<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13507" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/13507?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T14:47:34+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="44479">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/6fe13867f29c91d9567d9541f3f79fa2.pdf</src>
      <authentication>44484508a9a69e7910ba9112e55633b0</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42296">
                  <text>..
Page -1 0 -'The ~ily Sentinel

,

• Frances N. Reynolds, 71, Mason.
· died Saturday In Hartland Care
tenter, Jackson.
: Born Jan. 6, 1913, In Mason, she
: was the daughter ot the late Emery
: and Thi-resa L. Young Gibbs.
: She was preceded In death by her
l!usband, Raymond Reynolds, who
. dledln1953; byoneslster,BerlbaR.
Prince; and by two brothers, Carl J .
iuid Martin J . Gibbs.
.
; Surviving area son and daughter-

• .

,

MONTPELIER. Vt. (APl Passengers and federal olflcials
credited lin "extraordinary" rescue
effort by hundredS of volunteers

. In-law, Bobby Ray and Janice
~olds of Mason; three sisters,
Evelyn M. Edwards of Hartford,
MargaretV. JohnsonotMason,and
Loretta T. Bush of Letart; an(! tour
OWing 8 8
grandcl\lldren and five great·
graiujchlldren.
·
SpeclalshowjngsolthenewWorld
Funeral services will be held at 1 Wide Pictures releaSe, "Jesus Is
p.m . Wednesday In Foglesong VIctor," will be held this week at
Funeral Home, Mason, with the churches ot the Coolville United
Rev, Donald Roach officiating.' . Methodist Charge.
Burial w111 he 1n SuncrestMemorlal
The schedule Includes: Tuesday,
Park. Friends may call at 1 the 7 p.m. at the Coolville church;
funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m . Wednesday at the Hockingport
~--~~
ChurchBe
at 8 p.m.; Thursday at the
,...,.....y.
.·
North thel church at 7 p.m. The

Sh

·:_Sister Itectenw.aid ap
· p· ointed .
- 5~county peace coordinator
,
• Sister Janet Rectenwald, Pome• roy. a member of sereral national
" peace groups Including Pax Christl,
American Friends and Sojourners,
bas been selEcted to be coordinator
for peace groups In southeastern
Ohio.
; Designated especially for this
: ministry are the counties ofMorgan,
: Wa5hlngton, Atllens, Meigs, GaU!a
" and ~wrence.
:· There will be an effort to assist
.peace groups already established as
_weU as to assist In tile formation Of
•new groupS. Outoftlle88countles In
:ohio, only 14 remain without an
:organized peace group. Working
'With the American Friends' John
Looney, state organizer, Sister
,.,.__

Meigs County Emergency Medl-

.cal Services reported 11 runs over
the weekend.
Sa tllrday runs Included thePoineroy r.quad at 1: 14 p.m. til East Main
Street for Tim Dugan to Holzer
Medical Center; Pomeroy at 1: 18
p.m. loclk Mabel MOler ·from the
Pomeroy Health · Care Center to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Ra·
cine was called to TackervUle Road[
at 4:00p.m. totakeGraceWelkerto
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
At ·5: 46 p.m. Rutland went to an
auto accident off County Road 1 and
took Hetb Shaffer to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; later transported by Llle Flight to Grant
Hospital; Columbus at 8:30 p.m.;

•·

1 ted

showings are tree and open to
pubUc.

the

ln;;;:~s~~~~~·~pec:'n:::

Boom, a Dutch Christian who, untO
she was silenced by a stroke In 1978
Janet Is one ot three regional at the age of 86, traveled the globe
coordinators.
telling of her experiences In N~
The Sacred Heart Church In occupledHollanddurlngWorldWar
Pomeroy wlli serve as a peace and n. She and her tamlly were
justice resourCe center providing responsible lor saving the U\ies of
newsletters and printed materials · hundreds of Jews through their
for distribution. Thecenter,llke Pax work with the underground. Her
Christl,' has Its primacy objective experiences have been related In a
·~working with all people for peace
number ol best selling books asweu
for all humankind, always witness- as through World Wide's award·
Ing to the peace of Christ and the winning threatrlcal release, "The
gospel Imperatives of Hiding Plaee:·. ·
peacemaking."
Persons or groups who are
Interested In the program are to
write or· contact Sister Janet
Barbara A. Lester of Dexter bas
Rectenwald, Sacred Heart Church,
filed
for divorce from Earnest H.
P.O. Box 592, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Lester of Dexter In the .Meigs
Common Pleas Court.

as

Granted divorce

·lmtergency runs recorded
-

Inside today:

Rescue ullits band together at Amtrak disaster

Area deaths
·frances ~- Re~old!!

Monday, July 91 1

Pomeniy · Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy went to 8:57 p.m. · to
Kingsbury Road for Allee P~tz to
· Veterans Memorial Hospital; ·at
11:06 p.m . Racine went to Dewitt
Road for Arlene Roach-nontransport.
· On Sunday, Pomeroy went to 1669
Lincoln Heights to take Delores
Aelker ·at 7: 54 a.m. to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; at 11: 12 a.m.
Pomeroy went to Hiland Church
Road and tr&lt;\)lsported Vlrglnla
Hartley to .Veterans Memorial
Hospltali Racine was called at 3: 14
p.m. to 124 In Long Bottom and took
Flora . Saunders to St. Joseph's
Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.; Ra·
cine was also called at 8:43p.m. to
Tanners Run for Ulyssis Davis to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

with preventing the loss of even
more lives alter an Amtralc train
derailed, killing five people . and .
Injuring 137
The 18 hours of dlgglng, Uttlng,
cutting, sweating and waiting was
"a textbook example of how It
should be done," said Donald
Hamlin, who helped direct the
efforts that followed the worst
Amtrak accident In 13 years.
"It was trial under fire tor all ol
us," sald Hainlln. 52,atounderolthe
Essex Rescue Squad. "We practice ·
dlsaster drWs twice a year. But this
is not the sort or thing yo\1 think Is
ever goiDg to happen."
The Montrealet, carrying 278
people, toppled down all-foot gully
as Oood-weakened tracks collaJl""('
upder 1~ weight shortly alter 7 a.m.
Saturday In WWlston. The fiVe
people who dial were 'In a car that
w8s crusbed beneath two others,
authorities saki.
It was early Sunday before rescue ·
workerscouldgetlnsldethecrushed

others:

Instruction set
Dale Eddy, Marietta, wlllserveas
Instructor for lessons to be given for
the BeUes and Beaus Western
Square Dance Club beginning
tonight from 7to10attheRoyaiOak
Park Recreational Building.

car and retrieve the last two bodies.
A temporary road had to be
constructed through Jwampy
ground to the wrecl&lt;age so that
cranes could be brooght In to
remove the Wll!Cked cars.
Federal safety officials Investigated lhesceneSul)!lay as the tracks
were being cleared of crushed and
twisted metal.
.
The rescue "was extraordinary.
It seemed like It was planned," said
Bill Gearllart, owner of Adventure!l
Unllmlted, a New Jersey ()J'8ilnlz.atlon which had booked 164 pas.,
sengers &lt;in the Montrealer. for a
weekepd train party.

F,dWards to help them nm
rescue~tlon.

»-pee,

JuQlors of Drew Webster :fu.;t 39,
American Legion Auxili3ry, will
meet at 1 p.m . Tuesday at the home
of Mrs. Harry Davis on· Spring
Avenue.

.. ...... u
pi!iCfd

penlllllt ....... 7lld •

w.......,.

•

Vol. 14, No.6!

More thlui ;m llreflghters, state
twopet s, rescue squad members,
ambulance crews, National
Guai'dsmen, coriStnJCtton workers
and Red Cross volunteers helped

'"The coordlnst)on of this rescue
was an extraordinarY effort,"
Patrie"' A. GQidman, vice chair·
man of the National Transportation
Safety Board, told The New York
·Times.
Hamlin, a ciVIl engineer, was at
the scene within ~ mlnl,ltes of ~
accident and was recruited by Gov.
Richard Snelling ' and Vennont
National
Adj. Gen. Donald

••

Veterans Memorial
DINNG ROOM ONLY

Served .with whipped pot1toes. chic~en
cole
.hot roll. butter &amp; coffee.
no
ercept beveraae with

$3.25

REST

'

fantastlcyearandibellevettw~

bavebeen," said Don Hill. He• the land but ·1s .. unable to farm
• 'beca,.,.ofhealth.Hlllhasrernalned
- ,
active and said a private laboratory
. Is litvestlgating the problem and
resultlngdamagewltbthe·mlx.

the~~!~~o!ver~

~ ~did not deVelop fl,illy on the

HD1 repcalli he baa IIIIo used the
cbemlcal on 00,001 pepper plants
and bas expe11enced many of the
·
saine problems.
H enwgh evldena' pan be
gathered against the chemical

::'t':'::
~~
the company.

Su.s'pe·c' t 'l:u cky'
·
d
.to h·ave. . c·ape .
.

~
·

By SUE CROSS
A~atedPI'eii!IWr!ter

' TOLEDO; Ohio (AP) - Pollee
say a fugitive couple, wanted for
questlonlJig In a serle$ ol rapes,
murders an(! beatings In five states,
havebeen"awfullyiUcky"toescape
capture.
Toledo Deputy Pollee

Chief Ray
Vetter
Monday that desPite a
search that has doubk!d and
redoubled, thewhen!ai:IOUtsolAlton
Coleman and 19-year-old . Delia
Brown have·been "anyooe'sgliess"
since the last ver1fled sighting the
pair Saturday.
'llle two : are . charged With
aaravated robbecy In the theft that
morning of a sliver Chevrolet
Citation car from Frank and
Dorollly Duvendack of Toledo, who
Identified . their assailants trom
pollee pictures.
Vetter sal(! ·pollee and the FBI
weren't able to substan""te reports
that the pair Wlls lnvollled In an
early-morning exchange ot gllllf1re
and an attempted abduction outside
'ft'Toledo bar Monday?
Vetter said tlndln&amp; the I&gt;IM.'n·
dactcs' car remains the key to the
Investigation pollee and the FBI
·try to detmnlne If the pair have left
Toledo or have holed up here.
Pulice said they wereaetttna 15to

saki

at

...

as

MCI.~y Other ·S uites Too Choose

:ll cal)s an hour Monday afle,ntDClll
rrom people who tbQuPt they had
the flllltlves. Vi!ttl!r said I!IICh
call was checked u a pialbllt lefd,
-

· From At Big R•ductlonsl

Collmlll. • and Ma. Brownjtlme ~ In the llcel lid
dealhl heredVIralnla ~and
her JO.)'Ml'dd da~. Rachl!lle.

.

FU

2nd Street ·

. HERMAN GRATE, OWNER
(304) 773-Sift

'
I

•

·M•n,.W. ·Va.

Vetll!r llld. but C8IIIIDI be cbarlld
unh!tl!! lllllrt evidence Is fcwld.
He laid It waa polllble that
auqelet' 011 the Templel doDe
M~ may prcMdl! emJib evlcleace b lndiL11ill!lla. . '
QJ~em~allu 11111!11 de8Crlbed u a
"clerillllld ~" by. PBI

I

BAD- OD a ..mlll!lln lhc....,,lbe Hll ,.,..11!117tltruw aw..,.
,._ or two budu...,' of bad talnatea After IIIey ' I
hw• lh'C
I

I

~. tbe IIIII had oollede!IIIIWIJ bldre'• Ill W i*Gdwle· AI the
dlacarded t.natoea were deftlimed _ , _ lo .._AM tP tile root
o:D.Id be puled up, lbe IIOl'lllll roa&amp;'liloultl not be able tO be PI I ~.·said

Doe~-- of tile fannl, who deniUblla ks at rtpl. Normally tbe
root would ~ about 11oft feet ... el&amp;!e side Q( tbe ....... .he
"""'"" 'l1le tanuilo piJ1II&amp; lhown bore would normaDy have IJ'OWIIIB

· Jll&amp;h • lbe bind bw!!ee•• At left, a bulbel of bad l4llnatoes IB ~teen.

Y~m. ,l,lUlwiiiJ!91~U!!!IjBilll'retum

•

_

.

2S C..!l

New=C'

:::rl~==as~ _
Architect.outlines marina development
l
oathelr~,Hlll-eXplatned.
~
faclitty ~Ice ,
was

d
D'J(IVe
mU'"
er .
FU ~· I'
e·

.

1 Soctlon, 10 ,.....

. A Multimedia Inc.

-

By'lUI.I!liAMEI£JIER .
plmits, Doo Hill explained. Once
$Eatlnel Staff Writer
plmited ID the llelds, the tomatoes
"This is the weather tomatoes did not receive enough water
like," said Henry Hili of. Letart through the underdevelqled root
Faalls,
system.
.
Still, Monday was the Hllllani!'s
Meigs Coonly AgricUltural Agent
first day or harVesting. That is John Rkle ·.said the piants sllow
around two weeks behind schedule, visual hetbldde damage. Although
hesald.
Rice said he lhlnlrB the problem
The Hills and other growers In the inlght be tn:m the chemicals used,
area have experienced problems laboratmy tests d1d not wove his
they blame on a chemical used lh suspictonS.
~ the tomato plants from
'llle tests might never show what
seed. 'llle chemlcal,lt Is reported, Is . caused the problems. Rkle, said,
shipped directly to the tanners by adding that he tell ~ weather has
the truckload tn:m lWchelle, N.Y.
had sanethlng to do with the tailed
The plants which have been In the CfOP.
mlltaresmallandunabletobearthe
The Hills are unallle to put a
· nonnal amount of trult, It is moneyvaluemtheda,magetothelr
reported. 'n¥:! tomatoes that do 'crop. Usually aslngleplantwlllbear
deVelop trcm the plants are either around ftve pounds of tomatoes,
"delofmed" orarehollow;HIIIsaid. Henry Hill said. They are lucky to
'llle farm Is harvesting about get one or two good tomatoes from
one-thlrdofl~normalharveSt
SOOie of the plants this year, he
ft!lwever,lt Is reported that other added.
growers In the state and In olhet
The Hills planted around 25 acres
slates using the sarne chemical • .of ·· tomatoes or 75,001 plmits,
have not had problems such have although they do not farm all of the
been encountered In the J..etart 8CJ'ellae themselves. The real

·

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TueldC!y, July 10, 1984 .

Chemical··
blamed for
failed area
tomato ·cr9p

out.

'

at-- y - enttne

Bottcmma,HIIIsaki.
•.:.:'lbla year l:llUld.!JaYe ~ .a.

.

preparation•.•Page 3

(Opyotehtocl 1914

Boosters meeting

Juniors meeting

....

,....., .... .. ..... Low .,.,
Riel?:: I l)~lllloutllmph.
Wet ·v, pua, ~ _. IIIII*
will a +eM! fll 4 wa.a _.
11•1 ................ "rcoe

.

Marriage licenses

Amntsstons - Grace Welker,
Racine; Timothy Justis, Racine;
Brandl Fortune, · Elizabethtown,
Ky.; Sherly Uttle, MlddlejlOrt;
Delores Aelker, Pomeroy; Delton
Garnes, t..angsvllle; James Copeland, Rutlanc;l.
.
Discharges - Mary Pickens;
Roger Starcher, Timothy JuStis.

---11

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

~ ............. ~ .. Papt
Sparta ., ..................... .....
•

meet

Eastern Local Alhletlc Boosters
will meet In special session at 7: 30
thls'evenlng at the high school.

~

~'f\"1,}.••...•..... Pap: I

.

Three couples 1have 'been issued
m~ licenSe$ In the Meigs
.
County Probate Collrt.
to
They are VIncent Dale Gray, 18,
and Marlsa Ann Butcher, 16, both of
The Pomeroy Area Chamber of Racine; Racine; Steven Paul
Commerce will have Its meeting at . Hawk, 29, Pomeroy, and Patricia
noon Tuesday at Veterans Mem·&gt;r· Ann Bayles, 24, of Middleport;
lal Hospital.
Spencer Raymond Carpenter, :n,
Racine, and Cheryl Lynn Amos, 31,
cil Racine.

Chamber

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

!fill

•
1
'llle ~t Obstacle was aett1111
to thewrecJcaae. Only alol!i.MudaV
path k!d to . the train lrld!l. 8)'
rnldmomlng, two dozen COIIItl:'ue'
tlon W&lt;rkers began knocking~
trees and haullllg)ln gravel to buUi1
the temporary road. ·

...

ll)tlbe .... l'. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Cia !Cell
_ _ ...

Vice .presidential choice.•.Page

By-.;,.IIOEn.K:II
. there woold be a
It
allo pointed out that on the street, dogs barking, they
s
'SialfWrller
skating 1n lhe winter. There woukl · flnaDclnr the developnlen
_ t of the · said, 24 hours a day aild the .
A!he!IS architect David Reiser be the deveklpmi!nt of a wm!land
marlnawlllbeaptublem.Howl!ver, placement of some cement blocks •
unveiled a
plan lD develop Into a primitive camp area; an
MayorFredHoffmanlndlcated~t
on the street thereby creating a
the present marina Into 8: full-scale .exerd9e coUrse with programmed
It possibly can be tlone ID phases, · trattlc liazard. Hottman will look
recreational area when Middleport activity along the way; additional with ellorts being made to secure Into the canplalnts.
VIllage Council met In regular . parking; multiple sbelter struc· stateandtederalllnanclng.
Council approved Hoffman's resesslon.Mondaynlgbt.
lures; a inultlple-J:l1111l081! lleld; ·a
Councilman Dewey Horton sug- port for June, the report showing
Reiser~ at the meeting sand play area, a Small stage, an .getted that, perhaps, various civic collect1on of $6,074.63 In lines and
alongw!thJudyCrooks,JobnHood area tor shuftle board and horse grrupslntherommunltymlghtlake fees. A 1985 proposed budget wai
and Brian Conde, merrihers ol the shoe pitching. '
over a phase of developing the approved and an ordinance provldMlddleport Recreation Ccmmls·
The field 11wse ·would he a
mar1na areaasaservlcetothetown.
lng for the abandomnent or an alley
sian, tooutllnethepreiJmtnaryplan 12,1ID-squarefnotstructurebuUtror
ReiSI!I' stressed that last night's between lots78and79nearPalmeiwhich was I:l!(letltly authorized by year-round activities. There ·were
presentatlonlsonlytheprellmlnary Streetwasg!venflnalapproval. :
councu. .
be a storage area for small craft planlndlcatlngthatposslblycouncU
Reiser said the p~ Involves two under the building. 'Phase I of the and townspeople will add Input for
phases, the first being ~dscaping project ' woold cost an estimated
Improving the area before final
Hottman was authorized to pro;
anddeVeloinlentofi!Ctlvttycenters $100,00! with the~ phaae, the plans are drawn.
ceed with widening processes tot
at the puuine, and secondly, the . lleldllwsetocostaboutfD),Im.
..
lle!lcltftlqlll!llt ·
Railroad Street at a cost of $5,:Dl
construction of a field bouse.
Bruce Teaford, representing the with the cost to be absorbed In
Reiser displayed drawings of the
Reiser reported that the U.S. Ptxneroy-Ml!ldleP&gt;rt Lions Club, projects belngCarrted oot,
•
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, Arneiipreliminary plans and explained Amiy Caps of Engineers, which appeared before councU also to
lhemtovlllageolf!clals.'lllemarlna leases the marina to the village receive pennlsSIOn tor his club to canLeglon,wasg!venpermlsslonto
i.aw, he sald, Is an under· eveeyftveyears, hasglvenprellml· placeftve,sturdyDlpoundbenches ., Installing Ughtlng near village hall
. utlli:IJed area and as a result, Is nary approval of the plan and will at several locations In tJie town. ·
to Ught the plaque to the communisubject to vandalism. However, the sul:mlt a report Indicating recomPmnlsslonwasglven.Accordlng ty's two Congressional Medal of
development of the facUlty would mended changes and whatflnanclal to plans, two of the benches will be Hooor winners and the American
make It a widely-used area and as assistant might be p~ on the placed at the tennis courts of ~ which rues nearby. The
Conde later ren'iarked, the facUlty ' project. ·
Hartinger Park. two In the Amerl· llghtlng will he on a dawn to dusk
woold provide activity area for
VIllage olflclals Indicated that can Legion Park behind the pt\'!t switch.
people of all ages.
they are pleased with the expansion
otl!ce and one In the levee area on
Attending the meeting were
Reiser 1n expWntng the prellml· plan at the marina, and It was North Front Street.
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk-Treasl!l'er
CamplaiiJIII alred ·
Jon Buck, and councUmen Horton,
nary plans stated that there would suggested lhilt If the~ Is followed,
be a basketball area wblch could longer 'leases on · the facility be
'1\vo Hudson street residents also William Walters, Jack Satterfield
also be used for tennis courts and secured from theoorps. .
spolcetocouncDCllljunkcarspal'ked and Bob Gilmore.
I'

s:ro.OOJ

.

other

Special Agent Doug Domin of
Toledo, who said he believes
Coleman will ·kill again If he ISn't
caught.

A civic ·group called the New
Union ol Blacks In America has
offered a $lDl rewan:l for lnfonna·
t1on leadlrig to the pair's IUTe!lt. A
spokesman sald the reward was
offered becausethel'ewas "abaolute
lear" ainongToJeOO blacks.
Vetter said police are slxJwlng
pictures ol Coleman and Ms. Brown
In black neighborhoods In hopes that
people will be susplclous If they are
. approached bY Coleman.
.
In Ck!vel8nd, pollee contacted a
black-oriented newspaper and
pa"ted wt lllen on the couple.
·
ColEman seems to he a smooth·
talking con man who gains the
confidence of his victims before
aslaulllng lbem; police and the FBI

said.
Vet11!r said ,pollee may call In
to figure out what
motlvl!tes Cdeman and Ms. Brown
after CDIIpl1lnjj lnlbrmatlon about
thelrpastlll:tlonlfromauthorltlesiD
Wllconsln, Dllnols, Indiana and

JlSYdl!kiiiSI$

ftl!chllan.

'lbe 111!81'Ch for Coleman and Ms.
Brown began In Coleman's hometown or Waukegan, m., whre he 1s

area

Mondale ·planning .Dem convention
•

'

NOR'nl OAKS, Minn. (APl Walter F. Mondale is ~
quietlY to orchestrate the Delno'
cratlc National Convention next
wcel!: that apparently will give him
the par1y's presidential nomlnaliOII
while he ~ly tries til cool
speculation over who his running ..
mate will be.
Mondalewasremalnlngsecluded
at his suburban Minneapolis home
today, but he !las been busy
attendlilg to convention details and
thesearchforsomeonetotllltheNo. ·
2spotonhlsllcket

P.)aced IIi nomination, but Mondale whatevero''
andhisaldesareso&lt;;anfldentofthe
"A secooo Reagait admlalstra·
outcome of the baUottng that they
lion would be a time of unpreceare asserting CO!Itrol over the dented danger, when a confrontaconvention 9Re11da.
tiona! atma;phere could all too
But Hart, who was fiylng to · easOy cause regional conlllcts to
Atlanta today to deliver a foreign esc•tetoanuclearshowdown," he
policy speech, wasn't conceding the said.
nomination.
Dcintlon.tn Washington, sald that
He told supporters at a fum· Mondale's campalgn has rot yet
raising rea.&gt;ptlon Monday night In decided .. who will deliver his
McLean,Va.,aWashlngtonsuburb, nominating· speech and who will
that be still expects to win the · Introduce him tor his makes his
·presidential nomination. He cited acceptancespeech.
• •
rea!lltGallup,HarrlsandNewYorit
Meanwhile, Mondale and his

Sen. Gary Hart, Mondale's chief 'l'lmes-CBS polls as "factual suprival tor the presidential n&lt;mlna·
port" for his claim to be the
c:Jiar&amp;l!d with murclel' and )ddnpp- lion, will address the San Francisco strClllgest Democrat against R!!a·
JIIIW 1D tile deeth d 9-)ftr-okl convention on Wedllesday, July 18 gan 1n the fall.
.
Venllta Wheat of K......... Wla.,
under an-angements W&lt;rked out
In his SPOOch prepared for
whole body W8ll fouild JUIII! 19 II) between akles for Mondale and dellvecy at Emory 'uu6tentty In
Waulaegan.
Hart.
Atlanta today, Hart~ is
The Colorado senatorwtlldeliver substltutlng"rhetbrictorresul~''to
Coleman aiiO .. -dl!d for . his speech sho~ before the muk ftrelgn . policy fallurel In
deleptes ue expected.to cast their Central America, the Mldeut and
~In thedlappearUceof
Ill lnd!•n• - .. tbe death ~a voCl!s tbr Mondale u the pteslden- B!TIIII control.
'llle Colorado senalol' said Rea·
7·)'4!11'-ok! ' Gary, Ind.,
and t1a1 nominee.
Details of Hart's appearance . gan "llas Increased Soviet lntransl·
I!!'• ail ll1i1l!d Nbllei 1111 and . .
were lettled Moaday, ~ to gence arwnd the world, atralned
8111111!1 tbe Dl!lrolt .....
Vetllr lUI Ms. BICMlllpPeen to
TomDmflon, Uondale's.coaventlon ourrelatlonswtihourEuropeanalld
other alllea, and falll!d to achieve
be at 1aut a wlllllla acmrnpUce In · qle'l'atlonl manar.
Hart's
name
Is
expected
to
be
any arms control successes
tile atl8dll.

atrt

•

,.

e

aides •jlave been trying to quiet
specu18tlon over the selection of a
vice presidential candidate.
They especially appeared upset
about published reports over the
weekend suggesting that of seven
people Mondale has Interviewed for
the No. 2 spot, Rep. Geraldine
Ferfa!O of New York is ·supping
from contention while Mayors
Dianne Feinstein of San Francisco,
T(lll Bradley of l..os Angeles, who Is
black, and Henry G . Cisneros of San
Antonio. a Hispanic.. are becoming
serious contenders.

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

Council approves budget
Middleport VIllage Council approved a proposed budget of

. ·$1,1111,3l6.24 tor 1lHi at a n!gular meeting held Monday night.
Breakdown expenditure!l provided In the budget Is: general lund,
$296,411l; revenue sharing, $16,001; tire truck fund, $76,m, street
maintenance, $101,00!; street llght, $18,!'ffi; cemetery, ~.liD.
swimming JlllO!. $21,00!; HUD, $1M,921.24; water fund, $154,100;
water tank; Ssl.IID. sanitary sewer escrow, $00,00}, street levy.
$18,!01; Jll!lll!!1l] bond retirement, $875; !!rehouse Improvement,
$31,00!; meter deposit, $4.~ sanitary sewer, $101,960; fire
equlprnel1l, $21.,100; economic deveiOptnent, $10,00!.
Eatbnated receipts · Including balances from 1981 amount to

or

$l,H4,33188.

J•

�-

---·---

---

-·~

Comme~

-

·-.•

·--~· - ---

- _....___ ---.•
~

. ~-Ther::~~::

American League trying to
shake All-Stars l~ser image

--~--------~------~--~==~---~~----~------~--------------~~--------~--------~T~~~!~~~~~~~~~~
. · --~::.

. .

At ·the N·•·L R.•8 _
.

..

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
~omeroy, Ohio

~

DEVIYI'ED TO THE INTERE'!'I' OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

,..·l b

~m~

.

f"T'&gt;.-1'..... I ,.,......o:::::~~­

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT

PubliSher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
Gener&amp;I Maaager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
• News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Associa-

tion and the ..\merlcan Newspaper Publisher Association.
LE'ri'ERS OF OPINlON are we lcome(! . They s hould be leMJ.I ban 380 words
long. A.llletten are~ubject to edltln1 and muat be 8lgned with name, addr~a and

t el ephon e number. No unalgned letten wUI be published. Letters should be In

1ood taste, addresslnK U."uH, not pertonalltles.

Gett~ng

the loan:
advice from a
50-year veteran

WASIDNGTON -Somelnteresting things have been happening
lately at the National Labor
Relations Board. We are Seeing a ·
remarkable manlfestatlon of ·the
maxlmthatthepurposeofelections
ts not just to throw your rascals out,
but to thrOw our rascals ln.
Cynical as )I sounds , the eplgram
makes sense. The presidential
electlon of 1980 offered a choice not
only of men but of . political
philosophies also. Jimmy Carter,
Democrat, a moderate liberal, had
the support of organized labor.. He
ran on a platform that contained a
long section on "worker proieclion_ " Here the party pledged Its
support to the overthrow 'of state
right-to-work laws, to the organlza.
tion of public employees, and by
clear Inference ·to a pro-labor bias
at the NLRB.
By contrast, Ronald · Reagan,
Reputillcan, a staunch conservalive, brought to the 1980 campaign a
different · cast of mind and a

James J. Kilpatr~k ·
__..____,...._-----:-~~-----'-

different body of atfltUdes. The
GOP platfgrm put great elflphasis
upon lndlvldual UbertY, freedom of
choice and free enterprise. In a
. section on "jobs · and the workplace," the platform called for "a
healthy business environment," for
job creation In the private sector
and lor preservation of right-towork laws. The .Republicans acknowledged workers • rights to
bargain collectively, but '· thelr
platform made It evident that these
rights must not be abused.
On theSe opposing vle\vs, Carter
and Reagan went to the mat. And
Reagan won.
That victory not only gave
Reagan the right to Implement hls ·
· proclaimed policies; It positively
obligated him to move In conservatlve directions.. To his credl(
Reagan has done exactly that.
When tlie opportunity came along ·
last year to replace NLRB chair·
l)lan John Fanning, ·Reagali acted
decisively. He named Donald L.

Advice from a veteran banker: Ifyourcoinpany is small-or medium-size
and aimlrtg for growth, you must cultivate your banker as much lfnotmore
than your customers - even seek to be his partner.
Having becol)le a banker during tbe Great Depression In 1934, and
having survived and thrived by choosing his customers wisely, Theodore
Silbert makes that SUgge!&gt;tiOn, and the~ almost challenges you to make It
work.
·
"I'm a pessimist on credit," he says after five decades In the ooslness. "I
am a pessimist for having financed too many optimists.''
Sll bert, 00, heads Sterling National Bank &amp; Trust Co., ranked by the Bank
Admtnistratlon Institute as the best perfortner among large banks measured by such cr]teria as return on assets and equity, and ratio of
capital to assets.
.
Would you llke'to have his bank aS your partner? 'Then listen.
1
' The fact of the matter is tha tfewer than 10 percent of small businesses
come to a bank to raise capital adequately prepared.
.
'' Bankers do not deal in concepts, they deal In facts, and therefore do not
have time to dig for such needed data which should be up front In any
financial presentation."
·
Preparation, he says, helps any smaller business executive to get a loan.
MA~ HA~ 1bSENDYouOOf~ A
Knowledge does, too.
.
"Pick your commercial bank carefully. Does it deal mostly with larger
corporations, or is It one that atms to serve smaller business? Does It have
expertise In your field?"
The question, he suggests, is more important than you might J:1lallze. "If
you pick the wrong bank and wind up being rejected It will make Jt that
WASIDNGTON - The .Central
he kept It under control at
mucll harder for you to get a loan at a second bank."
...
an
ugly
Intelligence
Agency
has
appointments
my oUice arranged
Yl!'lr failure, he reminds you, will be ~rded In credit bureau files and
history
of
Inciting
r:ebellions,
then
for
him
In
Washington.
He spoke
make the next bank wary. " No bank likes to be approached as a,SE&gt;cond·
choice. Bankers are always afraid the first one knows something they tiptoeing away. Lefi behind to be . calmly, factually, almost with an
air of reSignation. ' .
slaughtered are the native recruits
don't."
The supplies of CIA had given
has
befrtem)ed,_
whom
the
CIA
pet a·good accountant, says Silbert, and maybe have him come to the
armed
and
trained.
him
would soon rurt otit, he said.
bank with you. But first, have him prepare a complete set of ftnanclal
This
happened
In
1974
to
the
Meo
It would be only a matter of
Then
statements, as well as a business plail; contracts In force and a personal
In
Laos,
then
In
1975
to
time
before
the Sandinistas countribesmen
balance sheet.
the
Kurds
In
Iraq,
each
time
with
terattacked.
"If
tbere's going to be
"An accountant saves the banker time and w0rk and shows the lending
tl'aglc
consequences.
Now
the
CIA
In
Central
America,"
any
holocaust
officer that he's dealing with an astute businessman - one who knows
he added wearily, "at least I'll be a
has abandoned the Indians and
enough to surtound himself with expertise."
Creoles
who
had
been
encouraged
witn\!SS."
Follow that advice on a,ccountants and ftnanciallnformation, and you
to revolt against the Sandlnlsta
The two guerrilla chiefs have now
Improve your chances of getting a loan by 75 percent, says Silbert.
regime
In
Nicaragua_
returned
to the steaming jungles ·
And be ready for the next requirement. "Even the beSt credit ·
The
leaders
of
tbe
betrayed
and
swamps
their people occupy
prospects," says Silbert, "must be prepared to personally guarantee their
guerrillas
flew
to
Washington
a
few
along
the
east
coast of Nicaragua.
loans.
appeal
to
higher
,
Will
Walt
sullenly for the
days
ago
to
They
··Ii a businessman isn't willing to put his assets on the line, why should a
authority_
"Don't
turn
your
back
on
their people into
Sandlnistas
to
herd
, bank?" he asks.
us," pleaded the anguished Creole "relocation camps" -the commu· ·
leader, Teofllo Archibald, at a
nist terms, Says Fagoth, for
meeting on Capitol Hill. :.'My p;.ople concentration camps. They will
are suffering real bad, and you sit · resist With knives after the CIA's
back and do nothing."
bullets run out. Then they will
The words oboked In his throat probably die, as did hundreds of
"You give me candy," he added thousands of Meos and Kurds
huskily, "and then haul back the before them.
At first, the Indians and Creoles
next piece." He could no longer hold
back hls emotion and sobbed.
fought side by side with· the
The ·Indian leader, Steadman Sandlnlstas to oust the hated
Fagoth, had betryed hls own dictator, Anastasio Somoza. But
seething anger tome in prtvate. But after the revolution, the Sandlnlstas

Dotson to tbe chairmanship. Rea·
gan also put Robert P . Hunter and
f'atrlcia Dlaz Dennis on the board.
The result had been a dramatic
change of course at the NLRB.
It Is an overslmpllflcalloll to label
Fanning "pro-lahor" and Dotson
"pro-management," buttbere Is no
question that policies .have shifted
abruptly under the Dotson-HunterDennis majority. The lone Carter
·holdover, Don Zimmerman, regularly finds himself on the short end
of 3·1 decisions. (The board's flfth
seat has been vacant fo~ almost a
year.)
In what Is known as the Meyers
case, f6r example, the Dotson
board In January reversed a 1975
decision having to do with em·
ployees who act alone. In the Otis
Elevator case In April, the hoard
held tl!at unless a contract speclfl·
cally ~ves a union a voice In a
manage"rial decision to move operations, employers are not bound to
bargain on the matter. In a

·.A:~ l-~.)~~
· f~'C't~~w
-./~1~'='
....

S£X,®NGE ~lQo4. '

,I

February case the board overruled
a long line of prior decisions
Involving. the conduct of pickets;
the old ruJe was that an employer·
could 1101 refuse to reinstate a
strlker who engaged only In verbal
abuse, unaccompanied by physical
violence. Und~r the decision In the
matter of Clear Pine Mouldings,&lt;
verbal ~threats alone will suffice to
justify dismissal.
.
Under the Fanning board and Its
predecessors, employers had al·
most no rtghts of tree speech In the
context of . hiring policies and
certification ·elections, A forrman
was likely to be In serious trouble lf
he Inquired Into a prospective
employee's view (lf unions. Managers were required to keep their
comments within strict bounds. In
the Rossmore House decision In
April, ij!e Dotson board ~verturned
a 1980 decision of the Fanning
board. Under the new rule, el]lploy·
ers - up to a point - may ask
workers about · their union ·
sympathies.
In a string of other cases. the
newly constituted board has em·
phaslzed Its desire to see labormanagement disputes settled by
arbl\ration rather than by formal
appeal to the NLRB. ThJs trend Is
partly the couftsel of practicality.
Dotson Inherited a huge .backing of
1,700 undecided cases, and he is
trytng to knock them off at the rate
of a hundred a menth.
The board's change In course sits
·poorly with \he AFL-CIO, but this
was to be expected. After a long
period of Imbalance, In which the
unions won nearly every key
decision, employers are having
their turn. It's a healthy develop-.
ment. The NLRB. to be sure, is a
quasi-judicial agency, apd It would
·be keenly regrettable lf the corrective adjustments went to extreme.
But the board never has been
famed for Its devotion to precedent,
and for a while at least, Dotson' &amp;
Co. will be In control at the helm .
This Is what elections are aU about.

RebeJs beg u.s . _____~__J_ac_kA_nd~e_rs~on

Berry's World

decided that the natives' communal
way of llfe would milke excellent
socialist demonstration projects.
Those who resisted this oppres'- ·
sive communist encroachment got
harsh treatment. Both Archibald
and Fagoth were Imprisoned and
tortured. Archibald showed the
scars where his flngernaUs had
been pulled out Fagoih went
through· the stapdard, communiststyle psychological torture -loss of
sleep, erratic schedule, Intensive
Interrogation, ~ehumanlzing
treatment.
.
·
The fiery Fagoth heads a coalition of Mlsklto, sqma and Rama
Indians called the MISURA group.
My ·roving reporter, Jon Lee
Anderson, is traveling with them
Inside Nicaragua. He reports that
they are desperately short of fOod.
medicine and ammunition.
Fa goth showed up In my ' office
with a message from my reporter
and an appeal for help~ He was
especially ea~r to meet the critics
of U.S. Intervention In Nicaragua
and tell them what was happening
to his people. I tried to arrange
appointments for him to talk to
Sens. Joseph Elden, D·Del.; Chris·

/

l'ELLING TALE! OF BASEBAU.- "-Uctty
Royals AD-Star third baseman Georae BreU enpp~~
In animated coavel'llltlon wllh retlaed ~
Redll catmer Johnny Belich before the American

•

Today in history

ihe

i

.'

he also needs the senior citizen vote.
I could be a twofer. "
· "Do you think you're up to being
vice president of the United
States?"
"As far as I can tell, a vice
president's main function Is to go to
funerals, and I go to a lot of
'fu111,!rals.''
.
"I understand the vice president
·also serves on the National Security·
Council.''

" Are you sure?"
"I have the Eastern Establishment media In my pockel," I told
him. "We've been dytng to have one
of our own In the White House for

'

years."

"Well, It's something to thtnk
about. I'm very Impressed with
your qualifications. Leave your
name with my secretary and we'll
get back to you."

.

By ERIC PREWITJ'
AP Sporis Writer

SAN FRANCISCO (APJ "- Reggie Jacksqn Is charged·up, as usual,
for baseball's All-Star Game.
He was tbe last mari In the batting
cage at Candlestick Park during
Monday's practice sessions. On his
final swtng be belted a ball Into the
seldom-reached upper deCk seats In
right field.
"'fhe.AII·StarGameisapartyand
a wonderlul tjme. I love to get
together with all tbe guys, raise
some hell and shoot the breeze,"
said the 38-year-old California
Angels slugger.
After makillg that remark, Ja~k­
sonacknowledged that, as a fielder ;
be's the: player considered most
likely to l!nock over the punch bowl
and ruin the party for the American
Leaguers tonight.
He Will start In right tleld, where
he'll be facing a sinking sun and
Candlestick's notorious winds.
"I haven't played In the outfield at

L

famJlles, so they rotate through his

.;. ·

CINCINNATI (1\P)-TheCinclnnatl Bengals have still not signed
tbelr top college draft choices,

fans

linebacker Ricky Hunley and defen- _opms for rooldes this weekend.
slvellnemanPeteKoch,andmaybe .
Agents for both players said they
without them when tratntng camp will not report unless they're under

,,
!I

..

ATHENS - · '1\venty·three-~ar coordinator and wa5 In charge of
practice preparation, scouting and
old Amy Prichard has been named
women's basketball coach at Ohio recruiting.
.
"1bat's arother plus, as I see It,"
University.
In June, Prichard, who served as said McElhaney. "Amy can con·
a graduate assistant to recently·
tinue the recruiting she's done ijll
reslgnel! bead Coach BeckY DeSte- year, and we really won't miss a .
fano, earned her master's degree beat."
. \
from OU with emphasis on athletic
Prichard held 18 girls' basketball
administration.
records at Lima Bath High School,
· "IreaUzethat23isnotveryoldtor where tier mother was coac11. She
a Division One, college-level head was student council president, a
basketball coach," . said Harold
member of the National Honor
McElhaney,
athletic director,
Soclet$', hadanaccumulatlcegrade
"but Amy is a very unique
polntaverageof3.8andwasMVPin
Individual whose parents both are four sports. She was a High School
coaches, and she has known since All-American and ranked a Class
she was 10 tl\111 she would fOllow In
AAOhioPiayeroftheYearin1979by
her parents' coaching fclotsteps."
the ASsociated Press.
Prichard was !Ill all-American
"I understand the strengths and
basketball player at Northwestern limitations of our retumlug players
.University, serving as a three-year and am famlllar with the policies
starter, . captain and MVP. She andproceduresoftheunlversltyand
tlntShed· as .t he Wildcats' secOnd il1e athletic department," PriChard
all·tirne leading scorer, with 1,533 said.
points, and as career leader In steals
Prichard added that she was
and assists.
, confident the women's bll.sketball
- As a graduate asslstani under . program wciuld continue to ·be
DeStefano, Prichard was defenSive successtl!l.

ou

i

..'

'

Uke

.

.

.

Officials deny Pat Nappi's
resignation as boxing coach
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.
(AP) - "Pat Nappi has been a
coach for as long as I've been
fighting," says 23-~ar-old Tyrell
Biggs, tbe world amateur super
heavyweight champion.
And Nappi will be roaching Biggs
andtheotberU.S.Oiymplcboxersln
T..osAngeles.
.
"Contrary to published reports,
PatNapplofSyracuse,N.Y., isstW
and always has been coach of tbe
1984 Olympic Boxing Team,"
Jaines Fox, executive director of
the USA Amateur Boxing Federatlpn. said Monday.
'There was a published report that
the67-year-ok1Nappi, who also was
. bead coach.ofthell!76and l91J)U.S.
OlympiC teams, had ~lgned.
"We never recevted an olflclal
notification of his stepping down,"
Fox said In a statement. "In tact: U
we had we would not have accepted

it. ..

Fox said theri.&gt; had been a
''misunderstanding about the
amoont 'ot time In Texas, not aoout
Pat's qualltlcatlons as a-coach." '·
The 12 Olympic team members
who were decided at the box-off last

~~?:: ~ru:a:ea~~=Y~::

Cannonade Ranch, owned by Josepllin~! Abercrombie, In Gonzales,
11exas, Sunday.
Several were unhappy, and the
arrival date was switched to
Wednesday. The team will remain
thereunWJuly24.
"I hear there's no human llfE'
Within miles of that place," com plalned Mark Breland, the 147·
powilc~&lt;~ssworldchamplonand the
leading U.S. hope for a gold medal.
. "'We realized tJiey needed a little
time off to go home and see the
famiJY and_to really bask· In the
realization of going to the Olym·

listanincand ilrst "lltinc tlltre" show tllet you care. Your pre·
fortlq.

(USPs lfli-MI)

'

...

'

h

.\ Dlvlsloa ol Mulllmedla, Inc.
Published every afternoon. Monday
t!ITouglt P'rlday, lll Court Street. by the
Ohio Valley PubliShing Company -Multimedia. Inc .. Pomeroy. Ohlo45769, 992.
~- Seeond class postage paid at Pomeroy. Ohio.

·I

••
•', I

oat

,.•
•'•

'•
",,"
'I

·'"•

JAcKSON PIKE -RT35 WEST
Phone 448·4524

York 10017.

POSTMASTER: Send addm.s to Thf'
Dally Senlinel. 111 Court St., Poi'I'K'roy,
Ohio 45169 .

SUIISCRII7ION RATES

a,. Carrier .. Motor Route
()ne Week .........: ...................... . .$1.10

One Month ..... .......... ................ .$4.80
One Year ...... .'......................... $57.211

'SINGLE OOPV
I'RICt:S
Dally ................................. 25 Cents

Subscribers n~ deslrlng to pay lhecarriE'r may remll In advance direct to
The Daily Sentinel on 3, s ·or 12 moqth
basis. Credit will Jwglvencarrierf'ach
month.
No subscriptions by mail pe.-mllted In
towns where home carrier service Is
avallablf'.

: : : : : : : : : : : ::

MAIL SUBSCRIPrJONS

~ ~=

52 Weeks
13

Inside Ohio

~:~

·--·· ····------- ................. 158.24

we&lt;&gt;~&lt;s ----~~~-e-~~~ ....... $15.60

26 We&lt;&gt;~&lt;s -·-- ...________ ................. $31.20

4 PLY
POLYESTER

Ttl!! popul~r polyestf!r lue ii bl!tlt tor CII!FJiltlrly

aM DI ICe&lt;l 10 serr If reatutti a btu o1 1 pol,n·
lf!r crnd

J.

8 1.-.: ~•• •r
~-• ot&gt;

B,l3

'"
'"

Your qaeltionsand co•-ts oa tills and oilier st*jtcts art
wtlcallt - In printt or IIUbiely throap this ~olu1111. .

(114) --141

JAMES SIIPSOII

I

li

J&lt;OO
'""
3900

'"

4100

r'~

3900

'"
H-14

"

""
'"

4300

HOO

&lt;5 00
4700

• 5 rob llf.;d

this subject.

MIODLII'OIIT, 01110

un~ l m&lt;.IHln

$29&lt;tQ

.

Wt lint rtldiftl 11111trialand wino !IIIIi naila"tat the Ill·
ntr1l 11oM tllat wt 11011ld ·nkl to shut wit' rou conctmiftl

PJI~,_ ct'«&lt;I6~PN-r.
;#;,,..,../ Jfewu

, •. l .. ,

· Member: The- Associated Press, In·
land Dally Press Ass&lt;rlatm and t hr
.\merlcan Ne-wspaper Publishers As·
soclallon. National Advertlslng Representative. Branham Newspaper Sales.
733 Third Avenll(' , Nt.lW York, New

llold. •

I·

i'

:

Mow all. don't ttr to jolt a &amp;rininl widow 0111 of htr &amp;ritf.
Tllllt will do It fllr lltt lflduaiiJ. Site 11ust lim acctpl tilt
loss. tlltn bt&amp;in to Hn liHII it and pass tllroulb ,_., __
IIGIII stillS btlort tilt llltural htalill&amp; tlfects of tilllt take

••

.,

.. ..

The Daily Sentinel

OUIFAMOUS
72r RADIAL

lltiiCt Is indication of roar dnire to lit sympatllttic and com-

.....,

••

Cincinnati."
Falk said he believes he can
negotiate a better contract for_a
shorter term, which Koch wants, In
theUSFL.
'
Bmm said he has not spoken with
Hunley's agent slnoe last week. It
was then that Brown said he had
made the club's ftnal contract otter
to ooth players.
"There's no update," said Donald
Pitt, Hunley's attorney. "Tbelroffer
ts unacceptable."

I

.,

!•

.

~~~~~real~~~ ~plcs~~:·~sa=i=d=F~o=x._____________j~5:2:W:C&lt;'ks::_:._:_.:...:---=--=--·=·--=. ·=·-=·-·=·=··~::.~::JL-=--~~~~~=:----~

..

.,::
..,

'•

'

$ilent 11presslons of ltllllllolls and co11passion (like a fi1111
iflppi"' of tht Mnd) lllfa simple "I'm sony," are frequlllllr
1110n eloquent ttlln lllkltlw lltttnpt at tuloJits.

• ·'•

~·

'·

now we have to direct our energies to :
getting ready for the Olympics."
·,,
It was not just the site of the -· ··
training camp that was behind the -:· '
controversy. Several people with · ·
professional boldng Interests, who
hope to sign the Olympians to ·· ·
contracts, contended .that Nappi ;· ·
was working for Aber-Crombie and · '· •
theheinlghtpersuadeboxerstotum ·-·· .
bccu
..
'
"Everythlni'·ls cleared up and proforher.
· ·· ·
, - - - - - - - - - - . - - - - - - - - . . . . : __ _ .

that you NOT MY· "llaloll how yaa must feel." It is
not-ntnssary to 1orct a r:omwsltion. nor to utoll lilt virtues
. of the dtuasld to th &amp;ritvi._ flllily.

·'

~

Nappi was not available for
questions, buthesaldlnastatement
released through the USA-ABF, "I
am proud to be coach for the
Olympic team.
·
"During (!!am selections, pres$ure, tension and feelings run high
and taut, and In that type of climate
It's erasy. !~- misunderstandings to

.. wtldwiSI

••'

. '.,.."

•

1 ,iltctt11t it is so difficult to lalollllow the beiNVtd reilly feels.

••

- ~

Falk, Koch's agent, said
Monday he I10pEti to ,have an offer
from a rival United States Football
League team ready for his cUent by
the
of the week.
Mike Brown, Bengals assistant
general manager, turned down a
contract proposal frOm Falk on
Frtday, bellevedtobeathree-~ardemand. The ~als have offered
a reported tlvt"year, $1.6 million
contract to Koch, who · reportedly
rejjrted the offer from the National
Football League club.
"There was no progress," Browti
sald of his talk with Falk.
- "At this point, we asswne their
'JIO&amp;itlon is closed," Falk said. "We

· WHAT DO YOU SAY TO A GRIEVING WIDOW?

T~Q WHI' ~'!aNT McU.S.

..

.

.

Ex-Cla8s AA' player appoU,ted co~~.0 u WOmen 8 basketball COach end

,I

0014, Till~ i!i ~ eXCiTi~6! WHO Doe~
MoNDaL.e CHoo~e FoR HIS RvNNiN6
MaTe'? Ttle BLaCK aTI-Ielf&gt;T? "ffie Ga'a'
·8UDDIUiT? TI-le_HiiPaNiG WoMaN?

cSS:

I,

all this season, not one Inning. My
the starting team this year.
last time out there was In spring
"That was Obviously a pOpularity
training," Jackson,sald. "Butonour vote tor me," Jackson said. "1bere
last road trip, I took balls In tbe . are some younger outfielders outfield during practice.
Larry Parrish and Lloyd Moseby,
"I had no problem at all with just to name a COJ.lple - who are
anything hit within 15 or~ feet from probably having better seasons but
me.
aren't here.
"H I've got a difficult play to make
· "But when I was younger, there
and don't make It, or U I mess upoo weresomeyearsiwasn'tvotedonto
an easy play, my fielding will be an the team and maybe should have
Issue, !suppose. i!Imaketheplays, been."
it won't be any Issue.''
The power of Jackscin'snamewas
With the AngeLs this season
more evident last season, the
even
'
Jackson has been resttlcted to work worst of his career. He was elected
as a designated hitter, but the DH to the AL All-Star team by
rule is not used In All-Star games.
despite a battingaverageunder .:nl.
"I don't see any problenJ. All I
Because be had Injury problems,
know about Reggie JacksOn Is that he declined the honor and stayed
hEl rises to the occasion when 50 home, opeutng art All-Star spot for a
million people are watching," said younger, more.cleservln{player.
Joe Altobelli, thj! Baltimore Orioles
Jackson has been healthier this
manager who is In charge of the season and has· hit 14 h!mers,
American League team.
Including a three-run blast In the
ThJs Is tbe ~4th time Jackson has ftnal g&lt;~~ne before the All-Star
lieen selected to play In the All-Star · break, to raise his career total to492.
Game. Baseball fans voted hlmooto He Is' batting .247.

Bengals ·negotiating for top
college players Hullley, Koch

"Thank you, sir," I said and lett.
I met the little old lady out on the
sidewalk. "How did you do?"
She said, "He was very lmpessed
With my qualifications and told me
~d get back to me. Do you think he
means It?"
"I'm SUre he does. But I wouldn't
give up your Social Security ci!E,ck
unttl you see what happens In San
Francisco. •
'

'fov f'ttiCeP!

baltlnr praellce Moad~Q' In San
Fraacllco. BreU wiD m8ll.e 1111 nk1111 AD-star
appearance ln toollhl'• gllllll!. (API urrpboto).

l..eape's Al.star

'

·--

"I thought It was the Social
Security Council," she ·sald. ''That
was one of the reasons I came down
for the job."
"Not to worry," I assured her.
"You have to go along with the
president on national security
anyway, so you just agree With
everything he says."
· "I hear the job pays pretty good.''
"You don't get what you IWUid as
vtce 'president of General Motors,
but you won't starve to death.''
. "Well, that's better iban being on
Social Security...
.
Two ~ later I was escorted
. Into the candidate's office. He was
surrounded bY advlaen.
He shook my hand and told me to
take a seat. "What can you add to
my ticket?" be asked.
"Well, sir, thewaylseelttheonly
way you can beat Reagan II U you
, have the ~ behind you. H you
make a newspapennan your running mate, I can dellver
ABC,
NBC, and Georae Will.''
Mondale s.e emed Interested.

•

·Jackson preparing for lrol~
in All~Stars game tonight

,__

I was walking down tbe street
minding my own business when' I
passed the "Mondale for Pres!·
dent" headquarters bullding. There
was a long llne out front and I asked
a man what was going on.
"The candidate Is lntervle\Ying
people to be his vice president," he
replied.
"What did he do - put an ad in
.
the paper?" I asked.
· "Notexactiy. But he put out word
to all the leaders of the unions,
"Yes, we're the group of three 'hackers' that
women and minority groups that
be's talk to anyone who wanted the
advertised for a fourth. "
jo~. I heard ahout It from my cousin
who works with 'Hispanic Joggers
for Mondale.' "
"I didn't know Mondale had time
to see everyone who wanted to be
vtce president.''
"He has nothing else to do untO
Today is Tuesday, July 10, thell!2itddayof1984. Thereare174daysleftln
.
the
July conv~ntion . By Interviewthe~~
'
Ing vice presidential candidates he
Today' s highlight In history:
oR July 10, 1962, the Telstar communications satelllte was launched ,can keep his name In thepaper. you
froni Cape Canaveral, Fla., to relay TV and telephone signals between the want to get In One?"
"It looks awfully .long."
.
Unitl!d StateS and Europe.
'"!'hat's what I thought, but It
On this date:
In 1832, President AndreW Jackson vetned legislation to recharter the . moves pretty fast. Every once In a
while a volunteer brings out coffee_
Second Bank of the United States.
rn· l&amp;'iO, Vice President Millard FWmore succeeded to the presidency and daughnuts so It Isn't as bad as
you would thtnk.''
following the death of ~!dent Zachary Taylor the day before.
llil.S!Q, Wyomtng became the 44th state of the union. ·
I had noihlng to do tor
In' 19«1, tbe Battle bf Britain began as Nazi forces attacked by air.
afternoon so I went to the end of the
In 1943, "Operation Husky" was under way as Allled forees began line. There was a woman senlor
citizen In front of me.
··
full·Scale landings on .Sictly durll1g World War II.
.·
."You going to go for It?" I asked
In 1951, armistice talks atmed at ending the Korean confllct began at
her.
~~.
'
"Why noi?" she said. ''He's going
Ten years !'80', Arab otl mtnisters decid!ld to IJtt their oU embargo ·
· agamt ihe Netherlands for its support of Israel. · .
to need a woman an the tic~, and

I

Mickey Mantle and AI Kallrw..
to Candlestick was 1n 1961, w~ a
"Thlngsmusthavechangedslnce near-gale led to a record seven
I played," said the AJ:s honorary ·-~errors iind oiew relief pitcher Stu
captam, Hank Greenberg, a Jlall of Miller off tbe mound before the Nt
Fame slugger With tbe Detroit prevaned 5-4 in 10 Innings,
Tigers when the AL dominated the
TrtCkY 'Winds and poor vlslbllty
game 1!1 the l9.tls .and 40s. "When I
created by a twilight start, which
played, w~dldn'teven bothertaklng will enable ABC-TV to televise the
batting practice."
game In the Eastdurtngprlmetlmll,
.
The. National League leads the won't help.
rivalry 34-19-1 and while playel'S
The AL batting o!'der goes
often downplay the game, saying It this: Detroit's Lou Whitaker, CallI
is merely a one-night showcase, NL fonila's Rod Carew at first base
} ..embarrasstng19setbacksln~b'les.
Maliager Paul Owens of Phlladel· Baltimore's Cal Rlpken, N~ ·,
But following last season's con- phlaoUeredadltlerentviewpolnt.
York's Dave Wtn!leld In left field,
I
vincing 13-3 trlumpb, marked by a
•
"The dllference between our Reggie Jackson of California Ill
seemingly new get·tooghapproach, AJJ..Star Game and !he one In other rlght,KansasCitY'sGeorgeBrettat
the At olltlook has Improved. ~
sports, I think, Is that ours Is played third base, Tigers
Parrish
"The~ can ' be a pe!ldulum
to be .won," he said. ''There's a and Chet Lemon In right tleld and~
,
~g." saki Baltimore Manager
National l..eague and American With no designated hitter, Toronto:· • ·
Joe Altobelli, who will guide the AL League pride that has lo be pitcher Dave Stleb. •
In the 8:40p.m. Eur matchup. ·
answered."
•
The NL batting order ts: Tony .
Prior to last year, ihe most recent - Just what happens at tonight's Gwynn of San Diego In left field, w,
AJ. victory had come In 1971, when 55th All-st.ar Game may depend RyneSandbergofChicagoatserofiO _;,
Frank Robinson, now the manager more on the weather than on the base, Steve Garvey of San Diego at
oftheSanFranciscoGiants, was the players.
first base, Dale Murphy of Atianta In
mo5t valuable player. Then 1! was
"Once the wind starts blowing center field, Cincinnati's Mike .-:_~
back to normalcy for AL with a 4-3 here, weasplayersdon'tdetermtne Schmidt at third base, Darr.YI'' '.
loss lhenextyear.
who wins/' said St. l..ouis' Oz.zle Strawberry of New York In right . ,;:
1be last 'time tbe AL won two Smith, a tleldtng whiz who will start field, Gary Carter of W.ontreitl at :: .
~tralght was In 1957·58, when Its
at shortstop.
catcher, Smith and pitcher Charlie :. •,
lineup featured Ted Williams,
The only time the All-Stars came Lea of Montreal.
AP Sports Writer
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)· - The
Wtndsofchangeareswtrltngaround
Candlestick Park, where tonight the
American League I10pEti to blow
away the recent past and breeze
back lbto an era of All-Star Game
prosperity.
Up until last year, the midsummer nlgilt's dream game for
fans had beromeanlgiltmareforthe
AL - 11 straight losses and an

Lance

!

Anyone for .vice president? ___A_r_tn_uc_hwa_ld

..•

By BENWAI.KER

topher Dodd, D-Conn.; and Patrick
Leahy, 0-Vt. On the eve of the
Fourth of July adjournment, I)One
of their.' could ·find the ttme.
But Fagoth met With other :
senators and·aides. He also briefed
staff members of the Senate
Intelligence committee. His guerrll·
las must make a llvini: for tbelr
command, he said. The CIA gave
them enough arms to fight but
never enough to win. So after 18
months of fighting, they have made
nMeal progress. The most they can
do is to sabotage bridges and haras~
. convoys.
Now that the CIA has cut off
supplies to his forces, Fagoth -was
asked, what ' will they do? "II
doesn't matter, " he said glum)y.
"We will fight anyway."
Of course, it does matter. They
cannot fight - Indeed, they cannot
survive - without :weapor.s. The
Issue Is not whether the CIA should
have armed the MISURA and
promoted an Insurrection In Nicaragua. That decision was made 18
months ago. The Issue b whether
the CIA should now a bandon Its
surrogates to a relentless enemy.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3 •

Ohio

WILLIS BLOWER

t•et!l

36 00

l! OO

4100

"'

. .•.

""'
""'
4100
46 00

••

4!100

""' ..
.'

&amp; BALANCED FRONT

FREE

•

$14so

POMEROY- -·HOME &amp; AUTO
600 EAST MAIN

·,
,.

POMEROY

~'

�10,

1~

1984

Coon~y

promises to
.fight again, despite injuries
NEW YORK (AP) -

Gerry
· Cooney, the O!le:time heaVYWeight
challenger who hasn't fought In
more than two years, p~ he
will return to the rtng In 1984 despite
another In a senes of lnjurtes and
postponements.
Cooney'sscheduledJuly~boutln

.

'

. lEAGUE CHAMPIONS - The Middleport ·
Dusters recentlY.completed a~ seasonlo clinch the
league championship In the Big Bend Pee Wee Girls
SollbaU League. Pictured are, front, ll'om lett, Shen'y
JQ!oion, Tabby i'hlmps, Chrissy Weaver, Pam

~icely

Baggy, Tera Gerlach, Nlkky Meier and Missy
Nelson; second row, ll'om lett, Trlcla Baer, Kim
Hanning, I.Alve Bally, SherTy Pullins and Traooy
Ellis. Back row, from left, Don Poole, Mike Gerlach
and Ed Baer, coaches. Absent was Abby Blake.

enjoys staying on the farm

CINCINNATI• (AP) - · Catcher
Alan KnicelY Is In the unusual
position of enjoying a spectacular
. minor-league season and hoping It
major leagues.
earnhlmapromouontothe
daesn'\
·Knicely hopes he stays )n the
Cincinnati Reds' farm system for
the fUU season, earning him free
agent status SQ he can go to another

said. "With the season I'm having,
I'll catch on with somebody - as a
ca tcher. If they put me on their
roster, Ilosemyfreeagency."

impressive enough to earn a
promotion under usual clrcumstan·
~- His .334 batting average was
leading the American Association,

Class AAA Wichita

home runs ranked him second.

Dallas with Phllllp Brown, one of his
former sparring partners, was .put
off lnc;leflnlte!Y Monday because of
an Injury to the rotator cult area of
his left shoulder.
. Cooney said he suffered the Injury.
In a sparring session last
. Wednesday.
"I went to throw a left hook an&lt;'! the
guy was In a corner," he said. "My
shoulder was not behind it. It was a
wide hook imd I pulled a muse!!;'."
The postponement was announced after an examination by
Dr. Jeffrey Minkoff, who · said
Cooney'sboxlngfuturewouldnotbe
known lintU further tests are taken.
Cooney was to be examined again
today.
"I guess they'D wrtte things about
me, huh?" Cooney said 1n a ·
telephone Interview with The AssQ..
elated Press. "I'm s.u re the stuff
they're goi!Jg to write about wm just
makemegetln theremo~. Without
a doubt I'D ftght In 1~."
Cooneyhasno(bOxedslncehewas
stopped In the 13th round of a title

11JESDAY
HARRlSONviu.E - Harrl·
smvme Chapter 2.'!5, Order ~
...., tile ~ star, wm meet
'l'UeBday at 7: ll p.m. at the

Holmes on June 11, 1982.
months. His reCord Is 2:&gt;-1, with 21 ·
Cooney was supposed to fight knockouts. He wl!l be 28 on Aug. 24. .
Brown on June 18, 1983, but It was · . Cooney said he has been preparcaUed off beCause of a knuckle lng .for . the Brown fight since .
lnjucy on Cooney'~ Mt hand •.which January and has spent $250,&lt;XXJ on
rEQuired surgery. He also missed a training expenses.
match against Earnle Shavers In .---~-=------19111 beea11541 of a ~r Injury and
was unable to ftght all exhibition
against Joe Bugner In January 1!*12
beCause of a bilck pr\iblem. .
Beginning with a foUr-round win
over JimmY Young 011 May 25, 198l,
and lncludlng 'one-roUnd kn&lt;x;kouts
of Ron I;yle and Ken !'lorton as weD
as the Holmes fight, Cooney has
fought less than 19 fUU rounds In 49~

.Scioto Downs
COLUMBUS, Ohio (APi - The
Star Pointer Pacing Series honors
the first horse to pace a two-minute
mUe, and the first leg of the
month-long series did Its namesake
justice as aU three divisions were.
racedlnsomeofthefastesttlmesof
the year Monday n lght at Scioto

Mltsonlc 'l'empll!.

__,...._
RACINE - RaCine J.odae 461,
F. and A.M., will meet at 7:ll

-

•thletes

When ~ need us, ..... be
there . .. wl1h prompt, concerned Insurance service. We ·
alwayS tly ID be friends )'1111

can depend on. Cal us blay.

. 214 lAST MAIN
POMROY

Downs.
Driver Gerald Bookmyer was ·on
the winning end of the two fastest
clocklngs. Bookmyer steered Phan·
tom Falcon to victory In the sixth
race and

992-6617

heavyweight

champion

tarry

Plghth race, both In tlmes

57 4-5.

Happenings

Alexander defeats
Eastern in recent

POMEROY - Revival servl·
ces will be lield at the Carleton
Chureh, Klnpbury Road, July
16-21, with services to begin at
7:30p.m.
'1lie Rev. John JeffreyWm be
the speaker and . there wm be
sPecial singing each night. The
~bUc Is Invited to attend.

Pony League acti•&gt;nl

Drama team

organization.
"If they don't (caD him up),l'Ube
a free agent after this season and I
can sign with anybody," Knicely

ALBANY - Alexander dis·
played a strong hitting attack and
received a pitching effort from
Mark Chapman to defeat Eastern
17·5 In area Pony League action.
Chapman pitched a complete
game to pick up the win, Issuing
seven strikeouts, five walks and two
hits . ...
Bryan Durst was the starting
pitcher for Eastern and was
charged with the loss before
departing due to an .lnjury.
Durst gave up nine hits with three
strikeouts and two walks In just two
Innings of work . Jeff Caldell
rellevt\d Durst and gave up four
hlts, three strikeouts and five walks
In two and two-thirds Innings of
work.
Kyle Davis pitched the final one
and a third Innings, giVIng up one
hit, two strikeouts and three walks.
: Leading, Alexander In hitting
were Mark Chapman wtth a home
run and two singles, Allman two
triples and a single, Powell two
singles. Mike Chapman two singles,
Daniel two singles, and Martin and
Kelter a single each. '
Jeff Caldwell and Bryan Durst
had the lone Eastern hits. Cald·
well's blast was a· long double.

'rourney slated
; Brian's Service Center wUI con·
duct an ASA-sanctloned class D
· softball tournament JulY 14·15.
~-Entry fee Is $ffi and two balls. For
·more Information, call John Jewell
:at 675-SW9.

.

USE YOUR

uses.

Over a 10-month period, fnirn
June of 1$3 to April ol.1984, Palmer
~rformed the Incredible feat o1.
shooting 23 holes-In-one and has
affidavits fron'l 65 dlrterent wit. l)eS5es to prove it. It broke the old
one-year record of 11 aces with
· something to spare~
. For a little ICing on the cake, ·
.Palmer repom.&gt;d that. he used the
::same ball tor 17 ot his holes-In-one.

I

'IW &amp;pedal 0.

;.

•.

IIJD'

-T.~

'&amp;·Do you realize hOw maay different people
j there an' In thls placo!

'. It's 10 ~ tbe~youenrountff. you
• wonder It It's-sate.
'
f You can torm your own c.,trdons when )IOU're
• dono.

Record off·the-air or use the buik-in&gt;mikes to make "live" tapes. Variable monitor
!ets you listen as you record. cassette features aut&lt;Hevel record ; auto-stop at
end of tape and 3-digit counter. 12-step LED meter lor power, battery and VU
Joud!1esS switch and FM s1e1eo indicator. 114-780 ......
·

1 Butwllocanjudlleagoodmelromabod&lt;n!?
: It makes you reoect how indMdual you reallY

.""'·

"You Are What You Eat" was the
topic presented by Mrs. Robert
Bailey at the rei:ent meeting of the
Fernwood Garden Club at the home
oi.Mis. Ted Warne!'. .
Mrs. Bailey stressed the lmpor·
tance of calcium and advised no
person aware of the rewards of
adequate calcium would allow
himself to be even sllghtly deficient
lnthenutrlent.Shesaldthatcalclum
can be as soothing as a mother, as
relaxing as a sedative, and as
Ufe.savlng as an axygm tent.
Mrs. Bailey noted that 99 n&lt;pe.,...,eel-It
of calcium In the IXxly Is In the bones
and teeth, and that It aids In
transportation of nerve ,Impulses.
She said that when the body Is
undersupplled with calcium, the
nerVes become tense, resulting In
lrrltablllty, restlessness and an
.~blllty to relax Inducing fatigue.
Calctwn dellclency often shows
Itself In lnsannla, Mrs. BaUey said,
and SIIQCsted taking a calcium
tablet or twu \vlth mUk just before
bedtime. She also conunented on
aitrlbutes ot calcium when It canes
to teenage growth, as ~ as
problems during menstnJatton and
~use. and the Improved

~, long

AM/FM Stereo Phono With Cassette

Be:st Cordless Ph9ne-44% Off

1 You

Save
/

sao

· 1~:\s

·9995

500-Foot Rangel
Make or take1calls anywhilre, even
OUidoors. Programmable security
code. 2·number memory and onetouch last·numbi!r redial. 1143-267

..

·

Myers, Long Bottmn.

: Just ......,. give up and lla'P tile le8I'CII on the

Other OO!tessess were Kay Bal·
derson, Cindy Pltlier, Grace Weber,
M'axine Whitehead, Ruth Anne
Balderson, Delores Frank, and Ella

.

I (JIJ,

.

You may ent'OUntft' 1 frlfnd « a toe.
i '!ben&gt; II a perfec1 - 111'1 waiHII!l to be
~ louad.
.
• So,.,.. .... - and _,b thoentlroRfOUnd.
1 Always romembor there II a opedal!0011100n&lt;&gt;
t

182899.9595

- . .... . .
J.-1,.1 I I

I ~

··-

', Lot '"'"" 110 ~ In tho Itt and 101 It be

.

~

i I

.

, You haW' band your tpHMJ oneo all your own.

il

:

"'--

.

a,.DI
T• ..,_
-you.,
muclt that I hMI towr1tolt cbwn.
• To put It In pint to Rivett ,_and dlll.....,t

,i

USE YOUR

The gift tablewasdecorat.edlnthe
bride's color scheme of suede rose
and frost rose. Refreshments con·
slstBl ot petit fours, sherbet, and
punch.
Garnes were played with prizes
going to Marilyn Hannum, Debbie
Spencer, and Diane Rice, Margaret
Brown. Janel Spencer won the door

' run.

ee e

34% off! Features "big' stereo" sound in a space-saving
"tower" design. Record ca'ssetles from radio or 2·speed
changer. Matching 15"·high speakers, 10.LED level meter.
Aut~ic"' FM tuning, aux input. 113-1213

1

RecopJtlon of Judy Holter, who
reached her goal wtth a loss of 100
jJOUIIds, hlghl1ght.ed the recent
meeting ot TOPS OH 5'lO beld lilst
Wl!Ek at the American Legion haD In

' my-..

• So I!Wayii'&lt;IJ&lt;OnoiO&lt;JmiJIIiaJOr t11ot my-~~ true.
: And I ~you lowo ~ a much u I ell you.

~cAter

; 22 named to
'

49::5\ac;h

2995
Each
'

Big savi11QS on one of our most popular
speakers! Only 7" high, yet delivers
amazing sound. Petfeet lor home, car..:.

eny\Yhere. Long-excursion 4" woofer and

: • Twenty·two M1!fes area students
Precec1111J the meeting Betty Jo
:~named tothedean'sllsttorthe Hunt led In exercllles. It was noted
: spring quarter at Ohio University, · thCJaewbowerewelghedlnlastwl!Ek
::Athens.
and loltwelghtat thenextwefah·ln,
""'ft
wUlrecelveaquartertlreachpound
' ' Maldnl at least a 33
· grade .,_.t lost Mrs. Holter read "Ten Cmt·
were Matt Ettc Amold, rnandments for the Battle ~ the
:Richard Kettb Rider, Otad William
. RldW'dl. Alina Marte Takadl, an
;ill Rt. t. .Coolville: 01o11 Blake

1" soft-dome ~er. Handles up to 40
watts. With wall hanger slots and spri~
dip terminals. Black, 140-2030: Silver,.

140-2034

26o/o

:aVI!fllie

11.~

81!

was presented a

=~~~ her-mg~tt

; OU dean's list

·cut

Slindere11a
class gathers.

:weever,Rt2.CooMUe:DavldPau1

: HolfrriiD. Sheila Edna Horky.
•~ Jeall Houchlnt, MldcDe:,' port; Jtunle L)lllll Sluon. Rl 1.

Mary Lou Hawkins was the top
1oaer and CathY Workman, till!
IWIIII!I'-IJP, at Mllllday's lheetlng d

Mlddkport.

for=true-to-llle

' . Flilllllcll J. BllettDar, Delra
: l&lt;eebauah Buell, Ronlld Clair
; t:owt, IJD(Ia Rae FeDI, Jayne
•tee Ht,..tl t.ynne Dee o~.
: DryaD Kettb 9lnD. aD. PanaO)\
Katllryft ~ Bala!r, Nick
~ Lee &amp;*liCk, Mr'hil Jolll Sal·
• 11111111, R8dDe; ICeYID 1M Glbtll,
!iDavld Wa,y~~e Wliiii!S, both d
:W
IIIII Camille &amp;1set1e SwJn.

Our excl~. premium formulllion
colons anc1 superior
picture definition, even after mulllple
andJ:~ks. So take advantage or this sale price and stock up today! HS,
. Beta, 144-475

:area:

.

•

'dell, Sl!alle.

•

I•

prize.
Others atteitdlng were Barbara
Hannum, Karen Ptobelt, Laurie
BoyleS, Diana Moore, Paula Dillon,
CathY Spencer, Margaret Gross·
nlckle, Vlvtan Humphrey, Pat
Witmer, Sharon Charll!s, Marie
Probert, Kbnber!Y KeDar, Julie
Curkendall. JudyCurkendall,Linda
KeDar. Edna McCray, Opal Harris,
Lillian Pickens, Jull Hensch, Kim
Reed.
.
Sending gifts were Lavina Bran·
oon, Mildred Stukey, Edna Wood,
Lori and Teddy Mundry, DeWe
Pickens, Marlene Putman, Phyllis
Reed, Debbie Weber, Maiy Allee
Blse, and Gladys WDllams.

TOPS member reaches goal

: I lcarJw h'l 1ft f*' and delr-llflrue,
, lt's-.,mii&lt;IIMdiiiiii!WIY.daY.
• But you ""' _,yl and I bid to tel you 1tnoW.
• 1bat I -you ......, &lt;,.. you moy IP·
: lalwop-dycuwli&lt;l&gt;lpt-.,,
, 111&lt; ,_. tll:&gt;ulbt ol you tnotontly takal away

Super Videotape Sale-Stock Up Now
and Save!
suPERTAPE"' by Radio shack ·

. was aruninced for July 17 at the
homeot Mrs.Howard 'I't1(xnas, wtth
Mrs. Warner to have devotions. A
patriotic theme will be carried out
with memberS to have a patr1o11c
. reading or poem, and the program
to be on red, white and blue
arrangements.
As for gardening tips for June,
Mrs. 11onas stressed the need for
watering In dry weather, to watch
for Insect Infestation, to fertOize a
Uttle at a time, to repot foliage
plants, to sow snapdragon seEd for
winter blooliung In the greentOOse.
She also discussed the care of bulb5
and poinsettias for healthY bloom·
log plants.

Osborne.

I In thlll place,
'.
·
• Gtw )'OUIOOII • to ... tllat . . ,
: spedal~.
.
, n·s~ to .......,,hllllollnaUythoOIIt',
, Totmlt IOidlldly and bave a swoet time !UIId

Reg

FCC regtstered. Not for com or party-line use ·
Memory Dackup b41nery e~e1ra

Sensational Die-Cast Speaker Sale
Lowest Price Ever! Minjmus'·7 by Realistic

, l!'s up to you to _.are tile Jol&lt;ers !rom the

• tloWIII.

·

the Five Poln1l claA o( Sllnde!ella.
At the MIB!aynllht Mum clall,
Jalle JMn8on lost the most weight
and 1t11n wu a til! fDr nllllll!l'up ·
betww: Lots AnD Rettmlre and
Ba111era Roouah. Mrs. P. Kml
received .her 3).pnlm wellhllols
rfbiDI and accepted Into the
llllm.and trim Pfiiii'8ID for bavlnf
~ ber aoa1 weight Jo AnD
NNMWIW! lB lecturer fDrSilndereDa.
'

Ground Beef

&amp;lge," and Jean Sexton led In
group singing.
The dieter's prayet"was ~ad. and
Mrs. SextmandPearJKnappsanga
U1bute to the best loser. Delores
Long read the ''Survival Diary." A
new contest to nm tor live weeks
was explained by Glenda Hunt, the
weekb' best loser. Bonnie Johnson

was runner-up.

Bible school
MIDDLEPORT . Bible
school at the Middleport ChurCh
of Christ wiD be held July 21 lo
Aug. 3 from 9: ll a .m . to 110011
each day.
A camlval will be beld on AUg.
4 wtth the closing program on
Aug. 5. 1beme will be "The
Wonder Fair." Bible school Is fol:
ages three tliroogh the 12th
grade. Further Information may
be obtained by c!a1llng 99'J.2914.

Biggs reunion
POMEROY - The Biggs
family l'l!lllllllli wDl be held at the
Jane d Nathan l:l1gp m Ohio
IX. Punauy,
'Illerewlll bealultetdlnoer at

S.m.v. .
.
12:ll pm. and an relatives and

'

LB.

GROUND CHUCK ....LP~. $}.29
GROUND ROUND
...LP•• $}.69
.
PORK NECK BONES ... ~s•. 39¢

Fresh-Lean
Fresh-Lean
Extralean

'

SUPERIOR (STORE SLICED)

LUNCH MEATS • ••••••
LB.

(Pickle; Dutch, All Meat Bologna, Chipped Chopped Ham. Salami)

Superior's
sugar cane

19'

Heiner's

One with each purchase of 2 Packs of
Store lade Frozen Minute Steaks.

~sl 6!L.

Sugar Free Or. Pepper
8Pact ·
16 Oz.

PEPSI, DIET PEPSI
PEPSI FREE

9~.!ll

$}49

u.s.

VALLEY BELL

GRADE "A"

Plus 0111.·&amp; 111

CQttage M
Cheese
ED.
$
EGGS

129

VIETTI

HOT
DOG SAUCE
WITH OR WITHOUT 0111011

39¢

WALDORF

·2% TOILET
MILK TISSUE

DR. PEPPER

$}l9

Bonus Bread FREE

One 16 oz. loaf with each purchase of 2
Packs o~ Kahn's Luncheon Meats.

BROUGHTON'S

·

3 LBS. YELLOW

ONIONS

GREEN BEANS

99¢

~13f· 3/99¢

Bonus Buy Bread ·

3/$}19I60Z.

Thrift King

LOAF

SUGAR FREE

IDA RED, YE
DEL.
&amp; RO.ME BEAUTY

APPLES

Mixed Vegetables
Peas. Peas &amp; Carrots
W.K. Corn

-· JELLO

.¢REG.
SIZE

u:s. 99¢
. o'

$139 ~:~~~

-CATSUP ·

SOFTY HAMBURGER
. &amp; HOT DOG ~

GENERIC

BUNS

DOG FOOD

3

Ptos Dtp. &amp; Tu

89¢

': 32 oz.
JAR

SUN TEA JARS
~$1 29 EACH

R.C. COLA

Plus Dep. &amp; Tax

DOZ.

THRIFT KING
SHORT CUT

lOOZ.

8 Pack
16 Oz.

59¢ ·

240Z.
' CTN.

HEINER'S

49

··t

BEST BOILED HAM .. L~·$1.99
BACO. N............ ;.....
1 Lb. Pk~)....
. La':· ·gg¢
.

~.B.Q. BUNS (8)

ChllllcotheonJune~. Nextmeetlng

Susan Hannum, brfde.elect of
Brad Witmer, was honored recently
Wtth a shower at the horneofPauUne

: mwn..

•100
Off

convention to be held In Dayton .I n
August along with one from Louise
Shaffer provided about the program
' b:Jok Judging.
I twas noted six members and two
guests took the Adena tour at

to meot.

.....,. give up hope. you w&lt;m't giVI' up
~ even 1n defeat.
• God mode one penoa to sllareall tho lows and

Clarinette"·108 by Realistic

ET-330 by Radio Shack

entitled HJ..eam _to Abide/' and
otfloers' l1!pot ts were presented. A
.letter was read regarding the

••

¢

.FRESH-LEAN (5 Lb. or More)

absorption when taken with VI·
tamlnD.
'
For ron can members exchanged
recipes. Mrs. Baney gave devotions

Bridal shower honors Hannum

&lt; KnoWing you~ better In attitude. ...,.11om
,. afar.
: You ke.p kOdng few that very SJXrla_lonpyou

'
•

~-

:==========::!,
· Poet's .Corner

' .
'
• 2-Way Speaker Systems; Each With 5 1 /•" Woofer and
Solid-State Tweeter for Home-Quality Stereo
• Automatic Search Music SyStem Helps Find Selections Fast

.

are

save

:
•·

sao

Ace of aces

CHICOPEE,. Mass. (AP) -The
odds against making a hole-In-one in
.golf
reportedlY 33,616 to one.
, Amateur golfer Scott Palmer of .
San Diego, CaUl., laughS at those
oddS, according to Spalding Co.,
~h manufactures the ball he

i

i

·Portable AM/FM Stereo Cassette
·Recorder Now Cut 44%

Pee Wee tourney
slated July 14-15
A Pee Wee baseball tournament
has scheduled for July 14-15 by the
Wellston Recreation Department.
Entry · fee Is ~ and two balls.
Individual trophies will be aWarded
to the first and second place teams,
with team trophies going to the top
tour teams . .
A drawing tor teams wiD be held
Wednesday at 6 p.m. at Blamer
Field, New York Avenue, WeUstori.
For further detaDs, caD Carroll
Dixon at 384-0065.

;

CHESlER - The New IJfe
Drama Team . !rom Norvel
Hayes Bible School wm be at
The Living Word Chester
Chureh ol. God, Friday, 7 p.m.
The team will do skits,
canedy and witnessing. The
church Is locat.edonell!lleeastof
Chester off Ohio 248 on Reibel
Road.
Jnt)nnat!On on the presentat1on may·be obtained by calling

•

SCR-10 by RealistiC"

second

Calcium benefits topic
of Fernwood meeting

Revival services

BUCKET
STEAKS LB.

Hewaa;'atoot~C::':.years.

-

99

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Lorain tor threli years and then
taught high school mathematics at
Athens u ..... School~

Michael J . Hargraves, a 1968
graduate ot Meigs High School and ·
valedictorian ~ the cla&amp;s, has been
named wlru)er of the 1~ Alton B.
Zerby Award glveil to the nation's
outstanding electrical englileerlng
student.
.
Hargraves Is the son ot Mr. and ·
Mil. George Hargraves, Athens,
former resklentsot~rt. The
elder Hargnives was asupedntend·
ent. ot the Meigs Local School

In August :)962, he joined the U.S.
Air Force and was commissioned as
p.m . 'l'lieticlay at the temple.
a
lieutenant on Nov. 17, 19!12.
He then enrolled at OU 1o oblaln a
bachelor's of ~ degree tn
POMEROY - The Melp
electrical engineering. He has been
Athletk) Boosters will meet at
considered a "clvUlan lnsutution"
1: lJ p.m. Tuesday at Meigs High
student of the Air Force Institute ot
School.
DistriCt from l.98i Ill 1976.
Technology atWrlght-PatteraonAlr
Parents ot au
are
In
addition,
lfl!rgraves
..
was
ForceBase.HewasOhloUnlverslty
urged to attend, esp!CiaUY re- ·
named
outstanding
senior
In
the
•
Air
Force Institute of Technology
!Jue&amp;t.ed are parents of football
school
of
electrical
and
computer
Uason
officer f!lr his first ye~ 1n
players.
engineering, CollegeofEnglneerlni school.
·
and Technology at Ohio University,
Hafgraves Is presently working
. WEDNESDAY
Athens. As lopsenlorln.thetleld, he on his master's degree lneleclrlcal
MIDDLEPORT- The Midwas leooplred at the annual engineering at OU. Upon rompledleportAmateurGardenerswiU
CoijegeofEnglneerlngandTedi!IOI· tion, he wiD take his first active
meetWednesdayevenlngatthe
OilY banquet at OU and ' durtng assfgnmmtasanenglneer.
llorNl of Mrs. David Cumings .
COIIII'IleiiC(\1 exercises on June
Hargraves 1s l1lllrl1ed to the
Mrs. fat Holter wm have a
9.
.
!ormerBeckyStlvers,alsoaformer
workshop 011 ·flower 8iTangtng ·
As Zerby Award winner, Har- POOJeroy reildent. They have three'
and members are to take a
- graves will receive a certificate, a children, Stephanie, U,Amy, lOand
container and flowers. Mrs.
plaque and a cash stlperx! m Alii. 4 . Adam, 4.
Edgar Pratt wiD ·be the coat a banquet In Chicago. The award
Mrs. Hargraves Is a secretalyhostess.
•
Is presented by the Los Angeli!s rea:ptlonlst at the Chrtst the King
Alu{nnl Chapter ~ Eta Kappa Nu, C.tholic Church In Athens. The
the national electrical engineering family resides at 44 Canterbury
• honor society with selection made Drive, Athens.
·
1HURSDAY
fromnomlneeso(thenatlon'sact!ve
Hargraves was ~ldent of his
POMEROY - The Rock
collegechapters.
graduating class at Meigs Hlgb
Springs Grange wm meet at s
Hargraves t!i'st graduated !rom Schoolandwasamemberotthel967
p.m. Thlmlday 111 the haD for the
OU In June 1912, with a bachelor's~ Meigs High School Southeastern
ann~ Inspection. AU members
· scii!!IC" degree In serondary educa- Ohlb League Championship football
are urged to attend.
tion. Jie taught high school physics team.
at Admiral King Hlggh School,

r~Knl~ce~ly~·~ss:ta~tls~ii~·c~swi~th~th~e~R.ed~s~
are· -a~s~w~ere~hls~n~runs~~ba~t~ted~_~in~.HisE:20~m~a~tc~h~by~w:or~ld~ao~x!ng~~c~o~un~c~I)~~Ch~edrokee=:
· ~~:.IJ~be~·~~~o~th:e:wlre~:ln~the~!~~~~~~~~d
ofl~
team

Former local recipient
of engineering·award

Calendar

·.

$ 49 25BAGLB. ·

8 COUNj

59¢

1
I
~·---------------------------------------------VALLEY BELL
1
HEINER'S
1
DR. PEPPER
. CHILLY POP
REG ..OR DIET
BONUS BREAD

'U:fK 99¢ Plu•~•P
. limit I
Coupon Expires 7115/ U

I

I

! ~~A~z·3/89¢ . L

24 PACK

I

·

' timitl

Coupon Expires 7/15/U

ICE CREAM

9
'h GAL $15

• •

Umot 2
Coopon Expires 7/15/84

C.ll. SUPERMARKET

$}29

Lim it4

Coupon Expires 7/15/84

1

1____ _:-~:_U!_E!~~~ -I
SUGAR
I
$1.00 OFF
II . SLB. $ 14 g ...· III ONE CIGARETIESPlus Tar
CATN.
II Coupon
hpiros
I
Coupon Expires
C.K. SUPERMARKET
I
C.K. SUPERMARKET
1

1-·--·-·C-.K-. ~~~~~~- --+-----=·~!.U!_E~~~~:.::__

VALLEY BELL

1··

·.

IN STOCK

111111 I .

limit 5
7/ 15/ 84

7115/U .

·

·

----------~-~----------~----L------~----..
PRIC_!S EFFECTIVE THRU SUNDAY.}/ 8 / 84

~~~~IG" . suPER
• M'ARKET

•

NO
SALES

TO

DEALERS

OPEN DAiLY &amp; SUNDAY~9:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M.
SECOND &amp; MILL ST.
.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
We Reserve ti!• ~jght to Limit Quantities.

.,

·WE ACcEPT

·

FOOD STAMPS &amp; "WIC" COUPONS

NOT RESPONSI--LE FOR TYPOG!iAPHICAL ERRORS .

trlaldtl are Invited to atlelld.

,

'
•

'

.

�... -

...
•

Pomeroy Middleport' Ohio

Tuesday, July 10r 1984
'

July 10r

Business Services

•

Sixth Beaver reunton held
I

Carole GWilan, Canton; Patricia
Smith, Beatrice 'C!Jne."Seva Cline,
Tina Forester and Tony Forester,
C!rekivllle: Michael Sr. and Joyce
Wolfe, Michael Jr. and Paul, C)ark
and Betty Hill, Mattie Hill and Doris .
!@~dolph, Columbus; , Jim and
Margaret C!lneandDarla, Beverly;
Dave and Glor!ne Cline, David,
Kathy, and Donna. Dl!llllen Long, ..
Chance Alan McElanle and Doug
Bailey, Waterford.
CharleS and Helen R. Wolfe,
LlndaBllick, Jim,Jasonandl..arra,
Carroll; Sean and Jerri Poling and
Jenilifer, Ft. Stewart, Ga.; Charles
and Lois C!lne, Steve and Charlie,
Moundsville, W.Va.; Carland Betty
Cline and Tanuny, Mason, W.Va.;
Carl and Connie Hill, Eddie and
Laura, Richardson, Texas.

were

1

Free Weter Anelyilit At Store or Pool Site

•LAND CLEARED-

Wide Range of Chemicals &amp; Su pplies

-sEPTIC .SYSTEMS

AND

APPLIANCE

~RVICE
4U5 Jcout Ctmp

~

Rd.
. hemr, Ohio
Ph . 9811-4289
II No An. .r. Coli JIU312
Wo Benrlco AU
Mok••• Mode!o
Anlontll lnstl!lotion
' Ho~,. Ctll! ond Shop
Sorvico

· Nat' A PRE'ITY SIGJfl' - 'lbe Womoul
tumlshlnp and the antiquated lavatories and toilets
In lbe eoorthouae lowJge Is not a pretty sight. Edna
Knllpp with the bl I ;g of her employer, the

_

1 ·CR•In...u l~lto--•l
l~lto ... _ l

z•--

GaDia·Melgs Colm!unlly Adloa Apncy and the
Meigs Coonty CmuniMiooers, Is headlos up a
retto\oallon projeclt wWt vohmleer support.

... ....

:1-A_,.g..,...,
· · ~'Y

1-L•t.-.4 ,..,.,.

·-·

7 - •...r••~ ~oo-

. ......... ~Mit

'"""'"""

'

r.uAMJ

'

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

1

...... a-.

111-- l l l ftDtl

an embarrassment to the county
and an Inconvenience to the
residents who must use it.
"Wit!t pubiic donations, we can
make the lounge more attractive
andcomtor!able," she commented.
Cash donations may be sent to the
Gaiiia-Melgs CAA Office, Meigs
County Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio

45700. Thosewithturni.shings,palnt,
flooring, Or fixtures to give, or labor
to donate are asked to contact Mrs.
Knopp at 992-59li weekdays, or
949-2Gll, evenings and weekends.

.

tN

Public: Notice

Public Notice

. LEGAL NOllCE
In lho M8IW ol lho lnqWoy
Into lho 1983 R - .nd
1984 Long-T00111 Foo- R•
porta of tho lloocbwe " - ·

at that time. Test1monv may be
ora l or wntte n. sworn or
unsworn. If testtmonv IS unSworn. 1t wtll be made a pan of
the recOrd .of these proceedIngs. but will not be cons1dered
tn the preparation of the
find1ngs of the DOE. If test1 m·
any 1S sworn. 1t will be made
part of the record. IS subject to
cross-examination by any of the
parlies to these proceed1ngs.
and wrll be cons1dered rn the
preparatron of the findin gs of

-

l~i*Gitld

Cue No. BPI-83-E
.,

C.. No. BPI-84-E

.

Buckeye Power. Incorporated !BPI). '" compliance w1t h
Ohto Ae~~t sed f.nQe Sect•on
155 1. 17. has fi led Long-Term
Forecast Reports for the years

I 983

and

1984

w'th

the

DivtS.IOn ·af 1En ergy !DOE) of the
Oh1o Department and Development The reports have been
asstgned Case No. BPI -83 -E

and 8PI-84-E.
These repOrts relate. to the
forecasting of energy demand.
pea~ load. and reserves. and a
general descnpt1on of the
, resource plan to meet demand.
and other m atters as set fo rth tn
Oh1o Rev1sed Code Sect1on

1551 17.

'

'

(AP) -Miss Sweden, a

__ 21·year-old registered nurse who
"never dreamed" It could happen,
wore the jeweled crown of Miss
Universe 1984 today afteroutsh!nlng
Ill other beauty queens from around

Compiete cop1es o1 the two
l ong-Term Foreca st Reports
can be , rev1ewed by any
member of the publtc at the
ofl1ces of DOE. 34th Fl oor.
State Off1ce Tower. 30 E. Broad
Street. Columbus. Ohro. Mon "day through Frrday, 9 a.m. 10 4
p.m. Further. a copy of the
report can be feYiewed by any
member of the pubht at the
followmg county public library:
M etgs local School D1str1Ct
Publ tc l 1brary
200 East Second Street

Pomeroy, Oh'o 45 769
Oh•o Revrsed Code Sect1on

the world.

1551.17(C)(cl mandates that
the DOE shall hold ~ pubhc

"I can't be!leve lh!s, I'm so happy

tllat my parents are with me,"
Y.vonne Rydlng said tearfully
Milolay n.lght after w!nnlng the
pegeant, and the$175,00llncashand
prizes that go with the crown.
Miss Rydlng, who weighs 114
pounds and stands 5-foot-7, was the
runaway leader at all stages of the
ronlest, scoring highest in both the
swimsuit and evening-gown
categories.
She also was the favorite of the
other contestants, who gleefully

COMMUNITY SHOPPING PAYS
:' OFF IN MORE WAYS THAN ONEI
a, lhappl•ln rour home- JOU IIVt on
..., the..., Mel_. on rour aw1ndnald
the llwanll of hi&amp;IIW., II1CI , _ . , ·
lr&amp;¥111 ... It PIJt 10 lhop ..... fOil llvel

Miss Ryd!ng also was to select a

The Daily ·Sentiilel

$:!,lXXI prize wardrobe from an

·. -

Miss Jcydlng said she "never
' dreamed" she would win. She said
that after her year a actiVIties, she
wooldprobablyreturntoherjobasa
reiilstered nurse In Sweden.

' .
'
'!be other semUinal!sts who did
not 'make It to the llnals were Miss
aei-rnany, Brlgllle Berx, 22; Miss
Guatemala, Julleta Urrutia, 21;
MISs Holland, Nancy Need, :aJ; and
Mfls 'lballand, Savlnee Prakara"nang,lll.

3 Announcements

I.

On the lite side-

PEKING (AP) - Interested In a
taSte of mock sweet and sour carp
made of mutlon? How about fried
squid made with tripe?
Therecipesareamong21llmutton
dishes concocted by a distinguished
011nese Moslem chef and published
by China's state-run press in what It
cl;l!ms ts the. deflnlllve Moslem

COOkboOk.
"The Moslem Cookbook" by
Wang Z!zhong "Is the most com- 1
plete In Chlne9e h!Sto!Y," theoMclal
news agency XInhua said Monday.
XInhua said Wang, Gl. who ls~the
Hul minority natlonallty and !lves In .
north-central China's Ningxia autonomous region, began his career as

\

.I

an apprentice In a Moslem reslau·
rant at the age of 16. Later he was ·
chef In the family of a warlord before
the Conununlst takeQver in l.M9.
"Amon&amp; Wang's specialities area
mock sweet and ·sour carp made
entirely of mutton, and tried aquld ·
madefromtrlpe,''XInhuasald. "He
uses spices to ~ the (lUII8IIIIt
muttoa aroma, Instead ot the rice
wine favored by other Moslem

gounnels. ,,

Muttoo Ia the malo meat of
· ChineSe Moslems, who do not eat
pork. An estbnated 13 million of
Ollna's 1 billion people are

Moslems:

PH. 742-2328
·

3-5-tfc

PH. (614) 985-4212

Wt Use Vaa Schr1dtr
Equipment RKoilrnendld
br · lladlna · Cl'l)et lltnufacturers.
·
. 'FREE ESTIMATES'' .
7-9-1 mo.

FREE ESTIMATES

BUS.: 985·3813
RES.: 985-3837 .
'6/18/1 mo. pd

MILLER

BOGGS

ROUSH ·
CONSTRUCTI.ON

JON·ES BAR
West Columbll

New Homn-btt111ivt
Rt1110dt!ina
lnsur111ct Work
Cu~t~ Pole Bld&amp;s.
·

SALES &amp; SERV.ICE ·

liVE BAND EVERY
WI!IKI!ND

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVIL(E, OHIO

-

~voilob!e

&amp; lntt~rect - 1

GAS LINES
WATER LINES
SEWAGE LINES

liiiNIS

,"Muct River Band"
Ftiturinl unny Tennant

·Somethina Special
For T~ Ladies
Every Sunday Ni&amp;ht
9:00 to -1:00 .

6/14/1 mo.

ll •l,tk

_....... '

foll lll.dQ/I II•II•Jlllmu•

1•·-·· ......
1~ v••••wo
J~~&lt;M••.,c~M

J.AIIW , .........., .....,

p ...... ""'...

-.

~.
311--c:........ .

111- MI.......... .

171- , , rtoo_,

-·~
'"-c"'""
lU ~ Pe&lt;!IIM

111- LHn

··-c-•u

.._.........-

'1

2~7 - l«o" '''"

IU-a..... Ditl
l71 - WIIMII

:u:=:~"-'

f'.fr•hlfn1f'l ..

•.......,.cc.....
..... . ,..

, ....'&lt;! ......
J41 - 1Uoi0•"'41
211- G..,•Oitl

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

...

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores: We can
•lso acid boll and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks. .

GlllioCO&lt;J~III

.....

, .. c• ..,.,.~

117 - Caal~i

111- .......loG•u•

..

For Ill your airina
needs; furnaces repair
service an4 installation.
Residential

·Authorized John Pftft,
New Holltnd. B•sh Ho1
finn Equipment
Oultr
Form Equipment

&amp; Commercial

Call 742·3195
Or 992-5875

Parts &amp; Service

. .....Ill . . . .

n .u.r-r.....

•,

I

~

ACCENT

VinvJ

FINa &amp; SUPPLY
220 !. Main, Pomoroy
PH. 992..6931

I

"Free Estimates"

BRAUN &amp;
ASSOCIATES

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
,-DOZE.S

Public: Notice

Qu ate methodology;
(3) The forecasting methods
cons1der the relat1ons h1ps betw ee n P, r~ cc and energy
co n ~u mptton :

466-1805.

THE OHIO DEPARTMENT
OF DEVELOPM ENT.
DIVISION OF ENERGY

N011CE OF APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

On Ju nA 22 . 198 4. 1n th e
Mer(lS Coun ty Prob&lt;1t e Co urt
Ces r1 No . 24452, Rohf!rt P. ·
Bauman , Sr .. 7 19 B eech
Strne t. Ap t 2. M1dt1 lepo r1
Ohro. 45 760 w&lt;1s app01nted
Adm1n, stra1or of thn estat P. o l
Jose ph Wtfl1am Biluman ,1ne r.~n se r1 . IJtf' of Post Off1 ce
Bo x 26 : M rd dleporl. rv, ~t rJS

-BACKHOES ·
-DUMP TRUCKS

LEASE YOUR N,EW
. VEHICLE .
DON'T BUY ·

=rEA~~:

No Down ·Payment
Excellent Rates

-10-BOYS ·
-TIEIICHER

,.

-GAS LINES
-SEPTJG SYSIEIIS

, For Information
Call Collect

LAIIGf or SMALL JOaS
• PH. 992-2478
. 6/20/ 1 mo. pd

Co . O,h,o. 4 5 760
ROBERT E BUCK .
PRO BATE JUDG E
By· Lon ,1 K Nesso lroa d.

1 Card of Then••

SIDING CO ..

(Eitctrici!J.

wmr. _,

Primitive Camplnl Available
Flshlqlncluded with camplna
SWilliNG: Dally ~,rrd Oli dm)
(SIIIIH, . , _ latrils,

&amp; ltiiCl 1111111

QI!AN HSTROQJ.\S &amp; HOT SHOWIRS
BAIT &amp; LP GAS AVAILAIU
· BASKIT~LL COUIT &amp; SWING SITS
For The Bee~ Ia Out..._ Pamllr Reereatlon

ROYAL OAK PARK

614~992·7111 or 614-992·7024

••m

toya. home decor. Noinvnt·

Sovoral Family Yord Solo.
Julf 12 _14. 9 . 1 . 2 mi . north large Yard Sola Wanotday
ol c;own City on Rt . 7. boby July 1 1. C!acko. bododitemo. .clothoo. all olzoo. preodo. oppllenceo, toyo.
cei-emica, nice c'l othel •

ment. Cor • phono noc. Coli _m_l_oc_._it_em_•_
· - : - - - - : - theeto. like now baby ltomo.
f - 1-800-SU-11)77. Aloo 1 T
••
Sheila Horrll. BladbllfY·
ueo .. lt Wod . 8 to .v . v 10 1 ~:.':!~'d, WMPO .. Watch · for
booking·pan.... ·
Clrc" · Ave. ecro11 from 1~
rei,. cenqele. ... . :
Spring Velioy Plaza.
Try lll!lng tho N- Avon 1---~-----~
Way . For Information call Vord Sale Tuood 1 y. Ju!w 10,
-Ill
e14-44e· 21 II.
9·1. 834 First Ave.. Golllpo·
'•"'
l!o . Stroller. chlldran ' o
'\ .•
;~

NOW AVAILABLE/

"SUPER 94"

The most ~•I

lir•·

Serving
Southeaat•rn OhiO

(6) 26.1713. 10 31C

Wo'd liko lo illrHuct you lo
! --A-Cor. lllo JIIO\Iom 111J
to drivo the vehicle of rour

GREENLEAF JERMITE

Public: Notice ·

•'"'"·No 001111 P1Y111tnl .

1 &amp;: PEST C.ONTROL

' NOllCE
PUBUC

Rtciqt.

Budget " heanng for Sale m
Twp. in Me1gs County will be
held July 14. 19B~ at 8 a.m

OH.

'

•.·

.'

neo..-v road grader. Public has the
nght to prov•d e wnnen and o ral
comment or ent1 re budget and
ask quest•ons concernmg rela· ,

BLACKSTON
IIEW ·.CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING

· Cimmercial. Residential
&amp; lnd1stri1l
All IJork GU'a~ntetd

Bol, 326
Pomeror. 0". 45769

For Fntor Sorvico
Call 614,992·6737

"FRIEE ESTIMA1'15"

7/9/1

'

lower Monthly PIYmtnt

' PH. 949·232()

The Townsh•p has proposed to
use Revenue money to pav for

r~~~~~~~=~
,....d
Church.

Sln~tra th-o and o,.,ncl-

Call for free sidin&amp; es·
timates, 949-2101 or
949-2860
No Sundey Cali•
3-ll ·tlc '

'

TOM'S
SHOE REPAIR

mium psoline jll ftt Bil
Bend aru.
·

94 Octane

Ethanpl Enhanced ·

ol-.

Availablio Only AI
RitCHIE'S

ment IMtv aew, lhe MLTA
Mel tho Boord ol Ectucatlon.
the Mei&amp;o ~ 8chocil
Olotrtct Ia pootlng tho fol.

iowlr\t v-nc!ee: Develop•
rMftllllly Handlalppld Clau

st 8 ............; Flnt Gr- at

MASON SERVICE
-CENTER

a.-...,; Y-Idvioo&lt;

11 Meig* High School;
Laeming Ditabllltieo Clan at

High School. Cantect Molgo
locoi lei. of Ed.et 8 . 3rd

mo.

G&amp;W PLASTICS

WHALErs AUTO PARTS
PH. 992-7013

&amp; SUPPLIES

New Cllevy Truck ....
...... .. : .......... '76.95
00015 ............ '149.95
HOODS ...... ...... •174.95
IUMPERS ..... ~ .... •69.95
GRILL ... :.. . ~ ...... '42.50
R. SUI'PORT ....... '84.95
TAll GATE ......... '8~.00

GAS - WATER
SEWAGE PIPE
REULATORS &amp;
FITTINGS
VOLUME DRIPS
\Vawlcw;
• 'd ""'

985-3813
9115-3837

6/ 18/ 1 nio. pd.

ava1lable for public rn spect1on
at the clerk's home.
Salem Townsh1p Trustees
Bonn1e Sc'o tt. Clerk

'

Curb lnfl~tlon
Pay calh
Claulflecl• and

262~9 Leg,on Rd.
Langsv, lle, Oh. 4 57 4 I
(71 10. 1tc

for

-

WE ARE YOUR SALES
ANO SEIYIC£

. HEADQUAITERS FOR
•ZENITH
II'SYlYANIA
•SPEED QUEEN l.AUNDIY
•G!ISOI 1Efi1GEIATOI
We Have A Full Time
Shop Tochnldan
on Duly

RIDENOUR

TV &amp; APPLIANCE

CHESTER-915·3307

Metal li Woad H-cratH.
Pick up at Blitz H,.,.,. 8hop.
Give -ey; IJb to find a
home for II dot 10meone -eel. o,. of
lha - - you'l lind
any-e. Cell 882-10011.

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
·'DOZER - IACKHOE
'RECLAMATlON WORK
'OIL FIELD SERVICES
'OUMP TRIICK SERVICE
'CONC:ftETE WOftK
'CUSl'OM IUILT HOMES
'WAT&amp;R. OAI•
OILUNES

RABIES
CLINIC

NISfNTID IY
llllp Ce. &amp; " - - Socitly
&amp; . . . co. lltlllh .,._
At Rutltnd Civic Center

THURSDAY, JULY 12th

·JIM CLIFFORD

·'

PH. 992·

·'

''l

P!M· ,
Gorogo oole Thura. 9-S. Mt. dty
tent, Wedneoday,
Street. Point110
P!ooMnt.
Zion Rd , acrool from hiah· Air condlticnllr. cor. ooiiCih. '
woy potrol office. on Rt. 36. chair. mloco!la natl~,fl· '
Lawn mowera, roof ventll•~

clothea.

to Mnd money through the
n.1 until you have lnvelti·

lnvenment propeny ~ for
ule, four plell in.goeid ahatpe
• good loCitlon. low do'4Wn
peyment. poaidve c••h flow .

Middlo~

ort, Ohio.

Pooltlono a.MI- n- lor

R . . , _ Nu,... and U- - Practicll NurtM.
e......... lmpla ... benefit
prog1 eiiMI.

Contlct """"".
nol Ofllee (3041171-3230
cr t:aldn Hoopltat.
lain. w.-va. ZIZiiO.

1liied the offering.

!nveotment property 10 yo- Call 1 -304-273-8745. ' I;_;
oro Old. 8 unit opertmont
building. Pon....,lvenlo Avo:, 4 bdrtn. 1YJ ..tory on Lwt:-: l
Wo!!oton. Oh. Roo!dont Rlv. Rd.. !g. roomo, J,l;
m1Mger with conliat waft- boleR!ent, bu~~ ltovo, ....-;
lf,g lltt, 1 yNr IH ..I with all porete 20x40 gerogo, ·In-~ ·
utilitlao P,Jid by ronter, ground pool. Coli 81 4-4·~;
1
•1 .311 per mo . incom'e. 1221 . . '
Price n..011ble poooib!a 2nd
mortgege. Out of town 2 bclr: houu for ·.. to, 1 c .. ,. .
- -· Cell 814-692· 1189 oarege. neor ohopp!ng ce.rl- ::
bllfora SPM. e14-&amp;84-2874 ter. For more information ~ i
aftar&amp;PM.M-F .
cell 448-4762
.
" ;·r·
!
•• ,

-------'---""'";"' .

--.,.---------""'!''

.

S - lullding Deoierohlp.
Bmo!l tc big profit potontio!,
big demand. ourter loado

furni1hed . Some ar•••

FoRD FENDEII .... '69.95

.UMPIII ............ '69.95
AI10Some Car
,, hn4ert Available

"CUT OUT
FOR FU-TURE USE"

KEN'S
APPUANCE
SERVICE

it-.

985-3561

All Makes
•W........ •Di8hwe1hen
•R•neea
•Refrigeratoro

•D.,.,. •Fr...,.

ttore fixturH. training end

1 grey ldttan 304-UII1320.

PARTS and SERVICE
4- ~ltc

RiVerview Personel C1re
Homo.. Betty Men:er - ·

hao viOCIIncy for oldat1y
8 i:o.t end Found
penon . Coli 1-304-7736882.
FOUND Bmoll ~ long.l-:----:-:----:--:-:--:haired dog with white eMit. Room • -rd for ,ldoriy
F• inlormetlon can 114- f11110n•. ol100 rvomo lor
241-8184.
·
wortoing men. Reuonllb!e.
Calll14-992-1022.
Lost: llllold. brown. contained lmpolllnt ,....... •
Opening for an e'lderly
,_ey. lolt In LongBottom women In my home ••
RMCI8ville e,.., ,. . A - Tuppers Plllno. Col 114Brothers Store. If found, 117-1328.
...... alte14-8111-331.3 . '
Bobyoitting in · my home".
Found-In ' a-·1 Run Certified dey C.,. CciurH.
*-L e v.y friendly Dolle&lt;- lim lid. 7 a.m. to li p.m. Call
mon typ41 dog. PMbly a 7 o.m. - 5 p.m. 304-1711huntlng dog. C::oH 814-948-. 2924.
·
3021. .
.
.
--------

Wolfe
.
Investigations,

inc.

Ill DOLEPO~T. OHIO

614-992-7626
PRIVATE

INVESTIGATION
OF ALL TYPES

GA'RAGE .

..

fttCGK££·

Rt. 124,P-OJ Ohio

II. l. "Bud" llcGHEE
Broker-Auction Service

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

. REPA.IR

Cheryl Lemler.
lltill County Associtte
Phone 742·3171

Alao Trariamisaion
PH. 992·56B2
'
pr 992-7121

54 Mile:. Merc:handlte

B

12'116'
UTILITY BUILDINGS

Sins Start ·From

SeVen year.old h.,me, thriiii J
bedrooma , garden 1A.o1." •

HOME LOANS FIXED
RATES Below moricet roteo.
Fi•ed conventional FHA-

VA . Luder Mortgage.
Athens. cOiled 814-5923051 .

23

Profeaaional
Services
NG Lower
tuning•·
Cltizena..Ward'a

WfH pl..., tobacco' . Call 'trademark. Lane Daniela•
614-2611-11128 .
114-74~- 2961 .
Public .S ele
8r. Auction

16 HP Twin Allis Chalmers ..... '2~5

42" Mower.

12------,15.·
...- -----

10 HP Wheel Horse .............. 117o49

8 Speed, 36"

___

mower.

8 HP Massey
36" Mower.

'

42" mower,

blade.
Ferauson ............1595

'

33. __ _ __

14.....- - - - -

10 HP Ford ...... -.............. ~ ......1995
Automatic, hyd11ulic lift,

··----34.-----

13. _ _ _ __

snow

•

.......,.••.

Mall 11111 c...,....- ...manc:e
Tile DeilY II till II
mc.tlt.

1

~

35. __ _ _ __

__;_

BAUM LUMBER915·3301
CNESTEI

'

.

I'

I

.. .
.
.
.
.,New liatmg. ·movtng need to ..
~

oell , 3 bedroom. 2full.,.tho,
Meadowbrook ·Addn. ' In!!"

per cent a11omable loeo1~11
Lota of exfrea. priced t\O•tJ.304-87~-8426 .

---------;:--,--~

Owner

trantferred.

n\Uitt

..u, exc. COfld. 181,000.QP_..;',.
$11.000.00 down. A104-l'
8~ pet. loan . 304 -l'?a- r-r
~ 6 29.
·· )~·~·-~
HOuae fOr aale, 81ft 111urpj~.:

ble loon. $3,000.00down .

bedrooms, 1 Y:t ba1h1, ,_,.

-

~;

lot . Cell 304·671i -684B .be.-,,'tore 5 :30, .676 -4358 •tt*eret
5 :30.
. .. r"!P

to 24'136'
lnsulatad DC!(_Houses

. . &gt;'t'

~~~~-7~--~~"J·'

32 Mobile Homes -""-: , . .

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

for Sela

,heine, Olt.
Ph. 614-143-5191

.

;

..

' •• :..J •
~

Rt•o~l

Wanted To Buy

wa poy caoh tor lito model
Jim Mlnl Chllv.-Oido Inc.
••o-Johnoon
44e-3172

CARPENTER

-_R--·
-,.,..,..,.--·SERVICE

R_,..,..
Point Plo-nt aroa.
~~~-. · olio

-

!arm

in

- Conorelewoe\

I F- Ettlmotnl

''V. c: YOUNG Ill

tsLtll'

7274 ,

31

HouH for oalo 3 bdr . 1'1•
both. large roomo, 'fireplace,
wood floora, new carpet,
Utnced In yard. in town,

- - moving. $39,900.
Call 44e-790S.

1------,.-...--In Mlddieport.

81 4louoin-. l;~l~f~~=~:=h~lg~h~e~at

992-6215 .. 992·7314

Pomerey,Ohle

,,

I

)II

Homes for Sale

For Ren1 In town with option
to buy. 3 8R. fencod yord.
Col 114-441·2081 nighto.

flll'ill/,11

."fit

NEW AND USED MOBI~'IJ,:;
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAl.'- ·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES;t•'
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPO~IS.~ ;
·RT 35. PHONE 614·4411- •

W!H mow yord, Goi!lpolio
ond Point Pl.... nt orao.

W-ed fo lluy uMCI li
h• ..,.. lwaln Furnl111,., 441-1151. 3rtl. li -:2:-:1--:::B:-u-si:-n.-. .
- . -- 0.. IL, Geltlpolio. Oh.
Opportunity
luylng dally iold. oliver
oo111e. ri~~~~Llew•• w. 11eftlns
- · old ooiiiL Iorge cur- Ei.clllent Op""unlty for
Nney. Top . . -, Ed. lur· manegoment O!'lentod perbit ....., 8hop, 2nd. Aw.
Mld,.apart. Oh. e14-882- 10ft
Full teorttert
port- ntime. Coli
3471.
e14-24S·IH8.

- Acttlonltllllll NMOIIIMnt

•

•

5 rooms and beth, be1e-' '
ment , carpet , fuel oil fut.

304-458-1843.

cleen uMd cert.

,31:
_
_
30. -_
- -_
-: _- -

28011 -Uncoln Ave. B'h po;JI• '
uoumab!e loon . 304-e?tl6047.
. •. &gt;•

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

:If_ _ _ _ _ __

,¥·-----

·

.

nace, garage, city water en,ct ~
1
ciatern, 4 plua acres, P8v.9 it'J-"1.
road. cloae to tchool. Leon ~ ·

. Sizes frotn 6'16' Up

111
10. _ _ _ __

rtlcil[..,

22 Money to Loan

10-6-llt

USED TRACTORS

mob&amp;le home eltting on

lot. reedy to movo hiP&gt;,; •2211.00-n tZZS.OO-"'
month. 304-1'71-271
1. , ,. ), ;
'

0887. Skill and lnt..r!ty our

ALL STEEL&amp; ·
POLE BUILDINGS

'

much more. Mr, Toio 704·
753-4738.

P11no Tuning end Ripelr.
Brunicardi Music Co., 44&amp;-

ReeU:ttete General

-'-----::-:--r:---::":'--:--"

-

I:;;::::;;;::::;;::===

304-876·3824.

Roger Hysell

Low modern houu 'to 'r!!,
moved oil lot 30xlfl. Cell ,.
448-9777 or 446-3112. ' ~

taken.· CaM to -lily. 303- 8 yro. oldi 3 bedrm. 2 tia~'
f•mily rQQm with w ·
.
Bebyoltt.r nocichd for two 769-3200 ext. 2401 .
chi- day ohift - mttura - - - . , . - - - - - - - l~u·•!'•• · Single cor gertgl&gt; n •
Wllrted: goad homo lor I Mvlt. R. . . . D81 ,....._._ Own your own Jean· 8 flat •ern With atbcked' ,
304-l'l'll·7878- li p.m. Sporuwur. ladiM ApptNI. pond. City woter In Rocine.'"
outaide
·Combination, Acceooorloo, Call 814-949 -21141 .
mOUHrS, k!Ueno.
UHd to
amen
•·
chi-. 3 biaclt. 2 yellow li Bolo Gu Station. n - tak- large Bile stOre. Nstlono!
brondo; Jorcllche, Chic. LN. Owner trenaferred-muat Htf
-'icatk&gt;n
lor
1
pooitio_
n
1 calico. Coli 814-892· Ing
full time .........., _
_ P1cit Levi. Vanderbilt. lzod. Eo- hGme. flmlly room hllo 20 tt7873.
up -.z;'icttione •t etat6on. plrit. Brittlnio. Colvin Klein. of window• for pe.torl 1;
Sergio Valente. Evan Pi- .v -, llni•hod doub!o garTo good home in country. POint PI-nt.
cone, CIIHbome, ,.,embers age. fireplace, large porch.
1-year-old. port Border Col40 lt. deck. woodo: privacy.
lady to cara tor invalid. w~! Only, Orphie~~lly Grown,
lie.
-304-171-1321.
-........ hed
ohots.
hire • in lor li dayo .. 2 Haalthtex. · 70o othero. near Royal Oak · P~rtt .
t7.900 tc 124.800. lnvan· •83;900. Cell 814·91:b!_
~ for opllt - - 304- tory.
1irf1re. training. fix· 1420.
171-1a38"' 871-3183.
3 klnlinL 304-675: 2714.
. .• :·· ·
tures, g,.n'd opening, ect.
-"
lArge dot houM 104-17&amp;· Full lime baby oltt• - d . Con open in 11 dlyo. Call Remodeled 2 bedrodri1\.
. , - .,., 30 yr. ol age. Mr. Laroon It 612-888- hou.. with clrrpetlng '-~'
44t8.
woodburner. Large cov-.«,:, 1
Must .,_ willing to como to 8666.
deck . Mid 20'• · Col! 8l 4~'~
Ylrd S .... ' 3202 Howord our h - In Flatrock "'"·
Own yol,fr oWn . Jean ~
992-67631or eppo!ntmeijl. • .
Ava. ~Wee
Wed 8;00 Call 304-886-~76.
·~
SPOrU-r, lad!eo Apporel,
till .jt:OO.
or Chilctren'o Store. 300 FOR RENT WITH OPTIOil•
brand namH. 114,900 in· 1:0 BUY!!! 14 ft. wide thr~ ~
Ht.....,. and Baby Homo- 12
Situetions
cludee initial inventory, bedroom, both end h'lllt, ,.
taro. 304-17&amp;-3734. ·
Wented · .
3gnoyli3--.Coll
114-992-7108.

171 10. 1tc

· 3 Announcements

Thut'lcley 12th, 493. Ook
. D. V' · ~
•
DI
C! hi
f
..
ICin • ..., .,
've. twin
ot· bad.
pg complo1e
or •••- ..........................
'
' · .,..,' •
ryono.
voccuum eleanor. Colll14•·
388-91156 or 448-7287. · Yord Sele. Moncley. Tuiil-

glt·wall cardl, ond colo I Gon.,.l dentist, now hiring tort, clothao. hemper. curhove received. May God enthu.stlc, i:erwr orlontad talno. baby ohoeo, jeen1, Yard Sole. 1422 Ohio llil.
1
b!eoo each end ..,.,., one. dentol alllotant. No pro- clothoo. mioc.
Wed and Thuro .
Oliva W -.
vlouo trelnlng II neceoury. 1,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;+;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;~;;,
Pll- ' compl«e ... r
oume along with ,.....anco
w P.O. llooc 728-D, l'onot·, l ~;-c---;:;-c--:-c----3 Announcements
roy. Oh. 41719.
21 · Bu1iness
31
M - femalo werlteci to
Opportunity
--------•
SWEEPER ond -lng N· babyolt 2 _..,.,ol.,.ln my - - - - - -- - ahiiM! ....... ,...... ioncl homo during the tehaol
Nice. remodeled 2 bdr -~
oupplieo.
,Picit up ioncl veer. Call 114-848-21611.
I NOTICE I
acreo . . 1267 lb. toboci o
delivery, Dov!o Vacuum
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB- bllu. ' SR· '&amp;54 belw
c~ee-.
one . . Ao per erticle 8, tronol.,. • LISHING CO. racommando Bidwell-Rio ~rende . Cell
0 - Cr... Rd. Coli _......._Section A post- thlt you do buain•• with 814-2411-5298 .
' 114-441-0284.
Ing of the nototleted ..... r-ple you kn01N. ond NOT
KARATE
Tho llaot In llelf-delenM.
Prlvou~Mmni. Piton• 28113074.
OhiO.

t•onsh•p of Aevenuii! Shanng to
the rest of I he budget. A copy oi
the enure bUdget w 1ll be

Or. C.ol Otborne
RABIES 13.00
Otlllf 1-111110111 Avli!Uio
Poa lliuat bt llllllld. Cats
1n Clrrltrs.

ng or .dollverlng, no
hwMtment. , _ 1300 kit.
In 0111111 Co, D·ebbl"• call

ool

ation for the preyen. 11111ny

UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

CAMPING: Dally, Wttkly, lonthlf, Seasonal

Rt. 326 at Bridge In V!ntop. whMI tro!!et. motoro. to&lt;!lo;
diahea , reloeder, mhpc. •

go 1 mite. Rain .poet pon.. .

":t~~~O!'Giondlnel1.t:

Mason,

Now

Cl e rk

64 Mise:. Merchandise

~'*M

forme, t0\'1, book1, aurglcel behind s kating rink ntlr
beck eupport. m!oc. Turn on Chester. g to e. Clothing 2

H.elp Wented

Hornomokero
x-tro In·
come. We liNd ..,.,.(
rapra..ntat!vao In thlt oreal
Porty plan axp. • p!uo. G!lto.

Aw ..

By: James L.Kenn ed-v.
A(1m1n1strator
Office of Forecast1ng
and .Rev1eW
DIVISion of Energy
Ohro Department
of Development

~· -

11

:1

BISSELL

.

00

r•-.... • - . , . • - lino)

Public: Notice

SIDING

"Beautiful, Cuetom
Built G1rega1"

Installation Available

I'

A11 ' l lllllll.t~ 1111~ Ill''

It Aluminum

1 -1l·tfc

..,w..... ... ......
.• u oo
,.._...,..,_tl
u,,.,, ...... __ ,,,....,"'-"" - ....... noo
~oooo

2oeitl;;.~...

Middleport, Olllo ·

1----~----------1
Utt•n --. ... o...
u, .. , ..... ...

Complete Outt• Wlllk
Complete Remodelil!t
Aooftng of, oH Typae
'· Worked in homo area,

11192-2198

III - lo! ""
lll - 1111!0"'

711 - 11111 .....

Vinyf &amp; Al_uminum

PATjHILL FORD

,,._,.._._

111- Nt'"H"'""

, . ... lloe iM

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

RAOIATOR
SERVIa

Clnui{iPfl llfrl(fl~ l't:ll'l' r 1li to

. ROYAL OAK PARK CAMPGROUNDS
St. Rt. 7-Pomwoyr Ohio
123 CAMPIITIS

ELECTRIC
SERVICE '

.,

chttto. baokou. diohu. fr~zlen Bottom F't el ------·-·-·-· · ·· ·- ··- ~- --- · :-·
stone' Jara. antiquao. ,gOld Mtrkot. Every wukand .
,.... Julf 1 2. 13, • . 4.
•nd oliver . Writo•M. D. U.S. 36 Frozloro Bottom, Pot!o
Flrot
houoo pool Met~od1ot
MIHor. Rt.2, Porne&lt;oY. Ohio WVa. 28082'. Oealero Wol·
Church
In Chooter. llulo,
41718 "' call 814·182· come . Don Fretler··
neo.
- .. Operator. 304·7111-2779. tlreo. badopreodo. p!!f..W•.
School clothes. email IP•. dl1hH, end table,
Goroga &amp;alo July 9 thr~ 13. pliancef!
miac. ·
~
Ono mile out Rt. -21 Bell Rt.
7. Small k!do and inot•nlty Porch oe!e: clothing._houH
dothn. fen1, booka, c:ur· ~~·~~~.~·~t~c .. 3VJ mllea Wilt
l11111i' Vllll'll!
taln1, mite .
·~
off New Lima A.d .
; l!' f \/ II I: "
3.
.
july 12·13. 9-&amp; . Adu!to.l-- - + - - - - - - -!c:baby clothao. wh!to unl· July 1 1' • 12. olghth houH

~.r= :.:"':~~~·~ ~~~~~....,~·~-_:-:-:--~ -----·-p·fPiiiiiailnf:~-

Ito-·~· .,._
-..llloto
4511!

3 P:M.·6 P.M.

Cartagena.

head.

energy requ1reme nts for each
year o f the period:
(b) The estimated Inst alled
capacity and suppltes to meet
the pra·,ec t ed load
requirements."

SHOP LOCALLY

secom

am

(aJ The proteCted loads and

-no=

First runner-up was Miss 'South
Africa, Tlsha Snyman, 20, of
Dllrban;
rwmer-up Wllll
Miss Venezuela, Carmen Maria
Montiel, 19, of Maracaibo; third
runner-up was Miss Phlllpplnes,
Dess Verdadero, 21, of Manlla; and
fourth runner-up was Miss Colombia; Susana Caldas, 20, · of

,,...

7:J.1....U ... .....

· (4] The report 1dentif1es an d
proJects re ducti Ons tn energy
demands due to energy conservation mea su res rn the mdustna l. commercia l, ,residenttal.
tra n stJortauon ~ and energy p rodu ctiOn sectors 1n the serv1ce
area:
(5) Ut1l1ty company forecasts
the DOE
The pres1d1n g hearing off1 cer of loads and resources are
IS empowered to e~Cclude repet•- reasonable m relation 10 poputlve. 1rrelevant. or 1mmatenal lation grovvth est1mates made
by state and federa l agenc1es.
tes t1mony.
B Evldonllafy H~:
. transportatiOn, .and econo mic
Thts heaong w111 begin· M an· developmen t Plans and loreday. August 6 . .1984. at 9:00 · casts. and ·make recommer)daa.m. 1n the DM s1on of Energy's tt ons where poss1ble for necesHearing Room. 65 East Stat"J sary a n d reasonab l e
Street. ~ H v.a tt Capttol South, al1ernilt1Ves to meet forecasted
electric power demand:
Columbus. Oh 10
.
(6) The report constders
Wh1le the publ tc rs lrnvtted to
an end th1s hearing. particlpa· plan s for expansiOn of the
t1 on tS. ltmJted to the parttes of re~1 ona l power gr1 d and the
record . At present these part1es planned fac1l1 ties of other utili ·
are OVE. DOE. and Ohio Power ties 1n the state :
17) All assumpll on s made 1n
s,ung Board (OPSBJ .
The pres1d1ng hearrng offtcer the forecast are reasonable and
may grant a motton to inteNene adequately documented ."
whtc h was not fil ed 1n a t1mely • Further 1nformauc;&gt;n may be
fash1on upon a shOWing of obta1ned by con tacting James
lehr K~nned:y . AdmtmstratO!'.
good ca use
Oh1 0 Rev~sed Code Sectron Forecasting and Aev1ew. Otvision of Energy at 30 East Broad
155 1.1 7(Dif21 prov,des that
Street. 34th F.loor. Columbus.
"the hearing shall tncl ude. but
Oh'o 432 1 5 or by calhng (61 4)
not be limited to. a review- of:

hearr ng relattve to BPI's longTerm Forec ast Repo rt. A conOh,o Rev,sed Code Section
solidated heanng on both the . 155 1. t7fEI prov1de s th at .
re1" sed 1983 and 1984 BPI "based upon the report furl ong-Term Fpre-cast Reports
ntshed pur suan t to divis1on (8)
has geen ordered [BPI-83-E - of thts sectton and the hear ing
50).
•
record. the divtston ofen ergy
DOE has scheduled the shall. W1th1n · n1nety days 'from
heanng in two parts:
the close of the record 1n the
fAJ PuiJic
heanng. determme rf :
Th1s heanng shalt beg1n on
( 1) Alltnformat10n relattng to
Wednesday, August I. 1984. at currenl act iVItieS. faC 1Iit1eS.
7'00 p.m on the Large Lobby agreements. and published
Heanng Room. State Off1ce energy poliCieS of the state has
Tc::rwer. 30 E. Broad Street
been completely and accu·
Colum bus, Ohto.
rately represented;
Members of the public w1sh(2J The load reQui remen ts are
1ng to prese nt test1 mony relattve based on Substantially acc urate
to these proceedrngs may do so htstoncal 1 nform at1 0 n ~a n d ade-

surroundediiE!ratterthecoronallon,
saying "I toidyou;i to)d you."

exclusive shOp in Bai Harbour,
north of Miami Beach, before
leaving Miami on Wednesday for
appearances In New York.
Her Utle became official Monday
night when host Bob Barker
proromced~ Rydlngthew!nner
the 1983 Miss Universe, T..ori'al,ne Downes of New ZA!alanci,
jUced the jeweled crown 011 her

......... . ¥ ..........

11-w ........ ,IPf
11-u..t. . .
111-tt..,.IO.Mo

II· ....,_'NaCI~

11·11

She described the lounge with its
wiimout turnlstitngs and fixtures as

-Sweden -outshines
t:ontestants;
.
takes Miss Uriiverse crown

11·"-·-·... .
............. ..............""
~~-··-w.-

;u.,......_,... _
:.._
u.,_,.,....,
, ........ ....._

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

11·- -

"

Monday two volunteers, Tanya
and Carrie Young, were busy
scraping off the flaking wall paint in
preparation for the "new look."
Donations to the project have
already been made by Elberfelds,
Rutland Furniture, Star Supply and
Bill Young.
- Labor, furn!sh!ngsandmoneyare
still needed, according to Edna
Knopp of the Community Acllon
Agency, who is heading up the
renovation project.

_._
••
,...191' ..
17-Mioolc.. . . _ _ ,
1:1-. . . . . .

., ........... 11-

11-1--

,. -

fum!sh!ngs, aswellaslnsta!lingnew
flooring.and painting the walls.

u.,......_...., ....

12-1::•. ~ ..._ ''""-'

-_ 47·-__····..._ -........
..·--··•wo;
, ......
,.........,........

Handy help gives 'new look'
t.o courthouse lounge project
··ByCIIARLENEHOEFUCH
•
Sei&amp;llnel News staff
,Long overdue improvements to
the street-Jevellounge of the Meigs
CQ{nty Courthouse are underway,
~t the .extent of the work may well
depend on publlc support.
: With no county funds ava!labiefor
the renovation, Meigs County Outreach of theGaJUa-Melgs Community Action Agency with otf!ces
located In the courthouse, Is heading
up a program to upgrade the lounge.
Plai1S call for replacement of all
~fixtures lnclud!iigtheant!quated
lavatories and toilets, draperies and

.....1

:u ......_~.."
u.--,
.. l_

BOI1ct.d

Roofin1 wa,_
Alu'!linum I Vinrl Sidi11s
1 5 Y tara Experience
QREG ROUSH
PH . 992C71183
or 992 -2282

"Service that Towers Above
The Rest"

IIICoontll..

___ _
.......
__
..................

eGRAVEL HAULED

498 Gen. ilartincer Pkwy.
. Middleport', OH. ·
PH. 992-2549 or i73-5

35115 Oak Hill l01d
lona Bott011, OH. 457U

PHONE 992-2156
Or lllfto DIIIIY

,,

CMh plld for laney Iron or
lloavy Iron bado·. t 1 10 ond

• o ••• o o o """ o o o o ' o o • • o o o o o o o o o • o

.·- ---·-·-c·l

The l;:&gt;aily Sentinel

'

The Daily

stone
Old Melo•
time cupup ~.P,re.
certain
co.
t=========::r:=========tt;::========:;,r:========:nrr:;;~~~~~;;;;~;rl
l'aRPET
board. call· 1-304-882·
-----·aiiiilpoils... --· --- ...... P.omerov·:------·
""
2711
PERSONALIZED POOLS .
.THE
TROMM
Middleport
&amp; UPHOLSTERY . COMPLETE HOUIEHOLDB,
• Vicinity
MAINTENANCE: SERVICE &amp; INSTALLATION.
DITCHING
•
.
CLEANERS
FURNITURE.
Btde,
Iron.
&amp;
Vicinity
EXCAVATING
'OR ALL POOLS ABOVE &amp; IN-GROUND.
wood. cupboatda. cMirt,
SERVICE ·

Geneva C)!ne, Akron; Glenna
Owens. Mt. VeJ:OQn; Ralph and
Katherine. GWIIan. Derek J!lvins,

The sixth annual reunion of the
and Helen R. Wolfe, secretaryCharles and Fannie W{)lfe Beaver
treasurer.
.
Jamlly was heldatRoYaiOakPark
- Allelldlngwere.Jolll)andWanora
recenQv with almoSt 100 persons - Beaver, Keith and Coty CurUs, Tom
attending. ·
and (,layla (),yegs, and Dwight
Recogidzed. and presented gjtts Spencer, ~; Ernest and
were Mattie Beaver Hill, 81, the
Flossie Bush, Allee Balser, Shirley
oldest wanan; Dwight Spencer, 81,
Simpaon, Da!ana and 'Lori, Jan
the oldest tnan; Chanc:e Alan
Williams, • John Baumgardner,
McElaney, 1monthold, the young- · Maiy Forester,' Robert and RO. ·
estchld; TomandGaylaOwens, the
berta, Loretta Smith, ·Maty E.
newest Jn(IITied; John and Wanora Smith and Teddl Smith, Racine;
Beaver, the longest ~. 44 - Alva Jr. and Gi:ace Hols!nier, Jay,
years; and Carl and Connie Hill,
John. and Brad; Paw and Brendli.
Eddie and Laura, of Richardson,
Holsinger, Vicky Glllllan, iuld
Texas, who traveled the farthest.
Jel-erny Gllltlan, Reedsville.
Al$0 recogni2led was a fiveA;nold and Iona Huw. Irene
generation .famBy,. Mattie B. •Hill,
Hupp, Charles and Nancy Hupp,
Helen R . Wolfe, Linda Y. Black.
Eddie and Sharon Hupp, Jeremy
Jerri A. POling and JennUer R .
and Jamie, Long Bottom; Russell
Poling.
. and Leona' CUne, Syracuse; Sam ·
Officers elected for the Jl!)y6, 1$5
Buckley, Mlnersv!lle; Russell and
reunion !
Grace Holsinger,
Freda Holsinger, MaryGUlllanand
president, Carl C!lne, ~president
Lee GIIU)an, Chester; John and

Mlddlepon, Ohio

Pau•ot

t

'
:

1979 liberty cara.;,.n ,
14x70. 3 bdr .• frontkitctni'n.r•,,
dining, living room with ..,.;
wooetburning fireplace. a-._tb_:~ :
with garden tub, nice ap· .. ,
plian c ea many faetu i'et.' :..

1972 Belmont 12x60. kit·
chen. living, 2 bdr .. 1 !Nlh
no turnence or appli•nc••r ?
Cell 446-0902 8:00AM to .
4:00PM.
~. ~ :;_

•

�-- .

. ..... . ·----

----------·-------------

--·

---'----· ----

Ohio

10, 1984

Television
Viewing
7/10/84
EVSNIN9

CIJe

1:00 • Cll
cil&lt;ID • 9
Nowo
(]) MOVIE: The ·Wilder, n111 fomily'
.
(]) N.W TrNoure Hunt
(!I lnoldo Ba..... II 'A preview of the . 1984 All-Star

•

1

iO

~mo.'

- ~ ROCCEE±

CIJ Andy Qrifllth
(I) Nowt/Sporti/W. .(1)
MooNeii/Lehm

TH~~~~1-~A~
Al..IMO~'(.

e~~tarTNk

IsrMIAP±x) ~~=~-=r~~

(f) 1IJ NBC NIWI

8:30 •

iHERe:s PL.ENTYOF

. I I K__ ]

Nowohour
il]) P-orhouN

Cil lllllemon.

(!I Motdl SportoLaok

CI.J' Cilrol Burnett

(1)_. (JJI ABC Nowo
(I) ID cas N•w•
il]) Powerho~N

e

Prfntenawerhete:

7:00 • Cll PM Megoaine
(])· MOVIE: 'Eddie ond the
Cruloara' .
(]) Here Come tho Briclel .

Yoat-y'o

ro &amp;portiCentor

I

Clllln!Ofd end lion

.,

I I I II I 11 )

(AntMratomorrow)
Jumblll· JETTY RAINY ADROIT · CLEAVE
:. W~at the ballerina l~sisted lhat her partner
do-"TOE" THE LINE

(I) Entortllnment Tonight
(!) Whell of Fort(I) Wheel of Fortune
f1)
NillhtiY
8u1in111

e

Ropo&lt;l
IDNowi
il])

.

MaoNoii/Lehrer

N-ohour
•
(jJ
Entortlinmont
· Tonillhl
eJoffarma
7:30
(J)·Tio Teo Dough
C!J Super aou.. of tho 70's
' Loon Spinks va. ~uham ­
mtd Ali IL•• Ve~ll. Februory, 1978).' (60 min.)
(I) AI In tha Fomlly
f1) Femilv F C!) Love Conneotlon
f1) Dr. Who
1D Whoel of Fortune
• (jJ PoopWa Court
One Dey ot a Time
8:00 8 (lJ IIJ A TNm The ~
'room bottle• a gong Qf ·
deaporodoeo that has
tlken over 1 SouJh Americin monastery. {R) (80
min.l
(f) MOVIE: 'EIIy M_.,(l)Oontle len
(J.) MOYIE: Thio Prop 1rty
Is Condilmnecf
(I) • (j) Mojor .....UI
Bollbell All-Iter Glmo
Covero91 of this game
which pits the National
League AII-Stora against
the American League AUStars is pre.. ntad from
Candlestick 'Pori&lt;. San
Fronclsco, CA. (3 hro .. 30
"'in .)
.
G (() ' ID MOVIE: 'Will
There
lleelly
Bo
o ·
Momlnor
·
f1) Nove
'Twenty-Five
Yao11 in Space.' Tonight's
progra~ presents a review ·
of wh~t men hll done in
apace end what we mey ••·
poet in th• future. (R) {80
min .) (Cioo~ Captioned)
il]) Forum
• MOVIE: 'Bovo tho Tiger'
·8:30 (!) Auto Racing '14: Con

"

Oswald Jacoby and
James Jacoby

e

CIJe

A heart attack
is fatal

NORTH
+Kt

.10185

Farms for Sale

Farm on Cre1ton R011d off
Rt. 87, M110n County. 183
acres. 30 ecrn paature. 3 6
acre• meadows . Rest
timber. All newly fenced . All
mineral .riQhts included .
1 981 . 14x70 Skyline mobile
home. 36x80 machinery
1hed. Machinery, cattle, etc.
304-896-3060.

44 ·• Apartment
for Rent

45

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

Furnished Rooms

For rent Steeping Rooms
•nd light house keeping
rooms. Paflt. Central Hotel.

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS {Equal Coli 814-448-07~11.
Housing Opportunity) has
one and two bedrooms. rant Sleeping room *126. utili· Pool Table A acceaaories.
's tarting Jlt $1'67 for one ties paid. ,Share bath, male Call8t4'268-8230 or 814.,.droom and $193 )&gt;lr only. Range • rotr;g: 919 2&amp;8-8002.
month !Of twa bedroom. 2nd. Ave., Gallipolis. Coli
'
with $200 ctaposit located 448-4416 after 7 PM.
Uoed V-30 'Dilch Witch
near Foodleftd end Spring
lrencher. 1-614·894-7842
·valley Plaza, pool and TV
or 1-614-894-1008:
35 Lots 8o Acreage
ant . Call 446-2745 or loave 46 Space for Rent
·
·
mesiage.
Water well drilling machine
lot' for sale In Mercerville. 1--_.::_
_______
&amp; ~II oquiP"!!~I . Call 614Coli 614-2511-1111,8.
3 bdr. unfurn. garage apt.. COUNTRY ' MOBILE Home . 388-8643.
t260 plus deposit. Coli Pari&lt;, Route 33. North of
Approx. &amp;'h acre, levelland, 448-3788.
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call 181111 Plymouth 2 dr .. hard
wilh frontoa. oro 2 roo~•: 1 -----:-~~-::-:--:--;- 814-992-7479.
f300. 8 HP Soero riding
exc. for building or m1n1 Furnished apt. 919 2nd., '-:;:;;::=~:=::=:;;=== mo-r, f300 . • Ceil 448form, all utilltioa noar by, on Gollipolio. t175. ·Men only. 186118..
oid Rt . 180 near Porter, Coli 446-4418 alter 7PM.
47. Wanted ti:l
19.000. Coli 814-388·
Ca-ptain bed. good cond .
8801 .
N-ly rernodolod 2 bdr.,
388-9311.
- - - - - : - - - - · l c - equipped kitchen, central Wante'd stor•ge •P•ce in
1&amp;0 foot Iota, one acre Of •lr. S250. 821113 Second barn or garage to store old 2 grade Belgium yaarting1, 1
mora. near Racine. TP wo- Ave., Gllllipolia. Coli 448- cor. 304-1175-1832.
Reg. Belgium 2 yr. old. new
tor. •3000 and up. Call 2158.
'---~~--,---- tobacco 1tick1. 86 acrat
814·992-3921 .
,.
woodland. Coli. 614-2564 rOoms • bath. ullfurniahed
8011 .
200 ecrea. tor more inforMerchanrl1se
.•· utilitle1 paid, adults'
maHon call 304-773-6740. pat
only, no pete. C~ll 4411Amana aide by aide harvest
gold 22 tfU·~· ••· cond.
Approx.. 2 acraa on Rt. 2, 8 3437 or 4411, 3111 .
Moving must Mil. Cell 448 ·
milea north of Point Plea- Unfurnished 2 bdr. in Crown
51 Hou•ahold Goods 2106 .
sont. 510 ft. road frontoga,
public water and electric City. Coli 814-2611-8&amp;20. 1------------,----avoilable, 304-175-1248 . . 2 bdr. apt. newly decorated,
860 to 8200 per mo. utiHie1
4 acre• off 'Kerr Herrleburg part. paid. Call675-6104 or
Road on Viney Road . 8711-11388.
e7,000.00. Coli 304-895·
3398 after 7:00 PM .
4 room• &amp;. b8th. furnished,
clean, no pets. adults only,

Ren Lil s

41

H ouaea for Rent

deposit

•

reference

Remodeling, aiding, interior u.

f;1rll1 SlliiiJI"''
~ L IVI:cll/1.~

61

For ule Of trade: 1877 1879 Ht!nde matlc 400 with
lid·
cougor XA7, •Ps • PB • AC• wind
le •-jemmer !erring
d &amp;•a•o
crul11 control, &amp; atoro. CoH d ...,go, ex. COl) "
u ·
Coll1114-241-8117.
1114-912-74 83.

350 .10 dozer 8 ft. blade
winch.

good condition.

~M~eta~lbu:-::l::dl:-,...
-:-bu-h;:--:to-y-ou::::'~, ~

$6.400. MF Pony 19110
model, plow, cli1c, mow•,
excellent condition. 11.400:
Call 6 75-5823 !Of directions: S . Kingery. letart,
WVA.

63

· Oar-. -age.
~.Varehou ... farm, etc . FrM .·: ~
Eotimoteo. 304-1175-3981 . •...-~
Cement finisher.
Garfiold. 814-915-44114 . . ,-

Ba•emente. pool diecks :.\~ ~
perking iots. any
jOb, ..... 41 ~

('iz'

Liveatock

1 980 Hondo 710 Super
Sport, .1 .400 .00. 304171-7138 or 304·11711312.

pots. Coli 614-643-2144 or
1114,843-2918.
.

re -

Nicely furnishe mobile home
in city, CA, 1 or· 2 adult•

715

.

...
or _,: ;j

napa Mildred as pen of •

plan to trick Laura

him . {R) (60 mtn.l
_
lelnr: Cought on/
Acl
f1) Eli11beth A '
il]) Nowowomh
• 81 lndopandont N 10:15 (J.) MOVIE: ·eon•nnier
Part 7
·
,
10:30 Cll!IIIOVIE: 'Valley Girl
(]) My Little M119ie
il]) KentuCky: The Ultiri\011
· EqUIItriln 1)111
Love Amerlcon Styli
11 :00 G Cll D (I) ID Neo_o•
(f) lito or Death un tho
Emergonc:y Room This documentary filmed at ~t.
Mary'l Medical Center 1n
Long Beach. Californil. ex·

~:

e

~~ :;·r ·

GoOd-1 Excavating, ...
,.: .
menta. tooters. dri~eye'."
MPtic tanlc.a, landacaping_. , ~
Call anytlmo 1114-4411 - '•''
4137. JamuL. Davison • .lr. "'"''

--·

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;_..._,,.1:

'\i'
-:-:-:::-7---.--:--:-.u
J.A.A.Conltru.c:tion Co.Ru- \ · ~, ,
I)

D011r •

1321 pluad-ait• ref,ren- .
coo. Coli 441-1384 befOfa
6PM. 448-0241 . UtiiHiea
partly paid.

lloctrlclllinoa.

71

Two .,.dtoom furnished, .
1375 mo.. unfurnilhld
1350. No pots, utiiHieoplid.
Coil 448-1384 before IIPM;
448-0241 .

N-ly redacor-. 1 bedroom. partlelty furnlo-.
U21.,D-iultroqui&lt;ed. Clll
114-882-1318 or 882281 1.
1 bedroom, Hmi·furnished
in Middleport, utHitill ineluded. C::oll14-882· 71n.

Auto Parta

a Actie. .orles

Wanted 302 ..,gino for '71
Ford Grondna 304-41111183.

1 bedroom Apt . $1911. rrio.
Including utilitloi. Equol
HouiinQ . qppo&lt;luni!Y. Con'
tact V•lll!g• Manor Apta.
614-992-7787.

2 bedr. unfurniehed treHer,

C!J lpor11Centor

.

78 Motors Home•
Campat'll

a•

BUIIDETTI CAMPEII
llALII &amp; BEIIV1CI. Opon
ctelty I to l :liO, IM. 8 10 4,
Clolld lllftdeV. U.S. llt. IO,
CooiVillo, Oh I 1 4· . .7·

Uood FumHuro -- Choirs,
dryers, and TV's. S mile111101
Buleville Rd. Open 9om to
llpm. Mllft. thru Fri., 9om to
lpm. Set.
1114-4411-0322
TV • Applle.-. 1127 Third
Ave., GIIUpollo; 114-448·
11188. Spin waohora, gil• ·•
electric dryora, auto
waohon, goo • oleclrlu!
rangaa. rafrlgar•tore, TV
oetl.

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

-·II ..._

GOOD U8ED APPUANCEil.
Waohen, dryers, ••frill'..
1 • Z bedroonl ,..,.._ Iori,
Apapto. Coli 114-"2·1434 or • - ·
IlTWiN lid.
882-1814 or 104-112· beoicte · - CNet M-.
21118.
114-~7311 .
'

u-.

1873 Pord 12ft. M~

171-1171.

·

&gt;

~

•·
'

~

::,.•

Jill.

PO!d--per-...1
to B. refrie., - · -.,,
I I - a' hOolc up.
CIW441-1310.

General Hauling. For 111ft :
Umoa1one, fill din. and top . •
ool. CIW CoM 114-211JI-&lt;3·
1427..
., .

loottle C•=:••·
. . . . I, II80d DDBAI!M,
Coli 114-HI·. . . .

eaoo.

•aoo.

171 a..h at.,}Ill•••'•"'

OH.
I ·

.I

-·

"'

.lomoa Boys Wator Service.
Aloo pools filled . Callll14- ·
211 -1141 ' or 114-441- ~
11711 or 814-4411-7811 .
r

,.7Z

*04-171-

••

(I) MOVIE: 'Botween Two.

•

.
PEANUTS

JIMI WATER SERVICE, ,, :
:Z.;t,r."·l~-- Coli , CIW Jim Lonler. 304·117·· ' I'
·::. :
.
' . 7387.
------------------~
•· II
• ft. 1110 C"'- folding
ploflllp truGII Oltftper, ...,. -:1:::7r--;U;'p-;h-o71a...:.ta-ry
'""·- - · ~
4, 1111 - · loe loox. ll'9.
aon. Cal 114-HZ·IOliO.

ton wltll
IIIH, 304-

1171 ·~·.,•

8 EWING Machi no repoira, '
aarvico. Authbrlrod Singer.
Baloa &amp; Sorvico Sharpon. !, , .
Sci nora. Fabric . Shop :~ ::.
·Pomoroy. 1114-991·2284,
1•

an. ft. Tarry t-.~ , ......

1117 Pord INIII. A·1 oondltlon. • • . . . euoo. clll
114-,117·e7·

of high-oociety vigilantes.
(R) (60 min .)
f1) Ll-illht Amorice
ID Allin tha family
eounsmoke .
11 :41 C!J 3rd Annuol Crackor
Jack Old Timoro lollbooll
Claallc from Waohlngton,
DC
·
U:OO Cllli!OVIE: 'Boer loland' __,
(]) Bum• • Allan
(I) WKRP in Cincinnati
1D MOVIE: 'Kid Blue'
e (jJ Nlghtline
1 2:15 (f) MOVIE: 'Tho Adoill-

~~~

Oenaral Hauling

,,,,

OONALP DUCK IS

F1FTV \(EARS OLD ?

1llAT'S PRETTV OLP
FOR A 1'\JCK ...

.

..

1,

sAID, ''I-ll. DON !
8UT l-IE DIDN'T

Worlda'
,
e
Cll (I) Loti Night with
30
12
David 1.8ttemlan
• (])Jock Benny Show
(I) Nillhtlina
.
eW Col~mbo 'Cand•dete
for I Crime.' A' S.nalorlal
candldato. using a p ,ubliclty holx, murdoN hil ctm·
polgn monogor tp otop a
IQVI triengla. (R) (DO man.)

e9N-

• Wild. Wild Weet

1 ·.00 (J)I Merried Joon
(I) lolliil

Gold

eiDCNN HoiMIIIne N 1•30 ())Loft That Bob
•
(I) E-inment Tonillht

TIIIITATE
l·
Ul'tiOLIT!IIY IHOP '
::
11U leo. A..... Ga•pol.._ " •
1 14-441-7131:1orl14-441· "l

I 11 II.

11:1 5 C!J Mitda !!po!UL.ook
11:30 e (lJ (I) Tonight Show
(J) Bllt of Clroueho

reu goes after e secret nng

;.

-;;::=;;=.:;:=.:===,) ,~.
S4 Electrical
a R_afrigeration w'i

85

(!) Nowa/St&gt;orti/W..thor
-~Couple

(I) eiD! Nowt
.g f1) MoGorrett McGor-

.'

truc$:'1, • water-ga1-eewer- • a;

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

N-ly reriuodoled 2 bed·
room, equipped kitchen.
t221. DopOIH reQuired. Clll
1114· 892-6319 or 082·
2811.

Dftcher, Dump

..a

may

,.

tQt82

+Kt04

q=~~:ou
~. lmportallt.;;
. 1\ tbem

.76~

., ..

+eu

;

SOUTH
+Q162
.AQJ3
tAU
+KQ

doa't drew trumpa too

for

-

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: !loutb

Declarer won tbe openiD&amp; diamond

tbe aee, Eut pliiJIDa tbe 10.
Tbe tin&amp; of elaba ... pla,ed lliCI then
the ..... onrtaUD with dummy'•
ace. Now QJDe tbe jadl of clubs, on
wllldl Soatll dllcanled • dlamood
lead~

...

I NT

1'111
P111
P111

*:"
ia ...,.; temPtmc ID lead tbe 10 of
belrtl from dummy ud let II ride.

z-.

PUI
Pill'
P111

••

.

Opening lead: +2

1'win
1111 etth
woald be dl11am. Weal wOI!ld
tbe tin&amp;- Perbapslle would I-___;,_ _ _ _ _ _ ____.

I

play 1 dlammd ID 1111
.
puiDer' I k!DI-

lf lie doel. r.ut lllloafd

IIIIW

pllly a

aecGDd trmDp. IIIII apoa wiJuiiD&amp; the
aee at ...-. l!:ut lbould pllly a
tldnl u.np. 'l1le ...all 011 tltllliDe of dummy's trumps to ruff lOIID&amp; ~

.

r:l 'i111owtl -· 1iJM:e declarer

a:=,:::-

apades ADd' 10, after the jack of
ciubs,
correct pllly Ia the tin&amp; of '
tbe poulbWty opaclea. Now tlie defeoden are belpof WI letff I I Aft« ell, lie Clll lell ID prevent declarer from tak.ln&amp;
aftn 1D laie tile ldD&amp; of hearta 11 10 tricks.
lOIII ,. lie
JMMI'l ID all of
II

Ute

eaa

"*,.,

dlcruti
br JHOMAS JOSEPH
ACR088

1 'l1rob
s Henlic
Jlll'l'aUve
ICUt ·

..

GIMly Jane

a French

river
DOWN
11Drelllabric 1 "Maltese
12 ...._
Briti11b Falcon"
WJ~O
CIHlar

. style

U~
11 Meal

fr18ment

..

zActress Bow
aBecome ·
furiOUI
t Greek

~esterday:aAnswer

· 11 Papooae's Zli Consent
.horne
II Nurture

11 But (Lal)

letter
1t Strengthen 28 F_rlendly
5 Bad temper 11 Preemi- II Jun
I Plowed
nent
or
field
ZZ CeiUc
Benedetto
32 Thread
a Imitate 1 Sheep
deity
Z1 ~
diaeue
zs Persian 33 Enlist
21 Jocullrity 1 JCJYOUI
rcae
38 Sailor
za Americlln
energy ' za Elevate 31 Secular
lllllke

17 Ran iatD
U Hooray!
11 BeYerage

a Amyl

lk:OOol

:

~He:re~(~F:;r.~l~~:tt

IIWrlllen

Jetter
S1 O'NeW play
MSIIt(Fr.)
31Rad11Uon

Wilt
II Tenth

&lt;II !leD
J7Nenroonl
employee
31EmVJMm~te

• Legl"a'.e

USalttree

7-.(

. DAD..YCRYI'TOQUOI'ES-Here'a boW IDwork II:

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the lbrae L's X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
ltjiCMIII pbea; the~ and fonnatioo of the words are all
hlnla. Each day the code letters arejifferent.
CRYPTOQUOTE'I

s

MXZA

AOX

YKKC

NSAO

PSMXRA

TSDRSAI, QJA HEJDOA

Cl ZKKA

SR AOX CEA . - DXKYDX

ERT
NXXTKR
DYKPPCSAO
· Yeeten~l)'a Cryptaqltote: I'M NOT A REAL MOVIE
STAR- I STilL GOT mE SAME WIFE I STARTED
ouT WITH NEARLY TwENTY-EIGHT YEARS AGO. WILL ROGERS.

•
'

+AJt05

+toau

4!D p1a7, - IIWI&amp;ht ID draw.
tntmpsiO tllat tbe defeailen caDDOt
uae their Uttle trumpa ID take trieD.
,_tile tllemt of~ two Ia "Walt
1 mlnqte;

EAST

+eu

•Kt

1

~ofesaeon .

(J) Anoth•r Lifo

tland. 0~.114-742- 2903~ •: ::
laHments. Footers. Con· 11 J.
crate , work , Backhoe••. ~~J~

Furnished 2 bdr .• no pets,

No WODder brld&amp;e II auCb a coofusln&amp; woaderful pme. In the lle&amp;IDJI\DI

the day-to-day
, pressur~l of the medical

iHAR AIN'T
HAPPIER THAN A HOG
WITH I::IIS CORN

•

WI!8T

amines

BARNEY

DoHr Work by Ted Han.... - ,
Dltchll, pondo, roedl, IMd '·
aiMrlng, etc. Cal Motor Car l)
8 - . 4411-lllt2. '
' • ,.

Furnished efficiency apt .• ,
ca;peted throughout, •175
mo. Oep. • ref. required.
Call 4411-41107 or 4412802.

Re-

(I) Rioh

""
. ....

Excavating

~nd

mington into ~orkmg for

,..,

83

s-

e

•r

.liM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT .. :'•
lNG . At. 1. Box 3115, Galli· •.
polio. Cllll14-317-05711 . .$:

.

2 bdr. mobllo home privoto
lot, 2'12 mi. out Rt. 588.
1176 mo .. -urity dop. &amp;
ref. CoR 446-41107 or 44112102.

Holly P.... 12lCIO. 2 IR,
unfumla-. '12 m• Pill
HMC out 31. Cell114·4411·
4381 or 304-171-1710.

~
.

SHULAW'8 Plumbing and' ";·
HeMing, 211 Sl&gt;th Bt.. • 1' '
Point Pl..oant, W. Vo. 304- '; • ·i
1171-1420. Lic..,aod Md. :, :
inoured.
·\ •· 1

Riverlido Apu . Middlepon.
Special rates for Senior
2 bdr. fully fumlahed, oir .CHizena. t130. Equei Houscond., adulta only. Call Ing Opportunitioa. 1114992-7721'.
446-4110.

·. Nice 14x70 3 bdr .. mobile
homo. U31 mo. depoll1 a
utHitill, no potl. Coli 441·
2182.
.

Cll700 Club
f1) lin
KinglleY oo
Edmund K. .n
il]) Vietnam
(I) iil Remington
10:00
An underworld figure kid-

..."

'

Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 814·448-3888
1114-4411-4477'

only, no poll. Call 4460338 . .

(f) MOVIE: '.lowo Ill'

• ;, ~

Heating

18118 Sport-. - · finished, extro porta, 304-8751387.
Boats and
Motors for Sale

min.}

CARTER'S PLUMBING' ... '
AND HEATING
· ·i¥

quired. Call 614-4411-1119 .

2bdr .. traDer 1175 plus depooit. Call 814-388-9851 .

large country lot. rural wa·
tor. LocaiOd in Centerpoint&gt;
Colll13-3711-1101.

...

.-

Cor. Founh 'and Pine

completely furniahed, water
pold. no inside ' pets. Main
St .. Cheshire. CIIIII14-245' 6B.1 8.
·

• ·1 60 mo. plus depoeit, no

8o

'

Very nice 2 bdr. duplex,

2 belt. 2 mUe below Eureka,

Clevelend
Grond Prix frOfn Clevelarld.
OH
8:00 eCiliilRiptidoCodyfells
for 1 woman whose 118ter
has ~ad ~rouble with a wellknown mobster. (R) (80

~8~2r--=P71u-m~~~n-g~
, --.-- ~·

Houae for rent in Mercerville

2 bdr. with wall to wall

8-·-

.rmsorry if I~
anythin' to hurt
. youJMus!

RICherd-&gt;~ '~

areo. Coli 446-3189 daya, Of
256-1562 ave.

carpet. AC. in GalllpoHo. Call
4411-1409 5-BPM.

¥!.{

Building. remodolng, vinyl ~
and alumn aiding . Free elti;, ~r ~
_ .... 304-17:1·3981 .
_, '

8200.

Large home, large yard,
t310 mo.. UOO deposit .
Call 448-7157.

2 bdr. unfurnished, ~xtro
nice 2 mi. out on At. 688,
1200 mo ..' odulto only . Coli
448, 2300.

.

iluHdlng·Remodoling, coi)n._,..,.
creta, drywall, · electdc · •~
roofing, flooring, framlng&gt; ~;i
kitchen-bathroom in~;tatla ·.t:.
tion·, dQor·window framing .•, .
304-1171-2440.
~-

Troy tractor 6 HP with
electric start, with cover,
gmeaanew . Call814· 388·

air. pool etc: Coli 675-511)4
or 671-638,.

42 Mobile Homes
'
,for Rent

:f.':

Farm Equipment

3 bdr. ho1,11ti deluxe, central

2 bedroom home. 304-6763172.

and exterior, tex-tu~ c.oat· -.ojl.ot
ing, 1imulated brick and:"'!
1tucoo, thermo r•la.cem.,.~ r
windows. 304-1 75-11ill0c

...
....,

tJ73

+A.JH

a

33

7-1H4

r

•

�·10-The

. ·,

5.ntinel

Gallipolis,
.
. Middleport, ·
~ Tup}lel'8 Plains post · wins

••'

Store sues to overturn. law
"

SYRACUSE - During first night
overhaul- Buchtel In a dramatic
action of the 1001 Bill Hubbllrd
fashion. SusleCassellreachedonan
Memorial Uttle Lel!g\le touma·
error, Scott Melton singled, and two
ment the Gallipolis Padres, Middlewalks follllWed with the bases now
port Cardinals and Tuppers Plains
full . Joe Hall cleared the bases with
Bears ~ W!JIS and will ~ow ,,, . a three-run biple, followed by
advance to second round play In the anotherwalkanderrorandagrrund
annual classic at Syracuse Munlcl·
ball to end the inning%.
pal Park.
·
Buchtel scored two runs In the.
The event is sponsol:ed by the sixth Inning with a lead off walk,
Syracuse Volunteer Fire doublesbY.HeathSavageandHeyes
Department.
Dean and a' single by Brian Withem.
In game one, Gallipolis took an AU seemed to be going well for an
earlyleadandthencoastedtoanll-5 Economy Supply comeback, untll
biumph over Rutland.
Middleport pitcher Darrell Mlctiael
Mike McQI!ald was the wtnnlng struCk out the last three batters to
pitcher, going four and two-thirds win the game. Michael tanned l4
lnnlngsandpostlngllstrtkeoutsand overallandwalked8.
six walkS. Mike Walls suffered the
Brian Withem fanned eight and
la;s for Rutland, despite fanning 10 walked six In a lOSing effort. Doug
batters. Walls, however, walked L'l. Martin had a home run, Mark
Shannon Blevins led the winners Spencer,' a single, and Heyes Dean,
with two singles, McQuaid had a three for the night that produced two
double and single, and Gene Sheets singles and a do\lble. .
had a single. For Rutland, Eric
In the nightcap, the Tuppers ·
· Walker had a double, Frank McGee PialnsBearsemergedan8-3wtnner
a t:J:lple, Jolm Rose a single, Heath over the Mason VFW team despite
Shoemaker, a single, and Mike little offense by either team.
Walls a single.
Perhaps pitchb)g told the story as
. In a ·9,'1 dogfight between two winner Sc;ott McDanald wtffed 12
competitive teams, the Middleport and Issued eight walkS, wblle
Cardinals edged Buchtel Economy opposing pitcher Scoti Keams
Sl,ipply In me second game of the tanned eight and walked six.
tourney. Eddie Crooks had a home
For the winners, Mark Murphy
run, Joe Hall, a biple, Susie Cassell, had a biple, Brandon ChaPman, a
11 single, and Scott Melton, a single, single, and Mike Wheeler, a single.
to lead the winners, who wereouthlt Roger Klein had a double and Mat .
·
seven hits .to four.
Rickard a single for the losers.
Trailing 6-3 in the bottom of the
Action resumes tonight as three
fifth, Middleport scored siX runs to more teams will gain bids to second
.
roundplay.

'

·Y

'

•'

wEsT CARROLTON, Ohio (AP) . riancewas ~ll8tll\ltlol)aJ.b'V~
- A West CaiTOIIton atore which 8nd struCk It dOwn In December. 1 ,
·sells cigarette papers and · other
. At thetlme,storep~rsaaJd.:
smoking a~ has sued the the smoking and snuff acceuor tea.=
City a second Ume to overturn an ctprette papers and slmllar ltemJ;.
ordlnarice regulating the sale of the store sells Wf"' Intended tu ~
dl'\li·related paraphernalia.
used with llli!OC'CO· .
~
PllUman's lnc. had llled suit In
The Council passed a neW ordl-.
U.S; District Court against West nanre In May of this year. City;
Cai:roUton last year. U.$. District MallagerG. TracyWtmamssald~
Judge Walter !Jice ~ with city's Jaw lllrect91"examlned Rice's
J&gt;hllman's that thellet!Qltion of drug rullngtborougl!IY and did addltlorylt
parapben)alla In the city'~ Old!· ~ · tu be sure the new,'
ordinance would not bestnlekdown,~
ln.l8lee8
but Edward Lettus, attorney m
Philman's, said the new o~
stW Is uncon9tltudonally vague. ; .
•
• The Carleton College Board of
•''
Trustees an.nual meeting wtU ·be
Thursday at 7 p.m. In the Syracuse
'·
Municipal Bl!lldlr!g.
ClEVELAND ~AP)
~' ,
winning nwnber drawn . Monday• ·
m the Ohio Lottery's dallyl •
•game "The Numller," was 386.
In
"Pick 4" glime, plliyec{ •
Meigs cOunty Court, scheduled
for Wednesday, has been resche- MOill!aY through Friday, the win·,
nlng nwnber was 2725.
duled for July 18.

,.
f

..

Lottery

Court rescheduled • nllittt

r.

ihe

r.
"

*
July
*
Satellite

Sllverblr~
ROTARY OFFICERS INSTAU ED - , NeW ollieen for llle

12'

~IIMI,Y Rotllry CIIJb were lniUIIedFrill..v n1pt at Heath
United Mat o!W Clmdlln MJddleporL 1be pwp lndlllles freat from

entry was discovered at 9
am. Saturday · at the Howard
Lawrence Store. Entry was made
through a rear window.,
Nothing was reported missing
and Investigation 1s conl!rnJlng.
The sheriff ls also Investigating

PAR~CLIPSE

·'

reported her mallbox has been
repeatedl'y lllled with hay and
weeds.
Harold Circle of Raclnl' reported
Sunday morning his maUbox was
filled with hay and knocked orr the
w.-;t. The ,newspaper tube was also
damaged.
Inwstlgatfon Is continuing In both
Incidents.

'

R!Hillrbble picture ·qu11ity in 1

•

small dish.

. $16.$0°0

!.

... ~.&gt;

HOME SATELLITE TV
SPECIALISTS
Silverbird Setelllte System

378-6158
Reedsville, Ohio

If your -baby was .horn
between 1979 aDd 1984, let
us publish a photo of him
or.her in The Sentinel's .
BABY EDITION
Monday, July 23 1984
--

FAILED - When the brakes failed on this truck driven by J Pickens of Radne, the vehicle traveled Into llle Klnpbuey M\lblle
11ome8 Sales bid...f:la Pomet'oy. 1be wreck occurred about 1:30 p.m.
as Pickens was drlvln&amp; soulb llloog U.S. 33. Pickens waa not InJured In
..., crash.

.

,-

'·

.

'

·'"J

•••

••

•

Damage was heavy In the engine
area to an automobUe owned by
Charles Archer, South Fourth
Avenue, Mlddleport,lnacarbilretor
fire at 9:25a.m. today.
.
Middleport firemen w~re on the
scene about 18 minutes.

Dissolution fded

. Marriage lice~se
A

Here's an opportunity for parents, grandparents, aunts and uncles or god parents to .
have their "baby's" photo appear in The Sen,
tinel's BABY EDITION Monday,July 23. All
babies born between 1979 and 1984 are eligible to have their photos publi~hed.Just think
how your "baby" will save and cherishl this
special edition throughout his or her lifetime.
It's easy to have your photo published. Just
bring or mail it to The Sentinel with the in for-

.

'

-

SuaaM~ Aen" Kincaid

Glenn and Barbara Kincaid
PSR, Gallipolis, Ohio '

· Cryml Dawn Oooderhem
James and Debra Gooderham
Rt. 2, Vinton, Ohio

marion requested in the coupon below, lOs
gether with $5:00 which includes the cost of
processing, publication and postage for s'afe return by inail. A black-and-white glossy photo
insures the best reproduction. However, color
photos, Polaroid photos and snapshots will be
accepted. Photos of babies born anywhere will
be accepted, too. Send inyour baby's photo today. Deadline for receiving phocos is Saturday
July 14, 1984.
•

•
••

·-----~--~----------------------------,

•
•
I ·'••

PLEASE PRINT

I
Baby's Name ...... ....... ............................................ ......... 1..... ............ t
. .
I

.

Deadline
· for photos

Parent's Name .... ........................ ,. .......... ........... .... ........... ..............

•
IS

Saturday,
July 14,
1984

Street ''r R.f.D.···········:················................................................ ~.

•

cI ty .. ................... ~ ·· · ···· · ...................
. ............. ........ ,........................... ,.. ..
Boy (

) Girl (

)

'

llliUTiaae license has been

·

·1 ·

.,••
5

I
II

'.

•

e

VoU4, No.62
C:rrr!fteo11914

aty

•

enttne

2 Soctlom, 12 PatH

25 Canto ·
A Multimedia Inc. N•wlpaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July II', 1984

Senate task force accepts hunger
·B:y C11ARLENE HOEFi.JCII
He referti!d tu the federal report
Sa " El stall Writer
which he said Indicated that"elther
Test1Jmny which seemed to- huneer Is not a problem or a pretty
conllnn 100~m Ohio's high minor one" and said that "there Is
Incidence of hunger and matnubi· evidence or hlqel' In Ohio." ·
Thesenatorl!liontheilnlortunate

history of unemp~t In OhiO
m11ng that the state has been 1n the
top three In unemplOyment for the

• past four or five years. He said that
long-term unemployment has
brrughthunsertothestate'speople.
SChwarzwalder noted the report
and recommeildatlons of the la$k
force wiD b.~ out In~r.
.
. Y.qllnJieQ ted
In his testimony, Keith Black of
. the llkounty Southeastei11 Oblo
Area Si!nlor Nutrttton Plogram,
calledforthestai.etosupplementthe
federal funds coming Into that

citizen&amp;, ll1ld health, welfare and
social~ repreSentatives were
Sen. Michael !)chwarzwalder, D·
· Colwnbus, chairman of the task
force; Sen. Oakley Collins, Rep.
Jolynn Boster, and Jill Poppe, a
leillslatlvelntemtoSchwarzwalder.
Thevtsttherewasthetasktorce's
' final hearing for pthi!rlng oral pro!11'811l.
·
testimony. Eight other bearings
He said that In the ~&amp;county area,
have been conducted across the 4,&lt;mmeals,lncludlng750wblcllare
state.
horrJe.dellvere,
being served
· In his preliminary statement, dally but there remains a need b'
Scbwarzwalder said the PIIJli08e of funding for additional meals. In the
the OhiO Senate Hunger TaskForce past y.ear; Black said about 700
Is ' to determine the lncldence or people who qualltled for IDne
lnmgler.IJIOhlo, the'etfectwhichhlgh · delivered meals have been tulned
imemplcJynient'playslnhunger,and awayduetothelackortunds.
to make recommendatiOns on what
He also asked the · state to do
action can be taken -to lessen the SIJ'Ilethlng to fund meals for the
unde!:'-00 population not quallfy1ng
problem.

·4t

.

test~mony

under CUITI!IIt guidelines and apwhere individuals are related as cussed the WIC (Women, Infants
pealed' for additional funding to
(.'Mipared to I;Jelng non-related, and
and Children) nubiUon program
allevtl!teotherlwn&amp;erln the state.
of the CMerences In ADC and which C\11Te11tly has 950 enrolled In
Roger McCauley Of the Corpora· general relief allocations.
Meigs CoUnty. She said the WICfood
t1on ror Ohlp Appalachian Develop- ·
The need to Increase general program provides only specified
welfare beneflta by at percent was iron-rich irulrtt:IOOs foods Instead of
menf, noted. that one In every four
people lit Meigs CoUnty Is I10W also discussed by Joan Seder of the sane of the non-nutritiOUS foods
recelvlna food stampa, but that it
Galla-Meigs Cooununity Action which regular food stamps can be
amounts to only1lbout$1.43 per day Agency. ShealsopJ'Opolledspendlng , used for and suggested an expansion
perpersoa.
moneyonnutrltlonaleducatlon,and of a more structured nubitlon
He charged that the current low providing !\'IOfe ·funding for emer·
program.
of ADC and gaaal relief In gency food pantries.
The ln£quitle!; In payni.ents of the
Seder said that famUies find they .various welfare programs · was
Ohio is )he basic caue of lwnger in
. Oblostncefoodstampearecleslgned are ~:letter off on welfare and food
discussed by Dorothy Kenney, who
not to provide all the food for the . stamps wtth a health card than
viewed social policies as a factor In
hoUaehold, bui as a supplement to working at a .JOb at the mtnlmwn
llunger. She ~e!ldeQ that the
other montes, ·such as ADC and
w~of$3.35.
amount tor general relief be
geJ)el'8) relief, conitng into the
Testltylng for the Galla County Increased tu the ADC standard, and
home. HecalledfortheTaskForce Wel!are DePartment, Margaret
that recipients be given 1111 In·
turecommendaatpe~centtncrease
Swisher said that 19 percent of )he creased allowable amount for a car
In thoee two funds as a way of total population In G8llla County Is before It affects their welfare funds.
alleviating lnmgler In Ohio.
ontoOdsljlmps, thatlOpercentlson
Furiher llilllu-.v
Polley l1iQullmeat
ADC,, and 2 pe~cent on general
Forrest Borden of the Galla
Pollcles which need adjustment In relief. She spoke of the ~ of County Council on Ag1i1g cited
the welfare programs Of the state Wlderstandlng by the food stamp severallncldentsofhungerlnGaUla.
WW!I'I! dlscusaed by Linda Broderick 1eclplents that this Is a supplement
County and also discussed the
of the Melp County Welfare to other food funds and Is not
wholesale purchase of food for
Department.
lntendedtoprovldeallofthetoodfor
distribution.
. ·She talked about the need for thefamlly.
Rqxeseutlng Dlstict 7 of the Area
ch;ulges which cut back on _a ssist· · She also spoke of the Inability of
Agency on Aging, Dick Lablanc
ance when famUies get better cars many famUies tu "manage" and of
noted that one-ntlh of the elderly.ln
or make other efforts tu improve · thelrneedforsomeklndoflilltrltlilrt
Southeastern Ohio
~low the
thefi' station lnllfe,orthevarlatlonln and buylny training.
povertylncomelevelandarelnneed
amounts received iD. households
Nonna Torres, R.N .• or the Meigs
or more money. The federal
County Health Department, dis·
government offers SSI as supple-

lev•

are

mental Income and Lablanc sug·
gested that one way of handling
h\lligl!r would be tor Ohl6 tp join
several otl!er states In providing
supplemental· Income to older
P!!Qple.
.
Joyce Thoren, R.N., relating her
experiences as a lunchroom superVisor and nurse In the Southern
Local School Dls.trlct where 400 of
the 1,009 students are on either free
or reduced-meal program, s!Xil«l of
the home poverty, of the need for
good nutrition In early chlldhooil,
and of the Increased percentage of
developmentally handicapped
chlldreil coming Into · the school
~stem. Nubitlon edUcation has
been Introduced .. Into some or the
schools, she said.".
Several welfare redplents gave
dramatic testimony on their strug·
gle to get alorig on their ADC or
general relief allotments and food
stamps. They spoke of "Uvlng with
llunger," having to rely on friends
and · relatives for assistance, and
tlndlng themselves :Without food or
stamps to get any by the third week.
Seveml also voiced complajnts
about not being able to get their food
stamps on saturdays.
.
:
Written testimony from 30 other
people was accepted by the task

force.

•

By~~
Alllodlscussedwasanappllcatlon Jones asked township trustees to
Sa 'I I Std Writer
for a grant under the Comprehell· help identity house$ eligible for the
Meigs County conurilssioners slve Hmsing-Nelgbborbxxl Revt· grant.
cilscussed cancellation of an eaae- tallzatlon Program. Acamllng tu
Canmlssloners received a rement In &lt;;ommbla Town$hlp and a
the Cmuntssk.ers, the primary quest for ~ tr\m ~
~Ina grailt application at 'I'ues(' goalofthePI\Aii.lmlstuJrNlnM!the Energy Alllildalell Inc. trom the
~ sreaulatll)lll!llng.,
housing ··stock and living formula grant or 111e C&lt;mmunlty
DOii Wooten, Rt. ,., Polneroy. envtronment. '
Develo{lme!lt Block Grant. Since
asked the OOI1UJIIs$looer to clincel
Throughout the state, $11.25 the commisSioners have not reIJie.:»-toot easement on his propi!l ty · riillllon ls available. Meigs County Is ceived thett award total for theyear,
akqCountyRoad 77. Theeasment applying for $400,&lt;m. Olmmunlty they agreed to keep the fequest on
amounts 10 about five a&lt;;res. he said. Action Agency wUI administer the file and consider It Ollce they kooW
The easement has "never bi!m grantlftheappllcatlonlsappi'(M!d. bow much JIK1III!'); they wtU receive.
used,"Wootensald. W~plansto Adeclskmisexpectedwithln45days
The Scipio request wwld help to
fann the land and keep one or the of the July 16 des rtlh,. for e;x11!nd thewater Unes to promote an
ditches cleared out, he~d.
appUCatlons.
.
industrial park.
The comm(Ssloners questioned
Aboutslxpeopteattendedapubllc
Commissioners agm!d to adver·
whether . they could cancel the
hearing today about theappllcatlon. t1se an old hdldozer, fonnerly Used
easement since It was orlglnaJ.b' Cmunlsskmer Richard Jones ex· at the landftll. CimmlsskRiers wtU
granted to the unlncollXJl'ated plalned that after poople cm1plete re;erve the Hgbt to reject any bids
. .vWage of ,Dyesvllle. The conunJs.
the appllcatlons, they wtU be and set a minimum at $5,&lt;m.
sloners referred the matter to the reviewed by a tbree-membi!r board :_A leased hnlld&lt;vel' bas replaced
prosecutor.
and prioritized according to need. the old one at the lanctflll .

NOTE: Photo of Twins will be handled as one picture.
Mall coupon, baby photo and •&amp;.00 to
Baby Edition, The Dally Sentinel
.
Box 728•. Pomeroy, Ohio 41718

·

•

. ..~.
1......
•

L----•----------------•--------------J

i

'

seventh wOII'Ien to serve and sit vloualy ~as a IJI!IIJo!' aSSOCiate ...
arou00 this cabli.et table," Celeste ot the Cleveland Federation or
told a cabinet '1wm news Cooununily Planning, In 19'19-&amp;'l.
•
colnference.
HUNGER
JIE&amp;RJNG
Teldl•-.v
011 IJiiDier In
~ d1alnnan o( the force, presided 1M the
In a brief exchange with repor.....
nt
o
OI1ID
pyeo
by fOod
I
'eoce
hearliJ&amp;, and Ia pkSured here with, left to right, JW
ters, the new director said she
""1$1 I eoc1a1 welfare l!lld lieallll lllfL I aod Poppe, JeP"**ve lolern to Schwanwalcler, Sen.
agrees with welfare advocacy
cawa 011h"'
at llie Tllellday aftenJoOo llearll!l . Oaldey CeQins, Scbwamvalder 111111 Rep. Jolyim
groups that welfare beneGts In Oblo ·
81 11ie 0111o sm* Hllbpl' Taak Force held at llie Bollter.
are Inadequate and shwld he
Sea1or CMI • Ceaer. Sen. Michael ~alder,
Increased.
She declined to name figures
except to say that Ohio welfarereclpt.en.ts n!Celve an 8liiOIQrt equal
to about M pe~cent or actual need.
"rd like tu see Ohio move toward
B:yDAVIDDI'O
theslot.
Mayor Wilson Goode.
100 percent~ need," abe said.
Aeoolptec! P.- Writer
With many Democratic leaders
One of the reasons tor Mondale's
She · said the ' ac:DIInlstratloll
Walter F. Moildale defended his woJXlerlng It Mondale might name
decision
to Ignore him, Jackson
already has set 100 pelcetat of need
search tor a .vice presidential Hart to his ticket, Mondale .said of said, "Is that threatS toMondaleby a
as a goat. and that she wants to push
running mate Tuesday as "exactly Hart, "I 111re him, I think he likes
sJgnlflcant number of Jewish lead·
ahead with other ieb RIS that have
r!ght,"whtletheRev.JesseJackson me." In an~ Interview, he ers are very evident."
been launched by the (I'INUJitlr,
lambasted the process again and added, "Gaf1Hiut and I have real
This raises an Issue- the division
especially his efl.orts to cut health·
Sen. Gary Hart said, "I don't quit," . dl!ferences and I think those
between
some .· black and Jewish
carecosts.
.
and hinted at a selection process of dl!ferences ought' to be a&lt;!Jnltted.
groups
that coUid_.!!amage the
Ms. Barry, who wiD be paid
his own.
He's a person who feels strongly· l)emclcrat's presidential chances.
$55,001 annually, as director, preWith Hart vowing again to stay In , about his vieWs; so do I. Thatdoesri't
Jackson said there was a "strugthe Democratic'race and President dlmlnlsh either of us."
gle by Jewish leaders to make me a
Reagan campaigning for environ·
His aides also announced a · pariah." Many Jews regard .)ackPJRECroR - JrocqueiiDe
mental support, Tuesday provided '' homecOming reception" at El· . son with suspicion since he met and
(.Jadde) 1111 liP" BriddeB . . .._ ._ Olltll of ofllce .. little of the harmony that Mondale more, Minn., on Friday before embraced Palestinian Liberation
wants .the week before the Demo- Momale rues to·Lake Tahoe, Caut•• Organlzatlon Leader Yasir Arafat
clltdor of llle Mel&amp;ll c..mt:v
&amp;at!c
National Convention that Is for the weekend.
several years ago. Jackson's widely
llolrd of · · - - by Map
Clerk al e-ta Lur.r 11111 oer
sure'to IXIIIInate him.
· Despite criticism from · some description of New York a» "hymie- .
'l'lleldq. Mra. ....... 10
Jackson said Mondale was ,bow· Democrats that his process o!
town" and his association With
"''lppDJe Gillie.....,. al Ill ....
ing to. pressure tn:m the Jewish selecting a nmntng mate has
Aug. 8 In U.S. District Court In
Black Muslim Minister Louts
cmununltylnnotlntervlewlnghim damaged him polltlcaJzy, Mondale
w~ D.c., seeks to force
lllr llle .... ,_., replarakhan - who has disparaged
cel
Ftucea
'111111wbo
,
.
forthenlilnlngmate'sslot.
said, "I'm doing exactly right and
reductloos In lnlenlate and lntema·
Judlasm In pubilc speeches - also
....... fnm llle ........ pal&amp;.
.· Sen.DaleBwnpersofArkansas,a I'm going to be in a far better
tiOIIal air pollutkln.
have damaged Jackson's relaJ1ons
never-Interviewed
but often· pasltlon to piCk the best n&lt;:mlnee."
''But abDul1 the EPA !pore our
Do.. Jw of u.e 111t1e J - with Jews.
.,.,... II • ol r.aaoJ,
mentioned candidate tor the Mon·
Jackson met with aides In
toottiiW, and IIIJuld Colwr• not
Jackson said In a statement late
Mn. . . . . . . . . . d,
dale ticket, said he notlfll!d Mondale • Waslllngton. but In an Interview Tuesday that he met Monday With
maet Ita obllptlatlltodeal with the
with the Los Angeles Times, hesald Judy Goldsmith, president of the
thathedldDOtwtsbtobeconsldered.
acid rain prdllem, we cannot rule . 'David, ad lllelr .... 'I 7
Aprl, a ...... a&amp; Melp lllP
Hart unveiled the.beglnolneof his . Momale lsn'tserklusly Interested In . National Organization for Women,
out the prwlhility ~ ilwUtl
own list of possible running mates, a black running mate, Offering as and Kathy Wllson, president of !he
brOulbl •Pintt 1be act11111 aources llciiDIIIIi . . fal, IIIII ~aim, 10
11116
..
k
at
Melp.JIIIIIar
Including Mondale and former
proof tllat he blmaelf had not been
oracldralo-tbeblapowerplalltaln .
National Women's Political Caucus.
liP
..........
fall,
Nilldeat
. Texal Rep. Barbara J~ Olllt.
Interviewed.
the Mldwat," be lllld In a news
He said they "came away cominltHe said It WDUid be ''nr«iseo9e" tu
Mondale has interviewed two ted to purs_ulng a mutual henetfclal
l'jllt ... frclnlliaallce.
. D will. A - p t * o f
ncmlnate • wunan merely to lEek
b~ during his search for a
IIIJt •I ... Mn.
. Acid ralo Ia llie !IIIJII! atven tu the
strategy for · the rainbow coanu&lt;in
political aclvUtqe, adcllng that he running mate, Los Angeles Mayor and their organtzatlons, tnclud!,ng
ll,llll-llltlf mouawt Clf pollutlllti · .lddli - - - • • .... .
C lt&amp;-lllii!Jbadwla;w.
would cywwJrtw II!'VI!I'III. women ~ Tool Bradley and Phlladelphla women of all races."
IUChu~c'ln•He.
·
a

Mondale finds little party harmony

State considers filing
acid ram lawsuits .
aoveroment.

,

·

his call for a woman vice preslden·
t1a1 cal1dldate with the appointment
of a seventh woman to his own
cahlllet
·
1
~ n-lay, he named Patricia
K. Barry Of suburban Gl'aiXIvlew
Helihts as director Of the Depart.
mentor Public Welfate, succeeding
Jo1m Cuddy, who resigned under
pre8IIUI'e last month.
Ms. Barry, 43, has been deputy
director for Medicaid admlnlstra·
tton, a job In which she seM!d well,
Celeste said.
•
"I thiDk she wtU bring ~ same
strona and dedlcatedJeadershlp as
director, .. he added.
After swearing her Into office,
. Celeste called attention to the ~
that he IIOW has seven womellln his
· cabinet, tnore tl1an any PledeceB·
SOl', at least In recent history.
.He said Ma. Bany "will be the

HARTFORD, Cain. (AP) _ Cwna:tiL'IIt would cullldei l1llnli
bli MJcl;;atEm power planta If the
. . Yl!derll
and
· ~pore the atall!'a CtllttiiW about

Phone ............................,.................

Dare of Birr~ .. .. ........................................,....... ,............... 19........ .

•

•
&gt;

Allen PhiiUpi
Bill and Marina Phillips
Rt. 3, Box 643
Bidwell, Ohio

.•

A maniagedlssolutlonactlonwas
filed In Meigs County Conunon issued In Meigs County Probate
Pleas Court. Edith A. Pickens and . Court to Wayne Laben Wllllams, 33,
Freddy K. Pickens, both of Middle- and Julla,Ann Simpkins, 21, both ci .
Middleport.
port, flied to end their marriage.
•

.·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -GOv.
Richard Celeste has underscored

She was preceded In &lt;Ieath by her
parents, a brother, a sister and a
grane!SOJJ.
Friends may .c all at White
Funeral Home In Coolville after 2
p.m. Wedriesday. Funeral seivlces
wtllbeThursdayinthefuneralhome
at 10: ~ a.m., with the Rev. BWy
Murphy orricattng. Burtal wtU be In
CoolviUe Cemetery.

· Admissions .:.. Thomas Lambert,
Vinton; Clarence Hayman, Racine;
Earl Schuler, Raclnl'.
•·
Dlscliarglos - Brandl Fortune,
Clfra Smith, and Kenneth Keesee.

..

Woman appointed .welf~e director

dows,IU.

Veterans Memorial

Family. medicine•••Page 6

•

Doris Lee of Clifton, W.Va., and , .
Shirley Ann Morris or RuUand; L'l
grandchildren, nine great·
grandchlldren and three nieces,
BettY Ruth Carpenter or Athens,
Katty Hoisington of Athens, Mary
Francis Highberg of Roillns Mea·

Emergency calls ans~ered

.

1111'0

Easement ·cancellation discussed

Area deaths

Car fire

'•

are

PRICE INCLUDES
COMPLETE INSTALATION

,--~--------------------~---------------------------'=··~----------------------------~ -

Seven Monday night and early unit tranlported Alice Plantz frOm
Tuesday morning calls for assist· her Kingsbury Road hon1e . to
ance were answered by units of the Veterans, and a111: 58.a.m. PomeMeigs County Emergency Medical
roy unit took Leland Saxton tromhis
Service.
Nye Avenue home to Veterans.
On Monday at 6:'42 p:m. the · Tuesday at 12:59 a .m. the
Pomeroy unit wenf to the Pomeroy
Middleport unit took Dennis Hart to
Health Care Center to transfer
Veterans from Ray Stn&gt;et; at 2: 19,
Edith Burton toVe1eransMemorlal
thePomeroyunitwenttoRtvervtew
. Hospital; at 9:08p.m. the Syracuse
for Dan Staats who was taken to
unit went to Morning Star for Earl
Veterans; and at 2: 35 a.m. the
Schuler who was also taken to
Racine squad transported . Eula
Veterans; at 9:52p.m. the Pomeroy
Strauss from Hill Road to Veterans.

-

Preselittuheartestlmonyfroql16

8' SPUN ALUMINUM DISH

ol

reports vandalized maublixes.
Shirley Jones; Dark Hollow ~d.

All-Stars wrapup•.•Page 3

..., willa Malib' ......, ..,._
dlt,y...... lUI. a.oe oii'UI.

persons representing food stamp
and welfare reclplenta, concerned

MESH DISH

· Highest 81cture quality
come$ with rake 324 Receiver
$2650°0

Break-in under investigation

The

.

.~ dauQ ....... Mill wldelf
.,..,,, ed elg ..... IDd 'h"l rr
lltcima Low . . up&amp; mill-

?:"

Pta •oeroy.

Considered top of. the line.

lett Gene IUas. vice pr 1lht; BID....._., I* au •: bllck, Tom
Jlowen, dln!dGr; BID lllowel-, ~eereW'y; RG&amp;er.~doo, ouiJI)Ing
president 111111 dlrectiJr, and Lee McCAJmas, treasurer.

Department.

Mary J . Davis, 83, Rutland, died
Monday In Holzer Medical Center,
Gaillpolls, following an extended
Illness.
MrS. Davis, fonnerlyofCoolvme,
was horn In Albany to Wiillam and
Clara Rickey Williams.
S!Je was a member of the Meigs
County Senior Citizens of Pomeroy.
She was· formerly employed as a ·
telephone opera tor by the Berry
Hotel, Athens.
She is survived by two sons, Dave
Lewis of Little Hock~. and Bill
Davis of Marietta; two daughters,

By ..............ttaa-&amp;.1.
a 'llele ... ~ ...... ~a.u ·
Clmlee-TV .............
EOoan-"h ..................
I
~~ .................ttaa-M

·tlon was p~ted tu , the Ohio
Sena~ Hunger 'l'aslt Force at a
public hearing Tuesday attemoonat
the Senior Citizens Center In

Specials

Systems

Wingett on Burford•••Page 2

Weather

...,

Carleton
8chedule meeting

A SaturoaY JIIOI'I$g breaking
and entering on DeWitt's Run near
Long Bottml Is being Investigated
by the' Meigs County Sheriff's

Mary J, Davis

Inside today:

.,., .

c::oaareu

. liCid 1'1111. ltate Attorney Gelleral
Joli!plll..lebemiiiiiiYB.

.

Lilllermln~thesasenrrent

'I'IJadiY atter retum1n1
Mlin1l)'

from a

l1ll!l!tlnl WWl attorniYI

eeaenJ and

li!jll I ilatlvai from
-oilier Northelatem atatelto
~PUll- on tbelr laWIUit •
api!JII the u.s. Envlnllmefttal
PIOIIIiCUIIII AIM"')'.
'Ibe 1!111, ICbeduJed tube beard

Far-

I

Faa••

,.

'&lt;

•

...

l1

'

•

'.
•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="168">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2758">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="42298">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="42297">
              <text>July 10, 1984</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="299">
      <name>davis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="305">
      <name>williams</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
