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                  <text>June 29. 1~86

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis; Ohio-'-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Page D-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Mcintyre home built for Gallipolis pharmacist

GATEWOOD IS TilE widely lmown name of tl)ls house &lt;11 State
SU'ftt In Gallipolis - larmus because ~Its association with nationally
MIOwned 0 . 0. Mcintyre. He had bour;ht K as a redrement home and
&amp;1ft to his wUe. The muse was put up In 1844 for Dr. JuUus Regnier, a
Ga._,.lls dnag;lst and doctor and son of me of the French 500. (The
Freneh 580 seUied GaBipolls In 1'190). Fred Bovle was one of the
laterestlng personages who have 11\'ed In Gatewood. ., ,

OPEC countries set
oil price arrangement
BRIONI. Yugoslavia iUPII The majortty of OPEC mrmb?rs
Saturday ag.-1 on a n~w trmpor·
ary ptice rangr for their oil and on
an overall cartel production ceiling
for this year, OPEC President
RJ!wanu Lukman said .
"The bulk of OPEC mem b?rs
have accepted the certain rang&lt;&gt; of
pnces that we think will work over
an Interim period," Lukman told a
brk'l news conference shortly after
the ministers resumed talks on the
fourth day of th~ir summer
summit.
Lukman, Nigeria's oil minister,
said the OrganlzaUon of Petroleum
Exporting Exporting Countri~s
also agreed on a production ceiling
for l!l&amp;i.
But he declined to say what the
temporary price range or the
product ton ceiling were on grounds
that pricing and production were
not the sole considerations lx&gt;ca use
OPEC Is seeking an overall stra·
tegy to restone its slumping
!1'Venues.
Lukman did not say which
memb?r nations opposed the price
arrangement. "I am giving you an
OPEC !Dint of view," he said.
He said
Subroto, the lnoone·
sian oil minister, was asked to
. recommend a set of production
quotas to !It thenewcl'illngand that
the ministers would meet again late

or.

toda)• or Sunday to consider thPm.
TIK' nev.~ con!Prl'!lce was hl'ld at
the conclusion of a 90-mlnute
session attended only by the
min rstcrs and one aide eac h. Thr
number of aides was kept to a
minimum to prevent leaks and
maintain a news blackout ordered
b)· Lukman.
Sources said the ministers dis·
cussed a proposal supported by
most oft he l:l members that called
for a production ceiling of 17.6
million barrels a day that would
graduall)' force oil prices up to
$17·$19.
A group of OPEC hardliners.
including Iran. Libya and Algeria,
demanded guarant ees the ceiling
will only b? temporary until OPEC
can ret urn prices to $:18 a barrel.
sources said.
One ministeria l source said he
was baffled by the hardliners'
attitude hecause he said it would
take a production cut to about 14
million baJT('IS a day to yield such a
high price and that such a tight
ceiling would b? all but impossible
to divide among the cartel's hungry
producers.
The source said the proposed
production ce iling and price rangr
In the compromise would apply to
the foW"th quarter oft his year. "We
are talklng about (a plan fori
severa l years. "

stm mboats and then lor about sl)c
25 cents per .day and walking fo11r passenger.
By JAMJlll SANDS
miles each way to and from work,
Concealed In the ·trees were years he operated a boat store Iii
Special Correspondent
, GALLIPOLIS - The house on When 12 years old, he was splitting hordes of Confederate bush· Galllp&lt;JIIs. About 1875 he entered
State Street known as "Gatewood" wood at il sawmill for 25 cents a whackers who opened !Ire on the Into a partnership wiTh a Pltrat In
and associated with Odd and cord and at 13 he took a position as VICtor No. 2. Captain Fred Ford the Bovle, Pltrat and Co. Grocery.
clerk In the clothing store of A.P. skiUIUlly backed·the boat away and In l885 Eovle became a partner In
Maybelle Mc!n·
Fenner. At age 14 he made a trip oo doiWI the river but not wttil the boat the Henklng grocery company
lyre was built In
a steamboat to Wheeling and back W\15 severely riddled with musket whereupon the name was changed
1844 for Julius
working as a pantryman.
ball holes. Fortunately nobody was to Henklng, Bovte and Co.
Regnier, who
t\T 'DIE t\GE of 15 he went to . hurt .
was a druggist in
Ceredo, VIrginia (now West VIrgithe Old French
1\FI'ER RUNNING a branch
nia ), to join the49th0hlo Regiment,
'DIE VICTOR No. 2 hightailed II office of the grocery store in Kansas ·
City until his
oommanded by Col. John Vance, to Point Pleasant to warn the City, Fred moved back to Gallipolis
death In 1851.
Julius was the son of 'Dr J:lhn oot was too young to be accepted as soldiers there but, according to in 1895 to take charge or the
a nrrult. He went with the band, Hardesty's· History of Putnam Gallipolis offi ce.
Baptiste Regnier, who was one d
the French 000. John Baptiste was however, to Charleston, playing the County, West VIrginia , "Captain
21 when he carne to America with cymbals untU the retreat of Light- Carter, commanding the Federal
Until his death in 1930 Fred was
his brother Modeste. Two other bum In 1B62. He then returned home troops at that place, made no
an
active Elk, Mason, and Demo·
brothers, Francis and Benjamin, and entered the government ser- preparations tor defense, and percrat.
He served as councilman and
had escaped France (during the - vice on the transport boat VIctor mitted himself to be taken com·
board
of education memb?r. The
pletely by surprtse, the next day, by
French Revolution) to Santo [)o. No.2.
Bovl£'s
were such staunch Demo·
It was while serving on the VIctor
mingo. By 1792 John Baptiste was
General Albert Jenkins."
crats
that
Fred's father was one of
urged by his young brother Mldeste No. 2 that Bovle saw action. The
only
two
men
In all Gallipolis to vote
ro nee Gallipolis for fear of the boat had on board In March of lB63
Bovle also saw action when a
for
Vallandingham
for governor In
the Federal paymaster, who was transport boat he was on was
Indians.
1863
when
suspected
Vallan·
On the boat trip up the Ohio taking pay !rom Galllpoils to attacked near Fort Donelson, Tendlngham
supporters
were
openly
Otarleston
oo
the
Kanawha
River.
River, their boat capsized. Many
nessee . Later ilovle served In the
Sl't
upon
by
gangs.
mUes !rom any seN lement they had At Halls Landing the boat was quartermaster department.
to walk several days. Their journey waved to the shore by a lone
From 18ffi to 1800 Fred Bovle ran
was impeded because of sickness . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - from eating the seeds of decayed
pawpaws.
From PittsbUrgh they went
overland to New York and then to a
Beautiful
Small Plants
French settlement in Newfound ·
Harlluafll
Reg. Up to 11.50
la nd. After three years there, Jotm
by Local
Baptiste and Modeste moved to
Now
Crofts People.
New York and In 1802 to Washing·
Come Look!
ton. Pa.. where John Baptiste
studied medicine under Dr. Antoine
Lemoyne, who had also b?en
among the "French 000".
REGISTER NOW FOR BASKET CLASSES BEGINNING SOON
In 1803 Dr Regnier settled around
Marietta, where he raised a family.
Julius Regnier studied medicine
under his father and moved to
REGISTER FOR OUR DRAWING OF '60.00 GI~T CERTIFICATE
Ga llipolis probably In the 18Ws.
DOOR PRIZE TO BE GIVEN AWAY EACH DAY
IDS DRUG store was bca ted on
We lllw just recti wed a .-. shipmint of.blautif!A solid oak furniture. We believe that this is
Second Avenue In the vicinity of the
the
finest quoity fumitun in the cna tnl wt haft tpecial prices dwing our Grand Ope11ileg.
present day Thomas Clothiers.
SALE PRICES THROUGH JULY 2
Of the prominent people who
'
have lived here b?sides the Regnier
family, Mrs. Mcintyre and the
Gatewoods, who have given their
name to the house, one should
in clude Fred Morgan and Lucy
Bovie who lived there In the early
part of this century. Bovie was a
prominent businessman In town for
several years , his name b?lng hall
of the Henking-Eovie Grocery Co.
that operated in Ga llipolis from 1885
to 1937.

IT'S OUR

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Inside:

Lady Liberty
Papt

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World Soccer Cup
Page4

Fred M. Bovie was born in Green
Township In 1847. At age U he went
to work on a farm, dropping com at

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- ~

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•

:e
Vol.38, No.40
Copyrighted 1988

at y

GOLDEN VAL·UE DAYS

Untied Pns IJIIerutlonal
Setttlael Staff Reporll
May employment statistics prove Ohkl Is In the
midst ot a recovery, a S!Dkesman ilr Gov. Richard
Celeste says.
The ligures released by the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services show the state's workforce has
climbed to seven-year peak In non·fann categorles,
matching the pre-recession level.
Jobless figures released by OBES last week showed
unemployment was on the decUne In arm counties.
But only Athens County posted a job~ figure b?low
10 percent for the region.

Meigs County's unemployment was down 1.8
percent In May to 10.9 percent. In Gallla County,
joblessness also fell1.8 percent to 10.5 percent.
Brian Usher, press secretary of Gov. Richard
Celeste, said the figures are consistent with otrer
studies.
"It backs up what the governor has b?en saying all
along- Ohio Is In the midst of a recovery," he said.
Us~er said a study by the National Academy of
Science ranked Ohio fourth In "We are finally back to
where we lett off from before the recession," Dixie
Sommers, director of the bureau's labor market
division, said. "From here on out, we're looking at

S39995
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REGULAR $599.95

SALE
CONTINUES ONE
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•

enttne
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further growth Instead of just getting back jobs we
lost.
"This is a slgnlilcant development for the state."
The statistics show total non-farm employment at
4.5 million, equaling an all·tlme high reached In
March 1979.
However, the mix of jobs since that year has
changed to fewer manulacturtng jobs, due In large
part to Ohio's dense concentration of industties hard
hit by the recession, lnclud'ng steel, transportation
and electrical machinery.
"Manufacturing jobs on the average do pay mane
than non-manufactuling jobs, but 1 think the average

By LORI SANTOS
WASHINGTON IUP! I - Tire 22
million American households vic·
tlmized by crime last year- ani' In
every fou r - represent a smaller
percentage than at any time in the
last decade, the ,Justice Depart·
mcnt says.
The Bureau of Justice Statistics
released its survey of 198'&gt; household cr imes Sunday, saying an
estimated 22.1 million U.S. house·
holds su ffered a robb?ry, bu rglary,
motor vehicle theft, rape, assault or
a household or personal theft.
"That is 25 percent of the
88,852,CXXJ households in the coun·
try, " said Steven Sch!f&gt;singer,
director of the Justice Department
agency. "Even rhough the numb?r
is stlll far too large ... it is espec ially

Is a little misleading," said Sommers. "They can lead
to the conclusion that non-manufacturing provides
only low·paylng jobs.
"The service sector and other non·manufacturlng
industries do have some high-pay jobs," she said,
pointing to the construction Industry as an example.
Non·manufacturlng jobs went from 3.1 million In
March 1979 to 4.5 million In May 19ffi. In contrast,
March 1979 employment figures tor the manulactur·
lng of durable and non.rturable goods was !l!G,!Wand
405,!W, respectively, compared with may 1986 figures
of 753,00) and 353,00).

gratifying that not once duting the
past 10 years did the percentage go
up."

Schlesinger said the 1985 statistic
was the lowest percentage since
1975, the first year such data was
kept, when criml' hit 32 percent of
all households. In 19S4 It was 26
percent.
The report credited most of the
decline from 1984 to a drop in the
percentage of households touched
by theft of personal property away
!rom home.
More than I mi!Uon fewer
households were victimized in 1985
than 11 years ago despite an
increase ct about 16 million house·
holds across the oountry dutingtbat
time. the report sa id .
But one of every 13 households

last year suffered a "high concern
crime" - a burglary or rape,
robbery or assau It by a stranger
against one of Its memb?rs, the
study showed. lt does not include
murder.
The households most vulnerable
to the villent attacks, II said, were
black, with a&gt; percent hit bY one or
more crimes; those with Incomes ci
S:!i,CXXJ or more, 29 percent; and
those In urban areas, 30 percent.
The report Is based on about
101,!W Interviews nationwide con·
dueled every six months with
household occupants age 12 or
older. The Incidents reported In
about 49,CXXJ homes are used to
estimate a natkmwlde total, both
those reported to pollee and those
Continued on page 6

Foreign policy issues top agenda

MEET mE LADY- Jule llwi&lt;e, 17,
of Glouceslel', Mass., holds a miniature Statue of
Uberty as ohe prepares lor a IHiay lrlp to New York
lor Uberty Weekend July 4. She wm be a pest of
l&gt;lcltal Equlpmeni Coi,Jora&amp;lon, a Uberty Weekend

sponsor. Julie, who has spina bUida, Is confined to a
wheelchair. She got permission from her doctor to
make the trip. See related Llherty stories on pa~ 9
today. (UPI)

By HELEN TIIOMAS
UPI While Hoose Reporter
SANTA BARBARA. Calif. !UP! I
- President Reagan winds up a
flve&lt;lay vacation at his mountain·
top ranch today and flies back to
Washington to tackle two major
foreign poUcy Issues- SouthA!rica
and nuclear arms .
With Congress away on its
two·week Fourth of July recess.
Reagan planned to spend a couple
ol days at the White House before
presiding Thursday at the opening
c~remonies celebrating the Statue
of Liberty's centennial In New
York.
While in New York, Reagan plans
to meet with French President
Francois Mitterrand for the ccle·

bratlon oft he statue France gave to
the United States 100 years ago.
Their talks were expected to b?
substantive and designed to mend
fences between the two countties,
at odds over the April U.S. bombing
raids on Libya.
Several weeks ago, Reagan
secretly ordered a major review of
United States policy toward South
Africa in the lace of a growing
clamor for sanctions against the
whltP. ruled African nation and a
House resolution calling for U.S.
businesses to divest their holdings
in South Alrica.
Administration of!lclais said the
review, expected to b? completed in
the next few weeks, does not mean
Reagan is backing away from his

!Diicy of "constructive engage·
ment" and no klnger resists toogher
economic sanctions.
Instead, officials said the admln·
lstratlon Is studying ways to
Improve Its contacts with black
leaders, Including the cutlawed
guertilla African Natklnal Con. ·
gress, to put the pressure on the
President Pleter Botha 's govern·
ment lor a negotiated settlement.
While adminlstrat bn officials are
confident the Senate will reject the
House resolution, sen limen! Is
buDding for stronger actkln. Senate
Foreign Relations Committee
Otalrman Richard Lugar. R·lnd.,
plans hearings starting July 22.
On another front, the president
Continued on page 6

I

Ohio becoming dumping grounds for infectious waste?

SAVE S6QO TO S700 OFF

OUR COMPLETE
INVENTORY IS ON SALE
COST OR BELOW

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPII Changes In the regulation of
medical waste dumping in
states east of Ohio have resuhed
In Increased dumping here.
where no specific state regula·
tlons gnvcrn the handling and
disposal of Infectious ,wastes.
The wastes lncluae hospital
cancer·flghtlng chemicals,
soiled bandages and body tissue.
According to a report in
Sunday's Columbus Dispatch,
the wastes soml'times are called
"red bag" wastes and include
anything that could spread
bacteria, spores or viruses. The
wastes come from hospitals,
clinics laboratorles, veterlnar·
lans ;u;d privati' doctor's offices.
The dumping has Increased,
particularly In northeastern
Ohio, since April, when Pennsyl·
vanla required landfills to lm·
IXlSI' certain condlt Ions on

lnfecllous·Waste haulers. New
York also has restricted such
dumping.
Edward Van Poolen, Columbus manager for Waste ManagP.
ment, an InfectiOus. waste
hauler, said his company would
like to see statewide regulations
on Infectious-waste disposal so
rules would be consistent at all
landfills.
"About every state that we
deal with requires pre·
treatment (of Infectious
wastes)," Van Poolen told the
Dispatch. "To my knowledge,
Ohio is the ooly exception."
JoSEph Pezze. regional air
pollutkln control rnglnf('r In
Pittsburgh, said he has heard
there is quite a bit of dumping
activity.
"A lot of hospitals are sending
portions d their wastes Into
northeast Ohio, such as the

infectious materia l or the che·
motherdpy chemicals." he said .
A sim ilar report was given by
a Pittsburgh-area hospital oUi·
cia! speaking at a hospital· waste
~mlnar last week in Reynoldsburg. Pennsylvania state officials don't track outbound ship·
men is of Infectious waste wtless
the Incinerated ash is hauled
back to Pennsylvania .
Thomas J . Halpin, acting Ohio
health director, said hi' opposed
a bill Introduced early last year
in the General Assembly b?cause it sought to assign hls
agency duties already assigned
In a general sense to the Ohio
E nvironmen ta l Protection
Agency. The bill was tabled .
Halpin said there Is no· evidence that current wastP. han·
dling practices represent a
JJJbllc healt h hazard . The Issue,
he said. pertains more to thP

Celeste fundraiser questioned
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)Opponents of Gov. Richard
Celeste are chat'Jing IIIII six
Colwn!Jul.area Republk:Ms are
planning a !Und·ralrllns dinner
for the Democrat In tetum lor
pastlluslness contracts with the
state.

The lnlluenllal group of CDIumbus bu8inesamen - six
Republicans - 11111• I has
planned the 11,-.peHlOUJIIe
lund-raiser becin• ceJeate hu
mne 80 much to revlallze tbe
clly. Bt&amp; a apokelman for

Republican gubemaiorlal CBIIcJI.
date James A. Rhodes says tbe

'
HOME OF WALDO, WHERE WE
90
DAYS
. . . . . . .s.AM•E•A•S•C•AS•H. .~. .~.....
A.RE. BE•IT•E•R•T·H~A·N·WEHAV•E•T•O•B•E•
.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .s.a•
...
ASC~A=SH~~~==~

90 DAYS

Pqe3

Crime down in U. S. homes

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ONLY

Reds top Giants

Meigs jobless down 1.8 percent during May

RUTLAND~ OHIO

. BUT OUR SALE
GOES ON DUE TO
TREMENDOUS RESPONSE ·
TO OUR SALE.

I

Pqe9

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Monday. June 30, 1986

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

TENT IS DOWN

Hanresting tips

By the Bend ...... Pages 7-B.t
Cla8811led8 ..... Pages 10.ll·l2
C«mb-TV ............. Page 13
Deathl! .................... Page 6
Edllorlal ................. Page 2
SIJorts ••.•..•.•...•...• Pages 3-4

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RUTLAND FURNITURE COMPANY

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leaders are "expeded" lo cootrillute because they do bufllneM
with the state.

The codttall reception wD1 he
heldJul,)o 9 at the Bexley home of
Leslie H. Wexner, pm~ldenl of
1be Limited. Jolnbtg blm as
ltot!la are Jom E. Fisher,
chllinnlln of Nationwide Insurance Cos.; developer Daniel M.
Galbrealh; Jom B. McCoy.
chalnnan 811d dllef aecullve
..fleer of llllnc One Corp.;
developer Jom
Kessler; and
lawyao ud developer Melvin L.

w.

Scfm«e•eln.
Fllber llid the lllnd-ralser Is
to lhow appreciation ilr the
a~ppolt Celeite has given the
Columbus community.
Celeite's chlel lund raiser
says the plherlng Is not "fte.
publlcana for Celeste," but
rather "business leaders for

•t

Celeste. In Columoos, they jll!ll
happen to be (l'edomlnanlly
Republican."
"ln oor efforts to revitalize
Columbus, we 0111e some appreciation to Go~ernor Celeste,"
Fisher said.
James A. Duerk. a Rhodes
campaign !lpOkesman, claims
the event was Inspired by a
le98-than-honorable motive.
"Most ol the people m 1M
(host) committee are doing
business with the state ol Ohio,
and 80Die or this wD1 be alred
during the campaign.'' said
Duerk. "We all know IIIII
Celeste apecls people doing
business Wlh the stale to ldck
Into 1*1 campaign and to front
for him."

protectbn of trash haulers and
landfUI employees.
Halpin and EPA officials say
they arc watching the situation.

but Ihere has been no coordina·
lion b?tween the agencies cr any
direct study .
"! don't know if anybody is

really in charge," said Nancy
Moore, section manager lor
solid waste at the EPA. "I've
asked my stalftoflnd cut what's
going on In other states...

Five remaining American
finns to .leave Libya today
By JIM t\NDERSON
was banned.
The Jan . 7 cxecutlv~ order
WASHINGTON iUPl i - Five
Amer·lcan oil companies, final completed the process of Isolating
vestiges of a once·robust U.S. Libya economically from the Unl·
commercial preSI'nce. are ex· ted States, which also warned
peeled to leave Libya today under European nations that the admlnis·
the most severe embargo the !ration would dlsaptrove of any
United States has with any country, aNempt to try to take commerlcal
advantagl' d the emba rgo .
tht' Treasury Departm~n t says.
The five American companies
By a Jan. 7 executive ordPr,
issued in reaction to the Dec. 27 Involved are Marathon, Occidental,
terrorist bombings at the Rome and W.R. Grace, Conoco and Amerada
Vienna airports, President Reagan Hess. Their comllned total of the
Imposed an almost total ban on any Libyan petroleum market Is
thought to b? less than 1 percent.
commercial contacts with Libya.
A Treasury official said, "We
Reagan said In his order that the
general embargo, the most severe expect all of them will comply."
The official said the AmeriCan
the United States has with any
country, was Imposed becauSI', companies can continue to try to
"The policies and actions of the negotiate the sale of their assets to
government or Libya constitute a the Libyan government , but the all
threat to the national security and companies' American citizens wUI
foreign policy of the United States." have to conduct such deaUngs from
As part of the order. allcomrnerl· rutslde d Libya .
The penalty for disobeying the
cal transactions between Ameli·
cans and Libya were banned, executlvl' order - which does not
Including the pumping of oil. The apply to journalists and rertaln
administration ordered the five humanitarian grou~ - is a flne &lt;1
nemalnlng American on companies $50,CXXland a jail termollOyears. In
out, after giving them an extension addition, !here Is a clvU penalty of
unlll June 30 to try to sell their SlO,(XX) lor each offense.
Nelt her the Slate nor the Treas·
assets.
In 1982, the administration ury departments has any accurate
banned the import of any Libyan Idea of how many Amertcan
crude olllnto the United States, and citizens remain In Llpya. At the
In November 198'&gt;, the import of any time of the executive order, the
Libyan neftned petroleum products State Department estimated be·

tween l,CXXJ and 1,500 Americans or
dual Llbyan ·Amerlcan nationals
were In Libya, but there is evidence
that many oft hem left after the U.S.
bombing attacks in April or because at the gpncra l oowntum 1n
Libyan oil product ion.
Reagan 's order prohibits Ameri·
cans from giving loans or credits to
Libya and from taking part in any
commerical transactions Involving
Ubya, Including lravl'l and thP
JJJrchase of any Imports.

Rejecl Bundy's appeal
MIAMI IUPII- Serial klllerTed
Bundy's pll'a for a stay of ~xecutlon
and a nl'w trial were rejected by the
trial judg~ today and his lawyer
Immediately appealed to the Flor·
Ida Supreme C'oun to halt Wednes·
day's scheduled ~xecutlon.
Dade County Circuit Court Judge
Edward Cowart sa id In his nfusal
that Bundy's lawyers failed to
prove any omissions or overt acts
that were slgnlilcant enough to
change the rutcome ot the oclglnal'
trial, presided over by Cowart. .
James Coleman , Butxly's lawyer, Immediat ely flied an appeal "
with the state Supreme Court to
block the execu tlon.
Barring Intervent ion by the high
court or the rderal courts, Bundy
wU!dle In theelectrlcchalrat 7a.m.
EDT Wednesday

•

�'

Commentary
The · Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DE\'OTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb

~m~ ,...,..,__.L-.,...· ~ d·~

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlst.lr
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Puhllst.lr/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
t\ MEMBER or Thf' Unlted Press Inte-rna tiona I, Inla nd Da!ly Press

Associat ion a nd the Am.erlcan Newspa ppr Publisht&gt; rs Asso"iation.
LETTERS OF OP INION are II.'&lt;'I COJ'T'I(' . Thf'\' should til' lt&gt;Ss than l'Xl words
lonR. All h•tters ar&lt;'s ubj('('t toed ltlng and m.tst b~ slgncd wit h n.ame, address and
tC'If'ph on(' numl)('r. No un slgn&lt;d ll:'tter s w ill be published. Letters shou ld bE&gt; In
ta sH'. :tddrcsslng Issues, not JX'rsonalltles.

~ ood

Lack·of action
For all the bluster from Gov. Richard Celeste that he ls a tough
decision-maker who handles the hot ones, it has become clear that the
opposite is true.
Celeste, in fa ct, is a marshmaUow when it comes to administration, as
underscored by his staff s inept attempts to cover it up .
Take the case of Ja mes Rogers, the former director of youths!'fvices. On
April 19, 1985, Celeste's office put out a press release saying the governor
had "accepted with regret" Rogers' resignation.
The release ciled "employee in·egularit ies" and commended Rogers for
taking prompt com.&gt;l'tive action. Celeste went out of his way to praise
Rogers for the "fine job" he did In reorganizing and upgrading the
department.
But when Rog&lt;'fs was indic ted a week ago, the governor changed his
tune, loudly proclaiming that he was "outraged" by Rogers' s conduct and
"bounced him for it promptly when we found out."
Celeste, it seems, is incapablleofbouncinganyone promptly, nor does he
have someone on his staff to do the job.
The problem with the Celestia ls is that they are convinced that every
program they initiate, every appo intment trey make, is'"' Impeccable as
to he heaven-sent. Nothing could ever be wrong because they did It and
right is on their side.
When Minnie Fells Johnson botched up the Depart ment of Mental
Retardation and Developmental Disabilities it was always somebody
else's fault. never Johnson's. bo&gt;causeshe was Celeste's appointee.
Sometimes, the attempt s lo put the best face on things will catch up to
you, and il did last week lor Celeste.
While he was immersed in srlf·pra ise for his bold, decisive action in the
Rogers case, it ca me to light that Celeste actually tried to help Rogers find
a job after he "bounced'' him.
What a fine gesture. fo isting a suspectEd felon off on a privaterompany!
The governor turned matters ovet· to William Sykes, his administrative
services director, asking Sykes to make a phone call oo Rogers's behalf.
The phone call went to, of all places, a rompany wit h state contracts,
whose president had contributed to the Ceiestrcampaign. Odds were good
that Rogers would get a job there, and no one would he tre wiser.
But those blasted nosy newspapers found oul. And why did the governor
go to bat for Rogers . whom he had "fired?"
Celeste. it seems. had compassio n for Rogers beca use he had a family to
feed and no way "to put bread on tre table." He had onlybecn ll'Uing down
$CAJ,OOO a year and had enough left over for a t ime·share condominium in
Florida.
Now the governor had only asked Sykes to help Rogers oo t '"' the story
goes. He did not tell Sykes to he so stupid as to get Rogers a job with a
company doing business with the state.
Why, then, not get rid of Sykes forth&lt;Jt indiscretion? Because he Is ooeof
the original Celeste appointees. he means well and he can do no wrong ...
Successful government depends on perceptions as much as !ilbstantive
acllons. If Celeste means what he says, lhat "wrongdoing wUI not be
tolerated by this admin is tration," he needs to back up his rretorlc with a
beheading or two, if only for appearance's sake. Or he is liable to get his
own head handed to him in November.

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, June 30, 1986

James Reston,exerctsedoverthe views." U that does not amount to !Dme other private party. We do not
fight President Reagll!l lias made . Ideological opposition, then Mr. even know whether, If tl)e bill had
on behalf of his nominee, Daniel Reston's use of the word Is unique. passed, the Supreme Court would
Manion, for circuit ludge, waxes
Mr. Reston then rehearses tt.l have sald yes or no.
"He was also criticized," Mr.
most awfully wroth. "He (Reagan)
usual syllabus of errors . "Mr.
Reston
goes on, "for proposing Ihat
demands t)le right to make ideologi- Manion sponsoml a bill to allow the
cal appointments l:Jut condemns Ten Commandments to be posted in tt.l Supreme Court be stripped of
ldeologtcal opposition even wt.ln It the p.lbllc schools just two rronths some- of Its jurisdiction and for
doesn't exist. That obstinacy Is after the Supreme Coort had suggesting that antl·war demon·
using up his capital, and wlzy t.l overturned a similar Kentucky strators 'should be penned up.:"
does it on behalf of a two-bit lawyer
law." Mr. Reston must have Many serious American comment·
like Mr. ManiOn even his friends
known, wt.Jn he wrote those lines. ators have suggested from time to
cannot understand,"
that the bill sponsomt by Mr. time that tre jurisdiction of the
Waal, I am a friend of Ronald Manion sought to meet the criti- court be limited, and of course it
Reagan and volunteer to explain It cisms of the court In Kentucky. was limited by lhe Founders. For
all to Mr. Reston.
wrere the posting of the Ten 100 years, Ire Supreme Court had
To begin with, the suggestion that Commandments was prescribed by !ilbstantlally no jurisdiction o\ler
tt.l opposition to Mr. Manion is law, and the plaques paid for from criminal cases. And wbo says that
exira-Ideological Is disingenuous. p.lbllc funds. The Manion biU lawbreakers protesting the Viet·
Sen. Joseph Blden, after examining provided that only those schools nam War or anything else should
Mr. Manion at the SenateJudlclary that petition for the Ten Command· have been jailed?
But It keepscomingdown to thi s:
Committee hearing, said, "I think ments should get them, and only ~
you are a decent and honorable the commandments were furnished Dan Manion has "ex treme right ·
man, but I do not think I can vote for not by the state, but by Moses, or wing views." But the logica l
question then to ask is whelhet· Mr.
you because of your political
@~C6 fOIIT woat~~ 9tl.1Z •T€ta&gt;1ZA"
ETTA
I·D HUtM~

'I. 'TMIN"'1-JE'VE I..OST
MOME~TUM·

Reagan has ex treme right-wing
views, and by the reckoning of Mr.
Reston, he does Indeed. But Mr.
Reston needs to remind himself
tha 1 a large majority of the
American poople voted for Reagan
In 1984 fu lly cognizant of what those
views are. U !here Is a political
jXlSltion taken by Mr. Manion
significantly different from positions taken by Mr. Reagan, l have
not heard it .
The pressures to mislead are
highly resourcefu l. A big piece
published lhe same day as the
Reston column. In the New York ·
Times, and written by Phillip
Shenon. speaks of "Daniel Manion,
an Indiana lawyer who h&lt;Js been
closely tied to the political work of
his father, Clarence. a founder of
the ultraconservative JOhn Birch
Society."
It Is strange how often the
biological rela tions hip between son
Dan and fa ther Clarence Is menU·
oned withou t the reader's being
informed that father Clarence was
not on ly a memtx•r of tre John
Birch SociNy txJt also the dean of
the Notre Dame Law School. One
assumes that so n Dan learned more
about the law at his father's knee
than about the John Bireh Society.
It happens that I am personally
familiar with Clarrnce Manion's
relationship with the -Xlhn Birch
Society. About it one needs to say
one thing. namely that Ire late
Robet1 Welch came to the cuckoo
conclusion that Eisenhower was a
communis!. Anyone who IEileves
that Is, quite simply, incompetent.
Did father Clarence believe u• He
laughed at the very idea, but
though t that. on balance, tt.l society
was worth supporting, and so he
lingered .on Its board of clire:tors
but was no more involved in
spreading the word that Ike was a
communi st 1to which Russell Kirk
made lhe appropriate comment,
"Eisenhower Isn't a communist,
he's a golfer") I han he was In the
silly Birch proposal that Earl
Warren he impeached .

By LOU

Federal funds abused_.....:...J_ac_kA_n_d_er_son_&amp;_D_ale_~_an_A_t_ta
her home state of South Carolina at
government expense." Though
some of these trips "pertained
dlrertly to ongoing OMEI program
activities," ott.lrs "dld not appear
directly relevant to her officials
duties."
For example, the auditors noted
that she took one trip to Olarleston
to accept an award from a nursing
group that "has no official txJslness" with the Energy Department. A former nurse, Douglas took
two olher trips to Charleston to
address a nurses' alumni group and
University of South Carolina medl·
cal students. On these trips she
"remained In South CaroUna
through the weekend at govern·
ment expense."
-Douglas, tt.l GAO learned,
made "numerous trips" to Puerto
Rico, Nassau, too Bahamas, Las
Vegas and Hawall. "Mrs. Douglas
made three trips to San Juan,
Puerto Rlco ... Her ttinerarles show
she anived earlier and departed
later at government expense than
was necessary to mmplete t.lr
o!!lclal duties," the report notes,

explaining: "Her offic ial bu siness
on these trips conslstrd of one·hour
ceremonies," yel she stayed scv·
era l days at public expense.
- In May 1984, D:&gt;uglas flew to
Hawaii to visit t"" schools with
department-related voca llonal pro·
grams. She spent an additional
three days in Honolulu at lax pay·
ers' expense. "Two OMEI staff
members provided us with signed
statements that they arrangl'd the
Hawaii school visits alter Mrs.
D:&gt;uglas told them that she was
going to Hawaii to visit hL•r
brot t.lr," the GAO reported.
-At one point, Douglas proposed
the eliminallon or the jobs of two
women - one a blac k, the « her a
Chlnese·Amer lca n. The GAO
stated: "Mrs. Douglas told us that
she did not pi'Opose the (di smissals)
to retaliate against two affected
employees and we found no dtrert
evidence that retaliation was her
mollve. However. we fou nd substantial clrcumstanllal evidence
suggesting that retaliation may
have been a significa nt fac tor."

-Douglas took several trips to
Las Vegas. One was to take part In a
single afternoon wcrkshop; she
stayed tlu-ee days. Another was il r
an energy seminar; st.! got there
t"" days early. A third, three-day
stopover was "to attend a llvt-minute viewing of a craler al
DOE's Nevada test site and a
45·minute briefing by officials ," the
GAO found.
-On one trip to Puerto Rico,
D:luglas' hotel bill of about $500 was
paid by a priva te crganlzation
funded by her office. The GAO
poin ted out that this "couldglverlse
to the appearance of a conflict of
interes t."
Douglas was also found to have
abused the Energy De partment
motor pool privileges. The auditors
Ident ified 11 trips between t.lr
home and t.lr office and 49 trips
that "appear to !have been) for
personal business," out of 139 trips
studied.
Footnote: Douglas declined to
comment , as did Energy Depart·
menl officials, who said they hadn't
seen the GAO report .

There Is a vast array of unans· weight ci tt.l mUitary payloads sent
up prevklusly by American rockets
wered questions regarding Presl·
and
shun les.
dent Reagan's proposal to take the
.
The
problem of how to build and
nuclear arms race Into outer space.
The so-called "Star Wars" scheme finance launchers capable of lilting
such huge klads Into the heavens
Is so . incmllbly complex and
has been obscuml by other ele·
futuristic It boggles the mind.
One of tJie least·understood as- ments d tt.J Star Wars debate, such
as the feaslbUity of a defense shield
pects of the proposal is Its eventual
cost. At the outset trere were a against an aU-out Soviet attack. But
the time has come to begin
number d estimates lndlcatlngthat
the system would cost In excess d a considering the practica lity and the
cost of lUling the t.lavens with
trilllon dollars to develop and
man's most exotic and ex pensive
deploy. No one can offer anything
notions of 21st-century military
other than the wUdest guess as to
terhnology
.
lhe eventual cost of this seemingly
U.S.
shuttles
and rockets have
unreal system. U It were to follow
been
lilting
into
space, at best,
the path of previous weapons .
about
!00,000
pounds
per year.
systems, no matter how high the
According
to
Lt.
CoL
Louis
Kouts,
current cost estimates may be, the
Air
Force
deputy
tor
space
plans,
actual cost will be vastly higher.
that
would
have
to
be
increased
lzy
The current national debt stands
ninefold
U
Star
Wars
were
to
be
a
at just over two trillion dollars. II Is
reality
by
tiP
year
nxl.
quite possible that "Star Wars"
U we proceed 1"lth Star Wars, we
could double that debt.
wUI
have to finan ce a new
In the June 9 Issue of Time
g&lt;'neratlon
of much more expensive
magazine, the editors focus on a
and
ppWI't'!ul
rockets and slu tt les
little-discussed financial and tech·
to
11ft
tt.l
vaslly
heavier payloads
nical barrier to the proposal - tiP
into
outer
space.
enormous task of l:JuUdlng launeh·
U tt.l U.S. defense planners
ing systems capable of catapulting
decided
to arm the Star Wars
the huge Star Wars weapons Into
devices
tt.lmselves
agalnst possioo ter space.
ble Soviet attack, John Pike d the
It Is estimatBI that tt.l projert, . Ft!deratkln of American Scientists
even In its Initial deployment stage, estimates that tiP cost would
would require launching a vast "quickly become tizarre as q:~­
an-ay of sensors, computers, lasers posed to just daunting."
Already 46 senators, nearly hall
and mirrors, satelllte battle Sta·
the
U.S. Senate,haveslgned aletter
tlons and miniature nuclear re&amp;e·
urging
that spending on Star Wars
tors oo a scale that dwarfs all
be
limited
toabout$3 billion in fiscal
previous launches. Indeed, Thne's
1987.
reseorch team estimates that
Neltrer tiP $3 billion annual
p.lttlng all this heavy, complicated
spending
level suggested by the 46
maehlnery Into ooter space woold
Involve payloads d 00 times tiP

senators nor the $5.4 lillion re·
quested by Mr. Reagan Includes
any rroney for the new !au ochers
ne!'ded to lilt Star Wars into space .
It Is my own view thai Siar'Wars
Is the biggest military and political
loUy yet conceived In the arms race
madness. That Is not enough to stop
it. What may stop this biggest of all
military boondoggles Is !hat there

may no l be enough money In the
Treasury ore enough gold in Fort
Knox to finance it.
If lhe Russia ns really want to
being us down. trey will do
everyt hing they can to cOnvince us ·
that we should txJUd Soar Wars. II
they att~mpt to do'"'· I hope wewlll
have the t'Ommon sense not to take
the bait .

Berry's World
.

z

-

~ra.w.__,
~ 191CibyNE" 1r.c

S ·B

" Sonofagun! /hope I can be as cool a
customer as he is! "

ca•nR FILM
DiEVEI OPING
~' 12 EXPS. ROLL •• 1.99
a-1&lt; 15 EXPS. DISC 2. 99
24 EXPS. ROLL •• 3. 99
36EXPS. ROLL •• 5.99
I

season.

C-41 COLOR PROCESS PRINT FILM ONLY . GOOD ON
FILM DROPPED OFF FOR PROCESSING
BETWEEN JUNE 30 THRU JULY 12, 1986

.

. ....-.-.

Scoreboard ...
Majors
WLPd.GB

NATIONAL I..IAGtJE
8)' Vnl&amp;H PftN IDM!1
loMI

....

W L Pd. Gil

NY

49 ' 21 .700 -

Mnt rl
Phil a
Sl ' l..ou

«JJI~!I YJ

"''

"28 "43 ....
»1\
_JM '!I 'h

Plsbrl{ll

Hou!ilon

:~ li .493 14 YI
32 40 .+14 18

.....

SanF'ran
Mlanta
Sa~o

LA
Cncnn ll

41 l1 .s.~ 41 :w .M7
1,11
38 Ji .514 J
J7 :n .:m '
:14 41 .m 7trJ

:n

41 .431

9

Satlll"'laJ'•Rmllb
NE"Y.· York 5. Cht'llli!O ~
Mo n! real J, PII!Sburth 2
Sa n Franc~~. Qnl'lnnatl l
1\tla nt.a ~. San Olc-goJ
Houlton 6, l.ol Ar~JJ&gt;I1'5 4
PhiL&amp;dl'lphla 7, Sl. Luuls ( 10 \nnlnj.!s.
s.n~~..,-·

48 ~ .fNI 41 31 !147 B

lbslon

.....

MonUI'al 6, Plttlb.irJt!'

Atlanta 3. San 1&gt;1t«o I
Clnt'l nnatl '· San Franctsro J
PtllladC'IPhll 8, St. Lwls 1
NN.· York 7, Olk'Sf!O 4
Hoostoo t l.o1 AniJ'II'!i l

NY
Toronto
Ill I..

40 36

-~

9~

""""'

Mlwkf'l'

.11 I; .sll 10
Jl J.&lt;l .SI4 10\o'.z
J7 )6 .:ll'i' 11
11 36 .$ ll

Calif

«&lt; 34

~1

3~

.432

Clvlll&lt;l

«&lt; 35 .5!3

-

'f.l
J7 II .t!J .llf.!
~

32 4l

SPank'
Oak lafld

fl

. ~~

J]

oMi .«13

l1

(I

Sahrdq'• a....

10~

.:110 11 ~

Drtrolt 8. MUwaul.-&lt;' S
Toron10 1, Ntw York 4
Bornon 7. Balt!m01'4'J
Chkago 4. Oakland I
Mlrl~a

7. Kansas City '2

Call lomla 9, Ck&gt;vcland .1
'I'rll.as ~. Sra ltlt 2
hn!IQ'IRnllll!

lbiton 8, Ba lt!mO A" 3
Mlnncaa 9, KarLslu City 4
Tort~nkl

6. Nl'W York 3

Dt1rolt 9. Mlhrfak"' ~. br
Mltwau)H 3. DPtro\1 I. '2nd

ROCK SPRINGS - Hard-hitting
Chillicothe swept a doubleheader
over Meigs here Sunday, holdlngo!f
a late Meigs rally to win the opener
8-5 and romping 15-6 in the nightcap
in American Leglon baseball action
here Sunday.
A scheduled Saturday doublereader against Kenova was can·
celled due to field conditions.
The powerful Chllllcothe nine
posted wins 21 and 22 against only
six defeats this season, which
includes an 8-2 win liVer seven-time
de fending District Eight champion
Lancaster and two wins in three
games against always strong Ponsmouth. Meigs drops to 1G-9 on the
year,
In the first game, the Ross
Countains a 7-1 fourth inning lead,
txJt had to hold off Meigs as the
hosts scored tour seventh inning
runs.
Chillicothe, which is composed of
high school players from Unloto,
Waverly, Adena, and mostly ChUIIcothe, had fou r RBI's from Mike
Cpleman, Including a twb-run
homer in the first and a run-scoring
double ln the third, both of which
were deep line shots.
Meigs t\ad ace Dave Ambergey
on the mound , now4-2, wbowentthe
distance and excepting a rough!
third and fourth Innings, pltch\.'d ,
well. Ambergey allowed 10 hits, but
gave up three each In the the third
and founh, leading to five ChUUcothe runs. He fanned four and
walked only two.
ChUllcothe's left ·handed screwbaUer Je!f Davis was tooched up for
seven hits, l:Jut o~ three alter tiP
first two innings. Dave had walked
only one batter untO the Sf'\II'Dth

,

when
plated re
low-Issued
runs. three as Meigs
PhD Bailey was the only Meigs .
player with two hits, a single and ·
double while Brian Durst had a
double and Otrls Kenlll'lly, Donnie
Becker, Dave Lockhart, and Am·
hergey e!IC h singled onre.
Agile sh:&gt;rtstop Brian Kaltenback
led Chilllcott.l with a single and two
doubles while clea n-up hitter Mike
Taylor had a double and triple to
add to Coleman's home run and
double.
Chillicothe taught a baseball
les511n to Meigs' yoonger players In
the second game as they jumped to
a 13-1 lead by the fourth Inning.
Otlillcothe, who had only 12
players, had many go both ends of
tt.l twlnblil whUe Cooch Jack
Welker went with his yoo~er
players among his lB·man roster.
West Virginia State'~sophomore­
to-be power·hltter ·Scot Gheen
cracked a long grand slam homer
in tre Meigs !Uth to narrow the
score to 13-5 at the time tor the ooly
plus ftlr the local nine In the
nightcap.
.
·
Chllllcotre' s Kurt Rhinehart·
started and had a one-hitter
working before Gheen 's clout,
which knocked him !rom the
mound and brOught on hard·
throwing Shane Hardy. Hardy tired
three hitless Innings to sbJre up tre
•

Mike Bartrum hu ded tt.l first .

mUton and right fielder Ken
Landreaux were also charged with
errors lor the fltth·place Dodgers,
who tell 7 1-2 games out of first.
"There Is no partrl. our game that
we can look at as positive," said
Dodgers first baseman Len Matuszek. "We have not pitched, hit or
played defense consistently. Until
we begindolngthosethlngswell, we
have nothing to buDd on, yet we are
still close."
Phil Garner led off Houston's
two-run seventh with a routine
grounder to short. Shipley's throw
to first sailed into the dugout,
allowing Garner to take second.
Losing pitcher Fernando Valenzuela then struck oot Glenn Davis, but
wUd-pltched the thlnl .strtke, permitting Davis to reach first and
Garner to move to third.
Kevin Bass lined an RBI single to
left, which also sent Davis to third.
Jose Cruz chopped a bouncer back
to the box tor an Infield single to
drive in the winning run.
"It's nice to IE back IIi ftrst
place," said Frank DIPino, who
collected his third save In relief of
victorious reliever Manny Hernandez, 2·3. "Hopefully, we'll stay there
the rest of the time. I think we
show\!~! Tommy and the rest of tt.l
guys liVer tt.lre that WI.' weren't
renting !lrst place." ·
Eqlos PlraiEs 4
At Pittsburgh, Tim Raines had a
triple, double and single, stole two
bases and knocked in the go-ahead
run to spark tiP Dcpos, who
pounded wt 15 hits. Andres Galarraga added a stio home run oft
Pirates starter and loser Mike
Bielecki, 4·5. Floyd Youmans, 7·5,
""rked nve Innings br the victory.

three Innings, was relieved by
Brian Durst In tt.l fourth, and Je!f
Nelson also came on in the fourth to
finish up. Nelson was tt.l most
successful Meigs hurler, allowing
three runs In three and two-thirds
Innings.
Besides Gheen's home run, Bailey had a triple and Durst and
Nelson each a single.
The
Rhinehart brotrers, Carey and
winning pitcher Kurt, had six hits
between them including a single,
double, and triple by Carey and two
singles and a double by Kurt lor
Otilllcotre. Eric Johnson added
three singles tor tt.l free·swtnglng
winners.
Meigs will be busy this hollday
weekend as they play three doublet.laders on consecutive days. Meigs
travels to Wellston Friday, hosts
Marietta Saturday, and goes to
Logan Sulllay. All tilts start at 1
p.m.

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oz.

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~

Bnvm 3, Padres 1
At Atlanta, David Palmer threw
a four·hltter and knocked ln tt.l
go-ahead run to lead the Braves.
Palmer, 4-6, went the distance for
tt.l second time, as tt.l Braves
extended thetr winning streak to
four games. Mark Thurmond, 3-7,
took the klss for the Padres, who
have dropped three In a row.
Reds f, GIE18 3
At Cincinnati, Ron Oester's
bases-loaded, none-w t single in the
ninth Inning scoml Eric Davis and
provided tre Reds' winning mar·
gin. Ron Robinson, 6-0, faced atly
one batter txJt earned tt.l decision.
Mike LaCoss, 7-3, took tt.lloss and
hit a homerun, hlssecondlnhlslast
two at·bats.

SPECIAL

"

~

SUNDOWN
SUNSCREEN

e.

Chicaao 6. Oakland ~. JJ lnnan,;&amp;
Ck'veland 6, Callklmla 4
&amp;&gt;ank&gt; 9, T01a' 3

31 8 N. Stcond Awe.

JOHNSON
• JOHNSON

._..

llJII)()Wij

'

Rookie third baseman Jeff Ha-

lACOSS HOMERS -San Frudlco pMdler MUte LtlColl Cf1111BI
home plale after hitting a IIOio home nm off Bedl Tom BroM!Ing
Suaday. Clndnnall came back to win the pme, 4-3. (UPI)

•

L--

Clnclnna' '.
Shipley, a rookie shortstop play·
lng In his fifth major· league game,
comrnltted a two- bose throwing
error that started a two-run seventh
Inning for tt.l Astros. It was
Shipley's second error of tt.l

wln.
)

RABD'O

UP18polt.t Writer
Australlan·born Craig Shipley
haa adjUJ181 quk:kly to the Los
Angeles Dodgers' bull\ bUng type rl.
defense.
The Dodgers lead the major
leagues with 91 errors, and commit·
ted three Sulllay In a 2-1loss to the
H11111ton Astros, who asswned first
place by a halt-game liVer the San
Francflco Giants, who lost to

Legion drops pair, 8-5, 15-6

Hidden price t....afiilg~______c_eo_:rg:::.__e_M_cG_ov_e_rn

Today is Monday. June ll. the 181st day of 1986 with 184 to foUow.
The moon Is moving away from its last quarter.
} b e morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercu ry, Venus and Saturn .
Those born on this dar e are under the sign of Cancer. They include East
German leader Wa lt er Ulbrich! in 1893, English socialist leader Harold
Laski in 1893, film dlrertor Howard Hawks In 1896, singer Lena Horne In
1917 (age 691, actress Susan Hayward in 1917, and actor Tony Musante In
1~ (age 00) .
bn this date In history:
In 1870, Ada Kepley became the first woman to graduale from an
accredited law school in the United States- Union College of Law in
Ollcago.
Jn 1924, the "Teapot Dome" scandals resu lt ed in lhe indictment of
Interior Secretary Albert Fall and oUmen Harry Sinclair and Edward
DOheny. All three were charged with bribery and conspiracy to defraud the
goyernment in the leasing of naval oil reserves In Wyoming and California .
,In 1936, Margaret Mitchell's ClvU War novel "Gone Wlthtt.l Wind'' was
p.lbllshed.
: Jn 1950, America n troops were rroved from Japan to help defend South
JS&lt;lrea against tre invading North Koreans.
• Jn l!&amp;l, the extended deadline for ratification of too Equal Rights
M-t.endment expired, three states short of the 38 needed for passage.
·ln 19ffi, all 39 remaining American hostages seized in too hijacking or a
T.IYA jet were freed after 17 days' captivity in Belrul. They were welcomed
fl!T'ranlduri, West Germany, by Vice President George Bush.
•A thought lor the day: Harold Laski wrote ln 1945, "We must plan wr
. cl~Ulzatlon or we must perish. "
·
·
·

Reds trip Giants; Houston back in first :.

Politics and Manion ____..:..:...W.=.illw:..:;;.,m.'_ _F._Bu_ck_ley..::..._}r•.

WASHINGTON - An Energy
Department official resigned last
February whUe tt.l General Accounting Office was Investigating
charges against her, l:Jut Rep . John
Dlngell, !).Mich., doesn't want to let
the matter end tt.lre. He wants the
department to take action against
the former official, Rossler
Douglas.
Douglas was appointed in 1!181to
head the Energy Department's
Office of Mlnortty Economic lm·
pact, ·a speclall:Jureau set up In 1918
to study the Impact of energy
~~--""""'~~~~-... ,policies and programs on minorities, and to increase minority
participation in the department
A stlll·restricted GAO report to
Dingell, who Is chairman of the
House Subeommlttee on Oversight
and Investigations, details several
accusations made against Douglas
- and GAO's findings. Our associate Lucette Lagnado obtained a
copy of tt.l GAO report. Here are
the hlghlighls:
-Examining records of fil trips
Douglas made ducing her tenure,
the GAO,found st.! "took 15 trips to

Today in history

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

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�Porneroy- Middiepon, .Ohio

Monday, June 30, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Bosox hike.lead; . .S.r ·goes to Boston
By MIKE TULLY
UPI National Baseball Writer
Somewhere along the way, Tom
seaver's suitcase began traveling
faster than his pitches.
But the Boston Red Sox, who beat
Baltimore 8-3 on Sunday, don't care
what their most recent acquisition
ha$1ostoffhls fastball. They believe
Seaver's experience, rather than
his velocity, wUI help them keep
their eight-game lead over the
secend-place New York Yankees in
the American League East.
"Seaver Is a Hall of Fa mer, a
genuine person, and a true prof!'Ssional," Red ,!)ox manager John
McNamara sail!: "We are very,
very thrilled. He knows what II is all
about. He's been there before and
he knows wbat we are trying to do :
Win games. And theY ankees didn't
get him."
To~y Armas slugged a two- run
homer and Jeff Sellers pitched a
nine-hitter Sunday. helping the Red
Sox complete a three-game series
sweep of Baltimore.
Boston players knew before the
game that Seaver had been acquired from the Chicago White Sox
for outfielder Steve Lyons. Seaver,
now with his fourth team, was
scheduled to pitch Tuesday.
" It will be good for us, because
Seaver can help us a lot," Armas
said. "It will be good for Lyons, who

can play every day."
· •. ~J.~l~~tnalsoextremely happy
The 41-year-old Seaver tuturt. · ~I!Jo'ltileloplay lor a person of the
Hall of Farner who has' won 31Jf,f~l'~' of (ma nager) J ohn
games, will enter . a .· tollltDtR~~ .. This Is a man I love
featUring Roger ckimens, tl!li ;li'~·'VJ,
right-hander who Is rldlne a 1+0 ';'.J.~Ueti:· l-3, gave up home runs to
start on the season that lnciU~l · t.\6,ltl!Cy and Cal Rlpken but
20-strlkeout game, and flamlto)llilll '· fll~ avoided trouble as Bos·
Dennis "Oil Can" Boyd, a 10.$'am~ ·i ~ ~ mtt.hed Its ftmrth straight
winner.
·.: ~- .lind eighth in Its last 12.
"Atthls point In my career, tlllsli ·' MDf.jloddlcker, 10·3, took the loss.
!'xtremely lmponant from a per; _c Jil'ollier games, Toronto downed
sonal standpoint," said ~avet.' '·' ' rileW,i"{Qit 6-3, Minnesota downed
"The closer I gettohome, the better ~~'tty 9-4, Boston bombed

a

.~a :.fJI'st

Murphy

(U PI )

Argentina cops
World Cup title
By United Press lntcrnalional
Celebrations broke out across
La tin America Sunday after Argen·
tina's 3-2 victory over West Ger·
many for the World Cup title.
In Buenos Aires, hu ndreds of
thousands of singing. pot· banging
people crammed the streets, wav·
lng fiags and honking car horns to
cele bra te Argentina's second
World Cup victory in eight years.
Argentina won the championship it
hosted in 1978.
The triumph preserved Latin
America's record of never losing in
the six World Cups held in the
Western Hemisphere since 19lJ.
Brazil defeated Italy 4·1 in the 1958
final in Sweden to become the only
country to wi n outsid!' its
hemisphere.
President Raul Alfonsin tele·
phoned Coach Car los Bllardo and
star Diego Maradona, say ing the
team set "an example for all our
country."
Foreign Minister Dante Caputo
said "Argentina triumphed today
and played a dignified game that
pleased the world."
In Managua, Nicaraguan Presi·
dent Daniel Ortega sent a telegram
to Alfonsin.
"Together with thou sands of
Latin Americans we followed allen·
tlvely the development of the 13th
World Cup final and celebrate with
joy tile Argentine victory," he sa id.
"We ask you to transmit our
sincerest and fra ternal congra tula·
lions to each member of the team."
During the game, streets were
deserted in Colombia , where Ar·
gentlna defender Jose Lu L' Brown
once played for the Naclonal de
Medellin club and midfielder
Marcelo Trobbian i played for the
Millonaires de Bogota team.
Brown scored Arge ntina's first
goal oo a header rn Jorge Burrucha·
ga's free kick a nd Trobbiani

The Daily Senlinel
1lll PS 14 :1-INJO I
A DMslon of Mulll med la , Inc.

WIMBLEDON. England (UP! )
- Wimbledon 's seeded playE&gt;rs
traditionally begin to clash in tile
fou rt h round. Of Coday's 16 singles
matches, however, only three are
between the expected comwtltors,
wi th two presenting the possibility
of a major upset.
Defend ing cha mpion Boris
Becker. seeded fourt h, will meet
No. 13 Mikael Pernfors In a la t!'
afternoon match which Is difficult
to predict and women'ssE'Cond s!'€&lt;1
Chris Evert Lloyd meets No. 16
Kathy Jordan. lhe victor in their
1983 m!'Ctlng here.
Becker has lost only one service
ga me and one Sl.'t this year while
rolling through his three opponents
on Cent er COUI1. But Pern!ors
ou sted the 18-year-old from the
French Open, winning the quarter·
final In four sets. and the Swede
knows the West Gecman is at his
best on grass.

Specials ·
•Money Saver Items
•Everyday Low Prices
•USDA Choice Meats
•Tender F-resh Produce
•We Welcome Federal
food Stamps and WIC
•We Sell Money Orders

title in II years

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Phone 44fi. 4524

BARGA I&lt; MATI&lt;EES SAT - SUN I
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PRESENTS THE

"'

entered in the last minute as a
substitute.
There was a quiet in Panama
usually reserved for Roberto Du·
ran's boxing matches.
ln Cararas, thousands took to the
streets at the end of the game,
honking horns and shouting "Viva
Argent ina, Maradona and Latin
America ." The same shou ts were
heard in Venezuela's s!'Cond largesl
city, Maracaibo.

Fourth round
action begins
at Wimbledon

onf

0 VALLEY SPEEDWAY

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.
MARADONA GOES OVER 111E TOP - Argentine World Cup
superstar Diego Maradona winces as he ·goes acros&lt;i the top of Wesl
Germany's Hans-Peter Briegel for the soccer baD during Sunday's
Worid Cup finals In Mexico City. Argentina claimed Ill! world t~ le, 3-2.

Baltimore 8-3, Ollcago downed
Oakland 6-5in 10 Innings, Oeveland
beat California 64, and Seattle
routed Texas 9-3. Detroit split with
Milwaukee , winning 9-5 th!n losing
3·1. Blue Ja,ys 6, Yrmlrees S
At New York, pinch hitter Cliff
John son sparked a three-run ninth
with a one-out RBI single, enabUng
Toronto to extend the Yankees'
home losing strea k to 10. John
Cerutti; 3-1, went two innings ilrthe
victory and Tom Henke filched the
ninth for his lOth save.

FOR HOME, FARM, BUSINESs··~.
&amp; INDUSTRY
.,

ARMOUR

Published every afternoon. Monda y
through Frida y, 111 Co ur t Sl., PomNoy , Ohio. by thf' Ohio Vall ey Pub-

LARD

Ushlng Company tMult lmt'dia. In c..
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Se·
.cond class pos tage paid n t Pomeroy,
O hio.

Me mber: United Press ln tNn a!lona l,
Inl and Dally Prrss Assoclalion and th r

-Normal L.P. Gas Tank
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•300 Gallons of L.P. Gas

Ohio Newspapr r Association . National
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POSTMASTER: Sf'nd address changes

to 'Ill&lt;' Da lly Semtne l, l ll Court St ..
Pomer oy, Ohio 45769.

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STARTS iEDNESDAY, JULY lnd
ANTHONY PERKINS in "PSYCHO 3"
I "tHE GREAT ~USE DETECTIVE"

SPECIAL WEDNESDAY
MATINEES
THIS SUMMER I

Bottle ·Gas

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. oPriceJ Eff!octive Monday, June 30 thru Sat.. July 5, 1986

•USDA Food Slllmpa Olodv Accepted • NOt R11ponalblo For Tvooaraohicot Error•

I
~-

~~
'

l

�:

Page-&amp;-The Daily Spntinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.....--Local briefs---..
•• •
' .

Coolville man cited by patrol

CLEVELAND iUPI) -Though average price d. unleaded regular
gasoline prices generally reach gas in the area was 18 cents In May.
their peak during the Fourth of July but rose as high as 89 cents a gallon
weekend, travelers will find an during June.
unexpected but welcome surprise if
Prices probably will remain at
Cleveland·area gasoline prices are"- the lower levels throughout the
a statewide indicator.
summer untO labor day, he said,
Cos,tsatareapumpshavefallen2 when fuel production shifts to
cents to 5 cents a gallon recently heating oils and other winter
and are expected to stay remain at products.
the low IE:vels through the weekend.
This year, motorist demand for
Prices in Northeast Ohio range gas has not matched supply,
from 83 cents to 85 cents a gallon, a leaving retallers with a surplus.
spokeswoman for Sohlo Oil Co.
said. Last summer about this time, Meet Thursday
area dealers charged about $1.15 a
gallon, said Elana Cocarri.
Olive Township Trustees will
George Pastor, executive dlrec· meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
tor of the Northern Ohio Petroleum Reedsvllle Fire Statton.
Retailers Association. said the

Blood pressure day Wednesday
The Scipio Si&gt;nior Citizens will hold blood pressure day from 2 to 4
p.m. Wednesday at the Scipio Fire muse with the Rutland
Emergency Squad in charge.

Units answer 11 weekend calls
Local units answered 11 calls over the weekend, the Meigs County
Emegency Medical Si&gt;rvices rl'p0t1s.
Sunday calls Included Pomeroy at"'.l: 16 a.m. to Crew Road lor
Kenneth Stewart. to Holzer Medical Center; Middleport at 2: 17p.m .
to Rutland St. for Pauline Russell. ro Holzer Medical Center;
TUwers Plains at 2:44p.m. to Rourr 7 For Harry Rowley to Hoizf&gt;r
Medical Center; Middlepot·t to Broadway at 5:10 p.m. for Albert
Stewart, to Hoizf&gt;r Medical Center; Pomeroy to the sheriff's office at
5:10 for Edward Eakins. toVl'teransMemorial,and Pomeroy at 7:15
p.m. to Village GrPen Apartments for Brandy Fortune. to O'Bieness
Hospital in Athens.
On Saturday at R: 3.1 a.m .. Racine took Shirley Powell from County
Road 35 to Pleasant Valley Hospital: Racine at 11:45a.m. took Frank
Lemley from Blind Hollow Road to Veterans Memorial; Middleport
treated but did not !Tanspot1 Jamie Hanis at 3:45p.m.; Racine at
8:12 p.m. took Eliza Hayman from Route l38 to Hoizf&gt;r Medical
Cmter. and Pomeroy at 8:48p. m. treated Bernie Neihm at Royal
Oak Park.

Tournament slated

Court news

London Pool in Syracuse is Off&lt;'ring its second session of swimming
lessons starting July 7 for children ov£'1' three years old. Also
advance life sav ing classes will be held starling July 8. Residents
wishing more information may ca ll 9921·9909. Instructor is Zane
Beegle.

Weather forecast
South Central Ohio:
Increasing cloudiness with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms this afternoon. The highs
will be near 85. Showers and
thunderstorms likely tonight with
lows )let ween 65 and 70.
Mostly cloudy TUesday wit h a
chance of showers and thunder·
storms and a high ner 85.
The outlook for Friday is for fair
weather with a low ner60 and a high
near 75.
The probability of precipitat ion is
40 percent today, 70 percent tonight
and 40 percent Thesday.
Winds will be from the east
around 10 miles an hou r today and
tram the southeast around 10 miles
an hour tonight.

Ohio Extended Forecast - Wed·
nesday through Frklay: Chance d
showers Wednesday , clearing
Thursday and fair Friday. Highs
will range between ffi and 85
Friday. between 75 and ffi Thurs·
day and 65 and 75 Friday. Lows will
range between 60 and 65 Wednes·
day and Thursday and 55 and 60
Friday.

I

Clarence E. !Little Dusty! Darst
of Naples. Fla .. formerly of Midd l~· ·
port. died Saturday at a hospital in
Naples.
He was prC'Ceded in death by his
parents. three brothers and two
sisters. Survivors include his wife,
Helen; a son, Eugene of Naples;
two sisters, Frances Davidson of
Route 1, Rutland, and Edna
Davidson of Wells Road, Route I.
Middleport.
Private funeral services will be
held arlO a.m. Tuesday in Naples.

Clifford Newlun
Clifford G. Newlu n, 71 . died
Monday morning at his Long
Bottom home.
Mr. Newlun was born May 1.1915
at Long Bottom, a son O\ the late
.Jasper New ton and Lula Vera
Congrove Newlun. Hr was em·
played by 1he U. S. Corps of
Engineers. He was a member of thP
Chester Masonic Lodge, Disabled
American Veterans and belonged
to the A.F.L.-C.I.O.
Survlng are a son. John 1\ewlun.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Sarurday Admission - None
Saturday· Discharge - Guy
Bush.
Sunday Admissions - William
Eakins, Mlddlepcrt; Rena Fitch,
Long Bottom.
Sunday . Discharges - Anna
Bareswilt, Lena Cooper.

Smith-Bowles
The annual Smlth-Bowles reun-'
ion wa~ held at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Ztba Midkiff Sunday with a
picnic dinner under the chestnut
tree on the farm.
Attel\dlng from out·of·town were
Mr lind Mrs. Eldon Bowles,
Dayton; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Nautlee, Dayton; Mr. and Mrs.
Joshua Aleaba, Dayton, Mr. and
Mrs. Walt Dun, BrookvUie; Mr. and
Mrs. Ron Smith, Lindsey and

'

Kristen Smith, Versailles, Ky .; Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Martin, Florida;
Elber and David Bowles, Huntington; Benetta Dickerson, Proctorville; Mr. and Mrs. Home Midkiff,
Arizona.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bowles,
Athens; Lucille Bowles, .Athens;
Mr. and Mrs: Scott Ervin, Athens; .
Kathy Bowles, David Bowles, John
Doe, Shirley Bowles, Brenda·Scott,
June Leach, Jeffers' Leach; Jeff
Mlncald, Greg .Leach, Geriikt L.
Ulbrich , John Ulbrich, Kevin Ul-

Hollon
The annual reunion of the E.R.
Hollon family and friends wa s hl·ld
last weekend at the Rout&lt;• 11
roadside park In Pomeroy. Arthur
Barr had grace.
Attending wer~ Mrs. Do rm an
Morrison, Mrs. Mart ha Clonch.
Pomeroy; Mrs. Grovie DiPhi,
Otarleston, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Hollon. Ryan and Tiffany,
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Hollon. Mr.

and Mrs. Tom Hamm, Chris and
Philip, Mr. and Mrs. Ron Holter.
Tammy and Ryan, all of Racine.
Mrs. Ellen Diehl Wirth, Belle.'
W.Va .: Mr. and Mrs. Dale Brlckles
and Nathan. Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Sinclair and Ryan .
Shade .
Mrs. Opal Hollon. Mr. and Mrs.
E.R. Hollon. Chester; Mr. and Mrs.
Arthu r Barr, Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Parker, Marietta; Robert
Parker, Virginia; Jimmy Hollon
and Shannon and Rhonda Hoschar.

Parkersburg, w .va,; Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Hollon, Tammy and Scott,
Columbus; Mr. andi Mrs. ruck
Hollon. EriC, Ricky Chasatie, Mrs.
Barbara Hollman, Stl'phanie and
Robert, Long Bottom.
Games were played and prizes
awarded to E.R. HoiOn, Cl&gt;al
Hollon. Stl'phallle Halfman, Ro~rt ,
Parker. Nathan Brickles, Tiffany
and Shannon Hollon, Martha
Clonch. New officers elected were
Larry Hollon, president, and Barbara Hoffman, secretary.

Outstanding 4·H'ers Si&gt;lected As
Ohio 4·H Congress Delegates David Rice, Gary Coleman, Janet
Stiltner, Mary Edwards, Jodi
Brown. and Steve Grady represented Meigs Coun ty at the 69th Ohio
4· H Congress June 18·21, at Ohio

State University.
According to Cindy Oliveri.
County Extension Agent, Home
Economics and 4·H, t.heseoutstand·
lng 4-H 'ers represented Meigs
County in 3~ days of tours,
activities, seminars, workshops

Young graduates

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:·
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Kila A. Young graduated summa
cum laude from Rio Grande
College June 8 wllh a bachelor of
science degree, accounting major,
computer science. minor. She was
honored as the outstanding ac·
counting student for the 1985-86
year.
Young Is a charter member of .
Alpha Lambda Delta Honor Society
and the Rio Grande College Ac· ·
counting Association. She is listed In
Who's Who Among Colleges and
Universities , was rt&gt;ciplent of the
Ohio Academic. Rio Grande Dis· .
trict and Kibble Scholarships, and
whlle in college comp leted a three
month internship wit h the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court. She
has been involved with 4·H aclivJ.
ties in Meigs County for eight years
and has been a mcmber of the
Student Ambassadors for Free
Enterprl'il' at Rio Grande.
She is r,,'t'SI.'Iltiy associated with
James Rossi. CPA at Point Pica·
san! . W.Va.
Young is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Young. Reedsville.

and other programs focused on
leadership development. career
education and exploration. and
citizenship, and government invol·
vement. The Central Trust Company. Meigs County Agriculture
Society. and the Meigs County 4·H
Committee sponrored this award
ttip.
Ohio 4-H Congress is &lt;:onducted

by State 4·H Faculty mcmbrrs of
the OSU Coopera ti ve Extension
SPrvice and features many out·
standing resource people, speak·
ers. workshop coordinato rs. and
even entertainers whrch make the
experience a highlight of delega tes
4·H years. Approxim ate!.\· !100 4-H
mPmbers age 14 c1nd O\'Pr arr
selected to participate ea('h vcar .

David Rice is the son ri John and
Anna Rice of Run Road, Reedsville.
He is 15 years old and Is a member
of the Country Clovers 4·H Club.
Gary Coleman is the son of Loren
and Mary Coleman of Nye Avenue,
Pomeroy. He is 18 years old and is a
member of the Meigs County
Marvels 4· H Club.
Janet Stiltner Is the daughter of

Auxiliary hears Girls State delegate
Jennil'er Couch, delegate to Buck·
eye Girls State, gave arl'port on her
actlvttles there at TUesday night's
meeting of the American Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post 39,
Pomeroy.
Jennifer was elected to the State
Highway Parmi. A highlight of the
week for her was a talk by Maureen
Reagan who is a former Girl Stater.
Iva Powell presided at the
meeting with Veda Davis giving the
prayer. There was group singing of
the national anthem and the ~edge
to the flag . Officers' reports were
given bY Catherine Welsh and
thank you notes were read from the
Tubercubsis and Health Assocai·
ton and from Brett Sharp. Mrs.

KUa A. Young

Davis rqJorted on cards and
flowers srnt to Helen lianson
Isabell£' Couch. Vrlsic Roush. and
Edith Sauer who Ls rl'po rtedl\· in a
nursing home.
·
·Anita · smith sa ng "America"
with Kathy Pullins at ti'£' piano.
Marge Fetty and Robin CAmpbell
will be lustesscs for the July
meetin g when off icPrs will bC
installed.
Mrs . Davis SCf\'l'd J'C'frcshmrnl s
assisroo by Robin ra mpbC'II and
Anita Smit h. They uS&lt;'li a roo. whit e
and blue ti&gt;:'me with a poppy
arrangl'ment fiark('() by ted tapers
as tlte cc nt erpiecc· . Mrs. Davis
presented .lf'nnifer Couch with a

ca ke inscribed "Congratulations
Jennifer" which was served with
punch during the social hour.

Joe and Betty Edwards rt Cheshire.
She is 15 years old and is a member
of the Wiggle and Giggle 4-H ClUb.
Mary Edwards Is the daugbt£'1l d.
Pearl and Linda Edwards of 1A$1g
Bottom. She is 15 years old and 11 a
member of the Wiggle and Giggle
4·H club.
Jodi Brown is the daughter .of
Jack and Kay FrederiCk d. Leadlpg
Creek Road, Middleport. She is '16
years old and Is a member of the
Meigs County Better llef&gt;f Clqb.
Steve Grady is the son of Paul and
Cathy Grady of Bowman Rtin,
Racine. He is 15 years old and is a
member of the Outsiders 4-H Club.

NOTICE
THE FLEA . MARKET
.
AT MEIGS COUNTY FAIR GROUNDS

WILL NOT BE HELD IN JULY

BACK AlAIN IN AUCUST

Trustees to meet
Salisbury Township Trustees wil~
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
township hall on the Rocksprings
Road. A public budget hearing will
be held at that time.

Lodge meets Tuesday
Middleport Lodge 363. F&amp;AM.
will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
the temple.

To meet Tuesday

Publil' viewing

SUMMER'S NEW I

Sunon Township Trustees will
meet at 8 p.m. TUesday at the
Syracuse Muncipat Builduig.

Chapter 2 Block Grant Program
and Tit le 6 B Special Education
Flow·Through Applications are
available for public viewing at the
offic&lt;' of the superintendent. East·
ern Hig h School. duting regular
bu siness hours.

I

Long Bottom; two daughters.
Jeanlf Reynolds and PhyUls How·
erton. both of Middleport; a special
friend. Virginia Walton. Reeds·
,;lie; a brother. Edwin Newlun,
Pataskala; four sisters. June Grlf·
fin, Long Bottom; Ruth Powell.
Reedsville; Nellie Connolly, Ma ·
rietta, and Wilda Smith, Kansas
City, Mo.. and 11 grandchllldren.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by two sons, two
daughters. his wife, Mae Kathryn
Larki ns Newlu n, a son·ln-law and
srveral brothers.
Si&gt;rvlces will be held at 1 p.m.
Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with Rev. Glen Deeter
officia ting. Burial will be In Sand
Hill Cemetery at Long Bottom .
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 p.m. TuesdaY.·

brich, Greg Ervin, Sharon Ervin,
John Ervin, all of Athens.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Smith,
Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Smith,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Sam
Curtis, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Windon,
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Holter. Mrs.
Elma Epple, Mrs. Lucy Gaul,
Roger Gaul, Mrs. Edrui Clark, Mr.
and Mrs. Rlchard Barton; Mr. and
Mrs. Charley Chaffee, ·Mae Rom·
. ine, James H. Smith, Mr. and Mrs
Cecil Mldklfl;Courtney and Carson
Midkiff.

.:4-H Congress attended by Meigs County delegates _ _ _ __

t===':H:O:NE=~====~L~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

All water bills for the month of
July are to be paid at the water
office in Pomeroy Village Hall. The
office Is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m .
Monday through Friday and from 8
a. m. ro noon on Saturday.

• •

Families gather for annual reunion acttvtttes___________,

IEIEDS:YII1E, OH.

Reminder

Monday, June 30, 1986

•

Continued from page 1

was seriously considering a re- geted at European capitals. The ·
sponse to a compromise offer hy United States so far has deployed
Sovlet leader Mikhail Gorbachev about 572 of the Pershing 2 and
on medlum·range missiles in cruise missiles it plans to deploy in
E urope.
Europe.
The dfer was made in a personal
letter delivered a week ago by the Issued license
Sovlet Union's new ambassador to
the United States and was noted as
Steven William Bunce, 22, Mid·
another sign that a Reagan· dleport, and Denise Lenla TUrner.
Gorbache.v summit meeting will be 22. Pomeroy.
held late this year or early next
Douglas Eugene Adkins, 31,
year, U.S. olflclals said.
Middleport. and Velvet Lee
The Soviets have 441 SS-20 Swisher, 25, Middleport.
intermediate range missiles tar·

The Daily Sentinel

"

39537 STA111J. 7

Probe 8 &amp; E

Area deaths

Clarence Darst

investigation
was ordered.
the fourth degree.
Apre-sentencing
Strassman had· been Indicted by
the grand jury on a charge of
possession and use of a controled
substance, abuse of the third
degree.
The reduced charge carries an
indeterminate sen tence of 6.12 or 18
months.

A breaking· and entering and
several incidents of domestic vio·
tence were investigated over the
weekend by the department of
Meigs County Sheriff Howard
Frank.
At 2: 15Sunday afternoon, Sharon
.Johnson returned to her home at
Racine to find a breaking and
entering in progress. She rl'pOrt.ed
that nothing was taken from the
house and the Incidence remains
under investigation.
Reported Sunday to the sheriff's
department was an accident which
occurred Thursday. John Bass of
Dexter reported that he was
traveling on his motorcycle on
County Road 17 when he rounded a
curve and stuck a cow. The
motorcycle was overturned and he
received some injury. He was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital for
treatmen t by private vehicle. The
inciden t remai ns und er
investigation.

Foreign...

•

By The Bend

and the 10th·lowest in the country,
he said . Hawaii, Connecticut and
Washington, D.C. have the highest
prices, while South Dakota, Okla·
homa arid Iowa have the lowest.
The popularity of compact cars
also is contJibutlng to the gas
surplus. he said.

FABRICS &amp;
CRAFTS

Joseph Solomon Strassman. ap·
pearing In the court of Judge
Charles Knight Monday morning,
entered a plea of guilt to a felony In

urban and rural areas were more
ft-ee from crime in 19~ than in 1984.
mainly because those in urban
areas were hit by fewer violent
crimes and rural ooes had tess theft
away from home.

"They don't want the competitor
to get a footmld," Pastor said, and
so are lowering pJices. "We
expected an Immense amount of
traveling but are only sa&gt;lng about
half rt what we expected."
Ohio gas prices are 5 cents to 6 .
cents below the national average,

------------t
OpsnlnR Julg Ill
EASTERN HILL
FABRIC SHOP

Pleads guilty

·: ·Cr;me
continued from page 1
., ... ________
_
not rqJorted. an agency !p&lt;lkesman
said.
In 5 percent of the households. a
member fell victim to a violent
crime- rape, robbery or assault last year. One in every 60 urban
households had a member who was
robbed, compared to one in 112 in
the suburbs and one in 295 in rural
areas.
The report said households in

The Big Bend Pony League will
hold a pony league tournament July
H3 in Mason. W. Va. Teams
Interested should call 992-7582 before July 4.

An action for dissoluton and
another for divorce have bee.n filed
in the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
Shelley Proffitt, State Routl' l38, Plan yanl sale
Portland, and Monty Proffitt,
Route 1, Portland, have filed for a
The Bethany Church will hold a
yard sale Wednesday and Thursdlssolutlon of their marriage.
Marcella Casto, 36464 New Haven day on State Route 124 near Racine.
Road. Long Bottom has filed for a 1
divorce from Donald Eugene Casto.
Minersville, charging gross neglect
of duty and extreme cruelty. She
· asks for custody of two minor
children.

Second swim session starts soon

l

Increased gas supply keeps holiday prices down in Ohio

ACoolvllleman was cited by the state highwaypatmlforfallureto
control the motor vehicle he was driving on Township Road m
Saturday In Orange Township.
John F. Cremeans, 16, was routhbound on ll3 at 3; 50 p:m. when he
lost control, veering off the right side d. the road and striking a fence,
according to the patrol's accident rl'port. His car was moderately
damaged.

' .

Monday, June30. 1988

JamHha Marta WIIHord

Lottery winners

Wilford birt/j

CLEVELAND (UPJ) - Satur·
day 's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number
289.
Ticket sa tes t o t a 1 e d
$1.281,:m.so. witb a payoff due of
$607,2n.50.

Kimberly and Ray Willrord .
Rutland. are announcing the birth
of their first child, ,Jamltha Marla ,
hom .tunc 8 at the Holzer Medical
Center. The infant weighed eight
pounds. nine oun&lt;Ys and was 21
inches long.
Maternal gra ndpart•nt s arc How·
ard and Marl!' Birchfield. Rutland.
and great grandparents are Noah
and Mlrley Birchfield. Dade City.
Fla.
Pat ernal grandparents arc Bill
and Chilrlotte W!Uford. Rutland.
and the great grandparents are
Bernie&lt;' Wll~ord . Rutland . and
Emmett and Goldie Lightfoot,
Middleport. Mae Lightfoot. Middle·
port, is a paternal great great
grandmother.

Lotto

29, 22, 20, 8, 34, 32.
Lotto ticket sales
$3,260.590.

rota led

.....---'----------1

INTERESTED IN FREE RENT?

1

I

1

,................
............ It
'*'

1111 II( !1$11

~

COME TO THE MAPLES
THE MAPLES "Free R•t" ...irtments

'

-,..-

•Applicants must apply or move in between June 20. 1986 and July
31, 1986.
•Applicant must meet HUD income requirements
•Applicants must move into THE MAPlES no later than 30 days after
application paperwork is completed.
dppllc~nts will receive free rent for 30 days followin&amp; move·in.
•Applicants must make full sectrity deposit peyment prior to move-in.
dpplicants must live in an effic~~Y apertment atTIIE MAPlES aminimum of six (6) months or will forfeit free rent amount from security
deposit return.
;rApplicants must be 62 years of or must have proof of handicap or
disability.
Call or stop in at THE MAPLES for more information

•ce

99 2 7022

IJL------~~~~·~~~:t_

______J

Dinner held

Members of th Adult Bas.lc
Education class or Pomeroy held a
• surprise dinner for the teac hers of
· the class. Mrs. Pat Neece. Mrs.
: Awnelle Aleshire, and Mrs. Tina
: Green.
•1
Attending were Pamcta Marie
:1 Judi, John E. Brannum, Debra M.
;I Krautter, Joan Landers. .Shirley
·I Hubbard, Debbie Willie, Donald
:1Armentrout, Or~tha , Marion and
) Michelle Snider. Karen Blanken·
·t ship and Rick, Ann Colburn. Dewey
• Autherson, Brenda Watson, La:1 retta Timmons, Jure Yost, Bill
~ Miller. and John Bush.
J

Slinderella meets

At the TUeday night Mason Class,
Naomi Young lost the m:&gt;st wrekly
I weight and rhe runner·UP was Nora
Fields. In the kids class, Nikki
I.-weaver bst the rrost weight with
Kelly Holcomb as runner-up. Ruth
Smith
was top loser at tbe
1
I Wednesday morning class, and
Joan Vaughan at the evening class
with
CatiiY Workman being runner·
1

I

I.' Up.

YOUR TICKtT TO WIN AND TRAWL OHIO!
Rub the six squares on your ticket. If any
three squares match, you win that prize
amount! Win a "free ticket." $2. $5. $25.
$50 to $100.000.
I

~tond Chance Drawing
Win 1of 2 Ohio-made Airstream motorhomes, plus enough cash to drive it around
Ohio for a year! (Total value each prize:
$150,000.)
Collect 12 "Travel Ohio" stubs. One
appears on the right-hand side of each
ticket Write your name and address on
each stub. and mail alll2 stubs to: SECOND
CHANCE DRAWING, P.O. BOX 94610,
Cleveland, Ohio 44101. One Airstream give-

away drawing occurs in August: thesecond
drawing occurs after the announced co nclusion of the game. Entries in lhe first drawing are not held over.
You are collecting 12 stubs to commemorate
the Ohio Lottery's 12th Anniversary.

Grand Prize Drawing!
Redeem winr.ing "free tickets" at an Ohio
Lottery Sales Agent and you're automatically entered in the Grand Prize Drawing to
be held at the announced conclusion of the
game. The Million Dollar Grand Prize is paid
at $50,000 a year for 20 years.

Out olthe 25,000.000 Onio.The Heart Of II All game cards
produced. there are 15 prizes ot 1100.000 ... 15,000 pr•zes
ol $50 .. . 37,500 prizes of $25 .. .t88 ,000~lf1Zesol ~~ · ·:
2,497,500 prizes of $2 ... and 1,250,000 "~ ticket w•nners.
I\AI 011 6 .:w'S
-TCH H Jf A (INO .....C '""'

'""''~'

IIOI.OI~I 1l( O il {~l\

Winners o1 $100.000 must submit claims, 1M person. for .
validation and payment a1 an OhkJ Lottery Regional OM•.ce In
Canton, Cincinnati, Cleveland . Columbus, Dayton. Manena.
Toledo Of Youngslown. All other winn.rs can coMectthelr
prizes ins1ant1y from any.lansed OhiO LOnery Sakts Agent

. (,__.
M~
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LIAK
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,..

Monday, June 30, 1986

Page-B-The Daily Sentinel

Holiday events planned in Pt. Pleasant
Point Pleasant Mayor J .J.
Wedge today announced plans for
tb!S year's "Happy Birthday to
America" celebration July 4-5 at
Krodel Park.
For the llrst tlme, the city w1ll be
sponsoring two days full of acttv,!-.
ties In oll&gt;ervance of the nation s
birthday, Including bands, twirlerS
and Dreworks.
The American Association 01
Retired Persons (AARP) wlll
sponsor an ox roast and bake sale
and the Mason County Community
Action Agency wtll have a booth
featuring baked goods and other
Items In the clubhouse.
Also on July • 4, the city will
recognize Disabled American
Veterans IDAV \, PrisOners of War

(POO's) and tmse Missing In
Action (MIAsl at 5 p.m.
Paddle bOating and swimming
at Krodel wlll open at 10 a ,m. end
close at 8 p.m. on both July 4 and
July 5. Miniature golf will open at ·
10 a.m. and close at 10 p.m. both 1
days. Harmon Park Swimming
Pool wll! open at 10:00 ii.m. and
. ~lose at 8 p.m. July 4.
Recreation Director Brtan Bt!Ungs has anrounced chlldrens'
games w1ll be held at Fort
Randolph at 3 p.m ., with awards
gtven In each class. A diving
contest Is scheduled for July 4 at 9
a.m. at Harmon Park Pool.
Registration Is now underway for
chlldren of all ages at the pool or
Krodel Park frO!'!! noon to 6 p.m.

Friday July 4
. Noon: Opening, .Invocation, fiag
raising; welcome by Mayor J immy
Joe Wedge.
1 p.m.: Annex (rock music).
2: ~ p.m.: Charley Lllly Poor
Side Band (country music) .
3: ~ p.m.: White's School of
TaekWon-Do demonstration.
4 p.m.: Old Milwaukee Band
(country, bluegrass).
5 p.m.: Veteran's recognition.
6 p.m.: Zucchini Pickers (folk
music) .
7:15p.m.: Sugar and Spice, baton
an,j porn porn group.
7:00 p.m.: Jonnle Belinda Mea·
doll~ (gospel music).
8:30p.m.: Sugar and Spice, baton
and porn porn group.
9 p.m.: StaffOOuse Rvad (rock) .
Da rk: fi reworks.

Bloodmobile making Mason Coun.ty stop
People who Uve and work In the
Point Pleasant area can celebrate
what's best about Amertca by
participating in a special Amertcan Red Cross blood drlve Tuesday, July 1, from noon to 6 p.m. at
Christ Eplsoopal Church, 8J4 Main
St.. Point Pleasant.
In addition to providing critically needed blood supplies for the
Fourth of July holiday, Mason
Countians will be able to demonstrate their love for their country
and fellow citizens through tbe
personal and patriotic act of
donating blood, according to Betty
Johnston, blood program coordi-

nator for Mason County.
"For life and Uberty, give before
you celebrate" Is the theme of the
blood drive, reflecting the purely
American s)irlt of volunteerlsm
which launched the Red Cross
blood program In the 1940s and
1950s.
"This coming Independence
Day Is very significant for area
residents, both because of the
celebration of one of our country' s
most beloved symbols c:t freedom,
and because the summer blood
slump has hit us earller and more
severely this year," Johnston
says.

"When we thlnkoftheglvlngand
bloodshed Involved In making this
country the best, the simple act of
donating blood Is one of the easiest,
most painless ways of demonstra 1.
!ng patriotism at its best, besides
the fact that each donation could
save as many as four Uves," she
adds.
Donating blood takes about one
hour, Including registration,
health check, refreshments and
about 10 minutes for the actual
blood donadon.
The July 1 blood drive Is being
co-soonsilred bv the Point Pleasant Junior Woman's Club.

Tuttle Cole, her great ~andmother, and B. Newland :
Tuttle, great great grandmother, pictured holdhtg
Sanuul!ha. The family now has three five generation
..,___
groups.

UM District makes assignments
COLUMBUS - Ap)Xllntments
have been made within the United
Methodist Church for the upcoming
year, and the list of. the Athens
district, which includes Meigs and
Gallla Counties, has been anoounced. United Methodist )Xllicy
requires ministers to be ap)Xlinted
annually.
Named superir.tendent ol the
district is Frank E. Rowe, serving
his first year.
In the Cheshlre Charge, Kurt G.
Cline, student pastor, has been
appointed. His charge Includes
Addison, Cheshire, Kanauga and
Kyger.
Coolville has been assigned
Jeffery S. Burdsall.
In Gallipolis, Richard A. VIlardo
has been appointed to Chrtst United
Methodist , and JoSEPh L. Hefner
aJ)d Gerald D. Lewis are assigned
to Grace United Methodi st. Lewis
will be in his third year as associate

at Grace.
In Green Parish, Centenary has
been ap)Xllnted Orville R. White,
who has been there three years , and
WOllam E. Canrode has been
assigned to Bethesda for the second
year. Both are part time.
Meigs Cooperative Parish resource ministries has been assigned Robert B. Mussman. At
Middleport Heath, Clemente S.
Zuniga has been assign~ for the
second year.
In the Northeast cluster of Meigs
Cooperative Paris h, Allred has
been ap)Xlinted Donald W. Archer
for the fourth year; Joppa was
ap)Xllnted Seldon Johnson for the
sixth year and ReedsvUle wlll be
assigned at a later time. · ·
James E. Corbitt is ap)Xlintect to
Pomeroy ·ror the filth year, and
Roek Sprtngs-Enterprlse Ch~ .
which InclUdes Enterprise, Flat,
woods and Rvck Springs, has been

assigned Melvin J. Franklin for the
second year.
Rutland Charge, which Includes
Pearl Chapel, Rutland, Salem
Center and Snmwille wUI be
supplied later.
The Southern Clu ster of Meigs
Cooperative Parish has been as·
signed Roger L. Grace al Apple
Grove In his third year and Paul A.
McGuire at Bethany for the fOurth
year. Syracuse Charge, which
Includes Asbury. Forest Run and
Minersville. has been assigned
Steven L Nelson for the fourth
year.
In the North GaUia Charge of
Gallla County, Chester L. Lemley
has been assigned for the fourth
year. The c)large Includes Bidwell,
Porter, VInton and Westerman.
.Pearl Casto has been assigned for
the thlrd yea r to Pattlot andJoanrtP
S. Kernitz was ap)Xllnted to Simpson Chapel In Rio Grande tor the
second year.

Athens District names superintendent
COLUMBUS- The Rev . Frank
Rvwe has been appointed District
Supertntendent of the Athens District of The United Methodist
e liureh. The appointment was
anoounced by Bishop Edsel A.
Anunons, resident bishop of the
W~ t Ohio Conference of The
United Methodist Church , at the
recent session of the Annual
Conference.
Rvwe succeeds the Rev. Benjamin Edwards. Edwards has been
assigned to the Christ United

'
Metoodlst
Church, Washington
Court House, after serving six ~ars as the Athens District
Soperlntendent.
Rowe has been pastor of the
Wesley United Methodist Church.
Bryan, for the past six years. He
has served Churches In Genoa,
North Baltimore. Lima, Columbus,
and Zanesvtlle. In 1958 Rowe was
pastor r1 the Conference Rural
Church of the Year, and was
awarded the Good Citizen Award
by the Roman Ca tholic Ptocese of

Columbus In 1973.
A native of Toledo, Rowe Is a
gra:luate of Bowllng Green State
tJnl-&lt;ersity and Oberlin School of
Theology. He received the Practl cal Theology Award from Oberiln
at the time of hls graduation.
He Is married to the former
Beverly Hessey of Fostoria, Ohio.
They have two sons, Steven and
John. Steven Is an attorney In
Columbus, and J ohn Is minister at
the New Ufe Community Church In
Little Rock, Ark.

~luegrassAmerica

f

set for Portsmouth
Sternwheel Regatta July 4th weekend
.- "Biuegr assAmerica!," a nonprofit organization, has scheduled
Its Drst annual Fourth of July
fistlval In Portsmouth, with 19
bluegrass groups coming In for the
event. BluegrassAmerlca has been
formed exclusively for preserving,
promoting, teaching and enjoying
bluegrass mu sic, its related traditions and Ideals.
. · BluegrassAmerlca Is being held
In conjunction with Portsmouth
Stemwheel Regatta, a July 4th
celebratlon that draws many thou ·
sands of people to the area
annuallY.
Stan Richards of the Ohio
...Department of Natural Resow;res
said, "The location chosen tJr the
festival which Is 7 ml~s west of
Portsmouth on Ol~ Creek Road ,
'just off Rt. 125, Is a natural tlf'e!!t
setting previously used for other
natlonal convmtlons.
The site," he stated "wlll accommodate up to 2,100 carrpers,ln" the
rough, and up to 6,100 cars and yet

retain the rustle atmosphere so
desirable for bluegrass festivals.
The Division rt Forestry wtll
provide 24 hour security and ample
water fi:Jr the festival goers,"
Richards said.
.Gary Rivers, co-ordinator llr tbe
Stemwheel Regatta said, "We )lope
to draw thousands of prople from
ouUylng areas to tiE bluegrass
festival who might otberwtse mt be
In the area and \l! able to take
advantage of the Sternwbeel Celebration." He tuJtlEr stated , "We
will try to J;l"OVlde an hourly shuttle
service l:lr the l:llk attending the
festival, so that they may participate In the many eva~ts or the
Regat!JI, Including t\toO big para:les
and two giant fireworks displays on ·
Friday and Saturday nJghts, canoe
r.a::es. carnival rtdes and other
events - 'With oo parking worries!"
Shirley Adams. chairman of the
Stemwheel Regatta said , "In add!·
lion to the rormal Sternwheel
events there wUI be a Liberty Bali

and a Captain's Dinner with
celebrities and V I P 's from all rNer
the state.
Judy Masters, chairman of tiE
BluegrassAmerlca festival said,
"We are combining patriotism and
cultural tradition In a giant festival
celebration. We wtll have 19 bands.
a free pig roast and a special big
gospel show at the festival oo
Sunday with Church service at 11
a.m. We're having The Country
Gentlemen, Ralph Stanley, The
Spencer Family, Quickstlver and
many other nationally .known
groups. Ourobjectlvelsto provlde a
"clean family-type festival at a price
everyone can afford .
Anyooe Interested In advance
tickels can contact Masters at
ll4-!i!6-~ll or WPA Y Radio at
614-l\3-5176. Dally rates are also
available at $7 for Friday, $8
Saturday and $7 for Sunday or $'!1
lbr the weekend at the gate.
Chlldra~ under 12 with parents are
tree.

Whistle found, just in the nick of time

I '

. BEREA, Ohio (UP! ) - A steam
whistle used In the Cleveland
surbub of Berea to call flreflghters
to' a blaze has been found - just In
time for the community's l50th
anniversary year.
The whistle, purchased from a
boat after an 1897 Dre In a men's
store destroyed much rl. the
oowntown area, was discovered In
the basement of retired Assistant
Fire Chief Samuel Gray, ln.
.He says the three-foot brass
whistle krown as Old Jumbo wasn't
really lost, just lost track of,
The whist~. used to call men to
work at the quarries, had been
purchased by Gray's wife's grandfather woose store ~;aught fire In

1897.
Gray, who retired In 1976 after~
years as a firefighter, acquired tiE
whlstleaooutadozenyearsago.It's
been In his basement much r1 that
time.
He says It takes two people to
carry It up or down the stairs.
Gray said that the 1897 Drewas so
bad !hat Cleveland shipped a Dre
a~glne out to Berea on the railroad
tracks to help battle the blaze. Store
owner J .C. Nokes was so saddened
by the loss of his store that he
purchased the brass whistle from a .
boat ad donated It to the town as a
fire whistle, Gray said.
Residents soon learned tha one
blast
the fire was In the

mean

center d town; two on the east side,
three oo the oouth side, four on the
west and five on the oorth side.
Historians, who said the whistle
was Installed at a mill, said It also
was used to signal starting and
stopping times at the sandstone
quarrtes. But by 19$, the quarrtes
wrre played out and ·closed, and
modem methods had been Introduced at the fire department and
tiE whistle became outdated.
Old Jumbo eventually ended up
at tiE dty's old electriC plant before
Gray said someone called him In
the 1970s telling him where It was
and that he might want it for some
personal and professional memories.

Spirit of Liberty, N.Y.

Lady Liberty has checkered past

Waving the to h for a quiet town .~

New York's lady in the harbor has
served as a sign of liberty and hope
for generations or immigrants and
their descend ants. But the Statue of
Liberty's history has more starts and
stops than a sightseer's trip up her 335
steps.
The idea that the peopl e of France
would give America a stat ue dedica ted to liberty was hatched at an 1865
dinner party given by French historian Edouard de Lahoulaye. Dinner
guest Frederic-Auguste Bartholdi , a
young sculptor born in Colmar, AI·
sace,. and raised in Paris, was deeply
msp1red. Having originally conceived
such a statue as a monument for the
Suez Canal, Bartholdi now saw it as a
symbol
of
Fra nco-American
friendship.
Barthold! began draw ing up his
plans for the Statu e of Liberty in 1870
but later that year the Franco-Prus:
sian War devastated Fra nce. Bartholdi's Alsace was lost to Gem1any, givmg the sculptor's passion for his
statue an added meaning
In 1871 , Bartholdi arrived in New
York to find out whether America ns
wanted the statue - and if th ey 'd help
pay for it. As his steam ship sa iled
mto New York Harbor, it pa ssed BedJoe's Island, named after the 17thcentury Dutch merchant who once
owned it. Barthold\ knew this was the
perfect home for "Libert y Enlightening the World."
After traveling throughout the
United States. Barthold\ concluded
that Americans would be will ing to
pay for Liberty's pedestal. Dt&gt;spitc
this, the statue was placed on hold for
three yea rs because of polilic.11 problems in France.
Barthold! completed his fina l draft
of the Statue of Liber ty in 1875. He
followed the conventioi1 of depletin g
liberty as a woman, her left foot
thrust forward over broken chains to
show the progress from her former
bondage. Liberty's seven-spiked

''-'~"'"'

-·~I

By Tom Tiede

~

ili!J.~h

-- 1

1

WORKERS IN PAHIS s ~nt nine years

J· I · _
h s

Lb

1,:.::~~~~~~~·~-~~~~~~~~~e~ta~t~ue~of~l~e~rt~y::_.- crown represents the! seven cont i· torch were ready for display in Phila-

nents and seas, the tablets in her left delphia in 1876. In June 1885, Bartholhand bear the date Ju ly 4. 1776. R.1r- d! dismantled the statue, packaged
tholdi borrowed th e classica l style of her in 2U crates and ship ped her to
the ancien t Greeks, his fiancee's arms Now York.
and hi s mother's prorile as rn odrls fur
America received Liberty, bu t had
110 place for a 225-ton woman. AtLi berty.
Alexandre Gustave Eiffel: creator tempts to raise $250,000 for Liberty's
of the famed tower. designed Liber- pedestal had been a phenomenal flop.
ty's framew ork . In Paris, varying Then German immigrant Joseph Punum bers of workers (depending upon litzer. partly out of sentiment and
how much money was available at partl y out of a desire to boost circulaany given time) pounded th in (1 !lOOth tion, ran editorials in his worki ngof an inch) sheets of copper and rivet· class Ne w York City daily. The World,
ed them together over a wooden asking for money for the base. The nafra m e to form Liberty's fea tures.
tion responded - especially AmeriThe construcuon of the 151-foot can schoolchildren. who contributed
Amazon took nine years - fr om !8i5 their mite boxes and pennies. The

to 1884 - and cost $400,000. Some Statue of Liberty was finally unveiled
people had naive ly hoped that she on a rainy Oct. 28. 1886.
would be do ne in time for America's
re nten nial. but onl y her arm and

ELBERFELDS

FIVE GENERATIONS - Mrs. Mabel Roush,
center, a resident ol Scenic Hills Nursing Home,
Galllpolls, is surrounded by tour generations of
family. AI right Is her daughter, Geraldine Roush
Cleland. At left Is her l{l'linddaughtw, Barbara

"Where Can We Find Him. " A
thank you note was read from Sandi
Hawley for a gi ft . Ca rds wrre
signed for May HoltN, Edith
Sisson, and Verm n and Helen

James J. Guinther, Susan F .
Guinther i&gt; Mary L. Guinther, Pt.
bt, Sutton.
Lorenzo D. Davis, Sr .. to Roger
W. Davis, Cert. of Trans., Porn.
Vlll.
Antbony Corsi, Helen Corsi to
Donald Edward Whaley, Ida Coteen Whaley, parcels, Bedford.
Donald Pigott. Susan Elizabeth
Pigott aka, Bettie or Betty Pigott to
Raymond F. Johnson, Dorothy M.
llmson, parcels, Olive.
Audra Edna Hayes to James
WUUam Boyd. Ladonna Garoldene
Boyd, parcels, Bedford .
Ross J . Stewart, Gertrude M.
Stewart to Steve Allen Burton,
Connie Faye Burton, Pt.lotslB&amp; 19,
Mldd. VIII.
Rvy Grueser, Opal M. Grueser to
Ronald Sykes, parcels. Chester.
Sherman Tillis, Kathleen Tillis
and Vtllageof Rutland, Agree Right
r1 Way, Rutland VIII.
Ellen Ebersbach and VIllage. c:i
Rutland, Agree Right or Way,
Rutland VUI.
Audrey G. McCoy, Dec., 1.0.
McCoy , Cert . of Trans, Chester.
Edna Pearle Canaday, Robert K. .
Can a:! ay to Allan Doyle Gibson, .
Sabra Joanna Gibson, parcels,
Rutland.
William D. Davis Jr., Coral D. ·
Davis to William D. Davis, Jr.,
Coral D. Davis, bt's, Syracuse.
Elmer E. Kaiser, Dec., to Loretta
E. Rvgers, fka, Loretta A. Kaiser,
Affld:, Bedford.
'

Nease. Forty-four sick and shutln
calls were reported.
Refreshments were served to the
members and guests. Mrs. Weber
and Marbelle Warner.

FIRST OF THE
MONTH SPECIALS
S795
'79 Ford LTD
'7 8 Buick Skylark
S295
'78 AMC Concord :~:~NICE S89 5 .
S495
'7 7 Ford Granada
'77 Plymouth Wagon S495
'7 6 Pontiac Wagon S595
'76 Chev. Vega Wgn. S395
:'7$ ·: PJy.mouth Duster S295
S295
'7~ Buic~ Wago.n
:-'70 : Me~cury Cougar S295·
I•

4 Dl.

RUNS GOOD

2 Dl.

Property
transfers

MECHANICAU Y SOUND

'·

"

.

.

'

'

'

IF THESE PRICES ARE NOT LOW
ENOUGH - MAKE US AN OFFER!!
•

SEE: J . D. Story, Jimmy Deem. Ed Bartels,
Nona Nelson, Peggy Ellis

SEE US AND YOU WILL SEE

"WE HAVE THE I&lt;EYS TO ABErrER. DEAL"

.

•

'

CLASSIFIED ADS

asupermarket

for everything.

SMITH-NELSON' MOTORS
POMEROY

500 EASTIIAIN

992-2174

.' .

are altogether happy aboUt lt.
,
The townsfolk say Liberty was ·
named lor "that sentiment whicb tlie :
inhabitants hold !10 dear." There Ia a.
sign In the town office that elbort~·
the proelamation of Iibert] "lbroqh·
out the land." There are allo red1,
white and· bhie bumper stickers, aDG :
the Stan and Stripes is planted in a .
good many lawns.
·
For all of ll,_though, tile raiden&amp;have not planned a formal oblerva- 1
tion of the Statue ol Liberty's birth-'
day. What's more, there won't even be··
a community ceremony for Jndepeti· ·
dence Day. Abraham Kleinman, thevillage superviso r, says a small con- ·
cert is scheduled for July 12, but, "ub, .
I'm afraid that's it."
Kleinman goes on to say that economic considerations are the main·
reasons why. He points out that the ·
town and village are in the middle of
the Catskill Mountain tourl!t area. He
says the Fourth of July will be the :
start of a premier holiday weekend, :
"and. naturally, we have to concentrate on that. "
Besides this, the budget for public.
celebrat ions is not as accommodating.
in Liberty, N.Y., as it is in New York,
N.Y. The supervisor says the pennies
are all accounted for in this neck of
the woods. He says the village can't ·
afford to spend money for a carnival,
even in Ihe case of an arguably good ·
l'ause

Hence, the big day is going to pass ,
largely without incident here wherethe Ne w Worl d was settled, here'
where th e llevolution was fought, '
and , certainl¥··-here where a smaH
part of the tired, the poor and the hud· .
died masses of so many teeming:
shores have learned to breatll free be- .
qiue the golden door.
Indeed , Sybil Wach may he the only
resident prepari ng a formal commem oration. She says she will hold 3"Mis.• Liberty contest in private. She )
will invite women of all ages to dresa ·
up in robes, or what have you, and the
entrants will ~e judged
'

'-

INDEPENDENCE DAy· SALE

Cleland Gheen. In the rear is Rebecca Gheen
Bradford, her great granddaughter, and In front are
great great granddaughters Rachel and Stephanie.
The family picture was taken on May 28 which was
Mrs. I!Alush's 92nd birthday.

UMW at Forest Run conducts meeting
"Women and Addiction: The
Hidden Problem" was the Jrogram
topic at the recent meeting of the
Forest Run United Methodist
Women held at the home ol Erma
Rvush. Evelyn Hollon had the
program rotlng that Its purpose
was to enable women to realize
drug abuse exists among women
and to provide Information about
the lack of treatment fac tlitles, and
to offer help by shartngoomfortand
healing which God provides
through scripture and worship.
The program took a talk sbow
format with in terv!ews. Taking
part were Mary Nease, Kathleen
Scott, Mary K. Roush and Franoes
Weber. A prayer for healing
concluded the program.
Hilda Yeauger presided at the
meeting which opened with the
Lord's Prayer. Officers gave reports, and Lillian · Napper read

The Daily Sentinel-Page 9,

Story of the statue
By Denloe Gorga

FIVE GENERATIONS - This Is one ol Meigs
County's five generation famllfes. From the left !hey
are Robin Ritchie Jones, rmther of three monlh old
Samantha Jo Jones ol Arlington, Te&gt;Wl; NHa Jean
Cole Ritchie, Samantha's grandmother; Orielta

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

�: Page-1 0-The Deity Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·'

Fanners hope
to reduce hog
production by
•
nme
percent
WASHINGTON ( UPI)
tarmers intend to reduce hog
production by 9 percent this
summer and fall, likely trimming
next year's pork chop and bacon
supplies and raising hog priC&lt;'S.
. In a quarterly report on hog
numbers, the AgricuiturP Depanrnent said Monday farmers intend
to have 5.16 million sows give birth
from June to November.
Department analyst Leland Sou·
thard said the decline is a continua ·
liOn of a cutback that began th!'Ee
years ago, which has boosted priCf'S
to profitable levels of 1982.
. "It looks like we will be In
profitability for hogs lor a while,"
he said.
· ;From last December through
May, the pig crop was 41.1 million
head, down 3 percent from a year
ago. Sows giving binh were down 5
perrent to 5.31 million, bui that
decline was offset partially bY a
record average or 7.73 pigs per
litler. compared with 7.64 pigs a
year ago.
On June 1. when the survey was
ronducted , iherP were 48.8 mi!Uon
hogs and pigs In the United States,
down 7 percent from a year ago and
the lowest June 1 inventory sinre

1975.
The breeding inventory of 6.3!1
million head was 9percent less than
a year ago and the lowes! June 1
tally sinre inventory estimates
begun in 1964.
ThP inventory or hogs headed to
slaughter was 42.5 million. 6
perrent Jess than a year ago.

were

Wind erosion
·inore than aver~
hut about the 8811le
as in previous year
· WASHINGTON (UP]) - Wind
erixled 8.4million acres In the GrPa t
PlainS during winter and spring.
$Out the same as last year but
more than the average.
The Agriculture Department said
!'ylonday that 8.5 million acres were
damaged by wind dunng the same
period a year earlier, !rom November through May.
Wind has eroded land in 10 Great
PlainS states by an average rj 6.35
mUllon acres annually sinre 1970. A
tecord of about 16 mllllon acres was
damaged In 1954-55.
, ,Texas alone accounted lor aimosl
3.3 mUIIon acres, or 3!1 perrent d the
Iota!. Las! year, 2.8 million acrPS
were damaged in Texas.
The main cause of wind erosion
this year was lack d precipitation,
which hampered growth or wheat
and cover crops that protect the
land.
Conservationists consider land to
be wind-damaged when 1.5 tons per
acre per year arP blown away,
three Urnes the rate of natural S&gt;il
replacement.

rial pesticides are protelris that
degrade quickly In the ~viron­
!Tirnt. Thus microblals must be
applied many times to control
Insects that mature over long
perlodls of time and that drives up
costs.
Caulder said microbial pesticides
are very specific about the bugs
they atlack. That limits commercial acceptance because farmers
believe they must attack a wrole
host rJ. Insects attacking their
plants, when In actuality, only 1
percent or 2 percent of pests- like
comroot wonn, cotton boUworm
and com ear worm - are causing
!li percent of economic tosses.
Individual chemical pesticides
also control only a very narrow
range of Insects, but theY are
perceived to have broader
application.
There Is also a perception that
txological pesticides kiD bugs too
slowly, leaving t.Jgs to do more
damage. In reality, Caulder said,
bugs quilleedlng on plants as soon
as they receive a toxic dose. even
though they survive the dose
lnitlaDy.
So far the most successful natural
Insecticide has been B. t., or bacUius
thuringtensls. Finns have had to
live with !Imitations of the product
as found In nature.
"The current rommecciai B.t.
products are applied as naked,
unprotected. spores and crystals,"
Caulder said. "They degrade very
rapidly, thus limiting their persistenre and usefulness."
Mycogen has used genetic engineering to let nature mcapsule the
B. t. toxin to Increase its persistence
In the environment. The gene that
produCf'S the toxin is genetically

enginEered Into an organism that
protects the loxln from degrading
when it Is placed tack into the
environment.
Chemicals have Uttle real edge
over biologicals in the range of
Insects they can control. Blolechnology permlts scientists to give
biological controls an edge by
Increasing their spectrum of control with additional protein toxins.
Tradit kma1 B.t. controls only
moths. Mycogen has discovered a
new B.t. that 6 active against the
beetle family, Including hoD weevils, cornroot worms and pests of
stored grain.
" With biotechnology, we can
engineer a delivery mechani!lm
with muttlple toxins to control a
broader spectrum 'or pests,"
Caulder said.
Genetic engineering permits
scientists to load a microbial with
more toxins. In the past. microbial
manufacturers were left with wha·
lever genetic capacity was found in
nature. In nnost cases, the microbIal !l'oduced too little toxin to
produce a rapid effect.
Now the toxin gene can he moved
to a new microbe wtth genetic
ability to produce rrnre effective
levels or toxin.
Caulder said no natural insect
resistance has occurred against
natural toxins. By rontrast Insects
can develop quick resiStance to
synthetic chemicals. ToxinS create
no environmental problems, whereas chemicals can build up at
unsafe levels In the food chain and
ground water.
Even when scientific obstacles
are overcome, Caulder warned that
many companies wUI !all to
recognize I he progress and act rn it.

Meigs County Agents Corner

Here's some harvesting tips
c.

By John
Rice
Coul&amp;y Extension Agenl
Agriculture
POMEROY- Knowiedgeo!the
molstUrP content of forage is
important to the IJ'oducer In &lt;l'der
to perlorm the hatvesting opera·
. lions of ensUing or baUng and
storing.
A crude procedure lor estimating
the moisture level is lljeezlng,
twisting, feeUng the forage, and
making a " guesstimate" tased oo
past experience.
This has been the most rapid and
commonly used metb:ld.
Another method Involves drying
a weighed sample of the forage In
an oven or ovm -llke device ilr a
prescribed time. This 6 time·
consuming.
Beyond this, the molstureconten t
of the forage In the field could have
changed substantially by the completion of the drying d the sample
and could be greatly different from
the computed moisture. This IJ'O&lt;E·
dure has been the rrnst accurate of
those used In recent years.
A microwave ovm, Ito wever, can
be used to estimate moisture levels
of forage In just a lew minutes.
Many farm homes now have
microwave ovms which could
make this procedure possible. A
smaU kitchen, dietacy or postage
scaie is necessary, preferably one
which weighs In grams.
Suggestions lor forage rmlsture
levels are as follows- baUng hay :!1'!! or less; large bales II' stacks less than aJ%; upright silo (open)ID«i%; sealed silo - 40-45%;
horizontal or bunker silo - ffi.70%.
For fUrther details, give IL'l a call.
We wUI send complete details.
Stored Grain - ~mmer Problems - H you're storing grain on
the farm, now Is the time to watdl
lor problems. Warm weather
brings both mold and Insects.
"You had to go Into the summer
with good quality grain," William
R Schnug says. "U you didn't, l's
probably too late to avoid some
damage to the grain. The main
thlng Is to not walt any longer.
Inspect your bins to see what
problems you have."
Mold caused by high grain
rrnlstUrP and temperature is IJ'Obi·
bly the biggest problem wtth
summer storage. Grain should
have been dried 1o a 14 percent
moisture level If it Is 1o be kept
throughout the warm summer
months.
The key to summer storage
success is to monitor the grain and
Its temperature throughout the
summer. To keep grain at uniform
temperature and rrnisture levels
the best practice it to airate it .

Schnug says to run the fans at night
wheq the temperature drops Into
the 10 degree range.
It will take several consecutive
nights of this to cool the graln
properly. Insects already In the
stored grain must be taken care d
immediately if the graln is to be
kept m thefarm.lnmanycasesthe
solution Is expensive and time
ronsuming.
Insect-infested grain can be
moved to another bin on the !arm.!!
this Is done, make sure that the new
bin has been treated with lnsecti·
dde and the grain treated during
transfer. Fumigating the grain
without moving it Is another
alternative.
However, a special license Is
.reeded to buy the chemlcals and
training required to use the appil·
eating equipment . This often
means hiring qualilled applicators.
Their lee may make seUing the
gralrr a rrnre feasible alternative.
The quality d grain as It goes Into
storage Is the key factor In how well
it will keeptbroughoutthesummer.
Grain undamaged by harvest
drying and handUng has a better
chance of surviving summer
storage.
Who Controls The Bull?? Who's In control, you or your bull'
ProtitabWty or commercial cowtcalt JI'O(Illctlon Is dependent upon
lour factors Including percent calf
crop, weaning weights of the
calves, the price received per
pound for the calves, and the annual
costs of maintaining cows. AI·
though it IL'lually receives less
eJ11)hasls, reproductive efficiency
Is tar more Important than growth.
Peraent calf crop, or In other words,
the percentage of females exposed
to some type of breeding season last
summer, \hat actually bring a calf
to weaning this fall, is used as a
major reproductive efficiency. In
short, we need a calf from 'every
cow born early In the calving
season lo insure adequate weaning
weight to cover the annual cost or
maintaining the beef cow.
The only way to Insure that all
calves arP born early In the calving
smson Is to have a shOrt 45 to 60day
breeding season resulting in a shOrt
calving season.
It has been estimated that at least
10 percent of the commercial
cow/ call producers In Ohio allow
the buU to run with the cow herd ·
year round. This results In calves
being born virtually every month or
the year and the row herd being in
all stages of production, which
creates problems In animal and
pasture management, production
and marketing.

IISUBTRACT" THOSE THINGS
GATHERING DUSt
lW DOllARS
TO YOUR POCKET
WITH A
CLASSIFIED AD

992-2156

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Law·
makers believe a majority vote by
farmers In favor of wheat produc·
tlon controls In a non-binding poll
would push Congress to reopen the
farm law enacted last year.
Sen. Edward Zorlnsky, D· Neb.,
who Insisted the poU be Included In
the 19!5 farm law, said Wednesday
he would not oresume to tell

That could lead a small flrm Uke
Mycogen to challenge large chemical companies with success.

·Busin.ess SerVices

farmers how to vote, because the
wte should be an accurate test of
farmer opinion.
He made It clear, however, he
supports mandatory production
controls, designed to produce
higher wheat prices, for two or
three years to trim surpluses.
Ballots were sent out Wednesday
and must be returned by July 14.

Howard L WriteMI

ACCENT

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

PHONE 992-2156

Aft.r
•PLAOUIS

•flAYS
'CHAIMI

~~~-

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE TO
BIDDERS

LEGAL NOTICE
Noticolo ._robyglven that
tho Boord of Educotlon of
tho Melgo Local School Dlotrlct. Moigo County, Ohio.
will offer lor oole by . . tod
bido lor eight 181 ochool

Bus Oortt~~o. Rutlond, Ohio.
742·2990.
Termo of Sole wilt be ,.,h
or check w~h pooltlve t.D.

PUBLIC NOTICE
OnJuly8, 1988at8:30P.
M. the Rutlond Townohip
TNIIOOI will hold I public

s..ted

bidl for aJpptving,

dollverlng ll)d inltllting TWO·

WAY RADIO EQUIPMENT
wil bt received by the Board of

t._

EduCIItion of
Meigs Loc:al
Sc:llool Dlltric:t. at the Office of
the Tra.aner, 621 South Third

Avenue, Midd'-rt, Ohio,
45760. lrltil 12:00 noon,
Eootom Daylight Time on July

10. 1986. Bids wilt be QllSlfld
1t 2:00P.M. on the same day

in the Office of the
Superintt11dent
C~ies of the specifications
aind prvpoul btanks are availe·

bto at tho Meigs Local School
Dis1rict. Office of the Troos-

urer. 621 South ThirdA'*"'ue,

Middlopon. Ohio. 45760. No
proposal will be constdered
unless tubmin.t on the blenk

pmposaltorms fum~hed with
the specifications.
Each bid sh1M be ltCCOff1J~·

led bv a 10% Bid Bond
satisflctory to the owner or by

certHiod chock on 1 oolv111t
bank in the sum of Ul'l percent

It 0%1 of the omount of the
maxifftlm bid . Bids are to be

bUlBI and IWO (2) VMI IRd
two 121 trucllo. ot tho TrN·

surer's office, Meigs

bids.

Jane fry,

Tre~aurer

Meigs local School Di1trict

821 S. Third Avenue
Midd~pon. Ohio 46780
18130: 1717. 14, 21 . 4tc

yoor 19B7. All

c~IZMI

CARE

Cleaned,
protected,
l811ltiztcl
ond

&amp;!.
~

Rutland Townahip Trusteea

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZINITH
•SYLVANIA

Edno M. Swick, Clerk
Molgo County. Ohio
181 30. 1tc

•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATELUTE SALES &amp; SERVICE

WH0-0-0-0

can help

We HtvJ Ahll Tl•
s~

you?
ClASSIFIED
. ADS

#DOB22EHB37755

6. 1972 lntemetional bus

66 Pllltnger
#136820H348044

#1 3882CHA20793
8. 1972 lntomotlonol buo
88 pauenger
#CSE522V1 13504
on ~. outside of the
9. 1976 Dodge Trodoomon
envelope as falowt: ''TWO- Van - #B21 BB8X046288
WAY RADIO EQUIPMENT
10. 1986 GMC Hondi-Von
810" . Th11 aJeceslful biddet
- #G1001PE3718A
will be required to fumith a
11. 1966 Chevrolot 12 ton I
satisfactory Pitrformance
. Stoko Body
Bond for 100% of the contract
#C8538F132745
price. lllo bid ml'( be with ·
12. 1973 GMC Chevrolet

••led

drMVn lfter tcheduled dosing
time or N~t of bids br at

looot oi&lt;ty 1601 doyo.
DeWery dl1e must be stll.td
111 lhe bid form and wiU be

taken into c:x:msid'*ation in the

awarding of bids.
T._ Board of Education.

V2 Ton Pickup

#TCY143F702259

Additional information on
these vehicles may be obteined at the Meigs Local

54 Misc. Merchandise

Meigs l.oall School District.
the right to reiec:t .ny
or aU bids or lf'IV part thereof.

reserv•

By ordor of t._ Boord of
Education . Meigs Local
School District. 821 South

Third Avenue, Midd&amp;epon,

Ohio. 45760.
BY ORDER Of THE
MEIGS LOCAL
BOARD OF EDUCATION
ROBERT SNO\\OEN.
PRESIDENT
JANE FRY. TREASURER
161 16, 23, 30; (7J 7 4tc
Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Tho Board of the Melgo
Lo.,.l School Dlotrlct deoireo

SUMIWIR SPECIAL
Central AC, for up
to- 14x70

$1199 Installed
Meigs Mobile
Home &amp; Parts
900 E. Main St.

Pomeroy, 011.
or call 1114-992-5517

11

following:
1. School Ac:c:ldont lnour-

onc:e
2. Fleet Insurance

Buying/Selling
Gold, Silver
14K Chains, Coins,
Collector's Accessories
Bullian
SUMMER HOURS

1-7 M-TH

4/ 1/ tln

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

Help Wanted

992-3410

The Meigs County Health Department will be
accepting applications until July 3, 1986 for a
part-time R.N. to work three (3) days per week
in Public Health Nursing.
Requires knowledge and experience in assessmeni and evaluation skills. Must be currently
licensed in State of Ohio. Acar is necessary and
must be able to work independently.

I

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL· SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

985-3937
Call for Directions

ARMY SURPWS
&amp; CAMOUFLAGE
Sizes 4 Yrs and up
ALSO HUNTING,
SURVIVAl and
VARIETY ITEMS

ACROSS FROM
POST OFFICE IN

MASON, W.VA.
304-773-5222

5·15-'86-1 mo .

Resumes can be mailed or brought to the Meigs
county Health Department, P.O. Box 631 ,
Mulberry Hts .. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 , Attention : Jon D. Jacobs, Administrator .

TRENCHING IS OUR LINE

The Mei1s County Health Department is an
Equal Opportunity Employlf.

Licensed &amp; Bonded

Trenching of Any Type
Beckhoe Service
Plumbing Service
Custom Welding
Lowboy Hauling
Septic Systems

WiliAMS TR£NCHt4G
SERVICE

At. 4, HyMII Run Rd.
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
Ph (8141 992-2B34,
992-8704
FREE ESTIMATES

The Meigs County Health Department will be
accepting applications until July 3, 1986 for a
full time R.N. in the Pre -Natal Clinic.

Hlmo.

Qualifications must be currently licensed in
State of Ohio, be able to assess and evaluate
the Pre-Natal Clients, and wort independently.
Salary, hours and fringe benefits will be discussed on interview.

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized John DMrt,
New Holland, ltnh Hog
Form Equipmtnl
Deoior

Far111

Equlplllt~t

Parft &amp; S1rvlee
UT'S IUILD. U~

•lOCillY OWNI O •lOCll l.IBOR

Now location:
161 North 5e&lt;ond
Middltport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Cerry Fishing Supp lift

Pav Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here
IUS Ill Ell I'IIONI
16t4J '1'12· 6510
mDINCI PHONE
16141 9f2-77l4

Real Estate General

••led bido ,._II be re·

!l?alltn

JO'S GIFT SHOP

SEE ONE OF THE

ceived In the Tr•aJrer'• Of·

flee, &amp;21 S. Third Av.. uo,
Mlddlopon, Ohio. on 01 bel-

~~CLELAND

fore 12:00 o ' clock noon on

July 18. 1988.
Tho Boord of Educetlon

SRACUSI, 01110
Th S1lel• 0• Ft~Jtlrl

CLAN"

TO HELP YOU BUY AND SELL

*Mebl Buildincs..tl'!~~
i-Po~

~I
t~'i~

Builtlin&amp;S . ~

.. Siotace Blliltinp
·~U. S~ES IV~ILABLE

WAMSLEY &amp; GRAY

•o

Phone

H 4-l WG.

Thuu.-F.ri . &amp;. Set.
9 a.m. to 8 p .m .

1-614-696-1337
1-614-593-8693

10% OfF

1/1 PRIU
OPEN : Mon .·Wod .

Cloood Tueodl

3 Announcements

MIDWEST
SEAL &amp; STRIPE

lAMPS &amp; FIGU.INIS

lATHS
116.95
CEMENT DOGS &amp; CATS

Molgo Locol School Dlatrict
821 S. Third Ave.
Midd~port. Ohio 45780
181 30; (7J 7, 14, 3tc

VINYL SIDING

and maUed and received or returned in person to firm·
•• Horne Adminiltration, 106 Butternut Avenue, Po·

We Haw Most All Popular Brands
At The Same Lo¥1 Price

1981. Tho betlot below muot be filled out, detochod

The slate of nominees for Meigs, Attwtn1 end Vinton
counties are lilted in the bellot below. The qualification• of persons voting are described In the " Voter
Certificet~n Statement" . For further information re·

oordlng voting Md voter otiglbitlty. 100t._ county offlee lilted above. FmHA election• ere open to all eligible voters without regard to race, color, religion , nation•! origin , age , politk:al affiliation, marital status
HX, and/ or handicap.

•

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

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
FARMERS HOME ADMINISTRATION
BALLOT FOR COUNTY COMMITTEE MEMBERISJ
&amp;toto INomoJ Ohio
County jNemo)
Meigs, Atheht, Vinton

•condidotolol Martha A. Lee
Cecil E. Gillogly
Betty L. Dean

0
0
0

' ONLY VOTE FOR 1 CANDIDATEjS)

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

He wlll111llk the 1111rlcet fa he)) you
hur or ull your property! The
Clel1d Cl1n hu the pull!

•VINYL
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

CLELAND REALTY INC.
608 EAST MAIN

POMEROY

J&amp;L INSULATION

NEW LISTING - POMEROY - 21ols w1th 5 bedroom older
home. Needs work'. Could be rental unit. Askin g$12,000.00.

PH. 992-2772

OWNER WANTS OFFER I - RACINE - Haveyoo been looking lor acreage with a nice house' This l4 re droomranch is
righllor you and your lamily. Family room, nice workshop,
elec tnc B.D. heat.

R-aulations requires that all voters for FmHA county

oreo c:onvnlttee olectlono mett t._ following eligibility requirement: l•l be formen; (b) derlvot._ principal port of t._lr lnoome from lerortlng tthlt Ia more
0&lt;

thin 150 .-rcent of their "ou income must oorr.from

ogricuhurol productlonj; (cl havot._lr principal form,
lng oporotlono whhln t._ county 01 or• for which tha
election 11 being ._td.

6-30-'86-1 mo.

Real Estate General

NEW LISTING - POMEROY - I I+ slory ader tome with 3
bedrooms, dinmg room and rear pat1o. ONLY $15.000 .00. •
POMEROY - Stalely 2 story home in town . 7 rooms, 3 bed·
rooms, 1. ~ bath s, ba semen!, mce front siHing porch .
$25,900.00.
CHESHIRE - 1986 Ma nsion mobile home oo rented lot
Beaulilul unit with 3 bedroo ms, elec. forced air heal wilh
rentral ait. Insulation package lor elilciency. REDUCED
PRICE TO '14,900.00.
·
OFFICE .......................... ....... ........................ 992-2259
HENRY E. ClElAND JR ................................. .992·6191
JE~N TRUSSEll... ..................... .. ......... ... ....... 949-2660
DOTIIE TURNER ............. ......................... ...... 992·5692

59 N. 2nd-'"·

Middleport

N.. t Deor To

W"t•• lilt•

992-6784

5·20-'86'1 mo.

••,.

INTERESTED IN BUYING
APPROXIMATELY 2112 ·
ACRES OF ST. RT. 7 NEAR
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL?
.IF SO, PLEASE PHONE
HOME NATIONAL BANK
949-221'0.

104 Mulberry ·' "·· Pomeroy

992-3345

3/2/Hn

ICUT OUT 101 FUTURE USE!

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All M1ku

IIACINE, OHIO
FA EE ESTIMATES
011 fitld S.ni(t,

landscaping, las~m~nts,
Land Clearing, Pond1, S.ptit
Sylttms, ltlavy Hauling,
StoM &amp; Gra•tl Ha~ling

ll1&lt;tritol Work

RESIDENTIAL. COMMERCIAL
&amp; INDUSTRIAL
!Certified E18ftr ician]

DON lOSE, Owner

U9-2493

Home

843-5340
1/1!/'8611 ""·

L&amp;S
TRANSMISSION
REPAIR

PARTS and SERVICE

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
DOZER , BACKHOE.
mENCHER. SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER ,
GAS &amp; SEWER UNES.
RECLAMATION. PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS.
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; O!RT

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

All Work
Guaranteed

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

OPEN MONDAY
THRU SAtuRDAY

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

"Free Estimates"

PH. 992-7403

6·23-86-1 mo .

BISSELL
BUILDERS

For Hours
304-372-5709

Alto Tr~n~mlulon

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6-17 -tfc

PH. 949-2801

or 9•9-2860

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TVs, Antennas
Satellite Salts
lmtallation 11rvict

AU major appliance re·
pairs (including micro-

waves) .

Also

Lawn

614-843-S248
614-949-2145
6-4-'86·1 mo.

3-D AUTO CENTER
IIO Vt W. Main St.

Pamtroy, Ohio,

'

992 -6778

~-

~~~~

'73· '80 GM F.,dtts ..... 139
73-80 GM
Rocker Penels ... ...... ..... 116
73- 7'9 Fotd Fenders ...... $39
Truclc Bed
linet"s .
.. Full $176
Mini 1166
FAEE INSTALLATION
2 YR WARRANTY

Set i•lection Gu1rent•d
Free Oeti\1.,.,. in Trl SllteAru

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

•Commercial
•Industrial

RAYMOND E. PROFFITT (MAC)
Office 949 -2431

Emo1raencv

i3

-z

PH. 742-2306
or 742-3171

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

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

RADIATOR
SER~ICE

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.
992- 2196
Middleport. Ohio
1 -13-tfc

BEST IN
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
•VInyl Replacements

Wlndowo
•'A" lnoulotod Gt111
•Tilt In To Clean

•Moot Windows PJic:od
under •300

FREE ESTIMATES

J&amp;L INSULADON
.&amp;
co.

NOAH ' S ARK ANIMAL PARK .
Schools, churchae, co,._,anv
picnia. birthd1y pan ln and
femily reunions. Call tU4·384210B or 1·800-292·2167.

810 South Second St. in Middleport. Ju ly 1 -7 . 2 gu huten.
beddin g linens. drapl!lll . curteinl.
Avon, pots. pans. dis hes. je·
welry. clothing, furniture, IP·
plienc11, towels, spr~eds, mi•c.

4

July 2nd and 3rd. Betheny
Church. St. At. 124. Racine.
Oh io.

Giveaway

Cell 304-676 · 7685 .
Duchund· mlx mate dog . Veer
old . Ceii614-446-7600.

DON'S MOBILE HOME
REPAIR .SERVICE
UNDERPINNING &amp; SnUP

Spflnf SpHitl

MOBILE HOME ROOF PAINTING

$9 5

IHCWDES PAINT
&amp; lAlOR

OFFEil GOOD THRU JUNE 5, 1986

992-3361

5-5-'86-tfn

JEFFERS EXCAVATING
POMEROY, 01110

Backhoes, Bulldozers, End loader, Dump
Trucks, SeH loading Pan, Hta vy Hauling and
Winch Trucks
•Water line
•Buaments
•limestone
•Gas line
oL.and Clearing •Fill Dirt
•Top Soil
•Septic Tanks •Ponds

FIIEE ESTIMATES

992-7089

992-3525

992-5232

Clothes, furniture , baby twing.
tires. betteriss. Meny mqre
items. 103 Brick St. Pomeroy.
July 1,2 .3.
Lee and Ai1chie, carport sate.
July 1 .2. 9 -7. Tyree Blvd.
metching cocktlil and end ta·
bles. bicycle, electric drill , ..bre
uw. temps , cloth£11 , misc .
items. craft s by Lee.

4 puppies wormed &amp; has h~
shots . Shepherd mix . Ca ll 614.
446 -7313
Several wood pallets to give
ewey . Firll come. firll serve
besl•, Inquire in person It
G•llipolis Oaily Tribune Offi ce.
825 Third A11e .. Gallipolil.
Mixed
puppiM 5. weeks old. Call
6t4-38&amp;-9634
3 very nice •ittens that arelittM
treinad . Clll614-446-9297.
1 veat old puppies half BOf'der
Collia· half Germen Shepherd .
Cell after 5, 814-446· 7685 .
2 lovely kittAns to e good home.
Celt 61 4-446·3897.
30 ectes standing hey. In
Rodne'ii 1r11 . C1ll 614 · 2469448.

G11 sto\le free fot hlluling , oven
do•n ' t wofk. 444 S. Minneso ta
Ave .. Wellston. Oh. Call 614384·5458 or 614 · 256 ·6758

2 mele 1 female German Shepherd pups to giveaway , 614 742 · 3086.
Black. male dog . Long -haired . 1
yeer okl. Also 3 cet1 and 3
klnena. Ca ll614·742-3168 .
8 game tOosters with no spurt.
ht trailer past Metgs H;gh
School on County Rd. 26.
Kinens lo gi1.1e away. 304 ·675 ·
7242.
Used washer, 304-675·7429 .

lost and Found

Lost : Black and White male cat. 4
white feet, wearing cot11r . Loll
ne1r Wi lbvillt. Call 814 -669 4985 or 614·742· 2328.
lost : ledies gle11e1 in blue·
fk&gt;werld cale. In vicinity of
Veletens Memorial Hospital .
Cell614·742·3094 .
Found Cow in Bethel church
aru hu tag with numbl!lr in eer.
C1U 304·675 ·3265.

9

Wanted To Buv

We pey cash for letell;'Qdel clun
used cars.

J im Mink Chev.·Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson
614-446-3672

5·19-'86'·1 mo.

July 3rd , 4th. and 5th. Lemps,
end teblea, pillows, rugs, toys,
toy chest. computor. computor
table. 4 inch TV with radio.
kerosene heater, etc. FlrltnGuse
p~11 Church in Chester.

SWEEPER and sewing machine
rep1it, p1rt1. and •upplies . Pick
up end deli\lery, Oe\liS Vacuum
Cleener. one helf mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Call 6t 4.
446 -0294.

6

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
C!l Coll1luterized Hearing Air Selection
~ Swim Molds · lnteiJ)reting SelVices

::z:::

Garagenle: July 1 end2 . Ernest
Whiteh eed. Reedsv ille . Gu
heeting stove. curtains , cuahionl. clothing in amtll chilcll.
juniors and mana sires . Misc.
9 :00a.m .

3 Announcements

RACINE, OHIO

IIIII IIn

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

Middleport

&amp; Vicinity

Announcement s

Approx . 1YJ ton of coal to
giveaway. 614 -742 -2502 .

•Residential

Gar1g1 sale at Art Millers. Wed .
July 2 and Thur . Jutv 3, from 1.0
em to 4 pm on White Hill Rd.
Rutlend. Clothing. wt.et-nots.
chriltmas decoretions. dilhei.
quilt tops, and k)ts more. W1tch
for arrows. 1lf• mill on 1st. left:
tum off after ltiVing Rutllnd ,

Two f.amity . Antique wood beds,
atone j1rs. quilts. chaifl, co Die·
tars item I . ck)thet. sho• . rldio:
1 uble, fruit jars. On e mile off 124
between Portlend end long
Bottom-watch for stgns. Rein or
shine. June 30. July , ,2.3.
Edgltf Brewer. Phone 814· M3·
6334 . 9:00·6:00.
.
mile on H3 et HumphftY' s.
Feed grinder, New Holl.nd Hsy
Squeaur·Conditionet, chest
deep freerer, clothes. weight
bend\, act. Cell514-992 -3869 .
·July 1,2.3. 9:00 -3:00.
1/.o

Full blooded silvar Persien cat

No Sunday Calls

Contractor

···· Pomerov··········

5-12 -'86-2 mo.

mower repair . Mobile

service .

GREAT BEND ELECTRIC, Inc.

a:

----------------

Ph. (6141 843-5425

Fem1le pure bred Dobermen 8
week old. Cell814·446· 4697.

*VINYL SIDING
*AlUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULAnON

"Free Estimates"

Gerege Sale
Thursday. Rt . 218 . 2 I
M arcarv ille . Herold 0 av ·
residence .

ID·I4·tlc

4-16-'86 ttn

New Homes Built

4 family . On Rt. 124 in RHine
behind Mesonic Lodge. Good,
cleen clothing . books. misc.
items. J uly 1. 2.3 from 9:00 "t o
5:00. Dennie Hill rll!llidents.

~~~~~~~~~!! _No_rt_h_M_•_'"_S_I_.---------

CAll COllECT:

BEND AREA CALL
Ripley Offici

Doy or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

VINYl &amp; AWMINUM

SUIGIIY IY AHT.

CUSTOM BUILT
&amp; GARAGES

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

July 2 &amp; 3. 917 4th Ave., 9-4.
lots of good clot hing . wicker
furniture , nunwuou• misc. items.

Two family. first &amp; only time th is
vear. Meny houlehokl items.
clothing different aius, men ' s,
women ' s &amp; children's. 22 Vln·
ton St. July 1 &amp; 2 8 -.t.

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area
20 years
''Free Estimates' '

SIUU ANIMAl HOUIS
Mon.-Wotl.-Thun. 3-5 pm
Tun. 6:30-1; Fri. 1-2 pm
Saturday 10-11 :30 om
IAIGE ANIMAl &amp;

HOMES

"At Reosonoblo Pricos"

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Paul E. Shockey, DVM
PT. PUASANT OFFICE
305 Jackson Avo.

Pow-ell 's, Fifth St .. Recine. Ji.lly
1 through 6. 9 :00 til d.-k. 6
femllies-large variety good eli?·
thing. mile. itams .

Rt. 160 Vinton , Jackson Rd .
Mon .-Wed. June 30, July 1 &amp; 2.
Chi ldnn s clothing , 1ome
fumiturl!l .

EUGENE LONG

TOWN &amp; COUNIRY
VETERINARIAN
CUNIC

4-5-tfc

Roger Hysell
Garage

Rt. 7, Pomeroy, OH.

CHESitiRE, OHIO

July 1.2 ,3 . Beby cloth•. kids
clothes. lilt &amp; J)epper shaken.
gf1a1Ware, mi1c. 2128 Chethem
Ave.

PH. 304-675-2441

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

ROSE UCAVA11NG

PAT HILL FORD

Pteaae detach thi1 notice before woting ballot

VOTER CERTIFICATION STATEMENT
Subport W of Port 2054 of Thlo 7, Codo of Federal

•ROOFING
•CUSTOM
GARAGE
BUILDING

FREE ES TIMAT ES

NEW LISTING - IHART - l ike new - in side and oul'
Complete!' remodeled ho~ oo Ia rge lot. Excellent cond1·
non. Garage, new mol &amp; ~d~ g. Onl, $27,!'00.00.

EXOTIC BIRDS,
TROPICAL FISH,
HAMSTERS.
KITTENS . BIRO
SEED, CAGES &amp;
AQUARIUMS

IF NO ANSWER CAU:

367-7560- 367-7671

PWS: Offict !uppliK &amp;
Furnitun, Wedding
a"d Graduation
Stotionor,, Magnotic
Sigl!s, RuW.or Stomps,

Ill Milt !1., Middleport

THE BIRD CAGE
&amp; FISH POND
PET SHOP

367-0317

y,, Ptlll'-1 Nui1

PHONE
(614)/742-2070

Milo B. Hutchison

•Certainteed •Mastic •Aloia

F11 All

bit•.

~

4-15·' 86-lc

luJintu Forms,
(Ofll StrvkK, El&lt;.

HUTCHISON
CONSTRUCTION

The Farmers Home Administration (FmHA) County
Committee electton this year will be held on June 30.

Pomeroy, Ohio

lutland, Oh. •s 77 5·

6-23 -' 86· 11110.

NOTICE OF ELECTION

lo.,.l FmHA office.

lit. 1, lox 21·8
32933 Romin• Rd.

(304) 773-5527 01 (304) 895-3386

Serving this area
with PoweSeal seal
coating and striping
and making of
A&lt;phalt &amp; Concrete.

HEA YT LAIGE

FIMIVII the right to accept
or reject 1ny and all blda.
J1ne Fry, Tr••urer

meroy, Ohio not later than June 30. 1986. If you do
ncn vote In per~on you should mail your ballot inside a
blank envelope martted ballot to ensure a secret bel lot .
Tbl1 blank envetope ahould ba placed Inside the envelope you use to mlil vour ballot. Your name .w~d addrill must be leglbte on the outer . .velope . Failure to
provide this information will render your ballot invalid.
Ballott 1nd envelopes may also be obt1lned from your

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

1· 3-'86 tfc

In order to be aon•idared,

ell

RUSS
ELECTRIC
MOTOR
REPAIR

4

6-16-' 86· I mo.

10-8-tfc

The Meias Ctllnty Health Department is an
Equal Opportunity Employlf.

3. Oeoollne end Oil Pro·
ducto
4. Breed Md Bokery Produc:to
6. Ml•ondDolryProduc:to
8. Tires ond Tubeo

"D1ty

CHESTER-915-3307

Resumes can be mailed or brought to the Meigs
county Health Department, P.O. Box 631,
Mulberry Hts .. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Attention: Jon D. Jacobs, Administrator.

to recelveaMied bidsfortt.

•• T11hi•Iu

TV &amp; APPliANCE

66 p1111nger

621 Stllth Third Av.. ue
Mddl-. Ohio 46760
Bids •oto be plainly morked

Moteriolo

CLC COINS

RIDENOUR

7. 1973 International bua

School Distrie1
Office of the Tr...,rer

~h:~:e: ;

992-6215 or 992-7314

5-29-' 86·1 mo.

HOtue.

5. 1976 International bua
ee Pllltnger

oorroo~

Addon1 tnd rtmodellng
Roofing and guntr work
con·crete wo·rk
Plumbing end electricel
work
(free Eltimitll)

"Free Estimates"
Installation bailable

also be hold ot thio timo.

1. 1968 Chevrolet buo4B PIIIOnger
#SS628F17824
#1 36820H348030
3. 1972 lntomotlonol bus
88 po11onger
#136820H348038
4 1974 lntomotlonot buo
88 p111enger
#13872DHA19920

DRY FOAM

$1995

will

have the opportunity to give
written or or1l oommenta on
tho uu of the !undo (HPO·
clalty Senior Citll.,l). The
public budget hearing will

MHtlng place: Rutlend Fire

2. 1972 lntemettonal but
86 p1aenger

W..IMI

667-3513

hearing for the purpo11 of
propoaed uie of Federal Aev.,ue Sharing Fundi for

The vehicles are aa follows:

sealld and addreued to:

Meigs Local

Lo~»l

School Diotrict, 821 South
Third Avonuo. Middleport.
Ohio. ot 12:00 noon, July
22. 19B6.

Said Board rMervea the

right to w1ive informalitie•.
to accept or reject any and
ell or parta of any and all

...

" -. llli

Ver~ seleor rain. gereo•••· , .2
Juty 8-15. St1r10. Mayteg wrlnglf' w11her, clattl• lldya lile I
&amp; Vicinity
11 . 2 mint
1· 90 Hood•
..................... .......... --• or
3 wh... ...-. ch-'n sew . Henry
3 Femtly Tun. &amp; Wed. 1st. St. Henman Ch•t•, Ohio.
rlgtlt OYM Northup bfktge. TV.
toye. turn . beby items, mile .
G1r1ge sale July 1,2. 9 -4:00.
Riggscftst · Addl11on , lbOV.
First Time New &amp; us«&lt; lttms. E.H.S. Medicine cabinwt, toy
July 2, 3. 4. 5. FNe miles south che11, bedspre1ds. curteinl.
of Gellipolil, At. 7 . 8-?
.
toys. dothn edutt and children~ .
Doris Well.
1tt Time 5 Family Jut~~ 4 S. 6, Fri .
&amp; Set. Hom intwior, tupper· 3 flmllv yerd Slle. July 1, a.
were. mile. 660 Jsv Or.
McKenzie Ridge Road off I•·
ahen Rd . Ttblt ctllirl, ck)1h•.
549 Hilde Dr. Ttlur1. July 1 Set. misc.
July 6. 9 to 6. Girl• clo thing.
0·8x, IOn'lt lerger lllet, girls 6 Yerd ule: Gordon Celdwtll.
boys, misc. items.
Tupp•• Plainl Jufll 4-6.

•BULLDOZING •EIIID
LOADER •TRUCKING
•TRENCHING
•CRANES •DRAGLINE
SEWERS · BASEMENTS
WATER UNES · SEPTIC
TANKS - CREEK &amp; FIELD
DRAINAGE PONDS - MOBILE
HOllE
- ROAD
BUILDING
• LAND

V. C. YOUNG Ill

11011 UICAitllll

2-17-86-tfn

Public Notice

-

"'"'

•M.Al.S
"'AYIL.$

949-2263
or 949-2168

Ot W1~i D1iHr Sutintl Clmtlitd Otpt.
Ill Court St . PO!Mror. Ollio 457&amp;'

s c•

742-2027

·· ... Gallipolrs........ ..

CARPENTER
SERVICE

PH. 992·6931

NEW- REPAIR

ard saleS

YOUNG'S

FENa CO.. ANY

ROOFING

-~---

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily

Ohio

Supports mandatory producti~n controls

Natural controls nothing new; account ·
for less than 1 percent of world sales
By SONJA IIILLGREN
UPI Fann Edllor
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Natural biological controls should have
an edge lor farmers Increasingly
·.roncemed about environmental
·impacts of pesticides, but they
account for less than 1percent d $15
billion In world pesticide sales.
· Natural controls are not new. A
'smaU California biotechnology finn
:believes il will use genetic engineer·
ing to improve upon tiny microscopic organisms used as pesticides.
'They can be formulated lo target
particular pests and yet leave other
plants and animals untouched.
Jerry Caulder, president of Mycogen Corp. of San Diego, predicted
.Tuesday that chemlcai pesticides
will continue to be agriculture's
pest control mainstay lor the s, but
he said the future lies with
:microbial pesticides, a virtually
untapped source of pesticide toxins.
Only 16 micro-organisms have
been approved by the Environmental Protection Agency for use of
natural insecticides and only lwo as
natural herbicides. They have been
.fOrmulated into only 100 products
compared to 1,600 chemicals that
arP sold in morP than 45,1XXJ
products.
"Yet over 1,000 micro- organisms
or microbial products are known to
produce toxins effective against
weeds and Insects," Caulder said.
·: Those 1.txXl tiny organisms were
discovered when there were no
commercial outlets.
"Think what can be done now
.that we are trying to find them," he
said.
Caulder spoke to rPporters at an
industry prPsentation of the latest
developments in the emerging
:industry that has begun to manipulate genes to create new agr!cultu·
raJ products.
He said microbials have had
limited commercial acceptanre
because toxins produced by bacte-

June 30, 1986

Monday, June 30, 1986

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
end nawer used can . Smith
Buick· Pontiac, 1911 Eastern
AYI .. G111ipoli1 . Call 614 -4462282.
WANTED TO BUY u1ed wood &amp;
coal heetefl , SWAIN'S FURNITURE . 3rd. &amp; Oli111 St. G•lllpo·
tit. Ca11614· 446·3169 .
Wented junk 1uto1. C11t 614·
388 -9303.

Cleaned closets. see whet we 've
got. Clothel. Pekingesepuppin
16 Riverview ott Park 51 . Jutv
111 .

1

11

Help Waf\led

Federal. Stete end Civil Sen~ice
jobs now available in your erH.
For info. Cell 805-844·9533
Dept. 1201 .

· ..... PfPieasaric ...
&amp; Vicinity
Mond1y , Tuesdey. Wedn11day,
6 miln from Point Pleuent Cll
Rl. 2. e t Flatroct. Baby furniture
and mi1celleneous.
'
Yard S1le, July 1. 2, 110 3rd
Stteet, Muon. Fumkute, ketG·
sene hutllf, fens , clothing, cri&amp; .
Yard ule. t405 Kenswh•
StrMI, Tuetdsy. July 1 &amp;
Wedn•dev. 2nd .
Big 4 family vtrd 1ale, 1. 2, 3,·9
1.m. till 1 on Rt. 35 . Just above
old Coestguetd Bese. Flut Time
This Yeerl

11

Help Wanted

RN . LPN to do insurence J)hysi•
call in Point PluHnt tr1d
a~rrounding areas . Car end
phone necaanf'( . Part -time
work. 1· 304· 343· 9444 after 10
a.m.
Need pert· time help. call 304•
875· 2.295.

Need Avon representatives in
Gallipolis area . Free'"" up fee ,
limited time. Call today 614·
446 -2156.

12

Mecheni c needed in Gellipol is to
maintain sma ll fleet of GM ligh t
duty truct~;s . EIIJ)Ifienced in
following · HEI. manuel trens ·
millions , differential, auspen ·
lion sy.tem•. engin11. etc. Send
resume to Bobby Riner. P.O.
Box 9247. Hunting ton . WV
25704.

Work wanted · cerpenter work,
rooting , siding, gutters, remo·
deling, new eddition, exp . by job
or hour . Free "timete. 304·
273-.,10.d

Oistfict Technician.
Gellla Soil &amp; Wetl!t'Consarvetion
Oi.trict, 629 Jeckson Pike,
Room 308·C . Gellipolis. Oh io
45631 . Con tact : Petty Oyar.
614· 446 -9687 . Oe1line: July
14 . Selery : Negociable based on
ed ucat ion and experienc;.e .
Needed : Per10n Interested in
promoting conservation of our
10il and w1ter resouurcl!llll. J ob
respons ibi lities: Working with
District owned equipment {in·
elu ding 2 no -till grain drills 1nd 1
no-till cotn planttrl. Worlllng
with landowners in developing
connrvation pntctices. i.e. waterways . diversions , ponds.
dtein-oe systems etc. Ability to
conduct .. rveya , and complete
engineer ing design• of canter·
vation prtcticts.
Euv Anembly Work l t714.00
per 100 . Guaranteed PeyrnAnt.
No Salu . Det ei lt ·· Send
atemped en11eloJ)e: Elen-5847
3418 Enterprise. ft. Pierce Fl.
33482.
GovMnment Jobs . $18.040 ·
$59,230 -yr. Now hiring . Call
806·687-6000 E.t. A·9805 for
cu rrent federal list.
Live-in corf1)•1ion with elderly
lady In Huntington, W.Ve . C1ll
304-nJ.t•u• .
Co· Driver wanted . Must be 23
yr~ . long Haul , tome experience
helpful. Cell 614-992-6756.
Baby sitter wanted in my home.
Sashen aree . Approx . 30 lws •
week. C•ll 614·949-2983 efter
3'00.
EASY ASSEMBLY WORK I
8714 .00 pet 100. Gu1rentted
peyment . No 111•. 01tail1 send
aumped envelope: Elen· 71 a
3418 Enterpr6se. Ft. Pierce. Ft.
33482.

Old furniture , t1ble1, chr1,
cupb., boakc1111, Ice boktl,
iron beds, ch11t1, wicklr. 1ny
cond. Csll 814-441-3759 .

World Book-Childcreft, repre·
sentetlvn needed. Pert time, full
time . guer.,tees eveileble, 30.t·
882· 24a5 .

Ree10nebly priced 141t70 mobile home w ith 1-1'1.1 ecr11 of
IMd . Prlfer toe~Uan In Gallipolis
erN . C1ll 304-175· 1121 1ft11
IPM wttlldtys enytlme wetll:tndl .

HIOH SCHOOL GRADUATES·

992-814t .

Carport Sale: Wed . end Thur.
J uly 2.3 . 9-4 . 31 t Wright St.
Pomeroy. large selection girt
clothes. inlantl. Excellent condition. Metemity clothH, mi1c.

Mature adult to care for intent
.,d toddler in our home. Afternoons a. evenings. Send resume
to Boll T800 In care of the
Getlipolis Deily Tribune, 826
Third Ave .. Gellipolis. Oh
45631 .

Pert tirne7 Awn! lnsurence
banefiu1 A'i'Onl t6 to start?
A11on l 614 - 992 · 7~80 .

Wentlld to buy: Old pevlng
brlckt. Cell Bill Blay.-er 614·

Yard S1le: July 1 end 2 . Behil1d
VFW in M11on. Two Chavy luv
C1mper top1. furniture . misc.

~:;::;;;~~~;::::=l-::;::;:;:;::;:;;::=~=
.

HouH on lend contract, pr.ter·
r•bl.., Addevllle or Chethlr•
Kyg...- Dl:st. $3,000 down . Cell
814 -367-7553 .

Buying d1ity gold , ailv• coins.
rings, jiWelry, llerling ware. ~d
colnt. llrgt currency. Top pri·
eM, Ed. Burken Blrber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh. 614992 ·3478.

July 2 and 3 . House bftide
Pleesers. 9 :30 · 4:00. 3 femlly .

Serve p1n -time In the Army
Nltionat Guerd tnd •tt.,d col·
lege full time . We JHO•Ida up to
•18.000 In tduc1tlonal •• ·
PL.U s. good pey end
good treinlng. 304·671·39150or
1-1110-1142-Je 19.

pen••·

ASSEMBLERS WANTED! Eam
up to 860.00 e dey aul!lmbling
di1play clowns. Simple, prof it• ·
ble, meteriela-pettern a.~ppl~ .
Send s•U·addrusld ltamped
.,velope. Hewkllendlng, P. 0 .
BOJI 13493, Orltndo, Fk)rtdt
32869 .

AVON , 3 open tenitori•, c111
304-676· 1429 .

Situations
Wanted

1B Wanted to Do
Would like to sit with eldi!H'IY
per1on elsa will do cletning. Call
814-446· 3007 or 614 -446 ·
6213.
Will do general house clnning.
Caii614-992-322B.
·
Will do blby sitting in my home.
Call614-992·6667 .
Seelcing to tJtof atud.,ts ln
math. BS in methmetics. with
tutoring experience. 17.00 per
hour. Cell 614· 992· 2704.

Fm ancial
21

.,

Business
Opportunity
! NOTICE!

THE OHIO VALLEY

PU8li~­

ING CO . recommends thet vou
do bus1ness with paoJ)Ie yoa
know , and NOT to send money
through the mail until you h1vt
iwestigat.t the offering

A golden opportunity · joiri
friendly home toy par1ies. th e
leader tor 31 years . Openings tor
managet1 and deelltf's. We hl\le
the lergest and best lin e in party
plan. No ca!h investment. ""
delivering or oollecting. Eern ~ig
money plus bonuses and travel
incentives, Call now toll free to
Carol Day 1·800· 227· 1610.
Established bus in11s for sele.
Indoor miniature golf course.
Downtown Gsllipolil. C1ll 614:,
.t46-8222 .
lntem etional Mettl Building Menutacturer Selecting builderdiller in some open eren. Higtt
p::ttenti.al profit in our growth
i'ldustry. (30 31 759· 3200 E)(T .
2403.
•
Priced to sell. Ntght Club on Rt .
7, 3 miln nonh of Pomeroy, 05
liquor liclflaeWith c•rrv· outbeM
end win a. newly remodeled . Ctll,
814-992 -6891 enytime.
· ·

23

Professional
Services

W1ter wall• serviced end drilled,
Free elllmattl. Call 614 ·9925006 or 614 -742· 3147.

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR
rediloo11er your piano ' s btlutlful
tone. call today, Werdl K.y!
botrd, 304-875· 111100 or 17&amp;7 .
3824 .

�Page- 12- The Daily Sentinel

Reo l E ~ l o l e

LAFF·A·DAY

'

61 Household Goods

I

CDf.mty AppUtn~ Inc Good
uMd eppllenna 1nd TV Htl
Open 8AM to IPM. Mon thN

I

31

Homes for Sale

ht 614-445·1899. 127 3rd

A... Olllllpolll, OH .

Vallev Fumiture, n.., a us.t .
Large IICtion of ~ellty fuml·
ture 1211 Eaatern Ave,

4 bed room houH, firepltct, 3
m1 touth ofGalllpol ll, U9.900
Call day a &amp;U -448· 181&amp;

Of

Oolllpolll.

avemngt 614-448 1222

-

U•.t bedroom aulte C0"1tiete
twin m~r- MI. bunk bedl,
occ:: chair, brUI bed. quaan sb:a
wat• bed. Call 114-441· 1171

3 bd r ho me. close to town, 2
b1th1, partly furmshld Gil
helt , low utrlrUN CatiiU -245-

9248

Atfrigemor hiNnt gold •1 25,
tefrla••tor whitt frolt flee
11 8D, rafrlelt'ator tide by aide
•185. upright freuer 196.
Kenmoraw1at1er 175. Whirlpool
watll• 195, GE waaher •180.
drytr h...,..t gold 188. el.ctrlc
range hlr'll•t gold t95 . electric
renge 30 ln. copptrtone t1 26,
tlectrierangehtrVest ~ld 30 In
•121. electric: range eYe ll'llel
0'1/llft 1150, bedroom turta 175
Skagge Applitncn, Upper River
Rd, 114·441·7398

N1ce eucutrve type home 3100
aq h: llv area, inground pool,
w11h or w•thout acre-sa S.R

160. 4 mr. from Holler Leatt·
optron a pourb rluy Call 114446 -73 22
Attmodeled home overlookrng
Oh ro nve r, 7 roo ms. vlnyle
11dmg, insu lated, triple triCk
wmdow• partttl banment. fuel
011 or fo re., 11r fu rnace with Mid
on wood &amp; co al fu rn ~~e e In·
dudes mobtla home lite 1nd
ut •h ues 1n piece $29.900 or
house a nd road hontlge
S75.00 0 Call614-367 ·0447or
614 -367 0465

2 bedroom home, large lot. 608
Rtdga Ave. A1o Granda. Otl 2
blocks !rom college. co11 fur
!IIIC I heat S11rtet or retirem ent
hom11 Now rented By appo1nt
mant Cell 614 -682 7424
FOI u le by owner large hou&amp;em
town bv grade sehootl29.500
Call 614 -446 -8390 or 614446 -9 768
3 bdr . large kitchen . bat t-., ut1l 1ty

room, 11ng la gwag a 2 car
dn11away. mea yard garden
IPICI. ftmshed garage Cllt
61 4 446 1368
Quahty home. newly rtmodaled
cho •ca loc1t10R on College Rd
Sy rac use. new completek1tchen
and laundry, llf cond•l•oned.
large lot 614 992-5 324
Go'V&amp;rment homes from $1 IU
retia") Oelmquent 1111: proper1y
RepoUtiiiOnl Call 805-687·
6000 ht H-9806 for current
•epo hst
6 •oomhoutt 1.2ac r• Double
c ~t r garage lo cated on RosaH1II
Batoain pnced •20 .000 Call
61 4 -678 -251 3

'

'

,.

.·

.
:.

House '" Chutar Vd i ~ga 7
•oo ms. basament, g1rtga. one
tenth acra, easy care. n1~
ne(ghborhood t28 ,500 Call

614-985 -3671

Juliet. They replaced all the
kissing parts
32 Mobile Homes
1982 Clayton 12dSO all elec

19,500 304-571 24B5

1967 Hol1ey Park 12dSO 2
bedroom ptrtially lurniahed.
central '"· 14,500. 304-895
339B or 896-3593
1973 Baron 3 br furn .. Cet'ltral
air. total elec , corn• lot bldg,
chain · link fen ce 304 -773 5612
1977 Homette. 14x.70. e•c.
cond 2 bt'. woodburn«. 3 ton
central'" unit •12 .000. 304·

675-51.,

1973 Douglll mobile home.
14x.65, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath.
good condition, 304-675 -403B

Farms for Sale

48 •era term, llttte Bull Sk1n
Call81 4 -258-1162 setlortnde
34 A Ftrm Rt 1 Leon. Make
Offer 1-904-696-6429
168 acr•. Letart 1r11, large
house, 2 bllrna, ownerfinancmg,

304-895-3450

Forsale3 br~me. 12tcrllltnd
plus 8 tau, 71 Ford, 2000
tractor &amp; all aqu1pment. new
bem 4 held Hereford cattle. wtll
sell all together or Stplrltt
773-597B enyt•maornl-5167
after 8 j:).m

2503

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

'"ground po ol 304·773 -5495
MUST SELLI Four bedroom
resrden ce on appro!Cimately 145
acres "w i1h tn e11y drNM'Ig dit·
tance of GaUrpolia, Ohio. Ownlf
ftnan clng with no down payment
to, qualified buyer. Propl!lrtv it
fenced end hu 50 ec r• ofcrMic
bott om Pr tced a t $76,000.
Phone 614-373-1147, uten·
s•vn 7S

Building "'" 3 to 17 acr• 3
m1l11 wat of HMC Ctll 614 448 -8221
80 acrea 1187 an actt • mil•
from R1o Granda. 1 mile off Rt.
35 Aural w11er &amp; elec:. available Call 814-245-9444
1 to 6 acr", partialty wooded
loti Tupper Platns and ChMter,
water and approved roMI to each
lol Re1aonlbty priced. wrn
fmance, 10 percent down. Cal

614·985-3594
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HO MES KESSEL 'S QUALITY

MOBILE HOME SAlES, 4 Ml
WES T. GALLIPOLIS

RT

Mldlum-sizld wood or coal
bumlng Buck Stove, MBO .

for Rent

Electric range,

2 bedroom 1100. depoalt.
1175 pet' month You pay
utlliti•. Cali 814-992-2394 after dark
Nic. t_b.clroom moltllehomeon
nlet lot on Routh lena. ChaahFra. Ohio. Ctll304-773-5828.

44

Apartment
for Rent

Nicely furn1atled mobfle home,

0338.

2 bdr utilities partlllly furn .

f175 mo. Coli 304·875·5104
.. aD4-175-7921
Furniahed apt 2 bdr t175
131 112 4th Gallipo lis Watll' pd.
Ctii814-441-44U efttr 8pm
Older coupln 2 bdr . ulilti•
Ptrttv paid f150 mo ., c..

304·875-5104 or 304·1755386 .. 304-875· 7926
HouM • apanment tor aingl•
Cell 3a.-676 -5104 or 304·
675-6386 Of 304-876-7928
Fum11hed 2 bdr 1pt utilrti•
pertrally pa1d Call 304-675·
6104 or 6715·6386 or 304 ·1576

7926

2 bdr furn11hed apt newly
redecorated , n1ce locat ion,
Hults onty, no pete Ctll 814-

446-2404.

One bdr all electrc, furnished,
tdulta, ref &amp; 1«: dep 1200 mo
Call 614 -448-2238 or 614-

441·2581 .

1 bdr. with stove &amp; refr~ No
peta. 1189 month t100 depOI It. Ctll814-448-3817.
1 bedroom 1pt for rtnt . Bes1c
rent ltlrtl t216 1 month that
lnclud81 all utiliti• Deposit
required of f200 . Contact Vii·
ltge Manor Apt . Middleport
814 ·992-n87 Equ1l Hou11ng
Opportunity

2 bedroom, total elK apt In
Pomeroy Aero.. from Fire
Station. 814 992·5215 or 014Pomeroy 2 bdr. Naylor~ Run.
1175 mo. n 00 deposit, yard.
patio, Ctll 1ft.r 6pm 814-992·

Apartment for rent 1n Syracu1e
large 2 bedroom. I 1915 p•
month Daposit required. Call

304-571-2336

114-882·5187 9·00
pm

After 5:00

114-982-5732

10

pm

5:00

Call

2 bedroom f\lrn11hed 1pt . tn
Middleport. Allutiliti• p1id Celt

614-982-15084.

41

1978 Mens10n 141170, 10x20
porch S. awning, underpmning.
2 bdr
beth Vr h'lltngroom.
ee~hn g t1n lll1tchen, 1tova. refug ..
dlttl, firepltce . AC , wa1her,
dryer Call 614 -389·9860

1 bedroom furmshed 1pt Utih·
Newly -Wed• Dream Houu. tits ,.rtlalty furniahed No pel I
Ava1lebla immed11tetv- a com- 114-948-2253 .
plet e refurbished two bedroom
home w ith newl wtll to wall APARTMENTS . mobile homes.
carpeting and coordinlting drep- hou••· Pt. Pleaant end Gtll ipo·
eries provided Garaga with Us. 614-441 -8221.
opantt. gtrden spot, and m.,y
othar utr11. Be the tint to Vve in 3 room IPirtment. avety1h1ng
th11 imm.cul1te homeloceted 11 furn1ahed , privata entrance,
1055 2nd Ave In Gallipolis. For ground floor , utilltlt1 p1id.
more detaile, phone Dentae 1t 1250 month 304-875-8730
Colon111 Proper1111, 814-2881 bedroom fum6shlcl tpartment
5110
in Pomt PIIUint Aduh1 only
3 bdr home W1ll tceept ona No peto. 304-175·1386
child. no pett. ref. Call61 4 -446·

Uud mo bile homes l11gnt
tel&amp;etion in the area. Fmanc1ng
av rul ab le French City Mobil e
Homes lnc 614 -448 -9340
19 7 3 Ltb ert~ 2 bdr • woodburnar, new carp.-t in bedroom.
IIOVe t. refrig 14,800. Mu11
..u Call 614 -245 -9264
1988 MansiOn 70• 14 INed 1n 7
mos for mora info . Plaut call

614 992-2269

197 4 Sta rdust 2 bd r , 2 bath,
OR . LR. eMptndo, n.vv lumaca,
carp et. ho1 wa1., h11ter Celt
614 -448 -3917

ev••

1984 14.11 70 Overltnd Park
manut by Holly Park 2 bdr ,
llfg e beth with gardan tub &amp;
shower 11111. Unfurnished, li'lled
'" 1 yr . Total electri c. includ11
block. elec wire &amp; breaker box.,
good condttion For more tnfot·
matiD n pie•• call 814 446·

1724
1980 L1b,lrtv 14x64, 2 bed
,oom. unfurnl1hed . vinyl underp!nntnijl included . Mu1t 1ell Celt

304-n 3 5873
1976 10.11160 Alan Mobil e Home
2 bedrooms, ell gu, partially
tu rnilhed with amaH porch on
rented lot. On 81ech Grove Ad.
Rut ltnd 14000 814-7422738 any ti me.
19 72 12~t60 Elcone Mobile
Homa with e .. ily deteched
10• 26 aunporch . MusltaloCite
Front kitchen. 2 bedroom, fur ntshed. • 6000 114-986-4227
=~------- l c197 4 12x60 eltc1:r!C 2 bedroom
mob1le home. A.C ., underpinnin g, pert Iaiiy turnlahtd Asking

e4700. Coli 614-985·3925

MOBI LE HOMES MOVED. In-

luted. rmoneblt tal•. Call

304·578·2336

Houses for Rent

1158

46 Furnished Rooms

3 bdr hou .. 8 mtl• out of Pt.
Pleasant 1250 mo .. plua depoatt. Call 814-448-4802
2 bdr. 136 Second Ave. good
neighbo rhood, rtftrtn ces I.
depo•i1 Ctlt 61 4· 448 -3949 or

614-446· 2419 .

92B Ftrst Ava 5 room hou11

Coli 614-446 -3B45

2 bedroom fum ished houM In
Middleport.

5304

892·7124

Plckans U•ed Fum1tura. Good
quality utMI furniture Open 9to
8 or call lor tppO!nlmtnt.

63

Antiques

Antique wood

614·388 -8&amp;33

19 73 12x60 Arhngt on, fr ont
k•tchen. must be totd French
C 1t~ Brok euga, 614-448 -9340

Tri ·Star Compect Sweeper
•76. or btlt offer C1ll 614-

city. adult• only C1ll 81 4-44&amp;-

Ashton buildtng lots with pubUc
wtter. mobile hornea permitted,

1982 Fl eetwoo d 3 bdr , 2 full
bathl. tott l el eC1 ric For more
mtor ma1 ion c tll efttr 4PM,

19 73 1 2x65 Uto p11 2 bdr ,
flo nl ltv room, owner mu st sel l
French C•ty Brokarag e 61444 6·9 340.

8817

4034

1aae.

PHONE 614 -446 7274.

1969 Elcona 2 bdr. 1211:80. with
p01ch. good cond ., or w•ll tr1d1
for ctm per, • 4 .300 Call &amp;1444 6-15 11

080 Call

3 roomt Uled carpeting With
pad , 10f1. 2 chei,. 304· 876

614-985-3925

35

NI CI 1973 Eutopil 65 ft p1rty
!urn . 16 200 Nice 1973 Ar·
hngto n 60 ft parlly turn
15 ,200. Ca ll 6 14-448-9340.

uoo

304·176-1483 .. 876-1450

992·7314.

7 ICtet w ith complete mobile
home hook-up Bam. WI Chllttr
area Atking 110.000 Can

32 Mobile Homes

42 Mobile Homes

Call 61 4 · 992·

For rent Sleepmg Rooms and
hgk1 house keeping rooms P•k
Central Hot1l Cell 814-446·

3 bedroom. Hartmgtt Perkwty

c.u 114-9B2·7113

2 bedroom Duple»~ 00..11 par·
tlalt\' fumithtd Low ut~llt••· In
Pomeroy Cali dey1. 814-992·
2381 Of 614 ·992 -2509 l'llltn·
ings

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bdr turn or unfurn . convament locatiOn, Upper River Rd .
•II utilltin ~id ex.cept electric
Sac dep. req. Call 814-446-

814-3117-7148

121180 two bedroont fumithad
• 185. par month plua depoalt
and utilities Call 114-982·

7479.

2 bedroom mobllehoma, 11J mile
Jenicho Ad . C1H aft.- 1 :00,

304-175·8483

For rent, 14dl, furnilhed . 14
Burdette Add 304-171·1372.
Call anytime.

C1llehen'• Used Tire Shop. Over
1.000tir•. alz•12 , 13 . 14, 15.
18, 18.6. 8 mittt out Rt 218

Coli 114·211-1251 .

Plaatlc Cllttm lfate approved.
plmlc aeptlc tanks. plastic
culvart1, m.tel culvert• AON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jack·
10n, Oh 614-288-5930
Echo trimmers 188 7&amp; to
f299 96 Husqvarn1 aawt.
Echo saw a, Verdman mowera
New • uaed. all mall• Ch11den
Stw Supply, Koontz ·SIIIor Rd .
V1nton, Oh Clll814-388 8564 .
FDf 11la Htrlequm Roman ce
bookl 270 for $76, white
wooden table 125. Set at 258
So Fourth Ave . Middleport,

Oh.

Round k1tchen table wnh ltlf
and 8 dtaira. t 50 Kindlewood
woodburn..- used 2 IMIOns
t450 Gas water heater 30 gtl
11ze used 2 yean good shape
150 3 cuahtan Norwalk couch
IXC lhape 175 . Call 61 4 -256·

1932

10" table 11w, band sew . Call
814-446·8131 after 6
1 hth ~quenum , eoffae table. 2
in11de doors Ct l 614 -446

3732

1981 eta• dozer 3608 cenopy,
wind1, 8 WIV blade 4 IX11
lowboy metal bed buitt on
rampa, ball hitch 427 Chlt\ly
truck engine. Page e" hft
Chetter ule 114-985-3667.
New Holland mowing machine
Hey Tedder Fold down campe r

814·742-3114.

Slight P1int D1mege Flashlftg
enow lign 12791 light.t, non ·
arrow 12:691 Non -light.:! 12391
FrH !mars! Few leh See
lo cally 1 -800 -432 · 016 3 ,
any tim•
Zenith ftoor model color TV
E• callent conditiOn 1150 614 -

FurniShed room •115 Ut1lit1•
pd 1 919 2nd Galhpolill. Share
bat h:- Single mala Calf 614-

46 Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBilE Home Ptrk,
Route 33, North of Pom•oy
Large Iota Call 814-992· 7479.
Trailer lpiC81 Send Hill AoMI
convanlent to achools. 11:ore and
hotptta:l. City sewer av1illbla.
Inqu ire Rani•. 304·6111 -4800
b.twean 9 00 1nd 4 00 week
doyl
Treller lot on C.-nden St Pt PI
no per month. 304·6715 -7771

446-2783

1 New salvage steel cilor
blanks, mcktand ICratch• •1&amp;
to f 25 11
2 Thermal patnan thermal break
alumlnumw•ndow saeverai i iZet
•4t 95 to 179 95
3 B' elu minu m patio do on tet
n99 .95 wlith scrHn .
4 Octogan led tltney 9'111
window• t49 96
6 15 l1te ptna French lt!ora B
grade• 189 95
6 4xBII 1A Matonita under lay·
mant 129 96 aa , 4x4x'l• $ 1 00

7 4 ~~: 8 x,.4 toung groove waffle
board exterior glued B IB 95
4•8• '12 4 ply plywood 8

liqu or Pltf'mit D2· D2X (Middle·
portl lor ule, price negotilble
For Information. cell D Hun1er
114 ·-481 -1080 or 61 4 · 992·

2720

2 · 10,000 BTU 111 oondlt ionera
for

cnement Windows

Call

176-4131

Wil liamson Mut Market
U.S.O.A Pr1m1 8eet Sela, Sides
t1 29, Front qta t 1 09, H1nd
qta 11 70 US 0 A Choice
Beet Sale. Sidea n .25. Frontt
11.1)1, Htnds t1 62 PfiCI in
ctudet cuttmg, wr-wlng tnd
fraez lng Whote Primal Cuu
Whole R1bevesU · 14 lb aver ega
13.90 lb. Whole New York
Strip• 12-14 lb everega 14.08
lb. Choice Tendarhon 15 .99 lb,
S~n lom 13.51 lb Full lotn
13.25 lb Prtce •ncludts cutting
Depoail required Guarlfltaed
tender Call 304-176· 6383 .
P.,.nt Pleasant. W Va
8 HP. !1 1 ton) log apliHer. Werm
Mornlrtg atova, Clll 304-875·
3028 after 6 p m.
1875 Chevy Monu •600. AI·
pine llereo w ith 8 ~~: 9 Alp~ne

304-176·1985

e.

dryer, hre•

23,000 btu 1lr oond: 10.000 btu
eir cond for aala. 304-876

122.

For 111t wool ruga 9x12 , t50

82

OI1W St., Oalllpolia. New A uMd
wood-coll•tov•. 8 pc wood LR
Mllte 1311, bunk bede 1118,
lftlron rec"'"" 189. .,_.
uaed bedroom suh•. r1n_gn.
wringar wnhen, • lho11. New
llvingroom 1Uh• t1U -te98,
llmPt. ltlo buylrtg co• • wood

a

...,.. Col814·448-3118 .
0000

USED

APPUANCES

Welflera. dryer1. rtfrigwttors.
rang•• · lkagg1 Applltnctl,
Upp• Aiv• l'ld. btllda ltone

CrMI_Mottl. SJ 4- 44~ - 7398

'-----------.,.-----------1

814-3B4 -3645

RAilROAD TIES 8 % feat b~ 8
1nd!N by 10 ~nchn. 88 per til,
dellvered Bill Slack 614 -992·

22B9

Block, brick, morta r and masonry auppltn Mount11n St1te
Btodc., Rt . 33 , New HtV$11, W
Va 304-882-2222

56

Pets for Sale

Oragonwynd Cattery Kennel
CFA Hlmelaytn, Pa rsl t n and
Siam•• kittens AKC Chow
PLIPPIH. New puppies Ill kittens
Cell 446 -3844 anar 7PM
AKC Reg Miniature Daschund
femal e puppv Has had shott
Call 614 -446 -7920
Aet lltered Doberman pup Red
temtla. excallent pad1gree .
Good temperamen t t125 Call

614-256-6403

Female wolf hybrid pup , 7 wb ,
thotl and wormfld, gentle 111tel·
l~gan t , c ute beyond words •25
&amp;14 -742-2681 .
App aloota ftllv . 3 yeara old. 14
htnds, g ent le an d bro ke t 200
Call 304-67 6-46 14 or 8953548

304-675-2288

57

Musical
Instruments

Baby Grand P1an o Goo d conditio n Beautiful oak ca b1nat
$995 . C all 614 -742 · 2957

59 For Sale or Trade

61

oiCh. 304-175-n71

24 ' round by 4 ' deep pool, pufT1J
• 11111d litter, all cleentng aqulp
ment. and aol• a winter oover1

304-175·4357 Iller 5 p.m.

Zorox 3300 II Copier, 30• ·1751244.
Queen tin hide-away bed,

f250. 304-875·2217

1111 Chovlllo, f1100; RtMt
hitch. fha Ford truck, 175: tNdl
camper UOO . Cell after 4 30

304 -57S-2929 .

Farm Equipment

JIM ' S FARM EQUIPMENT
Cf:NTER SA 35 W Gtlllpolls,
OhiO Ctil &amp;14 446·9777,1'111
614-446 3&amp;92 . Up front triC·
tors with wafTanty ovlf 15 used
trecton. 1000toola
Utthty bldg. SPl 30 'x40'x9 "
wrth 1 6 'x8" slider • 3' ""'
door 16 .256 erected Iron
Hone Bldgl . 614 -33 2-9745
collect
Us«&lt; Combn•
JDFP no int. tll11 -1-87
John Deere 6800 hydro . ditlll
John Deere -M20 di•al.
John Deere .WOO d•aael 4 whl
dr.
John Ottfl 3300 di•eL
Gleener 0 gel platform
Gleaner K gas plttform 2 row
c.h .
John Deere 45 doub4e VM belt
platform 2 row corn heed
New John Deere 4425 comb•na
no lnt till 9 · 1-87 ,
Ra 11 lmpl A Supply. St At 41
North W11t Un10n. Oh1o Call

613-644-3023

John

Deere hay rake

614 446-2252

Call

Boline 860 with 38 11d1 mowmg
deck 4 ft cycle bar. t900
614 992 -7458
New Holland 7 ft havbind.
e• cellent Gehl 95 Grtndar
m•.. r 21 '" mil magn.-t. Exc
cond, 304· 213· 42 15
Alhs Chtlmers 7030 tractor,
13 0 HP B•t ofler Sidera
Equipment. H..-.d~raon . 304675-7421

62 Wanted to Buy
Now buy.ng shell corn or ear
corn Call forlatntquotes River
Crty Farm Supptv. 814-446

2985

63

Livestock

2 year old Llmou t~ n 8ullfor uia
Pure bftd . A lao upright freezer
Call 814-378-6218
2 year old L1mou11n Bull torula
Pure bred . Also upwught
freezer Call 814·378-8218
Atlbtan Hor'"· purebred Are·
b1en stu d llt'lllct Specitl d!l·
counts to youth groups. R &amp; J
Arabtans, leon, W. Va. 304-

458-1062.

Laymg hen s. 50 cents uch. Call
304-937· 2268, no 1n1war, Clli
lt\lening1

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Custom cod1ung 117.50 per
tcre Cell 814-448 -2628 or
614· 245·5693 eft• 8 OOPM

Hav Squtre bllll from 19815
Never wet, t1 00 .. ch Also big
Low Boy Tn A.. l traile r for .. le round bll•. 110.00. 814-74228 7 7
ot' trad e
At ktng 1&amp;60. Call _ _ _ _·- - - - - - - 1
614-992· 7841.
For ule: Now taking ordeB for
hay out of the f1eld 90 1 bale.

Far m Sup pii P.S
&amp; L1ves !nck
61

F

arm

E ·
qUipment

614-949·2849

Good miMed hey on the wagon.

., 00 304·176-5579

Hey 1nd muk:h t.y. 76 c.nts a
bale Also fir-..vood. UO load

304-773-1115.

Tran sporl al 1011

U S 35 West, Jackson. Oh io

614·286·6451

Mauey Ferguson, NfiN Holland.
8u1h Hog Sel• &amp; Sent1ce Over
40 .... tractors to cho ose from
&amp; ooft1)Mte hne of new &amp; used
lqUipmlnl . llrgMI HllctiOn In
S E Ohio

71

D-4 doter very good cond, 4 way
bllda. •a.ooo c.u 614-245·

1987 Chevy fmptll 398· 325
HP. red. black intar10r. PS, PB, 2
dr ., fender lk1rt1. ex. c. cond,
good show ctr, 13,000 . Cell

9248 .

T0-30 tractor •1 .89&amp; New Idea
D1n1 bounce mower 1495 New
ldas hay e ond1tio ner 1196 NH
&amp;8 ba ler 1496 Call 814-286·

8522.

1988 long diesel tra ctor 011er·
worllled 1 Never More horan per
dol lar a. Long 810 64 HP tractor
Dell'llers only- 19 ,695 Ctlllury
&amp; see, 614 -286 -6622
MF No 12 baler •1 , 196 8ft. 2
kay tedder U50 6 ft drum
mower 11 .495 Cell 814-286·

652 2.

Used Hay Equipnwnt
John Deere 530 Rd . btler
New Holllf'ld 860 Ad . baler
Jokn Deere 410 Ad . baler
John Deere 336 1q baler
John Deere 24T baler
John Deere 14T baler
Badger round bllet'.
John Deere 1217 mower-cond
IHC 990 s· mower-c:ond.
John Deere 6110 rake w frt whl
John Dee re 894 rake
Oonlhue hyd bale fork
ROll lmpl. S. Supply, St Rl 41
North. West Union , Dhto Call

513-644-3023

Used Tractort .
JDFP no int till 1- 1 ·87
Whitt 4-150 cab dualt
John Deere 4440 cab A· H QR
1300 hra
John Deere 2980 0 575 hra
w-2$0 to.:ter
John D"re 2840 Aoll -gard
canopy, dull hyd
John Deere 40200 W.F. PS .
John Deere 30100 NF .
Ford 901 aelactld speed extra
ciHn.
John Dee re 70 G, rotl -a-matlc.
Allis Chalmert 8 W· 1 row cult
tHC A w -1 row cult.
Roaa lmpl. A Supply, St Rt. 41
North , Wast Union, Ohio. Call

613-I&gt;U-3023

71

Autos for Sale

1979DodgeDmnl024 84.000
mtlea 1800 or b"t offtt Call
2158 -1148 9·8.

3 1915 Mu1tangs . 1 r~n•. 2 for
part•. WIIIIellpackagetor•&amp;oo
C 1 11 814-379-2830.
1977 Cam 1ra 350 headm. 4
1pltd trantmlllion, wt'titemte·
rlor. bleck carpet, AM · FM tape
player, 40 waH power booster.
Cregar S·T whaetl, chrome
tractton bM't, air ahocks, red
plint original Gar-s.ekept mint
condition 20.900 orlgrnal
milll. 114-988-4322

Autos for Sale

78 Muttlng 114 cyt .. good c ond
Call 814-446-9358.

992-7403

1982 Ford Elcort, tw , IC, new
redial tir", vary clean white,
$2150 Of b11t offer 304-882-

3200

1983 Ctmero Z2B . 20.000
milll. Deal owner. loaded. chtrcoal gray, must Hll 304 675 8363 after !I p m

1981 Plymouth TC 3 Horizon
hatchbad1. 4 sp. air con d. Dolby
ltereo. front wheel drive •1600
or oest offar 304·89&amp;· 3036
1988 T-Bird, lo.ted. auume
loen 304·875· 4276 aft1r 8
1975 Chavy Caprice, 4 door,
•496 00 •• It Wm A Knight,

304-675-3275

72

Trucks for Sale

1982 OodgtRIITI Pickup 3 spd
with overdrive, fibtrglau
topper, exc. cond Ctlt 814·

12,995. Co1614-288-B622.

197B Dodgt ~~ 4•4 1ut0 , PS,
PB, AM -FM 18.000 m1ln on
360 engine. ntw PilAt 'lltfV good
cond. Aatl:ing U ,960 alao Mvara
blede 1950 Trede
4-w.-,
r. beat offer moving Call

.-.ow

614·441·2745.

1979 Dodge ,_. ton club cab 4•4
auto , PS , PB, 1ir, AM -FM, till
wheel, tow mleage, 380 tng.
new tir ... wheell, brake•. front
oaara. lock out hubl . ex cond.
000 llao Myers 4-WIY ~now
bleda t9150. TrMie or best ofl•
moving Cali 614-441 -2745

•&amp;.

1878 Cheyenne ChiYrolat 'Big
10 ' 'h ton, 1uto. PS. PB. niiW
t1rt1, 78.000 m1111. •3.000

Coli 114·441 4282.

86 Ford Aenger truck . 4 wheel
drtve, tl'ftlll eQUttv. 111ume
balance. 10,000 mil•. 304-

875-7842

2054

73

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1979 ConversiOn van, 1985

Chevy tnock. noce 1978 Chovv
Luv. Coli ol11r 6 114-4482558
1988 Wrecker 440 Holme
wanch wl1h 1wlng boo ma,
1978 Dodge window ven, 380
tng.. e. auto. AC. PS. PB, good
cond Cell 61 4-245·5294
Chevv v•n or C-30 truck, A-1
condition Satl Of trllde for c1r or
piekup Ctll814-245-9516 .
1973 Dodge van . nww paint,
1750 . Call 814-388-9767

miiNQe. Reatonably priced Cell

114 992-2511 .

1971 Fibargl•a Nove 327- 326
HP chroma engine. M· 22, 4 1pd
tran1 . Call 814-992· 8941 .

74

1979 Chl'llrolet 2 dr Monu
If Ilion wagon. auto. one owner,
t 899 John ' • Auto S alea, Rule·
'llilla Rd Gelhpolls, OH

19n Chevy Camara 350 eng•ne, auto, good cond., rebuilt
motor. new tlfM Call814-379-

2380

1978 Dattun 200d, II IPd.,

:J:,~o ohorp Coli 614·448·
1980 Mercury Merquts ex.
oond , one ownar. loaded. Call
814-448-3870.
1980 Toyota CoroHe, 2 dr.
hatchbtck With IUn roof. good
condit6on Call 11 4 · 281-8837
after &amp;PM
1977 Otdarnoblla Cu11tta Su·
pram• AM -FM can. PS. PI,
ralty wh ..... .-.w thoc*a. 1700,
no rust . Cell 11 4· 441·4803.
1978 Buidc Rael ah.-p , ona
owner, V-8. PS, P8, 1ir. white
tett• th•. •1.791. Call 114·

2f&amp; -118e5 .

WOW! NEA1 1

(j]}
MacNeil-Lehrer
News hour
Gl (j}' Divorce Court
@ Private Benjamin

0 Cil CII

\I

\

·.

FRA'NK &amp; ERNIE 'S

II

BREAKFAST

~· SPEC~lS

"

II

..D~

Coll814-245-5223

~AS'T?

fG(jJ AND

cha91's Atr Force mentor
vtSIIS. W1lhe and Dav1d
adop t h1s macho at11tudes--

TifAT':s' fUNNy. ·· I:
HAP you T'YPf'l&gt; A5
A fLAtc!:- ~~ON.

w h1c h enrages Va lene (R)
In Stereo

ffi Father Murphy

(!) To Be Announced
® Ill (!) Major League

Baseball · Teams to be An·

Cil

1 9BO Honda CA 250 loh of n.,.,
parts, mull a..l 1400 Cd

114-388-1752.

Suzuki 380, wlndahleld. uddle
bagl. 9.000 mliH. IIUO. Honda
460 Scrtmb4er 20,000 miiH.

THEY1RE ALL LE A.VING! [ SUESS

THEY COMP\.E TED WORK ON THAT
CONTRA PTION! 1. ...

well !CCI Wmer /ex plooer
Chns11na Dodwe ll revts us a
tn be rn Papua New Gutnea

160 mon ·1 IR)
(11) Dempsey and Make·
peace 160 min 1
8 05 Cil MOVIE 'Cross of Iron'
8 30 0 CD @ Amazing Stories
A henpecked husband f1nd s
solace

EEK &amp; MEEK

Fetty TrM Trlmmmg, atump
remo11al Call 304-175 1331

Starka TrH and Lawn Service.
ltnd1c1ping 304-&amp;7&amp; -2010

ACROSS
I F"ahled htrd
4 Card spo1
1 Penve r's lllgh
St.ad1um
8 One son 1n
•Bonanza"
10 ls""'ll

an unus ua l teleiJ!·
sw •tch

IAJ.

In

Rot1ry or c tble tool dr illing
Molt welll compl111d umed ay
Pump uln end t~ica 304-

MOR'fY MEEKLE i\ ND \\'1:\'TimOP
OO"!tJJ.. THINK ~E QI..IALITY
O F TELE:VI'?&gt;ION OliN BE
IMPI&lt;O\IED, 6FOTLESS?

CARTER 'S PlUMBING
AND HEATING

Cor Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 814-446 -38BB or 814-

I DeN'!' KNOW WHY

I Son-iER 10 A6K
',

YOU ANYTH ING .

'--------- r--~

21

(I) Women for America,
Women for the World .
Ben er World Society A
look at wo men s conlrlbutlo ns 1ow ard na t•ona! secu r-

11 :oo

CAN I
SORRY A
DOLLER
BILL,

EvergrMns Tree &amp; ltump ramo
vel , lawn cera, fen ces, n nd &amp;
gravel. mulch. stone deli'llerad
Call Don Wtugh , 614 446
9848

WHY DON'T YOU GO
TAP

LUHE'( ?

OL' ACE ·
IN -TH' HOLE

I AIN'T l Al KIN'
TO THAT GOOD -

FER- NOTHIN'
VARMINT

OWE HIM
THRE E

mCD Please Dont Let Me

o mm o m® o ®@

42 The lleatles
' - lllle"
43 Break

...

1247

e

principle lhal 111 l11 V I dua l ~
pnss ess 1n ~ c h ara c ter1 ~ t 1C~

advan-l ageo,u~ f or ~ UI' \ ' I I ' ill

Ca.l , llm• ton e, gravel etc
Delivered 1 ton 1nd up . Jtm
Lanutr 304-875-1247 or 876-

~ ,,,~'"'

ce11V1ron me n 1

stll ul e an mcre as1ng
propor1 1on "r 1h e1r ~ pec 1 es
111 lha l e nv1rcmment Wllh

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

1163 Sec Ave , G11lltpoli1
614· 446-7833 Of 814 446 ·

948· 2734.

1833.

Honda CM400T. 8100 miltl .
Fully '"ld oqulppod. l"cludlnQ
baga . New uhaUiti· VGC .

R &amp; M FurnituutM i nufactu ri ng
St At 7. Crown City, Oh Call
614 256· 1470, call Eva 614
441 - 34 3 8 O ld &amp; n e w
Uph ottered
Mowrey·, Upholaterlng • erving
tri countylrtl 21 Yllrl . Th e be 1t
In furniture uphotuarlng . Call
304 · 876 · 41 5 4 f or fr ee
H1 imates.

1"~EREGOES

11 30 0 Ill lW Wimbledon
Highlights Hoghllghls of
Wimbledo n ac110 n are fea-

A VERY OL-D

.

WELCOME TO THE
FIRST MEETING OF

Ol/11. POLKA CLUB !

4/E'RE ALL ~ERE TO
~-lAVE A GOOD TIME
SOLET'S 6~T STARTED..

R S

U K

OE W

ll C R S

ffi Burns &amp; Allen

UIJ ZU

TM V DL O

CIJ WKRP in Cincinnati
fll CD One Step Beyond

C E U

F 1J K 0

0 IIl ABC News Nightline
[]] Nas hville Skyline
®I Alice
0 @ Magnum. P I. An al·
tra ctive champion surfer •
turn s to Magnum fo r help
when her ex-husband threate ns to krd na p her daughter

'•

ZD E

[)

IIJ SportsCenter

SPeCIES"

170 mon.IIR).
@ Trapper John, M .D.
, 1 1:45 0 Ill 1m Best of Carson
:

Ton1ght's gues ts are Donald
O'Connor and Ornella Muu.

160 mtn I IRL In S1ereo
1 2 00 ffi Jack Benny
ffi Soccer:- Coli- All·
Star Game 12 hrs ) IRI.
Cil !llational Geographic
Explorer
IIl Entertainment Tonight
Rob Lowe 1alks abou1 his
role in the soon-to-bereleased f1lm, '' About Last

L C H U L R

.. II A l R

S MO

OZCYl!

.

ll SL

llR R

.,

..

l ' f.I'. K
R slJZ .

X C L

.'

X I. CO R

Yesterday's Cryptoquote : LET L' llf.I.IEVE
NEITHER llALF OF THE GOOil PEOPLE Tf' l., l S OF
OURSELVES, t;OR HALF THE EVIL Tllf. \ ' ·1\ OF

L---O~TII
:.:.:::E:::R:S___:J:_::O:::II:.:.:N_:P,:E;_II:::I.:.S.:.
EN:..N_'- - - - - - - - - - .', .,
' ·,
Ins Chacon the "Dollv Par·
Noghl
• (!) Rawhide
Ill I]) Howoil Fivo·O
@ MOVIE: 'A Lion in the
Street a'
t 2:30 (I) Boot of Groucho
(IJ ABC News Nightline
• (!) Rawhide
CHI MOVIE : ' Diamonds for
llreokfast'

12:40

e

Iii&gt; MOVIE: 'Mr. Syca·

more'

t 2:45 D I]) (fiJ Late Night with
David Lene'""'n The Inter·
na1iona l Day s how . fea1u ring
I

.•

\

H l h'. t l E

tured

each succee c.llllg ,ge ne

PEANUTS

•.

...'

WMXX U L UETlJ

R ~ \J

(141 Soap

natural selec

..

6-30

Shanghao 160 mon I

SNAKE!!

..

.'

CRYPTOQUOTES

th e owner of a fast -food
s lan d and the mavor o f

General Hauling

.'

One teller stands lor another. In Utis sample A 1s used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters ,
apostrophes, the length and formati~ of the words are a ll
hints. Each day the code letters are different

10ward free ente rpn se featu res conversauons With a
factory manager a fa rmer.

.

·~

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

on-

'.

.. .'
...

hrean

locat•on s urve y of the trend

.;

.'
..,.

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOJ'ES - Here's bow to work It:

New China: From Marx to
Th1 s

:

that

(t fJ Adam Smith in th e

CALEB?

.'

41 F"or fear

m

0

'r

38 Exaruon
..0 Ratti(' un

Mastercard?

..

36 Original

M1chelob Cup From Ooean
sode. CA IRI
Cil Gunsmoke
CD Love Connection
[]] SCTV

I Al READY

' • 'I

.

- match

m Bill Cosby Show
I' M FlAT AS A
FRITTER , SNUFFY..

Ru ~ta n

moun lam

CIJ Surfing : Stubbies Pro l!o

Bidwell Ceth Ft ed Store now
handling 4 " plnt1c drain pip e &amp;
fitting Call 81•·388-988B

' ,J

36 Three

News

BARNEY

'.

'''I \

33 ~on o f Bela
34 Thessahan

D1e
011 This Old House

•

. ..

10 Sweet roll 23 Terror
12 Htmalayan 24 Plane
coun1ry
landmg
15 Wrath
25 Caroa e&gt;enl
18 Rotate
27 Offer
39 Grassland

28 MISJUdgl'
29 Pyrnman Ia(

ny

Oood -1 Exell'llatlng, b"emant 1.
foot••· driVfPWi ys, septic tankl,
lendlcaping Call any1ime 814
441·4137, Jim" l. Dtvtaon,
Jr. owner

29 - m1gnon
30 Vaunt
31 Standard
quanucy
32 What• herd
37 ' All About

hox

Lauderdale . FL 160 mon IIRJ
Cil Roundtable (60 mon )
Clil@ News
10.30 IJJ Taking Stock

EKcavating
- -- - -- - - - -

21 Solitary
22 Gertrude

22 Apportton
25 Mushroom
26 Actor Rop
27 S tor a~t·

Championshio From Fort

83

78ill
of fare
9 IllinoiS

n vPr

10.00 (!) McDonald's U.S. Svn·
chronized
Swimm1ng

441 4477

response

611ahhle
city

14 Perch
16 Mall
17 Fosler
19 Big boss
(ahbr )
20 English
r1ver

American Hero'

THE QUALITY OF TELEVISION
CAN BE IMPROVED BY
R6'MOVIN6 THE PLUG FROM
TI-lE WALL SOCKET:

2 Palm leal
3 Reproach
4 flough y .
mixture
5 Bridal

IS One (Sp )

12 hrs I IRI
(14) MOVIE : 'The GreateS1

..

DOWN
I Exactness

statesman
II ikgiSiator

the melt •ng -pot of Amenca

Plumbing

+93

by THOMAS JOSEPH

wtth cnuc Ros&lt;J muno Bernre r (60 m1n I
'10) 0 ill) Ellis Island ICC)
Part 2 of 3 Four 1mm1gran1s
arn11mg at Eilts Island 1n
1907 str1ve for success '"

&amp; Heating

'10
'
t 9 6 51

t~~~:.r• rot rf

9.00 0 Ill [151 MOVIE · 'Rear ·
view Mirror' iCC) IR)
(]) 700 Club
()) @ Amencan Mast ers
Philip Johnson : A Self·
Portrait (CC) Amencan ar-

RtNGLES "S SERVICE , 111 pe
rienc.d carpenter. electr1 d an,
m~aon . painter . roofing lln ciud·
ing hot tar appllct1iont 304·
67! ·2088 or 675 -7368

B95·3B02

1-Jt.U

I'
••

chitect Ph1ilp Johnson d ts cusses h1s c hang1ng vtew s

81 Honda 150 in good condltlon . 1910 Cttl614-992-1144 .

114·H2·11U5.

tn

control

I t::a-Jr 1H lfJK HER MWU
COULD PI\')~ AFa..'rGRN'i-1 ltST

NORTH
tQI0863

:e;s

Stereo

2454

_8_7__U_p_h_o~l-st_e_r_v_ __

Ughttd travel trunk-IPon tlirlng. NM ,.., tirt E.C. 8000
ml•. Cell 114-812-11037 or

The right play
on the wrong day

s•on set w 1th a magrc remote

RON ' S Ta leviuon Serv ic e
Hou11 calls on RCA . Quaur
GE Speclal lng WI lanith. Call
304·576 2398 or 614 -446 -

11 750 Honda. 1410 or best
oflor. Coli 114-241-8238

1881 Hondo CB 7SO Cullom.

Rtver Journeys: A R1ver

Journey by Chn stma Dod·

325 51 38.

7397

t700. Coli 114·H2·HU or
114·H2-8037

MacNeil-Lehrer

1hreals 160 mon ) IRI

®

EKt erior &amp; intlfiOr ttucco. Plt1
ter I. pint• repairs low r1111

U26. Coli 114-387-0101

For aale 1982 Honda 780
CUIIO m Ntw tirlt, Cfllh btra.
beck r•t. crutse control 814·

Star Is

Ne w s hour
110) 1D @ S carecr:ow and
Mrs. Kmg Lee an d Amanda
mus t protec t an •ntern at ro nal tenn•s star when he
oeg tns
rece1vrng
dea th

Extaflor &amp; interior stucco Pl t l ·
ttr &amp; pllltlf reptlfl Low rates
Call 814 -258·1182

Ken's Wet• Serv1ce Wells.
cisterna pools end waterbeda
filled Call 614· 387·0623 or
614· 317-77 41 or 304 -1 75·

AMITY OUNCE SLUt~ MURMUR
An swer What the organ grinder hadA "TURN " FOR MUSIC

EAST
Calculating the right percentage
T
2
+ A 7 II
play at the bridge table can he a hal- , ' 3
' K9 7
fling and perplexmg exercise. Ba rt +A 10 8 3
+K Q J 7
Bramley held today's South cards' + Q 1oB 6 , 4
+J2
when the deal was played last March '
on the finals of the Vanderbilt Cup,
SOUTH
that national team championship
+K 9
named alter the inventor of contract
'A Q J 8 6 1 2
+2
bridge
+A K 7
Alter West had Ill(! ace and a d1a·
Vulnerable: East· West
'•
mond, the outlook for game looked
Dealer· South
good - all South had to do was play
the A·K of clubs and ruff a club. Even
Nortb East
Soutb
if the opponents take a heart trick, de· Wet1
clarer will still have 10 tricks. On the Pass
Pass
3t
third club, however, a slight problem Pass
Pass
arises. Should declarer ruff w1th the Pass
Pass
Pass
heart 10• II he does and the defender.;' Pass
hearts are divided 4·0, he will lose two
'·
heart tricks. On the other band, if be
Opening lead. + A
ruffs low , be mtght be overruffed With
a small heart, and later the defender.; L - - - - - -- - - - - . J
m1ght still come to the heart king
Bramley ruffed low and was over· with half of that 17 percent - namely, '·
ruffed by the seven, and then East held the chance that the six were in West's
up once w1th the sp?.de ace to deny de· hand. Furthermore, even when the ·
darer entry to dummy to take a heart small heart is overrufled, quite olter(
that overrufl is from a holding of K-x
finesse .
Bramley's play was nght. Hearts of hearts, and tbe bared king will then ..
. .,
will split 4·0 a little less than 10 per· drop under the ace
Nice play, Bart! Or, as your teamcent of the time. Although clubs Will
diVide 6-2 about 17 percent of the mates told you, the operat1on was sue·
hme. declarer was concerned only cesslul but the patient died.

nounced (3 hrs )
@I CD MOVIE 'A

ltfat lmt guaran·
tit . Locat refartn cea furntlhed
Free ntimatn Call collect
1-614 -237-0488, da-y or night
Ro g era Batament
Wtterprooflng

7911

I Jumbles

Iii CD Tax.
Ill CII ® Wheel of Fortune

N1gh1
@ Alice
C1IJ Jeopardy
7·35 (]) Sanford and Son
8.00 0 ffi (fiJ Valeroe When Mo·

Motorcycles

Will trtda for good car or truck

Sat urday's

{Answers tomorrow)

By Jameo Jacoby

night Rob Lowe ta lks about
h1s role tn the soon ·to-be·
released fil m. Abou t last

Uncondt tiOn~

Jamal Boys Watlf S!H'Vice Al1o
pools l11led Cl lt814 -256 · 1 141
Of 814-446 -1175 or 814-446

.

Game

ALLEY OOP

85

FoJ ule or trade 1983 750
Honda like new, 13.000 miln

New Newlywed

lEI CW Entertatnment To

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

304 n3 5839

'

James Jacoby

Home
Improvements

Trenching S arvtce water. gas.
and electric FrH es um1111

"

lien!:

port

Born'

1980 Dattun pickup, long bed
with flbtrgl111 topper, 1uto·
malic trtna bw mileage. good
tirlt . nooo ftrm 301 ·675·

...

Now arr ange the cueted letters to
lorm the surpnse answer, as suQ"
gested by tne abO&lt;Je cartoon

BRIDGE

(!) Butterflies

Serv1 ccs

82

F"~O­

!IIIOUS MT

(!) Nigh11y Business Re-

(!) lnsode Baseball

1973 Trwel Tratlar 18ft. SIHPI
8. real nice 11300 Slnd\'aAuto
Sales 614 -992-7403

Sttnley SINmltf 2 room m in
imum 120 per roo m Gall••
Mtigl· Vinton Counties 1·800

."

I KX J
Answer
[I 1 I ]ro ( 1 II I J

CD Hogan· s Heroes

@ Wheel of Fortune

114·441-01515 .

1981 Dodge van PS, PB,
AM-FM rldkl. 4 rMJW rtditl tltal,

B4 CheYetta 2 dr AM -FM
ca 118H1, ' bw mileava 14,200.
Call614· 446·0137

614-441-0059.

HtV, OCNE! CQ/Jf,
W. WWif I'VE GOi11

1976 27 ft Impala lravel tre tlll'
14,200 S11 acro11 from t he
K1n1Ug1 Dri'lle·ln lhllttf Call

Coil 11•·258·1182

e;eOL.OiiY

......
,.,·

W"'l!lll! 'THE
H I ~ ~TUP! Ni~ .

®l News

1

Fourtlfe rims. 15'' , four t irn · 2
L 80 and 2 G 60 304 -875 ·

387-0394

814·317-0447 or 114·387 0465
1983 Ford Conversion Van low

1981 Ctmaro PS. PB, tit, new
tn81. I cyl , 14,200 Cell

ARLO ,\1\'D JASIS

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

81

,·

FESSO~

0 IIl Jeopardy

74 Chevy MINbu, 4 dr, runs
good, body naldt 1 flnle worlc .

304-675-8885

'

'

Noghl' '

7. 30

76

t)

ITORMANI

soon-lo-be-

@I

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

1978 Volaria 2 door 1uto .
•400 Sandy• Auto S1lt1 614 ·

the

28 foot pontoon boet, 80 HP
Mercury. gaagrill. sterto. trailer
Price withmotorU800 , wllh·
out motor t1995 Call dey
814·992 · 2381 tnd night 814·
992-2!09.
---------Ranger bau boat. 18', 85 HP
motor, power tHt 1nd trim,
tow-low trailer, at11n lte1 ltHI
prop • 3500 Fwm 304-882·
269 2

1976 Cougar 2 door. 1uto .
t500 Sandy• Auto Salta 814·

992·7403

'"

ond troller 114-885·3327.

992-7403

1

19n XR7 Mercury Cougar AC .
loaded , ax e. cond, 12.600 Call

role

released ftl m . · Aboul Last

7429

12. 000 CoU 114·255-1393

814·2·5 ·9809

Yukon Dlllta 25ft house bo•t
wtth 40 HP E~nrude outboard

.

• w ....

X) I

m

114-992-5354.

'

tHEWZEI; I

6:05 Cil Down to Earth In Sweo
6:30 0 Cil (fiJ NBC News
(I) The Rifleman
Cil John Fox Outdoors
CJ.l Ill CJ.l ABC News
Cil Doctor Who
®l iD ill~ CBS News
(j]} Body Electric
8:35
(lunsmoke
7.00 0 Cil PM Magazine
Cil Man from U.III.C.L.E
(!) SportsCenter
(I) Entertainment Tonigh1
Rob Lowe 1alk s abou1 h1s

14 ft. •mi v alumnum tith ing
boat with trtllar tnd I hp motor
187&amp; Call 114-992-7663 or

1975 Ccw'llinenttl 2 door, outo.
$560 Sandyt Auto Sat• 81 4·

pm.

CROSS &amp; SONS

Se1ra waahtl'

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE

10 4x8 x.'J.. Iaven ply'NO od 8
•• 49
11 4x8x lf• ulvega p1nelmg
1299.
12 S' redwoodstatnpicntctable
with 2 bench u l39 96
13 Prehung 1nter1or doon all
a•ua and flntthat •29 95
14 Prehung•teel paneldoon sli
aires 189 .95
16 Wood pref1n1shad v.nyl
wrtped colon tt l trt m 7 pc 8100
16 Primed t .. rdrop wood trtm
11 .00 7 pc
17 K-lux bri ck corner• •1 00
per box. 12 box S10 00
18 J2 " x.76 " % t hermal tem·
pered glen reg H 9 96 now
829 95
19 Rock face brown lratler
lktrt tng 2B '"x60" $3 .99 ta
20 22 " x33 " 1t11nle11 l tte110
deep 1i" ks B grade t69 96
21 , Statnlen ateel mrner stnka
•&amp;9.95 8 grade
22 4pc sohdoakandbraubath
ut •23.9 5 ea 3 1ets and l4&gt;
•19 95.
23 5 gal atummum fl'llar mobile
home roof coating 82 2 95
Penn·• Warettou t a. Wellston.
Ohio 8 to 6, 6 deys Call

@ Bodywatch ICC)

."

.

I I K

Iii CD Star Trok
Cil Reading Rainbow (CCI

1969 Critchfield boat 75 HP
A1king 11 .800. Eveninv• &amp;
weettendl 81 4 -448-6282 or
814·446· 7404, m•teg•

8wood
4•8•~
groowa ply r
8 &amp;10Toung
96

---

~-·- - - ­

CIJ Mazda Sportoi.Oolc

19B5 Runeboul, inboard, OMC.
ail equip . Call614 286·2827.

II

I KI

News
(I) Groen Acres

367·0416.

.-.
'

8:00 0 Cil CII Ill I]) ®e tl2Hlll

1978 18 ft Stercraft alumnum
V-haul, lui· 11inyl top, 120 HP
Mercrulae Inboard -ou t board.
power tilt &amp; trim, tilt trtller,
AM ·FM B track 1tareo, t5 ,600
C11t 514-387-0447 or 814·

CLOSEOUT'S
SURPLUS
BUY BACK'S

'.

by Henri Arnold 1M Bob Lee

Unacremblllhlle four Jumbloe.
one letter loHCh !JQUIIt, to form
four OKI I~ wort!l.

EVENING

Boats and
Motors for Sale

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD OAME

~ ~ ~~ ·

6/30/86

BUILDERS

742-3086

oplll&lt;oro U50 aD4·BB2·3387

61 Household Goods

1982 Hondt C8 900 cuatom,

2100 mK•. 121500. 304 -n39125"' 773·915BI.

76

ftf}l)N} fj)1} ~

Television
Viewing

1894

Building materiel s , cement.
blo clt1 ell 1izes, ~ardor deiNII'V
Galllpollt Block Co, 123'h Pll'tt
St , Galhpolll , Oh10 Call 614 ·

Clt'am•c kiln large 3 deckks 1nd
molds Electr ic ~roner !on
rollm) CIII614 -446· 14B9
New T81tlmen1 deatgn embroid·
erv QUilt. handmtde by church
group t100 Cell 304 -937
2681 or 304· 468 -1997

The

B&lt;1RN LOSER

'
1975 Xl250 Honda motoreyele,
dirt or ltrte,, mint cond with
111:tra full Knobby tire . 304·8715 ·

245-5121

Btack male poodle, 7 weeks old

21" color TV Mqnavox. 160. 10
tpeed bike 1815 Call 114·44&amp; 4189.

TONY'S GUN REPAIRS, ICopa
bore eighllng, fa ctory nblueing ,
hOUI'I 9.00 t•ll dark . call 304-

week
month Gellia Hotel. Cali 814448-9680 Atntlllow II 1120
month

5914.

ln R1clne. 2 bedroom. large
yard, clou to lchoola. Call

64 Misc. Merchandise

Aoom1 for rent. day

Close to schools a nd ator81 m
Middleport Cell 614-892·

992·2588
- - - - - - - - ·lc-

e tch

114·992·5133

8658.

Unfurnished mobh homa for
rant in Middleport. C1ll 814·

bed•. 160

0751

441-4416.

rn Middleport. UOO per month

304-175-7771

Monday, June-30, 1986

74 Motorcycles

Building Mate rials
Btodl. brick. eewer pip.,, win ·
dowa. lintel•. ate. Claude Win ·
til's, Rkt Grande. 0 Call 814

9

eH ept , central air and h.,t In

new lv remodeled home Air
con d•t•on, v~nyle 11dmg. excel ·
18111 mng hborhood, pnced1o t ell
614-9 92-501 8

3 bt. fu ll basement. large lot,

Cllll814·441·71 11 .

614-742 -2339 or 814 · 698 -

256-8307

3blliC;I roo mhoma 15auM large
lake, Home tlas flrepi K e. wood,
coal. 011 , hot Wlter hut, new
k1tcf18fl large yard wrth child·
rftll ' s wooden play center Mornmg Star area Ca ll 614 -949·

car

KIT 'N' CARL YLI ®by Lllrry Wrlghl

66 Building Supplies

u 99.

for Sale

111 Mid dleport 5 ro om, 1 bllth

7 1oom house. 111! bath g•age
on Guve l H1ll. Middleport. Ohto
C!tl t 614-992-6714

with

chases."

Wtll tell or trade IINIII firm with
mobile one. Call tfter 5, 614-

Hoult fo r nle In Midd leport 4
bedroo m 2 story Corn11r lot
wt th garage 614 992 6972

Kenmore 18 0 cu.ft. eilfroatlns
top freezer· refrlg with factory
inetaltd Ice mak..-. 10 months
old. Almond color wh:h 111ml111
lin•. power mil•r &amp; in ax. eond
liking 1550. Owner rm11ing

"It s a remake of Romeo and

33

Monday, June 30, 1986

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

-

1

tOn of Pu urt o R1co; Stan Eg• .
the 'Ro llin "W t ll • ams ~j of Ja-

1·00

pan G1cgorv Bodlll, 1he

'.

' Ar ch L1tt lf! of Russta !60
m in 1 lA). In Stereo

,_' .

.

m Dobie GilliS

..... ',
.. ·•..

(]) Archie Bunker's Place

Ell CD Wild, Wild Wes t
1:30 Cil h1her Knows Bea1

(IJ News
•
'· v'
2:00 (I) 700 ~ lub
IIJ Mazda Sportslook IR). : ·
Cil MOVIE: • 'Divon:e.

Ameriean Style'
I

•

.,..

:

I

�~·

'

·-.... -·

.......

. ...

. ..

June 30, 1

DOUBLE 4

~INYL SIDING
$~995 .
·

~

SQUARE

20'/o OFF LIST
AL.L TRUSSES

PINNJD &amp; ,·
LAPPED ·-

SIDING
16FT. LEIIOTH

24' 4/12 Pitch
Lief •JJ.6J
24" Overhang
t26. 90
26' 4/12 Pitch
Lltt •J4.41
24" Overhand
t27 .53
24' 4/12 Pitch
Lief tJ8.S6
24" Overhang
$30.85
"Free Delivery On all Truues"

·

"Saper Paneling Speelel"
"REAL

99

NORFOLK
ELM

4'•8' SHEET

$499
EACH

,.19
9
SHOWER 'STALLS =~E '
1 PC. FIBEROLASS
TUB &amp; SHOWER f.,~~E '19 9
2 PC. FIBEROI.ASI
2
6
9
TUB &amp; SHOWER f.,~~ '
FIBEROI.ASS
9
9
BATH TUBS
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WAFER
BOARD

FIOEROI.ASS 56"

It

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INDOOR -

GRA SCARPET
BROWMOR·
GREEN

4'X8' SlEET

It

$4 69
$599

1/4

It

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WIRE
AMERICAN MADE
15'/e OAUOE

$1899'

. PER ROLL

411 SQ. FT. PER ROLL

ROLL

METAL

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• PRE-HUM8
J' WIOTH ONLY

6F
WIDTHS .
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SLIDINO·WI'NDOWS

2 •2 ...................................... $249
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MILL FINISH
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(SLIIIIRY IUMISIIED)

HOOO &amp;ZUSPAN ATERIAL$ CO •.
CASH &amp;
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MASON, W. 'lA.
PHONE 77:5·5554

28"•5'

UNDERPINNING

INSULATED
DOORS

I

$7 S..---S·BARBED
--

$899

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SQ. 10.

DRYWALL .
TOPPING

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ROLL

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295 .

READY MIX
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