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The economy••• Page 2

~

•

~ WINTHROP®
•

bv Dick Cavalli
PERHAPS I

FOR THE. BENEFIT
OF ANY
NEWCOMERSiD

SHOULD
INTRODUCE
MYSELF.

OWR TowN ...

MY NAME IS FOSTER
NORMAN, AND r
AM HIN5DALES FIRST
ASTRONAUT.

By the Bend ......... Pages5, 6

Classllleds ........ Pages&amp;, 7, 8
!I Comics-TV .............. Page 9
Deaths ................... Page 10
I

Editorials ................ Page 2
Sports .... ............ Pages 3, 4,

Clear lonlghl. Low M-410.
Winds llghland variable. Sunny
Tueliday. 10gb~. Chaoce or
rain near zero
toolght
and 1\lesday.

~I

...,..,....t

I

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I

.;
I

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'

17 \

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e

Vol.34 , No.5 1
Copyrighted 1914

' Heritage Day scenes•.. Page 5
1-S-o-il- u._n_i_t -p-la_c_e_s_s~cond .•• Page
10

•

at y

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio , Monday , June 25 , 1984

I Section . 10 Paglts
25 Cen t'
A Multimedia lnt Newspaper

Tax writers OK $61 billion decision
HIN5DALE15
FIRST ANDONL.Y
ASTRONAUT.

HINSDALES
FIRS1i0NLY

AND L-AST
ASTRONAUT.

J

l'lO~:

,,. Nl /1. ln1

On the spending side, the compromise calls for
nearly $8 billion In Medicare spending cuts over the
next three years- including a premiwn increase for
most recipients- but loosens welfare regulations and
provldPS n...., Medica id coverage for some poor
women and children.
The full House and Senate now must vote on the
eonferees' agreement.
It was tlle most significant congressional action so
far to resolve differences between a House-passed
$182.4 billion deficit-reduction plan and a $140.1 billion
package supported by President Reagan and passed
by tlle Senate.
Congressional lead ers want to finish w ork on the

issue by the end of the week. when the House and
Senate begin a three-week recess for the Fourth of
July and the Democratic National Convention. It
generally is acknowledged that after the break.
Democrats and Republicans will be more intent on
pa rtisan arguments for the fall preside ntial and
congress ional elections than on legisIa t ion .
It was 5: 17 a.m . Saturday when the tax writers
wrapped up three weeks of bickering and negotia tion
over 282 differences between tax measures passed by
the House and Senate. That final non-stop round of
private and public bargaining had begun at R: 30 a.m .
the pf(&gt;vious m orning.
Throughout, the House Ways and Means C'onunit ·

tE'P room. site of tlw public bargaining, was packed
with hundreds of lobbyists. rPOecting the fact that the
bill was composed mostly of changes in ex is ling taxes
that primarily affect businesses, ta x shelter s and
some comp licated tax accounting practices.
"In every swing, somebody wins and somebody
loses. I hope you all were winner s out there," Rep.
Dan RDstenkowskJ , D·lll , chairman of the Ways and
Means CommJttee. said at the close of the session
Among the winners were the tobacco indust r:v and
cigarett e smokers. The feder al tax of 1b cents \X'l'
pack will drop. as previously seheduled. to 8 cent s
after Sept. :JO, 1985. The m nferf'f'S rPjPCted a
House-passed proposal tha i wou ld have let the ta x
drop only to 12 cent s.

Heritage Weekend
•
success In Meigs

0·24

MR. MEN™and LITTLE MISS™

by Hargreaves and Sellers
...)J

WP

(
SUNDAY
DRIVERS!!

)

(

WASHINGTON lAP) Congress' plan to
complete work tllis week on a "down payment" to
trim federal budget deficits got a boost over tlle
weekend from House and Senate tax writers who
approved a compromi.5e package of nearly ~1 billion
In tax Increases and domestic spending cu ts.
The measure extends an existing 3 perl-ent excise
tax on telephone use, Increases the liquor tax about 36
cents on an 86-proof flfth of liquor, r aises the diesel
fuel tax by 6 cents to 15 cents a gallon. cuts the
one-year holding period on capital gains In half.
reduces tax write-offs for real estate Investors and
limits the authority of states to issue tax-exempt
Industrial development bonds.

_)

Heritage Weekend proved to bE' a
success with 900 \X'rsons touring
Adventure Galley II on Saturday.
and 300 people visiting the Meigs
County Musewn on Sunday.
The Oalboat was well received as
was the musical group " Sweet
Mountain Sound".
Vaughan Wendl;md, owner of the
flatboat . Adventure Galley II. In an
inte!"iew commented that 8.~
people have toured the boat since
they left Pittsburgh June 7.
Wendland stated that West Virgi ·
nia Gov. Jay Rockl'feller vislft'd the
boat and issued a procloma lion on
June 19. Wendland said that
Rockefeller was not able to tour the
inside of the boat due to his height six foot six Inches tall .
.
At Ravenswood 1,040 people
toured the boat in lour hours and 400
toured the boat when it was at
Racine Friday night .
Wendland salid they were on their
way to New Orleans. adding the boat
wUI bE' donated to the citizens of
Cincinnati for their Bicen ten nial.
"We have had no problems"
Wendland rommented. " I have
dedicated the Adventure Galley lito
Virginia Diggs who died in Sep·
!ember. 1983. The couple was
married July 9. and she diPd in
September.

"She was my inspiration, she
encouraged me to completl' my
project, Adventure Galley II . She
was a very positive and inspira·
tiona! person" said Wendland.
A crowd pleaser was the musical
group "Sweet M ountain Sound."
Making up the group we[(&gt; Jennifer
Shcets. Roger and Mary Gilmore
and Tim Glaze.
Highlighting the w eekend on
Sunday was the visit to the Meigs
County Museum.
Three hundred persons visited the
Museum on Sunday. Assisting at the
Museum. along with Mrs. C.E .
Blakeslee were Frances Goeglein,
E leanor Sm ith, Helen Smi th, Mar·
garet Parker, Karen Werry. Pauline Atklns, Gloria Riggs, Gamet
El"ine. E mma Ashley, Susan
Oliver, Patty Parker. Norma New land, Vada H azelton and Sherrie
Han .
In charge of parking cars were
Leland Parker and Fred Goeglein
and the Rev . William Middleswarth
was in carge of the mini theatre .
Refreshments were served by
Ohio Rolling Hills Dairy Goat Club.
Heritage weekend was sponsored
by the Pomeroy Area Chamber of
Commerce and Meigs County

Pioneer and His torical Soc iety.

('

D

,

one of the hostPSSeS. TI1e room was designed hy F'rt-d and &amp;••·!&lt;)· Baloy.

TOOL ROOM - i\ new addition to the MIL"'""' i' the "tool room."
Pictured holding an old·fashioned tool is Garnet Ervine, who served as

UMW president, Collins discuss issues
PAINl HliN ( ANAOA

~:· SPEEDWALKER

PRIVATE EYE,

Cris Hammond

I'll£ BVILT UP QUI

.SUBMARINES COST
m£ MOST, BUT YOU
GOTTA 1-fltVc 'EM.

A FORI110A8l£

NAVY

f.IU~£ ...

0

By MARK R. CIIElLGREN
Associated Press Writer
FRANKFORT. K y. I API - Go\·.
Martha Layne Collins and Umted
Mine Workers President Richard
Trumka said their m eeting today
centered on mulual areas of
interest. not potential problems.
"We want to try to head off
problems that may bE' facing the
coa l indu stry," Trumka sa id during
a brief newsronferenceon the steps
of the Governor's Mansion after
what Mrs. Collins ca lled "a working
breakfast. "
Tnunka said the m('('tmg was
"somewhat historic. "

CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. !API
-The shunle Discovery's ba ck-up
compu ter "hung up" today, forcing
1'\ ASA to scrub the ship's debut
launch just minutes before sche·
duled liftoff. The problem was
reminiscent of one which grounded
th~fi rst space shut tie for two days in

1981.

Bt!T THEY'RE THERE.

" The stage is set lor us tobeablc to
an ·ive at an agre&lt;:'mcnt beforv the
Oct. 1 deadline." Trumka said .
Trumka said it was important for
th~ union to establis h a n on-going
relationship wi th government lead·
crs in Kentucky ra ther than waitinr:
until problems with the industry
surfaC&lt;', such as during a sl rikP .
Mrs. Collins and I he• union l~adcr
agrl'f'd thPre arr enough problems
in the coal indu stry now.
The govrrnor has mad(' SC'VC'ral
SJX"'ChPs in recent weeks bemoan ·
ing the la ck of a national enrrgy
policy. PS)X'Cially one thai relics

hcm·ily on coal. and Trumka e&lt;: hOC'd

thoSC' st•nt iments .
The mcet lng. which included
most of the governor's cabinet and
most of the UMW IPaders from
KC'ntucky. included suc h topics as
synl he tic fuels and acid r ain. both of
w hich cou ld hav('a major impact on
the coa l industry.
KPntuek.v. whil'h producPs marC'
coal than a n~' othPr staff' in the
nation. has "bout .'l5.rro UMW
minf'rs \\'Orking a t abJ ut 140 min&lt;'S.
Trumka was to mee t with
indi,·idual members of the cabinet

during a S('riC's of mN'tings la ter
todav.

NASA scrubs launch of shuttle Discovery

0

YOU CAN'T St£ fl./EM,

"This is the first time the govemor
has opened the sta te and the cabinet
to the United Minl' Workprs this
fully," Trumka said .
One subject tha t was not dis·
cussed in great detail was the
possibility of a st rikc by union
miners this fall .
The contract between the UMW
and the Bitwninous Coa l Operators
Association. which covrrs most of
the union·mined coa l in thr nat ion.
expires on Sept. 30.
Though he declined to discuss the
negotiations in detail. Trurnka said
those talks are going well.

IT ALL COSTS MONEY.
TIIOVGH... LOTS OF
IT!

BUT IT MIIK£5 BATHING
II TRUlY /1£/ININGFUL
eXP!RIENCE FOR ME.

I JUST WISH
I COUlD llFFORD
SOfiP.

Gallia woman
dies in fall
A Ga !U a County woman diPd
Sunday at Saint M ary' s Hospital in
Huntington, W.Va., following a fall
Thursday ni(:ht at Gallia RDI!er
MU!s, 81 Grape St.
Youama Lambert, 2l . Ewlngton.
was fatally Injured after reportedly
falling approximat~ly ~lfeet from a
catwalk and striking her head on a
concrete surface at 10 p .m .
Thursday .
Lambert was transferred to Saint
Mary's after receiving treatment at
Holzer Medical Center.
Funeral services wlll be 11 a.m.
Wednesday at McCoy-M oore Fun·
Pral HomP. Vinton.

"We will snub for the day." said
spokesman Mark HPss at launch
cont rol.
A six-person crew was long-since

aboard thC' ship when thC' delay was
announced Among them , Amrri ·
ca's Sf'Cond space woman and an
industry engineer whose "weight ·
IC'Ss" manufacturing process w ill
produce test quantities of a myster y
drug.
The m alfunction cropped up

I

about half-an -hour bf'fore thP sche·
duiPd launch llme of R: 4.1 a.m. EDT
and NASA eng-ineer s attempt('() to
find a solulion. With ninl' minutf's
before schedu led launch . the coun t
down clock did not pick up and "
delay w as announced.
The launch w as set back unt t1
TUesday at the ea rUrst. The 1981
delay w as for 4R hours and
pi'('('('E'()Pd the ship Columbia's

dram at ie rna idC'n voy agf' .

Thr cou ntd own progressed
smoothl y ow rnight and into the
tf'rrninal countdown pha se. But

whC'n tht'

CJ1'W

Ohio highways kill II

Eleven people died In Ohio traffic
accidents over the weekend. includ·
lng four pedestrians, two motorcy·
cle riders and a bicyclist. according
to the Highway Patrol. The dead
are:
BOWLING GREEN - Timotlly
E. Hayes. 26, of Toledo, In a
motorcycle accident on U.S. 20 in
Wood County Sunday.
WILMINGTON - Kimberly L.
Murphy. 19. of Dayton, in a
motorcycle accident on Ohio 741 in
Warren CDunty Sunday.
ST . CI..AIRSVlLLE - Joseph W.
Wheeler. 19, of Shadyside. a

pedestrian struck by a car on a
Belmont County Road Sunday.
MADISON -JackieW . Mace. 22.
Madison, a pedestrian st ruck by a
car on a county road in l.ake County
Sunday
CLEVELAND - Grace Pilozo.
24, Cleveland, In a one-car accident
In l::leveland Saturday.
EUCLID - Noel L . Clark. 28. ol
Cleveland, in a one-car accident on
I -~ In Euclld Saturday.
BELLEVUE- David R. Ruffing,
6, struck by a car whlle tiding a
bicycle on a city street Saturday.

switchPd data from

thf'ir four to a backup machinl'.
launch control noli('('() an unex ·
plained dispa rity.
"The backup ni ght s.vs tem appar·
en II.'· has stopped , hu ng-up," said
Hess The backup system w ould
take over fli ght controls if all four of
the shuttle's primary computers
failed.

I

USBON - Raymond L. J('.llell .
72, in a one-car accident on Ohio 344
in Colwnbiana County Saturday.
INDEPENDENCE Phyllls
Seagro, 71. a pedesOian struck by a
car w hJie crossing a city street.
MANSFIE;.J)- Dale L . Beaver.
42. Ca tawissa. Pa. , passenger In a
truck which collided with another
truck on lntersta te 71 in Richland
County Saturday .
MASSILLON -Jane D . Gardner.
Jl, Hartville, pedestrian struck by a
car on Ohio 43 in St ark County

Frtday.

i\'1'11RED IN OLD F i\SffiONED dn.."'' Saturday was Shirlt·.v
Misner. She is pictured as she lis!Rned to th1• sounds of "Sw('{&gt;( Mountain
Sound" as the group entertained Satunlay on thC' stag&lt;' on tlw IIPJl&lt;"
Pomeroy Parking lot. See additional pltow- on pag•• 5.

More banks raise prime rate
NEW YORK ( i\P) - Leading banks today raist-d the prinw
lending rate by one-half of a percentage point to 13 percent, It•
highest level since October 1982 and the lounh jump In lour monll".
Analysts said they expected mOl'(' Increases.
"We're going to see several more before this year is over," said
Raymond Stone, senior money-market economist at Merrill Lynch
&amp; Co. "I would guess we'd see another one this swruncr, w 13.5
pe~nt.''

The move to a 13 percent prime was led by First National Bank of
Chicago, tlle nation's elghth·largesl bank. It was quickly followed hy
No. 2 ClUbank and No. 6 Chemical Bank, hoth In New York, No. i
Conlinental DUnols Nadonal Bank &amp; Trust In Chicago and No. 13
1\laline Midland Bank in Buffalo, N.Y.

�Monday, June 25, 1984

Commenta•"Y
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF THE

~IEIGS-MASON

AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB , JR .
~ews Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Pre~, Inland Daily Press Association and th e .1\m ertcan ~f'wspaper Publisher .4.s80clatlon .
LEiTERS OF OPI!"'iiOJ\ a r &lt;' Wf'lc·o med . Tht')' should bt' less lhan J00 'A"ord.'!
lonJil . All let tPrs arf" sub) ec· l to ed iUnx and must be signed with name. addreu and
t e lt"phont&gt; number . 'Ou um;ig n tc. IPUers wUI h*' publis hed Lett*'rs 'lhould ht&gt; In
good tll..•dP . addn"ll!&gt;lng i.-'''"uc&gt;S. not pt&gt;rsonalltll'fli .

George Gilder makes the point
(in the current issue of National
Re\oewl that a problem Ronald
Reagan suffers from is that he does
not really know how most persua sive l y to proclaim his own
accomplishments.
When asked, fo r instanC€'. how he
ex plains the rE&gt;port of the congr&lt;'Ssional st udv group that repor ted
that the A merican earner who
made $10.&lt;XXJ In 1982 stands. under
Reagan ·s policies. to lose $300 in
tota l income whilE' the American
who E&gt;arns $80,0)) stands to gain
$8.&lt;XXJ. the best Mr. Reagan was
ablP to come up wit h was two
points. The first of them was that
the reduced infiallno under Reaga -

Monday, June 25, 1984

nomics helped poor people by mon•
than the congressional figure calcu lated that they were hurt . The
Sffond, that Inasmuch as tax
reductions had been proportional, It
follows that the taxpayer who pays.
say, 50 percent, is going to profit
more than the taxpa yer who pays,
let us say, 10 percent .
All of thi s Is true. but much. much
less than the whole picture. The
whole picture involves apparent
paradoxes, and it Is the point of Mr.
Gilder's exercise that Republican
spokesmen had bett er get around to
masteri ng theSi' if tbey want to pay
cre dit t o th eir own
accomplishments .
For ins1ance. Question: Can It be

that a taxpayer at one and the same
time a) can pay a lesser rate of
taxes, and bl pay more taxes?
Next question: Can it be that a
low-Income earner can profit from
a con1 extual situation tn which he is
also deprived of $300 of federal
benefit s?
Let us ta ke li rst Mr. - oh. call
him Dudley, that sounds sort of
rich . Mr. Dudley. under Carter.
wa s paying 70 percent on unearned
Income and 50 percent on earned
income. At the end of 1!8!, Carter's
last year. he paid a tax of $100,&lt;XXJ.
Along comes Reagan. and the
first thing that happens (it would be
nice to give Mr. Reagan the credit
for this. but in fa ct It belongs to

is advised to move Into entrepre-

Economy is
still growing
Assertions that the economy is cooling must be considered in a larger
perspective that includes three important things:
1. The economy m ay bt• coo lin~. but it isn' t going int o a deep freeze.
2. A cool-down isn't necessarily a bad thing.
3. Any time an &lt;'C'Onomy is hot you' U find d=ns of economists talking
about the inevitable cooling off. Som e of them have been talking that way
for a year.
The fact Is that by most measures the economy Is still growing, and by
most estimates it will grow for several more months at least.
Estimates of the gross national product. the broadest measure of
economic activity. ran ge from m ere fractions to 5 percent for the
A pril-M ay-June quarter. A cooling to be sure. since ftrst-quarter growth
was 8.8 percent.
'fhat 8.8 percent surprised a lot of people. including those people in the
White House and the Federal Reserve who tend to think they run the
ecrinomy by their policies. It was a very hot fi~re.
tt fright ened a lot of those ubiquitous "economic observers" too. because
it suggested that perhaps the economic expansion was moving too fast sort of like the mixed feelmgs of a parent who sees a child gro"ing into a
new pair of shoes before the budget can accommodate the extra expense
involved.
A boom overloads the economy . It puts demands on the economic
machinery tha t simply cannot be met. It burns out lite bearings, and the
proof of that is smoke, or as some call it , inflation.
To retrea t from that condition tsn't always bad . A slower ra te of growth
gives the economy time to build the capaci ty to service the demand- and
do so without straining and creating inflation.
Some might even con tend that at this periud in the current economy a
cooling off is as welcome as a ('()id frOnt intruding Into a w eek-long seige of
hot, sult ry. debilitating weathPr.
You may be sure that when the econom y is moving along at a hefty pace
tltere will be those who feel it Is their duty lo remind you that it cannot last .
Ronald Reagan, for one, has heard his fill of it.
There Is a certain inev itability to such warnings. and it arises from the
nature of the econoMic forecasting business.
There is, that is to say. no gt"l'a t merit in merely telling customers that
('()ndltions Will stay the same Ca lling the turn wtns the gold sta rs, and
every econonnl c forecaster tries to get them.
In truth, not m any do succeed in getting those stars, although some claim
to have as man y on their foreheads as football players have on their
helmets. Often. though. the documenta tion is not nearly as clear as the
claim itself.
Some of their number. the economists at Provident 1\ational Bank in
Philadelphia . even suggest that those now claiming to see a cool-down on
the horizon should be looking back over their shoulders instead.
The " long predicted. much awaited" cooling off. they say. "has not only
anived. it has been with us for many months."
According to thPm. growth In rPal fin al sales- gru&lt;;s national product.
mtnus production t hat ended up as inventory- peaked at6.8 percent in the
second quart er of 19&amp;3 "and has slowed in evt'ry subsequent quarter."

government.
The gross fl~res are that the top
ea rners In America. defined as
thoSP who m ake $SO.&lt;XXJ per year or
more, are paying more taxps than
they had patd at any time during the
past 11 years.
Meanwhile Mr. O'Rourke.
shall we ca ll him ? - has lost three
percent of his $10.&lt;XXJ Income In
reduced federa l benetlts of one kind
or anothPr . But the unifonn tax
reduction means that If he Increases his earnings by $l,&lt;XXJ, he
will pay not an extra 25 percent of
his ea rnings in taxes, but an Pxtra
fivp per cent . Under thf' circumstan ·
ces. hP m akes a ff'w tactical

calculations. These may indicate
that he will take on an ext r a job.
which beforr he d('('llned to take.
calcula ting tha t it was hardly worth
his whilr. given the higher taxf'S
he'd have to pay. Or that he will

savC' more, givrn that inflation is
red uced and that tax on savings Is
a ls o rrrlut•Pd .

Poverty' brutality stalk _ _ _ _J_ac_k_An_de_.rso_n
WASII!NGTON Bangkok' s
nativE&gt; name, Krung Thep, means
" cit y· of .:Jngels.' " But t he tragic
truth is that the capital of Tha iland
is now a city of fallen angt'ls. It has
most of the count ry's 400.1'00 to
7!().(1Jl prostitutes .
On a r (l('cnt trip to Thaila nd , my
associat E&gt; Da lf' Van Aft a learn0d the
scopt:~ of t he Thai v i C"l' problem even
before he got therP. I n Tokyo. he
was told tho! morr than a million
.J a panPSl' mf'n Pac h vca r take off on
group junkpts lo T aipei. SeouL
Manila and c sp('&lt;' iall\ Bangkok.
T hf' main all r action in th PSf'
formrrl y .Japanrsf' ·Occupif'd cit ies
is prost itutes

Thf' "huy· ·glrl tnurs"' infuriatf'
and Th ai wom(' n 's
~roup~ . In To k ~'o . fnr Pxamplr. the
Wornpn 's Chrbtian TempPranCf'
Union pi ckrt~ .Japan Air l.inPs and

.Japan('SC'

Today

•

In

history

Today is MondaY . .June 25. the !lit h dav of 1 ~ . There arc IHY da ys left in
the yea r
Today' s hi~hlight in histo1y :
On .lun!' 2!\. I ~:J I . war broke out'" :\orth Korean fOt"C!'S invaded South
Korea.
On this date:
!Jt 1788, !he commonwea lth of \'irginia ratified the U .S. Constitution.
In 1876. (;.•n. Gmrgr• Custpr\ fmn•s WPI1' wiped out by the Sioux and
Cheyenne Indians in th e Battle of the Litt le Big Horn in Montana.
In 192i. in !'Jf'W York. architf'('t Stanforrt 1Nhitc was shor to death atop the
old Madison Square G~rden - which he had dr-signed - by Harry Thaw.
the jealous husband of actr&lt;'ss E\·cly n Nrsbit , w ho was White's mistress.
!Jt 1942. the British air force staged a t housand-bomb raid on Bremen,
Germany. during World War II.
In 1962. lh!' U.S. Supremo· Court ruled tha t the usc of an official ,
oon-denominational pray.H· in Nf'V..· York stall' pubUc schools was
unconsUtutional
Ten years ago: PrPsidf'nl Richard M . !\Lxon a rrivf'd in Brussels to confer
with Western Europmn l&lt; ·a df'rs.
Five years ago: 1\lexandpr Haig. thl'n -supr&lt;'mc commander of NATO
forces. narrowly Pscap&lt;-.::1 an attempt on his life w hen a bomboxplodedon a
bridge as he wa s bdng driven to work in Flelgium.
One year ago : ProtPSters hurled stones at V1cc Pres ident George Bush's
car during his v isit to WNt Ccrmany. The prott'stcrs opposed the planned
deployment of missile,; in F.urope.
Today' s birthdays: Broadway director George Abbott is ':fl. Movie
director Sidney Lumf't is 60. Actr!'ss Jutl(' Lockhart is 59 . Basketball
Hall-of-Farner Willis Reed is 42 . Sing&lt;'r Ca rty Si mon Is .19 Sportscaster
Phyllis George Brown is .'\'i.

Letters to the editor
Speaks up for Meigs board ...
I think It 's high-time somrone
from the silent m ajorit y speaks in
defense of the Meigs Local Board of
Education. They have recently
been ma ligned. Insul ted. demeaned. and In at least onP case.
threatened. I don't know Miss
Goodnlte. nor do I bear her any
malice. The recent past has shown
her to be a master at orga ni zation.
and I respec t that ability . H owever.
that is not the Issue.
The members of the School
Board wet'f' elected to govern our
educational system . Their deci sions cannot please all the people all

•

the lime. but they must nevert heIE'Ss makE' deci sions based upon
fa cts and problems t hat we as
non-administrators may not be
aware of. They are not req uired.
nor thould they be. to m ake public
the reasons for their actions .
I respect the demonstration of the
Board members having the courage of t heir convictions, and II they
choose to run aga in, (and who
would want to - alter all the
har assment?!. I think the voters
wtil show that the r ea l majority is
behind them .
Sincerely. - Bob Gilmore.

•

distributes pamphl ets deploring
wha t th e wo m en cal l "s f'x

imperialis m .··
T hai women are organizi ng the
fight for the rights of women tn the
red-light districts. During my associate's v isit to Bangkok, the Thai
governme nt sponsored a seminar
on the prostitution problem . Onr
group. Friends of Women. announced a campaign to "fr('('
women slaves.··
In fa ct, the pros titutes them ·
sPives ha ve formed t heir own
organiza tion. Thail and Night Girls'
Right s Pm1&lt;-ctlon Group.
T he mobilization against v ie-r•
was cata t.vze-d b~· a tragic accident
on a r&lt;'Sort island in southC'rn
Thai land . where five young prostitutes died in a hotel fire Reports
rha r lhC' g irl s were chainc&gt;d to tx&gt;d s

were denied by local officials. but

they did acknowledge that the
wom f' n had bN&gt;n locked in their
rooms to prPvent escapt:1 •
More than half th&lt;' women who
wind up in the eitles of Bangkok
come from the hill tribes of Chiang
Mai prov ince in nort hwes tern
Thailand. Many are sold by their
pove11y-strkken pa rPnls for as
little as $.'i0. And many arc lured
Into prostitution h y Thai officials .
who provide them with tickets to
Bangkok and promise them legiti mat e jobs that never m ateria lizf'.
Th!' Ba ngkok Posl recentl y pub"
lished an ail-too-familiar story of a
young girl who was sold bv her
father for $W. She w as put to ~&lt;·o rk
In a brothel run by a high-ranking
police official's \&gt;i f e. who lived next
door in a lu xurious homf'.

A visitor to her barr ed . locked
room saw that the girl wa s sick , and
bought her freedom for " large
sum . The bo:-ncfaetor made sure the
girl got prorx-r hospit al trPa tment .
then paid hrr fare back home. Her
fathpr bea t her up and sold her to
another procurer
Though loca l police corruption Is
a Sf'rious problem. Thai law
enforcement offirla ls say the al ·
m~t Dickensian durati on of thElegal procf'ss is the greatest
de-tPr r enl to proSC'Cu1ion. Jt takes
aOOut a yea r to bring a vicP
operator to justic£' . and th eN' are
many pitfall s alon g th&lt;' way. If
v.rHnessPs fail to answer lhl""ff"
su mmorl.S('s to IC'st ify, for example.
the case may be dlsmisst&gt;d and the
complaining policl' offict'r Investi gated for fa ilur&lt;' to produce the
\\!11 n C'SSC'S.

Art Of SUIDIDetry _________A_r_t_Bu_c_hwa_ld
President Reaga n couldn't say il
out loud at hi s press conference. but
hr hinted that onr of the problems
vvi th having a s ummit conferPnc£'
v.i th his count('rpart in l h£' SoviC't
U nion is !hat hP doC'sn't know wh o if
is.
.Jus1 b('forP thr l'Onfrn'nce he
rrcrivf'd a hrirfing fro m Soviet
rxrx-rt s tn t hr CI A and State
Df&gt;partmPnl
"Chf'rnrnko b sick." said onC'
r .-..:.pf'rt ' "ThP ~wf'r is shifting to
1\ndn..•i Cro m yko and Dc'fensc
Min istr r Usti nov .··
""Thpn I ought to m('('f v.rith
thrm." lhC' prf'sidc nt sa id .
" If you do. you wi ll offt:-nd Grigori
Romano'' of thP Commu nist Party
in Leningrad. who now s('f'ms to be
runnin g thr KGB We're not sure if
he's wit h the Chrrnenko group or
against lh&lt;'m . Bul I'd give him a Sf't
of cufflinks. jus t in caS('."
"Wf'll. how do I make any
progress with I he SoviP!s If ChernPnko isn· r in c harg£'?" the presi dent asked .
" Wr didn't say hr wasn't in
charge l·(p's a wily old goat and has
som&lt;' Young Turks In the Polltboro
who CJnn o l be ignored bPrause a nv
one of thPm coulrt he Chernenko:s
hf'ir apparrnt ."
"Are they hard-liners?"
"Some are and some aren' t.
Mikhail Gorba chev is one of the
favorites for the job If Chernenko
dies. He's 52 . so he'll be around for a
long time. I'd also give him
cufflinks to play It safe. But do it
quietly. If the anti-Chernenko
erowd gets wind of it. they'll use It
against him II he goes lor the
leadership."
"How can I remember all these
people if I go to a summit ? I can't
even remember the names of the
m em bers In my own Cabinet. "

" Here arc som" photogra phs
taken of Chrrnenko and !he other
Sov1et leaders at the last May Day
parade. Wr- ' ve put their nam es
underneath thPm so you'll know
who is who.''
Th&lt;' president studiPd the photogr aphs. "Thev all look alike to me."
"Ca ll everyone 'Comrade' and
you won't ha ve a problem. "
" How ca n I call a Soviet leader
Comrade after wha t I 've sa id about
them?"
" I t"s lik P ca lli ng so m eone
Mistf'r. "
" I don't thi nk it's a good time to
propose a summit m('('ting with tht'
Soviets when we don't know who
we· re dea ling wi th ."
" It couldn't be a better time. Our
int elligence Indicates if you propose
OllP now they wil turn if down nat."
" Why?"
" Flecause If you meet with
Chernenko 11 will acknowledge that
as far as the United States Is
concerned he is In charge. The
anti -Chernenko forces In thr&gt; Kremlin ca n't afford thi s while thf'y'r&lt;'
lining up their support to take over
the power. once Chernenko is stuck
In the Kremlin wall. "
"Chernenko must know this.
What's to prevent him from
accepting my Invitation to a
summit to put his domestic enemies
In their place?''
" The Soviet army wlll never go
lor a summit at this time. and from
what we can learn they have a lot to
say about who meets with Chl'rnenko and who doesn't."
" Then It 's your opinion that I
should announce at the press
conference that I'm willing to m eet
with Chernenkowlthout a prepared
agenda?"
"It will look great In an elec ton
year, particularly since there Is no
I

chance of it taking place. Our
intclligenrr indicates that if you do
this you'll be co-opting one of !he
major issues thp Dem oc rat s plan to
US&lt;' aga inst you in the fall. By taking
a softer lint' on the Sov iets between
now and E lecllon Day you'll stop all
lhC' talk tha t you' rp in transigPnt

about Sovirt -Ame ri ran r£"1 ations.··

" What happens. if in spite of your
int clligencP. thP Soviets agree to go
to a summit with no strings
att ac hf'd ?"
"Then you hav£' not hing to lose
but your culflinks. "

J

"Gosh, Mr. Pr881dent, I don 'I want to talk about
the deficit and Interest rates either, but...

•

'

..

--

OLYMPIC FlAME CROSSES DMDE - PhD Ingles, left, a
Golden, Colo., real estate agent, and Bob Crow with AT&amp;T In Denver
carry the Olympic Iorch to the Continental Divide at the lop ol Berthoud
Pass in Colorado on Sunday. Snowcapped peaks ollhe Rocky Mountains
can be seen In the background. (AP Laserpholo) .

Dwight Stones
back in limelight
By KEN PEI'ERS
AP Sports Writer
LOS ANGELES (API - High
jumper Dwight Stones. dwelling in
the shadows of his sport in n:-cent
times, soared back into promi nence. and a couple of America 's
premier runners wound up second
best as the U.S. Olympic Track and
Field Trials drew lo a dramatic
close.
Stones, an ebullient 30-year-old
who admit s he relishes the timetight. capped a well-planned comeback when he cleared an American
r ecord 7 feet: 8 Inches In the high
jump final Sunday night at the Los
Angei&lt;'S Coliseum.
Meanwhile, Mary Decker and
Steve Scot1, who've dominatPd the
U.S. men' s and women' s 1.-500
m eters. each failed to win their
event s.
Unheralded Ruty Wysocki, with a
time of 4 minutes. 00.18 seconds.
handed Decker her fir st defeat in
four y&lt;'ars. and .Jim Spivey overtook
Scott towtn themen 'sftnal in 3: 36.4.1
During a busy finish to the
eight-day trials at the site of the
upcoming Olympic track and field
competition. Carol Lewis won the
women's long jump at22·7V. to join
her brother, Carl, on the U .S. squad;
Doug Padilla took the men's 5,-00J
melers in I3: 26.34; and Les lie Deniz
won the women' s discus with a
throwof~2- 7.

Stones, the two- time Olympic
bronze medalist. had brazenly
predicted he would bett&lt;:r the
American m ark of7-7''!, set by Tyke
Pearock last year. and. aft&lt;•r
requiring just one a11empt at each of
the lower heights, he cleared the
record height on his second try .
"I had been doing m y under·
ground routine, " said Ston0.;, who
has ('()ffipeted infrequently rc·
cently. "And when I wen t 7·7 (in a
high-jump competit ion he organ ·
ized at nearby Ambassador College
prior to the slart of the Trials !. I
knew I was ready .
"When I came out here.! wanted

to have that look on m y face that the
other guys would know they were
jumping for the other two spots on
the team ... Ithlnkistlll have that old
killer Instinct."
Stones added tltat he did precisely
as he had planned, commenting, "I
didn't want to miss at any of the
lower heights; I didn ' t want my
friends and fannlly who were in the
stands to be biting their nails
wondering whether I w as going to
make the team or not."
Stones. who missed three t imes
after having the bar raised to 7-9';.1.
hadn't Improved his personal best in
the past eight years before he hit the
American record jump. He sa id he
particular ly wanted to do w ell
becau,;e. although he plans to
compete som e after the Games.
" This is it for me."
Doug NonlquL&lt;t. a distant cousin
of Stones and a Washington State
graduate, came up with his best
effort ever to finish second at 7-7.
while Milt Goode gol the thlnl and
final Olympic bert h with a height of
7-5'1.- Peacock, who suffered a slight
foot injury during an early jump.
cleared just 7-3.
Decker. hardly downcast at her
runner-up finish (4: 00.04! , said it
was actually to her benefit. Shew as
considering r unning in both the.J,CXXI
- which she'd already won at the
Trials - and the 1,500 in the
Olympics. but the grueling task of
six races in fivedaysand the setback
made her decide to settle on one of
the ('VeDIS.
"J tlunk I'd be more confused if I
had won. " sa id Decker. who swept
lwo gold medals at the World
Championships last yea r and hadn't
lost a raceslnceTatyana Ka?.anldna
of the Soviet Union beat her in
world-reconl time in the 1,500 in
19!ll. "I have decided that winnlng
one Olympic gold medal would be
much more valuable to tlll' than
winning two silvers.
" I 'll decide after a couple of more
races whic h on&lt;' I'm going to run ."

AP Sports Wrller
The Hubert H. Hwnphrey Metrodome In Minnesota, known as a
homE&gt;-nm house of honurs lor
pitchers, quickly turned Into a
temple of doom for Chicago White
Sox right fielder Harold Baines.
Chicago cruised Into the ninth
Inning Sunday with a 2-0 lead before
theroollellln. Flrst.DaveEngleled
ollwithaslngle.just theTwlns'llfth
hit off Richard Dotson. Wlthoneout,
Tom Brunansky singled.
Tim Teufel then broke his bat
while hitting a sinking line drive to
right that he thought " looked like a
bloop single."
Baines charged the ball, but
watched as It hit in front of him.
ooppedolltheartlllclal tun andover
his head. By the time center fielder
Rudy l..aw tracked the ball down.
Teufel had crossed the plate with a
threE'-nm, lnsldE'-the-park oomer
for a 3-2vlctory.
''I'm hitting first base running as
fast as I could," Teufel recalled as he
narrated the game-winning play.
"Baines Is coming in and Rudy L aw
was far away. I had no Idea where
the ball was, so I justkert running as
h ard as I could and the third-base
coach (Tom Kelly 1kept waving me
on."
Baines had little to say.
" The ball just bounced over my
head." he said.
In other American League
games. Detroit crunched Milwaukee 7-1, Boston beatToronto!&gt;-3 in 10
innings, Kansas City nipped Califor·
nla 3-2. Oakland downed Texas 4-2,
Cleveland blanked Seattle 5-0 and
New York at Baltimore was rained
out.
Teufel, who plays second base for
the Twins, said he ' sseen other weinl
things happen at the Metrodome.
"The ball bounces hard on this
turf. You have to keep the turf in

I

mind here because of the funny way
the ball wlll bounce," he said. "This
place can eat you up, bouncing over
your head just when you think you
can reach it."
Chicago Manager Tony LaRussa
disdained the notion tbat Baines
could have stayed back and safely
played the ball on one bounce.
" You're damned if you do and
damned ifyoudon'V'LaRussa said .
Dotson. 9-4, took thrhard-luckloss
while Ken Schrom, who allowed six
hits in the first three innings but gave
up just one more the r est of theway,
won his first game of the season in
three decisions.
Tigers 7, Brewers I
Jack Monis had missed two
starts because of a hyper-extended
right elbow. But he m ade a stylish
return and conv inced Milwaukee
Manager Rene Lachemann that he
is a natural.
Morris allowed only one hit oVPr
six innings in becoming the major
leagues' first 12-gam&lt;' wmner. The
victory for Morris, 12·3, was thl'
lOOth of his career.
Ed Romero' ssinglewithoneout in
the sixth w as Milwaukee' s only hit
offMonis. The Brewers got two hits
off Aurelio Lop&lt;'Z. who went the final
three innings for his nint h savP.
"When he has everything to·
get her. he might be the best pitcher
in the league." Lachemann s;;id.
Lance Parrish and Ruppert Jon0.i
homered for Detroit . .Jones· thr['('·
run homer overt he r ight · fiC' ld roof a t
Tiger Stadium ca pped a si.Hl.ln
sixth inning.
Red Sox 5, Blue ,Jays 3
Toronto's D.wr Stieb took a nifty
three-hitter and 3-0 lead into the
bottom of the ninth tnmng at
Fenway Park befor e the grf'mlins

arrived .
With one out. Mtkr EaslPr and Bill
Buckner singled. Wilh two out s.
pinch hitter Rick Miller walked and

pinch hitter Reid Nichols banged a
three-run double ofl thP wall In left,
tying the score.
Dwight Evans led off the Boston
lOth with a single agains t reliever
Dennis Lamp. With one out, Evans
stole second and took third on a
passed ball. Tony Armas then w on it
by drilling a 3-2 pitch for his 19th
home run of the season.
Willie Upshaw had a homer. No.
13, and an RBI single for the Blue
Jays.
Indians 5, Mariners 0
Bert Bly Ieven, connlng back
against all odds, showed he still can
pitch and field, too. T he
righ t-hander tu;sed a two-hitter in
SPa11 le and set a m ajor-leaguP
r ecord for putouts in a gam&lt;' with
six.
Bly leven, who under.vent m aj or
elbow surgery in 1~&amp;l and has been
naggPd by injuries since. did not
allow a hit until Jim Presley singled
with one out in th~ fifth . Presley had
been r('CailPd from &lt;lass AAA Salt
Lake City on Sa turday night . Jack
Perconte·s infi&lt;'ld single m the
Pighth was SPalllc's only other hit.
Blylcven. 6-:1. got all six of his
putouts a t first base aftl'r taking
throws from fir!il baSl'man Pat
Tabler. '-lo ot her Clevdand infielder
had an assist .
Andre Thornt on hit hom(&gt; run No
1.1 fur thr• lnd1ans and draw in three
runs.
A's 4,ltangers 2
R~ekc~· Hf'ndrrson and .loc Mor·
gan, norma lly k.nmvn for thf'ir
foot loose exploit s, s t~rred fort hP A's
by swinging homf'-J-un bats.
Morgan smacked a solo homer in
thdirs t innlng. It was his fifth of thl'
season but mort' notably. thc265th of
his car('(&gt;r as a sccond baSC'man.
That pushed M organ past Rogers
Hornsby int o the top spot on the
all -limP list for home runs bv a

sa'Ond baseman.
Two solo home runs by Pete
O'Bri£'n lifted Texas into a 2-2 tie
going in the bot1om of the ninth in
Oakland
But Jim Essian singled with one
out, and after Garry Hancock hit
into a forceou t , Henderson homered
"off Dave Tobik.
Royal,; 3, Angels 2
Dane lorg lifted a sacrifice fly in
the nlnth·inning to break a 2-2 tie as
the Royals were host-busters in
Ca illorrua.
Bud Black, 8-5, held the Angels to
four hit s tlu·ough eight innings and
Dan Quisenbeny pitched the ninth
for his 19th savt•.
Steve Balboni. who homered
r..ice against thr Angels in a victory
Saturday nlght. hit a solo hom~ run
for K ansas Ciry in the fourth .

Scioto Downs
COLUM BUS, Ohio (API- Tups
Fal('()n, ridden by Dave Rankin.
v•on thr• $10.&lt;XXJ third leg of the
Rambling Willie Pacing Ser ies al
Sc ioto Downs Saturday.
Tups Fal('()n rumed t he mile on a
wf't tnck in 2: 002 - o t o~Nin by a neck
over H B Falcon. Tups Falcon paid
$.'HO. $3 and 2.~. while H B Falco o
paid $-1 .40 and$2.20 forsecond . Racy
Rid paid $2.20 to show.
·
The fifth -rare trifecta of 1-4-3 paid
$1,55Rtl:l for a $2 ttckc t.
A crowd of 7,230 bet $o77.24ii.

SERVICE
Dependability
Peace of Mind
IIIItH

1\J;;DLLR ,

F&gt;rrnlled

Weekend sports in brief...
HOCKEY

MONTREAL (AP I -Clarence
Campbell, presldenl of the National
Hockey League for 32 years. died
early Sunday in Montreal General
Hospital at the age of 78.
A lawyer and decorated soldier in
World War II. Campbell was
president of the NHL from 1946 to
1977.
AUTO RACING
DETROIT (API- NetsonPiquet

survived a wild falSC'-~ I art crash to
win the Oetroit Grand PrLx Sund a)'
for his S('('Ond stra ight win .
Piquet. a tv.·o-timl' world cham pion, dmvc his backup BMWpowered Brabham to a II.H:t7-sccond
triumph over E nglish rooki e Mart in
Brundle.
BASKETBALL
SALT L AKE crrY. U tah tAPt F r ank !Ayden. who Par liC'r v.:us

seil'ctc-.::1 as the 1\a tional Raskrtball
Association's Coach of the Year
~Iter di r f'C ting th&lt;' Utah .Jazz to it s
finl'sl SC'a~on in a d('('adc of
rxi~ t (' n CP, on Sa turday \\-'i.lS named
lhr lraguC'· s Exf'C'ut ivc of the Y l'ar.
Layden. v.:ho also is thf&gt; .Jau
gf'nl'ra l managC'r. r('('ei vN:I :n vorrs
from a 76-mcmber panel of sport swritf'rs and broodcastf'rs who r f'gu larl)' cowr th&lt;' NB/\.

C.
E.A.
In

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618 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, 0 H.

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1S8o4 R J . REYNOlDS TOBACCO CO

CEO

LOW-

Martina wants to be
'best ever' in tennis
By ANDREW WARSHAW

Berry's World

By BEN WALKER

•

Democrat Rep. Dan Rostenkowskl
of the House Wa ys and Means
Committee tis that the top rateof70
percent is reduced to 50 percent.
The next thing that happens Is that
Instead of hitting the 50 percent
level at , say. $40.&lt;XXJ. as under
Carter. the taxpayer hits It at
$50,&lt;XXJ . A year goes by, and people
begin to yell and scream about
everything that Reagan has done
for Mr. Dudley. But the Internal
Revenue Service tabulates his
taxes. and they amount to: $115.&lt;XXJ.
· How's that?
Well. Mr. Dudley and his lawyer
and his accountant. taking note of
the reduced rat e of taxation. started
to move his portfolio around. With
the r eduction in taxes. Mr. Dudley

neurial ventures, so he takes 50
percent of his portfolio and puts it
into high tech. Sure. he pays taxes .
But he pays at a lower rate. He is
sa tisfied because his Income increases. In the course of Increasing
his income, he increases that of the

Page 3

Twins rally, edge . Chisox; Indians win

2-The Daily Sentinel
Pvm-y-Middleport, Ohio
Page

Reagan's problem ______W_ill_ia_m_F_.B_u_ck_tey_;___J_r.

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

"-'oy Middleport, Ohio

AP Sports Writer
WIMBLEDON , E ngland (API This year·s All-England c hampionships ceiebra te 100 years of
women's tennis ai Wimbledon and
Martina Navratilova wants to be
remembered as the gr&lt;'a test
woman player of the last century.
Navratllova. going for a third
successive singles title, is such an
outstanding favorile that one British
bookmaker L' not even issuing odds
on the women's tournament.
The only bet Is whom she will bea t
in the final.
"Martina is not unbeatable but
she's not far from It . Nobody else can
play that way," said America's
Kathy Jordan after her 6-4, 6-1
defeat by the Czech-born natural ized American in the final of the
Eastbourne tournament on Saturday, the last Wimbledon warmup
event for women .
Navratilova is not expected to
open her bid at Wimbledon until the
second day of the tournament.
Tuesday, traditionally reserved lor
the women .
Opening up on center court today
was defending men •s champion and
No. I seed John McEnroe against
Australia's Paul McNamee.
At the same time on court one, No.
2 seed Ivan Lendl of Czechoslovakia
met Dick Stockton of the Unlted
States, to be followed by Jimmy
Connors' match against fellow

American Lloyd Bourne.
Just like Alice Marble in 1939.
Maur&lt;'f'n Connolly in 1953 and
Margaret Court-Smith In 1970,
Navratilova dominates women's
tennis and has lost only onematchin
each oft he past two years.
Ear lier this month, she became
only the third woman and the fifth
player of all time to win the Grand
Slam of tennis consecutive
victories in the world's four major
tournaments- and she hasnot been
beaten by her great rival. Chris
Evert Lloyd, since the Australian
championships in 1!&amp;1.
When M aud Watson became the
first women· s singles winner at
Wimbledon In 1884. there were only
12 other player s In the draw and her
reward w as a sliver flower basket.
By contrast, the powerful, aggressive Navratllova already has
earned over $8 nnllllon from the
game. more than any other woman
in history.
In her first -round m atch here. she
faces fellow American "Peanut"
Louie, runnerup In the junior event
seven years ago, and Is scheduled to
m eet her regular doubles partner
Pam Shriver In the semifinals if the
draw holds true.
Shriver, like Jordan, Is a tall serve
and volleyer and one of only a
handful of players expected to
mount any serious challenge to
NavratUova's title on the last grass
courts.

.. •

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the next time you buy cigarettes.

• Bas t•d on s ug.Me!-ited retail prirt' n'r~ u -. other nationa l

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarene Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

nanu' brands. Savin~s may \'ary by location and outlet .
lhailablL· in limitl"d areas only.

14 mg tar ·. 0 9 mg mrclin"

i1'l

iJPI ClgaJC tte by FlC method

.

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�Page

The Daily Sentinel

4

Monday, June 25, 1984

Pameroy Middlepolt, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Monday , June 25, 1984

Page

....

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•

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(

CHAMPIONS - Charnpioru; of the 1984 Gallipoli•
Cancer Society Tennis Toumwnent are pictun•d
above foUowing Sunday's finals on thr Mullin' Court'
on Henkle Ave. Front row, left to right, wonwn 's
division an&gt; Rhonda Wood and .Joy Bentk•y, tlouhlt'S:

Dhwe Hopkins singles and Dene Wagner Pellegrlnon,
pn•sident and owner of Wagner Boardcastlng,
'I&gt;Onsor of the henellt event. Rear - Men's division
ehampions, left to right are Jack Fowler and Steve
'lullins, doubles and Nate Thomas, singles.

RUNNERSUP - Displaying second place awards
In the Third Annual Gallipolis Cancer Society Tennis
Toonuunent following nearly a week's action bt the
Old French City are, first row, left to right: Becky
Anderson, Joy Bentley, John Bentley and Mike

Coonen. Rear -

/

Rick Cloak, tountarnent director;

Bill Gray and Dean EpUng, tournament coordinators.
Thi• year's loumarnent was dedicated to Gloria
Young, who died May 30. Seventy-live area wnni•
players took part in the six-day event.

Sutcliffe hurls ChiCubs to within half-game of first place
By BARRY WILNER
!\P Sports Writer
Not oni;· is Rick Sutc liffP happ,· to
be back in th f' \Jational League. he's
thrillt'Ci to bl• pitchtng in mmringlul
F:ames now that summer has roUed
in.
Sutcliffe was acquired from
Cleveland bv the Chica1:o Cubs or
.June 1:1 and the 1~79N L Rookie of the
Year has won two straight star1 s for

his new IC'am . His la test \' il'lOJ) '
ram P Sunday on a fin•-hit , 14·
st rikeout . 5-11 g&lt;'m again.st th&lt;' St.
! .ouis Cardin&lt;.~ Is.
Sutcliffr c!J im('ll thl' m otl\·ation
of a pennant racC' - C''-"C'n at thi :-.
Par ly da te - has hPlPf'd him s ince·
joinlng lhr Cubs, who arC' a

half·gam0 behmd llrst ·plaet' 1\pw
York in the N L r:ast
'' It was b:,.· f3r thP most irnpJrtanr
gam e l 'vr p itc hed in t.hrCf' yC'ars
T his garnr meant somethmg. " sa id
Sutc lifff' , who \\:as 17· 11 for th(•

Ind ian s Ja.o..,t ~t ·a:-.on :tnd is ~ - :) thi s
.\'f'i.ll". ·· 1h;Hl funln Clt'\'l'la nd but thr
S('~lsOn m Ju ld s t ~ I J "I in M J n ·hamiPnd
111 .Junl'. w h~ ·n .\"ou Vo"t ' n ' 211 g amf's

out.
.;; tar!!'&lt;.l WL• II lasr yt•a r and was

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11 -:\ BUI aft &lt;'r t hPA il Star break . we
WL'rt' 2:l gurnt'." ou t Li nd it 's hard lO
moti \ "dl £' ,'r"OUI" S(' If ."
Su t eli fft •also v. asn · t hPa It h.\· \\'hrn
1tt is st'ason tx•ga n .
"l ha d mot t ·ana I wor kdonl' ~J.Vf'ar
ago bu t it wa:-.n'1 dom • &lt;'O Hl '&lt;.' tl~· .··
said Su tel ifft&gt;. · Tlit'Y had to do it m·f'r
a g&lt;.~in thi .. ., spring &lt;~rHJ w h('fl th p~·
O~llt'd it U)J, it ]i tt •ra lJ.\· P:O:piodPC!.
Thf' n · \ \ "i l f-, b lood all ou 'r thC' (JIJt'\ '
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Sutdil"f( • lt ) S t 1 7 1 )() '.md ~
"' It H·as a 11 y in;..:; t inw t.. llld took
m·pr J m onth .'" ·" ;tid SutdiH"l'. " It
wa s likC' sp ri ng t r~ linin g a ll on •r
again T h1 · c lub n ·a!-i 20 g;Jilll':-. out

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" I would rather be 2.0 against
them going into th(' ga nJethan have
them be 2-0 aga inst us, " quatiE'rback B1·1an Sipe said afl er New
Jersey's 16-10 victoty at Philadelphia, where the teams mept again
Saturday in an Eastern Conference
pla yoU game.
"Next week it's another nPw
game," said Coach Wait Michaels.
mindfullhat his Generals were the
only USFL club able to bea t thPI6-2
Stars this season.
"We just got to do if harder nex t
week . I'm suret heStarsw iU tty to do
it harder, too," Michaels added.
" We know the Sta llions can play
better," Bandil Coach Sieve Spurr ier sa id followi ng a 17-1(; victoty in
Binningham, Ala., site of Sunday' s
Eastern Conference playoff. "They
wi ll be tougher next week, so we w ill
have to work hard to better
ou rse lv es.''

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standings

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Phil::ldf'lphia w inn ing st reak and

he&lt;il l.h&lt;• Stars tor !he second time
th is season while Tampa Bay upset
th&lt;' Fl ummg ham Sl aiilons.

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df'sp itf' v ic toriPS Sunday ovf'r next
\\"('('k £'nd 's fi r st -round opponent s.

New J0rSI'\' snapped a 14-game

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By The Associated Press
Neither the New Jersey Generals
nor !he T ampa Bay Bandils would
mind an encore that would enable
l hPm Ia open the United States
Footbal 1 League playoffs precisely
the w ay they closed the rPgular
Sf' ason .
But neither team is about to be
lulled into a fa IS&lt;' sense of security

ll&gt; ·I

I ~~ ~ 1 . 1 nd

I

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I. ,, ,,

il that quick. The ba il just jumped.
When I pinch hit, I'm ready togo up
there and hit Ute ba ll hard ."
Padres H, Reds 3
Steve Garvey's saerificP fly
snapped a 3-3 ti e and Tim
Flannery' s bases-loadPd triple
capped a live-run 1.1th for visiting
San Diego.
Reds relieV&lt;'r Tom Hu.me..1-7.
came on in thr !.3t h and wa lked pinch
hitter Bobby Brown. A lan Wi!:!(ins
singled , sending Brown to third . and
took second on thP throw to third .
After an intentional wa lk to Tony
Gwynn loadC'd the bases, Gar•e.1·
drove m his second run of the gam&lt;'
with a sac riJicc fly to left.
!.uis Sa lazar drew a basPs-ioadc'&lt;l
walk from Hum!' and Flanm••y I hen
hit Ills triple irlo !he r ighl -fieid
corner to cl!'ar I he bases and knoc k
oul Humc.
Dodgers :;, Braves 2

i ..as AngelC's won it s fourth in a row
alter a seven-game slide• and is ti-l
w ith A tlanta this yea r. The v isiting
DodgC'I'S slammed [our hornf'rS,
beginning wit h a twO· lUll shot in I he

. ." 1 1

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Michigan, the league's inaugural
c hampion a year ago, travels to Los
AngPies to meet the Express in a
Western Conference game Saturday. The other Western rnatchup
has Arizona at Houston on Sunday .
Michigan tuned up lor it s playoff
opener with a Xl-17 victoty over
Chicago. Arizona clinched the final
playoff berth on Sa turda~ when it
routed Los Angeles 3.'&gt;-10. Denver
had forced the Wrangl&lt;&gt;rs to bf'at the
ExprPss when it throttled Oakland
20-7 on Friday right .
Th e Washington Federals,
headed tor Miami next season.
closed out their stay in the ca pital
Sunday wilh a 20-17' upsPt of New
Orlea ns. San Antonio blanked
Oklahoma 2.'\-0 on Sunday night.
Jacksonvllle routed Pittshurgh
26-2 or Friday night .
Mf'mphis, 7-10, visits Houston,
12-5, tonight in the final rPgu lar·
season gam e oft h&lt;' year.
Generals 16, Stars 10
Slpe threw a Ot'J.yard pass to

running back Herschel Walker to
(..oJve Nf'W J0rsey. 144 . a 16-7 Iran.
Roger Ruzek kicked lhrec field
1:0als for the Generals. Kelv in
Bryant, benched in th&lt;' first ha lf for
tardi ness at a team mf'Cting, scored
on a two-yar d tun and D av id Trout
kickl'Ci a 39-.vard field goa l i n the
fow·th qua rt N for Phi ladel phia .
16-2 .

'\T I J~ll' ' '

(;uPtTf'I'O .
Mik~ Marshall. who along with
Cr0g Flmc k a lso hil a home run.
wond&lt;'red w hy thP Dodgers have
brt'n so m asterfu l aKairst the
Brav es this season and last.
" I don' t know if we fry harder or
what." he said . "We ju st seem lo
have some coniidcnc!'. but. e'cept
for these th ree games. l hey have
brt'n a good bail el ub."
i\dded i\ llanta'sGIPnn H ubbard :
"We coul d win th&lt;' jll'nnant , bu l in
tho pa j)('rs here. it wou ld still say.
' Yeah. bul you dilin't bl•at the
Dodgc'r s."'
A,,tnlS X, Giants :l
Ldt ·hard&lt;•r Bob Km'jJjll'r pilch&lt;'&lt;i

his S('\ "PHt h &lt;'Ump)PIP gam(' f)[ thP
SPJson, surv i ving 11 hits. fJn ning

four and walkinl'( twu.
H ouston sco rl '(l four r uns in thP
sixlh to br!'ak open the game and
~l- l

take a

lt•ad . .Josr Cruz , Harry

SpUman and Ray Knight contr ib-

ute-d run -sr oring sing\e&gt;s a nd 'T('ny
Puhi added a " "-rifler

n,-_

down on a 1-l -~"i.ll d run for Birminghom, 1 ~4. 'vhich won thP
Sou thC'rn Di\' ision n own lx '&lt; 'JUst ' of
a IX'Ih'r rf'&lt;'Ord ln f-:Js h •rn ConfPr rncf' pl&lt;.~v.

8andil' 17, Stalli01" 16
Wa lt on Cat1cr savC'd the v iciOJy
tor Tampa Bay, 144, by blocking a
co nversion atlcmpt after lJirmingham's BobbyLarcttlt Robirl-:arl on a
39-yard touchdown pass m idway
through the fourth period. Jimmy
.Jordan replaced .Johr RPa v!'s at
quartC'rback and thre\v a sLx -yard
touchdown pass Ia WillieGillesp i ~to
give Tampa Bay a 14-10 lead befor&lt;:'
Zf.&gt;ron Andrusyshy n kicked a ?J.
yard field goal.

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ltw D ,1 i h ~ l " ll lind" n 1. li ' •I 12 mnnlh
rlt ' t

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· UW1•t •k r.,
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'1-\"ppk ,

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$ 11 ~)f)
$:.!9 l"l
$~!X '! .J
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r n 2n

~ ~· \\" ppk ~

.~:~ 1 1 XII

304-773-5710

Rt . 33

Mason, W. Va.

2 Free Dinners At Duff's
in Gallipolis , Ohio

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.

If We Install Your Wind shield
During The Month Of June .

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

AI COIU!rd &amp; StaH ol Point-Mason Auto Gloss would like to say thanks
to the People ol the Tri-County Area lor letting us service your glass
needs lor the past 13 years ... We Really Appreciate Ill

POINT-MASON AUTO GLASS
Rt. 33
e Mtbilt StMu Anil1bt1

304-773-5710

IIISOn, W. V1

" WI AJII'RICIATJ YOUR IUSlNISS"

GUEST REGISTRATION - Frances Goeglein and
Eleanor Smith were registering guests at the Meig-;
MlL'&gt;CIDll during Heritage Weekend. Over 1,000 peoph•

FlATBOAT OWNER - Vaughn W endhUJd, owner of the Oatboat,
Adventure Galley II, is shown in.'iide Adventure Galley. The Oatboat
was loaded with antiques for viewing. Over 900 p&lt;'rsons loured the hoat
Saturday.

S\\&gt;EET MO(jNTi\IN SOUND - Resident' vi,iting
the Meigs Mu"-'wn had the opportunity to h&lt;'&lt;ll'

visited the musewn and Oathoat Adventun- Galley 11
t:omhined during the Wl-ekend .

Calendar
MONDAY
RUTLAND
Ru tl a nd
Garden Club will mf'f't at 7: .l'l
p.m. Monday in the home of M rs.
Leo Chapman and Ann Webster.
Guest speaker w ill be Mrs.
Ernest Coven. r egional director
ofOAGC. Covert w ill givrastate
n!'ws update.

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Thl' LadlE's
Auxi liary of Veterans Memorial
Hospital wiU meet a 1 7 p.m.
Tuesday in the hospital dining
room. Anyone interestC'd is
welcomE'.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT FwnPy·
Bcn nC'tt Legion and Auxiliaty
Post 128 of Middleport will hold a
meeting Wednesday. A potluck
supper will bc!;in at 6:30 p.m.
with the meetings beginning at
7: 30p.m.
POMEROY - ThP Wildwood
Carder Club wUI ml'&lt;'t at 7:30
p.m .Jun&lt;' 27 in lhe Forl'st Run
Churc h.

MIDDLEPORT - The Ash
Si f('('t Fl'('('wlii Bapt ist Churc h
will havra rPViva i.July !throug h
.July 7. The services will begin at
7::l0 p.m .. w ith evangelist Normar Taylor. Evetyore is inv it ed
to attrrd .

Reunion slated
The Char les and Farry Wolfe
Bcnvcr reunion will be held .July 1 in
Royal Oak Park .
ThE' meal wiU beF:In at 12:30 p.m.
All are asked tobringacovered dish.
Friends and relatives w&lt;:'lcomP.

Entertainers
sought for roast
The 30th annual Rutland Volunteer Fire Depal1ment Ox Roast is
asking lor local ta lent to enterta in .
The roast is to be the event of J uly
4. Deadline lor entries is Ju ne :ll.
Cash prizes wUI be awarded.
For more information , con tacl
Kim Willford at 742-2178, or Peggy
Brickles at 742-2193.

Meigs personal notes

POINT-MASON AUTO GLASS

Saturday and SWtday during Heritage Weekend.
Making up the group are, ·
· . Mary GUmore,
JennUer Sheets, Tim Glaze and Roger GUmore.

tapping m!l';IC that was presented

:!i Co • nl~

l i&lt;t i l 'o

:1:! Wf'Pk :-.

el

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

toe

'- l tf· i ,:~ llo n . :\ : t l ll•lld l .- \d\1"111,1 1 1~ H t •p r l'
~ l'nla TI\" 1 ' . llr.~ntlo~m "\, 11 o.. p ; qJPI S. ilP •.
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Store

1n

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,\nw r ic w N 1'1-1 'P.t pt ' l l 'll l ill' h''l, ·\o..
];r llrl

,)(1(' Cribbs. who fini shed thl'
S('ason with 1,976 yards rushing and
receiving, scor&lt;'Ci thE' first touch -

Your Farm
Equipment

with their

Church slates
revival

Ep.;p:-; l t .·, . ~lfill l

DALE HILL
FORD TRACTOR

TOE TAPPIN', HAND CLAPPIN' TIME - "Sweet
Mountain Soond," a musical group, wasweU received

Happenings
.\ Uhh i un of \ l u lli ttii" IIL•. lrw

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firs t inning by F ranklin Stubbs and a
solo homPr one out latl'r by Pedro

Jersey snaps Stars' 14-game win streak

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run, and Bryn Smith registered his
first ;ictoty since May L'i .
The host Mets rema ined in first
place in the National League Easl
by just .004 percentagP points over
the Phlllies.
"Sometimes. I have a tendency to
run out there and tty to hit the ball
before I ever get to the plate."
Wallach said . "Today, I really
wasn't thinking about anything. I
just warted toswinghardandhit thp
ball hard."
Phlllies 4, Pirates 2
Von Hayes was thinking I he same
as Wallach when he hi! the PhiUies'
fourth pinch-hit homeroftheseason.
Ozzie Virgil al so had a two-run shot
and Steve Carlton continued his
mastety over the host Pirates,
beating them for the 12th time in his
last 13 decisions against them. The
Pirates haven'! beaten Carlt on,
38-22 lilelime versus Pittsburgh.
since Sept . 11, 19R2.
" I was j ust up there trying to hit a
line d1·ivc, get somet hing started,"
Ha yes said of his second pinch
homer of the S&lt;'ason . " I didn' t expect

l o"

~.1\

~'

II

.II 0..,. 111 ! ·1. 111

:•

and I w as throwing only 80 miles an
hour. Somebody in the Cubs
organization must have seer
something."
The 14 strikeouts were a careerhigh fu r Sutcliffe and gave the host
Cubs a sweep of a tlti'€('-game
sC&gt;rlPs.
"I finished liflh in thP!Arnerican 1
lcaguC' las! year and fo u11h the year
befor e (in strikroul s)," Sutcliffe
noted after he collected his first
shutou t since pitc hing a seven-hitter
aga inst the Ya nkees a year ago." ]
haven't seen a lot of these guys for a
wh ik. After I learn tlte hittet'S and
sta rt working on m y ow11, that's
wh&lt;'r I'll g('t in trouble."
.lodv Davis blasted a two-run
hom er to support Sutcliffe.
Elsewhere in the N l_, it was
Mort rml .1, NE'w York 3: Philadel phia 4. Pitt sburgh 2: Los Angeles 5,
Allan ! a 2: Sa n Diego H, Cincin nati 3
in LJ innmgs, and, in a nigh! game.
Houston heited San Francisco B-3.
Expos 5, Mets 3
Tim Wa llac h knocked in four
runs. including thrrt' wi th a home

Nellie Borgan and Rosella Birch·
field spent the weekend
in
Columbus.
Borgan's children gave her a
birthday party June 15. All of
Horgan 's children attended, except
for one residing in Florida . The
dinner menu included ham and
lurkey. Gifts Included red roses, a
diamond necklace and a picture

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reed have1
relumed from St. Louis, Mo. where
they attended graduation for their
granddaughter, Kimberly Sue
Sprouse.
Thelma Hayes recently visited
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Biddle of Texas
and tben traveled to Houston for the
graduation of the granddaughter of
the Biddies.

··-

Family Medicine

made up of .Jermifer

Diabetes complications explained

By Edward Schreck, n .u.
Assl•tant Prof&lt;'S..'Or
of Family Medici~
Ohlo University CoUege
of Ostcopathlc Medidne
QUESTIO N: I've j ust been dia gnosed as diabetic. My falhe r was
diabet ic for years a nd had many
unpleasant complications. What
should I expect?
ANSWER: DIabetes mellitus.
an

"Sw('(•t Mountain Sow1d 1 "

Sht'&lt;'!s, Mary llltd Roger Gilmort' \Utd Tim Gla:tR.

abnorm ality

in the body's use
o f glu c ose
(.sugar) with rf'sulting high blood sugar

is

the m ost common mf'fabol ic di.o;:; -

case In tills coun t ty. Most prop!~
are fam iliar with the comm on
trPa tments of diabetes. including
Insuli n. special m edication s and
diet control. What mary people.
ever many diabetics. do not
understand Ls that prevent ion and
treatment of the many compilca Uons of diabet es is as im portant as
controlling the diabetic's blood
sugar level.
In a general sense. any disorder
of the body caused bv the diabet es
mellitus may be consid£'red a
complication of thf' disf'ase. The
fi vp most common complications of
diabetes are v isio n problems. foot
and leg ulcers . pregnancy problems, kidney disease and kPtoacidosls, an acidic condition of the blood .

cont r olling

thP di abetic 's

blood

sugar \('\'C'L recent rf'search indl C.1tPs that it is an important factor
not o nl ~· in prolonging lifC' but in
kf'f'pin g thf' complic a tions of diat:x&gt; trs to a m inim um .

QG ESTION: What causes thrsP
c omp lic ations'!
ANSWER: Thr common thread
in m an.\' of thf' rl ifferP nl rornplira tions is damage to thP blood I'Pssds.
T hough r&lt;'search has not ve t
revmll'd th&lt;' reason for th0 lin k
tx&gt;tw('('n vessel impairmC'nt and
diabct&lt;". we do know thnt diabe ti c
patient s have much higher in ci dence of vessel disorders than th&lt;'
gcn!'rai population . In fact . the
increased S&lt;'Velity of hardenin g of
the artcr i~s in diabetic patir rl s
Jpads somP authorities 1o bcliC'V C'
that probabl y over half the strokE's
in thi s country ar c rr-latrd 10
diabetes .
QUESTION : Why docs diabetes
cause people to lose their visior 7
ANSWER: Unfortunately. di a·

bct&lt;'S is th&lt;' num lx&gt;r on(' c ausf' of
blindn t:s s in t hf' country. Again . it is

QU I-:STI ON
What causes a
dialX'ti c pat iPnt to ha\'P numbnrss

diabetes' plfpct s on the bod y's blood
\.'f'Ssrls tha t c ausr thP prob lem . In
I his cas(', thP dialx•tt:&gt;s d amagrs th('
small blood vessPis that pr oY ide

anrl pa in in his lf'gs and fN"'t '?
ANSWEH : Thi s compli cation is
C IUSf'd b~· injury
tO lhP fl f'f\"('~
thf'm sPh "f' s . Phvsicians an • un cPr

nourishmpnt to thf' PyP, c .:..~u s in g
gr adual los s of sigh t. Lasp r thr r apy·
uffC'r s nr w hopt""' to thPSf' p&lt;:~ l iPnt s­
through thf' prf'C'isP usf' of l &lt;iS(' I
IX'am s thr physidan son w tinw s
can stop thC' v essf'ls from lf'aking
and thC' rf'h:v dC'Iav vision loss.
Thr sam r di.~ JSC' procf'ss &lt;:~c ·
count s for m ost of thf' kidn r:- ·
problrm s associa tC'd w i th di Jix'tf' s

tai n a .'-' t o th1· C'.xa r l dist·asl' pro('(' s~
im·o ln"d in thb condition , but m c1 n~·
r h{'(n"i:zr t h;t t 1ht• s rna II blood n• s s pl ~
w hi ch should nourish thf' llPI Y t• s
tx-comr dJ!ll ~1 g('(l J nd tlwrdun' do
not pnwicl c· iidN.Ju:JtP circulaTio n To
t h(' nrT\'f' li bf&gt;r s
AI t hnugh snm(' dia br·t ico..: ('X ~x· ­
ri encr pain in tht•ir lpgs. anothrr
rnmmo n nf'l""\"f' disor rl&lt;'r J nf'u ro pat h_\"l i i SSOC' i; lff'(J With di ~l bf'IP!-. i.s
loss of sf'n ~~tlio n in l hc lowr- r limbs .
lftausP l hf'\ don "! IC'C'I 1hf' pa in .
pPopl f' with 1his condition can Pas ii~·

mellitus. As the small bl ood ,-ess!'l s
of the kidncv beco me damaged.
rrna l fun cti on g raduall.\· d('(Tf'asf's.
Loss of kidnf'~· fu nct ion from
diabe-te-s c auSC's m ore pc"Oplf' 1o
nwd l~n a l dia ly sis than am· othC'r
single disPa sf'.

ICE'S

OH• rl ook a sorf' or othrr inj ur_\ ro
lhf'i r [('gs or fN't until t hf' ti ss uf'
IJf' C'O m&lt; ·~ o b ,·io u ..- 1 ~ · i nfPCtf'd .
A n inf('f'tion th ;)t is not trf'a!Pd
p ro p0rl~ · can IX' qui t(' d angf'rous to
a cl iabf'tir. as thP disrasr rWu cC's
thf' I:JOd\'r.; ~ l h l l it ~ · to hf'a l it sP!f.
l 1 nfo rtunat (' l _,.. s uch mfrct io ns
amo ng dia l)('liC's ;1rr ;1 cnmmon
r c•; tsnn for l imll amputati ons.
:\It hough som e or 1hf' i n f orm ~ll ion
prf'srnt P&lt;I in thi s m ·f'rT iPw of thf'
man Y &lt;"O m plic; Jti rms of diahf'l r s
m a_Y il l fil' '-il snunrt fri ghtrning to
~ · o u . as a nrwl ~ · diagnosPd diahf'tic
\OU should lw Jssurrd that diabf'tPs
i..., i n m ~ 1st eases &lt;I \ "l'f\ managf'CiblP
d i sr·a ~ c .
Y ou a r r w isr t0 hf&gt;
('0ncc·rnf'd dbou t thf' possiblf' f'f·

fN·t.o..; !hP d iSC'&lt; ISf'

rna~·

FURNITURE
854 Second
Galli

ha w• on

~ ·ou

STORE HOURS
4j6 -95.13

9:30-5:00
Thurs.

~IQ.~

Specialty Graphics
Middleport , Ohio .

CUSTOM SCREEN
PRINTING
T-Shirts, Caps, Jackets. Etc.

H eart diSE"ase is also a common

effect of diabetes.
A lthough these and olher compli cations cannot be prevented just by

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Phone 446 · 4524
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AU. SEATS S 1 00
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $2 00

( EXCEPT "GR[Hl!N S" )

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FOR YOUR
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614-992-7626
AFTER 5 P.M.

REG. 1249.95

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And We Save You Nloney
When We Do ItI

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�Page 6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,

~y. June 25, 1984

Ohio

Area groups have meetings
TOPS groups

by the pansh of Templed Hills, Oak
Hill

The weekly "Best Loser "

for

TOPS OH 1466, Rutland, was Shorty
Wright. She was presented wtth a
dollar and a nbbon Runner-up was
Connte Boles
A l1l'W contPSt, "Lets' Sail to a
Slmuner You ," was explained to
members

Winners of a prevtous cont est.
Oiler and Short y Wright, w ill b&lt;•
treated to a dtet dinner. patd by the
losers.
A new member, Carole Phillips,
was welcomed to the club
Meetmgs are ht&gt;ld m tht&gt; Salem
CentPr ftrehouSI' For morr informatton. contact Shorn. V. nght at
7-12-~2

The week i} " &amp;st LoSC'r" or the
TOPS OH 1456 was Vtckt F'c!TI'II
Sharon Thacker and Frances
HySPU were rurmers-up Patty

Johnson was wrlcomf'd as a nP"member At last W&lt;'&lt;'k s m eet mg.
the losers were Bcm K·e Wme
brenner and Sandv Sergent
Mcetlngs are held at6 p m "'NY
'litesday m the Rulland
IC
Center. For mon.: mformallon, cal l

c"

992-2612.

BPW
The Middleport Husmcss ProfPS·
stonal Women m et 1 Pcently m the
Middleport L tbrary

Installed as

fl P\.\

Otf!C('t'S W('fP

Lmda Stobat1, pt es tdcnt , Alwtda

Wa111er.

Louise

\1Ct'

pres tdl'nt. F rancis

Oi:!VIS.

ttl'asurrr. Maqonf'

Fet ty, SPCretat) A randle cerem on} by Ca therine Wdch mstallcd the
officers
The club's :l8th annJv£'r'San \.Vas
celebrated
The club's next m cetmg wUI br a
potluck ptcntc at AJ"' tlda Wam ct 's
The m eal ~~&lt;ill txogm at ti : 30p.m July
16. Warner w rll pmv tdc dnnks

Jolly Homemakers
Thc .follv Homcmakprs Club met
June 13 and finaliZed plans fOI thP
August tnp ro Blcnnt•tl!assetl
island
The club m et tn 1he home of .l ane
Bowles
Cod&lt;&gt; labels and canrci&lt;'Cl sta mps
~~&lt;erP co llected and b,mdagcs prepared for m atlmg
The next m ectm g IS on Jul\ 11 m
the roadside park on the Jackson
County lmc:n,e pmJ&lt;'&lt;'t 1o11 ll br
crochet lessons

Eleaa Circle
The mcrtmg of the Elccta Ctrclr·
was held m the home of Kat hi'\ n
M etzger
M etzgPI had thP dc\Oitons w tth
'The Home a nd M"ston F' wld and
Do not go aftct othet god s
A letter of Hu lll 1\otPn of llong
Kung was t'l'ad , telling of hct
apprcctatron of man&lt;' \ gtft s Rhoda
and Jean Hull d ts pld\ Pd d SP\~ mg kll
to be SC'n t to 1h(' sld If' com Pn t Jo n ~t '
pa11 of a H1span11 self hdp
program
ThP gJnup \ 01rd to sene! a hirthdri\
g-~ft to !.ula :Vl urra\ Thf' gr oup
SJgnf&gt;d d gf' f 1Af'!J (did fm J ' \d
Harth\
It "a s a nnounr('fl !h(' gt oup \\.J s
1m 1tcd to thf' R 1o ( .r 3 ndP \\ (JJTif'n"
r\~SOC'ta t ton

C'O\Prt•d tho.;h pt t ntc: l1

,1

rn Juh 11

Pomeroy UMW
Fourteen members were pf&lt;'Sent
at the Pomeroy United M!'lhodist
Women Tuesday evening.
Dorothy Dowrue led devol ions to
open the m eeting Her theme was
"Too Much Too Soon."
An invita tlon was read to attend
the Red Bird Conference m eastern
KPntucky It was asked to saw
Campbell Soup labels for the Red
Bird Misston .
The West Ohto Conference Is to be
hPid July :.l-Aug 3
Dov.rnw reported six womE&gt;n
attended the meetlng of the Chris
uan Women U nttL'!l . Elghty·stx sick
calls were reponed. LandSI'apmg
the church was also dtscussed

A desprt course was setved by
hostPSSI's
Whale;

Downtc

and

GracP

Jaymar Golf
Etght een ladies attended ladles
day at Jaymar Coif Course
Tuesdav
It \'.:as announced the club was
InVIted to sevcia l mvJtattonals to be
ill•ld m the near future
N inc holc w inncrs for thPdayw erc
Pandora Collms and Sara Owen. 18
hole wmners were Sue Burdette,
Mary Bowen and N orma Custer .
Ladtcs day IS held every Tuesday
bcgm mng at R 30 am All lady
golt&lt;'rs aff' mnted to attend .

Racine Nazarene
The Juntor Soctety of t he Racme
Fi r st Chut'Ch of the Nazarene had a
ptcmc Junc 14 at the Forked Run

The Daily Sentinel

Grange
A report on t hP collection or uSI'd
Pyc glasSPS, a pmjC'Ct the state
gyangP supports, was giVen by
Ba rbara Fry,CWAchatrman, atthe
Thursda y ntght m L'Piing of the Rock
Sprmgs Gr ange held at the hall
Will tam Radford reported on the
rPmodelmg p roJect , and the group
'oted to Sl'nd a conttibut10n to the
F n endJy Hills Gr ange.
Lmda Broderick presented the
pmgyam m the absence of Louise
Radford Nter the group sang
" Am ettca, the &amp;autiful. ' · M rs Frv
t&lt;'ad "The Ragged Old Flag ," P~t
Holter "The Pmples P arts ... Na ncy
Moms. "Se,·en Sons," and Mrs.
13rodettCk, "\/;'hat a Fellow Thmks
of Dad"

ThPr(' was a contest on the fl ag
A pip
d UCt ion a nd SOCial concl uded thr
,md anothPr on a c trc us

mcctmg Rock Spnngs will visit
11,1( tn&lt;' Grange on .June 21

wm

1 C - o • r-.r.~~~o~"'"'•-.1

Army Na tJ onal G u&lt;:~rd Pvt Da vtd
E Grueset. son of Phtlllp I&lt; and
Kasena A Grur sf'r of Rural fioutf'
1. Point Pleasa nt . W Va , has
gradua ted from the U S A rm y
m ateriel con1 rol and acrountmg
s pectaltst courSf' a t Fon Lee, Va
Thf' slx -week course consisted of
procedures for receiving, s1orin g
and shipping, plus prepa ration for
stora ge and ha ndling of suppltr s
He Is a 1981 graduate of Point
Pleasant Senior Ht gh Se houl

Scott
MARI E TTA - A rcstdcnt of
Middleport has enli sted in the
United States M anne Corps ()(&gt;
layed E nt ry Program I&lt;Pll h A
Scott, enlisted tnto the AviOnic s
field and w1 ll r rport 10 M a Jlllt'
Corps Recrutt DPpot , Parris Island.
South Ca r olina. on Dec 18 for boot
camp. Time spent tn the DEP IS
credited as longevity for future pay
raises A graduate of M C'tgs High
School , Scott Js lhP son of Mr and
Mrs. Charles Scott w ho livE'S at 441
Beech St , Middleport

Past Matrons
p.,,,

Tht·
Matro ns Club of
II or nson\'lllc Chapter 2C&gt;.'i of the
( ) J dP! of EastPm Star m C't Mondav
('\ Pnmg m tht ' homf' of P;.wld
~\dkm :-.

R11zzard
Mlchaf' t H Buzzard, son uf Lr•on
I ' and G lm ta F' Buzza rd of Rural
Ruut P 2. Letart W Va . has bee n
promoted tn the US Air Force to
t hf' rank of airman first class.

Buzza t d is a

jXJWf'r

production

spe('laltst at M cClellan Atr Force
Base Calif w ith the 2049th Com -

mumcattons Group
His wife, Tam my. is the daughter
of William and T Jean Yoho of 112
Howard St New Haven. W Va.
Jl e LS a 1981 graduate of Wahama
Htg h Sc hool, Mason. W Va

L.egg
A trmJn C lf' nn \V LPgg, son of
DPnv tl W and .lohn W Legg of
Rura l Route 2. Lron W Va. has
lx'f'n assignf'd to Fort Leonard
Wood . Mo., a ft ~r completing Alt
Force bask tra 1n1ng
Dunng thP SIX wrck..c;; at Lack la nd
Air Force Bas&lt;'. Texas the airman

Wf'l'l'

F1rsl grad€' - Br1an Andf't son M allOn
F'15her, Adam Krowsc7.Vn Andr£&gt;a Moor...
.Jamte Ord. Amy W('aV('r Mclodv Wf'a ver
Ryan WHIIaiTL'I
Second gradf'- Aaro n Dnrmrrwr Andr(&gt;\1,·
Fk:olds. C'ttrul Gulnth ... r , Cry!!lal Harmon. .Jodi
Hobbs, Michael M cKelvev Ambf'r Ohlln ~N
Stephanie Sayw Jared StPwart
Third JUade - Mark Allen, Kt'vln Arnott
BethanY Bass, Roblorta Caldwt.&gt;ll Valerie

~- ... .........,

J ln-....

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.-

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

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...
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,, ~

-

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recetved special trai nin g In human
rC'Ia ti ons

,

...............
"",_

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

.

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··-··'
"'".......""',....,.,
.......
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03

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Ol ,.,..,, leo""''

Jr nklns
F'ourth

wa d&lt;' - Jf&gt;ff 1\llf'n . J.:~soo Amott
MiC'hPa BPntz. Tamml Burklf'\ AmiX'r
Cu m ln~. Carlton DrummPr, Robin Foll'y
Sta&lt;'('V Fry Kim Har r l'i, M arrv H\11. Scott
LL'ile, M lrhelle McCoy, Rrn£'f' Russell
Flfth wade - ,Jamlr Andrnon Tonya
ln ~l'ls Mica ,Jonf'S .Jcnnv L\sll' L,.,..r')'l PapP
.Joratu Ptzzlno M k hat'l Hr..lsSf'\1 , Robvn Stout
Andrf&gt;a ThMss
·
Sixth gradl' - Kf'VIn Bu rRf'SS Chris
Stf'Wart

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10 Hoo' O•oin

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U• oo II W,. do

Maotewnorl

blu"'

SR

th rPP h.-.d roo rn house
P" 1al ~&gt; c, f W 11 a rn Mn rr s (j pc

Amateur Gardeners

rnu sl sell lor not IP'&gt;S l hnn
dppr a•Sf' f1
v.lluf&gt;
of
S20 0(1() 00 V\o dl bP suld to Th P
hrflh P&lt;:; f h •d rlf' • rt 1 J 00 ;1 m
lulo,. 7 198 4 dl or l rcr o f 0 B1wn
&amp; OBr•f&gt;rl Attorney&lt;; 100' '•

Cou11 S!rf'(''

Apply

Fe r

Pom f'rnv

l 11 rt h •' r

O hoo

r ll("m rlr u rr

&lt;n il

&lt;Jq:J 2 720
{1)1 20 21 22 ?5 2fi 27 6!f

CIRCUS OFFICE AT
Old Jr Hrgh Grounds
Thurs. June 28

Public Notice

ONLY

Orl l rrow ?0

BROS.

198tl

111

lhf'

P•o l\ 1' f' Cno ll \
( j q&gt;
) 4 117() J• rll iol rq l
9 ,, r I '1 1 Vv S,..,, rHld Pnmp
111; 7b&lt;J
l &lt;l o
flh10&gt;
N,l &lt;;
oiP
Mr q

CIRCUS

(.r
Nr l

lo oi1 T• d
'

u111.,t

A f1 rtor1o lr l' r "

I ol

C.,.;\\ 11 d

I I

to r • ' • d

54 Misc. Merchandise

1
1

I

Hn

1 11

c1l

th o

J.,

(

. Ito nl Rr
)
Oluo 1'17/1
P1 n l 1 tlr

Wes t

1oe

Bn •

Jrod

r'

flv l t'll,t K NP&lt;,c, ••l •r• td
(IP!k

Sr tua tf' rn l 8bano n Town
shr p Me•CJS Co u n ty Ohro rn
~ec r o n 36 Tc wr 2 Ran() "' 11
anrl hf' rnq the no rt h part uf NW
onto&gt; quarter cunta.n •nq 78
ac rPs rnu•e o r tess
,mel the p ravc r •s that the "!hove
desc r rhed otl Fl nrl nas ro q ht s be
Dartr tronerl and t• tle th e ~to t o be
Qu •Ptr&gt;d ilS dCJ d rn st Jl rl e fe nd
tn s
!hilt thr rn terPst b e
or
nrc1Prf'r1 &lt;&gt;olrl '' •t cannot be
f) rrrrt oconerl lo r d ll d llowan CP Of
dr:&gt;tPrm rnf'tl

Jnrl

Sf' !

ttl!

ll it' I I H:'',' fp p c hr&gt;r f'r n ,l n d CC'i i S

You a rP

re qurred to ans wet

COtl tplar nt Ntl h lll IWP. nty
P•Qh days trit er t'l e la st pub lr ca
tr on ot 1t1r s notr c:f' wh 1c:h w rl l be
l)r thlrshPd n n ce eac h wePk. for
srll. corserr nr vt&gt; w ee ks The last
r u b lr t.: ~ t • o n w rl l hP ~ ilrl c on
Jul y 9 198 4 a ncl thr twenty
P •Qht rtnys tor J ll&lt;;VvPt will
rommencf! o n t11a t d ,Jt e
11 ca-,r.&gt; ~ ~f vo u r tailur P 10
HlP

Public Notice
Officers for the mming year are
F et ty, prestdent; Gladys Cumings,
vice president ; Moore, treasurer;
E lizabeth Burkett, sec retary. G u
PSis for the mectmg were Cathy
F trs t, Helen Saver, Mtller and
Schv. ab Happy birthday was sung
to RaSP Reynolds She w as pres
ented w it h a plant

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY.
OHIO
James W Suttle
Pla1ntiff,

Real Estate General

vs
West V1rgima Pulp and Paper
Company, et al ,
Defendants

FOR SALE

Case No 83-CV 3
NOTICE BY
PUBUCATION

Assistant hostess wa s Ka therme
HvSI'II. Refreshment s w ert:' a des·

MARY

MATLACK.

do·

ceased, the unknown spouse
1f any, Vw'hose name and
address am unknown, the
unknown hetrs, dttv1sees, laga
tees, administrators exacutors, and / or asSigns of Mary
Matlack. dec.

First Baptist Church
The Rac me t .ocks and D am w as
the site ot the Hearthstone class of
Middlepot1 First Bapt tst Church

furnace with factli·
ttes for woodbumer. 12.x15
fuel oil

RICHARD ROBERT MA
TLACK . dtteBBsed; the un known spouse, if any, whose
name and address are un known the unknown heirs,
~4&gt;VIS&amp;es legateefi, adm1mstra-

piCniC .

ThP6p m mPalwasen joyed bv 22

members a nd onr guest.
Freda Hood asked thP blessmg
A lw ilda Wemer tC'ad devot ions A
thank you was read from Owtda
ChaSP. The ladies of thr cla ss are
planning a tnp to FPnt on Glassworks tn .Jui)o

,----------------------~

lI

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savell I

l
I

st~Jr~~~e

block

20x30

block

building,

garage. Right

off Rt. 248, COUntly seHirtg,

'11 mile east of Chester,
Ohio.
( 2) TWO STORY HOUSE
IN RACINE ;
Oownstarrs equtpped with
kitchen. living room.
drnrng room and den;
upstatrs has two bedrooms and one bath;
house also has base·
ment Lot SIZe approx.
48' x308' Needs work.
If interested contact
The Home Natrona! Bank
tn Racine, 949-2210.

t • Ooo _ , , _

0100

uoo

t1 00

~u.cf

M~GKEE
'Rtn'*J4-

Name _____________________

Coll ege of th e Ail Fore!'.

SEWAGE PIPE
REULATORS &amp;
FITTINGS

Free Water Analysis At Store or Pool Site

RITCHIE'S
MASON SERVICE
CENTER

VOLUME DRIPS

498 Gen. Hartinger Pkwy.
MI-ddleport OH
•
'
PH . 992-2549 or 773-5634

lrvrl Proc:e&lt;I LHe tudq ment w rll
bP rPndererl a11a rnst you lo r lhP.
r e lr r f dP rna nded rn th e

M ergs Countv
Com mon Pleas Court

1614 11 18 251712 9 6Ic
Real Estate General

We can repair and recore radtators and
heater cores. We can
also ac1d boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks .

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Mtddleport. Ohto

608

POME'ROY,

0.

992 ·2259
NEW LISTING - Pomeroy Outstand1ng oomel Bnci&lt; ranch
oome with 3 bed rooms, 2
baths full basement. tee room.
equrpped krtchen wrport
lovely home on I acre klt

$49 90000
NEW LISTING- Danvtle Country liVIng 1n a great
locatton tor mmerst Located oo
apptox 2 acres, 2 story home
wtth new vmvl stdmg &amp; storms.
4 5 bedtooms. 2 baths lots ol
remodeling completed Garage
NEAR RUTLAND - Approx I
acre tot room tor mo~le oome
or camper Electnc avatlable
CHESTER 1979 14x70
mobole home 3 bedrooms I ~
baths, parttally lurmshed, un
derp tnnr. d ce ntral atr, fa
elec trrc heal 1nctudes 12 x24'
storage bu1ldm g I acre ~~

$1 9500 00

I

)Wanted
)For Sate

JAnnouncem enr
) F or Rent

Grandparent s at'f' Sihy l Dorst ,
Pomeroy; Mr and Mrs Charles E .
Cox, Oak Hill. Grea t grandparent s
are Grace Terry , Oak Hill; Mr. and
M rs. A.C U nderWood, B idwell

t)

18. - -- - - -

19, _ _ _ _ __
2

20
71.

J

Tl

•

2J
24
25
26
27.
28
29.
JO.
Jt.
32.

5

Surprise party

6

Robert Louks was honored on
Father' s D ay with a suf1&gt;rlse 70th
blrt hday party ln his home m
Syracuse
Louks' three children hosted l he
event
Homemade Ice cream and a
"Fisherman " cake were served to
guests.
Guests lncluded Mr. and :\1rs. Bud
Cundiff, Scott Cundiff, Mr. and Mrs.
Butch Armes , B.K Armes. Randy
Amles, M r. and Mrs. Jim Louks ,
Lori Louks, Amy Louks, Jonothan
Louks, Mr andMrs.J .D T aylor and
Mr. and Mrs. Rohert Louks

8
9. _ _ _ _ __

I to

I
1
1
I
I
1
l

I
I

I
I
I
I

II. - - - - - t2. - - - - - 13

Take A Step to Frnancral
Independence - We have 4
tnvestment properties for tn
come &amp; gmwth Call today ~
you want to get ahead
POMEROY 2 story 3
bedorom oome Wllh family
room 2 bath s formal dtnm g
room . country kttchen wtth
breakfast booth. lull basemenl
garage above ground pool
Only $30.000 00
REALTORS
Henry Cleland. Jr

992·6191
Dottre Turner 992·5692
Jean Trussell 949-2660
jo Htll 985-4466

A IH
'.

'

Wed ltke to 1ntroduce ~ou to
[ngage·A Car th e modern way
to drrve 1he vehtcle of your
chotce
No Down Payment
Lower Monthly Payment

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box 326
Pomeroy OH 45769

15. - - - - - 16
Mail This Coupon with RemiHance
The Dally Sentinel

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Complete Gutter Wort
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked m home area
20 years

"free Estimates"

EUGENE LONG

For Faster Servtce

Call 614 -992-6737

FOR FUTURE USE"
KEN'S
APPLIANCE

SERVICE
985-3561

All Makes
•Washers •D1shwashers
•Aang es
•Refr1ge rators
•Drvers •Freezers

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Stzes Start From 12'x16'
UTILITY BUILDINGS

Stzes lrom 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racrne Oh
Ph.

.. .

~·..-

"

~

...

..

..

.

... .

.

.

Wanted To Buy

We pay ca1h for late model
clean used can
J1m Mtnk Chev Olds lnc
Bill Gene Johnson

446 -3672

992-2478

PH.

6/ 2011 mo pd

DOZER
AND
BACKHOE
WORK

FENCE &amp; SUPPLY
'120 IE Mom, Pomeroy
PH . 992-6931

Cash patd for fancy 1ron or
heavy ~ron b eds $160 and
up tor certa1n Metgs Co
stone 1an. Old tlmtt c up ·
board
ca ll 1 - 304 - 882 ·

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS

"Free Estimates"
Installation Avatlable
I I m

'"

614 992

2711

II

We Have the
Lowest Rates

Buytng datly gold. STiver
co1na . r~ngs . Jewelry. aterlmg
ware, old coms , large c ur rency Top prtces. Ed Bur·
kett Barber Shop , 2nd Ave

Mrddteport, Oh
3476

ACCENT

AL TROMM
742-2328

a.

Wanted to buy used coal
wood heaters Swam Furnt
ture , 448 - 3159, 3rd
&amp;
Olive St , Galhpohs, Oh

FURNITURE
Beds, ~ron .
w ood. cupboards, chatrs,
cheus, baskets, dtshes.
stone Jars anttques. gold
and Sliv er
Wnte · M D
M1lter At 2, Po meroy Ohro
45769 '"' ootl 614 -992 ·

7760

BOGGS

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

SALES &amp; SERVICE

614-446 2072or304 -675

U S RT 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

Rt. l24 .Pomeroy Ohto

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

1979 t o 1983 Subaru or
Tovou Hatchb ac k or
wag o n
Good co nd1t1on,
3751 ev&amp;nmgs

New Homes- Extenst ve
Remodel1ng
Insuran ce Work
Cust qm Pole Bldgs
&amp; Garages
Roofrng Work
Alummum &amp; Vtnyl Sldtngs

Also Transmission

992-5682
992-7121

Parts

J 24 11t

773 -5988

&amp;

15 Years

E~~:perienc e

GREG ROUSH
PH 992 -7583

SEPTIC TANKS INSTAllEP

FREE ESTIMATES

367-7560--367-767

or 992 -2282

CHESHIRE. OHIO

li llie

Parts, Service &amp;
Cleaning

Chester. O~HI

For Garcia. Zebco. Sh1 ·
mano. Johnson, DiaWII,
Qurck.

Ph . 98!5 -426!1
~swtt .

Coli 915-4312

We Servtce All
Makes &amp; Models
An1enna ln,tallatton
House Calls and Shop

STEVE
PH .

Sen•tce Awatlallle

Services

3-1

~

Rest 6 IR 1 mo 1..-1

L__

Help Wanted

"Mud R1ver Band"

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Phone 742·3171

For The ladtes
Every Sunday Nrght
9:00 to
6!1 411 mo

We st Columbta

Featurrng Lanny Tennant

Something Special

614-992-7626
PRIVATE
INVESTIGATION
OF All TYPES

t·oo

Homemakers Dream t No
expenence needed to earn
25% comm rss ron demon
strattng m fnends ' homes
You co ntr ol hours and m ·
come Absolutely no 1nvest
men t 1 Also b00k1ng pet'tles
Call 446- 1270 or wrrte Toy
Plan , John sto wn , PA

15904

-985-4266

long Botto111,
_.:._ _ _ I

Oh.
t4 I mo

Wanted Someone to stay
wtth elderly lady 8 30 p m ·
8 or 7 a m 5 day1 a week

•lE NITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutters Cleaned
&amp; Painted
Storm Doors
&amp; Windows

W e Ho,.e A Full T1m e

Shop Technu:1an
on Du'y

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

949-2263

CHESHR- 985-3307
'

serv1ce and rnstallatton

Residential
&amp; Commercial

Announcemenls
3

Announcements

SWEEPER and ~•ng ma
chme repair, parts
and
supplies
Ptck up and
d eltvery . D av1s Vacuum
Cteaner o ne half mile up
Georges Creell Rd
Call

Call 742-3195
992-5875

PERSONALIZED
POOLS
498 Gen Hartinger Pkwy
Mrddleport. OH.

PH. 992-2549
OPEN;
MON.· SAT. 10 to 6
POOL SUPPLIES &amp;
MAINTENANCE

Try selling the New Avon
Way

For mformat•on call

1110

~A RATE

The Bett In Self -defense
Private lestoens Phone 286·
3074 , Jackson , Ohto

4

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

SIDING

BISSELL

SIDING CO.
" Beautiful . Custom
Built Garages "

Call for free sidina es·
ttmates . 949-2801 or
949-2860
No Sunday Calls
J I J ~~

-

Addons and remodeting
Rooftng and gutter -rk
Concrete worlo.
Piumbtng and etectncal
worlo.
lFree Estimates)

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

THE

Giveaw&amp;y

DITCHING

SERVICE
GAS LINES
WATER LINES
SEWAGE LINES
FREE ESTIMATES
BUS.:
RES .:

985-3813
985-3837
611811 mo od

mate Austr•han Blue
Hoeler Catl614 379 2128
3 female pupp1e1 . mother •s
part pekmese &amp; lhasa Apea ,
free to good home Call

Call

114-992-3403
Foxta1l ptge o ns to give
away Call 614 -742 -2450
Pupp1es to give away Pan
po~e - temor , 6 weeks old,

Wented to give away to good
home. 2 adorabte k1ttens.

304·675- t928
Ftrewood end pallets. mu11

toke oil . 304 · 773 · 5992

W1ll care for ftlderly penon tn
my home over 1 4 yn of
expenence Ca ll 614- 266·

Kitten to good h o m e. 304 -

6609

CHECK THE

CONTRACTING
•DOZER · BACKHOE
'RECLAMATION WORk
'Oil FIELD SEAVICf:S

•DUMP' TRUCK SERVICE
•CO NCRETE WORK

'CUSTOM BUILT HOMES

'WATEN , GAl.
OIL LINES

JIM CLIFFORD

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS
35185 Oak Hill Road
Lon1 Bottom. OH. 45743
PH.
Wt Use Von Scll1'14tr
EqliJINitt RteOlllllllllded
by L11din1 -Carpet llftM·
lacturers.

(614) 985--4212

'FREE ESTIMATES"
6-6-1 mo.

Water wells , drilled &amp; ser·
viced Free estimates Call

6

Lost and Found

Lost: Reward; Black lr whitt
mala cat . resembles Sylves·
ter 4 white boot1 . white
betty • chaat, white blue
~n ftOH. lear on rilht

f r - pow. Colt collect 814246-9212 oflor Bpm

2 koot bo. .loo In Woot
Columbte, 11-0&lt;d, OM It

a.

btarck
white, the other,
black, tan , white . If found,

t&gt;leaM colt, J04· 773-8182 .

614· 992·6006 or 814· 742 ·
3147
Would love to have 2 e1derty
ladieto sta-y in my home for 1
week . 1 month , whartever

loll of TLC Colt 814-849·
3014 anytime
Will g1ve p1ano &amp; orgen
l... ons In my honM to
begfnn..-s, adutta, • ad vanced Jtudents Alto teach
chording &amp; transposing Call

814-192· 5403

614· 446 · 3485

6 rooms, basement. double
garag e, 1 &amp; one -thrr d acre
lot
Rose Httl Pom erov
S32 900 Ca ll 1 614 678 ·

1979 3 bdr mob•le home on
sere lot, wel l sh aded
Must sell both together Cs l1

v,

6t4 · 388 9957
1 976 Bayvtew 14 X 70,
Refng , stove, CA WB go od
cond Catl 6 14 446 1506
1 9 78 Nashua 14x70 3 bdr
1'h bath. 2 em cond1t1oners ,
apphances, drapes Included

8 yrs old 3 bedrm, 2 baths,
fa m tly room w1th wood
b u rner Stngte cargar&amp;ge o n
8 fla t acres w1th stocked
pond C rty wat8f m Racrne

1976 14Jo:70 3 bdr tota l
he
elect n c underprnn mg
dow n an chors 8 .000 good
co ndttron storag e burldm g
$175 Ca 11446 3 162

Sale or Lease Servtce Sta
t1on . General Store bust ·
ness on busy h•ghway 2
bays, sales &amp; stock rooms,
selhng top pr oducts Serious
mmded calls onlv Wnte Box
1000
ca re of Galhpohs
Darly Trrbun e, 825 Th1rd
Ave , Galhpoha, OH 456 3 1
Water dellverv busmess
Ga lha &amp; Mason Cou nt1es
Serrous rnqurrres o nly 304
675 1619 evenr n gs, 6 to 9

22 Money to Loan
LOANS

FIXEO

Professional
Servtces

PlANO TUNING l ower
pr1ced regular t umngs drscounts to Semor Crtrzens.
Churches &amp; Schools Ward s
Keyboard . 304 -675 3824
Prano Tuntng and Repatr
l!lruntcard• MUSI C Co 446
0687 Skill and mtegr~ty our
tfl!lldemartor.
Lane Damels

514 -742 2951

AMA

approved

FDA &amp; FCC
Do ctor referrals

304 675 5568

Real Estale
31

Home• for Sale

For Rent m town wrth opt1on
to buy 3 BA fen ced yard
Call 61 4 446 2081 mght s
House for Sale by owner 4
BR house on Lower R1ve r
Rd 3 m1les south of town
Woodburnmg fueplace garage, basement new furna ce and r oo t . ove rlook rng
the Oh10 At\rler Call dayt1m e
446 1615
nrght 446 -

1244
4 BR lar ge eat m kttchen
l arge hvrng &amp; fam1lyo room s
also. 16Jo:32 tnground
heated pool all on a one acre
fenced 101. many other ex·
tras
Fmanctng ava ll abe -

059. 500
5877

Call 30 4 773-

For sale or trade , 2'h bed
room all mod ern house wrth
ba1h. attached garage. vmyl.
steel , alumn Sell or trad e fo r
late mod el 2 or 3 bedroom
tra1ler and land 304 · 882

Sttuations
Wanted

Sale by owner Trt· level 1 3
acre 4 BR 2 Bath, k•tc hen
complete, 15X30 d eck FP
2 cer garage, ax cond
Reduced t o 569 .900 Call

NEW AND USEO MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUAL ·
ITY MOBIL E HOME SALES.
4 Ml WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
AT 35 PHONE 614 446 ·
7274

liSHlNG CO rec o mmends
tha1 you do bustn ess wnh
people you know and NOT
t o send money thr oug h the
matl unt1l you have mv estt ·
gated the oHer1ng

Rental Agent
part·ttme ,
R1ver Bend Place , New
Ha ven , WV Call 304 - 676

12

for Sale
Country Home for sale 3 Br
central heat &amp; 111r
full
basement &amp; rural water , 2
acres Call 614 -379 -2513

THE OHIO VALLEY PUB

boat doclo.

6679

32 Mobtle Homes

t

RINE CO an Equal Oppor
tumty Empl oy er, lt now
fihng pos1t1ons for Cert1ited
W elders . Mac h1ntsts and a
Gen t ry Crane operator
Appty '"perso n •mmed1atety
at our fac1ltty at 2300 North
Matn Street, Pornt Pleasant
between 8 00 a m and 4 00
p m , Monday thr ough
Fr•dav

phone 304-675·6633

175-5t 62

J&amp;F

992

'Homes for Sale

Call 614 367 0691

NOTICE

S500 down 2 bdr tra1ter on
POINT PLEASANT MA - large wooded lot Your own

1 yr old

Kittens &amp; grown cat

Need Healthy lady to fiVe m
&amp; care for elderly lady, tn
Pomeroy area L1ght house
wort. &amp; cookmg Witl ntted
references
Salary plus
room &amp; board Call dayttme .

992 6284 . nrghto.
7671

614· 742· 2960
Vi nyl &amp; Aluminum

S1mmons Olds - Cad
Chevy. Inc t1 tak1ng •pphca
tlons f or fin auto meehanK::
3 y ears general expenen ced
m echantc w1th 1 veer upe
nence computer command
co ntrol Apphcat1on c an be
pt cked up at the serv •ce
office lntennews w1ll take
pl ace aftM all appltcat ton s
have been revtewed

614 -446 2156

C l KITCHEN

;!

992 -9968

Yard sale · June 25 &amp; 28 9
to 1 1 37 Pearl St Mtddle
port
Chr ldr ens c lothmg .
hub c ap s.
tra 1l er hrtch
kntcKnaca, women ' s Ill&amp;
22 112 clothmg, 10 speed
btcycle chtld's pt cknlc table

251 3

I

"'

For all your wtrtng
needs; furnaces reparr

5/ 2211

Bustness
Opportumty

Ass1stant Organ1s1 nttttded
at Grace Ep1scopal Church

Swtmmtng Instructor
needed 1mmed1ately at Mid dleport pool Contact Pat
K1tchen at 992 6212 or

3 2 tin

21

31

Summer Ttme tS Savmgs
T1me on thts remod eled
home Save Now rr Mtddle
port 614 · 992 · 6941

finanCial

6000 Ext R-9805

614 -44e -oa4

WRITESEL
ROOFING CO.

304 -773-

Prof ess to nat Eteet rotv SIS
Clrntc Pro be Typ e EkK:troly

Government Jobs S1 6 559
550,553 yea r Now H111ng
Your area Call 1- 805 · 687 -

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
WE ARE !OUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

shoemg ,

6207

446 4537 o• 446· 2158

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Or

Horse

23

Call 614 992 3968

JONES BAR

Cal l

3051

FINLAW

tl.l

$t&gt;f~ l ct' tl'laf Towt'IS A00¥f
1

toba cco

614-256-t52B

RATES Belo w market rates
F1xed con\rlent1onal FHA VA leader Mortgage ,
Athens. collect 614 592 ·

fmplnyiJlenl

Service

FISHING REEL
REPAIR

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
46353 Scout Camp Rd
It No

plow

Yard Sale 141 6m1le s leh
on 775
3 5 mr nght
Va ca tion sale - Everything
June 25- 29

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~----------­

All rypes O'f building construct ton, roofing, s1dmg,
rmno dehng, brrck &amp; con c rete. wood , custo m built
cabmet s By t he JOb or hour
Call 446-3162. Elowayne
Mast

HOME

I ] "'

AND

Co11nty Ca rtlf1ed

Dozer work. ground cleermg
&amp; ••cavat1ng 826 per hr

pm

or 10 loads firewood
delivered to Clrfton, 304·

Farm Equipment

S&amp;W TV
•TRENCHING
•BA CK HOE •DOZER
•END LOADER
•DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
•WATER . GAS, SEWER
RAIN LIIVES
,

1427

8

Authomed John Deore.
New Holland. Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

11

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Frazters B otto m Flea
Market
Everv weekend
U S 35 Fra11ers Bottom
WVa 25082 Dealers Wei·
come
Don Fraz rttr ·
Operator 304-755-2779

General Hauhng For 11le
Lunestone ftll d1rt , and top
soil
Calf CaH 61 4 -266 ·

Will

.. 'f&gt;iiriierov · ·

&amp; Vicinity

3171 .

8111
wants )Ob
well plaver
estabh1hed
couwith
ntry
square dance or polka bend

9

- SEWER
- GAS tiNES
- SEPTIC SYSTEMS
lARGE o• SMAll JOBS

113 W. 2nd St.
Pomeroy, OH .
Open: 9:00 to 5:00
Closed Thursda s

llill " '

4 , Jlr

.. ... aiilifiioifi ..

metal work, houaepa1ntlng.
cerpenter work Exc ref
Free ettimates Call 448-

Coli 446· 9638

- WATER

or

614·843·5191

M. l " Bud" McGHEE
Broker-Auction ServiCe
Cheryl Lemley .
Mergs County Assocrote

OWNER; MR. &amp; MRS. HARRY MANRING
AUCTIONEER: JIM ALLOWAY

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
- OOZ!RS
- BACKHOES
- DUMP TRUCKS
- lO·BOYS
- TRENCHER

PH.

miNI·"k'lt•\IINmi

Roofing and tuner work ,

Contlgments of new and

tub C•ll 614 -742 2137

"C UT OUT

t..wn Mowing &amp; Tnmmlng.
llelloble ond d.,.aoble
Reaton~tbM ratet C•ll 814·
256-e25 1 oftor 6 :30

Coli Roy 614-448-3109

TOM'S
SHOE REPAIR

Sentinei- Page- 7

Wanted to Do

uood morc:hondioe otwovo
welcome. RIChard Raynohh
AuctTonfUH
304 · 275 ·
3069

Old fash1oned cast non bath

PH . 992-7201
.

••"'V

Auction
Frr. ntght ••
the Hertford Community
Cantor Truckloedo of now
morchondioo ev•ov waok

L.---------~----.::6:,12:;5;::/~l:..:.:,m~o~.J.I

Ph. (614) 843 -5425
5·8·2 mo. pd.

LIVE BAND EVERY
WEEKEND

So me cry stal. some srlver Oster food processor G[ Mt crowavr
oven w/ probe and accessones Whtrtp ool freezer Sears washer
&amp; drye r sweepers bar stools maple dmmg room su1te w/5
cha~rs &amp; hutch floor sc rubber bas kets or all STZes fan ~ hrnocu
la~s large (approK 1701 elephant co lleclw fdrsplay cases red
wood planter houseplants. ceram1r. Chr1 stmas tr ee ~ handmade
ornaments, toy 1ed wagon pamttn gs p1c lures Decora mJ wall
hc.ngmgs rugs b l an ~ el s. qu1lts hand emhro1r1ered table cloth
w/ 12 napkms table lamps. 3 swag hRh1s floor lamps small
des k &amp; cha1r, 2 drawer ftlrng cab mNs boo kcase s swrvel ro ck
ers velv et wall hu gger reclrner hv tn ~ room su1tes (one mak es
tnlo queen bed) Kmg stze brass bed w / la r ~e dressesr chest of
drawers &amp; n1ghlstands 3 ptece bedroom sutte 19" co lor TV 12"
B&amp;W TV Sears AM I FM sleteo w/BSR changer new Ktmbatl
player ptano w/ 48 rolls vtolm old drun~ McG utly books L uc ~ y
Strtke tins, anltque ch ild's typewrrter old doll, hgurm es , drug
store sc ales (apothecary), school ~ouse 8 day clock

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

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

Wolfe
Investigations.
Inc.

Wilt OR

Handmade muzzle loader target gun. lth rca 12 ga double
barrel shotgun Spn ngfteld Mod 67 12 ga pump gun lrsh tn g
gear ol all krnds. redwood lawn lurn1tu re. lawn charrs sho
vet. sled ge hammer. saws, hamm ers. bench vr se ta p &amp; dre
set. mrsc ptpe dtes. wood chiSels hydraulrc tacks rakes
hoes. sander. drr lls. 4" Power Ktaft fOinter plane r. Hrrsh sa~
ta ble band saw, Kerosun heater. belt sander, Cta ltsman 14"
3 hp charrt saw , Ctaftsman router. Black &amp; Decker crrcular
saw, bench top workmate, mtsc tools ol all k1nd s law n
mower New Holland 8 hp nd 1ng lawn mower. elec hedge
tnmmer Black &amp; Decker weedeater Black &amp; Dec ker shop
vac Many 11ems nollrsled Noth 1ng shown ttl I sa le day
Terms of Sale · Cash orcheck w/ postltveiD Not responsr ble for accrdents.
Lunch Served by Shnnettes
One Time Ad: Cltp and Save

t•.

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

PARTS and SE RVICE

Follow Rt. 50 to Co. Ad 19 (Radford Rd 1 across
from Sportsman Club, Athens , Ohto.
Having sold our house and movrng to Florrda wtll
sell :
•nclude discount

Jll lfD

$37 500 00

SALE: Saturday, June 30
STARTING AT 10 AM.

These cash rates

New Chevy Truck ....
FENDER
176 9S
DOORS
... 1149.95
HOODS
.. 1174.95
BUMPERS
169 95
GRill
'42.50
R. SUPPORT .... 184 .• 5
TAll GATE
.... •85.00
FORD FENDER
'69 95
BUMPER
.. 16•. 95
Also Some Car
Fenders Available

1 13 lk

AUCTION

Mr. and Mrs Thomas L Dor st. or
Oak Hill, had a son June 19 tn llol7.cr
Medtcal C'Pntei He weighed scvm
pounds, 14 ounL&gt;'S snd was 21 inches
long

6/ 13/1 mo pd

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS
PH. 992·7013

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Larry E Spencer
Clerk o! Cou rt s

E Mar nl..:.:.;;;;;lllllo.O...

18

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

"K:k Pearton Auctione•
Service. Estate, Fwm. An·
tique • Mquidatioft • • •
LicenMd a bonded in Ohio •
WVo 304· 773-5785 or
304· 773-918&amp;

Wide Range of Chemicals &amp; Supplies

w.....,.,..- 985-3813
·---985-3837

612011 mo

ThP airman will now rf'f'f'tve

Dorst birth

&amp; IN-GIIOUNO

answ er ::J r o th Prw 1se res pond

Spc'C iali zC'd tnS I11.JCt!OO In the C IVil

engineering fi eld
He ts a 19H'2 graduat e of Point
Pleasant High School. W Va

POOLS ABOVE

as reau rred bv the Oh•o Rules of

Now Accepting listings in Meigs Co
B

All

Octane
Ethanol Enhanced
Ava•loble Only At

Mason , W. Va .

Public Notice

Real Estate General

Wntf' vour o.-n ad and ordf'r br mail with thi5
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you ge1
results Monev not refundabte

ln addtiiOn , a u m Pn who complr tf'
basic tr a1n mg earn fTPdif s rooward
a n assOC'tate dPgrff' 1n applif'd
sCJ('nCP through the Comm umtv

0oo&lt;loo• ... ..,._

lui-

$2 750 00

(I) HOUSE IN CHESTER:
Three acres with a nicely
constructed conaete block
home 26~30. 3 bedrooms,
one bath, 12.xl5 lwtng
room and 24x24 family
room. Partrally carpeted,

TO

SC'r1 COUf'Sf'

I»

Co
i iiMII

Vr r&lt;:J tn•a Pul p ancJ Paper

Com pany PI al defendant s
ThtS actr o n has been a ssrq rred
Case No 8 3 CV- 3 and rs
pendmq rn the Com mon Pl eas
Court of Mergs County Po me
ro y Ohr o 45 7 69
The o bte~.: t o f th +&gt; co m pl arnt rs
a pa•trt ro n and Qu rP.t trtlc JCtron
con cP.rnrn q o rt and qas rmrlPrly
•tlq Plf' I J it o wrr(J c1 esc rrbed rr: dl

_,_

est atf'

NOTICE OF
A PPOt NTM ENT
OF FIOUCIARY

ROLLER

.... _

Public Notice
ton, e.11.ecutors, and / or assigns of Maoy Madock. doc
You are hereby nol•fre rl tha t
yO I J havP heen named d efend
ants •n a ley al ac tton enllll ed
Ja m es W S uttl e Plat nttfl v5

,,

71J - Iot.oo&lt;l~

FOR

GAS - WATER

94

171 - -"""'"o....

_ ,.,.

·-····-·,...·-·

l l !JI&gt;MI01 .....

Public N otice

1U

mtum aasoltne tn Tltt Bia
Bend area.
·

·~ - ~

'11- l.oooft

JU - IA1 oH fOlio

. . , •• •, _•• "'-...............

II Ill H lloo&gt;oo

H hu i iJCf 'l

••-c"'
"""
JU- ""'''-"d

8

r:~~~~::~:::::=~~::::::::::::::::::~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ Auet1on every Tu••4•y
NOW AVAILAIUI '
G&amp;W PLASTICS
PEkSONALIZED POOLS
~~·
. t.:;.,~te;:.~· Y~h
"SUPER 94"
Contlf lldg., Comdon St
614 . 367' 7101 ·
The most powerful prt·
&amp; SUPPLIES
MAINTENANCE, SERVICE &amp; INSTALLATION

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

1,/fO O II-~o

01 ho l ouo

n~&gt;ar

Moore mtroduced Yonice Miller
10 the club Miller spoke about a
recreation center for Meigs County.
MIIIN and others are working to get
a three-year lease on a school
building . A teen raising is planned to
get som e ·contnbutlons and to
amuse mteres t ln the proj ect
throughout the county.
Marge F etty read an mVltat ion to
the 54th annual convention of garden
clubs on Aug 7, 8 and 91n Dayton

111 - Qur .. OO.o

IZ ~~"'l&gt;lnli I Hul"'l
13 to .........
' "' f loco... ol l Ao"-""'"

~.~ ...."""

FOR SALE

was given by K atherine SwanSI'n.
She r ead about honey bees preserv·
mg wood fences and porches.

•• - v~lon

,,._ .... a......

....

12 3 ,lnPs Sltt l nn r ownsh• p

so rare as a day inJuneT' New-s item

Jt7--c .......

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

'"

~~ "''""~ """"''
nw..,.,Ho,.,.. .......
• • h _ _ ... .... 1
01-II&gt;OCO l oo """'

Business
Opportunity

The Amateur Garden Club meet ·
mg w as held ln the home of Mrs.
Gene Moore Proeeed ing the m eet·
mg was Lionel Boggs Orgamc
Garden
Ver se of the month was, " What ts

...- G-ullo

UWon•4 •o l""

u

~ .

1 0 'luoonooo
13
" ' "···· · To- no
1 5 k "O~Oo
I I llo,_o I V . Ciftooo •
I 1 "'"''O iio n... uo
I I .,...., ,.~ l o O o

n •-.-......
,.c.
......... _

-_
, ,,_

f

...,,r;e..,.,
·-~·
··
IN - 11W41oo&gt;""

71 ........................... .

,

Uf,..-O&lt;T•o•

11 lloel!oto .. WontoCI

........... _

j otllllu IR~ lo•IPfJhum

l:J ....... . .

lliiiiiKMIN•~-ft ..

)1 " - · · · . . . .

~

,_.......,..wo
... .
,,,. .............

-··

The Daily

Business Services

( lfl "'f" d fH'fo" ' " " u rh ,.

71 ............. . .
U To,.koleohl o

...

J),.,_ .... ....
)4 ·~· .....
l5Leoo
•-'••·-~·
•t•

)

Connulh Eddlf' Harrl" Joh n Bl'ntlf'\ w... ndl
Ha 1mo n T&lt;r mara H,nman Klmb&lt;'r ly

Monday, June 25, 1984

PHONE
992-2156
.
Or
o.,t

._

.._
rue• T\1• "-''"'-'

.. . . ..., •• l .....

WWMI!

eo~t o l ..,

21

,,

.......

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

...JA•-.,.•-•
_.... .
u.,.,..,_...,

st udied the A1r Force mtsslon,
orga nization a nd customs a nd

Meigs Honor Rolls
Tbe ftnal six "-£'f'k.&lt;; honor ru!l for th•'
Syracuse F.letl1(1fttary School has bf"t'n
announc&lt;'d Makl n.R: a wad£&gt; nf R or abow
In aU their su bjfl('"ts to bf&gt; namro to Thf' rull

,,..._.~

"o.......,

In the service---Grue.1er

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

w

124

A tlendmg were F lora Man&lt;'
G tbson, M ary Hughes . J ohn and
K atheryne MetzgPI , Gcorge and
E rma ! Cr0means. Will iS a nd K allp
Anthony , Daw and Clara MaP
Dorst, Ca rroll , Debbte and Dodv
CIPiand. Tony and Sarah Fowlet.
John and A wilda Wem er , Don and
Edna Wilson . M tlt on and Freda
l lood and Teresa Dutt en

..

ttritl Dlil' StlltiMI QHslhtd
lll Coltft S1 . Pl*lfOY !*it 457i!

Fourteen members and one guest
attended. TheywereGracleW!lson,
Bernice Hoffman, Pearle Canady.
Avona1e George, Ruth Erlewlne,
Francis Yormg, Donna Nelson, Lois
Pauley, JoAnn Baulder, Betty
Bishop, Allegra Will, Stella Adkins.
Sharon J!.'Well , Janet Bolin and her
guest , Cheryl Jewell
"Country Parson," by Norman
VIncent Peale was the devotton.
Also read was The Essay on Man .
The treasurer's ll'port and mln
utes of the last meeting were also
read A thank-you note from Clara
M acJeffers was rmd
A family picntc will he held at 6
p.m. July 17 In the home or Mr and
M rs Stanley Caulder or A lbany
PearleCanadywonthedoorpnze.
Refreshments were served.

Lakc
Attendmg werf' Nancy F: Hunt,
Nancy L Hunt. Hetdi, Angel and
Kelly Sntder , Mike and Sally
&amp;aver, M arily n. Cristie and Gary
!..ee Cooper. Paul Carol, Paula ,
Meltssa and Bnan Justis, K evm
G ruE'S!'r, Kay, Ktm and Tim Ry an
and Steve Tnplct t

·----·- - 1

Cell 614 256-

1216
S1 ,500 down take over
S316 mo pavment taxes &amp;
m suran ce rncluded 3 bdr
ranch , full basement, wood burner c •ty sc hool s located
tn Plantl Subdrvrsron .
S24,400 balance Cal l 446·

8002

3590
' 77 Cameron 14~~:70 , ex
p•ndo , 3 bedroom . new
underpenntng, front por c h .
gas tuet
exc cond,

08 . 000 00
2700

304 676

3 bedroom hom e. 3 years ·
old. 8 V1 percent . assumable
lo&amp;n , low SO ' s 304 - 675 ·
6713 aher 5 p m

Call 614 949 2641
Rustrc Htlls. Syracu se 3
bedroom , famtly room, cen ·
tral atr , c ham hnk fence ,
storage bu1ldrng $32.000
Call 61 4 992 2521 or 304·

882 -3197
Owner transferred mu st se ll
hom e. famll't' room h as 20ft
of wrndow s for pastoral
vr ew ftmsh ed d o uble gar·
age, fireplace. large p or ch,
40 ft deck woods. prrvacv,
n ear Royal Oak Park

S63 900
5420

R emodel e d 2 bedroom
house near Pomer oy on 1
acre Storag e butldmg &amp;
cellar S 17 000 Call 614 -

deck &amp; fenced tn b•cll yard
8 Y2 p ercen t anumabht loan ,
t 10,000 down or w1ll con .'
11eklr trade for land. low 60 '$
after 6 304-R7f;-6643
30 acre farm , 14 acres flat ,
ntce 8 room house, 2 drilled
wells. excellent buy 1n the
mrd 60' s Jake Somerville

Root Estate, 304 -676 3030
or 67~ - 3431

446-02 21
1977 14X70. 38R 2 full
b aths, underpmnrng , AC
OW Ca ll614· 2 56 1156
2 BR needs some reparr
seen on Georges Cr eek Rd.
behtnd H&amp;H Body Shop
pnce nego,rable
Clos1 n g Out Tratler Rental
Bu sr ne ss Had 22 O NLY 6
LEFT
S tzes 10x50 &amp;
1 2x 5 2
2 b edroom fur ·
nr shed A comfortable ho me
tor a Low Prtce Brown 's
Tra il er Park
Mt ner sv tlle.
Ohro Call 614 · 992 3324

992 3006
112 Maple Pla ce corner of
Lasley, 2 bedrooms, famtly
room kitchen Must se ll to
settle estat e Call co llect
Vngmre Crew 1 614· 891
0442 or 431 0633
Hou se &amp; 1 ac re 10 Pomerov
ctty gas &amp; sewer 5 roo m s &amp;
ce llar fo r under $1 0 000 or
best offer WtH co nsrder land
contract Call after 6 p m ,
Athens 614 593 3269
Nt ce home rn cou ntry near
mm es, full basement. cell wr
2 bedroom s. 12 acres m
Langsv tlle
S29 000 Call

614·742 ·2 261
Must sell have to leave stat e
N o r easonable offer re
Je ct ed
2 bedrooms
1 1h
bat h dmetle kttch en ltvtn g
room Plus nver rtght away
ON 33 8 across for KaiSer
Alumm u m 10 mtles hom
bndge Cal1614 247 30 1 2
Older home w1th go od po
tentt al c lose to tow n rea
sona b ly prtced could be
m ade rnto 2 or Ja partments
go od mve stm ent Call for an
appointment 614 992

3592
Pom er ov. House for sale 3
bd rm s 1 1f? baths, uttlrt tes
a c , carpet ed. m su la red
rem o deled rns1de carport
buement 614 992· 2602
12 mrles fr o m Pomeroy
o utstandtng 8 s1ded ho me 3
s1des decked 3 bedro o ms 2
bat hs Full basement bar o1
pl us 9 acres S45 .000 Call

614 985 3575
Fo r sa le by ow ner. Cl arence
Htll Imm ediate possessmn ,
pnce negotrable or owner
w1ll he lp frnance 81 level 1n
Ru st rc Hills , Syracuse. Ohto
2 full bath s 3 bedrooms,
famdy room w1th f1replace.
sp tral sta~rcase . hvtng room.
krt chen w1 t h dishwasher &amp;
garbage dtsposal charn ltnk
fen ce 1 6x1 2 barn f or stor age rnsulated Call 61 4

247 4t34
FOR RENT WITH OPTION
TO BUYIIt 14 f1 w•de three
bedroom, bath and h alf ,
mobile home s1tttng o n mc e
lot
ready t o move rnto
S225 00 down $225 00 per
month 304 -576 27 11
Seven year o ld home three
bedrooms garden spo t
2605 Lm coln Ave B 1h pet
assumable loan 304 675

19 77 14x70 Schultz on
52x1 00 lot, con cr ete porch
w tth awmng storoge butld
rng 3 bAdroom 1 •,, b eth
stove &amp; refngerator . dr spo·
sal &amp; ran ge hood Must sell

S16 .000

Call

614 992

7 467 or 742 3154
10)(60 1966 two bedr oom
New M oon m ob rle home
S2 000 Phone 304 675
6995 be fore 1 p m

33

Farms for Sale

Small f arm (18 25 acreslrn
Portland Ohto bordered by
Ohro Rtver &amp; h•ghway No
bUild rngs some trees. 111
mmeral rtghts Fatr mark et
puce S 40 000 F or mfor
matton wrr1e B Grah am
4615 Eme r ald , Na cog
doch es. Texas 75961

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
lot for sale tn M e rce rv1lle

Call 614 256 6618
fo r sale 6 acres o f groundm
lebanon TP Good butld tng
stte on hard top r o ad A sk.ng
S5000 m best o ffer Call

614 843 5231
Syoracuse
seve r al n• ce
bwldmg lots wtth o ld bnck
hous e o n Wat er St over
lookrng n ve r Call 614· 992

5974
10x50 tratl e r o n larg e
wooded lot 7 mrles below
Ga llrp o lts on Racoon

S10 995 304 675 6448
5 acres can be spirt 500ft
fr ontage lo cated 8 m1les
north o f Pornt Pleasant on
A t 2 Flatrod Call 304
675 - 1 248 aft er 5

3 acres South s rd e % m1 le
oft matn h• ghway 304 6 75

t894
HOLLY PARK 2 bet1rooms
3 ac re s 2 outbw ld tng s.
porch a1 r co nd•t•onrng Mv
Best Buy at S21 ,000

JAKE SOME RVIL LE REAL
ESTATE
304 675 3030 304 675
3431 304 675 -3403

Rentals

5047

41

~2 Mobile Homes

d e l u~~;e central
pool et c Call 675 5 10 4
or 6 75 5386

f or Sale
Closmg out tra1ler rental Bs
Had 22. only 6 left Srzes
1 0•50 &amp; 12x52 2 bdrm
furnrshed
A comfortable
home for a low price
Brown' s Tra1ler Park , M1
nersv1lle . Oh 614 · 992 ·

3324
1981

3 veers-old, totat electric .

Call 6 14 992 ·

1973 1 2x60 remo d e l ed
trail er, new ca rpet , doors
plumbmg electnc AC Call

Hollypark. 14•70,

exc
cond . 12x8 deck,
und erp ennmg and large
room atr cond mcluded

304 - 895 -3696 o•
3600

895 ·

Trader 8o lot 3 04 773· 5848
after 4 p m
Holly Park mobile home,
fully turn1shed Very good
cond1tron , 1 % acres ,

$16. 000 304 -468 -1686

Houses for Rent

3 bdr house
An

Aent 4 BR ho use
upp er
At 7 Ca ll 614 · 446 0429
2 BA hou se 1n Ga lh pohs
adults no pets Call 614

446 ·0958
Home for rent good toea
tr on Bob M cCormtck Rd
3B R full basement partl't'
f •m sh ed nt ce, 2 b11th. ktt
c he n hvmg area beauttfu l
v1ew n o chr ldren, no pets

Ca ll 614 446 3643 Wos o
man Aeel Esta t e Agency
3 BFI hom e for rent , Rt 160.
5 m1 from hospttal carpon .
n1ce knchon le hvtng room
wood floor . 8300 m o plus
secunty, no c hildren, no

pets

Call 614-446 3643

Wtseman
Ag ency

Real

Est•te

·.- - - - -

�Page-8-The Daily

Monday,

Monday, June 25, 1914

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

June

25 ,

Pomeroy--Middleport,

1984

DICI&lt; TRACY
41

They'll Do It Every Time

Houses for Rent

2 BR house. aduhsonly . Call

61 4·446 ·0924
Small house. 2 bedroom .
$100 . mth .. $25 . depo1Jt
Ooea not include utilities &amp;

Sl:t:W*,C.M"

Knauff Firewood Reduced
prices thru July 31st . Have
your own Masoned wood
this winter . , , •. 258-82.6.

litU.SI! "" - -·

Limettone. Sand. Gravel.
Delivered in Mason. Mags.
Gallia or pick up at Richards
&amp; Son . Call 446 · 7786 .

adults only. Call 614 -949 -

2619 .
House tor rent near Me•ga
Mme No. 1 . 3 bedrooms.

Plastic cisterns atate approved. plastic septic tanks.
plastic cuht&amp;rt, metal cul -

$225 . mth .. SlOO . deposit
Call614 ·742 ·2126 .

verts. RON EIIANS ENTER ·
PRISES . Jackson. Oh 514 286-6930.

6 rooms and bath with
basement . nice neighbor·
hod. reference&amp; and deposit

Coffee table stereo. stereo.
dinette table _Ca11814 -256 -

6417.

House for rent . 1310 Ohio

Street . 304 -773 -51 1 5 .

Shrubs pruned. lawn re seeded. retaining walts ,
sidewalks, patios . fill dirt .
topsoil, bark mulch &amp; saw dust . Contact Bruce Davi sion. Ca11614-266 - ,427 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

TV. chest, couch , rung ,
Yamaha organ . Call 446 -

2 bdr . trailer fully furnistled .
good location, sec dep req

4052 or 448 -2248 .

Call 446 ·8668

2 bdr . unfurnished. eMtra
nice. 2 mi out on At 588.
S200 mo .. adults only _ Call

446 ·2300
12)(65. 2BA. m c ountry.
$100 deposit. $175 mo

Call 614· 367 ·0478 .
Mobile home for rent on 0 J
White Rd. just before Pros pect Church Rd .. 4 mi _from
hospitaL 3BA. large master
br . ex storage. lg . bath .
mostly furnished. nice lot .
garage. no children . no pets
Ca ll 614 -446 -3643 Wise man Real Estate Agency
1 2X60 edge of town on
588. no pets,$165 mo.
dep &amp; ref Call 614 -446 -

44

51 Household Goods

Apartment
for Rent

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS IEoual
Housing Opportunity) has
one and two bedrooms. rent
starting at $ 1 57 for one
bedroom 11nd $193 per
month for two bedroom .
with $200 deposit located
near Foodland ~tnd Spring
Vallfty Plaza. pool and TV
ant . Call 446 -2745 or leawe
meuage
3 bdr unfurn garage apt .,
S250 plus deposit
Call

446 ·3786
Furnished apt 919 2nd ..
Gallipolis. S1 75 Men only .
Call 446 -4416 af1er 7PM .

0822
14X65 3 BR . gas heat.
1973 . good cond.
S 7900 . 1 2 X60 all gas. 2

BR . 1969 S4900 Call 614 ·
446 -0175
1974 14X70. 3 BR . 1 'tl
bath . tota l el ec . good
cond .. S8900 Call 614 -

Newly remodeled 2 bdr .,
equipped kilchen , central
air , $250 . 821 1h Second
Ave ., Gallipolis . Call 446-

2158 .
Furnished Apt . 920 4th .,
Gallipolis
S225 . Utilities
paid Adults, 1 bdr . Call
446 -4416 after 7PM

446 ·0175
2 BR mobile home. Rt 7
below Eureka. adults only,
no pets , S 135 rno Call

4 rooms&amp;. bath. unfurnished
pal.. utilities paid. adulls
only . no pets . Call 446 3437 or 446 -31 11 .

614 ·256 - 1 157
Unfurnished 2 bdr. in Crown
12x60 2 bedroom mobile
home, partly furnished. Ra ci ne area Call 614 -992 -

5858 .
2 bedroom mobile home ,
adults only For sale or rent

City Call 61 4·256 ·6520 .
First floor furnished apt ..
utilities furnished. adults
preferred , reference re quired . Inquire 631 -4th
Ave ., Gallipolis .

Call 614 992 2698 .
2 bedroom , total electri c
with central air . o n East
Main St ., Pomer oy above
car wash . fully furnished .
Call614 -992 -7314 or 992 -

6215
2 bedroom trailer. kitchen
furnished . c ouple one small
child accepted . 304 -675 -

1076.
2 bedroom trailer . furnished .
washer . dry8f. air condition.
adults. no pets. $1 75 00
plus ut~ities Phone 304 -

First fl oor furnished apt ..
utilities furnished , adults
preferred. references re quired . Inquire 631 4th
AVe ., Gallipolis .
1 bed(oom apartment turn .
or unfurn . $190 per month ,
utilities paid, 6500 deposit.
6 month lease. no chi ldren.
no pets . Call446 -3657 after
7.

62 Olive St ., Gellipolis . New
&amp; used wood &amp; coal stoves,
6 piece w ood living room
suite with 6 inch flat arms
$399. bunk beds complete
with bunkies S 199, 2 piece
antron livingroom suites
$199. ant ron recliners S99,
other recliners
maple
dinette sets S179 . bo.~~
springs &amp; mattfess twin or
full $100 set regular - firm
S1 20. maple dinette chairs
S35, wash stands $34 ,
maple rockers $59, 7 piece
chromo dinene set S 149. 5
piece dinette sat S99. used
bedroom suites, refrigara .
tors . ranges , chest. dressers,
wringer washers , TV's, dry ers. &amp; shoes. Ca ll61 4 - 446 -

sao.

31 59 .
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair , rocker. otto man, 3 tables . !extra heavy
by Frontier). S685 . Sofa,
chair end loveseat. $276
Sofas and chairs priced from
$285 . fO S895 . Tables. $46
and up to 6126 . Hide-a beds . S440
and up to
$626 ., Recliners . 6176 . to
$376 .. lamps from $28 . to
S75 .5 pc . dinettes from

S99 .. to 435 . 7 pc . $189
and up. Wood table with six
chairs $425 to $745. Desk
$110 up to S225 . Hutches.
$550 . and up, maple or pine
finish . Bunk bed complete
with mattresses . S250 . end
up to &amp;395 . Baby beds.
5110 . Mattresses or box
springs . full or twin , $58 ..
firm . $68 . and $78 . Queen
sets. $195 . 4 dr. chests.
$42 . 5 dr . chests. S54 . Bed
frames . S20 .and S25 .. 10
gun - Gun c abinets. S350 .
Gas or electric ranges $375 .
Baby mattresses. $25 &amp;
$35 . bed frames $20. S25.
&amp; S30. king frame $50 .
Good selection of bedroom
suites . cedar c hests .
rockers . meul cab inets.
swivel rocken
Used Furniture -- Chairs.
dryers. and TV's 3 miles out
Bulaville Rd _ Open 9am to
6pm. Mon _ thru Fri . 9am to
Spm, Sat

2 bdr apt. newly decorated .
$60 to S200 permo utilties
part. paid . Call675 -51 04 or

675-5386 .

675 -4874
44

Apartment
for Rent

Newly rttmodeled 2 bed room . equipped kitchen .
$225 Deposit required . Call

614 · 992 · 5319
2815

614 ·446· 0322

4 rooms &amp; bath . furnished .
clean . no pets. adults only.
deposit &amp; reference re qwred . Ca116,4 -446 -1519

TV S. Appliances . 627 Third
Ave .. Gallipolis, 614 - 446 1699 Spin washers , gas &amp;
electric dryers , auto
washers, gas &amp; electric
ranges , refrigerators , TV
sets .

513 Third Ave , $,35 mo ..
adults only , deposit re quired . Call 614 -446 -4222
between 9 -5

or 992 ·

Newly redecorated. 1 bed room. partially furnished .
S225 Deposit required . Call

61 4·446 7398 .

APARTMENTS . mobile
homes . hou ses . Pt Pleasant
and Gallipolis 614 - 446 -

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms . Park Central Hotel.

8221

Ca ll 61 4·446 ·0756 .

One bedroom furn1shed apt.
P1 Pit Very clean . nice
A udlt!'l only . no pets Phone

Washers . dryers, refrigera tors, ranges . Skaggs Appliances, Upper River Rd .
beside Stone Crest Motel.

2167 or 614 ·593 6937
45

pm

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

2 bedroom country apt .,
near fairgrounds Roger
Morgan . Call 614 - 992 -

614 · 992 · 5319 or 992 2815

Nice 1 and 2 bedroom
unfurnished apartments .
304 -675 -2218 before 6

Furnished Rooms

Washers &amp; dryers S69 .95 &amp;
S79 .95-- This week only .
Hupp ' s Appliances &amp; Glassware, corner Rt . 141 &amp; R1 .

7. Call 446-8033 .
large Freezer S95. 5 TV ' s
$35 S. up, couches $35865, 3-5 .000 BTU air conditioners $95 each. Speed
Queen washer S50. Whirl pool washer $66. General
Electric washer &amp;95. dryers
S95 each. king S1ze box
springs •
mattress 565 .
Skaggs Appliances 559
Upper River Rd. 446 -7398 .

Sleeping room $115 . utili ties paid . Share bath. male
onlov . Range &amp; refr1g . 919
2nd. Ave .. Gallipolis. Call
446 -4416 after 7 PM

46 Space for A ent

304-6 75 · 1386
1 bedroom furnished apart ment. all utilities paid. 304 -

575 ·71 12

Trailer spece for rent

Call

614 · 367 · 7438

2dr

Refrigerator . General
860 . Cr~ll614 - 446 -

El~tctric.

2 bedroom apartment . $200
month , plus utilities . Camp
Con ley ares . 30 .. · 675 -

4683
2 rm turn . e t1i c~n cy apt..
carpeted throughout $175
mo .. dep . &amp; ref . requ.red
Call 614 -446 -4607 or 446 -

2602

COUNTRY MOBILE Home

614· 256· 1529 .

331 3.

Park . Route 33. North of
Pomeroy. llrge lots . Call

614 ·992 -7479.
Warehouse or storeroom.
25x6 . for furniture. lumber.
roofing . insulation, panel ing . equipment or other use

Call 1 ·61 4·486 5553
Trailer lots for rent

Deluxe 1 BR Apt . Gallipolis.
garagl!. CA. no pets. no
ch ildren . dep &amp; re1 . can

30• -

675 · 1076
Garage with two , 2 foot
doors in M1
Alto . WV.

304 -895 · 3534

1 bedroom Apt . $196 . mo
including utilities . Equal
Housing Opportunity . Con tact Village Manor Apts .

Merchandise

61 4·992 · 7787

Twin beds-

992 ·7721 .

61 4·446· 4267 alter 6pm .

51 Household Goods

•Go

each . Call

Top soil and fill dirt deli vered. 304 - 675 -7771
1983 250 3wheehtr. small 2
wheel bike; swing set; elect ric motorcycle for pre schooler _ Phone 304 -675 -

Camera 35 MM . Olympus
with ecca11ories, Call 304 Six wheeler altrl! terrain
vehicle, good co ndition,

$400. 304·882 ·2887 .
Will tear down barn or
building for lumbar. 304 -

Cherry Dining Room suit
with drop leaf table. Call

Wicker high back King chair.

614-992 -5164 .

evanino•-

GE refrigerator -freezer It
el&amp;ctric Magic Chef stove,
both almond co lor &amp; 6
months old . $800 pair . Call
614 - 992 · 5017 or 992 -

Brown wicker chest with

p .m .

Boerding all breads. Heated
indoor - outdoor facilitiet .
AKC Doberman pupptaa:

8100 .
3115 .

Stud Service . Cell 81 4 -441 ·
7795 .

79

8riarpatch Kennels Profes sional All -breed grooming .
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa cilities . Pick up and delivery
s&amp;rvica. Engliah Cocker Spa niel puppies . Call 814 -388-

Call

61 4·446·4257 .
2 Br Trailer Sylvester 8X32 ,
asking price 5600. Dis hwasher Gibson. $100.
Electric heater $20. Allis
Chalmers tractor model CA
with owners manuel. wide
front end, 3 point hitch.
garden blade. plow &amp; disc
asking price $2000. 250
gallon fuel oil drum round
type with stand $100. Call

61 4· 388·8504.
Dynamark 1 1 hp, 36'' riding
motor. less than 1 yr old,
$600 .. 10" McCullough
Saw $1 OQ _ Call 614 -446·

2316
Lawn Chairs $6 ea .. 446 ·

4384

1522 or 446 -7572 .
Complete mobile sound sys tem . Professional sound au dio equipment Good for a
band, perfect for OJ . lights
included. Ca ll evening after
9 p .m . 614 -992 -5547 &amp;. ask
for Nick Jr .

Kelvinator 30 inch electric
stove. new burners. good
condition. clean . $100 firm .

call614 ·992 · 3166 .
large lighted arrow sign
letters and numbers in cluded Hawk's Amoco.
Tuppers Plains . 614 -667 -

3182 .
Gas Furnance Owners get an
edge on Heat Bills this
winter : Set monthly goal!
with this newT ested. proven
electronic device . A Fue lometer will pr&amp;pare you to
economically. convi&amp;ntlov.
monitor Heat -Cost in dol lars. cents. this winter .
hourly. daily. from right
inside your home
Easy
instructions. installs in minutes. NO contact with fur nace circuitry . A one year
Guara nt&amp;e on workmanship .
limited supply in stock of
this Mini-Model -( B) System.
Order now _ For details call
Consumer Monitor
Systems- Middleport, Ohio
At 6,4 -992 -3 718 Monday,
Wenesday. &amp; Friday 9 :00 to
12 noon

30 inch electric range with
automatic oven timer. good
co nditon . 40 h . hay elevator . Call 614 - 843 -6186
evenings .

Zuspan, 304· 773-6564 .

CFA
Himalayan
Siamese
kittens.and
newPersian
liners
kittens . Call 6, 4 -446·384•
aher 6 .

.

~~==========:;:======'"=-==-==-::~
63

1

$70,

304 · 675 - 7541,

1 bedroom apt . in Middleport . e135 1 month plus

6666 .

utUillel. Calll14·992-&amp;548
dayl or .,..nto 114-849·
2211 .

Baby crib. eMcellant condi-

door. 160.00. 304 · 675 7641 .

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

E lactric ex&amp;rcise rollers ,

S75 . new. 304 ·175-7641,
evenings

tion, 150 00 , 304 · 87&amp; ·
2871 .

White pino dook, 125, 304675-7641 , evonlngo.

71

Livestock

ADBA Reg . Pitbull puppies,
McCoy generation Call

Musical
Instruments

2 Sunn mod&amp;l 15 in . PA
cabin&amp;ts, 1 Fender Bassman
21 5 cabinet. 2 monitor
cabinets. 1 Forisa 61 nota
organ. Call 614-992-6524 .

2 yr . old Kim!MIII Artist
console piano . Oak cabinet,
$2100 ., new . will tell for
$1500 . Bench included. Call

379-242&amp; alter 5pm .

58

Rabbitt and Hutch $60. Call

614·4411·4257 after 5pm .

5 · 1 0 - 1 982 - V6 . 4 spd ..
Topper . Call 61 4·441 ·
1331.

Greenbriar Stables. we ~y.
sell or trade hortas . 304-

1979 Dodge Truck . Adven turer 1 &amp;0. tilt. am ·fm sterBO,
2 -tone paint. new tir&amp;s . Call

675 · 5799

614-245-5131
9555 .

Fruit

&amp; Vegetables

Black raspberries, we pick.
$10 .00 gallon. Call after 6
to ord&amp;r . Happov Hollow Fruit
Farm. 304 -676 -2026.

S1 .50 bale. Cal 304-1755086.

Black raspberri&amp;s. Point
Pleasant. 304-675-1365

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock
Farm Equipment

Tractor. model 8 with culti ·
vators . Call 614 -2 56-6417.
7 h . haybine, eJCc. cond ..
John Deere 24T baler, New
Holland 66 baler. Farmhand
pull wheel rake. New Holland hay crimser, wagon
new hay rack. 601 Ford
mower, Ford cultvators. rotary hose. fertilize spreaders, wheat drills. Farmhand
grinder mi.~~:er. •hay &amp;: grain
elevator. other field ready
equipment. Howe's Farm
Machinery, Rt. 124 &amp; May ·
hew Rd .. Jackson. Oh.

614 · 286-5944.
Allis Cha lm ers with cu ltivators. good tor tobacco . Call

1

Autos for Sale

304-675· 7421
304-895-

62 Wanted to Buy

Wanted to buy. a nice boys
bicycle. 16 in. Call 458-

1997.

mare . Call 614·266 · 1386.

&amp;t 4 · 446 -

scotchguard-watar extrac tton. deGdorilers . flitEE Mtimates . Ae81onabte rttee .
RON ' S Television Service .
Speciattzing in Zeftith and
Motorola . Quazar. anllll
house caHa . CaH 304 -67a-

2398

&amp;14·446 · 2454.

Of

Fatty Tree Trimmtng. stump
removal
Call 304·175-

RINGLE'S SERVICE ...,__

or 175A LLEY OOP

GET

your

urpet

SHIP

STEAMER . Water removal.
furniture ctMAing, fr" Hti-

malos . 304·176-2295.

1243 or 446 - 1615.

ft. aluminum topper. 304-

Water wells commercial and
domestic. test holes. pump
sales and service. 304 -896 -

Vans

&amp; 4 W.O.

2726 .

1981

M111rda

GlC .

Call

1981 Dodge 024,

AM - ~M.

61 4-441·0930 or 304 · 6·,,;7448.

offer. Cell 614-912-5547 .

St&amp;reo. New Tirn, 4spd.,

Call 114-245·6131 or 2469655

1978 ~ord Fioota, goo4
mileage,

Motorcycles

1!177 Harley Dalridaon low
rider . Call 446 -7016 after

good

1976 Monte Carlo.

1971 Chevy Caprice Clnstc. 2 dr, IC, ps, V-1 et'lgine,
body good condition . exc.
performa..ce . Will consider
all offers . Call 614 -992 7412 after 6 p.m.

1/W

Beetle.

0"""

Roadster 1000 CC. •• ·
cond .. &amp;3200, 19B3 Honda
Express Moped, brand new.
60 CC. $425. Call6 1 4· 446·
7310 alter 5,30 pm .
Honda 750 K. CoR 11 4-446·
3252 .
1 181 Honda 750 Custom,
26.000 miLes. ex . cond. Call

614·317·0394 .
19110 HOnda Odysu•,•
&amp;600 ; ot white spoke
wheels. 16'h inch never

Remodehng, siding. interior
and e•tMtor. t111tured coat ing. simutatad brick ane!l
stucco. thttfmo re,tlacement
windows. 304-875 - 1110.

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gett1polis. Ohio

8&amp;0 Suruki EC . 88ft1 ......,.
.,..,.. offer, 304 -175·1713
aftM I .

ter 6 .
1978 Okls, 4 door, V -6 . 1ir.
PS, PS, AM -FM , cruin.

7!5

Boats end
Motors for Sale

with
pewer
and e.lltrat.
Actualallmitea.
11.000
. Mutt
sell this week. For Sale ly
Own&amp;r . Call 304 -676 ·
2975.
1 110 Pontiac

SunWt-1111, •

cyt .. with PB . ,.II, oir cend.,
AM · FM caaMtte, exealhtnt
condition. e2 . 700. 304 ·

676-7330.
1982 Camare. V- 1 • .utomatic, PS. PI, air, eruiu,

1• ft . aluminum boat with
tilt trailer. tnWivel be .. teats,
electric motor battery I life
jackets. 3 moa. old, eltc.
cond. •t&amp;O for all . Other

itemo. CoH 448-4U5 .
16.1 loot &amp; Trailer, 40 ~.
J"""oon Envino. Tra" "'
Sell .
114- 448-4337.

c..

1 I ft. SM Star. optlft bow.
convenible t~. aiR curtaint. IHtck erw:lotura. 115
h~ Mercury. till.
,ower lrim. low hoUft.
CUitom trailer. Catl 814-

tilt, AM-FM otorao, 30,000 379-2122 alter lpm .
miloo, 304-871·2813.
1 -~--------

c-. automatic.
wtn-

Larry' s lo•t Service. E•pert
outboard motor rtpain .

dowa, 17,000 mH01. 104·
8711-7471.

board&amp;. Alao ln,eerd outbcNrd repelra. Mlnnekata

1977

air condhion. ltQWer

tll71 ~Oft! LTD. 4 - . peint. 1'8. Pl. A-C. 311
Interceptor.

fte

ruat,

t1.5BO. 304· 1112-33711.
1 11111
apeed.

Honda
ma'hy

Prelurlll,

I

options .

113.000 mllaa, 11,400 .

" " - 304-nl-1321 -

B:JO 104-372-1711.

WHAT'S WRONG WITH

e&gt;iLL, YOU'RE
MAKING A
,MISTAKE/

LEARNING THE FAMILY
BU51NE55 FROM THE

GROUND UP?

Good - 1 Excavating, b.se·
ments. footers. driveways.
septic tanks, landscaping.
Call anytime 814-441 4537. Jamesl. Davison , Jr.
owner .
J .A .IIt .Constructio" Co.Au -

tlond. Oh.l14 ·742 · 2903;
8aMft'terttl, Footers, COtt-

l~oclaHza lrl

Mercury Out-

Contar. ,.r~
oeMc:ooentar. Lhre
beltatackle.ll8-8t..
CootviHa. Call 114· 8171389 or 8117·8107.

llenrk:l

•

Electrical
Refrigeration

a

42"2·2317.

NOTHIN'
BUT
LIQUIDS

o

.a 10m

•?

INTERVENOMOUSLY

11 : 15 _4 Mazda Sportslook
1,:30 0 l 7. Tonight Show
d. Best of Groucho
5 Catlins
-6 WKRP in Cincmnati
0 j'{ Hart to Hart An emo tionally
di Sturbed
man
pour s a bl1ndmg c hem1 cal
1nt o the Hans · sw1mm1ng
po o l1n th e bcl 1ef th at Jo n a·
thn n caused h1 s SISt ers
death (A) (60 m1n )
9 ' latenight America
fQ All In the Family
0} f2_ Nightline
W Gunsmoke
11 :45 A USFl Footba ll : Memphis at Houston
12:00 3 Burns &amp; Allen
_S Portreit of Amenca :
Wisconsin
6 Nightl ine
1_9. MOVIE : 'Wild in the

Sky

SEWING Machine repafn,
service . Authorized Singer
Sales S. Service Sharpen
Scitsors . Fabric Shop,
~omerov

8!5

12.30

814-992-2284 .

OJ
mJ

~ Eye on Hol lywood

'_f l Late Night With
David lettermen
_I Jack Benny Show
6 Solid Gold
j Columbo 'Troubled
Water s
Columbo s tr1p
aboard a cru1se sh1p turns
mt o a work1ng vaca t1 on
w hen a s1nge r 1S murdered

James l!loys Water Service.

Also fOOOIS filled . Coil 814256 - t141 or t14 · 44S 1178 Of 6t4 -448-7!111 .

(A) (90 mm I
0!) •} 1 News
fl) Wild . Wild West
12:45 T MOVIE' 'C urta1ns

Johnson Watet' Service. Call

1 :00

11 4·266- 1743 or&amp;14 ·2511120.

6 - Z5

JIMS WATE~ SE~\IICE .
Can JiM Lanier, 304 ·87117297.

1,30
•,

87

Upholstery

TRISTATl
UPNOLSTEIIY SH 0 ..
1 113 Soc. Avo., Qalll,oNo.
114·441·7133or 814·441·
1133.

:·

T
T

right play ' And what 's more
importa nt. wh y 1t is nght ?
Declarer led the I 0 of
hearts from his hand at trick
two. Wh en West played low .

the seven was played from

.AK

dummy

.K I06643
tAJ
K J 10

+

really . On

Nortb

three- two

alone and then South ha s
given up the chance to take
all the tricks In hearts , but 1t

East

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

any

division of trumps, declarer
will lose only one trick .
Sometimes the Q-J will be

Vulnerabl"' Neither
Dealer South
West

Had South peeked

at the opponents' hands'&gt; Not

is worth it if he can guard

Pass
Pass

against many un favo rable

+J

heart splits.
If an honor is played on

Opening lead .

the tO, declarer will win his
ace and run the seven of
hearts as a safety play
against four to the J-9 or Q·9
in the East hand. Note that

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby

sometimes

strong

artificial

a

careless

defender in the West posi-

South had a J'roblem on
his second bi . He had
enough high cards in every
suit to play no-trump, but
what if he belonged in his
six-card heart suit' Those
players who elect to play a

tion might decide to cover
the 10 with J·9 -5- 2 in
trumps

two

Now

natural

East· West's

trump tricks

wtll be reduced to only one .

as dum my's ace takes West's
jack and East 's sm gleton

one·club

opening have a leg up on the
rest of us when deals like
this occur. Be that as it may .
South chose the unnatural
rebid of three clubs. With
nothing in either spades or
diamonds, North made a
preference bid of three

queen
The recommended play 1s

hearts. South carried on to

(NEWSPAPER ENTF.RPRISE ASSN ;

correct onlv because of the
heart seven lfl dumiT!y . If
that ca rd were interc han ged
with either the fi ve or t he
deuce m the West hand, the
10 play woul d be valueless .

four.

~!Uo_W'6td'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
3 Grow toward

ACROSS

1 Colombtan

mght

1 Slevcdor e·s
umon

ctly

5 Garson
10 Russian

5 Complalllcd
6 Ha vr fun
71 11.at.'

lake

IISelf-

R Mistak e
9 Hcnmt
15 Surruner 1 Fr I 12 HighYesterday's Ans wer
16 Mimtr
schooler
17 Beverage
II M yth . fri end 26 Cn cs of
:12 l .'tnil'lll
reproach

13 Go to Reno

18
20
21
22
Z3
26

Paint

19 Hmncnnan

Val
c1ty
Laver of tenni s 22 Petit Detonator
2.1l.a - . Wi s
Unsullied
21Whipping

Greek poet

25 Hcightrn

27 So Afr
gold mine
28 Small coin
29 Kirghu ,
U S.S. R. ctty
30 Accumulated
33 Shmtu
temple
o4 P1amst
Tatum
35 Rome's
--- Venet o

d1sa pprm al 36 Son of
18 Ma son \
.ln l'nh
scrrcta n
:IR llllltal&lt;•il
30 Volcano mud
1poet. 1
:11 Star
39 o.. eiln
r h·a r of
tlnttnnr

h -1---l--1

37 Meetin g
places
40 Sheathe
II Bnnk
12 French
dramatist
43 Forest

ammal
DOWN
1 Enclosure
2 Mountam

crest
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here'" how to work it :
AXYDLR AAXR
Is

L 0 N G F E I . I. 0 W

One lett er s1mpl y stands for :mnt hN !n 1h1~ f&gt;J mple A i s
u sed for the thrc(" I.'s. X f or t hP \"' (1 11
df ~1ngl&lt;' leiter~.
apostrophes, the lt·n ~ lh :~nd ro r nl.lllllll n f ! ht \\nrrls at(' all
hints Earh da y \h(' r ode 1('1\rr!-. an' thfTt · r~ · n t

l'RYPTOQt 'OTES
HYVVWD

:Il

RWGYAPNYS

TGUW

II\ \VW))

GNAWDKEI·: K

GNAWDKEEK

Love Thet Bob

trump suit . His goal was to
restrict his trump suit losses
to only one . Do you see the

.9

1 Married Joa n
MOVIE :
' Invisible
Stripes'
I Entertainment Tonight

Q) Cf2l CNN Headlme News
:2] MOVIE ' 'Love Child"

match his unnatural threeclub rebid With an apparently unnatural play in th e

NORTH
• 6 53 2
.A7
• 8 513
•Qs 5
EAST
WEST
• Q8 7 4
• J 10 9
.QJ 52
t K 10 7 2
• Q96
+A 9 8 2
+74 3
SOUTH

Q

GeMral Haulint

oa1ooa

CorNet Craft a Ski Su·
prome, famHy oki boato
NuMd, Patller-.....
wv 304-422· 1413 Of J04.

BARNEY

WHAT'S SNUFFY
TAt&lt; IN' FOR
HIS COLD?

~

fi) Odd Couple

Excavating

crete wo,_, lacll:hoe·a.
Dorer •
Oitcher. Owmp
trucks , • water -gas -sewM&amp;Iectrical lines.

·~

News
2 MOVIE : ' Blue Thunder·
2 MOVIE : 'Mari lyn'
-3 Another l ife
4. SportsCenter
? All In the Fami ly
L News / Sports/ Weather
9 Dave Allen at large

1\'INNIE

SHULAW'S Plumlting and
Heating, 211 Sixth St.,
Point Pleasant, W . Va . 304675 -5420
licensed and
insured.

after 4 .
1981 8uick Electrl UmitH,
luxury car. fully MIUipped

11,oou

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG . Pitt. 1. lox 355 . Gallipolio . Call lt14·!17·0571

84

phone 304-676-6286. Call

MOVIE'

1984
fi) Lo11e American Style _

Pllone 614 ·441 -3811 .,..
614 ·4 46 · 4477

83

tilt Coticrr T~e QT.
lift"-&lt;:k, 304-178-1141 af-

Hal l?

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

-----------

Phone 304-875-71 II.

wor~~ at Cit~

Plumbing
Heating

1 g79 Kawouki KZ 750,

call 7 - 12 noon or 3-8 p.m.,

This dinqbdt

&amp;

new fatting . $1100 . Catl

1 977 Yamaha 80, S360.
Phone 304-175-4357 after
5.

1o

9 .-I T, Great Perform ances
Budden bro oks · Part II
Ton1 r elu ctantly marne s
Herr Grunlrch and Lubeck
JOinS th e German Confed erat iOn of 181 5 and be comes a free crty (60 m1n)
[Clo sed Capt1onedj
9 30 2 MOVIE ' 'M•ddle Age
Crazy'
10:00 _j_ Can Anybody Hear Me J
A group of peopl e present
the1 r ow n ways of overcom Ing thetr hand1 cao o f dea f ness by d1sp l aym g the1r
supenor ab il ity to com mu nic at e
(60
m1n)
(Cl ose d Capt1oncd}
11 Newswatch
ei) Independent News
10:15 5 TBS Evening News
10:30 _3_ Shirley &amp; Pat Boone
1l State of Black America

p . m . Rogers Btsament
Waterproofing.

12

~

' Jacq ueli ne Susan n's Val ley of the Dolls 1 981 ' Part

WATER ·

6 7 CheveUo Super Sport

1978 Honda CB 360T
6.600 miles, 8700. Call
61 4 -9811·44 18 .

fl) MOlliE ' 'Rock · A 8aby '
U c2 7 MOVIE ' ·sidney

0

KIDNAP

Wha t I he ch arr man o l ttle mathematiCS
deparlmenl wa s cal led - THE FIGU REH EAD

To bring home his
contract, declarer had to

'3 700 Club

used . Coil 514 · 992 · 2198.

61 4-992 ·2042 .

Answer

AFIR E GENTRY

Inside Baseball

1

good condition; 78 Jeep
CJ 5 fair condition. Call

614·949-3021 .

I

Jumbles HOUSE

BRIDGE

Sheldon's Rage of Ange ls'
Pa rt 2

PROOFING Unconditional
lifetime guarantee. Local
references fumished . Free
estimates. Call cotlect 1 -

5 ..M .

,.,1---------1 980 Harley Davidson

cond .• $1400 . Ca ll 6t4 ·
446 · 3243 efto&lt; 6pm .

t 975

74

good cond . Call

614· 24&amp;-9t79 .

9,00

614 · 237 ·0488. 9 a.m . to 6
1975 Dodge van. needs
work. good work van. maka

Sarurday ·s

:]) Dr. Who
:IOJ Wheel of Fortune
II) 1]}1 People's Court
fi) One Day at a T im&amp;
0 X ffi TV's Bloopers
and Practical Jokes Dic k
Clark and Ed McMahon
ho st this look at sc enes
never 1ntended for v 1ewmg
by a publtc aud1en ce (60
m1n .)
'2 Barbera Mandrell - The
Is a Champ T h1s cou ntry s1nger performs at the
Tennessee Perform1ng Art s
Center in Nashvil le
(£.: MOVIE: 'The Towering
Inferno'
Cl) Cisco Kid
@ USFL Football: Me m phis at Houston
•d ; MOVIE : 'Firecreek'
CIJ (i) 'll Major league
Baseball: Teams to be
Announced
0 -_:a: 10l Scarecrow and
Mrs. King A vtndtct 111e Dr
Glase r seeks rev e nge by
programm1 ng Lee to kill hts
boss . (R) (60 m1n )
9 ll Power and Prejudice
i-~ America The current pol It iCa l movement of bl ack
Amerrcans IS exam1 n ed as
a way to understand pre JU d iCe m the Unrted State s
(60 m1n) [Closed Cap tr onedl

3802 .
BASEMENT

1979 Chevy Beauville Van.
loaded ,$6200 firm . Call

r XI I Jr I I I I)?

U C2:: Tic Tac Dough

SHA .. E WITH CAPTIAN

sion....... 8. 3&amp;0. 11·8. AM
radio. sliding rear window, I

61 4·446 · 1336 .

PART OF

Gaoe Smith. 992 -6309 .

1 178 lincoln Mark V. 2 dr ..
sky reot. 22 .000 Miles. axe .
cond .. t7.498 . C•ll 448-

1910 VW Rabbit air cood ..
many extras, one owner,
showroem cond . Call 446 0515 anytime.

ANNIE

form the surpns~ answer . as sug ·
gesled by the above cartoon

(Answers tomorrow)

l8dy

GENE'S DEE .. STEAM
CARPET CLEAN.

1978 Chevy Sconadala. 1A
ton. 4.11.4, e111tra clean. heavy
duty, automatic transmis-

73

8 :00

stone. Call 614-367·0409
or 614-367-7244 .

$1000. Call 44&amp; ·1 326

675· t386 .

Answer here :

m
1~j

Now arrange the c1rcled letters lo

0

PM Magazine

1::['1 1iJ Cl) FBmily Feud
J:_, Love Connection

H S. S H..ne Improvements
vinyl sitfing, roofing , rMf'P!
addition , storm windows,

&amp;1.000. 304 ·676 · 1828 .

1983 Plymouth Colt 18, 000
mi . stand . shih plus econ·
omy shitt. air. Call614- 379-

7,30

e•p. C .. l 614-388-98&amp;2.

Mustang Grande.
302. auto., ~od on gaa.

ton truck, 72
International 4 wheef drive.

CD

I!)

MacNeil/le hrer
Newshour
Jeffersons

1 331
3/4

J I K

(JJ Here Come 1he Brides
~ SportsCenter
~ Q) ~ Ent&amp;rtainmen1
Tonight
UJ Whee l of Fortune
0 (]) Wheel of Fortune
~
Nightly
Business
RepOrt

PAINTING · interier and U·
terior. ~umbing. roofing ,
some remodelint- 20 yrs .

1972

1972 Ford LTD, all po-.

®

7,00

Call &amp;14-388-9887 .

304-&amp;7&amp;-2088
4560

Coll114·992·2065 .

Reg. Appaloosa mare, very
gentle, due to foal in Aug.,
one yaarling appaloosa colt.
4 yr old, bay gelding . and
Reg . Ouaner horse. Brood -

Call

NHAT"THE PAi l ENSAlD WHEN HIS
DOCTOR TOd/ H IM
TO DIET

LID O!l ll2l ABC News
0 :]J ® CBS News
CITl Colorsounds

Marcum Roofing 1: Spout ing . Now installing rubber
roofs . 30 years e•perience,
specializing in built up reof .

1974 Jeep truck, six cylinder . 4 wheel drive .

Livestock

Greenbrief Stab l es now
boarding horses. 304 _675 _
6799 _

YOU DON'T HAVE
ro &amp;C AFRAID OF
THO!'.E GIRL7.

BORN LOSER

614-44&amp;· 2282 .

73 P:ord Torino Station
Wagon. run• good . &amp;300.

heifers. 304 -896-33t9.

$2800 .
1300.

tNYWIRTj

Night's Sex Comedy'
:)) Rifleman
@ Mazda SportsLook

Home
Improvements

rienc&amp;d roofint. including
hot tar application. c•panter. &amp;lectrician, mason_ Call

concttion. New tires . •1100
or best oH&amp;r . Calll14-!192-

3570.

Sell or Tratle, 1977 J..,
CJ5. 304. V-8. headers.
white spoke wheela, sharp,

fll Star Trek
U ffi ('[; NBC News
·: I\ MOVIE: 'A M1dsummer

® News

Call 614·892-6522.

1969 Allis Chalmers
G leaner Cll . all new belts.
comp lete lov reconditioned.
13 " grain table with variable
spe&amp;d r&amp;el , both corn heads,
430 &amp; 440 $5,700. Also,
Case 31 OG diesel loader
with rippers, good condition . $6.000 or trade for
backhoe . Ca ll 614-698-

ev&amp;ning 882 -3239 .

. CAPTAIN EASY

(]

liT

[li

74 Oodg&amp;

$1550 . Coil &amp;14·41 -4230 .

Cows 81 Calves . also bred

6:30

con. Call 114-!1!12-6030.

TOP CASH paid for late
model used cars .
&amp;mith
Buick -Pontiac, 1911 Eastern Ave ., Gallipolis . Call

304 675· 5823.

Big Oiscounts on new and
used tractors and hay equipment, Siders Equipment.

1983 Pop-up truck camperwill sell camper onty-or with
1982 GMC % Ton Truck .
Ca11614·446-1294 .

rranspurlat l'ln

,978 VW Aabbtt. good tire,
good cond ., goed Mileage,

8254 .

446-8238.

Good mixed hay, $1 .25 in
field, 304· 675·5579 .

71

or 245 ·

1976 Ford % ton l'tU. 310
engine. runs goad. good
tires. aute. $950. Call 614-

Barley, $2.25 bushef; straw,

Jam Strawberries 1000
quarts of good jam berries
60 cents per quart. Pick your
own . 2 miles back of New
Haven al Union Camp
Ground . Clal 304 - 882 ·

61

Trucks for Sale

1971 GMC Step lion. trade
Of oell. Coli 514-446 ·4337.

alter 4'00. 614·992·5465 .

Phone dav 304 ·882 · 2222 .

Doberman pups . regiat&amp;red.
shots, tails docked . Call
614- 992 -7358

72

Black Angus BuH, Call 614-

RUG AU

Cl) News / Sports/Weather
(I)
MacNeil/ Lehrer
Newshour
[!) Powerhouse

304-875·6286.

61 4-689·4242 after lpm .

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
one len.,- 10 each square. to form
four ordinary words

0 Cl!(J) O CIJ® Iil ll2l

8:00

Autos for Sale

1978 2 door Pontiac Grand
Prix, PS. PB. air. crui1e
control, VI. 301. black.

Must .ell Matched pair of
sorrel lelgium Gelding
Horses. 6 and .. years otd,
good pulling horses. Mrs .
Harley Grate,langtvilte, OH

· byHenriArnoldandBoblee

EVENING

pickup truck camper, steeps
4 . ges stove, iee box. Exc.

81

9

~ THATSCRAMBLEOWOROGAME

~ ~ ~~ *

6/25/84

8 ft . 1 980 Colemon fol~ing

Dragonwynd Cattery Ken n&amp;ls. AKC Chow puppies,

63

Rat terrier puppies, S50 .
each Ca ll 614 -949 -2568 .

PROSECUT10N-

Daily Sentinei- Poge-

News
(_]) New Treasure Hunt

614 - 887 -

stove. Can 614 · 251-1511

Now open for business.
Mountain State Block . Rt .
33, New Haven . Complete
masonry supplies. 4 ". 8" ,
1 2" block . Delivery service.

Pets for Sale

Oh

R&amp;x rabbitts 83. Milk goat
$35 , baby goat S15 CeU
446 - 1354 after fi .

7312 .
LUMBER -Rough cut . oak,
poplar, 2x4, 2x6, 2x8. 1 x4.
1 x6 , 1 x8. length availebla, 8
ft . through 16 ft . Hogg &amp;

RETAILERS IS IN DI'INGER OF
li)(J:IOSURE-ANOCRIMINAL

~

3386 .
1988 A...-alon 18ft. camper.
sleeps 8 . self-contained , gat

Gravely tractor.

55 Building Supplies

I!IELIE\IE YOUR NETWORK OF

Motors Homes
8o Campers

614-388-9790

Double contour chair, as
advertised on TV, with heat
&amp; vibrator . Call 614 -949 -

3014 anV1ime.

"hone 304 - 895 -

Coolville ,

2237 .

Air conditioner, 1100 BTU .
good cond
6175 . 446 -

1.

BURDETTE CAMPE~
SALES &amp; SERVICE. Open
dailov 9 to 6:30. Sat. 9 to. •.
Closed Sunday. U S. lit. 50,

Protauional All Breed Dog
Obedience Training. Individual &amp; claues available. Call

Impala . Call614 · 367 ·7866
after 5 .
S 100.

l

li"
!1
l

'fl\1\lf.\.ftiDlJ

Television
Viewing

614 · 367-7220.

57

Trailer.

•i ~~W~E~~~~~E~R=e~~~SON~~T~O~. . . .

THANK YOU FOR SEEING ME ON
SUCH SHORT NOTICE, MURKY-

Judy Taylor Grooming . Call

Hay , 1972 Ledgerwood 25
h Camper. 1963 Chevrole1

4X8

Auto Parts
Acceasori . .

7 ft . to,.,_r with llicfiftl
window for thon bad truck.

oq . vd . Call 614 -992-6173 . _1_7
_5_-_4_
4_3 _&amp;_.- - - - -

2 bedroom fumithed apt . in

Cal) 614· 992 ·7177 after 6

6

~==:::::::::JL:==========J

dopooit .
3874 .

includes utHities . Dapo11t.

76

HILLCREST KENNELS

61 4 -446· 1609

6277 aft&amp;r 7
1~
Rastaurant ·d&amp;iry bar equip ment for sale _ Phone 304 - ~BOARDtNGHOUSE ®
675 - 1616 after 5 p .m .

Carpet for rentals for $3 .99

Middleport. UO&amp; a month.

--------

6509.

56

Furnished 1 &amp; 2 bedroom
apartmenu . Middlapo~t ­
Adutts. no pett. security

61 4 -992 ·

large 16ft. overhead garage
door. complete. also 8ft .,
door. ex . gas floor furnace ,
reasonable . Call 614 -266 -

54 Misc . Merchandise

676· 7476
Riverside Apt s Middleport .
Special rates for Senior
Citirant . • 130. Equal Housing Opportun ities . 614 -

Call

KIT 'N' CAALYlE ®

Pets for Sale

5!1

9790.

required . $250 month . 304675 · 1090

Mobile home furnished . AC .
•dea l for 1 or 2 men .
beautiful riverview . Fosters
Trailer Park . Call446 - 1602.

54 Misc. Merchandise

The

Ohio

GSCGQH

A F:

\ w

ATF: IlW

RWWK

t\ T W

V 1: H A

C EDIH

p

K

ft T W

~'[1 News / Sign Off

fl) Honeymooners
2:00

W

2,30

:I'

2:45

the Nigh1 Together'
d life of Riley
:I' SportsCenter

Bachelor Father
1]1 CBS N&amp;ws Nightwatch

MOVIE , "Lot's Spend

:]) MOVIE ' 'The Final Eve'

WKJSPHT

S (; K .J Y 1; .J W

TWKDQ

ZGVWH.
Yeslerday's Cryptoquo"' : IF SLANDER BE A SNAKE, IT IS A
WINGED ONE - IT FLIES AS WELl , AS CREEPS .
DOUGLAS JERROLD

�Paga

Monday, June 25, 1984

I0-The Daily Sentinel

...---Local briefs ••• ----.
Car overturns, man escapes
A Meigs County man escaped Injury when his car overturned alter
avlodlng a deer on Long Hollow Road Friday.
The Gallia·Melgs post of the state highway patrol said Dan C.
Knight. 16,312 Main St., Pomeroy. was eastbound when the deer ran
Into the road. Knight lost control of his vehicle. went off the left sldeol
the road and overturned into a creek at 10:15 p.m. the patrol said.
Knight's car received heavy damage In the accident the patrol said.

Donations sought for family
Due to a fire that destroyed the McOoud residence, the famlly Is
ne&lt;.'&lt;l of thC' following Items: household appllances of various types;
boys' pants, sizes 12 slim, 12 regular, 10 regular and size 28; boys'
shirts, sizP 12 and sizP H; men's shirts, small to large: boys' shoes,
sizPs 2\-i, 3% and 4; pants, 3().3'1, 28-30, 32·32, 34·32 and 34-34; ladies
clothes, dresses and sizP 7% wide shoes.
For addit ional inlonnation, call 992·3500. Items may be delivered
to H5 South Fourth St., Middleport.

Ryan Keith Dill, 26, Rt. 1,
Middleport, died at 1:50 a.m.
Sunday in the emergency room at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr Dill was born July ~. 1957 In
Gallipolis, the son of Bobby Dlll, Sr.,
Pomeroy, and Nett ie Roush Booker.
Michigan.
He was a drill press operator at
Imperial Electric Company. and
was a member of the Union there.
In addition to his parents he is
survived by his wife. Joyce B1ng
Dlll: one son and daughter at home.
Ryan Dill and Leeanne DIU;
step-mother. Betty Dill, Pomeroy:
five brothers, Bobby Dill, .Jr., Eddie
Dill and Todd Dill, Pomeroy; Mike
Dill, Middleport: Tony DiU. Califor·
nia: two step-sLsters. Gwen Folmer.
l'omeroy and Eileen Ball. Ken·
tucky: onp su•p-brot her. Donnlr
Folmer , Pomeroy: grandmot her.
Annie Dill. Middlepol1.
Funeral scrviccs will be held
Wednesda y at 2:30 p.m at Ewing
Funeral Homr with the Rev .
Richard Rothemich officiating.
Burial 1\11 be m Gilmore Cem elery.
Frimds may call at the funera l
home Tuesday from 2 to~ and i to9 .

illness.
Born Dec. 15, 1922, at Milford.
Ohio. he was the son of the late
Frank Leach and Nellie King Leach .
He was retired from the Leach·
Wamsley Sheet Metal Shop, Point
Pleasant. after 15 years of service.
He was a veteran of World War II,
having served in the U.S. Army.
Su1viving are his wife, Phy Ills
Dunlap Leach; six daughters,
Stephanie Leach, Sandra Leach,
Cathy Selby, Mary M yers, Pamela
Rayburn and Brenda Rainey, all of
Point Pleasant; three sons, Worthy ,
Frankie and Sheldon. all of Point
Pleasant; one sister, LeNora Leach.
Point Pleasant; four brothers.
Worthy, Hugh and Jack. all of Point
Pleasant. and Raymond, Pitts·
burgh, Pa.: and 15 grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by one
brother, Lewis 1Pete 1 Leach.
Funeral services will he at I p.m .
Thesday at Wilcoxen Funeral Home
with the Rev. Marshall Bonecu ner
officiating. Burial will follow in
Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Point
PlPasant.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 5 p.m. Monday.
Military gravesld&lt;' rites will be
conducted by American Legion Post
23 of Point Pleasant.

E!lther Sylwster

Rosa L Hoplit

EsthPr H . Sylvester, College
Road. Syracuse, died Sunday night
at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Funeral arrangements will br
announced by Ewing Funeral
Home

Rosa !_.. Hoplit. 83, Apple Grove.
was dead on arrival at Pleasant
Valley Hospital Monday morning.
Arrangements wlU be announced
later by the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home.

Russell A. Roush

I

Rus.;ell A. Roush. 90, N('W Haven.
died Saturday In Pleasant Vallev
Hospital.
Born Dl.or:. ll. 1893, at Broad Run,
he was lhP son of the late Geo rge
Michael and Serepta Roush.
He was preceded in death b~· his
wifP. Eima Knapp Roush, who died
in J!lro, and a son. Gmrge Evorelt
Roush.
He was a coalminC'r. a portf'ry
worker, and a memtx•r of Zion
Lutheran Church of Broad Run .
Suniving a!'f' two daughters.
Mildred Hayes. Pomeroy. Ohio, and
Dorortha Leachman. Marif'lla .
Ohio; two sons, Presley and Lesley.
both of NPW Haven: HI grandchild·
ren and l2 great -grandchildrPn.
Funeral Sf'rvircs will be at l p.m .
Tuesday at Foglesong Funeral
Homf', Mason. with the Rev. G&lt;'orgr
Weirick oHiciatlng . Burial wUI
fo llow in Craham Cemetf'ry .
Friends ma v rail at the' funeral
home aftrr 2 p.m Monday.

Husst&gt;ll Nitz
Funeral S&lt;'rvices for Russ('ll
F:ugme "Bones" :-J it z. 19. iii Bl&gt;C'Ch
St .. Mirldlrpol1. who di&lt;&gt;d in a
Sat urda y morning fin\ will iJ&lt;' hl'ld
Ill a.m Tul'sdU\' at thr bdng
Funeral Home with thP R.., .. C'l.1de
V . Hf'ndf'rson officiating.
Burial will follow in tht' R&lt;'f'Ch
lnwf' CC'mC'h'T:,.·.
Fril'nds ma y ca ll at fhf' funC'ral
hornP Monday.· from6to~p.m . ln Jif'u
of flowprs, thP famil y is asking that
ml'morial contributions bC' madf' to
chiiJn•n ·s organizations.
Nit z wa.~ prf'('t:'decJ in d{'ath by hi s
matf'rnal grandparents, E lmC'r and
M rvl a Schaefer.
Surviving are his parrots. Coy E
;md Nora RoSf' Sc hade r :'\Jitz of
M iddl&lt;·pol1: three brothers. Brian
and Donald, both of Middlopon. and
!( icky, of Pomeroy: two sisters.
VickiC" Morrison, Pomero~~ . a nd
DPbi Brockert, Sidney: paternal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
and Magnolia Nit z, Pomeroy: two
nephPWs, Jonathan and Jason
Brockert, Sidney; one niecC', Jen·
niter Sehaefer, Pomeroy; several
aunts, uncles and cousins.
Hew as a member oft he Pomeroy
Church of the Nazarene.

Charles Leach
Charles W. (Chick) Leach, 61,412
Lewis St .. Point Pleasant, died ln
Veterans Hospital, Huntington, Saturday evening following a long

Meigs County area happenings ...
Eastern board meets p.m. tn the Commlssoners' office In Bluegrass mu!lic
The Eastern Local Board ol the Meigs County Courthouse.

Issued a marriage license In
Meigs County Probate Court were
John Wayne Tuttle, 21, ol Racine,
and Gay a Denise Culver, 18, ol
Racine.
Filing for divorce in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court were Martha
Hart, by Catherine Jones, of Bailey
Run, Pomeroy, and Dennis Hart, of
Middleport.

Educa tlon will hold a special
meeting June 'n, beginning at 6:30
p.m ., to discuss personnel and
building matters.

Squads make 13
runs over weekend

'They were: 9:5i a.m. Saturday,
Middleport squad went to South
Fourth Street for Rus.;ell Nitz, who
was D.O.A. In the pmergency room
of Veteran's Memorial Hospital ;
11 : 13 a.m., the Pomeroy squad went
to West Main Street following an
auto accident and later transported
Kathy Watson to VMH; 6:17p.m.,
the Racine squad transported
Elmond Leamond from the RacinP
laundennat to VMH; 7:17 p.m ..
Middleport squad transported R.o·
hert Clonch. 125 Cole St .. to VMH :
10:39 p.m .. Syracuse squad trans·
ported Aida Gunther, Second
Avenue. to VMH.
On Sunday, at 12:49 a.m., the
Middleport squad transported Ryan
Dehi,Bradbury,toVMH; 1: 13a.m ,
the Pomeroy squad transported
Gerry Litchfield and Walter Smith
from Hartley's Shoe Store to VMH;
6:32 a.m., Tuppers Plains squad
transported Willie Grueser.
Tuppers Plains. to Holzer Medical
Center: 6: 59 a.m.. the Pomeroy
squad transported Charlotte Grant.
State Route 7, to HMC; 10:08 a.m ..
Rutland squad transported Edith
Talbot from Salem Center to
O'Bieness Hospital In Athens: 2:51
p.m .. the SyramS&lt;' squad trans·
ported Gary Mal11n, Church Str('('l.
to VlVIH; 5:57p.m .. Rutland squad
transportod Sherman Bashan.
County Road 10, to VMH . At i: 21
p.m.. he was nown to Grant
Hospital. Columbus; 8:23 p.m. , the
Rutland squad transported Roger
Gibson from Meigs Min&lt;' No. 2 to
O'Bieness.

acrP. Rutland.
.John W. Stobart to Donn a R .
S!Obart. parcPls, Susson.
Lillian Z.&gt;rklp lO Z.•lda Maxine
Hobsteller, Pamela JanC' O'Laugh·
lin, Bett v Jpan Krdwsezvn, Lo1 44.
Middlop&lt;Jrt Village.
Harry L. Cummings. d('t'('dsN:l.
Lillia A. Cummings, affida\'il.
Salisbury .
Lillie A. Cummings to Alan l.ep
Cumm ins, ~.3 acrC'. Salishury
.John L Suttle. Susan 1.. Suttle.
.lamPs W. Suttle. Greta Su tt le to
M ononga hda Pm... ·pr Co ., Oliv1 ~.
William R N icholas . Carol~r n
~ich o ls o n to (;f'nP V ancf'. I .ot -I.
Rut land Villag{'.
Na n('_\' .J .lasJX'rS to .Jack Alan
Ounawa _
, .. Tracts. Rutland Vil lagr
Ncm r\' .1. Jaspt&gt;rs to .Jack Alan
DunHway·. Trncts. Sutt on.
Waynr 0. Roush. Claudia floush
ro Trustf'f's of ThP Carmf'l Mr thn·
dist Church .. (lfR anP. Sutton .
Marion K FugatP. Eif'annr C
Fugarr. Dan C. Arnolrt . PatriciJ A
ArnoiQ ro KPnnPth R N('igkr .
Brenda D N~iglcr. Pt I."! .
Middleport .
.JoSC'ph R. Forf'm:tn. r-:w'l\'n
Forrman to .Jam rs H . Forf'man.
Pamf'ls F
ForPman. I arn •.
l .f'banon.
Flovd Cummin,, Addie M . C' um ·
mtn s tn Howard W. Brrwrr.
Margan'! F.. F3rrwrr. intrrrs r roa l.
oil, gas and othc•r minC'rals. Lrtarr.
Maud&lt;' R . NPison b) ( :uardiun to
SouthPrn Ohio Coa l Co ., Parcels.
SalE•m.
Charles D . F.stcp. Charlene M .
Estep to Jpannil' ,JonPs. Parcrls.
Scipio.
Donald Lw Cremeans. Sharon K .
C' rPml•ans to CliJ rl•nn• TTiplr!l .
Carol Triplett ..1 acres, Lebanon .
.Jack L . Ritchie to Robert R.
Ritchie, Darlene Ritchie. 2 acres,
Sutton.
Alan Blackwood, Marta H. Black ·
wood to Charles Van Met er.
Bernice Van M eter, 10 acres.
Rutland .
Earl B. Morris, Opal Morris to
John William Stobart , Naomi F.
Stobart. 0.2731 acre, Sutton.
Charles E. Hamlin, Lyda Hamlin
to Fred Wooten, Allee Wooten,
Parcel, Col umbia .
Harold 0. Long, deceased,
Mildred Pauline Long, affidavit ;
M lddleport .

:vtildrcn PaulinP Long to Virtory
Baptist Church. Lot 7. Middleport.
ErnPst D. Barringf'r. Ferra
BaiT!ngrr to Monongahela Power
Co .. Right of Wa;·. Olive.
Davlu L. Shrlburnr. Ellen Shrl·
burne to Monongahela Power Co ..
Right of Way. Ol! vr.
Pat E. Mitchell . Marcella SuP
Mitcholl to .Jamos E. Simpson.
Ruby E. Simpson. Lot 21. Middle·
port Village.
.Jayrnar Coal Co. to Leslie R
F'acPmyPr, Karrn L. Facrmyf'r,
Pt. Lot :), Bradbury.
.Jamf's R . Stew&lt;irl to Gal)' I.
Smith, KathiE'C'n M . Smith, Pan
Lot, Pom!'rov .
l.t'l' 0. Wood .Jr . B&lt;&gt;atricr Wod .
SusiP &amp;&gt;ss fka Wood to Ht'lr n BaPr.
Lots, Sv r&lt;.~c ust · \'illag&lt;'.
Hilda While to Thomas F: ugenf'
White. Susan White. 4..109 ac res.
\ heslcr.
.James F. . St. Clair to Cloria J . St .
Clair. Lot 7. Sunon.
Paul M . Darnell. deceased. lla S.
Durnell, Mfid a\' lt. Pomeroy·
V il lagp
PParl E I.ittlP , dPcrasC'd. by·
F;-;c'('Ufnr, tn William A. Willford.
l'h;Irlolh• A . Willford. ParcPl.
Hull and.
.John A. Srnilh . dc•ceas&lt;'CI, Ethel
Smith. , Elf'anor W&lt;:iltPr, Mcngan•t
Swatzcl, dccPasrd. Perry Smith,
dtX""caSf'd, WilhC'IminP Maif'r, Thoma s A. Smith, affidavit , PomProy
Village.
Margaret SwatzPI, deccasc'CI . AI ·
hen Swatzel, Marilvn Burgan, Jo
Swift, Affidavit. Pomeroy Village.
Albert Swatzel. decraSf'd. Ca t he·
rinP Swatzel, Marilyn Burgan, Jo
Swift, Affidavit, Pomerov Village.
Perry Smith, deceased. Dolorous
Smith, Rodney Smith. &lt;;ten Smith,
Melanie Bast , Affidavit. Pomeroy
Village.
Dolorous Smith, deceased. Rod·
ney Smith, Glen Sm ith. Melanie
Bast, Affidavit. Pomeroy VIllage.
Rodney B. Smith, Sharon L.
Smith, Melanie Bast. Gary Bast,
Thomas A. Smith, Wilhelmine
Maler. Richard Maier to Ethel
Smith. First Wa r d , Parcel,
Salisbury.
Eleanor Walter, Homer R. Wal·
ter to Ethel Smith, Lot, Salisbury.
Jo Swift. William Swift to Ethel
Smith, Lot, Salisbury.
Marilyn Burgan, John Burgan to
Ethel Smith, Lot, Salisbury.
Catherine Smith, Landon W.
Smith to Ethel Smith, Lot.
Salisbury.

The Rutland Junior Firemen will
have a meeting Wednesday June 'n.

Hearing Tuesday
There will he a revenue sharing
hearing Tuesday from 2 p.m . to 3

All members are requested to bring
tickets and ticket money.

Gallia, Fulton SWCD named first place
winners in 37th annual Goodyear program
Gallla and Fulton soli and water
conservation districts tSWCD! and
Ohio's first-place winners In the
37th annual Goodyear Conservation
Awards Program.
Meigs and Hardin soil and water

conservation districts are the
runners-up In the competition
sponsored by the Goodyear Tire
and Rubber Company In coopera·
tlon with the National Association of
Conserva tion Districts tNACD !.
The winning districts were
judged on their resource conserva·
lion achievements by Sally VanMe·
tcr, Deputy Director, Ohio Depart ·
m e nt of Natural R eso urces
1ONDR 1. representing the Ohio Soil
and Water Conservation Commls·
sian: Dan Conrad. Assistant State
Conservationist representing the
USDA Soil Conservation Service;
Larry Vance. Chief, Division of Soil
and Water, ODNR: and John
Sehaeffer representing the Ohio
Federation of soil and w ater
conservation districts , according to
Ra y Oviatt, awards program
dirPCtor
Tw o reprf:"sPntatives from each of
the first-place districts will receive

expenses-paid, vacation-study trips
to the Wigwam Resort and Goo·
dyear Fanns, Litchfield Park.
Arizona. In December.
Fred Sh!ninger, Delta, Ohio
named by Fulton SWCD as Its
outstanding cooperator. and a
district board member will repres·
ent that district on the grand prize
tour . Gallla SWCD names the
Wedemeyer Brothers, Northup.
Ohio Its outstanding cooperators
and will be reprsented on the tour
by a cooperator and a district board
member. They will be joined by
representatives from 51 oth&lt;•r
winning districts from across the
nation.
Plaques also wtll be presented to
the top districts and the runners-up

By the Bend ......... Paged, 6

CJ•ss!flem ........ Pages 6, 7, 8
Comics-TV .............. Page 9
Death&lt;! ................... Page 10
Edllorlals ................ Page 2
Sports ................ Pages 3, 4,

There will he bluegrass music,
featuring Bristol Mountain Bluegrass, July 4, at Portland Park In
Poriland, Ohio, from 1: ll p.m . to
5: ll p.m. The event Is being
sponsored by Profits Grocery of
Portland. Those attending are
asked to bring their own lawn chair.

Meigs agency second

at a meeting of the Ohio Federation
of Soli and Water Conservation
Districts. In addition. the outstand·
lng cooperators with all completing
districts will receive plaques.
Outstanding cooperators for the
Meigs SWCD are Thereon and
!.lary L. Johnson. Racine, Ohio.
Clark BrE'neman. AgiPr, Ohio Is the
oustanding cooperator with Hardin
SWCD.
Ca rr ol l SWCD, Champaign
SWCD. Defiance SWCD. Erie
SWCD. Fairfield SWCD. Knox
SWCD. Richland SWCD. and
Wayne SWCD. first place winners
within Thf' past fivc years and hence

ineligible to repeat. were named
Honor District in recognition of
their continued excellence.

fanty

cloudy loolght. Low

~- Soudlerly wiDds 10-lSmph.

CLEVElAND !API -The next
jackpot in the "Ohio Lotto" game is
estimated al $3.4 millionafternoone
chose all six numbers selected in the
latest draw ing, state lotteryofficials
said .
The Lotto game Saturday night
had sa les of$4,075.712, while holders
of winning tickets will share
$1,121.~. officials said.
Winning numbers from the draw·
lngwere 1, 7, 10,16, 'nand 33.

C.len Smith. Sue Smith to Ethel
Smith. Lot. Salisbury.
Violet M. Smith to B&lt;?rnard Dylc
Bay.lrma LPW Bav . . f,1acrc.Oiive.
C.ary P. Norris. Donna M . Norri s
to Harry L yons Sr . Wanda L .\'ons .
Lot o7. Racine Village.
Delmar Dean Clark. BP!ly 1..
Cla r k, Susan Clark. Elmer C.ene
Clark. Linda Lou Smith, Robert
Smith. Norma Jean Duke, Harold
Dukt•, Mat·tha Louise RI'&lt;'VC'S,
Barbara Ann Ryan, Frank Ryan .
Mary Lou Madden, Kennrth Mad·
den Sr .. Dana Ray Clark, Paul
Cind
Edwayrd Clark
F. Sutphin,
to Br:vnn K.Lot
Sutphin,
:l.10.
Sa li sbury.
William A . Watson, Nancy L.
Watson 10 Craig C. Folev, Ruth S.
Folev, Lot, Orange.
Charll's M yers 1X his m ark \,
.Ioyer Myers to TC'rry Elkins.
onf'·fo urt h acr r, Antiquity.
.Justin(' Lf'ah;...· to WarrPn E.
Lrah~·, 1~ acres, Orange.
.Jessif' L('{' Buchanan by Trustee,
Edna LouiSf' Buchanan by Trustff.
10 f{a lph A. Wells . Mary E. Wells.
l.ol. Ches ler.

Wimbledon play begins •.•Page 4

Wednesday, variable ckludlne8s
with sc•"
showers and
thunderslonns. Hlgb 80-M.
Chance of rain 3lpercen&amp; lonlghl
and i50 pen:e.Jt Weom~.

rea

e

Reds edge Giants, 2-l ...Page 3

•

•

at y

enttne
Surplus went to schools - Rhodes
\lol .l4, No .52
Copyrighted 1984

2 Section~ . 18 Poge1&gt;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 26, 1984

Democrats, who last year approved Celeste's 90
percent income tax increase, want to give $50 million
of a projected $131 million state budget surplus to
taxpayers.
The distribution fonnula has not been adopted, but
refunds likely will be based on the amount of taxes an
Individual paid.
Rhodes. who met with reporters Monday In his role
as chairman of the Reagan Bush '84 Ohio Steering
Committee, repeatedly dodged questions about the
proposal.
" I have no comment. I'm not going to set in
judgment on anybody in state government at this

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP) Republican Gov.
James A. Rhodes has been out of public office for 18
months and Insists he has nothing to say about what
his successor- Democratic Gov. Richard Celesteis doing.
But while Rhodes was busy sidestepping reporters'
questions about his v iews of Celeste's plan for a $50
mUllan income tax rebate, he tunted that he favors
giving such money to schools.
Action on the reba te plan offered by major ity
Democrats has captured the spotlight as the House
and Senate return tor a brief summer sessio n.

25 Cenl~

A Multimed ia Inc Newspope1

time," Rhodes sa id. ''I'm out. they're In ... and no
one's going to put any words In my mouth. I have no
comment on what they're doing in the Stat ehoUS&lt;'.
Period."
But when askl'() why he did not pmpose such a
refund when he was confronted with a surplus as
governor, Rhodes said: "We gave it all to schools. $150
million. At that time the schools were just a littiP
worse off than they've been at other times."
Rhodes also referred to f('pol1s tJw refunds would
amount to $12.50 if distributed evenly among 4 m illion

1axpayers.
"You better wait until he gets through first, all of

you. Don't spend 11 ," Rhodes jokc'CI. " .. .A lot of tlw
""ives will be spending the re&gt;batc and may not g"t it.
You can' t tell."
Senate Mmority Leader Paul G1Umor. l\l'ort
Ctinton, said H.epublicans arc undec:idt&gt;d about
whether to offer an amendmf'nt or JXlliCy .&lt;.,tatrmf•nl
favoring a bigger rC'fund or a reduction in incomr t&lt;:~x

ra tes.
"I think I he point \\'f' w.1nt to makP is I hf' rf'biltP h so
minor in relation to what thPsurplus is.·· G illmor S&lt;Jid
He expects it will be at least $3llmillion b\' th&lt;' Junc :~1
md of the fiscal yPar instead of the $1,11 million
projected by ((' )('SIC .

Middleport council concerned
about safety of fire fighters
By TERESA MELCHER
Sentinel Staff wrn.,r
Live power lines duringthereccn t
fatal fire were one of the it em s
discussed Monday by the Middle·
pon Council in its regular meeting.
"The houSf' burned down beforo
the power was turned off." said
Councilman Dewey Horton.
Horton said he was concerned
about the safety of the firefighters.
Council questioned w~ether the
fire department had the authority to
cut off the power or they had togo 10
Gallipolis to get a truck to assist .
" They have the authority. " said
Councilman Carl Horky. After the
las t major fire. som e of the firemen
had been trained to cut the power off.
he added.
Mayor Fm:l L. Hoffman said hf'

Louery winners

Meigs property transfers

Margaret Barrell. dPceased. Ro·
bert Barrett. Affidavit. Rutland.
Robert Barrett. Mary Barrell to
Robert Barrell. Mary Burrell ..40

Meet Wednesday

Cable-TV..•Page 2

Weather

Maniage license

Thirteen squad runs were re·
ported by the Meigs County Emer·
gency Medical Service during the
weekend.

Area deaths
Ryan Dill

I

Inside today:

f'
CONTRffiUTE - Vaughan's Cardinal In Middleport, for the sixth
consecutive year, look part in "Grocers Day," sponsored by the
American Cancer Society. Vaughan's donated a percentage of sales for
the day, which was held on Ju"" 9,tothecancersoclety.1bemoney will
be uS&lt;'II in leukemia research. Shown are, from left, Ruby Vaughan of
Vaughan's Cardinal, pn.&gt;sentlng a check to Mary O'Brit'fl, a
repn.•••entative of th&lt;• Meigs Chapt..•r of the i\merican f :anc&lt;.r Society.

BARN AAJSIN' - Workers at the Meigs County Fairgrounds begin
work on the roof of a sheep and swine buDding. The building is nearly
completed, and finL•hing touches could he put on by the end ol the week.

Hospital news
VETERANS

MEMOillAI~

Report car sales strong

IIOSPI-

Ti\L

DETROIT (AP) - The traditionally strong summer car-buying
season has begun with a bang. with U.S. automakers posting
mld.June sales figures 12.4 percent higher than the comparable
period a year ago.
The six major manufacturers reported Monday that car sales lor
June 11-20 were the best lor the period In six years.
The Increase kept the auto industry's year-to-date sales !".UC ai27.R
percent ahead of last year's pace.
"These nwnbers, the high ralf.'S, shouldn't he a real surprise,'' said
David Bloom, an automotive industry Ullaiyst for First Boston Corp.
In New York.
Bloom said he believes sales may slow do\\11 toward the end of the
year.
The carmakers said they sold 28,872 autos a day In mid.June. up
12.4 percent from 25,681 a day in the yerucearHer period.

ADMISSIONS - Donna Lam ·
be11. Vinton: Alice Jones, MiddiP·
pon; r.ary Martin, Syracuse: Care
Rairden, Hartford. W.Va .
DISCHARGES - Linley Hart.
.John Edwards, Maxine Russell.
Earl Pickens. Carl Sehultz, Ura
Morris.

r-r~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~mi~n~~~~r~~~ir~~~~;;;;;;

DINNG ROOM ONLY
Served with whipped potatoes. chicken
gravy, cole slaw, hot roll. butter &amp; coffee.
Sorry, no substitutes e•cept beverage with
'~ditiona l price.
P~ .

$3.25

CROW'S FAMILY REST AU RANT
POMEROY OH.

SECOND HALF 1983 REAL EST ATE TAXES

EXTENSION GRANTED
CLOSING DATE JULY 20, 1984
Second Half Penalty-10% of Total Unpaid Current Taxes
1) On December 1st, each year interest is charged against the
full unpaid balance of taxes for period of time from day
established in ( 1) above to date .
2) On first day of month following second half closing interest is charged on unpaid balance of delinquet taxes from
previous year for period of time from preceding December
lot to that day.

FAILURE TO RECEIVE BILL DOES NOT AVOID PENALTY AND INTEREST

OFFICE HOURS: 8:30 A.M. TO 4:30

P.M~;

PHONE: 992-2004

Meigs County Treasurer,
. George M. Collins

Ex-Meigs resident
treated for wound
A 5().year-old Gallipolis man was
treated and r eleased fo r a gunshot
wound to the left shoulder Monday
night at Holzer Medical Center
following a shooting incident in
Cheshire at 8 p.m .
Chief Investigator Carl Langford
of the Gallia Cou nty Sheriff's
Department said this morning Gene
C. Oiler, 728 Lila Drivt•, was shot
once in the shoulder during a
domestic-related dispute at a trailer
park on Fourth Stl'CI't in Cheshit'('.
Oiler, a former residen t of Middle·

port, was allegedly shot by Jack
Lane, 39, Cheshire, with a .22 -caliber
rPvolver.
Langford said the two men were
outside of Lane's trailer when thP
shooting occurred.
Sheriff's deputies questioned
!_.anc and Oiler about the Incident
last night. No arrests have been
made p&lt;&gt;nding further Investiga tion
Langford said.
Oiler was taken to HMC by private
vehicle.

No one reported injured in
three-car accident onn Rt. 7
No Injuries were reported In a
three-&lt;:ar accident on Ohio 7 in
Meigs County Monday.
Officials with the Gallla·Meigs
post of the state highway patrol said
cars driven by Ron E. Davis, 58,
Dexter, and David Roush, 18, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, weresouthboundon7and
a car driven by Jane A. Hess, 46,
Middleport, was northbound.
Davis reportedly stopped to make
a left turn according to the patrol
and Roush could not stop In time.
allegedly striking Davis' car from
behind, knocking Davis' ca r Into the
northbound lane, causing It to strike
Hess' car.
Roush was cited by the patrol for
failure to stop In an assured clear

I

distance following the 7:50 a.m.
accident. Roush's car received
heavy damage while Davis' and
Hess' cars were modera tely dam·
aged In the accident.
An Ohio Department ofTranspor·
tatlon employee was cited by the
patrol Monday for an Insecure load
following an Incident on Ohfo 7.
The patrol said Richard W.
Gartleld, 40, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, was
southbound when a DOT truck
drlven by Jack R. Riley, 28, Rt. 1,
Malta, lost some gravel which
struck Garfield's windshield, causIng light damage.
Ripley was cited by the patrol In
the8p.m . accident.

.•

would check with the fire chid on the
ac tual procedu n:
A property owner. Belt\' Poolor,
complained about the condition of a
neighbor 's property Pooler said she
had contacted the owner but wa s not
satisfied wJih the result s.
Pooler, who brought in pictuf('s of
the property. was 3dvisec! by
lloffman that he would try to talk
\\-ith the 0\'~-11C'r . Pooler also said she
\\:ould contact
thr hea lt h
department
Council also decided to ad\'ertL"'
for bids for l,(XXI pounds of asphalt
for strff't resmiacing.
New plans for !hC' proposed
marina werP shown and wiU bf:&gt;
di SCUSS('() in depth during Ihe n&lt;'Xl
m('('ting.
Co unci I also duw·ted t hcma\·or to

apply for sta te ma tchin g funds for
J'('habiliation of rental property . Th&lt;'
sta te w ill rPimburSP half of the
initial invC'sOTIPnt for indi\'iduals
fL,ing up f('ntal property. Hollman
&lt;'mphasizcd only $1 million was
a\'ailablt&gt; throughout the state. Th&lt;'
statc&gt; will probably only "fund 111
applications." Hoffman sa id.
A second reading was givrn to an
ordinance to clasp an aile;· on Sou th
Fourth Avmuc• betw('('n Pulmpr
and Main st rc--'f'tS. Onl~' two prOJX'rty
owners a re in vol\'l--'d.
An C'StimatP was pr('S{'n!M to
council for thf' n •pair of fhP brick
strwt betwwn Lincoln Strf'f't and
the school. Thces timatf'was$H ,T7S
to com:&gt;ctiy relav the bricks. Council
decided to discuss thcmatterduring
the next m!'E'ting.

A finn estimate on the drainag ..
repair for Broadwa vStrC&lt;•t will also
be discussed next meeting .
Bob Gilmore reponed hr hart
looked into th&lt;· problem of "dog
\\'astf' ." Gi lrnorP S&lt;iid MiddiF'I:XWt 's
ordi nance w&lt;1s slmlli;Jr to tho~ '
aruund thP st;J IP.

·· 1 don't

S{'('

why1 we·

Dl't'Cl an

ordinancC' spi?('ificalJ~· cov0ri ng
dogs," llP said. Middlf'JJOI'l ·s onli .
nancf' stalf'S it is illpgal to hd \ 't '
ocior-causing suh~t;mCI"~ on public
propPrtv .
Gi1morf' said thf' \"illagf' hJcl an
ordinanc0 10 cow·r dog wa s1C': the·
onl~· problf'm\~'a&lt;..,cat c hing &lt;::.om('(mt ·
allmnng it to happ&lt;·n
Council's nf&gt;xt mf't:•l ing wiJl !)(&gt; ;1
public h~ar m g on the hudgf'l .

Shuttle engine fails, flight delayed again
CAPE CANAVERAL Fla. !AP I
- The delayed debut of spac&lt;'
shuttle Discovery was aborted on its
launch pad today just second;
before ltftoff.
The ship was safe and the crew
was fine and in no dang&lt;'r. NASA
sa id.
With engine shutdown, tJ1ere was
no chance for a launch latPr ill the
day, and NASA had sa id any delay,
for any reason, would prompt a 1
least a two-day postponement .
It was four seconds from liftoff
when the engines shut down.
"'Extremely busy, " said HC'Ss of
the launch control center as
enginE'C'rs and cont roUf'rs workrd to
find the problem.
T he space agency's only concPm

tx&gt;fore the shutdown was with thC'
fog that obscuiL'd Discovf'ry.:·s
laun~h pad at Kennedy· Space•
(enter.
Discove ry is a n('w ship. th ird in
NASA's fil'f't.
"No sta gP No. l," sa id NA.SA
.
spokesman Terry While at Mission
Control in Houston.
Engine problems have plagued
the Discovery ear liPr when engine
No. 2 had tn be replaced wtlh an
engine from sistor ship Cha llenger
when fuel cell hrat cell becam&lt;'
loosc. That caused a thn'f'·day dela.\'
in the original. June 22. launch da !P
The engines were the source of
tremendous technological prob·
!ems during the shu~lc's drvrlop·
ment , but they ncvC'r fa iled in anj· of

the shu~le program's fir·stl l fiight s.
Smce enginPs did fin•. their would
l:&gt;e launch pad damage and there
would bt&gt; at il•usl 48 hours' work
bf&gt;fore anoth&lt;•r launch could be
a!lempted.
Discovpry's fligh t Cf('ll' mclud(•s
1'1\SA' s first commercial pa s·
senger. a senior Pnginecr from
McDonnell Douglas who des ignc'&lt;l a
manufactming process that uSC's
t hr uniquP propt&gt;r1 ies of wright less ·
nPss t u produ cr a dru~ .
Dudng t!1eir week in span·, t.hc
astronauts ar[' to r'f'lcasc thC'
mui tary communi cations sa tellite.
snap thousands of Ea1i h pi er urC's
v:it h a mapping camer a and C'rf'Ct a
10-stor:v· tall solar"arra,·" designed

to convf'rt the sun·s rCJ _
\ ·s lu
clC'Ctricity to power ~ parr St.LJt ions or
shuttle missions.
A thick bank of tog shroucled !hi'
lau nc h area rtu·oughout UK morn
u1~. bu 1 1he sun burn('() off mough ot
it to JX'TTnil the countdown to
contin Ul'.
ThPrP was no co nn i'C't ron tu
Monda~, ·s lasl ·minutpc.; dPI&lt;J~· 'I11a1
v:as CdUSL-'d bv a ('Um putf'r malfunc
tiun; thP PJTant unit w as n•placrd
and upl'rating (JI"O!JI'.'rly whrn thl'
cnginf' problpm lX.'t'UIT'!&lt;.l.
Nor since tlw Gemini prO.[.'Tarn of
lt1P 196)s has an Anwri('an ~paCl'
eraft romP so ago niLingl~· closr to
lift off on I\ tu Ix· awrli'CI . CPmin i t) in
1965 shut down om• S('&lt;'oncl afrPr
ign ition .

State seeks $2 million for additional forest land
By JOHN FRIEDMAN
0\1' News Staff
The StatP of Ohio has asked the
federal government for $2million to
purchase approximately o,flOO acres
of land to add to tho Wayne National
Forf'St.
Monday, during a press confPr·
encc held at Rio Grande Coi!Pge·s
Fine Arts Building. officials sa id
they were optimistic about chan('('s
of receiving the money and they
wlked abcut the future of thefof('st.
Wayne National Forest director
Harold Godlevske said the plan Is to
eventually "a t least double the size
of the forest."
"We're looking for a willing
scller-willlng buyer situation," Go·
. dlevske said. "We aren't going to go
through eondemna lion proceedings
to get the land. We'll only do it to

clear the title."
As late as last year. 63.00J acres of
the ITI.OOJ acre forest wrf(' targeted
for sale under the Reagan adminis·
tration's "asset managem ent
plan". However Bill !'Iapier. assist ·
ant director of the Ohio Dcpar1mcnt
of Natural Resoul'('cs. said no one in
Congress would introduce legisla·
lion authorizing the sale. Now, hf'
said. they ai'(' tiylng to use that
bn.•ak to tum the forest around.
"Wc•'rP looking for enough money
to purcl1asc some priva tely owned
an•as surTounding public acrC'agC',' ·
Napier said. "But even if we don't
grt a penny, "''.:e've raised t.h{'
consc iousnes s of the ' public as to
what the fof('st is."
God levske said a lot of land is for
sa le becuaS&lt;' of high interest ra tes.

Since a fair ma rket \'alue must l:x'
paid for the land . "the money
doesn't go a long way," GodlcvskP
said. " If we had the money. we
would havp no probl&lt;'m obt ain ing
the land," he add&lt;&gt;d .
The state must go bark to
Washington mcl1 voar for mor~
money and officials arc conMont
this appropiation, if it comes
through, is not just aonf'shot affair.
" It would be of very littlr cons&lt;'
quence if the appropiation i~j ust for
one• ymr," God!Pvske sa id . "Weare
hoping this is ju st thesta l1. that each
yrar \'-'C' Jl get mane~· until Wf''vr
C\'entually doubled tho size of the
forest," Napier added
The expansion of thf' forrst is
important to the stare' s c itiJ..f'ns as
much as an:&gt;one clsc Codle,·skl'

said. " Each year z.t'l Pf'ITf'nt of all
re\'C'nues from thf' lorf'st an·
channeled back to local counties .
ForC'xample. last year , with 177,lUl
acrC'S, the state rdumN:I SlhlfOl trl
county governments.· ( rilcil r,·skt ·
said That includ{'s fund " drri\'Nl
from rvcreation and minf'ra l fcY' ... t.t'weU as thf' sa il" o f timhrr rf'snurrr"
he added
Acrorrl ing to (~I"Xllf'\'~kf'. thr
expHns ion in n,l\'t"~ :1 mission " Wr ·
arr t~ ' in g to usc n'nt' wablf' rrsout
crs for lhr benefit of th!' publ ic. 1\.,
do not prohibit hunting. fishing m
tr appmg.
Thr citizens of Ohio h;--ln ' nf'\"('r
takC'n 1:1 rPa l intt•n•st in tht' lorr c;t
GndlevskJ• sa id . f'o~&lt;. he adrlr&gt;d. the·
futun• of the fon&gt;s l is dl'p&lt;•ndl•nt on
what tht'!'itaf('' scitilJ:'ns w ant

ODNR says boating accidents up on Ohio River
place during daylight hours or in the
early evening when there was still
light ."
A small percentage of the
accidents was due to fatigue and
alcohol, as opposed to nearly 50
percent of the fatal accidents last
year Gregory said. "May and June
are our worst m onths because It s
early in the season," he added.
Citations and collisions are up, but
overall, accidents are down Gre·
gory said.
The amount of citations issued
this may he a contributing factor In

By ,JOHN FRIEDMAN
OVP News Staff
Boating accidents on Ohio watPr·
ways have killed 21 people. lnelud·
lng a Reedsville resident, so far this
year, compared with 271n all of1983,
according to Ohio Department of
Natural Resources officials.
ODNR chief of watercraft Paul
Gregory said It Is. dll!lcult to put a
!Inger on a single reason for the
Increase.
"All of the fatalities were due to
operational error,"' Gregory said.
"But most ofthefatalaccldentstook

,

the rC'duction of accident s. but
because of the high number of
fatalities. Gregory said patrols on
the state's waterways will be be&lt;'fed
up even mnre and "all rules will be
strictly enforced .·'
That Includes ltfe jacket laws. A
properly fitting life jacket for all
passengers is required and they
should he worn at all times while In
the boat Gregory said. Anot her
serious Infractions Is O)X'ratlng a
boat under the Influence of alcohol.
which canies a penalty of six
months in jail and a !lneof$500. Most

ot her \iolalion..,; of boating I&lt;Jv;s arr
considerf'CI minor misdemeanors
and can')' P&lt;'nalit irs oft hr('(•days In
jail and a $100 fine .
Some states have laws requiring
boaters to be licensed In the mann1•r
of au tomobile drivers. and accord
mg to Gregory, that may be thewav
of the futuiT'.
·
"We'f(' seriously debating that."
he said. "Something has to be done
to educate the pubtir, even if we
have to make it mandatory boat('l's
got a license and go to class ."

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