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                  <text>Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

I Area deaths

Two more indicted
in alleged spy ring

Energy checking
System offered

Phllllp Russell. 64. of Dayton,
formerly of Meigs County, died
Monday at home following an
extended ll!ness.
Born and raised in Bradbury, Mr..
Russell was asonoftbelatPMaxand
Dora RUSSI' II.
Survivors include his wUe, Alma
Dodson Russell; two sons, Gary and
Danny, both of Dayton; four
grandchildren; and three sisters.
In addition to his parents, he was
preceded lndeathby a .son, Michael;
and two brothers, Hat:dlng and
Johnny.
Graveside services wtil be held 1
p.m. Thursday at Middleport HUI
CemetPry. Tobis Funeral Home,
Dayton., Is In charge of
arrangements.

Admlsslons--Charles.CartPr, Syracuse; Cecil Moore, Pomeroy;
Gladys Moore, Pomeroy; WetZI?l
Bailey, Jr., Dexter; Malvera
Wheel&lt;'r, Pomeroy; Connie Morris,
Racine; Bemard Ralrden, Hartford; Keith McCarty, Middlepm1;
Alan Wilson. Racine.
Discharges--Cecil Moore; William Richmond, Kenneth Michael.
Carl Autherson, Richard Ramsburg, J a m es Spangler.

Weather forecast

1

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30 indicted in cocaine ring
PHilADELPHIA (UPI) -Federal authorities Monday announced
the Indictments of 30 people, many
of theni doctors and lawyers, for
operating a cocaine ling that
dlstrtbuted &lt;IS much as $5 miiUon
worth of the drug each month in
Ohlo,12otherstates, Canada and the
District of Columbia. ,
Thewhlte-collardrugringwasthe
"largest known cocaine distribution
enterprise" In Philadelphia area
history and stretched from Canada
to California to Florida, said U.S.
Attomey Edward Dennis Jr.
He said the suspects were all
believed to be part or a ring
masterminded by a Philadelphia
dentist, Lawrence Lavin, who was
Indicted · along with 13 others .in
September. Lavin fled following his
release on ball and remains a
fugitive.
. Lavin allegedly began the operation In 1978 with several of his
classmates from the University of
Pennsylvania School of IDeiltal
Medicine, and by 1984 the ring was
distributing an aver!'ge 00 to ~

The June meeting of the Meigs
Local School Dlstrtct Board of
Educa lion has been changed from
this evening unt117 p.m . Thursday.

Marriage licenses
Marriage licenses have been
issued in MPigs County Probate
Court to James Arthur Snyder, ll,
Langsville, and Sandra Pauline
King, 26, Reedsville; and to Brian
David Hartman, 22, Pomeroy, a nd
Peggy Ann Wood, 35, Middleport .

Partly cloudy today a nd tonight.
Highs today will benear~and lows
tonight near 55.
Many Meigs County residents
Partly cloudy Wednesday with a'
SPrve as representative payees
who
chance of showers and a high near
for Society Security benflclariPS or
75.
The probability or precipitation Is Supplemental Securtt}' Income 1'1'20 percPnt today a nd tonight and :JJ , clplents have recently receive
accounting forms In the mall.
percent Wednesday.
According to Ed Peterson, manExtended Forecast
ager
of the Athens Social ~urity
Fair Thunoday and Friday and a
Office,
the reporting forms are now
chance of rain Saturday. Hlgfls wW
being
mailed
to a percentage ofthe
he In the 70s 'lbrsday and between 75
representative
payees on a monthly
and 85 Friday and Satunlay. Lows
'
basis
and
that
every
paype would be
· WID ranK!! between f5 and . il5
required
to
complete
a report
~unoday and il5 Qlld 6ll Friday and
annually.
Siltunlay.
ThP Social SeCurity Adminlstra·
t!on appoints fel)resentatlve payees
for children under 18 and for adults
CLEVELAND (UPII - Ohio who are not capabll' of managing
Lottery officials say the two winners their own funds. 'The recent i-elnfrom Saturday's Lotto drawing stated accounting process gives

been granted a divorce in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court from
William D. Bryant, Portland, on
grounds of gross neglect of duty and
extreme cruelty. ·
Oaude J . Humphreys and Regina
R. Humphreys, both of Pomeroy ,
'have filed for a dissolution of
marriage In Meigs County.

Free clothing day

Meets tonight
Group II of the Middleport First
Presbyterian Church will meet at
7; JJ this evening at the home of
Velma Rue. Joan SordPn will
present the study book and Jean
Moore. the devotions.

Democrats to meet
ThP Meigs County Democratic
Executive Committee w!Umeet at
-7: :JJ .p.m. Thursday at CarpPnter's
Hall, E-. Main St., Pon\eroy : All
Interested Democrats are Invited to
attend the session .

kilograms of cocaine per month,
Dennis said. He said one kilogram of
the nearly-pure cocaine had a
wholesale value of up to $56,CXXJ.
Dennis said at Its peak the ring
distributed $5 million worth of the
drug monthly.
FBI agent Wayne AUord remarked surprise at the type of
people allegedly Involved with the
ring, noting most narcotics suspects
are "street peopll' with long ·
criminal records who are also heavy
users of the narcotic.
"However, In this case, those
Involved were from all walks of life
with ... professions ranging from
housewifp and waitress to doctors,
lawyers .. . and stockbrokers," hr
said.
He added many of the ring
members were not drug users
themselves, but apparently regarded the operation "just as a
business."
"This case best typifies thr
Insidious greed that now permeates
all walks of thl' American way of life
which has resulted trom the large

have claimed their shares of till'
$1,423,124 jackpot.
•
Beatrice E. FrarriP, 46, Brunswick and Robert F. Edf,!P1 no agP
'listed, of LexingtOJ · 1\ " , 'Ne 20
annual before tax paythents of
$._15,578.10.
Wednesday's drawing wW be
worth an esttmatetl one-Millkll ·
dollarS .
·
. Monday 's winning .Ohio Lottery
numbers: Dally Number

NEW YOIU{ ·llll'l) - Chemical
Bank of
York has begun a
direct mail and advertising campaign for a special program to lure
Ohioans to open Money Market
accounts with Chemical and take
advantage of the bank's othPr ·
services, includingcredltcardswlth
limited checkwritlng.
Chemical announced Monday
that under it s ChPmPlus plan
reserved exclusively for Ohioans, It
will offer Money Market accounts a t
an Introductory interest rate of at
IPast 8 percel,!t ending July 22 for ·

minimum amounts of $5,CXXJ.
addition, 8aid the gl~ilt New
York bank, It wlil throw in free of
charge Its personal flnanclal ,plan ning SPrv!ce, which costs New York
customPrs $Ill. 'The self'ice Include .
In-depth financial planning, tax
savings and retirement planning. ·

in

New

7,500 at

"QultPbonestiy,lt'sln response to
literally hundreds of leiters we'vl'
received from Ohio asking how they
can participate in our services,''
said Kenneth Hurz, a company
spo~esman . · ·

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music convention
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162.
PICK-4
4142.

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profits obtained from the sale of
na rcotics," he said.
.
The 57-count Indictment was
handed down last week by a federal
.grand jury but kept SPaled until
Monday.
Dennis a nd FBI officials said at a
news conference that 19 of the
alleged ring me mbers had been
arrested anq seven additional
arrests werP expected Monday,
While the whPrea bouts Of four pthers
were unknown .
The cocaine originated in Colombia, entered the United States
through Miami and was transported
to Philadelphia by car or plane,
investigators said . In Philadelphia,
the cocaine was stored a nd processed at "siash houses."
The drugs were Pventually distributed to customers In Pennsylvanif!, New York, New Jersey,
Massachu~tts, New Hampshire,
Vermont. Maine, Rhode Island,
Ohio; Florida, AriZona. Colorado,
California, Washington D.C. and·
Canada, according to the indlctmpnt.

_:

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. Chemical· ~pent tWo m onth$
trying to buy thedefunctflol'l)eSta te · ·
Savings Bank of Cincinnati, but lost ·
out on the last day or the bidding to
Hunter Savings .Association of
Cincinnati.
"Over the past few months .
ChPmlcal recevied overwhelming
Pncouragement from Ohio consumers to offpr commercial banking
services In the state," said William
H. Turner, executive viet&gt; president
of ChemicaL

LASAGNA
DINNER

RIO GRANDE - An estimated top honors In the hog calling contest
crowd of 7,51Xl'gathered to partici- were taken by Ryan Curtis. Jameston, Ohio; clogging first place went
pate In the Seventh Annual Country
to Michael Sayre. Leon, W.Va .. and
Music Convention last weekend at
Bob Evans Farm In Rio Grande. Vaughn Toler, Madison, W.Va .. told
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The CaWinning first place In the band the most unbeliPvable story to win
tholic Bishops of Ohio said they
competition was thl' group One Way thl' liar's contest.
THURS., JUNE 20, 1985
suppori a boycott of Campbl'll Soup T rack, of Davisville, W.Va., Ron
'The Country Music Convention Is
5:00 TO 7:00 P.M. ~
Company products because the · Rigsby of Guysville, Ohio; took the jusi one of nt'arly ~special events
company has not allowed farm
number one spot in banjo category, taking place at Bob Evans Farm
Adults 14.00, Children 12.50,
workers to organize and bargain
with Robin Kessinger , Mason, this summer.
collectively.
W.Va ., earning first place among
The bishops, in a statement, said
the fiat top guitariSts.
the primary issue of thP farm
worker's struggle is centered on the
ln the mandolin competition, Don •
right to organize and bargain
Kessinger, Harmony, W.Va., recollectively.
ceived first place honors, and first
place in the fiddle category went to
Lefty Shafer.• Charleston, W.Va.
This was the seventh year for the
Bob
Evans Country Music ConvenSocial Securtty thl' opportunity to
Insure that funds sent to thl' payres . lion which has beCOme a well
MULBERRY HEIGHTS, POMEROY, OHIO
established event drawing many of
are being properly used for the
the Appalachian region's finest
beneficiary. Social Securtty bene!! is
country
and bluegrass entertainers.
and SSI payrilents should first be
In
addition
to thepmslcalawards.
, used to meet the beneficiary's
day-to-day basic needs lor food,
. shelter,clothlngandpersonal!tems,
Peterson advised. Any money
remaining can be used for specfal
Items or should be Invested or
. Funeral services, like all professional service~ cost
placed in an Interest bearing
money. But unlike_some other services. ·funeral'costs
account.
may have to be pat.d unexpectedly. For this reason we
Peterson also said that asslstancp
rt~O!ftmend pre·plannin&amp; for funerals as a means to
In completfuglhe forms Is available
ehmmate some of that unpredictability.
at thPSoc!ety Securtty'offlcelocated
at 2211,2 Columbus Road. Hours are
P~·pla~nina a funeral need ~ost You nothin&amp;. if you
8:45 a.m. to 4:JJ p.m. Monday
WISh. S_tmply take an hour or so to talk with us about
your w1shes. They wtll be recorded: you keep a copy
through Frlday Pxcept for national
and so-do we.
•
holidays.

SACRED HEART
CHURCH

r-------------"----------.,...--

Come to the Bloodtnohile
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19, 1985
1:OO· to 5:30 P.M.

Meigs ·co. Multi-Purpose Building

When You ~Ire Blood •.. The'l '1 Hope.

HOW CAN I PLAN FOR FUNERAL COSTS?

,Pl-k,~~ rt~-:f}~

MONDAY THRU FRIDAY

.
992-6417

6i

BILL BLOWER

l:00-4:30

106 EAST SECOND
ABOVE BANK ONE
IN POMEROY '
'

If you do wish to plan in advance for funeral costs we
can help you set up a bust fund, this will' assure you
that you nor your family nttd not worry about how to
PlY funtnl costs when they arise . With our &amp;Uaranteed
pre-arraneement funeral plan you can be assured that
there will be no more expense to you or your famil
and .that the exact 11tvlces .You have selected will
Clrrt.ed off.
·

.I

.AnOINEY·AT·LAW
OFFICE
HOURS 8:30-12 NOON
.
~

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Bishops support
Campbell boycott

D. MICHAEL MULLEN

Vol.35, No.46
Copyrighted 1985

•

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enttne

at y

2 Sections, 12 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newapeper

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday. June 19, 1985

I

We ~f!!lcome your questions and comments on pre. plan~tne or any other as~ect of funeral services, and
. we Wtllanswer them in prtvate or publicly throuch this
column.

ff,nwa~ .7ftH~u

"1•,1~•

(114) ' ftHl4l

MIDII!.II'OIIT, ·OHIO·
-~·--

-~

President: U.S. 'will have to wait out crisis'
Reagan on Hijacking
"End this cnmc now."

Chern Bank hegins program to lure Ohioans

SSI fortns must be completed

Two lotto winners

Saturday nlpt. The car was provided by Jim Mink
Chevrolet-Oldsmobile of Gallipolis. Boyd Is seen here
accepting the keys tQ the car from Det!e Wagner
PeUegr!non, center, of WJEH, and BID GeneJohn!on,
vice president of Jim Mink Chevrolet-OidsmobUe.

MEIGS MAN WINS CAR- Lawrence "Ughtnlng''
Boyd, North Second Avenue, Middleport, at right,
was winner of the 1985 CheveUe offered in a promotion
sponsored by WJEH Radio during lis 35th
anniversary celebration. Boyd's name was selected

Emergency squads To end marriages
Ruby P. Bryant, Portland, has
an8wer eight calls

The Ladles Aid of Faith FPllowshlp, Rout!' 338, Antiquity, will hold
free clothing day from 11 a.m. to 3
p.m. Wednesday at thP church. The
church Is located '4 ofmUPnorlh of
Raclnl' VFW. All pef!!Ons in need of
clothing are welcomP.

Seea.rteae'a coitm• Cll Pap J%

'

~eigsCounty•••

To meet Thursday

Easy care gardening

e

WASIDNGTON t UP!) - The
Federal Home Loan Bank Board
Monday conditionally approved two
more Ohio applicants tor Federal
Savings &amp; Loan Insurance Corp.
accounl coverage.
The Oakmont Savings Bank and
Sycamore Savings &amp; Loan Co., both
of Cincinnati, previously were
membl'rs of the Ohio Deposit
Guarantee Fund.
Oakmont, with assets of $75.3
mllllon, and Sycamore, with assets
of $23.8 million, also were approved
for membership In the Federal
Home Loan Bank System.

Meigs County Emergency MediColumbia Gas of Ohio customers
cal Servi~ _reports eight calls
In Gallia and Meigs count!PS trying
answered Monday; Pomeroy at
to save money on their hPatlng buts
1:
37a.m. toStateRoute7forCharles
now have a source of hl'lp.
G'antPr to Veterans Memortal
Operation ijome Check, offered
Hospital; Pomeroy at 3: 44 a .m. to
by Gallia -Meigs Community Action
:JJ1 Wright St. for Gladys Moore to
Agency, prov(des freernergy audits
VPterans Memorial Hospital; Ruand weatherization counseling to
tland at 4: 15 a .m. to 31866
Columbia customers WhOse famlly
IVlcCumber Rd. ior Wetzel Bailey to
Income is at or below their county
Veterans Memorial; Middleport at
median income.
12: 56 p.m. to Plum StreE't for Ralph
Th!' service Is a joint venture
Swan to Holzer Medical Center;
between CAA, Columbia and the
Racine at 3:35p.m. to Portland for
Corpora tion for Ohio Appalachian
SummPr
Lee Ann Smith to Veterans
Development.
Memorial;
Middleport at 3: 48 p.m.
All who part.lclpa te in the energy
·
to
·
702
Sycamore·
St. for Keith
check will receivP a free Inspection
McCart)! to Veterans Memorial;
of their homes to dPtE'rmine what
Racine at 5: 06p.m . to East Letart
needs to be done to reduce heating
for Harry Douglas to Vetprans
bills. A followup visit will include
Memor!al; Middleport atlO: 35 p.m.
informa tion on energy conservation, weathPrizalion loa ns , energy- to.61i0 High St. for Linda Pridemore
to Vetei';ms Memorial.
'
related financial assistance and
home energy management. The
Revival planned
home Inspections will be conducted
by energy a uditors trained by
The Christian Brethren Church ,
COAD.
Mason,
W. Va., will hold revival
Families who livf' in either houses
or buildings up to four urllts will be services at 7:JJ p.m. Frtday,
SaturdayandSurulay.Speakerswlll
eligible to participate.
· Further information is available be Rl'v. Bud HalfiPld ·and Rev:
. by calling Ron . Crawford or :Rena Ralph Workinan. There will be ..
Longstreth at CM at 367-7344 or special' sin!ifng and . the public is .
Invited .
992-6629.

.Veterans Memorial

Hero

See hilt,

.
SllrJ..........

Insurance approved

I

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·Beat of Bend

Phillip 1\U!!!!ell

. NORFOLK, Va. (UPI)- Federal
Arthur Walker has been jailed in
grand juries have indicted two VIrginia Beach and Whitworth in
retired Navy veterans accused of San Francisco.
being links in a famlly-and-frlend
The !our men are being held
spy ring on charges of passing without bond. If convicted, they face
military secrets to the Soviets.
JUe In prtson and Ones.
I ndlcted Monday were Arthur
John Walker, a retired chief
Walker, 50, a retired -lieutenant warrant officer . turned prtvate
commander, and Jerry Whitworth, detective, and Michael Walker have
45, a retlred COmiTlUnlca tions pleaded Innocent to the charges.
specialist.
The Nor1olk Indictment charges
Attorneys for Walker, a former Arthur Walker passed documPnts
engineer at VSE Corp., a defense from VSECorp. tohlsbrotherin1!1l1
contractor, said Monday he will and 1982. HI' has admitted to the FBI
plead not guilty at a hearing today to that he took the Job at VSE in
the seven counts returned against . February 1!81 at his brother's
him by a federal grand jury in urging and received $12,CXXJ for
hl'lplng John Walker spy for thP
Nor1olk.
Whitworth's lawyers said he Is Soviets.
In San Francisco, U.S. Attorney
scheduled to appear at an arraignJoseph Russonlello said thl' lndlctment today in San Francisco where he was indlcied Monday on a mPnt against Whitworth charges
single count . of espionage - but that be received $328,1XXJ In 15
would not say if he would enter a payments tunneled through John
Walker from Soviet agPnts.
plea.
The indlctml'nt dPtalled "41 .
Walker and Whitworth are believed to be links in a wldespead spy separate overt acts" by the rtng to
ring thought to have operated out of further the conspiracy, Including
Norfolk , site or the world:s largest m eetlngslnSanLeandro,CaUf.,San
Navy base and home to the U.S. Diego, Hong Kong, Nor1olk and the
Philippines, Russonlello said.
Atlantic Fleet.
·
"In terms ot numbers of persons
Walker's brother John, 47,
charged as the ringleader, and involved, this Is the largest organJohn's son, Michael, 22, a sailor last ized spy network seen in this country
assigned to the aircraft canier since the Rosenbergs. In terms of
Nimitz. were indicted on espionage monpY pald, It Is very, . very
charges late last month and are slgnU!cant ," be said.
being held in Baltimore.

Happenings around

Major letl8'H' roundup_

P/ut.... Att111tlon to D•t•JI"

Response
"i\nwril·a will lll'Wt' ma~l'
(&lt;ltK&lt;:ssions to lt:rrnrists.. .nm will
Wl' ask ur pr&lt;'sSIIt'l' :my other
I su."
gowm lll&lt;:lll h 1 10

Retaliation
"Tho.' prnhkm is ...who th.:ir
al'l'omplin:s ar.: . whl't\' th.:y ar.:
lucatl'd ... Su·ikinp. a hlow in a g&lt;'nl'ntl
din:clinn would lx: :1 ll'tTorist :ll'tion
in itsl'IL"

Israel
"Wl· s.:.:m hi lx: a tarp..:t. ais&lt;l, I 'm
quit.: sur.:. lx·l·ausl.' uf our frk·ndship
(with) and suppot1 of lsrad."

Nablh Berti
/f' lflt' l/llift•tl .\'IIIII'S dol',\ 1101 11.\'k
i.mwl '" n•/t •a .l&lt;' 1/w .'illiif&lt;• fll'i.lllll&lt; 'l'.l'
i•m•l) II•• mm!tl gil'&lt;' Ill&lt;' IW.I'I&lt;I,~&lt;'.I
llal'k ... ttwlll/d 11111 hold him
;,Y.-s: .1wtlllld."
._,

,,.,,.,,o,,,.;h/,-:'
_

UP! OWIJhiC

WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan, revPaling a rare
gltmpsl' of himself under pressure
and frustration, sayshewlll "have to
walt It out" before ordering any
retallatlo~ against the hijackers of
1WA Flight 847.
At his first news conference from
the WhltP House ln. nearly three
months Tuesday night, Reagan
openly reflected on the difficulty he
faces in dealh;g with "a dangerous
·a nd volatile situation."
He admitted to a nation angry
over thl' latest terrorist outrage,
"I'm as frustrated as anyone. I've .
pourn:ied a few walls myself when
I'm alone about th)s. It Is
frustrating."
But hi' sakl he could not order
retaliatory raids against thP Shill!'
Muslim terrortsts with any certainty that only the guilty would be
victimized.
"You have to be able to pinpoint
the enemy," he said. "Youcan't just
start shooting without having someone in your gunstghts.
"It Is a cowardly crime in that
they hold all thP cards once they
have these people In their power and
we have to consider their safety," he
said of the ShUte rerrortsts holding
as many as 40 Americans from the
plane somewhere In Lebanon.
Hinting that some form of
retribution may bl' in the offing, he
said, " Yes, I could gpt mad roough
now to think of a couple of things we
could do to retaliate. but I would
probably be sentpneinga·number o!
Americans to death if I didlt." ·

But later hi' conceded, '"(ou're
left with only one form of retaliation ·
and that Is, I! you just aim in the
general direction and Jdll some
people, well, then, you'rea terrorist,
too.''

When Reagan took oHice In 1!*!1as
52 Amertcans were released from
444 days of captivity In lran, he
promised "swUt and pffectlve
retribution" against future antiAmerican terrortsts.
He had spent the 1!81 campaign
attacking President Jimmy Cartl'r
for inaction. " I certainly wouldn't
stand by and do notl!lng, ".he said at
the time.
-,
Asked Tuesday night If there are
limits to his pat!Pnce, Reagan
replied, "I have to wait II out as long
as those people are thl're and
threatened and allvl' and we have a
possiblllty of bringing them homeI'm going to say a probability of
bringing them home."
He did make two specific threats,
against Greece, whoSe lax airport
security the United States has
blamed for allowing the hijacking to
occur Friday and against Lebanese
Shiite leader Nahbl Berrl.
Reagan said he ordered oH!clals
to warn Americans against travelIng through Athens, Greece. until
airport security is strengthened and
against . traveling to any Middle
Eastern country " that dOl'S not
publicly condemn and disassociate
Itself trom this atrocity a nd call for
thl' lmme&lt;li!IU• safe relea~ Qf Oi1'
citizens."

PUZZI ED - President RealM wipes his eye at a pre!l'i oonference
Tuesday nlglit where hi' dec~ the "United.stales tQnlgiJIIS a nation
being attacl&lt;ed by lntemai~ lenwlsts. (JJ'I•

Ohio HouSe rejects Senate's.budget package
COLUMBUS tUPI) - The Ohio House of
Representatives set thP stage Tuesday for 10 days of
hardnosed negotiations on a budget and personal
Income tax cut by formally turning down the Senate
Repuplican version, 5240, and SPnding it to a joint
conference commit tee.
· · Six panelists were named immediately, and Rep.
William E. Hlnig, D-New Phil~delphla, chief sponsor
of the HouSP-passed $~.3 billion 1986-8'7 budgt't and
chainnan of the conferenCE' committee, sa id work will
begin Wednesday. .
.
Hlnlg told his colleagues thl' Senate Republicans,
who passed the ir version last week, had tri":""ed too

much out ofthe House 's allocations for jobs programs ,
human services, local governments and state
employees .
·
"All of these were hurt by some oft hi' cuts made by
the Senate," said Hlnlg. "Hopefully we'll have a bill
back here that we can aU vote for by June :JJ."
House SpeakPr Vernal G. Riffe Jr. D-New Boston,
said IieJs optimistic about acomproml~ andwantsto
have ·one ready for a votP June 28 to avoid wetokend " ·
work. The Pxlsting two-year budget expires at
midnight Sunday, J\tne :11.
Preliminary discussions havealreadybegunbl'hind
the scenes to SPt the stage for compromise on the

Man faces multiple charges
a ttempted to Jock him in ja il a nd In
Tim HPrdman , 24, or Kingsbury
·
the process, destroyed some county
Rd.. Pomeroy, wa s arrested by
property . Hewasthen chargedwith
Meigs County sheriff's depUt ies
resisting
arrest and criminal
about 11:45 p.m. Tuesday night on a
mischief.
September 1984 wan·ant for crimi·
Wendell Barber, 21, ReedsVIIII'.
nal t respassing on private proper~);._,
was
taken Into custody shortly after
in Middleport .
\
.
midnight
WednPSday morning after
During a routlnl' search, Herd- ·
being
arrested
on two Meigs County
man was found to a!legely have
Cou
rt
bench
warrants, one for
marijuana In his posSPssionand was
fa iling to comply with a court order
arrested .
a nd the other for falling to appear in
He rdman resisted as deputies

court.
Barber was charged by dPput ies
with resisting arrest at the Reeds·
ville area loca tlon where au lhorltles
picked him up.
After being jailed, Barber be·
came unruly , threatened dPputles
and was charged with disorderly
conduct and aggravated menacing.
Both men will appear today
(Wednesday) in Meigs County
Court.

Senate's streamlined $19.6 blllion spendingoutlaywlth
an accompanying 10 percent annual reduction In the
!ncopte tax rates.
The.HouSI' plan made room for a 5 percent annual
Income tax cut, though both the HouSP and Senate
reductions would bl' the same for tax year l!l\5- 5
percent.
·
···
·
··
"tlhlnk it's going to take some wUUngn~ o.n both
sldeslo lookal wherewedrawthellneson tax,cutsand
leste whose own
spending," said Gov . Rl cha rd F · Ce
•
ortgtnall;Judget in January was for$20 .2 bllllon and a 5
percent annual tax cut.
"I'm concerned about a tax cut that doesn't havf:'
something tied to the economy, especially for the
second year," said CPleste. "We don't want to be back
here next year 1rals!ngtaxes) ."
In addition to Hlnlg, the House conferees are Reps.
Barney Quilter, D-Toledo, the speakerpro te mpore,
and Thomas w. Johnson, R-New Concord.
Senate representatives will be Sens. Stanley J .
Aronoff, RCincinnatl; William F. Bowen, DCincinnati; and Theodore M. Gray, R-Columbus.
Gray's appointment, made Tuesday, Indicates that
Senate President Paul E. Gllimor, R-PortCllnton,also
Is in a compromising mood; otherwise, he might hav£'
chosen a more conservative SPnator bl'nt on flghtmg
for a larger tax cut .
HouSP Republicans wanted to accept the streamlined.SenatP version
send It
to the governor

for signature.
.·
"You 'll ~ever get a c hance to vote for a btgger tax
reduction, taunted Rep. W. ~nnett Rose, R-L~a .
"This Is the best budget were going to get, said
JohnSOn. "It should not be diluted with a compromise
that dwllll :;&lt;~uce the sizE' of the tax cut and increase
- spen ng. ·
•
Critlcl:l.es Democrals .__
·_ .
Rep; Wllllann G. Batc~!ilef., R -Medlna, criticized .
· the Democrats for claiming the Senate "cut" the
budget. Hf:' pointed vut that the Senate proposal Is 16.4
percent higher than the existing outlay, following a 29
percent hike In 19&amp;1.
"Those are monumental increases In spending, and
·r m going to vote for this budget because It's headed In
the right direction," said Batchelder. "Spending is
tailing off."
Rep. Marc D. Guthrie, D-Hebron, complained that
the larger Senate income tax reduction will curtail
income tax revenues reaching local governments by
$~ million.
"At a t1me when the federal gov£'rnment is
recommending theellminatlonofrevenuesharingand
construction gra nts for watl'r and wastewater
treatment plants, il ls not a good Idea to cut aid to local
government ," said Guthrie.
But Rose retorted It only seems like a cut because
local governments were the bl'neflclaries of the large
1983 state Income tax Increase.

Meigs resident reclaims old turtle
We'w aU heard of the p&lt;'rverblal
bad penny that's supposed to r&lt;'turn.
hut, have any of you heard about a
turtle relurnlng- a fl&lt;'r 48 years no
less?!!
Friday. evenilJg, SyracuSP rl'sldent Dana Winebrenner was on
Snowball Hill at theupper endof the
village with his grandson SamuPI
Shain, Racine. The two were in a
barn on thP Marjorie Durst farm
where Winebrenner stores hay for
cattle.
As Winebrenne r ll!ted an old sled
that happened to be in his way, he
cautioned his grandson to watch out
for snakes. Luckily !here were no
snakes to bl' seen. But there was a
old turtll' - VI'IJ' typical looking the klnd of turtle that children in this
neck of the woods are notorious for
trying tomakepetsout of by putting
them In cardboard boxes with
various kinds of w~s. grasses,
fruits and vegetables for food .
Winebrenner picked up the turtle
and handed It to an excited Samuel.
(Remember when you were a
youngster, how exciting It was to
find a turtle?) Well, according to

Winebrenner, Samuel played with
the turtle for about half an hour. The.
boy even doused the llttle feller In a
tub of water in the back of his
grandpa's pickup truck;· just to see If
he rould swim.
Well, It was about that time that
Samuel noticed some markings on
thl' underside of the turtle's shell.
"Grandpa," he exclaimed, "this
turtle has writing on his belly! "
Winebrenner took a gander at the
turtle's underside and carved In thl'
shell was "XV July , L .B., 1937." ·
" I couldn't believe It ," said
Winebrenner. He knew tmrnedlately that thl' Initials L.B. be
longed to Leonard Bass, also of
Syracuse, "becauSP Leonard has his
initials c4JVed on beech trees all
over Snowball Hill."
The twosome took the turtle back
to WlnebrEnDI'rs' and (!01 in touch
with Bass to tell him about his long
lost friend. Bass didn't actually
retnember the turtle, but he did
remember whl'n he was 18 years
old, and not far from the same old .
barn where the turtle was found , he
took his penknife and engraved his

Initials In a turiiP's shell. It was the
sam!' year he and Winebrenner
graduated from PomProy High
School-19.17.
Bass alsO remembered that once,
when hi' was a youngster, he found a
turtle marked "W.D.R.-1894."
W .O.R. stood for the late William
Roush. also trom Syracuse.
It's hard to tell how far that turtiP
has traveled over the past 48 yPars.
"You don't know," said Bass's wl!e
Ora, "hi' might have walked to
Call!ornla and back in that tlme."
' And then again, perhaps the turtle
just stayed in the same vicinity
where Bass picked him up, engraved his shell, and put him back
down on the ground 48 years ago.
Anyway, Bass, Winebrenner and
Samuel tQOk a vot!" and haveopled to
put the turtle back whl're he was
found. "I'm going to Identify him
somehow," Bass noted, .. and
maybe hi''U be found again
9(X'Ileday.'' It's (O!Slble. Bad penn1es always
return you know - and apparently,
turtles do too - at least they do In
Syracuse.

ENGRAVED 'ftlR'lU!: -

Syrt~CU~e 1

al4euu

.._.,. lllllla,left, and Dana Wlnebn.!nner, rtcti, are
amued that INs turtle, held by Winebrenner's
a• Mdllon. Sunuel Shain, of Racine, ls.the same lurile

'*

on whlchBuutllae IBenaraved
W!!eh, L.B.,IIIIII
the date, July 15, Itm. 'lbenwtdnpweremedewltha
penknife on the wltkulcle of the turtle'slhell.

�...

- .. -

Wednesday, June 19, 1985

Commentary
rhe Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THF; MEIGS-MASON ARI!:A

~t:b

IS: m~
~v

.......__. '--.-..--.-, c:::::loo=o

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE RO'l'HGEB, JR.
News Editor
LE'M'E RS OF OPI NION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
l ong. AU letter s are subj ect tot&gt;dltlng arid must be signed wlttl name, addres s and
telephone number . No unsigned le tters will be published. Let1 er.s should be In
goOd taste . addr essing Issues. not l){"rsona!lties.

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Wednesday, June 19. 1985

•'

~tters
.
.

to editor

Loud yells needed now

During the recent controversy
over President Reagan's visit to the ,
graves of Nazi soldiers, the president said that Ihe visit was a
mission of " reconclllatlon ." ApParently It was designed to heal a rift
between Americans 1i'nd Germans
which Mr. Reagan thought remain~. noh•1thstanding 40 years
of cooperation between Washington
and Bonn.
Each time I saw the word
"reconcUlatlon" It struck me that
the real need for reconciliation Is.
not between Americans and Germans, but between Americans and
Russians. This Is the 'rift that ·has .
threatened the peace ol the wor ld
since the second world war.

The president should recall a bit
of history· as ·he contemplates a
summit meeting with Soviet Presi dent Mlkhall Gorbachev. If he does ,
he will see that we have vastly more
reasop to seek reconciliation with
the Russians than we do with the
Germans .
Hitler would have won the second
world war had It not been for the
combined effort of the United
States, Britain and the Soviet
Union. The SoviE'ts contributed far
more to that effort and suffered
Infinitely more than we did . Indeed,
the Soviets brol,&lt;e the back of the
Nazi war effort and destroyed the
lnllk of Hitler's first-line forces
before our troops were engaged in

Europe.
As an American born ber pilot, I
thought we were blowing Germany
to pieces, but we lea rned after the
war that the impact of American
bombing in Europe was severely
limited. It was the huge Soviet
army a nd the vastness of the
Russian terrain that rea lly destoryed Hitler 's heretofore unstoppable war machine. Twenty million
Russians died In that giga,ntlc
struggle, but In doing so they saved
Western clvUizatlon.
·President Reagan may be prepared, to forgive the Nazis, but I wUI
go to my grave'belleving·that they
were the most barbarous, murderous fiends unleashed on the world In

a ll hum an history.
There has been a pir!ure In my
m ind, recalled by recent events,.or
Russians a nd Americans jubila ntly
joining ha nds at the Elb&lt;&gt; River In
that victo rious, hope-filled spring of
1945. Th at same week we Ieamed of
the launc hing of the United Nations
in Sa n F ra ncisco. I cannot recall
any time In my life before or since
when I w as so proud of America
a nd so confident of the steps we had
taken to win the wa r a nd lay the
basis of a peaceful world order.
What went wrong a fter that 1945
spri ngtime of hig h hopes? Was It
the fault of the Russians? Were we
naivr In believing tha t cooperation
in wa rtime could be continued In
pcacc·tim&lt;'? Perhaps. Perha ps.
But is it also possible thill our
leaders were partly to blame for the
collapse of Soviet-America n cooperation a nd the disappointing reCOI'd of the United Na tions? Did we
help bring on the Cold War and an
arms race- so costly that It threatens
to bankrupt both the Soviet Union
and the UnJted ·Sta tes?
Should not thp spirit of reconclllatlon of whkh Ihe president has
spoken a lso b&lt;&gt; appropriate for
discussion with the Soviet Union? ·

and othersens,itive!'(Julpl!l('nt a!the
apparently signed on mainly as
million, British firms got all but two
Omani bases.
window dressing.
. ott he contracts.
Pentagon sources say the Air
Here, meanwhile, is what our
-Vinnell's selo&gt;etlon a s junion
Force has just asked for an
sources havt&gt; told us about the
partner m ay have been he lped by
.additionaly 90-day delay In award- situation:
the presence ofitsboa rd oJdlrectors
irig ihe contract. But 1Mt1' .seems
-:-TI!e ~driving . forCE' behi.nd t~P , of John Wl'St;form~r U.S. arribassa- .
llttl~ likelihOod that the deaJ'cari be · · award of th~ contract to Airwork- !lor; to Saudi Arabia ..While he was
ambassador. the Saudi desk at th!' ·
. undone, since the sultan of Oman ·. Vinnell Is British A1r Vlee M~rshal
and his British advisers insist the
Erik Bennett, a tough-minded
Stat~ Departm~nt was manned by
British. firm get the contract.
Ulsterman on IE"avefromfhe RAFfo
John Countryman, the current u.s.
The concern inside the Pentagon serve as commander of the sultan 's
amba ssador to Oman .
is that sensitive military and
air. force. He has had ext~nsiv&lt;'
Even more interesting Is our
intelligence Information would neMiddle East experience, including a
source 's report that a major
cessarily come Into the hands of thE'
stint as adviser to the Jordanian air
stockholder in Vinnell is linked
civilian contractor who maintains
force.
closely to Ghassan Shakir, a Saudi
"He can b&lt;&gt; totally charming or a
businessman who is a close adviser
the base. For example, in the event
of a U.S: decision to use the Oman!
bid of a bastard," one source said .
to thE' sultan of Oman. A businessbases for their intended purpose"He is the single most influential
man desc iibed Shakir a s a key
behin(l the scenes power in .Vinnell.
as ~ I aging areas for \.!.S. -rapid - : figure on the Ol]'lani defense scene
next to the ruler himself.': •
•
Neither Shakir nor a - Vinnell
.deployment forces ~ thecontral'tor
·would fieed.tG know in advance. .
The same SOUrce wTOto:•· 'in. a .. rrpreso:&gt;ntative 'were· ava ilablE' for
. confidential paper thai Bennett "is
comment.
The 'British company that has dedicated to the proposition that the
Despite the Air Force's belated
been secretly tapped tor the Sultanate of Oman Air Force was in
qualms ove the contract , the Oman!
contract on an ostensibly competi- the beginning, is now and even sall
govE"rnment has already been
tive basis, Airwork Ltd., tried to b&lt;&gt; British-!'(Julpped."
notified that Aiiwork-VInneU got Jt.
defuse theobjo&gt;etlons bytaklngon an
Of ll major Omani defense . Countryman reportedly confirmed
American company, Vinnell Corp., projects last ypar totaling $6.'l.'i
this at a recent business lunch In
as a part!ll'r. But VInnell was
Muscat.

Morse Chapel troubles_____L_ow.,.-e_u_w~ing:.:.et:.:_'

In my short lifetime, it seems thai recorder's office March H ,1865 with
the
Methodist Church has changed thE' following ~escrlption:
1 would like to say Meigs County
the
\llgh
calling of their organization
"Commencing at thE' road leading
may well be on the way to Jots of
from
making
converts
to
making
from
Racine to Buffington's Island
future jobs as we see a new
money.
That
is
how
I
see
the
most
on
the
line b&lt;&gt;tweensald M.H. MorSe
department sfOI'(' moving in near
recent
outrage
at
Morse
Chapel
In
,
and
William
Lovett, Thence South
Rock Springs.
Lebanon
Township
where
the
seven
rods
along
said Lovett's tine,
1 would only hope the people of
church
has
been
padloc(led
to
keep
Thence
East
fourt.
e en rods, Thence
Meigs County can offer their ideas
Its
duly
elected
officials
from
North
eight
rods.
Thence Westerly
and wants for our area. Just like me.
holding
services.
If
a
church
dOl'S
to
theplaceofb&lt;&gt;ginning,
containing
J'VP always wanted to see our area
not
show
a
profit
on
the
books
ol
the
three
fourths
of
one
acre."
get a D('WbowUn~ lane and a cinema
district elders, get rid of It! Sell it if
A hint of a neighborhood feud Is In
sot~ people of this art&gt;a don't have
If
not,
wipe
it
from
the
face
they
can,
the
last paragraph of deed: "It Is
to drive so far to have a good t IJ'T]E' or
oftheearth.evenlf
It
Is
burned.
That
hereby
required and provided that
watch a show. So comP on , Mt&gt;igs.
is
what
happened
to
the
Fairvk&gt;w
no
person
by the name of Webster
Everybody needs something from
Church
In
Letart
Township
where
I
shall
have
a
ruling voice In the said
the kids to ,the adults so let's speak
attended Sunday School wtien 1 was -premises herein conveyed." The
a boy on Pension Ridge.
deed acknowledges receipt ot $1S
You have all read about Morse paid by the trustees to Morse.
Chapel. It has been much in the news
The actions b&lt;&gt;lng taken now by
On Saturday, June J, l!Ri I was 9: 50a.m and met two ladies trotting
lately as the local trustees try to the district church olllcials. are ·
driving up Second Avi'. in Middle- down the road with a pollee escort. I
wrest cont·rol ot· thelr church from almost Identical with the actions
. port. 1got up to Mill Street and saw counted 06 cars lined up behind two
the Methodist oligarchy which taken against the Fairview Met ho- ,
ciui lined up ,about two blocks. trotters.
somehow has assumed rontrol of all dlst Episcopal Church In Letart
Which madt&gt; me remember a
Jltat)lrally, I wondered what was ·
the Metbodlst churches. They rule TownshlpWyears, or so, ago with a
hOlding thE'm up. Later I saw two remark I heard a man make several
with an Iron band and If a church few exceptions. The Fairview
llidfE.s trotting up the sti'e&lt;'t. Why years ago. He said "All Morons and
fails to shOw a prollt, It Is marked for Church had dwindled ln memberthf.y had touseth!'street and holdup a few intelligent people participate extinction. This Is nothing lii'W. If ship to a degt'ee that services were
traffic Instead of using the sidewalk, ln such things." Of course he was youhavenotnotlcedhowsomeofthe no longt&gt;r being held. A group of
crazy.
-poorer churches have been disposed no!Hlenomlnatlonal cltiJl!ns 01 the
!' U neve-r know.
_ 1,went over the brldgt&gt; and came
OpiE"Cobb
ot the last few years, It Is time you community cleclded that the church
tpdl acra;s abOUt hallanhourlater.
691 Sycamore: Mlddlepoi'l .
were told. Most have been sold for structure was too valuable both
l •caml' back acrllSs the bridge at
any amount offered and are now historically and socially . to be
•
being used as barns and out- abando!ll'd and lett to the mETCy of
bUildings, storage or any number 01 the wind and weather.
things lor which they were not
Theiefwe. they reorpnlzed the
Intended by their parishiOners who church and non-denominational
bullt them with local funds but had services and Sunday School were
· Today Is Wednesday, June 19, the 170th day of 1985 with 195 to follow.
no voice In thefr diSposition.
again held. They made one lata!
:TIIP moon IS moving toward Its first quarter.
The Morse Chapef M.E. Church mistake. They !ailed to buy the
: TIIP rnomJng stars are Venus and Jupiter.
was buUt In 1865, replacing a log structure rrom the Methodist EplsTIIP evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
church which hacllorrnerly served copaiChurchdlslrlctomclaisandas
, 'lbole bOm on this date are under the sign 01 Gemini . They Include the ploneercltlzensoiLE'banonTwp. their COJiil'l!ll&amp;llon grew and flourFreach phllollopher and mathematician Blaise Pascal In 1623; the Duchess
Three-lourth ot an acre was aold to Ished, the church ltl'UCtun! waa
~ WIDdltlr, born Bessie Wallis Warfield, In 1896 (age 1!9); bandleaderGey : the trustres 01 the Morse Chapel repainted and the Interior I edtc:."OLAJrnbardo in 1902; actress Nancy 'Marchand in 1928 (age 57); and actor
M.E. Church by Moses H. Morse rated. Then 011(' SUnday moml.ng
Malelllm McDowell In 1943 (age 42).
and recorded In the Meigs .county when the members anived lor

Traffic jam just too much

Church services, they found thE' door
padlocked and a "No Trespassing"
sign nailed to lht&gt; door.
The public b&lt;&gt;nefacto'rs who had
thought to save an Important public
building from neglect found that
legally they were Intruders with no
legal rights. ·The plano they had
Installed was confiscated and
hauled away; the carpeting they
had Installed in the aisles and on the
aHarwas ripped up and disposro of.
Then the lnlildlng was burned
assming that never ag11in would
thafcommunity be called to Sunday
services by the familiar sound of the
Fairview Church bell. It was the
death of a community an~ to many
,lo iis who spent our childhood there,
It was more like the murder of a
community'

Morse Chapel has non&lt;" of th&lt;' Iega 1
problem s which confronted the
people of F aitview. They havNhree
trustees who are locked out of their
own church. They hav(' hired a
minister, Rev. Gary Holter. and
somehow Sun&lt;)ay servic&lt;'sarebeing
held in spite of the padlock. Present
trustees of Morse Chapel are Aaron
Sayre, now living in SyracuSC',
Charles Bailey andEifieSmit h, both
of Racine R.p. Sayre was born near
Morse Chopcl and his father was
supeiintendcnt oft he Morse Chapel
Sunday Schoof for many years. The
trustees have taken out fire Jnsu.
ranee on their church and hav~
otherwise tried to prot&lt;'Ct their
church ,from becoming only a
memory like Fairview.
Good luck!

r-------------::= ----,

Berry's World

•

SCORES RUN - Mike BroW.. of the Calllomla
Angels scores on a double oil of teammate Reggie

Pastore shines in 6-l victory
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) - · With two w;llks to trail Ty Cobb's
Cincinnati RedsrnanagerPeteRose
record of 4,191 hits by just 45.
isn' t quite sure what he has on his
Pastore, 2-0, surrendered four
hands.
singles while walking one and
"It used to be the Big Red
striking out three to break the
Machine, then it ix'carne the Little
Giants' three-game winning streak.
Red Wagon, now I just don't kilow
"I wE"nt out therewith thE" Intent of
what we have: : ·the vetera!l saki.
challenging the batters today,' ' the
"We haven't been able to put a
Cincinnati pitcher said . ''If you are
·streak together this year, but I'm going aft er peOple and getting
confident we will. We've got a good
strikeouts; you gain a great deal of
young team."
confidence."
.
Tuesday, Rose got a four-hitter
Bill LaskE'y, 1-8, went 61-3lnnlngs
from Frank Pastore·as the Reds got
and took the loss.
back on the winning Ways with a 6-1
ThE' Reds went in front 3-l with
triumph over the San Francisco three runs In the sixth Inning. With
Giants.
one out. Gary Redus and Eddil'
"He (Pastore) earned this start Milner hit back-to-back doubles to
with hisplayoutofthebullpen," said tie the score. One out later, Dave
Rose, who went ().for-3 in the contest Parker singled home Milner atid

Meigs d~mps Athens

..
·-

took second on cente r fielder JOI'I
Youngblood's error. Alan Knicely
singled Parker home to make it H.
Laskey's decision to pitc h to
Parker troubled Chili Davis.
"The pitch to Parker was a bad
pi tch," the Sail Francisco outfie lder
said. " I don't thiQk th~re is a nyway ·
you should pitch to Parkerwith Aian
Knlcely coming up."
The Reds m ade it 6-1 in seve nth.
The Giants took a 1.0 lead ln the
· third when Trillo d rove home J ose
Urib&lt;&gt; with a singie.
·

FREE
MUFFLER
INSPEcnON

ROCK SPRINGS Taking a double, and Hendricks, Welker,
command E"arly with a ninNun Roush, and Freeman each singled
.s econd inning, Meigs won its third once . Malone led Athens with two
straight and six of the last seven •singles and a double while
games with a 14-7 slugtest victory McCombs had three singles and
over Athens In American Legion Coles a single and home run .
basE&gt;ball action here Tuesday.
Meigs goes on the road this
Melgs,now8-3ontheyear,opened Saturday with a double-header at
up a 9-0 lead after Its high-scoring Glouster lnlt come back home
MUFFLER INSTALLATION
SPECIALISTS
second and were roasting with a 14-2 Sunday with a two-game set against
edge after six Innings. Ath~.&gt;ns ~a me · powerful Marietta. Meigs had
If your muffler's making way too
much noise, drive into The Muffler
back with five runs in theirfinaltwo defeated Glouster 7-6 and 5-4 In an
Bay and get a tree, profess,ional ln·
at-bats. Athens, fielding one of its earlier double-header. Both. days
for muffler leaks , holes,
spectlon
youngest lejims in years, drops to2:7 . have 1 p ,m. st,arts .
damage, broken·nangers or clamps
for the · year. Athens was district ·.------.;_..;..;......;_-'-.;_;.....-1 and for weak.or corroded pipes. If It
runner-up to Lancaster ' in tourna needs replacing, we' ll install a
ment play a year ago.
tough, durable Walker&lt;&gt; Tru-Fif®
!11Uffler at a very competiliYe price.
Kevin Eastman picked up thE&gt; win,
going thE' first six Innings. The
Gallipolis Jeft-hander was In control
throughout with a sharp-brE"aklng
curveball, siiiklng out three and
walking three. Rod Roush came in to
pitch the final three Innings, fanning
lutrodUICes outstandinc Satel·
one and walking two. Four AthE"ns
as low as $58.74 a
NEW YORK (UP)) - Suspense, 6-9WestGermanDetlefSchrempfof Joiutson and a second-round pick
hurlers struck out tour and walked
month for homeowners with
mystPr;:, foreign lntrjguE'. It was all , Washington. At No. 16 they took 7-0 from , C)licago for forward Gene eight.
_
aood .cre.dit .Quantities are
.,
there Tti~ay - yr! not aJ your Canadian Bill Wennington of St. . BankS. • '
limited. This is definitely the
. ' . jJIY. carplinter, •. Wl\0 led _Meigs
lOcaL movie ' theater or favorite
John's ani:l one piCk fatertapped.7-'.! · ·: New Jerse~ was the only team ... With a double and·an opposit~·fleld :
best prom·otion we ha.lie .ever · .
seen. If you have ever thought
bookstore. It .all took place at the West German Uwe Blab of Indiana. without a first -round pick. With the
home run, started the nine-run
about getting a satellite dish.
36th pick the Nets selected Yvori
second with a double and came
National Basketball Association · CholcesNo.9throughNo.15were:
or are waiting until fall or win·
amateur draft .
Charles Oakley (VIrginia Union! to Joseph. a Haitian center frop-l
around on Scot Gheen's single.
ter to ret a dish. call us now.
There was suspense concerning Cleveland, Ed Pinckney (Vlllan- Georgia Tech . NiliE' picks later,
Gordon Spletefollowed with a single
whom the lndlaana Pacers would
ova) to Phoenix, Keith Lee (ME"m' Cleveland chose John Wllllams,
to diive In Gheen. Meigs then
NOW Is Tha Tima
select with their No. 2 pick. There phis State) to Chicago, Kenny Green Indicted in lhE"Tulanepolnt-shaving managed to score seven more times
, Call 446-241 1
was mystery In what prompted the
(Wake Forest) to Washington, Karl scandal.
duringihe Inning with only onE' hit .
Thursday, Juna 20 •
Washington Bullets to trade one of Malone (Louisiana Tech) to Utah,
After Brian Freeman was hit by a
Atlanta. with the 77th pick, look
fraN 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.
pitch, Todd Hysell walked, Dave
Alfredrlck Hughes (Loyola-Ill.) to Arvldas Sabonis, a 7-2 center and
the NBA's classiest small forwards
Part time ancl full time salts relor a No. 2 draft pick and . a frail
Hendricks was safe on a fielder's
San Antonio and Blair Rusmussen fixture on the Soviet national team.
320 5th St., Racine, Oh.
prtsent~tin inquiries wekomt.
7-foot -6Y, center who once herded
Indiana . University coach Bobby choice, Dave Lockhart .and Jackle
(Oregon) to Denver.
Welker both walked, Carpenter was
cows in the Sudan.
No sooner had Lee stated his Knight suggested last year that
NBA Commissioner David Stern pleasure In playing .for &lt;;hlcago. Sabonls may be thE' world's best safe on an error; Gheen hit his
second single of the inning, Eastbegan the 4-hour. 46-mlnute draft at
then hewastradedtoClevelandwlth player but Hawks officials doubt he
Madison SquarE' Garden's FE'It
man walked, and Splete hit a
Bulls guard Ennis Whatley for the will come to the United States.
6-90akley andguardCalvlnDuncan
Forum b.\ · announcing New York's
sacrifice ny.
·
SC'l&lt;'Ction of J amaican-born Patrick
(the~h pick! .
Other
Meigs
hitters
Included
Scioto Down.s re.~ults
Ewing.
Before the trade deadline, WaLockhart with twoslngles, Eastman
The Pacers next used most ofthE'Ir · shington sent Greg Ballard, onE&gt; of
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Iron City,
allotted five minutes before choosthe league's smoothest .small fordriven by Tom Brlnkerhotf, led all
Ing 6-9 Wayman Tisdale of Okla- wards, to GoldE"n State lor secondthe way Tuesday night to win the
homa over Creighton's 7-0 Benoit
round picks this year and in 1~.
featured trot at Scioto Downs.
Benjamin.
.
The Bullets used this year's pick on
Brinkerhotl guided the for-yearAND
The Los Angeles Clippers then
towering Manute Bol, certainly t)le
WITH FRIES.....$1.59
old over the mile in 2: 00 4-5 and
grabbed the shot-blocking Ben- only NB,o\ draftee to claim to have
finished three-quarters of ·a IE"ngth
jamin, Seattle . followed 'with 6-8 once killed a lion with a spear.
ahead Keep the Action. Monarch
Xavier McDaniel of Wichita State,
If Bol makes the Bullets. he'll
Twas third.
.
113 SECOND AVE.
Atlanta selected 7-0 J on Koncak of
team with bulky JE'II. Ruland in a
Lucy's Dream, Old Double and
coomblnatlon reminiscent o!Abbott
Southern M('thodlst. Sacramento
POMEROY
"At the End of the Po1111roy-Moson Bridge
Assirewere the first threeflnlshrs in
tagged 6-11 JOI' Kleine of Arkansas
and Costello.
the third ra&lt;X' to return $6 ,863.40 on
POMEROY, Ott.
PH.992-2556
and Golden State plckro 6-6 Chris
Washington also got lorward Dan
CALL 992-3381
the i0-8-2 trifecta combination.
Roundlleld from Detroit for centers
Mullin of St. John' s.
The crowd or 3,568 wagered
992-2342
The Dalla s Mavt&gt;ricks, using the Rick Mahorn and Mlkl&gt; Gibson , and
$253,235.
firs t oft hree first -round plcks,chose the Spurs acquired big man Stevt&gt;

Zenix
Video

Indiana Pacers pick Tisdale

"'

Jackson bt.lhlrd lnnlilg action. The ball gets by Indians
catcher Jerry Wlllanl from the relay throw .of second
baseman Tony Bemazard. UPI.

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By Unlk'll Press International ·
Shanls .Pugas banged out four hits
a nd dmve In two runs Tuesday
night , pacing the Maine Guides toan
11 ·9 International League trtumph
over the Roch&lt;'st&lt;&gt;r Red Wings.
Dave Von Ohlen Improved to 1-1
and Robin Fuson picked up his first
sa ve . Greg Biercezlcz, ().1, was
chased after giving up three runs In
two Innings.
Maine pounded out 15·hlts against
fjve Rochester pitchers, Including
RBI doubles by Carmen Castlllo In
the founh and Jim WilSOn to cap a
fO\Ir-run sixth.
TralllrJg at one point 10-2, Rochester rebounded aided by home runs by Mikl&gt; Reddlsli, JC!ff Schaele' and
Kelly Parts to pull Within 10-9.

"BegglflfJ your psrdon, sir, but wouldn't it be
flfiSifJr to make s list of Bll the people who
DON'T, hsve security clesrance?"

Malne's ~Ike Brewer a1qled In

"

l

ADOLPH'S

Maine takes 11-9 win

Today in ·h istory

j j

In two runs With a pair ol singles and
. Ed Lynch hurled an elght-l\ltter to
help the Mets hand the Cubs their
seventh straight loss. Lynch improved to 4-3. Steve Trout , 6-3, took
the loss,
Cardinals 6, Phlllles 2
At St. Louis , Tom Lawless drove
in three runs and Vince Coleman
banged out three hits and stole two
bases to pace the Cardl.t\als. John
'1\ldor, who won his founh straight
game, raised his record to 5-7. The
IoserwasSteveCarlton.l-7.
Padres 4, Dodgers 0
At Los Angeles, Dave Dr avecky,
6-4, hurled a three-hitter and Tim
Flannery drove In two runs to spark
a ·l().hit attack . The P.!dres' southpaw held the Dodgers hitless
through 4 2-3 Innings and struck out
six . Bob Welch , 1-1, makingoniy his
third start of the season because of
an arm injury, was replaced In the
sixth after yielding allofSanDlego's
runs.

Hurst, ·2-6, relieved and walked Toronto.
. By FRED McMANE
Kirk Gibson to load the bases before
Royals 10, Twins 1
UPI Associate Sports E4Utor
At Kansas City, Mo., Frank White
Lance Parrish treats Bruce Hurst Parrish hit the first pitch to him for
his lOth home run of tb&lt;&gt; season.
rapped three s ingles, drove In a run
the way the Sioux treated Custer.
Juah Berenguer, 2-3, picked up andscoredtwo otherstocarryMark
Parrish a bsolutely 'destroys
Hurst, so it came as a bit of a thevlctorylortwolnnlngsolrellefln Guble1;a and the Royals to victory .
·surprise Tuesday night when Bos- whic(j he gave up one run. Aurelio Gublcra ~altered three singles ,
ton Red Sox manager John McNam- Lopez got the last six outs for his walked live and struck out two
before departing after seven Innings
ar a left Hurst In to pitch to the fourth save.
Bill
Buckner
and
Dwight
Evans
with
a slight groin Jll!ll. He E"vened
Detroit Tigers' slugging catcher
homered for Boston and Johnny his record at 4-4 with Dan Qulsen wi th the bases loaded.
·
"The last thing I ex}:lected was a Grubb hit his first homE&gt;r ol the berry finishing up.
Angels 7, Indians 3
homP run ," said McNamara, who season for Detroit.
Elsewhere In the league, New
At Cleveland, Reggie Jackson's
watched dumbfounded as Parrish
drilled a pitch off the facing of the YorktoppedBaltlmore6-4.Mllwau- two-run· homer and RBI single
upper deck of Tiger Stadium for a kee beat Toronto 4-1, Kansas City pace,;) a 20-hlt a Mack that helped the
grand slam In the sixth Inning to routed Minnesota 10-1, California Angels defeat the Indians. Jackspark Detroit to a 9-8 come-from- trimmed Cleveland 7-3, Texas son's horner was the 512th of his
defeated Seattle 8-5 and Chicago career. putting him In a tie with
behind victory .
edged
Oakland 4-31n 131nnlngs.
Ernie Banks and Eddie Mathews for
McNamara hasn' t been doing his
Yankees6,
Oriole!l4
11th
place on tb&lt;&gt; all-tlme.llst .
homework . If he had, he would have
Rangers 8, Mariners 5
At Baltimore, Ken Grtffey llned a
noted that Parrish had collected 10
At Arlington, Texas, Pete O'Brien
hits in 18 previous at-bats against pair of 'run-scoring singles and
Rickey Henderson collected three Ignl!ed a sJll-run first Inning with an
·
Hurst , including five homers .
Parrish's fifth career grand slam hits and stole three bases to lead tht&gt; RBI double and added his seventh
ca pped a Detroit comeback and Yankees to their third straight homer to help the Rangers snap the
&lt;'nabled tho Tigers to break the Red victory. JoeCowley,5-3,allowedtwo Mariners ' three-game winning
Sox' six-gamE' winning streak. singles over five Innings but needed s_treak. Frank Tanana, 2-7,recorded
DetroiT regained second place by rellel help from Dave Righetti who his first victory since May 26 by
percentage points and pulled within gaveuphomerunstoEddleM~ray pitching 5 2-3 Innings and allowing
2Y, games of division-leading and John Shelby, and Brian Fisher, . six hits.
White Sox 4,A's3
Toronto.
who pitched the last inning for his
.
At
Chicago,
Harold Ba inE"s hit a
Trailing 7-4, the Tigers, who second save.
400-foot
upper
cleck
homer to lead off
collected a season high 17 hits, beg'an
Brewers 4, Blue Jays 1
·
··
At
Milwaukee
Earnest
Riles
f.he
bottom
of
the
13th
inning and
their comebacl&lt; when rookie Nelsbn
·
drove
in
two
ru~
to
support.~y
··
.give
_ihe
White
_Sox
the
· v_I~tory . .
Simmons sing!~ offst.;u1er Bruce
BurriS'
seven-hitter
and
JX.Jp
the
Bain~'
ho~er,
his
fifth
of
the
year.
Klson to open the sixth and was
forced at second. Lou Whitak('r Brewers hand the Blue Jays their was h1s third qit of the game and
sixth straight loss. Burris, 4-5, gave reliever Gene Nelson his fourth
doubled to drive out Klson and Alan
struck out live and walked one 1n victory in six" do&gt;eisions. Keith
Trammell greeted Mike Trujillo
pllchlnghls second complete game. Atherton, 3-2, took the loss.
with an RBI single.
Since 1982, Mliwaukee IS18-4 against

Misgivings surface ____Ja_ck_A_n_d_e_rs_on_&amp;_D_al_e_va_n_A_t_ta
WASHINGTON - Some of our
recent columns have kicked up a
sandstorm ln the~trategic sultanate
of Oman , and the dust still hasn't
settled.
We reported. th,at the Air Torce
has 'been quielly negotiating · an
agreement togiveaBrltishfirm the
multi-million dollar contract to
operatE' three U.S. built bases- a nd
the super-secret !'(Juipment they
will eventually contain - In Oman,
near the approaches.to the Persian
Gulf.
Afterward, Gen. John Chain,
chief of the State Department 's
bureau of politico-military affairs,
flew to Oman to review Omani-U .S.
affairs. An angry Omani foreign
!Dlnlster errilf!eously accused h.lm
of being oursource..
' ·.
The Air Force, meanwhile; has
used one excuse alter anothE'r to
stall the implementation of the
contract, which was supposed to
have been signed months ago.
Chain reportedly told the British
they could "go to hell" before they'll
get access to U.S. communica lions

look where they are thls week."
· · The Red Sox had closed to within
2 \2 games of Toronto, tops In the AL.
East entering Tuesday's night
game.
"In spring training I said It would
beaslx-teamraceln the East, " said
Rodgers. "We still have 100 games
to go. We can 't take Pittsburgh for
granted. They have a good ball
club."
Elsewhere, Cincinnati defeated
San Francisco 6-l, Atlanta edged
Houston 3-2, New York downed
Chicago 5-l, St. Louis beatPhlladel- ·
phla 6-2, and San Diego beat Los
Angeles 4-0.
Braves 3, A!itl'UI! 2
At Atlanta, Glenn Hubbard ripped
reliever Julio Solano's llrst pitch
over the left -field fence to lead oil the
eighth Inning and kl&gt;y the araves'
victory. Hubbard's blast made a
Winner ol Bruce Sutter, 4-2. Solano ,
fell to 1-2. Mets5 , Cubs 1
At New York, Gary Carter drove

Parrish's grandslam nips Red Sox

I have yet to ta lk to any visitor to
the Soviet Union who is not struck
by the lingering horror In Russian
minds relative to Worlcj War II.
They ha ve a deadly fear of another
war - especially one with tb&lt;&gt;
United States. That Is at least one
mutual basi s on which reconclllatliln might b&lt;&gt; gradually and
carefully built. Why not give
reunion at thP Elb&lt;&gt; a nother
chance.?

out. Our area won't just build
without someone yelling for it. So
yell now and yE"U loud and who
knOws WE' just may get it . So let's
keep up the pressure.
We will see Meigs County get that
shopping center yet and only the
people and our elected officials can
make that happen. So don't stop
now. Speak up and be counted as a
person who wants jobs and a place to
shop In our local area.
Floyd H. Cleland, Box 144-F,
Middleport.

I

.By GERRY MONIGAN
.
UPI Sports Writer
Managing the Pittsburgh Pirates
can be enough to turn any body
pessimistic.
Even Chuck Tanner lapsed Into a
rare m oment of negativism Tuesday night , but thE'n again, having
b&lt;&gt;aten the first-place Montreal
E xpos for the second straight night
m ay have had the Pittsburgh
m ana ger a little disoriented.
Larry McWilliams gave the Bucs
their second consecutive success
with a thrre-hlt, 4-1 vlciory over
MontrPal.
George Hendrick was on 'his
gam e, hitting a pair of doubles•and
d riving in a run for the Pirates.
" I don't knowhow far back weare
in the standings (14 games) , butit's
·not a lot of ground to makeup when'
there's more than 100 games to
play,': said Tan!ll'r, reverting to
for m . ."Look at the Boston Red Sox.
Where were they last week? And•

Time for reconciliation ____G,__e_or_ge_M_cG_ove_r_n

Slicing the
political pie
An Arizona Republican describes it as "probably one of the most
traumatic things I ever went through. " An Ohio Democrat caUls It " the
pblltical !'(Juivalent of genetic engineering. "
They're both talking about the process of adjusting the t)oundarles of
congressional and state legislature districts to confirm with the populatJon
shifts measured by the census.
Reapponionment is of crucia l importance to legislators because they
composition of their districts can'make the difference b&lt;&gt;tween victory and
deleat In future elections. "There are two things that excite the (state)
~nate reapportionment and horse racing," explains a Maryland
IJ(Jiitician.
: In a series of landmark decisions handed down slightly more than two
clecades ago, the U.S. Supreme Court imposed an unprecedented degree of
rationality and equity upon what long had been a scandalous system of
redistricting.
: Although it stU! remains essentially a political process, the high tribunal
r'J,'CE'ntly accepted jurisdiction in a case that will force it to confront- for
t.jle first time- tthe issue of reapportionmept as a partisan device.
- That development poses two important questions: Should the Supreme
Court attempt to reduce or eliminate the pervasive Influence ofpolitlcls in
r«listricting? II the court makes such an effort, is it likely to besuc~l.
Some skeptics argu_e that reapportionment is - and ought to be ;inextricably and exclusively linked to politics. Any attempts to radically
alter that, they b&lt;&gt;Ueve, is almost certainly doomed to failure.
: "PoliticS and political conside rations are Inseparable from districting
al1d apponionment," the Supreme Court acknowledged In a 1973decision.
''The reality is that districting has and is intended to have substantial
political consequences. ·
- As recently as 1983. Justlc John Paul Stevens suggested that "It Is
unrealistic to attE"mpt to proscribe all political consideratJons in thE'
essentially political process of redlstticting."
:. But Stevens also suggested that blatant·attempts liy poliHcal parties to
'!se reapportionment for crude partisan purposes could Invite judicial
review.
.
Indeed, the litigation soon to come b&lt;&gt;fore the court involves what those
who Initiated thE' civil suit aptly described as "purely and simply a case of
unadorned and unconsHtutlonal gerrymandE"ring in its most extreme
form."
: Promulgating guidelinE's In a court opinion will not b&lt;&gt; easy ix'cauS(' off
ftt&lt;' elusive naturE' ol political contiiul'ncies as well as the difficulty of
assessing the motives and judgE"ments of politicians Involved In
Wdistrictlng.
.
' Moreover. the standards imposed by ihe court would have to b&lt;&gt; broad
enough to encompass most of the circumstances likely to be encountered in
the futur.f yet narrow omo~gh to discoura!\E' ·po_tent!ally wayward
k&gt;gislators frol]'l !;(!ekm{: to ewde the r:ourt's mandate.
'. - .
; But any attempt by the high court to avoid .the admittedly'dlfficull issues ·
posed by the case would bC' Interpreted as encouraging future political
abuse of the redistricting proci'SS. Legislators would b&lt;&gt;confident thatthelr
miist outrageous acts would not go uncorrected by thE' federal judiciary.
ReapportionmE"nt, the high court noted in a 1972 case, involves
"relationships of great delicacy that are l'ssentially political in nature"but the rourt has dealt SUC'C('SSfUlly With other equally sensitive Issues and
politics is not beyond its purview.

Pirates defeat Expos

Jl

Dan Rohm In the ninth to seal the
Guides' trtumph.
Elsewhere In
IL, Richmond
beat 1'oledo 3-1; Syracuse downed
PawtuckE't 3-1 and Columbus at
Tidewater was raiiWid out .
At Richmond, va .. John Llckert
drove In one run and scored another
to lilt the Braves. Joe Johnson, 4-1,
strucll out eight en route to the
trtumph. AI Woods cracked his Mh ·
home run lor Toledo's lone run.
Marll Portugal slld to 4-4. .
At Syracuse, N.Y. the Chiefs
scored single rum In the sixth.
seventh and eighth Innings to rally
rrom a 1.0 defiCit. Stan Clarke
lrJ1plvYed to ..1 while ,Tom Hl'nkl&gt;
notched his 12th save. Charlie ·
Mitchell, 3-4, took the loss In relief.

the

t
l'

"

�Page- 4'- The Daily Sentinel

Weather ffrecast

Alleged -s py's son
cooperating with
federal officials
WASHINGTON (UI?J) - The
"1ilor son Of a retired Navy warrant
otfiC&lt;'r accused of mastenninding a
coast-tocoast spy ring has begun to
cooperate with authorities trying to
unravel the 20-year operation,
sou t'C&lt;'s say.
.
Fcderallawenforcement sources
who asked not to be identiled said
Twsday Michael Walker, 22, who
was atTested May 22 aboard the
airc raft carrier Nimitz "1th 15
pounds of classified material next to
his bunk, has begun to talk.
Michael Wa lker, like the other
t hrt'&lt;' suspects, faces a life sentence
if convicted and is the second man to

the two central figures- Michael's
father Jolu! Walker and WhitwOrth
- have refused to cooperate in FBI
interrogations.
All of the suspects have pleaded
innocent and are being held without
bond. John and Michael Walker are
jailed in Baltimore, Whitworth in
San Francisco and Arthur Walker in
Norfolk, Va.
In San Francisco, Whitworth,45,a
retired Navy radioman, pleaded
Innocent to conspiring for eight
years to pass NaVY secrets to the
&amp;&gt;vlets for payments totaling
$328,00l through John Walker, 47.

assist in the investigat'ion . His uncle

Court actions filed

Art hu r Walker, a retired Navy
lieutenant commander, · Is also
SfX'Oking with authorities about the
spy ring ca lled by some officials the
lar1,wst in 30 years.
In federal courl s a continent
aparl , Arthur Walker and Jerry
Whitwoi·th pleaded innocent Tuesday to charges of spying for the
Soviet Union. Their lawyers promised to pul on combative defenses.
"We'r&lt;' going to make them prove
it ,'' Whi tworth's attorney James
Larson Said .

eng·inl'£'r.

Thr law enforcement sources said

BODY RETURNED -The casket of Robert Dean
.s tethem Is canied oft a plane at Andrews Air Force

A foreclosure action on property
in Olive Township has been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
by Marietta Savings and Loan Co.
aga inst Jolu! R. Acors, Tuppers
Plains. A$50,029 judgment has been
requested for 'the balance due on a
promissory note.
In other matters, a reciprocal
action for child support has been
filed in Meigs County by the State of
IdahO against Flint Richard Greer.

l

,_9

Columbia Oas spokesman BOb
Innes sa id the utility agrees with the
consumt"rs' counsel 'sint erprf'tation
of it ' fina ncia l status.
JnnC's said 1hr('(' fa ctors IC'd to the

Tuesday night. Stethem, 23, a navy diver, Wi\8
slain by ShiUe hijackers last Friday on the 'lWA
aircraft in Beirut, IAlbanan. UPI.

Base

Body of Ame~ican returned

""

L Pel. GB
T&amp;"OniO ....• , .........•..• ,... .•ill · 25_ .tiC(\ Dl'lrolt ........
. ....... :W 26 .~ 21 ~
· 1\:ll;ton ,. ............... , ........ ll 2'7 .~ 11~
llatllmort' .....................:D :II .Ml 4
NN· York ...... , ............. :]] 29 ~'i17 !)"S
Mllwaukl••..................... 29 31 ...., 7~
(1('\·dand ...................... JJ 41
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C'hlc·~o ....... ...... ,.. , ........ :tl 2ft ) lf.! tallrot'nla ..................... :w ~ ..."loll

Ki.•nsa!i Cl ~· ................. :12 Y1 .5l6
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....
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Mlnol.'lOIII

1\0tw York 6, 8altlmo11' 4
J:ltotrll!t !1, lb;tm 8
('allfomla 7, Clevt'tand l

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H 1 111

(SI8totl

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11 1 C11"'\'rland

I

i\ mC!'ting of 1hr Meigs County
Chapt er of Make Today Count
organ ization \\·ill be held Thur1&gt;day,
7 p.m., at theS&lt;•nio,- CI!Izen'sCentcr,
Mulberry H&lt;'ighls. Pomeroy .

•

ll'P

•·ream !!iOdal ;;et

Trittit y Church. PomPro.v, will
stagr an ico Cream soc ia l from 10
a. m. to fi p.m. 11tursda y and Friday
in the chur·ch sO&lt;·iat •·ooms. Sa ndwiches. other food it ems. and
be1wages will also be ava ila ble
durind tht' socia I.

Two .-mergenc&gt;y run;;
Mt'igs Count y EmergC'rtcy Medical Scr-viCC' reports two ca lls on
Monda y: Racine at 7:09 p.m. to
Bmadwa y an.d Main 'for Elson
Spencrr to Vl'terans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 9:09p.m. to
IIJR Mulberry for Blanche Wolfe to
Holzer Mrdica l Center,

The Meigs County Heaith Department Is advising all organizations
that will be selling food during the
Heritage Days celebration this
weekend may need to obtain a
temporary food service license.
These organizations ma y contact
the Meigs County Health Department In reference to obtaining the
temporary license. Rl.'presenla- ·
tlves of such groups should call Jon
Jacobs or Joe Young at 992·6626.

Jis htn~ Compan,v ·MulllmNIIa , InC.,
Poml"roy. Ohi o 45769, Ph . 992·21!'16. s,..
cond ciaS!'! posl\l.~r pai d at Pomeroy.
Ohi o.

Area deaths
.

M{' mbPr: l lnlrt&gt;d Prrss Intcrnallonal.
Inla nd Dally Prf'Ss As sociation a nd 1ht"
Ohio Nf'ws J.Iaper Association. National
Adv('rfls ln~ Rf pn •sf' ntatlve, Branham

Freda ·M. Be;~n ·

N('W!!papei- SalE'S;, 73.1 .Thl(d AyrtluJ!,
Nt&gt;W ~ork , New Yo rk 10017 . ·
·

POSTMAST~~·: · St&gt;nd

addrt&gt;S!I chan~t"'fi
to ThE' Dally SconllriC'l. 111 Cout1 St. ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4~769.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By c._rrler or Molor RoUk ·

KElLER BUSINESS SERVICES
ACCOUNTING &amp; DATA PIOCISSING

;~~~:~~-~~~ sJ:1W PH. (614). 992·7270
OUR SERVICES INCLUDE
- Computerized ~counting
- lntern•l Control
-.(ax Planning

- Sale• Analyela
'

.

-

Peyroll Proc111lng
Federal • State Raporte
Profit • Loa Stlhlmanta
Financial Stltementl

THE PROFESSIONAL SERVICE liOR A
SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS
J

Pill~l l(h ..•.•

..
..

~

San Dk&gt;Q:O .. .... .
C"il!:clnrwll .. •.• .•.

,'aj!l -

!~T"(IH

~

1

. 32 :11 ~Iii

I'
'i
'I

·n Jl '"ill
. :r; .U 4~ .1
San f-'1' aoci:;co ........... 2'} .'t \ .M' 1:!
I..(Jiol Anj.!! 'l" ..
Allan Ia .... , . . ,.

.•.

1\lttid14y·.. K.'IIUJI.Io
Cinl1 n~tt

6, San F ranr l!oCV I
4. Mt-'llnoal I
f\01"10.• r r.ark. 'i. ("hlr~o l
St . Loubl ti. l'hlladdphi&lt;l:.!
1\llanta

On(' Mori th .......... ...... ....... .......... $4.80
On!'_VC'a r .... ... ..................... ... ., $:"i7.20
SINGLE COPY
. PRICE
Dally ...... ... ........... .............. 25 CC' ntl:i

Subscrlbf;&gt;rs not d E&gt;Sir in ~ to pay thf' car ·
rlt'r ma y r('mlt In adv ancC' dl rC'c t to
Th e Qall,v Sf:&gt;ntln£'1 on a .l, ~o r 12 month

(Television Receh;er Only)
system for your home or
business or ~~ a u may be one
of the half-m illion wh o
already own one. E1t_he r way,
you probably have Questions. We will begin lhe
series with the onswers to
the ques tions we are most
Qften ,asl&lt;.ed. And we wilt
·. keep : v6U informE: d .. of" new .
d~v~fopments . ·m program ~

mmg and .eQUipment

Hrlj ..IIJr\ at ,\tJ.•n•a .. nh.:b•

l..o&lt; Am.l('tr... 11

Of Your Newly Remodeled
Gallipolis Kroger Store

Domino
.Suaar
s.ib.

..

.:..

.•

LIMIT 1 PLEASE

ln"kle Ohio

. ..... .. ........ ...... ... $29.12
..... $~.24

Oul1kle Ohltr
13 Wrcks ..... ....... .................. .. $15.60
26 Wt'PkS ........... ................ , ... . $31.20

NET WT

show
you
what
the
excitement is all about. We
h-::ve what you want to watch.
And w~ ha1e the answers.

5 LBS.

INDIVIDUALLY WRAPPED SLICES
KROGER AMERICAN

_.. · Cheese -. .~ ·

.

.

]J \V('('kS . .. ............. ... ........ ..... $1•1.56

I.

c
'
Mayor S Ourt

Food .....' ...........-12-~z.

ggc

-.

co.-11try-. Club ..
Canned Ham

TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO
(IHidt IM Po1t Office I
BUSINESS HOURS:
~n. ·Fri. 2•~; Sat. 11· S

3-lb.

88

~2 Weeks ... .................. .... ........ $59.80

I

.

Six defendants were fined and
three others forfeited bonds in the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Seyler Tuesday night.
)&gt;orfeltlng were Howard Shank,
Pomeroy, $48; Clark Baker, Pome·
roy, $46; Davis Shane, Gallipolis,
$46, and Mark Hood, Middleport,
$44, all posted on speeding ~harges;
Louie Christian, Pomeroy, $63,
traffic light violation, and Mark
Griffith, Parkersburg,$43, stop sign
violation.

Fined were Duane Qualls, Pome.
roy,$113a nd costs,intoxlcatlon,and
$338, resisting arrest; Jerome
Howard, Route 4, Pomeroy, $113

DUGAN'S

KROGER VAC PACK

FRONT-END ALIGNMENT
:_,2, YEARS EXPERIENCE -

Located On Main St. in Rutland
*Complete Front End Parts &amp; Service
*On-Car Computer Balancing
*Chassis Pasts In Stock
FRONT END ALIGNMENT SPECIALISTS COMPlET~D
THE DANA SCHOOL OF CHASSIS REBUILDING &amp; ALIG~MENT

of a controlled
and costs, possesion
substance;
Linda Flynn,
Portland,

IL----~F~o~r~!!~~~~C~a!l27~4~2~·~2~0~5~7~=~j

$47 a nd costs, speeding.

j.r;;;;;;;::;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;~

Ralph E. Searles',-Rutland, forfe·
lied a $450 bond, posted on a charge
of driving while Intoxicated, in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.

HERITAGE WEEKEND

.SPEC

'

C&amp;A
AUTO REPAIR

For Homemade Bread J(lst
Like Grandma's Try Our ~qsy
Homemade Breads, Muffir; tJnd
Biscuit Mixes.
·

Phone 949-2777

OLD FASHION PEANUt BUnE~
PUlE MAPLE SYIUP
BUCKSTIAP and UNSULPHURED MQL4SSES

320 Stli StrHt

Racine, Oh.

"ANNOUNCES"

. The Expansion of Our Services
To Our Customers To Include:
*Complete Front End Repair &amp; Alignment
*Computerized Wheel Balance
*TIRES (All Sizes-Cars, Trucks, Far111l
AIL AT A

"SUPER DISCOUNT PRICE"

·10°/o OFF THURs: thru $AT.

Whole Kernel

Corn

SLICED
FREE

3 $}

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

12-oz .

SLICED

Ole Carolina

Bacon ................... .

NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE

BUYONE·
Bl·g K:
GETONE
Soft Drink....... 2-Lt~. FREE!

120 SHEETS PER ROLL

Swansoft
Paper Towels
Single Roll

Ia.

NIW l'riiiS
Temato
G..UC U.tuine illfd
Spinach Iaiii GarliC fettucchle hent
· IMtl Plllf• fador , ltheM

Ripe Sweet
Peaches
Pound

without waiting tqr t ~em to
appear here, ca ll ut. Or
be,ter yet, drop by artd vis it
)'lith us i n person . We can

M:ah Suh8crlptlonH
~2 Wl'f'ks ... ..... .. ........ ...

~~~ fl••~~~

Pm .. t;w.HJ![l.u ._l(orHt•;rl tl1Sf)11
l'tlilad!'lph.liJ tll Sl l .rA.Ii" ru,.:ht

COPYRIGHT 1986 - THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD SUNDAY , JUNE 18, THROUGH SATURDAY, JUNE
22. 1986, IN GALLIPOLIS &amp; POMEROY. WE RESERVE THE
RIGHT TO LII\11T QUANTITIES . NONE SOLD TO DEALERS.

reading this coiUmrj regu·
larly. 0 .1 course if YO tJ want

..

26 W&lt;'C'ks .

1l.wr.dliy'.. (,..,, .....
oJI :"\('V. ) '•Ill.

So

No subsC.~ iptlons. by ni~~~ prrr1,ltl &lt;'d l,IJ.
tow ns· wh t'&gt; r&lt;' homl' curr l£'r .s.:•rvlcf"&gt; li!i
a\'JIIabiC'. ,

'

1'&gt;1 ,II '\ ;oy. \"utJ..
l.'ipm
lh.LI.,If&gt;fl •."\ 11"4-i p 'l ':"o 111 1\ll. rn lo~ r ll&lt;•ln •
s1an:l.'i1. ~ . .M lpm
l'tuJ;JfiPII)hio.l 11-\l.o.f.m.m Ill ,11 \t 11'-'i~
•l\ll du i&lt;~l U11.,lol npm
'-.In P ~~ o rHa.,.km ~ II II• ,., (JY. 1\n~•lr...,
1 1il ·u~., I 'il Ill 1i pIll

BIG
fiVEEK

keep up With the 1nd1..1Sfry by

basis. Cr£•d ll wllll:x"&gt; glv('n rarrlrr ea£'h

monlh.

MnniJT-;ol

d(\l l}l'Ht"l

S..n 1-r.onn .... ·o:(ll

:i, Hou.~1on Z
~.

.-~1

i( &gt;~•.d •nlt t..j

C" h K-~1'

Pitl.~bu•~h

San Dic'Jro

11 .. r•,,mr t &lt;n. t fr! 1•11
l'l i i~)LI !W:h !lliLt ••n 2fh
' lit"-kl1tl -, .t•. ~ ,,.,I, n1
{'flJI.-1-(U

..:ri lfl 'KI

.. :~ :.!!l ~:!'

HoUSIUI .. ... ..... ..

L Pt1. GB

21

\\•odrl•--..d.j) ·~ Galli• "' I \II nuw .. t;tr( !
f'IO("IJ\O.•J! r'io &gt;!Q 1\ "n ,It "'" l 1-r,;OI.·I'·f'l•

JRo

answers to your Questions

On&lt;' W('f'k ............ ...... ..... ·...... .. .... $1 .10

Funds distributed
Registrar Michael J. McCulllon
announced that tbe Bureau of Motor
Vehicles has the May, J985dlstrlbu·
tlon of license tax revenul",&gt; totaUng
$55,784,159.97 ready for disbursement to local governments. Meigs
County will receive $194,366.43.

f'I:I"A' Yotlo.. ...
Phll~lphl:. ..

T• J.ij \i~
... ll l:h 'iii I
. ... :1-J 'IJ "t\j 11 ~
. 2~ :n ..«1 '" ·

Marriage license

1

•

funrral home a (ter ( p.m . on
ThurSday ~nd. until tirile of serVICeS
· Freda M. Bean, 84; Guysvilie, a . on Friday. Easfer:n Siar serviees
will be held at the funeral home at 7
school teacher in Athens and·Meigs
p.m. 11tursday.
Counties for over 40 years, died
Tuesday evening at O'Bleness
Hospital In Athens following an Lillian R. Daniels
extended Illness.
Born at Tuppers Plains, she was a
Mrs. Lillian Reed Daniels died
daughter of the late · Harold and Saturday morning in a Vera Beach,
Laura Matlack Parker. She is F la., hospital following a short
survived by her husband , Foster illness.
Bean, and · several nieces and
Shewasthedau~hterofthelateD.
nephews. Besides her parents, two Curlls and Mary E. Reed, former
-brothers pl'eceded-her in death. · • Pomeroy residents. 'She w&lt;Js also
Cd.'
·
·
·:
·· .-- .:·. Mrs. Beimwasamember·oft)le.· - preceded in dea tltby one sister.
Before the break-up of AT&amp;T, Guysville United Me thodist Church Mary , who died In infa ncy, ·and a
Ohio Bell carried all the long- · and Minear Chapter 274, Order of brother, Robert E. Reed.
distance traffic In Ohio. Today that EasternStar,andwasapastworthy
Survlvlng are her husband , Ritraffic is limited to smaller regions matron of that organization. She chard D.; two children, Linda Vidal
wit hin the state and that the smaller was a past high worthy priestess of and Richard C. Daniels and five
service area has resulted in lower the White Shrine.
grandchildren. Other survivors ar'l?
income, he sa id.
Services will be held a t I p.m . a brother, William Curtis Reed.
Friday at the White Funeral Home Sara toga. Ca lif., and an uncle,
In Coolville with the Rev. Cha rles FrederlckReed,Okemos,Mich.She
Jack and the Rev. H. Lawrence was the grandda ughter of the late
McDaniel officiating. Burial will be w. F. Reed, founderofthe Farnners
in
the Tuppers Plains Christian Bank in Pomeroy.
\''eterans Memorial
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
Services will beannouf\ced later.
Admlsslons .. LJnda Pridemore,
Middleport; Helen Frank, Pome.
roy; Elison Spencer, Racine.
Discharges..None.

Must obtain license

"""W

!'.10nln&gt;al ..................... .:n T!

.

cnrc.,..~o

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Tuesday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers: Dally Niunber
919.
.
Ticket sales totaled $1,109,670,
with a payoff due of $211,866. PICK-l
5888.
P!CK-4 ticket sales totaled
$162,843.50, with a payoff due of
$73;442.
PICK-4$1 straight bet pays$8,160.
PICK-4 $1 box bet pays$2,040. - - -

Meigs County happenings ..
Mf'f'ls Thursday

;~ I.

C111lfornto at Clr\•f.'"land. niJChl
a.ton at TOI'OII!O. niRhl
SPank' at Tua ~. nl}!ht
Mlnnt"!!OOa 11 Kans.u City, ntf[ht
NA110No\L lEAGUE

Mll~"&gt;'au"-.'{'

t \' uiKWidi:Z-4 1, 1:·3'1 p,m,
1\0(!W York I ~'NI.!'Oil l ~l at Rattlmol"(' tO .
MotrUnv1 ~.\ 1 , i:~ p.m.
Ibttan t~d 8.4t at Dt&gt;trolt I Tl'l"fPII i2t.
7::t'i p.m.
CaUI!Jmla

INolrs

Mland 011! Chlc".tJtO• ~I
Nt'W York 111 Detroll. ni~Ctlt

G*N!tl (All""- ElYI'i

1Cla.tl{')'

4--l l.ll:" ~ p.m.
t'ioun« ~\ at Tf')CP ~

,..,.,.,... G~YNK

Mllwallk.fo(&gt; 4, 'toronto 1
Kansas Cll}' 10, Mlnneeo~a 1
Tl'!las 8. ~Uk' 5
W~'•

:1-.11 a 1 Kan111 ~ Cit~·

StaNk'
8;.\S p.m. .

Chlcalo 4. daklM&lt;i 3113 lnnlroe&amp; l

Toronto

1nt1100

S1 I.Lll l' .

Join In The

A marriage license has been
issued in Meigs County Probate
ANDREWS MR FORCE BASE, fact, the United States Is tonight a
"We cannot and will not tolerate Court to Mlchat&gt;l Todd Manley, 21,
Md. (UP!)- ThebodyoftheNavy nation being attacked by Interna- this evil."
and Melissa Lynn Wise, 18, both of
dl.ver killed by Mosl.etn hijackers of . tional terrorists."
Eight guards In d~ white Goshen, Indiana.
a TWA jetliner In Beirut was
Stet hem was bludgeoned with the unlfonns carried the casket to a . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' returned to his native land, and
butt of a pistol and shot to death by white hearsP. Kenneth Stet hem, 24,
President Reagan hailed Robert
Shiite Moslems aboard hijacked wearing his Navy uniform, tearfully
Dean Stethem as a "young AmeriTWA Flight 847 , Friday. '['he saluted .as his brother's casket was
can hero.''
hijackers then dumped his body slipped Into the hearse.
As the setting sun broke through a onto the tarmac of Beirut InternaThe silence of the prDC&lt;'Sslon was
thin blanket of gray clouds, the body
tiona l AiflJPrt.
broken by solemn strains from a
of the 23-year-old victim arrived
Members of Stethem's family- · Navy band.
Tuesday night in an olive. and -grey each associated with the Navy Tears streamed down the face of
camouflaged C·l41 Navy transport,
openly wept a few ya rds from the
the
victim's mother, Patricia, and
flying from an American base n!'ar white casket, draped with an
The biggest problem in the
Madrid, Spain.
Amer·tcan flag, duri ng the she embraced her husband Rl·
satellite TV industry now is
chard, a retired Navy man, while
Information . lr, this relatively
One hour Ia ter, Reagan opened his ceremony.
uniformed
chaplains
·offered
praynew
and rapidly growing innationally tel!'vlsed news conferSpeaking on the tarmac a t the
dustry, it seems that you
ers
for
the
slain
diver.
ence at the White House saying:
base, outside the nation's capital
either can't find out enough
Ot you get too much con·
"One hour ago the body of the young and only a few miles from Stethem' s
ffictlng information.
American hero, the Navy diver hometown of Waldorf, Md. , Vice
This is the first in a series
The Daily Sentinel
Robert Dean Stethem, was returned President George Bush declared:
qf c: olumns whi ch will appear
weeki~ to help you unde r·
to his native soil in a coffin after he "Robert Dean St!'them was an
stand what a sa tel lite earth
(USPS lU·llfiOI
was beaten and shot at point ·blank innocent victim of a cruelty that
station does, how il wo rk s
A Division of MuUirnedh•, Inc.
and what yOu should expect
range. Hlsmurderandthefateofthe knows no bounds a nd a barbarism
frOm us. your proleSsional
Published (&gt;VC'ry. afternoon. Monday
other hostages still being held in that selects th(. blameless for
satellite TV dealer. You may
th rough Friday, 111 Court S1., Po·
Beirut underscores an inescapable punishment.
be consideri ng a TVAO
mer oY Ohio, by the Ohio Va llry Pub-

By agreement of counsel, a
preliminary injunction hearing in
the action o!the Ohio Department of
Health against Mary Young, Pomeroy, schi&gt;duied to be held this
morning, was postponed until
Wednesday, July 3, in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.

Improved earnings.
"The weather in 1984 was 11
percent colder (on average] than in
1983," he said. "In our business
that's a big detenninlng factor. The
second factor Is the economy has
picked up. And , finally, we've had
improved efficiency In .operations."
J 'rofits _ior Ohio Bell teleph6ne
slipped 6.8 pe~nt in 1984; ·. !;he.
Consumers' Counsel survey said. ·
However, the utUity's return on
equity went from 10.2 percent ln1983
to 15.9 percent In 1984.
Ohio Bell spokesman David
Kandel said two factors accounted
for the drop m' total revenues.
Kandel said the money tlfat Ohio
Bell once received from leasing
equipment to homeowners fell by
$209 million when the collection of
those funds was transfe~~ to
American TelepltQe'and Telegraph:

'I'WIMII.Y• .._...

tBtylt'Ym ~6 t. 1: 3"1 p.m .
Oakland IKI"U(&gt;JJ'r 4·7·1at Chk'• II3UJ'"I\S
7-!'.1, 8::11 p.m.

Ohio louery winners

Utility profits top
$1.7 billion in '84
COLUMBUS (UP!) -The Ohio
Office of Consumers' Counsel re- ported Tuesday that overall profits
for the state's U largest utilities
topped $1.7 billion lastyear, surpass: ing I~S:r s total by 7.8 percent.
The informat ion in the consu!Tlers' counsel' s survey was taken_
. fiw 'n the · annual re.Jiorts that .
companies filed at .the Public
Ut ilities Commiss ion of Ohio.
Profit s of Columbia Gas of Ohio
roS&lt;' 174 fX'l 'Cent after two years of
declining profi ts ..Spra tley sa id.
Although seemingly .high, Spra tley said the gas company's' return
on equity was more moderate.
totoling 12 ..1 percent last year.
"The thing you have to consider is
th at Columbia Gas had two bad
.vears in 1982 when their return on
rquity wa~
percent and in 1983
... when their r~tu rn was q_&amp;per_cent ,"
· •a id: Stevc•n Qs lrahder·. OCC
spokc•sman.

Sratdt• ... ...... ......... 21 .1'i ..w4 7
M i n~a .... , ........... ._., .. S :W .433
71,&lt;j
T(')la~ ........ ....... ;~, .......... :&amp;'i J8 .:ffl lO

AMfo-:R.ICM' 1..£,\Gl/E
By \lnlld ~ JNI"ftlldon.lj
F....

Scoreboard

The Daily

Ohio

Majors

Partly cloudy toilay with widely
scattered showers and thunderstorms. The highs wUI be near 75.
Partly cloudy tonight and Thursday. Lows tonight wiU bent&gt;ar55and
highs Thursday in the upper 70s.
The probability or preclpltatlon is
30 percent today, 20percent tonig ht
and 10percent Thursday.
Exleoded Forecast
Fair Friday and Slll)day with a
chance or showers and thunder·
stonns Satunlay. IDghs will be In
the 80s. Lows will be in the 50s
Friday, in the 80s Satunlay and in
tbe mid 50s to low flOs Sundar.

Hearing postponed
Arthur Walker admitted to FBI
agmts follow ing hi s arrf'st May 27
that he took $12,00l from his brother,
.John Walkf&gt;r, in retum for documents he got from the defense
contractor, VSE Corp., in ChesafX'a~r. Va .. where he worked as an

June 19, 1985

Wednesday, June 1'9, 198&amp;

.

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BI;EF

Boneless Top

Sirloin Steak .......
NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE,,

RC-100,

Springdale

Diet Rita
or RC Cola

2%DellMilk
on
2-Ltr.

For

3 PLEASE

LIMIT 2-Z·LTR. BTLS. WITH t11.8a
ADDITIONAL PURCHASES

t•

LIMIT ONE COUPON PEA FAMILY
~ GOGO lUll. JUNl !NAT. JUII Zl.
UJICI TO AP'PUCAI~IITAII • LOCAl. TAMil

.".:

�Page- 6- The Oailv Sentinel

.

•OHIO VALlEY FOODLAND
•GALLIPOLIS FOODLAND
•POINT PLEASANT FOODLAND
.:-.-.. ._ •BIG BEND FOODLAND

Pomerov- Middleport. Ohio

......
,.HREE:.WHEELER

~

The Daily Sentinel
r-----1iiiEi:-wHii'Lii" _____

By The Bend

l

Fifth WEEI( SWEEPSTA..ES !..... . ............ !
•.. r arv 1 oU\·
'" I
I
~ '"'''' I,~·::::::::::::.::.::: . ::.:::·:::: ::·:: j
Annl.e s ~o\;oOo't~~o

Wednesday. June 19. 1985
Page- 7

til

~ '1

PlfiJ'~Z~.,

Ad4rHs . . . . . • • . . . .

Camp meeting/pJanned

•• • • • . . . . . . • . . • • • • .

Pastor Michael Pangio of the
Rejoicing Life Baptist Church,
located at 333 North Second St..
Middleport. Invites th£' public to a
series of camp meeting services
with evangt&gt;list Richard Myers.
· Myers will be preach ing on
Sunday, June 2.3, 10 a.m. and 7 p.m.
and the services wW continue
Monday through Wednesday at 7
nightly. Encouraging Christian
unity, Myt&gt;rs ministers In a wide
varit&gt;ty of denominations and wei·
comes prople from all backgrounds
to attend the meetings. The special

L-------FOODLAND ~-------

J

SUNNY. CANE.

IVIORE TIIAN FIGID'ING FffiES - Social activities ·hav¥Jways

FlESH LEAN

GUNNOE'S

heen a part of the volunieer fire departments and during the depression

GROUND
CHUCK

PORK
SAUSAGE

going off lor a lew days or a week at the firemen's camp on East Shade
Rlw•r w hunt and Hsh was a popular way to get away from II aD. The
firemen wak thL~ first ward truck the site. Here a ltJ'OUP shows there

to

$14

$149

Beat of the bend

"Against the outsidE' wall and In mpr and Reid's Hardware Store
By BOB HOEFLICH
front
of his bakery establlslunent, began a mild form of counterfeit·
Sentinel Staff Writer
Fr£'d StPinbauer has hung a lng. From scrap Iron, and with such
Anyon€' intE'r£'Sted in som€' .old
Mrs. Alicia WarnPr, 247B Mul· machine that Is vt&gt;ry attractive to toolS as they could sE'CUre, the boys
music from
berry Ave., Pomt&gt;roy, nE'eds to get tht&gt; juvt&gt;nilt&gt;fratt&gt;rnltyofboth sexE'S. wer£' ablE' to producE' a copy of thE'
around the tum of
In
touch immedlatt&gt;ly with Don and
"This wonderful box contains penny that fooled ·:steiney's" rna·
the century'(
Sally
Fowlt&gt;r who appar£'ntly ChPWing gum of various kinds and Chin£' ev~ time. '
.
Lloyd Black·
moved rPCently. If you can help numerous cakE'S of fine candy. To
"TheSP mischievous young
wOOd purchased
pleaSP notify them to contact Mrs. gE't a choice package of this A.mt&gt;rlcans werE' having a royal
''onp of those
Warner.
confectiont&gt;ry, It is necessary to good time in the practiCE' of tht&gt;ir
boxes" at an aucplaCP .a pPnny in the slot, ·press a little deception but o! coufSE', ·thE'
tion Saturday and .
button
Indicating the deslr£'d flavor first time "Stelney" unlocked thP
thought he was getting a box of old
WomE'n
of
Sacrro
Ht&gt;art
Church
a
nd
thE'
Ingenious ilttlE' machinE' ' pPnny d£&gt;POSltory he dlscover£'d the
books. Howev€'r, when he later
examined the container he found it - known for their talent in the sends Into your hand a cake of the clPVPr cht&gt;at that was bE'lng
practiced.
was mostly old music - opert&gt;ttas, kitchen - will be staging a public wax.
"Now there's no being on earth
"A littlE' quiet observation led to
cantata s and that type thing lasagna dinner from 5 to, 7 p.m.
Thursday In thE' ch1,1rch auditorium. likE'S wax so WE'll as a boy,·E'XCE'pt a the dt&gt;tei:tlon o! the builty partiE's
published .in thP early 1900's.
D\1 cqntact Lloyd If colletting.iJid · You c.an a full dinner with dessert girl. But What enj oymt&gt;nt can a boy and then 11 ~arnE' Mr. Stt&gt;lnb1\u·
and ·beverage for' $4; $2.50 lor-.. gp.t out ·of a J61·ofwax s&lt;ilorigas 11 is er's duty to' tnforrh the parents of .
· -. ~u slc Is y0ur thing .
· · ·· ·
children.
· · ·
· ·locked up ih a· casi irtln box? And . · the erring boyS. :·
how Is Mr . Boy going to get any wax
Rev. Bill Perrin asks. that we
"At least onE' of the boys got a
Dicky J. · KJng of Pomt&gt;roy If he hasn't a pt&gt;nny?
mention that Holy Communion will
"Young
Amt&gt;rlca
began
to
reason
sound
threshing for his youthful
graduated
from
Washington
Tech·
be obscrveq at the Trinity Church in
in
this
wise:
Now.
a
penny
.takes
the
Indiscretion
which probably had thP
nical
Collt&gt;gE'
In
Marietta
Friday.
Pomeroy Sunday during the 10:30
ca
ke
every
tlme;
a
penny
Is
metal;
effE'Ct
io
take
some of the romance
Dicky graduated cum laude
a.m. moming worship serv ict&gt;. ThP
why
won't
plt'Ct's
of
lead
and
Iron
of
out
of
the
advt&gt;nturP,
and thE'
announc(•ment failed to get into the receiving his degrt'E' In data
exactly
th£'
same
sizE'
and
shaPE'
thought
of
a
heated
posterior
may
pt"OCPssing.
&lt;€'gular bulletin.
make thP machine givp down its quench his ardor for any such
And you think today's young wax jUst the same as the common future opt&gt;ra lions."
Do WP have anyone locally
Franres GOE'glein provided the
brollle cmt?
people are a problem.
involved in civil liberty and that
"So, two or threP mischievous . old nPWspapt&gt;r so·you'd know that
It was the Oct. 26, 189.1 edition o(
typP action? Somronr askro me the
quPStlon tl\r othet day and! haven't 'rhii. o.a lly T~lt&gt;graph ln. ~oll"leror urchinS took penny for a model ·crime has always existed,
and .retJrl~~~:
to the r£'ar
pf GPnhei·
. ..' Do
befon able "to loca tE&gt; a soul tl)at you .tHat rew~ted: . .
·.
..
.
.
'·
. - . '
'. keep smiling...

ENERS
'

'

\.
\

\."
BOSTON

· · R()LL
. RO#\ST .·
1-lh.

Boxes and surprises at auction
turn too If you nE'ed advlct&gt; or help.
Do let me know

HYGRADE
~

were plenty of squirrels out there. Front left Is the late Edwald Booth
grandfather of Olin Booth. who provided the pk-ture, with the lat~
Dayton and Roy Strickland, front right; and Charles McNamee,
standing tall left. Booth hasn't heen able to ldenUfy the others.

59 (

l •.

$ '199

.

a

~

~

Community calendar I area happenings

beamE' a director of marketing for
one of AmPrica's larg&lt;'St construe·
lion firms . US Home.
HP became siJ Invol ved In the
buslnE'Ss world that he becam(' vicE'
president of marketing in a major
east coast advt&gt;rtising agpncy.
During th is pt&gt;riod he devplopcd an
expt&gt;rtise In television. radio and the
print media with cllmts such as
Amt&gt;rican Broadcasting Co., Gulf
and Westesrn, JVIE'S Watches and
Jamaica Tourism.
ThP public is Invited to attend the
servicE'S.

r~~~~~~~~~ii

meetings
s Inthe
lathabundPnt
building
prlncipl&lt;'swUI
for focu
living
life.
Responding to a call to the
ministry aftpr a dozen years in thE'
business WQrld, Myers first served
as the adm inistrator ofthE' Merlin R.
Carothers Foundation of Praise.
It was under Carothers ministry
that he became well versed in the
power of pra lse and was llct&gt;nsed as
a ministE'Sr of thE' gospel. UndE'r the
aegis of Christians United for Jesus,
Myers ent ered full timpevangPlistic
work In 1978. Since that tlme his
work has focused on local church
mt&gt;etings and seminars, but bas also
included radio and tPievision
ou treaches.
In his mid·twPnties, Myers was a
tqp salE'Sman with the 3M Company
four consecutiVE' years. Later, he

531 JACkSON PIKE · RT. J5 WEST
Phonl 446- 4~

LASAGNA
DINNER
SACRED HEART
CHURCH
THURS., JUNE 20, .1985
5:00 TO 7:00 P.M.
Adulls 54.00, Children 52 .SO

Shrtddtd ...lb. $2. 19

SMITHFIELD

BOILED HAM •••••• !~·~:~..~·. S1. 9 5
1-LB. SMITHFIELD VACUUM PACKED
SLICED BACON .......~~~·••• S1.69
SUPEIIOI BREAKFAST HAM
LUNCH MEAT ••••••••••~~•••• S1.89
HOMEMADE
•
HAM SALAD
S,

1-U. GoWen ltl• QtrL

:niURSDAY

JIF

SLICED

PEANUT
BUnER
21

POMEORY ~ Southern Local
School District will meet in rt&gt;gUlar
session Thursday, 7:30p.m ., in the
high school cafeteria .

SLAB BACON

oz.$2 59

LB.

, BI-lliE

SALTINES.

POMEROY - Sout hern High
stag0 band will practice at the school
Thursday 6: :li p.m. for a Heritage
Days· performance.

$1139

FtESH LEAf~~ '

POMEROY - The Rock Springs
Better Health Club will mppt at l : 15
p.m. Thursday a t th0homeofLoulsc
Bearhs. ThE' program will be by
Teresa Abbott and th0 contest by
ViolPt Hysell.

Ground a·eef
KRAfT'

VELVEETA
CHEESE

3

~~~2~-~~...- $ 49

'

POMEROY- A.lasagna dinner
Will be held Thursda)' from~- 7 p.m.
at thr Sacred Heart Ca tholic
Church. The menu will include
lasagna, tossed sa lad or colE' slaw,
hot roll, piE' or ca ke, and beverage.
Cost for dinners is $4 for adults and
$2.50 for childt"C'n.
POMEROY - Trinity Ch urch of
Pomeroy is having an ice cream
social Thursday and Friday. Sa nd '
withes, baked beans. potato salad ,
cole slaw, oth&lt;'r desserts, b&lt;'verages
and
and noodlE'S

will also bP available from10 a.m. to
6 p.m. both days. Quarts of Ice
cream can be ordered by calling
992-3m. 992-3222or992-54ll}.
·
1

SpPakE'rS wiD be Rev. Bud Hatf!Pld
and Rev. Ralph Workman. Thef£'
will be specialsinging and thE' public
is invited.

POMEROY Meigs County
Democratic ExE'Cutive Committt&gt;e
will met&gt;! at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at
Carpt&gt;ntPr's Hall, E. Main St. ,
Pomeroy. AlllntefE'St~ Democrats
arc invited to attend the SE'Ssion.

SATURDAY

FRIDAY

POMEROY - Local chapter of
thE' Full Gospel Busin&lt;'Ss Mt&gt;n's
F€'1lowship International will be
held at the Pomeroy Senlor Citlzt&gt;ns
Center Friday with dinner at 6:30
p.m, and the meeting at 7:15p.m.
Th&lt;' meeting is open to thE' public.
DinnPr reSPrvations ar&lt;'S6. Richard
Myers. evangelist, will be thE'
speaker.
RACINE-RacinPUnitedMetho·
dist Women wiD have a chlckennoodl&lt;' dinner Friday at thP church
with sctv lng beginning at4 p.m.

CHESTE R - ThP Mt&gt;lgs County
Fish and Gam£&gt; Club will have a fret&gt;
chicken barbeque for all members
preceding Saturday's children's
fishing derby. Serving will begin at?
p.m. and members at? asked to
bring a covered dish.
CHESTER - Mt&gt;igs County Fish
and Game's annual Kid's Fishing
DPrby for children agPS 1·16, will be
hE'Id Saturday, 8 a.m. 10 2 p.ni., at
tht&gt;lr lakE', 3\ol milE'S wE'St of Chester.
Follow thP signs. Pole and baIt must
bP furnished by participants.
CHESTER- Shad&lt;' RivPr Lodge
at ChestPr wUI meel In special
session Saturday, 7:30 p.m., with
work In the master mason d~.
RUTLAND - Rutland Bowhunter's Assocla lion wiU conduct a frre

certified National Bowhunter's Ed·
uca tion Program Saturday, begin·
rung at 9 a.m ., at the clubhouse. To
pl"E'-rE"gister call R.T. StE'Wat1.
742-300;, or Sa nd ra Baer, 992-5138.
SUNDAY

POMEROY - Pomeroy Volun·
tPPr Fire DPparlmen t wiII hold a
chicken barbecue Sunday at thE' fire
sta tion. Butternut Ave .. Pomeroy.
Dinner wUI include a half chickPO,
baked beans, cOlE' slaw, and a roll.
SE'rving wUI begin atll a.m.
BRADFORD- Bradford Church
of Christ wUI hold Bible School
closing exerciSE's Sund ay evening,
7:30p.m.. at the church.
POMEROY - Descendant s of
Eliza and Ed Hayman will hold a
reunion at Forked Run StatE' Park
on Sunday. A baskE't lunch wUI be
served at noon. All friends and
rt&gt;laUves . are invitro to an~nd .
Families are asked to take a
covered dish and their own table
serviCP.

MASON, W.Va. -The Christian
Brethrm Chu rch, Mason, W. Va.,
will hold revival services at 7:30
p.m. Friday, Saturday and

24 CT.

MARGARINE ........... 2/S 1.19
1-l.b. Dhie Colloy
LONGHORN CHEESE;.. 51.97

72 CT. 3·11. lAG

12 01. lraft Slaglos

CAUF. ORANGE ........ 3/89•

HEAD lEnUCE .....~••••• 59'

16 Slice A.IIHir. Proc.

CHEESE ..............~f;.• '1.8'
HIUAIIDAil

liD lOME

:1 DOZ. PAl

APPLES ................~••• $1.19

SMALl EGGS ........~!~:.. 5 1.49

NOODLES •••••••••••••••••••~!·.•. 9 8 c
1-LB. TASTY BIID FiliNG

CHICKEN LIVERS ••••••••~~n~••• 69(
10'12 OI. CAMPIEU'S ABC

VEGETABLE SOUP ....... 2/79&lt;
46 OI. DEL MONTE

GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ••c.a.11. S1.2 3
15'14 OI. DEL MONTE TROPICAL

FRUIT SALAD ••••••••••••c.a.l1 ••••• 87&lt;
21 OI. VAN CAMP

PORK &amp; BEANS •••5~'·· 2 /S1. 1 9
15 OI. CAN CHEF BOY-ARDEE COSMIC KID

MACARONI WITOMATO SAUCE ...... 2/99&lt;

WEEKEND SPECIAL
FRIDAY, SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY
'

REGULAR HOT DOGS.

3 FOR $1_.29 ·.
PORTLAND DAIRY BAR
oWe ll"•••rw The llltlht To Umlt Ouentltlel .~

...

"Across From The Portland Park"
POinAND, OHIO

PRATT'S
BEAUTY
SALON

Middleport, OH.

20°/o OFF
SELECTIVE PERMS
TUES. &amp; WEDS. ONLY
·'
l~tvliat• Mtrri Amsbary
Owner1 luth Medley (Me" II

32 OI. DAFT MIIACLE WIIP

SALAD DRESSING ••••••wt S1. 99
14.5 OI. BEnY CROCKER

GINGER BREAD MIX ••IAxS1.19
11 OI. JIF CREAMY

PEANUT BUTTER •••••••!~! S1.79
175 CT. FACIAL TISSUES

PUFFS •••••••••••• ~.~ •••••••\«&amp;! ••••• 99c
5 OI. 4·PACII HUNT'S or DEL MONTI

N

•

�--

--- ----·

__,.....

--

-~-- ~

--

--- --.-------- ..•- .....

--~--

Wednesday, June 19. 1985

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

PI!Qe- 8- The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

OAGC convention set july 16-18

Olillr

111 Court SL Po•row. Ohio 4S7U

The 55th annua l convention of the
Ohio Association of Garden Clubs
wil( be held J lily 16-18 at ·the L.lm a
Best WestPrn Motel, 32900 Bluellck
Road, with clowns. games, flowers
and fPilowshlp being the order of the
S('Sslon.
"Clrcus-Circus" Is the theme of
the !lower show. Classes such as
"Caged Tigers," "Fire-eater,"
"Juggle r." "Roaring Crowd," and
'Balancing Act" wUI set the mood of
the convention.
Convention goers will havp the
opportunity to att~nd clinics conducted by state cha hmen In a ll

phases of the OAGC work, enter a
clown contest, rtde an elephant, and
browse b1 a giant sa les area when
oot attending scheduled business
sessions.
Mrs. Henry Dolezal, Ripon, Calif.
will be theTuesdayevenlngbanquet
speaker using "It 's Ada ptable" In a
program of designs ranging from
the exotic to the commonplacP.
Alan D. Cook, dlrectorofextendl'd
service at thP Dawes ArborPturn,
Newark, will speak a t the Wednes·
day evening banquet on the topic,
" Low Maintenance Gardening, ThP
Toot h Fairy, Tax Cuts and Other

Myths." HP serves as an OAGC
counselor.
Keith H. Brooks, a Toledo floral
shp owner will sharP his expertise In
floral design Thursday afternoon In
" Ka leidoscopes by Keith." A florist
with a flare, he will presmt a
program of practical Ideas for
arrangers.
Rl'gtstratlon deadline Is June 29.
Informatlon may he obta ined by
contacting Mrs. Roger MacDonald ,
:m Koerber Dr., Defiance, 41512,
telephone number 419-784-3114 , or
,any local OAGC club.

•

Genealogical conventton held
Karl'n Werry, president of the
MP\gs County Genealogica l Society,
Robert a nd June Ashley, Letart
Fa lls; Keith AshlPy, Rock Springs,
and Mrs . Walter (TPrry) Dunn.
Dayton, a member of the local
chapter, a ttended the Ohio Cenea16glca l Society a nnual convention
hel\! a t th~ Columbus Sheraton
Hotel.
Among the highlight s of the
convention w•s tlie accepta nce of
induc tees Into F irst F•milies of
Ohio, a n honoary arm of the sta ll'
society recognizing those who
descend· from pr&lt;'-1820 Ohio
pioneers.
·Those present for the Induction
locally were L£&gt;1and Pa rkE'r and son,
Michael. both of whom joined on

George Wolfe and Thomas Batey;
Robert D. Ashley, who joined on
Henry Wolfe and Lydia Elliot, and
the Ia te Ra lph D. Ashley, who joined
on Henry Wolfe and Lydia E lliot
with Keith Ashley, his grandson,
accepting the medal and certificate.
Present members who had addl·
tiona! anrestor lines accepted were
the la te Cla ra Lochary, who added
Nathan Dean and Fanny Lane;
Ke ith Ashley and June Ashley who
added George Roush, Jacob Roush
and Nicholas Weaver , and Frances
Roberts who added George Rou;;h.
Various educational topics covered eomputer genealogy, a
problPm-solvlng paDPI, the legacy of
steamboats, ethnic history , gravp

'

·Mike Roberts, son of Mike and
Sharon Roberts of Heath, a nd
grandson of Nonga Roberts, Pomeroy, and the late Bob Roberts, has
been awarded four scholarships
tot a ling $6,lXI.
Rohe11s rPceiyed the Ohio Board
of Regents Academ ic SCholarship
for ·. $l,(XXl; the OWens Corning
Fiberglass. National Merit Schola r ship of $3,00l; The Denison UnlvE'rslty, Unlverslty ScholarScholarshlp
of $2,£XXI; and the Licking Rural
El~ttic Inc. awa rd of$300.
An honor student a t Hea th High
School, Robertsgradua tedonJune 2
maintaining a 3.85 grade point
ave rage. He a-ccumulated 22 '1.!
credits In the college preparatory
course and gradua ted In the top1,£XXI
seniors In the state of Ohio.

As a junior Roberts was inducted
into the National Honor Society and
named a eomrnended scholar on his
PSAT scores. Asasenlor,hetledfor
lhP top score on the SAT In hls high
school. He served as the only student
on the Heath Compute r Committee
for two years.
This year Roberts took many
awards Including crPative writing,
computer m ath, Heath Sertoma, the
Prpsldentlal Outs tanding Aca·
demic Achievement and .the Ohio
State Board Award of Distinction.
HI' graduated with majors in
English, social studls, math, science•
and foreign languagPandlsenrolled
at Denison University at GranvUle.
He plans to major In eomputer
sciencP and languages.

chairman of Mountaineer Pomona
·Gra nge: state lecturer's eommltieee for the West Virginia Sta te
Grange; West Vl!'glnia Demeter
Club; Degree of Cpres; West
VIrginia Young Couple oft he Y~;&gt;ar,
1984; Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society: cha rter member
of MJ&gt;Igs County Cenel!_logical
Society; E~beth Rector Bu\'11
Tent ot Daughter~ of Union V(&gt;tera ns; Paducah Cha pter of United
Daughters of thp Confederacy;
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the American Revolu-

Poge499

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF ADUCIARV. ,
On June 7. 1985,f in the
Molgo County Ptobete Court,
Cue No. 24,809, Frri W.
Port... Jr .. 213 Eoot Second
Street, P&lt;&gt;me10y, Ohio 45769,
was appointed Eli8CUIOr of the
eotate of Lois B. Bailey,
decoa.ect. late of Box 211.
Alflo!1v. Ohio 4671 o.
Robert E. Bucl&lt;.
Ptobeto Judge

Mr. and Mrs. Guy Tuckerman of
Springfield were weekend guests of
Mrs. Gladys Tuckerman and Mr.
and Mrs . Eugene Haning and
Ronald .
Mr. and Mrs. Doylp Knapp, KaU,
Kevin and Charles and Barbara
Ha tfield e njoyed a cookout at the
home of Mr. a nd Mrs. Charley
Smith.
Mrs. Jackie Elam, Mrs. Gladys
Tucke rman, and Mrs. Dorothy
~es were recent visitors of Mrs.
E lsie Bra tton, Albany.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank spent
Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs.
E ugene Haning.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Roy Smith of
Rockspr ings Road werP recent
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Chari(')'
Smith .
·
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Giles ent er-

The fi rst rPunon of 1hE' Joha nnes
as t ' the homP of James and Karen
Werry near Morning Star, Racine, 1
p.l)'l .

John and Anne Rose wer(' born ·
near New York in 1791 and 1792 and
were the parents are at least 10
children, Elisha . 1812; Cyrpnlus.
1914 whO married Julia Newlin;
Jolm H., ma rried Sara h Haines;
H('IUJI, lim: Danie l, 1822; Simon,
1831; Sarah, 1826, who married
Benlamin Lewis; Leah, 1824, Who
rnllrrled Henry Farley: Hester,
1817, who m arried John Scott
Barber, and Rebecca. Their !ami·
lieS' were large and scattered over
many states.
·According to Mrs . Werry Cyrerilus Rose Sl'!tled in this arPa and his
cl\lldren were Daniel who ma rried
Catherine Fullerton; John W. Rose
who marrtl'd Sarah McKlm; Asa C.
(
• &gt;

'Lena K. Nessefrood.
Cieri&lt;
(6) 12, 19. 26. 3tc

WANT ADS
ARE JUMPING
WITH BARGAINS

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters · Dt&gt;wnsi&gt;OLJts I
Gutters Cteanod
Painting
Storm Doors
&amp; Windows
Siding · Soffit Work

NEW LISTING - PomeroyA nice lf111eslment or starter
home. 2 bedroom home on
large tot. Basement. Only
$17,500.

949-2263
or 247-4641

TUPPERS PlAINS - Ranch
home on approx. 2 acres.
lovely setting Modern Mchi!n .
~~ 3 bedroom. Carport:

992-6191
Dottie Turner 992-5692
Jean ,Trussel 949-2660 .
· Jo Hill 985-4466 .

A
~

lB
. R£AliOR

. -

;

JIM CLIFFORD
PH . 992-·

PH. 949·2801
or 949-2860
No Sunday Calls

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

'" All YHt Ptlllllf NHi•

PlU~

Olflet Suppliu &amp;
Furnitura, Wtd4ing
..,..Graduetion
Slat~Jot'.~notic
Sl""' I
· !ta..s,

-

lusiness Forms,
Copy Strvlm, Etc.
2SS Mil St., Mltltlt.;..,t ·
104 llulloorry
Pomoroy

8. _ __;_ _ __

27. _ _ _ _ __

9 . _ _ _ _ __

,.~·· ------

A•.

992-3345

_______

:10-' - - - - - -

31. _ _ _ _ __

». ______

•• •

33. - - - - --

15.

34.

~-

Mail TillS cou,_ Wi.. R-lttanc•

TheDdri.UIIII
111 Clllrt ...

OIL 457.,

-

3/2/tln

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
.... i.ntial &amp;

t
I

II

1
1

I

&amp;.---------.------------.

Commercial
•Dtvtlepmonts &amp;
c-cial Sittt
•Sifttlt 111111 Multi Ullit
lltt.Uifl
•WaOti . . . CRinttry
' Dtsitln and 'Ianning

G.G IOUSH
PH. 992·7611

5-7-tfc

614-446-8322 .

chea ts . ba aket a, dlahe s ,
atone jara, antlquea. gold
and si lve r. Write-M . D .
Miller, Rt.2 . P o meroy. Ohio

their annual Kids Fishing
Derby Saturday, June 22nd
at their lake on' west Shade
River Ad. 3VJ milaa west of
Chaster . Follow signs. Sam

i

Racine, Oh .

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL· SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

.,
Announces
The Expansion of Servilt to our Customers
To Include:
*Complete Front End Repair &amp; Alignment
*Computerized Wheel Balance
*Tires ~All Sizes-Car, Truck, Farm)

AT l SUPEI DISCOUNT

985-3561

All M•bi

•W..hera •Diahwa1hera

•Rang••J
•Refrigerators
•Dryera •FrHzera

V. C. YOUNG Ill

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH

' ACCEitT ..
FENCE &amp; SUPPLY
PH. 9U-6931
After 5 Call

742·2027

II

"Free Estimates"
Installation Available
- ·
4/4/ tln

RADIATOR
SERVICE

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

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

1-13-tk:

•SILVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GtBSO.N REFRIGERATOR
*SATElliTE SAlES '&amp;-SERVICE

·' . We Min' AFill filtH .
Shp Te~~alelu ·
•• Ptly

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER- 985-3307

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE ;·OHIO
Authomed John Deere
New Holland, Bush Hoi
Farm Equipment

Dealer

Far111 E•••~•••t
Patte &amp; Sartlae
1· 3· tfc

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

VINYL&amp;lU.NIM

Complato Outtw Wort.
Complete RemodoNng
Roaflng of oil Typeo ·
Wortced In homo 1 ..,;
20y....
"Froe Eltlmetoo··
CAll COUICT,

Ph. 1614) 143·5425
5/ 9/ 2 mo.

MEIGS
COMPANY

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING .

3i 1 Narlh Sfcond
. Mitlilltport, Oli_
io U7 ~fi

Middleport. Oh. 614-992·
3476 .

IUSINHS PHONE

C!lfl: 742'·24107

16 UJ 9'12·6150
IES~INCI PHONI
(6141 '192·

4/ 1/lfn

RENT A CAR
CALL
4·46-4522 ·· ~·w•- 11.•~' .fo; u;,:: .·

U-SAVE
AUTO
RENTAL
St. Rt. 160 North
Gallipolis, Ohio

ROSES'
EXCAYAnNG INC.
*Oil field strvice
*landSCIPinl
&lt;r Basements
*land cltlrina · ·,, ..
*Ponds
•Septic systems
•Heavy haulina
*Free estimltts
DOll lOSE
Offict 949-2493
Ho.,. •"~·~I'I!'IIU

7/ 11/ tfn

BENNETT'S
ENVIRONMENTAL
SYSTEMS
Mobile Home
Heating &amp; Cooling

614-446-9416

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS
35185 Oak Hill Road
Lona Bottom, DH. 45743

PH. (614) 985-4212

We Use Von Schrader
Equipment Retommttlded
by Le1din1 Carpet M•n•·
facturers .

.~-..::.

-- ~
RT . .62 NORTH
POINT PLEASANT, W. VA.

1------ ----

FREE catalogue by mail.
Write or phone MASON

Greenhouse Aaaistant Pert

NOW OPEN .. Edna's Tropi- t ime !16- 24 boura) per
cal Suntan, Gallipolis Ferry, week . Flexible schedule
across from Harry Siders '
Jewelers. ·

Adoption is a n alternative to
abortion. Professional couple, unable to have baby, will
provide much wanted Infant
with loving home and fam·

ity. Let ·us help you. Call
collect (9t4) 332-4088, evenings, anytime weekends .
Legal , confidential .

Giveaway

Roger Hysell
Garage
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alco Tr•u•lulo•
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
3-24-tfc

111£NCIING IS 0111 1.M
TronchinLDf Any Type
Dozor &amp; cl&lt;hoo Serv1co
Ptumbina Slrvlco
Welclina, lowboy Htulina
Septic Systems

RENT ACAR

cALL

licensed I londid

1111 f!TIIUIEI

WllUAMS
TRENCHING SERVICE
II. 4, Hyootl ~.. Rd.
Ohio 4!769
1614 992-1134
or 992

'"""''r·

TOWN &amp; COUNIRY
VETERINARY
CUNIC
IN MIDDLEPORT
PAUL E. SHOCKEY, D.V.M.

OPEN EACH
THURS. EVL 6-8
PT. PLEASANT OfFICE

uos JACISON aW.

....,
.........,,,_.......
r.-.,wo,.
......., ',....s,....
IIUI1 AIIUl IIOUD

.....,,,.....,.....

frWto ....... ....
Sotw4ot lt .....1140 .....

week old male kitten .
Black &amp; white. litter traiped,

6

n"d TLC. C,olt . 814-4489744 anytime. '

-

•

•

r

'

1 f. male cat blue striped
with cream . 6 kittens. 3
cream male. Call 614-446-

1364.

Puppy to give away par1
Golden Retriever tan, 4
months old, very friendly .
needs room to run. Call

614-446-8161 .
9

kitten•. 6

wMka ola.

mixod :breo.H. c'o!t .61 4·4460816,
_.-.
Free Collie type puppiea
(medium site). 6 weeka old.

Call614-985-4291 .

away. 304-875-5781 .

446-4522
•'We Rent For Less"

-U·SAVE
AUTO
RENT ALl
St. Rt. Ito
f:iorth
O.llipolls, Ohio HI·«

6

Lost and Found

IWEEP!R and -In• mo•
ohi ne ,.polr, Plfll, and
oupplln.
Plett. up and
delivery, one
Devlo
CIN-.
hill Vacuum
milo up
CrMk lid. Colt
114-441-0214.

G-•

Control hungor and toM
' weight with Now
U..!lPQ?'ISGlapoflwlt·PPH Combo ot
SUIItm If AIPC*INhT
Pruth l'hllrmooy, Jockoon

.......

HOME OWNERS-Refinance

to low fixed rate. Ute equity
any purpose.. le~der

tor

nomo

Lost: Reward for any information co"cerning black

~nd

Waste Water Treatment

614·388·9790 or614·388·
8720.

Lost: bl1ck Angus croll
heifer. All black with orange
ear tag. lost in Chlrry
Ridge -Sumner Rd. erea.
about 1 month ago . Call

61 4-985-4454.

Loat in Horae Cave area.
Small female. tri-colored
Beagle . Waa wearing collar
with name plate. Call 614-

949 -2171 .

LOst in Rutland area : large
tan and white Collie -type
dog. Neck wound. 614·

742 -2754.

Found : a pair of woman'a
gla11ts in front of Dr.
Bradshaw'• office, PomePick

Lost small tri-color dog. near

T"fflc Cticlo~ 62 N. 304·
1175· 21311.

1;='; =.::::;; ::::;;:===9

Wanted To Buy

We PI¥ cooh lor tott madtt
Cllln Ulld 0111.
Jim Mink Chov. -Ofdt Inc.
Bill Gene Johnaon

111 4·441·31172

4 bdr .. 3 acre•. kitchen.
breakfast room, livingroom,
diningroom, utility room,
fruit cellar, city water, gas. 2
car garage. wtth attached

Colt 1-819·!165-1522 for

lnformetlon 24 hours.

Eastern School District. 6
room home in good repair.
Fully carpeted, basement,
carport. Beautifully Iandi·
caped. 1 and one tenth

3 bedrooms , detached 24
feet K 28 feet garage, rural
water, aatellite and appliances. One acre. HyseU Run.

· ·

1 Ox4~. good cond, clean ,
nicely laid out, $3 .200 .00 .
G•llipolis Ferry, 304-671-

;4;6:31:.::;==:;::===

I
I·

acrea. Smell orchard. Will

Professional
Services

614-992-5714.

Piano Tuning 1nd Repair.
Brunicardi Muaic Co , ·614·
446-0687. Twentieth year
of quality ttrvice. Lin•

Donieto, 8t4-742-295t .

6t 4 -245 -9152 or 814-379·
2712 .

1- - - -- -- -- -

Water well• drilled end serviced . Prices on request. Call

6t 4· 742-31 47 ar 8 t 4·992-

Price reduced 6 rooms, bath,
utility . uorm windows.
doore, new roof. wiring,
garage . Call 614 -992 -

520•.

3 bedroom home, BY! percent anumableloan, g~rden
epot . Reducad down to

.49,000. 304-675-5047.

33

Farms for Sale

Small farm . 3 bdr. houae.
W1ll consider l1nd contract.

Caii614-256-6B13.

21 2 acre farm . Parker Run
Rd . Muat 14tiL Mov.ed to
Arizon1. Mi"ersl rights in:
ctudeiJ. Make offer, 814-

- - - - -- - - -

Mull sell: Small farm 6
acre1. 3 bedroom house,
wood burning stove; barn,
chicke11 coop, pony ahed, .
McCumber Rd., Rut11nd .·

$36.000. Cell 614 -992 2t43 or 614-742-2289 tf·

tar 6pm.

30 acres, mbbile home,
barn , shed. Fen ced , Rt . 2,
Maaan County, 304.-882-

BY OWNER - 3 bodroomo. 247 t or 765-•664.

1 1h baths, dining room, full
basement with family room.
24x24 garage, close to

34

downtown. 304·675·4804.

Business
Buildings

5006 .

191 N. Park Dr. 304-675·
6455.
Rent or sale building suitable

PAIR, Summer rates in
effect . free estimates .
Ward's Keyboard, 304-875·

Log homo. 3acroo. 2 mt. out w. va . 304-675-29 31.

for Church in Point Pteaaant.

Jerricho Rd. 8'12 pet . all.
loan. Call 304·675-6622 .
Price reduced on home with
4 bedrooms,
2 V.:.in family
b1th1,
wood
burntr stove

1-::- - - - - - - - -

for sale or rent businell

~~~~~~Js~~g~~i~t

Pleaaant.

'--==========
1-

room, fireplace In llvin- 36 Lots &amp; Acreage

groom . Anume mortage at

31

Hames far Sale

8'h par cont . 304· 675 4504.
3 112 acre lot . posaible ownar
fi nanc1ng. Call 61 4 · 379 ·

Flltwood area in Pomeroy

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

siding. aluminum window.
17 A. available. Call 614·

446-2359.

3 or 4 bdr .. 3 bath. f1m . rm.,

rienco helpful.
For Verolto
mo,. C1 11114· 441 · 7019 or 216 ·
detolft
colt Betty
"collect" 304· 744-0824. 1,._5_311_·_&amp;_4_2_9_.- - - - 3 bdr. houH, OrMn Schoof.

c...

utrolot, flnlahed booomtint,
2 ... goroge, U5.000.
lt4-441·3040.

Big down payment, short
time employment. or credit

payments. No chlfge for

dttl...-y. tntoroatod1 (614)
772-1220 or 1814) 773·
3928.

1.:..:..::._.:________

1878 2 bdr. moblto home,

1881 12xl0 office troller,
central alr-he•t. fl" rooms,

BR·Iounge, TV, rotaonablo. Porter. Ohio. 8 room hou11
on lot. Garden epot, good
Colt 114·211·1108.
locotion noor church a
Poroont lady Shop. LUCIO otore. Noedo little IIPiir,
~no . Pt. Pfll-t, WVo. !dell for retfrld couple or
near K&amp;K Mobile' Hornet. young tomily, good notgh·
Poputtr · prlcea. 11 4-9el- borhood, f13 ,500. Colt
814· 311·9031 .
4174.

Bear Run Ad 220 ft . fron ·
tage 'over V:. acre) overlook ing Raccoon Creeh . 1970
12x60 mobile home . Price
negoti1ble. Call 614-256-

1577.

Renlals
41

Houses lor Rent

7

room hou1e junct ion Han nan Trace • Rt. '.1 •t Sw1n

hiatory atopping you from CrMk. J .O. Pollitt. Colt
buy Ing 1 homo 1 Cano ld or 1 u
304-522-3221
or6t4-2116 '
37 .
ractolmed
or doublewldo . 1500olngto
down-toko
over ~ ~----:-----

total electric. Iii' cond .. txc.

cond. Colll14-2111-1450.

2845 or 614-446-7105.

Ouplu for sale by owner,
trtiltr lower River Rd .

home, 3,000 aq .ft ., 3 baths.
2 fireplac•. Vztcre. • more.
tii.OOO . Rtductd 10
e42 ,000. Auumobto 8~ .

Room a boerd for lady In
private room. beth, large

1974 t 4x70 troiler 3 br,
aome app. S4800. Lot 18.

S2B,OOO. 614' 878·25t3.· · muat soli lmmod. ·

people . Excellent income
lus bonus. We will trlin.
P
a .. Inoto or Plrtv pion expe-

Situation•
Wanted

. .

2 bedroom•. full basement Camp Conley . Rt. 1 . Pt. Pl.
double car _pra{,e, 1 .2 : WV. after: 6 !)m 304 - ~76:
acre a..· Ro•e Hill, ·Pomeroy. ·7671 . Owr:-er l~avlng wtate

LR , OR. 2 cor gorogo. CA. e11.500. Ownor wNI fiJoy Dr. Colt 1114·441·4307. nonce with downpoyment .
Colt 614 -448 -2135 btStep up-1are 4 bel r. f I bu toua tween BAM &amp; 1 2 Noon.

12

676-299B.

8181 anytime.

ONLY CHANCE ttl Colt Juno
1 9, 20. 21 only! Now hlrin•
•
aupervltor In your araa.
Work It home. Hire, trtin

TODAYII

MOBILE HOMES MOVEO.
lnaured . 20 years expe- .
rienc e 304-676·2866 or

groenhouoe. Call 614·446-

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
Government homes from lTV MOBILE· HOME SALES,
*1 . {U repeir) . Also deliquent 4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS .
taK property . Calll05 ·187- RT 35. PHONE 814·448·
6000 ext. GH-10189 for 7274.
lnformotlon.
1----------

FOUND male. mostly tan

long -hel,.d ~ou with coMer
end oholn 'oplrot otlck .
MIOMO Itt fomlty . 304•175·
3230. ext. 301 or 304-8751411

1975 14&gt;66 mobile homo.
U2.000. Call 614-446- CA. woodburner. •.8 .600 ,
Coli 614-446-7168 altar
2604.
7PM.

decor. your hours. no invelt·

800 - 553 - 9077. Booking
home and catalog partiea.
Federal, StateendCiviiJobs
now available in your erea.

256-1624.

5 - room hou t e. garage ,
Texas Ad. , Gatlipolil ,

for br., FR. BN coiling. vinyl

mont, 304-676-5758 or 1-

110.000 Call doyo 614'

446-7368 o r e\lel. 614·

446-3427.

4 openings telling Merri
Mac 's 100 percent guaran-

tied tine of gllto, toya, home

1976 Holley Park 7x24 FT
e.IC p .• 2 bdr .. CA. all appliancea. underp inning. carpet
throughout , uc cond .

'7~2- 2,52 . lila · rtinonabte
rOom houee.
offer refused . Terms evaila·
Gravel Hill, Middleport
70 It • 100 ft . Goroge. Call bll.

possesa current WV Ucenae.
Employment covered under
WV Civil Service. Extensive
benefits. Contact Peraonnel
Office at lakin Hospital or

phone 304-676-3230 Ext.
264.

1983 Jay Skylinor 2 bdr ..
completely furn ished eKcept
bedrooms, ceiling fan . AC.
stove. refr ig., completely
underpinned , 8x10 utility
building. Wisher &amp; drter.
total electric. aetting on
large rented priVIte lot. c1n

Jay dr. 5 year old hOrf\e, 3
bdn., large kitchen , family
room-formal dining. livin·
groom, 2 car garage, gas
heat, central air . Call 614-'

Mortglllt . Co .. · 614·1&gt;92· 614.992-2389&gt;
3051 .
. ~ -,-'---.,--_,.-..,.,.-

, female Engltoh Cocker Spa- Ptont Operotor lor Lakin 5500 or 676-3824.
niel. Miaaing since 6 -2-85. Hoapltot , Lokin WV. Muat 1- - - - - - - - - Some white on noaa. throat
&amp; ' cheat. very thy. C1ll

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

motion coli 614-446-3828
or 114-446·1 163. Shown stay if sold. Coli 614-446· .
7200.
by appointment.

614-985-4365.
- - - - - - - --tc-

1---------ref. to Box C-12 PIANO TUNING AND RE·

care of Pt.PI . R~later , Pt . Pl.

Yard Sale. Thur1 and Fri,
Hartford. 1st street above
bridge. d own one block,
brown end c ream trailer, 3
famil ies, toola, elec wheel ·
chair, boya clothes, lots of ·
01i1c items . 9 till 7.

+.::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::::

have to aee to appreciate.
Priced at S32,000 firm .

22 Money to Loan

Youth Group Car

4 at Jeno' a i n Eleano r.

Drive. Gallipolia.

r

1 Collie and t block German
Shepherd. 304·876-2347.

Reliable person 10 baby sit in
my home 40 hrl . wk . Send

Arbu~kle

Woah. Sotu rdov 22nd .. 9 to

USHI NG CO . recommend&amp; 1__________
that. you do business with
people you know, and NOT
to send mo ney through the
31 Homes for Sale
mail until you have inveati·
gated the offering.
House for sale at 1055 2nd .
Ave .. Gallipolis. Oh. Con·
Opportunities! available .
t ilts of livingroom . dininSummer c111111 in real
groom.
kitchen &amp; two bedlltate. word proceaaing.
rooms. bath all on one floo r .
medical ' terminology, and
Full baaement. large frOnt
basic typing . Southe11tern
porch
with awning. glused
Bueinese College. 629 J•ck·
in back porch. One car
son Pike, Suite 312 , Gallipo·
lio, Oh 46831 . Cat 6t4-446- garage, large back yard with
garden srea . For more in for·
4387.

inventory. Training, fixtures,
grand opening. etc . Can
open 15 days. Mr. Keenan

25616.

3 Family Yard Sale Thu raday
20th &amp; Friday 21st at Leon
Town Park .

Sot. June 22. 9:00AM4 :00PM . 324 Sandon

Cabal TV installer aervice
tech . Send resume to P.O.
Box 67, Gallipolit Ferry, WV

up ot Tho Dolly
Somlnol office. .
..

3 Announcement&amp;

Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB-

others. 17,900 to $24,900 23

NEW Gl BILL --Another be·
nefit for Army National
Guard members. You c1n
receiva $140.00 per month.
in addition to your drill pay,
and still anend a.::hool. Call

s. Vicinity

Garage Sale : Rain or shine.

Puppiet, phone 304-676-

2991 .

roy.

llllltlllllll.l:IIIIIIIS

Business

1306)678-3639.

(305)67B-3639.

----·-p·i -Pieasirif ----

BaHment S1le all dayThura.
276 Debbie Drive .

Will do babysitting in my
home. Vsrd fenced, have

Prior grMnhouse u.perience Own your own Jean ·
required. Salary depending sportswear. ladies apparel.
on e11perience. Cal 1614· . Children's. large size. Com256 -1428 1-5PM only.
bination store, Acce11ories.
Jordache, Chic, Lee, Levi. E
AVON up to 60%earninga. 2 Z Street. lzod, Esprit, Tom·
waya to earn . Call614· 446- boy, Calvin Klein , Sergio
2t 56.
Valente, Evan Picone, Liz
- - - - - - - --lc - Claiborne, Members Only,
Easy auembly work! $800. Organically Grown , Gaaoper 100. Guaranteed pay· line, H.. lthtex. over 1000
ment . No experience -no others. e13.300to .12.900
sales. Oeteila aend l&amp;lf- inventory, training, fixtures ~
addreased atamped enve- grand . opening etc. Can
lope: ElAN VITAL· 715, open 1 6 days. Mr. Kaiser
3418 Enterpriae Rd., Ft . (612) 888-8566.
Pierce. Fl 33482.
Own your own Jeen Own your own Jean · Sportaweer, ladles apparel,
Sportawear. Ladies Apparel, childrens. large size. combiChildrens, Large Sire, Com- nation store. acce11oriaa.
bination Store. Accaaaoriea. Jordache. Chic, Lee, levi. E
Jordache . Chic, L8e, Levi. Z Street. lzod, Eaprit, TomEasy Street, lzod, Esprit ,
Calvin Klein, Sergio
Tomboy·, c,tvin Klein. S.er·
Liz
gio·Val.hte. l;ven Picotte, Clz
Cll!ibOrne. Membe;s Only,
Organically Grown. Gaao·
line, Helthte~~: , Over 1,000 othera. f1 3,
others. 17,900 to $24,900 inventory, training, fiKtures.
inventory. Training. fixtures , grand opening. etc. Can
grand opening. etc. Can open 115 days. Mr. Loughlin
open 16 days. Mr. Keenan (61 2)B88·6555.
Own your own Jean ·
Sportswear, Ladiea Apparel,
Childrens , Large Sin, Combination Store, A.::ce11oriH,
Jordache, Chic, Lee, levi,
Easy Street. ltod. Eaprit.
Tomboy. Calvin Klein. Ser·
gio Valente. Even Picon•~ liz
Claibo!n.e , "'1•f!'b.,ra Oply,
Orgamc'ally Grown, Gaao·
line, Helthtex. Over 1.000

Hu tchiaon &amp; Vaughn , New
lime Rd. Rutland. Thurs . •
Fri. Size 6 bridle gow n &amp;.
acce11. included.

Yard Sale South Rt. 7 to
2 18, 2Y! mllet, lngalls Ad, 1.4
mile . Cheap pricee. Thurs. &amp;
Fri.

guorontoed. Coli 304-2732811 . Ravenswood. W. Vo.

21

20th, 21st. 10-5 3 mifoa

Rood.

Mill ~ service. Regiatared in Ohio . All work

Superior Exterminating Co ..
Inc. 'People who appre·
304-675-3960 or 1-B00- ciatea your Business ' . Li·
642-3819.
censed : Ohio -WV• . Cell

Moving Thursday . lut
chance . 304-676-1141 .

For Futtr Service

Watkin s dealer. No expe·

SHOE DEALER, Konno, WV riance nacessarv. Earn 26·
2524B. P.O. Box 38. Ph . 60%. Products for ule. elab
372·633B. Hours B to 9 Brooking tilting parties .
a .m . Evening 10 to 11 :30 Calf 614-446-3316.
p.m.
1- - - - -- - - -

11 female kitten. 7weeks old.

Call 614-997-67

Wanted

peat. You will receive a

L.,._ _ _ _ _.!;!!!;!:!:.!!.!J

3·22-tfn

6/ 3/1 mo

11

1

3 Kittena, 304-676 -3734.

'FIIEE ESTIMATES"

Ser v 1~es

wh o haOJe worn nice com for-

table MASON SHOES In the

A. A.A.

BlACKSTON
NEW .CAR &amp;
TRUCIC LiAS~NG
lOa, 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769

Employmenl

NOTICE: Would like the

Two 7 -week · old female
litter-trained k1ttena to give

We'd liko to introduce -you to
EnP&amp;t·A-Cor, the modern way
to dri" the vehicle of your
choice.
NO DOWN PAYMENr
LOWII MOITIU' PAYMINT

614· 742·232B.

name and eddreu of people , -:--:--~:-:--:-:-:---:---

8 milts from
Poltleroy·Muon Brid&amp;e
SINGLE 124.95
304·1&gt;75-6276
•live Enterto1nment of tee HBO
•Kitchenettes •Restaurant

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

Will do babyaitting 1 my
home. 2 opening • lett. 5
minute• from HMC, ex p. a.
e.:c. referencBs. Call 61 4-

County. 614-992-3466.

Standing timber. AI Tromm .

····· ·· ·-····· ···· ·· ·· ·· ······

.Portamo ut h Rd. Children &amp;
adult clothing, to ys, misc. - - - - - , - - -- -lc9 -6.
Hutc hi ao n an d Va u ghan
New l ima Rd ..
G•rago Salo June 20.21 .22. families.
Rutland. Thuraday and fr i·
Thurs ., Fri ., Sat . 2 milet day. Size 6 bridal gown e nd
f rom 141 on Neighborhood accessorial included.

Scipio Energy, toctted 1 '-'

members pro cading the
Children 's Fishing Derby on
Saturday . June 22nd .
Supper at 7 :00 pm. The
trustees request members to
bring covered diah. This Is a
free eat and rafreahment
meeting for all members .

SALES &amp; SERVICE
Also Carry
Jiat1ing Supplies.

Va•d So le Rt. 141. 184

from langsvill e o n St .
R1.325. Fourt h hou11 on t he
right .
-

Flea Ma,rket Every Thun.
back half Rio Grande Munic ipal building . Tillers, mowers, baby clothes. etc .

Kittens to good home, 2

Will do all types of ex·
cavating, . · landscap·
ing, be~; .....,.
. .Ysiema;:- water
g8S fin•. water
well drilling and aer·
vice, trucking (limHtone &amp; dirt).

Thureday and Friday, ..!una

mllea eaat of Pagetown on
Townahip Road 141 . Meigs

yellow, 4 black. Call 814367-7116.

, EXCAYAnNG

Yard Sale June 2 0 &amp; 2 1 at
Carter 's on Old 1 80 at Kerr.

Yard Sale Fri., Sat . June 21
&amp; 22. t 0 to 6 . Clothing for
kide. men &amp; wom ens .
Hous ehold item s . Allen
Drive. Gallipolis.

~

"

Middleport
l!o Vic inity

Aluminum scrap . Sell you r ref1nences. 304-876 -2784
aluminum acrap direcl to t he
smelter. Buying all grades of WUI do housecleaning in and
aluminum. Premium paid fp r around Point Pleasant, 304·
large loads . Call for quote. 676-77112.

4

- - .......
... .... :

l!o Vicinity

County Fish and Ga me Club

PARTS and

!Free Estimatesl

.......r,.ome;;;;;--------·

ware, old coin1, large cur·
rency. Top price s. Ed. Bur·
kett Barber Shop. 2nd. Ave.

The MeigS County Fis h and

•~----.,.,.----,.---..:.:...,;;~..:..=;;::o.-\1

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Need cle aning don e7 Wal·

...... Giiiifi&gt;oiii....... ..

Kids· must furn ish their own
bait and pole. 1 pole per
child. No minnow or anlf i·
cial bait permitted. There
will be prizes and free eats
for all children·. The Meigs
any accidents or damage to
anyone or anything on their
property .

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

ICUT OUT fOR FUTURE USEI

814-388-8190 .

457 69 or call 614-992- 446·8881 .
7760.
.
COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING
Buying d• ily gold, silver

will not be reaponslble for

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

.., - · •. ·f-ll__

American made clea ning
flrvice accepting new cuatomera by appointment. Call

until 2pm. Agoo 1 to 1 6. coine, rings, jewelry, sterling Pump

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Would ~h to paint ho.use
tr1iter1. roofa. Call 8 14·

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS lpoporingl Coli 614·245·
bock. Call now· 814-742- FURNITUR E. Bodo. Iron , 6657 for more lnformetion .
2328.
woo d, cupboards, chaira.

z

ill,

18 Wa nted to Do

firat "'o nth o r your money

Television listeni~&amp; Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
o· Hearine Evaluations For All Ages

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6)6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

11. 124,Pomoroy Ohio

17. _ _ _..:__ _
II. _ _ _ _ __

~on,

gram can help you Iota
1 0 · 29 plus pounds in your

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

work

3/fl / tfn

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

21--~---26.
_ _ _ __ _

Addona and remodeling
Roofing and gutter work
Concrete worlc'
Plumbing" and e lectrie~~ l

PH. 667-6535
or 985-4353

"Free Estimates"

incfucle distount

6.------

CARPENTER
SERVICE

*Water &amp; Gas
Well Service
*Myers Pumps
Sales &amp; Service

New Homes Built

Bruah guard fo r 77 Ford lA
4 wtieaf dr ive. Call

You can slim up for summer.
All Natural Weight· LOII pro·

NM4s ......................... ' 145
13-IS For4 IHfor
' .
- . ...................... ' 130
13-IS Ford · -

320 Sth St.

Formerly Heaton
Drilling Co.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

l . - - -- --

,._o,,

PH. 742-23.28

C&amp;A AUTO

'SHADE RIVER
DRILLING

*VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULATION

2_
1_
-_
-.s4 .__
_
_._
--_
-. ,_. u
__-'--

·.

10?:'1; ;j·r;:......... $S2.IO

6-19-tfn

10-6-ttc

5/ 28/ 1 mo. d.

~1. -_,22.
__-__ - _

·1

. - . ................. ,_...$14!

The

ing e400 ••ch. Call collect 251-1!28.
t - 317 - 7 B 3 - 7 t 6 t .
Witt plow tobecco. Calf
lndionopollt.
814·258· 1528.

Game Club will have a
c hicken barbecue for all

YOUNG'S
-

Old or antique slot mac hine•
wanted. An y c o nditio n, pay·

The Meigs County Fish and
Game Club vvill sponsor

*BASEMENTS •SEPTIC SYSTI;MS
*FOOTERS *GRADING
*CONCRETE WORK

Wa nted To Buy

Boot Gropot ru it Extro
St gth C
1
F
Ueed mobile ho m11. Call
~r"mocy, ~~~:fl,";~rt. ruth 8t4-448-017!S.'

13· 79 (hovy. Tr.
C.. Corntn ...... - ...... _120
Grillw . ........................ -'15
Niw and Utttl Auto Gloa~lAito Parh

TROMM EXCAVATIN

I'OMI HUY
l&gt;14 ~192 ?tflt

Pomeray,

DOZER , BACKHOE.
TRENCHER , SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER,
GAS &amp; SEW ;fi LINES.
RECLAMATICN, PONDS.
SPRING DEVELOPMENT.
HOME FOOTERS.
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT

L------ "·-----2-------

r•.

MGM
FARM CITY, INC.

992 -1&gt;215 or 992 -7314

CONTRACTING

REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland Jr.

20. - - - ' - --

13.------

lockw Panolo .........-.•21

BULLDOZER &amp; BACKHOE WORK

MGM FARM CIH
WE WILL NOT
BE UNDERSOLD

·

Jhen unh roln

12- - - - - - -

AT

Howard l. Writesel
Roofing Co.

. ,.

1
. -_-_
-11. 0
_.._
__-

TRUCKLOAD
FREEZER SALE

71-79 Ford Tr.

PH. 949·2777

Nam•-----------

group meets

~.

Business Services

· Curb Inflation II
Pay Cash for_ 1
Classifieds and
Savell I
vour own

_ _ __

o#

NEW LISTING - Middi!!POrt
- A neat 3 bedroom home
located •n l!fi&lt;Xl neighoorhood.
Exce.llenl conditJon, etec BB
heal. 60x!OO lot. Only $23,000

,_._--~.
. ---:-::---------~-.. .,.
-, ......
.I

7_ _

•

HOME NATIONAL BANK
CAll 949-2210-Ask for Tim

PRICE RffiUCED ~ And a
assumt1e loan wrth 8'•%fixed
interest rate, $119.23 monthly
Jli!Ymenl for appx. $14,200,
$•,000 down, or make offer
total of $18,200

· PO!!EROY ~ Near-Kroger's ~ .
th~ _~ew .o&gt;the rivec·J ·8RS. ·
LAND CONTRACT - $3,000
down, interest free. 20 acres of
timber and ~amed up house.
Just $16.000. Monthly payment and years to pay - You
llec•de.
·suo Mo.phy, llilttin Roush
Halon, Virgil and
lruco Ttolerd

1

--

73-U Ctoovy lr.

Grillts ..................... •Ja.so
73-79 Chevy. Tr.

Night
1·304
773-51&gt;34

Ph. 1114-843· 5191

ta lned with a birthday supper at
their home recPntl; honoring
Write
ad i!fld onler"' by mail wift1 mis
SummN Mav Giles, eight . The
coupon. Cancel ~our 1d by phone when you get
group enjoyed cake and Ice cream
. results. Manev not refundable.
followln ~: !he supper. Att ending
we re Cecil, Donald, and Neil Giles,
F rank a nd Cheri Giles, John 1
Stanforth. Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Ba iley, Bonita and Johnnie.
Address&gt;---------Mrs. Iva Johnson was the
Mothl'l''s Da~ · gu&lt;'sl of Mr. and Mrs.
Phone-------------~---·
Howard Thoma.
Mrs Nancy Russell spent SaturC trch!
Print a"• word in eadl
spau below. Each initial
day with Mr. and Mrs. Roix'rt
ar group of hgurn &lt;ountl
Ad Wanted
Russell . Mandy ond MlchaE'I Rus11 o ward. (oUIII nllftlt
10
I&gt;
sell were th&lt;'ir Friday overnight
3
I
and Hlllllnn or ~-·
days
day•
n•mbtr if 1111d. You II 911 Words day
gt!L'S IS.
hetter rnults if yuu 4t ·
Mr. and Mr. Leslie Frank, Sara h
scribe fully, giwe ~ice. the
$11.00
Beth, Tl'XaSRoad, WCI't'Wednesday
tribune rtltf'lts the right To IS S3.Du $1.00 sa.oo
to donify, tdit or reject
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene.
onr ed. Yo"r atl will ~ Te z; suo $1.00 $13.00 $21.00
Haning and Ronald, and Mrs.
'
pvt in th prOP,tr d1nifie~ ·
Gladys Tuckerma n.
han if you II chtck tlle
Toll $1.00 SIO.OO If S.QO $!1.00
prop1r bo• btlow.

Community

1:

- . ....................... . l iS!
10·1! Ford Tr.

7l-~'1'Jt!:;-i;:.......- ... S7D

498 Gtn. Harting., Pkwy.
Middleport, Ohio
HRS• 10 a.m. to S p.m.

Day
1-1&gt; 14
992 -2549

11·10 Cfoovy. Tr.

............ - ...- ..... 'TID

HYDIDTECH CHEMICALS

NEW LISTING - leading
Creek Rtf. - 3 bedroom home
with stove &amp;fireplace. Localed
on approx. I acre. Full
basement Electric heal aose
to town. $37,900.

992· 2259

MIDDLEPORT - Small 2 BR
home oo Gravel Hill. Garage &amp;
corner lot. Only $17,500.

( JWanted
&lt; !For Sate
&lt; JAnnoum::ement
&lt; )For Rent

- . ..... ................ .. IUS

" SPAS"

Sizes Start From 12'x16 '

POMEROY,O.

'

Housing
Headquarters

ABOV E GROUND POOL

.SPLIT LEVEL HOUSE with 3 bed·
rooms. 2 complete baths. dining
room, living . room and large recreation room. Located on 8
acres. Large farm pond. Racine
area.

E. Mai1ol.l..lll

BUSINESS BLDG. - In Po·
meroy 2 stories, good return

lion: charter member of Rockland
TIC'mple Pythlan SistPrs, and Chester Council, Daughters of Ametica.
Ashley was the salutatorian of the
1971 class at Federal Hocking High
School. She is a cum laude graduate
of Ohio '!Jnlversity with a bachelor's
degree In education. She has taught
in Meigs Local Schools for the past
nine years arid ·presently is a first
grade teache( at Mldd)ep.orr- Eie·
menta,.Y School
She and her husband, Keith, have
two daughters, Rachel, 5, and
Whitney, 2.

Gallif!olis

446-1699

REAL ESTATE FOR ~JtLE

LG. RANCH - Lots ol storage
space, big stone woodburning
firePlace'" the den. 3 BRs. dbl.
gaage and 2 47 acres. Eastern

Mike RobertJ

617 1hird Ave.

Real Estate General

LG. BRICM - Near the stores
in Middleport. 2 full baths, lg.
d1mng f;eplace. gas furnace,
I&amp; kitchen &amp;lg lot with trees &amp;
shrubbery. Only $38.500.

Schools.

County Appliance, Inc.

9

Arb uckle
Youth 22nd
Group
r-:;:;;;=.;:::=~~~:;1rr:==================~
I'EISONAUZED .....,.
Wooh,
Soturdoy
.. 9C1r
to
.-uvw
71-10 Cho¥y lr.
U-79 for4 lr.
4 ot Jono'o In Eleonor.
VINYL LINER POOl
, ..... ......................-•60
,....,.................. .•41 T•im off pounda with GoACRYLIC WALL POOL
7!·10 Cho•y lr.
'
73-79 Ford Tr.

Dwtr 400 Choktt
Good used refrigerators,
was hers. dryers. &amp;as and
electric ranges and TV sets.
OPEN 8 TO 6

3 Announcements

Real Estate General

ENJOY THE COUNTRY - 3
BRs, woodburmhg furnace.
equipped kitchen, carpeling
basement &amp; rural water.

Rose, who married Lucinda Au- a eovt&gt;red dish, pictures and other
miller; Hannah J . who married Items of lnterPst to be sbared with
Cassius Fitch; Andrew Jackson the family. Additional Information
who m a rrtl'd . Mary Elizabeth may be obtained by calllng949-2936.
Smith; All'xander who married Rain will not cancel:
Elizabeth Haddox; and Polly,
Manon , Charlotte, and Sarah.
Cyrpnlus married for the second
time a Rebecca Dow Johnson and
their chlldrPn wpre Julia, Mary T.
George Washington who married
Plans fora plcnlctobeheldatthhe
Moille Palmer, Cyrenlus Rose, Jr.
BellevUle
locks and Dam Park
who married Artie May Fisher, and
Saturday
were
made when the
Marton Francis who marrted Letl'Club met with
Community
BuUderl
cla Boyd.·
·
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Walter
Btvwn. A
The re~~nlon, according ID Mrs.
dlsross!onwasheldonacommunlty
Werry, wUI be tor getting acquainted and also for shartng proj«t. Refreshmmts werP served
to Donald and PauUne Myers,
family histories. 'The Rose family
history book published by the Rose Ronald and Ella Osborne, Harllss
Family Association with addltlonal · and tlelores Frank, RDy all(l
lnfo""l!Uon collected by Mrs. Marilyn Hannum, Grace and
Cordon Rose, EveJyn Rose ,Martln · ~ w~. Maxine anc1 EmPSt
Whitehead and Lillian and Warren
and others will be available.
'I'Itose attending arP asked to take Pickens.

r

deceasod, late of 51860 Bald
Nobs Road,' Long Bottom.
Ohio.
Robert E. Buclt,
Ptobete Judge

NEAR RACINE DAM ~ Fisher·
man buy this 4 rm. home w~h
bath overlooking !he river. Ex·
cet~nt l~ hmg Only $16,500.

Reunion planned for Roos, .Rose family
Roos (John Rose I and Annt- Cox
IWSe fam ilies wll be held June :ll

long Bottom, Ohio WIS ap·
pointed Adminillfatrix of the
eotate of Wodo· 0 , Mahlman.

YRI 992-21 ~6

Wolf Pen community happenings
Mrs. Steve Haggy. Stepha nie a nd
Brad . and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Russell were weekend visitors of
MT. a nd Mrs. Tom Summerfield ,
Candi. Wendy and Crysta l of
Medina . While there they attended
thE' gra du a t io n of Ca nd i
Summe rfield .
·•.,,
Mrs. Richard (Patricia I Wynn
and Weslry of Petal. Miss. is
spending a few days hNIC' with her
parents, Mr. a nd Mrs. Howa rd
Thoma and oth&lt;'l' l'!'latives.
Mr . a nd Mrs. Leslie F rank. Sara h
Beth of Texas Road were Wednesday visitors of Mr. a nd Mrs. Eugene
Haning and Ronald .
Mr. and Mrs Harl&lt;'~- Johnson,
Tammy and T&lt;'n~y. were weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. John Slack
and fa mily, Sandy,·ille.

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
EST,;TE OF WAOE 0 . MAHLMAN, DECEASED
Coto No. 24767 Docket 12
PoQe498
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On June' 6, 1986, In the
Molgo CouniY Probete Court,
Cue No. 24757. Sanh Mahtmon, 51660 Bold Nobs Rood.

TEAFORD .rl]

~shley named among outstanding women
Emma Ashley, Crew Road, Rock
Springs. near · Pomeroy has been
chosen as one of Jht&lt;' Outstanding
Yo4ng Women of the YE&gt;ar in a
program designed by thE' Na tional
.Jaycee orRanlza tlon to recognize
wome n under 1S who are outsta nd ing In service to thPir communities.
Ashl('y.' s activities inclu,de being a mwber ?nd tlo'acher at thP F irst
SOuthe rn Baptist Church -of Ml'igs.County; Pomona In Silverton
GrangE&gt;: pa$1 secretary of Racln('
· Grange: past steward of Meigs
County Pomona Grange: publicity

oppl•t For
Bargain?

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS CUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF LOIS G. BAILEY.
DECEASED
c- No. 24.809 Oockat 12

stone rubbings and castings, adopLena K. N..... rood
Cleric
tees a nd their genealogy , genealogl·
(6) )2, 19. 26. 3tc
ca I corresponsenilence, preserving
family photographs, legal terminolReal Estate General
ogy in gPnealogy a nd early Ohlo
mu sic.
Over 500 rPglstrants from across
Real Estate
the United States attended' the
convention with Ohio having the
largest sta te genealogical society In
216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
the na tion.
1·(614)·992
~325
The Meigs County Genea logical
Society will a id residents in proving
REMODELED - One HOOf 2
their lines for Flrst Families o!Ohlo ,- mce BRs, d11ng area, kitchen.
upon request in preparation for next
carport &amp;lg.lol in Rutland. Only
$21,500.
year's convention which will be held
in conjunction with the Nationa l
LOVELY 2 BAS. - Carpetin&amp;
CenPa logica l SociE&gt;ty's annu a l
small porch. basement gas lurconvention.
nace, pantry an d lglot iof just
$16,500.

Scholarship
given youth
.

64 Misc. Merchandise

Public Not ice

Public Notice

Ohio

Business Servlces

PHONE
992-2156
W1it1
Se111tlnd CIISSI!iecl Otpt.
Of

June 19, 1985

ltourucont f!ghtlnl ,
U, 800. Coli It 4·44 .
111 I or 814-441-00tl.

6 rm house, 926 Firet Avt.

Coli 614-448·3945.

·

For ron! 10 min . from ,
Goltlpolil or Rio Grenda on
Rt. 35; 3 bdr. houao, livll'l·
groom. large dining-kitchen

• -· with built-In coblnet..
utHity room. beth, 1 oer.
•nochod gor-. fully oorPllted.

curtains Included .

1973
will Mil Nloo yord, go~ nelghborfumloliod or unlumllhed. hood lor chifdrtn. RMt llant
Air cond., woohor·dryor. UIO Plf mo. bopoalt &amp; ..!.
now undorpinnlng, btocka. roq . Qu•tlflod oppflconh
Colt l14·448-4073orl14- only. Colt collect 814·281441·4835.
1447.

�Page- 1 0 - The Daily Sentinel

LAFF-A-OAY

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

54 Mi.s c. Merchandise
John Deere modal40 dozer.
I 1800. 304-875-7758 .

us

nient location. security dep-

ARMV

ost t reuqired . Ca ii614-446-

B558 .

1982
""MUSTANG""
2-horse •andem trailer, h1.
78"·, otall width, 36". Good
condition. Call 304-6754187.

51ATION

New 2 bdr . all ele~tri.c ­
acrou fro m h ospital. Dep-

osit &amp; ret ., no pets. Call
~1 4- 446-9307.

Coli 614-446-2236 or 61444 6-2581.
2 b dr. mobile home, total
el ec tric, adults only, no pets,
TV , cable available. Call

614-367-7438 .
2 bdr. t rail er 15160 mo . plus
deposi t . 3 bdr. trailer $1 75
mo . plus deposit . Both fur·
nished, not in park, but in
co untry, on Raccoon Rd .
just off Rt . 218. Call any-

1?oc!ii.,U • .,,

"Yoo-hoo! Anybody here?"

----------'------ ~===~======lr-:=========i
ti me 614-446 -8397.

c arp"et. enclosed patio, onetenth s mile on lincoln Pike
of At . 141 : Security dep .
re quir e d. C a ll 61 4 -446 ·
4303.
Trailer for rent. Call after
4PM . 614-446 ·422.5 .
Modern· 2 bdr., extended
livingroom, S230mo., $100
de posit. See 314 3rd_. St.,
Ka nauga, Oh . Call 614-4467 47 3.

44

Apartment
for R en·t

.J.ACKSON ESTATES
APART M ENTS (Equal
Hous i ng Opportunity}
monthlv rent starts at $169
for 1 bedroom and $204 for
2 bedroom. deposit $200.
located near Spring Vallev
Plaza and Foodla nd , pool
and Cable TV available,
hours as possible 10 am to 4
pm and 7 pm to 9 pm
Mo ndav-Friday. Call 614446 - 2745 or l e ave
message .

Ni c ely furnished mobile
home, eft. apt ., central air
and heat in city, adults onlY.
Call 614-446-0338.

1-

44

Apartment

for Rent

1 bedroOm apt. for rent .
Nicely located . Contact Viilage. Marior in Middleport .
614 · 992 - 7787 . Equal
Housing Opportunity.

2 bedroom furnished •p1. in
Middleport. All utili1ies p•id.
Cf!lll 614-992-50B4 •fter
5:00 pm. weflk:days.
3 ~droom furnl1hed apart·
ment for rant in Syracuse .
614-992-7689 alter 5pm.
APARTMENTS. mobile
homes. houses. Pt. Pies lint
and Gallipolis. 614-446 8221 .
3 large rooms and ~th,
Jefferson Avenue, Point
Pleaeant. Adults. no pets.
304-675-3052.
Furnished apartment, downtown Point Pleasant, utilities
paid, deposit required. 304895-3450.

45

Furnished Rooms

51 Household Goods

Why pay more? Check us
out,· New furniture. appliance1 outlet. Trade Cen1er,
Kanauga, Oh. Coll6 14 •446 .
7444.
P.. e green velvet chair, exc.

RICK"S NEW AND USED
FURNITURE. Compare our
prices, uve today. Phone
304-773-5430.

53

Antiques
----------

Woodburner kitchen stove
with morning cabinet and
watartank, $125. Call 61 4742-3109.

.54 Misc. Merchandise

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light houoe keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel .
Call 614-446-0756.

Knauff Firewood Summer
rate1- b~g loads. May 1stJuly 31at. Doesn't apply to
HEAP. 614· 256-6246.

Furnished room. range. refrig . $96, share beth. aingle
male . 91·9 2nd . AVe., Qallipoiis. Call 446· 4416 l!lfter
8PM .

SPECIAL cut olabo 6 PU
loads delivered in dump
truck e100. or21oodse180.
You pickup *1 5. Cali 614245-68Q4.

Farm Equipment

Hotpoint
large
cap
a c .i t dryer,
y·, exgold.
c . con
d,
8200 .00 . Hotpoint gold
wa 1 her. needs times.
f40.00. 304-576-2611 or
304-762-2035 .
TONY"S GUN REPAIRS.
hOt dip reblueing, all types of
gunsmithwork, fas• seryice,
3 0 4 - ~ 7. 5 - 46 31

.

55 Building Supplies
Building Materials
Block. brick. sewer pipes,
windows . lintels . etC.
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
0 . Coll614-245-5121 .
Builder's Surplus-Salvage
Closeouts. (1) Embossed
wood grain aluminum liding. foam backed. twin 4 " or
8 " pattern. 839.96 sq. (21
Twin 'rib white metal rotting
or siding 38" wide 8' thru
16. longtho. 841 .95 sq. (3}
Steel insulated prehung
door's all sizes and patterns.
875.00 to up. (4) Hollow
core and 6 panel wood
prhung door's $20.00 &amp; up.
(5) 4"x8'•5-32 wood paneling . 84.99 &amp; up.
Wella1on, Oh .
Penn's Warehouse
614 - 384 - ~646 .

Block, brick. mortar and
masonry supplies. Mountain
Stote Block. Rt. 33. New
Haven. W. Va. 304-8822222 .

56

Pets for Sale

New Idea mower 8296, hay
wagon $295, 9 h . hay bina
S796, Freeman loader
$350. Call 614-286-6522.
New 6 ton heavv duty united
farm wagon running gears.
$379.96. Massey Ferguson
bale load~r $260 . Call 614.
286-6522.

Ford 501 mower, 1$500.
very - good condition . Call
614 -388-9688.
Tobacco setters. Interna tional corn sheller, burr mill,
~eaton 7 ft . haybind, 601
Ford mower, Massey FerQUaon pull dyne-balance, New
Holland 56 rake, bale eleva·
tors, King Kutter rotary
mower, manure spreaders.
fertilize spreadert. other
equipment. Howe's farm
Mochinery. Rt. 124 to Mayhew Rd .. Jackson, Oh . Call
514-286-5944.

71

Autos for Sale

72

Trucks for Sale

TOP CASH pold for '80 ·'79 Chevy. 4 wheel drive,
model and newer used Cllrt. ahort bad truck 260, 6 cyl.
Smith 8ulclt-Pon11oc. 191 1 euto. _.c aha!'4 •4.200.00.
Eastern Ave .• Gallipolis. Call 304-875-7161 .
614 -446-2282.

1978 Cutl..s Supn~me 2tone m•roon , loaded ,
79.000 milas, U ,300 firm.
Coli 814-245-9498.
1979 Oldo Cutlaoo Suprema
Brous;~ham, new t1re1. air.
cruise. tilt, axe. cOnd. Call
614-446-4073 Or 614-4464836.
81 AMC Spirit OL hetch·
back, greatges mileage. axe.
con'd ., muat 1ell. Call 614·
245·5040 alter 4PM .
78 Ford Gronodo Ohio body.
bleck, new paint, e1,000.
Call 614-379-2116.

73

Vans

4•

1977 GMC Vandura with
Midat interior, excellent me ~
chanlcal condition , high
mileage-recent engine work.
Call 614-446-8098 elter
&amp;PM.
1 986 Ford Econ Uno Van
160. mileage 08!1610 and
tllke over payment•. For
lnforma11on call 304-8755393 alter 4.

74

Motori:ycles

1983 480 Hondo
never raced. Call
0!194 altar 4PM .

Steer stuffer, like new,
$700. Call 614-682-7349.

1975 Ford Torino light blue,
good cond.. 1750 or best
offer. Call ahor 5PM , 614446 -9376.

1974 Hilrley D•vidaon
Sportster, Iota of extras.
e1 , 700 . Coli 614- 245·
5550.

Farmall cub tractor with
cultivator and other equipment. Call 614-256-6846 ..

2· 1973 Pinto wagons. 1973
Dodge Charger. Coli 614·
379-2263,

Apartment for rent. Call
61 4-446· 9244 9AM · 6PM .

'

GOOD USED APPUANCES
Wnhlfo, dryers, rofrlgera1oro, rongn. Slcaggo Ap·
plionceo. Upper Rlvlf Rd.
beolde Stone Cr- Motel.
814-448-7398.

Riverside Aptt. Middleport.
Specill r•tea for Senior
Citizen•. $130. Equal Hous·
ing Opportunities . &amp;14992-7721 .

County Appliance, Inc .
Good uMd eppllance• end
TV Hto. Open BAM to I PM.
Mon thru Boot. 81 4·4411889. 127 3rd. Avo. Oolli·
polio. OH .

H Farmall tractor tor sale.
Call 614-949-2558.

1978 Naw Yorker. bronze, 2
dr .• loaded. Call 814-446·
7404 anytime.
1980 VW Rabbit. 2 door
with AC, moon roof. AM·
FM , 4 speed, block. U.OOO
or best oHer . Call304· 882·
2811 .

ox. ohape.
~14 · 367 ·

1980 Hondo 70 3 wheeler.
f395. Call614-446-9391 .

]

~~~~~~~~~: I

ueoo.oo.

2 bedroom apartments.
New Haven , WVa.. N_ewly
remodaled In town. 614992·7481 .

Valley Furniture. new •
used. Llrge Mctlon ~f quality lurnhure. · 12 1 8 Elltlfn
Avo., Oolllpolio.

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

Canoe. plano. trl-door refrie-rator , e ..ctric range,
wlclter furniture. Coli I 14982-7143 oftor 5pm.

1974 Ftlrd A•choro tNck.
Good motor. tlreo. ll&lt;!dy
badly ruotad . 114·882·
88114.

FlriWOOd . UO.OO pickup
lood. f30.0o dollva...t. Call
304·175-1712 or 875·
2891 .

1984 Ford Ranger plall-up.
V-8, oll~dard, longbed,
.,_..., duty -'ng 11118- Call
114-141-21tJ.

Air conditioner. con-ale TV.
Good cond. 304· 773-9111.

1878 Chevy 31b atonclard.
Runa '""· 1710.
Call
114-lfa-7141 .

loch. hoo 1172 cue
f11,000. Chevy dump
1912 2'111 ton 11,000. Low
loy f!IOO.OO : 304-8712321 .

Cii

s~ rv; ces

81

44;uoo

1183 Palomino Shetland
foldup camper. Deluxe
modal. - . , , I, oupar light·
wolght. perfect lor oompect
- · UHdonetlma,lllten-.
11100. 304-871·1714.
1 I l l ltaroreft pop - up
excollon1 con&lt;lhlon •.
f700 firm. Call 114·4410171 or 304-178-1431 II·
..r7.

ca-.

'

1877 Fleatw~ .. comper. 13
ft. eiOOIII 4. •eollorlt Cbndl·
don. •t.ooo. Coli 304·17!11383 otter 4.

I I (] tJ
"T HEY WER:E
PAI'I':"TICIPAN/5
l l:J A ~HOTe&gt;UN

m

Home
Improvements

WEDC::&gt;INIS.

I RUMIADj ()
I KI

e (])

BORN LOSER

[j

I OBOAT I

®N-•

aidetl!llk.
1,000 CB
equipment everything
$400.00.
304-675·5128.
--------

r

I I

(Jl)
MocNeU/Lohrer
New.hour
•
{!} Ne!¥ Name That
Tune
·
·
•stor Trek
IHBO) Workln' for PHnuta
Two teenagers become attrected to one another. but
differences In their back· ·
grounda may be to much to
· handle.
Tic Tac Dough
7:30
CIJCI- Kid
(]) lnolcle the POA Tour
((} Major I.Haue BaHboll:
Houoton at Atlanta·
CIID (]) Fomlly FIUd
Jeopenly
(J)
Nightly
Bualneoo
Aepon
()D WhHI of Fortune
81 ID Entertainment
Tonight
8:00
ffi Highway to
HHven (CCI
CIJ Flipper
(]) Profeulonal llowlera
Anoolatkin:

1971 layton 19 ft, self
contained. camper, gu or
electric. •1.500.00. Past

. Yesterday's

I

Now arrange ttle circled lett ers to
form the surprise answer, as sug·

gesled by the abo¥e cartoon.

(Answ8fs tOITIOfroW)
Jurnbies: SWAMP ELEGY DEPUTY BA BOON
Answer: A loafer Is always ready to do !his, to sav the
leasI- TH E LEAST

e (])

M•rcum Roofi ng &amp; Spout·
ing. Now in1talling rubber
roofa. 30 y.. rs experience,
specializing in built up roof.
Call 614-388-9857.
BASEMENT ·
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gua ·
rantee. local references
furnished . Free estimates.
Call collect 1-6i4-2370~88. day or night . Rogers
Basement Waterfuoofing .

Tabor UpholsterY' - For . r~~tu ·
pholstaring, free estimates.
Free picNup &amp; delivery. Call
614-379-2850.

.,,6,000

IIHnloiQpen
([} • 1D Fall Guy (CC)
Colt'a lifo ia in danger
when he become• bodvguard to one of the richest
women in 1he world. (R) (60
min.)
D (J) (!) MOVIE: 'Calamity
Jane'
.III
MacNeii/Lohrer
Newahour
IIII A · Celebration for
Handel end Bach The Phi·
lsdelphio Academy ol1he
Fine Arta i1 the setting for
1hlo opeciol celabmlon of
tho 300th birthday anniversaries of Handel and
Bsch. (60 min.)
Ill MOVIE: 'Gypay'
(HIOI MOVIE: 'Over the
B'I'Oklyn Bridge'
!MAXI MOVIE: 'Wholly

ANNIE
CIOtt'T PLAN ON 6PEI'iCI·
I~ WO MUCIC Tlii'IE IN
IT! YOU'RE HERE W
HAVE FillY.'

O.and M . Contractors. Vinyl
siding . replacement windows. insulating. roofing.
new and remodeling. con·
creto. Call304-773-5131 :
All typea Or maso nry. bricks,

blocks , ' concrete, stone.
Free estimate. Call' Roger at
Go-cart ••· shape. *225 . · 304-773-6127.
Call 614-388-9373.
RON'S TeleVision Service.
79 Harley Oaviion Sporttter House calls on RCA. Ouaur,
1 3.000 mileo. 12.995. Call
GE . Specialing in Zenith .
614-•46-1616 alter 5 814- Call 304-676-2398 or 614·
446-1244.
446-24!14.
.

3

2 bdr. apt .. utilities partly
p•id-nice. $ 149 mo. Call
304-675-5104 or 304-67653 86 .

EVEN INO
·7:00 •
PM Maeazene
CIJ Brendad
· (]) lportoconlllr
Cll S.nfonl and Son
(]) Enlllrt.llnmant Tonlgh1
ffi Wheel ol·Fortune
• (J) Wheel ol Fonune
(J) Second City TV

lit 4 W.O.

Pool People Special :
46 Space for Rent
lnground pool kitl, 18x32- HillCREST KENNELS
f2.39!1, 18x36-e2,695, Boarding all breeds. Heated
Must sellll 1975 Suzuki
20x40- t2, 895 in stock . indoor-outdoor facilities .
560. good cond. Call 614·
Mobile home lot, 12'x60' or · 16x32 inground poola- AKC Doberman puppies: John Deere 40 dozer.
266 - 6574 or 614· 256 ·
smaller, $76 water paid, 4th .inltalled-bring us your low Stud Service. Call61 4· 446~ $1800 . Call 304-675· 1973 Ford Pinto Squire 1941.
statiQnwagon. Automatic, - - - - - - - - - 6173.
~ pstairs unfurnished 3 rodm
&amp; Neil. Gallipolis. Call 446· estimate. Middleport 614- 7795.
A.C .• ru,no good, excellent 1980 Honda CD900, Shaft
9.92-5724.or Gallipolis 614apt.r carpeted. \-ltili ties paid•. 4416 ojtor 81'M .
Briarpatch Kennels
gas mjleege. ·6~0 . _ 1980 drive, air ausg;r)lion. Priced
no ~hiiCken , · no pets. Cell. .c.,~...:.-------.:..... . : 446-.30~1 : .
Oldo Cud••• L$. P: S .•.P.B..- tQ oell '61.4 92 6710 ..
-llonal . All-breed
61&lt;j· 446C1tl_37·:
. -··
.2.mQbil_e home pad• for r~11t,
63
A.C.. ·eiccellant condition. '
· :
:
•·
. · .
rural ,w,_t8r, electric, septic· - o~NS. ··?oo-Rem. 243. ~ tnd~or~ ou1doQr boarding
1978 750 Hondamoior;cyFurnished etficierlcy $12&amp;" tank, ga;agti storage, Rice 870-Rem. · ·12 go. 1i 00 cilltlei. English Cocker Spa- Reg . Morgan· 1fallion &amp; filly Ca11 .614.-.949·2668. ' ·
utilities paid, 919 2nd .• area on Eagle Rd. Call Rem. 12 ga. Red Hawk 44 niel puppies. Cell 614-388- for sale or trade. Call 614cle. Excellent condition .
9790.
1976 Volkowogon Rabbit, •860. After 8pm coli 614mag. Coli 614-367-0482
Gallipolis. single male pre- 614- 388-8826 .
379-2585 .
27mpg, good worX car. 98!1 3868
ferred . Call 446 -4416 after
$500. Call anytime 114- _ _• _ _. _ __ _ __
8PM .
2 trailer spaces tor rent on 1980 Honda motor bike, Dragonwynd Cattery Ken· Reg . Walking _horse mare,
CFA
Himalayan,
Persian
nel.
843-6440.
1979 Yomaho 1 100XS
private lot. lJpper river "Rd. 1969 travel trailer~ 1973
Chev, truck for .. 1e or will and Siamese kittens. AKC S700. Reg ._ walking horse
Furnished apa rtment . 941 Coli 614-446. 0002.
Musteng.
Needs
p·
a
lnt
completely
dreutid. otereo •.
mare
&amp;
colt.
8800.
2
yr.
old
1977
trade for riding lawnmower. Chow puppies. New litter.
nice road bike. 304-875 Second Ave . Gallipolis. 2
V2
walking
horse
gelding,
job.
Must
sell.
S700.
6144338.
Call
446·3844
alter
7PM
.
bdr S245 mo. utilities pd . COUNTRY MOBILE Homa Call 614-256 - ~640 or 614$250. 2 hor11 trailer, $800. 992 - 5816 or614 - 992- ------------------.
Call 446-4416 after Bpm .
Park, Route 33, North of 448-7027.
Call614- 992-6102.
AKC
'Baaset
hound,
pups
for
3785.
3 wheeler motorcycle•.
Pomeroy. Large Iota. Cell
Mini bike for ule or trade. 4 aale. Tri-colored, 6 weeks
Furnished apt. 3 room pri- 614-992-7479 .
1983 ATC-110 for $800
1
riding
horse
and
1
work
1 976 Monte Carlo. Make an and 1978 ATC-70 lor *300.
speed tr•nsmission for aale old. 5 male &amp; 2 female. Cell
vate bath , references rehorse. 304· 576-2233 alter offer . Call614-992-5163 .
.
or trade . Call 614-446- 614-256-1652 .
qui red, 845 2 nd. Ave., GalliColi, 304-675-3131.
5:00.
3370 Ilk for Brian Oipolis. Call 614· 446-2215 ..
Lorettl:
· ·.
Reg. A·ustri•Uan Blue-Heeler ·
1972·QpoiG:r. ·AftarG
1981 Kowao,kj
1000 LTD,
pups. Guranteod. to work
bull. .304-675-7671
5.800
miloo, excellent
con·_ MQdern~ 1 bdt' apt. dOwrt-s-.~y .fU~_nitUta. Oa·c:-~ _quality cettle .. Ready .to · go. Call
. tOwn ·location. ·t A, carpet, .
·dltion;
Cali ofter
.
used. Frarik;s Pawn Shop; 614' 446: 2,-09 . . ·
M c r ch~ n rl;se
complete kitchen . Call 614Well broke thoroughbred· Ps. good tlrn•• 3~ioc~ii . 5 p·.m .• ~04-675-793&amp;.
430 Second AVa .. Gallipo446 -438 3 days or 61 4-4462 AKC Reg. Pekenese pup- - Quarter Mare with 2 week 304-676-2383 after 5PM.
llo. Oh . 614·446-0840.
0139 eve.
pies. 1 male. 1 female . Call colt ; Grey child - broke
75
Boats and
Gelding $275 .00. 304-882- 1980 AMC.
51 Housahold Goods lawn mowers, good quality 614-256-9391.
513 Jrd . AVe. 1 bdr. private
Motora
for Sale
2762.
automa11c.
3o4:'ti71i-j:35.4:.j
uaed . Frank's Pawn Shop,
bath, S1 35 mo.. includes
Trained
Beagles,
male
and
SWAIN
430
Second
AVe.,
GallipoAsklorGuy.
-------------------. water ; depb~lt required . Call
female . Also 7 Be_a gle pups .
614-446 -4222 . between 9 AUCTION to FURNITURE lio. Oh. 814-448-0840.
64 Hay &amp; Grain
1974 750 l;londa 85!!5. 16ft. flbarglou boat. troller.
Call 614·742-2521 .
62
Olive
Stl,
Gallipolis.
New
&amp; 5.
1976 Pinto Hatchback auto. 711 HP motor. f500. Call
&amp;. used wood-coal stovea. 6
18ft. above ground pool. Y2
114-379-2702. '
*795 . 304-676-6622.
HP pump, filter , vacuum. Fish Tank and Pet Shop;
Fu rnish ed efficiencv S145. pc wood LR suite $399.
ladder, winterized cover, 2413 Jackson Avenue, Alfalfa hay, wire baled.
utilties paid. share bath, 607 bunk bads t199, onuon
$600. Call 614-446-9330 Point Pleasant, 304· 676- never wet . Call 614· 268- '72 Dat1un 4 speed 4 door 17 ft. Sports Croft tri·haul:
2nd . Ave. Gallipolis, adults. recliners &amp;99, new &amp; used
walk thru wind1hield. 75 HP
2083. Fish, birds and more . 2331 or 614-226 -2094 of- $400. 304-676-4203.
bedroom suitea. ranges,
altar &amp;PM.
Call 446-4416 alter 8PM .
Evenrude motor a. trailer.
ter 7PM .
wringer waahera. &amp; aho...
1972
VW
Super
Bemle,
New
livingroom
1uites
Himalayan.
need
ml!lle
to
1
---------Saara
10,500
BTU
window
Furnished apt . 24,3 Jackson
~~~- ~~~
can
Pike.. Gallipolis, 2 • bdr., $199·8599. Iampo. aloo air conditioner, axe . conO., breed with my female , .304- Good mixt;td hay for sale, excellent condhlon. $1,200.
.
$235. utillt e~ paid. Call buying co•l A. Wl;)od stoves. ooking $195. Call614-246- 576-251 1 or 304-762 - mus1 sell. Call 614-446- 304-676-44, 9.
1978 libarglno old-boot 1 6
0373 . •
2035.
Call 61 4· 446· 31 69.
5040 alter 4PM .
446 -4416 alter 8PM .
' 76 Toyota. good cond. ft, 76 HP, outboord. Call
•1.000.00. Coli oltor 5:00 814-448-4!194.
Remington 22· 260 model
740 % 2nd . A11e .. 3 bdr ..
Tr
ansporl
at
ion
304- 675-7565.
57
Musical
LAYNE'S
FURNITURE
700 ADL. Waover K-12 to
$190 mo., dep . req. Call
For ula: 1978 111 ~ ft.
Instruments
614-446 -4647 or 614-446· Sof•s and chairs priced from caM &amp; reloading diea. Call
Storcralt trl· haul boat with
1977
Hond•
ttetlon
wagon,
$285
.
to
$895.
Tobleo,
150
614-388-9322.
71
Autos for Sale
4222 between 9AM -5PM .
axe •h•pe or trade for pick trailer . • 1,600. can 614and up to 112!1. Hlda·o·
up equal value. •1.200 .00. 992·2143 or 614-7423 bdr , newly remodeled , beds,t390 . and up to Clooa Out Special. 15% off
2289 aftlf 6pm.
·
Phone 304-676-7380.
$550..
oofo
bodo
1146,
all
chain
sawt
in
stock
now
duplex : 644 or 646 Second
Ave .. utility room, kitchen, Recliners, $226. to *375.; 1hru Juno 22 . MR Chaln17 ft. C re1tliner. 1 6 6
diningroom . Call 614-446- Lamps from -f28. to 1125. oaw. Mitchell Rd . Call Bi 4inboard-outbo•rd. power
72
Trucks
for
Sale
pc.
dlnotteo
from
f109
.•
to
446-7126.
8293.
trim prop.• power trim tabs,
435. 7 pc. f189 ond up.
tri·haul. 304· 675·6288.
New 2 bdr. apt .. refrig . &amp; Wood table with tix chairl
8286
to
e746
.
Delk
1110
stove furnished . 4 V2 miles
12 loot John Boat. 304from Gallipolis . 5225 mo . up to $226. Hutche1, t660.
117!1· 8809.
Bunk
bed
complete
with
plus electric. deposit &amp;:
reference required . No pets. mattresses, 1275. and up to
&amp;395. Baby bedo. I 110.
Call 614-446-8038.
78 Auto Parts
Mat1resses or -box tprings,
or
twin,
$68
..
firm.
t88.
&amp; Accessories
full
Efficfency apt with garage.
private yard maintai ned, and 178. Queen oeto. 1,225.
lease required. S225 mo. 4 dr. che1t1, t49. 6 dr.
1 976 Ford, 6 cyl. auto.
water included. washer 8t cheats, $59. Bed framet ,
81,000 miles on motor and
dryer hookup . Call 614- $20.and $25 ., 10 gun · Gun
tre nsmis1ion, $200.00.
446-7209 or 614 -446 · cabinetl, t360. Gat or
electric range• $376. Baby
304-878-!1384 .
.3287 .
mottresseo. 12,5 &amp; f~5. bad
1 bdr. furnished or unfur- frames f20. f2&amp;. ·to 130.
77 Auto Repair
nish ed, utilities paid, $ 190 king frame f50. Good selecper mo.. S50 dep .. _ no tion ot bedroom tultes,
childr en, no pets. Call 614· rockers, metal cabinets.
headboar.ds $38 &amp;. up to
446 -3667 alter 5.
ATTENTION! ATTENTION!
865 .
IJ"o Body Shop now open .
Attractive 2 bdr. apt. with
FrM eatlmates. No lob too
refrig . &amp; stove. carpete.d . lA Used Furniture ·- Refriger•amall. 304-675-UU.
S. OR , convenient to ,Galli- tors. rangn. mete! office
deaks.
electric
rengt.
3
miles
polis. outside storage. With
197!1 Chavy truck. ~ ton. 78
washer &amp; dryer, $266 mo., out Bullville Rd. Open 9om
Climping
Run• very good. some rlilt.
without $260 . mo. C•ll to 5pm. Mon. thru Set. ·
Equipment
61
4-441-(1322
f900. Collll14· 912-5437.
614-245-9695 .
Furnished efficiency 701
4th Ave .. Gallipolis . $160,
utilities paid, .share bath,
adults. Call 446-4416 aher
SPM .

_8/!_IJ/85

1978 Starcr•ft camper
tleept 6, good cond., 8900.
Call 614-446-4109.

Camero 228 1983 low
mileage, V-8, exc. cond.,
garage hapt . Call 614-4469637.

Pole Buildings Construct8d
for com-mercial. garages.
farm, stores. etc. Any size.
free estimates. Call 304675-3981 .

Television
Viewing

Pop up camper trailer. sleeps
tix, fully equipped. $600.
Cell 614-446 -8103.

mower.~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~§@~~~

live pow·
er, with
3PS,bottow
plows,
drl!lw bar.
&amp;2.595. Call 614-2866522
·
3000 Ford diesel tractor like
new, Allis Ch•lmber mower
to Ford hoy baler, $4,4495.
Coli 614-286-6522 .

The Daily Sentinel- Page-11

Ohio

1971 Winnabago 25 h . fully
contained, generator. air.
••c . co nd, 87,500. Call
814-387-0447.

CROSS to SONS
U.S. 35 Weot, Jackson.
Ohio. 614-286-8451 .
Massey Ferguson. New
Holland, Bush Hog Sales to
Sears sand filter and pump
Service. Over 40 uaed
for a bowe ground pool. 3
trac1ors to choote from &amp;
years-old, phone 304-675·
complete line, of new &amp;,
1869.
used equipment. Largest
Deep freeze, 304-676- _selection in S.E. Ohio.
2931 . .
340 International tractor

cond. Call614-446-4303.

Country Oak tablea. ch11irs,
cupboards. desks. ice boxes.
Conkl&amp;l, Tuppers Plains. At.
1 . Hafld crafted and
finished.

51

1985

1985 Starcr•ft St•r Master
6. pop· up, same as new,
used 2 times, mus1 iell at
once to set1te lltate. Elec•ric, refrig .. healer. gas stove,
all optionl. t3.200 firm .
Coat over $4.900 new-, C•ll
614-446-1641 . ·serious .in·
quires only after 6, 614445· 8172.

Farm Supplies
&amp; L;veslnck

Sa1elllte Spun aluminum or
mesh. Save up to 8500 on
these di1hes thru July . Pre
site; checked . Authori.zed
Dreike dealer. 304-6764173.

WedtWiday, June 1

79 Motors Homes
lit Campers

Fruit

Strawberrie•. Roush'l at
Union Campground (back of
Nevv Haven, WVal 1.200
qts. of good jam berries. Vou
pick 40 cents qt. No Sunday
uleo. Coli 1· 304- 882 2237.
.

Gold carpeting. 1 2x24.
12• 1 2. 4•18 feet. excellent
condition, $250 . See on
floor. 304-675' 4370.

2 bd r, a ppli a n c e s furnished .
1l.h m i. fro m town. large lot.
S 1 75 mo. plus deposit&amp; ref.

On priVat e lot , 2 bdr. furnished mObile home, AC ,

58

&amp; Vegetables

2 bdr. furnished, all' utilites
pd . · ex-cept elect .. conve-

On priwate lot. total elect .. 2
bdr . mobile home. w, baih,
A.CJ carpet, one-tenths mile
on Uncoln Pi ke of Rt. 141 .
Security dep. required . Call
614-446-4303.

June 19, 1985

Ohio

The truth may hurt their
frlen'dl!lip when Tootie
asko Natalie·• opinion on
an esaay the has Written.

,.

AJ.I.EY OOP

.. .IT CONTAINS
yOUR UNCLE'S
"SPECIAL
VINTAGE".'

Fetty Tree Trimming. stump
removal . Call 304-6751331.
RINGLES "S SERVICE . experienced c•rpenter, electri~
cian , mason, painter, roofi·ng (including hot tar
opplicatlon) 304-675-2088
or 675-.7368.

·- Rc;it-ry. OJ c'ble· tQol.drilling.
Most welll 'completed same
day. Pump sales and serviceo. 304-895-3802 .
Stark• Tree and lawn Service. stump removal. 304576-2010.

82

Plumbing

GASOLINE ALLEY
+.h'"'"" was one

f mus' respec'IILJ
decline uer fine
offer. Calvin'

other small

reason!

&amp; Heating
CARTER "S PlUMBING
!"NQ HEAt iNG - .... · ·••
. C~r . Fourth and Pine
. Golllpollo. Ohio .
Phone 814-446-3888 or
614-446-4477
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING. Rt. 1: Box 355. Gallipolis. Call 614-367-0576 .

83

Excavating

WINNIE
GET~

Good -1 Excavating, basementa. footers. driveways . .
septic tanks, landScaping.
Call anytime 614- 446 ·
4537. James l. Oavi·s on, Jr.
qwner.
Oozer Work land c learing,
landscaping, etc . Free eati·
mateo . Coli 614-446-8038
or 614-992-7119 anytime.

84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

BARNEY

~700Ciub

Cll 81

{!} Dynaaty (CC)
Kryatle ia driven further
into the arms of Daniel by
81aka"o recant behavior. (R)
(60 min .)
III A Colebratlon lor
Handel and Bach Tho Phiiadolphla Academy of the
Fl~a AIU io. tho setting lor
·thiil IP.eci:el c:ele~rat!ori ·of
1~o 300th blr1hday.. an~iv- ·
·er11rie1 _ of Handel. ahd
Bach. (80 min.)
(Jj) Mark RuHIII Comady
Spec. Mark Ru11ell tak11 a
humorous look at curren1
events.
9:30 G (]) (!) Double Trouble
Allioon IHkl Margo"o help
in writing a term paper. (A)
(Jj) Plowing Up o Storm The
historv of thfl nlinht nf th•
American fermer is docu·
mantod. (90 min.)
fo:OOeCIJCil St E...WhareAn
old friend of Dr. Auschlan·
dor·o comauo ·s't: Eligius rn
~io search lor a , k(~ney
·~'
dorior fo ~ en African· boy .•
(R) (SO mln.l
(])
Aua1rallon
Ruin
Footbell
(]) • 1D Arthur Holloy'a
Hotel (CC) Peter and Billy
come to the aid of a young
girl who has become in·
.volvod In proatltutlon. (R)
(60 min.)
8 (]) (!) CBS Reporto:
Ternirlam-War
In tho
Shadow• The increuing
ute of terrorist tactics. par1icularly agal~ottho United
Stateo, lo dlocuased. (80
min.)
(J) Dohnonyl and tho
Clovolond Orcheotra
(HIOI Tino Turner: Private
D1noer Tina Turner performa in concert.
IMAXl MOVIE: "Hembone
end HIIUe'
10:11 (J) MOVIE: "The Third Day'
10:30 CIJ Trevello(a World

1 1:00

'fOU CAN LOOK NOW,
AUNT LOWEEZY

SEWING M•chine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
S•les &amp; Service Sharpen
Sciuora . Fl!lbric Shop.
Pomeroy . 614-992· 2284 ..

86

M -'

G Cil (I) Facta of Life (CC)

9:00

General Hauling

It12l

11:30

James Boys Water Service.
Aloo poole filled . Call 614266- 1141 or 614 -446 1175 Of 614-446 -7911 .
~en'a Water Service. Wells,
cisterna, pools filled . Phone
61•· 367-0623 or 614-!1677741 night or doy.

Waugh '• Water Service .
Wells. cisterns, pools. Fast.
relieble tervice. Call 6142!18-1240 or 614-2561130. Raa•onable ratea.
Haul llmea1one. sand, gra·
vel,dlrt, bulk or bag fertilizer ·
and lime. Ekcelsior Salt
Worka Inc. 138 E. Main St
Pomeroy. &amp;i4-992· 3891 . ·•

87

Upholatery

TRISTATE
UPHOlSTERY SHOP .
1 183 Sac. Ava., Oalllpollo.
114-441-7133 oi814-4461833·.

fl • M Furnh- MonuloQ!urlng, 8t. At. 7, Crown
Clly, Oh. Call 114-2581410. coli Eve. 114-448·
3438. Old to naw
Uphoot•od.

SNAKE!!

•••

James Jacoby

Too much help
for opponents

NORTH.
+ ·K Q 7 2
\'A 108 5 4

6-19 · 8 ~

••

+ K 105

By Jameo Jacoby
WEST
EAST
The standard lead from a plain suit
+ 9 64
+ 853
\' 6
lacking a sequence has from time
"Q J 9
tQ 973Z
tKJ 106 5
immemorial been fourth-best. There
+Q H 3
+ 62
is a strong argument that this lead
· should not be u~d against a ,slam '
. . SOUTH
contract. Not using a fourth-best lead
+A J IU
\'K 7 3 2
.should make it more dif.(icult for
t A8
declarer to count the hand.
course
+A 9 8 4
the same difficulty would exist for
the leader's partner.
Vulnerable: Both
Declarer succeeded on today's deal
Dealer: South
because the deiend ers were using
West
North East
fourth-best leads. South won the ace
: of diamonds and drew two rounds of
Pass
Pass
trump ending in his hand: He ruffed a
Pass
Pass
diamond in dummy, played a low
Pass
Pass
Pass
. spade back to his ace. cashed _the
Pas!'
spade jack, and overtook the spade 10
with dummy's queen. East followed
Opening lead· • 3
to all three spades . If the opening lead ' - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - '
. of the ' diamond three was from four
or five diamonds, .t hen East could not declarer might think that West could
ba~e more..t.ha~ t':"oclubs. Smtmg_his . ·have had ·six or even seven diamonds
achon to hts th•nkmg, d~larer _
played originally. ·Before ·cashing·· the high~
the ace ,and ~mg _ of c)ubs, and (hen clubs dec
· Ia
· ·h · th , . 1'
·
•ted · h t .
h· h E t h d
'
rer m•g 1 ep P ay 1o
eJU • Wit _ a rump w IC
as a place East on lead for a po'ss'1bl
d
to wm. Strtpped of all black cards and
.
e en
1
1
1
of trtJmp hapless East now had to p ay n c u~s. Declarer did well on the
play a di~mond, enabling declarer to :~tual deal, but he was helped by
owmg that the opponents leads
. trtlmp In his hand while discarding
dummy's lone remaining dub.
were tradttlona l and therefore
If d 1 d , 1 d
. t 1
predictable.
were r~r!ro~r~at:! ~h::~~n:rthS·=l~
(NE WSPAPER I!:NTERPRISE ASSN,J

I

or

te~JM"td'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
·. ACROSS ·

· Sillllir""'"' . ·

fEastern
39 indian
soldit• r
bishop's
title
40 From a
5 Maugham's
distanf·('
· - and Ale" · DOWN
10 Taste (Fr.)
I Sid• witl•
II The East
2 Dt•stiru••l
12 Oaseball
for
immortal
3 Shut up!
13 Expunge
4 Belgian
14 Within 1
commurw
(comb. form) 5 Groek
15 Moisten
island
16 Before (pre!.) 6 Troublt•
17 One from
7 Have
Esau s
few
country
friends
19 Knock
8 Board
20 Stack
a sleeper
1V role
9 Churo·h

21 Labor

greatly

Ye•terday's Answer
II Playwnghl 26 Prying
Clifford
device
15 Sagacious
2811azardous
18 ".. .thal
(sl.)
try - souls·· 29 Spanish
21 WasU' Ian d
saun:P
22 Dogs
30 l!ulloc k
23 On the
35 l)la&lt;k
job
cuckoo (var.)
student
36 Shade
24 Nosirc('
of gr~e n

22 Composer
Jule

2• Not a soul

INNN-

(]) Cll CIJG (]) ® Gl
N-1
CIJ 1111 Colby Show
(Jj) N-awotch
• lonny HIM Show
(HIIOI Not Nee nnrlly the

25 &lt;:reek
love deity
26 Diving bird 1
27 Greek letter "
28 Make
despondent
31 French
shooting
match
32 · - Gotta
lle Me"
33 Perched
34 Intertwine
36 Soct:er

-

'
e (])(I) Tonight
Show

CIJ hat of Groucho
(]) lpor~~~Mnter
(I) WKRP In Cincinnati
D (]) Night HHt O"Brlon
and Glamboneaearch tor a
murderer who hat been
otalking women. (R) . (80
min.)
(J) Lotenlght America
()D Taxi
·
(Jj) lntemotlonal Edition
t121 ABC N-• Nlghtllna

·I

r+-+-

Honeymoon.,..

IH•ol MOVIE: 'GreY&amp;toko:
Tha ~ncl of Tarun. Lord
of tho Apee' (CC)
(MAX] MOVIE: 'Gorky Park'
12:00 CIJ Wendy and Me
'
(]) lpo!U Focua Julluo
Erving
,
Cll hnny Hill Show
()D MOVIE: Wild In the
Sky'
(Jj) Star Huatler
t12l E" on HoU~
CMrllo'aAntlola
12:30
Ill (I) Lole Night with
Olvld Lottwman Tonlght"a
gueat Ia John Watora. teo
min.)
CIJ LoWi That lob
(]) Tonnla Maeaiino
(J) AIC H-. Nlghtllne
Ill MOVII: 'Tho Night
oflM CIMw'

Ie

e

'12:41
'1:00

BRIDGE

~'~~D.O.A.'
(I) I M1rrt.d J011n

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
.

Ohe letter s1.9;nds for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L s, X for the two O's, etc . .Single letters
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are ad
hints. Each day the code letters are differenL

CRYPTOQUOTE

6·19
AMMR
AMMR
AMMR

N R,

II .I Z

l..MK ~ HKZ

MNC

H.IZ

.fM C

li.J Z
.IMl"

Z M 8 .I ;

.rM c

O IIF.R ;

Y .J ;

II .I Z

If G II .1 Z . I. 1&gt;.
G II A 1
Yeatenlay'e Crytoquote: TilE WO!lll " IMPOSSIRL.E"
IS TO A SCIENTIST MUCIC LIKE TilE RPUII TO A
HORSE. - WILLIAM D. COOL.If)(JE
AIJ Z

'

�Page-12-The

Sentinel

June 19. 1985

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Community corner

Easy care
gardening
By CHARLE;NE HOEJ!UCH
Sentinel stair Writer
First it was "Low MaintenanCE'
and
now it's
Free, the
Nonsense
to House Care."
Having a
tiful garden and a
clean house with
a minimum of work··IIQW that's for
me!
About the garden.
'This week brought some discouraging news.' An announcement
that Alan D. Cook,
Dawes
Arboretum, Newark, wUI speak at
the Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs annual convention next
month In Lima on "Low Maintenance Gardening, the Tooth Fairy,
Tax Cuts and Other Myths."
'That title gives me bad "vibes,"
particularly since "low mainte-nance~ my kind of gardening,
and I kho_;, the meaning oft he word
"myth."
But the n. housework is more m y
responslbllty, and here comes a
working woman
with tips on
~reating order out of c haos on the
home front. She's talking about
looking gOOEI-on a day-to-day basis.
One of her suggestions to mlntm·
ize mainlenance is to go dingy like paint those white walls a
medium gray since gray is the color
of dirt or put up wallpaper with a
busy pattern.
Yes, the author, Ann Guiiioyle, Is
serious.
Learn surface cleaning, she says.
Cleaning house the way mother
did takes about 25 hours a week, but
who has that kind of t!Jne. So, says
the a uthor, figure out what Is
essential to keep the household
going a nd le t the rest slide. And
learn to be satisfied with what you
can get done. Decide what's
Importa nt a nd attend to that, and
then do the other things as time
permits.
Some of her tips for streamlining
the job include assembling supplies
ahead of time, putting on a little
music to work by, and concentra ting on one area at a time.
All this, she ;tffirtns, should help
make.. pr&lt;)er out of· Chaos· on the ·.
home front.
, Marge Reuter who has been a
night dispatcher at Pomeroy Village Hall for over· seven years
retired last week. Village employes
gat her('() for a social time honoring
Marge. 'There were refreshments
and a gift .

More
Americans die
on

We Rese1ve The Right To

Slory

Limit Quantities

STORE' HOURS ·
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10· PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

of blood

e
' Vot.35, No.47
Copyriphtod 1885

•

•

at y

enttne
2 Sections , 16 Pages

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio, Thursday, Jime 20, 1985

25 Cents

A Muhimedia Inc. Newsp•p••

Com•nissioners hear road complaints
'

By NANCY l"ITACHAM

MIXED

49(
Fr.-yer Parts .•.... ~~...
.
89&lt;
W·•eners •••••••••••••••••

SUPERIOR FRANKIE

12

oz. PKG.

HILLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED

$199
Sausage ••••••••••••••••
ASST. VARIETIES

$

FRESH PORK BUTT

Steaks/Roast ••••l!...
.1/4
.

.

Dyesvllle. Many residents I~ the arm have damaged
their vehicles traveling the roads a nd feel thes!lfety of
their driving Is being compromised Jordan said.
The surface of the roads Is son and turns to slick
mud after a rainfall Jordan pointed out, and also turns
to mud after county highway workers grade the
roads.
According to Columbia Township Trustee Gay
Johnson, who was also present at the meeting, the
road ·is In the worst shape "since 19.'19 or 1940."
"Carpenter Hillis so rough you can ha rdly get up and
down It In good weather and you can 'I gt&gt;t up and down
at all In the winter," Jordan added.
Giglio expressed his concE'rn that the poor road
'The
conditions are hurting his business Appalachian Stove Company - as well as the
business of a ca r body repair shop opera ted by
Jordan's son.

thL• type and " theonetha t's the worst Is the one will he
repaired first ."
In addition to checking the bridge, Roberts a nd
Warner will be checking out'a slip on Township Road
293, Silver Ridge, where Chester and Orange
Townships adjoin, as requested by Marcinko and
Robinson.
Petition presented
Dorsey Jordan and Steven Giglio, next on the
agenda, presented the conunisslon with a petition
signed by 40 Columbia Township residents asking for
· county road Improvements in the Carpenter
Hlll-DyesvWe area.
·
·
Jordan explaltied cesldents, who signed the
petitions, are angry about the deteriorating conditions
of County Road 10 going out of Carpenter toward the
Mount Union Church and County Road 11 toward

Sentinel Stalf Writer
Meigs County Conunlssloners became a sounding
board as several county residents and township
trustees aired their ·gripes and concerns about ·
township and county roads at Wednesday's reglliar
commission meeting.
Orange Township Trustees Robert Marcinko and
Wilbur Robinson open the session requesting county
assistance to make a bridge safer on Township Road
442. 'The trustees said some repair work was done on
the bridge abo'lt 20 years ago, but they are now afraid
to cross the 15 foot high structure wlth heavy loads.
Ted Warner, county highway superintendent, said
the bridge's strength has been cheeked recently . Phil
Roberts, county engineer, said because the bridge is a
tight truss carbon steerbrldge, problems are likely to
occur. Roberts noted many bridges in the county are

lB.

Pork lo: in·.~ .• ~~.• $1 ~·. ~ .
.

.

. .

. .

.

'

..

:: .

;,

. . ..

... .

USDA CHOICE

Chuck · Roast ••••••••• 99(
lB.

. .:
'

'.

--

(

.
2
..e.tt uce ...•.........•.
L
.
HEAD

William Watson advises tha t he is
the on&lt;' who took the pictures of the
antique fire fighting equipment in
the 19.17 susqulcentennlal parade In ,
Pomeroy which appeared in a
recent ft'aturc story about Pome·
roy firemen. Watson went into the
depatilll('nt In 1929 and was an
c tlve fireman for ma ny years.

.

.

39
Orange Ju1ce •••:~~~ 1

Havt' a nice wN'k.

BLUE BONNET

Bradford
Bibfe. School

Light Spread ••!~~~":. $1

59

'

Mt. Dew, Pepsi Free, Diet or Reg.$
8 PAK 16 oz.

BIRDS-EYE FROZEN 1 CONCENTRATE

STARKIST

BANQUET

,
2/$1
.
c
I
149
Awa·ke.................
Peps1- o a............ .

.SHURFINE SUGAR

:~l=;

$149

Umlt I Per Custo1111r
Goolt Ottly At '•well' 1
Offer llpim luttt 22, I tiS

THRIFT KING

'MAC. &amp; .CHEESE ·
O~, s ,
~

.7

BOX

.

reports made 1he first growth rate
WASHINGTON (UPl)-Go\rern·
shrink
even fart.h er 10 the latest 0.3
ment economists today estimated
jl('rcent.
the eeonomy Is growing at a 3.1
If the "Dash" estimate proves
percentrate,asharpreboundforthe
generally accura te, however, It
gro!;S national product fromonly0.3
percent growth In the first quarter . . would st ill not be strong enough to
reach the administration's forecas t
In projecting the "flash" GNP
for a ll of1985. a 3.9 percent rate.
figure, the Bureau ol Economic
'The four quart ers through June
Analysis assumed that sa)es are
show a growth rate of only 2,3
lncreas in~. that less merchandise Is
perrent, a government analyst said ,
being tied up In inventories, tha t
muc
h slower than the previous year
trade losses are shrinking a little and
that
saw
7.5 percent expansiOn.
that business spendin!( Is going up
'The GNP figures compare the
sharply.
If the assumptions do not prove ·estima ted total dollar value of a ll
coiTect the •·nash " wlll turnout to be goods and services for the latest
· ·too high, as happened In thP first quarte r with the preceding quarter
quarter. 'The first quart£'r "flash" after adjustment for seasona l
pecullatitles and the elimina tion of
was 2.1 percent.
AlthOugh this was farweaker than growth due only to Inflation ,
expected a t the time, subseque nt

120Z.

' Tuna ••••••l:-••• '59&lt;
Chunk
sl·

Umit 5 Per Customer
Goad Only At Powoll's
Offer bpiru .ltoM 22, 1915

32 Oz.

Btl.

79&lt;

SUNSHINE

.DRY DOG FOOD
20 LB.

Umit 1 ,., Cuttomer
Goool Only At Powllt's
Oflor Expires luna 22, 1915

•

BAG

$2 59

limit 1 Por Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer bplrts June 22, 1915

":...:

. -·

revisions In construction pl-.

'The c urrent Inflation rate for the
entire economy, not jus1consumers,
Is running at a 3.2 percent rate,
according to the government's
"Implicit price deflator," In the first
quarter it was 5.4 percent.
Another price measure the government economists consider
more accurate , the "fixed weighted
price index," shows the same trend,
a rate of inflation slowing to 3.9
percent In the second quarter,
compared wlth 4.3 percent in the
flrsi quarter .
·'The repot1 also showed corporate
after-tax profits in the first quarter
declined 2,8 percent but that cash
now available from internal sources
Improved 3.2 perCE"nt .
ln the previous quarter. rn

October through December. profits
fell by tess, 0.5 perCE&gt;nt, a nd cash
flow was up 2.3 percent.
The downward revisions in· the
first qua rter showed ~ he economy
undergoing some unusual twists.
Consumers kept spending and
saving on goods and services at a
healthy clip, a 5,2 percent a nnual
rate.
But final sales declined neverthP.
less as inventories backed up
unsold.
The assumptiOns made In formu ·
latlng the " flas h" estimate are not
necessarily shared by most private
economists, particularly th&lt;' expectation that business spending will
Increase or that trad(i losses are
leveling off.

WASHINGTON (UP]) - Presl· ttmc."
dent Reagan, apparently preoccuBu t Regan a lso indicated the
pied by the TWA hijacking, is Inte rnational Red Cross Is not
insisting he Is pursuing all roads to negotiating between tht' United
win freedom for American hostag&amp;s States a nd Israel ov&lt;'r a n exchange
but vowing not to submit to of the American hOStaics for
terrorists' demands :
·release by lsral'l of the700Lebilnl'Se
In a visit .to the American Shiites. ·
heat1land Wednesday -originally
The president was scheduled to
Intended as a Main Street salt'S
m('('t la te this after1190n · with
Alexander Hay, head of the lnternacampalgo for his tax reform plantiona I Red' Cross. White House
a grim -faced Reaga n dwelled on the
40 Americans ht'ld by Lebanese officials said the session was a
Shiite Moslems In Beirut, Lebanon.
long-scheduled photo oppoortunity
as ransom for their partisans held
and was unrelated to the current
by Israel.
crisis.
"We wm not cave in," Reagan
Although the administration has
warned a t a tax reform appearance
askedtbeRed Cross toconsuit lsral'i
~f9re !;he U,S. Jay~s ·ln Indianaabout thP s ta tus of the prisoner
PQIIS. "We're contipulng to ··.do . re)ea,se. .na.! ionat si'cvrity adviser
p\lerytliing· that We can.'to bring all ·." Robert McFaria ne inslstl'd this
credible infl'uence to bear to get our
Involvement did not con~tltute
people freEd and returned home
inedlatlon or negotiation.
safe and sound,
"The problem Is the perception of
"We must not yil'id to the terrorist
that to tetrorists of the world - of
demands and ·invite more terrorurging concessions to the terror·
ists." McFarlane said.
ism, " Reagan said. "We cannot
reward their grisly deeds, "
After the speech, Reagan met for
about e ight minutes with the family
of a n India napolis man , James
Hoskins Jr., whowascelebratlnghis
college graduation with a trip to
Europe whm he was captul'('d by
the hijackers,
" He again reassured them that he
was•dolng cvPrythlng hf' could a nd
he was very mind lui of the safety of
the hOstages," White HouS£' chief of
s ta ff Donald Regan told reporters.
Regan also dropped hint s of
possible progress in settling the
7-day-old hostage crisis.
"We ca n't ta lk abOut them.
'Things are in motion . We haven't
seen the r esult s of these things, "
DISCUAAES HOSTAGE Sl·
Regan sal~. " If we dldn'tthlnk they
TIJt\TION -&amp;'&lt;=notary of State
were positive w(' wouldn 't be doing
Groprgr Shullz appeared before
them,"
the Senaw f'o"'~RD Relation..
"We havP no reason to be more
Committee " '•'&lt;inesday to dispositive or more negative," he said .
cuss .the ttostu~:e situation In
"WP'r(' playing this one day a t a
Lebanon . UI'J.

Size of. income tax cut decision near

8
Ch·
i
cken.!~
~:~x. $2 39
Fried
I

:

and Slale Route 7 came recently along, with minor

'

STOKELY CATSUP

'

Economic growth shows · sharp rebound

I $1

MINUTE MAID Reg. o: Country Style$

Laurel CIUf Rd.

'

-·

. ...
-·-

.

BIG WHEEL j:X)MING - Earih Is belrig moved In Laurel CIHI where
the Fisher's Big Wheel d1&lt;lcount store 1!1 to go up In the near future.
Offtclal closure of Bt,; Wheel's purchase of 5 acres al the Intersection of

And Jay , like his gra ndfather and
his mother, will a ttt'nd Ohio
University.

Jordan a lso mentionl'd that some drain pipes in the
area iu'e a ppa rently plugged, causing water to drain
di rectly Into the roads creating hazards to dtivers .
Roberts a nd Wamer said they would try to remedy
the situation.
Regarding Carpenter Hill Road, Warner noted that
such problems usually occur because of a lack of
money In I he county hi!(hway budget. Johnson agreed
with Warner. " I und('rstand the bud.g eta ty problems," he said.
Union Avenue complalitt
A resident of Un ion Ave. then Informed commls·
sloners that berms along that road are cavi ng in
because ·or Illegal heavy traffic. "There have been
three semi·trucks on the road In the la st two days,"
she said, "because the no through trucks sign at the
inte rsection of Union Ave. and Route i can't he seen."
(Continued on page 6!

President Reagan ·
vows U.S. won't
submit to demands

119

School.

Bradford Chu rch of Christ opened
I
Vaca tion Bible School Monday
mornlng with a n enrollment of 70.
Bible school will continue through
Friday with a picnic for evetyone
from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m . A
dosing program wlll be Sunday,
7:30 p.m .. at the church.
Teachers and helpersforlhewrek
inClude Gerry Lightfoot, Susie
Lightfoot , Helen Mulford, Mildred
Hysell, a nd Francis Hysell,
nursery; Tainmy Milliron, Martha
Wright , Dreama Pickens, Ste·
pltanle MuHord, Eva Milliron,
bPginners; Nancy Morris, Jackie
tleel, Martha Cunningha m, Karen
Meadows, primary: John Wtight,
Nonmi Russell, Delores Frank,
juniOr; Mark Seevers, Madlllne
Painter, youth; Kathy Johnson,
pianist; Ruth Durst, songleader; .
and Sandy MuHord as secretary.
The missionary project Is the
Christian Children's Home of Ohio
at Wooster.

Using Mulberries
In lhe Sp 'Da1114 1111 Pap 8

·298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTlVE THRU SAT., JUNE 22, 1985

· When Jay Carpenter graduated
from Meigs High School earlier I his
: O)onth, it wa_s ~~ fourth gerier~ tion ·
: gradu'lling from the d lstrlct's".Jiigh
schools with 20 years between each
one.
'The late Roy Snowden graduated
in 1925, his daught er, the late J ean
Parker in 1945, her da ughter, Suzy
Parker Carpent er in 196.5, all from
Rutland High School, and her son,
Jay, in 1985 from Meigs High

conttnUlng

Paae 7

WAY - HoUle llpeal&amp;er Vlll'lllll
G. Rille, Jr., ilbove 111111 8enll&amp;or
8Unley J . Antnolr, R. ClnclnIUtd, acree the ot.r.e o1 the ~&amp;a&amp;e
Income tax cui wiD have a
detennlnlng factor on how much
l(leiNIIng wBI be allowed In

vartou1 levele
penune&lt;K.
I.

of

1tate

COLUMBUS (UPI J - A join!
HOIIS('·Senate conference commit tee negotiating the terms of the
1986-87 state budget hasagt'E('d to set
a "control" figure for spending and
then debate the sl1.eof an incomet ax
cut.
Both House Speaker Vernal G .
Riffe Jr., P.New Boston, and Sen.
St~nley J.' Aronof1, R-Cinclnnati,
said Wednesday the size of the
lt'lcome tax cut wUI have to be
deiennlned early so the conferees
will know how much .-an be spent in
dilf~t areas.
"The conference rommlt tee
· won'tbe able tp get down to serious .
bullness untu we determine the
amount of the sub$tantlal and

I

mea ningful tax reduction," saki
Aronoff, a member of the panel.
For Senate Republicans, "substantial a nd meaningful " has meant
10 percent in flsc'al 1985, 1986 and
1987, but theyooncedethat will have
to be compromised. Majority House
Democrats and Gav. Richard F ,
Celeste are caiUng for a more
conservative 5 percent a year for
two years.
Thestx-memberconterencecommlttee, which wm·try to finish Its
w~rk by late next wee~. convened
for 10 minutes under the leadership
d Rep. WOllam E. HlnJg, 0-New
Philadelphia , chief sponsor of the
House-passed PJ.3 billion approprl·
atton . The Senate version was a

more modest $19.6 billion outlay.
The conunittee was to meet again
today ·to hear the latest revenue
projections from the s tate Office of
Budget and Manageme nt and the
Legislative Budget Office.
The OBM two weeks ago subtracted $3(1! million from the
revenue projection It had issued In
March, shortly before the House
passed Its version of the budget.
"The most Importa nt point atflrst
will be to establish . what our
anticipated revenues will be," said
Hlnlg. "Once we've done that, we
can follow up on the a ppropriations
themselves and any adjustments."
Senate President Paul E. GU·
·tmor,R-Port CUnton, said prospects

seem good for reaching agreeme nt
by July l. when the new budgcr
period starts.
"It is by no means certain that we
will reach agreement by then,'' he
said. "but I would say the c ha nces
are somewhat better than 50-50."
Riffe, who said he will meet
privately wlth Glllmor before the
e nd of the week, hopes to take• a
settlement to the House floor by
June 28 to avoid any weekend work.
Riffe said there wlll probably be
little change In the amounts that the
Senate approved for primary and
secondary education and colleges
and unJversltles, 'Those figures were
at or above those recommended by
Celeste and the House.

" 1 think the rducation &lt;figure \ I'
pt'etty well SC't." said Riffe. uddlnf:
there m ay be changt's In Une it&lt;'ms
wi th in
thP educatio n
appropria tions.
Most of thl' t radtn~ is .-xpcctl'd td
he done between the hl!iih&lt;'r S&lt;.'nate
tax cut and the higher House
appropriations for human services,
healt h and environmental protec·
lion and state omployee p;iy.
Aronoff said that In areas of
spending dlsa~rcement. the HouSI'
version wlll be reduced on ·a
department-by-department basis
proportional to the "contl'Ol" ngurc.
a nd then indlvldua lllneif&lt;'ll1swill be
worked out .

. '·,

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