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                  <text>Times-Sentinel

The
74

Motorcycles

y..,-..

Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va.
KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Larry Wright

1981
600. Single cyl.
on or off road ·street bib. Mag
wheels. book reck, new engine.
d-4•4. autometic. 14,000 actual . muat sell. t450. 614 -949 '1178 ford F2&amp;0 pickup, 4x4.

1bw mil-ae. no Nit, 4 speed
ifjftd 1171 .Doclvt flrt wagon

"WWIIee. Taka your p ic k
,. 2 .. .1 .00, 4x7 utility ir11iler, aJI
~.new •200.00. 304-175-

..J 421

Vena &amp; 4 W.O.

73

117• V.W. Van, 2.000 mil• on
tebuitt engine, new ~int, good
.P.. E•cel. condidon. •1100 .
et4-245-&amp;6&amp;2.

::c-•

2686.

I

Yamaha XT 500 Et S550.00.

I

304-675-3190.
1985 Honda ATV 3 wheeler

70ec.

e~tc

cond. bought new.

appro• 10 hrsuse . call304 -6751683.

; 1eao FDrd Bronco. auto., AC .• 1978 Honda 550 Of will trade for
~ Pl .. PI .,AM -FM -Caaa ., white 4 wheeler. exc cond, 304-882- ~~ whMa. Call 814-245- 2426.
• ~1111 .

1982 Honda Nighthawk. 650
ec. Must aell. 304 -675-3002, 9
am t'o 6 pm.

1,977 Je..,CJ -6 , new paint, new
. • .,•• _ 11,500 .00 . 304 -675-

'

eoos.

74

Motorcycles

1980 · 1550 Suzuki, runs good,
· lqoka good. 6600 or best offer.

Cell 614· 388-8475.

1988 Yemahe YZ 126. exc.
,cond. $1200. C.ll 614-379-

-

.ZIII .

1982 Honda CX Custom 500.
Low mileage. stereo. luggage
racks. he . Cond. Call- 614"318-8261 DIVI o• 614-388·
tl3111 Evening•.
"

1111 CR 250 Honda. Excel.
c_ond. V.W.-·.pertl for sale.
&amp;14- 38$-8358 .
' 1981 Honda ATC 260 R J.
Wheel..-. Aeceready or play. Call
614-448-2587 aftM 5:30PM .

1985 24 ft. Pontoon float boat .
70 ·HP EYenrude motor. trailer,
Lots-Exuas. See at G a l l i p o l i s ' - - - - - - - - - - . . . , . - - - - - - - - - Boat Club. Call 614-.446-4782 . r
16 ft . Mark Twain. 80 h.p.
Mercury motor and trailer. Goo.d
cond. Call 614 -446 -2568 Mornings or Evenings .

76

1,983 Bayliner 16 ft . boat with
trailer. 85 HP motor , Has walk
through wind shield. S4900.
Phone 614 -992 · 7653 after
4 :30pm.

Uied 8nd Rebuilt transmissions.
lntarnaily inspected and guaranteed. Installation avail~tble . We
buy junk 1tansmi11ions. Call
614-448- 0966 .

1987 ln\lader 16 Y.z ft. V-haul ,
open bow . 1 20 hp 1/ 0.
09,200.00. 304-675-2517.

C~evrolet enginl!t': 3 - 350 engines, 1· 400 smelt block. 1 - V· 6
front wheel drive or S-10
pick-up. Call 814· 245 ·6067 .

1986 Rinker V-190 with Eagle
drive-on trailer. equipped with
uhey brake, 170 hp 1/ 0 , call
304-675-6885.

14ft fiberglass. 18 hp Even rude
motor and trailef, $400.00. Call
304 -~75 -

1 558 .

Auto .Parts
&amp; Accessories

Straight 6 Buick engine. nowly
rebuilt transmission. 304-676·
2199 .f?r 875-1,, 3.
Four 14 Inch SS Crageti. lug
nuts end two tires, 8100 .00.

304-882- 2428 .

1 A84 Palomino pop-uP travel
treiiBf , $'1695. Can be seen at
Smith Buick-Pontiac. Eastern
Ave ., Gallipolis. 814-446-2282 .

21 tt. camper. Tandem wheels .
self-contained, full beth. awn·
ing, sleeps si" . Good condition .
03200. Call 614· 985· 4418 .
For sale: Sunline truck camper,
for 8 ft . bed. Sleeps 4 , elec-ges
refrigerator. 4 bumer stove with
oven. Furnace. excellent condition. S1 100. Call 614·992 ·
7589 for more infQrmation.

J &amp; J Water Service. SwimmlnQ

Rotary Or cable tool drilling.
Most'w.Hscompleted s.meday.
Pump pin end service. -304-

poolt, cltterns, wells. Ph. &amp;14·
2415-92815.

82

ARTHUR'S CHAIN
LINK FENCE

Residential
CommerCial . Industrial

PH. 614-245·9113
1111 Soles -

fr" btimaftt

COMPLill INSTAllATION

Termites, Ants,
Roaches, Fleas?
CALL

EXTERMITAL"
TERMITE &amp;
PEST CONTROL
NICK DINGESS

614·388-9082

e.....

A &amp; M c.'s tom Couchn end

Reuphols~, St . At. 'l. Crown
City, ()Hi 11 4-256·1 470. Eve.
e14-4U-S431 . Open dolly 9 to
4 :30. 811 . 9 :30 1o 1:30 . Old &amp;
new Uphaatered. .i !j·

I

Dump Truck Service, coal, II·
m•tone, Pnd. gravel, dirt, trllh
etc. Phone 304-8715-3190.

STEP INTO ELEGANCE when you enter the
foyer of one of the f rench Crty 's finest. for- ·
mal LR. formal dimng. spacious master
bedroom wrth offrce or se wm g room adta·
cent. den; 2 BRs. upsta ~r s, 2\\ baths. 3hre·
places, Ig.' farT)rly room, solarruf1\. covered
patio. screened porch and much more. Call
for appt.

GREEN ACRES IS THE PLACE TO BE Nice ranch style home situated on a
70x 148 ft. lot offers 3 BRs, 1'1 baths. LR.
fR w/ fireplace. eat-on kitchen. gas heat.
Green Schools. Call today .

PRICE REDUCED TO $39.900! - GREAT
BEGINNER HOME -:- Thrs home offers a
large LR wrth fireplace. kotchen, donmg
area. 3 BRs. bath. full basement. I car gar·
age, deck. fenc ed yard IUS! mrnutes to
town on Rt. 141. Call lor an apporntment.

•

!78-2903.

•

• CAR'r,E R'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Founh and Pine
Gallipollt. Ohio
Phone $14-4-\6 -3888 or 814 448-4477

84

Vol.37, No,69
Copyrighted 1987

Residential or commltfcial wif·
ing. New mviCt or repairs.
Licensed electrician . Eltimete
free. Ridenour Electrleel, 304875-178&amp;.

PICTURE THIS- You and your fam~y relax·
rng on a wrap-around deck enJOyong a terr~~
view of Ihe Ohio River. You can wrth th~ home
at the edge of town Other attractrve features
1nclude 3/ 4 BRs, 2 baths. LR wrth stone lireplace and mrrrored wall that reflect the nver
view. FR. rec. room. krtchen. drnl!tte. 2 hoeplaces. carpet. central arr II you hke lhe nver
you'll love thrs o11e.

=

AFfORDABILITY + LOCATION
One
nrce starter home near Green School. 3
BRs. bath. LR, krtchen , fireplace. full base·
ment. brg yard. Call lor 1110re detaol s.

PRICE REDUC.ED BY $5.000!!! ASiill'lt
$54 ,900' Thrs home is situated in a very
noce nerghborhood at the edge of town and
offers approx .. 2.000 sq. ft. , 4 BRs, 1'.,
baths. krtchen. drnetle. LR. FR. wood ·
burner. gas heal. cent. arr . atlached garage, cr ty sc hools. Make us an offeo.

MAKE THIS YOUR NEW ~OM- Brick
ranch . 3 BRs. l 1h baths, kr che /range,
double oven. DW, livrng rm .. onette. lamily
rm., lrreplace. lull base ment, screened
po rch. 2 car altached garage, KC school
drstnct.

OWNER LIVES OUT OF STATE AND WANTS
TO SEll IMMEDIATELY - Very nice and
roomy home rn Spring Valley . Thrs home
offers LR. eq uipped krl chen (eat·lnl. dr·
nette, 3 BRs, 2 baths. fa mr ty room wrthfrre·
place. two car attached garage, gas heat.
cent. ;or Come took at this one and make
us an offe r'

LOTS OF POTENTIAL HERE! - 2000 sq. it.
building with frontage on St Rt 160.
12x20 walk·in cooler, 12 h. darry case. Call
lor more details.

11662

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE - 446-7699

A . &amp; R Wet..- S..-..,lce. H.ome
wefl1,

pools flUid.
Formerly Jemet Boys Water.

Cell 304-875-6370.
WetteJton '• Water Hauling,
renonable rites. Immediate
2.000 gallon defhlery, cisterns,
pools. well, etc. call 304 -576·
2919,

FofmetiV Ken ' s now John ·a
Water S..-vlce. Johi'l Wetter son
Jr. Owner. 1,000 or 2·. 000 gai
service. 304-1?1-2241.

.

.• i'
'

THIS COULD BE THE ONE FOR YOU Just 5 minutes from town, this ranch style
home oilers 3 BRs, bath, kitchen w/ range.
double oven. OW, displ .. LR, full basement.
fireplace, gas and wood heat. l car garage,
city school district. Call for an appoint. -ment.

AFFORDABLY PRICED AT JUST $29.900
-Close Ia city on Rt. 141 this home oilers
kitchen . LR. family room, dining room and
full basement. Large unattached block gar·
age. Call for' an appointment.

escort operation.
Bernsen told reporters aboard the USS Lasalle
there had heen "no alarms" through the first half
of the voyage south toward the Strait of Hormuz .
But he dismissed reports late Sunday tha't the
convoy had already passed through the hazardous
strait Into the Gulf of Oman.
"They · haven 't gone through the Strait of
Hormuz," he said. "We'd )1 ave lo have a fly ing
ship. ll 's Impossible.'"
Bernsen announced that three more Kuwaiti
ships wou)d he re-llagged within the next 10 days,
but refused to give specifics of the operation,
saying: "W~'re taking It one step at a time. "
He said the Gas Prince was "doing fine. " but
"so was the Bridgeton" before it ran into the mine
that the United States believes was planted by

Iranians.
Bernsen said Sunday he felt "pretty comfortable'" about secret plans and tactics qevised to
protect the Gas Prince and Its escort ships.
"I won't say I am totally comfortable, but I feel
that the force is prepared'' to deal with any threat
that arises, he said.
Iran, which has attacked Kuwaiti shipping In
retaliation for it s support of Baghdad in the
iran-Iraq war·, has erected Silkworm mis sile sites
on its coast near the · 24-mlle-wlde Strait of
Hormuz, but they are not believed to be
operational.
Iran announced Sunday · its Revolutionary
Guards would conduct three days of naval
man euvers In the gulf, Strait of Hormuz and Gulf
of Oman beginning Tuesday.

'

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•

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0

THE FAMILY Will LOVE THIS OME! Ranch sty le home on 5 acre m/ 1. oiler s 3
BRs. bath, krtchen. lamrly room. LR. cao·
pet, heatalator fueplace. WB stove. 2 car
attached garage. 16x 32 rn -ground pool.
Chaon lrnk fence. Call lao an appornlrnent.

:
•
LOVELY
HOlE Ill TOWII - This
home has a lot to ofler. Krtchen wrth ran ge
and displ , LR with fireplace, carpel oveo
hardwood. lull basement. attached garage
wrth electric oQener, gas heat/cent. air.
storm wrndows. You'll want to see thrs one.

YOUR FAMILY WILL ENJOY
- 4 BRs, 2 baths, equipped
.
attached garage, heat pump/cent. arr,
whrrlpool in master bath, above ground
pool. Shown by appointment.

BUY A LITTLE OR BUY A LOl- This home
can be purchased with 5 acres or 58 acres
and oilers 3 BRs, 2 baths, LR. kitchen,
woodburning stove, carpel, tobacco base,
40x60 barn, cellar house and several
sheds. Call for more information .

PRICE REDUCED TO 139. 900! - GREAT
BEGINNEt HOME - This home offers a
large LR with. fireplace, kitchen, dining
area, 3 BRs, bath, full basement, I car gar·
age, deck, fenced yard just minutes to
town on Rt. 141. Call for an appornlm8nt.

of· commemorative 'belt buckles
A variety of aclivily was
designed by Darst In memory of
staged on the weekend to mark
the 50th anniversary of the men who started the emergency
squad. Representatives of the
Middleport Fir e Deparlment
Emergency Squad.
early memhers were present io
On S&lt;Jturday evening, the new receive the bu ckles plus special
quarters of Feeney-Bennett Post pins and flowers. · The awards
128. American Legion, was the went to Henry Hennessy, rep res·
scene ,of a dinner and dance lo r ented by hi s· son , Bob; B. F .
m embers of the department and Parmalee; Tom Mills, represguest with numerous remem- ented by his son-In-law, Raybrances presented.
mond Russell; Steve McElhinny ,
Roher! E . Byer. a m emher· of rep.resented by his son. Kenneth
the Middleport Department for McElhinn y; . Brad Hudson·
28 years and pa st fire chief and Dwight Frost. represented by
past president. served as master daughters, Janet Hinkle and
of ceremonies for the event, th e Narsa VanMeter; Jacob Turner,
first staged at the new American represented by sons, Bill and ·
Legion quarters. Women of the Raymond Turner. and daughter,
Opal Priddy; David Jenkins,
auxlll~ry ot the post prepared the
represented by his widow, Doca!ett&gt;ria style dinner.
In his Introductory comments, rothy, and his son, David; ·Tad
Byer pointed out that the devel - Bolin, James 'L ewis, anct George
opment of the Middleport Fire Hoeflich.
Department Emergency Squad
dates back ·to Aug. 2. 1937 when
Others remembered for play the department voted to pur- Ing a major part in the early
chase ;a first aid kit. From then development of the squad Inon, it was constant training and cluded: Emmett Shuler. represgrowth.
ented by his widow. Barbara
Pre~en1 Fire Chief Jeff Darst
Shuler; 0. E. McKinley, represand Donald Stiv er s, assistant fire ented by his son, Earl; Sidney.
chief in charge of first ald. Russell, represented by his
assisted Byer In the presentation daughters. Ruth and Myrna ;

.

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•

3 BEDROOM HOME IN PlANTS SO - Elcellent
condotoon. New roof, vrn yt srdon ~ rnsulated full
basement. Crty wateo and sanrtary sewer $55.000.
REDUCED TD $48.000.
WE HAVE THE PERFECT COnAGE alone Raccoon Creek
for you to spen.!l your summer evenings and weekends
- year around living. Buy now. $42,500.

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NEW LISTING
•

Buy 3 ways"! 3 bedroom home ·· &lt;th 88 acres •
$65,000 00 3 bedroom house w1th 3 acres. $43,000.00:
Or buy the 88 acres lor $21.500.00. Hannan Tr a~e Rd . •

•
••

THREE BEDROOM REMODELED farm home wrth 144 •
acres. 19 acres bottom, tab. base, 3 barns. Near Mudsoc. •
Now $53.000.

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NEW CfsTING- NICE 2 BEORM. HOME near Evergreen
on Evergreen-Prospect Rd. Approx . ~ acr e land. county
water. Purchase now for $24,500

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COMFORTABLE COTTAGE - 2 bedoms. sotu ated along
Garfoeld AVe. Buy now fo r $16,000

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NEW LISTING: THIS ONE HAS IT All!!- 70 acres with
barn, outbuildings, 1,065 lb. tobacco base. Near Crown
Coty, Hannan Trace Schools. Buy now for $58,000.

•

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BUY NOW: 2 ~ acre lot located w1thrn Sprrngflefd Twp
Gallia Co. $10,500.
·

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BUILDING LOT: 75'x120' - Rodney Vrllage II. Under· •
ground se rvrces, . county water an d sewer. No mobrl e •
homes.
•s.500.00 •

e•

e

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NEAT 3 BEDROOM HOllE located along Roush Rd .. • •
Cheshire Twp. Kyger Creek sc hools. Approx. \\ acre.
wbfp, pool. Buy now for $49,500.
·
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3 BEDROOM HOME ON KATHY DRIVE near Holzer •
Hospital. low traffic area, large backyard WBFP, •
G;!llrpolis city school district. Price $45,000.
.
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NEW LISTING! OVERLOOKING OHIO RIVER- 12'x65' •
1967 mobile home. One acre land with icar garage. Call •
today . This one won't last for $10,000.
•

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135' COMMERCIAL FRONTAGE along Easter~ Avenue. •
Located "where the action is!!". Call for more informa-" •
lion.

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r

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SELLING YOUR REAL ESTATE IS BIG BUSINESS...
•
CALL AN. EXPERIENCED WOOD REALTY SAL'£SPERSOII

'CUT JN,JURED t•REE ' - This demonstration
In Middleport Sunday showed highly trained

·

EMT!I doing their work on the injured as firemen
cui the victim out of a vehicle .

Northern Ohio hit by storm
early today; damage heavy
By United l'r~ ss tru cr naUo nal
Tor nado es were spo l ted in
northcrn Ohio Sundav and a1
least ' onc man was struck by
light nln ~ as severe I hunder·
s1orms swcpr across ohc s1a1c,
flooding some st rcrls, knocking
down lre&lt;'s and knocki ng oul
cl ctrlcity .
Rain pourcd so hra vily along
som&lt;' slretCh('s of In ter stat e
highways In I he Youngs tou•n and
Cle vt•land areas thai many drlvrrs pull ed O\'C I' In thr berm to
walt for the ra in 10 slow.
A Geauga County ~:olfE"r was in
fair co ndit ion today al Clevel and
Metropolitan Gcner·al Hospllal
aft er being strun by ill(htnlng.
YounR Lee, 44. was struck al 5
p.m . while slandi ng under a orcc
at the Pleasant Hills Golf Course
in Burton.
And in Brook Park. an esli-,
matE-d 1~ people were injured
when a ~:la nl tent Co llapsed

Hearings
.

•

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e 24 ACRES more or less. Hazel Rid ge. $10,000.

DUPLEX 4 SALE - Great investment for
the buyer. Located on Graham School Rd .
Eacn unit oilers 2 BR s, lrvong room , bath,
krtchen and stove, relrig., OW and drspl.,
. laundry, large carport, central arr and star·
age well.

Oman by early today.
Th e Gas Prince. carrying a cargo of volatile
butane and propane to Japan, made a surprise
departure from Kuwalt Saturday without, Its
bigger sister ship, the 401,382-tlln oil tanker
flrldgeton. which hit amine July 24. On Saturday,
the convoy passed safely through the same waters
off the Iranian coast where the mine ripped a
gaping hole In the Bridgeton's hull during the
Inbound voyage of the two vessels.
Early Sunday, the guided mis sile cruiser USS
Fox linked up with the missile destroyer Kldd and
the missile frigat e Crommelln. which escorted the
Gas Prince from Kuwait.
Th e Gas Prince wa s expected to become the
first re-llagged Kuwaiti tank er to complete the
ro und· trlp Persian Gull journey under the u.s .

NATURAL BEAUTY SURROUNDS THIS
HOME - 10 acres. m/ 1, gentle Iarm land
near Rro Grande. The 3 BR home boasts an
absolutely beautolul log addrtron whoch
leatu res a great ooom wrth sprral starr s to
loh. beamed certing, stone chrm ney and
woodb~rner . Other features of thrs home
onclude formal drnrng, eal•ln kitchen.
woodburner between dinrng and krtchen .
bath. part basement. Call lor a0 appornt·
men!

• APPROXIMATELY 5 ACRES ollevel ground adjacent to
.Pleasant Valley .£slates: 350 ft. road frontage with city
• waler, sewer and gas on premrses. $400 per front foot
LECTA AREA - $23,500 - 3.5 acres,
m/1. 2 story home in good condition, 3
BRs. LR, OR, kitchen .. storm windowsand
doors. Shown by appointment.

25 Centl

A Multimedia Inc. Newotfaper

Honor Middleport squad on
50th birthday over weekend

•

GRAHAM SCHOOL ROAD - Very nice
ranch offers kitchen w/range. refri~ . OW.
displ., microwa ve. LR. fR, /Iinette. 3 BRs. 1
bath, cent. aor, carpetin g, 2 metal utrlity
bldgs, Shown by apporntment.

I Seclion , 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday. August 3, 1987

By ROBERT MACKAY
United Press International
Th e U.S. naval convoy escorting the tank er Gas
Princ;e . steamed toward the perilous Stl·a lt of
Hormuz as officials annou nced three more
Kuwaiti ships will be re-flagged under U.S. colors
within the next 10 da ys.
Th e 46, 723-ton Gas Prlncf' crossed the mid-point
Sunday In Its 550-mile trip down the Persian Gulf
with "no alarms," said Rear Admiral Harold J.
Bernsen . commandrr of the Navy's Middle East.
ta sk force of nine ships assigned to escort duty.
Shipping sources declined to give the convoy's
. loca11on. and Kuwaiti oil officials Imposed a news
blackout on the opcrallon.
·
But a Kuwalll oil source said theshlpshould ex II
1he Pers ian Gulf, pass through the Strait of
Hormuz and f'nt er the safer waters of the Gull of

CLOSE TO CENTENARY
On State ,Hrghway 141, nice 5 room cottage, 3 bedroom s,
large eal -rn krtchen . rural wateo. nice block garage and workshop. Approx . 20 ~ . x 30 ft. 2 more storage burldings. Fen ced
on 3 srd es. One Ill nrce, large garden space See it now!

General Hauling

cltterns.

•

Three mOre Kuwaiti tankers to be re-flagged

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration

85

Hot and humid. Tonight,
partly cloudy. I.ow 70 to 75.
Chance of rain 20 percent.

at y . enttne

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

'

•.

OWNER HAS REDUCED THE PRICE TO
$39.900- 132.9 m/1, pasture farm. springs. 42x94 barn. tobacco base. Old er
home in good shape. 3 BRs, bath. LR.
kitchen, Call today.

Daily Number
488
Pick 4
9215
Super Lotto·
2-3-12
22-2641

Page-3

NEW LISTING - Newly remodeled. bedroom home • :
near Patrrot, close to Auctron Barn. for sale now. •
rmmedoate possessoon. $29.500.00.
HOUSE AND 29.4 ACRES . M/ L, OHIO
TWP.'- Thrs home offers 3 BRs. bath. LR,
kitch en. large laundry rm. w/ washer and
dryer There is a tobacco base and a 36.36
tobacco barn.

Ohio Lottery

Real Estate ~eneral

Real Estate General

RODNEY CORA RD. - Beaut1ful home on
12 acres m/ 1. This lovely house rs sur·
rounded by trees and offers a unique floor
plan. Livrng rm. features woodburn er,
open ceiling design, kitchen . formal dm·
ing, 3 BR. 2'7 bath s. lg. patro off dinmg
area. 26x40 barn and 15xz4· garage. Call
for an appomtment.

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

2454 .

Starks Tr" end Uwn Service,
lawn cere, landSCIPing, stump
remoVII. 304 -571 - 2842 or

Montgomery
wins first
big league
contest

General Hauling

RON ' S Televltion Serv'i~• ­
Houll calls on ACA. Quaur,
GE . SpeoieUng in Zenith. Call
304 · 1571 ~ 2398 or 8,4, 441 -

Fetty Tree T'r imming. stump
removal. Cell 304-876-1331 .

PH. 614-256·1112

85

Dillard Wet'er Ser~o~ice : Poot1,
Ciaterna. Wellt. D•livery Any time. Call 114-441· 7•o•·No
Sunday

lfll-380 2

FRU ESnMATES

:-d-•.
. ~13 .

Home
Improvements

tee. local rtfeuncn furnlshH .
Free •tim81es. Celt collect
1-014-237 -0488, dtiY or ri/Qht.
RogersBesement
w 1
_•_"'_P_'00
_ 11_" .;..
9·- - - - - .I
SWEEPER and sewing machine
rep1ir. Pint, end suppli ... Pick
up and delivery, Oa\llt Vacuum
Cleaner. one half milt up
Oeorgn Creek Ad. Call 814446-0294.

EXTERIOR STUCCO, PIASTfR
&amp;PLASTER REPAIR
Work by tho hour or ·by
lhtjoto

l960 Willys Jeep. 4x4. Runs
• eood. •eoo. can 614-742. 2433.
'Honda T•en 90 .. low rnneage,
good cond. selling for health
~ 1986 fOfd llanr 4•4, Power reasons. 304-773-5923.
• _....,ing, power· brak•. excel·lent condition. 20.000 miles ,
Boats and
..,., four new mounted buckshot 75
18 .&amp;00 . 304- 372Motors for Sale

81

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Un conditlonel lifetime guaran-

I

~--------­
Kawasaki 260 LTO , $600.00.
good cond, 304-882 -2:487.

81

1987

By E. MICHAEL MYERS
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
congressional commll tees investigating fhe Iran-Contra sca nd al
moved lnlo their 12th and final
week of public hearings tod ay
with the 'focu s of the case moving
down the street to the federal
courthouse.
The question of laws being
broken In fhe sca ndal that has
rocked Pres ident Reagan' s administration is being considered
in a closed grand jury room, with
allegations being presented by
Independent proseculor Lawrence Walsh .
It Is a question "that has not
needed to be addressed by the
House and Senate committees
that began public hearings on the
affair three months ago. Their
responsibility has been to review
the secret sales of U.S. arms to

during a rib burn-orr. None of the
injuries was ser ious.

funnel clouds) up I]Cre." said
Deputy Gene Pence. "One
touchE-d down and bounced back
up. It wasn't really significant."'
Trees. wen~ downed on som e
A sheriff's spokesman said
st rl:'els In lakelront communities
early today 1hat damage wa s
near Cleveland. And the Cleveconfined to down ed trees and
land Elect ric Co. said 17,000
power lines.
customers lost electricit y durin!(
" There was,no structural damthe evening. More than 50,000
age or Injuries," he said.
Columbus-area customers were
Twisters also were reported In
wlthou l power for a time Sunday
Union , Trumbull. Lake, Ashtabnigh I.
Several lornado warnings
u Ia and Cuyahoga ·counties.
Marble-sized hall pelted Manswere Issued and there were
field , and pea -size hall wa s
numerous reports of funnel
reported near Burton .
clouds Sunday bul only a few
Andover and Ashtabula County
confirmed touchdowns .
.
received
nearly three Inches of
· Holmes Count y sheriff's depu rain In a two-hour period. and
lics sai d a twister touched down
several towns reported street
at 9:45p. m . near Holmesville.
flooding.
"Da m age was very minor,"
The mercury reachE-d 98 de·
sa id a sheriff' s spokeswoman.
grees In Toledo, which tied the
"There were no Injuries."
high-temperature record there
Anolher tornado louched down
for Aug. 2. set In 1964.
near Ashland .
·:we've had about 15 1reported

c~nclude
Iran and the diversion of profll s
to Nicaraguan Contra rebels with
an eye on areas In which . the
constitutional system of governm ent broke down.
Walsh"s criminal Investigation. while certainly as broad,
focuses more on the diversion of
what has been figured to he $3.5
million In excess prollls from
1ran to ·the Con tras. The funds
flowed when Congress had out·
lawed sending U.S. military aid
to the rebels fighting Nicaragua's le-ftist Sandinlsta
government .
Congress ho)Mid to wrap up Its
public hearings perhaps today
with a seconq and final round of
tes tlmony from Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, followed by cl'oslng speeches from
the 26 lawmakers sitting on the
committees.

Probe Sunday shooting
Meigs County Sheriff Howard
Frank reports as accidental
shooting early Sunday morning.
According to a report from the
sheriff's office, Frank and deputies Dan Levingston and Jimmer
Soulsby were dispatched to the
Mitchell residence; Route 124,
Langsville, at 3:47a .m.· Sunday.
The sheriff's department was
notified of the Incident by EMS.
After investigation. the sheriff
reports that Mitchell accidentally shot hlmself In the right leg.
About 2 p.m. Friday, the
Dayton bomb squad wa s at the
sheritf's department to pick up
an armed projectile which had

been recovered by authorities
earlier in the week.
Richard and Julia Dailey were
apprehended In Citrus Co .• Fla.
at 1:50 a.m. Sunday. The Dalley 's
will he returned to Meigs County
fo stand trial for child stealing. .
The sheriff further reports that
Dean Whitt lngton was apprehended over the weekend on a
judge's order for violation of
probation, and that two charges
of domestic violence were filed
over the weekend, one in the
Tupper s Plains area on Saturday
afternoon and one Sunday evening in the Reedsville area.

Edward Demoskey, Robert
McElhinney, represented by his
widow. Louise; Wayne Gibbons;
David Ohlinger, represented byhis wife, Betty. and daughter,
Sandy Ianarelil; Howard A.
Dailey. represented by his wife,
Roberta. and son, Kevin; James
Daniels , represented by his wife,
Janice. and daughter. Lynn.
Three living memhers of the
· original 12 m embers were honored and include Charles Wise,
t;::olumbus, unable to attend;
John Vroman and Paul Swisher
who were presented the com. memorative belt buckles .,
·· ·
Other long-time members of
the department honored Included
Jack Bechtle, who is hospitalIzed; Russell Mills •.. Everett
Bachner. C. 0. Murray, Daondl
Mills. Richard Karr , Jr., Ray mond Klees. Gerald Anthony .
Lewis Ellis, Don Lowery, and
Kevin Dailey . Dr. R. R. Pickens
who assisted the squad for many
years was presented a commem- :
oralive heit buckle and the
specially designed buckle will he
presented to each present
member of the &lt;fupartment.

......

Middleport Mayor Fred Hof·
fman gave a short talk expressing pride in the department and
Sen. Jan J..ong presented the
department with an Ohio Senate
commendation award. Former
members, Harold Hinkle and
Harold Wolfe were recognized.
Bud Sanford, expert in emer·
gency rescue instruction, spoke
on the growth of emergency units
in Ohio and of their vital role in
the community.
On S11nday afternoon. the de·
partment held a public presenta tion behind the Middleport Post
Office demonstra tlng the work of
the department' s competition
team. the work and equipment
involved in extrication pro·
cesses. and a Lifeflight display
as well as other exhibits.

this week
Before Congress breaks for
vacation Friday, however, the
committees plan to take private
testimony from several CIA
officials in an effort to tie up loose
ends and learn more about the
role of the late CIA Director
William Casey.
Reagan, meanwhile, plans to
address the nation before leavln.g
Aug. 13 on a 25-day vacation of his
own - marking his first formal
response to the 12 weeks of
hearings that. began May 5.
The president, apparently Impatient to respond to some
aspects of his worst crisis. broke
his silence on the hearings last
week when confronted with the
question of whether Rear Adm.
John Poindexter and Lt. Col.
Oliver North broke laws In
admittedly overseeing the-diver·
slon and destroying evidence.

INSPEcr LIFEFLIGBT HELICOPTER Vlslton look over the Llfellgl!t hellcapter whlie
the crew answers any queatlons at demonstra·

·-

..

Ilona staged by lhe Middleport Fire Department·
and Emergency squad Sunday.

�.·

L

Commentary
·

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBERofThf' Unlt('(l Prrss lrlt!'rnational.lnland Dallv Prf'ss
Assoclaliqn and thE" AmPrican NE'wspaper Publlshl'rs A. oclat'ion .
LETTERS OF OPINION :.lf&lt;' IA't'lromC'. Th£'~' should bC' ]('SS I n :nl 'I'.'Ord!&gt;
long. All 1£'11t'rs arC' !'UbiN't to N:llt inJ! and mu!'t tw !'l~nf'd with na mC' . a
P.iS and
tC'IrphonP numlx'r No um;IJrnM IMtf'f!{ ..... 111 tx- publl~hNI . LL'11C'rs shouln Ol' 1n

goNI lasiC',

~ ddrf'ssin~ iss u~ .

not pc-rsonalit\E'S.

WASHINGTON
Rural
America is sinking like stone:
tossed In a hog wallow, and It
desperately needs help from the
federal government if It Is to
. survive.
It's not hard to show that farm
families - and the small bust·
nesses, suppliers and factory
workers who depend on them as
customers - are in dire straits.
With only one-quarter of the
nation 's population,' rural areas
account for more than two-third s
of sustandard housing and more ·
than one-third of overall poverty.
Creation of new jobs is Jagging
badly in the countryside. For
every new job In' rural areas,
seven are created Jn the cities.
It's hardly surprising that each
week more than 2,000 Americans
abandon farming as a livelihood.

a

111 Court Street'
Pomeroy, Ohio

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday. August 3, 1987

Montgomery wins first big
league tilt on Davis' home run :

Financ.e :rural revivai __Ja_c_k_A_n_de_r_so_n_a_n_d_D_al_e_~_a_n_A_tt_a
;_

The Daily Sentinel

·

Celeste gears up for
presidential campaign
By LEE LEONARD
Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -Gov. Richard F. Celeste says that 11
he's to run for president, he has to have a message that will set him
apart from .the myriad of other Democratic candidates.
Well, Celeste app;~rently has developed thai message and it's a
good one. He tried It out 10daysagoon the National Urban League in
Houston.
'Fittingly, It was an l!ddress that could have been made by the late
President John F. Kennedy, and it contained elements oft he "I have a
dream" speech by Martin Luther King.
Using the themes, "What We Could Be." and "Yes, We Can," the
governor talked about the need to eliminate racial inlustices and
poverty. making everyone a winner.
Celeste appealed to the traditional Democratic coalition. including
liberals, and he spoke of the progress Ohio has made in education,
training and labor-management cooperation under his
administration.
,
The governor wound 1! up with a poignant story from his Peace
Corps days abo\11 a nearly blind volunteer In senegal who taught
nutrition and reading to the natives. and who saw herself, the
Africans and her own country in a new light through the experience.
She called it "I he gift of new eyes." and Celeste said thai if
Americans cooperate constructively, perhaps they can receive "the
gift of new eyes" to build a better world. Clearly, he wants to be the
leader in cultivating that vision.
Not forgotten were the barbs to be flung at the Reagan
aqmlnlstralion by any Democrat who is to be successful in 1988.
Celeste accused the administration of dividing the country Into
haves and have-nots, mortgaging the future and taking the easy road.
"Instead of cooperating in a common vision, they've asked us to
doze off and dream of the good old days," said the governor.
"Ronald Reagan and his administration have given us the poverty
levels of the 1960s, the civil rights attitudes of the 1950s, the farm
policies of the Dust Bowl and the religious Intolerance of the Span.ish
Inquisition.
.
, "TheY:ve appointed people to key government posts whose hearts
wouldn't make it through metal detectors in the airport. People J-VhO
believe that the way to serve the president of this great nation is to
keep the Congress and·citizens and the chief executive in the dark. "
Great· stuff for a campaign. But then nobody ever claimed Celeste
. wasn't a great campaigner or a man with a vision.
He has a way to go, though.
·
At a reunion of the Cfass of 1957 of an upstate New York high school
last month; none of those asked could identity the governor of Ohio.
A professor of political science from San Diego came the closest.
"He's the one with the peccadilloes," offered the professor,
apparently recalling news stories about the governor's personal
Indiscretions. Not a good sign.
One man, active in local politics in New Jersey, was told Celeste
was planning to enter the crowded Democratic presidential field.
"Forget it!" he suggested.
Celeste has heard this advice over and over again, but there's no
evidence he will take I!. He has a vis ion, and he may not soon get
another chance to carrv It out . •

Poindexter's son
of Catch 22
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON (UP I\ - Just when we were beginning to
understand how Washington worlls. Rear Adm. John Poindexter
gave us a lesson in bureaucratic creativity with his explanation of
"deniabillty".
..
The former national security · adviser told the Iran-Contra
Investigating committees that he approved funnE-ling secret arms
sale profits to the Nicaraguan rebels. He said he didn't tell President
Reagan In order to spare the president political embarrassment in
case. the scheme became known to the public.
Thai Is the way we understood deniabilty was supposed to work.
Simply stated. it meant Poindexter madE&gt; it possibl.e for Reagan to
say truthfully, if the deal went sour, that he didn't know what the
National security Council staff had done.
That Is what Reagan has said since last · November and
Poindexter's sworn testimony was the. best backing the president
could have ;tsked for. There was jubilation at the White House when
Poindexter said Reagan never knew because Poindexter never told
him.
However, Poindexter also said that he believed that Reagan would
have approved the use of the 'arms sale money to help I he Contras had
he been asked. And that Is when the sheer versatility of the doctrine of
deniabilty as practiced by Poindexter became apparent. .
The White House quickly denied that Reagan would haveOK'd the
deal had he been asked and said Poindexter had failed the president
by approving the deal on his own authority.

For family farmers, the prosper·
ous past Is fading into merr10ry,
the present Is bleak and there
seems to be no future.
The Reagan .administration's
concentration on increased de·
tense budgets since 1981 has .left
tt.t tle to spend on rural develop·
ment. Even Republicans con·
cede privately. that the Demo·
crals have been generally more
attentive to the plight of rural
America than the administration
has.
Now sen . Robert Dole, R-Kan ..
the son of a o'n etime grain
elevator operator, Is spearhead·
lng.an innovative effort to tap the
Farm Belt 's own resources for
rural d&lt;'velopment funds . What
makes his role significant is not
just that as 'minority )eader h&lt;'
has the standing to rally other

Republican legislators around
him. but the fact that he Is a
leading contender for the GOP
presidential nomination.
In a recent.interview, Dole was
enthu siastic about the rural
revitalization Idea that he arid
Sen: Charles Grassley, R-Iowa,
came up with. In Its simplest
form , It would turn mountains of
government -owned grain re·
serves Into the collateral for
loans ihat would be used to
finance private development pro·
jects in rural areas.
This was no Instant bra instorm
with a light bulb clicking on over
the senatorial domE' and a cry of
"Eureka!"
Its genesis can
probably bt&gt; traced to the Repub·
lican disaster Iilias! November's
elections. Looking past I he loss of
the Senate and hi s own post as

"Now make It a good clean fight - even though Killer Khomelni's goons
are probably taking your family hostage at this very minute."

' saw a
majority leader, Dote
hopeful sign In the election of new
Republfcan governors in the
Midwest. He quickly organized a
30-member task force on rural
problems, composed of Republi·
can governors and members of
Congress.
Out of their discussions
emerged the Idea of a "Rural
Fund for Development" backed
by · at least $1 biltion In loan
guarantees. Under I he proposal,
banks would make federally
guaranteed loans to businesses
that depend on the farming
c·ommunl!y. The guarantees
would be backed by grain owned
by the federal Commodity Credit
CorP.: the agency tha t buys up
surplus commodities to keep the
market stable. lt would be a
domestic version of the CCC
credits extended to countries like
Poland based on their grain ,
ha rvests.
"These commodlt les -billions
of bushels - are locked away In •
grai n elevators," Dole ex· •
plained . "Why not put those :
assets to work In the rural
economy?"
The assets are not only huge- . •
more than 2.8 billion bushels of :
grai n worth $5.5 billion In govprn·
ment .storage as of May 1 - but
they ro~lthe taxpayers a bundle.
Storage costs are estimated a t
$1.3 billion lor the current fisc a l
year. with cosls expected to
escala te In years to come. Grain
Inventories are expected to reach
4.5 billion bushels In 1988, worth
more th an SlO billion and In cur·
rl n~ $1 .8 billion In s torage costs.
Storage costs for all CCC-owned
products are expected to amou nt
to $8 billion fot' the 1987·1990
period .
Readers who want to givE' Dole
the benefit of the ir two cents'
wor th on the Idea~ for or against
-can write him a t SH 141 Hart
Building. Was hin g to n, D.C .
20510.

Having just completed a study
until lh l'y have been accepted as
mission to the Middle East, I am
an identifiable entity with land
impressed with several realities
they can settle on. permanently
that I believe hold the key to
under I he name Palestine.
peace in that troubled region.
It also seems clear to m e that
The first of these realities Is the
their can be no successful peace
clash between Israeli national·
ism and Palestinian nationalism . . conference that omits the Pales·
tine Liberation Organization.
This conflict has been at the root
Israel and some of the Arab
of Middle East tensions for four
states might wish the PLci would
decades.
There can be no doubt that the disappear, but that .Is unlikely .
IsraE'lls are determined to main· More than any other group the
PLO provides the locus and
taln their Jewish homeland . The
Arabs, including the Palestini· leadership of the ' Palestinian
lms , must accept and publicly cause. Just as the Palestinians
recognize the right of Israel to must recognize and deal with
Israel if there Is to be any hope
exist in peace as an Independent
for a Palestinian homeland, so
Jewish stale,
It is equally clear that the must Israel come directly to
terms with the PLO.
Palestinians are insistent upon a
It Is possible that the Palest!·
homeland of their own situated
on the territories lost in the 1967 nlan delegation to a peace
war - the West Bank of the conference could merge with an
Jordan and the Gaza area. They all-Arab group or with Jordan.
will probably agree that they but the Palestinians involved
Many cards, notes and other should then form a confederation must Include the PLO. Israel
several weeks ago. our son
gifts were also received and with Jordan, but there must first
must accept the reality that a
Parker lost his life in an antomo·
appreciated.
.
·
be a recognition o! the 'Palest!· peace agreement without the
bile accident. The Initial shock
This
outpouring
of
support
nlan cause and their right to an PLO Is worthless since only the
and grief of this incident were
made
II
possible
for
us
to
get
PLO has the organization and
identifiable state.
overwhelming and we were ask·
through.
We
have
a
renewed
strength to enforce such an
Economics and geography
tng ourselves how would we get .
cenfidence and respect for the strongly argue for uniting Pales· agreement with the Palestinians.
through II. ·
people of this area and feel very tine and Jordan. It Is difficult to
Another reality is that the
The answer to that question Is
fortunate to be surrounded by imagine the viability of a state no Arab-Palestinian population on
the reason for writing this letter.
larger than the West Bank and the West Bank and in the Gaza
Relatives and friends responded · people or such high character.
We
have
the
assurance
that
we
the Gaza.
area is growing faster than the
Immediately. From the first hour
be
united
with
our
son
on
that
wilt
popu·l atlon 'of Israel. This con·
The
Palestinians
that
I
talked
of our ordeal to the present lime
great
day
when
the
Lord
Jesus
fronts
Israel with several to11gh
. with . generally recognized the
people have been with us sharing
Christ'
gathers
His
church
unto
choices
.
. ultimate logic of a union with
the load of our . loss. Large
Himself
..
The Israelis can decide to hold
Jordan. But they have been
amounts of food were brought to
Thank you all for your loving fighting for public recognition of the West Bal)k and Gaza as part
or homt' and to Roger's mothers'
kindness.
their cause and their right to of Israel. If they follow this
home as well. Hundreds of caring
Roger and Delores Long self-determination for nearly course, Israel' would soon be·
people visited with us at the
and falljllY · four decades. They will not enter come more -of a Moslem stale
funeral home to offer concern
than a Jewish slate. If the
into a confederation with Jordan
and comfort.

Fishe1·men look forward to
float trip this time of year
By ;JERRY PICKRELL
Outdoor Writers As.•n. of
i\meriCll Distributed by UPI
One of the things every fisher·
man looks forward to this lim e of
year Is making a noat· trip. lt' s
one oft he most serene, enjoyable.
· a nd potentially successful wa ys
of fishing.
,
You needn't outfit yoursf.'lf
with any special ta ckle. The
same lu res and rod·and· •·eel
combin ations th at work In lakes
will serv£' thi s need too. But even
t hou~h ther · arc similarities, th e
demand on a fisher man 's s kill Is
~rea lly different .
It' s essentia l thai you be able to
" rrad' ' !hi' water. If you don ' t
know that swirl mea ns " subm rged tog just a hea d, you might
not only fallt oca tch the bass that
lives under It , you m ight also lind
th a t It rolls your !,)oat over.
The telltale "V" th a t points
toward yo u mPa ns then:-'s an
obstrut;t lon just under water . The
"V" th a t points away from you
means that th!'re's sa le passage
bl.'tw~n it s legs. Ei ther of th ese
'"utd mean there ar&lt;' fi sh close
by.
Slick gamcftsh lurkin g about
for an easy mea t a t lh(' hea d of a

. . ed .

C
. at Ie dge lnJUf

In

• • • •
•d
M18818Slpp•
aCCI ent
·

CAI..HOU N rrrY . Miss . 1UP I I
- Wa s hington Bullets forward
Tt•rry at l£'d gt"li•as ln Ju rrd ear ly
Su nday In a s ingl&lt;•v('hk le accl·
ci('nt 1hat · killed a not her pas·
sen ~:er, th l.' Mi ssissippi Hlgh,way
Palrol said.
C'a tl(.'(lge. 2:l. a Houston Miss ..
nat ive

was

transferred

__,.----'---G_eo_rg_e_M_cG_
ov_er_n

residents ol ·the occupied terrllo· moral standi ng In the eyes of the
rles were trea ted democra tically world .
The final reality Is that Kin~
and given the right to vote they
would soon have a majority In the Hussein of J orda n Is right In
government of Israel. If Israel ca lling for an International con·
held onto the disputed territory · fere nce on the · Middle East
and either denied the Arab Including the United States ana
residents the right to vote or the Soviet Unlori . Russia Is far
expelled them from the country, closer geographi cally to the
Israel would cease to be a Middle East than we are and has
democracy and would lose Its a vital interest In this region .

watched in

inten s i ~c

ra pid or riffle . Where the water
s tart s to pick up speed Is a good
place lor hapless small cr itters to
come flOating by. The tall of the
rapid is good because th ere the
fis h can pick up what ever didn ' t
make II sa fel y through .
Edges of ba nks wherl.' ' th en~
are overhanging trees make
good places to look too. ln sPCts

care for

possible Internal Injuries. He
dPscrlbed Earl Evans as being In
" fair condil lon."

CORDOVA, Tenn . i UPit _
Curtis St.range doubled his vic·
tory tota l fr om last seaso n a nd
moved Int o l'lght h on the all· time
money · list with his second
irlumph of 1987.
Strange drilled a six ·foot birdie
putt on thC' final hole Sunday to
t akc a one stroke victory with a
13-under-par 275 at the $724,(}13
Federal Ex press St . Jud e
Class ic.
S tr a n ~e·s Sl3Q,328 pa y~ hcck
cata pulted him from fourth to
second In this year 's e arnings on
the PCA To ur with $51);) ,88~.
behind only Pa~l Atlnger's
$586,962. H(' also mov(.'(l past Ben
Coc hran Int o No. 8 In career
t"arnlngs wll h $2, 7'.!0,(}1;!.
Hi s .lrlumph at Co lonial was
Stra n11e's 11th victory In 11 year s
on thP tour. With his Ca nadtan·-..
Ope n Iitle last month. his SUC·
Cf'SSCS foll ow a fru stra tin g 1986.
St r a n ~~ dropped fmm first on the
money list In 1985-whe n he won
t h1'C'C tournam e nts Inc luding Ihe
Ca nadian - to 32nd last yea r . his

The Daily Sc&gt;ntinel
( 1 1 ~.;1'~

1\

()i vl~lo n

nl

1-13-ftM)

~1dltlnwdl : t , lnt·.

Pu hl l ~ht'( l t' \' f' l'\ aff('l 'l lMn
t hi'Pugh F't'llla.\'. 111 ( ' nUl '!

Monrla\
~1 .. p,i
f'lW t'f'~ . O hlrt. hy tht' Ohln \'al ii',\ Puh
l l~nl nJ! ('t, mp:'" ·' ' Mulllm('(llot . lm ·..
P11nwtm . 0 hl n -l ft7+i~ . Ph . ~:! · 2 1 !"16. ~­
,.,,nrl d i1ss Jlfl!'l :tg(' p aid ; 1! P(l m ('rn~· -

Berry's World

. Ohio

Mt•ml.x •t : t ' n llt·tl Pt i ~~:--- In I&lt;''""·'' lon:tl .
Jnl;ulll n:llh : Pn ·.~:o--1\ S)o: l 'f l:ll lnn :Hl{l ttw
( Jh IO Nf' " '!&lt; i) :l (&gt;t •t A""'' o('\; ,tlt •n. Nat tnn:al

Majon&gt;

Nt'\l ' Ynt •k. Nf'W Yrwk 1001':- .

'

Appreciates support

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.........

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"I just HAD to go the mound and 1611 you 1
REALLY WISH you would stop throwing
bBsnballs me. "
·

at

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POSTMAS1'Eil : ~till : tlldn •.~s c h : m g t ·~
In '11H' nail\' St •tll lnf•l. 111 CoUI 'I St ..
Pt)mt•t·ny. Otiir• ~fi7b1l .
!rit t B.~ ' RIPTION

K 1\TES

Bv ( 'arrh•r or Motor Rnph•
Ont' W ~r·k .... , . ., .. .... .. .. .. .. .......... 5 1.2~
Ont• Mnnlh ...... ....... ... .. '
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:1\'allablf'

Mall Suhst · rlptlon ~
ln"idf' Mf'i.-!1 County
1.1 Wt'Pk~ . ............. .. ...... .. .... ... .. $17.29
26 W f'f' k ~ ... .. .. .....
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as

much

1o ·me

as

anything, " said the 32-year· old
Nor folk, Va .. native.
If Stra nge had not m ad!' lhc
putt he faced a fi ve- way playo(f
with Tom Kit e, Mik&lt;' Dona ld ,
Ru ss Cochra n. and De nis Watso n
whO were all bunched at 12-under
276 artrr 72 holes on the 7.282·
y'a rd . . pa r-72 Co lonia l Cou ntry
Club cours('.
"I had to tru s t my a bi li ty to
read th ~ green and hll it, "
Stra ng e said of hfs fin al putt .
,; It 's Importa nt on lhis 'rourse to
be a ble to read thr brPak of the
~rass and then just hil it ."
Stra nge, who fir ed a :!· under 69
after headin g Into lhP Ina! round
as co· lead('r a t 10-und e r. almos t
forced himsel f Int o the pla yoff .

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531

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THURSDAY~~

ftRDBO COP"

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"SPACEBALLS"

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Sun f ' rllnd ..t·u ut Hnu ~tnu , nl jtiM

Please enter me In the following events:
CHECK EVENTS:
Men's Singles _ _ _ _ _ __

BOBBLE Bi\LL - San.FruncliH'o's outfielders Chill Davis (left)
and Mikt· i\ldrell• hohble hall hlt hy Cincinnati's Eric Davis in
seventh Inning at Rivt•rlront Sunduy . The Reds won In II innings,
;~~. ·l••lf Montgom ery , Wellston, was credit~d with the victory in
his s(•(.•oml majnr lt•agHl' outing. (UPI)

Only ONDULINE con cover_
your roof with a lifetime
warranty

Men's 35 Singles - - - - - Men 's Doubles _ _ _ _ _ _-.rartner - - - -- - - Men's 35 Doubles _ _ _ _ __.. artner - - - - -,-- Women's Singles _ _ _ _ __
Women's Doubles _ _ _ _ _...Partner - - -- - - - Mixed Doubles
...Partner ----~--­
Beginner•- - - - - - - ' -. Intermediate Men -----~
Intermediate Women_ _ __
NAME ____________________~~~-------

ADDRESS~----------------------------~

I

SAVE ON
ROOFING

If your old roof is
rusting away, put up
one that wan't rust.

The Llfellme lllooRne

·-

4'• 6'7" - 26 Squa11 Foot Shoot

Corrugated Asphalt. Roofing and

Reg. '10.99

N.OW
Colors In 1ter:k:
White, Red,. GrHn,
Brown. llack and Gray
Approximately 100
1:quores lUntntly in

nodt.

,t •

6J

liULY 31 thru AUGUST

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Sl l .nu l.. t ll,.rtnn :t-11 .11 ~ l unt rt· al

1987 SYRACUSE OPEN TENNIS
TOURNAMENT

PH. NUMBER

JACK==-~~-~~

BARGAI NMATINEES SAT/SUN &amp;&lt;EO
All SEATS 12.75
A~ ISS I O N EVERY TUESDAY 52 .75

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'

ANAHEIM, Calif. (UP! ) - '·
Defensive end Donald Evans, the
Los Angeles Rams' fir st· round
draft pick, e nded his holdout ·•
Saturday night and . signed a
four-year contract, a team spo·
kesman sa id .

tn::n rw•.

u :.\ta ' t:

ft )' t nM I'd l 't• '"'~ lnl, ·rr\OUitln;tl

McMahon may start

\TIU .~ .\I . I . t: .\1:1 lo~

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home team has won a ser ies cago nipped Philadelphia 3·2.
By RI CK VAN Si\NT
. . Meis 7, Ji;xpos 4
C'lNC!NNATI (UP! ) - Eric . when we·v~ played the Giant s
At
Montreal, Keith Hernandez
this
vear
."
Davis has entered basebull 's
drove
In three runs and Ron
Sa'n
Francisco
mana
ger
Roger
elit e '·'30-30 Club" with a superb
Darling
collected his third
,
Cra
ig
did
his
best
to
look
on
the
sense of Iim ing.
stra:tght
victory
to pace the Mets .
The Cincin nati star became br ight side des pite los ing tw o out
•
Darling,
7·7,
has
won live of his
only 1he sevent h player in ·maj or . of thrE'f' over the weekend to the
last
six
sta
rts
.
He
allowed two
IL·ague history 10 hit at least :JO rt ~ds.
hits
,
walked
eight
and
struck ou I
"The bi g key for us · was
home runs and steal a t least 30
four
over
6
2·3
innings
. Roger
winning Saturday. because with·
bases in a season with homer No.
McDoweli
earned
his
16th
save.
ao in the llth in ning Sunday th at out that, we would have left town Bob Sebra fell to 6-11.
fiv~ ga mes behind the Reds
!(&lt;tVe the Reds a 5· 4 wi n over San
i\stros 6, Padres 0
lns'tead
of three," said Craig. " II
francisco.
At
Houston.
Mike Scott allowed
would
have
made
it
real
t.oughfor
The vi ctory boosted Nat ion a l
three
hits
over
eight innings and
us
hud
we
no
t
taken
at
least
onf'
League West -lea ding Ci ncinna · .
drove
in th ree runs,
Alan
Ashby
ga
me
he
re.
ll' s margi n over th~ second place
the
Ast
ros
. Sco tt , 12·7,
leading
"As
it
turned
out,
all
this
ser
ies
Giants to lhre0 gam es.
pitched
4
2·3
hitless
innings
rost
us
wa
s
one
game
in
the
Dav is, who has 39 sto le n bases,
allowing
a
si
ngle
to
Tony
before
"andings.
The
re's
st
ill
a
long
is a th reat to ·start his ow n ' '40-40
walked
fiv
e
and
Gwynn.
He
way
to
go
in
1
heseason
and
we've
Club " becausca two more m ont hs
struck
out
six.
Rocky
Childress
got
plent
y
of
c
ha
nc0s
left
aga
inst
rem ain in the season. Others in
pitched the ninth . Ma rk Grant,
C'i ncinna tl."
I he "30.:Jo Club'' arc Willie Mays .
2·
6, took the loss.
Ha nk Aaron, Bobby Bonds. Da le
Davis' hom er allowed rooki e
Braves 10, Dodgers 5
Mu r phy, Ken Williams and Jeff Montgom'ery to win his first
AI
Atlanta, Ted . Simmons
Tommy Harper.
major league ga me. Montgo·
'' It 's a goo d honor , but winnin g mcry, who was I he fo urth Reds' drove in three ru ns to back the
the game is mu ch morP impor· pit cher a nd worked on ly the 11th combined eighflhl! pitching of ·
la nl ," insisted Dav is. " All ()all innilig, was called up two days Zane Smll)l and Gene Garbe~.
games a rP more important th a n ago fro m th e Reds' Nashv ille powering the Braves. Smit h. 10·
indi\· idual honors . We're not here fa r m team and was ma king just 6, surrendered seven hits over 6
to wi n indi vid ual awat·d s. •·
his second maj or league 2·3 innings fo r the triumph-.
Garber gave up one hit over the
Da vis' lower ing g" rn e-wi nn ing a ppeara nce .
final
2 J-3 innings. Starter Ken ·.
hom er off Jeff Robin so n. 6·7,
Cincinnati. trailing 4·3 going
Howell
fell to 3· 4.
l' lcared ""' tcfl field wa ll by into the eighth . tied it 4·4 on an
9, Pirates I
Cardinals
ah0ut60 feet a nd hOunced against RB I single by Terry McGriff.
At
St.
Louis,
Terry P e ndl eton
iJ concrete barr ier on the top
With one ou t. Tr acy Jones
in
four
r uns and Jlm
drove
IC'V PI of sC-ats in R ivrr frOnt
s ingled off Cra ig Leffert s, stol e
Lindeman
add
ed
a home run in
St ad iu m.
second a nd raced hom e on
Joe Magrane,
support
of
rooki
e
" It was one of the bost balls
McGril'f's single off Scott
sparking
the
Cardinals
. With !'he
I 've hit in a long t ime." sa id Ga rrelt s.
,
Da vis. " II was a fast ball rig ht
Sa n F'rancisco. behind 3·2 triumph, St. Louis completed a
clown the middle of th&lt;• plate." ·
heading into the toR ol the eighth, three-game series sweep. Ma·
rtobinson dcs~r ibcd lhL' pitch had taken a 4-3 lead. Pinch-hiller gra ne improved to 6-2. Hipolito
as "a s inker th at did n't sink ."
.Joel Youn gblood led off with hi s Pena, 0-3, took the loss in his first
" I can ' t help tha t," said Da\'iS. seco nd home r of the year to left s tart of the season.
Cubs 3, PhiUies 2 ~
Robi nson didn ' t e,·cn bother to off John Franco to tie it 3·3. Mike ·
At
Chi
cago , Ryn e Sandberg
look 1o sec if 1he ba ll was going to Aldrete fo llowed with a single,
singled
over
a drawn·ln outfjeld
l'10nr th r ft~nrf' .
pinch· runne r Eddie Milner
with
one
Out
in
the lOth inning to .
"You don ' t hci\'C t o," hC' sai d . ra·ced to third on a single by
lift
the
Cubs.
Sandherg
popped a
·:You know tha t sound ."
Kev in Mitchel l a nd scored on a
fly
over
right
field
er
Gle nn
Th e Hcds hold a 5·4 cd gP in sac rifi ce fly to medium center by
Wilson
to
score
Leon
Durham
gamfls agai n st the Ci &lt;:w ts this ,Jeffrey Le onard .
;·cor anclthe cl ubs s till have nin e
Dave Concepcion's fi rs t home from third . Lee · Smith, 3· 6,
~H m c•s remaining against rach
run of th e ye ar in the sixt h inning pitched two-thirds of an inning
1
for the victory. Jeff Calhoun fell
other as the \' b a tt! ~ lor the had given Cincinnati a 3· 2 lead .
pr nn ant .
Elsewhere. New York defeated to I). I.
" But I thin k wc ·v ~ got lhf' Mont rea l 7·4. Hou ston blanked
momC'ntum going out· way now." Sa n Diego fi-0, Atlanta decked
said Dav is. " Toda~- was a re al Los Ange les 10·5, St. Lou is
PLATIEVILLE. Wis. iUPI\.bi g win . Tl1is is Ihe firs t limeD pounded Pittsburgh 9·1 a nd Chi·
Jim 1\.;lcMahon's recovery from
shOulder surgery has progressed
far beyond expe~tatio ns. prompt·
lng predictions he will start for
the Chicago Bears in their
reg ula r-season op e ner in
sept em her.
Coac h Mike Dltka said McMa·
hon is "fhrowiilg the ball prettY'
accurately. He doesn't have the
zip on It but he' s throwing it a lot
like he did before the s urgery."
McMahon is not yet 100 per·
cent. He does not throw in the
morning practices a t Platteville
and has bt&gt;en warned by Jobe
about ov erworking the should~r.
·'He told me not to push myself,
not lo gel too excited and try to
throw too much." McMahon
said. " He sa id the shoulder is not
going to bt&gt; as strong as it will be
in s ix months."

Evans ends holdout ·

!i2 Wrf'k.........

••

. ..... ....... , ....... !66.56
Out~ldt" Mll'ilf! County
1:1 Wf'P ks ... .... . , ......................... $11t2rt
26 Wf'f'k ~..
.. ....,............. $35.10
52 Wf'f'kS .. ..
. ......... .. ....... $fi7.fi0

m ea ns

1 \n tk• h•r :1 H .

At j\ t' l'l 1.~ i n~ ilf' J) I't:,.:t• nl ; t I l\'1' Rt ':l n h,1 111
Nf'\\.!&gt;if)&lt;lj)('l S;il("' 7:tl Thi rd A \ ' 1' 11111'.

\

worst fini s h since 1979.
But Stra n11e said the b&lt;'ller
money was not as im portant as
his better-play ,
" Ha ving Ihe opport unity on the
las t hole a nd coming throug h

Scoreboard ...

l'hlo· ~ lt:"

'

and small a nimals fa ll Into the
water from them occasionally ,
and fi s h lie in walt to ta ke
advantage .
Aft er a few tr ips. you'll begin to
read the watc~ almost by in·
st lnct. And If you' re like most
peopole. you' ll discov('r th a t
yo u'vP got a nl.'w favorite wa y to
fish

Strange cops St. Jude

from

Hillcrest Hospita l in Calhoun
City alonl: with MIC' hael Evans,
thcdriv('roft h('car, to thcNorth
Medica l C'l.'nt t'r In TuJ)('lo, Sun·
day morning. Both we re given a
room and Rosemary Jarrel. a
spokesperson for North Mf'dka l.
sa id Ca tledge was In "sWblP"
condition.·
Earl E van s, a passenger. was
tra ns fered to the Oxford La·
faycll&lt;' Med ic a l ·cent &lt;'r In Ox lord. Spokesman ChU('k Drum·
min said Ear l Evans Is being

Letters to the editor

v

'

ca lculall on. !her&lt;' Is no ~tood
happy arrangement whereby pons - the Impl ica tion being that
rea son why Europe 's conven·
Western Europe ha s been able to they would rath er "go neutral"
ti ona ! defenses ca n' t bp In·
rely on American nuclear ml s· than do so.
The fact flo start with) Is th a t crpased to a point where - with
slles to deter Soviet aggression,
the(! U e of niiCiear·!lpped ar·
they
have no such choice. The
While the Individual membt&gt;r
Soviet
Union
co
uldn
'
t
a
nd
tillery a11d othar taellcal nulcear
nations of NATO co ntributed to
wPapons - a Soviet cbnvl&gt;nttona I
wouldn't
bypass
a
neutral
West
·
Its conventional defenses wha·
a
tt ac k co uld bt' s topJ)('d In Its
ern
Euuropc
to
attack
the
United
!ever tht&gt;y felt a bl&lt;' and Inclined
tracks.
to afford, Is about to come to a States. On the . contrary. thr
Amerlran fears of a . West
screeching halt. thank s to advan - Incorporation or W('s tern Eu·
GPrma
n pullou t from NATO. and
ces In defensive (I.e. spact&gt; rope' s economy Into the Soviet
shield) !Pchnology. Nuclear mls· sys tl'm would Ill' an Pssenti a l more broadly of Western Europe
going neut ra l, lhercforP a m ount
sUes may have bPen a great Idea preliminary to any serious Soviet
(though I must say. having drive against the Unit(.'(! Slates. simpl y to a fear of blackm ail.
"E ithr r dt&gt;fend us a t your exlistened to the caterwauling of The only effPC't of nf'utrali zlnf:
J)('nsr , wllh weapon s of our
the liberal left fo r the past 30 We s tern Europ e. th r~fore .
would be to soft e n It up for a choice . ot· we will quit tht'
years, that you cou ld have fooled
me ). but.they are a lready obso- Soviet ta keover, J)('acclul or a lli a nce." If tha t Is lnd et'd
lescent. a nd within a dPCade thPy' oth('rwlse. tin addlllon. need I Western E uroj){''s positi on. It
dwell on Western Europe's fate Isn' t much of a ri a lli a nce.
will bt&gt; well on their wa y to
The Unit ed Sta tes has thr
once a bypass ing Soviet attack on
milit ary museums all ov&lt;'r th&lt;'
' opportunit y - I would say the
this cou ntry has succe(.'(led? )
world .
Still, how real is the fear of
Pres umably se nsible West Eu· so lpmn moral obligation - IOE'nd
Wl'slern Europe's, a nd partlcu· ropea ns c an see thi s as wrli as the frre world's d('pend!'DC(' on
larly West Germany's . reaction
anyone el s~. And certai nly they " mutu al assured dPstruc llon" If
to th s inE'vltabitlty• I was re· have no cause to dlspalr , merely It ca n, and to substi tute for It a
cently told by a worried Amerl· beca use their nuc lea r conforter h l~ hl y effective 'and pure ly dPf·
can observer that the Europeans Is about to be take n away. e nslve space shll'ld . That wil l
are simply unwilling to reduce Weste rn E urope's combined pop· Indeed 1a m o n ~ other thl ngs )
their standard of living to the ulatl on a nd GNP are far larger o bl l~e Western 'Europe to stiff en
level necessary to defend them· than the Soviet Union's. If Its non -nu clear d efenses. The
selves with conventional wea· ' IRBM s are rE'moved from the lim e to sta rt Is now.

Middle East realties_

as Howell tries lo make the tag after his wild pitch
lo Braves' Oale Murphy hit the backstop In the
lirst Inning Sunday.

OVER THE BASELINE i\ND UNDER THE
DODGER · Braves' Olon .James (hottom) slides
safely under Dodl{ers' pitcher Ken Howell to score

.Europe, arm thyself ______w,_·uia_m_ R_us_he_r
As pointed out in this space
recently ,' the Klssinger-Nixon
objection to the "arms control"
treaty currently being nego·
tlated between the United States
and the Soviet Union is. logically.
also an objt&gt;c!lon to President
R&lt;'agan's propos&lt;'d space shield .
For both I he treaty and the space
shield would eliminate interme·
dlate range ballistic missiles as a
component of NATO's armory
and compel Western Euroile to
rely on so-called "conventional"
weapons for its defense. Both
proposals also, lor that very
.reason. make It likely that the
battle for Europe's survival
would be fought - with or
without the assistance of tactical
nuclear arms - on German soli.
II that prospect, In the opinion
of Messrs. Nixon and Kissinger
and their supporting chorus. Is so
dismaying to German public
opinion that it would rPsult in thP
triumph of a leftist drive to
neutralize West Germany, fol·
lowed by the collapse of NATO.
why aren't they fighting the
space shield tooth and claw?
The truth is that lhe whole

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Monday. August 3, 1987

$989
Per Shttt

ID!ALIOR RESID£Nl1AI. AGRKUlTUIE
&amp; COMMEROAL APPUUTIONS

BAUM
LUMBER
CHESTER, OHIO

insulates qin't h~t . light wti,;.t sheen
Wont' nrlt or loHodt quieter than rMial
goes up fott like. m1tal easy fo install
i•ol for NlW roofing or moofi'"J
I)I

).

�Page 4-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, August 3, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

PGA year's final "major' championship test
By MIKE RABUN
UPI Sports Writer
PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. (UP I)- Golfs
1987 major championship s.e ason soon comes to an
end amidst the sand and water of tlie PGA
National romplex and l! the year's current trend
holds true the winner will probably be Mark
McCumber ~ or someone like him.
If it Isn't McCumber, cl)ances are it will be Tom
· Kite or Payne Stewart or Curtis Strange or Andy
Bean -or Gary Kbch or Jay Ha11s.
All of them have been arou~d for a number of
ye~rs. building the kinds of careers that are the
envy of many . But none has won a major
championship.
That, howevet•, did not stand In the way of Larry
Mlze, Scott Simpson or Nick Falco, who have
added to the most unique stretch in the history of
the game by winning their firs t major Hiles this
year In the Masters. U.S. Open and British Open
respectively.
The ~9th championship of the Professional
Golfers' Associalion begins Aug. 6 over the
7,002-yard, par-72 PGA National Championship
course ·- one of four layouts that make up one of
the many Florida go lfing hubs. Bob Tway will

defend thP title he won at the Inverness Club last
August by sinking a bunker shot at the 72nd hole.
The summer's other two major tournaments
were played on courses without a water hazard ,
but water will come Into play on all but two 'holes
at the PGA National. And where there isn't water,
there is usually sand to be found in more than 100
bunkers. The greens are small and the weather
could be oppressive.
But rather than the course and tile conditions,
the pre- tournament discussion will likely feature
the trend that has established itself over the last
. four years along the major ~ham pions hlp trail.
During that span there have ll&lt;'en varying types
of major championship winners. There have been
the veteran stars who were.thought to be past the
point of capturing a major title- Jack Nicklaus.
Raymond Floyd, Lee Trevino and Hubert Green .
There hav&lt;&gt; been emerging players like Hal
Sutton, Bernhard Langer and Twa y. And there
have been the sentimental favorites like Ben
Crenshaw and the most r&lt;&gt;cent addition to the
maj9r championship victory list -Nick Faldo.
Through It ail. however, there has developed an
unprecl'dented statistic.'
·
The last 18 major championships, dating back

to the 1983 U.S. Cipen at.Oakinont Country Club In
suburban Pittsburgh, have been won by IS
different players. That beats the longest previous
such streak by four tournaments.
In addition, the last five major events have been
won by players who had never won a major
before. Since the U.S. Open was created in 1895.
there has "iieen only one previous. stretch of new
major champions to match the current one.
That was established In lh&lt;&gt; late 1950s when Dow
Finst&lt;&gt;rwaid WGA). Art Wall 1Masters\, BUJy
Casper !U.S. Open). Gary Player !British Open I
and Bob Ros\)erg tPGA 1 won cons~utlve majo~
events. Those were the first major crowns for all
of those players. just as they have been for the last
five winners - Greg Norman !British Open!,
Tway tPGA) , Mize !Masters ), Simpson tU.S.
Open) and Faido (British Open).
"
." It's just tiiat therr are so many good players
now that any number of them arc capable of
winning a major championship," said Crenshaw.
who has led or shared the lead during the last day
of ali three majors this year. "These days a player
seems to get hot for a little whiiP and lhen fall &gt;
back.
·
"H .is going to take an Incredible player to s tay

By The Bend

on top for any length of.lime anymore."
At this time a year ago, it appeared there were
two such "Incredible" players available. Tway
and Norman were fighting it out for player of the
·year honors and at the PGA they dueled each
· other for the tournament crown. They combined
Cor more than $2 million In worldwide earnings in
1986.
.
.
Amazingly, neither has won a tournamE&gt;nl this .
year .
lnst&lt;&gt;ad, miw · names have surfaced. Paul
Azinger. )it tie known a year ago, has won tl)ree .
tournaments In 1987 and almost captured the
Brit ish Open. Mize and Simpson have risen
toward the top of the · money list, Mark
Ca lcavecchla has played well throUghout the year
and David · Frost has quietly had an excell&lt;mt
And as a symbol of the year, Robert Wrenn

came from nowhere at the Buick Open and almost
set an all-time PGA tour scoring recOrd.
"Players art'n't Intimidated .anymore," said
Stewart, who has played as well as a nyone In the
world the last two years and yet has only one ·
vlcton· , to s how for I!. "There is parit y In
equipment and parity in !he sport.'"

••

rt

,..

.

to home. Whitaker's effort was futll~ a.• Salll•
tagged him out during first inning action at ·
Yank.,.. Stadium Sunday.

Karcher will get.
chance
.

ing keeping threP quart ('riJacks
on t he active rosier! and they're
giv ing m e a fair opportunity to
compete against the ot ht'r guys,"
Karcher, who is a native of
Glenshaw, Pa .. finished his col·
lege career at Tulane in 198&gt;.
"It feels good to be back in Nl'~
Orleans . People know about m&lt;'
and I think the opportunity with
the Saints is a lot better . I think
it's just a matter of gai nin g
experiencC'.

Pan Am: U.S. might
goes on display

'

I

I •
I
I

1

By MAR1'1N LADER
UPI Sports Writer
' INDIANAPOLIS - A warm
llisplay of old-fashioned Ameri .~an power and patriotism should
add s team to an already swelterIng summer.
·
: The Pan American Games.
always a showcase of talent for
the United States . begin a twoNeek run Aug. 8, providing a
preview of the 1988 Olympics and
an opportunity lor the U.S. to
· flash its might. Vice President ·
:- George Bush will officially open
: the Games.
• The track and fi eld. tpam, with
::0 such as Carl LPwis and Jaeki&lt;'
• Joyner-Kersee. has been caiied
~ explosive; the basketbaii team.
: led by David Robinson . Is consi:·: dered unbeatabl e. and th(• gym \ nasl s will be tumbling in a class
.,, of their own.
•: Of the glamour sports, only In
:• baseball · and boxing do the
• United States field an underdog
• team, but not by much. While
: Cuba· is a six-time winner of thP
·: Pan Am baseball title, its na·
': Ilona! team was beaten tw ice in
: July by the U.S.
; Even In swimm ing, where the
: very best are going to Brisbane.
:' Australia, for the Pan Pacific
•' Games. the United States still
;. has more depth than it needs to
:: dominate at Indianapolis. · ·
~ More than 4,400 athletes from
:: 38 Western Hemis pher e nations
:· will compete In 30 sports. includ• lng some 675 participants !~om
: the U.S. This Is the first time the
• United States is hosting the
; Games since Chicago in 1959.
:· The Games · originally were
\ awarded to Santiago, but Chile's
:, military government decided it
·. could not alford to host the event.
:· Ecuador, the next choice, didn't
: have sufficient money.
, In the nine previous Pan Am
· . Games, the United States won a
:: total of 1,967 m~als , a lmost

three times as many as runncrup

Cuba with 672. The U.S. haul In
· Vcnezuda four years ago was 284
medals to 11;, for Cuba and 10~ for
Canada.
Carl Lew is, winner of four gold
medals in the Los Angeles
Olympics. will skip the spr int s
and devote fu ii at tent ion to tryin~t
to break Bob Beamon's 19-yearoid record of 29 feet. 2- ~ inches
in the long jump. H&lt;' believes ,,,e
rubberized Mondo runwav In
Indianapolis will provide him the
necessary assist.
"l 'm ready to do it, " Lewis
sa id. "It will just take ro nslslent
wind or no wind for just one da y~ "
.Joyner a lso is aiming to break
a long jump record, this one her
own. Her husband· coac h, Bob
Kersee. predlcled she would
better her American mark of
23-9.
'
National champion Mark With&lt;
erspoon and Lee McRae of the
University_of Pittsburgh sbould
decld&lt;' the men's 100- meter title
between them. and the same Is
likely In the women"s 100 between
Diane Williams and Georgia's
Gwen Torrence.
Other top U.S. contenders
Include Floyd Heard and Wallace
Spearman In thl' men's 200,
Butch Reynolds and Roddie
· Haley in the 400, Johnny Gray in
the 800, and Delisa Walton- Floyd
and Essie Washington in the
women's 800.
"Tbls could probably be the
best (Pan Am) team ever assembled," said U.S. men's coach
Tom Teiiez. "If the athletes do
what they are capable of, they' ll
do fine."
Tbe men's basketball team is
as certain a gold medal winner as
anyone competing in lndianapo·
lis. In ad'dition to the 7-1 Robinson, the College Pl~yer of the
Year and No. fcholce in the NBA
draft, the team Includes Danny
Manning, a lwo-tijne Big Eight

HONORARY MEMBERS - These are the
lronorary rnemhers of th&lt;' Middleport Fire
Department arid Emergency·Squad attending an
anniversary dinner Saturday night. They are,

fronl, from left, Donald Lowery,- Paul Swisher,
Gerald Anthony, Raymond Ktoes; standing,
Ru&lt;st•tl Mills, Kevin Dailey, Don Mills, Raymond
· Russell, Everett Bachner, and Lewis Ellis.

110\\' 11' WAS - These Middleport firem en
show how recur wa.' done years aKO at Sunday's
actlvitl•s held behind the Middleport Post Qflitc.

Taking part in the dcmonstralion are ,Jeff Darst,
Boh Flsh&lt;' r, Ke nny Imho&lt;l&lt;'n, Boh Byer, and Tom
Darst.

'

~~
. .

I

·Monday, August 3, 1987

season.

Red Sox rout Royals
13-5; Indians swamped 11-5

HAMMOND, . La. tUP i l picking up the offense, leadi ng
Fonner Tulane University and
the team as a quarterback. he's
Notre Dame quarterback Ken doi ng a good job. •·
Karcher is gett ing a cha nce to
Karcher. who started his cotprove himself with the New lege. career at Notre Dame
Orleans Saints, but he's fighting beforp transferring to Tulane,
the odds and four other s l~tnal ­ . went to camp la st year wit h the
callers for a roster spot.
DenvE&gt;r Broncos but was cut bv
..
"He's doing a good job,' ' said the team.
second-year head coach Jim
" At Denver. they W('f(' never
-Mora following an early workout rea lly considering thr·ee (quar: sunday. "He throws some good terbacks!," Karcher &gt;aid .
ones in there th&lt;'n he makes a bad "Herl'. I think thPy arc tronsiderthrow . From the standpPint of

·'

Page-5

Bosto~

INCOMING - Lou Whitaker of the Detroit Tigers
tries to elude a tag hy New York Yankees' catcher
Mark Salas alter a vound hall hy Tiger's i\lan
Trammell to Yankee's Don .Mattingly who threw

The .Daily Sentinel .

•

By MIKE TULLY
"Seit7.er.. he just killed us."
UP I National Baseball Writer
s aid Boston Manager .John .
Only the temperature ros&lt;' as
McNamara . "S tanle y ju s t
couldn' t ·k('('p the ball down on
dramatically as Kevin Seltzer's
him on th a t first home run ."
bat ling avt'ra~te on Sunday.
· Kevin Seltzer tied an American
Startel' Mar·k Gublcza. !l -10.
~ague r&lt;'rord by going 6 for 6.
went~ 1-3 Innings for thl'\•irtory .
with th e Royals lurning thr('(•
leading th&lt;' Kan sas Ci ty Roxals
to a 13-&gt; rout of the Boston Red
double pla ys behind him. Bob
Sox in a 'gamc played ·in 100St ani&lt;')'. ·3· 11. took 1hr loss.
drgr('(.' heal.
In oth&lt;'r ga me . , New Yo r k
" I told my wife las t night th a t
topped Det roil g.;,, C hi ca~o
it 's been a great year and
downed Mliwaukrc 7-.1, S&lt;-31tir
evcry thing. but I haven' t got a
s had!'d Ca lifornia 5-4. Toronto
four -hit gamP,.. Seltzer sa id.
blasted .Clrv&lt;' iand 11 -!i, Oakland
" There were times I got t hrcc
edge-d Minnesota 6- ~ in 111nnlngs
hil s my lirs.t thre&lt;' times up but I
a nd Texas stopped Raltimor&lt;' c&gt;-2.
cou ldn-.t get the four·th hit , Shc
just said •I know ,vou can hit. .. .
\' anke&lt;'S K. Tl ~rrs $
At Nrw York, Mlkr Pagllarultl
She was right. Seit zer.collrct('d
hit ;r two-_run homr·r In su pport of
two homers, one doubt&lt;' and thr{'('
Rick RhodPn's Hth \'ktory ,
s ingles. t~· lng a teague mar·k held
oy many players for hit s In a leadi ng the Yankrcs. ·Rhoden.
14-6, put thr first -placr Yank"' '
nine-irrnlng gaml'. He also drove
in seven runs. R£'nnie Stennett of thr{'(' l(a mrs ahead of the Tigers
In thr AI. East. Dave Ril!hNII , R
Pittsburgh, who went i for 7 on
SPpt. 16, 197:i. hold s thr modrrn for ~ in sa\"l ng RhOden 's vlrtomajor· ll'ague n 'Cord for perlrct
rtcs. collected hi s 20th'"'"" of th ('
~· ca r . .Jeff Robin son , 7. ;,_ rook thr'
batting in a game.
loss.
"I rau~ht all thr breaks I could
po~s ibly catch today," Sritzer
Whit&lt;' So• 7. Brrwt•rs 3
sa id. " Last night I had two line ·
At Mtiwaukw. Rill Long. fi-ti.
won n sta rt for the first t lmr In
drives that werl' ea ught."
With Kan sas City 's artificial O\"N , a month and Chit-ag o
t uri registl'rlng a pre-ga me pounded out H; hits , for it s third
tempNaiure of H 7. Seltzer set a victor)' In a row . Bdbb~ Thigpen
cluiJ rookie record for runs fini shed lor· his lhlrd savr' . Chri s
scored with 64 and extra ba .~e hit s Bosio, 7.:1. sufftlr!'d a h.Y IX'r
with :m. Hi s ~ for ~ raised hi s extended left kne&lt;' and IP!t thr
a'·•·rage from .:n:r to .32i a nd the l!amron a stretcher.
Mariners 5, ,\ngt•ls 4
seven RBI tied a club m ar k for
At
Anaheim. Ca lif. , .lohn
one gam&lt;'.

we

. RESOLUTION - St,ih• St•n. ,Jan Llll% ,.,.nt\'r, a
natlvt• of Middt~ pnrt , pn•sent••d tiU' \liddlepnr·t

Firtl l&gt;cpatt nu~nt \,m h lUI Ohio S~· mt.h• ~ 'on mwuclu ·
lion for ils ~nng timf• ""f'rVkf' tu llu) f4HII IIlltllil ,\' aJ

.,

Sulurday night's dinner. R•t•t• ivlng the award
Wl'rr ·lt'ff Jlarst. left , Middll'port Fire ('hlef, and
Our! Sf iv (' r·~ , right, assistant dtief in c l1argl1 of
Wurk.
·.
,.

l ' lllf'I' J{f'II('.V SfjUa cl

•

\

wlnnfl'r.

1\ '• 6, Twim 5
Oakla nd . .Jose
a nseco
s ln~lro home Luis Poionla from
S&lt;'l'O nd with two out In thr lith,
pullin)l rheA 's within one !(lim&lt;'
Of i\L W st·i&lt;'adinJ! Minnesota .
Th~ Twins open a thre&lt;'·gam
series agalnsl third - pia&lt;'~' Cali
fornia tonight in Anaheim . Ge ne
Nelson was the wlnn~r and Jpff
Hcardon. ~- 6, took the lo ss.
Ranl(crs 5, Qrlok.'S'2
At Arlington. Tcuo, Bobby
Witt yielded itvc hit s over R 1 - ~
Innings and struck out a S&lt;'ason-

At

STATI·; COMI'f:l'ITIOl'! 1'Et\M - Thl.&lt; I• ihe
Ohln ('omJM•tltlon t: nu·rg••n•·y IJnll Tt•am ol tlw
· ~11ddlcport t' lr" llepnrtrnrnt wl1ldr wn.• on hand

Sumhl.l' In dcmorrstrat c technique.• to the public.
Tlr&lt;',l' anJ n on stlvt•rs, G11ry Ellis, Kenny·Bycr and
( 'rnig

U a r ~ l.

hl~hllt o hrlptheRangcr scnda .

four-11amr losing s trrak . Wilt.
&gt;-o, tiro a major- i('agu&lt;' r('('ord ,
hem ming the 19th pitcher to
str'ik l' out four batters in an
Inning. Mike Boddieker frll to7-5.

Payton may be playing final year
By R,\NDV MINKOFF
UPI Sports Writer
CHICAGO - Walter Pa yto n,
speakin~t the way he earriC:s ih&lt;'
ball . has high - stepped and
stiff-armed question s whel her
th is Is abso lut e!;' his last yea r in
th&lt;' NFL.
At a news co nference at Lak£1

Player of the Year; Keith Smart,
the MVP of the Final Four for
Indiana;
Fennls Dembo of
Wyoming; Pervis Ellison, the
MVP of the 1.986 Final Four as a
freshman; Jerome Lane, the
leading rebounder in the na tion,
a nd Rex Chapman of Kentucky,
at 19 the youngest player on the
squad.
"There isn' t anybody on this
team who isn't capable of playing," Coach Denny Crum said.
The United States has won
every Pan Am basket bail champions hlp except for 1971.
The women's basketball team.
a gold medal winner at the World
Championships and Goodwill
Games, Includes 1984 Olympians
Anne Donovan and Teresa Edwards and also is favored to
finish first.
Even before the members of
the teams were determined. the
United .Stales was considered a
virtual certainty to come away
with the men's and women's
team title&gt; In gymnastics. One
reason for this is the paucity of
the competition.
Only five other teams are
co ntesting the men's championship and six the women 's. Ca nada and Cuba are expected to
claim the other team medals.
Olympic medalist Tim Daggett
may be ready fo compete for the
U.S. follllw ing a career- threatening neck injur)'. Daggett competed at !ll percent strength
during the Nationals.
"Other than (Canada's)
Laurie Strong, I think
have
most of the medal candidates,"
said U.S. women:s coach Greg
Marsden. "We really are pretty
deep when they're all healthy .
We have six girls who are very
close. The thing that's exciting to
me about this grqup is that
they're so young. They're just
maturing now Into international
competition."
'

Moscs squrezed home David
Valle from third base with one ·
oul In thl' ninth. hclplng .Seattlc
snap Ca liforni a 's four -game win ning strea k. Mike Klngcry hit a
first -Inning grand slam for th e
Mariners . Strvc Shields pitcht'&lt;ll
D lnn in!(s for thc victor~ . Gr('g
Minton fell to :1-2.
BluP ,Jays II, Indian• 5
At Toronto, Ernie Whitt homNC'd a nd drovc In four runs,
, Groq~e fk&gt;li clubbed a two-run
shor and Lloyd Moseby drove in
thr('(' runs. powering the Blue
.Jays to their seventh victory in
th lr las t 10 outings . Toronto
remained zr~ games behind
first -plUc!' Nrw York in the AL
F:as t. Dave :5tieb. 10-!i. was th

Forest lx'fore the op&lt;'ning of tht.'
Chicago Bear·s tralnin~ camp,
Payton .wouldn't commit a clea r
answer to_lhl'qucst ion ofwh&lt;'lh&lt;'r
he'll play beyond 1987.
"Unless som&lt;&gt;thing happ&lt;·ns
and Mr. McCaskey tlt&gt;am ownrr
Michael) says he want s me back .
this will be tht&gt; last one." says
Payton, the NFL's car«'r rush·
ing leader. "Nothing Is final, but
I'm thinking it is ."
Payton formaiiy signed a onpyear contract to play in 1987 at
more than $700,000 a year . He
refused ;m option year in 1981l.·
"The negotiations were simpie, " McCaskey smiled. "I gave
him a blank check, told him to fill
in the amount and we had It
compl eted."
Payton rushed fOr 1. :1.1~ yards
last year, four th best In the NFC.
He has 16,193 yards, 106 rushing
TDSand needso nemoretobreak
Jim Brown's record. He also has
120 TDS overaii , six short of
Brown.
Payton has never enjoyed a
close relationship with the media
even though he ha s received lillie
criticism in his 12-year NFL
career.
When he talked about whether
it would be his final year, he was
outwardly unromlortable. That
was due, in p&lt;trt, because he
hasn ' t made up his mind 100
percent.
"I don't think he honestly
knpws yet,'' says Bill McGrane,
director of administration for the
Bears' front office. "That's the
way Walter Is. He's a private
person and he generally keeps
his thoughts to himself."
Payton emphasized he be·
lleves he can play at least three
more years.
"You realize that you can't
play forever," said Payton, 33. "I
think I can play three more
years. I know 1 can play and it 's
tough to come and·say you ought
to stop."
Payton, wM basn't missed a
start since his rookie year, said

he wa s physic ali;• st t· on ~ and s tIll
" love-d the gam&lt;'."
Even Bears Coach Mik!' Ditka .
who was n' t consulted bv Pavton
a bout any rrliremrnt pian; ,
remain~

ron\'lnCf'd of Pa~ · ton ' s

ablli W
,
" Waltrr Payton is still th&lt;' brs t
runn lng back In the l!'agu &lt;'. You
SP&lt;' him in practi&lt;·l' and how hard
h0 " 'orks. H£' n C'vC'r wants t o

carne out of a gamt•," Ditka says.
" Waiter Pa y1on is still a vital
part of th&lt;' fk&gt;ars ' ucc!'ss."
Th!'rt" ilr&lt;' several srrnarlos
whir:h t-ouid keep Paylon around
throu~h 1988,
-A possibl&lt;' NFL stri ke· could
ln!Prrupt part or all of the 1987
season. In that evrnt . Payton
would lik!'i)' want to stay through
a full campaign In 19!18.

CARRIER NEEDED
FOR SPRING AVE.
POMEROY
.

IF INTERESTED, PLEASE CALL

ltoW IT'S llONF: d('monstrah~d

Middle1rorl Flrenu'n

lht• ll!"t' of air l tagl'l in rl'nwvinl{ a
vh.·l hn from muiPr u c•ar and how Jll'liJlll' nn• c·ut
out (tlXtral·nh•d ) front a vrhicle at. Snnda)''!'&lt;lo

THE DAILY SENTINEL OFFICE

992-2156

a divifi(·~ stag(•d in cmmtworallon of the 50th

annivcrary of the Middleport Fir•• Hcpartrnent
and Emcrgrn&lt;"~' Squad.

THUMPER DEMONSTRATION- Thb piece
of

C&lt;JUipment

ns a uthumper"

known

wa~

demons! rated Sunday. The equipment is designed
to assist in handling heart patient..

' .

--.-

THE MEIGS CO. BRANCH OF THE
AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION
WOULD ,LIKE TO THANK THE
FOLLOWING PEOPLE WHO MADE THEIR
GOLF SCRAMBLE A SUCCESS.
J&amp;R Sport Shop
Joymar Golf Club
Riepenhoff Dist.
Farmers Bank
Bank One
Home National Bank
Clark's
F.O.E. 2171
· Becky Triplett
Gloeckners Rest.
Lynne Crow
Pleaser's
Debbie Miller
Downing-ChildsMullen Musser Ins.

The Daily Sentinel
Turnpike of Gallipolis
Paul Simon
Veterans Memorial ttospital
Americare of Pomeroy
Bill Nelson
·
Tony's Carry Ou' ·
Elberfelds
Lenny Van Meter
Crows Fomily Rest.
Tricia Boer ·
June Freed
Kroger's

...

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLLS

WITH OUR USUAL BIG VARIETY AND LOW PRICES
Lunch Kits w/thermos ............ ~llt.!M.l.IIAW•• 13.95
Notebooks -3 subject 91f2X6 .................... S2.19
. 5 subject....:.. laO sheets·l 0'12x8 11.59
BIC 3 pac. Florescent Markers ..................... SJ.OO
Scripto Ball Points ••••••••••~ .•••.•• r.vsli.At.~ ••••••••••••• 7 7 c
·Trapper Keeper Organi-zer ........................... '4.44
Typing Paper - 200 sheets ....................... S2.18
CIA YONS - ALL SIZES 4ND LOW PRICES
School Boxes ••••••••••.•••••••••••••.•••.•• :.••••.•••••••••••••• 57 c
Little League Baseball Caps ..........!J...'t7.11AW.. S1.19
Sun Glasses ...............YAWtl.tA.UP,A9.J:\9JIAlfl.. '2.50
Office Supples-File Folders, Index Cards,
Receipt Books, Manila files, Clasp Envelopes

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

RALL'SMIDDLEPORT,
BEN FRANKLIN
OHIO

INCO~fiNG liEU COPTER - As a part of the 50th anniversary
of lh• Middleport Fire Department and Emergenty Squad, a
t; rant Ulcflighl ,plane made ali on the scene landing.

VNIGHT SPECIAL
MEMQitffiS - Looking over a scrapbook showing Middleport
Fire Department itnd Enl!'rg•·ney Squad ad,ivUie• owr the )•ears
are Raymond Klot'S, Ever~tt Bat·hrH'r, U&lt;'rnhl Arrtlul'l!y and Rnh
Fisher.

AND TO THE GOLFERS .FOR MAKI.. G IT A
GREAT DAY

BACK TO SCHOOL

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
(Dining Room Only)

Smed with whipped potaloes , chicken gravy, cole
slaw. hot roil , butter and coffee. Sorry, no substi·
lutes except bevera&amp;t with additional price.

PH. 992·5432
i)

$3•2

POMEROY, OH.

Fried

.

s

FOR JUST

HOURS: 9·6 DAIL:Y - CLOSED SUNDAYS

�•

P.age-6-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, August 3, 1987

Monday, August 3, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

British native finds life in area different
By KAREN KIDD

I

r'

\

VISITOR FROM GREAT BRITAIN- Chris Adams, from SOuth
Wales, says he's having a fabulous lime as a visitor to the United
Stales. He is learning quickly the American way of doing things,
and notes many differences between the two countries. (OVP
photo)

Saint Ambrose once advised
Saint Augustine, " When in
Rome, do as -the Romans do."
Perhaps the advice would be
the same for the Point Pleasant Gallipolis area. At least that's
what one a young man v isiting
this area from Great Britain is
discovering.
Chris Adams, 19. of South
Wales, came to this country July
5. "I W!IS actually born in a litt ie
place just south of London. in
Waking," he said. "Mos t people
in England don' t know where
that is."
Adams, an engineering sci ence ·
major at Bath University in the
Georgian city of Bath, is visiting
this country under the auspices
of a publishing company based in
Nashville, Tenn .
His first stop in the United
States was New York Cit)" " I
was ' in New York about twothirds of a day and it utterly
terrified m e." he said. Th e
representatives of th"' compan)
that had sponsored his trip had
told him and all those traveling
with him " a lot of horror
stories." he said. The stones
were designed to insure his
safety by making him aware of
what can happen in a large Cit)",
he said. but he had tak~&gt;n it all to
heart . "You're sure som('One ts
going to jump out at you with a
machete and start hacking at
you, .. he said.
The publishing company is
sponsormg his trip tot his cou nt r)•
in r~&gt;lurn that he sell books In an

alloted area. The books include
textbooks. how- to books and
medical encyclopedias
"I was allocated 1hi s territory
here," he sa id.
Adams is living In Point
Plea sa nt but sells In the Ga llipolis area. He does not have access
to a car so h€' walks across the
Silv er Me!Dorial Bridge every
day "or hitc h a ride when ever I

ran ,'' he said.
Early in his to-be-brief sales
career he had a small ta ste of the
American justice system . He
was stopped by the Gallipolis
City Police for selling books
without a permit and was taken
downtown to Police Chief .Joe
Owens. "They werE' all terribl v
mce abou t it ," he sa id
Ad am s had r eceiv ed a letter
from t he publishing compam
stating that the company belonged to the Chamber of Com m erce i n Nashv illE' so he did not
need a permit , However. he dtd
not have that lett er wt lh htm at
th e time. "Butt ha t was rPallv m v
fault , I ju st didn 't know how your
law worked her e. " he satd
But the c lr c um s tan cf'~ we n~
clea red up and Adams says he is
aga in in good standin g with the
po lice and working his area . His
eyes were sudd enly \"Pry wtdP.
·" You ' r e probably going to writ e
that up ancl ever vone is goin g 10
say , 'God, hC:s been involv&lt;'ci
with the police. do n"t touch htm ."
he sa id. "I'm. a good boy, I rC'a ily
am "

'

The law is no t the only
AmPrtcanism wllh which he ha s

Philathea Society conducts recent meeting
Mike Gei·tach presented the
program when the Phllathea
Society of the Middleport Church
of Christ. m et for their Ju ly
meeting_
Gerlack presented an interest ·
ing program on the sig ners of the
Declaration of Independence,
especially the lesser known ones,
theirfamilies andbackground.lt
was noted that the Declaration of

Independence was not read publicly until July 8. 1776
Phy llis Gilkey presided at the
meetmg wilh Farle Cole giving
the opening prayer
Devotions were given by Rose
Re~nolds She also presented a
reading. "Loya lty" and Clari~e Erwin gave "A Prayer For Our
Lead ers."

The secretary and card report
was given by Mildred Ril&lt;'Y and
the treasurer's report by Farle
Cole.
Named to the prayer list wPre
Donna Har tson. Narsa Van M eter. K en Carson, Ted Rile)'.
Martha Fry. Thelma Boyer ,
Martha , Haggerty, T haddues
Bumgardner and Lucille
Theodbald.

Community calendar/area happe_nings
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Mei gs Chapter Order of DeMola y meets
Monday . 7:30 p.m.. M asonic
Temple.

through Friday, from 6 to 8 p.m .
for ages three through sixth
gr ade. To enroll ca ll 992-~o73 or
5326

gn

SILVER RUN Vacation
RACINE - Tht• re will be a
Bible School Monday through
meeting Monday. 7· 30 p.in, for Friday. 6 p.m. each evening. at
parent s of kmderga rten students · Stiver Run Baptist Church.
in Southern Loca l School District, cafeteria at Southern High
RACINE -Racine Capter 134 '
Order of Eastern Star will meet
QRANGE TWP Orange
Monday at 7. 30 p.m. All officers
Township Tru stees m &lt;'el Man·
and members ar e urged to
da y, 8 p. m ., at the home of attend.
Dorothy Calaway, cler k.
COLUMBIA TWP- The ooard
POMEROY - Metgs .Jumor
of trusteps of Col umbia Town ship
and Senior Band B~osters mee t
wlli m eet Monday at 7:30 pm. at
in t he high sc hool band roo m at 7 the fir e sta tion.
p.m. Mond ay.

.,

EAST MEI GS- Eastern Junior Htgh football players wiii be
!it'tect for helmets Mond ay, 4
p.m , at the high school
,. tETART TWP - Letart Townshi p Tru st ees meet M onday, 7
p.rn.. at the tow n hall .
SYRACUSE - Sutton Township. Tru stees meet Monday, 7: 30
p .m ., at the Syr acuse Mumctpal
Building.
LAUREL CLIFF Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church
Vac~tlon Bible School Monday

TUESDAY ,
RUTLAND- Village Coulncil
will m eet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
Civic Cent er.
POMEROY -Pomeroy Lodge
186 will meet Tuesday at the
Masomc Temple. Not necessary
lor officers to wear chapter
dresses.
POMEROY - Meigs Athletic
Boost er s will meet in regular
session Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
ht gh school. Plans fort he fair will
be discussed as well as projects

lor the upcoming football season.
Those planning to work at thr
food booth m ay get their skin
tests at the tuberculosis clini c on

An appreciation card was r&lt;'ad
fro m thP Dor ot h)' Baker famt ly
and new prog r am book s wet e
di st ribut ed.
11 wa s announced thcrP wou ld
be no August meeting. A food
auction wa s pl anned for the
Septembl'r meNing w!lh hostesses to be F: ll a,Ma e Daughl'rt y .
Cly daAll ensw ort h. Bcll y M cKin
Icy and Mar th a Haggert y
Hos tesses for the Jutv m('&lt;'ting
we1e Co lleen VanMeter. Rose
Reyno lds and Claric e Erwm
Others attending were Cly da
Allensworth. Dorothy Baker,
Delcic F'orth F:lla Mac Dau gh·

r r 1y, Crac-e Haw Icy. Fra nels

had to become accustomed. The
language barrier, thou gh both
countries spea k esse nt ially the
same language, Is very r ea l,
though more an inconvenience
than a probl &lt;'m . Ga llipolis Is not
only the name of a city In his sa l es
area, it is also a cit y in France ·
with an entirely different pronounclation . Not knowing of the
uniqu e Gallia Count y pronounclation, hi&gt; asked directions using
the name of the French city
" And this bloke just sort of looks
at m e and sends m e out about 10
miles on Route 141. " he sa id .
But he has made other , mild er
observations about the languagf.
" You use different wor ds for the
sa m e thing.' ' he sa td . Some of
tht:&gt;se observations he ha s
adopted for his own . "Awesome
Is a new word T' ve added to m y
vocabu lar y," he sa lcl .
Tr a ns port ation ha s bC&gt;f'n
another illumin atin g experience
for the young man from a country
where ridi ng a bi cycle to work Is
m ore the norm than a cunos lt y.
"How do peo ple surviv&lt;' hrrt:', wr

ha vr

buses everywhere.·· he

said. In the Unit ed Sta tes the
aut om obilr has becomt:' mort:' a
nt'&gt;f'CSs it ~.' th nn n lu x u1y " ThPca r
Is an cx~cnsio n of the body O\'Cr
hPrc." hC&gt; sa id " You Cltn 'l
surv ive without one. B ut your

rwtrol is so C' hC':tp OVf'r hf'n"
. N inrt:r cents a ga ll on, I can ' t
beliPV&lt;' it."
But television h,ts bee n ,ome
thing of a disa ppoin tment "To be
quit e honrst, I Wdsn ' t V(.'ry
tmpresscd.'' hP Sltid . F:\'cn his
favorite show, M .A S.H .. whic h
he sa id " Is a cult in t·: ngla nd,"
wa s cll sa ppowtlng
" I just
thought it was a pi!\ tha t thc_v
had an advPrt brC&gt;ak ttornm er
cia!) .11 the end of M A .S I{ and
when 'ou swi tc h bac k al l yo u gl'l

is the titles." he sa id " I thin k it Is
ver·y annoying 10 ha ve an advert
bl'i&gt;ak every liv e minutes, don 't
you think it' s a~noying 7 "
Stlfl, there are some beneflls lo
American television . In Great
Britain , he said, special annual
fees. the equlvelent of about $75,
ar e req uired for the right fo view
television pt·ogramming. "You
have to have one and they have
det ector vans that go around to
m a k&lt;&gt; sure y ou ' re not )\la tching
without pay lng... That's right. the
though! police arc her e fr om
1984, " he sa id .
F ast food has bee n another eye
opener " D 1ive-ln her e. dr ive· in
there. we do n' t have dr ive-in
anything in Engl ancl. " he sa id.
" Th ere' s a lot of fa st food here.
We do have Mc Donalds and ·
We nd y's and ' maybe even Pi zza
Hut. But we don't have the fast
food you havP her e."
B ut his warmest experien ces
ha ve been from the peop le of the
Point Pleasa nt · Gallipolis a1·ea.
"Everyone ha s been Just fabu ·
iou s to me. no one has been I hi&gt;
least li ttle bit rude to me,'' he
said. He has been olfet'cd places
to s ta)'. to be ta ken out to eat and
he has hHd S!'veral in v ita tions to
both the . Gall Ia and M asoon
cou nt y fairs.
Hf' savs hP d()c-s n· t know why
he m er it s suc h atlcntion, al l hough he spccu lates that it could
be hi ~ liltin g 13 n t tsh aC"ccnt or
th at C\ eryont' he m cC'I ' Js j usl
verv cur lous abo ut life in anothL·r ·
cou nlt\'. Or pNhap s its j ust
so m ethin g abo ut th£' people In
lhis aJf'a " PPOp iP arou nd hen"
art' Vt'r\' aeccptl ng of you .. .l
think thrr' rc rrail)' friendly and
I'\ r had su&lt;'h a fabulous llmr
her.-.." he said.
,\dams wil l b&lt;' in the at·ea until
r:tl' h October.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. hu.
VETERANS MEMORIAl HOSPITAl

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE HAVE HEARING--AIDS"
CAU (614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244

Roush and Regi na Swift
,-------------...l
___:_________________________

Mulberry Heights 10 the m ornmg
hours of any day except Thurs ·
day of this week .

singer-turned-bassist &amp;lbby Yester decided the time was right to
begin work on their own music,
and secluded themselves away to
begin writing. Save lor a few
out-of-town club dates In December and January, the band
virtually dropped out ot the local
music scene to pursue its goat.
Bv March, when the band was
heavily Into writing and recording
early demo tapes , It became
apparent that another guitarist
would be needed for both record! ng

Snowden birth is announced
Jeff and Caro lyn Snowden ,
Rutland. announce the birth of a
second child, a s0n. Adam
Jeffrey Mummey Snowden, born
July 14, al O'Bieness Hospital.
The infant weighed 10 pounds
and two ounces and mea su r ed 22
Inches in length.
Adam was welcomed home by
his three year old sister, Amber

Mat ernal grandparents are Hope
Mummey and the tate Harold
Mummey . McConnelsville. Mat·
ernal great grandmothers are
Mrs Neva McMannis and Mrs.
Pearl
Mummey ,
McConnelsville.
Paternal grandparents are
Adeline Snowden of Rutland and
Car los Snowden, Pomeroy.

Couple returns to meetings
The Rev. and Mrs. O'Dell
Manley, Middleport recently
were in Knoxville Tenn . for the
annual Bible Methodist camp
meettng and conference . .
While there the Rev . D. P .
Denton received both the Rev.
Manley and his son, the Rev.
~.teve Manley of Marlon '&lt;'I ndiana

as ordained ministers.
Upon returning home Rev. and
Mrs. Manley began services at
the Pomeroy Health Care Center
with 51 in attendance. Rev.
Manley holds a service at the
home t)le third Sunday of each
month at 2 p.m. and invites all
those interested to atte!)d.

-- ................ ___
.. _
.. _
ClOSID ~AY

~·

.:::,_,..,_ ,...

I

I

·-- ~~-----··--- ~----~~':.!'~....:--··-.. M -

..

·-----. - ... . . . ,.
:r---- · .:-.. .
- - ..... -

.....- . - - ... to:.=~:.":.:.=..::"-I
Olo'"

::n!:

:--~·
-~- --=-~

~-~
-"::.;or--"!,'!:.:....":':,':i'"'..:::.--

........

.-......-.. .. .....- ..................
IliA"
JIIAI'I

.. .

" " .,.

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

===~

C'oulfied pap• COI'er dte
/ollo141tnf relep,.,oM udu,.pt

----. . =--=~=
::'C::o;J,-

.,-=~
,u-~­

-~-

===-

-

IX

•

~ ~

••Ill••

_
_
.

,

-

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbut, Ohio

July 17, 1987
Contract Saltt
Logot Copy No. 87·556
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sealed propoula will be
rece'v•d at tM otflce of the
Dlr.etor of the OMo Depart ·
ment ofTrenaportation. Col-

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, .Ohio 45631

ala of the total amount bid .
Ptrtl 1 thru 18

Athono. Gollia. Hod&lt;ing.
Meigt.
Noble

Monroe. Morgan .
•nd Wethington

Count._, Ohio, on tfxt"n
bri"et on varlout roulea
and Metlon1, by c ... ning
and painting end other re·
leted work .
Field ptJnling of exiatlng

,,

..,

ween the houra of 8 30 A M

and · 4 30 P.M.

MondO'/

BABY ITEMS

Strollers, Beds, Oressin&amp; Tables. Play Pens.
Walkers, Clothing (newborn-4T). High Chairs,
Car Seats.
Must be in cood
condition.

VINYl &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

64 Misc. Merchandise

FOR SALE ,
NATIONAl CASH REGISTER
Electric. Good work·

ing order.-1&amp;0.00
RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN
Midtll

t, Ohio

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Puts &amp; '••~~lu

eof

Mary Hobatetter. C ltKk
Meigs County

Commisaionera

171 27. (81 3 2tc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIAFIY
On July 14. 1187, In the
Molgo County
Probata
Court, Call No. 2S5U,
Myrtle L Croll. 501 84 Plna
Trae Drive, Tuppero Plolno,
OH. 45713. woo oppoirr1od
e..cutrb of the ...... af
CheriM L. Croll, clec-od.
la1t of 50194 Plno Trae
Drive. Tupporo Plalno, OH .
4&amp;783.
Chorla H K nlgh1.
Acting Probtto Judeo
LtnoK. NHMirOod,
171

Cltrt&lt;

zo. 21; fll 3

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIAllY
On July 14, 1987. In 1he
Molgo County
Proba1o
Court. Caoo No. 2a.M4.
Aneefa Rudlar, 51937 BIgley Rldga, Long lortom,
Ohio 45743, WH appoln1od
Admtntouatrl• of the aeta1t
of Eldon .Charla Iloilo. cleCMiod. loll of 17101 Sial•
Routo 1 24, R_U... Ohio
4&amp;772 .
Charles H. Knight
Ac11ng Probate Judge

7·30·'87·1 mo.

POIUOY - Six acres close to town -with nrce 117 story
frame home, wrth 3 4 bed rooms Ha s mce ktlch en cabinets,
10' •20' st01age lluridrn &amp; patro, garden space MAKE OFFER.

FENCE COMPANY

TUPPERS PlAINS - Bnck ranch that has everythrn g1 Full
basement wtth flmshed rec room. 117 baths, beaulilul
ktlchen, fotmal dmm ~ 3 bedtoom s, oak lrim, quahty work
Spactous ' lot 2 cat garage, pal to bcellent co ndillon

$68,00000

Let U1 Fuoe 'loa I•
FREE ESTIMATES ·
AESIDENTIAL / COMMEACIAL

BUILDING LOTS FOR SALE - 2 41 ams ot vacant land
located near Eastern Hr gh School wrth access toRt 7 Wafer
&amp; electrrc avatlable $6,000.00

S/1 / rtn

Roger Hysell
Garage

.

If. 124, PomerOJ Ohio

AmO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alu TrtuMiulo•

HERE IT IS! Your home tn the country, over 21 acres of
ground, plus a 2 story frame hou se w/ 3 bedrooms, cellar.
garden area. shed &amp; woodllurner tor extra heat WANT

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

$29.500.00.

T•••
sll•l

Howard L Wrltnel

....,

fOil

ROOFING

•lf•lfltto

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters ,
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

hoMe."

HENRY E. CLELAND, JR . ....... .................992·6191
JEAN TRUSSELL ..... .................:....... ...... 949-2660
DOTIIE TURNER ....................................992-5692
TRACY RIFFLE ....................................... 949·3080
OFFICE..........................
... ............. 992-2259

949-2%63
or 949-2168
4·22-17-tfn

!CUT OUT FOI FUTURE USII

liNGO

YOUNG'S

TltUII.•7 PM-II 6oU

CARPENTER
SERVICE

EAGlES C1UI-,OMEIOT, 011.

Allo ...............
CAU fOI flif 1!111An

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

- Addons and remodeling
- Roofing and guttllt' work
- Concre1e work
-Plumbing and electric•l
' work

992 -6116

CALU

All M1kt1

•Washer&amp; •Diahwaahera
•Ranges
•Refrig•retort
eOryert •FrHzert

(Froe Eo11mt111)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

II THE

PARTS and SEI!Vli:E

992-6215 or 992-7314

J.R:s REPAIRS
TYs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation ,
Service
Electronic Organs
Mobile service

614-843·5248
RIASONAILI • RlliAill
8-20-'86 tin

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION
Vinyl 8r Alum Siding
Complete Guitar Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of All Types
Worketl in Home Area
2S Ytors
FRU ISTIMAriS

CAll

1-614-843-542 5

1;1\

1

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

PAT HILL FORD
'

992-2198
Middleport. Ohio

1-13-tfc

t•

BISSELL
BUILDERS

DABBLE
SHOP

Wt .... whlrt
ltHf il.
Wo oht how 1lla pfae1 lOr
...,....lnt o:t4 , _ . . ,
Wo oalilfy or yao ..,., pay

N. !IHI AVE.
MIDDLIPOU, OH.

flU IUICHIIIIG
W/TIIIS COUPON

ancl

Goaol1hru Atrto•1 I

CALL ANYTIME

446·8311

1-1·1 mo.

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At

PLAmC CRAFT

Mo11tll of J~\~

... .

Prius"

PH. 949·2801
or 949-2860

CERAMIC BISQUE

lf2 PIICE

R~a~anablt

Da.y ar Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

1
h Oachsund, fe- Wanted: Ball guitar player fop. y
male. bl•ck with brown, very 1
l forming rock group 304· 7732
pleyful.12 weeks old. 814-992· 6996.
~
2073. !
1
..
AVON , no service charge, open
Mother hbb';' Cat end 3 kitten• territories. phone 304-875·
to good ho~e. 304-875· 3035
1429
.
• .r

2 Tom Kittens, one month•
1upply cat food, 304-875-4066
OJ 676·3583 ,

AVON · All arau Call MarifYn
Weaver 304-882-2845 .

R N. applications

now beintl
accepted for full time po1ition.
Pleasant Valley Nursmg Cafif'ol.
Center. apply pertonnel office~
Pleasant Valley Hosp, 304+676-.4340. AA·EOE
...:

Found •mall brown, female
Dechound type dog. On Noble
Summit Rd ., Middleport. 114992-5778

FREE INFORMATION PACKET
$18,000 1n college astlst•nce .
The Army Nation•l Guard 1·
800-642· 3619

CLIMB THE LADOER

TO SUCCESS . Guaranteed income with

B

Public Sala
&amp; Auction

Rick Peerton Aucttoneer h·
cenaed In Ohio and Wast Virgi·
nia. Estate, antique, flttm, liquidation Illes, 304· 773-6786

Wanted To Buy

We psv cash for late model clean
uted
Jtm Mihk Chev -Oid1 Inc
Bill Gene Johnson
514-448-3872

c••·

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
end newer used cars Smith
Buick-Pontiac:. 1911 Ee1tem
Ave , G•llipalil Call 814··••8·
2282
Used mobile homea. Call 814o
448-0175.

potential of 826,000 00 firllt
vear earning•. Training program
for those who qualify, Appty in' :
person at W Va Erriployment
Office, 226 S1xth St, Point
Plea.. n1 , W Ve Aug 6th
between 10·00 am and 2 :30pm. ,

12

Situations

Wanted
older tnan WlntltO move in With
someone who w~l help care for
h1m In lowm Call 814·446· ,
38158. talk to Em111t McKinney ·~
Dodrill's PltvateHomeCare W1ll
care for the elderty 6n my home
Call614-388-8193 anytime.

18 Wanted to Do

- - - - - - "'

8uvlng daily gold. sll...., coins.
nng1, Je'Welry, sterling ware, old
coins, ltrge currency. Top pn·
en Ed Bur""' B•rber Shop,
2nd Ave. Middl-.,ort, Oh. 614992-3-&lt;78

Jim's odd jobs painting. drtve- '
way rHeeling, carpenter work &amp;
roof r.-ir. hen • hedg81
experienced Cell 614 -3792418.

W1nted to buy, 1tandmg t1mt.'
Call AI Tromm al &amp;1•-742-

Can do light hM~Iing and roofin'g. ~ 1
Reasonable rates . Marton ,
Snider 614-949·2129.

QUILTS
AntiqUit·Pre 1940's. Call Marc
814-992-2101 (dlly-1) or 1-692·
2461 evening• ,

Room and bo•d for elderly and
handicapped with personal care. ~
In Middlepon. Call 814-992·
6873
•
.,

2328.

Would like to reserve an order tor
lim• bean1. 304· 6715-2083.
loom for rug weaving, 304773-9661

f_mploymenl
St;rv1ces
11

Help Wantt~d

Bartender for local bulineu-1 6
nightl a wh hp, req'ed. Mall
rftume to: Box Cia 100 c/ o
Clalllpolia D•llv Tribun•826 3rd
Ave. Galllpolit, Ohio 41831

Vacancy for elderly lady. Good '""'~
hom•cooktd meal1 •nd good
care Calf 814-992-7227
It'• country living In my home for
the elderty . Prtv•te bedrooms. ' '
bath and living room. No •tapa,
nlee uarch and yard. only 1even
m1nutes from star" end hospital exp. 814· 992· 15185.
Grover's lawn Mower Repatr.
We'll pick up and deUver Good,
uNCI mowers for Ale. Call
814· 742· 2383 or 114-742·
3091

- - - - - - ·..
Want to babysit. experienced,
can supply
refllt'encet CIIJII
304-875-3774.
lawnmower nrvice •nd rep~!r
Also iawna mowed, 304-875·

1553.

.,

..

CUSTOM BUILT

\

GARAGES
POLE STYLE or
CONVENTIONAL

--··· ..GallTpolrs·---------

....---p·c;n;·arov·-·-----

&amp;Vicinity

Middleport

FREE ESTIMATES

PH. 992-2772
7·30-17·1 mo

MillE'S APPLIANCE
REPAIR SERVICE
Service Call
0n1 Sl2SO
lliYIIG llJ.YUMII · - 01
1IIUSDIOID UPIUIKIS. MI.

Ill'- IUIMiliiD I

--

TIM,

,MIS AIID UIOI.

!onldrt1 rtfrtpllfrl, ....,.
·~

A(

p

.

Tundly, Aug. 4 . Exercise bike,
tov•. blcyel81, kids clothft (0·6),
l••n•· ell ei;r:es. In town beside
Stockvtrd.

onlrl.

Yard Sale: 2 milft out of Vinton
on Shepard Lane. Aug 4,5,end
&amp;. Moving.

Housecleaning ule. 4 mi St Rl
143. Coketr•vs, old bottlet. old
and new it..,s. 1.3,4,6. 9-6

Y•d S•le: Mon Aug. 3 · Tuea
Aug. 4, 1· 15 . 2 mil• out Rt. 218.
Oirlt clothes size• 6·1, 7 · 8,

8·10

~--

CAll

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

~··_m_
. ________________

PlllllliiNG &amp; HEAnNG
161

North Second

Mitlolopert, Ohie 457.0

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Wo Corry Flohlng 81J111111o1
Pay Your Cable &amp;

Phone Bills Here

IUIINISS PIIONI

r•141 mnn
IISIDIIICI 1'110111
1'141 "1·7154
1/2!/lfn

Riveri• Antiq_ues

,_roy

1124 Eut 1k1111 St.
HOlliS. Tua ••wa-Fri.

11

0.!11.

te 7 ,...

....,. 1 p.m.-7 p.m.
ly O..o or a,olrd-

RUSS MOORE
992-2526
7-1-S7 1 ....

DENNY
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
• TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

PIANO TUNING

leam SO'- Off
SECOND t•lng If
.............. 0111

year,
15 Yn. hpe.t.•• t.
Sdlaeh,la•S:
Clnwd1n.
Go041

tllraottlo

10, 1917

...:~~~~~ :.o

0 VINYl

SIDING
0
AlliMNUM SIDING
'llOWN IN
INSUUnON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
•• ·-hilt

"Free Estimate&amp;''

PH. 949-2160 :

or 949-2101
... s.May

Nice gerage Hie: Juns. nice
ctothlng. 1 mile on 143. Aug
4.8,1.
Man. TuH. Wed It th• Sugar
Run Alhl•d St•tkm un Mul·
bony .....

9·00·3:00

Tuet. Wed. Thur. 1 -4. 189
Mulberry. Pomeroy, mena.
wom.,._, end mlll:ya doth•.
Misc. ltenta. a.r Mt, Uotllnt
,condltlon.
'Y•d Ale behind Foodlend. Wed.
•l;,d Thur. leby ktml, IChool
dothft etc .
/Aug. 3.4.1. 8-?. Haroldlrewerl,
long Bottom, Ohio

.'

CerponSale . 660Bro~waySt. . ~

Middleport Auguat 4th and 6th.
9 ·00-4 00

----- ·pfPteiisiiiif _____·· ·
·~

. &amp; Vicinity

-·..

......... .... ............ . .... .. t .

'•'
Big Yard S1le. Girl•. women,
men's clotha; gla11ware. Aug . '~ 11
3.4.6 . 2107-MonroeAve, 8 30 · ',.,,',

1.

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL

.'

Yard Sale· 218 3rd Ave , Aug.
4.6,end 8Ch· Tuet . Wed .snd
Thuu . Good u ..d upright
free1er , stove, end tome
fumhure.

hwtnlolr~
.... •piHit, trooh ,...,...

ton.

&amp; Vicinity
................···-· ..............

Aug. 6th and 7th 9a m -9p m
Partial hsting Wicker rocker.
antique bed, boat and motor,
Tv· •• por1able gen.,ator. metal
desk, booka, thellow well pump .
like new. guna, windows. etc .
B1g aale multi famity Robert Hm ' ''
5th and Elm, Radne.Ohlo .
1

micr-... ...... .......P.omtirov····------

(wtn4tw utito

4-16-ll:t!o

'

F rae puppy

· 7/ 23/2 mo. d.

4-1 5·'86-fc

R~II&gt;IATOR
~ICE

i

9

Pomeroy, Ohio

1'1-----..:..---.._,

j

'-

GIIIDAl COIITUCTOIS
7-15-171 mo. pd.

6·17-lfc

"The
Clel11•
will

1·805-887-8000 Ext R-9805

Collie dog to g1veeway Good tor current federal lilt
~
natured, need1 attentton. Call
t
614-446-3870.
Friend..., Home P1rt1es ha• op ~
- , - - - - - - - - - - - , 1ng for manageu and de.aers ~
8 wk old male puppy, pan Pit ' vour area. Larg111t line In pa~ty.,...
Bull and Part German Police 1 plan, free kit, brand new chri.t..P
614-742-2260.
mea catalog, tay, gift, and hom.decor catalog, Over BOO 1tem1.~
6 kittena Long-haired. 2 months Top commiJtton end hostea~·..,
old, had 1st nt of 1hot1 Call gitl1 C1ll for free cet•log·~
614-992-7789
1· 800·227- 1510 or call cpllect ..
0-618· 462-0091
~
2 fttmele Beagln to good home
.
,
Call814-742-2863.
A1111tan1 manager or grocery )
manager wanted Exp•lence ~
Ferret to give ewav to good neceuary AmbitiOul, good f,
home 12 wkt old 614· 992· wtth people. Salary t115.000 to J
72n.
&amp;18,000 per year with ben.rits :
A growing company. Apply at •
Kittent to a good home. Call Vaughens Cardinal Middleport. "'
814-992-7382
;
1 Retired persons potition op.._..,.
Adorable fluffv cute ktttens C•ll for part·tlme help. Apply M ~
814·992· 7&amp;74
Vat~ghan•
C•rdinal,
Middleport.
_..:..._
__
__ _
__:___..., ;WI

•ROOFING •SIDING
•WINDOW REPLACEMENT

985-4141

Business Services
THIU JUlY

CIIISRI, OHIO

REFERENCES

MOANING STAR ROAD - Want to bu ild your own home but
can't hnd the perle~! place' Well , we have ttl 5-5 acre lots
located on Mornin~ Star Rd Water &amp; efeclnc available Call
us and slat! bUJidrng your dream home today! $10.000.00
each.

t7l 20, 27; 181 3, ltc

40"/o OFF 011 WINDOWS

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

PhoneDa,orh.......

OUT OF TOWN - Everyone loves the country and thJS rs your
chance to hve the re' Nrce 3 bedroom trarler wrth new cat pet
rn hvm g room, cethng fans m L R. &amp; kttchen. A/ Cunit rn Mas·
ter bedrm.. I bath wtth washet &amp; dryer rncluded Newer
hont porch lo sri on and waste those summer evenmgs away
rn thrs peacelul country settrng Also has many olher tea ·
lures mcludm g a wet bar, satellite dtsh. lot s of cabinet space,
2 bay wmdows rn drnmg area and master bedroom. All elec-,
Inc, d11iled welt MAKE OFFER $14,500 00 .

place people 1n over 70 cer-e•
2· 9 weltk old male kitten•. lhter fields Jobs are fulltlmeperman·
trained, to good home Call614 ent positM)ns with solid ben.rits.
258-1559 after 4 ·00 .
Applicants between 17· 30 yeart.
old wiU be con1idared. No Fee
Kitten• to u•ve away C.H Involved. Cell toU lree 1·800·
at 4-388-83&amp;8.
282-1384, Monday· Thursday;
9.m-2pm,
.. ~
8 week old puppin. Pert Beagle.
Cell 114-3&amp;7-0186 or 614· Govemment Jobl. a16,040 .;
367·7214 after 6.
t&amp;9.230 · y. .r. Now hiring C.tt.•

Far• Equlp111111t

•REMODELING &amp;
RQ_OIIt ADDinONS
•GARAGES &amp; POLE
BUILDINGS

.

Clerk

CHECK THE

ACCENT

$17,000 00.

Len• K. Nn..troad,

"Fifes"

711 S. 3RD ST.
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
PHONE (614) 992·7494

7-ll· lmo. d

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

enclosing the bid mutt be

WANTID TO IUY

614-992-3293

"FIEI lsnMATIS"

Van" , Bidder to UN own bid
form
The Board of Meiga County
Comrniuionera may eccept
the lowoot bid or the belt bid
tor the intended purpose. ..,d
reurvet the right to reitct any
or an bids and or •nv part ther·

The front of 1he envelope

Wanted To Buy

CALL

marked "Sealed Bid. Step

through Fnday.

9

Must see to appreciate.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULAnON

I

lion 307.88 of 1he Ohio Re·

1 - 1987 Stop Von
Specificotion1 moy be obIB!ned from the Melgo County
Commiatoners Office. Coun·
houH. Pomeroy. Ohio, bet-

PH. 949-2756
5·5·'87·3 - ·

In accordance with Sec -

aloud for the following vehi·
cle for use by the Rutland
Volunteer Fire Department

Middleport

Public Notice

NOTICE TO MOTOR
VEHICLE DEALERS

August 12. 1987. and rood

Residence
Corner of Fourth
and Palmer,

Autharizetl John Doera,
- Now Holland, lush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dtoltr

Public Notice

vtled Code. ataled. bids will
be received by the Meig•
Coun1y Commissioners In
their office located at the
Courthouae, Pomeroy, Ohio
46769. unttl 12 noon on Au·
gust 12. 1987. The bida will
be opened at 1 1JO P.M. on

MODULAR HOME!
Carter French

•Storm Windcws
•Replacement W1ndow1
•New Roofing

Tunday. Augull 11 . 1987.
tor Improvement• i n•
Par11 1 to 18 inclutive are
offered u on. contr.ct and
will be considered an the bl·

FOR SALE

•Insulation

WARREN J SMITH.
OIRECTOR
171 27: (81 3. 2tc

CALL DAVE OR PAUL TO PLACE YOUR
AD IN
YEAR'S EDITION
CALL 992-21.55 FOR DnAILS

JOB PLACEMENT: High school
grads. let us hBip vou discoverr
the tob thM f1ts you bwt. We..

•Storm Doors

umbut. Oh io. until 10.00A .
M .. Ohio Stand•rd Time ,

Code.
Plana and apeclflcedona
1re on file in the Department
of Trenaportation •nd the of·
fice of the Oiatrict Depuw
Director.
_
The Director reserv11 the
nght to reject anv and ell
bid I .

ADVERTISING_DEADLINE: IS
AUG. 7th

:!

8 wk old female kitten. striped.
long hair Call614-44.1· 3639.

John 11. Benh
Owner /Mechanic

1-800-826·1

Choptor 5525 Ohio Ravioed

'

Meel nice people •nd mah new'
frtends . Sell Avon. FrN · &amp;tart
upfH. C.ll114-441-2111.

(All makes &amp; models)

You'll build a big nest egg when
you save with the classifieds

15.

Giveaway

n-~•"-

P.O. BOX 1188
MT. VERNON, ,OH. 43060
DAVIS IIETAL SALES Is the Nation's fastest crowin&amp;
IIAIIUFACTURER of D-RIB mtlll roofin&amp; &amp; sidin&amp;.
Wt offers 4 profiles: D-RIB, HI·RIB. 5-V, CORRUGATED. Orders custom cut to the inch 11 no extre
cher&amp;e. OilS offers 10 btlutiful colors plus plvenized end plvelume. FREE delivery 100 squeres or
mort. Trims, skyli&amp;hls end tccessories. Quelity dis·
counts eveiltble.

c•..-.

Cook'• TV Service will beclos.cl
for vacation from Aug 3 thru A us

".

Truck, auto, l!o
heavy equipment
repairs and
weldillg.

EKh bidder thall be requirltd to fUe with his bid •
certified ch.c::lr. or c..~itr ' a
ch~k for an amount equal
to five per cent of hit bid, but
In no event more than fifty
thouund dollara, or a bond
for 1en per cent of his bid,
payebtt to tht D irector.
Bidder a mutt apply. on the
proper torm1. tor qualific•·
tlont at 1.. 11 ten daya prior
to the date let for opening
bidl in accordance with

THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR TAB
IS C NG ON AUGUST 14th

Area firm Meking locll iftdfvkf.
uel for outsWe ul• poliltOn
Tremendous opportunity for ant·
bit loU I VOUI\g peraon Who M}oyl
m... tng new people. Not onty •
job. bul •
Compl ...
benefit ,_chge. SHdreswmeto
. P S .C ., Box 18· 0 , Arrowh..a
lane, Portsmoulh, Oh10 461§2_,

4

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

DAVIS METAL SA

Help Waotad

11

c LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~ Licensed Clinical Audio_
logist

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR

PONI' '

Softball tourney
BRADBURY - Bradl;lu ry PTO
will sponsor a class D&amp;E mens
so ftball tournament August 8and
9 at Middleport Park. Entry fee is
$65 and two balls . For additional
information call 992-7195 or 9922540.

rrt:
"---··
;L:-...
"--==---·=

M.
tl •

llloto1't

- IDO•M MOIIO.r
lOO• II IUUOU
- 1011 '11 WI!IIIIIMI••
~ 1011'11 ltiU~IOA•

- toou oo

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
~ Swim Molds - Interpreting Services

ftATE8

DA~ UfOII~ ou• ~o; ATOOIO
• I lliG AM IUII~Dn

"TM dete • t for completion of thi1 wont thall be 11
Ht fonh In the bidding pro·

Show team
RACINE The mtdnight
cloggers are interdled m for m Ing a show team for its club.
Applications may be sent to
director Bruce Wolfe . Box 147,
Rac ine, Oh 45771 . Applications
mus t be post marked by August
10.

music thev had wrttten. John
Adkins was asked to join as the
second guitarist.
"
Restored to its original four·
member status, the band went
searching througout central and
southern Ohio for recording stu·
dlos to fit their music. In May the
proper studio was located through
word-of-mouth, and the band met
up with Dave Aiken of Lost Nation
Studios in Guysyllle, Ohio.
Under the engineering and producing guidance ot Aiken. Annex
recorded its self-pro:luced ortglnal
material beginning early In June,
wrapping up the recording during
early July.
"Breaking Ground" will be
released early In August In EP
format through QCA Records of
Cincinnati, Ohio. The release of the
album will coincide with the Annex
concert at thl!'1987 Mason CountY
Fair on Thursday, Aug. 13, at 8
p.m. This wm mark the album
material's locatllve debut.
Three reasons were motivation
for the album's release: to provide
material tor college radio and
commercial stations: to generate
major label success and last, but
most importantly. to give something back to the fans and
supporters who ,have stuck With
the band through the·years, ...
Songs on side one are "Mainframe," •'sllndslded" and "Hot
Tonight."

10 PU(I Afil AI CAU HI -lUI
IIOJeU thrw fleA I I Ul te' , ...
I A.ll. U..tH NOON SATUID&amp;T

Worll length - o.oo faet
o~ 0 .00 mite,

POMEORY -Missionary ser vic~s Tuesda y at Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, SR 14 :1. Speaker
will bet he Rev . David Gardner of
the Dominican Republic . Pastor
ts the Rev. Dewe,y i)ing.

A11 tllllrn cI! 111 en 1s
3 • Announcements

or 0 .00 mile.

Area band-releasing debut album
- The local rock band Anne:&gt;&lt; is
about to reach a milestone in its
10-vear history. During the early
part of August, the band will
release its debut album entitled
"Breaking Ground" under the
Columbus, Ohio label, Power
Game Records
The desire to release an album
had· been present for many vears,
but came to the forefront when the
band found itself a trio in Oetober
ot last year . Guitarist Jeff Wamstev, •drummer Mark Phillips and

Business Services

Project length - 0.00 foot

LONG BOTTOM
Ohio
Flame Fellowship Chapl er m eeting at Mt. Olive Com munity
Church Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m.
Everyone welcome.

The Daily Sentinei-P~J..

'

'

3 family v•rd 1a\e, Mon·Tua, , '
10:00 till 1. Cro11~ R . R . tracks
.from Beale School, follow signs:
new H Int. T.W., clothes. i'
woodburn..- •125 00 Som~ ·
furntture loti othllt' mise hems
Yards ... - Tueadey &amp; Wedn...'
dsy, Augult4• I . Ia m -1. 311 . .. , 1
~·
First Street.
'•

2 Family Yll'd lale - Toys. lte't.'•·':":-~
Re.aonabte Pticw. 424 4_1h ..
Avenue. K1"1uge, Ohio. 8 :30-l ,.~
'

Big Yard Sele. loy• cloth .... ' ...
dishH, sterM and mitcelhtn.. ,,..,
OUI. Augult 4, 5, 213 First' ~. r
Street, 9·1
• u}f
f

�0

..

.Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, August 3, 1987

"
21

LAFF-A-DAY

Business
Opportunity

54 Misc . Merchandiae

Mcrchanrll:&gt;l!

I NOTICE I

know, and NOT to Hnd money
through the mail until you have
inv•tig.. " th• off•ing.

Olive St.. Gellipolis.
NEW- 6 pe. wood group- '&amp;399.
Living room •uites- f1 99- lt699.
Bunk beds with bfdding· "$1 99 .
Full sb.e mattress &amp; foundation(
sta rt i ng - &amp;99 . Re cli ners
s1arting· 899.
.
USED - Beds. drauers, bedroom
~hes. 81 99 · t2 99 . Da1ks.
w ri11 ger wa~ her, a complete line
of used. lurnitura ,
NEW~ Western Doots· $30.
Worlcboots 818 &amp; up . I Steel &amp;
soft toe), Call 614·446· 3169 .

..·.. .: :

MOM 'S! Buy • SeU children•
clothing from Annie'a Ckla ..

Party Plan-lndiVktual

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62

GllB.ERS

s.a... Ca ·

t2 . Karen AiegM. 205 $tlr

Place. J.ckaon, Ohio 46640.
(:all 614· 286-2783 henings.

Rest1urant Butinftl ior nle.
Eutern Ave , Call 614· 446·
307? or 446-9782 ..

Countv Applian ce, Inc. Good
used npplianc111 and TV t(lts.
Open BAM to 6PM . Mon tkru
Sat. 614·446· 1699 , 627 1 3rd.
Awe . Gallipolis, OH .
·

Real Estate
~omes for Sale

Valley Furniture, new &amp; used .
large section of qual ity furni·
ture . 1216 Eastern Ave . ,
Gallipolis.

Lovely new 3 BR home built this

spring. 2 Cllf garage. nice area.
Clay &amp; city sch!oola, 6 milftlrom
Gallipoll1. Will eonstder mobile

"Ten to one ·they can't help

614· 446·8038 .
Brick

home

for

sale,

t.otal

r;;;~~~~~~~~~::-r;::;~:;~~~~~~~:l

electric,
3 BRgarage.
.. 1 % baths,
room, and
Call u1i1ity
"61 4· .

446· 0722.

.

34

Commercial buildings for lease.
Downtown Pl . Pleasant . Store•
Nice 3 BR . doublewideon corn•
lot in Thurman . EXc. Cond. Call . offices . A-One Real Estate:
Carol Yaeger, Broker . Cal1304614 ·245·6643 .
675·5104.

. For Sale by Owner: 4 ·5 BR .. 3
• baths . Approximately 4000 sq.
' ft . 25 acre1 with tennis t:ourt.

36 Lots &amp; Acreage

! 8173.000. Will

sell with only 5 ·
. acres for 5155,000. Call for
. apporrttment 61 4 -446 ·3386.

4 BR .. fp .. full basement. 3 mi.
so. of Gellipo!is. 34,900. Call
1 Oavs-614 · 4'4&amp; - 1 615 . After
' 5 :00· Call614-446.· 1244.
3 b ed room . full basement .
, Pomeroy. home. Close to down·
• to wn. Well insulated a'nd effi·
t:ient to operate, Improvement
' too many to list. Save before
li1ting with realto.r. Call 6 .1 4· ·
992· 7277 or 614-585-2583.

1 'h ac lot qn JeJrys - R~n Rd .
Apple Grove. with rural water.
304-576-2383 .
4 acres with 14at70mobileh0me
&amp; older haute on Board Rd . 1 mi.

Mu st sell· transfered overseas. 2 '
. bedroom house on Oliver St . In
Middlepon. Siluated on large
tree su rrounded lot close to
sc hools and grocery stores. 1
,Needs a few repairs but is 1o1ery
,liveable as is . A good starter
•home at only 89500. 614· 992 ·
2786 for information.
0nce in a lifetime! 6 rooms , 3
,bedrooms, mostly furnished,
la"r ge lot . Call or contact Bob
-tff!!ggerty , Middleport . 614 ·
992 · 5304.
.

1. 84 acru. nice flatland .
Conven. location. Call614-4467627.
6 Acres, 4 SR .• Home in country
lin.kfent:e, ~;~utbldgs., fr11it trees:
$53.000. Call 614 -245-9695 .

t,

from Sand Hill Road . 304-676-

7907.

S8\leral types of lots for sale. 10
miles1outh of Point Pl .... nt on
AI. 2 . Call 304-6761-2026 .

Ren taIs

1

1

Chester. 2 bedroom. bath. full
basement , large attic with steirs
.lcpuld malce 2 rooms}. Older
garage, outbuilding . 60K3251ot.
814-742-292.6 . $19, 500 .
Ho use for sale by owner: SmallS
roo m with bath on private drive.
Non h 5th in Middlepon. Ni ce
lot. Will seU on land contnu::t to
qual ified buyer. Call Bill Childs
614 -992-6312 . Reduced for
fast sale. $18 ,000.
3 bedroom homa. like new
Aural water. 4 . 8 acres. Meigs
Co. Redu ced to 528.000. 614•

742· 2295 .
2 bedroom on Bu tternut Ave.,
P o m ~ roy , CloSe 10 town , large
yard. Ca ll 614 -837-1326 aher
4:00pm.

· 3 bedrOQm , 1'h bath, corn Elf" klt .
Close to sc hools and town . Call
614-992 -3565 e1o1enings.
House. 5 acres. 5 m i. East of Pt.
Pl . All modern with 111lltheextras.
Appraised 80' s. 304-675-3099.
3 br Drick l'lome. lg-INing room,
deck, free water-se ptic. 8 1/t pet
loan assumption. 5 min. to Pt. Pl.
After 5 pm 304-675 -5306.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sele
NEW AND USEO MOBIL E
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALITY
MOBilE HOME SALES , 4 MI .
WEST , GAlliPOLIS. RT 35.

PHONE 514· 446 · 7274 .
Se veral t"land y man specials :
Tens. Twelves, and Founeena
from $1995 . Kaneuga Mobile
Ho me Sa'et, Kanauge, Ohio
614-446-9662 .
1984 ShuiU: . 3 BR . with expand.
Mi cro wave . 616,000 or best
offer. Call 614-446-6726 , ·
1984 S chult! 14x65 . 2 BR ., 1 '11
beth. like new . Cal l 304-675·
5950 c r 675-6551 .
14x70 c8revan traitor. 1 acre
land, gara ge, privacy fence,
loea.ted 'I• r:nile out Peach Fo.rk
Rd ., Pomeroy. 614-992 -2473
or 614· 992· 7512 .

41

Houses for Rent

Ni~aty furrtis~ed

smell houae.
Adults only. Ref8J"encet re·
quirttd. Off street ~arking . Ptt.
614-446-0338 .
.
Kitchen fumithed. carpeted, 2
BR , 1 "'h bettt .. no pets . . Oep . &amp;
Ref. 233 Second A1o1enue.
$350/ mo. plus utilities. Call
614-446· 4926 .
For Rent: Furnished 3 room
cottage in town, no pats, adutts.
Ref. ·and Dep. Call 614 -448-

2543.

Hall of 1 double. 128 State St. 6
rooms. beth. c:•pet. t200 a
month. Sec. Dep, •nd Ret.
Req'ed. Call614·448·0264.
13 White Ava. 2 BR .. sto1o1eand
retrlg. furnithed . $165 a month.
$76 dep . Call 114-448 -3870.
House for rent on St. At. 218 .
Ca\1614 -446-7208.
2 bedroom houu overloolctrig
psrk in Middlepon. Call 614·
992· 2598 .
New 3 bedroom ranch house
wi_th large fenced in yard. total
electric. &amp;350 per month. Lo·
cated on Rt . 160, 7 miles from
Holzer Hospital. No inside pets.
Refarenee required . Available
Sept . 1 . Call 614-388· 9755
after 5 :00 p.m .
House foJ ren1 in Ponland, Ohio.
CompletelY renovated. total
etectrie. central air, heat pump.
plenty of yard and garden 1pace.
4 mi. from Ravenswood . 814843· 5309 .
3 Dedroom house for rent . Ready
Aug. 1 . Must hM'e rllferences.
614 - 949 - 2866 for
appcintment.
3 bed room house in Henderson,
W: Va. t275.00 month, eell
614-446·9662.
2 Dedroom house. basement,
304·675· 621 4 .
2 bedrooms. 2 baths, garage.
JeflersOn Blvd.. no pet::s, 304675· 3901 or 675· 1625 .
6 rooms and bath, references
and deposit requifed. Option to
buy . Owner will finance .
8260.00 rent. 304· 675-1090.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

.1976 Skyline. 14x70, 3 be"d·
room. complete with 11 J:22
Urben Patio Cover and Door ·
Ca napy. Like new condition .
510.500. 1974 12J:60, 2 bed· 2 BR , all utilitie1 pd. e~tcept
room . EKcellent co ndition . elec .. turn . or unfurn ., sec. dep .
16300 . Delivered, blocked and req 'ed , Convenient lo cation .
leveled on your lo t . King sbury Coli 614· 446 ·856S.
Homes . 900 E. Main St ., Pomeroy . Ohio. 614 -992-5687.
12•50 - Edge o' town Rt . 588Carpon. One tmall child. Oep.,
3 bedroom mobile home. Set up S1 40 per month plus utili1ill .
and ready to move into. Patio Stove and Refrig . No pets. Call
cover. steps, etc. Complet~ . 614 -446 -7124 or 446-7350.

$6960.

614 · 992·65~7 .

On Morni~g Star Rd ., Aacine.
Phone 614-354-4084.
1970 Holly Park, 2 bedroDm.

04500. Ca11614 · 992 ·3100.
141170 Windsor with 14x30
addition. 3 Dedroo ms, pond,
appro11 3 acres, Gallipolis Ferry,

304·676· 6930 .
For sale Mobile Home 81 lwo lots
in New Haven or will sell mobile
home alone. For more inf. call
3 04-676-4468 .
1972 Windsor 12x70 with eJ: p"a ndo . •&amp;.500. call 304-8751558 .

33

Farms for Sale

8acresonTribbleRd. offRt: 62 .
Plus store building, warehouse.
3 BR houM. btrn. cellar. plut 2
other buildlnliJI. All Dlack 1op
road. C•ll 304-468· 1818 . Call
after 6PM .
103 acre f.,-m . 7 room houH,
bath. unlimited free QBI, 2000
lb. tobacco bale, ltockod pond.
timber, trailer II'*• with all
hook-ups torrent. Ca11814-742-

2642.
20 acre ferm Hannan frace
Aoed. Glenwood. W. Va. for
more lnformlltion c.tl. 304-773,

6118 or 773·6186 ofter 6,00.

3 BR . trailer for Jent. Call

614· 446· 1052.
2 Dr. with taparatedining room,
8175 a month. Owner pays
wtter end trash pickup. 10 miles
~ut Rt . 141, appro•. 15 min.
Aac:coon Tr. Park. Call81 4 · 379·

2730.

3 bedroDm trailer on Crab Creek
Aoad. $150.00 month. ' 304676· 1206.

44

Apanment
for Rent

3 room apt. for rent. Pat'tly
furnished. 814·992-6908.

APARTMENTS. mobile homn,
hous•. Pt. Pletum and Galllpo.
lit. 614-441· 8221 .
2 bedroom furnlaad ept, ret end
deposit, New Haven, W . Va.

304·882· 3217 or 304· 773:
6024.
3 room• end ba1h, u• heat,
ground floor. WBih., .,d dryer
hook up, no childran, lmmedlllte
occupancy. No peu. phone
304-~71- U80 Ot 53 or 10.

Apt. *189 . per month plua
utllfti• . Ref. &amp; amau depoalt

STANLEY Homecar&amp; Products.
Orcf:ert~;~day . Make your office&amp;
house cleaning easier 81 pie•
1uraabla. Call Stephanie. 6U·
446·8886 .

2686.

58

Fruit

======-:-:;:--Farm
&amp; Livestock

•sso.oo.

Apartments:. New paint , nice.
good location. Call 304 -6755104 or 675-n38.
661 3rd. Ave .. Gallipolis· 3 BR .
duplex , unfurnished apt., $250 a
month plus dep .. Call614 · 246-

9696.
1 BR , Apt . with stovund refreg .
No pet:t. U69 a month . 8100
Oep. Call614-446-3617 .
2 Sr. unfurnithad garage apt. No
pets. Ref. required . Call 614 ·
446-1873 between 8 :00· 5 :00.
Ni~t:e 3 Br., 6 rm . apt., atove. Ref .
and Oep . raq 'ed. Gat and water
furnished . Call 614-446 ·1543 .

1 97_2 Plymou th. 1969 Opel,
Cuto 102 keyboard . big guitar
amplifier. Call 614-742- 3073
Al so hav ing yard sale July 31 to
Aug . 3. from 9 -8 . At . 1 2 4' in
Rutland.

Furnished Rooms

Room1 for rent. day . week.
month. Gallia Hotel. Cell 614446-9580. R11nt as low as 8120
month.
Furnished room . 876 . Ulllities
paid . Sh8re bath. Single male.
919 Second. Gallipolis. Cell
446-4416 after 7pm . ,
·

46 Space for Rent
Offic• Space for Rent. Eatcellent
for Attorneys. Accountant, etc.
Close to Court House. Call
Wiseman Real Estate Agency .
814-448· 3144 . .
CQUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33, North of Pom•ov.
Rent~~l trailers. Call 614· 992 ·

62 Wanted to Buy

Ch~aape4ke

Now buying theU Corn Of ur
c~ rn . Call for ,latest quotas. R lv~r
C•ty Ferm Supply, 014 · 448·

Retriver pup•. AKC
registered. shou and wormed
read y to go , 304 -937 -2806
after 6 :00.

TONY 'S GUN REPAIRS . hot
reblueing, now takin~;~ order
orders foJ cus tom Mausers ca ll

304·875·4631 .

Siamese kittens and uu d rabbitt
cagM , call 304· 675· 5043.

AVON . look at us now , Earn
h tra Money . 304-675 -14 29 .

Two femole Blue TiCk puppies,
10 week t old. S 1 0 .00, 304 ·

675 ·6941 .

Maple den sofa. 2 ch ain and
ottoman 5200.00 . RCA upright
freu er. 12 cu ft . $150 00.
304 -676 -4572 .
.

57

Musical
lnst.uments

Baldwin fun

maChine organ.

304·676· 1295.

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Pe aches · Yaltow Free Stone.
Pick your own. $ 10 a Dushet or
$1 .00 per 5 lb.· Open 6 day-s 1
week. Closed Su nday . Raynor
Peach Or chard. 5 miles below
Gallipolis, Ohio. Call 614-446-

4807.

..

Freezer corn : Silver Queen. 10
doz . o; more· $1 .00 a doz.
Glassburn 's Farm Mar ket· St.
Rt . 160, near Poner. Call
614-388 -9027.

Metal desk 6ft 11 3 ft. 304-6753901 and 675-1625.
Wanted to buy, Oh· Kan veer
books, 1963, 1955 and especially interested 1956. Call
304-895· 3940 befor11 noon .
Portable lighted c hatlgeabie lutter sign, 1299 free delivery and
letters, W . Va. 800•842 -2434 o r
Ohio 800-533 -3463 .
.
~ew shower wall pump, used
one wrtek . 304-675 ·4373 . .

Quality Fruita and Vegetables
retail and wholeultt. B &amp; S
Produce acrou from Pizza Hut
Gellipolis, Ohio.
·

~==========J=========:::..I
SNAFU ® by Bruce Beattie

'•.

. :

63

'"Dl.lroc

1982 Bu ick R.egel. E11cal . Cond.
14.600. Call614·4415-0924.
···- .,-- - - - - - - -1971;1 Pinto, V·6 , auto. Good
shepe. 8800. 18 h . Alum. boat.
trallet", Mer c:u ry9 ,9 . 1 1600 . Call
614-448· 7019 .
1984 Plymouth A•liant Sw .
AC . PS. PB , tl11 . cru ise. stereo,
luggag e rack . E1c . Cond
U900. Call 614 -246· 9588
1978 Oetsun 200 SX , 6 tpd
Runs good. e700. Call 614·
, 266-1912
1981 Datsun. 12&amp;00. 1977
Pont iac. 11800 19 73 Ply ·
mouth, 1400. 1979 J eep CJ -'5 .
*2500. Cal1614 -367-0541 .

Boats and
Motors for Sale

:::~::------ · l c -

afier5pm

614·867· 661 9

1972 Chevy S uburb., Good
running c;o nditlon . 614- 7 4 2 ·
2557

1977 Dodge Mon ico 3 18 En·
glne auto, lik• n..., tirn 1nd
batterv. *400. 614· 992· 7466
1973 ford Pint2 station wagon.
Auto. Run • good 1600. C•ll
814-986·4341 •fter 5 :00pm

'78 Mallbo clauic. ' 7J No1o1a ..
304-876 · 1861 •Iter 6 :00.
74 Cutlet Supreme. 1400. or
best offBf. Runa Good. JO • ·

1989 Coupe d e Vill e Cadilla c.
New e111haust . tires. reeant palnl
job a upholttrw work. Run s &amp;
drNes good. 304 · 876· 3002 , 9
am to 8 pm.

72

Registe red Simmental Cow with
papers- brad to Slmmental Bull.
1976 Mont a Carlo. Pt .. Pb., 350
eng. C1ll 814 -379-2798 .
Angora Goats tnd RtJg. "N ubian
Dairy Goet1. Does. kids. bucka.
1nd wetflers. Call 814-3792887. Near Patriot.
6 yr . old . Apptloosa Mara for
tete. Great 4 ·H project. Cell

614· 441 · 7502.
3 year old Poll.t Hereford. Call
61 ~ · 992 · 7468.
7 cows and 1 bull. can .b.- seen
mornings Pliny route call 304·

937· 2206.

64

1972 Ford F-700 Stake Trut:k,
Hat 1.200 gellon water tank and
air brtk ... Runs good. t2000 or
best offer . C1'11 814 -256· 1468.
1 ton dump truck. Ford ph;:k- up.
1977 DeVill•d Elegan ce Sport
Ctdillac. good cond. Call 814446-9428.
1979 Ford Bronco. 1 owner, eJt.
co nd . 88.000 m i. AM -FM
cnseh.-. Call 814-448 ·7383.
"1982 Ood9e Ram 110. Stand·
ard trantm••lion, slant aix ovar·
drive. No rutt. good tlre1.

Vails &amp; 4 W.O.

1978 V.W. Van, 2.000 milnon
rebuilt engine. new Ptint, good
tires. Ekt:el. condition. 1 1700 .
Call 614· 246-5182.

Mixed hiiV $1 . bale on wagon.
Hay for bedding &amp;Oc. 304-676·

.

Straw and Hay, call 304-675·

6081 .

1977 J . .p CJ ·IS. new painl, new
tires , *1 .5 00 .00 . 304·671-

1009.
1978 Conversion OMC Van. PS .

PB. air cpnd .• 304-676 -2131 ,
Jeep CJ6. After 8, 304-576-

· Autos for Sale

IT .!eE/VJS 1b

Ill Wheel of Fonuna r;1
IIJ CrouiiN (0:301
eiiJ 1111 Jaop dyl r;l
a~
7,311I) ~JmOOUIII
1,00 (2) Dlkt8rl Terror In the Bush
e (J) 1111 ALF ALF learns

L•••• ........

gt

~/C·OUT ltOOJc: :'

&amp; Campers

J

-!i

what Chrla1mas Is all aboul.
(RI
Ill Poftlllo8t Racing 1987
Popeye's OHshore Grand
Prix from New Orleans,
Louisiana (T)
(I)
(I) Cli-eutr A small
family owned circus
stnJgglas to maintain Images

•

•ALLEY OOP

e

of lantaey.

21 f1 c1mper Tandem whtutla,
sall-cont•inffd , fu ll b11h. a wn lng , sleeps 11.11. Good condition
t3200 Catl 614 · 985 -U18

1!J Rlvw Joumeyo William
Shawcross travels alonq the·
Meki: from Ho Chi M1nh
City.
Ill!
a2i Kahr l AUie Allie Ia
swept oH her feet when Kate
isn't available lor advice. (R)

Services

RR-

Journeya C1'rristlna
DodwaH travels from the
Seplk River to lhe Wahgl ·
River. r;l
11)1 Prlm-wa Wrap ups of
the day' a world news and In
depth faaiiJre reports. (1 :001
1111 ..... AmeriCa &lt;LI
I:Ofi (I) MOVIE: ~OI!IIJ Are 1111
hve (NAl (1 :47)
1:30 CJl 1111 Valllll Double
data turns out grut for
Mark, but Ia a disaster lor
Wlllie.(RI
Ill! • a21 My ~~- lllrm
Sam becomes a campaign
manager when Patti runs for
class treaaurer.(RI 1;1

Home
Improvements

WAlEAPAOO,ING
Unconditional tlfet itne guo~ran ­
tfte l oc •l r~tfet'•ne" lufll is hed
Free ..t imo~te• Can collect
1· 614- 237-048 8 . day or night
R og e1•B• ae men1
Watatpr oo ring

.

EEK &amp; MEEK

em

Mf,l cruT «.t

e

JUST ClAIM

DI~AllC.

SWEEPE ~ •nd •ftweng m1chine
repair. parts. •nd supplies P1ck
up and daUvary . Davis Vacuum
C leane1 , one h s tr mile u p
Georgltl Creft Rd C•ll 614

IMAtUJITV?

446·0294
RON ' S leltY islo n Ser v 1ce
House calls on RCA. Ouuat .
GE Speci aHnu in Zen i1h C11 ll
304 - 678 ~ 2398 or 614-44&amp; ·

9:00 ()) 700 Club
.

2454

Fetty Trfi!e Tr imming , 1tump
remov•t. Calll04-875 · 13 3 1
Rotar~

or c•ble tool drilling
Mon we1t1 completed ume day
Pump ISles and tentiee 304

895· 3802

Starks Tree and lawn Sarvtce,
lawn ctre, landscap ing. l tump
removal , 304 -676 -2842 o r
576-2903

82

YOU SAW THE LOCH
NE56 MONSTER~ I
DQN'r BELIEVE YOLI 1

WELL, l DID. I W#&amp;
Fl L LI~ MY e,.t..THTUB,

WOIJLD "Tt:XJ BE:LIEVE

SEE, AND L .

EYEWITNE:515~

ceremonies of the
lnhrmatlonal Special
Olympics from Notre Dame
Stadium In Sooth Bend. IN.
Host Barbara Mandrell and
spedalguastYihHney
Houston are joined by Don
Johnson, John Denver,
Suun St. James. Frank
GIHord, Arnold
Schwarzenegger and Oprah
Winfrey. (LI
lil llll American Mll11811
The early years Chaplin
spent with the Mututl Aim
CompanY Is covered. C
Ill! •1121 Newhart Dlcli
reluetantly latl a-ge
accompany him to
P~Jbllaher'a party. (R) 1:;1
11)1 Lany King Llvelln depth
Interviews with top
neW1mekers ind cefebrltleo.
9:30 Ill Volllybel Pro Beech
Volleyball from Hermosa
Beach, California (T)
Ill! MOYIE: '1111 Lall Daya of

r HADAN

Reti dent fel or commercial w ir·
ing. New se, vice o r repairs
licentt;td el8(;1.ricien. Ettimate
free . Ridenour Electr ical , 304·

676· 1786.

BARNEY .
PROMISE YOU WON'T
11LL
TELL A LIVIN' SOUL SIIUT MOUTH
AS ARYA
WHAT I'M ABOUT
TO TELL
LOWEEZY

WHAT ARE
YOU LOOKIN'
FER~

Mai IJn Mo- (I :301

85

1981 Yamaha 850 Mptm, low
mileage.
C•ll &amp;14-949 -

••eo.

Eve celebration bite the dust.
(RI
10,001!J American Ma11811
.
Chaplln'a early eHorta sa an
. Independent filmmaker are
documented. r;1
llll Newa
IIJ E¥elllng A wrap up
of today'l IIIWI and a look
aheed to tomorrow'• IIIWI
otorlel. (1 :001

Cetlernt, Well s. Delivery Anytime. C:all 614-446 · 7404 -No
Sunday calls.

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming '
pools, cistorns. wetla . Ph . 6 14·
246· 9285.
R. II R- Water Se rvice. Home
CIStl!lfnS, wells, poolt filled.
Formerty James Boy s Wete r
Call 304-675-6370.

Kawataki 210 LTD, •5oo.oo.
good cond,. 304· 882-2467.

1977 Plymouth Volere. 318
engine, good work c:er. $400.

Yamaha )(T 500 8, 1&amp;60.00.

87

IT WON1T BE LON6 ~OW ..

Upholstery

304-676· 3190.

1981 Honde ATV 3 wheel•
70c:c. e~tc eond. bought new
approx 10 hrs ute , c.l\304- 171~

1883.

1982 Honda Nighlhaw~. 810

ec. Mun Mil. 304·178· 3002. 9
am to 8 pm.
Honda Trell 90. low mileage;
good cond, .... lng for heltth
reasons. 304· 773 -8923.

A &amp; M Custom Couches and
R ~upholatery, St . Rt . 1 , Crown
G'tY. Oh. 614 -256-1470 e
614-446 -3438 . Open deii 9\J:4 ;30. Sat . 9 :30 ·to 1 ;30. 1d
new ~PhC!stered.

.Galllomla
llll Midi

..........
.,,.,
s-.

for

,.
'·

.

is one
(abbr.)

21 Actor

Wallach

27 Baffle

28Comedy
29 'iurandot"
role
30Air Force
stalwart
31 Primeval
33 Swine

35 Civilaction

shoe

bringer
28 Boneless
37
Soliloquy
fish cut
words
30Seed

38 Water
pitcher
for battle 33Comedy 39 "Pony up"
211 Peruvian
- sketch 41 Hipster
42 Ohscure
34Annul

22 Merriment
coating
24 Prepare 32 Talus

~~~-

rv-~~~

genus
36 Nothing

37 Tsia, e.g.
40Stop

loafing
43 Exemplar

« lltasa Is

Its capital
411 Rich cake
46Mother
(Fr.)
DOWN

I TV's Monty
2 Olive
genus
STarry

4Road
. covering
II Shrub
6-jong

DAILY CRYPTOQUOI i!S- Here'a bow to work It:

8/3

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One leUer stands for another. In this sample A is used

CRYPTOQUOTES

..

R H 0

H R B V

'K C Z L ,

·C

eCil • eo

T Y 0

SLJHSZ

·-

(I)

Stubbln Pro Surfing
!:hamplonehlpa from
Oceenlldl, CIINiornla (T)
I!J . . OII

\

20Demur
23 Australian
marsupial

a little
19 Eared seal
26 Sizable
20 Reagan

TLJCJL

()) Pn»l..alonalluoflng 1986

free

·17 Alkali
18 Donkey

KCJL

.eCJJ

i" coun~ yarea 22 years . The best
" ~-r~ 1 ;u5e upholatering. Call

18 Move

111 Seculac

16 For shame!

em

LaarniCI frOm Your Father

~.ow re y·, UpiJolstering serving

30
•timates. - 4154

t: PortnrH of

USA Tonight
11,00 ())liard
lund
McConnlclr Game You

6&amp;

ACROSS
7 Swedish
wine
I Party
measure
.
giver .
8 Without
II Gather
(Lat.)
10 Asian
mnt. range
9 Hindu
holy man
12 Greek city
13 American lllmbue
jurist
141reland

va. the

frOm Huntlr!: Belch,

AT TillS SAME TIME
EV'ER'r' AFTERNOON ...

lty THOMAS JOSEPH

8-8

10:30 &lt;D Varloul
llllllatebo.lnllng Pro
Skaleboard Champi9"1hlp

IT ALWA'&lt;S RAINS ·

•u

i(D-

... Monlllr (lolA) (1 :281

PEANUTS

When you have a long minor suit to
tKJ
rwt in a ao-trump contract, nine tricks
+AI075
are frequently there, provided the opEAST
pcmenll don't take five tricks flnt. In
tJ7
today'a deal, South did noco with a
.KJ85
pre-emptive bid in lint
tlon, feel·
.54
lng that his K-8-t of spa es representtKJ983
ed too much oulllde strength. In reSOUTH
sponse to North's one-club opening, he
tK86
bid OQe diamond and then jumped t~
.3,
three diamonds after partner's rebid
tAQ109763
of 011e beart. That gave North the re- ·
~
spotlllbllity of deciding whether to go
. ' .
Vulnerable: Both
further.
Dealer: South
What migbt North do? In these situ- .
ati0111 the three no-trump game is 11SllNor1b Eu1
Soatb
ally best, but where wu the spade West
Paso
stopper? North certainly could not Pass
Pass
I
t
count on 1111 4-3-2 to do the work. The
Pass
3+
at11wer is what has come to be called a . ~:
Paas
3NT
western cue-bid. North bid three . Pass
Pass
spades. And what did that say? Simply
"I've got enough to bid over three dla· ·
Opening lead: + 10
monds, and if you can stop or partially tl!e western cue-bid some time an
stop the s~de suit, let's try for three find yOJinl!lf tn game with no play and
no-trum~. South w~ happy to oblige, no semblance of a stopper in the key
and happ1er sllll to fmd that North h.&amp;:d ' suit.
·
the K.J of diamonds as ~art of ~ Since the contract was played from
blgb-ard values. In the current tn· the rlgbt side, declarer had an overstance, It Is lopc.al that ~ spade bid trick- when West led from his strong
aaks for a stopper or parll~;~l stopper. suit. Had North been declarer in three
(When North holds c:ootrollmg val~es no-trump, the jack o( spades lead
m the
he c.an b1d n~trump hllll- would have quickly set him.
·
blame me 1f you try out .

for the tine L'a, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apcab apbea, the length and formation Of the words are all
binta. Each day the code letters are different.

10:20 (I) MOVI~ GodiAia

WINES

NORTH
•• 32
.AQ92

e0

CIIIIIIV and Lacey
Undercowr eulgnment
proves to be personal
experience for Cagney. (RI

Watt ersori' s Wat e r Hauli ng
reason able rates , immediat;
2.000 gallon delivery, cis lerns,
pools, well, etc. call 304·576·

Dump Truck Service, coa l, limeston e, sand. gravel, dirt. tra s h
ett: . Phone 304-675-31 90 .

(:

•Galao plano
Detlgnlng w.
lor a New Year's

General Hauling

74

Motorcycles

(I) lntemltlonal

~Opening

Cor . FoiJrth and Pin u
Gallipolit. 01'1 lo
Phon e 114-446· 3888 o r 6 1ol446 -4477

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Night It the MoYIII (R) (1 :31 i
Ill Surfer Magazine (T)

ll!*lal Otympjca Opening

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

CA RTER 'S PLUMBING

1!4

~~lyt:.~:i:'l.l:.t.,.
(I) •

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

Formerly Ken 's now J oh n' s
Water Service, John Watt erson
Jr. c;&gt;wn er. 1,000 Qr 2.000 g a\
aervece. 304· 676 -2248.

350 V·S, .1460. Coll814· 446·
0577.

S29S.

eCilJudge

geue:vt: THIS, BuT "''

79 Motors Homes

2919.

2919 or 614· 949· 2472.

ex::

~

Ill

Four 14 inch SS Cr1ger s. lug
nuu 1nd two tiras, S1 0 0 00
30 .. -882· 2 4 28

2742.

1977 Buick leSabre, four door,
air. atero, crulle, lih, new paint.

18815 Buiclc Aiver1. ':U1t of the
Big .ones ," charcoal Oray
19,760 miiN, lolided With
tr11. *14,150(1; Cell 114-448·

Chevrolet eng•nn· 3· 360 •n·
gines. ·1 400 am all Dloek. 1- V-8
lront whee-l driv• or S 1 0
pi ck-up Call 614· 24 6-!1067

NoT GOING

Played the Game: Bud Grant
(RI

D~Uard Wat er Service: Pools,

I

Hay &amp; Grain

•m

Silr Trek
7:051Il lllrnfonl arid Son
7:30. (J) CiJ NeW1twld 011111
Ill NFL luparalare Man Who

"(ollf(t:

'

BRIDGE

@a.naon

13800; 614· 985·4418.

73

.

ot Fottune

t!!1121 1111 -

ANO HEATING

Trucks for Sale

admoniahed, "has no special lime of Hs own. Its hour is
ALWAYS NOW "
·

reporta on world economics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:301

BASEMENT

13150. Cal!

Lawyw- N.wsy- Wrack- B¥!10111t- ALWAYS NOW
Granny had ·scOlded me for telling a lib. "The ll'uth," she

~~~~IIJ Mol.,- Cumlnt

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

2077.

rhe chuckle quoted
by fi lling iri the missing words
yov develop From step No. 3 below.

YEs1EUAY'S SCIAM-iiis'ANswul · ·:

Newlltour (1 :001

614 ·446 · 0966.

1973 C~wy Caprice. Good
work ear . 1400. 814· 992 ·
1971 ML!It.lng 2

.

•(J) PM Mqazlna
lll~(~l
(I) Entlotar.nant Tonight
· • (I) People'a CoUn
(!) all _ _, Lll1rw

Us Ad and Re built tr"n1mlss on s.
1i-t1ernally inspec.t ed and gu11r&amp;n '
lud . lnst• ll•tion .wailable. We
buy tun k tr1ns mlu ion1. Ca ll

81

I-~~..:;G'-r.YI•"'NC:,Ir'-A'-TCI_E;;.,.,Is,..-fl
Q-~~mplere
I

Wlncllnllruments

lliAT l!l ABALO- fACED...

14 ft fii:Htrglau, 18 hp Even rude
motOI' and trai!ef , t400.00. Call
304-676-1658

Palomtn:O~up

Al1 ernpjoymentlonn submitted
by a walter wu filled out com·
pleteiy by the fellow, but alter the
word "zip" he wrote, "Normal for

-+=1...:.;-I.:.,:.;1__;.1-1-I
. . . . . -

"=",
.

_

Iz!

L-.l·-~--.l.L-~-_.J.L-...1.

.

1981 Oodge0mni 012 4 Miser .
PS. PB. AC. 9lh'd 1h1pe. 11250
61 .. 992 -1804.

1985 Ford Eleort, Lo.., miluv•.
e•~•llent ·condit ion. · 2 dOOf ,
U500 cas h. 614 -388 · 9755

IIJ C8l -

N A L MY

York. (0:301 ·

1987 lnvt~oder 1£ 'h ft . V-haul.
open b o w , 120 hp 11 0 ,
19,200.00, 304 -676-2617.

76

I

aJJe"--•
1'311Il LMve It To lletrver
7,00(2) 1 1 8 - and
Mc;Cormlck Duet for Two

1983 BayllnM 16 rt·. bollt wk h
tre')ar . 85 HP "motor. Has wallc·
thrOugh wlf"!d 'hield 14900.
Pho ne. 614 -992 -71563 aftee
4 :30pm,

t llt\1•'
1978 Grind Pr iM, rtaw tires and -1984
trail..,.- , t1596. Can be seen at
1t,ot k s , tilt, AM · FM - Sm1t
h Bu lc k - PonH~ c . Ealtern
Steteo.Good body an d mo tor
Ave .. Ga liipolil, 614-446 · 22 8 2 .
' 11500. Call 814 •388- 9783.

1983 ChiWatta, Stand1rd. 4
speed. in· good co nd it ion
.t9,000 miln 132 Butt ernut,
Pomeroy, Ohio.

·.,

anchored live fr011! New

70 HP Evenrude motor. trailer ,
lots· btres. Seft , l!ll Galiipollt
Boat Club. Ctll614 -4,4 6•4782 .

1984 Olds. Cullau Suputme.
P.B.. PS ., AC .. Cruiae Call 614 ·
J67· 75.4 3.

Boar· (york· hampl 200 ID. and
Darr piga. 80 lbt. and 225 lbt .
"Phore 614 -258· 6609 .

388· 9308.

.,

1970 Nova • 327 eng., TRW
piston, full rac:e cam, 2.02
heedera. dual exheun. Mun cle4
spd. , Posi . raaren d, fibet'glass
hood wittt scoop. Ca ll614·.446·
1888 , uk for John .

1979 Pont iac Bonneville. 2 dr .,
e11c. cond. Call 814-387-0397
after 6 :00PM .

1987 Ford F-100, pickup· 223

"I s~nt yesterday at an air show."

For Sale: 1983 Plymouth Horizon; 4 dr . 69.000 miles. Nice .
Cell814-379-2726.

Polled Hereford Bull for sale.
Good herd bull . Call 114 -4461062 .

engine, 1tand. 1r1n1., needs
work. $100. 1114 A1mbter
stuionwagon, 191 engine.
12.500 aatual milea, nMda
aome work. $100 . Call 614·

47 Wanted to Rant

1973 Ford Tor ino. $1150. Call
614-446-2546 or 446-2826.

Reg.. pure- bred Limousin Bull.
Call 614· 266-1187.

71

Now thru July 31 , tirat 3
months. lot rant frH with 1 year
lease. Family Pride Mobile Home
Park, OallipoUa Ferry where we
c ..er to familfal. Spaclou•lots,
huge pl.yground • picnic area.
304-8715-3073 (if no antwer
leave m....g. on machine).

good. C1tl 81~ · 268-1187.

1986 Dodge Dayton• Turbo Z
red -silver. bltelc leather tun roof:
all opitons and •11tr11. new Elgie
GT tlret. 304 -675· 5306 aft et'
6 ,00 pm.

Transpnrtal1nn

SPACES FOR RENT - Trailer
lots, Rt . 1. locuat Road. beck of
K &amp; k . 304 · 67~-1076

'I

B oar~ .

Bred jutt like the
boars we tested 1t thl Ohio
Testa t ion that gtlned ov..- 2.5
lbs. per day. Roger 8enttev.
Sabina, OH . 613· 684· 2388.

7479.

3 t;)r 4 Bedroom houu In Kruer
Creek School District . Aeteren·
ce• Ph . 114·448-8621 .

Livestock

'

Space for small trailer~. All
hook-up•. Cable. Also efficiency
rooms, air .and cable. MasOn,
W.Va. Call304· 773 ·5651 .

1973 0 rand PrIX· Pont I ac:, nms

876· 3817.

6679.

..,
.

2985.

8 month Old Polled Hereford and
Canning tomatoes and bell
peppers. Picked $4.00 bushel
pick o wn 83. 60 buthel. Ray ~
mond Rowe. 814"247-4292 .

Autos for Sal&amp;

'75 Ford LTO. good cond,
304·896·3965.

614· 882· 3672 .

Twin bed·box springs, manreu.
Gracious • living. 1 and 2 bed- • Atarl-400 hom e compuler w room apartments at Village program recordttr &amp; game c ar ·
Manor end Riverside Apart - tridgas . 304 -675-3271 .
menta in Middleport . From
$216. includ ing utilitius. C11ll 2 HP add on air con d, A co il u nit
&amp; th·ermostat complete. 304·
614-992-7787. EOH
773-5751 or 773-5174 .
Fo, rent: Effi ciency cottage. Mt.
Vernon Ava. Pt. Pleasant. Hud Basement under store for rent.
shopsor ttora.g e. For sa le Air
approved. 614 - 9~2 - 5858 .
compressor, saw table for skill
Effit:iency apartment. Private type 1aw. 30 in rangeS 1 10. 00 .
entrance. Single working adult Call Bob Lewis 304-675 -1435 .
onl'fl Reference and deposit
required. 614-992 -5942 after Sears Crehsman 18 in alec lawn
mower S75. Whirlpool dehumi·
6'00.
difier , 30 pt capacity. like new
$75 . 304-675· 2161 .

45

1 '!'in latu re poodl e pup. AK C
regtsu~red . 1 male $1 2&amp;. lirm.

71

of

word• be.

·=

all voreae o1 the Mimi
0 8Mwllz Tar News Of
the entertainment world Is

~~~;;~;~;;;;~~;;;;;;;;•~;~~;4 1986 24ft. Pontoon floatboat .

Like new menualiv 9 P8t"ated
&amp; Veg~tables
hosp_ital bed· w ith metlrjj:U 11nd
side rt1i l11 .. Used just s8\leral
Apartment
lAYNE 'S F.URNITUR E
weeks. Sold new for S1400, C_a nnlng tomatoes. Letart Falls~
for Rant ,
asking only $600. Also brand Ohio. Harry Hill. Bring own
Sofas and chairs prit:ed from
new folding wheel chair, Never · conrain8f. ·
$396 to S995. TaDiea $50 •nd
used outside. Used o nly 3 dr;- s
up to 5125 . Hide-a· bedi $390
ins ide, Sold new for S645.
1 ar,d 2 bedroom ap~nment1 for to S596. Rodine~ S225 to , Asking S300. 614-992-2786.
Su~1plic~
rent . Basit: rant for 1 bdr .. 5375 . Lamps $28 to S126.
8183.00; 2bdr .. U19.00 . Also Dinettes S109 and up to $495 .
requ ired a 1200.00 security Wood table w -6 chairs S285 to
daposh . CONTACT: Jackson 8796 . Desk $100 up to S376.
Estates Dept. Ph 446-3997 Hutches S400 and up , Bunk
Equal-Housing Opportunity.
beds complete w · mattrenes
1296 and up to $395 . Baby beds
CROSS &amp; SONS
Furnished Efficiency t1 46. Utili- 8110. Mattresses or boJ: spri ngs
U.S . 36 West. Jackson. Ohio.
ties paid. sl'lare bath. 60? full or twin $68. firm S78, and
614-28'6-6461 .
Second Ave ., Gallipolis Ph. S88 . Queen nts 8225. King
448-4416 after 7PM .
Mauev Ferguso n. Naw .Holland.
$350 . 4 drawer chest $89 . Gun
ca Dineu 6 gun . Gas or electric
Guaranteed used appliances. 1 B Bush Hog Sales • Sen11ce. Over
Upstairs unfurnished apartment. rang e $375 . Bally maltresses
inch cok)r T.V $1 29 , 30 inch 40 used tractors to choo•e fr om-.
Utilities paid. C:arpeled. no c hild· 53!) &amp; 545 . Bed fram91 S20
e le&lt;:tfiC ra ng e . .$199, 2; door FF &amp; complete line o~ new • . utad
ren _or pets. Call614-446· 1637 S30 ·&amp; King frame 550. Good
ref rigera tor , 8 169 . 25 inch color equipment. la rgHt sei1K0110n in
selection of bedroom suites.
con so la S2 19 . .-.,3 ·automatic · S .E Ohio.
Furnished apl. neilit · door to metal cabinets. headboard s $30
washers. 3 alactiWC dryers.
Ut ilitv bldg: 27'dt!i'll9' . 1J·xa ·
Library. One prof"sional Adult and up 10 $65 _
track do~n &amp; 3' walk door.
· only. Parking. Ph. 446-0338 .
.............
84444 erected · Iron Horse
90 Days . same u cash with
Bldga. 614· 332-9746 .
Furnished apartment, $210 . approved 'credit . 3 Miles out
utilities paid. 1 bdr. 920 Fourth. Bulavilla Rd. Open 9am t o Spm
16&amp; MF Diesel tractor, 139150 .
Gallipolis. Call 448-4416 after Mon . ttt ru Sat . Ph. 614-446- Buildinv Materiels
.tt 12 MF baltr, *1 180. 1 h . NH
8pm.
0322 .
Block , brick, sewer pipes. win·· haybind. $1560. 200 gallon spray
dows. lintelt . etc Claude Win·
Upstairs, 3 BR , 1 bath, kit chen
PARSON 'S FURNITURE
ters, Aio Grande, 0 . Call 6 14- tank. 1295. Call 614· 286 ·
~22 .
furnished, no pets. Oep. &amp; Ref.
245 · 51 2 1.
238 First . 1250/ mo
plus N ~ w wood 6 pc. living room
utilities.Call 614 -446·4928 .
suues. S399 .95; New livin g Conc rete biocks 11111 sites yard or 800 FOtd uactor , -12760. 241
room :uites from S 179 95 10 delivety. Mason sa nd. G&amp;llipolis lnternatton1l round baler- like
Mw. $3 2fl0. International hay
2 BR. 2 Dath . t:arpeted , kitchen S700.; Chest of drawers 4
Bloek Co ., 123 \li Pine St..
conditio n er, 1296. Grinder·
furnithttd, no pets. dep. &amp; rat. drawer . S48., 5 drltWer. $69 .'96: · Gallipoli s. Ohio Cell 81 4 -446·
Mixer, $660 . Call 614-286S3251 mo. 11 Court St. Call End tables from $69 .95 sat .
2783 .
65 22
614-448-4926 .
Used Fumilure: bedroom suites '
fa,tll si:red beds, twin be~a and
Ready milt .concretll and all 9N Ford tractor with new 4 ft .
Modern 1 BR apartment . Call rockers . Re cli ners. from $99.95 concre te suppl ies. Ca ll us· v alley
bru sh hog. Runs good. 614614·446· 0390.
'
and up
Brook Ct~mant and Svppli es. 593·862 4. Ath..-. s, Oh io .
THE WORKING
304· 773·6234 .
. e ·rookside Apartments: 446 · MAN 'S FRI END
e., •. e hllin s, •nd lpr~lr..ts to,..
1932 or 446-4639. One Bed ·
al m ost a ny sa w . SIDERS
room apartment with large CARPET - 9x12 - as low as $50- 56
Pets
for
Sale
EQ UIPMENT CO .. Hend8fton,
country kitchen, new applian· lots to pick from . Als.o cut
W. Va. 304 ·876· 7421 .
ces, utility room, water, sewer c~r pet ,_ 16.00 a yd. and up .
and trash servi~t:es provided. F1nanong avail. Swival rockNs.
Qu i ~ area.
S100 . Molloha n Fu rniture . Groom and Supply Shop-Per Spaci.ts on New Holland t.t•y
tools (cash de .. tl . Two Model
Upper Ri\ler Rd . Ca ll 61 4 · 446- G room lng . All breeds ... AII
styles. Julie Webb Ph. 614-446 - 256. S VJ h rakes, 12.200. 00.
Furn is hed eff icie ncy , 701 7444 .
023 1
One Model2 158 . 8 '11 ft rakawfth
Fourttt Ave. S160 utilit ies pd.
dolly whHis. $2, 400.00. Two
Call 814 -446-4418 aft&amp;f' 8P.m .
Living Room Couch for sale,
Dragonwvnd Canary kennet. Pt1odal 472. 7 « hi'YDines.
good cond. Call614 -245-5855
CFA Hlm•layan , Persian and
t5 .960.00 On e Modal474. 7ft
1 BR apt. 746 Second Ave.
$185 per month . Deposit re· Twin size bed and chester Si11mose kiltens. AKC Chow ttaybina, 16,400,00. TwoMod.t
quirad. Call 614-448·4222 b. drawers . Bedding incl . Call puppies N&amp;w kitt ens: Siamese 488. 9 f1 haybine, •8.600.00.
and Himalayans. Call 614-446· One Mo del 489. 9 ft havbine.
tween 9 &amp; 6 .
614-245-9183.
3844 etter 7P M .
17.600.00. One Mod.t 30.
1000 RPM blower. •2 .950.00.
Furnished.downstain, 3 rm s.
AKC Golden Re u ieve rs. Ch e~ ­
One Model 462. dlse mower.
and bath. Clean, No pets. Adults
pion bloodline. Ready aher A.ug
13 .460.00 . Kaelen Serlllca
only. Deposit end Ref. Requ ired .
1 51 h. Shots i f'td wormed. Cell
Center . St . R t. 87 Poi nt
Call614-448-1519.
aft er 5:00PM , 614 ·446-6641 ,
Pleasant-Ripley Road. · PhOna .
52 CB,TV, Radio
3 04 ·895 -3874 .
Nicely furni&amp;had. 2 BR . apart·
Equipment
AKC Boston Terriers. Ca ll 6 u .
ment. Nic:alocatio n. Adults only.
256 ·9354 .
Mod'e l 200 M.F . field chopper.
Call 614 -446-2404 .
like new cond, $3,500.00. 48
.
'
Upstaers,
unfurn
. apt Good Good used co lo r TV 's , fl oor Dwarf Aabbhs in cages. Ca ll inch intulaga blower wfth 4 5 ft
614-446 -114 9 beforel5 :00 P.M. pip•.
Will uade for
locat ion. Utilit ies pd., Adu lts. models and portable ror sale
lives tock. 304 · 458-1031 .
Oepos . Call 614-446 · 1467 af · Call 614-446-1 149.
Pure bred Siam&amp;Se Kitt ens for
tar 3 ::,JO PM .
Sllle. 6 14-949· 2290.
G ra1o1ely tnachm entt . 8uah hog
1200. 4 ' blad• * 16 0 ; ~t:ultNa1or
4 rm t . and bath. Centrally
3 nice Beegl e puppiet for sale.
'1 50 . .rotary plow S1&amp;0 . 304lot: ..ed. One or two a dulls. Ref.
54
Misc.
Merchandise
Out ot good Rabbit dog. 614·
676· 1385 after 9 p .m .
and S ae. dep . req 'ed. Call
742-2521
,
614-446-0444.

(I) •

~ f\!l,~&amp;o.t

.

1111
75

•

em1uc1c

1' 1

6 '00.

IAMI

low to form four •lmple wordo.

ai)GOodTl.....
Roeere
I:OIIIl o-r to Eorth Stereo.
1:30. (2) 1111 NIC Nightly Newa
Ill John Fox'a OUtdoor
""-!RI

I

Smith-Corona Electric TypfiW ritter. Call 614-266 -1989 aher

~tter1

all 8ecret City

1981 v..,_aha 600 . Sl~gle cyl,
on or off r91d st r&amp;et bike. Mag
wh ...t , book rack, new engine,
mo st sell. 1460 . 614- 94 9 -

1981 70 3 wheeler. $326 . Auns
good. Ca ll 614-367-0421 .

Rearrange
0 four
scrambled

lll~(T)
I!J Qr. Who Rlbos Operation

1986 Honda ' ATC 260 R 3·
Wheeler. Racueadyorplay . Ca ll
814 · 441 - ~667 efter 6 :30PM .

Wurlitt:eF Piano- A-1 ~ondition .
Maret weight machine, other
exerctse equip, Call 814-3792248 Of 446· 1910.

5800
AC .,and
,.yr.
ol d.
$150.BTU
SofaGibson
· steeper
chair,
S160. Cell 814· 388-9783 . .

• (2) 1l)
1111,.....

614· 388· 8368.

614·448· 7669 .

WDID

l&lt;lllotl•to, Ct.Al I, P O L L A N - - - - - -

•

MON •• AUG. 3
EVENING

·' :!::' sca~4\llA-J&amp;t.tfse

1,00 (J) lllg V.ttey Showdown at
Limbo

1986 CR 260 Hond a. Excel.
cond. V.W. parts tor u la.

For S·ale; Honda C8360, Suzuki
TS1 86 . !JMX racing bike. 12 and
10 sp'eed girls bicycles. Call

r-lrod. 304-773· 9894.

In Middleport, OhiO, 2 roo"m
furn lahtd ept. 304-812· 2501.

1982 Honda C)( Cu1tom 600. ·
Low mileage. stereo, lugg age
raclcs. he. Cond. Ca ll- 814388· 8281 Daya or 614-388. 8351 Evenings.

,.4

Business
Buildings

4 rm houa e:8nd IOt .- 48 Neil Ave..
Galli polis. 89.000ormakeotter.
Call 614-367·0425.

Was h&amp;rs, dryets, refrig erat ors.
ra nge s . Skaggs Applian ces ,
Upper River Rd. l)eside Stone
Crest Motel. 614-446-7398.

•

.

1988 Yemaha YZ 126. eatc.
cot1d. t1200. Cell 614-379·
. 2561 .

Platlic:: cistern state approved,
plastic teptic tanks. ptattlc
e'u lverts, metal culverts. RON
:EVANS ENTERPRISES. JaCk·
son. Oh . 814· 286·6930.

GOOD US ED APPLIAN CES

me!"

home as tred•in , $47, 600. Call

Television
Viewing

Motorcycles

food.
Coli I 4· 388· f476 ·

The Daiiy SSntinei-PagB 9 ·

Ohio

1980 · 660.. Suzuki, runt good,
*1500 or b•l offer.
looks

G_oll614· 288·6251 .

THE OHIO VALLE Y PUBliSH ·
lNG CO . recommends that you
do bualntll with people you

31

74

Ce llahan ' t Uted TlreShop. Over
1,000 tlrat , 11z" 12. 13, 14. HI.
18 , 18.&amp;. 8 inllet out Rt. 218.

51 Household Goods

talog

KIT 'N' CARLYi.l! ®by Llrl'lf Wright

,

.L B T L S 0

C G

Z H L.G

TLCYOV

M 0

BLCFLG

Y N H R

O.H

0

Q

L

XQCO

HK

M 0

-I

Q Y' T C S Z

Y•terd&amp;J'I CI'Jpto4uote: TifE ART OF ACHIEVEMENT. IS THE ART OF MAKING UFE ,.,--YOUR IJFE- A
. MASTERPIECE. - WILFERD A. l&gt;ETERSON
r.'

-.

�Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

..

Pomeroy-M~dleport.

Ohio

Monday, August 3, 1987

..'

.----Local briefs----..
., Nation's heat wave enters third ·week
Squad has 12 weekend calls
at beaches or in cooler hotels and
By JACK BEARY
motels:
United Press International
Twelv e calls were answered by local units over the weekend,
Nineiy-degree heat swept the
A relentless , summer heat
the Meigs Cou~ty Emergency Medical Services reports .
wave pushed into Its third week · upper reaches of the Ohio a nd .
Calls on SundaY included: 1: 43 a.m., Middleport to Stonewood
Mississippi valleys. fifteen U.s .
across -the central United States
Apartments for Inez Pooler, to' Veterans Memorial Hospital;
today a ft er shatter,lng · high
c llles set new record highs for th,e
Racit~e at 2:06 ~.m. to Bas han Road for Jason Imboden, to
temperature records and roast · date, and at least eight cities
Veterans Memorial; Rutland ·, .t 3:46a.m. to Langsville for Pat
l!ig weekend beachgoers · and .logged readings at or above 100
Mitchell, io Veterans Memqrlal Hospital ; Middleport at 5:22
·
baseball fans from . the Greal · degrees ,
a.m ., to Noble Summitt and McElhinney Roads ·for Nora
Plains to the East Coast over toe
Since \he heat wave began las I ·
-Ca mbron , to Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers Plains at 11:48·
month, at least 69 peop le have
weekend.
a. m . to ReedSv ille for Dorothy Chevalier. to Veterans
The area, encolflpassed by the died . .Heat·related deaths have
Memorial; Racine at4:02 p.m. to Apple Grove Road for Beulah . 16-day . _!101 spell wlli not be been reported in P ennsylva nIa, .
Ransom, to Veterans Memorial; · at 5:25 p.m., Racine went to , · growing any smaller. Things will
Indiana, Illinois, South Carolina,
Yellow Busy and Mile Hill Roads for Chris Diddle, injured in an
be cooling off In the north-central Georgia, Wyoming, Iowa. Mis·
auto accident, treated but not transported; Middleport at 7:27
part of the country and warming . sour! and South Dakota. Phila ·
p . m. went to Rutland St. for Jack Clark, taken to Veterans
up somewhat in the northeas t . .
delphia alone reported 50 heat ,
Me morial.
Despite highe r temperatures related deaths du ring the past
At 10: 42 a.m. Saturday the Middleport t~nit went to.Bradbury
forecast for New E ngland, New two weeks.
Road for Wendy Smith, injured In a nwt_orcycle accident and
York state and Pennsylvania. the
The oppressive summer hea l
· . taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 6:47
. area has been getting a good deal caught some parUcipants in the
p.m . went to thee Arbaugh Addition for Bobble Swiger, taken to
1987 lnternaUonal Summer Spe·
of rain.
Veterans Me moria l Hospital; Tuppers Pialns ;~t 10:23 p.m.-went
The hea t and humidity smo· cial Olympics in South Bend. ·
to ChesterJor Linda Persons, treated but not transported.
thered the Great Plains, the Ind., by surprise.
AI ) eas t 200 -of the 4, 70Q
Mississippi Valley and the Deep
South Sunday , sending people m entall y disabl ed a thl etes
scrambling from stuffy homes to. s ought trea tment for sym proms
buy air condit loners or.find relief · of heat ex haustion from on· lheA Racine youth overturned a pickup truck Sunday, a t .5: 18
p.m .,on County Road 28, a bout a mile and a quarter south of
,· Ohio 338, according to the Gallla· Melgs Post of the State
Highway Patrol.
·
Ch ristopher R. Diddle. 16, 1vas cited for failure to con trol after
hls truck went off the left side of the road and overturned.

.
.

&lt;

premises · medical persQnnel.
Temperatures in South Bend
measured in the low' 9os Sunday
with high humidity.
'
'' I ca n' t - give you an exact
number," sa id Margaret Co~. a
nurse. ···But we've had a t leas t
:wo In for heal s troke and heat
exbaustion."
In Kan sas Cit v. Mo.. where the
Royals played ·the Boston Red

Sox · in temper at ures of 105
degrees , the artific ial turf regis ·
!erect a pre·game temperature of
~4.7 degrees, officials said.
··
At mldafternoon Sunday: the
Chicago Cubs were hOsting the
Phlladelphia f' hillies. In 96· de·
gree heat.
The · heat wave sent :record
n~mtiers of people. to Chlcago~s
beaches during the. weekend.

American Electric Power Co .. Ohio Power Co. and Southern
Ohio Coal Company have been dismissed as defendants in an
action filed by Michael Eanes, et ai. In regard to SOCCO's
involvement. the court said no evidence had been shown that the
company committed any act with intent to injure another.
Bank One, Athens, has been granted a combined judgment of
$14.844.69 from Robert -E . Sams. Reedsville. and Judith A.
Sams, Reedsville.
Plaintiff Motorists Insurance Co. has been granted a
judgmen t of $3,354.33 against Gregory R. Davis jn an action
filed against Davis by Charles W. Manley , e t al. Richard S.
Owen Ill has been dismissed as a party de fendant In the sane
act ion.
A contra ct has been rescinded and judgment of $2,979.86
a warded the plaintiff, D. Michael Mu)len , in an action against
Smith·Nelson Motors Inc., el a l.
Alside Supply Center, Division of Alslde Inc., had been
gra nted judgment of $2,904.16 from Wa rren F . Farmer. doing
busi ness a s Su perior Siding Center.
Tit le to properly in Olive Township has been quieted as
against all parties of int eres t in an action by Robert Harris
aga inst Naomi King, et ~1.
Thomas Theiss has been dismissed as a party defenda n I in an
. ac tion by Christina Cooper. a minor, et al. against Belknapp
Inc ., et al.
Other actions dismissed include the State of Arizona and Anna
Teresa Encinas versus Samuel Aumiller Gibbs Ill; Diamond
Savings and Loan Co. versus Nor man R. Hen'drlx. et al; Robert
and Tammy Klein , et al, versus Ewing Funeral Home Inc . . and
another.
·
.
In a, criminal matter, Mark Harrison, c harged with two
co unt s of drug trafficking, was re leased by the court on a $1 ,000
recognizance bond and David Frecker appointed his counsel.
An d a session of the Meigs County, Grand J ury has been
sc hed uled for 9 a.m. on Thur.sday, Sept. 10·.

Point Pleasant Emergency Med· .
lea l Servic&lt;? to Pleasa nt Valle~'
Hos pital w here he wa s prou·
nounced dead of cardi ac arrest
fo llowin g the 10::n p.m. acci dent .
Accord ing lo Morga n. Hughes
had a . long his tory of hear t
problems .
The police s pokesper son sai d
Hughes had apparen tly lrlccl to
s teer his vehicl e off of 1hf'
roadwa y, the n lost control, run·
nin g onto the s idewa lk. st riking
a n Iron fence pos t an d power
pole,
Hu ghes ·wa s tra ns p0 rwd to
CLEVELAND iUPI ) - The
PVH By the Point Pleasant
excitement generated in Ohio
E mergency Medical Service . .
over a record $;30 million Super
The ve hicle Hug hes was drf\·.
Lotto jackpot was quelled Sun·
a Ford station "wago n, wa s
ing,
da v when Ohio .Lott ery 'officials
totaled
In theaccide nt. according
announced thai two tickets werP
the
police
s pokesperson. Dam - ·
to
sold with the·six numbers chosen ·
age est im at~s for · t~e fenc&lt;" post .
in Sat urday 's drawing.
owned by Peoples· fla nk. a nd
Ohio Lottery officials sa id
powe r po.l&lt;,. be long in g to Appa l·
$20,6%,619 worlb o f lick_ets was
achlan PO'\(E'I' Compan;·. wer&lt;'
sold f(lr the semiweekly ga me.
n ot available.
·
which hadn ' t" produ ced a winner
Funeral arra nge ments arc
in fi ve drawings,
under the directi on of th&lt;' Crow ·
Th e num ber~ picked W&lt;?rt' 2. 3.
Hu ssell F uneral Home.
12, 22. 26 and H
Tht&gt; I ick el holders, whose
names have not bt&gt;en released,
can redeem their tickets toda y at
(i\s ol10:30 a. m.,
a regional lott ery .office. They
Provided hy
will s hare the $30 million pr ize
Bryce and Mark Smith
tha t wiitlie doled out in 20 annua l
of Blimt Ell I!; &amp; 1-•wwl ·
payment s.
The jackpot was a record in 1he
Firm
Prlc1:
13·year history of the Ohio
Lottery a nd the fourth· largest in Am Electr ic Powe r ......... .... 27 \'i.
AT&amp;T .... ... .... .... .. .......... , ... ..:ll \
North Americ a.
As hland Oil . .... .. .. . . .... . .. li!!l\;
Lottery official ~ sa;' a nother
Bob
Evans F a rms ... .... .. .... 24\-1
641 ticke ts we re nea rly winners
Cha
rming
Shop pes .......... .... :n',
with five of the numbers. Those
F
ederal
Mogul
.................. .. ~ ~y,
tickets are wort h $1.000 each.
Goodyea
r
T&amp;R
. ............. .. ?:i \-1
Another 31 ,852 tickets bear four
Hec
k's
In
c
....
....
.. ......... ... .... :n,
of the numbers. and each is wort h
Um ited Inc . ...... .. .... .... ....... 47%
$74 . .
Mult imedi a Inc ...... . .... ... ... 71V.
.Tickets are now on sa le for
Wedn esda y's Super Lot to dr aw· Rax Restaurant s ............... ... ... :\
R obbins &amp; Myers ................... 10
ing for a jackpot of $3 million .
S honey's I he . .... .. .. ..... ......... :11 1"\~
We ndy's Int i. ....... ............... Hl '·~
Wo rthingt on Ind ... ...... ..... ... .n~

Two have winning
Super Lotto tickets

Daily stock prices

c

Rule boys' death suicide
The cause of the death of John Cornwell, 12, found dead In a
truck on July 10, near Dex ter; Meigs County Coroner Dr. Jam es
Cond e s aid today was attributed to suicide by way of a ma ss ive
drug ingestion. The drugs .consisted of a sleeping pill and an
ana lges ic, Dr. Conde reports . The autopsy on the·-youth wa s
per formed in Franklin County.

I

Area deaths

I

Hughes. Poi nt Pleasant: a nd
three grandc hildren.
Funeral will be at 2 p.m.
'Fuesday a t Heck Funeral Home.
Milton, with John Steele. mini s·
ter. offic ia ting. Burial will follow
in Culloden Cemeter:v a t
Culloden.
Friends may call at the Crow·
Hussell Funeral Home in Point
'Pleasant after l p.m . Monday
and at the Heck Funeral Hom &lt;'
ft'om 11 a .m. to 2 p.m. Tuesday.

Jark Clark

·,

.,

!m:JsNOW
FRONTS: . . Warm

"

RAIN
Cold
-

[ill SHOWERS
Static

"

Occluded

~.lap shows r.'lintrflu'T'I terrseratur es.. At least SO(l/o ol any snadeO area ISp·edtc:ed
to rece1ve p:rec ipl!aiiOr: :r.o1c ated.
UPI ·

WEATHER MAP - Scatter&lt;'d s howc.rs ilnd thund erstorm~ will
&lt;'X lend from New ·England a cross ca.~t&lt;•rn N'c w York s tat e Into New
,Jersey and Pennsylvania. most num &lt;•rous ov~r southern and
central New England. Showers and thullde"torins, sum•• posslhly ·
"''vere. will he scatter1•d from thr• wt•Alt•rn Gn•at Lakt.,. Into
.e~L.,tern Colorado. St·aU•·n~d . rnalnl~· ~rt (' rnoon a nd t•vcnlng
lhund&lt;•rstorms will occur o1•er i\rlzon'!. Nrw Mex ico, the ccntr11l
Gulf Co:L•t slates, the Tennt&gt;ss••e Valley a nd the southe rn hull oft h••
1\tlantlc Coas t s tates.

South Co•ntral Ohio
Toda y.- variab le cloud iness
wi th a sll~ ht chan ce of thund&lt;'r·
Storms. Hot .and hum id wtth a
h l ~h 90 to 95. Varia b! P w.inds f&gt; to
10 _mph. Cha ne£' of rain Is :«1
percent ,
Tonight , partiy clou dy with u
IQW i() fo i5. Light SOUl h' llflnds.
C h a n e~ of rain Is 20 percent. ·

\

•

at y

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tt.il!sday, August4. 1987

By SYDNEY SHAW
.
.
WASHINGTON &lt;U P I\ - A Federal Communi·
cations_Commission plan to sc rap a 38·year· old
policy r&lt;&gt;q u Iring broadcasters to air all s ides of
con troversial public Is sues is already drawing
fire from law makers a nd citizen groups .
Th e dl.'clslon to repea l the so· c~ ll ed Fair ness
Doctrine - long opposed by broadcasters and th e
adminis tration but supported by a broa d r~ nge of
public Int e res t groups- was expected toda y. a
month a nd a half aft er Pres ident Reaga n vetoed
legis la tion that would have made' the policy law .
Word 6f the Impending FCC dectslon,.ex pecte&lt;l
to be una n imous. drew stor·m o f protest Monday
from eltlzcn grou ps, which will a lmost ceria inly
fll(' suit, a nd the House and Senat e. where S~ n .
E•:nest Holllnl'S• D· S.C .. accused lhl.' agency of
" re pud iating thr int e nt of Co_n!(ress ."
FCC sources would not n; vo'al deta ils of the
decision. but II Was widely c•xfll.'cled to Include a
statement that th e Fairness Doctl'lne Is unconstl·

tulional because it violat E's broad cas ters ' Firs t
Amendment r ig ht s.
. Before the vote, the agency also planned to
release a repo rt to Congr ess analyzing the
doct r ine. A House pa nel had ordered the
commi ssion to submit the re por t before taki ng
a ny action on the po licy .
''Congress won ' I like it ," s aid on e FCC source
who asked ·not to be named.
Broadcas ting magazine quoted an unnamed
commis sion offi cial as saying, ·'Every, newscas·
ter in the country will feel ema nci pated if it comes
out as ex pected."
The Fair ness DoGirine was set forth by the FCC
in 1949 and in 1959 was expanded to Include
a mendm ents to th e Communtca tio~ s Act. The
po li cy stat es th at broadcas ters must ai r contra·
vers inl Iss ues of public importance and provide
reasonable opport unit y for the discuss ion of
co nflicting 1•!ews .
The Supreme Court uphe ld thE- doctrine in 19~7 .

1 Section. 10 P~ges

2$ Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

a

Dingell, D· Mic h ..c.PJ'!n to attach the doctrin~ in
but the court opened the door !as·t year fo r its
September t.o legisla tion Reagan will be loath to
reconsideration by ruling that the pqlicy was
veto.
,
.
never made law.
" It 's going to be war," predicted Larry Irvin g,
The FCC said it was forced to take a s tand on th e
coun sel of the House tl"lecommunications sub·
doctrine aft£'r a (edcra l appeals court in Jan ua ry
co mmi t1ee. "The commiss io_n is a creature of'
remanded the agency' s decision against Meredil h
Congress but is ta king on Congres s on thi s issue.
Corp.. an Iowa broadcasting company whose
try in g to co ntravene co ngression al action . I1's a
Syracuse , N.Y., TV statio n WTVH had violated
renl:gade co mmiss ion."
·
the policy.
Advocates
.of
ol)e
Fa
ir
ness
Doctrine
say TV and
In the M eredith case, the FCC had re fu sed to
radio
sta
tions
must
meet
some
minima!
public
consider· whether the Fairness Doctrine wa s
int er es t requi rem ents beca use they use a scarce
constiiutlonal.- say ing Congress and 1he courts
pub Iic r~sou rce- the.electroma gnet ic spectr ~m .
should decide.
They . say man y more people apply for licenses
",But the ..-court made it very clear tha t. the
than there are ava il able frequencies. ·
commission cou ld no longer defer to Congress."
Opponents say the doctrine was firs t drafted
an FCC source said . · ·
Le aders of the House a nd the Senat e, both of , when televis ion was in its infancy and that the .·
telecommunications mar ketplace has c hanged.
whi ~ h voted by wide margins to make the doctrin e
Now there ar e more stations. plus cable
law, di sagreed. .
te lev ision, microwa ve TV serv ices and home
The Senate fail ed to override Reagan's veto. but
sa tellit e dishes.
Sen. Ernes t· Hollings, D·S.C., and Rep . J ohn ·

Task force plan designed
to aid economy along river
WHEE LING . W.Va. iUP IIA 20·year -plan to boost th e Ohio
River economy would .i nclude
state parks a nd a six·•ta te pact
pledging cooperation In eco·.
n·o mic d e velopment,, s aid
member s of Ihe Redeve lopment
Task Force. ·
The task force, set up last year,
has released a first dr aft of its
plan to boost the region. The

GOT A FILING EXTENSION
ON YOUR TAXES?

panel was form ed by the Ohio
Five primary goals of the task
Legislature with the ide a of force ar e to establlsh the Ohio
creating jobs a long the r iver.
. River reg ion as a prime location
The task fo rce's preliminary , of economic d evelo pm ~ nt ; ·a
report suggests 14 Ohio coun ties prime nation loca tion; a major •
for m regional por t authori ties for
recrea tion area in Ohio; an
"effective s teward" of l_ts nalu·
b9hding a nd tax ing authority,
and coopera te v.•ith the live ot he r rat resou rces. and to create
Ohio River sta tes -Wes t Vlrgi· oppor tunities Ior "achieving the
nia , Tllinil is. Indian a. Ke ntucky
highes t possibl e quality of life."
and Pennsylvania.

Let H&amp;R Block Make Sure
You Meet the August 17 Deadli ne:

·Meigs youth.progTam ends ~ug. 14

Whatever the reason 'or your filing exten sion. H&amp;R Block is avail ·
able to help.
·
H&amp;R Block's competent tax pteparers will look for every deduction
and credit possible to find you the biggest tu refund you have coming.
· Our offtces are · open year-round to handle .any In sttuallon you may
have. Just call 992·3795 or stop in our offices located at 618 East
Main .St. , Pomeroy.
·
Don 't forget the Augu st 17 eJtension deadline. Come to H&amp;R .Block
today.

The Meigs County Summer ties from the Ohio Department of at Reeds ville. . and. also the
Youth Litter Corps ha s cleaned Natural - Resources. Office Of E!cll ev illc Locks and Dam a t
numerous state, cou nt y and Litter Prevention and Recyc ling. Reedsv ille. They also. visited
township road s du r ing the ir e ight Crew members for the SYLC three recyc ling centers and teweek program which began Ju ne progra m are · hired through th e .. cycled nearly 400 . pounds of
22 and will continue th rough Aug. · Federal Job Tr a ining Par( ner · aluminum cans found along
14 . The corps Is under the ship Act tJ.T .P.A.J which is part
Meigs roadways.
direc tion of the Meigs Cou~ t y of the Gallla·Meigs Communit y
Though small in number, the ·
Office of Litter Control. headed Action Agency .
ere 'N has achieved outs tanding
by Ke nny Wiggin s and supe r·
Durin g incleme nt weather , result s in the past few weeks. The
vised by La r ry Driggs.
which hamper ed roads ide litter citizens of Meigs County can by .
Funding for the summer pro· pickup, the SLYC vis ited the proud of the efforts of th e SL YC
gram .comes through a special Shade Riv rr State Forest fac ilit y crew.
grant to participating communi·

BRING IN THIS AD
FOR A FREE
TAX RECORD BOOK.

H&amp;R BLOCK
IIi! tNCOMf. TAX PfOPLE

the Ravenswood Bridge. They will he at work In
the near future In the vicinity ol the Meigs Cou nty
•' airground• . Kenny Ramsey and Tom Buckley
have al•o been. SLVC participants this summer.
The corps has a lso received needed support from
the local hu s lnes.•es and agencies In the co11nty.

UI'TER CORPS PERSONNEL AT WORK Summ er Youth Utter Corps personnel, Gary
RU~. CharleS Jacks and supervisor Larry Driggs .
left to rJght, are at work on Route 338 justa lew
mlleot ahove Racine. The group start&lt;·d ul the
~aclne corpor~llon and Is making Its way toward

Anns hearings end; Reagon plans speech early next week
By ,JUDI IIASSON .
WASHIN GTON tUPl l -The
lra n·Contra cris is. th e- s l o r~- of a
"stx'ret Whit c Housc junta ," is
now thrown back to th at Whll c
House for President Rragan· s
response to the "chilling '· revel a·
1ions produ ced by -lh n·e months
or publlc hearings In a swelt erin g
su mmer on Capitol Hill.
Reagan ' s speec h. plannt:'d for
ear ly nex t week . is seen as the
most Jmm&lt;"d iatc focus fol lowlnJ&lt;
th c conclusion of lhC' public
proceedings Monday - though
the congi'C'SS!ona l Inves tigators
arc not done with their work by
an'y mea ns and new ar t ion Is

exP,ctl'd from 1h11 Independe nt
pros!'cutor pursuing criminal
rharg!'s .
·
The president Will be watchPd
for a response to wha t wa s
summed up by Se n. Daniel
Tnou ve. D·Hawa ii, a s a grim ta le
of secret policies run by Whil e
House aides behind the back of

with a sa•·inr.:s hla • t nn St•rta!
t\ t ' t l mlt•rl &lt;~ h h · n \ ~ h t '~ :-. lr •(•p h .1 " nr·\·r ·r
l)( ·r·n -.; ,, o ll til 'dahlt ·. C hn11:-o-1 ' :1n' ·:- it r· .rnd
p;t.,\ th1 · s;rm(' ; lmnu nl pr ·r pir 11'; •.· A ll l)( •d.
d lng !"rdd i n S1'1s 1 r n J ~· . plc •asl'. Hm r.' . il ':-.

~~ ~~­

:• spr •c l:t l ,S,t Yi ngs ''PPPi·tunl l.' nn thmug·h
~; llu l'd ; t\ nn \ ~· !

St•rta Prl'mit'r tomfort I®
E\lr;1 Firm -

~nwnlh Tu1~

ANY SIZE, EACH PIECE
T"· in ~ .l' ull,

()ut&gt;t•n nr

Kin~ Siu•""

ELB.ERFELOS
. POMEROY - ·992·3671

\

tlw public. the Congres s: a nd th e
commandcr In chi ef.
·• t sec It as a c hil\ln ~ story , a
s tory of df'cdt a nd duplicity a nd
the al'!'ogant disrega rd of the ru iC'
of Jaw." Inou ye said Monday ·
beforf' ban ging his gavel to end
the tPlevised heao'ings In his roll.'
.as cha ir man of th e Se na le
lnves tiga tfn g commit tee.
In closing out 250 hours of
tes llm oiw from 29 wit n('sses over
41 day s, inouye. a vcterart of the
Sena te Wa tergat e in ves tigation
14 yea rs ago , saict the current
sca nd al tu rnPd up a "'S hadowy
govcrnmrn1 wit h it s own Air
Fore(', its ow n Navy, Us own

fund · rilis in g mec han ism, a nd the
a bility to purs ue it s ow n ideas of
the ·na tiona l in ter&lt;&gt;st. free from
all c hecks a nd balan ces and the
law itself."

'"(l'his Is \ a story of a flawed
pollc;' kept alive. by a secre t
While House ju nt a "despit e re·
p eat~d warnings a nd s i gn~ 'of

fai lu re."' he declared. " These
da ylaight , to hold them under the slon and hid it from RPa p;a n to
minimize political damage .
hearings will be remembered
magnify ing eye of televis ion."
Ye t there a-l so was the widPs·
IOOj(PSt not fo r th e fa cts they
For the millio ns of AQlerica ns
C'licit ed but for t,he extraordinary
who followed the hear ings into
a nd ext raordinar ily frightening
the secret sa les of U.S. arrns to
v iews of gover nm e nt th ey
Ira n a nd the diversio n of profit s
exposed.
to Nicaragua n Contra rebels, ·
there was evidence to confirm
"Vigilance abroad does not
tha t Reag an did not know a bout
require us to a ba ndon our Ideals
the diversion a nd to contradict
or the ru lf' of law at home. On the
his insistence th at he dill not
contra ry , without our prlnC'iples
trade
wea pons for u.s. hostages.
and va lu es , wp have little that is
'
'
s peci al o•· worthy to de fe nd ...
There was Lt. Col. Oliver
The vi ce chairman of the
Senate pa ne l. Se n. Wa rren Rud· . Nort h, t he fired National Secur·
ma n, R·N.H .. eschewed · s uch it y Cot~ncll aide a t the eye of the
dramatic wording iri- a · final storm , who ma intained hC' was
assess ment that he said fa irly car rying ou t orders a nd who
r epresent ed (he des ire of his gained broad national suppor t
fellow Republica ns to look a head despite his admitted lies and
at· this point.
destruction of evidence.
·'The purpose of these hea rings
There was Rear Adm . John
has not been to cast blame or Poi nd exter. the pres ident' s
poin t fingers." sa id Rudman. a former nallonal sec urity ad·
former prosecutor. "it has bee n vlser , who a nswered perhaps the
to lmrn from our mistakes by most dr amatic question by say·
exa mining them in the open lng he alone approved the diver·

pre ad feelin g I hat all of the
questions may never be. ans·
wered unequivoca lly .

.

It's another hot week with little · rain in Ohio

$99

,.y~

Page-3

Tues day, var iabl (• do cdlness
with sr a ll cr&lt;'&lt;i thunders torms .
Hum id with a high a round 90.
r ha nc·c of rai n Is 5() pt•rcent. ·
Exte nded Forecast
Wedn&lt;"t&gt;day tlorou gh Friday
Chane(' of s howPrS and thftn·
dC'r!&gt;torms Wedn esday through
Friday.

1-:I.BEHFEI.I)S • l:ort ' Aul-{ust

.

6122

------Weather--~---

All Sizes
One. ·Price Sale

•• , UJDI'!: ,,
J./11'' I
PEOPlE SAY, nnrw•

· Pick 4

Tonighl, showers and
thunderstorms. Low
around 70. Chance ol rairi 60
perc e nt. Wednesday, .
moslly suQny and plea~ant .

FCC plans to scrap fairness .doctrine today

.Serta®Premium Bedding

DISCOVER WHY

089

Voi.J7. No.60

Hospital news

Jack L. Clark. 54, of Route l.
Rutla nd St. , Middleport, died
V eteran~Me morlal
Sunday a t Vetera ns Memor ial
Saturday
A&lt;Imisslons ..:2 Ha·
Hospita l after a sudden illness .
rold
Jeffers
,
Pomeroy; Bobble
A truck driver. Mr. Clark was
Swig&lt;'r.
Tuppers
Plai ns.
born Dec. 12, 1932 at Downington.
Saturday
bischarges
- Ula
He was a so n of the !at&lt;;&gt; James
Strau
ss.
Otis
Casto,
Pau
l Hud·
and Mary Esther Ca rr Clark, and
Mabel
Brickles.
son,
was a me mber of the Fra ternal
Su nday Admissions - Willi am
Order of Eag les. 2171. Pomeroy .
Ca
pehart , Pomeroy; Jam es Dun·
Surv ivors include his wife,
can,
Middleport ; Id a ·Poo ler,
Grace E. Swis her Clar k, Middle·
Middleport; Pat Mitche ll. Langs·
port; a s on, ,Ji m Clark, Pomeroy;
Dr. John C. Markley
ville; Mickey Oiler. Pomeroy:
a son and da ughter·in·la w. John ·
Dorothy
Ch&lt;?val ier, Reeds ville;
and Cindy Cla rk. Marietta ; tWo
Dr. John C. Markley, M.D .. 65, Etta Cu llurns. Pomeroy; Charles
da ug ht e r s a nd sons -in· law . · Route 1 Nor thup, died Saturday
Sheila a nd Kenneth Carsey of a t Holzer Medical Center follow· Payne, Pomeroy; She.r man Wil·
Iiams, Middleport .
Middleport and Lynn and Bernie ing a lengthy Illness.
Sunday Discharges - Helen
Weaver of Phoen ix , Az.; · seven
He was a staff physician at QJl:vts, Betty Willis, Beverly
grandchildren; a nd t.hree.sis ters,
Holzer Medical Center · for 37 Spires.
Coell Salser of Tuppers Plains,
years, beginning his practice
Patsy Per kins of Athens and
there in August , 1950.
Wealth y Garroway of Staffo rd,
Born Dec. 13, 19211n Washing· Issued licenses
Va.
ton, D.C .. he was asonoftllelale
Marriage lice nses ha ve been
Besides his parents he was
John M . Markley and Me ryl
precede d in dea th by a s tep·
Buckley Markley, who survives Issued In Meigs Cou nty P ro bate
Court to Douglas Benton Eblhl
mother. Ethel Clar k.
in Gallipo lis.
Serv ices will be Wednesday, 1
Also surviving are . his wife, Jr., 22, Pomeroy, and Cynthia
p.m., at Ew ing Funeral Home.
Olive Lawless Burnett Markley. Therese Arnold, 18, Syracuse;
Burial w il l be iri Wells Cemetery. whom he marr ied March 9, 1974 Victor Eugene Ga ul Jr ., · 21.
Friends may ca ll at the funeral
in Ga llipolis; . two daughters, Pomeroy, and Laura Beth Oil·
home on Tuesd ay from 2 to 4 _a nd · Mrs. Susan Davis, Gallipolis and !hoff, 20, Pomeroy.
7 to 9 p. m . .
Mrs. Clara Woollon, Denver,
Meet Wednesday
Colo.; one son. J .D. Markley.
Rodney and two stepsons, Cha·
· Clinton Hughes
Lebanon Township Trustees
Ties Burne.tt, Orville, Ohio and
meet Wednesday, 7 p.m .. at
will
Andy Burnell, Medi na; and nine
Clinton "C.V." Hughes. 59.
the
township
building.
gra ndchildren.
Point Pleasant. died Saturday ,
One brothe r preceded him In
Aug. 1. 1987 in P leasant Valley
Helf!!el fitting·
death.
Hospital.
· Born June 21, 1928, in Milton.
Southern High football players
he was theson ·ofthe late Richard
will have he lmet fitting Wednes·
a nd Matilda Dailey Hughes.
day . 6 p.m., at the football
End marriages
He was a produc tion worker on
building at the blgh school:
the hot line at Kaiser Aluminum
Divorces finalized in Meigs
for 30years, a U.S. Army veteran
Lodge to meet
County Common Pleas Court
of the Korean Conflict. a. former
in clude William Keith Wolfe
employee of Blenko Glass at
A regu tar meeting of' Middle·
Brenda L. Wolfe and Jodi
from
Milton~ a member of American
port Lodge 363, ·F&amp;AM, will be .
. Lynn Henderson from James
Legion Mason Cou nty Pos·t 23, the
held at 7: 30 p.m . T~esday at the
William Henderson. Jodi Hend· · temple. Refreshments will be
Loyal Order of Moose and United
erson was re)ltored by the court
Steelworkers of America Local
served following tbe meeting.
to her former name Gable.
5668.
The marriages of Bruce E .
He was preceded "in death by
Conde and Diana L. Conde; Ru,th ' Bowhunters to meet
his pare nts and three brothers.
.Ann Faulk and Timothy D.
Surviving are his wife. Betty
Faulk; Tina Rees and Jay Rees
The Chester Bowhunters wll(
Edwards Hughes: two daugh·
have
been
dissolved.
Tina·
Rees
meet
at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the
ters, Teresa Huffman and Kim·
club
house with election of
has
been
restored
lo
her
malden
berly Dawn Hughes, both of
name
Hill.
officers
to be he ld.
Point Pleasant; one son, Gregory

Daily Number

Copyrightad .1987

Man ·has heart attack,
dies in auto accident

A Point Pleasa nt man a ppar·
enlly suffered a fatal hear t
attack before crashing his car
into a utility pole in th&lt;&gt;2200block
of Jackson Avenue Saturday
night , according to Dr, Breton
Morgan. medica l examiner, a nd
a Point Pleasant Police Depa rt ·
ment spokesperson.
Cli nton V. Hughes, 59, of Elm
Street. was transported by the

7-2 - .

NATIONA~ WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 8-4-&amp;7 ·

. Driver cited after accident

Dismissed as defendants

Ohio Lottery

Dodger8-.
top l;teds,

'

pushed crop · maturit y of th e
By United Press Inte rnational
L~s t
wee k's hot. humi d ear lies t ~or n and soy beam crops
weather a nd essentially no r~i n ever pla nted. Many Ohio farmers
w'as nearly a carbon copy of the were · getting their ma chinery
week before. according to the ready for the harv est.
Ohio Agricultu ra l Sta tistics
Corn s llklng Was nearly com·
plete (96 percent , compared with
Service.
·For the week ended Sunday. las t year's . 93 percent) and 51
there were 6.6 day s suitable for ·percent was in dough or beyond.
fieldwork. with activities includ· compared with 42 percent at this ·
lng winding up the oat harves t.
time in 1986.
·
spraying and hay baling. along
In some of the drier areas of the
with taklngvacatlons and att end·
it:tg fal~s.
.
sta t e, howev er, ears were
Above·normal. temperatures drooping.
throughout the week caused
A majority of the soybea n
stress to crops, pastures and acreage, 64 percent. was setting
livestock. . , '
.·
or had set · pods, down slightlY
Soli moisture (before the lat e from last year's 66 percenllevel.
Sunday storms) decll!led slgnill·
The oat harvest was 86 percent .
cantly, to 58 percent short, 41 complete, compared with 79
percent adequate and 1 p~rcent · percent atthls time last year a nd
surplus, compared with 37 pe_r· ·an average 0! 63 perce nt for the
.. .
cent short, 62. percent adequa te years 19S2·86.
The weather was good for hay
and ]' petcent surplus a week
earlier.
·
baling, · but regrowwth from
However. the weather a lso earlier cuttings was slow be·

.

'

cause of a lack of rain.
Burley tobacco needs rain to
get "s pread" on. the lop leaves.
Tobacco topping is active.
The potato harvest continued.
with the quality good but quan tity down because of poor 's ets.
Sweet corn was moving to
market In large volume.
The -dry onion harvest was
under way. In Celeryvllle, Huron
Cou nty, but l£'afy crops recovering from las t month's flooding
were dam aged again liy the rains
late Sunday and early Monday.
.
' and vineIn many orchards
yards, Intermittent hall con·
tlnues to be a problem. Most
. vineyards were reportet;l in good
or excellent condition, but lnfes·
lations of black rot also were
frequently reported.
The harves t of summer apples
was about hal( completed, with
quality and yields reported high.
Peach sizing and yields were
smaller than expe¢ted In south·

er n·are'!s because of dry_soils.
· Livesto&lt;;k continued to show
signs of stress. reducing milk
production on dairy fa rms and
slowin g we ight gain on beef
cattle.
·
Rainfall totals for the week
ended at 8 a.m. Monday were a
little "r nisleadlng, since nearly all
of it fell overnight In thu!lder· .
storms "lale Sunday night and .
early Monday morning.
· Yqungstown recorded 2.22
inches for the week, while
Willard, Mansfield, Clevela'nd
and Canfield all were about 1\1,
inches.
·
·
. , For the season, only Fremqnt.
Celina, Willard . .Mansfield, C I ev
e I a n d and Youngstown are ·
reporting rainfall surpluses,
while significant deficits are
reported In Hoytville ( 4. 65
Inches). Columbus (~.86-lnches),
Caldwell (5 Inches). Wllinlngton
(5. 95 inches) a nd Jackson (4:73
inches).
,il

GRAND CHAMPION - He~~ther Pauley, 12, of Bear Wallow
Ridge. at left, visited 'The Dally Sentinel last week with Lady, a
seven·month·old bo¥er. Heather Is Lady's .foster owner for one
year
part o( a 4-H project. It's Healher's responsibility during
the year to give Lady as much love as possible and provide her with
obedience training. When the year Is over, Heather will give"Lady
up to be trained as a seeing eye dog. Nejlher Heather, nor her
lrlend, Ginger Findlay; nor her mother, Bobbl Pauley , pictured
with Heather, want to think about giving Lady b11~k; Heathllj' I• a
rnember of the Ridge Critters 4-H clllb. IJealher and Lady re~elvetl
grand champion during Saturday's Meigs County .F air judaiqJ Qf
4-ll projects.
·. · ·

as

..

~

,,,

·

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