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Pege 10 The Daily Sutinel

.----l.Geal briefs----.

Tuuc'ey, August 11, 1987

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
-- --

•

.
Middleport council. ;~ntlnued from page 1 ------Weather~-~--today and light and from the east

South Central Ohio
He stressed th•lt he could 1not
Council approved the placeMostly_
sunny today with highs tonight .
Indicate that the projj!Ct wUI be-· .men! or a two mlll·rtreequlpment
Exteaded Foreeut
,
established but Conrail needs to levy on the November ballot, between 80 and 85. Partly cloudy
Thunday
throuch
Salurday
;
tonight and Wednesday. Lows
There will be meetings Aug. 14 for all parents who will have
know at this time the receptive- stressing that the levy Is a
Fair Thursday through Satur:,
tonight wlll range between 60 and
. children attending kindergarten this fall In the Eastern Local
ness of village ·officials to an renewal and not a new tax. The
65 and highs Wednesday wlll be In day. Lows wlll be In the 60j
Schools.
easement over village property July report of Mayor Hoffman
Thursday and between 65 and 7Q'
the mid 80s.
Parents who have children attending kindergarten at Chester
near the lagoon. Officials lndl- showing fines and fees totaling
Friday and Saturday. Highs will
The
probability
of
precipitaElementary will meet at the Chester School at 12 noon on Aug.
cated that they are receptive to $5,146.50 for the month was
be In the mld 80s to low 90s.
•
tion
Is
near
zero
through
14. Parents who have children attending at Tupper Plains
the Idea and Wartman was approved by council.
Wednesday.
Elementary will meet at 2 p.m. at the Tuppers Plains school.
Announcements
advised to contact Attorney
Mayor Hoffman read a letter
,;·
Winds
will
be
from
the
norAll· parents are encouraged to attend these Important
Bernard Fultz with an offer on from the Ohio Department of
Semlaar
.
•
theast at 10 miles an hour or less
meetlngs .. Informatlon about kindergarten requirements and
Word of Life Church wlll ~
money to be received by the town Transportation Indicating that
transportation arrangements will be available.
having a seminar on Wednesday
and other details for the ease- the town's grant for 1987 to
at 7 p.m. with guest speaker
inent. Officials lndlcl!ted that provide a public transportation
Pastor Bob Smith, The subjec!
they.are not Interested In selllng system has been approved by
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
'
· wlll be "Five Reasons to Put
the limd Involved In such a $49,5~7 which Includes $35,018 In
Provided by
Your Children In ChrlstlaO,
Meigs County 'Emergency Medical Services reports six calls
project. Wartman Indicated that federal funds and $1~ . 539ln state
Bryce and Mark Srrilth
Schools."
Everyone welcome. :
Monday; Syracuse at 12:30 a.m. to Minersville for VIrginia
he plans to have a proposal ready moneys.
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loew I
Davis to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 10: 38 a.m. to
for th~ next meeting of council
. The mayor also reported that
Aglow meetlag
Barringer Ridge Road for Carl Autherson to Veterans
this month.
the town has received a new Firm
Women's Aglow Fellowship
Price
Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 8:16p.m. to Route 684 for Susie
sewage permit . The town must Am Electric Power ............. 27'4 wlll meet 7 p.m. Thursday at the
Sprouse to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 10:09 p.m .
have engineering plans for sew- AT&amp;T ......... ......... ...... ...... ... ... 35 Senior Citizens Center In Pome-:
to Forest Run Road for George Folmer to Holzer Medical
age disposal Improvements Ashland Oil .......... ................. 68 roy. Speakers will be members o~
drawn by Oct. 15 and work must Bob Evans Farms .......... .... 25'h tht&gt; Pomeroy Chapter Aglow.
Center; Pomeroy at 11:07 p.m. to West Main St. for Tina
be started by January, 1988, and Charming Shoppes ..............35 3-i Board. Topics to be touched upor(
· Hendrix to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 11: 22p.m.
Columbia Gas customers can completed by July 1, 1988. The Federal Mogul. .. ................. 48'h wlll Include "Obedience brings•
to Welchtown Hill Road for Lawrence Klein to. Veterans
eliminate the guesswork In their mayor announced a meeting to Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 75~ Blessings," "The Right Menta(
Memorial Hospital.
winter heating bills by signing up discuss the establishment of a Heck's Inc ..... ............... ... ... .4\\ Attitude," " Miraculous Healing:
In Al!gust (or Columbia's Budget town operated television cable
Limited Inc ..... .... ...... ., .. ..... 51 '4 on Financial Need," " In Times o~
Payment Plan, a~ordlng · to system tor 2:30p.m. Monday .
Multimedia Inc ............... .... 71\\ Need" and "Rebellion unto The:·
Jake M. Koebel. the gas comAtten()lng . the meeting were Rax Restaurants ......... .-... ~ ..... .. 5 Lord. •· There wlll be charge ot
l'tichard K. ':Chip" Dailey, 30, and Jull A. Dalley, 24, of
pany's Gallipolis area manager.
Mayor Hoffman. Clerk · Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 9 ~ $1.50 to help cover expenses of..
MJddleport, were returned by Meigs County !iherlff Deputies
Under the Budget Payment Treasurer Jon Buck and Council· Shoney's
Inc .. ...... ..................31 renting the building. Reserva-:
Monday from Florida to face charges of child stealing. Charges
Plan, customers pay the same men Jack Satterfield, Bob Gil- Wendy's Inti
.......... ............ .lO)l tlons for a salad course to be'
against the husband and wife stem from an Incident In July
amount each month. regardless more, William Walters. Dewey Worthington lnd ... ... ........ .... 24 \\ served were due by Monday . Cos~
when the couple took their own minor child, who was under the
of their monthly gas usage. To Horton and James Clatworthy .
lor the llghl meal was $4 , whlcli
protection, custody imd care of Chlldrens' Services.
join, customers simply pay the
Included the $1.50 rental ree. For
The couple fled to Florida where they were subsequently
budget amount on the August gas
more Information. call BeverlY:
arrested on the Meigs County charges. The child was returned
bill.
Rupe, 742-3003; Carolyn Searls.:.
earlier to the county by Chlldrens' Services.
Vete,ans Memorial
Columbia figures each custoVeterans
Memorial
992-3467;
Marlan Michael. 992•·
Child stealing Is a fourth degree felony and carries a
mer's budget amount estimating
Saturday
Admissions
Ruth
Susan
Monday
Admissions
3219; or Melodle Forbes, 992. maximum possible penalty of slx.12or18months In prison and a
the customer's charges for gas Sanders. Pomeroy; Vlrglnla Da- Crouch. Syracuse; Donald Bolin,
fine of up to $2,500.
7030.
usage In the upcoming year and vis. Syt_acuse; VIrginia Duck- Pomeroy.
.. &lt;
The Dalley's waived extradition In Florida and will have their
Saturday Discharges- Carlos
dividing by 12.
worlh, Middleport ; Juanita
1-.'mtertl
initial appearance Wednesday morning before Meigs County
Following
the
winter
heating
·Rife,
Josephine
Clark,
Wilitam
Chapman.
Clifton.
W,
Va.;
Carl
tContinued fr om pagP II
•
Court Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
.
season, Columbia reviews each Autherson. Portland; Donald Ken·nedy.
correct saggi ng lines on thl' hlglt
Sunday Admissions -Charles
" - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - budget customer's account to see Weaver. Pomeroy.
sc hool property .
·
(Continued from page 1l
If the budget amount accurately
Monday Discharges - Arlene Klein. Pomeroy ; Dorothy DemAnd finally . Wednesday, Aug.;
1 ' · " r ••• .
·
reflects the amount of gas being Taylor. Opal Willison. Anna oskey, Middle port; Angela Grlf· 19, 7 p.m .. al the high school. wes,
Shipping sources speculated port from which three Kuwaiti used. If It does not, adjustments Kincaid. Virginia Duckworth. fl!h, Pomeroy .
set as the date and location of
Sunday Discharges - Pamela
that the mine drifted south after tankers and U.S. warship~ left In are ·made to Insure proper Sherman Williams. Charles
special board meeting to deat
Payne. Gertha Hens ley, Susan Nl!z. Karen Reltmlre. Elise with personnel, financial and
being released by Iranian com- a convoy on Saturday for Kuwait . billing.
Wagenhals .
Columbia also offers the Sanders.
mandos near Khor Fakkhan, the
The three re-flagged Kuwaiti
other administrative matters. •
Checkfree
payment
service,
an
tankers and at least three U.S.
warships providing escort In the electronic transfer system that .
according to Koebel is "a conve·
An order authorizing the des- Persian Gulf were delayed in
nlent way for a customer to pay
truction of contraband _by the their journey after at least one
the monthly gas bill without the
sheriffs department has been mine was detected In the shipA SUPER SAVINGS OPPORTUNITY AT OUR
hassle of writing a check and
issued in MeigS County Common ping lanes to Kuwait, shipping mailing II."
sources said.
Pleas Court.
The sources said the convoy
A notice of appeal has been
flied In the case of Gary Wisor. Sunday evening passed without License issued
Ditcontinuetl 111111
The Plains, against James L. Incident west of Iran's Farsi
Island,
close
to
the
area
where
Ono·Of·A·Iind
Mayfield. administrator. Ohio
A marriage license has been
Bureau of Workers Compensa- the supertanker Bridgeton. also Issued In Meigs County Probate
Reduced as much as
tion, Columbus, and Southern escorted by the Navy, hit a mine Court to Michael Robert WoodSELECTION
July 24.
Ohio Coal Co., Lancaster.
row, 22. Racine. and Brenda Sue
to
Bentz, 20, Racine.

Eastern kindergarten to meet

MeGwire
sets AL
rookie
mark

Ohio ·Lottery
Daily Number

184
Pick 4
6032

~

Page-3

Daily stock prices

EMS receives six calls

Columbia Gas fmn
offers budget plan

Return couple to Florida'

a

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Hospital news

,..,enS;O•lS

Voi.J7. No.66
Copyrighted 1981

e

Partly cloudy tonight;
Thursday. Lows lo11l1ht between 65 and 70. Highs
Thursday near 90.

•

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at y

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, We'dnesday, August 12. 1987

2 Section• 14 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Mason Bridge may reopen Aug. 21
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
A grand re- opent n ~ of the Pomeroy-Mason
Brld~e Is sc heduled for 11 a. m. Friday, Aug·. 21 .
The bridge ma y be ope n to traffic a couple days
before that dat e. although no official announcement on the opening dat e has come fr om Jay
Malden, of Ma idE'n-..Jenkins Co nstruction Co .. or
from the Ohio Department of Tra nsporta tion.
Ron Ash. who is headin g the re-opening
celc&gt;bra tlon, repo rt ed at Tuesday's meet ing of the
Pomeroy Area Cham ber of Comme·rce that work
to the fleck of the st nict ur.-. is not quite finished
and th a;l the bridge's roadw~ y will bc rcstriped
before ll Is opened to traffi c.
Ash sa id 1:\0 letters of invitation to th e
re-opening· cerc&gt;mony wi ll be mailed to sta te a nd
loca l public offi cials from Ohio and West Vir(linla.
A number of. media perso nnel arc also to be

Invited he sal(!.
The ceremony wlll be brief. said Ash. with only
abou t 30-second presentations from speakers. and
will end with a ribbon cutting. .
The bridge has been closed for repairs since
March 30.. A ferry has been operating between
Pomeroy a nd Mason since that time.
Stat e Sena tor Jan Michael Long, D-Circlevllle.
was at Tuesday's meeting to make a specia l
present atlo n to Bill Nease. president of chamber .
Long recapped events leading up to the closure of
the bridge and acknowledged Nease's "persistent
efforts" in trying to securE' ferry service before
the bridge was closed. Long sald the communnlty
should be awa reof.how hard Nease worked on the
project. Long then read a resolution which has
been passed by the Oh.lo Senate. at Long's request,
co mmending Nease for ' his role In securing
the
..

ferry service and his dedication to the
community.
In brief rema r ks to chamber. members, Long
pledged again to make the needs of Meigs County
known to officials In Columbus.
In other business, NeasE' announced that the
cham ber office, presently located above Bank
One, will soon be moving to the former Diamond
Savings and Loan buildln~. Nease said the
J .T.P.A. program. now located at the Diamond
building, has invited chamber to share the
building free of charge. Chamber's telE'phone
number at the new location wlll be the same he
added.
A dinner-da nce on the ferry is being planned but
no date has been sel at this point. TheevE'nt will be
$25 per couple. Only a limited number of tickets
will be sold.
Jennifer Sheets reported that plans are

underway for another Big Bend Varieties show.
tentatively scheduled for the Saturday after
Thanksgiving. Last year's show was a blg money
maker for co-sponsors. chamber and the Rutland
Civic Center organization.
In a lighter vein, Pomeroy attorney Fred Crow
took the floor to recruit volunteers to take part In a
play he has written . Crow explained that he writes
plays. "which are more outlines than actual
plays, " and then at get-togethers, will video his
friends acting out t1le plays without prior
rehearsa l. He said most of the acting Is adllb. and
showed clips from a video of an earlier play. He
said the fun Is In watching the finished video.
And finally . Ron Ash commended Pomeroy
officials, business leaders and individual business
owners for the many improvements underway In
the village. especially In the business section.

r------------------------.

a

Court news

SEMI·ANNUAl

CLEARANCE SALE
GQOD

20°/o 50°/o

Mason County .
Fair Schedule

WEONt:SDAY, AUGUSf ~ 1987
9:00a.m. -Gates Open-Flag RaiSing Ceremon,y
Pretty Baby Cont~t
9:30a.m. -Dairy Goat Milk Out
10:30 a.m. - Greasy Pole Climb
1:00 p.m. - Open Sheep Show
Pedal Tractor .Pull
Ch.apel Opens
J:OO p.m. - Entertainment, Main Stage,
Rex Nelon Singers
4: :JO p.m. - Hannan High School Band Concert
5:30p.m. - Market Lamb Show
6:30p.m. -Narrow Way Singers (Gospel)
7:00p.m. - Utile Mister and Miss Mason County
4-H Leader Memorial Award-Jr. Bldg.
Junior and Open Dairy Show
Demolition Derby
7:00p.m. -Junior Style Show
9:30p.m. -Entertainment. Main Stage.
Rex Nelon Sl ngers
11:00 p.m. -Good Night-Gat~ Closed

GEORGIAN
HALL
QUID U11U TABLIS

Public Notice

IIY IIEIIIIAI"'

LIVING ROOM TABLES

Clatsie~lly 1tyJ.d Qunn AMt
l41bH! &amp;roUP fn1untt cabrh&gt;M

le-ts and WU moUI delaillftlc
Su~rbly ~rafted

Mnd· rubbed

eherry vel'loffr topt. and ma~

underparu hiYt. dlltr-a

(Continued from Pege 7)

fru itw DO;d u lntd flnJah,

Bolanco .. ........... 222.824

Ceah in

Benko (Nott ....... t17.686l
tnv•tmon\1 ... .. .... 240.410
Tot. Fund Bol. ..... .222.824
MEMORANDA DATA
A-1. Vot ...... 30.019. 127

MASON COUNTY FAIR QUEEN AND HER COURT- The 1987
Mason County Fair Queen Sherr! Hugh uri ...,... with her court
follow In~~; Tuesday nl~~;ht 's pageant on the main stage at the Mason
County Falrl{l'ounds near Point Pleasant. From left are 1986Queen

....

tnoido 10 Mitt ............ .4.00
Outoide 10 Mitt .. ...... 20.00
ADM .......................... 837

319.00

1

Num.of Non-Cert .
EmptoyMt ................. 44

OUP ~A WD CO!IUIODI.

rr· d

Num.of Cert.

l ".

n· H

Reg.

EmployHa ... ... ......... ..61
SUMMARY OF
INDEBTEDNESS BONDS

SWI.OO$

Sole

Bel. Bogin. of
Period ... ............ 120.000
Redeemed-During

9900
1

q · . ao· , lt " H

~

ALSO IN STOCK :

Fiocal Period ........ 10.000
Bot. 6-30-87 .. ...... 110.000

atg.

DIOf' LI.AF COCKTo\11. T4at.l .

--

Sale

Fenton Taylor named Meigs principal

$19500

1479.00 .

During the regular meellng and Mae Young.
F~ nt o n Ta ylor was named new
Res ignations accepted In principal of Meigs Hi gh School before the executi ve sess ion.
wh n the Meigs Local Sc hool Trcas ur('l' .Jane Fry repor ted c luded those of Phil Ohlinger.
Dl,trict Board of F: du cation met · that the district has been ap· cus todian : Ronald C. Jutton,
In re~ u lur sess ion in Miudlepot'l proved for a gra nt of $2:11 .708 for subs titute teac her; Constance E.
the Chapter I reading program Wes1 as assistant band director;
Tu esday night.
the ne w school year and upon
for
Clifford J . Kennedy as freshman
Taylor has b&lt;&gt;en serving as ap
her
reco
mmendat
Ion
tbe
board
bas ketball coach and reserve
ass ista nt prlniclpu l at the high
sc hool fo r a pprox imate ly 1:\ named. Ba nk l as the depos itory baseball coac h; Laura Proudfoot
years. lle succeeds James Miller for the district for Ihe nex t two as a substitute teacher; Todd
Bissell. substitute teacher.
who rcslgned from the pos ition year period.
Karen Meadows was hired as a
Fift ee n substit ut e teachers for
d fc&gt;c tivc Aug . l to accept a
the new sc hool yea r were named secretary for only th e new school
positio n In the non hern par1 of
Ohio.
and Include John W. Barcus, year for a secretary who is on a
Char
les G. Bush, Judith Croo ks, one year leave of absencE' and
Board act ion to hi re Tay lor for
Larry
Gibbs, Grace Hawley. Yvonne Young was hired as a
ih•• post was taken a ri er the
Betty Hutchison. Jane Manuel. reader guide for a visually
board held un executive session
Bre n t Marshall,' Pamela Impaired student for thE' next
foll owing its rcgular mee tin g
Tu&lt;'sday. Tay lor was unanim- Murphy , Winifred Haas, Kat - school year . The Meigs Junior
hl ee n S. Parker , Mary Powell, High School student handbook
ously approved for th e appoi nt ·
Rober) Shaver. Carolyn Tripp for the new school year was
ment by a ll five board members .

Sole 5239°0

SOFA TAilE.. .............................. RIIJ. •m.oo SALE '209.00
OVAL LAMP ................................ RIIJ. '299.00 SALPH9.00

I certify the following re·
port to be corr1ct end true. ·I
to the best of my knowl-

IUTLERS

edge:

TRAY TAll£ w/glau lo ........ Itt- '149.00 SALE S269.00

Eloite Botton
Treaaurltf of the Board of
Educ•tion

614-985-4331

I

Area deaths

Gladys Burchfield

He was preceded In death by
one half-brother. Richard A.
McDade.
Services will be at 2: 30 p.m.
Thursday at the Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home with the Rev.
George Hooschar officiating..
Burial will follow In Pine Grove
CemE'IE'ry at Leon.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 2 p.m. WE'dnesday .

Gladys BurchfiE'ld, 80, formE'rly of Stewart. died Monday at
Good Samaritan Hospital in
ZanesvillE'.
A homemakE'r, Mrs. Burchfield was born DE'c. 15. 1906 In
Athens County, a daughter-ofthe
latE' Benjamin and Flora Davis
Stanton.
Surviving are a daughter-Inlaw, Edna Curry, · Sunbury; a Wilbur Stephens
grandson, Earnest Curry. SunWilbur W. Stephens. 50, Route
bu ry, and two greatgrandchildren, Tony and Genie 2, Leon, died Monday evening In
Pleasant Valley Hospital. .
Curry , both of Sunbury .
He was an employee of Kaiser
Bes'ides her parents. she was
preceded in death by her hus- Aluminum at Ravenswood and a
band, Ernest, two sisters and . veteran of the U.S. Navy. He
attended Harvey Chapel Church.
three brothers.
Born April 28, 1937 in Leon, he
Graveside rites will be held at
was
the son of the late Charles
11 a.m. Wednesday at the Ca rStephens
and the late Ora Rollins
tha-ge Cemetery. Friends may
Stephens
Knapp.
call at the White Funeral Home
He was preceded In death by .
In Coolvil1e from 7 to 9 this
four brothers and three sisters.
evening.
Surviving are his wife. Cora
Roush Stephens; two daughters,
Guy Doolittle
Tammy Stephens. Leon, and
Guy David Doolittle. 30. of Patty Wooten, Letart; two sons.
Route 2, Point Pleasant, died Brian Stephens, Point Pleasant,
Sunday morning near and Randy Stephens, Sandyville;
four grandsons; two brothers.
Parkersburg. .
HE&gt; was a boilermaker and a Homer and Brycle, both of Leon;
member of the Boilermaker's two sisters, Crystal Thomas,
Local 667 in Charleston, and a Leon, and lcyle Herdman, Rutland. and one half-sister, VIolet
197~ graduatE' of Point Pleasant
Fridley of Ripley.
High School.
Services wlll be at 11 a.m.
Born July 30, 1957, In ColumThursday
at the Crow-Hussell
bus. Ohio. he was thE' son of
Funeral
Home
with the Rev.
Sammie and Jean Rollins DoolitKenneth
Durst
and the Rev.
tle of Point Pleasant.
Surviving in addition to hls Verlln Hart ofllclatlng. Burial
parents are one sister. Mrs. will be at Mt. Zion Cemetery,
J&gt;
Teddy Lynn Thomas, Point Plea- Leon.
Friends
may
·
c
an
at the funeral
sant. and one brother•. Sammie
home
after
2
p.m.
Wednesday.
Levi Doolittle, Point Pleasant.

AT

''
B£N~ DING

FOREIGN &amp; DOMESTIC CARS &amp; TRUCKS
.
Lifetime Warranty

(Another Way To Serve You Batter)
WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY
MOST DOMESnc CAIS fiC)M CONVEITEI..ON BACK

$8995

PAT "HILL FORD INC.
992-2196 .
;

approved and Rick Ash was
given a supplemental contract as
Meigs High School varsity volleyball coach with Pam Vaughan
Miller named assistant volleyball coach pending proper sports
certification.
The board granted maternity
leave to Donna R Jenkins from
Sept. 18 to the end of the first
semester and Supt. Dan Morris,
Assistant Supt. James Carpenter. Roger Holman and . Gene
Hawkins were named as board
representatives to acquire federal surplus property from the
Ohio State Agency for S4rplus
Property under 'the terms and
conditiOns established
by the
Ohio Department of Administrative Services.
.

More naval vessels
bound for gulf area

PAT HILL FORD
C.USTOM PIPE

Karla Click, Queen Sherr!, first runner-up Angle Hatfield, second
runner-up Cheryl Miller, third runner-up Leigh Supple and Miss
Con)!enlality Usa Hopson.

•

II i!

'
•

IID.D.~EPOIT ·l

R~Y AL SMILE 1987 Mason County Fair Queen Sherr!
Hughart smiles to the crowd after being crowned Tuesday night.
The new queen, daughter of Carol and Roger Hughart or Point
Pleasant, was sponsored In the pageant by ERA Town &amp; Country
Real Estate.

PRAISED FOR EFFORTS - Pomeroy Area Chamber of
Commerce President Bill Nease, at left, received high marks for
his role In securing ferry service for Pomeroy before the closure of
the Pomeroy-Mason bridge last March, At Tuesday's. chamber
meeting, State Senator Jan Michael Long presented Nease with a
copy of a resolution passed recently by the Ohio Senate
commending Nease for his efforts. Nease acknowledged that
many other Individuals were Involved In the projed and said It
makes you feel good to be part' or a community willing to get
Involved.

Fair entries close Friday
Closing time for all open class entries for the 1987 Meigs
County Falrwlll be at 4 p.m. Friday. Mrs. Muriel Bradford, fair
board secretary, and office personnel will be at the secretary's
office on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds from 10 a&gt;m. to 4 p.m.
both tomorrow and Friday to accept entries.
,

•

John Rice receives
distinguished award

John Rice, a native Meigs He is well liked and respected by
County resident and currently his county clientele and peers". ·
Rice Is the son of Nora Rice.
by a mine Monday in the Gulf of · serving as the Meigs County
MANAMA. Bahrain iUPI\ wM
resides with the Rices on the
Agricultural
Agent
•
.
was
presOman while fully loaded with
More mines were spotted near
ented
the
1987
Distinguished
.
family
farm homeplace, and the
Iranian crude oil.
the southern entrance to the
!ale
Wlllard
Rice. He and his
An NBC television crew flying Service Award today at the
Persian Gulf as three re- !lagged
In a helicopter spotted one mine National Agriculture Agents wife. Anna. have three sons:
tankers escorted up the watermoored off the pori of Fujairah meeting in Fargo, North Dakota. Mark, a Sl?nior at Ohio Stall:'
way by U.S. Navy warships
Receiving the award Is --the University; .John, a sophomore
prepared to load in Kuwait for and the other three were found
highest
honor a county agricultu- at Ohio University , and David, a
during
a
search
by
Oman!
and
the hazardous return voyage.
ral
agent
can receive and Is senior at Eastern High School.
U.S.
forces.
The
Omanls
were
Britain and France announced
presented
at
the national meetTuesday thE'y were sending mine trying to determine the origtn of
ing
for
outstanding
e.xtenslon
the mines before detonallng
sweepers to protect their vessels
service
In
the
county
where
the
amid new threats by both Iran them .
agent
serves.
At the same time, four u.s.
and Iraq to launch attacks
A . resident of ihe Tuppers
warships that · sailed from the
against oll and Industria'!
Gulf of Oman Saturday handed Plains area. Rice received his
Installations.
The threats followed a series of over the tankers Gas King, bachelor of science degree and
traql air' attacks Monday on Ocean City and Sea Isle City near his master's degree at Ohio State
Iranian oil targets. Iran re- Kuwait's mi).ln AI .Ahmadi on University.
Rice has served Musklngum
sponded by shelling Iraqi oil terminal. shipping sources said.
The
convoy
had
stalled
for
36
and
Meigs Counties as county
sites.
agriculture
agent for a total of 21
hours
off
Saudi
Arabia
when
At the United Nations,
years.
·
mines
were
spotted
by
Secretary-General Javier Perez
hellcopters.
The
citation
nominating
him
de Cuellar received a formal
The tankers wlll load oil . for the prestigious award reads:
response lrom Iran on a Security
"With his leadership and
Council resolution last month for products and natural gas for a
an Immediate ce11se- fire hi the return 550-mlle journey down the knowledge, John has developed
nearly 7-year-old gulf war, but no gulf and may be accompanied by and conducted outstanding pr«r
the supertanker Bridgeton. grams In vegetable production.
details were released .
which
hit a mine July 24 during dairy, agronomy and farm finanShipping sources said four
the
Navy's
first escort mission.
cial management. John's leadermines were spotted Tuesday 11
Britain
said
the
mine
blast
that
ship
In the retention and expanmiles off the United Arab Emidamage&lt;,!
the
Texas
Caribbean
sion
program
for businesses has
rates' port of Fujalrah. n~ar
brought
many
positive· changes
wh,ere the U.S.-operate(l super- . Monday promptedlttoorderfour
for ' the people
Continued on page 10
JOHN RICJ';
tankerTexaco Caribbean was hlt
.. . . . of Meigs County.
..
\i,

�-,

..

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~:~:y-=-~~:~~~n::~ :~.·:-

Commentary

Montgomery loses big league debut, 7-2

Wednesday, August 12, 1987

----------------------~~------------------------------------~~-----'.•..

The _Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Stre~t

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERF.!ITS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

I.

......,,....._&lt;;::l,
. ....

a~

. IS'imii:.l
~II'

~._

ROBERT L. WINGETT .
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assbotant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General .Mana~~:er

A MEMBER of ThC' Vnit('(l Prf'!'l~ JntC'rna1 ion a I. Jnlt.~nd D~1lly Prf'~s
A!"sodalion and thr Amrrica n Nrw$.p&lt;.~Jl('r Publl~hC"r!ol A~soclation.
LFITF.RS OF oPJf\IOf\ ;trr wt•ltilm1 •. Thf'\ " hould bt• lcosJoO th;~n :lii)O words
lflnp . Alllf'1H•fJoO ;Jn•~uhh'l ·ttu c"&lt;lil in[! and mu~ \ ~ JoOignr'fl wllh n:lml'. addi'('SS :1 n1l
lr•lt•phum, numtwr. No un.~ tgn1~1 l1 •1 1 r~ rs w.ill b4 · puhllsh('d. l.f'llf'l ')o' !ihol!lcl tw • In
~110d Jasti •. addr1 ·ssing is ~u~ . nnt PN'ltitln:llttl(.,;,

.·
...

.

The
realities of
..
~ngressional
spending
.
&lt;

By BUD NEWMAN
WASHINGTON ~UPII - Rep. David Obey, D -Wis., a tough,
nD"ilonsense lawmaker. got angry July 28 when saw on the front page
or lrhe Washington Post what he felt was .a cheap shot President
Reagan had taken at him and others in Congress. ·
··
There was Reagan on thE' road in Obey'~ home st11te using 11 huge
pair of scissors io cut up a "Congressional Excess" credit card held
up :by Wisconsin Republican Sen. Robert Kasten.
Printed on this funny, phony credit card were the phrases "No Tax
Too High" and "Mine. All Mine." In the middle was a picture or a pig
In barrel (to symboliZE' wasteful pork barrel spending, and the
saying "There's Plenty MorE' Where That Came From." In the
background was a big American flag.
The visual Image was cl!"ar - th!" president struggling to conlrol
wa~teful government cosls while the dastardly Congress spent and
taxed wildly and avoided making tough choices on federal priorities.
But the lmag!" Reagan pr!"sented on the road In Port Washington,
Wts·.. and at .vlrtually every other recent public appearance, was at
odds with the rt&gt;allty ·that Obey faced as chairman of the House
Apj)roprlations subeominltree responsible for foreign assistance.
"·I find It interesting to compare that visual Image .that the
president is sending to .the country with what he's doing In foreign
aidl" Obey said on the day the pholo appeared In the Post, and, no
doubt. many other newspapers.
In the Capitol Hill bunker where Obey works and where the real
wars over federal spending priorities are waged, It was the
administration, not Congress, seeking more money and backing
away from making a tough spending choice.
ThP administration got $13.3 billion for foreign security .a ssistance
programs for thP current fiscal year. Reagan tho;&gt;n requested $1.2
billion more this year and Congress, constrained by spending limits
ImpOsed by the Gramm- Rudman balanced budget law, which
Rea_gan supporred. gave him half that.
. ·
Ilut only .17 Republicans - one t.e nth of the Ho\lse' s 176 GOP
members- voted for the extra money sought by Reagan. Most voted
to strip It from. the bill.
.
·
"Jn plain language, the Democrats carried the administration
reqt,lest," Obey said.
And on the same day thai I he pholo or Reagan and his big scissors
ran; Obey had a new dilemma. There was not enough money to give
Reagan all he wanted for foreign security programs for flsral1988.
whfch begins Oct. I. and Obey's panel Wiis set to consider the bill that
afternoon.
·Obey had parlier devised a plan taking advantage of the
c6mpllcated bookkeeping Involved in government spending - the
kjbd where thf' lax dollar that Is act.uaily spent ls c?unted differently
tr-~n the tax dollar that Is authorized to be spent.
.
; obey proposed cutting military aid to Israel and Egypl by 2 percent
E'1ich - $36 million out of $1.8 billion In Israel's case. That tiny $36
nitlllon cut, be said, would free more than $700 million in budget
a,lithority for aid to other nalions the administration wanted to help.
•;I'hat was so because Israel spends Its money much raster than
olber countries.
;bbey knew any cut In Israeli aid Is controversial and difficult
~ause IsraE'I's friends in Washington and Jts lobbyists are
IDIIuential. persuasive and effective. So Obey. who was willing to take
tl)i&gt; heat . said he wanted bipartisan support from the administration
a(d from Republicans on his panel.
: H&lt;' didn't get it. Both shied away from the plan. telling Obey they
~not want to have to vote for or support a cut in Israeli ald.
•:&gt;o while President Reagan hammers away at Con-gress and talks
about the need to cut spending and mak&lt;' tough choices - while
,R]iagan is using gimmicks that make great pictures and convey
sironf! Images of who is the good guy In this cqmplicated fight over
sCIE'Jlding priorities - Obey and others In ,slmillar · posltio~s In
COngress havt&gt; to deal wIth reality ,
:~ nd that reality presents a less focused picture and more murky
tJ!jage than the one that ran In papers all over the country July 28t!ti- one the White House wants the A,merlcan people to believe.

a

.·..·.

Today in history
..;, United· Pres• International
:·Today is Wednesday, Aug. 12, the224thday ofl987 wilh 141 to follow .
•:'fh&lt;' moon Is waning. mov-i ng toward its last quarter.
·' :&gt;Thf' morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
·;Th&lt;' evf'nlng stars are.Mars and Saturn.
~;,Those born on this dale are under the sign or Leo. They include
English poet laureate Robert Southey In 1774; Am!'rican painter
~bolt Thayer. credited with the discovery or camouflage In the
a()lmal world, In 1849; educator and poet Katherine Lee Bates
(\'America the Beautiful" I In 1859; mystery writer Mary Roberts
ftlnehart In 1876: movie producer Cecil B.[)(' Mille In 1881: country
$gers Buck Owens In 1929 tage 58) and Porter Wagoner in 1930 tage
former national security advisor John Poindexter In 1936 tage
!ttl. and actor George Hamilton in 1939 tage 481.

s:;,:

.,.'•
••

••'·

~{&gt;n this date In history:
'
·
'in 1851. ·Isaac Singer was granted a patent for his sewing machine.
Ht.set up business In Boston with $40 capital.
Mn 1898, a peace protocol was signed ending the Spanish- American
~r after hostililles of three months, 22 days. The United States
Cquired Puerlo Rico. Guam and the Philippines, and annexed
!flwall.
1984, the 23rd Olympic Games ended in Los Angeles with a record
at~endance of 5.5 million people despite a Soviet- led boycott.
,n 1985, In aviation's worst single-plane disaster, 520 peaple died
When a Japan Air Lines Boeing 747 slammed into a mountain In
~Ira! Japan. Four passengers survived.

en
·.....

•.,

~

.

. .

.

~.'A thought for. the day: Robert S~&gt;uthey wrote, "Curses are like

( 9biing chickens. they :!ways come home to roost."

~

Cruises -beach the disab)ed ___sa_ra_h_Ov_er_st_re_er)

. When my colleague announced United States by herself wouldn't had to. That's lh e only way
her Intention to goon a Caribbean be allowed to take a cruise people with disabilities have won
cruise this summo:-r. I was without an "able-bodied" person their limited accesslbiilty to
envious. She'd just moved here following behind her.
privileges the rest of us take for
from Las Vegas, where shew as a
grant
e d. Even though there are
"Oh. your 'attendant' · could
tE'Ievlslon reporter and anchor. just be a friend,:' the travel agent finally federal laws that' requi re
She likes our mld·sized Mtdwest- . told her. "Just someon~ to bring entitles receiving government
Prn town but needed a little or the along that you could call an . funds to ma ke their buildings.
pace she was used to. The attendant." Donna ;1rgued that · alrpl a nt&gt;s a nd jobs accessible,
Caribbean seemed like the per·
there was no · assurance the enforcement has always been
ft&gt;ct remedy for the mid - friend could help her In whatever "So. s ue us." Only the tena cious
summer. small-town doldrums .
jam the cruise lines Imagined s he ni"E'd ap ply.
When Donna called her travel
I call&lt;;&gt;d severa l cruise lin es
might get into. It didn 't makt&gt;any
agent, she'd just returned from ,difference . "Those are the and asked a bout . the ir policies.
Washington, D.C., where she rules, " the travel agent told her. Patient · spokespersons . apologserves on the board or the
Donna thought about fighting. Ized but defended the rules,
National Barrier Awareness The impulse she has always felt citing metal floor runnNs that
Foundation . . In a wheelchair to be a good role model almost divided halls from ca bins, nu from an auto accident when she won her over. "I thought to me rous "step-ups" from roo m to
Wi'S 19, Donna Clint&gt; was Miss
myself, If .I don't fight this , no room , and bathrooms too sma ll
Wheelchair America In 1985 and other dlsa bled person will be able for whPE'Ichalrs. One lin e has two
has loni been active In behalf of to go on a cruise, either."
especially accessi ble s hips. but
- ---rights for the disabled. She
Then the need we all have for a
traveled all over the United restful va~ation won out. "I
States meeting, greeting and thought, 'This Is my vacation, not
lobbyln~~; lt&gt;glslators. She was on
a headache.' '} she said. ShE'
and off more planes, In and out of decided to chuck the Idea and
more hotels. than I hope to be In a
plan a vacation where t&gt;verylifetime .
thlng would be accessiblE'. I
That's why the news from her couldn't fault hf'r. A vacation is
travel agent knocked us for a
not a fight to tht&gt; finish.
loop. Tht&gt; ships wt&gt;re accessible
If this hadn't been ht&gt;r vacato wheelchairs. the . agent said.
tion, Donna would have scrapped
but the crulst&gt; lint&gt;s. wouldn ' t it out. Maybe that's the saddest
allow · Donna to take a cruise part ol thl~ story. As Miss
unless she brought along an
Wheelchair America and as a
"attendant." In other words , this
member of · coalitions ol peopiP
28-year-old professional woman
with dis a bllitlf's, she' s had plt&gt;nt y
who has traveled all ovi&gt;r the of experience in thP ring . She's

the a tt!"nd anl ruteo stllla pplies .

Many or tht&gt;se ships wer~ built
before accessibllll y beca me an
Issue , but of thE' lines with n ~w ,
ships, only one said the new s hi p
was designed wit h grea ler acc!"s- •
slblllty to disabled · people In
mind .
"It will take a large g roup of '
prople prot£'stlng this. ~ task. •
force. to make any difference to .
the cruise lines ." Donna said.
She kn ows so mP disabled person
will finally have to take I he cruse
lin es to co urt · to press the
argum Pnt th a t the lines should
co mply with federal accessibility
rules because they use federally
s ubs idized ports. That 's what
happe ne d with th e ai rlines,
which a lso res isted a llowing
disabled prople .to traveL

- ....

BACK TO SCHOOL

Specials

A fight is brewin·g
Issues- and could.drtvea dt&gt;t&gt;per
wedge between wholesa lers and
the retailers. Who oppose tne
beer bill.
. Two Democratic presidential
hopefuls who have supported the
beer bill In the past provl'd
s trangely shy when w e asked
a bout their current position on
the le~lslation .
Sen . Jospph Blden. D-DPL .
chairman of the Judiciary Committee. was out campalgninl!.
and his staff could not rE-a ch him
for comment. A·committE'P cotleague and ~Ivai , Sen. Paul
Simon, D-lil .. was a lso unava il able for comment .
Footnote: A spokesman for the
Pennsylvania attorney genrral
said that the state brought an
a_n tltrust suit · against PepsiCo
and two of Its bottlers. But lhP
suit was thrown out of fed era l
courl this summer becausr rhr
companies' activities were pro·
teet I'd by an exlstinl! federal law.
allowing softdrlnk distribution
monopolies, similar to the bill
proposed for the beer indu stry .

Scoreboard ...

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By DAVID AVITABILE
UPI Sports Writer
Mark MrGwlre. knowing his
power stroke would return . wa ·
ited out the 11 ~am~ to break a
o·ecord that had s tood for .17

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Kellogg retiring because of bad knees
:cOLU MJ'lUS, Ohio ( UP n lrtdl ana Pacers forward Clark
Kellog~ . side lined much of the
last two season because of ba d
kn ees. says he Is rctirin~ from
bas ketball , according to a Co·.
lumbu s nr wspapcr .
The Co lumbu s Dispalch says
KellOgg , a native of Ci&lt;'vela nd
who passt'd up his final yea r of
cligl bllli y a Ohio State to lurn
professional. will ma kt:' hi s dcci"
slon public at a news co nferen ce
this aftPrnoon in Indianapolis.
'T,·e given it a tot of thought ,
but I feel llkv if 's time io move
on," Kellogg. 26. told the newspaper Tuesday from his home in
Indianapolis . "My knee just
does n' t feel like it 's responding
we ll enough for me to continue
my ca reer In the NBA." ·

.

BILLS

FORA.

RIDE.

..

1

K!'ilogg, an a ll -Big Ten for ·
ward at · Ohi o Staf(' University
who scored 1,285 points in th•·ec
yea r s. sa id hC' informed Pacers
Genera l-Man ager Donnie Walsh
of his decis ion Tucsd~y.
Ke lio~g, a five-yea r N BA
pla yer. was decla •·ed m!'dlca iJ~·
unable to play in FC'bruary b:V
Pacers' tea m phys ician Dr.
Robert Brueckmann .

for people
who hate
get up for

The Daily St&gt;ntim·l

WORK ...

(ll!"PS Uli-ftfMI)

0

'

',.'
'
'

I

'I
When temperatures take the plunge
this winter, your heating bills needn't
climb. Not If you're on Columbia's
Budge! Payment Plan.
The plan a'lllt1lgee your bills Into 12
equal payments, so there are no peaks .
and valleys because of the waather.
. Instead, the monthly amount stays the
same . .• higher than you now pay In the
aummfllr. but a lot lower In tile winter.
Rather than upa and downs, your
gas billa lllay_on a smooth, even track
all~ 'round.
It's easy to be a Budget Payment
customer, lOci. All you do Ia pay .the ·
"Budget Amount" on your AuguSI bill,

and you'll be billed that amount every
month. Your meter will continue to be
read as usual, and each month's bill
will continue to show the amount of
gas you used. A review in March deter·
mines If your budget amount needs to
be adjusted because of weather. ·
Another good Idea: sign on for
Cl'l~ too. It automatically makes
your gas payment from your checking
account each month, so you save time,
postage ancr check charges.
·
Join the Columbia Budgpt Payment
Plan. 'lbu'll taiC8 the ups and downs
out of your healing bills ... and leave
the high coat of winter behind.

P u h'l b-IH i l o• \' (·1' \ a lll ' l'n n• •n . Mnnd_:,s
F'l'i fb \ . Ill ('q url SL . ,Pn
mno\ . Oh in. h~,. 1ht • Ohln V : d l&lt;'~ P 11 h ·
lb hln ,l! ('o ,mp;tn,\' M u ll lm('( tla . l nt·.,
d ;i!'-:o~ po:o~t; t J.:f'

paid at

Mt ·mh; •t : l ' nito'tl P 1 • ·s~ l n tt •rnal lonn l.
I n hi ml 0 ;111,\ Pn •s!&lt;i 1\ !'lSI'f'l;tl i(•n :t ncl I hi"
Oh lu N t • W!&lt;-p :t ~ll'l' A ss~tl'l ;llil •ll · N:lliOO ill
Acln •rtl!&lt;- ln~ Rt•p t'l"wn_lat l\ '1'. Amnh:~m
Nt' W!'iiJ' 'IWI S a lt •!&lt;- . 7:t:{ Third A\'t'fll.lt'.
NP\1' YM k. Nt•w r nr k lflfn7 .

R~TF.S

' 8)' ( 'nrrlt'l' or Mntor Kt11lh•
Otw Wt:t•k . , .... ,.;, ... ., ................... Sl . ~!l

Vm • Mlltl lh ... ,.... ..
.. ........ S!\. ~!1
on .. Y1o; 11
........ .$tirl .m
.!'r\l~(ii , Jo: ( 'OP\'
PKirt:
0. 111 ~ ....... .......... ... ........ :!r1 Ct• nl ~
•
Suhst·t·lh.-r.'- not d ; ·~id n g 111 pa _\' l ht •t·;tl't h •r m:n· n ·mlt 111 ; tt h ·:l lll 'l ' tll t·toc ·t 1•1
tht• n.. th· ~·nllm• l ! •ll :I:\. """ 1:! mnnth
b;o•ls. Cl:t•&lt;t It will bl:· gh't ·n ;·:t tT it •J' 1•:u·h
\1.'(•(•1{.

..

•MICROCOMPUTER/DATA PROCESSING
•EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAL
•ACCOUNTING
·, •BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
•MEDICAL OFFICE SECRETARY
•SECRETARIAL
•JUNIOR CCOUNnNG
Call one of our representatives today for

additional information

m :tll}wrm i11NI in
an•as whPrt'• twm t• , ..,,Tit•r ~wn · kr • Is
:n ·;!llabiP.

I·

COWMBIAGAS

I

•

•'

M~tll Suh~·rlpllonK

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ln~ldt• Mrll{f' ( 'oamty
1~ Wt·l'ks ......... ... .................... ,. :u · ~
tn w('&lt;'k ~.. ........... ...................... .. ' :r. .

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629 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis. OH . 45631

)2 Week• .. .. ... .. ...... ... ... ........ .. ll\6..;t\
Out~ldr

COLUMBUS. Ohio tUPII Roya l Copenhagen, Qflven by
Joe Ess ig J r .. paced his fastes t
time ever Tuesday night at Scioto
Downs In what was the fastes t
·m ile on the card
Essig drove lhe 5-year-oid
gelding to a 1:56 4-5 milt&gt; and a
12-le ngth win over Jeff' s Rick
and Cory Momentum . Royal
Copenhagen's time was three

seconds faster than his previous '
best.
One Life to Give won ihe six th
race with Able Sovereign A. •
coming in second. J .J .'s Sfetson
a nd Will C. Yorktown finished In
a dead hea t f&lt;;&gt;r third to set up two ,
trifecla com binations. The 1-8-7
combination returned $2.145.40
while the 1-8- 5 r et urned $281.40.
The. crowd of 2, 941 ~agered
$226,137.

ri'; ;.......;;;.;;;;;;jj;jjiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

DAN'S
~

Weekend
Special
Aug. 13, 14, 1 S
Jhur., Fri.

M.-1.11 C:ou•y

······ ·· ··.... · ~~~.:!0

~G Wf'f'k s ....... .... ... . ... ... .. ... ... :. ... !U.'l.lO
~2 WPPk s .... .... .. , .... .. .......... ....... ~tl7. fill

Reg. #16· 11-tOSSI

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AleS A&lt;eredited

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ni

INSTANT REBATE

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ss.OO OFF
!
!GIRLS SUNSET
BLUES
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&amp; LADIES JEANS &amp; JACKETS I
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AUGUST 13 THRU 17 .....,. DAN'S

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~-~-----------------------~

CARNIVAL
OF VALUES ·.

'IO'DELLSI
Stop In tO&lt;My lor your copy of our
Cornivot of Yltuet clrcur.r.

SALE ENDS SATURDAY. AUGUST 15

27.99
711-Pc. 318-ln. Drive SAE &amp; Melric Socket
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7.95 7,S 9

6.98 Gatton

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goes on easily and dries qulcf\·
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L·2"'

1 Gallon

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Faucet comes complete witn

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992-5500

Vine St. at Third

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J,1 Week• ......... .........

l:

Scioto Downs results

Break out of your deadend job todayl Train in
fields that provide more than minimum wage;
boring work; irregular hours; no opportunity for
advancement.
SBC offers courses in:

No sut)sc·l·ipll ons h~
.

I·

Pn mt•ro~·.

ll hln .

SI 'II." 'RTPTION

Guerrero drove in Valenzuela Landreaux singled home a run In
with a single to right. Heep the eighth.
Cincinnati scored an unearned -.
scored when Shelby reached on
run in the ninth against Matt '
an inflt&gt;ld hit.
" I just fry to hit the ball hard. " You ng on an e rror by secopd
said Shelby. who has 17 home. baseman Phil Garner .
"It 's how we play tomorrow
r uns since being acquired from
that
worries me. not how· we
Baltimore May 22. " I've got
played
, tonight or last week,"
pretty quick hands, but I'm not a
Rose
said.
" We didn ' t play the
home-run hitter."
·
way
we
w6.lll!¥1
IQJonlght a nd we
Shelby's s acrifice fly In the
got
beat.
"
seventh made it D-1 and Ken

Tony Bernazard's 14th home run
of I he year .. a solo blast in the
third Inning.
'' He's becoming a power
pitcher and ever s ince he's done
that, he's been a new man, "
Seattle pitching coach Billy Connors said .
In other ga mes. Ka nsas City
beat New York 8-5. Toronto
downed Boston R-3, Cleveland
defeated Baltimore 6-3. Minne·
sofa trounced Ca lifornia 7-2.
Detroit outscored Chicago 9-6
a nd Texas tripped Milwaukee 71.
Royals R, Yankees 5
AI Kansas Cit y. Mo., Ross ·
Jones a nd Larry Owen knocked
in two runs- apiect and Bret
Saber hagen. 16-7. won for the
fi rst tiQle in a month , pushing
Kansas City over New York.
Blue Jays 8. Red Sox 3
At Boston ; Jesse Barfield and
Ke lly Gruber belted solo homers
to bac k Jimmy Key's complete
game. leading AL East-leading
Toronto.
I ndlans 6, Orioles :l
At Baltimore, Mel Ha ll drove
in three runs a nd Cory Snyder
smasht'd his 26th home run.
lead.lng n.,.veland .
Twins 7, Ang•ls 2
At Minneapolis. Mark Davidson and Tom Brunansky drove in
two run s each in support of Frank
\ 'lola to lt&gt;ad the Twins to their
lifth , •ra ight victory.

cabins and be vnents.

Pr m\Nm . Ohln ~ r\7ti9- . Ph . ~f.l ~ · ~ l rWi. St·

t'I•Od

winning eight games in a row. "
The Dodgers took ·a J-0 lead In
thE' . first off Montgomery , 0-1, a
native · of Wellston, Ohio, when
Dave And erson doubled dow n the
left· field line, took third on a balk
and scored on Danny Heep's
s ingle to right. ·
Shelby walked in the second,
s loi!' seco nd. went to third on a
grounder and scored on Mike
Sciasci a ' s sharp single.
"I don.' t see how e itht&gt;r side saw
·the ball In the twilight ," s'a id
Cincinnati Manager Pet e Rose.
" I didn ' t expect our offense to hit
until the twilight e nded. "
The ·Reds closed to 2-1 In the
fourth on Eric Davis' 33rd
homer . a s hot tha t eas ily cleared
the left -field fence.
Mickey Hatcher singled In
Shelby, who had doubled. to give
the Dodgers a 3·1 lead In their
half of the fourtl\ .
TheDodgersopened a5-lbulge
In the fifth. Fernando Valenzuela. ba tting for the . injured
Welch. s in gled to left and. one out
lat er, reached second whe n Heep
wa lked . After a !oulout. Perlro

18-0z. Flett Kllt.r For
Carpttl worka In homes,

lh l' oUJ,!h

POS'l'MA ~' I'Jo-: R : SC'n11 nilch't-s:o c·h:ln j!t'S
tn 1lu• O;t ih S.·nt lnt'l . 111 C11 ur1 St ..
PnmP r n~ , f)t). in -'Titi!l.

I

Tht&gt; Oakland Athletics rookie
Tuesday night hit i)ls :18th hOml'
run of the season 10 brea k lhe
American League rookie homer
r~cord AI Rosen "had set In 19:10
with the Cleveland Indians .
" It's In the bac k of m:v mind
that it was just a matt er of time,"
said McG wirc, who had not
homert'd since .J uly 29. " I knew I
was capabl p of doing it. "
McGwire led orr the seventh
Inning of an R-2 1oss to th!'Sea tt lr
Ma rine rs with a drive O\'er the
left-cent er fi eld fe nce to set the
AL mark a nd ma tc h thr Na tiona l
League records set by Wa lly
Berger oft he 1930 Boston Braves
and F ra nk Robinson of the 190/i
Cinci nna ti Reds . H e ·added a
ninrh-inn In g. line-d rtvf' singl e.
" l' v(' fln aily g-ot, some lin P
dri ves. " MeG wire sa id , " I was
happy to hit the home run but I
was more happy wl!h myse lf the
las t two al ·ba ts when I kept my
head down on I he ba ll a nd hit line
drlv.,s."
Mike Moore. o-14. a llowed
seven hits , struck out four and
walked none. He also yie lded

This Ad is

1\ Oh·l!&gt;ihm of Mullhn•"!_lll, In•··

'

By JEFF HASEN
UPI Sports Writer
LOS ANGELES (UP I I -John
Shel by's favorite spot in the
ilneup is anywhere on it.
"When I co me out and look up
a nd SI"E' my name on the wail,
that's where I want to hit ,"
Shelby said Tu esday night after
-he had two hits and scored·twice,
helping the Dodgers a 7-2 vlclory
Ovt&gt;r Rookie Jeff Montgome ry
and the Clncinna ti Reds. " It' s
lust nice to go out and play every
day."
·
The Reds have lost five of the
first six games or an 11-ga me
road trip. The Dodgers. again
maintaining they have a chance,
trail by eiRhf games.
Bob Welch, 11 -7, Left aft e r five
Innings with a groin strain. He
yielded two hits and str11ck out
s ix. Weich' s Injury was not
expected to keep him from
making his next scheduled sta rt.
Sunday at San Francis~ .
" It was a Iough decision to giv&lt;'
up the baseball.' ' Welcn sa id. "At
this stage, It 's not who wins but if ·
we win. We're thinking about

McGwire breaks
AL rookie mark

ll.IIPe.., l_.t , I p.m .
Oalil•ll !S"I .. J-11 "'' ·""'-lk•( l.~o~na: ·
&lt;tlofl lt·IJ. l fn p.m.
I 't.o\ o-l•llf t\krrfo·l• 1-l } llt n....lllmoro•

:

I ) t nWt•d l'rt .... hu '"'""tklttlll
t:....t

ALL CHILDREN'S SHOES

By Jack Anderson and Joseph Spear
WASHINGTON - The "beer
bill" keeps rolling, just like the
Andrews Sisters' famous.barrel.
but somt&gt; past supporters have
decided not to polka.
Beer wholesalers have been
tcylng for six yt&gt;ars to get
congressional permission to assign distribution monopolies in
geographical areas. Consumer
groups claim the monopolies
would cause the retail price of
beer to skyrocket, and they have
enlisted opposition to the beer bill
from the Justice [)('partment,
the Federal Trade Commission
and the American Bar Assocla·
ficin, among others.
One or the sturdiest roadblocks
to the beer lobby's bill was a
study last year by the Consumer
Federation of America. which
COncluded that priCeS WOUld risP
if the bill passed. So the beer
barons have studii'S of their own
to present at today's hearings on.
the btU before Sen. Howard
Metzenbaum. D-Ohlo. chairman
of the Judiciary antltrusl subcommittee and a (terce opponent
or the bill.
Not surprisingly. thP studies
gathered by the Na1lonal Beer
Wholesalers Association spokes·
man said that competition
among the different brands
keeps six-pack prices down.
One study the beer wholesalers
have In hand Is described In thp
association's " Washington Update" newslette r and by an
Industry spokeosman as the. "Auburn University Study." It focuses on Alabama's 1984 version
or lhe proposed nationwide beer
law - and concludes that beer ·
prices didn't go up under the taw.
but actually dropped In some
cases.
Our associate St&lt;:wart Harris
obtained a copy of the study.
Although the three auditors
taught at Auburn University at
Montgomery, Ala., a disclaimer
on the Inside states clearly:
"This study constitutes the research efforts and judgment
solely of the authors and should
not be taken to represent the
views of Auburn University at
Montgomery."
Above the disclaimer .Is the
address of the Alabama Wholesale Beer and Wine Association.
In fact, the association paid for
this study, according to Dr. A.
Wayne Lacy, one of the researchers. But Lacy Insisted that
the research was conducted
Independently. according to aca·
demlc standards.
Meanwhile, support for the
national beer bill appears to be
eroding among past adho:&gt;rents to
the cause.
Sources tell us that a squabble
erupted earlier this year when
brewers represented by the Beer
Institute warned the wholesalers
that -their campaign for the
distribution-monopoly bill could
be counterprOdu~tive to the Industry as a whole.
In a statement give to Modern
Brewery Age, a trade publica·
lion. the institute pointed out that
the beer Industry faces some
serious threats - Including sug·
gested' health warning labels on
containers, a possible hike In the
federal excise tax, and a proposed b.a n on radio and television
advertising. Beer Institute
strategists are afraid that lobby·
ing for the beer bill might
alienate members of Congress
whose help Is needed on the other

CAUGHT IN RUNDOWN - Cincinnati's Nick Esasky sets his
sights on Los Angeles' Mickey Hatcher durinll rundown In filth
Inning action of Tuesday's NBC-televised game. Hatcher, who was
on llrst, antlclpaled a hit and run, but the Reds called lora pllchoul
Instead, and~ was taned out In the rundown, LA went on to win,
7-2. (UPI) ,

I

-SAVE-

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Gallpolls, Ohio
446·1276
HOURS
. Mon.day·Frlclay 'i A.M.-6:30 P.M.
7 A.M.·S P.M.

CMARGI CARD

HOUIS
Monday-Friday 7 A.M.-5:30 P.M.
8 A.M.·S

,' ·

�. '
Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

and Tim McGee.
Heading into camp. Stevc
Kreider was also expected to
challenge for thf&gt; fourth spot, but
he suffered a badly sprained
hamstring muscle the first day of
camp. and· Wyche has apppar· .
entiy soured on·hls chances.
" I don't know if he's going to
get back in time, frankly, to get
bac k In the race. The other two
guys have been goi ng too long
and too well to discount the fact

Martin and
Hillary battle
for position

Training
camp briefs ..

EASTMAN'S.. Your Independently Owned

By Unlled Press Inter 0atlonal
CARLISLE, Pa. (UPII -Gary
Clark says Washington Redskln s
teammate Art Monk deserves
the credit for his emergence as
Pro Bowl starter In his second
NFL season. Fellow Pro Bowl
receiver Monk won ' t accepttl!e
compliment.
"Art 's a grea t teacher, " said
Clark, who teamed with Monk to
become the NFL 's top passcatching tandem last year with a
combi ned 147 receptions for 2,333
yards.
"I probably get on the guy's
nerves. I'm always pestering
him on the field asking. 'What
would you do if this happened,'
or, 'What would you do if that
happened.' He' s a great guy. He
sits around listening to me, ever
since I was a rookie peste(ing
him and he's still listening to me
and still answering my stupid
questions.' '
Monk said: "He gives a lot of
credit to me, but he has to take a II
the credit himself because he's
worked hard and he's Improved
himself and he's just done a great
· job. Where he dldn' I gel respect
from Jopposingl players, he's
now getting some."
The 5-foot-9, 173-pound Clark,
from James Madison. was signed
by the Redskins out of-the USFL
In 1985. He led the team with 74
catches last season for 1,265
yards, seeond in the NFC. He
caught 72 passes ·as a rookie.
Monk, entering his eighth season. added 73 catches for Ul68
yards In 1986 while consistently
drawing double coverage. Clark
started lor the NFC in the Pro
BowL Monk was a reserve.

Low-Priced Supermarket

ODLAND

a

SMITHFIELD. R.I. iUPii Rookie free-agent linebacker
Greg Moore was waived Tuesday
by the New England Patriots. He
had suffered an Inju ry to his
shoulder-neck area during a
practice session last week.
The r~Jease of Moore. 22. left
the Patriots with 97 players on
their roster, with 95 in ca mp.
Kicker Tony Franklin and tackle
Bill Bain remain unsigned .
THOUSAND OAKS, Ca lif.
The Dallas Cowboys
said negotiations to trade for
Seattle Seahawk tackle Ron .
Esslnk were '"in limbo" and they
werP no closer to signing first round draft pick Danny Noonan.
Cowboys officials Indicated
Monday they had lowered ·their
offer for Essink. who has walked
out of Seattle's training camp.
" We're further apart than we
were," sa ld Bob Ackles. the
Cowboys' vice president lor pro
personnel. who has hand led
trade talks with the Seahawks .
"He's left camp, he's got a
groin pull and on top of that he's
29-years-old and spent all of last
year on Injured reserve."
· The Cowboys reportedly offered a fourth-round pick and the
Seahawks wanted a third- round
choice.
Noonan, a defens ive tackle
from Nebras ka , had missed 24
days of training camp as of
Tuesday. Cowboys VIce President .Joe Bailey and Noonan' s
agent, Tom Condon , were reportedly abot!l $300,00Q apart. The
tea m ha s offered a lour- year
package believed to be wo rth $1.5
million. Tea m official s have said
they will not increase thei r
proposal.

Wednesday, August 12, 1987

Pomeroy. Middleport, Ohio

WILMINGTON. Ohio tUPil- celver SPQt on the: roster.
" We're going to Jet them pla y
When the Cincinnati B&lt;&gt;ngals
and
see who emerges." coach
pla y their first cxhibitlon game
Sam
Wyche said Mondav at the
of , the season at Tampa Bay
c
lub's
Wilmington College train-·
Satu rday, thc starti ng wide reJng
camp.
"One of them probably
ceivers will be Mike Martin a nd
will.
Those
questions seem to
Ira Hillary instead of the more
a
nswer
themselves."
familiar Cris. Colllnswoth and
Martin , a five-yea.-vf.&gt;leran,
Eddie Brown.
'' The n•ason? Marlin and Hil· apd Hillary, a free agent who
llary are locked in a neck- spent last season on injured
and-neck battle for the Bengals' reserve, are seeking the backup
~------------fourt h . and poss ilby final. re- jo b behind Collinswort h, Brown

DOUBLE COUPONS

BIG BEND FOO.DUND'S

.

By The Bend

fl..

V.UVOLINE

llMIT 4 COUPONII'III VIIIT WITH •10.00 011 MDIII AooniONAI. PUIICIIAIE

Slralght-Baker reunion
Over a hundred relatives and
friends attended the Straight and
Baker reunion held recently at
Raccoon Creek County Park.
:Jimmie Straight, presltlent;
Clay Baker. vice president ; Dale
Whit , treasurer, and Ella dean
Mitchell , secretary, presided at
the meeting.
Recognized were Marie Jones,
Pat riot. the oldest attending;
Emily Elliott, daughter of Douglas a nd Debbie Elliott, the
youngest. The door prize was
won by Edith J. Douls .
·
Edgar Massie had the blessi ng.
Relatives from Baltimore, Md .,
Lima . Perrysburg, LaRue. Molz·
adore. Uniontown, and Thor'ns·
ville attended. AI the reunion
we'r e Rodney C. Slral~thl. JoAnn

'

.,

I .

:PHOIE - I.
I Musl be 18 yftart old •N o rne&lt;:hanlul reprodu ction I .,
1•1 en1rv pet VISil • Drawing Sal . August 291tl at I

SA.IL BOAT!!!

1 9ag 'B end Foodland

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•WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIM.IT QUANTITIES • PRICES EFFECTIVE W EONESQ .~.v . AUGUST 12 TH RU SATURDAY , AUGUST 15 , 1987 •U SDA FOOD STAMPS ACCE PT EO
•NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL OR PICTOR IAL ERRORS

'

TENDER BEST USDA CHOICE
FULL·CUT

Bone-In
Round Steak

FRESH

Chicken Leg
Quarters ·

49

Cl:

'

LBS .

$

A potluck supper preceded the
business ml't'llng when Colum·
bla Grangp 243-S held ihelr July
m~'&lt;'t Jng.
It was noted th at the annual
Inspection was held In J un e with
Mr. a nd Mrs. Arthur Crapt ree.
Melg Count,vStatPGra nge depu t le• 3!. ln'piC.'t lng n !fle~rs.
CWi\ chai rman. Eflzabeth Jor dan . an nou nced that donations

• Mountain Dew· Pepsi Free
Diet Or Regular

Pepsi Cola

.8
.

Northern
BathLIMITTissue
ONE

160Z.

ans.

LB.

OR MORE

39~

'Mary Starcher hos ted a rece nt
meeting or the Chatter Club at
hl'r Pomeroy home. Fra nces
Carlrton and E liZabeth Phillips
were gvests. Dues were collected
a nd reports given.
~ A pk:nlc was planned lor
~mber . HO!Itets gUts were
~resent&lt;:d to Mar:t Starcher. and

..... lhpo ...
WITH S10 OR MOA E ADDITIONAL PURCHASE.

AIDS

1UPII -

PLATTEVILLE, Wis. iU PI)An injury to fullback Hokic
Gajan has created opportunity
for several players to vie for the
position on th e New Orlea ns
Saints.
Gaja n. who missed all of last
season with a right knee Injury,
Injured his left knee during
non-contact drills last week. He
may be out for the season.
Buford Jordan, the slartipg
fullback last season. is, back.
Others competing at fullback
Include John Williams, who ran
once last year for 11 yards only to
suffer an Injury that kept him
sidelined most of the seijson, and
Barry Word. a converted tall·
back who was drafted last year,
butspent part of the season in jail
on a cocaine- trafficking charge .

f

ANDERSON, Ind. (UPI) The Indianapolis. Colts cut three
players Tuesday, !!'eluding quarterback Terry Nugent.
By releasing Nugent , the Colts
trimmed to the three quarterbacks they had on their roster. at
the end of last season - Gary
Hogeboom, Jack Trudeau and
Blair Klel.
J

'

I'

Spangler, Edgar and Beatrice Tina Layton, Lowa na and Jim
Massie, Paul and Elladean Mit- Bostic, Irene Morga n, Margaret
chell, Donald and Bernice and Michelle Friend, Patty Kin g.
Straight, James Ray and Edith J . Cylnthla Slraight, Donovan, Sue
Douls, Matte Jones, Jim and . Tiffany, and Adam Baker, Ca·
Agnes · Brumfield, Todd and rleen ·and Max Stout, Douglas,
Chadd Hamlllon, Jason, Jr. an(! Debbie, Forest. and Emily E ll!·
Opal Straight, Dale. Paula and ott, Durel, Sally, Evin E. and
Eric Whitt, Ervin and Juanita Tyler A. Salyers, Sherry and Lori
Roach,. James a nd Mary Wood, William son.
Jack ;~nd Kate Baugham and
Bill and Connie Straight. Ryan
Ernest L. Baker.
Straight, Blanch Shover, Cec il D.
Larry, Bvnda , Brian, Chris a nd Stan erl, Joyce Sheline, Paula
Terry Burnett. Eugene and Delo- Pickens. Mar lyn Allen, Don and
ris Baker, Jimmie and Patricia Dona Baisden. Clarence and
Straight, Basil and Ruth Whitt . Lillian Evans, Beed, Polly. and
Clay, Ann, Merrill and Darrell Joe Jenkins. Jody Hall. Duk&lt;&gt;
Baker, Ida Sycks ,' Don Straight, Massie. Marlin Baker, Ode ll a
Ray Baker, Don and Dorot ha Taylor, Jenken , Stephani, and
Black, Christine Hale Wes ten- Dort ha Baker. Harold . · Bennbur~t. Patricia Thlve ner.
jamin, Jonathan. and Chris tina
Garnet and Ronnie Straight. Taylor.

had been madC' to CARE,
FriendlY Hills Ca mp Fund, State
Deaf Fund. a nd Natlnal Deaf
Fund. A bake sa le was he ld and
Rose Barrows had the winning
entry in thc stat e grange baking
contest.
Other donations made durin g
the yea r by the grange, as part or
the communlly service program,
were to the . Anicrlcan Lung

l:lrenda Bolin. Doris Wilt. Isabelle Couch, and Delores Whi·
!lock reetved gifts from their
secret pals .
Re freshments were served and
games were played with prl2es
going to Frances Carleton, Dorothy Roach . Doris Will . Ruth
Young. and Brenda Bolin . Ms.

-

.

PUBLIC
FORUM

1"\1111·
11:1-( ()("\I\

Acquired

Saturday, Sept. 12, 1987
1:00 p.m.
Community Room
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Medical Office Building

Immune
HOLLY FARMS GRADE 'A'

(HALF $1.49
COOKS !'SU PERT

Semi-Boneless
Whole Ham

$

Chicken
Drumsticks

14-17 LB.
AVG.

LB.

Fried
Chicken

Surf
Detergent

Cl: $

29

99$

72 oz.
BOX

LB.

Deficiency

BANQUET

KING SIZE

99

oz.

32
BOX

Syndrome

AIDS • one of the most
feared diseases of our
timeandoneofthemoat
misunderstood: Pleatant · Valley Hoapltal
wants EVEIJYONE to
know more about AIDS.

.••
I

••'

·r_.

FREE DELIVERY
(DAILY)

one.

Even the word ca ncer . Is
POWPJ'ful. If I want yp u to buy this
prod uct or that pill. I •need only
te ll you th ai It preve nt s ca ncer. I
can te ll vou that the sun will
d a mag~ your skin and produce

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;SUPPLY CO~
555 Park St.

AssocaUon. St. Jud(•'s Hospital ,
Meigs Country Co unc-Il on Agfng,
Heart Fund. Nationa l Society for
the Prevention of Blindn('ss.
projects of the State Grange
Home. Youth Lea ders hp Fund.
J unior Grange trip to Nationu l

; Roz.$
NAHJRE '&lt;; BEST

Almost Home
Cookies

Cheese Singles

II or .

BLUE BONNET

Margarine

OREO

Big Stuff

14

01 .

1/4'5

t6o• .

Ice Cream

Covered Ore~$'

39 9
89

FOODLAND FROZEN

•ONION

Orange Juice

•SALT

Better
Cheddars

1 111 .

$169

12 .. . •••

PACK ER LABEL

French Fries

l ,•

I

I

.~ Main Street
Pizza

Phillips won the door prize.
Janice Feit y a nd Isabellr Co uch
will host Thu rsday nig ht's mee t·
lng at the home of Mrs. Couch.

Are Pleased to Announce

DAR makes
bazaar plans
'

. ·ouR NEW LOCATION

Mrs . Clyde Ingels was in
Ci ncinnat i las t week where s he
served as hostess lor a dav at
Waldschmidt House. Mrs ... In·
gels, a member of Return Jo nathan Meigs Chapter of the
Daughters of the America n Revolution. Is a lrustce of thP
facility and loca l chair man for It s
support.
·
On Nov . 13-15 a Christm as
bazaa r wJII bl' held there to raise
money fort he barn building fund .
Local DAR membe rs are being
asked lo nnake or purchase art
and craft objects a nd donate to
Waldschmidt House for the

AND REOPENING OF MAIN STREET PIZZA
AT 216 E. MAIN STREET
FOR THE BEST IN
HOMEMADE PIZZA
TRV OURS.

PHONE 992-2228
OR 992-9922

'

.:-~~

MONEY SAVING COUPONS

We invite you to join us
and our (uest speakers
in a public forum de·
siped to (ive you a
complete picture of
AIDS and how it · im·
pacts the tri·counties •

(

..S.179

•Lynn Alexander- Education Coordinator
Auaerican Red Cross
tt~stin( to protect the nation's blood supply
•Amy Swaingo, RN • Teacher
·Rio Grange Collere (Nurainr)
workln( with AIDS patients, misconceptions

lPaul En.gli•h Smith ·

t

::::~;:::

9

Vice President for Legal Services and Rlak
~exat, Cabell Huntintton Hospital
late1t leral developments concerning AIDS

I

100 CT.
BOX

Retreshments Will Be Served

WITH THIS COUPON. GOOD THROUGH
SATURDAY, AUG . 15 1887
A'r
FOODLAND STORES. ' LIMIT ONE PER
FAMILY.
COUPON NO. RT1050

orny

,,,

.
~

''

'' '
I

"WE DELI"ER"
•

~

Guest Speakers:

'

-MANUFACTURER ' S COUPON---J

Maxwell House
Coffee

•

Lipton.
Tea ••

INSTANT

$

, ,, ...,

.

save S1.25

!~ 2 f$1

VELVET SUF'ER DIP

FUDGE

99 (

Coupon
ltlow

~

THE FLO-THRU BAGS

With

Walnut Choc. Chip. Banana
Walnut, Apple-Walnut-Raisin

$129

399

'

Middleport, OH.

STAFF OF

•David V. Bran.gan ·AIDS Educator
· ··
W.Va.
ofHealth ·
statistics, defnlltlons, how AIDS affects the
immune system

' I.•

992-6611

THE OWNER &amp;

Grange by ju niors. and Alzhcl·
mer's Di sease Fund . A vlst to
Racine Gra nge was planned for
August.

bazaar.

,

We will be making daily deliveries
to the West Virginia area during
the . period of time the bridge is
closed. Just give us a call with your
order.

•Dr.
Fredric
E. LaCarbonara.
i
"
• Chief Patholo(ist
Pleasant Valley Hospital
transmission, testin(, treatment and therapy

FOODLAND SUPER COUPON

.'

ro
I
:
suffer ing, and pain. When we talk the beach . But If I tell you that t he thems~Jv~s.
en say 110
about "death and dyi ng" , we s un causes ca ncer, you'll canes!
The m ete thought of cancer
ass ume that we are ta lking about your Fourth of July pool party.
b d
ca ncer. When we ta lk about the
The word - ca ncer -almost
may
Jsa bllng.
Many women,
faced ewith
the discovery
of a
" terminally Ill " we assume that un speakable by many patie nts as
1
1
51
we are spea king a bout people well as some physicians:· Most
~;,:t ~ Jud~~t~~ ~:c~:s~ j~=~-:~
dying of cancer .
people talk freely a nd openly
afraid thatthe lump Is cancer_
Prior to the. development &lt;of about . their Arthr l(is or thei r
an d Ihere fore means pain, suffer" moder n medicine" ' many ped- Diabetes both pote ntially. ing. death . Their fear is so great
pie died of "co nsumption" , disabling, debilit ati ng diseases;
that they deny the existenc!:' of
" br onc hial penumonJa' ' . and but few people talk openly about
the mass even as it enlarges and
simpl y "old age", We accepted their cancer. It's too fri ghtening. · replaces th e entire breas t.
th esp events as acts of God or too awful to talk abourin public.
facts of life, but we didn't v i e w . - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - the process with fear or abhorence. In fa ct, many of these
deaths we r e actually due ·to
· ca ncer. Presently. everyone d.les
of something. If a loved one diE's
of a hea rt a tt ac k. or is taken by a
~troke . we are saddened even
gricf strl ken; but we still recognize th ese events as a par t of t he
life experience. But If. cancer
ca uses the death, we are fright ·
, cnM. r.e puised. This death Is not
a fac t of life; It is the result of
some unknown process that has
invaded a ny destroyed a loved

Chatter Club meets recently in Meigs

LB.

BONELESS
LB . $169

may accompany the diagnosis of
heart attack; but only the a nnouncement "You have cancer'·
universally produces terror, desperation. disbelief. panic - In
patient and famU y alike. For
most of us, lhP diagnosis, ca ncer.

Columbia Grange conducts meeting

.·
•

ASSORTED COLORS

1

f (,ftl'

:MAlE -----------~
~ADDRESS _ _
I

3 PERSON

t'a.se, cancer Is perhaps tht' most
feared, most dreaded disease
process In the world today,
Frustration, anxiety, decrease
In Self-esteem may accompany
tht' prounobeuncement ofka dflagnof·
sis of 0 Ia tes; shoe . ear o

. lfl"/tlfg
• ht,. .Bak
. er 11/"nun"on
• tS• h e.la
.
.
.
S.t
v

SALE! ~~~
I

Wednesday. August 1 2, 1987 :

M::=.~=~~~ &lt;?.!~~~Ei. . E~~ . P~~!.!~!~~!c:L .~~~~~. ~t. ~~~s.~~9.~.is,.. '"'"M'~

Cancer - The mere thought of
, th~ disease strikes fear Into the
earls of hundreds of people
verywhPre, everyday.j\llhough
hear t dl seas!' Is respons lbl P for
motre deaths ann ualbely, and Dla·
be es • may Wt' 11
a more

8 G BEND FOOOLA NO ENTRY BLANK

The Daily Sentinel
Page 5 ;

A nnr-versary v·

AU.-

SEE STORE FOR FURTHER DETAILS

" Mi chat•l runs putt ('r ns with a
lit! It' shak&lt;' to th11m; Ira just get s
on you and b1·e1JkS . Hillary In a
sprint Is probably a step faster.
Michael Is a llttlcqulcker and has
more ex perience. It's a toss-up,"
Coslett said.
Tht' Bengal..could keep a fifth
wldeoutlf they deem him more of ·
a contributor to ~ pec lal teams
than an ex tra defensive back.
" You try to keep the best 45'
playNs," Wyc he sa id.

Steve has been out of II," Wyche
said.
It Is expected to be at least
another ·two weeks bc!ore
Kreider can begin praoticlng.
Tf neit her Hillary nor Ma rtin
pla ys himself out of a roster spot,·
the Benga ls could decide to keep
five receivers.
"They both can play in this
league with no 'problem," offensive coordinator Bruce· Coslett
sa id.

WIN A FREE .

·-

,·

•-

.:-~~

IH

'

"',

'

I.

�..

..

'

Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, August 12, 1987
J,H'-1~ (;~"':f(
;

.•

.

'•

••

••

We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quantities

•

''

·-•-·- ..

&gt;

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

I

..'•

• .!

•.
••

.OF
GOOD
ALL
WEEK

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH. ·
PRiCES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, AUGUST 1.5,1987

·-·-••
..'•
••

..•'

.
'•

'·'
·-•.

...••
•.

•.

'''

''•

Limit
-20 .
U.S. D. A. CHOICE . _ _

LB

Chuck Roast •• ~ .••••
U.S.D.A. CHOICE · ·..

.

LB

.

.

$l 09
$

&lt;
&gt;

' 1

~

•

·:..
··.
·.
.•'

MIXED ·

Fryer Parts ••. ~B~~

•••••

49(

I•

....

Ul =&gt; i
I
~

S'wich Spread •• ~••. 99&lt; o .
=
•'·.

'•~

,

HOMEMADE

•

''·•

~

Round Steak •• ~ ••••• 199

HllLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED

'.,
''

Coupons

.ft.

99
Sausage •••••••••• :~.•• S1
I

t"'
l:'l
("')

0

~

0"=
2

"'.
1

i

::
·.·:

Breasts ••....•••. ~B~

•.
·FRESH
..•,

••••••

Ul

•

•'

•
•'

LB.

0.ft.

Bologna ........ ~~ •..••• 79 &lt;

&lt;
&gt;
t"'

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&gt;

C!'
=
II=
l:'l
t"'

("')

0

•

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~
0
2

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•

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"'•, ·

¥-

...

U.S. NO. 1 IDAHO

·'•

..

Potatoes

•'

·'•

•'
·,,'

...

•0

VALLEY BELL

0

2°/o Milk
SHEDD'S COUN!RY CROCK

.

.

Margarme ••••• !.'!~'·•
'

· "Mike'~ells'' Old Fashioned-Reg. $1.99

$

29

1
'

DAIRY LANE

~~, otato Chips ~:;••$1 29 Ice Cream •••••••••••• 99&lt;
$
MUELLER'S-LB. BOX
$
Spaghetti/Mac••. 2/ 1 Family ·Entrees .·.~.. 139
1h

GAL.

UNQUET BEEF STEW, CHICKEN DUMPLING
SALISBURY STEAK, TURKEY, MAC./CHEESE

I

•

•

'

•'

• ••••
• • • r,:o{JPON •••••••
• •••••
••
WILSON'S TALL CANS

•
'

•

EVAP. MILK
••
•

'·

''
'•'•

••
'•

•

•

•

•
•
••

TOILET TISSUE

6p:~~L $129

SfS2

limit 5 Por Customtr
Good at Powell's Supermarket Only
•• · Offer
Good thru Sat .• Aug. 15, 1987
........
E.... . . ......
~

••••• T

.~

..
0

•

•

limit 1 Per Customer
Good at Powell's Supermarket Only
(lifer Good Thru Sat.. Aug. 1s. 1917

CHEER DETERGENT
oz.

147
BOX

$549

limit 1 'per Cust-r
Gaod at Powell's Supermarket Only
Offer Good Thru Sat.. Aug. 15, 1917
.

'

CLOROX BLEACH.
GAL.

89 (

Umit I Per Customer
Good at Powell's Supermar.ot Only ·
Offer Good Thru Sat., Aug. 15, 1917

&lt;

&gt;

t"'

~

&gt;

=
~

l:'l

r')'

0

~

"=
0

..!
.

§

I

2

•The total vaiue Of the dou·
bla coupon may not exceed
$1.00
.;

•Any manufacturer's cou·pon greater than 51Cwill be ·
rad"med at 'face value
only.
· •Only one manufa~urer'•
, c:eupo~ per ita"\'
•The total value of the double manufacturer!• coupon
' cannot exceed thf.purcha•
price of the it en\. · Money
will not be refll!'lded. '

• to
•This offer does not apply
Po-ll's Super Vllu Cou- .
pona, free coupool1 or any
competitor's coupons.
. •Thlt ' • r excludet cigarette•. or 1ny other item•
prohibited by law.
•Offer is only good for pro·
duct on, hand. No Rain- ·
.check1. ··
·
•There Ia a limit .o f »:cou-

IDOin•,l'll
. •u may red.em.

r;;:::::::::::::::::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;:=======,

I

Reioicing Life ·aap~ist
Church &amp; Christian School
333 N. SECOND ST., MIDDLEPORT
THE PEOPLE:

.· Every Sunday people who Love people, come
from all around to worship at Rejoicing life •
THE POWER OF GOD:

manifests in a real way •••.
THE MINISTRY OF THE WORD:

is given the proper place....
THE PRESENCE OF THE LORD:

--------------------------------~·---------------------------------­

Community calendarI area happenings

is in every se.rvice ....

JOIN US IN WORSHIP THIS SUNDAY
10 A.M. &amp; 7 P.M.
WEDNESDAY 7 P.M.
Pastor Mike Pangio will be Preaching and
Teaching the Word of God.
The Gifts of the Holy Spirit pre in operation.
Prayer for the sick•••
GREAT CHILDREN'S CHURCH and
NURSERY FOR ALL SERVICES,

·---

'.

•

:

~· People

By WILUAM (". TRO'M' ·
United Press lnh•rnallunal
1\ M ERI C A 'S PROT ES T :
America wa s plac('d u nd ~r arrest Tut' Sduy - alo ng with hi s
fa ther. 1\hhlt• llolfman . a nd 17
ot her pt&gt;O plc p ro r es lln ~ the construction of wa te r-pu m ping sta ·
t lio n In Bucks Count y, P~ . Abblr .
50. a vetera n or t he un derground
a nd 'tiOs protests. led n ine ot her
' protesters through a hole in the
back renee o f th&lt;' co nstruction
sit e a nd c llm\X'd a cra ne.
f Abbie, son America lloffnuan ,
16, a nd the others v.·en.• chargl'&lt;l
wit h cont l'mpt or court . It
mar ko'll t he t hird l ime In two
mo nth s lhal lh(• e lder Hoffma n
• has been arres ted at the slle. He
· : says he pla ns to m ove 10 Buc ks
: count y a nd mgls lrr to vote so he
• ca n d e,·ote his lime a nd e n!'rJzy ro
• fi ghting the wa tt'r divers ion
: · project . Protesters say I he pump
· I ~ unn ecessarv a nd "' Il l p rom ote
: : d evelo pme nt ·In lh&lt;' region a nd
:: Incr ease the usr of nuc lear
: powt!r.
·,
•· CHEEKY Cllt: EUI : Has
&gt; Na ncy Rea~ta n 's " jus t say no"
· , ca mp a ig n ca use d Rlt-hard
: ; "Cbeech" Marin to to ne dow n hi s
: ac t'' Not ha rdly. Mari n. ha lf of
• · the CheC&lt;'h a nd Cho ng co m edy
:- rea m . was In Da ll as p romo ting
;. his ne w m ov lt', "Bor n In F:as t
•: L .A.," a nd was ask('&lt;! If II ~&lt;·ould
, ' be full oldope jokes like his o ther
• films.
very body who goes in ex ps&gt;c llng tha i kind of humor wil l be
' r!'warded ." Ma rin sa id wi th a
s mll!'. He describes the movie as
" very Cheech-ls h" a nd says It
has "a lot of soc la lly conscious
comedy with a lo l of heart a nd
bea utiful g irls."
In also becam e the second
cele brity to have his handpr int s
set In plastPr at the Casa Linda
Thea tre's Sta rwa lk · - sor t of a
: poor ' m a n's H o li~' WOod Walk of
•·· Fame. Th e firs t hono ree was
r Dallas reside nt Dorot hy Ma lo ne ,
; who won a n Osca r for her
• s upportlit jl role In " Writte n on
) th e Wind" In 19$.
C L .A. LAWLiiSS: One of lh e
:. ac tors on " 1..(1. La w" n&lt;'P.sJs a
' lawyer hlmseft. Jimmy Snftts.
~- WhO was ' OOplin a led for a n
•. , Emmy two \Yeeks ago .. and hi s
·~ glrlfrlt&gt;nd arlj out on $1,000 bond
•. afler being arres t('&lt;! for allac k'· lng t hr&lt;'e poll~ officers .

.~

----+--------i

SAVE

RC &amp; lET RITE
2 Liter Btl.

UNICURE
Blue Shampoo
.
or
Skin and Hair
Conditioner

•• • -

7'" '

16 oz .

99C

20°/o -7 5°/o STOREWIDE

FEATURING

PATIO SUPER SAVINGS

PLANTERS
CANISTER
SNACKS
•CHEES BALLS
•CHEEI' CURLS

79&lt;
200 COUNT
S SUBJECT
•

SUPERIEUR

.

WROUGHT IRON MESH 5-PC. DINING GROUP
41" table &amp; 4 Easy Chairs
NOW $
00

5 subject

ELEGANT PORCH SOFA

notebook

Reg. •610 .00

.

"

White frame with pastel cushions
Reg . '420.00

NOW

3 55
.

$210°0 .

AU STORES
OPEN 7 DAYS AWEEK!

•

" If I we r·e to havegonco n a I rip
the war-tor n count ry : Monta nd
llk r t h L~. I wouldh avetravelroas
will be acco m_pa nle d hy the
those pio nl'&lt;'r prisoners did archbishop of Lyon, Albert De c ha lm'&lt;i In .the s hip's hold." h(' cou rtray. a nd lht:y ho pe to m ('('t
jok('d . Blj!gs was one o f 1!i m e n with Le ba nese P res id ent Amln
who s tole S7.:1 m il lion In E n!(· Gem ayel ... The so n of th e
la nd' s C r~at Train Robbery " Raging Aull " faces coca ine
ca per In 1963 .
c h a rg~ · in Cl nc lnna ll. ,Joseph
Biggs was s&lt;&gt;nt e nced ro :lO l.aMollu , :!8, of No rth Miami
years In p rison but esca ped a nd
Beach. F la .. was arr es ted with
S&lt;'ltled In Rio, wh ere he nar rowly
two ot he r .m e n a nd c harged with
avoided extradlllon to E n~ la nd possessio n w it h Intent to d lst rlbbccause he fa th ered a Brazilia n ul e cocaine af ter a ll e!{edl y tryin g
so n.
to sell und ercover a!{ent s $1 50, 000
GLIMPSES: Ac tor Vv"" Mon- wor th or -cocai ne. Hi s fa r her Is
lund Is go ln f:! to l.r ba non ncx I · for mer middl eweig ht box ing
m on lh an d wil l tou r re fu g£'e c hamp ,Jak e l.aMolta .
ca m p~ In hopes ol e nco ura g ing
1h&lt;' s hipme nt of m ed ica l aid to

CLEARANCE SALE

OUR BUSINESS BEGINS
WITH FILLING YOUR
PRESCRIPTIONS.

W. ,.,._.,. TM Righi To l"""l O!wlt.... ~
Not Reapo ' bl Fol Pr""-'9 i:rror.

in .the news------

&gt;I

Chicken Livers ••••••

.
-•.
.•' KY. BORDER CHUNK .
•
•.,
•

A rl"&lt;'ogn it ion ba nq uet for
me m ber s over 80 years old was
held Sund ay a t lhe Pom eroy
· First Baptis t Chu rch:
One began attending In 1914
a nd others have long-lime mem bers hips in the church. They a re
E lle n Couc h a nd Cary l Coo k, 88.
· Ma ria Foster and Bill Watson. 83.
a nd G~rogl a Wa tson a nd Burton
Sm it h. 80.
A birthday cake decorated In a
pastel color schem e a nd Inscr ibed with the nam es of those
hOl'lored was served . Pi ctu res
we re take n a nd the Rev. Lis te n
H a ll~y presented eac h one with a.
book of d evollons by He le n
Ste ln r r Ri ce on be ha lf of the
c hu rch .
Eac h of lhose honored com me nted br ie fly on their yea r s In
the c hurc h. O t he rsatte ndlng t he
d inne r we re M r. a nd Mrs. Mrs.
Cur ly Wiles, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Those honored were leit to right. Marla Foster,
OCT4)GENAIKIA&gt;NS HONORED - The Poms•
Ba il ey, the Rev. a nd Mrs . Li s te n
Burton
Smtih,
Caryl
Cook,
Ellen
Couch,
Georgia
roy Fl1'8t Baptist Church honored Its older
Ha lley. Mrs. Debbi e Mulle n a nd
Watson, and Bill Watson.
members Suqliay ' with a recognition banquet.
so n, Mr. a nd M rs. Wayne Dav is
a nd 'family, M rs. C'al hy Young
a nd fa mily. Mr. a nd Mrs . Durs t
of Mlddle por l, Mrs . Edn a Tri plert , Mrs. Lo is Haw ley, Mrs.
Becky Kl oes a nd fa mily , Mr. a nd
Mrs. He rm a n Michae l, Lee Ann
THURSDAV
CHESTER- The Sha de River a t For ked Run Sta le P ark.
Dill.
Ryan Dill, Mr. a nd Mrs.
SYRACUSE T he Meigs Lod ge 453, Ches ler, w ill, ho ld lis Covered d is h d inner a! noon.
Will
iam
Ohlinger, Mrs. Sandy
Assocla llon for Re ta rded Cit l· regu lar meeti ng T hu rs day a t 8 Fa m ily and frie nds Invited . F or
Phalln
,
a
nd
Mrs. Audrey Youn!{.
zens w ill meet Thu rsday for a
p.m , at the hal l.
m ore Infor m a tio n contact J im
picnic from &gt; to 7 p. m. a t t he
Hay ma n a t 843-5286.
Ca rle ton Sc hool s he ll er hou s~ In
SUNDAY
Sy rarus£'. Bring covered d is h.
LANCASTER - The Dors i
PORTI.AN D - Hazel Churc h,
bevera ge and ta bl e servlc(l.
family reun io n will be held
belwl'&lt;'n Por tla nd and Long
Sunday, Aug. 16, a t rhel.a ncaster
Boll om on Route 1 2~. Is having
POMEROY - Rock Spri ngs fairgrounds: Di nn er a t noon.
hom ecomin g on Sund ay, Au g. 16.
Gra nge will meet a t R p .m Rel.alivcs a nd friends urged lo
Mor ning S£'r v lce a t 9:30: potl uck
Thu rsd ay nlghl a t th(' ha ll. New allcnd .
dinner at noo n: a fl &lt;:&gt;rnoon serv ice
offi cers will \X' e lecred. Th e hall
a t 1:30. Spea ke r will be Linda
will b&lt;· varu led for tile Ms•lgs
REEDSV II.LE- T he descendDa mewood . Specia l s inging w ill
Count )' Fai r fo ll ow in g t he a nts of Ed a nd l.lza Hay m a n will
be f ea tur~d. P as tor Edsel Ha rt
mf'ellng . .
ho ld a reun io n Sunda y, Aug. 16,
Invites the public.

•

.••• CHICKEN

•

,•

•

~

Church honors octogenarians

,&gt;/

1u1.1 r/;'tr.

•
•••
' •'

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

divided

DEOOORAN1'.
UNSCENTED·
12's REGULAR
&amp; SUPER

ANGLE
BROOM

WITH EXPLODED
POLVESTER BRISTLES
Compare at $3.79

$149
10 PACK Of

YELLOW
PENCILS
No. 2 Lead

2FOR

69&lt;
DIABETICS

SCHOOL
NOTEBOOK

$129 $6499

Sl£ PRIC£ 1119.99

less SSS.OO
Mail. ln Rtllate

3-SEAT GLIDER

Whitt fra!ftt with multi-plaid
ltltline cushions. Reg . 1 550.00

$275°0
3-SEAT GLIDER
. vanilla frame w/mauve stripe duralon cushions. $2 7 ·5 00
Rag. •&amp;50.00
NOW
CHAISE LOUNGES
A$ lOW A$ $149°0
NOW

SAMSONITE &amp; LYON SHAWl
•FREE PAIICING
efREE DEUYEIY

OPEN DAILY

HOS

(p#fvu~'iffJ
20 PIECE

•Distortion Fret Floot
Platt Glass

DINNERWARE
SETS

•Shatter losistarit
•Pn-&lt;lrillttl, drive
Krtws supplittl
•14"x50"

12 MOS. FifE

MON. &amp; SAT.

9 TO I
446-3045

F
DOOR
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il our

FINANCING

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$,199CJ

�Page-S The Daily Sentinel
By SUsAN. KUCZKI\
CHI CAGO I UP II - Clara
Peller. t h~ dlmlnutlveoctogenar·
ian whose bellowing cry of
" WhE're's the beef?" made her a
celebr ity, sold millions of hamburgers has died of heart failure.
Re latives sa id Peller, who was
secretive about how old she was.
es timated her age at 85. She died
of congestive he art failure Tuesday morning at her Hyde Park
apart ment. a spokesman for t h~

.Beef lady
.dies in .
Chicago

Wednesday, August 12, 19Bi

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

oo

Furth Funeral Home said.
Wendy's In Dublin, Ohio.
Peller, who moved to Chicago
In thE' commercl,al, Peller,
from Russia as a child, worked whose gravelly voice belled her
for 35 years as a manicurist 4-foot-9 s tature, played a consubefore being discovered by an mer outraged by the small size of
. the hamburgers served by other
advertising producer.
She appeared as.an aclress for fast-food chains. "Where's the
beef?" she demands.
1~ years In several television ads
before the· 1984 "Where's the
Peller had to stand ·on a box
beef?" commerlcal for Wendy's during the filming of the Wendy's
hamburgers made tier famous.
commercials because of her size.
"We're tremendously sad-· In addition. a production assistdened," sa ld Dennis Lynch, vice ant had to kneel out .or view
president of communications lor

besldl' Peller ·a na 1ug on her
dress when It was time for Peller
to deliver the famous line be·
cause she was hard of hearing.
Peller and Wendy's parted
company In 1985 when the hamburger chain refused to renew
her contracl after she appeared
In ads (or PrE'go spaghetti sa uce
saying, " I found if!"
Peller liked to keep her age a
secret · even to famil y
members.

· "Wr, think shr was oorn In 1902
- on Au~ . 4, 190'2 ," son ·ln -law
Fabian N~chc les sai d. "Bul II
will a lways rrmaln a mystery."
Nec heles sa id his mother-Inlaw never obtai.ned a birth
ccrtlflcale !rom her native
Jt~ssla.
·
· ·
Peller Is survived by a daughler, Marlene Necheles, a so n,
Leslie Pei!E'r. and two gra nd·
children. Her husband , William
Peller, died five years ago.

a

yvith good things at great pricesl

Wednesday, August 12, 1987

'

••

Summer hail brings out snowplows in parts of Wyoming
"

By Untied Press International
Thunderstorms that prod~ced
enoug h summer hall in Wyoming
to bring out snow plows s lammed
the nor th cent ra l part of the
nation loday, while rain in !he
Southeast provided relief fr om a
deadly hea t wave.
Heav y ~ torm activHy was
reporte d ear ly today alo ng a co ld
front through Minnesota. So uth
Dakota. N~braska , Co lorado and
Wyoming.
A thunders torm in northeaster n. Wyoming T uesday evenin g
produced lim -sized hall ncar
Alva, and s nowp lows were sent
out to cl ~ar off Highwa y 24 .nea r
Hule tt , where drlft s,we re more
tha n a foot high . .
Scattered s howers a nd thun-

derstorms were expecled to
continu e today across the Sou·
theasl; lh e remains of a tropical
depression that ca m~ quietly
ashore in Loui s iana Monday.
Rain was forecast from South
Dakota th rough th e Plains and

j

the upper Mississippi Valley Into
Texas.
In the Southeast . storm activity was expected to be heaviest
today from northern Florida
across southern Alabama and
through mos t of Mis sissippi,

National Weather SE'rvlce fore·
raster Hu~h Crowt her said .
The wei weather was a breath
of relief for Alabama, where
seven deaths have been' blamed
on the heat !his summer. Showers and lhunderstorms Tuesday
lowPred le mp erat ures , a nd
pro
mpted hea llh officials to lift a
numbers .
hea t aiE'rt fo r the southPr n
·
PIC:K-4
two-thirds of the st'!le.
. 60:12.
.
Tropical storm Arlene: lhe
P ICK-4 ttckel sales totaled first of th c season, popped up
$183.107 with a payoff due of . over the western Atlantic T"us$82.632.
d a~· and chugged eastward wltli
PICK·4 $1 straight bel pays 50 mph wind s, but posed no threat
$6,552. PfCK·4 $1 box bet pays to the United Sta tes, according to
$273.

U)tlt'l')'

CL EVELAND iUP il - Tues·
day' s winning Ohio Lottl' r;•
numbers :
Dally Numher
184.
Ticket sales 1 o 1 a I e d
$1,238·,2:J$.50, with a pay off du e of
$749.0-18.

the National Hur ricane Center In
Miami.
At 10: ;l() p.m . E DT, I he cenl er
of Arlene was about 400 miles
west -soulhwest of Bermuda . II
was moving east· northeast
around 17 mph.
Forecaster Gil Clark said the
storm 's :;o mph winds , with
stronger gusts ln. squalls, could
hit Ber muda with I huoderstorms, heavy showers · and
squalls .
Jim Dickson, a blind sai lor
attempting to cross the Atlantic
In a s loop. was racing the storm
to the island . He was 90 miles

north of Bermuda Tuesday night!
Dickson left Rhode Island Aug.:
4 for E ngland buf was s topped;
Friday when his automatic pilot·.
!ailed. He wanted to repair thee··
vessel in Bermuda before resum· :
ing his quest to be the first ·
s ightless person to make a solo
crossing of the ocean . ·
Clark said he did not expect
Arl ene to reach hurr lcanr&gt;
strength or turn toward lh e
Unit ed States. A storm syste m is
c lassified as a tropical storm
when Its wi nds reach 39 mph and
a hu rr icane when its wi nds reach
74 mph .

•

''The
Great
American ,,
Sandwich

CO PYRIGHT t987 · THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND .
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY . AUG. 9. THROUGH SA TUR·
DAY, AUG . 15. 1987, IN QIIUIPGliS AIIO ~ MfiOY

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 9

PQRMtroy-Middleport. Ohio

STOU1

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONE
.. SOLD TQ.:.O&amp;ALERS,"• : ·:·· ·

Create
''The
J\.11 A111erican
Ice Crea111
Sundae''

STEPHANIE LEIFHEIT

Stephanie Leifeit
wins scholarship

Country Club
Ice Cream

Stephanie Leifhell has won a
full lul l ion mu,lr sc holars hip
from thr Wrst Virgi nia Board of
Regt' nls. Shr will attr nd Mars hall Uni\'rr, lty In tlte fall,
ma jorl n~ · in mu slr edura.tllln.
StephaniP has gt·aduated from
Kyger l'r&lt;'&lt;'k Hi gh Sc hool a nd
wa s In tht• band lht•re. directed
by Chris Oulllon.
She hds lx&gt;rn In all ·coun l)'
(•hoir. thr Dbtrict 17h0norsr hnlr
nnd rtlo(' ('\ VI'd Sl.'&lt;·oncl . pl~l tc· In

liz-Gallon

volcC' at lhf&gt; Ma rshull Un i\' erslt~·
At'ad«' mll' F'C'S 1i\';"~l t hl .s Yt' ar .
Each ol

t hl!~

ad"..nrSI!d oiOMn!&gt; rs requ11ed

to ,,.. '".td'l ~ ""••~b~ for s;tle m u ch
Kroll~ StOfl! , 'e~l:el)t oil S ~rlu: al ly llOII!d
tn lhlli ad." tl Wt! do run out of an
illlvenr:w&lt;l rlt:m . we w~l o"er 110u your
c hna:e ' ol ,, c ornpa r ab~ rt.,.,, whttn
dvddUbll! , !ldlt~ctmg rhu uqnt "'II \l ing~ or ~

wnrcn will enmle YOII 10
purchase tM a&lt;lvenrse&lt;l Item ar 111e

r.unc n ot(;~

IH1v enr~ puce wr thm
~ot~•do r

coupon

w ~t

KROGER

Stephanie u-ns ~lso a mr' mhrr
of the AII·Ohlo State Pair Fai r
Yuulh l holr In 19R:•· a nd the
AII·Ohlu Stutr EYrojX'an Choir in
1986.
.
.
. he Is the dau~htcr of Ft"ssell
a nd Pearl Le ith It of Gu lllp ol!s·

ADVt iiTISED !UM POLiti

lJ days . On l~ one
be •ccepred Pt!'f rtem

Honey Roasted
Peanuts
12-oz.

pu rChoi!Oed

Squad has 9
calls Tuesday
Mel~ s loyn t;· F:r;nrrgency
Medi cal s.-&lt;r·vlces rt'ports nin £'
ca ll. Tues da y: TuppPrs Plains at
2: H . a .m. tra ns port('(! Pear l
Shult z to Ca mu~n - C'Iark Mrmor ·
Ia I Hospit al: Rutland a 13: :Ill a.m.
to Meigs Mine No. ~ lor Ja m&lt;'s
J&lt;'wett to Hoi7N Medi ca l Centre:
Tuppers Plains at !i:!i1 a.m. to
Tuppl'rs Pl ai n' for Fores t Ward
to St • .Joseph's Howlta l: Ra cin('
at 9:2B a.m. 10 Le tar t Falls lon
Jamf's R. All rv to ll olzer Medi ca l
Center : flutlu.nd al 111:29 a .m. to
Swick Road lor !-:d na Swi ck to
Vetera ns Memori al Hos pital :
Rulland al l : !\~ p.m . transpor tro
Tom Demko to O'Birness MPm·
orial Hospitul : Bas han Firr
Dr•par tment a t 7::17 p.m . 10 a n
auto flr r at 1he int rrsectlon of
Morning Star Roa d. a nd Cou nt y
Road 28: Hutlandatlll: 1g p,m. to
Hor ner Hill for .Jimmy Hayes to
O'Bienrs. Memorial Hospital:
Tuppers Plains ut ll : 5:1 p.m. to
R!'edsv lll e lor Janet Ra ndolph to
Ca mdrn · l l ark M e m oria l
Hospila l.

INDIVIDUALLY WRAPPED SLICES~

Kroger American '\\..
Cheese Food.............. 12-oz.
Kroger
Cottage Cheese ......... 24-oz.
NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE

Big K
Soft Drink .................. 2-Ltr.

BUY ONE'

QUARTERS

8-PC . BUCKET

Deli Fried Chicken

GET ONE
POUND

CALIFORNIA

Blue Bonnet
Margarine

O'Henry
Peaches

1-lb.

Pound

\

·For
"

REGULAR OR RIPPLE

16-oz.

Serve 'N' Save
Wieners
12-oz.

NON RETURNABLE BOTILE,
DI.ET MTN. DEW, MTN. DEW,

.Diet Pepsi or
Pepsi Cola
2-Litar

6-Ct

Send in for your $2.00
cash refund wh en· yov buy
Welch's Jelly, Jam or
· Preserves, J if Peanut
Butter and at least $2.00
worth of school supplies.

KROGER C~OCOLATE FUDGE
OR PINEAPPLE

I

Ziploc
Sandwich Bags

Welch's
Grape Jelly

50·Ct.

32-oz.

Ice ICream
Topping

•

.Hospital news
Tuesday Admissions -Aretta
Brickles, Middleport; Edtia
Swick, Rulland; William E.
Kennedy, Pomeroy; Jack R.
Miller, Rultand.
Tuesday Discharges - Angela
Grlfflth~ponald Bolin, Charles
Klein, VIrginia Davis, Donald

\\t'eaver.

4-Ct

GOL D RUSH ~

Double Fudge
Ice Cream Bars
I&gt;Ct18-oz.

18-oz.

GOO GOO

.Jif
Peanut Butter

Cost Cutter
White Bread

Oreo
Ice Cream

1-Ct 11-oz.

l&gt;·Gallon

11-oz.

16·01.

•

Cluster
Ice Cream Bar

sa2.8

,\ Class D&amp;E so ftball tourna·
me nt will be held In Midd leport
Aug. 1:'&gt;-16. E ntr;· fer is $1io.· fl it
your ow n softball . Ca ll74 2· 227~or
i¥.!2 ·70191or information.

South C:entrul Ohio :
Var!able cloudin ess toda y wit h
a hi gh between RC. a nd 90. Par tly
cloudy tonll{ht a nd Thursday .
Lows toni ~ ht w ill range br&gt;tween
65 a nd 70 and hi ghs Thutsday will
br&gt; near 90.
Th e proba bilit y of prec lpit a·
lion Is 1o per cent today a nd near
zero tonight a nd Thursday.
Winds will be ft·om the east to
southeast around HI miles an
hour today a nd from the sou·
theast at less !han 10 miles a n
hour lonlght.

· Nestle
Alpine Bar

$_,28
'.

Or eo
Sandwich·Bar
16-Ct

$281
'

••

FROZEN

Free School Supplies

Weather

IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE

Country Oven
·Potato Chips

Crystal Light
Bars

Plan tourney

M"caroni Salad

FREE!

WITH NU TRASWEET

.

I

Freezer Pleezer
Assorted Pops

.

($2.00 Refund By Mall) ·.

r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -,- - - ,

I
I
I
1

·

Wtlch't•/Jlf&gt;!, MaiHn Ctrttflcalt

Welch's. and Jlf., Free School Supplies Offer.
(S2 .00 cuh reh.md by m•U)

Please send mr $2.00 C"sh relund to:

I
I

24-Ct.

8-Ct 11-oz.

:~178

$218

Ice Cream
Sandwiches
12-Ct.

SJBI

Nam•--------------------------------------------I

AdOren

I en~
I
I.
I

I
I
I

Yoplait
Y.ouurt Bars

FREEZER PLEEZER

Sw•

Ztp

EnciOIId 1rt two proofl ol purctliN- 1 UPC symbOl Irom Wtlc;h 't Jell,, Jim« Prliti'VIi!IB oz. or
IJr&amp;tf' ), I loll lrtsnnen 1111trom Jrlo.Ptanu11luUtr (18 oz. Of llrctr). antl "lh rtJI•ftr ~tct1J)f' crr,hna
tilt purcnut pr,ctol Wt~nl , Jil• 1nd lt'lfllt $2.00 worth 01 oCnoot •IlPPI••
Mlil1o· Wtlth's ,.• nd Jil&lt;t·Frlt Sthoot s~p~hh Otftr '
P.O .So• 7795
Mi . Pro1pect. IL 60056·7795
H~ rr~ -off1r •~PLttl October 31, 198 7.

f&gt;luw nolt !hiM .Cdt\101\al tttmt 1 Ofltt 1Q0C1 oniJ 1fl lhl U ~A . •l•llfttiOt iU and Pufflo RtCo t•(tpl whert ~oh • blled
rttt r"t«&lt; Ot tut., 2 Th11 (lt1of !Uit""" 11111 bt m.KIIiM~WIIy ""'«Med 1nd mutl I«&lt;ml!IO, J'9111 rtQioiUt l Pltilll illcw
. 6-l..._t tcr Olltvtfl 4 Yo..t 01tt1 t~tnlt ""' not biiUtlrl«&lt; or u~ntltrttd ~ Ltflul one CC~~.~IIOII per name 01 addreu
'W.I(h'l •tlhtlllj••ttrf&lt;lt rldfrnarhotWtldi'I, Coh«vd MAOI'U2

ITIS IL LfGALTO !UIWIT MULTIP!..F RUuNOREQUf!TS tAOM THE SAWE r ~OIV IOUlL OR fAMilY,FRAOUL ENT
MULl !PL£ Rf:QUES1S MAY RESULTIN FUlfRALfSROSEt'tJTION UNCI:R THE ~All FRAUD STATUTES

I
I
I
I,
I
I

....

Go Krogering

L-----· ~---~-----......._J
CO"Y~IGMt 1917 t~[ I!; Jt0Cibt CO 1110'-15 ANDPII IUS GO{\O SUNOAY, AUGUS T I ,
IHH0UGH Sdl.I~O.A.Y , AUGVS t 15 . 11111, 1N
1 ,. •
·,· • ···

W( A(5 (1t \l'l1ME

~IGHl

tO ll '-'m

OIJA ~ TITIES N O~[

SOLO TOOULUIS

\

.,
I

�10-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, August 12. 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

----Local briefs-----,. Fine 8 in Pomeroy mayor's court
Probe Maso11 man's death

·~.

•

,,
"
"

The Wood Cou nty Sheriff's Department and s tate pollee In
Parkersburg are continuing t heir Investigation Int o the death of
a Point Pleasant man whose battered body was discovered at
around 4 a.m. Sunday on Interstate 77 near Rockport.
C.hlef J:)eputy R .L. Woodyard sai d Guy Doolittle, 30, of Route
·2. Greer Road, who had apparently been walking along the
1ntersta te, was struck several rimes by passing vehicles .
Motorists apparently failed to see thP body In the dark until they
were upon it, Woodyard added.
Woodya rd said Wood, County sheriff's deputies and state
pollee were In Point Pleasant Monday night lnlerviPwing'people
who might have information relating to the accident.. At this
time foul play is not suspected, but Woodyard said he has ruled;
nothing out.
Woodyard said the investigation Is at a stand s till, pending
results of the sta te medical examiner's report which should be
in by Tuesda y night ,
Fu neral services'for Doolittle will be at 2:30 p.m. Thursday at
Crow-HussE&gt;ll Funeral Home.

Twenty defendants forfeited
bonds and eight others were fined
In the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
• Fined were Jerome Howard,
Pomeroy. $43 ang costs, left of
center, and $63 and costs, opera tin~ under suspension; Timothy
Klein, Newport News, Va .. $163
and costs, reckless operation,
and $63 and cos ts, littering;
La'nce Herman, Middleport, $88
and costs. open flask; · Charles
Reitmire, Jr., Pomeroy. $63 and
costs, failure to pay old fin es; $50
and costs, speeding; $63· and
·cos ts , driving under suspension;
$88 and costs. open flask; Earl
Goode, Pomero~·. $63 and costs,

failure to pay old fines; $6.1 and
costs, squealing tires: Terry
Watson. Pomeroy, · $113 and
costs, Intox icated; $63 and costs,
failure to pay old fines; Sam
McCloud , Middleport , $88 and
cos ts , op!'n · flask ; Chiirles
Knapp, Middleport, $88 and
costs. open flas k.
Forfeiting bonds were David
A. Hobbs, Dexter, $&lt;13, defective
mufflt&gt;r. and $63, driving under
suspension ; Sherry J ohnson,
Middleport, $43, assured clear
distance; Gail Horton, Athens,
$6.1, ex pired plates; Ronnie Powell, Middleport. $48, speeding; ·
Thomas Stover, Jr., Albany , $88,
open flask; Kimberly Dent ,

Pomeroy, $63, no motorcycle
endorsement ; Jeffr&lt;'v Bas harn,
Chillicothe, $63, sq uealing tires:
Troy Bearhs, Pomeroy , $55;
Linda Harper. Pomeroy, $47.:
Wayne Seewell, Mason. $51, all
speedh')g; RobNt Fair, Richville, $&lt;13, assured clear distance:
Char les Burton, Middleport, $&lt;18.
speeding; Larry Hendricks, Middleport, $&lt;13. assured clear di stance: Bruce Hysell. Racl.ne,
$47; Fred Wol fe. Ru tland , $52;
James Oliver. Middleport, $47,
all speedi ng; John Houck, Pome·
roy, $43, Improper backing;
Karen Thomas. Manchester,
Mo., $49, sp&lt;'€ding; Stephen Hill.
$213, assa ult .

Mason County
Fair ·Schedule

Queen lo pass by Ihis evening
The Miss iss ippi Quee n, sistrr ship to th&lt;' Delta Quee n, wil l
pass ME&gt;i~s County communities on the Ohio River th is E&gt;venlng
enroute to Cincinnati from Pittsbu r!lh. Pa .. Gene Grate, avid
riverboat enthusiast.. reports.

.M
. ore "naval...

-'-'

Huston, Oak Hill, a nd Louise of
Cleveland: seven brothers, Fred,
Jerry, Donald, He nry, Raymond
and Harmon Gil lespie. a ll of
VIrginia; Jay Gillespie,. Maryland, and a brother-In-law , Cha·
rles B. Blackwell, Fredricks·
·burg. V a. .Seventeen
grandchildren , five great ·
grandchildren. a nd several nle·
ces and nep hews also survive.
Besides his parent s, he was
preceded In dea th by two broth·
ers. Jo hnny and Bill Gillespie,
a nd two grandsons .
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Fridav at the Mount Moriah
Church of God in Racine with the
Rev . James Satterfield officiating. Burial will be in Letart Fails
Ce metery. Friends may ca ll at
the Ewing Funeral Home from 7
to ~ this evening a nd from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m. on Thursday .

___ ___
Continued from ..:..__:__
page 1

rjline sweepers to the reg ioino
protect three Br itish wa,rs hips
escorting vessels through th&lt;'
Strait of Hormuz, the narrow
11ody of water connecting the
(:;uif of Oma n with the Persian
Gulf.
: The mine sweepers . are ex ·

Garcia , where it picked up th e
RH -5:m Sea Stall ion helicopters .
So urces in Washington said
Tuesday the Guadalcanal broke
down In .t he vic inity of Diego
Garcia, delaying it s arrival In the
gulf area. They said the ship was
expected to get under way again
peeled to ~ arrive in five weeks . .. withi n 14 hours.
·
O'efen se Secretary George
Wei11berge r said he was "very
¥mJ nger said "a new situation pleased" with the British deci · has arisen" wa rr anting dispatch sion to send mine sweepers and
o~ the sweepers in a reversal of
ca lled for a joint' international
ilh earlier decision not to go along effor t.
wit h a reques t for he lp from ih!'
He sa id ot her nations. pres um IJnited States.
abl y Arab sta tes, already are
- Tn Paris, France sa id It was hunting for mines In the gulf and
sending two minE&gt; sweepers to oefended what he viewed as the
bac k up four ships in a French need fo r. secrecy surround ing the
11avy task force on it s way to the ope rations.
Gulf of Oman.
In Was hi ngton, Defense Secretary Caspar Wein berger sa id thE&gt;
GOOD USED
hj&gt;licopter ca rrier USS Guada l·
ea nal will enter lh&lt;&gt; Persian Gulf
WASHERS, DRYERS
with elg hJ mine- sweeping helic·
REFRIGERATORS, TYs
oplers aboard. The Guadalca na l
is•on the way to the gu lf from the
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES
!ndian Ocean island of Diego

COUNTY

· -A di vorce has beE&gt;n gra nted in
Meigs County rommon Plea s
Court to Racinda K. VanMeter·
[rom John M. VanMeter .

"

'

I

Bonds on five charges wer('
forfeited by Charles Ray Fe rguson of West Columbia. W. Va .
when he failed to appear in the
court of Middleport Ma)·or Fred
Hoffman Tuesday nlght.
Ferguson forfeit ed SlOO on
cha rges of criminal trespass ,
$200 ()n resisting arrest, $200 on
deslructlon of propert)·, $100 on
dlsordE&gt;rl y manner. and $300 on
assault on a pollee o[flcer.
Also forfeiting bondsl n the
court wa s Timothy M. Sp ires.
Rutland, $450 on "OWl and $50 on
left of center.
Fined In the court were Mark
DeAngelis, Lexi ngton, Ma ss., $Jfi

"

~

~

Special of the Week

\

HAM SANDWICH

t

Sle14

.

DAIRY
VALLEY
"At the End of the ,._,..y·MaiOIIIrklte
_POMEROY, 011.

. PH. 992-2556

oo+~••••o
.
.

PORTRAI'IN

.~·our

pocket.

;. ~"o receive :vour applicarion, coli Randv
"
Van\lleter or \llarkGroves at 675-1121.

. . . . f.D.t.C.

&lt;

s.t:ollll S1lwl
.... W. VII.

. 173-5514

PEOPLES
. BANK i

''Tfte ••tt•r 8anlr"
, r'•S.5111 Awnue

..,_fll),f.T _I O .. ~

tv-•,..,.
f~ o (&gt;OV

1

ECKIICH

TURKEY BREAST .............. u. S2. 99
HOMEMADE

Card of Thanks

CARD Of THANKS
The lamily of William
Calvin Goorey would
like to thank family ,
friends and neighbors
for the ir love and many
acts of kindness. during
the loss of our love one .
Aspetial thanks to Revecend McClung lor words
of comfort and pra)ltrs. A
special lhariks to Henr;
and Hester Eblin fOI
pra)ltrs and hymns. Aspecial thris to the Drew
Wtbstec Post N39 of Pomeroy, Ohio's American
l.elion. The V.A. for their
SIIPPOfl and many ~ts of
kindness. the V.A. Hospi·
Ill ill Huntirwton. West
VirJinia, the doctors and
nurits and still lot trNt·
IIIIC1t lnd Clrt. EwitWS Funenl Home oilr heartfelt
thanks for their services
and their pan in making
oor loved one's memorial
service. thouch sad, a food
memory.
Thanks so much, may
God bless each and ever; one of you.
The Fam1ly ol William
C. Goorey

CALLEY HAM ••••••••••••••••••• u\ .... 99&lt; .

-~
- -.~~-.

:.tt1--r.t

'

fn::.,:;:..._..:..
,,_
._

OTHER FINANCING
SOURCES (USES I'
Excesl Rcpts./SourCBS Over
(Under) Disb. 1!. Other
Uses/ Not ....... .. . !30.8751
Beginning Fund Cash
Bolanco ... ............ 88,950
Ending Fund Cash
Balance ............... 66 . 076
TOTAL
Misc. f'e ceipts ... , .... 36.991
Stale Sourcet ....... 37B.823
Total Revenue ·
(0porating) ........ 414.814
EXPENDITURES :
Extracurricular
Activities ...... ............ 583
Employees Salaries
1!. Wages .... .... ... 324 ,750
Employee• Ret ire .
Ben ..................... 82.882
Purchased Serv ....... 21 , 957
Sup. 1!. Mat, ............. 8.671
Capital Oullay·
Replacement ......... 2 . 375
Other Objects ........... 4 . 671
Tolal Oisbur•ementi-

(O~er. ) ............ 445.689
Exc. Rcpts. Over(Under)
Dis b .... , ............. 130.876)
OTHER FINANCING
SOURCES (USES )
Excess Rcpta. / Sourcet Over
(Under) Oi1b, S. Other
Uses/ Net ...... , ... (30,875)
l;leglnning Fund Cath
Balance ............... 88 .960
Ending Fund Ca1h
8alance ............... 68 ,076
Flte al Cuh ' " .Banks

NetJ .................. 83.639
Too . Fund Bal. ........ 83.639

MEMORANDA DATA
ADM .... ................... 4.438
Num . of Non -Cart.
Empio-;eas ......... ..... : ..... 3
Num , o f Cer1 .
En:1ployees .... ,.. .~ ......... 12
I certltv the following re ·
pOrt 10 be correct and tru e,
to the best o t my kno wledge:
J o hn 0 . Rie bel. Sr.
Treaauntr of the Board qf
Education

18) 12 H e

Public N otiC$
LEGAl NOTICE
1988 BUDGET

The Tu Bo&lt;19., lor Moigo
County, Ohio. for li1cal veer
wes adop ted July 1 5 , 1 987,
by the Meigs County Board
of Commissioners.
A summa!')' of said T••
Budget m•v be rev iewed in
the office of the Melg•
Count';' Commiuioners between the houn of8 :30 A.M .
and 4 :30 ' P .M. on or af1er
August 13, 1987. It tile
Courthouae. Second Street,
Po~BrD';' , Ohio:
.
Meigt County
Commissioners
Mary Hobttetter. CW.rk
(81 1 2 1 tc

MARGARINE .. O.'Jil .. 2/99&lt;

BAKING
POTATOES ............. S1.99

OZ. BROUGHTON 'S

3 lBS. PAULA

RED COOKING
APPLES ...................... 99 1

NEW LISTING - RUTLAND - 3 bedrooms. I'! slory home.
Enclosed honl porch, equ1p ped k1lchen . storage building,
an d part basement $21.000.

14 CT.

NEW LISTING - SYRAC USE ---" II you li ke spac1ous 1ooms

HEAD LETTUCE ........... 79c .

and want the 11eatness ot tasteful decor

rna~e

an appolfll ·

menl 10 see !h1S lonely 4-5 bed1oom home wrlh 2 baths.
kitchen w1th cozy b1eaklastnook, lor mal drmn gooom, ul lltty
room. lull basement. La~ge neat acre lot. 2 ca~ garage. Many
ot her featu res' $62,900.

oz.

NEW LISTING - SYRACUSE :._ B11ck and Ira me ranch type
home wrlh basemen I, I cat ga1 age, 3 bedrooms on level
lat ~e lot. Large ten ced reat pial a1ea. Home tS '"excellent
cond1t10n 111 a ftOOd location. Ca l for aqqornl ment. $39.500.

TRING POTATOES ••• s1.3 S

NEIV.l!STING - .N1ce garage apartment'" Middleport. 3
bed rooms. lul l basemen! . a11 cond1t1oned. all on a level lol
close to shopping. ·$21 ,900.
·

'
.
s
PINEAPPLE JUICE............... 1.49
DOIL!t

NEW usnNG - Hele IS a cute little one tloor plan, 3 bed·
room hom e lookmg lor a newowner, n~ce k1tchen and bath,
shed. eq u1pped kitchen and olh er clean le~lures $16,500.

10'1• OZ.. CAMPBELL'S CREAM OF

MUSHROOM SOUP ••••••••• 2 CANS 99&lt;
16 ()1. BREAKFAST CEREAL

NEW liSTING - Ran ch type home in the counlry resl1ngon
ov'er 2 ac res ol ground. Full bas.ement, 3 bedrooms. On ly 12
years old. Wants $29,500.

FROSTED MINI WHEATS ••••• S2.29

NEW LISTING -

28 OZ. PENBIRILLS

n, story home in Rutlan d 3 bed rooms.
g, tronl sil11ng porc h, all on 'a mce lot.

TOMATOES ................. 2 CANS S1.S 9

Sitting Fee $2.00 . Not Included 1n pnce of advertleed apec1al .

Adventood special is only in blue and brown backgrounds.
Advenleed special ia in 1w0 (2) poses- our 1181ection.
Add~ional adwrtlsed peckages ate available at regulat price.
Add~ional cllarge for groupe and scenic baCkgrounds.

I

· liill)fY,YJ: 13 36

POMEROY
TUES., AUG. 11 thru AUG. 13
·- HOURS: TUES. &amp; THURS. 10·2, 3-6
WED. 10·2, 3-8

Ne. "-· W.-Va.

4'1• OZ.. UNDERWOOD CREAM OF CHICKEN,
DEVILED HAM ROAST BEEF r

CANNED MEATS~: ••••••••••••••••••• 99&lt;

li ROLL PACK

CHARMIN TOILET TISSUE ••• S1.89
12 OZ. MAXWELL HOUSE

. . $
INSTANT COFFEE •••••••~ •••••••
6.79
72 OZ. DETERGENT

.SURF SOAP POWDER ••••••••• S2 .89 ·

Oo~;t 111aka the wr.ong ull.
C1ll "Ciala~d R111t~.''

PEAR HALVES •••••••••••••••••••••••• 97&lt;

HENRY E. CLELAND . JR ........ ......... ... .... 992· 6191
JEAN TRUSSELL .................................... 949-2660
DOniE TURNER ........ .......,................ ,... 992·5692
TRACY RIFFLE ..... ........... ... ...... .............. 949-3080
OFFICE ... ........................ ..... :................ 992·2259

16 'oz. DEl MONTE

8 OZ. KRAFT ,

.

$

.

BAR-B-QUE SAUCE •••••••••••• 1.39

•·2136

..

..
· -..... "'·.-.,.
;::::=:=
..,._
..__.
·--

11----.

·-

·-·-

2s(

PAT Hill FORD
992-2196

EACH

I

Middleport. Ohio
1-13-lfc

USES FOR ALUMINUM SHEETS RANGE
FROM ROOFING DOG HOUSES TO
MAKING HAMMERED LAW SHADES.
BE PURCHASED DAILY AT THE
DAILY SENTINEL TIL 3 P.M.

CERTAINTEED VINYL

lie. •DOS-Dl hJ. 1/lt/ 17

PUll!( '"YmD _ . _ _

CARPENTER
SERVICE

FOR SALE

- Addona and remodeling
- Ro()fing And gutter work
•

- Plumbing and electrical
work
!Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Iii
992·6215 or 992·7314

Pomeroy, Ohio

4·15-' 86-lc

MODULAR HOME!
Carter French
Residence
Corner of Fourth
and Palmer,
· Middleport
Must see to .~PPreciate .

CALL

614·992·3293

BISSELL
BUILDERS

OPEN FOR BUSINESS
314 I. lbin St.
Pomeroy
Behind C1ty Hall ·

"At Reasonable Prices"

Only SJ250

Mon. thru Fri. or by
Appointment
Call 1614) 992·7204
Wholesale &amp; Re.t ail
1· 10· 1 mo. pd.

~:1USf

o.'ir:flO',\';IIG?
Cl[t,r; U?WITH Clt.SS!fliDADS · ·---;

-~

216 E. 2nd St.
·Phone
1-1614) -992-3325
NEW
l!STING-5 1m.
Jan ch. 5 vrs. old on 2 acr es
nea1 langsville. Ran ge, re·
lng.. db!. smk. ca r pe l~n g.
elec. 88 heat , woodburnm ,
gas well and alllc fan .
$38,000.
NICE &amp; lARGE-8 rms.. 3
baths, lg. fa m1ly rm. wrth
wood un 11. cook and bake
units. DISposa l, dishwasher,
panlty, dinrng rm., central
heat. lg. lot lor the children.
$50,000
1.55 ACRES- Near Pomeroy. Just oil Rt. 7. Asking
$4,000.
SYRACUSE- One II. mod·
ern 2 Br home. B11ch cab1·
nels. cook units, rel11 g., oak
lloors and lg. corner lot. Ask·
mg $37.500 .
3 YRS. OLD-One II. 7 rms..
2 baths, 3 Brs .. cook umts,
relng., carpeting, basement,
rec. rm. 30x20, lg. lireplace,
garage 30x 30 and tennis
court. $97 .500.
SYRACUSE-7 rm . ranch, 2
baths, equipped kitcnen, 3
8rs, carpeting. all elec. and
level lot.
HANDY ANDY - Want a 2
bath home, has up to 5 or 6
8rs. Family rm., panel ing,
carpeting, and 2 lots. Oller
Wanted.
1 liT. 7 BY- PASS ~ N icely re·
modeled small 5 rm. one
floor house. Carpeti ng, new
,bath, 2 porches and garden
space. Only $21,000

No Feolln' Arud,
Wt •••• Bul...tll
992-3325

!UV ..G Al~M t IIAHD! ~f
HOU!!HOL
PUMUI!. All
I!PAII!
AH1UD 1 .TEAll,
PAJJS AND lAIOI.

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Dar or Night

NO SUNDAY CAlLS

4·16-86-ttn

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service

noo.

NEW- REPAIR

614-8,43-5248
.8-20·'86 'tln

No Sunday Calls
3-11-tfn

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
CIISIII, OHIO

•ROOFING •SIDING
•WINDOW

~EPLACEMENT

•REMODELING

a

ROOM ADOITIONS
•GARAGES &amp; POLE
BUILDINGS

REFERENCES

Phone Day or honl•11

7·15-171 MO. pd.

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
CENTER
PAITS • SERVICE
Repairs

on All Makes

Gutters .
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
· Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

. Trans~xle Repairs
HAS :

CLOSED SUNDAY

Ph. 949-2969

BUY - SELL - TRAO!l
.. 8-7-1 mo

ACCENT

FENCE COMPANY

Lei Us Fenu You Ia
FREE ESTIMATES
RES IDE NTIAL ! C OMMEA CIAL

PH. 742·2027

949-2263
or 949·2168

J&amp;L
INSULATION

done within one
year.

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

15 'fn. Experience in

Schools, Ho-t,
Churches.
Go~ rlwough AU!f 30, "17

992-3711
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
7· 1S.87 1 010.

Roger Hysell
Garage

(CUT OUT FOR FUTURE USU

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Rt. 124, Pamoroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Trant111iulu
PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121

985-3561

All M1ket

6-1:1-ttc

J&amp;L BLOWN

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•DryerS •Freezers
PARTS and ~FRVtii'F

ANY IIMf
BU I CIILH SHU I'

INSULATION
CUSTOM BUILT
GARAGES

Wo know where tho lrool is.

wo aloo know the place tor
bul&lt;horing an4 proco11i..

w. tatisfy or you don' I pay

POLE STYLE or
CONVENTIONAL

FREE ESTIMATES

PH. 992-2772

7-30·87·1 mo.

r-::-r~~:"r':-c"""':-'-'-"1

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING .
·'

Middloporf, Ohio 45760

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

We Carry Fishing Suppllel

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phene Bills Here
IUSIN£5! PHONE
9tf.-6.55D
I'IHIENCl PHONf.

511 / !In '

PIANO TUNING

Receive
SOOfo OH
SECOND tuning If

10-8-tlc

.FrH puppies. Raccoon Ad. Call

814·446·4982.

3 puppiu . Pan St. Bernard and
part Bordtf Come. e wki . old.
Cell614·992·7269.

3 montti old female kinet'l.
Oeclawed . Call 814-992 ·1824.

Lost and Found

Lost : Licen•• plate off of truck.
Farm tag. F240AF . If any
information. pleue c .. l 614379-2133.
FOUND: blue tick Hound Dog
with one blaclc ' eye. Call 614256-1726 aft..- 5:00PM .
Lost : Keys iott Sund-v in
Pomeroy ne•r Methodist chureh
or Crowi Steak HoUte. It found
leave at D1ity Sentinet 1 1 1
Coun Sr. Pomeroy.
Last : 2 German Sheph•d•.
Mother, grav and black and pup.
brown end t1n·. Lost leelding
Creek area on July 30. Reward
for intormation . 614-992 -8092.
LOST - Between Hend.-son
and 9 Mile Road. Coonhound.
mo1tly white with spots, black
head . No collar, 304·876 -14&amp;1.

7

Yard Sale

··---.··Galllpolrs···-----·-

•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS

"flEE EsnMATES"

PH. 992-2772

8·4·1 mo. d.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

3 f1mity garage 1ale, canning
j...-s, misC. items,•lchool clothesell sizes. Wed. 6 Thurs. 8·4,
1 132 Second AIIIII.
Aug. ;0·14. From Gaillipolis 10
miln out Rt . 141 . 10:00 am ta

PLASnc CRAFT

FREE IUTCHliiNG

and

G:T:.c::,~ 1

CERAMIC BISQUE

CAll ANYTIME
44.6·131 ~-&amp;-! mo.

J~~ IOO.
r~::.ii:ii~Oiii-~~~;;!Jl:========~~
'

. Computerized Hearina Aid Selection ·
~ Swim M~lds - lnterpretilll Services .

i!2

~

LISA M. KOCH, M.S. .

::z:: License(! Clinical Audiologist

!

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1.213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 ·

i

Help Wanted

JOB PLt.C~MENT : High tehoal•
grads, lei us help .you .dis covet
the job that fh:1 you bMt. W.
pl1ce people in ov..- 70 car--: ·
fields. Jobs •re full time perm•~
ant poslttonswith solid benefit1:
Applicant• between 17-3:0 year'
old will be consld.ered. No Faa
Involved. C1ll toll free 1 · 800 -o~
282-1384, Mondi!IV· Thursday}
91111· 2prh.
~
Ber maid for Happy Corner. Ce"
after ·4 :00pm.- 514-446-2&amp;26.•
Before 4 :00pm .. appty in Ptltlo'l,
at the Happy Comer1
~
Drivers Wllnted for Domino'S
Pina. 18 yrs. of.. 191, driver' ~
lic.-.1e, insurance end dep.n~
ble vehicle. CaU 614-446-.&amp;040.
Updlte of applicant fil•- E~~:per.
me1t cutler for loc1l super•,
m1rket. S.nt retumeto : Box da.
101 , Gellipolil Deily Tribune
826 3rd . Avo. Gallipolis, Ohio
46831.
'
Full-Time AN , 3-11 shift and
lnfraqent 11 · 7 relief. Excel.
ulary 1nd benefits. Apply It
Sctnic HiU1 Pl!urslngCenter. C-11
614-«8-71&amp;0.
Exper.· P•r1·time baby sitt., for
2 children . Rio Grend•G•IIipolil
area. C1ll Rita Bunon, 614-1826704.
·Full-time babaitter .in my home
for evenings. Referencea .r•
quirad. Call814-446-9723 aft..5pm.
Full-time office a warehau1111
parson needed Ia start 'imm•
dia~ely. Call 1114-446-4109 for
appointment.
Medic:81 Coordinator. RN far
gi-oup home. Project tor Santor
Citizens. Coordinating 111 medii
ell MNiCM within com ext of an
int•madi.ta c.-e facility m ....
ing mdcade stendlf"ds, Knowledge • skill• of nursing profft·
sion, adminietratNe-aupervlsory
training. Knowledge of pltiM'It
aiMitment system preferred.
Sll1ry commensurate with ell.·
ptlf'ience. Cell Ohio Job Services
in G111ipoUs tor application &amp;
interview.
Exeeuti\fe Secretary . Send r•
1ume to Box T-350, c•• of the
Gallipolis D1ily Tribune. 825
Third Avo ., •Gallipolis , 0~
46631 .
B1by l itter needed in Centenary
area. Call 814·446· 9171 , 01y1
445-6838, E\lenings. Ask for
1

Grocery ltOfe manager nMed
in G1llipolis area. To be eligable
you mu• hiiYa prior man-aer
m.,t experience and pouets
good suparvisionll skills. Wa
off•. an excellent opportunl:ty
for the rig'-' indiviclual. Send
rnume to: Box Cl1. 102,
Gallipolis Daily Tribune. 8211
lrd . Ave. Gallipolis. Ohlq

Two Family Yar~ Sale: '" Poner
Brook Subdivision on FairfieldCentenary Rd .. Fri.. Aug. 14.
9-6, Sat. . 9-12. Chlldrens clothing, toys. miae. items.

Government Jobs. 118,040 •
169,230 · year. Now hiring. C1U
1·805· 687-6000 ht. R-9801
for current fed..-sl list.
'

Thrae Fami,lv PCJrchSale: 10AM .
till ~- Starting Aug . 1 21h till
gone~ Vinton. Glen Summrt Rd.
Aug, 1"1 · 16. Behind Bidwell
Post Office. 10·7. Adult. child·
ren clothes. tv. ate.
Fridll';'. S.t~o~rd.,, 9-4. Corn•
First • Pine. Mise. hou•ehold
and handym1n ittm1: 911 heat·
ers, m•ntell. grtte, lnlnk. canfling jan, 1tanaw•re jugs, clay
flower pot• ~ c.rpeting. light
flxtufel. kindling, log splitter,
exheust fen. ETC.; ETC.
Thr" Octave electric orglft,
blthroom wash bnin, diah•
and clothing. Thurs. &amp; Fri . .239
Third Ave.

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Big sale. Schul rnidence. 3
mtln SI)Uth of Tuppers Plaint.
Thur. Fri. Sat. 617-3336.
FridtY, Aug. 14. Ntw Lima Rd.
3rd ruktence on right. Maytag
dryer, air conditton•. hid••·
bed, drap•. rods, 1 2 ga, thOI
gun, ,yveigh' benCJh, lnfMtt 10
aduh clot~g. e14-742· 2410,
Annual ttayes gigantic: yard ule
In Clifton, W. Va. Frld.y, 14th
and S~turdliy , 15th. R.m post·
pon• till Friday, 21 11 and
Saturday, 22nd. ,
1

'

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Pert· time cook position. E\len-'
ing1 Only! Inquire at Villegft~
Piua Inn. 3004 Ja ckson A Ve~
Point Plo•ant .
,
Army, Navy, Air Force, Marin"'
- Vour Prior Ser\lice is wott h:J
MONEY in the Army NationaC
Guard, 304-876-3960 or 1-'
800·642-3619.
.~
Full t jmo bebysiner, dey and•1
hours, soma we11kands.,
Ages 7 and 5. Mature lady with~
no other tiu. 304-675-5834. ~
e'&lt;~ening

'

'

Need experienced live· in hou~e1
keeper for upstate New York'
area. Pie••• call304-676-6060,:
or 675-6860 for interview,•
Monday-Saturday, 10th-15th. •

.

.

WANTED - Lady that needa'1
l)ome to live in with elderly lady\
In city . Would hiVe own room.•
For information, call 304 - 1?5-~
1678.
:

censed
in Ohio
and W•l
nie. Estate.
antique,
f•m. Virgl·
liquidation se11111, 304-n l- 5785.

Something New
:
Under The Sunl
jll
Rap1 needed for lu Pin•• Ac -1
counts. part time. 118. 00~
potential; tuM time, 18d,00()'
plus potem~l . Work own hours,'
tralring pro'&lt;~ided. Call 1 - 112 .~
138·0019 M·F, 8 a.m, · 15 p.m.1
(C.S.T.)

9

GET PAID FOR READING,
BOOKS! t 100.00 Per TH!e. &lt;~~

1f2 PIICE

Month af

Si:fVICI:S

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS· Loe.t
company no\of¥' hiring. Hard workBehind B1iley Chapel Church·
Rt. 218 . EncycloptdiM, baby · Ing people for full-time employ~lothn: e-18 mos..
swing, ment. Mull be 1ble to work
household.. . Wed .. Thun .. and evenings. I 1 200 a month. Cor:
porata training, profit sharing
Fri.
..,d e•cellent benefits. For Ptr·
Do you like yard 1111111111 Than sonal interviawa call 114-ot45come out and shop in the opan 8,46, Thur1. or Fri. aft• .9 :00
eir at ViRa's. Bikes, trik.., AM .
1trolleu. beds, high chairs,
dreuars, 1awbiM!n, Iampi,
much mora plus ul• ...,ery
weMI. Look for our ad in the
block eds.

... -- ... ,; .-- .. ·----..... -- ... --- ..

MIDDLEPORT
o·H•
. r

f lllplil/111':111

Lady to live with eldertv lady 6
dl¥1 a week. FJea room, bo1rd.
Salary. Call814-4ot&amp;-0761 att..&amp;:OOPM .

"FREE ESTIMATfl"

DABBlE
SHOP
N. 2nd AVE.

fII'

1

46631 .'

.. ···--p·c;;n·arov ··.. :··--

7-:JO.'IJ.I mo.

2 nd. A... Mrddlepo&lt;t Oh. 11

982-3471.

Yard $ale. Sm1ll appli..,ces.
curtelns. dishes. rugs, furniture,
hammock. mens • womens
clothing. Many misc. ili!lml.
Tues.-Wed. Aug. 11 -12 . 2Edg•
mont Or.

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

coinl

Debbie.

&amp; Vicinity

Locatotl Hallway latw-

01-87'""

DENNY CONGO
Will HAUL
JUST CAll!
992·3410
liMESTONE
GRAVEL ~ SAND
TOP SOil .
Fill DIRT

7 kittens to give away- 2 mos.- 3
mos. ~d . Can be • ..., on Tu:aa
Rd .- 3rd house on left.

6 :00pm.

ROOFING

RfASONAilE , IEllAilE

Half Jileagle pups- 5 male~ and 1
female. Cell 814·387·0186 or
367-7214 Evening,.

6

12:00-8:00
M.ondav· S a1u rday

7-6-'IT-1

Giveaway

PH. 949~2860
or 949·2101

11. 7 ancl lash101

CAll 992-6711

4

" Free Estimates"

S.nidng refrigerol•s. fr•t·

bage dispesols; trosh compac·

No u .. pauing, hunting or fish·
ing. Gerald Hodget property.
Sand Hill Rd .

Part collie. brown. good dispo•i·
lion, ·9 month old male. ' 'Andy'',
304-676· 2931 .

Howard L. Writesel

Electronic Org&lt;lfis
Mobile service

t614) 9'2-7754

1

••· AC (window units ontyl,
woshm, drytrs, rottges, dit·
hwoshen, miuowewt~, garton.

161 North Second

t-3 -&amp;1

7-21·1 mo. d.

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Gift Shop &amp; loy Store
Collectors Items .
Costume Jewelry ,
Action lays, Musical
Toys &amp;Trinket Boxe.s
Open 10 A.M. to 4 P.M .

RUSS MOORE
992-2526 .

985-4141

H -1 mo. pd

ANN'S

Pomeroy

HOURS. Tue.·Wod.-Fri.
II a.m. to 7 p.m.
Sunday: I p.m.-7 p.m.
ly Chonct or Appoinlmtftt

GENDAL CON11ACTOIS

MIKE'S APPLIANCE
REPAIR SERVICE
Service Call

THERMO · BOSS '

112 4 East Main St.

WCJuld like .to buy homemade
quih1. Ca11814-245-11582.

oilvot'

.... Ed ........ a...... Sho,.

11

A1111 ounc1: 1111: nt s

1-3-'86 tic

Riverine Antiques

8uylna dolly -

cao l14· 4*

. rlnga, jewelry, tterling were, olil
colno, l•v• cutToncy. Top pri-

V; Ci:ii0n r~~oncy

Partt &amp; Servlu
ANnQUES
BUY OR SELL

~~iC)ollipollo.

Vl'f\fH f\OS bring

Farm •qui~mont

New Homes Built

YOUNG'S
- Concrete work

FOR THE BEST IN
REPLACEMENTS
WINDOWS

7 1 17 1

.•Aufhorilod John DNrt,
· New Ho~ ·od, Bush Hog

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

1----------1---------.......j

INSULATION
992-2772

Aloo • .... roolloot ....._
CAll fOI Fill U'IIMA11
992·UI6 ""_361·7220
_. _ mo.

u. s. RT. so EAST
GUYSVJLLE, OHIO

"VINYL SIDING
0
ALUMINUM SIDING
"BlOWN IN
INSUlAnON

CA~

J&amp;L

40"1o 0111R11ff
ONJIJlWIII',(DOWS

hr111 Eqult•••t

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

SIZE 23X30X007

Business
Services

SALES &amp; s· ERVICE

uu

RADIATOR
SERVICE.

ALUMINUM SHEETS
FOR SALE
ONLY

TAYLOR IUILDERS

Dealor

7/ 13/ 2 mo. d.

n.wer uHd1111
urs. hMMII
Smidll

3 Announcements

l/281t1n

'

TOP CASH pold for '83 mod ..

BOGGS

FREE ISTiMA TES

1-614·843-5425

·~·-­
=
==-·----.
:::="".::"1-

.._

92-2156

20 OZ. ORE·IDA

a~.-!.9~allets for only . .

· -_-

· Worked in Home Areo
2S Years

Real Estate General

10 LB. IDAHO

Gutter Work

Complete Remodeling
Roofing of All Types

16141 992 ·6592

·

lB. SH£DOS SPREAD

AMERICAN
CHEESE .................. S1.89

_

~~::e..'­

HAM ·SALAD •••••••••••••••••••• u~.... 89&lt;

KRAFT 12 OZ. 16 Sli.CE PROCESSE D

Vinyl &amp; Al~m . Siding '

Complutu

ta .•

Public Notice

Exc . Rcpta. Ove r(Underl
Dltb.................. 130.876 )

SLAB BACON ••••\LJ~tV1~U...'!Im S1.99

•••·•

•

Mf_.._ • •

)&lt;JIJHI OotiD . .

(Oper.) ... .. ...... .... 45.689

.

111 •

, U1

--__
---

•-•~u

FOR THE FISCAL YEAR
ENDING JUNE 30, 1987
''Thitlt an unaudited
financial atatament ."
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
Misc. Receipta ........ 35.991
State So~rces ... ., .. 378.82l
Total Revenue .
(Operating) .... : ... 414,814
EXPENDITURES :
Extracurricular
Acti\l'ities ...... ........ .... 5B3
Employaet Salaries

REAMES NOODLES ••••••••••••• S1.19

[

•oo •.,

'Capital Oullav ·
Replacement . .- ....... 2.375
Dthlf Obiecla ........... 4.571
To1al Olsburtem ent•·

SUPERIOR DERINDED

f1l.W

.,.,._

l~~Jto o•

45769
Date: July 28. 1987

212 E. Mlln- Pomeroy

OIW

Clauifi~d p.,u cover ' "•
fo lla UJinl t e,l!lphona •.u:hanpa ...

WIO~U O A f

Sup. &amp; Mot .............. 8.571

12

1

roo• ..

lOll OM

Combined Financial Report
of the Board of Education
Meigl County School
District , County o f Meigs
Addre11 : 320'h E. Main,·
P.O. Bo• 684
City : Pomeroy, Ohio

~.

""

IU..

100011 M01j010

1 Ben ..................... 82.882
Purchased Serv ...... 21 .957

BULK CHEESE .•..•J.,, Sl

1(8x10), 2(5x7s),•

IAHO

Public Notice

No gift brings out the loveliness of o woman like pearls. We
hove a fine selection at reasonable no nonsense prices ...
Not marked-up three times and discounted twice. Come See.

l co.t.n

11 DA\01

. . _. .

•• oo•01 UlUoooov

EmployHI Retire .

46 01..

never leaves

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

-·~ ....·~·

,...,.ao., ,,,.,

'1

__

AATI.

Dn .t uou •~•ue ano"

a. Wag eo ........... 324,750

P!Ail mLEY HOI PEPPER

Limit 9ne special p~~r famify.

-...,

LONG'S
CON
. STRUCTION

.... _..
..,... .......__ ,.____
..... . .
___... ..... _
·-..
......___..._
.. _., ...........
.
IDA..

11

Buldi ·Porrthtc.
Jr:==;:;;;:~==il':;========:;r.:;;;:;::;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;::;i•nd

::c::n. -eo.•

COO¥ Ot:AOtiiOII!

AT 742-2233 FOR INFORMA110N

COTTAGE CHEESE.. S1.49

, ..'then ~ou need a Peoples Bank VISA or

.......

. '

REFRESHMENTS WILL IE AVAILABLE

2~

·; •rveeded identification to write a check?
•Been .ftranded out of town without cash?
~;. •wanted io order tickets or make room
reservation.~ over the phone?

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

. .... . .

SMITHFIELD 6-8 LB. AVG;

ADOLPH'S

.. _

Qoo ol1o,..,

~~

.•

PH. 446·1699
HOURS: 8 A.M.·6 P.lll.

~n if it

ELLIOn

(lOYfl WNIIJ

-----......__----·-·--

·'

With Fries ................... l1.69

We know vou don't need another billto pav.
llut haven't vou ever -

-

...... ... ......__. . ........ _
.__ ""._
,
.....,_...,.,_...,_
. _,.,
., ......
' '.::':::..":~=-== t' =: (~ ~'!.!7 ::~
....". . ...

+----..+o·o

A CREDIT CARD?

~- ~Teater peace of mind

_
....__
.
..,_
__
...... ..........
.. _, __

. , __ h

SATURDAY, AUG. 15-9 A.M.-?
CONTACT MARCIA

HA((

.....
-~·
.:;,....

AT THE RUTLAND CIVIC CENTER GROUNDS

Roger Hoschar. Pomeroy, and
Ruth Powell , Middleport , were
eac h fined $25 and costs on
charges of disorderly manner,
and Lar ry Gilmore. Middeport,
was finl.'d $100 and cos ts. posses·
sion of mariju ana .

APPLIANCES
627 3rd Ave., Galtipoln

HASTERCARD . .
,, . Jwt hoviflf( tluJt "piece of plastic" can ~five :vou

AN AD C~U ..t .il U .
M0HtAY l'hfu JBDAY I A.M. t• 5 p.M.
I A.&amp; u..til NOON SATUIIDAY
10

FLEA MARKET &amp; YA.RD .SALE

and costs, speeding; Charles
Pullins. $25 and costs. lntoxlca·
lion: J eff Whittington, Mldde·
port. $2!i a nd costs: dlsorder l~­
manner: Richard Fril&lt;'y. $2fiand
costs, disorderly manner; and
Harold Lillie, Mlddlepon. $2fi
and cos ts. disorderly mann er,
. an(j $100 and "costs and 15 da ys In
Jail , resis tin g arrest.

ARE YOU SURE
YOU DON'T

'·

Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellls &amp; Loewl .
Firm '
Price
Am 'E leCt ric Power ...... .......... 28
AT&amp;T .... ..... .......... ..... .... .. 3~Y'
Ashland Oil .... .... ................ 68 1{.
Bob Evans F"arms ......... .... 25%
Char ming Shoppes ... ..... ...... 36~
Federal Mogu I. ...... ......... ...... .48
Goodyear T&amp;R ......... , ......... 75~
Heck' s Inc.... ..... .. .. .. .. .... .. .... 4~
Limited Inc: ......... ., ... ......... 50 o/,
Multimedia Inc ................ -. 70%
Rax Restaurants .. .................. . 5
Robbins &amp; Myers .............. .. lO 'h
Shoney' s Inc ........ : .............. JOY.
WendY's inti .................. .... lO Y.
Worthington Tnd ............... .. _. 24 %

Five bonds forfeited in court

-

Divorf'e granted

·Business Services

•

WILL SPONSOR A

TIIURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1987
Gates Open-F1ag Raising Ceremony
Kid's Kld Show
10:00 a.m. -Open Beef Cattle Show-.Junlor Beef Snow
Immediately following
·11 :00 a.m. -Pie Eating Contest
1:00 p.m. -Pedal Tractor Pull
.~: 00 p,m: -Entertainment, Main Stag('Pilll Dirt &amp; The Dozers
4: .10 p.m. - Wahama Hi gil Sellool Banq Concert
6:00p.m.- Baby Beef Sllow-Uvestoc:k Arena
6::10 p.m.- Gospel Sing-Harr'v Rhodes
7:00p.m . ...:. Pri'Sentatlon of .John McCausland Award
7:00p.m. - Farm Tractor Pull &amp; Out of Field Pull
8:00p.m . ...:.. "Annex' 1 - Inside Stage
9:00p.m. -Entertainment, Main Stage, Phll Dirt.&amp; the Dozers
11:00 p.m. - \&gt;ODd Nlght-r.ates Closed

Area deaths
\ ., James R. Alley, 66, 49789 State
-Route 338, Racine. died Tuesda y
at the Holzer Medical Center
!allowing a lengthy illnes~.
.. ' A r!'tired farm er. Mr. Alley
~as . born Aprll6, 1921 in Tazewell
County. Va., a son of the late
~ufford and Tina Louise Alley.
lie was a member of the Mount
Moriah Church of God, Rac ine.
Surviving are his wife, An na
Mae Alley, Pomeroy; fo~r
daughters, Mrs. James tVirgi·
nia ) Riffle. Syracuse; Mrs. Pau I
~Rosel Quickie, New Car lisle;
Mrs. Walter (Patsy) La udermllt,
L:etart Falls: Mrs . Ro nald
!•l inda ) Lunce, Lenoir City,
Texas; three sons , James Alber t
f\ lley and Carl Ruben Alley, both
of Letart Falls; Paul Randall
X1Jey, Cleveland; two sisters. Liz

(As of 10:30 a .m.)
Provided by

RUTLAND EMS

9:00a.m.~

James Alley

Daily stock prices

'

Thll Daily

Ohio

Rick

Pooroon Aucllon- ll -

Wanted To Buy

We pay c11h for late model cleart
uHCt can.
Jim Mink Chtv.-Oidl Inc.
1111 Genii Johnson ·
614·-·3672
Wanted to buy, standing t imber~
Call AI Tromm at 614· 742-

2328.

QUILTS

Antlclu•Pr• 1840's. Call Mere.
IU-1112-2101 tdoyotor 1-182·

24t1

Write: ACE-617, 2 Pi me. Naper-•
ville. IL 805.40.
.
:

I~BYSITTfR NEEDED wh~
ilchoolstarts, 2 ve•· old and fin
gr1der 1fter achool. Point Ple1- 1,
Ant •ea. A1fwance prefari1
but not nec:i1:11ry, 304-1713281 after &amp; p.m.
1

Siding lnsteH•• and help•e~
Experienced prtferNd. Mus~
hiiVI depandeble trvGk. Calt!
30•·•·71-&amp;138 btlween 1 -~

t :OO.

.

�• I.

Pomeroy
44

LAFF·A·DAY
Oodr .. l 1s Prlv.. eHomeCtre.

Apartment
for Rent

1 bedroom unfurnishlld apt . in
Middleport. 1160. per month

Call 614· 318-8113 anytime.

plus utilities. Call 814-992-

·

J

'

Jim' s odd jobs painting. drW•
way , ...,ling, c•ptnter work &amp;
roof rapaif, ,,... • hedgn

I

•nlperienced . Cell 614-379 2418.

and Refer . Call 114-44&amp;-8147.
Can do light heu~ng and (Oofing.

Reasoneble ra1es . MariOn
Snider. 814-949-2629.

Business

Restaurant 8 Yeinesa lor sal&amp;.
Eastern Ave . Call 614 - 4463077 or 446 -9782 .

"Wait, dear! You don't have
to run away... I will!"
~1

H omas for Sale

Threa bedroom brick home.
large living room. deck, free
watM-Ieptie,-8 %% loan n•ump·
tion. · Five mint.~tH to Point
Pleaunt. Afttt" 5 p.m .. 3U. 675-6306.
GOVERNMENT HOMES hom
$1 .00 IU Repair! Foredotures,
Repoa, Tu: Delinquent PrDPI'·
tiet. Now , .. ling your area.
Ca111 -315 -73B-7375, ut. 2P WV·H for currentlist. 24 Hours.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

41

Furnished Cottage. 3 room• and
beth. one or two adults. Ref. and
Dep. Water furnished. No pets.
Call614 -446· 2643.

3 BR :;-- 11h batha, famity room.
Refrig. and stove included.
located on Rt . 588. Ref. end
Dep. required . 8325 a mo. No
pett . Call 614 -256-6789 or
266·8205.
2 bedroom, W-0 hook-up, b.. •
ment. Clean Quiet location.
adults-seniors preferred. 1 or 2
children. No pet1. Reference.
S165.- 8195 . month plut dep·
osit. A\lalleble Immediately .
216·935·39&amp;2 .

3 bedroom house. for rent in
Syracuu. Also 3 bedroom on
lincoln Heights. Pomeroy. Call
614-992-7689 after 6:00.
Houses and apts. for rent . Call
614-992-2403.

Own your own apparel or shoe
store . Choose from : Jean Sportswear, Ladies Apparel.
Men ' s, Children· Maternity ,
large sizes, petite, DancewearA!trobic, Bridal , lingerie or Acc·eslories store. Add Color Analysis. B,.nda: Liz Claiborne.
Gasoline. Healthttx. levi, lee.
Camp Be~erly Hills, St Michele.
Chaua. Outback Red. Genesis.
Forenla, Orgitnically Grown.
ower 2000 othet"s or S 13. 99 one
price designer, Multi Tier pricing
di1count or family shoe stDfe.
Retail prices unbeliwab4e for
quality shoes normatty priced
from S19. to $80. Over 260
brendl 2600 styln 51 • • 800 to
S2&amp;.900. Inventory, training.
fixtur... grand opening. airfare.
etc. Can open 15 d-vs. Mr.
Keenan 1305)388- 8608.

Professional
Services

Auctioneer Col. Oaeer E. Click.
license ~ 764- 88. 304· 895·
3430 .

Rea l Eslote

14~~t70 Memory 1980. 2 BAS .. 1
bath. Quail Crk. No .6. Call
61 4-2·5-9629 .

1983 Freedom. 14x17. 3 bedroom. furnished . Call 61,.· 992·
7479. '
19n Nathua, 1~k70 . 3 bedroom. 1 'h bath. gaa dryer. gas
furn.ac:e. Good condition . Call
814-817· 6636 .
New 3 bedroom ranch hou••·
with large fenced in yard. Total
electric. $350 pet month. located Rt . 160, 1 milet from
Holler Ho1pital. No in1ide pet1.
Reference required . 614-388·
9765 after 5 p.m .

Ux60 Mobile Home. Com·
pletely furniah1d . 614 -992 5146 or 614-992·3048.
1"x70 Wind•or with 14d0
addition. 3 bedrooms. pond.
approx 3 acres. Gallipolia Ferry,
304-876-8930.
.
PR ICf;D RIGHT - 1971 Schultl
mobile home 12x60, 2 bad·
roomt on rented lot. block and
underpenning included. Panially
fyrnished, $4200.00 . 304 -88220•8 .

33

, 35 acres-approk . 2.0 acres of
bottom lend. with 2400 lb.
tobacco bate. large barn plus 3
outbuildings . Mobile home
hook-up. Nice home site. Call
614-256-1774.
Tobaeco Base. Rt . 218 asking
540.000. Will consider lend
contract. Call attar 2 PM .
614·448·4060.
20 acre farm with 3 BA . house,
Hannan Trac• Road. Glenwood,
W. Va. tor more information call
304-773-5118 or 773-5186
aftm 5 :00.

34
31

Business
Buildings

Homes for Sale

Home for Sale by Owner:
Greenbrier Et t ., 3BR .• bi -level
on 2.4 acres, AC . W.B.F.P.• wet
bar. 2 car garage. Ph . Before
4 :00PM 614-446 -4009 After
4PM . Ph. 304· 675 · 38,6.
lo-..ely new 3 OR home built thil
spring. 2 car garage. nice area.
Clay &amp; cltv' schools. 6 miiM from
Gallipolis. Will contkter mobile
home as trade-in , 147,500. Call
614 ·446· 8038 :
4 BR .• fp ., full basement. 3 mi.
so. of .Gallipolis. 34,900. Call
Davs -614 - 446 - 1615 . After
5~ 00- Call614 -4•6· 1244
Oelu;~~e ,

in·gJound pool, total
AC ., 3 BAS ., excel. loc::ation . A -1
Real Estate. BrokM. Call 304876 -6104
House plus 76 acres- 1 mi. no. of
No. Gallia H.S. Ruul water, lots
of woods. No reuonable offer
refused . Call 614 ·446 ·8980.

'3

Farms for ~ale

oR ..

brick, 2 b1th1, 40x6o'
metal garage. N•ce -locationCrown City. Call 614 -258'8813.

In Crown City: 3 8R . l'lome. All
newly remodele;d. Owner neede
to transfer. Mid. 40 ' s. Call
614 -256 -1662.
1979 Liberty , 3 8R . on 1 '!.
acres. off Rt . 160 a1 Porter. Call
014 · 246· 9~34 .

3 bedroom, 1'12 bath, corner lot.
Clote to schools an4 town . Call
114 -992-3585 t'Ytnings .
·
-lc6 room house. two baths. new
roof. N~uth ·win4owa, garage.
246 N . Fourth Ave .. Middleport.
Make offer. 614 -247-4672 or
614-247·2632 .
House for tale by owf\er. smaH 5
room with bath on pri\late driv•North 4th In Middleport. Nice
lot. Will tell on l.nd contract to
qualified buyer. CaH Bill Childs
614-192-13,2 . Reduced for
f .. t ..... $18,000.
6 room. bath. fultr carpeted,
new deck. 1 acre gro.Md.
~14 - 992-1554 .

'House in Racine. n.., r;ver, fulty
furnished. •1 3 ,000. 614· 9492213 -or 61.t-949 -2,88.

Commercial buildings for lease.
Downtown Pt. Pleasant. Stores.
offices. A -One Real Estate.
Carol Ye;ager. Broker. Call 304875-&amp;104.

35 lots

&amp; Acreage

New J bedroom ranch house
with large fenced in yard. Total
electri~ S350 per month. lo·
cated on Rt. 110. 7 miles from
Holzer Hospital : No inside pett .
Reference required . Call 614·
388· 9756.
.

3 bedroom. !ldutts. No pets.
304. &amp;76-4384 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
14x70 Mobile Home for rent.
1 'h bath1, 3 BR ., totalelec. 3 mi .
down At . 218. Cell 614 -256 9360.

®by Larry Wrlghl

· · 74

3 bedroom. Gallipolis Ferry .
1275. month plus utilities. 304675 -4088 .

~4~4:==~=======
Apartment
for Rent

1 end 2 bedroom apartments lor
rent. Basic rant for 1 bdr ..
1183.00; 2 bdr., S219.00. Also
required a S200.00 security
deposit . CONTACT: Jackson
Estates. Dept. Ph 446- 3997
Equal Housing Opportunity.
Furnished Efficien~ $145 . Utili·
ti" paid. share bath. 607
Second Ave .. Gallipolis Ptt .
446·4416 after 7PM .
Upstairt unturnithed apartment .
Ulilitin paid. Carpeted. no children or pett. Call614· 446 - 1637
Furnished apt. next door to
Ubrary. On'e profenional Aduh
only. Perking. Ph. 446·0338 .
Furnished apartment. $210.
utilities paid. 1 bdr. 920 Fourth.
Gallipolis. Call 4A6 -4416 after
8pm.

Reduc:.cl: 37.789 acres, surveyed. $22 .000. Call814 -446 2071 .

Modern 1 BA apartment . Call
814-446-0390 .

1 V1 ac lot on Jerry• Run Ad.
Apple Grove. with rt.~ral water.
304 -676 -2383 .
Se\leral types of lots for ul•. 10
miles south of Point Pleasant o'n
Rt . 2 . Cell 304-576· 2026 .
One acre lots on Meson 80 at
Ashton. Public water. mobile
homes permitted. $500 down.
8150 per month, 304-6762336
PRICED RIGHT - one acre
building lots on Rt. 2 It Ashton.
Public water and mobile hom..
permitted. 304-571 -2338.

Renlols
41

Houses for Rant

Nicely furnittled small hou1e.
Adults only. References r ...
quired. OH ttreet perking. Ph.
614-44e-033B .
Half of a double. 121 State St. 8
rooms, bath. carpet. •200 •
month. Sec. Dep. and Aet.
required .
2 IFI.. unfurnished house wtth
g•age. Accept one child. Ref.
and Oep. Call 114·448·9888.
4 BR . houHforrent. 3 mi. 10. of
Gallipolis. 1300 a month plus
dep. Ref. required. Call &amp;14·
448- 1811. After 5:00PM .. coli'
446-1·244.

300 w. Main St., Pom.-or .
Open HouM deity. 9:00-7:00
p.m , Check thie o,e out! You. 4 BA . house on 1 acre. Excel
may M able to buy lor les• than lOcation. Flel. Call A -1 Fleaf
rent. Calll1•·992·3841 .
Estatelroktr.

Furnished Rooms

Rooms for rent . day. week.
month. Gallie Hotel. Call 614·
446· 9680. Rent as low as S120
month .
Furn i shed room. 875. Utilities

paid. Share bath. Single male.
919 Second. Gallipolis. Call
446- 4416 after 7pm .

46 Space for Rent
Offiw Space tor Rent. Excellent
for Attorneys, Accountant etc.
Close to Coun House. Call
Wiseman Reel Eetate Agency .
61 · -446· 3644 .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33, Nofth ot .Pomeroy.
Rental trailers. Call &amp;14 -992 7479 .
Space for smell trailen. All
hook-ups. Cable. Also efficiencv
rooms. air and cable. Mason,
W.Ve. Call 304 -n3-!5&amp;61 .
SPACES FOR RENT - Trailer
lots, Rt . 1, Locust Road, back of
• .. • . 304· 676 - 1076.

47 Wanted to Rent
3 or 4 Bedroom house .in.Kyger
Creek Scttool District. Referen ·
cas Ph. 614-446 · 8621 .

49

For lease

FOR lEASE : one · bedro om
apartment overlooking city park.
t175 . pet month. Calt614· 4•62325 or 446-4425.

Br~okside

Apartmentt: 4A6·
1932 or 448 -4839. One Bedroom apartment with large
country kitchen, new appllanees, utility room . water. sewer
and trash services provided.
Quiet area.
Furnished efficiency , 701
Fourth Ave . S180 utilities ·j)d.
Call 614-448-•416 after ~pm .
Furnishtd.downslairt, 3 rmt .
d b ..h Cl
A."l..
an
· ~
ean,dNRopf ..Rs. quo
'tod
only · D epoan an
e· e
·
Celt 614 446 1519
·
•
·
Nicely furnished. 2 8R . apartment. Nicelocetion. Adultsonfy.
_c _. _11 _6_1_4_.44_6_"2
_ 4_04
_:'_ _____

Apartmontl
Now paint. nice.
good location. Call 30•· 676 6

:::~ ::. ~:-~:tove,

Furnithed.
Water paid. retrig.
Near
:r
Drive-In Theatre. Call614 -4417026.

Merchandise

End tibias from 189.96 set.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washen , dryers, refrigeratort,
r~nges
Sk1ggs Appliances .
Upper Ri~er Rd. bnkle Stone
Crest Motel. 614 -446 ·7398.
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofas and chairs priced from
t396 to 1995. Tablni'•5o and
up· to &amp;126 . Hid~a -. beds 1390
to 8696 . Recliners 1226 to
1376. Llmpa •28· to 1125.
Dinettes t109 and up to 1495.
Wood table w -6 chain 1286 to
t795. Oetk t100 up to t375.
Hutche1 •400 and up. Bunk
beds compl~t w -m1ttreue1
•295 and up to S395. Baby beds
., 10. Mattresses or box ~prings
full or twin t88 , firm $78, and
taB. Queen 1ets •226. King
1360. 4 drawer chest $69 . Gun
cabinets 6 gun , Gas or electric
range 8375. Baby mattreuet
136 &amp; U6 . Bed framu S 20.
UO &amp; King frame t60 . Good
•election of bedroom tuitet .
metal cabinets, headboard• S30
and up to 185.

90 Days same as cash with
appro \led credit. 3 Mile~ out
Bult~Yille Rd. Open 9am to 5-pm
Mon . thn.a Sat . Ph. 614 -4460322 .
SWAIN
AUCTION S. FURNITURE 62
Olive St., Gallipolis.
NEW- 6 pc. wood group- 4399 .
Li~lng room tuites· 1199-5699 .
Bunk beds with bedding- •199 .
Full size mattr"s &amp; foundation
starting· 199 . Recliners
starting· S99 .
USED· Beds. dr"•ers. bedroom
auit11, t199 - $299 Oeskl,
wring.- wather, a comptet:aline
of used furniture.
NEW- Western bootl· 130.
Workb.oott 118 &amp; up. ISreal &amp;
soft toel . Call 614- 446-3159 .
County Appliance. Inc. Good
u1ed appl iance~ and TV sets..
Open BAM .to 8PM . Mon thru
Sat. 614-448 -1699, 627 3rd.
Ave . Gallipolis, OH .

•

~I&lt;D

THE WORKING

Man

Boats and
Motors for Sale

u rn

$100 . Mollohu Furnilure.
Upper Ri\ler Rd. Call 614- 441744.t.

Matching Kenmou1 wuher and
dryer, tlanl"l!llt gold. in good
cond. 8226 . Small c;h"t type
~refller ,
Norge; good cond.
$130. 1973 Dodge Dart. 6 slant
eng., body good shape. S525
firm . Call 614 - 446· 2370.
Two commercial coolen for
sate· 3 doors and 2 doors. Good
co nd. Cell 614-,.45- 4731 , ,
CB almou new. R1dio with
earphonl!ll and speak••· Call
61 4· A46 · 8398. 3
like new manually operated
hospital bed with maur"• and
tide rails. Used ju11 t~eral
weeks. Sold new for •1400.
uking only S600. Alto brand
new folding wheel chah. Never
uted out•ide. Uaad only 3 drtt
int lde. Sold new tor 16•6.
Asking 8300. 614 ·992· 2786
Reward Yourself with a new
heavy duty zig· tag tlngersewing
ma c hine . $uggu1ed lilt
S239.99 . Your price thi1 week
only •169.99 . The fabric Shop.
614· 992 · 2284.

TONY ' S GUN REPAIRS . hot
rebh.1eing. now tak ing ord•
o rder~ for cu1tom Mautert. c4tll
304-876-4631 .
.
580 8 Cas• Ba ckhoe l oadar,
t9,600.00 . 30t -•U · 1031.
1971 GMC Tandem Dump
Truek. 671 GMdieselengine.- 10
·~ trans., ~r br.-n. PS.
17500.00. 30.. ·45"8 -1031 .
Tappan gas range, -36 ·inch. and
Kelvinator electric rang.. 25
inch; large dog houlf!l, 304 -676·
7984 .

~ats for Sale

56

wire

Meytag wringer wuhing machine Bo Seers conaole humidi·
tier . Beth In excellent cond.
304 -895· 3393 .

55 Building Supplies
Building Materials
Bloct., briek. sew" pipes. w in·
dows, lintels, etc. Claude Wintart, Rio Grande. 0 . Call 614·
245 · 6121 .

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Two male AKC Pekiragese puppin. 3 mos. old. t100 ..ch. Call
614-256-9391 .

Clean 01t ttraW. t1 , 50 par blla.
Call 614· 9•9· 3059 aft• l o :OO
p .m .

Norwevian ElkhoYnd puppi•
and one Pom•anian puppy,
304-896-3926.

Mind hl'f •1 . bale on wagon.
Hay tor ,beddlng 60c . 304·675.
5679.

reg . Pom•anian pups,
Yorkshire Terrlor, P•klng•• &amp;
Mlultt, Skieyu• pupa all reg.
a.. Kapp 304· 195-3958.

CCC Certifi cates.
2443.

AKC

•i•

AKC Aohw..l• pup. male 12.
wka. 1350. 304· 675· 1281.
AKC reginered Chespeake Bay
retriYer puppln, 3 mat•. Make
good gundog or a t~mlty pet.
Good with children. t200. 304 273- 4716.

57

Wurliter doutHe keyboard mgtn
and btnt:h. Good condition .
A1king 1300. Will negotiate.
&amp;14· 742 ·21 03.
Bundy II SB.k 1nd Ca ... llk1n..., .
after 4 :30, 304·876 -&amp;A&amp;O .
Bach Stradivartut Trumpet, top
of line: 3 yaart old. E•c ... ent
cor,dition , •100 . 304 · 882 ·
JA48 anytime,

58

Fruit

&amp; Vegetables
Red ret~r i n . Pick 'fOYr own
or w• pict.. Celt Taylor's Berry
Pal(:h. 614-245 -15054 011 446·

Be92.

Cann i ng tomalon 14 .00
pic•~ - 13,00 pidl your own.
Call Wavn• Rowe 81A· 2472277 Of 614· 247 -2515,

304 -875-

Miaecl hay. Alfalta • clover ·
urau. rauonabla price. 304576·2021.

Mnrgan• Woodhtwn F1rm, At,
3&amp;. 304·175· 1288.

Tr~nsportatwn

71

Autos for Sale

&lt;'J

liVI:ollld

61 Farm Equipment
.CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S, 3&amp; W•t Jackaon. Ohio.
614· 286· 8461 .
~•ssey hrgufQn, New Holland.
Bush Hog Sates I. Ser\llce. Over
40 usN tfacton to chooae from
&amp; complete line of naw &amp; uNCI
eq~o~ipment. Largest tel~ ion in
S.E. Ohio.
U~iHty bfdg : 27' 1138'19' . 13' s.8 '
track door &amp; 3' walk door.
t44•4 erected · Iron Houe
Bldgt. 11•· 332· 9745 .

1977 Cam•o. rtilty spon , •ut o ,
po .. pb. 01600, Call e14 ·266·
1 '4 1 or 251·611o43.
1979 Aeglti. low 'T'ilft. new
~in l 1981 Chevat1e. lowmll•.
1986 Pontt.c. T-1000 198&amp;
Chav.tte. 1 91" Aell.,t. Call
614·A46· 6980.
1983 Oodg• Colt 4 spd Shlt'p
11799. Cell814- 44&amp; · 4782
19?8 Ctt.vy Malibu . JOe ~g
runt good . Body fOtJ!Qfl . Celt
61t-•t8-7784 after 6pm.
1977 ptymouth Vol•• 1t1tklfl·
wagon. 318 ~glne. Aunt I)OOd
Call 6,4·448· 2274 .

1983 FordF1irmont · on•owntr.
Ilk• n.-. a2495. 1981 M11da
ptctl.-up truck. Nice. No rull.
11695. cane14 -2&amp;e- e5:Z2.
1983 Chwena. Standard. 4
1Pt8.d. in good cnnditiort .
t9.000 mil H . 1 32 Butt..-nut
Pom•ow. Ohio.

191JO D iesel 'tJ . W . Rabbit
.1850 . 1973 Plpar ChtrokM
140 113,000. 1974 wrtekld
Corvette con~ttrt lble •1800
,, • . 949-2756.
1982 ford . E!itp. PS , P8, air,
AM -FM, sun roof. le.. her saa11.
02000 cHh. Call e14· 381·
97&amp;5 after &amp; p. m ,
1818 Pontiac La Man•. 2 door.
h•d top, hiuhPt'rformancebuilt
engine. 4 apiHd. Good condi·
tiOn. •2400. Cell 614·742 2373 afttt " =
00 p.m .

Concrete blocks all tiles yard or
deli\lery. Mason sand. Gallipolis
Block Co., 1 23 '1J Pine St ..
Gallipolis. Ohio C111 614· 446 2783.
.

62 HP Massey Fergu10n Oieeel
traelor with plowt, diac, corn
planter and bush hog. 12950.
C•ll614-281·6622.

RetKfy mix concrete and all
concrete suppliet. Call u1 Valley
Brook Cement and Supplies,
304-773· 523,4 .

John D. .re 45 EB Combine. 2
row corn heed· 10 ft ., 1 2 ft. grain
table. Good cond. t2600 . Call
614-245· 5593 .

56

New Holl ..nd aqu.,e baler and
John Deere bar ralkt. •1&amp;00 .
1977FordWagonlT02. 1700.
C11l befort 2 :00PM .· 514· 317·
· 614- 949· 2263 or 614 ·949·
0632 .
2168.

Pets for Sale

Groom end Supply Shop -Pet
Grooming . All breeds . . . AII
styles. Julie Webb Ph. 614 -446 0231 .
Dragonwynd Cetterv Kennel.
CFA Himalayan, Peralan and
Siamese kittens. AKC Chow
puppie~. New kittens; Siamese
and Himalayans. Call 61 4 -446·
3844 after 7PM ,
AKC Boston Terrier. Call 814·
266 -9364
'h ChowChowpuppiet.Mothet"
AKC registered. Father 1. 2
malet. 2 females· I wk• . old,
Aug . lOth. Cute! t40 ••ch. Call
614 · 446 • 2108 Of 446 • 9&amp;16 .
Rat terri..- pups. Natural bob
tails . Phone 6,4· 446-3t13.

f(~~~~t~~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

Must Sell· Selling Farm. 360
International tractor, PS , good
tires. live power, plows. diatt,
cuhivator, vrad• blade, cuh i·
packer included. t2200. Call
after 2 :00PM . 614-446·4060.
International 360 diesel tractor
with loH•. 12395. 1200 Dav.ld
Brown dlnel tractor. t2496.
Grind..-, Mi•er. t150. Call tn4 288-6622.
Bars, chains. and sprockets to frt
almott any saw . SIDERS
EQUIPMENT CO ., Hendeuon,
W. Va. 304·178·742, .
,
NowHolland717FotgoHa"'o•·
ter. New Holland 7' H•y"'no.
""
Gehl 95 Grinder: mbter. AM lilt·
callent condition . 30•·273-

~!.,."\".";.!~~,.~~7Hnt'7l:"•

Tobacco sticks *115 . pet' 100.
Morgan'• Woodlawn Farm. Rtt .
36. 304·S75- 12Be.

Now buylnl shell eorn or ••
corn. Call forlat"tquot". River
Ctty Farm Suppty, IS14· 4oll·
291&amp;.

63

Livestock

Ouroc Boars. Btld just like the
boars we tested .. the Ohio
_TH1atlon thlt gained over 2. 1
lbt. per
Rot• l•ntt..,,
Sablntt, OH. 513·1584-2388.

d"'.

room apartment• 1t Vlll-.ge
Manor •nd Rhlet"alde Aplrtmenu In Middleport. From
$216 ., inelud~ni utilhi•. Cell
61 4-992· 7787. EOH.

Beef cow with 8 month old
hotlfw. Call 114· 387-0824.

115 month old Ch.-olles Bull, A .l .
btod. Call &amp;14·44e•4447. ·

I Interest you In a
and improved
'No soliciting' sign?"

'

1977 Ford .. door, LTD , AC ,
auto, PI, PS . 116 1 700 miln.
Pfione &amp;1•· 992· 73!i2.

1172 Ford Galaxy, auto, good
condition inside and out . 1650.
Cash. Call 6,4 -986 -3569 or
814·992-2807 .
1985 Buick Somerset LTD. V8,
PS . PB. air. cruite. load1d. d.-k
ch•co.t gray exterior, dovegtay
interior, 28,000 miln, for more
lnformMion eall614-949 -2820.
1967 Chrytlar Newport, good
condition . 3220 Franklin
Avenue. Point Pla•aant . ,w. Va.
19715 Cutlau Supreme V-8 .
•Ytomltlc. Runs good. no rust.
304·676-7376 .

-reports on wortd economics

and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30}
tDl llJ) Wheel of Fortune

e
~BenJOn

•

•

EST·

.I THIN!.; li~

•

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Un conditk)nlll lil .. lrne 11u.,.,.
tee. loca.l rat•aneas tutnlthed,
Free 111 imat11 C•ll coll.et
, · 11•· 237-0411. day Of nM,ht.
Aog11ra8at1m1nt
Wat~roofinQ.

'"''"Q

Hol1teln Bull C.lves. Cal 814·
388-1124.

72

TNckl for Sale

1113 Ford C•b OYer Dump
Truck. S2000 firm . Call ~14 992-6092 . .
CARS, JEEPS. TRUCKS under
e30Q/8uy Direct I Local government •1•. SIEZED 6 AEPO
vohldoa. Call NOWI 1·118·458·
3&amp;38 ext. J2284 for diraetOf'j'.
24 Hours.

ee.ooo.

1981 ford Pickup.
C111
30ol-671-7475 aftor 4 p.m.
weekd-r anytime on SlturdiV
end Sun~.,.
1973 DMoe.YJ ton piahup~ 318.
at. ps, · pb, good condition.
n2oo. 304· &amp;76-281&amp;.

B · ll..

AtLEY OOP
IT INVOLVeS A
CEREMONY IN

THE THRONE
ROOM ....

-·

the day 's world ne:t's and In

deplh fea1ure reports. (1:00)
@ MOVIE: Father of Ute

tfrido (NRJ (1 :33)
.
Ill (1J MOVIE: Roman
lfolidey (NRJ (1 :59)
8:30 (i) fi) CIJ Haad of the Clall
When Sarah's grades

EEK &amp; MEEK

Ser~t iC I .

Hou .. eaHI on RCA. Ouaur.

SVALUR FRE.SlDWIIAL

OE , Sp•cia4ing lr, hnnh Call
304 · 51&amp;· 2398
2•1154

Of

614 -448·

L15RARI£'S

•

Fetty Tne . Trimming. ttump
remo"'' Call 304· 87&amp; · 1331

plummet, Charlie confronts

her fa1har. (R) Q

9:00 ()) 700 Club

D C2J llll Night Court

Rotary Of cable t ool ddlhng
Molt welh completed same d.,.
Pump UIH end servic.e. ~04 196· 3802

H~rry ' s

Star•• Tree and lawn Service,
htwn c••· landacapinQ. ,-.ump
remo-...JI. 304 · 578 - 2842 or
678· 2903 .

I

and actress steer MacOyver

i'
•

into the middle of a drug
cartel. (A) I;!
C!J I!D Non Fiction
Telavlalon !;I
®l Ill c ·Mognum, PJ. A

' - - - - - - J ~ · / "-

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

OLIVER&amp; TrH Trimming, topping, tr imming. pruning d•ad
wood. uotm damage, ta•a
down•, Frn ~stimat". 304875· 3817.

MY DAD'S GOIN5 TO

'NOSE..JOB':
n:JNORROW.

5 TARTH I'5

carefree eKcursion finds

rH~~~~~g~O~~~~ID
~~==:-1
HAVE PLAS T IC

NO ...

5LJ RGERY~

Magnum fighting for his life.
(R)

HE'S &lt;ii;OIN5 TO WORK AS
A FRE5HNE.55 TESTER
IN A C HEESE FACTORY.

l!1l Larry King Llvel In depth
interviews with top
newsmakers. and celebrities.

9:30 D ill llJ) Slickers Cops wi1h
completely dltterent

WIGGINS MASONRY. WMI do
any brldl, block, Ilona, tlrepl•
eet. Yeare •• ptfienced. Call
304· 372· 8244 .

Plumbing

techniques learn from each

other. IR)
10:00 D (}] ([5I St. Elaowhero An
alcoholic poe1 refuses to
admit his life is in danger. (R)

"

&amp; Heating

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

CAATEA 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolia, Ohio
Phone 114-446 ·3888 or 614·
446 · 4477 ----.~
.

84

court is ordered to

decide all Its cases by
midnight (R)
Cil PBA Bowling
(i) Ill CIJ MocQyver Poet

I•'

Building and remodaUng, room
addition•. roofing , leyf)l,lt . .......
ing, 11ding. bathrooms. concrate. aiKtricel, drywall, ptumblno. 304 -175·3713

82

1i't MaJor Lalflu~ Be•ebell

-

(i) Ill (I) Hotel Two
Australian hotel men make a

fabulous bid to 1hB St.
Gregory, (Rl Q
1m 1111121 Tho Equalizer A
priest learns through

BARNEY
SOON AS I SELL
THIS CROP OF
POLE BEANS

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

confessional of an

assa&amp;sination plan. (A)

tlll ®News
1!11 Evening Newt A wrap up
of today's news and a look
ahead to tomorrow's naws

Retidential or commercial wiJ·
i~g. New aer\lice or r epairs.
Ucented electrician . Estirriate
frft. Ridenour Electricel, 304·
676- 1786.

85

stories. (1 :00)
Ill CD Sosp
10:30 ()) American Snepahoto
C!J To Live fo1 Ireland
fl) (!) USA Tonight
11:00 ill Hei'dcaaua and
McCormick
•
D C2J Tonigllt Show
(!)lntide the PQA Tour (R)

General Hauling

(i) •

-

'

on

I AM ...

Watterson's Water H1uling,
reasonable ratet , Immediate
2 ,000 gallon delivery , eisterns,
pools. well, etc. call 304-1178 2919.
Formerly Ken 's now John' s
Wet..- Set"viee. John Watterson
Jr. Owner. 1.000 or 2.000 9 .;
Mf\llce. 304-578-2248 .

PEANUTS

Upholstery

1

L.UC't', FIWM NOW ON ,

a.

R
M Custom Couches ..-.d
Reupholstery, St. Rt. 7, Crown
City. Oh. 114-258-1470, E\le,
614-446-3438. Open daily 9 to ·':
4 :30. Sat . 9 :30 to 1 :30. Old &amp;
I
n.w Upho•rerect . , . .
I
Mowrey' • Upho"t•ing HNing •• ,~
trl county area 22 'fllfs, Tha best
in furnhure uptlolttering. Call
304 - 6715 - 4164 for fret
e1timatH.

1M BEIN6 li:EPLACED
BV A D06 ?!

WE'RE 601N6 TO HAVE
5~0Cfl' PLAY RI6~T-FI ELD

W~O

DID VOL! TI-l iNK

tDl lportl Tonlght Action

I WAS, TED[)!( li:U)(PIN?

'

----~--~

''
'

--~~-~""h
8

~
••.;::.; !2:~~.-~
· ~:J
.. .. L_____.t;r.:::!:,.-4-::.!":..J .J,---111
:
. .=

(I) IIDl Ill Q2l llJ)

Newa
C!l Sign
I!D Keith County Joumel
FOllow author John Janovy,
Jr. into the Nebraska
sandhills to learn lessons
from natura, such as termites
living under cowpies and
snails In marshes.
1!11 "'oneyllne Currant
reports on world ~nomics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
11J Tslee ftom tho Dolllaldo
A Choice of Dreams
• (!) Love Cor.noctlon
11:30 {I) Spot18Conter (L)
(I) WICAP In Clnclnnott
• (I) Nlghtllne Q
1111 Trapper John, M.D.

I STINK ...
1\IEREFORE

R &amp; R Water Service. Home ; 1 '
claternt, walla, pools filled. 1 ,
Formerly Jamet Boy1 Water.
••
Call 304 -575-1370.

87

YEST,RDAY'S SCRAM-LEn ANSWERS
S~amp - Grist - Denude - INST~D of ME
Attar a big family meal of turkey, mom wrotelh1s note and
left It on the fridge: "Pick on turkey." Dad replied, "INSTEAD.
of ME." - - - - , - - - - - - -

Claret -

'

BRIDGE
A few plans
to choose from

.KQ9

By James Jacoby

+A 9 6 4

NORTH
8-tz-17
.109762

+4

.6

v

murderer leads Hammer
across the country to L.A . (R)
1!11 Primenews Wrap ups of ·

Roofin;. carpeting an~ gen•at
hom• rtQair C•ll GarY I14 . JIJ8 ·
8642 .
.
Tele~t i t i on

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTER S
TO GET ANSWER

i

SW(EPEA and
maddne
repetr . p.na, and IUppUM. Pidl
~o~~p 1nd dehverr. Oa~tia V~um
Ctean•r , on• half m l!• u p
Georon CrN!: Ad . C111 114441·0.21•.
.

A0/11 ' $

e

1.,.

e1H•.,••o-

J &amp; J Water SerVice. Swimming
pools. Cilterns, wefls. Ph . 614 245· 9286 .

'80 Pontiac Phoanix auto, ac,
h .. ehbaclt. garage k.pt-nice car
111500. Can see Flatrock, AI . 2 .
304-.675-4438:

fofZ HIS

. T'"'"'""-5

1964 Ford Oalu.y 600, Southern c•. 304-175-7340.

'75 Ford l TO, good cond. Make
offar. 304-895 -39615.

-.

TIMe

...

EAST
How would you play four hear!$? WI!ST
+Qs
a
+at
You might just play A-K-J of spades
.A843
and then play hearts, forcing out the
• 10 7 2
+KJ8:i3
ace and hoping. that neither defender +Q7
+KI083
52
began with four trumps. That way you
SOOTH
could draw trumps ending in dummy
.AKJ
and enjoy two good spade tricks. But
.J10752
you might run into a little trouble with
IIJSoolp
t AQ96
toclay's
layout.
1:00 ()) Daktart A Bullel for
+J
An easier approach is to crossruff,
Hedley
planning
on ruffing three diamonds in
Vulnerable: Both
D (}) llJ) Hlghwoy to
Dealer: North
dummy, scoring the club ace and the
Heaven Mark undermines
A-K of spades, and ruffing a lew clubs
Jonathan 's efforts when he
Norlb East
fears he may lose him . (R) Q in your hand. Let's see how that would West
Pass
PaSs
(!) Blllarda Third Annual
work. Win the club ace and rull a club.
Pass
Pass
Resons International 9-Ball
Play ace and ruff a diamond, and ruff
Pass
Pass
Championship from Atl1111tlc
another club. Cash the A-K of spades. Pass
Pass
Pass
City, New Jersey: Jose·
Ruff a diamond and then rull dumParlee vs Nick Varner (T)
my's last clu~, This time you may ~s
Opening lead: + Z ·
(]) MOVIE: Elvia on Tour (G)
well
trump
with
the
jack
or
10
of
(1 :33)
hearts, just in case West was leading L _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...__ _--J
(i) . 1!J CIJ Perfect SlrBIIQIIft
from
a three-card suit. Now you can
Mad a1 Twinkie, Balkl and
ruff your last diamond with the last simply have discarded one of his low Larry qui1 and takl!_jobs at
graa~ spoon.(R) t;J
heart honor In dummy. East can over- spades and held you to 10 tricks.
C!J IIJ) National Geographic
ruff or not, but you cannot be preventA rule worth remembering when
Speclll Examine what
ed from scoring enough tricks to make you are making tricks by crossrulfing •
happenod during the eruption
an overtrick. What was the trap in the is to takeyour high-card winners first , '
of Mount Vesuvius in 79 A.D.
band? If you were 99 careless as to before either defender can throw
ruff your fourth diamond before cash- away any little cards in the suit.
1111121 The Maw Mike
ing your second high.sl!ade, East could
Hammer The trail of a

SP.rVICI!S

Dilllrd Water Ser'&gt;~i ce: Pools
Cilterna. Wells. Deliv ery Any~
time. Call 814·446 -7404·No
Sunday calls.\

1982 AMC. Spirit, real good
cond. t1 ,800. 30•· B82- 33B&amp;.

Sl (!) Star Trek
(2) . (I) Newlywed Qeme
(!) Seholeotlc Sporta
Amertei(R)
(]) Honaymoonero
Ill (I) Judge
1m W - of Fortune Q
tDl Crouflre (0:30)
Ill Q2l llll Jeoperdyl Q

J

7:30 D

ctt...,y motor hom• 350
Mlf·contalned, 60,000
, 0 mil11 INt gaiJon, he
14,000 304·895· 3884

1983 ChiiVelle Melibu, auto ..
PS, air cond .. ' 8 cyl.,4 door.
82,150.0. after 6 ph0ne304· 675Z&amp;83.

1

62 Wanted to Buy

Gractou1 tl\llng. 1 and 2 bed-

1 982 Oldsmoblleloronldo. di•
t!!l engine !locked upl. Will
accept eny ru1onableofltr. Call
614· 992-"2171 batw•en 9 :00
am and 6 :00pm,

(]) Sanford end Son
(i) Entertainment Tonight
D CIJ People's Court
(I) llll MscNall/ Lehrer
NewoHour (1 :00)
1m Newt
1!11 Moneyllne Current

•

...

"

f9 PR INT
NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

(!) SportsCenter (L)

,.

..

I_ I_
Comp lete the chuckle quoted
• I_ 15
.
_
by fil ling in the mi ss ing words
I
L....JL-....1.-.L-.L....JL--1 you deve lop from step No. 3 below .

McCormick

SPAC!:WAl-fc:.

81

I I I I 11

ME P N N A

iD (}) PM Magazine

24 ft ·camp..- With tandtm
whHia. full bt'ltl. Good ·ebndi·
Hon Sleept till , Call 614 · 992~
7272
1970
moiCM
miln.
Cond.

HI T R Ez

My neighbor works at. a day
care center. One day I found her .
_
.
.
.
. _ making a sign to be placed beside
.
the sandbox. The sign read:
.-,--------,I"Mudpies- Organized-."

7:00 (]i Herctcaitte and

1187 30 tt. tihhwh~ ScM"p•
Camptr wi1h Qf whhout 198"
-FO;rd pic• · up. Call 11t· 992·
2794,

......,.,..--..,

....~r_-

rhe

I ::.....;.-1:....,:::_1.:.;...-JI

York. (0:30)

•aoo.

l.:;::::::::::::::===:.l.:==========~
_4_2_1_5_
. - - - - -- - -~
16' Fifth Wheel Ca:ttle Trail•.

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

tAMI

LIPEM

i!]l JeHeraona

Used and Rebuih transmlufona.
lnt..-nally inspect.t and guann·
teed . tnttalletion ev•lebte. We
buy kmk trantml11font. C•ll
114· 441·0966. .
•

of

WOlD

I
2
~
i
I
i
G0 N I J I;
I1--1.:::-.:,I:..!!TI:1:-...::;.1-1 7

a CIJ llll 111 c

anchored live from New

Auto Parts -~~
&amp; Accessories

1982 Plymouth Reliant Station·
wagon - one own..- . t1995
1982 .Impala. V • IJ , auto ,
PS .. PB ., velour interior, AC .
13296. Coli 614· 281· 8622

Quality Fruita and Vegetlbl"
198• Ford I ronco 1)11. Spltdll
ret•il end wholnlte. I • S
Edition. 40.000 mN•. heat
Produce 1eross trom Plua Hul. · cond. Call 814·440· 1211 .
G•ltipolia. Ohio.
1814 Honda CMc, " doOf'
Yellow Freestone c ennin~
Sedan. 33, 000 mil•. A J ., "-C •
peach" now .vllilabl.. Call for
AM -FM tteuo-Cau. neow neM
vari1ti" and prices . Bob ' a beh Aecbl tlfn with tO.OOO
MarkM, M ..on. 304-773 · 5721
m;t" warranty h e ... cond. Call
Open 7 Daya.
614-245-9417 .

f trill SIIPIIIII'S

76

(i)

ol

1983 11ft. Bayliner I:M&gt;at wrth
trail•. 86 HP Clnylfer _motor.
&amp;14-992.-"1663 efttr 4 ~ 30 .

F. .d Special for August. OatAifllf•Hay - Straw t1 .50 bii•-

Musical
Instrument•

-lcEtectric Lowary organ • · 1
shape. t700 firm. 614-9922671 .

BN Ford tractor. buth·hog. ditc.
plows Ia blade. 12500 firm .;
1981 HondaCB900cuslom, hi
low range . 12 . 000 miles
t 1900.; Chest-freeur 30 cu tt.
good shape. t 126 304 -773·
5944.

Nice 3 BR . Apt., stove. water,
gH. AC., futnithed. Dep. and
Fief. requirad . Call 814- 441·
1&amp;43.

*

171h ft. fib..-glna boat whh 21
ft . cu1tom (n.tcfe trailer. 100 HP
Evenrude motor. •1500. Can N
11en at 435 H. . dley St .•

Full si:re "• tightly used mattress
set . S60 . 814 -992· 5224.

College. Call 814-245-9417.

•'

~~:::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::;•;•";';~:~::•· ;~;L~ _M_I_d_d~-~
~rt_.______________

Plastic cittern ttate approved,
plastic tept lc tankt , plastic
culvertt, metal culverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jackton. Oh. 614-288 -5930.

2 SR . Apt. Close to Rio Grande

WI T H CAR-OL AND
WA !&gt; H - THE PROP D IE.DI C ~IM&amp;~D OUT ON. THE'
WING- I Fei.L~

Pontoon Boat - 50 H P. Johnaon.
trailer. 12750. Call 614 -4464043 aft., 6 :00PM .

Amana air conditioner. Brand
new. 18,000 BTU . Call 614·
446 -0991 .

513 Third Ave. 1 BR . •1BO per
mo. Deposit required. Call 614441-434&amp; after 5pm.

I WM

14ft. Bo.t. ltlil•. 8liC81. cond .•
3&amp; HP . Evinrude motor. Price to
1..1. Call 614~ 446 · 20&amp;&amp; . Eftn,

Financing avail. Swivel rockers,

Callahan ' • Used Tire Shop . Over
1,000tires, siles12. 13, 14, 16,
18, 18 .5 . 8 miles out Rt. 218.
Call614· 266·e251 .

I

•

(]) Down to Earth Stereo.
C!J Dr. Who Stones of Blood
I!D Secret City
IIJ Good Tlmu
Sl CD Buc;k Rogers
6:30 D (}) llJ) NBC NlghUy Nawl
(!) ln1ldt the POA Tour (T)
&lt;D Leeva It To Beavtr
(I) Ill CIJ ABC Nowo !;J
C!l NlghUy Buolneoo Report
®I Ill Q2l CBS Ntwa
I!D Ne-n•o Apple (0:30) 1:1
1!11 ShowBiz Todsy News
the entertainment world is

'

1339.

letterS

· four scrambled words be-

llJ) News
(!) SPOrtoLook (T)

Call 614-4415-1528 or 446-

CARPET- 9~t12 - 11 low 11 S50·
lots to pick ffom. Alto eut ,
CM'pet , $6 .00 a yd. and up.

54 Misc . Merchandise

O Rearrange

EVENING

16 ft. fit.glau . 40 HP, Johnson motor and trail•- 81&amp;00.

MAN'S FRIEND

C8, TV, Radio
E.q uipment

WED., AUG. 12

At!~

and up

Furnished Apt. Adult' only, All ,
utilitin paid. Get ·ready tor
winter. ~all 61'4· 446·9523 .

Fo.r ren1 : Efficiency cottage, Mt.'
Vernon Ave . Pt. Ple1Nnt. Hud
approved. 614-992-&amp;858.

75

rock,.., , Recliners from 199.96

52

'::~:~' S@\\.tllA-L£t.trs·
~....;.;.;_.;__::...;:; ldltad ~y CIA Y I . 'OUAN

6:00 ()) Big Valley The Buffalo

Ut&amp;d Furniture: btdroom tuitea. '
full tiled beds. twin beds 1nd

Daily Sentinei- Page- 13

low to form four simple words.

drlollt(lr. 148 .• 6 drawet. 1159.96;

1 4x6 Superior ehr ome
whe•ls , 304 -875 -4392 .

51 Household Goods

\1A-W.,,

JU5f lAAT
I'VE: Nt:&gt;VI?¥./ ...1

'85 HondeXR100. Can tt.1een
lot 36, K •I( MobilaHomaPark.

4

45

Pomeroy. $200 month. 614 992 ·6753.

Two bedroom mobile home. Call
aftet" 6 p.m .• 304-676 ·8483.

dr~wers,

Good used color T.V. for sale.
floor model and portable. Call .
814 -446 -1149.

2 bedroom trailer for rent in

Mobile Home For Rent - 2
bedrooms, tumished , 304· 675·
6612 .

tuites, 1399.95; New lfving
room suites from 1179.96 to

--------- -- -- -- -

FOR LEASE: Apanment with
completetv remodeled kitchen.
bath. bedroom and livingroom.
Available middle of August .
Second floor , corner Second and
Pine. Parking area provided.
t225 . per month, or 1250. with
3 bedroom mobile home for rent
in Syracuse. Calt614 -992· 7689 . kitchen appliences furnished .
Call 814-448· 2325 or 446after 5 :00,
4,.25.
..

For rent . Futnished 2 bedroom
trailer. Racine. 61t -992 -5039.

New wood 6 pc. ltving room

Television
.
.
Viewing

~ .. IT'5

condition , e&amp;oo. 304· 87fi ·
2788 .

T~

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

.IM...

1979 Honda CR 260. peellent

PARSON ' S FURNITURE

1700.; Chnt of

BORN LOSER

Motorcycles

1911 Kaweukl. C•ll 614 -4481180.

ture . 1216 Eutern Ave .•

Efficient apanment for rent
8150 .00 month. Plus electric &amp;
deposit and references . Call
304-773 -6944 .

14x65. 2 BR ., total electric with
woodburner on prklate lot. 10
min. from town. 8200 a mo.
Oep. and refer . required . Call
114· 258 -1393.

1 .84 acres , nice flatland
Conven . location . Call 814 -4487821.

1 V1 aeres ri\ler front propeny in
Syracuse. 14x70 mobile home,
101130 enclo1ed porch, new
24• 32 garage. Call Glenn Cun·
dill 814· 992· 3905

In MICidlaport. Ohio, 2 room
furnished apt, 304-882· 2566 .

Houses for Rent

3 bedroom house in Pomeroy.
Garage, new kitchen. Oepoeit
required. Call 61 •·992-6656.

Own your own apparel or shoe
store, choose trom : jean sportswear, ladies apparel.
men ' s. cftildren -materni1:y. large
ai~:es. ·-petite. dancewear aet"obic. bfidal, ling..-ieor accet·
sorlea store. Add cOlor analysis.
Brenda : Liz Claiborne. Gasoline,
Hulthtelt, Levi,. Lee, &lt;;:amp
Beverly Hills, St Michele. ChMJs.
Outbac:tt Aed. Genesis. Forenu ,
Orgenicatty Grown, over 2000
othet"S. Or S13 .99 one price
designet". muhi tier pricing dit·
count or temilv shoettore. Retail
prices un.,elifN'eble for quality
show normalty priced from S 19.
to sao. over 250 brand• 2600
styles. 114, 800. to 526,900 :
in.,.,tory, training. fiktures,
grand opening, airf.-e, etc. Can
open 15 days. Mr. Loughlin
[61 2)818 4228.

houses. P1. Pleaaent and Gallipo·
lie. 614 -448-8221 .

Apt . S1 99. per · month plus
utilities. Ref. &amp; small deposit
reqUired . 304-n3-9594.

0 pportunity
I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . recommends that you
do businets with people vou
know. and NOT to send money
through th• mllil until you hlNe
invMtigated the off..-ing.

APARTMENTS. mobile homes,

3 rooms and badt gat heat,
ground floor. wash8r and dryer
hook up, no children, immediate
occupancy, No petl. phone
304- 675 -4480 &amp;Kt 53 or 60.

Grover' • L..wn Mower Repair.
We' ll pick u~ end dellv••· Good.
used mowers tor 11le. Call
614 -742 -2393 or 614-742 3091 .
.
LAWN MOWER REPAIR SERVICE . Also lawn cutting. 304675- 1553.

1 b.droom apt. in Middleport.
All utilitin paid. e21 0 manth.
814-992·1713.

2 bedroom furniaed apt. rlrland
deposit, NeW Haven. W. Va .,
304- 882-3287· or 304-773.
6024.

Will Baby ail in my home. Exper.

23

KIT 'N'

Gallipolis.

5646 d-vs 1nd 614· 949· 2216
weningt.

18 Wentad to Do

21

51 Housahold Goods
v•uev Furniture, new • Uted.
Large ttetion of quelity furni-

care for the eld•ty in mv home.

Wednesday. August 12. 1987

1987

Ohio

••

.P8ckad aportl highlights with
Nick Charles·end Jim Huber.
(0:30)
Ill ®'Hot Slloto• CBS Leto
Night Amanda go&amp;6
undercover to lnvesUgata a
ao called accidental death.(R)
. tRI Trapper John, M.D. Don't
Rein on My Charade
tiS Tonight Show
• CD Leto Show

~..,,.,(
by THOMAS JOSEPH

'

"

ACROSS , 3 Winged
1 Keystone
4 Ninny
Kops'
5 Push out
activity
6 Chopped6 Surround
up food
9 Ease up
7 Yale
10 Drooping
student
12 Modify
8 Ironclad
for usage
warship
13 Tendon
11 Tiny
16 Ran into . 14 "1'wo - "
16 Cheer
(film with
34 English
18 '"Who am
27 Across) 26 Curtain
river
- argue?" 17 Consumed . fabric
19 Ready to 20 Nucleus
27 Ancestry 36"A Is
29 Shame
assemble 23 Civil
Born" ·
21 Conway
wrong
on you!
of comedy 24 One kind 32 Knowing 39 -- et
22 Poem
of shovel
about
labor a
23 Carry
25 Stephen
33 Provide 41 Engage
24 Succeed
King
party
in
27 Ponti's
novel
foods
fisticuffs
mate
.,....,.,....,.,._
28 Vetch
29 Tree
30 Work unit
3t'Unabridged
35 Macaw
b-+-+36 Lay eyes on r .,.+-1-37 Event
"
of 1812
38 N.D. city
40 Lessen
42 Poet Pound b+-+-ll43 Bridge
expert
44 Swiss
river
45 Put forth
DOWN
I Swimmer's
problem
2 Hebrew
school

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here's bow to work it:

,·

"

t

,.

...
••

..

..

8112

A.XYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and 'fonnation of the words are all
hints. ~ch day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE

•

•

.....

8-12

R

K D 0

Y X D S

0 X F W B

K D 0

NR K

X A J A V

E R X

LWJWLAL

C R J A

W X C A V W F R X Z A

R X
S W F C

,.
....'

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.•r

w

"

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CWE.-

BRJRFAV
Ynterday's Cryptoquote: IT MAKES ALL THE
DIFFERENCE WHETHER YOU HEAR AN INSECT IN

THE BEDROOM OR IN THE GARDEN.- ROBERT
LYND
.
A

'

.

0

·'

..

�/

Paga 14-The Daily Sec1tinel

State Fair attendance
By DAVID HARDING
. COLUMBUS tUPI) - Brent
Billman of Ostrander showed the
grand champion and Tom Sigler
of Loudonville the reserve champion In the junior Angus steer
show at at the Ohio State Fair
Tuesday .
Warm su nshine, pleasant

V/eclnasdlly. August 12, 1987

Pomaroy-Middleport, Ohio

c~ntinues

to lag behind last year _ _ __

breezes and blue skies marbled

Kortney Huvler of Mansfield
showed the champion Montadale
the fifth full day of the 134th · ram In the junior breeding sheep
edition of the massive exhibition . . show. Judge Keith Chamberlin of
In the open steer show, "Kevin Ashland said Huvler's fall lamb
Mast of Millersburg had the had "tremendous style and
champion and Jason Forsythe of size."
Washington Court House the
The champion Montadale ewe
reserve champion.
was s h~w n byMichelleTischer of

by low clouds greeted visitors on

reserve champion.
Nevada . Chambe rli n said · Chamberlin.
Tischer's yearling was "very big
Fair attendance Monday was
The champion Oxford ewe Is
with a lot of style and owned by Kendra Lay of 1~9.871 , down 3.4 percent from
the corresponding day last year.
femininity ."'
Ridgeway .
Cumulative
attendance stood at
Shaun Creamer had the cham"It's one of thl!- largest Oxlord
797,479,
3.8
percent
less than at
pion Oxford ram. His yearling ewes I've ever seen," Chamberwas "'large, a very good breed lin said of lay's yearling.
the same time in 1986.
Fair spokesman Shane Jenkins
type, very correct,"' sa ld
In the open barrow show, Dan
said
exposition officials are not
Huii and fam ily of Washington
concerned.
Court House showed the cham"ThE: shortfall is so small," he
plan .Berkshire a nd Michaella
said.
"Now If It were ¥P ilround
Beam of Xenia the reserve
10-15
percenf,
we might have to
champion.
.
get
a
little
worried.
But 3-4 ·
The champion Chester white
yesteryear.
percent?
That'.s
nothing.
We
was shown by Corron &amp; Sons of
"But I still kind of miss the · McComb, Shari Klamforth of could make tha t up with one good
farm machinery exhibits and Urbana had the reserve day.
harness racing they used to ha ve champion.
Wednesday is Children's Home
on the fairground s," said
Jeffery Smith of Xenia showed Day a nd Peace Da y at the fair.
Malinda.
the champion crossbred barrow Gra ndstand entertainment will
Other club awards went to and Cy Prettyman of Morral the be provided by Crammy AwardRalph Sturgeon of Worthington
winner Anita Baker.
for exhibiting at the fair first .-------_!'----------------(pouliry In 19141 , Warren Weller
of Worthington for oldest male
member t87), Lucille HQpkins of
·Mount Vernon for oldest female
member (91) and Paul Shaw of
Sidney for traveling the farthes t
to attend tabout 90 miles).
·

169
Pick 4

6432
Super Lotto
31-34-9

•

at y

By NANCY YOACHAM
Senll"el News Starr
Tile Meigs Couni ;y Comrntssiqners and Department, of Human Services are reaching a goal this
fall with the creation of a day care center for th e
county . Mike Swisher, director of hum an
services, received approval Wednesday from !he
commissioners to contract with Gingerbread
House Pre-School. Middl eport. for full and
part-tlme day ca re and pre-school lear ning for a
limited number of three to six year ·olds In the
count y.
Swisher explained that priority would be given
to children whose primary caretakers are either
fuUtlme employ!'('s or enro.lled In rulltlm e school
or job training programs . Childr en enrolled for
part-time cMe might be children whose pr·imary
caretaker is Ill he said. Protecti ve daycare
services wlil a lso be Incorporated Into the
·program for children who need special carp
during th~ da y only or for a limited number of

fABRIC SHOP

FAIIIC &amp; CRAFTS/SEWING NOTIONS
POLnsnt QUILT umNG

lly lh• Yar4l
OPEN TUES. -WEO. -FRI .
10 A.M.-5 P.M .
THURS . 11 -5 P.M.
SAT. 10-2 P.M .
CLOSED SUN . &amp; MON .
LOClTD S liii.IS IIOITtl OF
CIIISTD 011 ST. n. 7

days.
The center Will operate Monday through Friday
for 10 hours a day, 7 a.m, to 5 p.m, under the
direction of Mrs. Shlrln J . Nugged. Gingerbread
House has been licensed by the state for daycare
and services will commence Aug. 24 and continu e
th rough June 30, 1988. Tille XX Income guidelines
wUI be followed Swisher said. Total contract cost
for the services Is $59,990, relmburslble from the
state allocation for daycare.
The commissioners authorized Swisher to enter
Into contract for the services and commended him
lor putting the daycare program together. We
have always felt there was a need for a daycare
cent er the commissioners said.
At the request of the Meigs County Board of
Health, the corn ,mlssloners approved a request to
place on the ballot a renewal levy ofl.OO mills to
run five years beginning In 1987. A letter to the
commissioners from the Board of He all h

FUN AND NOSTALGI(" - Uke many other (llelp Counllans
who grew up with the muslt: of the !iltle!l and early slxlles,
APllilut Prosecuting 1\ltorney Carson Crow Kels nostal~lc when
. he ·hetlr!llhe music ol " hlri day." That's why whenever lhe rroup
Phil Dlrl and I he Dozers, with their golden oldies revlt•w, Is In I he
area. Crow hi In the audience. With lawn chair In hand and wearing
hl~ Dcner• tee shirt, Crow lri on his way lo the lair and an evening of
sentimental lun. He' ll be accompanied by several other Meigs
Counllan.• who are fans of the Dozers.

Play it again. Sam!

I

•

Old tunes never die;
some just fade ·away

•

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the scandal , Reagan repudi ated
statements by his form er na tiona l security ad viser. John
Poindexter, who told co ngressional lnvt')s tjga tors that '.'the
buck stops here with me" for
approving the ·. Contra fu nds
diversion. -Poindexter said he did so to
give Reaga n "plausible deniability," although he believed the
president would have approved
the project had he been told .
''Yet the buck does not stop
with Admiral Poindexter, as he
stated In his testimony," declared Reagan. " II stops with
me."
He said mistrust between the
White House ~ nd Congress was
highlighted by "lies: lea ks, divIsions and mistakes,' ' ma ny of
which were bared In the recent
congressional hear ings into the
alf11ir.
Rea gan devoted the second
half of his speec h to his hopes for ·
his remaining 17 months in

By HELEN THOMAS
UP! White House Reporter
WASHINCTON I UP! l - President Reaga n, acknowledging
not hing he ca n say about the
Iran -Contra sca ndal "w ill make
the s ituation right," says. he was
. "stubborn" In pursuing the polIcy that ' nea rly wrecked his
administration .
In a 16- mlnute nationally tell"vlsed address to the nation
Wednesday night. Reaga n made
his most remorseful and contrite
comments to da te about the
"confusing and painful" affair.
Spea king from the Oval Office,
Reagan conceded his ploy of
selling arms to Iran to win
freedom for American hostages
had spawned the sca ndal and
admitted. "The re Is nothing! can
say that will make the situation
right.''
While Ins is t log he did not know
of the diversion of profits from
the Iranian deals to the Cont ra
rebels In Nicaragua, Reagan
said, "'I a m the one who Is
ultimately accountable to the
American people."
In assuming responsibility for

Ohio State
Fair schedule

Cambridge

explained the need for the renewal levy as
follows:
.
"The le-.y hasa llowed the Board of Health to
perform additional functions sue as immuniza tion
for influenza of our senior citizens at a sizable
savings to the senior citizen. It allows us to finan ce
the Meigs County Speech and Hearing Cline of
which many Meigs County cit izens may a ttend
fr ee of charge. These services would be cost
prohibitive or perhaps not available at all in our
area. The renewa l of the levy would allow the
Board of Healt h to continue to su pport the Meigs
County Multi-phasic Healt h Screening which is
held every tliree years at considerable costs to the
Board of Healt h. Continuati on of the health levy
would allow the Board of Hea lth to continue to
co ntribut e applica nt share of cos t on funding lor
the Meigs Cu nty Materna l and Child Health
Dental Program. Beca use of tbe applicant share
on the part ol t·he Board of Health, a gra nt in the

amount of $26,000wilsobtained for new equipment
and perhaps In the near future, a de nt al program
at reduced cost would be available to !he low and
middle income citizens of the county.''
One mill said the commissioners, would
generate approximately $156,000 for the Board of
Health.
Bids of $18,348.52 from Bob McDorman
Chevrolet, Canal Winchester, and $19,492.52 from
Jim CQbb Inc., Pomeroy, for a 1987 step van for
the Rutland Fire Department, were received by
the board. Bill Williamson, Rutland fire chief. was
at the meeting for the bid opening. The
commissioners asked Williamson to review the
bids and make a formal recommendation to them
as to w}lich bid should be accepted. The fl te
department has received $9,500 In community
development block grant fu·nding to ass ist·ln the
purchase. The department will pay for the
remainder of the cost.
Continued on ·page 12

Reagan addresses nation on Iran-Contra

-

•

2 Sections 12 Pages 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspllpllf

Meigs hopes to have day ·care center by fall

By DAVID H1\RDING
gardens and the livestock - that were an int egral pa r t of
COLUMBUS tUPil - Ohio cows, chickens, goats and horses farm life at the lime.
·
PHONE 915-3909
State Fair visitors can get a feel
for what Ohio's rural lifes tyle ~----------------'-----------.J..-------------L,,-------------------------­
was like more than 175 yea rs ago
by touring the state Department
of Natural Resources' two-story
log house in theODNRareaofthe
fairgrounds.
"A lot of people would call this
a log ca bin. but because of its
size, it 's actually a hOuse,"
explained Chris tin e Williams of
1he department' s Division of
Parks and Recreation as she led ·
a group of (airgoers on a tour of
the exhibit.
The house or iginally was built
in the mld-1880s south of Zanesville in what is now Blue Rock
State For!'St. It was reconstructed on the fairgrounds, and
decorated to iilustrate life in
1810, to give v is itors a glimpse
into Ohio's past.
The house features . period
furn iture and an original sandstone fireplace and is staffed by .
volunteers dressed in authentic
ga rb of the day.
"Mom. look. they're making
apple pie!" a young boy shouts as
he points to tht' heart h, where
crust is baking in a dutch oven .
" I'd llke to live in a cabin like
t his. da d," s ays another
youngs ter.
Th e whitewashed interior and
brightly colored furniture represent an a ttempt to lighten
otherw ise dark rooms.
"The bright colors surprise a
lot ol peo ple. " Williams sa id.
"But as soon as Ohioans had
access to pigments. they pain led
every th ing.' '
Outside, sassafra s tea is
brewed and bea n soup cooked in
an iron kettle over an open fire.
Th~re a lso are herb and kitchen

Thursday, Aug. l:i
8 p.m. - Stevie Ray Vaughan.
McDo nald·s Gra ndstand.
Friday, Aug. 14
R a.m . - Junior Draft Horse
Showma ns hip a nd Draft Horse
Po ny Show, Taco Bell Coliseum.
9 a.m. -4-H E ngineering Day,
La usche Building: Junior Hols tein Show. Cooper Arena; Lamb
Carcass judging and Open Spot
Show, O'Neill Arena.
10 a.m. - Mule Show, Taco
Bell Col iseum.
11 a. m. - Chicken Scrat ch
Contes t, Bob Evans Barnyard.
12 :30 p.m. - Ceda r Point
Variet y Show, Natural Resources Amphitheater· {also at 4:30
p.m .r; Tim Fields. Gos pel Mus ic
Pavilion .
1: :!0 p.m. - Rodeo, McDonald' s Gra ndsta nd.
2 p.m. -Hog Calling Contest ,
Bob Evans Barnyard: Ohio Stat e
Fai r Strings, Fine Arts Theater.
2:30 p.m . - Pake McEntire,
Co unt ry Music Pavilion 1also at 7
p.m. I .
4 p.m. - The Heavenly Band,
Cos pel Music P av ilion 1also at
7: :lO p.m.l :. Shawnee Indian
Da ncing, Heritage Hall Par k.
o p.m. - Mid-East Regional
Open Chi a nin a Show, Cooper
Arena.
5:30 p.m . -Livestock Parade
of Cha mpions. Bob Evans
Barnvard.
6 p.m. - Draft Horse Hitch
Show, Taco Bell Arena; llama
Show a nd Demonstration, Brown
Arena; Spot Sale, O'Neill Arena;
Boxing Tourna ment. Davey
Arena.
7:30 p.m. - Farm Bureau
Youth Squa·re Dance, Rhodes
Center.
8 p.ni. - Club Nouveau,
McDonald' s Grandstand.

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thurs~ay, August 13, 1987

Copyrighlod 1987

Hum id. Chance ol thunderstorms. Hlglt.lln low 908.
Partly cloudy tonight. Low
near 70.

16-14--20

e

Vol. 37, No.87

r.============il
EASTERN HILL .

Welcome- to 1810·at Ohio Fair

Daily Number

Page 3

Veteran fairgoers reminisce ·fairs of past.
melancholy faces, as well as
By DAVID HARDING
fair . "'It was a long way from
COLUMBUS (UP!) -Spry old chiseled countenances . Couples
Hillsboro, and the roads weren't
anything to speak of. !remember
Paul Pulse cif Hillsboro re- clung to each other, for much
my dad saying, 'Pull your hat
members his first Ohio State more tban just physical support,
and old toes tapped and palsied
down, son, we're coming Into
Fair like it was yesterday.
"My granddad brought me hands clapped to the songs of the Columbus."'
up," Pulse recalled Tuesday at a All-Ohio State Fair Youth Choir. . Ha rry and Malinda Schilling or
A wave of gray heads swayed · Columbus were honored as the
meeting of the fair's Fifty Year
Club. " It was 1911. and I was 6 as the young s ingers offered longest-married couple In the
years old.
"Bicycle Bull! for Two, " and club. The Schillings have been
pulling In double-harness for 62 ·
"Boy, it sure put the bug on · kind old eyes misted over as the
years .
me," he said. ''It was 1914 before choir sang "September Song."
The. words, " .. .but the . days
Harry ~called attending his
I got back again, but I don 't think
I 've missed but two fairs since grow short when .you reach first State Fair In 1920.
"I was livng down In Pike
then. And I wouldn't have missed September," obviously held spethem if I hadn 't been darn sick." cial meaning for this special County then," he sa id. "We drove
Pulse was among 200 old- group of people. Those who as far as Circleville. then parked
timers at the meeting of the club, could, stood to pledge ~llegiance,
~~?u.:;~~.-~he tracuon une to
which Is open to any person who and meant it.
" I remember coming to the
.a ttended a State Fair 50 or more
The Schillings, who said
fair with my da&lt;l in our old Model they've been to about 50 fairs
year s ago.
T bac k in the '20s," sa id Pulse, together , like the modern-day
The me et ing. held oddly
who received the club's award exposition better than those of
enough at the Rhodes Youth
for having attended the earliest
Center, was awas h with gentle,

Ohio Lottery

Giants
share
NL West

office.

Looking on the bright side, he
said the scandal. by pointing up
the need fo r better coopera tion

between the White House and
Congress, " may be the eventual
blessing in disguise to come out
of the Iran-Contra mess."
The prE)sident was to embark
today, on a California vacation,
with a stop en route in North
Pl atte, Neb.
Reagan may still face vestiges
of the scandal when he returns to
Was)1ington.
Special I?rosecutor Lawrence
Wa lsh is pursuing possible grand
jury indictments of pr incipal
figures in the sca ndal, and the
congressional investigators will
issue their report in October .
Dogged for nine months by the
scandaL the pres ident came as
close as he ever has to accepting
personal blame lor th e scandal.
" I let my preocctlpatlon with
the hostages int r ude Into areas
where it didn 't belong,·· a
subdued Reaga n said. "I have
thought long and often about how
to ex plain to you what I intended
to accomplish, but I respect you
too much to make excuses.
"The fac t of the matter Is that
there is nothing i can say that will

•
ISSUe

make the s ituiltion right. I was
stubborn in my pursuit of a policy
tha t went astray."
Sen. George Mitchell , DMalne, a fo r mer federal judge
who sat on the special committees , delivered the·-Democrat)c
rebuttal to Reagan's remarks,
saying, "The Mistakes were not
in the execution of the policie.s,
The mistakes were the policies
themselves ."
·
The pres id en t ' s address
avoided.direct reference to many
of the conflicting accounts of
events and left a lot of questions
hanging, but Reagan did buttress
the versions presented by Secretary of State George Shultz and
Defense Secretary Caspar Welnbegrer, who told Congress they
consistently opposed the Iran
deals.
The two Cablpet officers "bot}l
predict ed that the _ American
people would immediately assume this whole plan was an
arms for hostages deal and
nothing more. Unfortunately,
their predictions were right,' '_
·
Reaga n said.

Elegant Mississippi Queen visits\Bend area
blend of comfort and elegance,
with
art, beveled mirrors and
toda y, he'd swell with pride as he
polished
brass. She carries 400
wat ched his dream of "t he
passengers
and a crew of 150.
biggest steamboat the world has
At one polntln time, more than
ever known" make her way
round the river bend. He listen 11.000 paddlewheelers plied the
delightedl y to her melodi c river- great rivers of America. Compeboat tun es steaming from tition was so fierce that these
world's lar'gest calliope, and he'd steamboat s virtually became
watch as .her bright red paddle- floating palaces, each one try ing
wheel churned up a frothy wake. to outdo the other. Great E uroShe's the elegant Mississippi pean chefs created lavish banQueen; !mort a llzed In song as the · quets for the passengers while
"Queen of the West," and she's the finest orchestras and rivera live with m)ls lc and a,ctlvitles. boat musicians provided ent erThere's a Jacuzzi, gym, sauna, tainment. Crystal chandeliers,
movie theatre, gift shop, library, exquisite art pieces from all over
beauty salon and a multi-tiered the world and rich mahogany and
sun deck Her decor features a
If Mark Twain were alive

By NANCY YOACHAM
Righteous Brothers, · Mit c h
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
Rvder and the Det roll Wheels.
Have you ever felt a tug ai the the Turtles, the Monkees, the
heart string when you hear a n old Crass Roots. Three Dog Night
song? That tug, or sentim ental
and Cary Puckett, on his own
feeling, Is what Mr. Webs ter now without th e Union Gap. jus t
defines as "nostalgia ." Although
to name a few. They may be older
lots or things can conjure up up but they still sound the same.
feelings of nostalgia - a drive
And the Beach Boys, with their
past the old homeplace or a vis it
Ca lifornia surf sound, celebrated
to the alma matre- no ele ment
their 25th anniversary last
of life can invoke nostalgic
summer. And Jan and Dean are
Three pages of up-to-date
feelings more quickl y than
at this yea r 's Ohio Sta te Fair.
county
. his tory, one page of
music.
This kind of music ma y be
stall~tical
Information and a list
The music you grew up with
t arne compared to most of
always stirs memories when you today's music, but the sen out of county, township and village
hear It again - no matter what . concerts of the people perform- elected 9fflclals will be Meigs
your age.
Ing· the "golden oldies" prove County's contribution to a special
Maybe It' s the rhyt,hmlc , melo- there' s a vast audience of lime capsule project being spondious, _ big-band souhds of the "golden oldies lovers" out there. sored by Ohio Attorney General
thirties and forties that cause you
Perhaps that 's why so many Anthony Celebrezze Jr.
The contribution will be presto remember wistfully the "good
new groups are doing remakes of
ented
to a representative of the
ole days. "
the "oldies but goodies." Just
attorney
general's office at 7:45
• Or maybe your musical roots
this week, three songs on the Top
p.m.
Thursday
on the grandstand
go back to the fifties and sixties 50 pop chart are remakes of old ·
··stage
at
the
Meigs
County Fair.
- when rock and roll drummed songs. Maybe the revised version
and gullared and twisted and of the old song will have a little Meigs County Commission Presi· shouted Its way onto the Ameri- different vocal style, the addition dent Manning Roush will make
·
can scene.
or a keyboard and electric drums the presentation .
Celebrezze created the time
Nowadays, It's just called or the Island sound· of the steel
rock. And 10 or 20 years from drum, buill's still the same song. capsule In honor of the 200th
now, the kids growing up with
Remember Sha Na Na? Popu- anniversaries of the U.S. Constitoday 's rock will feet· nostalgic lar just a few years ago with their tution and the Northwest ·o rdi) exery time they hear a song from titles review? They've since nance, and has asked county
' the past.
·
disbanded but they sure were fun commissioners throughout the
Currently, the music of the while they were around. Their state to contribute to the capsule.
The time capsule, a five-foot
fifties and sixties Is making a enthusiasm was contagious.
titanium
container donated by
comeback. Many of the duos and
But not to worry. Put on your
J!l'OUps from that era have been bobby sox and roll up your old RMI Co. of Niles, will be burled In
resurrected and are tburlng the )llue jeans. There are other front of Campus Martlus Mucountry singing their old songs, a groups around that sing that seum In Marietta, Washington
few new songs, and selling out fifties-sixties style of rock and County, on Sept. 17, the anniverconcerts wherever they go.
roll and a couple of them will be. sary date of the signing of the
U.~ . Constitution.
The Everly Brothers, the
Continued on page 12

tea kwood fu r nishings became
t he rul e rather th an the
exception .
Today. the Mississippi Queen
is among just a few carrying on
the grand old
tradition of
steamboat in'. To rld.e the Miss1ssippi Queen. or even to catch a
glimpse of her as she passes by,
Is to take a step back in time.
Said Mark Twain, "Sometimes
we'd have that whole river all1o
ourselves for the longes t time,
and once or twice of a night we
would see a stea mboat slipping
along in the dark .. .she would turn
a corner and her lights would
wink out .. .and leave the river
still again ... "

Today, we catch glimpses or:
steamboats just a few times In"
the summer and fall. But what ·a:
thrill!
·
Meigs Countians turned oul
Wednesday night to see tM
Mi ssissippi Queen as she made.
her way back down river from a
trip to Pittsburgh. She passed:
under the Ravenswood Bridge
atx&gt;ut 6 p.m ., came through the
Racine Locks about 8:30 and
passed by Pomeroy a nd Middleport about 9:30. The calliope
played as she went through the
locks and she blew her whistle to
spectators here and there between Racine and Middleport .

Donate. to
time capsule

"

MJSSIIiiSIPPI QUEEN - . The Mlssltllllppl
Queea, ~ailed the "Queen of the West," Is one of
just a few carrying on the tradition of
.steamboalin'. dere she Is, docl!ed last Thursday
.

..,

Ia Marietta, on her trip upriver to Plttshllrp. She·:
made her way back downrlverp11-~t Meigs County.·
yesterday evening.
•

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