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Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Plealll'lt. W.Va.
Inside:
By the Bend ............ Page 5
Classllleds ........... Pages 7-8
Cornia!-TV .............. Page 9
Deallti ...................Page 10
Editorial ................. Page 2
Sports ................. Pages 3-4
NAME BRANDS
lASSEn
FLEXSTEEL
RIVDSIDE
KINCAID
BENCHCRAFT
KEMP
SPRINGAIRE
ASHLEY
OYER 100 LIVING ROOM SUITES
·ovER 50 .BEDROOM SUITES
OYER 50 DINING ROOM SUITES
& DINmES
OVER 200 RECLINERS & CHAIRS
OVER 100 OCCASIONAL T
OYER 25 SLEEP SOFAS
UNLIMITED MA
1
&
ENGLAND
CHARISMA
·CORSAIR
HARRIS
DESKS, BOOKCASES, WALL
UNITS, CHESTS, CEDAR
CHESTS, SOFA TABLES,
CREDENZAS, HUTCHES
e
Vo1.36, No.30
Copyrighted 1986
•
at y
en tine
1 Section. 10 Pag01 26 Conu
A Multimedia Inc. Newap1per
Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio, Monday, June 16, 1986
e
•
ltlll
Arson may have been
•
cause; estnnate
costs
$400,000 to $500,000
By BOB HOEFUCH
Sentinel NeW!I Staff
Arson is believed tot~e• tbe cause of a ftrewhlch ravaged the Meigs1nnknown historically In Pomeroy as Remington House at Ule corner of E.
Main St. and Lynn St. - early Sunday morning with damages set at
between $400,001 and $500,())).
Area firefighters worked like a well-oiled machine as they attacked the
ea rly morning blaze which threatrned the middle block ri the Pomeroy
business section. They were under the direction of Pomeroy Fire Chief
Charles Leg~r who said that the Pomeroy Fire Departmrnt had worked
out a plan which would be followed li the Inn l'\lercaught fire. The plan was
followed Sunday morning and Legar had great praise for the area
fireflg!lters who brought the blaze under control and kept tt contained.
OwD;!rs of the Inn and the public also were high In Ulelr praise of the
firemen' s work since the blaze was r1 such magnitude and buildings along
E. Main St., are all old and probably very susceptible to Ore hazards.
COFFEE TABLES
END TABLES
CLOSE
OUTS
Starting At
$888~
RECLINERS
Starting At
$1 98 88
l VING ROOM SUITES
Starting At
Startindt
$18888
CASH & CARRY
BEDROOM SUITES
Starting At
OCCASIONAL
CHAIRS
Starting At
$9888
SPRING AIR
MATTRESS &
BOXSPRINGS
0°/o INOFF
sns
Summit in
GOr'bac-hev' S
court
FIREFIGHTERS ON SCENE - Firelighters from
several area fire departments were oo hand to batUe
the blaze lhal gutted the Meigs Inn complex on East
Main Street In Pomeroy, Flreflghlen; were on the
scene UDIII 6:30 a.m. Sunday and the stale lire
marshal's office Is Investigating the cause oflhe lire.
$588 88
0°/o OFF
All PICTURES
weiJ.olled machine to attack Sunday momlng'sllre which oilslroyed the
Melp 1rut In downtown Pomeroy.
ON
WHITE OPEN STOCK
BEDROOMS
DISCOUNTINUED STYLES
ON COVERS
AS IS &
ONE OF· A KIND
$2 8888
WATER BEDS
FIRE FIGHTERS FROM 10 ·area departments worlred like a
UPTO
.Empire60~·
OFF
Furniture hat to elaar
- at the laaat - Itt antlra
taoon• floor to •rop the
calling ••• ra•o•al. Yet, 1/3
of E~nplra't thowrooM •••••
olean•• out. So wa'va got the
· prleet to •o Iff
ntl'> SENTINEL PHOTO was takm at the peak of
n.e
•
Sunday momlng's fire which destroyed I he Meigs Inn
In downtown Pomeroy.
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - A new
overture from President Reagan
has left prospects lor another
superpower summit in the hands ri
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev at
a time of contention and possible
opportunity in U.S.·Soviet relations.
The White House confirmed
during the wwkend that Reagan
sent Gorbachev a lettPr proposing
tha t Secretary or State Georg£"
Shultz and Soviet Fore ign Minister
Eduard Shrvardnadze meet soon,
possibly In Europe, to develop an
agenda lor a summit late this year.
The letter. delivered In Moscow
last week by U.S. Ambassador
Arthur Hartman. wa s described by
administration off!icials as concili·
atory in tone.
When asl«•d about the lettN
Sunday as he ret urned lo the White
HouSE" from the pl1'siden t ial rPtreat
at Camp David, Md., Reagan
refu sed to discuss its content or say
whet her a response had been
rereived.
" We just con·espond." h0 to ld
reporters.
Shultz and Shevardnadl(' wpre
scheduled for a summit planning
session In Washlngton last month.
but the Soviets canceled til2 session
In r esponse to the U.S. bombing
attack oo Ubya in April.
~agan' s letter coincided with a
sw irl of confusion and con troversy
over his renunciation of the SALT 2
arms lirnitat ion treaty and a new
Soviet offer at the Geneva arms
talks on reductions in long· range
nuclear missiles.
The Soviets, denounc ing any plan
by the United States to exceed
SALT 2 Umits, suggested tension
over that issue could rndanger
plans fort he second summit agreed
upon by Reagan and Gorbachev at
their first I'Tl£'('1lng in Geneva last
November.
(Continued on page 101
Pomeroy Sunday morning to help
with the investigation of the fire
which had seriously threatened the
middle business block. He gathered
up materials from Inside the
structure for testing and, Chief
Legar said, Indicated that ai'Sln Is
suspected. The New York Clothing
Housee which Is on the ground ll'llel
as a part of the Inn complex had
extensive water damage as the
water put onto the fire at the lop
II'Vels of the building ran down Into
the store. Kemnlt Walton, manager
of the store which Is owned by
Thomas Oothiers of Gallipolis, and
Bill Otilds, president of the Meigs
Investment Corporation, which
owns the Inn complex, entered the
clot hing store about 12: I5 a.m.
There was heavy smoke inside the
store, however, and they were
unable to remove any thing except a
few business papers, from the
establishment. The New York
Clothing House had been Joca ted oo
the ground level of the ~mlngton
House (or Meigs Inn) since about
1897. Walton said that It is unknown
at this time what the store wlll do.
However, H the business continues
It wUI have to be relocated at least
untU the complex Is studied and
recommendations are made on
what can be done about redoing
parts of the structure. Insurance
adjusters for the clothing store
were expected to be In Pomeroy
Monday to examine the situation.
Walton said that the tremendous
amount of water pouring Into the
store from overhead was strong
enough to sweep gamnents of! of
coat hangers.
Bill Childs, president of the
Investment corporation, reported
that the corporation's board of
directors had spent $35,00l In
having plans drawn for the com·
plete renovation r1 the Inn and that
directors were this week expecting
to receive word that their appllca·
lion lor a block grant lor about
mJ.OOJ had been approved. The
board had planned to Invest some
$1.5 million in the revamping oft he
Inn. Now the plans are no longer or
any use and the hoard will have to
ca ll In an architect to determine
what can be done with the structure
and Its accessory buildings which
Include not only the N('W York
Clothing HOUS(' but the pizza facility
and another ground floor building
which housed City Loan.
The third floor of thr Inn was
demolished by Sunday moming's
fire. Otllds said, but the second
floor looks as though it might be
sa lvaged . An architect will be
called In to stud;· the safety of the
structure and to make recommen·
dations on what can be done to the
rema ins of the building if it is found
ContinuC'd on page 10
History of Meigs Inn: It all began in ·1847
(Editor's Note) Following Is the
history of the Remington House bt
Pomeroy, today !mown as the
Meigs lim, as prepared by Bob
'I1twl, Pomeroy, a great·great·
granc1son of the hotel's founders.
hotel in the heart!#. Pomeroy's
business section was raveged by
fire early Sunday momlng.
FURN-1TURE C0
Tying in with the flre were
several telephone calls, by a male,
to the Pomeroy Village Hall
dispatchers - Ellen Rought and
Kelly Snyder. The first of the
several calls reached the vlllage
hall at 11:31. The caller spoke r1 a
telescope on the second floor of a
building next to the Uberty Restau·
rant and threatened that It was
going to be shot out. The caller also
spoke of a bomb In a car on the
parking lot and there was also a
threat on the llfe of Pollee Chief
Jerry Rought. according toreporis.
After a couple of calls, no further
word was heard from the caller
untllabout2:30a.m. whenheaga!n
phoned and said, "I told you there
would be some excitement, you
..... ". By the time firemen were wel l
into fighting the blaze at the Inn.
Fire Chief Legar said the lire
started at the stairway between the
second and third floors or the Inn
near the loca tion of two large
windows on the Lynn St. side or the
building. And It was In this spot that
observers lire saw the lire. Pome·
roy received a ca ll to the scene at
11: 59 p.m. Saturday and the call
had come from Terry Gardner who
was working w1th the Pomeroy
Pollee Department. Leear said.
When Pomeroy fi remen arrived
at the Inn, men went Inside the
structure in an attempt to light the
fire. However, Chief Legar said the
blaze had gotten too big or a start
and they had to back off and l ight
the !Ire from outside the building.
There was equipment on the scene
In no time !rom Middleport, Mason,
Ga llipolis and Sy racuse plus man·
power from the lire department s of
Racine, Rutland , Orange Town ship, Coolville and Ravenswood,
Chief Legar reported . 0 1 unquestionable value to the efforts r1
firemen were the ladder trucks one from Gallipolis, used at the
front of the bu ild ing, and the Meigs
County vehicle, used at the rear of
the structure .
IJ'he nearby Ohio River provided
a great supply or water and good
pressure came from the lire
hydrants, firemen said. Four pieces
of equipment were able to pour
3,())) gallons or water a minute Into
the bu ilding while smaller hose
made it possible to put an additional
200 gallons of wat er onto the lire and
still even smaller hoSI' allowed an
additional 125 gallons each mlnut0
lor fighting the lire. Most of the
equipment was removed from the
scene by 6:30 a. m. which meant
that firefighters had put In a long.
hard night and that thousands upon
thousands or gallons of water had
been used to contain the blaze to the
Inn complex .
Frank EiSI'naugle of thP State
Fire Marshal's O!llce was In
Hls!Alry of the
Remington House
It Is not possible to rela te the
history of the Remington House
(dba Meigs Inn) without teillng
some d. the story of the WUUam H.
~mlngton family, who first developed the site, beginning In 1847.
Wllllam Holdredge Remington
was hom April 15,1810 at Warwick ,
Rhode Island. His parents, William
and Martha, were residents of Kent
County, Rhode Island. 'I'wo other
sons were born to this union,
Edward and Henry .
E~lsabeth Palmer Randall, the
wile of William H. Remington. was
born April 6. 1819 at Pawtucket.
Rhode Island. Her parents were
Job and Ann Cella Randa ll.
members of a well·known mer·
chant. shipping family,
W.H, Remington and his wife
were married on November 3, lB.%
in Cranston by the Rev. Abla I
Fisher. In 1838 they moved to
Athens, Ohio where Mr. Remington
established himesH In business. His
business Interests carried him to
Cuba where he remai ned for three
or four years.
Came Here In 1843
The ~mington family came to
Pomeroy In 1843, and set up a dry
goods and grocery store near the
Dour mlll at the upper end of town.
At that time, almost all of the town 's
business and residential areas were
located In the Kerr's Run vicinity.
In the spring of 1847 the Remlng·
ton store was moved to the comer or
Lynn and Front Streets, where It
has remained !'Ver si nce.
The Remington store In those
days was a three-slOt)' frame
pain ted to imitate brick. An 18Sl
advertisement placed in the Meigs
County Telegraph listed the followIng Items for sale at Remington' s
store: "Dry Goods, Groceries.
Hardware. Iron Ware, Stone Ware.
Queens Ware, Hats, Caps. Boots,
Shoes, Window Glass. Looking
Glasses, Clocks, Watches, Iron,
Nalls, Steel, Leather. Manila
Ropes, Oils, Fish. Provisions, Cot·
ton Yarns, Carpet Yarns, Carpets,
Mill Saws, V.'hite Lime, Plaster
Paris, MolasSE's and Sugar direct
from New Orleans, by the hoghead,
barrel. half·barrel. or retail."
The Remington store was a
casualty of the 1856 lire which
struck downtown Pomeroy . How·
ever, by August of 1857 W.H.
~mlngton was advertising a hotel
lor rent by October 1st, calling It
Continued on page 6
�·· '
Paga-2The Daily San~.
Pomeroy-Middleport. Oh
Monday, June 16, 1988 '
Commenta•'Y
The Daily Sentinel ·
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
BOB HOEFUCH
Assistant Publl8her/ ControUer
General Manager
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Edllor
A MEMBER or The United Presslntt-rnatlonal, Inland Dally Press Assocla·
tion and rhe American Newspaper Publishers Associat ion .
LE'ITERS OF OP lNION are welcome. They should be l(>SS than 300 words
lanK. All letters aresubjec1 Jo edlllng and must be signed with namt', address and
t<'lephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Lt>tters should be !n
good lastf', addressing Issues . not pe-rsonalities.
.
waldheiln and Castro ____
W_ill_iam_F_._Bu_ck_ley.;._J_r.
On the same day that Kurt
Waldhelm was elected president of
Austria, Ricardo Montero Duque
arrtved lnMiami -after2i years in
Fidel Castro's prtons. How did he
get out? WeU, Sen. Edward
Kennedy arranged it. He asked
Fidel Castro, and Fidel gave a
seigneurtal response.
That morning, Ronald Radosh, a
professor of history at City Unlver·
stty of New York, reviewed for the
New Yolic Tlmes a book by a
sometime fellow prisoner of Mon·
tero Duque, the dlfference being
that Annando Valladares was In
prison only 22 years, not 25. And
how did he get ou't? President
Francois Mltterrand asked Fidel
Castro to let him out, and Fidel
gave a selgneurtal response.
For some reason, Professor
Radosh announces that "It has
taken us 25 years to find out the
terrtble reallty - Mr. Castro has
created a new despotism that has
institutionalized torture as a mech·
anlsm of social control." It is not
clear wby it took "us" 25 years to
find out that Castro has been
sYstematically torturtng people.
Some of "us" have known ahout
this for 24 years, reporting M such
torture regularly, for Instance In
National Review.
But back to Mr. Valladares' book,
which Is called, "Against AU Hope:
The Prison Memoirs of Annando
Valladares." Valladares was a
young employee of the PostBl
Savings Bank In Cuba when Castro
came to power, and he expressed
misgivings about the communlza·
tlon of Cuba, and was therefore
aJTeSted. That was when It began.
In prison he was tortured . Here ls
how Professor Radosh paraphrases
life In the prison of F1del Castro:
"Mr. Valladares and other prison·
ers who refused 'polltlcal rehablll·
tatlon ' were forced to llve In the
Berry's World
g~:eatest heat and the dampest cold
without clothes. They were regU·
larly beaten, siDt at and sometimes
killed; they were thrown Into
punishment cells, Including the
dreaded 'drawer rells,' specially
constructed units that make South
Vietnam's Infamous tiger cages
seem llke homey quarters."
He tried once to escape, but
unsuocessfully. Retribution was
swlft. We quote now dlrectzy from
the author. "Guards returned us to
the cells and stripped us again.
They didn't close the reD door, and
that detail caught 11\Y attention. I
was sitting' on the floor; outside I
heard the voices of several approaching soldiers... they were go.
lng to settle accounts with us,
collect what we owed them for
trying to escape....They were
armed with thick twisted electric
cables and truncheons. Suddenly,
everything was a whirl- 11\Y head
spun around in tenibie vertigo.
They beat me as I lay on the floor .
One of them pulled at my 8rm to
turn me over and expose my back
so he could beat me mone easUy.
And the cables fell more <lrectzy on
me. The beating felt as If they were
branding me with a red·hOt brand·
ing !ron, but then suddenly I
experlen(l'd the most Intense,
unbearable, and brutBI pain of 11\Y
ute. One d. the guards hlld jumped
wlth ail d. ~s weight mmy broken,
throlj)Jng leg'"
Back to ProfessorRadosh: "That
treatment was typical. In the
r,unlshment rells, p1soners were
kept In total darkness. Guard
dumped buckets of urine and feces
over the prisoners will war~ off
rats and roaches as they tried to
sleep. Fungus grew on Mr. Valla·
dares because he was not allowed to
wash off the filth. Sleep was
Impossible. Guards constantly
wokP the men wlth long poles to
Insure they got oo rest.
WASHINGTON - The ugly
reality of more than ll,OOl highly
trained Soviet men and women
specializing in assassination, sabot·
age and other deadly. mischief the so-called Spetsnaz forces - has
not been lost on the Pentagon's
counter-terrortsm experts. They've
been quietly preparing U.S. de·
tenses against the Soviet special
forces .
No place Is more vulnerable to
Spetsnaz infiltration than Alaska.
The vast area of the thinly
populated 49th state- one sixth of
the U.S. land mass - stretches to
within three miles of the Soviet
Union ln the Bering Strait. Indeed,
there are some in the Pentagon whO
maintain that Spetsnaz forees are
already training against specific
targets in Alaska.
These suspicions, plus uncon·
finned reports of unusual Soviet
equipment In the Soviet Far East
and possible Russian lnflltratlon d.
Alaska, prompted Dale VanAtta to
vtsit the area and investJgate the
threat posed by special forces
COII1Jllll1ldos.
Last summer the Atr Force took
part in a coordinated exercise In
Great Britain, Operation Brave
Defender, atnned at a- potential
Spetsnaz strike. Even more to the
point, the largest nnllltary exercise
- open or secret - against the
Soviet threat, Including ~naz
forees, was staged In Alaska last
year.
Operation Brim Frosl Involved
18,100 Anny, Navy, Atr Force,
Marine and Coast Guard personnel,
185 aircraft and 1,100 vehicles.
The d!fflculty d defending
Alaska against inftlltrators Is truly
staggering. There are 72 square
mUes of Alaska for each American
soldier based there. Yet It may be,
as the late Gen. Bllly Mitchell ooce
told Cnngress, "the most strategic
place In the world" -an area that
is vital to U.S. security In the age ct
hlgh·speed aircraft and lntereontln·
ental ballistlc missiles.
Operation Brim Frost was In part
"designed to meet the threat ct
sabotage operations against critlcal
facllltles by unconventlonal war·
farefor(l's," accordlngloa briefing llne in oorthern Alaska, oor first
on the war game. In !lluthem line of defense, seemed the least
Alaska, the "enemy•: bf(l's at· jX'Otected.
tacked the Beluga Power Station,
For example, Van Atta was able
which SUAJlles electrlclty for much to walk wlthln a few feet 11 the
d the Anchorage bo\\1, where "vitals" of an early warning sta!Dn
two-thirds of Alaskans Uve.
six miles east of the northernrnost
In central Alaska , Anny Special U.S. community, the Eskimo vD·
For(l's posing as Spetsnaz Invaders !age of Barrow. He was not viewed
attacked the Trans-Alaska Jipellne wlth suspicion, because the occa·
- an olwlous top target, since it sional tourists who get there
suwnes on to the "Lower 48."
invariably have their pictures
While the securily Van Atta taken next to a totem po!e and a
Inspected at the Jipel!ne's souf(l' In signpost telling the dlstanre to Key
Prudhoe Bay was Impressive, oU West, London, New Yolic and other
otflclals acknowledged that it is points south.
impossible to defend the entire
Pentagon and Alaskan oftlclals ·
length d. the 799-m!le length ct admit there have been reports -as
pipeline as tt goes !Duth. About 43l yet unconfbmed - of suspicious
miles rlJ:ipellne are above ground: activities by unidentified Cauca·
four feet In diameter rut only an stans along the stBte's western
Inch thick, easUy wlnerable to coast north of Nome and M St.
conventional exf:loslves or even a Lawren(l' Island. Tb1s is the area
rlfJe bullet.
that's closest to Stberta, and the
Other tempting tar~ts are the Intruders could have been Soviet
radar stations that jX'Ovide the Spetsnaz Infiltrators, checking the
crucial early warning of missiles ·posslbtllty d. a future attack on
headed toward the Lower 48. The command and control facllltles
ones on the Dls!Bnt Early Warning there.
Ray of hope_~________G_eo_rg._e_M_cG_ov_e_rn
,
" That isn 'I the way we do things in Japan! "
Today in history
Today Is Monday, J\1111' 16, the 167th day of 1986 with 198 to follow.
The moon is moving away from Its first quarter.
The rooming stars are Mars and Jupter.
The evening stBrs are Mercury, Venus and Saturn .
Those born on this date are Wider the sign ct Gemini. They Include film
comedian Stan Laurel in 1800; publisher Katharine Graham In 1917 (age
69); authors Erich Segal in 1937 (age49) andJoyceCaroiOates 1n l9Jl (age
,48,; and actress Joan Van Ark in 1946 (age«!)'.
On this date In history: ·
In 1917, the first Congress of Soviets was convened In Russia.
·
In 1963, the Soviet Union put the first woman Into space -cosmonaut
Valentina Tereshkova.
.
In 1973, Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev arrtved In the United States for a
meeting with President Richard NlKoo,
In 1983, following the death of Brezhnev, fonner KGB chief Yurt
Andnopov assumed the title of president of the Soviet Union.
A thought for the clay: Erich Segal wrote: "Love means never having to
say you're sorry."
:
\
agreement, there is now at least
some hope that the deadlock of
mutual fear and distrust can be
broken despite Ire obstructionist
tactics of the Protestant leadership
that has flatly rejected lt.
This then is a plea for Irish
Americans, and all other Ameri·
cans wiD have J1 speciall1el!ng lor
Ireland, to use that relationship to
share what ls best In the American
tradition wlth rur lrothers and
sisters in Ireland. The glory fi
America Is that we have proved
here that the diverse groups who
comprise this dynamtc country can
remain faithful to their respective
sptritual and cultural traditions
while pledging allegtanCP to me
nation to achieve "Uberty ·and
justice for aU."
By DAVID MOFFIT
UPI Sports Writer
was in hettl'r shape physlcally than
he had been 15·20 years earlier.
.. .....
" You can't overcome youth . When
SOU'lll AMPTON,N .Y.t UPI Iyou are young, you can go rut there
Aft cr 26 y!'a rs on the PGA tour,
without doubt or fear."
Raymond floyd finally has
Floyd appeared to have neither
r<'arhi'd the threshold of 1\Jifllling doubt nor fear Sunday . He ix'gan
his ca rr<·r·lon g drea m.
the day in fifth place, thl'('(' strokes
" My goals the past few Y<'a rs behind leader Australian Greg
have b('('n to win thl' U.S. and
Norman, but birdied thrr<• of the
Brit ish OpPns," f loyd said Sunday
fina l nine hol<"S to win .
after capturing his firs t U.S. Open
"P!'Ople say I havr that rwinchampionship. giving him thrf'l' of
ningtlook on occasion ," he sa id. " I
the four "major" titles. "Now, all
don't know what it Is. But today I
that' s lett is the British Open. and I
felt totaily in control. I felt like
hope 1 can go after that one next everything was in sYnch. My
month ."
rhythm was in th<' 1ight mod<o.
Winning the U.S. Ojx'n was
"I felt togpthcr," said Floyd, who
floyd's goal cvl'r since he started finis hcd with the only sub· partotal,
play ing tournilment goU. and a t 43, a 1-und<or 279 that eai'IX>d him
' '·
he bacame the oldest man to clai m $115,1Ul. Lanny Wadkins and Chip
it. He won thr PGA Championship Beck finished tiro fo r second. two
in 1969 and !982, and the Masters in stmkes back, d<ospite m ch match ·
tropby after taking the U.S. Ope,. il Southwnpton,
TilE WINNER - Ray Floyd held ~the winner's
1976.
ing thc cou= record wit h !\-under
N.V., Sunday with a ont• under par 279. tUPI,
Floyd's victory on the Sh innecock 1\'is. " I was n('Verupset ."
Hills rourse, old<"St incorporati'd
Wadkins and Beck posti'd fil(>ir
281s more than an hour before
floyd fin is hed, and at one point
i;
tour's older vetera ns . 1 hr chrers they were tied at 1· owr with six
had barely subs ided from 46-year· others. including Floyd, for the
KIRKERSVILLE , Ohio tUPI)- 5.76 seconds or 25(i. 76 miles an hour, August 1984, the y<•a r he won thP old .Jack Nicklaus' tr iumph ill this IPad.
Former Funny Car world cham· while Bernstein was clockrd at 5.8l Winston world cha mpionship.
year's Masters. making him the
Floyd was still tied with Pay""
pion Mark Oswald ended a 22· seconds or 250.13 miles an hOur. The
"W<' have had our share of oldest M11 stcrs champion.
Stewart with five holes left, but took
month winless streak Sunday whcn win, the swenth in Oswald's carecr pmblems sin<'<' then. " h<' said. "W<·
" ! nrs·rr really thought abou t the k'ad for keeps when Stewart,
hc stunned defending champion was worth approximately $2;,(8),
have been mnnillg good , hut w~just ix' ing ~ : 1 yea rs oid, a nd this bo.' ing who wound up at 70.283. bog<>yi'd
Kenny &rnstein in thc 22nd annual
Veteran driver Connie Kalitta, havrn 'l had thr con'\iSIPn cy o11hP 1-(•rhaps mv last shot at a L:.S. No. 14. Floyd was home free after
NHRA BudwPiS<'r Springnattonals Ypsilanti, Mich.. defea t('(! J()(• 198<1 S<'ason. I think wr· an' finall Y Open. " said Flu.vtJ . afterfurg ingout getting his tounh birdie in a
a! National Tmil Raceway.
Amato tow in the Top rueidragster back on lrilek.
of a I<Jst round logjam with a bogl'yless round. at No. 16.
&lot'!' a record crowd of 41,000, title and Butch Leal, of nearby
"J3prns1Pin Wi! S Jht'.;~tl of mP until
closing round of lih Su nda~· rn y.·in by
"Anyone who tells you they aren't
thr :!.J.year-old Cincinnatian drove Blacklick, Ohio, won in Pro Stock about the 8l0-foot mark ." O.' wa ld t wo s1rokC'!<i .
k('('pillg an eye on the =reboard
the Old Milwaukee Pontiac Trans ovet· Warrpn Johnson.
sa id. '"lhr n I was ahlr to inch hY
" But , >Ome tim rs you have to far<' isn't trliing you the truth," Floyd
Am down thc quarter-mile strip In
Oswald 's last victory ca me in him ."
rea Iism. I did f('('f I'd ix'tter get on S<t id . "Ther<• are sco reboards all
llcrn>leln, Newport i:l<•ac h, with it. "
around, and you can't help ooticlng
Calif .. is ti'l' tl'iJ.,'lling world ehom·
.Jus t twn d d~'SP<Jrl i!'r . Flo~·d . who thcm. But I set my plan earlier in
piun and was thc df'f<•nding Sp rin g- has bo:'<'n playing on the tour since the W('('k, a nd made up my mind I
na tional s w lnl1f'r.
1%1, pointed out that while hr felt he was n't going to deviate.
Ka lilla , 4R. drove roa n P as~· win
, i \t.W
,,. ,......
! .
/
Springnationals draws record crowd.:~n~u~
.~:,j o~"~~n?n:~"~~ :~
Scoreboard ...
M il waukN• 2, Bos ton 0
Nrw York 4. Baltimorr 2
Minll('SO II:I 9, CIC'\'Piand :!
r.;,\TIONAL LEAGUE
By United Press ·International
Oakland 3, Texas 2
East
York .....n
Mont rr al. .•.... ..
P hil tlflPlph ia .
~ ('"'
Pittsburgh .
St. Loui ~ ........ .
whC'n Ama to's car suff<•l'('d f'ngi nC'
Saturday's Results
Majors
W L
Hi .729
Pet
32
.552 10 %
2fi
GB
.483 14 I>
28 :lO
25 .1f'
.m tB %
24 34
24 .15
We !it
.414 18 %
,407 19
Houston .. .. ...... 35 26 .574
San Francisco .
Atlanr a ... ...... ..
33
.10
Los Angr lrs ....
!ian D l r~o ....
C'ln cinn al i.. .. ...
31 32
29 32
24 34
28
30
.S41
.500
.492
.475
2
4Y.l
6
.414
9\>
5
Saturday's IW!4ults
Phlladolphla 7, Montreal
Ca II fornla 6, Kan sa s Cit\' ~
Toronto 6, Del rolf ~
·
S<>attle 7, Chicago .1
Result!il
7, Boston :l
Mllwauk<or
Toronto 9, Del ro il
(i
Minnesota 7, Clevr tand .1
Y o rk :~
Ba lt imore 4, NE."w
Oak land 9, Texas 2
Kansas City 6, Ca lifornia 5
S.attlc 10, Chica~o 5
Monday'• Game!l tAU Time• EDT)
Bosron (CirmC'n s 11 ·01 ar Npw Yo rk
rGuldry 4·61. 7:30 p.m.
Det ro it (Tanana 6-4 1 at Ballimon ·
Toronto 1Aiexand€'r4- 3l al Mil\l.'aU ·
koe iWPgman 2-51. 8:35p.m.
Kansas City
6
(Banhead 2-01 ar
Oakland !Langford 1-61. 10: l5 p.m.
Hou sron 7, S;:tn Francisco 3
San Dlrgo 12. Los AngPl{'s 0
Trxas (Hough 5·21 at California
IMcCaskill Hr. 10:35 p.m.
Tuesday'• Games
Kansas City at Oakland
Sunday's Results
Montn•al 2, Ph !lad£>lphia 0
Ci nr innat i !l. Allan! a 7
NPw York 4. Pitt sburg h 1. lsi
TE'xas at Cali fornia, night
Toronto al Mllwaukl'f', nlghr
Nrw York 8. Pltt sbur~h 5, 2nd
Chi cago t ~1. Lout s 3, 11 innings
Detroit at Bait Imore, night
San Francisco 7. Hous ton 2
Los Angt:•IC's 6. San Di('go 0
Monday's Games (All Times EIYf)
Philadelphi a rC'ar iton 4-71 at Chi ·
cago t Moycr <l-Ul . 4:05 p.m .
New York <Da rting 7·21 at Mont ·
rea l rTibbs l·2t. 7:35 p.m.
·
Sr. Loul ~ 1Cox 1·51 u1 Plllsburgh
tRholk•n 6·31, 7:3!J p.m.
l'lnrl nnarl !C.u lllck~o n 4·61 at
All ant a t P<.~ lm rr .1-51, 7:40p.m.
San Fruncisco ~GarrPlt s 5-61 ar Sa n
Diego 1Hawk lns 4-41 . 10:05 p.m.
Tuesd~ty'!il
Games
N<'" ' Yor k <tl Mont rral. night
St. Louis at Pittsbu rgh, night
Los Angr lf's .a t Atlanta, night
Hou ~ t o n ar Cinclnnarl. night
Sun F'rancisro at San DiCJ2:D, night
r\MERICAN LEAGUE
L
Baseball
Ba ll imorP- Announr t'<i sig n in ).! of
f'itzht frff' agPnl s chosrn in lhf' .l uflf'
amatPur drart : catchrr Mlchu<' l
Lehman; right· handed pitchers Tom
Michna, S i c~·<' William s and Rich
Jert ·handrd
pitchNs
Larry Mlns.
Chicago 1T\ L 1 -
PlacC'd rt ·nH•r
ttrl df' r Bob Df'rnl er on nw 1.1-dav
dl sab lf'd list: rmrgrd on sendin g
outfleldrr· lnflrlc:W r Tr r rv Fran ron a
to Iowa of lhP Am erican ·Associ ation
Pet
.656
GB
tAAAI .
,
Cincinnati - Placrd outfielder
Nick Esasky on the 15-day dl sa htcd
.:il7
3\\
from the 15-day d lsa blrd It s t.
Ea!il
w
Transaclions
Gordon Beattv. Gordon Dillard and
Dal!' Barry : ·and Sf'Cond ba sf'man
Philadelphia at Chicago
40 21
o7 25
Ne-w' York ..
:l5 25
B~tlllmorf' ......
.12 28
Milwaukc<' .
Cleveland .. .
30 :ro
T oron to.. ... ....
31 32
Ofot mil
27 .12
West
.14 27
Tf'JW S ..
.1 t 31
Ca lifornia.
.1t .11
Kansu!' Cll y
27 36
Oa kland .. ....
25 .16
Chicago .....
25 37
Min ni'SOta ..
Sl•a tl ll' .... ... .... . 25 39
Boston at Nf:'w York . night
Se-a tilt• at C'lev('land , nigh!
Chicago at Mlnnf'sotu. night
Winzenrt>ad;
list: ac ll\·a trd outfiC'IdP r Tracy Jones
.511.1 4\\
.!\13 7%
.000 9\\
.492 10
.458 12
.557
.000
3\\
.429
.410
.1\>
8
9
.403
9\\
.!110
..ll1 10 %
Placed r ellrf p!l chN
Houston -
Charlie Korfeld on the disabled IISI ;
recalled pitcher .Jeff Calhoun from
Tucson of Ihe' Pacific Coas t Ll'agu£'
tAAAI.
New York tALl - S.nt slmtstop
Bobby Mea cham to Co lumoos of the
lnternallonal
Lea ~w
IAAA l ; call {'()
up Infielder Ivan DeJesus from
Columbus.
Toronto -
Pl ac l'd rr liev Pr Ma r k
Eichhorn on the 15-day dlsa bll'd list:
rrralled f'l'\Jever Don Gordon f rom
Syracuse of 1hE' Intern at ion aI L Nt~U£'
tAAA i.
problems at tlx' starting line.
Kalitta's time was o.65 S«'onds 0 1'
217.97 milt•s an hour. Tn · ~< in was
also wm1h an estim ated S25.cm.
Amato. Old Forg>:>. Pa . didn't
compet e br<'auS<' his engi nP lost oi l
pm;sur(•.
Sunda~'s
rDixon 63 1.7:35 p.m.
Cincinnat i 2. Allanta 1
New York 5. Pittsburgh 1
S1. Louts I. Chi<'ago 0
nos ton .... ....
To understand the conflict in 1949 when the 26 southern counties
Northern Ireland, It is essential to seceded from the Brttlsh Cnmmon·
recognlze that il is painful and wealth and became a republic as
difficult not because lt is a struggle they are today.
between right and wrong. It is
The republic embraces four.
struggle between two rights - the fiftbs d. the land area of Ireland and
right of the · CathOUc minority has a population d. about three
nationalists, who would become a mllllon. Northern· Ireland, which
majority lf the northern countries remains a part d the United
joined the Irish Republic, and the Kingdom and is represm ted in the
right of the Protestant unionist Parliament in London, covers the
majority, who would be in the remaining one-fifth of Ireland and
minority as members of the Irish has a population of 1.5 nnfUlon Republic.
500;000 CathoDes, who generally
Obviously, the Northern Ireland favor joining the Republic of
question has its roots ln the ancient Ireland, and one mllllon Protest·
past. But with some knowledge of - ants whO, for the most part, favor
Irish history sln(l' the signing of the continued union with Britain and
Anglo-Irish Peace Agreement in the status quo.
1921, one can understand what is
The Northern Irish CatiDlics feel
really at stake In Northern Ireland rutnumbered, Intimidated, exf:loIoday.
ited and abused by the Protestant
That peace agreement came at majority In the North.
the end of a bitter and bloody
Paradoxlcally, the Northern Proconflict between the British and testant majority also sees Itself as a
iriSh during and after World War I, vulnerable minority siDuld the slK
and was accepted by Irish negotla· northern coontles merge with the
tors only after the British Prime Catholic-dominated 26 counties of
Minister Issued an ulttrnatum the Irish Republic.
threatening "immediate and terri·
Thus both the Protestants and the
ble war" if the terms were not Ca tholies rt the north genuinely
promptly compiled with. Although fear and resent !their actual or
It gave the new Irish Free StBte potential minority status and the
parUamentary government and dfscrlmlnatlon and ex!loltatlon
Independent status as a dominion of they believe is part d that minority
the British empire, the Irish had status.
objected that it required an oath of
The roost construcUve developalleglan(l' to the British Crown and ment In recent Irish history Is the
embraced only 26 of the 32 counties. Anglo-Irish agreement signed last
The Irish Free State oontinued to November by Prime Minister
press hard lbr independence from Fitzgerald ct Ireland and Prime
Britain, and in 1937 it achieved a Minister Thatcher ol Britain. The
new constltutlon that replaced the major provision ct tiE agreement Is
governor J!l!neral with an elected that "any chan~ In the status of
president and retained M1y a Northern Ireland would only come
limited "external assoctatlon" with about wlth the coMent d. a majority
the British Commonwealth. This fi the people rl Northern Ireland."
link with the British was broken by Because of the apparent fairness
the' Govermnent of Ireland Act of and constructive character of the
The Daily Sentinei- Page-3
Floyd achieves number one
goal with U.S. Open crown
.,
Chica go .... .. ....
Alaska iS vulnerable __Ja_ck_A_n_de_rs_on_&_D_ale_Va_n_A_ua_
l'omeroy- Middleport. Ohio
,........
'
Politics of a veto
When sUite lawmakers reconvene later thJs roonth to consider Gov.
Richard Celeste's Item veto in an Alzheimer's disease research and
tnoatrnent bill, the ootcome is a foregone conclusion.
Both the Hoose and the Senate will can(l'l the governor's veto of the
portion of the legislation that opens up nursing home expansions, on a
limited basis, for the first time sin()' 1983.
This can be said safely because both chambers approved the i
Alzbelmer's disease bill unanimously last rronth.
· Why, then, would the governor veto the part dealing with nursing homes
for Alzheimer's patients?
For the Celeste adi'Tiinlstratlon, partlcularly the Ohio Department of
Health, the section threatened to destroy one oft he main accomplishments
of the past four years - controlling skyrocketing health care costs.
The administration calculated that the ctfendlng language, added at the
last minute in the House, would allow nursing homes to sklrt carelully
drawn restrictions on expansion, and would add more than 2,(8) beds
subject to $16.7 million in Medicaid payments. So much for cost control.
"Their figures are dead wrong," sald House Speaker Vernal Riffe,
D-New Boston, who had the language added, and who is defending the
Alzbeimer's nursing home adclltions to the point ct overriding the
governor's veto.
Riffe says only a limited number of nursing home expansions would be
allowed and they would have to care exclusively lor Alzheimer's patients In
conjunction wlth a major hospital or university. Many ct the patients would
pay the bills themselves.
Rlffe has deep personal feelings abouttheissue. His own elderly father Is
recelvtng long-tenn care. The wife of his good friend, Speaker Pro
Tempore Barney Quilter, D·Toiedo, has Alzheimer's disease.
But Riffe's detenninatlon to override the veto ct tiE goverror, a fellow
Democrat whom he helped put In ctfice, goes beyond personal feelings . He
belleves the Celeste administration, under the guise ct cutting health care
costs, has handled the entire nursing home issue poorly.
•
The Ohio Department of Health stalled for two ~ars oo a request for an
Alzbeimer's nursing home In southwestern Ohio, which just so happened to
be In the district of Riffe's good frtend , House Mlnortty leader Corwin M.
Nixon, R·lebanon.
SimUar treatment befell other nursing hOm ' jX'Ojects :n southern Ohio,
including some In the districts of Influentlal lawmakers In Butler and
Hamilton counties.
Rlffe was particularly mlffed with tiE behavilr of Dr. David Jackson,
the former state health director now running for Cnngress.
"I think It's wrong, the way it was handled from the start," said the
speaker.
If an !tern veto protected the Integrity fi his health care cost conta!nment
program, Celeste probably was right In making lt.
But In raw political tenns, the veto could do nothing but hurt. Nursing
home .operators are legendary In the largesse they brfng to election
campaign funds.
And altho\lgh Celeste approved the rest of the blll jX'Ovtding $1.8 mllllon
in treatment, counseling and research CJI Alzheimer's disease, the r,ubllc
misperceptlon may be that he vetoed legislation to help old folks. In a
re-election campaign, that's no good.
:·
Monday, June 16, 1986
"Wrdidn't fer! confid<ont toda)',"
Ka litta said . "Wp had a t J'l'mPndou s
rnglne explosion du ling Sat urda)-' s
fina l qu alify ing round a nd it
destroyed eV<'rything . We also had
to replace an other engine i:t'forr tno
semifinals."
t
Top Furl favorit<' Don Garlit s.
Ocala, ria .. was Ujli<'t in ttl<' fir st
round by former NFL quarterback
Dan Pastorini. Richmond . Trx
Pastorini was elimin ated b)· Kalit ta
ill fit(> semifin als.
leal. a loser to .John>On la st wr'l'k
In ti'l' Cajun Na tionals. avenged
tha t fkofeat and stopped .Johnson's
two-race win strea k. Lca l's C a s t r
o I GTXTea m Nalionwisc Po ntiac
Tran s Am finished in 7.61 second s
ur 182.81 milps an hour while
.Johnliln fouled away his rhanCI's at
thr s1arting line.
"Our engine has had a miss ill it ,
and we didn't cure it unt il toda.1·."
l.....ea l said . "ll' s ni('(' to win a rarr in
vour hometown."
Sets course record
By Unlled Press International
Kazuyo Nakagawa. who shot a
<'Our.;(•-record 67 in the sreond
round , fired a 67 Sunday to win th<'
$127,000 Tohoku Queens Ladies Golf
Tourn ament at Akita, Japan . Na·
kagawa scored a thr('('·round total
Of:JI9, 5£'\'PO under par on thepar-72
eours<' at Akita Tsubilkidal Cou ntry
Club In northern .Japan. It was
Na kagawa's first tit le in her 3 1·2
yea r pro ca r('(' r.
Derby conlender sold
Clever Allrmont, a leading 19H.'l
Kentucky IX>rb) contender unt il
sidelined by an ill ju ry . has bN'n so ld
in Loulsvlll<'. Ky. The price was not
disclosed. The 4· year-old colt was
sold by W. C. Parter to Eugene
Klein, whoS£' New York sta ble is
trained by D . Wayne Lukas. Clever
Allemont recently broke a 14·
month dry spell with a win at
Churehill Downs.
"Y cs, I looked at the =reboard
today, oot I never chanwd ll1Y
method of play and I think tha i's
why I was successfu I. "
Two-time Open champion l.£>e
Tr('V ino, and Hal Sutton, both one
shot off the lead at the start of
Sunda y's play, wound up tied for
fourth at 71·282. Ben Crenshaw, who
had a Ill, was tied with Stewart at
28.3, and four-tlml' champion .Jack
Nicklaus !681, West German
Bernha rd Langer 1701 , Bob Tway
1711 and Mark McCumber 1711
were ali at 284.
Norman. the leader after the
socond and third rounds. balooned
to a 5-<Nrr 7!i Su nday to wind up at
285.
" I tricod to wt fired up," said
Norman, who suffered fiVe bog>:>ys
in a seven-hole span. " It was just
one of those days, I guess ... !lost it ,
and 1'1' t Floyd 1 won it. I'm not
S<tying I gave It away, oot I never
had a ell an(l' "1t h the score I shot."
Stewart, who bogeyed twooft no ·,
last thr"" holes, also recognized hi s :
downfall.
"i thought I was li ght there . but I
couldn't finis h it off." he said. " J
finished poorly."
Floyd, who has :!1 tour victories
than
and car('('r earnings of
$3.1 million. sa id f:l ay ing ~XJQrly last
Su nday in the Westchester Class ic.
where he woo nd up 12th after
stan in g the final day In the lead ,
has a hearing on how well IE pl ayi'd
this week.
"1 don't mean to boast, oot 1 had
more victories to my crsl it than
anyone else in the top 10. and I'm
the one who played like a rookie,"
hr sa id . ·•r was determined to do
better this week ."
rrore
Meigs Legion wins three of
four weekend diamond tilts
By KEITH "'ISECl •P
OVP News Staff
ROCK SPR INGS - Meigs cap·
tu red three of four ga mes over the
weekt•nd . taking a doubleheadrr
from Wellston Saturday and ga in·
ing a split with Loga n Sunday in
AmPriran Legion ba seball action
herr.
Satu rday, Meigs overwhclmcod a
winless Wr•liston nine. taking t tx•
first game 15-4 and the nightcap
11 -0. whlll' defeat ing Loga n &1 in
Sunday·, opener before losing &3 in
the .<;('Cond ga me. Coach Jack
Welker's crew gO<'S to 74 on the
!»C'ason.
MC'igs scorl'd nine runs in lhf'ir
first at bat again st Wrilston and
coastro to thf' ~~.·i n in Scuurduy 's
opener. Brian Durst led Meigs at
the plate with a double and triple
while Phil Bailey. Robbie Young .
and Scot Ghem all cracked two
sing les apiece. Da ve Amix'rgey
had a doubh' as did Da,·e Lockhat1
while winning pit cher Brian rr€'l'·
ma n added a singlr . Shawn Gilliland lr<l Wrllston with two singles.
1hc lefty rr""man pickcod up his
first win of the S<'ason, going the
first four innings before Brian
BisS<'ll hurlr<l the fina l inning.
Frecman fa nned lise, walked four.
and allowi'd only four hit s. Dan•
Sf'ch went thr· dista!IC<' fo r Wellston ,
fann ing three and walking four.
Both games wet·c called after fiv e
innings in a mutual agreement of
roac hes.
J eff Nelson thr£'w a masterful
two-hit shu tout in the second game
Sat urday and helped his own causr
at the plate with a single and
double. Nelson was in command all
the way, striking out 10 Wellston
batters while issuing only two
wa lks. Sech had bot h oft he.Jackson
Countains hits, a s ingle and double.
Donnie Becker led Meigs in
hitting with a singlP and home run,
thc mund -tripper coming the next
pitch after the Meigs centerfielder
had cleared the leftfieldfencc but a
foot foul. The SECond shot wa s well
over the lll foot mar ker in
leftcenter. First sacker Chris
Kennedy added two singles, Joey
Snydrr crackr<l a double. and Rod
Roush, Eddie Collins, and Charlie
Barrett each si ngled once .
Wellston pitching fanned three
and wa lked eight as starter Junior
Milliken was charged with the loss.
Meigs iooki'd in mld-season form
aga inst Logan In Sunday's opener
as Sou thern 's ace right-hander
Dave Ambergey buried a nlft)l
thr€'l'·hitter and barely mlssed
pitching a socond straight Meigs
shutout .
Ambergey, who fan""d right and
walki'd four in the blistering
humidity and heat, allowed Logan
its' only run in the s('Venth and final
inning on Jeff Brown's bad hop
triple to tight. Amil2rgey also
addr<l two singles as Meigs had
their third straight IO·hit game.
Hannan Trace's pride shortstop
Phil Bailey lastEd out a single,
doiiiile, 'and t liple while Scot Gheen
cracki'd a single and tvme run .
Other Meigs hitters were Kennedy
with a doubleandonesingle each by
Elecker and Mike Bartrum.
Mark McCallister wen t the dls·
lanec for Loga n, striking out one
and walking only three. Meigs
jumped oo the Logan right-hander
with five st raight hits to open the
game including a leadoff triple by
Bailey , Kennedy doubled, Gheen
cleared the bases with a three-run
homer deep <Ner the leftcenter
fence, and Becker and Bartrum
continued the four-run inning wlth
back-to·back singles.
The second game was called wlth
one rut in the top of the fifth frame
when !late umpire Art Stoba rt was
st unned by a wicked foul ball to his
neck-collarbone area and moments
later collapsed from heat exhaustion. Stobart was (jllckly revived by
Continued on Page 4
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SECOND HALF 1985 REAL ESTATE TAXES
Berry's World
EXTENSION GRANTED
CLOSING DATE JULY 8,1986
1) On first day of month following second half closing, interest is
charged on unpaid balance of delin~uent taxes fro'!' previous
year for period of time from precedmg December f1rst to that
day.
2) On December first, each year interest is ·charged against the
full unpaid balance of taxes for period of time from day estab- ·
lish~d in (1) above to date.
FAILURE TO RECEIVE BIU DOES NOT AVOID PENALTY AND INTEREST
OFFICE HOURS 8:30 TO 4:30 P.M. MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
PHONE NUMBER: 992-2004
"I have to give up Insider trading for a while. It
lookilas If 1may become an Insider of a different kind."
•
WINNING WOMEN - Jl'lnl place willllen mthe
ilK lemale dlvlsionsollastweoend'allfthuiiiiiFun
Run For Heart, &IJOIIIIOred by Vkau Memorllll
H08pUal, were, left to rlchl. Wendy llloe8, 111-18
year-old dlvlskm, Andf!'8,Thebr8, 12 ud IDler, Dana
'KuJtre.Carllon, 1~, and Bette Krawsczyn, 31-45. ilK
winner was Wendy K1oes, Proceeds from the event
beld Salurday In Middleport wen! to the American
Heart Asstclailon. Fun Run malrman WIIS Kbn
Blower.
,,
Meigs county Treasurer,
George M. Collins
�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel
By The Bend
LA has errorless
game; Reds edge
Atlanta nine, 9-7
PEREZ SAFE -Cincinnati's Tony Perez sHdes across oome plat"
Mr.
By ,JOE D..LUZZI
UPI Sports Writer
Dan Quisenberl)•. who has lro the
American League in saves five o!
the last six seasons, may be hard
pressed to lead his own team in that
category this y<'ar .
Quisenberry has been the premi<'r relief pitcher in baseba ll this
d<'cade. but nearly halfway through
the season. the Kan sas Cit)' >ubma riner has only five saves. Royals
manager Dick Howser has rroucro
Quisenberry's workload thi s year.
limiting him m ainly to situations
when the game Is on thE' lin~.
Howser found himself in such a
BROOKLYI\, Mich. rl'Pl r-Bill
Elliott . rhe dominant force in
NASC'AR Grand Na tional racing
l ast summer. was due for a good
day on the t rack.
" It really !eel s good to be lxtck,"
E lliott said Sunday after holdin g o!f
Harl)· Cant at the fl ag to clai m his
th ird straight title in the Miller
American 400 at Michigan l nt erna
tiona\ Sp!'('dway . H<' won by two car
lengths O\W Cant.
"It gives you your confidence
back ."
The Dawsonville. Ga .. native won
II races la st ym r and $2.4 million ,
but his best showings this scasoq
was thr<'<' fift h· place finishes in 13
situation Sunday, and he didn' t
hesita te to ca ll for his bullpen ace.
QuiSE>nbrtTV, who sl't a m ajor IPague rPCord with 45 saves in 19&1.
entered in the elghthinnin gw ithtix'
bases loaded and the Royals
leading 6-3. A!h•r surrenderlri g a
two run double to Bobby Cr ich.
Quisenberry rc>eorded the last four
ou ts to preserve a 6-5 victory OV<' r
the Ca lifOJTtia Angels.
With the effectiveness o! Steve
Farrand Bud Black, Kansas City's
bullpen is suddenly well stock<'Cl ,
and t hr need to use Quisenberry so
frequently has diminLshPd .
" Quiz hasn't bern dcmot<-d. "
HOWSf'l' ~id . " ThC' others havf' ju st
pitchro well. "
By using QuiSl'nberty l ess.
Howser hap<' s his ace will be
stmnger down the stret ch.
Thr Rn;'al s buill their lrad o n
power. Frank Whitr drilled a
two-run homPr in the fourth Inning,
'Tv(' tx.x>n a mUitarY obscrvrr
m ost of thr time." sa id Quisen ·
il:-rry, woo has made 22 appParan ces this year . " I r eally like playing
wit h an rogc: tha t means wit h
something on the line. "
Budd~'
thr sta rr bur quickly fadro rn route
to finishing sNcnth in t hi' nine·
horse field . Bolsooi Boy and Surter
X. were one -two ;1t the 1-2-mile
point before Broad Brush m ade his
charw from thl' fifth posit ion.
" He bo lted r ight \x'twcen O n ~
Magic Moment and F orty Kings
and went after Bolsroi Ekl)'." sa id
Stevens.
Stc·vens said Broad Brush "got
very compPtlt lvr " when Bolstlll
Boy matchro him st ride -!or- s trid~
to thP wirP.
Bianca lana hi! a solo shot in
or
inju ry suffcrro last Monda)·.
Blue .Jays 9, Tigers 6
A t Tomnto. pin ch-hitt er Ga rth
Iorg belted a t luw·t'Un homer. and
.Jesse Bartield doubled in a pair of
runs to highlight a sC\·en-run sixth
" I kind of !rlt l ikr I cou ld keep
him cE llio tr 1 back thrre," he said .
"I trough! I had a chance. But he
was dPfinitrl)' 100 strong to handle."
RU'll.AND - Mr. and Mrs.
.Jerry Black, Ru !land, announCf• t h. ·
engagement and appmachi ng wed
ding of their daughter , Tamara
Louise, to Derrick Michael Tay lo r,
son rJ M r. and Mrs. Mich'-K' ITavlor.
Npw HavPn, \\'. V<J .
·
Th<' bride-r\('('1 is a gradua tr of
Meigs High School and nttrnded
Hocking Trchnlca l CoiiPgr In
Nelsonv ille .
Tavlor is a gr adual!' of Wahama
High ~hoo l and Po int Pleasa nt
Voca tional School In Point Pleasant, W.Va . He is employed wi th the
New Haven Pollution Control Facll·
it y in NPw Haven.
An open church wedding ls
plannro for Ju ne 21 at the Rutland
Chu rch of the Na?arenc, ! :30 p.m.
The couple will resid<' in New
Haven lbllowing th!>lr w!'dding,
Orioles f, y ..-rkees 3
Boggs. wtu went 1-for-2 to rc:JiSf' his
m·rragr to' ..'Rl. 1.1ggrava tin ~ a rib
opposit~ .
Black-Taylor vows set Saturday
Page- 5
Alfred notes
Su nday School attendance May
wo s 22: Church attendance, 22 .
On June 1 Su nday Schc >I attend ·
ance wa s :!7: Church attendance ,
2.~
2i.
Mr. and Mr.r. ]ames W. Crirwe/.1
Mrs. Carl Horky , w ith Mrs. Tom
Rue as co-hostess. Mrs. Eddie
Bw-kett will have the study from
the Concern book . Mrs. Frances
And<'rson will havr the dPvotion. A
thanks offering wlll be taken.
SYRACUSE - Rick Weaver,
Cottagevllk>, W .Va .. will heevang<>·
list at a revival at SyracuSE>
MissiOn, Monday through Saturday , 7 eac h €'\lenlng .
LONG BO'ITOM -Long Bot tom
F lame F ellowship Chapt er, TuPS·
day, 7:30 p.m ., M ount Olive Com ·
munity 0\urch . Spea kers v.111 be
Adrienne Buckley of ClevPrand and
Helen Hunt of Ashland, Ohio.
mURSDAY
POMEROY - Pomeroy Church
of Christ wlll hold Vacation B ible
School continuing through Thurs·
day at 6: lJ each evening. Closing
program will be 7:30p.m . Friday.
Bible school
SHADE - Thr Shad!' Unitro
Mcttlldlst Church will be sponsoring a week-long Bible school.
M onday through Friday , from 9
a.m . to 11: 45 a.m . eac h day .
Children, age 3 and old<'r , will be
taught t hrough stories, songs and
crafts. Jnt errstrd adults will he
d !cred Bible study . Director is
Beverly Kubachka who can be
rcachro at 696-114!1 lor additiOnal
informat ion.
Guest speaker
POMEROY Rev . Theron
Durham will Jx> gu es t s]X•aker at
7:30 p.m . services thi s Su nday at
the Hobson Church of Chr ist in
Christian I.Jnion
Bible
School slated
RUTI..AND
- V acat i:m Bible
School w ill be held .June 23·27. 9:30
to 11 :30 a.m .. at the Rutland
FrPCwill Baptist Chu rch on Sa lem
Street. Classes lor nu "'ery nge
through teenagers. Everyone
welcome.
r;:::::::::::~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,
Mr. ,lild Mn. Ralpb McKe11::ie
McKenzie anniversary set
RA l'INE- Mr. and M rs. Hal ph
McKr miP of Rucin(' will obspn ·r
their 62nd wc"<ldin ~ anni\w sar\' on
.funf' 1K ThP~' ~\.'( ' l"P m ~u · ti rcl on
Jul)(' 18, 1924 In r ;all ipolis b) the
Re v . ru:. Dunn .
Thr! · hH\"1' om' di.lughtPr . Mrs.
Roh.•t1 .I. L<'wis r Addalou 1 Pomc-
rO\·: a grand"on. Da\'id Lewis.
Porn<'m)·. and a gra nddauJ(htcr,
Mrs. Pa ul fl ut~ t cCarol r and a
gmll grandson. Rotrrt Lewis
Durst. Akron.
1\ family obscrvamv
()(~ a sia n will be hPid .
of thl'
Logan .
Meigs host s Parkersburg In a
doubleheadl'r Saturda y before Ira·
veling to l 11nca stcr for rwo games
Sunday . Bot h start al l p.m .
Over :m ChPSl er High School
alumni attend<'d the annual ban·
quct and dance Saturday evening In
the Chester Elementary School
aud itorium. The banquet was
prepared by th<· Chester PTO and
served bv thE' Allred 4-H Club.
Serving as offi cers thi s year were
Jean Sexson. prPSid<'nt; Donald
Mora , first, Starling Ma ssar, second , Norman McCa in, third, and
Mlldrrd Gaul. fow-th vice pres\·
d<'nts: Maxine Whitehead , secre·
tary: Nellie Parker assistant secre·
tary, Helen Wolfe. treasurer. and
RoSE>mary Kell!'r , assistant treasurer . A balance of $9J7.33 was
rcponoo in the treasury.
Reunion classes oooored were
1926. 19:n. 1936, 1941. 1946, 1951, and
1956, " 1th the class of 1941 having
the most In attendanoe .
Mcmhers of the :lit h annivcrsal)·
class were prPSented gold key rin gs
and charms. Receiv ing charms
werr Kathlff'n Fick Wells, Poml'roy: Kathryn Willia m DietL, Belpre: F.sth!>r Freckcr Ward, Pomer ov: 'lllelm a I'<bite Eddv, Ki lll>Jck :
M i11y Virginia Mora Stewart ,
Pomeroy: M argaret Wood Christy,
Chester. Kr)· r ings wrnt to Sherwood Merro ith, Pom eroy, Har lis
Frank and Richard Coleman, Long
Bottom.
A floral arran g<>mcnts " 'as pres·
<'lll!'d to Ea rl Knll(ht , thl' oldC't
alumnus attending and a gift to
ll>nald Rid<'nour, Scottsdale, Ariz·
ona, woo had travelro tl'i:' farthest.
Lillian Williams Pickens wa s pres·
ented a floral arrangement for
having a bi rthday cloSPStto the date
of thE' banquet.
Families having SC\'Pra I a lumni
present well' recogni7Pd with the
Knight and Pickens families tying
for fi rs t place. Each had five
an ending.
Officers elected for next yra r
wrre Rlchard Fick . pr<'Sid!'nt ,
Harold Parker. Harold Newell .
Horace K an, and Virgil Win don,
v ice president: Opal E ichinger.
secretary: Betty Dean , ass istant
secretary: Cleo Smit h, treasurer ,
and Pa~linc Ridenour. iJ ss ist<mt
trrasurel'.
The " 11w C'ountt)' Band" provld<'d mu sic lor dancing with Rro
Ca rr as caller
Alumni tmvrling from a distanc<'
to attend thr banquet and danl'<'
wer<' Jimmv Weber, Lakeland.
Fla .: Victor and Jl:ola Kn ig ht Will .
Ca nal Winchest er·: Donald RJcirn·
our. Scottsdale. Ariz. : W ilbur
Weber . M cKees Roc·ks, Pa .: Frrn
Hayes C'hcescbr ew. Shawnr<': Ru ssell and Myra .June Si"'()n Argabril c. Norfolk, Va .: Clarice R;rrnhart Willard . Rushville: f.il<'<'n
Ha ves Coil, Gahanna: .lo>cphinc
Pickens Hull, Waldo: Marian Met'<'·
dilh Murphy, Sandusky : Mac 1\'hitr
,)OIJ(' S, Charleston. W.\'a .: E.:il"•n
M ay 18 All red Yout h held a
cook-out and afternoon games at
the by-pass pa r k near Pomeroy.
June J they m et at the church .
Topics discussed were You th Camp
and Kings Isl and visit . Next
meetin g will he Ju!lf> 22.
Su nday Sc hool SupPrlntend<'nt
Lloyd Dillinger presented Bibles to
high school graduates , Bob Burke
and Lisa Henderson .
C hurch v i sit or was Jan et
Con nally.
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Swartz
~n t an ::~fternoo n with Ka1!e
Swartz in Athens
Visitors at the Poole-Parker
tllmc during MPmorial Day W<'<'·
kend werr M r . and Mrs. Howard
Parke r , local, a nd Rupert
Schrader, F rankton . Kentucky .
Mr. and Mrs. Del bcn Yos t,
Lan caster Rt , visitro Genevieve
Cut hric during :vll'motial weekend .
They also went to West Virginia to
visit M r. Yost 's brot hers.
Mrs . Hobart Swanz rece ived
word of the dea th or her cousin ,
Wall er Koehler. Ca ledonia .
The commu nlty was saddened by
the death o! Wilmer RJce, grand ·
fathe r of M rs. Richard Yost. Mr.
Rice was a mat h and science
teacher for 35 years In the area
schools.
Rl'cent visitors of Pearl and Don
Randolph werr Dorothy Dvecher,
Chippewa Lake: Mr. and Mrs . Clalt
Randolph , Wooster ; Lily Randolph ,
Shade: George and Sharo n Wright ,
Grovepor t: Howard and Addie M ae
Hudnall and two children, Albany:
Bud an d Phy llis Bin g Sand<'rs,
Cm;ton: Lowell and Avis Bin g,
loca l: Brenda and Zane Stout, and
Crissy, Johnstown : Beatrice Bentz
and son, LanC'dSter.
\j~~~~~g~~,,
~J I lAC~ SON
PfK£ · RT 3~ WEST
Phone 446 -4524
INEES SAT • SUN &
WEDNE SDAY • All SEATS II.ID
ADM ISSIO N EVERY TUESDAY 12.50
Chester Alumni conduct reunion
c onrinucd rrom Pag" 3
13 thru 19_j
L JUNE
FRIDAY thru
THU RSDA Y ~
Ritchie Kuhn, Louisville: Harold
Parker. I ronton: 0\arles K ing.
Moundsville, W .Va .; Forres t and
Emma Rltchi<' Roode• . Navan'<':
and Ru th Cowdery Barthelmas.
Hazel Milhoan Rose. Virgil Wood.
.Jo hn and E loise Buckl<'y Lodwick.
Clarence and Kathleen [)>an. Do
nald Pullins. Ruby Hall Steele and
.Jack Eisclstcin. Philip Will , Maxine
Hawk Hunnell. all of Columbu s:
Elsie Spencer Stahl. Helena Hclr n
Marcinko HPnr:v. Lancaster. and
William L. Sponag<'l. Cro\\TJ City .
RABIES CLINIC
PRflfNTfD BY
Meigs County Humane Society
& Meigs County Heolth Dept.
AT THE
ROCK SPRINGS FAIRGROUNDS
SA lUR DAY, JUNE 21 ST
1:00 P.M. until 4:00P.M.
DR. UIOL OSBOIINE, VET.
RABIES - $3.00
Other innonlations o.. ilablt. Dogs
must bt on leathu. Cali in carriers.
C!I< IHG SOON: "I<AAATE KID Z'
SPECIAL WEDNIESDo\Y
MATINEES'
THIS SUMMER I
SafUni 14J ' ~ f'lrMI~illlW
\\. pii" H:1
l U I 11- 1
1t
t,
:\kij.." '
,. 12 l.l-l"o llf l
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~U ni t\,\'' " N'l~lnd (;IUIII'
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'\d'! Jn .md I Ou ii ·I T \I I ' \l'i'<o tl ,j It o 1.! ' Mtllilit·n
Sunda,,· ' ~'> tlN (hunt•
l .ill!olfl
IHI 0 11 1\- I :•:,
~ll tl!'
1111 111 x- 11 111 1
Md "" ll"'tl ·t .onLI \ "doll A m l"r ·I J..~ '' .onll YIJIJrlj.:
1
\\"1 ,\m h ·Jgo·' 1l l o I J' Mr~ "<~ll l~ tt • t
~md a,y ' 'i Si"tund CitUlll'
l ; ~an
Jl lli I - 1\.'i .J
Mt>iJC- .
!l'rJ 11 -1-li-.1
Mttt ht'll\ ;,nrl c \roll!' l"ol lin•. n.a n rum rl t, and
llarn'lt 141 WI ' Mat him
--~
Power Dnvtn
111ltt
:O.kl1.~
l il s ~ l l .
J.4odr. l 17.ol6
2.0 Pull Hqnepower
IJ ' .fnllln ~
kllefiM
PACKAGES OF
Tool P1l
DISPOSABLE
DUST BAGS,
ONE WEEK ONlY!
GET 1 FREEl
AIIJITlllllliE t•ma
FREE TOOL~
t2·1•
.,
Inc~
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
JOHN A. WADE, M.D.
"WE HAVE HEARING AID$"
CAU (614) 992·2104
304 ;675-1244
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FREE
. EUREKA
UPRIGHT
U-"tlM ~•-
.......... . . .
·-..........
-
EAR, NOSE & THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
Auxiliary holds meeting
r-----·----..,
BONUS!
BUY 2
CordiWIY""
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I
INGELS FURNITURE & JEWELRY
992~2635
..
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happenings
MONDAY
RACINE Vacation Bible
Sc hool at
Antiquity Baptist
Chu rch .. Route 338, R acine, Monday through Friday, 10 a.m-noon
dally.
MIDDLEPORT - Group 2 of
Middleport Presbyterian Chu rch
will mPCt Tursday at the home of
Me ";gs Leg;on
" ... - - - - - -
CI NCINNATI i UP!r Th<'
Cincinnati Reds Sunday put OUt·
fielder Nick Easksy on the dlsabled
list With sore thighs and activated
Tracy Jones.
The Rciis said Esasky, woo has
been bothered with problem s In
both thighs, will be on the disabled
list for 15 days. He had been batting
.224 in 41 games, hitting six home
runs and driving in 16 runs.
Jones went on the disabled list
May 24 With a left hamstring injucy .
He had been batting .33!1' In 24 ·
games, hitting one home run and
driving In SE>Vcn runs.
communzty
Community calendar / area happenings
TIJESDAY
KYGER - 0\eshlrc Township
Trustees meet Tu<'Sday, 6 p.m ., in
the township building.
()oo ·~ .......... '
a fast -acting Meigs coaching sta ff
and transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Pomeroy
Emerg<>ncy Squad . Stobart wa s
released following observation .
Logan plated six runs in the• t hird
Inning to post thP win , despite bein g
outhit 6-5 by Meigs . Log-•n goes to
4-2 on the yea r with the win .
Eddlt' Collins suff~red his first
loss or the year aga inst two w ins as
he combinro with Bar t rum lbr the
hurling chorPS. 0\ris M atheny
went the dlslanoe for Log-•n .
Meigs hitters included Brent
Bissell "1th two singles and one
single each by Snyder , Scott Miller,
Collins, and Barrett . Craig Wolfe
tlipled and Eric Miller doubled lor
.
MIDDLEPORT The 50th
wedding anniver sary of Mr and
Mrs. James W . Criswell, Fair lane
Drive, Middleport , will be obs('rved
with an oprn reception at HPath
United Metoodlst Church , Satur·
day, June 21, from 2 to 4 In the
afternoon.
Hosting the observancr are their
dau gh ter s, Car ol McCullough,
Pomeroy, and Dianna Wilkinson,
Charleston, W.Va .
Mr. and Mrs. Cris~ll. the
former Clara Hlad, ll<'re married
on June 20, 19); at the Lansing
M etoodlst Church in Lansing, Ohio.
They moved to Middleport in l!l!'Al,
and In 1976 Crisll0'11 retired from the
Kyger Creek Power Plant.
BPSides their two daughters and
sons·in ·law, Mr. and Mrs. Criswell
have nine grandchlidr81. They are
m embers of H ea th United Metlx>dist Church . Mrs. Crisll.l'll is a
member of Evang<>llnP Chapter
172, Order of the Eastern Star, and
her husband is a ml'tnber ol
Mlddlepcrt Lodge, F&AM .
All friends and relatives of Jhe
couple are Invited to attend the
reception but are rEIJUPSird not to
take gifts.
MIDDLEPORT A Men 's
Fellowship mPCting has been SE>t for
M onday, 7:30p.m., at Middleport
Church of Christ .
A t Baltimore, Mlke Young lined a
two-out RBI single to tight field in
the eighth inning, which r ight
firldo.'r Dan Pasqua apparcntly lost
in thl' sun, to rdlly the Orioles. Mike
Boddicker, 9-1, scatt erro five hit s
Q\'er r ight innings before Don Aa se
pitchro the ninth for his major
lmguc-leading 18th save.
A' s 9, Ran!l.l'rs 2
At Oakland, Ca ll! .. Chris Codlroli
pitched six shu tout innings, and
four ba tters drove In two runsrach .
lilt ing tl'i:' A' s. Codiroli , 5-7, allowro
!ivl' hit s. Tony Phillips. Dav e
Kingman . M ike Davis and Stan
.IaviN had two RBI apicct• for the
A' s.
~lariners 10, White Sox 5
At Seattle, Phil Br.Jdley, whc
doublro i n th.• l)'lng run , scom:l
from second on Ken Phdps' In field
single· wit h two out s In the ei ghth to
highlight a six -run Marin ers uprL'·
lng. Rookl<' r lght -hancr r StC'Vc
Firrovld , I · 0, r ar nro his first
major -l eague vi c t or y . .Joel
McKeon, 2·1. was the loser.
Charlie Lc lbra ndt . 7 -~ . was the
w innrr. Ro n Romanick, Jo, sui·
ferro tbc fourth loss in his last five
drcislons.
Elsewhere, Milwa ukee beat Boston 7-3, Tomnto dm;TJ!'d [)>t mit 9-6.
Minnesota clubb('d Cleveland <·3.
Ba llimorr nrpp!'d N<'w York 4·3.
Oak land tmuncv d Texa s 9-2. and
Sea ttle slammed Chicago 10-5.
Brewer.; 7, Red Sox 3
AI B(l;fon . Robin Yount and Ben
Ogilvie each hit two-run homers
and RBI doubles to po"vr the
Brt•Wt'l's. Rookie .Juan NievPs
impmvro to 6-2 , and Mark Clear
rceord!'d his fifth sav<'. W" dc
" I knew if I played my ca rds ri ght
I would be abl!' to grt around him ,"
hP "" id . " I used a little bit l apped
traffic. Han:y t Gantl W'dS getting
tlu·ough t turns I one and two real
well, but oncl' I got tlu·ough on<' and
two on the last lap still ahead. I
thought i muld stay there ."
Gant was thinking JUst the
Finishing
was (;(>off
Bodine.
followed
byt hird
Bllldy
BakPr
and
Waltrip fifth . Rounding out th.' top
10 W<'re Earnhardt. Bobby Hillin
.Jr.. Rick Wil son. Joe Rottman and
Rick)• Rudd .
Po le-sit ter Tim Richmond led the
fi rst seven laps. th.•n drop(X'd out of
conten tion. Richmond was fourth
tlu·ough Ill laps, but finished 15th .
Benny Parson, wtll startro in the
first rD\1' "~' h Richmond, dropped
ou t after fi ve laps \){'Ca ust• of a
blown engine.
The rae~ had eight caution fl ags
tota ling 41 \aps. T hPre were .11 lead
chlmgcs, and U cars failro to finish
fix' race- mostly bl'Cause of bl own
rn gi nes.
Inning that carriro the Blue Jays.
Winning pitcher Bill Ca udill earned
his first dc>eis ion of the year. Cl1Uck
Cary, 0.2, was the loser.
Twins 7, lmlws 3
At Cleveland. Roy Sm alley
slammro a two-run oomcr fi ve
pitches after Kent Hrbek 's >Oio shot
In tlw foun h inning, IPading the
1\vins. Cary Gaetti added a solo
homer as Minnesota boostro it s
maior lcagu!'-leadlng rome run
total to 93. Frank Vloi;J, 6-5. l'arned
the \1ctory . Don Schulze fell to 3-4 .
the fifth, and Steve Ba lbo ni cloutro
a thrcc-nm bla st in the six th .
five car- lengths .
He said he wai ted unt il just th<·
right moment to pass Ga nt.
sta rts.
It was Elliott's first victory of It¥:·
yea r. making him the 11th diffrrent
driver to win a NASCAR race this
year . He recorded an average
spl'ed of 138.55.1 mph. The triumph
boosted E lliott to third in the overall
NASC'AR standings with 1.922
points. topp!'d by Darll'll Waltrip's
2.001 and Dale Earnhardt' s 2.252.
Richard Petty, running his
I.OOlth Grand t\ational race . was
nc,·cr a !actor Sunda.\ ·, finishing
13t h. a lap behind the leaders.
Elliott took the lead on the !96th
lap, passing Gant as the two !ought
for the <-dgr the final 40 laps. HP
wouldn't budge on the final lap,
leading at one point by as many as
l 'runara LouL"' Blru.:k
Verrick MidulA.' l Taylor
with a run In the first inning of Sunday's game at Atlanta. The Redo!
edged the Braves, 9-7. (UPI)
Elliott makes it 3 in
row in Michigan 400
15
Conqueror took the lead at
,•
Royals nip Angels; Indians drop 7-3 tilt
" If he could '\'c, he wou ld 've
cursed at Bolshoi Boy ." said the
a neck.
_lock<')'. " He' s just th at kind of
The $~.00! race. which was
horse."
televised nationally by ESPN . was
Migliore said he felt his mount
attend<'d by 16,012 at Thistledown .
" trnse up a bit ."
Broad Brush, a M aryland· bred
"Broad Brush is the kind of oorse
3-yea r -old rolt Ji dden by Cary
tha t i ntimidates otix'r horses, " he
StE'\Iens, won $150,!XXl for owner
said . " I don't know what it is , bul it
Robert E . Meyerhoff in returning
seems to happPn .
$4.20, $3.20 and S2.&l.
" For a SPCond . it Sll'med Bolshoi
The son of Ack Ack out of Hay
Boy skipped a beat . We m ad!' up
Patcher finished third in both the . ground at the wire, but not enough.
Kentucky [l(>rby and the Preakness Broad Bmsh never ~appro chu rn before winning the Wood Memorial
ing, and I !eel Gary did a line job
and tbe Jim Beam stakes, and has
wit h him."
career earnings of Slm,443.
C'onlm\'rr ~ · marrrd thP Sff'ond ·
:•J was a bit apprehensive
annual, $125,001 Rose [)>Ba rtolo
starting from the eighth post
Handicap lO r Ohio· brro fillies and
position, but Richard told me not to
mares. wh ich followed the Ohio
worry and he was right," said
[l(>rby.
Meyerooff, woo had thE' East India
Cup presented to him by Thi stll'·
down owner Edward J . DeBartolo
Easks)' out
days
. " We didn't go to Belmont (for the
Belmont Stakes) because we felt
the mJJe-and-a·haf! was too much
for Borad Brush. Dick Small
convinced me we could come here
and win, and I'm glad he was
absolutely right."
Bolsl'<>l Boy, ridden by Richard
Migliore, paid $4.ffi and $3.40 In
earning $6,600 In Breed<'rs' Cup
bOnuses, while long shot Forty
Kings closed to within two lengths
at the llnish and returned $11. The
8-2 exacta was wortlt $20.40.
Wheatley Hall finished fourth.
'
•
Broad Brush captures 52nd
Ohio Derby crown Saturday
Sr.
Monday, June 16, 1986
Criswell
•
anmversary
planned
"Thp turf was bo.'e and my fret
By ED BURNS
just \\'f'n t out from undrnn(•." said
UPI Sports Writer
For the Los AngplPS Dodgers. the Garwy . " Noi:Ddy fcels worse than I
do."
National U>ague leaders in er rors.
Maria no [)m ean drov£' in a third
Sunday's game against San Diego
th at inning with a single. and
run
was anothPr one dPCided b,·
Russell
madi' it H In the eigh th
Bil
l
fielding. Unlike most of the ot ix'r.S.
with
an
RBI
double . Dunca~ hit a
oowever, it was the Dodgers woo
homer
in the ninth to pad
two-t'Un
came up with the outstanding pla)'S
the
lead
to
6-0.
and their opponent w·ho commiltro
In ot her ga mes , Montreal
Ill!> costly error.
blankro
Phiald<'lphi a 2-0. Cincin·
Bill Madlock was spPetacular at
nati
outsluggcd
A tlant a 9-7, San
third base, and Los Angeles pl ayro
Francisco
drfca
tPd
Hou s10n 7-2.
an errorless gam e for thE' SPCond
Chicago
edged
St.
Louis
4-3 In ll
day ln a row to earn a 6-0 victory
innings
and
t\cw
Yor
k
swept a
JW r thE' Padres. Sa n Dic>go first
double-hmder
f
rom
Pitt
sl>Jrgh
4·1
baseman Steve Gan·ey, mcan and
t\-5.
" hile, allowrd the first two nms of
t Itt· gam e to scoll' when hE' threw
awa) a bunt in the seventh.
EXJDS, 2, Phlllies 0
M adlock, woo has eommilted 12
At Philad<'lphia. Herm Win·
errors this season, m ade five
ningham hom<'rrd in the third
outstanding plays - leaping t-.ice
inning to lxtck thl' m mbined
to snail' liner s, and 11111'£' limPs
four -hit pitching of Andy McGaffi·
diving to take away potent ia l
gan , 4-6, and two reliever s. Bob
ground-ball hit s - to back Rick
MrCiun• and Jpff Reardon, who
Honeycutt' s score!PSs pitching.
ootchro his 15t h save. finished for
"That's just third baSE>, thell''s a
Montreal. Charles Hud son. 4-4, took
lot of action." Madlock said. "With
the loss.
him (Honeycut t. a sinkrrball spP·
Reds 9, Braves 7
cia listl pitching, you expPCt to get a
At A tlanta . Eric Davis homrrro
lot of action there. It 's just reaction
and drovr in ttrrf'f' mnt; , and Wadr
-you Pit her ca tch II or you don't. "
Rawdon had two RBI to lrad
Honeycutt, 4-3, pitched the first
Cincinnati. Dave Parker also ho·
six innings and extend<'d a streak to
mcrro for the Rros in suppon of
22 innings wit hout allowing a r un .
Tom Browni ng . 4-6. Zane Smith,
" The best thing I had today was
5-i. was the los('r.
the old 'Atom ' ball," Honeycutt
Giants 7, Astros 2
said. "The PadrPS hits were r ight at
A t Houston, Jell l<>onard. Chris
·em- most tight at Bill Madlock."
Brown and Chili Davis each
San Diego managN Steve Boros
coiiC<"tPd tlun' hit s, and Rob
said his team made good contact all
Thom pson drov<' in two runs wit h a
day.
pair o! suic ide squeezes . Vida Blue.
"The first six innings we swung
4 3, . worked sLx innings Bob
the bats as well as we swung all
Knepp<'r, 10-4. !OJ!!cred his first ioss
year- and we had nothing to show
to the San Fran cisco si nce J une 4.
for it," Boros said. " M adlock alone
1\lW.
probably made five great plays. I
Cubs 4. Cardinals 3
can't fault our hitter s. We ju st
AI Chicago. St!'V<' Lake sliced a
couldn't catch a break .
two-out single to right in the 11th
" By m y count, wr had II balls hit
inning to score Keith Moreland with
on the nose the first six innings that
the winning t'Un . Moreland doubled
were outs."
of f loser Todd Worrell. 3-6, and U>on
Added Honeycutt: ' 'I'm vel)· Durham was wa lkro intrnt ionallv .
fortunate. " They hit a lot of balls
With one wt. Lake hit a 1-2 pitch io
hard . To come out of thell' with a
r ig ht , which Tito Landr um Ia ilrd to
win is am azing enough, but to have
catch on a sliding att!'mpt.
them not score is r eally amazing .
Mets 1-8, Pirates 1-6
Theil' wcrr six or seven balls that
A t N<'w Yor k . Mookie Wilson .
could have gone through ."
Gary Ca rter and Ed Hearn tiJ.
Bill Ru,.;ell opened the seventh
merro to lift New York in thr
inning with a single off k>!t -hander
second game and ex trnd the Mets
winning streak to six in a row. Rick
Dav<' Dravecky. 5-7. The hit was
career No. 1,884 and placed him in
Aguilera , 1-:\. got fix' vic tory, and
an eighth· place tie with Ql Hodges
Rowr McDowell pltchro 2 1·3
oo the aU-time ll>dgers' list.
innin gs to earn his fift h save. Bob
Franklin Stubbs then l>Jntrd in
Kipp<'r . 2-n. was the start <'r and
loser for Pitt sbu rgh .
front o1 the plat e, but ca tcher Bru('('
Bochy 's throw to second was too
In th<' fir st gam!'. Keith H!'rnanlate to forO" Russell, and i:Dth
drz and Kevin Mit chell each
runners were sale. Alex Trevino
doublro In a t'U n to back Bob
Ojeda 's romplett•-game pitching .
followed with a l>Jnt to the left <t thE'
mound an d Garvey fell , then threw Ojeda , R-2. scatter ed nine hits.
wildly to first to second baseman
st ruck oul five and wa lked one In
Bip Roberts. who wa s rovcring . going the distancc fort he third t Ime
in II starts. Bob Walk, 2-3, got the
RuSSE'll and Stubbs scorro as
loss in his first Sl art of thl' sra,;on.
Trl'Vino reached second .
NORTH RANDALL. Ohio i UPl t
-The trainer of Broad Bru sh was
so certain the horse would win , he
did not watch most of Sa turday's
52nd running of the Ohio Derby .
"I knew Broad Brush could do
It," he said . " I went back into the
clubhouSE> to cool orr and think
abot.ti the future.
"I didn' t f igure the racr would be
thiis close, but the bottom linr is that
we won."
Broad Brush. with Cary Stevens
up, darted betw~n two horses to
take the lead just before t hr
backstretch and outdueled Bolsooi
Boy In the final J.16th milr to win by
The Daily Sentinel
Monday. June 16. 1986
Ohio
••
- Mlddlopo: :
'
'
FDlST - Receiving th!>lr First Holy Communion recenlly al Sacred
Heart CalhoUc Church iri l'omeroy were, left to right, Jacqueline
JeweU, daughter of Mrs. Dianne J ewell, Mason, W.Va.; Jamie
son oi Mr. Md Mrs. James Broderick, Pomeroy; and
Usle, daughter oi Mr. Md Mrs. Lawrence Lisle, Symcuse.
a1 the Celebrallon ~ the Euchamt was Monsignor Anthony
pastor of Sacred Heart Church.
Cont ributions were mad!' to the
Epilepsy F ounda tion of America
and lo CARE when the LPwls
Manley Auxiliary 263, American
Legion, met at the home of Mrs.
Florence Richards, TuPSday .
Mrs. Ma rgare t Bow les had
charge of the OpPning ceremony
and gave a repoti on the summer
convrnllon held at Junction City .
last week . Mrs. Catherine Curl.
eighth district president , conducted
the meeting with the mayor of the
city and the post command!>r
w elcoming the 45 auxiliary
memhers. Speaker was Mrs.
Warren Brll(gs, dPpartment president, who encouraged young people
to become mem hers or the
auxiliary.
A report was given on the
resolution regarding membership
of grandmot hers and great·
granddaught!'rs in the Auxiliary
which will be prcsentro at the
department co nvent ion to be 1¥:>\d In
Cleveland July 11 ·13. and consi·
d<'red later at the national convr n·
tlon to be held in Cincinnati this fall .
Mrs. Richards, unit and distric t
chairman for children and youth,
was presented an award from the
district. An award wa s also received fortheAmecanism program
chaired in the local unit by Mrs.
Bowles.
Plans were m ade for a picnic to
be held In Augu st. A report of poppy
sales was given by Lula Hampton,
chairman, and legislative Information was presented . Mrs. Lucille
Saunders of Gallipolis will hcst the
next meeting. Mrs. Annettte Johnson had the closing prayer and
refrestunents were served by Mrs.
Richards.
ONLY
99<
SALE GOOD
JUNE 1bth
thru JUNE 20th
700 NORTH
SECOND AVE.
MIDDlEPORT
brazle~
�1- .tge-6- The Daily Sentinel
History of Meigs Inn: ...
"the bt>st stand for a public houst•
tx>tween Whff'ling and Clnclnnat i. ..
which was located "dirf'Ctly oppo.slte the wharf boat." It was the fit'S I
:hotel In Pomeroy.
Near the rum of thr decade. a
description of thr Reminglon and
Halliday building. as it was kno"'ll
for a time, follows: "a thret:'-story
briCk with imitation s10nc fmnt. om•
side of the stOI\' room is for books.
stationary. wall papc1·. &C Thr
remainder is for a dn1g storr.
clothing stow. offic~s. and 'lccp mg
rooms. Th£' start' room is ~4 b~· i4
f~t. with two warf' room~ ."
ln JB66, "T.H. Dawson. gentle~
manly and accomodating pmpric·
tor," was prepared to gi\'~ Reming·
ton Housecu slomPrs satisfact ion in
every way . Its stable wa s pro·
nounced "unobject ionable " and
horses were "sui'(' to tx> taken carr
d.. "
bnprovements Noted
During the 1870's several im·
provements werr made to the
structure. In 1.871 a newcu)Xlla " likr
unto the pilot house of the Mattie
Rotx>rt s" was installed . Two ,·cal~
later its old. cracked , bell ~<·as
replaced. In 1874 a lorw illurni·
nated s ~ . which "rould be seen for
a bog distant{' on dark night s."
Monday. June 16, 1986
Pomeroy.:...Middleport, Ohio
was acldr<l .
In IH/:J, William Remington
turr1<'<.l <J\W cont rol of his business
to his :«1 )·rar-old son. Benja min.
Thr S<llr of dry goods was
rliscont inucd. rut Ben Remington
clainwd that he " latcl)' has added a
full line of cheap hardware to his
book storr at No. 97 f)·ont Stri'E't."
On .Januar)· 17. l!Jl5 William H.
Rcminl(lon died at his residence.
which was lo cated on Second Strff't
immcdiald\' lx>hind his rusiness
t•sta bliShmt•nt. The causc• of death
"·as said to ha\·P I.Jcocn pa ralysls. A
somPwh<~t fanciful version of his
younger )"ill'S stat<'<l that whl'n he
left home he had but one dollar In
his pocket. that one doUw· !x'ing a
¢ft from his father . At the time of
his d<'ath. Mr. Reminglon was
mnsidcrrd to be onP of the
wealthiesr men In Meigs County. In
oodition to his mercantile pursuits.
he was a Director of t i'e Pomeroy
Nat ional Bank and a memtx>r of
Pomem)· Cit)· Council for two
)'rars . In .June. 1875 he developed
"Heminglon's Additiln to Pome·
roy' ,.. located nPar Lincoln Heights.
Fire In 1896
The April 29, 1896 issue of the
Dcm()('rnt. a MPigs County Wff'kly,
proclaimed : "FIRE D_EMON"
_con_tinuod_r,.o_mpa-gd _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
was koown In tl't' nineteenth
century as the Remington block.
Local merchants In their advertiS<>·
ments referenced their establlsh·
ments from the Remington. For
exa mple, photographer E.F.
Felger descrllx>d the loca tion of his
studio as " two doors tx>low the
Remington House."
The Remington family , !hough a
long-lived group, had their
numbers thinned ronsiderably durlngthis perlodofllmc. On March 16,
STRIKES POMEROY IN THE
NIGHT." ''The RPmington Block
Suffers from a VIsitation Which
Lays it In Ruins." "A MIDN1GHT
ALARM ViHIGl SURPRISED
MANY PROPLE Al\TD MOST
ESPECIAI..LY TilE GUESTS OF
THE HOTEL." According to II'<'
story, the fire broke out In the
Remington's lamp and oil room.
located on the thlrd .floor. Several
guests narrowly escaped with their
llves. Ben Remingtoncarried$7,(XXJ
worth of Insurance oo the building
and $3,(XXJ on its contents.
The article Indicated that the
"Remington Hotel was built nearly
40 years ago." Rebuilt. it was
managed In the late 1800's by
William Dixoo. The present-day
structure dates from that time.
By March, l897 the New York
Clothiog House had bcated In tl1e
ground floor of the Remington
House. H.H. Blackmore was In
charge ri sales. Elghty·nine years
later, tl1e New York Clothing House
Is still there.
The visual impact of the Remington. with it s unique corner h.trret
capped with a prominent spire, has
made it a Pomeroy landmark for
decades. It comes as no surprise
that the center block of Pomeroy
1910 tl't' matriarch of the family ,
E lisabet h P. Remington, died one
month tx>forp her nlnety.flrst btrth·
day . Her son. Benjamin Randa ll
Remington, bom Novemtx>r 10,
1.845 and the last surviving male
helr of the Remington line. can·ied
on the family ruslness. He died
February 6, 1926 after a brief
illness.
Purchase Building
ln March 19:18 Edward Ebcrsb·
ach purchasrd the Remington
__,..-~
tmilding from the Huntington Na
tionnl Bank of Columbu s for$42,500.
The Huntington Na tional Bank wa s
Trust€'!' of 13<'njamin Remington's
estate. The hotel was 1mamed th<'
Marlin. and remained In that
families' control until No\'emher
1970, when it was purchased by
Meigs Investment Corpora tion .
The buildin g underwent an exiPn·
slve rrnovallon In ti'e early 1970' s
and became known as tl... Meigs
lnn.
•
Monday, June 16, 1986
Public Notice
Md::~~!~TW~~O~- ~
GREAT BEND ELECTRIC, Inc.
ltii;;'Qiti;;;;;;'j I
N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR
the TreaMJrer,
South Third
A,...ue. MiddlePort Ohio.
45760, until 12:00 noon.
Eootrm Daylight Time on July
10. 1988. Bids will bo opSted
• AS PEA POSTEO SCHED ULE
79
CHOCOLATE
COVE RED
RAI51N5 OR
NON · PAREILS4 OZ . BOX
1/o
~
VISINE
EYE
DROPS
PLASTIC OR
WITH DROPPER
PACKAGE
Inn following Sunday momlng's lnfemo.
OF5
PAT Hih FORD
992·2196
State
employees
ratify
contract
RAYMOND E. PROFFin (MAC)
the specifications.
Each bid shaH be 8CCOr11'51 ·
iod by a 10% ' Sid Bond
satisfactory to the owner or by
certrfied ct1eck on a solvmt
bank in the sum often percent
RACINE, OHIO
Office 949-2438
1 mo.
•
26
~:
-
oz.
ECONOMY SIZE
"C"
..~uu
...... .. ' " ""
Btds are to be plainly maltl:ed
on the outside of the 1ealed
envelope as folows: ''TWO·
WAY RADIO EQUIPMENT
BID". The OJccesolul bidder
will be required to furnish a
utisfactory Performence
Bood for 100%of the contract
prtce. No bid may be with·
drawn after scheduled closing
time Of receipt of bids br et
least sixty (60) days.
Delivery date m.~st be stated
m the bid form and will be
1ltken into consideration in the
awarding of bids.
The Board of Education.
Meigs local School District
reserves the right to reject any
or all bids or any part thereof.
By order of the Board of
Education. Meigs Local
School District. 621 South
Third Avenue. Middlepon,
Ohio. 45760.
BY ORDER OF THE
MEIGS lOCAL
80AAO OF EDUCATION
ROBERT SNO'MlEN,
PRESIDENT
JANE FRY. TREASURER
16) 16. 23. 30; (7J 7 4tc
7041-Practicalfold·over
potholders. Easy trans·
ler, pattern pieces .
71 02-Embroider towels
for yourself or gift.
Transfer of 5 motifs incl.
The Daily Sentinel
Oil"~ " CEIL -
PACKAGE
Of 2
OR q VOLT-
SINGLE
PACK
ALICE BROOKS
CRAFTS
LIT'S BUILD UP TOGfrHERI
•lOCAllY OWNED •lOCAl lABOR
Buildinas
*Slonge lluiltlinp
367-7560 - 367-7671
CHESHIRE, OHIO
985-3937
Call for Dirtctions
6-16-'86· 1 mo.
Paul E. Shockey, DVM
PlEASANT OFFICE
305 Jackson Ave.
PT.
SlUU ANIMAL NOUIS
Moa.·Wod.·Thun. 3·S pm
TuH. 6:30·1; fri. t ·2 pm
l<rlurdoy 10· 11 :30 am
LAIGE ANIMAl &
SUIGEIY IY APPI.
PH. 304-675-2441
BEND AREA CALL
Ripley Office
Far Hours
304-372-5709
CONTRACTING
Ill Court St , Pomeroy, Otuo t~76!
mon Ple11 Court of Meigs
County. Ohio, in tho 0110 of
Ollmond Sovingo & Loan
Compeny, Pleintiff, against
Dwight E. Co~. It of .. De·
f<lndontl. UllOn
therein
1
Judgment
rendered.
being
Cooo No. 86 CV 378 in oaid
Court, t will offer lor oale, ot
the front door of the Court·
houat in Pomeruy, Meigs
County, Ohio, an the 11th
doy ofJuty. 1988. ot 10 ,16
o.m.. lho following lando
111d tenements, located at
112 Buttetnut A\ltnue, Po·
moray, Ohio. 467119.
SHu•te in thl Village of
Pomeroy, CC"Unty of Meigs
ond Sl<llo of Ohio.
FIRST PARCEL; Being tho
wOOl ono· hiH of Eight-Five
f851 le<ll oft tho 1111 lido of
Lol No. 608. locolod on tho
lOuth lkle of B•Jttemut Avtnue. aekl above described
ploco baing oil of Lot No.
1505 fllrmorly ownod by Ella
Blggo Roppold, except tllot
pon .,ld IO Ctoro M. Bing.
SECOND PARCEL: Bolng
In ono hundred ocro tol No.
303 in Town 2. Rongo 13:
loglnning ot lho .,uthooot
_,., oflolformortv owned
by ooorgo Block on Bunor·
nut Av..-.u•: thence we~terly
llontl llid Block'l tine 100
IMI, ..,.,. or lou. lo lho line
,,
itod olip reor axle. raor otop
Meigs County, Ohto.
Being the same premises
acquired by The Franklin
Real Eltate Company, from
bumper, bright low mount
wntem mirrora, H.O. front
and reer ahoclca, awe . retr
springs, (6) 7:00x16 rmd
Thelma P. McMurrey and J .
Wi1B1 McMurray. her hul·
bend, by warranty deed
.,d snow tires and whlela,
CLELAND REALTV INC.
608 EAST MAIN
COLGATE
TOOTHPASTE
package, receiver
SUPER 9 OZ. TUBE
«owing
NEW LISTING - You shn~ld se< th1s house' River view,
completely remodeled mde and ool. 3,4 bedrooms. 2
baths. deck. cenhal atr. an d 1n re. $36,!JJO.OO.
LAND CONTRACT - i 4 acres w1th a 3 bedroom mobile
home that 1S lurn1 shed Has a set up fo1woodburne1, 2 rut·
buildings, small pond. N1ce at $11 .500.00 .
typo hilcll.
All bid• must be filed at
tho oftlco of Leading Crook
the
17th doy of Juno. 1988, by
Conaervancy Di1trict on
Appraiood ot $30,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Area l steal on a 2 story horre with 3bed ·
rooms. garage, k1tchen with bar. and on a e:>od street.
ORGEl
8.2 OZ . TUBE
$i4 ,500 00
The raaleltate can~l be sold twelve o ' clock noon All bid•
for la~s than two ·th~rds of the ' will be opened on the 18th
appraesed value.
dey of June 1988 attwelve
Howard E. Fr.nk, Sheriff
of Molgo County. Ohio
161 9. 18, 23· 3tc
line of Sug11r Run Street for·
- - ---:----1
IY·Ihroo 1431 fooi to BuHor·
Public Notice
'
NOTICE
'I
Leading Creek Con•er·
vency Diatrict will accept
1Mied blda et ita office 1.
locatod ot 34481 Cor.n Hoi·
low Road, Rtrtlond, Ohio
41776, lor purchoH by
Loodlng Croolo ConooNoncv
'
.
noon, atthl office of
f~~;,.s, C11h . Copleo of
opodlcoliono can bo ob·
tolnod <11 tho Loodin9 Crook
Olttrw:t Of·
fico.
181 2. 9 , 18, 3tc
I ClAttiFIED
54 Misc. Merchandise
•
2 be1Utl1ulty rtrip ld femal•
kitten I . A good homt is • rnust 1
- (614)
446-7619 (614) 992·6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Of
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
RITE
RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
AID
POMEROY, OH.
PHARMACY PHONE: 992·2586
FlU THE Bill
.
.
'
:
208 EAST MAIN STREET
Cell 614·+48·4922 .
Nic1 kJttens. Also uud b•·
throom oulfit. Call 814 -'48·
0997.
8· Hn
JEFFERS EXCAVATING
PO. ROY, OHIO
Backhoes, Bulldozers, End Laader, Dump
Trucks, Self Laading Pan, Heavy HatAing and
Winch Trucks
992-7019
Kittens to 1 good home . C1ll
614-985-3884.
2 h11hhy, cute, pi1Vfulklttln110
give tMIY· Csll 114· 949-2093.
Blick, grey, whi11 with spot1.
304· 676·7242 .
2 blacl m1le kitt..,l, litter
trainld, 10 wb. old . 304· 1575·
3982.
6 Lost and Found
992-3525
Jl MCll FFORD
service.
PH. 992·7201
IV 1, llittnn as
Satellite Salts
Installation IIFYiCI
All maior appli1nce re·
pair• {including micro·
.Also lawn
mower repair . Mobile
614-843-5248
614-949·2145
BOGGS
SALES & SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
THE BIRD CAGE
& FISH POND
PO SHOP
Far111 Eqalp111ul
EXOTIC BIRDS.
TROPICAL FISH,
HAMSTERS.
KtTIENS. BIRD
SEED, CAGES &
AQUARIUMS
59 H. 2nd Ave.
Middloparl
Nu1 DNr te Wntn A.. e
Perfl & Strvlee
992-6784
Au1hori1od John DMro,
Nnw Haflontl, lu1h Hog
Farm Equipmen1
!Italor
9
used
FA EE EST I MATES
1
Oil Fiold Smko,
f(UT OUI FOR FUTURE USE)
landu:aping, lasemenh,
Land Ckaring, Ponds, Septi(
KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Systlft!J, Htavy Houling.
Sta111 I Grovel Hauling
Elsdritol
Wor~
RESIDENTIAL . COMMERCIAL
llo INDUSTRIAL
(Certtfied Electrici•nl
915-3561
All Mtku
Homt 143-5340
•Waahera•Oishwaahert
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers
5/ll/'16/ 1 mo .
*VINYL SIDING
"ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULA nON
BISSELL
SIDING CO.
ARMY SUIPWS
& CAMOUFLAGE
Sizes 4 Yrs and up
ALSO HUNTING,
SURVIVAL and
VARIETY ITEMS
PARTS and SERVICE
"'Free Estimates'·
PH. 949-2801
304·773·5222
No Sunday Calls
5·15.'86·1 mo.
FOR THE BEST IN
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
•Vinyl Replacements
Windows
•JA" lnsullted Glau
•Tilt In To Clean
•Mo1t Window• Priced
under '300
"Free Estimates"
lnstallatian bailable
41 I
WATER WELLS
SERVICED
AND
DRILLED
FifE ESTIMATES
FREE ESTIMATES
Call
J&L INSULA110N
& SIDING CO.
992-2772
992-5006
or 742-3147
Rt. 1, Bax 27-B
32933 Romine Rd.
Rutland, Oh. 45775
PHONE
(6141/742-2070
5·29.'86.) mo.
THE QUAUTY
PRINI SHOP
F11 All Y11t Ptlttlrll NHir
PWS: OHin lupp~ll &
Furniture, Wedding
and Graluolion
Sto1ianory, Mognotk
Signs, Rubbw Stamps,
lusfn111 Forms,
Copw Stnic", Eh.
2!! Mill St. Midolltport
T04 Mulborry Aw., Pamoray
992-33453/2/Hn
BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUilT
HOMES & GARAGES
"Af Reasonable Prices"
PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNl'AY CAUS
4-16·'86 1fn
HUTCHISON
CONSTRUOION
OWNER WANTS OFFER!- RACINE - Have yoo been look·
ing tot acreage with a nice house? This 3-4 bedroomranch is
righl for you and your fam1ly room, ntce workshop, electnc
BB heal.
·
NEW HOMES.
ROOFS, DECKS,
ELECTRICAL &
PLUMBING
HENRY E. CLELAND JR ..................................992-6191
JEAN TRUSSELL... ..........................................949·2660
DOTTIE
TURNER ........................ .................... 992-5692
,
PH. 742-2306
or 742-3171
Milo B. Hutchison
·Contractor
5-19-'16'·1 mo.
ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2263
or 949-2161
2-17·86·tfn
3-D AUTO CENTER
YOUNG'S
IIO'Ir W. llta~ St.
'omtnf, ottto,
992-lr771
~
I
$w~
'13·' 80 OM Ftndlr& ..... U9
73·80 GM
Rock• P1n1l1 . .. . . ....... S 1 6
73·79 Ford Fenders ...... l39
Truck Bed
Lln~t~ ................. Full 11115
Mini 11115
FREE INSTALLATION
2 YA WARRANTY
S1tisf.ction Gu•r.-.t•d
Ftte Deltverv h Tri St••• ArM
CARPENTER
SERVICE
-
Addon1 1nd remodeling
Roofing 1nd guHer work
Concr11e work
Piu mblng and tltetric•l
work
(free Eltimates)
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 9U-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
4·15·'86·1C
,----------,---..1
DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL ·SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
'PI.AOUIS
•M.ALI
"'AVILI
•PINS
•flAYS
<HAIMI
10-8-tlc
OWNER WANTS OFFER! -LONG BOTTOM - Aneat 3 bed·
room ran ch with spacious lamily room , kitchen .,th built·in
range and oven units, separate diningarea. Gas I.a. heal plus
woodburner. 2 car gmge, approx . i acre w1th garden space
and outbuilding. Many features.
Howard L Write•l
6-4-'86-1 mo.
5-20-'86'1 mo.
RUSS
ELECTRIC
MOTOR
REPAIR
2282 .
WANTED TO BUY usad wooCI•
coal heaters . SWAIN ' S FUA}.IITURE. Jrd. 6 Oltve St GllliltO·
lis. C1ll 614-446-3169 .
Wanted junk IUlOS. C1ll 614·
Small motcrc-wcle prefen•bty an
80 Dl' go -c•rt or 3 wheellf. Csll
614-387-0813 .
Buying d•ily gold, sihler coins.
rings, jewlllry. atll'ling ware. ofd
coin•. larg1 currlf'lcy. Top pri·
c•. Ed. Burkitt B1rbttr Shof.
~;~·- ::;&.Middleport, Oh. 11 , ·
Em~loytliclll
Se rvt. c1:s
11
Help Wanted
l/11/tfn
ACCENT
After S Call
TOP CASH paid for '83 model
1nd nWter used Cll'l. Smith
Buick-Pontiac , 1911 Eutem
A1111 .. Gallipolis . Clll &14· 448·
MASON, W. VI.
or 949·2160
4-5-tfc
FENCE COMPANY
PH. 992·6931
•
6t4·446 -3672
ACROSS FROM
POST OFFICE IN
New Homes Built
DON lOSE, Owner
949-2493
Clrl .
Jim Mink ChiV.· Oklt Inc ...
Bill Gene Johnson
·
388·9303.
ROSE EXCAVAtiNG
IACIIIE, OHIO
Wanted To Buy·
We PW'f cuh for 111e model c~
5·20.'86'1 mo.
1·3-'86 tic
i~~i="
~
An~ntion! Time is running out to'
get in m the ground fk)or. Be ·•
aapervilor for Houte ot Lloyd
Toy P•rty Pllr'l . No investrr.nt.
Weekly PlY checks. Call collect
304•'736· 8330.
•
I
Federal. St1te 1nd Civil Servlct
jobs row svailable in your ar...
For info. C•ll 805·&44-9633
Dept. 1201 .
Local8u•inas will be in nHd of
sev•ral employHI beginning
August, September 1t1d Ot·
tobtr. Cooks !must be lbll to
preptr• ro flit food) W•l·
tr11s• or waitll'l (mult be 21
Vt_lfl of lUI· IUml blr tlf'ldinQ
1biliti• pnrferredl • p1rt time
bookkeep..-. "Oirl Frld1y''. SMid
informstion desired to P.O. Bo•
426. Pt. Pl1111nt. Wll. 2&560 .
W1ter treatment plant ~lrltOr .
Puf11)1ng 1.2 to 1.5 million
g•llona per d1y. lon ••change
plant . Clua II lie.nse • must.
Excellent hesHh & retirem.,-.t
benellts. S•lsry negoti•ble .
Send rnume tl Galli• Rufal
Wltef Rt 1 Box 184 Glllipolls,
OH 46631 . Cell614·446·9221 .
Chikt Care Workltf · Houseke~per
wanted to live-In with flmity 6n
sm•ll vill~gt on commuter treln
linencrthcfNsw VorkCity . Care
for 2 and 4 y•ar okl c:::t.ildren ,
Houtehokl dutin and simple
mNI preparation. 15 d•y week:
with Wldn•day and occltion.(
other evening or w ..lcend Nb-.,
yaining . Own room , bath, cabtl
TV and $110 waeltular;- . Prefer'
college tga. Summ•r OK bul 1
longer cornmittmlf'lt preferred .•
Send neme, addreu. telephone.'
Av1iillbility d111, experienCI,s
referencea to Mrs . England, 67·
SunnysKII At.tenue, Plea11nt·~
t.tille, NV 10570.
Htrd ·working, depend~l• indf.J
vidu1l i)r genwal offic. work ,;
Must have good h1ndwriting, ,
ple•unt phone voice, & accu.·
,.,. typlng skills. s..,d reauml
to Box TBODO WI care of th.:
G1tlipolit Daily Tribune, I;S
Third A\le, Gallipolis, OH "6831 ."
1
W•nted so me on• to mow ltwh.
call 304·675-2015.
'
'{atd SaleS
$27,000.00
01
Con11rvancy
.
NEW LISTING - TUPPERS PLAINS- log home lor rustiC
liVing w1lh modern conven1en ce 12 bedrooms, lull ba sement.
Nestled 111 Jhe trees with approx . 13 aCies. Barn . Callie see!
I o'clock
loodlng Crooll Conoarvoncy
TERMS OF SALE: Cooh. •
POMEROY
NEW LISTING - CHESTER - Really a mce 3 bedroom
home w1th full basement and latge level yard . Carport & a,
great locatiOn in town . $34.!l!O.OO.
8-ply, tranamluton oooler,
gauge•. amme1er end oil, H.
D. knitted vinyl llal, oux .
fuel tri, H. D. battery, cargo
tight, candy apple rod , trailer
269. Page 13. Moigo Coun-
Run
'
171 oflhe Oood Rocordo of
ty Deed Record• -
fotlowo;
n"ut Avenue; thence in 1
toutheasterty dirac:tion along ,
ooid otroot 61 feat, thence
nonh 30 deg . eaet 85% feet
to Mechanic Street: thence
In 1 werterly direction with
Mechanic Street 88 feet to
tht ptice of beginning .
Thl1 conveyance is mad•
IUbitct ro 1 ruarvetton con·
teined in that certain deed
302engineorequN•Ient. IU·
tometic tren1mi11ion, lim-
Reference Deed : Volume
,Street;
thence oouthertv with the
Sug~r
September 18, 1964, re corded in Volume 222. Page
recorded In Volume 222.
Beginning at the southw811
comer of Mechanic Street
end
OR
YOUR KIND OF FOLK!
Y'All COME SEE US, YA HEAR?
SPECIFICATIONS; 1987
Pogo 171 of the Oood Ro·
cords
of Meigs Countv.
Ohio.
of Pomeroy, Meig• County.
11
'h ton Stylooida 4x4 pickup,
dated September 18. 1964.
THIRD PARCEL. Situate
on Sugar Run in the Village
Ohio, bounded
huoband, to Tho Fronklin
Roof Eotato Company doted
S-14-1 lo.
J.R.'s REPAIRS
WIVII).
TRENCHING IS OUR LINE
H! mo.
z
:z:: Licensed Clinical Audiologist
FREE ESTIMA1I S
DOZER. BACKHOE.
TRENCHER , SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. WATER .
GAS & SEWER UNES.
RECLAMATION. PONDS.
SPRING DEVELOPMENT.
HOME FOOTERS.
OUMP TRUCK STONE
& DIRT
WIUAMS TRENCHING
PHONE 992-2156
Giveaway
J&F
742·2027
Rt . 4. Hyoell Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 46769
Ph 16141992-2834 ,
992-6704
FREE ESTIMATES
4
1 fem•l• 2 yr . old Beegle to find~
good home . Call 814 -448·
0098.
WAMSLEY & GRAY
6·4-'86 -1 mo.
TOWN & COUNtRY
VETERINARIAN
CLINIC
Write • Mission•ry for adr•••
Mite P. 0.. . Box 1083 . St.
Petersburg , fla. 33731 . ·
~
a:
iAll SIZES AVAILABL£
Phone
CLC COINS
'
- LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
Swim Molds· lntefl)reting Semces
•Limestone
•Water Line
•Basements
•Gas Line
•Land Clearing •Fill Dirt
•Top Soil
•Septic Tanks •Ponds
(3114) 77).5527 01 (304) 895-3386
1·7 11-TH
INTERESTED IN BUYING
APPROXIMATELY 2112
ACRES OF ST. RT. 7 NEAR
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL?
IF SO, PLEASE PHONE
HOME NATIONAL BANK
949-2210.
z
Box Bt , Leiv1sy, WV
7 week old kittenl to gtv•w•y.
Long -halrld . littef trtfned . CIA
IF NO ANSWER CAU:
Buying/Selling
Gold, Silver
14K Chains, Coins,
Collector's Ac~essories
Bullion
SUMMER HOURS
Pomeroy early Sunday. Some nearby businesses were affected by the
fire, nHicia.ls said.
vehicle 11 follows :
Sing!•'
Meet W•t Vlrg!niono.
All ~g•. 01111. comp.-Mons.
morrlogo . Don 't bO lonely.
814· +46· 2318 .
367-0317
Trenching of Any Type
Backhoe Service
Plumbing Service
Custom Welding
lowboy Hauling
Septic Systems
Licensed & Bonded
· District o1 one new motor
f.mUy ~nions . Clll 814-31 42108 or 1· 800·282· 2187.
CJ Co~uterized Hearing Air Selection
•SYLVAIUA
Hole
Books $2.95 + 75¢ p&h .
l:JO.- F.-.Sr38-ll
127·Aigltlno 'n' Dolilll
t2Hooy Glflo .•. Omooronll
117-Eaay Art of tl 1 pin
SALVAGE - Mickey WIDiams of Mlck's Barber & StyUug Center
removes a chair from his business wWe area firefighters fought the
blaze that struck the Meigs Inn oomplex on East Main Stmet in
from Thelma P. McMurray
end J . Willi• McMurray, her
Schools, churcf1•. COn,llnY
picniCI. · b'rthday pr~rtlel 1nd
INCLUDES PAINT
& LAlOR
FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
•ZENITH
deb! BuidifllS
'86 Needlecraft Catalog
150 designs. $2 + 75¢.
"CLELAND CLAN"
Public Notice
NOAH'S ,ARK ANIMAL PARK.
992-3361
CHEMR-915-3307
4/1/ tln
w-.
62·12 liortlllm 1~11..
NY 113n. Prlnl - . Alldrlll,
Zip, Slzo, Numblr.
SEE ONE OF THE
of Alben Davies lot, now
owned by E. w. Peoplee;
thence southerly along said
Oa\lies' or Peoples' line 35
feet to a stake; then ce easterly along the line of lot
formerly owned by Andrew
Reid 100 feet , more or less.
to Bunernut A\lenue to 11
post; then ce in a northerly
direction along Butternut
Avenue 69 '11 feet to the
place of beginning . See Records of Deeds of said Meips
County, Vol. 36 . pages 58
and 58, being record of
Deeds of Dec. 20 . 1869.
from Josiah Huntley and
wife to Benjamin F. Dyke
and being the same rea l estate herein described .
441·0284.
OFFER GOOD 1HIU JUNE 5, 1916
RIDENOUR
TV & APPLIANCE
•BUUDOZING •END
LOADER •TRUCKING
•TRENCHING
•CRANES •DRAGUNE
SEWERS • BASEMENTS
WATER UN ES · SEPTIC
TANKS · CREEK & FIELfl
DRAINAGE PONDS · MOBILE
HOME SETUPS · ROAD
BUILDING • FOOTERS • LAND
AliOI B - CrlflJ, , 11
Roitdlf IIIII
J 'L 7
01 Wnlt D11lly Stntrnt\ Cllml rd Otpt.
NOTICE OF SALE
By virture ot en Order of
Solo lnuod out of the Com-
$9 5
•• D11y
I Q. I 4·IIc
Public Notice
.
MOBILE HOME IOOF PliNIING
"'Sh~
NewtTtthltlll
'- Fill Tl11t
Send $3.25 plus 75¢
~ostage, handl1ng, for
each panern.
Sond lo:
Real Estate General
Public Notice
Sptl,g Sptellt
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
.SATELUTE SAlES & SERVICE
199
•RITE AI ,
ALKALINE
BAnERIES
MAALOX
.RITE AID
LIQUID ACETAMINOPHEN
ANTACID
TABLETS
Eme,rgency
11 0%1 ot tile amount of the
bkl. Bids ere to be
School Diotrict
Office of the Treasurer
621 South Thi~d AvtW'Iue
Middleport, Ohio 46 760
SWEEPER 1nd 1-.w~g m8Chlne
repair, pertt. and tuppN•. Pic*
~ •nd deltvlfY, Davit vacuur:n
Cleaner. on• hllf mill up
G.org• Cr ... Ad . C1ll 114·
UNDERPINNING & SRUP
WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
muirn.~m
Meigs Local
w•
3 Announcements
Middleport, Ohio
If
1 ..
L..._ _ _ _1;..·..;..;;.
• ·..;;;..;C..J .,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _"T"_ _ _ _.;5.;
· 5;.·',;86;.·t;.fn._
SERVICE
Public Notice
DON'S MOBILE HOME
.REPAIR SERVICE
28178.
Real Estate General
The Daily Sentinel
phone c .....d giftt whH•I
11 H.H.C.,
GILLEnE
ATRA
SHAVING
CARTRIDGES
:· coLUMBUS, Ohio iUPil - A
labor contract tx>twff'n the state
and about 35,00J members of the
Ohio Civil Service Employel's
Association goes into effect July 1,
gtvlng the employees their first pay
raise In thrff' year s.
The contract , ratified by a
margin of 15·to-1, gives each
employff' a $4'iO lump-sum bonus,
aloogwlth 7 percent pay raises. The
employees held mff'tings across
the state tx>twi'E'n May 22 and
Thursday to vote on the contract.
• Local ll of the OCSEA, an
atfiU.te of the American Federa·
lion of Stale, County and Municipal
Employees, approved the contract
by a margin of nearly 15-to-1. a
union
said.
~~~~er ~~:~:~'we ~~~
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. Wealso
repair Gas Tanks.
•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial
unleu oubmltted on tho bl.,k
proposal forme furnished with
- -• CHO COLATE COVERED
PEANUTS OR BR IDGE
MIX - 4.5 OZ . BOX
AFI'ERMAm -This Is the remains of the Meigs
1woulcl Uk•to ttlenk ...tfYanefOf
their preyers, c•rdt, Yl1ltt,
proposal will be considered
, BORDEN'S
CANDIES
.
We can repair and Fe·
MiddlePort. Ohio. 46760. No
sealed and addressed to:
of Thanks
In
at 2:00 P.M . on tha same day
in the Office of the
Superint.,dent.
Copies of the specifications
and proposal blanks are avella·
bie at the Meigs Loco! School
District. Office of the Trees·
ure.-. 621 South ThirdAvslue,
COLOR FILM
DEVELOPING*
Card
May Qod bltill
Con•ld Ohllng•.
+--------'"'T~~~------,r---------,---------,---------~ youth1111.hoiPlUII.
WAY
RAOIO
doiNonng
will be received
School District
1
Business SerVices
NOTICE TO
,8t00ERS
Seated bldo IDf oupptying,
Education of
The Daily Sentinei- Page--7
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
EUGENE LONG
SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
VIIIYL I AWMIIIUM
Complell Gutter Work
Complete Romodollng
Roofing of oil Typoo
Worked In home •r•
20 yur1
"'Freo EollmiiiM"
CALl COllE<T:
Ph. 16141 143·5425
5·12-'86·2 1110.
PLUMBING & HEA nNG
Now lo<afion:
llrl North S..and
Mitldlopar1, Ohio 4571r0
·sAI£S & SERVICE
W1 C1rrv Fishing Supplill
Your Cable &
Ph<lne Bills Hera
IUSIIESS P1f0NE
16141 992·6!SO
IISIIBf(f PHON!
1.141 .. , •• 17 . .
..... ·pc;n;arov ........... :
....... GiiJJTpolis.. ·· .. ..
8t Vicinity
V..-d Sals 2023 Ch1th1m Av•.
Jun• 17th I 18th.
Middleport
& Vicinity
·-
.'
···-··- ·- --·-·· ·········-··-·· .. ··
2 fam ily yard 1111: College AVe.'
Rutland, June 11 snd 17. Rail\ ~
or 1hlne.
'
5 flmit¥ y1rd
••1•."•ilrvld St.
Aetq;SJ from merint. Good clo·
thing. Mon·Wod. 9·4.
�11
LAFF-A-DAY
H alp Wanted
Cltbin~
41
Houses for Rant
Newly decor•ttd. 2 bedroom
hou11. Full'f carpMed. Unfur,nlthed. Storm doon and win·
dow1. Will acc:apt 1 or 2
chlldr.,. D..,a11t required. 614·
milk.,.. lr,mediate op·
~nlnga for ~binllt
·nwt•• •
m.tchine op•atorl. Houra B·ol.
•10 South Front St. Colutmua,
OH .
992· 3090.
EIIV ANembly Workl t714.00
per 100 . Gutr .. tMd Pevrnent.
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
No Salta. DtUilt -- Send
111mptd envelope: Elan-5847
3418 EntlfPriU, Ft. Pllfct Fl.
33482.
EASY
ASSEMBLY
fulty furntlhtd, AC. all utilti•
Plid. ldulrt only. Call 114-441 -
WORKI
$714.00 per 100. Gulfenteed
paym'"t . No ••••· Detlilt·Send
atam.,.t ..,velope: Elen· 715,
3'18 Enterprise, Ft. Piaroe. Fl.
4110 or 114·446·2003.
2 & 3 bdr mobile hom•. AC.
cable TV. BulevHit Rd . Call
614-4.S6-0527 after 3pm ..
33482 .
Gowemment Jobs. 116,040
$69.23D·vr. Now fliring . Call
Upper Rivlr Rd. alto double
wida. Call 614·446·0508 or
805-8117 -6000 Ext. A-9805 fof
current frtderallitt .
814-441·2430.
Mech~nie - drNtr
2 bdr. fum. or unfurn . conve-
10 work pan·
time for I IOCII CC"l'lftV· Write
The Deity Sentinel. P.O. Box
729M, PorN~roy , Ohio 116769.
Son-.one to .. ay with eldllfly
coup~ evening from 7 :00 ·
1 1 :00. In Middl..,art. Call 114992-2371 Of 814-992-2363 .
Monday, June
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Page- 8- The Daily Sentinel
51 Household Goods
:"'l:~:NITURE
AUCTION
82
11111111'- ........ -
6 •16>
"Honestly, Harry, sometimes
I wonder why I ever tricked
7
collecting,
dtliYifY.
PI"Y pl., no
htlpful.
C_.lPrw6ou1
collecw 1~;::;~~~:;~;:;:~~G:;:;;~:;::;;:::::~~ 2 bedroom. turnl1hed. 3 mllt1
31
Work! Book-Childcrlft, repr•
SMtltives needed . P1rt timt, full
time, guar~nt•• twaillble, 304882 -2485.
RAWlEIGH Slletmtn. e1rn
ss.OO to 110.00 per hOur •Ptre
time, for i'lformation ctU 304615 ·1090
PATIENT
ACCOUNTS MAN·
AGEA , Jtckson General Hospitll( Ripley , WV is 1<:cepting
tppli~tions tu tht po1ition of
patient account manager. Ouali·
fied applie~nts will hive 4 yeart
of ho1pittl busln ... offic. up•
rience. minimum ot • 2 .,..,
college degrM in tha bu•in••
field & • vast knowt.tga of
insurance billing, credlt c:ollec:tiont. & bua6n . . office
procedure. Submit resunw to
Jackton Gen••l Hotpital, Personnel c._,t, Pinnell Slrett.
Ripley, WV25271 byJune2&1h,
1986.
12
Situations
Wanted
Homes for Sale
Walk tO town, IChOOII,
ctturche.. library, one ttory, 2
bdr ., ettrec:tivl bath, formtl
diningroon, good carp.-ling,
ltrve kitchen, good g• fumec1,
storm windows. Call 814-448-
0530"
Handyman'• Speciel duple~~ rtn·
tat. In need of repair. VInton,
Ohio. Priced chaapl 110.000.
c.,l.,•·24&·6818.
12•10 Shultz covtr.t porch,
rurtl weter. metal 1torage bldg ..
with lot. Crown City. C1ll
114-251·144 .. or 11 .. · 2:&6-
4'h acrn with rold front~ge on
county rold 8 Tidl Ridge Road,
half ltnd. level garden land good
ttailer ette or hou11 lite. Joinl
Ctyde w..., land on thr• 1id•
at Thurmen, Ohio, juat off 3e
We~t from O•llipolil, Ohio. Call
114-241·9101.
Br owner· lrMII 2 bedroom
home with 'h acrthilltidtlotancl
outbuilding. 6 mil• eouth of
OaUipolia. krin• Aldge Ad. Firtt
houu on right from Rt. 218.
114.000. Pay M.OOOdown•nd
owner will help finMceiNIIance.
6 rooms & bath. 2 lot1. Ctl
614·388·8110.
3 bdr. home, clo11 to town, 2
bathl, partlY furni1hed. Gu
hNt, tow utilitiet. Cllll14-245·
9248 .
1B Wanted to Do
Will babysit in my home. Have
fenctd in btckyard & toys. etc.
Day time prl"fii'T.t. Call 614-
448-393tL
Tr., work wented- prunning,
topping. removals, hedges &
bu. . . trimmed. FriiHtlmlfH.
Call61•· ... 1· 1832.
Babv•itting job want.t tor
summer. Preferably wMkdtyL
Call anytim1614-256-6707.
Will do mowing & odd iObt.
cluning gtrag•. farm work.
Colt 614 "446"626&
Want~ :
Someone to ete11 l111d,
2 acr• clo .. to town . on Rt .
588. Repl'f to Bo• noo in cere
of the G1llipoiil Daity Tribune.
825 Third Ave.. G11iipolil, Oh
46131 .
Wille•• <:treof thut ·in• in thtk
hornet. 20 year e111p . CaM 114Will do mowing worlling in hly
at tobacco. H1ulint junk, or any
odd job. Cell 114-258-1465.
Would like to do N)utt Cllllling
tor home or office. 114-949-
2126 .
614-448-1318
7991 "
flll all Cidl
3 bedroom. nawly redecorated,
aluminum liding, l•g• carport.
gwage. on~ acre lot in Ch ..ter.
One-fourth mile on 248 off At.
7. &14· 980·4356.
3 bedroom, lg. kitdlen, heet
pu~ . •ir cond. <:.-p .. ed, gar·
tge, Syracu11. 814-992· 3402
.tt.... 6 pm.
Qulllrty home. newty r11m0delad
choice locetlon on Colleg• Rd.
Syrecu11. new complettkltdl1111
1nd 18Undry, air conditlonld,
la'lle lot. 11 4 ·992·532•.
2 bedroom Oupl• hou• partielty lumilhed. low utHitiel. in
Pomeroy. Call dayL 114-992·
lNG CO . recomrn.,ds thM vou
c10 busln•• with p.:Jple vou
know, 1nd NOT to nnd money
ttuvu gl11ht m1~ unHI you hav•
ln\ltltigl1«1 the offering.
lnt.mationll MetaiBuildin'- Menuiacturer ulectlng bu1lder·
dtaler In some op111 arus. Htgh
pot.,tial profit in our growth
fJdustry. (303) 7&9-3200 o.t.
2 bedroom houH In Pomeroy,
UOO lumilhtd. f11& unturnilhed. Pey own utllitl•, wood
burner, lltgt '(lrd. C .. l d~·
114· 992-2381 •• 114-912·
ev~nlngt.
OowerrMnt homes from t1 . IU
repatrl. Delinquent t.. proptlrt'f.
Aepot~...ktnt. Ctll 805-187·
6000 ht. H-9805 for currllrt
,..,., lilt.
1011100 lot. 1111 storyhoun. 3to
4 bedroomt, dishwasher. double
range stovt, tulr carplltd,
wood and COli buming ttov11.
Clot• to tchool end hospital.
Ctll 814-992·6010. Any rlltonlble oH1tt ml';' be conaidlfed.
7 room hou11. 100 • 100 aot.
t16.000. Svr1cu••· C•ll 61.t·
992· 2239 .
6 roomhOUII. 1.2 ICrll. Ooubll
cargaragt. locattd on Rose Hill.
Bargain priced 120.000. C1ll
2403"
114-67B·2113.
Est•blilhed busin•• for Hie.
Indoor miniawre golf cour1t.
Downtown Gallipolil. Clll 814 ·
7 room hou11 11h bath, 4
bedroom, g•age. 770 Ath St.
Middleport Ohio . 614· 992-
44&-8222.
121·0752.
6714"
12xl0 2 bdr. good cond., new
c.-pit new fumtct. partly
turnlthed. underpinning in ctudod. *4.100. Coli &14·211·
6704or &14·211·1 139.
1978 Mansion 14•70. 10x20
porch • ewning, undtrpinning.
2 bdr., ~th lh. llwingroom,
nUing ten kitchen stow•. r.trlg.,
den. fireplace, AC. wuher.
dryer. C.JI 11•·388·9850.
1981 Commodore 1 4x4• IX.
cond. 111.1!500. C•ll 114-388-
1528.
1980 Liberty 14x54. 2 btd·
room. untuml1hed. vlnvl under·
plnnine Included. Mutt 1ell. Call
Wet• welll MA'Ictd and drilled.
Frw •11mlttl. Call 614-992·
&008 or 614·742· 3147.
PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR ,
rtdilcower vour pieno' t btMitiful
tone, c.ll t.»day, Ward• IC.ey·
bo11d, 304-875-5100 or 1715382...
Home• for Sale
1978 23' Stlf Craft. <:artfr•
M"nfng , .. <:. cond .• full'f ctr·
p01od . 304·882-2471 .. 8823682.
12•15 trail• with land. mMe
offor, 304-671·5551 .
33
Farms for Sale
142 acra farm with 3 bclr. houae,
11191 bem, 2 pon•. Call 61'4·
241·1241.
161ecr• in letllrt, ltrge home,
2 bam1. owner fintnclng, 304·
891-3450.
34
Business
Buildings
ve•
21.12
okl hOme. 1 rooma and
bath on 1.8 acrt. Galllpol ..
Fo"Y· W. Vo. 304·f7&·2214.
3 bedroom. all alto, centr.t 1ir,
attaclted gar•ge, Oellipollt
FOf'Y. 304·171·2132.
1971. 1••10 K~lowood, 3 bt. 2
fuH bethl, tomt remodeling.
304-773·1088.
Nice3or4blclroomhoutt.l•g•
kitchM. half benment. acre
lend, will Ukt mobUe home or
camp« 11 down ~ment. IIIU·
JACKSON ESTATES APART·
MENTS !Equal Housing Oppor·
tunkvl monthly rent atart• et
t171 for 1 bedroom ..-d •212
for 2 bedroom, dtpolit *200.
loe~~ttd n...- Spring V.,ley Plaza
and foodland, pool and Cable TV
aw•llable, office houra u poaaf.
bl1 10 wn to 4 pm and? pmto 9
pm MondtV·Friday. Call 614446-2746 Of 111ve m.,age.
Nicety fumlahtd mobile home,
tff, IPI. , central tir and hett In
city, tdulu only. Ctll 614-44111-
0338.
2 bdr. utllrtlll partialty furn ..
*175 mo. Call304-176· t'i104 .
New 1 bedroom apartment. Call
614·448·2128 9,00om . 5pm.
Completetv furnilh.ct. all •lectric, 2 bdr. epertment, U25 mo .,
1 bdr. f200 mo. Adultt, Nferen·
<=11. nc. ~sit. 468 Second
Avo . . eo'll 01.4· 446-~236 or
114· 441·25iL '
Furnished room 1136. Utilitl•
pd. 919 2nd G.,lipolil. Share
bath. Singll male. Call 8144 .. 8·4416.
Furnished apt . 2 bdr . 1176.
131 Yt 4th Glllipolil. Water pd.
Cel1614·441-4416 after 8pm.
Fumilhed tpt . 1 bdr. 920 4th
Gallipolil. 1250. Utiliti• pd.
Commerc:itl ..,d rtlldentel rental property, tocattdonVitnd St.
N.wly remodeled and fullv
rontod. 304-175-3797.
35 Lots
& Acreage
Will do mowing worklnt In hay
or tobecco. Hauling iunil. or lt'l'f
odd lob" Coli 114·2!11· 1415.
acr•.
1 to 5
ptrtillly wooclld
lots. Tupper Pllinl end Chtlttr,
waltr and apt~rovtd ra.ct to aech
lot. Rt11onllbty priced. wiN
flnlftce. 10 percent down . Cll
., 4·910·35t4 .
31 terti for •le. Hone cave.
Recint. All mlnerlll, working
s•
wotl. •13.000 114-117·
3470.
7 nr• with complett mobile
home hookup. Btrn, in Ch11ter
.,.... A1king t10,000. Call
114-985-3921"
304-171·2331
1882 Cloy10n 12xl0 oil oloc.
•••100. 304-171·2411.
1813 Knoo!wood, 3 bodroom
trejl.-. Meume 'oen wfth tlow
d-n poym.,, 304-871·1206
or 875·8500.
'
1871. 12.1180Govenor, •rcond,
front porch wfth IIW'nlng, u:c
con d. 304· 111· 3411 after
1:00.
1882. 14xU Commodore, II·
eume loen at •112.00 month,
lumilhod, ... cond. 304!171·
1712 or 171-7842.
1971 Elcon1 mobMe home.
moblo loon. 304-e71·3030 or 14d5. "" cond, 304-871·
878-3431 .
1170.
992-7314.
Pomeroy 2 bdr, NIYk)rt Run,
*171 mo. *100 dtPOilt. ytrd,
patkt, CtU lfter lpm 614 -992·
....... 304·871·1991 .
Bulldingti11 on Fit. 2, Gtlllpolll
Filhing lake with 2 to 5
elec and approved •ewer •to"m
on leu lend of Crab Cr• , S"
Dick Auotln. 304·171· 2028.
f1t!I1 I II S
41
Houaea for Rent
Svr•cu... 2 bedroom t1 96 per
month plus utilitlet. Depotlt
required. Call 614-992-5587
aft., 5:00. 614-992-7871 Of
814·992·5732.
APARTMENTS. mobile homes.
hou••· Pt. Pl... ent •nd Galtlpo-
171·7&41 ilvonlng.
·
3 bt 1pt, elec. hilt I'VIiltble, 1
w ..k. locsted on CrabCr"k Ad.
References Required . C1H bttwMn 8 :30 & 8 pm. 304-676·
6809"
45
Furnished Rooms
For rant Steeping Rooms and
light houae k.aplnJII rooma . Park
Central Hotel> Call 114-«6·
48 Space for Rent
A•ohV-114· 441·0008.
Trailer lot ivr rent in Portland.
Acra11 from Post OHict. Trail•
hook-up . t70. per month. Phon•
0 ..1.. ., Colonlol Proportl•
114· 28f· l110 lor lunhtr
...,..,,
4 IMir. carpeted, rllfrig, a ltOYI,
frll. g11, ICyg« Creek trtl.
R.,,..,_ • - · eon 114·
3117·0440 or 814-448·3710.
7 rocn11' houH, 3 mll• lOUth of
Golllpolil. for lnfor-. Col
114·441·0143.
I room houM. 121 Flrtt Awt.
Coli 114-441·3841.
2 llodfoom lurnlohod houN In
Mlddloport. Coil 814· 182·
1304,
., 4·843-8186.
Trliltr 'PIIC•· Sand Hill Road
conwenlent to 1chool•. ttore and
hotpltll. City IIJWir 1VIillbl11.
Inquire Roaalll, 304-175-4800
bl'twHn 9:00 and 4 :00 wtek
dtyl.
Treller apece. 3 mlltl from town
juatabOYIOid ''Y" on Rt . 2, 1arge
.... 304-871·3248.
47 Wanted to Rent
Wented like to ,..,t 3 bdr. hou11,
prlfer blltfflent. In or around
Golllpollo. Nood b¥ Ju~ U1h.
Colt 814·441·4448.
Ml' rcil<l lll il s l!
51 Houaehold Goode
1
~~~;~~~~~~;~~:::;;;~~~~
56
Pete for Sale
AKCregist•edCockarSpanitls.
born Apr. 21. bleck male, buff•
whitefarnale,motherrld.buff
1'h v.. ra. 814·992 ·8021 or
304-875-3468.
58
Fruit
&
Vegetables
You pick f .50 qull'l . Roullf'l 'l
Berry Farm. Union Campground
near New Havtn, WV . Cell
304·882-2237 "
fa'Ving hint. Brown tnd
whrte. Call 814-742 -2455 .
large round He11tcn laler .,.d 2
•••I equipment trailer. C1ll
814·99.2· 740L
EVANS ENrERPRISES, Jock·
992·242e.
Good uaed reatonlble price
color TV ' 1 1 good vtrietv. CaM
114· ... 6· 1149.
e ft .
6 ft. 8 ln . pltio door
complete, 2· 36 in. x 48
insulated windowt. 38 in. 111 36
in. insulated window. Cllll 81 • ·
·U8-0098.
.II
Huffy Stu Thompton with mag
whetlt , flO. Call 81,·446 ·
3199.
White'• metel detectora. lltut
modelt, iowelt prices. Call
FMIII Supp l11:s
& LIVESIIII:k
61
Farm Equipment
CROSS & SONS
U.S. 36 Wut, J•elllan, Ohio.
614-286 -&161 .
MIUII'(flrguiOn, New Holland,
Bush Hog StiM A Service. Over
40 w.t tt'Ktort to c:hoo11from
& C0"1altteline of new & uted
eQuipment. ltrgftt Hitceion in
S.E. Ohio .
CENTER. SR 38 W. Galltpolis,
Ohio. Ca11114-446· 9777, we.
814-441· 3592. Up iront h-.c·
tort with wertanty OVet' 7e uaed
tfiCtOrt, 1000 toolt .
A£ tr•<:tor with plows 1450.
New ldta pull-typa mower
t226. 3 pt . rake never uaed
1395. JO 14T bllef 1896. Cell
800 FOfd trector, 1,200 houra
with plow1. cultivator mow1r,
bOom pole t2,995. 24ft. 4axltl
gool.,tck trailtr f1 ,t95 . 340
IH trtctor wtthpktwt, mowtr. IH
hllv condltiontf, hey w~na, 68
NH baler 12.91& . 1800 Oliwer
dintl widehont cream puH
*3.850. AC ._row no-tHI planter,
dNn U&O. Ctll 1·&1 ' ·286 ·
lifttone 2000 Family Fitnllt
System. Excell.,t condition.
Coli 814-843·1276.
TONY'S GUN REPAIRS , acope
bore sighting, factory reb luting,
hourt 9 :00 till d•rk. c•ll 3o•-
Buy Rawlelgh Products whol·
ula, Dal• and Wllm• Wood.
304·675·1090 .
SLIGHT PAINT DAMAGE .
ftalhing lffOW algn f299 . Ugh ·
t.t. non -arrow 12791 Nonllgh t.t f2411 Fru lettln! Frw ltf1r.
See
loco!~ .
tnytlme.
6522 .
8-N Ford TrKIOr. New paint,
rllbullt, runt good. t1350 . 814·
985--&222 .rter I pm.
NIW' Hotlll!d. 7 ft rear mower,
304"896· 3450 .
Now buying .ttMI corn or ear
corn. Call for lttnt quotea. River
Cfly Farm SupplY. 114·446·
2986.
63
AOHA Regilterld Quaner horn
stud service. Otttet out of
"Chartie Polite". Cell 61 4 ·446 -
Pets for Sale
614-3117· 7803 "
Arebitn Hor ... purebred Ara·
bi111 ttud •rvice. Specl•l dlacounta to vouth groupt. R. & J
Arabi1111, Leon, W. V•. 30...
.t58-1012 .
Hay
8t
Grain
MiliCI hay ltrgl
IqUiri
beltl,
01 .26 . 304·671·187t.
] rfl ll $iJIIrl.ii iUII
71
Autos for Sale
1979 Ford Miflt8ng 4 cvl .. new
rebuilt mott;lr. lew mlieege. Call
114·2&8·8417.
1967 ChivY lmpolo 311-321
HP. rod, bloclolrnorlor, PI, PB, 2
1911 Mozdo RX·7. & opd .. low
mlillge, ••c. cond. c•l 61•·
1979 Robbin. CoH 814-388·
197S Chevy Nova runs well
tiiiOO. Call 11 • ·MI-3870.
Rletglals Nova 327-325 HP,
c:hromt engine. m-22 trantmll-
olon Col 614·882-8841 .
388·9773.
Golllpolls.
no. 304-ttl-307& .
1 )4· 742·311 8.
9738 or. 814· 388·9813.
1978 Dodge 4x4 8 h . bad,
18 ,000 mil• on ntbuih 360
eng6ne, automatic, PS , P8,
AM -FM, new ptirn , ••c. cond.,
*3,960. Also Myers hydr~ull c
anow plow t950 , tndn .
ctmper. or bett offer. C•ll
614·446· 274& .
1982 Mazda. 6 tpeed , AM-FM .
12499 Johnt'a Auto Sates,
Butwille Rd . Gllllpolls, OH.
For Sale: 1982 Chevy Yt ton 6.2
Olt1el truck . AM -FM radio, P8 ..
PS ., auto , over drive, low
mllug1. 114-742-2997.
1983 Dodg1 Power Ram, IUIO·
matic, ..... low mileega. IJ~Cel ·
lent condition. 16600. 614985-4222 after e pm.
Vans
&
198! Chevy convertion wan, low
miiHga, AT. AC. AM -FM exc.
cond. Cell 614 -448-4141 after
6 6 on wHkendl.
1985 Chavy Conversion van
ral"d root, low mlleiiQe, lolded.
l OOfT KNOW.• J'llo GOIHG
OYER 1b TOAAV~ 1111&
MORHINGI WUtt ~lliHG
1980. 14 pusengar Plvmo uth
Van for s•le. Bida tccepltld unt il
June 20 . Will not accept bids
ten than two -thirds loan wtlue.
Call Wenda VIning. 814-9922161 tor more Information.
1964 Rambler ttation w1gen,
good cond. 74 Chevy pickup,
f1lr cond., 51h HP outboerd
motor, countertop, stove &
011en. Ctn be teen 2024 11J N.
Meln. Ask for Jim. 304·875-
6439.
1984 Dodge window van fulty
loaded *10. 600. 304· 875-
2938.
ball; Cincinnati a1 Atlan1a
79 Motors Homes
& Campers
1976 Star ~ rah foldout ~ amper.
sleeps B. complete with stove.
ice bo111 . lighll & sink. e~ec . cond ..
lihe nnw . Call 614 -388 -9755
after &PM .
ll hrs .)
Ill (I) ® Whoel of Fonuno
I]) Buttarllloa
011 [Z Entonainmont To-
. '(OU#i! F~IE'NPS CONPITJON
night
Tony Danza di'·
cunes his preparations for
his role as the nation 's
most successful jailhouse
anorney in the upcoming
TV movie, " Doing Time" .
1$N'T' e')(AGTL.Y
CONiAGIOU,J", BUT"
15 ft . Scottie. Self-con tained,
refrtgerator. no ve with oven.
furna ce . G ooJd condition .
$1000. ORO . Ca ll 6 14 -247·
4122 .
HE IS"
foi!Af<ING i f *
f'I~$'E"F
$1C:::fc·
Services
!HI Alice
IDl Jeopordy
7 :35 ([) Major Looguo B11eball:
Cincinnati at Atlanto (2
hrs .. 45 min.) Live.
B:OO D CIJ (jJ) Main S1roet The
worlds of two single teenage mothers-one white,
Home
Improvements
one black- are B)(Bm ined.
(60 min.l (R).
ALLEY OOP
(]) Father Murphy
(]) College Ch-loading
Chompionohlp (R).
(I) D (I) Tholnoldora (CC)
8ASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Un conditional lifetime guarantee . l ocal reieren ces fu rnished.
Free esti mates. C•ll collect
1· 614 ·237·0488, d•v or night.
R cgars Basom&nt
Waterproofing.
When
*1800. 304·812· 2471 or 882·
3662.
.
1981 KX12& Kawaskl . good
oond. .aoo. 304·773-IUs"
1872 PontiiiC Catallne, runs
good, AM tlr... bltttf'y 1300.
Wentld • cycle . front wheel
carrier and tow for car hftch,
304-89&·31121 .0
~o
or boll. 30C-671·2942"
mentor
Nick
is
and
Mackey discover a connection between the deeth and
I Answer:
Another
form of
Educated
guess
NORTH
.10H2
.A7
tAK6
•Jao
By Jem01 Jaroby
EEK& MEEK
PLOTZ.
RON ' S Televiti cn Serv ice .
Hou111 calls on RCA , Quaur,
GE . Speci111ing in :!enith Ca ll
304 -578-2398 or 614 · 446 ·
2464.
ACROSS
Mra. King .An ex·egent
lapses into a coma after
warning Lee end Amanda
about a plot involving the
poisoning of a fast food
I "Nightmare
Alley"
star
6 Garlic
fragment
II Bring joy
12 AffectiOn·
(CC) Tho diplomatic crisis
13 Quoted
14 Type lace
15 Virgil's
greeting
16 U!ied to be
18 Saul's
uncle
are tenn
(j]l Oempuy and Mak•
peace (60 min.)
9:00 D CIJ !IJ) MOVIE: 'Tho
Lords of Dloclplino' (CC)
(]) 700 Club
(]) Oymnaotlco: MeDon·
RINGlES ' S SERVICE . upe·
rienced carpanter. electrician.
mescn. ptinter. rooting lin clud·
ing hoi tar application! 304675 ·2088 or 675· 7369.
19 Fonner
Chempionohip
hrs.) (R) "
Rotary or c1ble 1ool drilling. , ,
Molt well s comp l11ted 11m a d• V·
Pump 11les and urvit:e 304·
MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
-.- ~
895-3802
WHAT ARE 'IOU <SONNA
I'M OONNA BE A JET
PILar WHEN I GET
CXJT a= 5CHOOL .
C . AND 0 . Contractor. remodel·
ing •nd new frame work and any
kind of odd jobs. Cet1304 -173·
5284 .
BE WHEN 'TOLJ GfET
(2
·
CllDCilMOVIE:'Tho Firat
Time· (CCI (R).
I]) (fi) American Playhouoe:-Sundey in tho Park
with George (CC) Bernad·
otto Peters and Mandy Pa·
tink.in star in a televis ion
Stark• Tree tnd Lawn Serv1ce.
landscaping . 304· 576-2010.
SHAVING-.
cal. (2 hrs ..
il)
Plumbing
& Heating
ANO HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pin e
G•llipolia, Ohio
Phone 614 -446·3888 or 614 -
of
BARNEY
Excavating
IT's TH' PARSON's
WIFE.TATER --
Oood·1 Excavating, basem~tnh ,
footers . driveweyl, tapti ~ tanks.
land•caping. Cell anytima 614·
446-4637, Jtmet l. Oawiso n.
Jr. owner.
Trenching Sorvi co; water , gas.
and eloc1rlc. Free animat es
304· 773-5839.
B5
HOWDY,
MIZ TUTTLE
GOHIDE,
~\ QUICK!!
SNAKE!!
Ken"s Watei- Ser\lice. Well~ .
ci11erns, poo ls and w•t erbodt
filled Call 614-367 ·06 23 or
614· 367· 7741 or 304 -576 Haul anything! 2 ton·8 1on. Call
614-446· 4861 Mon ., Wed ..
Thurs. Bam-10PM . Sat. 8 -12.
Ra,.sonable delivery pr ices
YOU OlE
L-------------'
.
c~rds f1ta ~our plan. ~ West lOIS ~p ,
With the king, you will ~ter play a
club from dummy, finesiiDI aplmt. _
the queen held by Eaat. U West ducta,:.
you play the jack, which 1 - to Eut's •
queen. Later you plunk down the club
ace, droppinl West'I kin& and malrln& .:·
your 10-spot the PJDeoloiD& trick. •
'Summer <Fn
5 Coniferous
tree
8 Pursue
7 Ship's diary
8 "Swinglng
- Star"
9 Dobbin's doc
10 Watch
17 "-
Wednesday" 27 Cry of
surprise
20 Civil wrong
21 - been had! 28 Ni~erian
29 N.t city
22
Mice
31 Doctor's
and -"
llJ'Oup
23 Purpose
·or
36 Heaped
39 Surprise!
40 George
Bums
role
41 C la~e
33 Slugg•sh or Ralin
34 Bribe 42 Cut off
35 Winged 44 Gold (Sp.)
-...
· A.nn(>~
'.
'"'
..
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for lite lhree L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
aposll'llphes, lite length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day lite code letters are different.
""
CRYI'TOQliOTES
6-1 8
G T F R
M D X
NBTPR
T
. RFRXKIGHDQ
TO.O.
ZRR
~
"
IG R
IGHOQ
·1 G H L
H I
LD C RVGRXR
H L
R ll L R
T AF HP R
0 D I
H L
C RXRHK
CT X Z
I V T H 0
PE:L IIJ C
BACHEWR'S LIFE IS A
FINE BREI\KFAST, A n..\T WNCH, AND A MISERABLE
DINNER. - .JE.\N DE LA BRUYERE
YeeiA!-,"0 C.,.......aoiA!' .0.
(I) Noihvlllo Skyline
.. ,,
'" '
..
'"
liD Toxl
(fi) Newawatch
•
[Z Magnum, P.I. A
PEANUTS
E)(.CVSE ME .. MAYSE I
HAVE NO RIG~T TO
Til ERE'S 0Lt1ER, ANt1
niEN TIIERE'S OLDER !
ASK VOU THIS, BUT...
former British secret aer1
vice agent imagines him.
soli to be Sherlock Holmes
and engagea hia old friend
Higgina in 1 murder inveati-
ll''ion" (70 min.) (R).
(j]l Trapper John, M.D.
12:00 (])Jack Bonny
(]) Soccer. World Cup (2
hro.) (R).
(J) Notional Ooogrophlc Ex·
R & M Furnlture M11nufacturing,
St. Rt 7. Crown City, Oh. Call
614 -256· 1470. call E\le 614 446 · 34 3 8 . Old & ne w
Uphottered.
..
.'
Opening lead: t J
IILONGFELLOW
min .) (R). In Stereo.
•
,.
PaSI
AXYDLBAAXR
e• (J)
Cil Ont Stop Beyond
ABC Newo "
1833"
Pass
3 DUute
adveniser" (R)"
10:00 (l] Gl 1121 Cagney & Lacey
(CC) Cagney and Lacey un-
(J) WKRP In Clnclnnotl
YJ!I<OLSTERY SHOP
Pw
DAILY CRYFI"OQVOO'ES- Here'• bow to wort II:
Cil Burno & Allen
CJJ Sporto0on1er
•
1 163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis.
614· 446 -7833 or 614 -446 -
Pass
Pass
Pass
I Nut
2 Pimola
night's guests are Drew
Barrymore. Joe f'enny and
Maureen McGovern. (60
'
TRJ ST AT E
East
DOWN
chael goes to extremes to
imprest his artistic mother
while Dick must keep a
rash promise to a dogfood
11 :30 DCIJ(jJ)TonlghtShow To-
FOR ME..
SNAKE?
Upholstery
weoo
'"
Carlsbad. CA. (R).
Coat. limettonB. gravel, otc.
Daliwerad 1 to n and up . Ji m
Lanier. 304-676 ·1247 or 675 -
Mowrev' • Upholstering 1ervi11g
trl county area 21 years. Th e beat
in furnitur e upholster ing . Call .
304 · 675 - 4164 t or fr ee
ettimaiOS.
,·
® Gl [Z Nowhan (CC) Mi·
fll (!) Love Connection
!HI Soap
WOUI..D
,.,.'
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: Nortb
46 Speeehify
woman . (60 min.) (R).
!HI Nowo
10:20 ([) MOVIE: 'Montone'
10:30 Cil Toklng Stock
• (!) INN Nowo
11 :00 D CIJ (I) Ill Cll ® G1 1121
IDl Nowo
(]) Bill Cooby Show
(]) Auto Roclng: Carlobad
5000 Road Roclng From
•
• A 10 S
47 Modify
48 Illustrious
American
cover some
surprising
facts when they investigate
the murder of an elderly
General Hauling
1247
Oreateat
Horo
9:30
446-4H7
B3
It Allie
<!ring of leukemia. (Rj.
{)])
tQS3
38 Wallach
39 Nimhle
43 All-oul
45 "Prilzi's
Emma is reluctant to win
the election for Junior
Class president when she
learns that her opponent is ·
CARTER ' S PLUMBING
..
.KQ8
31 Buchwald
32 Douhle·
cros..o;
34 Lacuna
37 Fonn
30 min .) In
Gl II2i Kate
SOUTH
.AJ64
30 Gisl
Stereo.
B2
• 7 42
.Q962
+K7
or Emma
29 Drift
version of Stephen Sondheim 's
Pulitzer
Prizewinning Broadway musi-
Q..JTOF SCHOOL';;
•H532
t J lOIS
2' VaudeviUe 2' Fuss about
name
26 Tread
25 Bakery
the boards
fixture
26 OS<ar
ald'a International Mixed
Pairo
•to 6 4
br THOMAS JOSEPH
Gl II2i Scarecrow and
during rhe Trojan War is
reviewed . (80 min.)
Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
removal . C11tl 304-675 -1331
ts
.KQ7 3
~M1-"*s(
restaurant (60 min ") (R).
(fi) In Seorch of tho Trojan
War: Empire Of tho HIIIIIIO
~EAL..
EAST
WEST
If the North-South hands look familiar to you, that's becaustl they are the
same u 'last Saturday's. Against the
odds-on 3-2 trump split, the approach
on Saturday wu to take a spade fi·
neue, next bang down the spade ace,
play out your high diamonds and
hearts, and then put either opponent
on lead 10 that be would have to lead
clubs for you. But what about today's
variation. in which West holds four
trumps to the K-Q? 1be answer is that
you must make an informed, educated
play in the club suit. You need to figure out whlcb of your opponents is
likely to hold only two clubs, and then
play accordingly.
Here's bow that should work. On the
leCOild lead of apades from dummy,
East shows out. To maintain ease of
communication, you put in the jack
and West wins another trump trick"
Bec.Uie East bas Ollly one spade, It is
much more llltely that be will be the
player with four clubs. If 10, there wlll
be Ollly two clubs in the Weal hand.
Hope tlaat West bolda one of tbe two
mlslln& club booorl. Play clubs from
the South band leadiug up to the jack
in dummy. you' will probably get some
reaction from West if the lay of tbe
(I) MecNoii-Lohror Noweh·
our
"''
James Jacoby
a mob kingpin. (60 min .)
il)
verblllbuae-" LIP LASH"
BRIDGE
(R) .
at 61 4 -992·6556 or 614 ·992 ·
2934. 20 yaart experience.
1980 Kaw11akllTD 750. E111cel·
lent condition . 1950. 080. Call
1984 Honda Night Htwk (Bikl
with windahleld. txc . cond.
Nick 's
murdered,
Need rap•lr in tide or out ? Cell ut
B7
'84 KLR 600 Kawaukl. exc
cond, fow mlltagt. 304-8822518 etter 1:00PM .
Saturday·s
IDl Wheel of Fonune
7:30 D CIJ (I) New Newlywed
Game
(]) lnoido Baooball
Ill) (!) Major Leogue Ba. .
Motorcycles
&14-992-7892 .&
(Answers tomorrow:
Jumbles: CHAFF GAILY SALOON HELPER
(]]) Private Benjamin
StariTII!IItlr a caml)lr, ltO\Ift . ic e
boll . uc. cond . 1979 Diesel
Rabbit. 304-676-3077.
..
I llll X I I I )
Mw.vouR[
®News
(fi) MacNaii-Lehrar Newah·
our
Gl [Z Divorce Coun
Camping
Equipment
TO
Now arrange the circled teuers 10
!orm Ihe surprise answer. as suo·
gested by lhe abo"e cartoon.
fJ) (!) H011an·o Horoeo
(J) Joopordy
I]) Nightly Bualneu Rapon
7397
74
e
D
AFOKTI
HI'-~
!li": INIS THI5.
Tony Danza discusses his
preparations for his role as
the nation 's mos1 successful jailhouse attorney in the
upcoming
TV
movie.
"Doing Time" .
u.ooo" Coil 114 -256· 1393.
1978 J11p CJ 6. Soh top. good
CCtndi1ion. C811 614 -992· 7020 .
A &ANANA 51< 1"l
MAY
W Down 10 Eanh In
CIJ IDi NBC Nowa
(]) The Riflomon
(]) John Fox Outdoors
Clllll (I) ABC Nowo
I]) Doctor Who
il)
II2i CBS Nowo
(fi) Body Eloclric
8 :35 ([) Ounomoko
7:00 DCIJPM Magazine
(]) Men from U.N.C.L.E
(]) SportaC.ntor
(I) Entorlalnmon1 Tonight
6:30
?TOPPIN6
TIME,
THI!>
'
' ~'I
ARLO A!'I"D JA!IIIS
WHAT ARE 'o'OO GOI~
1D DO 'lllDA'( ~~
t
tNECTED
e
3466.
4 W .O.
114·241-8109.
5y•ar oldragleterM femlltllut
Ortat Dine. Ferm ownen only.
Good ground hog dog. t71.
1975 GMC V-8. 1uto .. good
cond.. t950 . Ctll e14-388-
1968 Wrecker 440 Hclmt
wanch with •wing boCt ml,
1978 ChtYrolel Monza, 2 dr.
w11g0n, auto, on• own.-. t911.
John' a Auto IIIII, lula'lllleAd .,
IChctt .. table, 4 chalr1 tor Alt
ME
Ctll 614 -256· 1182
Co11114-3117·0667.
u21 011ft• 5 814· 388·1823.
Tick coon dog .eo. Coli 814·
M<~l'l'
12 ft. aluminum fis hing boat 3
HP motor and Tmlling motor.
New seatt. 8600 . 614 -992·
Exterior & interior stu cco. Plas·
ter & pl11ter repa irs. low relet.
1982 Chevy Silvaredo pickup 1
ton duel wheelt. duel tankt, new
tires . orginll mil• 81 .000. C1tl
l'lltn~g• 614·246·6666 .
I I I
Stereo.
1984 Bm bo" 16 tt. 60 hro ., '· •
72
1980 Chevy window van. 8
pusenger, dull heat· lir, tilt ,
crui11. t6,995. Call 614· 379·
2341. No Sundty calls.
Reg . Doberman pups ex. pedl·
gr .., good ttmp•ment. t 160
Chihuahua. 9 week• old. Non ftgllter.t. tinv. C•lt 11 4-MI41576.
6:QS
I 'M ~OT TAKI~~
"ANY CHA~cE!> OF
Mercury et&e. ttart, drive on .}...
treiler, 2 batteries, 2 · 6 gal~on
tankt , toot controlled trollmg
motor, 1 graph recorder, e11c . lw
cond. Call814-388-9718.
UI&O" 304·882 ·3200"
Trucks for Sale
I
NEGIF
!!Stem is explored.
t
E1111erlor & interior ttucco. PlaJter lla plaster repairs . low r11111.
Call 614 -256-1182.
1982 Ford hc:ort. IW , IC, n!MI
radial tir• . very dean. wl'1ite.
9 year old Morg1n mere wtlh
tlddle t&OO. 8 '(tar old Pal•
mlno gelding with tlddle fiOO .
4 year otd htlf Arab ian gelding
tJOO with taddle. Ctll lt'l'ftime
441·3231 .
ult. C•ll 30•·372·«520.
1983 Camero Z28. 20.000
miles. local owner. lo1ded.
Gh•rcoal Grty, mu11 see tt 304876 -6363 lher 6:00PM.
2&68.
Dragonwvnd CanlfV Kennel .
CFA Himlll'fln, Plflitn 111d
Slemt1e kltttnt. AKC Chow
puppl11. New puppl11 • kitten a.
Call 446 -3144 aft..- 7PM .
AKC R111. Booglo pupploo tor
'81 Chl\lette, auto, PS. PB, Air,
clean, good con d. dty 304-675 ·
5717 ewenings 875-6184 .
four ordinary words.
scientific evidence linking
the mind to the immune
16 VJ ft. fi bergl111 71fl HP
Mercury motor 8e trailer 81 ,600. •
Call 814·446· 2393.
<f
' 81 Chevette. AC, AM -FM cas""· 3 apeed. 304-876-4831
after 6:30 .
9379.
dr.. fender 1klrt1, axe. cond.
good llhow car, n,ooo. Call
... Colll14-211·8403.
•••
81
1979 Conv~rsion ven, 1965
Chevv troc:k, nict. 1978 Chl'ly
luv. Call lfter 5, 614·446-
245·6121
56
1984 SS Monte C•rlo. Whit e
end blue. AC . PB, PS, Till,
AM · FM cauene, re c lining
bucket aeau , 4 new tlrea. Pr ice
*1500. Good C<Jnditton. Call
after 5:00, 814 -367 -7191 .
73
H1y IVIilable on 1h1111, in
Darwin ••· 614·992-1073.
Vo. 304·882· 2222 .
1984 Silver Thunderbird .
28,000 miiH. VB . Call 614·
992·6872 after 5:00 pm .
Livestock
55 Building Supplies
Blodc, bridt. morttr 1nd m• ·
aonry aJppliM. Mountain Stitt
Btodl, Rt. 33, New H1111n, W.
1980 G. PtyiTX)ulh Fury. AM ·
FM , 1ir. 1 980 Oetson 210, 5
spud . Call 6,..· 992 -7075
B:OO•m.· 7 :00pm.
1973 % ton Chevy pidl -up . 360
62 Wanted to Buy
64
Build ing .materials, Clment.
blodl1 •ll1iz11, yard or dll!v.y.
Galllpoll1 Blodl Co .. 1231h Pine
St. , Gtlltpolit. Ohio Call 814 446-2783.
79 Olds
4 tpeed . 0360 . 614-742· 3086.
118001423·10113.
Bu ilding Mtteriall
BkJdl, brick, IIWet" pip•. win ·
dow1. lintalt. etc. Cl1ude Win ·
ters. AN:. Gr~nde. 0 . C1ll 814-
1976 Buick Ele ctre fair condi·
tion, 1800. Ctll61 .. ·388· 9832.
JIM ' S FARM EQUIPMENT
1989 Monarctl trtllor 12x80. 2
bdr, 161500. 83 Ford Rtnger
truck f4000 . Call 814-367·
Sot• with new tlipcaver 150.
Antique organ t86 . 5 piece
dinett1 125. 614-992·5697.
83 Hoods Shadow 760 CC . 8
speed theft drive, lew mileage.
*1860. Call614·986-4163.
78
Well , ihlt't one way
lor hill 10 c1o R
Unscramb'lthele lour Jumbles,
one leuertoeach tqutre, to lorm
IDl Nowo
(])Green Acreo
(]) Mazda Sponolook
fJl (!) Stor Trek
I]) 3·2·1, Contact lCC)
(fi) Bodywatch lCC) The
1975 Dodge Dart U50. 304-
1-814·281· Bfi22.
Slight paint damege. Fl11hing
1rrow tlgn *299 1 Ugtlted , nonarrow U79 t Nonlighted f2•91
Free lettttrtl Few left. SH
lo c• llv . 1- 800 - 423 · 0183 ,
anvtime.
•,
16 ft . Johnson
&
75
_:__:_
_ _ _boet
_
_trailer.
-,--::c:
HP Cat1614-245
·9432
.
_ _:_:,...-:--::::-::-::::-::- -
by Henri Amok~ and Boll Leo
8:00 DCIJCI)DCil®Gicr:z
81 Hondt 650 in good conditlon . 1950 Call 61 4-992·61 44.
•uoo. Coil 114·379-2726.
895-3638"
614·446·0548.
7781 .
84 Chrytler luer eutomaticAC,
18,000 mil•. PS. PB. ni ce.
1975 G. Pl\lmouttl Fury. 1976
Mercury Montrc:h. Both 4 door,
air. Call 614·992· 7076 . 8 :00
am .· 7:00pm .
oon, Oh. 114· 28B-1930.
1 980 3 Whlfilf 70 ltrill. 1979
3 wheelar 70 Mri• . C•lt 814 -
81 Buick 4 dr .. air. auto. black,
tharpl t2 .195; 82 Chevette
tuto, 4 dr., t1.496 ; 83 Ply.
K·Cif S.W . 13,096; 78 Chry. 4
dr .. f895 ; 82 Dlttun 4x4 PU
nice 14.295: 81 Chevv 1 ton
w-Jer-Dan-roll back bed. 8 & 0
Motort, Hwy. 160. Call 614·
59 For Sale or Trade
pe•.
GOOci
Echo lrimmers *88. 76 to
&299 .96 . Hu1qv1rna uws.
Echo ... ws, Vtrdmlt'l mowert.
New lla u1.t. all mak•. Childert
Saw Supply. 1Coontz·S1ilor Rd.,
Vinton , Oh. Catl81 4 <J88-8564 .
Autos for Sale
Cutleu Brougham.
Southam Cllf, rm rull:. All power.
New tiret. 13295 . Call 614·
4'6-0796 . Mutt see to believe.
Callahan"• Used Tire Shop. Ovilr
1.000 tlr•. tizes12 , 13. 14, Hi ,
, 11 .6 . 8 mil• out Rt. 218.
utic clttem 81tte approved.
plutic 1ept1c tankt, plutlc
culverts, metel culven1. RON
71
McCau1land Farm end Garden.
freth 8rocoli. 2 hMdt 7!i centt.
anap
hanging baskett.
tlowera. 16 mil• South, US At.
35 . Soothllde, W. Ve.
1975 Codgl motor hom•
33.000 milu. e11tra clun .
S4,tt_50. Call 1-614-288-8522.
II 114-256-6261 .
•
446·7322 .
54 Misc . Merchandise
07&1.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home P1rk,
Route 33, Nonh of Pomerov.
Large loti. Call 114-992· 7478.
•• thtflrlt to ltvlln thllad018bll
complelllly rlfurbilhtd 2 bed·
room horn~~ in u~llftf: neighborttood. Alto h• g~tage. nlce
yard end g•d., 1pot. Phone
Picken• U•ld Furniture. Good
qullltv used furniture. Open 9 to
8 or call for l!ppOintment.
30 .. · 675 -6483 or 675-1460.
Williamson Mut Mtrket ,
U.S .D.A. Prime Btef Sale, Sides
81 .29, Front qts. 11 .09, Hind
qts. 11 .70. U.S .D.A. Choi ce
Beef Salt. Sidll *1 .25 , Franta
n .05. Hindi f1 .82 . Price In ·
clud• cutting. wrapping and
irHJing. Whole Primtl Cull.
Wholl Rlbayel 12-1 .. 1b IYHIQe
13.90 lb. Whole New Vork
Strips 12 -14 lb IYerage 14.0&
lb. Cholet Tenderlion *5 .99 lb.
Short loin 13.51 lb. Full loin
S3.211b. Price lncludtl cutting.
Deposh required . Gu11antted
tender . C•ll 304· 675 -5363,
Point Plt~18nt. W. Vt.
Rent, IIMt, &andcontract, 3br'•
Rodney VIII~': II: 2 bf"' •·Eureka;
3br Event ttetghts; Oepo11t &
refll'lfiCN r~C~ulrtd . lltdlburn
Nk:e 2 bdr ll*tmtnh In dupl•
houM. M-'n St. Ch•hlre. OMo.
Fumlthed a water p11d. Call
441· 1171 .
Efficiency spt. Suitable for 1 or 2
peopl1. On Aouah Line In
Ch"hlre, Ohio. Call 30'· 773·
unlurnilhtd apt, yard and blllmtr~t. euo.oo ·month. 304·
8y own• 4 ecrll. e11c loeltion
n•• Sand Hill Ro~ and Rolling
Used refriglrator brill bed,
complet1. ace. chair. Call 614 -
675·413L
&828.
JJiiJ/...
lCfll6Hl
Upper River Rd . 814· 448-7398.
688&.
lio. 614·446·8221 .
814-24&·1118.
rat•. Cal
2 bedroom, tottl elec. 1pt. in
Pomeroy. Acro11 from Fire
St•tlon . 81 .. ·992-1215 01614 -
304·171·2331.
MOBILE HOMES MOVEO' In-
lUred. rtMOMbla
1 bedroom apt. for rent . 811ic
rent start• t215 . a month that
Includes all utlllti•. Depo11t
rl(fUifed of *200. Contact Villegt Manor Apt. Middleport.
61•·992-7787. Equ•l Houtlng
Opportunity.
Ashton buikllng Iota wlttl public
wtt«, mobile homet permiltkl.
197' 12d8 electric 2 bedroom
mobile home. A.C .• underptnnlng, portldy lumiohod. 4oklng
Tratler for •le: 197& 3bedroom
12x70. fiiOOO. 614·7•2-2232.
GOV.,fNM hornet from .1 .
(U-repalr) . Dellqulnt tall prop·
eny. Repo-llfons. Call 80&·
187-1000 ..,.;t. A-4512 for current rJPO Utt.
Apartment
for Rent
utllitill. Oepoth required . Call
borhood, n.w wall lo Will
ClfP•Inv • c:urtllnt provJdtd.
Plue mlf'IY •trM,Iowutlltfvblllt
• prden spot. Call 814· 281&110 tot- furth• dlltlill.
Ctll diYI 11 .. ·441· 1118
ovonlngo 114·446·1222.
44
f ·l"
THAT SCRAMILEO WOIID GAME
6/16/86
..
droworo 020 . Sk111goApptlonce
For 11le General El&etricwllherdryer, Uled one yt1r. GOod con d.
Will Mil ruaonlble. 304-615·
2U8.
2 bdr. apt .. downtown . 1190
814 · 981 · 4389 . whhout
utiitl•. U95 with
2 bdr. home In wetl.,t neigh-
15100. Colt 814·8BI·3tU
Of'
171· 38&8.
*12.000.
be"'"
pm . Coil
Two baclroom trail., wtth IX·
pando living roam on nictll.,el
'ut in Mkldleport. Near IChoola
and stpr•. c.tt614-912-2101
• bedroom houH. fireplace. 3
mi. oouthoiGolllpollo, Ut.IOO.
Two bedroom trtiler on Jtrrico
Roact. UOO.OO month. 304·
2 bdr. uptt81tl 1pt. 1111tra niCfl,
centrllair. C•llll14·446·2158.
llgh1. 304-671·1212.
or 11•·892·2318.
31
2 bedroommobtlahomefor rent .
Near Racinl. 614·992·6868 .
1982 Sdluta 2 bedroom, 2bllth
mobHthome. Underpinning. Un·
fumlthed. Mutt be moved, can
~ww.n 4:00 and 7:00
72 NMhua 14•10, 2 br, totll
tlec. o.c. underp~nnlne . eecur·
lty
Nice 2 bedroom mobile home on
Roush lane in Cheshire. Ohio.
On nice lot. CaH30•· 773-6828.
&1.·446·0390"
Forry, 304-l?e-2021.
32 Mobile Homea
tor Sale
Professional
Services
4318 or 304·171·9710.
1978 14•70 F"tlval 2 bdr., 2
bath•. lot• of cloallb, u:c. con d.
Call 114-441-1241 ,
w•.
23
2 bdr. 12.1160 HoiiiY P1rk.
Wllher·drver hook-up. Vt mi .
pat Holzer Medical Center. Ref .
• dep. required. Call 11'·«&·
Coli 114-446-441& ollor 8pm.
Phono: 114·949· 2640.
I NOTICE!
Tt£ OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
Pr•owntd mobile hom• - W•
hiVt'm • We flnence'm. Dlllivered ..d •• up at no ch•g•.
Elsea Home Canters, 1·800·
ingl.
RHtored hOme, VIne 61 .• Racina. Kitchen. new Olk cebinltL
living room. dining room. 3
bedrooma. bl'th. lndudel eu
curtelnl . Price : t35,000 .
Business
Opportunity
1389 or 304· 675·1328.
304· n3-6873.
2 bdr 12xl0 1973 Artington,
pric:e 18000. 2 bdr 12•115 1973
UtopiL price 1&,200. c•11111 , .
441-98 ..1.
2509
WiU do 1ny yard work. minor
reptlrt, ptinting inside or out.
Htve referenus . 304· 675 ·
21
3 bdr.. large kitch..-.. bath.
utilhiy room, ainglegarege, 2 c1r
driv.-way. nice yard, gardWI
aptce. finilhlld g1rege. C1ll
2381 or 114·992·2509 ..,.,"
446-2690.
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBIL£ HOME SALES . 4 Ml
WEST. GALLIPOLIS, RT 30.
PHONE 814-....8-7274.
Coli 114-441·2917.
Privttl horN care tor IWiiof
cititens. nC 8nd ,_ferenCIS.
CeU 614-992-3596.
touth of GaUipollt. For Information, Call 514· 441 -0143.
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
10~'-~Pwlll"
l(ca~T~.
~=;;:
B =::=:::::;:
d== ·:~
75
oats an
·'•
Motors for Sale
"'
Retrlgerttor h1rveet gold 1121,
rolrlgorowr whl" *12&, rolrltl·
'()\)M~T~D
llii<OW IT f11,/,J#(
•••
0
erstor avocHo •125, refrigera·
tor coppertone t125. refrigera·
tor sidt by tkle f195 , Wither
Kenmore f150, electric range
30 in . white top and boHom
oven t1 50, alectric range 36 in.
*75, g11 range h.-vest gold 3D
in. like new t160, air c:ond.
11.000 B. 8.000 BTU's S915 ...
bedroom Illite S96, ch•t of
you into marrying me."
l t:Cil'T ~o,~ ... ... 4'~V~all 'JI;LL
A~~DIJ.HJ,r'LL
Murry X 24 racing bike. New ...
h•ndlfl padt end apeedometer. " ~~·
All chrome. Good condition . . ~
'50. 614·985-3695.
', ,
Vatl.., Furniture. nM & uted .
brga ..c:tion of quality furni ·
ture . 1218 Eutern Ave ..
7
~~~!A
!7'~ COJF;?t; ' !!(;lrb
v
441· 1326.
County Appliance. Inc. Good
und appliance~ and TV Htt.
Open BAM to 8PM. Mon. thru
Sat. 114-446; 1699, 627 3rd.
Ave. Oatllpoll1, OH .
::,..al~ :•~:u~ :. n:~:
Raccoon Ad. Furnished $180 a WOOdin tebl1 f26 , y1llow kit dop" io •of. Coli 614·448·9341 .. chin cttina cabinet •5o. all In
Oil /Jil .. , ~ ~ !Jf. ---=~---
.
Television
Viewing
EVENING
1980 Honde 200 Twinstar, low
miles, VGC , 1660. Clll 614-
Wuherl, dry.,., relrigeietors.
rang11 . Sji~aggt Appllancu.
Upp• River Rd . beelde Stone
Cr•t Mot~ . 814·448· 7398.
8111.
..'
1983 Honda ATC 200 3
wheeler, good cond. Ctll 814448·7015 .
0000 USED APPUANCE8
Founhcondition.
Ave ., Middleport,
Oh.So.
good
SH 01 21i6
304-485-8733
1982 Honda C8160 loaded.
exc . con d. Call 81 .. ·446 ·01 22
11fter 4PM.
nient location, Upper River Rd .,
all utilitltl paid except electric. .Golllpolls"
Sec. d.., . req. Call 11 4·446·
I
••V';:, !!. R
Motorcycles
l tHill! W-~ ~ ~~ ~
Olivt St .• Oallipollt. New Au ...
wood·coll 1tov11. e pc woOd LA
..ita t399. bunk bed• .199,
antron reclln.. 199, new •
UHd bedroom tult•. rMget.
wringer wuhtrt. 6 aho11. Ntw
livlngroom tuittl 1189-tUI.
lamp1, 1110 buying coll6 wood
stew•. Calll14-441-3119.
Ux&O 2 bdr .• private lol with
playground & garden apot. 8 mi.
from Gallipollt on At. 218, f200
1 mo. Call614-258·1393.
" Cfuil1tnll around thewortd " 1
new plriV plan il hiring lrtl
1Uptt'\lilort. No invHtment. no ·
74
KIT 'N' CARLYLI! ®bJ LArry Wright
~~~~~1~6~,1~9~8~6--·----------------------~P~l~~~~~L~~~~~~~~~·~o~-~~~~--------~--------------~~~o~a~~~~~~!!:! ··
16, 1986 ·
,,
p-
()) En .. rtelnmon1 Tonight
Tony Danza di,cunes his
preparations for hi a role 11
the nation 's moat succe11·
ful jailhouse auorney in the
upcoming
TV
movie,
' 'Doing Time".
(]) Ball of Groucho
()) ABC Nowo Nlghtllne
lll (!) Rawhide
!HI MOVIE: 'Uizono'o Raid'
12:4~ ~ MOVIE: 'Swoet Nov-
(!) Rawhldo
D (I) Howell Flv..O
1:00 (]) Doble Gillis
e
liD MOVIE:'TheOnlyGeme
In Town'
12:30
e
CIJ (jJ) Lato Night with
Oavld Lottormon Tonight's
guests are Penn l Teller
and comedian Bob Sar-
lotta. (80 min .) In Steroo.
amber'
([) Archie Bunkor'o Place
fl) ill Wild, Wild Wool
1:30 (])Father Knowo Boat
(I) NIWI
,2:00 (]) 700 Club
(]) Mazda SporteLook (A).
([) MOVIE: 'Luot for Gold'
"
'
.......
',... ,.
.....
• ott•o
...
-I
' flof
--
�r~-
·
r-age- •v-1 ne
Monday, June 16, 1986
· s eeks
favors
Blaze destroys •••
Continued from page 1
to be structurally safe folkl\\1ng the
intense fire. ChUds Indicated that,
perhaps, the thlnl floorwallscan be
removed to the second floor level,
the second floor roofed and then
remodeling done to the structure
from that point . However, these
things will have to be decided at a
later time, ChUds said, after
insurance adjusters have surveyed
the situation and the board meets to
make decisions.
Other memtx>rs ·cf the Meigs
Investment Corporation are John
Musser, viC<' president; Bernard
Fult2, S€Cretary, treasurer. and
Jay Hall , .Jr., Dr. Ray Pickens,
Richard Owen and Kermit Walton.
Childs said that losses will run
about $500,(0). There is insurance
but not enoughtocoverthat amount
cJ loss, he said . The fact that the Inn
was "uno<rupled " limited the
amount of Insurance that could be
carried on the structure, Childs
Indicated. The Inn portbn of the
complex was last operated In June,
1985, and the pizza food faciUty
closed in January of this year.
Water service and some electricity
service were still on in the
unoccupied inn, Childs nportoo.
Childs said that the Inn had tx>en
secured Sunday to prevent theft
and that today someone would be
tooklng at steps which need to be
taken immed iately with the
structu re.
Bob Miller. manager of City
Loan, located on the grouod floor
level of the Inn complex, reported
that crucial records were removed
from the company's offices after
the fire started and that employes
removed other records Suoday
after the fire had bE>en exlin·
guished. The company office which
suffered heavy water damage will
have to be relocated at least
temporarily, Miller said. He is
expecting a company disaster
representative to visit Pomeroy
today to determine the steps to be
taken on the local operation. Miller
said that firemen and townspeople
were gr<'al in helping employees
with the task cl moving records
from the offi ce. Childs indicated
I
that, perhaps, the pizza facility
might be used as a temporary
location for the loan company.
Mickey Williams, located oo the
E. Main St., level just bE>Iow the
Meigs Inn complex moved all cJ his
bartx>r chairs and equipment from
his bulldlng after the fire started
early Sunday morning. He, too, was
given asslstan<P IJy firemen and
residents. The equipment was
taken to the sidewalk In front of the
Eltx>rteld Department Store and
Williams stayed with It lor the
nigh!. About noon Sunday, the
equipment was returned to his
oo rtx>r slwJp and he was open for
oosiness today even tlwJugh the
building did receive some water
damage. It had not been deter·
mined II there was fire damage to
tb£> roof of the Williams building.
At ooe point In the fire, loud
cracking noises could bE> heard at
the I'EI!r of the Inn on E. Secood St.,
and some felt that the noise was the
cracking cJ the walls. However,
Childs reported that these noises
were made by bathtubs and
slwJwers plunging from the heavily
damaged third Door to the second
Door.
Firemen worked all sides of the
Inn tt keep the fire contained. On
Lynn St. four or five hoses kept a
constant flow of water on the that
side ci the structure.
Pllmeroy Village was thrown into
complete darkness for ahout three
hours ea rty Sunday morning as
servke was cut by The OhiO Power
Co. and the Columru sand !'outhern
Ohio Electric Co. at the l'E'qUest of
the village. A cupola at the front of
the Inn structure had caught fire
and was expected to topple at any
moment and It was believed that II
might fall Into power lnes. Pllwer
was shut off as a safety measure.
However, the cupola although
oodly rurned did not fall .
Several hundred townspeople
were at the fire scene untll early
Sunday morning watching one of
the town's landmarks bE>Ing rav·
lslx>d. However, the crowd was
orderly as firemen turned In their
excellent performance i1 keeping
the fin• contained.
Area deaths
Harold Ketchum
By the Bend .. ...... Pages H
ClassiDeds .. ... ...... Pages 7-8
Comic&TV .... ..... ..... Page 9
Deaths ...... ,... ....... .. Page 10
EdiiAlrlal .. .... .... .. ..... Page ~
Sports .... .......... ... Pages 3·7
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Since
major Ohlo rullding projects
were not among 174 granted special .
exemptions IJy the Senate Flnanre .
Committee last week, Sen. Howaro ·
Metz.enbaum has requested lan·
guage In the Senate tax bill
retaining tax·exempt bond financing that would help raise money 1D
build the projects.
Melzenbaum' s request Is alined
at preserving sections of the ,.tax
code benefiting the proposed Columbus New World Center,. ihe
proposed domed stadium In Cleve. '
land and a soUd·waste- :dlsposal
plant In northwestern OhiO.
Suworters of ColumbUs' New
World Center first met with Metzen·
baum and Sen. John Glenn, J).()hlo,
In April. Although Franklin County
voters rejected a tax Issue that
would have fuoded the project last ·
month, supporters urged the sena- .
tors to Include the exemption In
"transition rules" whlcb cover :
project In the planning stage.
'·
A lawyer for the New World
Center Committee said he did not
know whether proposed changes In
the tax treatment of bonds would
affect the New World Center, so an
exemption was sought, rather ~ll ·
taking a chance IJy leaving It ·oui.
Supporters say the tax· exempt
status of boods lor the project
three
AERIAL ladder lrucb from two nearby communi·
I
I
with the family present from I to 4
p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m .
Inside:
ties helped fight Sunday mombtr;'s downtown
Pomeroy fire which gutted the Meigs Inn.
Court delays budget opinion release
'
e
\lo1.38. No.31
Copyrighted 1988
By NANCY YOACilAM
Sentinel News Stall
Two national companies" have
"actual wilding plans" to develop
sites In the Pomeroy·Middleport
area - ~- sewage can be provided
to the desired property, said Gregg
Gibbs, president of Southeast Development, when he mel Monday
night with Pomeroy Village
Council.
Gibbs told council the companies
art' Interested In 650 feet of
Pomeroy's river frontage north of
the Middleport corporation limit
and the Sears·Fruth Pharmacy
buDding. However, he pointed out,
the property is without sewage
~~~!~. ~ ~~~~ :~a,:se,o'~
A one-mill levy for the Gallia·
Jackson·Meigs 648 Mental Health
Board will appear on NovembE>r's
ballot again , following action by the
board when It met Monday.
The levy, defeated in Gallla and
Jackson counties and approved in
Meigs County when It appeared oo
the May primary ballot. is to
provide local fundin g for mental
health operations In the three·
county area, explained Dr. Romola
Hopkins, the board 's executive
director.
Operations lor Woodland Centers
Inc., senior cit izens programs and
other related programs have re·
ceived federal and state fuoding,
oot those funds are being reduced
every year, she said . The board
discussed placing the levy on the
ballot, possibly In Novemtx>r, at its
May meeting and sine<' then
Hopkins has tx>en consulting with
$3.25
CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
latex Semi-Gloss
Walll Trim,
mfr. sug . list S12.99
9
service.
"They approached me first and
made an offer contingent on sewage
service being made available,"
Gibbs related. Without sewage, the
companies will not buDd in the area
and the 2().30 jobs which would be
provided wm be lost , he added .
Because Pomeroy's sewage line
ends a! the Pizza Hut on West Main
- about a miiP away from the
Middleport corporation - Middle·
port has also tx>en approached
about the property.
Gibbs read a letter from Middle·
port Mayor Fred HoHman to
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler.
In the letter Hoffman said he had
tx>en approached about the prop
erty and that it could not be
developed without sewage. He said
he knew it would be a great expense
to Pomeroy lo extl'lld it s present
sewa ge system to the desired
location, however . if Pomeroy
would annex the propert y to
Middleport. Middleport could pro·
vide the sewage service a! minimal
expense since the propeny lies
withln fill feet of Middleport's
Intersected lines. Hoffman wrote
that he "would cooperate with
Pomeroy in 'any way for further
development of the property" and
to bring "jobs to the county. "
Continued on page 10
99~
Gallon ryoo
Best Latex.Fiat
Decoration,
mfr. sug.list S16.99
Weather forecast
WASHINGTON (UPI) Ground was broken for new
homes at an annual rate of
1,1188,000 In May, down 7.~
percent from • the previous
month, lhe Commerce Department said toda;v.
The decline was centered bt
muiiHamUy housing, or buDd·
btgs with five or more housing
units, doMt 21.9 pel"O!Ilt lo
542,000 at an annual rate,
according to estimates compDed
by the Census Bureau.
s1ng~e-famlly home starts remained unchanged al 1,282,000
at an annual rate, the bureau
Hospital news
Paint;
sug. list $10.99
Oil Bose
House &. Trim,
mfr. sug. list $13 99
Beat latex
Flat House Paint,
mfr. sug . llst $19.99
Best latex ·
Gloss House Paint,
mfr. sug . list S21 .99
said.
KING
405 N. 2ND
SUPPLY INC.
992-3784
CONVENIENT OFF THE STREET PARKING
SALE ENDS MONDAY, JULY 21
-·
~
' ~ ..
!•
\
I
I
the county commissioners of all prevention program in Jackson
County for $7,000, an d $14 .400 has
three counties.
In other action, the board . which tx>en gra nt ed to a child assault
serves as the funding agent for interven tion program in coopera·
mental health operations in the tlon with Jackson County Child·
three counties, approved contracts ren's Services and the munty's
for services with several agencies. juvenile coun .
. The board approved its budget
The agencies and funding are:
for
the upcoming year at $211 ,000,
Woodland Ce nt e r s In c ..
includ
ing direc t money for child·
$1,274,583; Jackson County Council
ren
'scluster
services. a grouping of
on AJco iJJUsm, $6,rol; .Jackson
agencies
serving
I he needs ci school
County Board on Aging. $6,000;
children
.
The
amount
Is down from
J ackson County Child [)(>ve!opmcnt
the
approximately
$239,(00
ap·
Center, $9,100; Gallia County Board
proved
IJy
the
board
last
year,
on Aging, $6,000; Gailla County
Alcoholi sm Progra m, $6,000; Hopkins said. which also included,,
Gallia.Jackson Senior Volunt eers direct fuodlng for children 's cluster
Program, $4,000: Rlo Grande Coun· services.
Hopkins said her appl ication for
seling Service, $18,(0); and thP
funding
to establish res ident ial
Meigs County AlcolwJlism Pro·
crisis
center
at Woodland Centers
gram, $6,000.
was
al'o
given
the green light at
Hopkins said fuoding was aiso
$150,t'ro.
approved for a communit y assauIt
DOWN SHE GOES- The urSeady tumt atop the
Meigs Inn was brought doMt Monday afteruoon by
workers lor Rose Excavatbtg of Racine. As a.result of
a Ore early Sunday momlng,the Meigs Inn SWIIalned
$100,000 to 5000,000 damage. David Grlndoilall ol
"I don't know how you tell somebody who's
smackln ' you In the mouth to gradually quit," said a
skeptical Gov. William Janklow of !'outh Dakota.
While Perpich and JankJow called for tough
measures on trade. Gov. Terry Branstad of Iowa
expressed concern that other countries might
retaliate against American farm products.
"They've already retaliated against agriculture.
We just haven' t figu red it out yet." replied Janklow.
Gov. Anthony Earl of Wisconsin said one of the
problems is that the United States has accepted losses
in the world marketplace In exchange lor acceptance
of U.S. foreign policy by other countries.
"This is crazy," said Ea rl. "We sit here drinking
Perrier. and you couldn't buy a bottle or Pabst in
Paris if you wanted to. "
Gov. Richard Celeste of Ohio sa id legislation to
protect individual indu stries is not the answer.
Rather . he said, the Unlled Stales should set long·
term, across·the-board trade policy so its trading
partners and American industries would know lb£>
rules and play by thrm.
Presenting prepared statements on International
trade to the governors were WUIIam C. Norris.
grll!ed . ribs: chicken and sa lmon before listen ing and
dancing to '50s and '60s rock ·n' mil hit s pl ayed IJy Phil
Dirt and the Dozers, a Columbus group.
Perpich, presiding over a discuss ion of interna ·
tiona! trade, proposed his tough trade policy and
rl'!'eived a positive response.
"The absence of a strong and predictable U.S. trade
policy has contributed sign li icantly to the sharp
deterioration of the International economic posit ion of
the United States and kept scores of domestic
indu stries and millions of American workers
defenseless against plant closings. bankruptcies,
farm foreclosures and recessionary unemployment
levels." said Perpich.
"Clearly. the mystical dream world of 'free trade'
Is a world that never was and never wlll be."
Perpich said countries that maintain excessive
trade surpluses with the United States and
discriminatory trade practices should be req uired to
gradually reduce their surplu s by opening th<'ir
markets to U.S. exports orredudng thelrwnexpon s
to the Amerk:an market.
!'orne of the governors ex pressed doubt that words
on paper would change the trade situation.
••
'
"
<
Racine was mcharge of safety measuM~ a.• all loose
bricks and tbt, which presented an bnmedlale
danger, were removed from the buDding. Further
decisions about the rullding's future can mt be made
mtlllnvestlgatloRS Into the fire are completed.
MIDDlEPORT
t~
I
The 7.4 percent drop was the
llll'Jl!St pen:entage decline In
housing sll¢s since May 19811,
when the housing Index declbted
by 9 percent and the sklwest
pace of housing starts since
December 19M, bureau anal,yl!ls
•
said.
The setback In home-buDding,
which has been among the
strongest !leclon of I he econoll\l'
In .recent months, was larger
lhan anticipated but not a
oomplete smprise.
Industry analysts have
wamed that a blgh rate of rental
vacancies paired with the losll of
lax IDcentlvcs for low-Income
holMig would depress the mullfamily secwr as lhe year
progressed.
The deCline followed a revl8ed
4 percent advance In April lo
2,m&,ooo, the swlltest pace or
new housing acllvly sbtce 1978.
The May rate lllliW 12 percJent
blgh!!l' than the May 1983 rate ol
1,6114,000 and the decline Is more
a slatlstlcal 8herratlnn than a
true setback lor the ·economy,
analysts said.
chairman emeritus of Control Data Corp.; Da,·id H.
Haag , chief executive officer of LTV Steel Corp.;
Ly on Williams, pres ident of the United Stee l Workers
of America; and George C. Cheek. senior vice
president of the Pot latch Corp.
Williams agreed with Perpich that " Ire<" trade
doesn't work II America is the ooly nation playing by
the ru les."
Hoag said the United States must neu traiizl' the
effects of foreign government subs idies to their
protected Industries.
Norris told the governors that thP management of
technology Is the key to ca tching up In the trade
imbalance. He said America is far behind other
nations In applying high technology to indust rial
production.
Janklow disagreed with Cricste's assessment that
the midwestern states have fas hloncd a " home·
grown " economic recovery despite the po licies of the
Reagan administ ra tion.
"There's no recovery in our state, " sa id JankJow
when confronted by reponrrs later. " It's not hitt in g
any rural state. It' s hilling thP indu strial states and
the service industries. "
•
State Controlling Board OKs
funds for Rio CC projects
Housing starts down in May
Flat
1 Section. 10 Page s 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspap~er
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 17, 1986
By LEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI I- The nation's midwest·
ern governors will wind up a three.<Jay meeting today
by discussing an issue common to all their st ates the farm problem.
A day long series of seminars is planned at the 25t h
Midwestern Governors' Conference on various facets
of agr!cu !lure, and the featured luncheon speaker wil l
be Rep. Kika de Ia Garza, D·Texas, chairman of thco
House Agriculture Commillee.
The governor also arc slated to vole on a resolut ion
sponsored by Minnesota Gov. Rudy Perpich.-ca U!ng
for a tougher U.S. trade policy. The resolut ion is
expected to receive widespread support from the
S('Ven governors in allendance.
Perpich asked his rnJdwestern colleagues Monday
lo join him in formally urging the United States to
adopt a strong trade policy which protects American
manufacturers from surpluses and unfair trade
practices.
The governors enjoyed themselves Mooday
evening at an outdoor barbE>cue at tb£> Ohio
Governor's Mansion. They joined their staffs and
corporate sponsors of the conference In dining on
Squads make three weekend calls
.Gallon
enttne
at
Nation's midwestern governors to discuss farm problems
Summit ...
8
•
G-J-M Mental Health Board
going after 1-mill levy again
TIJESOAY NIGHT SPECIAL
ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED
CHICKEN YOU CAN EAl
99~
Pqe~
Two national finns
may develop sites in
Pomeroy, Middleport
WASHINGTON (UP! I - The that makes the state of Arkansas security restrictions, including lim· professional sports team.
Supreme Court fueled speculation partially liable for the costs of the iling the oours reporters could be in
The Senate bill allows 'Interest
today It has reached a decision on desegregation plan.
the court press room.
earned on bonds Issued by stale and
the Gtamm- Rudman balanced
-Said producers of the CBS show
Secrecy traditionally su'rrounds local govenunents for guvernment
budget law IJy releasing only two of "60 Minutes" and a writer for the the court's actions and It is rare for operatiOns to remain ruuy deduct!·
three opinions expected to be Atlan!lc Monthly magazine do not a reporterto learn of a decision untll ble. They would bE> defined as Jllbllc
issued.
have to stand ttial on l!b£>1 charges it is announced from the bench on use bonds If no more than 2'i perrent
Court officials, while not saying brought by a retired Army Lt. Col. the rrorning It is issued .
of the proceeds Is used by a private
whlch specific opinions are ready, Anthony Herbert who accused his
There have tx>en several other enterprise.
routinely announce how many superiors of hiding war crimes in correct "forecasts" of Supreme
Peter Hartis, the Ohio £lemo.
opinions will be issued the following Vietnam.
Court rulings. One was an advance crat's top aide, said the exemptions
week. Last week a court spokeswo·
The rare reported leak from the report in Time magazine that gave are not like loose which Metzen.
man said there would bE> three court brought dozens of reporters the gist of the court 's 1973 ruling baum sought ID kill on the Senate
·
Monday, four Tuesday and and staffers from Congress to !he legalizing abortion. Political com· ~bst~
opmlons
Metlenbaum said transition
three Wednesday.
Supreme Court to walt for the mentalor Drew Pearson also arcu· rules that help taxpayers who have
However, the court dellvered expected Gramm·Rudman dec!- rately "predicted" two rulings In relied on current law In making
only two opinions today, raising slon. Reporters jammed the press r_::th~e~I:_:9«J:::s·~--------..E!~~a~re~~~~----
speculatlon the court decided to offiC<' and overflowed into the hall
lwJid back temporarily Its decision where a line formed . The office
In the Gramm·Rudman case he· cleared within minutes when It
cause of a report by ABCNewsthat tx>came clear the Gramm· Rud·
the justk:es had voted to strike man ruling - one of the top rases
down a key provision In the deficit left to bE> decided thls year - wa s
reductiOn taw.
not to come.
ABC Supreme Court correspond·
Today was mt the first time
ent Tim O'Brien reported the O'Bril'n has been the center of
COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
decision, saying that whlle he had anentton at the court. Advance
FOR JUST
DINING ROOM ONLY
mt seen the opinion, he had bE>en word cJ several Supreme Court
Served with whipped potatoes. chicken gravy,
told of Its contents IJy sources.
· actions leaked to O'Brien in the late
cole
slaw, hot roll, butter and coffee. Sorry,
As reported by O'Bril'n, the 1970s and again In 1981, prompting
no
substitutes
e.cept beverage with addicourt, on a 7-2 vote, declared an Inquiry by Chief Justice Warren
tional rice .
unconstitutional that part of the law Burger. After one investigation, a
designatlnglwJwtomakeautomatic government print shop employee
budget cuts If Congress and the lost his )lb.
White House fail to meet deficit
In 1979, O'Brien correctly prePH. 992-5432
POMIIOY, OH.
targets.
dieted two rullngs In the same
Featuring Kentu1ky Fritd Chicken
"We and
are the
confident
theCourt
storywUI
Is r~w~ee~k~.~T~he~~Je~a~ks~res~ul~ted~~in~ne~w:J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
correct
Supreme
announce the decision shortly,"
O'Brien said after the court failed to
rule in the case today.
In actilns at the court today, the
justices:
-Agreed to settle a tax dispute
over employer·sponsored medical
plans In a case the Internal
Revenue Service says could cost
government coffers millions.
-Let stand an order forcing a
suoorban Little Rock school district
to change Its boundaries to Include
black students from the city. The
justices also kept Intact an order
Harold tfion ) Ketchum. 69, of
Hockingport. died Sunday at
Camden-Oark Memorial Hospital Daisy Conkle
in Parkersburg.
Born in Parkersburg, he was a
Daisy B. Conkle, 89, of Little
son of the late Clyde and Mary Sandusky In Wyandot Co., died
Eaton Ketchum. He was a retired Saturday morning In Wyandot
postmaster or Hockingport post Memorial Hospital In Upper
office and a World War II Army Sandusky.
veteran. He was a member cJ
She was born June 7, 1897 in
Hockingport United Methodist VInton Co. to Meshach and Maggie
Church; Aladdin Temple Scottish Shiner Harvey. She married WilRite. Athens Chapter and Council liam Conkle In 1919. Ahomemaker,
Commandery; Coolville Lodge 337 Mrs. Conkle had made her home In
F&AM; Belpre Shrine Club:
the Little Sandusky area for the
Athens Shrine Club; and the Belpre past 44 years.
American Legion.
Survivors Include two grand·
Surviving are his wile, Norma daughters, Mrs. Roger (Nortleei
Looney Ketchum, at home; one Zimmerman, Washlngton Courtson, Roger Ketchum, Hockingport ; house, and Mrs. Greg (Nancy!
one daughter, Karen Branham, Scheaffer, Mason; and one great
Parkersoorg; one brother, Curtis grandson.
Ketchum. Concord, Calif.; two
In addition to her parents, she
sisters, Vera Cronin of Belpre and was preceded In death by tx>r
Doris Opuda of Matawan, N.J .; husband, In 1973; a 'daughter,
four grandchildren and several Gladys Carmean; eight brothers
nieces and nephews.
and five sisters.
Besides his parents. he was
Services wUI be Wednesday, 1
preceded in dea th IJy an infant p.m., at the Upper Sandusky
sister, Lillian.
Chapel of Lucas Funeral Homes,
Services will be Wednesday , II with Rev. Ricci Arthur officiating.
a.m .. at the White Funeral Home Burial will bE> in Little Sandusky
(Continued from page I)
with burtal in Stewart Cemetery. Cemetery. Fril'nds may call at the
A London newspaper, The Ob·
Mason ic services wUI be held 7p.m. lunerallwJme on Tuesday from 3 to
server,
which disclosed the exist·
Tuesday. Friends may call at the 9 p.m., with the family present from
rnce
of
the Reagan letter tn Its
funeral lwJmr alt er 9 a.m. Tuesday,. 3 to6 p.m.
Sunday editions, reported that
Gorbachev had not yet replied
bE>cause he is confused about U.S.
intrntions - partly as a result of
Meigs County Emergency Medl· Fire Department was alerted at the questions about U.S. abandonment
cal Service reports three calls same time; Syracuse was alerted of SALT 2.
Reagan announced May 27 that
Saturday and 11 calls Sunday.
atl2:Ll a.m.; Rutland and Racine
the
United States no klnger would
Saturday at 8: 06a.m., Rutland to were called for manpower at I; 11
be
hound
IJy terms oltb£> unratified
Brick St. for Fred Cales Jr. to a.m.; TuppersPlalnswascalledfor
pact.
Then
at his televised news
Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers manpower at 1:27 a.m.; Rutland
conference
bst
week, he indicated
Plains at 4: 21p.m. to Sterns Rd. fro EMS at 8:40a.m. to Painter Ridge
the
United
States
might not break
Ca rl Dorst to Veterans Memorial Rd. for Martin Mollohan to Holzer
from
the
agreement
II the !'ov!ets
Hospital; Middleport at 10; 10 p.m. Medical Center; Rutland at 9;07
warm
up
to
arms
control.
to 749 !'outh Third for Nettle Hayes a.m. to Salem St. for Ida Young to
The Observer also reported
to Holzer Medical Center.
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Mid·
Armand
Hammer, chairman of
Sunday at 12 midnight , Pomeroy dleportat 10:03a.m. to651BeechSt.
Occidental
Petroleum Corp. and a
Fire Department was called to a for Mary Bonecutter who was
frequent
go·between
In U.S .· Soviet
fire at the Meigs Inn; Middleport
treated but not transported; Pome·
relatilns,
met
with
Reagan In
roy at 5: 12 p.m. to Meigs High
Washington
and
then
called on
ballfield for Art Stobart to Veterans
Brttlsh
Prime
Minister
Margaret
Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 6: 17
Thatcher
and
Soviet
Amoossador
·
p.m. to Salem St.for Robert Eads to
South Cenlral Ohio
Lron!d
Zamyatln
In
London
Holzer Medical Center.
Variable cloudiness today, with
scattered thunderstorms this after·
noon and hlghs In the upper 80s.
!'orne of the storms may he S('Vere.
Veterans Memorial
Plan Bible school
Mostly cloudy tonight, with scat·
Saturday
Admissions
Carl
Rutland Freewill Baptist Church,
tered thunderstorms and a low
Dorst,
Pomeroy
;
Scott
Brinker,
between 60 and 65. Becoming Salem St., wlll hold Vacation Bible
School the week ~June 73-27 with VMH
mostly sunny Tuesday, with hlghs
Saturday Admissions - Carl
classes for nursery to teenagers
In the mid 70s.
Dorst,
Pomeroy; · Scott Brinker,
The probability of precipitation Is from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Everyone
Pomeroy.
50 percent today, 40 percent tonight welcome.
Saturday Discharges - Leonard
and near zero Tuesday.
Fields.
Winds wUJ be from the southwest
Sunday Admissions - Preston
at 10 to 20 mph today, becoming
Parsons,
Racine; Rotx>rt Curry,
Lottery' result8
noritx>rly late tonight.
Pomeroy;
Mary Bonecutter,
Ohlo Extendo!d Forecaol - Wed·
Middleport.
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Saturnesday through Friday: Fair
Sunday Discharges - Deatra
day's
winning Ohio Lottery
through the period. Highs will be In
Simms,
Carl Dorst.
numbers:
the 70s Wednesday, ranging from
Dallf Nwnber
the upper 70s to the tow 80s
773.
To meet Tuesday
Thursday and In the 80s Friday.
Ticket sales t o t a I e d
Overnight lows mostly will be In the
$1,289,m.!Ml, with a paydf due of· Friendly Circle of trinity Church .
50s Wednesday and Thu!Sday
$384.490.00. LoUo
will meet at 7; 30 Tuesday night at
mornings and ranging from the low
2,
19,
39,
32, 36, 16.
the church.
to mid 60s early Friday.
•
··1\ward;·Winners
The actual estbnated number
of starts for the month was
189,700, do1m fradlonally lrom
189~ mAptil. The number Is
COLUMBUS - The State Con·
trolling Board has released $241,621
In state money to finalize the
planning phase of a proposed new
classroom·labratory buDding at
Rio Grande CommunJty College,
State Sen. Oakley C. Colllns,
Rlronton, announced today.
Colllns said the money would be
applied to architect's fees and other
consulting fees associated with the
proposed $4 million construction
project.
The proposed 38,001-square foot
faclllty will Include two leeture
halls, 12 classrooms, one learning
center, one audlo·visual center, a
nursing lab, a business computing
lab, and offices for the general
studies bu siness, and nursing
faculty.
Dr. Herman Koby, secretary·
treasurer of the community college
adjmied lor seasonal differencesandextmded or 12months1Al
arrive at the annual rate.
BuDding pennlts were Issued
at an anwal rate of 1,785,(0),
001>11 5.3 pemcnt lrom the
previous month. II was the
largest peromtage decUne sbtoe
October IB85 and the slnwest
pace ol pennll Issuance smce
November 19811, the anal,ysts
said.
Rei!lonally, the Midwest suf·
fered the greatest decline In
!tarts, do1m 123;000 W 2<17,000 at
an annual rate.
The Northeast slowed by
8.'1,000 lo 252,000 but the South
. pined 40,000 to 8:11,(0) and the
West roroe lli,OOO W 5110,000 at an
annual rate, the report said.
.I
board of trustees, a~ended Monday's controlling board session and
said the release of funds was
approved without question.
The project, In the planning
stages since the fall of 19&3, was
placed In Gov. Richard Celeste's
capital improvements oodget In
May 1984. Ko!Jy said the building, If
constructed, would bE> placed on
Ridge Avenue, just west ct. the Lyne
Center parking lot. and would bE>
the largest bulldlng on the RGC.CC
campus.
The Columbus office of the
architectural firm U.R.S. Dalton
has bE>en employed as architect on ·
the project, Ko!Jy said, and !he first
set of set of designs was !llbmitted
lor the state's approval on June 7.
Ko!Jy said the project must
progress through three stages pf
apP.roval before dirt can be turried,
with each stage dealing wit h more
specifics untU const ruction docu·
ments are fin alizl'd. Plans must
progress through such agencies as
the Ohio Boa rd of Regents and the
stale architect' s office to conform
with rullding an d fire co<i• s. he
ex plained .
Final approva l is expected in
OctobE>r or No,·emtx>r. Koby said ,
oot actual construclioD" is not
expected to get underway until the
following spring.
Completion of 1he building will be
a pius fort he mmmunJty college by
meeting needs a nd eliminating
!llme classroom space pmblems,
Koby said.
"We've had !our or five tempor·
ary classrooms in such loca tions as
a oosement and the old college
bookstore, and this wUI allow us to
Continued on page If
�
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06. June
Text
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Dublin Core
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June 16, 1986
conkle
harvey
ketchum