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                  <text>. Page- 10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

----Localbrieh:---- Bush...

Inside today:

I

Continued from Page 1

June another busy month

lions tba t led to the letter Reagan
signed Satunlay morning, temporar!ly transferrlpg presidential
power to Bush.
And although Bush Wled In tor
\ ~agan at ceremonial situations,
)U;e a diplomatic reception at the
White House, Regan was the one
who sat in during the consultations
with doctors Monday In which the
.cancerouniature of the tumor was
divulged to the Reagans. .
Bush, who canceled a twcHlay trip
to Missouri and Ohio today to
remain on hand, was not told of the
development before a nationally
televised news conference.
Regan ls a candid executive who
has no trouble maktngdeclslonsand
easing officials out of Jobs in which
he feels they are not excelling. It was
Regan who showed former Lahor
Secreta~y Raymond Donovan the
door after Donova'n's lndlctn)ent on
charges of fraud .

June proved to he a nother busy month for Meigs County's .
e mergency units will 204 runs heing made, Bob Byer, adminisira tor
of the county's em ergency medlcal services reports.
There were 152 ~ns by the local units in addition to 52 runs by the
transfer units. Calls a nswered by the community units Include
Pomeroy, 47; Racine, 15; Syracuse, 10; Rutland , 25; Tuppers Plains,
16, a nd Middleport, 39. All vehicles were drive n 6,477.8 miles during
the month, an average of 31.75 per run.
Among the 132 patients transported by units during tne month, 84
patients went to Ve terans Memoria l; 331 to'Holzer Medical Center;
three to Pleasant Valley and 14 to other hospita ls.

Squads makeJour runs Monday
Four calls were answered by local units on Monday , the Meigs
Coun ty Emergency Me tical Services reports.
At 2: 05a. m ., th e Racine Unit went to Road 9 for Goldie Smith, to
Vetera ns Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 11:39 a .m. went to the New
Lima Road for Ida White, to Veterans Memorial; Racine at 11:55
a .m ·. took Kenne r Walbrown from · Portland to Holzer Medical
Center, and · at 1:40 p.m ., the Middleport Fire DepartnJent
extingu isht"&lt;l a car fi re a t the Village Manor ApartnJents.

.Area deaths
HeriK~rt

Herbert Gilkey, 67, of 336 Broadway, Middleport , died Sunday

surgeries.
Funeral arrangements are being
handled by Ewing Funera l Home.

morning at hom e.

Born Oct. 31, 1917on Gilkey Ridge
in Meigs County, he was a son of
Emmett a and Alta Wilson Gilkey.
A retired Middleport Chief of
Police, he was a charter m ember of
the F rate rnal Order of Police, a past
m ember of the Middle port Fire
Departm e nt, a nd a member of Hie
Middleport First Baptist Church.
Survl\rors include his wife, Eliza·
beth Ann (Betty) Gilkey, a t home;
three da ughters, Shirley Kish·
ba ugh, Columbus, Mildred Nash
. and Anna Mae Ellis, both of
Middleport; a stepson a nd his wife,
Jeff a nd Kil ty Darst , Middleport ;
eight gr andchildren; four brothers,
Leona rd , Roscoe and J ack Gilkey,
all of Athens, and Wa llace Gilkey,
Wilkesville ; three sister s, Ka thleen
Ellis. Gloust er. Bla nc he Dille and
Bahe F e ll, both of Lo~an; several
nieces.

LatTy Rood
Lai·ry E. Rood, 36, of 8th St. ,
Parkersburg, W.Va., died Sunday
evening In Parkersburg.
Born in Parkersburg, Mr. Rood
ha d been emplayed by the Visco
Corp. and later became a construe·
tion worker. He had attended the
Gospel Temple Church in Belpre.
Smvivors include his wife, Rosa
Rood, Parkersburg; five children,
Rhonda, Larry, Jr. and Robin, at
home; Brenda and Bonnie, Okla~
homa; two step-children, Bllly and
Tammy, at home; his father and
stepmother, Stanley and Evely'n
Rood, Coolvllle; his mother, Belly
Weekley Rood, Lancaster; a
brother, StevenRood,Coolvllle; five
sist,ers. Karen Perkins, VIrginia
Beach, Va., Barbara Young, Guysville, Unda Hines, Beverly Brown
and Susan Snyder, all of Lancaster;
a step-siste r, Gloria Rood, Coolville;
a ma ternal grandmothe r, Lena
Weekley, Parkersburg; several
nieces, nephews, aunts and uncles.
He was preceded In dea th by his
grandpa rents, Charles and Eva
Rood.
Services will be held 1 p.m.
Wednesday al White Fune ral
Home, Coolville, with Rev. Roy
Deeter officiating. Burial wlll he in
Coolville Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral borne Tuesday
fi'Dm 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p .m. and on
Wednesday until the time of
services.

nephews, brot.her s-ln-law

and s isters-in-law.
He was preceded in death by a
bi'Dther Wayne, a n infant brothe r
Ralph a nd two sister s, Ma bel Hogue
and Alpha J effers .
Services will be2 p.m . Wednesday
at Rawling-Coats·Biower Funera l
Home with Rev. Rober t Mille r
officiating. Buria l will be in Burlingha m Cemetery. Friends may
call a t the fun eral home all day
Tuesday with the fa m ily present
from 2,4 p .m. a nd 7-9 p.m .
A m e morial service by the
Middleport Fire Depart.ment will be
conduc ted 7 p.m. Tuesday followed
by a Fraternal Order of P ollee
memorial service.
In lieu of fl owers, the fa mily
req uests donat ions he made to the
Middle por t Fire Depa rtme nt.

Sports

Meigs County received $53,870.34
as its share of local government
money of $40,135,453.47 distributed
for July In Ohio, according to State
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson.

e
BIG CATCH- JefJ Morris, Pomeroy and hisflshlng
buddies landed the biggest caleb ol the season, a
fllO.pound, 3 loot, two-Inch long Blue Marlin at the
Oregon Inlet Flshln11: Center. Pictured with the catch

"'

at y

Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
·
Donna Marie Wood, Pomeroy ,
has been granted a divorce. from
EarlL. Wood, Pomeroy, on grounds
of gross neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty.
Batbara Jean Hanis, Middlepor1, has been granted a divorce
from Ben Harris, Columbus, on
Veterans Memorial
grounds of gross neglect of duty.
AdmiSsions - Golda Smith,
Michael C. Huddleston, Pomeray,
Reedsville; Beverly Spires, Chehas been granted a divorce from
shire; Ida White, Rutland; Grace
Gladys Sue Huddleston, Miners·
Welker, Racine.
ville, on grounds of gross neglect of
Discharges- Hazel Combs.
. dutyandextremecru!,&gt;lly.
Joanne Edith Musulin, Coolville,
has been granted a divorce from
John Nicholas Musulin , Espyville,
By United Press lnlemattonal
Pa., on grounds of gross negk-ct of
Part ly cloudy today, with highs duty.
between 80 and 85. Clear tonight,
with a low near 60. Sunny WednesJoseph
King,
Pomeroy,
against
A divorce
action
filed by Edward
day , with high temperatures bePamela Sue King, Albany, has been
tween 80 and 85.
dismissed by the court.
The probablllty of precipitation is
20 percent today and near zero
tonight and Wednesday.
Funds distributed
Winds will be from the northwest
near 10 mph today and light and
Meigs County received $20,966.65
variable tonight .
and each township fa the county
Ohio Extended Forecast- Thursreceived $752.63 as their part of I h~
day through Saturday.
July distribution of $1,959,853.$ of
Fair Thursday and Friday, with a
the revenue collected in Ohio from
chance of showers and thunderthe state's five cents per gallon
storms Satunlay. Highs will he In
gasoline tax. State Auditor T homas
the 80s each day. with overnight
E. Ferguson reports.
lows in the 60s.

The Southern Local School Dis;
trict Board of Education wlllmeet In
regular session at 7:30 this evening
at the high schooL

The Meigs County Democratic
Executive Committee wit! meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Carpenters Hall, East Main St.,
Pomeroy. All.Interested democrats
are invited toatlend,HenryHunter,
chairman, announced.

A judgment of $4673.81 has been
granted in Meigs ·count y Common
Pleas Court to Da le Kautz. doing
-business as Chester Agri Service, .
Pomeroy, from Dan Smi th, Racine.
Also in Meigs County, a foreclosureactionforpropertyinSalisbury

Hospital news

Township has been filed by James
Stewart , Pomeroy, agai nst P .M .A.
Enterprises, Pomeroy.

Lottery winning
numbers: 100,4367

Damages were estimated at

•

MEIGS COUNTY.

Marriage licenses

DOG POUND

M~n·ia ge licenses have been
issued in Meigs County Pmbal e
Court to Richard Alle n J ohnson, 25,
a n(! Ca therine Louise BLaettna r 24
and Linden Edwa rd Dunn. 24. ~nd
Metlnda Rea Thom as. 21, all of

?
•

r•P=o:m:e:ro~y:.========~~~~~=~~~~~~~

SUMMER CLOTHING
.
CLEARANCE
.

ELERFELDS
POMEROY

IN OUR NEW POMEROY LOCATION AT

TuOsdaY

Ave., Pomeroy, lor two and one-half hours
with damages amounting to an estimated $20,000.

'

PRODUCE

FAMILY REST AU RANT~
JULY 17TH

WHITE SWEET

With this coupon anti
the purchase of 5 lbs.
of tomatoes at the regular price, receive a.
dozen of White Sweet
Corn at this low price.

From United Press
manage r ofthe bill and chairman of
OVP staU Re~~Grts
the House Appropriat a tions subA $15.3 billion energy. a nd wat e r
committee on energy and water
appropriations bill - which in·
developme nt. said passage of the
eludes start-up funds for the
bill in record time sets a good
proposed UlO milljQn Gallipolis example for the later bills.
Locks and Dam mnsll1lction a nd
The easy passage came because
renovation p roJect - ha s won easy
hoth sides of the aisle r·ecognized
House approval in a vote that could ·tha t i1 was helow the president's
set a patte rn for future spending
budget , below cu rrent spending
bills.
levels a nd in line with the HouseThe bill , passed by voiceyote after passed budge t resolution, he said .
just three hours of de bat e Tuesday,
Speaker Thomas O'Neill earlier
was the first of 13 a ppro priations In the day had pledged that the
• acted on by the appropriation would remain under
measures due to be
House this year.
A spokesperson for lOth District
Congressman Clare nce ' Miller's,
RLancaste~. office said th is mornA Meigs Count y Gra nd Jury
ing that while the Ga llipolis pmject
a t9 : 30 a .m . Wednesday to
convened
is not listed ijllhe bill as a line item . it
evidence
ln a case involving the
hear
is included among 62 projects
h
ofDouglasA.
Rosenbaum, 27,
deat
\ itemized for stari·up.
whO
died
Monday
after
an apparent
The congressional spokesperson
hea
ling
early
last
Sunday
morning.
said $!00 mllllon was Included in the
Tracy
Franklin
Hysell,
21, has
·appropriations bill forlhe start-upof
been charged with murder in
the various pmjects.
Energy and water bills - lagged co nnection with Rosenbaum's
dea th . Forty-two witnesses were
" pork barrel" by their critics subpoenaed to give testimony
have sparked days of deba te in pa st
years, but only a handfu l of minor lx'fore the grand jury rela ting Io the
amendments were offered on the. incident i1 was reported.
A complaint against Hysell was
1986 bill.
.
filed
Tuesday mor ning in Meigs
Rep. Tom Bevill . D·llla., floor

the House budget targe t.
The 'Hou se and Sena te have not
yet agreed on a budget ta rget for the
year, but O'Neill said pending such
an a greemen t the House would ·
hegln work on the approriations bills
using the House target , which would
reduce the projected 1986 deficit by
$56 billion.
The $15.3 billion energy and wa ter
bill provides funds for the water
resources programs of the Army
Corps of Engineers, the Interior
Depa rtment's Burea u of Reclama . Continued on page 10

County Court by Meigs County
P rosecuting A!lorney Rick Crow.
Hysell was picked up Tuesday
afternoon by the Meigs County
Sheriffs Dep&amp;11menl at the home of
Carla DeMoss, Rt. 33, Pomeroy,
afte r a wa r rant for his a rrest wa s
issued in county court. Hysell's
address was listed as Syracuse on
·
the officia l complaint .
A spokesman at the · sheriff' s
departme nt sa id Hysell is being held
without hond a t this time. Paul
Gera rd, investiga tor for the pro..Con!inued orr page 10

REGISTER AT ANY OF ·
OF OUR 3 LOCATIONS
DRAWING AT OUR POMEROY LOCATION JULY 21 AT 6:00 P.M.
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

FREE - 2 LITER PEPSI
WITH ANY SMALL, MEDIUM OR LARGE PIZZA

REGULAR PRICE

WHITE SWEET- CORN

$1 75
J

DOZEN

REGULAR PRICE
5 LB5.

TOMATOES

$300

HURRY, ONLY A LIMITED SUPPLY
OF CORN AVAILABLE (200 DOZEN)
EACH DAY

OFFER GOOD AT ALL 3

~OCATIONS

HOT SUBS

LASAGNA '&amp; SPAGHETTI DINNERS 3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU
ANTIPASTA· SALADS
Main Street-Rutland-742-2089 PLUS A COMPLETE MENU.
St. Rt. 124-Syracuse-992-7287
FOR LUNCH &amp; DINNER
Main St.-Pomeroy-992-6648
DINING lOOM AVAILABLE
FOR PARnES
WE DON1 DEl/YER. BUT WE NAI&lt;E THEM BETTER. PICK ONE UP AND .SAVE

'

goodnight
WASHINGTON (UP[). - "This is
Christmas in July," P res!Qent
Reagan said today after spending
his " best night ever" in the hospita l
after the removal of his cancerous
tumor, a While House spokesma n
Continued on page 10

.THIS. unidentified Pomeroy flrcmoo prepares lo place hose into
upstairs window of the IWnnie Casro home during Tuesday's fire whlcli
caused an esttmak'll $20,000 dwnoged.

Report sabotage, harassment:
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Roving
bands of club-wielding men a re
blamed for several incidents of
sabotage and harassment against
the strikebound Columbu s &amp; South·
ern Ohio Electric Co. this week.
The incidents have delayed resto-

ration ofseJVice to many customers
affected by severe stmms ear lier
Ihis week. And the harassment has
forced the utllity to ~ly on
telephones to dispatch emergency
crews in onler to avoid evesdrllp-

ping on the company' s two-way
radio transmissions.
Today is thethirddayofthe strike
by the International Brotherhood of
Electrical Workers Locall466. The
union members do mostly repair

and line work .
ln one of a bout six incidents
'fuesday. a truck load of people
appeared at an east sidercpair site
and told the C&amp;SOE supervisors
working at the location to leave. The
workers com plied , compa ny offi·
cia ls said.
Company spokesmen sa irl supervisors worki ng at "'flvl'orsb:" ot her

locations In Columbus wer~ also
subjec ted to threa ts a nd "catcalls."
Although police officers were dis·
patc hed to two locations, no atTests
were reported .
" We. will la ke legal action if we
identify a ny of those people as
striking employes ," said Ma rllhall
J uli e n, ma nager of puUllc affairs for

C&amp;SOE.
P ower was disrupted to a bout
2,&amp;Xl C&amp;SOE cus tomers e arly
Tuesday when Jocks were cut and

swit ches were opened on circuits in
southwest Fra nklin County. Utlllty
officials said the sa hot age was done
by someone we,jj acquainted with
the C&amp;SOE sywrm .
·
The compa ny , which has 470,00J
customers In cent ral Ohio, was
struc k when Its contract with the ·
Interna tional Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local1466expired at
m idnight Sunday.
Union members rejected a threeyear contract proposal la st Friday.
The company has said that proposal
tContinucd on pagt• 14)

June income up ·0.5 percent

FREE DRAWINGS

CORN

S1 25 DOZEN

shuck the home of Mr. and Mrs.
·Ronnie Casto, 410 Spring Ave ..
- Pomeroy , early Tuesday evening.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles
L.egar said Mrs. Casto's mother,
Audria Arnold, was at home alone
when the fire started. Ill, she was in
bed and awoke to find the house full
of smoke. Oxygen which Mrs.
Arnold requires in treatment lor her
illness probably fed the fire, Chief
Legar said. Neighbors took Mrs.
Arnold from the home. However, it
was believed that her small {jog
might have died In the flre.
The front portion of the home and
the attic was gutted by the blaze and
there were smoke and water
damages to the rear of the story and
one-half home. Firemen were able
to keep the blaze contained to the
Casto residence. Two other nearby
homes would have been seriously
threatened, however, had firemen
been unable to keep the fire
contained to tbe interior of the Casto
home. Chief Legar reports .
Firemen answered a call to the
scene at 4: 04 p.m. and were there
until about ·6: 30. There ls some
Insurance coverage Chief Legar
reports.

OK ·water bill without debate Reagan has

Jury hears testimony in case

·MITCH'S

25 Centa

$20,000 at the result of a fire which

r===;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;===;;
II

992-6417

CORNER OF VILLAGE PHARMACY PARKING OT
IN MIDDLEPORT

enttne

Casto
home
hit by.
blaze

Pomeroy urea; Capt. Steve Daniel&lt;;, ship caplaln, and
Chuck Mosely, lmc&gt;cllng.

Southern board meets '

105 EAST SECOND
ABOVE BANK ONE IN POMEROY

•

2 Sectio~s. f4 Pages

are, ltor,GaryShlfler, ThadToal, BillJackson,Butdl

actions
Sum granted
To meet Thursday .Divorce
Several marriages have ended In ·

OFFICE HOURS~-12 NOON
1:Oif-4:30
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY

Exhibit ndes...

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Dean, Jeff Monis and Larry Banks, both ol the

AnORNEY -AT -LAW

Doug las A. Rosenbaum, 27 , of
Hysell Run Road, Pomeroy. died
Monday afternoon a t Gra nt Hospi·
tal, Columbus.
Rosenbaum was ta ken to Grant
Hospi tal via Lilcflighl on Sunday,
J uly 7, following an alleged assault
in which he received hC'ad inju ries at

'

Vol.35;

D. MICHAEL MULLEN

D..A. Rosenbaum

•

Meigs County area happenings ...__ _ _ _~

Weather report

Page 3, 4

.

P~~pa

July distribution

a party being held at the home of
J oanne Wears.
He has since undergone several

Gilkey

By the Bend __l'ages ~. 7, 8
Classlfteds _ Pages 10, 11, 12
Comics-TV
Pagel3
Deaths
Page 14
Editorial
Page 2

Beat of the Bend
. ...

PEPPERS PICKED, P ACKED - 'l1re crop of
green peppers at the Don Richard Hill F annin Letart
Fallo ill good 1111thlslann wagonloadolsome40bushels
picked Tueeday Indicates despite la&lt;it Wecblesd~'s
heavy ~ which· wiped out ahout 211,000 tomato

plants and 5,000 pep]lf'r plo ,,
(11C urn fann .
Workers a1 the !ann Tuesday packed 600 baskets of
lomales and sent them to market before getting Into
the picking and pacldnr ol peppel'll of 200 bushels of
peppers In tbe aftemoon.

By DENIS G. GULINO
United.Press lntemadonal
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - HousIng ~tarts Inched up 1.9 percent In
June while personal Income and
spending Increased a moderate
amount , government economls.t s
said today.
The improvement in housing
starts was a weak rebound from
May's 1~.45 percent decline and took
the annual rate of starts to 1.705
million , 7 percent below the level a
year earlier.
Personal income rose 0.5 percent
in June, the same amount It had
fallen In May. But after-tax ." takehome" pay plummeted 2.2 percent,
the biggest dec tine In 10 years.
The dramatic dectine was a result
of the unusual boost in Income In
previous months from late Income
tax refUnds. Had those refUnd s not
swollen Aprll and May d isposa ble
lncoine, the June figure would have
been positive instead of negative,
the Bureau of Economic Analysis

sa~~rsonal

SJX'nd lng wa s up O.G
percent in .June , the same as in May.
but half the increase in April .

ty pi ca l of Ihe lackluster pace for the
entire economy in the past year.
The personal income report
provided some of the final ingre. With disposa ble income declini ng d lents necessa ry for the gove rnand spending m oderately strong,
menl's r·eport ·Thursd ay on the
the a mount counted by the gov;;n- , -·second-quarter growth i~ the gross
national product .
m ent as sa~lngs plunged. l~e
savings rate slipped lo3.9 percent ut
J une. the lowest in a year, from I he
The preliminary " flash" report on
6.5 percent In May.
GNP saw a :u percent·e xpanslon, 10
New starts for single fa m ily
limes the nearly imperceptible 0.3
houses dropped 1.34 percent in June
percent growth in the first qual1er.
while those for mui1H amlly apa rt·
But since the te ntative estimate
me nts rose 7.28 percent,
was Issued both trade and Inventory
Building permits also dropped In figures came in that appeareq to
June, by 3.7 percent after going up
subtract from the growth figure,
4.3 percent the month before.
leading some analysts to expect the
The new figures on housing first formal report Thursday to
showed no seve re deter:toralion show a weaker result .
from wha t has been a fa irly heallhy
The Federa 1Reserve Boanl today
pertormance ln recent months,
1'pol'l cd it s own PConomic oullook tO
suppor tl?d by IO\V(Ir rat&lt;'~ fnr
Congress, seeing a mild pickup later
construction loans and mortgag:rs.
T he personal incomefigureswere this year and next year with small
in the middle ground between Jmprov!'fllent s In the unemploystrength and weakness , more me nt rate.

�-· ·--

.
·-·~~-~---------·

_____,__
Wednesday, July 17, 1985

•,

Comment

Page-2-The Daily

Record Minneapolis ci-Owd ·views NL victory

SAI~tin81

Pomeroy-Middlepott, Ohio
17 1986

.

DEVOTED TO THE I!'ITERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

~lb
rs:m~
~v

'

.

f'"'T""L-.-L.-.,.-. ~ =~~

.

ROBERT L. W1NGETI'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General.Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
. News Editor
LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. AIIIEitten ar(' subject to editing and must be signed with name, address and
tE&gt;lephonE' number . No unsigned lett er s will' be published. Lrners should be In
g-ood ta stt&gt;, addr('sslng Issues. not personalities.

innocent, and b) that in any event
Mario Cuomo~ governor of New matters he was tough as naUs on poses executing crlminais is a
they had served more ume than
murderer.
Gov.
Cuomo
takes
pen
in
York and leading candld,ate for the . criminals, and anyway, if · the
most
convicted murderers about
hand
and
writes
a
letter
to
the
Democratic . nomination for presl· Republicans wanted to, they could
whom
there was never any doubt as
Albany
newspaper.
Protesting
so
dent.ln 1988, has a great deal to overrtde a gubernatorial veto of a
to
their
guilt.
gross
a
violation
of
defensible
learn about such mundane matters death penalty bill, so that they, 1
Bleeding
hearts? Not all of them,
as domestic and foreign&lt;'JlOlicies really, were the hypocrites. Fatr polemical standards? No. Congrat·
because
one·
such partisan was, no
ulating
the
cartoonist.
appropriate to a free P&lt;!Qple, but enough, I ventilated his
less,
Tough-As-Nails
Mario. Yes, as
Marto Cuomo IS a man of great
forget that lor a bit Think Cuorri'o at ciartfication.
iieu.tenant
governor
of New York
another level, a personal level, it
But last week hiS sensitivity to personal political courage?
under
Hugh
Carey
he wrote a
A fortnight ago, The Newsday
being the pllght of public figures criticism was once again revealed
strong
letter
to
the
governor's
who seek authortty over us to to be very much more polished than Magazine publiShed a lengthy story
executlve
clemency
bureau
recom··
subject ther_nseives toextraPolltical his respect for other people's on convicted murderers Gary
mending clemency lor the prisonscrutiny.
immunities to unfair practioes. McGivern and Charles Culhane,
ers.
One can lrnagine the enthuSi·
who
have
spent
17
years
in
prison.
Point one: He is a man very Columnist Joseph Sobran, durtng
asm
with whlch their friends
They
didn't
shoot
the
shertlf,
who
.
sensitive to criticism. During his the Bitbutg business, wrote several
worked
lor Cuomo's election. ex·
was
seated
in
the
front
seat,
ca mpaign for governor (19ll2). he spirtted cojumns arguing the cor·
pectlng
that
the clemency Lt. Gov.
escorting
them
to
a
bearing
in
reached m~ over the telephone to rectness of the course taken by
Cuomo
"'?
ardently
recommended
Westchester,
N.Y.
A
third
prisoner
argue with an opinion given in this Ronald Reagan. A cartoonist for an
!n
1!ll2
would
be
granted
by Gov.
space that Candidate Cuomo was Albany, N.Y.,ne"ispaperretatiated did, who was in turn sbot and killed
CU'!lJIO
in
1983.
soft on crime as witness his by producing a cartoon in which by the sheriff. But the state charged
!!:"xcept that what then happened
dogmatic insiStence that the death Sobran appears ln a Nazi uniform. collusion, convinced two Julies (the
was
- not hlng. Cuomo will answer
The proposition that anyone who ' first jury was split), but piled up so
penalty should not be reimposed in
your letter 11 you write him about
New York. His point was that only supported Reagan's viSit to Bit burg much confusion that in due course
Chinese Checkers. The only way to
in thlsrespectwasheidentifiabieon · is a Nazr is tfle equivalent of the an adamant group of people
guarantee not to her from Cuomo is
what might be called the side of the
proposition that anyone who op- became convinced a ) that McGiv·
to write and ask him why he hasn't
ern and Culhane · were in fact
progressives, that in all other
acted on his own recommendation
(Uti95" \'!)~ wom ~-"lftfQ!AM-.­
respecting McGivern and Culhane.
The
reporter for Newsday conIoiUI.Me ~
cludes,
in [lis 5,00J-word essay on
HEA
the question, "Those who support
McGovern wonder whether Mario
Cuomo, who wants so much to be
known as a politician who takes on
the tough issues, really has the
political will to do sOmething he.has
so publicly described as the right
thlng to do."
The current · Issue of National
Review reminds us that it was
Cuomo who urged Geraldine Fer·
raro in San Francisco to raise
publicly the question whether President Reagan was a good Chrtstian
(how can any Republican be a good
Chr'istian? being the implied line of
argument). Mayor Koch insists It
was Mr. Cu 0mo. in their primary
campaign. who instigated the
· subterranean, and subversive, slogan, "Vote for Cuomo. not the
Homo," inviting unwarranted Infer·
ences from Koch's bachelorhood.
What it ali adds up to IS that we
are all obliged, in the months to
• come, not only to listen to Mario
Cuomo, but also to observe Mario
· "Compliments of the party over there - they sent yo~ their check."
Cuomo.

.

WASHINGTON- There are new
developments on the psyc,hic·
warfare front: The Soviets are
outspending us by at least 70 to one
in occult research.
Most responsible scientiSts take a
dim view of such self-proclaimed
parapsycllological practitioners as
mind readers, voodoo pin-stickers
a nd psychic spoon-benders.
We've reported in the past on
such obviously ludicrous concepts
as the "anti-missile time-warp
machine." The Pentagon once
considered developing this contrap·
tion to blast incoming missiles back
into a prehistoric era. where they
would theoretically harm only a
few dinosaurs or Cro-Magnons.
For years the Pentagon psychic
warriors were allowed to pursue
any nutty wili-o'·the·wisp that flew
by, with annual budgets reportedly
as high as $6 million. No weapons
With more laws and regulations
hands that will be feeding and · were ever developed - of course being passed by our lawmakers in
providing lor these people, if
Columbus. 1 wonder II they have
disaster should st rtke.
ever stopped To consider that if they
I for one WILL NOT be too
Ioree operations of coal mining and
receptive to open my doors to
The great historians Charles and
oil and gas well drilling to shutdown
"wolves dressed in sheep's doin S.E. Ohio. what will hapen to
thing." Nor will I feel much like Mary Beard, when asked if they
had learned any single overrtding
them if and when this country
shartng with those who have used
lesson
from the study of history,
comes under attack " via" nuclear
their "poUtical clout" to put me out
"It gets darkest just before
replied:
war? Correct me Ill am wrong but I
of work and out of business.
the
stars
come out.''
believe awh ile back that S.E. Ohio
When push comes to shove, it's
If
this
Is a valid observation,
was designatt'd as the area to
high time we residents and business
perhaps
the
time Is a t hand for a
"furnish shet(er lor Columbus and
people in Southeastern Ohio wake
fundamental
step toward peace in
surrounding areas. if the people
up and realize that all the "pushlng
the
Middle
·
East
It is difficult to
living in this area are forced to
and shoving" of our income and
imagine
a
darker
time
in the long
loca te elsewhere. due to lack of
jobs is being "pushed and shoved"
hlstory
of
that
.
troubled
region.
• •J9bs, what good will it do the city
away from us by the very people we
Suffering
little
Lebanon
is
lipped
• people to come. if there is nobody
helped elect Into office at the Capitol
and bleeding from its own bltt~r
here? With a il these new laws being
In Columbus.
internal strife - aggravatro by a
passed. which affects us bere in
If the People Uving In Southeast
bloody Israeli invasion, presSure
S. E. Ohio. it is making it next to
Ohio sit back and do nothlng and let
from
Syrta, the Palestinian turmoil
impossible for us to remain here
these things happen , just re·
and
the
hostage criSis.
and keep these places of shelter
memher that I told you so on July
Israel
is under tremendous strain
• open for the heavily populated
11. 1985. - Ma~ine Diddle Sellers
from
its
challenged borders and
· areas of the state. It se&lt;;&gt;ms our . Racine , Ohio.
'
from
its
enormous
mUtary outlays,
: lawmakers are trying to bite the
with the accompanying burden of
one of the worst inflation rates In the
world . The Peres coalition govern·
ment badly needs the boost of a
successful initiative to resolve some
of the antagonisms and dangers
:~.: Today IS Wednesday, .J uly 17, the 1~th day of 19115 with 167 to follow.
that confront Israel.
The moon is new.
Iraq and Iran are caught in a
: The morning stars are Venus and Jupiter.
cruel,
draining and seemingly
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn,
endless
ordeal
that must be marked
Those born on this date are under the sign of Cancer. They include
war
weartness
and hunger fo·r an
by
: economist Adam Smith in 1790, mystery writer Erie Stanley Gardner In
end
to
the
killing.
&lt; 1811J; actor James Cagney in 1899 1age86); TV personality Art Linkletter In
Moderate political leaders such
:; 1912 (age 73), comedienne Phyllis Diller in 1917 (age 68). actress-singer
as Hussein In jordan, Mubarak In
:; !)labann Carroll in 1935 (age 50). and actress LucieArnaz in 1951 (age 34).
J;:gypt and the Saudi ruling lamlly
:~
On this date in hlstory:
all have very real and urgent
'
In 19J6, the Spanish Civil War began.
reasons lor alarm over the growing
•• , In I9ffi, Arco, Idabo, a town oll,300 people, became the first community
Maslem fanaticism and the increasill the world to receive aU its Ught and power from atomic energy.
.·
In 1975, three American and two Soviet spacemen linked their orbiting ingly explosive crosscurrents con· ,
vlllsing their region.
·' Apollo and Soyuz spacecraft together lor histortc handshakes and
Syrian President Assad IS a
. ·.expressions of goodwlll, 140 miles above Eartb.
tougb,
opportunistic leader. But,
In 1981. 111 people were killed and :m injured when two suspended .
according
to current reports, he is
walkways collapsed and plunged IQ the gtound floor of the Hyatt Regency
concerned about the kind of danger, hotel in Kansas City, Mo.

~Letter ..to

the editor

It's time to wake up in SEO area!

and now the budget has dwindled to
less than $1 million, for exploration
of potential capabilities of the
human mind.
Meanwhile, the Kremlin has been
working overtime to open a mil·
itary "psycho-gap." The latest
top-secret CIA review of Soviet ·
efforts in parapsychology estimate
that It would take · a budget of
anywhere from $500 million to $1
billion for the United States to play
catch-up. Operating at much lower
labor costs, the Soviets are proba·
bly spending $70 miilion to $!ll
million a year, but possibly as much
as $350 million.
The delightful irony of the
Soviets' parapsychology extravagance is that it began as a response
to the perceived threat of U.S.
progress in the art. Several years
ago, the French reported that U.S.
psychics had communicated with
the nuclear submarine Nautilus via

mental telepathy. This gave Soviet
From there. according to intelli·
scientists the ammunition they gence reports, Soviet scientists
needed to lobby for research funds hope to be able to affect the
- · even though the reports were heartbeat and respiration of tara·
later exposed as a hoax.
way victims, much in the manner of
Western scientists may chuckle, Haitian witch doctors. The Soviets
but the Soviets take their psychic· ·have even clalrned, secretly, that
warfare experiments seriously. In several experiments were success1977 a 'Los Angeles Times reporter lui, with targets nearly suffering
in Moscow was arrested by the heart attacks or suffocation .
KGB and charged with obtaining a
In 1977 a Soviet el1)igre, August
secret state document that re- Stern, told U.S. intelligence agents
vealed the existence of parapsycho- of his work on "psychic energy" in a
logical research a:t several iabora- laboratory at Science City in
tories in the Soviet Union.
Novosibirsk. Siberta. He said 60
The CIA currently estimates that scienlists in Special Department
research Is being conducted in at · No. 8 of the Institute of Automation
least two dozen labs in IO Soviet and Eiectrometry had "unlimited
cities - 14 in Moscow alone. The funds" lor such experiments as
experiments range from "dows· trying to hypnotize people from a
ing" lor minerals and oil to testing distance and giving kitchen electric
"remote psychological monitors" . shocks to see if their mothers
that are supposed to measure the show,ed any reaction three floors
heartbeat and breathing rate of away. The lab was transferred to a
persons thousands of miles away.
KGB facility in Moscow in 1969. he

A Mideast meet --------------------~~~~~~
'
saGeorge McGovern

:~ Today

[

\

in history

ous extremism represented in 'the
seizure of American hostages.
The once feared and militant
PLO under Yassir Arafat is now
among the growing number of
Middle East leaders whose future
depends on a breakthrough toward ·
a resolution of the area's conflicts.
For these and other reasons, now
may be the time wheri we can begin
to hope realistically either for a
comprehensive peace conference
on the Middle East, or at least lor a
series of dialogues on vartous
aspects of the regional crisis.
As the editors of The Nation
concluded in a recent issue: , "For
all the wrong reasons and despite
hard-line opposition from both
sides, · a peace conference on the
Middle East now seems
conceivable."
I came to t!le conclusion long ago .
that if real peace is to be secured in
this area, it must include ail the
significant countries, factions and
interested outside powers. There
cannot be a comprehensive Middle
East se!tlement that excludes the
Palestinians and the Soviet Union.
When former President Jimmy
Carter announced early in his
presidency that the Soviet gnvernme~t was willing to join in Mkl East
talks, he was roundly condemned
by Israeli spokesmen. But the
reality is that the Soviet Union does
have a vital interest in the Middle
East, even as we do, and, to a lesser
but lrnportant extent, as do France
and Britain.
One would hope that at some
stage the United Nations could play
a helptul role In moderating and
policing the ~ddle East cockpit.

But for now it would seem
appropriate for the United States
and the Soviet Union to urge their
respective clients to begin serious
negotiations looking toward an
overall settlement.
The Reagan administration
came to powerfour and a half years
ago with the promise that curbing
terrorism would replace concern

for human rights as the keystone of
its foreign rights. Regrettably,
terrorism has increased during this
period and one looks in vain lor real
progress on the human lights front.
In fact , both human lights and the
effort to reduce terrortsm would be
well-served by a serious and
well-conceived peace confeence on
the Middle East.

mana""'"
Dick Willi~.
....

"In our league, I've seen pitchers - was horrendous .
scored onlyonenmagainsttheNL.
Starter and loser Jack Morris of
who can · absolutely dominate a
baveeasUygonetoOzzieVirgii,Tim This has happened despite a
game. M&lt;istolthem are here and the the Tigers ~e up five hits and two
WaUacl(, Darryl Strawberry or stunning array of homerun sluggers
American League hitters aren't runs in 2 2·3 nings and teammate
in
the
AL,
Why
,
in
Tuesday
night"s
Nolan Ryan . Anyofthemcouldhave
gotten· it and no one could have game the AL had an eighth place even· going to see them au. I don't Dan Petry as even worse, walking
beefed."
think I saw quite the same kind of three and being charged with two
hltter, Carlton Fisk, ·who has hit a
Virgil had a two-run single that major ieague-ieading23homeruns. pitching in the AL, but, of course. I runs in only one-third of an inning.
Willie Hernandez of the TigeJ:$
put the NL ~head 4-1 in the fifth,
But those big hltters are also free have to hit against these guys. Our
·
wasn't so hot elthet:. allowlrig a
pitchers
were
pumped
u·ptotbemax
·
Wallach had a · clutch ground rule swingers and that seems to play
two-run ground rule double to Willle
about
pitchlng
in
thls
game."
double in thilt inning, Strawberry right Into the hands of the NL
McGee
in the ninth Inning th$t
was
the
most
fearsome.
The
Ryan
reached base three t•-es
and pitchers.
uP
sewed
up
the game for the NL.
"The big sluggers in the Ameri· only pitcher ·in baseball history to
scoredtwlceandRyanpltchedthree
"I
went
out and tried to put nine
have struck out 4,00J batters, the
scoreless innings after taking over can League can be pitched to," said
Innings
into
one inning.'' saidPet:rY.
Hoyt. "They have a lot of big . Houston Astros' right -hander
for Hoyt in the fourth.
tried
to
do
too much at one tlrrte
"I
buzzed hls 98-rnlle per hour fastball
It was the overall pitching hoppers who can go deep, but they
Instead
of
taking
the batters oneat&lt;a
under the chins of New York's
mastery of the NL that proved rarely show up in the All-Star Game.
time.
I
realize
that
now, but I reai1y
"They're a bunch of free swingers Rickey Hendcerson and Dave
deciSive, bowev.er. The only run the
didn't
have
time-to
do
so when I
AL scored was unearned. the result wno are vulnerable to certain Winfield and sent them sprawling to
out
there."
the ground. He got himself Into two
of a throwing error by catcher pitches. I'm I)Ot surprised they
Quite ofien, the AL has been at:a
jams but pitched out of them both
didn't hlt &lt;mY home runs. II they
Kennedy in the first Inning.
times and left runners in scoring loss to explain its poor showing in tlie
11 marks the second straight year didn't hit any .off me. I didn 't tblnk
AU-Star Game. Thls time thereasdn
position.
and thlrd Utne in the last lour . they could. get to the other. liUYS. ,
was clear.
"The
key
to
thls
game.
no
doubt
All-Star Games that the AL has
"I know why they won tonight. 'It
about it, was Ryan getting out of
those jams," said Gossage. " Tome, was the way they pitched," said AL
that's where We held the lead to win manager Sparky Anderson. "You
thegame.
· have to go on what you see at that
While the NL pitching was superb, moment. And tonight I thought the
out. Forget Baltimore and Boston at now and Aug. 6. The temptation is to the AL pitching- especially by the (NL) pitching was jul;t
lean on pitchers and veterans who
7'h games.
trto of DetroitTigers who performed outslanding."
·In the AL West, California should might otheiWise receive some rest.
chiU the champagne with a &amp;-game
"There's not much sense in
lead over Oakland. Defendinl&lt;
champ Kansas City won't make resting players," Nettles said.
"You've . got to play your best
up 7'h games.
-In the National LeaguE: East. St. players as much as possible for the
Louis leads New York by 2% and next two (actually three) weeks.' '
Montreal Js alive just 4'h back.
Defending champ Chicago is not
Others disagreed.
!!.!!'£lor at 7'h behind .
"We're not thinking of being in a
. '
-In the NL West, San Diego stands pennant race tthat ends onAug.6),"
the best chance of any defending Si. Louis second baseman Tommy
champ, at a hall-gam&lt;e behind Los Herr said. "If we don't go on strike,
MON., TUES .._ WED., THURS•. &amp; SAT. 9 to 5
Angeles. Cincinnati still has a shot at you would almost let down."
FRIDAY 9:00 to 8:00
4 games out but Houston can forget
Anderson said he plans no
changes in hls managing scyle.
about it at 6¥,i .
Disagreement exists over now
managers will use players between

By MIKE TULLY

UPJ National B""eball Writer
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) - By
· ,presenting the owners with a strike
deadline, the ballplayers have
·created a different pennant race.
Suddenly, Aug. 6looks llke a very
· good date on whlch to be in ![lrst
place.
. II a strike develops, the leaders on
· Aug. 6 could wind up winners 1f the
• .season never resumes, or II a long
·strike is settled in tlrne to play the
playoffs and World Sertes.
'Tm sure they'll try to save the
playoffs and World Series," San
. Diego third. baseman Gralg Nettles
said. "That's wben the owners get
the TV money."
The I98i strike showed bow

was

dilllcult it can be . to predict the
course of the dlSpu(#! and the
resumption of the season. One
lntrlgutngposslbUlty. though, IS that
if the strike IS a long one, officials
may choose to forget the regular
season and enter the post-season
using the lour clubs in first place on
Aug.6.
"They migbt' do that," Detroit
manager Sparky Anderson said.
"That would be fair. Everybody had
the same chance to be there."
With Aug. 6 as .the last day of the
season, the races look this way:
-In the American League East.
the defending division champion
Tigers must overcome a 3~ gam~
lead to catch first-place Toronto.
Surging New York sits 2'h games

HARTLEY

POMEROY, OH.

"We '~e Got The Shoeg I, BoDfl
Fo, You."

:·M eigs Legion _comes from
:behind to edge Athens, 16-l 0
•

ATHENS - Just like Hall of
Farner Yogi Berra once said, 'It's
not over tit" it's over,' the Meigs
American Legion Post 39 came
stonnlng back from a slxth inning
Jfl.2 deficit with 14 runs in their final
three at hats to close out Its regular
season with a 16-10 win over Athens ·
here Tuesday.
•l AthenS, now 7-18 on the year rut
"winners of fiye Its last six games,
·scored aU 10 of its runs in the tliird
inning to take a lfl.l lead. Athens
.scored on three errors, two walkS,
and six singles.
Meigs, now 19-Bontheyear. plated
live runs in the slxth to make it !fl.7.
.scored four more in the seventh lor
an 11-lOlead, and put live insurance
·runs on the board in the eighth. The
game was called alter eight innings
. due to darkness.
Athens out hit Meigs 9-6. but Coach
Jack Welker's crew took advantage
. of 18 walks by lour Athens pitchers.
·· The Athens pitchers, who included
· Strickland, Howard, Malone, and
the lose!' Coles, fannedelgbtbatters.

Phil Balley staried for Meigs and this weekend at Athens.
Meigs and Lancaster, considered
gavewaytoToddHyseUintheslxth.
the two strongest teams in the
Hysell was credited with the win.
seven-team field, play ea~h other in
They fanned five and walked six.
Down 1fl.7. Rod Roush led off the first round action at 11 a.m.
decisive Meigs seventh with a walk, Saturday:
ChriS Kennedy was hit by a pitch.
Derek Barnes walked to load the
bases, Jay Carpenter walked alter Tennis action begins
Roush had carne home on a passed
NEWPORT, R.I. (UP!)- HuNa,
ball to load the . bases again, Scot
Gheen walked to force in another a native of China who defected to the
run, and.Jackle Welker drove in·the United States three years agll,
game-tylngandwinnlngrunswitha breezed by Mary Ann Groat of
double down the leftlield lb)e to bring Canada Tuesday. 6-0. &amp;-0, before
horne two more runs, making it rain halted play in the opening·
11-10.
round of a $150.1XXl women's Tennis
'Barnes and Carpenter had the big ·tournament.
The match was the only one
blows in the five-run Melgseighthas
both drilled back·to-back two'run completed as rain stopped play at
doubles.
·
the Newport Casino, the only grass
Me.lgs hlt~ all toidWere Weiker court tournament on the U.S. tennis
with a single anddouble, Barnes and tour.
Carpenter each a dciuble, and Halley
In rain-delayed matches, No. 5
and Brian Freeman singled once seed Alcyia Moulton of Sacramento,
Calif., and .Lea Antonopolis, Glen·
each.
Meigs and Athens both enter dora, Calif., were tied 5-5 in the first
Eighth District Tournament play set, and Linda Howell of Los Angeles
led Julie Richardson of · New'
Zealand, 6·1, 2·2 in the second set
when rain forced a halt to play.

Scoreboard ...
Transactions

Linescores

a-w

Tur!lll-q'•.U..'fWtlr.Me
NMUonl ..JII . . Olt- U I
Amet'oYI
I It

t• ... -

H~· t, Ryan j fll , Valm7.\IC'IU 171, Rt'ardon
~~~ . (;css&amp;JI:(' t!h and KNII'If'd:t'. VlrJdl tfl,
f\'no1 471: MorriJ;, .,..,_, 1:11, BI,'\' ~'\' Al 1-IJ .SII('b

161. Moore' til . Pt'tl)' 1!11 . HC'fnandw. t91 and
Fisk, W'hltt til. r~an 18L W- Hay!.
·L-Mor rL~ .

Majors
i\MEKI&lt;'AN lEAGUE

By Unlt.rd P"rfttlll~
He!llk
i\1 SW Game Ill._..,...

,...,...,..It

Cokir ,
NamOO Jeff ShM"man mm's ba.~ I«''OOII

NoJtloonlt&gt;, Amrrk'an 1

Colj!:atl' - NamC'd Mk'hiM'I Iluhm:&gt;' mm's

Trxu at [)(&gt;troll , nt~ttJt

Ookland :tl Toronto. niJ&lt;hl
Kans.~:~~ C!ly a l Baltbnorr. nigh!
C;~llfornla at lbton, night SN1Mk'

Mllwuuk("(•, nl~hl
NATIONAL U'AGVE
TuHday'll Hrtatt

Houston- Slgr\('d llfll'bllckl"'' Frank Buc;h
lndliii'IBpolls -

Na11oMI 6, AJ'n(&gt;rlcan 1

SIIVII'd &amp;ormstvt tackk'

Andn• P!OOII'II ol f'ulk&gt;r1on Stat.P.
LA Roms - Slpned runninR back Mllrlon
Mdn!)-1"(&gt; t:A Pltt!'ltlUr~ and of'lt'nSI\'1." t!K'klf'

W~'11Gamet
Nol(llffit"!i~l~

'ftaal'lldQ'II 6MnwM

0\lvalt.,Q\·f' oC [)('LA.,
f
NPw 011£'un ~ - Slgt\('d rorf8bark E:arl
Johnson &lt;af SOOth Carolina.
NY Jt&gt;\s - SIWl('d !l.afE'!y Rlrh Miano of

Chk'~ at san f)-anelsco
Pllt~WrJ&lt;h

at

Fool hoD
Dallas - SI.IZflt'd o!r('llJil\'(' linl.'fllan Man
Moran of Stanford !O a SC'fWS of l·year
rontrac'ls
OmvPr- Sli!Pal three draJI plclt~ : wtdl'
11'('{'1\'cr vantt Jotwoo or Artzooa. tk&gt;fl'tl· ·
slw•l'fld Simon f'lEotcht'r of HouSton and no5('
la&lt;'kk&gt; Dallas Carnt'f'OO ol Miami .

ol North CHroltna State.

AU fbi' GlltiW • M~

,

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Stormy
Action led all the way en route to a
1\4 length victory In Tuesday night 's
featured trot at Scioto Downs.
The winner. with Dick Brandt in
the sulky, coveredthemlleln2:013-5
and returned $5.40, $3 and $2.00.
Wildwood Thor finiShed second and
Pilof Fish came in third.
Rapid Regent. Beauty's Sunny
and Timely Treasurer provided a
2-7·3 trifecta combination in that
first race that paid $1,300.&amp;!.
A crowd of 3,157 wagered $216.958.

SOC't"Pl" NWII'h.

G...-

N~· York at MIIUM'!IOIP
ClP•l'l;md ul Oll('lf:O

Berry's World

Scioto Downs results

roarn.

w~.,..li Garnt"A

'11am!dll,)''ll

Miami. tFiorlda Stall'~~- Slwwd
si'IOrlst"' Todd C'rw:.
Nt"'.· York cNLJ - Acqull'f'd outnf'ldC'r
Tom Paclort'k from !hi' Chh:af.!O Whit£' So11
~ay 1or minor k'IIINf' lnnt&gt;Jdt'r Dan•
f'ochranl': oplloi'N'd outnt&gt;ld£'r John Ctuis
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·Crossed voting
:= lines in ·the House er,.
• Voting on issues large and small, the 435 members of the House find
• themselves a rrayed In all sorts of combinations and patterns, butoneoltbe
; most persistent reflects the vartous states they represent.
.
Currently there are 252 Democrats and 182 Republicans in the House
(and one vacant seat). Those political ties weigh heavily when it comes
time to vote on headline ISsues such as defense, t[le budget, or foreign
• affairs, bUt party loyalty varies from state to state. In some states that
: loyalty is fanatical, whlle other delegations seem hardly aware of their
• party.
• The California delegation is the largest in the House and as such Its
• representatives mlgbt be expected to show more diversity of opinion and
· independence from party positions, but on the big issues both the 27
Democrats and IS Republicans usually vote the party llne.
The New York delegation, with 34 members, also usually splits along
party lines, but with two colorful exceptionsc ·
Rep. Sam Stratton, · from upstate New York, holds a much more
conservative view than most of his 181ellow Empire State Democrats and
usually ends up being the odd man out. But whlle the 15 New York
Republicans pick up Stratton's vote with some reguiartty they find liberal
GOP Rep. Bill Green, from Manhattan's silk stocking district, siding with
the Democrats just as often.
" Texas, another large delegation, offers a more diverse voting pattern at
least on the Democratic side. While Texas RepubUcans generally v~te
together ·on ISsues of defense, foreign affairs or budget, as many as slx
conservative Democrats fn&gt;quently side with the GOP.
Texas is one of the states where Democrats in recent years suffered the
intense embarassment
of seeing one of their members ' Phil Gramm
.
formally abandon the pa_rty and become a Republican. He later moved on
to the Senate.
It was that kind of voting pattern that produced the label "boil weevils,"
a reference to southern conservative Democrats who sided with the GOP in
President Reagan's first term.
The 11-member Massachusetts delegation IS solidly Democratic, with
the exception of veteran Republican Rep. Silvio Conte. But Conte, who ts
the senio~ RepubUcan on the powerful House Approprtations Committee.
has a habtt of voting like a Democrat, which probably explains why he has
been re-elected so often in a state that Is so overwhelmingly Democratic.
Party lines are unsha!Cable In some smaller states. II Oregon's three
liberal Democrats ever find themselveS voting the same as their two
conservative Republican colleagues It almost certainly is a mistake.
Colorado's two Democrats rarely side with their lour GOP colleagues on
the headline issues.
A different pattern IS seen in the Connecticut delegation where tbe three
. Democrat~ and three Republicans frequently vote alike, taking the
Democrahc view more often than not .
Maryland's slx·member Democratic delegation often splits 4·2, with
Reps. Beverly Byron and Roy Dyson reflecting the conservative nature of
their diStricts and voting with The 'state's two Republicans.
Delegations from the country.:s heartland show a similar interes ting
·
diversity in their votes.

u,

FRED McMANE
UPIBy
Associate
Spoo18 Editor

.
a superior pitching staff
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI)-Appar- that allowed just five hits, the Ni.
ently, theAmertcanLeaguedecided
ttimmed the AL. 6-1, to win the
t
All-Star Game tor the 13th time 1n
0 go on strike three weeks early.
th 1 1
It's understandable, though. Fast·
e ast 4yearsandboost its overall
bail
ode
advantage in the competition to
·
s u r the chin from Nolan
36-19-l.
.
·
. Ry~ dosortolrnakeyouloseyour
The NL had many heroes and
desrre to go towork.
·
most or t!M!m wore the un!lonns of
Th~eeWeeksfromnow, onAug..6, theSanDiegoPadres.LaMarrHoyt
major
- league
trike baseball players will was &lt;hb
u.,. s tartlngand ~innlngpltcher
g;,~
s
unless a new Basic and was named the' game's Most
~= mentLels Signed by then.
Valuable Player; Steve Garvey had
r can ague players must be the game-winning hlt. an RBI single
won~ering today why they didn't' · in the second inning; Terry
Kennedy cliipped in· with an RBI
vote tostrtketheAll-StarGame.
Obance again, the National League single and Rich Cfflsage put the
em rrassed the American League finishing !ruches on the victory with
in the showcase event before a
a sterllngninth·tnnlngperformance
national television audience and the that included two strikeouts.
'largest crowd, 54,900, ever to see a
"I felt Hoyt deserved the MVP,
baseball game In ' the state of but hewasn.tour!)nlystar,"saldNL
•
Minn
· ~t~.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomeroy Middleport; Ohio

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Sentinel

Ohio

Rose plays .in 17th,
final All-Star contest
, By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Senior Edllor-Sporls
.
MINNEAPOLIS (UP!) -It's getting clOser to the time when Pete Rase
will have to declare one way or another, make up his mind whetller to bite
the hand that feeds him or not
Wouldn't you know it? He llas made his declslcin already.
·
He's not happy about doing If, but hf's going to bite that hand. .
He made that clear to everyone before Tuesday night's All·StarGame in
the Hubert Humphrey Metrodome, the 17th of his career, his first ever
there and possibly his last ever as player.
.
As player-manager of the Cincinnati Reds, he's got himself a major
problem he never figured on. The way things stand with Wm right now in
terms of employment, he's·a hybrid. Part labor and part management.
That means If the players walk out Aug. 6, the date they've set tor a
strike, Rose has to tum up his hole card. Either walk out with them or stay
on and support Mal'g(' Schott, the Reds' owner who pays him and tells
everyone how crazy she is about him. ·
He has another big consideration, too. Ty Cobb's record.
Rose needs 35 more hits to break It, and as he says, baseball Is
unpredictable. No one can ever tell what wUI 'happen.
What if there is a strike and It develops into such a long one that It extends
over into next season? What happens then? By that time, RoSe will be 45.
Someone else would p)ay the whole thing very close to the vest. He'd be
diplomatic and not say anything untU he absolutely had to.
But you know Pete Rose. He says what he feels, and what he says is that
even though he's technically part of management, he's lOOpercent with !he
players. If they walk, he walks. He's sorry if Mal'g(' Schott can't
understand that , but that's the way It Is.
" ! have to back the players," Rose said at a news conference Tuesday,
where Mary Lou Retton, the beguiling 17-year-old Olympic gold medalist,
also was on hand to welcome him as Wheatles' newest endorser. ·
Rose, who has never been accused of being dumb, didn't bother beating
around the bush. He admitted he wanis to stay on the good side of his
players and is anxious for them to like him.
"Guys like (Dick) Williams. (Jiln) Frey and (Bob) Lillis were teasing
me yesterday In the shower," he said. "They were teasing me because I
said I w!l"ted my players to like me. I do. If they like me, that mal\es my
job easier. I think my players realize they have the same needs I do.
"My philosophy is that you're dealing with grown men. All you want is
for your players to be happy because a ha~py player Is a good player and
an unhappy player isn't a good one. I strongly bel!eve In that."
Schott, who was a minority stockholder In the Reds for some time before
purchasing a majmity Interest In them last Fall, knows how Rosefeels
about the strike. Naturally, she is less than th!11led about it.
"! tried to explain to her all the good things that happened because of
Marvin Miller and the Players Association," Rose said. "Marge said that
the greatest thing since peanut butter was my coming back toClnc~atl.l
told her if it wasn't for all the things the Players Assoe!atlon did, I wouldn't
have been able to come back the way I did. It would've cpst the Reds a Jot
more than it did."
Possibly so. The other side of the coin is that the Reds never would've let ·
Rose go in the f!rst place had Andy Messersmith .a nd Oave McNally not
• succeeded in getting the baseball's reserve clause thrown out.

a

I

Finals of LL meet tonight

SYRACUSE - Syracuse Hubbard's Greenhouse and Big Bend
Foodland posted big wins In the
annual Bill Hubbard Little League
Tournament here Tuesday evening
toea m berths in tonight's champion·
ship finals at the Syracuse Munlcl·
pal Park. Foodland tripped the
Tuppers Plains Bears 8-5, while
Syracuse blanked theGaUiJX&gt;lis Red
Sox 1Q.O.
After scoring one in 1he first
inning. bost Syracuse Hubbard's
Greenhouse utilized two highscoring innings to handily defeat the
Gall!pol!s Red Sox 10.().
Chr~ Wolfe singled home Todd
Grindstaffwllh the game's first run,
incidentally providing the only run
Syracuse needed, the score 1·0.
Scoring four runs In the second, one
in the third and five big Insurance
runs In the fourth Inning, Syracuse
waltzed to an easy win.
Andy Baer was the winnlng
pitcher, hurling a no-hit shutout
performance. Baer fanned JO and
walked five in a super effort. Brian
Stout suffered the loss with four
strikeouts and three walks.
Andy Baer and Chris Wolfe led the
winners with two singles each, Roy
Johnson had a home run, Todd
Grindstaff a double, Mark Taylor a
triple, and singles each by Chris
Stewart , Scott Lisle, Carlton
Drummer, and Chris Ebersbach.
As the competition stiffened
between two fine teams, the TP
Bears slipped to an 8-5 loss at the
hands of Big Bend Foodland. Jason
Wright was the starting pitcher.
allowing thrre runs. walked three,
and did not strikeout a batter.
Robbie Fields came on In relief to
post the win, fanninglOand walking
four .
Big Bend broke a 3-3 tie in the
fourth Inning when Aaron Sheets
singled. Terry' Reuter singled,
Jason Wright singled, and Fields
singled to put the winners on top6-3.
Reuter, Wright, Fields, and
Sheets each had two hits while Eric
Heck and Pat Gryska each singled.
Scott McDonald hurled a fine
complete game, only to lose in a
close finale after striking out IO and
walking four.
McDonald had a double and
single, Danny Lantz a triple and
single, Mike Wheeler a tJiple,
Brandon Chapman a double, and
Shane James and Chad Savoy a
single each for the Bears.
Earlier Tuppers Plains had

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--·-

\

defeated the Albany Merchants in
one of the tournament's finest
games, the score 1.Q. In this game,
y.oung Scott McDonald was near·
pertecl In hurl!ng a no-hitter. He
fanned 10 and walked just three in
posting the win.
In the pitching duel, Jamie Jarvis
walked four and struck out 10 for
Albany. TP's oruy run came on a
wa!k to Chapmman and a single by
McDonald.
·
Tuppers Plains had just two hits
Including McDonald's . game·
winner and Shane James' single.
Earlier, Big Bend Foodland had
ousted the New Haven Orioles. 11-2.
Foodland hitters were Wright
with three singles, Kevin Taylor a
double and single, Fields a double,
and singles each by Eric Heck,
Marcinko, Randy Moore, Gryska,
and Jeremy Heck.
·
Burl Diehl and Dale Gerlach had
the ohly Oriole hits.
Fields was the winning pitcher
while Wes Bumgardner, who was
rel!eved ?Y Tom Knapp, suffered
the loss In a good effort.
The championship finals wUI
conclude tonight In Syracuse.

•

By FRED McMANE
UPI.Assoc!ate Sports Editor
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) - It
seems the bigger they are, the more
weaknesses they have.
The American League carne
strutting Into the Metrodome Tues·
day night flexing their muscles like
so many Paul Bunyans. that
fictional giant lumberjack from the
Minnesota woods, and lelt dragging
their bats behind them.
National League pitchers again
dominated AL sluggers a
scenario becoming commonplace In
this mid-summer showcase.
The AL has a stunning array of
home run hitters, but they went
down easily as five NL pitchers
combined to pitch a five-hitter. The
oruy run the AL got wa,s unearned.
It marks the second straight year
and third time In the last four
AU-Star Games the AL has scored
only one run against the NL.
The AL's problem is obvious.

Those big hitters are free swingers
with a lot of weaknesses at the plate
that can be exploited by good
pitchers.
"The big sluggers ln the Ameli·
can League can be pitched to," sald
LaMarr Hoyt of the' San Diego
Padres, the winning pitcher and a
former American Leaguer. "They
have a lot of big hoppers whoean go
deep, but they rarely show up In the
AU-Star Game.
"They're a bunch offreeswlngers
who are vulnerable to certain
pitches. I'm not surprised they
didn't hit any hofne runs. If they
didn't hit any off me, I didn't think
they could get to the other guys . .
"In our league. I've seen pitchers
who can absolutely dQmlnate a
game. Most of them are here and the
American League hitters aren't
even going to see them aU. I don't
think I saw quite the same kind of
pitching In the AL. But, of course, I
have to hit against these guys. Our

.

FREE

• FFLER

•

pltcherswerepumpeduptothemax
about pitching in this game."

INSPECTION

The Daily Sentinel

MINNEAPOLIS (UPI)- While Joaquin Andjuarwasbarbeculng
, wlth his family in st. Louis, Lamarr Hoyt siow-eooked the American
League's heavy !pttersiTuesday night,
Hoyt scattered ' two hits over three Innings to Uft the National
League to a 6-1 viCtory over the AL squad !n the il6th All-Star game.
Hoyt, one of live Sal.t Diego starters under NL manager Dick
Williams, was named Most Valuable Player, receiving the Ani~
Wan! Trophy.
His start had been overshadowed by. Andujar's boycott. Tite St.
Lools ace, whose 154 record is the best In the major leagues, opted to
stay horne with his family because WDilains could not guarantee he
would start.
.
Hoyt has won 11 In a row - entering the All-Star game with a
pel'liOIIal 10-game winning streak, 2.93 ERA and 124 record.

.Big Bend JCs golf·
event!slated Aug. 3
The Bend Area Jaycees an nounced today Saturday, Aug. 3,
w!ll be the date for its Third Annual
Charity Golf Classic to be placed at
the Riverside Golf Course In
Mason.
ln two previous years, the event
has raised $6,500 for local charities.
Tournament directors realize this
has come about only through the
local golf Interest and support of
businesses In the area which
believe In this charitable cause.
The tournament will be limited to
the first 144 players to pay their
entry fee. This will be on a
first -come, first-servect basis and
all interested players are reml~ded
they must pay ln advance to hold
their S]Xlt In the tourney.
Deadline for entry wilt be Thursday, Aug. 1. at 6 p.m.
E;ntry· fee wUl be $35 per person,
which includes 18-hole green fee,
cart fee, prizes and refreshments.
There wut also be closest-to-thehole prizes on Numbers 4, 7, 12 and
14, and longest drive on No. 18.
For the third consecutive year
Smith-Buick of Gallipolis will be
offering a new car for the first
person to make a hoie-ln·one on the
par-three 176 yard hole No. 9.

The tournament will'kicko!f with
the "Meet Your Team Party" on
Friday, Aug. 2, at 6:30 p.m.
beginning with blind-draw for the
four-player teams at the clubhou&amp;e
sheller.
A social gathering will follow the
.blind-draw where all players wUI
get a chance to meet their
respective playing partners and
competitors.
~
The 'four-perSon scramble format
will be as follows: (11 Each player
must play at least three drives of all
four team members during the
round: (21 Ladies will play from the
"white" markers: t31 Players will
be classed as A. B. C and D,
according to handicap.
Regis! ra tion for the tourney will
begin at 8 a_m. on Saturday with a
shotgun start following at 9 a.m.
The 144-player field Is expected to
fill quickly and all interested
players are urged to enter as soon
as possi ble.
To enter contact the Pro Shop at
the Rlwrslde Golf Course person·
ally, or by mall: Riverside Golf
Course, Rt. 1. Box 35, Mason, w. Va.'
2.'i21i0.
For more Informat ion , contct the
Riverside Golf Course at 773-95Z7.

t

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK · .

HAMB4~GER

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Out~kle

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COPYRIGHT 1986 • THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD SUNDAY, JULY 14. THROUGH SATURDAY. JULY 20.
1986. IN GALLIPOLIS &amp; POMEROY.

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Ohio

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o••••---.. +oo

THURSDAY THRU
SATURDAY

••
•i

Kno1l ,\ id.

damage, broken hangers or clamps

'

AMOUNT

r••

1

~nd\1 i(·hf". bf&lt;M'nA'S . Iced 1MI and

and for weak or corroded pipes. If It
needs replacing, we'lllnstalt a
tough, durable Walker" Tru-Fil"
muffler at a very cOmpelitl~e ~rice.

PH.992-2556

OFF OUR EVERYDAY
..
LOW PRICE

"-!IJd

Bay and get a free, professional In-

"At the End of the Pomeroy•Masan Bridge

OH.

Meigs 4-H news

If your muffler's making way too

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

P~MEROY,

August.
_.,
A day camp was held at Klashuta
recently. Attending were WIUle
Johnson, Jeremy Hartson, J.P.
1'hP Hjllbllllcs Jt-c:-enlly hE&gt;Id t~~~o·o m('('tln~ :
Fisher, Nicky Mills, Travis Face·
lhC' flrsl•wa s Marrb 2.J at Opal Oyt&gt;r's horne
mayer, Chad Burton, Dodger
wii h 11 lll('mlx'fs a nt.! two advisors atfE'ndlng.
Otfl('('rS wt&gt;rf' &lt;'li"Ct&lt;'d as follov.·s: preskk&gt;nt.
Vaughan, Monty Hunter, Adam
K£'\·in Napl('r; first vk(&gt; pJ'f&gt;SidC'nt, Becky
Wyatt, Sam Cowan, Keith Darst,
Riff'; SK"Ond vl&lt;'i' pl'l'Sidrnt. Tara Oark: third
Jon Mattea, Ryan Rowe. Walt \·!('(' prl"'S!dent; Ainwc- Rujl('; secretarv.
Troc~· Wrl~ht anLI Usa VIUanueva: treasurer.
Williams. Bobby Ellis, Cory SeyApr11 C!;.uk; n~·s ll"pprt('r. J(&gt;rt'mr RuJ)(':
mour, Bobby Johnson, .Matt Crad- S&lt;Hf'tv. &amp;th Clnrk. Wmdy Cilk('y: healt h.
dock. P.J. Chadwell, Jason Steart , Mall Clark. Tamm.\ Ctlk('y; I"('CJ"(&gt;aUon
J(\ ick•r. F:rn~t \' i!lonuf&gt;va. Dut'S V.'&lt;'l'&lt;' Sl'l at75
Kyle Simpson, David Carmichael, &lt;"&lt;'nt s. r,-1t'mbo:•n. dlsrussro act!vi'tl&lt;"!i for. th&amp;
,vPar and prol(\'11'. Qp:.~ l D;.'f'r provtdro CJZ£
Robby Wyatt, and J .C. Cr~means.

••

Page-6

MUFFLER INSTALLATION
SPECIALISTS

or
*

J

Bobby Ellis, cubs: Bobby Johnson,
Kyle Simpson, Jason Stewat1,
MattheW Craddock, Scott Gardner
andJ.C. Creameans. webelos.
Other activities of the pack have
included a cub olympics at New
Haven attended by Willie Johnson.
Orris Chapman, Keith Darst, Kyle
Simpson, Matt Craddock. Jason
Stewart, Bobby Johnson, P.J .
ChadweU. The boys participated In
the July 4 parade at Middleport, wUI
be taking part In the Meigs County
Fair exhibits; and pia~ acain]Xlut in

•·

Published f'Vrry afternoon. Monday
through Friday, Jll Court · St., Po_meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
llshlng Company/ Multimedia, Inc.,
Pom Proy, Ohio 45769, Ph.,992·2156. Sf&gt;·
cond c lass postage paid at Pomeroy,

Golden Ripe
Dole Banan

.•·'
.,,,"

Pound

..•

.
. ,.

1125.80'
115i.ss••

j

.i

PLUS

DEPOSIT

. _.; .

*21.9'li Annual Pm:entq;c Rltt

.. 10 . ~ Annual Percentage Rue

G81Jopolls: 358 Second Ave., 446-1973. Pomeroy: 125 E. Main St., 992~2171.

POMEROY
{

Middleport Cub Scout Pack 245
held a fishing derby Saturday at
Fort Meigs.
,
Winners were J.P. Fisher, tiger
cub, who caught the biggest fish;
WU!Je Johnson, tiger cub, wbo
caught the smallest fish; and P.J.
Chadwell, wehei&lt;IS, who'caught the
most fish. a total of 28.
Others participating were Dodger
Vaughan. Nicky MU!s, Je)'l'my
Hartson. tigers; Jon Mattea, Sam
Cowan, Keith Darst, Walt Willla~.
Ryan Rowe, David Carmichael,

.:.--. +~+oo·
~-

The Daily Sentinel

(USPS ....9.. )
A Dlvl8l~n of Multimedia, lne.

PRICE
Dally ......... , ..................... .. .. 25 Cents

Hoyt MVP honoree
.

Scouts
conduct
·fish ·derby

---Pomeroy Middleport, -Qhio

Wednesday, July 17, 1985

17, 1985

AL hitters find NL pitching
sti~l very tough nut to crack

-·----

.

.

., ," -

LIMIT 2-8-PAKS WITH $11.00 ADDITIONAL PURCHASES
LIMIT ONE 'COUPON PER FAMll Y
COUPON GOOD SUN. JUlT !~SAT. JUtT II. 1115
SUIIJKT TD APPliCABlE STArt &amp; LOCAL TAXES

'

. ..··
'

,•

'·'

'.

•

�'
Page- 6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, July 17, 1985
•

We Reser,vt The Riehl To
ll111it Quantities

STORt HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10· PM
Sunday 1.0 AM-10 P-M

298 SECOND . ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SAT., JULY -20, 1985

Stephanie Kopec

Kopec.birthday
-

Stephanle Kopec, 1laughter of
Tony and Dawn Kopec, Pomeroy,
recently oboerved her third. blrtli·
day with a cookout and party at the
hOme of her parents.
Attending were Bob, Lyndla.
Rebecca and Justin Bowers and
Mark, Jenny, Nicholas and Lindsay
Smith. Sending gl1ts were Tom,
valaiie, and Curtis Hanstlne, Mr.
and Mrs. WWlamMajercslk, mater·
nat · grandparents, Bernadette,
Franceska and B.J. Majercslk,
Marcin Kopec, paternal grand·
father, and Michelle Zlora.
The cake was a gift of Jlrn,
Melinda and Heather McLain and
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Humphreys

Sr.

USDA CHOICE

Chuck· Roast •••••
LB •

Calendar/
happenings

DINNER BELL KIELBASA

MEIGS and St. Paul of Tuppers Plains
United Methodist Churches will he
conducting vacation Bible schools
from 9 to 11 a.m. Classes wilD he held
for children and youth ages, 3 to 14.
· Chidren under the age 0fthree must
be ai:compani~ by a parent or
guardian.
Classes will be taught at each
church by work campers !rom First
Unfted Methodist Church In Chambersburg, Pa. and Maize Manor
United Methodist Ch1,1rch in
Columbus.
For additional Information on the
schools residents may call Don
Archer, ~12.

$ 99
1

LB;

Smoked Sausage .•

WEDNESDAY
RACINE - Rl'Vival runs through
July 21 at Morse Chapel Church,
CountY Road 35, 7:30 each evening
with Rev. Ralph · · -Tkman
speaker; s~ial singing . each
service; public hivited.

.
The Chester, Allred

°

Ground

·

COOLVILLE - Revival at 7: 30
each evening this week at Troy
Methodist Church, 3% miles off
Route 7 on North Route 144 at
Coolville with Rev. Eddie Boyer,
pastor, speaking; special singing
each evening; public Invited.

9
Beef •••~.$1

BUCKET

$

..

Cube Steak .~ •••

L:-

$

SUPERIOR .

99
1

Lunch Meat •••••L:- 129
.

'

GRADE A

Wh-ole .Fyrers ••••
LB.

FRIDAY
RACINE - Racine American
Legion will sponsor a dance Friday
night !rom 7 p.m. tU midnight at the
hall. No alcohol beverages are
permltted; refreshments will be
sold.
POMEROY - The Full Gospel
Business Men's Fellowship lnterna·
I wiU meet Friday at tbe Senior
Citizens Center, Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy. DlnnerwUI heat6: 30, and
the meeting at 7: 15. John Green,
retired locomotive englneer for the
Chessie $ystem, wiU he thespeaker.

tiona

SHEDD'S CLASSIC QTRS.

Country Crock...

SATURDAY
PORTLAND - Eastern High
School class of 1972 will have a
reunion at the Portland Park
Saturday with a dinner at noon.
Further InformatiOn may be obtained from Shelle Proffitt, 843-5376.
WILKESVILLE .- Tlte Wilkes·
ville United Methodist Church will
have im ice cream social Saturday
with serving to hegln at 4 p.m. Tlie
public is Invited.

IN

SILVER BOX. ·

/

If you .have any questions aoout tartar, ask your dentist or hygienist.

Or call this toll-free numberl-800-792-4600.
- 1 "Crest has been shown to bear effet:trve decay prcven!rVP dentr!nce that can be of srgmfrcant value when used rna conscienbously applred p10gram of oral hygier1c ana regular professional Cflrc
Councrl Ofl De01a1The rapcutrcs, Amencan Oentat.A ssocrahon • P&amp;G 1985
.

tgJ

SYRACUSE · - An ice cream
social will be held Saturday at the
Asbury United Methodist Church
wtrh serving to begin at 5p.m. There
will be assorted flavors of home·
made Ice cream, along with pie and
cake. Take-out orders may be
placed by calling 992·32'n or

992·5610.
SUNDAY
PORTLAND. - Descendants of
Charles and Alma Hinzman Snyder ·
will meet Sunday for the annual
Snyder reunion at the Portland
Park. All descendants al'e Invited to
take a covered dish for lunch and
participate In recreattonalactlvlties
after lunch.

WAIT ADS
All .....
11TH BIIIIWJJS

1 LB.

. IND. AMERICAN SLICES

12

2 I $1
.

oz. ~

Sandwich Mate ••••. 7
HYLAND CHUNK

.D0 g Fo· od •••••••••••••

TOTINO'S

$

20L'B.

·lzza
1o.s oz.
7
9
P
•••••••••••••••••••••
29
2 .
JELLO

Diet .Pop •••••••••••• s
16 OZ. BTL • .

•

SOF·PAC

TOILET TISSUE
6

ROLL$1 09
PAK

Limit 1·Pllt Customer
Good Oaly at Powell's
Offer bplres July 20, 1915

•••

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

•

-

•

...

••••••
..
•
•• "

••••
• •••••
•·····(XJU~·······
•

CIDER or WHITE
••• ••
••
HEINZ VINEGAR
••
GAL $199
••

(

$1
s
9
Gelatin Pops .•••:A:..
.

FAY GO

••• •
• •••••
•·····C(MJ~·······
•

9

(

.

CA)(J~

SHURFINE

6 ROLL

•.•••••
..... '

•

GRAN. SUGAR ·

SLB.
BAG

$139

Limit 1 Ptr Customer
Good Only of Powell's
Offer bpiros July 20, 1915

GAL

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

o

PUREX BLEACH

•·

,•

69(

limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only of Powell's
Offer bpires .July 20, 1985

�•

The

needay, July 17, 1986

Ohio

Sentinel

Rules announced for Domestic Arts exhibits at Meigs Fair
'fill' past li"Veral years have seen
entries in the domestic arts department at the Meigs County fair grow
by leaps and bounds, and thi'; year
· the display with Its wide variety of
classes promises to be even bigger
and better.
• • Addalou Lewis, superintendent,
" Will be assisted by Dorothy Downie
and Bernice Caryenter, chairmen.
In handling the exhibit which will
range from clothing to a hobby
corner. with classes for ceramics,

macrame, stenciling, and wood- Mrs. Lewis, the entries will be
arranged for viewing when the fair
burning, to mention a few.
As in all departments of the Meigs officially opens on Tuesday.
Residents who have not preCounty Fair, entries must be In the
hands of the fair secreary by 4 p .m . viously exhibited are encou~aged to
enter Items. There are classes for
on Aug: 9. There Is no entry fee but
exhibitors must purchase a mem- - children's clothing, dersses, trousers,. blouses, t-shlrts, coats and
bership ticket.
jackets; adult clothing, one and two
Following the practice of the past
piece d resses, . better dresses,
several years, entries are to be on
blouses, skirts, capes, coats, shorts,
the grounds by noon on Monday,
slacks,
suits and robes, and men's
Aug.l2, sincejudgingwill takeplace
that afternoon. That way, expla in€11

i

Beat of the bend

.: -mses
.

room.
-."!':-

-----

.

'""" Just so you don' t get the feeling
that som eone ne€115 you, let m e
point out that the Ohio Department
of Transportatlonhas awa rded contracts in July -one of the lists of
contracts awarded amounts to
$29,957,176.76 while the other rele ased o n J uly 15 totals
$19,961,138.83.
A number ofp rojects for highway
Improvem ents are outlined in both
~\ilistings and the counties getting the
• ,..Improvem ents are named. Guess
':'_ ,hich one is missillg from both
1istillgs - that's right. Meigs
County again gets a big zero. And
that's just a zero for J uly - the
previous m onths were little or no
better as far as Meigs County is
concerned. Just thought I'd remind
.,.. - you how important you are on the
state level.
Plans for handpalnt lng the cross
a t the top of the steeple on Sacred
Heart Church have faded away . As
it turns out there Is just no place to
hook another ladder so the handpainting could be done . Workers of
Lori Construction who have done
such a good job on improving the
picturesque ch1_1rch, will now go to
plan B - tha t Is, they' ll go as close
as they c an to the cross a nd spray
paillt it . The last word I had is tha t

The altar was draped in m emory
of Arthur Craig McCartney, past
grand patron, at the recent meeting
of the Harrisonville Chapter 255.
Order of the Eastern Star. held at the
Masonic Temple.
Clara M ae Jeffers and Larry
Well, worthy matron a nd worthy
patron, presided. Stella Atki.ns,
grand representative to Florida was
presented a nd past matrons and
past patrons along with honored
m asons were welcomed. Ruby
Diehl, 50 year member, was also
presented a nd welcom ed.
A picnic of the past ma trons club
to be held at .the home of Donna
Nelson Tuesday night was announced. A special welcom e was
given to Ivy Johnson who due to
Illness had been una ble to a ttend
m eetings since the new hall was
completed. Refreshments were
served by the committee of Dana
and , Bernice Hoffman, F red and
Avanel George, a nd Bernice
Nelson.

the cross will be silver. Incidenta lly. the church stands 157 feet
from the ground. Har·lz.ontally, that
isn't far- verticaty, well, that's a
different story.

•
World . of Poetry's
Board of
Directors has voted to ho nor
Jannine Petrel of t he Racine a rea
with the GOlden Poet Award for19135
for her rem arkable contribution to
poetry at the group's first annua l
convention to be held at the MGM
Grand Hotel In Reno, Nevada, Aug.
23-25.
Jannlne has entered six World of
Poetry contests and has won six
Award of Merit Certificates which means she's batting l &lt;XXJ.
The specia l awar.ds presentation
w1ll be on Saturday a fternoon, Aug.
"24, and ma king the presentation to
.Janninewill be Steve Allen who will
be there with World Television.
Following is Jannlne' s most
recent poem submitted to World of
Poetry.

- - saJ,&lt;XXl.

GIULLMASTIR

FAANKS . 10~K~~-

sAvoRv

.

:~.::~QE ... 10R~t~s$ 8
HYGRADE CHICKEN

8 80

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BOTTLES
CHICKEN•TURKEY•MAC &amp; CHEESE·
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Boston Roll
Roast
.
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BONELESS
NY STRIP
STEAKS

LB.$488

REG. OR LIGHT

Kraft

Pot
Pies

.

$1' 98

aoz.
PKG.

. LB.

May~nnaise

sac

Kimberly Lyon.r

is

Roller champ relative .
of Meigs County couple

The dream s tha t once were mine
alone,
))ave faded Int o dus t,
The hopes and fears that once
were felt ,
Don't matter quite as much.

Seven-year-old Kimberly Lyons
is the 19135 Great La kes Regional
Roller Skating Champion in Prlrn.ary Girls Figures.
She is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Tommy Lyons of Pontiac,
Mich., and the granddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs. J ohn Lyons, Middleport. The cha mpionships were
skated at Harp's Rollerdome in
Cincinnati, .July 4-12. The region
consists of Illino~, Michigan , Ohio

The tears once shed for all
mankind,
have dried upon my face, .
The time has come to lay me
down ,
and die in. God's sweet grate.

Neverlille a vacation
Yeal1

~

.:·"' •
· ;:
.;

FRONT END ALIGNMENT SPECIALISTS COMPLETED
THE DANA SCHOOL OF CHASSIS REBUILDING &amp; ALIGNMENT

~

For Appointment Call 742-2057 .

and Wisconsin. The five top placement s from each s ta teeornpetedfor
regionals. The top three in the
reglonals will now go on to compete
at the na Honals to be held In Lincoln,
Ne b., Aug. 3-10.
Kimberly has been skat ing com petitvely since 1982. Her p rofessional instl"\lctors from the ·$kating
Club of Utica a re Dona ld and
Cynthia Gate and Glenn Rocci.

DOWNING--CHILDS
AND

MULLEN INSURANCE

BREAST
FILLETS

WANTED:
BANK STOCKS

L8.•2··

••

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..
.•

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1 LB. KAHN'S PACKAGED

WIENERS •••••••••••••••••••••:.m.. $1 ~69
SUPE.RIOR BREAKFAST
HAM LUNCH MEAT ••••••••• n. $1.97
SMITHFIELD
BOILED HAM •• .S.Ll~~q.,.I1.-U••••• ~P, $1.8 9
HOMEMADE
·
HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••••••• u, $1.29

6.5 oz.
CAN

LB.

Pork .
Loins

Tenderbest

Wieners

120!98•

48
~. $1

IJI.
•

PKG.

•.• .

COOKING

FLAKED

ALL MEAT

Folgers
Coffee

78
390~6

MARGARINE ........ 89( LEMONS JM~m. '2I 9Sc
KRAFT 12 OZ. 16 SLICE
CANTALOUPE -'~~~.79&lt; .
AMERICAN PROCESSED
16 Ol. CELLO PACK
PIMENTO
CHEESE ....:m•.. S1.89 CARROTS .......\~~ •• 29&lt;

BTL.

CAN

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Magic
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Beef

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320Z. s

Ground

95 COUNT SUN KIST

Mazola
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Star Kist
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. . - - - - - - - - -- --1

Want Ads

:;

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*Complete Front End Parts &amp; Service
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992-2342

Ing activities and ot her pagea nt

8 80

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POMEROY

The production rehearsa ls, judg-

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•

OLD VIROIN'IE •REO. OR HOT

Alb Eye
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FRONT -END ALIGNMENT

113 SECOND AVE.

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HYQRAD'E CHICKEN

DUGAN'S

-..;; Meigs girl
competing
for title
·in Miss Teen
Erill Anderson, daughter of
Jennifer Anderson of Salem Cent er,
and William Anderson of Pomeroy.
will he com peting fo r thetitle ofMiss
Teen of Ohio in Delaware. Aug. 2-4.
Miss Teen of Ohfo will win an
a ll-expense paid t rip to the Miss
Teen of America Pageant, a $100
scholarship, and other awards.
E lberlelds Departm ent Store,
Pomeroy-Middleport Lions Club,
St. Paul Lutheran League , and the
!::'~ M eigs Fellowship of Christian
~Athletes are sponsoring Ander son in
the contest.
The pageant util izes judging
categories to fi nd the most outstanding young women using I he criterla
of scholastic record , achievement
and service to school and community, personal development of hobbles and illterests, genera l a wareness, poise and persona lity, a nd
judges interview.
.
The official pageant charit y is the
American Cancer Society wit h the
Miss Teen of Ohio ca ndidates
currently raising money through a
~ • scavenger hunt event . The goal is

ORANGE CRUSH,. A&amp;W ROOT BEER
DIET or REGULAR . .

''l!·e n Pound Sale''

•

$128
:
EACH

$EACH

~--------~----~------------~··~

TIME
As I sit before the fireplace ..
and watch the flames burn hig h,
I see the burnillg embers,
Of a life that' s passed me by .

Since cancer seem s to become
more and more prevalent, I keep
wondering why m ore of the billions
being spent by the government on
the "Star Wars" program and
give-aways, can 't be channeled into
some effective research. Oh, well,
what do I know? Do
smllllll!.

ONLY9 9

•

Cereal Bowla

BI:EF
$88· POLISH . $880
PATTIES . 1o~K~~.
·. sAUSAGE .. 10LBS.

OES meets

no ladder hook,
painting cross. tricky

By BOll HOEFLICH
Sentinel Slaf1 Writer
· Meigs High Football Coach Cha
rles Chancey adthat phystcal examinations
for all boys and
girls pa rt icipating in fall sports
a t Meigs High
School will be
tJven physical examlnatio~ begil)nlng at 9 a .m. Saturday al the
sehool.
Helme t fitting for a ll boys
interested in playing fres hman and
varsity football at Meigs High this
fall will be held at 2 . p.m. on
Monday , July 22, in the locker

F« TyPflllraplllt:ll Errars. USDA Faod Sllinps Accepted

l'LANDERS

..~With
..

apicure Casual Dinnerware
Tumbler And Mugs
Dinner Platea And

Julj Zl, 111S•We Reurn The Rliht To Umlt QuanUtles•NOt Responsible .

for knitted alghans, sweaters, arid made purses; ceramics of all kindS,
miscellaneous articles; crocheted macrame ):&gt;angers and m tsceilanealghans, bedspreads, vests, capes ous Items, stencUing, wood burning,
or ponchos, and wal).hangings; and and plaster of paris.
Premiums and r ibbons wiU be
qullts, patchwork, painted, ernbroldred, or appllqued. In the rug awarded In three places.
~"
category there are classes tor .-..,--- - - - - - -....:.,;
- -~
crocheted, latch hook. punch hook,
and loom woven.
The hobby comer Is a favorit e
with exhibitc;&gt;rs a~d has a class for
just about everything, model vehicles, pictures In any media, hand-

jackets, shirts, and trousers.
The classes for aprons are
gingham cross stitch, kitchen
apron, fancy or holiday apron, and
embroidered ones, while in needlecralt there are classes lor all kinds of
putow cases and cushions as well as
tablecloths, and miscellaneous
items In cross stitch, .painted,
embroidered, crocheted trimmed ·
and patchwork.
Th~ department also ha s classes

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Wt wiM pay lep pricttltr P"'..,. llotks.
Wt
-lollatol ill tllit litld for onr 10
,.., Call &lt;oltcl far • ~ualt. Ask for l111d

h"''

Smltlo.

26 OZ. MRS. SMITH'S

FIRST SCIOTO

CHERRY PIES •••••••••••••••• m~. $2.29

411 AIUDIA
. COIIIMIUt OH. 43%01
t6J4)261 -7091

Erin Ander.ron
events lead up to the Miss Teen of
Ohio Pageant F inals lobe he ld Aug.
4at the
!i p.m
.at Bra
nc hRickey
Arena
on
Ohio
Wesleyan
Unive
rsity

CARRIE.RS NEEDED

ca mpus.

BOYS AND GIRLS, AGES 10 TO 15 IN
THE MIDDLEPORT AREA.

Attend workshop
Karl
Maryeroy
Keblcr
H&amp; R
Bloc
k and
in Pom
at teofnded
a
workshop onthe preparat ionof tax
returns for partner ships and eorporatlons he ld June 28 and 29 in
Columbus.Theworkshopwasapart
f h
o I c cont
inu ing professiona
cation
program
offered byl · the
Nationa l Association of l'ax
Practitioners.

CALL THE DAI'LY SENTINEL
AT 614 _992 _2155 B,ETWEEN
8•00
A• M• AND 5•00
P• M•
•
•

edu- ~,~~;~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~

-= ------------------------------------------~

LISTEN IN ON LIFE

FANS
CKENS HARDWARE

~~~------------M~A"SO~N~·~W~-~V~A~·-----------J

CHOICE
...:.. TENDERIESTSTYLEUSDAIU(IET
.: ~ COUNTIY

46 OZ. GOLDEN ISLE

~

GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ••••••• ,~~~. S1.09
10 3/4

OZ. CAMPBELL'S CREAM OF

~ L~ 198

PEAR HALVES .-•••••••••••••• se~...... 89&lt;

32 OZ. BONUS PACK

.

REO.·CRINKLE CUT

..

MEADOW GOLD

MARGARINE-8PREAD

0.5°/o Lowfat

Blue
Ore· Ida
French Fries · Bonnet

;I

16 OZ. DE( MONTE

KOOL-AID ..................... s~~.. S2.49

Cube

~· steaks

MUSHROOM SOUP ••••••• lu~~ I 89c

21 OZ. VAN CAMP'S

5 LBS. OR MORE

28

32 ,0Z.

~80~ 158
CTN.

BAG

Milk

33

Plastic

Gallon

c

••

ASSORTED FLAVORS

PORK &amp; BEANS ••••••••••tmsf$1.19

GOLDEN RIPE

5 OZ. SAFEGUARD BAR

KEEP YOUR COOL!
WE HAVE AN
ASSORTMENT OF

CHICKEN DINNER •••••••••• (&amp;~~. $3.79

GAL.
JUG .

LB ..

'' .

2 LB. BANQUET 10 PIECE FRIED

tf::::::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::::;:::;:~1

••

.,

I

Bananas

TOILET SOAP ••••••••••••••tmsJ$1.19
2 5 OZ. ARMOUR

Light 'N' .L ively
Yogurt

DEVILED HAM ............... m~. S1.09 ·

"RUSTLE" '"CHIRP"

"ROAR"

"PURR"
Mlllv1ew CliniC

603 w. un1on

Athens. OhtO 45701
Phone, 16141 592·2863 ·

We'll Help You Listen In On Life

7•12 OZ. CARNATION

SPREADABLES.••••••••••••••• IPI•• $1.49

25 CT. PARTY PACK 10'/4"

HEFTY PLATES ..............m.. $1.79
32 OZ. VLASIC HAMBURGER

DILL CHIPS •••••••••••••••••••• Lu.. $1.4 9

-·•-

6

~

•

CTN.

I

·-· --·

oz.

..
;:

.

.

3
FOR
.
., .

\!
'

.

'

�. ··- '

• •

. !P~ag~e:21!~~The~~D~at~"ly~Se~nu~·~nM~----------------------------!P~~~m~MW~O!V:!M~M~~~d~~~~O~h~~~----------------~--------------~VV~ed~n~a~t~~·!Y~·~J~u~7~17~,!1!1!11!

Wednnday,

17, 1985

:&amp;perts believe Air-India plane 'disintigrated mid-air'
By PATIUCIA a&gt;IIEN

BOMBAY, India (UPI) -

Experts !Jylng to determine If a bomb
caused an Air-India crash that killed
329 people began examlng the
plane's flight recorder today and
said a review of the cockpit voice
• recorder gave no hint of mechanical
trouble.
"Most of the experts ... are of the
vtew that the.aircraft disintegrated
In inld-alr, .. a member of CO\Irt of
inquiry told the Press Trust of India
news agency.
Dalll from the flight recorder was
fed into a computer at Alr-Indla's
Management Information Services
department early today, a civil
aviation official said.
Experts hoped the device would
• provide a detailed account of what
was happening ~board the Boeing

747 jumbO jet when it dropped from
radar at an altitude of 31,00lfeet and

plummeted lntomlle-deepwatersot
the Atlantic off the l'rlsh coast June
23. The~ were rio sutvlvors.
Three lndlan extremist organizations claimed they planted a bomb
aboard the plane. But experts said a
prelltnin;uy review of the cockpit
flight recor-Qer tape faDed to show U
a bomb caUsed the crash.
· Experts saiil analysis of Information In ihe flight data recorder would
W&lt;e quite some time.
"We have to analyze the 64
parameters recorded lor 25 hours,''
the civil aviation official said.
Investigators conducted the(r
first review of the voice recorder
tape TUesday.
S.N. Sharma. secretary of the
six-man court Investigating the ·
dlsaster, said Indian and foreign

experts llstened to "a preliminary
run" of the cockpit voice recorder
tape TUesday.
"The quality of the tape recorder
appears to be good, •• he said.
Sharma sald he could hear engine
noise butdldnotknow If an explosion
could be heard at the end. He said It
would be "a couple of days" before a
final analysis was completed.

u.s.

By DAVID ZENlAN

Government sources, acknowledging the Green Line Hghtlngcould
threaten the security plan, said
behind-the-scenes contacts had
been launched to bring Synan
obsetvers onto Betrut's central
security committee.
The committee, which comprtses
representatives of the key Chrtstian
and Moslem militias . and the
Lebanese army, was formed to end
ou !breaks of fighting between the.
rival militias.
The Syrian presence on the
committee would help solidify a
truce and pave the way for the
removal of barricades and the
reopening of Green Line crossings
between the two halves of the
capital, the government sources
said.
While Moslem militiamen le(t the
streets of west Betrut and closed
most of their offices there TUesday
under the new security plan, they
maintained their fortified bunker·

success.

"We will not pamper anyone who
wants to obstruct what was
agreed," Sunnl Voice of the Natlon ·
Radio quoted one Synan .obsetver
as saying TUesday.

OK water...

:_ Reagan...____

Jury ...

--Local briefs:-Additional painting classes

Judge Patrick O'Brien concluded
-23 cases Monday in Meigs County
· Court.
Fined were Wayne Gillland,
:ReedsvUie, $75 and costs, S25 of fine
• - - - - - to be suspend&lt;id If driver's Ucense is
.obtained, three days ln jail sus. -pended. no drlver's llcense. S5 and
.costs. unsafe vehicle; Arbe Malone.
Racine, six months in jail with all but
two days suspended, a year probation, costs, disorderly conduct;
Mary Eblin, Pomerojl, $ro and costs
.with fine suspended, a year probation, refrain from complainant,
'disorderly conduct: Deibert Fridley, Pomeroy, m and costs, refrain
·from complainant, disorderly con.duel; Scott Hicks, Columbus, $10
and costs, parking In roadway; Lula
·shaffer, Pomeroy, $50 and costs, no
. ·operator's license: Bernard Rom, :me, Rutland, $35 and costs,failure to
·ytetd; Theodore Cremeans, Rutialld. $35 and ·costs, failure to
.control; Terry McGuire, Vinton, $35
; :and costs, failure to control; Doris
· -Mace, Nelsonville, $20 and costs,
failure to control.
Fined In county court for speeding
·were Robert Dillon, Milton, W.Va.,
$2:1 and costs; James. Butcher,
Vincent, $21 and costs; Robert
Rankin, Athens, $24 and costs;
Camellia Walker, Racine, $29 and
evsts; Larry WUUams, NelsonvUJe,
$20 and costs; Tony Thompson,

'

Polnl Pleasnat, ~'211 and costs;
Wendell Derr. Parkersburg, $25and
costs; Jerry Moore, Marietta, $21
and costs; Jon Thomas, Shaker
Heights, $20 and costs; Earl Durst,
Shawnee. $23 and costs.
Forfeiting bonds In Melgs County
Court were Larry Lee, Long
Bottom, $45, disorderly conduct:
Susan Lubarger, Lavalette, W.Va.,
$50, speeding; Nancy Smith, Newark, $50, speedlng.

I

Forfeit bonds
Forfeiting bonds in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
TUesday nlght were Dennis C.
Butcher, Middleport, $450, driving
driving
while intoxicated, and
while under suspension, and Terrace Kropka, Yorkville, Ohlo, $450,
driving while Intoxicated, and $50,
driving a weaving course. Fined
were Wendell Kaylor, Letart, W.
Va .. $14 and costs, s(leedlng,a nd
Cheryl Ferguson, LangsvUie, $25
and costs, disorderly manner.

m.

Market report ., Hospital news
Alhem U&gt;eotock Sal"'
SalurdaJ, July 13, 11185

Velel'llll!i Memorial

Admissions- WIUiarn Wise, Jr..
Middleport; Beatrice Blake, Syram:m lbs. 46 lo 58.50.
cuse; 'Sandra Luckydoo, MiddleFeeder Helf..-s; (Good and Choice)
port; Dovle Hale, Langsville;
:DJ.:&gt;XJ lbs. 41 to 48; 500-700 Ills. 38.50 to
47.
Joseph Allen, Portland.
Feeder Elulls: 1Good and Choice 1
Discharges - Michael Hubbard,
:DJ.:&gt;XJ Ills. 57.50 and down; 500-700 lbs.
44 to 48.25.
Kathryn Evans, Michael Smith, Sr.,
Slaughler Bulls; (Over l ,IXXl lbs.) William Wise. Jr.
41.00 to 47.75.
Slaughter Cows: Ulllltles :n to 39·
CATI'LE PRICES:
Feeder Steers; !Good and Choice)

Canners and Cutters 32.Z) to 36.75.
'
Sprlnger Cows; (By Th~ Head I 265 to

367.

Cow and Calf Pairs:

(By The Unltl375
to 600.
Veals; (Choice and Prime) 66 to 75.
Babv Calves: (By The Head) 31 to 91.
H00 PRlCES:
Hogs: (No. I. Barrows and GlliSI
:m-m lbs. 47.:il Top Hogs.

Licenses issued

Maniage licenses · bave been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Douglas ClaytOn Gloyd, 24,
Dexter, and Elizabeth Rosalyn
Cleland,
17, Middleport; Charles H.
Butcher Sows 35.75 to 38.
Feeder P!Rs: IBY The Head ) 2!lio 41 . . Zuspan, 54, West Columbia, W.Va.,
SHEEP P"RICES;
and Geraldlne Norveu, 59, Point
Feeder Lambs 58.75 lo 62.
· Pleasant. W.Va.

Wa~ted

-----·"Gaiiiiioiii________ _ Moving S.te July 19 8o 20.
&amp;' Vicinity
Garage Sale 1st house on
Little Kyger road . Just oft

PHONE 992-2156

Easy ANembly work. $600.

Qr Writt Dlil' ~ Ctntifit. o.,r.

per 100. Guaranteed pay-

No experience-no

clothing, flowers, bicycle,

rockers. Fri. &amp; Sat . July 19th

addr..sed

stamped

enve·

lope; Elan Vitol-176, 3418
Er\terprise Ad., Ft. Pierce, Fl
t ·CMot"-1,..._111_1
J . lfo.._..,

I •' A r

•-o-.

1~110--l

* tr

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

.

Clauifl~d Ptllflf eover 1lte

ll ol ..... ~l&gt;llrl'

'·"~I·"'*_F_
, ........... l...wl lll. .........l ·

.

-lt·-

11·,_,.,..,_

n ._
.w...
,.............

1 1·. . . , - -

~w...,

U ·AwMIMW..OtW

··-··-

.........
rv•c• ......
n-M
11-~foDo

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On July 12, 1986, in
the Maigs County Probite

Coun,

Can

No.

24708, Dena H. Raymond, 40804 S. R_. 684,
Albliny. Ohio 45710, wei
appointed ~dministratrix
of the estate of Martha
Robinson. deceased, late

_ -.
·-·--Qft... ... .

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

Pubiic Notice
of 40739 SR. 884. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Robert E . Buck,
Probate Judge
Lena K. Nesselroad,

(3117, 24, 31 3tc

Cieri&lt;

54 Misc. Merchandise

Real Estate GeneTal

/ollowlnK

_.._
.... c.-..,.

...

-

1

......
c...""
"""'CM lt4

Old Rt. 160 in Evergr•n.

Household items.

IM--Q- D111rict

___

171- PI. ,...._
IN- '-•

JtJI-POIIrllrNI

...... ,_
...,._
,.,___

147 -~,

lai- Nrw"-

HI- C._.,

. ., _ ....,.. Olrmeo:
,,._
'lhl lool

_ .,... ....

712- fl .........

FOR RENT

en- "'""-

ft. garage doora,
also finished area
for retail busine11.
Located on S.
Fifth, Middleport.
Oh.

11

u,~· ·"·""'"" '•.oo

Real Est•te General

I

..

MONTGOMERY
'REALTY
(61
Collect ·

992·6658 or
992-5113

,_,,.

POMER

.115 E.t Main, Pome,.y

m
LJ3

.·__992-22-:.::S:.-9- " ·
NEW LISTING - Nichols
Road - 3 bedroom ranch .
Needs some work but a rea l
bargain at $17,800.00.
NEW LISTING - Uniqu e
setling in Pommeroy. Approx. 7 acres, small barn.
shed, and a nice I~ story
home. Basemen! &amp; 2-3 bedrooms all 1n good repair.
Must be seen. $29.900.00.
NEW LISTING - Racine -

2 story home with 3 bed-

rooms in town. Gas f.a. heat.'
Large rooms. In good condition. $16,500.00
NEW LISTING - Middleport - Excellent location' 2
bedroom home, I ~ story
w1th modern kitchenette.
Nice lot $34,900.00.
NEW LISTING - Over one
acre in the country &amp;a like new
3.bedroom ranch type house
wrth 2 garages. Equipped
kilchen, all 1n rood condrtion.
$41,900.00
JUST OFF THE BYPASS!
Near town. seclusion and approx. 48 ~ acres olland with
free natural gas for no cost
heating! 4 bedrooms, full basement. Outbuildmgs &amp; a big
garden area. $49,900.00.
REALTORS
Henrv E. Cleland Jr.
992-6191
Dottie Turner 992-5692
Jean Trussel 949-2660
Jo Hill 985-4466.

A.llJ

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS

WEAlTOt .

Co'mmtrciol

216 E. 2nd St.
Phone

Commercial Sites

S-7-lfc

-.. -

NEW LISTING- 2 Bedroom
home on Union Ave .. Pomeroy. One floor, bath and
furnace.

NEAR VET 1MEM. HOSPITAL
- 3 bdrms w1th full basement, bath and central heat.
Reasonable.
FAMILY HOME - Excellent
location with view of river
and large lot. Near Kroger's,
central heat and all utililies.
RUTLANO - Remodeled 2
bedroom home on one floor.
Big kitchen w1th attractive
dining area.
LINCOLN HIS. - Real nice
2 bedroom home on large lot
with porches.
LAND CONTRACT - Home .
under roof, 20 acres ol
woods for $16,000 cash or
96 payments at $195.04 at
NO Interest. $3,000 down.
BARGAIN - 2 homes on 3
acres. Owner will furnish
material to Hniso. Small payments like rent.
NEAR RACINE LOCKS - 4
room (rame with full basement and nice lot. Asking
$16,500. Need offer.
RANCH - 2.47 acres, dbl.
garage, large stove, wood·
burnmg lire place, dwarl fruit
trees. E•cellent condition.
Ml DDLEPORT - 2 bedroom home with dbl: garage
for on ly $17,500.
CERTIFIED APPRAISALS
IT'S NOT WHAT YOU PAYIT'S WHAT YOU GEl
Sue Murpliy; Milton l'ouih
Holen. Virgil and
lrU&lt;t TMf~d

Housing
Headquarters

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

HOME NA nONAL BANK
for Tim

CALL
446-4522
"W• R••t For /.111 "

U-SAVE
AUTO
RENTAL

We Use Von Schrader
Equipment Recommended
by Loadin&amp; Carpet Manu facturers .
'FREE EsTIMATES"
3-22·tfn

Howard L. Writestl

ROOFING
NEW-IEPAII

Pri~·.·::T.-11'

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Also Carry
Fishing Supplies.

IUSINISS PHON!
16141 tU-USO
li!IOINCI PitON!
(6141 "2-7714

,

1127/ttc

Roger Hysell
Garage
II. IU,Pomeroy Ohio

949-2263
or 949-2969

U·SAVE
AUTO
RENTAL

CONTRACTING

Ntw Homts luilt
Eltim•tes••

PH. 949-2101

or 949-2160
No Sunday Calls
J/11/tfn

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start· from 12'116'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
lnsul•tad Doc Hau·s u

. P&amp;S BUILDINGS
R1cino. Oh.

Ph. 614·B43-5191
10-6-tlc

VINYL LINER POOL
ACRYLIC WALL POOL
ABOVE GROUND POOL
Onr 4DO Chokos
llYDIOTICll CNEI!ICAU
4tl Gon. Hortingtr Pkwy.
Mi.WI.,.rc, Ohio
HW~ 10 o.m. to s p.m.
Day
. Night
1·614
1-304
"2.254,
773-5634
· 6-19-lln

COIN SHOP
Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh.

OPEN
H111rs: 10 'til 2

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
.. LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
J
TOP SOil
1'
FILL DIRT

l

I

GENE GREENE

3·24-Hc

'"Free

ACCENT
FENCE &amp; SUPPLY
PH. 992-6931
After SCalf

10-8-ttc

742-2027

II

4/4/tt

SUPEIIOI
SIDING CO.

..

YINYL I AWMINUM

Completo Outt• Warlc
Comploto Remodeling
Roofing of oil Typoa
Worbd In horne area
20 yMrl
"Free Eatim~~ta1"

CAll COLLECT•

. Ph. (6141 143-5425
7/12/2 ....

OPEN
Mon., Wed., Fri., Sot.
9:00 AM '· 5:00 PM
7·5·1 mo.

SHADE RIVER
DRILLING
Formerly Heaton
Drilling Co.
•Water &amp; Gas
Well Service
•Myers Pumps
Sales &amp; SefVice

THE
PRINT SHOP

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

F, All Vm ''''~'I Nofit

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

Stationer,, Magnetic
Sign1, Rubber Stamps,

lusineu Forms,
Copy S~rvictt, Elc.
2SS Mill !1., Middleport

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Window•
•NeW Rooting

"FREE ESTIMATES"

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

104 Mulberrr A,-., Pomeroy
992-.... ~,.._

7/8/tln

VOUNG.'S

WE ARE YOUR
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

CARP~NTER

•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPUD QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SAUWTE SALES &amp; SERVICE

SERVICE

- Ad done and remodeling
- Roofing and gutter work

- Concrete work
- Plumbing and eleclrical
work

~~~~ Tn~•lclu

!Free Estimates)

RI.D£NOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHUTER-985·

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

cotoro. Call 614-367-0293.

wood on Friendly Ridge.
can 614-256-6260.

614-992-3561 ..

Seamstress wanted to do
altering in their home . Send
resume to P.O. S'ox 612.
Pomeroy, Ohio.

Refrigerator-freezer workl,
large upright. Call 614· 246·

The Meigs Local School
. . .
k'
D 11tr1ct
11 current 1Y see tng
applications from certified

Hay to give away. !'lot cut.
Darwin area . 614 -992 -

Varsity Football Coach, 7th
applicants
an Assistant
&amp;. 8th Gradefor
Football
Coach.
Girls' Varsity Voach. Giol-

6073.

8

Coon Hound puppies walkers. Call . 614 - 992 -

7749.

676-3734.

Puppies half German She·

pherd and
3834.

1.

304-675-

6 month old short haired
wired or medium size pup·

pies. 304-675-1222 .

MaletoCocker
4 yrs,
old
give Spaniel,
away. Regiaterf:ld, good with children .

. 882-2592 .
6

·

Lost and Found

FOUND Parakeet, at Mem·
oriel Field. If you have any
information or can identify
please call 614-446-9307 .
Found: Pitbull puppy on
Bailey Run Rd. Call 614·

992-7275 to identify.

-lcRedbone dog . Large sized.
last seen near dog pound in
Pomeroy area . 614 - 992·

6654.
B

-

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

12-8-tfc

lNTERESTED IN A
Wt'd like to

introduce ·~ou

to

choice.

NO DOWN PAYilUNr

IOWIW MOIITHIY PUIIIINr

BLACKSTON

NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING

Box. 326
Pomerov. OH. 45769 .
For faster

VETERINARY
CLINIC
IN MIDDLEPORT
OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE. 6•8
1Oth ANNIVERSARY .

sman animals receiving

veccinationt, worming,
end routine work during

tho month of July will
receive

·

Call 614- 9'97·

CAMPGROUNDS
St. Rt. 7, Pomeroy, Oh.

Uwl., N.w lifu,ltt•W
Primitive Camping Avaiklblt

W/Comping
SWIMMING DAILY

F~hing. lndurhd

Lifeguard On Duty

IS-. Diving 8-dl.
Walk, CleJf't RHirOOml ,
Shov.Mrt &amp; Snack Stand)

In appreciation of your

... _

,.-E. Sltodtey, D.V.M.

PH. 304-675·2·41
7/ t / 1 mo

C- &amp; Swilg Sm.

,, Tlo ,.,, OrrNw ,...,
RIIHfllll....

support lor 10 yean .

ROUL OAK PARK

61

111

All Maku

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•RefrigeratOrs
•Dryen •Freezers

•live Entertainment •free HBO
•Kitchenettes •Restaurant
A. A.A.

304.675·6276
1-10-t.f.n.

PARTS and SERVICE

4·5·tfc

RADIATOR
SERVICE

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY

We can repair and re-

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

systems. water
gas lines. water
r,lrilling and sertrucking llimas&amp; dirt).

PAT HILL FORD
992·2196

Call: 742-2407

Middleport,

5-23-lfn

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO
Authorized John Deere.
New Hollantl. Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Fat111 f:~ul~111 .. t
Path &amp; Smlee

l·l·tfc

loit &amp;LP. Gas btol!ak!a

e

10"/o DISCOUNT

985-3561

Announcements

BOGGS

Enaa1e-A·Car. the modern way
to drive the vehicle Qf your

,

RT. 62 NORTH
POINT PLEASANT. W. VA.
8 miles from
Pomerov-Mason Bridge
SINGLI 524.95
304-675-6276

age
and
wet!
vice.
tone

mo. d.

NEW VEHICLE

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

ing, basements, sew·

PH. 667-6535
or 985-4353
~/2811

(CUT OUT FOR FUTURE USE)

Will do all types of axcavating,
landscap-

tc r-------------~11
~-----------~
; TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
ROYAL OAK PARK

"Fret btimotes"
Installation Avwl""lt

EUGENE LONG

·SHOP

Ceramic Bisque
Plastercrah
Brushes, Paints ·
Sprays. Etc.

"SPAS"

luying &amp; Selling
Coins, Coin Supplies
&amp; Misc. Items

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

I'EISOfllaum POOlS

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

Alto TrutMittl ..

*VINYL SIOJNG
• ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULATION

North
Gllli(IOlis, Dllia i -ll-11

51. Rl. UO

DOZE". BACKHOE,
TRENCHER, SEPTIC '
SYSTEMS. 'NATE", :
GAS tlo SEW!R LINES,
RECIAMAnC N, PONDS.
SPI!ING DEVELOPMENT.'
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
8o OI"T

Efftctfve July 3, 1915

or 992-7121

Kittens to good home all

Full blooded Collie, male, 8
years old, need to have a
farm family home, 304·

~
MOTEL

DABBLE

"We Rent Far less"

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
, REPAIR
PH. 992-5612

8-13-tfn

on D11,

THE MIDDLEPORT

446-4522

J&amp;F

317 North St&lt;ttMI
Middto,ort, Ohio 4S 76Q

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 -

We lltrt AFall Tl••

St. Rt. 160 North
Gallipolis, Ohio
7/ 11/lln

RENT ACAR
CALL

Gutter Claoning
Pointing
FREE ESTIMATES

4/29/tln

PLUMIING &amp;
HEATING .

6413.

leyball Coach. Girlo' Aaoiat·

ant Varsity Volleyball
Coach. · Girls' Junior High
Basketball Coach, High
School Yearbook Advisor
and Junior High School
Cheerleader Advisor for the
1986· 86 school year. Applicants must hold a valid Ohio
teaching certificate and for
coaching p'ositions must
meet certification require ments of Ohio for sports
medicine and CPR . Persons
interested should contact
Dan E. Morris. Superintendent of Meigs Local Schools.
at 621 South Third Avenue
in Middleport, Ohio .

~ -~~~--~.=l~lv~e1,-ln~~la~d~Jfo~r
Ohio.

lady

in

Por:neroy,

614-992-2805 .

Break into the Financial
Industry part time. lnsu·
ranee agents needed i.mma·
diately. Earn 300 to 600
monthly and keep your
present job. Preparation and
training for Ucence pro·
vided . For interview, cell
1-614- 667· 6921 between

2-6 pm daily.

Own your own Jean ·
Sportswear, ladies Apparel ,
Childrens. Large Size. Com·
bination Store, Accessories.
Jordache, Chic, Lee. Levi,
Easy Street, 'zod, Esprit.
Tomboy, Calvin Klein. Ser·
gio Valente, Evan Picone, Liz
Claiborne. Members Only.
Organically Grown. Gaso·
line. Helthtex. Over 1 ,000

others. $7,900 to $24,900

Gutter• • Down•poutl

Real Estate General

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

RENT A CAR

PH. (614) 985-4212

1-(614)-992-3325

Wow- Free toys and free
gifts. Have a Friendly Home
Party now and wrap up your
Christmas sho.pping list
early. Gifts for all occasions.
Something for everyone.
Also looking for women who
would like to earn extra
money in their. spare time.
For more information ~all

.6276.

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

Furniture, Wedding
and Graduation

•Single and Multi Unit
Hou1ing
•Woqd Made Cabinetry
Dosign and Planning
GREG ROUSH
PH. 99,.7611

35185 Oak Hill Road
lone Bottom, OH. 45743

WISEMAN
INVESTIGATION
&amp; SECURITY
PH. 614·446·6211
RICHARD I. WISEMAN

-

LISA M. KOCH, M. S.
Licensed Clinical Audiologist

PIUS.. Oflico Supplies &amp;

r-::1-l mo

NEW LISTING - 2 BR,
carpeted home in Middle;
port, gas furnace and enclosed pore~. Nice for only
$8.000.
,0,

· •Developments &amp;

FOUl SEASONS
TA-NG SALON

Business
Services

~X

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

992-7771

et ono visl1 FREE.

'

-z
z

•lesideatial &amp;

ld cuatomert ... bring e
iend whO mgnt up end

.

Maiin..

(!I

,....... ,..,, '""'' IH
Coli
Now For Appaim._t

11 SESSIONS S35

Real Estate

Computerized
Aid Selection
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

24 Hr. Servi'e

FOUl SEASONS
TANNING SALON

Grocery store freezers &amp;
meatcoolerc. Call614· 268·

headboard. Call 614-2466876.

t.MI-:Ilrt•

All occupations. Call

806-687-6000 Ext. R-9805

to find out how.

White mala kitten 8 weeks

63 Pine St., Gallipolis
W1 Deliver

614-446-4046 Nettie Cor·

IIJiible .

t'er after 4PM .

old, cute. Call 614·448==~=f~§~~¥:§~~~~::=11
r
2212 otter 6P!'JI .

lOWMAN'S HOME CAIE MEDICAL SUPPLY

OPal I Ml·lO Pill lllao.·S.t.

NEW LISTING - 5 rm., I
floor, frame in Middleport
with . balh, carpeting and
large level lot. Only $16,500.

E.

r

Sale leftover•. Call

Twin size bed frame &amp; queen

Dexltf, Ohio

WE lllL MEDICAl( AND OTHER INSURANCE
UIIIEIS WHEN RIG.U

for

TEAFORD

FUTURE TV SATELLITE

•OKygen •Hospital Beds •Wheel Chairs
•Bathroom 4ids •Walker. •Crutches &amp; Canes
Many Other Items

av.,~ble.

ATENTfON BUILDERS
property has been sutldivided into I acre - 10 acre
srtes. tan be sold individually.
Leax water obtainable, priced
k&gt;w, possible excellent lllrms.
This is an excellent buy lor
either larm or development
POMEROY- 2 nice building
lots -on Wright St. Water &amp;
sewer. $4,000.00 each.
6 ACRES - $6,000 on Spring St. "EXCELLENT FINANCING AVAILABLE"

S179

Out of Town Customers Call Collect

Loc1ted on corner
of Mill l!t Fifth in
Middleport.

S14 9 S00
Sl3 5 QOO

Svstem with 324 Rec....................
500
Houston Tracker Avoilablc- Other Options Available

Ph. (6141 669-3.761 or

Jobs .

$15,000-t50,000-yr. pol·

101f2' RAYDX BLACK MESH DISH

Hospital Supplies For Home Use
SALES &amp; RENTALS
614-446-7283

FOR SALE
100'x100'
VACANT LOT

Complete and Installed ..................
SOUTHERN SPUN 9 ft. Ins lolled ....

Announces
Tht Expansion of Service to our CustomerS
Ta Include:
•Complete Front End Repair &amp; Allgnmen1
•Computerized Wheel Balance
1rTiral (All Slzea-::Car. Truck. Farm) .
AT A
7-IS·I mo.

,.ww....
. o.............................oo
........n..w.,., .._...............ao
u,.,,w.,. . .,..

8.000 sq. ft. brick
building w /2 1 0·

Racine,
PH. 949-2777

u••

46 Sp1ce for Rent

5th St.

• .u:u

. .7-C. . . . .

u, •

Government
Yard

2

In Memoriam

In

Memoriam . In loving
memory of my husband .
Norman Rizer, who passed
away 4 yearaago on July 17.
1981 . Loving thoughts of a
dear husband, Often bring a
silent tear. Thoughts return
to scenealong pass~d. Time
speeds on. but memories
last. Loved and udly missed
by Gertrude Rizer, son
Glenn. Grandeughters. Kelly
and Kenda Rizer.

RICK
NEER
farm ,
sales.
West

PEARSON AUCTIO·
SERVICE . Estate,
antique. liquidation
Licensed Ohio and
Virginia . 304· 773·

5786 or 304-773-5430.

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars.
Jim Mink Chev.- Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

614-446-3672

Used

mobile homes. Call

614-446-0175.

FURNITURE. Beds~ iron,
wood. cupboards. chairs.
chests. baskels , dishes .
stone jars, antiques, gold
and silver . Write · M . O .
Miller, Rt.2, Pomeroy, Ohio

45769 or coli 614-9927760.

Buying dally ,gold, silver
coins. rings, jewelry, sterling
ware, old coins, large cur·
rency. Top prices. Ed. Burkett Barber Shop, 2nd. Ava.

Aluminum scrap. Sell your
aluminum scrap direct to the
smelter. Buying all grades of
aluminum, Premium paid for
large lOads. Call for quote.
Scipio Energy. located P A
miles east of Pagetown on
Township Road 141. Meigs

For more information cell

814-949-3073.

• 20th.

Wanted to buy, like new
baby stroller, clean and exc .
cond.. large type wheels.

304-773-5619. -

Emplnyment

11

3171 .

----.. F&gt;·.;,-..ne-rov····----Middlepon

Yard Sale Fri , 19th, Sat .

others. $7,900 to $24,900

inventory. Training, fiKtures,
grand opening, etc . Can
open 16 days. Mr. Keenan

1- - - - - - - - - -

BIG BUCKS! Your prior
service is worth a lot of
money. Monthly paycheck -

New training . Call304-675·
3950 or 1-800· 642·3619 .
Career sales national com·
pany expanding in Point
Pleasant area . Opportunhy
for individual with extra
potential. Send resume to
Mr. J . W. Tracy. P.O .Box
2208, Huntington. W . Va .

1 _2_57_2_2_·--~---­

Wanted someone to cut hay

Live in companion tor elderly
lady. Room and board plus
salary. 304-675-6692 days
or 676 - 21 ~8 evenings.

1---------15

bles, water beds. sheett,
mattress protectora, pic·
tures. clothing. , household
items. Lower Rt. 7 before
Clay school on left.
Garage Sale 18th, 9 -6 . Rt,
160. 1 mi. N-Porter. Air
cond .• clothing, children'•·
adultsm toy1, Barbie dolls &amp;
access .
Yard Sale Thursday and
Friday. First house on left
past Clark Chapel Rof:~d on

&amp; Vicinity

Yard Sale 475 Kathy St.,
July 20. Air conditioner.
coffee table. electric broom,
christmas tree .

18 Wanted to Do

Help Wanted

Wash &amp; wax mobile homes,
84 .50 hour or $76. Call

614-446-4530.

Want to do plain sewing and.
alterations in my home .

304-675·4461.

Financial
2

1

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommends
that you do business with
people you know, and NOT
to sennd money through the
mail until you have investigated the offering .
Government jobs. $16,000$50,000 yr. possible. All
occupations . Call 1 · 805-

687-8000, e.xt. R-4562 to
find out how.

Own your own Jean·
sportswear, Ladies apparel ,
Children's, large size, Com bination store. Accessories .
Jordacho. Chic; Lee. Levi. E
Z Street, lzod. Esprit, Tom·
boy. Calvin Klein. Sergio
Valente, Evan Picone, Liz
Claiborne, Members Only,
Organically Grown, Gaso·
line, Healthtex, over 1 ,000
others. S13, 300to 824,900
inventory, naining. fiKtures,
grand opening etc . Can open

3051
3
6
_ _78_·_3_6_9_._ _ _ _ __
1 open Avon territories
15 days. Mr. Keenan (

3
available in Point Ple ... nt
area. 304 .676·1429 .

22 Money to Loan
HOME OWNERS -Refinance
to low fi11.ed rate . Use equity
for any purpose. Leader
Mortgage Co.. 614· 592 ·

3051 .

23

Professional
S11rvices

Superior Exterminating Co .,
Inc. 'People who appre ·
ciates your Business' . Li·
censed : Ohio· WVa . Call

·- -··---. ·---, -·---- ---------·
First Time Yard Sale. 3221
Howard Ave. July 17 and
18. Everything cheapll
'

Jul•
'

18,19,20th, 8 :00 to 7 :00.
Five families. All sites. Lots
of children• thing 1 , ·

31

H
f 5 1
omes or a e

familyroom , livingroom,
eat-in kitchen, utility room ..
2 car garage, many extras.
Leaving town. Last week
before listing . Call614-446·

4829.
Nice 3 bdr. home, lg.
livingroom , nice kitchen,
utility rm .. plenty of eloset
space, electric range, dispo·
sal, well inaulated, newly
carpeted. Faces the golf
cou·rse . Can help finance .

Call 614-446-2673 or 614·
446-1171 .

For sale by owner. Large
picturesque tri · level home
on wooded 1 14 acres make•
this home on Bulaville Road
your best buy at $57.000. 3
or 4 bdr., 2'/:J baths, large
kitchen w ith custom built
cherry cabinets. LR , DA .
woodburnar. 16K24 family·
room partially finlahed and
carport. Solid penel doon
throughout. KC School Dis·
trict . Close to town. Clal

614-446-0088. shown by

appointment only .
For 11le or lease . 2 bed ·
room1 , double car garage,
1 .2. acres. Rose Hill, Pome·
roy . Reduced 826. 000 .

614-678-2613.

GoVernment Hom·es from
$1 . (U repair! . Also delinquent tax property. Call

805-687-6000 Ext. GH9806 for information.

7 room houae. 1 Va bath. 4
bedrooms, garage on Gr•vel
Hill , Middleport, Ohio Call

614-992-6714.

House for ule. Nice.
46x 1 00 lot, aluminum sid·
ing, close to schools, • in

Middleport. Call 614-9!26361 .
:

3 bedroom home; 8 1!2 ~r ·
cent assumable loan , gar~en
spot. Reduced down to

$49.000. 304-675-504 .

log home, 3 acrea. 2 mi. .ut
Jerrico Rd .. 8 V2 assumable

loan. Call 304-676·6622.
•

3 bedroom frame, drided
well, access to rural wafttr,
3.6 acres. frontage state ~t .
2, Flat rock near tire station,
Stokermatic coal furneca,
low low annual heating dill.
garage and storage buAdings. 304-675· 5076 even ·
ings until 9 :00 PM .
~
Eleanor . House with or
without ellltra 1011 . Rt. 82 .

Water wells drilled and sar·
vice d. Prices on reqUHt . Call

614·742-3147 or 614-9925006.
PIANO TUNING AND RE -

PAIR, Summer rates in
effect - free estimates .
Ward 's Kayboard, 304-675 ·

6600 or 675-3824.

basement
screened in porch , breeu way , double garage, big
yard, garden 12.54 acres,
beautiful view. 2 miles out
Jericho Rd .

2627 Lincoln Ave. 2 bed ·
rooms, living room, kitchen
and dining room . full size
batha..and shower. Big lot .

S20,u00. 304-675-5123.

PRICED TO SELL. 3 bed·
room house. Palestine Rd .
Ashton . l~ acre. central heat

829.500. 304-762-266?.
32 Mobile Homes

for Sale

6 room house approx . 6
acres. Barn, buildings , collar
house , neitr Eureka ,

,,

Tri · State Semi Driver Train·
ing . Enjoy 2 weeks of
Tractor'· Trailer Training con ducted 20 miles south of
Dayton for past 16 yean.
Real placement servic:e emphasized . For complete writ·
ten details call : Friendly

$27.000 . Call 713-370- NEW AND USED MDB(LE
3624.
HOMES KESSEL 'S OU-'\LITY
MOBILE HOME SALES ,
Government Homes from 4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOUS,
$1 , (u repair) . Also delinRT 35. PHONE 614- ~46 quent tax property. Call
7274.
1· 806· 687· 6000, ext. R·

today .

lnvettmen1 · Shelter no has·
sets. Multi· unit. apartment
compte)(, all 1 bedroom.
some furnished. resident
manager. Renters pay all
utillt!ea, less than 5% va·
caney . Appro•. $1,400 mo.
income. serious inquires

18 Wen1ed to Do

614-446-0690 9AM-6PM .

Food Service supervisor tor
progre11ive healt care facll·
lty. Qualification• : must
have 90 hour approved
cour~e management skills,
experience in food service .
Apply at Scenic Hilla Nuts·
ing Center. 8· 4:30.

&amp; Vicinity

614-245·9152 or 614-379- 304-586-3672.
2712.
6 room house.

4562 tor Information.

Trovia at 15131424-4593 1- - - - - - - - Pert·time in home sewing,
drapery &amp; drapery altere ·
dons. Gallipolis area only.
Experience required . Call

------F&gt;-ffiieasa·rit' ....

3bdr. Jay Dr.. 3 bdr .. 2 both."
Need carpet installed . CAll
Mark Griffin , 614-4463282 work guaranteed.

31 Homes for Sale
CFI. July 27 8o 28. South _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___:_
1-614-632-0677.

J 8o R Sport Shop.

~=~~~=====+=====~===

Real Eslate

collect

Wed. trhu Fri . 10 til 1 E81t
Main St. in Pomeroy, behind

19•h •· 20th, 9-5PM. Itema 123 Park Drive

• Ql
priced cheap, htbrickhome
on left on Bluer Rd off
Addison Bulaville Rd.

Schools
Instruction

Ohio. Call

cated back of MGM hrm
City . Pomeroy hour• 1 0 · 5.

3 Family Garage Sale July

HIER'AV 2 day ground
school . Private, commercial.
Point.

238 Condor St ., Pomeroy.

July' 17th, 18th. 19th. lo-

old 160.

County. 614-992-3466.

bock. Coli liow 614-742- 614-388-8794.
2328.

ptaco July 20th 8o 21st. FN:
..0 plua 2 Red Dot ""lis.

Own your own Jean Sponswear, Ladies Apparel.
Childrens, Large Size. Com bination Store, Accessories.
Jordache. Chic, Leo, Levi,
Easy Street, lzod, Esprit ,
Tomboy. Calvin Klein. Ser·
gio Valente, Evan Picone, Liz
Claiborne, Members Only,
Organically Grown , Gaso·
line. Helthtex. Over 1 ,000

for half, 304-675-7283 or
Middleport, Oh. 614-992- 304-895-3641 .
3476.
1- - - - - - - - - -

You can tlim up for summer.
All Natural Weight -Loss pro- Fun Job . Setyourownhourl
gram can help you lose . as a toy party demonatrator,
10·29 plus pounds in your free training, tree kit, no
first montt).tbr your money collecting or delivery. Call

The D clau softball toume·
ment sponsored by the
R1cine Fire Dept. t•k••

1..:..._;________

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS $35.000 Life Insurance-

S1)rv1ces

614-448-0294.

inventory. Training, fixtures,
grand opening, ate . Can
open 15 days. Mr. Keenan
{306)678·3639.
~

Dodrill's Auto Parts. Now (3061678· 3639.
buying salvage and juck
cars. Mon .· Fri. 8 · 6 :30. Call
614-388· 9615.

3 Announcements
SWEEPER and sawing ma·
chine repair. parts. and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery.. Davit Vacuum
Cleaner. ona half mile up
Georges Creek Rd.
Call

GMC hub caps, fruit jars, 2

for re ..le tor nMdY childr•n .
Centenary TownhouM July
30 ~ 31 or call &amp;1•-4•8 -

_3_3_4_8_2_
. - - - - - - - I 20th. New Iampo, end ta-

Giveaway

U.P. WIRE MESH

Drake 324 Re&lt;., Drake 100 degrH LHA

112- M~

M?- C.,._
JM,- V.,_

PH. 992-6651
or 992-5113

FARM OR INVESTMENT
&amp; BUILDING LOTS
130 ACRES I mile fmm Ohio
Features huge dutch
. e1cellent lal&lt;e site,
and woods.
Owner saii"MAl(E
ON
lo sell as
excellent

4

U!lf!ph.o~te u:c:h.alt,tfDJ•• "

At. 7 . Antiques. antiqua
dishes, wood burning stove.

sales. Details send . self-

me.nt.

lfl Cewt St .• ~-"1· IIIIi• 457"

U ·I ,,._..._T_"'

and rooftop positions along the
Green Line.
The government sources said
paramilitary pollee were patrolling
west Betrut today, enforcing the
security plan with encouraging

Help

the aircraft and the ground staUoo
was "sudden and abrupt. "
The hews ·agency quoted one
expert as saying: "We are no wbler
than earller."

The Daily Sentinel

eXpert Carl PalkoVIch said
the "voices sounded normal" and
that there was no sign o! nervousness on the part of the pilot seeming to rule out a developing
mechanical problem known to the
crew or a terrorist threat from a
passenger.
But Palkovlch, an official of
Fairchild Corp., which manulactured the voice recorder, said: "It Is
very dl!flcult to determine whether

Continued from page 1
tlon, the TVA and the clvlllan and
mllltary nuclear programs or the
Energy Department.
As the House was working on the
appropriations measure, the Senate
Publlc Works Committee approved
a $12 billion omnibus water projects
authorization bill, the first break In a
decadelong stalemate.
The Senate bill, approved unanimously. represented a compromise with the White House,
.....:;&lt;C:::o:::n::tln::.:u::::ed::..f::.ro:::m:.:..!:pa::.!g:::e.:1:..)- - - which Insisted on provisions that
would force states and local
· said.
jurlsdlclions
to hear a greater share
slon news programs and began to
.. Reporting on Reagan's condition, read: "A Treasury afWlURogers." of the project costs and Impose user
deputy press secretary Larry
Speakes sald the president wished fees.
· Speakes said that when the nasal- Mrs. Reagan well on her visit to the
Bevil said he expected a slmUar
. gastric tube was removed in the USS America off the coast of authorization bill soon from the
mornlng, the president remarked:
House Public Works Committee.
Noriolk, Va.. today and told her:
• "This Is Christmas In July."
"Be sure to ten those people in
: Speakes sald doctors examlned uniform how proud I am of them.
. the president shortly afler 8 a.m. Being here has reminded me that
EUI'. "They report he had 'the best their dedication knows no bounds
Continued from page 1 '
.. ntght ever.' His coodltlon Is excel- and I owe so much to them."
cutlng attorney, Indicated Tuesday
.. lent. His vital signs are stable and he
A 2-lnch growth was removed that the sUite would request a bond
remains in good spirits."
frqrn Reagan's intestine Saturday of$:oJ,OOl.
·. He added that Reagan "is not when he underwenl a three-hour
Hysell had heen free on a $100l
experiencing any dlscomfort.' •
operatioh. On Monday, .doctors bond after he was charged with
·' . The president walked around his reported that the tumor was aggravated assault following the
: suite at Bethesda Naval Hospital malignant b~t that the cancer cells July 8Incldent In which Rosenbaum
TUesday evening, watched televl- had not spread.
was allegedly struck In the head
with a baseball bat while at a party
at the Joan Wears residence, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy.
Rosenbaum was initially taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital by
Meigs EMS and then tranferred via
~ought
Llfefllght to Grant Hospital, Columbus. He underwent several surger- ·
Librarian Ruth Powers reporls t!lallhe 32 children attending the
les
for the head lrijurles before his·
recent painting classes taught by Lois PauiPy at the Pomeroy and
death
at 3:45 p.m. Monday Gmnt
Middleport libraries were so enlhused they i'Sked for more. Mrs.
Hospital authorities said.
Pauley has agreed lo have ano1her class on Aug. 6. Registration Is
necessary to ensure space accornodations.
The grand jury will also hear
evidence in a case Involving an
There is stU! lime 10 register for the children's flower arranging
aggravated assault charge against
classes on July 25 and Aug. 1 which will be conducted by Janel Bolin.
Thomas Charles Porter, Sr., 45, of
Adult painting classes are also being offered at the libraries on July
235 S. Fourth St., Middleport. in
25. Adult classes will be held thaldayfrom1-3 p.m. al Mlddleporl and
7-9 p.m. at Pomeroy.
· connection with the July 3 stabbing
of Matthew Dillard, Z7, Middleport.
The libra ries' summer reading progra m has 76 children enrolled
this year which proves "Readers are leaders."
Officials said Dillard was allegedly
stabbed in the stomach by Porter
du~ing a fight outside a Middleport
bar. Porter Is fn;e on bond.

·conclude 23 cases in
~Meigs County Court

reconlers.'
The Press Trust of India news
agency quoted "rellablesoorces" as
saying the recording revealed that
the end of communications hetween

Business Services

11

3 Announcemenu

Yard Sale Donations n•ded

..

Fighting on green line; Syrian
..help sought: government source
BEIRUT, lebalion (UP!)
Pollee enforced a new security plan
: in west Beirut today as Moslem and
CJu:lstlan gunmen clashed along the
Green Line dlvldlng the clty.
• Government sources said efforts
. were under way to enlist Synan help
. to end the fighting.
Military sources ·satd Christian
. and Moslem mllltamen exchanged
·· sniper fire and occasional bursts of
: machine gun rounds along the
• Green Line during the night. And
several mortar shells crashed in
adjacent resldentialnelghborhoods.
· · Therewerenolmmedlatereportsof
· : casualties.
The clashes on the Green Line, a
· · swath of ruined buildings between
· : Chrtstlan east Beirut and the
• · Moslem west, came as 35 more
Syrian mllltary observers arrived to
· help five comparlots, the army,
: pollee and major mlllttas supervise
• the new secu11ty plan In west Beirut.

an explosion Is on the tape."
Aviation experts said it was
possible the plane was hit bY a
sudden electrical faUure that could
have deactivated the "black box"

The

Maintenance services
available-grounds meinte nance custodial services.
and clearing. Call anytime of
day or nigh't . Multiplex,

1-800-232-0500 ext. 204,

Outside Ohio call

25&amp;-9600 ext. 204.

1· 800 -

COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING
Pump sales. ltl ervice . Regis·
tared in Ohio. All work
guarenteed. Call 304· 273·
2811 . Ravenswood. W . Va.

Days 614-692-1189
614·694-2874.

1981 Nashua Governor .
14x60 with 7x21 expando .
AU electric. 2 bdr. prd'en
tub. asking $14,500. Gall

614-388-9746 or614-388·
8589 .
12X60 B~ddy house trliiler,

good cond. $4500. Soo ~Ill
Angell at

Eureka or C.all

614-256-1964.

1973 12x.60 all gas Hillerest
By owner remodeled 3 bdr. new carpet. tl!ltcellent cond.,
tanch. near town . Family· quick sale, only 83,950 . C.all
room, diningroom. equipped 1 6
_1_4_·_
44_6_·_0_1_7_&amp;._ _ __
kitchen. 1 Ya bath, natural •·
gas heat. new roof-carpet - 1979 14x 70 mobile home
kitchen, $41,600. Realtor- on 1 acre lot. Excell~nt
owner call 614· 446 -7881
ndition . Double car

or 614-446-6610 ask tor li20,x24

~m .

S18,500 .
•

�'

•

Page 12 The

17, 1988

Sentinel

~5~4~~~~~~~~-"~W~C=A=JL=~~~~~~~·~·~~~M--------,

GUNS. 700- Rom . 243.
870.111H1t. t2 .... 1100
Rom. 12 go. Rod Hawk 44
mog. Can 6t4·367-04112

Smith and W - Madol
18. 317 mov. wtdo
1275.00. l.lllo new. 304773-1730, ploaH no collo
aftwi:OO.

hoi-.

4x4 aompar -1•1 with

In ptrk. Room and board at
au for 2 yeart will pay for

l.lllo now Armadillo chain
llnk '-nee 140 fl ., 2 olntlo
gotN, 1210. Col 114:371·
2418 O¥Oninge.

1-:=-:-:-c---:--:---:---

"''*· hrm-. ""· tolot,.
· -· and 1177 Chev. 'llo

1972 Ch1mpion trailer in

Ono Karat ladlu diamond
ring Tiffany mounted, yel.
low gold. Coli 614-2888413.

1919 Kit mob il• home

12xl0furniahad ·w ith AC. in
Athen1 area near OU nt up
trailer. In excellent condi·
tion. Coll614-446-0810.
Ponland. 1 Ox&amp;O. Partly fur·

nlahed. new Coleman gal
fumoco. U.400 . 614-843 -.
6310 or 614-843-5406.

2 w.htool utility trollor with
oprlnga . Coli i14-2686413.

MOBILE HOMES MOVEO.
Insured, 20 yean experience. 304-576 -2866 or
676-2998 .
1973, 14x.66 Schult mobile
home, 2 bedrooms. central
air, deck, 4 car garage,
•ox1 16 lot. Henderson,
g
304· 675-&amp;660 oftor 6 PM .
Mu.1 .e ll 14x70 furnlohad
mobile home,
concrete
driveway
, out buildings.
drilled well. 1 acre of land.
Aohton Rood noar Hennon
HighSchool. t36.000.00or
make an offer . 304·67627 t 8,
'

33

Farms for Sale

Farm in Letart Township.
known 11 Hague Land on

'!fV.l

~,.\T'

l)••u" 1"''••",.. h...,••"·'""••"'"91''"•-""

44

Apar1ment
for Rent

. h d 8 11 • •
Furn&lt;~
e
ocroncy 701
41h Ave .• Gollipolis. $160.
utilitiea paid. ahara beth,
adullo. Coli 446·4418 otter
'&amp;PM .

beth, new carpet. fenced
backyard. 656 Third Ave.
Call614-446-0690.

ln'tereated in reasonably

pr)ced 5 to 30 acres, some
wooded area preferred.
a\lailable for trailer hoop up
or. accessible. with plana to
bUild in near future. New
Haven or vicinity . 304-8822,29.

4-1

Oakwood apt. 1 bdr.. air
cond., quiet, convenient location. no pet1. sec. dep .
Call 614-446 -2066.
Furnished apt.. 920 4th
Ave., 1 bdr., S226. utilities
pd .. adults. Call 446·4418
after 8pm.
Furnished efficiency, adutts,
920 4th Ave .. 8186 utilities
pd.. Call 446-4416 after
8pm .

Rent als
Houses for Rent

2 . bdr. unfurnished hou1111
wit:h storage building 6
a•rage. ref . . 6 deposit required. Coll8t4-446-9886.

Furnished apt. 2 bdr., 1196
water paid. 131 'h 4th Ave ..
Ca11446-4416 after Bpm.
Small apt. tor one, nicely
cleaned. furnished. Call
614-446-3511 or 614-9922430.

Jd .. listed immediate occup•ncy. Gallipolit · Rio
GNnde areal. Extra nice J . 1 Yz bdr . apt .. utilities paid.
bd;. home. Super clean. partially furnished in Rio
tattefully decorated. includ- Gronde. Coii814-44S..2064
Ing drapes &amp; curtains. Air or 614-446-1323.
cond.. nice yard. perfect
family home . Call collect Furn . upstairs, 3 rooms &amp;
614-286-6447 for more bath, clean, adults only. No
pets, references required .
details.
Coll614-446-16t9.
3 bdr.house. 2 baths. Call
304-675· 5104 or 304·675· New efficle~cy apt with
garage, Northup area. pri5386 .
vate yard, dispoul. small
4 bdr. bath &amp; Y1, lower river deck . lease required, water
rd., 1200 mo .. dep. req . Call included. washer &amp; dryer
614-446-4222 between hookup . Call 614-4467209 or 614·446-3287.
9AM· 5PM .
8 room house for rent next to
3-ln-1. Organ for sate and 9
ft. truck camper top. Call
6t4-992-3436.

Unfurnished 2 bdr. apt .•
$110 mo ., pay own utilities,
$100 dopooit . Coli 814446-1777.

3 bedroom. partially furnished house . 2 blocks from
Main St.. Pomeroy . 10
months lease required. Security deposit . Mutt be
employ0d . 6t4-843-6446.

Riverside Apia. Middleport.
Special rate1 for .Senior
Chlzens. $130. Equal Housing Opportunities . 614992 -772t .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bdr. furnished , all utllites
pd., except elect .• conve·
nient location, security dftpoait reuqired . Call614·4468668.
2 bdr. mobile home, dep . S.
ref. required. Cell ~ 14-2661922.
2 bdr . 2 mi. from HMC at
Evergreen . Partially fur ·
nished. children accepted.
Coli 614-446-3697 or 6t4246-6223.
2 bdr. trailer for rant on
Patriot Gage Rd . Call 614 446·4253 .
2 bdr. fully furnished AC,
utilities paid, adults only .
Coll6~4- 446 - 4110 .

2 bedroom mobile home.
Furnithed. AC . 1 child, no
pets. •1&amp;0. per month . New
Haven. 304-882· 2466.
44

JACKSON ESTATES
·APARTMENTS !Equal
' Housing Opportunity)
monthly rent starts at $169
for 1 bedrOom and $204 for
2 bedroom. depo1it •zoo.
Joctted near Spring Valley
Pfeu 1nd Foodland. pool
end Cable TV available.
l')ourl at possible 1 0 am to 4
pmand 7pm to9pm
Monday-Friday. Coli 614448-2745 or lteve
rne••ge.
Nlcaly furnished mobile
hom., eft. apt .• central air
•d heat in nhy, adutta only.
Call 114-448-0338.

'.'

2 bedroom epartmenta.
New HaVen, WVa . Newly
remodeled. In Cown. 614992 · 7481 .
1 bedroom apt. for rent.
Nicely located . Contact Village Manor in Middleport.
814 - 992 -7787 . Equal
Housing Opponunity.
Furniahed apt fo_r rent in
Syracuae. Phone 614-9927689 after 5:00 p.m.
APARTMENTS, mobile
homea, houses. Pt . Pleasanl
end Gallipolis. 614-446822t .
Apartments, Wedge Apt, no
children or peta. 304-8762072 .
Furnished aparcment Point
Ple..ilnt . UtiliUee paid . 304895-3450.
2 bedroom furnished, At. 2,
8 miles North Pt . Pl. S200 .
month plus $100. Deposit .
304-876-506t .
45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms . Peril Central Hotel .
Coli 614 -446-0766.

Apartment
for Rent

Apertment for rent. Cell
81'-&lt;1411-9244, 9AM-6PM .

.

.,

7.· 1 7

"

46 Space for Rent

2 bdr, duplex, new kitchen,

Real Estate
Wanted

Uled office furnltuN chllra

·
t•7
lldesk. Cal814 -«f-1. a .
AMF n'd 'ong m -. IHP• 38
in. cut. oloctrlc .,.,. u5o.
Coli 614·446-3870.
A'~rcondil
toner 18•000 8TU
UMd 2 months, coat •tsoo
selling 1250. Guorontoed.
Co.ll 1114-4411-7071.

" 'B' as in Bingo.
r'-----------T----------i----------

Fairfield Road near Syra · Furnished efficiency $146,
cute. 30 acrea. mineral utlltin paid, share bath, 807
rights. no buildings, near ·2nd. Ave. Gallipolis, adulll.
water line . Aaking $16,000. Coli 448-4416 oft or 8PM .
firm . Coli 1-216-386-7620
or write C. H. Sayre, 689 Hill
Blvd. E. liverpool , Ohio 2 bdr. opt .. utllltioo portly
paid-nice. 1149 mo. Coli
43920.
304-675-6104or304-6755386.
36 lots &amp; . Acreage
Nicely furnished •f?l. ~entre I
heal, air, parking, next door
to library. One profeuional
Loja or acreage 15 minutes oduH only. Call 614-446aouth of town. Call 614- 0338.
2!f6-6413.
large Attic apt .. furnished
1 ilcre building or trailer Iota •175. utilitie1 pd .. 919
lor NIO. Coll614-992-748t Second Gallipolis, male preor 6t4-992-2386 or 614- ferred, share bath. Call
446-4416 after 8pm.
9~2-3643.

311

2 whtool utility trallar with
•pringo . Coil 814-218&amp;413.

Furniahed room, range, re ·
frig. e126, there bath, sin·
gle male. 919 2ad. AVe ..
Gollipolia. Coli 446-441 8
after 8PM .
46 Space lor Rent
Mobi'le home tot, 12'i50' or
tmaller. $78 water paid, 4th
6 Neil, Gallipolio. Coli 44844t6 after 8PM .
large trllilar lot BulavilleAddloon Rd. Coli 8t4-441·
4265 or 8t4-387-0232.

Trailer apaces. Small child•
ron occoptod . 304-876·
1076.

South Bend bench lathe l1n.
·
116 vo h mo1or.
owong,
tooled &amp; ... dy. 1800. Call
614-241-1871.

47 Wanted to Rent

Air condltlonar:18,000 8TU
uood 2 montho, coot 1100
sell for 1250 guorantood.
Coli 61 ~-448-7075.

Wonted to rant or loose form
hoouM with barn 81 acreage,
good reference . Call 814446-0488 or 814-446·
0866.

1_::.::_::_____:_-,-__

1- - - -- - - - - -

SWAIN
AUCTION e. FURNITURE
62 Olivo St .. Gallipolis. Now
&amp; uoad wood-cooll1oveo, 6
pc wood LA oulte 1399,
bunk bedo lt99, ontron
rocllnoro 199, now &amp; u11d
bedroom auitea. ranges.
wrlnger woohara. &amp; ohooo.
Now llvlngroom · ouitoo
1199·t599, Iampo. lito
buying coal• wood stoves.
Cell 8t4-446·31 69.
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofas end chairs priced frorp
f28&amp; . to U96. Tobleo, no
and up to &amp;126 . Hide-abeds, $390. and up to
8660.. aofo bedo 1.146.
Recliners, 1225,.· to $376 ..
Lamps from •za. to •126 .
pc. dinettes from $109., to
435. 7 pc. f189 end up.
Wood table with six chairs
e286 to 8746 . Desk 81t0
up to $225. Hutche1, $660.
Bunk bed complete with
mattresses. t276 . and up to
$396. Boby beda. f11 0.
Mattre...a or box 1pringa,
full or twin, '$158 .. firm. •ea.
and $78. Queen aett, $225.
4 dr. cheat1, •49. 5 dr.
chests, &amp;69. Bed frame1,
820.ond 126 .. 10 gun- Gun
cabinets. •360. Gat or
electric range• *375. Baby
mattresteJ, t2&amp; &amp; •3&amp;, bed
from01 f20. Ul, &amp; t30.
king frame t&amp;O. Good selec tion of bedroom suites,
rockera , metal cabineca ,
heedboerdt t38 It up to
165.
Used Furniture .. Refrigerators. ranges, metal office
daaka, electric range. 3 milea
out Bulavllle Ad . Open 9am
to Spm, Mon . thru Sat.
614-446-0322
GOOO USEO APPLIANCES
Washers. dryer1. refrigerators, rang11. Skaggs Appliances, Upper River Rd.
betide Stone Crest Motel .
614-446-7398.
County Appliance. Inc .
Good uted appliances and
TV oots. Open SAM to 6PM .
Mon thru Sat. 614-448t699. 627 3rd . Avo. Gallipolis, OH .
Valley Furniture. new &amp;
used. large tection of quality furniture . 121 6 Eastern
Ave .• Gallipolis.
~
Ed's Appliance Serving eir
conditioners, refrigerators,
wathen, dryara. In Gallie,
Meiga &amp; Maaon Co. Call
114-448-7444 or 614-3677187.
Victorian &amp; Edwardian oak
&amp;. mehogeney furniture from
England : dining • choira,
carver. occ111ional tables,
drop leaf a .draw leaf tablea.
picturet. mirrora, marble top
wash ltend,. chett of drawert, tide board, ne .. ofthree
tablet, and more. Allet e fair
price . Call614-446-8668.
Uaod furniture : bedroom
auite, atudent desk &amp; chair,
2 pc. livingroom 1uite,loveooot.
5 pc.
wood&amp; dinette..
recliner.
Corbin
Snyder

111

CROSS • SONS

U.S. 31 Wnt, Jackaon,
Ohio. 111'-218-11411 .
Mo...., F-oon, Now
Holllnd. lueh Hog 81181 a
Sarvlco. 0wr 40 uood
troctora to choooo from &amp;
complete llno of now &amp;
oqulpmont. Largel1
Mlectlon In S.E. Ohio.

UMd

Old

z28

1878
I, 1971
Comoro. 304-891-3857.

Sale
1984 Ford Ranw ohortbod,
1wo-tona paint, 4 cyf., 4
epc:l. r AM-FM tape. 11idere•r
window. running board,
ciMn, 11,400. Call 6t.ll4411·17111 or lt4-388·
8811 aftariPM.
i---------77 Ford PU, lcyl., 111ndord,
*1.000 or beat offer. Call
814-381-9303.

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

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

1----------

1-:___,::;..__...;_....._

l----------

•a

1---------

ti~Picture

windows ther-1:::;;:;:;::=;:::==::;==
manlpone6"highby8'-10'- -69 For Sale or Trade
12' wood an clad t199.00- 1 - - - - - - - - - 8299.00·8399.00.
13. 6 gol. aluminum mobile P110e1000 SSB 23 chonnol
homo roof coating U1 .95 Siltronl X90 VFO, V-Quad
••- 6 and up t19 .96 oo.
Bloom Ant. 11211.00. Trade
1 4 .. Drive w t Y tile for ga kart In g.,d cond,
It 2 · · • 7 2 · '- t1 9 - 9 6) 304-678-&amp;128.
I t 0 .. • 6 0 " - I 1 2 - 9 6) i - - - - - - - - i8"x60"-18.96).
1 1 . 4"•t0' PUC sowor and
drain plpoi1 pc. U.49 N . )
126 pc. -U .26 oo.) 1100
pc.-• 3 ·00 n .l.
Penn't WtrehouH
Wolloton, Ohio
61 Farm Equipment
614 • 384. 3645

1981 AMC Spirit hitch·
Boats and
bock. 4 cyl., 111ndard, AC. 76
PS, PB. exc. cond. Coli
Motors for Sale
814-245-8040.
19 711 Nowport 1400. Coli ,
1972 20 foot pleooure jot
8 t 4 _24 s- 11376,
boat, greot family boat,
*2,100.00. Will take cars,
1977 Marcury Capn· Ghl• ho,...,
ooddlo, toe on trade .
vory good con d. It ,600 or 304-871-1799.
boat offer. Call .,.., -7, 1~--~-----1114-367-01102 Of anytime S..rs Oemeflaher Boat Mo8t4-3li7-7658.
tor, "7Y.I hp, Auz tank,
74 Ford 2 dr. hardtop, 1360.. U211.00. Phona 304-88221192.
Calll14·388-9303.
I==========
!917482f."r1dttG7ranada. Coli 76
Auto Peru
a · ua·
.
&amp; Acceasoriea
1978 Dodge Colt 2 dr .. auta
Cultivetora for A, Super A, on floor, ••c. condo Cell
Block, brick, mortar and end 100. •375.00. 304· 114-218-15·1 8.
Dodrill'aAutoPans . Vinton,
matonry auppliea. Mountain 876 3289
State Block, At. 3l, New
·
·
Ohio. Large Mlection of
ft. N- Holland No. 451 402 big block Chovy onglna INOrtl &amp; tlrao. Weinotallwloat
Haven w Vo 304 882
2222.'
'·
·
- 7
·dlluaemblad complata, wo ooll. Mon.-Fri. 8-6:30 .
mower, 304-1178-2823.
1200. GMC ,Suparcharger lat. 9-t. Coil 614-388only tno manifold, etc.l 8815.
1----------..L---------~ *200. Call 814-2&amp;1-1761
otter &amp;PM. _ _ _ _ _::-:c truck
Now replocomont
.:._::._..:.;_::._
porto. G.M. pickup
73-80

They'll Do It Every Tl'me

1976 Hondo 3110. 1978
Ootoun PU 17,000 mllao.
Call 814-256-8228,

71Ni!

1979 LTD Ford, 4 door,
302V8, PS, P8, AC, CC,
TW, .,.,. . oo1M11o, 2 nIT.OVI.'!J•• .1 81 rollola. Excollont condl·
11on. 12800. Coli 304-882·
3117.

~V··•

l/:;;:;-:":;"'i:'rmtT1111r';;;:

Two air conditioners . 6.000
BTU . $125 . 8 ,000 BTU .
1136. Call814-992-2602.

'-ndaro, 149.. Ford 73-79
fondoro , 148. Tollgotaa.
hood, rockor panalo. dooro,
etc. evlilable on mo~t pick·
upo and cart at 810'1) W.
Moln Sl. In 'Pomaroy, Ohio.
1114· 992-8778or304·8823181 evanlngo.

1--------Shop hol11. 3 ton. Contlnen-

tel 400. a,.nd new, never
1881 Corvot,10,000mliH, Non uoad. 1400. 8t4-843·
juot Iiiia new. phono 304· 1310 or 814-843-1406,
875·4384.
.
4-HOro18.8 eight ply truck
t871 Detoun 280Z. oun tlrea. Coli oflor 4pm . 114'1\!~:.:.ll roof, louvaro, AC, AM-FM, 912-2718.
new 70 eeriea tina,
13,tOO.OO negotlablo. 304· Clm(y 380 engine and tran1178·13t7.
mlulon , 71,000 actual
mMn. 1410.00. 304-878·
t 178 T·Bil'd,- aond, n- 3261.
INOint job, 30'-1171-2714 or
171·1177.

64 Misc. Marchandiae
Knauff Firewood Summer
f'lltea· biu loads. Mev 1tt·
July 3tl1. Dooon't apply to
HEAP. 114-266·8241.
SPECIAL cut alobto e PU
loadl delivered in dump
truck 1100.or21oedal180.
You pickup 115. Call 614245-1804. •

t 171 Pontloc Grortd Ua·
man. 1112 Chaw Cl11a11Dn.
phone 304·8711-*141.
1 110 Cllovv Monu, 71.000
miiM, ......, goo&lt;l cortd,
12,200.00. 304·811·
' 3013.

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Parle, R outa 33, North of
Pomeroy. Lorge loto. Coli
6t4-992-7479 .

..

F1rm Equipment

1----------

,IIJIISSEP it) 'INE
N~ONIIN

..

·'

'•

.

C1mplng
Equipment

l~-------lx10t..,,,....ltlmoo.tont
boe 110.00. 304·171·
2131.

.

·-

TRY HIM
AGAI~!

Improvement• .

. ..

GZ
Enten.lnment
•
Tonight
IHBOI Roy Bradbury: The
Crowd A car accident propels a man into a strange
world where aU is not as it
a_ppears.
8:00 U CD (!) Highway to
Heavon ICCI
Cil FliCII Prolesolonol Bowlere
Asooclatlon - 1116,000
Tucaon Open Coverage of
this event is presented from
Tucson. AZ . 190 ·min.)
(J) Portrait of America:
Rhodeloland
CIJ &amp; GZ flock 'n' Roll
Summer Action !PREMIERE) California is the set·
ting for this ·new series
which feacures music. dance
and guest appearances by
tl;&gt;p recording stars . ~60
min .)
II (I)® Charlet in Charge
Charles gets caught in the
middle when l ila wants to
date a boy her parents can 't
stand. IRl
())
MacNeil/lehrer
NoW8hour
lfil Notionel Geogrophlc
Special (CCI ·Among the
Wild Chimpanzees.· The ef-

BASEMENT G
WATERPIIOOFIN
Uncondltlonoillfetlmo guatentH. Local reference•
furnlahod . Froo ol1imotoi.
Coli collact 1-814-237·
0488. day or night. Rouer•
8aMmont Waterproofing.
O.and M . Contractor1. Vinyl
aiding, roplocoment wlndowo, lnoulallng, roofing.
new and ra'modaling, con· ·
crota. Coll30'-773·1131.
J.ond L. ln11111otion. Roof•
ing, vinyllkllng,ttormdoors
and wlndowo. FrH al11·
matao. Coll614-992-2772.

'!00
5LEEP IN EI/Ef!Y ONCE

.--:---j ., WtfY 5HOi.II.PN7'

RON'S Television Service.
HouM calla on RCA. Quaz:ar.
GE. 1-"'ling in Zonkh.
Coli 304-176-2398 or 814·
441;2414.

INA • .

fet1y TrM Trimming, ltump
romo•al. Coli 304-8761331.

RINGLES'S SERVICE, exporloncod carpontw, aloctrldan, meson, pt~lnq,. roof·
ing Cincludlng hot tar
oppllcadon) 304-1175-2088
or 675-7388.

forts made by, ,

~e archer

Dr.

Jane Goodall to study the
world of primates first-hand
are documented. IR) 160
min .)

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Molt welle completed ume
dey. Pump tales and Mrvi·
coo. 30'-895-3802.

l!il MOVIE: 'Tho Last Hard

Sterks Tr" In~ l.ewn Service, atump r1moval, 304-678-2010.
.

Kenny and Dolly perform in

82

Men'
[HBOI Kenny Rogers and

Oolly

Plumbing

JIM'S PLUMBING 6 HEATING. lit. 1, Bo• 361, Gallipolio. Cell 114-387-0176.

Im Booq'This is my

They're coming
with Booq
and Hooqy!

little qirl, HooqiJ!

Excavating

Good·1 Excavating, beaementl, footera. driveway• . ..
Mptlc tankt, landtelping .
Call anytime 614-4464537, Jamt~L. Davi1on, Jr.
owner.
Dozer Work land clearing,
l•ndacaplnt. etc. Free estimoln. Call 114-4411-8038.
or 614-982· 7119 anytime.
J .A.A. Conatructlon Co ..
Rulland, Oh . 8t4· 7422903. Bo-anu, Footars,
Concrete work. Backhoe'•·
Dozer &amp; Dltcher, Dump
trucka, &amp; water-gea-aewer·
etectrical Nnes..
Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration
'

SEWING Machine rep1ira,
aervice. Authorized Singer
Saln • Ber~ice Sh1rpen
Scinon. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 814·992-2284.

BARNEY
85

General Hauling

I'M SORRY,LOWEE7:V, BUT
THIS COUPON HA5 EXPIRED

Jamn Boys W•t•r tenrice.
Aloo pooll filled. Coli 8t4·
251- 1141 or 814-4411t176or 814-448-7911.

SHUX-·IT WAS
STILL GOOD WHEN
I LEFT TH' HOUSE

Ken'• Water Service. Walls.
cisterna, pools filled. Phone
6t4-3117-0823or 8t4-3877741 night or dey.
Weugh'a Water Service .
Weill, ciaterna. poolt. Feat,
rtlieble HtVice. Call 614256-1240 or 614-2661 130. A.. aonable ratea.
Haul Umeatone, tend, tJtl· •
vel,dln, bulk or beg fortHizor
end lime. Ercelalor Selt
Worko Inc. 138 E. Main St.,
Pomaroy.l14-992-3891 .

SNAKE!!

88 ' M. H. Repair ·
MOBILE HOMES MOVED.
Insured. 20 yean e•pe·
rlanco, 304-578-2868 or
171·2898.
87

PEANUTS

Uphol1tery

IF '(OU'RE AN ATTORNEY,
I'D BE INTERESTED IN
KNOWING WHAT KIND OF

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
t113 Sec. Ava .. Golllpolla.
114-441· 7833 or 814-4411t833 .

MAY

.

I SEE ONE
OF YOUR CARDS?

''A ND

D06 BITES ''

e

CASE5 'I'OU HANDLE ...

R A M furniture Menufac•
turing, St. Rt. 7, Crown
City, Oh. Coli 814-2111·
1410, coli Ewo. 814-44111438 . Old • · now
Up--.

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

'·

Together

[MAXI MOVIE: 'Unfaithfully Yours'
8:30 1iJ (f)® E/R Howard has a
hard time dealing with the situation when his daughter
stans dating Ace. (R) .
9:00 D CD (!) FBC1s of Ufe !CCI
Natalie' s way of covering up
her true feelings after losing
out on an important job
costs her her boyfriend. (R) ··
(l)700 Club
, (J) MOVIE: 'Poycho'
(f) &amp; (jJ 8arbora Waltoro .
Special Barbara interviews
Jane Fonda, Sally Field and
-. Esther Williams. (RI (60
min.)
1iJ (])®MOVIE: ' A Plano
for Mre. Cimino' ICC)
(f) National Geogrophic
Special iCC) ·Among the
Wild Chimpanzees .· The efforts made by researcher Or.
Jane Goodall to study the
world of primates first-hand
are documented. IR) (60
min.)
(jj) MOVIE: 'My Oinner
with Andre' ICC)
[H801 MOVIE: 'The Lady in
Red'
9 :30 II I]) CD No Complaints
Two former college roommates meet up after twelv.e
years and find themselves
incredulous at their different
lifestyles .
CIJ Top Rank Boxing - 8
Round Jr. Wekorwoigl1t
Bout !John Mool&lt;int vs.
Greg
Haugen)
from
Atlantic City
.
10:00 U CD(!) St. Elsewhere Dr.
Westphal! must make a difficuh decision when Elizabeth
visics from college and begs
to stay in Boston. IRI 160
min .)
(I) &amp;I (jJ Arthur Holley's
Hotel (CCI Financial problems and career conflicts
contribute to the destruCtion
of Dave and Megan's marriage . iR) 160 min.)
(f) Happy Jazz Tonight's
special features mu~ic from
Pete Fountain in New Or·
leans and the Jim Cullum
Jazz Band in San Antonio.
i60min .)
• Odd Couple
[MAX) MOVIE : 'Tom Hom'
·10:30 Cil Traveller'• Worid
.INN News
[HSOI Not Necessarily the
News
11 :00 II CD (f) CIIIiJ CIJ ® Ill
GZ News
(l) Bill Cosby Show
(]) EU!OINOtin Journal
(jj) Newswatch
• 8enny Hill Show
[HBOI MOVIE: 'Purple
.. Rain' ICC)
1 1:15 (I) MOVIE: 'Gunpoint'
11 :30 D CD (!) Boot of Coreon
Tonight's guests are Bob
Newhart, Joe Garagtola and
Oehiece Williams . (RI (60
min .)
[)) 8e1t of Groocho
(f) WKRP in Clncln-i
1iJ (I) Night Hoot Giambone · and o :anen become
invotved in • tOp secret op·
eration when they lnvesti·
~to a murder. 1Rii60 min.)
(I) Lotenlght Amotico
®Toxt
(jj) lnt~ Edition
(ill
AI~
~
.,Nightllne · ' ·
• Honoymoonaro
[MAXI MOVIE: 'Hot Dog ,
T h o -' ICCJ
12:0Q (]) Wondy Ma

CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
GoiMpollo. Ohio
Phone 111'-44&amp;-3a88 or
1114-448-4477

84

Parton

concan.

lit Heating

83

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(I) llenny HIH Show
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10 5011\E PEOPLE.
cln::ted

Now arrange the

to

letters

KI)
a:''[TI-r l I I XI I I)"

Report
(II WhMI of Fortune

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spouting. Now lnttllllng rubbW
roofo. 30 yooro oxporlonco.
71
AutOI for Sale apoclolizlng In buNt up roof.
---------~1 Coli 1114-318-1857.
,

8riarp1tch Kennel• Profestlonel All-br-.d grooming.
$121. Coli 814-379-2835. Indoor-outdoor boarding fa- Polo 8ulldlngo Conotnrctad
cilhloo. Eoglloh Cockar Spa- for . commerclol, "''"""'
Hove king olzo wolorbed. nlal pupploo. Coli 814-388· . form, otorw. etc. Any olu.
Noedtosell. Wllltakol300. 9790.
frwe ol11motn. Coli 30'Coli 614·982-8140.
1175-3981.
Drogonwynd Cottary Ken·
Cer IMt and dreBiing table. nel. CFA Hlmelayllfl, Parlian Homellte weter pump
Good condition. Call 6t4· ond SlamoM kittono. AKC t200.: Solo 1 gal. beck pok
992-3379. ·
Chaw pupploa. Coil 4411- oproyor 170.; A modal lntar
3844 attar 7PM,
with cult 11800.; Homalhe t979 Ford. Automatic lock
Commercial Ice creem
EZ chain NW •100.; 3 1Jt. In, 4x4, PI.PS.AC, AM-FM
freezer. 40 quart Emery AKC Reg . Chow Chow Fen • Seed IPr•der •so.; i1:ereo. 4 new tlret. Low in
Thompoon. otoinlooo oteol. 3 pupplao, all coloro. 2 littara. 5' 8uoh hog 1350.: 28' miloago . Call 814-992phose. 1800. Coll6t4-992- taking dopoolto now. Call 1Jrbocao piiNI tralloroi&amp;OO.; o.:,I.:,1_1S_•_«_ar_s._·oo_.;..._m_•·--6128.
6t4·216·127t.
52" tobacco 11icko 11c o·
ooch; tobecco beloro $60. 1986 Chovy Ooluxo tO
Firewood 120.00 pickup AKC Reg. Garman Sho- ooch. 304-731·2342 or lrucll. P.S., P.B.,outomotlc,
lood. UO .OO delivered. Coli pbord Pollee pupplu, axc. 171·1281.
VI . 19, 200. 114-849304-875-6762 or 676- watch dogo, 7 ,Moo. old,
21150.
2991 .
•100 aech. Call 114-448·
1 - - - - - - - - - - 0373.
1978 C80 Cltovrollt 2 ton
TONY'S GUN REPAIRS,
63
Uveltock
trucll with 14 fl. co~go von .
hotdlprabluolng,olltypeoof Roglotered AKC Cocker 1---------~ 13100. 1971 Chavrola1 1
gunamlth work, f11t aervlce, Sp•nial' pupplea. Chamton dump truck. •zeoo.
304-671-4131.
poglooand buff In color. CaR 2 Quonor horae mereol. 1 114-112-3184.
1114-992-7102 aflar 4pm .
yro. old. Call 814-379'67 lnternetionel dump
28t8.
AKC
pupplao. 2
trucl&lt;. 14ft. bed, 2 ton, idool
litterato chooaefrom ; *100. G011t1. twofaean nanny with farm UH truck, , 304·876·
66 Building Supplies oploco. Coll6t4-687-6967.
. billy kid, ono Alpine 2072.
nonny .. Cal 614-246-9167.
Fiatt Tank 1nd Pet Shop,
Trucks, 88 Chevrolet
Building Materiels ·
2413 Jackson ·· Avenue, Gueriey milk cow' 6 calf. pidoup. .304-67&amp;-8162.· ·•
Block, brick. tewer pipa1. Point Ploooont, · 304.· 671-. Call 114·3117-7578. ·
windowt, lintels , etc. 20113 ." Flah. blrdo ond more.
Claude Wlntau, Rio Grande.
Plgo for Hla. t30. aplace. 73
Van• &amp; 4 W.O .
0. Call 814-245.6t21 .
3 AKC lamola Poodlo pupa, Call 814-949-2017.
304· 882· 3872.
BUILDERS
Pigs ~r ule. i'nele and 1179 Jeep WagonMr Li·
Surplua-Satvaga·Cioaeol,4ts
female, castrated end mited. LHthtr Interior, pa,
.Musical
1. Interior hollow cora doors 67
wormed, 130.00. Coli 304- . pb. tw. c. con. IIC, very good
300H.
176·4668.
Instruments
cond. 13,000. 304·8962. Steelembotled insulated 1~--------30011.
6 panel exterior door's prehung •79.915 .
Paul delu~ee guitar. axe 84 Hay &amp; Grain
3 . Interior hollow cora pre- ocll_on, maroon wllh hard 1 - - - - - - - - - Motorcycln
hung door's &amp;19.9&amp; end •hall c..a. •e&amp;o.oo. Mite
=~9:6ft. steel inaulated ~;r~. optional. 304-675- ::.~ aC'~t ·o~n bj~i:'n.~~
entrance door·a with aide I::;:;==::;;::;:==== 814 _843 _5201 .
1979 XR 181. been rebuHt,
oxcollant condhk&gt;n, 1600.
light t276.00.
5 . Wood door ponalo 68
Hay for oolo. Mixad .and Collet4·387-7101.
I
H4x34x78 with full gluo ·~
&amp; Vegetables
clovar. Call 114· 742-2112. 71 Harley Suparglldo hoo
plate • 39.&amp;6.
new front end. new engine,
6. New ahipment of Keller 1- - - - - - - - -Hey for ule, pick up or
c • 2
whiter 1herm1l brNk tUdera
delivered . 304·89&amp;· 3480.
he• eatrat. en u 14 · 51·
en 1ingtehung windows at White 'II runners. you pick
1009.
below whola111le price1.
e&amp; bu .. we pick with ed7 . • Emboaaed wood grain vance notice
bu. Bring
1979 Honda Cl 125. good
cond., 2.100 miles. runt
twin 4" and 8" pattern, own contlinert. Call 814·
aluminum tiding with foam 246·6184 or 814·24&amp;good t3150. 1971 Honda
back. colora end white 9369.
400 Hawk. axe. cond ..
839 95 oq
for
Sale
s.ooo
milao. 11.200. Coli
a. Whtte 'twin rib. chenel Sweet corn yellow 8t w~ite. 71
614·388·98152 after 5,
drain tiding or roofing Call614-266-158ilor614814·388·8681 .
141 .96 oq. or golvonizad 266 -667 1.
TOP CASH paid lor '80 1984 FLHS only 600 made,
$28 .00 IQ.
1 - - - - - - - - - - modal and no- uood cora. IS , 99"~. C I II "t4
v • 266 9 O.. ux. 1 PC flber •laaa Sllvor Queen 1weet corn.
·
•
Smo'th
Bui~-Pontlac,
1911
17"6
lth rreb bar 11.80 doz:en. 1'11 mi. from
"'""
u .
b th t b .1
•
u white
w •1 9.96. · Holzar an Rt. 180. Call Eo11arn Aw .. Golllpollo. Call 1•-- - - - - - - - - Color
or
10. t7x19 whlta &amp; gold 614-4411-7299.
614·4411-2282.
1983 Hondo ATC 1t0.
· ·
1h
fl
1
r---------newly rebuilt, 304-875vonoty w t top berg 111 •1984 Big Rod axe . cond. !368.
•29 .96 marilla top &amp;39.96. Home grow, tomatoea, 1978 Volk•waaon Rabbitt.
11. Pla1tic counter top. wh. . . .eand retail. Delmer
Detlun 510 _ Cell
73 Mercury Marqul1; 8&amp;0
Solid pattern woOd greln'a Oer.nea. Letart. 304-896· 1978
Kawaookl. 304-871-1584.
30"' by 8'-10'- 12' 60 cenu 3400.
614-241-6818.

11/etiUCil,IS

Country Oak tables. cheira,
cupboardo, deoko,lceboxeo.
Conkloo. Tuppera Pleino, Rt.
7 . Hand crafted and
flnlohod .

(lll _
- M.,Noii/Lehrer
Newohour
• GZ New Name That .
Tune
.StorTrek
\
7:30 II CD Tic Tac Dough
· Cil Cloco Kid
CIIInaide the PGA Tour
(I) All In the Family
(I) II (f) FlllrTiily Feud
(!)J-cly
(I)
Nightly
Buoineso

81

1----------

Furnitura.956SecondAve..
Golllpollo, 614-446·1171.

•r

.. "&gt;

l1!1N_.

Si'l VII.V&gt;

blcycla,
304- l!::::=======;:======:!=~~

6 ft. Rollyson •lldlng doof~

·~
~- -

(I) $econd City TV

THEN

Glrlo. cond.
blu•10 IP•d
exc
new.
773·6819.

1----------

L1 K (]

(!) Wheel of Ftrrtune

1871 HoM'I 23ft camper ao
Ia 01t DodtiO Choola, undor .
1.000 11111H•. ,_ tl- •.nd
roO! air -aond. PI, PI, oorto
tranemJ•elon, 304 · 171 ·
11401.

PHOTO KEY CJ:!AIN fr•
with roll of color print film
proc11alng. Now thru July
27. Umit one k~ chain per
cuatomer while tuppliea
a.Nootr1. hH.~enberry Ph~rmecy

Pets
'---------,.
,
HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all broado . Haotad
Indoor-outdoor flcllltitl .
AKC Oobermon puppleo:
Stud Service. Coli 814-44117781.

rns..on-

Cilllanlarti-Son
CIJ Ent.mlnmont Tonight·

II (I) Wheol of Fortune

Nowt0x1ht.,...buHdlng
or worlc ohop 11,100.00.
30'-678·1874.

66

~I

.'

EVENING
7:00 8 Cil PM' M.,Ine
Cil 8ronded .

&amp; Cempera

bile•.

O'na.c'""() 1'0:-..&lt;0o ,-i\1 'I'IU&lt;T SCIWIIILEO WOAD llAIIIE
by Henri AmoMj and Bob La

7/17/85

79 Motor• Home•

RoQ 10 aPMd
axe
~;'i~u:~4-175-1038 or

-...

Television
Viewing

ton. 14200. or campor only
.1 .000. 304·111-3001.

'77 Oklo Cutluo Supremo
. .00.00. Conlrolalr ciond 2
ton 1300.00. 1 .1 . Co-op.
21 cu fl f - - 3 yro old
1250.00. 304-871-2114.

like

Camping
Equipment

A-...........
llaopo 6. ...... ··-·
roftlt ..

1----------

61 Household Goods

.71

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

DICK

&amp;4 Mi.c. Merch1ndiM

32 Mobile Homes
for $ale

Wednesdey, July 17, 1985

,ester d ay •a

v

form the surprise answer, as suogested by the above cartoon.

.,

(Answers tdmorrow)

I JumbleS: OXIDE

.

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LUNGE PURVEY RACIAL
Answer: What milk le for a catTHE " LAP" OF lUXURY

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7-17 · 1~

NORTH

.....

A lesson
in navigation

.K63
tAH3

By James Jacoby
The captain of our Royal Viking I
ship cruising Glacier Bay ril!ar ·
Juneau has a grave responsibili1y: He
must avoid ice floes and coastal
narrows. Meanwhile, I have an easier
task. In my daily lectures I tell my
audience that when they play a hand,
they must watch out for the rocks of ·
distribution. Here's another one of
author Norma Sands' hands to lllus- ·
trate my point.
After North's jump to two notrump and later show ol diamond
support, South knew he was going to
bid slam. When the Blackwood coqventlon disclosed that their side had
all the aces ,11rid kings, he decided to
go all the way and bid the grand slam.
That wu a little risky since the heart
queen was probably missing, 'but
South felt it likely that North held no
more than five major suit cards. (He
would not have supported diamonds
with only three, and most likely held
four clubs for his opening in that suit.)
U North bad two spades and three
hearta, three rounds of spad.. would
enable declarer to discard a low heart
from dummy and subsequently ruff
the third round of hearts.
Tbis particular grand slam was·

.

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EAST

WEST
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SOUTH

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Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
West Norlll East
I.
Paso
Pass 2NT PaS8
Pass ••
Pass
Pau 5•
Pass
Pus s•
Pass
Pass
Pa!IS
Pass
Opening lead: +J

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~NT

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•

easy tn navigate. The only dangerwas that one defender held all four _
outstanding trwnps. U It were West,there· was no hope. Just in cue Eut·
held all of them, declarer carefully '
played the diamond ace first. He wl!Jnow able lo pick up Eut's four_
trumps to the J-10, and after ntffll!J.
his third heart, pitch the heart jack oa·
the club king, to score the slam.
'•
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.I
•

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Aca088
40 Fencing
1 Estabmove
IIBhed on 41 Crowd
8 Herbert's
wgether
·~in
42 Bordered
Toyland"
DOWN
11 Tali in
1 S. African
"Mon ~·
2 Fed the pot
12 3 Educator
Ethiopian 4 Old nole
War
GMeant
13 Plllriot,
8 Having
17 Gennaro
27 Atlenlion
· two feet
Allen
7 N.Z.
article
· getter
14 Of on
aborigine 20 Athletic
21 Tie twiddler
Italian
8 Grs Indo&lt;:group
of comedy
clly
trlnalion
23 Miffed
30 Prod
15 Early auw 9 Euphoria 24 Astonish 34 Indigence
Ul Poem
10 Musical
211 Small boat 36 Attention
18 GM&gt; ~
compoze "She 38 Newm1111
whirl
sttion
to Conquer"
rum
19 Spotted
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Zl Townsman
ZZ NIIBiy
1;;--t---t---t-tglance
23 Portico
14 Dutch
for "'town'"
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271araeU
dance
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3Z Bralunan
title
33 COnvent
woman ,

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37Reproach
39/o.r1Ue
DAILY CRYPJ'OQUOTES- Here's how lo work It:

...

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iJLONGFELLOW

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One letter slands for another. In this sample A is Used

~~~~ tl;:"ie~a!ffc!:a~!; ~~~~:;~i:~~~i
hints. Each day the code letters are diflerent.

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7-17
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L J A P&gt;F B J KAT K H S
Y-nllr'a Cr,taq-: HUNGER IS · NOT ONLY
mE BEST COOK, BUT ALSO niE BEST PHYSICIAN. ~

PETER ALTENBERG
C11.S Kl,. F•"-'~"" S't'ndiut.. Inc

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Page

r

14-::The Daily Sentinel

E.Ganlner
J.E;mestGardner, 72,fonnertyof
MJddleport, died SatUrday at the
Llma Linda Hospital in Lorna
Linda, CaUf.
Mr. Gardner was born in Middleport, July 13, 19l2and was preceded
in death by his parents, J. Pearl and
Maud Gardner, Middleport, and a
brother Charles P . Gardner.
Surviving are his wife, Beth
Hendershot Gardner, Calimesa,
Calif., and two sisters. Esther
Gardner Vale, Morrow, Ohio. and
Dorothy Gardner Roush, Langsville

RD.
Memorial services were held In

Calimesa, Calif., on Monday.

Geneva Joachim ·
Mrs. Geneva G. Joachim, 8&lt;1,
fonner Meigs County resident and a
retired Meigs County school
teacher, dted Monday at Selby
General Hospital In Marietta.
Mrs. Joachim taught in Meigs
County for :rr years and was
principal of the Salisbury School lor
the last flveyearsofhercareer. She
wasachartermemberoftheForest
Run Melllodist Church and be·
longl'd to the Alpha Omicron
Chapter ·of Delta Kappa Gamma
and the Retired Teachers Assn. She
.was a graduate of Pomeroy High
School and Ohio.University.
Mrs. Joachim was born at
PomeroyonSEpt.8,1900,adaughter
of the late Douglas and Nettle
Jeroleman Genhelmer.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.
Howard (Jean) Wol!eofBelpre; two
grandchildren, Debra Lynn Pan·
nell, and Richard Alan Wolfe.
Belpre; great-grandchildren. Kelly
Nicole Pannell and Ashley Dawn
Pannell, Belpre; two sisters, Hortense G. Frankel, Belpre, and
Carrte Hal1iey, Cincinnati, and
several nieces, nephews and
cousins.
l
Pll!a!dlng her in death were her'
parents, her husband, A. H. (Dolph)
Joachim, and a 'brother R. L.

Genhelmer.
Sexvtces wlli be held at 11 a.m.
111ursday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev . .Steve Nelson
otnctattng. BUrtai will be 1n Middleport HW Cemtery. Friends may call
atthefuner'alhometrom 2to9p.m.
Wednesday and until time or
sexvlces on Thursday.

Hazel Rife

17.1986

Douglas Rosenbaum
Funeral services for Douglas A.
Rosenbaum, 26, :1271'-1. Hysell Run
Road, Pomeroy, who died Monday
at GrantHospitallnColumbus, have
been set for I p.m. Saturday at the
Ewing Funeral Home.
Mr. Rosenbaum was born DEc. 2,
1957 In Pomeroy, a son of RIChard
and Lois Smith Rosenbaum.
He IS survived by wife, TlnaSnitth
Rosenbaum; his parents, former
residents who now reside In Danville, Calif.; two brothers, Joe
Rosenbum, San Francisco, Callf.,
and Jim Rosenbaum, Sacramento,
Ca!H.; a sister, Linda Rhodes, San
Ramon, Ca!H.; paternal grand·
mother, Louise Rosenbaum, Pome- .
roy; father-in-law and mother-In·
law, M~. andrvtrs.AlfredRaySmith,
Cheshire; brothers-in-law, Ray
Smith. Middleport; Anthony Smith,
Pomeroy. Ertc and Matthew Smith,
both of Cheshire, andaslster-ln-law,
Laura Smith, Cheshire.
Preceding him in death were his
paternal grandfather, Fred Rosenbaum, Pomeroy, and maternal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ortn H.
Smith, Middleport.
Officiating at services will be the
Rev. W. H, Perrtn. Friends may call
at the fUneral home ·anytime
Frtday. The family wlli be present
from 2to 4 and 7 to9 p.m. Burtal will
be In Beech Grove Cemtery.

James F. Whitlock
James F. Whitlock, Springdale, a
subur'h of Cincinnati, formerly of
Pomeroy, died Tuesday afternoon
at the Jewish Hospital.
Mr. Whitlock was born In Pomeroy and later lived In Middleport
where he graduated from Middleport High School. tie later lived In
Kent, Ohio, where he attended Kent
State College. He also attended
Oxford University and the Univer·
sil)l of Cincinnati.
He is survived by his wife, Rita,
and-his mother, Mrs. Leah Whitlock
of Kent. He Is a nephewofMrs. Della
Mae Sommers of Ravenna, and
Mrs. Mary Kunzelman and Mrs.

Inside today:

Helena Brlckles, both ol Pomeroy.
TheJerryWayneCrolleyFuneral
Home In WillJalnsburK, Ky., Is In
charge of funeral arrangements
with services to be held at 1 p.m.
Thursday. Burtal wlli be In
WUUami;burg.

at Rawllng-Coats-Blower Funeral
Home with Charles Hargraves
officiating. Burtal wlli be In the
Cheshire Gravel HW Cemetery.
Frtends may call at the funeral
rome all day Thursday with the
family present from 2-4 p.m . and 7-9
p.m.

..

THURSDAY, FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
JULY 18, 19 and 20

QUANTITIES LIMITED
*REFRIGERATORS
*FREEZERS
*RANGES
·*MICROWAVES
*Y.C.R.'&gt;l.
*STEREOS

I

Sunny today, with highs between I
80 and 85. Clear tonlgbt, with a low '
between 55 and 60. Sunny again :
Thursday.. with high temperatures I

near85.
Theprobabllityolpreclpltatlon is

both of Middleport; six step great
grandchildren, Karen, Ryan and
Ann Kauff, and AI1hur, SIISIIII and
Bobby Tobin; a sister, Martha
Elizabeth Young, West Columbia,
W.Va. ; a brother, Charles (Dick)
Foley, Rutland; and a foster
' &gt;~lster-ln-Iaw, Mary GUkey, of
Middleport..

.

•

In addition to her parents, she was
preceded In death by her husband,

Winds wlli be Ugh! and vartable
today and tonlgbt.
·
Ohio Extended FOI"I!CIIIIt: Frtday
through Sunday - Fair Frtday and
Saturday, with a chance of showers
on Sunday. Highs wlli be In the Ills
each day, with overnight lows In the

Alva~.onMay5,1985;

a brother,
Foley; and three sisters,
.Eva Bell Kauff, EvaUna Lemley
and Matilda Lemley.
Sexvtces will be held2p.m. Frtday

wuuam

$962.99

459.99

413.99

419.99

379.99

341.99

539.99

~99.99

359.99

339.99

239.99

469.99

289.99

215.99
260.99

579.99

479.99

431.99

Louery winners
DaDyNumber

699.
Ticket sales t o t a I e d
$1,075, m .50-' with a payo!f due of
$279,645. PICK-4 .
!m7.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$157,574.50, with a payoff due of

$71,252.
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays$3,67'.!.
PICK-4 $1 box bet pays $153.
.

:469.99

319.99 '

'287.99

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219.99 '

197.99

184.99

120.99 -

108.89

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125.99

249.99

CUp lite endoted toupoa 1ad rtdpt to add a Httle aoN to yo1r da)'.
'

1 lg . can cnunk pineapple
t 8-oz . pkg . Athens
Cheesebarn Colby cheese .
1 egg beaten with 1 tbsp . flour
1/ 4 c. sugar.

fe Till ~; Tr.is coopon Is redelmiDie 101' 20C (PIIJS 8t UMIIihiH when
mailed !G Atlltns Cl'llentlarn , ClmplltiJ 51. , AtlltnS , OhiO 45101 . provtaea 11
tlls been used !Of i p1.1rchase in accDI\1illCI wit~ !~ill ofltr. Allyllllllr un
consi1M11s fraud. tnvolu providing purchau of sufficltnl stOCk to cmr
CC\I~n IHtsanlecJ lor reoemptlcft must be &amp;hDWn ""*"request. Void 11 ullllls
IJIUIIIblle(l , la~ecJ Of O!Mrwl$1 riSirle!IO by llw. CISI\ VJIUI 1/lGC. Olltr
llmlled to ooe toupun Pf' purchast. 111111hr..,.,.. 1111111.

.

459.99

339.99

305.99

589.99

379.99

341.99

239.99

199.99

179.99

244.99

199.99

1.79.99

439.99

339.99

305.99

449.99

359.99'

323.99

579.99

479.99

431.99

439.99

369.99

332.99

389.99

289.99

260•.99

659.99

599.99

539.99

FREE DELIVERY --.,

COME IN AND PURCHASE
A 1985 FALL/WINTER CATALOG
FOR $4.00

And a FREE Men's or Women's Watch
with the Purchase of a Maintenance
Agreement with tach Appliance Sold.

. AUTHORIZED
·
CATALOG .MERCHANT
BILL &amp; JENELLE HAPTONSTALL
North Second Ave.

Middleport Ohio

Phone: (Ohio) 992-2178 (W. Ya.) 1·800·SEAIS·99
. 1-800·732-7799

FlEE
PAlliNG

ELBERFELDS
.
.

HOURS:Man., Tun, Wtds., Fri. 9:00 to S:OO
Thurs. 9:00 to 12:00 Noon
Sat. 9:00 to 2:00

.

'

enttne
26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 1 8, 1985

Inventory of Meigs records
approved-hylcommissioners
The Meigs County Commissioners voted Wednesay In regular
session to accept a proposal from
George W. Bain, archivist and local
records specialist for the Ohio·
University Library, to Inventory all
county records nowhousedattheold
Chester Courthouse.
The purpose of the Inventory,
according to a letter from Baln,
would be to identify materials which
are no longer useful and could be
destroyed, and to Identify matertals
with hlstortcal value for which
better storage provisions should .b e
mac:le.
"
According to Baln'sletter, he will
he asking the Meigs County Pioneer
and Historical Society and the Meigs
County Chapter of the Ohio Genealogical Society to assist in the
inventory process which would be
conducted sometime between mid·
September and mid-October.
Baln noted the effort would
require cooperation on the part of
affected county officials because
materials without histortcal value
· could not be destroyed without
approval from the county records
commission and respective office.
holders. Valuable materlais would
be transferred either to the court-

*WATER HEATERS
*WATER SOFTENERS
*TELEVISIONS
.*UPRIGHT &amp; CANISTER
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•

2 Sections, 16 Pages

Vol.35, No.&amp;&amp;
Copyrlghtod 1986

3 DAY SPECIAL

Only the finest all natural cheeses . . .
• • • get the A CB Gold Label

Drain pineapple: heat juice and
thicken with egg and flour and
sugar . Cut ACB Colby into
chunks and . mht wilh pineapple and sauce .
Serve chilled .

at

e

HURRY INI!!

P.O. BOX 870 ATHENS. OHIO 45701

.

•

near zero through Thursday.

Nancy E. Foley.

~.JonandNancyRI!e,

-

*WASHERS
*DRYERS
*DISHWASHERS
*MOWERS
*TILLERS ·
*GAS GRILLS

Hazel Ellen Rife, 71, of Rt. l ,
Mlddleport, died Tuesday at Holzer
Medical Center In GaWpolls.
Born In Middleport, she was. a
daughter of the late WUUarn E. and

Survivors Include two sons and
daughters-In-law, Worley and
Paula Rife, and Charles and Ellen
~. all of MiddlEport;
lour
grandsons, Kenneth, Stephen, Joseph and Sam Rite, all of Middle-port; a granddaughter, Jandara
-~.Middleport; four step grandchildren, Sherr! Tobin, of California,
Mike and Tim Kauff, of Middleport,
Mary Tobin, o!Pomeroy; two great

•

10°/o OFF ALL IN STOCK
DISPLAY MERCHANDISE

Melg); Emergency Medical Ser- ·
vlce reports three calls answered
Tuesday; ·Pomeroy Fire Department at 4:09p.m. to a structure fire
on SprtngAve.; Middleport at 10:49
p.m. transported Shirley Jones to
Veterans Mernortal Hospital; Racine at 11: :rr p.m to Letai1 Falls for
Francis MWer to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.

Weather

..~.

3 BIG DAYS

Squads make .r uns .
.

erchant Sale

New

Report ...
. (Continued from page 1)
was the best It could offer.
'"l'bere Is nothing sttmng at aU,"
said Julien, noting that m talks were
scheduled or were being planned.
"We've already met 21. thnes for
. full-day sessions With the union," he ·
added. "We llstei;Jed to the union
propo68ls and accEpted some and
modified some of our original
proposals in response to the union. '
"We feel the offer on the table now
Is more than fair and reasonable,"
said Julien.

By the~ Pages6, 7,8,9
Classllleds
Pages 12, 13, U
Comlai-TV
Pagel5
Pagell
Deaths
Editorial
Page2
Page3,4,5
Spol18

I

house In Pomeroy or to the state
archives regional center at the6hio
University Library in Athi!ns.
The five-member county records
commission Is comprised of the
recorder, auditor, prosecuting attomey,clerkofcommonpleascourt
and president of the board of

commissioners.
The commissioners felt the Inventory and subsequent removal or the
histortcal records to a permanent
depository .at the university Ubrary
would be invaluable to the county.
Three of Meigs County's Community Development Block Grant
projects should be completed by
August reported Clerk Mary
Hobstetter.
The projects include the purchase
of a rescue vehicle for the Racine
Fire Department , repair of a
slippage on the Hlland Rd. access
from Union Ave. to the Veterans
Memortal Hosptal area and final
acquisition of the Chessle System
Depot for Middleport.
Two other CDBG projects. both
Involving road Improvements In
. Letart and Lebanon Townships, will
be completed by the end of August.
The Meigs County HlgnwayDepartment will begin the township road

projects durtng fair week In
mid·August reported Ted Warner,
highway supertntendent.
According to Phil Roberts, county
engineer, construction workers at
the Fisher's Big Wheel siteat Laurel
Cliff, should begin pourtng the
foundation for the building by the
end of this week or the first of next.
The·discount store is expected to lie
open before this year's Christmas
shopp)ng season Roberts said.
Roberts also reported that road
patching is continuing on County
Rd . 122. The highway deparment·
will also patch County Rds. 25 and
174 before moving to thewestendof
the county he said.
Warner reported the highway
deparment is still cutting brush
along county roadsides and has 10
miles to go befo~ the whole county
will have been.covered at least one
time.
In final business, a bidof$24;989.32
from Simmons Oldsmobile·
Cadlllac-Chevrolet., Inc., for each of
two dump trucks for the county
highway department, was aceepted
by the board.
Present were Commissioners
Richard Jones, David Koblentz and
Manning Roush.

-Kaiser will shut down potline
Aug. ~ 1,.195 will be affected
' WAGON TIWN TAKES BREAK - Younpien
travellncln a mule train frQm SGkller, Ky., to New

Manhlleld, Ohio, Wedneaday evening relax In one of
two covered wagons belns' used ill the trek.

From Kentucky to Ohio via
cov.e red wagons, horseback
From ·Soldier, Ky., to New
M3rshtleld, Ohio, the hard way -in
covered wago~ and on horseback.
That has been tile mission thiS
week of 10 adults and children from
both Ohio and Kentucky who have
made the trek' In trtbute to their
friend, Johnnie Price, 85, New
Marshfield resident who Is currently confined to O 'Bieness Hospitalln Athens as theresultofa broken
hip.
APPilrently, ·Price has been "the
horseman" of the New Marshfield
area and is held In high regard by
residents. there, many of whom he
taught to rtde and handle horses.
Price as horse dealer made friends
in Kentucky over the years and the
140 mile trip by covered wagon and
horseback is being made this week
beCause "it wUI please Johnnie".
Equipment and animals taking
part in theflveday trip were trucked
to Soldier last Saturday from New
Marshfield and the Ohio group
stayed overnight with Mr. and Mrs.
Clinton Porter before beginning
their journey on Sunday. The two
wagons were purchased by Porter
who is a good friend of Price and
each morning during the trek Mrs.
Porter has arrtved at the-overnight
camp site and has prepared
"fantastic" breakfasts lor the
traveling group. She then returns to
her rome In Kentucky.
Larry Swart otNew Marshfield, a
blacksmith, is one of the travelers-also a good frtend of Price- reports
that peoplealongtheway have been
"wonderfUl" to the wagon train
offering the travelers all sorts of
help and they've had no trouble in
finding pasture fields or other
suitable locations free of charge at
night where they pitch tents and rest
up for the next day's journey,
The "next day" does come early.
The travelers arise about 4: 30, tear
down camp, have breakfast, hitch
up and saddle up the animals and hit
the road by 6: :D a.m. The · train
travels 35 miles a day a!'d thf
travelers expect to reach the New
Marshfield area sometime this

eventng.
Anlmala are given good care.

f.:X,t problems oftheantmaisandDr.
David Kinleyslde, Olive Hill, Ky., a
veteranarlan, checks on the horses
and mules to Insure that they are

prices are responsible · for the
decision," A. Stephens Hutchcraft
Jr., corporate president announced.
The Impact or the potllne curtailment will affect approximately 195
hourly and salarted Ravenswood
employees. There wlll be no effect
on the facUlty's Fabrtcation Plant.
Hutchcraft saki the possibility
exists that additional capacity may
be reduced at Raven~wood and at
other Katsei- smelters at a later
date. Currently, the company is
continuing to work closely with its

energy supplier, raw material
sources and its workforce to
improve cost efficiencle~'ln an effort .
to ensure the future of the two
remaining pot lines at Ravenswood .
With the shutdown, two of
Ravenswood's four potlines wl il be
operational. Each potline has a
rated capacity of 40,750 tons of
aluminum a year.
The announcement follows sim·
liar pecisions made In recent weeks
by other major domestic aluminum
pnx_lucers.

Goodyear at Piketon to ·lay
off another 389. employees
'

CHECKS SHOE - Larry Swart, New Marshfield blacksmith, checks
the shoes on one of the nine 1)1ules maldngthetrlp from Soldier, Ky., to
New Marshfield, Ohio, thl8 week. Holding lhe·re!M Is Danny Vance of
_Bath County, Ky. The travelers camped In flelthofMlklredandStanley
Duncan, Bradbury, WednesdiiY night.
..

Meigs Grand Jury
reconvenes Friday
after late session
The Meil!ll CoW1Iy Grand Jury, In session untU !,ate Wedne'lllay
aftemoon, has _been continued until 9 a.m. Frtday morning.
No lndlclmf!nts Ia the cases before thti jury have been llled at this
point bul Paul Gerard, lnvelltlgator for Meigs Cowjy Prosecuting
Attomey Welt enw, expects thai omclal papers wUJ he Died In
comrnoa pleas coon IIOI1letlme Friday momlng.
TestilllOU) from 17 wMnesees was heard yesterday by the Jury
Gerard reported. When the Jury reconvenes Friday, about a dozen
more-..1tn ms wUI be.called to testily before tbegroupGerardsald.
The Jury could not be recoavened '11lunday beeauoe ol problemS
wJth lld1edullac wilD !II! I he added.
As plll1 of their dulles, p'8lld Jury members also lnspeded lhe
Melp Counly Jllll.

SWart as a blacksmith takes careol
l

d9lng o.k. There are nine mules four used to pUll the covered wagons
- with the rest being ridden by the
Continued on page 11

Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical
Corporation wlll close down one of
Its three operating primary
aluminum-producing potlines at the
smelter portion of its Ravenswood
works, effective Aug. 1, accordingto
a company press release
Wednesday.
" Continued depressed primary
aluminum prices, increased Inventories, and as lower than needed rate
of Improvement at Ravenswood In
bringing our overall cost structure
in Une with worldwide market

'

. PIKETON. Ohio (UPI) -The
Goodyear Atomic Corp. announced
· Wednesday it will furlough Another
389 employees at its gas centrifuge
enrichment plant in Piketon, by
Aug.l6.
On July 31, 274 workers will be laid
off and an addltional115 people wlll
be fUrloughed Aug.l6, theGoodyear
Tire &amp; Rubber Co. subsidiary said.
The reduction in workforce is
another major step in the ellmlnatJon of approximately 900 johs at the
Pike County facility .
In April, 1,240 Goodyear f\tomlc
employees were assigned to the
plant. AsofMonday, approximately
325 of them had been laid off.
Goodyear Atomic announced In
April that 'i'bout 400 jobs would be
lost as the result of program and
schedule changes.
The Departmeni of Energy announced June 5 that it Iiadcleclded to
close the plant. and discontinue
further research into advanced

centrifuge uranium enrichment.
technology.
The decision came c:lesplte the fact
that the government had invested
more than $2.6 bllllon in the facility .
The closing was in part a response to
declining uranium enrichment
sales.
In Washington, meanwhile, the
chairman of a House Appropriations subcommitlee said Tuesday it
Is imperative for the department
quickly to establish a timetable for
phasing out the plant.
Rep. Tom Bevill, D-Ala. : whose
energy and water development
subcommittee has authority over
the department's budget, spoke on
the House floor in response to a
question from Rep. Bob McEwen,
R.Ohio.
McEwen , whose district embraces Piketon.- had asked Bevill for
clarification of the panel' s intent In
Its report on fiscal 1986 appropriations for the department.

In the report , the subcommittee
said the department "should assure
t.hat an orderly termination" of
plant operations occurs.
The department ga.vc no tlmeta·
ble in announcing that it had decided
to close the plant.
"I think that fort hoseworkersstill
employed at thl\planl," said Bevill
" a timetable, developed and
leased quickly, is imperative."

re:

Bevill said his subcommittee
wants the department to make
"every possible effort to retrain.
counsel and place workers no longer
needed" and supports having an ·
independent p ri\·ate study of alternative uses for the plant by a group
outside the de partmen t.
Such a study, perhaps by the Ohio
Valley Regional Developmen t Commission, is being called for by the
Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers
International Union, which repres'ents workers at the plant.

Southern budget approved by board
A projected budget of $1,685,500
for Southern Local School District
for the first six months of 1986 was
approved Tuesday evening when
the Southern Local Board of
Education met in regular session:
Included In the estimated budget
was $43,500 fo'r bond retirement,
$95,COO lor lunchroom expenses,
$5(XXl !n the uniform supply fund,
$97.COO In state and federal programs and $56,!XXJ In the student
activity fund .
In other business, the board
approved a request from Clerk·
Treasurer Dennie Hili for an
advance drawdown or $100,!XXJ just
In case It"s needed; accepted the

resignation of Lee Lee as vocal
music teacher; approved Darrell
Dugan and Bobby Dudding as
volunteer high school football
coaches; adopted a school district
phllosopby; adopted a student code
of conpuct; and approved contracts
with Southeastern Ohio Special
Education Regional Resource Center, Southeastern Ohio Valley Educational Center and with the
Educational Media Resource
Center.
The board also accepted bids from
Ashland Oil, Pomeroy , for motor
oll; City Ice and Fuel, Point
Pleasant, for antifreeze, regular
gas, diesel fuel, heating oU and

transmission greaS&lt;'; Best Office
Machines, Belpre, for m aintainance work on typewrtters and
adding machines; Valley Bell, Point
Pleasant. milk; He iner's Bakery ,
Point Pleasant , bread; Excelsior
Salt Works, Pomeroy , coal; Meigs
Tire Center, Pomeroy, til'es and
tubes; Abbott Food Co., Columbus,
food supplies; Michael's lceCrt-am,
Jackson. for fudge bars and Ice
cream.
Present lor Tuesday's meeting
were Susie Grueser. board presi·
dent; David Hill . Denny Evans. Don
Smith and Joe Thoren, board·
members; Bobby Ord, Southern
Local. superlntenc:lent; and Denni~
Hill, clerk-treasu...,r .

I

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