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·-~

I

Page- 20 - The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy - Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, June.11 , 1986

I

Glenn issues call for new space commitment
1\'ASHIJ'\l.TON !CPi r - i\merica ~ hou ld makr a nPw m mmil
mi ·ntt l) spacP r."ipl o r ~l tion as part of
lh&lt;· &lt;Wow &lt;-,· from thP Chall rng&lt;•r
d i ~: H; Jpr. ~a~· s Srn.. lohn GIPn n.
D-OhiD, a nd it should build a
rrpl~t C'1' 11ll' ll l ~ h uHii ' and .:1 spacr
:-; Ta 1inn.
'111L' fi rst ..-\ m t•r ic~ n lo orbit thr
Parlh . Clrnn oulli nrd em am bilious
agf'nda f'X plora lion prO,l'TJ m TU PS·
da~ . It included luunching 1tw spacf'
relc&gt;eoJJI ' ;md planning for a llip ro

rommitm£'nt is no lf'SS lmpor1.ant
now than It was in thr 1900s. "
The administra tion, which ha s
\'Oiced supjX)&lt;1 for spacf' rcSf'arch.
shoukl takP thf' lead. Glenn said.

Thr shultl!' Challenger was d&lt;'S ·
.Jan. 28 in a n ex plosion an&lt;l
it s 'rrc-w of Sf'\T'n was kJJl&lt;'d . That
left thr Unit&lt;-d States with lhrrr
shull lt"'s - tt.:· barf' minimum. -i n
Gl£'nn's i; if'w.
At the moment. Ill' top priori!\' ,
hr said is 10 "take earr of our
immediatl' national SI'CUiily needs
as reprrsPnled by thr backlog of
miltrar\' sUiv eillantl' sa rcllltrs
wail ing to be IIJI Into orbit. " \Vith
11'0\'rd

~b r s.

"!\om' of thL'Sl' goals ca n t..-&gt;
achit'\'rd wi t hout a national ro m ·

mi tmf'nt to sparf' r xplora lio n... hP

s;1ict. "A nd in m.' \'irw. that k ind of

lhf' shu llle grounded . that mea ns
using rockers ro Iau nch thr sa lr l·
Iii•" · hf' said.
"Thai is gelling to bra thin line.
WP can not wail roo long on that
onr ." Glenn. a" mcmbr r ri the
SrnaiP Atmrd Services Commit ·
It'&lt;'. said bul declined ro say how
soon new sarellilrs must br
launched.
When thr shu« I&lt;• goes back Int o
operation. il s t'l'l'\\'S should be
limited to astronauts and scient ists.
Glenn said. but at some !Xlint thr
"civilian In space" progra m could
be started again.
"I don't think now is the timPtodo
it. This is mt a Grey hound bus

from Washington to Colum·
bus. TilL• Is a research V('hicle, as
far as I'm coocerned. stlil In a
research stage," he said.
Glenn again praised the work of
the Rogers commission fOr discov·
ering lhe cause ri the shuttle
di'llster and for JrOjX)sing Improve·
ment s in the shunle and in
op&lt;'rations of the National Aeronautics and Spaci' Administration . He
said he had teen surprised by
discovery of the Oaw.; .
"I was surprised a t some of the
tllings they were bringing oot, tha t
had crept Int o the progra m that I
had not been aware of. " he said.
go in~

Meigs property transfers

••

Western Shirts

I

Hubbard slacks. Sizes 29 to 50. Excel·

.

J

REDUCED 30%

$1860

'

~

\i'!;..!

lent selection of solid colors in li&amp;flt
and dtrk shades .

S19.9S
122.95
S29.9S
134.95

\
.

Slach....... sl3.97
Slacks ....... S16.07
Slacks....... 520.97
Slacks ....... '24.47

.f~ ' \

t 'JJJ

s12.so .............. sa.7S

su.so .............. 19.45

- lndtptNitnt

-1

j~ntment

- Niftr I~~St -Magnal ·
ift Dack

ONLY

299°0
SUMMER

selection.

30°/o

Belts ...... l9.19
Belts ...... S9.99
lelts .... 111 .99
lelts .... s13.19

Knit Shirts· Work Uniforms
-!~· -

Wrangler - VanHeuen -Cam1.
pus quality knits in stripes
---..:-.-.{-\ and solid colors. Pick his
favorite during our big sale.

$2,9S Caps &amp; Hats Sale .....$2.06
S3.9S Caps &amp; Hats Sale ..... S2J7
14.9S Caps &amp; Hats Sale ..... S3.47
15.95
&amp; Hots Sale .....$4.17

30°/o

Regular and extra lafle
sizes. Sol id colors, plaids,
stripe s. button down or te·
gular collars. Well known
brand s.

Bib Overalls

These rugged all -cotton overa lls are designed
for worki ng comfort with oversized . fl! in·
forced hip pocke ts. hea vy duty non -corrosive
hard ware. a full bib poc ket and diamond back.
Authentic in every deta il , right up to the ham ·
me r loop and watch pocke t at the waist. And
they're backed by a full one-year wa rranty.
Size s 32 to 50.

SIS.00-517.00 .... SI2.80
SI7.SQ.SI8.SO .... Sl4.40
S2$,QO.S27.SO .... S20.80

\

"LEE" and
"WRANGLER"

Sport Shirts

MEN'S BIG BEN by Wrangler
BLUE DENIM

\

MEN'S 522.95

MEN'S

$9.95 ....... $6,97
$12.95 ..... $9,07
$16.95 ,.,$11.87
$18.95 .. .$13.27

513.00.514.00 .... SI0.80

JEANS
Sizes 29 to 42 wa ist.
Straight lea or boot flare.
pre-washed 100% cotton
blue denim.

S1788

•./'

I

\

Dress Shirts
SAVE

30°/o

Short sleeve styles. Neck
sizes 14'/z thru 17. White,
solid colors and stripes.

SAVE

By N.\NCY VOACILUI
Sentinel News Stall
Repa irs will br made to Ihe Conrail railroad
crossing at Hobson according lo Phil Roberts, Meigs
County engineer.
Robens told tiK' Meigs Count y Commissioners at
Wl'dnesday' s I'E'glliar meeting that the Conra il work
crew had been at the Hobson site earlier Ihat morning
and he talked to their supervisor.
ThE' supervisor agreed, according to RoiPns, tha t
vehicles "were bouncing" as they crossed tiP Iracks,
oof tha t he tthe supervison could nol exct'&lt;'d lhe
amount of asphalt he'd almady been alolled to makP
repairs.
The engineer said ttr supervisor called Ihe Conra il
division engineer's office in Columbus to explaln til'
problem and was told thai 15 Ions of as(ila lt could be
okayed for US€ at Hobson wi tooul an additio nal
pu rchase order .
Roberts reporlt&gt;d til' asphalt will br applied ro the
south side of t lr crossing toward Rt. 7. Roberts called
lhis commill ment from Conrail "a start. "

.,,.,"' ,.,.

I'OMliM . II ICI

CM.IMl

c:.•o

30°/o

TWILL SHIRTS
AND PANTS

Dtsiel. durability and &amp;ood
loots art yoors in these po-

··L

,.

2 Sections, 16 Pages

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

S14.9S Work Pants ............ ,.I11.9S
S1 US Work Pants I• tiiM I.... S13.50
111.95 Shirts hh. slmesl ........ S9.55
112.95 Shirts llg. sltt~tsl ...... S10.:lS
114.95 Shirts l•silHI ........... 111 .95

Swim Trunks

~

Plenty of styles and colors in sizes S (28·
30), M(32-34). L(36-38) and XL (40-42). By
Campus and Le Tigre.

.30°/o OFF

I

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

1

S8.9S ...................... SALE
S9.9S ...................... SALE
S11.9S ................... SALE
SJ2.9S.. .................SALE

S6.Q7
S6.97
S8.37
S9.07

Father's Dew Sale

SALE! LIMITED QUANTITY

Father's Dew Sale

$1200

MEN'S

TOOL SETS

TIMEX
WATCHES
Our tntiro stock is rtduudl
SAVE 250fa

leg. 11 US to 16U5
" • 1tloction of oiJloc to
,- . rrollll

Sale Prle ..
S8 96 to

In ot her business. the boa rd·
- Appmved bonds of $.1,00'1 r•ach for rh&lt;' F: mr•rp- nr y
Medica l Service administ rator and lhr· m unry dog
warden;

- Received a cert ification and a rr-ques l for th&lt;'
approphat ion of $:16,CXXl to Ihe pubI &lt;C asSista nci' fund .
and appropriated the amount :
- Aut horizf'd Clerk Mary Hobstctter 10 advertise
for bids for comput er ha rdware for the EMS
computer training prowam br ing funded by a gran I
fmm lhe U.S..Depa rtmcnl of TransjX)Ma lion t hrough
Ihe Ohio Board of RegenIs;
- Appropriated $.';,Jrti .75 - the S(&lt;'ond half
certifica tion for 1986- into Ihe dog and kennel fund ;
- Appmved a dog claim from Gi lcspic Howard,
State Rt. 143. of$325 for Ihe less of a cow and newborn
calf.
Thr board recessed the ml'(•l ing ro m :onvm e 1p.m.
F'riday to open bids fo r a distribu tor truck for the
highway department and lor inslallario n of a fi rP
alarm system al the :vlcigs Countv .Jail .

New shaft being built south
of Wilkesville, off Rt. 160

Southern Ohio Coal Co.'s Raccoon No. 3 rnne. The
shaft is ex pected to be finished by the fal.

WILKESVILLE - Usually the the engineer rrsjX)nsiblr for lhe
saying goes, "bo!loms up, " bu l lhis entire project.
Wit h rhr development of the east
tim~ it' s t:ottoms down as a nrw
of rhc main und~ rwa;· , addi·
end
shaft al SoutiK'rn Ohio Coal Co.' s
Iiana
I vent ila tion is rl&lt;:julred . Ben·
Raccoon No. 3 mine is bei ng sunk
nett
sa
id.
from the surtaceiint o the mine.
The new shaft ; referred 10 as the
"We &lt;D have the option of running
Wilkrsvllle sha ft , is being built
both
fans in parallel or increasing
about one mile south of W ilk~svlll~
.
the
horsepower
on existin g fan s."
off Ohio 160. It is needed because a
he
expl
alned.
"
bu
r the incrcaSf' in
new easl area of Ra ccoon No. 3
air
from
theSf'
two options is
mine has lx•gun to be mined.
marginal
and
no
t a long-term
according Jo Southern Ohio Coal
solut
ion."
officials.
Therefore. rhe shall is !be most
Siner the mine began production
PConomic
all er nalive. Bennett sa id.
in 1974 , most of thr coal rhal has
been mined ha s bern removed from
T he lll'w fac ility willlx·an in rak e
an area nor1h and wrst of a
shaft
when il is completed. Ben nell
sa ndstone c han n~ l.
sa
id
.
Tentat
ively, there are plans Ia
In 19&amp;1. a jX)Mion of the chan nel
convr
r
t
the
stru ct ur£' to a r£'turn
was cut through, now making an
shaft
In
two
or
threc years. when a
arf'a accessible tha t could maintain
jX)rtal
and
i nt ak~ shaft are
new
the mine for 25 years, according to
Sf'heduled
to
br
pu
r. in about lwo
Larry Bcnnl'l t, rrsidcnt engineer a t
miles
ea
st
of
this
shaft.
the mine. Bennell is responsible for
As lh&lt;' mine expands to the cost.
coordina ting thr mine activiliE's
the
nonhem sec lion.s wil l PVCntU·
~&lt;i th the shaft construction. Max
ally
move eastward as well .
Cannon. chief min ing engineer for
Currently,
there a rc thr('(' Sf'Ciions
AmE'rican Electric Power's Furl
left
in
I
he
ro
r1h end ofthemine,rwo
Supply Department in Lancaster, is

which shou ld be mo,·ed b;· the end
of thi s yPar ond third should br
moved somr t imr in 19!!7 .
Under the directio n of project
engi neer .Jim Boggs. who was also
project en gineer for " shaft al
Southern Ohio Coal' s Martinka' No.
1 mine ncar F'alrmonr. 1\'.Va ..
constru ctio n of 1he Wilkesv ille shaft
hegan in ea rly May.
" II should· be rompleled &lt;'arly in
the fall ," Bcnnen estimated.
The fi rst step was put in a
concrete "coll ar.'' or baS£'. As the
shaft ;, dug. it wil l be lined with 12
inches of reinforced co ncrNe. Alr
sweeps wil l then br installed at rhc
shaft bollom. Thr SW('('P S mund off
lhe sha rp edges thai wou ld be
formed by a straight sha ft, so tha t
the re is tess resistance for lhe
enter ing air, Bennett sa od.
Thrrr u:ere a numbe r of factors
Ia consider in determining 1he exact
loca tion of the shaft as well . Alter a
nerd was established. Bennett
looked for good access from lhe
surfaet· - lo benefit bolh mine
personnel as w~ll as thr coni ractor
for the jo b.

Two young Gallia men hit by
lightning; power is disrupted Name Bu~kley program coordin~tor

~esltl /cottl)f(, twill pants
111d shirts. And. Scotch lie·
l•see flllric Truti!Wit
.,..es these no-iron pr·
ments usy to tift tor.
Available in 1 var~ty of
colo11. Shirt ~ ... 14 ~·20:
pont sim zno.

MOW!
MEN'S

S5246
Ell~trltlrl•

i:

enttne

state board was reqursled by lhf' commissioners and
Salisbury Township Trustees on beha U of lhf'
protesters.
The commission has also recpived notice of an
application by Herbert and Shclia Rut h Wha ley . doing
bu sinrss as Whaley 's Grocery. State Rt. 681. for a
Cl -C2 permit. Anyonl' wishing lo protrst the issuan cr
of t his licmsr by the sta le board soould forward I!Fir
complaint s to the Meigs County Commissioners by
June ll.
A public hearing was S€1 for 11 a.m . .June 2'i by lhr
commissioners 10 discuss a requrst from .Jaymar
Coal Co. for renewal of a permit allowin g thf' use of
salt brine for dusl, snow and ice control a t the coal
yard. Jaymar's current permil expi res Aug. 14.
The budget commission has certified a check from
thf' state for S2'i00 for the renewa l of the summer
youth lltlrr corps program. Thr six-week summr r
program Is sc hedu led to begin .Ju ne 23 and run
through mid-August. A projX)sal from Motor Ca r
Brokers. Ga llipolis, for rf'nlal of a van for the summer
liner program wa s accepted .

Robens and the commission have been concerned
for somP lime about the Hobson crossing. TiK' traffic
hazard was created when Conrail raised ra lls lo
accomodate·hlgh speed train s.
Roberts added Conrail is repairing other crossings
in the county, including the one on County Rd . 10 at
Langsville where problems also exL•t.
Ted Warner, county highway superintenden t.
reported two mowers arc being used to mow
roadsides, one in Ihe cast end of til' county an do ne in
the west end.
He said the highway depa rtment ls continuing lo
apply dust cont rol to township mads as r~ urs ted by
tru stees.
The Ohio Depart ment of Liq uor Control has
scheduled a hearing on an Cl ·C2 UrcnSf' application
for beer and wine carryoot from Kenneth Unden
Black . D&amp;B Quick Slop. Start• Rt. N3, fo r June ll, 2:30
p.m .. at the counhousr. Community mrmbers and
lht• Wesleyan Holinrss Church congreg~tion JrO·
tested Ihe issuance of lht• lic('nse. The hearing wit h Ill'

NEW SHAFI' SUNK - .4. new shall at WllkesviUe b
being sunk from the surface Into the mine for

SA~E

$14,95 ,.,..,510,47 1
s19 .oo ...... s13 .3o
$22.00 ...... 515.40 ·c.
$24.00 ...... 516.80 1. ,,;_,

set and 2 piece plier set.
While They Lut

$15 99

, ,~~~-:rr~

-VAN HEUSEN®

Pliers and crescent wrench

Father's Day Sale

!'- --·-· . \

S8.95 .............. S6.27
10.95 ............ S7.67
·S12.95 ............ S9.07
S16.95 .......... S11.87

MEN'S

BASIC
DENIM

'

•

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, June 12, 1986

~~G, PRACTICAL 81FT
-~~
MEN'S

MEN'S

All excellent quality leather
bi·fold and tri -fold styles.
Pick his favorite style and
color.

nerat wear. You·111ove our

·I-J&amp;.

111.00·'12.00
'12.50-114.00
114.50-'15.50
116.00-$17.00

PERFECT 81FT

Billfolds

hats. work straws. ivy lea·
gue. ba seball. coif art d ge·

S19 95

at y

SEE OUR FINE SELECTION OF RECLINERS,
ROCKER/RECUNERS, SWIVEL ROCKERS AND
ROCKERS.

MEN'S BUXTON

Caps &amp; Hats
Sizes to fit all. Roll -up

SAY!:

e

•

.TREAT YOUR DAD TO SOMETHING
SPECIAL .... A NEW CHAIR..

SALE PRICES!

•

···'l-

CHAIR SALE

Reg. S81.00 Low Back Chair ......... $68
Reg. S96.00 High Back Chair ......... $81
Reg. S179.00 Lounger ................. $143
Reg. S191.00 2 Seat Glider ........ $138
Reg. S379.00 Table/4 chairs ....... $299

'BUXTON

S•l• Prlutl

SAYINGS OF

0::";

SUPERIOR QUAUTY FOR YEARS OF
ENJOYMENt

A&lt;l·

. ,,

.
,. :::

FATHER'S DAY

·~ii .

2 (ydt In·

tint

300fo OFF

S8.9S · Shorts ............ S6,27
S12.9S Shorts ............ S9.07
114.95 Shorts .......... 110.47
116.95 Shorts ............ 11.87

~

.SUPREME
MOWER

-Powtrl~

Bit selection of quelity leathet belts
in sizes 30 to 46 - popular widths
and colors - western belts in cluded.

REDUCED 30%

SAVE 300fo
18.50 &amp; 19.00 .... 16.30
110.00 .............. 17.00

Cstusl Outdoor Futnitute

- 19 ln&lt;h (•I

Men's Dress Belts

We llllve all sizes from 29 ttuu
50. Pick his favotite style and
color 1nd match with a knit
shirt or sport shirt sale priced .

Fine selection of colors
and patterns in ready-tied ,
clip·ons and popular fourin· llllnd ties .

SALE

19 IN.

~

Repairs prOmised on Hobson rail crosstng

"BUXTON" and "LEEGIN"

Men's Shorts

MEN'S TIES

·_,1

Dress Slacks
Entire stock sale priced inctudinr

Aoother shipment in time fo r
Father's Day givmg.
Neck sizes 14'h to 20. slee ve
length s 32 to 36. Ttu e western
sty le with snapfront. two snap
fro nt fl ap pockets. Save durin g
our sale.

ENnRE STOCK

- ,. 7CJ
I'

.,

', lia,e'w
VeeKe

•

YOU'LL SAVE ALL WEEK AT ELBERFELDS ON FATHER'S DAY GIFTS FOR HIS DAY SUNDAY, JUNE 15TH. BIG SELECTIONS OF QltALITY
MERCHANDISE - ARRANGED FOR YOUR EASY SELECTION - COURTEOUS SALESPEOPLE TO HELP YOU FIND YOUR GIFT FOR DAD.
THURSDAY 9:30 TO 5
FRIDAY 9:30 TO
SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5:00
Entire Stock
MEN'S

By the Bend ..... Pages 11-!H O
Cla.'l.'iiftcd• .. .. . Pages 12-13-14
Comics-TV ..... ........ Page I~
Deallfo ................... Page lfi
Editorial .. .. ... .... ...... Page 2
Sport.......... .. ..... Pages 3·H

'

Vol.36, No.28
Copyrllfhted 198&amp;

SPECIAL SALE OF FATHER'S DAY GIFTS
Sale Prices

Inside:

Wiley to C.&amp; S. Ohio Elect. Co.,
Ease. Mldd. VIII.
Thomas B. Drake, Patricia A.
Drake to Randal M. Boston,
1'
parcels, Olive.
James Fred Richards, Carolyn
Sue Richards to Peoples Bank of
NelsonvUie. parcels. Scipio.
James P. Richards, Jeanne F.
RichardS 1D Peoples B&lt;ink of
NelsonvUie, 'parcels, Scipio.
Bobby Stanley to Lewis W.
Harper, J r.. Linda Harper, parcels,
SaUsbury . ·
Blythe Theiss to Oscar Maynard,
Wlian Mayna rd. SA lot 1204,Sulton.

Pea rl Webb, Marsha Webb to
WOllam T. Kerr, Linda Kerr, S.ll.
Scipio.
Monte Roy Wolfe. Shirley B.
Wolfe Ia Ha rry Yar bro ugh,
0.29040A, Syracuse.
Harry S. Y&lt;hrough to Monte
Ray Wolfe, Shirley B. Wolfe. Lot.
Porn. VIII.
Dana C. Cheadle, Dec.. June
Cheadle, Alfld .. Seiple.
Charles 0. Lisle, Dec., Beatrice
M. Lisle, Cer t. of Trans. , Syracuse.
Firs! Baptist Church of Mldd. to
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Elect.
Co. , Ease, Mldd. VIII.
Mary Carolyn Wll~y . Larry Lee

EL

WAANGLU $22.95
BLUE DENIM

I

"SCHRADE"

POCKn KNIVES

Bi&amp;selection in 2 111d 3 blldect pocket 111 ives, hunting ·
knives and oovelty knives. Regular prices 111 .00 to
135.95. Reduced 20%.

saao to $2 sao

HOUSEWARES - 1st FLOOR

MEN 'S BLUE CHAMBRAY

WORK SHIRTS

lent .ti rt tlih, ••IM yekt lleck •• ..U.rttlluttOM ere jut! 0

ftW If tiM ~1101ity ftllturtt '"' wih fllioy with I hi1 poly Rill' I CCII·
ttfl w.M, • -irlll ...... shirt. Aroil... i11ong ••• •• with~utton·
tlwv ,., ,..uh _. 1Mrt ........lilitll~tton · lhru patdl Poc•ttl.

BG. sa. 95 SHilTS."......~.............. 16,70
lEG. S9.95 SHim ........................ 17.40
lEG. s1a.ts SHim ...................... 11.20

ELBERFELDS In Pomeroy
'..

Sentinel Staff Reports
United Press lnlematlonal
Two men writ' admiltl'lf Into
Holzer Medical Center Wednesday
after bring struck by lightning on
the grounds of lhr old Gallipolis
GoU Club.
Gary Pennington of Bidwell a nd
An loony Kitchen of Rt. 1. GallijX)Iis.
both .around 19. weft' galling and.
according lo the report . took shelter
onder a syca more tr('(' when It
began to rain. Minutrs later, the
If('(' wa' . rruck by lightning around
5:35 p.m.
The two wpre taken to HM C by
the Gallia County Emergt&gt;ncy
Medical Service. Both men were
listed in sa tisfactory cond ition
today by hospit al officia ls.
Pl:nnlnl'!on. who appa ren tly sui·
fered no direct injuries from the
incident , was placed under obser·
va tion . Kitchen received minor
bums to ~s foot and leg.
Meanwhl lf', customers of Colurn·
bus and Southern Ohio Electrical
Company living on RJ&gt;d Hill Road In
Danville, Meigs County. were
without electricity for about four
hours Wednesday night
· Dale Priddy of Columbus and
Southern said thejX)weroulagE' was
caused by lightning during th
evening's thunderstorm which
struck an elect tical pole and broke
lt. Priddy said Ill&gt; company did oot.
know exactly how many customers
wNe fo rced to do wit hou I
electnclty.
Around the Buckeye State. Gov.
Richard r . Celrste has declared a
state of an emergency ln Ashtabula
County due to flooding l:'dused by
heavy rainfall.
Wednesday night's declaration
puts the resources of the state at the
disposal of county offlcfals to aid ln
their cleanup effons and In l'l'palr·
btg damage caused tJy the flooding.
Four Inches of rain fell ln the
county dunn g a two-hou r period
early 'Wednesday, flood ing roads,
homes and businesses, county
o!ffclals sa id.
Pans of a t l~ast 10 streets and
roads were washed out near the city
of Ashtabula by the Hooding.
I

"''ve never S('en il like this
before," said Dan Sl. J ohns, a
supervisor wit h District 4 of the
Ohio Department of Transporta ·
lion. "Wr have had til' flooding but
nollil' was houts likc 'this."
A convenicncr store in Ashta bula
suffered $15,(0) In da mage and a
ch•rk was trapped briefly when a
fl ash Hood poured about four feel ri
water in to Ihe store rarlv Wednes·
day , sa id owner Doug Coorsen.
Clerk Dave Budy had 10 call on
residents woo live !l'ar the store to
help him qll'n lhr starr 's fron t door
&gt;D he· rould rscape the rising
wa tl'rs.
" In a matter of 1.1 mlnutrs rhe
water roSf' like a flas h," said
Coursen.
Coursen said a ll of the food in the
store wa s l:lst.
A tornado also touched down
about two miles west ef l;s hta bula
early Wednesday. A few small
buildings were destroyed and lfl'('S
llnd power Unes were downed tJy the
twistet· There were no injuncs
I reponed . .._
Meanwhile, a nash flood watch
was In effect today for nonheast.
north central, east central and
CE'nlral Ohio.
On Wednesday, flooding elsewhere In the northeasl part of the
state washed out one bridge and

closing SI'Veral roads.
An urban a nd small-stream flood
wa rning was posted for Mahoning
and Trumbull countiE-s.
The Tibbel Road bridge over the
Chagrin River in Kirtlan d. Lake
County. was washed "! 1. whi le tiK'
Mitchell Mill s Bridge in western
Chardon Townshi p in Grauga
county was threalrnt\1 by lligh
wafers on liP Chagrin. Many olhPr
mads in tha i part of Ihe state were
closed by high water.
Pra·sized ha U was reported in
Ca nfield. Ma honlng Cou nty , about
5: 30p.m.
Meanwhile, the NWSconfirmed a
small tornado touched down Thes·
day night near Port Clin ton.
"It was a mini-tornado. On a
sca le r:i. zero to 10. it was a zero,"
sa id Bil l Ezell of the National
Weather Service office In Toledo.
" It dipped down and did it s da mage
and wrnt back up. "
Ezell praised lhe work II. the
Ottawa County sheriff's offi ce and
said COOJX'ratlon of deputies durin!(
the storm • was "an excellent
lwo-way street."
The storm ln Ottawa County
damaged a oome In ErleTownslsip,
damaged barns and oo tbuUdings
and blew out numerous window.; In
til' area , s!J:orUf' s dlspa tchpr Linda
Kollnko said.

Release block grant funds
The Meigs Coonty Commissioners have bem notified thai the
counly's 19116 Conununlty Developmmt Block Grant Fund
alloltment has bem releued by the Ohio Department of
Developmenl.
.4. meetlngoflhls year's block grant recipients has tmtatlvelybeen ..
scheduled for 1:~ p.m. Tuesday In the commissioners' offtce. 11m
Knopp. of Buckeye llUI&amp;-Hocklng Valley Regional Development
Dlltrlct, wUI be
to dl!ICI!s• tile approved projects: SU,MU4
1o
ToWTlllhlp lor paving of Townslllp Rd. 30; S17,MO to
Rutlind Vlllqe for paving of UOO II. of New Lima Rd. within v11ap
lbnlfs; Slllll2.81llo Racine VIllage for playgroulld equipment at the
Shrine Club Park; S99117toSalisbucyTo11118hlpforpavlngToW1111hlp
Rd. Tl, Naylor's Run; S'lOOO to Syracuse VIDage for restmom
facWIIes at the roadside park; $I5,2ZIIo Scipio Township Volunteer
Fire De1JlU1111ml lor purchase of afire truck; $11,000 each to Rutland
and Oranse TOWII!IIdp Volunteer Fb'e Departments lor the pu rchase
of fire flghtlns equipment.

Le._. ..,_nt

1

Bill Buckley, Pomeroy. Eastern
Hi gh School Pr incipal, has been
hired as talented and gifted pro·
gram coord inator for Meigs County
Sf'hools.
All thr('(' loca l districts. Meigs
Local, Eastern and Southern. a rc
participating in lhP new progra m
and wil l pa y the salary of the
coordina tor for the first year. Alter
that time, the Ohio Department of
Educa tion will pick up the costs.
This is the fi rst time tha t a talented
and gifted program coordina tor has
been employed on a county -wide
bas ~ . Buckley will begin his duties
on Aug. 18.
The Meigs County Board of
Educa tion hired Buckley fo r the

new post Thesday night and also
hi red John Foster. Pomeroy. to
Sf'rvr as work study coordinator
replacing Ma ry Bacon woo !l'llred
rccenlly. Foster has been employed
previously ar the Ca rleton School in
SyracuSf' and at Rio Grande
College.
The county board named Harold
Roush as dPiegate to the Ohio
School Boards Associa tion annual
fall meeting to be held in November
in Columbus and Oris Smith was
named allernate delegate.
The board increased the base
salary of certified employes from
$14,300 Ia $I5,400, an $1100 increase
followin g the state lncreaSf' criteria
and non-certified employes - two

secretaries and the attendance
officer - were given $1 ,(0) annual
salary increases. The new school
ca lendar was adopted and appropriations were modified Ia adjust
va r ious. leaves and vaca tions of

employers for the fiscal yea r.
Supt. John Riebel was authorized
to make applica tion for an early
childhood grant which will be used
to coordina te act ivities of all
agencies for children five and under
with handicaps or suspected
handicaps.
The count; board stUI ' has one
vacacy, a speech therapist's post·
lion. which il PXp&lt;'CIS to fill at the
July meeting which has been set for
Ju l;· 1.

Senate fights off IRA amendment
By JOSEPH Mli\NOW.\NY
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Suppor·
lers of the Senate's sweeping tax
rt'form bill are confident the
measure will sail through with no
major changPs now that they have
heaten back the most troublesome
lssur - moves to res tore IRA
deductions.
'
The Senate, heeding thr calls of
~bl ican leaders Ia keep the
radical plan free of amendments.
Wednesday nlghl rejected three
anempt s to salvage Individual
retlrrment account deductions that
would be gutted by thr b!U.
Instead. the chamher agreed the
sensitive Issue soould be decided In
a conference with the Hou91', which
last year passed Its own tax reform
bill that would k('('p most IRA tax
breaks.
The defeat of the amendments
was due ln large part to the failure
of IRA supponers to rally around a
single way to pay for keeping the
tax break. The main ammdmem
was defeated, 51-48, with !lOme
senators who voted for the other
two IRA proposals abandoning the
Issue on tha t vote.
"We're not going to have any
major changes In the outUne rt the
bill." Finance Committee Chair·
. man Bob Packwood bOasted alter

•

I he IRA Issue was defused.

He said he did nol belli've anv
other amendments were threa ten·
ing and noled, " If lRAs, on a scale
of 10, were an eight or nine, the
others were three or four."
Overall, the measurf. would
drastiCally curta il jX)pular deduc·
lions In rt'lum for lower tax rates:
two brackets of 15 percent and 'll
percent.
Packwood ..and other GOP lead·
crs, fearing suppon for the bill
cou ld unravel U any majorchangPs
are made, have campaigned hard
against all a mendments.
However. that strategy has
ruffled some fea thers in the normally free-wheeling Senate and
some senators said Wednrsday
there was a growing resentment
among lawmakers that could cause
a revolt on a futu re amendment.
Packwood said he did oot know H
senators were upset ,wi th him and
believed the IRA hurdle was the
biggest he would have to clear.
Under the bUI, the maximum
$2,(0) annual tax deductiln people
can take for contributing to an IRA
MJuld be preserved only lor lOOse
not covered by another pension
plan . lt Is estimated :ll mUUont1 Ill!'!
28 million American households
with IRAs would loS€ t!J:o deduction.
'

The main IRA amendment was
sponsored by SPns . Alionse D'A·
ma lo, R-N.Y.. a nd Christopher
Dodl. 0-Conn .. and would ha\·e
paid fo r pa t1iaU' restor ing the
deduction by increasing tiP alterna ·
tive minimum tax rale from 20
pent•nt ID 22.6 pr rcrnt. Thai '"·' is
pald .only b)· v~ r-, wm llhy indiv idu·
als and corporal ions.
But Packwood orgu&lt;'&lt;l !hal any
Continued on page 16

Correction
According 10 stat istics compiled
.by the Ohio Dara USf'rs' Center.
Meigs Count ,· in l~ had an
effective bu ying income of
$170.107,000. Of that amount , retail
sales was $6.1.6 mUl lan, or 38.6
percent of I he lola Ieffective buying
Income. This means, according
Ia BIU Quickel. of the Davls-Quickel
Agency, Pomemy . that almost $4
out of every $10 SJX'nl on retail sales
was spent in the l'Ounty. The other
$6 was SJX'nl ou r of Ihe county .
It was mistakenly reponed In
Wednesday's account of the Pomeroy Area Chamber of Commefl'('
meeting that Meigs County businesses !'tad annual retail sales of

$700,00J.

•

�,,

·Thursday, June 12, 1986

Commentary
111 Courl Slreel

.r

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE

~IEIGS - ~USON

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 12, 1986

Damage·suit reforma...______Ja_m_,es_J_.I&lt;_'G_Lp_at_ric_k

The Daily Sentinel
AREA

WASHINGTON President
RPagan t'!'&lt;Cently rid iculed whal he
termed "abs unlly" larg&lt;' jUJY

awards in )X'rsona I and pmduct

ROBERT L. 1\'INGETT
Publisher
PAT 1\'HITEHEAD
Asslslanl PuhllsiK'r; Co nlro ll~r

BOB HOEFUCH

General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB,
News E~ilor
A M E MBEH of Th&lt;' Untrro Prl's.s

,JR.

lnr r rn a tiona! , I nl;1nd

Dai l~ ' Prc· s~ ASS C)(' Ia

ri,ln and thf' AmNira n NN·spapf'r Publlsh{'I'S Association .

LETTERS OF OPIN ION arf&gt; Wf'I CO!Tif' . Thry should tx' !rss than 300 words
lon f! . Allll'tli'rs art&gt; subjt"Ctt o l'ditln g and must be s~ nl'd voith Mffi{\ addrt'ss and
tt&gt;ll'phone numbPr . Ko un sili{ nfd 1&lt;'!1('1'5 will bE' published . l.(' !IC'rs should br i n
good taStf' . addr('SS!ng i ssurs. not p€'t&lt;sona li tlf's .

Cosby's solution
A h igh official of the RPagan administra tion says It Is time for grownu~
to stop downgrading honesty, hard work. preserverahce and clean living
as values for children. Bill Cosby, he says. has the right idea.
Gary L. Bauer, the undersecretary of education, !old a co nfermce in
Wisconsin recently that poor and black families trying to keep their kids oo
the straight and narrow "shouldn't have to be a! war wilh a ruiture that
belittles In a thousand way s these virtues."
Then Bauer added, "The Bill Cosby show and the values it rromotes may
ultimately be more imponant to black childrens' success than a bevy of
new federal programs."
It is hard to argue about the merits of the Cosby show. ltdepictsan intact ,
happy family in which both parents. each a well-educa ted professional,
have strongly held ideas of right and wrong, which they teach with love.
humor and firmness to a housefu l of mischievous lxlt basically decent.
well-adjusted children.
Cosby and his television fam ily cenainly are fine role models for all
upper middle families, especially if one parent is an obstetrician and the
other a lawyer who provide I heir kids a spacious home and enough income
to feed, clothe and educate everyone. We know that such families do have
some problems, although in the case of !IF C&lt;1&gt;by family,they are never so
serious that they can't be solved in half an hour.
But how does the Cosby television family relate to the children In a
real·life family headed by an unemployed rmther who dropped out of
school before she could acquire any marketable skills? How do the values
promoted on !he TV show work in uving quarters that are crowded,
run-&lt;lown and vetmin·infested and a neighborhood where drug peddlers.
prostitutes and muggers rule the streets?
Now. of course. not all black kids live in such tllrrendouscirrumstances.
The point is that many youngsters- blackandwhite- do and they are the
people government programs are supposed to help.
It would be ridiculous to suggest that the Cosby kids need a federa l
remedial reading course or job tralning program. But it is just as absurd to
suggest that srum and ghetto children need only adopt the values espoused
by the Cosby show to become successful.
The Bauer comment, embraces thf' wondrous view of life ~t tnward In
the books of Horatio Alger Jr. He is saying, in essence. that anyone who
obeys the rules, works hard and refuses to give up will succeed ht Ute.
Fur1her. according to the contemporary New Right version of the Alger
concept. any attempt by government to help individuals will fall and
probably make things worse for them.
The undersecretary, who is in char 51' r:t a fortrcoming federal repon oo
family problems, didn't arrive at the Alger concept oo his &lt;Wn . After more
than five years of listening to Ronald RPagan, it Is clear that this Is the way
the president feels and that co ntrary ideas are not welcome in his
administration.
The president and his prople dismiss all suggestions that government
actually might be able to do oomething to help propie with disadvantages
bbecome seif·sufflclent.
Their usual response to such ideas Is that "you c an't solve problems by
throwing money at them ." Apparently their solution to problems Is to
throw television comedies at them.

liability ea ses. B)· II'H)' of example.
hC' r il £'d an award to a man "who
suff&lt;'tl'd a h('arl attack when he
flied to start his lawn mower" and
another award to a m an "who sued
the trlrphonr company because he
wasslanding in a phone booth when
hit b)· a car driven by a drunken
driver."
The prrs iden l 's examples were
illustratiw. but they mostly illustrated the difficulty in making
lEads or ta ils out of the crisis in
liability insurance.
The lawn mower case was a 1977
casr In Pennsylvania , Share v.
Seal~. The plaintiff pulled the
starter cord of a Sears lawn mower
15 times . The t hing wouldn 'I start.
He suffered a massive hea11 attack.
1\ ju !) found th&lt;' pmduct defect ive:

The cord -was In facl excessively
hard to pull. and the mower
wouldn't start because of a defec·
live va lve that did not meel the
manufactu!l'r's.pwn specifications.
The jury awarded $1.75 miil!on to
the plaintiff. a 32-year-old doctor
with his whole career imperiled .
Sears walved and appeal and
settled out of court for somel hing
loss.
The president's facts were still
more askew in the case of the
teleptnne booth. This was a 1974
casein California. Bigbeev. Pacific
Teleptnne and Telegraph Co. The
plaintiff found himself trapped in a
phone booth about 15 feet from a
major thoroughfare. He saw the
drunk driver bearing down on him,
rut the booth's door was jammed
and he could not escape. 'The case
never went to trial at all. ln Los
An!;1'les County Superior Court, the
teleptnne company woo a sum mary judgment . Bigbee appea led .

The California Supreme Coun held
that because of the Jammed door
the case stlluld be heard by a juJY.
Nine years afler the accident. lhe
matter was set tled out of rourt fo r
an undisclosed sum.
My information on the two cases
comes from the Association of Trial
Lawyers of America, which Is
doggedly fighting every effons at
chan!;1'S in tort . I believe some
chan!;1'S are ooreiy needed. but we
ought tn keep our facts straight and In this controversy f acts are
hard to rome by.
The trial lawyen; have rot helpe&lt;'
ttl' pursuit of truth by seeking to
o!Ecu re and to minimize the
staggering awards that have in fact
been made. They contend ; for
example, that data on "average
jucy awards" do not take into
account ttnse cases in which a ju ry
made no award. Thai kind of
reasoning tells us something about
lawvers and numbers. So many

CTT'A. @1986 FORT WOilni~"JNi,'-'TE1$r,o.y

HULME'

Nf-.11

•·A

e'
SlH'I~

11AIJ
NO

NOI~SIWWOJ

·s·n

st unning awards have been made In
medical malpractice &gt;'liits that
malpractice insurance ha~ become
either non-existent or exorbitantly
expensive. In llls Ang\'les premi ·
urns lbr obstetricians lasl year
ran!;1'd from $36,00llo $61.000. That
armunted to $685 to $].175 for each
baby dellverl'd.
These soarin g premiums, affect·
ing hundreds of oosincsses and
prolesslons, reflect such SNious
underwriting losses thai many
companies have ceased to write
product or professional liability
policies at all. It Is not that
American medicinl' has suddenly
grown irresponsible. More suits per
doctor arc tl' ing filed . and even
ttllugh docl ors win most of them ,
tlx' lega l expenses add significantly
to the costs of hea lth carr.
What to do ? The RPag an adm in·
islration has introduced a bill on
tort reform . The measure deals
·ooly with !he suits In the United
States , lxlt its provisions may be
d ted as models for civil suit s
everywhere. Orw section would
abo lish he rule of "join t and severa l
liability." un&lt;l&lt;'r which a sing!&lt;'
defendant, p!'rhaps bearing the
least liability. may bl' required to
pay the wtnle of a jury's award .
Anotlx'r section wou ld rrduce
awards by ttl&gt; amount a plaintifi
received from some olher source
I han the defendant. A third section
oould put a ceiling of $100.00l on
damages for "pain and suffering."
Other sections would put a cap on
ia"yers' ronting&lt;&gt;nt fees and would
petmit periodic payments of large
awards.
Th• proposals make srnse to me.
Star r legislaturcs would want to
also ronsidl'r the business of
"punitive damages," which never
has mad e sense to me. Aft er a
j:J ain tiff has been a warded com(JI.'n ·
sation for his own dem onstrable
losses, which is all that justice
requires , thr pl ain tiff has no right to
some further windfall intended to
"punish" the defendant. if a
defendant deserves punishment ,
punitive awards sb:Juld go to t he
registry of a court for equitable
dlslxlrsement .

Tempers flare. _______J_a_ck_A_nd_e_rs_o_n_&amp;_J_o_se_p_h_Sp_e_ar
WASHINGTON - if you t tink
the government's super-secret In·
lelligence analysis is conductal in
an atmosphere of oool, calm
efficiency, lrt us take you behind
the scenes at the State JRpartment
during one recent International
crisis. E yewitness account s make
the hu sh-hush Intelligence and
RPsearch Office sound like the
officers' mess on ttl' good ship
Caine at strawberry time .
On the bridge wa s Gerald Sutton,
chief of State's terrorist Intelligence
branch. At the helm. so to speak.
was intelligence analyst Julla
Roltler. Here's how she began her
subsequent report oo the situation :
"On Feb. 4, 19!'Al, at approxim ately 10 a. m .. tl1e eti!Tent intelll ·
gence watch was handling the
Israeli interception of a Ubyan
plane. Mr. Sulton's analysts were
apprised of the Incoming traffic .
which was mainly press Items."
(There's a jolt: State IRpartment
spooks, with all ttEir resources.
knew only what they got from the

press.)
The Israelis had forced down the
Libyan jet expecting to find terror·
Isis aboard. Bul t!Fy found only
Indignant Arab dlpiomats .
Twenty mhtutes after ttl' first
Incoming "traffic.'' Rottler re·
ported, the first Intelligence cable
arrival - with bad inforrnatkm .
"The Information really did no I add
anything new to tl1e press reports
except for tl1e erroneous note that
the aircraft was a
she
reponed .
In the midst of thi s fairly tense
situation, Rottler wrote, Sutton
"stormed into the watch area" and
demanded "vociferously" to know
why he had not been Informed of
m:ent developments.
The reason was that there had
been none, but when Rattier tried to
explaht this to Sutton. he slnutal at
t~r. "Shut . up. damn It! .. according
tG her report. A few moments later
tE yelled at her: "Sit down!"
Half a dozen httelllgence analyst s
sat bewildered by the boss's

m:.

outburst. Analyst James Maxstadl
lnlbrmatlon he had accused the
wrote In a merm that while he and
analysts of hiding from him did not
in fact exist. Moiineaux said he had
Rottler were working on "flash ·
board" 1computer) messages, Sut .
"kept rome records" on Sutton, and
ton stood "berating (Rottler) for not
statal: " Mr. Sutton sometimes
calling as many prople as he would
takes a denigrating approach to·
t
have wished."
ward subordhtates, ranging from
Rottler's report to her boss. Paul
rit·Jickhtg to mocking their abill·
Mollneaux, chief of current htteiil · · ties .... "
genae. said that Sutton's verbal
Molineaux ,concluded: " Thus, the
episode of which Ms. Rottler writes
flogghtg had her "almost ht tears ....
I was ~blicly and severely abused
Is not merely an abberation.
and humiliated. My colleagues and
RattEr,lt is a more bald manlfesta ·
I find Mr. Sutton's behavior
tion of a !;1'neral pattern of
tEhavlor."
appalling, unacceptable, abnor·
mal, abrasive, abusive and, most of
Sutton declined to discuss the
all, unprofessional."
Feb. 4 Incident. As for Molineaux 's
In his own repon on the Incident, repon. Sutton told our associate
Moiineaux noted that Rottler " Is a
Corky Johnson: "Mr. Mollneaux
competent, hardworki ng em ·
apparently has certain problems
ployee;· and added : "(Her) des·
with me. lxlt (he) has his own ...
crlption of Mr. Sutton's language
problems. " He added : " I have been
and demeanor Is consisten t wilh my
around In I he Foreign Service for l)
own observations r:t his approach to
yoors and found oome people have
problems a nd Interperson a l
liked me very much, others haw
relations hips ."
liked me less and these are the
Molhteaux reponed that Sutton
things you have to deal wit h. "
9Jbsequently admitted that the

Our friends the spies._____A~rt-=-Bu~ch.:..:..:..wa::.:.::.ld
The newspapers are jammed
with stories concerning spies and
rumors of spies. The world of cloak
and dagger docs not only concern
itself with our declared enemies,
but it involves our allies spying on
us as well.
·
It is this gray area of espinage
that causes pain to everyone.
The head of the CIA department
involved with ferreting out spies
who work for friendly power·s Is
Frank Ferret.
Frank said, "Spying on friends is
like cheating on your wife. "
" Whal do you mean by that?" I
asked him.
"Beats me. but It always gets
· everyone's attention. I think w hal
In reference to the anlcle oo Pit is bred Into these dogs, and ·I &amp;in't 1'm trying to say is that there is
blame the animal, I hold the owners
Bulls In Tuesday. June 10 paper. I
nothing wrong w ith having a secret
for the Pit Bull. Just
responsible
don't believe tiE letter oo Pit Bulls,
liaison until it becomes public
staking a Pit Bull in the back yard
that the Pit Bull is as nice as he
knowledge. Once it' s bl abbed all
would not protect a four year old
ciaim.s they are . On June 9 my tlur
over town. everyone demands
from wandering into ttl' yard or
year old s:&gt;n was bitten by one of
punishment , because the cuckolded
anyone else. U a person wants to
these amiable disposltloned Pit
count ry can no longpr claim It
own
a Pit Bull doj! he should hav e
Bulls. U the gentleman thinks Pit
didn 't know wha t was ~ ing on."
him In a pen wtEre no ooe rould !;1'1
Bulls are so grea t I would like for
"I never thought of !IF espionage
near him for too public's protection .
him to rome to Middleport and
business
as a form of adultery."
A dis be ilever
strike this lovable Pit Bull on tl1e
"Only
with
your friends, " Frank
Patricia Bentz
head.
cautioned
me.
"What yoo have to
I do believe that the mean streak
understand Is, the Western powers
have a mutual understanding that
we ca n microfilm each other' s
defense capabilities, providing we
don't get caught. if the word gets
out that we're being spied upon by a
Today is Thursday, June 12, the 163rd day of 1986 wfth ID2 to follow.
friendly rountry, .t hen we have to
The moon is moving toward its first quarter.
stllw public ootrage."
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
"Name a friend wb:J has done
that. ..
The evening stars are Mercury. Venus and Saturn.
'!'hoSe born on this date are under tiE sign rJ Gemini. They htclude John
"All the good guys have spies."
Augustus Rllebllng, designer of the Brooklyn Bridge, In 19J6; Vloe
"What happens when yoo catch
President George Bush In 1924 (62); singer VIc Damone ht 19'28 (age~) .
ooe ri the good guys ptntographing

Letters to editor

More on the Pit Bulls

Today in history
"

\'1

the stealth bomber?"
"Our style Is to arrest him cp.~letly
and boot him discreetly out of the
U nited States . Then his country will
quietly boot one of our spiesw l, and
we'll pretend it didn't happen. But If
someone leaks the story then we
have a serious problem."
"Why Is that?"
"Arlestlng a spy from a friendly
power raises a lot rmre questions
than it answers. lnslead r:t [raising
us for catching the spy, the press
wants to know oow many rmreare
out there ju st like him .• There Is a
hue and cry in America. and every
intelligence agency hates a hue aild
~ry. Thai's why we'd rather not
have agents of a!Ues arrested. But
the worsl thing about nabbing spies
Is havhtg to hold a public trial. 11
they plead not guilty, their defense
lawyers will try to embarrass us by
asking for every secret ttl' U .S.
government has. They embarrass
us by, asking for every secret the
U.S. government has. They know
we' ll make any plea bargaht to
avoid producing evidence in ooun ."
"What kind of plea bargain do
you offer them?"
"U the rat pleads gullty, we'll
give him ll years In the slammer,
and promise he'll be exchan!;1'd as
soon as possible for one r:t wr guys
doing
years in this rountcy ."
"Are t!Fre many spies from
friendly countries working here?"
" I stnuid rope so. 'The reason for
that Isn't because we have the most
secrets, but rather because the
United States Is a tunrountry.tospy
on. No spies wan I to go to ttl' Soviet
Union any oore, becauset!Fycah' l

drink the milk ."
"Does lhe U.S. maintain CIA
agents in our friends' oo untrirs as
well?"
"Of course we do- but we don't
ca ll them spies. we ca ll 1tErn
'Freedom Agents." '
"Do our friends know that our

'Freedom Agents' are spy ing on
them?"
" Yes, but they don't care becau se
wi th tourism way clown In their
countril's, the CIA covert funds are
the only hard doll ill's ti"l&gt;y are going
to S€e this ypar."

Berry's World

Cincinnati falls .deeper.into West cellar

Scoreboard ...

Page-2-:-The Daily Sentinel

By GERRY MONIGAN

Majors

Transactions

NATIDNI\l, LEAGUE
By United l,rt&gt;ss lntcrnllllonal
East
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California 12 . Chic ;tgo 11
Halt imuH' l Y1il~, · auk r( • :1
Df' trul r !-L Nrw York :\

Clt•\"l 'lJ!HI i . Ua kl ~mli4
SPa t tit · 1 ~. K;1n~a_... City:.!
Bus ton 1 Toron to 2
TP xu~; ll. !\1 i nnP~Olil 'l.. l+ l

Bust~ ball

Chicago tNL ! - Purchased t he
contra('! or ca tch1•r Stf've Lakl' !rom
IOWil or t he Am&lt;·rlra n Associat ir,n ,
Ch·vl'land- Pli.u:l'd first- baseman
T&lt;.~ b l t·r on th(• 15- dav fll sab lcd
I i st.
··
Los Ang&lt;&gt;lf's- Signed drafl s&lt;•l ec tions No. 9 l-lf'nry Gosh1..1y. f'f' nlf'l'
ri f'ldl' l" rro m Colu mbu!-., Ga . . and No.
18 (' li nt on Smit h, cPnl er F((•li.ll'r t hied
basPm&lt;:~n from San Fri.lnrisco.
·
MllwaukC'('- Adivutcxt rirst ba s(' ·
rnun Billy .Jo(• Robidou ."&gt; !rum t ht•
disabled list; ourrightrd rontrael of
lcftfir lde r Randy R('&lt;Jd v to /\AA
afflllat(' Vancouv'rr 1PCL1.

P:..ll

Basketball
Assis i&lt;Jnl co&lt;.tC'h
Paul Silas r eSignc•d .

Football
Gn't:•n Ba .\· - Relinqui shf'd ri g hTs
to

quartf'rb&lt;.~c k

Lynn

Dick(~_v.

Pittsbu r£ h - Signr-d qul.lrHTha ck
Mt~ r k Ma lonP to a mull i · yPa r
co ntrac t.
·

lloekf'Y
St . L ouis- Extf'ntl('(l t·ont r aCI"- ot
a~ ... is tant &lt;"O&lt;.ICh Rarcla v Ple~ gf'r an ti
assiqa nt rlir&lt;•ctor of h"u&lt;'kr~· op( ·ra
lio ns Hob Pl&lt;.~ g£'1' .

Leaders

llorm~

Runs

Nat!OnHI l .f'&lt;:tgu r - Marshi! l l , I.A

1\ Brook s . Mtll:bnd J'Jrkcr. Cin 1.1:
DO:J\"iS. Hou. Daw so n. Mil. ami
(;a!"\'£'\".

SD 12.

Am.-:ric &lt;.t n L(' Lt~ ut ·- .J u~' nn. C"dl
JR; ('a nSf'&lt;'O, OaK Hi; Bar fil'ld . Tor .

Bcp,.·Jot. BD!-. t.tn d Puel&lt;rtt, Minn 1:•.
·
Uuns Bath•d In

,\ltERtCAN LEMOliE
\\'
:\! t
.14
.14

.

UPI Sports Writer
The Los Angell's Dodgers crept
closer to conten tion in the Nallonal
League West by complel lng a
three-game sweep of Cincinnati
Wednesday night, burying I he Reds
dePpt.'r in ihe divisional cellar.
Th&lt;· Dodgers. who occupied last
place for most of April. tniil lh&lt;•
West-leading Astros by 51 ·2 games
after they edged the Reds &gt;4 in 11
innings, and I he San Diego Padres
whippr&lt;l Houston 11 -7. Cincinnati. a
p1esmson favorit t', is 10 games wt.
"We've m'eded 10 swf'&lt;'p some
body, " Franklin Stubbs said after
his RBI sing!&lt;' off .John Franco gave
the Dodgers their third straight
on(•· run victory over the RPds. " If
we can pick up one gamP a week fin
lhr standings), who knows what
can happen ?"
Stubbs has strugg led agai nst
lcft ·handers, hut taking bat ting
prac t icC' againsl lrfty managf'r
Tummy La sorda paid o ff
\\'Pdn rsday.
"The key is not to bail ou1 ."
Stubbs said . "''m starting ro fcf'l
good, ff'&lt;'l comfortable ··
With two out, Mar iano Duncan
s ing~&lt;\! to IPft and went to se&lt;:ond
wht•n F.r ic Davls oobbi&lt;'Ci thl' ball .
A ft er StrvP Sax was walkeU
iniPnl ionally b.v· Franco. (}.\Stubbs
groundl'd a sidearmed balll hrough
the middle to mak&lt;• a winner of f:cl
Va nde Bo•rg, 1·2.
"S tubbs jusl hit it in th1• hoiP."
~:.~id Cinci nnati playrr managt'r
PP!c RoS&lt;'. ",John has ln•n drop

Nf'v.- Jpr se\' -

Wednesday's Ut•sults
At I.Jntt 2, S&lt;m F ra ncisco 1. 10
irini ngs
San D\Pgo 11 , Houst on 7
!\rw York ~). Phil adrlph i a :1
P it tsburgh ~- Chicag o .1
Montrt'&lt;l l ~ - St . Loui s: ~ . 10 inning ~
Lo~ A ngPh•s ~- Cincinnati •1. I I
1nning"
Tlmrsda)•' s (;anw ( i\11 Ttnws EOT )
San Fr&lt;.~ nci sm iKrukow K-:) 1 at
Housto n j Hrrn i.! ncl('i' O-l1. H: :1:1 p.m .
Friday's Ganws
St . Lo u i~ a t Chicago
Pil1 sburgh at 1\'1·1,1.· Yor k. r.i ght
M orllrP:J I at PhllatiPlph i il . nichr
Cinci nnati at Atlanta. night
S:m F'rancism aT H o u ~ wn . night
!.us i\nJ...•t']r• s J t San Di1·go, ni gh t

Hos tfi n ..
1\;t lt imoH ' .
t\r· w York
i\lilwauki'l' ..
I ·ll·vpl;md
Toront o.
I }&lt;•1roil .

inning~

Tltursda \-''s Garnt•s l :\11 Tim••s F.IYf)
Nrw ,·1 ark 1l ' ndt&gt;dd('(J f a t Bi:!l!i
morP 1Dixon li :11. i : :1:) p. m
MilwaukN • tHiguf·r a X~ 1 &lt;11 1\os lr•n
d1oyd 7 ·I I. i :.1:• p.m .
Dr l ro it j 'f'an &lt;lfl i.l ~ ·l 1 at TtJront o
d { f'\" .1 :H. -; ·:\!l p.m .
k i.J n... ;.t~ Cit\" 1.f;w b on 'l-:t1 aT
Ca tilornia 1\\i.ttli-4 1. 10 ::\~ p.m.
ChiCilf.!O 1Cuwh•.v 2-.' IJ al ~&lt;Jttif'
1Hf'U 1tif • 0-0 i, 111 : .1~ p.m .
Friday'" Gam('!&gt;i
:\1ilwa ukPr at Hos10n. night
1\ &lt;.m ~&lt;L" C' it v at Ca li forn id, ni ght
N1 •w York ;,t Baltimorf' . nighT
Dr troit at Toro nt o. night
Chicago &lt;11 Srattlr . night
T1•xa " at Oa kland . 1111-! ht
Minn c·.l,(ll &lt;l .11 CIP\danct n1 ghl

1\'&lt;..t! iona l l.c•L.lg w • - Brook s. M 11 I."L
M ;u ·o;hall. l.t\ . Ptl r kl"r , Cin and
Schmidt , l'hil 41 ; C;trtf'r , :'\Y &lt;.~nd
&lt;'.[)LI \ "iS SF ·10
Amrrica n J.c ·; !g ur · - Can.Sf '( 'O. CJal\
:. 7; Mct t1 i ngl ~ - . !\ Y ~ ~; . lcJ\ m·r. L .l i -17:
Bavlo r , Hu!-. and 1\i n ~m an , Oak ·l.l
.
Slolrn na . . I'S
!\utio nal l.e;tgur· - ('ol1 ·man . S!L
:~:1; Dunc(.Jn, I.,\ 2)'(; H a irw ~ . .VIII 2:1:
Ooran . l !rJu Jt): fin · plu ~T r ~ tic ·da tl :-1 .
AmNiCi.ln Lt'&lt;ti.! UI' - !I Pndf'r...,on ,

pin g his d('Jivrry on his brea kin g

ball. "
The f{eds tied it 4·4 in lht• ninth
\\'i! h an unPiHned run . Kf'n Howf'll
walkr'Ci Buddy Bell to lx•gin thP
:-\ Y .'tR: C&lt;.mgl'los i. Chi 2tl; Wi ggi n ~ . inning . Oavp ConcPpcion lhrn hif i:.l
H.tll 17: Mosc-hv . Tor ltl: RPvnr1lll~ . shot hack to Howell. and lhe ba ll
S&lt;•a an d Wilson: ~ C ! !'1
wcnl off his glove. 13&lt;•11 and
Pih.: hin~ \'leturies
Concepcion
took second and third
i\u ti onal J.c·&lt;J guc - 1\ru·ppt·J . !l ou
H'Spl'Ciivf'l.v
whr n Howrll thr('w
10 :!; Cooden. 1\'Y ~ - ~ : ~ r ul&lt; u \~ ·. SF
R-:i; H. Jwl~&gt;~' · Ph il an d \' al('n ru t&gt;l ~l . l "\ wild! \' 10 first. Bell seuml on ' '
X-1.
grou0drr b_
, . Ro Diaz.
AmP riC'an LPiJgw · - f "lf •mt ·n "' · Ho'
Stubbs
put
thP Dodgers aheacl :l-2
11-0; Boddick f'r , Rdt. l\ -1; H ic ut•r Lt .
Mil f!.-t H&lt;.~I.I S, Oa k 7 2: !\it'kriJ. l\ Y in thf• fifth who·n hi' brok" a l ·fo r -9
i -:1: Bailf'-". ("1(' and Bo~· d. uo . . 7 ·I
slump with a homer off B ill
E:..rncd Run A\'~·raK~'
Cullic k&gt;&lt;m . Sl ubbs' lllh homPr of
CB:tsl•d on 1 inning x numht•r of
the war followrd a wa lk ru Sax .
gam~ t•:M· h tt••wt hu o, pl:tJ &lt;'d)
Aicx Tr!'\' ino' s fir st homer of t tv •
i'\a rion al I.Pagu r - Coodf•n. :\Y
2. 11 ; K nf'p[X'r. !-lou 2.26: Oic'&lt;l &lt;t. \Y sra son an inni ng · l af£1" gan' th1 ·
~ .:):~: Smit h . J\11 ~ . !'1 i: l{ hodf'n . P it
Dodgers a ~ · 2 !Pad . The rcst·rw
1.ul.
i\ml'r ic&lt;ln U: '~gu c · ~ ll iguf•r a. Mtl ca1chcr had onf' hit in hi!' ptl'\"ious
2.1R: Clrmm ~ . Bo s 2 . ~ : I ,Nm a rd . Kt
Hur~t .

'l.liO;
2.~ .

Ros 2.79 : C'urrm . T1 •.'i

,

SlrBu·outo.;
i\ ~ ili on&lt;Ji l. f'&lt;tgu r- Scull. ll ou J1!'1 ;
\ ";il&lt;'n7uf'i:t , l.t\ 9~: \\" plc~'- 1..- \ 7~ :
P Lll m r r All Ti . Smith . All 7ti
Americun L eagu('- l"ll • mc · n ~ . 1-iu..,
Jf)-1; Hurs t. Ho~ ~t : H i,L! Ut'l"ot . !\ltl K'l :
l{ iju. 01..1k R'2; .\1on is. Or-1 -;--;-

Snns
/\"a tiona\ LPaguP - Smith . H ou 15.;
Rf'ardon . Mt l 1-l : Ornsco. !\ Y 11 .
F r~ln CO.
C"in. Goss&lt;Jg t•, sn ;md
Worrf' ll . St l. 9.
i\mrrica n I .r ag ur - Aa sc '. 1-!.a 11 1i.
n tg hPtti. ·'~' n ; 1-! &lt;Jt"ri ~ . Ti ·x 11;
HPr na ndt •t, 1&gt;1·1 .md St ;tnli' y . H o~ IU .

Release names of 73 thus far who will
take part in 1986 Hardee's Golf Classic
By U nitt&lt;! l'ress International
Organ izrrs of nrx! month 's Hur rk'r 's c;olf Classical the Oakwood
Count!')' Clu b in Coal Valley, Ill.
rrleasr&lt;t a I ist of 7.1 golfers who hav·r
mad£' rommitmcnts. including drlrnding champion Da n Forsman
and past winners Dave• Stockt on.
Victor Regi:dodo and 0.'.1vr Rarr .
O!h('r big namr~ passing up the&gt;

llritish 0(l!'n 10 attrncl the Quad·

Cities rv·pnl .Jul.\' 17 ·~0 inc ludt'
Grorgr Archer und Tommy AHron .
.. Na ncy Po t1rr of Ardmore. l 'a ..
shot a pJ r 74 WC'dnrsda~ · to captur('
th&lt;· sr&lt;:ond-da)· lmd in l hr ;:, th
Wom en's F.aslern Golf C hamp io n ~
ship al Gulph Mills, Pa ., wilh a lOla!
SCQJ'(' of 76-74- I:&gt;(J. K and)' K(·sslcr
of CharlottNvill&lt;'. Va ., Tursdav's
lcadrr, shot a 4-0\"('1" ·()&lt; 11" l't!. bul was
ablP 10 hold S&lt;'tund placr• with a t "U ·
da~· srorf' of 7.1-'TR- 1:&gt;1. onr sfrokr
off 1he pat'f'.

Francis in charge of gifts for l986
Diles-Appalachia Golf fete June 25
ROCK SPRINGS bu sinrssm an

Pomemy

Bill Francis Lo; ln

chatw of lining up gifts fort tv' Dllrs
dinner .June 25 a1 thr' Meigs High
School and herr 's wh at he ha s
'i&lt;'Cured thu s fa r:
A Pete Johnspn ga me jersey and
.o n autographed copy of Tht• Paul
Brown Story from Clnrl nn atl
Rrn gals.
A B&lt;•rni&lt;' l{osar jl'rsr~· from lhr
Cleveland Bro"ns .
• Four mu nd s of golf at the

Nickl aus Gri?.zly Course from thr•
Jack Nicklaus Span s Cmter at
Kings I slan d .
Jeff Parsons made it poss ible fur
&gt;&lt;~ m&lt;'On&lt;' to get four clubho" sr
passes to next year' s N icklaus
Mc mortal Tournament in Dublin.
Ohio; plus one leal her bound
limited edit ton of ttl' first 10 )'&lt;'ill'S of
the Memorial Toumamrnt.
·' Wp hope we 'U havp m:JtT' b~· t.hr

r.imr wr sit dmvn to cat. .. said
F'ranclo:; .

COLUMBUS - Eastrrn's Me·
Iiss a Nutter ended a great srnson
by placing six th in the stat e in the
shot put durin g thr:' 12th Annual
Glrls' track and field meet in
Columbus. Nutler placed sL,th
behind stat e ch ampion Mary
Raighard, a senior from Uix'rty
Crnter: 1'\anry K olle, Dann a Ben ·
nett. Pam Conley, and Lorr ie
Sickle.
Stale Champion Reigh ard did
double dut y bv also win ning ttl&gt;
discus lhis Yt'dr. brmkin~ tx.' r own
state record of 139'3". Reighard's
ll£'W mark set anol hC'r st atc markof
J:,g·. besting the "AAA" and "AA"
mark s of 15&gt;'2" and 14.1 '2'
rcspPct iv f'l ~·.
Rt'ighard \
winnin g shol put
mark was 40'5'~ " . good enough fur
vi c tory thi s year to makf' her a
repeat champion . but not as good as
last ~-car's 4D'fi" mark .
KoJic of Smit hville losst'Cl 40'1".
Bcnnl'lt .18'8"," tMogadorer: Con·
IP)' of Ashland Crc st\'iew 37'11 1•," ':
and Sickl e 3fi'6" from .JHckson
Milt on. ~u tt er lhrew a 36'2' 2 " to
brmk I he Eastern School rr&lt;?ord for

I hP s Lxlll I i me I his SC'a son.

One bright spot for t he Eli'&gt;
t hinclad is that all gi rl s ahm d of hr'r
Wl'I"P seniors, l'Xrcp t fo r Sicklr who
Lo:; a sophomo re. )Iutter is a j unior.
SLxteen girls compcll'd in the
Class "A" &gt;1ate meet. moaning t hat
Nutter bested ten of the statl''s best
to become a state finaUst.
Eastern Coach Ralph Wigal
co mmr ndrd Nutter for an out sta nding indiv·idual effort and com ·
mPndf'd his girls' fC'3 ffi ror a rin r
season .

12 at -bats.

Dan· Park(·r· s Sf'\·r n1h-inning
lume run off flob Welch was his
Ht h oft h1• )'rm and pullr'Ci I ho • r&lt;-'Cis
to 4·.1.
in other games. A tlanta nippt.&gt;d
San F'ranciscu 2·l. San Diego
dt·cked Houston 11 ·7, New York
topped Ph iladdphi a ;,.:1, Pittsburgh
lx•al Chicago
3. and MontrPal
&lt;'CigNl St. I ituis 4 :1 in 10 innings.
Urav&lt;'!i 2, Gillllt.s I
At Sn11 Fra nci ~;c'O. Onic Virgil's
two-out ~olo hom(· run in the.• IOih
Jift((l Atlanta. Crnr Garbl'r pit ched
tlu·ee periec l inni ngs of relief to
imprD\'P lu 2-1. Gn "P. Minion. 2-4.
\\'a s lhr' losPr aft&lt;·r \'irgi l hit a .1-2
[itch for hh ninth hom o run nf thr

&gt;·

\ "Pa r .
Padr(.~ II, Astro!oi i
A t San D!Pgo, r:arry Tr mpi&lt;' ton
hit" lwO·lu n double to highlighl a
Jour run eighlh inning and lift San
I Jirgu. T i&gt;' Padrrs h&lt;id raer&lt;l to a
i 1 Jrad . hut rhr' A~ tro s rird it 7-7
IJC tor&lt;• losing for th&lt;• first hme in
liv·e games. Lan ee McCullers. the
last of thr ee San Diego pitchers,

one out in tlr lOth inni ng to scurr •
Tim Wallach and power Mon1r0ol
Wallach singled off loser Greg
Bargar. 0·2. Jeff Reurd on pitchr;J
the ninth to improve to fi.l and I.J&lt;orr
Roberge pi tched rtF 10th lo carn hi s
first save.

worked three innings to improve to
2·1. Houston rellr ver Frank DiPino
fell to I · 2.
Mets 5, Phlllles 3
A t New York. Ray Knight hit his
eighlh home run and drove in two
runs and GaJY CariN had lwo RBI
to prop!'! New York. Ron Darling .
7-2, went six innings lbr the victory
and .Jesse Orosco, the founh M et
pitcher, recorded the final two outs
for his lith save. Steve Carllon, H.
was the ioser. lasting 3 1-3 innings
whili• giving up r igh t hits and fi ve

Giamalli new
NL president
NEW YORK 1 L:f'l 1 The·
National League. incrC'a "lingly
faced wrth problems from the
outside world like drug abu s(' and
labor strife. ventured awa;· from
the world of baseball 10 find lhc
lcaguC''s ncxr leadc·r.

run.~.

Pirates 5, Cubs 3
At Pittsoorgh , Rick Rhoden
singled homo two runs and com bined w ith three rei levers to pace
Pittslxlrgh to a swt'ep of t heir
lhrP!'-g ame series w ilh the C"bs .
The victory was the foun h in as
many decisions for Rhoden, 6-J
who and Don Robinson , the third
Pirate reliever. earned his first
save. Guy Hoffman fell to 2·2.
Ex(rls 4, Car&lt;lnals 3
A I St Louis, pinch -hitter .Jim
Wohlford lofted a sacrifice fly wilh

Baseball oul,ider A. Ba r lctl
Giamatti. tho retiring president of
Yale Univers ily wa s in trodua:·d
Tuesda y as the league's 121h
pr&lt;'sidcnt . He · r&lt;1Jlaces Charles
"Chub " Fwnry. who will r&lt;'Sign in
Decembl' r aflrr 17 years with th t;
league. G iamatti' s term will bl' fh·ryears.

/

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A.D.B.A. SANCTIONED
POINT SHOW &amp; PULL
JUNE 14 and 15, 1986
AT

MEIGS COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
9 A.M-5 P.M.
•FREE SET UPS•
HYOUR OWN TABLE•
ITEMS WILL BE SET UP ON THE

SIDEWALKS

•Craft Items
•Bake Sales
•Yard Sale Items
" My goal is to become very rich by doing inslder trading -• and not get caught."

stretch a single into a double. Los i\ngl'lcos went on to
defeat the Red.• 5-4 in II innings. (UPI I

Ol!l' i\1' SECOfliD- Cincinnati's Ron Oester was
out at set:ond htLse Wednc'Sda,v night after he tried to

Nutter
sixth in
state

NE
SATURDAY JUNE 14

ro

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Call Village Cut Rate at 949-2140
or Radne Dept. Store at 949-2800
FOR

RMATION

Pomeroy, Ohio

(FREE ADMISSION AND FREE CAMPING)

SUNDAY'S SANCTIONED
PULL TIME: 10:00 A.M.

SHOW TIME: 12:30 P.M.

Registration 8:30 a.m. to 12 Noon both days

SHOW ENTRY FEE: $11.00 Per Dog A.D.B.A. Registered Dogs Only
H.W.VA. PBC FUN PULL direttly after Shaw Saturday

IBeginnm,

try

your

dogs!) ·

BBO CHICKEN DINNER SATURDAY EVENING, JUNE 14 .. J.~L.J.q!!,~~~..!~L $600
Sponsored By

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO PIT BULL CLUB
AND

HUNTINGTON, WV. PIT BULL CLUB
The show will be held at the Meigs County Fairgrounds at the Jet . At .
Rt. 33. y, mile north of Pomeroy
For More Information Contact:
Arnold Johnson - President, 5 .0. PBC- 614 -992- 6945
Larry Cremeens - Vice President. S.O . PBC- 614-388-6269

7

and

�Thursday, June 12, 1986

Arledge d'enies
pressure charge
By CERILSSE ANDERSON
UPI Sporis Wrller
NEW YORK (UPi l _ Roone
Arll'dge ABC group president for
··IIE'WS ~d sports. Wednesday de·
nll'd the NFL ever exerted any
pll'Ssure on the network affecting
Its decision not to televise USFL
games 1n the fall .
Television, and the USFL's tack
of a network contract for its
schedule beginning this fall, have
played a central rote tn the USF'L's
billion antitrust suit against the
NFL, now In Its ruth week in
District Court in Manhattan.
"Did anyone with the National
Football League ever express 10
you lhe opinion that it was bad
enough to televise the USFL in the
spring butyoubetternotdoftinth&lt;'
fall? " ' USFL attorney Harvey
Mverson asked Arledge during his
teStimony .
"Absolutely not . at oo time ever."
Arll'dge n&gt;plil'd.
Arll'dge, who returns to the
witness stand today for crossexaminat ion. also denied the NFL
ever expressro a negative reaction
to the network's decision to broad ·
cast rhe USFL's first three spring

$l.S

Janet Werry, BMnle Koenig, Jenny Cowdery, Susan Baum, April
Rlldlle, JeMy Lee, Joy Swain, Darlene Baum, Amy Shriven, and
Paula Cowdery, Mgr. Dack.Coach Ralph Wigal, Donna CurDs,

E.o\GLFI'TE TR,\CK SQl'AO- The Ea.•tem girls' track team
of roach Ralph \\jgaJ mjoyl'd &lt;UI .. ltsttuuting season, highlighted by
fme individual perform&lt;VI&lt;'I'S that netted S&lt;'&lt;'tional, district, and
n'gional crmms a.• well a.• S\'.·\ C IDnors. Enjoying the best ,season
wa"' junlor !O hol pultr r MPlissa Nutter wm recentlv became a state
finalist hy pladng sixth in the stat t•. Pkturl'd are Ginger Hayman,'

M~ Hensley, Tammy Leachman, 'llna BlsseD, Beverly Wigal,
Pam Lawrenre, MeUssa Nutter, l..arh."" Long, Ruth Nutter, and
Delanie Baker.

~

U. S. Open begins
86th session today
By Dt\VID MOFFJI'

.

.

'1

111
"

.,

'~

,.
,. •

UPI Sports Writer
SOUTIIAMPTON, N.Y . JUPI)The U .S. Open goU championship,
rcruming to this laid· back. Eastern
Shore area for the first time since
its Infancy , began Its 86th run today
over the sand and brush of
Shinnecock Hills.
The last time the U.S. Open was
held out on the tip of Long Island,~ ·
years ago. til&lt;' now far·more
prestigious tournament was In only
its SECond yea r.
Few of the 156 performers
entered in the $700,&lt;XXl event
previously had seen the 6,912- yard.
par 70 course which features
narrow fairways, knE'C- high rough
and tiny greens.
What they found, acm rd tng to
those who have played in Europe.
was a channing Old World m ursc
similar to those used for the Brit ish
Open .
"We are all anxious to see li this
grpat course will stand up to the
best players in the world ." USGA
Pres ident William J . Williams sa id
on thP eve of the Open. "We oope It
will ."

The roncrnsus was that Australian Greg Norman is this wrek's
favorite.
Norman, nicknaml'd "The Great
White Shark" beeauseof his affinity
for telling shark· hunting tales. ha s
· been the hottest player on the tour
the past month. Hr lied for
both in the Masters and thr
Heritage. then won ooth at La s
Vegas and in the Kemper.
" M y co nlid~n ce IPvel is vrry
high. particularly with my driver
and m y purter" said Norman . who
is this .vear's trading monry winner
with $447.109. " More so with my

S€COoo

HITS

our OF ROUGH - .Jack Nicklaus hits out of the rough on tiF

approa~ · h to the lillh hole during Wednesday' s practice round fortoday's

Xlilh L. S. Open in Southampton, N. V. (UPI)

oullrr.

Keep Showboat Classic "in the family'
•
I J\S \ 1-:CAS. 1\r\' 1l : Pi 1 13ro rtH·rs-m-la w Mikr ,\ulb.\ ' and
Sltw ·Cook kepi thr $130.1('()
Shtll&lt;boMI Doublr&gt; CIM&gt;Sic ti tlt • in
rh&lt; · fam ii&gt;· \\'l'dn rsda&gt;·· slopping
F:rni1· Sch lrgrl and Hugh Millrr.
211'•·19:1. in th&lt;' ch,&gt;mpionship ga me.
1\lr h rarh bow lrr rolling r \'f'r)'
orh&lt;'l' framr. Aulbv and Cook

Qon lf'Cl

J C']('t.Jn

ga m r ttg&lt;Jinst

~l il lrr

anrl Schl~~el. whilr rile runnrr,·up
suffrn'Cl 1hiT'&lt;' opr•n frumrs.
ThP ros.Tiir "'' npt"n frame• b.\· lhf'
Jo .. in ~ tram wa s in lh P lOth l rt~m&lt;'.
Mill~r l'Ou l&lt;l have shur out thr
l op- ~o,l'£'Ci s

with 1\\'0 strikrs in thr

lOth tra m&lt;· Bu r rh&lt; • l!'fr·handrr Hr
i:t

:-.olid b-R split a nd

m t~srd

to opPn

lht · &lt;ioor for Aulb.' .
\N'din g jus1 a mark tor thr
\ 'ir!OJY. A u ltJ~ · spar(l() l hC' " ~'' 'f'n - pin
J:lth c;m'f'r triumph .

~mel ~&lt;'J IC'd hi~

T hr "inning Irom spl it SZ&gt;.IO'Ifur
th..'ir sn:::·ond sTraight doublt ·:-.
CJ"l')HTI .

I 1wa s t hf' third t itlr of 1hP ,\ 'f•ar for

l'ook arret 11 rh of his carwr
Thl' 1·ictor&gt;· r nd:ocl a streak for
Au liJY, who had faift'&lt;i to tk'frnd
thrrr lil ies during l h&lt;• Winter Tour.
Last year. the 26· yrar·old won six
rim"' and &lt;'amrd a rf'Cor d l;!lll ,:Dl.

Lillie League series
will slart Aug. 19
By lJnitcd Press Intematlonat
t.at in ,\merica is ro pla y Europ&lt;'
and t h&lt;' l' .S. Central rea m is to face
the L'.S. West l!'am on rhe Op&lt;'ning
dm
ot ll rhe
h LittatleWilliams·
Ll.'agur
f1a &gt;&lt; ·ba
Worldi OtSeries

" This is a long·hltter s course and
that's unusual for the Open ," sa id
Norman . woo has the tongrst
driv ing average among those herr
this w eek. "The long hittl'r usually
gets crllcifil'd at the Open ."
·
The sentimental favoritr is 46·
year ·old Jack Nicklau s, who won
his six th Masters and ~h owratt
" major" championship in April and
lst he only entrant st lll in content ion
for pro golf's "Grand Slam ."
" Winning till' Grand Slam is not
every likely," sa id Nicklaus. " But 1
certainly want Ia gJvr. myself a
c han~
w ."

Nicklau s, a four· time champion.
says he ha sn't been thlsdetennined
to w in another U.S. Open since he
last accomplished that fear six

u.s.

smsons.

years ago.
" I've taken a dl!frrrnt approach
I han if I hadn 't won the Masters 1in
April I," said the "GolCien Bear.
who is making his l&gt;th consecutive
U.S. Open appearance' - one short
of Gene Sarazen's record .
"U I hadn't won IfF Masters. I
lliOUldn't have a.s much rnthu si·
asm," Nicklaus said. "Frankly.
winning the Open wasn 't as much of
a priority before I won till' Ma sters.
" This is my sixthtimrlocomrlo
an Open after winning the Ma slfrs
and l' v~ only won both the same
year on&lt;P 119721. In in the early
years, when I was winning the
Ma sters on a more·or ·iess regula r
basis. it didn 't seem as important as
it does now."
Some frrl that sine&lt;' Shinnrcock
is so much like a British Open
course. Tom Watson, who has won
five British Oprns the past 11 years.
should be cons tderl'd the favorite.
"I don't think that' s rea lly an
advant age," said Watson, who won
the U.S. Open in 1982 bJt hasn't won
anywhere since the 1984 Wrstcrn
Open , 'n months ago. " Thr fair·
ways are roo soft to make a true
links go lf course.
"St ill. the gra ins arc fairly firm .
Ther e arc a numl&gt;i'r of holes will're
you can roll the bali on."
Thr hugr Open field was schc·
dutl'd to begin play at 7 a.m . EDT
today with Ill' las I threesome gbing
out at 3: 42p. m . and not expected to
finish until about 8: :vJ p.m .. weather
permitting.
The forK as t ca lll'd for possible
thur&lt;lershowcrs in thr arm rodav.
which could delay play. AU 156 arr
schl'duled to play toda&gt;' and Friday
with I he field 1rimml'd lo 1he low tlJ
for the final two rounds oo Sa turda y
and Sur&lt;la y .
·

ABC has dPCiined to televise
USFL games since the league has
moved to a fall schedule.
E arlier Wl'dnesday, documents
written by an USFL owner deserib·
ing a proposed st rat egy to foret' a
merger with till' NFL were pres·
ented to the ju"··
H!)wever. USFL Commissioner
Harry Usi'&lt;'r said the merger
strategy was only Wl alternative
consid:ored b)' somr USFL owners
w ho had been "pushed against the
wall " by t il:' "NFL's monopoiislic
mafhine.' ' Usher had been recalled
to till' srand to compiP!e his
cross&lt;.&gt;xa minar km t hat had been
interruptl'd last WE'Ck .
The dorummts - an Aug . 10.
1~. letter and a .Jan. 13, 19t!i.
memo- werr both writtm by Tad
Taube, onr of the owners of thr
USFL Oakland Invaders .
It has been rhr NFL' s contrnrion
that the USFL o..ner s oot onlv
causl'd their losses bv 'ill'ir o":O
mismanagement bu t' that th&lt;•v
inst ~a ted til:' suit to force a merger
with t ill' NFL. The NFL maintains
the USFL moved it s trams out of
maj or f&lt;'lr\'!sion markrl s 10
smaiiPr cities that had no NFL
teams to facilit ate a merger with
till' &lt;i&lt;l&gt;r league.

"We have too many, or In !llme
InstanCE's geographically mis·
placed, or m other instan&lt;Ps
underfinanced frWlchises to effect
the strategy leadlngtoamerger oc
accommodatiOn with the NFL,"
Taube wrote rn..hts 19811etter to his
lellowowners. Clearlylftt.&gt;retsto
be a mer!J&gt;r, the USFL must be
present in lo!f!cal markets lor NFL
expansion ...
Asked about .. rmving teams.
Usher insisted, Geographic post.
tlonJng of frWlchtses since I Iiave
been commissioner hav~ oothlng to
do with a merger plan.
In an dtrn contentious exchangr
with NFL .attor~ey. FJ;~nk Roth·
man. Usill't later said, It IS not a
questlon of rmving Into cities. It Is a
quesuon d being pusiFd out. "
referring to Ill&lt;' NFL.
The rommtssioner in sis ted he dld
oot share lhe opinion tha t merger
wilh the NFL was the only
alternative for the USFL and said
the allernallve he was trying to
pursue was to obtain nrw television
revenues.

Baughman promoled
DALLAS &lt;UP() - Ohio State
graduate Dutch Baughman, who
ha s served as assistant commls·
siorer of the Southwest Conference
the past three years, has been
promoted to associate commis·
\S toner. it was anoounced Tuesday .
As associate commissioner,
Baughman's duties will Include
NCAA rules Interpretations. offi.
dating, administration or cham ·
pionshlps, eligibility , campus and
recruiting seminars, national letter
of Intent administration a n d
mforcement.
"In the last year, Dutch has
assumed more and more responsi ·
billty . Ar.d. with this promotion, he
will continue to be involved in all
phases of the conference opera ·
lion," said SWC commissioner
Fred .Jamby.
Prior to joining thr SWC in
August of 1983, BaughmWJ, 37,
se~ed four years as athletic
dir&lt;l?tor of Furman University at
Greenville. S.C.
Baughman is a 1971 graduate of
OSU, where he was a ' thrre · year
football letterman . He also lelto/ed
111 lacrosse and wrestling. Baugh·
man r eceived a master's &lt;l&gt;grl'l'
from Ohio State In athletic adminis·
trat io n iro 1975 and has completed all
work except his dissertatiOn as a ·
ooctoraf candidate at OOU.

We Are Open 49 Hours ·
••

Steelers ink QB

.'

A Week

To Serve You!

STOP BY ONE OF OUR CONVENIENT
LOCA liONS IN MASON,
POINT PLEASANT.OR NEW HAV~N
CHANCES ARE WE'LL BE OPEN.
LOllY &amp; INSTALLMINT HOUIIS
Monday thru Wedneodoy ...... .. .. .. .... .. .9100 a.m. To 3100 p.m.
Thurodoy .. .... ............. ........................... 9100 a.m. To 12 noon
Frlday......... 9tOO a.m. To 3100 p.m.- 5130 p.m. To 7100 p.m.
Saturday.... .. ...... .......... .. ............... .. .... .9100 a.m. To 1100 p.m.
DRIVE-IN &amp; WALK.UP WINDOW HOURS
Monday thru Thursday ....... ... ............ .. ll30 a.m. To SIOO p.m.
Friday ........ .... .. ........ .... ................ .... .. 1130 a.m. To 7100 p.m.
Saturday .. ...... .................................. ... 1130 a.m. To 1100 p.m.

Jh Untted' Press International
Thr Pittsburgh St('('lrrs Wr dnes·
day signed quarterba ck Mark
Maione to a mulli ·year cont racl.
Terms "wr not announcrd. Ma·
lone. '!:1. is enrcring his seventh
season wit h til&lt;' Strelcrs after being
the club's l'o. l draft pick in 198&gt;
24 Hour Dapooltory &amp; Free Bonk By Mall.
from Ari7.ona State. Hr was
Pitr sburgh's sta rt ing quarterba ck
during thr first righr gam es last
""Ioresu ffrrlnga toe Injury.
sea son.,.
...,,., f.D.I.C.
which forced him to miss six
~ond ~!Tfl(&gt;l
Z.!l:! .Jackson ,\ w•
~ th Strr.f'T
games . Malonr complrted IJ7.of·
"vva!;On , W Va .
Poinl Pk•a s.:)nT , W.Va .
\lpw !law n ,\\' \',1
7i'l · ~ U
h~ · 11 :.1 1
IIC -21.\i
233 passes f;,Q.2 p&lt;'rcentt for 1.428
yards and .,.-..:.:...:.::...:.:....::::..::.:..::::.:.:.:.:._L
13 touchdowns la st vea r .
________________________

PEOPLES BANK

1 ____.:_________;____

rnund games of 1hr srrirs for 11 -a nd

OFF
Si\FE t\T HOME - Cleveland's Andre 'Thomion
sUdes into honw safely as Oakland's ,Jerry Wtua.rd

By MIKE WElL
UPI Sports Writer
As mara rhans go, Wednesday
nighr 's 16 inning. 6-2 Texas Ranger
victOr)' ovr r lhC' M innesotct Twins
had its fair shMt't:' of dramatic
homers and gutt y p&lt;'rionnan c\'s .
Oddibe MrDowrll r ippl'd a thrrr.
run home run in the rop of the 16th
inning to lead the Ra ngers in the

longest game in Minnesot a's Mt.•tro·
dome hi story .
Gary Ward lrd ofl t he 16rh with a
single, and Ruben Sierra followl'd
with a single to righr. McDowell.
who failed once to bunt. then hit an
0.2 dciivc" · from Rov Lrr Jackson ,
0.1. into thf. upp&lt;'rdcek in right fie ld
for his ninth homer of the S('ason .
Geno Perralli 's RBI double m ade it
6·2.
" Thl' pi tch was out ovl'r I hi' pla te.
II was roo good for an 0.2 pitch,"
McDowell said. " I just swung . I
have been swinging writ of late.
You get thr hir and know it's out of
til&lt;' ballpark. you say 'h&lt;'y . It' s
ovrr: That gamP could'\·r gone oo

forr\·rr.··
Tlw Texas outbu"t made a
wi nner of Mitch William s, 6·1. and
· rescuiod Charlie Hough's p&lt;'rfor·
man re from being wastl'd.
Hough, in his 17th year in r h&lt;•
ma jor leagues, S('l ;, Rangers·
record bv pit ching thr fi rs t 13
innings beforr bPing pulll'd in fa vor
of Williams.
" I felt real good thr whole gamr."
said Hough, who allowl'd r ight hits
and at onr· point retired 20 of 21
batrr rs. " Nothing was hurting and

Lee MacPhail is
Pioneer honoree
By United Press International
Th&lt;' Spo r1ing tl:rws said \11edncs·
da)· it will pll•scnt its annu al
Piom,·r Awa rd to Ll'l' MacPhail,
formrr Amr r ica n i.A'agur pn•sidrnl
and r ctirl'd head of the Player
fuolations Committee. The awa rd is
to br pr=nted a t thr fift h annu al
National Old Timers RaSf'ball
Classic in Washington June 23. The
newspaper init iated thr aw ard in
19&amp;1 to honor rrtirl'd basteball
· rxr&lt;'utive&gt;s. Pc1s1 winn£'rs of thC'
Pionrcr Award a r~ Joe Cronin and
Bowie Kuhn

tlSPS "~~~
,\ Ul\'ll'l lon of Mulllmedla. In c.

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MEN'S
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Father's Day
•i'"•' dealer

"The Middle Shoe Store In The Middle Block"

EBERSBACH
HARD~ARE
II 0 West Main Stuet, Pomeroy, Ohio

POMEROY, OHIO

992·2811

No suMcrlprlons by mall per m!Ued In
towns where home carr\{'}' Sf'rv lce Is
available.

Mall Subficrlptlon!l
Inside Ohio
13 Weeks ................................. $14.56
2ti Weeks .................................. $29.12
~2 W~ks .................................. $58.24 !
OUialde Ohio
13 Weeks ............................ .... 11~ .611
2ti Weeks 'II " .. ... .. ..................... 131.211
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PRI CE

MARGUERITE-SHOES

ri'la nagf'd just lhl'f'(' base• n.mnC"I'S
and one hir.
" He was changing sprl'ds. Hr frtt
good . Lucky 13 was enough."
Va lentine said of Hough, who was
sidelined at the start of the sr•ason
with a &amp;&gt;11' finger hr hurt whii&lt;'
shaking hands with a fr iend
Hough was matchl'd for 10
innings by 22 yra r ·old Allan Andl•r
son, who was mak ing his major
lmgue debut for the 1\nns.
Anderson allowed eight hit ' and
walked four w hile slliking our
I hr('('. Calll'd up from AAA Toledo
of the Int ernationa l League Tues·
day. hr became the first Minnesota
pit c~rr to work m ore rhan nine
innings In a game this year.
" IHough r throws that knuck lrr
for st rikes and he really does it well
with men oo base," Twins manager
Ray MUter said. "But he's always
been a premier pitcher and hr
showed again why tonight .
The Rangers wen 1 ahead 2·0 on
an RBI double by Pete O'Br ien in
rhr first and Toby l·iarrah's run
scoring triple in the third .
The Twins cut til' tmd to2·1 in the
fourth on doubles by Tom B ru ·
nansky and Gary Cacrr i and ti&lt;'tl
the score in til' filth on Kirby
Puckett's run ·scoring double.
The Rangers had srven runnrr s
thrown out on rhe baSi'par lts.
E lsewhere in the American
L.ragur. California ootslugged Chi ·
cago 12·11. Ba ltimore nlppl'd Mil·
waukff 4·3, [)(otroit do"nrd New
York 9·.1. C' lrvctand beat Oakland
74. Bct;ton l'dgl'd Toronto 3·2. and
S!'allle pound&lt;'d Kansas City 12·2.
Angels 12, White Sox II
Ar Chicago. Rupprt1 Jones drove
in thr('(' runs with a two· run homer
and an RBI triplr to powrr
California. Gary Pett is had three
hits and scorl'd thr('(' runs and
Brian Downing beltl'd a tWO·t'Un
homer in the Angels' 16-hit at lack.
K irk MtoCaskill, 5-4. was Ill&lt;' winner
while Richard Dotson, 4-6, suffr r l'd
the loss. Orilles 4, Brewers 3
At Mllwaukff. Cal Ripken' s
r un·scoring single broke a tie and
highlighted a three-run third inning
to lift Ballimot't:' and snap Milwau·

k&lt;.,.'s four· game winni ng streak .
M ike Boddickrr, 8·1, scattered sL'
hits in seven innings fort he victory.
Danny Darwin, 3·3, went the
di stanc\' and lost for the Bn'W!'rs.
Tigers 9, Y 1111 kees 3
At [)(otroit, Lou Whitaker' s two·
run single and a successfu l double
st ~al contributed to a three·run
fourth as Drt roil snappl'd a thi'l'l.' gamc los ing streak . Frank Tanan a.
64, scatt~rl'd seven hil s over seven
innings. Willie HPrnand:oz finished
for his lOth saw. Ron Guidry. 4·6
lost for the fifth time in six starts.
lnoians 7, t\'s ~
Ar Cif'l'eland. Ca rmen Castillo
and Tony Bernawrd beill'd rwo -run
homers in til' fifth inning to pace
Cl Pvaland and send Oakland to its
cighrh srratght loss . Ken Schrom .
5·2. allowrd four runs rn eight hits in
sL, ·plu s innings. Scott Bailes fin·
is hPd lor hi' fift h sav&lt;·. Rick
Langford fell to J.6.
Red Sox 3, Blue Jays 2
At Toronto, Ro!l('r Clemens and
Bob Stan ley combined on a six·
hi tt ~r and Don Bay lor crac ked a
rwo·run homer to prafl&lt;'l Bct;ton.
Clemens. who worked eight in·
nings. improved to 11 .0 and tied
Roger Morel' s 1973 record for the
best start in Boston history . Doyle
Alexan&lt;i'r fpltto 4·3.
Mariners 12, R&lt;lyals 2
AI Kan sas City, Mo.. John Moses
had two doubles and three RBI to
lmd an I B·hit Sea ttlt• attack. Th~
M ariners jumpl'd 10 a a 12·0 l~ad
wi th sevrn runs in thr sPCortd inning
and fi ve in the Ihi rd . Frank White's
two·run homer spoiled Mike Mar·
gan's shutout bid . Morgan im·
prol'ed to 4·6. CharliE' Ll.'ibrandt.
64 . took the loss .

27 take part in
part in golf event
Twenty·sevrn were in attendance
on Ladles Day. Guest Day was
discussed and committees named.
'Ibis will take plaee on Thesday,
.Tune 24th.
.
Winners after 1B holes were; tied
for low gross, Norma Busler and
M argaret Folrod . Low net went to
J:lebble Sayre and blind prize
winner was Nancy Reed. All ladles
are invlled to attend Ladles Day
every Tuesday beginning at 9 a.m.

PARKING!

urprise father
with a beautiful gift
from LifestVle
t·

LA-Z-BOY RECLINERS
STARTING AS LOW AS ................

w..k, ..... ............................. 159.80

LANE ACTION RECLINERS
STARTING AS LOW AS ................

BEAUTY REST QUEEN SET !Mat. &amp; Box!
STAlliNG AS LOW AS ................

PHARMACY

WAREHOUSE
I•
EVERYTHING

OFF
EXAMPLES
REC. $10°0 NOW '.$2 50
REC. ssoo NOW S1 25

STARTS FRIDAY, JUNE 13TH
10 A.M. TO 7 P.M.
FORMER THALER FORD BUILDINC
ROUTE 35 WEST, CALLI POLIS, OHIO

28

Porr»&gt;roy. Ohio 45769. ,

Orw W1&gt;ek .. .. .. .. ..

Available at thi• fine

1Trxas ma nager&gt; Bobbv r Vatrn ·
line r was asking me how t' fr lt e1wv
inning.
" Hr said if it wasn·r for (left
hander Krnll Hrbek leading off the
next inning, I wou ld 've still been in
thP game. But he wantl'd a left y
rhrowing to Hrbek."
Aft er thr sixth inning, the Th·ins

Rep rC'senta!lve, Bt·ar ham

Onf' Month ..........

SALE ENDS JUNE 30. 1 986

FREE

tries 1o tag him In Wednesday's game In Municipal
Stadium. Cleveland went on to win the game, 7-4.
(UPil

Ohio New,;paper Association . Natton Ll l

, plus a oowerlu l 21 2 fC eng •ne

1

Pomrroy , Ohio 45769, Ph . 992-2156. Second C'l.i~s pos tag e paid a1 PomC'roy,

In land Dall y Prr.~s Aslloclallon and Ihe

•etv a t DIOde onochment\ A rt tn r ~

~egu lar I rS!
Doll;" ~&lt;Mn~ s

Published rvrry aftf' rnoon. Monda_Y
through Frida y, 111 Court Sl., P omeroy. Ohio, b}' th£&gt; Ohio V;~ ll f'y Publ!shlnR Company ! Multlmcdla, I nc.,

M('mb~r: UnUPd Prrss lnternallonal,

oore

OF

Rangers outlast Twins 6-2 in
16-inning marathon; A's lose

The Daily Senlinel

12·.\('ar·olds will be U .S. Easr I'S.
l'.S. South and the Far East vs.
l'anad a. bot h on Au~ 2tJ. Thr
'&lt;'mifina ls \\' ill br hl'ld on Thurs ·
da~. Aug. 21. and the world

mer 1 o ru sn cu rrer

FOR

75%

por1. Pa .. un Aug . 19. T hr ot hC'rfirst ·

vae

SHOES

EVERYTHING

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2 55
44400

~ FINAL

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DAYS!

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OFF

STEARNS &amp; FOSTER QUEEN SET !Mat. &amp; aoxl
STARTING AS LOW AS ................

39900

HUNDREDS OF OTHER GIFT IDEAS
ALL 10°/e OFF SALE PRICE!
CORNER OF THliiD I OIIYI
GAUIPOUS, OHIO 446 -3045

•FlEE DEU'Wtn

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
10 A.M. TO ,7 P.M.
.
. .
SUNDAY 11 A.M. TO 8 P.M.

�I'

Page- 6-

Thursday, June 12. 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 12, 1986

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

Ponneroy- Middleport, Ohio

Being 'gifted' not always -at gift to the child
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) -Two
Wright State University professo rs
· have dlscovert'd !hat being gifted is
not always a gift.
Through a recently completed
, study of children's l ea rning sty les,
LUbum Hoehn and Marlene Blreley
found thai gifted students often are
affec ted by alienati on and

barroom
Those problems can be allev iated, however, if teac hers iden·
lily and encourage the gifted child,
they said , adding that successful
educa tion for such children de pends on coordinating programs to
meet learning sty les.
Hoehn and B ireley rl'Commcnd
emphasizing crea ti ve problem
solving, incoll'Oratlng indelJE'ndent
and small group activities and
st r essing Integra ted m aterial

ra ther than Isolated fact s as
alternatives to a traditional, basic
skill-orlentt'd curriculum.
"A general. balanced approach,
which allows careful explora tion of
all possible preferences, should be
carefully built into tbe elementary
curriculum," said Bireley. "Secon· dary teachers and counselors
should assist st udents in considering their personality types when
maklng cat·ecr choices."
The professors studied 200 pupils
in third through sixth grades and%
ju nior and senior high school
students assigned lo gifted or
academically talented classes ln
ni ne Miami Valley-area school
districts.
Giltro children tend to more
highly intuitive than ttl'ir peers,

t hey dlsrovered .
" They're able to mal~e 'leaps of
learning,' I:Jypassing some logical
steps in thinking, and t hey prefer lo
deal 'wlth Ideas ra ther t han facts,"
said Bireley,
" It' s how ttl'y prOC€·SS lnforrna·
tlon," Hoehn said. "Gifted children
tend to prefer Intuitive thought
processes. They lea m lJy leaps and
jumps r at her than by a seq uential
step-by -step process."
Hoehn said thi nking differently
may alienate the tv.1J or three
childen in 100 whl arc classified as
gifted and 1hat alienat ion can lead
to underachieving or dropping out
of school ,-ysterns " too structured to
meet their needs."
" Schools, In general, are not
geared to deal with the problems of

gifted childrrn," he said . " They'r e
very oriented towar d !he average
student and a logica l progression of
lea rnlng steps."
Bireley said gifted children usually process Information internally,
r ather than within the group.
" Often ," she said, " that Information also is processed much quicker
than aver age, resulting ! n a sense of
isolation ."
By educating teachers to be open
to different styles of learning,
Hoehn and Bireley hope teac hers
w ill Ident ify gifted children more
easily and give them C{lportunitles
to make the most of their gilts.
"There are so many different
kinds of giltedness and personali·
ties that the gifted child often gets
ignored." sa id Hoehn. " A child can

State board must
consider appeal

te gifted in int ellec t, creativlly ,
leadership , achi eve m ent s or
talents.
"Some of theSl· childrPn mal tx·
'teacher-plcasers' and lhe rcforr ·
easier to identify. Others art· niorr·
free-spirited and individualistic.
" Wha t we're really trying to
suggest ls thai unless the· glftr'&lt;l an ·
handled appropriat ely in a cla~s ­
room settlng, ttx&gt;y may tx·corrtr·
OOred i:.lnd fef'l um.T PU 1ive, '' h£· said
Bireley said the term gifted
usually im plies three charac tpris
tics: above-average intelligen t&lt;·,
high achievement and I he ability to
solve problems crea tively.
" It's this last one that 's most
likely to be lost of a child is
programmed inappropiately," she

COLL.:M ill'S. Ohio iL.: Pi t - Tho
;tat&lt;· BuarJ ul Tax \ ppca h rr,usl
Cl m~icln ·i.l n t1ppral by Austin rmvn
Township, Mahoning County, that it
l.\.JS ·~., h l)rt ( h: 1'1F.;cd b.v $~,554 i"
loca l govl·m m&lt;·nt funds in 1983 ''"" ~
Ohio Su pn ·m1• ('r1u11 has ruled .
Th1 lr.-.o ·-,' l&gt; • '1rnpl:linr'fl thJl
lhl· :\ldtHltlln !! ( --: 1Uil l ', f ~ lll i;~ el f'OrYI

mi-.&lt;... lfJn I ') rH I Ill I '(Jtr 'J'l l :l n f: '
&lt;~ l lrrf a t lr ,n &lt;... . .~ nd r ·. , ·J [ J&lt;~i rl '.1 ·;,,
Jn ~ &lt; (,unl \ h\ .':i.1.n : 1P. !:1-l Y r,u rJ~
.&lt;. . 11J'..\n '/ m~r , ... hip J';JI r 11 , :-,2.~1 l l ~ iJ
T\1t · f..,,JJd r1t Trt:. -\ppt ·,. l&lt;..
gJ , I illl d

'ril·

,fllfi

·• ( •JUTl l \

Budgl'l ( 11rh r ,(J n , ' til}' I• In trJ
d l\mi&lt;,~ lhr ·: i, fl\ hi[ ' -. r·r ,rnr' L' tr.t

l aro
Hispanic consumers becoming important market e
·-· .. ...

said .

IM THI

~

/

By RENEE HAINES
SAN ANTON IO iUPli - A
marketing expert fears the boomlng interest in courting the Hispanic
consumer will go the way of the
focus on the black buyer a decade
ago- and that . he says, will be too
bad for busin ess.
"Lots and lots of companies are
interested in the Hi spanic mar ket.
The queSt ion is do they have a
genuine economic m arket development interest or are they in it for the
public relations aspects. I fear
some! imes they are in it just fort he
public relations aspects." says Joel
Saegcrt.
"Another fear is that Hispanic
marketing is just another one of
those hot 1opics pt'OplP get excited
aoout for a while and then move on

'86 ESCORT
Stock #6763

.

14

'

That's too bad, he said , because
both groups have the numbers and

rising affluence to make them a
profitable target for 'businesses.
"I always emphasize the His·
panic market as a gr•owth opportun·
it y for companies, tx.,ause they are
a trad it ion ally u nder se rv ed
market," Saegert Sl tid .
" The hardest thi 1ng for a company to do ls stea l a m arket share
from !llmeothercornpany- Pepsi
trying to get a m arket share from
Coke. That's very E•xpenslve. Peo·
pie arc so preoccupied with the
present market. I've pushed the
Hispanic m arket as an C{lportunity
that may be C7Jerlooked," he said .
the fastest
Hispanics have
growth rate among minorities.
" They are young row, and young
people tend to spe nd more than
older people. They were tradition ally low income. and they are

becoming more afflu ent. I 'look at
the Hispanic market which has
rislng ex pee tat ions &lt;1 discretionary
Income," he sa id.
" I'm afraid other companies
might be giving it casual attention
rather than a solid focu s from a
strategic planning ·standpolnt,". the
professor said. "Pay attention to
the market for the oppor tuntles it
provides. not just because it's a hot
topic , not just because it ' s trendy."
Saegert h as been ca taloging
Hispanic buy ing preferences. culling from'the available literat urewhich he say s there is not mu ch of
- to determine the va lidity of
Htspanic buymg habits being
touted .
"One that is most widely claimed
is brond loya lty, that they are more

Lyng will accept gift of six goats from
today from U. S. dairy go~at producers

MO.

By SONJA.HILLGREN
UPI Fann 'Editror
WASH INGTON i UPli -Aml'ri
can dairy goal prodJc&lt;'rs clalm tha t
at least four former American
presidents had goats on the White
House grounds.
But Presidents William Henry
Hanison. Abraham Lincoln, Rutherford B. Hayes and Benjamin
Harrtson lived In a different era.
Agriculture Secretary Richard
Lyng will accept a gi ft of six goa ts
Thursday on behalf of President
fu&gt;a~a n . But lhosl' animals will
never gPI IocxperienCI' a pampered
life at the While Hou se.
The goat kids - representing six
breeds: Alpine. LaMa ncha. Nubian. Oberha sU , Saanen and Toggenburg - will be sent to the U.S.
Park Service's 200-acre Oxon Hill
Farm in a Maryland suburb.
But the president is oo slrangcrto
goa ls,
A yPn r ago, when he wrote a
letter recogn izing the first Dairy
Goat Awareness Day, he sa id.
" Nancy and I reca ll w ith fondness
the time about 2'i years ago when
each of our doe goats had quintuplet s on our ranch in California."
Thai experience apparently sa tisfied membership criteria of the
12.000-mcmber American Da lry
Goat Association. It is giving the
president a me membership to the

'86RANGER
Stock #6821

to so mething else," said Saeger!, a
professor at the Unvierslty of Texas
at San Antonio. who has been
researc hin g Hispan ic bu y in g
patlerns.
Saeger t compar es the current
in terest to the market reports on
blacks in the 1970s,
" I saw a lot of Interest in the
research 10, 15 years ago for blacks
thai' s j ust not there now. Now
evet-ybody's moved on to the
Hispanic subgroup, But that doesn 't
necessar ily mean marketing to
blacks is any less important than it
was 10 or 15 yea rs ago. That signals
to me. per haps. some of this
int eres t now is because it' s a hoi
topic," he said.

51
MO.

'86 ·aRONCO II
Stock #6805

SAVE

1

association, a. dairy goat m agazine
and a port rait commemorating the
quint uplet births.
Reagan designated June 14-21 as
the first Dairy Goat Awareness
Week. a step up from last year's
awareness day,
The 22-year-old association l'
new to Washington publ ic relations
gimmicks to ra ise public awar eness of their products or causes.
The gimmicks are considered a
great success if the pres ident or a
Ca binet officer is involved. Thisooe
will also fea ture a goat cheese
br unch on the Agr iculture Departm entlawn.
Dairy goa l producers wtll try to
gel the public's attention with other
events throughout fk&gt; nation .
Although the dairy goa t is only
getting acquainted with the rela·
lively modem field of public
relat ions, goats wer e the first
animal species to be domesticated .
They have provided shelt er, food
and clothing to human s for aoout
7,100 years,
Ancient Greeks produced goat
cheese. which spread to E urope,
Africa, Southwest Asia and Indi a.
Early American settler s included
goats among !heir dairy animals.
Thr momenrum was los! for

m any years . 1l!er£· are only abou t

100,0)) datry goat,, ln t he United
Slates compared to millions of
ol her lives tock.
But there has been a larg&lt;'

increaSf' in consun1er interest ·in
domestic goat che&lt;:'Ses OJer the past
decade, There are about :II producers of goat cheeses .
The dairy goat association said
goat cheese is lower in calories and
easier to digest than many other
cheeses because It s fats are
generally small m:Jiecu les.
Many people al lergic to row's
milk, oft en babies ot· elderly people,
can tolerate goat's milk, bu t it is
oft en hard to get,
Nonetheless, In various paris of
the nation, goat's milk is sold raw ,
certi fiEd , pasteurized , powdered or
as cheese, ice cream or yogu rt ,
, Goat's milk ls evt"!l an ingredient
in !llme &gt;Daps.and toilelrles.
Americans are ex]Drting goa tssome IO,«&lt;J a year - and goa t
expertise,
With a $4 million foreign aid
program, SPVeral Amer ican univer sities are involved in pro jects
rela ted to goa t production in Brazil,
Indonesia, Kenya , Morocco and
Peru .
Dairy goa l week wUI take on

brand !oval than non-Hispantcs. A
lot of Hispanic agencies trade on
that idea , that it is real hard to get
them to adopt a new brand . but ~
you do, you've got them, " Saegert
said .
The pmblem is !hal his studtes
have ye t to pmve that standa rd .
" I can' t got people to indica!&lt;•
they pu rchase more of the brand
than anybody else," he said .
Hispanics do tend to be mor&lt;·
prtce conscious than other groups.
but Hispanics also tend to bl•-mure
prest ige-product oriented
" l l!ose things are contradictot}',
and I say , 'yes . tha i ' s tru e,' but
they're both stili wrrect ,' ' he sa id ,
" The biggest fac tor markf•tcrs
have to realize i s that Hispan ics ;JI"{'

53 1 l AC ~ SON PIKE - AT 35 WE ST

Phone 446 · 4524

8ARGAI 'l MA TI fifES ',ll' - SUN &amp;
\oiEDNE SDAr - ~. Ll SP"~ 12.50
ADM ISS ION E'IEil:r TJ E ~ DA 1 S2 50
l~ ~ r D A~

"J ArE SPEED "

7:10 ~ 9: 2(

I,

Stock #6353

98
MO.

p.m.
Reg;srer daity to win a Myrtle Beach
Vacation, 3 Days &amp; 2 Nights. at Ocean
Ourvts cw Sand Dunes Resort Hotel. No
Purchase Necessary. Need Not , Be

P.....,.ToWin.

special significance at the dairy
goa t research center at Prai r ie
View A &amp; M, a historica lly black
land grant school in Texas.
The president is not lht· only
friend of the dairy goat.
House Agriculture Chairman
Kika de Ia Garza, D-T exa s, is the
center's special patmn. He go t il
established and r&lt;1Jealed ly has
protected it s existence and funding
against attempts to cut it.

FLORIST
·'vf e ij( .~

Cn unt y '., Ollks t Flori., I

C"'ING SOON: "KARA TE KID 1'

352 EAST MAIN
POMfiOY, OHIO 45769
614 /992-2644

SPECIAL
MATINEES
THIS SUMMER!

, - - - - - - - - - ----:--L.___________.....J.....J_ _- : - - - - - - - - - -

.... . . ..

In ro nflrmlng UPJ's plan of
rcorganiw t lon Tuesda)', U .S.
Ba nkruptcy Judge Grorge Bason
praisEd the nation's second-largest
news setv ice for a " truly extraordi·
nary" r&lt;.&lt;·overy from the brink ol
finan cial collapse.
''I'm enormou sly pleased and I
believe that JUPI' sl future now is
assurEd for the foreseeable futu re,"
said Bason. who presided over the
company's operations durlng 13 ~
months of Chapt er 11 proceedings.

Market report
OHIO VALLEI' LIVEll'I'OCK
Market Jlo&gt;~ June 7, li!SO
Sale Every Saturday at I p.m.
Trends: calves. stendy. Feeder Ca tU e.
steady. Cows, $1-$1.::0 higher. Feeck'r Steen :
,oro &amp; choice, Zll&gt;:m lbs, S5M61: :ro-4Xt lbs.
$&gt;!. ~,SO; «ll-500 lbs, 153-162: ID8Xt lbs.
~1 - ~1; fiXl-700 lbs. $47 , !il-~7. 50 ; IDtiXt lbs,
$4.1.50-153: tiXt lbs &amp; up. Sl2,!iJ-Iti2.:iO; Feeder
Hellers: good &amp; cholre, 2i0-:IXI lt&gt;i, 1&gt;2-16!.50;
:ID4Xl tbs, $49-156: IDliOOibs, $17-JJO; iiDtltO
tbs, S4&gt;-15J: fiXl-700 tbs, $14-151; IDIIXI lbs,
S«l-$16,50: IIXIIbs &amp; up, $38-$47; Feeder Butts :
good &amp; choice. ZiO-:IXI tbs, 152-$64; :ro-4XIIbs,
15 1.~ , 50; OJ.!'J!J lbs, ~$59; ID8Xt lbs,
$111-157: f00-700 lbs, $14 .!il-154.50: '!X&gt;8Xl lbs,
$12 . ~ ; IIXI lbs &amp; up, $3!1.!il-$49; Hots.
Steers &amp; Bulls: :m lbs &amp; up, $11·15JJD;
Butcher Bulls: 1m lbs &amp; up, utilities,
S42.!D-$47.50; cann('l"s &amp; cutters, "-17.$Ul;
Butcher Cows: utUitles, S)'l.!'i).$l.J: cannf!r'S &amp;
s:J).IJG; Lt. wt. low grade rows.

cullers.

=-

s:J).OOwri. Spring('!' CCM·s: by the ~end,
Call Comb: S:IDII(I); Veal
Ca iVf'S: chOice &amp; prime. $75-$85: medium
162-$74;" Bally carves: by !he head,

$2i).$,J;I}, Olw &amp;

Top Hog: 210-:l!O lbs $18-149; Butcher
tloars : tOO lbs &amp; up, lll-bi: Butcher Sows:

:nJ.4X) lbs.

131-$3!1;

jt)()-50()

tbs, . P!.!IO-S42;

---:

.......,.:-:Jc..,.......

4 lftlt~ll WlnciSflltiC W!Om I AII·Smon SIHI 8SW

e l'owlir slttnno

SEALY

• Trnlfd gliSS

• Ill lum

Posturepedic

•

&amp;· ~mder 2 9l tllQIIIt

I

~IIIOINIIC

P195 1wes

• I(OIIIe(l Ylllfl con klure~
~ ncn ~~~

• Hudllfli!l

11,238. 1

OYUC fl¥1

transmrs,ron

REG. 1179.00

~~~SS995
Sill

KING

Roc. l199.95

ea. p&lt;.

......

$8995

Soh Only

Solo Only

NEW 2 PC. U .

LIV. IM. SUin
lEG. $319.00

$199 95
SAVE '120

NEW 7'JI(. WOOD

DINEnE SET

!OMPAII TO 1419.00

S2999S
SAVE 'l20

IIW 5

Jl( ,

WOOD

DINmE SET

(OfltliAII TO 'U9.00

S19995
SAVE'I8

.. G)

group. Any bod\' woo tries to trea t
them as aU allke is m iss lng the
roint. But the first princ ipi&lt;' of
marketlng is to look fo r subgroups
wit hin any heterogenous mar ket:·
he said .

U.PI sale Tuesday
WASHINGT ON 1UPI I A
federal ba nkruptcy judge has
apptuved the $40 million sa le of
United Pr ess Intern ational to Mexl·
can publisher Mario Va zquez·
Rana. who says h&lt;' wUI do
every thi ng possible "to make UP!
tbe best news agency In the world."

ppr ~

as het erogenous as any other

Judge approves

OF
OLLARS

"

.,_.. .......... '*-Mtt ....... r.n..l.ft llP.II. .......... -111111•-' Pll ..... _..~_,..~ .,., .. Cttii!t~• """"
.U .II, IIIIf"'lt•lllldln, . .. ....... ,..., . . __...._._. ...... .,_,

....... ....,...,..._. .. ....__• .......,.....,........_ ..... ,,,.....,.,_...II .. IIMMttll f1IM'Iitlpi••-..'I'.W...-Itl"a-.... .,.
..................................................................
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.._..•. .,........
_.....

• ....._... _~
_ .._,_ ............
~,,..,...

!00-IIXI IbS, mtl4: Pip by the head, $18-$12.

'

,., ~.

. .. bftt ...... ..,

�The Daily Sentinel .

By The B~nd_

Thursday, June 12, 1988

Page-l

Organizations gather ·for meetings in Meigs G:mnty
MARC
Lou Hon ath of the Athen,Soci&lt;Jl
SPcurit)' office was guest speaker at
the Ju ne mee ting ofthe Meigs
Associ a 1ion of Ret arciPd Cit izen'
hrld at the Ca riNon SchooL
Commit1((' fC'JX)rts were givC'n
and a \ 'Otf' of thanks wa s extended
to toosr who contri buted flowers
and heiJ)&lt;&gt;d in planting them a round
the school grou nds. II wa s noted
that mone: from the rummag esalr
will IX' usro for special ot:·mplcs
expenses in Columbu s.
Plans werr made Jbr a group of

parents and Ill' school admlnlstra·
tor to visit a group home til
Columbu s on .Ju!X' 26. Transpora·
lion can ix' arran):({'d by calling the
schooL
The group agreed to buy a "grass
oopper'' for use in the various class
rooms. Picnic was &gt;el for Aug. !!l at
the Middleport Park. 5 to 7 p.m. A
final report on school activit ies was
gi\'(' n by the a dministator.

Star Grange
Donations ~we made to the
Church Wm·Jd Set'VIOP and the

Youth and J unior F unds when the
Star Grange met recently with
Patty D~w. master. presiding.
Thr IPgislalive t'('port was given
by Ray Midkiff. Opal Dyrr. yooth
chairman, reported on the yooth
groups' stand at the flea market
and reminded members that junior
and youth cont ests will he judged at
the Ju~v Jlle('ting.
Linda Montgomery , women's
activities chairman, reminded
members to take their entries for
the nat ionallX'ediPwork and stuffed
toy contes1s and the state sewing
contest to the August meeting for
.
•

Carpenter community happenilngs
f/

Mr. and Mrs Duane Baldwin and
·children . who ha\'(" bft'&gt;n stat folll'd

in (;(&gt;rmany. arc here visiting h~r
mother, Madge Dye, and other
rr lat h-c·s.
KPith and Bryan .Jordan \'isited
friends in Akron mer the w""kend
and fi shed in Lake Erie on
Satu rday
Mr. and Mrs. CrPg Carr and son
and Mr. and Mrs. Bm King.
Columbu s, spent the W('('kend with
their stepfa ther and mother, Mr:
and Mrs. Eldon Barrows. a nd
assisted wit h putting a roof on the
"""' home the Barro ws arc building
just off State Route 143, south of

Carpenter.
Mr. and Mrs. Kmneth Bolen and
children entertained with a party at
their home in honor of tl&gt;:'ir niece.
Lisa Bolen. woo was a member of
the graduating class at Alexander
High SchooL Lisa is the daughter ri
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Bolen.
Mrs. Arthur Cra btrrr was OOS·
tess for the June meeting of the
Temple Church United Metludist
Women at her hom e. Hazel Stout
gave-de."Gtions based oo an article
from Response magazine concern·
ing women In the church and the
ro le of fathers in the lumP. Poems.
songs, and a prayer were given by

other members. Elizabeth Jordan
suggested that one-half of the
pledge to missions for II&gt;:' year be
sent to the district secretary til
JunP. Albany United Methodist
Women are invlled to join Temple
Women for a picnic at the Temple
Olurch Grove in August. A special
program and devotions will br
planned.
Bibles were presented to Kevin
Crabtree, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ca rl
Crabtree. and Lisa Bolen, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Bolen, at
Sunday School at the Temple
Church Sunday. Both graduated
from Alexander High School.

judging.
A report was given on the l4
members who· visited Racine
Grange where they presented the
literary program.
It was announced that there wUI
be a five county potluck gel·
together at Rodney oo Saturday,
June 21, 19ft6 at 7 p.m. There will
also he a JXJt luck dinnPr at 7p.m. on
Monday, June ll, to celebrate the
IOO!h anniversary of the Meigs
County Pomona Grange at the
Rock Sprtngs Grange Hall.
A thlnking·Of·you card was sent
to Grace Colwell and an anniver·
sa ry card was sent to Carl and
Clara SheneJJeld in honor of their
nst weddm.g anniversary. The
literary program consisted of several reading,; about Father's Day
and Plag Day. A )Xllluck supper
wa s enjoyed by the group following
thP meeting.

Friends, Flowers
Beautification of the coa l tipple
area at the entr ance to Rutland was
planned durlng the meeting of the
Prlends and Flowers Garden Club
held at Pizza Da n' s in Rutland
recently.
Club mem lll'rs met with Kar l
Paulsen, a r.~presentalive of the
·loca l coat rnill&lt;~S. who has &lt;tfered to
help the club lin clearlng the project
site. Tl&gt;:' group made a trip to the

site, some measurements were sang "Mother Loves Me" , and
taken and proJXlsals for II&gt;:' beau lUI- "Sunshine In My SouL" Wanda
cation presented.
Eblln had "What's a Mother
It was decided that written
Worth?" foUowed by singing d.
permission sluuld be obtained from "Mother's Doxology." Anita Smith
the owner, Olarles Goegiein, before sang "Motl&gt;:'r Dearest."
any .work Is done . A leiter ot Intent
Karen Gllk8!son, who had been a
to enter the state beautification
missionary with II&gt;:' Navajo Indians
contest with the (l'oject wUI be sent for 17 years. was the guest speaker.
to the nature and IFautlflcatlon Jan ice Haggy gave II&gt;:' IFnedlcllon.
chalfman.
Attending besides those named
Plans were also diSCU$ed for were Bonnie Friend, Cathy, Vicky
organizing a junior garden club. and Kay Ia Pullins, DeloresSurla~
Sandy McDaniel was appolnted
Mae Lynch, Diane Johnson, Emm~
leader of the group and will handle Fox, Ruth Dulgas, lola Howell,
orga nization and listing with the Mary Miller. Belinda Soulsby,
state association.
Evelyn Young, Carolene WIUJam!,
Attending the meeting were Deanna Haggy, Judy Wolfe, Patty
Janet Bolin, Lilly Kennedy, Sandy Barton, Brenda and Tara Wyatt,
McDaniel, Gina Tlllts, Brenda Angie and Mia Bass, Kate Parm,
Bolin. Tina Stewart, Judy Snowden, Becky, Kelly and Eric A~rson.
and Judlt h Hill.
Evelyn Stanley, Joyce Bowen, Iva
Powell, Linda POwell, Marge
Fetty, Mary Braley, Eula Odegard,
Shirley Meadows, Nancy and
The a nnual mother-daughter Norma Baker, Janet, Julte and
banquet of the Laurel Clif Free Ashley Eblin, Kathryn Mora, AJ .
Methodist Church was held re- tona Karr, Tina Jacobs, Brenda
cently a t the Salisbury Grade and Pam Haggy, Bernice Swartz,
School. Jean Wright welcomed the Sandy Wright, Becky Eblin , Joyre
mothers and daught ers.
and Stacy Hysell, AJadlne Baker,
Table grace was given by EvPiyn Betty Reed, Edith Barton, and
Young, Donna Gilmore gave a Maclnda Gllkenson .
reading entitled "Mother", and
Gifts were presented to the oldest
scripture was given by Donna Kav mother, Tina Jacobs, the youngest
Clark.
mother. VIcky Pullins and the
Jessica Wright , Kim Haggy, mother who had traveled the
Arnie Friend. and Alicia Haggy farthest, Becky Anderson.

Pamela Crooks, daughtt·rs of Mr.
and Mrs. Edward A. Crooks,
MiddleJXlrl ; Ta mara L. Eichinger,
daughg1er of Mr. and Mrs. Paul D.
Eichinger, Pomeroy, and Melanie
Ann Weese. daughter of Mrs.
Lillian 1. Weese. Racine.

Academic All Americans named
Jeff Arnold and Phil King have
heen named Academic All·
Americans by the Na tional Secon·
dary Education Council on recom·
mendaiion of Mrs. Girree Notier.
an Eng lish teacher a t Meigs High
School.
.Jdf is the son of Bobby and
Bonnie Arnold, and Phil is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. L loyd King.
The NSEC has estabished the
Academir AII·Amerlcan Sc holar

Award Program in order to otler
deserved ri'COgnition .. to superior
students who excel in academic
disciplines. The Academic AIJ.
American Scholars must earn a 3.3
or better grade point average.
Names of II&gt;:' Academic All·
Americans will appear in the
directory, which is published na·
tionally. Students are selected on
the recommendation of ieachers.
coaches. counselors, and otil'r
qualified sponsors.

1986

Heritage Weekend ·b,e1ng planned,
to feature music, races, exhibits
Heritage Weekend, a project of
the Pomeroy Olamber of Com·
merce and the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society, Is
being billed as tl&gt;:' event to attend on
the weekend of Ju!V' 21 and 22 for
old fashloned fun, good food, and a
look at displays and demonstra ·
lions of ttl' skills of toda y and
yesteryear.
. Activities at the museum, Butter·
nut Ave. wtll he held from lto5p.m.
and tl&gt;:' program offers so""lt hing
lor everyone. Pat Philson Will be
demonstrating the ali of spinning,
Shirley Houston will sluw how to
weave basi&lt;l'ts and decorate sla te,
Eugene Wlloughby wUI he there
with his working grist mUJ, and
Myron Duffield wUI re!urn to
entertain on his calliope.
On both Saturday and Sunday
games will be held from I to 4:30
including a tug.o-war, three-legged
race, wheel barrow race, cracker
whistle contes t, sack race, egg and

spoon rare, egg toss, and rolling pin
throw. A place has been set up to
pitch horse shoes, and on Sunday
afternoon a pie bakingcontestl fruit
plesr wll ~be held a t 2 p.m. with !be
pies to be auctioned off at 3 p.m.
Proceeds wUI go to the Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society.
Otl&gt;:'r activities will include a
river lx&gt;at slide show 11\' Captain
Charles Stone Saturday at I p.m.
and Sunday at 2 p.m. Art Skinner
wllllr showing his skiD In leather
work, and Harold Teaford will
display wood Items which he has
made. There wiD also be a display
by Larry Wolfe of his arrowhead
collection, and Howard Nolan ri his
collection of lapidary .
Other features wUI br a softsculptured doll exhibit bY Mary
Bradford. a demonstration on
traditional Dower arrangements by
Betty Dean and Pat Holter, along
with numerous antiques.

WMFI

Students named to list
Pour MPigs Counlians attending
Musk ingum College at New Con·
cord were among students named
to the dean's Jist for the si'Cond
wmester. A grade point ra tio of at
least a 3.6 ou1 of four point s is
r"'luired for listing. The group
includes C.vn thia
Crooks and

· June 1

A "patriotic memories" room is
being prepared where items from
past wars wUI be displayed.
Documents can IF encapsulated,
copies of old Bible inscriptions
made, and on Sunday old photographs can IF copied for a charge.
Otl&gt;:'r activities or the weekend
will include a craft sluw on Court
St., from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday
and Saturday, an antique ca r show
on Prlday and Saturday, a steam
englne display by George Francis,
music by the Sweet Mountain
Sounds and Denver Rlre and his
homemade instruments, and dane·
lng by Gerald PoweJJ and his
cloggers.
'
AEP's last sternwheeler, " The
Juanita" wtll be In Pomeroy for
Heritage Weekend.
The Pomeroy Fire Departmen 1
wiJJ have barbeque chicken ilr sale
on Sunday, and food and home·
made re cream wUI be served at
Trinity Olurch aU weekend.

THURSDI\Y
ROCK SPRINGS Rock
Sprlngs GrangP will meet 8 p.m.
Thursday at the grange haD.

Olapter, Daught ers of the Ameri·
can Rl'volution, will he held a t the
IIJme of Mrs. A. R. Knight Friday, 6
p.m.

FRIDI\Y
POMEROY - The film- Three
Musketeers and Mr. Magoo- will
be shown Friday, 2 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Library.

POMEROY - Mary Shrlne 37,
Order of the \\'hUe Shrtne of
Jerusalem, will ITll'l'l Friday even·
ing at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. A practire for Inspection
wiJJ take place a t 7 p.m. with the
regular !Tll'l'ting to be held at 8 p.m.

POMEROY - Annual Flag Day
picnic of Return Jonathan Meigs

Si\TURDI\Y
MIDDLEPORT - The !Hm Three Musketeers and Mr. Magoo
-will be shown Saturday, 2p.m., at
the MlddleJXJrt Library.

GALLIPOLIS - Grand Squares
Western Sty le Square Dance Club
wlll sponsor an open dance Saturday, 8 to II p.m.. at St. Peter's
Episcopal Olurch in Gallipolis.
Caller wUI be Jlm Taylor.
GALL !A COUNTY -The GaUJa
County Conference will convene
Saturday, 10 a.m., at Poplar Ridge
Church. Everyone welcome.

PT. PLEASANT - Bend are-•
gospel sing, 7:ll p.m. Saturday at
Gospel Lighthouse Church , Neal
Road, near Krodel Park. Pt.
Pleasant, featuring Griffith Gospel
Singers, Reflections Trio, Narrow
Way Singers, The Winning Side.

NAME BRANDS
IENCHCIAFT
IIEMP
SPIINGAIIE
ASHlEY

Suzanne Bush, Racine, and the late
Jacob Bush. Paternal great·
grandmother is Mrs. Dorothy
Proffitt, Racine. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Ernie
Bowling, Jackson, and the maternal great·grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Tudor, Jackson.

DESKS, BOOKCASES, WALL
UNITS, CHESTS, CEDAR
CHESTS, SOFA TABLES,
CREDENZAS, HUTCHES

COFFEE TABLES
END TABLES

CLOSE
OUTS

ON
WHITE OPEN STOCK
BEDROOMS
DISCOUNTINUD STYLES
ON COYEIS
AS IS &amp;
ONE OF A liND

LIVING ROOM SUITES
Starting At

S28818
WATER BEDS
Starting At

$18888
CASH &amp; CAllY

'
The birthdays or tl&gt;:' three
children of Mike and Bonnie
Nicholson, Ryan, 12 on June 4,
Bridget, nine on May :n, and
· Mathew, two on June 8, were
observed recently wlth a lawn
party at II&gt;:' home of Mrs. Ernest
Nicholson, Rutland.
Following a rookout, games were
played , and Ice cream and cake
were served to Ethel Nicholson,

George and Violet Grate, WJJJJam
and Carolyn Nicholson, Miranda
and Billy Jo, Kenny and Beverly
Baylor and Brad, Georgene Grate,
James Brewer and Jeremy , Mike
Grate, Jodl Grate, Philip Smith,
Matt ~blin, Misty Birchfield, Ra·
quel !Gomez, Came WJUJams,
Monlca Holman, the hosts and the
three children wluse birthdays
were jlelng observed.
•

Brethren Olurch, Texas GJmmun·
ily, Sunday, at 7:30 p.m. Public is
invited .

SUNDAY
POMEORY - Patil'r's day
homecoming "' Mt. Union Baptist
Olurch oo county road 10 off Route
143 Sunday. Dinner at noon wlll be
followed by singing at I:30 p.m.
with singers including Boggs F a m·
lly of South Point and Ward Pamily,
Cheshire; groups are invlled to
participate.

Special services
BASH AN - Denver HiII of
Poster, W.Va. will be speaker at the
Red.Brush Church of Olrisl located
oo Bashan Road for weekend
services. 7 p.m Saturday. Sunday at
9:30a .m. and 6 p.m . The prbllc Is
invited to attend.

TEXAS COMM UN ITY - Unity
Singers, of Coo lville, direc ted by
Sue Matheny , will present special
music at the Mount Herman United

Bible school

SHADE - The Shade United
Methodist Church will be sponsoring a week·long Bible sc hool .
Monday through Priday, from 9
a.m. to 11:45a .m. each day .

Olildren, age 3 and older, will be
taught through stories, songs and
crafts. Int erested adults will IF
of fe red Bible study. Director is
Beverly Kubachka who can IF
reached at 696·1148 for additio nal
information.
ChUdren'sfilms
POMEROY - Starting Friday ,
c hildrm 's fiirn s will be sluwnevery
Priday and Saturday at the Pome·
roy and Middleport libraries. Pilms
will beat Pomeroy, Priday, 2 p. m.:
Midd leport , Saturday at 2 p.m.
Films for .lu!X' are as follows: June
13 and 14, Three Musketeers and
Mr. Magoo; June 20 and 21. Star
Trek -Dagger of the Mind; JunP
'!!a nd ~. The Deerslayer.

tests will begin a t 12: ll p.m.
Sat urday . The contest for bands Is
scheduled first, followed by con·
tests for banjos, flat top guitars,
mandolins, and fiddles.
Th&lt;&gt; !~Is compel It Jon L' sche·
duled to begin all p.m. Sunday and
will be acc&lt;impanled between com·
petitions by a oog ca Utllg contest. a
cloggers contes t. and a liars
contest.
Each entry must play three
selections during I he prrllm inarics,
although judges may reduce the
seiPCtions to two il' t.ime is being

pressed. Three tunes mu st also he
played during finals . No rlectlic

lead inslrume nts arE' permittOO,

altoough electric basses wil l IF
allowed in band competition a nd an
electric bass amplifier will he
provided onstage.
Bands mu st consist of no less tha n
lhra&gt; instruments. Sunday finalists
will be the top five finishers in each
event.
Admission is free to the general
public. Lists of lodgings and
campgrounds with hookuJE will he
provided by Bob Evans Parm. The
Parm will provide free primitive
camper space for self.contained
camping vehicles.

Summer leadership camps set

saaaa

Birthdays 4re observed

weekend but on Sunday at 2: 3fl will he perlonning
downtown Pomeroy.

The Gospel Tones and Sounds or
Inspiration; George Hoschar, master or reremonies.

Area musicians will compete for
cash prizes at the eighth annual Bob
Evans Farnn Country Music Con·
vention Saturday, June 14 and
Sunday, June 15.
RegistratiOn for musicians .;.ill
be conducted 9:30 a.ni . · 12: ll p.m.
Saturday at a cost or $2 per even t
and$5 per band. The open concert is
scheduled to run untJJ noon each
day.
Ollldren 10 years of age and
u~r are invited to pl ayonsta~e a!
12:30 p.m. Sunday. Each child
appearing wil l receive a special
Ioken awa rd .
Preliminaries for the other con·

Starting At

Mike, Bonnie, Ryan Nicholson

only be playing at the Meigs Museum over tl&gt;:'

Bob Evans Farm slates music festival

ENGLAND
CHARISMA
COISAIR
HARIIS

Birth being announced
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Bush are
annou ncing the birth of tl&gt;:'lr si'Cond
child. a daughter, May ?:1. Mrs.
Bush Is the former Mary Bowling.
The seven pound , 11 ounce infant
has been named Mary Elisabeth.
Mr. and Mrs. Bush have a son,
Donald Jr.
Paternal grandparent s are Mrs.

CAUJOPE ON IIERD'I\GE WEEKEND Relumlng to the Big Beud lor Herllage Weekend will
be Myron Dulfteld and hls calliope. Dulfteld w01 not

Community calendar I area happenings

POMEROY - The Senior Citizens DaliC(' Club will have a square
dance Friday, 8 to 11 p.m., at the
senior center on Mull&gt;:'rry Heights.
Bring snacks. Everyone welcome.

BISSEn
FLEXSTEEl
IIVEISIDE
KINCAID

~

OCCASIONAL
CHAIRS

60°/o OFF
ALL PICTURES
SPRING AIR

Starting At

MATTRESS &amp;
BOXSPRINGS

S9888

50°/o INSRS
OFF

BEDROOM SUITES
Starting At

ssaaaa
UP TO

60'/o
OFF
E111plre Far•ltare hat to eleer
- If ••• ltllf - Itt tatlre

tteoad floer to drep th
. ""'•• ••• re ....,. v.., 1/3
of E1plre't •••wroo• •••••
el••••• 111. So we'we tot th
· ,prim to do ltf

!\.......,.,.,

PROGRAM FRIDI\Y - ..,nelh
,.,te,
plaaG. wiD be In ooncert at the
French 1\rt Colony Friday. Both 1\ndm! and Ms.

and Nancy Zlday,

Zlday are from Ohio Vnlveriflly In Alhens, and have
worked with IIUII1ei'OUS groups and organizations ~
L'Oncerl. ·

Famous flutist featured Friday
There wUI IF an '1"'n concert a 1
the French Art Colony, 5JJ First
Ave.: Ga llipolis, m Friday, at 8
p.m., featuring Kenneth Andrews,
accompanied by Nancy Zlpay.
Andrews received his B.M. and
M.M. degrees ln !lute perlormance
with high honors from Indian a
.linlverslty. While trere re was
awanled the coveted Performer's
Certificate for outstanding
performanre.
Andr ews served for ' two
summers as Visiting Professor ct!
Flute at Indiana University, Bloo·
mington, wl&gt;:'re he was principal
Outewlth the Festival Orchestra. In
addition he has taught at several
music camps and is a former
member of the Colorado Phllhar·
mon ic Orc hes tra . Since the
SJ mmer of 19!ll, he has been art Jst

in residence a t tl&gt;:' Bay View Music
Festival in Michigan where he Is a
member of the Bay View Wood ·
wl!id Quinte t, principal In the Bay
View Festival Orchestra and active
as a soloist.
Andrews Is currently Associate
Professor of Flute at Ohio Unlver·
slty In Athens, wl&gt;:'re he Is also a
member . of II&gt;:' Ohio University
Ba roque Trio and Woodwind
Quintet. He has served as Director
of Orchestras at Ohio University
and tills past sprlng was guest
conductor d. the West Virglnla
All-State High School Orchestra.
Nancy Zlpay received her B. M.
from the Dan a School of Music,
Youngstown State Univ ersity in
Ohio and her M.M. with distinction
from the Manhatten School of
Music in New York. Apart from

professional accompanying, Ms.
Zlpay has performed extensively In
solo and chamber music nriials
ac ross the United States.
She has appeared a guest !lliolst
with the Hong Kong Philharmonic
Orchestra a nd til' Bay View Music
Festival Orchestra as well as
harpsichord soloist with the Ohio
University Faculty Olaml&gt;:'r Or·
chestra and has made several radio
and television broadcasts through·
out the United States and In !be Far
East. Curren lly Ms. Zlpay Is an
affJIJated faculty member teaching
ln the Preparatory Division at the
Ohio University in Athens.
To be included on the June 13
program are works by Francois
Devlenne, Domenico Sca rlotte,
Frar.cls Poulenc, and Frederic
Chopin, "mong others.

Thr Count ry Bumpkins

I'Tl('f

oo May 5 at

Mother's Day gtl'ts .

A report was given on how to plant flow«.Ys .
After th(' m('('Ung. Beck~· Kautf servro

n'tr&lt;'Shmrnts or pop and eotato dllps.
cynthia Kautl
N("WJ

Rt;xlner

ThP Salem Center CQ.Ce«prs , had a
meelfnl': on May l9 at Bcxlnle Scott's hOnr
with 13 memlx'Ni and 3 ~ visors &lt;~ ncnctln g . A
Community proJect was dlsrussro.
Tell:'5a Molden gave a repel'! Cl1 tfl(o
eKplanatlon c1 a pattl'l'n enve~. Michel&lt;'
Scon gave a report on the parts r1 a camera.
A pmt' of voUeyba ll was pla}'('d tlr
l'e!'T'!atiOrl. 'llle nt&gt;xf met"ting ls scheduled tor
Junt 2 at Karen C lark's OOm!.

, Lorma OtJer
New-s Reporter
Tht"' Country Bumpkins he-ld a meeUng on
May 19 at Chris Schultz's hom" wtth 14
mem benJ and 4 advtows In at1f!lldan~.
Members dlseUW!d a safety·-klng con.
t!Ot, the May :114-H projed cllnlcat thrMetgs
Co.rnty Fa~grounds, and the ral!ellnr for

wldt'f,bUHerflles. .

.

M.&gt;mbPrs rl the- club (l:avt&gt; a r;k&gt;monstratlon
Of first ald. Bobby Moodlspaul{h sPrVed

rt'frestuncnts. Next meeting Is scheduled for

.Junl' 2.

Cynthia Kautr

News RP.por!l'r
"Dan 's Bus Kids" 4-H Club held a rTI('('fing
oo Ma v 'll "'11h 2 advisors and 6 members

IJ'CSeni. 'l1w secrt•laJY's and treasurer 's
1"(1)0MS ~w approved and sulllJll(&gt;f meetings
were discussed. Oub members KBW rep,)fts
on t heir proj('('ts. RandyB\nggavea rt'JX) rl on
plants for JDOr !iOll. John Chancy loki about
thl' cart' of plants an d how to apply ft'rtlllzC'r.
M:&gt;mbers played wttfJf ball for rerrfBUon.
At tOO next meoet lnga fteld trip L~ planned and
a! visors will dleck on projects.
John Chancy
News Reporter

HUibUII&lt;s 1TX'1 May 23 at Opal Dy!.'f'shomP
with 5 members attending. candy bar sales
were diScussed, also the projl't't clinic and 4-H
camp. Ernest Villanueva gave a report oo
corrpuf('I"S. Charadt:&gt;S was playt'd llftrr
meeting. Opal served cookies and potato
dl\ps. Next meeting l.!i June2 at Opal's hoose.

Sherr! Ramsburg
News Reporter

'llle Allred A~fls met on June J Mt Susan

•

camper to assume variOus leader·
ship roles. Camp activities also
include campfire, flag ceremonies,
swlmmlng, boating, hiking, water
carnivals, crazy games, and many
other special camp activities, Les·
ter said.
Outstanding leadership roles are
rewar&lt;Ed daily and at the endo!lhe
camp with an award's ceremony.
Experienced and weU ·tralned coun·
selors work with campers to help
develop leadership skUis.
Leadershlp Tralnlng camp Is
cpen to all area young people

IFtween tl&gt;:' ages of 8-15.
Area camps Include Session 3 at
Cedar Lakes in Ripley oo June 27-:Jl
for ages 8-13; Session 4 at canter's
cave in Jackson on J uly S.9forages
12-15, and Session 5 at Canter's
cave In Jackson on July 9·12 for
ages 8-12.
The cost for the 4.&lt;Jay camp is S65
which includes aU lodging, meals,
materials, and awards.
For applications or fuliher infor·
matlon contact lEster at P.O. Box
\Ill, Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631 or call
614446-8256.

FAC accepting new gallery proposals
The French Art Colony, located
a t 530 F irst Ave., Gallipolis, Is
accepting ex hi bit Jon proposals
from Individual artists and artist
grouJE fOr the 1986 gallery season.

Banquet held
A mother-daughter banquet was
held recently at the Silver Memor··
ial Freewill Baptist Church in
Kanauga .

Proposals soould include up to
eight limm slides representative
of an artist's work with a resume
and prior exhibition record. A
numbered sUde listing and self·
addressed stamped envelope mu st
accompany slide submissions. All
slides should IF labeled with the
a rtist 's name , title of work, media, .
dimensions and year completed,
Deadline for gallery proposals Is
Aug. 15. Special exhibit arrange·

ments and availability dates should
"'company proposals in a cover
letter.
Information and slides should be
forwarded to the French Art Colony
Exhibit Committee, P.O. Box 472,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. For addl ·
tlonal information. call 446-4425 or
446-:&amp;4 Tu esda y through Prlday.
The Prench Art Colony is a
no n·proflt art s organization funded
In part by the Ohio Arts Cooncil .

N
0

A buffet dinner was enjoyed by rr;;;;;;;;;;~~i~f.;::~::~~f.~;;;;;;;;;;;,
the group. Lucille Parsons gave
scriptu re, Sylvia Neece had several
poems, and there was group
singing . Attending were Shirley
s1~m~an : Sandy Mltchen, Bonnie,
Mellnda and Dee Gooklin, Peggy
Yeauger, Mildred Clonch, Ange la
Harmon, Ruth Hlgginlx&gt; \h ~ m.
Anna Mae Hoffman, Shirley Har·
- -1'-··
•AUTOMAnC
mon. Dorothy Leach, Marshat·and
Ma ryanna Browning, Carolyn
TRANSMISSION
W• msley, Ruby Holley, Connie and
•V-8
~~
Clarissa Parsons, Jewell a nd Jessie
ArroWOOd. Hazel Plants, Ha7.el
Fortner, Mila Blankenship, Sharon,
Becky and Melissa Williamson,
AS LOW AS
Betty Mitchell, Sheila and Stracy
Fielder, Penny Likens, Sylvia and
Rhonda Neece, Deena and J ennifer
Kennedy, Diana and Lindsey Smith
and Joshua. Shari Stone, Phyllis
Drehel.

WEDNESDAY'S AD SJIOULD HAVE READ

FULL SIZE TRUCKS

Meigs County 4-H happenings
Chr1s &amp;hu ltz 1 .~; honl('. Sf&gt;vrnta&gt;n rfl(&gt;mbers
and 3 advlqars a ttmdro. Tht' club decided to
tour IN&gt; Pizza Hut on May 10. Thcv are also
J)lng to trur the Meigs Museum arid make a
$5.00 donation. An the I'Tl('mbcrs madf'

The American Leadership
Academy will IF sponsoring 51!&gt;'·
eral Leadership Tralnlng Camps
for area young people this summer.
Leadership Training Camps l&gt;:'ip
young people 10 develop essential
leadership and cltizellship skUJs.
The four day camp offers a
variety of exciting workshops and
sessions 10 l&gt;:'lp )oi:)Ung people
develop se Jf:confldence, sellexpression, and independence, ac·
cording to director John Lester.
At Leadership Tratning Camp,
campers are divided Into leader·
ship grouJE In order 10 allow each

Pullins' horre with I Jml"mbcrs and 2adVisors
In ancndanct'. Plans Wt're made&gt; for a
ron.sesslon stand on J une ~a l the harst:&gt;pull at
the Athens County FolrgrounM. It was alo;o
clscussed who would Jx&gt;scrvingat theChestt"T'

and East('fll alunn l banquets to bt&gt; held on
June 7, l9Qi.
Rcnet' Kayk&gt;r ga ve a rq;ort on how to pta('(&gt;
a pattt..'rn; Mary Ann Klbbl~ gaw Of1(l on
rookin g from her All Amer1 can foods
P' ol~t: Michel(' Donovan gave a report oo
bt&lt;')~l&lt;S .

Badminton was played for recre&amp;Uon.
Robin While, SJ.san llul llns. Mary .A.nn
Kibble, and Gay Ann Burke served refre'l h·
ments. The next lrleftlng is set for June 10 at

which time Adam Calaway, Renee Kaylor,
and Maralynn KJbbl~ will give reportS .

8,799

Robln While

News Reponer

The Alfrl'd Livestock 4-H Cl ub mtt at Dte
Baker's MIT'te' on J une 1 with 10 members and
3 atvtsors attending the meeting. ~101'1

lncludro lhe dt'rnonstratlon on Thursday
right (May :!J at the Fairgrounds: members
were told IJ&gt;y,• much their pigs shwld wela;h
and ab&lt;&gt;lt· showing the~ ~ .. and things to
bring lo ratr. A pC!ItC Is plaMed In July for the
club.

HOUII
lloo., IW, lri. 1130-I,QG
r.... &amp; ,.,.._ 11SO·S1IO

,

lat. 1:10·4,QC): lao. 1111-S.OO

�rhe

Ohio

.,

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 12, 1986

P9meroy-Middleport, Ohio

WE SALUTE ,

Weekend evefits plarlned with fathers in mind
well as playing. Thr team was
sponored by a kennel that raised the
Oorang Airedale. Proceeds of this
festival Sat urday and Sunday go
toward recrea tion improvem~nt s
in the community that has less than
1,000 people.
·
This being Fa ther's Da~· wee·

krnd: ·#tumerous rvf'nl s arr planned
with Dad in mind .
The parking Jot at Cedar Point
will turned over to Corvettes as
more than 500 of those sports ca r s
are expected for the 17th AII·Ohio

Corvette Weekend Sunday.
Tractor Pull will be held at the
Americas only remaining rail · Marlon County Fairgrounds Friday
road carniva l Is In Cleveland
tnrough Sunday .
through Saturday, putting on ap·
A Country Music Festival with
pearances at the International country and blu~ass musicians in
. Exposition Center adjacent to the competition will be held Saturday
Cleveland Hopkins Interna tional
and Sunday at the Bob Evans Farm
Airp011.
near Rio Grande In Gallla County.
Jul!f' is Ohio Wine Month, with a
The Orange Johnson House in the
varie ty of special events at wineries Columbus suburb of Worthington
and vineyards. Vintriersofferdrive- · re-enacts an early lfffis Ohio
lt·yourse~ tours and the history of
wedding Sunday afternoon.
winemaking in Ohio tha t dates back
Summer Weekends at the Ohio
to the 1800s.
Village in Columbus are held
Jonat han Bye Days, in the Sa turday and Sunday afternoons a t
Guern&amp;'y County community of the reconstructed village.
Byesville through Sunday, pay
A House and Carden Pilgrimage
tribute to the founder with a parade, and Artique Show will be held Jul!f'
flea market, and at1 s and craft s.
18 tnrough 20 in Hudson.
Arother activity in Guem&amp;'y
-Ar Oceanography Exhibit will
County Saturday is the sixth
be on display at the Center of
anniversalJ' of the Degenhart . Science and Industry in Columbus
Museum in Cambridge.
tnrough July 1l The Super
The Marion County Steam and
Summer Science Show '86 at Cail
Gas Engine Show and Antique
focuses on computers. This pro-

gram Is in effect tnrough Sept. 1.,
-A Quilt and Stitchery Revival
at Sharon Woods Village in the
Cincinnati suburb of SharonvUJe Is
an exhibit of antique quilts and
needlework tf'Chniques. This Is on
display through June 22.
-Pa tterns Worth Repeating is a
QuUt Show at The Dairy Barn in
Athens through Sunday.
On the theatrical schedule
"Tecumseh!" outdoor drama
opens Satu rday at the Sugarloaf
Mountain Amphitheatre near Cl\illlcotne. Perlormanoes are Monday
tnrough Saturday evenings tnrough
Aug. :ll. For tickets, call 614-775·

0770.

.

- Tne Summer Arts Festival at
the CUff Park Amphitheatre In
Springfield from June 18 through
July 12 offers lrre outdoor programs on jazz, sy'mphony blu~ass
and musicals . The per1ormance

Holzer Health Fair
slated for June 26
The Third Annual Holzer Medical
Center Healtn Information Fair
will be Thursday, June 26, from 10
a. m . until 4 p.m., in the French~
Room at t he hospital and on the
adjacent outside patio, according to
Cl\arles I. Adkins, Jr., chief executive officer.
Residents from the hospital
service area are urged to take time
to visit this third annual event,
which is free.
Accordin g to Mary Harrison,
R.N ., stall development coordina·
tor for nursing services, who Is
chairing the fair, much information
can be shared with the residents of
the hospital's multi -county service
area. Visitors to the health lair will
see and hear more about how the
hospital functions, Ms. Hamson
noted. " Today 's emphasis is on
'weilness'. We want the residents ot
the area to know how Holzer
Medical Center an d its stall m n be
helpful to them in m aintaining their
healt hy minds and bodies."
"Each service within a hospital is
unique and at thesarne time, vital
to the smoot h operation of a
medical romplex , Adkins said."
"The Health Inform ation Fair
offers the appropriate seM in g for
area residents to ga in first hand

-i"'-"

J

•

6971.
-"A Chorus Line" is performl'd
at Lourdes Coll~e In SyJvanla
through Saturday. F or tlckets. call

.

Music in the Air l&lt;i the Sllmmer
program of free outdoor concerts In
Columbus City Parks Friday tough
Sept. 17. The schedule is available
by calling 614-221 ,nxJ.
-Ponderosa Park near Salem
hosts top Nashville stars every
Sunday through Sept. 28. For
tickets and schedule, call 216-

332·0044.
-Magic Waters Theatre in Bain·
bridge In Ross County presents
Broadway Shows tnrough Sept. 6.
For a schedule and tickets, call
Janice Brlzlus at 6!4-47J.IHI or the
theatre at 513-365·1388.
-"Extremities" wlll play at
Otterbein Coli~ tnrough Sunda y.
For tickets, call 614- 890-:ll28.
-"Evita" is performed at Players Theatre In Columbus through
Jul!f' 28. For tickets, call 614 ·2'24·

l

' , ;;

I

\ . \.:" .

chrstra performs l our concerts at
Chemica l Abstracts in Columbus,
June 21 and 28, ,July 5 and 12 . For
ticket s. call 614· 221-5281.
-Music In the Park Is a frf'l•
concert every Th~rsday evening In
the Municipal Cen ter in the Colum .
bus Sllburb of Upper Arlington
tnrough Aug. 28.
--Ohio Light Opera's season at
the College of Wooster and runs
tnrough Aug. 10. For tickets, ca ll
216·263-2345.
-Star Thea tre Inc. in Warren
presents Theresa Brewer and Jerry
Vale and the Glenn Miller Orch,,;.
Ira the week ti June 21. For tickets,
ca ll 216-392·55."().

By WILL1AM C. TRarr
United P,.. International
FAMOUS READING TEACHER: Be.l ore Amos was famous, h&lt;'
was a high school dropout. Now WaDy "Famous" Amos, the cookie
king, is prepa r ing dropouts lor their gmduation«Julva lency test
tnrough The Kentucky Network, nar rat ing five ll·minute v:deos that
nelp adults lea rn to rrad.
" I r an l'l"ally relate because I was in thr Air Force when I took II&gt;.'
CED and I was scared as hell," says Amos. a long.fimc crusa dr rfor
literacy. "And not ha v ing a llot of preparation fr ightened mr rvrn
more. I can sera rea l advantage in these videos ."
Amos quit vocational school in New York in 1959 a ft rr hearing his
best friend' s tales about the Air Force. " I wa s not one of your most
industrious students," he says. " I always looked for the ea sy way
out. " But then cookies madr him rich and famous and Amos has
branched out by putting ou t a motivational record.
His llf'XI project is a store where customers grt 1heir shoe&lt;j
custom-made on the spot for anywhet'l' from $60 to S:W.

;~,

i

!

''
.t.

EXHmrr SFI'- Sarah Blazer, staff rurse at Holzer Medical Center,
demonstrates Choakin ' Charlle, a man~ln to teach aid for a clloaklng
vlcilbn. II will be one of many exhibits at the Holzer Medical Center
Health Fair.
Gallia County EMS will also have a
space.
Booths and display tables wUI be
set up in tne French :lXl Room and

on tne outside covered patio for an
eaSy flow of \isltors to the Third
Annual Healt h Information Fair.
Refreshments wUI be served .

Cabbie (pothole bandit' "
won't be charged by city
BU RLINGTON, Vt. tUPi i Bruce Ploof, a ca b driver by da y
and liv' admitted m asked "pothole
bandit" by nig ht, will not be
charged lor planting evergreen
trees in city potholes, police say.
·Ploof's ca mpaign to draw atten-

tion to the urban craters was so
successful, in fact , that city officials
have pledged to repair Burlington's
streets and Ploof plans to target
potholes in New York and
M assachuset Is.
Ploof disclosed he planted the
evergreens In three city potholes
ea rlier thi s month alter hearing
that an ambulance ax le had been
damaged in a pothole.

Police Lt. Jonn LaWare said
Ploof has talked to pollee and he
" will not be charg{'d for his actions.
"He made his point." said
L aWare. "The city's starting a
program to clean up the JXllholes."
Burlington's socialist mayor,
Bernard Sanders, asked Monday
that the city spend $1 million next
year on road repair, tbe largest
sum ever lor that purpo&amp;'.
Ploof said he had planned the tree
planting for tnree weeks, and wnen
planting day cam e along, he drank
some beers with his accomplices to
gat her courage for I he overnight

act ion.

After planting the evergreens, he
· borrowed nearby barricade'! . to
' 'I'm glad my point was made place arou nd the potholes. so that
wit hout being m al icious," sa id nobody would get hurt by running
Ploof, 28.
into them.

Quarter horse delivers triplets
DAVIS, Calif IUPI I -The birt h
. of triplet quarter horses in a r emote
central California pasture was a

rare event

BIG SWEFI' T0(1I1J - Two pastry chefs put Dnlshlng touches on a
chocOlate Statue of Uberty In Pam Wednesday. 'The s!atue weighs two
tolti, Is two meters high and will be shipped lo New York lor July 41h
celebrations. (UPI)

made Pven more

"ex traordina ry" because the two
fillies and the colt have survived,
experts say.
" It was touch and go for the first
24 hours and wUI continue to be' for
the next week," said Dr. Jonn
Madigan, senior clinician of eq uine
medicine at the U niversity of
California at Davis.
The three foals wrrc born
Monday in a pasture near the
central California city of Modesto.
·They were tak en to the Davis
campus for expert , 21-hour care

and were reported doing well
Wednesday evening.
Madigan said veterinary tex ts
estimate
' triplets
occur
in
horses
onlythat
once
in every
300,000
birtns.
" I don't know of any vet that has
ever tended to ttiplets born to a
horse. It is so rare," he said . "And
that they are live birtns is even
more extraordinary . Mares oft en
co nceive twin s and often abort both
.or ol!f' of them. "
The Jarwst fllly wa s 35 pounds
and the colt 28 pJunds. A foal
usually weighs about «J or 50
pounds, Madigan said.

t\ND SO SHE GOES: NBC newswoman Unda EUerbec td ls
what's wrong wi th tel~visio n in her book "And So It Coc'S" and
singled out onP problem - network condescension - du ting a
publicity stop in Boston.
She says the people who put television tog{' I her .. arc l'l"'t1ain they
are smarter tnan the rest of us and so thev talk down to us
constantly. " Consequently , she said, "W&lt;' g{'.l 'Dirk and .Jan&lt;''
writing. It' s that old non&amp;'nse that the American j)Jblic wan tsdreck.
I don't think that 's true. In tel evision , we pay lip service to good
writing but it 's neither demanded nor rewarded ."
PIN-STRIPED TEP.RORI'i'll!: Heavyweight corpora te cxccu·
tives blowing up Wall Street? Ad m an Jbn Patterson uses the names
of clients and colleagues lor the charac ters in "Black Markl't," hi s
filth book.
Patterson, who has worked on advertising campaigns such as
"Miller's made the American way" and Burg&lt;'r' King's Herb. uses
the name of Burger K ing Chairm an ,JeH CampheU lor one of his
disaffected Vietnam veterans who attack Wall Street. Kyle Craig.
head of the Steak and Ale cha in, a lso is a bad guy.

PHARMACY

2501 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant, W. Va

THE PERFECT PLACE TO
SHOP FOR DAD'S DAY
IS THE LaSALLE GALLERY
WE HAVE A WIDE SELEcnON
OF GIFTS FOR DADS, BOTH
YOUNG AND OLD

•Wine Sets
•Desk Accessories
•Balloon Bouquets
Ect-Ect~Ect. ·
FREE DELIVERY
MANY OF THE ABOVE ITEMS ON SALE

•Bar-B-Que Sets
•Collectables
•Mugs

LaSALLE
GALLERY
137 N. 2ND
liiDDliPOI1

C·HECK OUT OUR LARGE
SELECTION OF
FABRIC ON OUR

1/2 PRICE lABLE

TATI..OR TALKS: Elizabeth Taylor says self·pity, stubbornness
and Insecurity led to her excessive drinking and m t ing. When she fell
sorry for herself , Taylor says she told herself, "'Poor El izabeth.
Let 's have a little r eward t hen .' And It wou ld be chocolate il'l"' cream
and hot fudge." She compounded things when the fat pkes ,;arted.
" I don't know anybody whoenloys fat jokes and all the jokes•bout
m ysellthat I heard- all they did was make me mJn' rec alcitrant ,"
she says In a series of interviews that starts Thu rsday on NBC' s
"Today."
She beat alcoholism at the Betty Ford Center almost ti&gt;r€&lt;' year s
ago. "''m much morr secure wit h myself than I wa s before," she
says. "I used to drink because I thought It wou ld hPip my shyll('Ss."
Taylor also says that her favorit e movies are " Who 's Afraid of
Virginia Woolf" and "National Velvet ." " I w-a-s 'Velv et ,"' she says.
"I ale, breathed, talked nothing but horses." GUMPSES: ' Dean
checked Into Cedars ·S inai Medica l Center in Los A n ~ les
T\lesday night complaining of a pinched nerve in his neck. He's
undergoing tests and hospital officials expect him to stay three or
four days. A spokesman lor Martin says the inju ty is belirvrd to bP
golf-related ... The whit e hair has trcome her trademark but
Barbara Bush doesn't have lo like It "I wish I hadn'llet my hair gu
white," VIce President George Bush's wile says in a La dles Home
Journal interview. "I colored my hair for 10 years until 1970. I kept
trying to dye it warm brown but it came out any co lor it wanted I
spent my life in the beauty parlor. Finally I sa id , 'This is lidicu lo us,'
and George didn't care ... dldn 't even notJI'I"'" ... "The Morning Alter "
has a blg·nam e cast - Jane Fonda, Jeff Bridges Wid Raul JuUawith Sidney Lumet directing. It' s a murder melodrama and wil l be
released later this year . .

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$299

$19''

AFTER

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The powerful . SpotL•Iern.• ptO\IIdes a reltable source
of light lor common household tasks or emergenctes
Spolliler recharges conr.nuously m 11s storage/
charger base. so it' s always full y charged and 1eady
to use No need to replace batte r1es

SALE PRICE

$2299

AFTER

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SPORTSMAN's LANTERN

All purpose floating lantern.
Birght light!

OUR COMPLETE STOCK

TIMEX ·
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mustache lrlmmlng so
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• unique. 5·poSJfion ltimmlng guide attachment lets you select the beard and
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SALE
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Shaves as close as a
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COLOGNE SPRAY

r;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~

AND

HAWAIIAN FABRICS

Great Gifts

786 N, Second Street

JOVAN MUSK FOR MEN

Manm

JACKET

NEW SHIPMENT
OF

364 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio

Quantity Closeoul!

BLUE CHAMBRAY

992-7521

father

419-213·9Z77.
-The Columbus Symphony Or·

People in the news

experience tnrough demonstrations and equipment on display,
while m embers from the various
department s of the hospital are
available to explain and answer
any questions".
Departments participating this
yea r include Ambul atory Surgery,
Coronary Care, Diabetic Education, Dietary, Emergency, ET
Therapy, Home Health, Jenkins
Clinic, Medical L aboratory, Neural·
ogy Labor atory. Obstetrics, Oper·
atlng Room, Pediatrics, Pharm acy, Radiology, Respir at ory
Therapy, Social Services, Volu n·
leers and Volunteer Cl\aplains.
Other displays will provide Information on programs and printed
materials of special interest to
cant'l'r pat ients, such as the " I Can
Cope" progra m and Reach to
Recovery, and tbe Ostomy group;
to heart patients with materials
from the Heat A ssociation; demJnstrations with Ci&gt;oak in' Charlie to
teach the Heimlich Maneuver; new
computer program on Health Risk,
the Body Composition Analyzer and
LIFELINE.
A special display will illustrate
the numerous outreach programs
of the Hospita l in Gallia, Meigs,
Mason and Jackson Counties. The

•

.schedule Is available by ca lling

513-324- 2712.

11

~·-J·u-R~Y
is

I

By SANDRA L LATIMER
United Press lntemalional
La Ru~ in Marion County - the
sm alles t city that ever fielded a
professional football t ~a m - turns
its atten tion to that feat this
weekend with tiv' annal Oorang
Bang.
La Rue fielded a profpssional
football team in the l!!Ws, ~&lt;it h the
l~endary Jim ThOill&lt;' coaching as

Sentinel-

sideburns. too

V:.%
33

'

• comes with 3 lonlj·lile alkaline banerles,
storage bose. adjustable trimming ljuide
aHachment, mini beard &amp; mustache
comb, blade guard, cleaning brush, oil
and detailed lnstrucllons

Less 1500

'14~R

'19"
Mail-In ilebat•

SALE PRICE

OFF

REBATE

EXAMPLES.

Reg. 11911 NOW '13"
Reg. '2~ NOW '1B'1
Reg. 13411 NOW '23 •

ltfvE LOTIIN

�Page- 12- The Daily Sentinel

Medical ·study cites dangers
of keeping guns in homes
H)· ROR STEN

puq;.,1~t '

L'JlJ Sd(•nt't' \\nl (•r
HOSTO\ 1l ' Pl 1 - l'r\)plt· 11 htl
kn'p .QU n ~ tn 1llt'l r h omt ·~ 111.1.\ ht • Ill
)..!n\lh' l rl:lll ~PI 11J,!I1 !hO:-.t ' \\
.tt 't 'OI dm ~

no1.

tu

.1

!Jp

dt l

nt'\\ ..;rud.\ rlt l t

luund !IH~ 1irr. mns.arr

morr· nf1rn

inYnl\'('fi 111 sulct clt •". honm Jdt '' 01
t.llal atc1cknh tli,Jn m ~·lf ·tir lt • !t-t ·
'ilH' .!'f uel\ ol gun~ J101 dt' .lth~ 111
h1ng Count' . \\ a-;h. .-. hmn'CI !h.! I
l(ll f' \ ('10 faral s htXl ltn g !hill &lt;Y't ·u r"
in lhC' homt' in ..;df rll'fl'fl Sf'. nt'U t h
~.1 l)(•oplr an· klllf'C l 111 -.;IJICi dt'"·

hnmit' Jclr-.. .md .ICCidrnl' nnoh mg
;1 gtJ n \.:q)l .11 bomf'

·Jn hghr of tht•st· f111din g~. 11 m.1 .\
1'(\L... un.!bh bt • askt•d '' tl(' l ht•r h. t 't 'P

nt

L:11 n IS rot ·to klll a
t'llnllli. ll I t ~Ill p1UI0Ct lht' indi\·id ·
u.d \ lt' "'' pJoh'(!l\ t• ust&gt;s of gun~
dn11 't 11n ol\ I ' t '\ t'l
firing thP
tin•,Jr m . much I~'"'" killing Thr
md1\ Jcl JJal ..
Fn1 · tile stud~ · . h't• llrr mmt n:•
, lt '\\ t'(l

.1

n'(nnis

t h1 ·

of

all

lhf'

~'1 11t"h't d1'. tt h ... 111 King Coun t ~ .
\\ l11 d 1 111\'IUdt&gt;~ St 'd llh•. from 19~ 10
19~).

01 7~ 3 fu t'a!'lll tl'lal!'{l dPaths.J98
ocr·u 1Trd 111 the hom r whrrf' tht'
H t'&lt; lpon \\'a.., krpt Two drat h.s
tmoh txl .111 mtmdPt OC&gt; in ~ shot,
\\hil t' J llOlhf•J S\'\ PII ~p]l' W('l t.'

k1llt&lt;l m oliH'I 1n&lt;'ldclll s ci:L"if1ed

d fdmiJ.\ ',_ prn li'l' ll llll Il l phH'I~, II U1
j:!l't',lll'l'ci.tngc J .' Sclld I lr :\ t lhlll L
hc llt•r m ,m. who rondut 'll'd rhr•

a:-. self &lt;idt'll 'it'
Fo1 ('\i' n scll&lt;kft·nst' hom iCJd('
111\0I\ tn g .t IJI'f\ l l'nl. ttr rrwNr LJ
. ~&lt; ·c rdrnr .!l dt\ llh'. -1 .6 c riminal
h~) fllK' Jdt·.., ;mel ;{~ :-.u irici's. Gun..,

stud\

\\' t'l

1!1)..: fllt'.IJ"Tn~

m rhc homt' tn Ci t 'd:-.t"'"

P.nd Rl.wkmt~n uf lilt' \ t~llo n.J I

t'

u.. tll

tu

.Jcq u,tmtann:·"

1~

kill

tlmC'S

fT irnds or
as ofl r n as

Hiflt · .\ ... ~oci.J tl o n d i"Pll h'&lt; l 111r
..,tud~ ·,. fmding.;, whlf'h ·\\'i T t' rt•-

'-II an g1 ·t·..,

~ ~~ TN! 111 \\ l'&lt;.ln r.;;.d J .', .._, \ (·\1

lh.il 11 100 k('('p .1 gun in lhe house

l 'hg

lancl .loum ;ll nl \ 1rdtrJno -"
UI.H kmdn "'atd thr ~rut!\ Llllr'{ld

" llt'rr· IIYmg lo shake Ihe belief
\Ou .11 r plOif'Cl tng .\ OUr~l'll. "

10 [,JKt • illiO , ILTOUII I IOCir!t•n t.:; 111

Krl
l!• t m;uJ s.tid in a trl('ptn nr inrrr
\WH .
In f:w 1. ~ oo may be

H h]{ h gun u~1 tll'J5 prott't' lf'&lt;ltll('m

in( t r'.l.., ltt £! ·' ou t cl.mgror mstrad of

-,1'!\ f'"' nubrcl1 ' rht · ~llln t·o r m u:h1ch

c! l'f'l'l ' tl'-'l!1 g I! .

dll ml 11Hh'r \l &lt;l ' fng ~l t Cnf'CI ,m ;n

\\ llii&lt;' m os t o ~mrts of tl¥' PSit ·
120 millton J;..'tt fl' in thf'
L'mll{l S!&lt;ltt&gt;s kt'f'p firrarm s fo r
hunt mg. &lt;; fUCIJr'. s }l)~r Up IO flu'[{'·

\,\1111

.~ j:..ru n

~tud.\ ' 1

11h1'

"It

Hhd1~0\I'J

10

00

~ tid

ha:-

\11th

IJ\ r \ 'HlUf' Of :1 g un

corp:--&lt;"'.

rn.~tt 'fl

\l'tthou r tx&gt;ut.Q "hot
n o t hi ng

thr • prnh'&lt; '

II 'i lnt lnllll ,C

H l .M' klnc~n

"'n 1c

qudtwr ... o l h'llH O\\llC'r"
.tt

Thursday, June 12, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

!t'd"l

pa rtl\·

lor

kc\f'p thf'm
prol(('llOn ,

Guns in the Home

Kellerman said .
In addit ion. OVIllf'rs of handguns.

which wt•re used in more ttian ill
JX'I'('I.'nl of lhr death; not inl'oil·mg
Sl'lfdrfe nsr in 111&lt;' s1udy. arr mu ch
more likr t;· 10 cit e self·proleclion as
lhr 1mson fo r k('l.'ping il gu n
Prl'l·ious Sludics hale found 1ha 1
JX'Oplc im ohn l in argumems tend
to rt•arh for 1tv'&gt; mostlrt hn l I.I.'C'apon
m·aiiable.
"Easy acC(\:ss to firf'arms rna~

lt"&lt;&gt;rrfore be pa rticular ly da ngr- rous in houS('holds pmnr todomeslic
violen('l.'. " Kellerman sa id .
He added that becauS(' man;
people who atlempl 10 kill IJ1!'mSf'ln-s act on impulse, an easily
avai lable gun may conlrioole to If&lt;&gt;
likelihood of a suicili&gt; .

'Bandil' takes action
BURLII\GTON. \'1. fUPII
Bruer Ploof, a C&lt;l b driver by day
and lhr admilled masked "pothole
bandil" b~ nighl. will not br
charged for planl\ng evergreen
trees m cily pot holes. poli('l.' sa).
Ploof's campaign to draw a ll enlion 10 lhP urban cra t£'rs was so
successfu l. in facl. Iha l ci t)· officia ls
havp pledged Io repa ir But·linglon ·s
s1rrels and Ploof plans 10 t a rg~&gt;t
pl lholes in New York and
MassachuSf'lls.
Ploof disclosed he plant ('(] ih&lt;&gt;
evrrgr('('ns in lhl'('(• cily potholes
l'a rUer this mont h af1 er hraring
thai an ambu lan('l.' ax le had been
damag('l.l in a po1 holr.

A Washington state study done from 1978 to 1985
showed that for each case in which a firearm was
used for self-defense in the home, the following
incidents involving firearms occurred :

5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40

0

Accidental

Royal couple at clinic
to undergo physicals
CLE\TLAI\ D 1L'l' l 1 - King
Hus-ein an d Quc'('n ;\001 of .lonlan
,m· undr·rgoing (':-ll l'n si\·(' ph \'SIC&lt;JI
(':\Jminat Jo n ~ ;11 thr Cit•\ r land
Clin1c foundat ion

The p:J ir il ll ended Ihe· high sc hool
gn 1cluor tons of 1hf'lr lm n daugh!C't :-.
:ast- H0f'k and mC'I with PrPsidrn t
~ tf'dg.J n

Monda.\ brforr going To

('lei'Piand
P~pc'&lt;' lrd

1\'c'&lt;i nrsclc~;· The;· ar&lt;•
To &lt;., fa~ at thr clmi c

lhrough Fncla)·
Hussein. --fl . undr·r wt&gt;nt '"""s m
IYHl al the dinir fm gaslro
mlf''-ltn,d p;u n ,md hl (~ 'r l mg

lk ;lilt! (/I.H ('n ;'\oar a1 riH'{! c11 the ·
c li nK' amtd nghl ~'(· urit\· sho rrl.\

Pr0-1drn1 Joao Figueirc&gt;do of
B1azil. Ki ng Khalid of Saudla
A1a l1ia and mrml:rr' or ca binets
from TUI'kp;·. WC'S I Germany,
MeXICO. Canada , Kuwall, ltal; and
Sa udi a Ara bi a.
Spokesman Frank Wcm c•r saJd a
numlx•r of ltl' p111rnl s are cUrecled
10 Clrvdand Clinic b.' "ph)'Sirians
who tra 1nrd hell' and arc now
prac t 1dng OH'I'scas.

Ohio Lottery
Cl. l:\l:l.N\D 'UPI I- II'ednc'S·
dJ1 ·, 11·inning Ohio Lollery
numl:x•rs:

br lore 2 p m Thrl' IIT·rr p:1 (('led b1

Daii.Y Number

c:inJc o ffi r la lo;;, \\'hO rsc011{'d thr
coup!(' i nl o t t-M:· n ing v. h( 'i'(' 1ht'.\ '~ 111
tY' &lt;., ta _\ in).! .

j;!lj

A limilrd num ln or ho spll al
c• mplo~ ·r&lt;·..;

and patif'lll'-' H·atr hrd

tht: king 's ar n vnl from wmdow.-. .
Thc• arPLI WO !-. df'( clrJ !r'd w itll

sod to
tr. 's flag.
pLJill f{'Cl

Twkc-1 sa les lolal &lt;'&lt;i $1.1R9,2.18."&lt;J,
11'11 h " f&gt;J' ol f due of S410 ..'PJ .
Super Lotto
9. 16, 26. :17, 19, 14
Surx-·r Loti o llckt' l s&lt;Jll's toralrd
$.1.-1 2\ ~ .

The 1ir. th{• firs1 in the hi story of
1he stale pageant. will be 1he second
asterisk in the 1986 pageant book.
This yPar's field ol34 con1es1an1s IS
lhl' largest, Sf'li \ng up lhr{'(' prrliminary n1gh1s
The night's other winner was
Tracy Swanson whose green swimsuit won her thai li lle. Swa nson. a
22-yrar·old OSU s1Udenl from
Ca nfield . will play the flul r Friday
mghl
The lhr,... talenl winners are from
pageant s thai were not involved In
Ihe program last year.
Kanakaredes. who ,.,eaks Greek
as flumlly as s t.&gt; speaks English.
won Ill&lt;' Miss Columrus pagean1
Apri l 'l7. Graber. rompeting as
Miss Ohio Valley, won her preliminary in Hamill on County. She Ls
from Hu1chin son. Kan , and was
fourth runner-up in ttl&gt; Miss
Kansas pageant.
Johnson. a 2l ·year·old a;u st uden! , won the Miss Plck Pringlon

tf'Prf'Sltll Ius t ·uun ·

Criminal/
Domestic
homicide

VINYL &amp; AWMJNUM

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remo deling
Roofmg of ell Types
Worked in home area

20
"F ree

BULLETIN BOARD

un.drre:o "t~ s.:.tmt· rou tinf' IH· had

whrn hC' \\as hcrP Ilr la~o,t ttm1· It'"

schedui('l.l fo 1 ihr('(· ddvs."
Sol-era I world ii'CidPrs hall· IJCc•n
pilllenls 01 lhC J.(IX}h('d fJCi ill v.
which

mtludr·s

a SP('(' W]

wmg

designed so hea ds ol stal e C'J n
coni inUC' their W smf'S s

wh1 ·n not

tx•ing cxamim'&lt;i b.1 doc!OJ s
The lisl of paiiPnls lnl'iuclr
,\THE NS UYESTOfK StU..ffi
C lf!l(' Prlt'(&gt;s Sloughtcr St('(·rs· $-1!! $5 1 ~J
Vt'('(lr'r St('('J'S ' !good &amp; ctlOIC'C'I, J)O !iiO Ill:-.
$4q -r.t-S6.1.Z'l. 500 iOO ll:fi, S46-S5i: F~'('drr
Hrlff•rs· !good &amp; eholce t, rom lt\li , $U $60:
Sf)}. ?I))

It Pays
To Advertise

lbs. $37.00·S50.25; Fet&gt;dC'r Bull!-. ; tgood

&amp; rho!("(' I. IDYN) lbs, $1 7 .933. IDi'tXI lb!..

S.1U-S17.. Slaughwr Bulls lov(•r 1000 !bsl.
.'iO: Siuugh ter Cl.M's ut !Ufi(.~,. $.'ll:l'J·
s.~ c ;~nnors &amp; cutten; . $29 75·$17 75. Spr!Jlgl'l
\o~·s ' tbv 1!w OC&gt;ad ), &amp;175-$11~; Ccr.1 &amp; C':tif
$4.'1-SH

Pairs. l byt hc u nltl.~-~75: \(',1l'&gt; t(hOJr •·
&amp; prlrn ct, $55-$8J; Bat~· Ctlvcs t b~ !.hf'
tv&gt;ad I. $28.$00; Baby CaiVC'S' I by !h(' pound l.

100·!66

Hog . Prices: (.¥1 , b.11TfM'S 8· gi lls) :!I).Zifl
lbS $43-$47 75; BU!1' hPr Sow s: tr. 21 -$1{1;
Boanr S$S:I7 Fff'dl'r Pigs · 1by the

auicher

IY!ad 1. $20-$43

Sht&gt;CP Prices: Slaugh h'r ~rw.&gt;p · $10-SXI

EROBICS

STARTING FRIDAY, JUNE 13
6:00-?
AT THE RUTLAND

,

CIVIC CENTER

In structor: Dottie McClelland

CALL

992-2156

veers

Estimates"

CAll COILICT:

Suicide

Ph. (614) 843-5425

5-11-'86-2 ma

Source: New England Journal of Medicine
said Wednesday that flreanns ar&lt;• Involved much
more fn.'qucntly in homicides, suicideS and fatal
a&lt;cldents than in self-defense. The study of gull\hot
deaths In King County, Wash., smwed !hal for every
fatal shOOtinK that (){'CUI'S in the il&gt;me in self-defense,

(UI'I)

palicnl.
Mc iver's all orne!. E. W1nlhrow
McC room . said Mrl vrr is complel
mg a posl ·graduute felluw;hip in
Washmglon. D.C.. and " nol
currently praclicing in lh1s stal e.
McCroom. who comparro the
board's powr r of rcvora11on

as

an

ex treme punishment comparnblr
to !he dea1h penalty in crlm mal
casrs. sa id his client was vou~

" hen ihP alleged crimes OCCUlTed
and had bem prac1 iri ng medicine
only sLx years.

before 1hr board. Mc lw r lt'fused lo
testify . c it in~ his r ight s under the
F ifth Amendment. Mciver was no1
presrnl a t Wed nesday' s t"&lt;&gt;aring
Mciver's response 10 a [lp.
Cl'ml:rr 19R21eller informing him o1
til&lt;' invc-sllgaiKJn said. " II appears
tMafia 1 lorC'I's have rnnspired with
a~enl s of thr Pharmacy Board ro
st•l mP up as a scap&lt;&gt;goa11o pro11'CI
ttl&gt; Mafia 's inlerC'SI as a supplier of
il lega l drugs."
A board mvestigalion L-oncluded
thai Mciver "would p&lt;'rmll virtu ·
ally anyone to walk in otilh&lt;' slrC'!'I
and obtain Schedule II ronlrolled

Amrnca pagea nt last July 4.
Miss Ohio Pageant producer
.John Kunkel. staging the siKJw on
ttl&gt; theme "Ohio. We Have II All ".
asked each contestant to wear a
ros tumc in ttl&gt; opening number Ihat
would represrn11hr area where tl'r
preliminary pagl'anl was held
Kanakaredcs. who has done
volumeer work a1 lhr Columbus
Zoo. carried a Bengal tiger cub
born lh&lt;&gt; day six' won her pagPanl.
John son, who chose a red -whileand-blur costume. said 11 portrayed
tht:• small Franklin Coun1y com.
munity beller than a S1aluc of
Liberty could.
Graber , wiD won lh&lt;&gt; Miss Ohio
Va lley title in Hamil ton Coumy.
wore Ill&lt;' gr{'('n and yellow racmg
sil ks of Shanron Brook Fa rms in
Kentucky iha l runs horses al River
Downs. Swan son, Miss Cuyahoga
County Fair, chose a denim skirt
and j(ingham blouse and carried a
while sluffeQ. duck which she says
has become her good luck charm.
Kunkel, in his third year as
pageant prnducer, has two fotmer
Miss Ohio's performing in his
two-act show and ano1tl&gt;r on ttl&gt;
judgrs pa nel Former winners
appearing as fealurnl slng~&gt;rs are

Melis.a Ann Bradl!')' of Mansfield
and Sharon Phlilian Bkichc1. a
former Delaware rcsid&lt;•nt now
li1·ing in Scol1sda l&lt;'. Ariz.
"Lillie did I know when I was
crowned in 19ffi th ai r would be
prrforrning 20 years taler," said
Mrs Blocher. "Wil&lt;'n the· coni C'S1·
ants were oornaf1er I waserowned.
ll's lime form&gt; to rrlire."
She lt"&lt;&gt;n sang "Su nny... first
rrcord&lt;'d in 1966. lhr year six' won
Miss Ohio and was third runner-up
10 Miss Amenca.
Bradley won lhe s1ale lillc two
}'l'ars ago and was fir s! runner·up
10 Miss AlTll'rlca On 1t.&gt; judges
panel is ms1 Miss Ohio Kat hv
Vcrron, her first time as a judgP.'
Reigning Miss Oh1o Suellen
Cochran, in t"&lt;&gt;r "Proud of Ohio"
S])€('Ch 1oward Ihe rnd of 111&lt;' show,
said Ihe Buckeye Stale Is the "home
of eigh1 presidents. avia tion, S('V rra l halls of fame and six Miss
Americas and I'm proud lobe from
Ohio."
Cochran. who has won S23.!XXJ in
scholarships throughout ll&lt;'r page.
ani exprrlr nCI'. has SJglled a
co ntrac1 wilh Liberace's manager.
Shr will crown her successor
Sa turday night .

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Fisllmg Suppli es

Pay Your Cable l!o
Phone Bills Here
.,..,r- BUl1Nil5 1'110NI

Sl.Jbstancrs wi1h lillle or no medica I
f'xammarion.''

Board records smw 1hat Youngstown und&lt;'rmvrr rullce officers
obta ined prescriptions for dir1 pills
from Mciver, in some cases willl:lul
rver being exa mined.
One agrn1, 6-2 and 152 pound s,
lesiUied that Mciver required a $.3.1
fpc trfore exa mining him and
rcmmmmding a dirt plan in
February 1982. The agen t said
Mciver renewed thr pn&gt;Se riplion l1
days later. toough thragen1did oo1
complain about any ailments.
YoungSiown olfiCI'rs also seized
about 2.!ro of Mciver's prc'Scrip
lions blanks, 2,!XXJ of which wer~
presigned .
In otlrr action. llx' board ·sus·
p&lt;'ll!i&gt;d the med1callicense of Allen
Coonry Corone r William E. Nobll'
for al least one year and ]X'rman mtly I'I'Voked his permll to prC'S ·
cribe controUed drugs.
Cou nty proseculor Dave Bowers
had said tha1 if such acllon were
1akm, Noble would nol be allowed
10 con1\nue as coroner. Noble a nd
Dr. Robert A. Walls a lso arc
accused of il legaUy prescribing
drugs.
The board suspencrd Watt s'
llrrn~ for at lras1 one year and
permanmUy limited thr IYJX' of
prescriptions he may write.
Bot h doc1ors wlll be req uired to
lake a series of pharmacology
classes and 1es1s to be relnsialed.
The boanl also su spenli&gt;d for six
months the UCE'nse of Dr. John P.
And&lt;&gt;rson of JotrJ stown, who has
been accused of sex ually assau lting
a yoong mal e palient and overprcscrllllng drugs .
Anderson has been r{'('eivlng
trea1ment for alcoiDUsm under the
impaired physicians program for
lhrf.'l' and one-half years, ~is
al1orney said. The board said il wil l
I'I'COnslder Anli&gt;rson's case af1er
ttl&gt; susprnslon, durtng which c.mu st un dergo psyc hiatric
lrea1mrnl.

16 141

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
" At Reasonable Pri&lt;es"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

4-16 'IIi lfn

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124,Pomoroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

REPAIR

Alto Truurlttlon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

Oil fi eld Senict,

&amp;

FREE ESTIMATES

landscaping,

la1tm111h,

REPAIRS

Land Clearing, Ponds, Septic:
Systems, Heawy Ha'-lling,
Stant &amp; Grawtl Hauling
EIKtrKal Work

pdato YouFSyatenu Now

PHONE 992-2156
Or lutt D1 1llf Sentinel Cln11htd Dtp1
ll I Ce11rt St Pamtroy, Oh10 0169

LARRY'S
SOUTHERN MILLS
CARPET OUTLET

RES IDENTIAl, COMMERCIAL
&amp; INDUSTRIAL
tCertlfled Electrician)

DON lOSE, Owner

Hobson Rd., Middleport

949-2493

992-6173

Home 843 -5340

5113/ 1 mo

51231'86/ 1 mo.

THE OUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

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

PWS: OHice 5upp lios &amp;
furniture, Wedding
and Grtxluation
Stationer,, Mo,jnetic
l~gns, Rubblf Stamps,
lustntss Forms,

Copy Smku, ftc.
2ll Mill ft ., Middlljlort
104 Mulberry Aw., Pomeroy

~4

Hr. Em1rgtn1y StnKt

992-3345

949 ·2 1 45

3/2 1tln

CO UNTY o MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
The folloW111g were recei·
vod / proparod by tho Ohio En-

OEPA. P.O. Bcix 1049. Col·
umbuo, DH, 43216. Ph. (614)
466·6037. Con.,~ ORC
Chop. 3746 and OAC Chaps.
3746·47 and 3746· 5 tor,..
CJJirements.
Finellnuanca of Notk:e ot

cy (OEPA) ,... wBIIil. Elloctivo
da1eo of final oelions and it·
ouanoo dat01 ol proposed ..,.
tiona ere stated. Final action•
mov be -•led, In writing,
within 30 days of the dllto of
thil notice, to the ErNironn'181llll BoardofReview. Rm. 101 .
250 E. Town St., Columbus,
OH, 43216. Notice of any
o-1 ohalf be filed w~h the
diniCIOf willlin 3 day~ Propoled oeliona wil booomo final ..,tooo a wttn111 ad)Jdico·
lion heeMg r-.,est il: IUbmft·
ted willlln 30 days of the It·
.,ance data: or the drector re-vilel/ withdriWt
the pro ·
poNd .:lion. ArYV ,..... mov
a~bmlt comments and / or ~·

quilt a - g rogerdlng anv
non·finol IICIIon within 30
clava of tho date. ndicatod.
"Action ", 11 uaod obove dooo

not inckldll r""""t of o vllrifiod
tlalgnificanl,..btlc

co~laint.

Public f':tlotice

C oel Company

S.R. 124
Near Langsville. OH .
Eltoctive Deto 06·06 -86
Applicotion No. f•l
0663000060 F003
Final Issuance of Renew•!
of NPDES Permit
Village of Pomerov. Board ot
Public Affairs
801&lt; 361

Pomeroy. Oh.

Help Wanted

161 12 H e

11

Help Wanted
WE NEED AN
APPOINTMENT
SECRETARY! Call,

collect if nucenory,
Jll4-42B-1B12 oft..10 A.M. for on
interview. EOE M/ F

Oulllifi cattOns
1. M1ture
3 Ambit iOUS
2 . Attractive 4. Goal Setter
5 . Carter Otiented
6 People Person
The tollow•ng e•Pirltnc:e het p lu l
bul no! nnntilll' A. COUM tiC

S•les. 8

Munic.· 0.11o 0.5
Permit No.
OPB00032•CD
Thlt flnol action not JlfiC·
eded by proposed action end
ia oppoolable to EBR.
F2YY060686

interllt •lstt. • public meet·
Fine! l&amp;lll anoe of FindilQI
ing mil'( be hskJ, AI to '"'V OC·
tion. including e receipt r1 veri· and Orderw under ORC Chap.
6111
fled COC11&gt;11inta. In'/ P81101t
Village of Pomeroy. Boerd
mov nollce of florthcu of Public Affolri \
octiont, ond oddilional nlor·
Bo• 351
,
million. Unltu othorwtto proPomeroy , Oh. 1
vided In notlcoa of poolictolor
Date 06 / 05 / 88
fC!Iona, e1 oommunicotlono · EHootive
Receiving Wltert: Ohio_
lhel be •es:rt to: Hooring Clor1c,

1· 17-86·Un

RADIATOR
SER~ICE

Call

IIOW UICATED IT
141-lllo.
"'o*. Ob

992-5006
or 742-3147

992 -2198
Middleport. Ohio

~

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

&gt;YOUNG'S

Tnmchlng of Any Type

Backhoe Servtee

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Plumbing Serv ice
Custom Welding

lowboy Hauling

-

Sept1c Sy11ems
l icensed &amp; Bonded

WiliAMS lRENCH~G
SERVICE

Addons and remodeling
Rootmg and gutter work
Concr&amp;te w o r•
Plumbing a n d e le&lt;:1fica t
work
~ F'ae

Rr. 4. Hvsoll Run Rd .

Esti mat es )

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Pomeroy , Ohio 45 769

Ph 1614) 992 · 2834 ,
992-6704
FREE ESTIMATES

992-6215 or 992 . 7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
415 86 1c

5· 7·2 mo

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVAN IA

ARMY SURPLUS
&amp; CAMOUFLAGE
Sizes 4 Yrs and up
ALSO HUNTING.
SURVIVAL and
VARIETY ITEMS

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATEWTE SALES &amp; SERVICE

ACROSS FROM

She~ Tn~1ltl1n

We Hen 1o Fall TI1111
01

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

o••,

5-29-'86·1 mo.

3-D AUTO

IIO'h W. Main
Ptmwoy, Oltio,

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New Homes Built
" Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-281.0
No Sunday Calls

CHESTER-985 -3307

Ro ehr Pan• . .

73-79 Ford Fenders

FrH OeiiYrt _,

J&amp;L INSOLAnON
&amp; SIDING CO•
992-2772

5-10·'16'1 mo .

THE BIRD CAGE
&amp; FISH POND
PET SHOP
EXOTIC BIRDS .
TROPICAL FISH.
HAMSTER_S,
KITTENS . BIRD
SEEO, CAGES l!o
AQUARIUMS

$9 N. 2nd An.
Middleport
Next D..r Tt W11ttrR luta

992-6784

5-10-'86' I mo

3111/tf"

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
All M••u
•Ranges

•Refrigerators
PARTS and SEA

DON'S MOBILE HOME
REPAIR SERVICE

Parts &amp; Service

992-3361

1· 3-'86 He

Paul E. Shockey, DVM
PT, PLEASANT OFFICE

305 Jackson Avo.

Saturday I 0· II :30 am
UIGE lNIMlL &amp;
51!IGEIY BY lPPl.

FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

CALL

Ripley Office

WAMSLEY &amp; GRAY
Phon•

(304) /n5527 Dl

I I 14-llc

Fatten your Hallet
with awant f\d

All major appliance re·
pairs (including micro-

Lawn

mower repair . Mobile
service.

614-843-5248
, 14-949·2145

895-3386

CONTRACTING

TVs, Antennas
Sottllite Soles
Installation service

DOZER . BACKHOE.
TRENCHER , SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. WATER ,
GAS 1!o SEWER UNES .
REClAMATION. PONDS .
SPRING OEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
1!o DIRT

JIM CLIFFORD

6-4-'86·1 mo.

z

~ U·l 61o

J&amp;F

J.R.'s REPAIRS

Also

~
:r::

•Ali SIZES IVIIlABLE

Call:
992-5875 Or
742-3195

waves).

-a: LISA M. KOCH. M.S.

*St~lll Buildiflp

Residential &amp; Commercial

5-5-'86.tfn

FREE HEARING TESlS WEDNESDA 'tS
CJ CoJ11ltllerized Hearing ~ir Selec~ion
z Swim Molds - Interpreting Servtces

HD~
---"''•
Buildings

PH. 992-7201

Perty PIIWI S•les, 0

Tt~ech lng

S•lel't' Ptld whh trelnlng. Cell.
COittlct If IIIC"IIIf'f , J04 428·
4465 afl a• tO AM fQf' en eppointmenl lor 1 pe-rtonal lnle!'VIIIW

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

wh n D11bb•e EOE M/ F

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

Due to a vigorous expansion program, a
national corporation S$8ks carear minded
Individuals to learn thll business. This expansion offers an outstanding ~rtun­
ity for responsible individuals whO have a
strong desire for management. Specific
work experience is not as important in
qualifying at is a sincere desire to have a
career. Call, collect if necassary, 304486-2113 after 10 AM for a panonat interview. EOE M/F.

•BULLDOZING •END
LOADER •TRUCKING
•TRENCHING
•CRANES IDRAGLINE

e.

2887
On a black lo ng haired Ieinen .
304· 675· 5043

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

POMEROY, OHIO
Backhoes, Bulldozers, End Loader, Dump
Trucks, Self loading Pan, H111vy Ha!Aing and
WirKh Trucks

Lost ; US Navy papers, discharg e
p a pen , marr ia ge li cense
Anyone finding pap ers belong ing to Worthy E S1enley Ca ll
614· 742 -2705 Rew11d
FOUND , small gold and white
t hort lagged dog . wearing red
collar. Greenbner Estales. 304·

675 -38 I 6 .

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash tor late model c lean
used cera.
J im Mink Chev. Olds Inc .
B1!1 Gene Johnson
614 -446 -3672
TOP CASH paid for '83 modal
and n..,..,er usa:l cars Smh:h
Bu idi -Pon ti .w;, 19 11 Eastern
Ave . Gallipolis C1 !1 614 -448 ·
22 8 2
WANTED TO BUY used wood &amp;
coal heaters. SWAIN ' S FURNI·
lUR E. 3rd. &amp; OliVe St G'I II IPO
111 Call &amp;14 -446 · 3159

61'·387 -0613

ct.. Ed Burkett Berber Shop,
2nd Ave. Mtdd leport. Oh. 61 4

992-3476 .
Smell trtiler for garden tr1ctor
IPPX 4 V, x6. 304 -676· 1991
Swing set stand . good cond . ca ll
30'· 676-3788

Employment
Se rvtce s

FREE EmMA TES

992-3525

992-5232

SEWERS · BASEMENTS
WATER UNES · SEPTIC
TANKS · CREEK &amp; FIELD
DRAINAGE PONDS · lii081LE
HOlliE
- ROAD
BUILDING
· LAND

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

~

RAYMOND E. PROFFm (MAC)
RACINE, OHIO

Olfiu 949-2431

Emergency

Oehv ery person Must have own
transpo rtatiOn &amp; ina Apply in
person · Oonelli 's, Spnng Valley
Plaza
Easy Asumblv Wor k! &amp;714 .00
per 100 Guaranteed Payment.
N o Sates . Details· S en d
stamped envelope: Elan -58 47
3418 En1erpri se, Ft P1erce Fl.
33482.
EASY ASSE MBLY WORK !
i!l714 00 pt~r 100 Guarant11ad
pavment No ules Details -Send
stamp tid envelope: Elen -71 5.
341B Enterprise . Ft. P1erce. Fl

33482

11

Help Wanted

Oovtmment jobs I 16,040 ·
159, 230 yr . Now hiring Ca ll
805-687-6000 ext A-45e2 for
curr.,t federellia1 .
No e11.p . neca•nrv . Must be
evailablt for immediate e""loy·
ment. ma)or medic al ben_. its
Plid vacations 1fter ht Y'flat
Call Thurs. &amp; Fri 10am to 5pm.
614· 446· 3687.
Loca!Bualnna w11i be in Med o f
MYtrll emokJyeea begtnntng
Augutt , September and Octo ber. Cooks (must be IDle to
Pfep•r• no fa11 food! Weitrn ..• or wei1er1 (must be 21
y. .ra of eu• · acme bar tend~n g
abillti• prefe"ed ) a part tlrTW
bookheptr, " Girl Frida¥" Sen d
lnfortnltlon deeirad 10 P.O. B011
t21 , Pt. PIIIS&amp;nt. WV . 25560
0. 11111 Christian School Is aeak ·

Ga rage SAle. 509 Pamsh Ave .
10 00 tlll4 00. Fr1day. June 13
Yard Sale o n Plymale Road .
Ga llrpol!s Fe rry, Fn and Sat.
10 .001 ,111. cancollad ,, '"'"·

to

0

Will babysit ., my hollltl Have
fenced in backyard 1!. toya, at e
Dey time Pf&amp;ferred Ca ll 61' 446 · 3935 .
Will baby sit in my home Che.a p
lnqu~red a' 2004 Clla1ham Ave,
Gallipo lis. Oh10
Tree work wanted · prunning ,
topping , removals . hedges &amp;
butheltfl mmed Fraeestime1u
Ca ll614 · 446-1832
Will do any ya rd work , m 1nor
repllfs. paint ing tnstcle or out
Have references 304 675 ·
799 1
Will bfabYstt· ~ home, fenced
yard , have referen ces 304 -675
27B4
Sendy ' s Create a Kak e is dec:otatlng Clkea and w1ll hav e
begrnners decorating clusn.

304-882-3773

Government J obs $16. 04 0
$59, 230 -vr. Now hinng Call
806· 587 -6000 Ext R·9B05 for
current fede ralli11 .
Mechen1c· drrv er to work pantime fo r a local company Write
The De ity Sent~ne-1 , P 0 8011
129M . Po meroy, Ohio 46769
N tt~ded
Telephone o peratorCI!IJhi er . See Jack Colhn! . Jtm
'C6bb Cl1evrohal. 308 E M11n St
Pomeroy .

AVON . 3 open terri1oriM . Call
304-676 · 1429
Now Hiringll ldea ljob for mot h·
former taechera, party plan
dufers Hoose of Llo'f'd. Inc ,
h1nng su pervisors. advertiSe.
hire, manage people. In home
cari!Wir Greet pay , eam Hawa u
tr4' . Tra inig provided Call Col·
!ee l far detailt. 304 · 744 -0924
er~ ,

$100 .000.000 Compeny Ne¥~
Oiv1110n Hinng . ground floor
opportunity far home baaed j o~
Top position u part plan superv1·
sor. Free train ing IIJ pp lias and
samp l81 Call cot111c1 for details.
Belly Varallo (3041744 -09 24
" Chmtrnu aroun d the world " e
new par1Y pten 11 hiring aru
~perv 1 so,. . No Investment , no
collecting , no delivery Prav10us
per1y plan halpful Cell collect
30 4-485 · 6733

Baby sit1er in my home, Monday
thru Frtd ay, cell wenings 304 ·
882-3699 if no answer 304 ·

773-6303.
B1by nwdad in my home Call
30 4 . 882 -2301 attar 6.00 .
1::.:..=.::..::~~---RAWLEIGH Sa lesman. urn
15 .00 ID •10 .00 per hout aapre
time. for information call 304
676 - 1090.

12

Situations
Wanted

p,.v 1 te hOme care for senior
citiltnS TLC llld references .
Call614-992· 3596

_1_B_ W
_ a_n_t_e_d_t_o_ D_o_ _

lng a dedicated Christian teach11r 1
lor 1 combined cl111 of grldu
1-3 . Blchtlor' t degree reQuired .
Mar cums Garage ell lYPet auto
Send r•urne to PO 8011. 279.
work . SpfiCIIIilt on G MC d l•ei
Che1hlre. OH or Call 114-446 ·
11ngines. Cat 814 -246 -5821.
8844.

,,

Yard Sale, 2904 Spruce Ave,
9 00 till 12 00. Thurs and Fri

EIIP&amp;fl&amp;nO!Id bo(ty shop patn ter 1 - - - - - -- -- and front Erld alignment techn1- ,clan. w tth dealership experience
only Contac t Jack Collins. Parts
Ftnancial
and Servi ce Director Send
resu~ to J1 m Cobb. 310 E
Ma in St , Po meroy

World Book·C hi ldcraft. repre
sentatives nudMI Pert t1me. lull
time. g ua rentfllll&amp; eva liable. 304·
882· 2485 .

5/ 231'16/ 1 mo.

N.E.C.A. CONTiACTOR

In tales nowl Keep pr esent job .
Mak e more SS Pan t1 me than
you are now . Loca l leeds w e,
mal e tne appointments Corlfidentlal tntarv iew&amp; , aftern oon .
call 614 -446 -3615

388-9303.
Smell moto rcycle prafer.t:l ly an
80 or go :cart or 3 wheeler Ca ll

&amp; Vicinity

Help Wanted

---------

Lott. Gray billfo ld with velcro
cloamg. Losl in P omeroy Call
614 -992· 66 38

· Pt'PieiisBrit ·

~~;'~~~~·~·~~~~~p~nn~g~v;•+~R~~~~~~;;;;~

678 1.

•Limestone
•Water Line
•Basements
•Gas Line
•Land Clearing •Fill Dirt
•Top Soil
•Septic Tanks •Ponds

992-7089

........................ .....
P ch S 1
2 10 5 · A
0
Pome ro v F1rst Time Friday 9-5

11

8-13 tfn
Buyin g daitv gold , silver coi-ls.
L----------:------_::.;:..::;::.....11
rings. jewelry. sterling ware. old
cotna. large currancy. Top Ptt·

JEFFERS EXCAVATING

.......p................. .
omeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

One year old fema le H1matayan
cn declaw&amp;d , phone 30 4 -675·

W1nted junk autOI . Call 614 -

GREAT BEND ELECTRIC, Inc.

54 Misc. Merchandise

Dous to giveaway 1 Dob'e rma n .
Cat1614 -266 -1661

9

OFFER GOOD THRU JUNE 5, 1986

*Melli Butldin!S

One ye ar old female m1tten
pawed cat 81 3 kittens . Call
61'4 · 367 -033 1

lost Harlsv Davidson leather
bi ll -fold Contains Important
pepera Call 6 14 -992 - 7634
l ost around Krogers parking lot

•Dryers •Freezers

PAINT
S95 INClUDES
llAIOR

•lOCAllY OWi!O

3 kittM 2 month1 old &amp; mother
futll to good home Call 614 388-9901 .

LOST Blue tntold billfold ho ld s
lmp onant pape rs If found
ple11 e call , 614 -446 · .2224.

MOBILE HOME ROOF PAINTING

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Tiger cat female. 1 yr old &amp;
kin ens . B wetkl old all tag er &amp;
Oaachund femele dog Cal l
814. 446 · 8284

6 Lost and Found

flrlll Equlp111ent

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
VETERINARIAN
CLINIC

2 female cats to giVe away One
11 all Whit e, tKIIJit Other IS
ca meo. 10 wka old Both
outd oor call Call 614 992·

Watso n's on Ne!Q ilborhood Rd
Saturday. June 14 9-dark .

Giveaway

985-3561

Sptinl Spe~l•l

LIT'S BUILD UP

Fri . &amp; Sat . 1818 Chatham .
Home mterior, p1 ck-up toolbo11 ,
bru sh guard, police scanner . lo ts
of nic· naks

4

2 so!K:I btack ki«ens, mala, litter
3962 .
tre1ned . 10 week a o ld . 304· 676·

ICUI OUT FOR FUTURE Ulfl

Yard Sa le 2 Femthea. 1 V1 mr le 6 fllmltvvard •at&amp; J un8 13th and
out 141 . beside vault cofTl)anY 14th 9·00 · 6.00 . Ho me Jnteflo r.
Wed . &amp; Thurs.
TV&amp;. lots at clothn tsome b1g
&amp;i l eal V1o le1 Mtlhon• on At 7 .
Yard Sale 720 3rd Ave . Fri. &amp; Tupper s Plaint , OhiO
Sat 9 to 5 13th &amp; 14tll
J une 11 th, 12th and 13th
Yard Sale at Raymond Fisher s. 2 Household goods, quilt tops.
doou sou til of Nortll Ga llia Htgh women end children clothet
School Fra . &amp; Sat . J une 13 &amp; Rein c&amp;ncals 2 m1les on Hyaall
14.
Run off Rt . 124

3 kittens and 2 fe mal e cats, good
mou sers. to a good home . See at
88 5 Brownell Ava Apt 1,
Middleport

Want Ads

Never lilke a VacatiOn
They Work AI )WI

•Mo1t Window&amp; Prk:ad

under 1300
FREE ESTIMATES

Y1rd Sale Rt . 141 · Pauiot Gage
Rd . Tun . Wed , Thurs . D11ile1,
organ, old 1readel si!Miing ma · June 11th and 12 th 36 N
chin II 81 attachmlltf'ltl, mise
Second Ave , Midd leport

5 181Tl ll'f' . Cen tenary Townhouse. Fn and Slit 9 -5 Ra.bb1ts tapes .
Jun e 1 3 &amp; 14 9 -7. clo t hing. s11ddle Old J3 North Hem lod!
m11 c . spe~kers . nngs, ne'N Grove. follow 11gns
electnc typewriter

I

•Vinyl Replacements
Window a
• 3/4" Insu II ted Glan
•Tilt In To Clean

Middleport
&amp; Vicin ity

4 month old male puppy Labrador &amp; S pani el . Short ha1r goo d
wi1h cata
Children
Ca ll
614 -446-6080.

OulrM'ItHd

FOR THE BEST IN
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

&amp; Vicinity

·

9 klnflf'ls mosUy male . ytlllow .
black &amp; bl.cl! &amp; whrt e Ca ll
614-256 · 1168

2 YA WARRANTY

&amp;•tltf~tetlon

p·c;ni-erov

· · GiiHriioH'S · ·

Ga rage Sale Thurs J una 12. June 11th, 12th, 13th Wed .
Sat. June14 . 25 aut o . Wanctle•· Thurs .. Fu Rutland . New l tma
tar, Sofa &amp; chair, dinette aet, Rd , 9th house on r tg ht linle o t
bedroom surte, compound bow everything
end mise Teke 160 to K&amp;mper
Holl ow tu rn righ t. foUow 11g ns
Giant M01t1ng Sale 613 Mitl.
M1ddleport 9 00 am drnly June
2 Fam1ly Ya rd Sale June 11th &amp; 1Oth-24th Everything must {J) f
12th. 9 :00 to 6 00 . Stingy Creek
Rd oft Rt 654 , 2 1/l mil es from Frve famil y ya rd 5&amp;le . June 13 &amp;
Che1h1re.
14, fflday and Sa turday. 39170
Ro cks plingl Road 9 .0 0 to dark
Thu r~ ..
Fra. Tools, cloth111g,
anfant-up, Avon , sketea, re friger· J une 12 , 13. 14. St.Rt . 124 in
ato r &amp;226 . crib Rio Grande Rt Dor c15 New cloth1n g IIlii 1 1·
35. 1 mile past Abi i'IS
12. wh•te un ifor m&amp;. camper . 2
b•cycles. kn1k kn acks 8 30 to 3
3 Faily Garage Sale Thu r Fr1.. pm R111n or s hme
S at 11 m1le1 out 141 from
GallipOliS J unction of 325 Trail 3 l11mllv mov.ng sa le1n Hamson ·
b•k e, anvil. gr.st m1!1, Hoovflf v1Ue. June 13 end 14 from 9 :QQ.
washer, chtld &amp; adult clo th es. to 1 Mens, womens , chlldrens
miSe
and babv clo thes Many mts c.
n ems All p r~ c&amp;d 1o go About '/1
Big Yard Sa le Sat. J une 14 , 8-5 mile from station on 681 . follow
Tare Estates-Add iso n Baby bed ~gn5
gas grill . recliner. childums
clolhing. Jelln&amp; stereo equip
Fou rlam•ly . June13 &amp; 14 . 9to
m Bnt, car seats. toys. dishes . 5 Ne lson ut!lidBn c:e 2'h mi iM
telephon es en cycloped ia&amp; cur out Flatwood Road Was h11r.
couch. power duve IWeeper.
ta ins. etc
- - - - - - - - - - !hamper, desk, ~bby hOrse.
Carpclrt Sale Ra1n Of sh1ne 196 childs tab le and chairs , house
Sanders Dr . Th ursday &amp; Frid ay hold items Cknhe,· ad ui'c, ma termty. ch ildren&amp; !infants to 8)
3Famity 1411 1h mi pastGraen ~ 14 - 992 - 2903
School Towa rd 775- l11ft Clo ·
thing all sizes. June 12 -14
D.Qn t m1u th 11 on el l Nice clean
women's JUn!Ois and mans
Yard Sale Kr1st1 Dnve. Fr1di!IV &amp; clot hes '" excellent condttiO n
Saturd ay
d1shes. Silverware, cu rta1n s
sheers, m1&gt;.er1. clot hes hamper,
YardSa le VJmi on Rt. 21B . from medicme cab1net , grill , stereo
At . 7 Housahokl rtems , clo - shoes. and jewelry , June 13 &amp;
thing , toys tires . chairs J une 14 n3 Grant St , Middlepo", 9
13 Fn 9 -4
lo 4

Clostng tor&amp;Mson sa le Wednes·
day and Thursday. June 1 hh
and 12th. Cleland Greenhouse.
Vtne St .. Rtcine, Oh1o

' 73 -'80 OM F.,dtr1 .. .. 139

73-80 OM

UNDERPINNING &amp; SETUP

John DHre,
Now Hollond, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Bluagflss and country mu sic at
Poston Lake New England. Ohio
on June 14th starting at 1 00
pm . Bands art~ larry Sparka .-.d
The Loneso me Ramblltrs. The
Ron Rigsby Band. The Harts
Brothers and others. Directions.
A1. 50 East to G uy sv1 lla. OhiO
and follow the &amp;tgnl Admission
110 00 Children under 12 free .
Bring your own lawn chairs .

139
Truck Bed
l1nen .. . .. ...... .~~~ =~~~
FREE INSTALLATION

.ra~

4/ 1/tln

WANT ADS bring
Vacation Money

NOAH 'S ARK ANIMAL PARK
Schoola. churches. col'f1).,Y
picnics, b1rtt'aday parties and
famltv reun ions Call 614 -3842108 or 1-800 -2B2· 2167

I 15

991-6778

1·13-tfc

*VINYl SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULA nON

3 Announcements

1200. ri!Miard for the arrest end
conviction of pen~on or persons
r!!P-On11ble tor the cu1t1ng of
tince ltlong property of Homer
Bel1 on Smilh R1dge Rolld . On
week· end of May 17, 19B6 . Cal
Homer Bett at 614-84 3· 5486 Of
Sheriff's Department at 614 ·
992 -3371.

•Washeu •Dishwashers

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

5-15-'86·1 mo

PAT HILL FORD

6-4·'86-1 mo .

TRENCHING IS OUR LINE

(614)/742-2070

Jewelry S1le1. C Home

Effective Date 06 / 04 / 86
Receiving Waten : Ohio
River
Facility Detcriptton:

949-2263
or 949-2168

&lt;HAIMI

~ulhariud

IO·IHic

MANAGEMENT
TRAINEE
FOR NATIONAL
COMPANY

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

~AYIU

.,t}

PHONE

ROOFING

•PINS

FREE ESTIMATES

1, Box 27-B
32933 IOIIIInt ld.
Rutland, Oh. 45 77 5

13

Announcements

SWEEPER and "'w ing mach1ne
repa11 , pan s, an d su pplies Pick
up and de livery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one halt m ile up
Georges Creel Rd Call 81 4 ·
448 ·0294

Rt.

NEW- REPAIR

•TIAU

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

3D4-372-5709

Facility Deacriptton :
Munic .- 01 . to 0.5

5-19-'86'-1 mo

•ftLAOUIS

SALES &amp; SERVICE

For Hours

River

Regis tration

Southern Ohio

11

PH. 742-2306
or 742-3171

•MID AU

BOGGS

BEND AREA
Public Notice

NEW HOMES.
ROOFS. DECKS.
ELECTRICAL &amp;
PLUMBING

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

tit. 304-675-2441
Public Notice

Milo B. Hutchison
Contractor

5-12· L mo.

WATER WELLS
SERVICED
AND
DRILLED

RUSS
ELECTRIC
MOTOR
REPAIR

HUTCHISON
CONSTRUCTION

Howard L Wrltesel

A/C

'" All Yw Ptl•tl•f Nuit

3· 24·tfc

SMAU ANIMAL HOUIS
Mon .• WocJ..Thurs. 3· 5 pm
Tun. 6:30-1; Fri. 1·2 pm

The Daily Sentinel

IACINE, OHIO

SATELLITE
· SALES

New lotation:
168 Nor1h Se&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

16141 992 -6150
RlliDIN&lt;E PHONE

of sf'xua lly assau !I mg" \ oung malr

ROSE EXCAVA11NG

PLUMBING &amp; HEA nNG

nearly 43 peOple are killed in suicides, humleldes and
accidents involving a gun kept at home."ln lght of
these findings, it may rea.o;onably be asked whetll&lt;'r
keeping firearms in til&lt;' home increases a family's
prowctlon or places It in gre-.tter dWJger," said Dr.
Arthur L. KeUennan, "II&gt; &lt;'Onducted til&lt;' study.

GUNS IN mE HOME - While many people huy
guns lo prote&lt;:t their humes Wid families, researehers

vironmental Protection Agtr~·

·Jiospital spokPswom,m 11osrm
a rY H aulu n sa id H U\Sf'ln would

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

3 tie for Miss Ohio pageant title

ROYAL ARRIV.~L - King ll~to;.•ei n of .lonJ;m arrived a1 til&lt;'
f l.-·eland Clinic Foundation \\'edJwsday amid tight security . The
5().year-old king, along with his wile, Qu&lt;'&lt;'n Noor, wi111mdergo physical
••xam inations. Hussein wa.• at lhl' clinic• in 191\1 for ~;as tro·intestinal
pain. Hr wa.s gn'l'lc'll h~· clink staff, from left, Bill Ki•er. Shatt uck
llartw&lt;•U and -John Evt•rsam. 1U1'1 )

992-3410

EUGENE LONG

Iiluring lhr!'C' prel'ious t"&lt;&gt;arings

By SANDRA L. lATIMER
MANSFIELD. Ohio fUPJI
Three singers looked al a small
silver bowl and a bouquel of
long-s1Pmmed red roses.
"O'K. gang How do wr spli 1 ihl'
bowl thlt'C ways?" asked Melina
Ka nakaredes, one of the 1hrec who
lied for Iaten I honors the flrsl night
of the M1ss Ohio Scholarship
Pageant
· KanakaredC'S. a 19-year-old Oh io
Stale University student from
Akron, sang "All 1hal Jazz." The
olll&lt;'r two singers who ga rnered 1he
mos1 numh&lt;'r of poln1s from 1he
judges were Susan Kay John son
who sang "Mr. Melody" and Susan
Michell e Graber who sang lhr
operatic aria "Giiner and 13£&gt; Gay."

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

10-8-ttc

deaths

The Daily Sentinel-

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Business
Services
------~~==~~~~~~----r-----~

FILL DIRT

Ohio medical pane~ lifts doctor's license
By JEANNE REAU
COLUMBUS, Ohio ICPI I
Former Youngstown physician Edward L. Mciver. accused of
prescribing drugs illega lly. no
longer will be allowed 10 praclicr
medic me in Ohio
The Slat&lt;' Med ical Board Wed nesday revoked Mciver's licenSf'.
aclmg on earlier lesllmony that he
sold and prescribed drugs Illega ll y
in 1982. Thr board also revoked llx'
licenses of two Lima doctors.
including Ill&lt;' Allen County coron&lt;'r.
and a Johnstown physician a~rused

June 12, 1986

21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . recommends that you
dO bu1ineu with people ~ou
know, and NOT to send money
througtJ the mal l unti l you hav e
W!v&amp;~tigatl!ld the o Ha r.n g
Ta11ern for sa le if'l Middleport
01 D2. 031 icensa ReaSQnable
Call dey 614· 992 -9975 even IAQI 614· 992 -2B7J
U1od ca r busman m Meigs
CountY lnqu~re Monday Jun e
16 from 11 am 6pm 614 -992 771 1

23

Professional
Services

Water wotls serviced and dnlled
Free eS11metes Can 61 4 · 992 ·
5006 01' 614 742· 31 4 7
PIANO TUNING A.N O REPAIR .
rlll(h u:ovar you r piano ' s beaUt iful
tone. cntl todey , Wards Key
board . 304- 675 -5500 or 675
3824

Real Eslate
31

Homes for Sale

4 bedroom house, f1 replace. 3
m1 south o l Gallipolis , $29.900
Call daya 61 4 ·446· 1615 or
eV&amp;nllliJS 6 14 -446-6222
3· 4 bdr carp eted . rflmodeled.
basement , nice. 'h acre, 'IJ mila
from city. 122 .500 Call 6H 446 · 2034 af1ar 6PM
Go'o'&amp;rn ment homos Irom S 1
IU-repair) . Dehqu enl ta11 prop·
eny . R epouea ~ton a . Call 805 697· 6000 ext A-4562 for cur
ren1 repo li11 .
Redmond Ridge. 3 '/r miiM from
tOWJl1 house 1 ~ atorv appro• 7
•cre!t, storage buildrng. Call

304/!75-6t17 .
3 bedroom, newly redecoflted.
alumin um si ding, large carport.
garage. on l_.~t acre lot in Cheater.
One• fourth m ile on 248 off R1 .
7 . 614-9B6 -4356 .
3 bedroom, Lg. kitchen . heat
pu!T1), air cond. carpetad. g•rage. Syracuu. 614· 992·3'02
aft er It pm .

�..

31

Homes for Sale

LAFF·A·DAY

1 bedroom houae m c•tv mce
fT'MtV improvementa, large out building , pnca reduced to
fl 2 .000 Ctll 614 -446 3l50

Must selll Foor b9droom reSIdence on approx 1 45 acres
Within e11y drtvtng diStan ce of
Galltpolts Owner ftnmncmg w1th
no down pevment to Qual•hed
buyer Proper1y '' fenced and

hts 50 ICflll of creek ho uom
Pr1ced at $76 000 Cell 614 373 1147e•t 75

Call614 -245 -5818

2 bedroo m Duplo: house par
t1aiiV furmahed Low ut iliti es , '"
Pomeroy Call days . 614 992
2381 or 614 -992 -2509 svan

running an eight-cylinder car
on a four-cylinder income!"
41

1e

omes
for Sale

1986 14•70 3 bdr, all elec , CA.
hved 111 6 11• months Call 614367 7216 or 614 367 0522
MOBI L£ HOM ES MOVED m
sured reasonabll! ra tes Call
304 576 2336
1982 Clayt on 12•60 all elec
S9 ,500 304-576 -24B5

IRQS

2 bedroom house 111 Pomeroy
5200 furmshed S1B5 unfu1
n1shed Pay own ut•llt1es wood
burner. large vard Call davs
614 992 -2381 O f 614 -992
2509 evemngs

House trailer 45 • 101966Good
cond new storm wmltows
$2 100 00 304 675 4631

--------- - l c ~

8 HP rtdmg mower $400 3'h HP
Saara ootboard mower S150 8
ft msulated truck topper S200
8ft truck racks $50 Te lephone
answaung machme 576 17 tt
Bast Boat 150 HP J ohnson
Motor S5000 614 -696 1227
after 4 00 pm
RHtored nome, Vme St Raone K11chen, MW oak cabmets
hvrng room , d1n1ng room, 3
bedrooms. blth Include! 81!
curta1nt Pr1 ce S35 000
Pho ne 614 -949 -2540
70x1001ot 11f: ttoryhouse 3to
4 bedrooms, d~thwasher , doubl e
range Jtove. fully carpeted,
wood and coal burnmg Jtove
Close to school and hospital
Call 614 -992 -6060 An~ rea:~~o­
nable offer may be constdered
7 room haute 100 :c 100 lot
816 000 Syracuse Call 614

992 2239

2'11 year old home, 7 rooms and
bath o n 1 8 ecra, Ga1l1p0ha
Ferry. W Va 304 675 2284
3 bedroom, all elec. central e~r ,
attached garage Galhpohs
Ferry. 304-675 2932
168 acr• m letart large home
2 barns owner flnen ctng 304-

For sale by owner, 2 bedroom
mobtle ho me on half acre
ground 304 -458 -1517
1983 Knoolwood. 3 bedroom
tra•ler assu me loan w1th a low
dawn pav ment 304 -675 5206
or 675 -6500

'-·------------------1976 12•60Govenor cur co nd

hont por ch wtlh awmng exc
co n d. 30 4 895 3 455 after
5 00

•s

1982 14114B Co mmodore
su mo loan at S 152 0 0 monlh,
lu rms hed , e•c cond , 304 675
678 2 or 675 7642
1976 Elcona mobile ho me
14 x65 e• c cond 304-675
6870
12x66 tra1l er w1th lend , moke
otter, 304-675 -6551

33

Farms for Sale

Approlt 100 acrM rural wetftf
barn , mmeral 11ghts on Clark
Chapel Rd Ask for Clyde Ferrall
call614 -388 9038
40 acres w1th n•ce 2 story ho me
4 bdr . 2 baths co mpletely
remodeled tobacco ban. farm
eQUIP Call 6H· 256-6790

34

895·:1450

"

Choice of two Colon1al names, 9
rooms end 2% baths orB rooms
and 2 baths, bolt\ new ly rem o
deled . Owner f~nancmg 304

882 2095

Laue. purchase agreement pos
11bla Very mce home with 3
bedroom• liv1ngroom w1th flf•
place. 2 batha. larg e country
kttChMI , hobby room , laundry
room, lull buement 2 car
garage . central vacuum system
a~r mnd. deck . 5 wooded acres

304 896·3363

Sale or lrade· Ntw Haven. 3
bedroom• 2 batht, f~teplace ,
garage, $38,1500 OOorS300 00
month plus depos1t 304-273·
24.71
3 bedroom houu, a attn kitchen .
elec heat. cit y wat er. garden car
port 304-6715 3020

32 Mobile Homes

for Sale
NEW AND ~SED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES 4 Ml
WEST . GALLIPOLIS , AT 35
PHONE 614 -446-7274

12•60 Shultt covered porch.
rural water, metal storage bldg ,
w1th lot, Crown Cuy Call
614 -256-1U4 or 614 256 ·
1389 or 304 ·675-1328

1980 Ltberty a .. s4. 2 bdr . all
gu underpinnmg steps
blades Mutt be moved , &amp;6. 500
Cal l 614 446 0963
Pre-owned mobile homes · We
have ' m
We fmance m Deh'o'ered and Set up at no ch atg e
Eitel Home Centers 1 -800826-0752
KirkWOOd 12x60, 2 bedroo m s
partly furni1hed nii'W carf)et
a .. callent cond1t10n. manv ex
tfaJ. Mutt aee S6 500 C11ll
614 446 8010
1976 14x70 FettJVal 2 bdr 2
bath•. lo ts ot closet•. Me cond
Ca11614-446 ·6241
12x60 2 bdr good cond ntrW
c1rpe1. hew furnace partly
furniahed . underp111n1ng m
eluded. •4.600 Call 614 256
6704 or 614 -256 -1 139
1980 l1berty 14x54. 2 bad
room . untum11hed . vinyl under
ptnn lng Included Must 1ell Ce ll

1982 Schulu 2 bedroom 2bath
mobtle,oma Underpmning Un ·
furniahed Must be moved . can
be teen between 4 ·10 and '? 00 ·
pm Call 614 - 986 - 4389

t12 .000

Two bedroom treiler wit h ex pando living room on n1ce level
lot in Middleport Near achools
and atorea Call 614 -992 -2101

Business
Buildings

Old Tobacco warehouse
Walkmy d1sten ce to down
town Galllpohs Oh1o w1th
concrete fl oo r, separate ratl
!ldtng, truck docks. 240 amp
aerv1ce and modarn 3 500 sq ft
ol1•cu
Idea l for w~oleeale grocarv.
durable goods storag e. mdoor
flee market etc
Ofl•ce area pro ducmg S700 a
month mcome
Ca ll 614· 373 -1147 ext 75
Poas1ble 100% flnan cmg
Commercial and rlltdtn1el ron
181 property. located on Viand St
New ly 1 rem odeled and fully
rented 304-675 -3797

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

Campatte at Btg Foot Park No
money down , S50 m o owner
f1nance w1ll s how 8\le &amp;
weekends Rt 7 - 6 m1 , below
Gell1pohs. turn nght &amp; follow
IIQnl
1 1AI acres w1th 12Jt60 mobile
home At 218 , 10 miles hom
Gallipolis Call 614-245 6049
even1ngs

35 Beres , 3 m1les welt of HMC
Call 614 -446 -8221
1 to 5 acres

61 4·992·231 9.

APARTMENTS , mob1le homes,
hoosn Pt PleaJant alld Gallipo·
hi 614 -446 -8221

8 HP r~d•ne mower 1400. 31,.; HP
Se.-a outboard motor f150, 8
ft tnsullted truck topp8f UOO.
8 ft truck racks •150, telephone
answering 175, 17 ft ban boat
160 HP Johnson motor 16,000
Call 614·896· 1227 after 4PM.

1984 San bon 18 ft. 60 hrs ,
Mercury alae sttrt, d11ve on
trailer, 2 batteriM. 2 · 8 gallon
tenks. foot contro lled trolling
motor. 1 graph recorder, exc
cond Cell 814-388-9718

In M1ddlapon. 2 bedroom fur·
mahed apartment , also 2 room
furntth&amp;d apartment 1-304-

Electnc ttove tor BJII. Good
conditio n 160 C•ll 814-992 7747

19 tt Arlttocratt boet 120
Horsepower , lnboard -outboltd,
Marcnu.. r motor , new teat•.
very good r:ondttion asking
e1 500 Call 614 245 5040

For rent Sleepmg Rooma and
ltght houae keaptng rooms. Park
Central Hotel Ca ll &amp;14 4460766

46 Space for Rent

PAINT DAMAGE
arrow llign 12,86. Ltth·
ted , non -arrow, l2561 Nonhgh ted t239! Free letters I Few left
See lOcally 1(8001 423 -0183.
anyt•m•

Tr11let tpaca. 3 mtles from town
JUi t above old " Y" on Rt 2 . 1arge
lot. 304-876 3248

Be tho f1nt to live 1n this adorable
completely reiurbtshad 2 bed·
roo m home Ill excellent neighborhood Also has garego. mce
yard and garden spot Phone
Oemse at Colon1al Prop9rt181
614 -286 -5110 for further detailS so,iacUemp ~
bedroom furn11hed house tn
M1ddlepott Call 614 -992

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Fullv furniShed AC all ut1lt181
pa1d , adulu only Call814 446·
4110 or 614 -446 -2003
2 &amp; 3 bdr mobtle homes AC.
cable TV Bulavilte Rd Call
614 -446-0527 after 3pm
141170 tra1ler for rent , $260 mo .,
3 bdr , total e lec , CA. S250 dep
Call 614 -446 -3793 bath &amp; '! J
washer &amp; dr'Ver .
2 bdr tota l elect nc Call 614
446 -0722
Upper R1ver Rd also double
w•de Call 614 446 0508 or

61 4-446·2430

2 bch fum or unlurn convement locat•on Upper Rt..,ar Ad
all utlltllet paid e:ccept eif!Ctt1C
Sac dep req Cal\ 814 446
8558
Raccoon Rd Furn11hed S160 &amp;
dep &amp; ref Call 614 446 9346
14 .. 70 3 bdr , 1 1/J bath fur
n11had or unfurmshed Wether
d,.,-er, totll el&amp;etuc, CA. S260
mo . S250 dep . Call 614 4463793 Earlie Can. 641 Th~rd
Ave Gallipolis. Oh
2 bedrooms, close to ttores and
school Call 614 -992 -5914 lor
more 1nformaho n
N1 ce 2 bedroom mob1le htJme m
Cheater OhiO On mcelot Cell
304 773 5828
2 bedroom on Rt 2 Pmnt
Pleasant, 5 mma hom town
S150 00 plus ut• ht •es 5100 DO
depos1t 1 small ch1ld accepted
304· 675 -6389 betwee n 7 00
end 9 30 PM

44

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES APARTMENTS !Equal Houamg Oppor
tumtyl month ly rent Jtlrtl at
S 176 for 1 bedroom and S212
for 2 bedroom. deposit S200.
located neat Spr1ng Valley Plaza
and Foodland , pool and Cable TV
evailable oHlce hours as pos'ltble 10 em to 4 pm and 7 pm to 9
pm Monday-Fndey, Call 614·
446- 2745 or leave message
N1 cetv f urn11hed mobile home.
eH apt . centra l a~r and heal 111
c1ty, adults only Call 614 -446-

0338

2 bdr uuht1es pannllly turn
S175 mo Call 304-675-5104 '

Ashton bulld1nglo11 wnh public
water mob1le homes permtt1&amp;d
304 576 2336

Co mpletetv furniShed all elect
r~c . 2 bdr apartment, S225 mo
1 bdr S200 mo Ad ulu, ref eren'
ces sec de poa1t 458 Second
Avo Call 614 446· 2236 or
614 446 2681

nea r Sand H1URoad and Rollmg
.
Acre• 304 675 1991
Bwldmg s1te on Rt 2. GaiiJpoht
Ferry 30 4 576-2026
F1Sh1ng lake WJth 2 10 6 acre1
elec and approved sewe r Jystem
onDa u Bend oiC rabCreek See
D1ck Austin 304· 576-2026

Rentals
41

Houses for Rent

2 bdr home

e•cellent neigh·
borhaod new wall to wall
SlfP.O.I•ng
curtamt ptov1dad
Plus many extr81: low utlhly bllll
&amp; garden spot Call 814-2865110 for furth et' datao ls
111

e.

7 rm haute lnqu~re at 918
Second Ave . Gallipolis Ohio.

Tra1ler lot. water end sewage
futnllhad. 304-676· 3407

47

Wanted to Rent

Whole Atbeyel 12 141b average
U 90 lb Whole New York
Strips 12- 14 lb average U 06
lb Choice Tend~ttlion •s 99 tb
S,ort Lom U 51 1b Full Lotn
S3 25 lb Price Includes cutting
Oa~Jit required Guaranteed
tender Call 304-676 -53f!3
Pornt Pleasant, W . Va

W1ndow air cond, 10,500 btu
Go Cart, double satt 304-675·
Ant ~que tova tNt. SeartJogger,
Hotpo1nt portable dlthwasher

Wanted hketo rent 3 bdr house,
prlfllt" batement, in or amund
Gallrpolis Need by July 16th
Call 814 446-4448

51

304·n3-5a88

Hardwood f ~rew-ood •30 . 00
p~r:kup lo.-1 deliwered Farmall H
tractor S600. 00 304-468
1638 or 468 1728
8 hp Troy-Bilt tillar, 1982 model
horse , manual start. tctory un
limited warranty Included.

Merchandise

n5o oo 304·875-1259

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION 1!. FURNITURE 62
Olive St., Gallipolis. New &amp; used
wood -coalttol)as, 6 pc wood LA
suitl!l S399 bunk bedt 1199,
antron recl1ners 899, new &amp;
used bedroom surtet, range1 .
wnnger washara, &amp; stloet New
l111mgroom suites S199 -•699
Iampi alto buyrng coal &amp; wood
stovea Cell 614 -446· 3159
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waahers . dryert. refrtgerators
ranQ._.as Skaggs Apphancu
Upper River Ad beside Stone
Crut Motel 614 -446 -7398
County Appl11nce, Inc Good
used eppliancfJI and TV sell
Open SAM to 6PM Mon thru
Sat 614- 446 1699. 627 3rd
Ave GalllpohJ, OH
Valley Furniture, new &amp; used
Large section of q.~ahty lurn1
tura 1216 Eutern Ave ,
Gall1polis
For sale HarlequiR Romance
books 270 for '76, whitt
wooden table f25 , 'f'IIIOw ktt·
chen china cab1net $50. all in
good condition See at 256 So
Fourth Ave , Mlddl.,art, Oh
Refrigerator harvest gold S125
rtfngerator white 8125, refng
erator avocado •1 25 , tefr~gera
tor coppertone 8125 refrigera tor lldt by Side S195. washer
l&lt;enmore f160 , &amp;lectnc range
30 i1 wh•te top and bottom
oven $160, electriC range 36 '"
S75, gas range harvest gold 30
•n hke new $150, air cond
11 000 &amp; 8.000 BTU 's t961118
bedroom Juite 195. ch11111 of
drawers e2 0 Skagga Appliance
Upper RNerRd 61 4-446 -739B
Mrm · pit li v~ngroom 1u1te prllow
backs 1275 Ca ll 614 -446
1316

Four bedding Geranrum~ lor 99
cents All ftowera and veg . plants
t7 26 flat Bananas 26 centt lb
Georg1apeaches60 centslb 8&amp;
S Produce, VIand St , Po'"t
PleaJant
Sears Go· Cirt S140.00 Stratolounger brown S80~00 WHtem
Flyer 24" blk BM)( b1ke SBO 00
304· 676 -591 2

55 Building Supplies
Bu1ldmg Mater~als
Blodl, ~nck, sewer plptl , windows, hntels, etc Claude Winten, R10 Grande 0 Call 614·
246 -5121

Oragonwynd Cattery Kennel
CFA Himalayan. Persian end
Srem•e k1tten1 AKC Chow
puppret New pupp1e1 k1Hen1
Call 446 -3844 after 7PM

a.

AKC trr colored Benau Hound
pup1, reduced ptiCII on adult
dogs Crown C•ty. 81 4 -258·

1652

Reg Doberman pups eJ~ pedlgree, good temperment . •1150
ea Call 614- 266 -8403
AKC Rtg . Beagle puppi11 for
ule Call304 - 372-4.620
Wolf hybrid P\JPP'" Reactv
June 22 . Sflott, wormed UO
Too cu te to bel•eva l 814· 742 25B1

Fancy 77 RCA Color Console
26 1nch TV walnut wood
cabinet Ask1ng UOO L1kanew
Call 614 -992 -3609

Cocker Spamel. whelped May 2,
AKC registered , 2 maiM left
good pnce, 304 773 -6626

Pickena Used Furniture Good
qualitY used furnrturt Open 9 to
6 or ca" for appointment

57

Furn~thed

apt 2 bdr $176
131'11 4th Gall•poh• Water pd
Call614 446 -4416 1f1er Bpm
Furn11hed apt 1 bdt 920 4th
Galhpolla S260 Ufll1t1es pd
Call 614 446 4416af1er 8pm
1 bedroo m apt . f or rent Batie
rent ttarts 1215 a month that
include• 111 utilitlet DepoJtt
requ~rllld of &amp;200 Conta ct V1l·
leg e Manor Apt Middleport
614 992 -7787 Equal Hout lng
Opportun ity
2 bedroom. totel elec apt in
Pomeroy Acrou from Ftre
Stat1on 614 -992 -6215 or 614 -

992·7314

Complete sat of Drumcraft
drums. 1 yr old, like new Call
614 -266-1322

58

Full stze bed dresser, cht~~~t.
1tereo, 2 small l•ncomplatel
bed1 Caii614· 266 - H68

G1baon 10 000 BTU a~r cond
•1
Call 614 -446 -2147.
·

eo.

Two- Ont bedroom apt ready
for imm~Miiate occupancy total
electr~c . water furn11had 614-

2 piece living room Jult. 1 wall
shelf unit. o ..: gfun cabinet.
1977 Old1 Cutlaat-•erlal no
3G29R7M15103 Cell 614 -

992 2094

446·4113

Efficiency apt Suitable for 1 or2
people. On Aou1h Lane 1n
Cheshwe, Ohto. Call 304· 773-

Nice electric Tappan electric
range with self-clnn lng OYen.
1 1/~ yr. old Wrll 1ell or trldt for
vu renge Ca11814·992· 3&amp;9!1 .

600 Ford tractor , 1. 200 houra
with ~owa. cultivator mower
boom pole 12 ,996 24ft 4axl~
gooseneck trallll" e1,996. 340
IH tractor with plowt, mower . IH
hay condi1ioner, h•y w•gons 66
NH baler t2 .995 1800 Olt\ler
dietel widetront cream puff
U ,660 AC 4 row no -t1ll planter,
clean t860 Call 1 -614-286 -

6622

Gravely tractor 8 spd , electric
ltarl. "'«¥ good co nd , 8850
Call614- 387-7512
Tobacco tractor, M11111 Harnt
Pacer with hydraul1c cultiwators
Call 614 -446 7380

For Sale or Trade

1976 Dodge motor home
33 . 000 m1let . elttra clean
•4,850 Call 1-614 -286· 8622.
Good laying hens Brown end
white Cell614· 742· 2465

Fo rm SUJIIIIIr.s
II. Llves!Dc k
Farm Equipment
CROSS &amp; SONS
U S 36

w..l.

61 4·286-11451

Jacklon , Otllo

Mauev Ferguson. New Holland
Buth Hog Sal• &amp; Service. Ova;
40 ... ., tractors to choose from
• oo~ltte Una of new used
equipment. Largest 11laction In
S E Ohio

a.

JIM ' S FARM EQUIPMENT
CE!"TER SR 31 W. G•lllpollo
Oh10 Call 11 4·448 -8777 we'
614·441·3192. Up front· tree~
tort With wananty over 76 uaad
trac!ora, 1000 to ole.

992·6006

1984 Chevy Cavaher 4 door
P S. P B e1ttta clean Call

614 992 3703

1975 Dodge Dart "450 304·

a96·363a

Livestock

63

19n Oldsrmb1le Cutlau Su
prame Brougham 304 675

6863

67 Ford Muttang 60.000 act
miles Duel exhau1t good body
fatr rrter10r . •1 .500 F~rm 304
en 1146

9379

One registered Herrriord polled
bull call 304-468-1f!73
Horse, Black Tennnaee Walker,
4 years old. 304· 676· 6843
Ga~tad r~ding hot'la, 304-676

2443

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Hay for 11le 90 cents out of f1e&gt;ld.
I 1 20 delivered &amp; ltacked Call

614-446-0373

10 acre• atandlflg hey to C\lt &amp;
bele. Between Vinton • R1
Grande Call 814-245 -9167
M1xed hay llrga 1qu1re balM ,

1979 Ford Mustang 4 cyl , new
rebuilt motor, low mtlaage Cell

614-266-11417

Jeff Baugtlman's 1971 unfm
l1had re~tored NOVA . 327
chmme engine, no phone •n·
qu~res Middlepor1 (Bradbury!

1967 Chell'j lmp•la 396 321
HP . red , bii!Ck intenor. PS PB , 2
dr , fender tklrtl , nc cond
good show car, t3 ,000 Cell
614-245-9609

1983 32ft Shennendoah travel
trBIIflf S6.500 Call f\14 · 448
1756

1979 Scotty camper. 19 ftlong,
seli contamed. e11c cond 9 ft
slide Ill campt~r . 304 576-291B

Home
Improvements

1983 Camero Z28 , 20 000
mil&amp;l . loca l owner. load ed
Gharooal Grav. mutt teell 304
875· 6363 after 5 00 PM

81

1977 Cordoba. verv n1ce . 814
446· 2765 tlll 6 30, 304 875·
65f!5 after 7 00

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Un conditional lifetime guaran ·
tee Local references furn11hed
Free Htlmatet Cell collect
1 -614-237· 0488. day or mght
R ogers Ba sement
Waterproofing

1986 Ford Ranger 4 cvl , fu81
lnJtcted. 5 tPd overdrive lOngbed. 7, 000 mllet, exc condwith
.:Jme e11tras
Call 614 -266 -

6867

1980 41t4 Dttlun long bed plus
f•barglau topper New tirea
good shape Call 614 -387

7800

1980 Datsun p1ckup custom
1978 W•ld•m•• travel
tr111er. 1elt conta•ned , slettPt
8· 10, both 900d condttron Call
614 -388-8437 ~~nytime

1Z'fl

1982 Chevy S1lvaredo PICkup 1
ton dual wtleels , dual tanka, new
tlrM, orgii'I!U m1les 81 ,000 Cell
evenrng1 614- 246 5666
'70 Chevy , good c ond .
1800 00 304-676 -2316 aftftr

4 00

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1979 Conveflron van, 1966
Che~ truck, mce 1978 Chevy
luv Cell atter 6, 614 -448 -

266B

1980 Chevy wmdow van , 8
passenger. dual heat· llr. t1lt .
cru11e. ,5,996 Cell 614 379
2341 No Sundl\l calls

1986 Chevy ConversiOn \lin
fltled roof. low m11eage , loaded
Cell 614-367-0667

AINGLES ' S SERVICE , e•per~enced ca rpenter, electrletln,
maton pa1ntar, roofmg tmclud Jng hot tar apphcet10nl 304676 2088 or 676 7368

1980 Malibu Cla111c Landau
books 13.000, f1rat S2,500
takes it Call 614-446-0362
1979 Rabbtn Cell 814-388
8428 Ollftat 5 614 · 38B ·8823
1976 Monze factory V· B. 4 1pd.,
ltd., new paint &amp; tlr• . 20 MPG
Run1gre1t 11klng 11,300 Call

614-448-7530

78 Gremhn 8 cvl.. 3 tpd ,
AM -FM caSI good tires, t450

Coli

614-387-0167

•600

Coli ., 4· 441· 3870.

1970 C'.,_evelle converlibl• new
!)lint, t aw tlr81. 350 auto .
12,800 . Call 814-446-8201 or

1976 Hon da Elsmore MT 250
Enduro •• cond _ •sao Celt
614 446- 1810
1982 Honda C8760 loaded ,
axe cond . Cell 814 446 0122
after 4PM .
1 983 Honda XR

614·446·2323.

600

Call

1981 Yamahl 750 runt great.
looks good, ask1ng 1900 Call

614·446· 7530 .

19B2 Yamltta 126 a&amp;OO Call

814·448-0760

1983 Hondt ATC 200 3
wheeler. good cond Ca ll 814 ·

446-70.16

81 Honda 660 tn good cond ition . •960 Call 814-992 -6l44

1982 Kawasak11100. E•cellent
condklon Call 614· 742 2065

61 4· 742·2703

F1b1tglaa1 Nove 327-326 HP .
c:tuome
m-22 uanlmil-

83 Honda Shadow 760 CC 8
speed shaft drrVe, lOw m1leege

olon Coli

•1aao c.n 614·986·4153

77 Monte Cer~ . ex . cond. new
tlrM &amp; plint . Must eall. Cell

1983 Honda. 650 cu1tom defun. 1 1 , 000 mlltl. exc con d.
must '"to appreciate, call after

Fu,.,. 1976
Mtrcury Monarch ' Both 4 door,
air . Call 114·992·7075 8 00
am.- 7.00 pm.

UIZABUH Th~ IS SnLL
AT LU\X:H LUITl-1 "THAT
HA~E.

6:00, 304·678·2919

'84 KLR 800 Kewaaekl. e1tc
cond, low mileage, 304· BB2·
25111fter 600 PM

mm 1(RI
@I (!) MOVIE "Doc'
ill
MacNeil-lehrer

Flf..IN.K:lER ..

~
.l

Rotary or c:•ble tool dnlhng
Most well• completed umeday
Pump sales and serv1ce 304

IQ

B96 3802

C AND D Contra ctor remodel ·
1ng end new frame work and 1ny
kmd of a dd JObs Call 304 773
5284

82

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

•
I

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
WHEN I &lt;:rE-TOLD,
IM OOING 10 HAVE
A WALKING STICK.

Lawrence &amp; Eyd1e Gorme
(60mon I
@I MOVIE: ' Who'" tho
Buffalo Roam ·
B.05 (I) MOVIE 'The G•eat
Bank Robbe"!'
B 30 O CIJ@ Farl)ilyTiesiRI . In
Stereo
9 00 0 IIl @ Cheer5 (RI . In
Stereo
ffi 700 Club
(j) 0 C!l The Colbys ICC)
Jason 1s torn between h1s
marrrage and h1s self-worth .
Zachary Powers crea1es an
oil sp1ll , wh1ch endangers
Co lby
Enterpnses ,
and
Cons tance ga1ns valuable 1n·
forma uon to prove her mental S1abolo1y (60 m1n 1 (RI
CIJ Nova : What Ernstetn
Never Knew ICC) Many of
the world 's fmest physiCISts
auempt to dev1se a theory
to e ~~:plam the emgma of the
un1verse j60 mm ) lRI
®l
@ Bridges to Cross
An ex-convtct hrred by the
magazme rs 1mmed•a tely attracled to Tracv (60 mm I
(j])
Myste"fl
Agatha
Christie's Panners
in
Crime (CCI A woman con·
su!ts To m m y and Tuppence
when she suspec1s at te mpted murder 1n her
newly-rnhented house (60
m1n I (RI
9:30 II 11)@ All Is Forgiven
10:00 0 IIl (W H1ll Street Blues
Funllo s
pohce-corrupuon
comm•ss1on frnd1ngs enrage
a 1ealous Dan•els and a
Rambo-styled lunat•c takes
hoS1ages (60 m1n I IRI
20120 !CCI
m m soap
(!) Frontline: Will Thoro
Always be an England?
(CCI The soctal culture and
work ethiC of post-rndustnal
England 1s exam1ned (60
m1n )
®l
@ Knot's landing

a

~AZlLIAtv

NOT ONLY !XES A
WALKING STICK.
HELP lOI.J WALK ...

BUT IT MLIST 8E qREAT
FOR ~TnNG 'rOW
THR0..6H A CROWD.

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor Fourth and P1ne
Gelltpol11 Oh io
Phone 814 446 -3888 or Sa
446 -4477

mo m

a

(R)

83

[jj) Newswatch

Excavating

BARNEY

BOOHOOHOO

I WAS DREAMIN'
WE LIVED IN A
BODACIOUS PALACE ,

·· THEN I WOKE UP
TO THIS!!

85

NOW THAT VOU'RE WI DE
AWAKE, GO DREAM ME UP
SOME BREAKFUSS.,
.YORE MAJESTY

General Hauling

J ames Boys Water Serv1ce Also
pools fllled Call614 266 1141
or 614 -446 1175 or 614 446
7911
Ken 's Watet Serv ice Wells
CISterns, pools and watttrbeds
filled Call 614· 367 0 623 0 ,
614 367 7741 o r 304 675 ·
1247
Haul anyth ing! 2 ton -B ton Call
614 446 -4861 Mon . Wed ,
Thurs 8am· 10PM Sat 8 12
Reasonable deiJvttr\1 pnces

"'IU 'D MAKE.

A 6Rt:AT

POL-11"1CIAN,

AND AN
ACCOMPI....ISHED'
PU&amp;L.IC SNEAI&lt;f:R!!

WH'(&amp;CAUSe
I'M A !S~PENT OF
-rHE R'EOPL.E?

SNAKE.!

Coa l. hmestone. gravol. etc
Dttl1verud 1 ton end up Jim
len1er. 304-675 -124 7 or 675 7397

87

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec Ava . Gallipolis
614 -446 7833 Of f\14 -446 ·
1833 .

A &amp; M Furniture Manufac1ur 1ng
St Rt. 7, Crown Crty, 01\ Cat't
614-256 -1470 call E..,e 614 446 -3 438
Old &amp; n e w
Uptloatetad
Mowrey's Upholate rmg seNing
t n county area 21 year~~ The best
ln furniture uphollhHing Call
30,4 675 - 4154 for fr ee
esttmatel

@ News
10.05 (]) B1lly Graham C•usade
10:30 CD Enterprise USA
@) (!) INN News
(fl) Tony Brown's Journal
11 :00 O IIJ® O OO®J m ® CliD
News
ffi l Spy
f1) CD love Connection
(jJ) The Shakespeare Hou•
Hosted by Waite• Mat·
thau . King Lear lear reconCi les with Cordelia. but they
are ca ptured and sentenced
10 deal h by Edmund (60
mm)
Ill! Soap
11 ·03 Cil SCTV
11 ·05 CII MOVIE: 'Before Winter
Comes'
11 :30 0 1Il @ Tonight Show
Ton1ght s guests are Carl
Ae1ner, Andra e Crouch and
Sybol Shepard (60 m ~n I In
Stereo

CII SportsCentor
CIJ 0 (j) ABC

Unsc ramble these lour Jumbles
four o rdinal)' words

rxr
···--·-- "'
'"......

[J I J

&lt;.
•
[ WALKED ACROSS T~E
STREET W~T~ ~ER ...

THAT'S ALL l DID!

'(OU KNOW Wf4AT
SHE SAID? SHE
SAID ''THANKS MISTER''
'
'

I'M ONLY TWO MONTHS
OLDER T~AN SHE IS, AND
511E CALLS ME "MISTER" !!

HO I/ 1:5~ ~1.~1

tJ

HA5 &amp;11!0/JN

IN PO~ U I.P R iY
IN RECE NT Y~~~5,
No N &lt;~ rr &lt;~nge the c 1rcled leHer 'i to
lorm the surpti!.P. an&lt;&gt;.Ner as %1~
ges1ed hy Ihe aoo ~e {,at1oo"

K) I K tJ
M5wer:sv[ I I 11 }[ I 1 GJJ
,,
I fl

Yest erd&lt;~Y s

I

11r

JumbleS PUPPY CUBIT BE:r i\l L 'I ! &lt;'i
Answer The la test thtng out- 1 HF eF , I I .JI' Mf~

Jo.mbll look No 11 1e avtlllbll lol' 51 t5 ~~~... ~ otnt• I)Qtl•g• 1nd "•""1•"11 lf Olt'l
Jl.mltii , CIOI~II _..,.,., , P 0 lol 4368, Qf\l.,dO, f l Uatl2-4~ l~lt,lll l y'Nr
fWIIM tddrMI ,
COM and IIIMI -,wrc:t-.ec• ~lbt.IO NIWI~II I

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

Winner stranded
in the East

\OIU II
• (~ ! lll

'f
t

I

By James Jacoby

•

,1, J

Here IS a deal m which the 4· 3 spade
ht would haoe prOVIded a safer ga me
contract than the actual three no·
trump When hearts were l ed agamst
the no-trump game, decl arer was re·
s1gned to his fate On the thtrd and
fourth rounds of hearts, he disca rded
two clubs from dummy, and from h1 s
own hand a club and a diamond He
then wa1ted for West to take the set·
tmg tnck w1th the f1flh hea r t And
wa1ted . The lights came on as decl arer
realized that the opponents had
botched the defense by blockmg the
heart su1t East was left With the set·
ting tnck. but West was on lead
West exited with a spade and de·
clarer could take the rest of the tncks
as long as he made the ellort In prac·
!Ice, he played A·K of diamonds. When
the queen did not drop. he then took a
club finesse w1lh the Jack, and that
was mne trtcks
The lesson on defense b s1mple to
remember. North asked whether
South had a four-card maJor su1t by
b1dding two clubs. The respon se, ·two
diamonds, sa1d, " Sorry, partner ..:. no
lour-card major " Knowmg th at South

II

~6

\!

'

1 'I ~

BI
l:.A~ l

~\I '-' I
• 375

" Q J 73

• 9 4}.
• -\ K 1(I

• Q 65
+ Q 10 3

+9 2

~I

2

• •o 7 4

' OL'TII
+ A K fi
'f H 4
• AK 33
Ki 6 5

+

Vulnerable Neith er
Dealer South
West

Nor th

E as l

Pass

2•

Pass

3 NT

Pass

Sou th

I NT

Pass

2+

Pass

Pass

Opcmng lead • 3

cannot have four hea rts makes

1t

easy

for West to unblock a heart honor
when East plays the kmg and ace, JUSt
m case the hearts have toda y·s diStn
butwn pattern
0

UII NEWSPAPER ENTER PRISE: ASS N

~wd'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I He1n
I Sf'Urrtf'd
6 Consumt:'d 2 S.dv.;&gt;r

9 Mllkr
rvtdent
10 ComE'

3 Thr ~ auru s
r om p 1IN

4 Pompr u

ashorP

12 A nx1ou ~
13 Aqual1r

ammal
15 Henna
ts one

16 -

gTf&gt;f'lmg

5 Penrwatc
6 Unsur
pa.~sC'd

7 l.ac&lt;'
8 Reg tn
11 Conse·

18 Woman
person
1fled
19 Ex&lt;·hangt&gt;
21 A Hf'tnN

22 Pot·tn
23 By hran

25 Tank

rratt •

!jf.' C'UOn

14 Insurge nt
17 Ftsh
20 Chu n:h
tnhu nal
23 llomllaot
24 I.A'I s
havP 11 1

26 F'nghlt' nNI

ord1 natre

32 ( hoH 1
p.lrt
:l6 Engl1:-.tl

27 M.ultng

37

C' OSlS

29 Ph1hpp1n1

:19 In f n 11r
II l un,u

Jwasanl

3 1 L\ l n~ lar

r''"''r
(I n • lfH "
" a~

t'

down\\ ard
,.,....,.,....,.,.-,..,......,.,,.,....:.,.,.-,.,.-\dll1il·

24 Vngtnla

ts om•
27 .Jury

h~ l

28 Wahuw s
dan( c
29

Wt• t ~ hl

unit
30 - r l
l,thor.t

31 Muclia~w
33 llock&lt;' y
~rra1

34 Decay
35 Ordtnanr t'
38 CadP nlP

-tO Ext s nng
42 Aqtl&lt;ltll'
h trd

43 Progrt&gt;:-.s
44 Distaff
hunny

45 Edtl
&lt;l sr npt

"

OAILYCRYPTOQUOTES - Her e's how to work 1t :
AXYOLBA AXR
isLONGFEL LOW

One letter stands for another In th1s samplt \ " us!'d
for U1e thr~ L's, .X lor the two o·s. rtL' Suu;lt- lette"
aposlrophes, the length and forma ti on of the "01 us ·" e ;Il l
hinls Each day the code leiters are diffe rcnl
CRYPTOQUOTE

6· 12

DA O IX

p

(' M

K AU I U

r

R

l' I

W l lJ ( I I\

M R

~I

I~

I'

t,

h

\

p \1

\J

I
lllews

Nightline
flf CD One Step Beyond
ill Austin City Umits:
Glenn Campbell
00 Taxi
@ Night Heat O'Bnen
loses hrs gun and ts serIOusly wounded 1n a subway
ll'!n bat1lo 170 m1n.) (R) .
~Trapper John, M .D.
11':45. (]) WKRP in Cincinnati
12:00 (I) Beat of Groucho
(!) Surf1ng: Stubblos Pro &amp;
Mlcholob Cup (R).
tD (IJ Rawhide
0 (!) Eya on Hollywood
@ MOVIE. 'To Be An·
nounced'
12:15 (I) Entertainment Tonight
Ill (I) Hawaii Flve·O
12:30 II (]) Gil Late Night with
David Letterman Tonigh1' s
guests are Tracev Ullman,
mustcran Bryan Adams and

a

Upholstery

1983 XA 80, ~tor Cycle Like
new . 614- 246 6177

Of

814-388-9818
1975 G. Plymoull&gt;

EEK &amp; MEEK

PAW ·· AN'··

eu-44&amp;·81 13

.,,lne,
e 4·992-11941 .

INDUSTRV!

i

Motorcycles

19B6 XA 250 Honda dirt b1ke
t 1,20 0 Call614 446 1756

. WHV, IT COU~D
I'VEIJ I.EI'ID TO THE
BEGINNING OF A
COMP~ETELY NEW

Statkl Tree and lawn Sennce.
landscaping 304-676 -2010

Trenchmg Serv1ce wa1er. gas.
and elactrrc Free es t1mata1
304· 773 -6839

1984 Dodge Charger PS , PB ,
AC. auto , AM-FM redia. exc
cond . 22 .000 milaa Cefl f\14 -

•

Fetty Tree Tnmmmg, ltump
remO\Ial Call 304 875 1331

1984 Chevy S 10, 4 wheel
dnve. pr~ce reduced, 304 -676 -

74

.

ALLEY OOP

RON'S Televl11on Serv 1ce
Haute calli on RCA , Quazar,
GE Spec1ahng in Zennh Call
304 576-2398 or 614 446
2454

1976 Chevy Monr:a V-8 , 1760
Se•at 21 NetiAve or614 -446
1981 Mazda RX -7. 6 spd , low
m•leage. •xc cond Call 614-

.

Exter~or &amp; mterior stucco Plaster &amp; pluter repalfl low rat as
Call614 256 1182

Good · 1 E•cavatlng basements,
foot en. duveways. septi c tanks
landscaptng C!lll enyt1me 614
446 -4537. Jam&amp;a L Da •m on.
Jr owner

6363

1le g tant ,' a man who
cltmbed 110 stones . and a
composer who turns ord1·
nary sounds 1010 mu SIC ~60

®l 01 @ Crazy like a Fo•
(R)
® Evening a1 Pops Steve

Ertenor &amp; mt1nor ducco Plaster &amp; pla1ter rep11rs Low rates
Call6 14 266-1182

19B2 Chevy 4114 305 V-8 . auto
lit, short bed sell th11 weak
S4 ,800 Call 614 446 7019
1986 Chevy conversion van . low
mtleege, AT · AC , AM FM e11c
cond Call 814 -446-4141 tfter
6 &amp; on weekends

~~Yr

Serv1ces

2696

Trucks for Sale

WHAT AN f'SO! CAN you ~I.IF:Ve
t-IE" j'OU&lt;iH,. A fUZ'X-S:U.$,.~?

Golf; 1986 J S. Open
Champtonship From SoulhampiOn, NY (3 hrs . :Jo
m1n I (RI
® 0 CII Ripley' s Believe
11 or Not! (CCI Mee1 a "gen·

News hour

197B Jeep CJ 5 Soft top, good
conditiOn Call 614 -992 · 7020

1980 Toyot;. Corolla tun roof
AM ·FM stereO with ca11ette, 6
IPd .. 2 door hatchback. rtdlal
ttrN, good cone!., 82,700 Call
614 -388-99 11 or 614 -388-

Wackiest Sh1p In 1he

CII

79 Honda XR600 , 1600 00
Call 304 -675 e&amp;73

1984 Plymouth Aehant 4 dr
auto, arr, cruise, AM FM tape
S3,799 John'• Auto Sal"
Bulaville Rd , Gallipol1a
'

446·2323

rn

1974 Dodge Camper ConverSIOn, by Tioga Stove w1th oven,
ICebox , smk. Jlteps e S1 BOO
Cell 814-247-4292

81 Chavette. AC AM -FM cas
sett 3 ~peed . 304 -675 -4931
after 5 30

73

Autos for Sale

19 76 Starcratt foldout camper,
sl&amp;eps 8 CO!lll lete With ltOVe,
ICe box. light I &amp; tlflk, e•c con d ,
like new C11ll 614 - 389· 9765
after 6PM

Wanted - cyc le front wheel
c emer and tow for c ar hit ch,
bolu or ball , 304-675 2942

01 26. 304·676·5579

Tran s porla!IO~

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

' 86 Ch~wy S10 truck , lllu• new
304 676 6643 aflar 6 00

72

m @ Divorce Court
llll Private Benjamin
@ Wheel of Fortune
7:30 0 Cil ill New Newlywed
Game
C!l Speedweek
W CIJ Ta•i
0 (j)@) Wheel of Fortune
([) Yes, Minister
U) (W Enterta1nmen1 To·
night
Ill! Allee
(iS) Jeopardy
7 35 (!) Sanford and Son
B 00 0 (1)@ The Cosby Show
(CCI (RI. In Stereo

Army

62 Wanted to Buy
Now buytng ahell corn or ear
corn. Call for lat"t quotas. R1ver
City Farm Supply. 614 -446-

Camping
Equipment

New ca mp e r Ill&amp; ffldge ,
9 100 00 or bell offer 304 675 5247

79

67 Chevy- two SupM Sport B
and M trans and oonv , Hunt
C0"1J. lhrher. 4 10 pot~ , alum
alots , intenor good , motor
liTO kat, body solid. needs work
S1200. Call 304 882 3702

- - -.

Newshour

1978 Plymouth Wagon for tale
Runs good t175 Phon e 614

19n Camero. a ltte wmdows
lliM'ttrel. $1,500 00 304-882

1976 Chevy Nova Nnt well

61

1980 G Plyrrouth Fu~ AM FM a1r. 1980 Oetson 210 5
speed Cell 614 - 992 7076
8:00am • 7 00 pm

304 896· 3450

9809
59

for
General
Rease
httch Motors
Call veh1cle
614 3791
2692

Autos for Sale

71

'81 Chtwette. auto PS PB Air
clean good cond day 304· 676·
5717 evanlflga 676· 6184

448 -3231

614·446·1149

0167

New Idea pull-type mower
1225 3 pt rake never u1ed
8395 JO 14T b•ler a896 Call
1· 814 -286· 8622

Cucumber. watermelon and
cantalope plants Cleland Green ·
neuse, Vma St. , Aac•ne, Oh10.

Good uaed reasonable price
co lOr TV ' s 1 good var~ety Call
4- P235 -70 R 1 5 Dayton• RWL
hke new •175 Call 814· 367·

AC tractor with plows e 460

2656

1980 3 wheeler 70 ser181 1979
3 wh•eler 70 lefl81 Cell 614 -

800 gallon water tank on tktdl.
goodcond Ctll614 -446 2614

1·614-286·6622

Strawbemes p1clt your own Call
C laude W1ntars . 614 · 2•5 6121

Call

14,000 BTU Air conditiOner
S100 Caii614-38B·9778.

5826.

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

1365

Pomeroy 2 bclr, Naylors Run.
•176 mo 1100 deposit, 'Yard,
patio, Cell atter 6pm 614· 992·

6886.

Musical
Instruments

McCausl&amp;nd Farm and Garden
Ec ho tommers i88 76 to . Fresh Brocoh. 2 heads 7! cents
8299 . 96 Husqvarna uw1 . snap peat, ,ang•ng bukets.
flower • 115 mil81 South, US Rt
Echo saw1, Y1rdman mowers
New &amp; uted s\1 mak" Child en 35, Southt1de. W Ve
SIIW Suppl&lt;y, KoontJ ·Sailor Ad ,
Black raspbertltl , 304· 676
Vinton . Oh Caii614- 3B8· 8564

992 242B

86 New Holland b81et, clean
S496 14 T JO baler S896 MF
No 12 baler S1,185 . MF rake
4395 JO rake 18915 501 For~
ITDW8r e460 9ft tedder t695
6 ft drum mower e1.496 Call

71

2671

304·675·6403 00 675-1450

8 foot thowca1e, S100
614 ·U6-0212

1 970 5000 Ford d1a1e1 tractor
with 3 bottom plows, •4. 750.
3•0 lntematlonal tractor with
P'Owt &amp; 6ft licltle bar mower.
e1,950 Ceii1 -614-2B6 8522 .

Great Dana Farm owne11 only
Good ground hog dog 175 ,

New 1 bedroom apartment Cell
614-446 -0390

Furmshed room 8135 Util1t••
pel 919 2nd Gallipolis Shere
bath Stngel male Cell 614
446 -4416

Pets for Sale

56

400 cubtc eng1na &amp; other parts·

78

AQHA Regittered Quarter horse
stud 1ervice Direct out of
" Charlie Polite" Call 61 4.· 448·

Bauen Hoond . 1 year okl, tr1
co lored , 876 00 304-67 5 ·

PlastiC c istern rtate approved
plast•c seprlc tankt , platte
cu l..,er1 s metal culverts RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES , Jackaon, Oh 614 -286 5930

Farm Equipment

61

Blodt, brrck, mortar and ma
10nry supphea Mountain State
Blodl, At 33, Naw Haven W
Va 304 882-2222 .
·

446·2783

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

- - - -- - --

2985

K1ng-size watl!rbed l1ght wood
Call 614-387 7237

Cellehan ' s Used T~re Shop Over
1,000tirM.IIZ8112 . 13 14 . Hi ,
16, 165 8m1losoutAt 218
Call 614 - 266·8261

~~==========~:::::::::::~

8Utldmg ma ta r.al1 . cemant ,
blocks all lll:8t. vard or delivery .
Galhpolit Blodl: Co , Ul'h Pine
St. Gelhpoht Oh10 Call 614·

614·742·311a

54 Misc. Merchandise

11 1 •..,~"

New Holl•nd, 7 tt rear mowar .

Uted reirlgarator bra11 bed ,
compl ete, occ chalt Call 614
446 -1171

Complete full s1ze canpay bad,
8100 00 403 Chesnut St ,
Henderson, W Ve

a

Flaah~ng

Williamson Meat Market ,
USDA . Prime Beef Sale, SldM

tly Henr i Arn old 01nd Botllee

(]!) One Day at a Time

Pontoon boat Used 1 time and
1 wood lathe Call 614· 992 6017

76

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

\9 ~~ ~

one letter to each square. to form

O IIJCII Oill ® Ol ®CliD
News
CD Green Acres
C!l Mazda Sportslook
tD CD Star Trek
'
CD 3 -2-1, Contac1 (CCI
® Under Sail

•6:05 (!) Gomo• Pyle, USMC
6 ;30 0 IIl @ NBC News
f.]) Wagon Tra1n
C!l Tennis Magazine (RI
CII 0 CD ABC News
Cil Doctor Who
®J @ CBS News
® Body Electric
Ill! Welcome Back, Kotter
6 .35 (!) Gunsmoke
7 :00 0 Cil PM Magazine
C!l SportsCenter
CII Entertamment Tonight
tD CD Hogan's Heroes
0 (!)Jeopardy
(I) Ntghtly Busmess Report
@) News
®
MacNeil Lehrer

'SLIGHT

6643

Newly decoraced 2 bedroom
house Fully carpeted Unfur·
nlshed Storm doors and wm
dows W1ll accept 1 or 2
chtldren Deposrt requited 614·
992-3090

2 bdr apt , downtown, S190
Without ut111t1es. $296 wrth
ulll1t1es DepoSit requued Call
614-446 2129 8 OOam - 5pm

Bv owner 4 acres e:cc locati on

Call614·992 7479

N•ce 2 bdr apartments m dupl8111
house Ma1n St Chelhtre, Oh iO
Furn~thed &amp; water pa1d Call
614-245 -581 B

35 acres lo r sale Horse c ave
Rac1na . All mmerals. workmg
gas wflll $13 000 614· 667 347 0

21ots for sale over 1 acremeach
Will ~ell together or separate.
304 675 3407

Lorge lots

·6·00

__:_~. , , _

!. ,...

ft\J\}1.\.ft ift}ft

~

EVENING

_______

675-4631

11 29.t1 Front
qttS Dt1A 09,
H1nd
qts
70 U
Choice
Beef Sale. S1d" •1 . 2&amp;. Fronts
S1 06, Htnds t1 62 Prrct 1n

Tra1ler apaces Sand Hill Road
convenutnt to tchools. store and
hoapltal. Ctty JMer available
lnqu1re Rosalee. 304-676 -4600
between 9 00 and 4 ·00 weak
day•

2 bdr upsttllts apt extra n1ce
central all Ca ll614 446 2158

Und erground h o me . Enerey
taVBr· cool in summer, warm in
For sale or rent 2 bedroom. wm te r Stove, refrigarator
extra nice. Ready for occupancv. Large round sunporch, mce
Can bt mo11ed . Muttl see to IIIWn. no childern or outdoor•
petl 1260 mo , 1100 sec. dtp.
-""""· .6000 """!') .1B51 reference•
Call614 -446· 17158 .
614-992'7479
. ·. ' ·
01'

6/12/86

Rent , lease land contract. 3br's
Rodney V•llage II 2 br' s-Eurelut
3br Evana He1gf'11 s Deposrt &amp;
references requtted Blackburn
Rnlty -614 -446 -0008

partially wooded
lot! Tu pper Plams and Chester
water and app roved ro ad to each
lot Reasonabl~t pn ced , w1 ll
fman ce 10 percen t down Call
614 985 -3594

304· 77J.6B73

121160 On I acre Very good
condrt10n Grear cou ntry setting
ne1r town Cell 614 -99 2-7020
Mutt sell

Houses for Rent

5304

Goverment homes from S1 IU
repair ) Delmquent ta• property
Repoue1110n1 Call 805 687
6000 Ell! H 9805 tor currant
repo list

7 room house 1 'll bath 4
bedroom. gareoa 770 Ash St
Mtddlap ort , Oh10 6 14 992
5714

16ft Johnson bo•t &amp; trahr. 75
HP Call 614 -246 -9432

~;;;::;;::;:;;~:;:====-r~:::;:;::::::::::::::~ COU
NTRV MOBILE Home Park. """" '""'"•· w•-"• ond
1 32 M b' l H
Rou te 33. North of PomeJOV
freezing Whola Primt t Cuta
o

B£1RN LOSER

1125 I 81 4·M9·2801

TONY'S GUN REPAIRS . acope
bore lighting, far:tory reblueing ,
houra 9 :00 till dark, call 304

Sentinei--Page--15

The

Thursday, June 12, 1

1 6 '11 ft flberglau 7 112 HP
Mercury motorS. trailer 11 ,600
Call 614 -446-2393

45 Furnished Rooms

"Part of our problem is we're

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Ulrry Wright

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Television
Viewing

Unfurmahad apt , vard end btte·
ment. e160 00 monlh. 304676 -7641 rJenlng

tal In need of t8PIIt v.nt on
Ohto Prtced cheap' !110,000

75

New W1nch.. t..- 3030 Rifle. 7
mm world war 1 Mu•aer. Buck
Knife Bicentenial, 156 ounce pure
s1lver. klttof foreign coins , 1978
Chevy Capric. W-oon 11800 ,
!2Ya cubic ft refrtgerator. Mke
nM l1rge stereo Both for

6B2·2566

Handyman '• Sptte•al dup leJO. ren

Qual•tv home newly remodeled
cho1ce location on College Rd
Syracuse new completek ttchen
and laundry 111 condlltoned
large lot 614 992 -5324

54 Misc. Merchandise

Apartment
for Rent

Syracuse 2 bedroom &amp;195 per
month plus utlltties DIPOIII
required Call 614 992 6687
etter 5 00 614-992 -7671 o r
614 -992· 6732

0630

By owner- t mall 2 bedro om
home wtth % acre htllstdalot and
outbuildmg 5 m tles solJth of
G1111pohs Krtnet R1dge Rd F1rst
house on nght fr om Rt 218
814 000 Pay S4 OOOdawnand
owner wil l help finan ce balan ce
Call 614 446 -2917

44

2 bedroom apt 1n downtown
Middleport All utihtlea p1ud
$210 per month Call614· 9926611 or 614 992 -6783

Wall! to town
schools
churches. librtry one tiOI)' , 2
bdr , attract111t batt\, formal
dimngroon , yood carpet •n g
large kitchen good gas turnec e
storm Wlndowt Call 614 446-

4'h acres wrth road frontag e on
county road 8 Ttck R1dge Road
half land 18\lel gardttll l•nd good
tra1ler stte or house srte Jams
CIVde Walk er land on three s•des
11 Thurman, Oh10 , just oti 35
West from Galhpohs Otuo Cell
614 -245 9105

Thursday, June 12, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-14- The Daily Sentinel

DAOIX

RY

h

0

\

A U I' I .I
E l1 I'
/ I I I
Yesterdar's Cryptoquote: lJE I'TER T!O Il l·: Ill HI 1-: N
OUT !'ROM AMONG MEN TitAN TO liE lli S I.I ~I: Il 1\\
CHILDREN -- RICHARD HF.N F1Y IlANA
T IJ I 0 X IJ P K

©

1986

Kong Features SyndiCa te Inc

Wash1ngton re poner Sarah
McClendon (60 min ) (R) , In
Stereo.
CD Bill Cosby Show
(!) Flahin ' Hole (R) .
(I) ABC News Nightline
1!11 CD Rawhide
llJl MOVIE : ' Branniga1.
12.40 II) @ MOVIE: 'Tho Apple
1 :00 (]) Dobie Gillio
(I) What" s Happening

Now

• (!) Wild, Wild West
1:15 (I) MOVIE: "Rogues of
Sherwopd Forest'
1 :30 CD Fathor Know• B'!!t

Down 1he Stretch (R)
News

2.00

700 Club
Mazda Sports l ook (RI
tD (IJ MOVIE. ' They Died
Wi1h Their Boo1s On'
(10) CBS News Nightw atch
S1'l ll News (RI
2 30
!". ;orts Center
2'55
1110 VIE : ' lady lor a
Night'
3:00 ffi MOVIE: 'Altai• in Reno·
(!) Bowling : PBA Showboat Doubles Classic From
Las Vegas . NV 12 hrs .) (RI
IBJ Co.nedy Break

�Thursday, June 12, 1986

~P:;age=::::::16:::The:=;:::D;:a:il::y::Sen:=t;in::e::l=;::=====:::;--::-:--:--P-o_mero_:Y:-:;'illiddleport, Ohio

IMeigs citizens donate 7 4 pints of hi~

Area deaths
Lena Holter
Lena Mae Holter. 80. 29793
Township Rd. 643, Racine. died
Wednesday evening in II'&lt;' Veterans
Memoria l Hospital specia l care
unit
A bomemakrr. Mrs. Holter was
bom Nov. 18.. 1900 In Long Bottom to
George Hcmy and Sonoma Cur1 is
Osborn. She was affiliat ed wit h II'&lt;&gt;
R.1cine "First Baptist Church. and
was a mcmlx'r of Racine Grange
2&amp;16 and First Fa mil ies of Ohio.
Survivors include two daughters.
Mrs. Gfora idinc Cross of Racint&gt; and
Mrs. June Ashley of Letart Fa lls:
one son, Lan}· Holter of Pickerington: 13 grandchildren; 15 great
grandchildren: a nd · 8 step-great
grandchild ren.
She was pi'('('&lt;'ded in dea th by her
par&lt;'nts . her husband Clifford . in
1900 ; a son. Eugene Holt er; and a
sister. Hilda DeWolfe.
Graves ide SPI'\'ices will be 2 p.m.
Satu1'day at Letart Falls CemeiPIO'
with Rev. Stevr Deaver otfidat lng.
Frir nds ma)·call at Ew ing Funeral
Home from 2 to i p.m. and 7 to ~
p.m. Frida1·. In liru of Dowers.

friends may contribut&lt;' 10 the
Rllci nr First Bapt is t Chu reh build·
mg fu nd .

Gilbert McDade

Gilbert E. McDade. 75. Six Lakes,
Mich.. form&lt;'riy of Portland In
Mrlgs Count)'. died June I a t the
Kelsey Memortal Hospital in Lakeview , Mich.
Mr. McDade was born Feb. 11..
19U and was the son of the !ate Van
E. and Henrietta Middleswart
McDade.
Hr was a lile member and past
master of Big Rapids Masonic
Lodge, a past patron of Six Lakes
Order of Eastern Sta r, and a life
member of the Elks Lodge. He
attended Six Lakes United Metho·
dis! Church . ·
Surviving are his wife, Mabel; a
son. Billy E. of Springfield, Oregon:
a daughter. Mrs. Edward tBel ty l
Brkiacich of Scbf'waing; a sister.
Mary Louise Ours of Huntington ,
W. \;a .. eight grandchildd r~&gt;n a n d 17
gr&lt;'a 1-grandchildren.
Services were held at 1 p. m.
Wednesday at the Youngman
Chapel in Lakeview.

.· :Senate.. ,_____c_o_n_rln_u_ed_fr_om_pa_·g_e_1_ _ __
ta mJX'rin g with tax mtcs- ('Vrn 1n

tl'&lt;' alter native minimum tax could rip the fabric of the ent ire bilL
He added tha i he cou ld not live
with man)' major changes. "There
is a JX&gt;in l beyond which 1 would not
go - I'd rat l'&lt;' r have no bilL" he
said
The rwo oiht' r proposa ls would
have paid for pa rtial IRA restoralion; by limiting othrr write-offs for
itemizing taxpayers. They were
rewcted on votes of 76-21 and 78-18.
All the amendmenl s would have
restructured the IRA tax break so
tha t a worker wou ld get $310 baCk
from lh&lt;' government for a $2,!m
IRA contribution. regardless of
incomr lew !.
The issur was

c lear !~·

1~ most

srnsitivc part of the bil l. Many
srna tors sa id 1hey had been flooded
with han dwrillen constituent tellers
ca lling for a restora tion of the

deduction.
As a way to sidE'S tep the fight.
GOP leaders pushed a non -binding
resolution call ing for the problem to
b&lt;' dealt with in a conference with
the House.
The Senate approved thP resolution 964 but crit ics claimed it was
meaningless because it could not
fo rce the conference to fE'Store the
IRA tax brea ks and co ntained too
many conditions.
Tliat argument was bolstered by
Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, D- IlL, lbe
!'&lt;'ad of II'&lt;' Ways and Mean s
Committee. whi ch fashioned the
House bilL
" II is unrealistic, in my view, to
expec t 1hE' conference to patch up
what the Senate it self seems
unwilling to face," Rostenkowski
wmte in a lettel' to Sen. Alan Dixon.
D-Ill

Sales slip back 0.1 percent
WASH[]I;GTON 1UPI1 - Retail
sales sUp[.('d back OJ percent in
May aft er a rrv ised 0.4 rercent gain
the previous month , the Commerce
Depa rtmcnl said tcday .
Adva nce estimates of U.S. rNail
salE'S last month. adju sted for
seasonal different'l's . totaled $U7.ffi
billion. down from a n •vised $117.14
in April. accw ding to the monthly
Census Burea u survey of retail
businesses.
Two rr lail sectors thaI expanded
rapidly in April, auto and housing
malerials sales, slowed markedly
to thP su rprise of analyst s who had

exrected continued gains.
Aulomot ive salE'S advanced a
sUm 0. 6 percent last month followIn g an upwardly revised 4. 3 percent
surge In April , the fE'Suil · of new
low-intel'E'St financing incentivE'S.
Building materials, hardware
and ga rden suppUes fell back a
su rprising 4.2 percent In May .
following a 4.6 percent advance In
April, despite a continuing br isk
level of new and exisil ing home
sa lE'S.
Furniture and home appliance
salE'S. on tl'&lt;' other hand, advan ced
by 2.8 ]X'rcenl last month.

Gilman trial begins next month
A trial has been S&lt;'l to begin next
month in Gallia County Common
Pl!'as Coun tor a 71 -year-old Perry
Township woman charged ~&lt;11h

residence.
Roderick said it was proven
Blanton had read Mrs. Gilman her
rights and testimony from Rio
mu rd('r.
Grande College and Community
Grace Gilma n. Rt. ~ . Oak Hill. , College security of.ficer Mike Walwill go on trial Ju ly 15, according to ton "clearly corroborates this fact,
Judgr Richard C. Rode rick Jr.
and th at the de fendant made a
Rodl'rick made the ru ling a fl ~r a knowing and voluntary waiver of
hearing on the findings of three
her rights be fo re sl'&lt;' gave her
examiners who tesJed Mrs. Gil - various statements to 1he officers In
man. who has pleaded not guilty
the case."
and not gu ilty by J'('ason of insanity
A gun reported ly used In the
to the charge. Based on those shooting, owned by Jim Gilman, is
findings. Roderick ruled I ha t sh!' is to be chocked forfingerprlnts by the
comprtPnt 10 stand trial.
sheriff' s de partment and result s
"That does not resolve the plea of are to be provided to Cox, Roderick
not guilt)· by rl'ason of Insanity ," sa id . ·
Roderick expla ined. "II means she
Mrs. Gilman also requE'S ted the
understands cou11 pl'()('('durc and ju l)' In It'&lt;' tria I view the scene of the
thP toll' of her attom!'y and the crime and the requE'S t was granted .
prosecuting aii 011H')'."
Sheriff's Investigators· allege Gil man, a retired roal miner, was shot
Roderick denied a suppression
following an alleged "domE'S tic
motion fi(('(] by Mrs. Gilman's
dispu te." He was dead at the scenc
all orney. Donald Andrew Cox. on
of a single bullet wound . invl'Stlgastall'ml'nls Mrs. Gilman reported ly
tors said. Tl'&lt;'y reported at the time
gave to tl'&lt;' late Deputy Erskine
tha t a .38-ca Uber r£O.•olver was
Blanl on a t t!"&lt;' I ime of i'&lt;'r arrE'St for
confiscated from the scene.
the alleged soootlng dea th or her
Mrs . Gilman has been b t\;ed in
husband. Jim Gilman. 72, onJan .12
the Athens Mental Health Center.
at thrir Cora-Centerpoint Road
where court-ordered p;ychiatric
examinat ions upon her have been
conducted .

Eighty persons reported to an
American Red Cross Bloodmobile·
at the Meigs Senior Cit irens Centet'
in Pomeroy Wednesday to contrlbute 74 pints of blood to the local
blood program.
Twenty-seven persons gavE' blood
on behall offriendsorrelallvE'Sand
first timE' donors WE're Joan Tu tt le.
Don Cullum s and Maurlsha Nelson.
Linda Friend.became a one ga llon
donor; Charlk Johnson. Richa rd
Swanson and Deborah Grueser
beca me two gallon donors; James
M!iler became a four gallon dorms
and Virginia Bland and Donna
Davidson became seven gallon
donors during thf visit
Dr. James Witherell and Dr.
Wilma Mansfield were the physi·
clans in charge and nurses were
Ferndora Story, Emma Adams.

60s.

Beulah Ward, Lenora Lel!heit and
Naomi London. The clerical staff
Included Mary Nease, Jean Nease,
Joyce Hoback, Arizona Stewart a nd
Peggy Harris. Retired Senior
Volunteer Program workers assistlng with the visit were Virginia
Buchanan , Dorothy Long, E mma
Clatworthy, Florence Richards,
Erma Roush, PhUamena Follrod,
BernadinE' Meier, Jesse Curtis,
Lula Hampton, William Hoback,
1
Opal Diddle and MariOn Ebersbach, The canteen was served by Xi
Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorolity..
Donors by community include:
Pomeroy - Brenda S. Cun·
ningham, Janet Ambrose, Lenora
J . McKnight, Debbi Buck, Bernadette Anderson, Debra Mora ,
Debbie Grueser, Richard E. Swan-

son. Pamela J . Miller , Rebecca L
Ambrose. Wilma A. Mansfield,
Dorothy J . Oliver, Lois Wyant ,
Sylvia G. Neeee, J anet L. Persons.
Arizona Stewart, Ronald Hanning,
Gerald Rought, Janet Peavley,
Opal M.. Grueser, Howard P.
Logan, Gloria K. Riggs, Ja mes E .
MOler, VIrgil Windon, Geoffrey
wuson, Jackie Hildebrand, David
M. King, Carolyn Charles. Cynthia
M·. Hartenbach, Stephen R. Hartenbach, Mary A. Sorden, Adell L
White, William C. QuickeL .
Middleport - Carroll Cleland,
CharlE'S F . Johnson, Kathryn D.
Johnson, Phyllis Drehel, LyM
Schuler, Leafy M. Chasteen, Saratl
Fowler, Edward Durst, Maurisha
Nelson, Glorta J . Peaviey, Timothy
E. Smith, Gerald L.. Antbony, C.
Robert F isher, Dorothy McCloud,

Sall ie E. Kitchen , Joel K. Kitchen.
Rncine- Joan Tuttle, Kathleen
McNickle, Charles W. Bush, Ml)rte
A. Bush, Kerr! A. Beegle, Virginia
Bland, Dawna R Grueser, William
H. Hoback, Lisa R.Parsons,Robert
L RJichiE', Paul F. Marr .
Syracuse - Linda L. Friend,
Darla N. Thomas.
Hemlock Grove--Don B. Cullums.
Long Bottom - Henry E. Bahr,
Debbie E. Finlaw. Harlan Ballard,
Reedsville- )'/icky Barber.
Rutland - Avanell George, Fred
George, Dinah N..Stewart, Gregory
M. Stewart, Oopna M. Davidson,
Paul A. RICE'.
LangsvUie - Alva B. Clark,
Karen S. Clark, Eilts E. Myers.
ChE'Ster - Herbert Short, Martelia Short, Clarence C. Wolfe, Jr.
Coolville- Lee Payne.

By WILLIAM HARWOOD
UPI Scienre Writer
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Rogers Commission's "harsh erlt l
cism" of NASA 's past mistakE'S is
well deserved, Adminis trator
Jalll!'s Fletcher says, but the
agency 's future depends in large
part on presidenlial support for a
new shuttle to replace Challenger.
President Reagan said Wednesda y night hesupport s such a project
but a final decision must await the
outcome of a growing debate on the
role of manned spacecraft vs.
unmanned, throw-away rockets.
"There's a backlog now of space
cargo that is supposed to be up
there, and we have a problem of
delermlnlng whether we should
increase the number of unmanned
launchers," Reagan said in a

na tionally tele vis ed n ~&gt; w s
conference.
Fletcher, Rear Adm.. Richard
Truly. who is chil'f of the shuttle
progra m. and other top agency
officials were called to testify again
today before Ihe House Science and
Technology Commlttre In hearings
thai began 'J'uE'Sday to study the
find!ngs of the Rcgers Commission
treport on the Challenger disaster.
Willie Fletcher and other NASA
•Jfflciais exprE'Ssed optimism shutt1e flights could be resumed In
1.11id-summer of 1987, other space
a gency officials cautioned the mid! ;ummer date was too soon.
"By and large, the report and Ihe
l1arsh criticism Is dl'served by
NASA ," Fletchl'r said Wednesday.
Committee members made It
c lear that . In addit ion to reviewing

the problems that led to me
Challenger disaster, they planned
to pro~ the future role of America 's space program, Including the
balance between manned space
operations and unmanned programs referred to by Reagan.
Fletcher told th&lt;' panel Tuesday
the nation dE'S j:era tely needs a new
shuttle to replace Challenger to
avoidthepressure that couldleadto
another disaster.
"I don't like thl' thought of only
having three orbilers," he said,
"because that's a rather marginal
Ill'€!. It 's not just the fli ght rat e
that's of roncern, but it' s the
problem of supposing you have a
great difficulty and you want to fix
, - - - -- - - -- -- --

•

a1y
·Vol. 36, No . 29

Producer Price
IndeX for finished goods

$299

c'V::,s:::
II'Chv:cv•
,_,.
2rorS6.99 2rorS6.99 _2 _ ,.=--•

1

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12 forS1.99
lnehiOtSSllad B1.1tlet Willi HCI
S9ot" (III·YOII·Un-tal) Irill d

But It remained unclea r whPI I'&lt;'r
the administration woold niake
offse tting reductions In othe r nu·
clear force s to remain under terms
of th&lt; ' treaty if there Is nd new anns
pact later. this year.
"T hE' treaty was really nothing
bu 1 I'!'&lt;' legitim izing of an arms
race, " he said, "II didn't do
anyt'ning to reduce nucll'ar weapons or the nuclear threat. "

ba\ed polalo.CanAOi biUst 1
will\ otMI d1sccun1s.Tax no11ne
CllfM 11M tlr IIY ,.-111111.

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lntiLIOeS SJiad But1tt lltithHOI
Spol" (all-y«j ·CI IH II) alld
biked pota\o. [;11\Mibt used

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bUed poiii.O CIIW'Qt blllted,
Wi!I'IOtlllf distiMiftts. Tpnol ird

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*.(Inventory Reduction Sale)

MIDDUPOIT, OHIO

·.8%,f--- - - - - --

290

·1 . 20/o,f---- - - - - --

288

·1. 6%·f--- -- - - - -- - --j

286

·2 . 0%1L...---------..J
M J J ASONDJFMAM
1986
1985

1986

to btllallon alter 111 unprecendented lour-month
deflatkmary holiday, tile Labor Departmenl said

New booster design decision near
By WIWAM HARWOOD
UPI Science Writer
WASHINGTON t UPI ) NASA has vowed to meet ali 1he
recomm('lldations of the Rogers
Commission, but vert ical IE'S !
· firing of redE'Signed shu nle
boostl'r rockets poses an engi neer ing challenge that may br
impractical to meet, offic ials
say.
John Thomas, director of the
NASA team studying ways to
improve the booster joint that
doomed Challenger , said Thursday a decision on a new dE'S ign Is
expected in the next few weeks.
He sa id four booster IE'S!
fi rings currently are planned.
but he was not optimistic the
redE'S ign and Lest program can
lx' completed In lime to make
the agency' s J uly !987 target
dati' for It'&lt;' fi rst post- Challenger shull le mission.
"We' J'(' looking at that now, "
he sa id. "We're looking a t the
schedu le. as a result of which
one of theS&lt;' configurations we
might want to attl'mpt to
implement.
"Right now , I don't have a
better datr than July. I'm not
terribly optimistic we can ad
here to that , but I don't have a
better one. "
As for the redesign process, he
said: "I th ink we' re mak ing
sam!' progri'ss on sd ect ing at
least a number ot alternat ivE'S to
a lleviate thes£' .. par ti cul a r
probl£'ms . "
Challenger was dl•stroyed
whl'n a joint betwren two ful'i

segments of Its r igllt-hand boosler ruptured, allowing a deadly
jet of flame to wash over the
shutt le's thin-skinned external
fu el ta nk , trigger ing an
explosion.
Once a new dE'S ign is selected ,
the boosters will have to be
IE.'sted . The Rcgers Commission
recommended that NASA give
"full consideration" to conducting ground test flril)gs ot the new
boosters In an upright position.
Previously, the giant rockets
were IE'S t fired horizootaily, but
expert s say that may have
masked subtiet!E'S about joint
operation because the way the
rubbery solid propellan I
"slumps" under the influence of
gravity may be different depend
ing on the rocket's orientation.
Thomas said engineers arc
considering firing one of the
149-!oot boa;ter rockets verti·
ca lly, ellher upright with its
nouie pointed down as it
normally would be launched or
ups ide down with it s nozzle
pointing up.
Both approaches pose de·
manding chaiienges . For e xample. the tempera ture of the
rocket exhaust even 500 feet
downstream ot the nozzle is
more than 4,001 degrees.
A rocket rtring In the normal
launch position would require
special supJXJr t structures that
could handle such harsh trea t·
men! , and NASA &lt;'llginrers say
the cost and tlml' needed for
such !E.'S IS may not justify 1hE'

.I

Veterans Memorial
Admit ted - Addie Burnem,
Rncine; Clinton Cochran, Portland .
Discharged - Michael Pierce.

Village ·Pharmacy

292

results.
In any case. Thomas said a
final boa;Jer design will have to
be approved by an Independent
review board - a Rcgers
Commission recommendation
- before being submitted to
NASA Adrnlnlslrator Ja mes
Fletcher for final approvaL
Thomas and other top NASA
officials testified before the
House Science and Technology
Committee Thursday In the
third day of hearings oo the J an.
28 Challenger disaster · and the
findings of the Rogers Commission report.
Rep. Robert Schruer, D-N.Y .,
grilled Michael Wreks, who was
the second in command of the
shuttle program. on why NASA
continued to launch alter memos last summl'f raised serious
conO"rns about the rocket joints.
Weeks said tha t wl1ie the
problem was ser ious, it was not
considered a dang~:&gt;r to Olght by
rocket builder Morton Thiokol
Inc .. which recommended allowIng shuttles to continue flying
untO corrections could be made.
Schruer said a repol1 last
August provided more than
enough ev klence of problems to
demand that Oighls be hailed .
"What I'm suggesting Is . you
had In your possE'Ssion - I mean
II'&lt;' decision-makers at NASA
hE.'a dquarters - three separate
warnings that sl,lould have given
you notice that the nex l launch
shouldn 't ta ke placE' until these
problems a rE' identliied and
solved ," Scheuer sa id.

Damaged by gunfire

Hospital news

•Cologne 20°/o Off
•Amnity Billfolds 20°/o Off
•Timex Watches 20°/o Off
•Travel Kits 20°/o Off

-.4%.1--- --

Thul'!lday.

President discloses anns proposal

Happy Father's
Day
Gifts From
Village Pharmacy

294

WHOLE'lALE PIUCES UP - Wholesale prices
increased by 0.6 percent last month, marldng aretum

Thinly sliced chtirbroilec!
sirloin steak smothered m
onions ~nd melted cheeSf·
~c£­
With fries artd beverage•. •!~~~~~,._'!'••--:
----~ .... - Steak C/torJIIef! SteM

TOLE DO. Ohio( UPli - Vanda ls
left 2,700 Toledo Edison Co. customefs In Waterville, Including two
peopie on life support equipment
without electricity for a half hour
Thursday night after an insulator
was damaged by gunfire, company
officials sa id today.
SpokE'Sman Rick Kelly sa id
vandalism has Increased during a
strikE' aga inst the ulllity by
members of the lnternalional
Brotherhood of Elect rical Workl'rs

'·

10°/o OFF
OVEk 70 OLDSMOBILES
'I

STOCK

BY KEVIN KEJJ.Y

JIM COBB
CHEVROLD·OLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC
"FOIMEILY SIMMONS OLDS.-C.D.-CHEV."
PH. ( 614) 992-6614

HOUIS:
Mon., w•., Fri. 8:30-1:00
Tues. &amp; Thun. 8:30·5:30
Sat. 8:30·4:00;' S1111. 1:00-5:00

.

•

•

'

.
'

I

'

•

enttne
2 Sections. , 2 Pogeo

26 Cenu

A Multimedi• Inc. New.t paper

Wholesale prices up
0.6 percent in May
four· month deflationary binge not percent, according to the index.
seen since the department started Producer prices tlr !Oft drinks and
keeping the statistic in 1947.
alcoholic beverages ros e 0.3
It was the first increase since percent
December, when producer prices
The inOa tk:&gt;nary trend In food
also rose by 0. 6 percent, ooreau prices was offset by an 11.4 percent
analysis said.
drop in the price of milled rice and a
The annual wholesale deflation 4.0 pereent dip in wholesale fish
Burea u of La bor Statistics ana- rate tor the year to date Is still a costs.
lysts attrioot.ed the upturn to a healt hy 7. 6 percent and producer
Excluding food and energy costs,
turnaround In the cost of fin ished prices were 1.7 percent kl wer last the index for finished goods rose
energy goods. Gasoline prtces rose month than they were in May 198i, just 0.2 percent last month. analysts
8.6 percent In May following a bureau, analysts said.
said.
record 21.9 percent plunge In March
The ·February decline, revised
The wholesale cost d capital
and a 10.4 percent drop In April In
from 1..6 percent, is the steepest equipment Inched up 0.1 pereent In
pace with the collapse In world oil month-to·month drop in prices on May following a 0. 3 percent gain In
priCE'S .
record.
April . Intermediate goods sUpped
The whoiE'Saie price of :;orne
Wholesale food costs, which had back 0.2 percenl following a 1..0
l'&lt;'ating oll. In contras l, continued to ad~an ced by just OJ percent in percent decline the previous month,
decline with a 6 percent drop April, rose a brisk Ll percent in according to the index.
fo llowin g an 8.7 rercent decline In May, paced by a 12.6 percent surge
April.
in the cost of eggs and an 11.8
Women's clothing costs rose 0. 8
The Increase In the May Pro- percent increase In the price of percent and chUdren 's apparel 0. 2
ducer Price Index fo llows decllnE'S frE'Sh fruits.
percent while clothing costs for
of 0. 7 percent in January, 1..5
The cost of fr es h and dried .men remained unchanged . Whole·
percent In February, 1.1 rercent In vegetables rose 6. 3 per&lt;l"nt , beef sale cosmetic costs rose by 1 7
March and 0.6 percent in April, a and veal 5.4 percent and pork 5.2 percent

Senate resumes work on tax.
bill today; block amendments
confe11'11ce commitlee that wtil be
By MARY BETII FRANKLIN
Separately, a group of conservaWASHINGTON (UPII - The char!;'.'d with hammering rut a
tiVE.' senators dropped efforts to
Senate leadership, determined to compromise pian.
attach an anti-abortion amendment
After voting 7&amp;21 for the non- to the tax bill. They said they
pass a major tax reform bUl , has
managed to block any amendments binding resolution to pu t sales taxes changed their minds after talking to
so far, but may be setting It self up on a par with state and local
President Reagan, who supports
tor trouble with empty promises of incomE'S taxes, real estale taxes
the bill and askl'd that It be kept free
and personal property taxes that
action down the road.
l1 amendments.
During a daylong debate Thurs- would remain deductible under tbe
The Senate bill would drastically
curtail tax breaks In return for
day, the Senate voted 77-20 to krep bill, the Senate quit for the night.
Sen. Phil Gramm . R-Texas, lower tax rates of 15 perll'nt and 'IT
a special tax break for the oil
industry, putt ing tax reform spon- noted that together with earlier
percent The most sensitive issue
sors In the awkward position of Instructions to l'E'Store the tax
has been the individual retirement
defending preferences for one deduction for Individual retirement account deducllons, which would
industry alter opposing them for accounts, the conference commit- mostly be gutted by the legislation.
tee will have to come up with an
The measure would allow ooly
others.
The Senate planned to resume its additional Sl2 billion In revenue.
wcrkers mt covered by another
"Tha 1 revenue's not coming from
debate today, beginning with an
pension plan to :ake the maximum
amendment to rE'Stor~&gt; charita ble heaven ," sa id Gramm , wbo helped annual $2,001 deduction for contrtdeductions for taxpayers who do wrtte the balanced- oodget law.
ootlng to an IRA. II is estimated
" If I was a Senate conferee. I'd
not itemire .
about 20 million or the 28 million
The special oil Industry tax ha te to go to conference with
American llouseholds wit h IRAs
breaks, worth about $1 5 biUion In particular piece of trash," sa id Sen. would lose Ihe tax break.
Ihe next flv~&gt; years, were originally Bennett Johnslon. D- La.
placed In tbe bill as a way to win
over oil state sena tors and get the
measure passed by the Flnan&lt;l"
Commillee.
Sen. Bob Packwood , ROre., the
panE'!' s chairman. opJX)sed the
provisions in committee. But on tbe
COLUMBUS, Ollio (UPI) - Ohio House Speaker Vema! G. Riffe
Senate floor Thursday he defended
Jr., J).New Boslon, said today he has nothlnp; penonal against Gov.
thl'm as necessary for the survival
IUchard F. Celesle, bul he believes the (Jivernor was wrong to veto a
of the bill , even though he admitted
section of leghlallon pro\'ldlng lor researdl and treatment ol
they were unfa\1'.
Alzheimer's disease.
Sen. Lowell Weicker, R- Conn ..
wbo proposed stripping the special
"I disagreed with the veto," Riffe told the liiUIWII meeting of the
tax shelt er provisions, argued they
Ohio
Mining lllld Reclamation Aslodatlon. "I feel very strongly
hurt the tax l'l'fonn cause.
about
lhls b!lue. There's no pei'IIGDIII dlsapeement between the
"Remember, you' J'(' not selling
governor
and 1. The &amp;nvemor and Jju!il disagree on thlshsue. l think
this bill ... as an exercise In
he's
wrong,
and he prohably lhlnb I'm WI'OIIji; .. "
politics," he said. "If' s being sold as
an exercise In fa irness and
Riffe, who said he stDI supportsCeleste's ~lon, plans to bring
· slmpliclly."
the
House Into sesaon the week after next to ovl'l'ride the (Jivernor's
Lall'r ' the S•male voled overitem
veto of language w!Kh pennlls lmlled additions to nursing
wheimingiy 1o restore full deduclihomes
serving Alzhebner's pal Ienis exclusively ..
bility of sa lE'S taxes - when tbe bill
reachE'S a compromise conferl'nce
The rest of the bill, approved by Celesle, provides $1..8 million for
wit h the HouS&lt;'.
training
o1 professionals In the lreatment and counseling of
It was the second lime In this
Alzheimer's
victims, and lor research at universities and hospitals.
wrek's debate that tbe RepubilcanThe
Republlcan-rontrollecl
Senate al8o plans to return to override
controlled Senate, unable to overthe
veto,
which
Celeste
said
he made to control Medicaid costs hy
come its leadership's determlna ·
keeping
a
ceDing
on
nursing
home
beds.
tion to pass a clean bill, voted to
shift a ' tough decision to II'&lt;'

Riffe: Celeste was wrong

Fontter Meigs sheriff named top Gallia lawman

442, 9

30U E. MAIN ST.
POIIIEIOY OH.

'

By T.R. EAS'DIAM
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Wbolesale prices increased by 0. 6 percent
In May, marking a return to
inflation aft er an unprecedented
four-month deflationary hcllday,
the Labor Deparjrnent said today.

..4%-f- - - - ---

1985

SteoJrl)buteJI

WASHINGTON !UP! ) - Prl'Si·
dent Reagan says thE' Soviets have
offered a new arms cont rol proposa l a nd he will give them several
months to make clear that it is "fair
and balanced" or thE' United StalE'S
~&lt;1 U a bandon the unratified 1979
SALT 2 trea ty:
He held out hope that , despilt' II'&lt;&gt;
fact "I was always host ile to thai
trea ty, " the Soviets may be per·
suaded to move toward genuine
reduction of nuclear weapons so
both sidE'S can "get around to
gelling rid of them as much as we
can."
AI his J7th news conference.
Reagan responded to 22 ques tions
- fewer tha n normal. and the
perfonnanO" by both the (res ident
and reporters was at timE'S a
comedy of errors.
The result left some confusion on
-Reagan 's positio n on the SALT 2
a nns limitation I rea ty a nd the issue
of abortion.
Reagan sa id the United Stales
would stopa biding bY tbe pact when
thetimecomE'S to a nn the IJ1st &amp;52
bomber with cruise missiles, which
Pentagon !nurces said would occur
in mid -November.

Seasonally adjusted percent
changes from previous month .

.8%.1---- --

MJJASONDJ FMAM

All Middleport Village funds as of e!&gt;crow. no receipts, no disbu rseMay 31 totaled $.1'!4,351.96, Village m ~nt s . $113.217. 29; fi re house im·
Clerk·Treasurer Jon Buck reporl s. pr·ovement fund, $12,136..16, $259.!Wl,
Receipts, disbu rsements durtng $31i.J8.l22; water lank, no receipts,
the month and the ('lid of the month no\ disbursements, $J30,977.58; wa total of each fund . respectivriy. teJ·, $10,554 . 72, $10,126.96. $17 . 118.71 :
includE':
sa:nitary sewer, $7,495.~. $7,246.41.
General. $45.7&amp;5 . 52, $33.259 . 07, $2H .46.'i.~; swimming pool. $592.16,
$24,558 . 69: strret maintm an &lt;I', $6c,6 . 7~ . $1.485.90; cem e te ry .
$4,259. 34, $3.183. 91. $2,664 . 24: fed- $7.7.72, $1,797.59. $1 ,412.25 deficit:
eral revenue sharing. no receipt s, wa ler meter trusts, $555, $315 ,
$3,292.34. $~WI ; street light s. $12 ,076.20; litter cont rol, no re$6,016.35. $1,705.99, $1,M2.49; street cei pts, no disbursements, $102.10
levy, no receipt s, no disbu rsements, dell cit; f'COnomic devl'lopment ,
$2.343.56: fire equipment. $150, SUI17 . 45, $1.289.00, $7,724.86.
$365.25. $254.30 deficit ; fire truck,
Heceipts tor tbe month tota led
$4.487.28, $(£.13. $U,856.06: public $101,602.23 while disbu rsements
transporlalion, $6,874 .73, $6.1 47. ~ . a mounted to $69,744.ffi.
$5,874..13 deficit ; sanitary sewer

Producer Prices

Unadjusted, 1967=100

Squad8 get three
11 W d d
ca 8 e nes ay

Buck gives finaJncial report

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, June 13, 1986

Copyrighted 1986

it or yru have some other problem
with one ot the other orbiters.

Three calls were answered by
local units Wednesday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services reports.
At 10:15 a.m., Pomeroy· took
Rl!chel Taylor from Mulberry
Heights to Hoirer Medical CE.'nter;
Racine al 2:47 p.m. took Cllnt
Cocran from Portland to Vl'tl'rans
Memorial Hospital, and Rutland at
8:28 p.m. took Arlie Lambert from
New Lima Road to Holzer Medical
Center.
- - - - - - - -- - -

. DlttoJ) gets fueet
j U

By the Bend ...... ......... Pages &amp;7
Cla8811leds ............ Pages H-10
Cornlc8-TV ..................... Page II
Jlreaths ..... ............ .. Page 12
F.AIItorlal .. ............... Page 2
Sports ... ............ Pages 3-4·5

NASA fac4es more questions today

Weather forecast

Centl"al Ohio
A flood watch is in effoct.
Showers and thunderstorms
likely today, \\olh highs in the mid
80s. Some thundrrstonns may be
sev~&gt;re and produce l'&lt;'avy ra infa ll.
Scattered showrrs and thunderstorms early tonight with clearing
skies la ter ton ight and a low ncarOO.
Sunny Friday, with highs near ~ South Central Ohio
Showers and thunderstorms
likely today, with highs in the mid
80s. Scallered showers and thunderstonns early tonight wit h clea rIn g skies la ter tonight and a low
near 00. SuMy Friday, with highs in
the low 80s.
The probability of precipitation is
70 percent today. 40 rercent lonij;ht
and near zero F riday.
Winds will bec:ome wE'Steriy at 10
to 20 mph this ·afternoon and
nort hwE'Sterly at 10 lo 15 mph
tonight
Ohio Extended Forecast - Satur· .
day thrOUgh Sonday: Fair Saturday
and Monday, with a chance of rain
on Sunday. Highs wUI range from
the 70s to the lowllls, with overnight
lows ranging from the !Jls to the low

Inside:

VETERAN lAWMAN HONORED - Fonner Meigs County SherUI

Robert c.Jlartenbach, right, chief depnty of the Gallla County Sherill's
Depariment for lhe past nbte yean, was reciPient of lhe Jim Mills
Lawman of the Year Award at the Gallla County Gun Oub Thui'Rday.
Hartenbaeh wco~ated by Sheriff Jante1 M. Montpmery, left.

.

OVP News Staff
A veteran law enforcer in two
count ies was the recipient of this
year's Jim MU!s Lawman of the
Year Award from theGallia County
Gun Club.
Robert C. Hartenbach, fanner
Meigs County sheriff and now chief
deputy of the Gallia County Sl'&lt;'·
riff's Department , was awarded
the engraved police revolver by
Gun Club PrE'Sklent Bi!i Kegley
during the annual recognition
banquet Thursday.
"I've been in this business for :rt
years, ~ in Meigs County and the
last 9\oj in Gallipolis, and I've !)ever
had such fine treatment as I have
here," Harten bach said after being
congratulated by .Sheriff James M.
Montgomery and others from the
sheriff's department, statE.' high-

way patrol. Gallipolis Cit y Police
and the "'ildllie divis ion of the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources.
Hartenbach, who served in the
U.S. Navy from 1M2 untO 1~.
joined the Meigs sher~f' s department in 1949 and became sheriff In
1957. holding the job for five
consecutive terms . He was the first
Ohio sher~f, in 1966, to undergo
basic law enforcement training
from the state, training he took
alongside Capt. Silas Hamilton, his
later co-worker tn tl'&lt;' Gailia
sheriffs department He became
chief deputy for the Gail!a depart·
ment in 1977 when Montgomery
took office.
In addlt kln, he underwent Ohio
Peace Officer Criminal Code Train·
ln g in 1974, Law Enforoernent
Officer Training School through the
FBI In 1957 and 1962, the Bureau of

Criminal Investigatk:&gt;n's Ohio Re·
g!onai Crime Control Cllnic in 1965
and Law Enforcement Automated
Data System training from ihe
state highway patrol in 1979.
"During his service for this
department, he has carried rut his
day-to-day responsiblllties ~ keepIng with the higllest regard for his
profession," Montgomery said in
nominatin g Hartenbach for the
award. "He has gained the respect
and admiration of fellow employees
as well as members of other
departments he has come into
contact with."
Prior to the presentatk:&gt;n, Common Pleas Judge Richard C.
Roderick Jr. recalled how the
award was started in 1963 In bonor
of Jim Mllls, a veteran [Dllceofficer
and deputy who was one of the
founders of tbe Gun Club. The
award is to homr lawmen in the

area for their contributions to
keeping communiliE'S safe, and to
bring the depa rtments together,
Roderick said .
"We rea lly apprec iate what
yru're doing in honoring our
lawmen, " Roderick told Gun Club
me mbers hip a tt e ndin g th e
banquet
Six previOus recipients of the
award wer&lt;' prcsm t for the ba n'
quet.. They were former GaiilpoUs
Pollee Chil'f . John Taylo r, who
received the ~rst award recipient ;
Kenneth 1bmlinson, field supelv lsor for ODNR; Capt Sl!as Ha milton of the sheriff's departml'nt ;
tonner Galllpolls City Pollee Sgt.
Paul North; Capt. Carl Langford of
the shetiff's dl•parlment; current
Police Chief Joe Owen: and
Trooper Allan Wheele r of th&lt;'
highway patrol.

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