•Refrtgerators
•Dryer s •Freezers
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992 6215 or 992 7314
Pomeroy,
PARTS and
OpenHoraeShow Sat Juty 4th
6 00 PM Jackson County Jr
Fa irground Cott•gev tlie W Va
Spo n.or JCHCI Oueattons 304
Heattnll & Atr Con ditiOning
servtee-man •lso mstallatlon
man with et lea11 5 'll•ars
8ltparlance Raply to Box 0 23
Pt PI Regrster 200 Mam
Pt PI WV
372 4373
Goveaway
LAB TEC+t
Jaeklon General Hosp Rlpty W
Va l• ac cepting appltcattons for a
full tim a medical Lab Tachntctan
quahfted applicant wtll have a 2
or 4 year degree In Medtcel
Technology and a current ASCP
Regtstry Hospital offers excel
lent u lary and benefl1 s for more
tnformatlon call Pertonnel Dir ecou 304 372 2731 or apply at
Hosp1tal bussmess offtce
I
Kttten s 8 wks Weaned Gray
strtpe One all gray Call 614
448 9636
Appox 6 acru hay you cut Ill
remove
Near Rodney Call
614 446 2046
Homelell fflandly cahco cat
Needs home Gnod moUJ~e r Call
814 446 2316
To gtve away Alaskan Malo
mute Mala 4 yean Cocker
spamtd._] Y2 yean old Femalespaded Have papers on both
can &1 4 446 771 e
JTPA OTP If you went tram,Lng
tn
the foUowrng areas~lliE
OCCUPATIONAL TRAINING
PROGRAM 11 who you need
Tretnmg po1111on• will be 8VIItle
ble tn ltbrary work Outreach
work Warehouse along wnh
the opportuntty to achteve your
GE D If you are tntarestad you
must be between 22 and 66
years old a restdent of M 1son
County brmg the follooiJmg
tn formatton for ehgtbtlrty certtft
c::at1on Dnver s li cense rent
recetpt or uttltty bl ll ll to prove
rettdence B~rth certtftcatton
socta l secuntv or voters regtster
atton Proof of the amount of
fem1ly s tnco m e for t he pe st 6
month ctleck stubs and any
type of pubhc esatstance or
unemployment benaftU you are
receivmg If you are hanc:l1
capped provtde prbof of td en11f1
c;atMJn for flandtcap status all
metes born after Jan 1 1960
must have a selectwa draft
number Contact the Employ
meot Security Off1ce at 226
SrxttiSf PomtPieasantorphone
304-676 2770 by Ju ly 6th An
EEO Employer
Part Great Dane pups to gwe
away Cell 614 742 31 18
12 wk old German Shepherd
m1xed puppy to gtve away to
good ho me Call 614 843
6276
2 pupptes part Shepherd dog
BOGGS
SALES & SERVICE
U. S! RT. SD EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authonzed John Deere
New Holland, Bush Hog
farm Equ•pment
Dealer
BELL CONSTRUCTION
Farm Equipment
Parts & Service
General Contra<tors
UCINE, OKlO
949-2748
I 3 86 tfc
518 B7tfn
~
-a: LISA M. KOCH , M.S.
1:5
Climcal Audiologist
:z:: Ltcensed
'
z
_.
lot ~ oos
8
BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New llo,.es Built
Free E1t1mates
PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801
No Sunday Calls
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service
Roger Hysell
Go rage
AUTO &TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Trusmlttlon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6 17 tfc
J&l BLOWN
INSUlATION
Mobole servoce
BISSELL
BUILDERS
J&L BLOWN
INSULATION
CUSTOM BUILT
GARAGES
POLE STYLE, or
CONVENTIONAL
FREE ESTIMATES
PH. 992-2772
6 2 87 I mo
EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
CENTER
PARTS • SERVICE
Repatrs on All Makes
Transaxle Repairs
lotatod Halfway Batween
- Rt 1 and lashan
HAS 12 00·6 00
Monday Saturday
CLOSED SUNDAY
PH. 949-2969
BUY - SELL- TRAbE
I 30 ..1 mo
r----l¥~Uia;r;;---11
PAINTING &
SANDBlASTING
REStDrNTtAl
COMMERCIAl INDUSrRtAl
Ill CoMe To YoY. Porleble
SeaAielllot
MASONRY RISTOUTtON
SWIM POOlS STEEL, IARNS,
fARMING IQUtPMENr
HOUSES. SIORI fRONTS ETC
" At Reasonable Pnce< "
PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Ntghl
Call
416861fn
PLUMBING & HEA nNG
161 North Second
Mtddloport, Ohto 45760
FREE ESTIMATES
Pay You / table &
Phone Btlls Hare
BUSINISS PHONE
..-,. ... ' t614) 992 6510
RISIDENCE PHONE
(6141 992 7754
·~Hti~
• ~J u rJPr5/ 1/ tln
lowboy Hau ling
Sept1 c Systems
We Carry Conorete Culverts
L tce nsed & Bond ed
WilLIAMS
TRENCHING SERVICE
Rt 4 Hyse ll Run Road
Pomeroy Ohio 45769
PH (6141992 2834 or
992 6704- Free Estimates
ll 2 mo
Can do light haultng and rooft•g
Rea a onable rates M ar1on
Smder 614 949 2629
1wa ge
Letart
Pleaant area
541 0 or wrtta
Box 36 8 West
Va
Lawn mowers repatr odd Jo bs
lawn c utting 304 675 1563
Financial
21
.
Busoness
Opportun•ty
I NOTICE !
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO rec ommends that you
do busmeu w1th peop,e yeu
know and NOT to send money
through the marl unttl you tuwe
tnveattgated the offermg
:
23
Professional
Serv1ces
r==~======r==l----::r.:s:::~----~
' Gallipolis
& Vicinity
3 Fam1ly Yard Sale July 2 & 3
Route ns Chtldren s clothes
bed couch & cha1r freezer
July 1 :& 2 Rt 7 acrou from
Blu e Fountain Motel M ttcel
l aneou~ Items
Wanted To Buy
We pay cash for late model clean
used ca r s ~
J1m M1nk Chev Old s Inc
Btll Gene Joflnson
614 446 3672
TOP CASH pa1d for 83 model
and newer used cars Sm1th
Butck Pont1ac 1911 Eastern
Ave Galltpohs Call 614 446
2282
Slates used from houae rooh
W1ll PICk up Ca ll 304 372
4099
Yard Sale 113 Fourth Ave
Thurs 9 5
Baby clot hes
clothes mag wheels &. t~res
MISC tt ems
Communrty yard sa la-movtng
ta le 2 3 4th 9 6 7 mrles wast
of C h eth~re 7 m1les east of
Mens
Porter on At 554
womens
c loth 1ng
Lar ge
women s st:zes Baby chlldrens
clothtng dresalng table baby
bed (all excellent eond ) Cur
tams antrques btcycla furnt
t ure movre projector home
1ntenor w1cker frshtn9 gear &
mucfl more
Buy1ng dally gold Stiver cotns
nngs jewelry sterling ware old
co1n1 large currency Top prt
cas Eel Burke" Barber Shop
2nd Ave M iddleport Oh 614
992 3476
c~~:~~~~~:
.::~~.~:~
u
Garage Sale D own from Adda
I school on Add1aon Rd Kmg
waterbad stereo system
furmture car 1 973 Dodge Dart
c lothes much t'nore July
1235 96
I
July 1 3 Btdwall Turn left at
ra1troad tracks Bath room ft.ll
turl!s hot water heater more
Garage Sale July 1 4 Lm co tn
Prke 2nd bnck house on nght
All new rtama
Wanted to buy standrng trmber
Call AI Tromm at 614 742
2328
Yard Sale Wednasda'll 11a Thur &da'll 120 State St 9 6
July 2 4 1109 Sun set Dr 3
famtly chtldrens clothes golf
clubs IBM typewt~ter bargams
Em~loymenl
SerVICes
11
2 fam tly ya rd sale 'h m iles past
Laynes Furmture on !aft Thurs
& Frt 8AM BPM
Juty 1 2 3 4 677 Jack1on Ptke
9AM 9PM Electric rang, cttest
of drawers pollee scannftl' lawn
mowars A\fOn decanters full
bcJud 2 miles patt Ho lzer
Help Wanted
5 famtly yard salri... Thurs & Frt
July 2nd & :1rd 2 )lfle out 141
Lane re11dence
3 family long St Rutland J Yiv
2nd an d 3rd 9 00 4 00
4 fam1ty July 1st 2nd and 3rd
253 South F1tth St M tdd[epo art Gas furnac e ch.rc oal
grill large w o m en clothtng b~y
cl01h os 112 141 M any mora
ttems too numerous 10 menttqn
9 00 7
\,
810 Sou1h Secon d M1ddlepoft
July 1 4 Lots of m •sc
'"' :,
Ft~day
July 3 9 5 Beht•d
Summerf•elds Restaurant in
Chester Clothes •n tant gtr ls to
12 months Boy• s1zes 5 '8
mts c men s and w o mens
clot hes Shoes tnfant seat tovs
mrse
July 2 and 3 9 00 t11l dark Twtn
s1rollor dressing t able 2' C'Br
seats toys 2 eleetrrc motofs
and more Max Orenner ret•
dance ofrtJnton Terrace Follow
s1gns 614 992 2803
July 1 2 3 Rt 124 tn Syracuse
beside Przza Dan s Tupperwa r&
tnfants womens and met"'s
clothmg motorcycle helm~t
end tables Ford truck, trUnk
lawn cha~rs and lots mora
Mornrng Star Subdtv l,t on
Coun1y Rd 30 July 2 and 3
Stone tars mtsc tools house
hold ttems and cloth•ng 814
949 2537
Thursday and Fnday July 2 end
3 9 4 Antique buffet btcyde
bean bags good brands ch1lij
rens ckithes boys and g~r [s
toys m tsc ttems 1 mtle on
Flatwoods Ad Greg Berley
Clean lac:ltes clothes 10 20 also
m ens Furntlura appliance!
bedding drapes tools cannrng
JRfS walker crutches canes
mtsc Roger Spencer Rt 33
July 3 4
Bes1da Post Off1ce 1n Tuppers
Plama Thursday July 2 9 00'\ 7
A.cross from Hubbard s Gre60
house tn Syracuse Friday Ju4y
3 9 00 4 00 Ra1n or sh1ne
Boys cloth tng 11ze 6 10 Lad•es
Jeans srze 7 1 1 .Xntckknacks
curtams household ttems 198;0
Kawasakt LTO 440
ROOFING
July 3rd at 133 Bu"ernut
Po m eroy Record ce bmlrt: up
holsterv too ls books ctrt:ullu
saw teans electncal supPIIt!s
much more
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleantng
Pamtmg
FREE ESTIMATES
& Vicinity
949-2263
or 949-2168
42 287tfn
Pt Pleasant
MARCUM
CONTRACTING
Available positiOn 1n tile chef
lang1ng car.., ol C'll}lecttonal
medicine Chillicothe Comtc·
t1onallnstitute 11 saek1ng a St•te
of Ohio Llcenaed Physician for
pt~mary care at our 3 000 had
facllhy Thi• position will fill the
dutlll of our tnatltutlon Medical
Director Cell 814-773 2818
E:f.l 201 or 220
~HESTII, OHIO
•ROOFING •SIDING
•WINDOW REPLACEMENT
•REMODELING &
ROOM AODITIONS
•GARAGES. POLE
BUILDINGS
Announcements
ControlyourW~gh\ Take New
Shape Diet Plan" and E Vap
Watllf P1lls Fruth Pharm-=v
C•ptaln D 1AIYou Can EetF1eh
Dinner Sund-v July 15th 11 30
4 00 .t the Southern High
Scho9! Caft1ttit Racine Spon
aored by the Southam Band
Advance tldtrtt for ag• 13
through adubs t4 26 under
13 f2 &0 Th•• ttclet:s m.y be
obtained from any band m~mber
or at the Htih School Office
Tickell et door •• 60 and
12 7&
Pomeroy
Instructor ne•d•d b'll state
beautycollege lmmad rate open
1ng Day avenin g. full pllrt time
Call814 887 8512
Wanted Retail Hardware Clark
Send Rasuma to Box 488
Gallipolis Ohto 46831
3
Housekeepmg Cell between ~12
& 4 614 388 9725
I
Brenda lakes care of elderly
people tn her home 10 yrs
e•pertenee Lovtng cere Call
614 992 6940
NEW- REPAIR
Custom Weldmg
Jtm -s odd jobs pa1ntmg dn~a
way reaeallng carpenter w o r" &
rgof repalf trees & hedges
expeuence d Ph 614 379
2416
•
NOTICE Huston s Wel d•ng af'ld
Fabr1catton serv1ng your area
We weld anythtng from east ~ron
to alumn Servtce factort"
trucktng or lndlv tduals If you
need som91:h.lng bm11 or rep atred
please call614 682 7122
Howard rl. Writesel
lype
.
•
Jrm s odd job• patnttng drt'lf.,.
way reseahng tarpenter worll &
roof rej? at t:, trees & hedtn
tllper.ence!d Call 614 3~9
2416
f
12
Pubhc Sale
& Auct1on
I ( ?fi l tn
OUR LINE
Tre:~~~:,~~~ Servtce
Any
Ptumbong Service
6 10.17 I mo pd
9
We Carry Fi1h~9 Suppl1es
u
•\l•-
Washer and dryer and rang e
servtce All mek es and modej-s
30 years ellpertence Reaso11a
ble rates Call Chest,rre 61A
367 0322
Rt ck Pearson Auctioneflr It
censed tn. Ohto and Wast Vtrgt
ma Real Estate anttque farm
hqu1dt.U1on sates 304 773
6786 or 773 6430
SALES & SERVICE
PH. 742-2027
985-4141
VETERANS Earn elltfB money rn
the Army Net ronal Guard 304
675 3960 or 1 800 642 3619
~e
Wanted to buy r ear Honda
wlleel tor 84 XL 100 moturcy
cle Call 614 742 2864
FENCE COMPANY
GINIIII CONTIACTOIS
Lost cat long hatred male Tan &
brown Stamese mark1ng
Brown co llar 326 near R10
Grande Reward Call614 446
9633
61 4-44•·30:28
ACCENT
REFERENCES
Phono Day or Ennonga
lost and Found
Work Guaranteed
FREE ESTIMATES
NO SUNDAY CALLS
'It ES ID ENTIAL I COMM ERC! AL
6 2 811 mo
J S 17 3 mo
CUSTOM BUll T
HOMES & GARAGES
•lnsuUUton
•Storm Doors
•Storm Wmdo w s
•R eplac ement Wtndow s
•N ew Ro ofmg
PH. 992-2772
John II. Benh
Owner/Mechanic
RUtABlE
20 86 lfn
·Let Us fence 'lou In
JAMES KEESEE
PH. 949-2756
614-843-5248
VINYL &
ALUMINUM SIDING
' fREE E!T!MlTEl
Truck auto. &
heavy equipment
repa1rs and
weldmg
I All makes & models!
Electron11: Organs
8
K1ttens to grve away call 304
676 204 1
8
EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR
TVsr Antennas
llllln
pherd puppres to good hom e
304 675 7966
6
Experrencad lady wtll do biby
sitting m my home ""on dey lt\ru
Frtday Call304 773 57'40
4 30
..
01 (•• 1/ 19/U
PUll!( INVltiD
J.R.'s REPAIRS
REASONABlE
6 week old hall German She-
tmp eratiV8
that
we ltnd
htm c at
Lost
Female
yellow
& whtte
& kttten Taken from PrtestiV
home t hat burn.ct If any mfor
matton please cal l 614 446
2171
(61 4) 446·7619 or (614) 992·6601
417 Se<:ond Avenue. Box 12.1: 3,:...........,
Galltpohs Ofifo 45631
'VINYl SIDING
"AlUMINUM SIDING
"ILOWN IN
INSUlATION
3 krttens htt8f box tramed
304 675 6141 after 3 00 pm
Mtsstng. yellow &
male
sharthalred cat With 3 legs Hu
health problem that req u~r es
continuous car e and med•cat1on
Hts name 11 Charlas and Ill
miSled very much Last seen
Ft~day Juna 12 at Dr Allan
Boaters offrce If you ve seen
htm or have 1nformalton about
htm please contact
Dr Bos
ler a offtce 448 9762 It rs
Compulertzed Heartng Aid Selectton
Swtm Molds · lnterprettng Servrces
Rt 124, Pomeroy Ohoo
E
KEN'S
APPLIANCE
FREE
ESTIMATES
ALLWORK
GUARANTEED
161 29 30 171 1 3tc
Real Estate General
YOUNG'S
NEW HOMES
RESIDENTIAL
RENOVATIONS
P0Bo•37
B ~d l Will be awarded at the
regu lar Board meeting on
August 10 1987
Matga County Board of
Mental Retardatton reserve'
the rtght to accept or re,ecl
any or aU btds
Ketth Black
Operatton s D~rector
(CUI OUT FOR fUTURE USE!
Situations
Wanted
Truck drtvers needed Mal e or
female Call 614 992 2321 or
1 BOO 247 4516
304 67& 3626
Syracuae Oh1o 46779
614 992 6681
6 15 87 I mo
Start your own bustneasl Be
come a ..Watkms dealt!' Full or
p11rt t•m ~ opportun1t1" avella
ble Call 614 992 76 83 for
more Information
Control your Welgt'lt Take New
Shape Dial Plan • an d lo tad
tempholesterol too h1gh 1 Lower it
with Heart Flo trah orl capsules
Fruth Pharmacy
4
Senttnel12
3 • Announcements
Business Services
Oehvery wdl be made to
the Carleton Sc hool for the
pe,.od of August 24 1986
through June 30 1988
B1d• are to be ma1led to the
address below and Spec1f1c
btd deta1l1 mav be obtatned
tw contactmg
Mr Ketth Black
Operations Dtrector
Soct>Ona 26 26 JO 3t 32
• Real Estate General
11 01. MOlTON 01 BANQUET lEG.
Gattlpohs Ohoo 4663! tor
ADDENDUM TO PART 1
ITEM E !51
SOUTHERN OHIO
COAL COMPANY
RACCOON MIN E NO 3
RE\IISEO ll / t9 / 87
LEGAL NOTICE
Souther., Oh1o Coal Com
DEPARTMENT STORE
PHIC~S
Box 490 Athens Ohro
45701 has tubmllted en
appl1cat1on to rev11e a Coal
Mlntng and Aeclamatton
Clell 9 Wood Bo• 263
Syracuse O h10 46779
wsu &PP91nted Admm111ta
t o r of th e estat e of Dora B
Wood deceased late of Bo•
263
Syrl!lcuse M eigs
S1reet
ments or reques<s lor >ntor
mal co nference may b~ sent
0
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIOUCIARV
On June 22 1987 m the
M etgs, Ceunty Probat e
Coun Caae No 26546
locust
July 16 1987 8 om to4p
m at VIllage Holt
Southern Ohio Coat Com
panv - Me1gs Mine No 1 P
Pubhc Not•ce
9
publt c v1ewmg Wr~ttencom
ADDENDUM TO PART 1
ITEM E (61
SOUTHERN OHIO
COAL COMPANY
MEIGS MINE NO 1
REVISED 6119 / 87
LEGAL NOTICE
~
Ho~sa
Budget can be In spected by
the public on Wednnday
1711 1tc
1 0 01. VIENNA
DOWNING C.HILDS
MULLEN MUSSER
McArthur Ohoo 45851
and tho Gotha County Re
corder Gatt•a County Court
Jon Buck
Clerk Treasurer
V1llage of Middleport
... ....... ~0
9%
James
num bers
comments and ask qun
tiona concernmg the pro
The entoro proPGsad 1988
In
ur lf"Ul ro iTiedleti I\ year•
CLEVELAND 1UP il - Tues
day s Winnin g O h 1o Lottery
Court House M_p1n Street
pOHd 1988 Budget
Tal bolt
Vet erans Mernorml
- Be r
Lav in a
Donn a
•net provtde written and oral
Pubhc Notoce
Hospital news
fuesdav Ad m 1ss 10ns
11 a m Grueser, Racme,
Bra nnon
Reedsville,
Kleon Pomero}
Tuesday DIScharges M cComas
'
The sudden s torm hurled hall
and dumped two In ches o! snow
on fl'fe ground sa 1d Adams
Coun ty E m ergency Manage
ment Agency Din'ctor James
Fox
Daily stock prices
Weather
NATIONAL WEATHE8 SERV ICE F.PRECASf TO 8 Ar,t EDT 7·2·87
.
Public Notice
\IIOualy approv e d to be
PUBLIC NOTICE
BUDGET HEARING
The apphcalton 1s on ftle at 1
The V1lfage of Mtddl~ort mtned
will hold 1 pubhc Budget
tho office
of the Merge
Meoga
County
Recorder
Heanng Monday. July 13
1987 It 7 30 p m •n the County Court House Se
., counc1l chafnbera 237Rape cond Street Pomeroy Oh10.
St • Middleport Ohoo Att 45769 the Von1on County
We can repatr andre ·
Citizens are 1nv1ted to ttlend Recorder
Vtnton County
core radiatOrS and
crews"
Process 31 Pomeroy court cases
Libraries to close Saturday
l£ster Hal('h
where one woman died
because of high wtnds
Showers and thunderstorms
conti nued ear ly t111 s morni ng
hom Mlssoun to Ohib a nd
Kentucky
Widely scatte• ed
showers and thunderstorms con
tmued O\ei t he AUant oc reg10n
a nd the Gulf Coast states
The co ld fJ ont st1 e tched from
Ne\\ E ngla nd thJOu g h Pennsy l
vama and m to the Midwest
wheJ e showers a nd thunder
storms brought much need ed
- oal n
~ But Pennsy tvam a was hl l l ate
T uesd ay by st or m s pa ckmg
gal e f orce wmds lig htning and
dime-stzed haJ J A wom an was
killed whl'n w ma s t ore the roo!
off her garage a nd dropped It on
he•
ThP sam e sto rm s blanketed
pall of Pen nsylvania Wll h up to 2
mches of snow on T u esda) the
last d ay of Ju ne
Vlrgm1a Mary Va n Li eu 57 of
the sou th centra l Pennsylvania
town of Gett ysbu rg dted In
sta ntly Tuesday after high wi nd s
plucked the roof off her garage
and dropped 11 on h er sa1d Stat e
Po lice Trooper Robert Ga no
The deceased was wa l kmg
along Rou te 30 m front of her
reSide nce v. hen
h1gh w mds
bl ew the 1oo! off her garage
"hlch then landed on top of her
Gano sa1d
The storm • just uproot ed trees
b' the hundreds
an A dam s
Cou nty emergency dispatcher
sa1d earlv tod ay · It tore through
here bad 'I he; re stJII out there
w1th cham sa-'s and (utllltyl
Public Nottce
The
• Ohto
GOVERNMENT JOBS
$18 040
•at 230 yr Now
HirtQg Calf80I!i 181·8000 Ext
R 9§t06 for current federal hit
HIAINOI GovernmtntJobs you•
area •16.000 •aa
Call
802 838 8886 Ext 1449
ooo
Middleport
& Vicinity
Furnt
ture gl•as clothing
dryer
workbench lot• of paperbacks
4th snd P:..rl RaCine
Wednelijtav an(~ Thursday July 1
and 2 213 Unton Ave m
Pomeroy Chtldrens cloth1ng and
many mr sc ttems 9 00 1
At the junction of Rt 7 and
Forrest Run Rd Large sehtctlon
and large s1zet 9 00 4 00 Juty
123
Huge yard .. Ia July ht thru
4th Wed
Sat 9 ttll d111k
wa.,da Powells 6tf1 St Racine
3 famlty July 2nd 3rd 4th
Bash.., Ad In lront of Buhan
Ftre Dept!
•
•
BIG YARD SAlE I 10 Thlfd St
Mason June 30 J uly , _,. 2
clothtng c arpettng c•ndy
molds furmture knick kna cks
curtems tools tO'IIS childs ~•ka
carrter
Sewmg machme typewriter
Nat I Geographies ca nnrng t•t
soma green lots more Thundf..Y
& Frid ay 1 17 Pleasant St
Grgantlc Yard Sale July 2 3 4
Below S1den Jewelery Gall 1po
Us Fe,ry Lots' o f new ttemt
2 tam1ly ftrst ttme 1 mile r.u1
Redmuc:l Atdge Henderson WV.
Wed Thurs Frt 10 QO t1ll6 00
Cheap lots mrsc Items Home
lntertor tte,n s baby cloth es loll
o1her ttmes
dig Yard Sale 102 Thtrd St I
M ason July 2 3 9 00 7 Lotr of
chtldrens elothmg stereo TV .,
mtsc
3
More and m re women are
becom1ng suc:c"•tul In the
busln•awor ldtod~ AtNation
wkl' a growing number of F~..:.:..:.:.:..:..:.:..:..:.:..:...:__.;......~
women hiVe found exc tling
aatltly1ng c•eerl 11 an lnsu
renee Agent wtth our Company
Ftrst ~fth 1 Year Income Clf'l be 1 ----..,----'~~
UO 000 or more In Sal-v plul Flrsl t1rne aver Sandi tlawley
eddltktnal bonu1e1 Cell for an
rnldence. For"t Run Ad 2
appo)ntment at 114 374 8246
miln from Rt 7 9 Q0-3 00
An equal opportunity employer
Friday July 3rd
'
Yard Sale Thur •day 9 00 4 00
Corner of Maple Ave and
Sandhill Meadowbrook adth
tton Iota of mise tt ems
Movmg Sale July 1 5 ev-.f9l 1;
thtng goes TV tool box f urru
ture 2212 Madison Ave
1
'
•
�.
Reo I Es l,ilt ~
31
47
LAFF·A·DAY
Space for Rent
l4
KIT 'N' CARLYLE
54 M jsc . Merchandiae
•
old Combustio;..., uti
feedi ng cda l stove to, Mia
Excellent condition · For more
informauon , ull 614· 3.88 ·
Homes for Sale·
Graenbr~ er
Space tor rent , tr,il ec: 1pscei.
loeutt Rd . Rt . 1, Pomt Plaasal'lt
304· 676· 10?6.
by OWner:
Est .. 3BR .. bi- lwel
on 2 4 acres, AC . W .B.F.P .. Wet
bar. 2 c•
PM. Beiore
4 ·00PM 614-4009· Aft• "
o•r:::·
New 4BR, 2 · bath, 'Clark Or
3 or 4 Bodroom hausa in Kyger
Creak Schaal District . Referen·
~81 P.h 614-446· 8621 .
'52,000. Newty remodltd Ha .
..ZBR . $22,000 in A.dd•ton. Call
446 -8898
•_,e For Sal& or lease••
Merchandise
4 BA. 2 bath; full baternent, with
aboveground pool & XL deck on
1 12 acre across from Addaville grade school. Finanetng availt·
ble w1ttl small down payment.
Priced thousands btilow ap·
51 Household Goods
praiaed valun . Call Retz · 919,
SWAIN
AUCTION & FURNil'URE 62
Olive St. Gallipolis .
NEW· 8 pc. wood group· lf399.
Ltving room tuit81· t 199·$699.
Bunk beds wtth bltdding- $199.
Full size msttress &. foundation
.s tuting - 1 99 . Re c lin e rs
.sterting t99
USED - Bed•. drenara. bedroom
su ite s. fi199-1299 Otsk t.
wrtngtf w•aher, a complete hne
of used lurmture.
791 -2152 .
lovely new 3 8R home built 1~11
sprmg. 2 car ganga, met ar ...
Clay & c•tv achoolt. 6 miles
grom Gallipolis. Will 'conllder
mobile home' as tude - in
$47,500 . Cal614-446-8038
2 BR , 10 yr , mint condition,
beauttful location, Near Nor- ·
t hup Pri ced right or will trade
Call614· 256-6200
4 rop m house 48 N~ll Ave.
Reduced t oS10. 000 C&ll614 367-0425
For .. te by owner· 2 story hou"
tn Mtddleport overlooking park
30 yr. guarnteed vinyle sidmg,
w -w cat"pat, 1 'h bath, untque
woodwork. 614- 992 5126.
3 bedroom, 2 bath an 1 and one
thitd acrft 1~81 lot Central air,
clbte to Metgs High Sehoal
Pri ced reasanably . Phona 614·
992-3225 after 9 .00 p m. ·
House in village of Chelter.
Ohio Bargain at $24, 900 .
Coma teal Call 614-98!-3571 .
Government Homes for fi1 00
jU Repair! Buy D1reetl Rapos
and Tax Oelmquent Properties.
Get the facts today! Call(refun·
dable) 1 -518 -469- 3546 E"t
H 1 3850 24 Hrs
3 : bedroom Storm windows,
carpetmg, garage and 110rage
buildmg. Must taU. See Fred
Williamaon or call 614· 742·
2490
_"_Which do_you want first
the truth,. the whole truth, or
nothing but the TRUTH?"
r~~~~ijf~~~;;~=~Gfi~~;iii~1i~~;;=~~
for Sale
. for Rent
42 Mobile Homes
Mobile home, two lou, niea
block garaga. total eleetrie~
central air, large acrHn..t porch.
new underpenning. W81her and
dl"''tr. food freaz•. New Haven.
all goes for one price. call
304-675 - 4488 for more
information
8 acres on Tribble Rd. off Rt. 62
Plut store building, warehouse
3 BR house, barn, cellar. plua 2
other buildings All black top
road Call l04-458 -1818. Call
after &PM
20 acre farm Hannan Trace
Road. Glenwood, W. Va. for
more information call 304· 773·
5118 or 773-&188 after 5:00
34
6 room house Rose Hill, Pom&roy, Oh 1.3 acres 117 ,000 AI
M.artm 614· 678 ·2513.
Nowly remodeled 3 bedroom
house fo r sale or rent on Ltncoln
Hts 614 - 992 - 7689 after
S ·OOp m .
3 bedrooms. 1 bath, living room.
d1n1ng room , kitchen and den .
Full batement with fuel oil or
w ood burmng furnace. carport.
out bmlding. trailer hook-up, 1 1h
acre. $25.000 . Will consider
land co ntra ct at 9 p11rcent. Call
614· 742·2832 ev&nmgs after
5 00.
5 rooml w1t h bath Ntce loea1ion
on Gran t St Newly demodeled.
large lot, close to 1chool and
c hurchas Priced reaaoneble.
Call614 -992 -7244
Business
Buildings
Commercial bulldtngs for lease
Downtown Pt. Pleuant Store•.
officea. A· One Real Estate
Carol Yeauer. Broker. C1ll 304·
676-6104 .
747 lndduttrial ltorage 12 foot
over haltd dotfr, 3 ph .... of
alactflc. 18x48 tteel bu tlding
614 - 448 · 2362 For
appointment .
Owner will finance 3 br, dining.
fam. room-w -burner, 2 baths.
cent " ' · 2-ear gar . 2 outbldgs
304-675-5893
..
NEW' AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WES T, GALLIPOliS . ~T 36 .
PHONE 614-446-7274
141170 3 BR total electrte.
blocks. underptnntng, sundeck &
tteps Call after 7pm, 614· 36~;
7287
1973 Freedo m. 2 BR , total
electriC. underplnnmg tncludad
$4 ,500. Call 614-388·9724 '
35 Lots
&
Acreage
1"h ac lot onJerrys Run Rd. w1th
rur.t water. 304-576-2383.
45 acres mora or la11 Bud
Chatt1n Road. city wtter, paved
road. 128.000.00. 304- n6-
3&79
41
Houses for Rent
Nicetv fumtthed small house
Adults only . Refer~tntea required Off ttreet parking Ph.
61 4-448· 0338 .
1) 2 Bedroom brick below Swan
Creek· den . full basement, air
condtttontr'!Q. fuel ail heat. 1 car
~arage . S260 / ma . 2) 2 to 3
Bedroom aJMrtment in town.
utilities paid *360 . 3 ) 3 Bedroom, full batemenl . Spring
Velley area. t326. 41 3 to 4
Bedraom on linle Kyger Rd .
Country atmotphera 1350.
Wiseman Real Ettata 614-446-
3844 .
1968 Cuatom Manor, 12x60. 2
BA , gas heat , porch. refrig ..
stove. WI D , fully carpeted.
good condition. $4,500 Call
House for Rent or Sale land
contract. good house, tchool
dtlt Cell61o4-448-7572. Eve 's6.00 446· 1622.
3 BR , U!Grande Blvd., Bnck.
Call 814· 379· 2769.
Kitchen furnished . carpeted, 2
1980 14x70 Memory. 10x.20 BR , 1 % bath, no pets, Dep. &
deck w1th ra il, 4J:6 back porch. Ref 233 Second Avenua.
10x14 outbuilding butlt wtth 1350 / mo. Call 814-448-4928 .
pressur e treated lumber $ 12 .600. 1987Kawallkt1104 Spilt level 3 BR , 111J baths,
wtleeler $1.100 . Call614· 246- l,co"'•bi<led kitchen, dining, bese9629
·
• ment. ctty s.::hool. Dep. e326
mo Call614-388- 8323.
1981 tcnox "12x80, 2 BA . total
Electr~c . new carpet. vel"'' nice. 2 8R , central air eond Wall to
wall earpet. Adults onty No
Call 614· 446-0175
pets. Flfst clan. Call 61-4· -4461 984 14x66. fenced yard 3 0893.
lots Rt 160 at Evergreen .
$18,600 CaU614-446-1339or 2 bedroom house and apt. for
r.,t in Pomeroy. Psrtl&lly fur 614· 446 ·1628
nithed. depolit required Call
1984 Shultz 141170 wtth e•- 61 4·992·2:!81
"'
pando 3 BR 6 2 bathl land
contr&ct &vailable Call 614· 2 b.t:lroom hou1e tn Clifton .
Stove. refrtgerator. carpeted. No
446· 6525 .
pets Deposit. Phone 304 · 7731983 Skyllne: 14•60 2 8R , AC. 6962.
extra nice French Ctty Brokerage Servtcos Call 614-448· House for rent In Middleport
Call 614-992· 11939.
9340.
For 11le or rent ~ 1972 mobile
home. 12x60. Goodcanditlon 2
bedrooms. A lso 1980 Suzuki
motarcycle Call614· 9B6-3931
or &U-,85-3839 .
2 bedroom , full basement .
plenty of yard and garden apace
free gu and water. CINn *300
month. 814· 843· 6309 '
1974 Schultz , 141185. Total
electric. gas available. on
50x120 lot, c ham fence, 12x18
work shop with gas. 1nd one
Jmallpuilding. '118,000 or trade
for property of equal value. Write
Virginia Backus. 222 Beech St .
Middleport. Oh io . '
2130.
4. br houae for rent. 304 -675·
3 bedroom house, basement.
nice yard. Ceii30•· &71i· 3030 or
675· 3431 .
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Modular Ho mel C•nar Frtf1ch
residence, Middleport, Comer of
Fourth and Hooker. Must aae to
appreciate Call 814-992·3293.
2BR . AC. cable. Hud accepJed.
Riverview in Kanauga Fosters
Mobile Home Perk. Ph. 114·
1973 1 4K70, 3 bedroom, furnilhad 17250. 1968 2 bedroom. partly furnlsh..t Ui600
614·992-7479 .
Mobile Hom" for rent
114· 441-0627.
1979 Holly Perk mobile home,
70x14. can be aeen lot No. 35 . K
& K Mobile .ttome Park 30•·
676-7979
1982 14x70 Holly Park. 3
bedroom, Cerit rel air, all electric.
Mu lt Sell. 304-773-9156
Mobile home for aala or rent
304-773·6812.
' 79 Mat1chln mobile home,
14x70, new carpet. 3 bedroom.
t7. 200 00 or b81t oHar, 304·
4&8-17H.
Two 2 bedroom mobile ham" ,
furni1hed. yard wtthchain link
fence. $75.00 depOsit, phone
304· 676-6612 after 5 :00pm.
448·1602
2 BR : 12x60 unfurni1had 1 / 2
mile from Holzer. ref•ence •
deposit r.ctulred. Call 114-448-
4319 or 304·175·9710.
14x8B Mobile Home. 2 BR. on 1
sere lend. 2 children accepiad,
•u)O Oeposh. *101/ month
plus utiliti•- Cell 81<4· 388·
9881 Vinton area.
Workboot
s t18 8t: boollup . !Steal
So
NEW· Western
$30.
ooft too) Coli 814-446-31•9 .
County Appliance. In c Good
used epphanees and TV sets.
Open SAM ta 6PM Ma n thru
Sat 614· 446· 1699, 627 3rd.
Ava Gatlipolis. OH ,
Valley Furniture, new & used
Large section of quality furni ture 1216 Eutarn llv e ,
Galllpolts.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers , drye,.. , refriver•tora.
range.: . Skagg s Apphan ctl ,
Upper River Rd• bMide Stone
Cut•t Motel 614-446-7398
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
44
Apartment
for Rent
1 and 2 bedroom apartment• for
raru
Bule rant for 1 bdr ,
1183.00, 2bdr., 1219.00 . Also
requir..t a 1200 00 Mcurity
deP91it CONTACT. Jackson
btate• Dept Ph 446· 3997
EqlMII Housing Opportunity.
Furnished & unfurnished apts .
U 50.00 and up, refereneet Pll
304-675-7738 or 304·675 5104 A-1 R..l Estate
Furniahed Eff1C1ancv t146 . Utilt·
tiaa paid, share bath. 607
Second Aw , Gallipolis Ph
446-4416 after 7PM
Upttatraunfumtshed apartment
Utilities patd Carpeted, no child·
ran or pats. Call 614-446-1637
Garage 1pt 3 room• & bath
Furnished, inCluding wa1ller.
dryer & 1ir . C Inn No pets
Adutts onty. Ref. & dep ra'Quired
Csll 614-446· 1519.
928 First Ave 5 room hs. Call
614-446-3945
Trailer for • ale or rent. Call
614-992-7179
and dryer. AC. t195 plus
depotil af!d utilities. 814-9927479.
ment
1904 Nashua 141160. 2 BR
completely lurnishad it desired.
EJ:cellent condition Awning &
covered patto CA Call 814·
446-0904.
614-256 -8225.
· 2 b.,;troom, furnished , washer
Furnished apl neAt door to
Ubrary One profauional Aduh
only Parking. Ph 448-0338.
Renl~ls
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
DupiM. 1 bedroom, partly fur nished. •uo per month plus
utilltlet. Call614-992-2394 attar 9 ·00 p.m
747 Industrial storage 12 foot
0\lerhead door. 3 phases of
electnc, 18x48 tteal building
Clll614-446· 2362 for appoint-
By Own• · Price reduced. 3 br,
1'h baths, dlntng, reereatian
room. 2 car garage 304· 6754604.
75
Atd.lng 1i wn mow•r *1 &0,. runt
'good . Air cot1dit1oner $40,
w or'ka good. Call 614 - 448 ~
47 Wanted to Rent
Furnished spsrtment. 1226.
utllht81 pa id 1 bdr 920 Fourth,
Gallipolis Call448-4416 after
Bpm
Apartment for Rent 3 rOoms .
1121 / mo. Adults . Call 304·
876-6104. or 876-7738 .
1, 2. & 3 BR apartments.
Han...,suekle Hills Range, r&-frig., & gtrbage d11poul1 Gu
heat Rtnll starttng at •190.
Water. uwtJr. tra1h 1ervice peid.
Call 614-446 3344 or 614446- 1134 Equal Hou1in~
Opportunity.
furnilhed Effictency Apartment:
3 rmt. & bath, carpet through·
out. pri\11te & quiet. Smgle
work1ng person onty . Call 614·
446-4807 or 814 446- 2602 .
Deluxe 3 room unfurniShed
apartmMt New kitchen. carpet
throughout 1st floor, off ttreet
park1ng. Call 614-446-4607.
448-2804
Upl'tain , 3 BR . 1 bath, kite hen
furnished, no pets. Oep & Ref
238 {int. f250 / mo. Caii614-
44B-4926
2 BR, 2 bath, carpeted, kit chen
furnllhtd. na petl. dep & ref.
1326 / mo. 1 1 Court St Call
814-446-4926
Gracious ll'tlmg . 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Vlllege
Manor and Riverside Apart ments in Middleport From
•21 6 Including utilities. Call
11114-992-n87. EOH
Efftciancy 1pt. for rent on RouaN
lana in Chnhire. Suitabla for
one or two people. Call 304773-6828
1 bedroom unfurntlhed 'lpart·
ment in MiddJeport. f1 60. per
month plus utilitiaa. Call 614·
949-6645 Of 814-949· 2216 .
- - -----:-- - la.b2. fd..07
Vtllage Green apts now accept·
tng application• for restdency. 2
bedroom. total electric. For
mora information 814- 9928174
Fumtshed ap11 tn M1ddlepon. 1
bedroom, t21 0 . 2 bedroom,
f220. t100 depo11t. Csll 614·
992-61&0.
APARTMENTS , mabile homes,
hausH. Pt PleiSant and Galllpohl. 614· 448· 8221
~
2 bedroom furnised apt. ref and
deposit, New Haven. W . Ve ..
304-882-3267 or 304 -7736024
One bedroom apt. tn pt , Pies·
aant. Extra clean and nice.
Adult• Only. No Pets. 304-875-
Sof• and chain pflced from
t395 to S995. Tablet $60 and
up to t126 . Hide-a -bed• $390
to $696. Rer:llners t225 to
S376 Lampt 128 to 1126
Dlnene~ t109 and up to 1495,
Wood table w-6 ch11r1 S2 86 to
8795 081k 8100 up to U75
Hutctles t400 and up. Bunk
beds complete w -mattre11es
t295 and up to 1396. Babybed1
S 1 10 Manreue1 or box springs
full or twin 168, firm 178, 111nd
188 Queen Jets $225. K1ng
1360 4 drawarch"t $69 Gun
cabm111t1 6 gun. Gu or elactflc
range $376 . B1b',o msttreues
S36 & t45 Bed framn t20 .
$30 & King frame 160. Good
~etection of bedr oom 1uite1,
n;)Btal eabinat1, head ~rds 830
and- up to 165 .
............
90 Ditys tame 11 castl w1th
approved c redit 3 Mil• o ut
Bulrnlle Rd . Open 9•m to 5pm
Mon. thru Slit . Ph. 614-4460322.
PARSON 'S FURNITURE
Naw wood 6 pc. livmg room
su1tet, 839.9.95 , New livmg
room au1tes from 1179 .95 to
S700 , Chest of drswer1, 4
drawet" , •48 .. 6 drawer. $59 95;
End tabtes from 169. 95 1M
Used F,u ,nitura bedroom 1uites,
full stzed beds, twm bedt and
rodtllfs . ~e cllners from S99 95
and up
THE WORKING
MAN 'S FRIEND
Kenmore washet- $95 Whlrl·
paol wa sher· green, $160 GE
w..tlar· Almond , hka new,
.,76 Dryer· white. 176. Oryarcopparto ne, e96 . GE Gn dryetf 150. Hoover portable with erdryer set· •200. Electric range30 in ch. 1125 Eleetrie rtng&-30 ineh. copportona S150
Electric rang &-- 30 1nctl, $96
Electric range- whtte, e65. 2
re fr 1gerat ors- holt tree-wh1te.
5125 eactl Freezer- llke new.
t150 . Skaggs Applian r:et , 559
Upp er RN er Rd,~all 614 4467398 ,
CARPET
Remnants- All sins.
carpet - t6 .00 yard 81
roo ms· 1300 & up
avail@la Molloh111n
Upper Rtver Rd Call
7444
Also cut
up l1ving
Finen c:1 ng
Furn 1ture,
614 -446·
L1vin~
room furniture for sale:
Red & white v11lvet Call 814388-9059 anytim e
Almo1t new k1tchen applian r:es .
kitchen tabla, naw C.B , stereo.
more reasonably pri ced 133
State 51 .. Gallip olis .
large frost · frea rttfrJgerato r.
1125 Electric range. t85 Mlc·
rowa..,e oven and cart. S125 .
Antique Metropol itan Org Dn.
&75 Queen AIJn• style w ingback r:hair, 186 Celt 114 -99 2 6697 or 814 -992 -3189
Plastic cistern alate approved.
pl81tic aepttc tankt , pla1tic
culverts. metal culvert• RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jeek·
son, Oh. 814-286-6930
G revely riding tractor 16 HP,
tiltltf II moving deck -t600 . 2&
ft . Westinghouse chnt beazar$300. Ce1U14-268 -1431
2 wood stoves: 1-Ktndlewood.
1-Warm Morning .. New gu
camper cook 1tova. oven. 4
burnan wi1h cabinet . Call 814-
266-8413
2 Woodbu'n" •. C.'' 614·388-
21 ~
·-
Cabin (!fultar
I
...
-ro_N_v_·~s-G_U_N_R_e_PA_I_R_s~.- .--.t
~-~~~;;;~~~~~~;~;~;~~~~~g~
0, LiVI~O>IIICk
Full walnut bedroom autte full or
quean l tle. noo. 304 -8755856.
CROSS. SONS
U.S . 36 W•t. Jadlaon. Ohio
6,4· 281-8451 .
Maney F~~tguson . New Holt and.
Bust! Ho9 Sal .. & Service. Over
40 us*' traetott to d\oosa from
& complete line of new 6 used
equ~ment largest seleetton 1n
S E Oh io.
Gravely trar:tor, refrtgerator ,
coffee & end 11blet, Kirby
sweeper, eon crete mold• ready
for butinan 304-675 - 6162
8 11. ·
ere• .. tredmlll, chain .. w . lawn
Uttllly bldg 27'1131'x9' . 1J'K8'
trac)l tfoor & 3 " w.lk door .
-. 4444 erected - Iron Hone
Rld~s 814 -332-9745
mower. atr co mprnsor. 304676-6689
Surs 1 5 1 cu chest freezer
1 150' 00 304-615- 6646 eftar
5 00
.
82 HP M111ey Ferguson di .. el
tractor U3915 , 7ft NH Hay Bind
1995, NH Square Baltf· lharp
t9915 . Yerm... Aound Baler
12785. hey w1gon 1309 Call
e14-218 -11522
Lon -Shaw porch furmtura. 5 pc.
cre1m color. ••c co nd , 304·
675-6682
;86 M111~ F•rguton tractor 6
A'1 2 Malley F.,guaon bat•
14 ,960. 3 pt hh t;;h mOWIOQ
m.chlna t3150 H•y condttlonar
f1 150 . 200 gallon spuy tank
with c•t 12915. Call 814-286 ·
61522
32ft utantlo" l•dder. twa 6 tt
commercial step ladders. 7 tt
e•lension running board, one
pair car r1mp1 ph on e 304· 6761128.
ELECTROLUX 111M or saNice.
.a1k lor larry or Karan, 304-6751467
lrnetrtltlonal Cub low -Boy trac·
t or wrth mow•r & grlldtt blade &
lawn cart 1. 7&0. Ford tractor
wrth high a lpw range. New
fin iahad mower 12. 3&0. Call
614··2B6· 6fi:Z2 .
55 fi(Jilding Supplies
Butlding Material•
Block. brick. sewer ptp81 . win
dowa, lintels, ate , C laude Win,.,., Aio Gr1nd11 , 0 Call 614·
24 6 -6121
GrMtafy rotor plow t225 . Good
<:ondtUon Call 814- 387 -0149.
12 HP AIIJs Chalm• puAing
t11ctor eeoo. Ca ll 814· 6981743 .
Conctate blocks 111 flZel Ylfd or
delivery. Maao n 18nd. Gallipoht
Block Co .. 123 YI Pine St ..
Gallipolis. Ohio Call 814-446·
2783
Bu y one any aiJ 1 c hain tew chain
and Ql'l Mcond chain haU pri ee
SIDERS EQUIPMENT C O ..
·· H•n'd•aon, W \Ia 304· 1576 ·
7421
Re.c:ty m ix concret e and 111
concrete s upplies. C• ll us Yaii...Brook Cement ~ rfd Supplln. G•tll g~ind• m i...~ with mevntrt.
6 acraens. theli•. vood cond.
304-n3-6234 .
11
o. lO.t -273-4215.
56
le · 0111vetv. Phone 304·
· 3939 after & .00
Pets for Sale
•
62 Wanted to Buy
Groom and Supply Z hop-Pet
Grooming All breeds . All
stylet. Jult e Webb Ph. 61 4 -44&·
0231 .
Now buying thell corn or eat
corn C1 1l for latnt quotn. Aiv.,
Chy Farm Supply, 614· 441·
Dragonwynd Cattery tcenn•
C FA Hlma lays n, Persi., t nd
S11mese kitten• AK C Chow
pupple1. N1w khtent; Siamese
and H1m1lay an1 C1 ll 614-44&·
3044 sfter 7PM .
2986
63
Ferral l · 126.00 Great O•ne
PUPI · $100. ~abbi ta· t3.60
Call 814-446-1364 .
Co~::ker
Span1el pups- t100
each Ct l( 614 -388-8890
Pure brad Siamese kit:tans fof.
uie. Call 814· 949-2290. ·
64
AK'C Ragi•tered Cairn Tarriet
female puppy No cheeka C1ll
6 14-992 · 2607 .
.
Musical
Instruments
Modell o Uprig ht
614-446-0671
pteno. C111
.
••
•Y•t•m. 1~·::.:~•• ;•i.~ '.:·:.t:~·
Tronsporlolwn
71
Autos for Sale
r------------
992' 1137·
1984 Chevy Cfiwette . 4 dr .. no
rust, sherp *2915 1981 Old•
Cutlas•· 2 dr , 1harp. 129915.
Call &U - 2~&- &622
"
1974 LTD, Black. Power. 1200.
Ca\1114·367; 0446
Wh1te peactles· Ptck your OYtn
110 .00 Bu . or 6 lb. for t1 .00
Bring own container• Fri. & Sat
Raynors Peach Orchard At 7 ,
lower RNar Rd Gallipoht, OH
614-448· 4607 Closed Sunday
Glas1burn ' 1 Farm Ma~ket St
At. 160 near Poner ia now open
Ferm fresh veget•biH. Call
614-3Be-9027
F
uoa 11 ty rutts 1nd Veget1bl•
retail end whohtule B & &.
P<oduco ac<oos f<om Pl•u Hut '
84 Olda Cutlan Supreme.
Auto. , AC. PI , PS ." crvllt
control. V-6 46. 000 mtl ... Call
114-3&7-7&43
1976 Nav• Strong engine 1nd
tr•nsmtuion . new bf,._aa, AC.
qood eondllio n 1500 Call
It 14 •885·4371 evenlno•·
1972 Dodge Charger, 3 11.
•.no. optlo"s 01iglnel paint,
high mll•ag•. 'tier; etean and
nica 814-742 -2979 ar 61C7•2 ·2' 43
1 t74 Ford Club Cab p lck·up
with bed linar. 1976 Camero
:150 VI R••r:tnabla often
ac~ tad 61C· 992-2'717
1973 Pfvmoo th Road Runner
340 fact orr angina, P,lstol grip, 4
t PMd trlntmlaJton. n.w 811·
hault IYStem, good tirn. Litllt
O'<lttr 17. 000 mil•. runs good.
Po&itN1 tr1dt ,.., end. Naed1
body work 8700 Al1o four 15
Inch old..- style Monte C~r lo
Ratty Wheats, comp lete, 1100.
Call ~14- 742-2&02
19'79 Ch-y Ch_.lrft • . auto,
$700. 1981 Plymouth Horilon,
• tpee.d. Ul50 197g Ford
Couri•. 4 lpMd, 1550 1979
Ch6'Wy Monza . aut o, t500 .
Sandy 's Auto Sill•. 1514 -912·
7403.
'10 Clmat"o. 310, T·top. many
axtrss, 304-675 -8]92.
1978 VW RabbH
1641 .
304 - ~68 ·
1913 Calwi•. 4 door . tt.ndwd
lrana. air cond 1 . :100 mil•. v..,
good cond, 12.&00.00 304878-1730.
'83 Olda CuU"• t4. 900 00 . '81
Ptvmou•h hppo.o 11 ,700. 00.
·eo D o dge D i pl o mat
11 . 600 . 00 . ' 80 Camero
U ,liOO .OO. Ph ona 304 -812
3421 .
1980 Ford Fl11ta. runt and 100._1
go od. 11 ,200 .00 304· 157& 1&53.
1980 Ch11¥r01at tr ue:• 4WO. '4
ton. Cell 614-448-4225 ahat'
6pm.
Hay & Grain
AtfaU .. l'imothy H•v- 1987n.w
e rop, vsry htgtl quality, no r1in
Some 100 peteent alfatf1 Can
defiver., Call tor prtc" 6 ava il•
bUity. 24 hOurs. Hidden Hilla
F•rms. 433 Jack$on Pika. Oatnpolis. Ohio 4156 31 . Phone 61 4 ·
446-8003 or 114- 246-114&
.ttar 6pm
Purebred Siamete Kitten•. 304
57
livestock
1913 Dodge Charger . t250 .
Saa •t: 87 Spruce SuMI,
G•llipolla.
. 19'79 Camwo B•rlinatta Y 8
305, PS, PB, AC . gr.od eo nd.
Our oc Boar11 . Bred ju.. fike the 11 ,000 .00 304-882-2295
boars we tHt.t 1t the Oh io
halation that galnlid OVM 2 6
Trucks for Sale
lbl per dtW Rag• BenlllfV. 72
Sabina, OH . 513-514- 2398.
1977 C h.., , pickUp. 3 / 4 ton.
3 f6Qtlttrlld Angus cows, young. stand•d. four ap-.d. t.a.vy
nic1. brad . t600 , a.ch Fifm
duty. 350 engina. Jolin' s Auto
304-675-2902 ,
Slln. 6,..· 446-4782
8 month old rust thort haired
min laruut Daehs hund Ca ll 814448 -3243.
675-2189
-
1979 Cadlll1e .. 1982 Subaru 4
Wh. Or., both· good cond 1969
Flrlibird body paru. Call 614·
446·947&. 24&-6097.
Q '·
~:9:3:0:":·=:;======:..LG='':":po:l:ia:.:O:h:l•:·=====~
1983 Mut.. ng hatchback. PS.
PB , AC , aunroat, cruise, new
tires. 'low mil•. Call 814·448·
1976 DOdge Aspen statton
wagon -*600. 1977 Dodge
Atpen nation w•gan -•eoo. Csll
814-388-9724.
1984 Volkawagon rabbit. dlttel.
71 .000 mil•. asking t3200.
C•llahar 6 , 814-441·4724
1978 Ford Thunderbird Oiamendntw
JubiiH
Naw
vinyl
dulledition.
aKileust.
ZO.OOO
. f2800 . Call 614· 2156DtluJtlt.
new. On.ly B.ooo
Furnished Rooma
114-2&1-1261 .
1184 Ford E1cort 4 S I T .
*40,000 mil•. AUing *3.260.
Furnilhed toom •100. Utllltl•
p-.:1. Share bath. Single male.
919 Second. Gellipoli•. · call
448 - 44~ 8 after 7pm.
Ford Vsn . Econolin• 150
PS , 1uto, 11900. 814
37
1981 Jaep J10 pickup, 4 whetl
dlrva, low mn ... new transmit·
slon, I eyl. 304-882- 2159:Z
1988 Ford A.nger 4•4 . many
•n••· e11uma toan *8. 300.00
and alder vehide. 304· 675·
71542 or 1575-6947.
Office Space for Rent. E.u:ellent
for Anamevs. Accounlent, etc.
Cto.. to Court Hou... Call
WillllnM Real E•t•ta Agency.
272&.
1982 Plymotlth Chomp, dull
3711-2728.
Mobile Home Spec.. 60 ft. or
smeller. t76 . Water Pd. 920
Fourth. Gallipolis. Call 814441-4411 after 8PM.
1987 Dodo•
Ch.,g.,;
-:',-,---::----:--,..-- -lc-
1 9815 v -filS Mean•. 8 , 000 mtiH.
Good cond. 614· -448·0386.
1980 H•rlay Davtdaon tor ..It Of
trMia. 304· 6715-1143. '
1973 YemahaEndouro 175. c111
or 17&· 2342
1984Kiwaukl KLR 800, 1.800
actuiil miles . like new ,
t1 .200.00. 30<1·882-2790.
auto .
mlloo . Coli 814-379·2728.
1 979 Ptymouth Arrow Pickup.
Coli 814·379-2721.
"You stili have a chance lo win ...he mighl
leave early to beat the traffic ... "
8710.
~04-&71· 247&
shifter, 47,000 mil•. Call614·
114-441-3144.
1916 Y1maha Y2· 250. Ettce4·
lent condhlon, Call 614· 44&·
1911 Chevy Malibu . Good
thape, one own•, cloth interior.
t2,3SO. Coli 814-288-8&22 .
1984 Handa fil50 Night Hawk,
4 , 000 mlle1.11•• neW,
f1,BOO.OO . 304· B82·27SO.
1978 Honda Htwk 400 motor-
cycle f&OO.OO. 20 ft. P1owler
c1mplng trsll•r t3,800 .00.
304-87&-&773
You~ TH~OAi.
00~
·'
HEY, LOOK OVER
AOUI>.NI>.! WHI>.T
HECK IS THI>.T~
WELL, I '"' SURE GLI>.D
SHE DID~ T THOUGHT
r 'D H~D IT FOR SURE
BASEM ENt
WATE.RPAOOFINO
Uncondition .. lifatlmt guar•nIH
.local ref..-enc.. turnlsh.ci ' ·
' ' " K l imat••· Call coiiKt; ;
1- 614-2]7 -0488. d'"" o'ln1t;~ht •
R ogar 1lla•em•nt "'
Wat•pr9Qting
1- I lrol I J· I:J I"·
Quiver -- Tipsy - Educe -- Drover -- DRIVERS
Raising a teenager ·Is like having a loddler going through
the lerrlble twos, multiplying by eight and adding a DRIVERS
license.
BRIDGE
g_ot back on hos loot (AI ~
(!)Bodybuilding 1986 Mr.
Universe Competition from
Tokyo . Japan (RI
(J) Q (J) Perfect Strangero
Balk l's plan for a birthday
~ny for Larry erumbles. (A)
1111 lllil21 The New Mike
Hammer Mike tnes to rescue
the son of a fnend from a
tria l for murder (A)
[D Oreal Performances
1!}1 Prlmenewa Wrap ups of
the day 's world news and in
...,.,g,.,.n
RON 'S Talevh lon·'S•rvi ca
HouM e1Ha 011 RCA . Ouanr .
GE &pkiaollng In Zennh Call
304-578 · 2398 or 614 -4462 454 ,
5 Seafood
first joint appearance of the
Oemoctratic prestdent1al
cand tdate s includ1ng
9ephardt, Jackson , S1mon ,
Biden, Babbit and Gore.
.
--:--::----:------:"-:Stsr .. s J'" and l1w n Serviee
lawn care, landact ping.Al stump
r•moul. 30 4 578 · 2 tt:42 or
1111 111021 Magnum. P.l. rc·s
MORTY MEEKLE AND W,:..IN_T.:...H~RO_P_ _ ___, , . - - - - - - - - - - - ,
HE 'D LO.IE 1D HAVE A
HIG/1 · PLACED !'OSITION
M Y CADS VERY
67& 2903.
CIVIC-SPIRITED.
Oryw1tl and Aepai, , 20 yurt
ell.parltnca, FrH Eatlmare 304
676 3287.
•
IN IHE AD(IA.INISTRATID-J .
HE e.A't'S A c:a.JPI..E OF YEARS
IN WASHING!VNAND HE 'D
BE A MILLICNAIRE .
r
i'
•
BARNEY
SHORE LIVES LIFE
IN
22 Baseball
tenn
23 Glutton
24 Margay,
dreams that gave meaning to
Israel 's trtumph may be
27 Salaried
28 Coal
MV MAN SNUFFY LIVES lT
IN TH' PARKIN' LOT
Tlf FAST LANE
0
·
Hotel Dave·s use
,, 29Type
of crayon
attractive fashion designer
seeks McCaWs help (A)
I
i
1
32 Clumsy
of tod6{S news and a look
33 Large
85
General Hauling ' _;
r I
'":o
Otllard Wattf Ser'tltcu: Pool•. ' I
Cisterns, Wells. Delivery Any- ~ ~
time Call 814 -448-7404 -No
Sunday calls
, 1
'
R & A W81e'r Service
: Cilttf'nl, well1. ,pools
Formffly Jame, 8~1
Csll 304-575- 8370.
; j
Hom e ~ 1•
fdled r :.
Water 1 1•
.
1 I'
'
J & J Water Service. Sw1mming 1 :
pool•. cittern•. Weill. Ptl 614- ; ..
246·9286
I " •
:----'-~------
..t
Watterson ' s W1ter Hauling, : r.
re•sonable rates, immediate•
2.000 gallon delivery , cisterns:
\
pools., well. ale eall 304 -576- \
1I
2919.
K•m '• now John 's
~
Wster Service, John Watterson~
Jr. Owner 1 ,000 or 2.000 gal
1ervice 304-676· 2248.
..,-
.....Up_holstery
~.---
B7
'
• Jacoby transfer b1d
Opening lead
.
h1s jack and played another heart. De·
clarer won and played sllll another
spade. On this card West let go a heart
and East won h1s ace_ East now re·
turned a club and declarer duckejl :
That was the fourth tnck lor the de·
lense as .Wes.t now won the mne, but
West had to g1ve up, either leadmg mt'!
declarer's K-10 ol clubs or playmg the
heart Jack into the dummy's :ting
·
..
1 Newborn
Morgwt
2Zt!al
3 Kick up
a row
4Danube
• Yeeterday'a Auwer
tributary
II Mur~ maker
6Belgiwt
29 Eucharist
province 22 Entice
plate
7 Wagnerian 24 Arnontil·
30
Large
heroine
lado
spoon
8 Exorcise·
holder
34 Lacerate
11 Memorize 211 Food
36"14 Booty
fish
0'Clock
16 Hick town 26 Dismal
19 Budget
dwelling
item
2 7 Source
-,tr""Tli:-"
37 Current
38 Skirt
fabric
39 Earthen-
ware jar
40Church
. 711
D Cil [I) II <II 1111 Ill ll2l
1151 News
I]) lnalde the POA Tour (A)
(J) S.!gn Off
1:1
YA60TTA
AXYDLBAAXR ·
IIDTIIA
. , 01 illonayllna Current
At)MIRE ·TilE
SPIRIT OF
lsLONGFELLOW
reports on world econom1cs
and financial news With Lou
ou~
LrTTL£
LEAGUE
~..
Form~rly
--,..----------------~'
Pass
barrel
Heroos (GI (1 :35)
t 1:00 CD Hardcaatle and
McCormick
--------------------- . :
Pass
35 Consecrate
Ill(!) USA Tonight
10:35 CIJ MOVIE: The Hell with
''
3 '1'
3 NT
boat
i1J1 Evanlng News A wrap up
I!]) NIWI
I
Pa ss ~
31 Blvd.
Qal lllil21 The Equalizer An
stones. (1:00)
I!J) News
10:3Q CD American Snapshols
t
2 NT
3 ••
scuttle
of drugs jeopard1zes h1s
chance of pass.ng the bar.
(A) 1:1
ahead 10 tomorrow 's news
Ae1 idant1al or comm8t'cla l wlr ing. New ltf'viee Of repairt
li canaed electrlci•n. Est imate ..
tree Aidenour Electncal. 304
67 5•1786 ,
Pass
. e.g.
Day War, the tdeals and
(I)
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
2+
-....-r.--
211 Slough off
•ourtng.
Electrical
& Refrigeration
wrong
disappears when a book he
wrote 1s rejected . (A)
CII Q
MY COUSIN WALDO
21 Civil
0 Nlghl Coun Bull
years after what some call a
miraculous victory In the Six
Plumbing
& Heating
CARTE A'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
C01 Fourth and Pine
Oanipolit. Oh la
~
Phon• 614 ·446-3888 o r 614446-4•P7
peasant -
18 Rebuff
20 Gold (It.)
10:0011 (1) 0 NBC News Special
Six Days Plus 20 Years : A
Dream Is Dying. Twenty
;
Homa repair. rOOftng , pain ting,
building and haul ing phone
304-675-3:190
delight at having his children
visit him turns to pan ic (R)
11J1 Lorry King Live! In depth
interviews w1th top
newsmakers and celebrities
9:30 11 (1)
Sou1h
DOWN
sauce
9 Not written
10 Adversary
12 Mine
entrwtce
13 Prickly
herb ·
11J Spanish
article
16-Bertha
17 Philippine
_Special Buckley presenls the
i
East
ACROSS
41 Belgiwt
1 Card game
river
modern day pirates (AI t;1
. III Firing Line Candidate
Rotary or c eblt tool dr illing ,
Mo1t w• ll• c omphrt~ um• dl.,
Pump 11las and t~~tvic• 304 •
1196-3802
Nortb
lty THOMAS JOSEPH
>
researcher fight ruthless
Fany Tre• fr i mmi n~ 1tump
,..,oval Call 304 .675· 1331
2.
West
·· ~,
credit card.(A) 0
(J) PBA Bowltng
(J) Q CIJ MOcGY"'er
MacG,.er and a pretty
tenc:tf, Medlng. mt~leh. 1 ~11.
1tone.
at1rub1 Don 's
Landtc:apn 114 448 · 9846
.
Vulnerable· Neither
Dealer. South
anionds was a Jacoby transfer bid
showing at least five hearts, and three
no-trump by North simply denoted
enough to play game
Declarer h"\is many choices after the ·
club lead . Because ol the heart-suit
blockage, there is no certam way to
take nme tricks. So South took the bold
apl>rOllCh . He banged down the queen
spades. West won the king and led a
knowing declarer had no more
than two cards in that suit. South 'fiOn
the heart ace cashed his top diamonds
and played the 10 of spades. East won
Natalie sets out on a w1ld
buying spree wttt\ her f1rst
r" A stump ttm Ovf!l, ehatn It nil
'I'AQ
tAKQ
+A K tO 5
uated well for you. you w1ll take the
tricks you need I like a deal in which
you wm by doing just the opposite playmg against the grain and hoping
the bat doesn't break.
South had a huge no-trump holding
1
24 high-card points with two 10·
spots He . showed that strength by
opening two clubs (arhflctal) and rebidding two no-trump over N.orth"s
...,,.
• 10 9 B
. J4
SOUTH
• Q 10 9 8
negative diamond response. Three 'd i·
This f1lm tells the story of the
Statue of Liberty 's ong1nat
des•gn aod chronicles t.he
process of repair1ng and
restonng the statue
EAST
.AJ 6543
., 53
WEST
.K 2
'I'J 972
t6 53
+Q9 6 2
The standard way to develop a trick
Heaven Jonathan and Mark
help a once famous muSICian
sch90l caplaln.(R) 0
9:00 CD 700 Club
II (1) 0 Facls of Life
• 873
with an honor combination is to lead
up to 11. II the defenders' cards are Sit·
Samuels blames Charlie
when Mana falls lor a rival
EEK & MEEK'
'I'K ! OB64.
• J 74 2
· James Jacoby
~
rn
1-I-81
NORTH
By James Jacoby
ao..boll
8:05 CI1 MOVIE: Mister Roberto
(NAI (2:03)
__8:3Q CII Q (J) Heed cit the Class
I
.7
Against
the grain
7:05 CII Sanford and Son
7:30 11 (1) (i) Newlywed Game
(J) Scholaatlc Sports
America (T)
Q(J) Judge
1111 Wheel of Fortune 0
[l) Crosoflre (0:30)
Ill 1!21 ll5l Jeopardy! t;1
7:35 CII Honaymoonirs
8:00 (1) Daktari
II
ll5l H•ghway to
depth fealure reports (1 :00)
E•t•rk)• Stucco. , Platt., •nd ~
Plaater Repafr, Wor .. by tha llouor '
or byth• Job. FrMtltrm•tl Cell
614. 2&6· 1112
82
UNSCRAMBLE--fORf
11:1 ANSWER
III
ill [!) Major Loogue
S WEEPER and stwlng meehln• ~
repair , p.art L and aupph .. p,~
up 1nd d-'i'tlery. Da'<l iS VKUum ,
Cleaner. one h1U m ile up '•
Georg• C,...._ Rd Call 614·
446 · 294.
•
11
I
YESTERDAY'S SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
iJi The fl!laklng of Ltberty
ALLEY
PEANUTS
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FANCV WORDS LIKE
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R & "M Custo"' Couchea and :' ;
ReuphOI•t•rv. Sl At . 7. Crown, •1
City, Oh . 814-218-1470, Eve. ~
614-448-3438 Open daHy 9 to ' ~
4 :30, Sat. 9 :30 to 1 :3Q. Old & 1\'
new Uqhostarecl.
'
Mowrey's Upholataring nrvlnl·::
trlcountyara•22yelra. Tttebatt 1 ~
In ·fumlture upholstering Call ~f.~
304-676 · 4164 for free r
ntimste1 .
.-.1-
i
•
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A LUMP 1l:>
Home
Improvements
•
Motorcycles
/
'
Ser v1ces
1975 Ctlevy v an · new tlr".
motor rebu ilt. Nna very . good.
11 ,100. Call 814· 38B-9783
1176 Hond1 38of. Low ml'-ae. t210. Call 114-1864418. '
1185 Dodge 'Ch•g•. 28,000
mH•. IS speed. Call f;1 ..· 379-
•••
•
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~ LETTERS IN SQUARES
·m CIJ Peoplo's Coun
iill (!)"Today
MJjor League llettbaH
In Walt VIrginia
·71 Crul.. Air mtltat ho m• , 28 :
tt . lotdlod. Ctau A, call 304- ~882 · 3237 after 5·00 pm.
(
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.
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IIIIIJI ll5l Wheel of Fortuna
•
B4
441-18&1 .
n .ooo. Coli 814·288·
~ otors Homes
Comple te
.:'!; PRINT
and financial news -with Lou
W .O .
1877 Thunderbird. P/ W •
locks. new b.Uery, new paint.
flliOO Of bel,~ otfer. Call 81<4446· 32315.
8226.
Space for Re11t
•
1•
1976 Chi'IV pickup 1ruc:k. 8 eyt.
aut o, n.w p1int )ob, runs (lOad.
tl550 00 304·458-1732
1977 Hond• CV- 750 K. Wlndahleld, ni'VIf r•• tire. Call 114-
1971 Chevefl•verv gaod eondl-
~
16
the chtJclt )e quoted
in lhe missing words
!--''--'~-'-...1.--'---' you develop from slep No. 3 below.
[l) MaeNtll/ Lehrer
NowaHour (1 :00)
1111 Nawa
11J1 Monayllna Current
reports on world econom1cs
)lDj <OOJ<ING
& Campers
1974 El Camino truck. good
cond 3D4-B82-2208
Call 114-317-7230.
tloft.
1
•
4- 14 IMt. •loti~ 1tummum"
maga , Vni·lu g, 9 !"eh 1nd 6 ineh ,
wHtl n• Remtna1on t"'" E C.,.
614-74'2:-2979
19'75 Ch-rohlf pt ck· up. run1
good, t&OO ; 1977 Fa'd 1111ton
wagon, goO<! cond. 1995 304·
87&-2848
74.
1
BUDGET Tfanamluion• Used &
f'ebUih . An type• Guarant..d a
m inimum o f 30 days. will
deliver , cnll ' & c;any Of Instal
Call 614· 379· 2220 or 'f. · 304 ·
6715-17511
19'77 Chwy P / U truck: run•
good. nice boctv. t1 ,295. C~ ll
614-281·&1522
.
2030.
Accessories
ln, l8fnalty Inspected lo g~are n
leed. Installation • pickup avail·
abla. C1ll 814-441 ·0966
1979 Ford Truck 1 / 2 ton Call
ahar 7:00 814-448-3243.
&4
.I
(J) SportsCenter (LI
(J) Entertainment Tonight
Uted & rebuilt lrsn•mi11iar11 All
79
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LETENT
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1c------'--:-::---:::
.
Vans
Pho n• 304-n3-
BUDGETTransmtll lon t · Used&
Rebuih, All typH . Guaranteed 1
minumum o f 30 dll't'S, will
deUv•r. c•sh & carry or instal
Ph. 814· 379-2220 or 1-304·
876· 6758
Oar
73
our ta,;;ily
quite Ire•quently.
One moved
day I heal1:l
my
brother lamenl. "I hope we don"t
.
.
.
move soon . ll's taken me three
,..-- , . - - - - - - - - , months in this place to learn -to
York. (0:30)
fBI JeHeroon.s
;7;6;::::;A~u:t;o;:;P~a~r~ts~== •
1988 Fard Ran
16800 Call
614-388 ·908&. PossiiJola o ld ew
trlld•
l
. ll--rli...:.Ar
.
2..,~..:1•-.tr.--11. "•
Hardcaatle and
osif
13 1500.00
0.
01
1 986 Dune Buggy with cla111c
MG t hell Runs good. C1ll
114-379-2573 Eve 's
61 Farm Equipfnent
Portable 40' 'x8 ' 1ighttd c hatlg&-abte letter SJgn 1299, oon
hghted 1229 Free delivery 1nd
leltert, WVa 800-642· 2434 or
Ohio 800-533· 3463.
Dilhwather, chtlt drawers ,
71
f .tri ll SIIJI JI III''
rebl uelng. free puppy with 81Ch
~u atng job, eel 304· 676 · 4131
Autos for Sale
·
anchored live from New
24 ft Ch ris Pontoan boat, 40 hp .~
Mercury motor. factory tra iler ,'-i
I I I 12 I
I [IUPPLM
I I I' Ii
II CIJ 9l lllil21
· 6:30 II (2) 1151 NBC Nightly Naw_
a
(J) lnolde 'ihe PGA Tour (T)
(J) II (I) ABC Nawa ~
III Nightly Bualneoo Ropon
1111 lllil21 CBS Nowa
[l) Newton•• Apple (0:30) C
IIJl ShowBiz Today News ol
the entertalnm&nt world is
315 HP Mercury Outbolrd, can- u
trois and steBfing. t396 Call " "
61•· 949 -2989. Eagle Rtdg e ~ 1
Small Engine.
~ 1'
the
be·
WONDIW
I
Ill (!) Buclc Rogers
dual allla. tilt trailer. *4.000 . ..
Call 814- 388· 9783
....
~
(I)
•
to form four simple words
I
.'
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[l) Sec,.l Clly
•
fBI Good Times
,.··
-197&
---------"--~~~~=Mark Twain 140 HP . I/ 0 , Jooo
3lh HP
. low
(J) SponeLook (T)
1-0 molor. N•ed• refurbishing 6 '
repainting Will ull ar trade fol
INestOck. A•king t1800 . Cell
614-448-7025.
•para 161!i , Bolen• Rid lit modal
900, no eng aoUd deck, pot
trae. R-E 1160, Tiller N R . t26.
Uud puth mowen, 18 Inch
B&D elect f34.96;, 22 inch
3 'h HP tech. t44 .96.
chief 6 HP tach.,
Room• for rent, d.,- . weak.
month. Gallia Hotel. C•ll 114·
448-9?15 . Rent a~ low as •120
month.
47
h." Skillcraft
II <2J
'Sieepi 4 to 8 . 120 HP Man;ury ~Jtt,
~;r::;::~:iE'
!etten of
0 Rearrange
four scrambled words
8:00 (1) Big Volley
1111 Newe
WORD
GAlli
----,,....-...--- f~ltt~ ~y
• .
, EVEI'IINQ
'
13e&
45
• · WED., JULY 1
Boats and
Motors for Sale
1 985 24 fl. Pontf;)on floatbOat. '
70 HP Evenruda mo tor, tralltlf'.
lote-htr81. See at Gallipolis , '-" Boat Club Call 814· 44~~t · ~ _ .
ceram1c block . 15
600 block
54 Misc. Merchandise
Callahan's Used Tire Shop , Over
1 .000 tires, siz&s12, 13. 14. 16,
16. 18 5 8 miles out Rt 218
C&ll 614 ·266-6261
llllotorcyclas
'::~:t;~' S©~~)A-·
lG£!f.S"
CLA T R. POlLAN
.
672B.
4PM . Ph 304- 675-3816.
.Television .
Viewing
Kz- 850 Kaw•uki , 4 cyl ;
8 800 00. Call1 -614· 24&-5801
after 5·00 or 304 ·875-7690
930e.
Home lor Sale
the Uaily
Ohio
1987
1, 1987
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio- -
Page 18-The
,.
.
Unbeknownst.to
everyone. it was a
111nr K
•
and stormy night.
DobbS. (0:30)
I!J) Taleo •from the Darkolda
11:30 D ()j 1!]1 Wimbledon "87
Updote
I]) SpartaCenter (L)
CI1 WKRP In Cincinnati
Q (J) Nlghfllne 1:1
fiDI Magnum, P.l.
iiJI Sports Tonlghl Action
packed sports h•ghllg~ls with
Nick Charles and Jim Huber
(0:301
•
Ill 1121 'Adderly' CBS Lola
Night Adderly vlslta an agent
ho•p~allred with a fatal,
wasting dlsease.(R)
@ Tropper John, M.D. Is
Thera a Doctor In the House
Ill (l) Late Show
1t:<IS D (2) 1!]1 Boat of Ceroon
t 2:00 CD Bume and Alten
I]) SponsLook (A)
CI1 Nlghtllna !;J
fl (J)lAciro Reall>eople
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the iength and fonnation ¢the words are all
hints. Each day the code letter's arJ.(!lfferent.
· .
CRYPT9QUOTE
•
7-1
MH
r
SHHM
QBCX
LHP
X FIR
HT
MH
L H P
V H
QXFC
QBUU
BC
S H H M
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B F A
K R_
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YMterdafta Cryptoqtaote: LIBERTY UNDER THE
CONSTITUTION IS NECESSARILY SUBJECT TO TH~
RESTRAINTS OF DUE PROCESS. ..,... TIIOMAS JEFFER·
Q
SON
•
~·
J
'
.
�1"898-~U- I ne U811y l:ientinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday. July 1 • 1987
MEN'S
VAN HEUSEN
Sport
-Shirfs
s,
XL
,
.Dress
Shirts
' ..
Sizes (14, L,
plus big
- sizes and tolls. Solids ..
· ilnd patterns. Gooil
Sl!lection - short
sleeves westerns
included.
Short sleeve styles,
neck sizes 141/2 to
17. Solid colors ana
neat patterns.
Save
Reduc:ed
3·5°/o
35~/o
B~GINS
MEN'S AND BOYS'
Super Savings!
MEN'S
SUMMER ·WEIGHT
JACKETS
KNIT SHIRTS
Good styles and color selec.
tion. Boys' -sins 8 to 18 men's S, M. l, XL
1/2 Price
Reduced
MEN'S
HEAD WEAR
Ivy League caps, golf; work
caps, roll-up hats and more.
All siles.
CASUAL
SLACKS
Regular
and
Sires
SU.9S
and XL.
BOYS'
SHORTS
&.JAMS
Select your favorites in sizes 8 to
Summer Shirts
and save. Plenty of. hat
weather to come. .-
35°/o
Our e~tire selection induded.
Knits in tonk tops, dress looks,
jeans shirts and novelties ~ pfus
our fine selection of sporl shirts.
Sizes 8 lo 18
Savelluy 35°/o
far
now
OFF
S~l450
.
•ack-to·cchool wear.
S-UMMER
OUTFITS
One and 2 p<. suits, bibs, trawlers and
dolls and shorty sets. Boys' long P.J.' s
and 2 pc. short P.J.' s.
playsuits. NB to Size 7.
40°/o OFF
REDUCED
GIRLS' SIZES 7
GIRLS SIZE 3 TO 14
.
to
40°/o
•
CHILDREN'S WEAR - 2ND FLOOR
DENIM
.JEANS
Missy and junior sizes in o variety of
styles you fll like.
SAVE
35°/o
REDUCED
50°/o
Slacks • shirts - blouses • sweaters
to mix or match.
Regular and extra sizes.
'
35°/o
.
:
WOMEN'S
.
' AND JUNIOR SIZES
.SALE PRICES
SPORTSWEAR
CHILDREN'S
By O<ean Padfi< • Pandora and
Wrangler. Includes shorts, blouses,
tanks, skirts and s.weaters.
35°/o OFF
SPRING
JACKETS
REG. $11.00 TO $36.00
•
$ 879
'
SALE PR)CES .
START AT
'
.
24 1/t -
Pants suits, lab jackets, pants &
skirts separate.
· ·
Sale Priced .
ENJOY SAVINGS UP _TO 50%·
ELBERFELDS
USE OUR FREE
PARKING LOT
POMEIOY
I
f/berfeltl•
ru•l
1~1 • •
~OT
n1
g HIO
1~ 11
CHI.RGt UIIO
lnstnamental musk. Thl> new building went under
construction on Sept. 15, · 1986. The outside
structure was pul up by a co ntractor. but all of th e
Inside · wcfrk, Including the plumbing, heallng.
electrical work, and even the cabinets were
installed by l e~ lonnuin'S who donated their time.
OPEN HOUSE · - A• a pllllt of Middleport'•
Fourth of July celehratlon, Fee ney· Bennett Post
128, American Le!!lon. will have an upc•n house, 2
to 5 p.m ., al its new building, ('O rner of Filth and
Mlll Streets. !Wfreshmcnts will be served and
O,nver Rice; will be on hand to provide
Celeste, guard c9ntinue
disupte over 1989 trip
'
UNIFORMS
Sizes 6 to
also petites,
•
en tne
1 Section 1Q Pages
25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper _
..
vot ed 10 give 5 per cent raises to employees in th e
offices of the recorder. commissio ners, treas urer ,
aud itor, probate·j uvenlle court, common pleas
court . co.unt y cour t. clerk of cou r ts, vet erans
s<'rvices. board of elections. infirmary , sheriff
a nd prosecut ing attorney.The fiv e percent raises
will amount to Sl9,098.93 from the cost recovery·
funds .
ThiS Is· the third year for the contracted cost
recovery program wh ich enables the county to bill
s tate and fe deral agencies lor services performed
on their beha lf In the courthou se.
The sa larv increases should go In effecl with th e
pay period endiqg this coming Friday . . .
Coun ly En'glncer Philip Roberts repdrted that
the newly passed sta te gasoline tax increase will
mean a $13, 000 per month increase to the count y
hi l(hwa)· d e part ment from September to June
1988. a nd a $1:i.OOO per month increase th erea fter ,
ac cording to the Ohio Departmen t of Taxation .
Patt y Parker, chairma n of the Meigs Coun ty
Bicenten ni al Celebra tion to be held July B. 10
a .m. to 5 p.m .. at the Meigs Cou nty fairgrounds.
updated the board on ceiebratiqn plans. The
celebration, being held in hon or of the bicentennial of the Nor thw est Ordinance and U.S.
Constitution. will include a number of varied
events.
The commissioners commended Parker on her
efforts on behalf'of the celebrafion. and on behalf
.of monthly programs which ha ve been held to
comm emmorate the bicenlenniaL
Ju ly 22, 10 a.m . was set for public view in g of
Salem Township Road 326 1Pi geon Ridge Road ) ,
off Count y Road 1. north of Sa lem Center .
Sout hern Ohio Coa l Compa ny, which owns
property on both sides of the road . is reques ting
clos ure of th e road which is no longer passable.
Joe Ramsey. representing SOC CO, pr·esented a
recommenda tion from the tow nship trustees to
close the road . There are no houses on the road
Ramsey said. A public hea.i'ing· to . discuss th·e
pro posed road closure will be held at 11 : 30a. m . on
Ju ly 22 in the commissio ners' office at th e .
cour thouse. The proposed road clos ure will be
advert.ised prior to July 22.
6.1 percent; best smce 1.9 79
Regional road projects
t~pic of SEOR(: meeting
WOMEN'S
.
•
.
'
: ·. '.
-,
June jobless rate drops to
COLU MBUS. Ohi o tUPli _i_ ·g uardsmen would face, a nd he
Gov . RlchardCelestesayshe wil l has Invited Jwo Ohi o congres s-.cont inue to talk with Naliona i men to go along.
Ohio Nal ional G uard officers
Guard ofllclals In Washington
about hi s opposit ion to send ing told Celes te lhis week the Pen·'
Ohio Na tional Guard troops to lagon ha s lhrea te ned to deacti the Honduras lor tral ninl( exer- vate the guard. which would
mean the loss ot a ll federa l funds,
cises in 1989.
The governor said Wednesda y If Celes te refu ses to let unit s train
he Is hoping for a favorable court - In Centra l America as ordered.
The Pent agon has sched uled
decision In the cas.e. but in the
absence of that wil l obey a 1986 three engineering · unit s frbm
law giving the federal govern- Ohio to train In Hon'duras in 1989.
ment the r ight Joorder state unit s mainly building roads .
to tra in in any locatio n, even. in
(:eleste opposes the training
peacetime .
mission becau se Hondu ras
Meanwhile. he said'. he is borders war-torn Nicaragua.
consideri ng a viSit . perhaps later where he a lso opposes the Rea lhls month. to , Honduras to ga n administratio n's att empt s to
·determine what , dangers Ohio aid the Contra rebels.
DEVON
SPORTSWEAR.
Big selection of styles and si'zes for
everyone. Buy now and save.
1/2. PRICE .
FOR THE JULY SALE
SAVE
VVonnen's Dresses
CHILDREN'S DEPT. - 2ND FLOOR
PRE-TEEN
DRESSES
"
The Meigs Co unty Commissioners decided
Wednesday to walt one more week before making
the final · decision on whether to .reject a gran t
!rom th e E nv ironmental Protection Agency to
lund 85 percent of costs 10 upgrad~ sewage
systems in Tuppers Plains .
Because only about 30 percent of th e Tuppers
Plains residents included In th e proposed projecl
wen• present at a June24 public hea rin g to discuss
th e sewage project, th e commissioner s fe ll they
shou ld postpone a decision In order to give oth er
a'ffected resid~nts additional time to comment:
So far. no comments have been received by
Commissio ners Ma nn ing Rous h a nd Rich Jom•s.
Commissio ner David Koblentz reported 1hat' he
lnlliated co mmenls from two resident s, both of
whOm felt t,he gra nt s hou ld be ·re jected.
Roush a nd Koblentz said that because of the size
a nd importa nc(· of the project . ali affected
r esident s shou ld have a c hance 10 vote on t he
CHILDREN'S DEPT. - 2ND FLOOI
SAVE
WRANGLER WoMEN'S & JR. SIZES
SHORTS
..
OFF
818 SA~INIS
ALL WOMEN'S AND JUNIOR SIZES
project.
Jones took an opposite pos ition. noting that
numerous · public hearings wer e held to updat e
residents on th e project as it progresSfi'd . He
pointed out thai the las t meeting was heav ily
a dvertised and copies of the project ' s management and use r 's charge . plans were made
availab le to residents for review prior to the
meet Ing .
Those who atte nded the meeting were " ovNwhelmingly a!'ai ns t" the project he said. And
si nce no comme nt s have been received from those
not at the meeting. Jones said it appears the
residen ts do no t support the project..
If the commissio ners do not hear comm ents in
Javor of the ·project, they expect · to pass a
resolution next week to rej ect EPA 's offer
"according 10 th e wis hes of the people" of
·
Tuppers Plains . .
Through the county' s cost rec.overy plan, about
$24.000 is available lo be used to raise salaries of
approxima tely 43 count y general fund e mployees.
After discussing the matter. the commiss io ners
·SALE!
Sizes 6 months to size 4. Solid <olors
and patterns.
SAVE
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
REDUCED
LITTLE BOYS' .
•
f
Meigs ·ConlinissiOn _will ·'wait_uiie ·more week'
!:
14
.. ·. ·. ·.. ·t·
Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio, Thtnsday. July 2. 1987
•
CHILDREN'S WEAR - 2ND FLOOR
,_
at ·y
e
12_mont~s up to size 7. Regular shorts
and jams. Good selection - well
known brands.
Boys' sizes 12 to 24 months and 2 to
7. Pi<k your favorite c.olor and style.
Save now on all of our girls' shorts
- match or mix with shirts on sole.
Special group of pre-teen si1es at
reduced prices now.
·--.
.Childrtn's Wear- 2nd floor
SHORTS SALE!
Tank tops, jeans tops, dressy styles.
A, big seledion for this sal~.
CHILDREN'S DEPT. - 2ND FLOOR
floor
BOYS
40°/o
- ·.'.
1987
Highs between 80 and
_ · Probahlllly of rain 20 oer•centl
.. Friday.
7904
40°/o
SALE!
SWIM TRUNKS
40°/o
Reduced
60s. Partly cloudy Frl<day.J
Pick 4
Page4
•
Cloudy tonight. Low in- ·
372-
bX and 7 to 14, You'll Jike the
LITTLE aoYS'
SUMMER TOPS
SAVE
DRESS
SALE
Newborn si us, 1 to 3, 3 to
Daily Number
seleclian and utro saving1,
OFF
2~d
Children's _Dept.
35°/o
GIRLS'
eludes all kinds swimwear.
·SUMMER SHORTS
SAVE
TRUNKS
By le Tigre. Good seledion in ·
boys' 8 to 18, men's S, "M, L,
and XL.
SALE!
Sizes 6 months to 14. In · :
SUMMER TOPS
40°/o
SWIM
CHILDREN'S
maining stock 19" and 21 "
models. S~me self·propelled.-
40°/o
•
MEN'S & .OYS SIZES
SAVE 35°/o
LAWN
MOWERS
Closeout prices on our re-
CHILDREN'S DEPT. - 2ND FLOOR
CHILDREN'S DEPT. - 2ND FLOOR
Shorts &Jams
Save
•
..
Cory~ghted
SALE!
I!l"~~~ I :l•i1 SWIMWEAR
LlnLE BOYS
SUMMER
SLEEPWEAR
Girls' nite shirts, gowns, pojamas, baby
SJ9.9S .
•
, Vol,37. No.41
MEN'S
Ciose-Out Sale!
BOYS'
1'8
A.M.
Save now for hot weather to
come. You'll like the selectior'!
of styles and colors.
Reg. sa. 9S....... Sale S6.71
Reg. ·s10.9L.. Sale '8.21
Reg. '12.95.. ... Sale S9.71
Reg. S14.9S... Sale '11.21
S, M, l
Very comfortable
and oasy to wear. Solid colors.
35°/o Save.25°/o
CHILDREN'S
'
-DRESS
TROUSERS
REDUCTION SALE!
OFF
.Sale Priced
MEN'S
REDUCED!
REDUCED!
~9:30
MEN'S
Our entire se_lection on sale.
Regular and extra large sizes.
Solid colors in lighl and basic
shades.
Many txctllent styles and colon
in tonic tops. jeans shirts, drossy
knits, and novelties. S, M. L, XL
plus big sizes to 4X.
'
·.
THURSDl Y, JULY _2nCI,
Ohio Loiter\'
•
·Reds ·outlast
AstrQs
The il!rector of the Ohio Depar tme nt of Transpor tation will
\ speak at the annual Southeastern
Ohlo Reglona) Council summer
meeting July 16 at the Fairgreens Country Club In Jackson
Co unty .
'
Warren Smith. ODOT directot·,
will speak to the membership at
the annual dinner meeting following a golf torunament which
has been planned at 8 a.m.
Currently two of the SEORC's
six priority projects are now
un!er construction, the Jackson
by-pass and the Albany to Athen~
portion of the Appalachian Highway. Smith will update members
on lntitiatives in the SEORC
highway package w111ch Includes
begil)nlng engineering studies on
four projects and discussing the
'
By CRAIG WEBB
WASHINGTON (UPTi -The
nat ion' s unemployme nt ril) e
dropped . to 6.1 percent In June.
·the bes t s howing since 1979,
because t h e labor forc e shrun k
more than usual, the Labo r
Dep"rtment reported today.
Th~ gover nm en t said the rat e
appeared to go down in iarge part
because fewer youn 11: people than
normal Had enlered t he labo r
for ce by the!t!lle it surveyed the
job market in June.
An estimated ·119.2 milllon
people we re in the civilia n labor
Io ree, 476, 000 !ewer th an in May ,
the govern men1 ·sa id. Of tha t
force, 112.2.6 million peo ple were
employed. 190.000 less than in
Ma y, while 7.26 million were out
of a job a nd·looking for one. .
That represent s a 286.000 person drop ·in people looking for
wor k. Because It fell by more
th an lhe drop in total emp loy men! . the rate fell as well .
June's 6.1 · percent civilian
jobl eSs rate is the best si nce
December 1979, when it stood at
6.0 perce nt. The rat e was 6.3
percent in April and May .
year~.
Officials
continue
search·.
said .
The teenag e unemploym ent
r~te fell1 .8 percen tage points to
15.9 percent. The rate was
unchanged for adult men a t 5.5
percent and shrank 0.2 of a
percent age point for ad ult
women .
Whit es recorded a 0.1 percentage poinl dr op in thei r jobless
rate to 5.2 percent. Blacks felll.l
percentage points to 12.7 percent
and Hispanics' rate dropped 0.2
percentage point to 8.5 percent.
The 6.1 percent overall rate
covers only the civilian popula-'
\ion., 1f n:!iUta ..y pe.rsonool. slatloned in the United States are
Incl uded as part of the labor
force. the overa ll jobless rate
was 6 percent. ·
Si nce June 1986 !he nation's
unemployment rate has dropped
a full percentage poin\ while t·he
uumber of people employed has
risen by 2.5 million. Many
econo mists have been surprised
by that growth in emp\oyment,
saying they didn't think the
economy was strong enough .to
__ sy pport that many_new. .people on
the payrolls.
Battle lines ·draWn for.
. Bork
•
•
nomination on high court·
WASHINGTON tUPI)- President Fi<:agan's bid -to put Robert
Bark on the Supreme Court. a n
efforl to extend the reach of
conservative principles for years
to come. cou ld spark the tough est
Senat e co nfi rmation fight on
subh a nomination in almost 20
ROBERT BORK'
The "verage non-farm employment grew by a smaller than
expected 11 6,000 workers. nearly
all of th em in serv ice - rather
than goods-prod uci ng. jobs.
Janet Norwood, commissioner
of.the Bureau of Labor Stat istics.
said in a sta tement that the
nation's non-farm payroll had
been grow ing by 250,000 people a
month from January through
April.~ then ·Slowed to 100,000 in
May and June.
· "In summary. the data relea sed th is mornin g show a drop
In joblessness in June but very
little change in .employment,'<
s he said . "Factory employm ent
stayed a t Ihe May level, a nd the
pace of job growth in services
slowed ."
The Labor Department also
said the average number of hou rs
worked per week In manufacturin g plant s by production line
workers s tayed the sa me at 41
hours. but the number of hours of
overtime per week shrank by 0.1
hour to 3.7 hours a week. 1
Teenagers accounled for more
than two-thirds of the ilecline in
the number of j.ob seekers, it
Liberal opponents arid conservat ive support ers of the co ntroversia l federal · appeals cou rt
judge drew battle lines immedia tely upon Reagan 's announcement Wedn esday of hi s choice .to
succeed the retired moderate
Justice Lewis Powell.
Sena te Democrats vowed to
question Bork on everything
from fin e poinls of co ns titutiona l
law to his role as the man who
carr ied out President Nixon's
.
orders to fire Watergate special
prosecutor Arch ibald Cox in 1973.
Conserva tives cheered the de cision. hopeful that by replacing
Powell as the cr uci al vote in
many 5-4 decisions. their views
will dominat e the nation's highest court long after Reagan
leaves office.
Reagan end ed five days of
speculation about a successor to
Powell by picking the man tha t
senior Whi te House officials said
was "at the fop of everybpdy's
list" right from the start. Of(i ciais said a final dec is ion was
postponed as a politica l jud gment in defe rence to var ious
se n ato rs pushing ·o ther
no1;11in'ees.
'Bor k. 60. is a formPr Ya le
University law professor who
.
shares Reagan,' s strict ronstructionist view of the Constitution
and has criticized Supreme Court
rulings on issues such as civil
rights, affirm at ive ac tion and
abortion.
The president praised his man
Wed nesday as "a premier constitutional authority" and urged the
Democratic-led Senate to s peed
co nfi rmatio n hearings so the
co urt returns to full strength
before its fall session begins Or!.
5.
"I have eve ry expecta tio n 1the .
Senate) will do so." Reagan said
at a brief appeara nce in tlie
White House with Bork, who left
without saying a word. "I n
taking thi s action today . I' m
mindful of th P importance of this
nomina tion .''
Heavy rain in northern Ohio
to 6 feet deep was reporled
The Brentllngers suffered
By United Press International
cover
ing some roadways in Ric-hburns
in
the
·
e
xplosion.
officials
A,uthorltles are still looking for
Nearly 4 Inches of rain fell on
land
Count
)·.
cl ues in connection with a male part s of north central Ohio e ar ly said. They were initially treated
Pollee
said
Ihey had ' to use
infant. found abandoned June 22 today, ca usin g widespread flood- at a Mount Gilead hospit al before
other two priorit y proj@CIS now
to
resc
ue
trtic)Sers from
boats
in the Chester area . Anyone with ing that closed dozens of high- being transfer red to the.burn unit
und er construction. .
their
cabs
on
some
highways in
at University Ho ~pita.l in
Information on this case is asked ways, forced the evacuation of
The four projects on the
Coun
ty,
where
Route
Richland
to co nta ct ·the Me igs County several res idents and sparked a n Columbus.
· SEORC priority list are the . Sheriff's office at 992-3371.
30,
a
major
ci:Jsl
-west
art.ery
Meanwhil e, residents of the
ex plos ion that injured a Mount
RavE>nswood br id ge access, the
Wh etstone park, the . nearby througl) the s tate .. was closed .
Brent Larkins , 21, was ar- Gilead couple .
Appalachian highw ay from
Several strer ts. , in · Mans!irld
rested In the Portlantl area
Pollee officers were forced out Moh awk Trailer Park aild lhe
Athens to Belpre, the Appalach·
were
und er waler and a Richland
partment
complex
Thistlewood
a
Wednesday eve ning by Deputies
1an ·hlghwax from Givens toStat e , J!mmer Soulsby and Dan Levin·g- • of their headquarters in Shelby, were evacuated, The two trailer County sheriff' s lie utenan t desRic~land County, about 70 miles
Route 104 rn Pike County and a
parks and the apartment com- cribed th~ flooding there as the
ston on charges of gross sexual north of Columbus.
by-pass at Ponsmouth.
Imposition. Larkins was released
Jack and Nancy Brentlinger, plex, where ' nearly 100 people worst In slx or s even years .
' A highlight of the summer by County Court Judge Patrick
Dozens of . hlg hw~ ys were
live, are located in ·a low·lylng
meeting is the golf tournament O'Brien on his own recognizance resider.ts · ·of the Whetstone area on the ~outh side of Mount closed or covered with ·water.
l"'hlch has . been planned. Bill and was scheduled for an Initial Trailer Park In Mount Gilead,
· throughout north ce ntral Ohio
Gilead,
t;:hilds. golf professional at the appearance before the judge this about 50 miles north of Colum- . Less than 100 people were ·and some northeast Oh io
•bus, were Injured whel\ a explo·
Jaymar ~~If Course In Meigs
sian ripped through their mobile taken a Red Cross shelter near counties.
' <;:ounty . will act as tourname nt mor:nlng.
A flash flood warning was
Mount Gilead, a Morrow County
During today's Initia l appear- home.
Issued
early today for .several
ance, a preliminary hearing was
Authorities believe hi gh water sherl!f's department spokesman
counli~s
in north cent ral Ohio
set for 1 p.m. July 15. Larkins In lhe park caused a propane gas said.
SEORC Box 271, Wellston.
that
were
hit by heavy rainfalL
Res idential evacuations also
signed a$2,500personal recognlz- line . to )lreak, sparking the
1 Robert L; (Bob) Evans is the
The
warning
expired at 4 a. m ..
were reported in Morrow, Knox
a.n ce bond and was released by ex plosion.
president or the SEORC.
today.
and j=tichland counties. Water up
'
.
(Continued on page 101 ·
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1!~~~~o;. ~~!i~rs a~~~~=~~~~·~~
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�
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07. July
Text
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July 1, 1987
haskins
hatch
johnson
pollock