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                  <text>Area deaths
A. J, Cochran
A. J . Clinton Cochran, Route 2.
Portland, 90, died lilesday afternoon at Vetera ns Memorial
Hospital.
Born on Oct. 22. 1895, at Portland,
he was the son of Andrew and
Emma White Cochran. He is
survived by two daughters, Ka ·
thrvn Sulia. Elwood City, Pa. and
Rita Jones, Wlllmer, Minn.; and
two sisters. Daisey Lawson. Portland . and Goldie Spa hr, Parkersburg. w. Va .. live granochildren
and four great-grandchildren. Besides his parent s. he was preceded
in dea th by his wife. Eva Ly nn
Law!On Cochran in 1981.
Funeral services will he held at 10
a.m Friday a1 the Ewing Funeral
Horne. The Rev . Roger L. Grace
will offlci a!eandburial will he in the
Great Bcnd Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funcra l home from 2
to 4and 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday.

J. B. Stobart
J . Benjamin Stobart, 87. of
fulcine. died 'I\wsday morning in
Pleasant Valle)' Hospital.
Mr. Stobart was born Nov.l.l898
in Antiquity to th~ late Thomas and
Belle Weaver Stohart. He had been
a stea m engineer.
Surviving arc daught rrs Dorothy
Cardwell of Fostoria. Anna Roush
of Svracuse. Isabelle Couch of
Pomrroy and Phyllis Johnson of
Clifton. W.Va. :' sons. JOC' and Tom
Stobart. both.of Racine: 26 grand·
c hildr e n and 27 g reat grandchildren.
In addition to his parents, he wa s
preceded in death by his wile.
Crystal Anna Stobart, in 1972, one
daughter, two sons. three brothers
and three sis ters.
Services will he 10 a .m. Thu rsday
at the Ewing Funeral Home with
Rev. Steve Deaver officiating.
Burial will be in Letart Falls
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
fu neral home from 7 to 9 p.m.
Wednesday.

He is aJS() su"•lved by three
chlldnen: .James Dalley ol Gallipolis, Margie Sue Miller of Columbus,
and Sa lly Lanter of Fremont, Ind.
One son. William, preceded him in
death Jan. 29, 1985.
AJS(J surviv ing are six stepchildren: Gerald A. Taylor of Ga llipolis,
Carol Cox, of Gallipolis, Connie
Jones of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va .,
Melvin Bruce Taylor of Ga llipolis,
Charles A. Roberts, U.S. Navy,
Windsor. Connect icut , and .James
L. Roberts. U.S. Air Force. Charleston, South Carolina.
Other survivors include 19 grandchi ldr en and seven grea tgrandchildren. He was pneceded in
death by one sister. who died in
infancy.
He 'spent all his life in Gallia
County . Funeral services are sche·
duled for 2 p.m. Thursday at
Waugh -Halley -Wood F unera l
Home. The Rev . Joseph Godwin
will offficiate. Burial wiU follow at
Mound Hill Cemetery. Friends mav
call at the funeral home 6-9 p.m.
Wednesday.

Lois S. Hennosy
Lois S. Hcnnosy, 77, Polnt
Pleasant, died Tuesday in Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Born Ju ne~ . 1909, in Mason, she
was the daughter of the la te Sardine
LeRoy and Sadie Young Sherman .
She was pneceded in death by her
husband , Philip Hen nosy .Jr. In 19£8.
She was a secretary at the
Marietta Manufactu ring Co. lor 30
years and the Mason Furniture Co.
for 10 years. She was a member of
Christ Episcopal Church. Point
Pleasant.
Surviving arc a sister. Anna
Lou ise Sherman, Mason.
Graveside services will be at
10:30 a.m. Thursday at Suncrest
Cemetery wit h the Rev. Bennie
Stevens officiating.
The family requests no flowers.
Thene will be no visitation.
Fog !~song Funera l Home, Mason. is in charge of arrangements.

Kathleen Greene

I. G. Davis
Iris Glen Da vis, 69, of Daggett.
Calil.. died Satu rday at the Barsto
Hospital in Barsto, Ca lif.
Bom in West Virginia, he was a
son of Nora Pool Davis of Uttle
Hocking and the late Iris C. Davis .
H£' was a World War ll veteran and
worked as a service mechan ic.
Surviving are severa l children
and grandchildren ; his wife, Ruby,
of Ca lifornia; his mother; and two
sisters, Della Hendershot of Belpre
and Norma Cprliss of Hawaii.
Services will he 2 p.m. Thursday
al the White-Ethridge Funeral
Home, 125 Lee St., Belpre, wit h
Pastor Jerrv Castcel officia ting.
Burial will tie in Rock land Cemetery. Frirnds rna ~ ca ll at the
funera l home after 12 noon
Thursday .

Harold Dailey
Harold E. Da iley , i5. of 122
Second Ave , Ga llipolis. died sud
denly in Holzer Medical Center at
9:35p.m. Monday .
A retired businessma n and livestock dealer. he spent all his life ln
Gallia County. He was an owner of
the Ohio Produce Company !01·over
50 years. He was born Feb. 19. 19ll.
in MudS()C, the son of the late
Claude D. and Nellie Myrrs Dailey.
He was the stepson of the )alP Knox
Williams.
His first marriage was to Edna
McKean on Dec. 29, 1929. She
pn:w ded him in death Ja n. 31,1971.
HE' Is survived by his second wile.
Eleanor Ball Daile)·. whom he
married Sept . ~- 1973.

Kathleen E. Greene, 86, Wilkesville, and a former Vi nton resident .
died 1:30 p.m. Monday in the Scenic
Hills Nursing Center In Gallipolis.
A retired piano teacher. she was
born Aug. 15, 1899 In Vinton to the
late George Elmer and Cora Kent
Tyler.
She married the late Harlan W.
Greene. who passed away Dec. lJ,
1917.
Survivors include two nieces.
Mrs. Don 1Jane Ann 1 Burns of
Wilkesville and Mrs. Ray Janice
Wedemeyer of Bidwell, two nephews Francis Tyler of Vinton and
Lee Ty ler of Gastonia, N.C.. and
stepson Eugene Greene of Darwin.
Preceeding her in death were one
brothE'r. Keith Tyler. and one one
sister-in-law, Helen Tyler.
Mrs. Greene was a member of
the Vinton United MethodiSI
Chu rch, a 40-year member of the
Huntington Grange, and the Gallia
County Senior Citizens.
The funeral serv ices wlll be 3:30
p.m. 11tursday at McCoy -Moore
Funeral Home ln Vinton with the,
Rev . C..J. L!'mleyofficialing. Burial
will in Vinton Memorial Park .
VIsitation hours are set for WednPs·
day 6-9 p.m. a t thE' funeral home

Youth to serve
refreshments
The Meigs Count y Grange Youlh
\\ill be serving homemadE' ice
cream, sandwiches and potato
chips across from the Meigs
Museum on Saturday, Heritage
Wf'l'kend . Serving wU I begin at 11
a.m and continue until 5 p.m . On
Sunday the group will serve
sandwiches from

Rhodes to participate in tournament

New coal laboratory
is dedicated Tuesday
ALBANY - Furthering Its commitment to bum coal cleanly,
American Electric Power's fuel
supp ly department dedicated Its
new central coal la boratory on
Tuesday.
The new laboratory, which tests
coa l samples lromAEP' s affiliated
mining operations, is located next
to Southern Ohio Coal Company's
Meigs Division headquarters bn
Ohio Rt. 689.
The new facility will strengt hen
AEP's ablllty to provide quality
coal on a consistent basis. according to J .E. tJack) Callie, senior
vice-presiden t-fuel supply, at the
cEdicat lon oeremony. "Quality is
part of our creed," he said. The coal
laboratory will test both raw and
clean coal from AEP's mining
operations to guage mining conditions, measure beat content, and
check on clean coal standards.
Analysis of mining core samples
wil l be performed in the lab as well.
AEP's previous laboratory was
housed In a small building located
on the grounds of the company's
Meigs No.1 mine. The new complex
consists of two tulldings, one of
which houses the offices. coal lab
and a water lab area. The other is a

preparation tuilding where coal
samples will be brought In ,
screened and crushed befor&lt;&gt;
testing.
· The new laboratory repr&lt;&gt;sents a
number of advantages over the old
facility, according to Harold Dilley,
chief chemist for the coal lab.
"The new facWty wiU give us an
Improved working environment as
well as 4.!ll0 square ft. of space four times the amount r:t floor space
In the old lab," Dilley said."The
tncreasoo space also gives us plenty
of room to dry the coal samples-a
necessary step befor&lt;&gt; testing can
begin."
The lack of drying space in the old
faclllty caused lab employees to be
somewhat depencEnt on nice
weather he continued.
The staff also will be able to
conduct water analysis at the new
lab Dilley said. "These tests are
necessary to meet Ohio Environme nt a l Protection Ag~ncy
regulations ."
DUley, a Gallipolis nesicE nt, who
has worked tor the coal lab lor 11
years. said that two chemists. 11
technicians and a cl~rk have moved
from the old facility to staff the new
laboratory .

Pomeroy mayor tenninates cases
Timothy Dav idson. Pomeroy.
was fined on three charges when he
appeared in the court of Mayor
Richard Sey ler Tuesday night.
Davidson was fined $313 and costs
for fleeing an officer, $63 and costs
lor no operator's license, and $375
and costs for OWl.
Others lined in the court were
Randy J. Lee, 1m and costs,
expired plates: and Scott E ichinger, Pomeroy, R. D., ~@and costs,
traffic light violation.
Both Connie Grimm and Vicky
Hayes. Pomeroy, were placed on
six months probalion on charges of
assault .

Diamond...
Continued from pag~ 1
terms and conditions of the customer's CD with Diamond Savings
and Loan wlll be honored.
Personal Checking- A personal
checking account wtu transfer to
Ba nk One's preferred checking
account which is Bank Qnp's
lnterest-bearlng account. Interest
increases at these levels: 0-999,
$1.0Xl-~ . 999. $10,!XXJ-S:Il.999 and
$25.tXXl and up. The competitive
rates associated with each level arc
suLject to changt:&gt; weekly.
Certlilca tes of Deposit - A
certificate of deposit wil llransfer to
a Bank One cer1ilicate of deposit.
The customer will continue to eam
the sa me interest rate for the same
maturity on each certificate of
deposit held at the Diamond
Savlngs and Loan. Ail terms and
conditbns of a certificate of deposit
1\ith Diamond Savlngs and Loan
will be honored .
Information on safety deposit
boxes, overdraft protecction-VISA
line of cred and VISA debit card and
Anytime Bank Card wil l be mailed
separately to Diamond Sav ings and
Loan Co. customers.
The Diamond Savings and Loan
Co. In Pomeroy Is loca ted In a
relatively new structure on W.
Main St .. and there are four
employees. Plans for the future use
of the building and any plans on the
future involvement of the Diamond
employees are expected to he
announced later this week.
Geri Walton is currently the
manager or the Diamond Savings
and Loan Co. branch In Pomeroy.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports six calls Tuesday; Pomeroy at 6:07 a.m. to
Pomeroy Health Care Center for
Hilda Frederick to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at 8:55
a.m. transported Lowell Wingett to
Pleasant Valley Hospital; Rut land
at 1:40 p.m. to Main St. for Vivian
Coy to Veterans Memorial Hospi tal; Tuppers Plains at 3: 3.'i p.m.
transported Launen M. Crawford

from an auto accident on Rt. 7 to
Ve terans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 3:44 p.m. transported
Charlott e Wolfe from the same
accident to Veterans Memorial
Hospit al: Sy racuse at 6:53 p.m.
treated but did not transport Mary
Pickens, Cathy Grady and Marian
Watson at the scene of an auto
accident on Bowman' s Run Rd .

Displays ...

Veterans Memorial
Admissions- Cora Loftis, Pomeroy; Hilda Frederick, Pomeroy;
Betty Loft is, Pomeroy; Charlotte
Wolfe. Pomeroy; Clarence Wo~e .
Long Bottom; Frank Wolford,
Vinton.
Discharges - Bernard fulirden.

South Central Ohio
Mostly sunny today, wit h highs
bet ween 75 and 00. Partly cloudy
tonight, with a low between 55 and
60. Part ly cloudy Thursday, 1\ith a
chance of s how~rs and thunderstorms and highs in the low 80s.
The probability of precipit ation is
near zero today, 20 percent tonight
and 30 percent Thursday.
Winds will be light and variablE'
today and light and westerly
tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast - Friday through Sunday: A chanoe of
showers Friday and Saturday, with
fair wea ther Sunday. Highs will he
in the 00s each day, with overnight
Jaws In the fils.

Lottery winners
CLEVELAND iUPit - Tuesday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers: Daily Number
7"EJ.
Ticket sa les totaled $J.Ill0.180.
with a payoff due of $li9,796.
PICK-4
6TI5.
PICK-4 tickPt sales totaled
$155,2~5. with a payoff due of
$6.q,9()8_
PlCK-4 $1 straight bet pays
$5,008. PICK -4 $1 box bet pays$212.

1
/2 PRICE
NATURALIZER. HUSH PUPPIES

ALL OTHER WOMEN'S SHOES
REDUCED

20°/o

•ADIDAS

•FOOT JOY
•NURSE MATES
•NATURALIIER

•SEBAGO

•HUSHPUPPY

•SOFT SPOTS
•CONVERSE

HARTLEY SHOES
MAn C. VAN VRANKEN, OWNER

OMEROY

992-5272
THE OLD SHOE STORE
WITH THE NEW LOOK

STOCKED CLEARANCE SALE!

ALL CARS AND TRUCKS IN STOCK

A WEEKEND OF OLDTIME BARGAINS
LADIES PASJEL

AVAILAII IN

LADIES

DRESS SHOES

YIUOW
liLAC

FLATS

30°/o OFF

PUll

.

30°/o OFF

LIG=~~L·
YA ..E

EXCLUDES CIERA COUPE, CUTLASS 442, 98's &amp; CORVEnES

Jl

ALL SUMMER SANDALS
•CONNIE
•NATURALIZER

20°/o OFF

•SOFT SPOTS
•SHAWNEE

•MARSAMALLOWS

OPEN 9·5 THURSDAY AND SATURDAY, 9·8 FRIDAY

COBB

CHEVROLO -OLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC
::~i:~I=H~·

LAYAWAYS

,-

..,.....,.

SAFE AND SOUND- Meigs Cwnty's grandstand
wblch curves with the race track- -lhe ml,v one of

"'-·

..

..

Its design In the stale-Is bebtg rmovated in
prepiU'&amp;tlon for the 1986lllelgs Cwnty Fair bt August.

Grandstand
•
renovation
underway at
Rock Springs

SHOES

"FORMERLY SIMMONS OLDS.·CAD.-CHEV."

PH. (614) 992-6614

.HOURS:

Mon., Wed., Fri. 8:30·8:00
Tues. &amp; Thurs. 8:30·5:30
Sat. 8:30·4:00; Sun. I :00·5:00

2 Sec1ions, 16 Pages

19~6

25 Cents

A Multimedil Inc. Newspaper

Emergency loan fund
proposed for counties
in case of fiscal woes

Meigs County Sheriff Howard
Frank reports a domeslic violence
incident at ap pmximal rly II a.m.
Tuesday in the Stiversv ille area .

LARGE GROUP OF
WOMEN'S ORESS

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, June 19,

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel Newa Stall
Extensive renovation and reinforcement of the century old
grandstand on the Meigs County
Fairgrounds Is underway and wlll
be completed well before the 1986
fair swings Into action.
· Built in 1885, the grandstand is
one of lite few, If not the onlyone,ln
the state which curves with l be race
track. In January, 1983, It was
accepted Into the National Register
of Historical Places.
Some work on the structure was
planned for this year by the Meigs
County Agriculture Society but
extenstve renovation became "top
priority" alter an inspection by
·Gerald Bonnett . building inspector
for the Ohio Department of lndustlial Relations . He iagged the
structure as unsafe without ex tensive support work underneath.
Bob Thompwn of .Associated
Fabricators, Inc. is handling the
work and already a new roof,
guaranteed for 40 years. has been
installed . Along the front 16 foot
lOng 6x6 treatoo wood braces have
been bolted to thPCxistlngsupports.
Similar braces have been btstalled
between each of the 19 bays of the
curved structures n the back.
To handle some water problems
around the grandstand, drains have
been In stalled and over two fool of
fill has been moved in, a ll in
preparation lor making a roncrete
foundation. Onoe the bay areas
have been concreted, then Thompson says the grandstand wUI be
raised a sectio n at a time and
concrete put uncErneath the
suppon s.
AI tiP front of the grandstand
which seats !:ax&gt;, a concrete
walkway will go !rom ooe end tot he

WASHINGTON iUPI) - House
Republicans. in an unexpected
move, have supported a tough set of
economic sanctions against South
Africa, but their backing Is par1 cia
political ploy to ensune the bill's
defeat In the Senate.
The m~asures call for a total
1\ithdrawal of U.S. business operations In South Africa and bar
virtually all Imports from the
strife-torn country.
President Reagan bas opposed
fur1ber sanctions against South
Africa on grounds they wUI deny the
United States any leverage on
Pretoria to negotll!te a peaceful
· transllion to black majority rule.
The House Democratic leadership had enoorsed new sanctions
against South Africa, which stood a ,
chance of passage Wednesday. The '
sanctions called for barring new
U.S. Investments and loans In South
Africa and prohibiting the import of
Its coal, uranium and steel.
Seeing that posslbllty, House
Republicans sabotaged the bill by
challenging the Democrats to vote
for the total business disinvestment

State Sen. Oakley C. Collins has
Introduced legislation to establish a
stale County Fiscal Emergency
Loan Fund to help avoid thE'
cutback of essential local services
when a county government runs oot
of money.
"When a county government is
about to go broke, there should be a
state fund available S() vital servic~s such as law enforcement can boc
contlnued at adequate levels until a
long- range financial plan Is worked
out," Collins, R-Ironton, explained.
"That's what my bill Is des igned to
do."
Collins said hls proposal is
patterned after the state's school
loan fund, which has been used on
numerous occasions since Its Inception in 1978 to pnevent loca l school
closings.
"Our local school districts have
someplace to turn when they get in
dire financial strait s," he said.
"The same should be true for our
county governments. The school
loan fund has worked well , and so

should a county loan fund ."
Major provisions of Collins'
legislation, Senate !:1111 409, would:
-Set up a County Fisca l '" mergency Loan Fund of an unspecified
size to make loans to counties
determined to be in a sta te of fiscal
emergency.
-Establish criteria ard procedures under which the state auditor
would cEtermine if a oounty is
approaching or has neached a state
of ~mergency.
-Crea te a Division of Management Advisory Services within the
sta te auditor's offi ce to more
closely monitor county tudgets and
provide specialized technica l and
support services.
-Expand the fiscal poW!'rs of a
board of county commLqsioners
under certain circumstances.
"I have worked closely with the
state auditor's office and the County
Commissioners Association of Ohio
ln preparing this bill," Collins sa id.
"We believe we have legislation
which _will help counties avoid

finan cial crises by providing more
technical expertise and an Im proved early warning system."
Collins added that strict t·epay ment requirements would be attar hed to any state loans made to
count ies.
"In order to protect our tax
dollars, any county applying for a
loan will have to submit a specific
plan deta iling how the county wUI
improve Its financial position and
repay the loan.
"As is the case with the school
loan fund , ·any loans to counties
would have to be approved by a vote
of the State Controlling Board. The
sta te auditor will be instructed to
make sure any county receiving a
Joan fulfills it s commitments, and
regu tar progress reports to the
Controlllng Board wUI be required," he said.
Colllns said he hoped committee
hearings on the bill wUI begin this
summer, with fu ll Sena te mns!deration possible later this year.

47 sign
• •
petition
to seal
off roads

~

CONCRFI'E FOUNDATION - The century-old grandstand on the
Meigs County Falrpounds Is underwolng extensive renovalion. Here
the !lr!!t of about 100 yards of concrete which wiU provide a new
foundation for the slnlcture Is being poured. Bob Thompson of
Associated Fabricators, Inc. Is dobtg the work for the Meigs County
Agriculture Sociecy.
other, replacing the old WOOtEn one.
handrails wll l be installed along the

sea ts and some of the seats will be
nep laced or rqlaired .

House backs sanctions bill
O~ER

JUNE 19TH, 20TH &amp; 21ST

Vot .38, No.33

Copyrighted 1988

Probe incident

HERITAGE DAYS
SALE

Weather forecast

a1 y

Hospital news

Continued from page 1
calliope valves and k~yboard were
all r&lt;&gt;built. It is housed in an
ornately cEcorated red and· g&lt;J id
circus wagon .
On Sunday aft ernoon the Sunshin·
ers of Albany will jiOVide rntertainment on the grounds at the
Museum.
There will be rio charge fo r any of
the activit ies at the museum but
donations wUI be accepted .

Forfeiting bonds In the court
were Barry W. O'Brien. Shade, $13.
speeding; Brad Young, Pomeroy.
$13, assuned clear distance; Floyd
Brown, Middleport, $63, explned
plates; Terri Carmichael, Pomeroy, $13. stop sign violation; Jerry
Markin, Albany, $43, assuned clear
distance. and $375, DWl.

•

e

EMS squads get six calls Tuesday

DAYS
IN DOWNTOWN POMEROY
CHAPMAN SHOES

By the Bend ...... Pages &amp;-7-8
CIIIS!IIIeds ..... Pages IZ-13-If
Crolla!-TV ............. Page 15
J)eaUJs ................... Page 10
Editorial ................ . Page 2
Sports ............... Pages 345

26. A spokesman for Rhodes
confirmed Wednesday morning
thai the fanner governor would be
part icipating in the event . Rhodes
\\ill also be present lor the annual
hillbilly supper to be held at Meigs
High School on Wednesday evening
before the tournament.

James A. Rhodes, former gover·
nor and Republican candidate ln
this year's Ohio gubernatorial race.
Is "looking forward to a good day In
Southeastern Ohio" when he takes
part In the Dave Diles Appalachia
golf tournament on Thu rsday, June

HERITAGE BARGAIN
AT

Inside:

Wednesday, June 18, 1986

Pomeroy Middlepon, Ohio

Page 16 The Daily Sentinel

proposa l of Rep. Ronald Dellums.
D-Callf.
The Dellums measure bans any
U.S . bank loans or business investmen ts in South Africa and calis for
"the withdrawal or disinvestment
of all U.S. assets currently In South
Africa."
On a voice vote, Democrats and
Republicans swi nly endorsect Dellums' proposal.
Rep. Robert Walker, R-Pa ..
opposed any sanctions and was the
primary force in the GOP
maneuver.
"The president wtll veto a till that
comes close to the Dellums' bill,"
Walker said.
"Mayill: now we can get these
folks to sit down with the admbtistration, wlth the comervatlv~ side,
and work out some opt~ns ratlPr
than these political charades."
Dellums opposed the llmlted
sancllons, enoorsed by Rep. Dante
Fascell, D-F1a., chairman of the
Foreign Affairs Committee, that
would ban new bank ~ans or ·
Investments in South Africa. He
proposed that American firms .

,.

sim ply he foroed to pull out .
"Immediate disinvestment and a
total embargo iS not Incrementa l,"
Dellums said.
Walker said Dellums was "honest" abou t what he truly wanted
and other Democra ts were not
willing to fight for the toughest
measures.
But those measures virtually
guarantee a veto by Preside nt
Reagan, even If they pass the
Senate, while the House Democratic leadership's proposa ls had a
r easonabl e chance In the
'Republican-controlled Senate.
Democrats said they wanted the
tQughest possible sanctions but
Republicans said tlPir Senate
colleagues will not even consider
the House measure.
"This was a political exercls~
from tiP word go,'' Walker said.
"This is a fairly radical position.
Even If It passed It would be

vetoed."
Rep. Mark SiJjancEr, R· Mich.,
said the Ripltii!!Can strategy was to
"lose the battle but win the war" In
the Senate.

Forty-seven people have signed a
petition requesting- ~utton Township Trustees to seal Greenwood
Cemetery Rd. and Tackervtlle Rd .
In the fulcine area.
Art Hill, a resident of Greenwood
Cemetery Rd ., announced the
petition to the trustees an d the
Meigs County Commissioners In
Wednesday's regular meeting.
Hill , aft er describin g the du st
problem on thE' m" roads, sa id he
and the petitioners realize township
money Is limited. However, he said,
the area has bu ilt up quickly ln just
a few years and · ·we deservE' better
roads than what they've got." He
said dust control is not adequa te.
Sutton Township Trustees Otis
Knopp, Delbert Smith and Forrest
VanMeter were also present for the
meet ing. Said Knopp. "If there was
a way to get the money. we would.''
He then questioned the commission
about applying for Community
Development Block Grant funds.
Commissioner Richard Jones
explained that under present state
CDBG guidelines. the GreenwoodTackervllle area of Racine is not
eligible for CDBG funding. Jones
said the only way to qualify the area
would be to conduct an Income
survey to show it falls wit hin the
guidelines. The survey is confidential Jones said, and names and
exact income figu res ar&lt;&gt; not
required.
It was polnted out that CDBG
gu Jdetines change from year to
year 'and Income surveys may not
be allowed next year. Despite tha t,
Knopp and Hill were In agreement
that the survey, which would be for
next year's allotment of CDBG
funding, "Is the place to start."
County Engineer Phil Roberts
est imated It would cost about $4,!XXJ
to "single seal" the .7 mile the
petitioners want sea led. or $8,!XXJ to

RECEIVES HIGHEST AWARD - The Meigs County Emerpmcy
Medical servtces received the Ohio Asotodatlon of EMS' highest award
for achievement, the Ohio Action Award, durin,; the association's
annual state conferenre last week at the Hyatt Regency In Columoos.
The award is given annuall,v to a person or EMS syslem for their
outstanding acttvMies In the EMS field. Bud San"rd, at rlglrl, ·put
president of the IIS!IIclatlon, pre~mled the award to Roberl E. Byer,
Meigs EMS administrator. San"rd cited the Ideas and lnmvatiDrB of
the "group effort'' In Meigs County for lhe fll'lmolion'OI EMS. Byer,
accepted the award on behalf of the "volunleers of Meigs Count)' who
make lhe system work." 'lbe I~ member Ohio Association ti lite
largest Slate EMS organization In the United Slates. (See P~~ge 10
Story).
"double seal."
Roberts sald the highway depanment wou ld cooperate with the
trustees any way poss ible and
would provide free labor to apply
the seal.
Ted WamPT, county highway
supervisor, reported 100 thousand
ga ilons of du st control have been
applied on Meigs' county and
township roads. AU but four
townships pu rchased dust control
this year Warner said.
The departtnent will begin
grader patching within two weeks.

said Warner, and will continue
mowing throughout summer.
Roberts and the commiss ion
discussed a proposal to seed about
two acres of priva te property on the
Flood Rd . which had been used as a
dumping arra. The dump sit es
were recently clpared by bcalli tt er
program personnel. Commissioner
David Koblentz said present Utt er
grant money "cannot be used for
beaut~Jcation . " He said there may
be other moneys availablE' and
suggested Robet1 s conler with soli
Continued on page 10

Racine Volunteer Fire Department
completes July 4 celebration plans
RACINE - The fulclne Volunteer Fire Department, In regular
session Wednesday night, finall2ed
plans for Its annual July Frurth
celebration.
The annual parade wUJ kick off
festtvitles, which lnclucEsa chicken
barbeque, children's games, horseshoe pitching, homemade Ice
cream, professional wrestling, and
a gigantic fireworks display.
Parade en tlies are rurren tly

being sought according to parllle
marshall Scott Wolfe, who n vltes
any and all area &lt;rganlzatlons to
partk:!pate. The parade will begin
at 10 a.m. with lin e-up at 9 a.m.
For further information cr to
enter please send an entry form to
"Fourth of July Celebration", Box
:181, Racine, Ohio 45771. Participants need not pre-enter to be In tiP
parade, altlilugh It is helpful in tiP
parade line-up.

The lire cEpartment bopes to
build community Interest in ttls
year's parade. Members are especially interested in organlzatkms
bttldbtg floats for the annual t'!erit.
Prizes of $5(), $.ll, and $15 will be
awarded to the top thrre Ooats In
two divisions: Theme and Non ·
theme.
From 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. the Racine
Volunteers will serve chicken
(Continued on page 10)

r

•

�Thursday, June 19, 1986

Comment

Page-2-The Dally sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thurida • Ju_n!t 1.9. 1986

:::===========:=:::;-.
The Daily Sentinel

·Hanging might help-------,-...::.~=::.:::.::...:~!:..:...~s=~::.I·!!:=~~~~=~

Ill Courl Slreel

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Un ited PrE'Ss lnt£&gt;matlonal, Inland Dally PrE'Ss Associa tion and the America n Neo-A•spaper Publishers Association .
LETI'ERS OF OPINION

are

welrome . They shook\ be less than lXl word s

long. All letters are-subj&lt;'CI to 00 lttng and mu st bf'stgned with nama, addrt&gt;ss and
telephone number . No un signed Jet1 ers will tx&gt; publi shed . L£11ters should be In
good taste, addres sing Issues, not personalities.

Acting

strang~

From coast to coast, Republican voters ar0 b?havlng very, very
strangely. In fact, their actions seem so out of character. trey could be
described as almost sensible.
·
In the recent North Carolina and Ca lifornia primaries, the Republicans
had glowing opportunities to put purity above performan&lt;P and nominate
some very conservative - ttv&gt;y might ev&lt;'n be called far right fringe candidates to the Senate.
But the Republican voters declined. They decided, as Barry Goldwater
might have put it, that moderation in the [Airsuit of victory is no vice.
· That has not always been the case in past years.
Republicans of the ultra gender, a well-organized force in
apathy- imbued primaries, have Insisted on ideological purity from the
candidates- even at the expense of losing Senate seats.
The late Sen . Clifford Case was a reputable and honorable senator who
served New Jersey for years- bu t he did lack the pJrity of thought and
voting that the Right Wing demanded. So the ultras fielded one of their own.
As a result, Case was defeated and in ttv&gt; ~J&gt;neral election th&lt;' New Jersey
Senate seat went to the Democrats. They own it to this date.
The ultras also went after Sen. Edward Brooke of Massac husetts,
mauling him so badly in ttv&gt; primary that the Democrats won in the
general election. They also own that sea t to this date.
This year, by contrast, tre Republican Right had chan&lt;Ps to pJt up their
kind in North Carolina and California. And to make it rmre pal table, ttv&gt;
problem of disposing of an incumbent of ttv&gt;ir own party did not come into
play.
Sen. Jesse Helms, the great gunJ of the New Right, gave it a big try in
North Carolina, his home state.
And why not. Didn't Helms create Sen. John East out of an unknown
professor and party activist and make him Into a U.S. senator six years
ago. With East retiring due to ill health, flelms set about stitching togettv&gt;r
another clone and naming him David Funderburk.
But when the Republican voters looked at this Funderburk, a college
professor and once an ambassador to Romania , and stacked him up
against James Broyhill. a 12-term veteran of Congress and plenty
conservative enough for anybody except Helms, the choice was Broyhill.
There may be some fallout from that primary that turned ugly as
intra-party fights on zealot lines usually are. The rift will take some tv&gt;aling
but, as of now, Broyhill has to b? ronsidered the favorit e over former Gov.
Terry Sanford, his Democrat opponent.
In California, which can elect the very conservative, a Robert Dornan, or
a very liberal, a Ron Dellums, with equal aplomb, ttv&gt; Republicans had a
variety of Right Wing candidates to choose from in ttv&gt; Senate primary.
'fllere was television commentator Bruce Herschensohn , who has ties to
the Nixon network and wants the United States out or ltv&gt; United Nations
and the United Nations out of the Untted States; Los Angeles County
Supervisor Mlcheal D. Antonovlch, who wanted the Army stationed on the
border to keep Mexicans out and urged homosexuals to chan!J&gt; their sexual
orientation; or state Sen. Ed Davis, who as a police chief sugges ted
executing plane hijackers by hanging them at the Los Angeles airport .
But no, California Republicans oominated Rep. Ed ZO;chau, a moderate
from the Silicon Valley. He is an economic conservative but backs
legalized abortion and the Equal Rights Amendment, has voted aga inst the
MX missile and, until this year, opposed aid to the Contras In Nicaragua.
But those Californians have three tlm&lt;'S sent a true-blue conservativl'
against Sen. Alan Cranston and ended election day still [Aireand still out of
office. This time, they opted for a candidate who can appeal to the center.
This new form of acceptance among Republicans- swallowing some
imperfections in return for an increased chance of success - Is no
guarantee.
Broyhill and Zschau could well lose. But the other way did not work
either.

W REFORM AND YOU
CURRENT LAW

aENATI VERf&gt;ION

HOU~E

VERSION

WASHINGTON- Big Bill Bennett, the u.s. Secretary of Educalion, turned up b?fofl' a House
committee last month to sayoome
remarkably sensible things about
the drug epidemic in our public
schools He had several recommen·
datlons for coping with students
who use drugs, or deal in drugs, on
school pmperty. His first recommendatlon: Expel them.
That blunt proposal seemed to
dismay Charles Rangel of New
York, chairman of ttv&gt; Select
Comml'ttee on Narcotics · The Rev ·
Jesse Jackson , wbo testified tre
following day, also demu!Ted.
Agreeing that drug abuse is a
"national disas ter ," Jackson
thought drug educaht'o
1 n programs
would b? better than expulsions.
Benjamin Gilman of New York
concurred: "Kicking trem out Isn't
going to solve the problem," he
said. "That' s not educating ttv&gt; kids,
that's just sca ring the hell out of

them."
Bennett Is on the right track. He
made It clearthathecertainlyis rot
opposed to "dl1lg education programs." He wUI publish a "what
works" booklet this summer, summarlzlng ttv&gt; most effective pmgrams across lh"&lt; nation. H"&lt;
b?lleves flnnly that a long-range
answer Ues In promoting a unified
front among parents, students,
teachers and principals. Meanwhile, Bennett cited a couple of
examples of "get tough" policies
that have worked won...,
..... rs.
Eastside High Sehool In Paterson, N.J., was "a caldron of
vlolenoe and terror" b?fore Joe
Clark took over as principaL The
school had a drug education
program i thrre -fourths of aU high
school students have tv&gt;ard drug
education programs!. but while Ire
program was ~ing oo, students
were selling drugs In the halls.

1

/,..1.:, ~A•It

Clark ~t oo the public address
system and announced flatly there
would be no rmfl' drugs at
Eastside. Subsquently he expelled
:llO students. There Is no drug
pmblem at Eastside today.
Hundreds of ll)lles to the south, in
Atlanta, Northside High School also
had a "rampant" epidemic d drug
use. It too had a drug ed4catlon
program, but one day Principal BUI
Randolph found students In the art
class smokin;: marijuana and
blowing it through the air vents. He
took summary action. He sent a
letter to every parent warning that
"If I catch your child with drugs,"
thechlldwouldbeo-u-t. Drugahuse
at Northside, said Bennett, "has
just about st ped "
op ·
Rep._ E. · Clay Shaw of Fort
Lauderdale was ttv&gt; oniv rommitlee memb?r to support' Bennelt's
proposal: "I think It's about time
that we quit worrying about the kid
we throw out fl school who was

Urv~IJ7'm\-

"Q~

.,_

we worry about the live he's going
to corrupt If he stays In schooL We
have to quit being bleeding hearts
for every kid who's rotten to the
core anyooy. Just like tre rotten
apple, he rots the rest of tre class.
We've got to get him out."
Let me add my own "amen" to
tre romments ct Bennett and Shaw.
Two weeks ago 1 attended a
conference ci New York mayors at
NJagara Falls. I kept asldng these
city officials, most of them from
quite
small
towns,
what
they
regarded
as trelr
biggest
problem.
I expected ttv&gt;m to say "getting
liability Insurance." They · Said,
"Cmck." Their towns and public
schools are under~ing an epldemlc of addiction to this latest
cocaine derivative. NeMiweek
magazine last week had a terrlfying acrount of the ~l"gi'On!ng
underground market for the drug.
The situation cries out for the very
kind of toughness Bennett is
advocating. Drug education programs alone won't do the job.
A couple of ~ars ago I proposed
that capital punlslunent, in a
particular form, b? revived for
dealers in drugs. My trought was to
hang convicted offenders In a public
square. Some readers were horrl:
fied . Others trought I was kidding.
I'm rot kidding. Capital punish- .
ment may not b? much of a ·
deterrent against murder, but the :
sight of a ·few oorpses swinging
from a scaffold might work with
drug dealers. And I cannot Imagine
a more heinous crime than the
· crime ct !JJShing heroin or cocaine. ·
Other steps siDuld be taken . .
President Reagan recently autho- :
rized 'the augmented use of ttv&gt;
Navy and Air Force in interdcting .
drug smuggling from South Amer- ·
lea. This should help. Local judges :
sbould b? enoouraged to impose
harsh terms In prison for serious
offenders. Local school boards and
parent-teacher associations ought
to throw ttv&gt;ir weight behind
Benne~ ·s proposal br "zero tolerance." No measures will end ltv&gt;
traffic enlirely, bul if this plague Is
to be rontlnued, much tmre will
have to b? done than what we are
doing now.

Conquering failure ______:J:.__ac_k_A_n.:::..:de:.:..:rs:.:..:on-=-&amp;~Jo=se.:Lp.:..:..h-=.!Sp~:...:e=-ar
WASHINGTON - Most Ameli· the big-circulation Sunday magacans worry and fret , sometimes zine Parade.
This stirring and stimulating
envying tbe famous whose success
appears to be seemi&lt;'Ss. Why don 't book has all the ingredients to
they ever fall ? How can they be so become a best seller. It shares
confident? Why does their success many intimate reflections by Anderson 's friends about how trey
seem so easy and effortless?
It's hard to Imagine people like conquered their private anxieties
author Alex Haley, televL~ion's and darkest moments. It Is also the
Barbara Walters, newspaper pub- brutal story of Anderson's own rise
lisher AI Neuharth, Sen. John from the slums to success.
Alex Haley, for example, reveals
Glen n, comedian Jerry Lewis or
actor Carroll O'Connor being lha t he came to close to committing
troubled by crit ic ism or tortured suicide on an ocean voyage from
with self-doubt. Yet each has Africa to the United Stat&lt;'Sdoing his
struggled to overrome fea r of research for "Roots," the morufa ilure. They are household names mental best·sellingsagaof his slave
today because they were able to ancestors. The project had been
tum their worries into a healthy dragging along for 12 years and he
force for positive change, to direct was stuck. Friends doubted his
the energy created by fear and ability to complete ttv&gt; hook; he was
anxiety Into a productive force.
deep In debt; the hook had b?come
How they - and a host of otrer an albatross.
What kept him from flinging
highly successful people - were
able to transtorm worry into himself over the ship's rail Into tre
winning is the subject of a new book water? "The voices of rrzy ancesthat will hit the bookstores next tors." Haley recalls simply. "There
week. It is entitled "Courage Is a was Kunia Kinte and his daughter
Thr&lt;'e·Letter Word" and was writ- Kizzy, her son 'Chicken Grorten by Walter Anderson, editor of

ge' .. .'No, you mustn't stop, you
finish writ in' that book,"' the wice
w-ged him.
Perhaps tre lowest point in
Barbara Walters' car€f'r came
during her unhappy experience as
co-anchorwlth Harry Reasoner on
AOC-TV's evening ne\.\5 , The mtings were poor, and critics were
scathing. She was a prima donna,
ttv&gt;y said, who demanded limou sines, a pink typewriter and ottv&gt;r
trappings - all untrue. Strangers
would smirk and mutter "Baba
Wawa" within earshot, emulating
the "Saturday Night Uve" jokes.
"It hurt, and I woo ld bleed over
every word," she recalls. Sometim&lt;'S she cried, But It wasn't all
brickbats. One message of support
came from the late John Wayne,
whom she had never met. ''Don't let
the bastards get yoo down," read
his telegram.
The Jerry Lewis telethon for
muscular dy strophy has evolved
into an American Institution. Yet
ttv&gt; comedian is regularly deplored
by critics who char!J&gt; him with

personal aggrandizement and egotripping over "his kids."
In a pJignant anecdote. the
comedian describes how children
close to death have etten insisted on
meeting him. "I've sa&gt;n this
happen for 36 years: A child won't
die unless tv&gt; meets me," Lewis
says. "A young boy may have lived
15 days more because I was
present. What does that moon? To
the child and his family, that's a
millennium. So every year I make
what appears to be a self-indulgt&gt;nt
remark, 'Please h\'lp rrzy kids,' and
I take some heat. So be it."
Before Archie Bunker b?c'lllle
AmeriCa 's working class hero
through IJ television seasoos of "All
in the Family," actor Carroll
O'Connor went through almost six
years of what he caUs "total
rejection" as a hopeful stage actor
in New York. After landing a good
role In his first profess ional audition, he then found himself unable to
get even the most modest walk-on
part, and he worked as a substitute
teacher to make ends lllE!'t.

No-shows at wedding_____A_rt_Buc_h_wa_ld
It's June and weddings are
busting oot all over. The one thing I
notice is that many parents tend to
be more upset with those guffits
who don't come to ttv&gt; wedding than
pleased with those who do.
And so It was with Bob and Kathie
Parrish of Sag Harbor, N.Y., woose
lovely daughter Kate was married
last week.
·
I found Bob and Kathie standing
on the porch overlooking ttv&gt;ir
palatial garden, filled wlth wedding
guests. I expected t rem to be happy
since everything was going so
smoothly.
"Great party," I told ttv&gt;m.
"Ben and Hannah Mazer didn't
oome," Kathie said.
"How do you know that with so
many people here?" I asked.
"They called and satd ttv&gt;y had
jury duty."

Today in history
Today Is Thursday, June 19, the 170th day of l9lli with 195 to i&gt;Uow.
The moon is moving toward Its full phase.
The morning stars art' Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They Include
French philosopher and mathematician Blaise Pascal, in 1623; ttv&gt;
Duchess d Windsor, bom Bessie Wallis Warfleld,ln 1896; bandleader Guy
Lombai'doln 1902; actress Nancy Marchandlnl928 (age 58); actress Gena
Rowlands In 1936 (age 50); and actor Malcolm McDowell In 1943 (age 43) .
On this date ln history:
In A.D. 325, the early Christian church qJened the general council of
Nlcaea, which settled on rules for computing the date of Easter.
In l931, Congress created the Federal Communications Commission to
l'!'glliate Interstate communlcatlons, including rommerclal radio and
television.
1
In 1953, convicted atomlc spies Julius and Ethel Rosenrerg were
executed.
.

wedding to go to after they
accepted," Bob said.
"Walt a minute," l saJd. "! see
Judy Sokal over there by the
gazebo. You have to glve her credit
for being rere."
Bob sald, "We'1e only keeping
track d people who didn't come."
Kathie 's eyes were sweeping the
crowd. "I knew It, I just knew lt.
The Chancellors didn't make it."
"Maybe they had to go out of
town?" I suggested.
"They RSVP'd thatttv&gt;y would be
here."

"That's tre last Pontiac 1 buy
from Chancellor," Bob said.
"Give him a break," I pleaded.
"People are stlll arrlvlng. He oould
have been held up in traffic."
"Don't kid yourself," Kathie said.
"The way Chancellor drives, tv&gt;
would have been here by now."
"Do you see Mary Anne and
"On Sa turday?"
"Exactly. They cou ld have told Carlos SuU!van ?" Bob said t11
ttv&gt; truth and said ttv&gt;y were going Kathie.
"Why sbould I see ltv&gt; Sullivans?
sky-diving."
"Dave and Laurie Kramer aren't I told you we wert' wasting a stamp
rere. We went to their daughter's wtv&gt;n we sent them an invitation.
wedding, and we hadn't seen her They're much too holtsy-toltsy to
since she was 2," Bob sald. "I guess come to a wedding on Long Island.
Dave's golf game Is rrofl' Impor- If It Isn't Prlnce Andrew and Sarah
tant than listening to 'Oh Promise , Ferguson's nuptials, they're not '
Me,'
Interested."
"Forget the Sullivans, and give
"You people are really keeping
· credit to those who are rere like the
score, aren't you?"
Bob saki, "I've given up many a Flicks, the Sehlcks and ltv&gt; Wicks."
Bob said, "We gave the Sullivans
weekend to go to the weddings of
my trlend's children, even when I a damn nlce wedding present, and
had tickets to a Jets game. I expect · never even got a thank-you note."
"In spite of eVerything," I told
them to give me the same
courtesy•
them, "you have a lovely group of
Standing on her toes, Kathie sald, people rere, and Idoubtl!youcould
accommodate any more guests."
"I don't see tre Sokals."
"They probably found a better
"The ones I hate the mlst,"

Kathie said, "are the friends who
call up at the last moment and tell
you that they have swine flu."
"Why do you hate them?" I asked
her.
"Because we still have to pay the

caterer whether they come or not."
"You're ruining your day keeping score of all ttv&gt; no-shows at your
rreeptlon," I said.
"Not me, " said Bob, "I never
lake anything personally."

ROCK SPRINGS - . ~elgs ·
tracksters Wendl Kloes and Jodi ·
Custer along with Mason Fisher, ·
son of Meigs track coach Gordon
Fisher, had outstanding days at the
Junlor Olympics track competition
held last Saturday at Wheelersburg
High Sehool.
All three of the athletes advance
to state competition In the Ohio
State Junior Olympic championships at Dennison University June
28 and 29,
Kloes, the 17 year dd daughter d
John and Becky Kloes ct Pomeroy,
placed second In the IOl meter run
during ttv&gt; southeast regional meet
while Custer, the 15 year old
daughter of Joe Custer of Middle·
pJrt and Judy Well of Darwin,
Placed second in the sbot put and

Berry's World

second In the discus.
Fisher, the nine year old son or
Go~ . and Lil1da Fisher of
Sy!llcuse, placed secotdln the long
jump, second bt the 400 meter run,
and fourth ln the 100 meter dash.
For the young Flstv&gt;r, It was a
dream-come-true as this was his
flrst dflclal track rompetltlon.
Mason had helped out with the
Meigs track team but was to young
to compete.
The Junior Olympics track competltbn Is governed by the Athletic
Congress o! the Unlted States of
America. The Olympics are set up
Into boys and girls dtvlslons and the
athletes rompete In ttv&gt; following
age groups: 10 and under, 11 and 12
~ar dds, 13 and 14 year cids, 15 and
16 year cids, and17 and 18yearcids.

Meigs cage camp dates announced
ROCK SPRINGS - Mlck Childs,
newly named tv-ad coach at Melgs
High Sehool has announced the
time and date for the annual
Marauders boys basketball ca~
tore held July 21-24 and July 28-31
from 9-11: 30 a.m. at Meigs High
School.
The cost of ttv&gt; carrq&gt; is $30 with
registration dates set for July 5 and
12 from 10-12 a.m. at Meigs High,
Meigs Jr. High, and Rutland
Elementary.

The camp will re for all boys who
will enter grades 4-9.
This year's carrp features !Undamentals Instruction, Full oourt
games, contests, vldeo taping,
Awards, and Camp T-shlrts.
If you are unable to attend a
registration date, you may register
by completing the form b?low. Mall
the form and a check or rmney
order to ~ to: Mick Childs, 765
Broadway Street, Middleport, Ohio
~m.

MARAUDERS BOYS BASKETBALL CAMP
Fur boys wt.J wtll enter the 4th, ~th , 6th , 7th, 8th or 9th
DATES: July 21 thru 24 and July 18 thru 31.

~ade .

TIME : 9:00a .m. to 11 :30 a. m.
LOCATION: Meigs Htgh School
REG ISTRATION DATES: July 5, 10 a.m. 10 Noon; J ulv 12, 10 a.m. to noon.
REGISTRATION SITES:

Me igs High School, Meig's .Jr .High. Rutland

Elementary
CAMP FEATURES: Fundamentals Instruction, Full Court Games. Contl'SIS, Video Taping, Awards and Camp Tshlrts.
If you arf'unable to an end a T£f!'lstratlon, you ma y r ~Js u~r by rompl(&gt;ling the
followln~ form . Ma ll lhP form and a chl'Ck or mon (&gt;y ordt&gt;r for $.'1100 to:
MICK CHILDS
160 BROADWAY STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OHJO 40160

MARAUDER CAMP REGISTRATION FORM
NA M E _________________________________________
ADDR~ --------------------------~-----------

GRADE ____________________________ t9S6-H7 o\GE. _ __
HEIGHT - - -- - - - -'WElGHT _____T -Shlrl

Size·,-,-~-

!Sp(&gt;Cify Youth or
Sma ll , Medi um, l a rg{' or X·l argC'J
Chl:'ck onf' or t hf&gt; follow in ~ and 5lg n:
__l

hav(llns uranct' to COVff my r hlld whiiC' hC' I5 partlc lpat lnJ,lln th C' Maraudr r

Boys Basketball Cam p.

SIR;natun.• of pe~ rC' n t or li(Uardlan
____J

do not have lnlitlranoe lo co\'er my chUd while he I§ partl c lpatla~ ln the Ma·

rauder• Boys Buketba.U Camp.

.

S!Rnatui'C' of parent or guardian

-

.

.

Scoreboard ...
Majors

·~~·~ lte!dl~o

NAmN..U.IL\GUE

.....

M' L Ptt GR
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1'- Y
Mor.tn•,ll
Phllo1
&lt;&gt;I

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Transactions

"""'""'

f'rorrotl'tl

!oj~ 'O nd

nearly flawless in fmnt of a·;
enthusiastic crowd of 37,014 that
Included his family . The only
baserunner he allowed In the first
six innings was rookie Rub?n
Sierra, who grounded a sharp
single to right in the second.
Rookie Pete lncaviglla halted
Sunon's bid for his 59th career
shutout when he hammered his 12th
homer of the yea r, a drive to
left -center with two out In the
seventh.
Sil'rra added an Infield single in
the &lt;'ighth.
"I had to remember I had a
bcttom line," Su tton sa id .
··, catcher\ Bob Boon0 kept l"&lt;'·
minding me to take it easy. For all
but one inning II he ninth I, 1 held it
all back."
Sutton st ruck out three and
walked none to square his record at
5-:i. It was his second romplete
gam&lt;' of the year.
The milestone victory came
exactly 20 years and two months
after his first big-league triumpha victo1y in ltv' Houston Astrodome
whi le as a rookie with the Los
An!J&gt;Ies Dodgers.
The Rangers lost treir fifth
straight , their worst slump of the

PITTSFORD, 1\.Y. (UPit Players blame a tiring LPGA
schedule and a modest $2i5.rro
pu l"SI' for the small fie ld entered in
the four-day Rochester Internationa l, which begins today at Locust
Hill Country Club.
Only 109 play&lt;'rs. Including just
three of the top 10 money winners,
are In Rochester fur the International, 35 below the maximum and
the second smallest fie ld in the
10-year history of the event.
"Prople look at it from a business
point of view," sa id Val Skinner,
who said the two tournaments after
Rochester wi ll be nat ionally
t&lt;'ICvlsed.
The LPGA Championship and
the $450,001 MeDonald 's Championship, with th&lt;' largest purse on the
tour, precede the InternationaL
Some golfers also want to take a
week or two off to prepare for tre
U.S. Women's Open July 10-13.
Among the missing wlll be .Juli

Inkster, winner of two straight
tournaments, and 198.J Rochester
winner Ayako Okamoto. Officials,
however, predict crowds of up to
:Jl,O'XJ daily at l.Drust HilL An
&lt;'S tim atfid 75.rro people turned out
for
year.a rai n-soaked toumament last
"The Rochester International
has lbund a perman€!11 place in the
hearts ofMooney,
Rochesterians,"
Thomas
pr&lt;'Sident ofsai
thed
local chamb?r of commerce. Proceeds go to organizations that aid
disabled children.
Defending champion Pat BradIcy, who has played In 15 of 16
tourna ments in 1986, missed a cut
for only the third time since l9i7 at
ttv&gt; June 5-8 McDonald's Classic.
"Tha i was definitely tre result of
fatigue,' · Bradley sa id. "I didn 't
realize how much menta l)y and
emotionally winning the LPGA
Championship t the we&lt;'k before)
took out of me."

.422

011

25 !II .ll7

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:li 40 ..114

7
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Cli'l'l'la nd - Si jllll&gt;d pl 1c h4 'f' nur1~ •1(~''
&amp;hm.-·IT'r and w lfll'idr'r Mlfhal'l
'1\l· ank~ k.J to 1 ~'f':1 1 ront r:oct~ "1th Fklta' ~
of lhr ~ York Pl•11n t o~·;~ u\• . §i)..'fll.'tl
pltrlw Ph illip Dlln1o!T' Jnd lnfk&gt;l~n Rl k ~
PolK and , Jam~ ,. tU·hardsoo tr1 1 -\'N~r
rontrJf'l~ ~ i lh llurlln"wn of th • ''Pt~•l:wh
tan l.rai(UI' 11\ 1
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t.'tm'!. on tt.• dl!l;lb~"(! 11!41.
Pill~ ri b - ~11om! !lhoi'IS!Op Snmll'l\
Khallla to tt~C'l au M..\ Hawaii INIJlltlfthi.•
Plll'lrk: C'Oill~tl I.A'Iql\ll': purt'tla!il'(l ttw:&gt;
Diln&lt;~

our marriage contract."

'

'

'

season, as their lead in the AL West
was shavedtojustahalf-gameover
ttv&gt; Angels . Texas has collected just
six runs in Its last eight games and
hadn't scored In 22 straight Innings
untO Incavlglla's blast.
"It not a good feeling, not at all ,"
said Rangers coach Joe Ferguson,
a teammate or 9Jtton with the
Dodgers. "Let him win rt against
someone else."
Elsewhere in the American
League, Boston topped New York
5-2, Oakland blanked Kansas Citv
l-11, Milwaukee beat Toronto 3-i.
Detroit defea tro Baltimore 6-1.
Cleveland downed Seattle 5-l and
Minnesota edg!'d Chicago 10-91n 10
Innings.
Red Sox 5, Yankees 2
AtNewYork,DonBaylorbrokea
tie with a thrl'&lt;'-run double In the
ninthlnning to supportthe seven-hit
pitching of J)(onnis "Oil Ca n" Boyd
and help the Red Sox complete a
three-game sweep of the Yankees.
The loss was the founh in a row for
the Yankl&gt;es, who received a
tongue-lashing from principal
owner George Steinbrenner before
the game.
A's I, Royals 0
At Oakland, Dave Kingman hit
his 15th IDmerto back Curt Young's
four-hitter and lead the A's. Kingman, who had managed oniy four
hits In his previous 22 at-bats, hit a
2-2 pitch from loser Bret Sab&lt;'rha gen, 4-7, over the lcft -fi&lt;'ld waiL
Kingman has st ill managed 10 RBI
in his last 10 games.
Brewers 3, Blue Jays I
At Mllwaukl&gt;e, Mike Felder hit
his first major-league oomer, a
two-run shot , to help the Brewers
snap ttv&gt; Blue Jays' four-game
\\inning streak. Ted Higuera, 9-5,
sca ttered eight hits, struck rut eight
and walked two. Jim Clancy, 6-5,
was the loser.

blasted a two-run homer and rooke
Eric King pitched a five- hitter to
lead ttv&gt; Ti gers to their third
straight victory. The loss was
Baltimore's eighth in its last 10
games. Herndon snapped a score·
less tie in the fifth by lining his
fourth homer off Scott McG regor
5-7.
'
Inllans 5, Mariners 1
At Cleveland. Ken Schrom and
Scott Bailes rombined on a tluw hitter and Mel Hall doubled in two
runs to tv&gt;lp Ire Indians break a
thr&lt;'€-game losing streak. Schrom.
6-2, allowed On&lt;' run on thr&lt;'€ hit s.
struck rut four and walked three in
notching his third st raight triumph.
Twins 10, White Sox 9
At Minneapolis , Steve l.Dmba rdozzi'stripledownthcl eft -fl eldlinc
with none out In the lOth inning
scored Kirby Puckett from first
base and gave ttv&gt; Twins their
fourth straight victory . Kent Hrbek
hittwo home runs for theTwinsa nd
Ron Kittle hit two homer s for the
White Sox.

ALL WOMEN'S SUMMER
WHilt &amp; PASTEL

DRESS SHOES

30°/o OFF:~~
GROUP

SANDALS &amp;
CANVAS
h

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trifa_gt .

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San Fran('IM'O - Purtha..W ltll l'OnlriK't
d lnlk•lli'r· out lk&gt;ldl&gt;r Ran ~· k:uld)(•l lrom
Ptloctlbc of the- Poclfk'Coul IA'U\1t' IAM 1:
OUtrl"hlf'd 0111 lk'ld'r Chris Joii'S to PIUniX
lf'Ka~ S«&gt;nt r1Rhl·hlll'1dl&gt;d ptrrh4•1
Dwa;vrlf' llr'flry tlnnmnllT'd ~Jblar rrr\'r In
r1Rht I'IIIOWI to Cldahoma City of lhl'
Amrrkan ASSQ('Iatkm for 11 21 · day
rf'hahlll!albn ast~I~IW' n t ; h'lldN:loutfiPkrr
f'&gt;~:«l!r Wr!Jtht lnMontr&lt;'lll for a ploly&lt;'t to be&lt;
1\artli."{! latror; ~ IIVa ttd 0:-s~ltd h~ tf&gt;l
Larry PaTTish: 1ignrod fnlf'-allf'l'tl tatrll.-&gt;r
Mark Pook'. a rorrrrr Toronto farrritand,
and a~siSI:nl'd him to TulSa rl tlr T~ s
Lt•l!R\J{'.

_....

r\

r-~~~~n~ge~rs:6
~·-0~r~lo:les~
At Baltimore,
Larry- ~~~::~
Herndon !:~~::::::::::::::=~=~
1

Old Fashion Specials
AND

Nrw York - ~ btward ChrL•
Mc""'aly kla nrulll·)'NrrontnK'I.

......

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NY lllan&lt;k'rs - Namro T('rry S fm~X'Qn
IK&gt;Id roach. •
Toronto - I-JIIad roarh Dan Maklrt'\

rrstanM.

·

.UNLIMITED TAN

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GOOD SELECnON
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MASTU &lt;ARD
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MIDDLEPORT

·1•

SHOE PLACE J ,',

Ingels Furniture &amp; Jewelry

Ingels Furniture &amp;Jewelry
"I just remembered something 1must put In

(UPI)

ba.&lt;,f'fTlll n

[ ~('

t2 · ~r.

St. LoUis

,.mfHh . l l.~pm

falllornla -

play, IG88ing out Seattle's Spike Owen oo the ~ay The Indians woo 5-1

Mltl k MdJ•Iflflrt ' lmmM idl;,nd u f tht• Trl!. l~
Li"dt.'IJ(' to Edmonton nl i t.• Pi!dlk' Coa ~ t

0\ lcliJ!O. Dumton 1111 St Uluilo 1hll .
(1il rk t7 t. l'lllsi:IJil!h t l~ t l . Bonds t-I l
ll oo ~ ln n , r. .{)a\'ls tlJ I Cincinnati. E Oa\'is
rti1 . Miln·1· ,,a , Montn•al. W allo~ch l 1121
NN \' o!'l;. Stmwbrrr;.· til l. C'artt·r cl21 . 1.os
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Hor l'll'l' 111 1. San t'roorlsco R111o1·n r61 .
Md,·ln cl 1. Uri tx- cl t. S~ n Dl('jZO. Staklard
tli.Carwy 1l:l1
WlllNnl PMdll'l"ll
O!lcai!O. Smith t..l..j1 . St. Loul5 t\51 1. Cull

t I D-41 . Plctsbur'W!

I. Kan~ ~ (Ill U
ltJ~Ion ~. Nt""' York 2·
[)c-trolt 1&gt;. Ral! lmorr 1
ll!'\!'land ~. ~ ·a lii.-• I
f'&lt;~liklrnla $, Tru ~ I
MlniW'sola 10. ('hk' iii!O ~. ltl lnningl&gt;
Ttaill\i&amp;u· '.,G~ tAIITimrs f:Uf 1
f't!htJlU 1001\' L~ .l :h at MlnrP.Dfll ,,\ nct'l

(11-,·t·la nd

(li iC'Ilj;!l:J ' l'hlla~l•tJ*II a ~ . lfl lnninJ:&gt;
S! . l.oul' I. P l ll.'iiJ~.u lZ h 2 1comp

By FRED McMt\NE
UPI Assistant Sports EdliOr
Don Sutton reserved his seat in
the Baseball Hall of Fame Wednesday mght and h&lt;' walked proudly
through, the front door.
The 41-year-old Sutton b?came
the 19th pitcher In baseball htstory
to amass 300 career victories by
stopping the Texas Rangers on
thre&lt;' hitsandpitching the Ca liforna
Angels to a 5-1 victory.
Unlike Ear ly Wynn and some
oth&lt;'r pitchers who struggled to
notch their 300th caroer victory- a
milestone' that m('ans almost cerlain eventual entry into the Hall of
Fame ~ Sutton turned in a
masterpiece.
Hcthr&lt;'W just 85 piteh&lt;'S and faced
only 29 batters - two over the
minimum - In becoming only the
sixthpltcherin )listorytoamasslXJ
victories and :l,rro strikeouts.
"I think there's a ledge wher&lt;'
guys like tTomJ SC'aver and (Steve!
Carlton are on, thl'y arc th&lt;'
pl'&lt;'mierpitchrrsofmyera:'SuM on
sa id. "!thi nk I would be on the next
ledge, wit h guys lik&lt;'Gay lord Perry
and Phil Nlrkro, guys who are
mechanics, who grind it out."
Pltch ingonthr&lt;'edays res tforttv&gt;
first time th is year, Sutton was

Small field entered in RI;
blame card, modest purse

MIM'ti UI«' ,l , TOI'onto 1
O~ kland

By Una&amp;M PT'Mi lrlfonW:ioftl.l

LONG STIU:'I'CH - Cleveland llrst baseman Joe Caner extends
hlmoself to prevent a ball from going out of the lnlleld, Carter made the

Sutton records 300th career win, 5-l

Mlck Childs- He-ad Coach and Ca mp Director

f 'i ii~IJ:h Ul M On!rt'~l . night
-'!laniH Ill C\nrl nrwtl. nil(hl
Houston 111 Slln f'rllllfisro. niJ,:hl
S:m Dlolo ut Los Al1Rt'k's. night

II

II

Meigs thinclads have
good qutings in 'eveTJ,t

''full seroice salon"

Ill W. 2nd St.
H!·U20
Pomeroy, OH.
HOURS : MON.·SAT 9:00 TO 9:00 ·
CAU FOR AN APPOINTMENT

STYLIST.:._niiii MliSHAil, "JiAIY POWEll
UZ LUCAS, LAURA BED, MICA lA YMOND
AND TANNING, s•ILA POWEll

�June.19. 1986

Ohio

Thursday. June 19. 1986
I

Expos

1

Name Simpson Islanders head coach

•

gam on
leaders

UPSIDE DOWN - Umpire Fred Brocklander
jumps out ol way ao; Hou!ton pitcher Mike ScoU lan~
upside down alter losing his balance while attempting

IAl put out the Reds' Max Venable at first base In
Wednesday night's game at Riverfront. Clndnnatl

won, 3-2. (UPI)

Davis belts two-run homer
in ninth to give Reds 3-2 win
CINCINNATI IUPI I - ThP
baSPball rocketed off Eric Davis'
bat as the Houston Astros watched
in dislll'lief.
Davis lx'lted a two-run homer off
one of baSPball 's premier rPiief
pitchPrs Wednesday night to glvP
the Cincinnati Reds a 3- 2 ' ictory
over the NL West· leading Astros.
"When I hit It I knew the game
was ovPr." the 24-year· old Davis
said quiPtly after his one-out blast in
the last of the ninth had given thl'
Reds theirfounh win in fivegamPS.
Right -hander Da ve Smith .
brought on by managPr Ha l Lanier
to facP Davis, was Sl'l'king his 17th
save. Instead. he was saddled with
his third loss as he threw but two
pitches 10 Davis. who hit his sixth
homPr of the year.
"I wasn't thinking home run ,"
admltted Davis, hltling cleanup for
the SPCOnd straight night in the
absence of the inju red Nick Esasky .
"I was just looking for somel hing to
hll hard and keep the ball in play .
" I figured they'd bring in Smit h
lll'cause he'd lll'en warming up. The
last timP I faced him he grounded
mP out to shortstop. So I guess it
was my 'time this ti me. "
Mike Scott , Houston's starter
who had no-hit Cincinnati through 5
I-3 innings, carril'd a 2·1 lead into
the ninth and disposei:l of the first

batt&lt;'r whPn h&lt;' fa nned playermanager Pete RoSI'. Lanier then
brought on lefty Frank DIPino to
face Dave Parker, who muscled a
single to center.
Lanier then called in Smith to
pitch to Davis, now batt ing .237
aft er getting off to a horrendous
start this SPa5on.
"I don't care if 1 get second·
guPSsed," Lanier sa id. "Scott told
me he was tiring when I asked hi m
alter the eighth Inning. And even if
DiPino had gotten Parkl'r ou t. I
would have mad e the move wilh
Smith. He' s thO' Ill's! reliever in the
game and I would do the sam~ thing
th&lt;' sa me way aga in."
"Thl're are times when you wa nt
to stay in ," said Scott, who gave up
just three hits and struck out eight
In 8 J-3 innings. "And there are
times when you rea llze you should
tum it over to the bullpen. We're In
first lll'cause of em bullpen. which
has lll'en out standing."
Rose said it was no secret what
Smit h was throwing to Davis.
"He goes with his forkball and h~
got it too high to Eric." Rose said.
"Eric caught up to it wit h a nice
easy swing and it was gone whpn it
left his bat. Even if it had tl'en a low
ball he probably wou ld have hit it."
Parker, back In the starting
lineup after missing as tart Monday

with a sprained wrist. marveled at
Davis' ability.
"He can dlctatl' the game," said
Parker. "He has phenomenal
ability and world class speed on the
bases. It's tun to watch hi m
accelerate go ing from ft rst to
second, just like kicking a high·
powerl'd car Into gear. He has
natural instincts and the capability
of doing it all. He reminds me of
Bobby Bonds an d he's going to
stand this league on Its head."
John Denny, wiD hurll'd eight
strong Innings for the Reds. gave up
single runs In the SI'COnd and third
innings before right-hander Ron
Robinson took over in the ninth.
Robinson retired three straight
batters and received credit for the
victory that boostl'd his rccord to
5.0.
Scott, in co ntrol all the way,
mowed down 13 straight hitt~rs and
was working on a no-hitt ~r until
Eddie Mllner hammerl'd his foul1h
homer 10 deep right lleld with one
out In the six th . Dave Conce pcion in
the sev~n t h and pinch·hitter Max
Venable in the ~ lgh t h had the only
other hits off Scott, both singles.
Tonight's windu p d the threegame SPries will pit Marlo Scto, 3-6,
against J im Deshaies, 3-2, as the
Reds try for a sweep against the
Astros, who have lost throe straight
garn~s.

Owners settle differences; Schott
still in control of Reds activities
Cl NCINNATI IUP)) - Reds
general managing partner Marge
Schott said she and limit ed panners
who expressed dissatisfaction over
her business policies SPt tled their
differences Wl'dnesday du ring a
five-hour me&lt;'ting.
"I'm still ruMing the Reds ."
Schott said at the conclusion of a
meeting with all eight limited
partners at her Cincinnati home
"We think we got our problems
resolved.
"I think some problems have
been press probl~ms, you know.
really maybe haven't lll'en prot&gt;
!ems, Maybe It's a matter of
communication," she said.
Schott said the meeting was not
confined to ending the squabbles
plaguing the front office in recent
weeks.
"We have certain problems
facing us like (finding a new) spring
training (site) , the Stadium Club,
(ttl! ) scoreboard. We're not going
to do anything different."
Also attending the meeting was
National League.staff attorney Lou
Hoylll'S, who was dispatched to
ClnciMatl by Commissioner Peter

Uelll'rroth .
Several limited partners had
ex ~rPSsed anger over Schott 's
financial dea ls and the fact six key
front office personnel have left the
club s in ce SchoH bought controlli ng
interest in Dccmeber 1984.
Ca rl Krach, a limited partner
from Chicago. had ca lled for the
removal of Schot t from her positions as president and chief exccutive officer of the Reds.
Schott owns 5~ uni ts of the
14-unit partnership. Schott cashed

in one of her uni ts for $1.6 du llion
and paid h~rself a $133,000 "a ttend·
ance" bonus, prompting llmlled
partners George Strike and Carl
Lindner to hire an accounting flrm
to monitor the Reds' financi al
records.
Lindner owns 1~ units in the
partnership and the seven othersKrach . Strlke. Louis Nlppel1, Mrs .
Louis Nippert, Jack Maier, William
Relk and Walter Bartlett - own one
share apiece.

White upset winner at Easthourne
'EASTBOURNE , England (UPI)
- Hana Mandllkova was stunned
by Robin White Wednesday, while
top-seeded Martina Navratllova
easily advanced to the quarterfl·
nals of the $ni,OOl Eastbourne
Wom e n 's Gr ass Court
Championships.
Mandlikova, the French and
Australian Open champion, battled
Inconsistency on the court, and
suffered a 3-li, 7-5, 6- 31oss to White.
Mandllkciva was' seeded sewnd In
the tournament.

Navratllova, working hard toward her goal of defending her
Wimbledon champlonshlp nex t
week, crushed Dianne Balestra! of
Australia, &amp;4, 6-2.
"I couldn 't run as much as I liked
out there," Navratllova said. "I've
still got some flu , but It's not
lntherlng my game. U I had the
luxury of staying in hed for three
days, It would Ill' gone. I havl'n 't
been sick for years. Now this is the
thl:d bout d IUness I've had In
19116."

By JOEL sHERMAN
t)PI Sports Writer
A first major-league meeting of
high-school teammates turned into
a soiir reunion for Dwight Gooden.
Tim Wallach played the big bully
in the way no one has in Gooden's
dynamic three-year career by
blasting two home runs and lifting a
sacrifice fly to compile five RBI and
help the Montrl'al Expos to a 7-4
triumph over the New York Mets.
It was the first time in the major
leagues tllat Gooden had yleldl'd
hwo home runs to one hitter In a
game and It occurred in his first
blg·league squaring off with high
school chum Floyd Youmans.
Youmans and Gooden were
teamrnatPS at Hillsborough High in
Tampa Fla .. for hwo years lll'fore
Youmans moved to Southern California. The hwo had kidded about
how they were going to hit each
other in the days leading up to the
game.
"This game gave me extra
incentive and I was all pumped up
pitching against Dwight," said
Youmans. who lasted just 5 J.J
innings but Improved to 6- 5. "But I
didn't change my style. Maybl&gt; I
'threw a llttle too hard and that's
why I walked five batters. But It
was a thrlll for me. I have always
lll'en in Dwight's shadow and I am
his friend , but now maybe some of
the baseball fans wUI know me. "
Gooden, S-3, provided a very
un·Gooden -llke performance, last·
ing just 6 1·3 innings, yielding six
hits, seven runs - six earned- six
walks and one strike out.
"I have lll'en Floyd's friend since
we were SPVen-years-old," Gooden
said. "We both wanted to be
ballplayers and even though I am
following Floyd's ca reer very
carefuly I don't think I treated this
game any different from the
others."
But Wallach did. Entering the
game, Wallach was J.for-19 with U
strlkeouts against Gooden.
"Gooden had my number lll'fore
tonight and I certainly struggled
against him." Wallach said. "But
tonight I decided to make contact
by shortening my swing and It
worked. But don't underestimate
Dwight. He Is a good pitcher he just
had a bad outing tonight. He st ill
gets a lot of pEOple out."
Wallach hit a solo homer in the
third inning and belted a three-run
shot, his 12th homer of the year. In
the seventh after Tim Raines had
doubll'd a nd Huble Brooks walked .
Jeff Reardon went 2 2·3 innings
for his 16th save.
Elsewhere In the NL. Chicago
nipped Philadelphia 5-4, Cincinnati
edged Houston 3-2, Los Angeles
stopped Atlan ta 5-2, St. Louis
topped P it tsbu rgh 4-2 1n the completion of a upheld protested game and
Plttsburgh •downed St. Louis 2·1 in
the regular game, and San Fran cisCO defeated San Diego 6-3.
Cubs 5, Phlllles 4
At Ch icago, Don Carman un·
corked a wild pitch with the baSPS
loaded in the lOth in ning, enabling
Ron Cey to score the Cubs' winning
run. Carman's wild pitch came two

(

RUTLAND - In two recent little
league garres Rutland split with
Mason and Salem Center, defeating
the Salem crew 16-12 an d losing to
Mason 1·0 despite another ro-hitter
by Terry McGuire.
Terry McGutrl' Wl'nt the ma&gt;d·
mum slx Innings giving up no hits,
no ru ns, walking three, and Issuin g
17 strlkeouts. Tim Peterson suf·
ferl'd the loss in the seventh on an
unearned run; the result of two
Rutland errors.
Both squads played fine games as
pitCher C. ·Pyatt picked up the win
in relief of J. Johnson. They walkl'd
(our and struck out two whUe
allowing just two hits.
Rutland Is not 6-1 overall .
Jeremy Rupe and John Rose had
the m ly two hits.
Against Rutland Tim Peterson
pickl'd up the win with relief from
Jeremy Rupe and Gary Adams.
They gave up no hits, walked 22,
and tanned ten. Walter Barrett
suflered ttl! loss.
Peterson and McGuire were the
big ·hitters with two hits apiece.
MeG uire, McGhee and Shoemaker
doubled , while McClintock, Rose,
Musser and E. Peterson each.
singled .

Tea m
W-L
Mason 1........... .. ... .. ...................... .. .... 6.0
New Haven .... ... ........ .......... ...... .. ... .. ..5·0
Mason 11 .................... .. .. : ................... 5-1
Eastern... .................... .......................4-1
Midd leport .................... ........... .......... 4-l

Hartford ............................... ........ ...... 4-2
Syracuse .. ........................................ ..3-3

Pomeroy 1.................................... .... .. 2-4
Pomeroy It ...... ................. ..... .. .......... 1-5

Ractne ............ .... ...... .. .. ............ .. ....... 1-5

I
\

,•
I

•

J

f ('

POP FLV - St. Louis' Terry Pendleton reaches back as he catches
pop 0y In Wednesday's contest at Pittsburgh. The Canlinals won, 4-2.
(UP!)

ba tters after left fielder Von Hayes
threw out pinch ruMer Dave
Maninez at the plate oo Cey's
single. LN• Smith. 4-4. was the
winner and Steve Bedros ian, 2· 3.
took the loss.
Dodgers 5, Braves 2
At Atlanta, Franklin Stubbs
drove in three runs with a single
an d his 12t h homer to help
Fernando Valenzuela, 10-4, lll'come
the NL's second 10· ga me winner.
Tom Nll'denlucr earr&gt;:'d his fourth
save. Craig McMurtry, 1·3. took the
loss.
Cardinals 4-1, Pirates 2-2
At Pitts bu rgh. Bill Aimon'ssacri·
lice Oy drove in Joe Orsulak In the
12th inning to enable the Pirates to
snap a six-game losing streak. Don
Rotinson. 2-0, earned the victory.
TO&lt;tl Worrell, 3-7, was the b SPr.
Before the regu larly schedu led
game. Pa t Perry and Worrell
combined to one-hit the Pirates for
fo ur inn ings and allow the Cardi·
nals to wrap up a victory In the
resumption of a protestl'd game.
San Fnuoclsoo 6, San Diego 3
At San Diego, Chris Brown , Bob
Melvin and Jose Urilll' homered to
lead San Fra ncisco. Mike LaCoss.
":ho had not de feated San. Diego
smce 1983, wen I 6 1-3 mn mb'S to
improve to 6-2. Mark Thurmond,
3-6, was the loser. Juan Berenguer
Pitched out of jams in the sl'\lenth
and eighth inni ngs en route tOhis
SI'Cond major· league save. and his

r~fir~s;t;t;·hl;s

The Daily Sentinel
( llli'S 11:1-111111 1
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mon lh .
No subscrlpllonli by mall l)f'rmlltrd In
towns Whf'fr hom!' c.a rrlrr Sf.'rvlce Is
a\'a ll a bl &lt;'.

But Floyd said his 279 at
Shinnecock HUis was an excep·
tiona! score considering the tough·
ness of that course and the gusty
winds and chUiy rain that plagued
the first rou nd , which was caUed by
many of the golfers t be toughest
round played on an Amrrlcan
course in the past quarter of a
century.

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tor a genera l manager by t('a m
co-OYo•ner Gordo n Gund following
the dismissal of Harry Weltman ,
had said du ring Tuesday's NBA
draft that· he "had Identified the
man and was in the process of
getting him."
On Tuesday, Daugherty let slip
that he had talkl'd to Embry "and
round him a very nice man."

RICHFIELD, Ohio (U PI I wayne Embry may be new to the
job as the Cleveland Cavaliers'
general manager, but he alrea dy
knows what his top prlorlty Is find a head coach.
11 has been learr&gt;:'d that Embry.
who will be formally announced as
the Cavaliers' general manager at
a 1 p.m. EDT news conferenCl'
today, Is in the process of hiring
good friend Willis Reed as head
coac h.
A source close to the Cavaliers
said the 19-year-old Embry, a
native of Sprlngfield, Ohio. and now
a consultant with the Indiana
Pacers, has stipula ted his desire to
hire Rel'd, an assistant coach with
Atlanta .
Neither E mbry nor Reed could
not Ill' reached for comment. The
latter's hiring to replace George
Karl, now Golden State's head
coach, Is expccted to follow "In the
very near futu re," the source said.
Joining Embry at the news
conference wlll be Brad Daugherty,
the North Carolina center whom the
Cavaliers made the first overall
pick in Tuesday's NBA draft and
guard RonHarperofMiami (Ohio\.
Cleveland's SECOnd pick.
Richfield Coliseum president
Thaxter Trafton, placl'd In charge
d the Cavaliers' search committee

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UNIONDALE. N.Y. (UPI ) Terry Simpson wUI have to learn to
deal with the intricacies of hockey
players at a higher level and the
pressure of following one of the
game's most successfu l coaches.
Simpson lnherltl'd thoSP chal·
lenges Wednesday when he was
naml'd to repla ce AI Arbour as the
New York Islanders' head coach.
Arbour, who retired last month to
take an office job after 13 SPasons
and four Stanley Cup triumphs with
the Islanders. Is the second winningest coach in NHL history.

"The biggest change will Ill'
handling players who are men. who
have successfu l hockey careers and
other interests," Simpson said. "On
a day to day basis dealing with
veteran players wUI Ill' quite
differen t than deiaing with $00-a·
week kids. Yes. I have mlxed

Simpson,
whocoached
rccelvedCanada's
a multi·
year
contract,
National Junior Team the past
three years. The team won a go ld
medal in 1984-85 in the World Junior
Tourmanent and this year Simpson
guided Canada to the sliver.
From J972·1982,Simpsoncoached
the Prince Allll'rt Raiders of the
Western Hockey League In Tier II
competition (Ju nior B) in the
Saskatchewan Amateur Junior
Hockey League. The Raiders cap·
tured the league title in eight of
thoSP years and four times won the
Centennial Cup as the Tier' II
champion of Canada. Simpson was
named Coach of the Year three
times.
In 1982, Prince Albert moved into
the Junior A Western Hockev
League. By 1984·85 Simpson pro·

feelings
taking
now"I'm
quite sure
it is the
the job.
rightBut
thing.
The Islanders won lour conseculive Stanley Cups from 19 ~).1983
under Arbour. They qualified for
the finals In 1984, but were denied a
record-tying fift h conSPCutive Cu p
when they were defea ted by the
Edmonton Oilers. The Islande rs
lost in the SI'Cond round in 1985 and
were swept by Washl gton In the
open ing round this. year.
"The time had rome for a change
and a new coach such as Terry
Simpson," said Bill Torrey, the
Islande rs ' genera l manager. "He
owes no one anything and is
sta rtingwith a clea n slate. We gave
everyone ample chances to prove
they could s ti ll do it. Now its time to
put the best Islanders team we can
on the ice whether they're :ll-years

Scioto results
COLUMBUS. Ohio (U PI I Substitute driver Joe Adamsey
gu ided Inspire Success to the 5·
year-old ti'Otter 's fi rst victory of the
season in Wednesday night's fea tured eighth race at Scioto Downs.
Inspire &amp;lccess, which had not
finis hed lll'lter than fourth all
season, grabbed the early lead and
stayed In front the rest of t he way to
beat out Rachel J an d Scme
Thought. ,.
The winner covered the mi le In a
lifetime best clocking of 2: 002·5 and
returned $7.8!, S3 and $3.
Hankin, a :!J.J b ngshot, won the
sevent h race, kicking off a 7·5-2
trlfecta combination that was
worth $2,0U. Charsue Leader and
Electra's Man rounded out the .
comln.
A crowd of 3,144 wagered
$262,664.
"

'

..:

..

duced one of Canada's grea test
junior teams. The Ra iders rolled to
a 58-11·3 regu lar-season rerord and
a J2. 1 playoff mark to take
Ca nada's Memorlal Cup as J unior
Champions.

Maine outlasts Tidewater nine, 8-5
Jun ior Noboa's two-run double
capped a three- run ninth Inning
Wednesday that snapped a tie and
carried the Maine Guides to an 8-5
Internationa l League victory over
the Tidewater Tides at Norfolk , Va.
Dave Ciark led off the ninth with a

"I think the game I played last
week wou ld ha ve won any go ~
tournament." Floyd said . "If you
can win at a U.S. Open, perform at
that level, it would carry you In a ny
tournament .'·
Floyd said he lnped all the hoopla
surrounding his Open victory
wouldn 't dis! ract from his play in
Atlanta.
" I hope I do n't have a lctdo'Ml."
he said. " It's possible. but I don't
think It will happen.
"I literally have had ro time free
from the time I've gotten up until
I've gone to bed since I won this past
Sunday," he said. " I've 6 ther been
gett ing or returni ng calls.
"It' s lll'en tiring, but I'veenjoyed
all the atten tion, espcclaUy under
the circumstances. Hopefully,
when I toe off cat 8: 10 a. m. EDT\.
that will all be behind me.
" I hope I'm mature enough to
handle the business and the golf.''
Floyd said. "I've won two touma·
ments in a row bl&gt;fore and the Wf('k
alter I won the (1976) Masters, I
almost won the Tournament of
Cb amplons."
The Atlanta Classic offers a
continuation of last week's Open
duel. Five pl ayers who were tied
with Floyd at one point or another
last Sunday are playin g against
him again this wcck.
"I hope success breeds success.''
Floyd said . "I've lll'en pl aying very
well from tee to green all year. If
my putting had teen better . I think I
might have won throe (J' four other
tournaments. U I cant lnue to play
as well as I did in the Open , I can
win any tou rnament.
"You'd like to win every tourna ment you enter. but that' s not
l"!'a llstlc."
Hav ing ea rlier won two PCA
Championships (J9ffi. 19821 and a
Masters, Floyd's main goal now is
to win the British Open and lll'come
one oft he few who have won all four
"major" championshi ps.
"In the long run," Floyd sai d.
"the ma jor championships are
what Sl'parate players."

By DAVID MOFFfl'
UPI Sports Writer
ATLANTA tUPI I - Ray ~' loy d
refu SPS to bask in his most
spcctacular victory, instead looki ng
to the fut ure to fulfill other goals.
"I don't want to get lost up in
saying I won the Open and It's lll'en
a great caree r." said the43-year-oi d
Floyd, who last Sunday became Ihe
oldes t U.S. Open champion. "I've
go t a lot of desires left ."
Floyd looks to fulfil lsome of those
desires in the S500.!XXJ Atlan ta
Classic, which began its four-d ay
run today over the hilly Atlan ta
Cou ntry Club course. The 156-man
field also lncludl'd the top four
money winners on this year's PGA
Tour- Greg Norman, Andy &amp;&gt;an,
Bob Tway and Hal Sutton.
Norm an, who has earned $458,979
this year. can break the Tou r's
single-SPason r('('Qrd this wf('k by
winning the ~.rm top prize.
"There's a lot more out here
you've got to watch out for than
that." Floyd said. "There are so
many good young golfers playing
on the Tour theSP days. There are
about \50 playing thi s Wt'Ck who
have a chance to win."
Floyd . who has won 20 touma·
men ts and more than $3.1 million in
23 J-2 years on the Tour, almost won
last year's Atlanta Classic. missing
a playoff by one stroke when he had
a clos ing 70 alter thrcc straight
4-under·par 68s.
Wayll(' Levi, who won In a
playoff, and Steve Pate were both
15 undpr par for 72 hairs last year.
Floyd needed only a !-under score
this past Sunday to win the Open by
two st ra kes.

.;.
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Rutland .. ..... ....................................... 1-5

Harrisonville......

Floyd hopes to
·fulfill desires in
Atlanta Classic

\

MEIGS ,\N O MASON
Pony L[l. Mld·Seuon
Slan dlnr•

. ,.

NEW ISlANDER HEAD COACH - Tenoy Slmp50n tries m C"'l after
hebrg named new head ooaclo of the New York Islanders Hockey team
Wednesday . (UPI

Mason,
New Haven are
•
Unbeaten m

Ieague

The Daily Sentinel- Page- S

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

solo home run off Terry Leac h, 2·1,
that gave Maine a 6- 5 lead. Randy
Washington then singled and Dan
Rohn walked. One out later . Noboa
doubled off Randy Myers to help
make a wmner of Kevm Hagen, 54 .
Frank Wills pitched the ninth for a

old or 40."
The Islanders have lll'en dlsas·
sembling the veteran core of Its
Stanley Cup teams over the past
few SPasons, a system Simpson wil l
foUow.
"In theory, all joillareopen . but
obvbusly certain players would
ha ve to play themselves off the
team in training camp and early in
the season," Sim pson said. " I will
expect everyone to earn their spot,
veterans and rookies."
Veteran Islanders center Bryan
Trott ier expects the change to help

"We didn 't forecheck in the
playctfs, " Troltier said. " If we
don't execute it's not the coach's
fault, It's lhe players' faull, even
though the coach gets bl amed. A
new coach comin g in Is good, It will
create com petllion. There are a
whole bunc h of areas it will help,
concentration, trainin g.
" I know 1 wan I to show the mach
that I'm important and that he ca n
call on me in any nu mber of
situations. The younger players wil l
want to provp theybelong and the
older players will want to prove

==:;

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�The Deily Sentinei- Page- 7

Pomet'Oy- Middlaport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Your Social Security

By .The Bend
Keep foods hot without source in transit
'

By l4lll Horvath

Thursday, June 19, 1986
Page-6

In the spotlight

By Cindy Oliveri
County Extmslon Agent
Home Eoonomics/4-H
"Keep hot foods hot and cold
foods cold'' Is an important ru le for
anyooe transporting foods to reun·
IOns, picnics or covered dish
dinners. But how can hot foods be
kept hot with no heat !l:lurce
avatlable in transportation?
We must rely on retained heat to
keep the food safe, and careful
selection of the t:lod to be taken Is
lmportaht.
This week, "In The Spotlight"
takes a look at ways to keep hot
dishes hot for summer picnics.
Food spoilage bacteria grow best
at temperatures between 45-140
deg1ees F. Low acid foods such as
meals, poultry, eggs, dairy and fish
are especially risky. Foods with

!l:lme tomato sauces are sUghlly
less risky but stUI require caution.
In hot dishes, such i&gt;ods need be
heated above 140 degrees F
preferable to 100-170 degrees F.
Also, make sure hot foods are
heated throughout.
To transport, wrap the dish In
newspapP.r, then pack It In an
insulated container to help hold the
heat. Glass cooking dishes hold the
heat longer than metal dishes.
These measures should allow hot
dishes to be held for one to two
hours.
But what if til! meal Is to be
cPlayed or the dlstanre traveled Is
very great? Consider some other
alt ernatives. U electricity will be
available at your destination , try
using a slow-cooker. Cook the food
or place hot food In ·a slow-cooker
and heat on the high setting before

leaving horne. Insulate with newspaper or towels for transporting.
Plug It in again as soon as the meal
site Is reached.
A chafing dlsh or warming tray l;
another good way to keep i&gt;od hot
during serving. Keep food covered
to retain heat.
I! the food must travel more than
one hour ot the meal Is not going to
be served Immediately, check the
possibility of taking the uncooked
dish on Ice and cooking it after you
arrive.
If such fac1lities are not available
and the tlme from heating to eating
the i&gt;od Is more than one or two
hours, change the menu to foods
which can be transported more
safely.
Remember that spoilage con·

linues after the meal as well so chUI
any leftovers promptly or discard.
For a different addition to your
summer picnic or reunion, try this:
Dilly Carrots and Beans
}l cup water
1 teaspoon sugar
~ toospoon salt
~ toospoon dlll seed

evaporated - about 10 minutes.
Add Ital1an dressing and toss to
mix well. Serve hot, or chill and use
in tossed vegetable salads.
Ca lories per serving- about 00.
For fewer calOries, use low-calorie
Italian dressing. About 30 calories
per serving.'
'
Dtd You Know That: After the

HIGH JUMPS - Frederick J . Smith, Jr., Middleport, Is pictured In
one ol his two weekly jumps with Ihe 82nd Alrbome DtvlUin. ·He has
been comrnls81onedasecond lieutenant a1 the Ranaer AlrbomeSchool,
Fl. Bemmg, Ga..

Father, son
banquet held

-··-

!

Fathers and sonswerehonored at
a banquet hosted by Iff&gt; Phllatl'oi&gt;a
Women at the Mi&lt;klleport Olurch of
Olrlst recently.
Recognized and prl'Srnted gifts
were Wlloor Theooo ld , the !idest;
Scott Elcliinger, the youngest; Ted
Riley , the oldest grandfather; Carl
Nelson, the most chldren; Ron
Evans, the father traveling the
farthest , and Ed Evans a nd
Lawrence Stewart, the most
granochlldren.
Richard Gilkey had the blessing
before the dinner. The program
.was a take-elf on the Ted Mack
'Amateur Hour with Bill McDaniel
in the role of Mack. Wendell and
Mike Q&gt;rtack did a trained animal
act, Olrls Stewart and Rodney
Brewer. a magic act; Bill Bailey,
Des JeHers, Rodney Bailey, and AJ
Hartson performed as the Meigs
·valley Boys; Carolyn McDaniel
·w~ a tap danrer; Grace Hawley,
Mildred Riley, Dorothy Roach. Bea
Stewart, Clyda Allensworth, PhylliS Gilkey and Clarice Erwin were
in the kazoo band. AI Hartson did
bird calls. Jared Stewart a nd
Raney Shuford had charge ol cue
cards, commercials were tJv Donna
.Hartson and Sharon Stewart as the
"Lemon" Sisters; and Betty
McKinley and Roxanne McDaniel
assiSted with props. Jared Stewart
sang "Father's Eyes."
Others attending were BUI
Grueser, Willard Boyer, Ted Riley,
Jr., Mac Stewart, Kenneth Carson,
Harold Carson, John Stewa rt,
David Cole, Raymond Cole, Frank
Jhle, Joshua !hie. Gardner Weh·
rung, Seth Wehrung, Dan Thomas
and Danny Thomas, Jeremy Ha rt son, and Mark Gilkey.

Quote of the day
By United Preas International
George Ball, chatnnan and chief
executiVe dllcer d PrudentialBache Securities Inc., telling a
.HOUBe sutxommlltee that IUegal
tnslder trading Is more prevalent
thallll was a year ago:
·
"It 1s a time ct. great concern. U
people . !ole contldence In the
1nll!gl'lly of the marketplace, then
niCe plutocratic fat cats like me
wUI
their comfortable jobs."

iose

meal. hot food leftovers should be
cooled rapidly. Large quantities ·
can be chilled by placing a pan in
Ice water and stirring the food
periodically. Ice water Is twenty
times better than cold air for
reducing food temperature. Next
Week: Some tips on what to do with
food If the picnic iS postponed . .

CARRIER ROUTES .
NOW AVAILABLE
IN MIDDLEPORT

Combine wa ter, sugar, salt , and
ell! seed· In a saucepan, bring to
bo iling.
Wash and trtm green beans;
leave whole. Add to boiling water.
Simmer 5 minutes. Cut carrots Into
thin strtps, 2 to 3 inches long. Add to
green beans. Boll until both vegeta.
bles are tender and liquid Is almost

Frane&lt;&gt;s Vineyard, Reedsville;
Janet Gilland, Lucas; Cecil H. and
Eileen Smith, Pomeroy; I.Rsrer
Damewood, Syracuse; Richard
Vineyard, Vandalia; Jon Vineyard.
Miamisburg; Sherry, John, Joshua
and Jacob Freer, South Bend, Ind.
D. Way ne Vineyard, Virginia
Beach. Va.: David, Debbie and
Christopher Creamer, Mogadore;
Sandra and Tracy Thompson,
Coolville; Cindy Scott, Lucas; Elsie
Stalnaker, Spencer, W.Va.; Vlrgi·
nia Daugherty, Spencer, W.Va.;
Jewell Ga rner. Danville. III.: Ru s·
sell and Myra Argabrite. Norfolk,
Va .: and Virginia Lee Desmond ,
Parkersburg. W.Va.

Inez Pooler, Terry and Debbie
Pooler, Debbie Putnam and Raney
Boston, David and Donna White,
Mabel King, Dona and Charles
King , Mindy and Lindsay Spaar.
Lelia and Bill Windon; Herbe11.
Patricia, Joshua and Maeyn Ervin.
Cecll and Gladys King, Robert
Conley, John Conley, Jr .. Edna
Walker, Sharon Hartman and
Craig, Bill. Sharon and Billee
Pooler. Mr. and Mrs. Randy King.
Sheila Arnold. Gladys Wolfe, Judy
Wolfe, Ro!J' Saxton. Kathy Hively
and Joshua , April Wiener, Maxine
Hetzer. Dorot hy Chaney, and
.

UV. IM. SUITE

IF INTERESTED,
PLEASE CALL
DAILY SENTINEL

IIG. $319.00

$19995
SAVE '1 20

S PC. WOOD DINETTE SET
All chairs extra heavy solid

992-2156

oeech wood wi1h carved backs.

I,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J

20°/o OFF

SAVE

STOREWIDE!
MARGUERITE SHOES
POMEROY, OHIO

:··.::ll.

~=·

---~--~-wclloppec!
Steak 1Choppec! Steak
choppedMeal~ rr ll Voble Mea&amp;
Vable JffeGII

'II

'II FDID
11NIIJUriU

I
Jt,.¥;.ggl2 torSS.99 2 torS§-99
Ri....
I Rib- I Ri=.
Steak':-.
1
Steak 'f"*" I~s7.98
l)for$1.99 ,~for 1.991

.....
.:::r::,. ·--k
....:"".:,too-

:rra.nsfers

~

'613.

'245. t

SAVES44B.t

"&lt;fud01SoiodBufftlwithHOI

5o9r- {IM-~OU·t1n·U\) In&lt;l

bak.ld 110u\o. Can liCit bt useo

wltll o\htl disee~jnll. lv.no\lfl(l.
_.,IV $bl.
._,.MtlaatiRI....-.Ifl.

tlilllll__. "'.-y

Mpo·- -... . ., - . . . •-Rd ,-RI. 7, Gallipoll•
(14'rott from Airport)
.. Kid• •dn 5 E.1 Fl'f'l'"'

~

.................... t.i:l'·ftlP.JI............ .... -

..... -A.P.LII................ " ... fnlllf•-.

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

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

.........
•••

·

_.................

• ............. ,• ....., ........ . _ ........ 1..................

·=·........................................... . . . . . . . . . _. . . . ..--

......... ,.. ....... . _ .... tMt~wr~~t•~....,.l. ftAIIIIII'IIIIIiiiiAIII ........ _. ...... "r; •~e.IIV'. .

:

-

-

................. u.l,. ..... _

~-------

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.. ,.. ............................... a...

T.P.C.W. Dlst., Right of Way,
;&amp;.tton.
: • Roger Holsinger, Cindy Holsin·
;!J!rtoT.P.C.W. Dlst.,RightofWay,

:ouve.

• : John Fisher, Jr., Sarah S. FiSher,
T.P.C.W. Dlst, Right of Way,
:dhester. ·
'

:*&gt;
'

Only

$419

ISOPIOPIIYl

RUBBING ALCOHOL

16oz.

'

oa. p&lt;.

Sols Only

""""
. . .T
. . .__h_ e__a_i Y- Sen tin~!,..__
THE SENTINEL MAKES
RUB OFF OLD NEWS

ADVIL

INSULIN SYRINGES
&amp; NEEDLES

ADVANCED MEDICINE
FOI PAIN

PIIG. OF 10 ............ $1.69
PIIG. OF 100 ....... $16.29

$349

50 TAIUTS

NATURE MADE

DIP END

VITAMIN C

UNDERGARMENTS

SO MG.- 100 TABIElS

TRIAL SIZE

REGUlAR $2,59

2-EXTIA ABSOIBANCY

Only

$1 49

RIG. 99'

Only

59&lt;

TY~CAPLETS

SUJISHER LOHSE

500 MG-100 TABLETS

Pharmo(y

REG. S2.59

Only

' Ki-nnftf'l McCulaugh, A.Ph.
C...._ iuttt..
Aonlld HMiftg, A. PI!.
Mon . thru l•t . 8 :00 Lm. IO I
Sunday 10:30 to 12:30 tnd I
PAESCAIPTIONS

.
Fri«MMIy Servlct

E. Mil"

58995
fO,

Celeste approves
tougher, updaled
fireworks action

37C

KING
Roc. Sl99.95
pc.

Sets Only

¥·100 DISPOSABLE

~

t .'Charles Bush, Allee Marie Bush
lUI. lfll.~•lllillll• -

3/IOZ.

REG. '6.00

1•

'I
.
' -• Roger Beegle, Marvine Beegle to
:T.P .C.W. Dlst .. Lebanon.
:;, Iva P. Rayburn toT.P.C.W. Dlst.,
:flight of Way, Chester.
~ Robert Lee, Martha A. Lee, to
·T.P .C.W. Dlst. , Right of Way,
~tton.

---

Rtv~ r

DENVER (UPll - Tufty, a once
obese 32-pound cat weighed in at a
'chubby 19.5 pounds Wednesday,
and the veterinarian who put heron
a strict diet four months ago began
•screening farnUies who want to
adopt her.
, Dr. Jim Wingert, who put the
animal on a diet of bran and
carrots, said hi' and the Denver
Dumb Friends League were going
through a list c1 about rt1 households
'that could become Tufty's new
home.
· " We're In the process of inter·
:viewing people and lntmd to
announce' an adopt bn within the
;month," Wingert said.
• 'IUify weighed 32 (Xlunds In
:February when her owners took her
;to the Dumb Friends I.Rague to be
.put to sleep. She was !II fat she had
:no energy 1&gt; play or clean herself.
: Wingert, who got pennlssion
·from the owners to try to save
:Tulfy , said 12 to 15 pounds would be
:an Ideal weight for the cat. He said
·the new owners sllluld keep Tufty
:on a restrictive diet the rest of her
;life.

:Property .~ ·

-'1:.1..-

Upp r.r

SPRAY

Weight watcher

$299

a1

lWtN$8995
Sill

:$449

SAVES620.t

At,., 1;

\

Heritage Wee·kend

. '

s~r- (lft·yOII·Un·U1)a~
billed potiiO. cannot!,. u 1. cl
with omtr !ji~WJn\t. ~;., .
, Cllfll ... ..,..,. ,....

and

Carwash blues

"The Middle Shot Store In The Middle Block"

MIDDLEPORT

lrtt-ISalld lklfttl'll'llhHol

lfG. '179.00

by Frances Roush and Bet t:Y Louise McElhinny, Martha Chllds, Reynolds. Clara Conroy,
Hildred Carson .
McKinley placed a flower after Margaret LaUanre, Colleen Van
each name of the &amp;'l deceased listed Meter, Joe Bailey, Thelm a Sines,
HOUSE OVERFlOWING?
on a bulletin board. The Phllathea and Dennis Hocl&lt; man.
Dorothy Roach gave cPVOt ions
song and prayer opened the
CUAN UP WITH
program with Phyllis Gilkey in using recordings and readings in
ClASSIIEDADS
charll)' . Reports were given hy observance d Memorial Day, Flag
Thelma Boyer, Farle Cole, and Day, and Independence day. Others
Dorothy Roach . A thank you card aMending were Clyda Allensworth,
was read from Raya nna Cole and Mildred Riley, Bea Stewart, Nettie
Ted Stinson for serving their Boyer, E lla M ae Daugherty, J)o.
BURBANK, Calif. (UP! l - A wedding recepton.
rothy Baker, Delsle Forth, Grace
man who was bUffing up his Buick
It was voted 10 purchase a mffee Hawley, Clarice Erwin. J uly hos·
at a OO:it-yoursetf carwash watched pot for the church kitchen. On the tesses will be Colleen Van Meter,
Incredulously as a thief jumped in prayer llsr were Lewis Harris, Regina Swift , Nettie Boyer, Rose
the ca r, locked the doors and drove
off, poUce said.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-11
The car owner, whom pol1ce did
not Identify, told offie&lt;&gt;rs he had left
the keys in the Ignition . while
washing the vehicle at the carwash
Wednesday, Lt. Talhen Kanigher
said.
PRICES GOOD THRU MONDAY
The thief appeared suddenly and
jumped into the passenger side of
TANNING
the car, telling the owner. "Nice ca r
ACCELERATOR
you got here, Mislff, " Kanighcr
mJPICAL ll£ND 01
said.
COI'PTEIONE
Before the car o.vner rould react.
the thleflocked both front doors and
d('OVt' away.
3.75 oz.
·Pollee were lOoking for a whlie
man, about :.JJ years old with brown
hair , driving a 1972 Buick Skyla rk .
SAND &amp; SABLE
Memorial services for deceased
members highlighted the June
meeting of the Philathea Women
held at lhe Middleport Chu rch of
Christ.
Poetry and readings were given

-FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY ONLY-

992-716,1

.

Posturepedic

rp;;;;;;;______

GENERAL TIRE
SALES

tnc:hiOtS SattdBuH•t,.•~ 1
Spot'" It!!·~"
. -c.a:.•~ M6
ll~'l.ed pol,Mt. Cll'l tl Tilt~~not md.
wtlh OUter d~ ·,...,....
c..-~, 1.,

SEALY

Philathea women meet, conduct memorial

~Bec~k~yiW~a~d~e.=:....=::._::_~::::::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~

LET US HELP YOU
GET READY

~

Sara Marie Smith, Angela Edwards, Tatum Roush, Angela Wolfe, Keiu
Bailey, Talllla Joluulln and Angie n.gle. Not pictured are memoors
January Beckett and Stephanie Bell.

' SWEET AND INNOCENT -Sweet and Jnnocenl, the dance dvlslon
of Supr and Spice Corps, dlrecled by MarySmlthandlnstnl&lt;torsKelly
and Kenda IUzer, wW perfonn lllrooghoul lhe !IImmer al various
f!lncllo118, Uke the Meigs Counly Fair, Aug.12. The grouplsJull BaUey,

IS COMING!

Thinly sliced charbroileq
sirloin steak smothered m
onions
andand
melted
chees.f·
With
fries
beverage.

remember that Social Security
benefits are not intended to be the
sole linanclal hase In times of either
retirement or upon death . Your •
estate planning should Include
other types of inrome sources such
as insurances, savings, In vest·
ments, etc.
If you have any questions atx!Ut
widow or widower benefits, either
stop in cr give us a ca ll at the Social
Security office. We're open from
8:45-4:30 from Monday through
Friday and our local phone number
Is ~2-6622 .

. . I PC. I.A.

~ACATION

NORTH SECOND ST.

disabled chlld over 18 may also be
eligible for monthly bemllits.
Benefits are even available ilr
divorced widows and widowers who
meet either til! age or disability
guidelines. To qualify, the mar·
rlage to the income earner had to
have lasted at least 10 years before
the dlvorce. Proof of the duration ct
the marriage Is rEquired for these
claims as well as proof or age.
Peace of mind comes from
knowing that a source of Income Is
there when the family's bread·
winner dies. It Is Important to

~ pound green snap beans, fresh r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;::::::;:::::::::::::;:;::;::;:~:
V. cup Italian dressing

Families gather for event
The Pooler-Wolfe-King reunion
was held recenlly at the Chester fire
station Sunday.
Following the picnic lunch. a
meeting was held during which
time families were introduced.
Prizes went to Daryl Pooler, Texas,
who traveled the farthest; Edith
King, most children present and
also tho oldest, and William Brad·
ley Woods, the youngest.
Other prizes went to I.Rna Belle
Pullins, Dohrman Reed, Kim Reed,
Alfred Wolfe, Harry Spai!r, Mike
Pooler, Caryl Pooler, Edith King,
and Geneva Leonard.
Others attending the reunion
were Marcy ad Jeff Hed rick, '
Nancy; Bob and Jason Arnold, Jean
Sexson, Virginia and Lisa Pooler,
Phyllis Reed, Viola Teegarden,
Olive Glen roy, Clive and Dione
Wolfe, Caryl and Lea Nlchole
Pooler, Lois Pooler, Gilberi, VIcki.
Tara and Valerie Woods. Edga r
and Diana Pullins.

Peace of mind. Maybe the Social
Security benefits most assoclatw
with that feeling are survivors
l)elief!IS. Currently &lt;JJer five million
men and women receive monthly
checks based on a deceased
spou!;e's earnlngs. The aver&lt;€e
monthly amount Is $130. I'm certain
that just about everyboey knows a
relative, neighbor, or friend who
gels widow or widower benefits

from Social Security ,
Benefit payments can begin as widowers can be sent benefits as
I.Rt's talk about who quallfiesand early as age ro with a rwuctk&gt;n lor early as age 50 with no further age
when payment . can begin, You the early receipt. Aperson who files reduction from the amount ava lla·
might haVe noticed that benefits at age Iii will receive an unmluced . ble at 00.
are payable to both surviving amount that equates to what til!
Men and women younger tllat 50
husbands and surviving wives. deceased income earner would can also quality for monthly
There are no gender llmlts. A have received at ffi. A permanent checks. If there are chlldrm under
widow or widower wUI be eligible II reduction applles for montm a 16 In the household, !be surviving
the Income earner had mough benefit iS received before 65 with parent can get benefits untO the
covered work under Social Security someone who applies !Dr benefits at youngest child reaches that age. A
e lt her as wages or self. age ro receiving 71.5 percent c1 the parent with substantial care and
emplOyment.
armunt at ffi. Disabled widows and maintenance responslbUtttes for a

4 medium-size carrot.s

Vineyard reunion held
The annual Vineyard reunion
was held Sunday at Royal Oak
Park.
Attending were Paul. Lila and
Steve Richardson, Brookville; Dale
and Domthy Vineyard. Tallmadge;
Don and Rosalie Weekley, Columbus: Lucy Vineyard, Torch; Mae
Vineyard. Reedsville; Ellen Vine·
yard, Brookville; Mildred Collins.
Canton; Bill and Ruth VIneyard,
Wooster; Dorset and Betty Vine·
yard, Susanne and Crystal. Little
Hocking; Kenneth and Maxine
Creamer, Coolville; Keith and
Carol Vineyard. Tina , Missy and
Jeannie. Belpre: Ernest. Jean and
Paul Vineyard. Reedsville; Mary

Flekl Repreaeotattve

Who qualifies, when do befiefits ·begin?

WE DON'T WANT TO
RUB OUR CUSTOMERS WIONG
For yeera newapaper readara have had to dell with the problema of ink
rub-off. Now, " tow-rub" ink Is solving the problem. Extensive field tests
show that this Ink reduce• rub· off up to 80% comp•red to conventional
newelnkl.

The Daily Sentinel
"Your Hometown Newspaper"

�Page-S-The Deily Sentinel

Thulllday, June 19. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Dance recital shows off students in 'tap' form
Approximately 300 people attended the recent sprtng dance
recital presented by Barbara's
School of Dance, Syracuse.
Teacher-director of the school is
Barbara Lawrence. Seventy-five
students pertonned in the recital
entilied "Rhythm of the Night,"
which was held at Southern High
School in Racine.
The show began with all dancers,
ranging from age 3 to adult,
perfonning In a production numher
to "Rhythm of the Night."
Cynthia Caldwell. Laura East-

man, Amber Hayes, Latricia Holman, Betsy Houdashelt. Beth
Knight, Heidi Legar, Melissa
Ramsburg, Jodi Roush and Und- ,
say Smtih tapped to "Let's Have a
Party" and "Nobody Does It
Better."
Amher Cumings and Michelle
McCoy did a jazz dance to "Burning
Heart" and a tap dance to the
"Theme from Magnum P.I."
Jesslka Chapman, Jessica Chevalier, Rochelle Jenkins, Jennifer
Lawrence, Nicole Nelson, Jessica
Radford, Amy Beth Redovlan,

Samantha Sisson and Rayan Young
did a jazz dance to "Girls Just Want
to Have Fun" and tap danced with
umbrellas tn "Rainy Day People.
Kimherly Crites, Alicia Haggy,
Tract Heines and Stacy McCoy
tapped to "The First Part of
Friendship is Friends" and a
"Spoonful of Sugar."
Suzanne Clay danced an ad·
vanced tap routine to "Invitation to
Dance."
Raberta Caldwell, Anna Chapman, Linda Chapman, Valerie
Connolly, l.eann CUndiff, Susie

Francis, Melissa Harris, Heather
McPhail and Cassie Nease per·
formed a jazz routine to "When the
Going Gets Tough, the Tough Get
Going" and tapped to "Rasplll&gt;rry
Beret" in blackllght.
Six and seven year olds Keri
Caldwell, Meredith Crow. Billy
Francis, Nathan Haines, Whitney
Hap!Qnstall, Myca Haynes, Jason
Lawrence, Stacie Reed and Amher
Thomas were a rml hit with the
audience when they perfonned to
" If I Only Had a Brain" from the

vanced tap routine to "A Broadway
Medley" and jazz to "We Built This
City."
Danielle Crow, Tara Gerlach,
Christy Hawkins, Ellsha MeadoW!I, •
Marcia Robinson, Beth RouSh and ·
Emlly Shain did a jazz danre to .
"And We Olnced" and a tap dance
to "Xanadu."
Suzanne Clay and Do nita Manuel .
perfonned a jazz routlne to
"Emergency."
Gall Havatter and Barbara Lawrence did a fast tap routine to "New
Attitude."
For the finale, each dancer
returned to the stage for a finaJ bow •
to the music of "Greatest Love of ·
All" and each performer received a ;
sDk rose from Barbara.
Barbara was also presented with
a bouquet of roses and IJ'esents
from her students.

Wizard ol Oz. They aisotapped with
canes 1D "We Make It Happeo."
Nora Eastman, Arnie Friend.
Alison Gerlar h, Jodi Hobbs,, Cindy
Roush and Katie San&lt;Ers danred a
jazz routine to "Kids Incorporated"
and a military tap to "Yankee
Doodle !)Indy."
Holly Williams i#ruted witb high
kicks as she tapped to "New York,
New York" and perfonned a jazz
routine to "I'm So Excited."
The 3·5 year old class, Bridget
Cross, Carly Crow, Tr!cla Davis,
Courtney Haines. Alt111!"' Hill,
Janey Hill, Tangy 'Latlderrnllt,
Melody LawrEnce, June ' McCoy ,
Morgan Mathews, Alyson Patter·
son and Molly Heines sang and
danced to "I'm A Uttle Teapot"
and "It's Neat."
·
Leigh Anne Redovian and Shelly
Winebrenner perfonned an ad-

Developing rude to an art form
NEW YORK (UP!)- New York where the samedistancewst $4.10,
City taxi drivers "have developed and U&gt;ndon where It cost $3.
rudeness to an art form," and the
The cheapest rideswerelnRiode
French are nearly as bad; accord- Janeiro where a ~ kilometer ride
lng to a report on taxicabs around cost 76 cents, and Cairo where the
the world.
same ride wst between $1 and$1.61.
The report in "World Executive
New York cabs rated high on
Digest" rated taxis in nine cities prices, and average on. bonesty,
worldwide on live different criteria availabU!ty and knowledge of the
- fourforqualityof service andone city.
for price.
The report said oft he cab drivers,
Taxis in TokYo. Rome, Palisand "some. like those in New York,
London ail got three stars for bave developed rudeness to an art
cleanliness, compared with New fonn, although the French have
York's singlf' star, a poor rating.
little to learn in this respect."
The only taxis dirtier !han !hose , . - - - - - - - _ . : ._ __
in New York were In Cairo. The
cabs In Bangkok, Jerusalem and
Rio de Janeiro all drew two starsFor informatian leading to tht
an average rating for
cleanliness.
arrest ond canwidian of parson
The taxis in 'Ibkyo and U&gt;ndon
or parsons responsillla for tha
received the highest, lhree-star
cutting of fence along prop·
rating In all four quality criteria,
ertr
of Homer lelt an Smith
and Rome ranked close hehind.
Ridge Road. On wtelcand of
with three· star ratings in all
categories except availability.
Mar 11. 1916.
Taxi prices were highest In
Call llo1111r Belt at
Tokyo, where a 5-kitometer ride
614-143-5486 ar Sheriff's
cos t $4.40, followed by New York
D rlmlnt at 614-992-3371.

S400 REWARD

TUMBLERS - 11ds group of the Su!J:BI' and Spice "''1"' recently
perfonned at lhl' West VIrginia Oag raising oonmorzy In lla!Uord. The
girls are dlrect!ld by Mary Smith. Plclured are, front, Angle Engle:

middle, Page Wa&amp;; Sara Marie Smith: back, Jamie Drake, Meredlth
FetheroD, Mandy VanMatre, ChrWy Drake, Suzanne Susldn and Toral
Shaw. Not pictul'l'.d Is memher Stephanie BeD.

Community calendar / area happenings
THURSDAY
POMEROY -Enterprise United
Methodist Church Willing Workl'rs
Class, 7:~ p.m. Thursday at the
home of Mrs. Mabel Moore.
POMEROY - Middleport Child
Conservation League wlll meet at
6: ~p. m. Thursday at the Route ll,
Roadside Park. lor a family picnic.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Church
of Christ wlll hold Vacation Bible
School conllnuing through Thursday at 6: ~ each evening. Closing
program will be 7:~ p.m. Friday.
RACINE - Vacation Bible
School at Antiquity Baptist Church,
Route 338, Racine, through Friday,
10 a.m-noon daily.
SYRACUSE - Rick Weaver.
CottagPVille, W.Va., wll! he evangelist at a revival at Syracuse
Mission. through Saturday, 7 eac h
evening.
SHADE - The Shade United
Methodist Church will be sponsoring a week-long Bible school,
through Frklay, from 9 a .m. to
11:45 a.m. each day.
POMEORY - Meigs County
Democratic Executive Committee
meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at
Carpenters' Union Hail, 618 E.
Main St., Pomeroy; ail Interested
Democratics and committee persons Jnv1ted.

FIUDAY
CARMEL- Cannel-Sutton Unl·
trd Methodist Church wlll hold a
hay ride and wiener roast at t~J~,'
Carmel Church Friday at 7 p.m.
BASHAN - Public ice cream
social bl&gt;ginning at 5 p.m. Friday at
Bashan Fire House by the firf'
department auxiliary; sandwiches,
pie, cake and soft drinks also
available and there will be musical
entertainment.

POMEROY - FUm, Star Trek :
Dagger ot the Mind will be shown at
2 p.m. Friday at the Pomeroy
Library.

SATURDAY
CHESTER - Bowhunters wUI
hold their annual two-day jamboree
Saturday and Sunday with events
starting at 10 a.m. Saturday; free
camping wlll he available. Those
needing rrore details contact Terry
Brown at !ll5-3J64.
POMEROY- Hymn singSatur·
day at Freedom Gospel Mission
Church al 7:30p.m. wllh a group
from Chester as special singers.
POMEROY- Movie, Star Trek:
Dagger of the Mind to be shown at
Middleport Library, 2 p.m .
Saturday.
GALLIPOLIS- Grande Squares
Western Style Square Dance Club Is
sponsoring an open dance Saturday, 8-ll p.m., at St. Peter's
Episcopal Church , Gallipolis.
Caller wlll be BUI Bush.

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Rev. Theron
Durham will re guest speaker at
7: ~ p.m. services this Sunday at
the Hobson Church of Christ In
Chlistian Union

School wU! be ~eld June 23·27, 9: ~
to 11:~ a.m., at the Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church on Salem
Street. Classes lor nursery age
through teenagers. Everyone
Wf'lcome.
Meeting set
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Garden Club WUl meet · Monday
night at 7:30 at the home of Mrs.
Edith Wllllamson. Dues are
pa,yable.
VBS

R lTTLAND - Rutland Freewlll
Baptist Church on Salem St. wlll
hold Vacation Bible School June
23-27 with classes from 9: ~ Jo ll: ~
a.m. All agf.'s, rrom nursery
through teens, are welcome.
Ice cream social
POMEROY The Trinity
Church rt Pomeroy wlll hold an lee
cream social and serve lunches
Thursday and Friday, from ll a.m.
to 6p.m. eac h day. Sloppy joes, ham
sandwiches, hot dogs, cole slaw,
potato salad, baked beans, chicken
and noodles with roil , beverages,
desserts and homemade ice cream
will be sold. Take out orders will be
available both days.

're Here
To Help

Property
transfers

• Prescriptions ftlled
• Over-the-counter drugs
• Health and beauty aids
• Cosmetics and perfumes
• Sickroom; surgical needs
• Vitamins and diet aids.

Robert L: Searles to John Sea·
rtes, Ruth Searles, Lot 118, Rutland
Yilt.
Harry Osborne Jr., Mary E.
Osoorne to Herald Oll &amp; Gas Co ..
Right of Way, Rutland.
Cl!arles H. Theiss, Bonnie F.
Theiss to Thppers Plains-Chester
Water Dist., Right of Way, Sutton,
James Circle, Phyllls Circle tn
Thppers Plains-Chester Water
Dist., Right of Way, Sutton.
Ruth Ann Powell to Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water Dlst.•, Right
of Way, Lebanon.

Pharmacists Who
care About You

VILLAGE
PHARMACY
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

*(Inventor Reduction Sale)

PORTI.AND - Annual reunion

ot the late Albert and Eliza Hill wUI

be held Sunday at Portland Park. A
covered dish dinner wlll he held at
noon. All friends and relatives are
inv11ed.
REEDSVILLE -

Descendants

of F.d and EEI!za Hayman will hold

thf'ir annual reunion Sunday at
Forked Run State Park, Reedsvllle.
Friends and relatives are w~lcome.
There will he a basket dinner at
noon .

WEIIN!SDAY • Al l SEATS 1250
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY 12 . 50
LAST DAY!
11

O~ER

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

Now i1 the Time to Bug/
GARDEN SPRAYS

Jl

by
ORTHO &amp;
DRAGON PRODUCTS

MASOIN, WV

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
I UP!) - Government offtclais,
pointing to a decrease in violent
dealhs and serious clashes, said
emergency rule has given the
country "a sense of optimism." But
q~posltion membl&gt;rs of Parliament
were not so sure.
At a news briefing Wednesday,
the government said the state of

emergency, declared June 12,
curtailed · political violence and
boosted pubUc confidence in the
country's security forces .
"Only three&lt;Eaths were reported
In the 24 hours (prior) to this
morning,'' government Bureau lor
Information spokesman Leon
Melle! told reporters in Pretoria.
"There has been a marked

decrease In the number of incidents
and In !he seriousness !hereof," he
said. "This is one of the lowest
figures in many months."
Meller said there was "a sense of
optimism in the country and
renewed confidence in the security
forces" since emergency rule was
invoked .
He said two men were shot and

killed by poUice Thesday during
separate attacks on a civlllan bus
and a police patrol. A third man was
found burned to death In Kwan&lt;Erele, north of Pretoria. Mellet also
said police saved four blacks from
being burned alive by other blacks.
The latest deaths pushed to 45 the
number of people kllled In the first
six days of the nationwide state of

Terrorist ·confesses to killing American
By JOHN PHILLIPS
GENOA, Italy (UP!) - The
accused leader of a Palestinian
commando band that hijacked the
cruise ship Achllle Lauro confessed
to killing American Leon Klingh·
offer and said the wheelchair-bound
New Yorker was singled out to
prove "we would have no pity," a
Rome newspaper said.
Fifteen defendants went on trial
Wednesday for the Oct. 7 hijacking
of the luxury liner.
Assize Court Judge Lino Monteverde said he wouid hear testimony
today from the five defendants in
custody - three alleged hijackers
and two accused accomplices. Ten

other defendants - Including Mohammed Abut Abbas, the Palestine
Liheration Front leader accused of
masterminding the hijacking were being tried in absentia.
Another suSPect In custody- the
fourth and last of the accused
hijackers- was a minor at the time
of the hijacking and will be tried
separately In juvenile court.
The Rome newspaper La Repubbilca reported Wednesday that
Magied a1 Molqi, 23, - whom
authorities have identified as the
leader of the tour-man commando
group that seized the cruise shiphas confessed to killing Klinghoffer.
00.

Monarchs note anniversary
STOCKHOLM, Sweden !UP! I King Carl XVI Gustaf and his
commoner queen, Silvia, today
marked the lOth anniversary of
their Cinderella wedding that si lenced ail talk of abolishing Sweden's l,OOJ.year-old monarchy.
When Carl Gustaf ascen&lt;Ed tot he
throne oo Sept. 19, 1973, he was met
with skepticism. Opinion polls
showed rrost Swedes favored re·
tainlng the Royal house, rut Carl
Gustaf - playboy and swinger was not the Ideal king to conserva·
live rronarchists. And he was a
target for liberals and socialists.
During the mid -1970s, a tdevislon
talk show delved into the &lt;J~estion :
"Should the monarch II' fired ?"
And a widely distributed poster
depicted Carl Gustal shooting
himself _In lhe head - in keeping

with his royal mono. "For Sweden,
in keeping with the times."
But that kind of questioning was
silenced on the June 19,1976, wit ha
royal wedding · In Stockholm's
Greal Church. The bride w.&gt;sSiJvia
Sommerlath, a West Gennan with
a smile that mpited Swedish hearts

COBB

CHEVROLO -OLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC
"FOI.IlY SIMONS OLDS.·CAD.·CHEY."

301 E. MAIN ST.
POMEIOY, OH. ·

.,....a

IPICIAL w•DNao.w
THIIIVIRI.RI

PH. (614) 992·6614

HOUIS:
len., WM., Fri. 1:30·1:00
T1111. &amp; Thurs. 1:30-5:30
Sat. 1:30..:00; SUII. 1:00-S:OO

government "must tell Parliament
how many prople have been
detained."
Dave Steward, director general
of the government's Bureau for
ln!onnation, told r&lt;l&gt;orters in Pretoria authorities deci&lt;Ed not to
release the numhers or Identities rt
people detained without charge
under the emer,.,ncy.
A numrer of supermarkets and
chain stores were hit by strikes
Wednesday, t.Jslnessmen a nd
shoppers said. They said black
workers staged sit-down strikes in
branches of the Checkers and
Pick-n-Pay stores, apparently he·
cause they bl&gt;lieved trade union
leaders were in deten !ion.
Checkf'rs Director Clive Wei!
refused to commen t on the reports .
" I have reen instructed not to
comment . There is a total embargo
on this lhing in terms of the
emergency regulations."
Weil nonnally speaks freely to
reporters aoout lahordispJtes in his
supermarket chain .

8 WEEK SUMMER CLASS STARTS JUNE 23RD
CHARLETON SCHOOL-SYRACUSE
JOY KING, INSTRUCTOR
8 WEEK SESSION $36
MOll. &amp; WED. 4:30·5:30 Alii • :30·7:30; TUES. &amp; THUIS.
5:45·6:45; lUIS. &amp; ••• MDIII. 9 A.M.·10 A.M.
PIIOIII 992·3794 fOI IIGISTIADOII. ASI! AIOU1 S1UDINT DI5COUIIT.

NAME BRANDS

Sequoia sea trial set
BY PAT SCALES
NORFOLK, Va. !UP! 1 - The
presidential yacht Sequoia, saved
by a trust from becoming a floating
nightclub, was readied for trials in
the Elizaheth River today to check
its seaworthiness after a $2 million
stem-to-stern refurbishing.
If the Jl)l.foot yacht passes ils sea
trials. It will leave the Nortolk
Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Corp. on
June 27 and sail to New York to
participate In the Fourth of July
rededication of the Statue of
Libl&gt;rty.
During a llvl'month overhaul.
workers replaced the yacht 's pipes
and wiring and lnsta il!'d two new
generators. Th&lt;'y a Iso replacrd
about one- third of the Sfoquoia's
wooden huU , but did not change h&lt;&gt;r
classic lines.
Chief engineer Eric Sager '" id
new engines were installed Ihat will
boost the Sequoia's top sp!'rd.
which he declined lo n•vra l for
security l'('asons. by about 4'11
knots.
" It may sound like we have starr
ollhe art. and some of it Is. but It's
prtnclpally in the interest of
safety ." Sager said. "If you came
aboard . you'd find It's not
extravagant."
Qry-&lt;loek workers also refinished
and restored the yacht' s interior
and installed a custom- made
carpet with tt-l&gt; presidential S('ai in
the Sequoia's main salon on
Wednesday.
The 61-year-old yacht. which is
run by a crew of nine, has a main
and aft salon. four sta terooms. a
galley and a pantry. plus quarters
for the crew.
The Sequoia spent its ea rly years
chasing rum mnners on lhe

Molql said he killed the American held the ship until Oct. 9, laking it to
Invalid with two bJrsts from a the Syrian coast and back lll&gt;rore
Soviet-made AK- 47 assauH rifle, surrendering to Egyptian
authorit~s.
the newspaper said.
Ori Oct. 11, U.S. Navy jets forced
The newspaper quoted Molqi as
an
Egyptian jet carrying the
saying he singled out KlinghofCer to
hijackers
to land in Sicily, where
convince authorities that the hi·
Italian
authorities
arrested them.
jackers would stop at nothing to
Abut
Abbas
and
an
aide also were
press their demands that israel free
aboard
the
plane
b.Jt
the Italian
50 Palestinian prisoners.
"We agreed the first hostage to government, ignoring strenuous
kill should he an American," Molqi protests from Washington, allowed
them to leave the country Oct. 12,
was quoted as saying.
saying
there was ro legal complaint
" I chose Kllnghoffer, an 1\valid.
so lhat everybody would know we against them . They are among
would have no pity for anybody, thoS(' heing tried in their absence.
The five suspects In court when
just as the Americans. arming
Israel, do rot realizt&gt; that Israel kills the trial opened Monday in an
wo!Tll'n and childrm from our underground bunker courtroom in
Genoa's Palace of Justice raced
people indiscriminately," he said.
"! wenl down 1o where the charges ranging from rru r&lt;Er and
hostages were and forced a Portu- kidnapping to belonging to an
guese steward totaket he American anned gang.
Wednesday's opening session,
to the poop deck .I fired twost'Dtsone in the head and one in the taken up mainly with jrocedural
matlers. was disrupted by lour
heart ," ~e- said.
Four hijackers seized Ihe Achille Wesl Germans who slaged a
Lauro and took its 3&amp;! passengers protest in the spectators' section
and crew hostagP Oct. 7 as the ·and wcrr carried oul shouting,
Italian liner cruised off Egy pl . Thl'y "Long Jive Palestine."

emergency. A report on Wednesday's vbience was to be made
today.
In Parliament in Cape Tm•n. the
only legal forum for criticism of the
emergency, opposition lawmaker
Colin Eglin con&lt;Emned the suspen·
sion of civil rights and the " blanket
of censorship over the land."
"The inrormat ion that 5 coming
from the Bureau br lnlonnalion Is
limited and relatively unreliable,"
said Eglin, leader ofthe opposition
Progressive Federal Party.
He said tt was "ridiculous that
official propagandists for the government" should be the ooly legal
source ot neW!I about the 2-year-old
black 'political .uprising that has
claimed more than 1,1110 lives.
Newspapers that would normally
reporl oo unresl and w !spoken
criticism of the goverrunent published blank spaces on their front
pages.
Eglin condemned detentions
without charge or trial under
e!Tll'rgency nguiations and said the

and boosted the image of the ..------------------------'----------------------~
monarchy.
"If you qurst.ionrd tlv&gt; Swedish
monarchy today you would either
II' regar&lt;Ed as i'lsane or unpatriotic," a newspaper columnist said.
The media and the pJblic rc(er to
!he royal couple as "the King and
Silvia" - a sign of who is the most
popular.
'
"Maybe I should also put on a
OYEI 100 LIVING ROOM SURES
hat," the restrained 40-year-old
king has been heard mumbling as
OYEI SO IEDIOOM SUITES
IASSm IENCHCRAFJ Ill GLAND
his queen •1eais the limelight.
OYEI SO DINING lOOM SUITES

Mississippi River and became llv&gt;
presidential yachl during the HerIx-rt Hoover administration.
Richard Nixon cruised aboard
the Sequoia lrUJuently and Grrald
Ford usro it occasionally. but
Jim my Carter had no USI' for the
presidential yacht and it was sold
during his administration.
The Sequoia. which was nearly
CODI'Prled into a floating nightclub
ii1 Florida. Is now owned by the
Presidential Yacht Trusl, a nonprofit organization that has raised
money to underwrit e Ihe cost of the

FLEXSTEEL liMP
CHARISMA
IIYIISIDE SPIINGA.E COISAII
KINCAID
ASHLEY
HAll IS

&amp; DINETTES
OYEI 200 IECLINEIS &amp; CHAIIS
OYEI, 100 O'CCASIOIIIAL

OYEI2S SLEEP SOFAS

uru;:T~E~D:X~~:r::

·DESKS, BOOKCASES, WALL
UNITS, CHESTS; CEDAR
CHESTS; SOFA TABLES,
CREDENZAS, HUTCHES

f('flOvation and future OJX'rating

costs.
"It wa s found in a stair or
nCJ!iect." Sager said . " lr 'd Ix-en
abandoned prrt~· much."
Aftrr the Founh of .July crlrbra rion in New York. Sager said the
Sequoia
spend the rest of thr
summer oo fund -raising voyages to
ot h&lt;&gt;r ports.
The trusl will turn the Sfoquoia
back over to the Navy in 1988 for use
as the official presidential yacht.

""II

Indict 12 after
eight month probe

COFFEE TABLES
END TABLES

CLOSE

Starting At

saaaa

·ours

ON
WHITE OPEN STOCK
BEDROOMS
DISCOUNTINUED STYLES
ON COVERS
AS IS &amp;
ONE OF A lUND
J

FREMOI\'T, Ohio iU PI r l'wetvr peopl&lt;' have been Indicted
by a special Sandusky County
grand jury following an elghl·
month investigation on charges
they were selling cocaine. marijuana and LSD al the Whirlpool
Corp. plant in Clyde. officials said
Wednesday.
Prosecutor John Meyers said
nine people were arrested Wednesday and seven of them were
Whirlpool employers.

We Are Open 49 Hours
A Week

To Serve You!
STOP BY ONE OF OUR CONVENIENT
LOCATIONS IN MASON,
POINT PLEASANT-OR NEW HAVEN
CHANCES ARE WE'LL BE OPEN.
LOllY l INSTALLMENT HOURS

EXCLUDES CIERA COUPE, CUTLASS 442,• 98's &amp; CORVEnES

Santinei~Page-9

S. ·African government praises emergency rule's effect

LIVING ROOM SUITES
Starting At

- - '46·"52•
BARGAIN KITINEES SAT •

C08RA 11 SYLVE STER STAllONE
UO I 9,20 P. M. RATED IRI

The Daily

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

531 JACKSON PIC.E - AT 35 WEST

Bible School slated
RlJJ'l.AND - Vacation Bible

Pickens Hardware

Thursday, June 19, 1986

Mondoy thru Wednesday ................... 9.oci
Thurtclay ........... .................................. 9100
Frlday......... 9100 a.m. To 3100 p.m . - 5130
Salurday............................................... 9100

o.m. To
a.m. To
p.m. To
a.m. To

3100 p.m .
12 noon
7100 p.m .
1100 p.m .

DRIVI·IN l WALK.UP WINDOW HOURS
Monday thru Thursday ................... ..... l130 a.m. To 5100 p.m.
Prlday ..... ............ ...... ................ :........... la30 a.m. To 7100 p.m.
laturd•y .................. ............................ 1130 a.m. To 1100 p.m.

$288 88
WATER BEDS
Starting At

$18888
CASH &amp; CAllY

60°/o OFF
'

ALL PICTURES
•

SPRING All

OCCASIONAL
CHAIRS

MATTRESS &amp;
BOXSPRINGS

S9888

50°/o INOFF
sns

Starting At

BEDROOM SUITES
Starting At

ssaaaa
UP TO

60'/o
OFF
EMpire Fl,.lture to elatr
h11

- It the l111t - Itt eatlre
•e•••• floor to •top ••e
··"'·· ••• ,. •••el. v... 1/3
of EMpire'• ••••roo• •••••
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prim to ••ltl

24 Hour Depository l F.-.. lonk ly Mall.

PEOPLES BANK .
Second S~l

Mason, W.Va.
773-5514

- r F.DJ.C.
Z.!l:! Jackson Ave.
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RNITURE CO.

�·Page 10-The Dally Sentinel

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

· Area deaths

Theodore R. Pearson

Thoodore R. "Teddy" Pearson,
28, Point Pleasant, died from
Injuries received In an automobile
accident Wednesday morning.
He -was born Jan. 13. 1958 to
Gerald and Bonnie Wamsley Pearson of Gallipolis Ferry.
He attended the Meigs Ctrrlstian
Center In Pomeroy, Ohio, attended
Point Pleasant High School, was a
memberclthe U.S. army reserves,
was a former employee or the
Kaiser Aluminum Corp. of Ravenswood and was a member of the
Steelworkers Local 56Gi at Ravenswood. He was also employed at the
G&amp;B Exxon Station and Garage in
Henderson.
Surviving in addition to his
parents are his wife Joanna Nelson
Pearson of Point Pleasant; two
sons, Dallas and Jesse, both cl
Point Pleasant; four sisters, Kathy
Adkins of Henderson, Lana Manewall of Kansas City, Mo., Pamela
Powers of VIrginia and Lisa Davis
ot Wilmington, N.C.; two brothers,
Stevie Pearson and Randy Pearson, both of Ga!Hpolls Ferry;
grandparents, Hugh Bob and Je.
welt Wamsley of Gallipolis Ferry.
Funeral services wilt be Satur-

1

day at 1:30 p.m. at the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Kenneth Show officiating. Burial
wilt follow In the Wyoma Cemetery
in Ga!Upolls Ferry.
Friends may call at the runerat
home on Friday from 7-9 p.m.

Helen Archer
Helen E. Archer, 75, Reedsvtlle,
died Wednesday at the LancasterFairfield Community Hospital.
A retlred cook from the River·
view School at Reedsville, Mrs.
Archer was bam at Reedsville on
Jan. 27,1911 , a daughteroflhe late
E. E. and Cora B. Reed Coleman.
Surviving are a son, Don Coleman, Columbus; two nieces, Ruth
Tuttle, Pomeroy, and Anna Belle
Tom:nce, Cincinnati; four grandchlldi-en and a great-grandchild.
Besides · her parents, she was
Preceded in death by her husband,
Nelson Archer in 1981 and a
brother.
Mrs. Archer was a member of the
Christian Church.
Graveside services wlll be held at
2 p.m. Friday at the Reedsville
Cemetery with Rev. Stever Deaver
officiating. Friends may call at the
Ewing Funeral Home from 7 to 9
this evening.

!Continued from page 11
Rac,.,;ne.... - ------dinners or individual chicken
halves, while the ladles auxiliary
will be serving pop, rake, Ice cream
and other refreshments.
Games for the children will be
held on the firehouse grounds
throughout the afternoon.
Evening entertainment sponsored by the fire department will

consist of Mid-West Championship
Wrestling, featuring nationally
known "Ox" Baker.

Following the wrestling !X'Ogram, local volunt~rs will hold
their fireworks display.
Firemen are currently s&lt;Fking
donations to help purchase the
fireworks.

Pel"!!onal income
slips 0.1 percent
WASHINGTON (UI'I )-Asharp
drop In sovenunmt subsidy Jill¥·
menis to Iannen! ...,., than
acCOUIIted lor a 0.1 pement decline
In penoqal,l.,oome In~. the first
setback In Cumulative eamlnp In a
year, the Cornmera! Department
said today.
Penonallooome nationwide, adjullled tor 1euonal differences and

extended for 12 months, came to
S3.445 trtiJion last IDlnth, do~m S3. 7
Nllloa from lhe revi;ed two-year
ijgh ol 13.449 IJtlllon In AprD,
according lo a report lmm the
Bureau of EcoiDIIIc Analysis.

Tlowll..:GIeLiritf

c-11nc1

•
Manallold

Blood pressure clinic
scheduled here July I
A free blood pressure clinic will
be held at Rite Aide Pharmacy, 2Ql
E. Main St.. Pomeroy, on Tuesday,
July I, 10 a.m. lo 2 p.m. In
conjunction with the clinic, a digital
blood pressure kit wtll be awarded
to those who sign up for !he clinic.

Fanners, flea
market July 5
A farmers and flea market was
planned for July 5 when the Racine
Merchants Association met Monday at the Club Restaurant.
Also discussed al the meeting
was a fish fry and several other
activities.
New memberswelcomedwereC.
Thomas Smith and Associates,
Racine Motors, Wagner Hardware,
Cross Market, Hemlock Pipeline,
and BUI COlA!rt. The association
now has 14 members.
Atlending were Ruth Brooks,
Beverly Moore, Joan McLain, Tom
Wolfe, Eher Pickens, Howard
Wrltesel, and Gerald Simpson.

Soulh Cenlral Ohio
Partly cloudy today, with highs
between ro and 85. Clearing tonight ,
with a tow near 65. Sunny Friday,
with highs near ro.
The probability of precipitation is
20 percent today and near zero
tonight and Friday.
OhloExtendedForecasi-Saturday thmugh Monday: Fair Saturday and Sunday, wlth a chance ot
showers on Monday. Highs will be
in the &amp;ls each day. with overnight
tows In lhe 60s.

e

The Public UtUities Commission
of
Ohio has flied an 11-page
I
Canton
,
memorandum
with the U.S. Army
' Colin• •
•eolull'lbua ·
outlining
Its
objections to the
/ •
Spin 911o1c1
proposed
shipment
of toxic mus·
• Doyton
coiiiCOIIIa
1
gas
through
Ohio.
tard
twmtlton
•
The Army is scheduled to
announce a preferred disposal plan
July 1. The pmposal has been
opposed by State Rep. Jolynn
Boster, D-Ga!Hpolls, who sald the
pmposed mute through southeastPropoaed route
JDilltard ern Ohio .and part of the 94th House
.
. Dlstrtct she represents "doesn't
IU shipments through Oh1o make any sense."

'-------"!----.a·
,
of

47 sign.__c_on_tin-ued_tro_m_pag_e_1_ _ _ _ __
conservation service representatives "to determine If anything can
be done."
Mike Custer, Meigs County dog
warden, reponed he has been
working this week with Andrea
Batey, former dog warden, to
famlllartze himself with the job. He
and the commission discussed
hiring Batey to work one day a
week in his place to allow him a day
off from the seven-day-a-week job.
Custer said Batey's pay could be
taken from his salary. He said it
would be beneficial to have a
backup in case of emer!J'ncy. No
action was taken ln the matter.
Custer and the hoard also
discussed installing a telephone at
the dog shelter. Custer said he
would rather have a teleprone that
a CB radio since the phone would
make hinn "more accessible to the
{llblic." The board authorized

•

The posslbllty of dividing .the
slalls at the shelter to create more
space to separate the different size
dogs was also discussed . Koblentz
will meet with Custer to determine
If the stalls can be divided.
The board also approved a
motion to permit Bob Byer. director of Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services, to serve on the
37-member Ohio Emergency Medl·
cal Services Board.
The board commended Meigs
EMS for receiving EMS' highest
annual award for achievement, the
Ohio Action Award. The board
caUed the award "an honor for the
whole county."

Byer appointed to newly created board
stated that It was an honor for
Meigs County EMS and the county
to have a member associated with
such a select group. "It wUI require
some travel on my part but shOuld
not interfere with my dulles as EMS
administrator," Byer said.
The board will meet four tinnes a
year. An organizational meeting Is
scheduled for July 9 in Columbus.
Byer's invitation to serve was
confirmed in a letter from tbe
Board of Education last week
durtng the OAEMS assembly in
Columbus.

VHS VCR Wireless Remote

Hospital news

celebratloll. (UP!)

Prison inmate describes illegal
fireworks in second day of trial

Veterans Memorial
Adll)itted - William Young,
Pomeroy; Ida Young, Pomeroy.
Discharged - None.

JUD1'111 TILLMAN

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WASHINGTON (UPft - . A pi lance with OSHA laws.
Ohio, and Edward Kennedy. DSenate labor committee handet-··-Crttics also noted that last Mass.
President Reagan a defeat by -October, federal judge WIIUam
Metzenbaum and Kennedy said
rejecting the nomination of a Wayne Justice of Tyler, Texas, Rader had spent much of his career
controversial Texas lawyer to the fined Rader $3,tro for apparently attempting to destroy OSHA and
commission overseeing on- the-job misrepresenting facts and disobey- was in no position to be on the board
safety of American workers.
ing couri orders In a race dlscrinnl· overseeing the agency.
.
On an 8-8 vote Wednesday, the nation suit in which Rader repres- .. Aller the vote, Melzenbaum satd ,
Senate Labor and Human Resour- en led Trinity Industries Inc .• a
It was obvious he was not an
ces Commltlee killed the nomina- Texas manufaclurer.
objective appointee. The record
tlon of Robert Rader Jr. to the panel
Duling contempt pmceedlngs, was · strongly against him. The
In charge of enforcement at the the judge called Rader "lntracta· Reagan administration shouldn 't
Occupational Safety and Health ble," "recalcltranl," "obslinatety have sent hinn up in the first place."
Administration.
disobedient," "disrespectful lo es·
Kennedy sa id Rader had made
It was a defeat for Reagan and tabllshed rules of procedure," and "a legal career undermin ing the
the committEe's chairman. Sen. said his behavior was "a perver· enforcement activities of OSHA "
Orrin Hatch, R-Utah who strongly sion" of proper advocacy.
and was an "overzealous defender "
lobbied for Rader. '
Aft.er the committ"" n]used to of corporate clients seeking to
Opponents noted that some of repon Rader's name to the fuU cripple workplace safety .
Rader's corporate clients while he Senate, Hatch attempted lo have
Sen. Paul Simon. 0 -111 .. said hP
was a lawyer 1n Ennis Texas were Rader's name sent to the Senate had kept an qJen mind about Rader
cited for contempt of court' after floor without recommendation. The until Rader sent him copies of ll
fo llowing his advice to refuse entry fallback tactic also falled , 8-8.
recent cases he helped decide.
to OSHA inspectors though they
Rader, 41, did not return phone Vtrtualty all. of them fa vored
had warrants from f~ra l judges. calls seeking his comment. .
employers rather I han workers.
Duling hearings, Rader argued
Reagan made the nommallon St~on sa t~ .
.
thai his record had been distort.ed while Congress was m recess, and
The Senate commtti C&lt;' has
by critics who focused on a Rader has served on the lhree- rightfully judged that judicial
relatively few cases in which he member panel that hears appeals boards are no place for idealogtJes
advised clients to resist and delay of amA citations since September and advocates," said AFL-CI O
OSHA inspecliuns. He said he spent 1985.
spokesman Rex Hardesty. The
most of his tinne advising comOpposition lo Rader was led by labor federation had lobbied
Sens. Howard Metzenbaum , D- strongly against Rader.

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Eddie R. McOure, Middleport,
forfeited bonds on two charges, $100
on assault, and $100 on disorderly
conduct, In the court of Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday ,
night.
Also forfeiting a bond in the court
was WUUam M. Weaver, Jr., I'
Middleport, $00 on a charge of
·squealing tires. Charles McCloud,
Middleport, was fined $00 and costs 1
on a charge of disorderly manner.

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......'"', reJects nomination

Man taken to VMH
after auto mishap

ice with the

Board to meet

Forfeit bonds

Custer to check on installation and
monthly rates for telephJne service, and repori back at next week's
meeting.
Custer can now be reached at

CLEVELAND tUPI) - Wednesda y's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers: Daily Number
fm.
Ticket sales totaled $1,150,Z11,
wlth a payoff due of $439.994. Super
Lotto
10, 13, 15, 21. 29, 34.
Super Lotio ticket sales totaled
$4,380,264.

Norbert P. Neuzllng, Jr., Long
Bottom. has been named to the
president's list at Washington
Technical College for the spring
quarter. To earn the hOnor, Neutzling maintained a perfecl4. grade
average duling the term. He is a
student in the electrtcal englneertng
technology pmgram.

•

The commission memo, Issued roadways and waterways.
"Ohio and Ohioans must not be
Wednesday, said shipmmt of the
toxic chemical through Ohio pres· subjected to the Iisks in the
ents the threat cl a spUI which could transportation ri the gas ~ere
endanger Individuals, waterways alternative, direct routes are ava11able," the memo said.
and croplands.
Boster Introduced leglslatkm on
"T!Ie disposal of the chemical
munitions should occur at their May 22 calling upon President
present storage installation (Aber- Reagan and the Congress to stop
deen Proving Ground, Maryland)." !he gas' transportation ttrrough the
said the report. "The shipment of area.
"I resent the ImplicatiOn that
the chemical agents anywhere off
their current sites presents a rural lives are somehow tess
potential lethal hazard to the Important than urban Hves," BQ&lt;;.
environment and !he people Uving ter sald. "I would rather they would
in the vicinity of the proposed spend the money for onslte Incinerators than risk any llves through a
route."
One disposal plan calls for-the toxic train wreck."
mustard gas to te shipped from
Maryland to Anniston, Ala.
"It does not require a Ph.D. In
, geography to recognize that Ohio is
not In the path of a direct route from
Aberdeen, Maryland, lo Annislon.
A Long Bot! om man was taken to
Alabama," said the memo.
Veteran's Memorial Hospital WedThe PUCO said the proposed nesday night after a fire In his car
route passes through 48 Ohio cities, resulted in an accident on Ohio 124
(owns and villages wllh a combined in Olive Township.
population of 219,txXl. The rroposed
According to the state highway
route travels ttrrough the region report Jimmy P. Wells, 21, Long
from Parkersburg, W.Va.
Bottom, was westbound on 124 at
The commission said the route 6:20p.m. and observed a fire In the
would pass through the middle of rear seat of his car causing him to
the rosiness and residential dis- lose control and veer off the right
tlicts of Splingfleld, Athens and side of the road.
Washington Court House, and
His car rolled over and was
would traverse 599 railroad grade damaged heavily. Wells was Sl.'crossings and 149 bridges over riously Injured and transported by
the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service to Veteran's where
WIC schedule given
he was taken In stable condition to
The schedule for picking up July the Ohio State University Hospital
WIC coupons has been announced In Columbus via the Grant Hospiby the Meigs ,.County Health tal's Life Flight.
The corrccl spelling and sex of
Deparlmenl. Coupons will be
Issued on Monday, June 30, Tues- the Leverett, Mass., resldenl who
day, July I , and Thursday, July 3 was kUied In an automobile accl·
from 9toll a.m. and 1 to3 p.m.each dent Tuesday afternoon on Ohio 7in
day. For those who cannot pick up Chester Township In Meigs County
their coupons on the regularly Is Laura 1\1. Crawford, and she is a
scheduled days, they may he picked woman. In Wednesday's paper the
up on July 7 or July 14, 9to lla.mor deceased was incorrectly referred
1 to 3 p.m.
to as Lauren M. Crawford, a man.

Ohio lottery

On president's list

The Southern Local Board of
Education wUI meet at 10 a.m.
-saturday at the high school.

United Press lnlematl!lnal
Sentlnell!tal! Reports

Youngatown

On the recommendation of thf
Ohio Association of Emergency
Medical Services, Robert E. Byer,
administrator of Meigs Coonty
Meigs Mine 2 to Holzer Medical EMS has been Invited to serve on
Center; Rutland at 10:07 a.m .. the newly created Ohio Emergency
treated Lola Harrison at her home Medical Services Board.
Ammded House Bill 222 became
on Depot St.; Pomeroyatl0:58a.m.
effective
on May 14 crealing the
took Sue Smith fmm West Main St..
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Emergency Medical Services
Pomeroy at 4:51 p.m., took Allen Agency in the Department of
Dill from the Texas Road to Holzer Educa lion and establishing the
Medical Center; Tuppers Plains at Emergency Medical Services
5:43 p.m. took James Wells from Board.
Long Bottom to Veterans Memor· · This board, with a selected
tal; Rutland at 5:48p.m. took Allee membership of 37 persons, will be
Plantz from the Kingsbury Road to ch~ with the responslbllty of
Veterans Memorial; Racine at 9:01 guiling the future of EMS In the
p.m., went to State Route 338 for State of Ohio.
Byer, ln a letter to the Meigs
Zelpha Stewart, to Veterans MemCounty
Commissioners requesling
ortal. and at 7:19p.m .. James Wells
was taken from Veterans Memortal permission to serve on this board,
Hospital to University Hospital In
ColurnlPJs via Llfefiight. According :
to reports, Wells was haullng
gasoline in an open container, the
container overturned and gasoline
flowed onto the hot exhaust pipe
and his vehicle exploded. Accord·
lng to reports, Wells Is at the bum
center and received bums over
about 75 percent of his body.

weather forecast

11

·Ohio PUCO objects to _gas shipment

'

Squads answer nine calls Wednesday
Nine calls were answered by
local units Thursday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services reports.
At 9:17 a.m., the Pomeroy Unit
treated Agnes Buckley at her home
on Mechanic St.; Rutland at 10:02
a.m., took Wllliam Crabtree from

Thursday. June 19. 1986

CHATTANOOGA. Tenn. (UP!)
~ Prison inmate Dan Lee Webb
took the witness stand in a federal
explosives trial and described the
Inner workings of an Illegal business that came to an end in May
1983 when an explosion killed 11
people.
· Webb's testimony implicated all
four defendants in the trial, which
started Tuesday. He testified for
about four hours Wednesday.
The four defendants face char!J'S
stemming from an investigation
Into the 1983 explosion at Webb's
faclory in Benton, Tenn.. which
made Illegal ex plosives called
M-als, M-IOOs and aerial fir~mrks .
Webb, brought from a mininnumsecurity federal prison In Atlanta,
said he set up the factory at his bait
farm when hard tlmes forced him
to find another Income. He told of
driving a van marked with a large
redworm to Missouri. Illinois, Ohio
and Pennsylvania to deliver explosives and pick up suppUes.
Sixteen people, Including Webb,
have pleaded guUty in the case.
Webb Is serving a 10- year term In
federal prison. Others who have
entered pleas are scheduled to be
sentenced July 7.
On trial are Howard Bramblett,
54, of Ocoee, Tenn .. charged in 17
counts of an 18- count Indictment;

John Miller, 74. of Holland, Ohio,
charged In five counts: Orville
Weigelt, 57, of Cleveland. Ohio,
charged in two counts; and Raymond Schroeder, 34, _of Chicago.
charged in three counts.
The charges Include conspiracy
10 manufacture Ulegal explosives,
dealing In them and shipping them.
Assistant U.S. Attorney John Cooke
called Miller "the head of It a II" and
described Bramblett as Miller's
"confidant and frontrnan."
Webb testified he operated tile
bait farm and a masonry business,
which was his prinnary business, In
!he early 1981s. He said he got to
know Bramble!! because he delivered redworms to Bramblett's
·
store for sale.
Webb said he often heard Bramblett talk about the money - $160
per case - to be made In ~legal
fireworks, rut didn't take the talk
seriously. As the masonry business
declined in the recession of the
early !!liD.;, Webb said he began to
look for a way to add to his lam ily 's
income.
Webb said he began to think
about going lnlo business with his
good friend, David Parks, whO also
needed money.
"AI first it was a joke,'' Webti told
the jury. "We couldn't imagine that
there was that kind of money in it."
But Webb said his financial
situatiOn worsened.

"I got to talking to Howard more
seriously about us makin g them
(explosives)." he said .
Webb testified Bramblen guided
him ttrrough ('IICry step &lt;1 selling up
the Illicit business in the fail &lt;1 l982.
He said Bramblett gave him the
"recipe" for mixing exjjosives,
brought hinn the necessary chemi·
cats or told him where to buy Ihem
and went with him tobuythcm.and
provided him with customers.
Webb testified over defense
objections Brambletl said Miller
gave him the names and telephone
numbers of many customers.
The prosecution's star witness
told of making !rips in his van to
Chicago lo deliver cases of explosives to Schmeder and then going
on to Cleveland to buy tubing fort he ·
fir!O'Works from Wl'igelt. who owned
a factory there.
'
Un&lt;Fr cross-exa min atkm by '
Miller's lawyer. Webb acknowledged he prinnarily heard of
Miller's involvement from Bram·
blett, but had had little contact wilh
MU!er.
Investigators wit h the U.S. Bu·
reau of Alcohol. Tobacco and
Firearms said the exact cause of
the Benton blast will never be
known. They said any spark could
have ignited the volaiUe " nashpowder" that was being packed into
casings.

Rain affects Buckeye crops
By United Press lntematlonal
The Ohio Agricultural Statistics
Service says last week's lhunder·
storms dumped large amounts of
rain on Cl'naln areas of Ohio,
aHectlng much of the hay crop and
washing away fertilizer In some
areas.
For the week ended Friday, June
13, the downpours were so localized
thaI some areas were Oood and
others were left nearly dry. the
agency reported Wednesday.
Soli mol;;ture was rated 7 percent
short , 48 percent adequate and 45
perCI'nt surplus, with mosl of the
shortages In the Southeast.
Rains delayed hay culling and
curtng. Quality deteriorated be·
cause the crop is beyond prinne and
much of the first· cutting hay was
rained upon during curtng. In the
south, some farmers' began second
cuttings before finishing first cut·
lings within the same field . Hay and
patures was rated lair to good.
For ot~r crops:
· -Com rated good, 100 percent
emerged. with the average stage of
development eight leaves unturted.
Farmers were sldedressing with
anhydrous ammonia and spraying
post-emergence herbicides. Cutworms, armyworms and slugs
were reported, but only a few fields
were at the threshold cl using

controls.
-Soybeans rated good. Planting
was almost finished , but rains
delayed progress In some area sand
washed away herbicides. Cultiva tion was underway, 85 percent of
the soybean acreage was emerged.
-Winter wheat rated good, 100
percent emerged. Various fungi
and diseases were reported, including scab, rust anjlseptorla. HumidIty wUI determiJle the inOuenCI' rJ
these problems on wheat yields.
-Oats was In good condition,
with :D percent of the crop headed.
-Tobacco tranSplanting advanced to some ro percenl com·
plete. Rainy weather and wet soils
limited progress and soil-borne
diseases were Identified, including
soft ;tern mt.
Strawberry harvest advanced to
50 perrent complete, although
heavy rains damaged some ripe
berries and slowed timely picking
cl the crops. Growers also harvested asparagus, broccoli, Jetluce
and radishes.
Youngstown had the highest
rainfall ct alltheagency'sreporting
statiOns, 4.39'1nches for the week.
ColumlPJs was next with 2.!l!
Inches and, as an indicatiOn of the
spottlness ct the showers, Ohio ·
Slate University's reporting station
in ColwnlPJs, less than 10 miles

..

from Pon Columbus Airpon , had
only .5 In ches.
The lowest!'alnfall amounts were
registered · al Cincinnati ( .15
Inches). Wilmington (.32 inches)
and Willard (.34 Inches).

Market report
OmO VALLE\' LIVF,STI)CK

Market Repol1 June 14_., 1986
Sale Every Saturday at I p.m.
Trf'lld s: Veal Calves, steady : FN.&gt;d('r
Ca11ll',

s t~ad y;

Cows, $1 .5().$2 .00 highN ;

&amp; \' carllngs, med. fra mr 111 &amp; 2,
250-JlO lhs, S5Vill·$63: 300·400 lbs, $53S l~rs

$fi2 . ~ ; 41Kl·500 lbs,
S~J.S61.50 : 00~ 700

$.'i4·Sfill: 500·600 lb s,

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1280-$100; Cow &amp; Calf Combs, $310-$535:
Vea l Ca lves : choice &amp; prime, 173-$86;
medium, $55·S68 ..rt&gt;: Baby Calves: by lhe
head, 135-SBO.

Top Hogs: 210-240 lbs, $48·151: Butcher
Boars: 400 lbs &amp; up, S:»-$34; Butcher ·
Sows: 300·400 lbs, $36.50·$11.50: 400-500 1~&gt; .
139·$13; 500·600 lbs, $39.50-$44: Pigs by the
head, $18-$40.
Specia l: 20 BWF Heifers, 50().600 lbs , "'111
sell Saturday, .June 21, they will sell at 3
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l;;~;:;:~::::;::;r;:;:::::::::::;;;;:;:;:;r.;::=;:;;;;==iir=:;;7.~~~~;::~;:~~:=:=;;:=t1-;:=:;~~~~=~

June 19, 1986

Sentinel

J

tlon went to the Soviet Union and he
Intended to harm tile United States.
" U the government has not
established all the points of Its case,
then he must be acquitted of
espionage," Larson said.
Roger Olson, Whitworth's closest
friend, testified Wednesday that he
warned hiS friend that, "! did not
like Johnny Walker from the llrst
day I met him. My exact words
were that John Walker would sell
out his own mother."
Walker. during two weeks of
testimony. said Whitworth was hiS
main supplier ot classified docu·
ments. Walker testified as part of a
plea bargain agreement, in ex·
change tlr a reduced plison term
for his son, Michael, who also
admitted stea ling classified Navy
papers.
Olson, 46, a oonstruction supervl·
sor in New Guinea, said Whit1110rtll
had a habit of loya lty to friends and
rejected Olson's suggestions about
Walker .

ACCENT

IACtill, OHIO

PT. PUASANT OFFICE

FEN(E CO. .ANY
PH• 992• 693 1
After
s Call
742-2027

Sy•t..s, Htovy Hauling,
Slant &amp; Grav~ H001Nng

pauI E• ShOC kty, DVM
305 Jackson Avt.
SMAU ANIMAL HOUIS
35
un. - pm
Tu11. 6:30-1; Fri. 1-2 pm
Saturday 10-11:30 om
LAIGI ANIMAL I
Mon

w~

••

"U.·

lh

Ott fiitd lorvict,

land~pitog, • - " ' " ·
land !!Oaring, rends, Stpti&lt;

brothels and gay bathhouses.
The governing body of the AMA
today was set to debate warning
labels for alcorollc beverages,
criminal penalties for the posses·
slon of child pornography and
motorcycle safety before adjourn·
ing t!Ji&gt; five-day annual meeting.
The Medicare overhaul was
based largely on a board report to
the delegates. The board, noting the
system will be $1 trillion in debt by
:mo. sought to design a plan that
would "correct those deficiencies
by basing the new program on a set
of actuarlaily and fiscally sound
principles."
"What we're basically saying Is
that the struct ure of Medicare IS
faulty," said Dr. Jerald Schenken,
an AMA trustee from Omaha , Neb.
"It's on a railroad track to fiScal
oblivion if nothing is done."
Schenken said that while the
AMA program would cost taxpay·
ers more at the beginning, rosts
would remain flat and not Increase
drastically as IS expected under the
currenl program. Benefits would
be similar under hath plans, he
said.

H-

143-5340

In-vitro fertlllzatkm over to he conceived and
delivered In the state of Kentucky. Doctors said that
the seven-pound, seven-ounce baby and her rmther
are In excellent oondiHon. (UPI)

Ex-Marine executed in 1974
•
convenience store murder
HUNTSVILLE, Texas (UP! 1 glasses he had requested so thai he
A former Marine was executed
could see his sister. Nancy DOOson,
tooay by lnjecllon tor the 1974
and her hu sband. Bobby, as they
muroer of a convenience store witnessed the execut ion.
manager, desplt~ pleas for mercy
from a prosecutor and the victim 's
Bobby Dodson gave Brock a
father, wbo said, "Two wrongs
thumbs-up sign and Brock smiled.
don't make a right."
"I lo\'eyou Kennel h." said Nancy
KenllE'Ih A. Brock, 37, was Dodson.
pronounced dead at 12:18 a.m.
Brock was asi'J?d if he wan led to
COT. He was omered to die for
make a final statemenl .
killing Michael Sedita, 31, during a
"Naw, I'm ready," Brock said,
robbery of a 7-Eieven store in srowing no Pmotlon. The conviCted
Houston.
killer Ucked his lips, then looked at
Members of the state Board of the Dodsons.
Pardons and Paroles said they
"Take care of yourself Bob,
could not remember receiving a Nancy. Thank,," Brock said. He
req~est for mercy from the rela!lv~
looked up at the ceiling, I!Ji&gt;n said,
of a slaying. v1cflm.
"OK, bye."
Former Harris"Lhunty Assistant
"Bye Ken, I love you," Nancy
District Attorney George Jacobs,
DOOson said.
who prosecuted Brock, said he was
"I know It ," Brock said.
not sure Brock meant to kill Sedita,
The lethal drugs were then
whom lle was using as a shield from
adminiStered , and moments later
po!Jce.
Brock began making a snoring
At 12:0!1 a .m. tooay, Brock was sound. His siSter called his name
strapped to a gurney and given
three times, but Brock did not

respond. She again said she loved
him, then asked him Ill/ICE' ~ he
could hear her.
"He's asleep now," Bobby DtXJ.
so n said, and moments later, eight
minutes after the lethal dose was
administered, Brock was pro·
nounced dead .
Gov. Mark Whitcrcrused to grant
Brock a lklay reprieve Wednes·
day, saying, "For me 1o grant a
delay in this case would only
prolong a matter which has taken .
more than ll years to oome to Its
ultimate roncluslon."
The Su(l'eme Court refused In
May to consider Brock's last
appeal. He had been on death row
sinCE&gt; 1975 and won stays of death
dates In 1978 and 1982.
Tuesday the state Board of
Pardons and Paroles refused to
spare Brock, voting 4·2 to uphold
the erath sentenCE' depslte rare
pleas for clemency from the
victim's father and the man who
prosecuted the case.

Full size matt reu &amp; bo• sprfnga .
Call 614 -367-7225 .

"free

4 tiger kittens 10 weeks old &amp;
mother cat . Clll614 -446-8254 .

Estimates"

Installation Available

Used washer for parts. glidet",
charcoal grill. 304-676-41 se.

4

5123/'16/l mo .

Two bags baby clothing, 30467!5 -2448.

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

For Hours
304-372-5709

l0-14-Ifc

6

vicinity of Riverboat Inn parking
lot . Don ' t carflebout money, jult
rerum papers. RfiWard . Call
614· 742· 3095 .

Worked in home area

9

20 years

" Free Estimates'·

Ph. (6141 843-5425

5·11.'86-2 mo.

7478-Crochet 7 pes. tor.
20" soft doll. Use baby &amp;

Boys, Girls State

7583-Make a huggable
20" lall soft pup . Tissue
pattern. pup &amp; clothes.

chooses leaders

WIUAMS 1RENCH~G
SERVICE
Rt. 4, Hytoll Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 46769
Ph (6141992·2834 ,

Send $3.25 plus 75¢
postage , handling . for
each pattern.

The annual Buckeye Boys and
Buckeye Girls Stale functions
got underway with the selectlon
of Its leaders. In the photo above,
Ohio Chief Justice Frank Celebrezze administered the oath of
ofloe to B~t W. GledhW of
Gallon, wbo was chosen Buck·
eye Boys. State governor at
Bowling Green. GledhUI's
mother, Mrs. doluJ McDonald,
holds the Wble at center. AI
right, newl,y-elected Buckeye
Girls Stale Gov. Patricia
Krkzler, left, from Kenton,
began ber first day with a
oonference with her newl,v·
appointed exocutive secretary,
Dlonna MoelscherotNew Kno~·
vWe. Girls State continues untO
Salunlay at the Ashland College
campus. (UPJ )

FREE ESTIMATES
S· 7-2 mo.

Allct- Ctofts
-~~~~~ J1 7
The Daily Sentinel

NEW FOR ONLY $1

C

R

A

F

T

S

Clown IS imp·
ish. 20"' tall and fun 10

701~Mr .

make. Tissue pattern
pieces to sew clown and
clothes .
Directio ns .
details 1nc1.

Send $3.25 plu s 75¢
poslage, hand ling, for
each oanern.

•Ranges
•Refrigerators

•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS end SERVICE
4- ~ · IIC

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TVs, ~nttnnas
Sat.llitt Salts
Installation service
All major· appliance repairs (including microwaves). Also
Lawn
mower repair. Mobile
service.

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

10-8-tlc

-~~~~ . 31. 7

12·t2 llolt11tm BMI., WoollliCte,
NV ttm. Print - ·
Zip, Slot, Pontm -

Add!•"
·

NEW FOR ONLY $1

needs a strong armed forces. and
cu ts in defense spending threalen
the nation 's security. Democracy
requires well-informed leaders who
can resist currents leadin g toward
Isolation and the wll hdraw of
United Stales forces from overseas
ooses, he said .
" It is not possible to pull back into
isolation, into "fortress America."
he said duling hls Zl·minute speech.
"I'd rather defend California from
New Guinea than I would from the
sro res of Oregon."
In answer to quesllons from
selected members of the audience,
Weinberger said he supported tlx'
preiident's action to scrap the
strategic arms Umltatlon agree·
ment on grounds the Soviets have

never honored Ihe unsigned
oommitment .
"An effective treaty must have
an effective method of verifying
lha t each side is mooring Ihe
agreement." he said.
"The record shows that whe·
never a treaty gels in their
(Soviets! way, they violate It,"
Weinberger sa id . "We need a belter
verlflca llon system."
Weinberger said the recent arms
sale agreement with Saudi Arabia
will help protect that nation and
others from attacks from Iran and
possibly the Soviet Union.
"It' s oot designed to hurt any of
our frlr nds in th at region, bu l to
preserve the security oft ha t area."
he said .

One Super Lotto winner set
CLEVELAND (UP! I -One Ohio
Super Lotto player picked all six
numbers in Wednesday night 's
drawing to win the $5 million top
prize.

The name of the player will be
announced after the winning tlckel
is valldaled at a regional lottery
office, a state Loltety Commission
spokesman said today. The

numbers were 10, 13. 15, 21. 29 and

It Will &amp; MW"Sr&lt; To
When You Tune In To tht Btit 8u)1
in the Clossl(eds.

Public Notice
NOTICE OF A PRIVATE
SALE
Notice is hereby Qiven tta.t
on June 30. 1986 Ill 10 A.M .
1 privata ula will be twld at
the offtcet of The Central
Trutt Co ., NA of Middlepon,
Ohio to ull for cash the lot·
lowing collateral to wtt :
1 1980 AMC Spirit 2 Or.

Liflbock Ser.
279908

#

AOM4368

The Central Trust Co .• NA

of Middleport, Ohio rnerve•
the right to bid at this 1116 .

{8119, 20. 22 Jtc

96-page, full-color Cala·
tog of Crafts - patterns.
books. supplies, crewel,
cross stitch, needtapoint.
lalch hook. qu ilting . and
more.

ALICE BROOKS

The rop prize ~&lt;innings will be
paid In 20 annual installments of
S250,1!6.55, minus taxes.
In addition to lhe grand prize
~'inner, 142 players selec led five of
the numbers to win $!"J02 eac h. Also,
6,917 players chose four or the·
numbers, winning $.ll apiece .

r----------------------------------------

BULLETIN BOARD ,

miles out Sand Hill Rd. from
Pt. Pleasant, 304-675-7153.
June 21 - Travellers
June 28- Galdrush
July 4 &amp; 5-Leatherwood
BAND PLAYS
7:30-11:00 P.M.

Uvo Music Every Saturday

,.,.1.
to Puhli&lt;

Music FrH to '"""''"

•3.00

~ach-•s.oo

Wtkomt''

We can repair and recore 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-rtc

"At R1asonablt Pricos"

PH. 949·2801

or

949~2860

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
DOZER , BACKHOE,
TIIENCHER , SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. WATER .
GAS 8o SEWER UNES,
RECLAMATION, PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT.
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT

Jl MCll FFORD
PH. 992-7201

4-16 ·'11i tfn

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

59 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport
Nut her To Wtsttnl hto

992·6784

PLUMBING &amp; HEA nNG

Rt, 1, IIGx 27·8
32933 Romine Rd.
Rutland, Oh. 45775

New location:
168 Narlh Socond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

WANT EO TO BUY used wood &amp;
co11l heatera . SWAIN ' S FURNI TURE , Jrd . &amp; Olive St. Gallipolis. Call 614 -446 -3159 .

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Wanted funk autos. Call 614 -

We CaiTV Fishing Supplies

Pay Your Coble &amp;
Phone Bills Here
BUSINESS PHONE
16141 99Z-65SQ
RESIDENCE PHONE

PHONE
(614)/742-2070

1614!992 - 775~
108 1 1!n

5·19.'86·1 mo.

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

FOR THE BEST IN
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

•Vinyl Replacements
Windows
•,A.. lnaulll1ed Gl11s

•Tilt In To Clean
•Mo1t Windows Priced
under '300

FREE ESTIMATES

J&amp;L INSULATlON
&amp; SIDING CO.
992-2772

Announcements

F11 All Yw Ptlllilrl Nult ·
PWS: Ofliu SuPfiHH &amp;

3 Announcements

furniture, Wedding
and Graduation

Stationery, Magnllk
Signs, Rubin• Stomps,
Business Forms,
Copy Services, Etc.

SWEEPER end aewing machine
repair, parts , and suppli ... Pick
up and delivery , Davis Vacuum

Cleamu , one

388-9303 .
Set of h11nging acales br pro duce. Cell 61 4·256 -6870 .
Old fur niture, tablet , ctna.
cupb., bookcases. ice bo•et,
iron beds , chettt. wicker. any
cond . Call 614-44$-3759 .

The Meiga Co. Fish and Game
Club will h.ve a work session

Saturday, June 21st l'taning at
7 :00 11.m. Bring weed and grass
cul1ing equipment . ThfWe is
something that every member
can help do . We need all the help
we can ge1 for prepara1ion of
Kida Fishing Derby

!24, Pamtroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

FuiiM Bru sh and Raw leigh Dis tributor tor the bend area . Jo.,
V arian. Muon. W. 1/a. :1)4- nJ-

Transmission

9194 .

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

4

6-17-ttc

5-20.'86'1 mo .

54 Misc. Merchendiae

AUTO
FOR SALE
1984 CHRYSLER
FIFTH AVENUE

HUTCHISON
CONSTRUCTION

Howard L. Writesel

Milo B. Hutchison
Contractor

NEW- REPAIR

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

PH. 742-2306
or 742-3171

5· 19-'86'· 1 mo.

EIC. CONDinON

ROOFING

Giveaway

long haired krttMa to givftaway.
Li"er trained . Call 304-675Mal e dog,

DON'S MOBILE HOME
REPAIR SERVICE
MOBILE HOME ROOF PAINTING

949-2263
or 949-2168

OFFER GOOD THRU JUNE 5, 1986

2 mother cau. 4 kittens, 2 wM e,
2 gray 11ripad . C1ll 614 - 446 4636.
1 malewhiteguiena pig , 9mos.
old . Ne&amp;ds good home . 3J Ev1ns
HeighU, come anytime .

5 hea puppies . 29
Heights. come anytime

992-3348
AFTIR 5 P.M.

YOU'LL SAVE MOifEV
IN THE CLWIF!EDS
ANO THAT'S NO BULLI

CLC COINS
Buying/Selling
Gold, Silver
141C Chains, Cains,
Collector's Accessories
Bullion
SUMMEI HOURS
1·7 M·lH

985-3937
Call for Dirtctians

6· 16' 86· I mo.

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Lmrt Township Trus·

witl hold !her '"'""''
Budget and Rev..,ue Sharing
maotingonJuly7, 1986, 8:00
P.M . at Townhal.
Boord af Truotoes
Don R. Hill
WoMer H. Rouoh
Harry C. Hilt
Clott&lt;, Jovco Wh~e

(6119, 26: 171 3 Jtc

3-D AUTO
CENTER
1
II0 h W. lloio St.
PorMre,, Ohio,

992-6771

iii-:~

'73· '80 GM F,.d.,. .... . l39
73 ·80 OM
Ro .. er Pantla .... ... ....... 1 115
73 -19 Ford Ftndert ...... f39
Tn.1dl ltd
Llnlf'l ,.... ............ Full 1176
Mini 1166
I

UT'S BUILD UP TOGETHfRI

•LOCALLY OWNIO

•lOCAl lABOR

*Metal Bu i~in11

*'ole

Buildin11
t St01111 Buihlinp
'~U. S~ES IVIILABLI

WAMSLEY &amp; GRAY
5·J4.J Mo.
msm''"'"'
or (~4) 89).3386

• VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
0 llOWN IN
INSUlA nON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

New Hames Built
"Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2801
or 949·2860
No Sunday Calls

Ell'1ns

11

Help Wanted

l ocal Business will be in nlltfld of
several employees beginning
Augus-t. September and October . Cooks ~ must be able to
prepare- no fall food} Wei·
trets es or wahen ~ must be 21
year11 of age · some bar tanding
abilities preferTed) a par1 time
I:DokkMper. "Girl f ridsy ". Sand
i'ltormatio n deiired to P.O. Boll
426 , Pt. Pleasant, W'll , 25560 .
Water treatment pt.,t

~erator .

Purrping 1 .2 to 1.6 million
gallons pM day. ion aw:c.hange
ptant. Clasa II licente 1 must.
Excellent heelth &amp; retirement
benefi ts . Salary negotiable .
Send resume -m Gellia Rural
W1ter Rt 1 Boll 184 Gallipolis,
OH 45631 . Catl 614 -446 -9221 .
Ellperienced wood working person . Appty 240 Jacltaon Pike,
2 -5PM
Easy Auembly Work! 1714.00
per 100 . Guaranteed Payment.
No Sa 18t Detail• -- Sand
aemp«t envelope: Elln-5847
3418 Enterprise, Ft. Pl&amp;rca Ft.
33482 .
EASY

ASSEMBLY

WORK!

5714.00 per 10 0. Guaranteed
PIYment. No sates . Oat1ils-Send
st1mped envelope: Elan- 715,
34 18 Enterprise, Ft. Pierce , Fl.
33482

5-5.'86-tfn

CAU

TOM ANDERSON

Bull . Call

614· 388·8449 .

IN(IUOES PAINT
&amp; LABOR

992-3361

1·17·86·1fn

Pit

A bag of Yard Sale gooda. Call

Sp1lng Speclsl

$9 5

'IJ

614-388-9809 .

UNDERPINNING &amp; SOUP

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Employm en t
SerV IGes

Call B14·

NOAH 'S ARK ANIMAL PARK .
School1 , churches, C0"1lii'IV
picnics . birthdav per1ies Md
family reunions . Call 614 - 3842108 Of , . B00 -282 -2167 .

Roger Hysell
Garage
~lea

Want to buy metal shelves br
st ore. 304· 675- 2782 .

446 -0294.

992-33453/2/ Hn

Rf.

Buy ing deity gold , ai iYer coins.
rings, ji!Welry, sterling ware. old
coins. 18rge currency. Top pri·
ces. Ed. Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd. Ave . Middlepon. Oh . 614992 -3476 .

half mile up

GeotgM Creek Rd .

2SS Mill St., Middttporl
104 Mulberry A'4., Pornero~

5-20.'86'1 mo.

'{ard SaleS

JEFFERS EXCAVATING

POMEROY, OHIO
Backhoes, Bulldozers, End Loader, Dump
Trucks, Self Loading Pan, Heavy HarAing and
Winch Trucks

..... ·Gatniioli"S" ........ .
&amp; Vicinity

•Water line
•Basements
•limestone
•Gas line
•land Clearing •Fill Dirt
•Septic Tanks •Ponds
•Top Soil

992-7089

FREE ESTIMATES
992-3525

992-5232

3-Family Verd Se ta Thurs.-Sat.
311 Sanden Orfva. Ctothing
(adult-children). s ho es. toys.
gamn. misc .
G1rega Sale Bidwell -Rodney
Rd . Thurs ., Fri., Sat. Watch for
signs. Clothing , furniture . c ur tain•. miac.

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
0 Co""uterized Hearing Air Selection
z SMm· Molds • lntefllreting SeiVices

-a: LISA M. KOCH: M.S.

Gtraga &amp; Patio S1le. Big 4
Femilies. Mana thins, IW81tera,
woment clothing etl siz.•. bedspreads, rugs. treez.er contatn.-s.
some arta &amp; craftt. houaehold
it&amp;ms too nu merout to mention .
453 Laritt Or. Jutt beyond
Holtars June 19· 20 -21 . 9-1

~

::z::: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

-z

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

6 Family . Cent en ery Town ·
hou11. June 20 &amp; 21 . clothing.
stereo , owl l1mp1, jewelry.
too ls , pilno . canner .
mitcelleneout.

8-13 tln

lltt/tl•

TEAFORD
REAL ESTATE
218 EAST SECOND STREET

GREAT BEND ELECTRIC, Inc.

POMEROY, OHIO 46789

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

Yard Stle Thura. 19th, Fri. 20th
on Unooln Pike just oft 141 at
Centenery. 4th tr1iler on left.
Oiah", gla .. ware, rotiller, IM~~~n
mowltfs, ditterM'It tin clothing,
jewelry. too11 . ._erietv of mite.
Patio Slle 203 Btnlani Orin.
Thurtdl\' June 19 , Frid1y June
20. 9em· S,m. Mtloeltan.ou s
itema . dryer. dder maple couch .
urlet., of clottling mens
WOnwtrll 1NnS, Iii ...

Office 949-2431

En~~•rgan~&lt;y

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
Th urs day and Friday, June 19th
and 20th. Eag le Ridg e Roacl.
County Ad 32 . 4. 3tenthsmilet.
9:00 to 4 ·00 Bicycles .
June 20th and 21st . 640 Grant
St.. Midd lepo rt . Clothes. knick
Macks. dishes . 9 :00 to 5 :00.
R1in mncels .
36216 Ro cks pringa Rd ., nonh
of fairgrounds . watd'l for signs.
Clothes . bedding , eppliances
and misc. June 19th and 20th.
3 tamtly ya rd sale . 43991 Forest
Run Ad . Minert11ille. J une 20th
and 2 1st 8 ·0 0 -5:00.
Ru stic Htlls. Friday and Satur·
dav. Jun e 2 0th snd21tt . 9 :00 to

5:0 0 . Nice kid '• clothes . 614 99.2 -76 12 .
Third 11nd CC~~ntllf Sts. in M110n,
W. V1 . Thursd1y. Friday and
Sltutdlly, J une 19th. 20th. and
21 1t . $400. Chine tor f100 .
302 engine p1n1 , clothee.
di1hes , Tupperw~te , tovs, car
body. fii C. 9:00· 5:00

······ Pt Pleasiirlc ··
&amp; Vicinity

1'1t ml.out Rt. 218fromAt.7................... .. ......... .. .. .

Weedeater, dinltteset . cur1atns.
Yard Slit Ftlrfleld C1nt.,ary
Rd . hlrfittd Acr•. 4th houaeon
lett. Frl. Sl1. Junt 20 &amp; 21 .

a

RACINE, 01110

······ p·an;·erov...........

Garao• Stta June 19th &amp; 20th.

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

RAYMOND E. PROFFm (MAC)

Fri &amp; Sat. 28 Central Ava. Btby
clothes. jewel~ . records, misc .

Sale Friday, S1turdey. Behind
Old Bklwell School. Amold
Street Subclfvitton . Cunaina.
home Interior, etc. 9:00-?

mo .

It Pa.ys
To Advertise
CALL
992-2156

t

4621 .

)6141992·3325- 992-3876

~

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

CRAFTS

Real Estate General

OLDTOWN CAMPGROUND

BISSELL
BUILDERS

31.

'Amigos' completed
HOLLnVOOD (UP! )- Prin·
clpal production has been completed on "Three Amlgns," an
Orton Pictures comedy starring
Steve Martin, Chevy Chase and
Martin Short.
John Landis directed til!
picture for produCE'rs Lome
Michaels and George Soisey
from a screenplay by Martin,
Michaels and Randy Newman.
Newman also wrote the songs
for til! film, which will be scored
by Elmer Bernstein.
Co-starring wlth Martin,
Chjlse and Short are Alfonso
Arau, Tony Plana and Patrice
Martinez.

DENNY CONGO
Will HAUl
JUST CAll!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEl · SAND
TOP SOil
Fill DIRT

Soncl to:
Allee B'"'*a Crolts,

The Daily Sentinel

By diM SIELJCKI
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio iUPI I
- Calling them America's best
hope for a democratic future,
Secretary of Defense Caspar \Vein ·
berger urged students at Buckeye
Boys State to become active
members of society and spend time
In public service.
"What you are doing here
represents our nation 's best hope,"
Weinberger told an enthusiastic
crowd that greeted him with chants
of "U·S·A" at Bowling Green State
University's Anderson Arena
Wednesday.
Weinberger. a former California
legislator appointed Secretary of
Defense by President Reagan in
1981, called himself a ·political
conservative. He told the high ·
school juniors to find their own
" philosophical rudder" to guide
their actions.
"The work you're doing is
particularly useful to see some of
the frustration , some of the excite·
ment and I hope some of the fun ,"
he said.
A record 1,438 students are
attending the 50th anniversary
session of Buckeye Boys State, the
American Legion's largest exercise
in mock government that will end
ooSunday.
The 16 and 17-year-old students
were selected by their high schools
to participate In the nine-day
function designed to promote Inter·
est In the democratic process.
Weinberger said democracy

•Washers •Oithwashers

SERVICE

RUSS
ELECTRIC
MOTOR
REPAIR

refrig erator . Ce ll 614 - 446 2266.

w-.

ALICE BROOKS

985-3561
All lllltktt

RADIATOR

TOP CASH paid for '83 m odel
and nfiiNer uaed cara . Smith
Buick -Pontiac. 1911 Eaatem
AYe., Gallipolis . Ce ll 614 -4462282 .

U sed 3 bclr. e lec . range &amp; used

NY 11m. Print NIIN. -....
Zip, Slot,- -·

96·page, full-color Cala·
log of Crafts - patterns,
books, supplies. crewel.
cross stitch, needlepoint,
latch hook , quilting, and
more.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

992-6704

Soncl to:

i2·12- 81¥&lt;1.,

!CUT OUT FOR FUTURE USI)

Wanted To Buy

We ptty cas h for lata modal claAn
used can.
Jim Mink Chev.-Oids Inc .
Bill Gene Johnaon
614 -446 -3672

CAll &lt;OILECT:

Trenching of Arry T~pe
Backhoe Service
Plumbing Service
Custom Welding
lowboy Hauling
Septic Syttomt
Licensed &amp; Bonded

lost and Found

lost: Small maroon purae in

VINYL &amp; AWMINUM
Comp leta Guuer Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of ell Types

Weinberger delivers speech
at annual Boys State meet

NEWBORN- Mary and Bob llfcllonaldposewlth
their healthy newborn test-tube baby at the
University of Kentucky's Albert B. Chancier Medical
Center In Le~lngton houn; alter II was delivered
Tuesday afternoon. McDonald's bally was the first

Nicflkitt.n. Call 614-446 -?076 .

DON 1051, Owner

PH. 304-675-2441
BEND AREA CALL
Ripley Office

wool blend . Directions.

who was installed as president
Wednesday evening.
Already on record seeking a
tobacco-free society by the year
aiOO, the AMA pushed further
toward th at goal Wednesday, prop.
osing a smoking ban on all
oommercial airline nights in the
United States, all health care
fac ilities and ail elementary and
secondary schools durin g school
hours.
The del&lt;'ga res alsri called for
prohibiling the sale or tobacco
pJO&lt;Iucts to anyone under age 21 or
through vending mac hines and
condemned lhc practice of attach·
ing a designers label to a cigarette
brand. Ritz cigarettes, for example.
bear the Yves Saint Laurent logo.
Also. the delegates accepted a
report calling for children with
acquired immune deficiency syn·
drome, or AIDS, 10 be allowed in
scHool unl ess Iheir behavior signifi·
cantiy inca'ases their chances of
spreading the disease.
They also endorsed the effons of
a utrolit les to close "public reser·
voirs of the spread of sex ually
transmilted diseases" such as

Female calico cat, e Y"· old .
Must giveaway no petl altowed
in aplrti'nent . Call 814 - ~6 ·
9520.

Eltdricol w..•

949·2493

C1ll

Clothet for ell . Call 814· 24ri·
5285.

RESIDENTI4l, COMMEACI41.
&amp; INDUSTRIAL
~Centfltd Electriclenl

SUIGIIY IT APPT.

AMA proposes smoking ban
By LARRY DOYLE
UPI Science Wrker
CHICAGO (UP! ) - Smoking
should be prohibited on domestic
commercial flights, In schools and
hospitals, and anywhere else it
would lxlther non -smoke.rs . !he
American Medical Associallon
says.
"We believe that smokers· righiS
end where lhe rights of non·
smokl'rs are infringed upon," Ron
Davis, an AMA trustee, said
Wednesday. "We have a saying,
'Your right to smoke ends where
IllY respiratory apparatus begins."'
· The AMA House of Delegates
also voted to endorse a comprehensive new plan to save lhe belea·
guered Medicare program from
financial ruin, including a voucher
system and increased age eligibil·
ity requirements.
The delegates earlier chose Dr.
William Hotchkiss, a thoracic
surgeon from Chesapeake, Va .. as
president-elect. Hotchkiss will take
offiCE' at the 1987 annual meeting.
Hotchkiss will succeed Dr. John
Coury Jr., &amp;1, general and pediatric
surgeon from Port Huron, Mich.,

c~~ge.

ROSE EXCAVADNG
FREE ESTIMATES

Giveawav

7PM , 614· 448 · 2825 .
2 male hem•t•s &amp;
814· . . 6-t859 .

TOWN &amp;COUN1RY
VETERINARIAN
CLINIC

TRENCHING IS OUR LINE

during domestic air flights

The Daily Sentinei-Page-13

Ohio

4

Defense concluding ·its case
in Whitworth espionage trial
By PAMElA A. MacLEAN
from 1974-to 1983 to the Soviet Union
through tile J ohn Walker spy ring.
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The
defense In the espionage tlial or \\lhl!wort h is accused of receiving
Jerry Whitworth announCE'd it S332.001 for the data.
would rest its case without calling
Seven of the 13 oounts carry a life
the . retired Navy radioman to sentence.
testify IM&gt;cause Whitworth "has no
Outside the courtroom. Larson
defense" against the tax charges he suggested an importan 1 factor in
also fa ces.
keeping Whitworth off the stand
was
the defense's failure to get
Defense attorney James Larson.
who had indicaled he ex peeled 10 separate tlials for the el ght espion·
call 2!l wilnesses in a two-week age count s and the five tax evasion
·
period, said Wednesday he would oounl s.
"He
has
no
defense
10 the tax
conclude his case tooay alter only
three days of testimony. The c har~s . To put him on the stand
prosecutlon case lasted three wou ld affect his credibility as
months and included moll' than 120 regards the other charges," Larson
sa id .
witnesses.
The defense contmds the governProsecutors said they expected to
complete questioning of rebu nal ment never established Whit~&lt;urtll
witnesses tooay, and U.S. District knew an)' information he allegedly
John Vukasin indicated llle jury provided Walker was going ro the
trial would then be recessro for a Soviets or thar it was Whitworth's
week to allow both sides to prepare intml to harm rhe Uni red Srates.
closing argu ments.
Larson argued that under the
espionage
charges in lhe Indict·
Whitworth, 46, is charged l'ith
ooth espionage and tax evaskm for menl Whit ~&lt;Drth can ·only be
allegedly SE&gt;IIing Navy code secrels convicled if he knew ttx&gt; informa·

Pomeroy- M

1 •

'

Yard Stle Friday 20ttl. Home
Int ., dol... lerge selection of
gltuwt•e. carnival, t~ton &amp;
co11Ktof1 pl1t ... tool boa far 8
ft . pldcup . Lower Otrfiekl Ellt .

2 FamilY Y..-d Slit Fri., S11. 20
&amp; 21 , 9 White Ave. Wetd'l for
ligns.

Yard Sale, 2 105 Jtfltraon Ave,
Thurs and Fti , June 19 and 20 .
Yerd Sale, 1821 '12 30th Street,
Thurs. Fri. Set. Watch for signa.
clothes. furniture, games , etc.
Huge Yard S•le,Junt:ZO and 21.
at Powell'1 Barber S~p , Galli·
polia Ferry. Clothing , •pplianlarge quanity gf toola,
mowert, 2 ~orm doon:, solid
oak door 38" and lotb. clothing, lot s of merchandise.

c•.

�Ohio
Page-14-The Daily Sentinel
1 1 Help Wanted

Pomeroy-Midctlet-- .

LAFF-A-DAY

Cllbln.t m-":en. lmm.diete Op·
enlng• for c.binltt Miller• •

rnachMe ap•eton. Houra 8 ·4.

470 South Front St. Cotumbul.

OH .
*51,2:30-yr. Now hirtng. Cell
IIJ&amp;-•7· 11000 En. A-9805 for
current ftderellit1 .
Join Frl.ndty Homt Toy Ptrtltl,

2 bdr. IPt.. downtown, t 190
witP,out utilltia. 1296 wilh
utlliti11. Oepotit required. C•ll
614-448 -2129 8:00am · 6pm.

227 -1610.

Arts 1nd cretu wanted. For
N.1ionwida Mail Order M~rket ·
llg . For more inform~~tion , send

Furnished 2 bdr. apt utilitill
p . .lllly p1id. C1ll 304-6766104 or 875-6381 .

name, Mldreu. phone number

lnd tetf lddreued ttamped
11'1\ltlope , plus informtt ion
lbout the type of product vou

2 bdr. 1pt. newly redecorated ,
nice locttion. adult• only. no
pets. C1ll 6 14-448 -2404.

produCII to Meigs County Mede,

882-2086.

R AWLE IGH S.lesman. earn
1&amp;.00 to t10 .00 per ~ur spare
time , for ~formldo n Clll 304-

"In addition to the fringe

benefit, you get a 45-second
·lunch break!"

t----------1-;:;;:;:=:::::==:::=::::=:1
33
F
arms for Sale

875-1090

12

Situations
Wanted

Will c:~~re for eldltf'IY or itl in their
hom1. d1y thih. hperienced.
ctep.,dlble. Referenc.s . C•ll
814-992·7310 .

18 Wonted to Do
Babysitting job wanted fo r
., mmer. Preferably weekdlyt.
Cd .,ytime 614 -256-6707.
Will do n-owing &amp; odd jobs.
ciNnirlg gtrtget, farm worh .
Clll 1114-446-6268.
Will ckl mowing working in hay
or tobtcco. H1uling·junk, or any
odd job. Ctll 814-26 6 - 1468 .
I will cb IJ'Of81stonel sewi11g. a
ye1rt experience 1nd good refrenoes , 304· 676 -1196.

Fmanc1al
21

Business
Opportunity
I NOTICE !

TIE OHIO V4LLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommends th1t you
do busin•s with people you
lcnow. 1nd NOT to send money
throu~ the msil until you have
i'lvestigtt.:i the offering.
htsblishlld butiness for sa le.
Indoor rrin'-ture golf course.
Downtown Gallipolis. Ctll 614·

441·8222.

For Ule "ICtivl ger~ge busin"'
In growing community. Proctor·
\lille, Ohio. C1ll 614 -886·8286
1f1er SPM 814-888·5'70 .
A golden opportunitY · join
friendtv hom. tov partl11, the
1...... for 31 v••rs . qp.,ingt for
rnentgllf1 1nd dealers . W1 htve
the llfgelt and beat line in party
plln. No cuP, W1v11tment , no
deliYtrinO or c»necttng . Eam big
money plu1 bonuses 1nd UIVI4
lno.ntiY11. C1H now toll free to
C•rol D1y 1· 800·227- 1&amp;10

23

Professional
Services

W1ter wills serviced 1nd drilled .
Fr .. estimtt ... C1il 814-992·

5006 .. 814-742 -3147.

PIANO TUNING 4ND REP41R .
r«&lt; iloover your piano ·a betU1iful
tone. ctll .,d•v. Wtrds Kevbo•d. 304-876-5500 Of 675 -

3824.

R~al

31

Estate

Homes for Sole

4 bedroom house, fireplace. 3
mi. south at G11Upolil , t29 .900.
Clll dl¥1 814-441 -1116 or
evtnlng~l14 · 448 - 8222 .

4 1h 1crt1 with told frontage on
county rold 8 Tick RidOI Road.
hllf lend. level gtrden lend good
trill..- sitl or nou .. site. Joins
Ctydl Wtlkl' l.nd on thrM sidn
81 Thurm~n , Ohio. just off 35
W11t tram G•llipolil. Ohio. Call

814-245-9105.

By owntf· srntll 2 bedroom
home with 'Ia •crehll.. tdelot 1nd
outbuikUno. 15 mil" south of
01Uipolia. Kriner Ridge Rd . Firat
houM on right from Rt . 218.
t14.000. P-v •4.000 down 1nd
owner wiH help fin~nce blltnce.

Coli 814-441-291 7.
IS n:ton •

bllth. 2 lots . Ct ll

814-388-8180.

3 bdr. home. cloll to town, 2
beths. ptrttv furnithed . Gas
P,ett, low utilities. C•lll14 -245·

9248.

6 room P,ouse. 1.2 acr11 . Double
car gartge. Loc1ted on Rou Hill.
Bargain priced S20.000. Cali
614 -678 · 251 3.

7 room house 1 Itt batfl. 4
bedroom, gar1ge. 770 AsP, St,
Middleport Ohio . 614 -992 ·
5714 .
Pomeroy School District. 3
bedrooms. c•roet throughout.
11ft beth. Muat see. Shown by
appointment. Call 614 -992 7861 .
Restored home. Vine St. . Re·
cine. Kitcflen , new oak cabinets,
living · room . dining room. 3
bedrooms. beth . Includes all
curtains . Price : $ 35 .000 .
Pllone: 614-949-2540 .
All 11lectric. 2 bftdroom Mme.
Baseboard heat. 'h basement
with woodburner. garage, cable
TV tnd sewage. Low utilities.
ucellent condition. 1.4 tcre, on
Yellow bush Rd . in Sutton Town·
sh ip. A•cina. $33,000. C111l
614·949 -2610.
1976, 14.1170 Kirkwood , 3 br , 2
full baths, some remodeling.

304-n3-5088.

3 bedroom bri ck nestll!d in
wood• on 5 acr11. ba1ement. 2
baths, 2 car gar1gt, fira place,
mini barn . call tor appointment
Choic11 of two Colonial homes. 9
room~ 1nd 2% baths or 8 room~
and 2 batP,s, both newly remodeled . Owner fin1n cing . 304·

882·2095.

N . Perk Drive, 2. bedroom, full

baument. F· A 911 htlt. centr"
AC , datlchad gtraga, IIIUflll·
bll 8.6 per cent loan if qualif',t .

304-675-8280.

Sele or trade. New Htven. 3
bedrooms. 2 batl'll, flreplacll,
gerlge. U8. 600.00 or t300 .00
month plus deposit , 304-273·
2471

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

1 2x60 SP,ultz covered I)Orch.
rurtl water, met1l storage bldg.,
with lot, Crown City. Ctlt
614 -258- 1444 or 614 -266·
1389 or 304-676-1328.
1978 M1n1ton 14.1170. 10.1120
porch &amp; twning , underpinning,
2 bdr., bttP, 'h. livlngroom,
ceiling tan kitchen sto\11, refrig.,
den , fireplace. AC. w11her,
dryer. Cell 614·388-9850.

614-986-3594.

45

Ashton building lots witfl public
water. mobile homM permnted,

For rent Sleeping Room• and
light houtekeeping room1. P~tk
Central Hotel. C1ll 61 4-446·

304-676-2336.

Bv own• 4 acres, e:w:c location

near Sand Hill Road and Rolling
304-676- 1991 .

Acre~ .

Ren tal s
41

Houses for Rent

Furnished Rooms

0756.

46 Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home P1tk,
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
l1rge Iota. Call 814-992 -7479 .
Trailer lot for rent in Portland .
Aero as from Post Office. Trailer
P,ook-up . f70 . per month . Phone

614-843-6186

Trailtr apacu. Sand Hill Ro.d
convan i8t"'t to schools. store and
hospital. City sewer available.
lnquireAoulee, 304-676·4600
between 9:00 1nd 4:00 week
dayt.

47 Wanted to Rent

614-886-6222.

3 bedroom home btth &amp; Y2 , full
gwage. centre! tit, 1 mile from
Holzer. Call614-446 -4166.

W1nted lik1 to rent 3 bdr. house,
prefer b1sement. in or eround
Gallipolis. N11aod by Juty 15th.
Ctll 614-446 -4448.

3 bdr. b1tP, &amp; hllf. FR. located 3
mi. out Rt . 688. U26 month.
Re1. &amp; deposit required . Call
614- 251· 6789 or 614 -261·

Mereha ndi se

6205.

2 bedroom furnished house in
Middlep o rt . Cell 6 14 -992 ·

51 Household Goods

5304.

House for rent . 2 bedroom,
unfurnished , fully c•rpated .
O~~poait required. Ctll814·992·

2 bdr furn . Of unfurn . convenient location , Upper River Rd .,
all utilities peid except electric.
Sec . dep . req . Call 61 4-446 -

8658.

Raccoon Ad. ~urnr.hed 1160 &amp;
dep. &amp; re1 . Ctll 81 4-448·9346.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
0i ive St., Gallipolis. New &amp; uted
wood·coalltovn. 6 pc wood lit
auite 1399, bunk beds a199,
entron raclin~~r~ t99 , new &amp;
used bedroom tuitea. ranges.
wringer w11P,ers , &amp; aho". New'
livingioom sulttt 1199-1699.
lampt. 1lso buying co11 &amp; wood
stoves. C1ll 61 ' · 446 -3159.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wuhert , drylrs. refrigerators.
t1ngu . Skeggs A ppllancet.
Upplf River Rd . bnide Stone
Crett Motel. 61 4-446· 7398.
County Applitnce. Inc. Good
us«&lt; tppl iancet and TV seta.
Open BAM to 6PM . Mon tflru
S.t. 614· 44&amp;-1699, 627 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolis. OH .

14x70 3 bedrooms. e260 mo.
C.. l 614 ·387-7216 or 814-

1912 Academy house trailer
12.1166 with 1 4•12 tip out, 3
bedrooms, fully c~rpll1ed. new ·
completely furnished e.11cep1 for
bed1. 011 furn1c1. 18.5000.
Ctll 614· 446· 1912 . Mty be
seen on little Bull Skin Rd . First
trliltr on left.

Furnish.! 12d0 in Centen1ry, ~
washer-dryer. AC . wet11r paid,
1225 mo . plus dep . Call 6U- Refrigaraior harvest gold 1126 .
re1rigetltor whitt $126. rtfr~ ­
446-2390
erator IVOCado 11 25, ratrigera ·
Ni ce 2 bedroom mobile P,omeon tor coppenone t1 26, refrigera tor tkft by sk:le t196, WISher
Routh L•ne in Ch•flire, Ohio
On nice lot. Ca11304-773-582.8. Kenmore 1150. electric rtnga
30 in. white top 1nd bottom
2 bedroom mobile home for rent . oven n 60, el11ctric range 36 in .
176, g11 rtnge hlrvett gold 30
Nur Recine . 614 -992-6868 .
ln. like new 8150, 1ir cond .
11 .000 a. a.ooo BTu·o 096 ...
Cion to tchools and stor• in
bedroom suite $915, chest of
Middleport Ctll 614-992 ·
drawers 120 . Skeggt Applilflce
6914.
UpperRivarRd. 114· .t48· 7398 .
Mobile nome for rent. 2 bed·
30" Frididaire eiec:ttic rtnge .
rooms, 1160.00 per month,
looks like new , t100 or best
304-676-4164 .
offer. Ctll 814· 446-7729.

Price reduced . 12.1160 2 bdr. 2
kits , Rt . 218. m1ny extr11. Cell
614 -245·6049 evenings.
1973 12:w:70 treilll' partly fur·
nishtd with an 1cre of land muse
nil, 86 ,000 firm . Ctll614-261·
1 1 31 .

304-678-2338

1982 Cll'(ton 12JI:60 111 elec:.

f9.500 . 304·678-2486.

1983 Knoolwood , 3 bedroom
treil.-. 1111.1 llll!! ioen witfl a low
down payment, 304-876-6206
or 676 -8600.
72 N1ahu1 14:w:IO, 2 br, tot1l
elec. G.C. underpenning, securIty light. 304-875-5282.
1988 N1ttonel , 2 b•droom
t,.iler. 13.200.00 firm Clll

304-882-29110&lt; 882·3647.

387-0622.

44

Apartment
for Rent

142 1cretarm witfl 3 bdr. house.
large b1m. 2 pond1. Call 814-

245·8248.
118 tcrll in ~tlrt. ltrge ~mt,
2 blms, owner finenclng, 304·

895-3450.

V1lley Furniture. niiiW &amp; used.
L~tge le&lt;:tion of quality furn iture . 1216 Eastern Ave .•
Gallipolis.
For sale: H1rlequirl Romtnce
books 270 for e76. whi1e
wooden t1blt t25 . y1Uow kit chen chln1 Clbinet 160, all in
good condition . See 11 261 So.
Fourth Ave., Middleport, Oh.

Mlldium·tlzed wood or coli
burnlno Buck Stova, 1460 .
Elec:trlc range. 1200. OBO . Call
814· 742-2339 or 614·898·

JACKSON ESTATES APARTMENTS (Equ•l Housing Oppor·
tunityl monthly rent ttarts at
t178 tor 1 bedroom 1nd 1212
for 2 bedroom. deposit 1200,
locattd nMr Spring VIlli'( PI Ill
1nd Foodl1nd. pool tndCibltTV
1v11ilble, ortlce hours • pots!·
~e10 tmto 4pm 1nd 7pmto 9
pm MondiY· Friday, C1ll 81~ ·
448·274! orl11ve m•••ge.
Nicely furnithtd mobile home,
1k. 1p1., Clntrll 1lr 1nd heat in
city, tdultt only. Ctll 814·446·

2 .,d t1blet 11nd coffnteble. All
solid oak. Prtc:t icelty mrw . Atk ·
ino 176 . eech. c.u 614-992-

7862.

Pldlens Used Furniture. Good
qu1llty und furniture. Optn 9 to
8 or cell for appointment.
304-1715 ·6483 or 676 -1460.
Elrtv Amlflcen Sears .,fa bed
1nd dttir, 111c cond, 1275 .00.
Call 304·875· 2198 1fter 8:00
PM between or between 7:00

4M · 10:00 4M .

0338.

2 bdr. utlllti• p1rtlllij turn ..

64 Misc. Merchandise

814-992-7892 .6

Complttety furnished, 111 tlect·
tic, 2 bdr. 1p.rtment. •221!1 mo .,
1 bdr.
mo. Adutt•. n1«enCII, MC. dtpOiit. 418 Second
Av.. C1ll 814· 448· 2231 or

•zoo

814-448-2581 .

FurnilhMI room 1131. UtiltUM

son, Oh. 614· 288· 15930.

918 2nd Oalllpollt. Shuo Whitt'• ITitt1l detec:tol'l, lltest
b11h . Singtl mt11. C1ll 814· · modlts. lownt prices. C111
81 4 · 446·0!48 .
441-4418.
pd.

75

Carpeting for till. C1ll 814·
446-01 &amp;&amp; .
.
Slight p•int dlmtgt. Fl11hlng
enow •ign 12991 Lighted, non·

Nonllgfr~ICI

Free lettenl
See
arrow
$279! Few left.12491
tocallv . 1 -800 - 423· 016 3 ,
anytime.

SLIGHT PAINT DAMAGE .
Flaahing errow a~n 1299. ligtl·
ted , non -arrow 12791 Nonligh ·
tad $2491 Free letters! Ftw leftr.
Sea locally . 118001423·10183,
anytime.
Bobby Ma c c•rsett · strolltf,
prem stroller, cat boost• seat.

304-875-8606.

Winchester Model 37. thrft 18
gauge, one 20 g1uge. Set
Remington 141 tifiM for sale or
trade. 304-n3 -6565 .
Two girls regular bicvclee, on1
26 inches 1nd one 24 inctlet,
good con d. wiU •ell rMIOnable.

304·882-2903.

Two 4 piece jacket outfits. sizes
10-12, phone 304-676 -2716.
19.800 btu air cond, call after
6:00. 304-875·11 39 .
U1ad J20 Oilctl Witch Trendier
tnd Sob C1t Lallier, 614 -194·
7842 or 614-194·5006

55 Building Supplies
Building Materials
Blodl , brick, sewer pipet, win dowt. lintels, etc. Cl1ude Win ters. Rio Grande. 0 . Call 614 246 -5121 .
Building mlttritls , cement,
blockt all sizes, v•rd or dltiverv .
Gallipolis Bklcil Co., 123\1, Pin1
St., Gallipolis . Ohio Call 614-

fJl.9J_

r.fiDI!\

12 ft. 1luminum flshing bolt 3

Newmotor
teatt 1nd
. 1600.
614-992
~.:~:-::":'":':·m======:;==========~ HP
Trolling
motor.·

_3_48_5_.____ -,-:-c--:-:c-:-

61

Farm Equipment

u.s.

315 Wilt, J•ckaon , Ohio.

814-288-8451 .

M11My Ferguton. Nf!N Holltnd.
Bulh Hog Salet &amp; S•rvlce. Ov•
40 uud trtctors to choose from
&amp; O)rT1)1tte line of new &amp; used
equipment. L1rgett eelection in

S.E. Ohio.

AC trtctor with pklwa 1450 .
New lde1 pul -tvpe mower
1226 . 3 p1 . rlke never used
t395 . JD 14T biller •&amp;96 . Call

1-614-288-6622.

800 Ford trlctor. 1. 200 hour~
with plows, cultivator mowar .
boom po .. 12.995 . 24ft. 4111111
gooseneck trliltr t1,996. 340
IH lrector with pkJwt, mower. IH
hay conditioner, hty w-oont. 88
NH btler 12,996. 1800 Oliver
dietel wldafront cre1m puff
13,660. AC 4 row no-till plsnter.
cl11n 1850. Clll 1-614-286·

8622 .

1973 Long 446 trtctor 8 h .
tiller. grid I f bl.t1. ditc .. fertil iu
IIHteder, boom pole, 14 ,600 .

Coli 814 -268 -1964.

Farmll M tractor 1650 Cell
614· 3118· 9303 .
Utility bldg. SPL: 30'x40 ':w:9'
whh 115 'd ' slider &amp; 3 ' tltl'\l .
.cloof'. 16 . 2515 trected. Iron
Hotte 81dg~ . 814-332- 9746
collect.
24ft. lktletontypehayelevator,
also Simmenttllhowctnle. Ben
Bickers BB F~rm. C•lll14·317·
7727 .
8-N Ford Trtctor. New paint,
rabuilt. runs good. 11360. 114·
985-4222 lfter 8 pm .
New Holltnd 310 Baltr. Oelu:w:e
Model . Like new. a4200. Call
614 -985· 41 43 lfter 6:00p.m.

Rabbitts $3.00 etch. Call 114446-1149.
AKC Reg . Brittin¥ Sp1niel pup·
pies, 10 waetts old. 2 m .. ea.
8100 each. Ctll 61 4-682 -7&amp;49.

troll... t3,1100.00. 304-676 2949.

76

Autp Parts

&amp; Accessories

514-448-2323 .

78 dodge Diplomat tutomatic.
AC . fully loaded , asking 11 ,500.
82.000 miles. Call 614 -446 9678 ~nytime or 614-441· 4176
1fter 8i:OO.
1976 Ford LTD U60. Call
814 -367-7187 after e.

3 - &amp;cyt. enginefonale. 2Chevy,
1 Ford. Ctll 614 -446 -4423 Of

2677.

8o Campers

1984 VW GTI 5 apd.. AC.
AM -FM can .. extrt clttn, eJtc.
cond . Call 614-246-6040 .

1 976 Starcraft foldout camper.
•eeps 8, co""lett witP, stove,
ice boll , lights &amp; sink, tliC. cond .•
like new. Ctll 114-388-9756
after &amp;PM .

1978 Pinto 4 cyl .. •hpd .. &amp;660
1974 PlyfY"I)utt-1 Sateilitll &amp;360.
Clll614-388·9303.

18 ft . c1mper good condition,
1 v, mites Rt. 141 . Reesonlbla. ·

82 Ct-tevette Scooter 46,000
miles, tan , lflarpeit vette In
._,wn . C1il 814-446 -4347.

Over the cab tr uck camper.
Sleeps 4 . Call 614·992 · 3090.

1975 G. Plymouth Fury. 1976
Mercury Monarch . BotP, 4 dOor.
air. Call 814 -992 -7076. 8 :00
em .· 7:00 pm .
1980 G. Plymoutt-J Fury. AM FM, air. 1980 Datao11 210, 5
speed . Call 614 -992 -7075
8:00am.- 7 :00 pm.

Uncondltlon•l lifetime . guar•n·
tn. Loc1l referencn furn ish.! .
Fret 81timatea. Call collect
1 ·614-237-0488. dey or night .
Rogers Battment
Waterproofing.

1980 AMC Spirit, cell after

Stanley Steemtr 2 room minimum t20 per room. G•lliiMeigs- Vinton Countln. 1-800·

34,000 miles, 304-675-7476.
"Ch1rtle Polita" . C1ll 61 4-448·

9379.

9 yelf old Morg1n mare with
Siddle 1500. 8 ye1r old P1la·
mino gelding with saddlt 1500.
4 ye1r old hllf Arabian geld ing
1300 with slddlt. C1ll anvtima

1977 Okts Cut1111 tuto trent·
minfon. air co nd . good cond.
with m.nv new per1a, 304-676·
6930 or 676 -3346.
' 84 Chevy S-10 tru ch, V-6, 4
speed. m.-.y opt ion•. aponv.

22.000 mile• . • 6.000 .00 . 304·
675 -7330.

814-3117-7803.

2 brat gilts. 1 Duroc bo1r. C1ll

72

Trucks for Sale

814-245-9241.

Artb ltn Hors•. purebred Ara bian stud llf'Vict. Speci1l dil ·
count• to youth groups. R. 6 J .
Arlbitnt. Leon. W. V1 . 304·

1982 Mudt. !5speed, AM -FM .
12499 Johnt 's Auto Salet.
81Jevill11 Rd . Gallipol is, Ot-1 .
1980 Dodge 0 -60 . 4 IPd .. rld lo.
topper, 12,199 John1'1 Auto
SaiH, Bultville Ad . Gtllipolil,
OH.

RINGLES ' S SERVICE . expe·
rienctd Clrl)tnter. el.c:tricitn.
muon, Plinter, rooting (inckJding hot ttr tppllcttionl 304·
676 -2088 or 876 -7388.

Coon Hound dog, p1rt Red-Bone
pen Blue Tick, 2 '1.1 v11n old.

448-7904.

82

58

Approxim1tely 1, 800 !eying
hens, c.QII, 7 '14 ton Bin tnd
Aug•r egg Grader with con ·
veyor . Sell or trlde. 8uft1lo. W .

1974 Chevy C- 10 62 .000 milft
ex c. cond .. 12.000. Ctll 614-

304-882 -2237.

Glaubum 's Ferm Market. St.
At. 160 nur Porter. Open br
busin••· Fresh vegetablet &amp;
fruits . We ICC8CII food sttmpt.

614-388-9027.

McC1ut lend Farm 1nd G1rden.
2 heads broccoll76 centt bushel
H .OO . Clbbtge 4 headt 11 .00.
Sweet corn In 2 Weeki. US Rt.
35 s. 16 mU~t. SoutP,sicle. W.

Vo.

59 For Sole or Trade
Rabbit buck. do81 , frytrt "
bunnies t2 to 16 . Ctll61 4-36; ·

0624 .

For ••I• or trtdt b8 U·htul
trailer. 1800 v1lue 7 monthl okl.
Will tell tor 1600 cash or h_.a
for good Grtl.ltlv tiller-mow..- or
riding mower heevv duty. C1ll

614-379-2&amp;58.

Urge round Heslton Ill• tnd 2
uti . .u ipmlnt tr111..-. Cali

614-892-7401 .

F"r111Sllllll lll:s
&amp; IIVI:SIIIt:k

Good mlud conditioned h1y for
11le in field . E1sy acceu. Ready
Jun1 18th on. n .oo. 81 4-986·

1975 Ford F100, picllup, auto
transmluion , PS , 304·675 ·

5888

Farm Equipment

JIM"S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER. BR 315_W. Golllpollo,
Ohio. Coli 814-448·9777, ov1.
614-446· 3582, Up fn::rnt hactors with Wlft'lftty over 75 uted
trtctora. 1000 tools .

896-3802

Mi.Jied hty ltrgt squ1te baln.

73

I WANT MY

71

Autos for Sale

19 79 Ford Mustang 4 cyL. new
rlbullt motor, low milhge. Call

814·2118·8417.

1979 Convenfon v1n, 1966
Chevy truch . n ice. 197B Chevy
Lu\1 . Call after 5, 614 ·446·

2688.

1985 Chevy conversion vtn . low
miluge, AT, AC, AM ·FM axe .
cond. C1ll 114-446-4141 thlf
8 a. on weekends.

0

CARTER"S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

BARNEY

Cor. Fourth 1nd Pine
G•llipolis. Ohio
Phone 614-446-3888 or 614-

448-4477
-;;=::::;;===:::===
83

•• AN'WE ONL'{
GOT TWO
LOLLIPOPS

Excavating

02,000. C1ll 814-256-1393.

1978 Ford f . 1&amp;0, 4.114, 400,
euto. PS . PB. 11! ma_ior mechan·
iCI rebuih . Netd1 tome body
work. 12.200. Call 614· 448·
1781 or 614-388-9811 1fter 5.

1979 Rallbltt. Coli 614·38e8428 "'lh.. 5114·388-8823.

61.4-245-!1421.

1979 ChtvrOiet Monu. 2 dr .
w~gon , 1uto, on1 owner, t999 .
John' sAuto Stl•, BuleYIIIt Rd .,
Otlllpolit.

8;4 Chrytler;Lutr 1utomatlcAC.

18.000 mil•. PS. PB. nlco.
08.1100. C1ll 114-379-2121.
1871 Buldt Et.ctre felr condl·

tlon, MOO . C1ll 814-388-8832.
Olds Cutl•• Brough1m .

Soulhom .... "'"'"'· All power.
t~... U295. Coli 814-

448-07815. Must IHto believe.

1871 Chevy Monzt V-8, t696 .
1978 MtvMick .. dr., 85,800
mil•. good cond.. 1996 .l187&amp;
PontiaoOrlnYMI good bodY. Nnl

good, 4495. Coli 114-3782233.

DO. DOC?

1978 Sportater 12. 100. Ctll

1984 A1mbler station wagen .
good cond. 74 Chevy pichup.
ftil' cond., 51/J HP outbotrd
motor. countertop, 1t011t •
oven. C•n be ..., 2024\1, N.
Mtin. Atk tor Jim. 304-175·

8439.

'86 Ford Renger XL. 4 whet!
drive, crullt, tuto , 14,000
min, pt.,ded warr•nty.
•hort wheel bitt. Old., full size
truck •• tr.cle In 1nd ••tuma

v.e.

1010. phono 304-875-7842.

74

Motorcycles

1----------Hi fl. fiblfgl1ss bost, 40 HP
motor 6 trtller. 8700 . Ctll

114-448· 7904.

81 Honda 650 In good oondl·
don . 1960 C1tl 014·992-6144 .

I I I I ]ui&lt;e[ I I I I )

James Jacoby

Making friends
with a sluff-ruff

NORTH
• J 10 71
.Q5

By James Jacoby

• 873
.K 9 6 4

There are paradoxes in bridge. FOJ
enmple, you af!! taught not to play a
card (against a suit contract) that will
allow the declarer a sluff and a ruff
(discarding a loser from one band
while trumping in the other). Just as
BOOn as you learn this rule, the next
lesson teaches you when to Ignore it.
The clue to knowing when lies in accu·
rately counting the declarer's cards.
Against four spades, West led dill·
moods. Declarer trumped the third
round and played A·K·Q of spades,
drawing trumps. Next eame the ace
and 10 of hearts, East winning his
king. When West bad followed suit in
hearts, be played his lowest card lint,
then his next highest, showing that he
originally started with an odd number
of hearts. East then knew that playing
another heart would allow declarer a
sluff and a ruff, so be played a low
club. Declarer ducked this around to
West's queen and dummy's king, and
next finessed against East's jack to
bring in the club suit without a loser.
This time East should have just

(I) Yes, Mlnlotar
I}! Entortelnmenl Tonight Lesley Ann Warren
her role in the upcoming
TV
movie
"Society's
Child" .
ID Majo• League Baseball:
Chicago Cubs at Now Yo•k
Ma1a (3 hra .)
(JII Jeol"'rdy
8:00 8 Cil (11) The Cosby Show
(CC) Clai• laces a tough fin ancial decision when she
learns that her great uncle's valuable painting is to
be sold a1 an auction . (A) , in

dog thai wate&lt; skis . (60
min .) (R).
Ell CD MOVIE: 'Tho Kill or
Who Wouldn't Die'
()) MacNoii-Lohre• Nowshour
® Ill 11! Crazy Like a Fox
Harrison and Cindy's plans
for a romantic weekend are
upset when they spot en
old friend who supposedly
diad fiwa years earlier. (60
min.) (R).
(j]) Evening at Pops
8:20 ([) MOVIE: 'Captoln Hora·
tlo Ho'"blowe(
8:30 D Cil (JII Family Ties !&lt;lex
creates a monster when he
coaches a nervous Jenni·
fer on presenting a speech.
(A), In S1e•eo .
9:00 D Cil (JII Chers A small
accident has Sam frantic
after Diane entrusts him
with a valuable book from
her collection. (A) , In
Stereo.
I]) 700 Club
(I) Auto Racing '88: CART
Portland 200 From Portland. OR . (90 min.) (R).
I]) Ill (I) Tha Colbya (CC)
A lener from Constance's
past reweals unforseen disclosures about Jeff, while a
serious accident causes
problems for 1he Colbys .
(60 min .) (R).
CIJ Nova: Signa of tho
Apoa, Songs of 1hl Whales
(CC) The la1est resea.ch in
animal communication is
examined. (80 min.) (A) .
® ID I}! Trapper John,
M .D. (60 min.) fR) .
liD Mys1eryl: Agl1ha Ch•lstie'e Partnoroln Crime (CC)
A newspaper's personal
column entry leads Tommy _
and Tuppence to a murder
at lhe Ace of Spades night·
club. (80 min .) (A).
9:30 DCilc,J)NightCourt(A) , In
Stereo. .
10:00 D III (JII Hill S1roet Bluos
Washington deals with his
relationship with his new
girlfriend, Buntz collars a
thief and an artist takes re-fuge in his controversial
sculptu•e. (60 min.ffA) .

(]) llJ

.9

lol*-11

EAST

WEST

.86 5
'K J 7 3

.98642
.KJ962
+QB

• A 10 4
• J 72

SOUTH

.AKQ32
• A 10

tQ&gt;

+A 10 53

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

w.. t

Nor1b

East

Pass
Pass

2a

Pass

Pass

South

••••

Pass

Opening lead: • 6
gone ahead and given the hated "sluffruff." Letting declarer get rid of one
loser does not give him enough help to
make the contract. He will now have
to play the club suit on hill own and
will not be able to avoid losing one
more trick.

61~UM~tt'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I - sticks
I Chew the fal
5 Love (Sp.) 2 Sharpened
9 Shack
3 Egg-shaped
11 Contributed 4 Sty
12 Senseless
5 Playing
13 White
marhle
poplar
6 Fairy queen
15 Final
7 Supervisor
16 Barrel
8 Force to
18 Get - or
resign
19Ten years IOMedit
21 Royal
region
nickname 14 Brink
22 Collection 17 Dentisfs
23 Na.y
group
woman
20 Solicitude
24 Pub
23 Unruly
24 Thi ckwit
·game

Yesterday's Answer
25 Spanish 30 Greek
seaport

island

26 Temper 31 Think
27 Paper
32 Range
of hills

quantity

28 Philip-

36 Wee look
38 Negative

pine

40Thrash

item

26 Break
bread

27 Maxim
28 Indian
cymbals

29Tree
30 Franknes•
33 Pub drink
34 Stewart
or

Taylor
35 Dilly
37 French
river
39 Slur

over
41 Tumult
42 Earshot
43 Appoint-

ment
f.l Submissive

DAR.Y CRYPI'OQUOO'ES- Here's bow to work lt :
AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

One letter stands lor another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and lormaUon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE

(I) 20/20 (CC) (60

6-19
fJ\ncbSoep
Cll Frontline: Aaoault on Affirmative Action (CC) The
disagreements over affirmatiwe action policies in
4me•ica ere explored. (60
min.)
® Cl!l 11! Knora Landing
iCC) (60 min.) fA) .
liD Newowatoh
10:30 I]) New Ganeratlon
@ Auto Racing '88: Acropolis Roily Racing From
Greece. 160 min.f
Iii) 1IJ INN Nowa
(j]) Tony Brown's Journal
ID News
10:60 ([) MOVIE: 'Chorge ot me

Trenching Service: w11ter, gall,
and electric. Free estimates.
304· 173·5839 .

GenerBI Hauling

1988 Wrecker 440 Holrris
wencP, w ith swing boom•.

1917 CP,evy lmp•l• 396-325
HP, ted , bltcll interior, PS, PB, 2
dr.. fWider skirt•. e.11c . cond,
good ttlow ctr, 13.000. C1ll
814· 24&amp;· 9809 .

Flbergl111 Nova 327· 326 HP,
chro~ engine, m-22 tfln•missJon C1ll 81 4- 992~ 4941 .

WHAT ARE
WE GOIN'TO

Good-1 E:w:ctvtt ing, besemenu.
footert , driviiWays, septic t1nkt .
llndtcapl ng . Cell a'nytlme 614446-4537. James L. Davison.
Jr . owner.

85

DESSERT
BeFORE TI-lE

•.

Plumbing

-;;

SINCE WHEN
JX) YOLJ SERvE

SLIPPER~

LEFT
Vane &amp; 4 W. O.

*1.211 . 304-875-6579.

Trans~orlalion

GETANIJVE
ON . ..
WHERESMY

SUPPER!

4296 .. 814-985-4333.

79

61

1983 Dodge Power Atm. IUtO mttiC, 4x4, low mlluge. excelltnt condition. t8600. 114·
986-4222 after 8 pm.
1972 Dodge, c1mp11t tpaclel.
phone 304-676-4681 .

Vine ripe tomttoll, Oeorgia1nd
Carolina Peechu, home grown
broccoli and 111 type fNit 1nd
vegs . B &amp;. S Produce. 206 Viend
St .• Point Pltlllr'lt, W. V1 .

HEY'1 LET~

&amp; Heating

Hay 8o Grain

64

7

HEY! HOW
ABOWTsa.IE
SUPPER?

Rotlty or cabl l tool drilling.
Most wells completed 11mtd1y.
Pufl1) IIIII and 18f'Vice. 304·

6040.

You pick t .60 quart . Roush's
811rry Farm . Union C1mpground
ntar New Haven , W\1 . Cell

,....-,~THPJ \.1£ 1&amp; t,tx.J., .

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Starks Tree and Ltwn Service.
lendsc1ping . 304-576·201 0 .

7 Cratsbrld cows with calves,
let Btld 1t 8 &amp; S Produce. 206
Viand St .• Pohlt Pleallnt.

Vo .. 304·937-2268.

y-

6VT &amp;FORt 1.1.£ eEGI~ THE
SJRGEOO ~L IIEQ.XRES

Fetty TtH Trimming, stump
remo"'al. Cell304-67&amp;· 1331 .

304-875-8492 .

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

HAPPE~I~ ...

2454.

AKC registered Bugle puppies,

304-773-5476.

WHAT'S

RON ' S Teltvition Service .
House calls on RCA . Ouulir.
GE . Spaci1ling in Zenith. c•tl
304-578- 2398 or 614 -441·

Caroenter, remodeling. room
addition , building rep1ir1, block,
roofing , p1inting, cement work.
304-675 -6162 .

304-675-6072.

GO:);) EVWOO... Hei&lt;E'S

Need Ulfllir inside orout1 Cellut
It 614·992· 6551 Of 814-992·
2934. 20 Ytlrs t.II.Perience.

468-1082.

19n Ford F- 100 PU . 6 cyl. .
AM ·FM cassene. tltc .. cond.
Priced to sell. Call 6 14· 246·

EEK&amp;MEEK

325-6138.

AKC Regist..-ed Cock" Sptniel
puppi.. . Blond a11d Buff colors.
Teils and Duking clews done.
also de-wormed. 1126 . C1ll
614-742- 2738.

2 bred aow1 and one purebred
York Bore 1576 .00. Milt Fer ren tiO .OO. F1n Tail pi1Qons.

THEVWENTI

ges1ed by the above cartoon.

BRIDGE

transformed his car with
light bulbs, and witness a

NOT YET! rD

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Ex11rior &amp; inttrlor stucco. Pluter &amp; plest..- nrplira. Low ratn.
Call 614-258-1182.

AQ HA Regtstered Outrter hot~e
Jl:ud urvice. Direct out of

ALLEYOOP

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·

I

Racing '88: World
Sporta Ca. 24 Hrs. of Le·
mans from France . (60
m in .)
CIJ Q I]) Riplay's Believe it
or Noll (CC) See machinas
that obey the human voice,
learn about an artist who

..-/_ '__

A " ~AM."

!Answers tomorrowl
Jvmbl.. : COVEY MUSIC BAKERY INOOOi'
Yesterday's ·
Ana-. Who! they oaldabotrtlhei!Odolvai&lt;llholl.-st Ume
she~ on TV-"DEB-Ofii.AIA"'

Cil Auto

...__....

T1KNOt.\l WHERE

1982 Chevy Cavalier, 4 cvl,
1uto, 4 door. 12 ,660 .00 nil Of
lrllde for trucll , 304-675-4181 .

' 79 Corvene. wtlitl 1nd red.

rl

SURE LIKE

62 Wented to Buy

Livestock

Ntw.(

WHAT A COWAflt.D
M115HT DO
WH!N ME e!i'6
INTO

tffzj tx)

Army

Home
Improvemonts

Exterior &amp; interior stucco. Pl11·
ter &amp; plttter repairs. Low rites.
C1ll 614·266·1 182 .

1973 Delta Oldsmobile
8500 .00 . 1976 Mustang
8600.00 . 304-676-1262.

Ctftj (J

Stereo.

Serv tces

1976 Dodge Dan 1460. 304·

6:00. 304·675-51i74.

.,,., '''" ''"--"' A Lo;.

tJ

·I

I]) Wackioat Ship In lhe

4884 .

Now buying shell corn or eer
corn. C1ll forl1tt1t quote• . RiverCity F1rm Supply, 614· 446·

iAY.:INW
TO HIMSELF

1960 Coechrnan otmper, 22ft.
tub, awning. air cond, sleeps B.
304 -87&amp;-5399 1fttr 5:00 .

81

1972 Pontiac Cat11lin1 . run s
good, new tir11s. bat1try $300.

Ai!OUT'

3662.

1984 SS Monte Carlo. Wflite
and blue. AC , P8, PS. Tilt,
AM -FM '"11ntte , reclining
b.Jdcet aeatt. 4 new tires. Pri ce
88600. Good condition . Cali
attar 6:00. 614-367-7191 .

896-31138.

r xJ

Ill

1978 23 ' Stir Crtft. carefree
.wnlng, eJtc . cond., lull';' Cit·
peted . 304-882-2478 or 882-

1984 Silver Thunder bird
28.000 miiM . VB. Ctll 614992-6872 eftltl' 5:00pm .

THEFY

Cil Speedweek
fJl (l] Taxi
llJ (I)~ Wheel of Fortune

79 Motors Homes

1961 Pontiac Grande L1M1n1, 4
dr ., U ,OOO. Cttl 814-446 ·

Ill 11!

Game ·

614-268 -1668.

1963 Srudeb1ker, runs good,
good body, $750 .00 . 304-676·

a.,,

Vo. 304-882-2222 .

Oragonwynd Ctttery Kennel .
CFA Him1l1yan. Persien end
Siam•e kntent . AKC Chow
puppies. New puppies &amp; kitt~~ns .
Call 446 -3844 1tter 7PM.

1984 Dodge Charger air cond .,
auto, exc. cond . 22 .000mi. C1ll

1972 Pip•tone M1rlner 11 ft.
120 horse inbotrd motor •nd

304-895·3828 .1

63

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

Autos for Sale

Naw Holland 7 f1 haybind.
96 Grinder
eJtcellent.
miur. 21" mill magnet Ellc
oond, 304-273-4216.

Block, brldr., monar 1nd m• sonry 1Uppli11. Mountain Sttte
Block , Rt . 33, New Htven, W.

Pets for Sele

71

CROSS 8o SONS

2985.

56

Boatsand
Motors for Sale

, .,,

448-2783.

Coli 814-2&amp;6-6251 .

EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jock·

5 00 304-878-2408.

7.8 HP. CoM 814-448 -n21 .

I]) ®

(]) Green Acreo
Cil Mazda SportsLook
Iii) (l] Ster Trek
()) 3-2-1 , Con11ct (CC)
(l]) Under Soil
CD Ono Day at a Tlmo
8:30 . D (}) (JII NBC News
(]) Tht·Riflomen
Cil Outdoor Lifo (R).
I]) Ill]) ABC Nowo
())Doctor Who
® Cl) I}! CBS New•
(l]) Body Eloctrlc
1D Welcome Back. Kotter
. 7:00 D (}) PM Magazine
(]) Men from U.N.C.LE
Cil SportaContO&lt;
Cll Entertelnmon1 Tonight
Lesley Ann Warren her role
in the upcoming TV movie
"Society's Child".
611 (l] Hogon'o Htroeo
G (I) Jeopardy
())Nightly Buolneoa Report
®News
(l]) MacNeii·Lehrer Newehour
til I}! Divorce Court
1D Privll1a Benjemln
(j)) Wheel of Fortune
7:30 D CIJI]) New Newlywed

1983 Hond1 660. custOm dl·
luxe. 1.100 mll11 . exc cond,
must aee to apprtc:ilte. call aft.,

Gravetv 8 apetd. electric 111rt.
30 ln. mower, rottrv till•. itulty.

(}) I]) •

tJ I

""'=""

I )
·=--=-..

(j)) Ntwo

1984 'Kiwaukl Kxeo . C111
814-992-681!16 . Syrtcuae.

f60 . Clll 8f4-448·8218.

I JO(NB

6/19/86

8:00 •

1980 K.w111kl LTD 710. Excel·
lent condition. 1950. 080 . Ctll

hwn mower, 1xa. cond., 21 ln.
cut, 3.6 Briggs l Strttton lf'IQ.

Un10&lt;omblo 11- four J . -,
one Jetter to each IQUife, to form
'"'" onllnwy won1t.

EVENING

7768.

Calllhtn' s Uaed Tire Shop. Over
1.000tirll,li!et 12, 13, 14 . 16.
11, 18.15 . 8 mil• out Rt. 21 B.
Pl•tic cittem 1t1te approved .
pllltlc septk tanka. p/1111c
wlverta. mete! cutvtna. RON

'

1981 Hond1 CB 900 F, Super
Sport. 1900.00 . 304-876·

0175 mo. Coli 304-116·6104.

NIW 1 bedroom 1p1nment. C1ll

Murry X 24 rtclng blkt, New
htndle ptds end •lldo.,.,er.
All chrome. Good condhlon.

268-1858.

~ ~ ~~ 1

THURSDAY

814-446-9251 .

RCA· VCR rtcOrder, e.11c. con d.
Cill 814· 448·.t423 Of' 814·

i}fll}f.\fl fii)ft ~THAT sCRAMBlED WORO GAME
f&gt;V Henn ArnoiO ano Bob Lee

Television
Viewing

19 79 Hertly DIYidson klw rider. ·
10,000 milw. Llkt brlrnd new .
See ·~ Bostic Moton. C1ll :

f60 . 814 -986-3695.

8817.

614-448-0390.

Oov«mlftl hcun.. from 11 . IU
rapl6rl. OlllnQutnt tu property.
RIIN)t....lonl. C1ll 80&amp;-1!1871000 Ed. H·980&amp; for current

nlbl• offer m..,- be conalderad.

5609.

1988 Mention 141170. CA. all
electric. lived in 7 mos . Call
614·992· 2259.

Qualttv home, n....-ly remodeled
choice location on College Rd.
Syrteute, MW complete kitchen
and leundry, a ir conditioned ,
ltrgtlot. 114-992-6324.

Clllt14-9U-11080. 4ny ,,._

2 bedroom ept. ut ilities paid.
partialy furnilhed, "UO . OO
week, 304-676-3100 or 676 -

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Llrry Wright

Motorcycles·

,..ton •z
Coli 304-178-6823.

6609.

2 mobile hOmes furnished or
unfurnished , adults. no pets. 6
miles from town . C1ll 114-446·
1168.

MOBILE HOMES MOVED : in sured, Je110111ble tit". Call

70x100 lot. 1 '1.1 atory house. 3to
4 -Ndroa,., dilhwlt,.,, double
tMQt 110VI. fuly Ctrp.ttd,
wood 1nd coal burning rto"''·
CloH to tc:hool and hoapital.

1 to !! ac:re1, pani1Uy wooded
kltt. Tupper Pleina end Chester,
water and 1ppro\iled ro.d to each
lot. Re11on.tJiy priced. will
finence. 10 percent down. C111

74

TO 8 lntenl1donlll ck:q;er : 4.,._.
bktck 1aw muf 2 Chevrolet
1918
ton 1981.
trucke

1 bedroom ept . for rent 81sic ·TONY'S GUN REPAIRS , scope
rent 1t1rts 8216. a month th1t bore sighting, ftctory reblutlnQ,
includes all utilitiu Depotit P,oura 9 :00 till dartt. c1ll 304·
required of 1200. Conttct Vii · 676-4831 .
ltge M1nor Apt. Middlepon.
614-992-n87. Equ11 Housing Willi1mson Mut Merktt.
Opportunity.
U.S.O.A. Prim1 Beef Sell, Sid II
$1 .29. Front qts. 11 .09, Hind
2 bedroom. total alec. apt. in Qts. $1 .70. U.S.O .A. Choice
Pomeroy. Across from Fire Beet Sale. Sidet 11 . 25, Frontt
Station. 814-992-6216 or 614 - 11 .06, Hindi 11.62 . Price in·
992-7314
c:lud11 Cuttino, wrtpping 1nd
frsezing . Whole Primal Cuts.
Pomeroy 2 bdr. Naylora Run. Whole Ribeyet 12· 141b IYtftge
e176 mo. e100 deposit. yard. S3.90 lb . Wholt New York
patio. C1ll after 6pm 814 -992 · Strips 12- 14 lb l'lllriiJe 14.06
6886
lb. Choice Ter\dertion 16.99 lb.
Shon loin 13.61 lb . Full Loin
APARTMENTS. mobile homes. $3.26 lb. Price lnciudll cutting.
houl8t . Pt. Pleuant and Gallipo· Deposit required . Gutrll'lletd
Us. 614 -446-8221 .
tender. Call 304-875 - 11383,
Point Ptee11nt. W. Va .
3 br apt. alec. heat available. 1
week. located on CrebCraek Rd . Buy Rawleigh Product• who!·
Reference• Required. C111 be- 11le, Dale 1nd Wilmt Wood,
tween 8:30 &amp; 6 pm . 304-676 · 304-875-1090.

Mah offer lest th1n 15,000
mobile home. o\ilerlooking river.
nice home for older folks. Cell
614-446-2376 .

Call 814·245·6818.

-"·'-

446·8221 .

2602

8626.

742-2291 .

t200 fumilhtd, t118i untur·
nllhtd. PlY own utiliti•. wood
burnlf, terv• ylfd. Call d..,.t
e14· 982-2381 or 814 · 992·
2501 evening•.

Building titet 3 to 17 acres 3
miles west of HMC. C1ll 614-

Furnished effici.,cy 1pt. Clfpet
ltuougflout, private &amp; . quiet.
Single working person only
1175. including water. Call
614 -441 -4107 or 614 -446 ·

2 bdr. 121160 Hollsy Park,
washer-dryer hook -up. v, mi.
p11t Holzer M.dlctl Center. Ref.
&amp; dep. requirad . C1il 614 -4484369 M 304-875-9780.

1981 Commodore 14.1144 ex.
cond. 16.600. Cell 614 -388·

New Moon. 10x50. Por ch.
underpinning, 2 bedroom, bath,
kltchltll. living room . 111 turn.ist-ted but living room . 614-

2 bHroom houu in Pom•oy,

lot on A•r:coOn Creek. Privtte
SIICure, quiet. 40x100. bath
house, boat dock. water and
electric 1vailable. Reasonablt
priced. Cl1l 614 -446 -4306
Norm Snyder. 1-304-372-5688
Mike D1yton.

NEW ANO USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL"S QUALITY 3090.
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
wesT, GALliPOLIS. AT 35. 42 Mobile Homes
PH'ONE 614-446· 7274 .
for Rent

H1ndynN1n 't Specill duJ)It:w: ren·
ttl . In ne.cf of rap1ir. Vinton.
OP,io. Priced cheep! 110.000.

ingt .

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

4 bdr. carpeted, re1rig . &amp; stove,
Mutt Sell · OwnertleM~inglllte, free 911. Kyger Creeh aru.
3 bedrooms. diining. f1mily References &amp; deposit. Ctll614room, buement, 9ar~ge, n111t . 317-0440 or 114-448-3760 .
1nd nice. low 40 ' s, 304-675 3030 Oil 675 -3431 .
Nice 2 bdr apartmer1t1 in duple:w:
flouae. Main St. Cheshire, Oh io.
Split leva!, 6 years old, femily Furnished &amp; Wlter paid . Call
room. fire pl1c1, 3 bedroomt. 2 614-246-6818.
bltP,s, 2 Cit ga11ge. ltrge corner
lot , atsumtble 8. 5 per cent loan, 4 room hou111 . with Ptra kit . In
304-675-3030 or 875-3431 .
Crown City. 116,500 . Cell

1980 Libtrty 14x64. 2 bed·
room. unfurnished. vinyl underpinn ing included. Must aeU. C1ll
304-n3-6873 .

2 bedroom Duplex hou" Ptr·
ti1lty furnilh.d . Low utiliti•. In
Pomeroy. Ctll diVI. 814-992·
2381 or 1!114-992 -21509 evtn·

tcre mini farm for tale.
McCumber Rd.. Ruthtnd . 3
bedroom houl8, barn. pony
shecl. cP,icken coop. Call 614992· 2143 or 114-992-2724
after 4 :30.
6

304-676-2385.

3 bdr.. large kitchen, b1th.
utilltiy roam. tingle QlfiQI. 2 Cll"
driYIWIY . nice Yltd, gtrden
.ICt, flnllhed g~rage. Ctll

814-448 -1358

FumisP,td 1pt. 2 bdr 11715.
131 Vt 4th Gtllipolis. W1ter pd.
C1ll 614 -446-4418 efter 8pm.

Ect1o trimmers . . .. 71S to
129$ ,81. . Hu1q¥1rn1 •.-a
Ec~o uws, Vardm1n mowers:
Nt\Of' • Ul_., Ill mlk •• ChUdtrs
Stw Supply, Koonh·S.Itor Rd .•
Vinton. Oh . .C.. I14· 381·•M.

House 6 epartment for slnyles.
Call 304·67&amp;·6104 or 304·
676 -6386 .

m.nt, ,_, dllivtring or collecting.
E.m b6g monl'( plut bonuses
.,d trwel inoentiv•. Call now
mJI ff• to Carol Dey 1 · BOO·

World Book-Childcraft, rt~ne­
,.,tatfv• needed . Part tlma. full
tim.. vutr.nt•• 1\illil.tJie, 304-

64 Misc . Merchandiu

6386.

the lllder br 31 years. Op..-..
lngt IH mMagen tnd d..l••·
We h1Vtlhlllft811 and beat line
In peny 1)111'1 . No c11h inw.. t·

46789.

Apartment
for Rent

Older couples 2 bd--., utiltl•
ptrttv p1id t150 mo .. CtU
304-6715-6104 or 304-676 -

4 GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY-

3•6 . Pomeroy . Ohi o

44

Furnllhed 11)1. 1 bdr. 920 4th
Gtilipolit. 12150. Utflititl pd.
Cllll14-«1·«11 1fter 8pm.

Ooveml'l"'tt''t JoN. •11,040 -

Box

Thursday, June 19, 1986

James Boys Water Service. Also
pools tilled . Call 614-256 -1 141
or 614· 448·l115 or 614-448-

DID YOU HeAR

7911

ABOUT 'THE SCIENTIST

Ken ' s Water Service. Weill.
ctsterns. pool• tnd w1terbtcls
filled . Call 614·317·0823 Of
614 -367-7741 or 304-875 ·
1247.
"":;

WHO

C~6SED- --·

Co11l. lim111tone. gravel, 111c, •
Delivered 1 ton and up . Jim
Lanier, 304-676 -124 7 or 675 -

Lancers'
111 :00 II CIJI]) G

7397.

(JII NIWI

:;;::;;:=;::;:::;::====
..
87 Upholstery
,:
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY 8HOP
1183 Sac. A\ile ., Gallipolit.
614· 448-7833 or 814-446·

1833.

R • M Furniture Mtnutacturing,
St. At. 7. Crown City, Oh. C1ll
614-258· 1470, call Eve . 814·
446 - 3438 . Old &amp; new
Uphoattred.

.
.
.
·

Mowrey ' s Upholstering serving
tri county eret 21 yurs. The beat
in furnlture upholstering . Ctll
304 - 876 · 4164 tor free
ettimatu .

'
•
.
.

..

EZW

JNE · YAWX

E Z FE

E ZW

E R

RVVRXWB

JYWXXWB

A X

ABWFY

EH NW

AE

AD
FHW

H WF Y
F D B

w c- wx
(; F K W X

A E .

UADB

HNXXWYY

EZW

DRE

YRLWYY

Yeaterday'a Cryptoquote: SLOTH , LIKE RUST,
CONSUMES FASTER THAN I.AHOR WEAR ~. WH ILE
TilE USED KEY IS ALWAYS BRIGHT . - RENJAMIN
FRANK UN

.

Cll ®

Ill 11! '

(]) 8111 Cosby Show
fJl (l] Love Connection
(j]) Twonty·Fivo Yeors of
the Preakfency Crisis menagement in the American
presidency is diacussed by
former
administration
chiefs of staff from lhe Ei·
senhower to the Carter
presidencies. (80 min.)
11 :03 ()) SCTV
11 :30 D(})(JI)TonlghtShow Tonight's guest is comedienne Roseanne Barr. (60
min.) In Stereo.
I]) Burna llo Allan
@ SportoC8nter

'
(l:f"WKRP In Clnolnna!l
(l] Ono Stop a.yond
G Cll ABC Newt
I]) Auatln City Limite: Julc•
Newton

e

®Taxi
Gi ll]) Nlah1 Heat O"Brien

eno l:iiambone investigate
when a bungled arson attempt results in murder.
(70 min.) (R).
,. ,
CD Trapper John, M .D.
· ; 12:00 ()) Jock a.nny
·
Cil Surfing: Pipeline Mas.·
tors From Oahu, HI. (A) .

·(Jj

Entertainment Tonight

Lilley Ann Warren her role
in th e upcoming TV movie
" Society·s Ch i ld"".
(l] Rowhide
Cll Hawaii Flve-0
~ MOVIE: ' Ad am at 6
A.M.'
12:25 ffi MOVI E: 'Blood Allay '
12:30 8 Cil illl La1o Night with
Devid letterman Toni ght's
guest is singer Rosanne
.
Cash . (60 min.) In S1areo .
()) Boat of Groucho

l

,

~

.,

�Page-16- The Daily Sentinel

E
L
B
E
R
F
E
. ::,~~::.: :~::::-.:.:~ ! ·
.· . ._. L D S'
LowPriee80urSpeeialty!

~

and moat Wooderiul outpour· '
lnf! of BARGAINS that hao
Comeyourway.

f

f

··---······.,

· "-....
G't/Gl

'

coossa
I
I

d
an

unprecedentedG::::-'

I Summer Season, 1986!
' We ha•e an Entirely New and
f qean Stoek. We h..e the

f

Proper Styles. We hne the Cor·

''

"'ct Prices. We always lead,·

Inside:
By the Bend ............ Page 6
ClaljsiDeds ........ Pages 7·fl.IO

THOSE who ca.n may follow.

t

CornlaJ.TV ............. Page 11

~~-------

Deaths ................... Page 12
Edllorlal .......... ....... Page 2
Sports ................. Pages :H

.Cllief under-fd!ti·.

' pige1

-----------------~------~---~~~~··~·· ~··~··~··~0
.. ......... , __ ,,.,,. .

.

F

~~~~~~~~~~~~----------------

_'"!:'.;~_ .,.,...

.• . .. ·······-·

Clothing For Your Family And Furnishings For Your Home.

Prices That Will Outclass A_ll Competition!
BATH TOWEL SALE!

ANCHOR HOCKING-Reg. 1 7.~

MICROWARE

Cannon Royal Family.

Choice of muffin pan, divided plate with
cov er, bakin g ring &lt;r bacon rack .

YOUR
CHOICE

LARGE SIZE BATH TOWEL

5
Ref!. 1 5.99- SALE 2,99
13.99
1 2.49

3 ONLY -Reg. 125.00

HAND TOWEL-SALE •t.99
HAND TOWEL-S ALE 1 1.29
FLORAL PRINT

Y2
PRICE
BOYS DRESS SLACKS

CUDDLIN' COUNTRY

BEARS
The bears with thumhs.

In regular and slim sllzes 8to 14 . Student
sizes 26 to lJ waist. Soltd colors.

$1488

Regular '17 .95 to 121.95

MEN'S VAN HEUSEN

DRESS SHIRTS

VAN HEUSEN $16 and $18

SHORT SLEEVE
KNIT SHIRTS

Short sleeves, solids and patterns.
Neck sizes 14 ':h to 17.

SALE PRICES

Good Selection!

$499
BOYS' S.S.
KNIT SHIRTS
Printed T-shlrt style.
XL sizes.

·$18

SALE

66

WRANGLER 122.95 BLUE DENIM

WESTERN SHIRTS

s, M, Land

MEN'S and BOYS'
SUMMERWEIGHT

Neck sizes 14 ~ to 20.
Sleeve Lengths 32 to 36.

Hanes S4.25

pick.

Sizes 30 to 36.

Yz PRICE

S, M, L and ZL. Solids, plaids,

. First quality by well known rna·

30% OFF

YOU SAVE!
MEN'S

SWIM TRUNKS

BOYS'

MEN'S WRANGLER PRE-WASHED

DENIM JEANS

SWIM TRUNKS
Sizes 8 to 18. Variety of styles and colors.

Sizes 29 to 42 waist
New Shipment For This Sale.
Reg. Price ' 19.95

SALE PRICES

MEN'S HANES-RED LABEL

MEN'S

UNDERWEAR

SHORTS SALE!

and knit briefs. Also boxer
shorts and big sizes.

Sizes 29 to 50 waist. Big sty le and color
selection at reduced prices.

ENTIRE STOCK

SAVE

30%

LITTLE GIRLS'
SUMMER DRESSES
Sundresses, Casual Dresses,
Fancy Dresses

SAVE

33%

SALE PRICES
THIS HERITAGE
WEEKEND AD IS
COPIED FROM AN
ELBERFELDS AD
APPEARING IN THE
TELEGRAPH
MARCH 18, 1896.

MEN'S S-T-R-E·T·C-H

DENIM JEANS
Sizes 29 to 50 waist. " Wrangler"
and "Lee" . Regular fit and fun fl t.
Regular Prices ' 19.95 to 129.95

SALE PRICES
BIG SAVINGS!
MEN'S SUMMER

HEAD WEAR
Caps and ha ts In summer's best
REDUCED

30%

s~a}!a~~I~~~~~~b~t~~lm.
lng materials tn solid colors and patterns
45 Inches wide. Full 90 Inch width.
QUILT MATERIAL· MUSLIN
QUILT LINING· QUILTING
THREAD

SAVE 25%
WOMEN' S KNIT
TOPS

REDUCED 25%

Sale Prices Start At Only

S525

Since 1864

SAVE
ALL BEDROOMS ........... 25 %

SUMMER
SLEEPWEAR

LOW SALE PRICES!
JUNIOR &amp; MISSY

SWIMWEAR SALE
One and Two Piece Suits

SALE

PRICED

FROM ONLY

$6 75

ENTIRE STOCK REDUCED 25%

Buy any Thank Goodness It Fits Jra
(soft cup or lightly lined) and r eceive a
pastel pink, V·neck, camisole FREE.
All camisoles are ladles' Size L.

AS LOW AS $300
LITTLE BOYS' SHORTS
Casual and Dressy styles
Size 2 to 7

25% OFF

JUNIOR, MISSY, EXTRA SIZE

COORDINATE
SPORTSWEAR SALE

coordinate sportswear Is
In this sale.

~ OFF

1

RCA CLOSEOUT SALE
We're Making Room For The New
1987 Models

ALL 1986 RCA
COLOR TVs

AT LOW, LOW
CLOSEOUT SALE PRICES

SUMMER
JEWELRY

EARRINGS, CHAINS,
NECKLACES and PINS
TWO DAYS ONLY

25% OFF
WHIRLPOOL
AIR CONDITIONERS
5,000 BTU .......... '279
7,500 BTU .......... '369
10,000 BTU ..........
12,000 BTU ......... $5

The Oldest and Largest Dry Goods House'

Front and Second Streets

FURNITU
SALE!
FURNITURE SALE!
FURNITURE SALE!

LADIES'

Right at start of season SAVE 30% on
our entire selection In sizes s, M, Land IBesfltfrcs,rtrnqual!ty by Lorr alne, Katz,
XL.
and Texsheen .

styles and colors.

Y2 PRICE

$IQ99

25%

SPORT SHIRTS

LIMITED QUANTITY

JACKETS
BOXER SHORTS
Good co tor and size selection. Take your

SAVE

SAVE- MEN'S

e

••. ..•-.:.· .. : . ::.· _: ...•...•• ...•• .

SAVE

lf4

LITTLE GIRLS'

SWiMSUITS
One and two piece sulls.
Sizes 6 mos . thru 14

REDUCED
30%!
LITTI.E BOYS'

and GIRLS'

OUTFITS

Onr and tw o plett st'tJ .
bl IK. Most arP mac hi n(l

wuhable.

SALE PRICED
FROM

$ 29

TOPS

TANKS,
BLOUSES
&amp;KNIT TOPS

SAVE OVER

30%

YOUR
CHOICE

CHILDREN'S

SUMMER HATS
and CAPS

Vol.36. No.34
Copyrighted 1986

-~-~---

--'

---

.

.. - -· ·--- _.,. __

-

at y

enttne
2 Sections, 12 Pages

26 Centa

A Muhimedie Inc. Newspaper

Meigs board to reveal
Salisbury plan in July
Plans for redlstrlctlng the area
setvlng till&gt; Salisbury Elementary
School wUI he unveiled at the July 22
meeting of the Meigs Local School
District Board of Education.
This was the word Thursday
nlght when a delegation of parents
representing students of the Salls·
bury School met with the board of
discuss reports of redistricting.
Supt. Dan E. Morris reported that
rumors have circulated as to the
redistricting and he assured par·
ents that no decisions have been
made as tohowstudentsenroilment
will be reduced at the Salisbury
School since tv&gt; has not had
adequate information to make the
decisions.
However, Supt. Morris reported
that, according to project enrol·
lment ligures for this fall , there wlll
be 44 students In the first grade at
Salisbury; 281n the second: 281n the
third; 291n the fourth; 29 In the fHth
and 331n the sixth. The problem. of
course, is with the firs! grade.
Morris stated, since 44 students In
one classroom is neither a good
learning sl!uation nor a good

teaching situation. On ttv&gt; otrer
hand, Morris reported, enrollment
at the Pomeroy Elementary School
has been down for the past several
years and some Salisbury students
could be transported to that facility
Instead of to the Salisbury School.
Supt. Morris said that the problem at Salisbury has not been
discussed with tre board of educa·
tJon at this point and that he has not
made an decision on what his
recommendation will be In regard
to rrovlng students from the
Salisbury School to tre Pomeroy
Elementary Bulldlng. However,
when the decision Is made, he said,
students from grades one through
six In the particular area selected
will probably be assigned to the ·
Pomeroy Elementary School. In
other words, he said, that rt would
not only be first graders who wUl be
moved from Salisbury to Pomeroy .
Parents attending the mretlng
told ttv&gt; board and administration
that treir area Is a growing area
and that they purchased .heir
hOmes feeling tbat treir chUdren
would attend ttv&gt; Salisbury Elemen·

tary School. which Is ilr grades one
through slx. They asked about tl1e
possibUity of a buDding program at
ttv&gt; Salisbury School or the tempor·
ary use cil a modular building at the
Salisbury building since the 44 first
graders mlght be tre same problem
for ttv&gt; six years d elementary
school unless the number reduced
through families mlV!ng. However,
Supt. Morris said that the expend!·
ture for addltklnal facilities would
not be justified since fUture enrol·
lment figures appear to be on the
down side. There also would be
addltklnal staff costs. Trese addl·
tional costs would not be justified
when some or ttv&gt; Sallsbu ry stu·
dents could be transported a mile or
so to another school within the
district, Morris reported. He said
that the decision on which students
are to be transferred wUI be made
with due regard that tre Pomeroy
Elementary Building will not be
overcrowded.
Parents were rrost su pportlve in
their comments on tre educational
program received by their children
Continued on page 12

Board accepts resignations
Several resignatklns from staff
members were accepted when the
Eastern Local School District
Board of Educalion met In recessed
session earUer this week.
Resignations accepted were
those of Blll Buckley, high school
principal who has been hired as
director or the county talented and
gifted program; Valerie RanshOt·
tom as advisor to I he flag CO!lJS and
majorettes: Frances Thomas, high
school science teacher, and James
Wilhelm as band director pending
employment elsewhere.
The board agreed to join the Ohio
Star Investment Program as recommended by the Treasurer
Eloise Boston and Principal Buckley gave an estimate on the cost of
replacing Items stolen at the high
school over the year at $3,000. He
was asked to get add it lanai prices
on the major Items. The board is

also working with estimates on a
1mph case for the high school lobby,
bul wUI keep within the $1,(00 In
donations received for the display
case. Supt. Richard Roberts was
authorized to proceed with the
painting of lheexterior and doors at
Riverview School.
A discussion was held on possible
changes for the student handbook
but the board took no action since a
new principal for the high school
will be hired. Student Insurance
through the Brogan-Warner
Agency was approved. Arch Rose
presented costs to the board on bus
routes for the hall day kindergarten
program to be Instituted this faU .
The cost estimate was based on the
use of two bus drivers. Rose wa&lt;
asked to prepare a second estimate
using four drivers. Vicky Lay!ll',
reading teacher at Chester Elcmen·
tary , reported on three reading

conferences she attended In April .
A second reading was given on a
policy Issue as to who Is responsible
for 18 year old students and was
approved. According to the resolu·
lion. 18 year old students will be
governed by the same rules which
apply to other students of the
district. It was announced a state
report on the special education
program In the Eastern Dlstricl
will be given at the county cilflce at 2
p.m. on July 23.
The board voted tolend300chalrs
to a church group which wiU have a
tent meeting In September and It
was agreed to participate In federal
programs next year. Life Touch
photographers were approved to'do
school photos next year. Estimates
will be secured on the purchase of a
wet-dry vacuum for the Riverview
School and a pickup truck for the
Cont lnued on page 12

MORE ROOF TAKEN DOWN - More of the roof
portion ol the Meigs Inn was brought down Thursday

afternoon by Rose Excavating of Racine. Company
worilers used chains tAl secure too msteady portions

ol Ire roof. A wbtch was then used to puB the sectloM
wthe Inside of too buUdlng. The Meigs Inn !lUitalned
between $400,000 and 5500,000 damages In a lire early
last Sunday morning.

Heritage Weekend activities are in full swing
If you're into being entertained, educated or bot h,
then Pomeroy may he the place to visit over ttv&gt;

weekend.
Heritage Weekend activities moved into swing
Friday and will continue through Sunday wit h
"somet hlng for everyone" being offered by the
Pomeroy Area Chamber ci Commerce and the Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical Society.
DOWNTOWN
Court Street was blocked off this morning In
preparation lor a two day country craft show,
weather permitting, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
The AEP' s last working sternwheeler, " Th~
Jaunita" Is docked at the Pomeroy levy and Is open

for touring noon to 5 p.m. today. Tomorrow visitors
can board tre boat anytime from 10 a.m to 5 p.m.
Other Saturday activities scheduled for downtown
by ttv&gt; Chamber (f Commerce Include an antique car
show on Court Street, 9 a.m. to noon, and an antique
steam engine display by George Francis on the
parking lot from 8:30a.m. to 4:30p.m.
On the parking tot stage, Denver Rice will perfonn
with his homemade Instruments from 1:30 to 2:30,
and Myron Duffield will bring his calliope Into town a 1
the stage area for a concert from 2: lJ to 3 p.m.. after
which the Shady River Shufflers will clog for an hour.
MUSEUM

The museum wlll be open on both Saturday and

LITTLE BOYS'

Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. In addition to ttv&gt; regular
exhibits, a variety of new things wUI be ava il able lor
visitors to see. and several demonstallons will tv&gt;
going on.
Shirley Houston will be doing basket weaving and
slate work. Betty Dean and Pat Holter " ill be
demonstrating traditional flower arranil{'ments,
Eugene WUioughby will be showing how his grist mUI
works, Art Skinner will show his skill In leather work.
and Harold Teaford will display hOmemade wood
items.
Larry Wolfe's display of arrowheads will be on
exhibit, Howard Nolan will be therewith his collectio n
of pollshed stones, and Mary Bradford her
soft -sculptured dolls.
Feature of the theatre will be Captain Charles Stone
with river boat shows, 1 p.m. on Saturday and 2 p.m.
on Sunday.

A pie baking contest 1fruit pies) will take place
Sunday a t 2 p.m. with entries to be at the museum at
1:30. At 3 p.m. the pies will be auclloned off with
proceeds to go to the Pioneer and Historical Society.
All afternoon thert' will be games fort tv&gt; children on
the lot across from the museum. Myron Duffield wUI
he performing on the calliope both days and
Sunshlners from Albany will sing on Sunday
afternoon.
The essays written by the fifth graders who took
part In the Yesteryear program of the Senior Citizens
vRSVP will be judged and the winners announced.
Homemade Ice cream wU he sold both days at the
museum, on Saturday by the Junior Granil{', which
"111 also have sandwiches both .da;·s. and on Sunday
by the Meigs Rowdies 4·H Club . The Sunon Cannel
Church wlll also be on the scenewithdesscns. Sunday
the Pomeroy firemen wilt have a chicken barbecue
beginning at 11 a.m.

Two killed in Gallia County accident

SUMMER TOPS
Buy Now and Really
SAVE!!

25%

In Pomeroy.
POMERO't, 0.

'

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, June 20, 1986

Emerp!ncy penoanel
by a Weat
Vlr&amp;lnla Air National Guard tractor traDer Tlmnday
at lbe lalenectlon of U.S. 85 anct Ohio S2ti at Rio
Graade. Dead are Hilda Perkins, 63, Rt. 2,
DOUBLE FATALD'Y -

SUJTOUDCI tile wreckale ol a car stnldl

·-------·------

•

.·

Ch•)lllllke, aad Juanlla S. Fullra, 74, Chellapske.
Beulah Jlllllloe, 51, owner o1 lbe car, and Cllnlon
JUIJtlce, 58, both of Rt. 4, Chesapeake, are In critical
oondlllon at Holzer Medical Center.

RIO GRANDE - An Investiga·
Uon continued today into the
collision between a car and a West
Virginia Air National Guard tractor
trailer at the Intersection of U.S. 35
and Ohio 325 here Thursday thAt left
two Lawrence County women dead
and two ottv&gt;rs hospitalized.
Dead at the scene was Hilda
Perkins, 63, Rt. 2. Chesapeake,
according to Rio Grande Marshal
John Vance. Juanita S. Fulks, 74,
Chesapea ke, died enroute to Grant
Medical Center, Columbus, where
she was taken by GMC's Llfefllght
tv&gt;llcopler.
Vance was scheduled to meet this
morning with Alr Force officials as
part of the Investigation. Direct
cause cil the accident had not been
determined as of this morning.
The other two victims, Beulah
Justice, 51, and Clinton Justice, 56,

both of Rt. 4, Chesapeake, were
taken to Holzer Medical Center and
reported In critical condition In the
intensive care unlt this morning.
Cli nton Justice Is being treated for a
punctured lung and Beulah JustiCe
for multiple trauma, according to a
HMC spokesperson.
The accident occurred around
6:32 p.m. when the car, owned by
Beulah Justice, collided with the
iractor trailer, driven by Sgt.
James C. McCallister, 51, South
Charleston, W.Va. McCallister was
enroute to base at Yeager Airport In
Charleston after delivering SU!lJius
material In Columbus, Vance said.
Wtv&gt;n the marshal's olflce ar·
rived, the car had reenforced Into a
culvert near the Intersection and a
medic from the Wellston Fire
Department who was apparently
passing by was at the scene, Vance

said. Tlv&gt; Gallia County Sheriff's
Department "Jaws of Life" extrac·
tion device was called but was not
used . The ca r was an apparmt loss.
while tlv&gt; tractor trailer. haullng an
empty flatbed. apparently suffered
minor damage to the front.
Assisting at the scene were the
sheriff's department. tre Rio
Grande Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment, GaiUa EMS and Gallla
Coo nty Volunteers. Llfefllghl was
ca lled shortly aft er ttv&gt; accident and
arrived around 7: 30p.m. to trans·
port ttvi' one victim to Columbus,
who reportedly died before the
helicopter landed at GMC.
The accident blocked rmst west·
bound traffic on li, while eastbound
cars and trucks were routed by
sheriff's deputies and volunteer
firemen through tlv&gt; village.

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