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                  <text>Thursday, June 12, 1986

~P:;age=::::::16:::The:=;:::D;:a:il::y::Sen:=t;in::e::l=;::=====:::;--::-:--:--P-o_mero_:Y:-:;'illiddleport, Ohio

IMeigs citizens donate 7 4 pints of hi~

Area deaths
Lena Holter
Lena Mae Holter. 80. 29793
Township Rd. 643, Racine. died
Wednesday evening in II'&lt;' Veterans
Memoria l Hospital specia l care
unit
A bomemakrr. Mrs. Holter was
bom Nov. 18.. 1900 In Long Bottom to
George Hcmy and Sonoma Cur1 is
Osborn. She was affiliat ed wit h II'&lt;&gt;
R.1cine "First Baptist Church. and
was a mcmlx'r of Racine Grange
2&amp;16 and First Fa mil ies of Ohio.
Survivors include two daughters.
Mrs. Gfora idinc Cross of Racint&gt; and
Mrs. June Ashley of Letart Fa lls:
one son, Lan}· Holter of Pickerington: 13 grandchildren; 15 great
grandchildren: a nd · 8 step-great
grandchild ren.
She was pi'('('&lt;'ded in dea th by her
par&lt;'nts . her husband Clifford . in
1900 ; a son. Eugene Holt er; and a
sister. Hilda DeWolfe.
Graves ide SPI'\'ices will be 2 p.m.
Satu1'day at Letart Falls CemeiPIO'
with Rev. Stevr Deaver otfidat lng.
Frir nds ma)·call at Ew ing Funeral
Home from 2 to i p.m. and 7 to ~
p.m. Frida1·. In liru of Dowers.

friends may contribut&lt;' 10 the
Rllci nr First Bapt is t Chu reh build·
mg fu nd .

Gilbert McDade

Gilbert E. McDade. 75. Six Lakes,
Mich.. form&lt;'riy of Portland In
Mrlgs Count)'. died June I a t the
Kelsey Memortal Hospital in Lakeview , Mich.
Mr. McDade was born Feb. 11..
19U and was the son of the !ate Van
E. and Henrietta Middleswart
McDade.
Hr was a lile member and past
master of Big Rapids Masonic
Lodge, a past patron of Six Lakes
Order of Eastern Sta r, and a life
member of the Elks Lodge. He
attended Six Lakes United Metho·
dis! Church . ·
Surviving are his wife, Mabel; a
son. Billy E. of Springfield, Oregon:
a daughter. Mrs. Edward tBel ty l
Brkiacich of Scbf'waing; a sister.
Mary Louise Ours of Huntington ,
W. \;a .. eight grandchildd r~&gt;n a n d 17
gr&lt;'a 1-grandchildren.
Services were held at 1 p. m.
Wednesday at the Youngman
Chapel in Lakeview.

.· :Senate.. ,_____c_o_n_rln_u_ed_fr_om_pa_·g_e_1_ _ __
ta mJX'rin g with tax mtcs- ('Vrn 1n

tl'&lt;' alter native minimum tax could rip the fabric of the ent ire bilL
He added tha i he cou ld not live
with man)' major changes. "There
is a JX&gt;in l beyond which 1 would not
go - I'd rat l'&lt;' r have no bilL" he
said
The rwo oiht' r proposa ls would
have paid for pa rtial IRA restoralion; by limiting othrr write-offs for
itemizing taxpayers. They were
rewcted on votes of 76-21 and 78-18.
All the amendmenl s would have
restructured the IRA tax break so
tha t a worker wou ld get $310 baCk
from lh&lt;' government for a $2,!m
IRA contribution. regardless of
incomr lew !.
The issur was

c lear !~·

1~ most

srnsitivc part of the bil l. Many
srna tors sa id 1hey had been flooded
with han dwrillen constituent tellers
ca lling for a restora tion of the

deduction.
As a way to sidE'S tep the fight.
GOP leaders pushed a non -binding
resolution call ing for the problem to
b&lt;' dealt with in a conference with
the House.
The Senate approved thP resolution 964 but crit ics claimed it was
meaningless because it could not
fo rce the conference to fE'Store the
IRA tax brea ks and co ntained too
many conditions.
Tliat argument was bolstered by
Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, D- IlL, lbe
!'&lt;'ad of II'&lt;' Ways and Mean s
Committee. whi ch fashioned the
House bilL
" II is unrealistic, in my view, to
expec t 1hE' conference to patch up
what the Senate it self seems
unwilling to face," Rostenkowski
wmte in a lettel' to Sen. Alan Dixon.
D-Ill

Sales slip back 0.1 percent
WASH[]I;GTON 1UPI1 - Retail
sales sUp[.('d back OJ percent in
May aft er a rrv ised 0.4 rercent gain
the previous month , the Commerce
Depa rtmcnl said tcday .
Adva nce estimates of U.S. rNail
salE'S last month. adju sted for
seasonal different'l's . totaled $U7.ffi
billion. down from a n •vised $117.14
in April. accw ding to the monthly
Census Burea u survey of retail
businesses.
Two rr lail sectors thaI expanded
rapidly in April, auto and housing
malerials sales, slowed markedly
to thP su rprise of analyst s who had

exrected continued gains.
Aulomot ive salE'S advanced a
sUm 0. 6 percent last month followIn g an upwardly revised 4. 3 percent
surge In April , the fE'Suil · of new
low-intel'E'St financing incentivE'S.
Building materials, hardware
and ga rden suppUes fell back a
su rprising 4.2 percent In May .
following a 4.6 percent advance In
April, despite a continuing br isk
level of new and exisil ing home
sa lE'S.
Furniture and home appliance
salE'S. on tl'&lt;' other hand, advan ced
by 2.8 ]X'rcenl last month.

Gilman trial begins next month
A trial has been S&lt;'l to begin next
month in Gallia County Common
Pl!'as Coun tor a 71 -year-old Perry
Township woman charged ~&lt;11h

residence.
Roderick said it was proven
Blanton had read Mrs. Gilman her
rights and testimony from Rio
mu rd('r.
Grande College and Community
Grace Gilma n. Rt. ~ . Oak Hill. , College security of.ficer Mike Walwill go on trial Ju ly 15, according to ton "clearly corroborates this fact,
Judgr Richard C. Rode rick Jr.
and th at the de fendant made a
Rodl'rick made the ru ling a fl ~r a knowing and voluntary waiver of
hearing on the findings of three
her rights be fo re sl'&lt;' gave her
examiners who tesJed Mrs. Gil - various statements to 1he officers In
man. who has pleaded not guilty
the case."
and not gu ilty by J'('ason of insanity
A gun reported ly used In the
to the charge. Based on those shooting, owned by Jim Gilman, is
findings. Roderick ruled I ha t sh!' is to be chocked forfingerprlnts by the
comprtPnt 10 stand trial.
sheriff' s de partment and result s
"That does not resolve the plea of are to be provided to Cox, Roderick
not guilt)· by rl'ason of Insanity ," sa id . ·
Roderick expla ined. "II means she
Mrs. Gilman also requE'S ted the
understands cou11 pl'()('('durc and ju l)' In It'&lt;' tria I view the scene of the
thP toll' of her attom!'y and the crime and the requE'S t was granted .
prosecuting aii 011H')'."
Sheriff's Investigators· allege Gil man, a retired roal miner, was shot
Roderick denied a suppression
following an alleged "domE'S tic
motion fi(('(] by Mrs. Gilman's
dispu te." He was dead at the scenc
all orney. Donald Andrew Cox. on
of a single bullet wound . invl'Stlgastall'ml'nls Mrs. Gilman reported ly
tors said. Tl'&lt;'y reported at the time
gave to tl'&lt;' late Deputy Erskine
tha t a .38-ca Uber r£O.•olver was
Blanl on a t t!"&lt;' I ime of i'&lt;'r arrE'St for
confiscated from the scene.
the alleged soootlng dea th or her
Mrs . Gilman has been b t\;ed in
husband. Jim Gilman. 72, onJan .12
the Athens Mental Health Center.
at thrir Cora-Centerpoint Road
where court-ordered p;ychiatric
examinat ions upon her have been
conducted .

Eighty persons reported to an
American Red Cross Bloodmobile·
at the Meigs Senior Cit irens Centet'
in Pomeroy Wednesday to contrlbute 74 pints of blood to the local
blood program.
Twenty-seven persons gavE' blood
on behall offriendsorrelallvE'Sand
first timE' donors WE're Joan Tu tt le.
Don Cullum s and Maurlsha Nelson.
Linda Friend.became a one ga llon
donor; Charlk Johnson. Richa rd
Swanson and Deborah Grueser
beca me two gallon donors; James
M!iler became a four gallon dorms
and Virginia Bland and Donna
Davidson became seven gallon
donors during thf visit
Dr. James Witherell and Dr.
Wilma Mansfield were the physi·
clans in charge and nurses were
Ferndora Story, Emma Adams.

60s.

Beulah Ward, Lenora Lel!heit and
Naomi London. The clerical staff
Included Mary Nease, Jean Nease,
Joyce Hoback, Arizona Stewart a nd
Peggy Harris. Retired Senior
Volunteer Program workers assistlng with the visit were Virginia
Buchanan , Dorothy Long, E mma
Clatworthy, Florence Richards,
Erma Roush, PhUamena Follrod,
BernadinE' Meier, Jesse Curtis,
Lula Hampton, William Hoback,
1
Opal Diddle and MariOn Ebersbach, The canteen was served by Xi
Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorolity..
Donors by community include:
Pomeroy - Brenda S. Cun·
ningham, Janet Ambrose, Lenora
J . McKnight, Debbi Buck, Bernadette Anderson, Debra Mora ,
Debbie Grueser, Richard E. Swan-

son. Pamela J . Miller , Rebecca L
Ambrose. Wilma A. Mansfield,
Dorothy J . Oliver, Lois Wyant ,
Sylvia G. Neeee, J anet L. Persons.
Arizona Stewart, Ronald Hanning,
Gerald Rought, Janet Peavley,
Opal M.. Grueser, Howard P.
Logan, Gloria K. Riggs, Ja mes E .
MOler, VIrgil Windon, Geoffrey
wuson, Jackie Hildebrand, David
M. King, Carolyn Charles. Cynthia
M·. Hartenbach, Stephen R. Hartenbach, Mary A. Sorden, Adell L
White, William C. QuickeL .
Middleport - Carroll Cleland,
CharlE'S F . Johnson, Kathryn D.
Johnson, Phyllis Drehel, LyM
Schuler, Leafy M. Chasteen, Saratl
Fowler, Edward Durst, Maurisha
Nelson, Glorta J . Peaviey, Timothy
E. Smith, Gerald L.. Antbony, C.
Robert F isher, Dorothy McCloud,

Sall ie E. Kitchen , Joel K. Kitchen.
Rncine- Joan Tuttle, Kathleen
McNickle, Charles W. Bush, Ml)rte
A. Bush, Kerr! A. Beegle, Virginia
Bland, Dawna R Grueser, William
H. Hoback, Lisa R.Parsons,Robert
L RJichiE', Paul F. Marr .
Syracuse - Linda L. Friend,
Darla N. Thomas.
Hemlock Grove--Don B. Cullums.
Long Bottom - Henry E. Bahr,
Debbie E. Finlaw. Harlan Ballard,
Reedsville- )'/icky Barber.
Rutland - Avanell George, Fred
George, Dinah N..Stewart, Gregory
M. Stewart, Oopna M. Davidson,
Paul A. RICE'.
LangsvUie - Alva B. Clark,
Karen S. Clark, Eilts E. Myers.
ChE'Ster - Herbert Short, Martelia Short, Clarence C. Wolfe, Jr.
Coolville- Lee Payne.

By WILLIAM HARWOOD
UPI Scienre Writer
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Rogers Commission's "harsh erlt l
cism" of NASA 's past mistakE'S is
well deserved, Adminis trator
Jalll!'s Fletcher says, but the
agency 's future depends in large
part on presidenlial support for a
new shuttle to replace Challenger.
President Reagan said Wednesda y night hesupport s such a project
but a final decision must await the
outcome of a growing debate on the
role of manned spacecraft vs.
unmanned, throw-away rockets.
"There's a backlog now of space
cargo that is supposed to be up
there, and we have a problem of
delermlnlng whether we should
increase the number of unmanned
launchers," Reagan said in a

na tionally tele vis ed n ~&gt; w s
conference.
Fletcher, Rear Adm.. Richard
Truly. who is chil'f of the shuttle
progra m. and other top agency
officials were called to testify again
today before Ihe House Science and
Technology Commlttre In hearings
thai began 'J'uE'Sday to study the
find!ngs of the Rcgers Commission
treport on the Challenger disaster.
Willie Fletcher and other NASA
•Jfflciais exprE'Ssed optimism shutt1e flights could be resumed In
1.11id-summer of 1987, other space
a gency officials cautioned the mid! ;ummer date was too soon.
"By and large, the report and Ihe
l1arsh criticism Is dl'served by
NASA ," Fletchl'r said Wednesday.
Committee members made It
c lear that . In addit ion to reviewing

the problems that led to me
Challenger disaster, they planned
to pro~ the future role of America 's space program, Including the
balance between manned space
operations and unmanned programs referred to by Reagan.
Fletcher told th&lt;' panel Tuesday
the nation dE'S j:era tely needs a new
shuttle to replace Challenger to
avoidthepressure that couldleadto
another disaster.
"I don't like thl' thought of only
having three orbilers," he said,
"because that's a rather marginal
Ill'€!. It 's not just the fli ght rat e
that's of roncern, but it' s the
problem of supposing you have a
great difficulty and you want to fix
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a1y
·Vol. 36, No . 29

Producer Price
IndeX for finished goods

$299

c'V::,s:::
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2rorS6.99 2rorS6.99 _2 _ ,.=--•

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12 forS1.99
lnehiOtSSllad B1.1tlet Willi HCI
S9ot" (III·YOII·Un-tal) Irill d

But It remained unclea r whPI I'&lt;'r
the administration woold niake
offse tting reductions In othe r nu·
clear force s to remain under terms
of th&lt; ' treaty if there Is nd new anns
pact later. this year.
"T hE' treaty was really nothing
bu 1 I'!'&lt;' legitim izing of an arms
race, " he said, "II didn't do
anyt'ning to reduce nucll'ar weapons or the nuclear threat. "

ba\ed polalo.CanAOi biUst 1
will\ otMI d1sccun1s.Tax no11ne
CllfM 11M tlr IIY ,.-111111.

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bUed poiii.O CIIW'Qt blllted,
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MIDDUPOIT, OHIO

·.8%,f--- - - - - --

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288

·1. 6%·f--- -- - - - -- - --j

286

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M J J ASONDJFMAM
1986
1985

1986

to btllallon alter 111 unprecendented lour-month
deflatkmary holiday, tile Labor Departmenl said

New booster design decision near
By WIWAM HARWOOD
UPI Science Writer
WASHINGTON t UPI ) NASA has vowed to meet ali 1he
recomm('lldations of the Rogers
Commission, but vert ical IE'S !
· firing of redE'Signed shu nle
boostl'r rockets poses an engi neer ing challenge that may br
impractical to meet, offic ials
say.
John Thomas, director of the
NASA team studying ways to
improve the booster joint that
doomed Challenger , said Thursday a decision on a new dE'S ign Is
expected in the next few weeks.
He sa id four booster IE'S!
fi rings currently are planned.
but he was not optimistic the
redE'S ign and Lest program can
lx' completed In lime to make
the agency' s J uly !987 target
dati' for It'&lt;' fi rst post- Challenger shull le mission.
"We' J'(' looking at that now, "
he sa id. "We're looking a t the
schedu le. as a result of which
one of theS&lt;' configurations we
might want to attl'mpt to
implement.
"Right now , I don't have a
better datr than July. I'm not
terribly optimistic we can ad
here to that , but I don't have a
better one. "
As for the redesign process, he
said: "I th ink we' re mak ing
sam!' progri'ss on sd ect ing at
least a number ot alternat ivE'S to
a lleviate thes£' .. par ti cul a r
probl£'ms . "
Challenger was dl•stroyed
whl'n a joint betwren two ful'i

segments of Its r igllt-hand boosler ruptured, allowing a deadly
jet of flame to wash over the
shutt le's thin-skinned external
fu el ta nk , trigger ing an
explosion.
Once a new dE'S ign is selected ,
the boosters will have to be
IE.'sted . The Rcgers Commission
recommended that NASA give
"full consideration" to conducting ground test flril)gs ot the new
boosters In an upright position.
Previously, the giant rockets
were IE'S t fired horizootaily, but
expert s say that may have
masked subtiet!E'S about joint
operation because the way the
rubbery solid propellan I
"slumps" under the influence of
gravity may be different depend
ing on the rocket's orientation.
Thomas said engineers arc
considering firing one of the
149-!oot boa;ter rockets verti·
ca lly, ellher upright with its
nouie pointed down as it
normally would be launched or
ups ide down with it s nozzle
pointing up.
Both approaches pose de·
manding chaiienges . For e xample. the tempera ture of the
rocket exhaust even 500 feet
downstream ot the nozzle is
more than 4,001 degrees.
A rocket rtring In the normal
launch position would require
special supJXJr t structures that
could handle such harsh trea t·
men! , and NASA &lt;'llginrers say
the cost and tlml' needed for
such !E.'S IS may not justify 1hE'

.I

Veterans Memorial
Admit ted - Addie Burnem,
Rncine; Clinton Cochran, Portland .
Discharged - Michael Pierce.

Village ·Pharmacy

292

results.
In any case. Thomas said a
final boa;Jer design will have to
be approved by an Independent
review board - a Rcgers
Commission recommendation
- before being submitted to
NASA Adrnlnlslrator Ja mes
Fletcher for final approvaL
Thomas and other top NASA
officials testified before the
House Science and Technology
Committee Thursday In the
third day of hearings oo the J an.
28 Challenger disaster · and the
findings of the Rogers Commission report.
Rep. Robert Schruer, D-N.Y .,
grilled Michael Wreks, who was
the second in command of the
shuttle program. on why NASA
continued to launch alter memos last summl'f raised serious
conO"rns about the rocket joints.
Weeks said tha t wl1ie the
problem was ser ious, it was not
considered a dang~:&gt;r to Olght by
rocket builder Morton Thiokol
Inc .. which recommended allowIng shuttles to continue flying
untO corrections could be made.
Schruer said a repol1 last
August provided more than
enough ev klence of problems to
demand that Oighls be hailed .
"What I'm suggesting Is . you
had In your possE'Ssion - I mean
II'&lt;' decision-makers at NASA
hE.'a dquarters - three separate
warnings that sl,lould have given
you notice that the nex l launch
shouldn 't ta ke placE' until these
problems a rE' identliied and
solved ," Scheuer sa id.

Damaged by gunfire

Hospital news

•Cologne 20°/o Off
•Amnity Billfolds 20°/o Off
•Timex Watches 20°/o Off
•Travel Kits 20°/o Off

-.4%.1--- --

Thul'!lday.

President discloses anns proposal

Happy Father's
Day
Gifts From
Village Pharmacy

294

WHOLE'lALE PIUCES UP - Wholesale prices
increased by 0.6 percent last month, marldng aretum

Thinly sliced chtirbroilec!
sirloin steak smothered m
onions ~nd melted cheeSf·
~c£­
With fries artd beverage•. •!~~~~~,._'!'••--:
----~ .... - Steak C/torJIIef! SteM

TOLE DO. Ohio( UPli - Vanda ls
left 2,700 Toledo Edison Co. customefs In Waterville, Including two
peopie on life support equipment
without electricity for a half hour
Thursday night after an insulator
was damaged by gunfire, company
officials sa id today.
SpokE'Sman Rick Kelly sa id
vandalism has Increased during a
strikE' aga inst the ulllity by
members of the lnternalional
Brotherhood of Elect rical Workl'rs

'·

10°/o OFF
OVEk 70 OLDSMOBILES
'I

STOCK

BY KEVIN KEJJ.Y

JIM COBB
CHEVROLD·OLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC
"FOIMEILY SIMMONS OLDS.-C.D.-CHEV."
PH. ( 614) 992-6614

HOUIS:
Mon., w•., Fri. 8:30-1:00
Tues. &amp; Thun. 8:30·5:30
Sat. 8:30·4:00;' S1111. 1:00-5:00

.

•

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'

I

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enttne
2 Sections. , 2 Pogeo

26 Cenu

A Multimedi• Inc. New.t paper

Wholesale prices up
0.6 percent in May
four· month deflationary binge not percent, according to the index.
seen since the department started Producer prices tlr !Oft drinks and
keeping the statistic in 1947.
alcoholic beverages ros e 0.3
It was the first increase since percent
December, when producer prices
The inOa tk:&gt;nary trend In food
also rose by 0. 6 percent, ooreau prices was offset by an 11.4 percent
analysis said.
drop in the price of milled rice and a
The annual wholesale deflation 4.0 pereent dip in wholesale fish
Burea u of La bor Statistics ana- rate tor the year to date Is still a costs.
lysts attrioot.ed the upturn to a healt hy 7. 6 percent and producer
Excluding food and energy costs,
turnaround In the cost of fin ished prices were 1.7 percent kl wer last the index for finished goods rose
energy goods. Gasoline prtces rose month than they were in May 198i, just 0.2 percent last month. analysts
8.6 percent In May following a bureau, analysts said.
said.
record 21.9 percent plunge In March
The ·February decline, revised
The wholesale cost d capital
and a 10.4 percent drop In April In
from 1..6 percent, is the steepest equipment Inched up 0.1 pereent In
pace with the collapse In world oil month-to·month drop in prices on May following a 0. 3 percent gain In
priCE'S .
record.
April . Intermediate goods sUpped
The whoiE'Saie price of :;orne
Wholesale food costs, which had back 0.2 percenl following a 1..0
l'&lt;'ating oll. In contras l, continued to ad~an ced by just OJ percent in percent decline the previous month,
decline with a 6 percent drop April, rose a brisk Ll percent in according to the index.
fo llowin g an 8.7 rercent decline In May, paced by a 12.6 percent surge
April.
in the cost of eggs and an 11.8
Women's clothing costs rose 0. 8
The Increase In the May Pro- percent increase In the price of percent and chUdren 's apparel 0. 2
ducer Price Index fo llows decllnE'S frE'Sh fruits.
percent while clothing costs for
of 0. 7 percent in January, 1..5
The cost of fr es h and dried .men remained unchanged . Whole·
percent In February, 1.1 rercent In vegetables rose 6. 3 per&lt;l"nt , beef sale cosmetic costs rose by 1 7
March and 0.6 percent in April, a and veal 5.4 percent and pork 5.2 percent

Senate resumes work on tax.
bill today; block amendments
confe11'11ce commitlee that wtil be
By MARY BETII FRANKLIN
Separately, a group of conservaWASHINGTON (UPII - The char!;'.'d with hammering rut a
tiVE.' senators dropped efforts to
Senate leadership, determined to compromise pian.
attach an anti-abortion amendment
After voting 7&amp;21 for the non- to the tax bill. They said they
pass a major tax reform bUl , has
managed to block any amendments binding resolution to pu t sales taxes changed their minds after talking to
so far, but may be setting It self up on a par with state and local
President Reagan, who supports
tor trouble with empty promises of incomE'S taxes, real estale taxes
the bill and askl'd that It be kept free
and personal property taxes that
action down the road.
l1 amendments.
During a daylong debate Thurs- would remain deductible under tbe
The Senate bill would drastically
curtail tax breaks In return for
day, the Senate voted 77-20 to krep bill, the Senate quit for the night.
Sen. Phil Gramm . R-Texas, lower tax rates of 15 perll'nt and 'IT
a special tax break for the oil
industry, putt ing tax reform spon- noted that together with earlier
percent The most sensitive issue
sors In the awkward position of Instructions to l'E'Store the tax
has been the individual retirement
defending preferences for one deduction for Individual retirement account deducllons, which would
industry alter opposing them for accounts, the conference commit- mostly be gutted by the legislation.
tee will have to come up with an
The measure would allow ooly
others.
The Senate planned to resume its additional Sl2 billion In revenue.
wcrkers mt covered by another
"Tha 1 revenue's not coming from
debate today, beginning with an
pension plan to :ake the maximum
amendment to rE'Stor~&gt; charita ble heaven ," sa id Gramm , wbo helped annual $2,001 deduction for contrtdeductions for taxpayers who do wrtte the balanced- oodget law.
ootlng to an IRA. II is estimated
" If I was a Senate conferee. I'd
not itemire .
about 20 million or the 28 million
The special oil Industry tax ha te to go to conference with
American llouseholds wit h IRAs
breaks, worth about $1 5 biUion In particular piece of trash," sa id Sen. would lose Ihe tax break.
Ihe next flv~&gt; years, were originally Bennett Johnslon. D- La.
placed In tbe bill as a way to win
over oil state sena tors and get the
measure passed by the Flnan&lt;l"
Commillee.
Sen. Bob Packwood , ROre., the
panE'!' s chairman. opJX)sed the
provisions in committee. But on tbe
COLUMBUS, Ollio (UPI) - Ohio House Speaker Vema! G. Riffe
Senate floor Thursday he defended
Jr., J).New Boslon, said today he has nothlnp; penonal against Gov.
thl'm as necessary for the survival
IUchard F. Celesle, bul he believes the (Jivernor was wrong to veto a
of the bill , even though he admitted
section of leghlallon pro\'ldlng lor researdl and treatment ol
they were unfa\1'.
Alzheimer's disease.
Sen. Lowell Weicker, R- Conn ..
wbo proposed stripping the special
"I disagreed with the veto," Riffe told the liiUIWII meeting of the
tax shelt er provisions, argued they
Ohio
Mining lllld Reclamation Aslodatlon. "I feel very strongly
hurt the tax l'l'fonn cause.
about
lhls b!lue. There's no pei'IIGDIII dlsapeement between the
"Remember, you' J'(' not selling
governor
and 1. The &amp;nvemor and Jju!il disagree on thlshsue. l think
this bill ... as an exercise In
he's
wrong,
and he prohably lhlnb I'm WI'OIIji; .. "
politics," he said. "If' s being sold as
an exercise In fa irness and
Riffe, who said he stDI supportsCeleste's ~lon, plans to bring
· slmpliclly."
the
House Into sesaon the week after next to ovl'l'ride the (Jivernor's
Lall'r ' the S•male voled overitem
veto of language w!Kh pennlls lmlled additions to nursing
wheimingiy 1o restore full deduclihomes
serving Alzhebner's pal Ienis exclusively ..
bility of sa lE'S taxes - when tbe bill
reachE'S a compromise conferl'nce
The rest of the bill, approved by Celesle, provides $1..8 million for
wit h the HouS&lt;'.
training
o1 professionals In the lreatment and counseling of
It was the second lime In this
Alzheimer's
victims, and lor research at universities and hospitals.
wrek's debate that tbe RepubilcanThe
Republlcan-rontrollecl
Senate al8o plans to return to override
controlled Senate, unable to overthe
veto,
which
Celeste
said
he made to control Medicaid costs hy
come its leadership's determlna ·
keeping
a
ceDing
on
nursing
home
beds.
tion to pass a clean bill, voted to
shift a ' tough decision to II'&lt;'

Riffe: Celeste was wrong

Fontter Meigs sheriff named top Gallia lawman

442, 9

30U E. MAIN ST.
POIIIEIOY OH.

'

By T.R. EAS'DIAM
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Wbolesale prices increased by 0. 6 percent
In May, marking a return to
inflation aft er an unprecedented
four-month deflationary hcllday,
the Labor Deparjrnent said today.

..4%-f- - - - ---

1985

SteoJrl)buteJI

WASHINGTON !UP! ) - Prl'Si·
dent Reagan says thE' Soviets have
offered a new arms cont rol proposa l a nd he will give them several
months to make clear that it is "fair
and balanced" or thE' United StalE'S
~&lt;1 U a bandon the unratified 1979
SALT 2 trea ty:
He held out hope that , despilt' II'&lt;&gt;
fact "I was always host ile to thai
trea ty, " the Soviets may be per·
suaded to move toward genuine
reduction of nuclear weapons so
both sidE'S can "get around to
gelling rid of them as much as we
can."
AI his J7th news conference.
Reagan responded to 22 ques tions
- fewer tha n normal. and the
perfonnanO" by both the (res ident
and reporters was at timE'S a
comedy of errors.
The result left some confusion on
-Reagan 's positio n on the SALT 2
a nns limitation I rea ty a nd the issue
of abortion.
Reagan sa id the United Stales
would stopa biding bY tbe pact when
thetimecomE'S to a nn the IJ1st &amp;52
bomber with cruise missiles, which
Pentagon !nurces said would occur
in mid -November.

Seasonally adjusted percent
changes from previous month .

.8%.1---- --

MJJASONDJ FMAM

All Middleport Village funds as of e!&gt;crow. no receipts, no disbu rseMay 31 totaled $.1'!4,351.96, Village m ~nt s . $113.217. 29; fi re house im·
Clerk·Treasurer Jon Buck reporl s. pr·ovement fund, $12,136..16, $259.!Wl,
Receipts, disbu rsements durtng $31i.J8.l22; water lank, no receipts,
the month and the ('lid of the month no\ disbursements, $J30,977.58; wa total of each fund . respectivriy. teJ·, $10,554 . 72, $10,126.96. $17 . 118.71 :
includE':
sa:nitary sewer, $7,495.~. $7,246.41.
General. $45.7&amp;5 . 52, $33.259 . 07, $2H .46.'i.~; swimming pool. $592.16,
$24,558 . 69: strret maintm an &lt;I', $6c,6 . 7~ . $1.485.90; cem e te ry .
$4,259. 34, $3.183. 91. $2,664 . 24: fed- $7.7.72, $1,797.59. $1 ,412.25 deficit:
eral revenue sharing. no receipt s, wa ler meter trusts, $555, $315 ,
$3,292.34. $~WI ; street light s. $12 ,076.20; litter cont rol, no re$6,016.35. $1,705.99, $1,M2.49; street cei pts, no disbursements, $102.10
levy, no receipt s, no disbu rsements, dell cit; f'COnomic devl'lopment ,
$2.343.56: fire equipment. $150, SUI17 . 45, $1.289.00, $7,724.86.
$365.25. $254.30 deficit ; fire truck,
Heceipts tor tbe month tota led
$4.487.28, $(£.13. $U,856.06: public $101,602.23 while disbu rsements
transporlalion, $6,874 .73, $6.1 47. ~ . a mounted to $69,744.ffi.
$5,874..13 deficit ; sanitary sewer

Producer Prices

Unadjusted, 1967=100

Squad8 get three
11 W d d
ca 8 e nes ay

Buck gives finaJncial report

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, June 13, 1986

Copyrighted 1986

it or yru have some other problem
with one ot the other orbiters.

Three calls were answered by
local units Wednesday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services reports.
At 10:15 a.m., Pomeroy· took
Rl!chel Taylor from Mulberry
Heights to Hoirer Medical CE.'nter;
Racine al 2:47 p.m. took Cllnt
Cocran from Portland to Vl'tl'rans
Memorial Hospital, and Rutland at
8:28 p.m. took Arlie Lambert from
New Lima Road to Holzer Medical
Center.
- - - - - - - -- - -

. DlttoJ) gets fueet
j U

By the Bend ...... ......... Pages &amp;7
Cla8811leds ............ Pages H-10
Cornlc8-TV ..................... Page II
Jlreaths ..... ............ .. Page 12
F.AIItorlal .. ............... Page 2
Sports ... ............ Pages 3-4·5

NASA fac4es more questions today

Weather forecast

Centl"al Ohio
A flood watch is in effoct.
Showers and thunderstorms
likely today, \\olh highs in the mid
80s. Some thundrrstonns may be
sev~&gt;re and produce l'&lt;'avy ra infa ll.
Scattered showrrs and thunderstorms early tonight with clearing
skies la ter ton ight and a low ncarOO.
Sunny Friday, with highs near ~ South Central Ohio
Showers and thunderstorms
likely today, with highs in the mid
80s. Scallered showers and thunderstonns early tonight wit h clea rIn g skies la ter tonight and a low
near 00. SuMy Friday, with highs in
the low 80s.
The probability of precipitation is
70 percent today. 40 rercent lonij;ht
and near zero F riday.
Winds will bec:ome wE'Steriy at 10
to 20 mph this ·afternoon and
nort hwE'Sterly at 10 lo 15 mph
tonight
Ohio Extended Forecast - Satur· .
day thrOUgh Sonday: Fair Saturday
and Monday, with a chance of rain
on Sunday. Highs wUI range from
the 70s to the lowllls, with overnight
lows ranging from the !Jls to the low

Inside:

VETERAN lAWMAN HONORED - Fonner Meigs County SherUI

Robert c.Jlartenbach, right, chief depnty of the Gallla County Sherill's
Depariment for lhe past nbte yean, was reciPient of lhe Jim Mills
Lawman of the Year Award at the Gallla County Gun Oub Thui'Rday.
Hartenbaeh wco~ated by Sheriff Jante1 M. Montpmery, left.

.

OVP News Staff
A veteran law enforcer in two
count ies was the recipient of this
year's Jim MU!s Lawman of the
Year Award from theGallia County
Gun Club.
Robert C. Hartenbach, fanner
Meigs County sheriff and now chief
deputy of the Gallia County Sl'&lt;'·
riff's Department , was awarded
the engraved police revolver by
Gun Club PrE'Sklent Bi!i Kegley
during the annual recognition
banquet Thursday.
"I've been in this business for :rt
years, ~ in Meigs County and the
last 9\oj in Gallipolis, and I've !)ever
had such fine treatment as I have
here," Harten bach said after being
congratulated by .Sheriff James M.
Montgomery and others from the
sheriff's department, statE.' high-

way patrol. Gallipolis Cit y Police
and the "'ildllie divis ion of the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources.
Hartenbach, who served in the
U.S. Navy from 1M2 untO 1~.
joined the Meigs sher~f' s department in 1949 and became sheriff In
1957. holding the job for five
consecutive terms . He was the first
Ohio sher~f, in 1966, to undergo
basic law enforcement training
from the state, training he took
alongside Capt. Silas Hamilton, his
later co-worker tn tl'&lt;' Gailia
sheriffs department He became
chief deputy for the Gail!a depart·
ment in 1977 when Montgomery
took office.
In addlt kln, he underwent Ohio
Peace Officer Criminal Code Train·
ln g in 1974, Law Enforoernent
Officer Training School through the
FBI In 1957 and 1962, the Bureau of

Criminal Investigatk:&gt;n's Ohio Re·
g!onai Crime Control Cllnic in 1965
and Law Enforcement Automated
Data System training from ihe
state highway patrol in 1979.
"During his service for this
department, he has carried rut his
day-to-day responsiblllties ~ keepIng with the higllest regard for his
profession," Montgomery said in
nominatin g Hartenbach for the
award. "He has gained the respect
and admiration of fellow employees
as well as members of other
departments he has come into
contact with."
Prior to the presentatk:&gt;n, Common Pleas Judge Richard C.
Roderick Jr. recalled how the
award was started in 1963 In bonor
of Jim Mllls, a veteran [Dllceofficer
and deputy who was one of the
founders of tbe Gun Club. The
award is to homr lawmen in the

area for their contributions to
keeping communiliE'S safe, and to
bring the depa rtments together,
Roderick said .
"We rea lly apprec iate what
yru're doing in honoring our
lawmen, " Roderick told Gun Club
me mbers hip a tt e ndin g th e
banquet
Six previOus recipients of the
award wer&lt;' prcsm t for the ba n'
quet.. They were former GaiilpoUs
Pollee Chil'f . John Taylo r, who
received the ~rst award recipient ;
Kenneth 1bmlinson, field supelv lsor for ODNR; Capt Sl!as Ha milton of the sheriff's departml'nt ;
tonner Galllpolls City Pollee Sgt.
Paul North; Capt. Carl Langford of
the shetiff's dl•parlment; current
Police Chief Joe Owen: and
Trooper Allan Wheele r of th&lt;'
highway patrol.

�Sentinei-Page-3

The

Commenta
The Daily Sentinel
·•

Feds and

lll Ceurt Sll'eel

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE 11\TERF.'!TS OF THE MEIGS·MASOS AREA

~rh
cs:m~
qjv

Concerning the student loan bill,
a few observations:

~._.,...,,.......,.=·"""

.

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A. MEMBER of Tht United Prf'Ss Intf'rn ational. Inland Dail\' Pr£&gt;ss Assocla·
non and th e America n N~· spaper PubllshE'rs Msoclallon.
·

LETIERS OF OPli\ION are welromc . The~· should bt.' lim than

n

words

1. One tends to distrust bills that
pass bY a wte c1 93-1. Why?
Because there is a sense c1
demaguglc passion In the air when
that kfnd of thing happens. If It was
such a good Idea lbr the federal
government to stand by with $6.5
billion for srudent aid and direct
loan programs. row come the
federal government did rothing for
student loans for so many years•
Were all congressmen andsmators
'itupld back In thOse days? And are
111 congressmen and senators
uddenly bright today? 1t Is re-

college~-~id
cor&lt;Ed that Sen. Jesse Helms of
North Carolina wted m .
About 35 years ago, the presl• , dents of Harvard, Jolms Hopkins,
Stanford, Brown and otll!rcolleges
Issued a manifesto warning against
federal aid to education. Their point
was that such aid inevitably meant
federal control, and of course they
were correct. Federal aid oow
means that colleges like Hillsdale
College in Hillsdale, Mich., have to
swear up and down thattheydo not
discriminate against women, never
mind that Hillsdale neverdlscrlrnlnated against women, having adnnltted them on the day the ooUege

Willwm· F. Buckley Jr.

was fouOOed In the 19th t~&gt;nrury.
And of cour.;e there Is the whole
business of·affirmative action, and
the rECOrd·keeplng that, one major
college has complained, takes
about $1 nnllllon a year of clerical
time to complete.
2. But federal control to one sire,
there Is the question of federal loans
to students viewed as a revolving
fund. It Is not a major real to
appropriate money once, in the
knowledge that It wru·· serve tor all
time the same purpose. That' was
the o~al Idea: The federal
government would come up with a
few billion guarantred oollars,

Jon~ - Al l letleors aresubj('('f to edlt~ng and mu st be slgnf'd wl! h name. ad dr£&gt;ss and
t&lt;'IC'p honr number. :'\ o unsigned letttn wUI bf' publis hed . LP11Prs should bt&gt; in

iiitood taste.

add rf'Ssin~

issu£&gt;S, not personaltlie-s.

The Lighter Side

.Going batty
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON iUPII - An organization calling itself "Bat
Conservation International" Is trying to Sl1Jarate facts from myths, many
c1 which appear to have been spread by the Englis h novelist Bram Stoker
in his book about Count Dracula of Transylvania.
: As for the fiction that "bats suck people's blood," a BCl spokesman
allows as how "only three of nearly 1,000 species eat blood, and thOse live
only in parts of Latin America."
· Furthennore, according to BCI, even vampire hats "generally go after
wildlife or livestock, not people."
The last time I consulted a map, Tran'\Yivania was part of Romania and
~as located the next hemisphere over from Latin America. And Dracula's
victims were mostly young women.
: Any resemblance between wildlife or livestock and young women is, of
~urse, purely coincidental.
BCl took no heed at all oft he notion that! he IPstway- some say theorlly
way- to kill a vampire Is by drivlnga stake through its heart. However, I
am willing to concede that such a ooncept probably is more mythical than
factual.
: ; That myth may have originated among vampire-hunters who were poor
• marksmen.
- · BCI does say that bats not only are harmless oot actually a hOon to the
tmman race. An organization like that could give vampires a bad name.
Vampire bats themselves are small, reddish-brown creatures. They
. can't help it IUhey canooly swallowOulds. Any memiPrr:l.the human race
. who has ever been on a Ould diet can sympathize.
- Moreover, according to one I'Eferenre hOok I looked at In the oourse of
· this rather exhausting, If not exhaustive, research, while vampire hats
have been known to attack sleeping people, their bite is generally painless
and soon heals.
Nevertheless. what are described as "weird stories" have sprung up
around bats, including the "superstitious legends" that their life style was
patterned after Count Dracula-type vampires.
AlthOugh vampire folk tales come from many parts of the world,
including, presumably, Latin America, the illks In Romania and other
Balkan countries must have been particularly talkative.
. They envisioned scrne vampires as corpses ri sulclres who came back to
life at night and bit the necks ol sleeping persons In their quest r:1. a constant
supply of fresh blood .
As to why a suicide would choose to come back to life at night with only
· fresh blood for nourishment, I cannot Imagine. But youknowhowfolk tales
:are. Maybe there wasn't a fast-food outlet In the neighborhood.
· · Anyway, there have been numerous motlon picture versions of the
: Dracula legend, in some o! which the vampire pursues two young
Englishwomen. But, the bat conservation m&gt;Vement to the contrary. I still
ao along with the novel.
Incidentally, I was somewhat surprised to learn that Stoker's Dracula
character was based on a real person - a memiPr of the Romanian
. nobility whose nickname In that language means "son of the devil.''
· . Too had for literature and the movies that Stoker never met his father .

,.

Berry's World

Tway first ro~nd leader in
U. S. Open play with par 70

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio
Friday, June 13, 1986

•

He has no home
WASHINGTON- In Egypt, land
of the pyramids, lavish construction projects are certainly nothing
new. But the U.S. government's
extravagant 20-year effort to pro·
vide a suitably posh residence for
the American ambassador would
make a pharoah blush.
So far, the boondoggle has
swallowed $6 million of taxpayers'
money like so much dishwater
poured onto the sands of the Sahara
·- and with about as much effect.
There Is stU! oo resident~&gt;.
Here's the story, as gleaned by
our associate Lucette Lagnado
from Internal State Department
documents, Including an Inspector
general's report and a General
Accounting OOlce study r!!juested
by Rep. Jack Brooks, D-Texas:
In 19ffi, State purchased an
elegant villa In the ritzy Cairo
suoorb c1 Giza, near the Pyrannlds.
The hOuse dated back to the British
colonial era and was magnificently
situated oo the banks rithe Nlle. All
It seemed to need was some

which would be lent to students a t a
fairly modest rate of Interest. The
students, over the next eight or 10
years. would gradually repay the
loans. The repaid money would
Ihen IP lent tot he next generat ion of
students , and oo forth.
Well now, this has not actually
worked out. Sen. Phil Gramm (of
Gramm-Rudman) pointed out that
$4.3 billion (that's $4,;VXJ,OOl,000) In
student l:lans are In default. That
makes a lot ri students who did not
major In ethics. The current bill has
a few rrore teeth than the preceding
bills, permitting the federal govern ment to sell bad loans to collection
agencies, and authOrizing the government to garnishee salarleo
paid by federal agencies to any
deadbeat former student. The need
to guarantee, at this point. another
~.5 billion is for all Intents and
~rposes to give up on the very idea
of a revolving fund .
3. And here Is another wrinkle. If
a student's parents earn, $30,00&gt; per
year after taxes, that student d~s
not qualify for a loan.
There is a lot wrong with this
pcrure. To proceed on the assumption that a family with joint Income
d $lJ,OXl even after taxes can
afford to send a child to college Is
probably correct. What is not
correct is to assume that such a
couple can send two children to
college, Jet alone three or four.
Sturents of the Social Security
problem tell you that the great
problem that besets us Is the birth
rat e. Whereas before the baby
ooom the average American fannl ly
procreated 2.5 child ren. that rate Is
reduced to an extraordinary 1.5.
And If you subtract from the figu re
the Increasing number of unmarried people, you see a sharp dec line
In the total figure of Americans who
are going to IP matriculating In
college oown the line. Arewesublly
engaging In discouraging the larger
family?
The student loan bill will have a
complex effec t on the next generation of college-goers .

"I feel used."

Jack Anderson &amp; Dale VanAtta
--------------------~~---------

refurbishing to transform it Into an
Impressiv e ambassado ria l
residence.
But this modest undertaking was
stopped cold when Egypt broke off
diplomatic. relations after Its disas·
trous defeat by Isr""l In the 1967
war. When relations were resumed
In 1974, the State Department
raised the residential ante with a
two-pronged approac h: Renovation of the Giza property would
resume , while a second mansion
was purchased to muse the ambassador In the meantime.
The new property, purchased in
1975, was a mansion in the suburb of
Maadi. li cost $1.8 nnllllon, and an
additional $1 nnllllon was spent
ftxlng it up. That was accomplished
In ooly four years.
But when It was ready lor
oocupancy, the ambassador, Her·
mann Ellts, refused to move ln. He
complained that it was too far from
the embassy In downtown Cairo,
and grumbled tbat no other ambassadors were living In the neighbor-

hOod. He also faulted the security
arrangements.
So the ambassador pre-empted
til! home of the charge d'affaires, a
relatively molEst place In the
Zamalek suburb. The fancy digs In
Maadl were left unoccupied.
Meanwhile, then-President An·
war Sadat decided he wanted the
Giza property - the first site,
remember? - tor his own use. So
Slate turned It over to him, and
IE lllliltion crews leveled the old
colonial residence on the Nlle.
Then Sadat changed his mind and
returned the bulldozed site to !he
State Department, which hired a
Washington architectural firm to
resign a new residence.
There were some problems including a cost overrun of more
than 100 percent of the original
$180,000 contract - but eventually
the resign was accepted despite the
misgivings, and an Egyptian construction company was contrac ted
to build the hOuse. "Apparenlly, no
attempt was mace to conduct a

By DAVID MOFFIT
UPI Spotts Wrller
SOUTHAMPfON,N.Y. (UPI JShinnecock Hills took no prisoners.
Thurday's open ing round of the
U.S. Open was played In gusty
winds, rain and bone- chilling
temperatures so none of the golfers
were surprised that Bub Tway's
even-par 70 was good enough to
take the lead- the flrsttlmeaflrst·
round leader had failed to break par
In the Open In 12 years.
Shlnnecock Hills is a nearly
100-year-old course located on the
eastern tip of 1$ng Island and the
site of the second-ever Open In 1896.
It Is similar to the British Open

pre-award survey to determine If
tthe builder! was financially or
trehnically qualified," the inspec·
tor general noted.
In fact, the contractor has
previously done Inferior work for
the embassy, the Inspec tor general

. '"'

:Today in history

self. They lag in helping people better
· understand and cope with the
system."
The schizophrenic coverage of
NASA and ils space prbgram ill us·
trates Wolfson's point that "most important is the need to break free oflhe
infatuation with spot news."
Before the accident, the media pro-ducedfawningcoverageoftheadven·
turous aspects of each space mission
and the personalities of the astranauts. There was virtually no reJMlrting between mi55ions about subs tantive matters.
Since the accident, the media has
concentrated on the inadequacies that
went unreported and uncovered for so
long - a frenzy that led NASA's administrator to complain about dis"
torted coverage that could do "lrreparable damage" to the agency
The space program is hardly the
only example of news-gathering organizations lurching from story to story.
Libya's state-sponsored terrorism
dominates the news one week but is
quickly replaCed by accounls ~f ques~
tionable lobbying by a former White
House aide. That, in turn, is promptly
succeeded by extravagant coverage
of a tax reform bill approved by a
Senate cqmmittee.
Washington journalists often don 't
do much better when they goo~ the
road to cover political campatgns.
"The horse race ... Is every news orga·
nizatlon's favorite election story and
every critic's No. I exhibit of why poI! tical news is frivolous and untostructlve," notes Wolfson.
Despite the emphasis on predictinc
the outcome, the news media's preelection assessmen•11 are often faulty
- perhaps beeause so little effort is
devoted to seriously examining the
politicians, the voters or the Issues.
"Afierce struqle races for the soul

of American journalism," concludes
Wolfson. "Some say the battle has already gone to the forces of those who
preach brevity, sensation and oversimplification. The homogenizers of
the news talk about electronic gad-

I

U.S. Open golf toomey. Above, Twayhltsout~ at rap
oo the lOth hole at Southampton, N.Y. (UPI)

FIRST ROUND LEADER- BobTway, wlthapar
70, grabiM!d the ftrstround lead Thursday In the !lfith

~--

ROCK SPRINGS- Meigs had a
thr er-game winning streak
snopjX'd with a pair of losses in
single games Wednesday and
Thursday, losing at Parkersburg
8-4 and yesterday 7-4 at hOme
aga inst Athens In American Legion
baseba ll action.

loaAt~ke~~.M~~a~
d going into the bottom of the
sevent h when the West Virginians
struck fo r five runs . Meigs outhit
Pa •·kersbu ~9-R. but had five costly
errors.
Mike Bart rum was charged with
the loss, hurling the first six plus
innings.
The Rutland native
Barlt11m ran Into trouble In the
sevent h and was I'{'Jieved by Dave
Ambergo'l, who finished the game.
Mullen went the first seven for
Pa rkersburg In gaining the win and
had rellef help fro m Lux In the
eighth.
Phil Bailey and Eddie Collins led
the Meigs hitting with two singles
each while Robbie Young had a
double. Getting one sing!~ each
were Brian ~rst , Scott Miller,
Davt' Lockhart, and.Brent Bissell.
Stout had a home run for Parkersburg, who went to 2·1 with the win.

Against Athens. Meigs had an
early 2-1 lead, but a three-run
Athens fourth plus two rmre In the
seventh put Meigs away . Meigs
milled In the bottom of the ninth ,
however. loading the tases with
robody out, but could plate ooly one
run.

"I've played In condltklns worse
than these, but thls course Is
dlffieult In caim,8Jdegree weather.
It's an obviously dlf!lcult but fair
golf course. But I wou ldn' 1 say the
weather Is fair."
Tway, who earlier In the 'year
won the Andy Williams Open, was
sitting In the interview tent when
play was temporarily suspended
because of flooded greens.
" ! didn't think it could get any

p.m. EDT. The 18golfersstillonthe
course at that time were to resume
theiropenlngroundsat9a.m.EDT.
Leader. among those 18 was Mark
Calcavecchla, who was 3 over with
two holes to play.
"It was, in general, a very
difficult day," said Tway, woo is in
only hissecondyearontheTourbut

Parkersburg .. OOJ 100 S!J&lt; - 8·8·1
Bartrum, ArniPrgy (7) , and
Gheen. Mullen, Lux 18 1' and Polm.
WP-Mullen. LP-Bartrum 1°·11..
--Athens ........ 100 :rn :m - 7·9- 5
Meigs ·.... .. ·· 110 000 011 - 4 5-2
Conrath. Coles 191 • and Weher .

e Are
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A specia l Investigating team
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The expensive wreck now at Giza.
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But those developments are not inevitable - especially if the news media can establish their own agenda
and proceed with systematic, analyti·
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- ~~~~-~h~as~~~re~a~dy~w~~~~~re~t~~~a~ha~U~~~~~~~~~~-~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~
and~m~t~di-re~Me~.~D~~~s~t~~~d~Ba~r~reitt~
was charged with the loss, his
WP-Conrath. LP·D~st
(H ).
first this year against ooe win.
James Conrath picked up the win
for Athens, going into the ninth
before getting relieved by Tony
Coles, whO earned a save in p.Jtting
oown the late Meigs threat .
Mark Jenkins led Meigs with two
singles while Bailey, Joey Snyder,
and Lod&lt;han all singled ooce. Ed
Robe led Athens, now 3-0 this year,
with two doubles while Rick Walls
had a single and &lt;Dubie. Brad
Ro~ers added two singles for the
winners.
Meigs heads Into a pair of
ooubleheaders this weekend, all at
hOme, with a 4-3 slate. Saturday,
Meigs hOsts Wellston and Sunday
will entertain Logan. Both are 1
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The results were predictable. As
til! yea"' - and the millions rolled on, the project became a
shambles. A former embassy
offici~! lnfonned Washington by
letter that It "Is the most poorly
oonstructed project I have ever
seen," and said one observer
"described It as looking like Swiss

worse," he said. "But listening to
that rain beating on the tent, I guess
it Is ."
Norman came to the Open with
the hOttest hand. having pOsted two
victories (Las Vegas Invitational
and Kemper Open 1 and two
seconds (Masters and Heritage) In
the past two llllnths.
"My confident~&gt; level Is very
high," said the man they call "The
Great White Shark." "A 71 is a 67 or
a 66 around here. That 71 was Hke
shoot lng 3 under par. Since l started
playing the British Open In 19'77,
they've never had weather like

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!i!~;iiiiiiii~---~

Si;?e?sh:~:~~;~i~f:£~

Meias·
-Lemon drops two tilts
e•

News media's failure. _ ____;_____R_o_be_rt_W:___,al~te.:....:....rs
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Through·
out the first 2&amp; years ofthe U.S. space
program, neW! coverage of the Na·
tiona! Aeronautics and Space Admin·
tstration was overwhelmingly sympa·
thetic, If not downright sycophantic.
As newspaper readers and televi·
slon viewers know, the tenor of the
coverage changed dramatically on
Jan. 28, when one of NASA's four
space shuttles exploded, killing all
seven people aboard.
The ensuin~ months have produced
a torrent of cnllcal reports about NA·
SA's operations, including scores of
"The senator is due on the floor for e voice
news stories about alleged safety
vote. WHERE'S THE MAKEUP AIDE?"
lapses, cost overruns, management
blunders . and , assorted other
madequactes.
In every tnstance, however, those
apparent NASA failures predate the
shuttle accident, usually . by many
yean. Th~, the news ~edta are con·
: 'Today Is Friday, June 13, the ~th day of 1986 with :m to illlow.
fronted wtth. the dtfftcult .question:
Why was thetr coverage pnor to the
: . The moon Is moving toward Its tlrst quarter.
catastrophe confined almost exclu·: The morning stars are Mars and Jupter.
Stvely to obsequtous, superftctal re· The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
: '!bose born on this date are under the sign c1 Gemini. They include Gen. portmg when Iough. thoughtful proJ&gt;.
Wlilfleld Scott In 17lli, poet and dramatist Wllllam Butler Yeats In 1865, tng clearly would have been
.
.actor BasD Rathbone In lll92, Mexican composer Carlos Olave2 In 1899, preferable?
That, m effect, Is the question posed
. ~levision host Ralph Edwards In 1913 (age 73), Bulgarian born artist about newa coverace o!the entire fed·
-chrlsto In J.9.1i (age ~1), and actor Richard Thomas m1951 (age ll).
eral c~yernment In an tmportant new
: .On this da~ In history: 1n 3'/.'1 B.C., Alexander the Greet died d fever In book, The Untapped Power of the
'Babylon at age 33.
Press: Explaining-Government to the
People," by Lewis W. Wolfson, a jour·
: In 1944, the llrst German V-1 "buzz b:Jmb" hit London.
· In 1911, James Earl Ray, convicted klller c1 ~rtln LutherKlngJr., was nallsm professor at American Uni·
versity. He explains:
.captured In a Tennessee wilderness ai'EQ alter escaping from prtwn.
"The central thesis of this book is
- In 198'2, King Khalld c1 Saudi Arabia died and was succeeded by Crown
that
the news media weaken govern·
l'i'lnce Fahd.
ment
not because they are too critical
• ·Jn lim, the robot spacecraft Ploneer-W became the llrst IIWl·made but beeauae
they are too timid. They
~bject ever to leave the solar system, 11 years after It was lawrhed.
fall to set out Independently to ex·
• In 1985, Mexican-style cheese made In Los Angeles with faulty plain covernment's operation.
equipment causEd the natlon's deadliest tainted food cased this century.
"Tbey don't analyze political proSome 90 people died natlonwi&lt;E by July 25, when ~ral b~lth officials ceues and Institutional relationships
. declared the crtsls was nearly over.
· bebind 'the news.' They don't use their
• ·A thought for the day: lrlsh poet William Butler Yeats wrote: "A pity power consistently to counter govern·
beyCIIICI all ~llini Is hid In the heart of love."
ment's power to shape news about It·

courses
its and
narrow
knee-highwith
rough
tiny fairways,
greens.
With that type of course and
Thursday's punishing weather
making scores average nearly 8
over par, Tway, fresh off last
s unday's westchester Classic victory, entered today'&gt; oecond round
a stroke ahead of Greg Norman, the
leading money winner on this
year's PGA Tour.
A half dozen others, including
fonner champion Tsm Watson and
South African Denis Watson, whO
tied for second in last year's Open,
were two shots back after opening
72s
Play, delayed by · an early-

mllllon dollars. " It was just kind of
a survival day. You could rea lly
blow yourself out of the tournament
with conditions like this.

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�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. Friday, June 13, 1986

.Play Detroit, Toronto tilts in heavy fog

CHAMPION poo - Arnold
Johnson, president of the local
Southeastern Ohio Pll BuD Club,
shows the champion dog "Be,...
. ley's Bad Boy" at a past
American Dog Breeders Assoc~
allon sanctioned pll buD show at
lhe Meigs County Fatrgrounds.
Another ADBA sanciloned point
show and puD Is upeomlng allhe
fairgrounds this weekend.

FIRST TIME MNNER Larry Cremeens, vlce.presldenl

of the Soulheaslem Ohio Pll BuB
Club, Is shown al a pi buD show
at the Meigs Counly Fairgrounds with 'T.C.'s and LC.'s
Colton Candy." This YOUIIII pll
buD look lop honon in lis llnil
compeletion. On 'Satunlay and
Sunday. lhe fairlroonds will be
lhe site lor another sanclioned
pit buD show.

Pit Bull Club members give
their views on local issue
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
City and county governments
t hrou~hout Ohio. and other stalE'S.
113\'P eithPr pasSl'd or are considering ord in ances to prohibit owner·
ship of pit bulls. Just this month
Middleport Vi llage Council discussed that very topic, but represrnta tivrs of 1he Soul he astern Ohio
Pit Bull Club stepped forward to
offer council assistance in establish·
ing an ordinance to provide lor the
safrty or Middleport rt'sidents, and
still br fai r to the dogs and their

of errors that many animal welfare
associations oppose legislation to
ban the breed entirely. According to
Dorothea Fisher, of the Meigs
County Humane Society, the dog
breed itself is not the root or thE'
probl!'m, and action against dog
attacks needs to be channeled
toward lhosc !nJiy rE'Sponslble for
the !J'Oblem - the wners.
For generations, the Pit bull has
been deliberately bred to produce a
heavlly muscled, finely tuned fight ·
ing mac bin!' and It is ITue that the
pit IJ.Jll can do a great deal or
~J \\ 11 rrs .
damage to a human K It anacks.
With a twoday American Dog But this Is because the pit bull,
Grc'f'&lt;kors Associalion sanctioned unlike most other dog breeds tmds
po in t show and pull coming up this to persist in the attack. The bite of a
wf&lt;'krnd at the Meigs County pit IJ.Jll Is often rmre srvere than
Fairgrounds, lora'! pit bull club other dog bitE'S, but pit bulls are not
members art' anxious to clear up the crrly dogs cited as biters.
misinformation about the breed. In
By its bi'EE'dlng and nature, the
lt1llh, anima l experts will agree pit IJ.Jll Is a dog that cannot be
th&lt;il there is probably more misin- Ignored and members of the local
formation about the pit bull than pit IJ.Jll club stress that the dog
any other animal. wild or domestic, requirE'S special attention and
in existence-.
lmowledge.
One of lhr most serious problems
For this l'E9son, local club
with the anli·pil bull movement in m!'mbers are coming forward In
this count ry is the queslion- what hopes of educating pil bull owners.
is a pit bull?
as WE'll as the public in general.
Confusion still exists about the
llecause some pit bulls have
origm and evolution of the dog now been. and stU! are - 'illegally called lhr American Pit Bull being used In dog fights. the entirE'
Tcn ier, and this leads to other breed has gained a bad reputation.
breeds being mistakenly lndenti- But Arnold Johnson, pi'E'Sident of
fied as pit bulls. thus creating even the local club. and Larry Crefut1hrr problems when pit bu lls are meens, vice-prE'Sident, point out
banned from communities.
that not all pit IJJUs · have been
The American Pit Bull Terrier raised to be fighters. They also
"'wages 17-19 inchE'S al the point out that neither the local club,
shoulder. weighs from 4(). 70 pounds, nor the national organization, conand is r'l(istrred by the Utah based donesdog lighting, noting that It Is a
American Dog Breeders Associa- felony offense to fight dogs.
IJon and the United Kennel Club.
According to Johnson and CreHowrver. aimost the same dog is meens. the pit bull Is a courageous,
registered by the American Kennel loyal and loving animal, and one of
I 'lub as an American Staffordshire
the best companion dogs.
rrrrier.
The creators of the "Our Gang"
Some authorities believe the pit series believed thrse lo be true
bull descended from a cross or the qualities of the pit bull also .
mastiff and a terrier. OIIJ&gt;rs Remember the Liltle RBscals' dog
believe the dog r&lt;'Suited from a Pete? The crea lor of Buster Brown
eross of the Staffordshire terrier and his pit bull pal "1lge" banked
and the Bull tcnier.
on these beliefs to provide a
The confu sion grows as people favorable product Image. Another
bC'gm to classify all bulldog looking prE'Stigious company, R.C.A. Vicdo~ as pit bulls.
tor, used a pit bull, wbosenamewas
It is partly brrause of thesc types "Nipper," as an advertising
SYmbol.

Ohio Outdoors:

The Mystique of flyfishing

By MIKE· TULLY
UPI National IIMebaJI Writer
Both the IR!roit Tigers and the
Toronto Blue Jays played in a log
IJ.Jt only thE' Tigers looked Ilk~ it.
ThE' Tigers lost a least three balls
In a thick mist off Lake Ontario
Thursday night, suffering a 9.0
thrashing in a game called In the
seventh inning by rain .
"I've got news for you, I knew
they wouldn't be able to see It If It
was hit in the air," Tigers manager
Sparky Anderson said. " I knew
they couldn't find it."
Buck Martinez coDected a pair of
RBI doubles and Kelly Gruber
launched a three-run homer, all
camoflauged by fog.
"I didn't see where the ball
landed," said Gruber, who went
J.for-4 and picked up his third
homer. "To tell the truth It was way
too thick out there.
"When I got to first I figured thai I
had driven In a run, IJ.Jt then I saw
that nobody knew where the ball
was so I kept on rutUiing."
"Once the ball left the pitcher's
hand I couldn't see It," said Detroit
right fielder Kirk' Gibson. "It was a
miracle if anybody could.
"(Shortstop I Alan Trammell and
the guys in the infield were pointing
to II, but aliicouldseewasromeone
swing. I couldn't see the ball."
Cliff Johnson drove In three runs
with a tworun hom!'r and RBI
double and Jesse Barfield added a
solo homer to hand Detroit Its JOih
loss in li s last 13 gamE'S.
Jimmy Key, 4-5, scattered six
hits and struck out six en route to his
second shutout and second complete game. Dave LaPoint, 2-5, took
the loss.
After Gruber's hOmer, play was
halted and, afler a delay of 35
minutes, the game was called .
In other American League
games, New York downed Balli·
more 7·5, Chicago overtook Seattle
S-4 and California shaded Kansas
City 3-2.
In the only National League
game, Houston delealed San Francisco 4-1.
Yanllees 7, Orioles 5
At Baltimore, Don Mattingly hit a
two run homer and doubled home a
run, helping theY ankees overcom&lt;:'
three homers by Juan Benlquez.
The game was delayed 33 minules
by rain. Reliever Brian Fisher, 2-2,
was the winner. Dave Righetti
finished for his 14th save. Tippy
Martinez, J.J. took the loss.
While Sox 8, Marmers 4
At Seattle, Carlton Fisk doubled
oome two runs and Harold Baines
hit the next pitch for a two-run
homer in a five- run ninth that
rallied the White Sox. Joe Cowley,
3-3, gave up six hit s and no walks In
eight Innings to earn the victo ry .
Bob James worked the ninth. Lee
Guetterman. 0-2, rook the loss.
Angels 3, Royals 2
AI Anaheim, Calif., Brian Down ·
ing tripled home two runs In the
third and Mike Witt fired a
six·hltter 10 propel llhe Angels one
game ahead of Kansas City and into
second place in the Arne rican
League West. Witt , 7- 4, had a
no-hitler and a 3-0 lead through five
innings. Danny Jackson. 2-4. look
the loss.

Tennis tourney
starts Thursday
The fifth annual WJEH-WYPC
Cancer Society !ennis lourna·
ment began last evenl ng'wlth two
match!'s in lhe women's singles
dlvlson . In the first match
between Ga illpolltans, Deck y
Johnson downed Susan Tope 7-6,
6-3.

Johnson plays Terry Haggerty
tonight at nine o'clock In her nexl
match. In last ni ght's second
Flyfi shjng is one of !hose things
match , Karen Carter of Gallipo1hat has a mystique aboul it, sort cl
lis
rallied for a t hree set win over
like canocing.
Mary
Fowler of Pt. Pleasant, 4-6,
The majo rity of fishermen seem
7-5, 6-2.
to believe that if you're not a
Carter will meet Becky Anderfull -blooded Cree, you'd better not
son
of Syracuse In a Sunday
mrss around with canoes. Like·
afternoon match.
wise. lhey reason, If you weren't
The tournament ge ts under·
taught the nuances of fiyflshing at
way
this evening at 5: 30 with a
)'Our grandlalher's knee, It's too
slate
of 13 rr.atches to be played
late to learn now.
on
area
courts. For inatch Urnes
Actually, the canoe Is a dandy
and
locations,
fans should check
litt le work boat that almost anyone
the
schedule
at
Forest Mullins'
can master in an hour or so of
co urt at 46 HenklE' Avenue in
--':'_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,;;;:;.;;_===...:....;:__...:,_ _-, Gallipolis. The public Is Invited to
attend the matches. There Is no
charge .
Ry United Press Intematlonal

self-teaching. I wouldn 't recommend whit !'Water or open ocean
travel after so little exposurr, but
it's more than enough for a jaunt
along a favorite shoreline.
The same thing Is true of
flyfishing . An hour or so or
calculated messing around with a
11g will put you In a position to be
able to catch fish with it. All you
have to rememb!'r, r!'ally, Is that
with a flyflshing outfit yru cast the
line and not the lure, and when a
fish 1s hooked , your hand and
fingers act
real and drag . A
flyreel is only a pl ace to store the
line when you're not fishing with it.

.._I'll

Opening Round pairing for the
fift h annual WJEH-WYPC Amelican Cancer Society Tennis Tournament for this weekend are llsted
below.
All players are to report to ForE'S!
Mullins' tennis court at 46 Henkle
Avenue in Gallipolis one-hall hour
before their scheduled match unless other arrangements have been
made with tournament officials.
Players will compete In the rest
two of lhree sets, using a 12 point
tiebreaker if the set goes 6-6 In
games. Players are to bring a new
can of tennis balls for their matcbE'S
with the winner taking the ~wean
and thr lose r the balls used duling
the match .
'
Any players who have any
quE'Stions should contact touma·
ment director Rick Cloak at
446-6342, or BUI Gray al WJEH,
446-l&gt;IJ.

Addington and Jack Hughes.
S....y,luae151h
(It: Ill A.l\1. I
Eric Saunders and Anita Topevs. Forest
Mullins and Karen Birchfield.

,

(2: 10P.M. )

Winner of Mark Frlend rScol t E plin ~ 11s.
Dave Crow .
Pat Clay \ 'li . Phil Stanl&lt;'y.
Russ

Moore/ Lany

Evans

vs . J eff

AM Jenkins and Bill Gray vs. Bfock}l

Porter .
Plckens!Epllng winner vs. Sau ndl'rs or
Ra y Crowsrr or Paul Ma cKenziP.

(II:• A.M .)
Jay Ca rttrt BIII Gouchenour wtnner vs.

Donna Neas(&gt; vs . Mlchcllt' Jenkins.
Winner Addingt on &amp; Smilh-Ha ggcrty &amp;

Danny Rodgers/ Larry Elliott wlnnervs
M .C. Shah/ Frank Johnston winner .

(4:111 P. M.)

Johnson and Don Carter .
Dave Crow .

Haggrr ty vs. Karen Eacht.s &amp; Jim

Bruce ModiSt&gt;t!Bill Eachus winner vs.

Osborne.

A .C. and M .C. Shah vs. Pat Lynch and

Jack Fowlt&gt;r.
Winner Karl'n Ca·rter !Mar_v Fov.•IN vs .
Becky And&lt;'rson .
Winner Sha h-Sha h and L).'nrh-_ Bowman
vs. Allf'n White i! nd Mark Epling.

Jim Elllott.
Bob Ki esling and Bob Simpson vs. Dr.
Montrle and Mike Sayre.

Loull'Bow man
Wendy Smlth·S. Subblah / An lta-Susan

TopP wtnnt'r vs. Karen Eachus and Nancy

Mullins.

il:llt P .M. )

Bowman and DooliiiiN HII J and Hen·
dricks wlnn£'r vs . Chip Hagg('rty and J .T .
Holland.

Erlr and Co lin SaundC'rs vs. Cli fton

Browning and Rick Pick~;&gt;ns.
Winner of Massie and Fowler 'Jenklns
and .Jenkins vs. Sarah Cline and Ann
Ep lin ~ .

E .S. VIIIPflU{'Va t Krlshna Kool wlnn pr

\ ' S,

The soui'CE'S said Bergesch also
feels the loss of several key Reds
perronnel since last winter has
hindered his ability to elfectivE'iy
operate the club.
"I have nothing to say publicly. I
simply can't comment," Bergesch
told the paper from Los Angeles,
where the Reds completep a
lhree-game series against ., the
Dodgers Wedinesday.
Th.e Reds were off .Thursday
befQie starting a f6ur-game series
wlth Atlanta.
Soura!s said Schott also has
"second-guE'Ssed" many of Berg.esch's decisions.
Schott, who bought rontrolling
interest In the Reds In December
1984, owns 5~ "units" In the Reds

WHAT A CATCH! - Seven-yeal'&lt;lld Jomnle (Mup) Glland
Pan:;ons hooked this nine pound, 27% Inch lreshwater drum perch from
the Ohio River al t\ntlgulty around 6 p.m. Tuesday. Young Panooswu
fishing oH his grandpa Press PIU'!IOns' dock at lhe tbne. II was quite a
struggle, Antiquity folks say. Alter Jomme reeled In his catch, II was
measured and weighed at Roy EDis' Ball Smp in Lelarl Falls. EIDs said
II was the biggest fish he's seen tlus far this year. "And aD I used was a
nlghtcrawler," declared Johnnie, son of Tam! and Mark Panons,
Andqully, and JeH und Patty GIUand, Winter Springs, Fla. Coole the
end of the year, if Johnnie's h:eshwater dnon Is Ihe Hgesl caleh ol that
type in 1986, he gets a new llshlng pole, courtesy ollhe Ohio Deparlmenl
of Natural Resouroe's Division of WlldHie.

(l::tH.M .)

Karen Smllh &amp; Fra nk John ston vs.
8PCky &amp; .lim And&lt;'fSOR .
Jtft Porter &amp; Phil Stanley vs. wt nnC'r
Klcsll ng-Simpson !Sayre-M on1rl&lt;'.
Shah. Wal lis or Jonrs vs. Friend , S('(l n
Epling or Oa V&lt;' Crow .
Pat Clay &amp; Oarrln LE&gt;W is 11s. Jay Car lt'r
&amp; Rick Crow .
Winner Brownlnfi: · P i cke- ns a nd
Bo'wman -Dool illlr vs w!nn1' r of
Hendricks-Hill and Hagg('rf y-Holland _

handful.
NEW ORLEANS (UPI I Williams, woo was drafted by the
Former teammates described
former TulanE' basketball star John Cleveland Cavaliers in 1915, is
"Hot Rod" Williams as a frequent undergoing his second · trial on
cocaine user, who eag!'rly agreed to charges he scliemed wlth eight
join in a plot to fix games, during others to shave points in February
testimony in Williams' sports- 1985 games against Southern Mississippi and Memphis State. He
bribery trial.
DE'fense attorneys for the 6- cannot play In the NBA while the
foot -10 center have tried through charges are pending.
In tE'Stimony Thursday former
cross-examination to paint the
prosecution witnessE"S as greedy , Green Wave forward Jon Johnson,
lying drug users who took advan- also accused In the point shaving
tage of Williams' small-town scheme, testllled Williams told him
at halftime of one of the games,
Innocence.
The defense planned to beg1n Its "We've got to lose."
TE'stltylng In exchange for im·
case today when l;l&gt;Urt resumed at
10:30 a.m. EDT. Although they munity from prosecution, Johnson
have subpoenaed 65 witnesses, they said he was practicing shot s before
were expected to call only a the second half bf the Memphis
State game whtln Williams "explained to me It's got to go downw!''ve got to lose. So you've got to
quit crashing the boards and
playing the way you're playing,"

COLUMI;!US, Ohio IUPI I Dayton has been picked as thE' site
for the boys state high sehoul
basketball tournament again next
season, but the tourney wUI be
moved back to ColumiJJs In 1911!.
The Ohio High School Athletic
Association Board of Control voted
4-3 Thursday to hold the tournament at Dayton In l!m and at
Columbus in-19!&amp;.--·
The board also voted to retum the
girls basketball tournam!'nt to
ColumiJJs next year. It was was
played in Akron last season.
The boys tournament was rmved
to University of Dayton Arena last
season after b!'ing held at St. John
Arena on the Ohio State University
campus in Columbus since 1957. A

ii:IG P.M .l

DEMO SALE AND SAVINGS

(7:10P.M.)

Da nny Rod gers vs . La rry Elllott .
J .f . Young vs. Bob Keisling.
Ru ss Moort&gt; vs. Larry Evans.
Colin Saund er s vs. Ra y Crowser.
Don Ca rter vs. Eric Saunders.
19:00 P.M.t
U &lt;' Bowman and Frank Dooilll r vs.
Donn it' Hendricks and Dw1ght Hill .
Kathy Massi(&gt; and Pat Lynch vs. AM

1986 JIMMY
4X4

and Mi che lle Jenkins .

F. .S. Vll lt'nu(&gt;Va and Dr. Montrle vs.

Da v f' Wirth and F'or&lt;'S Mulllns.
M .C. Shah vs . .Joe Wallis .
Wlnn r r Br&lt;'ky J ohnson /Susan Tope v s.
T('rry HaJ&lt;:gcrty .

Saturday, June 14
110: 00

A.M.)

Sh!'tly Has kins vs. SU&lt;' Eplin ~ .
Sa r ah Cl in E' v s. Rh onda Wood .
Jay CartC'r vs . Bill Goudlm our .
Chuck Bcl cht'r vs. Mik(' Sa yr(' .
Ja mes and VI c Mullins vs. Bruc('
Modl'sil and Danny Rodg('rs .
( II : !Jil A.M.t
JNipN Grondh al \ ' s _ Donnie Hendricks .
\\'Inner Co lin Saundf'rs/ Ra y Crowser vs.
Pau l MacKenz ie.
·
Winn er J o(' Wa llis! M.C. Shah vs. Todd
Jones .
Sre,·e and RobbiC' Miller vs. Kathv
Mass ll' antl Pa t L_v nch.

·

!1 :00 P.M.l

Nancy Mulli ns v.11. Rhonda Thompg;on.
Bil l G ra~· and Rlrk Cloak \'S. Bill
Chapman and Bill Couchenour .
Bill Addingt on and Nancy SmiTh vs.
TNry and Chip Hag~erry .
Winner J .F . You ng tBob Kiesling vs Lee
8(1.-l•man
Karen Ea chus vs. Ann Epling.

(UG P.M.)

.

Sh('ll y Has kins and La rry Elliott 11s.
W!'ndy SmiTh and Todd Jones.
Bi ll Ea chus VSi . 8ru{'(' ModMit.
Rl r k Pl ckPns vs. Mark Eppling.
Rtl onda Wood &amp; Donn!(' l-l endrlcks vs.

Scott and Sue Epling,

n~;~:~~t:h,~~;:~:::~:,~;tnncr
E.S.

Vlllen,eva
"· Krlshoa
il: 311 P .M.)

vs

Kool .

FUN RUN PAR'DCIPANTS- '11lese are some ol
lhe kids who l".ut for fun in the l2 and under race
during Saturday's Fun Run For Heart In Middleport.
Lell to ri~l are Brett Boothe, "'(e 9, Jarel Boothe,~.

~-6

$1,500
DISCOUNT
motor, automati~ with overdrive,

deep
tmted glass, folding rear seat. defogger, tilt
wheel, cruise, cast aluminum wheels AM /F M
Stereo with cassette. 2 tone paint.

MUCH, MUCH MORE
SEE : J. D. Story, Jimmy Deem, Ed Bartels, Nona
Nel10n, Peggy Ellis
See Ua and You Will See
"WE HAVE THE KEYS TO A BETTER DEAL"

SMITH-NELSON
MOTORS
SOD East Main
992•2174

Pomeroy

B il l Adclln ~ ton i A II &lt;'n Whil r wi nn er vs . ~~!!!!!!!!!!!

Tim l.ynch ' Nr.a l Kool wlnnN vs. Frank
Jarl&lt;
fowl
Doolifllr
. !'r .
N anC'y Mu lli ns and Jim E lliott vs. Dr.

;;:::::::::::::::::::::~

and Mrs. Sha h.

!7: 00P.M. )

&amp; on Epl inf,l' vs. Mark Fri C'nd.
:\l•al Kool and Don CariN vs. Bil l

REMEMBER
WITH ToFLOWERS
•l!t.nd bt1u1ifully
1

dPoi«nf!d funeral

arranpmtnl, jut1 4"111
or vlth

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
"'"'' If

· ·li'IMnt .'irnrllf,,,f'·

BULLETIN BOARD

1984 Ford LTD ....................... S5695

P.S., P.B.. air, cruise·, bucketsaata, wirawheels.
auto./ overdrive, V-6. Excellent condition .

19 78 Ford Thunderbird ......... SJ2 95

Auto .. P.B .. P.S .. Air.

~ACATION

1977 Ford LTD ....................... SJ 095

Green, 1 owner, auto .• PB. PS, Air.

IS ·COMING!

1974 Dodae Pickua..................$900

4 wheel drive. a~o .. Nne 'gOOd.

LET US HELP YOU

GET READY

.

·GENERAL TIRE
SALES

NORTH SECOND ST.

992-7161

MIDDLEPORT

1975 Ford F-2SO ................... S129S

Club cab, auto., PB, ~S. Air. Good condition.
··

1968 ·Mercurv Montclair .......... $7 50

4 dr. 1. owner. gOod 6ondltlon.

Shawn Dalley, 8, Kelliher

Dalley; 3,JerochCarlson, 2,

and Sara Manslleld, 2. Proooeds !rom the event went
to lhe American Heart Asooclatlon. Chairman .,r I he

Clyde Eads, also under a grant of
Immunity from prosecution, des·
clibed Williams as a frequent
cocaine user who enthusiastically
agreed to l!lke part in a game-fixing
plot.
"Hell y!lG. Let's do it. Let's make
slime money," Eads quoted WliU·
ams as saying before the Southern
Mississippi game.
Bobby Thompson, who has
plreded guUty to sports bribery,
said Williams "played 9:lft" in the
second half of the Memphis Stale
game, IJ.Jt admitted during crossexamination WUliams had to be
careful nol to be too physical
because he was In lbul trouble.
MemphisStatecoach Dana Kirk,
tE'Stltying for the defense, narrated
a videotape of the game for jurors
and said he saw nothing unusu al
about Williams' play.
"John was a lways very up
against us," Kirk said. "And he

By RANDY MINKOFF
UPI Sports Wliter
CHICAGO iUPit- Jim Fregosl,
Bobby Wine, Bi ll Vlndon and Bob
Lill is are among the experienced
ba seball pro piP available to replace
Jim Frey as manager of Ihe
Ch icago Cubs.
Frey was firt'd by Cubs's presl·
dent Dallas Green Thursday morn ing. aft er Chicago had been swept
in a lhrw -game series earlier this ·
week by th~ Pittsburgh PiratE'S.
" I don 't think anyone In this
org~niza tlon , anyone in thlscltycan
ever thank jim Frey for the effort
he made for this organlzalion in
1984," Grren said of the Cubs' s
Na tional League East title during a
news conference at Wrigley Field.
"But we had to make a change on
lht&gt; field . Whatever Jim Frey was
doing wasn 't getting rE'Sult s."
In his place. first base coach John
Vuckovlch will serve as Interim
manager for today's doubleheader
with the Sl. Louis Cardinals. Thlnd
base coac h Don Zimmer. a close
friend of Frey's, was alsodismissed
in the sha~eup of a club thai was in
fifth place, 23-33, and adislant 161-2
games behind the front -running .
New York Mets.
"We hat e to lose Jimmy and Zim
but we' rr going to get ourselves
ready 10 play a doubleheader," said
Vuckovich. a former major league
utility Infielder.
Speculation on who Frey 's successor would be
from the

lime Green announced llhe firing
after a brief meeting Thursday
morning (Green said he actually
decided to make the change after
TuE'Sday night 's loss at Pittsburgh! .
Fregosl, manager of St. Louis'
triple-A team In Louisville; Wine,
the former Philadelphia coach;
LUlls, the former Houston manager; and Virdon, who has managed PlttsiJJrgh, the Yankees,
Houston and Montreal, were mentloned as possible succE'Ssors.
" I have some namE'S In mind:'
Grrt'n said.
Publicly, Green wouldn't give a
list as towh)' he fired Frey, who had
1y, years remaining on a three-year
contracl. Privately, sources said
Green was upset for a lack of
aggrE"SsivenE'Ss on the part or the
Cubs' manager.
"You havE' a certain responslbil·
ity for lhe team to play. I don't
make an apology, I tried untU the
final out to do the best lor the
baliclub," Frey said. "This Isn't a
pleasant thing to go through . I had a
great relations hip with this city ...
Dallas told me briefly, the 'players
got yru fired."'
Frey, 55, said the club treated
him well, bul said Green did not list
spec ific reasons for . firing the
manager.
" I !eel bad beeause the players
didn't play better. If it Is my faull,
then I have to assume the responsibility,' ' he said. " When It comes
down to it, the club is
or

Which one of these swHt young things do
you think will be the first to become forty?

Happy Birt
•

Girls!

scheduling contt._ . wit h OSU gra·
duation cereml.'niPs forced the
move last spring.
The board made its decision after
hearing presentations by representatives of Columbus and Dayton.
UhrlchsvUie Claymont Principal
Dan Brooks was among the :" ·""
board memb!'rs who vot~~- ~-·1
the site selection.
·
"I repnesen t predoininantly the
eastern district, and for those
people t re dlstanoe (to Dayton 1Is a
factor, " he said. 'Tve taken
surveys of the principals and
athletic directors. and It was
unanimous to bring It back to
ColumiJJ s.
"But I'm not that upset. Dayton
did a super job of hosting ihe

fun n111 was Kbn Blower.

Bucks losing three players

Green cleans house; Cubs appoint
John Vuckovich as interim man

·,1974 Ford lf2Ton·Pickup ••.•..•• $295
Runs good. Little rough. .

unit each - Frisch's Restaurants,
WDIIam Reik, Carl Kroc~. Louis
Nippert, Mrs. Louis Nippert, Mul·
timedla Inc. and TF Corp.
Schott, meanwhile, has con·
firmed sre pald herself a $133,001
attendanoe bonus last season. The
bonus matches money paid to
player-manager Pete Rose for
attendance .at Reds games.
"Pete Rose and I were on the
same thing," Scbott told WLWT-TV
WednE'Sday. "If we put the fans in
the stands, that's what we went on,
performance. I mean, what the
armunt was, compared to the
invE"Stment I have and tre interE'St
factor In It , It's like peanuts."
Kroch, a Chicago bookstore

owner, told The Post, "The only
solution Is for Marge Schott to be
out of the crganlzatlon."
"They can't make me sell my
shares back," Schott said. "I
wouldn't consider that. I d,., ,
throw the towel ln."
Schott also ronfirmed that she
sold one of her ownership shares
back to the partnership for $1.6
million beeause she wanted tofind
limited investor In Indian a ur
Kentucky but was unable lo do 9:J.
Schott said the franclt ise made
money last year. but wuuld not
disclose how mur·lt. No dividend
was declare:! lr&lt; ·a use the pro!lt
was small anri would be needed to
protecl against future financial
probl em;, ; he said .

,,
.. '
~

.·•

•

•

played very well that night - he
scared us to ~~Rth."
During the ·Sou them Mt•!ls•'PPI
;;~ me, Jomson testified, WUIIams
"'ll1led him 10 "slack up" or,
defense. He also sa id he heard
WUllams brag aboul missing tree
throws in the game, after which
Jo hn9:Jn said he put $900 In an
envelope and wrote "Hot Rod" on
it.
Defense altorneys repeatedly
pointed to glaring inconsls lencirs
between John9:Jn's testimonY ""'
previous statements he has ;T,ade,
and accused him of lying tn cllsiTict
attorneys and on the wlln&lt;•,s stand.
Williams' firs! trial ended in a
mistlial an d dlsmcs'al of chargE'S
last Augu st . An appeals court
reversed that ruling and ordered
him to stand Ilia! again.
Fou r dclendants In the ca se have
pleaded guilty and four others face
fu ture trials.

Dayton gets state tournament again
in 1987; Columbus ·is host in 1988

Friday, June 13

Anit a and Susa n Tope vs. Wendy Srnlth
and S. Subbl a h .
·
All(&gt;n WhiTE' vs. Bill Addington ,
Tim Lynch vs. Neal Kool.

partnership, wltle Carl Lindner

owns 1 ~ and seven etters own one

Williams described as 'frequent cocaine user'

In lhe 5K 18-liO. Not plclured were Randy Spaun,
winner In lhe IlK 31-411 and Ronald !]By In the IlK 46
8lld over dlvlltlon. Overall 5K winner was Randy
Spaun. Overall1tK winner wu Ed Sams. The fun run
wu held In Middleport and was chaired by Kim
Blower.

Announce pairings for tournament

is

CAlL .
992-2156

Bergesch wants front~ffic~ squabbling to end
CINCINNATI (UPII - Reds
General Manager Bill Bergesch,
saying he Is dissatisfied with his
working relationship with club
owner Marge Schott, may ·quit at
the end of the season unless uni'E'St
In the club's organization and front
office Is resolved soon, a newspaper
reports.
In a copyright article in The
Cincinnati 'Post Thursday, unnamed soui'CE'S described . as
"close" to Bergesch said Bergesch
told some minolity owners he wUI
leave the Reds If the situation Isn't
settled.
Several minolity owners of the
Reds have expressed displeasure
. with Schott and have hired an
auditing flmt to examine the club's
financial records.

WINNING MEN - Flni place male
in
Satunla,y's Fun Run For Ileari, spoMOfed by
Veterans Memorial Hospital on behalf o1 the
American Heart Association, were, left to rillS, Ed
Sams In the IOK 314~ yeaNtld division, Todd 11ooU1e
In the m 12 and 'under division, Rex Ham In the 5K .
IHS, Anthony Leno in·lhe !OK 1~, and Jell Bumett

The Daily Sentinei-Page-6

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPIJ -Ohio
~Dief state Unlv!'rslty 1s iosingtttreeot Its
~
basketball players, the ColumiJJ s
Dispatch reported today.
they are not."
Oarence McGee, a 6-foot -7 junior
Frey, woo was named the NL center-forward who played in 33
manager d the year In 1984, sald.on games last sea9:Jn, Is dropping out
the last homE"Stand the club started of school, and freshmen Gary Rich
to respond but the just completed and Dave PIE'tke are t ransl!'rring,
3-7 road trip soowed the dub hadn 't the newspaper reported.
·
"Ciarenft' Is dropping out of
school, at least for next season. He
has personal problems," the news·
paper quoted an unnamed source
as saying.
The unspecified problems were

between McGee and tre university,
and were not involved with new
coach Gary Williams, the newspaper said.

tournament last year, and it Is
coming back to Columbus."
Delaware Athletic Director
Ralph Young and Willard Superin·
tendent Jerry Stackoouse also cast
negative votes.
Ol!SAA :··"'"ses were $~.000
less to taJ,.: •"" toumameent in
Dayton than at Ohio State, officials
said. And the Dayton Chamber of
Commerce has advised the OHSAA
it will rover approximately an
additional $.1),001 In expenses next
year. ----..
"This thin:. :. : "'ov.er event than
the NCAA ('lu... ~ ""'mll ~ -1 far
as mor.oy for tre mmmuru,, ," Mid
University d. Dayton AthletiC Dl·
rector Tom Frericks, who said
estimateS placed the boost to
Dayton's economy al $3 mU!Ion,
thanks to hosting the tourney last
season.
"We sell !fi perCPnt of rur NCAA
tickets locally, so the prop!!' aren't
in the motels and restaurants. They
drive borne after the game. The
slgnlllcanCP to the community far
exceeds the NCAA."
OHSAA Commissioner Dick
Armstrong said he was pleased
wlth the board's decision.
"I think the board made a ~ '00
decision, a fair decision," An •.
strong said. ''Of course, I havt t.
feel that way , because It was ba• '&lt;
oo my suggestion."

McGee. of Chicago, whO has one
year of eligibility left, started ~of
58 gamE'S at Ohio Stale, Including
seven last season. He averaged 4.2
points and 2.7 rebounds last year.
The Dispatch said Rich plans to
transfer to George Mason and
Pletkl&gt; Is considering Oklahoma
State. Both would be Ineligible to . - - - - - - - - - - play next season under NCAA
rules. They have three years of
GRAVELY TRACTOR
eligibility remaining.

SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St.

Plan softball tourney

Rich, of Standish, Maine, played
In three games last season, while
Pletkl&gt;, of Spenct&gt;r, Iowa, appeared
in two games.
Williams' style of play - an
uptempo game that uses a full·
court (ress and a fast break might not be compatible with the
capabilities cJ. the two 6· looi -11
players.

Pomeroy,

OH .

Phone 992-2976

SPIING AND SUMMEI HOURS

A men's U triple S.A. Class D
OPEN MON.·FII.
world qualifier softball tournament
9 TO S, SAT. 9 TO I
wUI be held at BuckeyE'S Park and
and Hadley Field in Marietta on
June 28 and 29. The winning team
will receive a berth In the world
tournament to be played Labor Day
weekend and the second and third
place teams will win berths in the r - - - - - - - - - - - - L - - - - - - - - - - - state tournament to be played In
August. Entry fee Is SID and two
steel balls. Teams interE'Sted should
contact Ken Offenberger at 374-2943
or Jerry Huck at 678-2&amp;8.

USE THE U.S.
POSTMAN TO DO
YOUR BANKING!

DAI,LAS GREEN

•

•••••••••••
','

•,' ·. ',"'

THE
GRAVELY
SYSTEM

•

Admlnion Prlce'POtt"cy
Bargain Matin"s
Sat. &amp; Sun, All Seat• $2.25

(intc'ma._~

Adm , Every Tuesdoy , $:l . 2~

Startl Friday, lu• 13, 1!116

TilE
mCUt~IDv
HIT OF 1llf. mr.R
~...dll•dt"•klric

Mllnir IN! hrill) )'1111
•PH}1t~r lrr1

dlttriDJ "St.GrtiJmlf
• .. 7" .!MIIfl ..

__.,.

all~~t , ll~e Nt . s~

'"'····

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Poltergeist
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PG-13

--·

....... w.v•.
Evnl. . 7:00,
Sat. a Sun. Mat. 1:00
Silt. Mld•ll~t, 11:00

TfS.Itlll

Evenln11 7:10, 9:10
Sat. Sua. Mal. 1:10
Sal. Midnight, 11:10

!hi·JKboll Ave.
f'triUWUIIII, W. Va.

a

tm.U!t
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Member FDIC

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-

�Page~&amp;- The

Daily Sentinel

SOMETHING FOR YOU
THIS SUMMER AT

.

Rabier clinic ·scheduled
•

•
By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentmel Staff Writer
"nle Meigs County HumaJ)e
Society and the
Meigs County De-partm e nt of
Health] are join·
lng again this
summer to
rabies clinics
the. first will be at
the Rock Springs Fairgrounds on
Saturday, June 21. from 1 to 4 p.m.
Dr. Caral Osborne will be the
attending veteranarlan and other
lnnoculatlons will be available. The
rabies shots are$3anddogs must be
on leash and eats in carriers. A
second clinic is planned for sometime after the annual Meigs County
Fair.
Th~ R &amp; G Feed and Supply Co.
on Pomeroy's West Main ·Street
helda grandopeningandwlnnersof
door prizes are being anrounced.
The winners are Tina GeaJ)I; Ell
White. Pt'te Hendricks. CJtristine
Napier, Larry Thomas. Cbai'lotte
Grante , Mary Layne. Ruth ErWin,
Bonnie Thomas. Ed 'JohnsOn, Sher·
man Buskirk. Martha Lou Beegle,
Janice Daniels. Robert Molden.
Larry Wolfe. Neva Curtis. Ann
Hargraver. Anita Aeiker, Lou
Hutchison and Adalou Lewis.
Employes served punch, cookies
and coffee and kids were given
baUoons and lollipops during the
grant opening.
Owners and employes say
"thanks a lot" !or the grand opening

Auxiliary plans social
An ice cream social was planned
lor June ~ when the Auxiliary o!
the Bashan Volunteer Fire Depart·
men! met reeently at the hall.
Beckv Pullins presided at the
meeting. The social will be held at
the fire house with serving to begin
at5:li p.m. There will be entertain·
ment during the evening.

'!

!llccess.
Mrs. Iva Upton, cltalrperson of
the annual mental health beUrtnger
fund drive In Thwers Plains,
reports collections at $94. She and
her bellringer:s. Allee Cw11s, R~
Tucker and Mary Marcinko. thank
the p.~bllc for the Sllpport.

.

/.

Nadine I. Goebel, Reedsville, wUI
receive her master of science
degree when Wright Stale Unlver·
slty, Dayton, holds Its ~th semi·
annual commencement exercises
tomorrow. State Rep. C.J . McLin
wlll deliver the address and wlll
receive an honorary degree from
the university.

Doyle Gibbs

·Area man graduates

Mrs. Helen R. Wolfe of Carroll.
whodoeskeepintouchwilh~sfrom

Doyle Gibbs graduated May 4
· time 10 time, writes thal _the Eighth . from Salem College, Salem, W.Va ..
annual Charl('S _and ·Fanny Wolfe . with a bachelm·'s degree In criml·
. Beaver Reunion has been set lor nal justiCE&gt;. He was a place kicker
July 4th at the she,lter house al · for the Salem Tigers for four years
Reyal Oak Park In Meigs Cou nty. and achieved the honor of being
Those attending are io 'take a n:lmed fourth 1n the nation In the
· eovered'dis~ and their -oW/1 table NAIA; Division 1. Gibbs Is the son ct
service, Dinner wlli ·IJP at .12 .noon. · Mary Jane Elclilnger Gibbs, Par·
The reunion. as .inost ·arc, 'Will' he · kersburg; and grandson of William
cpen 'to au· relatives and _!rlends.
Eichinger, Syracuse, and lhe late
Margarel Eichinger. Gibbs is
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Theiss, currently employed In law enforce·
near Racine, have a daughter and a ment at Myrtle Beach, S.C.
son who will be receiving their
master's degrees at Saturday's
Ohio University commencement.
They are Sharon Birch. who wlll
be receiving her second master's
degree, this one In health services
Vicki Ferrell was the best loser
administration, and Kenneth Jr.. with Jo Ann Eads and Kethel
who wlll be receiving an executive Hatfield as runners-up at the
master's In business admlnistra· Tuesday night meeting of TOPS OH
lion. Many o! you know Sharon as 1456 held at the Rutland Civic
nurse In the Meigs Local School Center. It was announced that there
District. Her first master's Is in will be no meeting of TOPS on June
education. Kenneth lives In Lancas- 17 since several members wUI be
ter and so has done work on his at1ending the open house of the
degree a I the branch of Ohio Pomeroy Club. However. weigh·in
University in that city.
will be held from 6 to 6: ll.
Information on the Rutland group
Congress giveth and Congress may be obtalned !rom Sandy
taketh away - so say goodbye to Hysell. 992-7467.
your IRA. Do keep smiling.

TOPS group meets

Rio ·Grande College .

and ·Community Coll,:lge
Your choice of: college credit classes; special interest weekday or Saturday
classes; one-week worlcshops.
'

Monday, June 16, 9 a.m. until 4 p.m.

&lt;:&lt;

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS

vs.

MARKEL MINING.INC ..
DEFENDANT .
In pursuance of en Execu-

meroy. Ohio, on June 24,
1986, II 10:00 in tho fo.
renoon , of 18id day the fol-

lowing Goods and Chatt•.
to· wit:
One ~1 I Caterpillar 09
Dozer, Serial No. 66A450B

Appraised Value

PAT HILL FORD, INC.

$6,667.00

Secretarial Science

Nursing

Termt of Sale ; Cash on
day ot sale .
·Taken as the PfOpenv of

Markel Mining. Inc ., to ••·
tisfy an uecution in fa \lOr of

Special Interest Classes (Non-Credit) in SWIMMING, GYMNASTICS, and
CHILDREN'S CLAY.

Southeastern
Equipment
Company, Inc.
HOWARD E. FRANK
SHERIFF
161 13 1tc

For more information and class schedules, telephone 614-245-5353 (Ext.
325), or in Ohio, 800-282-7201 (Ext. 325).

FINANCING UP
TO 60 MONTHS

t

.

··

1986 F-150 4X4

$300000
DISCOUNT ON
ALL F-250
4X4'S IN
STOCK

SCHOOL OF
HOMESTEAD LIVINGS~
ONE WEEK
WORKSHOPS

w~

$2 soooo DISCOUNT ON
ALL F~ 150 4X4'S IN STOCK

818 SA~INCS
1986 ·RANGER 414
PICKUP

On The Spot
Bank Financing

9.95°/o
S2 soooo DISCOUNT
ON ALL RANGER 4X4'S
IN STOCK

FINANCING
AVAILABLE

SEE OR CALL
RICK TOLLIVER, KEN RICHARDSON, J,R. PIERCE

PAT HILL F DI Inc.

MIDDLEPORT

461 S. THIRD AVE.

PHONE 992-2

PUBLIC NOTICE
On J..,e 23. 1988, ot 7:00
P.M . at tho Townholl, tho

trustees of

will hold

Telephone now for brochure information and registration
form for the workshops listed below. But hurry! Some
workshops will close in a few days. Telephone
614-245-5353 (Ext. 325), or Ohio only 800-282-7201
(Ext. 325) for information about:

noon on

1!1nml., Automotlc Flro

Alarm Syttem end inltea 1

Monuel fin Alorm Syotem Ill
the Moigo County Jol. Se·
cond St-. Pomoroy, Ohio.
to
be lntereonnect..t-

1301 :7- 7-:M APf*ldik A.
088C Sac. 1718.3.1 .,d
OBBC Soc. 1711.5 ond o
conforming to tho ooqulre·

County Deed Recorda.
The following real lltete
Seid percel Wll eppr1tald
being thot port ol Lot No . 89 ot ne,ooo.oo.
in Pomoroy. Moigo Cournv.
Tormo of ooto: Cooh
Ohio. which io bounded ond
Real ..ttte eannot be told

•A

muel $1tverman end wife to
Hecker by doed
dated Octobor 20th, t890.

FrM&gt;r

and recorded in Volume 70.

public heoring lor

peciatty Senior Citizens! are
invhed co attend 111d provide
written 01 oral oomments
concemflg the townthip's
entire propoaed ta.utget.
Barbera J . Grueser,

Clorlt
Bedford Township Board

ot Trustaea

cournv. Ohio.
,The following - r e a l
..... In ... Cl!y of
Pomerov. Melgl c...rnv.
Ohio. ID-wit:· Being • poll of
Lot No. 128 In the Vilogo at
Pomeooy, Chip. Seltl port beIng • ~ 21wt wide on Sva·
"""" s - ond
lhil width 1n • -erty dnc·
tiQft..
40 lwt
!I lndl•.
__
_ llld
llrip._on
tho

''

'

"

'

216 E. 2nlst. · '
Phone

~ 9')rr'l'l't0r'l

&lt;N•.

,.

181 13 ttc

ot 10:00 O'Ciod&lt; A.M., the

following
Help Wanted

HOllE OPERATORS: Ptr·
sons in G111i1 , Jackson .. d
lltiJS counties who are
wilhn&amp; to particip1t1 in a
foster type pro&amp;nm for
poople with emotional pro·
blems. Reimbursemttlt is
$450 1 month. Must be li censed by the State 0.·
partment of llentel Htllth.
For ntore information contact Barbm Cox, Coordi·
of Community SupServices at Woodlllld
614-4-16-5500.

Reg.139.95

• Genuine Olled-WIInut Venoer
• Liquid-Cooled T-Ier

$3.fal.

ProgtMim8ble t5 S1lactlan MotrtiOI y

Lowest price ever-ideal for Dad's stereo

NEW USTING - 5 Rm. lrame.
2 batl'6. If. lam. tnt., I&amp; lront
fXlt'Ch, basemen~ gatage and
nee lot. Middtp&lt;rt Askltg

system! With compact disc, there's no rumble
or surface noise-just pure music. And COs
virtually never wear out. 142·5001

$28,000.
NEW USTING - One lbor 4
rm. oome in Midd~port. Has

oow kitchen, panelitg catpet,
2 IJ)rches and garage levellot

12"1Bar1d Equalizer

COmpact Stereo Syaltem

By Realistic

Ciarinettee·117 by Realistic

$16.~.

Save

NEW UsnNG - ~ restricted

buiklitg lot n Baum Sulxlfl. I

-fffilil@l II illiTillilli ~.

a:te pius.
NEW USTING - 43 a:res, 9
rm. oome, fumace, caiJ)eting
basement, 3 cat garage,
milerals, barn and ollter

but uld rightl. rights ol wry

and ••mente 11 conttined
In ofornlid died.

t9.

•ao

69!' 17995 2:as

NEW USTING - 5 rm. home.
edge rl town. Bath, gas FA
fumare and ely uti~ies. Just

8Cf0.

REFERENCE DEED:

Save

HALF PRICE

acre.

Meiuo c ... rnv 0ee11 Fleoordl.

knno 229. Poge

-

NEW USTING - 67 a:tes in
Orange TownshiP Mar Surmer
on county td. lP. waler
avai~b~. AOOut $600.00 per

-g

wil lor . . It the hon1
doof of the c... rt Hou•ln f'o.
'"""'''· Mo~go c ... rnv. Ohio.
on tho 11th cloy of July. 1986.

--

1 ·1614)-992 - 3325

-g
s--.-··-·
w.,

Estate~

Real

--g.

Save

•40

Vo-

INTERESTED IN BUYING
APPROXIMATELY 21/2
ACRES OF ST. IT. 7 NEAl
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL?
IF SO, PLEASE PHONE
HOME NAnONAL BANI
949-2210.

'100

11995

Reg.
119.95

Gives total control over frequency response! IMX~ circUit
expands stereo "image".

basement and attached dbl.
garaga

AM/FM Cer Cassette

NEAl POST OFFICE - 2 BR

By Realistic

131-2010 TM SCi-CouotiCS. Inc

Reg. 219.95

Low All20 Per 11onttt on CIIIIJnl•

LOw AIIZO Pet llonttl on CttiUne •

Hear poliCe, fire-20,584
frequencies on 60 cpsnnels!
No crystals needed. 1120-117

Has cassette, phono, S-track.
AM, FM. Matching 17"-high
113-1221

TV/AM/FM

2w

PortaVistone by Realistic

Save

•so

$19,600.
36 ACRES - Near 1tte
IDspital lots rl MJtJds Rural
water.
lliUIIDERFUL - 2 story It
excelent condition, cook and
bake unils, hoi water lxiiler. ful
basement iOew of river.
$37,000.
3. 75 ACRES - In Syracuse.
Nl utilities and !ile rhome.

M'igo

7•5
.,-

buildings. Ea~em schoot.
$45,000.
RANOt - 5 Poil~ area.
1.327 acres, 7 nns , servilg
bar, range, refr~erat01. lui

ixlme, nice carpetng trod.
ktcllen and ni:e lot. Asilltg

- · .,d '-'•
R8111 Estate General

Save

•&amp;o

11915 12915
Reg. 179.95

Low Aa 120 Per Month on CttlUne•

Has auto-reverse and digital
tuningiiiHfash. 112-1912

Save ftftM Reo
Reg.179.95

Low Ao ao P• MonUI on Clt!Uno•

Weighs only 2•1• lbs.! With sun
hood. 116-103
BaHeriel extra. Dilgonllly meuur«&lt;

L. ~

~--~

Housiny
'Headquarters

--·

Copy tapes, record AM, FM
stereo or ''live"! 114-795

By Realistic

By Radio Shack

,.. _..,

.__.-.aol'w-onCttl.ine·

Deluxe AM/FM Rllc:llo

Desk/Wall Telephone

$20,000.
ONE FlOOR - 2 I~ lii~g
rooms, fuN basement bci~
heat. 2 car fllllge and lg lot.
near iJade_school.

140 .,_,-,39.95

Cut~~~

Cut29%

2495
39.95

2415 :.Is

Reg.

Lighted Butt-

The Daily Senlinel
(Uli'S

11~11111 )

every

afternoon, Monda y

A Dl~rll'- ol Multlmedl8, In«:.
Published

Quartz St~pw11tch

through Friday, 111 Court SL. Pomeroy, Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Pub-

· By Miclonta"

llsblng Co mpany/Mulllmedla, Inc.,
Pom•roy. OhiO 45769. Ph. 992·2156. s.,.
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.

33%

.

AND
• '. r •

tEAFORDrrl

er' 1 Compenaation
pro· ond upon lbout llvefeot ollot
grom. Bidder'• riotc number No. 128. In """-Y· Ohio
five
muot be lurnlohed In bid. The oold live loot llrip
Molgo County Commloolon· laot on Sycori!ON 8-.. Aleo
en reMrve the right ~ ec· the right .cl TEFI IWil to IIY,
cept or Nject eny or oil bldo inotolt, llld
......... in. Cl'l. GloW •d
and / Of any pert tht~f .
Melgo County ........... uldiiYeloot ~
Commlulonen foantlng n.. feot on S y Mory Hobotettor, Cleric
.,d
151 30; 181 6, 2tc
geo pipol. ........ the
right to enter . _ oold .lve
llrip lor ... pu!p&lt;lM of
Public Notice
toying, ........._, ropolmg. ...
loylng. .............,
llld
moinuir*'tlthe- It
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtUe of on ...... ol Sole thelntllltiontodolal&gt;eond
ilouod out of the Common lncludo .. rlghta. rights
Pleeo CCirrt of Meigl C..,nty, of Wflf ll1d .........
Ohio. in the ol Centro! Qlll1ed llld ,...1111 by Lone
TNII C~eny. N.A..
.
J;1,,Koolller, ot ol., in their dlotl
ogelniiJ.,. Boley,
. to Honry Strolle dotod D_,..
OMMdontl • . _ • Judg....,t ber4,1941, -dod lnDeod
....... ... bllng eo.. Book 144, ot Pogell38 olthe

No. 83-CV·38.1n said C..,rt.l

llad1e lhaek

Recorda of DMdl of Meigs

of egreu on first and atcond D - 4 . 1941 , ondwllich
llooro of tho Molp County • now occupild bv 11M north·
Jail .
orty ond ol tho Koehler bride
All employ• olloll be cov· buldlng. Allo • right ol

Ohio Worlt•

I

R8111 Estate General

'"' pogeo 383·314 of the

menlo of Sec:. 1716.9 111d IICIUthoolv olde ol .... -arty
1717.0.
40 loot llld elndl-. ofo - ·
21 lnotoll opprovod. Hlu· toln _ , llrip con•¥.'!'
minsted E•it ~gna Over ttw to Henry Strolle by Lone H.
doorways of the main mean a KOIIII.-. 'ot ol .. by dlotl -

by the

•Interior &amp; Exterior
•Siding
•Remodeling
•Ge11eral Carpentry
•Kitchens
•Repair Work
•Roofing
REFERI;NCES -FREE ESTIMATES

181 8, 13. 20, 27; !71 3

·a.

Soc.

orod

CHES1D, OHIO
HOME BUILDING

deKribed 11 follows ; to·'Nit : for
thin two-thirds of
Forty foet on front Str•t the eppr1iud Vllu e.
and tighty·IIYo by elghtyHowerd E. Frank
fivo fHI end bolng tho oeme
Sheriff of Meigo
promlooo conveyed by So·
Cournv. Ohio

GET YOUR TAN
BEFORE YOU
GO TO THE .BEACH

r
-LOG CABIN REPAIR &amp; RESTORA nON
-TRADITIONAL LONG RIFLE CONSTRUcnON
-WHEAT WEAVING
-BEGINt ANG DULOMER PLAYING
-TRADITIONAL WOODCARVING
,,
-OIAIR CANING
:'. ,I
-BEGINNING BLACKSMITHING
.-·,,r,
I •"
-INTRODUCTION TO QUILTING
1 -· I''
, I
I
r
- WOOL SPINNING
r' .
-COLONIAL LANTERN MAKING
-RJRNITURE REFURNISHING
_:INTRODUCTION TO WEAVING
-OUTRTTING THE BAO&lt;WOODSMAN
- ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES
-I~TRODUCTION TO STAINED GLASS
-ADVANCED SPINNING
-INTERMEDIATE AND ADVANCED
· DULOMER PLAYING

1

Bodford Township

tho Budget .,d RovenLe
Shoring Fundo lor tho TownJhip lor t 987. AI citizens! ...

11

Learn an American pioneer skill while you live early
American history. This is a once-a-year opportunity, with
workshops taught by some of the region's finest artisans
in an authentic setting.

12

PHONE 614-985-4141

,,

,...,teln

Public Notice

1986 F-250 41. PICKUP

46789. until

tion iuued from the c~ .• June 13 end opening at 2:00
olf&lt;C8 of tho Court of Com· P.M . thot dolo lor tho lol·
mon Pleas of Meigo Cournv. towing diocrlbed County
Ohio, on tho 2nd day of May. work by 1 c:el'tlfied Installer:
1986, and to me directed in
Furnish all . , m~~terlals. Ia·
the case named above. I will bor, and appliance• neces·
u:poae to Sale at Public Auc- ury to complete in 1 aatla·
tion. on the steps of the Court factory manner;

510 .000 .00
Two - thirds equala

Medical Lab Technology

· Notice i1herebygfventh•t
Milled proposal• will be received by the Moig1 County
Board of Commiaioneq ••
their office located in the
Courthouse. Pomeroy. Ohto

MARCUM CONTRACTING

Public Notice

Public Notice
........ to·wlt:

SHERIFF 'S SALE OF
PROPERTY
SOUTHEASTERN
EQUIPMENT CO .. INC .
PLAINTIFF ,

House. Second Stroot. Po·

History
Psychology
Social Studies
Social Worlc

Archeology
Communications
English
Government

Public Notice

Rou~.

Racine, Route 2.
r-----------

wlll sponsor an open dance Satur·
day, 8 to 11 ' p.m., at St. Peter's
Ep&amp;-opal Church In Gallipolis.
Caller wlll be Jim Taylor.

Public Notice

Biology
O.emistry
Computer Science
Math
Natural Science

Education
Fine Arts
Music
Physical Education
Theatre

Roger and Chrtsty Roush, Ra· Mary
cine. are annouinclng the birth of
thelr third daughter, June 6, at
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point
Pleasant, W.Va. She has been
named Kasey Lynn. The baby
weighted seven pounds, lour ountes
and was 19 Inches long.
Mr. and Mrs. Rou~' s other
children are Kimberly Lynn, age
seven .. and Jennifer Lynn, age five.
Maternal grandparents are Charles and Patty Michael of Racine,
Route 2. Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Findley of Letart Falls and Mrs.
Marie Michael of Racine are
great -gra ndparen ts . Paternal
grandparents are Herbert and .

143 Sunday. ·Dinner at noon will he Invited to attend.
POMEROY -The film - Three
!Qllowed by singing at 1:30 p.m. Bible sdlool
Musketeers and Mr. Magoo - wlll
with singers Including &amp;lggs Fam·
SHADE - The Shade United
be shown Friday, 2 p.m. at the
Uy of South Point and Ward Family, Methodist Church wUI be sponsor·
Pomeroy Library.
Cheshire; groups are Invited to lng a week·long Bible school.
participate.
CHESHIRE -TheGalllaCounty
Monday through Friday, from 9
POMEROY - The Senior Cltl· Conference wlll convene Saturday.
a.m. Ill 11:45 a.m. each day.
zens Dante Club wUI have a square 10 a.m., at Poplar Ridge Church.
TEXAS COMMUNITY - Unity
Otlldren, age 3 and older, will be
dance Friday. 8 to 11 p.m., at the Everyone welcome.
Singers. of Coolville. directed by taught through stories, songs and
senior center on Mulberry Height s.
Sue Matheny, will present special crafts. Interested adults wlll be
Bring snacks. Everyone welcome.
Pf. PLEASANT - Bend area • music at the Mount Herman United offered Bible study. Director Is
gospel sing. 7:30 p.m. Saturday at
Brethren Church, Texas Commun- Beverly Kubachka who can be
POMEROY - Annual Flag Day Gospel Lighthouse Church, Neal
Ity, Sunctay, at 7:30p.m. Public is reached at 696-1148 for additional
picnic o! Return Jonalhan Meigs Road, near Krodel Park, Pt.
Invited .
Information.
Chapter. Daughters o! the Amert· Pleasant. featuring Griffith Gospel
OIUdrm's flims
can Revolut ion, will be held at the Singers, ReOectlons Trio, Narrow
MONDAY
POMEROY - Starting Friday.
home of Mrs. A. R. Knight Friday. 6 Way Singers, The Winning Side,
RAONE Vacation Bible
children's
fllms wlll be shown every
p.m.
The Gospel Tones and Sounds o!
School, Antiquity Baptist Church.
Friday
and
Saturday at the PomeRoute 338, Racine, Monday through
POMEROY - Mary Shrine 37, Inspiration; George Hoschar, mas·
roy
and
Middleport
Ubrarles. Films
June :¥1, 10 a.m.-noon dally.
Order o! the While Shrine of ter of ceremonies.
wlll
beat
Pomeroy,
Friday, 2 p.m.:
Jerusalem, will meel Friday even·
Middleport,
Saturday
at 2 p.m.
SYRACUSE - Rlck Weaver,
lng at the Pomeroy Masonic
ROYAL OAK - The BeUes and
FUms
lor
June
are
as
follow.;:
June
Temple. A practice lor inspection Beaus Western Square Danoe Club Cottageville, W.Va., wUI be evange13
and
14,
Three
Musketeers
and
list for a revival at Syracuse
will take place at 7 p.m. with thP wU sponsor an cpen danre Saturday
Mr.
Magoo;
June
~
and
21,
Star
regular meeting 10 he held at 8 p.m. at Royal' Oak Park recreation Mission, Monday through June 21,7
Trek - Dagger o! the Mind; June
building, 8 b 11 p.m. Caller wlll be each even ing.
'XI and 28, The Deerslayer.
SATURDI\Y
Keith Rlppeto of Parkerslllrg. All
Guest speaker
MIDDLEPORT -" The film wester n square danrers are Special services
POMEROY - Rev. Theron
BASHAN - Denver Hill of
Three MuskPieers and Mr. Magoo Invited.
Footer, W.Va. will be speaker at the Durham wlll be guest speaker at
-'-will be shown Saturday, 2 p.m .. at
Red Brush Church of Christ located 7:30 p.m. services thi s Sunday at
the Middleport Library.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Father's Day on Bashan Road for weekend the Hohson Church of Christ in
GALLIPOLIS - Grand Squares homecoming at Mt. Union Baptist services, 7 p.mSaturday, Sunday at Christian Union
The
W('Stem Style Square Dance Club Chu rch Cll
road 10 off Route 9:ll a.m. and 6

Register at Davis Technical Career Center for 5 or 10 week credit dasses in:
Accounting
Business ManCJ98ment
Economics
Finance
Marl&lt;eting

Roush family has new arrival

Community ·cale,ndar I area happenings
FRIDAY

\

The Daily Sentinai-Page-7

Pomerov-:-MptdlepQrt, Ohio

Friday, June 13, 1986

'

Beat of the Bend

--~

Friday, June 13, 1986

Ohio

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GET HOME

I

1995=-:s

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Plge-8-The Daily Sentinel

•

Ui

Ui

Friday, June 13. 1986

Pomeroy-Midd!eeeffi Ohio

u

=

Friday, June 13, 1986

The Daily

Ohio

-tard

GREAT BEND ELECTRIC, Inc.
"!oociillooooo ...

c..

Businesses Listed On This Page.
_ --tC:l.J "

c-o · o·
Roy RoftS
Ph. HHIOO

St. Rt. •

Chester

MOUNTAINS ARE MONUMENTS
TO THE LORD'S CREATION

\ \ CEN1ER, INC.
I( JollnPh.F."Hltl
Fultr, Mgr.

I

~

Pomeroy

~ISHER &amp; LOHSE

m

~!!!

SlORE

Church &amp; OHico Suppa;.s
GIFTS
"Moll St
Middleport

NEW YORK

Prescrtptlons

Na1tonw1de Ins. Co.
216 s. Second
Pomeroy
992-3325

of Columbus. 0 .
804 W. Ma1n
992 1318 Pomeroy

ru

Comple1e
~
Automotive
'
serv1ce
Locust &amp;
Street
992·9921

"Before the mountaons
were brought forth, or ever
thou hadst formed the
earth. thou art God."
- Psalm 90.2

214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

Pol'fieroy, Ohao

all the visible examples of the wonder of

Middleport
Pomeroy, 0

KinJbii'J Home Sales
Senice
&amp;

the stately grandeur of the Rocktes, the 1agged

Po1111roy,

pmnacles of the Tetons, the saw·toothed es-

• 992-2975

The

F•nest '"
Modular Homes

Pomeroy, 1100 E .

vation: the glacier·carved horns of the Alps,

~'"

', "

J

"Strving Familin"
264 S. 2nd, Mildltport

992-5141

(row's Family Restaur111t
"Ft~IIHtf

Himalayas and the rolling, tree-covered folds

SONS SlORE

of the Appalachians; among many others. They
Channel OUr life·giving Water Supply, modify

GrocenesGeneral Merchandtse
Ruone 949·,550

our climate to prov1de the nght cond1ttons for
every need, and offer rnany recreational opportunitleS. MountainS have played a VItal role
throughout hiStOry, and some of the most

CHAPMAN SHOES

/(flffeif Ftltl CMMu" ''Po•Hf l Q•Dif !Hf $11H"
221 W. Main St, P-ray
104 E. MA .. ST. PO.IIOY

992-5432

famolls Biblical episodes were enacted on thetr
slopes Or SUmmitS. Whatever your creed, YOU

992-2815

need look no farther to appreciate

-n

TRIN1I'Y &lt;l!IJROI, Rev W H Perrin,
poot&lt;r, ~ aock, !b&gt;day School Sup&lt;
Cllurch Sctoll 9: 15 a.m .Wcrship Serv1e JO l)

a m Ololr

-arsal.

Thesday 7 ll p.m
of IAl&lt;! Burt
POMEROY QIURCH OF TilE NAZARniE, C&lt;rno!r Unlllo and lllilill'n]l, Rev
Thomas Gll!l M&lt;Qo~. poostor Norman Presley. S. S. Supt.. Sunday S&lt;lml, 9: ll a m.,
l11lll'nlne wtnbp J)•.11 a.m., t'V80lng !lt'I'Vko 6
p.m : mid-WEek servlcf, Wednesday 7 p.m.
CRACE EPc;a)PAL atuRrn l!6 E
Main Sl.. POmeroy Sunday seovices Holy
OOJTI'Z1llnion on tlr first Surxiay Of each rmnth.
and CCIIIIllneol wfth rnDI'OU1g Jra¥"1" m n..
ll'drdd &amp;mday Morning prayer and serrmn on
aU o&lt;her &amp;.ondays ct tilt omnth. ChW'Ch School
and Nllr:sel)' care provided Cctlee l&gt;llorln tilt
Plll1sllllalllmmt!dlatety !Oilow1lll!lhe !lt'I'Vko
POMD\OY CHURCll OF CHRIST, 212 W
Main Sl , NoU Proudtoot, IDS!or lillie School
~ .lla m., MoniowW&lt;nhlp, ll .lla m · Y&lt;Mh
......,, &amp;00 p.m .. Evmlng worship 7•00 p
m. Wedroe;day night Jral"'" ..-!ng and Billie
study ~ 00 pm
TilE SALVATION ARMY, 11!i Butternut
~

A"'" l'oim'oy Mrs £&gt;ra Wining In c11argt
Sunday l»lln5 .-Jng, W a m ; !b&gt;day
School, Ill ]) a.m s.o.tay Sdrxol, VPSM
Eloise Adams le_. 7 ll p m Salvation
mee&lt;lng. varbo&gt; speakers and music spoc!U
Thunday, 11 .ll a m to 2 pm. Uodlos HOITI!
~.e...,.
In ctoaqp,, all wtme11
tnvlled, 6:6 'JI.m. nounc~ay, ca-.,. Cad«

""""""'

Oasos tYro,. ~Bible) , 7 ll p.m Study and Prayer~. ..,... to tilt publlc
I'()MERQY WESI'SIDE CIIUROI OF
amm', l!ll6 Ch!lolron's Home Road !County
Road '16) ttz.sm. VtlCal music Swday Wcr.u.&gt; Wa.m Bible Study D'a m , Worship. 6 p.
m W.aeday Bible Study, 7 p m
OW DEXTER IIIBLE CHRISI'IAN
QIUIICH, Alvin Curtis pasklr: LlDda SNan
Soopl Sunday School ~ ll a m • jl'eochlng ser
WE!, tlrsl and third !b&gt;day foln.lng !b&gt;day
SchOol Yooth -~ ~.11 p.m """Y Sun
day
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST
PrN Cblng 9· 30 a.m flrstandsecond Sun
da)ls of eecb month thrd and foorth SJn

day eachmontl'l worship services at 7 30 p
m . Wednesday evenings at 7 30 p m ~
Prayer and Bible Study.
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST Mulb
£"rl")' Hel~ht s Road , Pomeroy Leroy
Bruch, Pastor, Sabbath School Superln

tenderl1, Rhonda Markin . Sabbath School
btf!:lns at2 p m m Saturday with worship

seril«" fo\low lnR: at 3 15 Everyooe wei

come

RUTLA ND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
- - Sister Harrlt&gt;ll Warner, Supt Sunday
School 9 30 a m , Momin(l Worship, 10 4S
am
I'()MEROY F1RST BAP'TIST Lysooo
HaUey, mln lslf'r William Snooffer. Sun·
day School Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m
, Motntn~ Wdn hip 10 J) a m
F1RST SOUTHERN BAP'TIST Po
mt'I'O)' Pikf' E Lama r O' Bryanl pastor
Ja-ck Nfteds Sunday School Dlrf'Ctor Sunday School. 9 lJ a m . Morning Worship,
10 •s l'Vfnlnp: worship. 7 00 p m (0 S T l
A: 7 JO IE S T 1: Wedn Hday Prayer Ser
vice, 7 OOp m fD.ST ll 7 Jll PM IE S
T ), MilliOn Fr1end! (agt&gt;S 2 6) , Royal
Ambauadors !boys age9 6-l8L and Girls
In ACtiOft (Bii:l'S 6- 181 on Wed ntsda ys 7 p
m IDST11t7. 30pm lEST I Tuesday
Vlsltallon 6 :ll p m
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH llallf'Y Run Road , Rev Emmen Rawson. pastor Handley Dunn, su pt Sunda y School.
10 a m . Sunday PVentnl[servlce. 7 30p m
, Bible tearhtn1. 7 30 p.m. Thursday
SYRACUSE MISSION, CHerry St . Sy
ra~sf. ServlcfS , 10 a m Sunday Evening
services Sunday and Wednesday at 7•00 p

m

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION. Rev KelohEblln .
pallor Sunday School 9 30 a m , Wad E'
Hayman. supt , MornlnRWorship, 10 30 a
m , Sunday evening service 7 30 p m ,
Wednesday Prayer Meeting, 7 30 p m
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
Racine Rev JamE!'S Satterfield, pastor
i'rE'f'man Williams Supt Sunday School
9 f5 am , Sunday and Wednf'!da y t&gt;ven ln(l services 7 p m
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST
Corner Sixth mnd Palmer Ea rl Eden, Pastor Ray Fields, S S Supt , Dan Riggs,
Asst Supt Sunday School, 9 15 a m ,
Morning Worship 10 15 a m Sunday
Even ing sen·i~ 7 p m Yout h mee ttn ~.
1 30 p.m Wedn H day· even ln gserv lce7 p
m Choir practice 8 p m

MIDDL EPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST .
!ith and Main Bob Melton mlnisttr AI
Hart5011 , assoc minister Mlk ~ Gerla ch ,
Sunday School Su.ptrlntendent Bible
School9 XI a m , Momlng Worship ll 30
a m Evf'nln~~: Worship 7 00 p m Wednes
day, 7 00 p.m Prayf'r meetin g
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF 111E NA
ZARmE Co-pastor• ~ Charles ea,.wand 11rv Nan cy Coyle BUI Wh ite, Sunday
Schpol SUpl sunday School 9:3(1 am ;
Mornlna Worship 10 30 am ; Evangelistic
meeting 7'110 p m WednHday 7 00 p m
Pra)'t'r m.. llng
\.
UNJTJIIJ 1"8111111YTI!KIAN MINIITHY
OF MEIGS COUNTY
Rev. Ketl 11'11&lt;11.,.
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH - Sunday Worship Services
9 00 a m ; Churth SChool 10.15 am
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN Sunday School , 9 a m , Chu rclt ~rvice ,
W 15 am

•

SYRACUSE FIRST UNIT ED PRESBY
TDHAN - Sunday School 10 a m ,
Church serv ice 11·15 am
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD Pastor.
J ohn Evans Sunda y SChool 10 00 a m
Sunday Morning Worsh Ip 11 00 a m Chll dren 's ~urch 11 a m Sunday E venln2
Se~ic e 7 00 p m WE'd, 6 p m Young La
dies Auxlllary WE'dnesday, 1 p m Fam
lly Wors hip
HAZEL COMMUNlTY CHURCH Off
Rt 124 3 miles from Portland-Long BOI
tom Eds t'l Hart , pastor Sundav School,
9· 30 a m Su nday mom In g prea ctoln g
tO·JO a m Sunda y ev ening services, 7 l)
Pm
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH, Corner Ash and Plu m Ralph
Cundiff, pastor Sunday School 10 00 am
Morn lnR Worship, U 00 am . Wt'dnesda -..
1and Saturday Evening Servlct&gt;s a t 7 30 p
m

God's hand I·
f

work than these breath-taking h1g h potntS 0
the earth'S hOriZOn.

'----------------------------.J

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH

UNITEII METHODIST CHURCH
NORTHEAST ILU8TER
Rev. Daa Ard.fll'
Rev. Roy DHter

Rev. Set•• .JohaHn
ALFRED - Church School 9 30 a m
Worship, ll a m . UMY F 6: 30 p m .. UMW
Third 1\ltsda y. 7 30 p m Communion
flrs r Sunday IArcherl
.
CHESTER - Wo"hlp 9 a m.; Chur&lt;h
SChoollOa m : BlblrStudy Thursday 1p
m , UMW first Thursday, 1 p m : Com
munlon . first Sunda&gt; (Archer !.
JOPPA - Worship 9 30 a m , Church
School 10 30 a m Bib!(&gt; SNdy Wedn es da }~
7 30 p m 1Johnson1
LONG BO'ITOM - Church School 9 Jll
a m , Worship 7 p m , Bible Study, Wt'd
nesda y, 7 . ~ p m UMYF Wt'dnesda y,
6 00 p m . Communion First Sunda y,
lArch en
REEDSVI LLE- Chu rch School 9 30 a
m , Worship Serv ire 11 00 am IDeeter l
TUPPERS PLAI NS S'l' PAUL Church School 9 a m . Wors hip 10 a m ,
Blblt&gt; Study, Tuesday 7 30 p m UMW.
Third Tuesl:Jay 7 30 p m . Communion
First Sunday ( Arche-r~
CENTRAL ClUSTER
Rev. Jame11 E Corbitt
Rev. Steven Nellon
Rev Melvin Frankllo
Rev Clemente S Zunlca, Jr
Rev A.ndrew Rubenklnl

ASBURY ISyracus!'l- Worship 11 am
Chu rch School 9· 45 am : Char~f' Bible
Study, Wednesday 7 30 p m . UMW first
Tutsdav 7. 30 p m Choir Rehearsa l
Wf'dnf'sday 6 30 p m UMW, fourth Sun
day 6· 30 p.m 1Ne-lson 1
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m
Church Sc hool10 a m , Bible Study, Tues
cla v. 7 30 p m . UMW First Monda y. 7 30
p m . UMYF Sunday 6 p m Choir Rr
hrarsal 6· 30 p m Wed nesday tfrankllnt
FLATWOODS- Church School. 10 a m
Worship. 11 a m . Bible Study. Thurs
day 7 p m UMYF. Sund ay 6 p m
!Franklin \
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a m .
Church School 10 A M Choir prac!ICE'
Tuesdav. 6 30 p m , UMW, fi rst Tuf'sday
7 30 p m. 1Nelson1
HEAT H oMkldlepoMJ - Church School
9 30 a m , Morning Worship 10 30 a.m ,
Youth Group. 4 p m Wednf'SclaY Church
Choir rehearsal , 7 p m , Thu rsda~ ,
Prayer Servlct&gt;, 6 30 p m , Bible Study, 7
p m IZun~a)
MINERSVILLE - Worship Servlco 10
a m , Church School. 11 a m , UMW. third
Wedne-sday 1 p m Choir practiCE', Mon
da y, 7 30 p m (Nelson)
PEARL 'CHAPEL - Worship Service 9
a m , Church School 11 a m UMW SE'
('Ond Tuesday, 7 30 p m , UMYF last
Tu esday 7 30 p m (Rube'llktn~)
POM EROY -Church Sc hool 13 15 a m
Wo rship 10 30 a m . Choir reh earsal
WE'd n('Sda y 7 30 p m . UMW 5econd
Tuesday 7 30pm UMYFSu nday, 6pm
tCorbll!l
ROCK SPRINGS- Church School. 9 ]5
a m Worship 10 a m , Blblf' Study, Wed
nHday 7 30 p m. UMYF !Seniors! . Sun
day. 5 p m !Juniors \ every other Sun
day. 6 p m IFran klln l
RUTLAND- Chu r&lt;h SChool. 9 4~ a m .
Worship. 10 30 a m , UMW IEvenlng: Cir
r iel second WPdn esday 7· 30 p m UMW
!Afternoon Circle I sfC'ond Thursday, 1 p
m !RubenklngJ
SALEM'CENTER - Church Sctoooi!Oa
m , Worship 9 45 a m IRubenklng)
SNOWVILLE - Worship, 8 30 a m ,
Church SchoollO a.m. (RubenklnRI
SOUTHERN CLUSTER

Re-v Ro1er Grace
Re\1. Paul MICOalre
Rev Keith Rader
APPLE GROVE- CHurch SChool 9 00
a m Worship 10 00 a m (first a nd third
Sundays). UMW Steond Tuesday, 7 30 p
m Pra yl'r mtetlng, Wednesda y,? p m
(G race)
BETHANY - Worship, 9 a m ; Church
School, 10 a m ; Bible Studl, Wednesday,
10 a m , Dorcas Womfn 1 Fellowship,
Wednesday, n a m iMcGulreJ .
CARMEL - Church School 9. :II a m ,
Worship, 10· 45 a m. second and Fourth
Sundays, Fellowship dinner wllh Sulton
third Thursday, 6·3lp.m. (McGuire\
EAST LETART- Church SChool9 a.m.
Wors hip 10 a. m second and rour1h Sun
days. UMW tlrsl Tuesday, 7 30 p.m.
!Grace)
LETAR'f FALLS - Worship 9 am

Chur ch Sc hoollO am tGrace\
MORN ISG STAR- Worsh~ 9 ~ 5 a m
f hu rch Sc hool , 10 30 a m , lbll' STud v
rhu rsda\ 7 ~ p rn mader ~
RACINE WESLEYAN- Churc h School
Ill:.~ m Worship 11 a m UM Wrourt h Mon
do
:11
M . Pr
kl
v at 7 P m~ . e n ~ ayer 8 rea ast
WednPS(Iay 7 a m 1Grace1
SC'TIO N-C hurch &amp; hool 930a m
Mornm g Worship 10 45a m first and third
Sunday~. FNio"A ship dinner with Ca rm!'l
lhlrd Thu rsday, ti 30 p m t McGuirf'J
KENO CHURCH OF CH RIST, Vernon
Eld ridge min ister. Oliver Swain Sunday
School Supt Preaching 9 30 a m each
Sunda y
HOBSON CH RISTI AN UNTON Ge&lt;l rge
Anedo, pastor Sunday se rv ice, 9 30 am,
even tng serv l~7 lOp m Prayer meeting,
Wednesday, 7 ~ p m
BEAR WALLOW RIDG E CHURCH OF
CHRIST JOSE"ph B Hoskins. pastor Bib It
Class 9l0a m Mornlng Won~h ipl0 30 a
m Evenin g Worship. 6 30p m Thu rsday
Bible Study. 6 30 p m
NEW gJ"JVERSVILLE OO MMUNIT Y
CHURCH . Sunday School service 9:45 a
m
Worship service 10 30 a m
Evangelistic SE&gt;rvice 7 30 p m Wedn es day Praypr meet ing 7 30 p m Thursday
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Pomeroy
Harrls.on\'llif' Rd Robert Purtell, minis
ter: StfVf' Stanlty, S S Supt . Bill McEI
roy Ass! Sup! . Sundav School9 30 a m
Worship Sf'rvlre 10 30 am. Even lngwor
shipSunday7pm andW&lt;'dnesday 7pm
STJOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH Pine
Grovr The RE"v Wi llia m Mlddll'Swarth,
pastor Chu rch strv!ce 9 30 a m Sunday
SchoollO 30 a m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Jo hn WriRht pastor Sunday School9 30 a
m, Larry Ha~ nes , S S Su pt Mornln2
worship 10 30 am
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NA.ZA
REN E ft(&gt;V Lloyd D Grlmm ,Jr , pastor
Ora Bass, Chairman or the Boardof Chr ls
1\an Life Sunda y School9 30 am , Morn
lng worship 10 30 a m , (&gt;Yangellstlc ser
vice 7 00 p m Wed nE"Sday service 7 p m
LIBERTY CHRISTI A!"l CHURCH , OeK
tpr Woody Call pastor Services Sunday
10 a m and 7 p m Wedn esday, 7 p m

Evenin g worship 7 30 p m Wfdnesda y
Prayer and Bible Study 7 30 p m
DEXTEfl CHURCH OF CHRIST
Cha rl es Ru~sell Sr minister Ri ck Ma
combf'r supt Sund ay School 9l) a m .
Worship service 10 30 a m Bible study,
T d
~n
ues ay 7 .J\J P m
REORGANlZED CHURCH OF J ESUS
CHRIST OFLATTEROAYSAINTSPort
lan d Racine Road W\1liam Rou sh, pdtor
Lind;) Evans, church school director
Church school 9 30 a m . Morning worslp
10 30 am . Wednesday t'Venlng pra~er
serv ices, 7 30 P m
BETfn..EHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl
Shuler pastor Worship service 9 30a m
Sunday School10 30 a m. Bible Study and
pra&gt;er SE'rvlce Thursday, 7 30 p m
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION
AL CHURCH Kingsbury Road Rf'V Da
vld Curfm an, pastor Sunda y School 9 30
am. Ralph Carl, Sup! Evenlnj worship
7 00 pm Prayer meeting, Wednesda y
1 00 P m
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN , Vernon
Eldridge pastor Wallace Damewood, S
S Sup! Sunday School 9 30 a m . Worship
Sf'rvlce, 10 30 am
HYSELL RUN HOLIN&amp;'iS CHURCH
Mike Thompson New Haven, WV, paslor
Sund ay School at 9: XI a m Morning: wor
ship at 10· ~ a .rn , Sunday evenlngservlce
at 7 Xl p m Thursday services a t 7 30 p.
m
FR EEDOM GOS PEL MISSION at Bald
Knob located CJI Coo nty Road 31 Rev
Lawrence Gluesencamp, pastor Rev
Roger Willford , asst. pastor. ?reactllng
services Sunday 7 )) p m Prayermeettng
Wedn esday, 7 30 p m., Gary Griffith,
leader Youth gr~ps Sunda y evening at
6 30 p m with Roger and VIolet Willford,
leaders Commu nion service Urst Sunday
each month
WHITE'S
CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
CHURCH- Coolv Uie RD Rev Phillip Rl denour pa stor Sunday School 9 30 a m
won hlp service 10 30 am , Bible study
and worship serv ice Wednesda y 7 p.m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Mark Jonl'S past or Bill Nlch olsoo , Sun
da y School Supt SundayS choo\9 30 a m
Morning Worship and Co mmuni on 10 30 a

RACINE F1RST BAPTIST
Steve
Deaver, P as tor Mike Swiger Sunday
School Supt • Sunday School 9 30 am'
Morning worship 10 40 a m . Sunday
evenin g worship 7 30 lJp m Wednes day
evening Bible study 7: &amp;J p m
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY oruROf
Ra • ·uderot'll1
Ro
8 urlin""·
· pastor,
r;•K&gt;m
) 1...1'1
bPrt Cmar1. ass istant pastoc Sunda y School
10 am wocsiUp 7 pm, Weclr'lfsday, 6 p.m
youth JJ'Iel'tlng , Wed., 7 p.m church servi('(&gt;S
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH ~
mllfoff Rt 325 Rev Ben J Watts, pastor
Robert Searles. s S Sup! Sunda y School
9 30 a m , Morning Wor:.hlp 10 JO a m
Sunday (&gt;vening service 7 30 p m . WEd
nesday service, 7 30 p m
SILVER RUN BAPTlST, Bill Little
pastor Stl'Ve Litt le. s s supt Su nday
School10 a m Morning worslp, 11 a m
Sunday evenin i1: worship 7· 30 p m Prayf'r
in
d Blbl
d Th da 7 30
mE'E't Ra n
estu Y urs Y
P
m , Youth meeting Wednesday at 7 p m
REJOICING LIFE 8AP1;j,ST CHURC H
- 383 N 2nd Ave Middleport Sund ay
SChool tO am Sunday evening 7 OOp m
Mid week service, Wed • 7 p m
LANGSVILLE CHRISTI AN CHURCH,
Robert E Musser, pastor Sund ay School
9 30 am ~ Paul Musser, supt . Mornin~
worship 10 30 a m., Sunda y evening ser
viCP, 7 P m · mld-wE'ek serv lct' , Wedn es·
day, 7 p.m
SYRACUSE CH URCH OF THE NA
ZARENE Rev Glenn McMillan pas tor
Mary JaniCE&gt; Lavender Su nday •School
Supt Sunda y School 9 ll a m . Morning
worship 10 30 a rn Eva ngelistic sen. ice,
6p m , Praye r and Praise WEdn esday 7p
rn . Youth mf'etln g, 7 P m
EDEN UNITED BRITHREN IN
CHRIST, Elden R Blake pastor Sunda)
School 10 am Gary Reed , Lay leader
Morning sermon, 11 a m; SUnday night
services Christian Endea vor 7 30 p m ,
Song service 8 P m Preaching 8 31 P m
Mid wt&gt;ek prayer meeting, Wl'dnesday, 7
Pm
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, Rog
er Watsoo, pa .. tor Crenson Pratt , Sunday
School Supt Mornin g Worship 9 30 a m,
Sunday School 10 30 a m Evening ser
vice, 7 ll p m
Mr UNJON BAPTIST, Donald Shu e,
pastor, Joe Sayre, Sunda y School Supt.
SUnday School 9 45 a m , Even lng wor
ship 6.l&gt; p.m Prayer Mee tlng, 6 30 p m
Wednesda y
TUPP ERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST Dave Prenllce, minister Oeryl
Wells, Supt Church School 9 am , Wor
ship Service, 9 45 p m
OIESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE. Rev Herbert Grate, pa11or
F rank Rltnf, supt Sunday School 9 30 a
m.; Worship serv ice, 11 a m and 1 p m
Sund ay. Wednesday, 7 p m Prayer meet
ing
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METRJO!ST
CHURCH Rev Robert Miller, pallor Ro
bert E Barton, Director of Christian Edu·
calion, Steve Eblin, assistant. Sunday
School 9· 30 a m ; Morning worahfp 10 :11
a.m, Choir practice, Sunday 6·00 p m ,

mRUTLANDBIBLEMET)-[) DIST Amos
Tillis pastor Sonny Hud.sm, supt Sunday
School 9 30 am , Morning worship, 10 JO
am , Sunday evening servlet&gt; 7 00 p m
Wednesday service 7 p m WM PO pro
e h Su nday.
gram 9 a rn. ac
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE Rev Lowell Font pastor . Sunday
School9. 30 a m , Worship service 10:30 a
m.
Y01.1ng I\Ninle's servlee 6 p m
,. ....,.
Evangelistic strvlce 6 ~ p m Wedn esday
se~J:o~ ~URCH OF CHRIST. Miller
St Masoo, W Va Eueene L Conger, ml
•
nister Sunday Bible Study 10 am .. Wor
ship ll a m. and 7 p m Wednesday Bible
Study, vocal mu sic 7 p m
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dud
ding Lane, Masoo, W Va J N Thacker,
pastor Even ing service 7 30 p. m Wa-.men's Ministry , Thu rsday, 9 30 a m ,
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7 15
Pm
HARTF"ORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION Thr Rrv William
c
bell
s d SCh 1 9 ••
amp
• pasoor un ay
oo ~a
m , Ja mes Hughes su pt Evening service
7 30 p m Wed nsdayt&gt;ven ln g prayer meE't
tn 2 7 30 p m Youth prayer servict' eac h
Tuesday
FAIR VIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart ,
W Va , Rl 1 James LPWis, pastor Wor
sh!p services 9 30 a m., Sunday Schoolll
a m , Evenin g wors hip 7 30 p m Tul'Sday
rottage pra yer meeting and Bible Study
9 30 a m , Worship service, Wednesday
7 30 p m
OUR SAV IOUR WTHERAN CHURCH,
Walnu t and Henry Sts, Ravenswood, W
Va The Rev GEorge C Wei rick, pastor
Sunday SChool9 30 am Sunda y worship
11 a m
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH , loca ted on
Pomeroy Pike, Cou nty Road~ near Flat
woods Rev Blackwood, pastor Services
on Sunday a tlO 30 a m and 7 30 p m with
Sund ay &amp;hool9 30 a m Bible Study, Wed
nesday 7 :II p m
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST, St Rt 338, Antiquity Rev
Franklin Dicken s, puto r Sunday morn
lng 10 am Sunday l'Venin g 7 30 p m
Thursday evening 7 30 p m
SflVERSVILLE CO MMUNITY BAP
TIST CHURCH Past or Robe rt Byers
Sunday SchoollO a m , Worship serviCE' 11
am; Sunday even ing service,7 30 p m ,
Wednesday evenin g serv ice 7 Jll p m
INDEPENDENT HOUNESS CHU R(l{
Inc Pearl St. Middleport Rev O'Dell
Manley, pastor Sunday School 9 30 a.m ;
Morning worship 10;3(1 a m , Ev..,lng
worahlp 7 30p m. Tuesday, Jl:30p.m Wo
men's Prayer meetlna:. Wednesday, 7 30
p m Prayer and Praise SE.'l'V Ice
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOO
TOLJC - VanZandt Pnd Ward Rd Elder
James Miller, paalor. SUnday School,
10 30 a. m , Worship Service, Sunday, 7 :ll
p m , Bible Study, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS,
Harrlsonyflle Road Rev. Dewey King,
pas tor, C!llnton Faulk. Sunday SChool

Pay Your Cable llo
Phone Billa Here

,,I

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES
. .204

St.
OH.

Cilndor

....,. - · IUSitnS IliON!

I

Fot All

Rutland, 0h•o4S715
"B•II " Brown, Owner
PhOne (61&lt;1 741·2177

y,., Prl•lltf N11i1

106 lutternut An., Pomeror, Oh.

and GraduatiOn
Sla1ionory, Mogntlk

Stgns, Rubber Stamps,

lusin11s forms,
Copy StrYKts, Etc

755 Mill ll., Mi.Wioporl
I 04 Molbtrry A• , Pomtroy

Supt . sunday School 9 30 am. morning
worship 11 am , Sunday evening service
1 Jll p m Prayer Meetin g. Wednesda y.
730pm
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD
non-Pentecostal Worship service Sunday
10 am . s und ay school 11 am Evening
worship serwolce 7 00 p m Wednesday
prayer meeting 1 oo p m

Across from the Courthouse

EUGENE LONG

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

,_,,ft.,

IN~J'~~~~~R~.Tf!a~~'i!~:
Community off Ct Rt 82 Rev Robert
Sanders pastor Jeff Holter, !a~ leader
Ed Roush Sunday SC hool Sup I Sunday
School 9 30 a m morning worship and
chlldr .. ·s chur&lt;h , 10 Jll a m . evening
preaching servlct- on the sf'rond and
fourth Sundaysao 7 J(l p m Christian En
deavor on the flrsl and third Sundays at
7 30 p.m Wednesday prayer meeting a.nd
Bible study, 7· .11 p m
CHURCH OF GOO OF PROPHECY
Located on 0 J Whllt" Road or Highway
160 Pat Henson pasto r Su'1da y School tO
a m Classes for all ages Junior Church 11
a.m , Mom 1ng worship 11 a m Adu lt
Choir prac tlc(&gt; 6 p m Sunday Young Pl'O
pte's, Children's Church and Adult Bible
Study Wednesday at 7 XI p m
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEl. 570 Gra nt
St. Middleport Affiliated with SOutht'rn
Ba 1 C
pi st onvenllon David Bryan, Sr Ml
nls ter Sund ay School 10 am . Morntng
worship 11 a m , Evening worship 7 p m ,
Wedntsda y evenino Bible studv and
~
J
praYf'r mt"(&gt;ting 7 p m
BR4DFORD CHURCH OF CH RIST, St
Rt 124andCo Rd 5 Mark Seevers mints
fer Sunday School Supt Harry Hen
dr lcks, Sunda y School 9 30 a m Mornln 5l
worship 10 ll a m , EveninR wors hip 7 p
m WednfSday wors hip 7 p m
sr PAUL LUTHERAN CHU RCH,
Corner Sycamore and Second Sis , Pomeroy The Rev Wil lia m Mkldleswarth
pstor Sunday SCh~ l 9 45 a m , Chun:h
serv ice 11 a m
SACRED HEART CHURCH. Msgr
Anthony Giannamore Ph 992 5898 Sarur
day Evening Mass 1 30 pm Su nd ay
Mass 8 am and 10 a m Confessions ooe
half hour before each Mass CC D classes
11 am Sunday
·
VICTORY BAPTIST 525 N' 2nd St
Middleport Jam es E KN"See. pastnr
Sunda y morning worship IO a m. Even
Jng sen: ice 7 p m , Wednescla&gt;' evenin g
worshi p 7 p m Vlslta llon Thursday 6 ll
pm
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH _ Gary
Holter, pastor Sunday SChool 10 a m .
worship service u am , prayer mrctlng
7 JOpm Thursday
LIVI NG WORD CHESTER CHURCH
OF GOD - Gilbert Spencer, pastor Sun
day School 9 30 am· Morning serv ice
10 OOa m Sundayevenln gservice7 OOp
m • Mid-week prayer serv ice Wf'dn eosday
7 ~ OLIVE co uuuNITY OfURCH,
......~
Lawren~ Bush, pastor Max Folmer Sr
Supt Sunday School and Morning Worship
9 30 a rn Sunday evening .service. 7 P m
Youth meeting and Bible Study Wednes
da(;N~fE~ FAlTH CHURCH. Rt 7 00 Po
mercy By Pass Rev. David Wlse man.Sr .
pastor Melvin DrakE". S S Supt Sunda y
School 9_30 a m Morning Worship 10. 30_
Evening WorshiP 7. 30 p m , Wednesda y
Prayer5ervice 7 30pm
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH. Railroad
St ·Mason Sunday SchoollO am· Morn
1ng wors hi P 11 a m •r.ven 1n g serv 1Cl' 6 P
m Prayer me-e lin 8 an d Blbl e SiudY Wed
nesday 7 p m

VINYL &amp;AWMINUM

Veterans
Memorial Hospital
115 E. Momoroal Dr.
''2 ·2104

Pomoror

FOREST RU N BAPTIST Rev Nyle
Borden pastor Co rn elius Bunch su po
Su nday School 9 30 am, &amp;-cond an d
fourth Sundays worship se" Ice a t 2 30 p
m
MT MORIA H BAPTIST Fourth and
Mai n Sl Middlepor t Rev Gilber t Craig
Jr . pastor Mrs Erv in Baumgardner
Sunday School Sup l Sun davSchoo l9 30i:l
m , Worshi P Serv lco 10 45 a m
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHR IST
- Jos(&gt;ph B Hoskins eva ngE'IISt Sund av
Bible Study 9 a m, \\: ors hlp, 10 a m Sun
day evenln2 serv il'€' 6 p m , Wednt'Sdav
pvenin' serv icP, 7 p m
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY , Racin e
Rt 124 Willi
H ba k
s
am o C' • p.tstor und ay
SchoolWed
10 a md Sunday
even
lng
servict'
7
1
1
Pm
nes ay eVl'n ng serv ce 7 p m
CARPENTER BAPT IST Don Cht'adll'
Supt Sunda y School 9 30 a m Morn lnR
Worship 10 30 a m Prayer service, altE'rn
ate Sunda"!i
J
MIDDLEP ORT PENTECOSTAL, Thi rd
Ave Rev Clar k Bak er pas 1or CaiN
r ot
!Ingham Sunda&gt; School Sup I Sunday
School 10 a m with classes tor all ages
E\ening services al Gp m Wedn fSday Bl
ble study at 7 30 p m Youth serv ices Frl
da) at 7 ll p m
ECC LESIA FELLOWSffiP 118 Mill St ,
Middleport Brother Ch uck• McPherson
pastor Sunda:\ School 10 am Sunda y
evening serv ices at 7 p m a nd Wednes&lt;il v
~l'rv lces at 7 p m
ANT IQUITY BAPTIST Kenneth Smith
pastor Sund ay School 9 30 a m churt'h
~erv ict 7 30 p m youth ff'llows hip G30 p
m. Blble stUd) Thursda) 730 p m
FUU. GOSPEL LI GHTUOUSE 331Wi
Hiland Road Pornr rO) Tom Ke ll y pas
tor Da nny Lambert . S S Supl Su ndav
mornlnJZ SC' rvlce at 10 a rn Sunday P\ ' f'n
lng servicE' 7 30 p m Tursdav a nd Th urs
day Serv lcr s at 7 Xl p m
WORD OF FAITH. 93 Mill s . . Mlddlr
port Sunday morning servlcf' 10 15 a m
Sunday evPnln Ji!' 7 30 Th ursday morn i n ~
Bi ble study 10 a m Wed nesday evrn ~ g
7 30 P m
NEW HAVE N CHURCH Of THE N,\
ZARENE, Rl' v Glendon Stroud pas tor
Sund ayS&lt;'hool9 30a m Wor sh lp ~rrvtC'f'
10 30 am . You th Sf'rv lcl' Su nclav 6 15 p
m Sunday evPnin2 ~Pn• icr 7 00 p m woo
nPSda y PrayN M£'e!ln ,~o; and B!bl£' SIUd\
100 p m
NEASE SET1 LEME NT CHURCH sun
da) aft ern0011 S{&gt;rv tcl'S at 2 30 Thur5da)
evenIn![ s('rvlcf'S &lt;~1 7 10
F'IRST BAPTIST CHUHC H Masoo W
Va Pastor Bil l Murphy Su ndaySC'hool lO
a m Sunday f'V(' nlnJ{ 7 30 p m Pra}N
mePil ng and B!ble study Wedn l'Sday 7 30
P m Evt&gt;ryonf' welcom:o
RUTLAND F'REE WILL BAPTIST Sa
lem St Rev Paul Taylor past or Sunda y
School lO a m Sunday evpnln lif 7 00 p m ,
~~n esday f'vl"tllng pra yer m{'('ting 7 00
SOliTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURC H S!l-..(&gt;r RJdge Duanp Syden
Stricker pastor Sunday School 9 am ,
Worshi p Serv iCE" 10 a m . Sunda" even In•
'
s(lrv lce, 7 00 p m Wrdn l'S da y nioht
Blbl€'•
study 7 00 p m
•

Complete Gutter Wo rk
Complete Remodeling
Roo!ong ol all Types

Worked tn home 1ree
20 year1
" Free Estimates"
Utl COLLECT,
Ph.

(614) 843-5425

'73·'80 OM F.,.d.,,
73·80 OM
Rocker Pan••

t15

73·79 Ford F•nder•

t3SI

lme1rgency

linen

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949·2263
or 949-2168

2· t7-16-lfn

A/C

APPLIANCE REPAIR

949 · 2146

(614)/742~ 2070
5-29-'lti·IIIID

Henry E Cleland. Jr.
992-6191
Jean Trussell. 949-2660
Oolite Turner 992-5692

A
I

[B
'

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·621$ or "2·7314

Pomeroy, Oh10

415 861c

Toenchong of Arry Type
Backhoe Service
Plumbing Service
Cu1tom Welding
Lowboy Hauling
SeptiiC System•
Lictnaood &amp; Bonded

-z 417 Second

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

Hob1011 Rd., lritldltporl

992-6173

511311 mo

992·6704

JEFFERS EXCAVATING

POIIIIOY I OHIO
Backhoes, Bulldozers, End Loadtr, Dump
Trucks, Self Loading Pon, H10vy Ho~ing and
Win&lt;h Ttvcks
•Limestone
•Water line
•Baaements
•Gas Line
•Land Clearing •Fill Dirt
•Top Soil
•Septoc Tanks •Ponds

BISSELl
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

&amp;fterS(all

EXOTIC BIROS,
TROPICAL FISH,
HAMSTERS.
KmENS. BIRD
SEED, CAGES &amp;
AQUARIUMS

742·2027

59 N. '2nd An.
Middleport

"Frtt Estimates"
Installation Awatloblt

. .xt DMr Te . . .., .. btt

992-6784

5-20·16'1 mo

I I

BOGGS

SAUS &amp; SERVICE
U. 5. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, oHIO

Rtasonablt Prius"

Authoroud John D11ro,

PH. 949·2801
or 949-2860

Now HollaN!, lush Hog
Farm Eq,.pmtnt
Dtolt•

"At

Day or

Night

NO SUNDAY CAllS

4-16 86 tfn

FOR THE BEST IN
IEPLACE.NT
WINDOWS

•V1nyl Repl•cements

Windows

• 1.4" lnaullted Glass
•T•tt In To Clean

FREE ESTIMATES

FREE ESTIMATES

Oil Fiold Sor•oct,

992-2772

landrcaping. ......,t~

5-20.'86'1 mo

land (ltarong. ,onoh, StpiK
llt&lt;trkal wor•

OON lOSE. Owner

9"·2493

Home 143-SUO
l / ll/'H/ 1 ,..

TOWN &amp; COUNIIY
VETEIINAIIAN
CUNIC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM

Stolurday 10· 11 :30 ant

L&amp;IGI a•&amp;L &amp;
SUIGIIY IY &amp;PPT.

PH. 304-675·2441
BEND AIEA CAU
llplty Offlct

For Hours

REAII~J ' IL---~~

814·268· 1168
4 month old mslt puppy Libra
dor • Spll'ltll Shon h.. r oood
with c111 &amp; children Cell

&amp;14·oU8 -8080
1 f~tmlle2yr

oldB•~~gletofindt

good homa. Cell &amp;14 446
0098
buutitully rtnpMI ftmtlt

luttens A good home 11 a mu11
c.11 814-iiW&amp; -'!122

7 week okl kitten• to QIYtaway
long·htirad itt.,. trM'Iad Call

&amp;I 4-985-3884

One black long h1ired ldtt.,
304-675 -5043
2 solid blecll km.,, melt, lttter
train .:f. 10 week• old. 304·8763982
Dnt Ytlf old femtle H1malaytn
cat, dtclawed , phone 304 S75

5781
Black. gr-v. wtnte with

~pots

304 &amp;75· 7242

2 bieck male k1tt1n1. litter

tr..n«&lt;. 10 wkl old 304 175
3962

FirM Equlp111ent
Ptrtl &amp; SeNiee

J.l-'86 tic

CONTRACTING
DOZER , BACKHOE.
TRENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER .
GAS &amp; SEWER UNES.
REClAMATION. PONDS.
SPRING DEVELOPMENT.
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TllUCK STONE
llo DIRT

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

L01t US Nevv PIPifl. dlld1MQ1
PIP•n . merrlage ll cenu
Anyon• finding
btlong•ng to Worthy
Stentev Call

rpn

614-742 -2706 Rewerd

9

Wen1ed To Buy

W•P•Y cnh for tete model clean
u1.t Clift

J im Mink Chev ·Oich In c
Bill Gent John ton
814oUS 3672

ICU1 OUT FOR FUTUR£ USEl

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

All M••••

•Washers •Dishwashen

•Ranges
•Refr•geratort

•Dryen •Freezers
PARTS end

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TYs, Antennas
Satellite Salts '
Installation service
All major appliance repelrl ffnclu ding mlcrowavoa(. Also Lawn
mower repair Mobile
18NIC8.

614-843-5248
614-949·2145
6-4.'86 -I mo.

Ave G•thpalll Call 614 -,..62282
WANTED TO BUY uoed wood 6

coel hllllfl SWAIN 'S FURNI
TUAE , 3rd &amp; OilY• St Gatttpo
''' CIM 614~6 - 3159

3 f.nltv moving 11laln HtrrltOfl.·
ville. June 13 lnd 14 from f :ob

to 1 Mlftl, WOmlfll, ~ildrent
and bllby ctoth• MtnY mite.
i1..,. All priced to go About !..;
mil• frof'l'lllfltiOn on 11181, to !low

ligna

Four f.mily June13 • 14 9to
S Helton r•ldMCI 2'11
out Fl1twood Ro.t W•hltf,
couch. pow., dri¥1 ...,..,.,.
detk.. hobby
childs tablt and c:hlin. 1\ous..

""*

h.,.,..

Mrs•.

hold lttm1 Cloth•·ldult, rN-'
ltmrty. chUdr.ns llrlfen11 to 81

&amp;14-992-2903

••

Don ' t m1•• this on.tt Nlca ciMn
women' s. juniors .nd men•
clOth• In Pcetl ...t condhlon
di1h11 , tllv•rwar•. cunalnl.
lh•rt mlx•,. c klth .. hlmp•.
mediCWI• cllbinet. grill. 1ter10
•nd J.Wtlry, June 13 •
14 nJGr.mSt .. Middleport 9

lho•.

104

Fn and Sat 1 · 5 Albbits, tiP•.

uddlt Old ll North, Hemlock
Grovs. folklw ltQM
Gsr.gre ..,, JL111 14 .. 231!
2nd St Ponwoy, Oh10

PfPiaiiiiiii'if ....
&amp; Vicinity

&amp;-family y•rd ul• Jun•14, I 00
to 1 Sliding Hill Cr.... Ad fW•..
Point) Hwtford WV

Help Wanted

W•ter trutment p4~nt aperttor
PUfT1'1r1g 1 2 to 1 5 mdhon
gelkln• p• day lon eJ.ch.,g•
plant Cta.. II hcen11 • must
E.c:ellent hNtth !a retrrem..,t
benefits Sllery negotiable
Send mume to Galll1 Rural
Weter Rt 1 Box 184 Gtlllpohs

OH 46831 Ctlt614-44&amp;-9221
H•rd· wotiung. dependabl• tndt
vidu•t tor g•n•.r oHica work

Mutt have good hancMmttng,
plsatant phone VOice, &amp; ac:cu
rate typing skill• Send riiU,...
to Box T6000 ., care of th•
O•lltpoh• Dstly Trrbune 826
Thrrd Ave, Gelllpoha DH.5831
Ea1y Autmbly Work ! '714 00
por 100 Guaranteed Payment
No Sales Oetellt· Send
tt1mpld .,velop• Eltn· !5147
3418 Enterpr11e Ft Pietce Fl
33482

EASY ASSEMBLY WOAKI
1714 00 per 100 Guarantted
pavment No •••• Datarii-Stnd
1t1mpld enveklpe Ellf1· 715
3418 Enterprlte Ft Pierce, Fl
33482
Govfllifti'lent Jobs 116 040
t59,230 yr Now hiring Ca"
805· 1187-8000 Ext. R-9805 lor
currant f.ct.,al hit

W1U t.bym: rn my homt, fenced
ytrd heva ref.,.,cet 30•· 878·
2784

Fina nw l
21

Business
Opportuni1y
I NOTICE I

THE OHIO VALL£V PUBLISH
lNG CO NCOI'f'mellldl thtt ¥OU
do bu•an•• wtth ptople you
know. end NOT to ,.,d mon.,
throu~ tht meil until you heve
i'IV•tiglttd the offering.
Ttv~m for tale In Middleport.
01 . 02 D31tcenH A.uon..,.a
Cell d.., 814-992-9976 wen~ng•

814-992-2873

Used Ctr bulln.. 1n M•ip
County Inquire Monday June

18 from 11am - 8pm 114-992771t

23

Profeaional
Services

Mechtnrc-dnvtr to work pert·
t1me for 1 kJc.l cofT1)any Wnt•
The Darly Sent~nel P 0 BOJC

neM. Pomeroy. Oh10 46759

Telephon• op..-.Wr·
e111hrer See J•ck Colltnt, Jim
Cobb Ch•vrolet, 308 E Me ln St
Pomeroy
Needed

PIANO TUNINO AND REPAIR.
redilcovtr your ptano 'a b. .utltut
tone, c.lt todey, Wwct• Keybon. 304-&amp;75·11800 ., &amp;75
3124

RADIATOR
SER~CE

We can repair and re·
radiators and

core

heater cores.

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

PAT HILL FORD
992·2198

Middleport. Ohto
1 -13-tfc

WATER WELLS
SERVICED

AND
DRILLED
FIIEE ESTIMAliS

Call
992-5006
or 742·3147

6·4·'86·1 mo.

•SYlVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN tAUNDRI
•GIBSON REFRtGfRAIOR
•SATEIUTE SAlES &amp; SERVICE

UT'S BUILD U, TOGfTHEIII
•LOCALil OWN£D

•LOCAL~BOR

*Melli Bttiltlin15
•Pole

Buying daily gold silver COifll.
ung•. JIWiiry. tllft'"g ware old
coms laro• currency Top prl
c• Ed. Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd Av• Middlepo rt , Oh 814

Wt HnJ Af1ll Tl•
Shp T1thltlt1
n Dety

*Sim&amp;e BlikinCI

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

WAMSLEY &amp; GRAY

CHESTIR-915-3307

4111Hn

"VINYL SIDING
'AlUMINUM

SIDING

'BlOWN IN
INSULA nON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New

Homes Built

" Frea Eatlmatee"

PH. 949·280 1
or 949·2860
Sunday Colis

No

llll l ofo

iiW. SIZES AVAI~BLE

Phortt

304-875 3788

5 14 I Mo

(.104) 773-S527 01 (.104) 89S-3316

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
FOR AU YOUR
WIRING NEEDS
Residtnlllf &amp; Commercii!

Help Wanted

992-5875 Or
742-3195

11 -14 tic

C:Ollec:ttng. no dehvtrt Pr~10u1
Plrtv pltn helpful C1tl coll•c1
304-485-8733
World Book Ctlildcraft, repr•·
•entatNM ntedM Par1 time. full
time. gutrantHievaillble 304

882-2485

denlitl lntervltws. tftamoon.
ctll 114·441 -31115

Local Buslnllt will bt in nttd ot
several employMI beginning
Augutt, September 1nd Oc~
Iober Cookl (mu•t be .,.. to
pr1p1,.._ no f•t food) Wal~
tr••• or weltwt (must be 21
yur1 of tgl- IOml bel' t .. dlng
•billtl• prefetTtdl • "" dtnl
bOOkkMPtr, " Girt frldty . Stnd

RAWlEIGH S1lt1men urn
n 00 to ,, 0 00 ptr hour tapti
tlma. for lnformatton c•N 304
675 1090
MAN
--··-- H01p1

po•itlon of
t ccount man~• Quail
appUtM'Itl will Nn 4 yeers
of hospital bu11n111 office expe
r l~~nce , minimum of e 2 yHr
college dttgr• tn th• bu1111••
fttlkl &amp; a va•t knowtedg• of
tnturanct billing . credit ·
colltctiont &amp; butlrl•t oHice
proctdura Submit rtiUmt to
Jtckson Gen•ll HotpiUII, Ptr·
tonntl Dept Pinntll Str•t.
Rtpl-v. WV 26271 by J une25th

Situations
Wanted

18 Wanted to Do
M•rcum t Gereg• all 'VP" auto
wo rk Sp.eltlitt orr GMC dl•tl

tnall'l•

Cal814~ 24&amp;

682&amp;

Ctlll14 · 44&amp;~

erty Aepo .... tiOnl Ctl lOtS

187· 8000 Pt R-4582 tor
,.,, rapo lilt

GJf·

1 bedroom houH In city, nice.
many lmprovtmM'Itl, large outbu il ding , prrc• rtdu~d to
•12.000 Coli 814-448-3150
ehurc:hn librtrv. orr• ttorj, 2
bdr • lt1flctive btth formal
din1ngroon good Clrpeting.
lergt kl1chen, good gas fumece.
•tofm WW'Idow• Cell 814 448

0530
Mu•t Nil! Four bedroom r•l·
dence on appro• ,.6 acr•
Within lilY drNI'Ig fhtan-=- of
Gat!IPOitl Own1r f~nanang w.th
no down payment to Cfolllifttd

buyer Property

11

fenced and

ha 50 tern of awk bon om
Pnced et 175 000 CtH 81 1(.
J7311•U•Ilt 7&amp;

H•ndvmen' t Sptc1at duplex r..,.
tel In need of fiPIIf V.nton
Ohro Prictd chup l t10,000

Call 614 -245· 5818

4 Yl .cr•• wtth roed fron tagl ~

county road 8 T1ck Ridge Rold
htH ]lf'ld, t~.t glfdtn flf'td gobd
neUer lit• or houu sit• Jo1n1
Clyde Wtlk•r l111d on three tid•
at Thurman Oh.o ''"' ot1 31
w.. t from Gelllpoli• Ohto C11t
!14 245 9106
tmall 2 bedroom -.,.
w1th Y, ecr• h!tllldllot lnd
but bu tkhng 5 mrln touth of
Galttpohs Kun" Rldg• Rd F~rn
~me

on nght fro m At 218
114 000 Pay t4 000 down .,d
owner will help tinence b.llan ot
C1ll 614 441 2911
houM

Redmond Ridge 3'.1:1 m1t• from
to wn hou•• 1 Yr ttory 1pprox 1
acr•• storag• budding Call
304 1175 8117

One-fourth mH• on 2•8 of1 Rt
7 &amp;14 985 4368

o.,

tim• pr.tltffld Call S14·

Tr .. worll wanted prunnlng,
topping, rtmOYIII, htdg" •

Will do mowing • odd jobs,
ciNnlng g•tgn. farm wort
Coli 814·446-628&amp;

Dtllvery pt.rton Mu1t hav• own Will do any yard work mrn or
trll\lportatktn &amp; Int., Apply ln . rapUt, painting intldt or out
ptrtan Oontlllt. Spring Vtlley HIVe reftrtnCII 30~ 17 6

PIUI

Gov.n ment hom11 from t1'
IU-repair) D•bquent tu prop-

441-3936

Baby1ittlng lob wanted lor
tumm• Prlfer•Jv wtMdeyt
Call anytime 814-2151-1707

ChNhlr•, OH or

mr 101.1th otGetllpolis, t21,too
Call day• 814-.468· 1115 or
ev.,mgt 114 448 -1222

3 bedroom, newly rtclec:orattd
aluminum lidtng, large ctrpon,

0•111• Christian School I•

1 ~ 3 Becfttlor's ctegr•r.:auit'td.
Send rtiUnw to PO lox 271,

4 bedroom houM, fJrtpiKa, 3

Will babysit In my horne H•v•
fenced in backy•d &amp; tov• etc

bueh•lrlmmed. FrMtttlmatn
Col1'814·441· 1132

lng 1 dtdlcat.rChrlttllr'l tNchtr
for 1 corTein• d111 of grldll

Homes for Sale

Bv owner

home ca re for senior
CldZti"'S TLC lrtd ,.,.,... c..
Coli 814 992 3595

PriVata

infofmatlon dat lrtd to P 0 lox
428. Pt Plonont, WV , 211180
11M&amp; ~

31

Weill to town , school•.

Baby needed m my homt Call
304-882·2301 ...... 5 00

12

In ..111 now7 Kttp pr• .. t job
M1kl mor1 U P1r1 time thin
you art now Local ltldl w1,
m1h tiM 8PPOintments Conti~

1144

Call:

.,.,und th t wortd " a
nM" party pl•n • hiring tru
auptrvrtorl No rnv•tment. no

1986

Government jObt t 16,040 tl59,230 yr Now tlir.,g Call
1015· 817-6000 •~~• R ~ ~82 for
curr..,t fed•ral htt

BuildiniS

" Chrl•tm.~t

IICC4ptlng

Small motorcycle J)l'efet'abl'( sn
80 or go·nrt or 3 wh••l" Calf
614-387 0813

11

Rr.o l rs l &lt;t l r.

Now Hrrin11t t ld•eliob for mothera. former tNcl'ter•. p.,y pltn
dialers Hou" of lloyd Inc
hiring IUPif'YIIO,.., ldvtrt•e
hire '"'""'' people In ho~
career Great pty, ttm Htwlll
trip Trtinig provided Cell Col
IKt for d.. •ls 304· 744-0924

3BB 9303

992-347&amp;

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS fOR
•ZENITH

304 675 1429

WentMI JUnk autos Call &amp;14 -

Sw.,g 1et stand good cond c ..

PT. PlEASANT OFFICE
305 Jac.,.n be.
SMALL ANIMAL HOURS
Moo ·Wood•• Thurs. l · l pm
Tuts. 6:30-l; Fri. 1·1 pm

yellow

6 Losland Found

J&amp;F

SJSioms, HtayY Haollng.
Stene &amp; Gra•tl H1uling
RESIDENTIAl COMMERCIAL
• INDUSTRIAL
(Certlfi .. Electr1clU~}

~Ia

blact. &amp; bhtck &amp; whrte Cell

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
end new• u1ed cert Sm1th
Buu:k· Pont•ec. 1911 Ea1tem

J&amp;L INSULAnON
&amp; SIDING CO.

UCINI, 01110

9 krtt.-.1 m01tly

5/ 23/'86 / 1 mo.
Nice kittono Aloe uoed be
L----------r----..;;.;~-~.--'1 throom ou1fit Cell 614 446

THE BIRD CAGE
&amp; FISH POND
PO SHOP

knP• 8 30 to l

pm A•in or thll'l•

G•r-se S.la Thura June 12 2 family yard 1111 College Ave
Stt . J~e 14 2&amp; •uto Wrndln- Rutland,
June 11 end 1? Ra1n
tll', Sofa &amp; chaW dinette
bedroom tutti. compound bow Clf .......
tnd m11c Taka 160 to Kemper
Hollow tum right, follow aigna

11

l

992·5232

~ntk

11 -

Giveaway

Dog I to grve.w1y 1 Ooberl'nln
Call 814 258 1551

FEliCE COII'ANY
PH. 992-6931

WltiOn ton Netghborhood Rd

Saturd•v. June 14 9 · dl1'11

bicycl•.

1111

AVON , 3 open terrrtorin Ctlt

•Molt Window• Priced
under '300

ROSE EICAYAftNG

4

Hn

ACCENT

Fri. &amp; Sat , 1818 Chttham
Home mt•.or, ptck -up toolbox ,
brush gu•rd poltcetcanner lot•
of ntc·nalts

mtsc items

Your Syttemt Now

LARRY'S
SOUTHERN MILLS
CARPET OUTLET

'

::r::

992-7089

fS family, CenteneryTownhoute
June 13 &amp; 14 9· 1, clothing
mite
tpMk.,.l, rlngt. new
•ltctrlc typewriter

Oerege ui•Set June 1• 10 · 3
p m Rt 3&amp; aero .. from Spr111g
V•lley Ph•rmacy Matarntty
cloth... b1by ittml, &amp; meny

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
L3 Licensed
Clinical Audiologist

SERVICE

REPAIRS
~pdate

a:

WIUAMS IRENCH~G

FREE ESTIMATES
5-7·2 fiiO

SATELLITE
SAlES
&amp;

C!' Cof111uterized Hearing Air Selettion
z Swim Molds · lntl!rprettng SetVices

FIIIE ESTIMAliS
992-3525

Saturdty

a

Dorea• New clotlllng

••t

FREE HEARING TESIS WEDNESDAYS

TRENCHING IS OUR LINE

Mila B. Hutchl10n
Contractor

5-19· 86'· 1 mo

5-5.'86-tfn

NOAH S ARK ANIMAL PARK
Schoolt. churd'lta. COI'f1).,y
plcnlca, birthday panl• and
fam1ly reumon1 Call &amp;14-3842108 or 1·800 -282-2187

0997

Rt 4 , Hyull Run Rd
Pomeroy , Ohio 45169
Ph te14!992-2834 .

PH. 742·2306
or 742-3171

lANGSVILLE AREA - 2'h
aCJes 1n the countty &amp; near
Mone #l Th1s 3 bed room
ranch lype home os a true
ba rga1n Carpeted, forced
aor furnace cellar hou se,
garden S!)ace, fruot trees &amp;
woodburner hookups

- Addons •nd ramodehng
- Rootmg end guH•r work
- Concrett work
- Piumblll'lg tnd electucal
work

c..

oUB -0294

3·24-tfc

CARPENTER
SERVICE

part•. and tupplita P1ck
I.CIInd delivery, Davl• Vacwm
Cl11n•r . on• half mile up
Georg" CrMk Ad
61tl·
rte~a•r ,

INCLUDES PAINT
&amp; LAlOR

992-3361

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

YOUNG'S

SWEEPER and sewing machine

OFFEII GOOD THIU JUNE 5, 1986

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto TrUtMittlo•

HUTCHISON
CONSTRUOION
NEW HOMES.
ROOFS, DECKS .
ELECTRICAL &amp;
PLUMBING

$9 5

Yerd Sale Krittl Drrve Friday

3 Announcements

MOBILE HOME ROOF PAINTING

Ohio

!Free Enlma1osl

PHONE

Afl fl 0 ufl GC Ill~ Ill s

Sptl,l Sp"lel

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rl. 124,Pameray

3 Fam1ly 141 1'h mt pastOrNn
School Toward ~715- lltft Cto
thing Ill Iiiii Junt 12 14

UNDERPINNING &amp; SOUP

5 15-16-1 mo

Cond1t1oners.

., 24 Hr £mergency StnKt

DOH'S MOBILE HOME
REPAIR SERVICE

304-773-5222

Refrtcerators. Washers
&amp; Dryers, 1Vs &amp;
Satellite Systems.

lt. 1, lox 27-1
32933 lomlne ld.
lutland, Oh. 45775

POMEROY,O.
992-a2s.9
NEW LISTING - BRAD·
BURY - farm w1th n1ce 2
story 4 bed room home Th1s
property will pa y tor 1tsell
free gasto home. royalty on
come fromlwo well s rental
1ncome hom 2 bedroom
hause farm has t1llable
acreage, barn garage, out
butldongs Some fenctng
Call lot an appOintment
$63 !)10 ()()

ACROSS FROM
POST OFFICE IN
MASON, W. VA.

M1crowiw Owns,
Rarces. A1r

RUSS
ELECTRIC
MOTOR
REPAIR

E

AUY SURPLUS
&amp; CAMOUFLAGE

Experienced Seivice in

54 M isc Merchandise

POMEROY - 5 acres of
wooded land to entOY are
great Add lo lh1 s a 3 bed
10om 2 bath ho me woth ba
sement. garage and barn
makes 1lodeal lot you' Near
tow n - good cond1toon
Only $28,000 00

)

NEW- IIPAIR

10-8-ttc

PRICE REDUCED - On th1s
6 05 acte tract and a mce 3
bed10om home Close to Po
meroy but secluded Owner
needs to sell AI S19.!l:IO 00

WAvE THE FlAG TOO MUCH
Tomorrow June 14, Is Americas Oag day. I pray you all will hunt
your Rag and fly it. America has a bright and beautifu l red, white and
blue flag. Who can deny Its beauty?
The question Is, can we wave the fl ag too mu ch? Look around
Meigs county and America . Are we being too timid or even lao
apologetic about rur flag andourrountry? Have we allowed the ult ra
liberal, leftist, pro-communist, and civ il llberiarians to shout down
those d us who are SiiJilllle, plain, proud to be Americans Can we
wave the naitoo much'! ~Not anymore than we ca n read the Bible too
much. We need to get familiar with our Flag and 'Vha t It stands for
just as we need to read rur Bibles rrore to know what Is Inside
Our Flag stands !Jr Patrick Henry, Franklin, Washmgton, Nathan
Hate, Paul Revere, Jefferson, Lincoln, Sgt. York and many others
Isn't the Bible Noah, Joseph, Jacob, Issac, Most's John , Paul.
Andrew, Joshua and Christ himself? The fl ag Is Va lley Forge,
Bunker HUI, Lake Erie, Gettysrurg, Corregtdor. Pearl Harbor,
Wake Island, Flanders Fields, Bataan, Normandy, Korea, Babe
Ruth, Bob Feller, Davy CTQCkett, Daniel Boone and many more?
How are we to know about Calvary, Mt. Sln at, Ur, Galilee,
Bethlehem, Josephs garden, the land of Goshen If we do not read and
reread the Bible again and again and again.
I do rot think we can wave the flag too much I do not lhlnk we can
read our Bible too mJCh. I oo not belleve we can say we love our
family too much The ooly tlllng we can do too much Is sin and be
unpatriotic. Fly your flag etten and read your Bible more often and
love your neighbor as yourself daUy Do this and wewill be living In a
grand and glortous community and nation. America Is the Flag and
Is the Bible and Is caring people - Pastor \WIIam Mlddieswarth.

L Write•l

ROOFING

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

TOitdo Porch Sale 100 Second
Ave , Saturday 8 1 Fenton Clllll,
doltt cloth•. fumtture, mT•c:

Sizes 4 Yrs and up
ALSO HUNTING,
SURVIVAL and
VARIETY ITEMS

Howard

car 111t1 to~1, dt1h11,
teleptlones, encyclop«&lt;l.. cur
uins. ttc

mM'It.

Sand•n Dr Thurtdey &amp; Frid-v

Ill

Truck Bed

5 12 8&amp;-2 mo

NEW LIST! NG - CHESTER
- S1t on your screened
porch and v~ew a 3 61 acre
lot dolled w1lh abundant
shadetrees or relax n thos3
bedroom one lloor plan
home w1lh 1\\ baths All ap
pliances tncluded, washer
dryer add to lhe conven1
ence of beon gon the COli ntry.
pond storage buoldon g-cel
ta r Wh at more could you
want for $34 !l:IO00

Sermonette

I

Office 949·2431

CHISHIIE, OHIO

3/l/Hn

Agsncg, Inc.

12, whi11 unHorm1, ciiTIP•• 2

Ctrport Sal• R.., or ... .,, 198

Furniture, Wedding

. (614)992-5721

bill• envtl. grist mill , Hoovtr

•••h• chtld • edutt c'oth•.
mote

RACINE, 01110

367·7560 - 3U·7671

PtUx Offi&lt;t !uA!Nts &amp;

FLOWERS FOR IVIRT OCCASION
(614)992-2039 or

J'-'1• 12 13. 14. St Rt 124 lrt

Junct~n

RAYMOND E. PROFFM (MAC)

If NO ANSWER CAll:

Ftv• t.mli.;:;~;ci·~;J;; :;;-~ ·..;·.
14, F•lclov ond s...,dov ~·741
Aocbpringt Ao.t t 00 to •rt

3 Felly Gtrtgl Stl• Thur . Fri •
S••
11 mit• out 141 from
Gatllpoht
of 3215 Trait

lig Yard Stle Sat June14, 8-15
Tara Eltll"· Add!Rn Baby bed.
g• grttl reclin•. child,.,•
ck&gt;thh'lg. )1 .... 1, aterao lqU!p •

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

wm

lill Qui&lt;kol aNI Ruth Ann

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

M•

carpment of the Sierra Nevada, the towering

WAID CROSS

We C•rry F11h111g Supplin

992-3345

creation, the most awesome are the mounta1ns;
appeanng m a w1de vanety of form and ele-

'

Brown's Fire &amp;
Equipment ~~~e.~:;d

I

SENTINEL

CI.OlHING
lOlSE ·l':..v
KERMtT's KORNER

,

PomeHg Flow11 $bop

THE DAILY

,.: ~

,,

•MIDAU
'GAVILI

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Yard S.l• 720 3rd Av• f=n S.
B1t 9 to S 13th &amp; 1•th

SALES &amp; SERVICE

•PlAOUU

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

TEAFORD REALTY

EWS &amp; SONS SOHIO

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

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

Ntw LocaMon:
161 North Second
Middleport,' Ohio 45760

.. .. P.onierov .........

...... Giiffipi:ilil'"""'""
&amp; Vicinity

7991

g.ragt on JA. acrelottnChestlr

3 bedroom, Lg kitchen. hilt
11r c:ond Clfl)ltld g•r·
age Syracuse 114· 182 3402
pu "1l

eftM 5 pm

·

Outhtv hOme. n.wty remoct.i.t
d'lo1ct kJceUon on CofleQ• Ad
S't'fiCUit, MW C0"1ttlttllltdl.,
and t.undry, M conditioned

l•rg•lot &amp;14-912 1324

..

2 bedroom Dupi•K houM 1*trally furnished Low utllttl•, 1ft

Pomtroy C•ll dey• &amp;14·•2238 1 or 614 192·2!09 evt~n\

"go

�••
Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Fric;lay, June 13. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio

Friday.

31

Homes for Sale .

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®bJ 1MrJ Wright

46

5 rooma a. bath. :Z tots. Call
81 4·388·81 80.

COUNTRY MOBILE Honit Park,

Route 33. North of Pom1r0y.
Ltrgelots. Call et4-192- 7479.

u*

2 btdroom hou H in Pomeroy,
furnilhed, 1185 unfvr ·
niahed . Pav own utilititl, wood
burner, large yard. Call days

Ttalter sptc•- Sflnd Hill .Ao.t
convenllnt to ichoola. Itor• and

holpital. Cit¥ IW~Ir avallabla.
lnquW. Aoaal•, 30•·B75·4BOO
betWeen 9 :00 and 4 :00 week
days .

614· 992-2381 or 8 14-9922509 wenings.
Goverment hornt"a from •1 . jU
rep1ir) . Deltnquenl 1111 property .

Trailer space. 3 mil• from town
juat abovtold " V" on R1 . 2, 1arge

Repoueuiona . Catl 806-8876000 Ext. H-9805 lor currant
repo Utt.
.

lot. 304 ·175-3248.

[

-~------ · lc -

7 tbom hou11 1 ~ bath. 4
bedioom, gar111•- no Alh St

Middt.,.ort, Ohio . 114-192-

Trailer klt,
fumil~ld.

6714.

tnd ltwage
304-175-3407.
Wlllf

47 Wanted to

8 HP riding mower t400 . 3YJ . .
s ..rs outboM'd mower t150. 8
ft . insulated truck topper 1200.
ea.. Bolt 1150 HP Johnson

Motor ftiOOO . 114-89&amp;-1227
af1er 4:00 pm .
Reetor«t home, Vin1 St., Rt·
cin e. Kitchen. new a.k c.bln~t .
living room , dining room. j
t.d rooms. blth. lncluct.a 1M
curta ins
. Pr
ic e : ' I 35 . 00 0 .
Phone:
614·
949·2540.

70•100 tot 11,torv...,uat. 3to

Mer cll,HHI ISl'

7 room house. 100 • 100 k&gt;t .

S16,000. Syracuse. Call 8U·
992 ·2239 .
6 room house. 1.2 acret . Double
car garage. Located on Ro11Hill.
Bargain priced $20. 000. C1ll
614-678·2613.

2'1r year old home. 7 rooms ~d
bath on 1 .8 acre. GaUipolia
Ferry, W. Va. 304-875 ·22B4 .
3 bedroom, all elec:. cenlral air.
attached garage. Gallipolil
Ferry. 304-675-2932 .

Cho ice of two Colonial ho~• . 9
roo mt and 2 ,,., baths or B roo rna
and 2 baths . both newly remodeled. Owner financing . 304·

882· 2095
l eate, purchlle agreemenl possible. Verv nice home whh 3
bedroom•. livingroom with fir•
place. 2 batha, large coun~r~
kitchen, hobb¥ room , laundry
ro om. full bllemlflt. 2 wr
gttage. central vacuum IVIttm.
air oond. deck, 5 wooded acr•.

304-895·3363.

Goods
t~~;;~~:;;:::::=:::;r:;~~~~~~;~;H -51- Household
--------

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL·s QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI .
WEST. GALLIPOLIS. AT 35 .
PHOr.tE 814· 446-1274.
12•60 Shulfl covered porch .
ru ral water, metal storage bldo ..
with lot. Crown City. Call
&amp;14 · 258· 1444 or 614· 25&amp; 13 89 or 304· 675 · 1328 .
19BO Liberty 14x54. 2 bdr .. til
gu , underpinning , atepa.
blocks. Mu11 be moved , f6 ,1500.
Call 614·446·0963.
Pte·ownld mobile homn · We
have'm · Wa flnance'm . Oetl·
vered ~r~d set up at no ch.-ga.
Elsea Home Centers, 1-800·

826·0752 .

Kirkwood 12•&amp;0. 2 bedrooms.
partty furnished , n8W' ca rpet;
excellent condition. manv- II.·
traa. Must see 16 ,500. Call
614-446 -8010 .
1976 14x70 Fastivtl 2 bdr .. 2
blths. tots of ctoMts, exc. cond.
Call 61 4-44&amp; ·6241 .
1 2ll60 2 bdr. good con d .. new
cerpet. new furnece, penty
turnished , und•rpinning In·
eluded. 14 .600. Call 61•· 256·
6704 or 61•· 258· 1139 .
1978 Msnaion 141170, 10x20
porch &amp; awning , underpinning ,
2 bdr.. bath 'h, INingroom,
c.ailing fan lt itehan atova, rehtg.,
dan, finplace . AC . w•har,
dryer. Csll614 -388· 9650.

1978 Elcona mobil• t.::lrM .
14d5. exc cond. 30•·175·

UppiM Rlw• Rd. a ..o double
wide. Call 614-446·0508 or

121185 trtil• with land, make
offer. 30•·&amp;715·6561 ,

2 bdr. fum . 01' unfurn. conve-Rian1IO~tion , Upper River Rd .•
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
all utllhlel peld 1XCIP1 electric. Wuhlfl, dryere, r.trigeretort.
Sec. dep . req. Call 11•·•41· · rang11 . Skaggs A PPiilncu.
8688.
Upper Aiv• Rd . b~ttde Stone
Cre~t Mottl. &amp;14-441-7398.
Raccoon Rd. Fumiahtd 1180 •
dtp. • rol. Ctlll14·448·9348. County Applbt(lce. Inc. Good
uted eppliencee end TV Mtl.
1••70 3 bdr., 1 'h bdh, fur· Open BAM to &amp;PM. Mon thru
nished or unfurnllhld. Wuher· Sat. 814-448· 1899, &amp;27 3rd.
dryer, totel al.ctric. CA. 1250 Ava. Gallipolis, OH .
mo .. 1260 dep. Call eU-448·
3793 ElrUt Carr. &amp;41 Third . Vtllev Fumiture. new &amp; uud .
Ave .• Ga"lpoltt, Oh.
Lerge IICtk)n of quelity furni·
tura . 1211 Etuern Ave ..
1 4~~:80 2 bdr .. Pf'Nitt lot with Oalllpollt.
pleyground 6 gerdan 1pot. 8 mi.
lrvm Otlllpolla on At. 21 B. 0200 For lilt: Hertequin Romance
books 270 for 171, whitt
• mo. Ctll814·218· 1393.
wooden tabla t26 , yellow kit·
2 bedroom, fuml1hed. 3 mil• chen china cabin.- 160. ell In
south or Gtlllpoll1. For lnforma· good cottdltlon. See at 256 So.
Fourth Ave .. Middleport, Oh.
tion, Call 614·"48·0U3.

72 N11hua 1•xeo. 2 br. tolal
·.c. undlfDanning, MCUr·
elec. G

nv tight.

304-875·15282.

1978 23' S1ar Craft. carl'lree
awninv. exc . cond .. fully' car·

poled. 304·882-2478 .. 882·

3662.

33

Farms for Sale

•o acr• with nica 2 •tory home.
4 bdr.,

2 batha, co,.,letely

remodeted. 10bacco but, farm
equip . Call 614-2&amp;8· &amp;790.

168 acr01 in Letert. lerga home.

2 blmt, owner firuncing . 304·
8S5· 3450.

34

2 bedroame. clo11 to ttor• and
school. C..l 61•· 892·691• for
mare information.

Business
Buildings

Commercial and fMid.-.tll ran ·
tal proptrty, JoCit.d on Vi1nd St
Newly remodeled end full¥
ren1ed. 304· 6715· 3797.

35

llo

Lots

Acreage

315 IC,M, 3 mil•

Witt

of HMC.

Ctll 11 4·441·122 1.
1 to 5 -.:r•. parti.rty wood.t
lote. TupPif Plaine and Ch11ter,
water and approve,t rolld to tiCh
lot. Ae110nabty prlc.t. will
linanc:e. 10 patcant down. CtU
614-98&amp;-3&amp;94.

acr•

gN wtll. U3.000. 814·811·
3470.

7 acr• with complete mobile
ho,.. hookup. Btrn, In Cheater
area , Aaklnt 110,000. Cell

81 4·915·3926.
Ashton building Iota with public
watar, mobile hom• plfmitted,

30.·571-2338.
21ots for ealaover 1 acrain each.
Will Mil toglthlf or Mptrata,
304·876·3407.
Bv owner 4 ICrll, IJIIC loc.ation
neer Stnd Hill Road end Rollino
Acrll, 30•· 115· 1991 .
Bulkling aite on Rt . 2, G111ipolt1
Farry, 30(..178·2021.

acr•.

Fiehing 1•• with 2 to I
elec and approwed 1ewersy11em
on Ba11 Bend of Crab Crlll4r:. S"
Old! Aullin, 30•·&amp;715·20215.

RP-n lal s
41

Hou8es for Rent

1-582 ·5840.

Newly dec:Ortted. 2 bedroom
houll. Full¥ Clrpeted. Unf\lrnilhed. Storm doora and win·
dOwl. Will ICCIPt 1 Of 2
children. Oapoalt requJr.t. 81•·

6782 or 676·7842 .

2 bedroommobilehomefor rtnt.
Naer Racine. 814-992-6868.

2 bedroom turnittltd house in
Middleport . C1U 614-992 -

1304.

912· 3090.

42

.

Mobile Horries
for Rent

Fully turnllhed. AC. "' utlltl•

ptld. oduht only. Ctlll14·448·
4110 or 114·448·2003.

2 &amp; 3 bdr mob41t horntt. AC ,
cablt TV. Bulllfllll Ad. Can

114·4-48-0527 otter 3pm..

Refrigerttor harvett gold 1126.
refriger1tor whlta *1215, retrtg erator avocado 1126. refrigera·
tor coppartone 1125, refrlgera·
tor aide by lkle t196; w11h1r
Ktnmora •110. electric range
30 in. whht top 1nd bo«om
oven 1150. electric range 36 i'l.
t76, g11 rang• htrY•t gokl 30
ln. lika niW' *110, tlr cond.

11 .ooo • 8.ooo 8Tu·a on ...
2 bedroom on At. 2. Point
PIMNnt. I min• from town .
0150.00 pluo utlll11et. •100.00
dapoth. 1 tmtlll child accept.t.
304·875 ·8389 between 7o00
and 9:30PM.

bedroom suite 1915. chill of
draw•• UO. Sktgga Appliance
Upp• River Ad. 11.· 446· ntl.

44

Used refr~erator bra11 bed,
completa. occ. cheir. Call B14·

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES APART·
MENTS lEqutl Houalno Oppor·
tunity) monthty rant ltarte at
1178 for 1 bedroom and 1212
for 2 bedroom, depoert 1200.
k»c.at.r n.., Spring Vlilt¥ Pl111
and Foodland. poolll'ldCableTV
evtlllblt. office houra u possl·
ble10 em to 4 pm end 7 pm to 9

pm Mondty·Frldty. Ctll 114·

448·2745

Of

111ve m.,ege.

Nicety fumllhecl moblt home,
.tf. apt., centrtl Nand he11ln

city. tdulto '"'"'· Ctlll14-441·
0338.

Mini·pit liwingroom surte. piUow
becks 1275 . Call 814 -446·

1316.

448·1171 .

ICing·slze waterbtd. Light wood.

Ctl1114· 387·7237.
Fancy 77 RCA Color Contole.
25 ·Inch TV, walnut wood
cabinet. Aeking 1300. Likentw.

Ctll 814·992·3109.
Pickens U.ed Furnirure. Good
quality u..d fumitu,a. Opan 9to
8 or · eall for appointmant.
304-1575-8483 Of' 876-1450.
Complete full slza canpay bed,
*100.00. 403 Chesnut St ..
H.,dlf'IOn, W. Vt.
FOf' llleGtntfll Electri.cwa•her·
uaed ontv-nr. Goodcond.
Will Mil rnaonlble. 304·1715·
dry~r,

New 1 bedroom aplttment. Call
114·446·0390.

2 bdr. uptlain 1pt. extrl nict,
central air . Caiii14-446·216B.

2 bdr. apt .. downtown. *1 90
withoul utilitilt. 12915 wHh
utilitl•. Depotlt required. Call
Compl.tety furnished, all ettct·
ric, 2 bdr. aptrtrMnt, 12.25 mo.,
1 bdr. t200 mo. Adultl, ,.,.,.,.
c•. Me. depoelt. 458 Second
Av•. C.rl 614· . .8·2238 Of

814-441·2581 .

Fumishad room lUIS. UtUiti11
pd . 919 2nd Gallipolis. Share
bath . Singe! male. Call 814·

441•4411.

Fum lshtd 1pt. 2 bdr 1175.
1 31 '11 ••h Gallipolis. W1ter pd.
can 114·448·"411 ther 8pm.
Furnlahtd apt. 1 bdr. 920 4th
Gallipolis. 1250. Ut llltl• pd.
Call 614·448-"418 att• 8pm.

7 room house , 3 mil" eouth of
G•llipolls. For information, Call
6U-U8-0143.
'

1 9B 2 ~ 1•x48 Commodore, at·
sume loan at •U2 .0o-month,
furnlahed. exc cond. 304· 875·

304·173·&amp;828.

814·441·2129 8:00tm · 5pm .

Al hlon Road area. 14•70 mo ·
bile home. 2 tJ.droomt, 2 full
batha . 1Y, acre llfld, concrete
drive, 2 story buUding, appraised
131,000 will 1111 t27.000 or
take t'touse or l•nd ae trMie in.
Own er will help with finan cino .
Ponibl¥ no down pav-ment.

19 78, 12d0 Govenor. t lr cond.
fron1 porch with IWning. exc
cond . 304· 8815 -34155 liter
5:00.

Nice 2 bedroom mobtla hOme in
Chllttt. Ohio. On nice lot. Cen

315
for ula. Hartt cMte.
Racine. Ail min•ale. workino

387-0440 or 114·448· 3710 .

1983 Knoolwood, 3 bedroom
tra lltf. usume loan with • low
down peymant. 304· 1715-6206
or 675 -1500.

Olive St. . Gallipolia. New &amp; ulld
wood·coalstov•. 8 pc wood LA
tulte t399, bunk b«tt *191.
antron rec::linert t99, new &amp;
111111 bedroom auh• . r.,gn.
wringer w11hera. &amp; eho11. New
livlngroom auit• t199 · 1599.
lempt , alao buying coal &amp; wood
ttovt~ . Call614·446 -3169 .

814· 448-2430.

12x60. On 1 .ere. Very good Aent. leeH. land contract, 3br' '"
cond ition. Great country 11ttin g Rodney Vlllagall; 2 br't·Eurakl;
near town. Ce ll814 -992 · 7020. 3br Event H1ighta; Deposit &amp;
refer.,ces requlrld . Bladtburn
Mu at sell.
Ra..ty. 15 14·448·0008.
1982 S chultr:2 bedroo m, 2 be th
mo bile home. Underpinning . Un· 2 bclr. home in excellent neigh·
furnished. Mull be moved , can bOrtKK)d, ner.N well to Will
• curtain• provided.
be seen between 4:00 and 7:00 CltPetlng
Plut meny IJitrll, low utility billa
pm . C all &amp;1• · 9B5 - •3&amp;9 .
• gtrden tPOt Call 61•· 286·
, , 2.000.
6110 for further detalle .
Two bedro om traile' wrth Ill· 7 rm. houte. lnquifl 11 918
pendo ltvtng room on nice level
lot in Mktdleport. Near IChOOII S~d Ave., Gallipolia. Oh io.
and stores. Call 614 ·992· 2101
Nice 2 bdr apartment• in duplex.
or 614 ·99.2 ·2319.
houu. Main St. Ch"hire. Ohio.
For u le or rent . 2 bedroom, Furnished • watlf paid. Call
e•tra nice. Reidy for occupancy. 81.·245·5818.
Can be moved. Must ' " to
a pprecilte. 16000 or rent t1 86. Be the fif'll to live in this adorlbla
complataty refurblahed 2 bed·
81 4· 992 · 7479 .
room home in excttlent nefoh·
1974 12166 alectric 2 bedroom borhood. Alto hll o•rage. nice
mobile home. A.C.. underpin· yard 1nd gll'dtn tiK)1 . Phont
ning. plrtia11y furnished. Asldng Denlu 11 Colonltl Propertl,.
814· 286·61 10 for further d•
16600. Cell 61 4 -985· 39 25.
ttill . lo,fiCittmp - .
bdr. Clrpetld, ,.frlg. &amp; StOYI,
MOBILE HOMES MOVED : in ·
eured . rHJonlble rl1et, Calf free g•. Kyger Craek ane.
Referenc:ft • daposit. Ca118U·
304·578 ·2336

For sale by owner. 2 bedroom
mobil a home on haH acre
ground , 304·468· 1517.

SWAIN
AUCTIOr.t I FURNITURE 152

8870.

85~8 .

304 ·173·5813.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr. total electric. Call 614·
448·0722 .

1981 Commodore 14• 44 .e•.
cond . 16,600. Cell &amp;1• · 38B·
1980 liberty 14x64 , 2 bed·
room, unfurniahed, vinyl undar·
pin ning induded . Must sMI. Call

42

09.500. 304-578·2485.

1982 Clayton 12•80 all e-.c.

Sale or trade·New Hawan. 3
bedrooms. 2 battlt, fireplace.
gar-a e. S38. 500.00 Of UOO . OO Okt Tobacco wtrehouae.
month plus deposit. 304· Z73·
Wllklno ditttnct to down·
2471.
town Gtllipolil, Ohio. with
concreta floor. aeparttt rtil
3 bedroom t'louse, eat in kitd'ltn. tiding , trudc dockt. 240 amp
el tc hut . citv wlter, gtrden, c1r MfVict, 111d modam 3,!00aq.f1.
offices.
"""· 304 ·675· 3020 .
Ideal for whole11la grocery,
1976. 14• 70 IC irkwood , 3 br, 2 durable goode dorage, indoor
ful l bath1, to,. ,.modeling. flea m.,\1111, etc.
304·173·5068.
OHica: .... producing 1700 a
monttl income.
C1ll IJU-373· 1147 e•t. 75 .
32 Mobile Homes
Po11iblt 100% fin~clng .

- - -- - - -

54 ·Miec.

1 bedroom apt . for rent . 811ic
rant darts 1211S . a~ month that
indudes al utiliti•. Oepoeft
requirld of 1200. Cont1ct Vii·
llfill Manor Apt . Mkldleport.
6U·992·nB7. Equal Housing
Opportunity.
2 bedroom, total elec. ept. in
Pomeroy. Acro11 from Fire
Stltlon. 114·992·8215 m 814·

992·7314.

Po,..roy 2 bdr. NIYlofl Run.
1176 mo. 11 00 dtpotrt. yar'd.
pttlo, Ctll efter IJpm 614·9928188.
Two- One bedroom apt. reldy
for immtdiatt occupancy, total
elec1ric, water furnished. 61 4·

2448.

Kitch., table, 4 chairs for ..,,

020 . 304·895· 3078.

54

Misc . Merchandise

Callahan's Used Tire Shop. 0v8f
1.000 tir•. llzH 12. 13 , 1• . 16.
18, 18.6. B mil• out Rt. 218 .
Call614· 268-11251 .
Pteitlc cltttm 11111 epproved,
Pllltic ••t+c tanltt. plut ic
culve,u. mtttl cutvent. RON

EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jtck·
oon, Oh. 814-211· 5930.

Echo trimmers liB . 78 to
1299 .95 . Huaqv.rna uwa,
Echo NWI. Yardman mowen.
New &amp; ua.t. all ma\11•. Childera
SIW Suppty, Koontz ·Sailor Rd ..
VInton, Oh . Ca116, 4 -388· 8664 .
8 foot showc111. 1100. Call
614·446 -021 2.
,980 3 whtelar 7.0 seria. 1979
3 wheeler 70 HriM. Cell &amp;14·

992-2428.

Oood Ulld fiiiOntble price
co5or TV' t

1

good vtrlatv. Cell

•Hf

304·173·&amp;888 .

Sy'ICUII. 2 bedroom 1195 Plf

month plut utllitl•. Oepotit
r~ if.t . Call 814-892·1187
1 :00. 814-992-7871 Of

•ft•

814·982·5732.

APARTMENTS. mobile homee.
haua•. Pt. PIMIIInltnd Galllpo·
lie. 614·,...·8221 .
In Middleport. 2 Mdroom fur·
ntlhed 1Pif'tmtn1, 1110 2 room
furnlthtd IPirtmtnt. l -304·

882· 2111.

Unfurnilhtd apt, Yltd end bile·
tMnt, 1150.00 month, 304·

175·1841 ovonlng.
3 br ept, tlec. htet IVtlleble. 1
weel!, loctt.d on CrebCr..etAd.
Aef•eneet .. equifed. Cal t.twean 1 :30 • 8 pm. 304-878·

8809.

45

Furni1hed Rooms

For rant Sleeping Roome end
light hou11 k_,ing roo me. P•k
C...tr-' Hotlf. Call &amp;1•·•48·

0718.

hor11,
manu81
1t1rt.
fctory
un·
B
hp TfOV·
BIIt tiH
.... 1912
model

limlltd wtortnty Included.
1710.00. 304-175·1259.

Huffy Stu Thompson with mag
wheeta. 160. Cell 814 ·44&amp;·

3199.

White '• metal delectors. lltelt
modtls , lowell pr icel. Ca ll

81 4·441·0848 .

Nice etKtric Tapptn electric
range with aetf-cleen lng oven.
11A yr. old. Will nil or trade for
g• range. Cal1814-992· 3ei9fi.
New Winch•t• 3030 Alfie, 7
mm world war 1 Mu1111r. Buck
Knife BlCiflt,nial, 86 ounc.pure
sllvtr. lots o~reign.colnt, 1978
Chevy CIIPrlca w-10on. ·neoo ..
i2 VJ cub4c ft. refrltarator. likt ·
nwt large st~teo . Both for

01UJ114·949-2801 .

8 HP riding mower 1400. 3 ~ HP
Sears outboard motor 11150. 8
ft. intulated truck topper 1200.
8ft. trvclt rackl tl50, tettPhone
an1werlng 178, 17ft. b1u bOlt
150 HP Johnaon motor 18 ,000.

...

Building Mattritlt
Blodl, brick, IIWfl pipM, Win·
dow•. lntelt, etc. Cleudl Win ·
tera, Rio Grtnde, O. Cth 614·

241·5121 .

•

Building materials. cement ,
~c:kl all1b:ta, yard or dtlivarv.
Galllpolle Blodl Co .. 1231h Pine
St., Gallipolis, Ohio Cell 614·
446·27B3.
eonry wppUea. Mountain State
llodl. Rt. 33, New H• ..,.,, W.

Wanted to Buy

Livsetock

AQHA AfiCilat..r Quart• hofle
Mud t«vice. Olrect out of

""ChodtO PoiMt"". Ctlt 814·448·
9379.

9 ¥..,. old Motgtn mare with
saddle t!OO. 8 YMr old Pel•
mlno 111kllng with Hddlt tiOO.
4 r - old "'" Arebt., gotdtng
*300 with eaddlt. c .. anytime
814· 317·1803.

Hone. Black Tenn. . . . Walker.

4 y.. n dd, 30•·171· 5143.
Gtlttd rJIItng hortt. 304·878 ·
2443.

64

Hay

llo

Grain

10 Rret •ll'ldlnt hly to cut &amp;
b1l1. lttwlll'l Vinton • Rl

56

~qUare

Mlxtd hey larga

304·818·8843 tfttr 1:00

1177 Cordobl, verv nk:1, 814·
4-41· 2715 tiN 5o30. 304·176·
1111 • .,.. 7:00.
1882 Ford Eac:ort, IW, IC. new
redial tirts, very ctnn. whit,.

.1 .211. 304-815·&amp;818.

btlet.

Tr dris p lil Lil11 111

1985 Ford Rtnt• 4 cyl .. ruet
5 IIJd. DYttdrive. long·
bed. 7.000 mil11, uc. condwl1h
IDmt 1111tra1. Call e14· 21&amp;·
ln~ed.

1910 4JI4 01tsun long bed plus
flb.giMa topp•. N..., tim,

good shape. Call 81•·367·

7800.
1810 Datsun pldl;up cuttomb:ad. 1878 WUdemMI trevel
trailer, Mlf contlinld. liMP•
1· 10, bolh good condition. Call
814-3111· 1M37 anytime.

1112 ChlvV Sllvtrtdo pickup 1
ton dutl whMII. dull tlftkl. MW
tW•. orglnll milll 81.000. Cell
..,.,lngol14· 245·&amp;811.

1918 Ootltt 4•4 8 11. bed.
11.000 mllet on Nbullt 380
anglne, Mo~tlc. PS. PB,
AII·FM,
pllnt,
cond .•
13.150. Alllo Mv•s hydraulic
IIIOW plow 19150, t ttdll ,
camp1r, or belt otflf. Call
814·448-2741.

n•

••c.

good thow etr. *3.000. Call

1879 Convtfllon ven. 19155

Autoa

for

Sale

814-241·8808.

1911 M,.dt RX·7. I opd':\W

2341 . No Iunday call .

1914 Dodge Charger PS. Pl.
AC. euto. AM·fM Ndio, u.c.
cond .. 22.000 mil•. c.n 114·

441·2323.

N&lt; C regiatered Coc:ll:lr Spenill•.
born Apr . 25, bleclc tnale. buff 6
whitt femtla. mothir rtd &amp; buff
1\11 y11re. 814·992·6021 or

1980 Toyoll Coroll• aun roof•
AM·FM ltll'to wfth CU111tt. I
t~~d. . 2 door httchbeck. r1d ..l
tkea, good cond., •2.700. Celt

304-875· 3458 .

114· 381· 8911 or 114· 318·
9801.

57

1980 Malibu Cl ....c Land14.1
....... u .ooo. flrot 12.800

Comp ltte 111 of DNmcrllft
drums, 1 yr. old, like new. Call

814·258-1322.

Fruit
Vegetables

StriiWbe" i• piclcyour own. CtH
Cltu de Winter• . 614- 2415 ·

6121 .

59

ttlo .. ft. CtM 814·441· 0312.

1919 Rtbblt1. CtU 114·318·
a421 or ol1tr Sl14· 318·1823.
1971S MonztltctoryV·I, .apd.,
ltd .. MW Jllitl. tlr•. 20 MPG.
Runt tr•t •l£ng 11,300. Call

114· 448-7530.
18 Grtrnlltt I cyl.. 3 opd ..
AM·FM Clll. goocltlrH, MIO.
Ctll 11 4·317·0157.
1975 Chwt

NOYI

rvna well

MOO. Ctlll14·441· 3870.

McCtulltnd F1rm and Gtrdan .
Fr•h Brocoli. 2 heed• 7&amp; centl,
snep pe11. h.lnoino baskats.
Uowers. 16 milea South, US Rt .
36. Southside. W. Va.

For Sale or Trade

1970 Chlwllt convertible new
paint, , _ tlrts, 380 tuto .,

12.100. Ctlll14·441·8201 .,.
&amp;14·446·81 13 .•

Flborgleto Novt 327-328. HP.
dlraml enelna. m-22 trMimil·
oton Colt 814·982·88•1 .

n

Fdrlll Siip pi ii~S
&amp; LIVI:,Illi.k
61

Farm Equipment
CROSS. SOr.tS

WHt, Jtcltton. Ohio,

., 4·288·8481 .

Maney Ferguton, New HoKend.
Bush Hog Sal• • Service. Ovtf
40 .__. trectorsto choo11 from
&amp; COR1J~t e llne or new 6 uMd
eq uipnwnt. Largnt •lection In
S.E. Ohio.

C.....,. trllck. ntoo. 1978 C.....,.
Lw. Ctn ttfttr I. 814·448·
2118.
1110 Chwy wrindow van, I
.,....,..,, dual hMt•lir, tHt.

2671 .

Musical
Instruments

llo 4 W.O.

Vans

1984 pty..,..ltt Atllont 4 dr ..
auto, tlr, cNIII, AM·FM tape,
*3/711. John' t Auto IIIH,
II&lt;Jtvllf, 11\t.• G~lfo .
mlltege, uc. cond. Call 814·
441-3231 .

Monte C1rto. •• · cond. new
tirM &amp; plint. Mutt 11U. Call

GtntpoHo.

1982 Mtl!da. II speed, AM·FM .
12499 Johnt 't Auto S.r•;

S&lt;Atvllle Ad. Otlllpollt. OH.

B1 Buick 4 dr., air, auto. b4ack.
lluwp l 12.7115; 12 Ch....e«a
auto. 4 dr .. 11 ,.U5; 83 Ply.
K·Ctr S.W. 13,0815; 7B Chrv. 4
df.. 1895; 82 Ottaun 4x4 PU
nice M.296: 81 C.....,. 1 ton
w·Jer·Dan roll blck bed. 8 &amp; 0
Motort. Hwy. 110 . C.. l 114·

441·7322.

1875 0 . fltymoutn Fury. 1871
Mercury Monardt. Both 4 *'or,

olr. CtN 114·11112-7075 . 1:00
am.· 7:00pm.

1980 0 . Ptymou1h Fury. AM·

FM, air. 1980 Dateon 210, IS

M .BOO. Ctll14·441·7019.
1811 Ctlwvconv.rlion ven. 5ow
mil... e, At. AC. AM·FM tlC.

COftd, Ctlll14· 441-4141 ottw
. . . . -tndt.
19H Chevy Convlf'llon Vtn
rtieed roof, IDw mliNIIe, loaded.

Colll14· 317·0817.
1168 Wrecktr 440 Holma
wtnch with awing booms,

n .ooo. c.• 114·218·1393.

1878 Jeep CJ &amp;. Bof1 top. OOOd
a:Jndit::IOn . Cell 81•·812· 7020 .

en..,

1810. 14 p. .
ptvmouth
Van tor 1111. lids IQ.OIPied unlil
Junt 20. WIN not aeotpt bldl
1111 than IWO·tfllrd• loen ..,..., ..

Ctll - d t VIning, 114·982·
2181 for morelnformetlon.

1984 Chevy 8 · 10. 4 whoel
drive, prlc. r.tuc.t, 304· 878·

11.. Rambler ttltlon waoen.
good cond. 74 Chewy pldlup,
flit cond.. 151h HP outboll'd
motor, oountertop. ttow •
oven. Can bl ..., 2024 1/, N.
M1in. Alk tor Jim. 304·175·

1438.

1114 Dotlt• wll1dow von Mtr
loOdld 010. 500. 304· 175·
2838.

74

Motorcycles

1976 Honda Ellinora MT 250,
Enduro 11. cond., t&amp;OO . Call

814-441-1810.

1882 Hondt C8180 lottled.

Er.ctric stova for 11le. Good
condition.
Cell 814·992·

New Hollend. 7 h rur mower.

Ctll114·448·7380.

304·895· 3480.

"81 Ch&lt; vottt. AC. AM·fM ctt·
..... 3 ........ 304·111·4131
lfttr 1:30.

1983 Honda XA

114-441·2323.

1100. Call

1881 Vnal\a '750 runs great.
klokl good, liking 1900. Cell

114· 448· 1830.
1982 Y.-nlht 1215 1800. Call

814· 441·17780.
1983 Honda ATC 200 3
whHter. good oond , Cell 614·

448-7011.

' 1813 XR 10. Motor Cycl1. like

1---------Mw . 814· 241 ~ 1117 .

83 Hondt 9htdow 760 CC . 6

epeed thlft driva. low milugt.

Murry X 24 ,.dng billie. New
h~ndll • • and IPIIdometer.
AM chrome. Good c:ondHton.

no. 114·8fl5· 3185.

-d.

Me wlndowt,
now tlrtt. •uoo.oo.304·1112·
2198 .
.

1884 H101d1 r.tloht Howk lllk)

clttn. good

dly 304·175·

11717 .,...,ingal71·111•.
1877

Ctmtn~ ,

1883 Camaro Z28. ' 20,000
mlln , local owner. lolded,
Gharooll Gtl'lf, tnulf ...11 30··

811·1383 tlltrloOO PM.

•

•

•

_

_

. ; : : . . . . _ .- . - ,
•

•

;r_i

·--

· . •l l ! l i J .

~

........

l'M GE.1Tlt..)3(l!ra'"

ll-£. SlCXK MARKE.T. ..
St~rv 1c~s

81

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATEAPROOFINO
Unconditlonll lif.. lme gueran·
t ... Locll r.teranc• furnllhad.
Fr• Mtlmltn. Call collect

1-814·237·0488. dey or night.

Roger• Baltment
Wet., roofing.
EJrtlrior • mtlrlor stucco. Pill·
ter. piMtlr r•alrt. Low litH.

Ctlll14·211· 1112.

MORTY MEEKLE AND

wkh wtrulll,llld, uc. c:ond.
01100. 304-882-24710&lt; 882·
3882 .

Went.t • cycle Pront wh..l
ClfTier lrid tow for Clr hitch,
bolt• or bill. 304·8715-2942.

01

weoiRL"S ARE HOLDING A
'HANDS0\4E6T SOY'o::Nresr
AND 1 ENTERED~ NAME.

"'"''"'

GEE! DOYa.JREALLY
ll-iiNJ&lt; ICAN WIN IT:1'

LET'e t.lLJE'&gt;T &amp;.Y \I.E
NEEDED SQ\1\E
COMIC RELIEF.

WAYTOt90,
FRED/
GIVE' HIM ONE

F~QTHE

TALKIN5 MYNA
~11&lt;0,15~
WITH USTODio¥.

FORME/

I

304·178· 2388 or 814·448 ·
2454.
FlttV Tree Trimming, 11ump
removal. CtU 304-678-1331 .

Rtr.tQLES "S SERVICE • .,,..
rlenced carp.,tar, alectricien,
m110n. painter, roofing (lndud·
ing hot t• appllc.ationl 304·

F.1•ening T elevision Listings _______....;_________________________________

875·2088 ... 871-1318.

Lat Vegea. NV live .

FRIDAY

Star\111 Tr.. and Lawn Strvlce.
ltndtcaplng. 30·· 5715·2010

6/13/86

Cll D (I) Tho I.Dvo lloa1

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Moat weU1 c::ompltl:ed umaday.
Pump ul11 and 1arvlca. 30•·

EVENING

the ship is a Wortd War II
troop cruiseJ bound for

7 :00 D

Cil PM Magazine

Championahlp From Sou·
themplon , NY . [3 hrs .){R) .

C. AND D. Contractor. ramodattng tnd nsw frtme work end ~v
kind of odd jobl. Call 304 · 7735284 .

82

ICCI Gopher fantasizes 1ha1

France. but threatened bv

C!1 Golf: 1988 ·J .S. Open

895· 3802

(I) Entertolnmen1 Tonight

• ffi Hogan•o Heroes
0 (I) Jeopardy

Nazi submarines. (80 min .)

IAI.
D ffi SOOfl
(I) In 5eMdl of the Trojon
• War: The Logend Undef

Newshour

(j}1 Divorce Court
@ Private Benjamin

CARTER 'S PLUMBING

AND HEATING
COf'. Fourth end Pin a
Gllllpolia, Ohio
Phone 814·«8·3888 or 614·

1B1 Wheel of fortune

7 :30 D (}) CIJ Ne w Newlywed

Game
fJl ffi Taxi
U (I) ®1 Wheel ot Fonune

83

(I) Agony
Excavating

ID (]II

Entertainment To·

night

Good-1 h cl\lating. beumenta.
foot en, drivttNeys, septic tenkt.
landaceping. Call anvtlmt 6144U·4&amp;37, Jam• L. 01vilon,
Jr. ownar~

CHI Allee
7:35

8 o00

Trenching Service: water, g11,
and electric. Free estimates.

30 • .173- 5839 .

85

fJ) ffi MOVIE : 'Exorclat II :
The Heretic'

(I)

Haul any,hing l 2 ton·8 ton . Call
8U-U8 · ·8 51 Mon., Wad ..
Thure. 8tm· 10PM. Sat. 8 · 12.
Reasonable delivery prices.
Coel. limutone, grawel, et c.
Delivered 1 ton and up. J im
Llnier. 304-875-1247 or 675-

7397.

MacNeil-Lehrer

News hour
@J ill CW Twilight Zone !R) .

7911 .

Kan 'a Water Service. Weh .
ciatern s. ~o l s and wat erbeds
filled . Call 814 ·367 -0623 or
614 · 387 -7741 or 30 4 -676 ·
1247.

10:20 (I) H~'a Ho"'"
10:30 m Jock Bonny
D IIJ INN News
(J]) Sneok Previowo In
Stereo.
10:50 (I) Night Tracko Power
Play In Slereo.
11 :00 D Cil (I) D (I) IDl Nowa
(l) I Spy
I.Dve Connection
(I) SCTV
®
3Z To Be Announced
(fi) Tr. . .ure Houua of Bri·
1eln: R...,pturlng tho Put
Plas Newydd and Wightwick M anor are explored.
{60 min .l

• m
e

® 500fl
11 :30 D Cil t.BJ

CID

Washington Week in
Re view (CCI

CHI MOVIE: ' Hopscotch"
8 :30 CD Flipper

({) 0

([I Mr. Belvedere

ICCIIAI

9 o00

(fi) Wall $1reet Week
D I]) IDl Miami Vi ce
Crocke tt and Tub bs mus t
contend with the bizarre an·
tics o f a demented ex-cop
w ho ha s a knack of predict·

1ng mob s iayings. (60 min.)
(RI. In Stereo .

Coaby. musician Graham
Nash and Jon lovitl. (60
min .) In Stereo.

(I) 8 (I) ABC Newo
Nlghtllne
D II) Ono Step Beyond
· Cll Auotln Cl1y Umlta: Joo
Eiv/Erlc Johnton
® DlDI News
@ Tre- John. M.D.
1 1 :50 (I) Night Trocko In Stereo
12:00 ill Beat of Oroucho
.
(I) WKRP In Clnclnnotl
D ffi MOVIE: "The Cra·
metora'

Ill (I) ABC N•wa
®Taxi
ilJ1 To Be Announced
12:10 Cll Nlgh1 Trld&lt;oln Stereo.
12:30 8 CIJ .IJII Friday Night Vl-

e

deoa In Stereo.

ill Bill Cosby Show

(l) 700Ciub
(I) 0 Cll Mr. Sunohlne

Upholstery
TAl STATE

UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave .. G111ipolis.
614 -446· 7833 or 614 ·4•8 -

1833.

R &amp; M FurnlrureManufl cturing.
St. At. 7 . Crown City, Ot'l. Cell
814·266 -1470, call Eve. 61• ~
.t46 · 34 3 8 . Old &amp; n e w
Uptlostared.
Mowrey'-a Uph,.ttet'lng sMving
trl county area 21 ¥lira. Ttlebett
In furn itu rt upholetering. Call
304 - 17 5 - 4154 f o r fr 1 e
tltlmtte~ .

!CCilAJ.
(]) Of Principal lntereal
@J ill ~ MOVIE : "To Bo
Announced'
I]]) Great Performances:
Man from Moscow [CCI

Tonlgh1 Show

Tonight's guests are Bill

CIJ U Cll Webster {CCI tRI .

General Hauling

Jemes Bov-s Water Service. Also
paol a filled. Call6,. ·266-1141
or 614-446· 1 175 or 614·446·

87

(]I) Jeopardy
ffi Major League Baseball:
Cincinnati at Atlanta live.
D I]) illl Knight Aider Mich ael and KITT battle a
deadl y roc ke t-powere d holo'·
ercrah . 160 min .} (A). In
Stereo.
CD Doris Day's Beat
Friend•

(!) SportaC.ntor

(I) Entort.olnmont Tonight
0 (I) Howoll Flvo-D
® · MOVIE: 'To Be An·
nounced'
@ MOVIE : ' Mtjor Dun.
dee"

(I) Doble 011111
C!l
Auatrallln
Ruto1
Foo1bell 'BII
(I) ABC News
w ith the Briti s h gove rnme nt . __ . 1 :15 ® MOVIE: "To ao An r-4.
nounced'
!60 min.) !R) .
•
1 :30 (l) F - Knowa Boat
9:30 (I) U Cll ABC Comedy
(I) Puttln' on the Hl1o
Special: Heartl of Steel
2 :00 D Cil (I) News
ICCI
(J) 700 Club
(I) Woll Stroot Week
(!) M . .de Sports~ (A).
10:00 D Cil &lt;Ill Stlngrov S!lngray
D ffi MOVIE: 'Night of
b attles an evil overlord who
Part 1 of 3 A Briti sh intellig·
o nce agent brings e Ru ssien
informant to En~land and at·
t empts to put htm In contact

has been murderi ng the ille·
ga l aliens w ho harvest .1'1is
m a rijuana cro p . (60 m m.l

(AI. In Ste reo .
(!) Top Renk Boxing from

SATURDAY

s earch Troy for fe c1s about
the Trojan Wer. (60 min.)
(J]) Nowawlltch
@ News

MacNeil-Lehrer

a

-·

o.wn·

and American expeditions

@) News

®

D3ZNewa
3 :00 (J) MOVIE: 'The Bodgo of
M.reNI Brennen·
(]) Soccer: World Cup !AI.
(BComedyBrook
3:30 @ln&lt;MyNewa
4:00 D ffi MOVIE: "The Veil"
(B MOVIE: 'The Oonerol
Died At
4 :3D (J) MOVIE: ' -...to of

Seige Conflicting German

(J) Nightly Buoineoa Re·
port

Plumbing
llo Heating

tl850. Ctll 814·8115·4153.

"M KLA 800 Kowtotkl. PC
oond. low mllltgl. 304·182·
2S111fttri:OO PM.

'81 Chtvtttl, auto. PI, PI, Air,

DAY

MOTI-tE'.. ~ ~y
(!?;&gt;--..()
Nor so
( ·_ 1, \'\ . Mv..rt-ty.
IJ::::::;1'~ -.·
.. .:.....

EEK AND MEEK .

after 4PM.

11 H..,dt 880 In good condition. t980 CtW 814-982-1144.

&amp;00 Ford trtctor. 1.200 Aourt
with plowt, cultivator mower.
boompolti2 .M5. 24 rt. 4pl•
gool.,eck tralltf *1 ,HI. 340
IH tractor Mthplowt, mower. IH
hay condrtiontf, hay WlfOnt, M
NH bal• *2.191 . 1800 ONver
dl11el wldefront craam puff
13,1110. AC • row no·tlll planter,
clean 1850. Call 1·814·286·
8522.

1979 Scotty camptf, 19ft long.
utf contaln.r. exc cond, 9 tt
11/de in ctmptf, 304·818· 2911 .

ac. cond. Cell 814·448·0122

1914 Chevy Ctvall•. • door,
P.s .• P.B., utra ciNf'l. Call

1875 DOtlgt Dtrt 1480. 304·
895· 3138.

DADON

·U . d'

448·4417

61•·44IJ· lli92 . Up front trac·
tort with wa"anty OVII 7! uatd
trectora. 1000 tools.

1-114-288·1622.

197• Dodge Camper Coewer·
aion. by Tioga. Stove with oven.
icebox. sink, sleeps a • 1 BOO.
Calll14·2•7·4292.

1353.

8:00am.- 7:00 pm.

28.000 mlltt. va. ct11 814·
992·8812 tflor 8:00 pm.

IT"'S Ju$T 1-lf'CE.'

1975 Sttrcratt foldout c•mp•.
lletpa I, co,.:.t.la with etov•. ·
Ice box, llghla6 elnk, ••c. r:ond ..
like new. Catl 814· 318· 97&amp;5
aftar IPM.

RON ' S Tel1vi1ioh Sarvice.
HouH call on ACA. Queztr.
GE . SpecitUng tn Zenith. Clfl

1980 Honda 200 Twin11ar, low
mllto. VGC. •JIO. Ctll 114441· 1321.

1984 Silver Tnunderbird .

REM;~a:R " · ~J
~
FATHER'S
~-;._ f:)&lt;G~f'i

Motors Homes
llo Campers

1912 CMvy 4x4 3011 V·l. tuto,
lir. ahort bed, tall thil week

opted . Cell 114· 992 ·7075

AC tractor with plowt U50.
New Idea pull-type mow•r
12 215. 3 pt. rtlcl niVar used
t3 95. JD UT ballf tB95 . Call

79

coultt. •1.11111. CtM 814·379·

JIM 'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SA 35 W. GtNipol~ .
Ohio . Call 614·4U-t777. wt.

814-982· 3703.

-•

••c.

E.terior • lnt•iof stucco. Pits·
ter 6 pi~Jttf repak-a. Low ratts .
Clll 81.-,:2116· 1112.

814-318·8811.

1179 Chevrolet MoNa, 2 dr.
wagon, auto, ont own•. 18t8.
John' a "uto Sal•. BullVIlle Rd .,

"rlfv'lf' r HANJ&gt;LE

't0&amp;.4l Pf'RIONN~I- FILl'
X GE'I A PAP~ C::CJI!

Camping
Equipment ·

1118 OMC V-8. tuto .. good
cond.. 18150. Cal 814· 381·
9731 .. 114· 318·8813 .

73

Hound. 1 y11r old, tri
colored. *76 .00 . 304-675·

1&gt;o IT", PEMJ~TbN, BUT"

Naw cempar tlze fridge .
t100 .00 or bitt offer. 304·678-

1817.

1817 ChlvV tmptlt 318·328
HP. rtd. bltck lnttrior. PS. PB. 2
dr., ftlnclef tldna. eac. cond,

1111111

78

Pol'l'"r Jc:NOW ttow 'fbV

Rlt&gt;blt. 304· 815·3017

AICC Reg . B119lt pupplel for

GrNI Dane. Farm own era only.
Good ground hog doe. t715 .
614-742·311B .

z

fN~

Stlrmtst• 8 camp•. stove. ic.
bolll,
cond. 1979 Oi•tl

TNCkl for Sale

1173 '&gt;4 .,n C.....,. pick-up. 380
4 ....... . •350. 114·742-3088.

2581 .

FRANK AND ERNIE

2812.

72

1971 Ford Mlllteng 4 cyl. , I'IIW
rebuilt mota,, low mil•lfil•· Call
814· 215B·M17.

Woll hybrid puppiet. Aqdy
Junt 22 . Shote. wormed. UO .
Too cut• to beti...,tl 814· 7•2·

•.

400 cubic .-.glnt 6 oth• parts
for Gentfll Motort vehicle. 1
Rltll hitch . Call 814 ·379 ·

1247.

n.,

Atg. Doberman pupa ax. plcfi .'
or•. good tempermant, 1150
e1. Clll 81. ·256·M03.

4571.

Auto Parte

a. Accessories

1972 Pontlec Catalina. runa
good,
tlrn, battery t300 .
304-B96-312B .I

71

Chihuahua. 9 wtlkt old. Non·
regiltlfed , tiny . Clll 614· 441 -

PI!JoA&amp;TI'I&lt; .

ottto. 0500. 814·892·
3485.

Auto• tor Sale

AKC trl-colored 8AHtt Hound
PJPI. reduced pric" oo adutt
doga. Crown City, 814-258 16152.

otlo. Ctll 304·372·4820.

I&lt;

12810. 304· 882· 3200.

Hey naHII!Ie on lhar•. WI
Darwin • •· 614-192·8073.

Oragonwynd Ctntt"V Kenntl .
CFA HimaiiVIn, Peraian and
Siam•• kitttns. AKC Chow
puppln. NIW puppiM &amp; kltttns.
C1ll 446· 38·4 1ftar 7PM.

71

·ea ChiYY 110 truck, liken.-.

Orwodl. Coll14·241· 9117.

Ctll814 ·191·1227 tfttr 4PM .

1747.

82

Vt. 304·882· 2222 .
Pets for Sale

IIEEN POSSI9LE

WITHOUT TH! APMiR.1H.'9
A81LITY TO HANP~E'

12 ft. eluninum tithing bolt 3
HP motor and Trolling motor.

~:;:=;:~~====,-;;;;:~~~~T.~r.r.;1 76

Blodt. brick , mortar and mt·

Tobacco tractor. Mallie "'"''
Ptcer with hyd,aullc cuhi'llatort.

•eo.

incurable."

24 "" blk8MX bikt080.00.

u.s. 36

448·0098.

"I think it's best for ·'you to
know, doctor- your slice is

304-&amp;75 · 5912.

2 piece living room suit, 1 wall
lhelf un it. oak gfun clbinet.
1977 Oldt Cutltll·tar ill no.
3G29R7M15103 Call 61• ·

6 ft. x 6 ft . 8 in . patio door
complete, 2· J6 ln. 11 48
insulat«t wtndows. 36 in. • 36
ln. inaulated window. Call &amp;14·

Pontoon bo11. UMd 1 time, end
1 wood Latha. Call 1514·992·
15017.

83

Building Supplies

HAV~

. . .:- ------···-

Seart Go-Cart •1•0.00. Strato·
lounger brown 180.00. w..tem

Maple t1ble • 4-ch•ire. good
cond. 176 . See at Cochrane
Exxon. Pt. Pl.

8UT NONE OF IT WOULO

18 ft, Arlltocrlft bolt. 120
Horupower, lnbotrd·outboard,
Men:ndllf motor, nii'N' 11at1,
very good condition, 11klng
•1.100. Cal 614·2415· 150•0.

Now buying ehell com or ••
corn . Cell forlattst quot•. Aiwer
City Ftrm Supply. 814·441·
2988.

14,000 BTU Air conditionM.
1100 Call 614-388 ·9776 .

2183.

,,

Four bidding Glfaniuma for 99
cen11. All flowertlnd veg . pl1nta
17.21!1 ftn . llftenu 26 oenltlb.
Gtorgla peachMISO cenulb. B&amp;
9 .P-toduce, Viand St., Point
Ple..ant.

Good ltying hens. Brown and
whit a. Ctl\614·742·24515.

3 elumlnum awn ings 9tt .. 4f1.,
3tt .. Goodthape. Cell814 ·446·

6811 or 814·992·1783.

488 1728
.
or
•

Gibson 10,000 BTU air cond ..
1180. Caii614-.W8· 26•7 .

Efficiency apt. Suitable for 1 or 2
people. On Roush Ltne in
Chethlre, Ohio. Call 304-773·
5B21.
2 bedroom apt. In downtown
Middleport, All utilltl• p1id.
1210 I * month. Cell &amp;14·992·

r.:::r..~~g~tvo'~''\~'4~m~

0157.

446·411 3.

19tM au• batt 18ft. 10 hrt ..
Merturv alec , ttlrt. driYa on
tnMiir. 2 blnerl,., 2· I gallon
tankl. foot conuolltd trolling
motor. 1 grtph Ncurder, uc ,
cond. Clll81~· 381-9718 .

Antique love 111t. Satf'l Joooer.
Hotpoiftt poneblt dilhw.Mhll'.

llo

B011t1 end
Motors for Sale

II'. Ctlll14·241·9432.

8843.

sa·

9

18 ft. Jofmaon boat &amp; lraU•. 7!

Window air cond, 10.800 btu.
Go Cart, double till. 30•·875·

55

Sentinel Page 11

Ctlll14 ·441-2393.

ctudet cutting. wrlf)Ping end
frMiing , Whole Prim., Cuts.
Whole Alb~YU12·1411aw•~te
*3.80 lb. ~011 NIIN Vo,.
Strlpa. 12· 14 lb tvtr191 14.08
lb. Choice Ttod.tlon R .llll 1&gt;.
Short Loipl *3.81 lt. Full Lotn
t3.2&amp; 1:1. Price tn-..dll cutting.
D1poslt r.aqulr.t .• Gulf'tnleed
tand~t. Call 304-171-13e3.
Point P1Malf1t, W. Va

F~tr

Daily

15YI ft. flbtfiiMI 7YI HP
Merc:ury motor • trail• *1 .500.

*1 .28. Front qta. '11 .01, Hind

qto. 01 .70. U.S.D.A. Cholco
Salt. SldM •1 .21. Frunta
t1 .Dri. H6nda •1 .12 . Price In·

1838

7-

The

I I

M111 Mtrklt.

U.S.O.A. Primt ltll Bait, Sid•

19 7 15 D o dge mo to r ho me
33 ,000 miles. extra clun .
14,850. Call 1·114· 286· 5622.

992-2094.

75

hourt 8 :00 till db, call ' 30'·

111·4831.

1 \YIIIIa~aon

-

Motorcycle•

1981 1()(121 K.,vttkl, good
ccnd. QOO. 304•173· 5121.

TONY"S GUr.t REPAIRS. ocope
..... titllltlng. ltctory reblutlng.

114·448· 1149.

• . 9235 · 70 R 115 Daytont AWL
like new 1176 . Call 814· 387·

74

LAFF-A-OAY

Merchandi"

Houtwood . firewood 030 .00

4 bed rooms. dishwashtf. double

rang e stove. tully Clf111t«i ,
wo od and coli buming nova.
Clote to achool and hospital.
Call 61 4· 992· 6080. Any rtlto·
nabl1 offer may be consid~rtd .

Rent

Wanted like to rent 3 bdr. hou11.
prlfer ba..ment. in or around
Gallipolis. NHd b¥ July 1!ith.
Call 114·446-u.-s,

8 tt. trudl rad11 t50 . T..._,hone
I MWMing miChtne f715 . 17 ft .

,,

Space for Rent

,.
June 13, 1986

1 :00

tho Living Dud'
llilJl To Be Announced

2:15 (lD CNN .HNdllne.Newo
2 :3D (]) B""""Comor

6/14/86
E\JENINQ

7:00

D (JJ News
(J) Campbell•
(]) Fltlhln' Holt !AI.
(I) • II) Small Wonder
D (I) (ll) Hoe How
(I) Wild Amoffca ICC)
&lt; l J - of fortuna
Gll Newton's Apple ICCI
• ~ Solid Gold
@It"I . Uvlng
7:30 D (JJ Young ··p - ' •"o
Speclll: Uttla Arllu
(l) Guns of Will Sonnett
(I) What's Heppenlng

Now
•m
Jt·• . Uvlng
(I) Profiles of Noturo

GJJoopordy
Gll Wild America {CCI
&lt;B At 1118 Movloo
8:00
Cil (ll) Olmmo • Bruk
!RI. In S1ereo.
(I) MOVIE : "MIIdeto,EICI&gt;
Other'
· ~

a

ffi Supercroa1 From L.A .
Coliseum. (90 min.J

(I) D Cll Diff'rent Strokes
ICC) tAl.
.
D ffi MOVIE: "DIII "M'Ior
Murder'
(I) Boeing Thlngo
(lD D 3Z Al.-f Hawke.
Santini and Caitlin pose as
, stuntpersons in a Wild West
a how in en effort to locate a
hijacked e•perimen1al wea -

pon. !60 min .IIAI .
()j) Austin City

Umlts

Guests: Bonnie Ralu; The
leroi Brolhars. (60 mln.l

&lt;B MOVIE: "The Mansttr
Club'
8 :05 (J) MOVIE: 'Tho Men From
Llremlo'
8 :30 D (JJ iliJ TIWt FICit of Ufe
(CC)IAI. In Stereo.
.CIJ CIJ a - ICCIIRI .
9 :00 D Cil iliJ Tho Ooldon Olrla
IRI. In S1ereo.
(I) D (I) MOVIE: "Or-e ·
tCCIIRI.
(I) Myotorlouo World
(lD D iliJ MOVIE: .'To Bt
An.-nced'
()j) N..mrtllo llkytlno
9 :30 D(I)~2271RI.JnS1ereo .
(]) AutO Rilling 'BB : Cort
Mllwauk• 200 From MilwaukH, WI. 190 min.) IRI .
(I) . _. Prwtowa In
S1areo.
(J]) K-udty: Tho 19B8
U111mlll E~ Trill
1 0 :00 D
Cil (ll) Romlng1ofl

a

St.... Laura and Remingtoc

'

uncover a pair of disc jock·
eys as prime suspecls in the
murder of a radio traffic re ·

poner. !60 min.) {AI. In
S tereo .
(J) To Be Announced

D ffi Wrootllng
(I) MOVIE: 'Doc1or Who:
Planet of the Glantt"
@ Newa
10:10 (I) Billy Graham Cruaado
11 :00 DCIJ(I)O (I) ®G ~IDJ
News
([l Succe11 'n Ufe
C!l SportoCenter
D ffi Tales from the Dark ·
oldo
(J]) Novo: Horaemen of
China ICC] The lifestyle and

e

t!&amp;ru•"*t(
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Sc hool
subj.

5 Prophet
9 0 1ive
gfOUS

10 Malefactor
12 Marria.Re
symbo l ·
13Riab .

are examined . {60 min .)

14 King ·

@ Twilight Zono
1 1 : 10 Cll Night Track• Chartbuo.
terl In Stereo .
11 :3D D Cil IDl Sltturdev Night

to pper

DOWN
I Upright
2Mrs.

Kramden
3 Dogma
4 )leldam
5 Chinese
· cicy

6 Within
(comb.

Uve In Stereo .

(I) Star S.arch
D ffi Twilight Zone
D (I) MOVIE: 'Tho Day
the Fllh Came Out"
()) Hitch Hikers Guide to

t itle

(abbr.)
28 Manage
· 32 Soul (Fr.)
33 Kn otLq
o r Ad ams
34 Border

p ink pearl s tolon during a

35 Easily

posh dinner party. 160 m in .)

1fftft\Mt ffi~ \jl THAT SCRAMBLED WOAO GAME
by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

Un scramble thess four J umbles.
one let let to each square, to IOI"m
lour ortllnary word s.

chewed
37 Lanza's

"Be My -"
38 Locomot ive
39 Equitabl e
40 Camper's
shelter

41 Gravitate
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES - Heres how to work it :

I

(J

AXYDLB AAX R
laLONGFEL L OW

tJ

One letter stands for another. In this sample A 1s used
for the three L's, X for the two O's. el&lt; . Sing le le tters,
apool.rophes, the length and formati on of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
WHAT A CCIUNTI!~­
F!!ITI!I'r TUI'rN!.C:O
I"Oi.IT/CIAN MIGHT I!JE
! XP'!CT!!C:O TO PA~5.
Now l l'l'lnot tl'lt clrclld lettarl to
form thesurpriH tn awer, as auogaated by ll)e a bove cartoon.

Pttn,.,.._,htrtt, KI I
Yeeterdey'a

I

a car
36 Hubb ub
37 Perm it

26 Red
or Black
27 Mlnister'll

12:00 (}) Take Time
C!1 AWA Wrestling {AI .
(I)
Mystery!:
Agotha
Christie' •
Partners in
Crime Tom my and T upp·
once atte mpt to re cover a

t
.tDEURB ±
) I ( J

33 Mar on

25 Request

nounced'
@ Ufeot.,loo of tho Rich
and Famou•

tUNGES

25 Babble
26 Seaside
29 He rd
30 Invigorate
31 Revise

24 Compan io n

® Taxi
II ~ MOVIE: 'To Be An-

I I I

18 Garmenl

22 Th«.&gt; refore

the Goluy

BLOIM

Yetiilerday'a Anewer

fonn )
7 Be!Sf'ech

for
15 - sequitur 8 Medical
sethat.: k '
15 Down
18 Butt
lOACC'IIJn2l .. Brlan's
against
ulate .
Song" star
17 Missive
11 Send bac k 22 In o ne's 19 Spire
(at ho me]
or nament 15 "Quo
Vadis?"
23 Ve ngeance
20 Pay dirt
character 24 Rase
21 Dramatis
~--Tr-r.personae

(l) John Ankorberg

TRAFC

1 :00

12:1 0 Cll Night Tracks In Stereo .
12:30 Cll WWF All-Star Wrn tlinv_
CIJ Outer Umits

ancient traditions of the
Chinese Kazakh horsemen

~ ~~~ Ill

@ Police Story
8 (}) MOVIE: "Blood and
S.nd"
(l) Jimmy Swoggart
1:30 D ffi MOVIE: "Murder
can Hun You'

® MOVIE: "To Be An ·
nounced '

CKYPTOQUOT E

6· 13
E

I E BT R A Q O · w

J YO R

·\ \ .I R

IDR EZJ E I I '

A GO RT

J( I I I I 1 LVOORO

E 0 L

E

K R E "

E

Y W

E

J A EN

1· Y W ll ll E I A R

LR

A E

(Answers tomorr ow) JOG FR DR
Yesterday ' s Cryptoquo ~: TII J-: IH : I!" .\0 PEHSll 1\ I\L
J umblse: BULGY PAUSE MAROON SHREWD
CHAR M SO GKEAT AS TH F. CII AH M •IF A C II E f:HF"\"1.
Answer: How 0111et hal grown In IJ()I)Uierltv ~ recent
TEMPERAMENT. - H EN RY VAN Jl \~E
_ . _BY LeAPS l I!OlJtlOS .

�. ....... ........_ ...

Page-1~-The Daiiv Sentinel

.. ..

~

PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio

.... .

Friday, June 13, 1986

Sund ay

r---Local briefs--- Reagan clears up
Heritage weekend auction canceled
cloudy SALT 2 ·issue
The County Stoll' auction originally planned for !Jerltage Weekend
has bel&gt;n canc!'led by the Pomeroy Chamber or Comrne=. due to a
lack of public intcmt In the auction.
HOW('Ver, many other actlvltk&gt;s wlll be laking place in POmeroy
duting Heritage Weekend, Ju!K' ~-22. The chamber w111 sponsor a
craft show on Court St. to be held Friday and Saturday from 10 a .rn .
to 4 p.m. each day. Many talented Meigs County craft people have
signed up to ex hibit , sell and IX&gt;monstrate thelr work.
An antique car show for Meigs Countlans will be held Saturday
·morning fmrn 9 a.m. to 12 noon. Trophies will he awarded in various
categories and Heritage Weekend visitors are !l'mind(&gt;d that the
cars will be on display only on ·Saturday.
·
Additional attractions will be AEP's last working st!'fnwheeler,
"Juanita." The boat will be docked at the Pomeroy levy .and wUI be
available for touring. Southern Ohio Coal Co. wilt' have a mining
display, and antique steam engines will be exlblted, courJesy of
George Francis. Myron Duffield will again bring hls calliope to
Pomeroy and dancing by the Shady Rlver Shufflers clogging group
wUJ be featured. Well-known Denver Rice 'wUI IX&gt;monstrate his
homemade instruments and the musical group "Sweet Mountain
Sounds" will also petiorm.
Additional in!OJmation on the scheduled even ts is available from
the Pornemy Chamber office at 002-!Wn\.
Anyone lnte!l'Sted In participating or entertalningdurtng Heritage
Weekend should contact the chamber office as soon as possible for
schedullng.

Announce flag design contest
Design a flag for Pomeroy and you may win a $50 savings bond.
The Pomeroy Merchants Association is sponsoring the contest
which will end Wednesday with tbe prize to be awar&lt;lpd in special
ce!l'rnonies on Heritage Weekend .
Designs should be llnnlted to three robrs plus the background and
should be uncompllca ted since the plan Is tD have the design made
into flags for businesses to purchase.
Designs should be left with Mary Powell at The Top of the Stairs,
Sandi Ianne!l'lli at Chateau, or the Pomeroy Chamber or Commerce
Olflce In the Cou rt House.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - President Reagan says the SALT 2
nuclear arms treaty Is dead and has
Indicated that any restraints put on
the U.S. weapons buildup wUJ
depend on Soviet actions. .
Reporters asked Reagan pointed
questions Thursday about his
stance on SALT 2, after a series of
ambiguous statements froin administration offlclals ;md Reagan's
owti !l'marks at his Wednesday
night news conference confused the
lssile.
R:eagan may be asked to explain
·-his reasons for ·scrapping the
unratified 1979 treaty when he hosts
a luncheon for regional reporters
today.
Thursday he endorsed !l'rnarks
by chief White House spokesman
Larry Speakes, who said the
agree_ment is finished as a founda ·
tion for arms control.
"The SALT t!l'aty llrnlts no
longer exist," Speakes announced.
"ll we take future actions in the
area of arms control, It would be for
!l'asons other than the SALT
agreement."
Reagan later told reporters. "I
think you can trust what Larry
Speakes told you. "
However, Reagan hedged when
asked whether the United States
would SUillaSS the SALT 2 limits
later this year.
"Anyone going into negotiations,
I think, has a right to !l'maln silent,

Fire 3 commerce officials

Eulah Hoffman
Eulah Marie Hoffman, 69, N!?W
Haven. died Thursday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy.
She was born June 2,1917 in Red
House to the latf&gt;Jesse H. and LUJan
Elizabeth Bass Hargraves.
She was preceded In IX&gt;ath by her
husband Dallas R. Hoffman In 1972
and one son Rlchard Nelson
Hoffman.
Surviving are two daughters,
Mrs. Elizabeth Mae Reynolds of
i\kron, and Mrs. Susan K. Rainey a
Ll&gt;taFt; one son, James Raymond
Hoffman of New Haven; one
brother, For!l'St Hargraves a West
Columbia; two sisters, Mammle
Volz of Mansfield, and Betty
Vaughn of Tucson. Ariz.: 18
grandchildren and 11 great·
grandchildren.
Funeral services wm be Sunday
at 1: :II p.m. at the West Columbia
United Methodist Church with the
Rev. Charles Hargraves officiatIng. Burtal will follow In tile
Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Friends may call at the residence
of the deceased on Saturday from
'~4 and 7-9 p.m. for visitation. The
body 12:J0.1:ll
wUJ lie In state
at Sunday.
the church· ·
from
p.m. on

clalrned a pattern of Soviet viola tions fol'CPd him to d(&gt;clare the
treaty finished as a foundation for
arms control.
The pact was signed In VIenna by
P!l'Sident Jlrnmy Carter and the
late Soviet leader. Leo nid
BI'E'Zhnev.
Speakes said 1that, regardless of
U.S. actiQns later this year- when
Reagan can act to exceed SALT 2
limits, actual compliance Is no
longer a coneern.
"The United States 5 mdlcatlng
that we wUJ no longer be bound by
the numerlcalllrnlts of It," he said.
"We have not violated It yet. We
may not go over It In the fall."
Speakes said his statement was
Intended to dispel "confusion."
Following Reagan's news conference, administration officials were
concerned Thursday that the )resi·
dent seemed to soften his stand and
to be leaving room for
maneuvering.
Another White House spokes·
man, Edward Djerejlan, told repor·
ters that although SALT 2 Is
finished, "restraint Is not dead, and
we hope that mutual restraint Is not
dead . That will depend on what
Soviet actions all'."

The renewed d(&gt;clarations that
SALT 2 Is IX&gt;ad came as the
CLEVELAND (UPII - Thurs- administration expmsed Interest
day' s winning Ohio Lottery In a pair of new Soviet arms
llrnitation proposals and hinted the
numbers:
overtures might have been !I'Omp·
Dally Nwnber
ted by the tough line Reagan took In
142.
1)cket sales t o t a I e d his May 27 announcement.
$1.165,T71.50, with a payoff due of
$686,093.50.
PICK-4
8715.
PICK4 ticket sales totaled
$176,331.50, with a payoff due of
$79,479.
P!CK4 $1 straight bet pays
The Meigs County Litter Control
$5,784. PICK4 $1 box bet pays$241.
Program Is now ln,futl swing. Law

ties, and public
enforcement
andawareness
collectionaspects
actlvlof tt&gt;e program all' now operating.
Since April I, 24 illegal dump sites
have been reported and invesugated: nlneoftbose slteshavebeen
cleaned up with the cooperation of
the property owners: 13 of the sites
are under surveillance; and two

HEATH UNR'ED METHODIST CHURCH

Says Steve Powell, program
supervisor, "the magnltu&lt;lp of
activity which we havp been abJe to
engage In during the past weeks
would not have been possible

I

South Third at •In St.
Mldcllepart, Ohia

~31

JACI&lt;SON PIKE · RT.3!1 WEST

- -·452o4
SAT - SUN I
WEDNESOAV • All SEATS $2.50
.IOOJSStON EYER! TUESDAY $2.50

The closing program for the
Rlverview Community Vacation
Bible School wlll be held at 8 p.m.
Sunday at the Rlvervtew School,
Reedsville. The public is Invited.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted - Dale Ord, Mason
City, W. Va.; John Hunnell,
Pomeroy.
Discharged - E unice Christy.

without cooperation and donations"
fmm a number of people and

IPICIAL WIDNIIMY

MATINID'

flo~r~ga~n~iza~tl~on~s~.~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~TIIIS~~~~~-~T~R~II~II~I~~~
THE PERFECT PLACE TO
SHOP FOR DAD'S DAY
IS THE LaSALLE GALLERY
WE HAVE A WIDE SELEcnON
OF Gm FOR DADS, BOTH
YOUNG AND OLD

•Collectables

•Mugs

•Wine Stts
•Desk Accessories
•Balloon Bouquets

Etc.·Etc.·Etc.

FREE DELIVERY
MANY OF THE ABOVE OEMS ON SALE

LaSALLE GALLERY
MIDDLEPOIT

137 N. 2ND

"The Demands of Fatherhood"
FATHER'S DAY JUNE 1S, 1986

9:30 A.M.-Church ·School For All Ages
10:30 A.M.-Morning Worship
"We Love Because God Loves Us"

~-~~;;;;;;;::;::~=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~~

. 992-7521

ELBERFELDS
OF

Arrangements are being handled
by the Foglesong Funeral Horne.

Ereil Sleeth
Erell LewiS "Hap" Sleeth, 75,
Mason, died Thursday at Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
He was born Ju!K' 13, 1910, In
HWidred to the late Rev. John
Sleeth and Pearl Klrkpatrtck
Sleeth.
A !l'tired truck driver and a
vPteran ct World Warn, In the u.s.
Navy, he was a member of the
VFW Stewart-Johnson Post 9926 a
Mason.
Surviving are his wUe Betty G.
Sleeth of Mason: seven daughters,
Mrs. John (Shirley I J . Glover of
Elyrta; Mrs. Anita K. Travis a
Huron: Mrs. Roy (Rebecca) J.
Scarberry of Ripley; Mrs. Carol L.
McCoy of Rlpley; Mrs. Ralph
(Janet) Edwards of Cottageville;
Mrs. Richard (Cheryll Lake of
Mason and Mrs. Bruce (Reta)
Hendrickson a Mason; one son and
daughter-In-law, WUllam E. and .
Sherry SlEeth of Mason; two
sisters, Iris Wade of Inglewood,
Fla. and Inez Davis of Kings Port,
Tenn.: one brother, John Sleeth a
Denver, Colo.; 23 grandchildren ·
and six great-grandchlldren.
Funeral se.vlces wlll bP Satllr-

__s~.~9.~Y
. · is
fath6\f'
On Sunday,
All Fathers Will ·
Receive ,A

a

FREE SUNDAE
FROM

ADOLP.H'S DAIRY VALLEY
"At the Foot of the Ponieroy·Mason Bridge"
POIIEIOY, OH.
992·2556

-

•

_

~

-

,·· ·r

FATHER'S DAYGIFTS
'

MAKE ELBERFELDS YOUR
SHOPPING CENTER FOR FATHER'S DAY GinS
•Sale prices on our big selection of gifts for your Dad Sunday, June 15th.
•Oren shirts, westerns and knit shirts, sport shirts - ell excellent quality.
•Select dren slacks from our big selection of sizes and colors - or shorts tor
summer wear. You'll save on Hanes underwear for Dad.
•Big selection of qualitv leather belts sali priced and neckties.
•Save 30% off Buxton billfolds in many ltyles and colors.
•If work clothes are on your list you'll find special prices on shirts. work uniforms, jeans, bib overalls.
·

STOP IN OUR MEN'S DEPARTMENT, LOOK AROUND, SELECT YOUR
.
FATHER'S DAY·GIFTS AND. SAVE.
.
'
.
VISIT THE FURNmRE DEPARTMENT 3rd FLOOR - SAU PRICES ON
LAWN CHAIIS, All CONDmONERS, RCA TV SETS ND EASY CHAIRS.
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR SPECIAL FATHER'S DAY GIFT SALE

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

ELBERFELDS

,

.~ ....
·~..:......~;·,~. v .,.,"·f . •
' r '~£

• U

r

I

•

•

.. .,,

• "

.. &lt; •

.,~..,,.·

oj

0

0 •

..,

•.
r ..

SOC

Page B-1
Inside:

Along the Rlver .......... A-7-12
lluslnP.118 ....................... C-1
Classllleds ....... C-2·34-~7-8
Dealhs ......................... A-4
E.dltorlal ...................... A-2
Sports ...... ....... .... ....... B-1-5

Ohio weather:
Partly cloudy
-Page A-3

tmts 8 Sections, 76 Pages 50 Cent•

1986

A Muhimedia lne . New1paper

Meigs commissioners table fire alarm bid
$115,000. The munty will trade In its old distributor
truck, valued at $31,500, leaving a net mst to the
county of $83,500.
A three- to four-year financing program for the
tl,'Uck will be set up with the Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., Pomeroy. The commissioners wlllln the
near futu re pass a molution to borrow the money.
The truck is to be delivered within ll days.
Until then, the county will continue to use the ad
distributor truck In the application of dust control and

aspha lt for sealing.
The commisSion tabled a bid of $14,120 from
Security Electronics Inc., Lowell, to in stall an
au toma tic fill' alarm gystern and a manual flre alarm
gystem, to be interconnected andconformtostateand
loca l fire cod(&gt;s, at the Meigs County Jail. Included in
the bid price was the Installation of Illuminated exit
signs over the doorways on the first and second floors
of the ja il.
The commission wlll confer with District Flre

Safety Inspector Richard Dutton, Marietta, to make
SU!l' the bid package meets specl!ications. before
making a decision in the matter.
In other business, the commission confirmed the
hiring of Michael Custer, Pomeroy, as Meigs County
dog warden, to !l'place Andrea Batey, who resigned
the position effective Wednesday. Custer will assume
his official duties Monday with Batey assisting him
through Wednesday. New telephone numbers i&gt;r the
dog warden will be announced as soon as possible.

.. ,.")',!..•

Showplace's treasures
put on auction block

Hospital news

•Bar-B-Que Sets

. - ,.

• , •&lt;

o

•

By NANCY YOi\CIIAM
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - A bid for a distributor truck for the
Meigs County Highway Garage was accepted, and a
bid for Installation or fire alarm systems at the Meigs
County Jail was tabled, wt.en tt.e Meigs County
CommisSioners met Friday In recessed session.
Accepted by the commission, upon recornrnenda ·
tjon of Cou nty Engineer Phil Roberts, was a bid from
Southeastern Equipment Co. for a 1911&gt; International
with bituminous distributor. Total cost of tt&gt;e truck is

Program Sunday

0

j

Comlrs-TV ............... lll'lel't

Pleasant

PH. 992-3039

REV. (. SONNY ZUNIGA WILl PREACH ON

Art Buchwald offers fU'8t·hand though18
on the role of fathers - Page A-2

·weather report
South Centrat Ohio
Mostly sunny today, with highs
near Ell. Clear tonight, with a low In
the upper 50s. Sunny Saturday, with
highs In the low 80s.
The probability of precipitation Is
near zem through Saturday.
Winds wlll be from the west to
northwest at 10 to :11lrnph today and
light and variable tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast - Sunday through Tuesday: Generally
falr thmugh the period, with highs
ranging from the 70s to the low !Mls
each day. Overnight lows will range
from the 50s to tt.e low 60s.

·

•....
- ~•• 1i. ,,•• • .J;,, • ,1 •
.1i.

U.S. Open continues

uae.

==~~ :;:d:~= ::,ve
Collection activity began on May
27. Through June 1, 31 rnles of
county roadways have been
cleaned up, !l'Sulting In 30 dump
truck loads of trash being removed
from these roadways. In addition to
the number of truck loads being
hauled, 154 bags of litter were
collected.
The roads that have bel&gt;n cleaned
by the collection crew are C·38
between Pomeroy and Mlddleport
under tile Pomeroy-Mason bridge,
C-21, C-.3 and C-5.

oO

Bob Hoeflich repOrts some deer caused
turmoil for village employees - Page A-3

ClASSIFICATION CHANGED - 'The , ~Urduuie by Buluul
Volumeer ~ Dep.ntnent ~ thl8 ~·quick re&amp;plllle vehicle," or "ll'ulh
truck," hu reaulted In a chan&amp;e fl cla81111catlon lor the Bashan VFD
Dtstrlct. 'The aewcla8!tlllcatlonwllresuUaadecnuelnllrelnsuranoo
rates lor many ln!iured properties wiiiU the district. The new
classlftcatloll goei! Into effect July I. • - rates wDI decreBSe from
seven to 30 pen:ent, depending on the type flstrudure Involved, ood Its

Meigs litter control
program in full swing

A men's U trtple S.A. Class D
world quall!ler softball tournament
, will be held at Buckeyes Park and
' and Hadley Field In Marietta on
June 28 and 29. The winning team
day at 1:ll p.m . at the Foglesong will receive a berth In the world
Funeral Home with the Rev. Terry tournament to be played Labor Day
Alvam officiating.
weekend and the second and third
Burial wlll follow In tile Blaine
place teams ~UJ win berths In tt.e
Memorial Cemetery In state
tournament to be played In
Cottageville.
August. Entry fee Is sa&gt; and two
Friends may call at the funeral steel balls. Teams Interested should
home on Friday from 2-4 and 7-9 contacf Ken Offen berger at 374-2943
p.m.
or Jerry Huck at 678-28ffi.

Area deaths

-Page A-7

deal."
In the past several weeks, he has

Lottery winners

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Three
The three employees worked In
Commerce Department employees the Bureau of Economic Analysts,
will be fired and security of which Is !l'SpoDS!ble for preparing
sensitive economic data wDI be reports on the GNP, the leading
tightened following an inqulry that financial Indicators and other sensicould lead to tbe outlawing of leaks tive data, Baldrige said.
of potentially valuable information.
They were not Jdpntlfled because
The dismissals, announced
the
fe!X&gt;ral employee cod(&gt; specifies
Thursday by Commerce Sec!l'tary
they
be given ll days to respond to
Malcolm Baldrige, COIK' I u d e d a
"charging
letters," which will be
nine-month inVPStlgation by the
IX&gt;IIvered
to
them Thursday.
!X&gt;partment's Inspector general,
Baldrige
said
analysis bureau
the FBI and the Securitk&gt;s and
employees
had
taken
lie IX&gt;tector
Exchange Commission Into a leak
tests
In
the
investigation
that
In September 1915 of gross national
determineq
·rwo
had
used
.data
for
product figu!l's for the second
Squads gel one call
personal
gain
and
.
a
third
had
quarter of 1985.
passed data to another person for
·Only one call was answered by
that
person's gain.
·'Theil' all' various kinds d leaks
the
Meigs County Emergency
that permeate this town," Baldrige
·
Medical
Services on Thursday.
said at a p!l'SS conlerenee. "But
But the lnvest~ation did not Middleport took l:.inda Mohler from
leaks ct sensitive economic data
determine how the· GNP data 238 Walnut St .. to Veterans Memor·
rank right up tt.ere with national
reached the q.!cago futures trad· lal Hospital.
securtty, In my opinion.
ing markl't and New York Stock
"Fortunes can be won and lost" Exchangt', where the data became
on !hi- basis ol such advance known about 18 hours before Its
Plan tournament
knowledge, he said.
formal release.

Choosing
a career

so that nothing could be used
against him," he said. "We're
trying to replace It with a better

,

..

By BOB HOEFUCH
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - There are auc·
tlons and there are auctions In
Meigs County. Nothing unusual
about that.
However, one .of the biggest of
this type sale In quite a few years
was held Frlday and Saturday at
Reedsville when the esta te of the
late Violet M. Smith was sold by
Mike C'rum and his crew from the
Thornville area. The group In·
eluded four auctioneers who some·
times sold in different areas on the
grounds plus a crew of clerks and
helpers.
The weekend auction was adver·
Used ex tensively throughout the
area and In tbe Tri-State Trader
magazine. On Friday, there was a
sizable crowd from far and near on
hand and sales appearo:J to go well.
The Violet M. Smith property Is
well known in Meigs County, as the
otiglnal property of the late AHred
and Edna. W. Kibble Stewart of the
Stewart-Warner speedometer bus!·
ness. The business apparently
provided quite an Income for Mrs.
St£'1\'art . who IJlOVed back to
Reedsville follo,.1ng the death of
her husband.
The property consists of a
13-mom, thrfl'·Story house owr·

looking the Ohio River. On tt&gt;e 40
acres are a ca!l'taker's cottage, a
g!l'&lt;'Dhouse and an attractive l,llXJ·
Square-foot recreation hall with
hardwood floors and a balcony. The
late Mrs. Stewari had tt.e recreation hall constructed and permitted
gmups of the Reedsville community use of the facility.
At Mrs. Stewart's death, the
property went to her brother,
Anderson Kibble, who at his death
established In his will the Kibble
college scholarship program which
henefits many Meigs County students going on to higher e&lt;1uca tlon
each year. At his death the original
Stewart homeplace went to a
nephew, David Smith. and his wife,
Violet, and, of course, became
Vlok&gt;t M. Smith's property when
her husband died a few short years
after tt&gt;ey Inherit ed the showplace.
Mrs. Smith died last Dec. ll. Her
son, David G. Smit h, is executor of
tt.e estate.
The Smiths' ad!X&gt;d thelr personal
touch to the property. adding many
lawn decorations and a consldera·
ble amount of brass and mpper
acct'SSOrles as well as ether Items to
tt&gt;e well furnished Sti?Wart·Kibbte
residence.
The rntire accumulation was so ld
at the we&lt;'kend auct ion and tl&gt;e

OUI'DOORS- Buyers made themlelvescomfortable on the lawn~
the late VIolet M. Smith' In Reedsville Friday as Mike Crum and his
crew from the Thomvllle area - !lOme lour auctmneen1 plus helpers
and clerks - look bids on box after bo•Jf brass, copper and ceramic

ware.

home, land and ott.er buildings are
for sale, SUillrlsingly at a flgu ll'
under $100.000.
Small wonder that tt&gt;e auction
took two days. Friends of the tate
Mrs. Smith, In fact. wondered if all
of the contents of the home could be

sold In that amount of tlrne. There
were well over 200 pieces of lawn
figures and ornaments, over 700
pieces of repro cower ware and
some 600 brass Items. AU these
things without touching cast iron
lawn furniture. the furnishings of

RECREATION HALL- This 1,~uare-foot, attractive reeeallon
buDding, compelte with halcony, was the srene of a part of the auction
held in ReedsvWe F'rklay and Saturday to settle the estate of the !ale
VIolet M. Smith.

the 13 rooms in the house and all of
the accessories in the horne.
Friday, a 1750 grandfather clock
brought in (1oler $1.700 on the auction
block; a massive turn of the
century. ornately-carved walnut
nine-piece dining room suite with

the origlnal portrait needlepOint on
tt&gt;e six chalrs sold for $1,790. A tum
of the century carved wa lnut
b!l'aklront with wrought iron panel
inserts sold for $370. A three-piece
wrought leon featuring winged
1Cant inued on A.J 1

Ohio's largest labor group backs Celeste's re-election bid
By RICH EXNER
CLEVELAND (UPI I -Gov. Richard Crteste has
won the support of the starr's largest labor
ol')!anlzatlon, tbe Ohio AFL-C IO.
The executive board of the !OO,()()().mernber union
un animously recommended the rodorsernent of
Celeste for a th ird-consecu tive election, and 1,000
delegates to the biennial convention gave overwhelm·
ing approva l Friday with a voice vote.
"I don't think this should be any surprise to the
delegates that we will endorse Dick Celeste for
go~ernor," President Milan Marsh.
"Dick Celeste has been a good governor for Ohio

and its workers. Dick Celeste has also been a good
governor for business.·· Marsh said. "This Is what we
need ."

The governor angered some union leaders by
signing a bill that makes It more difficult for
ernployN'S to collect civil liability damages In cases
where they al!l'ady are !l'Celvlng workers' compensa tion benefits. There was some speculatiOn that he
would not !l'Ceive the AFL-CIO endorsement.
He was not sc heduled to make a major speech
during the opening of the convention for tt&gt;e first tlrne
in eight vears. but only beca use of a conflict with his

vacation. Marsh said.
All the controversY appeared to be behind a sm iling
Celeste as he entered Cleveland Public Hall to a
standing ovation.
He received severa l ott.er standing ova tionsdurtng
an emotional speech, which was followed by Marsh's
announcement that the executive board unanlrnously
supported the endorsement .
Celeste told the 1.000 delegates that their concerns
with tt.e new workers'cornpensatlon law would not be
forgotten.
"I kPow that some of you are upset and fru strated

Family planning goal
of new health service
vaginal sperrnicides, condoms and
By CHARlENE HOEFUCH
Information on the rhytlun system
Times-Sentinel StaH
POMEROY - The high rate of arc aU avai lable fmm the health
teenage pregr.ancles, wllh one department .
They are dispensed monthly
Meigs County sehool dlst rtct report ·
ing a pfl'gnancy rate during the through the Health Depart ment.
1985-86 sehool year of one In S('Ven again with payment based on the
teenage girls, grades nine through slldlng fee sca le, or no payment ~
12, is one of S('Veral !l'asons why the there is Uttle oc no Income.
In dlsrusslng the hlgh rate of
Meigs County Health Department
has initiated a family planning teenage pregnancies. Blackwell
serv ice as an l'XIension of its said that statistics show that most
girls are sexually acllve for a year
pll'nata l clinic.
The new service. open to women befall' seeking birth control, or that
of all ages, begins Monday and will they have had a "sea re" with a
be staffed by Ann Blackwell, !X&gt;Iayed period. While she said
registered nu rsP and cert ified nurse parrnts of sexually active teenag·
practitioner In obstf&gt;trics and gynr- ers are encouraged to become
co logy, and Phyllis Bearhs, Involved In seeking birth oontrol for
thelr daughters, parental consent Is
women's heallh care technician.
Services are available on an mt requlred and the visit s to tt.e
appoi ntment basis, Monday t.ealthdepartment areconlldentlal.
As an exa mple of the sliding fee
through Friday from Sa.m to4 p.m.
seale, a woman in a family of four
AU cases are confidential.
Charges are based on a silding fee with an Income under $10,650
seale, with those unable to pay to rocelves all servlee5 free,tnctudlng
receive birth control services with- monthly supplies for her birth
out charge.
control method.
A worriim In the same size family
As explained by Blackwell , If a
sexually active teenager has no with an Income of under $17,118 ·
Income of her own and does not would pay ID percent, or $6 for the
havf&gt; family Income available to Initial visit and $1 a month for oor
her, then pregnancy prevention supply of birth rontrol plls Hthat Is
services are free. The Jaw does not the method she selects, wtlte a
require that parents · be mtifled woman In the samf&gt; family of four
before birth oontrol inilrmatlon with an Income of S:!l, 787 wCJJld pay
40 percent ol the eharge on the
and supplies are dispensed.
Oral contraceptives, better slldlng lee scale, or $12 fort he initial
known as the pill, the diaphragm,
(Continued on A-.3)

with the bill the legislatu!l' passed and I signed," he
said.
"It is my expectation that people will intelll!l't and
apply these regulations In a flrm and falr manner.
while understanding the concerns of working people
In this state. We will not turn the dock back to the dark
ages of unrornpensa ted lnju ties In work places across
Ohio. We can't go back to those days."
He defended his record on other labor issues.
" We made the difference when we said the steel
workers were locked o"t at Wheeling-Pittsburgh, and
they were entitled to their benefits. "

Tax refonn backers
foresee no problems
By JOSEPH MIANOWi\NY
WASHINGTON (UPi l - Senate
Republican leaders predict no
serious repercussions from the first
· change in their previously una!·
tered tax ll'forrn bill and expect
overwhelming approval next week
without major alterationS.
The first twist to the radical tax
plan ·ca rne Friday when the Senate
appmved an amendment by Sen.
Howard Metzenbaum, D·Ohlo. to
strip the bill of a special $50 million
tax break for Unocal, a California based oil company.
The provision was kllled by voice
vote after It lost a test vote 60-33.
Senate Republican leader Robert
Dole of Kansas and Finance
Committee Chalrman Bob Pack·
wood, R-Ore., have campaigned
.hard •o keep the tax plan free of
major changes and have been
successful on all key votes.

NEW FAMB.l' PlANNING - TomoJTOW tbe Meigs Couaty Heallh
Dep1111men&amp; wll add lutlizy planmog aeMces lo Its JII'OII'IUII· 'The
services wm Include Initial eumlnatlot11 and ....,......., blrlll conlrol
8Upplles, with the chargeranglnglrom mtiUgtoaperoon~ baaed on
available Income Ulklg a sliding fee seale. Here, PIQ'IIs Bearili,
women's heallh care technician, left, and Ann BltiCkwell, reglatered
nune and cerillled IIUI'IIe pl'lllllloaer In ohsleirlea and pnecolop, look
over the supplies to he used Ill the Jll'llll'lllll· Theile laclude blrib oonlrol
pOls, vaginal spennlcldes, creams and fiiiOnps and di!IPJn&amp;m8·

Both senators agreed on the
Unocal change and Packwood
rejected suggesUons that lie al ·
lowed his supporters to vote against
the tax break as retribution against
California's two senators. Democrat Alan Cranston and Republican
Pete Wilson, who 'opposed him on
the Issue of Individual retlrernent
accounts.
Packwood said the amendment
did not violate tt.e "basic tenets" of
the bill be scu~ted In rommlttee

and said he had no fear any major
changt' would get by, Including a
sweeping proposal to altl'f the
measure's laX rat e struct ure.
" We are clearly a.&gt;er the hump on
the major ones and I don't think
these transitions will mea n much."
he said, predicting final Senate
passage of the bill by tbe middle ol
next week.
The loophole for Unocal. for·
merly the U~ ion Oil Company of
California. was one of 174 "transition rules" sprinkled throughout tt&gt;e
measure designrv' to help specific
companies or projects that senators
are concerned abou t.
The provisions are estimated to
cost about $5.5 billion In five years.
Metzrnbaurn has singled out 19 of
the Items he believes all' particularly unfair. "Such provisions are
not transition rules: they're gt'('ed
rules," he chargl'd.
The Unoca l provisio n, he sa id ,
was offensive because It not only
gave the company a break under
terms of the bill. bot also would
have provided It with an exception
from current law. His amendment
dlrocts the money from the tax
break to go toward helping farmers
Income average.
Metzenbaurn said oo Would try
Monday to ellrnlnate more transition rules, but st!l'Ssed he would not
push any amendment that could
defeat the entire blll.

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