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·

r-age- •v-1 ne

Monday, June 16, 1986

· s eeks
favors

Blaze destroys •••
Continued from page 1
to be structurally safe folkl\\1ng the
intense fire. ChUds Indicated that,
perhaps, the thlnl floorwallscan be
removed to the second floor level,
the second floor roofed and then
remodeling done to the structure
from that point . However, these
things will have to be decided at a
later time, ChUds said, after
insurance adjusters have surveyed
the situation and the board meets to
make decisions.
Other memtx&gt;rs ·cf the Meigs
Investment Corporation are John
Musser, viC&lt;' president; Bernard
Fult2, S€Cretary, treasurer. and
Jay Hall , .Jr., Dr. Ray Pickens,
Richard Owen and Kermit Walton.
Childs said that losses will run
about $500,(0). There is insurance
but not enoughtocoverthat amount
cJ loss, he said . The fact that the Inn
was "uno&lt;rupled " limited the
amount of Insurance that could be
carried on the structure, Childs
Indicated. The Inn portbn of the
complex was last operated In June,
1985, and the pizza food faciUty
closed in January of this year.
Water service and some electricity
service were still on in the
unoccupied inn, Childs nportoo.
Childs said that the Inn had tx&gt;en
secured Sunday to prevent theft
and that today someone would be
tooklng at steps which need to be
taken immed iately with the
structu re.
Bob Miller. manager of City
Loan, located on the grouod floor
level of the Inn complex, reported
that crucial records were removed
from the company's offices after
the fire started and that employes
removed other records Suoday
after the fire had bE&gt;en exlin·
guished. The company office which
suffered heavy water damage will
have to be relocated at least
temporarily, Miller said. He is
expecting a company disaster
representative to visit Pomeroy
today to determine the steps to be
taken on the local operation. Miller
said that firemen and townspeople
were gr&lt;'al in helping employees
with the task cl moving records
from the offi ce. Childs indicated

I

that, perhaps, the pizza facility
might be used as a temporary
location for the loan company.
Mickey Williams, located oo the
E. Main St., level just bE&gt;Iow the
Meigs Inn complex moved all cJ his
bartx&gt;r chairs and equipment from
his bulldlng after the fire started
early Sunday morning. He, too, was
given asslstan&lt;P IJy firemen and
residents. The equipment was
taken to the sidewalk In front of the
Eltx&gt;rteld Department Store and
Williams stayed with It lor the
nigh!. About noon Sunday, the
equipment was returned to his
oo rtx&gt;r slwJp and he was open for
oosiness today even tlwJugh the
building did receive some water
damage. It had not been deter·
mined II there was fire damage to
tb£&gt; roof of the Williams building.
At ooe point In the fire, loud
cracking noises could bE&gt; heard at
the I'EI!r of the Inn on E. Secood St.,
and some felt that the noise was the
cracking cJ the walls. However,
Childs reported that these noises
were made by bathtubs and
slwJwers plunging from the heavily
damaged third Door to the second
Door.
Firemen worked all sides of the
Inn tt keep the fire contained. On
Lynn St. four or five hoses kept a
constant flow of water on the that
side ci the structure.
Pllmeroy Village was thrown into
complete darkness for ahout three
hours ea rty Sunday morning as
servke was cut by The OhiO Power
Co. and the Columru sand !'outhern
Ohio Electric Co. at the l'E'qUest of
the village. A cupola at the front of
the Inn structure had caught fire
and was expected to topple at any
moment and It was believed that II
might fall Into power lnes. Pllwer
was shut off as a safety measure.
However, the cupola although
oodly rurned did not fall .
Several hundred townspeople
were at the fire scene untll early
Sunday morning watching one of
the town's landmarks bE&gt;Ing rav·
lslx&gt;d. However, the crowd was
orderly as firemen turned In their
excellent performance i1 keeping
the fin• contained.

Area deaths

Harold Ketchum

By the Bend .. ...... Pages H
ClassiDeds .. ... ...... Pages 7-8
Comic&amp;TV .... ..... ..... Page 9
Deaths ...... ,... ....... .. Page 10
EdiiAlrlal .. .... .... .. ..... Page ~
Sports .... .......... ... Pages 3·7

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Since
major Ohlo rullding projects
were not among 174 granted special .
exemptions IJy the Senate Flnanre .
Committee last week, Sen. Howaro ·
Metz.enbaum has requested lan·
guage In the Senate tax bill
retaining tax·exempt bond financing that would help raise money 1D
build the projects.
Melzenbaum' s request Is alined
at preserving sections of the ,.tax
code benefiting the proposed Columbus New World Center,. ihe
proposed domed stadium In Cleve. '
land and a soUd·waste- :dlsposal
plant In northwestern OhiO.
Suworters of ColumbUs' New
World Center first met with Metzen·
baum and Sen. John Glenn, J).()hlo,
In April. Although Franklin County
voters rejected a tax Issue that
would have fuoded the project last ·
month, supporters urged the sena- .
tors to Include the exemption In
"transition rules" whlcb cover :
project In the planning stage.
'·
A lawyer for the New World
Center Committee said he did not
know whether proposed changes In
the tax treatment of bonds would
affect the New World Center, so an
exemption was sought, rather ~ll ·
taking a chance IJy leaving It ·oui.
Supporters say the tax· exempt
status of boods lor the project
three

AERIAL ladder lrucb from two nearby communi·

I

I

with the family present from I to 4
p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m .

Inside:

ties helped fight Sunday mombtr;'s downtown

Pomeroy fire which gutted the Meigs Inn.

Court delays budget opinion release

'

e
\lo1.38. No.31
Copyrighted 1988

By NANCY YOACilAM
Sentinel News Stall
Two national companies" have
"actual wilding plans" to develop
sites In the Pomeroy·Middleport
area - ~- sewage can be provided
to the desired property, said Gregg
Gibbs, president of Southeast Development, when he mel Monday
night with Pomeroy Village
Council.
Gibbs told council the companies
art' Interested In 650 feet of
Pomeroy's river frontage north of
the Middleport corporation limit
and the Sears·Fruth Pharmacy
buDding. However, he pointed out,
the property is without sewage

~~~!~. ~ ~~~~ :~a,:se,o'~

A one-mill levy for the Gallia·
Jackson·Meigs 648 Mental Health
Board will appear on NovembE&gt;r's
ballot again , following action by the
board when It met Monday.
The levy, defeated in Gallla and
Jackson counties and approved in
Meigs County when It appeared oo
the May primary ballot. is to
provide local fundin g for mental
health operations In the three·
county area, explained Dr. Romola
Hopkins, the board 's executive
director.
Operations lor Woodland Centers
Inc., senior cit izens programs and
other related programs have re·
ceived federal and state fuoding,
oot those funds are being reduced
every year, she said . The board
discussed placing the levy on the
ballot, possibly In Novemtx&gt;r, at its
May meeting and sine&lt;' then
Hopkins has tx&gt;en consulting with

$3.25

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

latex Semi-Gloss

Walll Trim,
mfr. sug . list S12.99

9

service.
"They approached me first and
made an offer contingent on sewage
service being made available,"
Gibbs related. Without sewage, the
companies will not buDd in the area
and the 2().30 jobs which would be
provided wm be lost , he added .
Because Pomeroy's sewage line
ends a! the Pizza Hut on West Main
- about a miiP away from the
Middleport corporation - Middle·
port has also tx&gt;en approached
about the property.
Gibbs read a letter from Middle·
port Mayor Fred HoHman to
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler.
In the letter Hoffman said he had

tx&gt;en approached about the prop
erty and that it could not be
developed without sewage. He said
he knew it would be a great expense
to Pomeroy lo extl'lld it s present
sewa ge system to the desired
location, however . if Pomeroy
would annex the propert y to
Middleport. Middleport could pro·
vide the sewage service a! minimal
expense since the propeny lies
withln fill feet of Middleport's
Intersected lines. Hoffman wrote
that he "would cooperate with
Pomeroy in 'any way for further
development of the property" and
to bring "jobs to the county. "
Continued on page 10

99~
Gallon ryoo

Best Latex.Fiat
Decoration,
mfr. sug.list S16.99

Weather forecast

WASHINGTON (UPI) Ground was broken for new
homes at an annual rate of
1,1188,000 In May, down 7.~
percent from • the previous
month, lhe Commerce Department said toda;v.
The decline was centered bt
muiiHamUy housing, or buDd·
btgs with five or more housing
units, doMt 21.9 pel"O!Ilt lo
542,000 at an annual rate,
according to estimates compDed
by the Census Bureau.
s1ng~e-famlly home starts remained unchanged al 1,282,000
at an annual rate, the bureau

Hospital news

Paint;
sug. list $10.99

Oil Bose
House &amp;. Trim,
mfr. sug. list $13 99

Beat latex
Flat House Paint,
mfr. sug . llst $19.99

Best latex ·

Gloss House Paint,
mfr. sug . list S21 .99

said.

KING

405 N. 2ND

SUPPLY INC.

992-3784

CONVENIENT OFF THE STREET PARKING
SALE ENDS MONDAY, JULY 21

-·

~

' ~ ..

!•

\

I

I

the county commissioners of all prevention program in Jackson
County for $7,000, an d $14 .400 has
three counties.
In other action, the board . which tx&gt;en gra nt ed to a child assault
serves as the funding agent for interven tion program in coopera·
mental health operations in the tlon with Jackson County Child·
three counties, approved contracts ren's Services and the munty's
for services with several agencies. juvenile coun .
. The board approved its budget
The agencies and funding are:
for
the upcoming year at $211 ,000,
Woodland Ce nt e r s In c ..
includ
ing direc t money for child·
$1,274,583; Jackson County Council
ren
'scluster
services. a grouping of
on AJco iJJUsm, $6,rol; .Jackson
agencies
serving
I he needs ci school
County Board on Aging. $6,000;
children
.
The
amount
Is down from
J ackson County Child [)(&gt;ve!opmcnt
the
approximately
$239,(00
ap·
Center, $9,100; Gallia County Board
proved
IJy
the
board
last
year,
on Aging, $6,000; Gailla County
Alcoholi sm Progra m, $6,000; Hopkins said. which also included,,
Gallia.Jackson Senior Volunt eers direct fuodlng for children 's cluster
Program, $4,000: Rlo Grande Coun· services.
Hopkins said her appl ication for
seling Service, $18,(0); and thP
funding
to establish res ident ial
Meigs County AlcolwJlism Pro·
crisis
center
at Woodland Centers
gram, $6,000.
was
al'o
given
the green light at
Hopkins said fuoding was aiso
$150,t'ro.
approved for a communit y assauIt

DOWN SHE GOES- The urSeady tumt atop the
Meigs Inn was brought doMt Monday afteruoon by
workers lor Rose Excavatbtg of Racine. As a.result of
a Ore early Sunday momlng,the Meigs Inn SWIIalned
$100,000 to 5000,000 damage. David Grlndoilall ol

"I don't know how you tell somebody who's
smackln ' you In the mouth to gradually quit," said a
skeptical Gov. William Janklow of !'outh Dakota.
While Perpich and JankJow called for tough
measures on trade. Gov. Terry Branstad of Iowa
expressed concern that other countries might
retaliate against American farm products.
"They've already retaliated against agriculture.
We just haven' t figu red it out yet." replied Janklow.
Gov. Anthony Earl of Wisconsin said one of the
problems is that the United States has accepted losses
in the world marketplace In exchange lor acceptance
of U.S. foreign policy by other countries.
"This is crazy," said Ea rl. "We sit here drinking
Perrier. and you couldn't buy a bottle or Pabst in
Paris if you wanted to. "
Gov. Richard Celeste of Ohio sa id legislation to
protect individual indu stries is not the answer.
Rather . he said, the Unlled Stales should set long·
term, across·the-board trade policy so its trading
partners and American industries would know lb£&gt;
rules and play by thrm.
Presenting prepared statements on International
trade to the governors were WUIIam C. Norris.

grll!ed . ribs: chicken and sa lmon before listen ing and
dancing to '50s and '60s rock ·n' mil hit s pl ayed IJy Phil
Dirt and the Dozers, a Columbus group.
Perpich, presiding over a discuss ion of interna ·
tiona! trade, proposed his tough trade policy and
rl'!'eived a positive response.
"The absence of a strong and predictable U.S. trade
policy has contributed sign li icantly to the sharp
deterioration of the International economic posit ion of
the United States and kept scores of domestic
indu stries and millions of American workers
defenseless against plant closings. bankruptcies,
farm foreclosures and recessionary unemployment
levels." said Perpich.
"Clearly. the mystical dream world of 'free trade'
Is a world that never was and never wlll be."
Perpich said countries that maintain excessive
trade surpluses with the United States and
discriminatory trade practices should be req uired to
gradually reduce their surplu s by opening th&lt;'ir
markets to U.S. exports orredudng thelrwnexpon s
to the Amerk:an market.
!'orne of the governors ex pressed doubt that words
on paper would change the trade situation.

••

'

"

&lt;

Racine was mcharge of safety measuM~ a.• all loose
bricks and tbt, which presented an bnmedlale
danger, were removed from the buDding. Further
decisions about the rullding's future can mt be made
mtlllnvestlgatloRS Into the fire are completed.

MIDDlEPORT

t~

I

The 7.4 percent drop was the
llll'Jl!St pen:entage decline In
housing sll¢s since May 19811,
when the housing Index declbted
by 9 percent and the sklwest
pace of housing starts since
December 19M, bureau anal,yl!ls

•

said.

The setback In home-buDding,
which has been among the
strongest !leclon of I he econoll\l'
In .recent months, was larger
lhan anticipated but not a
oomplete smprise.
Industry analysts have
wamed that a blgh rate of rental
vacancies paired with the losll of
lax IDcentlvcs for low-Income
holMig would depress the mullfamily secwr as lhe year
progressed.
The deCline followed a revl8ed
4 percent advance In April lo
2,m&amp;,ooo, the swlltest pace or
new housing acllvly sbtce 1978.
The May rate lllliW 12 percJent
blgh!!l' than the May 1983 rate ol
1,6114,000 and the decline Is more
a slatlstlcal 8herratlnn than a
true setback lor the ·economy,

analysts said.

chairman emeritus of Control Data Corp.; Da,·id H.
Haag , chief executive officer of LTV Steel Corp.;
Ly on Williams, pres ident of the United Stee l Workers
of America; and George C. Cheek. senior vice
president of the Pot latch Corp.
Williams agreed with Perpich that " Ire&lt;" trade
doesn't work II America is the ooly nation playing by
the ru les."
Hoag said the United States must neu traiizl' the
effects of foreign government subs idies to their
protected Industries.
Norris told the governors that thP management of
technology Is the key to ca tching up In the trade
imbalance. He said America is far behind other
nations In applying high technology to indust rial
production.
Janklow disagreed with Cricste's assessment that
the midwestern states have fas hloncd a " home·
grown " economic recovery despite the po licies of the
Reagan administ ra tion.
"There's no recovery in our state, " sa id JankJow
when confronted by reponrrs later. " It's not hitt in g
any rural state. It' s hilling thP indu strial states and
the service industries. "

•

State Controlling Board OKs
funds for Rio CC projects

Housing starts down in May

Flat

1 Section. 10 Page s 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspap~er

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 17, 1986

By LEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI I- The nation's midwest·
ern governors will wind up a three.&lt;Jay meeting today
by discussing an issue common to all their st ates the farm problem.
A day long series of seminars is planned at the 25t h
Midwestern Governors' Conference on various facets
of agr!cu !lure, and the featured luncheon speaker wil l
be Rep. Kika de Ia Garza, D·Texas, chairman of thco
House Agriculture Commillee.
The governor also arc slated to vole on a resolut ion
sponsored by Minnesota Gov. Rudy Perpich.-ca U!ng
for a tougher U.S. trade policy. The resolut ion is
expected to receive widespread support from the
S('Ven governors in allendance.
Perpich asked his rnJdwestern colleagues Monday
lo join him in formally urging the United States to
adopt a strong trade policy which protects American
manufacturers from surpluses and unfair trade
practices.
The governors enjoyed themselves Mooday
evening at an outdoor barbE&gt;cue at tb£&gt; Ohio
Governor's Mansion. They joined their staffs and
corporate sponsors of the conference In dining on

Squads make three weekend calls

.Gallon

enttne

at

Nation's midwestern governors to discuss farm problems

Summit ...

8

•

G-J-M Mental Health Board
going after 1-mill levy again

TIJESOAY NIGHT SPECIAL
ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED
CHICKEN YOU CAN EAl

99~

Pqe~

Two national finns
may develop sites in
Pomeroy, Middleport

WASHINGTON (UP! I - The that makes the state of Arkansas security restrictions, including lim· professional sports team.
Supreme Court fueled speculation partially liable for the costs of the iling the oours reporters could be in
The Senate bill allows 'Interest
today It has reached a decision on desegregation plan.
the court press room.
earned on bonds Issued by stale and
the Gtamm- Rudman balanced
-Said producers of the CBS show
Secrecy traditionally su'rrounds local govenunents for guvernment
budget law IJy releasing only two of "60 Minutes" and a writer for the the court's actions and It is rare for operatiOns to remain ruuy deduct!·
three opinions expected to be Atlan!lc Monthly magazine do not a reporterto learn of a decision untll ble. They would bE&gt; defined as Jllbllc
issued.
have to stand ttial on l!b£&gt;1 charges it is announced from the bench on use bonds If no more than 2'i perrent
Court officials, while not saying brought by a retired Army Lt. Col. the rrorning It is issued .
of the proceeds Is used by a private
whlch specific opinions are ready, Anthony Herbert who accused his
There have tx&gt;en several other enterprise.
routinely announce how many superiors of hiding war crimes in correct "forecasts" of Supreme
Peter Hartis, the Ohio £lemo.
opinions will be issued the following Vietnam.
Court rulings. One was an advance crat's top aide, said the exemptions
week. Last week a court spokeswo·
The rare reported leak from the report in Time magazine that gave are not like loose which Metzen.
man said there would bE&gt; three court brought dozens of reporters the gist of the court 's 1973 ruling baum sought ID kill on the Senate
·
Monday, four Tuesday and and staffers from Congress to !he legalizing abortion. Political com· ~bst~
opmlons
Metlenbaum said transition
three Wednesday.
Supreme Court to walt for the mentalor Drew Pearson also arcu· rules that help taxpayers who have
However, the court dellvered expected Gramm·Rudman dec!- rately "predicted" two rulings In relied on current law In making
only two opinions today, raising slon. Reporters jammed the press r_::th~e~I:_:9«J:::s·~--------..E!~~a~re~~~~----­
speculatlon the court decided to offiC&lt;' and overflowed into the hall
lwJid back temporarily Its decision where a line formed . The office
In the Gramm·Rudman case he· cleared within minutes when It
cause of a report by ABCNewsthat tx&gt;came clear the Gramm· Rud·
the justk:es had voted to strike man ruling - one of the top rases
down a key provision In the deficit left to bE&gt; decided thls year - wa s
reductiOn taw.
not to come.
ABC Supreme Court correspond·
Today was mt the first time
ent Tim O'Brien reported the O'Bril'n has been the center of
COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
decision, saying that whlle he had anentton at the court. Advance
FOR JUST
DINING ROOM ONLY
mt seen the opinion, he had bE&gt;en word cJ several Supreme Court
Served with whipped potatoes. chicken gravy,
told of Its contents IJy sources.
· actions leaked to O'Brien in the late
cole
slaw, hot roll, butter and coffee. Sorry,
As reported by O'Bril'n, the 1970s and again In 1981, prompting
no
substitutes
e.cept beverage with addicourt, on a 7-2 vote, declared an Inquiry by Chief Justice Warren
tional rice .
unconstitutional that part of the law Burger. After one investigation, a
designatlnglwJwtomakeautomatic government print shop employee
budget cuts If Congress and the lost his )lb.
White House fail to meet deficit
In 1979, O'Brien correctly prePH. 992-5432
POMIIOY, OH.
targets.
dieted two rullngs In the same
Featuring Kentu1ky Fritd Chicken
"We and
are the
confident
theCourt
storywUI
Is r~w~ee~k~.~T~he~~Je~a~ks~res~ul~ted~~in~ne~w:J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
correct
Supreme
announce the decision shortly,"
O'Brien said after the court failed to
rule in the case today.
In actilns at the court today, the
justices:
-Agreed to settle a tax dispute
over employer·sponsored medical
plans In a case the Internal
Revenue Service says could cost
government coffers millions.
-Let stand an order forcing a
suoorban Little Rock school district
to change Its boundaries to Include
black students from the city. The
justices also kept Intact an order

Harold tfion ) Ketchum. 69, of
Hockingport. died Sunday at
Camden-Oark Memorial Hospital Daisy Conkle
in Parkersburg.
Born in Parkersburg, he was a
Daisy B. Conkle, 89, of Little
son of the late Clyde and Mary Sandusky In Wyandot Co., died
Eaton Ketchum. He was a retired Saturday morning In Wyandot
postmaster or Hockingport post Memorial Hospital In Upper
office and a World War II Army Sandusky.
veteran. He was a member cJ
She was born June 7, 1897 in
Hockingport United Methodist VInton Co. to Meshach and Maggie
Church; Aladdin Temple Scottish Shiner Harvey. She married WilRite. Athens Chapter and Council liam Conkle In 1919. Ahomemaker,
Commandery; Coolville Lodge 337 Mrs. Conkle had made her home In
F&amp;AM; Belpre Shrine Club:
the Little Sandusky area for the
Athens Shrine Club; and the Belpre past 44 years.
American Legion.
Survivors Include two grand·
Surviving are his wile, Norma daughters, Mrs. Roger (Nortleei
Looney Ketchum, at home; one Zimmerman, Washlngton Courtson, Roger Ketchum, Hockingport ; house, and Mrs. Greg (Nancy!
one daughter, Karen Branham, Scheaffer, Mason; and one great
Parkersoorg; one brother, Curtis grandson.
Ketchum. Concord, Calif.; two
In addition to her parents, she
sisters, Vera Cronin of Belpre and was preceded In death by tx&gt;r
Doris Opuda of Matawan, N.J .; husband, In 1973; a 'daughter,
four grandchildren and several Gladys Carmean; eight brothers
nieces and nephews.
and five sisters.
Besides his parents. he was
Services wUI be Wednesday, 1
preceded in dea th IJy an infant p.m., at the Upper Sandusky
sister, Lillian.
Chapel of Lucas Funeral Homes,
Services will be Wednesday , II with Rev. Ricci Arthur officiating.
a.m .. at the White Funeral Home Burial will bE&gt; in Little Sandusky
(Continued from page I)
with burtal in Stewart Cemetery. Cemetery. Fril'nds may call at the
A London newspaper, The Ob·
Mason ic services wUI be held 7p.m. lunerallwJme on Tuesday from 3 to
server,
which disclosed the exist·
Tuesday. Friends may call at the 9 p.m., with the family present from
rnce
of
the Reagan letter tn Its
funeral lwJmr alt er 9 a.m. Tuesday,. 3 to6 p.m.
Sunday editions, reported that
Gorbachev had not yet replied
bE&gt;cause he is confused about U.S.
intrntions - partly as a result of
Meigs County Emergency Medl· Fire Department was alerted at the questions about U.S. abandonment
cal Service reports three calls same time; Syracuse was alerted of SALT 2.
Reagan announced May 27 that
Saturday and 11 calls Sunday.
atl2:Ll a.m.; Rutland and Racine
the
United States no klnger would
Saturday at 8: 06a.m., Rutland to were called for manpower at I; 11
be
hound
IJy terms oltb£&gt; unratified
Brick St. for Fred Cales Jr. to a.m.; TuppersPlalnswascalledfor
pact.
Then
at his televised news
Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers manpower at 1:27 a.m.; Rutland
conference
bst
week, he indicated
Plains at 4: 21p.m. to Sterns Rd. fro EMS at 8:40a.m. to Painter Ridge
the
United
States
might not break
Ca rl Dorst to Veterans Memorial Rd. for Martin Mollohan to Holzer
from
the
agreement
II the !'ov!ets
Hospital; Middleport at 10; 10 p.m. Medical Center; Rutland at 9;07
warm
up
to
arms
control.
to 749 !'outh Third for Nettle Hayes a.m. to Salem St. for Ida Young to
The Observer also reported
to Holzer Medical Center.
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Mid·
Armand
Hammer, chairman of
Sunday at 12 midnight , Pomeroy dleportat 10:03a.m. to651BeechSt.
Occidental
Petroleum Corp. and a
Fire Department was called to a for Mary Bonecutter who was
frequent
go·between
In U.S .· Soviet
fire at the Meigs Inn; Middleport
treated but not transported; Pome·
relatilns,
met
with
Reagan In
roy at 5: 12 p.m. to Meigs High
Washington
and
then
called on
ballfield for Art Stobart to Veterans
Brttlsh
Prime
Minister
Margaret
Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 6: 17
Thatcher
and
Soviet
Amoossador
·
p.m. to Salem St.for Robert Eads to
South Cenlral Ohio
Lron!d
Zamyatln
In
London
Holzer Medical Center.
Variable cloudiness today, with
scattered thunderstorms this after·
noon and hlghs In the upper 80s.
!'orne of the storms may he S('Vere.
Veterans Memorial
Plan Bible school
Mostly cloudy tonight, with scat·
Saturday
Admissions
Carl
Rutland Freewill Baptist Church,
tered thunderstorms and a low
Dorst,
Pomeroy
;
Scott
Brinker,
between 60 and 65. Becoming Salem St., wlll hold Vacation Bible
School the week ~June 73-27 with VMH
mostly sunny Tuesday, with hlghs
Saturday Admissions - Carl
classes for nursery to teenagers
In the mid 70s.
Dorst,
Pomeroy; · Scott Brinker,
The probability of precipitation Is from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Everyone
Pomeroy.
50 percent today, 40 percent tonight welcome.
Saturday Discharges - Leonard
and near zero Tuesday.
Fields.
Winds wUJ be from the southwest
Sunday Admissions - Preston
at 10 to 20 mph today, becoming
Parsons,
Racine; Rotx&gt;rt Curry,
Lottery' result8
noritx&gt;rly late tonight.
Pomeroy;
Mary Bonecutter,
Ohlo Extendo!d Forecaol - Wed·
Middleport.
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Saturnesday through Friday: Fair
Sunday Discharges - Deatra
day's
winning Ohio Lottery
through the period. Highs will be In
Simms,
Carl Dorst.
numbers:
the 70s Wednesday, ranging from
Dallf Nwnber
the upper 70s to the tow 80s
773.
To meet Tuesday
Thursday and In the 80s Friday.
Ticket sales t o t a I e d
Overnight lows mostly will be In the
$1,289,m.!Ml, with a paydf due of· Friendly Circle of trinity Church .
50s Wednesday and Thu!Sday
$384.490.00. LoUo
will meet at 7; 30 Tuesday night at
mornings and ranging from the low
2,
19,
39,
32, 36, 16.
the church.
to mid 60s early Friday.

•

··1\ward;·Winners

The actual estbnated number
of starts for the month was
189,700, do1m fradlonally lrom
189~ mAptil. The number Is

COLUMBUS - The State Con·
trolling Board has released $241,621
In state money to finalize the
planning phase of a proposed new
classroom·labratory buDding at
Rio Grande CommunJty College,
State Sen. Oakley C. Colllns,
Rlronton, announced today.
Colllns said the money would be
applied to architect's fees and other
consulting fees associated with the
proposed $4 million construction
project.
The proposed 38,001-square foot
faclllty will Include two leeture
halls, 12 classrooms, one learning
center, one audlo·visual center, a
nursing lab, a business computing
lab, and offices for the general
studies bu siness, and nursing
faculty.
Dr. Herman Koby, secretary·
treasurer of the community college

adjmied lor seasonal differencesandextmded or 12months1Al
arrive at the annual rate.
BuDding pennlts were Issued
at an anwal rate of 1,785,(0),
001&gt;11 5.3 pemcnt lrom the
previous month. II was the
largest peromtage decUne sbtoe
October IB85 and the slnwest
pace ol pennll Issuance smce
November 19811, the anal,ysts
said.

Rei!lonally, the Midwest suf·
fered the greatest decline In
!tarts, do1m 123;000 W 2&lt;17,000 at
an annual rate.
The Northeast slowed by
8.'1,000 lo 252,000 but the South
. pined 40,000 to 8:11,(0) and the
West roroe lli,OOO W 5110,000 at an
annual rate, the report said.

.I

board of trustees, a~ended Monday's controlling board session and
said the release of funds was
approved without question.
The project, In the planning
stages since the fall of 19&amp;3, was
placed In Gov. Richard Celeste's
capital improvements oodget In
May 1984. Ko!Jy said the building, If
constructed, would bE&gt; placed on
Ridge Avenue, just west ct. the Lyne
Center parking lot. and would bE&gt;
the largest bulldlng on the RGC.CC
campus.
The Columbus office of the
architectural firm U.R.S. Dalton
has bE&gt;en employed as architect on ·
the project, Ko!Jy said, and !he first
set of set of designs was !llbmitted
lor the state's approval on June 7.
Ko!Jy said the project must
progress through three stages pf
apP.roval before dirt can be turried,

with each stage dealing wit h more
specifics untU const ruction docu·
ments are fin alizl'd. Plans must
progress through such agencies as
the Ohio Boa rd of Regents and the
stale architect' s office to conform
with rullding an d fire co&lt;i• s. he
ex plained .
Final approva l is expected in
OctobE&gt;r or No,·emtx&gt;r. Koby said ,
oot actual construclioD" is not
expected to get underway until the
following spring.
Completion of 1he building will be
a pius fort he mmmunJty college by
meeting needs a nd eliminating
!llme classroom space pmblems,
Koby said.
"We've had !our or five tempor·
ary classrooms in such loca tions as
a oosement and the old college
bookstore, and this wUI allow us to
Continued on page If

�.

"

•

Tuesday, June 17, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

Farmland value will continue to drop, but at slower pace
By SONJA HILLGREN
UPJ Fann Edllor
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Arneti·
can fannland values, which have
declined by 29 percent nationwide
In the 191Wls, will continue to drop
thls year and next. but at a slower
pace, a new survey by the
government predicts.
Results of a survey, issued
Monday, also show that a largl'
share of land transfers last yea r
was due to foreclosures. that people
who Uve off farms are buying a

largPr share of acreage and that Ihe
portion of land purchases financed
by cred llls at a 20-year low.
The major finding of the survey
was that farmland values fell 12
percent bet ween April 1~ and
February 1986. The average value
of American lam1land ha s fallen 29
percent from a 1~1 peak, and
values have decl ined more than ;..o
percent in "'me Midwest stales.
In a summary repm1 of other
survey details, economists pr&lt;'dicted farmland values will decline

further during the remainder of forced 22 percent of all farmland ers and appraisers, county officials
1986, but by less than 12 percent. transfers last year. Voluntary sales and farm lenders.
It found that farmers who
They predicted a 1987 drop wlll be and estate sales were responsible
less than the rate In 1986.
lor '5/ percent and transfers among already owned land rough! about
"A stronger market for farmland family members made up 14 three·Hflhs of the acreage sold last
pmbably will emerge In the late percent. The remainder was not year. Landowners from df the
farm increased their share to 30
1980s,.. the department said.
ca tegorlzed .
Declinf'S over the P"St two years
In any given year, the arrount of percent of the land sold , up from
- both 12 percent - were the fa rmland that changes hands Is aboul one- quarter In recent years .
largPst back·tO·back declines since small, and !he department said the,
The survey also found that use of
a Depression-era drop of 17 percent number of farmland transfers Is oo credl! to finance farmland pur·
In 1932, and 19 percent In 1933.
chases has fallen !rom a 91 percent
a dcwnward trend.
The survey fo und foreclosures
The survey questioned 4,o:xl peak In 1981. Over the pas! year.
against heav ily indebtc&gt;d farmers people, Including real estate brok· only 76 perrent of farmland

transfers were financed by credit ,
the lowest level In :!J years. Sellers
of land provided one·thlrd of credit
extended.
As the Farm Cred it SystPm has
weakened financially, Federal
La nd Banks, wruch are par! of the
system, have reduced their share of
financing fa rmJand purchases.
Last year they provided just 25
percenTof credil for land transfers,
down from a peak ri Yi percenTin
IlK&gt; early 1900s. Banks and insura nce companies provided most of
the rest.

Wheat production still in spotlight; farmers b~ing polled
By SONJA JIILLGREN
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UPil - The
tale of Increased wheat production
In the Soutto?ast, double· cropped
with soybeans, is only a shor1
chapter in the story of American
wto?at surpluses of tbe 1900s.
U the whole story Is told, soft red
winter wheat gmwn In the Sou·
theast - sold for quick breads,
cakes and crackers - contlibu tes a
relatively small part of the nation's
overwhebnlng surplus.
But Its dramatic increase In
recent years shows how farmers'
decisions on producing cmps are
based on a wide rang!' of factors,
like availability of agricultural
research improvements, price sup·
ports and production costs, more
than on markets for their crops.
It shows ·Wheat can be grown
relatively easily in many regions, at
home and abroad, where the
toughest competition has sprouted
In recent years.
Wheat production is In lhe
spotlight this month as farmers are
being polled on fheir opinion of
production eontmls, which the
administration st rongly OPP"ses.
An Agriculture Department re·
port on doubiP-Cmpping said that
"lf·the Southeast becomes a major
wbeat·produclng region, !he fin an·
cia! eonditlons of producers in other
wheat· producing reiions may be
affected."
It said concerns over stockpiles
and farm policies make it "lncreas·
lngly Important to analyze the
factors causing this recenT trend in
wt.?at production In the Southeast."
Soft red winter wheat has been
SUil&gt;IUS since 1970. ThJs
stockpiles are 70 million bushels
compared with domestiC and for·
elgn use of 3362 million bushels.
StockpUes were less than :!J million
bushels In 19m.
In the early 1970s, farmers in the
Southeast produced 25 percent of
total soft winter wheat and the rest
grew In the eastern Corn Belt. The
Southeast's share rose to inorethan
40 percent by the ea rly 1900s. at the
same time stockpiles became
troublesome.
The Southeast's share of total
American wheal production rose to
10 percent, double the rate of a
decade earlier.
Farmers in the Southeast now
double-crop wheat with soybeans
oo nearly l&gt; percent of tto?ir
soybean acreage. Double- cropped
acreage exceeded 40 percent In 1982
with a peak of 58.5 percent in
Georgia.
To be fair, other classes of wheal
had much greater stockpiles as the
current marketing year began June
1. Those surpluses are grealer Ihan
tiK&gt; wtal sold In the UniTed States
and abroad In the previous 12
months.
Hard red winter wheat, Ito? staple
of the Great Plains. began the
marketing year with a stockpile of
976 mllUon bushels, 5 million
bust.?ls m:tre than comumed over
the past year.
Double-cropping in Ihe Southeast
- making tl)e Increase in wbea!
production possi ble- began before
World War II, when farmers grew
small grains fOllowed l:ty grai n
sorghum, giving them two crops
tmm the same field.
Higher crop prices In the 19ms
and new technologies enrouraged
fanners wexpand double-cropping
by planting wheat in the fall and
harvesting it in spring. Tben tto?y
quickly plant soybeans for harvest
in the fall .
Introduction of high·yieldlng
wheat varieties spurred double·
cropping. In some areas, 00 bushels
per acre c1 wheat Is the norm,
compared to 00-bust.?l yields in the

theast" by departmenl PConomist s
Michele
Carlson

- sa id farmers ' decisions on
double-cropping are more sensitive

w changes

In wheat revenue than
soybean income.

percent for every I percent rn ·
crease In wheat rev•enue.

f-:"-----;;~;;;;~----------~j'jjjiiijjii;;::"----------~jjjjj

'B&amp; .ESCORT
Stock n6763

Rain, NY Mets drop
Expos 11~ off pace
Leyland filed an offic ial protest,
citing a section of the National
There was too much rain to suit League Green Book tha t says
lhf' Monlrea l Expos Monday night umpires musl walt at IPa sl 45
and not enough lo piPase the mlnules befOre calling 1he game.
Piltsburgh Piralcs.
Crew chief John Kibl er called the
A heavy rain delayed Ihe start of game with one out and one on in thc•
the New York Mets· Expos game top of tto? sixth aft er back·IO·back
for an hour and 26 minutes, delays of 17 and 22 minutPS . In
Sl'vet·ety limiting attendance In between the delays, play resumed
what Expos' management was long enough for the Piralt'S ' losing
hoping would bP a box office starter, Rick Rhoden, 64, to lhrow
oonanza.
two pilches to MikP LaVal liere.
Only slightly more Than !6,o:xl
Kibler said to? ca lled the game
fans turned out for the first of a because of the rain, which slopped
three·game series between the two about a half hour later, and
Na tional League East Jivals, about forecasts of possible tornado,.,;.
onl'-third of the expected crowd.
"The game stopped the first time
Those lhal did show had to sit about 9:16 and Ihe gamf'wa s ca lled
through anolher rain delay of 38 at 9:56, which Isn'T even an hour,"
m Inures In the flflh inning.
Leyland said. " It isn'l C'Vrn 45
The fact ,the Met s won the game, minutes. According to Ihe way I
4·1, In 10 innings to Increase IIK&gt;Ir read the rules, that' s enough basis
NL East lead toll Y, gamPSover the for protest... "
Expos isn't likely to help the gat!'
Starlcr Danny Cox goI his se'!.·oncl
tonight.
victory in seven declsion'l, scall!'r·
"We must bP jinxed in tilis lng five hits- one a solo home run
stadium," Expos' manager Bob by rookie Barry Bonds- over fi vr
Rodgers said. " We're having trou· · innings. Jack Clark homered forSt .
ble drawing crowds and we finally Louis and Ozzle Smith and Willie
gel the Met s lnlo lown , and what McGee singled In one nm ear h. Thr
happens 7 II rains and still 1he Cardlnals also scored a mn on an
people stay away."
error by r ight fielder Joe Orsulak .
Darry l Strawberry singled home
Elsewhere in the NL, C11icag o
Wally Backman with the go-ahead topped Philadelphia 7·5, Atlant a
run and Len Dykstra added a nipped Cincinnati 4·3 in 10 Innings
two-m n slngiP off Jeff Reardon, 64, and San Diego blan ked San Fran
in thr liJih Inning To lifT the Mets lo ciseo 4-0.
their sPventh stra ight victory.
Braves ~ . Red• 3
"ll' s Iough to play wilh two rain
AI Allant a, Ken Oberklell singl&lt;'!.l
delays like that," Strawberry said. past drawn-In second ba seman Ron
"You've got to use a lot of Oester to &gt;rore Dale Murphy from
concentralion. You've&gt; got to put third· base with one out in thf'
your mind to it. In the lOth inning I bottom of lhe lOTh and lifT thC'
wanted lo get the ga meovPrwi!h so Braves. ATlanta tied the seore in 1hr
I bore down and I goT a line drive ninth on a lwo-run h:Jmerby Andr&lt;'S
single."
Thomas. Oberklell also hom r ml.
While the Expos lamented the
Cubs 7, Phlllles 5
bad weather In Montreal. Pirates'
AI Oricago, Shawon Dum Ion hi I''
manager .Jim Leyland didn'l trunk lwo·mn double to cap a four·run
the weat her was bad enough In fourth inning and Leon Durham
P illsbu rgh. Certainly not bad belted a two-run homer in the fi flh
enough to wa rranl lhe umpires to power the Cubs.Rooki(• Jamie·
calling off Ihe ga mf' lx&gt;cause of rain Moyer. makin g ilis major leagu e
in the top of the six lh, giving Ihe St. debul. gave up five rum over 6 1·:1
Louis Cardinals J 4-1 triumph.
Innings to gain the victory

Majol'8
By Unit ed Press lnre rnallonal
East

Q24

NC'w York ....
Mont r f'aL ....

P hiiCJdl'lp hiu
Chicago ..

MO.

St. Louis ........
Pilt sburr h ...
Hou~Hon

I,

:t3 29 5.12
1\ l litntu ..
31 30 .50R
Los An,e:C' h's .... .11 32 .492

'I&amp; RANGER
·Stock 11'6821

:10

Dir,go ..
C in r lnn &lt;.~!l ...

s

24

:12
35

.15

2ti

MllwaukC'£' ......

T!

29

Toronro...........
Clevel and .......

32 .12 HIO
30 311 .'~ 0

Texa s ......
Callfiforn ia ....

.484

Chicago .

4
5

MinnPso ta .......

5~,

.407 10

cago rSutcll ffe 4-H r. 1:05 p.m.
Hous ton 1 HC"rnandf'Z 1·1 Ju t Cincin ·
nali t \\'rl sh 1-11. 7: :\!l p.m .
\'P1.~· York 1 BNf'nyi 2-0 J at M ont r cul i lll'skf' th .1--1 1. 7::~!1 p.m.
ST. Loui s tM ;n hrw s 2-11 1.1 1 Pl 11s burgh tH C'uschr l 4-51,1: .1 5 p.m.
Lo s Angr lrs tWrl ch J- :11 at t\ rlanw

tMahk- r 7 - ~1. '; : ~0 p.m .
Sa n f rancisco tKrukow R- -1 1 i.lt San
Wt•dm•s d a~· ·s

Friday, June 13

Torrt Haner, GalliPOlis

Kansas

Stock Jt635J

s•a
MO.

·NBA
draft
today
1\T \\'

YORK rl 'Plr -

hr 'll soon [](• rich.
Da ughrrt.v is th&lt;· lr ad ing c&lt;Jndi
datr lu b(' lhP No. 1 over all sc-ifY·t io n

whr n tht• Philadr•lphia 7&amp;-rs b&lt;·g in
lhr 1\ BA dra!f al l p.m. EDT loda1·.
'l'ht' go in g pr icr fo r top picks i' in
thP

ra ngl' of S8:XJ.COO

J _\'Par

"Hunrlrrcls of Thousands of kid s
drra m of IX'l'Oming a pro a thll •tr· ...
said Da ugherTY on lh(' ('t'l' ol th1·
drafl . " ITtxl ay 1 is going Ia IX' ,.,.".
(•:-;citing.
,\ l'l."

rm ll ~·

lt

hasn 't hJt mf'

R&lt; '
q •

Al"l:l

ill

.lll

Scioto results
COI.C:YIBUS . Ohio 1UPJ 1 - \'an
Hva n F.x prcss grab beet Ihe lrad jusl
past thr quarter·mile pole and
."&gt;1&lt;:1\"('(j i n f ront lhP rf'sl of the&gt; wa y to
notc h ~~ on&lt;•· length v ictory in
~1 o nda 1 ·

Dr ivm b)· Ma rtin Wollam. lhr
wmncr co1wl'd the mile In 1:59 .1·5
and rPIU l1lt'!.l $.)to win. Oak Knoll
llm fin ishrd seco nd and Hallview

tn ~ t '&lt;H~ p:1~ 1 wht•n

ca mr in third .

ll ulrda,· Fart'. 11-.:• fa stes t 2·

thP !\o. 1 pic k h&lt;t S IK'f'n a Cf'fiCilrH~ .
th(' dra ft cl ass t his yrCJr lacb a

_\(•Jr·old

ton.:1 ti dP ~ u ]:x• r star. I t con ! etm~
IJIPnt - ]:x • rha p~ lht • mu:-- 1 in tt·n

lilt h.

-

ina . is b.\ · no mea ns a conSf'n r.;us \:o
1 choict'. lk muld iJf' su [J&lt;'rsedcd 11)'
any num tx ' r of pla\·rrs.
111(· thing tht~l most ron c'f'rn ~ lh:-scout !'&gt; b th.:l l t hr ph~ · ..,i c&lt;ll pia~· cJf

nig ht's fraf urn l sixth roce

rro l J t Scioto Downs.

Htmu ~

opJ)()~ ·rl

As

StCJtr;

torwards

Len

R ias

in

fh· P ·f'i g htl\~

thr
mih~

na tion 0\'f'J' a
tra c k , fini shc·d

Wi Jii[lms of t nuisiana StatC'. c:md
guards Ron H a rpf'r of l'vl iami

Owa\m· " ! Jc·arl"' \ \ 'a!-.hinf-,rtlln

of S\TJ cusr
11

York 1f\; irk ro i .'II , 7: :10 p.m.
Oct roi! tU ' I\C'a l 0.:11 at H altimo n~
I Di.lvls ~ - fit. 7:.1:, p.m
Sf&gt;al! lr ! M orga n ~ - 6 1 .t l Cl i ·\·rl ctn d
rN irk ro :1-:l 1. 7 ::\~ p.m.

,\ Crordi ng to :"B:\ HOUI ing d 1rn·
tor M LII1\' Hlakr thP on I~ tt&gt;al111h;tt
~r ill not br ~1 i drcl ll\ d raft is th!• l.o:-Angrlrs I "liPIX'I''-.· :\nd ttw!' s on I~
tx'&lt;.·au .o,t~ t he&gt;~' do not pick unt il 11\1 ·

third round .

W~l gf'r£'d

l-luhhard tourney
~tart s July 7

SU RSC RIPTIO' R,\Tf}l
8}' Carrier or Motor Rout e
Onr \\' rf'k
.... .. .................. Sl.J(J
On f' Month
.... S-1 .Po0
Onl' YP&lt;"H
S5i .20
SISGLE COl"\'
P RI CE

Th&lt;' 1986 Bil l Hubbard Memo·
ria l Lil l ie Lea gue• Tournamen1
wil l beg in J ui)' i . A 1.1 player ros·
t&lt;' r a nd a $15.00 ent ry fee is
mail to Syr acuse Fir e

D!'par l menl. Deadlin e fo r entr v
is June '!7.
·
For morr in formatio n call992-

Su b~rrlbPT" '&gt; no! dPs1 r ln g 1u pa ~- ! hP ('&lt;J r
riPr mav rf&gt;mll In adv :.mcp dirt•cr !u

Thr Daif\ Srnlin£ll on aJ . ti or 1~ msmth
tD sis. Crf'dil will bfo givm Glrr if'r l u r h
mont h

~o subsrr i pt!On" b\ mail P£'fffil!l(&gt;(1 In
tow ns wh crr home r:. 1r r lt'f SC'r\'ICf' Is
avdil ablf'"

RUTLAND TIRE SALES
"OETTING YOU THERE Sf\FELV"

Inside Ohi o

1'£'xas &lt;H Ca lifo rnia . nig ht
Drt i'OII at Bu lt imorr. nig ht
Boston a! 1\"rw York . ni gh !
Scali If' at Clro,:rland . ni ght
ChicaJ!:O at Mlnnrso i;L ni ght

M aster Card and Visa W elco me

'289.

LOW AS

BUY
PINE BEDROOM SUITES
ONLY

'399

LARGE DRESSER MIRROR,
CHEST &amp; HEAD BOARD

MA
2ND STREET

TABLE LAMP AND
GET MATCHING
LAMP

FREEl
cS04J 773·5592

HERMAN GRA Tf OWNfR

lift·

inno,a li\t• a1•·

in .. untll('t" j.,
on•· namt·

&lt;~nollwr r.·a!Onn ~tn

,.a,.,

it lw .. t."
.
·l .ikt• ou r lnd.- lt·rmin all· 11rt··
miurn li ft· ln ,.u r an('t•. -\II il
m.- an .. i.. rhal in 1ht· '" f11t of..;a~.
lonl!•·r lift· ,., .,an l anrit•., in tht·
futun ·. -\uht·O\otnt•r .. ha.. II•·
Ot&gt;'-ihilit~

to lo"' ''r ~our pr•··

mium !O arrord i nl! l ~ .
.\.!'k 'our inclqwnrlt•nt \ ulo·
0"' rwr ~ a!!t'fl1 for lht' dt•laiJ ...

,.

.Aulo-Owner,f

Insurance

Life . Homt . C n n u~ lm'''·
One name ,oJ _
\ , 11 :.~ IL

. Sl5.ti0

"

EVENING
WITH
THE BOSS.

'· '

'· ·.
"

And get an answer to your financial needs within
48hOUJS,

'995

Don't be shy. You've got a date with the boss Even eve ni ngs or
weekends- just call and make an appointment. 'tour Beneficial
manager will happily meet with you. For a Perso nal or Horm·
Equity Loan. Or a Credit Line Account up to $200.000. And
you'll get an answer in 48 hours or Jess. Soget tn touch with
the boss. Your date's waiting for you.

ALL
GIBSON REFRIGERATORS

.

.,.

....
.,
.,

The boss is in at the following locations:

PRICED RIGHT!

GALLIPOLIS4t6 SecoodAYenue

... 448·2765

POMEROY-

COME IN AND CHECK OUR PRICES!

FURNITURE

lo

SPEN11

SOFA, LOVE SEAT &amp; CHAIR

NOW ONLY
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.
OTHER LA·Z·BOY CHAIRS
AT REDUCED PRICES!

-\ulu ·O~ ru · r-.

pruuh

•

3 PIECE
LIVING ROOM SUITES

REGULAR '379.00

992 -6687

.... SJ I. W
... $59.80

J2 \\'(&gt;('kS.

BUY NOW AT

Monday, June 16
Keith Ashlay, Pomet"ov. Ohio

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

.. s~ . H

\.1 Wf'f'ks

3
LOVE SEATS
THAT MUST GO

Lol11 Taylor . Point Pteasant

... S29.1".?

2!i \\'('('k o: .

MASON FURNITURE ODDS &amp; ENDS SALE!

Sunday. JtJne 15

.. Sl-1.16

U Wf'f'kS
21i Wt"'f'kS
~:! \\' i"Y'kS.

*ALIGNMENTS *FRONT END WORK
*BAnERIES *TIRE REPAIR
LOCATE D : MAIN ST ., RUTLAND , OHIO
OPEN : 8· 6 MON .- SAT. ; 8 -8 FRI.
PH . 742 -3088

... .

)1 1111 Subs criptions

lOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS
AND LIGHT TRUCK TIRES

Gam~

For information leading to the
arrest and conviction of person
or pmons responsible for the
cutting of fence along property of Homer Belt on Smith
Ridge Rood. On weekend of
May 17, 1986.
Call Homer Belt at
614-843 ·5486 or Sheriff's
D rtment at 614-992-3371.

POSTMASTER: 5(-nd iH:klrrss chan21'S
ro Thr Dailv Sml lnrl. Ill Courl St.,
Pn rrll"'rn~·. Ohio l'ii6~1 .

' 909 or 992 ·7775.

Kan sas Cit\· a t Oiikla nd
Toront o at ·M ilwaukf'f'

S400 REWARD

Mrmbrr : Unil('(! Prrss ln tNna ti onat.
Inla nd Dat i" Pr f'Ss Assoctalion and ltw
Ohi o r-.: r wsPa pN ,\ sso&lt;"ln l lon. i\" at iona l
Ad vrni.~ in g Reprrsrnl ativr. Bra! ham
1\1'\4-"SpapN Sal E'S. 73.1 T hir d A\"enu r.
'lpw York ..\'ew Yor k 100\";"

r-.;;;;;;;;;;;,:;;,:;;,:;;,:;;,:;;;;;;;,:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-l

Toront o 1 Kf'~ · ~ -51 at Milw ~HL k C'1 '
!Darwin .l.\1. H: .1:1 p.m .
Chi c &lt;.~gu rD otso n .J-61 at .\l in nl':-.ota
~ S mithso n Vii. 8:.1!1 p.m
T&lt;' xa s /Wr ight J-0 or Mahl!'r 0-11 at
Ca lifo rnia ! WitT 7--1 1. 10: ."1 :'&gt; p.m .

not chrd hi s sixth sav&lt;• .

Publis hf'd rver\ aflf'rnoon . M onda v
rhrough F'nc:lay. Ill Court S1. . Po m&lt;&gt;r ov. Ohio. bv lhr Ohio \'a ll ey Pu b11s h1n·.e Co mpri n:r· Mul ri mr d ia . I nc..
Pomer ov . Ohio ~5769. Ph 992-2156. Sf'·
cond cl&lt;i ss pos ragr paid al Porn('r oy,
Ohio.

.~'.'7R. ffi'l

npeded -

&lt;J sin g!(' by

(l.SPS IU·9601

nra r thP qua r ter· m ilr polr J S thP

2. 7~

Law scored on

victory .

.Jorge Or! a for whal (TOV!'&lt;i 10 bt• Ihr
winning run . Bud Black. H. was
the winner and Dan Qui srntrrry

,\ DlvL&lt;tfo n of Multimedia, Inc.

l.;i , k ,\ian . the 'econd IJf'tting

Of

mn. Bill Wegman . 2· 6, took I il· loss.
Royal' 3, A's 2
AI Oakland , &lt;ali! .. Ru dy La w .:·
lin ed a double off the right fi f·ld wall
to score Willie WilS&lt;Jn WII h the
go·ahead run and lead lhrf(oyalsto

The Daily Sentinel

rhol&lt;'(' ln thP Si'\ 'f'nth racr wa s
t lf· t u ; II J~ · thf' first horsr undrr thr
wirt· hut listrd as a nonfinishf'r

C' rG\\'t l

innings and allo wc'CI one unea rnN..I

Men's USSSA Class D Wor ld
Qualifier Tourn a ment will be
played at Buck eye Park in Hadley Field in Marlen a June 28 th
and 29 th .
Winner will receiv e a berth in
Ihe world tournament Labor Day
weekend in Cinci nn ati. SPCo nd
and t hird place teams will get
berth in the sta te tour na menl.
Enl ry fee Is $60 a nd two St ee le
balls .
For more info call Ken Offe n·
borge r at 614·3'74·2943 or Je rr y
Hu ck at 614·6'78·2808.

!{i\'Pf" Baron triump hPcl in thP
•·nll1 rarr to hmrl a 1 -R- ~ trifrcta
cnmbi nat io n th a t was worth $1 .0CJ.
I '; tddy .Jor 13.\Td \\'a s sffond and
,\roa;io s ho~rrd .

r\

'

.

Blue ,Jays 9, Brt~ers ~
At Milwaukee. Garth lorg drove
home thre'&lt;' mn.s and F. rnir· Whiff ,
Tony Fernandez and Gl'orgp Fl&lt;'ll
all homered to power lh&lt; · Blue J ays
10 their lilird slratghl vtctorv. Doy le
Alexander , 5-3, workf'd !h&lt;· fi rslliv·e

Men's softball
event June 28-29

rOh ioJ. J ohn n,· l taw kin s of IJ ukf•.
~1nd

~.

allowing Joyner lo movt&gt; to second .
After DeC!no:•s stmck out and
Rl'ggie Jackson was inlentiona lly
walked, George Hendrick swung
and missed at a 3-2 pllch for whal
would ha ve lx:'f'n The final out, bul
Mercadc allowed Ihe pitch to gel by
him for another passed ball and
Joyner raced home.
" It 's not his faull lllal we lost lhr
ballgame," Hough said of Mercado.
" That's part oil he game. The man
just dmpped the ball . Dumb plays
lnol mverlng the pi al&lt;') are a lot
worse. I was looking right at him
tMercado ). I juSl assumed thaT it
was going to roll away a few feel
and Ihat he's got it. It was my faull.
I should've been at home plate."
Kirk Mt&lt;:askill, 64, allowed only
four singles - one after the second
inning - while striking ou 110 10 get
the victory .
"Sure there's tu ck involved,"
Joyner sa id. " It was a mental lapse
on Charlie's part not lo rover. He
was probably tired a nd relieved to
sllike oot George and ju st forgot."
In other AL ga mes. Boston
pounded New York 10·1, O..troit
nipped Ballimore 5·4, Toronl o
trimmed Milwaukee 9-2. and Kan·
sas City trimmed Oakland 3-2 in ll
Innings.

~~·\

ul

MarY land. l'hurk Person of ,\ u·
burn . Ke•nr11 1\'alkcr of 1\c'ntu c·k,·.
\\'alter 13&lt;- r.tY of St. John'· .John

LA·Z·BOY CHAIRS

\

Bra d

D aughPrty. ca l lc'&lt;.l sof1 and considPITod J qut•stion mark h_\· .'-.()nw
i\B A SC(JUi s. kn ow~ um• t h in ~ -

n~ ult u f ~Hl J cr·idPnl . Nf'it hrr h orse ·
nor d r i n ' r was inj un'(:!.

1. l af' kson 2-.JJ o11
Oakland rS tpv.:ar t 0-0 J, .1: ).'l p m
Boston ! Woodwa r d 1-'!t .1 1 :\1 ·'-\

Games

nin rh-inning dcfc•nsivc replacem€'nl

- dropped his bloop fly ball down
1h1· lr fl fi eld Iinr. Joyner Ihen ruined
Hough's no·hit alte·mpt with a line
'i ngl&lt;•Io rig hi CPnlrr to knock In 1111'
t.vi ng nm.
With Doug DcCm c&lt;·s at the pi ale,
flr lando M ~ rcado commiltcd his
fi rs! passed ball of lh&lt;' inning,

13&lt;-dford of Mr•mphis SIO I&lt;' and
Chris 1\'a&gt;hbum of :\orlh Carolm •

(il v

\\'ednr.sda)" s

Hough, 5·3, !'ntcred the ninth wilh
a no·hil ft'r and st ruck ou t lhe firs!
ba ll!'r only to have pinch hill er
.lack HowPII reach Third base when
Gmrgr \Vr ighl - inserted as a

Ill

A22

:n

2j

Ra ngrr s.

wlll'n h&lt;' lost dri1rr Trent Tharps

.m r

.lti

CJIARLIE HOUG II

(.Just Mis,.,s N&lt;&gt;-llitler)

Amo ng 1ho:-.(' C'.\ pr'("trd to gu in 111j ·
fi rs t rou nd :JI'f' ('('nlt'rs \\"i lli ~m1

fa liforni&lt;l 2. TPxa s I
Tuesday's Game,.; (F\U Tinll's ElYf t

Saturday , June 14
Virginia Watters. St. Albans. W . Vtt.

OF

25

37

day. Th ai all esca ped Hough
Monday night .
Hough . in his 14th major league
sea son. lost a no·hil ter aflcr 8 1·.1
Innings and lhcn losl tto? game
wht'n ht• failed to cover home plate
on a passed ba ll which allowed
Wally .Joy ner to score fro m second
ba s.• and givC' the Cal ilornia Angels
a 2·1 vicTOry over The Texas

tht• t\ Bi\ will m&lt;•n1r lm Daughcrl\·

.:-{)R

.11

man , bunting and covering bases
arc t hin gs that artl gone ovrr every

Rt ,
to '

innin g~

San F ra ncisco at San Dh-go. ni_g ht

100•s

~ \ .'

34 2R .~:H R
.12 31 .:ilR 21 -'
J1
27

to pound funda mentals lnlo their
players. Hilling the right cutoff

:)! .!

.46 7 It

Toro nt o 9. Milwau kC'C' t
Konsos Cit y 3. OJkla nrl

Ph iladelphia &lt;I! Chicago
l'w w Yor k at Mont rPol. nig ht
St. Louis a t Pitt sburgh, night
l.os An _gp lrs &lt;tl Atlanta . ni ght
Hou ston al C'in('i nnati, ni g-h!

SAVE

28 32
\\'est

GIJ

.Oil
.::.Xi
5H
5:!5

St•a ll lr ..
~5
]9
Monday' s R.Ps ults
Bos ton 10. I\rw York I
Det ro!! 5. BaltlmorP ~

Dit•go rHo)·t l ·.1t. 10:05 p.m.

St!rl: 116805

Ci t ~·....

2'!,

Mondav's Rrsul!s

MO.

21
21.i

Oakla nd ..........

ChicagO 7, Phi l ad r lph i&lt;~ 5
St Loui s 4. Pi tt sbutg h
in ninRS
!\ llan w 4. \inc l nn&lt;.ll l 3. 10 inn in,l!s
NI'W York 4. Mont rr a l 1. 10 inn ings
~ an DiPgo 4. S&lt;~ n F r anci sco 0
Tut•sday's Game!'! (1\11 Times E IYf)
l'h iladC' Iph iJ !M addux 0-21 at Chi ·

651

41
37

Detroil. ........ ...

I r.:~i n ing,. m(;l nagcrs and coaches try

but Daught•rty, J ~ - foot .
forv.·a rd -(·rnrrr from \"ol'l h Ca1 ul

Boston ............
Nrw York ...
Bal! imorr .......

Kansas

.574

Sa n F'rJ ncisco .
S&lt;:~ n

GB

44
16 .733·
32 27 .542 I I!~
28 31 .475 15'h
26 35 .426 IR 'h
2.1 35 .m 19
24 35 407 1 9•~
We.'it
:15 26

..

Pet

By .IOE ILLUZZI
UPI Sports Writer
You would Think aft er aboul 20
trips to Florida Ihat Charlie Hough
wou ld know betler .
Du ring Ihe rT-gimenls of spling

~l'Jrs

AMER ICAN LEAG UE
East
" ' L Pet

NATIONAL LEAG UE

s

Hough loses no-hitter, game
in 9th; Yankees drop 10-1 tilt .

By FRED McMANE
UPJ Assistant Sports Editor

w

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3 ··

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Scoreboard ...

1900s.
Increased eonservati:m tillage
accelerated chang!'. By leaving
crop resldues In fields to reduce soll
erosiOn, farmers can plant stJY·
beans more quickly than II they
plowed their fields using convert·
tlonal dllage.
Forgoing plowing can give
farmers an extra week or two to
grow soybeans. New sh:lrt· season
soybean varieties that mature late
enoogh to provide good yields have
been lntmduced In recent years.
Recent developments In herbl·
cldes Ideal l:lr conservation tillage
illso promoted double- cropping.
· ConservatiOn tlllage can have '
con!Ucting environmental Impacts.
It reduces soU runoff and Increases
productivity, but greater pesticide
use potentially exacerbates grouoo·
water pollution. Pesticides also
pose problems wt.?n pests develop
resistance.
The study - "Double-Cropping
Wheat and &amp;!)'beans in the Sou·
(

Farmers can be expecled to
Increase double-cropping by I

Tuesday, June 17, 19,86

E:venin p

ucl w~Pknd l b~· ~ ppo1n tmut

A {luJn:.wbJ•'(H

JOOW Second Slreet

992·211,

lr CII&gt; du.iJ~Jid j"l~·

";

: I

ftBeneficial.

•

"

.,,
"

Talk to the manager, and you're talking to the boss, · ··

MASON, W: VA.
•

'

�Commentary
Ill Court Stre&lt;&gt;t
rumeroy. Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE t''Tt:RESTS OF THE \IEIGS-\1..\SOS ,\RE,\

ROBERT L. WI"G ETT
ruhllsh&lt;'r
BOB HOEFUCH
GrnE&gt;ral Manager

DALE ROTHGEB. ,JR .
"ews Editor
A ~1E,1B E R ol Th r l'nift'd P r~s lnh·r·n.llion ,tl. ln L1nfl O.u h
lion and thr Amt--r iran ~E&gt;w sp ;r pr r Pub lis hr r· ~ ,, ~~ocl.trwn

P rr~- M~oo:: ·1 ,1

LEITER S or OP I:"'JO\ ar·r W (' i ('() ffi{' _ Thr ~ ~hould tx· It·!' ~ thJn .'l[l(i II O H1~
long . Al l \t&gt;ttPr s a rf' su bj t'&lt;'l 10 t.J il in_g and must IX' s i_g nI'd lt·Hh n.J m" . .~e l dr('ss ,_tnd
tf&gt;l ephon (' numbrr l\o un si.'! nA1 IP!!rrs wlll b&lt;' publ is hrd Lt&gt;t tf'n
~ood tas1e. addrrsslmz lssurs. nOT pPr son ;~ litit•s

~nould

tw In

Sophisticated choice

WASHINGTON - Fifty years
have passed since the House of
Representatives Impeached fed e ral Judge Halsted L. Ritter and the
Senate convicted him of misll&gt;havior, high crimes an d mis&lt;F rr£&gt;a ·
nors . The time has come!or the two
chambers of Congress to impeach
a nother federal ju&lt;l!;e and to throw
him out of offtee.
The miscreant judge is Harry
Claiborne of Nevada. Appointed ~
.Jimmy Carter in 1978, he has
brought a new distinction to the
federa l bench: He is the only
fedPra l judge ever sent to prison.
Claiborne was convicted in 1984 of
fa iling to rrport S106,000 in income
from his law practice in HUng his
tax returns for 1978 and 1979. The
U.S. Cour1 of Appeals for the 9th
Circuit afftrm€d his conviction and
the U.S. Supreme Coon refused to
, re
_ v.le•w•t•h•e•c•a-se_._ _ _ _ _ _.,.

Claiborne now is se!Vtng a of the United States "shall be
two-year prison term at the Federal removed from offlee on Impeach·
rnson Camp at Maxwell Air Force rnent for, and conviction of. tn&gt;a·
Base In Alabama. He has adam· son, bribery. or other high crimes
antly refused to resign. He con· and misdemea nors." It takes two·
tlnues to draw his salary d$78,(1X)a thirds of lhe Senate to convict.
year.
In this century, five federal
The situation is Jreposterous, judges have been Impeached by I~
incredible, outrageous. If this eml· House. In 1903 Judge Charles
nent felon had one oooce r:i respect Swayne of Florida was Impeached
for the bench that he has disgraced br padding his expense accounts
by his crtminal conduct, he would and using property in receivership
step down. BeCause he refused that for ltls personal gain. He was
hooorable course, rut one alterna- acqullted. In 1912 Judge Robert W.
tlve remains: The House should Archbald of Pennsylvania, a circuit
move Immediately for ltls Impeach· judge serving on the old Comme=
rnent , and tbe Senate should set Coon, was charged with conspiring
aside a couple of days this summer with railroad Interests. He was
for his trial.
convicted. In 1926 Judge George W.
Under the Constitution, federal English of East St. Louis was
judges hold their offices "during accused of aceepting an interest·
good behavior." That section must free loan from a bank In which he
be read in conjunction with the was a director. He resigned before
further provision that clvU offlcers.. . .h.e..ro_u_ld_be_b,.r..ou_g;.h.t..to-tri•a•l.•_.,

This fall, Peter Rodino almost surrly will bPcome one of few proplP to bP
limes to the House of Represrntatives.

elected~

But the \'Pteran NPw Jprsey [)(&gt;mocra t has an f&gt;H'n rarrr dislinrtionhe is one of only five white House memlrrs who t11)r&lt;'Sent co ngressional

districts whell' black voters are in the majority .
By defeating three black opponents in til&lt;' Democratic primary earlier
this month, Rodino \irtuan,· assu red himself of rr-E'Iertion.
Eventually, Rodino's district. centered on Newark. probably will have a
black rrpresentative. In 1~. its voting age population was :&gt;4 (l('rcent
black and it maybe as high as 00 percent in the next cPnsus. There probably
Is no white politician who will be able to carrv the disuict after Rodino. now
77, vacates the seat.
The June 3 primary raised an interesting questio n fort he district's black
voters: Would it be better to have a freshman black congrNsman with
llttiP influence in Washington or a senior white rrprPsrn ta t ~·e who hPad s
a n Important committee with jurisdiction over, a mongol her subjects, civil
rights legislation?
The Rev . Jesse Jackson. supporting Rodino· s prin cipa l black challen~r.
put the issue more succinctly: "seniority" vs. "dPsl iny." Rodino' s chief
black opponent also was backed by Newark's ·new black mayor, Sharpe
James, who ousted the city 's firs t black ma)•or. Kmneth Gibson, earlier
this year.
But the incumbent also had some powerfu l carnpaignprs, among them
several well-known black members of Congn'Ss from ot her stairs and Sen.
Edward Kennedy, who campaigned in the district for Rodino.
They argued thai Rodino's n.:ord as chairman r:i the Hou se Judiciary
Committee and as a staunch libPral made him the best man. black or
white, the district could have in Washington .
In tbe end, enough of the district's black Democrats stuck with th&lt;'ir
white congressman to give him the nominal ion with a comfortable margin
o1 victory.
The result might be ascribPd to the power of ineurnbency - Rodino
probably has held tbP sea t for rrost o1 the alult lives of most r:i !he districl's
voters - but It also might he intefllreted as an exa rnplr of political
sophistication thai defied conventional notions of bloc voting behavior.
Such a conclusion would constitute rea l irony. When Rodino was first
elected to Congress in 1948,1talian -Amcrica ns held the baian&lt;P r:i politic" I
power in that part of New Jersey. His el hnicity probably had iJS much to do
with his election as a ny oth&lt;'r fac tor.
It Is also of some lnlerest that Rodino was not highly re-garded in the
House before he took over t h~Judlclary Committee chairmanship in 1973.
As secood·ranking committee Deroocrat, Rodino was designated as th~
author of the committee l1'ports on all the major civil rights bills of th&lt;·
1960s. In fact, the reports wert' largely written by the committee staff.
Onee, when Rodino's authorship was llllr&lt;l by a rrporter.ollf' of Rodino's
New Jersey colleagues suggested with some sarcasm that the N&lt;&gt;wark
congressman probably hadn't read anything on the rrport but his own

name.
Rodino went on to preside. with precision and fairness. over the
Impeachment pi'OCC&lt;'dings aga inst Prf'Sidcnt Rich" rd NLxon. The
congressman who downrated him went on to Absc·"rn and" prison t~r m .

utter to the Editor
Keep one lane open!
I would like to say In pa sl
weeks we have heard of meet ·
lngs and phone calls lo the st ate
not to close the Pomeroy -Mason
Bridge. Please keep one lane
oren .
I think the time has co me to tell
everyone to wake up to real lif e.
This bridge Is old and In need of
repair a nd you ca n't half do the
job with one lane open.
The state must do what has 10
be done and the sooner the bet·
ter . But If you were to look at the
point the local business takes you
would th ink safety was the last

tlng on their minds. Do we just
forget a few years back we had a
bridge fall killing ma ny people in
our area? I , for one , say c losr I he
bridge.
I am sure we will have a river
ferry to take traffic buck and forth .
So come on, business people, don't
think about the money you will
lose; think about the safety of the
loca l people driving across the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge. So for now,
let's get the job done before the
real shopping time starts.
Floyd H. Cleland

Responds to recent OU grant
If you have not read the article
In the Sentinel for June ll . 1986
about "A Grant for Ohio University", do so. Do not miss such rno·
mentous lnformatlon. I wonder
what swivel chair artlsl thought
that up . To me It Is baloney going
In one e nd or a sausage grinder
and baloney coming out the other
e nd . I am sure Celeste Democrat
ts turning the gri nder . Those
weighty terms like "conflict re·
solution", "grievance handling"

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Tuesday. June 17, 1986
Page-5

lnnpeach hinn__________________k_m_es_J_K_u_~_tr__
kk

The Daily Sentinel

rAT WHITEHE.'I.D
Assistant Publlsher /Conlroller

Page-4-The Daily Sentine
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday. June 17, 1986

and "action oriented int erventions" oughl to give those kids In
" labor management" something
to think about.
If you have never had a conversation with a bureaucrat by all
means do so. They can Ialk them selves out of any cor ner. It is an

election year. Anything to keep
the mon ey flowing Is good poll!·
ics. There ought to be a gra nt to
get rid of the groundhogs and
multiflora rose a rou nd here.
Ga)·le Pri ce

Today in history
Today is Tuesday, June 17, til&lt;' !68th day of 1986 with 197 to follow.
The moon is moving toward its fuU pha se.
1lte morning stars are Mars and .Jupiter.
The ev~ning stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this date are undN the sign r:i Gemini. They include .John
Wesley, the founder of Methodism. in 1703; actor Ra lph Bellamy in 1905
(age8li; a uthor John Hersey in 1914 ; Dean Man in in 1917 lage69 !; sln~r
Barry Manllow In 1946 Iage 40t ; actress Susan St. James in 1946 tage40J;
and comedian Joe Piscopo In 1951 Iage :I;t.
On this' date In history:
In 1967, China announced it had SUCC&lt;'ssfully -tested a hydro~n bomb.
In 1972, five men with cameras and bugging ('(Juipment were arrested In
tbe headquarters of tiK' Democratic National Committee at tbP Watergate
apartment-hotel complex In Washington.
In 1974, Herbert Kalmbach, President Richard Nixon's former personal
lawyer, was sentenced to six to 18 months In prison and fined $JO,(IX) for
Ulegal election fund raising.
In 1982, Argentina's President Lropolw Galtleri resigned In response to
Britain's viCtory In the Falkland Islands war.
In 1981, the British defense magazine Defense An ache said the Korean
airlllll'r shot down by the Soviets In 1983 was part of a U.S. Intelligence
mission. The United States dlsmls.sed the chargt&gt;.

The fourth judge In Ibis century,
Harold Louderback of California,
was impeached for "tyranny,
oppression and favoritism" In the
appointment of receivers. . The
charws were weak, and Louderback was acq ultlcd . Then carne
Florida's Judge Ritter in 1936. He
was charged with secrelly taking a
$4,500 fee from his former Jaw
panner - $2,500 of It In cash on
Olristrnas Eve cl19:Jl- and with
evading Income tax. Ritter was
acquitted on six counts but convicted on a catchall sevent h chargp
and thus ll'moved from office.
In all r:i the Hve cases, much wa&amp;
heard about a definition of "high
crimes" and especially of "rnisde·
meanors." Senators pondered
whether they had power to remove
a federal judge on their own notions
of bad behavior as dlstingulsh&lt;'d
from "good behavior." Much was
said about English law In 1701 and
about the Intention of the framers in
1787.
None of th&lt;'se queslions arises In
the rnaner cl Judge Claiborne. The
facts are not In dispute. He was
indicted. convicted and sentenced
to prison for Income tax evas ion. In
heaven's name. isn't !bat enough?
Rep .•Jim Senscnbrmner, R-Wis..
has Intended to Introduce p. resolu·
lion of lmpeachmenl last week. In
c:IPferen&lt;P to Peter Roeino. chair·
man of Hou se Judiciary. Sensenbrenner agrff'd to wait until the end
of the month. Rodino wants to walt
for a repon form the 9t h Circuit and
the U.S. J udicia l Conference, but
what is the sense of that• Such
ponc:IProus wh&lt;'el·spinnlng could
take months. and meanwhile Clal oorne would continue to draw his
salary.
Federal judges occupy a unique
place In oor syst&lt;'lll of government.
Members of Congress may he
expeUed by their colleagues. Prrsi·
dents may fail of rr-E&gt;Il&gt;ctlon . Only
judges hold their offices "during
good bPhavior," which Is to say, for
lite. On til&lt;' cold black record, Harry
Oaloorne has behaved badly.
Throw the bum o..n!

TOP HONORS - Among the students honored at
aw!U'&lt;h day presentations at Portland Elementary
were, left to right, Heather Gibeau! as outstanding

sixth grade student, .Glenda Holter, student body
award winner, Wid Becky rarsons, citizenship award
winner.

historians .
But If Nixon does have the nine

li\•es of a cat. it must he a block one .
Evidence continues to bubble to the
surfaee that Nixon brought rnisfor·
tune to the American public when
he set out to engineer his re-election
in 1972 by whatever mean s
necessary.
One still·uoresolved mystery of
the Wntergate scandal involved
Greek -America n businessman
Thoma s Pappas. An Investigator
for the Watergate special prosecutor concludPd In a repor1 tha t
Pappas- who admittedly cooperated with the CIA "an)' timc my
help was requested" - was til&lt;'

conduit for Uiega l contribut io ns to
The prosecutors stopped shon of
til&lt;' Nixon-Agn ew re-election cam· caUing the ca mpaign contribution a
palgn from Greek businessmen In quid Jl'O quo for thP fuel contract,
1972. He had performed the same but they did note that the Pentagon
service in 19Gl, funneling money to had received lower bids fort he fuel.
til&lt;' Nixon-Agnew campaign from Pappas' OVv'll company· was givf'n a
the Greek military junta, according sub-contract.
Pappas was also suspected by
to House Intelligence Committee
testimony in 1976 by the former U.S. prosecutors or contribut ing some of
ambassador in Athens. Henrv the money dcmandf'd by the seven
Tasca.
·
men arrested for the June 17, 1972,
Since the Greek junta's centra l burglary at the Waterga te offices &lt;i
intclligenc1' sciVice was lllt rn ly the the' D!'mocratlc National Commit·
source of the funds sent to the tee. He told prosecutors, however.
NLxon-Agnew campaign via Pap- that the on ly money he had
pas, but was Itself being subsidized provided was a $50,o:xJ personal
by !he CIA, this meant !hal the loan to Altorncy General John
American spy agency was indi· Mltehell to buy an apanrncnt.
rectly cont ributing to the Republi ''Somr documrntary E.'vidf'nce
can candidat es.
indicates !bat !hose Involved In the
Documents prepared by the cover-up may have expected funds
special prosec utor's staff and re· for it lmm Pappas." one special
cently dls('l)vered In their files by prosecutor report says. Noles
Greek journalist Elias Demetraco- seized from convicted Waterg"tc
poulos indicate that Pappas h"d flgurr [).vight Chapin referred to a
also soUclted at least $25,000 for the meeting wlth Pappas an d contain('()
Nixon-Agnew campaign from a the cryptic notation: "i." The
Greek businessman who subse· proserutors said: "We have no
qucntly was awarded a fuel con- ex planation of the meaning of this
tract i:Jr the U.S. Sixt h F1cet.
notation, although it has bc&lt;.' n

Portland Elementary teachers
honored their top students at
awards day activilies held recently
at the school. Sludrnls were
presented awards for ac hievemen t
in the academic and al hletic areas.
Students were also honored for
good citizenship and perfect
attendance.
RecE-iving acadPmic awards
were Greg McKinney, first grade;
C.J. Harris, second; Michelle Harris, !bird; .Iamey Smith, fourth;
Nick Adams, fift h; Joshua Cooper.
sixth; Craig Wolle, LD; Chris
Hamm,DH .
Writ ing award winners

W('IT'

Gary Cooper. first grade; Woody

Richards, second ; Michelle Harris,
third: Christie Cooper, fourth:
Michael Evans, fifth; Heather
GibPaut, sixth ; Becky Parsons.
LD; Forrest Teaford. DH.
SpeU ing awards went to Greg
McKinney, first grade: Ga hc
Smith, SI'COnd; Michelle Harris,
lhird; Jamey Smith, foun h; Nick
Adams. flilh: .Joshua Codner,
sixth; Becky Parsons, LD; James
Parsons. DH .
Reading award winners were
Amy Rizer, first grade: C.J .
Harris, SI'COnd: Mich~llc Ha rris ,
third; Jamey Smit h, fourth; Shawn
Wolfe, filth; Heather Gibeau! ,
sixth; Craig Wolle, LD; Chris

Waterga te scandal bmke. He look
his evldrnee to the Waterga te office
of D!'mocratic Party Chairman
Larry O'Brien. In fact , Dcrnrtraco·
poutos Is now convinced I hat it was
Nixon's fear of what he may have
told the D&lt;&gt;rnocrats about the Illegal
foreign campaign conlrlbutlons
that led ·to til&lt;' fateful mission of the
White House plumbers 14 years
ago.

Unconstitutional meddling___Ro_be_rr_Wa_lre_rs
WASHINGTON (NEA) - "Give me
six lines written by the most honorable of men," Cardinal Richelieu proclaimed in the 17th century, "and 1
will find an excuse to hang him."
Now, more than 300 years later, a
U.S. government commission appears
intent upon reaffirming the French
prelate's sage observation that any
human expression can be deemed
antithetical to the public good if its
hostile critics embrace a suitably
negative attitude.

That dubious task is being under·
taken by the Attorney General's Com·
mission on Pornography, an t !-member panel dominated by men and
women who apparently believe that
censorship is the remedy for every·
thing from sa lacious thoughts to sexual violence.

The commission, formed a year ago
by Attorney General Edwin Meese,
will issue its final report early next
month - but enough already is known
about its work to conclude that it has
ill-served the public.
Among the panel's many misadventures has been the premature, unauthorized disclosure of substantial por·
lions of its final report. The
conclusions have provoked harsh crit·
icism from dissenting commissioners,
social scientists, civil libertarians and
others.
The findings were preordained be·
cause a majority of the commission's
members long have been shrill critics
of real and imagined pornography.
Tbe panel's chairman, lor enmple
is Henry E. Hudson, a prosecutor 1~
suburban Virginia who has devoted
much of hls career to cracking down
on "massage parlors," theaters specializing In X-rated films and "adult"
book stores.
There is good cause to hold such establishments in low esteem, but their
products, services and activities are,

in great measure. protected by the
First Amendment to the Constitution.
The danger inherent in meddling
with !Jtat protection has been succinctly described by critic Kenneth
Tynan: "Any country that has sexual
censorship will eventually have polit·
ical censorship."
A landmark 1973 U.S. Supreme
Court decision provides a tightly
drawn definition or obscenity. It requires the presence of three elements:
a "patently offensive" description or
depiction of speci fied sexual conduct .
an intentional appeal to "prurient in·
terest" and a general lack of any "serious literarv ortistic, political or scientific value."
The commission, considering itself
the guardian of the public's morals,
has clumsily attempted to expand and
extend that definition - to the point
where it has verged upon designating
appropriate qexual behavior for the
nation's citizenry.
The commission's apparent disre·
gard for established legal standards is
illustrated by its call for a ban on sexually explicit telephone call-in ser·
vices. When the Federal Cornmunica·
tions Commission atlempted to take
si milar action last autumn, it was
stopped by a federal court because of
the constitutional issues involved.
The panel's fascination with por·
nography has led to the purchase of
"Young Girls in Bondage" and similar
publications, field trips by the com·
missioners to peep-shows, and file
cabinets bulging with accounts of tru·
ly grotesque and bizarre sexual
practices.
What the commission has not acquired, however, is any appreciation
tor rights protected by the Constltu·
tionJrhus, It apparently intimidated
7-E)even stores and several regional
druk-a\Qre chains Into halting the sale
of rlaybiJy and renthouse magazines.

Invoking the authority of the na- bution of pornography."
tion's highest ranking law enforce·
It's all very depressing, bul there is
rnent officer, the commission coerced one piece of good news: The commis·
those stores with letters saying it had sion will go out of business alter it
"received testimony that your com· completes tts final report in early
pany is involved in the sale and distri· July.

Doonesbury

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

rrnt

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70MMAI'IIl.CW
\

weekend's obser·
vance of HPr itage

Sunday.
Heritage Sunday, of course, a t

onr timr . .vas a

·John Edward&lt;;

4-H'ers awarded trip
to Washington D.C.
with oth~r 4-H rnemh&lt;'rs fmm
acmss the country lo exchan~

1Wo M~igs Countian s, Johr
Edwards and Becky Rife. are in
Washington. D.C. part icipating In ideas and k&gt;arn diffPI'f'nl cus1oms
!he week -long cilizcnship and lead · and int~rf'Sts .
Thrv will "!so atlend assemblies
ershlp tra inin g sessions at the
to
learn and pract ice life s ki lls,
Naliona l 4·H Qont cr.
legislativl'
policies and discuss
They arc a part or ~ delegates
possible
solu
tions to dlmestic and
rrpresen ting more than 142,(0) 4 H
international
problems. Through ·
memll&gt;rs in Ohio.
The nation's capital is the out the WCPk delegates will learn
classroom for 37 teenage 4-H'ers how to use votin g rnochines. Also
from 18 Southern Ohio counties this they will develop a plan lo tran slate
week. according to Duane Plymale, what they learn into ongoing
programs in th eir horn e
District 4-H Specialisl.
communities.
The Citizenship-Washington FoCit izenship-Washington Focu s is
cus program for 15 to 19 year olds
anan!,
'l'd by Na lionai4-H Counci l in
from Sout hern Ohio started Sunday
suppor1
of the 4-H progra m of the
and wUI rontinue through Saturday.
Coo(l('rativr
Extension Service of
During !he summer fmm Ju rr 2
statr
e~
nd..grant
uni\•ersltil's and I he
through Aug. 10 more than 4,000
V.
S.
Department
of Agriculture.
tcenage 4-H'ers from 44 states will
participate in Washington Focus The Soulh District trip is coordi·
nated through the So uth Distr ict
trips.
Participants wil l vlsit Capitol Hill Ext ension CrntPr located in
for a close-up view of the political Jackson.
process; meet with their congres·

Chatter Club meets

8EJJ.
I

Becky Rife

Mary Stacher hosted a recent
meeting of the Chaner Club with
Frances Carle!gn and Linda Gheen
be ing guest s.
Dues and Dower fund monies
werecoUected and II was decided to
have a food sale next month.
Hostess gifts were given to Mrs.
Starcher. Dorothy Roach recieved
a birthday gift, and Brmda Bolin an
a nniverary gift.
Garnes were played with prizes
going to Donna Fry, Ruth Young,
Linda Hubbard, Doris Wilt, and
Jan ice Fetty.
Mrs. Roach won the door prize.
Ruth Young will host the next
meeting.

Harris in the third grade: Jarney
Smith, four1h ; Nick Adams. filth;
Joshua Codner, six tb and Chris
Weaver. LD. Eugene Adkins received the scien&lt;r award and Alice
Lewis the ooc ial studies award in
til&lt;' DH class.
Outstanding Ch apter I student s
were Brianne Proffitt, first wade:
John Riley, second; Eugene Long,
third; Wendy Gill&gt;au t, fourth and
Jamie Proffitt, six th.
Good Cit izenship "ward&lt;; were
presented to Sarah Wall brown, first
grade; Robin Gillispie, second :
Eugene Long, third; Tonya Cremeans. fourth: Kim Cremeans and

Rachael Rose. fi fth ; Becky Parsons, sixth; Aloon Sa lser. DH.
Overall citizenship winner was
Becky Parsons.
Students with rcrfccl a ttendanCl'
were Jessyca Hatfield in the thir d
grade; Becky Parsons. LD, an d
Forrest Teaford, DH
Student s who missed thrw days
or less wf're .Just in Mickileswa rt

and Matthew Evans in the second
grade; Ange l Flinn. third: Frannie
Hewitt , fourth : Michael Eva ns a nd
Krist)· Rizer, fifth ; Jam ie Proffitt,
sixth: Eddil' Salt sman . LD.
Honored for their ptrticipation in
the school patrol were Shaw11

Wolfe, t'ick Adams. Ja m&lt;')' Smith ,
Glenda Holter, Hcat !T'r Git.' aut,
.Jessica Covert, Mich&lt;l!l Evans and
Kristy pjzcr.
Heat trr Gi!X' J.ut

~,~·as

hooored as

s.Lxth grade student of the yea r;
Glenda Holter was presented the
st uden t hody award: and Joshua
Codner was honorr&lt;i iJS overal l
S(l('Ui ng champ.
Honorrd for being on ttl' honor
roll all vear were Greg McKinney,
C..J. Harris. Hilll•ry Harris. Arrw
Rizer. Heather Giheaut. Nick
Adams. Ja mev Sm ith, Chrlstie
Cooper, David Picken s, MicheUe
Harris and Ch ris Harnm.

Heritage weekend events Sunday

By BOB IIOEFUCH
Sentinel Staff Writer
Pomeroy is gearing up for this

sional
sena tcrs
for a rrprrsentallves
discussion ofandlegislative
issues; vis it historlca I and cu It ural
sites within the metropolitan Wa·
shington, D. C. area . and int eract

i'()J (JJOI.JrT
IN A /OmR.Y,

Hamm , DH.
Malh awards wen t to Greg
McKinney, first grade; C.J. Harris,
second ; Michell e Harris. !bird;
Jamey Smith. fourth; Shawn
Wolfe, (lfth ; Joshua Codner. sixth;
John Harmon. LD: Alvin Phillips,
DH.
Receiving awards lor language
skills were Hi llery Harris, first
grade: DeniS(' Roush, second ;
Michelle Hanis. third: .Iamey
Smith, fourth ; Shawn Wolfe, fifth :
Heather Gibeau!, sixth: Craig
Wolfe. LD: Chris Hamm. DH.
Science awards and soc ial stu·
dies awards went to Michelle

Beat of the bend

suggested !bat there were seven
torlginali Watergate defendants."
In &lt;Fed. one of the many rrferrn&lt;I'S to Pappas on White Housr tape
transcripts during the cover-up
period wa s this one by Nixon: "1
think it 's a matter of fact, though,
that oornebody said be sure to talk
to Pappas bPcause he's being very
he lpful on til&lt;', uh . Watergate
thing."
And when White BouS&lt;' cou nsel
John ()('an asked Mitchell U he had
asked Pappas ror money lor the
burglars' defense. Mitchell replied
that he had.
D!'rnetracopou los was the first to
uneovrr the Nbwn-Pappas conn('(_'tion in 1968. long hefON' the

WoHe; back row,
Codner, Nick Adams, Chris
Hamrr, Jamey Smith and MicheUc Harris.

Portland Elementary awards day honors students

Nixon'S back _________J_ac_k_A_n_d_er_so_n_&amp;_J_o_se.:....p_h_S.:....pe_ar
WASHINGTON - Fourteen ye·
ars after the "third-rate burglary"
that led to the first presidentia l
resignation in history , Richard
Nixon has emerged once again on
the national scene as a respected
confida nt of President Reagan. He
has gone fmm tbe cover-up r:i
Watergate to the cover of Newsweek, his status as an unindicted
co-conspira tor convenientl y Ignored by the revis ionist pop

ACADEMIC WINNERS - Receiving academic
awards at Portland Elementary Sehoul were, front
row,lelt to right, C.J. Harris. Greg McKinney , Craig

sideba r to the an·
nual Big Bend
Rega lia. The regatt a went downlhe
tub&lt;' but Her itage Sunday lived on
and now other activities are being
st aged as sidebars to it.
Pcroonally, I'm looking forwa rd
to it. It provides a bil of a lift and I
can get particu larly enthu sed with
Myron Duffield and hi s caliope,
housed in a grea I red and gold
circus wagon. The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co. is paying !he
freight for Duffie ld 's com ing and
everyone' - residents and visitors
- th ank s to the band can enjoy the
nostalgic caliope mu sic.
Maybe Hcrit"gr Sunday and !he
weekend aclivitirs will erase the
bad lastc !hat the Meigs Inn fire
brought to many good cit lzens over
!he past wrckend . The Inn was a
l"ndrnark of the town and it's
sicke ning to even think that anyone
would have com mittrd arson in an
a ttempt to dest roy the old establishment - and If firemen hadn 'l
functioned so wel l. a whole block of
the to"n cou ld have gone. We don't
need that, do we!

connection to the famlly is asked to
contact Ashley at 992-7874 and he
will attempt to work out something
on the return of the Bible - or

horses and i5 wild butTOS. ca ptured
by the Department of the Int erior's
Bureau of Land Mana gement on
public rangt&gt;landi. will bP up for
adoption at the farm in Rio GrandP.
The "nimals have a ll been

whatever.

Ted and Kaney Reed have
returned to their Pomeroy home
following a dclightfulllip 10 merry
olde England - plus more.
Flying to London, tbe Reeds
loured there for two days be fore
1\Qing to South Hampton where Ihey
boardPd the Royal Viking for
Edinburgh. Scotland. From there.
they traveled to Norn-ay and that
visit inclu ded a trip up the
soow-capped mo untains.
Then there was Dublin wit h tour.;
of castles plus other sightseeing and
shopping. Fina lly, it was back to
London for a few more days of
sightsecing heforr returning home.
Sound fant astic, huh ?

examined by a veterinar ian to

determine their age and to in sure
their soundess and good health.
People who promise to give the
animals a good horne may apply lor
as many as four . The adoption fl'e is
$125 per horse and $75 per bu tTo.
The Evan s event to be known as the
first Wt ld Horse and ButTo Expo
will be Ju ly 3to July 6 and on Ju ly&gt;
there \\1U bP a show open to only·
wild borsed s and burros abtained
through the program to sho w the
beauty and ta lent s of the animals.

Ice crpam and cnr erl ainm C'nt.

Th"t's the offerin g at the Bashan

Anyone fo r a horse or buno?
If so. you:u have a good opportu n·

it y at the Bob Evans Fa rm next
mont h. Approxim ately 200 wild

dC'partmE'nt stagPS an iCC' cream

socia l. There " ill also bP sa nd wiches. pic. ca ke and soft drinks
available along wifh music.

And in conjunction wit h Heritage
Sunday WPl'kend activ il it'S the
Carmel-Sutton Unitr&lt;l Methodist
Olu rch of Rac u1r will he selli ng
homemade pie along wit h soft
drin ks and ool!f&lt;' at the Meigs
County Mu seu m from Ito 5 p.m. on
Saturday an d Sunda\· a ft er noons.
I've hra rd it all. Scirntists are

now saying tha t sleep is a period of
frantic ncli\"it~· withJn thf&gt; cPntral
fl

time of

physio logica I stress !hat brings
wif h it gr r ar clunwr to tl"Y' ,·ery

young, the old and the sic k. Tl)·
doing without slt'f'p ami s"' how
nervous an d stresshtl you get. You
gotta admit that \\"hen you'r e
rested. it' s mu ch m skr to kPep

smiling.

Keith Ashley tells me that he ha s
rrccived wot'd from a woman In
Florida who says that her church is
using a Bible which camP from
Meigs County . It is unknown just
how the Bible got there. but It docs
conta in v aluable fam il y
informal ion.
Thr lady wou ld like to work out a
plan so that the information can be
relumrd lo !he family. The names
involved are William T . Metcalf
and Lucinda A. Squires who were
rna rried in 183l. Anyone having any

r;::=======================:::;-

SAVE 148 TO 176,., ,., ,, 4
• long - wconr~g . ~re el

COMPARE
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•
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Professional Brokerage Services

CENTRAL TRUST SECURITIES
Cincinnati: 513/651-8760 Ohio: 800/582-7391
Outside Ohio: 8001543-7331

1

64!~

-,/ISI1SI0s3os ·--,-10_S_Il-SI-I-S'S!i~-!;;2~·~:,..
""1 , ., 0 !

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belled 771 rad oo l\

• Mo re than 60 nHIIoo n \old'

msmm

,1DS/ 1SII4

ij7's
..... ,.

P11SI1SIIS

\

p .m

Fr iday when the auxiliary ot the

nPr·vous system and is

The ll('Wiy organized Grmt Bend
You th Choir bPing readied for an
appearanC&lt;' at the Rae in&lt;' Jul,v 4th
celebration will hold rehearsa ls on
.June 1i and 21 at the high school.
The two rehearsals foUo\\ing that
will b&lt;' at the junior high school.

~

Flrr Hou!'.r tl?ginnlng Ci t

i({n~
.., ....

ALIGNMENT MOST

CARS 514so

POMEROY

606 EAST MAIN·

992-2094
SERVING MEIGS CO. FOR 2 YEARS, 1966-1986

�Page 6-The Daily Sentinel

Community calendar/ area happenings
'n.IE\IDAY
POMEROY - Open house at
TOPS OH 570, Pomeroy, will be
held Tuesday al 7 p.m. at Veterans
Memorial Hospital Cafeteria.
. KYGER - Cheshire Township
'Trustees tneE't Tuesday, 6 p.m .. in
the township building.

Methodist Church Willing Workers
Class. 7:.ll p.m. Thursday at the
home or Mrs. Mabel Moore.
POMEROY - Mlddl!'port Child
Conservation League wlll meet al
6:.ll p.m. Thursday at the Route33,
Roadside Par~. for a family picnic.

Metoodist Church will be sponsoring a week-long Bible school,
through Friday, from 9 a.m. to
11:45 a.m. each day.

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Rf'll. Theron
Durham will be guest speaker at
7: .ll p.m. services this Sunday at
the Hobson Church or Christ in
Chrtsllan Union

POMEROY - Pomeroy Church
MIDDLEPORT - Group 2 of
of
Christ will hold Vacation Bible
Middleport Presbyterian Church
School
continuing throogh Thurswill meet Tuesday al the home or
day
at
6:
.ll eac h evening. Closing
Mrs. Carl Horky, wit h Mrs. Tom
program
wlll be 7:30 p.m. Friday. · Bible School slated
Rue as co-hostess. Mrs. Eddie
Rl.JTLAI\'D - Vacation Bible
Burkett will have tht' study from
RACINE
Vacation
Bible.
School
wUI be held JuliE' 23-27, 9:30
the Concern book. Mrs. Frances
School
at
Antiquity
Baptist
Church,
to
11:30
a.m., al tbe Rutland
Anderoon will have the devotion. A
Route .IlS. Racine, through Friday,
FreewUI Baptist Church on Salem
thanks offering will be taken.
10 a.m-noon dally .
Street. Classes tor nursery age
through teenagers. Everyone
LONG BOTIOM- Long Bottom
welcome.
Flame Fellowship Chapter. Tues·
SYRACUSE - Rick Weaver,
day, 7:30 p.m .. Mount Olive Com·
munity Church. S[X'akers will be Cottageville, W.Va., will reevange- Meeting set
Rl.JTLAND - The Rutland
Adrienne Buckley of Cleveland and list at a revival at Syracuse
Mission.
throogh
Saturday,
7
each
Club will mret Monday
Garden
Helen Hunt of Ashland. Ohio.
evPning.
night at 7:30 at the home of Mrs.
Edllh Williamson. Dues are
'11fURSDAY
SHADE - The Shade United payable.
POMEROY- Enterprise United

Family dinner conducted in Meigs
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Parker
entertained with a family basket
dinner Saturday honoring Parker's
brollver. Edson. and his family.
Willis Parker, Parkersbu rg, asked
the blessing.
The honored guests wrrr Mr. and
Mrs. Edson Parker, Aurora , Colo.
and Mr. and Mrs. Lan;· Parker.
Laura and Carol. Las Cruces, N.M.
Others attending werr Mr. and

Mrs. Robert Parker. Mariet Ia;
Rotut Alan Parker, USN, Norfolk,
Va.; April and Aaron Parker,
Columbus; Violet and Dennis
Parker, Homer Parker, Su.zy Car[J€nler. irene Parker, Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Poole and Will, Nellie
Parker, Mrs. Nancy Campbell,
Lori , Nick. and Ryan , Danny
Thomas. all of Meigs County.
Nternoon ca llers were Rexal
Summertield, Mr. and Mrs. Lou

Smith, Sherr! and Michael, all local,
and Gerald Summerileld, Little
Hocking.
The families !rom Colorado and
New Mexico were also honored at a
luncheon Sunday al lhe . PooleParker home and on Tuesday
visited thE' Reedsville locks and
dam. Monday evening visitors at
the Parker home were Mr. and
Mrs. Samuel Michael. Sliversville.

Pomeroy Church of Christ ends year
The Followers of God youth
group of the Pomeroy C'hu rch or
Christ, concluded a vear of activilv
with a recent party:
·
The leaders, Ba rbara Fields and
Mary Ann Fields, took the children
out to lunch . then to a movie, 'The
Time Machine" at the home of

Helping Hands
hold meetings

Mary Ann Fields. then oot fo r
refreshment s and some outdoor fun
ar the Middleport Park. To con·
elude the party live children
ri'tumed to the church basement
for games.
The group consists of children,

grades one through six. Among live
regulars attending durtng the year
were Debbie Alkire, Julie King,
Michael Null, and Becky Null.
The group will neorganize in the
fall at which lime they will select a
class name and decide on the
various activilles for the year.

People in the news--

A visll lo the Meigs County
By WWJAM C. 'IR!JIT
Infirmary on July 4 was planned
United Press lnternatioaal
when the Circle OF Helping Hands
METAL MANIAO!: Heavy-metal lvero Ozey Osbourne gets
ri the Zion Church or Christ mel
enough criticism for his own conduct at his concerts and wants to
disassociate himself from the trouble at his Saturday soow In Long
recently at the home or Suzanna
Beach, Caltl. One man died after a fall ala roncerl and al lf'asl three
Warner.
ollvers were hospitalized with serious Injuries.
The group also decided lo furnish
desserts for meals al the Ohio
A 22-year-old man fell while walking oown an aisle, hitting his
Valley €hristian Assembly camp
head. and died at a hospital. Three oliver men were taken from the
site at Darwin tre week of June ll.
show to a hospital wllh severe head injuries. Osbourne said lhroogh a
The Young Adult Class will handle ·
spokesman lhal drugs apparently contributed 10 Ire death and he
urged his fans to avoid the abuse of alcoool and drugs.
two of the five days.
Reports were given on the
"I don't go on stage drunk or stoned and I oon'l wish the klds woo
mother-daughter banquet with specome to the shows to do that either," said Ihe one-time drinker. who
has been accused of biting lhe heads off animals on stage. The
cial than ks going to Kathryn
Sunday show went off without Incident after security was tightened
Johnoon for overseeing the ban·
· and hospital officials braced for more Injuries.
que!. Gifts of candy were given to
the falrers on Father's Day.
Devotilns were given by Mrs.
FATHER BOWIE DOE'i&gt;NT LIKE POP: Is David Bowle
Warner who used "Vacation For
mellowing at age39? In an Us magazine interview he talks about his
God or From God" based on
disdain for current pop music, being tre fatrer of a 15-year-old boy
scripture lorn Lev. 3. S!ve closed
and learning lo open up and tolerate otlver people's opinions. "But
wllh a poem, "Give" by Adele
don't get the Impression that tlvere's this nice guy bursting out of
Proctor.
David Bowie," he says.
· Officers reports were glven. II
was noted that Ida Murphy wUJ
have devotions for lhe Women's
Fello.whip meeting lo be held on
JuliE' 26 al Bradbury . The July 3
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Williams, the five.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
meeltng wUJ be al the home of fonner Trudy Roach, Hysell Run.
and
Mrs. Carl Roach, Pomeroy,
Grace Warner with Ihe Bible word Pomeroy, are announcing the birth
and
paternal
grandparents are Mr.
' lo be used for devol ions.
or their second child, a son, Jordan
and
Mrs.
Ray
Williams, Pomeroy.
Mark, May 29, at the Holzer
Maternal
great-grandmotlver
Is
Medical Center. He weighed e ight
Marie
Francis,
Pomeroy,
and
pounds. four ounces and was 22
paternal great-grandmother is Lily
inches long. Mr. a nd Mrs. WUUams
have a daughter, Kasey Michelle, Dyke, Middleport .

Williams birth being announced

Past Councilors club
conducts recent meeting

Lyme Dee Oliver

Graduate
honored
Lynne Dee Oliver. who Is gra.
duallng from Ohio Unlversl1y
summa cum laude with a Bachelor
of Science Degree In Communications, has been named outstanding
student of the School of Comrnuntcatlons Systems Management.
This honor Includes the $1,0CIJ
Bruce Howat Award, given for the
first time al Ohio University.
Oliver, who completed her college work ln March, recently
returned from a three week tour of
Europe durtng which slve visited 11
countries . This AmericanEuropean Students Union tour
began In Amsterdam, extended
southward as far as Rome, and
ended at London.
On June 23, she will begin
working for the Amaco Corporation
at Its Chicago headquarters as a
Telecommunications Analyst
within tlve Information Servia&gt;s
Department. She Is the daughter rt '
Robert and Dorothy Oliver, ·

Pomeroy.

Tuesday, June 17, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

New officers were elected at the
recent meeting of the Past Councilors Club of Chester CooncU 323,
Daughters of America, held at the
hall.
Elected were Fern Morris, president; Cora Beegle, vice president;
Thelma While, secretary ; Mary
Showaller, tri'asurer; Erma Cleland, flower committee; Alta Bal·
lard, sentinel, and Mary K. Holler,
news reporter.
Margaret Tuttle, president,
opened the meeting with the 120s1
Psalm, the Lord's Prayer. and the
pledge to the flag . Officers' reports
were given. II was not€1,1 that the
July meeting wUI be a picnic a llhe
Chester Mini Park 6:ll p.m With

each peroon to take thlr own table
service. There will be an Amrican
flag presented to the park.
Ho.•tlng the ineetlng were Elizabeth Hayes, Jean Frederick, and
Alta Ballard who served refrershments. Games were conducted by 1
Betty Roush and Lora Damewood.
Ethel Orr won the door prize.
Others present were Mary Sho·
waller, Opal Hollon, Ada Bissell,
Mae McPeek, Leona· Hensley,
Mary Hayes, !nzy Newell, Sadie
Trussell, Margaret Amberger, Gol·
die Frederick, and guests , Julie
Damewood, Matthew Morris,
Leona Ferrell, Sandra White, and
Terry Roach.

OES presents members
with their 25-year pins
Twenty-five year pins were
presented lo J im and Donna Nelson
by Bernice Hoffman at the recent
meeting of live Harrisonvlle Chapter 255, Order of the Eastern Star,
!veld at the Masonic Temple.
Avanelle George, pro tern worthy ,
matron, and Larry Well, wortl\Y :
patron, presided at the meeting.
Introduced were Stella Atkins,
grand representative to Flortda,
past rna Irons, past patrons, oonored Masons, those having grand
appointments, and Ruby Diehl,
60-year member.
In observance of Father's Day,
the group sang "Faith of Our
Fathers" and there was a rooding, ·
"Fattvers Are Wonderful People"
by Gracie Wilson. The birthdays of

Stella Aikins and Miss Diehl were
observed. Clara Mae Hysell
thanked Ire past matrons club for
the bridal shower given her.
Catherine Shenefield , grand organist, was voted an honorary
member of Harrisonville Chapter.
Grace Colwell was reported lll and
in ·Veterans Memorial Hospital,
and Larry Well's father, Denver
Well, was reported confined to tlhe
Holzer Medical Center. Cards were
signed for both of ttvem.
Bob Reed gave tre blessing
before tre group retired to tre
dining area where trey were served
refreshments by Marcia Denison,
Margaret Parsons, Bernice Nelson,
and Neva Nicholson.

•.

Community happenings in Meigs
Harrisonville

day of every month at 7:.ll In the
community buDding. Square dan·
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mahr of ces are held every Friday night al
Flortda spent tlve past week here the building except on the last
with her brother, Mr. and Mrs. Friday night of each month.
Lowell Hlethger.
Leota Ferrell, Midway, Is here
Mrs, Leaha Williams spent Sf'\/· visiting her sisters, Leona Hensley,
era! days with her nk&gt;ce, Mr. and Ada Bissell and Mae McPeek. Mrs.
Mrs. Ralph Chapman and family at McPeek spent last weekend In
St. Henry.
BellevU!e and Parkersburg, W.Va.
Michael ~an and son, Do- visiting relatives and friends.
minae, Columbus, was the weekend
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Willford of
guest of his motlver, Nellle Brogan. RushvUJe were here for ttve recent
Estlver Brandau, Jackson, was Chesler Alumni Reunion.
tlve Satruday night guest of Lola
Diana Rathburn, Dayton, spent
Clark.
several weeks here visiting lver
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Sleple ol grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John
Wilmington visited Friday with Brewer, Reedsville.
Frances Young.
Marilyn Miller, Janel GroeneWeekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. vell, Columbus, and Mike Bissell,
Virgil King were Mr. and Mrs. Oble Pomeroy, visited theirmolher.Ada
Coomer, Jr. and daughter, Debbie, Bissell and Kenny, recently.
Obie Coollll'r Sr., Kankakee, m..
Jo Ann Rebecca and family,
and Miss Gracie King of Mansfield . Columbus, were recent guests or
Mrs. Lois Hamilton and son, her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John
Devin d. NashvU!e, Tenn. spent the Hensley and Dick.
weekend with her parents, Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. John Andrew and
Mrs. Millard Chrlstan. A family children, Timmy and Shawn, Coreunion was held on Sunday at ttve lumbu s, visited his mother, Mary
ho!lll' of her sister, Mr. and Mrs. Andrews, coming especially for her·
James Harmon, Portland. Attend· birthday celebration.
lng were Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Mr. and Mrs. Paul J . Andrews,
Grueser and Meron, Mr. and Mrs Westerville, and Barbara Andrews
Robert Snowden and Becky, Mr. and Tom Al)derson, Columbus,
and Mrs. Millard Cbrlstan and Mrs. visited over the weekeend wtth
Lois Hamilton and Dev ln.
Paul and Barbara's mother, Mary
Andrews. They also attended the
Eastern High School Alumni.

Long Bottom

The Long Bottom Senior Citizens
meet the second and fourth Tiles·
day of each month atlhe commun·
ity building. Free blood pressure
clinics are held the fourth Tuesday.
The Long Bottom Community
Association meets the last Wedns-

Wolf Pen
Mr. and Mrs. Roy 0. Smith of
Rock Springs Road were Thursday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charley

Smith. Other recent vlsilors of the
Charley Smilhs were Kail Knapp

and Barbara Hatfield.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank, Sarah
Beth ot Texas Road, spent Sunday
wtth Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Haning,
Ronald and Gladys Tuckennan.
James Murphy , Sonora. Calif.,
Robert Murphy dRadne, John and
JuUe, Racine, Mrs. Josep h Evans,
Tyson and Jonathan of Racine,
Mrs. Greg Davis, Ashll anoJoshua,
Basham, were all reeent visitors or
Mr. and Mrs. J.R. Murphy and
Peggy.
Drema Ward of Klngs\\OOd,
Texas, also rf"C('ntly vlslted the
Murphys as did Mrs. Richard
Basham (Debbie Murphy! or
Springfield , Fla. Peggy Murphy
was the overnight guest or Drema
during her vis it here with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ward.
Tuesday Mrs. Ida Murphy,
Peggy Murphy, and Debbie Ba ·
sham visited Mr. and Mrs. John
Downs and family, Trimble.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
spent Sunday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Harley Smith, Kanauga.
Monday they visited Mrs. Iva
Johnoon.
Adam Downs of Trimble, Robbie
Murphy of Racine and Ashli and
.Joshua DavL~. Eagle RJdge Road .
were recent vlsllors of Mrs. Ida •
Murphy and Peggy. Adam Downs
spent a few weeks here with Mrs.
Barbara Davis and family, Mrs
Joseph Evans and family, and
Robbie Murphy, Eagle Ridge
Road.
Summer Giles has been visiting
here with her grandparent s. Mr.
and Mrs. Clair Giles.
Mrs. J.R. Murphy visited in
Bidwell recently with Mr. and Mrs.
John Wamsley and family.

Bridal shower for area resident
Mary K. Roush hosted a shower
with live women of Ibe Forest Run
United Methodist Church as cohostesses honoring Kimrerty
Roush, bride-elect of Scott Frederick. The soower was !veld In the
church social room.
A pink and white color scheme
was used in Ire decorations. A
game was played with a prize going
to Faye Wiggins. Linda Hamm won

tlve door prize.
A white wedding !veil trimmed In
pink was suspended over tlve gift
table. Guests presenllng gits were
Doris Grueser, Hilda Yeauger,
Faye Wiggins, Betty Blackwood,
VIrginia, Jonelta and Tina Davis,
Sandi Hawley, Erma Roush, Marybelle Warner, Linda Hamm, Kat ·
hleen Scotl, Mary Nease, Evelyn
Hollon. Carrie Grueser. Jean

Nease, Marcia Arnold. Hclrn Baer,

Kellee Nease, Rose Ann, Kimberly
and Rochelle Jenkins, Leah Nease,
Lillian Nap[J€r, Barbara and Mf'·
lanie Beegle. Crao ln Sa lser,
Mildred Withee, Ramona and
Krl~ta Roush. Others sendi ng gifts
were Clara Bar r, Helen Nease.
Mary Hamm, Linda Evans. Kenda
a nd Kelly Rizer.

I~

ATLANTA (UPI) -Ken Oberk·
fell may have gotten the gamewinning hit, but he saved his praise
for teammate Andres Thomas'
second homer or the season.
With one out in the bottom of the
lOth Inning, Oberklell singled past
drawn-In second baseman Ron
Oester lo score Dale Murphy from
third base with the winning run
Monday night and Jtlt the Atlanta
Braves to a 4-3 win over the
Cincinnati Reds.
Atlanta tied tlve score in the ninth
off reliever Ron · Robinson on a
single by Oberkfell and Thomas'
homer.
"Everybody says I hllthe big hit ,
but Andres got the big hit In the
ninth to give us that chance," said
Oberk!ell.
"This team shows a lot or
character," said Oberkfell. "We
just don't qull. We didn't quit
yesterday (Sunday) when we were
down 9·0 and we were down two In

B~

PAM Mc&lt;:AIUSTER

and from that or Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Crank of Hender!lln, W.Va.
.
Jenkins, who says she once told
Hlbel jokingly "''m your chief
disciple in Gallipolis," has encouraged several local residents, includ·
lng the Kobys, lo coilect the artist's
works . She dales her own Interest tn
Hlbel from 1966.
"There was a man from Athens,
Mr. Harmon, who had a gallery In
Naples, Fla. and he had a showing
of hers f'llery year. That's wren I
first !Ill'! her, In 1966."
Alloough Jenkins was not famU·
Jar with Hlbel's work at the time,
she said "It just had something.She
remlndt'd me so much of Mary
Cassatt." Like Cassall, a famous
Allll'rican artist of the late nineteenth century, Hlbel's Sllbjects are
fr£Quently mothers wil h young
children.
·
"I just find something in those
children - lrey're oo angelic,"
Koby said. "She ju st has so much
bve in her heart," Jenkins said of
Hi bel. "You can see it in her work ."
AltiDugh Hlbel Is an artist who
has enjoyed financial success and
great popularlly in her own metim ~. Jenkins still deserlbes her as
an energetic, hardworking, friendly
woman. "She gets up at five In the
morning and starts painting. She
told me 'l have so many ideas In my
head.' Her work just grows as her
p:&gt;pularlty grows."

One mark of Hlbel'spopularlty is
tlve trip slve and Hibel society
members wJIJ make lo Beijing
(Peking), China In September as
slve becomes tlve fir st foreign
woman artisttoexhlbll tn mainland
China. Hlbel was invited to China
by tlve country' s Nallonal Art
Gallery. The Hibel society ha s
made ooe Sllch trip every year for
Sf'lleral years.
On the Irip Jenkins tooktoZurich.
she and otlver !lll'mbers or the Ed na
Hibel Society were met by Hibel
when their plane landed at 6 a.m.
Duling the trip, Jenkins and the
otrers visiled a Rosenlhai~X)rcelain
factory where Hlbel ooughl plates
louse for her collec tor's pl ates. AI
Rosenthal, Jenkins said, Imperfect
plates wen• broken rather than be
sent out as factory seconds. Broken
porcelain llllered the factory .
The society also made a trip to a
German castle. where members
dined , listened to mu sic, and wen•
offered a chance to Sl'1m In lh!•
castle' s pool, wit h oo thing suits
being provided to all 1:xl guests.
They were also given llveir choice of
Hlbellltoographs as gifts.
Although Jenkins will not makl'
the trip to China. she says she
treasures the memories or her
Hlbel roclety outings. "Everything
has just been something you'd
never dream ri.' ' she sa id. "And to
think thai , from here in Ga llipolis,
I've had tlvese experiences."

NBC airing terrorism special
By MARK SCHWED
UPI TV Editor
LOS ANGELES (UP!) -NBC
News President Lany Grossman
was Itching to air more of tre
controversial Interview wtlh Mohammed Abul Abbas, live terrortst
wanted by Ire United States for
mastet;mlnding the Achille Lauro
hijacking.
Three minutes of the Interview
wtth correspondent Henry Champ
aired on "NBC Nightly News with
Tom Brokaw" May 5. The Interview was granted on live condlt Jon
that NBC not reveal the wrerea·
oouts of Abbas, and that deal
prompted the State Department to
denounce NBC as an accomplice to
terrorism.
The Itch gets scratched on
Tllesday (June 17,10011 p.m. EDT),
wtven NBC airs a special edition of
the news magazine show "1986" ·
called "The Achille Lauro: A Study
In Terror," hosted by Tom Brokaw.
Within Ire context of this hour-long
program the greater time given to
the Abbas Interview amounts to
giving the terrortst a much longer
rope wlth which to hang himself.
Brokaw reveals his claims to be
nothing but lies and tlhe reallty of
murder shows clearly through the
freedom fighter pose.
The news peg that Grossman was
searching for arrived In the lorrn d
a trial In Genoa, Italy, featuring

three of the four captured hi·
jackers. It starts Wednesday (June
18).
Roger Mudd, who co-hosts "1986"
wllh Connie Chung. publicly objected to the "special edition" of his
show so soon after Us revamped
debut last week. But NBC has
decided the 10-11 p.m. Tuesday
time slot is where documentaries
and news specials will go so Mudd
lost the argument.
"This year there are very few
Americans In Rome," Brokaw
says, with a cut to scenes of "dead
people" In Rome and VIenna
airports alter terrorist attacks and
ultimately to Brokaw standing on
tre deck ottlveAchUie Lauro cruise
ship.
"What really bap[J€ned here on
this ship?" Brokaw asks and the
program gives !llme good answers.
Abbas admitted to playing a role
In tlve Achille Lauro hijacking In tlve
portions of tlve Interview that aired
on May 5. The terrorist also
threatened actions against Ameri·
cans within U.S. borders and called
President Reagan "enerny No.1.''
This time, viewers can see
portions of the Interview in which
Abbas denies that his cronies shot
Allll'rlean Leon Kllnghoffer. We
also ~&gt;ear Abbas say tlhe main
objective was not to take civilian
oostages, but to launch a raid on an
lsraeH tar~t. tlve port of AsiKlod.

As to the $250,00J Ihe U.S. is offering
for his capture, Abbas counters
with an offer or $1 million to anyonP
who can deliver "Pres ident Rmgan

•

Bo Dlaz's two-run rouble high·
lighted a three-run seventh Inning
thaI staked the Reds to a 3-1 lead.
With Atlanta leadlngl-0, the Reds
rallied against starter David
Palmer. Buddy Bell and Eric Davis
momentum. "
Atlanta and Los Angeles begin a led off with singles and the runners
three-game series at Atlanta· advanced on a sacrifice by Dave
Concepcion before Diaz doubled to
Fulton County Stadium tonight.
Dave Parker said live bss was knock In two runs.
A single by Ron Oester moved
typical of Ire Reds' bad luck this
Dlaz to third and knocked out
season.
"We just can't seem to put It Palmer. Pinch hitter Max Venable
logetrer, " sald Parker. "We have a then greeted reliever Jeff Dedmon
winning spell lOr two or three with a run-scoring fielder's ci1l3ice.
The Braves took a 1·0 lead In the
games, but that's it. We're not
taking advantaged q&gt;portunltles." fourth on Oberkfell's fourth home
In the lOth, Murphy walked off run or Ihe season, a solo shot to right
losing reliever John Franco, 0-4 . field.
Reds third baseman Bell was
Bob Horner singled to center,
forcx-d
!o leave Ihe game in the
sending Murphy to third. Horner
Sf'llenth
Inning with a strained
took second on center fielder Eddie
Milner's throw to third and Oberk- lower back.
Clnncinnati returns home tonight
fell oounced a 2-2 pitch just past
toq&gt;en
a three-game series with tlve
Oester lo make a wlnllE'r of Gene
Houston
Aslros.
Garber. 3-1.

the ninth tonight and we Just came
back and won the gallll'.
"It's deflriltely a big win for our
side. What with the Dodgers
coming In it's nice to have a little

Snyder gets major league education
ROBERTO DIAS
UPI Sports Writer
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Cory
Snyder struck out In his first al-bal ·
Sunday, swlnglngwUdly ala Frank
Viola pllch on the outside corner.
The second time up, Minnesota
pilcher Viola again threw the
Cleveland rookie Ihal pinpoint pilch
and again Snyder struck out
swinging.
"I've learned one thing about the
ma jors," sa id Snyder, who was
ca lled up from Maine of lhe
International League last Thursday. "The pitchers are much
smarter here. They vary their
pitches just a lillie bit each time,
they nibble the corners."
In Snyder's third al-bal, Viola
again aimed for that outside corner
and o!!ered a fastball. Snyder lined
It into lhe left-field stands for his
first major· league home run.
But In Snyder's final at-bat, he
st ruck oul looking at a Frank
Pastore slider.
"Maybe I'm being a bit selecliv~.
a lillie too choosy," said the
23-year-old nallve of Englewood,
Ca lif .. Cleveland's first selection

Hibel works display open at Riverby
OVP Staff Writer
GALLIPOLIS - "To Ruby, who
knows more about Edna Hibellhan
anyone else."
These words are scrawled across
the bottom of a poster advertising
artlsl Edna Hi bel's 1983 exhibits in
Jerusalem. They were written by
Hlbel and addressed loa longtime
friend and supporter. Ruby Jenkins
of Gallipolis.
The poster, a lithograph, Is one of
the Hibel works on display al the
French Arl Colony during the
month of June. The FAC exhibit
features samples of Hibel's work in
oils, lithographs and collector's
plates.
Hibel, whO has been called
"America's foremost living woman
artist, " designed Invitations for the
FAC exhibit as a favor to Jenkins,
aceord ing to FAC spokeswoman
Saundra Koby. Jenkins has been an
active member of the Edna Hlbel
Society, a group founded to pro·
mote the work oftlve artist. She has
twice traveled abroad In the artist 's
entourage, once lo Zurich, Switzer.
land and the second time to
Jerusalem,
The exhibit atFAC is taken partly
from Jenkins' personal collection,
as well as those of Dr. and Mrs,
Richard Simpson, Saundra and
Herman Koby, Mr. and Mrs.
Vaught Smith and Mr. and Mrs. R.
WU!lam Jenkins,all of Gallipolis,

hll In In 25 of his last 27 games to
raise his season average lo .304.
"He's an example tor aUor us,"
said -tlve manager. "He's hoi and
maybe re'll help reat up a few
people. Pitching-wise, we're a bit
tired. The day off (Monday) will
give the bullpen a break."

and Ihe fourth player taken overall
In the June 1984 dx:att.
·'I'm glad thai I'm getting Ire
chanre to play," he said. "II
wouldn't have made much sense lo
yan k me w t of Maine, where I was
playing every day and hilling well
( .ll2) to bring me to Cleveland and
bench me."
In Snyder's three games with tlve
Indians lo date, he has gone 3-for-12
(.250) with a triple,a oomer, Ire one
RBI and two runs scored. He has
struck out five times, four of those
looking, but Manager Pat Corrales
isn't concerned.
"The kld 'li play f'llery game,
either in left field, right field or
maybe a little at third to spell Jake
(Brook Jacoby)," said Corrales.
"The bomer was good - Cory
went down and got an outside pitch.
The strikeouts, trough, oon'l surprtse me. I'm not sure If he's being
entirely selective - he's probably
never sren pitchers this good."
Corrales says the 30·30 Indians
are playing Inconsistently, wtlh the
exception or ootfleider Joe Carter.
Carter has 12 hits In his last 21
at-bats (.5711 with five RBI and has

Wimbledon race
up for grabs
LONDON (UP! ) - The working
words for Wimbledon are "wide
open."

John McEnroe, ranked fourth in
the world, Is not playing. Neither is
No. 5 Yannlck Noah. Jimmy
Connors. who Is No.6, is doubtful, at
least until he sees a doctor Tuesday
about his pulled groin muscle.
Boris Becker, the 19!!i champion
and No. 3 In the world, is bothered
by an inflamed membrane In the
palm or his right hand . Besides, he
still Is only 18 and hasn't progressed
further than the quarterfinals in his
last four tournaments.

PHONE
992-2156
Or lntt Da1lly S.ntifttl CtJu•htd Otpt.
Ill Co~1t St .. Po IIIlO¥ . Olu 4~ 769

Public Notice

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE
STATE DF OHIO
LEGAL NOTICE
DEPARTMENT OF
STATE OF OHIO
NATURAL RESOURCES
DEPARTMENT OF
DIVISION OF
NATURAL RESOURCES
RECLAMATION
DIVISION OF
ATHENS , OHIO
RECLAMATION
HEARING TO SHOW
ATHENS , OHIO
CAUSE WHY COAl.
HEARING TO SHOW
MINING PERMIT
CAUSE WHY COAl.
NUMBER D-0208
SHOULD NOT BE
MINING PERMIT
NUMBER D-0111
DEEMED ABANDONED
SHOULD NOT BE
Order by tho Chiot NumDEEMED ABANDONED
b&lt;ll 6784 woo inuod by
Order by tht Chief Num·
Abundsnt Life Coal Corportion on Msy 27. 1988. The ber 5785 was ilauld by
Mlbioct of the oulor: Show Martel Mining. Inc. on Mty
Cau1e Why Coal Mining Per· 27, 19B8. Thooubject of tho
mit Number D-0208 Should order: Show Couoo Why
Not

Be Deemed Ablln-

Arrv person having en In·
terelt thlt is or may be 8dvorsely offoctod by the Order

Arrt

peraon having an in-

tereJt that is or may be lldv-

orsely offectod by tho Ordor
of by the Chief moy inter- of by tho Chief moy lntor·
v.,eln the Htorlng.
vene in the HNring .
If thort 111 eny quMtlont
If there are any qull'tionl
concerning thil Hearing,
please cell Briln Babb. at

(814) 286·884&amp;.
(6) 171tc

RADIATOR

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF RDUCIARY
On June 6, 1988, in the
Meigs County Probote Court,
C.. No. 2&amp;. 136. J. B.
O'Britll, 100'11 Court Streel
Pomeroy, Ohio 46769, w•
-'"ted UICutor of the
eolllleof Auch WeddloA-·
oon.
leta of S.R.
124. Recine, Ohioolf6771 .
Robort E. Buck.
Probote Judge
L.,aK. - o d,

-Old.

(8) 10. 17. 2• 3tc

Clel1&lt;

COli Mining Permit Number

0 -011 1 Should Not Be
donod .
A Show Coun Hooring !of Dtemod Abondonod.
A Show Couoe H_.,g !of
Abundant Life Cool c.,.,...•.
tion is scheduled at 2:00 p. Millie! Mining. Inc. il tdl•
m. on Junt1 24. 1988, In tho dulod ot 1:00 p.m. on Juno
office of the Ohio Dopaotment 24. 1988. In the office altho
of Noturol Rooou,_, Divi- Ohio Dopsrtmont of Noturol
sion ot Reclomatlon. Fount- Reoou,_, Dlvlolon of Rocloain Squere, Building " 8 " , motion, Fountlin . Squore.
Third Floor, Columbuo, Ohio. Building B, Third Floor, Col·
Abundont Life Cool c.,.,...,. umbuo, Ohio. Morl!el Mining,
tion ahlll lhow CIUII Why Inc. ohow couoe why Cool
Cool Mining P•trit Number Mining Permit Numbof DD-02ot ohould oot be 0111 ohould oot be deemed
obondoned.
deemed obendoned.

concerning

thil Hearing,

plotot coli Brion Bobb. ot
(814)2111·H45.
(81 17 1tc

Public Nolice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Bid will be recelv.r until 3
P.M., JLiy 28, 19Bil. et the
Moyo(s olfioo ot tht Yilllgo
of Mlddltport, 237 R- St..
Mlddlopon. Ohio 46710 lor
the drilling .,d production cf
oil lnd

oe• under the real ..

the Ylloge
tltulted in S.llobury Township, Molgo County, Ohio. detcribod In Volume 227, Pogo
867, Molgo County Deed Records. The offer 110 loae the
rMI 1111tl lhol provide thet
oo wtll shall be drilled which
wlllnterfen with tho sewogo
ditpoool lodlhlot tltuotod ...
lhe r•leotllo endthetthe VIItogo r111n101 the rig hi 110 ap-

1111 owned by

prove the loe~tion of 161'f dril·

ting oil• ond the locotion ol
.,y production Hn• and/ or

equipment .
,...------.,---~~

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIOUCIARY
On June 8, 19B8, in the
Meigs County Probate Court.
Case No. 26,134, Adreln Roberts, 38013 Long Hollow I1111LR'
Rd., Pomeroy, Ohio 46789.
was appointed executor of
the estote of Jomeo P. Roberts, deceated. late of Rt. 2.

The Yillogo ol Middleport
reserves the right to reject
any or 111 bids.

Jon Buclt. Cler1t-Treuuror
Vttloge of Mlddlopor1
June n , 24: July 1. B, 16

Public Notice

TRENCHING IS OUR LINE
Trenching of Any Type

ROSE

DCAYA11N\
UCJJII 01110
FREE ESTIMATES
Oil Fltld Smico,

Backhoe SeNice
Plumbing Service

Custom Welding

Landscaping, IDIIIIIMfl,

Septic Syatemo

5ylflftll1 Htawy Hauling,

l icen sed &amp; Bonded

Stone &amp; Gra•ol Houllng
lltctricol Work
RESIDENTIAL. COMMERCIAL
&amp; INDUSTRIAL

WilliAMS 11!ENCHIIIG
SERVICE
Rt. 4, Hysell Run Rd .

!Certified Electrician)

Pomerov . Ohio 46769

DON lOSE, Owner

Ph 1614)992-2B34 .
992-8704
FA EE ESTIMATES

949·2493

Home 143-5340

WANT ADS bring
Vacation Money

=~~-=-=--...,.---..,~

Pomeroy. .Ohio 46789.
Robert E. Buck,
Probeto Judge

Lena K. Nesselraad. Clerk

SER~ICE
.We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfe
WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN IAUNORY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
.SAfflUTE SALES &amp; SERVICE
We H111 Ahll Tl•

, .. ~.IIIII
"0•11

S~•t

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPliANCE

CH!STER- 985-3307

4/ 1/ lfn

BUILD U~
•lOCAllYOWNIO •lOCIL LABOR

FREE ESTIMATES

(CUT OUT FOR FUIUH USEJ

ROOFING

985-3561

All Mtbt

•Washers •DishwashiHS
•Ranges
•Refrigerator•
•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE

77J.S5t7 or (304) 895-llU

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
ODZER, BACKHOE,
TRENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER ,
GAS &amp; SEWER UNES.
RECLAMATION, PONDS,
SPRING DEVElOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS.
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992·7201

16110. 17. 24

~

'VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
'BLOWN IN
INSULA nON

WATER WELLS

-

•"-lOUIS

•PINS

•MIDALS

.YIAYI
ICHAIMI

-GAYILS

' ~7

~

AND

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New Homes Built
"Free Estimatos"
PH. 949·280 1
or 949-2860
No Sunday Calls

DRILLED

111111

We Cer'y Fishing Supplies

Pay Your Cable &amp;

Phone Bills Here
IU!JHESS PIIOHI

oono 11

(6\4) "2·6ll0

141-1111.

RI!IOEHCI PHONE
(6t41 "2·
I

~-~~~·

446-IMI '

FREE ESTIMATES

Call
992-5006
or 742-3147
6-4-'86 -I

EUGENE LONG
SUPERIOR

CO.

SIDING
VINYL I AWMINUM

mo.

3/lt "'"

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Re modeling

'73 · ' 80 GM Feodera .... $39

FOR THE BEST IN
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

THE BIRD CAGE
&amp; FISH POND
PO SHOP
EXOTIC BIRDS.
TROPICAL FISH.
HAMSTERS.
KITIENS, BIRD
SEED, CAGES &amp;
AQUARIUMS

•Vinyl Replacements
Windows
•W' Insulated Glass
•Tilt In To Clean
•Most Windows Priced
under •300

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

s• N. 2nd An.
MitldleJ:rt

....,,. Auto

992-2772

992-6784

5-20-'86'1 mo .

5-20-'86'1 mo .

ARMY SURPWS

&amp; CAMOUFLAGE

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 UST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized John D""·
New Holland, lush Hog
Form Equipment
Doalor

Sizes 4 Yrs and up
ALSO HUNTING,
SURVIVAL and
VARIETY ITEMS
ACROSS FROM
POST OFFICE IN
MASON, W. VA.

fa till Equip 111ent
Parts &amp; Service

304-773-5222

5-I5-'86-1 mo.

1-3-·116 tfc

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS

0 Co1t11utetized Hearing Air Selection
z Swim Molds - Interpreting Services

-

73-80 GM
Rocker Penelt ...... ..... t 16

Roofi ng of all Types
Worked in home ara~
20 years
" Free Estimates"

73 -79 Ford F&amp;nders .. .... t39
Truck Bad
Linet"s ......... .... .... Full &amp;175

Mini $165

CAU COllECT:

FfiEE IN STALLATION
2 'f'R WARRANTY

Ph. (614) 843 -S42S
5-12-' 86·1 mo.

SetilfK t ion Gu~r•n1111d
Frn De!Nerv in

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

HUTCHISON
CONSTRUCTION
Milo B. Hutchison
Contractor
NEW HOMES,
ROOFS, DECKS,
ELECTRICAL &amp;
PLUMBING

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

7.42-2306
or 742-3171

PH.

5-19-'86'·1 mo.

10-8-tfc

BISSELL
BUILDERS

TOWN &amp; COUNIIT
VETDINARIAN
CUNIC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"AI Reasonable Prices"

Pl. PLEASANT OffiCE
305 Jadlson A••·

949-2801
or 949-2860

SMAU ANIMAL HOUIS
Mon.-Wod.-Thun. l-S pm
Tues. 6:30-1; Fri. 1-2 pm
Saturday I0-1t :30 om
LAIGI lJIIMAL &amp; .
SUI GIIY IY lPPT.
PH. 304-675-2441
BEND AREA CALL
Ripley Office
Far Hours

PH.

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

a:

L3 LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

4- 16-'86 !In

l: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

-z

New location:

t 68 North Secood
Middleport, Ohio 45760
SAUS &amp; SERVICE

hd&amp;f.....

~

SERVICED

PLUMBING &amp; HEAnNG

.,..._ lo"

2-17·86-lfn

4-5-tlc

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
8-13 lin

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

304·372-5709 :

- Addon• and remodeling
- Roofing and gutter work

10-14-lft:

- Concrete work
- Plumbing and el8(!trical
work

DON'S MOBILE HOME
REPAIR ·SERVICE
UNDERPINNING

V. C. YOUNG Ill
9'11-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

&amp; SOUP

. Sptlnt Speel1/

S WEEP ER and aewtng machina

$9 5.

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP
F11 AH
Prlrlllt Nul•
PIUS: Offict Supphs &amp;

y,,

furniture, Wedding

anti Gralluation
!tolionory, Mo9&gt;otic
Signs, aubbor St1111p1,
lusineu Forms,

Copy Stnicts, II&lt;.
2lS Min St., Middltporl

JEFFERS EXCAVATING
POMEROY, CillO
Backhoes, BulldaJtn, End Loader, Dump
Trucks, Self Loading Pan, Heavy Hauling and
Winch Trucks
•limestone
•Water line
•Basements
•Gas Line
oland Clearing •Fill Dirt
•Top Soil
•Septic Tanks •Ponds
FREE ESTIMATES

992-3525

992-5232

S/ 23/'

mo.

lOot Mulbauy b ., Pomtroy

992-3345312/«n

CONTRACTOR

446 -0294.

NOAH 'S ARK ANIMAL PARK .
Schools, churchH, COn'C)InV
picniCI . birthday p.lrtill lnd
f.Bmlly reunio ns. Cell 614· 384·

2108 or 1-800· 282· 2187.
Singles: Meet West VirginiMa .
All •.9 •· Dacn, co,._,.ntofta.
mamage Don ' t ~ tonely .
H.H.C ., Bo11 81 . Leivasy , WV

26676 .

4

Giveaway

614· 446 -2316 .

RUSS
ELECTRIC
MOTOR
REPAIR

long haired kin en s to give away.
litter tra ined Call 304· 676·
4621 .
Male dog, 'h

Romine

Pit

Bull. c 'a ll

614 -388 -9809 .
A bag of Vud Sale goods. Ctll
614 -388 ·8449 .

lt. 1, Box 27-B

GREAT BEND ELECTRIC, Inc.

repair, parts, and sup plies . PicK
up and delivery, Oav i1 Vacw m
Ctuner, ona half mile up
Georges Cri!H!Ik Rd . Call 614-

Kittens to a good tlome Ce ll

329 33

N.E.C~A.

3 Announcements

4-15·'86-lc

MOBILE HOME ROOF PAINTING
INClUDES PAll!
&amp; LABOR
OFFER GOOD THRU JUNE 5, 1986

992-7089

Announcement s

{free Estimates)

*Sttwlf! Bliklines

5·14-J lo.

OHIO

949-2263
or 949-2168

Buildines '

Phont

367-7560 - 367-7671

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

992-3361

WAMSLEY &amp;GRAY

367-0317
tr NO ANSW Ea CAU:

Howard L. WrittMI

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

*Melli Btrildinll
tPolc

;Alt SIUS IVIILABL£

.. '

5-7-2 mo.

5123/'16/1 mo.

Nod IMr lo

• BUUDOZI
•END
LOADER •T-RUCKING
•TRENCHING
•CRANES •DRAGLINE
SEWERS · BASEMENTS
WATER UNES · SEPTIC
TANKS - CRE£K &amp; FIELD
DRAINAGE PONDS · MOBILE
HOME SETUPS · ROAD
BUILDING · FOOTERS · lAND

Lowboy Hauling

land Clttorlng. Panch, Septic

BOGGS

The Daily Sentinel

to us."
Brokaw takes" good amount of
time to point out thai Abba s Is not "
freedom fight er bu l a man who
admittedly masterminded the highjacking and other terrorist actions
that n,;ulled in civilian deat hs.
NBC talks to some ol thr
oostages, the capta in of the shipilnd
tre waiter who was ordered al
gunpoint to throw Kllngbotrer and
his wheelchair ovcrooard.
"The beginning or the hijacking.
It was like a bad movie, " says
passenger Mildred Hotbs. "... 1
really tooughl I was going to di P
that night."
The four terrorist s, armed with
machine guns and grenades. gathered the passengers on the deck
or the Achille Lauro, surrounded
tlvem with cans of fuel oil and gave,
the wo!lll'n llvc grenades 10 hold.
But tlvere was al least one
passenger not on the deck Kllnghol!er. 'Ttve passengers heard ·
two shots and five hij ac kers gave
live captain a passport and said.
"This Is the !Irs tone that we ka pu1.··
Yet Abbas, wearing a suit and lir·
and smoking a ciga rette, tells NBC
that nobody was killed. Why would ,
llvey klll an old man In a wheelchair
he asks.

Business Services

·Braves rally, edge Reds, 4-3

B~

The Daily Sentinei- Pag.) --"1

Ohio

June17, 1986

Rd.

Rutland, Oh. 45 77 5
PHONE

(614)/742-2070
S-29·'86·1 mo.

2 molher c an. 4k ltt&amp;ns , 2w hita,
2 gray stripad. Cell 614 -446·

4636 .
1 male white gu iana pig, 9 mot.
old . Needs good home. 33 Evans
Heights. co ma anytime.
5 free puppi111 29 Evans
·
Heights. come anytime.
Cuddtv pup piea. Labrador mix.

AUTO
FOR SALE
1984

CHIYSLER

FIFTH AVENUE
EXC. CONDI110N
CAU
TOM ANDERSON

992-3348
AFTER

5 P.M.

CLC COINS

Buying I Selling
Gold, Silver
14K Chains, Coins,
Collector's Accmorits
Bullion
SUMMER HOUIS

1-7 M-TI

985-3937
Call far Dl,.ctlons
6·16-'1&amp;· I mo.

Located St . Rt . 180 . Call atter
7PM . &amp;14· 446 -2825.
,

J.R.'s

REPAIRS
TYs, Antennas

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

Satellite Salt•
Installation 1t"IC1
All mo)or applionce re·
pelrs (lncfu ding micro·
WtV81). Alto Lawn
mower repair. Mobile

Mrvlco.

614-843-5248
614-949-2145
6-4-'86-1 mo.

RAYMOND E. PROFFm (MAC)
RACINE,
Office 949-2438

OHIO
Emergentey

2 heelttw, cute, playful kittens to
give away. Call 614·949 -20 93.

6

lost and Found

lO ST Bla ck &amp; white Rat Tenier
dog . Vicinity of Mills Village. Call
614· 446· 3375 .
"
Lost: Bon clau

ring

tJQ(n

. hatem High School w;th inhl•
OR H lnsKte. If found. Call
614 -949 · 2152 Of 614 -949·
2960. Reward .

�Page-8- The Deily Sentinel
Yard Sale

7

.......Giinrjiolis.........

LAFF-A-D'AY

35 lots &amp; Acreage

-- -- --

lot on Raccoon Creek Private
secure, Quiet. 40x100, bath
houae, boll dock. water and
electri c tvallable. Retsonlbll
priced . Clel 614 -446 -4305
Norm Snyder, 1-304-372· 6888
Mike Dayton

&amp; Vicinity
Garag e Sale Bidweii·Aodn..,
Ad . Thurs .. Fr1 .. S.t. Watdl far
11gns Clottling, furniture, c:u'·
tain1 , mise

1 to 5 acres. partially wooded
lots. Tupper Plaint and Chester,
water and approved road to eech
lot. Reuonably prieed, will
finance. 10 percent down. Call

··· P'oiiierov ........ ··
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

514 985-3584.
35 acrn for u le Horse cave.
Recine . All m1nera11. working
gu well. 113 ,000 614-667·

5 f11 m 1ly yard ule R11lrolld St.
Acro1s from marina Good clo ·
ttun g Mon -Wed 9-4 .

3470.
Ashton building lots with public
water. mobila homes Pllfmt"ed·

Huge yard ule. Ctl"ter Firehouse Wednesday June 18

304· 678·2331 .

Aher two . most everything half

By owner 4 acr111. exc location
nur Sand Hill Road and Rolling
Acrea , 304-675 -1991 .

p t iCB

Wanted To Buy

9

Building s ite on Rt 2 , Gelllpolis
Ferry. 304·5715-2021 .

w, pay cash for Iat• mod11l c lean
J1m M1nk Chev .- Oids Inc
Bil l Gene JOhn son

TOP CASH Pltd for '83 model
and neYYtr used CUI Smith
Bu•ck ·Pont•ac. 1911 Entem
Ava . Gell ipolis Call 8U-t•U·

22 82
WANTED TO BUY used wood &amp;
coal heaters SWAIN 'S FURNI ·
TURE. Jrd &amp; OINe St. Glllipo hs Call614 446 -3169.

Wan ted run k autos Call 614-

388-9303
Sm111 motorcvcle preferabty an
80 or go -can or 3 wheeler. Call
614 -367-061 3
Set of hangtng scales br pro duce Call 614 -256 -6870.
B11 ying dattv gold silver coins.
ungs. tewelry. starhng Wire. old
coins, !1rge currttn cv. Top prt·
cel . Ed. Burkett Barber Shop.
2nd Ave MKtdleport. Oh 614·

18 Wanted to Do

31

TrN . work wanted· prunning.
topp1ng, remo\1111, hedge• &amp;.
bauhestrimmed FrMestimatas
Cali614-.WI-1932
hbylitttng job wanted for
a.unmer. Preferably wHkdi'VIC.II anytime 814-258·6707
Wtll do mowtng &amp; odd jobs.
ciNning garegts, farm work.
C.ll 814-448 -6268.
Wanted: Someone to clell' land.
2 acr11 close to town . on Rt.
888. Reply to Box T700 in ctre
of the Gelltpolil Daily Tribune.
825 Third Ave .. Gallipo lil, Oh

46631 .

Employment
Se rvices
11

Help Wanted

E ~~: c.e Her1t

Income for pert ttme

ho me assembly work For into

call 312 ·741 ·8400 e11t 313.
Attent io n ! Time is running out to
get in (ll the ground floor Be 1
!I.Jpen.tisor for House of Uoyd
Toy Party Plan. No •nvntment.
Weekly pay checks. Call collect

304· 736-6330
loca l Busmess w1ll be in need of
s~ eral
employees beginntng
August September and Oc·
1ober Coo ks (must be able to
prepara· no faat food) Wal·
treu es or waiten (muat be 21
vears of ege· aome blr tending
1bilitl11 preferred ) 1 part time
bookkeeper, " Girl Friday" . Send
inforrn111tion desired to P.O. Box
426. Pt Pleaaant. WV, 25660 .
W1ter treetment plent operator
Pu~ing 1. 2 to 1.5 million
gallo n• per dey lon exchange
p(ant. Cla11 II hcentt a must.
E11cellent heehh &amp; Ntirament
benefits Salary negotiable
St~nd resume to Gallia Rural
Water Rt 1 Box 184 Glllipolis.

OH 46631 . Coll614-446 -922 1.
Child Care Worker-Housekeeper
wanted to live·in wfth family in
small vtllege on commuter tratn
line north of New York City. Cera
tor 2 .nd 4 year old children
Hou sehold dutiet and simple
maal preparation. 5 day wHit
Wilt! Wedn•dey and OCCIItOnat
otner eventng or wHkend bllb·
ysi" ing. Own room , bath, cable
TV iinit 8110 week salary. Prefer
r 'lllege ege Summer OK but
longer convn111ment preferred .
Send name , addrnt , telephone
Availability dlte. up•ience .
reierences to Mre. England . 67
Sunnvside Avenue, Pleaunt·
ville, NY 10570
Cabin11t makers. lmmed iate·-op«~inga tor cabinet makltf'S &amp;
machin e opefetof1. Hours 8· 4.
470 Souttl Front St Columbus.

OH
Euv Auembty Wo rk! t714.00
per 100 Guarent•d Payment.
No Sales . De t ails·· Send
damped envelope Elan-6847
3418 Entarprise , Ft. PlltCI Fl.

33482.
EASV ASSEMBLY WORK!
$7,4 .00 per 100 . Guaranteed
payment. Nosall!ll. Details-Send
aumped envelope: Elan-715
3•18 EnteJllrill, Ft. Pierce. Fl:

334q2.
GovemrNnt Jobs. 116,040 .
159,230 -yr Now hiring . Call
806-687-6000 Ext R-9805 for
current federal lilt.

A GOLDEN OPPORTUNITYJorn Frien dty Home Toy Partin,
· the IlNder tlr 31 years Open·
ll'lgs br mtniQet'l and dell81"1.
We hi'IO the lergllt 1nd belt line
m party plan. No cuh lnv•t·
men I. ro deiNettng or collecting.
Eam big money plu1 bonus11
and travel mcentivll. Call now
"" tree to Carol Day 1-800-

Business
Opportunity

! NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO recommend• th1t you
do bu•in•s with people you
know . 1nd NOT to lind money
throu~ the mall until \IOU heve
inv ..tigat.:t the offering.

lnternatiOnll Metal Building Ma·
nufacturer selecting builderdiller in some open areal . High
potential profit i1 our growth
indu1try. !303) 769 -3200 ext.

2403.
Esub lished bu•in•• for 11le.
Indoor miniature golf course.
Downtown Gallii)Oiil. Call 614·

\rille. Ohio. C1ll 614·886·8286
after 6PM 614 -886-8470.
A. golden opportunity· join
fr1endly home toy parti... the
Ieeder for 31 y11rs . Openings for
managers and dul . .. We neva
thelarg•t and bntline in p~~rty
plan No cuh investment. no
d.tivering or mUlcting. Earn big
money plua bonua11 and travel
incentN• . C1ll now toll free to
Cerol Day 1-800·227-1!10

23

Profouional
Services

Water wells serviced 1nd drilled .
Free eatimltll. C1ll 614·992·

5001

~

Wa nted 1ome one to mow llwn,
call 304 -676 -201 5

12

Situations
Wanted

PIANO lUNING AND REPAIR

3824

"31 · Homos for Sala
4 bedroom houn. fireplace. 3
mi. south of Gallipolis, $29,900.
Call dayt 61•·«6·1818 or
evening• 81-t-446·6222.
Wt l k to town , 1chools
churchn. library, one story.
bdr.. a« ractive batt!, formal
dlningroon . good carpet ing,
larg e kitchen. good gu fum ace,
storm windows. Cell 814-446·

2

0530
4'h 1cres with road frontage on
county rolld B Tick Ridge Road,
hllf land. lwei garden land good
trailar site or house site Join1
Clyde Welker land on thr• sldn
It Thurmln. Ohio. Ju•t off 35
Wnt from Ga•tpolit, Ohio, Celt

114·245-9105.
By owner· small 2 bedroom
home with VJ icre hilllidelot 1nd
outbuilding. 5 milll south of
Oallipolil. Krin• Aldge Rd . Flrrc
house on right from Rt. 21 B
114.000 . Pey 14.000 down and
owner will hefp finance INiance.

Cllll114-4-48·2917.
5 rooms &amp; bath, 2 lo11. Call

3

All electric. 2 bedroom hOme.
B11eboard hilt, 'h basement
w ith woodburner. gar~~ga. cable
TV and setNage. Low utilities,·
tAcellent conditton. 1.4 acre. on
Yellowbuah Rd . in Sunon Township, Racine . t33.000. Cell

6H-!M9-2110.
21h year old home. 7 room~ and
bath on 1 . 8 a crt, Gallipolis
Ferry, W Va. 304-175-2284.

1978, 141170 Ktrkwood . 3 bt. 2
full bl1ha. some remodeling .

304· n3-5oea .
Nice 3or4bMroom houst, ltJge
kitchen . half basement. ecre
11nct. will take mobill home or
Clml)lf' as down payment, IIIU·
mabie loan, 304-8715·3030 or
876 - ~31 .

3 bedroom brick nest led in
woods on fi acres. bllemtnt, 2
baths, 2 car glf'age. fire plac1.
mini b1111. call for appointment

7. 61.· 986-·358 .
3 bedr~m. Lg. kftchen. heat
punw. cond. ctrpttld. 11 .,.
age. Syracuu 814-992· 3•02
aftet 6 pm

a"

18 Wanted to Do

2 bedroom Duplt:~t hOUH Plr·
tlelly furnilh.C Low ln~l• in
Will lake care of t hut ·ins in their Pomeroy. Call dtys, 814·ti2·
homes . 20 year eJip . Call 614· 23B1 or 814·992· 2509 even·
lnge.
4 46· 2690.
2 bedroom houae In Pom ..oy
UOO furn ished. t1811 unfur:
nlah~ . Pay own utllhl•. wood
bumlt', lerge Vetd. Call days

Would like to do hOut e cte1nlng 114·882· 2381 or 114·882·
for home or office. 814-849· 2508 ...,.mngs.

2 125.
Gowlfm.nt homn from t1 , (U
Will do any yard work. mfncr rlppe6r). Delinquent tea proprepairt, paint ing inside or out. My. RllPOu•liDn•. Cel 101·
Hawe referencll. 304· 176· 887·6000 ht. H·8801 fOf
current repo lltt.
'7991 .

Nice 2 bdr apsrtments in duptu
houae. M1in St. Cheshire, Ohio.
Furnith.t &amp; water pa1d. Call

6U· 245·5B18.
4 room hOuse, with extra lot. In
Crown City, t16,500. Call

Middleport . Call 614 -992 House tor rent . 2 bedroom
unfurnished . fully carpeted:
Deposit required . Clll614-992 -

3090 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

0

Unfurnished apt, vard and bu•
mern, 8160 .00 month. 304·
675· 7641 evening

0

1983 Honda ATC 200 3
wheeler, good cond Call 614 -

0

446-7015 .

6/17/86
EVEN!NQ
Cil ()) • ()) ® . . llll
il1l Newo
II) Clr. .n Acreo
@ Mazda Sportslook
f.ll (7) Star Trek
CII 3-2· t, Contact (CC)
till Here'o 10 Your Health ·

8 :00 •

8 :05
8:30

81 Honda 660 in good condi·
tion . tS50 Ca11814-992 -8144.

3 br apt, alec. heat aveillble. 1
week. locat.:t on Crab Creek Rd.
RefiiJI'encll Required Call b•
tween 8:30 lla 8 pm'. 304· 676·

Murry X 24 racing bike. New
handle pads and tpeedometer
All chrome. Good eondition

6608.

060 614·986-3596.

46

Furnishad Rooms

1980 Ktwallkll'f.D750 . E*cel·
lent condition . t960 . OBO Call

114-992· 7892 .6

Upp., River Rd . alto double
wide Call 614· 4•6·0508 or

614-4-41-2430
2 bdr. furn . . or unfurn. conve nient loe~~tion, Upp11 RNer Ad .
all utiUties paid e11cept electric:
Sec. dep. req . Call 814-448 ·

8568.

Raccoon Rd . Furnished tHIO &amp;
dep . S. ref. Call 814· 4•&amp;-9346.

or 304·676·S760.

32 Mobile Homos

2 mobile homn furnished or
unfurni•hed, 1dul1t , no pets 5
m1l11 from town Call 61 4 · 446·
1 15B.

U1180 Shultz covered porch.
rural water, metal storage bldg ..
with lot, Crown City. Cell
614 ·256· 1444 or 614 -2 56 -

1389 .. 304-175-1328
1978 141170 Fe1tival 2 bdr , 2
baths. lots of closets. e11c. con d.

Colll14·4-41·1241 .
1978 Mans ion 141170, 101120
porch I twnlng. underp inn ing.
2 bdr.. blth v,, Uvingroom,
ceiling t1n kitchen stO\Ie, refrig .,
den, firepiM:e, AC , w11her.
dryer . Call 814·38B-9850.
1981 Commodora 14x44 ex.
cond 11.500. Call 814· 3BB·

8628.
Make offer Ills ttlan tl5 ,000
fY!Obilt home. ovartooking rNer.
mce home for older folks. Call

11•·«8-2376.
1980 Liberty 1411!t4. 2 bed·
room, unfumishtd. vinyl under·
pinning includ.C . Mutt sell. Call

304-n3-5873.

Nice 2 bedroommobilehomeon
Routh lane in Cheehire. Otlio
On nice lot . Cell304-773-5828.
2 bedroommobiletlomefor rent
Ne1r R1cine. 614 -992-6868 .
Two bedroom trtilllf' on Jerrlco
Road . 1200.00 month, 304·

675· 3858
Mobile
rooms,

~me

for rent. 2 bed·
t160.00 per month,

304-175-4164.

Trailer for 11le: 19713 bedroom
12x70. t5000. 614-742 -2232

M081LE HOMES MOVED: in·
30·· 671-2338

•uoo. 304· 676·2485.

1 983 Knoolwood. 3 bedroo m
trailer. 1111.1me lo1n with 1 low
down payment . 304-875-5208
or 875-1600.
1978. 12 1180 Govenor, air cond,
front porch with IWn ing . exc
cond1 304 · 898 · 3455 1ft e r

5•00

1782 .. 178· 7142.
,978 Elcone 1 mobile--home,
141185, axe con d. 304·6715·

1870.

44

Apartment
for Rent

1918 Netlonll • • 2 bedroom
lrlil•, t3 ,200.00 firm call

882·3647 .

Fermi for Sale

142 aere farm with 3 bdr. houae.
lerge b~m . 2 ponda. CMI 814·

2U·I248.
111 terll In L111n, llflt home,
2 t.ma. owner financing. 30•·
11115·3-450.

Echo trimmer~ 188 .715 tO
t299 . 915 . Husqverna uws ,
Ecllo NWI, 'f ardm., ITIOWetl.
New 6 u1ed, aM mall•. Chifdtn
Saw Supply, Koontz -SaUor Rd .•
Vinton. Oh. CIIII14-388-B664.
Buy Rawleigh Produc11 whcltale. Dale nd Wilma Wood

304-675 -1090.

SLIGHT PAINT DAMAGE
Flashing arrow aign t299 . ligh~
ted , non-llfow t2?9t Nonligh·
ted 12491 Frn le"tJs l Few leftr.

See _locolly . 118001423·10163,

lot. 304-676-3248.

anytrme.

47 Wanted to Rent

Bobby Mac canllt·atroller.
prtm stroller. cer booster 'nat.

Wanted like to rent 3 bdr. house.
prater basement, in or ~round
Gallipolit Need by July 16t h.
Catl61•-4•&amp;-4448

Merchandise
51 Household Goods

55 Building .Supplies
Building Mtterial•
BlocK, briclc. IMtWir ptp•. win dows. lintels. etc ClaucM Win·
1er1, Rto Grande. 0 . C1H 614·
2·5·5121 .
Building m1terials. cemant.
blocks aiiJilea. yard or deiNery .
Gallipolis Block Co., 123Vz Pine
St., Gatllpotit. Ohio Call 614·

harvest gold t125 ,
refngerator whtte t125. refrtg·
erator avoCido t125 , rlfrigera·
tor copplrtOne t125, reftigerator tkfe by sKte 1195, wuher
Kenmora t160, electric range
30 in. white top and bottom
oven t 150. electric renge 38 in.
175. gas range h~~n~est gold 30
in lilce new t160 . air cond.
1, ,000&amp; B.OOD BTU's t96 ...
bedroom ..,"e 195. cheat of
drtwers 120. Skagga Appliance
Upper River Rd . 614-••ta· 7398 .

Pickens Used Furniture. Good
QUaltty used furn l1ure. Opan 9 to
8 or cell for appo~ntmen t.

JACKSON ESTATES APART·
MENTS (Equal Hou11ng Opper·
tunity) monthly rent ltartt at
t178 for 1 ~room and 8212
for 2 bedroom. depo1it 1200,
loCitld Milt Spring Vellev Plaza
end Foodland, pool and Cable TV
available. affice hours 11 po11i·
ble 101m to•pmend 7 pm to 9
pm Mondev-Friday. Cell 614·
448 -27415 or leave m•uge.
Nicety furn ished mobile home.
eft. apt .. cantr~l air 1nd tlut in
city, adults only. Call-61 4-446·
2 bdr. utilif 1ea partially furn ,
t H6 mo. Cell 304-675 -5104.
New 1 bedroom apanment. Call

61.· 4-46·0390.

Pt ..tie cistern st1111 approved.
plastic 111:1tic unkl, plast ic
culvens, metal culvarta. J\ON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, J1c lt·
son. Oh. 814· 2B8·5930.

2 tx:tr . UPSIIitl ll)t, extre nt Cf!.
central air Ce\1814 -446· 2158.

WAite 's metal detecto rs, latest
model•. lowest prices Call

2 bdr. apt ., downtown, 1190
without utllitin. t295 with
Uttlhin. Dtpoait requtred. Call
11•· 446-2129 8:00am . 5pm.

1989 Mon..-ch trailot 12~e60 , 2
bdr. 16600. 83 Ford Ranger
truck $4000 . Cell 814 ·367·
na1 .

~omplettly

614-445-0648 .

furn ished. all elltct:·
r1c, 2 bdr . apanment , 1225 mo ..
1 bdr. t200 mo. Aduhs. referencea. sec depos it. 458 Second
Ave. Call 614 -446· 22 36 o r

TO 9 International dozer: 4 held
block 1aw milL 2 Chwrolet
truckt ~ ton 19158 &amp;2 ton 1986.
Call 304-675-5823.

Furnish.ct room t 136. Utilities
pd 919 2nd Gallipolis. Share
Nth . Singe! male Call 614·

S light paint demega. Fluhlng
&amp;now sign 82991 light.:t, non·
arrow • 279 1 Nonllghted t2•91
Free l11ttera t ~ ew !aft. See
lo ca_lly 1 · 800 -423 - 0163.
anyttme

114-4-46 -2681 .

Fumlsh.ct ept. 2 bdr 1175.
131 'h 4th Gallipolis. Water pd.
Ctll 814 -448· 4418 1fter 8pm
Furn ished apt. 1 bdr. 920 4th
Gall ipolis. 1280 U1il itill pd
Call 81•·«&amp;·••18 after 8pm
c ouple~

2 bdr.. utilties
paid t110 mo ., Call

30•· 876· 6104 or 304·175·
5388.
1 bedroom ept. for rent. B•slc
rent ...rt, U18 . 1 month thlt
includes 111 utilities. Deposh
raquired of 1200. Co ntect VII·
lage Manor Apt. Middleport.
814-P82· 77B7. Equal Hoysing
Opportunity.

"
1pt. in
)

2 bedroom, total elec
Pomeroy Acro11 hom Fire
St1don. 814-992·1216 or 614·

9t2-73H.
Pomeroy 2 bdr, NIVIOre Run
•175 mo •1 00 deposh, yard:
patio, Call efttf 8pm 8,.·992·

1888.

Sofa w1ttl new tlipcover 150.
Antique org1n 186. 5 pleca
dlnetta 125. 814-992 -5697.
lifetone 2000 Ftmlly Fitn11s
Svstem . Excellent contlition

Call 614·843· 5276 .

Pets for Sale

AKC Reg . Beegle puppiea for
Nle. Call 304-372· 4620.
5 year old registered female Blue
Tick coon dog t50. Call 814·

388-9773.

175-'1831 .
Wil ti 1m1on M"t Merket
U S .D.A. Pr ime BeefSsle, S id~
11 .29, Front qts. t1 .09, Htnd
qta . 11 70. U.S .D .A. Choice
Beet S1le, S~11 t1 2&amp;. Fronts
t1 .06, Hinde 11 .82. Price In·
eludes cutting. wrapping and
freezing. Whol1 Primal Cutt.
Whole Albeyet 12· 141b tverage
U . 90 lb. Whole Ntw York
Stripa U · 14 lb everag•
lb. Cholet Tendorilon t5 .98 lb
Short Loin t3 .151 lb. Full Loin
I 3. ~ 5 lb. Price indudel .cunlno.
Deposit required . Gult.,tNd
tltlder. Call 304·&amp;78 · 5313,
Point Pla..ant. W. Va.

••.oe

71

Autos for Sale

, 6 ft . John1o n boat &amp; trailer, 76
HP Call 614-246·9432 .
1984 Ball boat 16 fl . 60 hrs .,
Mercury alec stan, drive on
tr•iler, 2 batteries. 2· 8 gallon
tanh, toot controll ed trolltng
motor. 1 graph recorder. ercc
cond. Celt 614·388·9718 .
12 ft. aluminum ti1hing boat 3
HP motor and Tro ll ing motor.
New aea11. 1500. 614 -992 ·

3465.
1972 Pipntone M~rin e r 16 ft .
120 horsa inboard motor and
trai ler. 13.800 .00. 304-6 75·

2949

1979 Ford Mus11ng 4 cyl., new
rebuilt motor, low miletge. Call

814· 251-6417
1987 CtMvy Impala 396· 325
HP, red, black interior, PS, PB. 2
dr . fender skil11. e.~~:c cond.
good show car, 13,000 C&amp; ll

114·2·6-960S

84 Chrysler ll•er automatic AC .
18.000 mi l• . PS. 1PB. nice,

06.600 Co1111•· 379-2721

79 Olds Cutlus Brougham.
Soutllem car, ro rust. All power
New tlru. t3296 C11t 614446-0796. Mu11 11110 belil'lt.
, 975 Chevy Morua V-8. t596 .
1976 Meverick 4 dr .. 85,600
milll, good cond .• 1998. 1976
Pontiac Orenvill good body , runs
good , 1495 . C1ll 614 · 379 -

614·7·2·3118 .

1984 Dodge Charger air cond.,
auto, e11c cond. 22.000 mi Call

AKC Registered Cock• Span iel
puppies. Blond and Butt co lors
Tails and Duking ciiWI done
also de-wormed. 1126. cet'l

61.·446·2323 .

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

You pick 1.50 quart Routh ' a
Berry Farm . Union Campground
nNr New Haven, WV. Call

304-882-2237.

59 For Sale or Trade
1976 Dodge motor home
33 .000 milat , extra c lean ,
14.850. Cell 1· 814· 288· 8522.
Large round H111ton Baler and 2
a11el llqUipment treilar. Call

614·992· 7401 .

78 dodge Oiplomet IUtOmiiiC,
AC, fully lold.ct. asking 11 ,&amp;00.
82,000 mil•. Call 114· &amp;41·
9671anytimeor61 • · 448-4876
after &amp;:00.
1975 G. Plymouth Fury. 1971
Mercury Monarch Both • door.
11r. Ca ll 814-992-7076. 8 00
1m .- 7:00pm .
1980 G. Plyrmuth Fury, AM ·
FM. air 1980 Dstson 210, 6
speed . Cali 614 -992 · 7075
8:00am.- 7 :00 pm.
198• Sil11ar Thunderbird .
28,000 mllea. VB. Call 614-

992·11872 "'"6:00pm.
1984 SS Monte C~rlo . White
and blue. AC . PB, PS . Tlh.
AM·FM cauette. re c lining
buctlet Hell, 4 new tirH . Price
18600. Good condition. C1ll
.,. ... 6
814 -367-719:1 .

oo.

1975 Dodge Oert t450. 304-

f .IIIII ~ lllliiiii: S
~ Livo:s l tit:k

61

898·3138.
1983 Comoro Z28. 20.000
miiH . loct l owner, loaded.
Ghercoet Grl'(. mutt ' "" 304178·6313 orhor 5:00PM .

Farm Equipment

614-281· 6461 .
MaNY Fergueon. New Hollend,
Buah Hog Iaiii a S.rvice. Ower
u11d triC10rs to choose from
&amp; co,.,..,lete line of n..- • und
equipment. larg ..t 11lection in

.a

S .E. Ohio.

1982 Chevy Cavaliar, 4 cyl,
auto. 4 cbor, 12,650.00 seH or
trade for trudc, 304-875-4181 .

72

-·

81

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Un conditional liret1me guaran
tee. local r.terencn turntahed
Fr.. •timltll. Call collect
1·81•· 237-048B. day or night
Rogars Basement
Waterproofing.
Exterior &amp; lnterlor atucco Pl11·
ter &amp; piHtM repeira . Low rates
Call 814-258 -1182

EEK&amp; MEEK

h .terior &amp; intttrior stuceo Plat ·
tar &amp; plutlf repain . low rat es

TE.tJ BUCKS ...

Need rfl)eir inside or uut1 Call us
at 81-'·992· 8661 or 6U-992·
29 34. 20 years experience.
RON ' S Ttl1v lsion Sende e
House calls on RCA . Ouazar,
GE . Speclaling in Zenith. Call
304· 571· 2398 or 614 · 446 ·

2.54 .
Fetty Tree Tr imming, stump
removal . C1ll 304· 675· 1 33 1
RINGLES ' S SERVICE . experienced carpenter, elec:trici1n.
miiiGn. paintar, roofing (ln clud tng hot tsr appl icetlont 304·

B·N Ford Tractor. New paint
rebuilt, nub good. 11 3!f6. 814:
986 ·4222 ofttr I pm.

62 Wanted to Buy

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

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

St11ka Tree and law n Service.
ltndscaplng 304-578· 201 0 .

Now buying shell com or ear
corn. Call for tetllt quOtll. Aiwer
City Farm Supply, 81•· . . 6·

"

5284.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

82

CARTER 'S PWMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and Pine
Gallipohs, Ohio
Phone 814· 448 -3888 or 614·

441·4477

Excavating

85

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1979 Converalon van, 1968
Chevy truck. nlca . 1978 ChBYy
Luv. Cell lft:er II, 614 -446-

WoAt&lt;E UP. JUGHAID!!

GO STAND

I'M SICK AN' TIRED OF
VOIU SLEEPIN'IN CLRSS !!

CORNER!!

IN TH'

General Hauling

K_fln ' s Water Servic~t Well s.
CISter ns po ols an d w aterbeds
filled Ce ll 5 14-367-0623 or
614 · 367 7741 or 30 4 ·6"15 ·

phone 30•· 876-4681 .

, -- -------.

C. AND 0 . Contractor. remodelIng and nM frame work and eny
kind of odd jOba. Call 30•· 773 -

1969 Chevy Truclc. New Ill •
h1u11. new t1r11. toPQer. 350
autort\Uic . Price negot iable .
1972 Dodge, eamper apaclal.

7

OH, ANDA SALAMI
&amp;/'.NDWIQ-1 l WAS EATING
WH ILE !WA5STIRRINEi IT.

.

896·3802

J&amp;m es Boys Water Service Also
pools lilted Call 614 -25 6-1 14 l
or 614 · 446· 1175 or 6 14 -44 6 ·

Moving. Coli 614·992· 7877.

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

. THIS LENONAOE
TASTES FUNNY.
(
WHATS IN IT::!

Rotary or cable tool drilltng.
Mott well• completed umeday.
Puf1'1) 11111 and u rv ice. 30•·

1983 Dodga Power A1m, automatic. 4•4: low mlle~ge, exce._
tent cond1tlon. teaoo. 614·
986·4222 """ I om.

73

"

176-2088 .. 676-7318.

Tr enc"'"g Se rv•ce. wa11r, gas.
end elfiCtri c Free estimales
304· 713 5839 .

8622 .

MID I GET A t.Xm
5A&lt;K 1HAT 5A'r'S 'SE£?.

SO 1 SWT HIM

Ceii614 ·266·11B2.

1982 Muda. 6 speed , AM -FM .
12499 Johns ' a Auto Sai11
Bulavillt Ad. Gallipolis , OH . .

100 Ford trector. 1, 200 hours
with ptows. cultlwttor mower
boom pole t2 .995. 2. ft . 4ul~
goosanack tNiler t1 ,995 . l40
IH trlctor whhpklwl, mower. IH
hay conditioner, hay wagons, 66
NH iNlier t 2.995. 1800 Oliver
diesel widefron\ cr.. m putt
t3 .650. AC 4 row no-till planter,
clean 18150. C1t1 1 · 111 4-2BI·

AVOIP

'T"E'~~o~ISM ,

Trucks for Sale

For Sale: 1982 Chevy 11J ton 8 2
Di11tl trudt. AM ·FM radio, PB ..
PS., tuto , over drive. low
mileaoe 614 -742 -2897.

W~'{)

Home
I mprovoments

AC trac10r with plows U60 .
New ld11 pull -tvpe mower
12215 3 pt. rake n...,er used

In bolo' eep6. Coli

:r T'ttOuGHT"

ALLEYOOP

Good -1 Exc e'lating, besement s.
foot ers . driv~JWays , ~ept ie 1a n1c s
lands caping Callenyllme 614:
446 -46 37. J ames l. Dav11on,
Jr . owner.

t395 JO

,_.E' u.S".

Serv1ces

1982 Chevy Sitverado pldc:up 1
~n dull wheela. dual tankl , new
'""· orgir'll miles 61 .000. C111
evenings 814-245-5651.

1·1114· 286· 8&amp;22.

wow! I"JJ~

?! --·

N VACATIONING .,..,

CENTER . SA 36 W Gallipolia
Oh10. Call 614 · 441· 9777.
614-446-3592 . Up front triC·
10rs wtth warranty over75 unci
tractors. 1000 tools

tv•:

fiVE POL.L.A~S

Over the cab truclc camper
Sleep• 4. Call 614·992-3090

B3

J IM'S FARM EQUIPMENT

AUTO REPAIRS

E'l&lt;lt-fT"'( •

4122 .

1972 Pontiac Catalina, runs

4184.

fOU~ Jiul'oi~EJ)

15 tt Scottie Selt-con11ined
refrtgerator, l tovft w tth oven:
furnace . Good c o ndition .
11000. 080 . Call 614 -247 ·

fOod. n.w tirn. batterv 1300 .
304·895-3828 .1
1983 Swdebaker, runs good ,
good body , $760 00 30··175·

ROADSIDE GARAGE

1976 Starcrah foldout c1mper.
sleep• 8, cofT'4)1ete with stove.
ICe boll , lights &amp; sink. eiiC con d.,
like new Call 614 -388-9765
after 6PM.

1970 Buick Eltetfl flir condi·
tion , 1800. Call 81t-388-9832.

2233.

614·7·2·2738

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Great Dane. Farm owners only
Good ground hog dog . 176

TONY 'S GUN REPAIRS , ocopa
bore l ight ing. fa ctory reblueing
hours 9.00 till derk. call 30"~

Transportation

56

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S 36 W..t, J1cbon , Ohio.

Call 614·256-6251.

., .26 30·· 675· 5679.

1979 Chevro~t Monu , z dr .
wagon , tuto . one owner, t 999.
John' s Auto Sal". Bulavllle Rd .,
O.ilipolit.

AM · 10.00 AM .

Callahan 's Used Tire Skop . Over
1 ,OOOt lrts. s i~es 12 . 13. 14 , 15 ,
16, 16.6. 8 miles out R1 . 218.

MUted hsy large square b•'"·

Fiberglals Nove 327-326 HP.
chrome engine, m-22 transmis·
110n Call 814·992·89•1

Eerty American Setn 111fa bed
and chetr. uc cond, t276 .00.
Call 304-t75 · 2198 1f1er 8:00
PM between o' between 7:00

54 Misc . Merchandise

64 Hay &amp; Grain

81odc , bticlt, mortar and m1·
10nry suppli11. Mountain State
Bku:k. Rt 33, New Heven. W
Ve . 304·8B2· 2222 .

Reg Doberman pups ex. pedi·
gree. good 1emp•meru, t 150
ea. Call814-266-8403 .

Refriger~tor

304-678-15492.

4-46-2783

Washer!, dryers . refnger1tors.
ranges Skaggs Apphanc . ..
Upper RNer Rd . beaide Stone
Cnttt Motel. 81 4 -446-7398.

For 111e: Harlequtn Romence
bookl 270 for 175. whtu
wooden table 126. yellow kit·
chen etlina cabinet t80, all in
good condit ion. See at 256 So.
Fourth A11e .. Mkldltpon, Oh.

2 btad sowt and one purebred
York Bort t675 .00. Male Fer·
ren t60 .00. Fen Teil piegons.

1979 Rabbitt. Call 814-3888.26 or after 6 81•· 388 ·BB23 .

GOOD USEO APPLIANCES

V1!1ey Furn iture, new &amp; used .
l11ge lettion of quality fuml·
ture . 1218 Eastern Ave . .
GallipoliS

451· 1012.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

30.·175·1605

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel
CFA Him1tayan, Persian and
Siam•• khtena . AKC Chow
puppi• . NIIW' puppi•. kltt.,s .
Call 448·3844 efter 7PM.

County Applian ce. Inc. Goo d
uted app lianc ea and TV sets.
Open 8AM 10 8PM . Mon thN
Sat 814· 446 -1899 , 627 lrd.
Ave Gallipolis , OH.

Arabian Horses. purebred Ar1 ·
bian stud service. Special dls ·
oounts to youth group•. R. &amp; J .
Arabians. Leon. W. Va. 304-

.

30•· 87! ·6483 "' 175·1UO.

Older
partly
72 Nuhul 14a60. 2 br, 10tll
.tee. Q.C. undwpennlng. HCUr·
ity light. 30•·175·1212

Trailer 1pace. 3 mil• from town
just aboweo ld " V" on Rt . 2, large

448-1171 .

446-4-411.

1982. 14x48 Co mmodore, ...
au~ loan 1t t162 .00 month.
furnllhtd. e11e cond. 304-8715·

Trailer spac11. S1nd Hill Road
con11enitnt to schools, atore and
ho1pitat City setNer available.
Inquire Rosalee, 304-875·4800
between 9 :00 and 4 :00 week
days .

Used retr!Qeretor bru• bed.
complete, occ. chair Call 814-

033e.

Two bedroom trailer with expando living room on nice liVe!
lot in Middl..,art Near schools
and ttores Call61.t·992-2101
or 614 -992-2319.

614-843-6186

2 &amp; 3 bdr mobile hom• . AC ,
c_,le TV. Buleville Rd . C1ll
614·446· 01527 aftlf 3pm ..

4369

for Sale

Tr1iler lot tor r.,t in Portl1nd.
Acro11 from Poet Office Trsller
hook-up. 170. per month . Phcn1

su ite $399, bunk bedt 1199
anHon ttcliners 199. new &amp;
ut~ bedroom ll.litat, flnges,
wnnger wathere , &amp; sho11. New
livingroo m suitn 1199· t699 .
lamps . alto buying coal &amp; wood
stovet. Call614· 446·3159 .

812· 2095.

33

~~D, ~00 ~ IPJJ
MJe., I 'M~I(,HTI::D.

74 Motorcycles

APARTMENTS , mobile home~ .
hous• . Pt Pl...1nt 1nd Gallipo·
Ita. 614·•41·8221

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURN ITURE 62
Olive St., Gallipolis. New &amp; used
wood-cotlttov.. , 6 pc wood LR

2 bdr. 12x60 Holley P1rk,
wash..--dryar hook-up. v, ml
pn1 Hotz., Medical Center. Ref
&amp; dep. requtred . Call 814-446·

~

Television
Viewing

1988 Ch~Wy conversion van, low
mil... ge, AT. AC . AM -FM e11c
cond. Cell 014· 448-4U1 aftflr
6 &amp;. on weekends

5-,.racuta. 2 Mdroom t195 per
month plus utilltllt. Dapo1it
requir.C. Call 814-992·81587
after 5 :00. 81•· 992-7871 or
814-992·5732 .

Fully furnished, AC . all utilt111
paid. aduhs only . Call614· 441 4110 or 614· 448 -2003.

Choice of two Colonial homll, 9
room~~ and 2 111 batha or 8 rooms
and 2 baths. both newly ramodeled. Owner financing . 304-

30··112· 2119

5828 .

6304.

304-175-2385.

1982 CIIVton 121160 all alec.

3 bedroom, ntwly redecorated.
aluminum aid ing, large earport,
garage, on :14 acralot tn Chnter.
One· fourth mile on 248 off Rt.

Be the fir1t to live in th111dorable
completely refurbiahed 2 Dtd·
room home in ucell.,t neigh·
borhood. Also h11 geragt~. ni ce
yard and garden spot. Phone
Denise at Colonial Propertiea
814-286 · 5110 for further
detail.

14x60 2 bdr .. prNate lot with
playground I garden lj)Ot . 6 mi .
from Gallipolis on At . 21B. t200
I mo. Cali 614· 256-1 393.

2 bdr 12d0 1973 Artington
price 18000. 2 bdr 121165 1973
Utopi L Pf'ice 16.200. Call814-

Coli 614 -246·6118

Houses for Rent

2 bedroom furnished houae in

sur.:t. rNsonlble rat•. Call

Handym1n ' s Spec::ial duplu ren·
tel. In need of repair Vinton
Ohio. Priced cheap l l1o.ooo:

41

Restored home Vine St . Fh·
tine. Kitchen, new oak cabinets
living room. dining room,
bedrooms, blth. lncludM all
curt•int . Price 135,000 .
Phone. 814·949·2640:

614·441·1358

441·9141.

Rental s

614-888·6222

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES . 4 Ml
WEST. GAlLIPOLIS. RT 36.
PHONE 614 ·4-41·7274.

Real Eslole

Vans 8o 4 W.O.

19BO Chevy window van, 8
pa11enger, duel heat-air, tilt,
ctt.~ilie. t5 .996. Call 614 -37 9 ·
2341 . No Sunday cells

EHici•ncy apt . Suit1bitfor 1 or 2
people. On Rou•h L1ne In
Chnhlre, Ohio. Call 304-773-

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Large lou Call 614-992 -7.t79.

7861 .

rediscover your plano ' 1 beMrtrfui
tone. call today , Ward• Keybolfd , 304-176-6500 Of 076-

Wtll ca re fo r eld e.-ly or ill in th ei r
M me. day shift . E~~:perien ced , Quality home. rwtwly remodeled
dep endable. Refe ren cts . Cell cfloice locetlon on ColltCJe Rd .
614-992-7310 .
Syracu••· new compltte kitchen
and laundry, air conditioned,
large lot. 11 4 ·992 -8324.

Will do mowing working in My
or tobecco Hauling junk, or .-.y
odd jo b. Call 114· 86· 1•6&amp;.

7 room houee 1 lit b1th, 4
bedroom. garage 770 Attl St.
Middleport Ohio 614 -992·

114·742·3147.

' ' Ctl rlst m~~ s around the wortd ' · 1
new par1y plan ts hirtng area
superv11ora. No i nve~tment . no
co llecting . no delivery . Pr...,iou•
~ rty pl., tltlpful. C111 collect

675 1090.

614·678·2613 .

Forry, 304·175 ·2932.

3 bdr.. large kitchen, beth
utllitiy room. ttngle gerage, 2 ca;
driveway, nice yard. garden
apece. fin ished ger-ee. Call

R AWL EIGH S al es man , ea rn
S-5 00 to 110 00 per hour s pare
l ime. fo r ll'tformation t all 304·

6 room house . 1.2 aer•. Double
car garage. Locat.C on Roee Hill.
B.-gain priced t20,000. Call

For 11le ctive Q11'119e bu1inna

227· 1510.

World Book - Ch i ~ cnft, repr •
sentatives needed Part tr me. fu ll
lime. gu • antees wailable , 30•·
882· 2465

70x100 lot . 1 '12 1toryhouse. 3to
4 btdrooma. dlthwaahlf, double
range atove. tully carpeted.
wood 1nd coal burning 1tove
Clo11 to school end tlotpltal.
Ctli 814-992-8080 Any re11o·
nabla offer m.y be conaiderld.

3 bedroom. eli ~ac . central att.
ettlched g1rege. Gallipolis

814-388·8110.

30,4.485·6733 .

9248.

446· 8222.
in growing community Proctor·

73

75

3 bdr home, close to town , 2
blthl, partly furniahed . a..
hilt, low utilitiea. Call 814· 2•5·

Pomeroy School Dinrlct. 3
bedrooms, Clrpet througtlout.
1 '12 b_ath. Muat .., Shown by
appointment Cell 614 · 992 ·

992·3476

21

Homos for Sale

5714.

Financial

KIT 'N' CARLYL! ®by L1rry Wright

Apartment
for Rent

Fishing lake whh 2 to 8 acre~ ,
elec end approved sewer syttem
on Ba11 Bend of Crab Creek. See
Dick Au1t1n. 304·576-2026.

used cars

614 -U6 -3672

44

SNAtKE!!

,...,.-.,.-"

1247

Co~l . hm ll3 tone. graval. III Ct,
Oeltvorrld 1 ton and up J m~
lem er. 30 4 675 -1247 0 , 67S·
7397

PEA~~~U-T-S~~------~~~--~~~~--~~~~~--~

Upholstery

2618 .

2988.

63

Livastock

AQHA Aeglst•ed Quart..- horae
dud servlca. Direct out ot
" Chertie Poll1e". Cell 814· 446·

1988 Chevy Conv.,.kln v1n
retied roof, low mileege, lolldld.
191,8 Wrack•r 440 Holme
wench with 1wing booms

n.ooo. con 814·251·1393. '

937t.
9 year old Morgen mere with
sllfdle tiSOO. B year old Pal•

mlno gelding -

ollldll

teoo.

4 yur old t.llf Arlbltn gelding
!300 wfth alddle. Call •nvtlme

.1.· 3117-7803.

MAY I .SPEAK TO 'IOU
ABOUT 1\\'i FRIENC' HEI&lt;:E?

Ctlll14-3117-0857.

1914 Rembler ttetlon wagen,
good cond. 74 ChiVY pickup.
fair cond., 5'h HP outboard
motor, countertop. stove •
oven.
be ..., 20241,.\ N.

c.,

Moln. A"' lor Jim. 304·175·
1439 .

R I M Furniture Ma nuft ctunng
St. Rt 7, Crown City, Oh Cll li '" .. I
614 -256·1470 . cell Eve 6 14 _1 ... ._
446 · 3 438 . Old &amp; n ew • •:·
Uph o1te red .
1 "" - ·

M

.

Cil il1l NBC Newo
II) Tho Riflemen
@ Revco'o World Class
Women (R).
(IJ Gl (IJ ABC News
CII DoctOr Who
ilD Ia illl CBS News
till Body Electric
;&amp;:35 I]) Clunomoke
7:00 II Cil PM Magazine
II) Man from U.N.C.LE
@ SportoCon1or
(IJ Entertainment Tonight
Daryl Hannah d1scusses
her ro le in the upcoming
f1tm , "Legal Eag les".
f.ll (7) Hogen'o Heroes
Gl (IJ Jeopardy
CII N lghtly Business Report
®Newo
till MacNeil-Lehrer Newohour
lll llll Divorce Court
llJI Private Benjamin
@ Wheel of Fortune
. 7:30 0 Cil Cll New Newlywed
Game
·
@ Kenny Bernstein Expl8ina Drag Racing
f.ll CIJ Taxi
a([)® Wheel of Fortune
CII Fawlty Towers
Ill llll Entertainmont Tonight Daryl Hannah discusses her role in the
upcoming ftlm . " Legal Eal!!es".
(B) Alice
@ Jeopardy
7:35 Cil Major League Baseball:
Los Angelos a1 Atlanta (2
hrs., 4 5 min.) Live.
8:00 II 00 il1l The A-Team
Faceman
madvertently
hires th e band Culture
Club to oerform at a rowdv
c owboy bar. (60 min.) (R) .
II) Daktari
@ Roller Derby (60 min .)
(R)
(J) a (IJ Who's 1he Booel
(CCI When Samantha w ins
a spot on her school's drill
team . she neg lects her job
as Angel a's Saturday se·
creto ry. (R)
f.ll (7) MOVIE : 'The Long
Riders'
(]) MacNeil-Lehrer l\lewsh·
our
® Cll llll Somon &amp; Simon
A1ck and A J . delve m1o the
world of SeMuat su rrogates
when th ey m~o~est1gate th e
murder of a rad io psychol·
ogtst's assistant (60 min.)
(R).
illl Nova: Signa of 1ho
Apes, Songs of tho Whales
(CC) The latest research m
an1mal communicati on is
exam ined. (50 min .) (R) .
1IJ1 MOVIE: 'Return of a
Man Celled Horse'
B:30 (IJ a (IJ Growing Pains
(CC) Jason and Magg oe
protest when a PTA pres i·
dent constders them unfit
as student chaperones (A)
9:00 0 Cil @ Huntar The lead
actor is killed on a TV show
on which Hunter and
McCa ll are serving as
techntcet adv1sors
160
min .) (R). In Stereo.
II) 700 Club
@ AWA Wrestling (2 hrs 1
(J) a
(IJ Moonlighting
(CCI Moddoe and Devid in·
ves1igate a real-life k1lhng
when they accidentally
join Ms . Oipesto on a ·murder mystery' train trip (60
mi n.) (A).
® MOVIE: 'Goodbye, Mr.
Chi po'
® Cll llll Magnum. P.l. (60
mi n.) (A)
till Frontl ine: Assault on AI·
firmative Action (CCI The
disagreements over afftr·
mative action poli cies in
Amer ic a are uplored . (60
mi n.)
10:00 II Cil@ 1988 (60 min.)
(IJ liJ Cll Spenser. For Hire
(CC) When the1r respective
cl ients
are
murd e red.
Spenser and Hawk vow revenge on the racketeer re sponsible for the deaths.
(60 mon .l (R).
f.li) (7) Soap
® Cll llll Tho Equalizer
McCall ca lls his old friends
into act1on when a flower
shop employee beco mes
1he target of murderers .
(60 m&gt;n 1 (R)
till Nowawetch
llJI News
10:20 Cil World of Audubon Ba·
lieved to be eM
1inct m the
early 1970's . Ameri ca·s
most endangered and most
elu s 1ve creature. the Black
Footed Ferret , ts documented . (60 mi n.)
t0:30 I]) Ce lebrity Chefs
fJ) (7) INN News
illl Groa1 Outdoors

CIJ Cll a CIJ ® m llll

ABOUT

'o'OU'RE W
RON6
~I S 6EIN6 TOO

OLD FOR YOU ..

IN MANV WA'IS, HE's
STILL QUITE ~O\JN6 ..

I MEAN,YOU
S"OULO SEE
HIM WITH HIS

6LANKET.. _.,...._~ ~----1

11 :20

CIJ

NBA Besko1ball Draft
(A)
11:30 D CilllJI TonightShow (60
min) In Stereo
II) Burna &amp; Allen
@ SportaCanter
Cll WKRP fn Cincinnati
f.ll ctJ One Step Beyond
Gl Cll ABC News
(I) Soundotage

®Taxi
Cll llll Simon &amp; Simon Rick
and A.J . go undercover a t a

I

owrey s Uphollterlno JMYtn g. ·
~rl coun~y lrea 2 1 Yllrt . The bl'llt .
1n turntture upholl teting . Cell
30,4 - 675 - 41 6 4 f or iree )
ttlt1m11t es

I THINK

nudist colony to locate a
missi ng . executive. (70
min.) (R) .

r

fil

Unacnmblt • - four Jumblol,

onelettll'toNChequare, to form
lour ort1lnory

I

"""'*·
UMTAG

I I I

I t]

RAIFE

t

·~...:::.- ""

6 - 17

8

@ Nowa
II) Bill Cosby Show
@ lnolde tho·PGA Tour
f.ll (7) Love Connection
till Mapp &amp; Lucia In Mapp
and Lucia's battle for SO·
cial supremacy, Mapp is intimidated into buving Lu cia's painting while lu cia
c la1m s to speak Italian
when a contesu is sched- r
uled 10 arriv_e. (SO min l

IHE SIDES'

it

j'}l}f.\,f} fi}it
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~·
by Hoovl Arnold and Bob Leo

Cil Gomer Pyle, USMC

1 1:oo o

A Lln.L.E OFF
11-IE "fOP AND "T'RIM

7911 .

87

Daily Sentinei- Page-9

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, June 17, 1986

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

WHAT THE I~ !FI'0'"5
AT $TEAL.INS
APP'L.E$ WC.I!!S .

j

I SAYILE
I KI

Now arrange thl'l ctrc ted letters to

fo rm the surpri se answer, as suo·
gested by 1M above c artoon

KI I I XI I I I 1

Answerhere:

!Answers tomorrow)
Yesterda y's

J umbles. WHINE FEIGN DECENT OUTWIT

I Answer:

A banana skin mey help to bMg tti!SVOUR WEIGHT DOWN

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

No second
chance

NORTH

1-17-H

• 8 63 2
• 83
t A 10 9 2

By James Ja~oby

tQJ 3

EAST
WEST
At a recent duplicate tournament, tQH
t A 10 74
most declarers on today's deal went .K
.10 5
down one or two in an ice-cold con· t813
t KQJ7
tract. What went wrong'
tA64
tKI 09 8 72
Many ~ouldn't resist a trump fi.
SOUTH
nesse, even though it's less than a 50
+KJ
percent chanee. (The finesse can't be
.AQJ9 76 4 2
repeated if West shows out.) With just
t61
one entry to dummy, declarer can fit5
nesse once in either hearts or spades.
Vulnerable: East·West
After a spade finesse he will eventualDealer. East
ly plunk down his trump ace, dropping
the king singleton (a 26 percent
No rib Eao1
chance). After a losing trump finesse, Weo1
1•
however, be will eventually have to
Pass
Pass
lead his spade jack or king, hoping that ' Pass ·
the jack will be won by a singleton ace
Opening lead: t 3
or that the king wiD drop a singleton
queen. The very poor chance of sue-• L----- -------...1
cess for this play is based not only on
laws of distribution but on the bidding. clarer loses a heart finesse and both
If one opponent bas a singleton spade spade tricks for down two.
honor, his partner has si1 spades to an How did anyone go down juat one? If
honor but never bid the suit.
declarer ducks the flrst diamond in
The successful declarer counts his dummy or if East wins his spade ace
unavoidable losers (club ace, spade at trick two, East might lead a trump.
ace and a diamond), wins the opening ·U declarer foolishly takes the bait and
lead with dummy's diamond ace and finesses, he goes down one. Rememleads toward bls spade king. If the ber: If a defender kindly allen you an
king holds, be plays bis heart ace and 1estra opportunity that you can't get
scores up 10 tricks. The unmindful de- 'for yourself, politely refuse it.

61~4tJ,.r
by THOMAS JOSEPH
2 Oper a
ACROSS
I Philippine

highligl11
3 Tropical
island
6 -Mask' slar fru o1
I 0 SJlt'echoly .f One - time
5 AssuaRe
II Round·
6 G regor ian .
tripJlt'r

13 Last

e .~ .

14 White
poplar
15 Game
for tykes
16 Subal omic

particle

181'urmenc
19 Man ifest
2 1 Regret·
tahle
22 - had it 1
23 Misplace
24 Operatic

7 Play
8

-

u.s.with
poe!

Yesterday's Answer
( 1803-82) 23 Food nsh 31 Less
9 Press
24 Enghsh
frequen t
statemen 1
es.&lt;ayost
32 Athirst
12 Anthology 25 Layer
36 Suspe nd
17 Native
26 Fr~e ndshop 37 Berore( La1)
mmeral
27 l olite
39 Ep&lt;ir h
20 G raJlt'
or t rona
4 1 Spanish
b earer
29 Path
queen

segment

27 under-

ground
worker
28 Reso loeney
29 Gain
30 Devour
31 Scope
33 Summer

(l'r.)
34 Yes
35 Gotcha!

38 Sh op
40 Lear's
daughw r

42 - nous

43 Co ncerninR .,..+-444 Equipmcn 1
45 Spacious
DOWN
I Malleable

1--+-

DAD..Y CRYPTOQU~ - Here 's how to work It :
AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A 1s used
for the three L's, X for the two O's. etc. Si ngle letters,
apostropiles, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE
6-17

Z R

R B U D V

QB O

R T

BO P

B

E ID S O N

E I D S D N

R

R W N 0

X Z 'y D

QB O

DOT WK F

.I BOOZD

R T

0 T R

H f)
R T

FW N Y R

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: HAI'E A PLAt'E F'U R

EVERYTIIING AND KEEP THE Tfll NC~ SUl1EWHERE
ELSE; THIS IS NOT ADVICE, IT IS MERELY Cl 'STUM
MARK TWAI N

llJI Trapper John, M.D.
1 t :60 (J) MOVIE: ' f1 Happened
one Nlghr
·12:00 II) Jack Bonny
@ Top Rank Boxing from
Lao Vogao. NV (90 min.)
IR).
Cll En1ertalnmon1 Tonight
Daryl Hannal'l di scu sse s
her role in th e upcoming
folm . " Legal Eagles'
f1l CD Rawhide
D Cll Hawaii Flv.O
ilD MOVIE: 'Paper Chan·
t 2:30 8 Cil il1l Lata Night with

Da v• d l etterman To nig ht s

g uests are NB C News Cor·
re spondent Li nda Elle rbee
and comed 1an
Ri c ha rd
Lew is . (60 m tn .) In Ste reo
II) Bes1 of Groucho
(IJ ABC New s lllightlina
f.li) Cl) Rawhide
llJI MOVIE : 'The Cassandra
Crossing'
12:40 II) llll MOV1 E: 'Cieopa1ra
Jones'
1:00 II) Oobia Gillis
Cll Archie Bunker s Place
f.lj) CIJ W ild, W ild West

-'
-"'

�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

TWO. natl•Q· nnl

GOP leaders:

I loU • •

break should IX' elimlnat&lt;'d Iron'!
tbe measure.
At tbe time. Sen. Pete Wilson,
R-Calll .. who wanl!'d the special
brrnk, contended Packwood was
trying to retaliate lor his (l)positlon
on lbe sensillvr Individual retirement account issue.
Packwood denied tbe charge, but
oo Monday he and Dole fought to
save the special treat ment lor
Phillips.
The vote to keep the special tax
brrnk also showed that there was
still strength In lbe ccalition of
senators opposed to any change In
tbe bill., which would drastically
curtail popular tax breaks in rerum
lor lower rates oilS percent and 'l1
pe-cen t.
The bill's biggest remaining
challenge is one sponsored by Sen.
George Mitchell. D-Maine, which
would dras tically restructure the
rate structure to 15 percent, 'l1
percent and 35 percent.
Mitchell, who said he would
support Ibe bill regardless of what
happened to his amendment,
argued that his plan would " increase tbe amount of tax relief for
the middle class" who "don't get
much of II under the Finante
Committee bill."
The so-called tran sition rules are
special tax breaks deSigned to help
specific companies or JYOjeclscope
" i lh new tax laws. In the Senate
bill, tbey are worth about$5.5 billion
In five years, while tbe House bill's
tran sition rules are worth about $25
billion.
Merzen baum has launched a
campaign against many of !he
provisions, charging tbey are unfair giveaways.

.

SE'SSJOn .

Councilman Henry Werry suggested that Liberty Lane to tbe
Flood Rd. be considered since the
street is highly traveled during high
water. The mayor noted thaI

Five ca lls were answered bY local
units Monday, tbe Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
reports.
At 8:53 a .m., Pomeroy took
Gertrude Bass from Locust St., to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syra cuse at 10: 39 a.m., took Net tie
Moore from Water St., to Veterans
Memorial; Middleport at 12:09
p.m .. look Freda Big from Mill St.,
to Holzer Medical Center; Middleport at 6 p.m. weanllo Plum St. for
Lottie Leonard, to Veterans Memorial; Rutland at 7:49 p.m. look
Danielle Hoffman from the Rutland
ball field to Veterans Memorial.

State...
Continued from page 1
phase loose out," he said.
The last new building to open on
tbe RGC-CC campus was the $3
million science and math building
next to E.E. Davis Technical
Careers Center, formally dedicated
by Celeste in OctohPr tQRd

get a handle oo some of the
problems" affecting lbe parking
lot. The mayor asked council to give
lbe pollee "a little more time,"
adding, "II we can't get the
]X'Oblems curtailed soon, we'll
enforce a curfew."
Baronlck was apJXJinled by tbe
mayor to write a formal letter
commending the elfot1s of the
Pomeroy Fire Department and
other bcal ftre department s during

Sunday's early morning lire at the
Meigs Inn.
Work Is ccntlnulng at tbe Naylor's Run and Monkey Run parks
rhe may&lt;)" reported. Young reJllrted lhat some park equipment
has already been installed al
Naybr's Run and equipment will be
up Installed at Monkey Run within a
week or so. Young also noted that
two picnic tables have been donated
to the vUiage by the Ctvltan Club.

COUPON
HEARING TESTS IN MIDDLEPORT'

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fot' I rtpiiCIIMIII folder. WI hlvt other
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11um whllou11hocon-1Ctoncl oa1o1y
of I CUt'Ht biiiiMhl door.

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Democrats to meet
The Meigs County Democratic
Executive Committee will meet at
7:ll p.m. Thursday at the Carpenters Local Union 650 hall at 618 E .
Main St., Pomeroy. All interested
Democrats and committee persons
are asked to be present.

King Builders Supply Inc.
405 NORTH SECOND

MIDDLEPORT

'92-37U

SPECIAL WIDNIESDAY
MATINEES'

COIIVIMIIT Off mnT Pl.IIIG

THIIIUI.IIRI

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Admitted - David Donohu e,
Syracuse; Karen Peck, Racine;
Gertrude Bass, Pomeroy; Lottie
Bradford, Middleport.
Discharged - Scott Brinker,
Hilda Frederick, Eulah Oehler,
John Hunnell.

years.

USE THE U.S.
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We

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PICK4 ticket sales totaled
$160,036, with a payoff due of
$72,150.
PICK4 $1 straight bet pays 1
$4,5.ll. PICK4 $1 box bet pays $755. ,

STOCKED CLEARANCE SALE!
ALL CARS AND TRUCKS IN STOCK
(EXCEPT THAT LISTED

The

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CLEVELAND (UPI) - Monday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number
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Ticket sales totaled SWl2,858,
with a payoff due of $573,315.50.
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PH. (614) 992-6614
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HOURS:

Mon., Wtd., Fri. 8:30-8:0 '0
Tu11. I Thurs. 8:30·5:3,0
Sat. 8:30-4:00; Sun. 1:D0-5:~1'0

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25 Cents
A Mul1imedia Inc. Newspaper ·

The force of the lmpacl knocked
Nash's car farther into the driveway forcing It to turnover on its
right side. Nash's vehicle was
damaged moderat ely, while
Wolle"s was damag&lt;'d heavily.
Crawford was transporr&lt;'d 10 the
hospit al by tbe Meigs County
Emergency Mf'dical Service.
Meanwhile, the Mason County
Sheriff's Department is continuing
its In vestigation of a two- vehicle
accident this morning which killed
a Point Pleasant man.
Detaiis of \he acc ident on W.Va .
2, live miles south of Point
Pleasa nt , are sketchy, but deputies
have identified tbe victim as
Theodore R. Pearson. 27, 2107
Lincoln Ave.
Pearson was pronounced dead

upon arriva l at Pleasant Valley
Hospital by Mason County Medical
Examiner Dr. John Grubb. Grubb
said Pearson apparently died of
ches t injuries . The state medical
exa miner will co nduct an autopsy.
The acc idcnl OCCU lTed at around
7:50a.m. when Pearson's Mercury,
northbound on 2, ccilidcd with a
southbound chemicallankerdriven
by Haden Hagie, 40. address
unknown . The lan ker, carrying
Nm1h Carolina pla tes . was empty,
deputies said.
Both vehic les were declared total
losses.
Haden and Pea rson were lran sporl!'d to PVH by the Point
Pleasant Emergency Medical Service. Doctors in !he PVH Emerge ncy Care Center were treating
Haden for lacerations thi s morn ing.

Diamond S&amp;L changeover to
Bank One effective June 27

RtpiiCliiQthail tfOI tiJIO.Ineoldwoodln

.t\

to editor

Two area men killed
in automobile wrecks

Get all three with a
Bilco Basement Door.

f.~. ~ ~

~~ters

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, June 18, 1986

- --4524

H

·

' '

enttne

A MassachuS&lt;'IIs man was killed
in a two-car accident Tuesday nigh\
on Ohio 7 In Chester Township,
Meigs County .
Lauren M. Crawford, 46, Leverell. Mass.. was declared dead
upon arrival at 4:40 p.m. at the
emergency room of Veterans Memorial Hospital from Injuries sustain!'d durtng the accident.
Crawford, Meigs County's first
highway fatality of this year, was a
pasSI'nger In a ca r driven by
Theresa C. Nash, 35. Leverell,
Mass. Nash's car was southbound
on 7 at 3:30p.m. attempting a left
tum into a private driveway and
was struck in tbe rea r on the left
side by a vehicle driven by
Charlolle L. Wolle, 45. Pomeroy,
while Wolle was anempt ing to pass.

*(Inventor Reduction Sale)

Soulh Central Ohio
Mostly sunny today, with highs In
the upper 70s. Clear tonight, with a
low near 50. Sunny Wednesday,
with highs In the upper 70s.
The probability of precipitation is
near zero through Wednesday.
Winds will be from the north allO
to 15 mph today and light and
northerly tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast Thursday through Saturday: Fair
each day , with highs In tbe 8ls.
Overnight lows will be in the 50s
Thursday and Friday mornings
_and In tbe 00s early Saturday.

Voi .J6, lllo. 32
Copyrighted t 986

531 JACKSON PfKE · RT.3~ WEST

A Torch man was cited lor
driving left of the center line
Monday In a two-car accident on
Ohio 12:1 In Chester Township.
According to the report, Rodney
D. Cremeans, 19, was westbound on
124 at 4: ll p.m. and drifted left of
center striking a westbound car
driven by Mark A. Larue, 23,
Reedsville. Both cars were damaged moderarely .

Denver Rice will be entertaining
with his homemade instrument s on
Saturday at 1: ll p.m. at either the
stage area or on Court St. Myron
Duffield will have .his caliope in
town from 2: llto 3 on Saturday and
the Shady River Shumers will be
clogging on Saturday from 3 to 4 in
tbe Court St. area. George Francis
wil l have a variety of steam engines
on display on the parking lot
Saturday from 8: ll to 4: ll p.m. II
had earlier been announced that
Sweet Mountain Sounds would be
appearing in \he entertainment
scheduled but due lootber commitments will not be laking part.
Employes of the Pomeroy Area
Merchants wUI be dressing in
Heritage Day styles and store
windows will ca rry out the theme.
Some merchant s will be offering
Heritage Weekend specials. The
Meigs MuSI'um plans special features lor tbe weekend also.

Weather forecast

at y

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THE TESTS WILL BE GIVEN BY A LICENSED HEARING AID SPECIAliST.
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BARGAIN MATINEES SAT • SUN I
WEDNESDAY - All SEATS 12.50
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY 12 . 50

· · Page it

By the Bend . Pages 8-11-10-11
Classlleds ..... Pages 12-13-14
Comics-TV ........... .. Page 15
Deatltoi ................... Page 16
Editorial ..... .. ...... .... Page 2
Sports ............. Pages 3+5-6

e

DR. RANKIN PICKENS
509 SOUTH THIRD AVENUE
THURSDAY, JUNE 19
FROM 9:00·12:00 P.M.

tl;j~bk: trial begins

Inside:

OH

Free Eltelronicl hearing 1!111 will bl given by a.u'one Hearing Aid C11111r at

Patrol cites driver

Call auction off; lack of
public response said reason
An auction planned for the
weekend as a part of the Heritage
Weekend observance has been
cancelled due to the lack of public
response.
Activities will begin in Pomeroy
Friday with Court St. to he blocked
off and local craft prolple will be
setting up displays lor sale and
demonstration purposes on the
street. Tehre are approximately 12
entries to dale lncludlngwoodwork i~g, ceramics, baskets, country
crafts and others. The craft show
will belrom10 a.m. to4p.m . on both
Friday and Saturday. ThoS&lt;' displa ying cr afts need to provide their
own tables.
An antique car show will be beld
on Court St. from 9 a.m. to noon on
Saturday. Trophies will be awarded
in the different categories. The car
show will be only on Saturday and to
enter a car, owners should contact
tbe Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce at 992-501i or Hank Cleland
at 992-2259.
American Electric Power's
working sternwheeler. lbe Juanita,
will be docked In Pomeroy from
noon to 5 p.m. on Friday and from
10 a.m. to 5 p.; m. on Saturday. The
sternwheeler wUI be available for
public tours.
Southern Ohio Coal will have a
display on Court St with the display
to emphasize underground mining
and the changes mat have taken
place in that typeofmlnlngoverthe

Liberty Lane "Is In good shape for
paving at this time."
Seyk&gt;r said he was not sure II the
vlllagl' could alford to pave Welshtown but that it would be
considered.
Councilman Bill Young also
suggested paving Naylor's Run,
"from lhe top of the hill to the
corporation limit."
Councilman Larry Wehrung
noted that It may be September
before paving can begin.
A traffic safety problem at tbe
intersection of Lincoln Hill and
Butternut Ave. was brought up by
Wehrung. He noted that vehicles
traveling Butternut toward tbe
river are often exceeding thli speed
limit as they round Ibe blind curve
at the Lincoln Hill Intersection.
Wehrung suggested the Intersection be modified in some way, or
warning flashers installed at tbe
least. Council agreed "It's a
dangerous area that needs attention." Said !be mayor, "we'll see
what we can do."
Wehrung also suggested an 11
p.m. curfew be enloreed on the
Pomeroy parking Jot '"at least
through !be summer." Wehrung
said be thought the majority of local
residents would be In favor of a
curfew.
Council member Betty Baronlck
added that she too had received
complaints of loitering on the
parking bt alter dark. Mayor
Seyler said he wwld not be in favor
of a curfew at this tlme, noting that
Pomeroy pollee "are beginning to

Answer five calls

incomes.
The vote ccntrasted to one the
Senate took last Friday when it
made the first change In Ibe bill and
agreed to drop a special tax break
for Unocal, a California-based oil
company _
However, on that vote, both Dole.
of Kansas, and Packwood abandoned their "no-amendment" strategy and agreed tbe special tax

Continued from page I
•---------=:.:.:....::..:::.:.:..::::.:.:_
_ _ _ _ ___,__

Gibbs, who 001ns tbe Sears·Fruth
building, not!'d that Middleport
•could not legally provide sewage
service to Pomeroy.
Gibbs said he personally was
"not lied to eltber Pomeroy or
Middleport" and that his interest
was In providing jo~. He recalled
that In tbe 1983 ribbon cutting
ceremony when Sears open&lt;'d, he
stated his "goal was to create 100
jo~" In that area. Sixty of those 100
jo~ are now being provided by
Sears, Fruth Pharmacy and Dairy
Queen he said.
Gibbs said thai annexation of Ibe
river frontage by Middleport would
not effect Pomeroy's income tax.
Even if tbe property across tbe
street woold be annexed too, it
would only affect the residences of
two relirff's he nt&gt;Orted.
The property is &lt;tlittle value In its
undeveloped stale he said.
Mayor Seyler told Gibbs llle
proposal would have to be discussed and researched before
council could comment.
Stated Gibbs. "I hope Pomeroy
Village Council will at least consider my proposal."
Pomeroy Village Council discussed the posslbllty of paving
Liberty Lane, Welshtown Hill and a
sec tion of Naylor's Run when they
met . Monday night In regular

Tax refonn will
pass this week
By JOSEPH MIANOWANY
WASHINGTON tUPI\ - A
slowdown In debate forced Republican leaders to adjust predictions of
exactly when the Senate " 'ill
approve its Ia' reform plan. but
they insist it will pass intact this
WeC'k, evC'n if it means a rar£'
weekend session.
In a day mark&lt;'d mostly bY
inaction. thf' GOP·I!'d Senate spent
hours Monday talking about tbe
swff'ping bill draft!'d by tbe
Finance Committee. but took only
one vote. agrff'ing to save an
estimated $100 million tax break
written into the bill for tbe Phillips
Petroleum Co.
A handful of ma jor amendment s
are still pending and a host of
smaller challenges are possible,
although Finance Committee
Chairman Bob Packwood, R-Ore..
says he is ccnlident the bill will pass
";th no serious alterations.
"This is tbe seventh day we've
been on thr bill." Packwood not!'d
Monday as the Senate wrapped up
busineSs without making much
progress.
He sa id Republican leader Robert Dole plann!'d to keep the
Senate into the night today and
work "WednE'Sday, Thursday, Fri·
day and Saturday, if necessary, to
pass it."
"The bill is not going to IX'
bollixed up," he said.
The tax break for tbe Phillips
Petroleum Co. was saved wben the
Senate. on a 73-14 vote, killed an
amendment from Sen. Howard
Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, that would
have eliminated the so-called Iran·
sition rule and used lbe money to
help farmers average their

Tuesday. June 17, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

PREPARING FOR IIERfi'AGE \\EEKEND Pomeroy VIJiage employees, left to right, Stephen
Tatterson and Jack Krautter, spent Tuesday
afternoon Installing wrought iron r.Utln~ around the

stage on the upper parking Jot. The vlllaie purchao;ed
the railing which is hoped to be up for Heritage
Weekend.

Three branch offices of Diamond
Savings and Loan Co .. Findlay.
which have been purchased by
Bank One. Athen s, NA. one being in
Pomeroy, will be transferred to
Bank One at the close of business on
June '!1.
The other two Diamond Savings
and Loan offices involved are a\
Logan and Athens.
The Diamond offices in Pomeroy
and Athens wlll close while t'he one
in Logan will remain open as a
branch of Bank One. Al hens.NA.
According to Information sent to
Diamond customers Tuesday by

Bank One. Athens, N.A .. and thf'
Int eres\ is ea rned daily and paid
monthly. Customers will receive a
home office of Diamond Sav ings
and Loan Co.. acccunts will IX'
detailed statement monthly showing al l ac tiv ity and int erest paid.
transferred automaticallv ro Bank
One effective Saturday, June 28.
Bank One will furnish an initial
Here 's how the accounts will be savings kit complete with deposit
ha ndl ed . accor din g to t he , and withdrawal rickets.
IRA- An IRA will transfer to a
info rmation:
Passbook savings and Christmas Ba nk One Tax-Saver IRA . There
club. These accounts will transfer will be no cha nge In an IRA as a
ro Bank One·, preferred savings relsult of this transfer . Ti"l• custoaccoun t. Preferred savings pays mer wil l continue to earn tbe same
higher interest for higher ba lances interest rate lor thf' same maturity
of 0-999, Sl.IID$9.999, $10,00l- on each IRA deposit he or she had at
$21,999, and S25,00J and up. Ra tes
Diamond Sav ings and Loan. All
are subject to change weekly .
Continued on page 16

Displays are available for
• •
Heritage Weekend VISitOrs
Visitors to the Meigs Count y
MuSI'um will be given a look a t IlK'
past in the many displays to be
fea tured Heritage Weekend, Saturday and Sunday, 1 to 5 p.m.
The original cemrnl block maker
oft be Pomeroy Cement Block Co. is
on loan to the mu seum and will be
ex hibited along with numC'rous
tools and equipment used by early
woodworkers and miners of Meigs
County.
Other special exhibits will include
a loom almost :;oo years old and an
upright grand plano and a victrola,
In add ition to the numerous othrr
regular exhibits al the mu SI'um.
Two horse-drawn buggies dating
from before the tum of the centu ry.
both donated by the Blaetlnar
family to the museum, will be
shown during the weekend. The
one-seater buggy was manufactured in Pomeroy, accordi ng to an
att ached brass plate. The other
wagon, a two-seater, is about lXI
years old, according to the family.
Special C'X hlbll s will also Include

Larry Wolfe's collec tion of arrowheads. Howard Nolan's lapidary
work, old kitchen utensils. and
patriotic memories including items
from past wars.
On both days there will be a
variety of de monsIrations. Shirley
Huston \\ill demonstrate baskPI
weaving and sla te work, Art
Skinner will show his leathe r
craftwork . Harold Teaford wUJ
demonstrale woodworking , Pal
Philson will do spinning, Betty
Dean and Par Holl er wil l makC'
traditiona l flower arrangements,
and Mary Bradford wUI show how
to make soft -sculptured dolls.
Also m hand will be Eugene
Willoughby wit h a working gris t
mill.
In additional to the displays and
demonstrat io ns, lbere will be
ga mes lor tbe children on both
days, from 1 to 4: 30 p.m. wit h prizes
lor Ibe winner. A pie baking contest
will lak e place on Sunday at 2 p.m .
with Ibe pies to be auctioned off at 3
p.m. with proceeds to go to the

Meigs County f&gt;i()('('r and Historic!
Society.
Other highUghts of the weekend
will be a program on boals which
traveled the Ohio River . Capta,in
Charles Stone will be narrating a
River Show at I on Saturday and
again ar 2 on Su nday afternoon.
Featured both days will be Myron
Duffield on his calliope. A native of
Middleport now res iding at Olmsted Falls, Duffield is returning to
Meigs County under sponsorship ol
the Farmers Bank and Savings Co.
and Ihr Meigs County Museum. He
will be playing at Ibe museum on
both Saturday and Sunday and at
2:30 Saturday will perform down lawn fumeroy_
The calliope, built by Duffield ,
has 41 whistles made of bra~s pipes
ranging In height from Hve inches
to two feet In diameter . from
S&lt;'Ven-elghls of an Inch to three and
one half Inches. Duffield had to
rebuild some parts, restore albers,
and improvise still more. The
Continued on page 16

Kate Smith, 79, succumbs
RALEIGH , N.C. (UPil - Kate
Smith, whose rousing rendil ion of
"God Bless America" !Ired the
nation 's patriotism and raised :1600
million for Cis in World War ll, died
with "no tears and no pain" at lbe
age of 79.
"America was indeed Godblessed lo have Kate Smllh asoneof
her daughters," President Reagan
said alll'r learning of her death
Tuesday.
A spokesman for Raleigh Community Hospital sa id Smith died of
respira tory arrest shortly alter
being brought to the emergency
room about 2: 25 p.m.
A funera l mass was scheduled In
Raleigh al tO a.m. Thursday at Our
Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church.
Burial arrange ments were
Incomplete.
Smith. who had been In poor
health since 1976, had not performed lor years, but she rl'lllalned
a symbol of the nation's perseverance and optimism during the bleak
years of the Great Depression and
World War II.
In 1939 President Franklin Roose-

vell introduced Smith to Britain 's
King George VI by saying: "This is
Kate Smith - lhls is America."
Smith was a lready an established
Broadway and radio enlrrtainrr

KATESMmt

when she discovered an unpublis hed song by Irving Berlin, got
sole performing right s to It and
inn·oduced it on Armistice Da y 1938
as "God Bless America."
The song Jilted America's spirits
In the dark days of World War II
and virtually became Ibe second
national anthem . Smith took the
tune !rom coast to coasl ,' ralsing an
estimated $600 million In war bond
pledges.
But sbe n&lt;'Ver profiled from the
song.
"Every penny Kate Smith made
from slnging 'God Bless Aml'rica'
went to the Boy Scouts of America," said her niece, Susan Andren,
woo was at her side wben she died .
"She was talking to me, but her
Ups weren't moving," Andron said.
"The n she looked out Into space,
and sbe was gone. There were no
tears and no pain."
Reagan, who co-starred with
Smith in a 1945 movie, "This Is The
Anny," awarded her the Preside~­
tlal Medal of Freedom, America s
top ctvlllan oonor, in November

1982.

.....

•'

BI.AETl'NAR BUGGIES - These two halliedrawn vehicles, one a two seater wagon dating back
120 years, and the other a ooe seat buggy
manufactured in Pomeroy will be oo exhlblt at lite
Heritage Day actlvltles at the Meigs Museum. Patty

..

·' • - "'
' --

Parker, active wlth tbe museum committee, spruced
up the buggies In preparation for the weekend. She
was joined for the picture hy Rick Blaettnar, tbe
great-great-grandson of the founder of thr Blaetlllar's
"buggies to Bulcks" business In Pomeroy.

Burger will retire J~ly 10
WASHINGTON (UP!! - Chief
Justice Warren Burger's retirement Is sure to bring changes to !be
ccurt he has headed lor 17 years.
The questions are how many and
how soon.
The announcement or Burger's
retirement, planned for July 10,
coupled with President Reagan's
nominations of Just Ice Wllllam
Rehnquisl to succeed Burger and
federal appeals court Judge An·
tonin Scalia to fill Rehnquist's seat,
cculd give conserva lives an edge on
the court.
"In the short run, there will not be
much of a difference: a conservative replaces a conservative," said
Dick Howard, a former Supreme
Coun law clerk and profesoor at tbe
University of Virginia. "There wUI
he some differences In tbe long
haul."
He said that Rehnqulst has a
more cono;ervatlve agenda than
Burger and is weli-Uked on tbe
court by evPn those who disagree

with him, a key to coalition
building. Also, Scalia come to the
court with a fully developed judicial
theory and a "first rate mind,

WILLIAM REHNQUIST

view" that "will affec t justices in
tbe center of the ccurt. "
Although ther"r were some dissenting voices. immediate reacl ion
suggest!'d ne ilil'r Rehnqulst . 61.
nor Scalia. 50. would have serious
difficulty winning Senat e appro\'a l.
Burger, 'Ill. sa id he had decided to
surrender his lifetime appointment
on tbe court 10 pursue his work as
tbe bead of the commission plan ning the bicentenni al celebratiOn of
tbe -adopt ion of 1be Con.,titution,
whlch will begin Sept. 17. 1987. That
date also will be Burger's lll th
birthday.
At a rare news conference at the
Supreme Court late Monday , four
boW'S after Reagan 's a nnouncement at the White House, Burger
reflected on his long tenure at the
court as he sat beneath a portrait &lt;1
Chief Justice John Marshall, the
early 19th century juristwholo~
tbe high court Into a more pol'ertu I
wing of the government th11,11 ~ , , ,
· Founding Fatbers~xpected 1\ · ·\·'• ·

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            <elementText elementTextId="40356">
              <text>June 17, 1986</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
