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                  <text>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 .

. '·,

�'

•
The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

1

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

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

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
LETTERS OF OPINJON are welcome. They shQuld be less than 300 words

long . All letters are subj~tto editing and must~ signed wllh name, address and
·telephone number. No unsigned lt&gt;tters will be published . Letters should be In

. good taste. addressing Issues, not personalities.

Page-2- The Daily Sentinel·
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Thursda',l. J~rl8 20, 1986

'

An eye for

80

Brenly's two homers leads
Giants ·over Soto, Reds, 5-2

eye _______J_am_e_sJ_._K~_·lp_a_trr._·ck

WASHINGTON - Back In the terrlfylngordeaiof'IWA'sFllghi847
summer of 1904, kidnappers In remains to be resolved: theou !come
Tangier seized an elderly American of this particular Incident is uncercitizen, foil Perdlcarls. The respon· tain. But we may be absolutely
sible party was well known: a certain of one thing: If there is any
brigand chieftain named Ahmed perception or caving In on the part of
ben Mohammed Ralsull, an enemy the United States, thiswUlnot be the
of the sultan of Morocco.
· last such hijacking. We w.lll ilosped
At that very moment tlie Republi - ati Invitation to extortion.
can National Convention was meetThere Is but one way t.o deal with'
Ing in Chicago. Theodore Roosevelt such terrorists. tt is to apply the
was nominated by acclamation. He ancient law spelled out in Exodus
dispatched an ultimatum to be 21:23. Let us match "life for life, eye
delivered. to Morocco and read it to for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for
the convention: "Perdicaris alive, hand, foot for foot, burning for
or Raisull dead!" Perdicarls was burning, wound for wound, stripe for
freed.
stripe."
As I write this column, the
Suppose, to be supposing, that

-

when the terrorists killed their first
victim, and tossed his body from the
plane, the lnsraells had chosen one
ShUte Moslem at random from the
700 they held as 11r1soner. Suppose,
then, that this randomly chosen
prisoner had been put to death at
once by flrlitg squad and that proof
of the execution, In the form Of a TV
tape, were shown to the hijackers.
And suppose this act of summary
retribution were accompanied by a
threat: For evert American passenger you kill thereafter, we 'wUI
killlO of your brothers.
Such a cold-blooded_ policy would
set off cries of protest in every
humanita!'lan quarter. Th(? U.S.

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - To
the 8,4!ll fans at Candlestick Park,
the collision between two eras of
baseball was not very obvious.
All they sawwasBobBrenlyripa
palrofhomersanddrlvelnfourruns
to lead San Francisco to a 5-2
triumph Wednesday over the Cincinnati Reds.
Hdwever, under the surtace, It
was a clash between two schools of
baseball thought. One the product of
the high-tech ·~ and the other a
leftover from the hard-playing ·~.
Brenly. a 1984 National League
AU-Star whose hitting stroke mysterious disappeared at the beginning
of the season, has undergone three
weeks of mtensive confidence
rebuilding by a group of sports
psychologists using 1!91' s methods.
The psychologists have Brenly
using auto-visualization techniques
and doing a · series of mental
exercises to Improve his concentra ·
tlon whUe at theplate.The result, the
San Francisco catcher said, Is that
he Is more relaxed at the plate and
able to see the ball hetter.
On Wednesday, Bren1y saw a
Mario Soto fastball well enough to
driwe It Into the left-field bleachers
for a three-hdmer. He later added a

Constitution does not applylnlsrael.
but we would hear that the proposed
executions would violate due pro:
cess of 'law: they .would be cruel and
unusual:' they would amount to ex
post facto punishment. We would be
''lowering ourselves to the level of
the terrorists." We wquld be
"murderers." All of that .
But If such a policy were adopted
and enforced, and the pool of
Moslem and PalestJnian prisoners
held out, it just might put an end to
the kind of savagery we witnessed
with the hijacking.
Make no mistake: we find
ourselves In a virtual state of war.
War Is Inherently cruel. War is
Inescapably unjust. During World ,
War
the Germans lndlscriml·
nately bomhed targets In England;
the Allies retaliated with · the
sa tura lion bombing of German
cities. Innocent and unoffending
human beings - as Innocent and
unoffendlng as American passengersonajetplane-dledlnthose
raids of 40 years ago.
.
The policy I am advocating could
not. be based upon bluff. There are
ruses in war. to be sure, and It might
be possible for a few actors and a
special effects crew to fake a movie .
or a multiple execution. Such a hoax
might work once. Only triidlng a
real life for a life and an ·e ye for an
· eye would have meaning for·
terrorlststl)e next time.
Other measures ought to be taken
also. The United States could refuse
sovereign protection to U.S. citizens
who fly on airlines with Inadequate ·
security systems. In the matter of
the 'IWA affair we have to suspect .
briiJery of security screeners who l~t
the weapons through, but brlhery
can be detected and punished.· It
would not be Impossible, it would
merely be a nuisance, a t such
airports as Athi&gt;ns for every
passenger to be strip-searched al1d
every bag opened

n:

Twists and turns
.in .Reagan's plan
, President Reagan has taken a politically popular and probably
111eritorious campaign· for tax simplification and turned It Into a crusade
against "socialism" and in favor of the traditional American family where
the wife stays home.
In campaigning so vigorously across the country and In White House
appearances, the president almost sounds as If he doth protest too much.
· As he himself says, simplifying the tax system and reducln!; the brackets
from 14 to three won almost universal support - 'jn principle..
But h!i' has been most vocal In defending the only two reallycontrov,..rsial
items that affect the average taxpayer - his proposal to repeal
deductibility of state and local taxes and elimination of the "marriage
penalty" relief.
Reagan claims that only one-third of taxpayers , even In the most
~ected state of New York, itemize their deductions and get benefits from
wrltlngotf state and local taxes. He also claims that byraislngthepersonal
exemption to $2,&lt;XXl and allowing nonworking wives to make a tun $2,000
tax-free contribution to Individual Retirement Accounts, the plan will help
the AmeriCan family . .
On both issues, he has been on both sides.
' . ' In 19&amp;1, he opposed repealing the deductibUity of state and local taxf!S • .
·~alling It "a tax on a tax," exactly what opponents of his 1985 policy, notably
·G&lt;iv. Marlo Cuomo of New York, are claiming.
· · '!Wo years ago, Reagan opposed the measure because It was one of
5everalldeas from "llheral Democrats In the House" for ra-Ising revenues
'
·about $35 billion.
.
,
_.
. .. Now, however, Reag'an favors repealing the deduction because low-tax
.sillies are subsidizing high-tax sta'tes like New York "for their lack of
resolve.''

.What's the difference In two years?
' A White House aide says raising $35 blllion to $40 billion now by ending
· ihe deduction is acceptable because some way is needed to offset the
drastically lower tax rates for most people. In that way, the plan remains
"I'{'Venue-rieutral."
' ,Patrick ·Buchanan, White .HouSe director Of commu.nicatioru;, in a bitter
.P\Ibilc feud w'lth Cuo~, says using the tax system to redistribute society:s ·
"'ealth - the key principle hehind 72 years of progressive taxation,- ts
:"nro-soclallst."
: ,In his speech two years ago supporting deductibility of state and local
taxes, Reagan himself said the. prqgresslve tax system has resulted In
America "creeping closer to socialism:"
". Reagan is also ballyhooing his tax simplification plan as "prq-family,"
· arguing correctly that the time is long past for raising the exemption for
each child from $1,0l0 and $2,000.
. Proponents of the plan from the Christian right say giving housewives
. lUll benefit of the $2,000 IRA contribution will encourage those who want to
~ stay home with the children .the ability to do so.
: ~ '- Black supporters of-the tax plljn say, on the other hand, that ellr!llnatlng
: taxes altogether. for the poor wiU encourage black women to get outside the
. ·· ; ;hQint- and off welfare to take jobs from whicn theS' can keep all' of-their '

. lllcome.

· • In that speech two years ago, when Reagan condemned the "tax on a
:; lax," he a Iso boasted of )Jis support for reducing the "marriage penalty":: jheanomaly under which a married couplefillngjolntly paid more in taxes
~: than two single people living together and flllng separately. He also
~claimed credit for Increasing the child-care tax credit.
: ; 'Under his 1985 tax plan, the "marriage penalty" relief Is gone and so Is
•ttie child-carl' credit, reduced to a less lucrative deduction ..Both of those
:;l~ reforms benefited women who worked - now a majority. Reagan's
.:: ·natural constituency and his natural hent, however, lean toward the
;; cild-lashloned notion of women staying home and raising children and
·: -ooncctlng ever-Increasing tax exemptions for each baby.
..:: ·.What has happened, simply, is that Reagan has had to balance his goal of
.: :S)'evenue-n(?utral tax reduction with tax Increases for some of the same
·, ~pie he tried to help two years ago. Meanwhile, working women are
';. -$imewhat penalized and old-fashioned women are somewhat helpeo;l.
.,.. : · Now it's all right to impose a "tax on a tax" because in 1983it was a
• ··~uberal" scheme to raise revenues, and In 1985 it 's a conservative idea to
1:::- lieep taxes lowl'r for traditional two-parent families with one wage-earner.
::;. : In a way, a marriage penalty of convenience.

..

._"' ~
"-,., ....~ ...

'

. . ...,..

~Letter ·to
.

....•••

•

editor

Republicans did the same

· It seems as though a certain Jetter
':N'rlter just won't J(et off my back.
:tpr the rest of this letter. I will refer
-fothat wrtter as that person. I asked
t}iat person one other tim(? not to
mention me In any letter to the
,fdltor, but, I guess that ittakessome
~pie longer to understand certain
things, than It does others.
••.If that person only knew the
'!lumbers or people who have called
~. and made run of that person's
'IJ&gt;tlers, then I don't believe that
-4rtdlvldual would ever Write another
-kiter. The largest percentage of my
calls come from the.Racine area.
• 1 have been reading our county
~paper for at least 45 years. In
that tlme.lf I had to pick out one
~tence that was the most stupid, It
irould be the one where that person
the readers of the Sentinel to
.,. word to that person, If anyone
~what my plans are.
· You can stop your worrying,
J!I!Callll' I do have a plan. and I wlll
~It before I end this letter.

fit

ii.J!ed

The writer•then went on to state
that a Democratic congressman
flew from Florida to Columbus to
cast his vote on thestatelncometax
law. What In the h--· business does a
congressman have voting on a state
income tax? . The writl'r neglected
to mentiOn that a Republican
senator from California, namely
Pete Wilson, left his hospital bed In
Washington and traveled by ambulance to Capitol Hlll to vote on a
budget issue that the Republicans
wanted passed. 1ben boatllcker
Bush flew in from Phoenix to C&lt;Jst
the tie breaking vote at 1 a.m. on
Mlly10.
Now, tm&gt; time has come to reveal
my three-part plan. The first part Is
simply this: not to rrJa\&lt;e a fool of
mayself, by writing a letter to the
editor every week. I believe that .
J)art two Is the most Important one.
That is, not to reveal part three of my
pjan before Its time.
Paul Clark, Middleport . .

-

'u~gent' COIDpUter ____

.Scoond BLAST OF DAY...: San Francisco Giani
catcher Bob Brenly circles the ~wit~ Is !IIlio home
run In the eighth Inning off Cincinnati Reds relief

WASHINGTON- In the appar- way:
computer system was to cost about project - and gave Rehab a
ently endless chronlcilng 91 Pen"The need for CAMJS can he $600 million from start to finish. sole-source contract.
tagon waste, it's the$640 toilet seats. · simply stated. Without it, the Army Surveying the appalling estravaBy the spring of 1984, Col. Luther
$400 hammers and $600 ashtrays cannot perform the functions
gance to date, sources Involved In Crum, then-dirli'Ctor of the Anny
that get the headlines. l.ess essep- needed to mobilize the- (reserve) -!he project now predict glumly that . Automatf9n Management Offtp&gt;,,
. tial, ·but far rnpre wasteful, are tile forte; redistributepersonnel,equip, the ul(ltnale cosr is.sure-tow wen -: wrct&lt;' a fl'l('.mb t_o the .chlef of ·the • .
unpUbliclzed delays attd cost over- ··ment·and material·by priority, and over$1'billloti.
.
. .
.. : Army Reserves charging that
runs oil the Pentagon's big-ticket prepare units for deployment within
fn 1982, Ihe Army chose Rehab CAM IS was out of control. Detailed
items.
the time fra\'}1e demanded by G!'Qup Inc. , a Washington-based
plans . were "essentially nonOne of these is CAMlS, lhli natiQnal strategy."
company, to do the basic "brain- · existrnt" ·M chalJ(ed, and even the
Continental · Army Manageme nt · But for a lilts urgency, theCAMIS storming" for CAMlS under a Small' amount of money already spent was
Information System, on which the · pro)E.'Ct has bogged down in the very · Business Administration "set- impossible to figure out.
Pentagon has already spent enouglt first of its preliminary stages: aside." but the C..eneral ACcQl,lnting
"Adequatr controls ovrr th(?
money to buy 66,00) overpriced figuring out what the computer Office !ruled that Rehab was too big sole-source contractor, Rehab, are
ashtrays with no dlscernibleresults. system should be able todowhen it's to qualify for the special small- lacking," Crum complained. "They_
After three years of development eventually built and programmed.
business lreatmmt , so A1my offi - are in control, rather tha n being
Our associated Donald Goldberg clals . gave Rehad . a sole-source controlled."
and expenditures iopptng $40 million, the fancy computer system is obtained hundreds of pages of contract, arguing that it wastheonly .
Crym's ... recom111endation .. that
still many months and 'millions o__r. 'intermit Army doCUments.detailihg' &lt;firm that could do the jpb,
_ . Rehab's contract' not he renewed i:lollai; (rom ev~.n reac.:liiqg the_ the project's Pt:Oblems. . \,Vith ,thE' - Army .. attorqeys questioned this-- )Vas· lgno1'ed, and the' company is .
drawing board. . .. . .
- held of.Joe'Burniece, imanalyst with reasoning but we~ Ignored . When now. In the running for yet another
How important is CAMIS to the Project on Military Procure- other officials Insisted that the slice oft he CAM IS pie .
national . security? An internal ment, a prlvatewatchdoggroup, the project beoperiN:Iupforcotnpetitive
The Army•s Inspector general is
m(?mo from lhe Anny .F orces story has been pieced together.
bidding as originally planned, the reportedly investigating the fiasco.
Command Chief of staff put it this
As envisioned four years ago, the brass created a separate cbmputer
Footnote: Rehab has declined to ·
discuss the matt(?r.

WASHINGTON- A few months
ago I wrote about a new book called
"The Mysterious William Shakespeare," by Charlton Ogburn, which
argue' that "Shakespeare" was
really Edward de Verc, the 17th
Earl of Oxford. I was stunned - and
cohvlnced.'
A number of other reviewers have
also been won over to what they too
had assumed was a crank notion,
Herewith some afterthoughts that
haveconflrmedmeasan Oxfordian.
I've spaken with a few traditional
Shakespeare scholars, including
SannuelSchoenbaunn.authorofthe
monumi&gt;ntal and delightfully written history of Shakespeare biography, "Shakespeare's Lives."
The case of I he Earl of Oxford hasn't
budged Mr. Shoenbaum, but l don't
see how He can dismiss the evidence.
Ironically, "Shakespeare's
Lives" and Mr. Schoenbaum'sown
scrupulously careful biography of
Shakespeare have helped c;omplet(?
my own conversion to the Oxford
camp. Usually further research Into
a poet's llfedeepensourunderstandiDg of his work. We see how he has
used his own eiqlerlence in his
poems, even when he Is miles away
from autobiography.
But with the conventional SnakespeareofStratford,lt's the other way
around. Each advance In scholarship . seems to pare away the
humanizing legends and -anecdotes,
leaving _ the author even more
remote from his work.
This ni'Ver aroused my suspicions
about the Stratford man's authorship until I ran across a' more,
plausible candidate. Oxford's life,
though not much Is known Of It,
offers dozens Of striking points of
resemblance to the plays we call
Shakespellre's
Two events In Oxford's ' life

time backing out of a marriage to
Oxford 's daughter.
Two or her close friends ofhiswere
the brothers the earls of Pembroke
and · Montgomery; Montgomery
married another of Oxford's daugh-"ters and Pembroke nearly married I
a third. The First Folio edition of
\
Shakespeare's plays was dedicated
I
to these two' l:)rot hers.
And , this is only part' of the
evidence . As 1 say, pretty
convincing.

Berry's World

pitcher Tom Hume Wednesday. Earlier, Brenly
cracked a three-run shot off starter Mario Soto. The
Glanls defeated lhe Reds, li-Z wtlh Brenly getting four
RBI's. UPI.

·
· ·
·
·
. solo· homer to break a"1-l tie and·.
NEW ORLE.ANS (UFil i"': Jn t]le . called Uils meeting tp try arid getau r- . on profes5iomi l wrestling," . : . '
highlight il four-rilli Dodger seventh
heart of thr• Crescent City, just a . hoUse baCk In order.. The risk tor - Included In the121eglslativeltems initingthat sparked Los Angeles loa .
cheaters simply hasn't been high being considered by the special 5-1 vlctoryoverthePadres.
diploma's throw from scandalscarred Tulane University, the lords
.-nough and that simply can't goon." convention Is an amendment 10
"During the streak. !felt like !was
For all of his rhetoric, though, force each school to conduct a
beingseparatedfrom therestofthe
of the NCAA have gathered for a
D~vis had few specifics to otter self-study of Its Intercollegiate
team because that's what everyone
special conventlonont heprec~rIous
five y(?al'S
those skeptics. fearful this two-day athletic programs every
stateofcoll..giateat hie t.1cs. ·,
1 wanted to talk about."
NCAA President John Davis convention Is all bluster.
and an amendment ,or iln annua
The Padres must hope Hawkins.
Wed
sd
"We've
had
requests·
in
the
past
outside
audit
Of
all
expend,tures
for
who
is on a pace to match Denny
opened the proceedings
ne aY
• hi r· b d t
McLain 's 31-wln seaso(l in '19ffi,
with much bark and little bite, for 10 or 12 additional full-time an Institution sat e tcs u g(? ·
-"' d
enforcement representatiVPs, "
"We've surveyed • our ttsports ""oesn't fall Into a slump simUar to
palntingagrirnportrat't of gr.,._-..an
cheatin~ erodin~ lnter,colleglate
Davis said, "but we decided not to committees and we ve g~ .en a
one Atlanta's Rick Mahler expert
Increase the bUdget In that manner. strong ' response back s~y~~g we rlenced after_gettingofftoa7-0start .
s~~~y's session Qf th¢ flftl!_speclal , A loLof the lmprove~J enforcement should m_alntain the defmtllQP -~! Sincetht,&gt;nj !Pt&gt;Bra.ves' rJght-han!le!
N.CAA Co.nvent ion features a bri(?f- ,_ will be done at the lnslitut)onai-leve)_ .amateurism we 'hav&lt;' right now. -·
gone:&gt; 3_5 _
.
. - . ·:· .
ing by John Ryan,' head of the
th~ghlncreasedawareness.
·said DaVIs.
Hawkinshadj:~venupbuttwohits
Presidents C'orrtmission. and a
By separating the secondary
three-bout' general round table from the major -:tolators, our
discussion . Officials plan to hold a
enforcement staff wtll be.. able to
news conference to discuss the concentrate on the majors.
.
Davls.nev~r add~ the quesissues of gambllng and drugs, two
tlon of how a dozen tull-tlme
an!as whfre !he NCAA appears
enforcement officials can ~ exengulfed by a purple haw.
Davis said the 12 legislative pected to monitor the NCAA s 791
· proposals to he voted upon Friday memller schools. He is expecting
by the college and university
the tougher penalties to put the
presldf'nts are Jlmited to integrity clamp on the big violators.
"I've got a. f':hng good coaches
and economics.
· The ' most controversial item Is are saying let ~ ha":e a syste~
Proposal3, which seeks to revise the where theot.~rgu~ tsn tcheatlng,
NCAA's enforcE&gt;ment procedure by satd Davis. They ve com~ to us for
estabitshlng distinctions between thE' last 10 years asking for a toughh
"major" and "secondary" viola- enforcement Program. Out of this
lions and instituting specific wtli come a higher degree of
.
, • integrity wit~.coa€hes. the people in
penalties.
If the proposal. dubhed the "death the trenches.
penalty resolution," passes, a major
When Davis finally mentioned
violation would be defined as one Tulane. which was rocked three
that provides an extensive recruit- months ago by allegations of pomt
lng or . compeiltiVe advantage. shaving. he used the .L~tsiana
Minimum penaltl~. beginning university to make a target point ·
Sept. 1, would Include a 2-year about the nature of competitive
probationary period and elimina- sports.
·
!ion of all expense-paid recruiting
"As we found in thE' instance of
Tulane, if the sport itself is harmed
visits to the Institution for on(? year.
·'All of us reco!(lllZE'forsomP lim&lt;' thrn we are Indeed in deep trouble,"
now there's been concC'rn abou t he said. "Once people have lost their
intercolleglatC' at hiPtics," said confidence in athletes competing
·
honE's fly, Wfi'are In serious trouble ...
Davis.
"The Presidents Commi ssion has you don't see many~pll'~l!mbling

1

'

Th(? Ohio Valley .Junior Golf
Association's first 1985 tournament
was held al the Galllpolls club
earlier this week.
Thirty-siX golfers participatN:I.
Medalist honors W(?nt to Parker
Long. who fired .a 77 to edge Steve
Bradbury by one stt'Oke. Bradbury
shot a 78, losing top scoring h!)nors
on the final hole. Tom Meadows shot

I

· an~totakethlrdplacehonorslnthe
15-17 age bracket.
Second flight winner In the senior
division was Ray Redman. Jason
Roush was runnerup.
Eugene Choi won the 12-14
year-old division, edging Matt
Baker and Eddie Crooks. Clint

Davis. 10. led the younger gi'Oup
with a 49 (nine holes) to edge
runnerup Jeremy Duncan.
Next tournament on the Ohio
Valley junior circuit wlll be Tuesday, June25, at Riverside Golf Club.
Mason, w. va. Tee off time is 8: ll
a.m.
Gallipolis results were: ·
llll-ll •

,;rulllp) _ Pal'llff l .on.J(, 71: .~ti..,·~

RradbUJ'\'. ~ : Trnn MP!Kiowi'l, ftl: Ru ~ lloobl! 1. t4,
F'r1nk C'ftpt'twt1 . !l'l; Ky~ S.undi:J'!I, 8'1: ~~~!1~ ~~ 1 ·
!1'1: RoAIIm. R'i: .100~ Str'll'llt~. IIM: IA'f' f"tMt•ll. 9.~. R·l'
Rr&lt;lm('f!, f4; .]o:;oo RouUI. lti: Todd Zll~pa n , !U, T. P .

MW'J)h.\·. M: Mm k HM!Il'fflMoiD: Tim Laudl&gt;r. 1111.
(ll-ll-.rib'ai PI _ Ewcrn&lt;' Chol , !lfl; Mau Bakl'r.
91: Eddif&gt; trmlui. \ij: Tld:l PtM'Cll, rt: oloM Hoback .
!CO: lM\'ICI Ru.'l!lt•ll. tffi : Mull Wlllli, H~; Chad l.t&gt;iteh ,
1~ LA'H('t'M!af1 , 127; Wf.t'ldy RmdbJt) . l:W.
.
(11 .... u.., 1 _ CUnl Oa\'t§, 49: JP"""'' Durran,
!ill: Clartta C•pc_
'fuui, !16; .Jnmk' Hlltrl\, !'t7 and Ja!IOfl
l.t'M'h... I NhM' holt•!H,
I

(

and a run when the Dodgers jumped
on him for three hits in the seventh .
He was lifted withOut retiring a
batter 1n the inning.

have scored just three runs In the(r
last 45 innings. ,
· ·
Expus4,Pirates3
At Montreal. pinch-hitter Jiryi
Wolhford singled in Vance Law
from third base 1n the bottom of the
eighth to send Pirates starter JOS(?
Del..ron to his ninth loss in 11
decisions . Rookie Tim Burke. 3-0, '
was the WiMer. Hubie Btooks hit
three-run homer for Montreal and .
Blil Almon homE&gt;red fort he Pirates.
· ' Astros 7, Br-aves 3
'
- At Atlanta. craig Reynolds a!ld
Jose Cruz homered to hl'lp Joe
Niekro to his 197th career victory
and·iead theAstros.Reynoldshiihis
third homer _ all against the
Brav('s _off start er Steve Bedrp-

·Guerrero hit a ~-0 pitch into the
right-field stands for his 14th homer.
Jtwashis10thhomeruninhislastl5
gamesanndmadeawinnerofJerry
Reuss; 5-5.
Elsewhere, New York shaded
Chicago 1-0, San Francisco heat
Cin&lt;:innati 5-2, Montreal edged
Pittsburgh 4-3, Houston pounded
Atlanta 7-3 and Philadelphia
blanked St. Louis 1-0.
In the American League, if was:
Toronto 5, Milwaukee 1: New York
10, BaltlmoreO; Detroit9, Boston3;
Cleveland 2. California 0: Kansas
City 3, MlnnE'sola 2: 'rexas5, Seattle sian. J-6. PhUlies I, Cards
0
4; and Chi~ ago .8, Oakland 7 in .12 . ·At St·. Louis. Jerry i&lt;oosman, ~-1 ,
, innings,.
.
~nd. Oon .Carman COmbined : on a .
· ·.· Meis·l, GuiJSO .
At New York, Dwight Gooden, fl\•&lt;&gt;-hiltC'r and Greg Gross drove In ·
thP game's lone run to boost the
10-3, tossed a six-hitter to help the
Phillies over Joaquin Andujar, 12-2.
Mets hand Chicago its eigh th
and the Cardinals. Thelosssna~
straight loss. Cooden fanned nine In
St. Louis' fivc--gamewinllingstreak .
raising his major ll'ague- Jeadmg
Koosman notched his 218th can:er
strikeout tot al to 125. Scott Sanderson, 3-2. was the loser. The Cubs victory .

a

lias

Fishemten .represent
la~ge state investment

Name winners of first golf
meet; next one set June 25

'''Mfd(Jfltmsn' - develop 11 doll to go with the
miU//e - license it... we'll mslce MILLIONS!"

~:~~~:e~1~~~~~~i~

_

J
.
_

s tances suggesting HamlPt's stabbing of Polonlus himself.
Oxford was a fiery man, and Mr.
Ogburn s€es many ofShakespeare's
characters as sa tirical thrusts. a t
men he feuded with at court.
Late~· in life, Oxford was close to
theyoungEarl of Southampton- to '
whom "Venus and Adonis" and
"The Rape of Lucrese" are dedicated, and who is often thought to he
thPyoung man urgcdtomarrylnthe
sonnets. Southampton was at the

By JOE JLLUZZJ
UPI Sporls Writer
Now that Andy Hawkins' record
has been blemished, we will see
wheth(?r his Cinderella season
continues or whether he turns Into a
pumpkin.
Hawkins lost his firSt game of the
season Wednesday night after
chalking up 11 straight wins. Now
the question this San Diego rigl:tt: ·
bander, who before this year had
never won more than eight games,
must answer is - can he bounce
back from this setback?
·The 2S-year-old Hawkins seems to
think so.
"Now It's over with and I can

·
CAA
d
Gambling, drugs on N
.agen a

afterthoughts~___ o._sep_h_So_b~..;;_a.n_

command special interest. One is
his youthful trip to Italy, which took
him to the cities that formed the
background of so many of the plays.'
We even know the names of two
Italian acquaintances of his: Baptista Nigrone and Pasquino Spinola,
whose names seem to he echoed in
Baptiast Mlnola lit "The Taming of
the Shrew." Oxford particularly
loved Venice, whose topography is
evidently familiar to the author of
''The ME&gt;rchant of Venice."
The other major event occurred
during this journey. Oxford's young
wife seems to have conceived a child
during his absence. The details are
murky, but he came home Ina rage
against his wife and herfather, Lord
Burghiey, Queen Elizabeth's chief
' '
minister. After a five-year separation, they were reconciled: Oxford
. may even have become convinced · .
that the child was his lifter aiL At any
rate, he reproached himself for his
harsh treatment of his wife, and the
episode seems to have resounded In
all the plays that concerned jealous
husbands and lolrers' ahd falsely
acc\lsed women. A treacherous
frtend of Oxford's named Richard
Yorke, who brought him the court
rumors of his wife's infidelity,
sounds very much llke Iago In
"Othello."
Burghley Is also wld(?ly acknowledged as the model for Polonlus In
"Hamlet." It's hard to see how the
Stratford man could'have portrayed
Burghley in such close detaU or why
he would havedonesowithsuchbold
malice. But lfOxfordwrotetheplay,
we can understllnd a bitterly
personal meaning In casual lines
such as Hamlet's remark to
Polonius: "Conception Is a blessing,
but not as your daughter may
c6ncelve." , Oxford also stabbed a
servant Of Burghley's In circum-

"They've given me a series of
mental exercises that has helped me ·
see the ball better. I know a lot of
straight-line baseball people are
hestiant to accept changes like this,
but it's helped me."
While Brenly represented the
198l's theory of baseball, Cincinnati
manager Pete Rose ts a throwback
to another time.
Rose, who did not play Wednesday and stlllneeds46hitsto breakTy
Cobb's record _of 4,191, says he does
not give any credence to all the talk
about sports psychology.
"I don't bellev(? In none of that
stuff." the Reds manager said.
"Yeah . it looks llkt&gt; It works today
after he hits a couple of homers , but
what about next week."
The vict6111 went to Da.ve La Point.
3-6. who in six Innings gave up two
runs on siX hits. Scott Garrelts

pitched three innings of sc~relesS
relief, suikln g out six, for his fifth:
save.
"Supposedly it all evens out," saki:
La Point at¥&gt;ut hi s disappointing:
year. "I've aiready been through·
my frustration · pertod. Now what
happens, happens the rest of the
way." .
.'
In the Gia nts' Jeft-hander's six.
losses this season. the, club has·
scored but seven runs.
Loser Mario Soto, 8-6. went siXInnings, yielding four runs on three
hits and six walks.
San Francisco touched Sot o for
four runs In the fourth . Joel
Youngblood singled. MaMy TrillO;
doubled and Chill Davis hit a.
sacrifice fly . Brenly then smashed a:
three-run homer to left tomak(? 114_-0.
Dave Parker drovE' In two runs for
the Reds in the sixth. Dave VII!'
Gorder singled and Solo's bunt w~ s
misplayed by first baseman DaVId
Green. One out later. Dave Concepclon 'sflelder'schoiceleft ruMers'!lt
first and third . Parker then singled
to right, bringing In tw.o runs .
San Francisco scored its final run
in the eighth when Brenly cracked
his seventh homer , a solo shot off
Hume.

Hawkins suffers first loss;
Cubs' losing streak hits eight :·

J_ac_k_A_n_d_er_so-.-n_&amp;_J_·o_se_p_h_sp_e_ar

Oxfordian

solo bla st off reliever Tom Hume in
the eighth.
"It 's (his reni'Wed hitting) s trictly ,
a mental thing," the Giants'catcher
said. " I've been seeing the psychologists that the team has hired and
they discovered that I really haven't
been concentrating that well at the
plate.

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Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

Thurilday, June 20, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, •Ohio

rNiekro brothers may join Braves next year
ATLANTA ~UPII - Henrtetta
and Phil Niekro Sr.of Lanslng, Ohio.
say they would enjoy seelng their
beys playing togl'tller again.
1'tK&gt; boys are Phil Nlekro, 46, of the
New York YankeE&gt;S, and Joe Niekro,
40, :or 1he Houston Astros. Their
contracts explre this year and tall&lt; in
Aflanta is the brothers might both
throw knuckleballs for the Braves
next season.

"It's good to know that they could "1he Braves in 1973-74 before the
get back together," Phil Niekro Sr., you!lg{'r brother was sold to the
7'1, said from his horne.
Astros and beearne baseball's
"Oh, listen to youi'SI'It," said winnlngest righthander from 191ll
Henrietta Ntekro, 70. "You can't through 19&amp;1.
believeeverythingyou hear. It's just
Phil Nlekro, who played in
a rumor. I'll tell you something Atlanta ror 18 seasons, signed with
though, Phll just loves Atlanta. He' s the Yankees after the Braves
likealegenddownthere,youknow." released him. in 1!&amp; beCause
·Phil and Joe Niekro pitched for management thought he was too
old. He was 1&amp;-SwithNewYQrk last

season and is 7·5 this year.
"J've been inHoustonsolongthat I
would Uketoend my career there,"
said Joe Nlekro, the AstroS' starting
pitcher Wednesday night againSt
the Braves. "But you never know in
this business. Phil didn't think he'd
ever leave Atlanta and look what
happened to hlm ."
The Nlekros are on their way to .

Nlekros have 487- 291 for Phil and
196 Cor JOC'.
"It would be nlce for us to beat the
Perrys' record while pitching in the
same rotation," said Joe Niekro,
who Is 3-7 wtrh a 3.~ ERA. "I reaDy
enjoyed pitching with Phil when we
were together with the Braves in the
early 1970s."
· ...
The Braves and lirst -year Man- ·
ager E ddie Haas are struggling In
fifth- place in the National League .
West, and there has been specula·
tion tha.t PhU Nlekro might join the
Braves as a Pljlyer-manager.
"He hasn't 'talked much about
Athens captured the J.!ll5 Sou·
theastern Ohio Golf Association coming back hereasmanager," Joe
Tournament at Circleville SUnday, Niekro said, "but I think he would
completing 1he two-day. 36-hole rna ke a good manager. 11 you know
meet with a team effort of 870.
PhiL you know his heart 'is sttll in
Plckaway was second with !ll6, Atlanta ."
followed by a tie for third place
Henri Ita and Phll Nlekro Sr. said
between Ironton and Lancaster their minds would rest easier It their
t895).
.
sons were on the same team again.
Marietta, owner or more SEOGA
" I don't like having them pitch
titles than any other community. against each other," the 'e lder
was fifth this year with a 913 total, Niekro said. "We're a very closefollowed by Gallipolls IV!th •918; knit fa mily and that used to bother
Hocking Hllls, 923; FairgrEens us something awful. We had to take
(Jackson-Wellston) 930; Cam· nerve pUis a nd everything, I'm not
bridge, 952 and Chlllicoihe (DNP).
kidding, it was awful."
Athens' Craig Goldsberry capHenrietta Niekro agreed.
.tured medalist honors with a
"I'm telling you it's just too much
64-71-:t:fi, edging teamnilfte Ray tension."
Finneraty (139) for top honors. Par
was 142. Pro-am play was held
Friday. Gallipolis Howard B.
Saunders and Atty. Bill Conley
The Daily Sentinel
placed tltird in that event.
t USPS 14 $-,50)
· Rusty Saunders, last year's
A Dlvl!tlol) of Multimedia, Inc ."
SEOGA ffie\lalist, paced Gallipolis'
team entry with a ~-77142. He also
PubHshed Pvl'r y a fu~rnoon , Monday
th rou~ h Frida y, 111 Court St., Po·
won the "longest drive contst."
m(&gt;rOy, Ohio. b.v th E' Ohio Vaflt&gt;y Pub·
Gene Grabiac fired a 147; George
llshlnF! Compan y f Multlmffila, Inc .•
PomProy, Ohio 45769. Ph . 992-2156. SePope 149; Ron Toler 161; Ron Ellis
cond class postage paid ut PomProy.
162 and Steve Carter 164.
0~10 .
Other local scores were:
M('mbrr: United PrPSs International.
Vic Hager and Brent Johnson.
Inland Dailv Prrss Association and tl'le
Ohi o Nt'wsPap&lt;&gt;r Associat ion. National
165; Ron Carmichael 166 and John
AdvNiisln g RPpr{'S(&gt;nfallv~ . Branham
Cunningham 169.
N£&gt;wspap&lt;&gt;r Sa les, 711 Third Av('nue .
Next year's tournament will be
Nf:'Yt' York , Nrw Yo1·k 10017.
held at Athens.
beating the major league record for
carEer viCtories by a brother
combination. The record Is 529 wins
by Gaylord and Jim Perry and the

Athens
SEOGA
champion

POSTMASTER: Sl&gt;nd addfl'Ss c han~
to Th(' Dally ' Sr&lt;ntlnrl. 111 Court St .,

PomProy,

NOTICE
. : S'mE'I'CHE'IFOROUf- Kansas City RoyaficatcherJimSunberg
~lo putootasllding Minnesota Twins' Kent Hrbekat IJomeintbe

tying run. KC won the contest, a-2. UPI.

to get In with tbe

f anks drub Orioles; Indians top Angels
Pagliarulo. Mattingly's SECOnd sac- followed with a single to
ByFREDMcMANE
Hassey led off the SECOnd and
... UPI ~'I!!OC!~IeSponsEdilor
third inningi; · with home runs, . : rifiC&lt;&gt; fiy score,:~ Meacha)'n. Winfield, Henderson. 111aking it 1?-Q. .
. 'Jbe New Yo~k Yankees _atl&gt;' marking thefirsti.imeirihiS.cat'eet::
. .
niaklng Earl Weaver wish he tie\1er · he had two in the same game.
lett his vegetable garden.
New York jumjled to a Hl lead in .
:After a 2 ~ year retirrou•nt , the ftrst inning. Rickey }ienderson,
Weaver returned as manager of the who reached base safely 14-&lt;Jf-16
B;lltirnore Orioles last Friday and til]les in the series, and Ken·Griffey
prompl.)y guided his club to three opened the game with walks.
suc;cessive victories over the Mil· Homderson stole second after his
wjHikee Brewers.
walk and both runners advanced a
·'lben the Yankees came to town base on a wild pitch by starter
aid promplly took some· luster off Deilnis Martinez, 5-4. Don Matting·
Weaver'sachievementbysweeping ly's sacrifice Oy scored Henderson.
• a J~gameseries.
.. Dave Winfield's ~ingle ~ntGriffey
· •1be Yankees ' weren't exactly to third and Scott Bradiev followed
ocinlial el~; In two or .those . with.a single tn~re GrUfey: . :
\1cl&lt;aies they drubbed tlle Orioles .
·
~. including Wednesday night's
The YankeE'S scored four. times in
triumph. ·
the second. Hassey led orr with a
:Ed Whitson, 2-6, pitched a home run. Mike Pagliarulo singled
sOl-hitter Cor his first sliutout of the and Bobby Meacham and Hender·
season and Ron I:fassey hit a pair of son followed with walks to load the .
biJrners to spark the Yankees' bases. Ken Dixon relieved Mar·
triumph.
tlrlez, and Griffey singled to score
.FIRM •

score

.

'

1n a first -round match, Britain's
,JerEmy Bates CX'icbrated his 23rd
btrthdaY with a 6-3. &amp;4 victory over
SC)ol1 McCain.
Gleml Layendecker downed &amp;&gt;n·
hlbOts 7-~. ~. 6-.1, John Frawley or
AalfiU'alla ~E'lltro Pfister. 1-6. Hi.
IPJ.Nduka ()dlzorofNigeria stopped

Shiras6-2, 7-6and Roger Knapp beat
Bauer6-7, 6-2,6-2.
Layendecker, a 24-year-&lt;Jld Cali·
Carnian ranked 176th in the world
last year, advanced to the round of
16. His previous successes have
been in doubles and this was a rare
singles victory.
Shiras was first warned and then
had a pena lty point againSt him
after an OUtburst at wllpire David
Howie.
With only three j!ames played and
already a service break down,
Shiras was clearly unhappy at some
line calls. At 1he start of the fourth
game he was warned for ball abuse
and the penalty point came before
the match restartedwhenhemadea
dt&gt;rogatory remark to Howie.
In the fifth game, Howle over·
ruied another decision against
Shiras. This time the American kept
his temper but not his form and
beCame the first seed to be knocked
out.

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While upgrading existing line
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Counties. Cable TV subscribers could notice lass -of
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and
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THANK YOU FOR
YOUR PATIENCE

1

NEW YORK (UP!) . - From
Patrick Ewing to Chris Remley,
there was somet hlng for everybody
at the NBA draft.
But - as the laws of the
marketplace dictate - there was
.clearly more for some than others.
Ewing, of course, was the
exquisite acquisition Tuesday - a
Rembrandt. of a: player now part of
the New York Knicks' collection.
The· auction began with the7-foot
Georgetown center and concluded 4
hours and 46 minutes later with the
selection or Remley, a 6-8 forward
from Rutgers claimed by the Boston
Celtics on the 162nd pick.
The choices came In aU sizes from 5-7 Spud Webb of North
Carolina Stateto7-6)&lt;2 ManuteBolof
Bridgeport.
The choices came in all rnatterof
addresses and accents - from the
Soviet Union ro Sudan, from Haiti to
·
Bulgaria.
And the choices came from a grab
bag of schools - from College of
Idaho to dear old Harvard . Four
schools-VIllanova, North Caronna
State, UCLA and Virginia Common·
wealth - led the way with three

"I think you'll see low scores here putting and chipping as well as'last
again this year." KitesaidWednf'!!· · year, but I need to start hitting my
day on the eve of this $500,1XXJ PGA irons closer to the pin. Last year
Tour event. "Probably not a 19 when I won here, I did everything
under like I had last year, but it well ."
probably wm take 14 or 15 to win.
WhUe Kite is defending champion
"We'll have to change mental and one of the favorites, the rrian
gears this week, think about attracting the most attention during
shooting 4 or 5 under every day. Wednesday's pro-am was slender
We'll have to be much more Tze.Chung Chen of Taiwan who led
aggressive."
through most of last week's Open
Kite, winnerortheTournamentof before suffering a quadruple bogey
Champions and more thall $171,(0) on the fifth hole in the final round.
Chen, who is in the firstthreesorne
so tar this year, says he isn't playing
as well now as he was five or six teeing off this morning, salt!' he
weeks ago.
would like to put the Open behind
"But, I'm starting to come around him but it hasn' (been an easy thing
'
again." he said. "I like my chances to do.'
beCause I like the golf· course. I'm
"I don't want to talk too much
about last week," said Chen, who
wound up in a three-way tie tor
second behind Open winner Andy
North. "This is a Atlanta week. I
have another tournament to play."
Chen, who turns Tl next Monday,
said despite booting tlJe _Open. title,
·~r feel I'm jllaylrig well enough to be
.a factor this week... .
. .
Wednesday was the first time
Chen had played the Atlanta
Country Club course since falling .to
make the cut on the hilly, 7,1XXJ.yard·
layout two years ago.
"I like a narrow course·like t!tls,"
he said. " You have to hit the baD in
good posi\ions- and that's good for
me.
.
"Not to win the Open, after
leading by so much (four strokes) is
very disllppolrtling," · said Chen
: "But to !Jnish second ih the -U.S.
Open .:.... someihtng only on~&gt; otiier ·
Far East golfer tlsaoAoki ofJapan)
luis done is pretty good, too. My
heart is very, very happy."
Three of this year's top money
winners are playing in the ClassicLanny Wadkins, who won two West
Coast tournaments in Januacy and.
is No. 2 in earnings with $326,495;
Colonial champ Corey Pavin, No. 4
at$290.4ffi; andHoustonchampRay
Floyd, No. 5 at $2B8,525.
Calvin Peete, 1~ Classic champ
and No. 3 on this year's money list .
withdrew Monday because of con·
\
tlnued back problems that forced
I
him out of the Open.
' TAKESSIIORTBREAK-Tze.ChungCII(enrlgltttakesashortbreak
Top money winner Curtis
and tallcs with his caddy Wednesday during pro-am play and a practice
Strange, who tied for 31st at the
Open, neve,r committed to play in
round oittbe ltiDy, 7000-yard Atlanta Country Club Course. Chen, who led
Atlanta. Neither did Jack Nicklau~.
the U.S. Open play last week wttD a qu~ruple bogey left him tied for
second, failed to make the out here two yell.n! JlKO, the last time he was
Tom Watson and Lee Trevino who
all missed the Open cut.
entered In the classic. UP!.

ATLANTA (UP!) ...:, Defending
champion Tom Kltesays the biggest
difference between playing in this
week's Atlanta Golf Classic andlasl
week's U.S. Open will be attitude.
"Last week. at Oakland Hills, the
course was so tough, you played to
avoid too many bogeys," said Kite .
" Here, at the Atlanta Country Club,
you haVI' IO be much mOre
aggressive. You have to gear
yourself for making birdies."
Kite offers himself as a case In
point. In las t year's Atlanta Oassic;
he was 19 under par with rounds of
69-67·66-~. to win by five strokes.
Sunday. I -under was good enough to
win the Open, where Kite finished
13th.

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Clippers, Jon Koncak of Southern
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"In three years. this kid will be
better than Patrick Ewing,"
Clippers roach Chaney said of
'Benjamin.
·Golden State nailed a big guard In
Chris Mullin o!St . John's, Utah was
lucky with Malone available, Phlla·
delphia got its forward in Terry .
. Catledge of South Alabama and
Cleveland wound up with forwards
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John \'{illiarns of Tulane. .
At guard, Houston got highscoring Steve Hams of Tulsa to
complement its frontline, Detroit
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Amf'rk"an l.c&lt;llltUC' - MulllnRiy. N\' ii :
Bnl.nansky, Mtnn and Mum•r. Ball a :
f ablon. Dt-1 and Kin~. Oak .u.

Nalloral

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Colmlan. SIL +1 :

Stl. :a&amp;; l.opl'l. Chl tt; Rnl!ws. Mil
Clack1m , Sf' :JJ.
1

Mr('A.'(',

:n:

Battery Backup Operates Alarm
If AC Falls
Save now on a clock radio that wakes you
on-time, every time! Battery Sentinel"' LED
warns you of weak backup battery. Snooze
bar, sleep control. 1112·1545 BaCkup banory e«tta

lA·~·

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Hndr!in. t\Y ................... -18 1!1".! :.o ~ .:~a
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COIJII(&gt;I'. Mil ............. ..... rlfl'&amp;l'\29 76 ..'U.l
Whltdkt'f'Dt .................... !ill'll4.f!l]!i ..l.!l
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~- '!1!1 n 1n .:.ft9
491'ifl 'l)l ~!l . :N

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MorPind, ('h , .......... : . .......
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Molltol'. Mil ....... ,............ ~ %11 11/ 70 .\1~

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Mllwuuk•1· ........ ,., ....... .'.!!• :f.? .171 ~'' .·
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rfla:-«1 un J.l pi lltf' :tppc•; wan~~ " no. 1)1
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N,\TJCIS,U . U ;..\lllJF.
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New 2 Pc. E.A.

Ballin'

l\1lnnt'AA!a. 1111:n1
{'ullfnrnlu utl'ltlrll$(o. night
ll:tltill"ll•n· ill Mllwaukw , nlW'!I
Nl'\.1' York 111 1)1'11111 1. nt~hl

Majors

8995

Leaders

Trxn ~ til

Ry lJnlwd l'rl'!oll. 1ntPm~Mion:ll

57-59 Court

..'

them," Dallas coach Dick Motta
players from each selected.
Said Marty Blake, the NBA's said.
The Washington Bullets made
scouting director: "There's no such
thing as a bad drat!. If you're New fronillne alterations, dealing Rick
Jei'SI'y then it's a ·bad draft. They Mahorn In one move and Greg
Ballard in another and obtaining
have no first-round pick."
Not so with the Indlana Pacers, Dan Roondfield from Detroit. And,
who held thrEe of the first '0 picks In a mild surprise, lite Bullets took
and are In position to remodel their Wake Forest forward Kenny Green
already strong frontline. The big wtth the 12th choice, ahead of Karl
addition is Wayman Tisdale, the 6-9 Malone of Louisiana Tech.
The Bulls roaneuvered by ship·
forward from Oklahoma chosen
ping
big man Steve Johnson and a
secood .
draft
pick to!;,lnAntonioCor forward
"I have a gutreelinghe's going to
he a hell of a player," Pacers ~ch Gene Banks before the draft. They
·then made two more trades,landing
George..Irvine said.
, ·
Two other forwards followed on Charles Oakley, a 6-9 forward from
collS€Cutive second-round selec· Virgl!Jla Union.
" We aren't through dealing yet,"
tlons - BUI Martin .of Georgetown
said Jerry Krause, vice president of
and Dwayne McClain of VIllaf\ova.
The Mavericks, hungry for pivot operations.
The Spurs stirred the waters by
help, had threeofthetop17picksand
chose two centers and three taking Alfredrlck Hughes of Loyola
foreigners-West German forward (Ill.) as high as 14th. Hughes Is n0 t
Deller SchrempC · of Washlngtan , bashful with the baD - he takes to
Canadian cellter Blli Wennlngton of shooting the way plants take io ·
St. John's and West German center chlorophyll.
Most clubs had some! hlng wortlJy
)..lwe Blab or Indiana.
to
present to their fans . Other
"In taking all or these foreigners,
centers
going early were Benoit
we know that they have a Jot of
basketball I)Otential ahead of Benjamin of Creighton to the

Atlanta Golf .Classic
offers
.
different attitude· this week

S2 Wc&gt;(lkS .................................. $.r;8.24

COtiPAH 10 '41!.00

pleased rQ inrroduce

Reservations

. By Curler or Molor Route .

One WcC'k .. ,...... .. ....... .... ............. $.1.10
One Month ... .............................. $4 .80
Ori(' YPa r .............................. $."17 .20
RINGLE COPY
PRICE
Dail y ..................... .............. 2~ Ce-nt s

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

NBA draft had. something for everyone

MERSPIIING
MAmESS

Two seeds advance
:BRISTOL, England (UP!) Hl'llrl Leconte of France and Terry
Moor. thetoptwoseeds.advanced in
~t sets Wednesday at the
~7,«mWest orEnglandgrasscourt
cllaJniiiOnShips.
:~..«onte downed Gianni Ocleppo
~ltaly 6-3, 6-2 and Moor eliminated
J-lllland'sHuubVan Boeckei6-2, 7-6.
'Tile tournament Is OIM.' of the
~tiona! grass court events ll'ad·
iJig to next week's Wimbledon
cllamplonshlps.
: Fflllr seedS were defeated Wed·
nisday- No. 10 Tarik Benhabilrsof
A.lgPr'la. No. U Hank Ptistl'r, 1'\o. 12
U'it ShiraS and No. 14 Mike Bauer.

RUBSCRIPTION RATES

CABLE TV
ninth inning of Wedne!;day's game. Hrbek was trying

otilo 4~700.

Thursday, June 20, 1985

A.rnrrtcan ~ - PMtls. Cal :1\;
lltncknon, N\' • : coauna. oak 21: Ru!lcr.
a.. ~ Mottl{&gt;. ,..,. 18.

By Realistic

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1!)95

Reg. 24.95
Mountl Easily Under Moat DHhn
Adds FM to your AM car radio, withou1 rewiring, and your existing antenna will do

just fin,. Lighted tuning dial. With under·
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us

Never N11de a.tterlea,
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4-key memory, autc&gt;-eonstant. SqtJare root
and percent keys. 8-dlglt diaplay. ~

�PtJJa

6-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 20, 1985

Banking
·awards
banquet
conducted

87,units of blood ·
given Wednesday
Ninety-four prople contributed 87
pints of blood to the Meigs County
Amerlcan Red Cross blood program
when a bloodm.oblle visited the
Meigs Senior Citizens Center
Wednesday.
Twenty-four prople gave replacement blood and during the visit
James Will, Debra Mora, Robin A.
Buffington, Peggy Harrts , James
Birchfield, Frederick Thompson,
arid Phyllis aearhs became ga llon
donors. Becoming multiple gallon
donors were Raymond JEWell, two
g'aUOIIS; Paul Rice, three; Geoffrey
A. Wilson, four; Judith Hunter ,
Virgil Windon, !lye; Wllllam Hoback, six; Ellis Myers, seven and
Carolyn Jeffers became a 15 ga llon ,
donors. Physicians on hand were
Or. WllmaMansf!eldandDr.James
Witherell. The canteen was served
by women()! the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church.
Clerical workers included Marlon
Ebersbach, Thelma Dill, Florence
Richards, Erma Roush, Virginia
Buchanan, Emma Clatworthy, Bernadine Meier, Philomena Follrod ,
Myrtle Sisson, Naomi London ,
Emma Adams, all or the RSVP
program. Other volunteers included
Peggy Ranis, Dorothy Long,
.feanette Radford, Mace! Barton,
Mary Nease, Terri Starcher , Maitnda Hill, Linda Friend , Wanda
Imboden, Bob Geyer, ROOney
Roush, &gt;1otui Longstreth . .
, Donors by community were:
Pomeroy--Mary K. Spencer,
Vaughan J. Spencer, Billy J .
%Jencer, Joseph J . Hilleary. Penny
l.. Brinker, Harold W. Blinker,
twbert W. Vaughan, James A. Will,
Loretta A. Brown, Terry Lee
Watson, Debra D. Mora, Mildred I.
Alldre, Anna Lock hard, Richard E .
SWanson, Mary L. Starcher, Rayrtlond Jewflll. Peggy Harris, Ariz·
ona StEWart, Lucy White, Homer G .
BalCter, Mary A. Sorden, MelanieG.

Rollins, DebOrah L., Grueser , Law rence D. Leonard , James E.
Witherell, Fred 'Thompson, Lawrence R. Powell, Bryant A. Young,
Phyllis M. Bearhs, Ann Blackwell,
Geoffrey A. Wlloon, Virgil Windon,
Robert W. Couch, J anet M. Am·
brose, David M. King, Mike W.
Palmer, Slllrley Mills, Charles D.
E lils, Susanna Heck, Carolyn A .
Jeffers, Larry W. Pa~ns ; Roger
Gaul, Daniel R. Taylor, Paul A.
Rice.
Rutland--Donnie R. Laudermilt,
Avanell George, Fred H. Georg£&gt;,
J a mes C. Birchfield, Mary E·
Jacobs, Larry J . Ball, Mary E .
Davidson, Donna M. Davidson,
Lewis Kennedy, Gregory M. SIP.
wart, C. Robert Geyer.
Langsville--Ellis E. Myers, Karen
Clark.
RacinP.·Barbara Lynn Chap·
man, Vlrghtla M. Bl;tnd, Jean
Alkire, William H. Hoback,
J e anette M. Radford, Joyce M.
Medley, Loretta K. HUI, Ronald
Holter, P,aui F. Marr.
Syracu~- Linda L. FliE&gt;nd. Everett J . Michael.
Middleport- Tonda Seidenabel,
Julla Qualls, Patricia K. Logan,
Gerald Anthony, Sarah J . Fowler,
Edward W. Durst, NoraR.Nltz, Coy
E. Nltz, Gloria Peavley, Judith
Hunter, Dorothy McCloud, Debra
Carder, Charles F. Johnson, Robin
A. Buffington, Elaine Corsa.
Hamden--Clarence R . Buskirk.
Cheshlre--Charies W. Searles.
Long Bottom--HarlaQ A. Ballard,
Susan A.'Karr. ·
Tuppers Plains--Betsy A. Herald.
Albany--Joanne MaHaffey.
Reedsville-Richard .S. Barton,
Mace! Barton.
Ha rtford , W. Va ... Ramona
Jordan.
1
Letart, W: Va. --William Ball.
Chester--Clarence C. Wolfe.

---------

--

Area deaths

\
\
/
,_

:1
SPEAKER-BobH!Mbon,thlrdfromleft,presldent
of the Hillsboro Natioaal Bank, was speaker at the
annual awards banquet of The llills of Ohio American
· lnstltuteo!Banldng'i'OOsdaynlpt. Withhlmfromthe

The annual awards and recogni ·
tlon banqllli't of The Hills of Ohio
American Institute of Banking was
hE&gt;Id Tuesday night at the Holiday .
Inn nE&gt;ar Gallipolis.
·
Students were recognized and
received certificates for having
taken course at Rio Grande College.
Seven courses were offered .
Representatives from banks In
Jackson, Gallla and Meigs Counties
were present with Bob Hodson, .
president of the Hillsboro National
Blink as speaker .

Plan WIC schedule

guerrilla · attac~

also among the dead.
Albert A. Schaufelberger, was shot
San Salvador, walling for a friend bility for the killing.
The kllllngs o! the Marines were by left·wtngguerrlllas.
when twornen sbothlmfourtimesln
The U.S. Embassy has since
He said 12 prople were injured in theflrstofU.S. military personnel In
According to the U.S. Embassy,
the head .
changed t hE&gt; patterns or living for
!he attack, all Salvadoranclvllians . El Salvador since May 25, 1983, Schaufelbergt&gt;r , 32, bad been sitting
Leftist Popular Liberation For- U.S. military personnel, including
They were rushed to a downtown when the deputy commanderoftbE&gt; in his car parked outside the ces, fighting the U.S.-backed go- thE&gt; times that U.S. m llltary person-.
emergency clinic.
f:""U_.s
_ ._mll_I-::
ta=ry=g•=ou=·=p=
, N=a=vy
=L=t.=Cm
= d=r_._u_ni_v_ers-lty,;_o_r_een
__tra_I_Ame
__rt_c_a_In__v_e_rnm
__
en_t,;,'_Ia_t_
er_ ci_a_tmed
__
res
_;_
po_ns
_ I· __
ne_l_ca_n_v_l_si_t a
....:..po..:pu~la=r=spo=rt~ln=g=·::cl::u:::b,,
A state of emefgt'ncy was
immediately declared, the spokes·
man said , and air force hE&gt;licopters
new over the aree, Hundred~ of
soldiE!I'S we,r e dispatched throughout thE&gt; clly to search for !he
terrorists .
An U.S. embassy spokesman
called the grQUfl a unit of leftist
rebels "dressed up as members of
the armed forces."
" ln our judgement It Is not clear
whether the guerrlllas specifically
intended to kill the Marines or If the
Marines just happened to be .in the
place the guerrillas decided to
attack," he said .
The president or thE&gt; Salvadoran
Supreme Court, Franclso Jose
Guerrero, visited the site of !he
killlngs ahd described It as · a

. "ffiassacre.
"Terrorists do not respect human
lights," he said.
Among seven Salvadorans killed
were an executive for the computer
firm lnterdate, Humerto Rosales
Pineda, and a well-known local
lawyer, Humberto Saenz, the milItary spokesman said. He said a
Chilean and a Guatemalan were

NASHVILLE
VACATION
3 DAYS &amp; 2 NIGHTS
WITH

EVE~Y

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NEW TRUCK SOLDI

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YOUR VACATION INCLUDES ...

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commodations for o
family of 4 (2 adults and

AWARDS - Receiving awards at the recognition
ballquet of The HBJs of Ohio American Institute of
Banking Tuesday night were, I to r, Darla Haynes,
special recogrutlon from the president ol A.I.B. lor

2 children under 18)
1tFRHI
" V . t.P ."
Package provided by the
hotel on your arrival
*FREE I Good Morning Coffee!
,
1tA CERTIFICATE that makes your trip Iran·
sfarrabie to relatives or friends .

,.
completing several courses; Eric Enunert, who
received a diploma for completing the fundamentals
of banklng,cour.;e, 1111d Tina Dlly, special recognition.
from the president for completing several oourses.

Commissi~ners •.. _,.;.(..:..co_nt..:..inu_ed_fro_m..;.pa....:g..:.."....:11_ _ _ _ _ _ __

OHer O.o od Thru June 1915.

COUGAR • Stk. no. 55591
1978 FORD PINTO· stk. no. 10121 .·. .
1977 FORD,F·lOO PICKUP.· stk. no. 50161
1980 CHEVROLET CITATION • stk. no. ~9271
1978 FORD THUNDERBIRD • stk. no. 45642
1979 FORD LTD 4 clr~ • stk. no. 20091

.....-.Sin»plieilg.........
:. OPEN FOR. BVSINE'!S - The Shbt Shop, loeated on· 'lbli'd; st. In
·• Racine, Is now:~lor-buslnesf! UQdrf 0\Vftllt 'J)oo:ll'lf .Bentz.-Bentz \rill
·b.:
tee slUts, Jacket&amp;, iYm sborts, and hals. ue·also does all types
of tranferring and custom designs. Store hours are 9 a.m. to 7 p.m .
Monday through Satunlay. The addition of avldeogarneroomlsplanned
fcir the future.

-JUST ARRIVED! '

.. ·_1!?~~m~!.~!D .

9emng

Weather forecast

I

V.Ulage funds total $218,845
•,

A great price and top-quality features. Take this ad with
you when you shop and see for yourself if the other
brands can m~&gt;asure up to Simp/icily.

SHOP AND COMPARE
• A heavy-duty welded and reinforced frame is an important assurance
of long life.
·
.
• Exclusive PATENTED ISO-BODY" CONSTRUCTION isolates the
operatorfrom engine vibrations so you f..,! as fresh after you mow as
-you did wht'n you ilarted.
• The hinged hood not only encloses the engine to reduce noise, but also
enhances the good looks of the machine.
• One pedal clutch/brake, combined with 5-speed in -line shifting and vbelt dutching, means smoother starts and easier maneuvering-around
· trees.

lHERE'S MORE
There are more features than we can possibly list
In this ad, so stop in and arrange a free home
demonstration with us. And if you have a trade-In,
let us clmaze you with what we can give you for it.
Finally, wocan make it easy on your pocket to own
a SimJ•lirity with our REVOLVING ·CHARGE
PLAN. It's available to qua~fied buyers with NO
15% down and eaoy monthly payments at FINANCE
compe~tive rates. And if you buy by July 31, CHARGES
we11 pay the finance charges on your first 6 FOR SIX MONTHS!
monthly poytnentl. After that, you can pay the remaining amount In
, full, or continUt' to make monthly P")'Tllentt.
,
"Simplicity riding mowen are available In 5-hp rtCOil start . 26" cut 8·
'hp electric start • 30" cut, or 10-hpe!ectrk: otart • 3(1" cut. Price sh~ Is
.s-hp model. .

ror

FAIRPLAIN
TRACTOR SALES
IIAIIIOtlft II
IIPllf, WIST- 15171

REED'S
. COUNTRY STORE
41M • MAll
IUDIVIUI, 0110 41712
614-371.-~125

~.0.4.·J·7·2······7·J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .·.,~...........M.••;•;•';"·····-. . . . ..

.......

PRICES

.OPRYLAND HOTII.

,-----------------"1..------------

Partly cloudy today and Frlday.
Highs today will be near 75 and
Friday near ffi. Mostly clear tonight
with a low near 55.
The probability of precipit a lion is
20 percent today, near z~ro tonight
and 10 percent Friday.
EXI«lded Forecast
Saturday through Monday
ChiiiiCe of showers and thunder·
storms Saturday and Sunday. Fair
Monday. 1Dgbswlllhelnthe80sand
lows In the 60s.

****
LOW

3 EXCITING DAYS &amp; 2 GREAT t41GHTS

developed two weeks ago when the toadverttse.lnthiscase, thE&gt;sponors
commlsslonersdiscoveredthatbids would
have
been thP
for Ihe job were a bout to be ·opened commissioners.
without the job ever being adverIn other business, thecorrimlssion
Used in local newspapers and accepted a bid of $9,196 from
without the commission being Gheen's Paintlni&lt;, Racine, to paint
apprised ofthes tatils-ofthe. project. !he Meigs County Courthouse. Ail
Two hundred . notices of the Amencan Painting Co., Pittsburg,
.PO:O)ect wer~. serit out to contracters . ,Pa .. the only other bidder, . s~bmit -.
in ·the $ tale; 2G of those cont-r;~ctoi'S ted a. bid of.$1M&lt;XL . ·. . . .
requested bidpackel&amp;andeiglttbids
The commission also moved to
were received by . the SCS Coulter advertlseforbldsfortwonew1985or
said. Of those Pight bids, five were 1986· model dump 'trucks for lhE&gt;
from Meigs County, one was from county highway department as .
Jackson, one from CaldwE&gt;ll , and specified by the county engineer.
one ,from . New Philadelphia, he
added .
·
According to First, the job should
he awarded right away. He noted
that thp four low bids were from
Meigs County cont ractori;.
CoulteP explained to ttie eomml'·
sion tha.t it is .not .-Scs. policy. .to .
advertise.· jobs in local papers but
said hE&gt; hoped future problems of this ·
type could beeliminatedby mailing
to project sponsors, a noticeofintmt

LARGE
PJI:L ECTION

• Trcmtoortatlon Notlncho~d«t

• A mower that's attached to a pivoting front axle rides over groun4
contours on rear rollers for a beautifully groomed lawn .
.

.

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7-

people.

~3 1 JACKSON PIKE - RT. 3S WEST

-

\

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador
(UP! ) -Leftist guenillas sprayed
automatic rifleflreacross a block or
cafes Wednesday, killlng four U.S.
Marines, two Arperican civilians
and seven olher prople, officials
said. Twelve clvllians were Injured .
American Marines Tom Handwotu't , Gregory Webber, P atrtck
Kwajaski and BobbiE' Joe Dickson
were killed when the termrists
openEd fire, theJusticeMinlstry told
UPI.
The ministry said U.S. clvlllans,
George Viney - who was working
as a computer technician for the
Wang company - ~nd Roberto
Albrlde:z also were killed .
·
·
The men's hometowns, ages and
mllitary ranks were not released.
State Department spokeswoman
VIvienne Ascher corirlrmed only
that four.Marines and an American
c jvillan were killed in the attack. She
said !he Mannes were off duty
guards at the U.S. Embassy.
Six other civlllans, a Guatemalan,
a Otilean · and four Salvadorans,
1vere also killed In the-attack, atong
wllh .one Salvadoran soldier, !he
ministry said .
A Salvadoran military spokesman said an undetermined nwnher
of guerrtllas pulled up in two trucks
in the posh ZOna Rosa ~tor of San
Salvador and opened fire lndiscrtmi·
nately on a row of cafes, kllllngthe 13

1985 F-150. PICKUP

Sr.

6, 7-11.20. 29, 39.

president of marketing for the lnstltute board.

Ponieroy- Middleport, Ohio

Six Americans among 13 killed in leftist

Pickup schedule for WJC coupons
has been announced by Dort ha
Riffle, ADP Coordinator. The schE&gt;·
dule Is A-G July 1; lj·P, July 2: Q·Z,
July 5, all9t o 11 a .m . and 1 to3 p.m .
Those unable to ·pick up their
coupons on the a ppointed day, may
do soon J uly 8, 15th a nd 22nd.

The resident , a Mrs. Reeves, said
parents
are afraid to lt&gt;t children
Services
are
being
arranged
by
Lisa A. Taylor
walk the road because of the heavy
the Ewing Funeral Home.
traffic and because of speeding
Lisa Annett Taylor, daughter of
Theodore
Radcliff
vehicles. She commended officer
Ronald and Brenda A. (Barr )
Joe
KJrby of the · Pomeroy police
Taylor, 5197 DeWitt Rd ., Fostoria,
Theodore Radcliff, 65, Wilgus department for being the only law
was stUibom at 12: 00 p.m. Monday
(Lawrence County) , died Wedn~­
~nforcement authorltywhoactually
rn Fostorta qryJI_~\~1. .· _ .
day mornlnjf at Cabell-Huntington . slows down the Union Ave. t raffic.
: In addition to her parents, the ·
Hospital Mit&gt;r a brief lllness..
.
: Mrs, . Reeves said. 'slie ·was
Infant ·Is survived by a sister, Lort
A diSabled coiilirlinerarid imU.S.' · ''lhinkiitg ·or laking . up a .petition
Ann, at home; paternal grandpar·
Army wteran of World War II, Mr.
because I mean business.''
ents, Merrlll and May Ta~lor,
Taylor was born Jan. 29, 1920 in
She noted !hat the county plans to
Pomeroy; maternal grandparents,
Huntington. a son of Squire and
repair
the Hiland Road access
Dale and Pauline Barr, Reedsville;
Sarah · ~en Radcliff, and was
whE&gt;n,
in
her opinion, Union Ave. Is
and a maternall:reat grandmothE&gt;r.
raised In Law!'('nce and Gallia
traveled
more
than Hiland.
Mary Offutt of Tuppers Plains.
Counues.
Roberts told her she could "look
• Graveskle services were held
Survivors include his wife, Geral- for Urlprovements to the road but we
Wednesday, 2::1&gt; p.m., at Memory
dine Schartlgt&gt;r Radcliff; eight
can't enforce the speed limit."
Gardens near Arcadia wllll Rev.
children, Daniel, at home; David,
David MacDonald offlcatlng.
Commissioner David Koblentz
Route 3, Ironton; Jack, Walters
Harrold-Fiortana Funeral Home,
also brought some road complaints
J;!urrDI!', S. C ; Douglas, Hani&gt;;Qn·
Fostorla, made1hE&gt; arran·gements.
to tne attent(on ot Roberts ~ nd
burg, Va.; JEWlle Vanee, Chesa·
pe.a ke; ·l:.lnda ·RuckE'r, South Point; · Warner. Koblentz.stngled our problems or brush obstructing the view
:Paul 0. Puilins,
Brenda Martin, Shinnston, W. Va.;
where Township Road 9 meets
P enny Lyn' Radcliff, !lt home; a
County Road 36 in Olive Township
Paul Oren Pullins, Sr., 73, died brother, Clyde Radcliff, Jackson.
and a similar situation where
Wednesday evenillg at his home at and aunt, Flossie StephE&gt;ns, Kitts
.County Road :IJ meets County Road
4lm8 Horse Cavp Road, Racine.
Hill. and five grandchildren.
· Mr. Pullins was hom July 16, 1911. Besides his parents, he was pre- 28,In Sutton ToWnship.
Wamer explained !hat general
For the past 10 ypars he had spent ceded in death by four sisters and a
.
relief
workers haw been handcut:the . wlntl'rs at Cherokee VIllage, brother.
tlng
some
brush throughout the
He attended the Baptist Church
Ark., returning to his farm in Meigs
county
and
just
haven't !'('ached all
and was a veteran of the U. S. Army
County for the swnmer mont.hs.
areas
as
yet.
HP is survived by his wife of 50 having served In World War II .
Bob First oft he Meigs County Soil
years, Virginia Queen Pullins; two
Services will be held at 1 p.m .
sons and daughters-In-law, Paul 0 . Saturday at the Wilgus Fairview Conservation Service, and Dave
Pullins, Jr., and his wife, Ruth, Baptist Chureh with Rev. Leon CoultPr, a director with th~ sta te's
Horse Cave Road.; and C. D. Rogl'r Holderly and Rev. Billy Payne Reclamation. Conservation and
Pullins and wUe, Pat,SugarGrove: officiating. Burtal wlll be In Wilgus Development 'dlstrlct , discussed
with thE&gt; commissioners !he upcomt&gt;lght grandchildren, 10 great- Fairview Cemetery. Fr-iends may
ing
reseeding project at the county
call
at
the
Phillips
Funeral
Home
in
grandchildren, and a nufl\!ler .of
ProbiPms with the matter
landfill.
nieces, nephEWS, sisters and Ironton from 6 to9 p.m. Friday. The
brothers-In-law, · many cousins and body wlll lie In state at the church
one hour before services.
frlends.
: Mr. Pullins worked in Columbus
for the lgel Escavating Co. for 34
CLEVELAND IUPII - Wedness-ears retiring In 1975. He was the
day's
·w inning Ohio Lottery
only child or Mary Pullins wh~
nwnbers:
Dally Nmnher
preceded him in death in 1968. He
126.
was an active charter member of
TlckE&gt;t sales total ed$i,t41,IDt50,
the Cherokee Vlllage Indian Lions
, .
with a payoff dueof$405,124.50. Lotto
¢Jub at Cherokee Village, Ark.

Lottery winners

left are Paul Reed, vice president of llnances of the
Institute board; Dr. Jam Schul, dean of the college of
business at ·Rio Grande, and Eric Emmert, vice

Thursday, June 20, 1985

~~ Pomeroy VIllage funds as of
May 31 totaled $218,845.12 reports
Jane Walton, vUlage clerk·
treasurer.
.
.
Receipts, dlsbursemeqt ~ and the
enll of t!le month balance, respec·
lively, ill -each of the funds making
up the total include: gt&gt;neral,
S48,517.01, $3),133.28, $39,291.30;
safety, $200, no disbursements,
$3917.25; street malntalnance,
$8923.15, $4575.62, $6122.93; state
highway, $359.38; no d!Spursements, $12,001.99; · fire, $4466.16,
$156~.44, $4658 . 3~;
cemetery.
$1499.25, $707.20, $4170.76; water,
$19,:1&gt;2:74, $28,418.68, $57,848.24 ;
sewer.. $7371.11, $3728, $7179.99;
guarantee . meter, · $525, $623.45,

4

dr .• wire wheels, v-e, -air cond.,

vinYl roof, heater, auto. trans .• .

PS, PB. body side mouldings, tin·
ted glass, AM radio. Stock N
57693 . .
WAS

, NDW

'1995

'995

9 passenger, station wa90n, V-8,
air cond., Interior &amp; exterior

decor group,. auto. trans .. PS,

4 dr .• 4

power windows, .power door
locks, tilt wheel, cruise, AM / FM

radio, reer window defogger.
WAS
NOW

•2995

'2195

cvL.

4 speed, AM radio.

Stock #53221.
1

WAS

NOW

•3995

1

2895

2 dr .. 4 c yt .. sun roof. 4 speed,
AM/ FM rad io. stereo tape. fog
lights. Stock N 57812 .
WAS

..

NDW

··2595

'3595

ss:io7:ot; utUlty, $12,271.97. $2682.50,

$22006.89: sale of building, $382.45,
$382.45, $270.22; perpetual care,
$100. no disbursements, $1!0!.25;
cemetery fund, no receipts, no
disbursements, . $17,825.12; pollee
pension, $1854.01, $43.12, $1810.90;
building debt, $ll7.55, no dlsbutsements, $355.16; reereation fund, no
· receipts, no disbursements, $355.16;
bond retiremen~ $1236.01, $28.75,
$18472.14; revenue sharing, no
receipts, no disbursements, $6531;
permissive tax , $372.58, .$830.00,
Receipts for tlie month tOtaled
$107,498.38 whilE&gt; disbursements
amounted to$73,715.54.

conft'rence or thE&gt; Ohlo School
Boards Association In Columbus
and textbooks, approved by a
teache r textbook committee from
across the county, were approyed .
Bills were approved for payment
and a discussion was held on the first
academic excellence banquet
staged recently by the board. ·

PS,

PB,

body

CRESSIDA

side

mouldings, tinted glass, tilt
wheel, cruise, AM/FM rad io,

2 dr .• -4 cyl. , air cond.. auto .

stereo tape, radial tires , white
walls. StockN53A02 .
NOW
WAS

WAS

'6695

'5495

trans.,
radio.

tinted glass,

'3695

AM/ FM

NOW

'2695

AM/ FM r adio, radial fires. Stock
N 201Jl .

walls. Slock N45642 .
IriAS
.

'3995

'3995

'2693

V·8, air cond., vinyl roof. auto.
trans., PS, PB, ,AM r~dio , white

NOW

'2695

NOW

WAS

'5995

'5130

2 dr .. 4 cy l. , 4 speed, PB, new
t ires. Slock N 10321 .
WAS

'·WAS

'3995 ;

NOW

'1995

A cyl. , 4 spe•d, PS,
r adio . Stock II ~0031.

WAS

SPECIAL

WAS

'3295

.•1995

4 speed , sliding rear glass. rear
. step bumpper, AM radio. Stock N
59971 . .
'NOW
WAS

5495

'3995

'3295

glass. AMI FM radio. Stock N
20042.

•3995

'3999
CJ-7

12 passenger; V·B, auto. trans.,
PS, PB, gauges, air cond., tinted

WAS

PB , AM/ FM
SPECIAL

1

CLUB W~GON
4 cyl ., staitd. ·trans., AM radio,
radial tires . Stock N50742.

'1395

CAMPER

WITH SNOW PLOW
EV.ERYTHI NG GOES
ton pickup, V·8, -4 speed, PS,

PB , long w ide bed, rear step
bu mper, AM radio, m ud &amp; snow
tires. Slock N 57401.

NOW

'2195

1978 DODGE D-150
v,

STATION WAGON
V·8, air cond., auto. trans., PS,
PB, radial tires, white · walls.
Stock N57421.
SPECIAL
WAS

DASHER

4 dr .• 6 c yl. , a ir cond ., auto.
tran s. . PS , powe r· door loc ks,

' THUNDERBIRD

CUTLASS

$3502.82.

Physicians rwmed for driver exams
· Physicians to handle physical
examinations for bu~ driver appli·
cants were name&lt;! Tuesday night
\fhen the Meigs County Board of
EducatiOn met ·!I:! regular session.
Named to handle thE&gt; physicals
were Dr. Wilma Mansfield, Dr. John ·
Ridgway and Dr. James WithereD.
The board named member,
Harold Roush, as delegate to the fall

,

l'vfrl!¥1,

NOW ·

'2753

Ha rd top, • whee l drive, V·B,
autQ. trans .• ps , i&gt;B , AMI FM
radio, stereo tape. Stock 153521.
WAS
NOW

'6495

'4M5

Meigs County happenings..
Three emergency runs
·
'
Thn!e calls were answered by local
unltsWednesd~y. theMelgsCounty
E111ergency Medlcjil Services
report&amp;

'

At 6:12 p.m., Pomeroy took
James A. 1\'lcDanlel from an
accident at the Intersection or Route
7 ~lid. UniOn Ave.•. to vetet"ans
Memorial Hospital; at 6:35 p.m .,
Syracuse went to Horse Cave Road
for Paul 0. Pullins, Sr., reported
dead on arrtval, and at 6:41 p.m.,
Pomeroy took Elizabeth Rou.s h
from E. Main St., to Pleasant Valley

HOipltAI.

II

.

'I

Veterans Memorial ·
Admitted -- Valerie Hanstlne ,

p~~~rged--Mlllard

swartz,
James Pellegrino, Charles canter,
Keith McCarty, Ralph Webb, Robert Snowd~n. Wetzel Bailey, Linda
Prltmore.
,

Sa urday serv1ces
Services will be held a1 the Red
Brush Church of Christ at 7 p.m.
Saturday. There will be mornllt&amp;
wonhip at 9: :IJ a .m. and evenidg
services Sunday at6. DenverHlliof
Foster, W.Va., will be speaker.

.~

dr., diesel , 39,000 mites, A·1
cond, 4 cyl. ,• heater, AM/ FM
radJo, WSW radlilt !Ires, bucket
•
seats. Stock N556 It .

57681 ,

'5295

'3295

4

• A cyt. , neater,

PS, AM rad io.
!leats. Stock 120824,
NOW

'4430

WAS

NOW

'4650

V·B, auto . trans., PS, f'B , AM/ FM
radio, mud &amp; snow tires. Stock I
WAS

NOW

'2195

6 cyt., auto . trans., PS; PB, radial
tires. Stock N 57851.

WAS

'5995

NOW

'4581

�nnnday. June 20. 1986

The Daily Sentinel

Beat of the bend

By The Bend
Mulberry. time

Sentblel Staff Writer

Page- 9

In the sJX&gt;tlight

Money says it all
By J¥)B HOEFU()Jf

Thursday, June 20. 1985

A 1984 graduate ot Eastern High
School where she was salutatorian
of her class, Lori received a full
tultloll· scholarship from Rio
Grande College and Community
College. Sbe resides with her
husband, Charles, and son, Larry,
.at Route 2, Coolvllle.

By CJliii)Y OLIVERI
County l!:xtenslon Agent
HomeEcooiomlcs+H

WANT ADS
AREJUMPIJE
WITH BARGAINS

one tablespoon enzyme presoak. .' seal edges.l:lakeat400degrees !or40
The mulberry has a long history. mlnu tes or until golden brown
We know It was cultlvated at least · Did you know that you canmakea
4.&lt;00 years ago. And by many delicious mulberry julce drink?Call
legends, exotic uses are attached to ouroff icefor the rec ipe at 992-li6.96
~
It. One of the trees was imported to
All educa tional programs and
-A.- ...... ,•,~ •
lhls country In hopes of starting a activities conducted by the Ohio
-'LCUU.:VJ-1
prosl*'rous silk trade. But, it failed Cooperative Extension Service are
p
and the tree's reputation suffered.
available to all potential clientele on
That's a lot of bad press for such a a non-dlscrlmlnatory basis without
. 352 East Main St.
sweet frult . And even though you regard to race, color, national
may not enjoy a Chinese dellcacv origin, sex, hand icap or J&lt;'ligious
Pomeroy, OH.
uslngsharkstuffedwithmulberrlr~ . . affiliation .
Meigs County's Oldest florist
the berrtes make delicious jams and ~~--~·-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiit;.
berry desserts.

Money, 1\'loney; money makes
MUJberrlesMakeSweetTreals
tlle world go
"Here we go-round the mulberry
'round, tlle world.
bush ...."Orperhapslnthlsarea,tlle
110 round , tlle
"mulberry tree" is more appropworld go round. ·
rlate. And,lfyou're going 'round the
These words
tree, be sure to pick tllose juicy
from a song In
sweet benies before the birds get
Pleasant Grace Weber, chairper- tllem.
cabaret, unfortuson
for tlle mental health fund
nately, have a
Each year, we get several calls
drtve
, reports collections of $122.70
PQlnt as Bob Gilmore and Jack
asking 1t this delicate frult is edible.
Satterfield, Middleport council for tlle Rredsvllle area.
Not only is It edible, it's also
Solicitors reponslble for collec- nutritious. Mulberries are a good
·members, whO are heading the
MULBERRY JElLY
Middleport comm11nlty July 4tll tion of this amount were Marlene source of Vitamin C and · contain
3 pounds mulberrtes (about 2
Putman, Mary Blse, Gladys 'J'ho.. some potassium.
celebration, realize.
quarts)
Middleport VUiage, Feeney· mas and Brian Reed. ·
Perhaps one reason people ques·
(remember to Include some
Bennett Post 128, American Legion,
·lion eating these frui!s is because unriPe berries)
Even though tt really hasn't you never see them at tlle grocery.
and tlle Middleport Fli'e Depart~ cup strained fresh lemon juice
seemed
Uke summer yet, the The berrtes are just too perishable
'\lent each contrtbuted $500 so 14at
7 cups sugar
tlle community could have tl1e vacation Bible schools are mo'!lng for grocery trade. So, you either
1 bottle liquid pectin.
celebration and tllat's fine and right along.
have to grow them or gather them
Put mulberries in a saucepan and
The Rock SpringS United Melber yourself.
dandy. The fireworks have been
crush. Heat gently until jui~ starts
ordered and plans an' underway for dlst Church has announced its Bible
Theeaslestwaytopicktheberries to flow. Slmmer covered for 15
the special observance - the first In school for June 24 tllrough 28tll from is tolayasheetunderthetree.Then, minutes .. Put in a jelly cloth or bag
tl1e community for a number of 9: 00 to 11: 00 each day with "In tlle gently shake the tree a few tlmes.
and squeeze out juice. Measure 3
Footsteps of Jesus" as tlle theme. The ripe berries will fallleavtngthe cups into a very large saucepan.
years on tllls partteular holiday.
However - there's a hangup. The school wtll he for nursery unrtpeonesonthetree.
Add lemon juice and sugar. Mix
There' s $150 needed for the insu· children through teens. The closing
A few 1.\nderripe berries Improve · well.
program wlll be Sunday morning, the flavor of products made from
ranee which must be purchased Bring to a boll over high heat ,
in fact, It's just about a case of no June 30. Anyone with questions.,. muiberrtes. So Include about 25 stirling constantly. At once, stir In
may call Lenora Leifheit at 992· percent underrtpe berries.
insurance, no fireworks.
the pectin. Then bring back to a full
5836.
' Bob and Jack are wondertng If
When you get home, rlnsethefruit rolling boil and boil hardd for one
there aren't some other organlza·
in cold water. Remember to lift minute, stirring constantly . ReBy tlle way, there wtll be food them out of tlle rinse water gently . move from heat. sklmofffoam with
lions In the town - perhaps, some
businesses - or even Individuals available In theareaofthemuseum Then soak the berries forJO minutes a metal spoon and pQur quickly into
wh&lt;i would like to come up with a during Heritage Weekend. Episco· in a mixture of one quart cold water hot jars. Yield: abOut 8 half·pint
donation on the insurance costs. Not · pal women wlll have sandwiches, and one tablespoon salt. This wUI jars. ·
only tllat but the pair could use beverages and desserts, the Meigs remove the bugs still hiding in the
You might also enjoy a fresh
other contrtbuttons to help with Rowdies 4-H Club wUl have hOme· berries. Rinse again to remove the · mulberry pie.
other activities scheduled for the made Ice cream and the Sutton- salt.
. MULBERRY PIE
Cannel
Church
will
have
beans,
You probably won 't find many
91nchunhakedpiecrustfor2crust
day.
Wanna help? ·I can assure you cornbread, desserts and beverages. recipes specifically using mulher- pie
Bob and Jack will be glad to hear · So - all of the plans have been rtes. But generally, you can use
3 cups mulberries, stems
their telephones ring with offers of completed for the weekend activi- raspberry recipes and substitute removed
ties. Personally, I'm looking for- mulberries. To Improve the flavor,
help.
'
1 cup sugar
ward to hearing lots and tots of mix one· fourth underrlpe berries to · 4 tablespoons flo11r
Lori K. Ritchie, daughter of Mr. music from the caliope.
three·fourt.hs ripe fruits.
dash salt ·
and Mrs. Wilbur Rpbtnson, has
No matterwhatwayyouchooseto
2 tablespoons butter.
The City of Columbus wUI be use mutberrtes, tlle evidence of
done well for tier first year at Rio
Put berries into pie shell. Mix
turning Its streets Into a speedway picking· eating is often found on sugar, flour and salt. Sprinkle over
.Grande Community College.
. She compiled a perfect four point tllis summer for racing which ts clothes or tablecloths. When remov· berries. Dot top of berries with
-average for all three quart.ers attractlng drtvers of International ing mulberry or any fruit 'stain, butter piOC:s. PlaC&lt;" top crust and
.which included a summer session standing. Shucks - 'being from
not Ittomay
use set
a soap
and
Jast year: She's a business educa· Prairie Junction, I tllought Colum· remember
water solution.
tl1e stain.
bus
streets
were
nonnally
speed·
'tlon major compll'ling 'Ill crE:&lt;JII
To rernpve these blue-purplestajns, .
wajls.You ((eepjlinlli!lli.•.• ·
tto,Jrs thusftirr::-·: - • .e--tnunetiltety rlhse the lirt lcle with .
coot running water. Tbequlckeryou
start the stain removal process, the
more tuck you'll have getting It all
out.
.
"Follow In the Fooisteps" was the· Johsnon, and Todd Reiimeir.
Then soak the stained Item In
theme olthe·Bible school held last . ' Othet: helpers with tlle school watm wafer and an enzymP
week at tlle Carmei·Sutton United
were Cindy Pitzer, Jean Trussell
pre·soak product. Recommended
Methodist Church. There were 38 Rene Trusseell, anit Becky Lee. ' proportions arP: one quart water to
studl'nts e~Ued and the average
attendance ,was 25. Robin Reiber
was sec!&lt;'tary and pianist.
Pam Foreman and Patrece
Circle were teachers for the nursery
class with studets being Tara Rose,
' . ·perfect attendance, · Tyter· l;lttl~.
Jacob Ridgeway, Cassie Rose.
Teachers for tlle beginner class
were Helen Holter atld Sharon
Deem, with Robbie Card, Jessie
Little and Russell Reiber having
perfect attendance, Jeremiah Johnson, Gary Reltmelr, Tracy Card,
students. Judy Harrtson and Amy
Hanison were th«&gt; teachers for the
primary class. Missy Ridgeway,
Robin, GUitspie, Jeff Rose, Jeremy
Jackson, and Jason Deem all had
perfect attendance and others in the
class were Aprtl Reitmeir, John
Card, and Ryan Holter.
In the junior class taughl by
Connie Little and Alice Parsons,
those wlth·perfect attendance were
David Deem, Jeremy Cleek. Penny
911llspie, Jenny Cleek, and Robin
Reiber. Others ln the class were
Aaron Card, Frannie Hewitt, Steen
Reltmler, Christina Eynon, and
Jessy Reiber.
Jimmy Deem, Bmt Rose, .Jason
Circle, Jamxl Circle, Jerry Hayman, Todd Harrison, and Jamey
Holter all had perfect attendane'e In
the youth class-taught by Maxine
Rose and Donna Johnson. Others
enrolled were
Reltmelr,

LOR IS T

We Hsre Swimwesl'
Fol' The fntil'e
.fsmilg
BEACH
. TOWELS
0
BEACH
THROWS

0

Stop In And Get
Ready For That
Trip To The Beach
OVER 50 YEAS IN BUSINESS ON THE
"T" IN MIDDLEPORT

OPEN FIIDAT NIGHJ UNTil 8:00 P.M.

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

'13ible school co~du&lt;.ted

NOW YOU CAN OWN YOUR OWN

SATELLITE DISH FOR AS LOW AS

Empire Furn ure
meroy
Invites You to Stop ·
And Browse Around In Our
New Location.
•Bast Bargains
Arou,.d
•Heritage Weekend Specials
Throughout The Store

'

$995
.

JUNIQRTM
BY

SEE OUR
DISPLAY

Free On Site Estimates - Expert
Technicians to Answer.Questions and to
Service. Your Satellite Just After the Sale.
'

LET US HELP YOU FINANCE YOUR DISH.

I

'1'0 CJUil.wl

CII!DA!Df

EMPIRE .FURNITURE
WEn MAIN ST.

POMEIOY

iott's

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

�--

- --r- ~-

I

Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

en ·tes
etc anti
etits e

..

.

~. . . .

j

•·.-..

. ..
.....
'-.
•
{"

i

.

"
AVAI/ABLE IN BLACK LEATHER

80NZO .U

•

.HART·LEY SHOES

MAKE
OLD FASHIONED PRICES ••••

ON .

PANELS

.

••' .

.

\

LARGE SELECTION OF PASTEL SHADES

1/2 PRICE
·· Stop And Sse Ou1 Wlndow1 Dsel'slsd
:

··

CASH 'N' CARRY
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY ONLY

He~its

- Week,end

·· · srin~1

· · OlD MARI.ETTA UN.SEED OJl ·'

·

NOW
··.· White #7· ·
Prices .
lfft&lt;tivt .
Thru
Juno 29, 1915

STOREWIDE SALE

•'·

20°/o

or 992-5721

-·

:

'

',. .

GIRLS' .SLEEPWEAR
Pajamas, gowns and shorties. Knits and
poly/cotton blends.

HERITAGE
DAYS
SALE

KNIT SHIRTS
Short· sleeve styles. sizes 8

BOOK
SHELVES

$AlE PRICED
$359
$1 Q39

J

1- - ·

·XHoward Miller

CLOCK SALE

BATH TOWELS

SUMMER
HEADWEAR

$355 .

SWIM
WEAR
SALE

.lADIES'

~

'

. . ....

KNIT TOPS
SALE ·.·

: :

' . ' . Misses and · £Mira ·Size ta~k
tops, polo knits and crinkle
cloth tops.
Misses Sizes S, M, L
Extra Sizes 40 to 46

"Kerm's Korner"
Pomeroy, OH;

$PECIAL TWO..OA Y$AlE! .

..

·. MEN'S 'v.AN HEUSEN . -. .

'\ DRESS SHIRTS
Neck sizes 14V, to 18. Short sleeve
styles. White. solid colors. Neat
stripes. Select your favorite style and
· save.
$16.00 Dress Shirts .............. 51 I.
, s 19 and $20 Dress Shirts .... s 14.5
' S21 and 522 Dress Shirts .... Sl6.09

•

Reg. ss.oo..................................... Sole 53.99 ·
Reg. 57.00..................................... Sale '5.59 .
Reg. 19.00..................................... Sale S7.19
Reg.I13.00 ................................ Sale 510.39

'

Reg. $9,00 Tops .............................. $7.19

Reg. 112.00 Tops ............................ S9.59
·. Reg. SJ6.00 Tops .......................... S12.79
Reg. SJ9.00 Tops .......................... S15.19

OH.

VAN HEUSEN

little Girls' one and two piece swimsuits. little
boys' trunks. Complete
range of children's sizes.
,.

Reg. $7.00 Tops ...........................u.s 5.59

PH. 992-~811

Pomeroy~

lf2 PRICE

Regular and extra JarJa sizes in
many different styles and colors.

~{ ~

..

..
"NEW .YORK..
'CLOTHING HOUSE.

$1395 GALLON

WHilE
THEY lAST!

REDUCED PRICES-BOYS'

SHORTS
AND TOPS

•, .

'-·.

·

. OIL .BAS Elf PRIMER

110 W. Main

MEN'S SHORTS
SALE PRICED

Regular prices 115.95 to '19.95. ·
Includes fl ight panh. twill sport
pants , fatigue looks and safaris.
Sizes 8 to 18.

and two-piece styles.
Recular leg and French
cut lee. Save now!
119.00 Swintwoar...... $15.19
'21.00 Swimwear....... '22.39
'32.00 Swintwear....... l%5.59
141.00 Swintwoar....... 132.79

1/2 PRICE

WOMEN'S
. UNIFORMS

.

EVERYTHING
IN ·ouR STORE

EBERSBACH HARDWARE

OFF

..........

REGULAR .PRICE ·

$1395 A Gll[Olf

· Yaiiguaril #"5 · · ·.

.

$2 60 TO

ACTION PANTS

SWIM WEAR
Sizes 3 thru 13 in one

MEN'S ACTION PANTS

l/2

,20°/o.OFF

HOUSE PAINT
· REGULAR $16.95 GAUON

.

~

FRI. &amp; SAT.O=N~L-Y_.. .~
...·.

SALE·

CLEARANCE WEI-BOY$ '

JUNIOR SIZES

Fli&amp;ht pants, twill sport pants. zipper le&amp; pants. safari pants
and more. Sizes 28 to 38 waist. Rt&amp;. Price 119.95 to 126.95.
MANY IIAYI
YOUR
COOIDIIIAIING Slllm
CHOICE
SALE PIICED NOWII .

1

.

Gilt Sets. Dusting Powder.
Cologne and Body Lotion,
Reg. 13.25 to 11(.50

throuch 20. Our entire stock including dressy knit, jeans shirts,
Reg. 14.50 t~ 11~.00
tank tops, mesh weaves and . ·,...,.
.
I '~
more.
-.. ,,.. -·
leg. Ills 36"120"
YOU REALLY SAVE
· fc:
lays' SUS to 17.95 Knill ..... sus
'
,
Walnut ...........59 5
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
I\ .'
lays' 18.95 to '10.95 lnill .....sus
~
.f. cc •.
leg. 1126 36"d6"
lays' 111.95 to 113,95 "11nits .... •9.00 .
.,;..
TO
Walnut """" 11 OS
lays' 114.95 &amp; 115.95 Knits .....110.15
•' PRICE
sus to S7,95 Shorts ....... s5.20
.
leg. 1149 41" d6"
--·-~--~---~-·'"" 11:9s to 11o.,s Shorts ..... s7.4o
'-------~--~--~wl..----~~-·-·-·--·--1 Walnut ........ S12 S
,
111.95 to 113.95 Shorts... l9.70 l I -\ /
leg. '170 24"x 41"
114".95 to 116.95 Shorts .... l11.'10 ~ ' \ \ .
. · Pine ............. 5129
SALE - CANNON S4.99
117.95 tO&gt; S19.95 Shortl .... l14.20 ·
' ·r
119. '114 60"x 36"
'
Walnut ........ $159
I
HEIRlOOM OUAUTY
BOYS'
FOI GENEitAnONS
Misses sizes 4 to 20 and hall
SUMMER
.·
MEN'S
of ENJOYMENT •
sizes 14!/t to 26'12. In this.seExtra
heavy
large
size
Cannon
terry
towels
in
Reg. 1"5 GranMtlthtr
. lection you'll lind dresses.
solid colors. 86% cotton. 14% polyuter for
Clocks
..................... S79S
pant suits, skirts, blouses.
leg. 11 OSO Grandlother
... extra absorbing.
lpants and lab coats.
Clocks ..................... sus '
Rollup hats, straw
'
11150
'
Knits and poly/cotton ~lends
hats, golf and tennis
caps. Fine ass-ort· .
Reg.l17 Unifor.M.,113.~9 . 1---'.1.-'--1- . iii assorted styles and c~lors . . u~~~~~~::;:;::;:::.:;::;::;:;.~~---~
· Many coordinating pieces.
ment ' of styles and
· Reg. 119 Uniforms .. s 15.19
colors
.
Reg. S5.00.... Sale $3,99
Reg. 123 Uniforms .. s 18.49
Rog. 12.9S.... Sale '2.19
53.49 Mat1hing Hand Towe1...... 12.3S
CHilDREN'S
Reg. $7 .00 ... Sale $5.59
"" ...... 134 Uniforms .. 12 7.19
log.
13,9 s .... Sole $2.19
$1.99 Mat1hi11g Wash Cloth ....... 51.35
Reg. S9.00 ... Sale $7.19
Rog. '4.9S .... !elt 13.69

HERITAGE
WEEKEND

VANGUARD PAINTS

CLEARANCE $ALE/

book clutches, credit card
anache. keycases. billfolds.
French purses and calculator
clutches. Cowhide, lambskin
and nylon.

OLD fA~HIONED
.

Sizes 30 to 38 and large sizes 40 to 46. One
and two piece styles and two piece blousons. Save Friday and Saturday.
·
123.00 sw•mwear
.
. Sf8.39
.........
,126.00 Swimwear .................... ,120.79
129.00 Swimwear ..................... 123.19
132.00 Swimwear ..................... 125.59

LEATHER
ACESSORIES
Special1roup of Roll's check·

All l'tfi/DI C,dlt C"d' 1nd
Wlte Flowm Emgwh111"

115 W. 2nd
, Pomeroy
Serving Meigs and Gallia
Counties

D90 .................. ;.;,........... Only 51.69

LADIES'

FL·
O
WER
SHOP
106 Butternut Ave.
Ph.992-2039

F11 H111tsgs Wssksnd
THE FABRIC SHOP

TDK CASSEnE TAPES

SWIMWEAR

u

$395

Pomeroy, OH.
"We A~~ept

Choose cotton poly blends.
linens, Jtorgette in sizes 6
lhru 20 and 38 thru 44.
Smart looking styles lor wear
right now.
114 llouses ............. l11.29
' 117 llousel ............. l13,7'1
125 llouse1 ............. 120.1'1
129 lloustl ....... :..... l23.3'1

EMERAUDE
FRAGRANCES

S1160'
Quality TDK brand blank cassettes
1--w-------·------.---·~~---·-·~--~
-M~.I~SS,_ES....&amp;-.E-XT-R._A·-si·ZE~~s·_....,.........~-·--·-~~-'1 D60 .................................
Only 51.19

DAISY. BOUQUET

MARGUERITE
SHOES
"The Middl11 Shoe Store In Thit Middle Block"

60 INCH DREss· WEIGHT FABRIC

EVERY PAIR OF
$ 500. OFF JUNIOR
SLACKS

HER/TAtJE .
WEEI&lt;ENO SALE

3 ~POMEROY

BLOUSES

JUNIOR SLACKS
SALE

~

20°/o
OF
STOREWIDE

CALICO and PILLOW

MISSES &amp; .EXTRA SIZES

Footies,J·ouers and tennis socks. Nylon bien s, stretch fit. White with colored tops .
REG. 11 .59 SOCKS ................... 11.26
linen, denim, twill , poly/gab and baky REG. 12.00 SOCKS.. ................. 11 .56
cords: Solids and stripes in junior sizes 3 REG. 12.50 SOCKS ................... I1 .96
REG. 13.00 SOCKS .: ................. I2.36!~~
to 20 ·
REG. 118 to 127

OLD FASHIONED

Friday &amp; Saturday Only

AYS S

LADIES' SPORT SOCKS

OPEN STOCK

·.

ll:l)lJC:-riC)NS !

E

OLD FASHION SALE PRICES ON QUALITY MERCHANDISE
.FRIDAY, JUNE 21ST AND SATQRDAY, JUNE 22ND ·

•CHIC
•SHEBOYGAN

•LEE
•LEVI

The Daily Sentinei- Page-1 1 ··

,

HERI

.

.

DAN'S
IN THE MIDDLEPORT MASONIC BUILDING

OPEN TIL 8:00 FRIDAY

SAVE 20°/o
.

ORTS

·2·5°/o OFF

Heritage Weekend Speeiall
•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1 RACK OF CLOSEOUT ITEMS

s eg

'

"

ALL M
.

' g

~·

. Thursday, June 20, 1985

CHOOSE FROM

•

· AVAILABLE IN PIGSKIN

POMEROY, OH.

..

.,.

'

MA~l .ITEMS

DUKE II

~

-

•

SUMMER CL.EARANCE

~: . ~

&lt;

Thursday, June 20, 1986

Ohio

I :

•

CHAPMAN $HOES

lASSEn ARCHITECTURAL

NEXT TO ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

2

ENnRE smcnoN
WOMEN'S

of one
Hanes 3·pack (or ony lhrtt Hant1
. undtrw~r garmontsl.

SUMMER
SLEEP WEAR
\ Choose from our line selec-

·

f

IIERITAOE DA1S

l.ll••

OLD FASHIONED SIDEWALK SALES
"'
...~

-DIAMOND-

'

•100's of Pieces of \
Costume Jewelry '·..
Marked Way Down \
•Many Beautiful Gift
Items at a discount:

l

. .

{"

\t

~.

,·

r•a ... nn.es. Votive Candles, Glass &amp; ~
Wooden Jewelry Boxes
"'
Select Group of leather Billfolds,
· Pewter Figurines, etc.
• BRACELENTS.......

/

"

WE'LL GIVE YOU A BEAUTIFUL' TAN

REGISTER FOR DRAWING
ON FRI. &amp; SAT., JUNE 22 &amp; 23

MEN'S -

Drawing Will Be Held At 5:30 P.M. On Saturday

1f2

-WA

.OF THE

..

NOW

YOUR DEPENDABlE. JEWElER OF OVER 2S VEARI

~Jettllen.
212 E. lAIN -

HfW. 2nd

'

liFE TIME •
WARRANTY -

.,.or-·,.,

20010
I~

MEN'S - lADIES'

STONE RINGS

SerVI~Ce .!IUIH.II

992·6720

Trudy Merahall, s BrendeJ•ney

•

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
'R.eg.

/ lion of waltz lenath aowns.
cowns ·and robes, Ton1 4owns
and robu. pajamas, nlteshirts, baby dolls, dustars, terry
coverups and shifts. Also hospital rowns and bed jacuts.
Knits, terry cloths, nylons and ·
poly/conon blends. Sizes S
thru XXL and 32 to 38.

HANES $2.00 REFUND OFFER
Get Partkulars In Mtn'• Dept., ht Floor
Here's How You ~-;-For Example:

Reg. 57.99 Pkg 'Men's Briefs
·SALE $5.99 With Rebate

58.00 .......................................... Sale S6.39
59.50,........................................... Sale S7.59
112.00 ....... ~ ............................... Sale S9.59
S17.00 ............................... ~ ..... Sale S13.59
JUNIOR

BLOUSES
&amp; TOPS
Midriff lops, knit pullovers.

purchaH

MISSES

~~~

.

.3~~!~~~J~:n /~ 70

Big selection of styles in sizes 1',
8
to 20. All arranged for your
blouses, bic shirts. sw.. ter
easy
selection.
· knits and jersey tops, Jr. Sizes ,
5 to 13 and S. M. l.
lays' sus &amp; 15.95
Rog. 11,00 ............. Salt S6.Jt
Shorts ............................. S4.1 0
Rog. 112.00 ........... S.le 19.St
leys' 17.95 &amp; sus
ao9• '16.oq .....;... Salt stu•
~ Shorts ............................. S6.30
log. 120.00.-.... Salt $15 ... . ;leys' 113.95 Shorts .... I1UO
a11 . 'su.oo.;.,..... Salt 11Ut

.MIRROR SALE

MEN'S S24.9S to S34.9S

Finest quality 'I'" plate glass
With diamond ground l/1" bevel
Venitian. mirrors have · Masonite
Backs and 2 way hangers. Door mirrors include hanging hardware .
Reg. S24
Reg. $34
Reg. S$6
Reg. S$9

18x24"
24x30"
30x(0"
2(x68"

Mirror ......J20
Mirror ....:..s29
Mirror ...)...$48
Mirror .......$SO

WRANGlER

FASHION
JEANS
A good selection of styles in
stripes, distress look denims;
pleat front jeans. straight leg
styles. All pre-washed.

~~2

PRICE

PANT SALE

.SPORTSWEAR

Jeans. Casual Slrxks, Dray Stripes &amp; Solitk
little Boys' Sizes 2 to 4 and 4 to 7
linle Girls' Sizes 2 to 4. 4 to h
and 7 to 14 ·

Polo shirts. slacks, shorts, blouses,
split skirts. knit tops, 1nd crop
pants.
Misses Sizes: 8 to 20 and S to XL

REG. 515 to $J2

$ALE/

Reg. 'I Pants .................................... 16.39

Rtg. 112 Pants .................................. s9.59
Reg. s14 Pants ................................ 111. 1'I
lleg. ~17
113.5'1

/

$sl1 Ptl~ld

S12 ~o~ $2 560.

SALE! GIRLS' TOPS

Knit "ops, IJidriff Tops. . . _ tnl T... Topr

Sizes ~ to 24 mos .. 2 to 4, 4 to 6x, 7 to 14
Reg. 15 to s15 - SAlE PRICED.

$3 85 to Sll 55

Pomeroy, OH . . .

MON.-SAT. 9:00 TO 9:00
HOURS .·
• CALL FOI All APPOINTMEIIT ·
··

I~K OVERlAY

20°/o
·~~~~oFF
r-

..

..NOW

LADIES'

SEIKO
BULOVA
PULSAR

(NO PURCHASE NECESSAR.YI

STOP BY AND SEE OUI IEAUTIFUL
GOEIEL WINDOW DISPLAY

~~

/
,.,,..'-"' ·

BACK
ly mail with tho

11-. M•rv Powell

113 COURT
POMEIOY
992-2054

•Wohh Repair
•Jtwtlry R•pair
•Appraltal S.nlct

USE OUR FREE
PARKING LOT

•

ELBERFELDS.OMEIOY·

- ·-

E.INrleNt .

411., ..... ,1

C...... CUD

�•

12- The

June

Ohio

Sentinel

Area organizations have meetings
OES
Marga!'('! Douglas was prt'SI'nted
her 60yearpln by Frances Young ar
the recent meerrng of Harrrsonvllle
Chapter, Order &amp;f the Eastet n Star.
lleld a t the Masonic Temple
Presented 25vear pms by Paulrne
"Atkins wet e Glona Riggs and Mr
and Mrs Bernard Ledley
" Oara Mac Jeffers and Larry
Well, worthy matron and worrhy
patron, presided Wtlh grand repr&lt;'SI'Illative to Flonda, Stella Atkins,
being presented The altar was
draped m memory of the late past
grand patron. J Lester Durst
In observance of Father 's Day.
the worthy matron had a short
prowam aftet whrch gifts were
presented ro the oldest fat her, the
youngest fa ther, the fa ther wll h the
_largest fa rruly and the fa ther who
•haS been a mell)ber the longest
-Refreshments were served by Neva
Nicholson, Marc ta Denison. Ber
nice Nelson, a nd Margaret Pa rsons

,E.eedsville UMW
',., Mrs Mary Btse and Mrs Vtrglnra

'

Walton we!'(' hostesses for a recent
) 'l'leetlng of the Reedsville Unrted
MethOdiSt Women at Jhechurch
Mrs Sue Reeds had devotions
using P lacmg Christ In Our
Activittes" as her toptc Mrs
Marlene Putma n conducted the
· business meeting durmgwhtch tune
,55 shut in calls were reported Cards
w ere stgned for several frrends
Mrs Sandy Cowdery thanked the
• Rlembers for the dmner served at
the time of her grandfather's death
A bazaar a nd bakesale wasset for
Aug .1 The re wrll be no meetings In
-July ot· August The September
,m eetmg wtll be a potlljck supper a t
the church Games were played and
prtzes awarded
Refreslunent s were served to
those named and Mrs Leona Ruth.
Mrs Ertka Bormg Mrs Dtane
.Jones, Angre and AndreW Reed ,
•Mrs, Pa t Mart m, Mrs. Barbara
!Ylasters, Mrs Ma mte Buckley
,Mrs Mary Aem s, Mrs Cowdery
who won the door prize, Mrs Verna
' Rose, Mrs Sue Reed, Mrs Dolly
,Reed, Mrs Sue Douglas, Mrs
Vtvran Humphrey ad Mrs Ltlh an
Pickens. The door pnzes \\las
' awardro to Mrs Cowdery

Junior Gardeners
, POMEROY - Offtcers were
elected when the J unior Metgs
Sharers a nd Growers Ga rden Club
-met at the E nterprise Umted
·· MethodiSt Church
The group rncludes Donia Crane,
president ; Kelley Grueser, vrce
prestdent , Donna CurtiS, secretary·
treasure• . a nd Ma ndl Sheets, news
reporter
The group plants flowers at the
church to complete a plantmg
project start ed by the Metgs Count y
Marvels4 lH Ciub The nextmeetmg
wtll be hE'Id a t7pm gnJuly lOatthe

.

'

.

Enterprise Church and all young
people under 18 are invited A
workshop on modern design arrang
rng will be beld Doma and Billy
creaeand AngteChaprnan tookpart
In the Regional 11 flower show at
Nelsonville recently by making
conservation posters

Riverview Club
Plans for a progresstve dmner on
June 27 were made when the
Riverview Garden Club met recently a r the home of Mrs Roy
Hannum
Mrs Ernest Whitehead anq Mrs
Denver Weber gave !'('ports on a
commumty project, and Mrs.
Donald Putman noted that the
flower~ have been planted at the
Riverview School Srgn planter
Co host ing rhe meettng were Mrs
Harltss Frank and Mrs Tom
Spencer with Mrs Okey Connolly
gtvmg devottons from the 67th
Psalm and a poem · Out m the
F teldsWrthGod "concludingwrth a
prayer for J une. For roll call
members named thetr favortte
spring flowe rs
Mrs Curtts Cauthorn presented
the program on teas, telling of the
dtfferent kinds, thetr ongtns a nd
uses Games were conducted by
Mrs Terry Cline and Mrs Ronald
Cowdery wtth prizes bemg awarded
tothewln ners Mrs Fra nk B!sewon
the door prtze
Refreshments were served to
those named and Mrs Walter
Brown, Mrs Herman Grossruckle,
Mrs Ronald Osbot n, a nd Mrs Ray
Young

4-H group
The Mason Busy Bees 4 H Club
met recently at the home of Erruly
Bumgardner The 4 H song, "West
Vu girua Boys and Grr ls 'was sung
and members repeated the 4-H
pledge
Devotons were read by Tracy
DeWees from Psalms 43, and roll
ca lt andofftcers reportsweregrven
A swunmmg party was set for
Fnday a t the home of Tammy Chne
and a dance was planned for July 26
a t the Mason ftre statton It was
announced that the Mason County
Fair will be held Aug 6 11 and
proj ects wtll be due on Aug 5
Members will have a RC stand at
the July 4 cetebra lton a t the Mason
Park Next month's meetrng w111 be
held July 2 at the home of Tracy
DeWees Refreshments will be
servro by Tammy Cline and
Michelle Gnmm Devotrons wtll be
by Emily Bumgardner

Amateur Gardeners
A report on OoweJs donated for
c rvrc beautiltca tion was gtven a tthe
recent meeting of the Mtddleport
Amateur Ga rdeners held at the
Mrddleport P resbytertan Church
The flowers have been planted m
areas around Mtddleport village
hall At the suggestron of Gladys

Frances Haggy was thewmnerof
t he fruit basket forwetghtloss at the
Tuesday night meeting of TOPS OH
570 held at the church on the "T" m
Middleport
Lmme Bell Aleshire had charge of
the meeting rn the absence of Kathy
McDamet, leader, and officers'
reports were given Kathy Garner
was welcomed as a new member
Rally day to be held Tuesday was
dtscUssed wtth weigh in ttme from 5.
to 6 p m Top loser of the week was
Bernice Durst

Rock Springs Grange
Helen Blackston and BUtmy Kuhl
reported on the commumt y servtce
proJect a t the Thursday night
meeting of the RockSprings Grange .
a t the halt and announced work
sessions for thts week
Contributions were made to the
state youth and travel fu nd A
communrcatron was Jead from the
state secretary oullinmg vanous
actrv1t res at Frtendly Htlls Cam p
Thank you notes were read from the
Chtld Conserva tron League a nd t he
County Grange Yout h
It was noted tha t 13 mem bers
VIsrted RacmcGrangeon June6and
presented a program Members
reported tll were Oorot)ly Long,
Betty Conkle and Homer Radford
Refreshments were served by Mr
a nd Mrs Wilham Grueser a nd Mr
and Mrs. Harold Blackston

Of

..

. Fa thers were recogmzed on
father's Day at the Alfred Church
with six bemg gtven gifts of mugs
and handkerchtefs Florence AM
Speneer made the presentations
and read 'Fathers are Wonderful
People"
Twentv ftve atte nded
•
;:sunday schOol and 18 were thPre for
the chu rch servtces Among the
vis itor~ were Zelda Hutton, Brecks
: ' ville. and Trent Bu by
•
ThP Alfred Untied Mcthodrst
• women held serv tces a 11 he At·cad Ia
~ Nursing Center Tuesday F lorence
•• Ann Spencer was the leade r a nd
organist a nd sang "HisEye is on the
: Sparrow." All ofthe tesldents jolned
• tor group singing and both Mother s
, Day and F ather's Dav were
.observed wtth grfts bemg presented
- Nina Robmson read from Provers. and Thelma Henderson from
Joshua Netl1e Parker 1ea!l 'A
Mother" and "You Can Talk to th&lt;'
Man " Sammie Ralrdm had a
•testimony, and the serviCi' closed
with the Lord's Prayer in unison

'' Mr and Mrs Rtcha td Yost a rc
announcmg lht• bnth of a son. Aa ron
Thomas, .JuneS Genevieve Guthrie
o1 tbe Alfred rornmunlty is the
11ilfant'sgr&lt;&gt;a t-grandmother Recent
(rfsitors of the Yosts and Mrs
Guthrie were Mr and Mrs Delbert
Yost and Mr. and Mrs. Chatles Yost ,

Mr a ndMr~ ClarenceHenderson
a nd Edith Harper visrted Mr and
Mrs Btll Wood
Zanesville
recently
VIsitors of Mr and Mrs An
Atherton were Mr a nd Mrs Barr,
Ltttie Hockmg, Fanme Batnhat t,
J ean Depov, Wtlma Vineyard.
ClarenCi' AtheJton and Nelhe
Pa rker
Mr and Mrs Ha rold Swa rtz,
Wllh amstown, were recent vtsitors
Mr and Mrs. Hobert Swartz.
Mr and Mrs Don Robmson wer e
called to New Castle, Pa. by the
death of her brother, BltiStalna ker
Pearl Randolph was taken to
Veterans Memona l Hospital J une
15. She is making a slow recovery
On Father 's Day, Keebaugh's
Shake Shoppe, Tuppers P la rns,
treated Mr and Mrs. Lee Hender
son to a dinner in obseranee of thetr
weddmg anmversa ry Mr and Mrs
Clarence Henderson and Mr and
Mrs Pave Williams and Aaron,
Belpre, accompanted them
Sunda\ School attendanC!' May
26 was .J3; church attendance, 24
On June 2 Sunday School a ttend·
a nee was 33, church attendance, 28
Genevieve Guthrie and Mr and
Mrs. Delbert Yos t, Lancaster Rt .
were Memorial weekend visitors in

\Social Serurity questions and answers
• Q. My new doctor doesn't acCi'pt
ass~J~~nWnt o! Medicare medical
, 1osurance payments. I know I have
111 11Je the claim for payment
•p~ytelf, but I've never done thts
· t~efore. How do I do it•
A You need to complete a form
mtltled A Patient's Request for
~are Payment, also called a
Form 1490 S. Send the form to the
MediCare earner that handles
mediCal Insurance claims In your
part o1 the country You can get a
copy o1 the form at any Social
Security omce, w~ you can also
I

get help In filling it out
Q At present I'm applying for my
own medical insurance, but I'll be
eligible tqr Medicare In a lew
months I~ having trouble decidIng whether to enroll in the medical
insurance part of Medicare or just
continue paying tor the Insurance I
have now Wha t should I do?
A. Some prtva te health Insurance
policies are Intended only to
supplement Medicare Still others
may not pay for some services that
are covered by Medicare medical
I,

jullfiM~n!f

,, ... {,; ....-ol

l.lo""""""

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

m

'""_
IWII_.,_.,

··-··"'

-_

~

I

Q My husband and I have both
worked under Social Securit)l for
over 40 years When I retire, will I
be able to collect benefits as both a
worker and as his wife?
A No. You can only get an
amount equal to the higher benefit
o! the two Socia l Securlt)l wUI
figure out your correct rate.

Tnnch1ng Of Any TyfM
Dozer &amp; Backhoe Semce
Plumb1n1 ServiCe
Welding lowboy Haulrn&amp;
Sept1c Systems

.. ..,.Qo...

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

11N- M-p0&lt;1

:saJ- cr.MI*•
:s••- v ~t~-

=~~~7--

. ..

17 1/Jfl...'-"

uw,.. n a ct11..-.

l1c1nsecl &amp; loncltd

--~

. . - CMII«

241- Ri60.....
211- 0....,_, Dltl•la
142- At olllo Dl11riet
J7t- Woln\OI

FR£1 EITII!AI!S

S4J- Itord.,ul
141- l.tlar\Fiilll

112-fllew l'l....,

Ml- ltloOIOII

lti- Utort

741- 11111....

. r------------------------1
...,
Up 11 tt W-

o... tey -..,;,,

Up ~t ti W_. o Tlw•4•~ io\Hrtl.,.

t?M*'II-o

Up,, I I W... .lbl ..,

~-

" " " - ' - 0..

~

uoo
"""

20 -l mo

Pubhc Notice

Public Notice

SHERIFF'S SAL E
OF REAL ESTATE

dated Moy 9th. 1 91 4 and recorded '" Book 111, at P329 of the Deed Records of
M01g0 County, Ohio
Refe"'"co Deed Vol 270.
Page 689. Deed Records of

NO 84-CV 133

In pur$Uance of an Order of
Sale ISsued out of the Com
mon Pleas Court of Metgs
County, Oh1o, In the above en
tided actton, I Will offer for sale
at publiC auctton. at the doorol
the Courthouse 10 Pomeroy
Oh1o m the above named

Metgl County, Ohio

(61 13. 20 27 3tc

64 Misc. Merchandise

TRUCKLOAD
FREEZER SALE

County, on Fnday. the 19th
day of July. 1986, at 10•30
o'clock AM , the folloWing
descnbed reel estate, Situate 1n
the County of Meigs and State
of Oh10 and tn the V1llage of

Middleport to-wit
The foKowtng real estate
Situated 1n the Vtllage of Mid
dleport, County of Meegs and
State of Oh1o, and descnbad
as foUows lot No 79 1n Palmers Additton to Sheff1eld, now
Incorporated 1n1o and a part of
the V11lage of Middleport
Bilrrowt~

8

RE'AL ESTATE FOR SALE
SPLIT LEVEL HOUSE with 3 bed·
rooms, 2 complete baths, dining
room, living room and large recreation room. Located on ·a
acres. Large farm pond. Racine
area.

U-SAVE
AUTO
RENTAL

HOME NATIONAL BANK
CALL 949-Ask for

MGM FhRM CITY
WE WILL NOT
BE UNDERSOLD

PIIISOifAUZED POOLS
VINYl liNE~ POOL
ACRYLIC WALL POOL
ABOVE GROUND POOL
Over 400 Choicos

MGM
FARM CITY, INC.
P CIMI HCJY

HSPAS"

6 1 4 ~Jn 2 1H 1

HYDIOTECH CHEMICALS
491 Gtn Hartlngor Pkwy
Middltpo&lt;l, OhiO
HRS. 10 a.m to 5 p.m
Day
N1ght
1-614
1-304
992 -2549
773 -5634
6 19 ttn

and

Pubhc Sale
8o Auct1on

ESTATE AUCTION

ALL STEEL &amp;

POLE BUILDINGS
Stzes Start From 12'x16'

UTILITY BUILDINGS
S1zes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Racme, Oh
Ph. 614-B43-S191
1o6 tic

NY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

ADMINISOATRIX: CHRISTINA GRUESER
Casa No. 24,1142
Douglas W. Littlo, Atty.
CASH - POSITIVE 1.0
DAN SMITH-Aucttoneer
949-2033 or 992-7301
Dale Johnson - Apprentice
Not responstble for acc1dents or loss of property

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND

TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

,-----:-.... .:..-,...-.~~---.......,_ ........_. ___,.,. -.IIL::._--=-...:.,.-':-ll!:!:!!.£J

Pay Cash for

Classifieds and

Savell I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I
I

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters - Downspouts

CALL
446-4522

c oupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get

, re;ults Money not refundable

1
1

U-SAYE
AUTO
RENTAL
St. Rt. 160 Harth

4/ 29/ lln

I

Name-----------1I
I
I Address
I

- Addon1 and remodeling
- Ro of 1ng and guuer w ork

- Concrete worM
- Piumbmg and eleclncel

ROSES'
EXCAVAnNG INC.

(free Est1mt1tes)

•01l freld servrce
•Landscaprna
•Basements
•Land cteanng
•Ponds
•Septrc systems
•Heavy haulrng
•Free est1mates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

Offico 949-2493
Homo 843-5340

Pnnt 'on• word m ~Pth

below (Gdl IAifiDI
or group of figures (0Uftll
lpDlt

os o word Count namt
ond oddnu or phane
number tf used You'll ~·t
Htttr resulh tf rou dt ---4---f----11---+---~
1m be fully,
pme. Tht
tnbune restrves lht rtght
to danrfy. tdtt tr re1t&lt;l
any ad Your ad wtll ••
put m th pror,tr da111f1ca
t1on
youbelow
II dmk lht _1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~
PfOper1f box

g•••

---+--1---+---t---l

Call: 742-2407

5 23-tfn

---4---t---if---t----j
Thest cash rates

1

tndudt cl1nount

( )Wanled
( )For Sale
( )Annauncemenl

( )for Rent

17
18

"·----- -

1

20

2
J
4

22

6
7
8

•

2t
23
24
25

our FO. FUTURE um

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
915-3561

All Meku

•Walherl tDilhWIIherl
•R•ngee
•Refrle-retore
•Dryer~ •Freezer~

PARTS end

SERVIIC~

2t

12

Jl

IJI

32

••

:JJ

34
35

Mail Thil Ceupoa wltll Remittance
' The Dallr Selltinll

111 ClurtSt.

Pamlf'OY, Oh. 41769

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

317 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45160

SALES &amp; SERVICE
Also Carry
Suppliee.

IUSINES5 PHON!

1614) HI·USO
IIISMNCI
(6141

B111ttt Doberman pupp1es

Celt614-379-2114

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

JIM CLIFFORD
PH.

2991

PH. 992-761

1 Colhe and 1 black German

One stray kitten. 6 week a 1

' 304-882-3202 call ofiOf 5
PM

1·3·1fc

THE QUAUTY
PliNY SHOP

SYSTEMS
~

F11 Ally,, '"Ill•~ N..Jt
PIUS: Offi&lt;O Supplies '

furniluro, Wtlltling

uJ

:z:

614-446-9416

~

6/3/ lmo

992-3345312/Hn

320 5th St.

NO DOWN PAYMINT
LOWER MOtif Ill f PAY MINT
BLACKSTON

N£W CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Bol,

326

Pomeroy, OH , 45769
For Faster S.fYICI

Call 614-997 .. .r.n

949-2777

~·~·~

73-10 Chny Tr

to dnve lhe weh1ele of your

ch01ee

Racine, OH.

Announces
,
The Expansion of Service to our Customers
To lndude:
•Complete Front End Repatr &amp; Alignment
*Computerized Wheel Balance
*Ttres (All S izes- Car. Truck, Farm)
AT A SUPER DISCOUNT PRICE6. 13-1 ma

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICL(
Wed like to 1nt1oduce you to
Engage ACar the modt&lt;n woy
,

ftftdtn - .
73-10 Chewy Tr.

. .'60

D-• · . .. . . . . '125

73-10 Chny Tr
Hoods.. ................ •150

73·14 Chny Tr

..mpor........ ....... ... $70

73-79 Chnr Tr.

Grdtoo .. .. ....... ... •n.so

73·79 Chowy Tr.

Roger Hysell
Garage ·

Rockor Panels .......... .•u
73·19 Chewy. Tr.
Cob Cornors .............. .s:ro

73-79 far~ Tr.

fenders.. .. .. .. ... . .'41
73-7' for4 lr.
Doors ........ ... .. ... . '135
10-15 ford Tr.
Doors .......... .....$145
71-71, ford Tr.

GIINI .. . . . - $52.SO
10·15 ford Tr.
Hoodo.. .
.. ..... 1 145
13·15 ford R""'or

lloo&lt;lo. . .

... --· .•no
s
.. --· .. . 75

13-15 for~ • -

G&lt;lln .. .

Neck

wound

742-2754

614

Cell

Found 1 pa1r of woman'•
glesaes In fron1 of Dr
Bredshew'a off1ce, Pomeroy P1ck up at The 011ly
Sent1nel office
FOUND male mostly tan
long· hau:ed dog with coll•r
and chain spiral 1t1ck

M1nes ru fam1ly :t04-676
3230 ax I 306 or 304 675
5416

Singing Gorrllla Call Btlloons&amp; Co 614 446 4313

Pharmacy. Jackson

Alto Trlltlllllllo• .

•BASEMENTS •SEPTIC SYSTEMS
*FOOTEFJS •GRADING
•CONCRETE WORK

PH. l42-2328

12-tO-

area Earn $36 ,000 t o
$ 60,000 per yearthrue•cel lent commi1110ns Sales or
banklng experience helpful
but not nece 11ary Send
re1ume to C F.M C . 2400

- ·-- GiiiiiP'oHi ..... -Opportunit y
I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALL EY PUBUSHING CO reco mm end•
that you do bue1ne11 w ith
people you know, and NOT
to Hnd money through the
mall until you hava lnveet l·
gated t he offenng

1-----------------Own y ou r own Je e n Sporteweer. lad••• bou
t 1que, or children 's store

Ntllonol brands 112.900

Oh10 43229

Easy auembly work! $800

Include• f11ttures tremtng.
inltllltnventory, accessones
and more Call nowll Mr

ment No experience-no
eale1 Det 1ul1 aend sel f
addreued stamped enve

22 Money to Loan

-----~-------- lc -

3418 Enterpn se Ad , Ft
Pterce, FL 33482
Stano Position Open Legal
e x perience praf onble
would aleo hke applicant
Wtth bookkeep1ng and word
proceu 1ng knowledge Interested epphcanta pleal9
forward reeume to P 0 Box
488 , Pomeroy, Ohio

HOME OWNERS-Reflnante
to Jaw f uced re te Use equ1ty
for any purpose leader

Own your own .Jean Sportawear, lad181 Apparel
Ch•ldrene, Large Size. Com bmatlon Store, Acce11orlea
Jordache Ch1c. Lee. Lev1
Easy Street. lzod, Esprit
Tomboy, Celvm Klem, Ser·
gto Valente, Evan Picone. LIZ
Clad)orne, Membera Onty,
Orgemcelly Grown, Gtlo-

West Virginia 304-7736786 or 304 773-8430

We pay caah for late model
clean used cars

Jim Mink Chev -Otdo Inc
Bill Gene Johnson

814-446·3672

Bruah guard for
For4 lA
ton, 4 wheel dr1ve Call

The Melga County Fiah 1nd
Game Club will sponeor
their annual K1ds Fishing

Derby S.turdty, June 22nd
at the1r leka on weat Shade
RIVIH Rd 3 "'.1: m1lee west of
Cheater Follow aignl Bam

until 2pm Ages 1 lo 18

must furn11h the1r own

end pole 1 pole per

No minnow or arttflciel hilt permitted There
will be prizea and free eats
for all children The M11g1
County Fiah and Game Club

witt n01 bo responsible for

:::o8nC:~:=~~:;:,:;r:;~~~&amp;
property

Tho Meigs Counly Fish and
Otmt Ct~b will hevo •

chicken barbecue for all
memben proceding the
Children·• Flahlng Derby on
Saturday , June 22nd

Supper at 7.00 pm The

trustees requeat members to

Call

614-44,·8322
Wanted

to

poundoge
1437

buy

tobacco

Call 814 448

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE Bods, 11on,
wood, cupbo•rds, chairs,
chesta. beaketl, d11h1s
atone jera, antique•. gold
and s1lver Write· M D
Miller, Rt 2, Pomeroy, Oh1o

411769 or call 814-9927780
Buying dally gold, s1lver
coins. rlnga JB'Ntllry. starting
ware. old coma large currency. Top prices. Ed . Bur-

kelt Barbo• Shop, 2nd Avo
Mlddtoport. Oh 814 992
3478

aluminum Promtum paid for

l~rge loada. Call for quote
Scipio Energy, located 1%
mllea ea1t of Pegetown on

Township Rood 141 Metgs
County 114-992-34e8
Sttndlng dmbar AI Tromm
114-742-2328

Buying book 1nd record
collections Any alza. any

type Call 81 4-892-7180.

Wonted CINn fill dirt, 304878-12118.

304-676-3950 or 1 800
642 3619

Cabel TV Installer Ht)!'IC8
tech Send resume to P 0
Boa:; 67, G1lhpohs Ferry, WV

25616

-

Reheble peraon to baby lit 1n
my home 40 hrs wk Send
name and ref 1o BoxC-12
cere of Pt PI Aegister,Pt PI

phone 304-676-3230 Ext

4 openmg1 1111ing Merri
Mac's 100 percent guaran
teed hne of g1fts, toy a, home
decor, your hours. no mvest-

ment 304·6711·6768 or 1800-663· 9077 Bookmg
home 1nd catalog pan111
Federal Stete and C1vil Jobs
now ave1lable tn your area
1nforma11on 24 houri
1 9 , 20 21 only I Now hmng
eupervisor m your erea
Work a1 home Hire, tram
people Excellent income
plus bonus We wdl treln
Buaineu or party plan expe
nence helpful For more
dete1ls call Betty Varallo

"colloct" 304-744-0924
TODAYII
12

Celt 614 266 6609
Persons Body Shop Lucas
lane Pt Pleaeant, WVa
nair K&amp;K Mobcla Homes

Popular 1prlcoo
4174

814-985-

1 B Wanted to Do

e

2118·11128

American m1de clleaning
MfVice eccepting new CUI•
tOmlfl by appointment. Call

814-388-8180.

•
4-

I ·npll•yllli"t'
'it~

I v IC11 ;,

11

~elp

Wented

pto, unable to hitve btby, wAI

provide much w•nted infllnt

Wtlklns detlor No oxperltnce -•Hry Etm 26IIOK. Produotl for ttl•. also
lrooklnt tooting port!"
Ctll814·4411·3316

Yard Sale Sout h Rt 1 to
2 18, 2 Vz m+lea Ingalls Rd 114
m1le Chea p prtc es Thu rs &amp;
Yard Sale Fn S1t June 21
&amp; 2 2 1 0 to 6 Clot hmg for
k1d s. m en 8a women s
Hou sehold Item s All e n
Drive Gallipolis
Flea M1rket Every Thurs
back half R1o Grende Mun•c1pll butldmg T1llers, mow
era baby c lothes, etc
Garege Sale Ra1n or 1h1ne.

Sot

Juno 22. 9 OOAM·
San ders

Frl &amp; Set 9 6

3 Family Carport Sale Mon •
lues 9-4 Everythmg 1m·
agmeable 3 mtles out 1 80
look for balloon s

censed Oh io wva Call 1-----------------614 246 9152or814-379
2712
31 Homes for Sale
Wat* wells drilled and serVIced Pnc.. on request Call

614 742-3147or614-992
5006

191 N Pork Or 304 675
6465

PIANO TUNING AND RE -

32 Mob1le Homes
for Sale

PAIR
Summer rates m
effect-free estimates

Word 's Keyboard, 304 675
5500 or 676 3824

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

3 or 4 bdr, 3 bath, fam rm
LR, DR , 2 car garage, CA,

Step up-lara 4 bdr fabulous
home, 3 ,000 sq ft 3 baths
2 f~replaces . 1h acre &amp; more

$65, 000 Reduced to
142.000 Assumable 8%
Coll614 446 7019 or 216
636-8429

In Gelllpoha. country v1ew
from sundeck &amp; shaded
patio on re•r of house Front
v1ew of golf courae large
carport bow Window. large
buement Call 614-446

2639
1978 2 bdr mob1ia home,
total electrtc. air cond exc

cond Colt 614-256 6460

House for aale et 1066 2nd
Ave , G•lhpohl, Oh Con
111t1 of hvingroom, dmm
groom, kitchen &amp;. two bed
rooms, bath ell on one floor
FuU ba~eme.,t , large front
porch w1th awn1ng glassed
m back port:h One car
garage, large back yard wrth
garden are1 For more infor

ma11on call 814 446 3628

or 614· 446· 1 163
by appo1n1ment

Shown

Jay dr 5 yaer old home, 3
bdrt • large kitchen, family
room formal dm1ng hv1n
groom. 2 car garage , gas
heat, central 11r Call 614·

446-3427
4 bdr , 3 acres, kitchen ,
breakfast room. hv~ngroom .
dinlngroom. utthty room .
frUit cellar, city water. gas 2
car gar1ge, w1th attached

greenhouse Ciolt 614 446
8181 anyt1me

Jay Dnva 3 bdr ranch w1th
attached 2 car gerage. eat-1n
kitchen, hvingroom, famtly
room with fireplace , 2 b1th
rooms. utthty room . a.r
cond atum1num 11ding Call

Celt 814-446-0276
2 bedrooms, full buement.
double car g•rage
1 2
acres, Rose Hill, Pomeroy

128.000 814-878·2513
Eastern School D11trtet. 6
room home 1n good repa1r
Fully carpeted, basement
carport Beeut+fulty lands·
caped 1 end one tenth
acres Smell orchard . Will
have to see to appreciate
Pnced at 132.000 f1rm
7 room house, 1 Vt blth

Grovel Hill Middleport lot
70 11 x 100ft Gorogo Colt
61 4-992-6714
Pnca reduced 6 rooms, bath,
utility, storm wmdowe,
doore. new roof, wiring,

Cot! 614 992 -

3 bedroom home, 8 l.l1 per~
cant lnumabl•loan, g1rden
spot. Reduced down to

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL S QUAL
tTY MOBILE HOME SALES
4 Ml WEST, GALLIPOLIS
RT 36 PHONE 614 446·
7274
Duplex for 11le by owner
tra1ler lower R1ver Rd
S16,600 Owner w111 fi nance w1th downpt~ymen1

Colt 614-446-2136 be tween SAM &amp; 1 2 Noon
B1g down payment short
ttme employment, or credit
h11tory stopp1ng you from
buymg a home7 Con11der •
reclaimed single or double Wide • 600 dQwn take over
payments No charge.. for
delivery Interested? (814)

1981 12x60 off1ce trader,
central air heat. f1ve rooms,
floureacent llght~ng ,
95 900 Call 614-446 -

8118 or 614·446-0019

1973 Cameron, wtll sell
furn1 shad or unfurn11hed
A1r cond • washer dryer.
new underpinning block s

completely tum1•hed e)C cept
bedrooms ctuhng fen AC,
completely
stove, refr.g
underpmned, 8x10 u1thty
bu1ldmg, wnher &amp; drter,
total electric. 1ett1ng on
large rented PriVIte lot. can
stay 1f sold Cell 614 4467200
1976 Holley Park 7a:;24 FT

exp. 2 bdr . CA. all oppllon
ces. underplnmng
th r oughout axe

carpet
cond

510.000 Call days 614·

446 ~ 7368

or eves

614-

266-1524
1975 14x66 mobile home.
CA woodburner 88,500
Call 614-446· 71158 after

7PM

Like new 19B3 Skylme
Allison edn1on garden. beth
tub oak penet1ng 8t c abinets CA underp1nmng
new storage butldmg &amp;:
deck Pnced 10 sell Cell

614 446 8664

MOBILE HOMES MOVED
Insured. 20 ye1rs expe nence 304 · 576 -2866 or

676·2998
1 Ox46. good cond cle1n.
nicely la1d out, $3, 200 00

Getllpollo Ferry. 304-676 4631
Farms for Sale

Sm111 term 3 bdr houae
Wtll conalder land contr1ct

Call614-268·6813

21 2 acre f1rm Parker Run
Rd Mu11 sell Moved to
Ar1zona M1nerel rightl In
eluded Make offer 614742· 2862 No reasonable
offer refu eed Terms evetla·

blo
Must sell Small form

6

acrea 3 bedroom houee .
wood burning stove, barn ,
ch1cken coop pony ehed.
McCumber Rd , Au11and

136,000 Coli 114-9922143 or 614 742 22B9 ot-

tered In

baaement with fam1ly room ,

Yard fenced, have

reforoncos 304·1178-2784.

Will do houMCietnlngln tnd
around Point Plleunt, 304w

1176·77112

4 bedrooms. 2 Y:. bat hs.
wood burner atove 1n fllm1ly
room. fireplace 1n llvln·
groom A11ume mort•g• at

&amp; Vicinity
3 Famtly Yard Sa le Thursday
20th &amp; Fr~d ay 21st at leon
Town Park
Arbuckle You th Gro up Cer
Wash, Saturday 22nd , 9 to
4 at Jeno•s m Eleanor
Yard Sale. Thurs and Fr 1
Hartford, 1st stree t above
br1dge, down one block,
brown and cream 1rader, -3
fam1hes tools elec wheel
chelf, boys clothes loti of
m11c 1tem1 9 t tll ?

Road

Pleasant R1dge

Gallipolis Ferry, Fn

and Sat
Several famtly Yard Sale. Fr1
and Sat, J une 21 and 22
Fa1r Ground Roa d
Yard Sele. Fr~day 9 00 10
4 00, 21 I Fo~ rth St . New
Haven, cancelled If ram

34

Busmess
8u1ldmgs

For sale or rent bu110111
bulld1ng m Point Pleasant

3VJ •ere lot , po111ble owner

fmoncmg Coli 6 I 4 379
2845 or 614 446 7106

Beer Run Rd 220 ft fron tage [over 'h acrel overlook Ing Raccoon Creek 1970
12x60 mob1le home Pr~ce

nogollobte Call 614-256
1577

For sale on contract JA ac re

lot , Rt 160. 14.500 Coli
814-446-0706
1 26 acres Raccoon Twp
on Rt 664 Water &amp; electnc
to obtain Call 814-

•••Y
446-3624

Renlaf s
1-:-:--:-::----:---=:----

41

Houses

for Rent

1---------------7 room hou11 JUncteon Han
n•n Trace &amp; Rt 7 at Sw•n
Creek J 0
Polhtt Call

304·522-3221 or614 266
6537
.

G1ll1polls or R1o Grande on
Rt 35. 3 bdr houaa llvlngroom, large d1nmg-k1tchen
area with bu1lt-1n cab1net1,
utth1y room , b•th, 1 car
attached garage, fully car
pe1ed, cunatns encluded
Nece yard, good nelghborhood for children Rent Reh1
S 360 per mo DepoSit &amp;: ref
req Quallft ed apphcantl

only Coli collect 614-286
5447

New 3 bdr llv1ngroom, 2
bath fam1ly room central
a11, d11hwasher drapes &amp;
curtams, carpet, downtown

Call 614-448-1409 eflor
5PM
Upstatrs duple•
2 bdr ,
refri g &amp; stove furn , ref &amp;.
dep Vme S1 near Jtver Call

814-446-3949

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bdr furnrshed all utllite l
pd • except elect conve
ment locatiOn securny deposit reuq.red Call6 14 -446-

8558

New 2 bdr all electri C
1cron from ho1p1tal Dep
os1t &amp; ref no pets Call

614 446 9307
33

30 acres, mobtle home.
barn, shed Fenced, At 2 ,

homa

-.-

Call 614 446-4073 or 614- 6 rm house. 926 Ftrst Ave
446 4836
Colt 614-446-3945
Fo-r~r"'o~"',--,:-:0--m
--:-m--ft-OJn
...._
f 983 Jay Skyhq'or 2 bdr , I -:-

BY OWNER - 3 bedrO&lt;&gt;mo
11~ bolhs dining room. full

vuo....,leed. Colt 304-273- 24x24 Dlltge, cloot to
ZB11 Rovon1wood. w. vo. _d_o_wn
__•_o_w_n_3_o_4__8_711_·_4_&amp;_o_4
1
Will do babyslltlng In my Price reduced on home w ith

Pleasant

Pt

712·1220 or !6141 7733926

COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRilliNG
Pump Nl" Mrvlce Regiswork

Yard sale June 2111 arid
J un e 22nd 4 6 3 Grant
Street M iddleport, Ohto

36 Lots 8o Acreage

ter Spm

All

nght

304 675 2931

.49,000 304-875-6047

Ohio

Frtday, J une

from Langsville on St
Rt 325 Fourth house on the

Yard Sale

Super1or Extermmatmg Co ,
Inc ' People who appre
Clites your Bu11ne11 LI-

Oan1eta. 614·742·2961

~md

Thursday

20th 2111 10-5 3 m1les

frJ

P1ano Tunmg and Repa•r
Brumcard1 Mu11c Co , 614446-0687 Twentieth year
of qualhy serv1ce Lane

goroge
Will do babyslttong, my 520ol
home. 2
tefl, 6
mlnutea from
eliilc referenc..

Thurs , Frt • Sat 2 m1les
from 141 on N eighborhood
Ro• d

Yerd Sale Fatr1teld Centenary ecro11 Porter Brooke
Subdtv111on Ant1que oak
r o cke r, cl oihes. formal
dre11e1 8 6, Fri 8a Sat

814-986-4386
Would like to p•inl: house
14trailers, roofs Call

GorogeSaleJune20 21 .22

G•rage Safe Neighborhood
Rd acro11 from Centenary

Moving, owner must sell
Will consider land contract

Room &amp; board for lady m
pnvate room , bath, l1rg1
BR lounge. TV. rea.onable

9-6

23

814-448 4829

Situations
Wanted

448-8181

•oro•• from Har_ry Sklera'

with Iewing home end film·
lty. Lot uo help you. Colt
colteot 1114)332-4081, ..,_
tnlngo. tiiYIIme --endt.
Legal, aonfl-lott

nefit for Army National
Guard members You can
rece1ve $140 00 per month
1n add1t10n to your dnll pay,
end still attend school Call

Yard Sale At 14 1. 184
Port smouth Rd Ch1ldran •
adult clothmg toys, m11c

4 OOPM
324
Dnve Galhpoh s

Jay Dr Call614 446 4307

Aluminum scrap Sell your I ~---------------­
aluminum ecrap d~rect to the
smelter Buying ell grades of

Jowotera 304·1711·3087

lborllon. Profeaatonal cou

(305!678-3839

ONLY CHANCEIII Call June

n

NOW OPEN .. Edne's Troplcel Bunton, Gtlllpollo Ferry.
Adoption lo on atternttlvtto

enventory. Tratntng. fixtures
grand open1ng, etc Can
open 16 days Mr Keenan

Call 1-619-565·1522 for

Arbuckle Youth Group Car
Waah, Saturday 22nd • 9 to
4 1t Jeno'a 1n Eleanor

bock Call now 814·742·
2328

others 87,900 to $24,900

284

ent1que, hquldatiOn
Licensed Oh1o snd

814-448-0176.

You can alim up for aummer
All Natural We1ght-Loe1 pro·
gr1m can help you loae
1 0 ·29 plus pounds In your
tint month or your money

Jean Sportswaer, ladtea Apparel,
Ch1ldrens, Large S1ze Combinatton Store, Accellor~es,
Jordeche, Chic, Lee. Lev1,
Easy Street. lzod, E1pr1t
Tomboy. Calvm Kletn, Ser
910 Valente, Evan Picone, Ltz
Claiborne, Members Only,
Orgamcally Grown, Gasoline, Hel1htex, 'Over 1,000

Middlepo rt

&amp; Vicinity

Mortgage Co . 814-5923061
Professtonal
Services

Po.meroy-

a. V ic in ity

1 2!1-ai;iru;;!~--­

E Dublin Gronvllte Rd .. Cot

farm,
eales

Public Sale
&amp; Auctton

Uaed mob1le home•

I will not bo rosponslbto for
ony debta other lhen my
own hrbora Boorht

BULLDOZER &amp; BACKHOE WORK

Full t 1me m ongege loen rep

RICK PEARSON AUCTJO.
NEER • SERVICE Estate.

8

Pike

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

2166

Waste Water Treatmen t
Plant Operator for Lak1n
Hospttal, Lakm WV Must
posse11 current WV Licen..
Employment covered under
WV Ctvd Serv1ce Extenalve
benefits Contact Peraonnel
Offtce at lakin Ho1p1tat JJr

Balloona for Get Well. Annl·
verllrye, Birthdaye, p1rt1e1

bring covtfed dlth. Thllil a

9-IJ.tfn

AVON up t o 50% earnings. 2
w ay s to eern Call814· 446-

NEW Gl Bill Anolher be

Rood, Pl11n Valley Road
..... 304 B96 3B78

fru ••• end retreahment
meetlni for •II members

TROMM EXCAVATING

PH. 992-5682 ·
or 992-7121

949-2171

ton end white Coll1e-type

Ntw and U.td Auto Glatt-Late Mt4tf Parts

Rt, 12 4,Potnoroy Oh1o

REPAIR

Loat m HorN Cave area
Smell female. tri-colored
Beegle Wll wear~ng collar
w1th name plate Cell 614·

Grapefrult·PPH Combo at

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213

PH.

or 814-446-8109

dog

Control hunger and loae
we1ght with New

C&amp;A AUTO REPAIR

PH. (614) 985-4212

brown poodle, Ingalls Rd

L01t 1n Rutland •rea. large

SWEEPER and .. wing m•·
rep11r. p1rt1, end
auppllee
Pick up and
deflverv. Oav11 Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up

Fruth

W anted quailfied peraon t o
g •va swimmmg le11ons t o
1 2 yr old child Swimmers

LOST brown leather chockbook. vlcln~ty of Rt 218 If (3051678 -3839
you have eny lnformet1on
pteue cell 614-2116-1528
Own your own
area 1n Centenary
t60
reward Call814-446 -4280

3 Announncements

Lrcensed Clinical Audiologist

814-2116·1528

't' erd sales
Call

Cal 1814-

llne Helthtex, Over t .000
814-38B-9790 or 81 4· 388- others $7,900 to f24.900
8720
mventory Tra1n1ng. fixture s

and Graduation

A1111 11 unc e1111~ nIs

&amp; UPHOLSTERY

We Use Von Schrader
Equrpment Reco111mendelt
by Leadmg Carpet llanu .
lecturers
'FREE ESTIMATES"
3 22 tin

Lost Reward for any 1nfor~
m1t1on concerning black
female Enghah Cocker Span ..! M1111ng since 6 - 2 86.
Some wh1te on noaa. throat
&amp; chest, very shy Cell

Found Male Springer Spa·
nlel, found on Sand Hill

8 ll iln

35185 Oak Hrll Road
long Bottom, OH 45743

Lost and Found

Statlon•y, Magnetic
Signs. lubber SI-s,
Inness Ferii'IS,
Copy Strwkts, Etc.
255 Milt St. Middl-1
104 MuU..rry AY., Pomeroy

992-2196
MiddlePort,

PIONEER CARPET
CLEANERS

6

LOST 1 female chocol1t1

T Hill FORD

~ L1 SA M. KOCH, M.S.

tobacco

266 1428 1-&amp;PM only

grand open1ng etc Can
open 1 6 days Mr Keenan

We can repatr and recore radtators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boll and rod
out radiators . We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Televtsron ltsten10g Devices
Computenzed Hearing Ard Selection
Heanng Evaluattons For All Ages

experlenu

~ ow

'16769

P1rtt &amp; Service

Georges Creek Rd
61 4·446-0294

on

Wdl

lope, ELAN VITAL- 716

Pupp1e1. phone 304· 8"'715 -

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Fndoy I p.m.-2 p m
Soturdoy t 0 o m It 30 a.m.
LOG£ ANIMAl! AND
!URG!RT 1Y APPOINTMENT
304-67S-2Ul

Oreenhouae A1111tant P1rt

per 100 Guaranteed poy- Tote 704-274-6965

Coli 814-985-4291

' GREG ROUSH

992-7201

Wednnday 3 p m -S p m
Thunday 3 pm-S pm

BENNETT'S
ENVIRONMENTAL

'

Free Collie type pupp1e1
(med•um size! 8 weeks Old

4/A/ n

lt. 611 Wost Darw1 Ohio - 992-7013

21

9359 ofler 2PM

•Rnidltlfial &amp;
Commeni•l
•Dtnlopmonts I
Cemmorcial Situ
•Stnglt and Multi Untl
Housing
•Woo4 Modo Cabinotry
Dostgn and Planning

chiM

2 7 - - - - --..
JO

"Free Estimates"
lnstallatton Availallle

Tundar 6 30 p m.-1 p m

AU.

26

10
l1

15
16

1cur

2 · 3 m6nth old Calhco colored k1ttena C1ll 814~ 266

Authonzed John Deere,
New Holland. Bush Hog
Farm Equtpment
Dealer
farm .E.ul.lllllll

Gallipolis, Ohro 45631

Will do all tyjllls of excavattng, tandscap·
mg, basements, sewage systems, water
and gas hnes. water
well drtlhng and serVICe, trucktng (hmes·
tone 8o dtn)

0815

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILlE, OHIO

I

18 Wanted t o Do

needed for Getllo County

9 kittens, 6 weeki old,
mnced breed C•ll814-446-

lllondoy 3 pm -l pm..

i

Phone-------------------1

614-448-8161

Ph. (614) 143-5425
5/9/ 2 mo pd

!MALL ANIMAL HOURS

304-675-6276
1-10·1f n

RIDENOUR

EXCAVATING
COMPANY

Puppy to give IWIY pert
Goklen Retriever ten, 4
monthl old, very friendly
needs room to run Call

20 yeen
''Free E1timatea''
CAll COllECT:

PT. PLEASANT OFFICE
3305 JACKSON AY£.

RT 62 NORTH
POINT PlEASANT, W VA
8 mdos from
Pomeroy-Mason Bnd&amp;e .
SINGlE 124.95
304-675 -6276
•ltve En1ertammeni•Free HBO
•Kilchenettes •Restaurant

with creem. 5 kitten1, 3

Worked tn home eree

After S C..l
742-2027

Help Want ed

croom mete Colt 614-446- level Call 614-446 -0304
13114

Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Typos

PH. 992-6931

OPEN EACH
T_HURS. EVE. 6-8

~
MOTEL

1 female c •t blue stnped

Complete Gutter Work

SALES &amp; SERVICE

CLINIC
IN MIDDLEPORT
PAUL E. SHOCKEY, DVM

d

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM

FENCE &amp; SUPPLY

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
VETERINARY

DON lOSE

Colt 1114-448-8284

BOGGS

, ACCENT

REC~ATICN.PONDS

w ork

2 t i gers, 2 gr1y

WMned

Shepherd. 304-876-2347

CONTRACTING

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Gallipolis, Ohio
J/ 11 /lln

Heating &amp; Cooling

MEIGS

11

Giveeway

Page- 13

The Daily S e ntinel

118-24 hours) per
yellow. 4 block Cell 614- lime
w eek Flea:;ible sc: hedule
387-7118
Pri or greenhous• experience
4 little ldtt.,.s, I month old, required, Sotory depondlng

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

J&amp;F

YOUNG'S

Mobile Home

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER-985-3307
4/ 1/ltn

Cleaned

949-2263
or 247-4641

sho, Tee••l•t..

Wpte your own ad and order by ma1l Willi m1s 1

4

EUGENE LONG

No Sunday CaHs

Soding - Soffit Work

"W1 R1nt F11 l111"

•SATELliTE SALES &amp; SERVICE

•• D•tr

949-2101
or 949-2860

Pamt1ng
Storm Doors
&amp; Windows

RENT A CAR

•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

We Hm AFill Tl11e

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
PH.

Howard L. Writesel
Roofing Co.

SAT., JUNE 22, 1985-10:00 A.M.
This IS lhe personal properly of the late Herman
Andrew Grueser. Lo1ated on Bearwallow Ridge
(Co. Rd. C37) 1ust off St. Rt. 33 at Burlingham,
Ohio.
HOUSEHOLD. Table &amp; 6 charrs 1desk, ga s stove lamps,'
drnette set w/ 3 chatrs, refrrgerator, stove s, bedroom
su1te, coffee table, stand s, prctures, 40 pc fla tware
set, 40 pc sel Japanese chtna , osc!llatrng lans, mrsc
knrcknacks, clocks, TV, pots pa ns. dtshes lrnens, cabt·
nets and more
ANTIQUE or COLLECTOR ITEMS. Bedroom surte !bed,
dresser, chest of drawers, and nrghtstand) , chrna cabr
net, buffet, quilt, orl lamps, "Gone Wrth the Wrnd"
lam p, cedar chest and other rtems
'
MISC : 1969 Ford Falcon. 1965 ford 1h ton (lr c ~up
horse, rolotrller, Homelite 20 Super Xl charn sa w 18"
lawn mower hand tools !old carpenter tools), approx
2 000 tobacco strcks and other rtems

PH. 667-6535
or 985-4353

New Homes Built
"Free Esttmateo"

Rt 160
North
Galhpol1s, Ollto 112 «

G uners

Formerly Hooton
Drilling Co.
* Water &amp; Gas
Well Service
*Myers Pumps
Sales &amp; Service

*llOWN IN
INSULAnON

" We Rent For Less"

51

SHADl RIVER
DRILLING

•VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING

446-4522

Business Services

AT

Mlligo County. Oh1o. and be
1119 the same property con

RENT ACAR
CALL

Real Estate General

Oscar BMJOws her husband.
to Jame1 Stevens and Re
bocce A Slovens by -

The State of Oh1o
Me1ga C ounty
D1amond Savmgs S.
loan Company. Pl11nt1ff
VO
Kevm A Oatley, et al
Defendants

veved bv Alma F

WILLIAMS
TRENCHING SERVICE
Rt. 4, Hy1tH Run Rd
romeroy, OhiO 4 57 69
(614) 992· 2134
or 992 -6704

U? -l~f1~

..7- 0ool....

Ulu
..' ""'
14
~ . ,...,• • , ""

.. u.....

lls-41f~

'~""

.,,.....,_, , H-111111

~

,.. ...

rel t plwne l".relutnle•

...... c_ ,,.

1 1_1m..,_..,.,u

,,,.
.... ......
uw_,...,

I III... W..,_
I I"II"""""'W-N

~~=

-

7~~..,.[..-..lnWw-.-!

s

insuranCi' such as house calls by a
' doctor You should contact your
Insurance agent to find out what
your present policy wlll cover after
you become eligible lor Medica re

••....
···-a.

I Cartltlf ,._,.., , ...... ioo - - 1

Ohio

Kittens to good home, 2

Clo141jaed paxe• a-.ue' tbe

Curb Inflation ·.

Alfred
Memmla l weekend guests of
Clara FollrOd and Nina Robinson
were Mr a nd Mrs Bitt Follrod. Mr
' and Mrs Steve Foil rod, Athens
Mr a nd Mrs Joe Poole and Witt
made a business trip to Wright
Patterson AFB, Dayton May 21 23
Whtte there they vtstted Mr a nd
Mrs Ter ry Fetty Karen and
Sa ndra, a nd Mr and Mrs Jim
Glbson and Christ)l
Pearl Randolph accompa nied
Mr and Mrs Cla ir Randolph to
vlsn Mr and Mrs Donald Ran
dolph near Charleston, W Va Ms
Ra ndolph later attended a din net at
the home of Sharon Wright, Ca rroll
in honor of Mrs. Wrtght s son,
Da na, who Is entering the Na tional
Guard
Memorial weekend guests at the
Poole·Parker home were Mr and
Mrs Terry Fett y, Karen and
Sandra, F airborn , Willis, Rodney,
and Tim Parker, Parkersburg,
Rupert Schrader, Fra nkfort, Ky
Beat rice Be ntz , Lancas ter,
Wtlber Va n Meter , Columbus, Mr
and Mrs E ldred Hess, Dalton, were
Memortal weekend guests at the
Randolph home
Mr and Mrs Robert Keaton,
Bobby Matthew and Kevin are
visiting Mr and Mrs Lester
Kea ton

t51St

TRENCIING IS 0111 Ill£

·Alfred community happenings
Lancaster

~*to

20, 1985

Business Services

Slfllln ll

lll Court St POIMrtY

Wolf Pen permnals
Mrs Iva J ohnson was the
Memonal Day weekend vtsltor of,
Mrs J ohn R Murphy and P eggy
Mr a nd Mrs Dona ld Russell
spent th£&gt; weekend camplng a t Lake
Snowden near Albany
Bqrba ra Stedman and J ulie
Stevens of Faui ax, Va and a
nephew of N£&gt;bl aska we re Tuesdav
VIsitors of Mrs Iva J ohnson a nd Ida
and Peggy Murphy

June

PHONE
992-2156
Wr ltt Dlilty
Ctlnltttd o.,t

Cumings, flowerswUibeplantedma ,
tree trunk at the fire station
Marge Fetty presided at the
meeting with members !'('latlng
vacation plans Kathryn Swanson
reported that she and Daisy
Blakeslee attended the50th anrtrversary celebration of tlie Rutland
Garden Club Officers' reports were
given by E lizabeth Bw kett and
Jean Moore
Mrs Cumings talked about portu
lacha noting that tt ts good for porch
boxes and also as borders for
gardens The traveling pnze was
sent by E mogene Crooks and won by
Clara Conroy The doot pnze was
won by Rose Reynolds
Tables were decorated wrth roses
In goblets A flower a uctton was held
fdllowlng the meeting Tac pms
were gtven as favors by the
hostesses, Mrs Cummgs and Helen
Sa uer. Peanut butte• pte and coffee
wete served at the conclusron of the
meet mg

TOPS

20, 1985

Meson County. 304-882·
247t or 766 4884
Business
Buildtngs

1------------------

Rent orHio bulldlne sultablt
8'/t por cont. 304-875- fo r Church In Point Plttotnt.
41504
w Vs 3q4-675-2931

2 bdr apphences furn iShed.
1% m1 from t own, large lot
S176mo plua depo11t &amp; ref

Call 614 448 2236 or 61~
446 2581

2 bdr mobile home t otal
elec1nc. adults only, no pet s,
TV, cable available Call

814 367 743B

2 bdr trader $ 160 mo plus
dep011t 3 bdr tratler $ 176
mo plus depostt Both fur~
mshed, no1 in park, but 1n
count ry , on R1ccoon Rd.

just off Rt 218 Coil ony.
time 614 446-8397
On prlvete lot , total elect 2
bdr mob1le home, 111) bath.
AC, carpe1, one tenthl mile
on Lmcoln Ptke of R t 141
Secunty dep required Cell

814-446-4303

On priv•te lot, 2 bdr
mshed mob1le home,
carpet enclosed patio,
tenth s mtle on Lincoln
of Rt 141 Secur~ty

~r~
AC ,
one Pike
dep

requ ired Co li 814· 448
4303

Trailer for rent

Call ehar

4PM 61 4-446·42211

�.

.

14-The
42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

&amp;

Modern 2 bdr.. eMtondod
llvlnCII'oom. I 230 mo .. 11 oo
dllpoolt. See 314 3rd. St ..
Kanauga, Oh. Call814·446·
7473.

1982 model '' MUSTANG''
2-horu tendem trailer, ht.
78". stoll width, 36". Good
condltloh. Call 304·676·
4187.

2 bedroom mobile home.
nice. air cond. Send Hill

Hotpoint dryer, gold, large
cep1city , exc c·ond
1200.00·. Hotpoint gold
Wllhlr , needs tlm11 ,
140.00. 304-5'76-2611 or
304-762-2035.

Road. 304·875·3834.

44

Apartment
for Rent

TONY 'S GUN REPAIRS.
hot dip reblueing,all typal of

gufltmlth work. flit Mrvice.

304· 675·41!31.
Heating aid, phone 304·

675-7141 .
Frlgldare electric stove, all
burners work, great for

·
125 .00 . 30 4-7 73·
connong,
9187.

61

Supplii:s
L1vesluck

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S, 35 W01t, Jockoon.
Ohio. 614· 286· 8451 .
.MIIItV _
f erguton. New
Holland. Buoh Hog Salao &amp;
Service. Over 40 used
tractora to choose from &amp;
complete line of new '&amp;. ·

adulto. Call 448· 4418 after
IPM .
Upotolro unlumlohod 3 room
apl .. carpeted, utilttiea paid,
no children. no pets. Call

614-448-1637.

Mobile hom.alot. 12' x60' or
smaller, 876 water paid, 4th
&amp; Noll, Gallipolis. Call 446-

4416 after BPM .
2 mobile home pads for rent.
rural water, alac:tric, septic
tank, garage storage, nice
area on Eagle ftd . Call

614·388-8826.

Furnished efficiency 1126 . 2 trailer spaces for rent on
utllltleo paid, 919 2nd .. private lot, Upper river Rd .
Oallipolit, sin.gla m41l8 pre- Call 6.14-446-0002 .

ferred . Cell 446·4416 after
8PM .
Furniahed apanment. 941

. &amp;oeond Ave, Gollipolio, 2
bdr '245 mo. utllltloo pd.
Coli 446·4416 after 8pm.
Furnished apt. 3 room pri't'ata bath, references re·
quirad, 846 2nd. Ave., Galli·

; polio. CaH 614-446-2216.

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park, Route 33. North ol
Pomeroy. Large Iota. Call
61 4-992· 7479 .
Trailer spaces, one small
child accepted. No pet a.

304-1!75· 1076.

Merchandise

; Modern 1 bdr apt. down~ 1own location. CA. carpet.
· complete kitchen . Call &amp;14-

51 Household Goods

4411·4383 dayoor 814-446·
0139 evo.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Oliva St., Gallipo,is. New
8t used wood-coal stove •. 6
pc wood lR suite $399,
bunk bad• $199, antron
recliners $99, new &amp; uSed
~~~:~;::r": suites; ranges,
washers. 8t shoes.
New livingroom suites
1199-$599, Iampo. a lao
buying coal &amp; 11\lOod ltOY&amp;I.
Coll614-448 · 3159.

:
:
,
•
:

613 3rd. AVe . 1 bdr. private
batt'!, $136 mo., includes
water, deposit required. Call
814-448·4222, between 9
6 5.

'.t:urnished aHiciency 8146,

utiltieo paid. ohoro beth, 1!07
2nd. ~ve. Gallipolis. adutt:s.
Call4411·4416 efter 8PM .
Furnished apt . 243 Jackson
· Pike.. Gallipolio, 2 bdr.,

· $236. utilltol paid. Call
: 446-~416 after BPM .

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofas and chairs priced from

SPECIAL cut alobo 6 PU
loads dtlivered In dump
truck $100, or 21oado • 1-80
You pickup f15. Call 614:
245-5804.
GUNS . 700-Rom . 243 .
870-Rem. 12 go. 1100
Rem. 12 go . Red Hawk 44
mag. Cell 614-367-0482
Mini bike for sale or trade. 4
1peed transml11ion for sale

or trade. Call 614-446for Brian or

3370 ask
Loretta.

New Idea mower 82915, hay

contained. camper. gas or

For~

hoy b•ler, e4,4495.
Coll614-286-6522.

Baby furniture. good quality
used . .Frank's Pawn Shop,
~30 Second AVo., Gallipolia, Oh . 614·446·0840. '

Lawn mowers, good quality
ueed. Frank's Pawn "Shop,
430 Second AVe., Gallipo-

llo. Oh. 614-446-0840.
1 B ft. above ground pool, Y,
HP pump • .filter, vacuum,
lad~er,
winterized cover,

1500. Colt 614-446' 9330
after 6PM.
Seers 10.500 BTU window
air conditioner. axe. cond.,
aoking $195. Call614-2455040 oft or 4PM.

71

Building Materials
Block. brick. sewer pipes.
windows. lintels , etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
0 . Coll -614-245· 5121 .

Ford 501 mower, &amp;500.
very good condition. Call

Builder's Surplus· Salvage
Closeouts. 111 Embossed
wood grain aluminum aiding, foam backed, twin 4 ' 'or
8" pattern, *39.9!5 sq. (21
Twin rib white metal rotting
or siding . 38" wide 8 ' thru
.
16'J 1· th ,
~ lng • · 4 1. 9 6 aq. (31
Steal insulated prahung
door'sallsl-.esand patterns,

Tobacco setters. Interns ·
tional corn sheller. burr mill,
Heaton 7 ft. haybind, 501
Ford mower, Malley Ferguson pull dyna· balance, New
Holland 6.6 rake, bale eleva ·
t
K'
K
ors,
mg
utter rotary
mower, manure. spreaders,
fertilize spreaders, other
equipment. Howe' s Farm
Machinery , Rt. 124 &amp; May-

1978 Cu!looo Supreme 2tone maroon, loaded.
79.000 miloo. 13.300 firm.
Call614-245-9498.

73

Autos for Sale

1979 Qlds Cutl..o Supremo
Brougham, new tlrea air
cruise, tilt, a•c. cond.' Cali
614· 446·4073or814· 4484836 .
81 AMC Spirit DL hatchback, great gas mileage. axe.
cond .. mull ooll . Coil 614245 -5040 after 4PM.

Vans

1977 GMC Venduro with
Midas interior, excellent mechanical condi1ion , high
mileage-recent engine work .
Coli 614-446-8096 altar
_6_P_M
_ .--------

1

1977 Dodge van 83,000
miles. H95. Coll614-446·

74

Motorcycles

Go -cart ex. shape, S225 .
Call 614-388·9373.

1-:-::-::------....:.1975 Ford Torino light ~luo,

79 Harley Davison Sportster

1980 Hondo 70 3 wheeler,
1396. Call614-446-9391 .

All types of masonry. brickw,
blocks. concrete. stone .
Free estimate. Call Roger at

Must sellll 1976 SuJuki
560. good cond . Call 614266 · 6574 or 814 -2511 1941.

304-773-6127.

1980 Hondo CD900. Shaft

Call304-576-2398 or 614 446 -2454.

Dodge Charger. Cell 614379· 2283 .

RON'S Television Service.
House calls on RCA. Quazer,
GE. Specialing in Zenith .

to oell . 614-992-6710.

Livestock

Reg. Morgan stallion &amp;: filly
for sale or trade. ·call 614-

1978 Plymouth Volare atationwagon, good work car,

ANNIE
• I'VE GOTT' llll.fiiT.
t«JCHY • l Nf~f!
lliOOGHT 0' YOU
A6 &amp;!:Iff '5P!:CUIU.y

creta. Csll 304· 773· 5131 .

drive. air suspension, Priced

63

e

fNY61CNI.~

2·1973 Pinto wagon1, 1973

l-::

aft.·

ll:;;;;;;,jji;,;i;;:,--;;;;;;-;:;i

ALLEYOOP
... AND I'LL BET SIR

Fetty Tree Trimming, slump
removal. Call 304 -676-

1978 760 Honda molorcy·
cia . Excellent condition.

'

1331 .

. opplicationl 3_0 4,675-2088
or 875· 7388 .
Rota,:Y Or cab'e.tool driluriQ .
.Most wells completed same
day . Pump sales and sarvi·

cos. 304-896-3802.
S tarko Tree and Lawn Seivice, otump removal, 304-

~ -:-5;7;6:-2:0:1;0;.=·=====·
82

·

It's the best

money can buq, MeiPd!

1

Plumbo"ng

8t Heating

·.I

CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANO. HEATING .
Co:r. fourth ar,d. Pine
· Galli pori•. Ohio : ·
Phone 614-446-3888 or
614-446-4477
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG . Rt. 1, Bo• 355, Galli polis . Coll614· 367·0576.

83

WINNIE

,160NIZJN6 DECIISION

WAS TAICfN OUT rx
DOOR~8 HO

Good -1 Excavating, base·
manta, footers, driveways.
teptic tanka, landtcaping.

All porto for 1977 Cordoba.
Cal1304-773·116&amp;1 .

Cell anytime 814 -448 4537, Jomoo L. Oovioon. Jr.
owner.
Dorer Work land clearirflJ, '
etc. Free elti·

land1cap~ng,

mateo. Call 814-446-8038
or 614·992 · 7119 anytime.

•

&amp; Refrigeration · · ·

1978 Ford. 6 cyl, · auto,

85

VOU GIT THAT
PURTY PITCHER

0~ ME. MAW?

DOWN ATTH'
ART GALLERY,
PAW···

One Bro~n 8 foot Ford
topper, axe cond, .1 eo.oo.

304· 875·1912.
77

• .

llloo pools filled . Cell 8141256- 1141 or 614· 446 ·
1175 or 614-446· 7911 .

SNAKE!!

I
•
HI.

614-367-0623 or 814-367·
7741 night or day.

Auto Repair

ATTENTION! ATTENTION!
BJ's Body Shop now open .
Free es11matel. No job too
amall . 304·11711·21163.

78

Jem11 Boys Water Service.

K.en' s Water Service. Wells,
ctlterna, pools filled . Phone

Waugh 's Water Service .
Walls, ciaterne, pools . Fa~.
reliable Mrvice. Call 814·

258·1240 · or 114-266 ·
1130. Re ..onable rates, J
Haul limestone. nnd, gn vel.dirt. bulk or bag fertilizer
end lime . EKeelsior S•lt

Camping
Equipment

Workolnc . 638 E. Main Sl ..
Pomeroy. 814·892·3891 !

1983 Palomino Shetland
foldup c•mper . Oelu1111
model, -po I, lUper light·
weight, perfect lor compact
oar. UHdonetima,llllenew
11800. 304-11711·6714.

"

87

THEV WAS '

HAVIN' A
ONE-MAN

0

"' TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY IHOP
11116 Storcrolt pop·up 11113 lee. Avo., Oolllpollo.
011~•· excellent concthlon
1114·446· 7833 orl14-44•·
1700 flrm. Coli 114· 441: 18J3.
.
.' .
0175 or 304· 671-6431 If·
tor 7.
R I M Furniture Monujocturlng, St . Rt. 7,
1177 Flootwlng camper, 13 City,
Oh. Call 614· 0lt. lloopo 4, •-lent condl· 1470. coli Evo. 614·
•
tlon, $1 ,000. Call304·8711o 3431 . Old 1 n
1383efter 4 .
· Uphootorod .
.

em:

Heads-up play
by second hand

NORTH
6-20-15
+Q15
.63
IAQI0643
.32

By Jameo Jacoby
WEST
EAST
"Winning Defense for the Advanc·
.K94
+1o s 2
ing Bridge Player" iS the title of
.Q 10 74 z
.KJB
Frank Stewart's latest contribution to
• K8
•Jvo
bridge literature . He selected a title
• 764
• J 10 9.
which should offend no one , since all .
SOUTH
of us are certain that we are getting
• AJ 6 3
better a1 bridge. Early in the book,
.AYS
Frank demolishe$ the old chestnut
• 7z
"second hand low." Here is the deal.
.AKQ
S
West leads 1he four of hearts to his
partner's king, which wins tbe trick .
Vulnerable: Neither
East continues with the heart jack
Dealer: South
and then the eight, which Sou1h final·
North Eaot
ly wins. Now comes a low diamond,
funn' (CCI
and West must be alert to the right ·.
It
Pass
IIJ(()(JD Magnum, P.l. The
Pass
play. It is absolutely essential lot him
Pass
3NT Pass
search Is on for aoma vatu·
to put up the king. Otherwise declarer
Pass
able love aonga believed to
will put in 1he 10, which will be won
have been written by 1 now
deceased muaic star. (RJ
by East's jack. On the next diamond
Opening lead: •4
(60 min .)
play , West's king will go under
IIJI Natlonai ·Folk Foatlvol
dummy's ace, and the rest of
Ill MOVIE: 'Dirty Oozan'
dummy's diamonds from t he queen
(HBOl MOVIE: 'Bachelor
down will all be winners .
Party' (CCI
Of course in many instances put- m~.re heart tricks to set the contract.
. (MAXI MOVIE: 'Mtllnle'
ling up the king , would not prevent
Second hand low" is a fine old
8 :30 Gill Cil Foml~ Jioa Mol·
dec.larer"lroQ~ ·eventualiY running the . _ada~e, and it is usually rilht: ·aui if
... loiy feels thatno .. one is
·
grieving proper_ly w~en h8r · 1 .suit. After -aii,.South can let West hold you re . one .. of .Frank . . Stewari•s
the irick." If that were to happen here, ~dvanctng bridge players, keep your
favorite aunf dies. (R,
West would immediately take two eyes open for the exceptions.
IIJI Joan Shepherd Amorlco
(CC) ' Make School or Die.'
Jean Shepherd visits the
Old Woot.
9:00 G (]) CIJ Choero
CIJ 700 Club
(!) ·Top Rank Boxing • 12
Round
Heavyweight
Championship (Jouo Ftr·
guoon vo. Tony Anthony)
frqm Atlantic City
G (()tiD Simon end Simon
(CCI Rick and A.J . are hired
by 1 social worker tc) fihd
out w~Q ,hll bo.en .kidnap. .
.
4
ping Skid Ro:iw bums. (R)
by
THOMAS JOSE,H
•.•
(60 min .)
ACROSS
42 Son of. J~cob
IIJI Myotoryl (CC) 'ReillyI Roman
43 Brinks
Ace of Spies: The Visiting
Firenian.' Reilly poses as a
statesman 44 Marine bird
German fireman in order to
5 Of the pope DOWN
obtain top aecret plans for
J0 Asian river I Dromedary
a new Kruppa navel gun .
11 Re~alc
2 "That's
(R) (80 min.)
12 Mush mom
-· ( Wf\.1
14
EpiRJ"am·
so ng)
9:30 G ill (!) Big Shell In
malic
3 Disappear
America
15 Sea eagle
4 Pay dirt
10:00
Cil Hill St-t Bluoo
16 Expert
5 Eucharist
Ynterday'o Arulwer
The station has a unique
18 Big - ,
plate
171lrowbeat 28 Expected
problem when a grossly ovCalif.
6 WOOd core 21 God w the 30 Fro m
erweight hood paooos
away in tho holding call. (R)
19 Rumanian 7 Fqllow
Chinese
Tinker to - ...
(8_0 min.)
tlu"oufth
23 Warmth
32 Spiritual
coin
([). ll1i 20120 (CCI
8 Guaranteed. 25 Gol into 33 Memorize
20 Monk's
• ([) ID Knora Landing
haircut
9 Looked
shape
38 College
(CCJ
lll(llicoously 21! Put to sleep In Iowa
22 What
IIJI Nowowotch
a relief!
13 Grow tardy 27"Juxtapooe 40 Devour
iHBOl
Sox
and
tho
24 Cau tion
American T"neger Statil·
25 Dennis
1ics 1bout teen sexuality
O'Keefe
are revealed .
mm
(MAXI MOVIE: 'The lima26 Draw

SHOW

taU(

WANTED

a-on
27 Opera
highlight
28 Therefore
(Fr.)
29 French
chemist
31 Lubricate
34 - aller
(last resort)
35 Churc hill 's

View'

10:30 CIJ My Little Margie
lfil Tony_ Brown'• Journol

:oo •

,1

ill w rn a Cll aD m
ll1i Now•

(]) Bill Cooby Show
(J) capitol Journel Con grellionel experts and
journlllltl join hoot Hod·
ding Corter in dlacuaoing
w!lat'l happening on Capitol Hill.
lfil Sporting Life ' Big
Leoguoo ol Laughter.' Jim
Palmer, Alan King. Stove
Londeoburg, and Phil Footer ielllheir favorite sports
atorlew.
lonny Hill Show
IHIOl MOVIE: 'SI-n
Condleo' ICC)
11:30 •(])CIJTonlghtShowTo·
nlght'o gueotlo Laura Broni_gon. [00 min.)
W leo! of Oroucho

..

()) lporuaan•r

36 0 ne (Fr.)
371n the bag
39 Libyan city
41 Tille
in Tampico L-.J.......L-L-J..DAILY CRYPTOQVOTES-Here's bow to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR

II LONGFELLOW
'

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's , etc. Single le1ters
apcstrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are ali
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

.

(I) WKRP In Clnolnnttl

•

'"
IF I(OU DON'T GIVE ME
Ml( fN1HEI( eACK, I'M

601N6 10 SUE!

1 •

ril Fall Guy Colt
dlocovort thll tho m•n he
io stunt-doubling lor Ia
being framed for 1 murder.
(R) (00 min,)
ril Le-Ight llmerlco
tiD Taxi
(J]) Profllet of 8• aaoao
IIDAICN_.N"htllno

CRYPI'OQUCYI'E
6-20 .

aJ PKA Full Contact
Kore10 Covorogo ol tho
World Light Welterweight
and Wortd Llgh1Wolght Tl·
tlo llgh11 lo prooontod from
El Polo, TX. 190 min.)

TVZSG

G 0 G Y D

SJ

RJ C I S
NURN

11:411M~~~h"nowbello'

1z:ao CII Bin Dena

k-+-+-

sign

e

PEANUTS

Upholetery

XX)AT ( I I I )

!Anow.o lomorroWl
Ye51eoday'ol Jumbllls: OZONE TAI!OO GRIMLY RADIUM
Answer: They were participants in a ahotgun
wedding-THE BRIDE &amp; "G LOOM"

10:15 (J) MOVIE: 'i"he Pirollo•

'[ J

General Hauling

81.000 miles on motor and

tronomjulon, 1200.00 .
304-675·6384.

Pnnranawerhele: (

e (])

LOCK/

SEWING Machine nopoiro.
service. Authorired Singer
Sale• &amp; Service Sherpen
Sciuors . Fabric Shop .
Pomeroy. 814·992-2284. •

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

'NIWIWEU., ~r

Excavating

Electrical

()

~u·;.·~,_J

JAY HANP5/THE

84

'

NoW arrange the circled lettltfl to
tQrrn the surprtae a_
naw«, uauoQetiOCI I&gt;Y the lboVo clltoon.

'-------------..J

RINGLES'S SERVICE, ex perienCBd carpenter, electrj·
clan, mason, painter, roo . ing (including hot ur

WHAR DIO

76

New1hour
ll}) Now Noma That
Tune
1111 Star Tr•k
7:30
(])Tic T•c Dough
CIJ CIICO Kid
(!) ESPN'o Spoodwook
Cll Major League Booobell:
Houeton ot Atlanta
CllG Cll Family Feud
CIJ Jeopardy
® w-1 of Fortune
liD . ll}) Entertainment
Tonl,ht
(HBOI Penny Power
8:00 G (]) Cil Coo by Show Clill
end Clairautpecttheworst
when thev come acron a
joint in one df Theo's
ochool bookl. (Rl
CIJ Hare Como tho Jlrldeo
(!)Super Bouta ol tho BO'o
Aaron Pryor ve. Alexit Ar·
guello (Miami, November,
1982). (60 min .)
( [ ) . ll}) MOVIE: 'In Uko

O .and M. Contractors. Vinyl
siding, replacement win:
dowa, insulating, roofing1
new and remodelirtg. con-

13,000 miles, $2,995. Call
614-446-1816 after 6 614446-1244.

I ()

tTHINEW

·J I I

.'

AI50Ui T HE ONLY
CIVI L. 5ERVAN"r
'(OU'O P'REFcR TO
5~E. 1'1-115 WAY.

liD

814-379-2869.

good cond., 8760 or best
offer. Call after &amp;PM, 614·
44 6 9 7 6
:-:-:-·::-3:"::-·_ _ _ _ __

II I

®Now•
IIJI
MacNoii/Lohrar

Tabor Upholstery. For reu-.
pholsterlng, free estlma1es.•
Free pickup &amp; delivery. Cell

Comaro 228 1983 low
milng1, V-8. eJCc. cond ..
goroga kept. Call 814-4469837.

700 ADL, Woav0 r K-12 &amp;
case &amp;. relOading dies. Call
614-388-9322.
Briarpatch Kennels Professional All-breed grooming.
l':f~~r- outdoor boarding facilities. English Cocker Spaniel puppiea. Call 614-388-

Home ·
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gua-:
rantae. Local references
furnished . Free estimates.
Call collect 1· 614·237- '
0488. day or niuht. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing . , .

160, mileage OB6610 and

Call614·379·2115.

IIJilody Eleotrlo
I Dream of Joannlo
7:00 eli! PM Magazine
CIJ Gun1 of Will Bonnett
00 SpotiiOOnter
([) Sanford and Son
CIJ Ent-lnment Tonight
CIJ Wheel of Fortuna
• (]) Wheel ol Fortune
Cll Mountain Sla1o Cel•
bretian

e

Call 614· 38B· 9857.

lake over payments. For
information call 304-676-

5393 after 4 .

G Cll (JD CIIS Nowo
Cll Dr. Who

~arcum Roofin9 a SpoutIng. Now inltalling rubber
roofs. 30 years experience.
speclaliring in built up roof.

1986 Ford Econ Line Van

$286 . to S895. Tables, $50
•8&amp;0. After 8pm call 6148300. Call 614-446·1013.
and up to t126. Hide-a·
9811-3868
.
.
9790.
379-2585.
740"1.1 2nd. Ave .• 3 bdr .• bods, &amp;390 . and up to
'
1973 Ford Pinto Squire 197B Yamaha 1100XS
e190 mo .. dllp. noq. Call e550.. oola bodo t146, White sewing machines reg·
Ken - _Reg, Walking horse mare:
. Automatic,
completely dressed. stereo.
614·446-4647 or 1!14·446· Recliners, . 8226. to $376., ul~r: ~rice t279 now 8100.
$700. Reg . walkin·g horie
·runs _goo~. exceiiBi-'11 "ice ' road bike. '304- 676Lamps ·from 128. to 1.1 26. and. 30% oil on Noci:hl
A22"2
between"
911M'5PM
.
.
.
'
mar•·
~
..
colt.
8800.
2.
yr.,old
. .
mil.oago. •no. 1980 4338.
. -dinettes tiom 8,1 ()9•. : tO: . •ew.ing maChl.~8; Call collect
puppies . NeW litter. Y:r · _ .~alklng . horsa gaJdii':'O:·..
.
Cudaii LS. P.S .. P.li.,
7 .pc . ·s .1Q9 oold up: · 614-385-8025. . . .
· · 3 'bdr.' · n.WJ•f' re~~deltid, ·
· I 446-3844 olter 7PM .'
t260. 2 hOrse trailer, 8800 ..
• e•cellem condition. '198.1 K~asaki 1000 LTD
table with ai• chairs
duplex: 644 or 846 Second
Cell
614-992-6102 .
Toddler.
caruat
116,
Sun614-949-2558. 6,600 mileo, ~xcollent con:
$2B5
to
8745.
Deok
S110
" Ave.. utility room. kitchen,
AKC
Ballet
hound.
pups
for
· dlningroom. Call 614-446- up to $225 . Hutchoo, $660. beam st.ver 120. 4 pc. aale. Tri-colored, 6 weeks 1 .do"ng h
d 1
k 1 -:-::=::-~~------'- dltion, t2600 .00. Call oftar
r'
orse an
wor
1976 Volkswagon Rabbit,
Bunk bed complete with sparkle Orume-matic set old. 6 male &amp; 2 female . Call horse.
8293.
304-678-2233 otter 27 mpg, good work car. 6 p.m .. 304-675-7938.
ma11resses, $276. and up tO 8100, royal manual type 614· 256·1652.
5 :00.
.
jj•500.
• Call_ anytime 614· 1982 Kawaoki 440 LTD,
New 2 bdr. apt., refrig. &amp; 1395. Baby bodl. •110. writer 136. Tl comput8f
43 6440
stove furnished . 4% miles Mattresae1 or box_ lprings. (recorder, speech synthes- Reg. Auatrielian Blue Heeler 20 month old Chorolaio bull. I-:-=:-::----:---11.300 miloo, call "304- 773from Gallipolis. $225 mo. full or twin. 868 . . firm , 868. izer, joy stick a. aoftware) pups. Guranteed to work
t150,
entenainment
stand
304-675-3308.
1977
Muotong.
Noodo
point
1;6;.7;7:9:.
=;===::::==
pollttd.
pluo electric, depoo~ &amp; and 878. Queen Mts. 1226.
cattle. Ready to go. Call
job. Mull oell. HOO. 614reference required. No pets. 4 dr. ches~s . $49 . 6 dr. t10. Call614-446-2796.
614-446-2109.
Wall broke thoroughbred· 992 - 5816 or614 - 992 · 75
ta and .
chests. 169. Bed frames.
Coli 114-444!-8038 .
- Qu~rter Mare With 2 week 378 6 . .
._.
Canopy
bed
with
drasaer
$20.and e25 .. 10 gun- Gun
Motors for Sale
watarbed quean size 2 AKC Reg. Pekenese pup- colt; Grey child - broke I-:=---~----Efficiency apt with garage. cabinlats, $360. Gila or 8425,
8450,
chest-type
freezer
pias,
1
mala,
1
female
.
Call
Gelding
$275.00.
304-8821976
Monte
Corlo
.
Make
an
electric
$375.
private yard maintained,
1195. 1 full size bed 1125
614-2.;;6·9391 .
2782.
ollor. Coll614-992-5163.
lease required, 8~2.6 ·
18 h . fibarglaee boat, trailer ,
an1ique
mohelf"
couoh
•
.
wat•r include(!.
75 HP motor, $600. Coli
choir
1350,
2·
20
lnch.blcyI"
Trained
1980
AMC
.Spirit,
po,
pb,
dryer , hoqkup.
. ;•
H·a v 8t ·,Grain
clo $36 ea, 1971 ·Yamaha lemole.
automatic:·· 304-675-3354 .. 1114-~79 : 2702. . .
tion · · of
446-7209 · or
60
noodo
work
$76.
Cell
Call61414&lt;!·
21;21
Aok
lor
Guy.
rockers,
metal
cabinets
,
3287.
17 ft. Sporto,Craft tri-houl :
headboards $38 &amp; up to 614-367-0541 .
Fioh
Tank
end
Pat
Shop,
walk
thru windshield, 76 HP
Alfalfa hay, wire baled, 1974 760 Honda 8696.
1 ...,.-----~-1 bdr. furnished or unfur- $66.
2413 J•ckson Avenue
Evenruda motor &amp; trailer.
Air
conditioner
6,000
BTU
never
wet.
Call
614-2681976
Pinto
Hatchback
auto.
nished . utilities paid. $190
Point PleBJant, 304-675:
Exc. cond., 12,600 . Call
per mo .. 160 dep., no Used Furniture ·· Refrigera- works graatl 1150. Antique 2063. Fish, birds and .m ora . 2331 or 614-228-2094 al· 8796 . 304·675·6622.
ter 7PM .
1-:::::-::---::----- 614·367·0447.
children. no pets . Call 614- tors, rangea, metal office buffet 166 . electric
portable-correctable
typew·
'72 Datsun 4 speed 4 door
desks.
electric
range.
3
miles
448·3867 after 5 .
Himalayan; need male to Good mixed hay lor ula, f400 . 304-675-4203.
1978 flborglato old·boat 16
out Bulavllle Rd. Open 9om riter $75 . Call 614-446- breed
with
mv
female,
30~ft.
75 HP, outboard. Coli
4062.
muot oelj . Call 614-446- l-:-=:-~-----Attr•ctive 2 bdr. apt. with to 6pm, Mon. thru Sal.
578 · 251 1 or 304 -762- 0373.
614-446-4694.
1972
VW
Super
Beetle.
61
4-446·0322
rltfrig. &amp; stove. carpeted, LA
Oynamark riding lawn 2036.
eJCcellenl condition, f1 ,200.
a DR. convenient 10 Galli12 ft. alum . boat with oars,
mower needs transmiasion.
Hoy for lOla . Out oltholiald . 304-675-4419 .
polie. outaide atorage. With
good cond., 8136. Call
1978
Duster
goOd
running
Call
614·949
·2656
after
1-:-=::-::-=~----waehar &amp; dryer, 8266 mo ..
Musical
cond. 8200. Call 614·379- 57
5 =00 pm .
1979 MG Midget, low mi- 614· 446·4230.
without . 1250. mo. Call
Instruments
21
14.
leage,
304-675-1780.
814-246-9595 .
For olio : 1978 16'/o ft .
Starcraft
tri-haul boat with
'78
Toyota.
good
cond,
Tr ansporlat1on
2 bdr. apt .• utilities partly
trailer. f1.500. Cell 614$1,000.00.
Coli
after
5:00
pald·nico. f,149 mo. Call
992 -2143 or 614-742304-876 -7555.
304-675· 5104 or 304-8752289 after 6pm.
6386.
71
Autos for Sale
~7 ft . Crel11iner, , 185
Apertmen1 for rent. Call
enboard·outboard, power
614-448•9244 9AM ·6PM .
trim prop., power trim tlba,
trl · haul, 304-1175-1281.
Apt. forrent, dep. roq. $110
mo. Cell between 9 &amp; 5,
12 loot John Boot, 304111 4·446-1777.
876 -6809.
Rlveroldll Apto. Middleport .
Special rate• for Senior
Cltlzeno. t130. Equal Houo·
lng Opportunltlea . 614·
182,7721 .

81

8508. -

78 Ford Granada Ghia body,
black. new paint. $1,000.

~

Cll Groen Aor•• ·

( [ ) . il}) AIC Newa (CC)

BORN LOSER

Ser VICI!S

8t 4 W.O.

I ()

"RARBI

e (])

)

electric, 81, 500.00. PalO
oldetalk, 1.000 C8 equip·
mont ovarvthlng $400.00.
304-67&amp;· ~ 128.

t~~~~~:;::::==~~~~~~~~~~~~~!j

Remington 22·250 model

Clooo Out Special. 15% oil
all chain saws in s1ock now
thru June 22. MR Chain·
aaw, Mi1chell Rd. Call 614446-7126.

I DON'T
!&lt;NOW

1971 Layton 19 ft. sell

286-6522 .

875·00 &amp; up. 14 1 Hollow haw Rd .. Jackson, Oh. Call
core end 6 panel wood 614-286-6944 .
prhung door's $20.00 &amp; up. 1 ---~------­
{5) 4'•8'•5· 32 wood panel- Stear stuffer, like new,
ing. $4.99 &amp; up.
$700. Coli 614-682·7349.
Wolloton, Oh.
Penn's Werehouse
Farmall cub tractor with
614-384-3646.
cultivator and other equipment. Call614-266-8848.
Block, brick, mortar and
masonry 1upplies. Mountain H Farman tractor for sale.
State Block, Rt. 33, New Call 614-949-2 558 .
Haven, W. Va. 304-882Pole Buildings Constructed
2222.
for commercial, garages.
farm, stores, etc . Any size,
free eatir;nates. Call 304 _
56
Pets for Sale
675-3981 .

·'

olx, fully oquippad, f600 .
Call 614-446-8103.
1976 Star~eft camp~
oleopo 6, good cond .. 8900.
Ca11614·446-4109.

614-368-9688 .

EVENING
11:00 • (]) ([) CIJ • ([) (JD •
ll1i Newo
CIJ Hot Potato
Cll Father Knowo Boot
ill Audubon Wildlife
Thoatno
IIJI )-2-1, Contact (CCI
• Bowltahod
(HIO) Simon and Gorlun·
kel: The Ccnoert In Con1rol
Perk Thll 1981 reunion
features 1he du.o't ' 60's
cl11alct plus a()mt of their
recent oclo hill.
IMA)(l MOlliE: 'Tho Rool
Glory'
.
8 :30
(!) NIC Newo
CIJ Rifleman
(!) E8PN'* Horoa Racing
Weekly

0

3000 Ford diastl tf'actor like
new, Allis Chalmber mower
&amp;

New 8 ton heavy duty united
farm wagon running gears,
8379 .96 . Massey Ferguson
bale loader 8250. Call 614-

6,~0/85

Pop up 'camper trailer, sl.-pa

1 -:-:-::-::-:-~----­

0'0.

THURSDAY

1971 Whlnebogo 25ft. fully
contained, generator, air.
oxc. cond, e 7,500. Coli
614-367·0447.

340 International trector
PS, live power, with rriower,
3 bonow plow•. draw bar,
$2,69&amp;. Call 614-2866522.

1796
Freeman
load•r
$·3 6.0, ,Call
614-286-8622.

Furnished eHiclency 701
4th Ava .• Gallipolis. 8160,
utilities peid. sh•r• bath,

446-8172.

uted equipment. largett
te!ectlon in S .E. Ohio;

wagon $295, 9 ft . hay blno

Television
Viewing

1985 Starcraft Star Master:
6, pop-up, aame as new;
used 2 1imea, mutt Mil at
once to settle estate. Elect· ,
ric, ref rig ., heater, g11 stove.
all options. 13.200 firm.
Cost over 84,900 new. Call
614-448-1641 , serious in·
ql! fres only aft•r 8. 614-

Farm Equipment

The Daily Sentinei- P8ge-1&amp; ·

·Ohio

79 ·Motors Homes
·
8t Campers

Fm11

54 Misc. Merchandise

June 20, 1985

Thursday, June 20, 1

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T G E .•) Y G

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NIJ!l

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Yeeterday'l Cryptoquote: WOK Ul', AND NOT
DOWN; LOOK FORWARD ANT&gt; NOT flACK; IJHlK OIIT
AN[) NOT IN; AND LEND A HANil - E. H. HALE
~

�. . .
June 20, 1985

PaJJIEI-16-The

you want it ... .·
you've got it.~;

Community calendar / area happenings
nfURSDAY

.

POMEORY - Southern Local
School District wtll meet In regular
session Thursday, 7:30 p.m., In the
high school cafeteria.
POMEROY - · Southern High
stage band will practice at the school
Thursday 6: 30 p.m. for a Heritage
Days' performance.
POMEROY - Trinlty Church of
Pomeroy is having an tee cream
social Thursday and Friday. Sand·
wtches, baked beans, potato $alad,
coleslaw, otherdeSserts, beverages
and homemade chicken and noodles
will also beavallablefrom10a.m . to
6 p.m. both day!;. Quarts of lee
cream can be ordered by calllng
992-3777, 992-3222 or992-548J.

---

POMEROY - . Meigs County
Democratic Executive Committee
will meet at 7:30p.m. ThurSday at
C;u:penter's Hall, E. Main St.,
Pomeroy. AU interested Democrats
are Invited to attend the session.
FRIDAY

POMEROY - Local chapter of
thE&gt; Full GospE,&gt;l BusinE.&gt;SS Men's
Fellowship International will be
held at the PomE.&gt;roySenlorCitlzens
Center Friday with dinner at 6: 30
p.m. and the meeting at 7: l5 p.m.
ThE&gt; meeting is oJien to thE&gt; public.
Dinner reservations are$6. Richard
MyE.&gt;rs, evangE.&gt;llst, will be the
speaker.
RACINE-RacineUnltedMetho·
dlst Women will have a chicken·
noodll' dinner Friday at the church
wtth serving beginning at 4 p.m .
.

.,~

...,

LADIES' LONDON FOG

LADIES'

SPRING &amp; SUMMER COATS

SUMMER DRESSES

40°/o OFF

REDUCED

SATURDAY

CHESTER - Thl' Meigs County
Fish and GameCiubwill have a free
chlc[\en b!lrl)/i'Que Jor jill members
pl'e(.'!.'dlng Saturday's children's
fishing derby. Serving will begin at7
p.m: and members are asked to ·
· bring a covered dish.

~.,...

LADIES' LIGHTWEIGHT JACKETS

lADIES'

30°/o OFF

SUMMER SUITS
REDUCED

LADIES' SWIMWEAR
By Jantzen &amp; Castaway

30°/o OFF

lADIES'

SKIRTS &amp; SLACKS

..

LADIES' BLOUSES
REDUCED

REDUCED

20°/o TO 30°/o

REDUCED

20°/o

LADIES' LEVI

DENIM. JEANS
20°/o OFF

LADIES' KNIT TOPS &amp; SHORTS

20°/o TO 30°/o

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT ·

.

GALLIPOLIS - The budget life safety concerns due to a lack of
plight of Gautpolls Developmental preventive maintenance, Inability
Center and the Ohio Department of to provide adequate programming,
Mental Retardation and Develop- and less community access due to
mental Disabilities was outlined the unavallabUlty of safe vehicles toearlier this wE.&gt;ek by iwo state transport residE!nts.
officials.
The ·Medicaid certlflcatlon ef
Dr. Minnie Fells Johnson, dirE.&gt;C· developmental centers would be in
lor of ODMR-DD, and Dr. Louts jeopardy, posing serious consequen·
Mazzoli, commissioner for the ces to GDC and the community, the
Division of MR·DD Programs, ofllclals said.
stated the department's case to the
According to John.sQn, "cards,
Citizens Advisory Board at CDC.
letters, telegrams and phone calls to
Pro)JOSed budget cuts in . the the legislators support.ing the House
SenatE.&gt; version of the s)ate budget, version wtn make a d!t!erence. ''
· ~.,.l!l.co
_: Uf~r~'I?'~&lt;:OJ!ll.!ll.% w.UI
•_ Conferebce Coi1imtttee·members
· l;le ~ ..-lilggertng" {o the:Clej)iirtment 111!1 t can be ' wri!terf io
~
and ,CDC; the officials said. Of the' Wtwam H!nig, ~ Prysl Parkway,
$13 million proposed cut In ODMR· S.E., New Phlladl'lphla, Ohio 46633,
DO's bUdget,. the. lion's share will 216-339-6651; Rep. Barney 'Quilter,
. come from developmental center 641 Woodville St., Toledo, Ohio436ai,
budgets,
419-248-1412; Rep. Thomas Johnson,
Thl' House version of the budget 175 Friendship, Box 47, New
bill Is being support.ed by state Concord, Ohio 43762, 614-8264447;
officials.
Sen. Stanley Aronoff, 700 Tri·Stare
· ActmgGDCSuperlntendentPam- Building, Cincinnati, Ohio 45211.!,
ela K. Matura said problems would 513·241~; Sen. W!Uiam Bowen,
intensifY at GDC if the Senate 3662 Reading Road, Cincinnati,
. version of.the budgE&gt;! .Is approved. Ohio, · 513·961-5415; Sen. Theodore
·Those problems Include a dlrilln· ..Gray,~ Thomas Road, Columbus,.
· 'tshed quality, of life, an 'Increase in Ohio 43212, 6l4·294-585l.

'

'

•

Baking contest
!feing planned
.

••

~.

·• ... -

..

- .·. --

1 Section. 10 Pages

26 Cent•

A Multimedll Inc. Newep•per

...

:.

_

·.

.

·';

...

..

Herltjlge Day activities will get
underway tonight at 7 p.m. with a
community square dance on the
upper parking lot. Music wtll be
provided by the CircleD Wranglers
with Charles (Reddl Carr as !.he
caller.
HlghllghUngSaturday's actlvlt!es
wtll be the old fashioned dress
contest on the parking lot stag~
beginning at noon, . followed by

12 MONTH
12,000 Milt

WAAAANIY

HEAVY DUTY
PRICES
START
AT

SHOCKS

$1462
EXCHANGE

lf your car Ia ,
four yean old,
replace the
belts and

11

SAVE
20 % to 4 0% ,

ENGINE REBUILDING
KITS
~

gear f~~ Qerllage Weekend.

p

E

.I
A

.

14-9000

c
0

u

p
0

·:

: .

..

BY GABRIEL

LIMIT 1

WITII &lt;;OUPO~

6/26/85

COUPON - - ----- '

SOVDI POINT MAN KDJ,Im - 8Galll P.-&amp;
, elltlrnt Jomn:y Marplqr, 31, Wlllllldlled In AOIIIHJIU'
accident on Ollie 7' lOUth of Gallipolis 'l1llnday
aftemoon. In the
pho&amp;O, GJIIIIa Coun&amp;y Sherlll's

~ Chel Stool preparee to open 11tce wreek of
Mlupb,y's car wltlt lbe "JaWI! of Ule" exlractton
device. (OVP photo by Larry Ewing),

above

G

Parts

~~~ PLEftSANI.

· GALLIPOLIS .
240 THIRD AVE.
446-1113

1704 EASTERN AVE.
. 44~·4204 '

I AM 'nL 5:30 PM

I AM 'nL 7 PM

!

992·2139
I AM 'TI 5:30 PM .
•

4N ST.

773-5511

675-1520

I AM 'nL 5130 PM

IAM'nLSPM

Wy
111 JACKSON AVE.
I

'

675.-27·31

IAM'nL7PM

square dancers. and the junior fair
king and queen will be announced by
the Junior Fair Board.
At tbe Meigs MIJS{'um, I to 7 on
Saturday and I to5 on Sunday, there
will be numerous displays and
demonstrations ranging from shoe
cobbling to chair caning. Two
movies will he shown in the
mini-theatre and there w!ll food
booths by tbe Sutton Carmel chu rch
and the Episcopal Church Women.

the scene, and tbe "Jaws of Life"
extraction devlce was dl spatchrn by
the Gallla County Sher iff' s Depart · .
ment to !l&lt;'t tiM' victim out of the
WI'O'CkagE.&gt;.
The accident Is the fourth fala l on
GaUia County highways this yPor.
The last dl'ath occun'ed May :JJ,
when 4'year-old Cassandra Ca nl er·
bury of Gallipolis died of injuties
suffered In a rear·l.'nd c'Olilslon
between a car and o ~r&lt;C"ad truck on
U.S.l&gt; at Centen·illr on May 'li .

Federal jury indicts Middleport men

N

OPERATES FROM MOST't2 VOLT
CIGARETIE LIGHTERS

EVERYTHING YOU NEED
ALL IN ONE BOX

Styiettes twirling, a performance by
the Southern Stage Band, and
Denver Rk'l' pE_&gt;rformlng with
homemade Instruments.
Thl' CaiJlopE,&gt;wiU move downtown
from the museum for a program at5
p.m. and at 6::JJ the Sweet Mountain
Sounds wUI perform. Sunday's
activities wlll also Include cloggE.&gt;rs
from th£' Mountain State.StompE_&gt;rs,
the Mrlgs County Senior Citizens

GALLIPOLIS - A Lawrence driving southbound on Ohio 7, south
County man was killed in a onei:ar of the Intersection wtth Ohio 218. at
crash approximately five miles l : 55 p.m. when ·he reportedly lost
south of Gallipolis Thursday control of his 19'19 Chevrolet
aftl'rnoon.
Camaro.
Johnny Murphy, 31, South Point,
The car spun around. went Into a
was pronounced dead at the scene
culvert and struck a concrete
by Dr. Donald R. Warentme, GaUia
abutment. A piE.&gt;ce of concrete went
·County coroner. Warehlmesaldthls
through the driver's sldl' door of Ihe
morning that Murphy died of Camaro, crushing Murphy.
internal hemhorraglng.
The car was severely damaged.
The GaiUa·Melgs post or the state the patrol said.
highway patrol said Murphy was
The patrol and GalllaEMSwent to

s

$8 88

'a

~

•SEALED POWER RINGS
• PELPRO GASKETS
e CLOYES TIMING CHAIN
• STERLING PISTONS
•FEDERAL MOGUL BEARINGS
oiNSTALLA110N 11PS

-

ciJI!!munily·mov"!llnto

Gallia records fourth fatality ·

QUARTZ HALOGEN
HAND·HELD SPOTLIGHT

hoses. No
rnaHerhow
they look!'

PRICES VARY BY APPLICATION

TOP QUALITY

DISPLAYS EVERYWHERE - 1bls display ol antiques at Clark's
Jewelry store ~ just one .of many .in windows about .town liS the.

Heritage Day activities set
$795

~atlon.
'Fhere will'be judging of apple and
chlirry pies with three cash prizes to
be awarded to the top three winners
of both kinds.
· :J'I1ere wtll be three prizes
awa{'ded to the best decorated
cakes. Judging w!U be held ·in the
baking contest at4p.m.Anyonewtth
qu~tl0118 may call Kim Willford,
742·2103.

4

enttne

00STUMED FOR THE
- Early In lbe week; Top
SlaitS beautl(!lans began weariQg old lllllhloned ~' ~y loda,):, the
shop . was !UIIt !'118 of many P""'!'my bulllne8!les with f1Mi0nnel In

QUALIJY PADS

.Pte and cakE' baking contests will
~ - !)eld In conjunction with the
annual Rutland July 4th

••

at y

GDC bud_g et plight
outlined this week

ELECTRONIC
IGNITION
MODULES

Acting I, the llrst French Art
Colony offering In Its new dramat•
tcs · program. will be taught by
Kaihy Spencer on Mondays, Wed·
nesdays, and Fridays from July Sto
.
July 26.
Classes wlll .be taught atRlverby,
!lOme of the French Art Colony, 530
First Ave., Gallipolis.
The nine sessions are set to run
troin 2-4 p.m. and will cover such
theatrical basics as stage position·
tog, .Improvisation. movement, vo·
Ice ·and auditioning techniques.
'ftie course is open to students In
gradPs seven through 12. Preregls·
tratlon will beglri on July 15, 1·5 p.m.
In j\&lt;'rson at the French Art Colony,
or by phone. 446-3834. A maximum
of 10 students w!ll be accepted upon
payment of the $35 tuition fee .
Ms. Spencer, a former English
teacher and forpnslcs coach In
Gallla and Mason Counties, holds
an :under!cl"aduate Sprech/ Theatre
degree from Marshall Unlversi~.
where she will rE.&gt;Celve her Master s
degree this July.
·Active In college and community
t~atre. she has PE.&gt;rformed with
many ar('a theatrical organizations
In :addition to founding both the
Pomt Plmsant Junior High and
KygE.&gt;r Creek High School competltl~e :speaklng teams.

•

are .

FAC drama
classes
'

•

By BOB HOEn.JCJI
chaele Mowery, English, and Mike
Scnlfllel staff Writer
Wilfong, mathematics. The
Teachers for , a summer school . ~limr11er program wUJ· be funded
program being offered at Me!j!S
through the Meigs County JuvenUe
High School this year were emCouh which secured money through
ployed ,Thursday night wh~n the
the Ohio Youth Program and wtll be
Meigs Local School District Board
free of cost to the district.
of Educ!ltlon met in regular ~ss!on.
The board authorized treasiU'er
Employed for the program were
Jane Wagner toadvertlseforbldson
Mike Gerlach, social studies; Ml(Continued on page 10)

•

.

Slory, photo on Page 10

Board hires
·teachers for
summer ·sch

40°/o

CHESTER - Meigs County Fish
anct Game's annual !(!d's Fishing .
O,ri!Y for ¢1itl!lrenag~ 1-16, will be .
held ;Saturd&lt;lf• ·g "m1fo 2·p.m:, at
thelr lake, 3'h miles west ofChestett.
Follow the signs. Pole and bait inust
be furnished by participants.

-' pianned ·

A hero's burial

21, 1985

.

·.

Story on Page 4

e

Voi.35. No.4a

•

.

-r------.--------------~~~--~------------~
Meaningless process
Heritage schedule
Letter Pap 2

20°/o

': ;··'

..

•·-

DOes Tournament stories Pap a

"QUALIT'( COSTS LESS''
at PARTS 'PlUS

Brethren Church, Mason, W.Va.,
will hold revival services at 7: 30
p.m. Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
Speakers'will be Rev. Bud Hatfield
and Rev. Ralph Workman. Thl're
will be special singing and the public
Is Invited.

...

Celebrity list grows

---

---

·- ....... ·-··· ---- - - ...... - ....___

~

on

CHESTER- Shade Rlwr Lodge service.
at Chester will meet In special
session Saturday, 7:30 p.m., with Services changed
work In the master mason qegree.
POMEROY - Wednesday and
Sunday evening services at PomeRUTI.AND - Rutland Bowhun· roy Wesleyan Holiness Church will
ter's Assoclatlc;m win conduct a free not be held this week so that church
certified National Bowhunter's Ed· · member's may a trend camp meet·
ucatlon Program Saturday, begin· lng at Morristown, Ohio. Sunday
ning at 9 a.m., at the clubhouse. To School will be held Sultday morning
pre-register call R.T. Stewart. as usual.
742-3000, or Sandra Baer, 992-5138.
Swlmmlngle!lSORS
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - New
RED BUSH - Services wUI be
held at the Red Brush Church of Haven Pool is offering Red Cross
Christ at7 p.m. Saturday. Therewill swimming lessons, instructed by
be morning worship at9: :JJa.m.and Mary Caroline Wiley, starting
evening services Sunday at 6. Monday and continuing Monday,
Denver HUiofFoster, W.Va., wtllbe Wednesday and Friday for two
speaker.
weeks ..
The fE.&gt;e for le ssons wtll be $20 and
those Interested may register at the
SUNDAY
POMEROY - PomE.&gt; roy Volun· pool anytime this wE.&gt;ek, noon to 5
leer Fire Department will hold a p.m., or Saturday morntng,10 a.m.
chicken barbecue Sunday at the fire to noon.
Morning classes will include
station, Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
'Dinner wUIIntlUde a hall chicken, intermediate · and advanced be· ·
baked beans, colE&gt; slaw, and a ron. ginner classes from 9-10 a.m.;
SeJVing wUl begin at 11 a.m.
beginnE&gt;r classes for seven to 10 year
olds from 1()-11 a.m.; and beginner
BRADFORD- Bradford Church classes for chldren ages four, five
of Christ wUI hold Bible School and six from 11 a.m. to noon.
closing exercises Sunday evening,
Evening classes will start at 5
7:30p.m., at the church.
p.m. with a tiny tot class unt!l5: :JJ
p.m. for youngsters birth to four
POMEROY - Descendants of years accompanied by an adult; an
Eliza and Ed Hayman w!U hold a excerclse class wlU be offered from
reunion at Forked Run State Park 5: 3().6: :JJp.m .; and adult swtmmlng
on Sunday. A basket lunch will be for beginners and advanced will be
served ·at noon. All friends and offered from 6:.30-7: :JJ p.m.
For more information call the
relatives are invited to auend.
FamUles are asked to take a pool at 882·3611 or Mrs. Wiley at
covered dish and their own table 882-2318.

MASON, W.Va.- Thl' Christian

-.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UPI)- Juana over a two· year period In lliegal activities took plaa • betw('('n
After two days of deUberatlon, a Mason County.
the sprtng ofl9Kiand lhe summProf
federal grand jury In ChariPston has
·Roy Elmer, 46, of Sap Sucke1· 1984, near the towns of Lron and
returned two lndlctm{'nts.
Creek, Mason County; Dennis Clifton In Mason County.
Federal prosecutors. however, Butcher, 32, andCharlesWalker,34.
Elmer Is named In all fou r count s
are withholding infonna tion a bout both of Middleport, are accused of ofthe thret&gt;-pagc lndlctmmt.lncludone of the chai'ges until . the
growtng and cultivating marijuana lng Oil(" thnt charges him and
defendant can betaken intQcusiody. planls and possE.&gt;Sslng and distrlbut· ··'Butcher with cultiva ting ,'l.JOti
The second Indictment chargE'S
lngmarijuana.
marijuana plant s In a six-month
three !Jlen .with cuiUvatlng marl- · .The indictment charges that the
(Continucxl on page ltl i

Israeli warplanes fly pver Beirut; crisis e~ters 8th day

BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) ~
Suspected Israeli warplanes flew
overBeiruta!rporttoday, witnesses
said, as 40 American host~ · .
Wlinting only to "get out ·a~ here'~ '
, spent an eighth day flUarded by
ShUte Moslems demanding a mass

•

prlsonet release by Israel.
Witnesses near the airport said
two jets, belleved to be Israeli
reconnaissance planes, broke the
80Uild barrier In a Slngle pass over
the airport.
They said the fighters banked iow
\

.

.

over the coastline on a ntght path
that took them south toward Israel.
No anti-aircraft fire was reported.
. The reported teconnalssancemls·
slon came a day after mtlltlamen ot
the Shiite movement called ArnalArablc for hope- allowed the world

.

a brief glimpse cit five of the 40
hostages from a hijacked 1WA jet
during a chaotlc.news conference at
Beirut airport.
Arnal flUM'Ien, one Shaking a
pistol in the air, angrily took the
captives out ct the room when a wild

shoving match broke out among the
estimated 150 Journalists on hand.
The Americans were brought back
15 minutes later and began speaking
after a correspondent apologized for
the melee.
"! want all of the cquntrles

•

Involved here lohem·ourplm," said
Allyn B. Conw~ll . .19, of Houston ,
explaining the hostages had named
him a spokesman . "I want them to
hear our prayers. Le i's gE.&gt;t out of
here."
.....
j

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