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                  <text>Page- 10- The Daily.Senti1')81

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Tuesday. June 23. 1987

Local briefs-----y Buffalo records
Meigs Boosters meet tonight
The Mei gs Athletic Boos t!'rs will meE&gt;t Tu esday at the high
school at 7 p.m . Plans wUI be made to prepare the lootball and
bas ketball progr ams for the 1987-88 school year . All mem bers
are urged to attend.

Sheriff probes incident
The Meigs Count y Sheriff's Office received word !rom the
Mei gs EM S that a baby was found Monday night In the back of a
pickup truck on Ohio 248, two and a hall miles eas t of Ches ter .
Sher if! Howard E. Frank, several of his deputies and Mike
Swisher of Children's Services wer e dispat ched to the scene.
When they arrived, they round a m ale Infant, not mor e th an a
day old, ly ing In a box In the back or the t ruck. The Infant, which
was es timated to have weighed six pounds at bir th, was taken to
Holzer Medical Center by the Tuppers Plains Emer gency
Squad. At last r eport officials at Holzer r eported the child t o be
In stabl e condition .
The child will probably be released within tw o or three days
unless complications develop.
The Incident Is under lnves llgatlon by the Sh er iff' s Office and
Children's Services.

Squads have five calls Monday
Five calls wer e· repor ted Monday .
Pom eroy , 1: 42 p.m . - transported David Sigman from a
motorcycle accident on Main Street to Vet er ans Memori al .
Hospital.
Middleport, 1: 16 p.m . - to North Second Ave., for Mar gar et
VanCooney , who was t r eat ed but not transported.
Pomer oy, 4: ~1 p.m . - to Ea st M ain St .. lor Lau r a Harrison. to
Veterans M emorial Hospital .
Tuppers Pl ains, 8: !7 p.m. - to t he ball field for Cha d Nelson to
Ca mden·Clark Memorial Hospit al.
Tuppers Pl ains, 9: 22 p.m. - to Ohio 248. for a newborn Infant ;
tra nsport ed to Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.

Activities...

Continued rrom pag 1

step would be seizure of hi s
bu siness assets and th e closin g of
his res taurant , Ma es tr i petit!·
oned for voluntary bankr upt cy a step that he said forced the IRS
to allow him to pay off his taxes In
Installment s.
" I was forced Into a corner ,"
h ~ tes tlfied. " It 's as though their
motiva tion Is fear , and fear Is not
a j;OOd motivat or for people."
Three IRS tax ofllcers blam ed
1he probl em lar gely on pressure
from managers to step up
co llections.
Sen. Da v id Pr yor. D·Ar k.,
chair man of the IRS Over sight
Subco mmittee, referred to a
Feb. 17 memo fro m a r egional
IRS manager In Balt imor e chas·
l lzlng worker s for the "sorry
report " on their .January ac tlvltle.s. which Included only seven
seizu res of propert y.
In one case. a lower-level
manager had added a handwr il ·

Reagan...

ten note reading, " l need your
help to avoid gett ing Int o
t roubl e. "
Shir ley Garci a, a co llect ions
officer In La ndover . Md .. tes ll !led that the message wor kers
got from the memo was "t hat we
had to go out and make some
1propert y ) seizures to keep pres·
sure off the managers."
The author of the original
memorandum "obv iously ml sun·
derstood " agency guidelines that
prohibit use of such enforce ment
statistics to assess the j ob
perfor mance of it semployees. an
!RS spokes man sai d. The gu!d('
lines are Intended to protect
employees from an arbit r ary
r ev iew of their work and guard
taxpayers from unfair ac tion
ag ain st them, he sa id .
The memo has been referred to
the reg ional commissioner In
Philadelphia for Inves ti gat ion.
the spokesman said.

Continued from page t

The Reagan adm inis tration
hopes South Korea will " use
restraint and bring the demon·
strallons to a conclu sion," Fit zwa ter sa id , addin g, " We oppose
the use or martial law."
Sta te Department oflclals sa id
they had no Indicat ion a coup was
Imminent , but a public statement
about milit ary Int er vention was
made to ensure th at South
Kor ea's armed forces have no
Illusions about the U.S. position.
The United States has 40,000
troops In South Korea and t ies
bet ween the two cou nt ry 's mi l·
lt:u·y fo rces ar c close.
" Wr urge Korea n mil itary
commanders to concent rate on
the de fense of Ko r ea and all ow
I he poll t leal process to develop In
a m anner agre!'a bl e to the
Korean people," Oak ley told
r eporters.
"Recent signs of flexibil ity on
the par t of both the government

and opposition lend hope th at
resolu tion ca n occ ur via posit ive
polit ical ac tions not nega tive
milit ary ones." she said.
A State Department official
who r equest ed anonymity sa id
the administration Is concer ned
about "a n unfortunate tradi tiorr
of hav ing polit ica l probl em s
solved by military coups."
He said U.S. co ncer n is no t that
the armed forces would Inter·
vene to hea d off reforms th at
Pr esident Chun Doo Hwan might
agree to under pr essurr. bu t t hat
It mi ght act on it s own to pu t an
end to the demonstra tiOns.
Of ficia ls said Slgu r would
press Chun to reopen the debate
on constitutional r efor m he
halted In Apri l, show r estra in t In
dealing wit h the demonstrations
and co mpro mise with his domes·
tic opposit ion as th e b&lt;&gt;st wa y s to
handle the cr lsi&gt;.

1985.

Middleport
honored

Thund er storms hlt western
Penn sylvania and southern New
Yor k today , with dr iving ra in s
also falling in fowa, Missour i ,
Nebr aska and the Dakota s, the
National Wea ther Service said .
Heavy ra in s Monday cover ed
In Kansas , so uthern (il!nois,
southern Indiana and par ts of
Kentucky . In Kansas, the st orm
produced 5 Inches of r ain and a
tornado In Morris County , but
ther e wer e no report s of dam age

~SNOW
FRONTS: "

ft Occluded

Static

WEATHER MAP -Scattered showers and thunderstorms will
occur from the upper Mississippi Valley through the eastern Great
Plains, the middle and lower Mississippi Valley , the Southeast,
al~ ng the Gulf of Mexico coast, northern Florida, the Tennessee
and Ohio Valley , along the Atlantic Coast and eastern Great Lakes
and southern New England. Rain and thunderstorms will be most
numer ous from northern and wes tern Minnesota through eastern
South Dakota, eastern [llebraska, western Iowa. eastern Kansas
through Missouri and northern Arkansas. Thunderstorms will also
occur from sout~ea.'t Louisiana through southeast Mississippi,

~----~----------~----~·~· ~
· --------------------

ES
ARE RISIIIG!
(AID OUR
PRICES ARE

Pri ct~

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio 1UP!) - Pr.ioritv bills
moved Into the pass ing lane in the Ohio General
Assembly today as sta te l awmaker s began a
three· day sprint towa r d what they hope is
adjournment lor the summer at th e end of th e
week .
In partiCular. a House- passed bill raising th e
speed limit from 55 to 65 mph on rural fre!'way s
was given Its first hear ing in ·the Senate Highways
and Transpor tation Committee l ate Tu esday and
pla ced In posit ion for Senate approva l later in the
week.
The House sc heduled a vot e today on a
contr overs ial bill limiting stat e retirement
system investm ents in co mpanies oper atin g in
South Afr ica, while th e Senate wa s to take up
House-pa ssed legislation protecting owner s of
new car s that turn out to be "lemons."
Both ch ambers wer e to conve ne at 1:30 p.m.
One bill sidet racked Tu esday was a major
House· pa ssed civil j ustice and insurance r eform
bill. Majority Republicans, lacking vot es, pull ed
It of! Tu esda y 's Senate cal endar and went back to

the ba rgainin g l abl e with a consumer·mlnd ed
Gov. Richar d F . Celeste.
A select Senate commit tee was to meet at 9a.m .
and consider amendments proposed at the 11th
hour by the governor. II was possible that bill
could r each the Senat e floor again later today .
A r elated bill lightening up on medical
malpractice cl aims to ease in sur ance probl em s
for physician s and hospitals gained 31-2 approval
in the Senate Tu es day and wa s r eturned to th e
Hou se lor concurrence in minor ch anges.
On the speed limit bill. legi slative leadPr s
selec ted the House ver sion to pa ss this week and in
return, chose to move the Senate ver sion of
legi slation overhauling sa vings and loan r egula lions to prevent recurrence of the th r ift cr isis of
1985. Th at broke twin deadlocks in those two

areas.
Tues day's hectic activ ity also sa w :
-Pl ans mad e to insert an am endment into th e
$2. 4 billion transportation budget raising Ohio' s
beer -dr inkin g age from 19 to 21. That Hou se·
pa ssed bill is expected to br r eported out of
committee Thursday . It also cont ai ns a 2. 7-cent
hike in the stat e gasoline tax.

SALE PRICES GOOD lliRU JUNE 28, 1987

WE HIROP IIIIIIT, IUmFIL •11110 Fll Ill!

"SUPER

:rom page I

Pl ant z, of Gallipolis.
fn presenting the award ,
Mercer cited Pl antz' accomplish·
ments as a st udent as an exam ple
of what ca n be ac hieved In the
Am er ica n system .
T he them e for th is year's
wo rks hop i s pr odu ct l\·i t y.
Throughout thr week, par t ici·
pant s will have an opportunity to
meet and i nteract with the
bu s in('ss co mmun i ty, Ri o
Gran de faculty and · students
!rom other schools. They will be
actively Involved In discussion
and market acti vit les .
Two hours of colle!(e credit wil l
bf' gr anted b,· Rio Gra nde
College to the hl!(h school st u·
dents attending all sessions,
which will co ntinue through June
26. A crrli!lcatc of completion
will be awarded at the end of the
workshop.

Ill 4. ROLL PICK
HIGHLAND
MEADOW

VELVET

PIPER TOWELS

TH TISS

3/99~...

69!,

147 oz.

BIG 48 OZ.

Hospital news

3!.,..

Vet erans M emorial Hospital
Mond ay admiss ions - Sar a
Wi ll is, Pomer oy; Chester You ng,
L on ~&lt; Bottom .
Mond ay disch ar ges - La na
Gibson and Terry Spencer.

POWDER, 16 OZ. OIL

COYEI IIIL
MOISTURE WUI

VISELIIE
IITEISIVE CIRE
BABY PRODUCTS

Lottery numhers
CLEVELAND rUPi i - Monda y's winning Ohi o Lotter y
numb&lt;'r s wit h ticket sales and
pa
you ts:
The ll'lt nesses . nowevN, were
Daily Number
over shadowed today by the
22~ .
stru gg le to settle arrangem ents
Ti cket sales t o t a 1 " d
wit h Nor th's lawyer , Brendan
Sull ivan. to gPI testimony fro m $1,211 ,936. 50, wit h a payof!du e of
the m an who has re fu sed to tal k $540. 295. 50.
PICK-4
since he was fired from the NSC
24
~6
.
staff Nov. 25.
P I CK ·~ ticket sa les tota led
Rep. Lee Ham ilt on, D·Ind..
chairman of the House commit - $176.82:..50. wit h a pay off due or
tee, said Monday both panels had $79,637.
P TC!&lt;-4 $1 st raight bet pays
made " a lot of progress" wit h
$3.
3ll4. PICK -4 $1 box bet pays
Su lliva n and the tal ks we r e
$141.
"moving forward ." Ham il ton
said the committees would b&lt;&gt;
ta lking also to Lawrence Wal sh.
the Independent prosecu tor pursuing crim inal charges In the
South Central Ohio
CaS('.
Beco m ln~&lt; partly cloudy today
" My guess Is every body will wit h widely scatt er ed thunder·
pi'Obably go a long If II does not storm s and highs In the mid 80s.
Impinge on the right s of Con· Part ly cloudy t onight and Thu rs·
gress," said Rep. Dante Fascell, day , with a low tonight between
D·Fl a., refusing to provide any 6o and 70... and highs Wednesday
details of the pr oposal.
In the mid 80s.
Committee mem ber s consider
The probability of preclplta·
North's tes timony cruci al to ·tlon Is 30 per cent tod ay , near zero
answE,&gt;rln g un resolved questions t o n ig ht a nd 20 p erce nt
about secret U.S. arms sal es to Wed nesday.
Iran and effor ts 10 supply the
Winds will be light and varia·
Ni caraguan Contra r ebels when ble today. and light and northeasAmerican mllltary aid to them terly t onight.
was Illegal.
Extended Forecast
The key question Is whether
Thursday throush Saturday
Presiden t Reagan, despite his
A chance of shower s and
denials, knew about the diver sion thunder storms Thursday, with
of proUts from the Iran deals to fair weather Friday and Satu r·
the U.S.·backed Contr&lt;.s. ·
day . Highs will be In the 80s
The pr oposed pact , three com- Thursday, near ~ Friday and
mittee sources said Monday, ranging from the middle to upper
would have North give limited 70s Saturday. Overnight Jowswlll
testimony In private followed range fr om t he upper 50s to the
shortly by a public appearance. middle 60s.

J:

1!J..

$4.51

NEW HAVEN- Financing for
the pr oposed employee buyout of
the Foot e Miner al plant at New
Haven appears to be set.
St ate Senator M ike Shaw ( RMasonl sa id he r eceived word
lat e Tuesday aft ern oon that
Westinghouse Credit Corpora·
lion, a national !lrm. has agreed
to finance the entire pl an, with
the exception of the $4..1 m illion
the state of West Virgini a k icked
In ear lier .
While details of the financial
packag!' ar e not yet ava ilable,
Shaw said he understand s th at
" the deal' s pu t together ."
He added, " It ' s expensive, but
we under stand that beca use of a
certain degree of r isk."
· Th e senator said he learned of
the new devt&gt;lopment from Bill
Doepken of th e Pittsbu rgh law

. CIUIIILielll

~,ouJl/&amp;00

2!~~u.n

$2.17 UCit

111Z. SIZE

SIIIREST

PLAX

SIIUS FIIIIUU
filliP 24

DEITIL RIISE

murra.n

2~~~~U.M
"IIUT Fll

Sill"

Ill

VISELIIE

Weather

I

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DIE I DIY
WITIII
.

SPf
15

1IUI lfGUIAI ,.

..,.,..

IDIIIaD

3~!u

By JOSEPH MIANOWANV
WASHINGTON t UPli - Congressional investigat ors are
study ing a new money trail to
learn how a myster ious $500.000
from the Swiss bank that held
deposit s In the I ran-Contra oper·
allons wounJ up In the legal
defense fund lor Richard Secord,
one of the scandal' s m aj or
figures.
The money, tr ansferred by a
Swiss Inves tment company from
the Credit Suisse bank, cam e Into
Secord 's legal def ense fund In
three deposits In the last six
weeks, Noel Kocb, a former
Pentagon official. testified ·
Tuesday .
Koch said the deposits led him
to resign as a trustee for the fund.
He appeared before the House

1

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SIBIILWFb

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PAIIII£UEF RINIIA

4

71

IIGLAT . . .
15Gll'ltl(

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i

some more votrs."
Se n. Stanlry J . Aronoff, R· Clncinnatl, conceded
to a report er the bill would "pi'Obabl y not' ' have
had the 17 vo tes to pass without some consumer·
or iented modl!lca llon along the lines suggested by
I he governm·.
But he chided the Democr at s for "a fllp·flop or
log ic. Yo u're ar gu lng again st .vour own case at the
moment . Thest&gt; am endm ent s would Improve th e
bill from yo ur point of view."

celebratio~ .

install fl ags throug hout thedo\\'n ·
tow n stree ts. The legion 's new
banqu t'l hall at 29!1 M ill Str eet
tacross from the post offlc&lt;• t will
hold an open housr du ri ng the
aftl'rnoo n.
Activ ities will res uml' at Dil l's
Park at 7 p.m.
Tom Pay ne 11 nd Dave Estcrer
from WMPO will ser ve as mas·
ters of cer emony with a proj;ram
of recorded sixties music. At
7::!0, Ma1•or F red Hoffman will
spea k, followed by featured
spea ker . State Senator .Jan M l·
char! Long, a Middleport nati ve .
Dave Dil es will also b&lt;&gt; In

att endance and the entire Jl/lttldleport Vill age Coun cil will be on
the podium . A pcrformancr by
thr Shady Ri ve r Shuffler s wlll
co nclude the prol(ram,
Capping the day ·long ce lebra ·
t ion will be a flrewor·ks display at
9; 30 p.m. by the Mlddlcpol'\ Fire
Department.
Gi lmorl' lnvlles cvcr vonr to
l'lslt M lddh' port on the F'ourth of
.July.
Arid to vlllagr r esidents lie
says. " Don't lhlnk you ca n sit on
your front po r·rh and sec th e
artlvltlrs . You ca n' t , You miss
1
too much."
'
r

....

!lrm of Berkm an-Ruslander, cor·
porate counsel l or Amer ican
A ll o~' s. Inc., th e band of employees seekin g to r e-gain the
jobs they lost when the plant
closed In December 198.,.
"Accor ding to !Doepken ), It 's
green," Shaw sa id, " Ever y th ing
we as ked for , we got."
Shaw has wor ked close ly wit h
for mer Foote employees. eco·
nomic developer s and govern·
ment of!lclals, Including Gov .
Ar ch A. Moore Jr., to make the
bu yout plan a r ea lit y ,
In Febru ar y , Go\'. M oore.
before a pa cked house In the
Wa hama High Schoo l gymna·
sl um. signed a l eiter of commit ·
ment for a $4 mil lion loan from
the sta te of WE'st Vir gi nia toward
the project which officials estl·
ma ted at that ti me would cost

fr om between $18 and $19.5
million . And th e state Legllsla ·
lure, during the last regular
ses si on, passed a Sh aw ·
sponsor ed bill that will excomp t
sales of electricit y co nsumed In
manufacturing a ferroall oy !ro m
th e state' s bu si ness and occupa·
lion tax. That exemption translates Into an additional half
million dollar s for the proposed
com pany 's cash ·fl ow packagco.
Earlier this month , Docpken,
who also worked on the Weir ton
Steel ESO P pl an. sa id American
Alloys, Inc. and Foote Miner al
havr agreed In principal on the
terms of th e sale, which will be
announced at a press conference
at the plant soon.
He estlmted · then th at th e
transaction wou,ld be co mpleted
within the next 4&gt; days.

offer
SEOUL , South Korea (UP II The leadin g opposit ion pa rt ~·
today rej ected an offer by
President Chun Doo Hwan 10
reopen debat e on constitut ional
refor m and vowed to continu e
anfJ.govct- nment protes t s th at
ha ve led to two weeks of rl otin ~ .
The rejec tion came hours afl er
Chun, In a historic mC'eting with
opposit ion leader Kim Yo ung·
sam , made an about-face and
offered to rl'new the debate.
Chun 's decision to haitthe dr bate
Ap ril 13 led to the cur r ent round
of demon st r ations.
The Reunification Dem ocratic
Part.v turned down the offer afl cr
Kim briefed part y leader s on
Chun 's proposal . The part y sa id
Kim made pro posa ls to settl e the
cr isis but nothin g was achieved.
" Th e top·ll'vel meelin~&lt; today
broke dow n," sai d Kim Ta c·
ryong, the o!!l cl al part y spokes,
man. " And we have no ot her
choice but to stage struj:!gl e
tagalnst the government 1 by
pea ceful and non·vlolent ml'ans
along with al l de mocratic
forces."
The Na tional Coal it ion for a
Democrati c Consti tution, organ·
lzer s of a June 10 rally th at

OPPOSITION REJECTS CHUN OFFER - South Knrran
Pr., ldent Chun Doo Hwun '• offer to reopen d1•hatc ~n
constitutional r elorm wa~ r ej ected ioday hy oppoNllion leader Kim
Youn~· .am (right) and Kim vowed to contlnul' antl· ~~vernmt•nt
protests that have led to two weeks ~r rioting. The two shake hands
In the preNidenllal palace In Seoul hcforc today 's m!'l•tlng. ( Ul'f )
'

ma rked the be~i nnln g of two
wee ks ol v lolr nt protPsts, said It

.

had no plan&gt; 10 r ancr l a major
protest F r id a.' .

Investigators· probe new money trail in ·Iran-Contra deal

•'IIIITMII•

~~~-·

SCRAlCHEI
FWAIITIK.I U
..

package for an employee buyout of the defunct
Foote-Mineral plant at New Haven. The decillion
Ill expected to put 210 employees back to work.

Foote Mineral financing gets
approval; expect details ·later

SIFTEIIEI

DOEIIEO

OUIIESUWI

WESTINGHOUSE Credit Corporation, a na·
llonallirm, h11.' agreed to finance a plan (with the
exception of the $4.5 million the state of West
Virginia kicked In earlier) to complete a funding

SIUGILE
FIIIIC

UUHIY

119

thus sta bil iz ing liability insura nce ra tes. "It 's
simpjy a matter of fine tuning."
" All the fin e tuning has been done that needs to
be done," sa id S&lt;onate Minorit y Leader Har.ry
Meshel, D-Yo ungstow n, noting that people h'\P
trave led from throughout Ohio to hear the debate.
" Th e appropr iate pl ace to do it is herr and lh&lt;:'
appropriate ti me Is now. 1 see no reason for
delay in g actlon on this bill. "
Sen. Lee l. Flshrr, D·Shaker Height s. a member
of the select commit tee. said at least 50
am endments had alrea dy been considered and
rejec ted . "We are &lt;'ngaged In a sham ," he said .
" W&lt;• ar e r eferrin g It back to committ ee lo get

Chun's

41' IFF UIEL

~ PUREX

26 Cents

Reject

14 oz.

$1.211FF UIEL

DOVE
DISI UQIID

- The House Way s and Means Committee
repor t out a Senate· passed $1 .8 billion bond i ssue
for loca l hlghw a~· and bridge Improvements alter
r educin g It to $1. 2 billion.
- A Senat e-House confer ence co mmitte&lt;• on th&lt;•
state's $22 billion general budget mecot again and
report some progress . but It m ay not be r eady for
a fina l vote until Fr iday.
The civ il j ustice and in surance reform bill wa s
se nt back t o commlii i'E' for co nsideration of about
five am endment s proposed by Cel este.
Pos tponement of the sc heduled Senate floor
vot e spo iled th e day lor about 200 labo r union and
co nsumer w oup mem bers wh o r allied on th e
Statehou se steps at noon to oppose the bill and
then packed th e Senat e chamber hopin g to sec
minorit y Democrats shoot holes In 11 .
But Sen. H. Cooper Snyder , R-Hillsboro, lh t•
chief sponsor , sa id Celeste had sent up some
am endments at the last m inute and the &amp;&gt;nate
owed him the cour tesy of consider in g them.
" We would !ee l co mfort abl e with a little
adjustm ent in the bil l. " sa id Snyder. wh o
fashioned the me asure In hopes of reducin g
frivolou s lawsuits ·a nd excessive damage claims,

Thi s year ' s Middleport Fourth
of July celebration promises to
be theol gges t to date accordin g
to Middleport Vlll aj:!e Council ·
man Bob Gilmore. who is i n
char ge of th e event .
The festivities will begin wi th a
par ade at 1 p.m. The par adr ,
being coordinated by Rogr r
Wi lliams, will sta r t fr om Da ve
Dii&lt;'S Park and be lt&gt;d by the
Meigs High mar ching band .
First and seco nd place tr ophi es
don ated by Middl eport Trophies
will be aw arded to par ade
par ticipants In five categories.
·. Mld.dleport' s. Feen ey - Benn~tt
Post of /hP Am ~rl cil n Legion w ill

DOUBLE ITPRIITS
EVERY
DAY!
1011 Slllll STOlE

Mercer ...

2 Sections 14 Pages

A Muttimedie Inc .. Newspaper

Middleport plans

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.

lOW\

enttne

Ohio lawmakers give priority bills final look

Map shows minimum temperatures. At least 50% of any shaded arila is foreeast
to receive precipitation indicated
UPI

(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Provided by
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl

Co ntin ued

~SHOWERS

-RAIN
Warfl) "Cold "

•

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, June 24. 1987

Copyrighted·1987

Daily stock prices

Firm

at y

VQI , 37. No.36

Partly cloudy tonight. Low.
hetween 65 and 70. Partly
cloudy Thursday. Chance of
showers and thunderstorms ••
Highs near R5.
'

3518

•

Oth er r ai nfa l l amoun ts Mon:
day included 2. 74 inches a 1
Syra cuse, N.Y., 2.27 i nches at
Rome, N.Y., and 2. 07 Inches at
Wi lkes Barre-Scranton, Pa . In
Bath, Pa., r esidents were soa ked
wit h 1.03 inches of r ain in jusl20
mi nutes.
The storm front O\'er wes tern
Pennsy lva nia and souther n New
Yor k kept tem per atu res cool in
much of th e Nor theast, and high s
were m ostly In the 70s.

Am Electric Power .......... ... 28'1,
AT&amp;T .......... .. .. .. .. .. ............. 28 ')',
As hfand Oil ...................... .. 63 '1,
Bob E vans Fa rms ............. 25 \4
Charmin g Shoppes .... .. .. .. .. .. 32·]4
Fe der al Mogul .. .. ................ 42"1.
Goodyear T &amp;R ...... .. ...... .. ... 6931\
Heck's In c ............. ........ .. ... 4 y,
Li mited Inc..... .. .. .... ......... 46.Y,
Multlmedia Inc. ......... ... .. .... 60'!,
Ra x Res taur ants.... .. ........... ,!;')).
Robbins &amp; Myer s ...... .. .. .... .. 11 \4
Shoney's Inc................. .... ..... ~0
Wendy ' s In ti. ....................... 9}1
Worthington lnd ...... ....,. ....... 20 '.&lt;1

Daily Number
569
Pick 4

Page 6

or Injury.
The del uge appeared to beaver
lor Buffalo as the city had only a
20 per cent cha nce of rain for
today. Res id ents were bailing out
basement s and high wa ter under
v iaducts had forced police to
close roads in the suburbs of
Depew and Wes t Seneca alter
cars became str anded in water
up to their roofs.
Erie Cou nt y sheriff' s officia ls
said a sectio n of Route 78 in the
county was closed beca use ol
high wa ter.

United Press International
Th understorms were scatt ered
from the M idwest to the Eas t
today, but It was Buffalo, N .Y .,
that apparently " got It all at
once" as 11early two months '
wort h of r ain came down In a
m atter of hours.
Breaking the old r ecord of 3.28
Inches for a single day set In 1985,
Buffalo picked up a record 5.01
Inches of ra in Monday, o!!lcla ls
said.
" We got it all at once," said
m eteorologist T om Dunham i n
Buffal o. " We got mor e than a
m ont h's equivalent or rain in a
m atter of six hours."
The average r ainfall for the
month is 2.72 Inches, he sa id.

~

.

record rainfall

Hearings resume today
WASHI NGTON tU Pl l - Congressional Inves tigator s. resum·
j ng their hearings Into l ht• Iran·
Contra sca nda l tod ay , were
ai m i ng at an agrC&lt;·m r nt clearin g
the way for a reluctant L t. Col.
Oli ver Nor th to come forward
and test ify.
Leader s of the House and
Senate comm lttres probing the
case ar r anged priva te mPetln gs
around the noon break In loday ' s
hearings to try wra pping up wh at
sour ces desr r lbed as a tentative
agref'ment that could get public
tes ti mony fr om Nor th , th P Ma·
rln e at the center of the sca ndal.
as ea rly as Jul y 7.
Wit nesses called for th is sev·
ent h week of public heari ngs resuming aftet" a br ief reces s
June 9 - reprt&gt;sented the CI A.
the Na tional Security Council
and the Justice Departm ent and
Included two figures linked to
Nor th .
Glenn Robinette, a securit y
consultant and former CI A employ!'E', has said he arranged for
an electronic security ga te to be
Installed at North's home In
subur ban Washington. an estimated $2,000 expense possibly
paid for with money from the
Iran· Contra oper ations.
M ichael Ledeen Is a former
.NSC consultant who was a v ital
middleman In tsrael' s early
discu ssions with former national
securit y adviser Robert McFarlane that led to U.S. ar ms being
sold t o Iran through I sr ael In

Ohio Lotterv

l

.

and Senate committees pr obing
the affair as they resumed thei r
public hearings for a seventh
week following a brief r ecess thi s
month . Today the committees
ca lled forth Stanley Sporkln. a
feder al court judge and former ·
general coun sel for the CIA.
The hearings began last month
with tesllmony from none other
than Secord, a r etired Air F orce
major general who served as the
operations manager In secret
\).S. arms sales to Iran and
efforts to supply the Nicaraguan
Contra rebels at a time when
American military aid to them
was Illegal.
Secord testified he was not
engaged In such t r ansactlons for
personal profit, but evidence
since then has shown he used

m oney from Credit Suisse accoun ts that Included pr ofit s fr om
the Iran deals to buy a sports car
and a private plan e- bolstering
the theory or many committee
members that Secord profited
handsomely from the clandes·
tine operations.
Koch and the congressional
Investigators said Tuesday they
had no clu e as to who donated the
r ecent $500,000 to Secord's de·
tense fund, and Koch said Secord
asserted he, too, did not know the
Identity of the donor.
Koch said he was so bothered
by an " appearance or ImproprIety," that he resigned as a
trustee of his friend 's defense
'account. "With General Secord
you have to assu.me that money

from that sour ce. a Swiss bank
account , had a peculiar odor to
It ," sa id the Pentagon' s former
chief terrorism exper t.
Koch nonet heles s told [nvestl ga tors he did not believe the
funds were " dirty money" and
figured " som eone who want ed to
be helpful to Dick' ' simply made
a '' dumb" move by sending the
money through Switzerland.
The Swiss account s, wher e
money from the Ir an deals wa s
sent. have been frozen by au thorIties since I he scandal erupted
last fall , and Secord has fought
the committees over access to
abou t $8 million from the deal s
still on deposit In accounts he
controls with his Iranian-born
business partner , Albert Hakim.
Sens. Warren Rudman , R

N.H., and Will iam Cohen, R·
Mai ne, sa id the committees did
not know If the $500,000 came
from the I ra n arms proceeds or
who m ay have authorized the
transfer.
"Obviously com pet ent people
will have to de termine the title of
those fund s," Rudman sai d. " We
don' ! know where thi S money
cam e from . We know It came
from Cr edll Suisse, but that's a
pretty big bank."
The qu es tion of persona l profit
In I he sca nd al has emer ged as a
significant Issue since the hear·
lngs began. In addition to doubts
about Secord 's testimony that
could brin g hlm back befor e the
committees for more lnterroga·
tlon, ther e has been ev id ence
along the same lines against L t.

)

Col. Ol lwr Nort h.
North , th e M arlnt• lln ·d Nov . 2;,
:rom th e Na t la nai Securit y Council' starr becau se or his cent ra l
role In thr case, dealt with
thou sa nds of dollars In cash and
travel er's checks as a lia ison
wi th the Cont r as. tes tim ony haS'
shown - and so me or t he mon&lt;&gt;v
was spent on such th ings· a's
groceries and snow tires.
fn add ltlon, Hakim testified
this month about tryi ng to
es tablish a $200.000 " death benefit" account In Switzer land for
North 's famil y , about trying to
arrange a j ob for Nor th' s wife,
and abou t naming North as a
ben eficiary of about $2 million Ill·
the event that both H a~l m and
Secord died .

�Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
''Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, ~une 24, 1987

·c ommentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~~

.

~m~ rn......o..._-.-•.......,&lt;:::~."""
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher
· PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

, Assistant Publisher/Controller

AMEMBER o! The Unlled Press lnlernallonal, Inland Dally Press
Assoclallon and Ihe American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPIN ION ~fe- w('lrome They should .bf les!l than XlO words
long . All letters art' subject l oedltlng and rwst be slgno:l with name, address and

U. S. ·fimtS buy fake bolts __A_nd_er_so_na_n_d_Sp_ea_r
WASHINGTON - U.S. Customs agents Investigating the
International trade in counterfeit
steel bolts have made a shocking
discovery : American Importers
are knowingly ordering these
dangerous, substandard Industrial fastener s from Asian
manufacturers.
When we first reported on the
flood of cheap counterfeit bolts
coming into the counlry, It was
assumed that shady factory
owners In Japan, Korea and
Taiwan were hoodwinking their
U.S. customers with substandard
bolts made to look exactly like
high-grade bolts. Bul customs

sources told our associate Ste·
wart Harris ·th at American Importers are deliberat ely ordering
the counterfeits. They cost less
because they are made of tnll'rtor materlal , or they may not Qe
properly lempered to withstand
high temperatures and stress. ·
For example, Investigators
have assembled document ary
evidence In the form of orders fo r
"Grade 8 boron bolts." Genuine
Grade 8 bolts - the workhorse of
lhe steel·fastener lnduslry - do
not contain boron. Bolts made
with boron lurn lo putty at high
temperatures.
"II's not the Japanese pulling

telephon e number . No unsig ned Jeuers will be ~ bll!thed . Letters should be In
go?d taste, address in g Issues. not persooalltJes.

Why wouldn't
politics be partisan?

one over on the tmpoTier, " a who put French labels on bottles
Customs agent told us. " The that come from 6ther countries,
importer is requesllng a fraud ." and Customs Service attorneys
The flood of bogus bolls Into the argue that the " head markin gs"
cou ntry has reached such stag· on the bogus bolts are similarly
geri ng dimensions that about one fra udul ent. because they IndiIn every three Grade 8 bolts cate th at the bolts are stronger
tested at the Defense Industrial than they really are.
Supply Command depolin Phlla·
Many Japanese bolt makers
dPlphla is a counterfeit.
· have agreed not to counterfeit
The Customs Service plans 10 sleel bolls for the U.S. trade,
prospcute gomestlc Impor ters of even when th&lt;'lr customers ask
counterfeit steel bolts undPr the for lhem. But manufacturers in
Lanham Ac t, which makes it a Korea and Taiwan have refused
crim e to misrepresent goods so far to stop their lucrative
broughl Into thp Un ited States. counlerfeit in g.
The law has been used successfully against wine merchanls
Penlagon investigators are
also looking into Ihe boll. situalion, afl er d,lscovering last winter thai counterfeit s were pop·
ping up In the Army' s armored
veh icles.
We first reported on the ha· ·
zards of coun terfeits in armored
ve hicles lhis March. Since then,
CBS Evening News has picked up
the slory.

By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHINGTON (UP II -The raising and spending of money purely
lor the purpose of winning elecllon being undeniably a pollllcal
endeavor, why Is anyone surprised lhat relorm of campaign
llnanclng laws is a parllsa n issue?
"Whenever you co ns ider the Issue of money In pollllcs. tht&gt; parllsan
juices begin Ia flow ," Com mon Ca use Pres ldenl Fred Wertheimer
points out. "There has never been a fight Involving campaign financE.'
reform that hasn'l had partisan overtones."
• For lh rec weeks, lhe Senat e has been paralyzed In a classic split
down party lines wlthoul even 1oe hlnl of movemenl lhal would
lrii:ltcate a rendezvous on common ground.
·: ?n fact, the only poinl of agreeml•nl amon~ Democrats and
ijepubllcans Is lhal something is amiss and that il Is lime for
G'ongress to remodel the law thai was spawned by Ihe excesses and
failures of a lawless syslem.

::: r;&gt;ast lhat lnllial agreement. lmporlant In It self, Republicans and
:Elemocrats arc on lhe road to different d~s tln allons, lhelr routl's
:d!ctated by Ihe nreds of and weaknesses in the.lr own parlies.
·: Clllng the Increase In Ihe cosl of a winning a Sen ale elecllon from
$600,000 In 1976 to $3 million la st year and no end In sigh I, Democrals
·offer a blillhat would sci spending limits ranging from $9Ci0,000 In Ihe
:~mallest states to $:i.:i million In th e larges t.
&gt;: By con lrasl, Sen. Alan Cra nston and his Republican opponent, Rep.
•Ed Szchau , R· Ca lif., spent more than $20 million las l year In lhe
:c;:a llfornla Scnall' race, a nd big slale con tests lhrealen 10 go beyo nd
·t·hal In lhe futu re.
0: A Supreme Courl ruling, however, prohlblls Imposing ca mpaign
·~ndlng ceil ings lhal puJ Democrats In the poslllon of providing
candidates with so me "ca rrol " Ia make voluntary parllclpallon
allractlve. The answl'r : luxpayer financing up Ia 40 perccnl of Ihe
lim II .
Although lhe skyrocketing cost of winning a Senate seat is
outlandish and does force lncumbenls 10 spend an Inordinate lime
hustling money, putting limit s on spending would profll Democra ls.
The reason Is simple: Republica ns raise more money a nd, therefore.
CIIJI spend more.
:.; RepubliCans are not willing 10 CC'de Ihis money edge, which they see
·-buhinclng heavier Dcmocral k rPglstrallon In many states and
&lt; tll).mlerlng reglslrallon and get·out ·lhe-votr drives by such
heavyweights as organlzrd l ~bor .
, Senate Republica n leader Rolx'rt Dole says lhat llmllatlons on
. spending wou ld end a ny GOP hopes of Ihe lonl(· a walled
· )'breakthrough" In the Soulh and other pari s of Ihe cou nlry where the
· J)emocrats are heav ily entrenched.
;. ' His counlerparl, Senal c Drmocrallc leader Rober t Byrd, Insists
thai the legis tat ion "is not In! ended to deslroy Ihe Republi can Pari)'.
T~at's pap."
in one area, the rotc of polllleal acllon committees, both sides arc
.;Uilng Ia move, bul, agai n, In different dlrrcllons. The Democrats
; want to llmll the amount a candldale can accept from PACs; th e
: itepubllcan , su g~:es t cu lling the maximum a PAC can give to a
ca ndida! e.
Sen. Bob Packwood , R-Ore.. who IWc lved nearly $1 million In PAC
money last Yl'a r , is l'Vcn willlnl( Ia put PACs out of business,
prohlblllng any money Ia flow to ell her ca ndldales or Ihe parties.
. ·. The fund amenl al difference. howevPC, concerns fi xed ceilings on
; spending by ca ndidates , without which Byrd says there can ix' no
- campaign finance reform.
• Byrd, who had made cam paign finan ce reform .a prloril y, Is nol
aboul to give In, although the press of other legislation may forcl' him
Jo;gtve way.
. • Unt II Byr·d can co nvlnct' enough Republicans Ihal selling limits on
· i he· amounl a ca ndidate ca n spend Is the cure for the Ills of political
nnandng, the Senate Is unlikely to move on ca mpal~:n finance
· refbrm.

..

'

.

•

How about after next year?

•

Feels satisfaction

...
• • •

- ~,r

Sir,
'·What a satisfact ion to see Ihe
Serlior High School Building
restored, the grounds beaullfled,
• and this building of fond memo: rJe$ again being a source of
•ll(efulness, pride and joy.
;.; &lt;to those ot us who were
. · &amp;Jutlents In the then new building
: in11)e late teens, It was painful to
· see the building deteriorate. Both
: the tacultry and the student body
:; fell: such pride In that building
.; a)td what It meant for us and the
.· eommunlty. There was no litter; lng: nor any defacing. I vividly
. recall a lecture . to the student
•

• •

1

The steel bolt s themselves
arpn't lhe on ly things bPing
coun lerfeited, according to sources close to Ihe Pentagon lnvestlgat ion. , Democrat s are also
forged lo lend legitimacy to
.shipments of bogus bolts.

lk,.

Oil crunch,: an opposing VieW __Ro_b_er_L_~_al_te_rs
INDIANAPOLIS 1NEA 1 - In
Ihe &lt;'arty 1980s, when virtually all
experts In the energy field were
predicting lhat crude oil prices
would conllnue lhelr upward
spiral. physlcl sl William M.
Brown defl pd that conventional
wisdom.
The -dlreclor of energy and
lechnologlca l studies at Ihe Hudson Institute here, Brown rejecled the popular notion Ihat the
Organization of Petrollum Exporllng Countries was so powerful th ai It could Impose its
dem ands for ever· Increasing priers upon hapless Importing
nallons.
Ins lead of joining those offerIng thc-sky's·the·llmlt scenarios
of crude oil prices escalating Ia
$Ci0, $100 and even $1Ci0 per barrel,
Brown lorecast a prlcecolla·se ln
Ihe mld-1980s. Subs('(Juent event s
proved him correct.
Now he's at It again. dismiss·
lng lhe currently fashionable
view Ihal Ihis counlry and other
oll·lmportlng nations again will
be at OPEC's mercy - perhaps
as soon as Ihe 1990s.
" We arc headed toward a

period of time again where we'll
be sitting in gas lines.. . anytime
In Ihe nexl lwo Ia fi vr years,"
warns Interior Secrelary .Don al d
HodeL "'!'e are loday sowing the
seeds of thr nex t energy crisis,"
adds formrr Energy Secrela ry
James Schlesinger.
That's probably not lrue, Insists the lconoclaslic Brown, who
predlcl s for the rest of the 1980s
a nd the 1990s oil prices probably
will be no lower than $6 to $8 per
barrel and no higher than $18 to
$20 per barrel a range almosl
Identical to lhe flucluations of
recent years.
Among the factors Brown
expects to conlinu&lt;' mod era ling
oil prices:
OThe constant fear of anolher
"oil shock" such as !hose of
1973·74 · and 1979· 78 makes a
repctillon of those events less
likely.
"The greater lhe lhreal of
rising fuel priers in the fu ture.
Ihe grealer will be Ihe lnlerest n
new energy sources and new
energy technology." ex plains
Brown. "There still remains
enormous lechnological polen-

tial for increasing elficiencil"s
and for finding su bs tltules for
petroleum fue ls."
Unlike the Untied Sta tes,
" mu ch of lhe world is still
unexplored" and probably contains major oil fields. Brown
ciles recent discoveries in Auslralla and Soulh America as
possible exa mples.
oBolh th e Soviet Union and
China have vas1 onlapped crude
oil polential- and both are livei)·
lo accelerate r'plorallon and
sales to Ihe Wesl in coming years
lo earn needed hard currency.
OPlenllful coal and nalural gas
increasingly are lhe furls of
choice for numerous form s of
slalionary energy consumption,
Including the general ion of electrical power.
oCrude oil remains the almost
universa l source of enNgy for
aulas. trucks and other vehicles
- but dramalic changes a re
almost certain 10 occur within
the nex t few decades.
The commercial developmen I
of effi cient. economical batteries
to power molar vehicles is "a
very strong possibility" If no I "a

near cerlainty," Brown says.
ThE' emergence of electrl~ vehicles probably will r('(Julrr 10 to 20,
years "bul not more Ihan that,"
he adds.
The one evenl lhal could lead to
rapid esc atat ion of crude , oil
pric~s in lhc short or middle'
lrrm, warns Brown, wou ld be an
Iranian viclory over Iraq , leading 10 "Iranian hegemon y over
Ihe enllre Persian Gulf."
Islamic fundamentalism
would sweep across the region, producing radical politic al
changes Ihat would give religious
zea lols conlrol over OPEC policies. Thr price of oil would be
likely 10 rise to Ihe $40·to-$60 per ,
barrel rangr, if not hlghrr.
i\bsenl lhal development, the'
Irreverent Brown has lillie re-:
gard for lhe standard forecas tslhal warn of a sharp run up In
petroleum prices before lhr end
of the centu ry ."
"The conventional wisdom has
bern wrong In the pasl on
drmand, on supply, on price and on conservation, " he says . "Why :
should we give il any credence :
now?"

A woebegon farewell ______sa_ra_h_O_ve_r.~_lre_et:

A man you may never have
heard of has broken the hearts of
many of your friends and nel(l;h bors. You may never know about
it, though; Garrison Keillor Is a
fellow one shares wllh a trusted
few.
Oh, these folks may have lrted
to Introduce the unworthy to
Keillor somp foolish Saturday
night. Sitting In a living room at
dusk, they turned on their radios
and silently watched their
fri
ends listen to the commercials
might conceal18·1nch cracks llkt&gt;
for
the Fearmonger Shop, Berthe hidden rupture Into which one
ME&gt;Igs County farmer fell up to tha's Kitty Boutique, Bob's
Bank . They fidgeted through
his armpits ?
Or, nex t yE&gt;ar will Soulhern their guests' growing boredom
Ohio Coal have to close the patch with the ·s weet strains of a
because, with longwalllng , there Scottish balladeer or an aging
can be no strawberry llelds bluegrass music giant. Too many
years of television rendered
forever?
some
unable to understand the
Sincerely,
soft
,
barely
audible words of
Lady Borton
Keillor
as
he
told us stories of
Box 225, Rt. 1
ourselves
over
the airwaves.
Millfield, Ohio 45761
After a steady diet of firearms
and screeching tires; It becomes
harder and harder to hear the
gentle "shulub-shlub" of the
heart.
body by the late Prof. C. T.
But the time for converting
Coates, when the janitor re- friends Is past. Keillor ended his
ported chewing gum under the 13 years as host or National
desks In the Sophomore Boys Public Radio's "A Prairie Home
room. Social lralnlng was a Companion" June 13. He was
definite part of the curriculum.
slmply tired, he sald, !lndlng It
Among the Improvements that almost Impossible to bring us
we nole and appreciate, a City what we've eome to expeet !rom
Hall, so attractive, Is Indeed high him every Saturday nght along
on the list.
with the good music and belly
Thank you, City Fathers, and laughs: stories of the small but
all who contribute to this wondrous events of our lives, told
restoration.
to us with the wisdom ol an adult
Yours truly, through the eyes of a child.
Maye C. Mora , It Is this genius that made us
Class of 1921 love Keillor so, and depend on
him to out some oersoectlve on

:tetters
to the editor
••
: bear Editor:
: :: ~ext year. after Southern Ohio
: Coal has longwa lled und er It s
Thhie-acre st rawberry patch ,
wUl SoCo still welcome citizens to
pick berries fo r charity?
If Soulhern Ohio Coal opens the
: 11eld nex t year, will SoCo assure
: p.lckers thai only ground moles
· caused cracks emergi ng In the
•soJl; so SoCo once Iold Molgs
County farmers?
Will SoCo warn plcker·s that the
wE'bblng of the slrawberry plan Is

Betwrt'n Customs and the
Pent agon, about 20 prosecutions
are being prepared againsl Importers and distributors who sold
co un terfeit bolts to their military
or induSirial customers.
The crackdown on counterfeit
bolts was coordinated at a
mcel lng of aboul 30 federal
law·enforcem ent agents In Long
Bt:oach, Calif. . Pa rlier this month.
They comp ared note s and
mapped oul strategy for prosecuti ng th e co unt erfeit bolt
pushers .

our dlsappolntmenls and failures. As we made one concession
to adulthood after another, we
lost the joyful anticipation with
which we viewed the world as
children. Keillor somehow lived
through the same failures and
disappointments without shutting off the wonder and hope. He
reinterpreted the small everyday actions of our lives, making
us realize the heroism of just
getting up another day. He
showed us ourselves In a new
light and made us love our own
warts.
I was a little surprised, then, at
th e sulking with which some
Kelllo rltes greeted the news that
he was leaving. They wonder how .
he could do this. and what would
possess a.man to step down at the
pinnacle of success. (Keillor's
latesl book. "Lake Woebegon
Days," was a national bestseller. He was the darling of the
media last year and featured on a
recent cover of Time magazine.)
1 can only assume they either
don't know how exhausting it Is to
·reach down and pull out a piece of
your soul and give It to others
week afler week, or have forgot ten how taxing the creative
process Is .
Few of us ever reach the level
of a Garrison Keillor, but most of
us have walked In his shoes.
j;lmple activities that don'tget us
much attention - teaching a
Sunday School class week after
week, being program chairman
for Rotary, leading a Brownie
troop - can make us feel like
there's nolhlng left between our
ears and our soeks but mush. And
Invariably when we quit, our
leavlnt Is l!Y'eeted with morP

dlsappolntmenl th an apprecla ·
lion for service rendered .
It 's time to let Keillo r go, 10 do
his writing and ~:aln the anonym lly he lost as a celebrity In hi s
own hometown . "That 's unbearable," he told a news confprence
In St. Paul, Minn., when he
announced he would leave hi s
show. "To be a celebrity means
that people don 't Invite you over

to dinner anymore, because th ey;
figure you cou ldn 't come."
I hope eventu all y all of Kell .'
lor' s monologues are made available for people to bu y, because
Ihey are greal literature as welt
as food for the heart. But having
ea ten well at Keillor's table for 13
years, ll 's lime for the resl of us
to use his great gift and go find
our own wondl'r."

Berry's World

· Wednesday, June 24, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

NOl.ON6ER.
SILENT AMO MYSTERIOUS.
OKAY! HERE'S THE
STRAI&amp;HT POOP, •••

··Dayton joins:~;

Upshaw homer lifts Toronto
By JOHN TORRES
UPI Sports Writer
. For the past two seasons,
lostde pitches have mean1 trouble for Willie Upshaw. Tuesday
night, he opened ·up and reclaimed part or the Inside corner.
Upshaw hit a grand slam fn the
fourth Inning and Fred McGriff
added a two-run shot, powering
the Toronto Blue Jays to an B-7
victory over the Detroit Tigers.
With no score In the fourth ,
.Jesse Barfield walked, George
Bell singled to center and Ernie
Whitt walked before Upshaw
lined an 0-2 pitch Into I he upper
deck in right for his ninth home
run , equaling his hom e run total
for last season. Kelly Grube r
singled to third and McGriff
pulled the first pitch to him into
the upper deck in right for his
sixth home ·run.
"I wasn't about to give ln.
Regardless of what happened, I
, was going to have a good swing,"

Upshaw, who · hit his second
career grand slam, said. ·"I
caught up with a fastball. That
was H.

"I've been able to open up on
inside pitches again, and not stay
so closed."
Dave Stieb, 6-4, allowed six hit s
in 6 2-3lnnlngs. He has won t.hree
of his last four starts . Tom
Henke, the fifth Toronto pitcher,
earned his 13th save despite
allowing a two-run homer to Alan
Trammell In the ninth . Jeff
Robinson, 4-4, took the loss.
Elsewhere, New York edged
Baltimore 2·1, Boston slugged
Milwaukee 9-5, Chicago pounded
Seattle 13-3, Minnesota clouted
Cleveland 9-4 , California shaded
Texas S.6, and Kansas City
blanked Oakland 4-0.
Yankees 2, Orioles I
At Baltimore, Gary Ward
hom ered off newly-signed re-

Scoreboard ...
Majors
~ ,\TfONi\L

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3• 1

'

'Chico Caldwell'
named West Virginia
State coach
iUPll - Percy "Chico" Ca ld·
well, who coached four losing
1eams at South Carolina State,
was named coach at NAtA
nallonal runner-up West Virginia
Slate. Caldwell. 40, complied a
48-65 record at South Carolina
Slale. He repl3ces Craig Carse,
who resigned last monlh and
became an assistant at LSU .

Joiyu•·•"''

w Tnlrdt1

TROY. Ohio iUP l) - Jerry
Hounchell Jr. of Troy and Steve .
Stone of Toledo each ·fired 2under par 67s Tuesday to share
the flrsl-round lead in Ihe 16to18
division of the Ohio Junior Golf
Tournament.
Ric Baird of Dublin led lhe
15-and·under di vision, shooting a
l -over par 70 on the 5,867- yard
Troy Count ry Club course. A pair
of Circleville golfers - Ed
Helwagen and John Craddockwere lwo strokes back at 72.
In the 16 to 18 division. Jeff
Junk of Washing! on Courl House

Ferrari retains two

M't•dnt•...dll,V ' .~ (;anH'!&gt;

Tulrdl' .-1 M11lilt•
·
( 'o lu mhu~ 1M: l'llwh•·"'t'l
TIIIIMr.'allrt' Ill Rot•hi'Sif'r
ftkhmund 141 SyriM:UI'&gt;I'
Thul'lldii.V '" liamt,;
~tlllnt • .u.l folumhtuo

'ndt&gt;wul« at Ket•ht'Ktt•r

·*

tUPI) -Ferrari will retain
Michele Alboreto of llaly and
Austrian Gerhard Berger for the
1988 season, team officials said.
The future of Alboreto, Ferrari's
· first driver, had been In doubt
after reports said he might be
signed by the British Williams
learn next year Ia race alonl(slde
Nigel Mansell.

We will be making daily deliveries
to the West Virginia area during
the period of time the bridge is
closed. Just give us a call with your
order.

1 will be di.1continuing

VALLEY LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
55SPark- St.

and Bob Moss of Parma each
shol69s 10 Ira il the leaders by lwo
slrokes.
Hounchell and Stone played In
Ihe same th reesome and came 1o
ihe ta sl hole tied . Hounchell
chipped In from jus! off the green
for
Stone
wilhaabirdie
20-footand
birdie
pull.followed
Ho~ncheli. play ing on his home
course where he holds the record
of 63, had nines of 31-36 for his 67.
"I hit lht• ball good," said
Hounchell, who will be a senior at

Troy Hig h School th is fulL " I
dldn'l make any l(rral shols bul l
made a few good shols· where I
had lo."
SlOne. who plans 10 enroll at
Ohio Stale on a golf scholarship
Ihis fall , hadd nines of :lo.:n.

ft============tl

MilWAY
TAVERN
BR4KEAWAY

Transactions

FRIDAY &amp;
SATURDAY NIGHT.S
JUNE 26 &amp; 27

ftlllit•hllll
Rallimort• - l'ilrnt•d ,,.. , ~ u~~:••nt rt'"
llr\ t•r U uua: ( 'orhrll .
I J~S ,\n.:t•lt-s - Tr~t:d l'd minn,... lt· u~ut•
plti'IH'f' Tim Mt •t•k.'l lu O~tkl11nd '"r
mlnur• h•;~~t~tl' pltdll'r Hill 1\rW' Jtl'r: pur•·h"-'"'' " ttw · t'1lnlr1wt nl uutlh'ld nunny
ll rt·p from i\lhutju••rqtM' ui lht• 11 ut•llk
4 'ua~l l.t•uJiit• C,\AA 1: "pUun••doutfl••ldl •r
IIJ •1r;l•· M'llltlllilll In t\lttut!l" ' l'itltl' ,

12.00 Cover Charge
Must be 21

Super Savers
Sale!

The Daily Sentinel

Save On Women's Naturalizer and

I USPS 14~11tti
A Divis ion of Multimedia. Inc. ·

Hush Puppy Dre11 Shou

Pul:tllshrd P\'l'ry aflrrnoon . Monday
throu~h F'rldaV . 111 Court Sl .. Po·
mt'roy. Ohio, b)· 1hc Ohio Vallry Publl!ihlnll Company /Mu 111medla. Inc ..
Porn•· &gt;v, Ohio l 5769. Ph . 99Ht56. S..
cond :ilss pOtilali!f' paid 111 PomN oy .

ALL WOMEN'S

DRESS SHOES
0

4

Unltrd PrPss lniPrnallonal .

Inl and DallY Prrss AssOf'\iltlon and lhf
Ohio NewsPafH'f AsslX'IAt lon. National
Adve-rllslnR Reprf'!'f'ntatiV('. Bra nham

Newspaprr Sall'ti." 733 Third Avt'nur .
Nf'W York. NPw York 10017.

Don't Ml11lt

Middleport, OH.

992-6611

THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY

Mf'rttl}('r:

COMPLETES DOUBLEPLi\Y - Balltmore Orloies' shortstop
Call Rlpken steps over New York Yankees' Dave Winfield alter
forcing him at se&lt;·ond h:\Se In the fourth Inning of the game in
Baltimore. (UP!)

(DAILY)

limited to Obstetrics and
Gvnecolo!fY effective luly
6,~1987 in Suite#118 o} ihe
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Medical Office Buildinl{.
Appointments can be
made bv callin~ 675..3400.

John W. Grubb , W.D.

'!J:1

FREE DELIVERY

l'lloriCE TO ,·'
PA'I1ENTS
Wy Practice will be

my practice in General
Wedicine effecr.ive July 6,
1987. All patient record.!
will be left. with Breton L.
Worgan , W.O. who will
take over my practice in
General Wedicine at that
time.

DAYTON, Ohio (UPi l - T'~r
University of Dayt9rt is ending I '
independency by joining th~
Midwest Collegiate Conterenc!:!.
next week.
~
Dayton, a private Catholic'
unlver~ lty and o~e of lhe eo un;
try's major Independents, be~
comes the seventh member oflhco
conference. Just las l FridaY,
Marquette University turne&lt;.~
down the opportunity to join.
Marquette's decision not t&lt;i
join fu eled speculatu lon Dayto'l
would not join either, bul DD
Athl ellc Direclor Thoma s Fri&gt;r ~
leks said Dayton' s decision
"wasn'l tied Into whet her !Vlar;
quette would gc."
,
Other members In the MCC are
Butler Unlverslly, Detro.tt ;
Evansville. Loyola (Ill.), St;
Louis and Xavier.
,
· The Flyers will bt&gt;gln leaguq
competition In basketball with,
Ihe 1988·89 seaso n, play in g all but
Evansv ille Ihal year.
MCC Commissioner Jam ~s
Sc haffer said Ihe Day ton ·
hosl lhe 1989 and 1990 MCC m~!il s
basketball championships. The
winner of Ihe IOurnament get ~.&lt;~,D
automatic berlh In lhe NO~~
lournamenl.
•
Dayton's lasl Irip to Ihe NOJ\("1
was In 1985 when It losV1 a
first -round game to event ual.
champion VIl lanova by \IVO
points. The Flyers were runll!ll;"
sup to UCLA in 1967. They' ve ~lso
gol 1wo NIT championships. , ,

Hounchellleads Junior Golf Tournament

~ : UP · "'·

( ' lt•\f'IWid Ill

conference ·

at 0 11kland

TuroiMu tC 't•runil·:!l a11Mr11U fMnrrh
1~ !), 7:1'1 p.m .
Nt•w 1' •rl! ( t:nldr~· 11-21 at R~lllmnr• •

'!-:1).11: :11)

'

Jiever Doug Corbett in the eighth
inning to lead New York.
·
Red Sox 9, Brewers 5
At Boston, Ellis Burks hit a
three-run homer and Jim Rice
added a two·run single In the
sixth Inning Ia l~ad the R~d Sox .
While Sox !3, Mariners 3
At Chicago, H ~;~rold , Baines
collected three hits, Including a
two-run homer, to pace Chicago's season-high 18-hlt attack.
Twins 9, Indians 4
· At Minnesota, Gary Gaetti
drove In four runs, helping the .
Twins overcome two homers by
Tony Bernazard .
·
Royals 4, A's 0
At Oakland, ·Mark Gublcza
fi red a three·hit shutout and
George Brett knocked In three
runs to lift KansasClty.

:1

10 2!1 .Mil -

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. ~63

I
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S)'rat'llllt' ul Tldi·•Millh'r. ppl.l .. rain

AMF.Hif ,\S LEAta JJo;
t::-..t

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('olumhullll, P 11wl ut'lu-t I, J,.l
(' olumhuN3, PllwtkkM ~. ~ ~~~~

,\tilanlll .- LoN •'-ll:f'lrs, nl~~:hl
('bu·lnnatl at San f' rllllt'l'"'it, nl~~:tw.

31 :tO

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N•ow \ 'or ..
DMrnil

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Callfornl

t:aM

Mnntl'f'al
Nl'll' \ 'urk

:-.

Ouk.li&amp;nd

!SI•auh•

Oh h

THE POl NDEXTER:

The Daily Sentinej-Page4

4 BIG DAYS
rrktly, Junt 21

A.V1rilble
P.R.
Annul Perctnllae

Flaed P1ymen~
R1te flnlnclna up to 10 molllhl on mry new
c1r and truck ln stock

10 1.111.·1 p.m.

s.turdly, Junt 27 10 •. m.•t p.m.

AT
GRAND
CENTRAL
MALL

"\So,.dor, luno 21

FROM

II UNITED
W

NATIONAL BANK

NNER'S CHOIC
CAR GIVEAWAY

We're Giving Away ABrand New Car!
Be sure to reg rst er with each dealer at Auto Mania '87 to win the new car or lruck
Irom
those on
Ihe center oft he

CHOOSE FROM THESE 13 DEALERS
•Ill fOlD .,,,,,,, , ,, ,., . 11111n'- • ~- tmlll , , ,.,,, . .l.lllllloolll

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,•111111 !mill ......... ' 1!11 IJfplillll*f

POSTMASTER: SI'NI addrPss chanllf"!l

to Thr Oall\' Senllnl'l. Ill Court Sl .,
Pomeroy. Oh.io 45'ifi9.

SUJISCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Mol or Route

• _,., · ... , ... , , .. fllllloJjo Cfti&lt;
•IIIII&amp; ....... , .. 1111 ,.,... 1•&lt;01
• ltlltl n.&amp;l ... , .... .. , -~~•lltCll--..... tll1-lr1llloo
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SUb!&lt;crll:terJO not drslrln~ to pa y IhE&gt; car·
rl&lt;•r may remit In advanct&gt; dlrtct 10
The Dally St'onllnl'l on a 3. 6or 12 month
basts . Credit will be&gt; ~vPn rarr\{'r Pach
Wf'ek ,

No subscriptions by mall p.l'rmlllf'd In
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HARTLEY
SHOES
un
YAI YIAIUiti-OWitiR

PO-OY, OH.

a=

992-5272
Layaway• Weleome

WOOD COUNTY AUTO/
TRUCK DEALERS ASSOCIATION

UNITED
NATIONAL BANK

wt News /The Sentinel

�i-omeroy-IV1100i8pon.,

Vr 11U

Wedoosdal(. June 24 , 1987 1

Edberg blanks Eriksson as 1987 Wimbledon play hegins
By STEVE KETTLE
UPI Sporl s Wrller
WIM B L E DON. England
tU Pl i - Sweden's Sie!an Ed·
berg consi der ed lhrowlng a
gam e in order noll oembarrassa
fellow counlry man, bul a ch ance
10 make Wimbledon !ennis hi slory was mor e en! icin g.
Edbf'rg whll ewas hcd Si efan
l&lt;ri ksson 6-0, 6-0, 6-0 Tu esday 10
rwcome the fi rs t mr n's winner in
rl1i..., ~Pa r 's tournament. which
',\.'~I S dr ia.vrd ne(lrl y two da ys
beca use of r ai n.
Men's lop seed and l wo-llm c
de fe ndin g chompi on B ori s
flcc kr r r l iminal ed Kar el No-

.
vacek In st ra ight sels, while No . 2 three game points.
seed I va n Lendl struggled belore
" I tried to keep !he ball In
subduing an 18-year-old quallller
play," Edberg said. "I though t
he knew nothing about and who about giving hi m a game In the
has yel to win a Grand Prix · end. but I ma y never get a chance
·
to win like this In a grand slam
ma tch this year .
" !have never won a lhree-sel
tournament again. ! fel t sorry for
match wit hout dropping a game,
him. but he only laughed
afterwards."
but I bea t Andreas Maurer (Wesl
Becker. with his flashy sty le,
Germany) 6-0, 6- 0 earlier this
year." Edber g, seeded fourth.
entertained a Center Courl
said.
crowd · w hich had wai ted unlil
Edberg became only !he third
la te afternoon of the second day
man ·during the Open era to
before rai n permllted play. He
dcliv.ered 10 aces and eve n won a
sweep a Grand Slam match

dropp~gagam~

polnl wi t h his left hand - for
wh ich he apologized- In beating
Novacek, 6-4. 6-2, 6-4. Becker
closed out both the first and
second sets with aces.
Lend!, !he losing final ist to
Bec ker las! year, worked for 2
hours and 22 minu tes to beat
Chr istian Saceanu, a Romanian
who now lives in West Germa ny,
6-2. 3-6. 6-3. 7-5. Lend!, ranked No.
1 in !he world . came wllhin two
po int s of dropping the fourth set
befo r e ma king the dec isive break

Wednesday. June 24, 1987

,

~omeroy- Middleport,

'

WI!AT IS THE
MEDIC ALERT PROGRAM?
The Mttlic Alert Program is a national, non-profit organizatian thot provider a rleoringhom far information an rpociol htalth prollltmr af its memllerr, Each
mtmber is supplie&lt;l 'lith a smallttttdollion on o rhain
or bracelet, engraved with information about hir
health problems. For uample, the jewelry may be ins·

cribed "allergic to penicillin" or "wearing contad
lensts."

::.:·-~-~~:;.~~c:3:"

(6 t4 ) 1112-5141

loiiODLEPORT,

0~1 0

In addition, the organitation keeps on file additional ·-_i~·;
·";·
information on its memberr' health. in the event of on _
emergtn&lt;y, mtdicol 'lorkerr can call the notional or - =---~-~
ganization hi is located in Colilornia) to get this in·
formation, It could be vital in medico! treatment
I

5TH STREE1

j614)667-31fO
COOLVILLE, OHIO

STILLWELL GRAB - Reds' shortstop Kurt
Stillw ater (fr ont) r eac hes out and makes a calch

·'

--

B y ~lARK COHEN
U PJ Spo r ts Wriler
J,.ee E lla found oul how easy
managi ng can be when your
starling pitc her turns in a dominaling performance.
."Shane Raw ley al lowed four
hit s over eight Innings Tuesday
nigh! to hel p !he Ph il adelphia
Phillies to a 4-1 vlclory over the
St. Loui s Cardin als and !heir firs t
triumph In five ga mes · under
Ella, who replaced ! he fired John

Lendl struggles past
unknown in first round
to his own cxpr ct at ions.
Thr world 's No. 1 rank ed
pla ye r cu mr wllhin two points of
!win g fo1w d l o a fiflh set
Tu os cla y by un 1~- yt· a r - o ld &lt;Jual ifl ('l' wlrhout a sin g-lr vit'turv this
yc·b r In Gnmd P r ix compr iiHon.
W~en hl' fina lly emerged wilh a
1: - ~ .'l-0. fi-:l, 7-:, vktorv ovt' l'
C'h'r islian Sacranu In his ~penin g
round mal&lt;'h al Wimblrdon.
LPn&lt;ll

lw

inl i m (:l trd

wa s n' t

sur prisNI.
" I don't r xpec tthin gs lo guwell
al WimiJicclon." said Lend! , lhr
lns)ng fi nalisl 10 13or is Bcck rr
lasr ,VPa r. " 11' ~ u s tru gg lr f t'Om
&lt;I:JY onr wht•n I ronw uvcr and
wot k on my ~amP . ll 's a strugglr
wllh llw '' '!'ll lhr r . ll' s a sl r ugglr

with m .\' g;t rn l'. l!' s 11 s t rug ~ IC&gt;
with m.v footwork and wllh most
otlhl ' thi ng, _
'I I n onr H' ;l y

it m;tk t•:-. it hmcl.ln

au othPr Wtl\' if ~· o u pia.\' wf' ll and

sucrt·Pd it

n1 t~kc·~

it mo n' sat isfv-

i ng . It to u g h1 ·n ~ .\'OU up. and tht~n
t I!(• ~ un mH ·r t ' i l'i'l l i 1 b j us! a pi Pet•
of akr•."
i..t' IHII pl ;trt •tl \ '1' 1') \n•\ 1 In the

n1wning S('t nn g r;t'is ~o ftr• npfl bv
t·n fl st;t tl l rain .1nd ~ t'( ' TllPcl r&lt;•a d ~ ·
for ;1 o., f r ;dght !-if' l :-. \'icton u~ a i n .~ l
tl p( ; t~ 'l ' l" Ll l lkt •d t'-:0 .

J"j;, in 1114'

on a ball hll by Chill Davis"'' Kal Daniels look on
In the second Inning. (U PI)

Fra nco sa id. " I just sa id I'm
no t going l o Jell hem be a! me. I 'm
hav ing fun . I 'm ju s! golngoul and
tryi ng to do my job. My faslba ll ls
rea lly sinking well !his year .
Pete s~ld I ha&lt;l a good si nki ng
fas tba ll , so why not throw it'' So I
go t ahead w ith mv faslball and
ca m e bac k with changeups for

Rawley guides Phillles-over Cardinals _

:LOW ltE'I'liRN - Numh!!r two seed Ivan Le nd! of
(\&lt;rcho.• lovakla ret urn• a low hckhan d l o West German Chr isllan
Sa("l·anu du r i n~ their !ir.t round m atch at Wlmhledon. Le ndl won
6-2, :t-fi, 6-:1, 7-5. (UI' I )

WIM RL I" DO t\, E ng l a nd
t UPlt - By fi irl ing wllh danger
Hgtl inst an unknm~,.· n oppo1wn1.
Ivan Lend ! m&lt;•rel v wa s living up

wor ld. He won the toss and
circled 10 receive serve, and I his
strategy paid off immedlalely as
he bi'Oke In the opening and
seve nlh gam0s .
Bu! Saceanu, a Romanian now
li v ing in W~ s l German y,
ac hiPved !he only break of the
second se1 In t he sixth game
when Le nd! double fa u lted twice ,
enabling him to even the match.
and hr wa s up 4-2 in !he !ourth

Felske last T hursday.
"We needed a well-pitched
game and we got II," sai d Ell a,
who received a bott le of champaign afl er the game. "Whenever Shane sme lled th ai he was
getting Into troubl e, he ro und a
way to gel out of the inn ing.
"tThe victory! was i nevllab le
because we ·were brea k ing our
ta ils the last fo ur days. We had
tho right Ingredient s to win. It
was nice getting over tha i

Top 60 collegians featured
in soccer doubleheader

'
RICH F I ELD, Ohio tUPi l
Brian Ainscough and Frank
Mcint os h, two "colleg ians from
the New York City area, powered
their respecl ive teams to victory
Tuesday night In the seco nd
annual Budweiser Soccer Cl assic
at the R i chfield Coliseu m .
.The Classic doubleheader .
played on !he eve of !he M a~r
Indoor Soccer League's player
draft , featured the top fill collegl·
ans in thr nation and was
a II ended by 4,4:16.
Ainscough, a forward !rom
Fairleigh Dickinson University .
scored two goal s and added t h1·er
as slsl s in l eadi ng lhr St ars to a
9- 8 vict ory ove r t he Sl ripes in the
opener.
Mcintosh , a for ward from t he
New Yor k lnslitule of Tech nology , scored lhr er goal s I~ !he
nigh! cap 1opower the Amencans
10 a 5-2 decisio n over lhr
Nalionals .
Three olh er pla yers helped
t h:elr chances in the drafl wilh

set.
Lend! finally perst&gt;vet·ed , allhough It took him 2 hours and 22
minu tE"s:
"I wa sn' l vt·ry pleased 'Yith t he
wa y I played today ," he said.
"Us ually with me on grass I go
four or fi ve sels with a lot or
p la.vrrs. As long as I can keep
fighting and hanging Iough, I
sometimes pull through.
"'Today I !cit the cou_rl was
uncertain. very soggy and soft .
Under the conditions I l elt it was
as good as it could be, built was
V&lt;' ry hard to pu sh off fast and
hard on t he !Irs! step."
Saceanu , coached for !he las!
month by Gunt her Bosch . the
man who helped develop Boris
Rec ker , played wllh a lol of poise.
sprving hat·d and ret urning well.
"ll' s my fir st lime with him
and I lhlnk he will play better, "
Sace:tnu said of Lend!. " He
played prctly good, bu t It was
diffl culi wllh !he r ain. "

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CATALOG STORE
JUNE 25, 26 &amp; 27

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hump."
Rawley , 8-4, im proved his
career record to !i-1 agai nsl S1.
Lo uis and lowered his career
ERA to 1. 59 agains t !he
Cardi nals.

BREAKFAST
YOUR CHOICE FOR

AND MAXWELL HOUSE® COFFEE
01

2 EGGS, HAS"ROUNDS, BISCUIT &amp; JEllY

routed Piltsburgh R-2, Sa n Diego·
beat Hous ton 4-1. Los Ange les
nipped A tlan ta :t-2 and Cincinn ali
dumped Sa n Francisco 4-1.

BREAKFAST HOURS: MON.-SAT. 6:00 A.M.· 10:30 A.M.
SUN. 7 A.M.-11 A.M.

C ulls ~. Mets I
AI New York, Mike Brum ley
"I knew l oday !ha l I had a
great opporlu nity lo give our capped a four-run f ifl h Inning
w ith his !lrst ma jor-league hoballclub a bl!! llfl," Rawley said.
"The fi rst cou ple of days you mer and Rick Sut cl iffe wo n his
could tell Lee was jus! t rying to lOth game of !he S&lt;'ason In
get back In the swi ng of leadi ng the Cubs.
managing ."
Raw ley walked three and .-- - - - - - - - - - -;
st ruck out fo ur. Sieve Bedrosia n
pitched the ni nlh for his 17th
RABIES CLINIC
save. Lee Tunnell, 3-2, l oo k the
loss .
Prtllftttd by
Von Haves. who had three hils
Meigs County Humane SO&lt;itly
lor Philadelphia. said I he Phil ond Meigs County H~alth Dtpt.
ot RO&lt;k Springs Fair Gr011nds
lies can slill sa lvage the season.
"This win was Jwicc as good,"
S t d J 27
Haves said . "'Hr ' s !E ll a I doing a
a ur ay, une
good job. Now !ha t !he streak Is
I P.M. to 4 P.M.
over, we can get on and play the
·Dr. Carol Osborne, Veternorian
kin d of ball we ar e capabl e o!
Rabies lllotr S3.00

SUPER PLEASE~® (lit LB. CHEESEBURGER WITH THE

strong performances in the firs!
game. (;ienn Lurie of SPal tle
Pac ific Univer sit y scored t hree
g-oals and added an assist l or the
Stripes .
In addition. Harry Sm ar th of
Brooklyn College addrd two
goals and an assisl for thr Star s
playing."
whil e Da\'ld Dovle of Cam pbel l
JN.C'. J Unlver sli_v had Jwo goals
fea ted New York 4-1, Mont rea l
and two assis is for !he St ri pes.
In tho nightcap, defender ..
Bl'ian Bliss of So uthern Connecll·
cui ad ded one goal and t wo
asslsl s for !he America n squad.
The American s W(&gt;rP coached by
Tl mo ·LJekosk i of !he Cleveland
Force, whose !ram has four of
!he first 11 picks in loday 'sdra ft .
Clevela nd has the top overall
pick. and Bliss Is co nsidered 10 be
!he lop d!'fender In !he collegla le
pool.
John Stone of Sou! hcrn Illinois·
Edwardsville had two powerplay goals to accoun1 for !he
National scoring-.

Other innaculatians availablo.

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WORKS ON SESAME SEED BUN)
LARGE FRENCH FRY &amp; lARGE COCA-COLA® CLASSIC

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$199

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Bill and Jenelle Hapton&amp;tall

N. 2nd

992-21 78

- Middleport

()PEN MONDAY. TUESDAY, WEDN ESDAY &amp; FRIDAY 9:30-15:00
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THURSDAY &amp; SATURDAY 9:30· 12:00 Noon

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LIMITED TIME ONLY AT PT . PLEASANT W. VA .

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mean SaYinp! You won't lote thtm with •
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Coupon 0 rganl%er
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blue vinyl
AlQngo wl l ~ rour ort11r ttnd In Pil l or 1 lltlfl Qr
OOJ iMIIInll lhl brtfld 111m1 Ol I "lodloiCI tOU •
., Checkbook size
ponlll~tl u1o•v·• P'Pt' 1n1111a of rr.t pot lift •
, 3 H PIIIfe compertme nte J!!'~~'~'"~"!!J"1!..!''"
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Hlndtome

FIRST ._. 11111S AREA
MilS. Alii WANI'S TO HElP YOUI
Open Fram 9 a.m. - 10 p.m.
Call For One Fret Questian 675·71B9
2211 .1cxkmn An. - Point "--11
With litis Ad Get SJO.oa Rtallng For 0~ ss.oa

OUR OFFICE WILL BE CLOSED ON
THE FOLLOWING SATURDAYS:
7/4, 7/11 and 7/18 DUE TO VACATION SCHEDULING
WE WILL RESUME REGULAR
SATURDAY HOURS ON JULY 25th

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MEIGS HEALIH SERVICES

POIIEIOY
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HAMBURGER

Advice On All A ffairs Of ~fe Such As Love,
~arr iage And Business .
All Reading Guaranteed And Confidential .

IULIRIY HIS.

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WILMA MANSFIELD, M.D.
MICHAEL J. FURLONG, M.D.
JAMES E. WITHERELL, M.D.

·cATALOG MERCHANT

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~l~n~o~t~he~•=·~g~am~e~s,~C~h~t·c~a:go~d!e-~!:~~~~r~m~u~rt~~~on~le~a~~~~r~::lJ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

THANK YOU

SEARS

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LUNCH or DINNER

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Tell.~ You Pa.~t . Present

99 (

HOT BUTTERMILK BISCUIT WITH SAUSAGE

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SAVE ON EVERY
KENMO RE
APPLIANC E
ON THE FLllOH

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DEALS

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SAN FRANCISCO tU Pl i the t wo str ikeouts. "
for Malt Wi lliams, left·hander
Th e Ci ncinnati Reds m ay have
He struck out Chr is Speier and Rob Mu rphy replaced Frank
com e up with a.t leas ! a partial
Bob Melvin to end the game.
Williams.
answer to i helr season-long probCinci nnati broke a scoreless t le
lem of putt ing together an
in the six th inning. Dave Concep- . -- - - - - -- - - -__.: •·•
effective star ting ro tation.
cion led off" with a double and
Right-hander Ro n Robinson,
later ca me hom e on Tracy Jones '
· m aki ng his second start of the
sacr ifice !ly .
season, scattered four hits over 6
The Reds made it 2-0 In the
1-3 Inni ngs T uesday night to
seven!
h. Eric Davis led ol f with a
guide the Wes tern Div ision lead·
slnf(le
and
took second on a single
ing Reds to a 4-1 v ictory over !he
by
Dave
Parker. Buddy Bell
MONDAY THRU THURSDAY · ,.
San F rancisco Gia nts. Robi nson,
bOunced
Into
a
double
play,
with
3-2. walked one and struck out
Dav is mov ing to third. Bo Dlaz
three.
'&lt;I felt in control of all my then doubled to score Dav is.
San F r ancisco pulled within 2·1
pitches," sa id Robinson. " II felt
In the bottom of the seventh. Chill
gr eal starting."
Davis led of! w ith a single lo
" Robby Is a bi g plus lor us,"
center and, one out later, Frank
sa id Reds m anager Pete Rose.
·
Willi ams relieved .Robin son.
"H e had a good fas tball and a
Pinch hitter Harry Spllman then
good brea king ball. to night."
grounded to shortstop K urt StilSan Francisco manage r Roger
lwe ll, who bo bbl ed the ball and
Cr aig also thought Robinson was
threw low to first fo r an error.
ROBERT DeNIRO
tough.
putting
ru
nners
on
firs
t
and
" His fast ball was really
second.
moving tonight. He has a live
A ft er left -hander Eddie Milneo·
ar m and he's got a deceptive
was
announced as a pi nch hitt er
m otion lik e (G iant s pitcher;
Ke lly Downs."
Robinson's em ergence as a
star ter has had t he side bene!it of
Jell ing John F ranco shine as a
reliever. He worked l hdinal t wo
i nnin gs In shu l out sty le Tuesday
night for his 151 h save.

Nystrom beat Henrlk Sundstrom, 6-2, 6-7 15-7). 6-4. 6- 3, i n
a n o th er a i 'I-Swedis h
confront ation.
Gabriela Sabatini. at No. 7 the
highest women's seed to play,
de feated American Barbara
Ger ken, 6-3, 6-3;• No . 8 Manuel a
Maleeva of Bulgaria defeated
Canada's Helen Kelesi , 6-3, 6-2;
and No. 11 L ori McNeil of
Houston won her open ing round
match from M arie-Christine Cal leja of France. 6-2, 6-3.

~~~~~· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

To lind out more about the program write or call:
Medic Alert, Turlork, Calli., 95380. Phone numbers
209 / 632 -2371 burinm and 209/ 634-4917 emer gency,

•

Reds' Robinson wtns agatn

wllhoul
so
n won merely 35 point s EinMks
!he- 1
60-minu te m atch and had on ly

flaw6~&amp;- '(Ooat;.:':l, fctoe1l.
~ne-/ .Ytme

The Daily Seotinei- Page- 5 -~

•

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Jn the illh game.
Saceanu won only one set In
two previous Gra nd Prix tournamentsl hisyearandisrankedNo. ·
175 in the world.
Other seeds 10 win during a
program abbr.evlated by rain
were No. 11 Pat Cas h, No. 12Brad
Gilbert of Pi edm ont, Call!., and
No. 13 Joakim Nystrom.
Cash, a quarterfl nallst at \Vi mbl ed on l ast year, defeated Am erican Marcel Freeman, 6-0. 6-3.
6-2; Gilbert ous ted Stu art Bal e of
Brit ain, 7-6 (7-4), 6-4, 6- 3; and

Ohio

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By The Belld:
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Ohio

•

·The Oaily

Sent-inel~

Wednesday. June 24, 1987 '

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Chester community happenings .

. We Reserve The Ri&amp;ht To
limit~uantities

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

By Clarice Allen

Memorial Day weekend with Mr.
Cletus Allen, Columbus, ·spe11 t
ann Mrs. Clayton Allen.
Saturqay night with Mr. and Mrs.
for the Y.ear at the ·Ladles
Laura Jean Eichinger, Col., Clayton Allen. He came to attend '
Auxiliary meeting held Wednes- and .Jeff Horton, Worthington, the Chester High School Alumni
day evening at the firehouse. were recent visitors of Opal banquet as his class was honored
President Cleo Smith opened the Eichinger.
for the 50th year anniversary. •'
meeting with prayer and pledge
Mary Myers and son of Kansas
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Justice,
to the flag. Secretary's report are visiting her parents Mr. and
Rutland,
were recent visitors of
was read by Lora Damewood and Mrs. Larry Cleland. Mr. and
the treasurer's report by Opal Mrs. Cleland met them In St. Mr. and Mrs. Hobart. Newell.
Robert and Ouaward Conroy, ,
Hollen. Committee reports were Louis,' Mo., and returned them
Collersville,
Tenn., were wee- •
given and money for cards and here for the visit.
kend
guests
of Mr. and Mrs.~,
·
Recent visitors of Mrs. Ethel
dues was collected . New cards
Erroll
Conroy.
were or~e~ed and a report on the Orr have been Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Ice cream freezer was gtven. Nueman, Gallon, Mr. and Mrs.
Plans for a field trip In July In Joe .Sever!nsk! and Kelsey,
place of the regular meeting, Cleveland, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
were discussed. Cleo served Grueser, Logan, Mr. and Mrs.
refreshmentstothosenamedand Nick McCoy, Mr. and Mrs..-J!m
FAIIK &amp; Cbn5/SIWJNG NOTIONS
Inzy Newell, Clara, Conroy, Ethel Foster. and Jenny Grueser, all of
POLYESTER QIRLT IAmNG
Orr, Erma Cleland, Dorothy Columbus, Martha Lee, Becky
(ly Tht Yar41
Hawk, Clarice Allen and Pauline and Amy, Sarah Voss and Blythe
OPEN
TUES.-WED
.·FRI.
Ridenour.
Theiss, Racine.
10
A.M.-6
P.M.
Mr. and Mrs. Spence Tedrick,
Visiting their uncle Raymond
THURS. 1 Hi P.M.
Old Washington, visited Mrs. Kraeuter at a nursing home in
SAT. 10-2 P.M.
Opal Wickham on Me morial Pickerington, were Opal Eich!nCLOSED SUN . • MON.
Day.
ger, Laura Mae Nice, Richard
LOCifD S IILIS 1101111 Of
Or. and Mrs. Billy Alien, Katie VanMeter, Eldon and Leda
CMESTD 011 ST. n. 7
and Bobby, Westerville, spent Kraeuter.

New committees were named

THURSDAY
ONLY
JUNE
25
___________ ,

298 SECOND ST.
. POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU: a -SAT.,
JUNE .27, 1987,
.

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EASTERN .HILL
FABRIC SHOP

PLAQUE PRESENTED - Middleport Fire
Department members look on as Bob Byuer,
Meigs County Emergency Service Coordinator,
receives congratulations to the department for Its

50 years ol community service from Jim Mills,
first vice president of the Ohio Association of
Emergency Medical Services. The department
was presented a plaque from ihe state
organization.

Middleport honored by OAEMS
The Middleport Volunteer Fire
Department was honored for it s
50 years of community service at
the Ohio Association of Emergency Medical Services stat e
convention held a t the Hya tt
Regency in Columbus ove r· the
weekend.
·The presentation of a plaqu e to
t"e department by the assoclatlpn was made at the closing
banquet.

The Middleport Volunteer Fire
Depa rt men! was one of the fi rs t
In the stat e of Ohio to have a
volunt eer emergency squad . The
Oh io Associa tion of Emergency
Medical Services ·published a
featu re ar ticle and older photos
of the department a nd its eq uipment in Its May . 1987. publica·
lion, Echo, rel atin gaspectsolthe
:iO yea rs of service. The depart -

Alfred area notes
Sunday School att endance May
31 was 36; church attendance, 19.
On June 7 Sunday School attendance as 24; church atl endance,
10.
May 31 Superintendent Lloyd
Dillinger present ed Bibles from
thf church to graduatin g seniors; Delani Baker, Melissa
Calaway, Lee Ann Robinso n.
The church and communit y
were saddened by the death of
Anna Thompson. Mrs. Thompson
was a faithful UMW member and
always attended Sunday School
and church. Many fr om the
community att ended visitat ion
at White-Ethridge Fun era l
Home, Belpre·, and services at
Alfred church. Her daughter and
husband, Ka te and Ray Rode-

haver. returned to th eir r iorida
home .June 3.
Thelma Henderson received
word of the dea th of their
sis ter-In-law, Cheryl Harper,
who was the wife of th eir brother,
Ray Harper , Shinnslon, Wes t
Virgin ia . Members of family
from Alfred area who a ttended
services were Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Hend erson, Mr. a nd
Mrs. Clair Foll rod, Mr. and Mrs.
Da ve Watson and Stacy .
Mr. and Mrs. Garland Cald we ll
Wl'nt to visitation at Whit e's
Funera l Home, Coolville. for Mr.
Caldwell 's co usin, Pa ul Baker .
Ruth Brooks accompanll'd Ca rolyn Whaley to Columbus when'
Mrs. Whaley underwent surgery .

Churches of Christ meet
A program on country craft s
by Donna Hart son hi ghlight ed
the recent meeting of the Meigs
County Church es of Christ
Women' s Fellowship held at th e
Middleport Church of Chris!.
Mrs. Ha rtson noted that th('
family does their craft work in
the basement and th at they
create ali sort s of wooden items.
Slie talked abou t the var iou s
pieces of equipment used in their
creative pas ttime, as well as the
paints, varnishes, and other
finishes.
The meeting was opened with
singing of ' "Tis so Swee t to Trust
ln.Jesus." The prayer song was
"Take Time to ·be Holy, with ·
Edna Eva ns giving the prayer.

Evangeline
Missionary
meets
Plans for sending 12 comfor·
ters to the Grundy Mount ain
Mission in August we re noted
when the Evangeline Missiona ry
Group met recently at the
Pomeroy Ch'urch of Christ.
Janet Venoy presided at the
meeting with members workin g
during the evening on an album
of pictures taken over the years
o! the group and Its activities.
Charldlne Alkire had prayer and
devotions were given by Eileen
Bowers who talked on Joseph, a
model father and God fearing
man. She gave prayer. For roll
call members commented on
Father' s Day and cards were
signed lor Gertrude Bass, Marge
Wilt, and Catherin e Proudfoot .
O!flcers' reports were given and
approved.
SUpport of Denny Alien's work
and his response alter each 1
donation was noted . Pauline
Kennedy had the mission study
on John Croyles ' Speck of
Heaven .which is a Christian
Mission to take care of kids who
have nothing. He being a former
football star o! Alabama attrlb- 1
uteil his success to God's calling
dol!lg your best and what mak~ ·
YOU , happy. Refreshments were I
served by Charld!ne Alkire and a
guest, Debbie Alklrt!, to those
named and Gertrude Andrews
:·r·11111d Eva Dessauer.
-- ~ - --

Devotions included a responsive
reading, "The Fruit of the Spirit "
based on Gala tia ns 5. Elea nor
Hoover had prayer lor the
offering with Ru th Underwood,
fir st vice pres iden t, co nductin g
the meeting in thr absence of
Eileen Bowers who was reported

~People

Ul =
&gt;

0oft

ment was co mmended for always strongly supportin g the
stat e organization . since it s
inception.
Th ree days of educaitonal
seminars were presented during
the co nvention with ta lks va rying from salesmen who demonstraled emergency equipment to
phys icians who spoke on various
medical topics re lated to emergency work.

Fryer parts .•••••~•••• 39&lt;
FLAVORITE .
·
$ 29
Lunch Meat •••••• ~... 1

OUR BUSINESS BEGINS
WITH FILLING YOUR .
PRESCRIPTIONS•.

ALL STORES
OPEN 7 DAYS AWEEK!

CY

Personal notes
in Meigs Co.

Bacon ••.•••••••••••• ~•••• 99(

Fur"""""'

786 N. SECOND~ MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Fosler
and daught er , Patty, arrived
Friday from Taccoa, Ga. lor a
few days' vis it with their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Wt'bb and
Mrs. Ma ria Fos ter. Joseph left
Sund ay fo r Michigan on business, and his wife a nd daughter
ret urned to Georgia today.

CHERRY 7-UP
J ....
DID 7-UP.
2 Uter

OSCIUAnNG

STAND FAN
Whitpor quiet air flow.
A~able vlrti&lt;al setting.

Mrs. Pa m Foreman of Portland, Jea n Cleek and Ralph
Ha rden were dinner guets of
Mrs. Lu la Circi(', Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Watson of
Kent , Mrs . Richard Young, son,
Eric and a gra ndson, were guests
of Mr. a nd Mrs. Edson Roush
over th e weekend.
Becky Lavender of Sy rac use
was the over night gues t of Sh eryl
Johnson, Saturd ay night.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd .Johnson
and daught er. Sandy of Middle·
port visited Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Earl .Jo hnson Sunday afl l'l'noon.

.
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SauSage ...........·~... $] 99·

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Pepperoni •••••••••••••.99C

HORMEL SLICED

3.5

oz.

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0

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HANDY-HAS
MANY USES

Air Pot

.,,

#43170

Bananas ...........~~ ••• 29c

ALL PURPOSE

SCOURER

liters.
No. 30496

loft f....t""' 0114 ...
........., it ,...,........

$299

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11'1.

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2°/o Milk •••••••••• ~~•• $129 • = "'"'.
Ul -= BROUGHTON - 24 OZ.
BROUGHTON

\

Cottage Cheese .... 99&lt;

BAG OF 101
MARBLES

3 PACK OF

WAFFU WEAVE

DISHCLOTHS

Includes 100 marlll" plus 1
"'::~ in a plastic, ,..
Itt
bog.

·69C

DAIRY LANE

69C

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BROUGHTON PREMIUM

COUPONS
29
99
·Ice Cream ••••• ~%.:A!.••• $1
Potato Chips .. ~!:!.. $1

Revlon
House of Values

....
.....' •
•·····couP(Ii·······

:

CHARM

TOILET TISSUE
'

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10

39
Ice Cream ••••••••••••
c;ackers ...o.....'!..Zo.. $]
MIKE-SELL-REG. S1.89

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Hat and cold liquid dis·
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PRINCE GARDNER

1.9 Uter

United Press International
PENN GOING UP THE RIVER: Sean Penn Is on his way to
]a ll and a therap ist. too. The battling young actor was sent enced
to 60 days in the Los Angeles Count y Jail for pu nching an extra
on the set of his latest movie. "Colors," and for driving
reckless ly.
The sentence actu ally was imposed lor vio lat ing the terms of
the probation Penn was given after an earlier battery case. In
addition to the light with the extra. Penn entered a no-contes t
plea Io a charge of reckless driving.
"l think he's a ta lented Indi vidual and I don't want this type of
thing to ha ppen aga in," said Municipal Cour t Commissioner
Juelann K. Cathey. who imposed the senlence. She a lso ordered
Penn to undergo psyc hiatric counseling for his violent temper.
LOVE IS A MANV SPLINTERED THING: The Joan
Collins-Peter Holm affair is getting nastier. Holm flew in to
London Tuesday, declaring that he had come " to haunt" the
"Dynasty" star, who Is trying to ha ve their marriage a nnulled.
But then Holm also said, "There will be no confrontation. I'm
a nice guy really. " Holm claims he is broke and tha t Collins has
made off with his BMW . "I' ve pu t a reward on It of $2,000 to
anyone who can find it," he said. "The car was originally In
France but I' m sure she had hidden it in London. It Is In my
name, It Is legally mine and it 's been ordered by the court to be
returned to me bu t it's not come back."
Holm says he Is bitter because their estra ngement happened
virtually overnight and without warning.
·
SECRETARY POOL: A tribute to the late .CIA Director
William CMey attracted a host of Washington big shots like
Alexander HaiJ, Donald Regan, Paul Laxalt, Jesse Helms and
William Colby,
So who got a rousing standing ovation aft er being Introduced
as an "Individual who demonstrated courage, conviction and
commltement to the cause of freedom ?" Fawn Hall, of course.
Also attending the dinner was another Intensely loyal
secretary, who, like Hall, was linked to vanishing evidence
during a national scandal - Rose Mary Woods, Richard Nixon's
secretary and alleged creator of the infamous 18·mlnute gap In
the Watergate tapes.
BORN TO KEEP RUNNING: Abel Klvlat, 95, the oldest
American Olympian, made a symbOlic run down Fifth Avenue
In New York and said he still hasn't gotten over finishing second
In the Stockholm Olympics 75 years ago.

c:

2

5 DAYS ONLY!

By WILLIAM C. TROT'I'

0-=

1"1

•

Weather Permitting

in the news---

("":

Chuck Roast •••••••••
,U.S.~.A. CHOICE , . . ~
$
9
9
8
.Round Steak......... 1
;

1111

JULY 1 &amp; 2

n
0

.......
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.. __________ J z

LB.

\

YARD SALE

Glacier
The Ja cobshavn glacier on the west
coast of Greenland is one of the largest in the Western Hemisphere. It is
also the world 's fastest. The glacier
flows at a rate of more than 100 yards
a day and "calves" giant icebergs as
often as every five minutes.

•

89&lt;

$2999

Wieners •••.••'~.o;.~K:••••• 69(

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

New! .

3 SPEED

Mrs. Pat Thomas and daughter , Suzan, and Mrs. Ruby
Burnside have returned from a
vacation at Mry tie Beac h.

KY. BORDER

•

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CRISPY SERVE

v.r. ,._..,.,. fht Right To LtrM Or.,...tt•~
NDI ~aft..._
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MIXED

PHONE .915-3909

Ill.

Pl ans were made for area
churches to fu rnis h evenin g
dessert for camp during the
season. Gar bage bags were also
contr ibuted. Camp started this
week. Cards were se nt to Mrs.
Bowers. Ted Riley and Dennis
Hockman.

("":

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PIG.

99&lt;

8·9&lt;

:

.•••••••
. ... COUPON ••••••
.....
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: : TIDE DETERGENT
: 147

oz.

s

$ 99

•

• • •• • • • • • • • •• •••• • • • ••
..

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COLES

:

WHITE BREAD

••
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•

GIANT
20
oz.
LOAF

IMttit I0 Pit' Customer
GeM flllly At Powtlt's Supermarket
Oftar &amp;ooil tltru Sot., 1- 27, 1917

.

r

• ••••••••

}

3f$1-

limit 3 Pit' Customer
• Gotd Only At Powell's s.p.rmarktt
• - Offer Good thrv Sat., Jvne 27, 1917

•

.-........................

•The total value of the coupon
may not exceed ' 1 .60.
•Any manufacturer 's coupon
greater than 51¢ will be re·
deemed at fa ce value only .
•Only one manufacturer '• coupon per item.
•Tho total ll'lltue of the manufac-

turer's coupon cannot eKceed
the purchaae price of the item .
Money will noc be refunded .
,oThis offer does not apply to Po woll'a Super Value Coupons.
free coupons. or anv competi-

tor's coupon a.
•This offer eKcludes cigarettet,
or any other itema prohibited
by taw . .
~offer It only good for product 1
on hand. No Rainchecks.

�Page -S-~

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June 24. 1987

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

Beat of the bend

Wednesday, June 24, 1987

In the service...

July 4th is nearing!
By BOB HOEFLICH
requiremenT Is that youngs1ers
Sentinel Stall Writer
provi de t heir ow n pole and ballJuly 4th Is coming up and there no minnows allowed, however.
should be plenty
There will be free lunches
o l acl lillt y
· provided for the children and all
around for you.
participa nt s will gei some sort of
· AI Rulland a prize.
1he scene of a
The event will be held at the
celebraTion for
assocla11on' s club house on the
number
Texas Road , Chester area, and
- plans for
signs wi ll be posted to mark ihe
way.
parade have been fina lized.
The parade will leave Depot
a nd Brick Sts., at lOa.m . with the
Ellen Jane Mygatt Young
ci lizens band radio c lubdlrecllng attended the reunion of the
!he traffic and will dis band In
Middleport High School Class or
fr ont or the Ba nk I branch on l937 thls spring and enjoyed 11 all
Immensely.
Larkin St. Cash prizes a nd
trophies will awarded e ntries
The group was so well organ·
judged mos1 outstanding.
ized a nd held a spec ial reunion In
The pa ra de Is sponsored by the
th e after noon before joining the
Rutland Fire Department which evening reun ion of all graduates
wil l accepl enl rles up to a nd
of !he school. The group had both
Includin g the day or the parade. L W. McComas and Marlin L.
Any wishing infor mation s hould
Ess~x.
administrators during
ca ll Lilly Kennedy at 742-2861 or
!heir hi gh school years. presenl
Charli e Bar rett at 742·2578.
lor the afternoon event .
Ellen Jane Is spending some
Congratu lat io ns to Judy King
11m ~ of the ir summer home in
Rey nold sburg and writes that
Coomer. daught er of Mr. a nd
Mr s. Virgil Kin g, Kin gs bury class members well re me m·
Road, who rr'&lt;'eivcd a co mm em- bered the ir elementary re d
orative un ivers it y plate in ap- sc hool house which was loca ted
preication of her excellent lea d· on the property where the Mid·
ers hip as food service di rector at
dl eport Post Office now stands.
Th e innoce nt games of the
Judy rr·
Olivet Unive rs it y.
por ts th at 405,000 st ud ent mea ts
limes and the vacatio n Bible
sc hool classes arc edged we ll In to
were served durin g the recent
the memory of Ellen who writes :
sc hool year at Oli ve t. Stude nts
" Many of our values would be
cons umed more 1han i90,000
ma in en! ree portions in I hese
th e res ult of the leachlngs
mea Is In addit ion to sa lads,
received 1here. So often whe n we
·desserts and ot her meal portions.
were young I suspect we fa iled to
a pp reciate our h om e town
----teachings .".
' WI Ilia m C'. Goo rey. !.as ley Sl. ,
She penned I he lollowing verse
Pomeroy, would probably wei·
aftr•r
allendi ng the reunion:
ro me hea rin g from you abo ut
I thought thai I might never
now .
s(·e.
He underwent surgery on .J une
My 50th anniversary.
15 at a Ve lerans Adm inistration
Of high sc hool. th at is.
Hos p!lal and Is seriously ilL
Cards may be sent to him a t the
Bul pleased we wrre to review.
Veterans Adm inistra ti on Medi·
Thai
we survived a pos t
ca l Cent er. Ward 2-Wes t. Roo m
depression era
21!i4. 1540 Spring Va lley Dri vr.
And a war or two .
Hunt ington, W. Va .. 25704 .

Joe Humphrey

Shower given
for bride

,
Joe Humphrey, son of Gene
and Pat Humphrey, has been :
promoted In the 0. S. Air Force to :
the rank of Airman First Class. :
Humphrey is jl refrigeralion :
and cryogenics specialist. withthe 366th Civil Engineering
Squadron at Mountain Home Air
Force Base, Idaho. His wife,
J amle, Is the daughter of James
and Betty Acree of S. R: 143,
Pomeroy.
·

ENTERTAINING - The Bend River Boys will
be among the musicians providing free entert,aln·
lng at the Shrine Park In Racine Saturday night a.•
a Racine VIllage spoMored activity, one of a
series being held this summer. The program

Saturday evening will start at 7:30 p.m. and will
featured not only the Bend River Boys but Sue and
Harold Hager and Freddie Sayre, organist. The
public Is Invited to take folding chairs for the
entertainment, Refreshments will be available.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Marilyn Robinson and Joan candles and flower s on white lace
Smith hosted a bridal shower fo~ ·t ableclothes. A wedding bell
Tanya Jones, bride-elect or hung above each Iable. The .
Kevin Brooks, Friday, at the hostesses served a decorated
Alfred Church.
ca ke, party mix, and punch to
Games were played with prizes those named and Julie S!oter,
going to Debbie Brooks. Char· . Josephine Osborne, Michelle and
lotte Van Meter, Judy S!oter, and Marlene Donovan, Becky Smilh,
Lori Rlichie. Gifts were pres· Jodi Bro\vn, Lori Beller, Flor·en ted to the bride-elect.
ence, Spencer, . Clara Foll~od,
Tables were deco rated in a Nina Robinson, Thelma Watkms.
pink and whil e color scheme with Captolla Brooks, Helen Findling,

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Autumn Bussery, Ruth a nd ·
Mildred Brooks, Nellie Parker,
and Dorolhy Robinson.
Sending girts were Sina, Bob,
Amy and Tracy Murphy, Osie
Follrod, Florence Wyers, Mar·
tha Pole, Pam , RIChard. Aaron,
anti sara Yost , Wilma Sharon
and Lisa Henderson, Sue Dye,
Vera Weber , Susan Pullins, Paul
and Carolyn Whaley, Grace
Price. and Teddy Mundry .

catchl nl.! thP biggest, th(' m os t

and th r heaviPs ! fish. Th e only

Some havo• left us. bu t pride
and joy w p felt as we looked back.
To join once more in the
Orange a nd the Black.
I th ink 1he lat e Norman
we lt could have done
fanta s tic things on ou r
sales . don't you'? Do
smil ing.

Rock ·
so me
yard
keep

mas. Middl epor t, Mrs. David
Wi wma n. Rull and ; Mrs. Jana
Bowersox and children. Un lopo·

rf'l at! v('s In 1h(1 a rea.

lls. as Wl~ ll as her son-in -law and

Guests or Freda Smit h wrrf'
her cous ins . Evl'iyn Ha ning.
Da vton. and Mr. and Mrs.
; Wlill am Ha ning. Jr .. Delaware .
' Mr. an d Mrs. Denver Raw lin gs.
. Alban~ Wl're aftN noon call ers.
Mr . and Mrs. Rodn ey Bowrn
• and c hild ren . C ind~ Cr,,b trr r.
:a nd Mr. a nd Mrs. Ron nlr Bolen.
wrrr r~crtvrd Int o Tr•mpl e Unl ·
·. ted Mrlhotll st Chu1·c h In s pecia l
: services ro ndu rtrd bv Harold
Benson.
Rev. a1 ui Mrs. i\rthur Crabtrrl'
have rP iu r nr d fro m l..akt's l&lt;k
wht•rr they a tt r t1det1 the Unitrd
Methodist Chur r h Conf1 •rrm·r.
Mrs . Crabtrrcset·vrda s dr to•gal&lt;'
ror the Alba nv charg&lt;' thi s year .
Mr. ;ond Mrs. Ronnie Roten amt
Mr . ''ncl Mrs. Dav id Dorst spr nt a
wf'rkc' nfl

ln

Kf•ntu cky .

Th l',V

Games for children were conducted on the green at the Meigs
Museum on Heritage Weekend.
Blue ribbon winners In their
respective age categories on
Saturday were Marc Jones and
Jeff Whit e. tug of way; Marc
Jones, Annie .Jesie, sack race;
Nicole Pickens. Monica Adams,
Ma rc Jones and Mike Klein ,
wheel barrow; Jeff Whil e.
cracker whistle; Nancy Pickens.
sack race; Crysta l Bartlow a nd

srrv("d

by

thr

Annie Jessie, Monica Adams ,
Nicole Pi ckens. 1hree-legged
race: Christ Parker, Noel
Pickens , J eff White, egg a nd
spoon race.
Ta king fir st places at the
Sunday games were John Pes·
rez, Annie J es sie, and Dennis
Boyd. Mik e Kle in, Matt Dally,
a nd Chr is .P arker , tug-of-war;
Annie Jess ie and Matt Dalley,
John Pere2 and Mary Garnes.

three- legged race; Cass Cleland
and Paul Chapman, John Perez
and Mary Garnes, wheelbarrow :
John Perez, cracker whistle;
Chris Parker, Annie Jessie, and
John Perez . sack race: Whitney

Wrslln a Cra btree. assisted by
h e r dau g hter -In -law . Lea h

a lon~ with oth~r pl 'l&lt;'0&lt; o f
lntrr!'sl.
• Neva Ra ki• l'. Port Jefferson, is
·s!J{'ndlng &lt;om ~ tlm r hr r&lt;' 1rlth
· her moth&lt;' r. W st" c,mo,le.
, '. Mr . anrl Mrs. Erldl~ ,Jorda n.

Crabt rre .
Among the grad uates of Alex·
andPr Hig h Sc hoo l were James
Allman. Ra yma Sue Booth ,
1\ udra Bur ke, Dawn Face myer.
Dav it! Glllo~ly, Waller Robb and

.

july 31.1qB7

U.S. Inspected

. ..

'

REG.

and is to be used
only tor tt1e pur·

. Mr. and Mrs . Richar d Rup!' of
• Po meroy reCt' ntly retu r nc'd from
• Phoenix. At'lz. whrre hra ltrnded
: the li th a nn ua l reunion of the
Mao·tn e Corps Sixll1 Drlcnse
llattllon which serv!'d on Midway
·Is land .
Rupr wa s a la nk drivN on the
• Island and was reu nited wll h a
; fe llow tank drlve1· whom he
· ha dn 't seen si nce 1945.
• The reunion of the unll is held
in a diffcrcnl clly eac h year a nd
nexi year will be In Reno, Nev. In
1992. lhr 50th ann lversar~ cele·
• bratlon of the Battle of Midway
: will be held In New York City.
: While in Phoenix. Rupe a lso
' visited his brother, Jake, sis ter,
Mary Ann, and mother. Ger·
!rude. He and his wife toured the
famous copper mining ~own of
Jerome Ariz. a nd Sedona, Ariz.,
the city that was the scene of
many western movies.

,,.,.,. ol Artca,...,d
siladium H.S.

dassrings.

arts

Mr. and Mr.r. Otcur fitch

Fitch anniversary Sarurday
Mr. and Mrs . Oscar (Barn ey )
Filch, 50610 Bigley Ridge Road,
Long Bottom, will celebrate their
50th wedding' anniversary on
Saturday, June 27.
Married at Ironton in 1937, !hey
are the parents of one daught er,
Mrs. Billy T . Dailey, and one son.

J-2209

869

212 E. MAIN - POMEROY

grea t-gra ndchildren.
Fitch Is re til'ed after working
In the saw mill and timber
cutti ng business for many years.
He Is a veteran of World War II.
Since Mrs. Fil ch is an inva lid , a n
open recept ion Is not b~ing
planned alth ough c lose fri ends or

Pound

--·
...;.,.

·--

RELAXATION

16

COPYRIGHT 1987 · THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD SUNDAY, JUNE 21, THROUGH SATURDAY, JUNE
27, 1987, IN I'OMEIO!AND ~IILIPDliSI!OAI!.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE
SOLD TO DEALERS.
ADVEmlfD ITEM PDUCY
Each of these ad'Veniaed items is required to be readil~t available for

invi I ed I 0 ca ll

OZ. OSCll MAYII

sale in each Kroger Store, except aaspecifically noted in this ad . If we
do run out of an adveniled item, we will offer you your choice of a
comparabfe item, when available, reflecling the same savings or a
raincheck which wUI entitle you to purchase tl'le advertised item at the
advtrtiled prtce within 30 daVI. OntV one vendor coupon will be
accepted per item purch•d.

Beef Frankies or Wieners •••• S2.19
1 LB. IIISP &amp; SEIVE VACUUM PACK .
$
·
Sliced Bacon...................... 1.29
SWISS
S_HREDDED S2.09 lB.
$
Cooked Ham ............. ~HC.EP.!!· 1.89
HOMEMADE
Ham Salad ................:....... u.•. 89&lt;

Kroger Cottage Ch.,ese .. 24-oz.

mooth to
operate.

the only mov·
ing jet! Glides
gently up and
then down
the length of
your ~ack .
• Lighted lor
nighttime use.
• Never over

round opera·
lion in any

America's fCI'I'Ori·te

Portable Spa

climate.
.. Completely
portable,
totally selfcontained. ·

2 Ll. PARUY

Kroger Orange Juice.......

LIGHT SPREAD
MARGARINE ............. S1.39

Cantaloupe ........J.Ht... 891·

12 OZ. 16 SLICE KRAfl PROCESSED

HEAD LEnUCE .......M.... S9'

PIMENTO CHEESE ..... s1.89
QU~RTS

Of BROUGNTON'S

CHOCOLATE MILK .........79&lt;

BLACKWOOD HOME SPAS

"

STARTS THURSDAy I JUNE 25TH - 9 A.M.

All Women's Spring &amp; Summer Shoes
WHITE
BONE YEllOW
PINK
RED
ILUE GREY

$800
WOMEN'S SHOES
OR 2 PAllS FOI $15 00
GIOUP OF

ALL CHILDREN'S SHOES

GIOUP OF TENNIS

SHOES

GIOUP OF MEN'S

SHOES'

Sl ooo PAll

S1JOO PAIR

·1/J PIICE
'

'

MARGUERITE SHOES
•DDU SIOI STOU 1111 THE •1111 ROCI

Potato ChQJS .................... 24-oz.

C

NON RETURNABLE BOTILE

2-Ltr.

KROGER 16-INDIVIDUALLY
WRAPPED SLICES

12-oz.

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF

CALIFORNIA

17 OZ. DEL MONTI

\

C

Embassy Mayonnaise ..... 32-oz.

GREEN
PEPPERS ...............U.. S1.49·

Fruit Cocktail ....................... 99c
16 OZ. 1HANI-JOU
Cherries............................. s1.39
29 OZ. JOAN OF AIC
Red Kidney Beans ................. 99c
17 oz. lOYAL MCI
Yams •..••••.••..••••••••••••••••....••.•• 99c
12 OZ. lUlWIU MOUSI
Instant Coffee .................. S6.97
15'11 OL WIIITNIJ
Pink Salmon ..................... S2.39
2 IOU PACI
Bounty Towels .................. S1.3 9
12 OL HillEl. CAN
SDam Lunch Meat ..... ~....... S1. 99
, Jl 01. OAIDt DG
Sweet
Pickles .................... s1. 99
11'11 oz. •, • •
Ovster Stew •••••••••••••• ~ .......... 99c
11 'bz •lffs
$
Bar-B-Que Sauce ••.•••••••••••• 1.29

s119

79
59
Big K Soft Drinks ............
99
C
American Cheese Food ...
c
PQiar Pak Ice Cream ....... ~-Gal. 99
EMBASSY SALAD DRESSING OR

24 OL OII·IDA

'•

Gal.

BIG VALUE CHEESE PUFFS , PRETZELS, CORN CHIPS
OR COUNTRY OVE•N
6-·
1

II CT. CAL! FORNI~

99 c

$199

CHILLED

~MOT().

Summer Clearance Sale

,

IX8

,._.

S9995

Co lumbu ~ .

Rupe trip

44~·1699

•

Hash Brown Potatoes ... ~.. $1..39 .
40037 Sumner Road
12 OZ. MINUll MAID
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
·Oranae Juice ..................... S1.3 9
Ph. 614-985-3805
4 Ill PAl'IAGI G.G.
Oxl('y,
we- n' ove r
- La ke Wurt h, Flor ida . a nd Lulu ~~M:a:r:k:W:&lt;:Il:
s h:·:f:ro:m:th:l:s:a:rr:•:·::~~~~~~~::::::::~~~~~~~;;~~
rn on the
.............. S1.59
night gm•,ts of thr h· mother. Mr .

Dra Co ttri ll.
Gur s ts a l thl' ho me of Oma
'S i arkt'~ n·eenlly have inc ludrd
Mr. and Mrs . Cecil .Jewrll and
; da ught e r and Don a ld Bla&lt;'k ·
• wood. Co lumbu s; Mr. a nd Mrs.
Eug~ n e
Hol liday. C h ~ rl f'sto n .
: W.Va ., Mr. and Ms. Lt•e Mr Co·

PH.

HOUIS: 8 A.M.·II P.M.

Ashley , Cass Cleland, Mary;
Garnes, egg and spoon race ;
C'hris Parker, Cass Cleland , and
Mary Garnes, Racine; and Mary
Garnes, and Paul Chapman, egg
toss.

This offer expires

hostess.

• ·vis ll £'cl a l&lt;rn tu cky horst• pa rk
and My Old K&lt;'nlu&lt;' k)• Honw

COUNTY
APPLIANCES·
U7 3rd Ave., Gallipolis

Holly Farms

daughtrr. Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Wiseman .
Tr n members of the Temple
Uniletl Melhodlsi Church women
mrl at the home of Westlna
Crabn·ec. One half of !he year's
pledge will be se nt by the
treas urer to thr District Treas·
ure r . Pl ans were made lo Invite
the Albany U.M.W. for a pi cnic In
Au gust and a District OH!ccrwlll
be lnvl\ed as gues l speaker. A
success ful bake sale wa s held proceeds to be used for suppllPS
for a Vacation Bible School In
Ju ly. " Memorles ofourFat he rs"
was used lor a very Int eres ting
progra m theme and dev otions
per·lotl. Our ca rds a mi letters.
vis its , a nd telephone ca lls mini s·
n·v was discussed. Refres hme nt s
wf. r r

GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

Heritage Weekend games -winners named

Carpenter happenings l.i~:.~.:.:.:viiei ;i io;i;ii~~.~.chii~i i~~h..~.a.~d.heii1liiiiii~h.u~.lniic~.~.~.~eidi=~-~
Mr. and Mrs. Walt! 1:: .Je fiNs.
London. rece ntly visi ted his au nt .
Mr s. Id a Chradl c. a nd other

The Eleanor Circle of Heath
Uniled Met hodist Church will
have a chu rch ·wide br idal
s hower honoring Jean Ann Hor ·
ton at the chu rch Surtday a t 2
p.m. Everyone is invited to
all end.

Humphrey graduated from
Meigs High School in 1985.
Airman First Class and Mrs .
Humphrey have spent the past
two weeks here with their
parents.

.. .

Mei gs Coun ty yo un gsters have
a n In vitatio n to a n ou ting Sa tur·
da y and It should be fun .
'fh e an nua I fi shin g derby oft he
Meigs Cou nt y F ish and Ga me
·Assoc iat Ion will be held fr·om ~
a.m. to 2 p.m. and spec ia l awa rds
will br&gt; glvr n to 1he young pr•op h·

Shower to be given

GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS
REFRIGERATORS, TVs

June Lady
Peaches

Cubed
Steak

Pound

Pound

Heinz Keg 0'
Ketchup
32-oz.

88
%"

•

TRIM

Springdale
2% Milk

FULLY PREPARED

Whole BBQ
Chicken
2%-lb. Average

. I

,r

•

Gallon

KROGER BUTTERMILK GAL .• . $1 .69

350 SHEETS PER ROLL 1·PL Y.

Cottonelle
Bath Tissue
4-Roll

"

�..-- ·--·
Page- 10 - The Daily Sentinel

~·

.

~-

-~·

··--

... --·--·· - -- - - ---- --·---- · ---

Wednesday. June 24, 1987 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By United Press International
Rain, hail and gusty winds
lashed N~braska today as storms
rolled t hrough the nation's mid·
sec tion, and thund~rs torms dot·
ted part s of the Southeast .
Storm s pushing across the
central Plains brought rain to
Nebraska an d Kansas aft er leav-

Romine selected
for CCC training

night, and thunderstorm s
brought heavy rain, gusty winds
and small-sized hall 10 lhe
cen tral Nebraska Panhandle.

County, Neb. No Injuries or
damage was reported .
Showers subsided over most of
New York state Tuesday, but not
before as much as 3 Inches had
fallen over. Its western. central
and northeastern sections. More
than 3\S Inches of rain was
measured at Glens Falls, N.Y .•

Tornadoes were spotted Tuesday near Honey Grove, Te~as,
Ardmore. Okla .. Emporia, Va .,
Weld Cou nty, Texa s, and Banner

m

Low-Priced Supermarket

I

'.

GOVERNMENT JOBS .

QUILTI

,_At

lO PU(I Alf Q U&amp;l H1 -11S&amp;
...,, tirt.~
I A.a. tt S P.l.

I Ul Uatit NOCIII U.NIIAJ
ClOSED 511101 'f

"""'·..
.-···
--... ....··-I-·'"'"__...... ..._____
...
.
.._
. ...
....
.,..
n..
.
,
.
,.
••
--- . .. -·..__
"'··

....
..,.

--..·--·.,..

IIMl'l

ct.. i/i•d pqc• CO\'H ,~w;
/~lloUnr. lelepltou

t:\-~.

::r=:r.

ael&amp;lrtp,,..
::-~=

-=-·-----

coll~or antiqu•
quU~a. Pieced or

....,alqut. Aft'1 condkkm . High•
price~ paid for unusu .. pettamt.

C.ll ~ara at 114-IIZ-2.101
dl'fl ar 1-112·2411 eveninp or
wMendt .

..
::::.•a+=

_
.. _
._
..--·-

-

.

C11h plid to.
or pre t 9150

.

. ...._
~--

Itt=·
--

G,.. haket:b.U CoKh. A11ftt·

1nt HiGh School TriCk Coach,
JunM)tJ4~tfrracltCotch, Allltt·
ant Junior HiGh T;tctt Coach,
Glrlt Volltly'b..l Coteh, Glrl1 '
A11l1t1nt Volleyball C oactt .
Girls' Aea.v• lattta.ll Coach, •

CPR. Per1on1 lnt.-lltld 1houkl
contact Dan E. Morrl1. luptrin·
t,ndlrit ot Mai" Local Schoot1.
It 121 South Thlrd AYiflut In

Mlddl_., Ohio .

Mlkt ntw frl••· mike money I
Sign lor Avon, nowl 814·318·
9340 .
Elrn htr1 money! Have . fun!
Recelvt big awardt 1nd prll11!
Sell A\'On . 1 bo"lt free cologne
to flflt ten to comctlttt tn
tpplication tnd accept 1 1m1n
torrhorv. I 14· 112· 3143 .
'

tin

County Court Hou~e. Se-

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

Coun Houae. Main Street.

Ohio: 46661.

and the Gallia County Re-

~OOFING

•SIDING
•WINDOW REPLACEMENT
•REMODELING &amp;
ROOM ADDITIONS
•GARAGES &amp; POLE
BUILDINGS

public viewing. Written com ments or requests for .informal conference may be sent
to the Division of Reclama·
tion, Fountain Square, Build-

Whole
Fryers

REFERENCES
Phono Day or henhtgt

. ASSORTED COORS

•REGULAR •COUNTRY STYLE

Ol-d Carolina
.Bacon

Minute Maid
Orange Juice

5

Northern .
Bath Tissue ....
....
.

...

5

4 ROLL -:
PKG.
·

•

limit 2 Please

Wealher

Happy Ads

Congratulations
You made it
2 years Dan,
one day at a
time.

1
54 Misc. Merchandise

..

Rib Eye
Steaks

Kahn's
Wieners

numhe~

:Ml~ .

BENCO PEAK QUALITY

CUSTOM BUilT
GARAGES

BISSELL
SIDING CO•

POlE STYlE or
CONVENTIONAL

lltw No- Built

FREE ESnMATES

PH. 949·2160
or 949-2101

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124, Por111roy Olrio

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

Pinto
Beans

FARMERS HOME AOMINISTRATION . 105 Bullernut Avenue. Pom.,oy. Ohio. not later than JUNE 30,
1987. II you do not vote in peroon you lhould mail
your ballot lnaide 1 blank envelope marked ballot to
ensure a secret ballot. This blank envelope should be
placed inside tM envelope you 011 to mail your ballot.
Your n~me and addrns muat be legible on the outer
envelope. faiiure to provide this Information will
render your ballot invalid. Ballots and envelopes may
1110 be obtained from your locel FmHA office.

5 LB.
4LB.
BAG

WITHI1DORMOIIEADDIT10NALPIIIICIIASE.EXCLUDINQ

LB.

PKG.

The Farmers Home Administration ~FmHA) County
Committee election this yHrwill be held on JUNE 30.
and mailed and received or returned in per1on to

BAG

1LB.

NOTICE OF ElECTION

446·6323

TOBACCO PIOODUCTS. ADO. QUNITIIIES ARE $1.a

I'ICK-1
:!filS.

The olllte of nomintt1 lor ATHENS , MEIGS &amp; VIN ·
TON COUNTIES ore iioted In the blllot below. The
qualification• of persont votinG are described in the
"Voter CertHicltion Stotemant.'' For further inform•·

PI CK -4

tlc krt sales tota led
$173.1:18, with a payoff dur of

$7K:m .

tion regarding voting and voter eligibility. IH the

countv office llotod obove. FmHA eloctlono '" open

ldt•ntify third winm•r

to •II eligible voters whhout regard to r1ce , color. reli-

gion, national origin, IQI. pollticel affiliation. marital
.tatua. .... and / or handicap.

CL EVELAND t UP i i - T hr
thir d ja ckpot winner In the June
17. $6 million Ohi o Super Lotto
game has been Identified as an
un&lt;•mploycd Ci ncinnati man.
Loiter)' officials Tuesday vall·
dated lh&lt;' ticket held by P. Q.
Vu ong who will share the jackpot
wlth two other w lnners. Each will
receive $8tl.Otlfl, a Iter taxes every
yea r for thr nex t 20 years.
OfflclaIs sa ld Vuong is single.
Winninr;: j ackpot t lrkets held
by Anita T ay lor of Cincinnati and
Timothy Hiller of Cleveland
were validated last week .
The winning numbers In the
game were 10. 14, 28. 35, 42, and
44,

Da
or 1:,.

Any U•ing Room

I Hall- S3US
Any 2 a._ and
Holt- '4US
Any 3 looms ond
Holt - SS9.9S
Any S Roams ond
Holt-

Ph. (6141 143-5425

5-22·87· 2 mo. pd.

992-2196

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tlc

UNG'S
-

PLUMIING &amp; HEAnNG
168 Norlh loc011d
Midtltplf't. Ohio 45760

Addon1 t!ld remodeling
Roofing and gun er work
Concrtte work
Plumbing •nd Mectric::al

SAL£5 &amp;SERVICE

Wt C1ny Fllhina SuppliM

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Billa Here

work

(Free Eltimatesl

992-6215

CAll:

PAT HILL FORD

CARPENTER
SERVICE

or

'

IUSINUI PMONE

t6 141 9t2-bSSO
lllllfHCI rttONI
t6141 9U-77S4

992-7314

Pomeroy, Ohio
4-15-' 86-lc

IJ?ft lr!n

BALLOT FOR COUNTY COMMITTEE MEMBEAfSI

Stitt

(nHit)) _ _ _ __ __:O~H:!.\1· 0~----

Covnty (n•••I' ----~A=:T~H~E::_N!:
S .ccM:;E~ta~s"'.~V.::IN~T~
ON
:::__

"Candidatl(s) _ _ _ __!M!!!A~
RI!!!HA~
A.~LE"'E_ _

0
-------~RO'-"N'-'E,AS'-"IM,A,_,_N_ _ 0

__________________ 0

SWEET

California
Cantaloupes

ASSORTED VARIETIES
DIET RITE. CHERRY RC

RC COLA

BeHy Crocker
Cake Mixes

Purex
Bleach

PEAT'S SHARPEN UP
A COllY IIITIII'IISI

HAND &amp; CIR . SAWS
CARBIOE TIPS

SCISSORS · SNIPS
PLANER BLADES
ROUTER BITS
CLIPPER BLAOES
KITCHEN KNIVES
PRUNERS · UNO
SAWS · CHAIN SAW
CHAINS

31178 .,.. 1111 ·~ ­

""' htt-. OM. 45743
985 -4112 . . ..,•••
5·22 -11-1 ~·-

u

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR

VOTEI CEITIFICATtON STATEMENT

_
...
=' na:

_
....:
=:::::u::... .

" ' - ' Yof Plr12054 o!Titlt 7, Codlolftdtllt loplltioM ro. . . 11111 II "'"' lor F...ACOIIIIJ or or• -ittot tltc·
IIIII .... 1111 fl' ltlltlilllilltY Jtlflllr-s: f•l • ~n«s:
)IIIII It lhlllllllllir ••'-lnlttcltllll ~

8

1., .........,...,.,_,_....
tl!!.., ~-=:

12 PACK
120Z.

It ' IUitllliiWIIItlll tfiiiiMI 1111 crillrll tn..t .

CANS

rtl21. 21. 21. M. 21. K. zt 21.11t

r

Olnnlf SundiiJ, Jutv 8th. 1 1 :30·
4 :00 tt the Southern High
&amp;chool C1f11arla. R1elne. Spon·
IOI'ed by the louthern . .nd.
Advanoe, tlckttl tor IQM 13
throu!h lduhl, 14,21: under
t 3. t .10. Thtltlldlltl may bt

U .71 .

4

Giveaway

Kitten• : 2 bitd&amp; met•. 1 ltiY
mall, 1 r.~• whitt female. C1ll
lt4-44 -3131 .

P11ppy: 1 / Z plklnv. .. 1/ Gorgl,
3V. montht old. Callt14-317-

0208 ,

Truck, auto, S.
heavy equipment
repaira and
welding.
(All make• &amp; model•!

PH. 949-2756
Jolin K. hnh
Owtttr /llecltianlc

BOGGS

SALE~

&amp; SERVICE
U. 5t Rl. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Authoriud John O.rt,
. Ntw Holland, luth Hog
form lqeipmtnt

Dtaitt'

fet• E41lp• ..t
,.,.. &amp;

FILL DIRT

HEAnNG &amp; COOUNG

!CUT OUT fOR fUTUI'! USE!

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

7 puppiM, 4 m1lt, 3 ftmtle. Ctll

"""a.
114-371-2714., 814441-4117.
8 b.e• y•rd uleltem1. ClothM,
odd tndt ... Must .... Ill ,
lt4-441-llll.

e.u

8f'Vtrll cartont of church u1ad
""mn bOokl, 304·17D·4111.

wet«•

SERVICE
~II

Exp. Child Ct"WorQr. Attumt
required. Conteet Oh io Job
S~Nic ... Ctll&amp;14·"-41· 1183.
Choolt SIO In merehtndiltlrM
in tddition to your ,..,._
HOit .. l IWird when you 1re I
Queen'• Way F11hlon HQitHI:
bttwun Juna 28 -July 11,
111!17. Affordable f•h lo n 111
reMOn·lll INIOn. C1ll 8 14·
441-7217.
Dittrict Ttchnlclltl for tht Gtllil
Soil • Wtter Conter'9'1tk)n Dlt·
trlct. Minimum raquittmtl'\11
Include • hloh tchool dlplomt,
whh addltlon•l educa'tion 1nd or
lllpetlanct pr,tarred, ferm b1cll·
around, tblllty to work wtth
I'KI· tlll equipment, good mathemttlaal 1nd communiCIIIIon
tkMit, 1nd the ablttty to wor ..
with people. Apptlcetk&gt;ns wtl bl
ICHPitd at tht Dlttriot Oftiol1t

Jim ' t OCid jobt painting. drtv•
WIV '"••line. Clf'p~ntar war It l
roof rtpair, trtll • h......
exptrltnotd. Call 114 ·311 ..
2411.
.

- : - - : - - - - - :· .
Jim'• odd Jobs, palntlno. drtv• :

Wly r•HUng , Clf'INftttr WOf.. I •

roof r~p~lr, u... l hNDII
axptrlanoed . Ph . 114· 3'1:' •

24tl.

:

Will do b""'liHing . Coil 114·'
441-tl14.
•

Can do lltht htuilng 1nd roofing. '
Ra,sontble re1et . Mtrlon•
lnldlo. 114-1141-2121 .

•

12tJack•onPikt. Room 301·C,
Oolllpolio, OH 4103t through

Llwn mower rapW, Wll plci up '
and dtlr•. Alto Noht hMIIiftl. ,

o,...,

Coli 114-742- 231! or ""' '

Jutv t. tll7. Contoct: Potty
Dlltriat Contervltlonitt,

t14-oUe ·UI7 . ••••rvt•neaao·
llble biNd on ••J*IMae 1nd
..,calion. In 1ddlllon to promoting no· till prtctiDII the tpptl·
clfll thDUkl htve tn Inter"' In
working wttt. ~cal lendowntrt
In promoting tOUnd contarvt•
Uon practh:eund thtwl11u11of
our soH • Wll., retOurCft,
O.n111 At-'ttlnt full tlmt in
Colurnbu1 Ohio. Mutt be non·

••.-l~ced ln ch.nelng ur,
truck and t,.nior tlrn. front 111~
alignment 1 plut, mutt hwa
mKhanlclll IIMihiM. Apply In
penon only, no phont ctlls

pie. .. Ohio V.. ltY Tlfl Outlet,
Otlllpolll Ferrv. W. Vt.
Full time. AppUc.tnt mu1t bt
••P«Ianced In chlftflint Cll',
truck • UIC10f' tirll, front end

1Ugnm1r1t 1 plu1. Mutt ht~~~e

mtchlftlcal 1bllhl81 . Apply In
piFIOn only. No phone c•ll•
piNH. Ohio \1111~ Tlrt Outlet,
Gtlllpoil• Farry, WI/.

742· 3011 .

WWI c:!•t lor

..

ptNOn

m ,.....,

home. H1v1 hM horne nurtlng
trlinlng. 304·111 ·J20JI .

I llldlll ... tl

21

Buelntta
Opportunity
I NOTICE I

THE OHIO VAllEY

PU~IIH· ,

INO CO. •-mmMdl thot rou
do bull...., whh people ,..,
know, Ond NOT to ..... _ . ,
thraueh the miM uml you h~~t~~t

lfWMllllled th• offerinG,

Own vour own • • • or lhaa
ltOrt, CtiOOII from : Jasn •
IPO,tiWIIr , ••dltl t,.Pittl,
m.,1, chllctren· Mat«nltY, 1.,...

IIIII , pttltl, dtnCitWtlr •
••able, bridll, Mftltrit Of HOM·
tori• .ttora. Add cokM anatylll.
,,. . ., Ur Cioiborno. Oooolino,

....ly

Htlithtoo, lov~ Lao, Comp
Hl!o, It MI-. ChiUo,
Outbaclllllad. GeneM, flo,.. • •
Org,.,ICifr Grawn. ovtr 2000
othtn or tUI .tl one prtae
dtolg-. nNHI II« priointl dlt·

6 Loat and Found

Nttdtod - 2 people f01 ptn-tlmt
Oolp. Coli 304-171-2211 bo-

Inventory, tr1lnlng, llxturtt,
grenct openlne. Hf. .. etc. Can
open 11 idlY•· Mr. Louehlln

Need country or blue grn• bind

for Juty 4th. Valley Vot Flft

Dept. 304 -171·2434 or 171·

otyl•. lt4.100 to UI,IOO:

rwMn I · 7 tvenint•·

11121111 " "·

Lo.. : l1h1rday, 1/ 20/ 17. g-rey
• whitt fam111 ctt: natr Ohio
Y1U1¥ LN ...odl . lht m1y hll¥1
been In btdl of 1 !Mdlup. PleiN
Coli lt4-441-7222 ., •41-

8217-uk ShMon.
Found:·4

Rtw~~rd .

Ur•: (Dnlwhh picture

Found: Old lemllt leegle 6og.
Found by IMdt Grove Cem•
twy. 814-112-2714 .

B

PubNc Sele
&amp; Auction

Rick Pearson Auatlane., II ·

•Wslhers •DI.t.w..hert

•RantH
•R4tfngeretora
•Dryers •Fraaers

PAR'tS and

aenHd M Ohto and W11t Virgi-

n!&amp; Rell Ettatt, entiqua, f•m.
li111uidation ultl , J04 · 773 17110f 773·1430.

9

Wanted To Buy

Jim Mink Chtv.· Oidslnc.

THE

IMI Oint Johnton

IOUtiTIY CLUI
GOLF

LEI ION I

•a.oo
NEW

11•·«1-3t72
TO~

CAIH pold IOf' '13 -

tnd ntww Ulld Clift. lmtm
-Pontloc, 1111 Etoc..,
'A •-· Oollipollo. Col 114-4412212.

GRIPS

3.00

0

TROPHIES
PLAQUES
IADGE8

JOII'IUIIOD
.... 1111

I

I

--·--··Gamjjoli'i'·-------- ....... PfPiiiiiliirif" ...
llt Vicinity
EITATE SALf·CompletthOUI•
hold of furnlturt, e•trl nice,
loolt, antlquet, clothing a etc.
lt.rting Wed. 24 until .. sold.
On llh. 110 1bout 7 mil• from
hOIPittl · yellow homa-on rlght.
Wltdt for •tent.

Y•d Stlt: 1104 Chtthem.

Mtht

•llorn!WI-o

*-"-.

114·

2471 .

,.5-3561

.W.•Isllon
..._.,_.

IIIJp'r DIINIIt WindoWS

Of

.

'

Dl1c:ov• mutlc thlt IUmmtr
wHh indtvlclual gulttr. bill
guhar. l•so"' It INnictrdtt
Mutlc. Ctll for opentftlt 114·
441, 0187 , lnnructor Jtlt
Womoltv. 114-441-1077.

1&amp;a11 woodlfl Dltlfll. Mutt bt
removMI ffom premiMt. 3•01
Frenklln Ave .

c••·

VINYl &amp;
AL-..SIDJIIG

'·

oount Of famity lhoa ttore. Rtt~
ptlcw unbtUf!IIHbft for qualtty
lho• normaltv prioed ffOfft t 18 ,
to 110. o. .. 210 "'""'" a.oo

Wt plf catt. lor lit I model cleen
UMd

J&amp;I.ILOWtl
INSUUnON

Schoola
lnatruction

304-717•3411 . Nonnon lltllff.

foldtniHv lt4-441-3107.

llesidtntiol 1nd ''"'" &lt;Oil·
lltr&lt;ill units. lnsllilltion ot
duct work. humidilim, lurnect. httt po01ps, ond sir condillon in'
All •on IUirlnlttd . Coli;
(614) 915-4122 (r•idonto)
"S,.Ci1l: HEll piCIIII c'"t11i
tir condi1Diinc lor Mobilt or
_,., · inotliltd on
Pld •• r•dy to cool. Prico:
SIIH.GO ploo ta.
or 1 HEIL2l\ loti Hilt "'11111 iot:lllilll • ,.., *~ric""- ·

Ill. s-21

16

of etlphtntlhl bD ol park. Cell

S-1.'17-l

Prtt:t: SIHU!

Mowing, trlmminl, odd job•.
Coli 114-112-181 .
:

4917.

,, ... , tt Tycoon
114·311·1138. Roworrl.

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL

Situation&amp;
Wonted

Tire "•capping luslnau . ,
121,000. All-ont. 11..., ,
tlr.. : 13 to -U tnah. Call

rod••
Llkt. C111

992-3410

12

VaUtv Drive, Point "alllftl, W.
3 melt kift«&lt;t. z month• old. _v~o._t_-30
:..:.,.4_
·1~7;:.
5 ·.4.:;:.
340
:..:...._ _
Black • whitt. Ctll ther 1.
Pm
lima.
1ppUcent
mu1t be
114-37&amp;-2711 ., 114 · 441-

LHt ; June t 31h-2 Hthine

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

hou1ework, f'()n-tmok•. Llv•
In Gallipolis. Cell 814 -441·

tmoktr. Pldl up .tppllcttlon• 1t
5 oltvful kiHono. Coli 114 -441- 201 N. 2nd. Avo. Mlddl_.,
Ohio and tend to 441 W.
7920 .
Schroc.. Rd .. W•tervlllt. Ohio
AKC 7 year old Dobermltl 41011 .
F1rnllt. To DOOd home. Call
Applic1tlon• now btlng •c·
8t4-448-4liU.
.
ctPtld for 1 pll'l time awenlng
4 lovublt khttnl, l milt tabbys 1hlft po-'tion for Mtdlcll lib
• 1 milia arr(. To eood home. ttehnlcen. Contlet PtnOtlnll
OffiCI Pt ....nt Valli¥ HOip,
Coli 114·317-7221.

3 milt klntn• . 3041·171·1830.

'ONLY VOTE FOR........ !....CANOIOATE(s)
Plwl dltec• this noli co blfor• votin1 bollot

Control yourWiight·Ttki " Naw
Shape Diet Pltn" 1nd to.fMI·
tempapt•ln D't AM You Ctn Eel Flth

1 Mndy blond klttln, I

10-8-tfc

15c OFF LABEL

Wtttr Pills. Fnnh PhartniC'f .

Old. 304 -171-et 11.

U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE

FARMERS HOME ADMINISTRATION

Control yourWtlght -TUt " New
Shapt Diel Pltn" 1nd E-Vap

Wanttd: lady to Nve \n -.llh
tldertv ambulatory lldy. St1y
n!Qhtt, come tnd go durtna diV.
p,_plfl m1111 , ltahl houtllttep·
ing. Coli 114-IU-1431 .
.

a c1rt for

tld•ty ltcty-not bedt111. light

441-3117.

ob11lned from •nv bend member
or 11 the Hleh School OtUce.
Tlcil;lft II door t4 .80 and

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

UPHOLSmY PLUS

V. C. YOUNG Ill

EUGENE LONG

Rffd~11/

CAIPn

VINYL &amp; AWMINUM
Worked in home area
20 years
" Free Eetimatas· •

R!ASONAIU • IIUIAIU
8-20- '16 tfn

L&amp;W CllANING

SUPERIDR
SIDING CO.

Complete Gutter Work

614-843-5248

J.li'tla

.

3 Announcements

·Mobile service

No Sunday Calls

6-1-87-1 mo.

TVs, Antennas
Satellite Salts
Installation
StrYict

ProgrMIIvl Heelth Ctre f1clltty
islctlvlty Mtkingan AN to urvt
In the captchv of direc:tor of
nurt... For•100bH, INI ·ICB
F1cHhy. Located in loutt••t·
ern Ohio. Prwiou1 axpertanct II
d•lred tiut not requlrtd. be.
111.., • bttnefit1 . Apptw tt
Sc~nlc Hll\1 Nur1lng C1nt.,,
Rt.2 Bo• 2e2 Bldwtll, OMo
4&amp;8 1• or ltnd FMLtmt.

2311, 114·448 ·0322 ,

4-12-87-tln

A11 111111 111:1~ 1111:111 ~;

Electronic Organs

"Free Eatimetea"

PH. 992-2772

Complete Remodeling
Roofing of atl Typeo

1987. Tho blllot below muot be filled out, dtt1ched

39

CLEVELAND 1UP I I - T uesdav's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally N urnh&lt;•r

D-RIB, HI-RIB, 5V,
.
cuttom cut to the inch 1t no extra ·
ch•ge.
oHtr1 10 beiUttful colou,gltvaniud 1nd gllv•·
lume. FREE dllivery 100 1quart1 Of more. Trlm1. 1kylight1
and ICC111Gri11 . Outntity discount• •~•il•ble.
01110 1·100-126-1141- 0/S ColiKI 1-6'14-961-3:131

LIMIT ONE

949-2263
or 949-2168

,J,R.'s REPAIRS

Aept N111dtd for busin•• ac·
counlt, Full· tima. UO.OOO ·
tao.ooo. ptr1·tlm,, t1 2.000·
t11.000. No 1elting. repett
butln . .. Itt your own hourt.
Trt lning pt'OYkitd. C1ll 1·11 2·
931· H70. M·F. 81m to epm
ICentrill Sttndlf'd Timtl

Someone 10 livt In

FREE ESTIMATES

5-11-87-1 mo.

0

~Ito Tr••••lt~lo•

PURE

,

Gutters
Down1pouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

992-2526

YINYl SIDING
ALUMINUM SIDING
0 1l0WN IN
INSULA nON

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

6-17 -tfc

Bi·Aite
Sugar

flEW - REPAIR

RUSS MOORE

0

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

•MEAT •BEEF •REG. •JUMBO

ROOFING

' '

, Mr. and Mrs.
-·Roger Bleck of
Rutland, Ohio are
announcing their
4th Anniversary
together on June

TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE
BONELESS

BUY OR SELL

HOUIS: Tuo.-Wtd.-lrl.
1t o.m. lo 7 , .m.
Sunday: 1 p.m.-7 p.m.
ly (hoMO or Apt&gt;Oinlmtnl

Rt. 4. Hysell Run Ro1d
Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;9
PH . (614) 992-1834 or
992-6704 - free Estimltes
l ·IHmo.

6-10-81-1 mo. pd.

Howard L Wrltestl

112 4 Eosl Main St.
Pomeroy

WILLIAMS
TRENCHING SERVICE

GINIIALCONTIACTOIS

ANnQUES
Riverine Antiques

Licenud II Bond,ed

985-4141

Happy Ads

..•
.
..' .
120Z.
PKG.

TRENCHING IS OUR LINE
lranchin&amp; oi Any Type
Backhoe Service
Plumbina Service
Custom Woidina
lciwboy Houlin&amp;
Stptic Systems
We Corry Concrete Culverts

CHIMI. OHIO

corder, Gallla Counrv Court
House. 9 Locult Street,
Galllpollo, Ohio, 46631. for

SLICED

Aultttnt Varsity Football

carllfic1tlon raqulrem111t1 of'
Ohio for aport1 m.Siclna end

oond Street, Pomeroy, Ohio.
46769, the VInton Countv
Recorder, Vinton County

HOLLY FARMS GRADE 'A'

Th• Mlip LOGtll8ehool Dittrlct
lt currentty ..-..... .,..llcet6ona
from eerdfltld appUcanu for •ri ..

Girls' Junior High latkMball •
Coec:h. High School ChMthNd« •
Ad•ilor. Fretttmen CheertNdw '
AcM10r end Junk)r High School
ChwtHd• Advl10r for tht
1917·88 school v•• · Appl~
eanu mult ho'd 1 velld Ohio
tt1chlng eertlfleet• . end for
coiChlng po~ltlont mutt meet

to be
mined.
The application Is on file at
the office of the Meigs
COunty Recorder, Meigs

McArthur,

111,040 · tll ,230 Y"• Now
Hlrinv. C.H 101-117·1000 ht.
R · ~IOI fof current tedefallllt.

Co.c:+l, 7th and lth Grtdt
Foat~l Coach, loya' llthOrildi
loollotboll c~ loyo' 7th

f 111pi11V 1111'111
St:r vIC1:'

vioully appro'Jed

, WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. • PRICES EFFECTIVE WED.: JUNE i 4 THROUGH SATURDAY, JUNE 27, 1987.
• USDA FOOD STAMPS ACCEPTED. • NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL OR PICTORIAL ERRORS.

Firm
Prke
Am Elect r ic Powpr ............. 27'Y,
AT&amp;T ........................... 28 Y,
Ashl and Oil .... .... .. .. .. ........ G2 :Y,
Bob E vans F'arm s .. ........ .... 25Y,
Charming Shoppes ................ 32
F'ederal Mogui .................... 43Y,
Goody ear 1'&amp; R ................. .69%
Heck 's Inc .................. .. ...... 4 ~
Lim it ed In c... .... ..... .......... .... .45
Multimedia Inc................. .. 59:X
Rax Restaura nt s.. .. .............. 5')1
Robbins &amp; Myers .. .. .. .... .. .... 11 V.
Shoney' s Inc ...................... 29Y,
Wrndy's ln tl. ....................... 9%
Worthington lnd .................. 20%

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIOUCIARY
On June 22, 11a7, In the
Meigs County Prob1te
Court, Cou No. 251148 ,
Cleft 8 . Wood, Box 213.
Syr1cuu, Ohio. 411779 ,
WIM oppoinlod Adminlotrotor o l t h l - of Dor18 .
Wood. dntred, lata of lox
283. Syncuu. Meigo
County, Ohio, 41778.
RobenE . lucie,
Probote Judge
Leno K. Noooolrood, Clortt
(II 24: 1711. 8. ~

_.._ .. __ _

POI8S to lllP.Ind thl areal
for room and pMiar under·
ground mining and provide
for pillar remQvel on thoH
ar111 end on areas pre-

'THRJWNG

Provided hy
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Locwl

Public Notice

......

1,924 scm ond io located
on the WllkeovHie Quod 7 'I&gt;
minute U.S.G.S. quadrangle
m1p1, sppro•imotely 1600'
ooutheut from Wllknville,
Ohio. The oppllcation pro -

(A• ollO: :lO a.m.)

$:i!l6. PS2. 50.

·-·

-···· -

prop_osed underground
wortunga lnNI encomPellu

Daily stock prices

Ti cket sales 1 o 1 a I r d
$ 1.1 6:U 1 6 . :~J . wil h a pa yoff dur of

-~·

County, Salem Township,
Section• 26. 26, 30, 31, 32,
31h ond Froctlon 19 in
Vinton C0&lt;1nty, Wllke~vlile
Township, Stc1ii&gt;no 1 2
2E. :5, 4, 9, 8, 10 and l6 In
Golllll County. Huntington
Townlhip, Section 1 . The

A record one m onth distribution of more than $59 million to
local government s from current
motor vehicle license fee revenu es collected In May wa s
an nounced by Michael J. McCulllon. reglstratar of motor vehl·
ctes . Meigs County 's par t of the
tot al Is $204,22o.08.

Lottt'ry

--· .,...

eretions will be in Meigs

ODLAND
I.
.

Funds distributed

South Central Ohio
Most ly sunny today, with highs
In the upper 80s. Partly cloudy
tonight, with a low between 65
al)d 70. Partly cloudy Thursday,
with a chance of showe rs a nd
thunders torm s and highs near 85.
Th e probabllil y or preclpilatlon Is near zero today. 20percent
tonight and 40 percent Thursday.
Wi nds will be light and from
the northeast toda y and light and
v~ rlabi C' ton ight.
Extended Foreca..~t
Friday through Sunday
A chance of showe rs and
thunder storms Friday and Sun day, wilh partly cloudy sk ies on
Sa turday . Highs m ainly will be
between 75 and 80 each da y .
Overnight lows will In the 60s
early Friday and In the 50s
Sa turday and Sunday m or nings.

J.• ·- -- •

AODENOUM TO PART 1 ,
B-3, Columbus, Ohio,
ITEM E 16)
14:12li4 wijhin lhirty doyo of
SOUTHERN OHIO
d~te of publiation
COAL COMPANY
notice.
RACCOON MINE NO . 3
1, 8. 16, 4tc
REVISEO 6 / 19/ 87'
LEGAL NOTICE
Public Notice
Southern Ohio Cool Compony - RIICCoon Mine· No.
3 , P. 0 . Box 490, Athono
Ohio, 46701. hoi submitted
• ., epplicetlon to ...vise a
Cool Mining ond Reclomo tion Permit numbered R0463. 10, to the Ohio "e·
.P'Irtment of Natural
AMOurcee, Divllion of Rechomotion. The proposed Coal
Mining end Reclomotion Op-

EASllllti'S . Your Independently Owned

T he Ohio Department of Nat u·
r al Resources announces the
selection of Bernard D . Romine.
22. of Meigs County, for the
Civilian Conservation Corps.
!CCCI
Th e son of Kenneth Romine of
:k1266 Romine Road , Rutland.
and a graduate of Meigs Hlg!h
School, Romine's one yea r enrol·
lment wit h the Ohio CCC will be
se rved at ihe BarneyQ uil terCCC
Ca mp located In Green Springs.
As a co rps m~mber, Romine
wlii rece ive on the job !raining
while achfevlng needed conservation work on Ohio' s lands and
his torica l silcs.

-

Public Notice

Tuesday evening at Little Rock ,
Ark .. and at Myrtle Beach, S.C .
E lsewhere, the West Coast
enj oyed moslly fair skies, clouds
covered the mld -Atlanllc slates
and skies were fair over New
England. Temperatures soared
Into the 90s Tues&lt;;Jay In VIrginia
and North Carolina.

during a 24· hOUI' period ending
Tuesday mornlnp.
.
Winds up to 7:i mph Tuesday
were blamed lot· dam agin g air·
planes and n hnngar In Craighead Cou nt y, Ark .. ~ nd for pushIng a semi-truck onl o a pickup
near Searcy, i\l'k.
AbOut 1 ln c h ~s or ra in fell

~

Wednesday, June 24, 1987

Nation's midsection lashed by rain, hail and gusty winds
lng eastern Colorado, the Na llonal Weather Serv ice said .
Thunderstorms hit parts of
Texas, Oklahoma, Arka nsas,
Louisian a and Mississ ippi. Rains
were scattered, and there was no
lhreat of flooding.
Three-quarter -in ch hall fell
near Mitchell, Nc b.. Tu esday

-

tlor;iftedlllygrrld.-...... )owolry............ crld

-Oti. EIII-IoiMr
1... ...._. T::m,
2M. A,._ Ml_.l 1 ~ 011. II
M2·3471.

...

Ciani. -n~n.r

•t

•aort•••......,.ca•

I 4-M2-1111 .

.

1:00·5:00. Fridoy • lolurdl'/.
Vll'd 1111. Stcond hou•• on
lul11111f11 Pll1 1. 1 rnile from
Port•. Newbotn to edult cl&lt;&gt;thing, f~o~rnlturt, frt1 ltlndlng
ftrtplac•. hom1 Interior, cur·
t1ln1 . Thur1 , Fri• • let .
Ctnttnltf'Y TownhouH. 81t. An·
tiQ\111 , pit '"'· dr....... lionel
lflin, gl•tw•re. kitchen coiled·
ibl•. ctothlng, toota.
700 Thkd Aw. Glf11 &amp; boVI -'111
2T-3T, tAWft
Thurt., &amp;
Fri. 1-5.

""'"'*'·

....... P'f Pleiiaiinf .....
lit Vicinity
..................................

lit Vicinity
Thur. Fri. 811. Uvlng room tuht.

coH• table. dl•h•, nl c·niCI,
toyt. aduh • chHdren clothinf, A
llttl• bit ot evtrythine. All ftamt
Cheep. 107 Hendtrson lt. '
Handlfton. WY .

---.. --p·c;;n·erov...........
Middleport

lit Vicinity
....... ... .. .... . .. ...... ... .. ... .
HouMhOid turnlture 1nd y..-d
Nle. 114·982· 3843. July 1st.
2nd, 1nd lrd . 8 :00· &amp;:00 .
Oueen-tlted and 11,;11 lla:td hkl•
• ·t.dl, lOft end chair,
tnd IDVI COUch, wood Wtchtn
dinette 1nd ch•t. blby horae
walk...-. IfNI c:lothel. New Lt·
Wlor lllndt . varlou1 tl111,
ti.OO elctl. Chikkan end 8dutt
ctothtt:. Ill tlaet·tome nN.
Jeans. t.mp '"d mtao. new hot
wet• htM., blank•. ti .OO .
bOwling bill. t milo
teet of ,.lllland, :11211 11. Rt ,
12.. MIWeen bxon tnd Sub&amp;1..1on.

'*='"'"'

T-. '""'

Huge I famUy . June 21th and
27th, 1 :00•1 :00. In front af
Rudancl Mtne luppty ,
-lcJunt 21th. 21th •nd 27th. I to
5. North oirlo of llltt Oor.,o,
~1. 7. ~,...... .

.

�Page- 12-The Daily Sentinel

June
24, ' 1987·
II
,

•

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday. June 24. 1987.

LOSER

'

21

LAFF·A·DAY

Business
Opportunity

44

51

Apartment
for Rent

choou from : Jttn ·

1 and 2 bedroom tptrtmtntl for
rent. Batie rent tor 1 bdr.,
'183 .00; 2bdr.,t219.00. AltO
required 1 UOO.OO tec:ur~ttt
dtpotit. CONT~CT : Jtckton
Ettatn Dept. Ph '46· 3997
Equtl Housing Opportunity.

Sporttwttr , ladies appertl.
M,nt, Chlldren · Mtternlty ,
Large Sla.. Pttlte, Dtnef'Wttr·
Aerobic. Bridal, lln;erit or Ac •
cnaorin Store. Add color enttv·
tit. Br~ndt : Liz Cleibornt,
Gttolint, H..lthte:c, Levi. Lee.
Cemp S.verty Hlllt, St. Michele. ·

Furnl1h..:l • unfurn lthed IPtt ..
•160 .00 end up, reflftr~Cet Ph.
304·876· 7738 or 304 ·876·
6104 A-1 Real Etttte.

Ch.ut, Out~eclc Red, Gtnttlt.
Fortnu. OrgM'IIcalty Grown,
OYit' 2000 othtrl or 113 .19 one

price d"ign«. Multi Till pricing
discount or ftmllv tho• ltore.
retail ptlc.t unbtli...,able for

FurnlshiMI Eftic!enev t146 . Utili·
tiet peid. •hare bath. 607
Second Ave.. Gtllipolit Ph.
646· 4416 after 7PM .

quality thOM normllty pr iced
from t19. to t80. Over 2~0
brandt 2800 ttylet. 114,800 to
*21.900: inventory, training.

lixturn.

gr~nd

Furnithed apartment, S225 .
utilltiet paid. 1 bdr. 939
Second. Gtllipolls. Call 446·
4416 after 8pm.

opening. alrlare,

•c. Can Ciptn 16 dfiVt. Mr.
Loughlin 612· 888·4228 .

Ana l Eslale
45
31

Homes for Sale

Homa for Solo by Own••

Gr~tnbrill Est., lBA ., bl· i&amp;~Jel
on 2 ,4 "'"' AC , W.B.H , wot
2 car814-446·4009
gttege. Ph. Befort
Altar
4bar.
'00PM
4PM. Ph. 304· 675 . 38 1a.
---------New 48A , 2 bath, Cl•k Dr.
ou.ooo, Newly ,..,odled Ha.
28R, t22,000 In Addloon, Call
448· a898
.. For Sale or ltHe••
4 BA, 2 bath, lull b..tment , with
abovtground pool &amp; XL deck on
1 / 2 ICft ICfOII from Addevlllt
grade tchool . Financing avella·
ble with tmell down ptvmenl.
Pticed thoutands below •P·
pralted vtlue. Call BtU:: 91 9·
791-21&amp;2 ,
Completely remodeled houte. 7
room1. 2 batht . 30 acres
ground. 10 ecr11 good bohom.
Call 814 ·371· 27110,
Lovely n.w 3 BR homabuitt lhi1
tprlng. 2 car garage, nice area.
Cl.y &amp; city schools. 8 mil11
grom Oalllpollt. Will consider
mobile home . ·, trtde· ln.
U7,BOO . Col 814-408-8038 .

"We pledged our flag today
something about one

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

2 bedroom. Full b11ement.
plenlv of yard and garden apace,
free guend water. Clean. UOO
month. 614·843 · 6309.

Big down payment, thort time
employment Of p11t credit hll·
torv ttopping you from buying •
home1 Contlder • r•clsimecl
1 4a70. We htve teversl. Only
t600 down. psvmentt to fit your
budget , Free delivery. Inter·
etted7 Toll free ln Ohio BOO·
828·0752 Mid Ohio Financial
Service.

6 room haute Camp Conley
area, U2S.OO month. 304· 676·
1371 or 675 ·3812.

4 room haute for ule. 46 Nell
Ave. t12 ,000. Call 814 ·367·
0428,

1973 Baron mobile home.
12a65. 135,000. Ph dtvUmt
304-875· 5223 evening• 937·
2488,

Fullv furnished 2 bedroom home
In R1ctne with eQuipped kitchen.
river vl.w proplfty, acroat from
Gan••l Stora. Easy tccen to
Ohio Riv• bo.t leunching tnd
sendy beach. •1&amp;.000. 614 ·
949·2168 or 614·141·2288 .
Why pay rent when you can buy •
houte on land co ntract? Call
814,992-2403 .
In Pomerov. 1 nice hou1e with 8
room• and blth. Alto lull
b11ement and firepltce. Phone
81• ·992·7482
3 bedroom. 2 bath on 1 tnd one
third acre ll\let lot. Central air ,
CIOII to Mtlgs High School.
Priced re11ontbly. Phone 614·
992· 3225 aft• 51 :00 p.m.
7 room1, 1 YJ batht. turnl1hed
kitchen . Cotntt tot. clou to
town end tchool1. Cell 614·
992· 31505 after 6 :00p.m.
Rustle Hlllt , Syracuse. 3 bed·
room1, 1tteched garage with
electric door opener. cover.t
patio. chtln link ft~nce . central
tit, tolldwood cabinets, garbage
dl1poul, newly remodaied be·
throom, hlfdwoad floor• . Call
1!114· 992·8192 ther 15 :00 pm.
l.lrgt 2 temlty houte, llvtln one
apll'tment. rent othM. 2 and 4
bHroom, full batement , cenu 11
Otl htlt. vinyl 1iding. 307
Spring Av e . . P omerov .
U9,000, 614·949· 2628,
Hou11 In village · ol Cheuer.
Ohio. 8trli'ain tt t24 .900 .
Comt tHI Csll614· 985· 3571 .
II room houtt, 2 baths. new roof.
1idlng. Nutalh Wlndowt. N. 4th
St .. Middleport . Make offer .
114· 247· 4672 or &amp;14· 247·
2832 ,
Two homH on At. 33 adjacent to
Hartford CommunitY Bldg. 3
bectroomt, 2 bathl. dining room,
f•mlly room. eat In kitcheo•nd 3
bedroom•. 2111 bstht, dining
room, family mom. ut In
kitchen. garage. Low down
p.avmtnt, lnter11t free loan to
qutlifl_. buyer for remaindlll' of
1917, owner financed . 304·
882· 2096,

33

Nice home- Arbuckle, 3 br, din·
lng. family , laundry room•. 1 ~
bath, -Vi acre, wtter . 138,000.
304·6el-9t u

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Aemodel.t 1170 Hallmark Mo·
bile Home. 12d2. 2 Bedroom• .
uaoo. Coiii14· BB6-6669 ,
1171 2 lA mobile homt.
h e - - i o n, Coli 814,
251· 131&amp; 0&lt; 11 4· 266, 1667,
1913 Noolluo 14a70, 3 BR,
woodllum«. In •celltnt condition , t13.100, CIIH IU-441-

oe..a,

leiUtfful 12atl motNie' home
wittt 10a20 ptenlion. Central
•lr, MW Clfl*, very good

Farms for Sale

8 acre• on Trlbbl11 Rd . oH At . 12.
Plut ttore building. wsrehou1e.
3 BA house, bern, cellar, plut 2
other building•. All biKk top
road. Call 304-458-1818. Call
altfH" I!IPM .
20 acre ftrm Hannan Trace
Roed, Glenwood, W. Va. for
more Information ctll304· n3·
IS118 or 773·5188 after 5 :00 .

34

Business
Buildings

Commercial building• for lean.
Downtown Pt . Pleaunt . StOJel.
ofllcet. A·One Real Ettete.
Carol Yeager, Broker. Call 304·
876-6104,
747 lndduttrh•l•torega 12 foot
DVtf llttd door, 3 Phltll of
electric. 1 8~e48 ttHI building
814 - 446 · 23e2 For
appolntm.nt.
747 lnduttrltl ttoral! e 12 toot
overhead door. 3 phatn ol
electric. 18•48 neel building.
Ctll81 4·448· 2382 lor eppoint·
ment.
Beautiful Ohio River Camp
Groundt, 21 full hook·upl , 2
apartment• furni1hed. 7'h tcre•.
room lor mora. Call 614·949·
2626,

35

Lots

&amp;

Acreage

Mobile Home iott lOt tale. 50 h .
wide, ~1pprox . 1 260 ft . long.
Atht11t, Ohio. Road frontage
available. On At. 1 on Ohio River
between Athalia. Ohio &amp; Big
power lines. Finan cing tv all able
by ow ner . Ctll G. Frank
Creamer-Chuapuk , Onlo .
St4-BS7-Uee ,
1 cer block g~~ttg•Appro• . v,
tcra lend with wtter tip, ttptic
1y1tem, elettlc hookup. Appro• .
1 milt oft At . 7·Gaorgtl Cf'4Htlr.
Ad. Mutt Sell . Call 306·882·
2366,
1.-'r

Trail.., lot tor rent. Natur•l gel,
1 12 mile out Addilon·Bulaville
Rd. Ctii614· 317· 743B .
1 YJ ec lot on Jerry• Run Rd. with
rural wtttr. 304· 578· 2383.

36

Real Estate
Wanted

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2BR, AC . cable. Hud accepted .
RiVtf\liew in Kanauge. Fosters
Mobile Mome Park. Ph . 114448-1802,
Nice turnithtd 2 bdr. mobile
home. Upper At . 7. t200 month.
Water paid. Call614· 246· 5818.

Room• for rent, dey. week .
month. Gtlllt Hotel. Cell 614·
446· 9716 . Rentat ktwatt120
month
Furniohod ooon\, 0116 , UtiiHioo
'd Sh
both, S ingle male,
919 Second. Gellipolit. Call

74

~. l'M

Motorcych11

3 bedroom, furnithed , AC .
Good, clean condition. '160.
per month. New H111en, 304·
ae2· 2468,
2 bedroom mobile home. Rouah
Lane, Che1hire. Nice lot. Call
304· 77J.68ZB,
2 bedroom trtlhtr lor rent In
Middleport . Call 114 · 992·
3436,
2 bedroommobllehomator rent.
Vine St ., Racine. Call614 · l67714e.
Two 2 bedroom mobile homet,
furnithed, yerd withchtin link
fence. 176.00 depo11t. phone
304· 676·661 2 after 6:00 pm.
Double wide on private lot, 3 br,
2 full batlu , ac. Iemily room. See
to appreciltle. Gallipolis Ferrv.
0326, 304 ·876· 3087 ,

44

Apartment
for Rent

2 bedroom furn l1ed ept. ref and
depotit. New Heven . w. Va ..
304 · 882 ·3287 or 304 -773·
6024 ,
Ci11en ept in Henderson, partially
furnithed, 304· 676· 1972 afl11r
6:00pm .
One bedroom ept. In Pt. Plea·
unt . htra clean end nice.
Aduln Only. Na Pe11. 304 -6711 ·
1388.
Apartments for the Elderly.
Frenchtown Aptrtm&amp;ntt. 727
Fourth Ave. Opening 10on 24
unltt deligned tor Senior Clti·
unt{U &amp; older! &amp; hsndi ctpped
peuon1. Rent intludlnll edjutt·
ment lor wtter. uwage &amp;
electric It blled on tensntl
income. Equll houting oppor·
tunitv . Appllcatlont mav bt
picked up It Spring Valley Plen.
Cell ·U8·46J9. All elec;tric hett
pump1.
Rio Grandt. New 2 BR Apt.
Stove . refrllltrtlor &amp; water
turni t hed. 1226. per month. No
pet• . Oepotit. Call 814·448·
803e,
Apartment tor Rent : 3 roomt.
"26/ mo. Adults. Call 304·
175·5104. or 175-n3B .
Unturnlthed garage apt. : 2 BA .
322 Third Ave .. Adultt only. no
pe11 . Call 814-448· 3748 or
266-1903,

Renlals
41

Houses for Rent

Nicely furnithld tmall house.
Adults only , Reference• fl·
qulrld. Off ttr"l parking. Ph .
814·446·0338,
Two bdr. unfluni1hH hou11.
Worbhap. verega.
Merrltd
coupl•. Will accept 2 children.
Ref. and dep. Call 441·9181.

1 btdroom furnithed apt. in
Middleport. All utiiiUII plid.
•210 per mon1h. Celll14·992·
6160 ·
Efticiencv tpt. for rtnt on Routh
Line In Chnhire. Suitable lor
one Of two people. c.n 304·
773·5828,

Unturnlsh.- hou11. 3 bdr . Aod·
n4¥ VIllage II. U7S, Cell 4,e.
4418 afl.,. 8pm.

2 bedroom furnished epllrlment.
All utllltl• lurni1htd. 1225. pM
month or teO. per wuk. 307
Spring Avt., Pom•oy. 114·
949-2128,

2 BR furniahld or unfurnilhld,
AC, utiHtloo pd, Coli 814· 441·
1200 ol1ot I ,

APARTMENTS, mobile hom•.
Pt. Pl...antand Galllpollo, 114· 44S-a2U

For rent Of Hie. 3 BR. 2 Hlh.
Molgo High
Woodod lot School, Cllll 114· 441·81tl Of
114-112·1304,
31A, O.R., 1 b.th, utllityroom,
110flll IMAilcM"'. UIO/ month .
1280 l)opoolt, CoM 114-448·
0478,- I PM 441-1111 ,

Older mOdel mobile home.

In
nice home whh I
roome .... Ht"- futt .,_.,ent
end ftfepl- PhoM IU·H2·
3117,

""'*001.

Pam...,. •

•

Office Space tor Rent EKcellent
lor Attorneys, Accounttnt. etc.
Close to Court Haute. Call
Witeman Real Eatate Agencv.
614· 446·3644 ,
Mobile Home Space·60 ft . or
tmtller. t76. Water Pd. 920
Fourth, Gallipolis. Call 614·
448-4418 oherePM ,

W~l!On wheel ceiling light. 24",
5·hght, wood and antique brats,
S40. Call 614 ·367-0461 aftlf
5PM ,

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Roule 33, North of Pomeroy
Rental treilert. Call 614 ·992·
7479,

Lawn tractor mower. MF 1665
Hydro with 3 pt. hitch, 64 inch
mower, 4 h . blade. 83,000. Ctll
814-379· 2745,

Spece tor t mell trailert . All
hook·upt . Cable. Alto efficiency
roomt, eh end eeble. Ma1on.
W.Va. Cell 304· n3-5661 .

Colligan Weter Pu·rllicat lon system. 8400., 67 kev AMI electric
plano, organ, &amp; harptcord.
$300 . Call 814-3ee·8436,

Space for rent , trailer tpacet,
locutt Rd. At. 1, Point Pleasant,
304· 875· 1076.

A~hley woodburner. 8660 new.
will tell for 8300. Cell61 4-388 ·
e2e8,

47 Wanted

19 Inch black a white TV. 860.
Ment 3 spd. bike. t40. Cell
614· 448· 4141 after 6.

3 or 4 Bedroom houte in Kyger
Creek Sc:hodl Diltrlc:t. Referen ·
en Ph. 614·446·8821 .

Wood teble and chairt. Cherry
venltv. ment fringed leather coat
tize 42. loy1, clothet. hcellent
condition. Call 614· 367·77.80.

3 or 4 bedroom houte in
Southern Local School Oittrlct.
Aeferencn 1re evaileble. Cell
814· 982·501e ,

TONY 'S GUN REPAIRS. hot
reblueing, fr11e puppy whh each
blueinll job, call 304·176·4631 ,

Mercha nrli se
51

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FUIINtTURE 62
Olive St., Gellipolit.
NEW. 8 pc. wood group. t399.
Living room luitet· 1199· t599.
Bunk bedt wrth bedding· t 199.
Full tiJ:I mattrett • foundation
lllrtlng · 199 . Recllnen
ltlrtlng· 199.
USED· Dedt, drestert. bedroom
1ulte1 , e199· •299 . Oetkt,
wringer wether, 1 complete line
of ulld furniture.
NEW· We1tern boots· UO.
Workboots t18 • up. (Steel &amp;
lofttoe) . Call814· 441·3159.

3-pc cherry dining room set,
6·24:· bate kit cablnetl, sofa.
Call Andy Sigler, 304·676 ·
1286.
Sear• kenmore washer. S25 .00.
3(14.675. 1943.
8x16 tiel bed tandom trsllar, 1 e ·
d~mp bed. 304·882 ·3237 efter
6 '00,
9 pc. heavy wood living room
tulte. 8360 .; 10 -toot 111telite
avttem e600 . 304·675 ·5389
lfttf &amp;:00.
Motorola color TV . n&amp;. workt
good, 304-675 -1845,

GOOD

CouCh and TV atend . 304· 676 ·
6394.

56

BuiJding Supplies

lAYNE 'S FURNITURE

80 Oayt ume 11 cath with
approviiMI credit. 3 Mil11 out
BullVIlle Ad. Open 91m to 6pm
Mon. thru Sat . Ph. &amp;14· «6·
0322,

Building Meterials
Block, brick. tewer plp81 , win·
dowt, lintels, etc . Claude Win·
tert, Rio Grande, 0 . Call 614·
245·512 1.

Groom and Supply' Shop· Pet
Grooming . All breeds.. .AII
stvles. Julie Webb Ph. 614· 4415·
0231,
Dragonwynd Catterv Kennel.
CFA Himeleyan. Penien and
Siamese kittent. AKC Chow
puppiat. New kittens; Siemete
and Mimalayant. Call 614· 448 ·
3B44 after 7PM .

57

Musical
Instruments

For sale: Bundy Trumpet . New.
Call 814-992 -2772 .

58
&amp;

Fruit
Vegatables

Ouelity Frultt and Vegetable•
retail and wholeule. B. &amp; S.
Produce ecro11 from Piu:a Hut
Gslllpolit. Ohio.
'

Far111 Supp li es
&amp; L;vcstu~k
61

Farm Equipment

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S . 36 Wett, Jackton, Ohio ,
614· 286· 6461 '
MIIHV Ferguton, New Holland ,
Buth Hog Salet 6 SeNice. Over
40 und lrtctort to choo111 from
&amp; complete line of new &amp; u1ed
eqUipment. largett aelection in
S.E. Ohio.
273 New Holland sq. Bel8f
t1500. Ford 3pt . Rake $326.
Shl'ller Pott Driver noo. 7f1.
locust po1t1 t1 .35 each Ph.
614· 38e-9832,

8Q1 Ford Tractor·flunt l!OOd·
t2850. l ate model Ford mowIng machine· i660. J D baler·
8660. Grinder, miKer t696. Call
614· 286 ·6522 ,
1972. 175 MF tractor, Eac.
Cond. Call 614·286· 7561 b•
tween 8:00 to 4:30. Atk for Joe.
Manure tpreeder. exc. cond.
81600 or bell offer .. large
1preyer, approx . 200 gel. New
pump. t960 or bnt offer.,
Maney Ferguton mq . beitr.
Mauey Ferguton 13 lor pan t.
$1000 for both. C11ll 814 ·887·
448e,

Concrete blocka ell1ize• yard or
dallverv. Maton tand. Gallipolis
Block Co .. 1231/J Pine St ..
Gallipolis. Ohio Cell 614-446·
2783.
Aeady miA concnrte and all
concrete tuppllet. Call ut Valley
Brook Cement end Supplies,
304, n3· 6234,

Buy oneenv 11r:echain saw chain
and get aecond chein half price.
SIDERS EQUIPMENT CO ,.
Htnderton, W. Ya. 304 ·676·
7.21,

56

New Hollend 7ft. hay bine. G11 hl
95 grinder mlur, Ntw Holland
717 Forage Hervettlf, All good
cond. 30,· 273 ·42 1&amp;.

Pets for Sale

AKC Gorm11n Shepherd. Good
watch dog ttock, wormed, 7
wkt. t100. No checkt . OH
Wo ods Mill Rd. Call 614 ·388·
e5U
Reg. Beagle pups: 9 wkt. old .
worm8d, •&amp;o. Call 614· 256·
1619.

Farmail H tractor with mower,
304·882 · 3237 alter 6 p.m.
3YJ hp Juniorlrov S ilt rototi11er.
bought new . Uted 2 hrt. hiller
furrow . •~tra tunt up kit. •&amp;oo.
304·176· 2302 ,

PARSON "S FURNITURE
New wood I pc. livinv room
aultet, 1399.96; New living
room 1uitt1 from •179 .95 to
&amp;100 .; Chett ol drawen. 4
dfewtr, &amp;41 ., 6 drtwer, '69 .96;
End tablet fr om t69 .96 ut.
Uted Furniture: bedroom suitet
tun tir:ld bedt. twin bed• and
roelr.en. Redlner1 from t99.96
tnd up
THE WORKING
MAN 'S FRIEND
Electric renge &amp; retrlg. Both·
Good Shepe. t100 / etch . Call
114-388·1842,

AKC Ragiltered male
Oobermtn· Red, 3 yet,. old. To
responsible owner . Ctll 814·
406·4668 ,
8 month old rutt thort haired
miniature Dechthund. Call6144,46·3243 .
Black &amp; tan coon hound. 7
montht old. •&amp;5. See tt 1926
Chlltnut St .·Galllpolit.
Apricot poodle pup. AKC regit·
tered. wormed. ttiled &amp; thott. '
Sire champion lint. Ctll 614·
441 ·7372

62

Wanted to Buy

rtlt

Bruce Beattie

. ..... ...

II

BUOGETTranamilliont: u....
Rebuitt. All types. Guaranteed a .·
minumum of 30 days, wiH .....
deliver. caah &amp; c~rry or inatal.
Ph, 814·379-2220 or 1·304· '- '
676·876e ,

1976 DodgeAtpin. Zdoor, good
mtchtnlcelly, ftlr body. hal
oHif. Cell 61 4· 949·2183 before 10:00 pm.
1979 Chl\l. Ceprice Claasle.
Fully equipped, 5&amp;,000 eetual
mllet. Loclllv owned . '2500.
614 ·949· 2674 ,
1977 ChiiVy CI!IS dump truck. II
tp· tnnamiasion, 2 1p-a1111,
04. 660, 304-46e· 1031 ,
1980 Dodge Omnlo, good cond,
runs good, t 1 ,300.00. Call aft•
6,oo PM, 304·&amp;71-2738,
1977 Oldt Cutla11. good car.
Air, am-fm 8 triCk. t800 .
304-876-6118 '
1982 Buick Slr.vhawll4 ap, 4 cyl.
a-c. pt. pb. extra nict. 304· 675·
8662,
'74 Corvene. 350 tuto , air,
t-top, ted . $6,900. 304·571·
Z3e3.
'78 Crul11 Air motor home. 28
ft . toadld . 304·882· 3237 after
6,

1980 Toronltdo ~aded atk
04,500, 304-876-3753,
1983 CfltvV 6 C'fl. aulo. IC, pt.
pb. verv nice car. t2 .995 .
304-876·2883 ,

72

Trucks for Sale

1976 Int . 5000 ltfiM, 238
dlnel Tsndam bump, 13 apd.
trant. t13,500 or bitt ofler.
Ctll G. Frank Crttmtrtl14·887•488,
Con1truction mtchinlfY: 1 110
Ca1e loadtt. '10.000 or best
oft•. Call614· 887·4488.
For Sale or Trade. 1983 Chwy
half ton 4 wheel dJ. Shon bed.
V-8. Auto., with lockout hub1,
new tlr11. &amp; magt, Lota of
eatru Neldt painted. Call
IU-28B· &amp;e67 ,
1978 Franklin Slllldder ·
U4,000. Prlf'lnlt load• on
Chevrolet tr\fCir.-87,000. 1974
Int. true~ U.OOO. 1174 auto.
carS. tratler 140 ft .)·f7 .800. C.ll
"'" . ,00, 114·311-9173,

1978 Chwy Truck . t4SO. CaM
114·992·7463,
Ford log truck. Vrlf'Y good bunka.
114· 742·2473,
'71 Ford pick up with topper.
304·882·3237 Mt• I o'clodl .

Grain

by ,

Upnalrt ~nfumithed IPM~ment.
UtHit ... pilei. c.o.t.O. no chlklrln or f*l. CIN.14· 44f·1137

lr ,JIISIJIIILilillll
71

Autos for Salt

Vans

&amp; 4 W.O.

8&amp; Jetp, 74 Herlev O..ict.on
0-010, 30(.171·1170,
1986 ~""' Ronvor 4•4 0U10,
Cf\llte, tm·fm. Y· l . fuel lni_.
Uon. unlimited motor..,.....,.,
towing pq, 31.000 miloo, Wll
coneider ¥tlhic:te on lflde. 3()&amp;.
171· 7142 oltw llftm.

74

e \!2)

PL.ACe5 IN
l-IN~, Of'AY?

--

lololl - wwt.'
nawiMIOII
t200.
Colt 114·441· 4141 oft• 1 or

~:-:-----·It--

1-V·IIIIIopa.I.000-

0 - - 1 1 o f . - -.

1111 J -

1Hi Mtjor League

Q

IQ

HINIII

. 7:35 (IJ Honeymooner~
o.ktlri
1111 Highway to
HMven Petty 1111ef who finds

1:00 ())

e (%1

a million dOllars must dec ide
his future , (R) Q
(I) Fltltln' Hole (R)
Cll • [I) Perlecl ltrangell
Larry 1e8chll Belkl the
American rl1ual of dellng, (A)

:
·

~

o..

llll
at Perlonne-•
Shakeapeare·a Ioree abou1
mlttlktn Identity and family
devotion,
all • C The New Mlkt

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondhlon.t liflltime gueran· ....
tN. locel ret.enc. furnilhed. ·,
Free lltlmM•. Cell collect ~
1-814-237· 0481. doy oo nigl.t: ,_.
RogeraB•••ment ··
Waterproofing.

,,05

Cha~lt and his e1uden1s

dlacuaa their though11 on

EEK &amp; MEEK

SWEEPER end uwing machine
r~tP~ir , part a. and auppll•. Pick
up and delivery, Davi1 Vacuum
Cle•ner, one half mile up
Georg• Cr..tc Ad . Call 1!114·
441·0214,

~=~~J:i,

I ~ CXJT ~ITH MY
. CaJBR£SSMMl LAST N16HT

Wh\AT

HPfroXD?

QI,C,CO
Kill)J,.,

PubliC Penn and Tailer.

cruucrs Cf IIJleRtsr,

ERR::f&lt;S lkl JL'OOWJJT,

AIJD A10W.LY !.U!AL·
1snc I~TA11CtJ Cf
(OIJSrlli.JWr ~

Vinyle &amp; Aluminum Siding.
Storm wlndowt &amp; doort. over
hang gunert. Free 11tlmatet.
Ph. 81 4·441-6332 ,
ht•rior Stucco, Plllttr and
Piut• Repair. Watlr. by the hour
or by the lob. ftHettlmate. Call
614-288·1182,

known 11 the bid boys of

mtglc, blend comedy and
mtglc In 11111 performance, Q

t.OO ()) 7od Club
• (J) 1111 FIC!t Of LH1 The
gtr11 find 0u1 1t11t a young

alngar flara her attr
pollntill, (A)
til PIA llo,.ttng
Cll • [I) llaGQyver

'' !

; ". .\QcuNewa
lpaal.. lovllt Unklft: llwn

Dlyt Ill lilly

0 LMy King Uval tn dep1h

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Fetty TrM Trlmmlnt. ttump
removal. Ctll304· 175· 1331 .

HAVE Ya.J SEEN

Rottry or cable 1ool drilling.
Mott well I compiMed sam•d..,. .
Pump all• and service. 304·
891·3S02

NASTY NH&lt;IARF ~

NO .,. DO YOU

LEFT"
FCRCANP?

THINK HE's

ANYTHING ABCUT ITON ..,e;
SIX O'CLOCI&lt; NEWS.

=

eSix Da~ PIUI 20 Years: II

Drlllmll
(I) • ll)
Megan
makll 1 deelalon •egl&lt;ding
D•- obHtalon will&gt; speed ,

Plumbing
Heeting

&amp;

~f...,... Newt A wrap up

'

CARTEA "S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth anti Pine
Otlllpolla. Ohio
Phone 114·441·3188 or au.
441·44n

of 10day"t ,.wa and a look
lhetd to 1omorrow'a newa
atorllt, (1 :00)
ew~oep

10:30 ()) AIMrtoln 8naptholt

BARNEY

(IJ'Mijor LII(IUe llllbltl
[J) lfMI Tiler Qo
Pullllc Penn lnd Teller.
known 11 the bad boys or
m1glc. blend comedy and
magic In lhlt pertormence, t;1

HAVE A GOOD VISIT
WITH YORE
SISTER

Electrical
Refrigeration

!Ill IHI Newt

MAW

e (!) USA Tonlgltt

A"khntllli or cDmm•cilli wirIng. New ..-vice or r...ra.
UcenHd tlectriden. E11imalt
fr... Ridenour Electrical. 304·
871·1788,

11:00 (I)

J • J Wetlt' SlfVic.. Swimmirtg
poo61 , clt1etnl, wefla. Ph. I 14·
248-9281 ,

McCormick

.1121

(I) lntlde 1M POA Tour (R)
[J)IignOII
(!]) Not AI P - Ate
l1riiQhl Look 11 ""
dyntmlet or the parenl child
reiltionlhlp and .,plore
IIIIOiional connlcla In hOrnet
children are rallld by

.c:;:;.

§;Y
Curren!
reportl on world ec:onomlca
and flnlncill , _ . wt1h Lou

.. •.

-·

Dobbl, (0:30)
11:30 (J) liS Tonight Show
til IDortiCenler (L)
(I) . . . , ftl Ctncinnlltl

e

.·

•i.:•Q

Wttterton' t Wtter Hauling • . -:rutoftable rattt, immediate
·
2.000 g•llon deti't'ery. cisterna. •. _,
poolt, wetl. etc. call 304· 571· .., 1
2t11.
~·

8

~

Form•tv Ken 's now Johll't
Wtter Sent~. John W.ttertOft
Jr. own• . 1.000 Of 2.000 ...
' 304·878· 2241 .

87

-IItie ond

• (J) (I) • il) Ill!
1111 .....

General Hauling

R • A Water Strviee. Home
dtternt. wtHt. pools fiN...
Formerly Jamet BOYI Wittf',
Same rtt11. Call 304·8715·
1370,

e ()) as Nlgllt CGIIII When

H.trry"a doQ 111111 D1n, hila
COIWincld lie hal rabin (R)
10:00 (J) Gil NIC lpeclal

Sltrkl Tr• and Lawn Service.
lawn c.-e. lendacaping, ttump
removal, 304· 57$. 2842 or
571·2903,

&amp;

- • k e r a lnd celtbrllln

1:30

1 HAvE A ~AT FEAR

Uphol1tary

P.l.

(JJiporta Torllahl Action
packld tp011t hig!IHghll wl1h
Nick Cherll1l encf Jlrii Hubef,
(0:30)
·•rtutf' Cll Ute
Nlgllt &lt;lrMnlpan II ualgnld
to In illlnd riiiOWnad for Ht
¥00doo. (R)
T....., .1o11n MD That
Old Olng of Mini

ea

PEANUTS

• OF 6EIN6 BORING ..

WHAT'S THE MOST
BORED YOU'VE
EVER SEEN ?

6ESIOE5 ~16HT

NOW?

a

.(!)LIIIIMw
12:00 ()llunll IIIII Allin
(D~(R)

1;-;::&amp;.._..
!IJIIIftOII

.......,_.,Uptall . . . . . .

'•

.. _ _ 12_1'11o_ !
In tan:tuea ,, '
~ 0111 , ,

..., ......

104·11'1·4 14 ••

__

.. . . ·:·
_,

--.

.

.,
'

'

ware - : ·

Complele the chuckle quoled
by filling in the missi ng words

you d&amp;velop lrom step No. J below .

I

"Wow, Did, I didn't know you were a letterman," beamed
my S?n. He louncl a IWRttr In the attic. ,Biushlf!9 . 1 said. "I
waan t. The _IWB~ttr btlong_s to your MOTHER :

BRIDGE

9 lllallllf:4 UYe newt
with PI1FICii Emory and
~lrltln Undqul••, '1 :00)

NORTH
.AK

So orten the right play requires the
'KIOU
suppressil&gt;n of natural bridge in·
• K51
.KQ6 i
stlncts. Here's a good example, 1\tany
times with 18 high-card points the
~
opener will jump to only three hearts , ~T
.Q IOU 1
but here North thought that his king of
Q
,61
diamonds was as good as an ace after . • Q J 10 8 7 a
+I
West's overcall, so he jumped right to • A 12
' •lOUTS
game.
, SOUTH
Declarer won the diamond opening :
,j,
'
lead with his ace to lead a trump right
away - normally good procedure, ,
•Au
West grabbed the ace and continued
with the diamond 10, king from dum·
Vuloerable: East· West
my, ruft East returned a club to
Dealer: North
:
West's ace and West took the selling
t
trick with lhe diamond jack, Despite Wett
Eut
Soe..
the need to draw trumps, that vulnera·
Pau
ble overcall by West should have
Paa
Pua
alerted South to the likelihood that Pua
'
J
West held both aces as well as a si1·
card diamond suit SO he should lllok
Opening lead: • Q
for a counter to the predictable
defense.
East then returns a spade or a clu ~
The right tactic Is to capture the di· declarer can throw his other dlam01
amond opening lead with the king in on dummy's club king before retu~ ,,',
dummy , Then play a low club back to ing to his hand to finally lead a tru111 •
the jack, West will win with his ace And , If East playa back a hearllft
and play another diamond, but now ruffing, he will not bave another he~ ,1
South can play low when East ruffs, If lelt with which to ruff ,

'A

usu
•u1u

.J

t•

u

•

..

•"

by THOMAS JOSEPH
1 Vealer

5 Capacity

10 Russian
city
11 Tongue12 Volcanic

'

.

,,:•

dish

spew

5 Cambric,
e.g.
6 Author I 7 Zola novel
Levin
18 Spoken
7 Nursery 20 Uquld
word
measure
8 Concept 22 Inclined
9 Rossini.
entrance
operatic Z4 Grandeur
hero
Z5 "- but the

13 Tooth
substance
14 Senseless
16 Indian
17 Man doth
- live by

bread, ,
19 Sell
21 Biblical

11 Basic

;

80 Extensive
32 Je118lca
or Hope
34 lshmaellte
35 Donated

27 Brazilian

.

36 Exceeding
38 VIntage
auto

Brave"

40 Hostelry

42 Coal '
15 Grand· 26 Before (Lat) extract
parenlal 28 Rational
43 Had dinner

Rockfish

.,

(1965 Dim)

belief

mountain

28

-..

3 Float
on air
4 Custard

laahlnR

23

,.,

DOWN
1Pass
between
peaks
2 Macaw

ACROSS

ln11N1twt wt1h top

I DON'T KNOW ., THERE: WASN'T

Ie

mac:ta this date months belore we

UNSCRAMBlE lET.TERS TO
GET ANSWER

mulbeny

RIOIQI4t undercov.~r agent
-.eta Thorn1011'1 wilt and

RON'S Ttlewlalon Service .
Hou .. c... on RCA. Ouuar.
QE. Specltling in Zenith. Ctll ~
304·578· 2398 or 114· 4•1· • '
2464,

84

help widow MOure $2,200
due from a union penalon,(R)
I!Jl Prlmenewa Wrap ups ol
the dly"s wend ,.WI and In
depll1 fNture reports. ( t :00)
e (!) MOVtl: Key to
Rlblccl, P~n t INR) (1 :40)
(IJ MOVIE: Derby'l RIIIQIII
(NA)(2:01)

1:30 Cll ell) HMd of 1111' Cle11

MotorcyciM

1111
n.-.

Adding the manikin /11nd turned B.lmblnl's
act lnto a real attention grabber ,

I!Jl c....n.. &lt;0:3X

..

Home
Improvements

63

Straw U .OO btle, Morgan
Wuodlawn Fttm. At. 36, Pliny,
W. Vs. 304· 178· 1281 or 11op

UH .. LeT:J 'WAPE

Hemmer Hammer agrees to

Dillard Water Service· Poolt
Cist•nt. Wells. DetNirv Any:
time. Call 614-446· 7'04·No
Sund.., ellis .

&amp;

Atwlltca (T)
.[I) Judge
1111 WhHt of For1une

'

19a7 S10, P&amp;. PB. • apood, long
bod, 1600 lb. poylold, 9000
mna~ . 80,000 mllil CH 1 ye.,a
warranty. For ule or trede fof
o4dtr pick· up. Cell e14·62·
1176,

Hay

e

19 ft. Nomld eemper for ule or ...
trade. Nice and cl.., . 304·175· ~
4431 ,

85

Four vear old Appaloou. Cell
814 ·441· 0481 afttr &amp;PM or
24&amp; ·6102 Daytlmt.

Bon
7:30 (%1 Cll Newlywld Qame
(I) Ie-ttie 8poila

1979 Dodge Holiday Aambl•
motor home. .tee.. gas . h• ·
averythlnv In good thspe. 304- . ·
178· 2311,
':

1978 Ford F·100 1h ton, auto.,
good shape. &amp;1900 . Call 614·
448 ·3852 sh:er II.

like the
boers WI t"ted at the Ohio
Ttltltion that gain.d over 2.6
ibl. per drr. Rog• 8en11ey,
S.bint. OH . 513·58.t-2388 .

linton

ems11rT,.k
7:05 (IJ Sanloid and

- FRANK · AND ERNEST.

low speed worm gear for
l:model, gravely fractOf , 7.6
HP. 304·876· 4439 ther 6 p.m.
Livestock

Dobbs, (0:30)

• C llll Wheel of For1une

~

,

Coen:e - M/Qhl - Beefy - Wealth - MOTHER .

reports on world e&lt;:anomics
and llnanclel news with Lou

i

.

YESIEIDAY'S SCRAM-I.ETS ANSWERS

[J) llll MacNail/ l.lh,.r
NeWIHaur (1 :00)
1111 NIWt
I!Jl Monertlne Current

Ctll614·992· 5011. Li1le.

82

I

McComllck
(%1 PM Magulne

1970 self·contained ctmplf. 18

81

.

7:00 (I) Ha-llie and

1973 Pontiac 400, runt good.
$300. Good tires. Call614·446·
3852 tfter 6 .
1970 Chevelle SS. 4 1peed. Call
614· 985·4306 tftlf 5:00p.m.

.

8 PRINT
NUMBERED LHTERS
IN THESE SQU ARES

(HIJe-•
1:35 (I) l.lava 11 To IIHvtr

I

New rear window louver• for 82
Ford EXP . New PfiCe •1&amp;0.
Asking •1 00. Cell 614·246·
9266 after 6pm,

I.

Not·so-brlght husband to wile
as he prepared to leave the
house, "Be reasonable, dear, I

;

6

L-.J-..L-.1-.J'-..L...J

News ol
1he tntertllnmen1 wend Is
ancl1ored tlva lrom New
York. (0:30)

..

22' Star Craft. t1 ,900.; n•'D;
Comp. 11 ,400, 304-171-2383,

I
I I I" I i
t
R A S 0 V I;
s I I 1
DR ,E CY

I

IIJ ShowBiz TOday

361 Ford Cleve. •er• motor.
Tranaminion C· l . other Ford
p•rt•. Good condition. Call ·:.
814-387· 78S8,

1974 c.-nper. 21 ft .. tandem
wheet1, awning 1nd antenna. full
blth. U200 . Call 814-185·
4418,

-AMPENN

N I L US T
~7:;-TIc:...;l-=:,1.:...;1;-;,..1--1

[J) Nightly llullnlu Repon
!II el!2l CIS Newa
(!]) Newtan'a AJJDM (0:30) C

r.

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

be.

--------,

r

(I) lntlde the PO.( Tour (T)
(I) .• [I) AIC Newo
_ !;J

Cll En1trtllnment Tonight
• [I) Ptople't Court

1982 Monte Carlo. ei,, AM I FM
radio, 3.8 V-6 engine. hcellent
Condition. Call 814.448·8763.

73

O.ree• apt. 3 room• • btth.
Furni8had, lndudlng walhet,
dryer a air . Ca..n. No pllt.
Adult• only. Ret. • deprequlrld.
Colll14·441·1111.

1:30 e (%1 llll NBC NIQIItty Newt

(J)~r(L)

ft. k1 good condltkm. Sleept ti•.

1960 Empl Dune buggv. Aluml·
num wheett. Wide tirn . lots of
chrome. &amp;2896 . Ctll 614· 446·
0844.

I

a:os (I) Olltlgan'tltllnd

Auto Part•
&amp; Accessories

rust. thll'p. t2995. 11B1 Old1
Cutiatt: 2 dr .. sharp . •2995.
Coli 814-2ae-1122,

1984 Dodge Omni. 4 tpd., like
niM'. *2699. John 'IAUIOStlet,
BuiiNilla Rd. Gallipolis.

I

e

1982 Pontiac Firtblrd, 30~ V-8.
low mllet , AC, AM -FM.
Ctstette. aunroof. 84800 . Ctll
304 ·676· 7643 or 81 4 · 448·
8619,
'

1980 Ctlev , 4 tpd.. runt, no ruttl
t400, Call 614·379-2140.

I

llll .....

1183 11 fl . e.y' Linerloat~kh~:
86 HP Chryal• motor. Wal~..through bow. tiiOO. 114·912· ·813tfter4:30 .
·~7
.17' Glutron 1178 302 Ford v· B·:
motor 190 hp a-1 cond. U,9915 . -·
304-891-3438 '
-·

79

I

•

(I) Spoltlloolc (T)
[J) Dr. Who Horror of Fang
Rock, Part 1
(!]) S.C.-I City
1H1 Good Tlmea

76

1981 Trant · Am : loeded,
4&amp;,023 milet, t4.600. Cell
614· 379·2629 ,

the

low to form four simple word1,

• (%1 Ill • il) 1111 • \!2)

1917 Dodge Aspen. V·B. 318
auto .. runt great. Netds grill.
Good ~orlr. car. e800. Call
614-448·7796,

1980 . &amp; 1977 Toyota Coroll•.
Automatic, air, rear defogger.
rebuilt motor. Priced to sell . C.ll
614· 448-1e1o,

UMI

Ofour
Rearrange letters of
scrambled wor~:b

• mluck Rooen

1979 Toyota 4 whttl drive with
loll ot lltlrtt. Real th11p . C•ll
810·406-1810,

64

Furnlthld apt. ne~~~t doof to
Ubrery. Ont PfOfwtlonel ~duh
only, Porllng, Ph, 44I· 033a,

Autos for Sale

WOlD

PIUUI

1:00 (I) t11g Valley

Boats and
Motora for Sale

Now buying shell corn or Ill'
corn. CelllorlstattquotH . River
City F~tm Supply, 114·446·
2986,

j.=:::::::::;;::::;;;;;;;..l::::::::::::::::::::.
Ouroc Boara. Bred just
I
SNAFU®

71

:J

1 984 Chevy Chevlltte: 4 dr ., no

62 HP Mauey Ferguton diuet
tractor U396, 7ft . NH Hay Bind
•99S. NH Square 8tlefolharp
•995, Vermeer Round Bal8f
$2796. h8V wegon e300. Call
614-286 -6622 ,

hou••·

Furnllhtd •P•rtmtnt. U28.
util«loo pold, 1 bck, 820 Four1h,
t'.,~il, Coli 441· 44 11 oft or

Pets for Sale

36 MF Diesel tra ctor with new 6
h. tini1hed mower 13796. Po1t
hole digger 1276. Grader Blade
•175. landtcape bo• S295. Call
81 4· 286-8622 .

Bed spread. curtaint, clothe•
pres1, Ironing board, •mall tabla.
oillempa. 23 11 lincoln Avt . Pt.
Pt

Sote1 and chairs priced from
'396 to 1996. Tebln •so end
up to 11215. Hide·• ·beds $390
to •596. Reclinert '226 to
'376. Lamp• UB to •us.
Dlnetttl 1109 and up to 1495 .
Wood table w-e chair• U86 to
n95. Detk t100 up to 1315.
Hutchet t400 tnd up . Bunk
beds complete w·mattretlft
1296 and up to t395 . Baby bedl
'1 10. Mettrtllet Ot bo• tpringl
lull Of twin t68 , 1irm 178, and
t88. Queen seta '226 , King
t350 . 4 drewer chnt tl59. Gun
cabinets 8 gun. Gu or electric
rang~ •375 . Baby mtttr111es
'35 &amp; Ull , Bad ham• UO
UO • King frame t60. Good
11laction of Mdroom suite•
metal cabinett, headboards t3ci
end up to t8&amp; .

56

3 . pc·blutt bath lluurat, lighted
med. cabinet, t1 10. Callafter6 ,
304-e75-5S46 .

Valley Furniture, new &amp; uud.
large tection of quelitv furnl·
ture . 121111 Eutern Ave .
'
Gallipolis.
USED APPliANCES
dryert, refrigerators,
rangea . SkeQlll Applltncet,
Upptf' River Rd. beside Stone
Crest Motel. 814·446· 7398 .

~~=::=:::::::::::::;r:;::=:::::::•:•:•:•~:·:,..:·:n:,

Utility bldg: 27'x36'x9' . 1J ' •8'
track doar &amp; 3' walk door.
$4444 erected . Iron Hone
Bldgo, 814-332,9746 .

6 hp, 2· tp Wlrard (Western
Auto) riding lawn mower. 26 "
cut . Call 304· 675 ·3092.

Wt~hert .

,&amp;
WlJtf

WED.1 JUNE 24

TUTDAIIY

EVENING

1II ft.
No .motor. tiOO. 010 . C.tr...
814· 992· 3413,
.-

/ · LJ
•
l

Gravely tractor refrigerator. cot·
fee &amp; end tabiH. Kirby twaeper,
concrete model• ready far buti·
nun . 304· 676-11162.

County Appliance, Inc. Good
used appllencet and TV iets.
Open BAM to 8PM . Mon thru
Sat. &amp;14·441·1899, 627 3rd.
Ave. Gtllipoli•. OH .

•

.
Gt.tron Boat Md tnU.;, ·:

NBw Oakwood hanging t wing·

1771

'tlU

1986 24 ft. Pontoon floatboat,
70 HP EVenrude Fnotor, tt*ler, · ~
Lott· btr11e. lea 11: Gtlllpolia.-.·
Boot Club, Co11114-448-47112,•.::

Plttl!c cistern state approved,
pla111c teptic tanks, pla1tic
culvert,, m.,tal culvertt. !JON
EVANS ' ENTERPRISES. Jack·
ton. Oh. 614·286· 6930.

3 ,0150 Netiontl Geographic
Magaz inet: 1961 to 1987. 2
office detkt with t~tpewriter
e~etention, 1 child' I detk/ chair.
Cabinet Iewing mechin11 &amp;
stool, accanoriea . Call 614·
446· 7781 after 8PM .

to Rent

75

Callahan·, Used Tire Stlop. Over
1.000 tire1, 1izu 12, 13, 14 , 16.
16. 16 .15 . 8 miles out Rt . 218.
Ceii614 ·26B·62111 .

•12&amp;. New Oakwood porch

1 ALWAY? LOOK~
lO ~'T.AJ.KI~ TW.~S',

86 Honda Shadow BOo. Watlf '
cool•.... aft driven. 3000 mit•.
01450, C'lll14· 3ae. a288,

Mise , Merchandise

g lld tr· .2 ~o . Call 614·448 ·

VISITINb AIM ~ ..

•
'
:
.
.

Television
Viewing

197.t KtwaNki 250 Dirt Ilk• ·
t320. Coli 814-441-2819 ,
'

Large capacity uprillht frltltzer.
very good condition . Call 614 ·
448·8832 after 8 .

Space for Rent

47

1978VJ Hart., Davtdaon, 80 cu.
in. 7Sih anntvenary model.
Electra Glkle. FuHy driiHd.
atereo, redio. I.OOO mil•. htrt
nice. •4.500. Call 814· 379·
2808 tft:ltl' 5 :00PM .

Good uaed Color TV '• for tale o_r
trade. Call614 ·446· 1149 .

54

l:Cl!Jbl:llrl!%

1/JW.A WilfN "'f'S A~Y

Notic:t. Savt DY• 60
p«cent, New mettrtu liquidation sale to bt held Thurtdty,
June 26, inllde the Gallipolia
Holid.., Inn. Sale runt from
10:00 AMtiiB : OOP~ . No phone
cellt Plene. Twin mlttrn ...
start at U9. _Huge telection.
frH balloons fot the kiddi11.
Don 't Mi11 tt l

Hutilator all metal fireplace.
complete- e310. Call614·446·
1340.

10•60. 2 bedroom•. No peu.
Coll614 · 949· 2•24,

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
room aptrtm..,.ta at Vlllege
Manor and Riverside Aptrt·
menu in Middleport. From
U16, Including utllitie1 . C1ll
810-992 ·7787. EOH ,

2 bldioom houee and tf)1. tor
rent In
PM1111tv fur·
nlahld. -.olft reQuired. Call
114·62·1»11,

c--

3 bed roam houte. 2206 N Main
St . 304,.68· 1728,

2 BR apartment, furnithed.
Urge roomt &amp;. yard. Main St.,
Che1hire. t200 month. Wtttt
paid , Cat1114· 245· 5818.

candltkMI. Mutt HI to tppr•
oloto. ooldng ffOOO, WI• ... on
lond _ ,... , Cllll 814·119·
3151 ,

11•80, 2 - -' Milko gild
- l t 4·tl2·
1101.
•

3 bedroom . Rent plut utitltl".
Gallipolis Ferry. For inf. cell
304-878-408e.

3 to 5 acre• on Rt. 36 with
highway lronttga. Call E.R.A.
Town &amp; Country Ret! httte
Broker. 304·876· 61548 or 875·
2817 atter II .

lv Ownet · Price reduced. l br,
1 y, beth•. dining. recrution
room. 2 cer glftQI. 304-676·
410.,
All tltt.. 1''1 ecrll , FHA IP·
proved. City wallr, outbldgt,
private, Rt. 2. 12 min. from Pt .
Pl. U5,000. 304-89&amp;· 3681 .

6 roomt and bath at llngtville.
UOO. per month plut depotit.
Approved rlflfencel reQuired .
Coll614·982-12e6,

1984 14•86 Mobile Home, 3
lott, ali electric, fenced yard.
EvergrNn. e18,600. Call 614·
446· 1628, 448· 1339,

197&amp; Rochttttr 14x70 mobile
home, total elec. new carpet.
07,900, Neg, 304,876· 7618 ,

For tale by owner: 2 itory haute
In Middleport overlooking p~rlr. .
30 yr. guamteed vlnyle tiding,
w·w oarpM, 1 1h bath. unique
woodwork. 014· 992·5126.

Houses for Rent

8 room houte in Pomerov . Call
814,992 ,3438 ,

2 BR, 10 yr., mint condition,
beautiful location. Near Nor·
thur. Priced right or wilt trade.
Col 814· 288·8200,

3 BR houH, cent. air. attached 1
car garaae. 38 Chillicothe Rd.
Coli 8·8, 448· 28e3 ,

41

NEW AND USED MOBilE
HOMES KESSEl 'S QUALITY
MOBilE HOME SAlES, 4 ML
WEST, GAlliPOLIS, RT 36,
PHONE 81•· «8-7274 .

12a70, 197&amp; Schultz mobile
hom•uc. cond. Price negotiable. Call ev11ning• 114 -4468e48,

3 BA, 11inyl tiding, rural watltl',
nice nelghbmhood. t19,000.
Coli 814, 448· 3249, 814-448·
1339, or 1!114· 448· 11128.

Furnished Rooms

• a fjlZZ) e. "
nat'IOn m
•.. ' ...
I~~=i~i;;~~~~==-~~=~~:;:;~-;:==1446·«10 sfter7pm.

By owner: Smtll 2 BA home.
From StAt 21 8·tlktKrinll' Rd.
1 / 8 mll•flrl1 houte on right.
t12.000·wlll help finance. Call
814· 448· 2917,

3 IR. 2 bathe. gartge. llfge
kitchen, large dining room, AC .
Blh% intere1t U . OOO down.
take over paymentt. Call 81 4·
448-2472,

KIT 'N' CAIILYLE ®by Larry Wright

P~bllc

Own your own apparel or thoe

ltore.

Household Goods

n-TI"'-rr--

,,

'

,,_

&amp;eaport
Coiffure

..

shop

29 Turkish
standard
30Jeremiad
31 Scheme
33 - up

••
•,

,,,'

(horse

command)
34 In the past
37 Sports

,.t

..'•

setting
39 Over-

•••
.' \

wrought
41 Brazilian

'...

tapir

44 VIndicate
45 Begone!
46 Swiss city
47 Wlth us
DAILYCRYPTOQUOtES-Here'show to work it:

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One letter stands lor another, In this sample A Is used

for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc, Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different
CKYPTOQUOTE
6-24
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F T G

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ARE LOST IF YOU CAN'T MAKE OTHERS WORK FOR
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�Page- 14- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

City Holding enters trade market

Pomeroy Mayor's Court

CHARLESTON. W.VA . - Tho common stock of City Hold ing
Company began trading on June 23 in the NASDAQ market,
according to James L . Burns. pres ident and chief executive
offi cer. Cit y Holding Company. whose trading symbolts CHCO,
Is a bank holding compa ny which owns Th e City Na t lanai Bank
of Charleston, The Bank of Cross Lan es, and effecti ve .June 26,
Tho Peoples Bank of Point Pleasant.
Bl\rns not ed that Cit y Hol~ing Compa n.v 's entry int o the
NASDAQ market provides broker s and other s with immediate
access to the best bid and asked pri ces and other Information
about th o company' s shares throughout the trading day. Those
prices an• avai lable over more 1han 150.000electronlc terminals
In brpkers' offices th roughout lh(· United Stales and tho free
world . ·rrading dat a are also distributed wid&lt;•ly through wire
services for selective dissemination by newspapers and r adio

Seven dPfendanfs forfeited
bonds and three others were
fined In the courT of Pomeroy
Mayor Richard Sey ler Tue ~ day
nlghl.
forfeiting were Car l Qualls,
Pomeroy, S43. failure to yield the
r ight of way; Tamal a Jones ,
Pomeroy. $45. speeding; Earlene Stobarl. Racine. $43. speeding; .John Ingels, Oak Hill, $4:1.
pa ssing on a double yellow line:

cmd t elC"v ision station s.

Cit y Holdin g Co mpany repon ed r&lt;'Cord ea rnin gs in the first
quarter of 1987 of $451!,000. Earnin gs per share increased to 97
cent s, compared to 86 cents per share in 1986. an in&lt;'I'Case of
almost 1:1percent. The mos t rcc(•nt known sa le of City lloldlng
Compan y stock was $:l1.7S.
In addition to increased market vi sibil it y, NASDAQ givrs
Cil y Holding Compally the advantage of muiliplc m arket
makPrs That m mprtr to offrr th e brst bid on asked prices. as
opposed to a singl e specia list on the fl oor or a stock exchan ge.

Area deaths
Ira HiJI

i ra Hill. son of Elijah and Clara
Morris Hi ll, iorrnerly of Meigs
County, diC&lt;I .Juno 12 at l(oekledge, Fla .
He Is su rvived by his wi le,
Allee Theiss Hill and two so ns
and daughters-In-law. Gail and
Nancy Hill and Dal e and Kathy
Hill of New Wat erford. Ohio.
Besides his parent s. he wa s
prec eded In deal h by two sist resrs, Ed na Pay nI cr and Ma r.v
Radcliffe and lwo brothers, Wni lace Hill and the Rev . A ibN! Hill.
Burial wa s In Rock lcdgt• Mcmorlai Gardens.

Divor&lt;~t'S

!,'l'anted

Di vorces have been gra nted In
Meigs Coun ty Common Plea s
Court 10 William R. L.evacy fr om
Fred a Sue Lcvacy: Phil Zedcker
from Tammy Zcdeker: ,Ia nice L.
Leo from Louie D. Lee.
Hen a Parks has been gra n led a
di vo rce from Thomas Parks and
rPs lor ed b.v lhl' court to hf'r
former namr C' heviJlirr.
Phy llis A. McConihay and
Emmons A. McCo niha y have
been granted a dissolution of
1heir marr iage.

night.
Fined In the court were Robert
H . Shamblin, Mason, W. Va., $425
an&lt;) costs and three days In jail,
driving while Intoxicated, and
Thomas Quillen, Middleport, $50
and costs, driving while under
suspension.

. ds have 4 ca IIs
Squa

Cases dismissed

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
111 Second St., ·Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

FOR THE BOTH
3RD

t.

OF YOU

TANNING BEDS

AIR CONDITON
GET READY FOR VACATION
START YOUR TAN EARLY

PERM SALE

F~sr.n•L

. l

With Fries .....................
SJ .79
,.,
. ..

. POMEROY, ott.

PH. 992·25511

_

30% OFF SALE
ALL
SWIMSUITS

FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY

, 30°/o OFF

30°/o OFF

2-9-5

at y

Vol.37, No.3&amp;

LADIES'

1 LARGE RACK OF

ATHLETIC SHOES
30°/o OFF

GIRLS, JUNIORS. MISSES

By NANCY YOACHAI\1
Sentnel News Staff
A request lor pay raises from 26 of 33 workers at
the Meigs Cou nty Department of Human Services
was denied Wednesday by the Meigs County
Commissioners.
A letter. dated Ju ne 10, officially requesting
raises "comparabl e to the total cost of living"
since their last pay raises. was forwarded to th e
commiss ioners last week by Michael Swisher.
director of the department of human services.
Commissioner Richard Jones stated that in the
11 years he has been commissioner, he has "never
had a singl e issue cau se as much public
comment."
Although loca l department of human services '
salaries are reimbursible to the county from the
Ohio Department of Human Services, salary

increases must be approved by the board of
county commissioners.
However. Jones said ,thai after hearing
comment s from people of the county, he could not
support a pay increase for the employees of the
department of human services at this lime,
regardless of what state ceilings on salaries for
that department might be.
Commissioners Manning Rou sh and David
Koblentz agreed with Jones . Said Roush, "I feel
exac!ly the same way ." Said Koblent z, "I'm also
against any raises at this time."
Koblentz added !hal for Meigs County - and
working for the taxpa yers- he felt employees at
the department of human services are bein g
well -compensated.
Jones said that in comparing surrounding

JEANS

30°/o OFF

290
NORTH SE(OND
MIDDLEPORT

ENTIRE MONTH OF JUNE

HOT WORK, HOT DAY -In the 9()-plus degree
heal Wednesday, members of lhe Middleport and
Pomeroy Fire Departments haUled a blazing
gasoline tanker. Here, they foam down the fuel a.•
the fire was nearly extinguished. The tanker,
driven by Gary W. Gregory of Reedsville, was

2 Sections 12 Pages

26 Cents

registered to MGM Farm City. He colllded wlih a
coal truck which was attempting lo pass a car on
SR 554 near Cheshire, driven by Charles A.
Weimann of Cheshire. Weimann was cited for
Improper passing. (Sentinel photo hy Lee Ann
Welch)

Two area men escaped serious
injury Wednesday as the two
trucks they were driving co llided
head first on SR o54 near
Cheshire.
Th e Jl : 45 a .m. accident saw
Charles A . Weiman. 23, of Route
1. Cheshire. cited for Improper
passing, when th e empty coal
truck he wa s driving met a
loaded gasoline lanker. driven by
Gary w. Gregory, 3o of Reedsville. Both men were wearing
sea t belt s at the time of the
accident. and neither were
trea ted at the scene for injuries.
Gregory 's truck was regis tered to MGM F'arm City . Wei·
man was attempting to pa ss a car
at the time. and his truck
sustained heavy damage.
According to emergency per sonnel at the scene, the tanker
dumped approximately half It s
2. 000 gallon load and exploded
two times. After the fire was
ex tingui shed, th e remainder of
the gasoline was pumped from
the ta,nker, whi ch was a total
Continued on page 12

In anllclpation of passage by
the state l eglslat ure of House Bill
231 regarding child support enforcement , the Meigs Count y
Commissioners discussed Wed·
nesday how their board will be
affected If The bill becomes law.
If the bill does become law. the
county's bureau of support would
be removed from the jurlsdlcltion of the common pleas court.
and the commissioners would
have authority to contract wi th
the common plea s court, the
prosecullng attorney's office, th e
department of human services or
another agency under their direct control, to take over operations of the support bureau .
If the bill becomes law and the
commissioners would not take
action by a certain tim e to
contract with an agency to take
over the support bureau. it would
_automatically become a par t of
the department of human
services.
Funding from the slate would
help support the bureau reported
Jones.
In other matfers, the commissioners voted to extend a verbal

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Women's Summer

Sandals, Casuals,
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50% OFF

Men's &amp; Children Selected -

Casuals &amp; Dress S

50% OFF

Selected Men, Women's &amp;
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arrangement between the county
and Genera l Telephon e Com pany of Ohio to help eliminate
accident~! damages of burled
tel ephone cable and pedes tal s
dur ing road maintenance by
count y highway department
workers.
Forrest Turner and Earl
Draper, of GTE. reported they
have had no problems with
equipment damages since they
entered Into the trial arrangement with the county in January .
Turner reported thai GTE Is
Impressed with the arrangement
in Meigs County and is looking
toward it as a model for working
out similar arrangements with
other counties. townships and
municlpalilles.
Said Phil Robert s, Meigs
County engineer. In regard to the
trial arrangement, "It's ama zIng what a little co mmunication
will do."
In other busines s the commi ssioners scheduled a public meet ingfor I p.m . next Wednesday , in
their office at the courthouse, to
hear comments regarding an

application from Bill Pullins to
use salt brine for dust and lee
co ntrol on a
driveway and
parking area on private propert y
In Salisbury Township. The brine
would be applied by J.D. Drlllin~
of Raci ne.
Robert s reported that Count y
Road 21 (Hobson Drive) Is
scheduled for hot mix pa ving on
Thursday morning. and that if
possible, tralflr will be mainta ined during the paving proc ess.
He reported that 700 tons of hot
mix will be needed to pave th e
half mile stretch of road.
He also report ed he expect s to
receive color proofs of the new
M eigs County map by the end of
Ju.ly.
In a related matfer , the board
accepted bids for bituminou s
ma terials for July from Asphalt
Materials Co. for mixing and
sealing grades, and from Ash land Oil Co. for priming grades .
In final business, a! the request
of County Auditor William Wickline, the board approved an
advance draw of $60,000 for
county operations, to be repaid
from the next tax settlement .

adding thai at the time. "the)' knew what the
sal aries were" and wPre satisfied just to be
getting a job.
Roush pointed ou t th at the sa laries of those
emp loyees have increased si nce their Initial .
hiring, since they received step increases within
1heir classifications (Which are es tabllshed by the
slate). not Including- fully paid Insurance benefits
and longev it y pay after a certa in number of years.
The commissioners moved to nolify Swisher to
infor m his emp loyees that after cons idering Iheir
request. they have decided, by unani mous vote, to
deny the rai ses.
Tht" commissioners said they will be exploring
tbe cou nt y's overall financia l condition with the
auditor and treasure!' to determine If and when It
will be possible to give raises to the other
employees they feel are being underpaid.

Tanker,
coal truck
collide

lo~s.

You won't want to miss
these savings.

passes
locks bill '

Wi\SHINGTON (UP!)
Thirty-four mtlllon dollars for
a new lock and dam on the
Ohio River ncar Gallipolis L•
included in a $16.2 hllllon
energy and water approprla·
lions htll approved Wednes·
day hy the Hou se.
Last week word was received loca lly that S34 mllflon
had hceen approved by the
House Appropriations Com·
mlttee.
The new lock and dam,
when completed In several
years, would replace' a 40year-old stru c ture that
shippers say Is one of the most
antiquated on lhe river.
The allocation could mean
as many as 500 construction
Jobs for the area at "It's
peak," according to Army
Corp of Engineering olflclals.

EX:PLI~N~&gt;TI()N GIVEN -11 lhe
of Tupper. Pl-.ilta
reject an
i\ granlto upgrade their New age sy•tems, It will be up
to the Meigs County Health Department to see that sewage
prohlems In the community tire corret:ted. Jon Jacobs, Melp
County deputy henllh commissioner, cxplalM to Tuppers Plains
residents at a public mcellng held last nlghl at the Tupper. Plain•
fire station, what they should expect if the health department II
placed In chllrg" 11f the slluutlon.

.

Tuppers Plains citizens
.
giVe vtews on proJect

.

Thanks, but no thanks . We
ca n' t afford your generosity.
Thi s seemed to be the messa ge
from the majority of resident ~ at
a Wednesday night public meet ·
lng In Tuppers Plains in regard l o
plans to move forward with a
slwblc Environmental Protection Agen cy grant to upgrade
sewa~e
systems within the
co mmunity .
Based on the wi shes of the
people of Tuppers Plains . the
Meigs County Commis sioners
will be making the final decision
within th e nex t three to 14dayson
whether or not to proceed with
th e project.
Conductin g idS! night's meet Ing wa s Commiss ioner Ri chard
.Jones.
Thus far, according to .JonPs,
approximately $90,000 has been
spen t on the project; $4,,WO by
E PA and
by the co unt y .
Under the gra nt , EPA Is to payS"
percent of the total projec t costs
and the Individual proper ty
owners arc to pay thl! remaining
15 per ce nt to upgrade their ow n
systems.
Before taking questions, .Jones
reca pped the projecl whi ch began In 1978 with enforcement of
an EPA building ban In Tuppers

s:.o.ooo

'

Plains. due to sewage disposal
probl ems. An original ban in 1972
was never enforced.
The comm issioners then began
a search lot funding sources to
assi st Tuppers Plains In bringing
the sewage systems into compllancewlth health standards . At
I hal tim e, EPA pledged at least
7f&gt; percent of the costs, in the
form of a grant, and possibly 85
percent, .Jones said.
In the final analysis, EPA
could be putting In as much as
$:i16,000 .Jones rcpor ·cd.
.A public meeting Nas held at
Eastern High School Jones said,
to discuss the EPA ofrer. Residents told the commissioners to
procred with the gra nt
application.
The grant was approved and
the englnrerlng firm or ,John
David Jones and Associates,
Columbus, was hired to develop
project pl ans. It was determ ined
1ha 1 the most cost effective
measure of corrr•cting the ,ewage problems In Tuppers Plains
would be to upgrade each Individual system .
Residents wrrc kept Informed
Of lhP proje&lt;'l through periodic
public mee tin gs .
Continued on page 12

Jackie Gleason, 71, 'The Great One,' cancer victim

Tennis Shoes

FORT LAUDERDALE , Fla.
(UPI) - Jackie Gleason, who
emerged from the working- class
world of the Ralph Kramdens to
savor the sweetness of life as a
· show business gianT In all respects, has died. "The Great
One" was 71.
Gleason died Wednesday night
of cancer In his home In !he
fashionable For! Lauderdal e
suburb of Lauderhill, with his
third wite, Marilyn, by his side.
"He quietly, comfortably
passed away," she said.
Gleason had been released last
week from Imperial PoinT Medical Center In Fort Lauderdale,
where he was treated for cancer.

Chap.ntan Sho_es
Phone 992-2815

Thunderstorms likely
night. Low ht upper
Morning showers Friday,
highs near 80.

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

co unties, he has found that co unty employees
being support ed by monies from th e county
general fund arc the ones that are being
underpaid.
The average annual employee sal ary at the
co unty courT house Is $11 ,158 - more than $6,0011
less than the average employee sal ar)· of $J7.449
at the department of human services. The highest
paid Meigs Count y deputy sheriff rece ives $13,811
per year.
,Jones said he would be making every cffm·t in
the next two weeks to give some amount of pay
Increases to the other employees in order to close
the gap slightly between them and the department
of human services.
.Jones noTed that he assisted many of the people
who signed the petition for pa y Increases at the
department of human services grt their jobs.

Meigs Commission dis_cusses
effects of House Bill 231
House

Begins 8:00A.M.
Thursday, ]une .25

E. Main St.
/SA

en tine

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, June 25, 1987

Copyrighted 1987

JR.
MISSES
WOMEN'S
SIZES 3-13 SIZ,ES 8-18 SIZES 311-44

UMMER SALE

Pomeroy, OH.
Master Charge

Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs., Sar.9-5; Fri. 9-8

'

Pi&lt;'k 4
6305
Supper Louo

r-----------------~

Chapman Shoes

IT'S
OFFICIAL!

456

Commissioners deny request for pay raise

oo•~••••o

LEE
COOL RIDERS

Daily Numlwr

•

,.

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY
VALLEY
"It. the End of the Po1111rvy-Mason Bridge

The Meigs County. Common
Pleas Court cases of Larry E.
Cummins. et al. aga)nst Flson'sWestern Corp ., et al, and Linda
Milliron against Ronnie Keith
Hubbard have been dismissed .

SYRACUSE

992-3982

\

Speelal of the Week

Ohio Lottery

Reds win
5-4 in
tenth
Page 3

Sharon Stewart , Middleport, $48,
Gallia-Meigs Community Ac· •
Veterans Memorial ·
speeding: Joe Proffitt, Racine,
tlon Agency will hold free clQTuesday
AdmissionsHillary
$46, speeding: Harold Johnson.
Purley, Pomeroy: James McCo- Ihlng day for low-Income perso ns
Racine, $46, speeding.
on Thursday from 9 a.m . to 12
fined were David Leach. Ma- mas, Proctorville; Grace Camp- noon . The clothing bank Is
bell, Pomeroy.
ri etla, $57 and costs, speeding;
located In the old high school.
Tuesday Discharges .,., None.
Betty Mankin. Pomeroy, $100
building in Cheshire.
and cost s, cruelty to another's
animal. and Lance Herman,
Middleport. $63 and costs, no r--~-.--"'"'
..--_----___,.,.,..._,..,~.,_~_,
_,.,.--.:-::_,..--~
. ~-r"".. -.~r-\
operator' .s license.
~
~
._, ._,

Harold A. Reeves, .Pomeroy,
forfeited a $450 bond posted on a
charge of driving willi e intoxicated and a $50 bond posted on a
cha rgf' of failing to control hi s
vehicl e in the court or Middleport
Ma yor fred Hoffman Tuesday

M eigs Cou nt y Emergency
Medical Serv ices repor ts four
cal ls Tuesday; Middleport at
9:30 a.m . to Syca more St. lor
Dorothy Davis to Holzer Medica l
Cen ter; Tuppers Plains at 1:22
p.m. transported .James McComa s from an auto accident on
Route 7 to Ve!Pran s Memorial
· Hospital: Middl eport at 3: 4&amp;p.m .
to Bradbury for Mary Ann
Carsey who wa s treated but not
tra nsported; Pomeroy at 4: 12
p.m . to Pea coc k Ave. for Gra ce
Campbell to Vetera ns Memorial
Hospit al.

Free clothing day

Hospital news

Middleport Mayor's Court

r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=====;;;;;;;;;;;;==;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1

A marriage lice nse has been
Issued In Meigs Cou nt y Probate
Court to Ricky Joe Morris. :16.
and Kathy A . Perr ine, 3:!. bo th of
Pom eroy .

Wednesday, June 24, 1987

\

He had triple bypass heart
suq;ery In 1978 and suffered from
emphysema and diabet es .
Gleason called himself " The
Great One, " and so did many who
knew one of the most flamboyant
stars In history- a comic genius
who disdained rehearsal and
eagerly consumed prodigou s
quantities of food, liquor, cigarettes and anyThing else that
wou ld prompt his classic declaration, "How sweet It Is! "
" He was brilliant," said Milton
Berte. "He led the life 'The Great
One' wanted to lead."
"What Is there you can't
remember about The Great
One? " added June Taylor, sister

of Marilyn Gleason and leader of
the leggy dancers who became a
fixture on Gleason's television
variety show .
" Jackie Gleason wa s a man
who loved to make the world
happy," she said. " He loved life.
He was bigger than life. He
enjoyed what he did . He enjoyed
his fun . He enjoyed making
people laugh."
Gleason sold millions of records as a bandleader, won a
Tony Award In the Broadwa y
musical "Take Me Along" and
received an Oscar nomination
for his gripping portrayal of the
aging pool shark Minnesota Fats
In "The Hustler."

But his grea tes t success wa s in
television, a medium th at he
dominated in the 1950s and 1960s
with his va riety shows - and
which he has never left , thanks to
reruns of his clas sic series, ·'The
Honey mooners."
Set almost entirely In a bare
kitchen at 328Chauncey Street In
his native borough of Brooklyn,
Gleason, as the blu stering bu s
driver and marital combatant
Ralph Kramden. blended slapslick and pathos to create what
many consider to be the greatest
situation comedy In TV history.
Gleason developed the show
from a sketch fea tured on his
195~· 55 va riety show and then

spun II off Into a series In J%o- ,6.
Art Carm•y , who portaycd Ed
Nor ton , Ralph '' bumbling upstairs neighbor who workrd In
!he sewer and always wore a'('.
shirt , ves t and a· hat , explai ned
the succps s of the series by
say ing, "Hi s humor and mine
just st&gt;emed to click."
But anoth er explanation was
offered by Audrey Meadows,
Ralph's wile Allee. who Invariably was offered a trip to the moon
courtesy of her husband's fist
and wound up with an embrace
and The compllmen!, "Baby.
you're the grea tes t ."
"Every thing about him was
larger than life." she said.

•

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