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Inside:
By' thllllend .. .... Papa H-'7
Cle•...,. ........ Pqes&amp;+10

CAJmlat.Tv .............Pqe 11

Deattw ................... Peae 12
F.dl&amp;c;JI1al •••••
Pap 2
• Sport~ ................. Papa 34
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Vol.38, No.41
Copyriehtld 1988

.)

2 Sktions 12 Peges

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 1, 1986

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

0.2 percent in May
. ·By T.R. EAS111AM
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The government's broad reading of
· economic vitality In the ~ar tutvre rose a modest 0.2 pa;cent In May.
the Cornme~ Department S!lld today.
The composite Index of leadlng economic Indicators rose to 178.8111
May from a downwardly revised 178.5 In AprU the Bureau of
Economic Analy$1$ said 1h a report. The scale began at 100 In 1967.
Last month, the bureau reported gains of0.9 percent In March and
1.5 percent In AprU. A change In credit wtstandlng and net business
formation forced downwaJ'd revisions ID 0.6 percent and 1.3 percent,
respectively, bureau ana)Ysts said.
The AprU advallce was stU! the best since October 1983, when the

Farm pi·ice8 ate
down 1.6 percent
By SONJA BILLGREN
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A sharp
government-Induced drop In wheat
plices contrtbuted to a 1.6 percent
decline In prtces' farmers received
for raw farm products, cance!Ung
out a May Increase, the only~arm
prtce hike of the year.'
Overall raw farm prtces were 6.2
percent less than a year earlier.
Wlieat prices plung€9 by 51 cents
between May and mid' June to$2.45
per bushel, the lowest prtce since
October 1977. The federal ptlce
support for wheat was lowered
June 1 to carry out last year's farm
law, which cut prices to make
American crops more competitive

Increase was negated by the June
decline.

A three-month p)ice rally at the
end of last year was followed by a
plunge In January and February,
no overall change In March and a
slight drop In Aprtl.
With a mark of 100 Equal to 1917
prtces, the June Index for all farm
prb?s was 121, down·frilrn a rev~
figure of 123 for May and equal to ·
the AprU Index. A year ago the
Index was 129.
Hog prices are a lrlght spot In the
agricultural picture: At mld.June,
IDg prices av!!faged $50.10 per 100
pounds, up $4.:11 from M,ay to the
highest mark since August 1984.
On the negative side, cattle prices
feU below rog prices to $49.40 per
abroad.
ln an effort to enhance sagging 100 pounds, a decUne of $1.00 exports, Agriculture Secretary Rl· making the overall livestock Index
chard Lyng Monday annouileed the ~hanged from May a&gt; mid-June
but 2.2 percent lower than a year
prkle support for the 1987 wheat
earlier.
c~ will be reduced eYI!II more to
firpUer prices J'()Se 3.1 cents a
$2.28 a bushel, compared t0 $2.«1
"11'115 ·yent and $3.00 1n tHe' ~tlng !X&gt;und• to ,:M -~ntS a ,pa:urid, tli! ·
Ju.b''l!lllf. '
y~~May31.
·.· . . highest price
IMler .prmi fol' cattle, eggs,
',I.owel' ; !l'lces i&gt;r lettuce 'll)d
lettuce,- tomatoes ahd hay also tofnatoell were pr1maey cause~ of a
puDed dOwn the farm price average 19 percent decUne .Jn an lndex of
Iii Jdne, the Agriculture Depart- cornmerdal vegoelables, but the
ment said Monday. DeciJnes·inore mark was 14 percent higher than a
than offset higher prtces for. hogs, year ago.
• By contrast, a fruit Index rose 13
broUers, potatoes, oranges and
percent between May and mldapples.
_June bUt was 6.8 percent lower than
Department dtlclais revised a last year. Higher prtces for
May Increase In raw product !l'lces oranges, apJies, pears (llld grapeto t6 percent, dOwn from the 2.5 fruit pushed up the rronthly
percent hike Initially reported. May Increase.
Potato prices 101e by IKl cents to
wd\.the only month that average
priCes rose this year and the $4.89 per 100 pounds.

performance, sensitive materials and stock prlcesandcontractsand
orders for plant and Equipment aU contrtbuted to the advance. ·
The declining Indicators were led by net business formation, whicH
pulled the Index back by 0.44 percent, the report said.
Manufacturers' new orders for consumer goods and materials,
building permits, average workweek and average weekly initial
claims for state unemployment Insurance aU had a negative Impact
on the composite Index.
As In other recent reports, the lndustlial sector of the economy
appeared weak while the financial sector see~ comparatively
robust.

economic llarometer surged ahead by 1.5 pel't'ent.
The Index, which seeks to predict the direction of the nation's
economy three to six months In advance, stood at 167.1111 May 1985. It
has advanced by 2.9 percent during the first five months 11 this year.
The composite Index has either advanced or remained unchan!J!d
In 12 of the last 14 months. The last decline came In January of this
year, when it feU back by 0.2 percent.
Six of the lllndlcators advanced In May, led by money supply in
1982 dollars, which accounted for 0.28 per cent of the overall Index
gain, the bureau said In a statistical report. .
A change In outstanding credit patterns, gains In vendor

Citizens asked fo ·
curtail use of water
S)TacuBe reslden&amp;s are being ·
8lilied aot to uae vlllqe wa&amp;er for ·
lawn and prclen purpcllel,
~ lor the board of public
alliin said today.
WhiJe an emergebcy does . oot
curreatly exist, a11 exCle88ive
IUIIOUil&amp; of water Is being pwnped,
creating conditions that could lead
to probleml, It was reported.

a

.ance

OPEC fails to take
'

united stand on prices
By EDWARD ROBY
BRIONI, Yugoslavia (UPil The 13 squabbling OPEC'countrles
failed again to ~ eye to eye on a
unlfledstrategytodryilpthegluton
the world oU market and stop prices
from tuml!llng.
The OP~C summer summit on
Brfpnl Island In the Adrtatlc Sea
broke off Monday with only a
tentative pricing-and-production
agreement by a majort_ty of the
cartel's members. The tentative
agreement was denounced by '
OPEC hardliners, who are holding
outfQrsharplycurtalledproductlon
d
h hi he
Ices
an m!JC. g r pr · ·
The' ministers agreed to meet ··
agal)lln Geneva on July 1.8 to wcirk
out country-by-country 0\ltPut quo- ·
tas under the production lid adopted
by the majolity.
u~ OPEC can reach unanlmous agreement on cutting produc·
.tlol\ by then, oil analysts warn, ttJe
p~ cl a barrel cl crude could sink

below $10 In a market already
flooded by an oil-production surplus

of more than 2 million bl\rrels a
day.
The rtfl In the 13-member
Organlza tion of Petroleum Export·
lng Countrtes has widened to the
point that the communique lssu~
at the end of the six-day Brion!
meeting did not even mention
pliclng and production ligures for
fear cl further antagonizing the

DEr.ll1m!l· HONORED - Honored clulinf
.M-hy IIIIM's pwnp centmnlal oblervance were
pll!lt· ....,.,._, Meadll' and Ellr•beth Jonlan and

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Paulkle Atkkla, lei to rllht. A oedellmal cllaDer
preceded the program of recopltlon. (See ppsllot
011 JNII't! 12).

\ ~

OIJ)J!BI'' IN ·ME)OERSIUP
- Maudi Holcomb bas beea a

member ol the GrRD,e lor 78
yean aad has the dlltDctlon ol
hoJdlas the lllOIIt years .il
membenlllp In Melp Cotuay.
She ns lfven a round ol
applaule b)' fellow IJ'IIIIPrl at
last Jllpt's centennial. celebra·
tlon of Pomona Grange.

New plan
set ·up for
NASA agency

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla .
(UPI ) - ln the first major
management change since the
Challenger disaster. NASA wUI run
ho~uts.
_ the agency's $8 billion space station
But OPEC President Rllwanu project directly from WashingtOn
Lukman, the Nigertan cil minister, headquarters tolmprovecommunltold a closlJ\g·news conference the cations clnd declslop-maklni.
•
10
Uln
d rtcln
NASA Administrator James
jmKiuct n ce g an P
g Fletcher """"''~ed the reo~"'·
target accepted by .the majolity
,..M_
'~~"'u
early ' in ·tilt: ~tlng ·remained .tJie
zatlon MoJldi!y ahd named Andrew
base for the draft outpUt quotas Stolan, director of NASA's Lewis
ministers were taking rome for Research Cent~r IJ:l Cleve~d. to
c onsld era t Jon by theIr head the space station office.
governments.
·
Stofan said that before the
Ministerial sources said the..., ChaUenger accident Jan. 28, ~e .
majortty adopted a tentative ceUing aspects of NASA management
Continued on page 12
Contlnued on page 12

.·,

RECOGNIZED DuRING GRANGE ()F.NI'EN·
NlAL cu..EBRATION - Put ll1llten of Pomoaa
Gren,e recoplzed at Monday DIPt'• oelebredoa
were, left to rtpt, Fred Goegleln, JIH.U51; staaJord

Stooktan, 1183-lB'lll and 19'78-19111; Nonnan WID,
lrJHrlll; Robert Reed, 1981-1983; and Paube
lldns, lW-19118.

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HonlOsexual _groups ·assail high court rUling . on sodomy
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where It remalhs IUegal.
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Hprnosexual .rights
Hardwick, who was arrested by AUanta pollee i&gt;r
Underlying the legal Issue of whether the case
groups, beleaguered by fears about the ·spread ot
violating the law, an offense that can be pudlbed by
should go totrtal ~as the broader question cl row far
:x1 years In prison. Hardwick was not pro~ecuted; but
AIDS, have ~~~ .ddealt another ~ ·With a
·the constitutional right to prtyacy, gleaned from
· used his aiTest as a chance .to,go to federal court il
Sup,reJne Court ruliJ1g that tlil! Conatl!:utiOn does not
!Jicfude a right to en'gage' In lilei)!hy: ,. · \
·
various provisions of the BW cl Rights, extends Into
have•the 'lawovertuml!d.
.
The naiTow 54 rWlDg 'J,fonc!Jy ~~ a .1brm of
Tile state had ulied the high court il.wld a ruling America's bedrooms. \
On that point, ~ew York Attorney General Robert
by tile 11th U.S. Orcult Court cl A~ls that crdered
. protest from homoleXIIll ~Pa. wm. ~ve ~
Abrams
crttlclzed the decision as "a gross Invasion of
fllhtlnl job 8nd bou.sl,1ll dllcrlmlnatbl alli!mming
" t~ on whether the law, 'which applies to all P19iJie
wltldn the state and mela!l oral,and anal sex a crime, · the privacy lights ot all Amertcans. The court Is
flull liOJW:ei'ILI. about ~ ~ -~
allowing states a&gt; crtmlnallze conduct engqed In by
syudlun, the deadiy dh e~w that CUm!ll~
a
WBI linconiUtutlollal. '
mUllons of Amerlcans - marJied and uniTiatrted,
p~ance cl ~;i!DO!Ii lb vlctlpla.
ftfondiiY'!I rUiingrneiiJIS no trial will be held and the
heterosexual and jiOmOieXua)."
·'Pie ,ruling "allOW$ Big BrotQer to pollee .the
law WliJ stay on - books. ·
, · ·• ·
· The court, which has extended the light to privacy
IJedro(rns cl millions of ~an citizens," ield Nan
'l1lornali . Stoddard, executiVe dlreciDJ! cl , the
to IssueS relating to marrtage and chUd.bearlng and
Hunter, director cl the ·American ClvU Uberties
LaJnbda Lepl Defetlle and F4ucat!Qn Fund ln.New
re&amp;rJna';
refilled to extend It to homollexUal activity.
Yodt, a bcniOIIXUal rflbta ~ .Ad, ''11,\w!al)':,ftve
· Union's Lesbian-Gay Rights Project. . ··
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"None
cl the rwhts anDOUIICe$!111 thoee caiea bears
"'lbe decii6Dn' II ~ IJIIc;l as It pcl!ISibly• could haVe · ' ywl tnri DOW tNI wiD lie viNIId .. !be Dred Saltt
been," aeld ~ Adlteni;Jeil'l, an attorney for·tlle
~cttlltpyrtptamouemeat," ai!l! -totlle · any ~totlleclelmedoonstltutlonalrtahtof ·
h&gt;rriolexuala to enpge In actJ ct scxbuy ·that Is
~ l8B'r bllh court ndlal tbet blaCb wen not clll 11.'
I,.Nblen ftlahtJ PrOject of San Francllco. .
In this case,", Justice Byron White said for
111e court, on a ~ vote; uplleld Geoll!la 's
. He Uld, hOweVer; eftolill' wlll continue . to
the majority. "No connection between family,
anti·**'IY ' lew In 11 ease bepn by Michael
deobnbiallze aodbnay bl tHe*~ of the COWJuY
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marriage, or procreation on the one hand and
hornoeexual actlvlty on the other has been
demonstrated."
·
ln dissent, Justice Harry Blackmun, joined by
Justices WJWam Brennan, Thw-good MarstlaU and
John Paul Stevens,. said the case was not aboutsodomy but about tlle "light to be left ·elope."
·
Blackmun also chided the court for Ill "almost
ollsesalve tocua on hornoaeXual activity," Wlitll!i that·
the Georala law ello applies tohet,erosexualactlvly.: ·
The rulinl follows a 1976 decision In which the coul't· ·
affirmed a declslon that upheld slmUar al!tl·sodomy :
law In VJrP.Ua. However, the justices did not lS$11J!$11 .:
opinion eiplalnJng their reasoning In that case~.agd:
courts have been divided m slmllar laws Iince. •
The Col,llt ruling meiuls consensual socbJny ilstWa
crime In 24 slates and the Dlstlict cl Colun:m\1.
Homosexual rights groups said sodomy lias been ,
decrtmlnallzed In most of the remalli!llg states, el{tlet ·
through law or· court action.
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The Dai'ly ·sentinel
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Pomeroy, Olllo

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. DEVOTED TO TilE INTEIU!S'l'S
OF TilE MEIGS·MASO!II AREA
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ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Pulillaber ·
PAT WHITEHEAD
Alllst1111t Publlsher/ContiiiUer

BOB HOEFLICH
General M1111ager

DALE ROTHGEB, IR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Daily Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LEITERS OF OPINION are welmme. They !ll"'ld be less than :m words
long. All l~ters are subject toed l~a' &amp;pd nust be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unaJgned letters wOI be pubUsbed. Letters should be In
aood taste , addressing Issues, not pefiSmalltles .

High court surprises·

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WASHINGT.ON · - Some tJme
• within the next rew days, Jean
Harris wUI post .a lett€!' 10 N~
Yoi'k's Gav. Marlp CUomo. ~.
she wUl be saying, P,lease have
mercy. She wiU ask lbr the
clemency that only a governor can
grant. Her plea should be beard.
Perhaps you have lbrgQtten the
caseofJeanHarris. Sixyearagolt
wasthestuff!romwlichthetablold
papers are made. But ruppose we
go back a little fUrther, to. December 1966. That was when Jfan
Harris met Dr. Herman "HI"
Tarnower. She was then 43, di·
·vorced,llllther oft\W sons1a native
of Grosse Pointe, Mich., a Phi Beta
Kappa graduate d. Smith. She had
been a schoolteacher lor l9 years; ·
shehadjustbeennameddlrecilli'd.
a gfrls' acadefl\Y In the Plllladelphla suburb of Chestnut lDII.
Shana Alexander, In "Very Mud!
a Lady," has described Mrs. Harris

Daniel Webster Roan, the tong-time mayll' of MUwaukE'e, was fond of
saying, "Avt!ltl the power of appolnttnent. AD you get Is a thousand
~emles and one Ingrate."
Dan Roan's advice has had special meaning to many presidents who
have selected Supreme Court justices whose Ideologies seemed to change
once they donned the black robes.
· In some cases, the appointee a president felt sure woold support his
views on the high court tuineil out to be the justice who cast the deciding
vote against him in a crucial case.
Some say It Is the lifetime tenure that goes with the j&gt;b that oo often
trans!onns Supreme Coort justices. Otrers say the "experts" probably
weri! guessing all along about what klnd of judges romlnee would be.
An example was Felix FrankfUrter. Because he was the sponsor cl along
. list of yoong liberals who studied under hlm at Harvard Law School before
jolrtlng the New Deal, it was assumed that Frankfurter would llli a
left~leanlng activist when Franklin D. ~ell appointed him to the
Supreme Coort.
•
·
In fact, Franklurte~was a model d. judicial restraint, opposing Supreme
Court Involvement In "political" cases, such as the constitutionality of
legislative gel'rymanderlng. Not untB he lett the court did It finally lay
dQwn the "one man,' one vote" rule now In effect.
· _There were ~te expectatlpns abol,lt another Rbosevelt ;~ppobltee,
Hugo Black. Allbaugh he was a solid New Dealer, Black, an Alabama
seaator, was regarded as a staurrh segregatklnlst, and disclosure Ihat he
had been a youthfUl member of the Ku Klux lOan aroused an ootcry from
liberal and black organizations. As It tumed out, oo rmre enthusiastic
battler for the rights of minorities and for civil liberties than Black ever
served on the hlgh.court.
•'Earl Wamn also . was oomethlng of a surprise. When Dwight
Eisenhower tapped him for chief justice, he was regarded as a moderate
Republican, but certainly not as a clvlllli:l!rtarian. In fact, Warren was
known one of the principal advocates of sending Ameiicans of Japanese
descent 10 concentration camps at the slart of World War II.
The Warren court became known ror Its liberalism and activism, going
well beyond anything ever considered (Xlssible by contemporary
observers.
One of the remaining staurrh liberals from the Warren years Is Wiillam
Brennan. It Is almost sure that Eisenhower did not exJ)i'Ct ·that il what
Brennan would be when he appointed him.

at that time. ~. was "a bright,
very pretty, p-avtnclllJ sct~oolteacher and dlvon:ee, blkhJy edu·
cated, hlgh·mlnded, and· about as ,,
worldly as Wbmle the Pooh." Just ..
belbre Cluistmas 3J years ago, she
went to a dinner party at a friend's
home on Park Avenue. One ct ·the
guests was "a man who kloke.f to
her l1ke an Egyptian· phar!KI)1."
This was HI Tarn0wer: "He Wlls
tall and dark, with dive skin, white
teeth, pi'OJI)Inent rose and ears, and
hypnotic ,brown eyes flecked with
amber lights.'' He was a cardioiD·
gist, unmarrled, with a rlch
practice In Scarsdale. In 1978, with
her help, he .WIJuld produce the
best-selling ''Complete Scarsdale
Medical Diet."
,
She fell headlong In love. In a
matterofweeksshehadbecomehls
mistress. For. a tlmeherlovewasas
passionate!)• returned. Jfe gave her
a diamond tlng; he talked, liut
alwavs evasively, of marrlage.

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Is t. ere a aw on property conditions?

ofbuy!ngchenrucalstokeepthera~

I thought there was a law and
ordnance In Meigs County espe·
clally Pomeroy. concernblg property conditions. There must oot be,
as there Is property thai Is
dlsgracelul and nothing but a health
and !Ire hazard. The Inside 1s rntey
and the-eutslde Is oothlng but a field
with tall weeds, broken limbs,
trash, and Its a rat and snake
harbor. I have complained and
talked to the health department,
Utter control and also the pollee
department and Its been alroost a
month and they all seem to have
some kind of excuse. why the
rightfUl owners have not been made
to clean It up. This (rOperty Is next
to my mother's property who
passed away recentJy and I'm tlr.ed

and snakes . from ll\Y ·mother's
property. II they can't make the
rightfUl owners clean this property
up, why not lettheG.R. workers do
It and put the charges &lt;11 their
property taxes. I think It Is about
time someone who has the author·
tty to do something about this
problem. Whats the use to clean off
the rlverbanks along the river if the
property Is a shamble.and a big eye
sore and can be seen as you enter
the mabl entrance Into fllmeroy.
So, I believe whoever Is responsible
for this property, should be forced
to clean It up, now! No excuses,ifs,
buts, or maybe about it.
Minnie Johnson
Middleport

Give them a fair chance
I am one ct the Racine AT-Ball
mothers. I would like to congratu·
late our boys ahd girls on a IHl
season. Everyooe of them played
great. They went on to the next 2
tournament games and won them.
What I am really writing about Is
the very last game of the tournament. It came down to Racine A vs
Hac!ne B. I have never seen such a
poorly officiated gaine.
·
Everytlme the umpire \W)\!Jd
make a call the coaches would go
Into a huddle and change lt. The
J'ere deciding who was out and who

wasn 't. For example 2 runners
were coming home and the 2nd
runner passed the 1st runner and
touched base. The umpire called 2
outs. The coaches went blto a
huddle and called one, and that

S\uol!.
They called the game at the
bottom of the·4th and gave 1st place
to Racble B. I' think. they should

forget about the trophies and let oor
boys have a chance to win or lose
fair, with some neutral umpires
that they'll have to listen to.
Debbie Maynard

Expresses deepest thanks
community where there are so
many line people when there Is a
tragedy such as we just had. God
bless everyone of you .
John C. Hensley
and family
Tuppers Plabls

I would like to express' my
·tftpest thanks to friends, family

..amembers or the oommunlty for
.their rupport and generosity In our
)'eeent tragedy.
• There are no words to express
how much It helps to llve In a

Sincere note of thanks
The American Heart Association,
·)'llelas County Branch, woold like to
6tend a sincere rote of thanks to all
the volunteers, participants,
~ and orpnlzatiorut who
1)artlclpatl!d In a successfUl l!m-86
CIIJ'J1)allll.
; ova- f1lQ) was raised In Meigs
' (nmty wiich w1ll be used to
)upport proerams of research,
aa~tloil and commUnity !le!VIce
Gf t!R American Heart Asloclatlon.
:· The Melgl C1xp!ty Branch Is a
·®DJollent .cl the Central Ohio
Heart Chapter wllk:h divests over
•JBo,cm In heart retNreh each

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A larp part of thll ~ Ia
J1one at the ~ State Ulllvenlty

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Heart dillease Is stm the number
one kWer In the United States. In
198t, 50% of all deaths In Meigs
Coonty were due to cardiovascular
disease. However. the research Is
paylngtG.
In the last ten years, death and
disabilitY due il heart attack and
IJlrt)ke hal decreased by 00%.
The .work of the volunteers of
Meigs Crunty has played an
lmJlort!mt role In the work or' the
American Heart Aslloclatlon.
Tharik yooall again tqr ~r hard
work and dedication.
Rllontla L. Dailey
• .SecretaJy
MelaJ ~ Branclt
American Heart A811oc!atlon

w fOrblds'Kitll!rtcan.corporatlons
rrom using bribes to w1n contracts
overseas.
Leading the latest charge ag alnst
the act Is Sen. John Heinz, R-Pa.
His famlly firm, H.J. Heinz, Is one
of 61 companies opposed to the law
under the banner oft he Emergency
Commlttee for American Trade .
Heinz owns $3JO mlillon worth of
company stock.
Another member of the emer·
gency commlttee Is Pittsburgh ·
based Westinghouse, which was
!lie. d. the senator's biggest corpo·
rate contrlbutors In his 1982 re·
election campaign. Westinghouse Is
currently facing bribery dlarges
IDlder the law that Heinz Is hoping
to amend.

A federal grandjury Is lnvesUgat·
big· allegations that Westinghouse
spent ~million tu,"grease" a $2.1
ljjlloncontract lor.a.nu~r power
station In the Philippines. The r.!W
Philippine government charges
that Wesllnghouse's agent, Herml·
nlo Dls!nl, gave the bribes to
then-President Flfdlnand Maroos.
Dls!nl's wife Is a oousln of former
Philippine first lady Imelda
Marcos.
Heinz' s proposed legislation
would have oo effect on the
Westtnghouse case,
Part of the current campaign to
gut the Foreign Corrupt Practices
Act Is window-dressing: changing
the law's name to the Business
Accounttng and Foreign Tra:le
Simplification Act. A leading oppo·
nent d any tamperlngwith the law,
Sen. William Proxmlre, )).Wis.,

Ear'll!d Run A v~
1BasOO on 1 lnnln(( x nu mbrr d !o?'fl)('5
Pc1ch tf&gt;am has playrd 1

Nat\ohal L&lt;'llR\K' - HO:lf:'YCUII , LA 1.9.3:
&amp;ort ,Hou2.35: Tudoi·,S rL2.41: For!iCh,SIL
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The Daily Sentinel
( US I'll 1 4~9GGI
A Dl vts ion ot Multimedia, Int.
P u blls ht'ti f'Vf' t'}' aflcrnoon , Monda y
through Frida y. 111 Courl St., Po mer oy . Ohio, by thr Ohio Va lley P ub ·

liSh ing Co mpany iMultl med la. Inc.,

Pom('roy, Ohi o 4~769. Ph . 992·2156. Se-

co nd class posta lo{ (' paid al Pom£-roy.
Ohio .

'

MPm bf' r : UnUM Press lnt r rna lio n al.

Inland Dall v P rl'Ss Association and t h('

-

l A';tl!\11' • r\i-\1\ 1; S~•n l rljj hi -homdrd

! JIII·:•n . Hou ~,.;

Ann·do·;rn I ' 'il r.,ru•· - lh•nd·rXJn.

~~~~:

Transactions

ll .nn'"'- Mil 1'1: f).jnr·;l!l . I.A and ll.lli• . l 'ln

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't'ouO$!

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('rllemlll . Sl l

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~ndbrr~: Lun~lon.

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Muol'l"\ ham 191 and TI•Itl(•!on. W- ( -~ l'ldiOII I

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Berry's World

..001 001 Ol! - 5101

7•i :l'!.!

K!

1~ -~1

L- Ackl'r 12,1 1, HR,;- Toronto. 81'11 !H •.
Mt~&gt;~.&gt;f7!' 1121, Bu!; ton. IUct• ,7,

: ~.

llnnk• ltul\'o.
,,rlilln.d IA ",IL'Ut' - ~t.r ~h.rU . f.,\

leaders are highly Sophisticated In
d&gt;allng wlth coqtemporary politics.
Thus, they ha ve encouraged the
pluraliSm lhal has given the church
lnOuence In both major political
parties.
.
"I'd Hke to think theSe developments represent a fundamental
shift," says the Idaho Democratic
leader, "but I lear they do not."

W- Stan 1M

ll ~ .'1.'!1
1'11 11'1 \-12

Hw.

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Lamp 161. C:1udill 161, 1\rkrT 111
M&lt;~rth"'f'l : l' lp!X'r. Loll~ • 101 .

Whlll ,

Sf.iln~· 1 ~1 a nd C'-«"n1m.

u.-

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1'1- lm M

C;•liforniH J nl'l ''

Ttrt 01! ~l :l 010 0 - - !1 13 0
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!'lllf·;,llu 1!\\. 1 - f' lo&lt;1'd tiJ!hl nanthl
p l!d1r1· I! ir k Su1r ltff1· un thl· l!J.d.a, diS11blrfl
ll~r

1ln namnrd

I 0-game home losing streak

could drive, " Hassey said. "I was in
a situation where I could look for
my pitch. We've been try ing so hard
to break the home losing streak. It
feels good to finally come out and do

UP! Sports Wrtter
Dennis Rasmu ssen justified his
new reputation as the New York
Yankees' stopper Monday night by
halting the Yankees' 10-ga me home it. "
Hassey and Detroil 's Kirk Gibson
losing st reak.
engaged
in a verbal dispute in the
Ra smussen scattered six hits
first
inning
after Gibson had
over 8 2-3 innings and improved hi s
grounded
Into
a double play.
record lo 8·2 wit h a 3-2 victory ovN
Home-plate
umpire
Nick Bremigan
the Detroit Tigers.
rL·strained
Hassey
from charging
The triumph halt ed New York's
fran chise-lying home losing streak. the Tigers dugout alter Gibson
The Yankees also dropped 10 started yeliirig at Rasmussen and
straight in 1913, when they played in Hassey .
"It was my !au II ." Gibson sllld. " I
Ihe Polo Grounds.TheY ankees had
was
out of line and. the nexl timr to
not won at home since May 25.
th£'
plate,
I told him so. Something
Rasmu ssen, who won hl s third
straight decision, is the only was really bothering me before the
Yankees starter to record a victory game ... I let II affec t my play, and I
shouldn't have. And I won't in the
in the team' s last 16 gam es.
"Here's a young man who should future.
"But I told him !Hassey 1 in the
be pitching in·the Ali- Star game,"
inning he didn 't have to gel
ninth
Yankees manager l ou Pln lelia
ticked
off about it ·and lll'at us."
said .
Rickey Henderson gave the
Rasmussen needf•d last-inning
Yan
kees a J.() lead in the sixtl1
relief help from Dave Righetti , who
Inning
with his 15th home run of I he
a!ler yleldlpg an RBI sblgle,
season.
The Tigers tied the score in
recorded the fin al out for his 17th
lhe
seventh
on Tom Brookens'
sa ve.
"He's been our best starter." sacrifice Dy.
In Ute New York eighth. Hassey
Pinie lla said of Rasmussen. "He's
drove
a H I offerin g from losing
kepi us in just about every game
Walt Terrell, 7-6, over the
pitcher
'he's pitched."
of
center fielde r Che! Lemon
head
Catcher Ron Hassey had lhe
to
score
newly acquired Ciaudell
game-winning hil . a two-oll n double
Washington
and Mike Easler.
in Ihe eighth tha i snapped a 1-all tie.
·
Washington
had
si ngled wit h one
" I was just looking for a pitch I
out and moved· to second on a
groundout before Easler was in ten·
tionally walked.
Elsewhere In !he Ame rica n
Scioto results
League, Ba lt imore defeated Mll·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPl i - ~a waijkee 5-2, Chicago shaded CaliStorm p:&gt;sled Ihe fas tPSI mlie of hi s fornia 4-3. Minnesota oowned Texas
career Monday night to win the 5-2. Boston nipped Toronto 10-91n 10
fea tured $3,500 elghlh race pace al innings, Cleveland clubbed Oak·
land 8-3 and ~attic cl ippoxl Kansas
Scioto Downs.
Driven by Dave Ra nkin, Jh(' City 3-2.
· Orioles 5, Brewers 2
3-year-old gelding lowered hi s
AI
Baltimore. Eddie Murray
lifetime best mUe by tWo seconds
singled home I he tying ru n and Cal
wllh a 1:57 4-5 clocking to bea! out
U.R. Cagey by a hea~ . Livious Rlpken's bases-loaded walk forced
in the winner. enabling the Orioles
finishro third. Sea Storm returned
Jo snap a five -ga me Josbl g streak.
$7.40 to wln.
Scptt
McGregor, 6-7, broke a
In the first race, the 7-3-6 lrifecta
Jhree-game
personal losing streak.
combination of Dallastown, Stylish
Tim
Leary,
67, suffered the loss.
Culie and Just Neil paid $7ll.60.
White Sox 4, Angels 3
A crowd of 3,066 wagered

~on , 1 ~1

p m
ti an1' ]('\ (•l .mtl .n 1l,rk!ii/KI
I ~ · troit ,, , Ni'l.\' Yo1 · ~ . nil! h1

Monttons and Democrats.__----:.,·___.:R~o=be:.!..!:rt~~.,!!!al~te:.:.:=,rs
serving t....:&gt; four-year terms.
Politicians and analysts In the
regkln generally agree that this
year's unusual numi:l!r of Mormon
Dermcrats seeking office Is more
likely to be a short-term pheno·
~enon than the begbmlng of a
long-term trend.
'
Although the chu rch has a
:.teputatlon lor emphasizing tradl·
tiona!, conseiVative values. ' its

JJ IDIIO-tiiOOI - 6 111

al I ',&lt;IIIIJIIIJ.l

.H1

I H .:wnL, I/'1

lt:u •·11o · r m..J n(~ ,'J, , lf)·,'J,'i

proverbial truck through. The
Justice Department has agrEed the
language is too vague.
Bu;!ness opponents of the current
law complain that It Imposes an
Irrelevant rmrality on their efforts
to compete In the world market,
and claim that some bribes are
necessary to do business overseas.
They also blame the Foreign
Corrupt Practices Actfor oontrlbut·
lng to·the growing U.S. trade deficit.
But a study by Dr. John Graham.
!X'Qfessor of business at the Unlver·
slty of Southern California, chal·
lenges these claims. His study,
reviewed by oor reporter Jim
Lyoch, found thai In the three years
after the anti-corruption law's
passage, U.S. trade with "bribeprone" countrles actually ootpaced
trade wi th " non-bribe-prone"
countrles.

( 'rl('

By LOU RABITO

d

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from thf' lnju{f'd lt~ t .
N!•w York - PlltN'd rl11ht · hand«! pllrhN'

Duw~n

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Dies of cancer

Giamatti leaves

By United Press Intematlonal
Jack Christiansen, a member of
tile Pro Football Hall of Fame and a
former head coach for the san
Francisco 49ers and Stanford Unl·
verslty, died of cancer a4 ~ .
Christiansen , diagnosed three ye·
a rs ago as having lung cancer, died
Sunday following surgery al Stan·
ford Medica i Center.

By Untu.&gt;d Press International
Newly elected National League
President A. Barliell Giamanl
president of Yale University for Ihe
past eight years, Monday handed
over the reins to former Columbia
Law School Dean Benno Schmidt.
Glamalli, 47. is Ia succeed Chub
Feeney ·as NL president In
November.

Nf'Y,• Yo rk, New Yor k 10017.
to The Da ll~· S.:~nlin (') , lll Court St ..

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POTTl(&gt;fOy, Ohio

..
Acker fe ll to 2· 4. Bob Stan ley
improved to 5-2. Boston's Don.•
Baylor was hit by Jwo pitches,
set!ing a Red Sox sea son record of
19.
'
lnoians 8, 1\ 's :1
At Oakland, Calif., Cory Snyder
homered and Tom Candlolti scat·
tered nine hits to lead the indi ans:
Candiott i. 6-6, rcg istPrrd his six th
complete game. Jose RijowenJSJ..J
in nin gs and dropped his record lp
2-7.
Marlners 3. Royals 2
At Seatlle . Scott Bradley's two ·
Jlln double keyed a 1hrec - oun fou rlh.
inning for the Mariners. who
cxtendcd the Roya ls' losin g stol'ak
to four games. Mark Llngston, 9-5,
w on his fifth stra ight gamr. The
loss wm t to De nni s Leo nard , li-7.

AI Anaheim. Ca lif., Ozzie Guillen
drill ed a basPS- ioaded 1riple tocap a
four -ru n filth inning that boosted
the White Sox in I heir new m an &lt;~ge r
Jim Fregos i's l'l'lurn to Anaheim
Stadium. Joel Davis evened his
record at 44 with the triumph. Kirk
McCaskil l. 8-5, was the loser.
Twins 5, Ran gers 2
At Arlington. Texas. Cary Gal'lli
knocked in thrce 'rims wit h two
doubles, and Frank Viola pit ched
three -hit ba ll over 8 1-3 innings !o
lead lhP Twins. Viola struck out
srvena nd improved Jo8-li. Ra ng.ors
relif'ver Greg Harris fell lo 3-7.
Red Sox 10, Blue ,Jays 9
AI Boston. J im Acker walked
Dwight Evans wit h th&lt;.• ba ses
loaded in Ihe lOth Inning to hand the
Red Sox their filt h straigh t victorv

$277,451.

Ohi o N(•\nPapcr Association . Nallonal
Adv&lt;'rflsl n g Rrprl'!ienta tlve , B10a nh am

!~STANT

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N\' _ Q~ OIOOIB -7 1110
~ - Lon _IQI 000 000 - 0_ I 0
Owda ~nd Carlrr : 1'udor, CM· nbt&gt;~ 161 ,
Pf'm 1}1 1. Ho rton 191 ~ Ad Hf'at h W-OjNla
1!1-2• L- 1\Jdor rh-4 1. HH-Krw Yor k.

~' "'- ~ ·or~

1Dr. Jtx"·k Ol1 . ; -:~tp. m .
Mi"-'·auki'l' IWPJ,.'TN O 2-til

in Yankee Stadium followin g remarks by Tigers' Kirk GIOOIII. New
\'ooi&lt; won, snapping a Ill-game home losing .treak. (U P! )

HASSE\' HELl) BACK - New\' ork catcher Ron Hassey Is held back
by home plate wnpire Nick Bremlgan during Monday night's AL game

d ll.n1 HR.~ -San O il ~. Cw=--nn 111 . Trm ·

.\'i !i.l3 .f) .'Iii .stli
r. .l':l ¥i .11 _.
.l:l ~I # II til':

1\( '

011) 0111 - t.. j 1
M rC'u lk'r~ 1111

and Krorffl) :
1\nrppPr. .Andtn ••ll 171 and Milrrock .
,\.,biA. W- DraH'('k;.' 17·71 . l.-Knrppl' r

:Jll 1'2
~ffi 12

-l()

T1•x,,,

..000031)'41 - !II U

lloulltn om

101 ~

1':11 1'l•h [)(·1 ]'j

COEUR D' ALENE , Idaho i:l! pivotal Is In adjacent Nevada,
(NEA) - Members d the Mormon where Rep. Harry Reid , a,Mormon
Church have klng been active in Democrat. Is competblg with
politics, especially here In the former Rep. James Santtnl, a
bltermounlaln West where they ron-Mormon Republican, .for the
tradltlonaily have been identtlled seat being vru:ated by retiring
with conseJVatlve values and the Republican Sen. Paul Laxalt.
Republican Party.
As In the case of the Evans·
Indeed, the dlurdt' s political and Symms oontest, the Reld·Sant!nl
ideological orientation Is person!- r.re ts too close to call five months
fled by lis current president, Ell'a befOre Election Day- but. In boih,
Taft Benson, who was U.S. agrlcul- the Dermcratlc candidates' rellture secretary In the l950s under glon alrmst certainly has made
Pres !dent Eisenhower, a them rmre competitive.
Finally. Mormon Democrats
Republican.
Ill an unusual development this have rmunted challenges to Repubyear, !Jowever, · Mormons · have !lean cOntrol of two of· the three
e merged as moderate-to · coneresslonal districts In Utah,
!X'ogrl!!ISIVe Dernocr atlc candi· wliere the churcn mit only Is the
dates In political contes'ts In thrEe oom!nantrellglouslnstitutebutalso
states where the dlurch has a a powerfUl force · In political,
substantial membership. Their rell· economlc and cultural affairs.
glous aflillation could be crucial In
In the distrlct encompassing
determining the outoome d. these Ogden, Logan and· the rural
p
oountles of western Utah, former
races.
Here In Idaho, Incumbent Gov. Dermcratic Rep. K. Gunn McKay
John V. Evans, a Democrat, Is will be attempting to make a
s(epplng down to dlallenge Sen. comeback by toppling the three·
Steven D. Symms, a Republlcan. term Republican who unseated
Evans, a Mormon, Is bellevm 10 him, Rep. Jaries V. Hansen.
have at least WI even chance to'
McKay, a nephew of a fOrmer
deny'symms, who Is not a Mormon, president of the Mormon church,
a second term In the Senate.
the late David ·o. McKay, !le!Ved
.. Although Idaho Ia not generally live tenns In the );louse before
Identified with the dlurch, there Is a narrowly klslng th Hansen In 198l.
sizable Mormon popiltation In
In the congressiOnal district that
Idaho Falls and nearby communi· lncludesSaltLakeCityandrnanycf
ues Iii the state's 80utheast~ Its ~burbs, fonner Rep. D. Wayne
· oomer, .an especlaDy consetVative &lt;&gt;wets, a Mormon Democrat. Is
area where EvanJ has run W!!ll In atlemptlng tQ unaeat Incumbent
the past.
Republican Rep. Davie!' S. MOIIIOII.
(Han80n and Monson -llkemost
"Jt's causing the RepubliCans .to
haveflts," saysonelongtlmeleader ' !llccesstul Utah 'p olltlclans- also
ct Idaho's Dermcratlc Party who are M&gt;nnorut.) ,
aakl•thilt he not be Identified. "The
"We have ''a.\. whole band!UI ot
Republlcaiis rould lose control. of exclttng races· iii which Mormorut
the Senate becauae of a bunch at are the Democratic standard·
Mol n10111." .
betu'en," note1 tormer Utah Gov.
Thla ya~r'~ .·ottler Senate electjon Scott M. Matheaon, allo a l'lloorilon
In wldch a Mormon afflllaWn oould Dermcra~ whO retired lri 19841\fter

"u-.p

Ndkmal l..e!IP' II
OOOOIIO!JOI - Il.Z t

Mnt

nt Pllt~hury:h

1Sa1r lf'llf G-Oo, 7: J;, p.m .
Si.Jn Fmnf'isw I!J iur i -4 1 ~ ~
ti\1&lt;-Mu n ry HI. 7:40pm

AaSl'. Ba ll 20:

Linescores

111 C'hleago

tl'rll'f' 1-1 1. i :.15 p.m.
! M ~ ddux 0-31

I.RaJ:Ur -

Tf?: It Stante&gt;:-·, Bo!l ll

l.os Angf'lrs IHCII'If')'('\)114-41 al Cindnna!l

Philadl'lpt-Ua

Wo!T('IJ, Sil.

RIJ! hi'IIL NY 17: Hl' r Mntrz. DPr15: HmTis.

Tuesday's Gltmes (AU TIIT'Ie5 EDT )

Momwul 1Ml'r&gt;il ffl $!an
~ ~ &lt;~ndP rYm .'1-51 , t l!J p.m

RParMn. Mil Ill:

Gc6&amp;~ J;:E', SD11 nd

L1: F'ri:lllro, C'lll 12.

'' t!ama 5. San f ranelsro 1
San Dit'l'(o !1, Hooston 2
Cincinnati li, Los AnRf'[~ ~ - 11 ln Rlnj!S
1'\t'\.\ York 7.S1 . Louts0

a

caustically refers to the Heinz bill
as "Bring Back Bribe r y
Legislation."
The JX'OVIslon of the current law
that strlkes fear Into the hearts of
oorporate executives Is the one that
makes trem criminally liable If
they "know or have reason lo
know'' that a company agent plans
to bribe a foreign official. The Heinz
till would relieve the executives'
anxiety by specifYing certain "per·
mlsslble payments" to foreign
' cl!lclals, Including "those that are
lawfUl under local law" and those
made ,"to secure the performance
d. a routine government action,
Intended as courtesy or a token of
regard."
These exceptions, of cou rse, are
the classic definition of bribery. and
Proxmire has derlded them as
loopholes big enough to drtve the

"""

~·y

Backing big business __J_a_ck_A_nd_e_rs_o_n_&amp;_J_os--=ep_h_Sp:;__e_ar

~,~,~~~e~l~te~rs~·~.~l~~~~·~·ed
~··~·t~.O~Jtb_~,~--~~~=~·~~4~~g~~~le!w~~
,

·Dw1ngsclloolbreakshe tookherm. she had become alug-depeildent.
trips around the world. Hercarrer He was favoring .Mrs. 1J'l1oros,
tmssomed. , In 1976 she became who Wall making It a practice ,to
headmistress of the posh Madeira leave heMr llngeHarlerrisln the Jdbathroollndmit
School In VIrginia just ootslde ·where rs.
cou
·
Washington. Their affair lasted for Consumed . by jealousy, she bornalmost 14 years.
barded Tarnower with pathetic
Toward the end d. this period It love letters: "AD I ever asked for
bl!came a one-sided aflalr. · A was 10 be with you .... There was
notorlous · womanizer, Dr. Tar· somethlnglnlifetolookforwardto.
rower was not satisfied with one Please, darling- don'! teli i)'Rl,Jt
mistress. He needed two - Lynne was all for nothing. She basi you
Tryforos, his receptionist and office every single moment bl March assistant, on weeknights; Jean lor Chrlsfs sake give me April ... "
Harris on weekends and vacations.
In February of ~. In the midst
Mrs. Harris submitted to this of suicidal depression, Je1UI Hams
hurnlllatlng arrangement. She was bought .32-callber revolver.. On
Infatuated, besotted, obsessed with the evening of f¥rch 10, 'she wrote
love. The two women were weD out her reslgJ)atlori (rom Madeira,
aware of his duplicity. He seems to wrote a will, left Instructions for her
have, treated them with equal fUneral, and drove rn4tdlessly
cruelty.
through t~ rain to Tarnoll(er's
By March of 198), Jean Hartis
home In New York. At her trial she
was falling to peces. Dr. Tarnower Insisted that her only thought had
had kept her on Desoxyn, a been to have one last talk with her
stimulant known as "speed," and lover. and then to kill herself. Her
testimony was that she put the gun
to her temple; he wrested It away;
In the ensuing scuffle and she pulled
the trigger repeatedly. Tarnower
diOO of four bullet wounds.
Mrs. Harris went on trlal the
following November. In February
of 1981, after eight days ol
deliberation, a jury found her guilty
of first-degree murder. She was
given the minimum sentenCe of 15
years to life, with · ·parole a
possibility b1 1996.
Jean Harris was 63 years old In
April. She has suffered two serious
heart attacks In prlson. Governor
Coomo and his advisers might well
ask themselves what possible
public purpose Is seJVed by keeping
her longer In prison. In correctional
lheory, prlson sentences have
several functions. We lock up
convicted felons to punish them,
and to deter, them and others from
future crime . In the matter of Mrs.
Hanis, none of these has meaning.
She assuredly Is no danger to
society. She has been punished
severely. The time has come, just
as Portia pleaded In "The Mer·
•
chant of Venice," lor justice to he
seasoned wilh mercy.

Boyd, BM JO.s:

Hli!'J('ra. MU11J..6: Langsron. Ste •a

NATIONAL ~F[
By Unlttod PnM
1oM!

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WASIUNGTON- Ever slnrethe
Foreign CQrrupt Practices Act was

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Tuesday,.

Ohio

By The Bend

·Martina expectsf challenge
in Wimbledon quarterfinals
1, '

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DIVES FOR RETURN - Pat Cash of Australia
to Matt.• WWander of Sweden

during fourth round action at Wimbledon Monday.

dlves for a return

(UPI).

Bell paces 6-5 Cincinnati win
By lUCK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UP! 1 _ Third
OaSI' was tiM' hottest of comPrs for
Ur{rinneti and Los Angeles Monday night
C indnn~ti third baseman Buddy
llell ma!lr ''' spectacular fielding
plays to kl'&lt;'P the Reds in the !(amP
through the Jllh inning when Bo
Di~ sing l&lt;'&lt;l in Tony Perez from
third base for a 6-5 Reds' win.
It a l'"-lwasa t thlrdbaseinthetop
of j he 11th that Steve Sax of the
DodgNs went into a spectacular
rag&lt;' after being called out bY
umpirl' Rob Engel.
"It looked like World War Ill out

edged Philadelphia 3-2, San Diego
ttu·ashed Houston 9 2, and Cincinnati beat Los Angeles 6-5 in 11
innings.
Braves 5, Giants 1
At Atlan!Jl, Rick Mahler tossed
an eight-hitter for his lOth victory
ccl~ar~welling Reds.
.
• and s ingled home a pair of runs.
Wr vr got I~ wm agam tomor- hclpmg the Braves to the1r mth
ruw !Tuesday nrghl) and gel ahead cunseculive victory. Mahler, who
of ::Jllese ~ys , and get out of tile has lost five. struck out two and did
oosement , said Rose.
,
not walk a batter in posting hi s
Both clubs blew two-run leads m fourth complete game. The rightthe late mrungs Monday mght.
hander lost his shutout in the ninth
Los. Angt&gt;les, w1th starter O~el when .Joel Youngblood lro offwilha
Hersh1ser pemnltting only two hils home run.
the first six innings, was enjoying a
Expos 4, Cubs 3
3-1
lead
until
tile
Reds
erupted
for
AI
Chicago.
Mitch Webster' s
Iherr-." Ci ncinnati first baSPman four
runs
in
the
seventh
to
seize
a
5-3
third
hit
of
the
game
- a two-out
rno nag('r Pete Rose sa id of the
advantage.
Rose
singled
in
two
of
RBI
single
to
right
snapped
a 3-3
outburst by Sax.
But Rose couldn 't think of rnough therunsandtheothertwosooredon tie in tile top of the 11th to lift the
good words for Bell's play at third. a tllrowing error by first baseman Expos. Montreal's rally started
Enil's Cabell.
with two rnt when pitcher Dan
~{he ~ simply wswd!)'t ,hav~
·
Bul
,
Cloclnnatl
reUev.,.
Tt!ll
Schatzeder,
3-1, walked on lour
1li+n ahlr 10 •tay In ~~ game
Power
let
Lus
Angt&gt;les
tie
It
5-5
In
pitches
off
Lee
Smith, 46. Boh
wit houtlk'lf's slick fielding. He took
the
eighth.
Power
walked
Jeff
McClure
earned
his
fourth save.
slx hils&lt;~wa y from the Dodgers with
Hamilton
and
gave
up
a
single
to
Pirates
3,
Phlllles
2
diving stops and quick, accurate
Alex
Tr&lt;'Vino.
Reggie
Williams
At
Pittsburgh
,
Barry
Bonds
and
throws to first.
doubled to score Hamilton and send R.J . Reynolds each smashed solo
"Rrll was amazing," praised
Power to the shoW!'rs. Tr&lt;'Vino home runs and Bob Walk oombined
Hos&lt;•. "SIPW Sax asked me during
soored
oo an Infield out off of John with two relievers on ar cight tl1t' g; m iP. 'Who is that man ovflr
hitter. leading the Pirates. Wa lk.
Franoo.
then•'! '
Cincinnati
had
grabbed
a
1-0
lead
3-4,
gave up both runs and fi ve hils.
"I said. 'Tha t's not one man .
in
the
second
on
BeU
'sfourthhomer
walked
three and struck out five
that's tluw.· He's s imply amazing.
oftheyear,butthe~erstiedit in
over 61-3 innings. Charles Hudson
I got charged up by Buddy's play."
Sa id Bell. "II feels great tohdvra the third on a run-scoring single bv fell to 4-7.
Billy Russell.
Padn.'S 9, t\stros 2
f~:lll\P lik1 • thnl ·•
Los
Angeles
got
a
run
in
the
At
Houston.
Tony Gwynn and
A!' fur thf' rontrovrrsial out c"'ll
fourth
thanks
to
shortstop
Dave
Garry
Templeton
eac h homcrro in
&lt;~n Sax. (·\·rn l~\1 admittrd it was
Concepcion's
'throwing
!'1-ror
and
a
four-run
first
inning,
pacing the
\'1' 1)', W'ry dO.'.;( '
added
a
run
in
the
sixth
on
a
Padres.
Dave
Dravecky,
7-7, al S&lt;tx """ tkHJb i&lt;'d and was trying
run-sroring doubl e bY Williams.
lowed seven hit s in seven innings
!11 siJPtch it into a lriplP whf'n a
Elsew here in the NL. New York for the victory. Bob Knf1)per, 10-6.
rPia l' th10w fmm right firldcr bal'e
beat St. Louis, 7-0, Atlanta downed failed in his fourth attempt to
J'arkrr to srcond baseman Ron
San
Francisco 5-1, Montreal shaded become the National League's first
I ~·slcr lu i'li•ll just nipped Sax at
Chicago
4-3 in lllnnings, Pillsburgh 11-game winner.
Illin!. ,\t if•ast. third bas&lt;' umpire
1.- n;:&lt;•l call1'tl Sax out.
w1·nt inllJ

S~•x

"' Jl J,t t ''

&lt;.1

C&gt;'nter.
,
.
Carl WilliS, 1-0, pllched the final
two ummgs to get the wm.
It was the fifth straight loss for
Los An6"1es. and dropped tbe
Dodgers to JUSt one-half game
ahead of II&gt;:• National League West

nwybr thE&gt; worst ealll've

:1s I\·,. f'\'l'r bf&gt;en. That call was
1idirul( ii JS. It was obvious. Cut and
l[lit~l. "

A ng~•li's

managrr Tommy

l.asurda l\\in· had to push Sax

SELLING OUT ALL
BLOUSES &amp; SLACKS

awa\' from Fngrl.

1 ht' out

cr~ ll

PRICED AT

r \r·arrd the way for

II•· fa-ds' li th. With two outs,
pinch hill&lt; 'r Prr('z singled off Ed
Van&lt;k' lhg, 1.1. Parker doublf-d
Pf:rf'Z It J third and Diaz followed

$4, S7, S12

At least five Meigs County high
school students have been selected
to be among tile 50 high school
students named 1986 summer
scholars at Ohio University attending college classes from June 16 to
July 18.
The students chosen are in tile top
10 percent of t.hi&gt;Ir classes and will
be high school seniors In the !aU.
They received scholarships covering the cost of up to seven university
credit hours and are living on
campus during the five week
period.
The group includes Ronald Todd
Clay, Chest!'r; Jeffrey Jon Arnold,
Pomeroy; Travis G. Newlun, Lung
Bottom; Klrk Dean Reed, ReedsVIlle, and Judith L. Mees, Pomeroy.
You notice that I say at least Hve.
There could be more but we were
only advised of the five. Out of
county schools and organizations
sometimes are guilty of notifying us
of only a part of a Meigs County
group attending an event and we
have no way knowing when these _
lists rome In lf ·we have all of the
names or not. We just do the best we
can and ·light a lot of candles.

IN THE HEART OF POMEROY

f!J~- T!Joali.r-~ Jfot&lt;~
F,,,.a/ .llfOMe

Mr. and Mrs. Roberts will be
moving to Bath about July 10. Mlke
has accepted a position as director
of research .and development for
the Garland Co.. Cleveland. The
ilrm deals in commercial roof
products. Mike has been with
Owens-Corning Fll:l!rglas In the
GranvUie area for the past 17 years.
Inciden!Jllly, tile Roberts have
purchased an 11 room rouse with an
Indoor pool for their new residenC&gt;'
in Bath .
Yep - there are sometimes
advantages In leaving Meigs
County although both Mr. and Mrs.
Roberts do bve our area. They're
frequent visitors. Mike Is the son of
Mrs. Nonga Roberts of FUmeroy
and the late 'Robert -Roberts, long
time Pomeroy teacber.
The Meigs County Branch of the
American Heart Association would
like the men golfer'S to tnake a note
on their calendars for Aug. 7. The
group will sponsor a men's scramble at 1 p.m. on that day at the
Jaymar Golf Course.
Chery 1 Roush will be working at
the Pomeroy Cliamher bf Com·
merce office during the summer
months and the ctfice will be open
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day until
further notice.
-

The National Secondary Education Council announced that Angela,
Sloan has been named an AI:a·
demic All-American.
The Academic AU-American
Scholar must earn a 3.3 or better
grade point average and only
scholars recommended bY a secondary school instructor, counselor or
otber qualified sponsor are ac cepted. These scholars are also
eligible for other award; given bY
the NSEC.
1
Sloan, who attends Meigs High
And, at least nine Meigs Coun- School, was nominated for this
tlans graduated from Hocking national award bY Mrs. VIrginia
Poston, French-- ll'llcher. 'She will
Tehnical College l'n Nelsonville.
They are Kathleen Cleland, appear in the AI:ademic AllPomeroy; Shirley L. Myers, Reeds· American Scholar Directory which
ville; Paul B. Roush, Racine; is publis hed natllnally. She Is tile
Joseph D. Sayre, Route 1, Reeds· daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
ville; Kyle S. Woods, Pomeroy ; Sloan and the granddaughter of
Jeff A. Wyers, ReedsvUie; Michael Mrs. Violet Walker of Pomeroy.
Bareswilt, Middleport; Frances
II doesn 't seem like you get much
Moxley, Pomeroy, and Cindy
for your money when you get me of
Warner, Ruute 4, Pomeroy.
ttose small decals to update your
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Roberts of motor vehicle license pla,tes. On the
Heath were in town over the other hand, you gotta admit getting ·
weekend to attend the annual that decal on Is a lot easier than
Roberts Family Reunion In the changing license plates. So you
have cleaner hands. Keep smilln'.
Point. Pleasant area.

THE FLEA MARKET
AT MEIGS COUNTY FAIR GROUNDS

WILL NOT BE HELD IN JULY
BACK AGAIN IN AUGUST

'

~~i~~~;~s "~~~~-~~P~d?}a~, ~~~!~~·"

numerous donations were made
and parties were held for residents
of four nursing homes OJer the past
monlh bY the American Legion
Auxlllary of Feeney-Bennett Post
128, American Legion, Middleport.
The Cora Bennett Scholarships of
s:meachthlsyearwereawardedto
a girl and a boy at the Zenia
Children's Home, a facility for
veterans' sons and daughters.
The unit made donatllns to the
AMVETS, to Middleport VUiagefor
Fourth of July flrewor!$ and to
Catherine Curl, eighth ' district
president, for the July birthday
party at the Chillicothe Veterans
Hospital.
Janice Gibbs reported on the
distrtct summer conferenC&gt;' held at
Junction City which she, Jean
Gilmore, Gall Ferry, and Renee
Stone attended.
~
The unit received the the birth·
day roU caU certificate, a goal · rtbbon, a certificate fur being goal
on Aug.1, 1985, anational alation of
membership.
Also received by tile unit was the
first p)ace In community service,
Sonja Wayland, chairman; first
place in children and youth, Etta
.
'

veterans affairs and rehabilitation,
Velsie Roush, chairman; second
place In Americanism, Jean Gilmore, chairman; and a certificate
of recognition for junior activities.
Diana Jarvis, chairman.
·
It was noted that the itnit's party
at the Ar~adia Nursing home at
CoolvUie In June cost $293.54.
Assisting with the party were Mrs.
Gilmore, Mrs. Ferry, Fred Gibbs,
Grace Welch, Trlcia Tolias, Emna
Hendricks, Mrs. WlU, I.e€ Reed,
Renee Stone, and Bob Hunnel. A
gift was pr"'ented to BobbY Dye,
the newly adopted grandparent of
the unit.
Mrs. ww spoke oo activities for
Veterans Memorial Extended Care
Facility patients with parties there
costing $61.52. Going on May 29
were Mrs. WUI, Mrs. Welch, Sue
Ulllc. Nettie !fayes, Irene Snyder,
Gibbs, and Freda Edwards, on
June 19, Mrs. Edwafds, Erma
Hendricks, Mrs. Little, Mrs. Welch,
Mrs.. Jarvis, r;&lt;Jrs. Will and Dennis
Little, Boy Scout Troop 145, and on
June 24, Bob Hunnell, Gibbs. Josh

Gerry Parsons, and Mrs. Will.
A C&gt;'rt. ~icate of appreclatoin was
presented to Ci~bs, who then gave
it to Mrs. Will, with ~th be1~g
commended fo~ the urut s role m
serving tbe pat1ents.
Mrs. Edwards rf1)orted on the
Plum Street care home activities.
Mildred Daines w~~ presrnted a
glft on her birthday, June 5, with
M~ry .Clark and Mrs. Edwards
attending. The cost was $44.15.
PhyUis Blake reported on the
Riverview nursing home wtth
Gerry and Virgil Parsons, Mary
Hoover, Mrs. Blake, and Gibbs
providing glfts and a dinner at a
rost of $62.12. Mary Patterson of !he
home and Eva Stout, a patient,
were taken out to eat, lmd dinners
were IJlken back to John DUI and
Gertrude Corlis, who were unabte
to go out. . . .
The hospllahzallOn of Mrs. Roush
was noted and a gown and robe sent
to her. Walter Bunce r~IVed a
flower arrangemerH on his 90th
birthday at a special dmner, -and
Marvin Kelly was presented a

given to Dennis Little of Boy Scout
Troop 245 for his participation in the
Memorial Day services. _
Mrs. Parsons, past .Eighth.District president, gave her sistec
Becky Tyree, a Ute membership
pin. Plans were made for Mrs. WUI
and Sheille Fox to beat tile halloo
July 15 when a public dinner will be
held.
,
_
R~bert and Erna Cornelius,
Nell1e. Ha yes, Maurtce Neutzl!ng,
Wallace Russell, Raymond Justice,
Gera ld Herdman , Eph Herdman, .
and Mrs. Roush were report~ ill.
The death of Gerald Freeman s son
was noted and cards a!ld fioW!'rS
were sen tKatheryn Metzger. chaplain, had
the closing prayer. ThP door prize
brought by Mary Clark wa s won by
Mrs. Tyree. Aspaghelli dinner was
served pree(-ding the meclingtothe
auxiliary members as well as the
legionnaires.
It was noted that f!J memtx•rs had
paid dues. Mrs. Stone preSided in
the absence of Mrs. Gilmore.
Twenty-two memix'rs attended.

SPECIAL
12 TANNING
SESSIONS

DANCE SET - The PhUIIp
Swann Trio wDI provide I!Rislc
when the Royal Oak Dance Club
msts a dance at Royal Oak
Park, July 12, 8· p.m. to
midnight. Members welconie;
1111est admls81on $15 at the door.
His repertoire ranges from the
40's to the top 40, ootutry to
swing, pop to jazz.

ONLY

$2700
July &amp; August Only

BRENDA'S BOUTIQUE
&amp; TANNING SALON

318 N. Se&lt;ond Ave.

Middleport, OH.

PH. 992-3667

O"D L'S
ummer
'

-

.

2x4x8' 209

2x6x8' . 319
4x4x8' 459

499

lx6xl6'

MEN'S &amp;BOYS'

'II
'

211

ROOFING
·SHINGLES

LADIES &amp; JUNIOR

SWIM
TR'UNKS

SWIM
SUITS

$400

ON SALE

. .. ~
.

BRAPI)..SPEC. PKO.

39.88

4-Cti. Ft. Wheelbarrow has

'"

tng~l'lr
• [lettrGI\It OIQ-11 clock

• • eylinl)er 1 91rlrt
Ovtrii!MI console

• fi'iiltd ot.m

•tnternl Wlll\l5tntld Wlptn

•

8uf1111!f rub stnps

• lnstrMITIII'tiiiiOfl ;roup

• Dual tleclnt remole
corurot murors
• Tnm nr10Srcent11 ~ub~

22

,

U1 X

g k

1

~
rWil.... ...... ..... ...-..=
__,

•1,410.

• r r011 lllld rear bumper Ollli'd\

INFANTS
OUTfiTS

,

rllll N

•710.t

SAVE S620.t

'1,029**

SWIMSUITS
&amp; COVER-UPS

BOYS &amp; GIRLS

o~S0°/o

"
••

•

•"

•

•
•••
••

••

..••
•
..•"•.
•

..•
"

-..

co~er

.

RACK OF BOYS

a riCh, velvery finish _Per-

room walls. etc. In
I

Come in today and see our full line.

19 99
o

SQUARE

SAKRETE CONCRETE MIX

7.99

-

~

&lt;

fh'o Only full Bag On The Market

I

R.DU.C.ED .
.,

'

3.25

.SUMMERWEAR
'SHOITS; SIIITS

Sun-activmd '"' down tabs bond shinctes tocether torminc a wealherti&amp;ht fit.

E·Z KilN" Latex Flal Finish

up lo

114.88·
•

"Stwl~t -Pla ... AIItiiiiOI lo D•tell"
.
BRU« liSHER
BILL BLOWER

di11l to

1-

9.98a.,~

brass jels lor ewen coYerage. With

MEN'S
TENNIS-SHOJS,,
WitTE BAll CAPS .
VISORS

SU.MMER
DEVON

'f-. SAVE

Oscillating Sprinkler features

SALE

ONE RACK

It doesn't lllltter wlttther one's husband or wife died after
a prolon&amp;ed illness or wllether it wts a sudden death . The
result in&amp; widowhood is a deep-seated impacl which may
last .lor days, weeks. enn months.
•
Durin&amp; this period of initial shock, you must help the wi· ' .
dow or widower to bt ~CTIVE. By occupyln&amp; his or Iter time
with tht iii)P_ortent details Ill, "pttinc thinp toaether" to~
evecy.dly hvtna, he (or she) 11 forced, tltankfully, into activity.
With our professional responsibilities and nperience, we
11 funtral directors an be of lmtllldilte help. Wusslst in
processin1 tht many personal papers 111cll n Soci1l Se·
curity and V.A. We handlelittrally hundreds Ill details for
the f1mlly throuavut th1 tot1l servic1. And we try to htlp
11 best we can with the widow or widower in their emo·
tlon1l adjusttlllnts.
One of 011r chief p1lsls to brlft&amp; ptKeand comfort to the
LIVING In tlltlr lloun a1 nttcl. If wt can help you in this,
plene let us know.

14.88

'

REDUCED

SALE PRICED

239 " RAPI) SPEC PKG

seamless slaol tray, hardwood
handlea. full curl rim and a rupged
ade assembly "'"Wit
· 14W..rft'11

GIRLS

3 MOS•• 9 MOS.

'II

HOW CAN I HELP THE NEWLY WIDOWED?

(11.4) 11Hl41
' MIDDI.II'OIIr, ~

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
The Olllo-Unlverslty Communiversty Band wUI
be presenting an
open air concert
on the parklng lot
along tile Old
Ohio at 7 p.m. on
July 17. There's
no charge and in
fact, yollire Invited to bring not only
your favorite lawn chair but also a
picnic lunch and really enjoy the
music. There are several Meigs
Countlans playing in the band this
summer, I understand. Bank One is
sponsorl!!g the event:

SIMONS PICK-A-PAIR

\\'jt h his garnr-wlnnlng singiP to

••

.

Summertime music

NOTICE

By_United Press International
Okln homa wa s picked in a season
prwiew by The Sporting News
Monday to repeat as national
champion of college football. "With
its stable of stars back in full force
and the nation's best defense,
Oklahoma is a solid No. I preseason
pick." the sports weekly said.
UCLA, Michigan, Alabama. Miami
1Fla. t, Penn State, Nebraska, Ohio
Slat e, Tennessee. and Texas A&amp;M
were pickro to follow the Sooners In
thr top 10.

Page-6

•

Beat of t.he bemj,

"Now he feels he's back at the top. I
think he can go all the way. I didn't
think he could play this well right
after the operation . But he SPrved a
little bit better than I thought he
would.
"I knew he was fast around the
court,! knewheoouldmvrrthenet,
but 1 didin't reaUy think he cou ld
serve as well as he did."
Cash, an exceptional athlrtP with
a great array of soots, sluwed
extraordinary ability on his relex
volleys, which negated Wilandcr's
strong gro"ndstmkcs.
Monday's two matches r'f'garded
as upset possibilities proved to be
straight -set victories for the favorite. Defending champion Horis
Becker beat Mikael Pernfors 6-3,
7-617-2). 6-2 ard women's No. 2seed
Chris Evert Lloyd defeat('(] Kathy
Jordan 7-fi. 6-2 .
Evert Lloyd fell ix'hind 5-l bul
fought off five set points and won 10
" straight gamrs. Jordan's 191\1
defeat of Evert Lloyd here is the
only time the Floridian has been
denied a semifinal ix'rth in 45
Grand Slam tournaments.
"You Clll!lose ten games in a row
or you can win tm in a mw," said
Evert Lloyd. "It I grass! is a
strang{' surface. As soon as I got my
returns going, Ihat was tl'e
differenC&gt;'."
Pernfors, seedE'd No. 13 and a
finalist at the French Oprn, where
he beat Becker in the quarterfinals.
wa s considered a legitimate lhrt•at .
"He can usc his "'rve i2l aces) a
lot more here than hr could at !he
French Open," sa id the Swed(' .
"There the surface is so sluw tha t I
mn play my rhythm, settle' down
and play my shots. Here I just don't
gel liM' time.
"If 1M' can play like this and serve
like this . there's oo way you can
beat him_

IN STOCK

"' il1~1! we~s one ol I~ worst ralls
1\ ·c· J ~'N S('(' n," said l.asorda. " If it

"'"'out. I nught to get a new job."
Said lJdl, "Ron's ttu·ow was
1x•rfect, rtght on Ih(' bag . I thought I
han him ."

falls Into place," said the six-time
Wimbledon singles champion, pursuing her fifth consecutive title.
All four women's quarterfinals
will be played today. No. 2 seed
Chris Evert Lloyd will meet No. 7
seed Helena Sukova of Czechoslovakla; No.3 Hana Mandllkova will
meet unseeded Lurl McNeil of
Houston, Texas; and No. 10 Gabrlela Sabatini wUI play No. 15
Catarina Llndqvlst.
The men 's quarterfinals will be
played Wednesday with one fourthround match still to he completed.
Top seed Ivan Lend! was tied 6-7
(7·9), 7-6 (7·2 1, 2-2 with Californian
Matt Anger when darkness halted
the late evening match on Center
Court. ThematchwUiheoompleted
today.
The winner will play American
Tim Mayotte, sa&gt;ded No, 10. In a
meeting of unseecled surprises,
India's Ramesh Krishnan wUIIJlke '
the oourt against Yugoslavia's
Slobodan Zlvojinovlc.
Defending champion Boris
Becker, seeded fourth , will play
MUoslav Mecir, an unseeded player
from Czechoslovakia. and· No. 7
Henri Lcoonte r:1. France ~Is the
tournament's biggest surprise, Australlan Pat Cash, a wild-card miry
who is ranked No. 413 and
underwent an appendectomy four
weeks ago.
Cash, 21, who reached the
semifinals bere in 1984, Monday
upset second seed Mats Wilander
4-6, 7-5, 6--4, 6-3.
''I'm happy. I suppose I'm a bit
surprised too," said the Australian
who tosses his wristbands to his
female fan s after each match. "I
reaUy didn't expect it. Under the
circumstances I'd say it was the
best tennis I've ever played.'·
Wilander, who has yetto play in a
Wimbledon quarterfinal, said ,

Tuesday, July 1, 1986

.....

-,-

Sooners ranked tops

ragr.

, ·.- rr t,;ul, " hf' said. "That' s as mad

U.\s

By FREI)ERICK WATERMAN
UPI Spor18 Writer
WIMBLEDON, 'England (UP!)
- Martina Navratilova today may
finally meet the high quality of
com petit ion she's been hoping for at
Wimbledon - against Someone
who has npver beaten her.
Navratllova, who has yet to lose a
set during the first week of
competition, has been complaining
about the lack of first-rate rompeti·
tlon in her draw and has virtually
waltzed through the early rounds.
Today, however, she expects a
challenge from Bettina Bunge of
West Gemnany In the quarterfinals.
"It'll be a tQugh match," said the
No. 1 ranked woman. "I had a close
match against ber here last year
(7~. 6-3). She's a good player, she
can hit it from anywhere. It's good
- I'm ready."
Bunge, however, did not sound
hopefuL
"On grass, there really isn't
much you can try against Martina.
I've had some great matches
against her, " said Bunge, who has
never beaten Nayatllova. "I've
also had some J:l!elty bad ones
whrr-e she just beat me really
badly. But then she's done that to
everyone else, so it's nothing to be
ashamed of."
Navratilova has won 48 of 65
gamrs and has been happy with her
play so far.
The top seed and defending
champion has lost only one service
game, a streak of superiority which
ex tmded ttu·ough Monday's 6-3, 6-3
fourth-round elimination of Isabelle
Demongeot of FranC&gt;'.
"I feel that if I'm playing well,
then tile sro1-e doesn't make any
difference. I'm happy with my
serve-and-volley game and if that' s
going well. then everything else

The Daily · Sentinel:

_,..
'

"011' , .. ''T" IN MIDDIEPOII

'-

O'DELL
I

.

•

�Ohio

community happenings

Long
~~ visitors of Leona

'
.
'AWARD - YveUe l'Oiilllti*IUJedrecelvr.g her award In I he South
Dlalrtcl safety speaiiJDI COIUit beld recenlb' In Jac"- tnm Dale
Roberts, Westfield Compulles J'Etl-laiiYe.
'

Safety speech
gets award
Yvette Young, daughter of Roger
and Yvonne Young, 39170 Rock
Springs Road, Pomeroy, look part
In the South District safety speak·
lng contest held at Jackson.
She represented Meigs County In
the junior dlvlslon of the contest
with her speech, "Safe Kids are
Happy Kids" In which she discussed some ct. the major areas In
the home where accidents occur.
Twenty-seven yoong people look
part In the m ntest sponsored by the
Westfield Companies. Presentlng
trophies and plaques for the
company was Dale Roberts. Young
Is 11 and Is a first year member of
the Meigs Rowdies 4-H Club with
Margaret, Patricia and. Kathleen
Parker as advisors.

Herisley
anCI Ma~ McPeek ha'l(e been Mr.
· and Mrs. Jolin Joluison and gran·
(laughter, Dana, of Rossford; Mr.
and Mrs. BIU 'I'honlpson, Sprtnglleld, and Mr. and Mrs. Ammon
· UjtQn cl CUrtis, who. also enjoyed
camping on the Shade ·River. and
Mr. and Mrs. Roger BeD and son,
Brian, New England, W.Va. .
·
• Jlmm,yWells, son ct. Chester and
Dorothy Wells, who was severely
burned In an automobUe accident
recently Is repQrtedly lm(ll'!lvlllg
rapidly. He underwent skin graftIng last week.
Jolm and Mary Newlun , are
remodeling the old Nell GJ'OC'E'
home.
Usa Masters Grossnickle and
daughter are now residing In a
moblle home near her parents, Joe
and Barbara Masters.
Recent visitors of Phyllis and
Dorsel Larkins were Mr. and Mr.

Wamsley; Cheshire, Klni
La~ - andW
. esley, GalUpo.lls,and
Do Pierce.
·
G and Boring, Reedsvllle, was a
rec t' visitor of Paul Hauber.
R by Brewr and Beth Mutphy
obse\vEd birthdays on June 27, and
Mrs.\Brewer's gtandson, Brandon
Flte'lo celebrated his on June 28.
Mn and Mrs. Dorsel Larkins

~

!
Quqte of the day

united

By
Press Intemattonat
Pres\d(!nt Reagan, asked about a
requesMrom the Sovle! Union for
speclal ,an'ns ,talks this month to
discuss \his decision to scrap the
unratllltld SALT 2 treaty:
"Too ~uch salt Isn't goo:! for
you."

"OmUIO YOU THERE SAFELY" . ·..

r

LOWEST PRICES Ott PA$SENGIR CARS
. AND UGHJ· TRUCK TilES ·
*ALIGNMENTS *FIONT END WOH
*IAMIIES •nil 'REPAIR
LOCATED: MAIN ST., RUTLAND, OHIO
OPEN: 8-6 MON.-SAT.; 8-8 FRI.
PH. 742-3088
Maator Card and Vlaa Welcome

·, 4.0'~/o
OFF

110/.v .:10
l

•·

,·::.·

•

Of·f

ALL.

ALL

·-·DINOTES
IN STOCK

'

SOFA·S
IN STOCK

OFF

l ·,

.

Sarah Anne Hawley

409/o
·oFF

~~~~=~=~Parlrel',
'
'
"'lden~t~of~lhe~M~el~gs:!~f.J
'j~ honor
~
hllnp a plaque

and

Jolm WOllam
who contrlbuled a,ooo to the establshment ol
the Museum on Bultenlul Ave., Pomeroy.
Foundation .after his death.
That money was used toward the

!llrchase of the museum on Oct. W.
1971.

AtL

Wildwood Garden club .meets
As for their reproduction, their
eggs are tbe size of a coffee bean

A program oo the hummlng'blrd
by Kathryn Miller was a feature ri
the recent meeting of the Wildwood
Garden Club held at the home of
Jaunlta Will.
Mrs. Mlller noted that the
humming bird Is more friendly than
other birds and llketheoobrred. At
onetime, she said they were sluffed
and used as decora!ions on
women's hats-:;rhe smallest of tile
species is In CUba and the lar!Ji'St In
the Andes, she noted . She talked
about feeding the birds sugar water
and said that the birds also eat
InsEcts.
They are like tiny helicopters, she
said, hooverlng and oot soaring,
and can migrate up to a thousand
mlles.

and they often rear two broods In a
season, sometimes building
another nest while taking care
small birds. The male bird wes not
help the female with the babies.
Janet Theiss was co-hostess for
the meetlngwllh Debbie Ball gjvlng
devotions using the readings, "The
Proud Parmts" and "My Fatlier
Disciplines Me."
Timely gardenlngllpswereglven
by Mrs. Theiss who said that now Is
the time to give lawns another
applicaton of fertilizer, to pinch oot
the Ups ct. mums, to divide 311d reset
Iris, to gjve rose rushes another
application of fertlllzer, and to keep
the faded blooms cut of!.

"remember father" lime with
those attending relating memories
about their fathers. June King
recltfll a poem, "My Father" and
then blew a kiss to her father, Dano
King. Debbie Alkire recited a
poem, "My Two Fathers" with
tributes to her Heavm!Y Father
and · her eaFihy father, Roger
Alkire.
Pat Thoma presented prizes to
the father with the biggest foot,
Charlie King, the father with the
most keys on a ring, DanoKlng, and

Repairs and Improvements were
discussed at the recent meeting of
the Long Bottom Community Assoclatlon held at the hulldlng.
Dorsel Larkins presided at the
meeting with Mae McPeek giving
the secretary and treasurer's reports. Possible lnoo!pOI'lltlon and

B, EPRO~M

FURNITURE
IN STOCK
-

The HWbUlles ~H Club met on June ~ l9Bii

at the home of ()paJ Dyerwtth 2advisors and 2
members attending. They dlsrussed Ideas for
tre fair OOoth.
Tonya Thornton gave a derrons1ratlon on
First Ald.
•
The children mjoyed playlng ch arades for
m: rea tlon . Reh'eshments of t"'Okles , r hips
and kool aid were served. The next Tfl€{'fln g
w!U bi.&gt; June 13, at Opal 's b&gt;uso.
ShE!"r1 Ramburg

111e HWblllles 4-H aub met Juri(' l1 at the
Dyer resldenrewtth lmembf'rs and l ad vtsor

Betty Milhoan's flower arrangment of the month was entitled
"Memories." ShP used tiger lilies,
catnip, phlox, cosmos, black eyed
susans, yarrow and beE&gt; balm In an
antique stone pitcher
Marcia Arnold gave a demonstration on making a mass arrangment. She used bu tlerfly weed,
black eyed Susans, and wild
yarrow. She also displayed a black
pansy.
A thank yru note was read from
Sandi Hawley, and Dorothy Smith,
Doris Grueser, and Debbie Ball
were named as a oommlttee to
make rut new yearbooks.
The July picnic will be held at
Grueser's Pond. Refreshments
were served following the meeting.

the father with the longest beard,
also Charlie King. Anna Lockhart
had a quiz on "How C:reat a Father
Are You ."
The program closed with a
friendship ring ani! group singing of
"Bl~ Bethe'ne'nlatBinds" and a
closing prayer by Joe Lockhart.
On Father'S Day, gifts were
present«,'~! to all the fa !hers and sons
there. Spej:ial recognition was
glven to the oldest father, the
youngest father, and the father with
the most chlldren present.

!n attendancE&gt;. ~
Stems of business dh.cussed Included a neld
tr1p to the post office and meeting dates.
A demonstratiOn was giV£&gt;n Dy Usa
V!Denucva on the parts of a camA"a.
For recreation they played bingo. Opal
Dyer served refreshments.
The next meeting' was se t br June 'll a t
Opal Dyer's.
Sherr1 Ramburg
News Reporter

Th£' Meigs Better Livestock Dairy Oub met
June 17 at the hOme of Jerry . David and Paul

Smi th wUh 10 members and 1 adviSor

OFFALL
800KC.SES
DESIS

'.

,.

,.

·Retires

.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport:
OES rnees Thursday, 7!~ p.m.
Past matrons serve refreshments;
wear past matrons dresses.

Swirnrnln« lessons
SYRACUSE - London Pool In
Syracuse Is offering its second
session of swimming lessons start·
lng July 7 for children over tlli'N
years old. Also advance life saving
classes will be held starting July 8:
Residents wishing more lnforma:
tion may can 9921·9909. Instructor Is
Zane Beegle.

Coonty Fish and Game.

attending.

Items c1 business dlscu&amp;led included a field

trip to the W.Va. Sausage Plant

a to Bob

Evans Farms andpossJbJIItyofselllng milk at

Brenda S. Donahue, Brenda s.
Null to Johnle C. Donahue II, .19A,
Sutton.
Octa Gillogly, Dec., to W.E.
Glllogty, aka Wm. E., Cert. of

The Triple R 4-H Club met June 23 at the
lmre d Amy Well wit~ U members and 3

meetlngwas set for July 1 at the Parker horre
wrere demonst rations wUJ be gtven by the

advisors In attendance.
ltetm of business diSCUSsed inclladed 1h!
posslbUlty d. ~to the Wave Pool in West
Vlrglnla and the progress of each member'$

Retreshrrrn ts were seiVed. The next

Parkers.

Jell Ra&gt;e
News Reporter

!l'oiect.

Amy Well gave a safety ~rt and a flower

demonstratiOn.

~Imming was enjoyed by all.

--.sh·

ment.s « ho~made Ice cream, bro#nles and .
pop wero served by Doris Well. The next

rrembers attending.
They planned •a swtmmlng party at the
horre of Be-tty Pauley.

meeting 'NUl be July 3 at the horne of Debbie·
Brooks wMe Joy Swain, Jay Swain and
Nancy Gadd~ wUI give reports and Debbie
Brooks and Joy Swain wUI dodemonstratkm.
AmyWeU
News Reporter

A potlu ck pcntc was ~rved as refresh·
rn.&gt;nts. The nPxt meeting will be Junel7 at thE'
Hudson residence.

Afl'll Hudson

Nrws Reporter

..

Th e Flatwocx:l Flyers met June 21 at the r-------~--~
CUrtis residence with 10 members and 1
advisor ahending. Theclubmembers wr:rked
oo the~ outdoor Cool&lt;ecy I proled. by llxlng a
mea l in the~ project - · The boys In the
club eamped out overnight as r«reation . The

.... -

~Fxt meeting was set for June 28 where the
d ub will at1end a rlshlng derby at tht&gt; Meigs

Dorothy M. Eades, Ease, Salem
Howard S. Ebers bach, Sr., Dec ..
to Looanna E. Wllcox, HowardS.
Ebersbach, Jr, Thomas Allen
Ebers bach, Lauranre S. Ebersb-

~~~~­

Alloll- 1111
talll WftSI lilts

... ....,... ......,. ... .
. . . IllS . . -

12 llltsllllln.. .

.... l- .

....... • .. lt.

r====':":·:·..=====:
I&amp;G nED &amp; SUPPLY·

ia~ch~,~Ce~rt£.~al~Tr~an=s~.,-=Le=ban=o=n~,

Trans
.. Columbia.
Edwin
S. Cozart, Laura H. Cazart " Bedford, Porn. Vlll.
to Grace L. Haskins, Pt. lot 1140,
Racine VUI.
Clara B. Miller, Dec ., Roy Mlller,
Atfld., Porn. vm.
Ray Mlller, Maurita Miller to Ben
H. Ewing, Doris Ewing, parrels,
Porn. Vlll.
Lavern Jordan, Mary Jordan,
Jack R. Jordan,
S. Jordan
to Rex H.
·Cheadle, tracts, Columbia.
Kathy Anderson to Jim Walter
Homes, Inc., parrels, Salisbury.
Roxie B. Reed, Dec., Alvin S.
Reed, Affld., Olive.
Iviwno,trN
Richard H. Stewart, Betty L .
Stewart to Bruce P. Eades, Dorollll'
M. Eades, parrels, Salem
KIIICH
Richard L. Stewart, Donna Dlrlene Stewart and Brure P, Eades,

vac•• PACK

Graduates

hot water heater repair were
amon)!' the t~lcsdlscussed . Phyllis
Larkins noted that herdaughter-l!rlaw, T~Yf11Ya Larkins, graduated
from Rio Grande College with a 4.0
average. Get-well cards were
signed br Ellen W~!lls, Cliff Newlun, Martin Nesselroad, with a

Donna Curtis
News ReJDrter ,

nr ralr .

Meigs County land action

birthday card for Mildred Hauber.
Melody Roberts and Francis
Andrew gave square danre comRebecca Anderson, daughter of
mittee reports. Roberts noted that Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Wright has
the kitchen Is closed until fall. Mary received her master's degree from
Andrews and Juanita Wells wUJ he Ohio University, Zanesvllie
hostesses for the next meeting.
Branch . She Is presently teaching
Attending were Juanita and at Camlrldge High School where
Stanley Wells, PhyUs and Dorsel she waks·. with children with
Larkins, Mae McPeek, Leona learning dlsabllltles. Mrs. AnderHensley, Leota Ferrell, Ada Bissell son resides In Cambridge with her
and Kenneth, Mary Andrews, husband, Jolm, and two children,
and Mrs. Painter, senior class.
A social hour was held following Melody Rollerts, Harold Brewer, Kelly and Eric.
and Francis Andrew.
the jl'ogram.
,... -- _ __::..___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...,....,..._ _ _ _ _ _ _,..--- -------i

The closing program of the
Bradford Chu reb of Christ Bible
school was helcj Sunday night at the
church with the mission !tfering
going to the Ohio valley Chrlstlan ·
Asse!Jlbly camp at Darwin.
Cherie Seevers, Madeline Painter and Delo~-. Frank were
directors of. the sahool with devo·tions 'each ~y being sUdes of the
caJTip aclli(ltles J:iY Mark SeeVers.
Karm Meaclgwl ;,taJid Marthll
Wright presen~ J9)1.l, the Apostle,
for devotloll'&gt; eacli day.
·
Mrs. SeeveJ;"S was . the song
leader, and panlsts were Rutll
Dl!rst and Katll)l JOhilson. Jackie
Reed conducted !Ill! contests.
Sunday nlgllt's P!'Ogfam opened
with group sbigine It "Love Ufled
Me." Te~cher,$ and !lelpers ~
ln~ced and 11 P!fY, ~Looklngfor
Love ' was prt!SE!Jied by Mark
Seevers; Blll Amberger, Mrs.
Seevers. Mrs. Frank, Mrs. Pablter,
and N1111cy Morris. Chlldrell taking
part were Ran~ Bing, Joy
O'Brlell, and Bobby Moodlspaugh.
Teachers and llelpers recognized
were Gary .Ugbifoot, Mlldred
Hysell, Carol Anderson, ll!ld Hlilen
Mulford, nursery; Becky Am·
berger, Julie' Moodlspaugh, Eva
MllUron. and Connie Thomtoo.
beginners; Nancy t.i)rrfs, Becky
Alhberger, Martha CUnnlnghanit
Karm Meadows, and Mrs. Ander· ·
11011, primary; Mrs. Frink, ~Orina
Ru!SMI, Oebble Pickens, and VIcki
Smtih, junior class; Mark lleeveri

ROCK SPRINGS - SallsbuJY
township trustees, Thursday, 7 p.ni.
at township buDding on Rock
Springs Fairgrounds with budget
hearing to be held.

The Ridge Crlt1crs 4-H Oub met June 21 at
Ux- Hut! man re;ldcnCl' with 2 advbon; and 5

Bible school conducted

.'

mURSDAY
OUve Township Trustees wOI mee!at 7:30p.m.
Thursday at the Reedsville Fire.
Station.
REEDSVILLE · -

Meigs County ·4-H reports
News Reporter

Community Association meets

&lt; .

.

'

Tuesday at the Syracuse Munclpal
TUESDAY
SYRACUSE - Sutton toWnship Building.
·trustees meeting, 8 this evening at
WEDNESDAY
Syracuse Municipal Building.
•
RUfLAND - The Scipio Senior
Rtm.AND - Rutland Village Citizens wllt' hold blood pressure
Council meets 7:~ p.m. Thesday, day from 2 to 4 p.m. Wednesd~ .at
the Scipio Fire house with the
'civic center.
Rutland Emergency Squad In
POMEROY - Installation of charge.
officers. Drew Webster Post 39,
RACINE -The Bethany Church
American Legion, 7 p.m. dinner
will
hold a yard sale Wednesday
Tuesday.
and Thursday on State Route 124
RIJfLAND - Rutland Bowhun- near Racine.
ters Tuesday shoots have been
RUTLAND - Blood pressure,
canrelled B!)d wUI be held Instead at
5 p.m. on Saturdays at range day at ,Scipio Senilrs Otlzens in the
following shoot hunting; videos wlll Scipio Firehouse, 2 to 4 p.m.
Wedneday with Rutland Emerbe shown at club .house.
IJ1ncy Squad members taking the
~­
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport pressure.
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, will meet at 7: 30
RACINE- Yard sale at Bethany
p.m. Tuesday at the temple.
Church, Route 121, Racine, Wed·
SYRACUSE - Sutton Township nesday and Thursday.
Trustees wlll meet at 8 p.m.

A plaque In memory IIJld honor of
the late John WUllam Jl:erscherwho
contributed $:11,00&gt;: to the Meigs
County Pioneer · and Historical
Society for a museum was !lung
there Heritage Weekend.
·
The ln!;cripllon on the 2ll x 2t Inch
walnut plaque gwes tribute to
Hetsher who was born In Pomeroy
on March 16, 1881, the son . r1. .
Michael and El~beth Mlll'!@ret
Schilling Herscher-. II notes t)lat he
so f;'njoyed hls chlldhOod In Pomeroy that In later years he returned
to Pomeroy many limes tor a
reunion wlih his boyhood
surroundings.
After his father moved to Charleston In 1888, Herscher stayed In
Porrieroy and worked at the bakery
aild confectionery siore of his aunt
and ·uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Steinbauer. At 15 he moved to
Charleston and lived there until his
death.
..- But Herscher never forgo( his
native Ml:igs Couqty and Pomerpy
and was a benefactor of numerous
organizations. He gave to the local
hospital, church -and llllrary
' through the years. Hls largest gilt,
perhap~. was an·offerto glves;Ji,OOO
to the Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society for a museum.
$2i,OOl was paid before his death,
and an additional $5,000 was given
by the trustees of the Herscher

Fathers and sons of the Pomeroy
Church of Christ were honored at a
dinner and. program held recently
at the church.
Chris Alkire had the prayer with
the congregation singing "Faith of
Our Fathers" led ~Suzan Tho!Jla
W!tll·~l)llfty atih'e plano.
Nell Pi'oudfdo(. • pastor, Mel the
prayer and asked the blessing on
the dinner enjoyed In . the social
rooms of the churclt.
The program opened with Janet
Venoy giving a reading, "What Is a
Father." She also conducted a

RECLINERS

.Community calendar I area happenings

.,

Father-son banquet held in Pomeroy

ALL

.

Herscher ..
honored. ·.. ..

7

The Daily

Ohio

::,·

RUTLA-ND TIRE SALES

/o

CHECKlHE

.

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

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r.====::;====:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;,-:

0
·48·

Tom and Sandi Hawley are
announcing the ·blrth of a d~ughter,
Sarah Anne Hawley, May 25, at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Mi;Uernal grandparents are Cha·
ri&lt;'S Hamilton, New Haven, W.Va .
and Faye Wiggins, Minersville.
Great -grandparents are Ralph
Matteson, Springfield, and Helen
Walton, Wellston.
Paternal grandparents are Diane
Hawley, Pomeroy, and thf: late
Clarence Hawley.

•••
..

Hayman.
:
Mr. and Mrs. David Dalley, Rae :.;
Lynn, ''Reedsville; Mr. and Mrs . ~
Lawrence Johnston, Jererey, Tup- ,
ers Plains, Doug Hauber, Bashan, ~
Scott Hauber, Portland, and ·:
Deanna Rockhold , Reedsvllle, :
were Father's Day guests of Paul ;•
Hauber.

have returned from a vacallon In
South Carolina. Their daughter,
Shirley Salisbury and chlldren;
GaUlpolls, accompanied them on
the trip. .
Grace ~uden, Olympia, Wash ..
has been visiting friends and
relatives In the area. She visited ·
several days with Ernestine

'

Hawley birth

1, 1986

1

SLICED BACON .............l».iM-. 97c
SHIIDDED
$
BOILED HAM ••••:MVI4.JJMlJJ. 2.19
ECIIICH
•••••• A •••• .S1.79

24 Ol. CTN. BROUGHTON'S

30 CT. CALIFORNIA

COTTAGE CHEES£ ..... 51.39

CELERY ...............AtN.K... 6tc

PlFT 12 OZ. 16 SUCE PIOCESS

318. NEW

SWISS CHEESE ......eFJi.51.89

LODI APPLES .......JNi 51.19

I lB ..KRAFT PARKA Y

24 CT.

MARGARINE ••••OIIfAUU .. 79'

HElD LETTUCE........ &amp;.69c

12

oz.

REAMS .NOODLES ..................... 99c
• 10 OZ. IIIDSIYE FOIDIIOOI
LIMA 8EANS ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 89&lt;
100 CT.

I

DIXIE CUPS ....................Wtl•• Sl.-69
2• rc. aox PLAmc sn
KNIVES, FORKS &amp;SPOONS ........ 79&lt;
U .CT. DIXIE
.
PAPER PLATES •••••••••••••••m•.• S1.79
250 CT. NOIUIRN
.
.
$
NAP.KINS •••~ ••••••••••••••••••••~~~... 1.4 9
7'12 OZ. CAINAMN
SPREADABLES ••••••••• ~•••••••"ti. .. S1.4 9
S 01. AIMOIII ·
VIENNA SAUSAGES ........tm~~s1.19 _
u CT. unoN
.
TEA BAGS ......................101. .. S1.8 9:

'" ro ''' ,.,.,., o1

• long· wearing, siMI-belted 721 radials
• More than 60 mill/an sold/

msnJJif

29 OZ••L MONTE

.PEACHES ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $1.19 :

iiJJnJIII

· I 01.

UnLE JUG DRINKS •••••••••••~.fP&amp;.79c

16 ·OZ. YLAI( .SOli ·

,•

t:lbyd Wright, ullllty foreman at
Spcm Plant, New ' Haven, W.Va,_
has retired after ~rs· servlde.
He was honort~i'ai a cllnner party
In (:aUJpolls .and was ~led .
(lllti)IY hla co-wOI'JI;ers. &gt;\'farewell. .
plrt)l, was allto held· by hl8
deP&amp;rtment at the !iilllt on ii!A1:1ast
daY wortc. ·
·

POMEROY

606 EAST MAIN

992'·2094
shviiiG ••os.co. r01' to nliS, l.t66-1tl6
'

t

.'

or

...

:·

•

'

~

"'

,

Dill PICKLES .................."'... 51.19
6'12 oz.
PRINGLE :c"IPS ..............WII.. S1.2

�1

Ohio

Tuesday,

-schOOls ·chief calls Cleveland 'sick'
)IJ MICHAEL O'MALLEY

CLEVELAND (UP!) .;_ Cleveland Schools Supertntendent Ro- ·
nald Boyd says he thinks Cleveland
Is "aslckclty" becau!lll'ofpoorrace
relations and an Ineffective board of
educatk&gt;n and blames board pollt·
lcS as the reesm ~r hls filing.
Boyd was forced to resign
Monday after serving ooJy nine
months at the helm It Ohio's largest
public school system. Board
members claimed Boyd's pertorriumce on court-ordered school
desegtegatlon and budget matters
was poor.

Tile superintendent said ' the
move came to hlm as a complete
surprise and It put hlm In "one of
the most unfair situations" In which
·he's ever been Involved.
"I was never given the opportunIty of even slttlng down with the
board as a whole to talk about any
dellclencles that they may have
thought that I had," said Boyd. "I
find thaI to be very deplorable."

•

!

Board of Education President
Joseph Tegreene said the board
unanimously voted for Boyd's
removal and wU! buy out his
!our-year contract for s:m,ooo. Tbe
supertntendent's annual salacy Is
$10;000.

number It positions, tlrat were
deemed lmportan t In the admtntstrallon, were left unfU!ed," said
_Tegreene. "The' board was fully'
prepared to support lb&gt;se kinds of
cuts It, In tact, the district. was
wing the kind d multl·miWon
·dollar deficits . that. had been ·
projected."
Boyd, who said he was satisfied
with the flnancialllgure In the plan
to buy out his contract, defended his
record, saying he made Improvements In transportation and "fforts
to computerize the system's ac·
countlng department and blamed
board poll tics as the reason tlr his
firing.
"It's lx&gt;.afd politics that th1s
community Is going to have to deal
wllh," said Boyd. "And you're
going to have to deal with It at the
polls."
Tbe superintendent said board
members Interfered too much In his
administration and he felt a
constant pressure as Hhe had "five
or six bosses "
"Iri
' th1s dlstr
. 1 t the • m1sco
c , res a
n-

'

ceptlon of the role It the board and
the role d the adrnlnlstratmn," he
said.
.
Boyd said It wDI he difficult for
tlle board to find his replacement ·
because Cleveland's schOol system
has a poor reputation and most
administrators are not Willing to
deal with the pressures and the
polltlcs.
"When this (firing) hits the
education papers, people are gillng
10 say: 'There,we go again. That's
Cleveland,"' said Boyd.
"I think Cleveland Is a sick city. ~·
he added, citing poor race relations
and a school gystem that Is
paralyzed by co~uallnterference
· from the school board. "And Ithlnk
those are the kinds of things that
help a city to die."
.Boyd was the permanent replacement for Dr. Frederick Holliday,
who committed suicide In Januacy
1985. Holliday left a suicide note
claiming that board poli.ilcs and
Infighting drove hlm to take his lite.
"Just lastnlght, lor some reason,
Dr H U!da ..
I was thinking about . o y,

•

said Boyd. "I 8J111XJSitlve as Ill how
he must have ielt. Because I, like
'Dr. }lolllday, . have shown an
Increase Iii test scores In this
district. Anci so J&lt;W have to ask the
question: 'What IS expected or a
supertntendenl?' I can't be God and
Ic~i~!'t I]!! Gocl's right hand man."
B6yd Is the seventh superintendent tlnJerve:!n Cleveland since l978
when u.s. :Disl;rlct Judge Frank
Bl!tttstl o~red the district
desegregated.
" All d u5 ean't be that bad," Said
Boyd, noting the rumber It superlntendents jn a sbort period.
In Msy, Battisti turned the
c'leqregatlon responsibility over to ·
state Superintendent Franklin Wal·
ter. The judge' said tbe system was
dragging Its feet In efforts to
desegregate .schools.
"I just arrived here ninem:&gt;nths
ago," said Boyd, responding to
charges that he was 1'\!SIJOnslble for
the state Slepplng In to expeqlte
~G.. '
SIDE _ Cleveland SchoolS Superintendent
desegregation. "And des cgl cgatlon · DA-au Boyd _ .....:.~....... the 1'1!880118 for hJ8 rest-·""• Mmiday a&amp; a
occurred In 1978. So bow can I be
,...._.
..,._..
...·
(ll'fllll coni-JCJe, 'lloYd was Ia ~lloe lor mae moldh!i ud was
held resJl?nslble for that?"
ClevelaDd's IIII!Vmtli 11Chooi8Upertntend!IDI Mnce n . (1!1'1) · •

0

1

Central Trust buys Ky. bank

,fil l i• +-• ••••••.Ml !l_
;,s$1!'!

•
tin
renew
rou
e
"'"'ri'I"""-"'- J -· ..

PHONE 992-2156

Soldiers' remains unearthed

,•
•
''

v.aa.

-State promotes campsites

'

COLUMBUS (UP! I - The Ohio Department of Natural
Resoorces Division of Parks and Rect'Eiltlon Is providing
. ln!Qnnatlon on the availablllty of campsites ·at state parks for ·the
. upcbmlng Fourth of July holiday weekend. . . .
Campers can receive lnfonnatlon on campsite avaJiabUlty at the
• state's 5!1 parks by calling 614 261)'/IXO betWeen 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. on
July 2 and July 3, said Stan Spaulding, chief d parks and recreatk&gt;n.
All sljlte P!lrk cam))BI'OIInds, with the eXception of the main
~nipp)Und ·at Mohican State Park, ~II! on a first-rome,
flrst·lli!rved basiS. Spaudln&amp; said. Retervatlo111 i&gt;r Mohican !lillY be
1
INide by calllni the park omce aUl99!H aiO no morethan~ cl.$ys In
adVance of the ~ arrival date. .
.

... '. ,. :
•

Ohio Lottery
CLEvti.AND (UPI) - Monday's , winning Ohio ~ttery
numbers:
·D illy Number
5:ll
Ticket sales totaled $1,128,7ti1,
with a payctt due of $511,677.
·
PICK-4

One Holf County
Shora. Public
A•l-ot ........ 23,198.150
HlltofiOiit
Booloiy .. , .,, .... , e. ooo.oo
8011. Wotti'. ,, 211,100.00
Crfppllolf• '

Cltlltlron .,, , ,.,., 11.1211.00
Soil SIIIVty ,.,., ,10.11711.00
Folr loord ,,,..,,3,100.00
Senior CMiona .... 11,00().00
TOTAL ...... .,, •107•• 1.,117

l!elowlutummory oftt.
ontlro buclaot. which, elong
wtth lht lfttondod .... of
Revenue Bhorlnt !undo It
ovoltelo for public lnlt!IIC·
ti!ln et tt. M...t County Au·

8147
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$169,019, with a paYctf due ~$76,119.
'
omc. from July 2,
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays dltor't
1888,toJuly 11, 1888; bet·
$4,61&amp; PICK-4 $1 box bet pays$192. -·tho houroofl:30 A.M .

-

OMild by lht --...

lituMod In S.llobury ;.;;;:.:
lhlp, Matgo County, Ol)io, dt-

TVs, Anttnn'as
Satellite Salts

BUILDINGS

F\ESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
AGRICULTURAL
Custom "Design

lnstallati011 s~rwict
All mojor appliance re-

CAU 667-3271
Ctt~tpue t~•

Q11llty

Before Yf.tf:t roo.

llo.t O.or To WHtern Auto

992-334'5

992-6784

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

59 N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport

3/2/ n

5-20-'86' I roo.

CLC COINS ·

'

•

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Buying I Selling

Gold, Silver
14K Chains, Coins,

VINYL &amp; AWIIINUM

Collector's Accessories
Bullion
SUMMER HOURS
1-7 M-TH

Compktte Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling

Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area
20 veers
" Free Estimates"

985-3937

CAll COllECT:

Call for Directions

Ph. (614) 843-5425

6-16-'86· I mo.

5-12-'86·2· mo .

RUSS
ELECTRIC
MOTOR
REPAIR

VINYl SIDING
0 AlUMINUM 'SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSUlAnON
0

SAUS &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO

Rt. 1, Box 27 -B
32933 Romine Rd.
Rutland, Oh. 45775

PHONE

farm Equipment
Parts &amp; SeNiae

(614)/742-2070
5-29-'86-1 mo.

1-3-'86 tfc

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
IIEAOQUARTERS FOR

TRENCHING IS OUR LINE
Backhoe Service
Plumbing ·Service
Custom Welding ~
Lowboy Hauling
Septic Systems

•SYLVANIA
,
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
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Licensed &amp; Bonded

W• HtwJ Ahll T1t111
Sho~ Taeh lcilw
011 DMty
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

WRUAMS TRENCHWG ·
SERVICE
Rt. 4 . Hyaell

Run Rd.

Pomeroy, Ohio 46769

Ph 16141992-2834,
992-6704
FREE ESTIMATES
5-1·2 mo.

CHESTER-985 -3307'
4/ 1/ tfn

YOUNG'S

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

CARPENTER
SERVICE

DOZER . BACKHOE,
l!IENCHER. SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER,
GAS &amp; SEWER UNES,
RECLAMATION•. PONDS.
SPRING DEVELOPMENT.
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT

- Addons and remodeling

- R oo ring and gu tter work
- Concrete work
- Piumbtng and electrical
work
(Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

JIM CLIFFORD

992 -62t l or 992-73t4
Pomeroy, Ohio

PH. 992 •720 1

4-15-'86-lc

ACCENT

ROSE EXCAYl11NG

FENCE COMPANY
PH. 992-6931

PH. 949-280 I
or 949-2860

J&amp;L INSULAnON
&amp; SIDING CO •

No Sundar Calls

992-2772

"Free Estimates"

Heme 843-5340

Installation Available '

5123/'16/ 1 mo.

4/ I

liMY SURPLUS
&amp; CAMOUFLAGE

CARPET
CARE

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

667-3513
DRY FOAM

Choice of
Materials

MIDWEST ·
SEAL &amp; STRIPE
Serving this area
with PoweSeal seal
coating and striping
ond making of
Asphall &amp; Concrete.
1-614-696-1337
1-614-593-8693

JO'S GIFT SHOP
SYRACUSE, OHIO

The Stl1lt 0• FerJ•Iyl
HlAVT IAIG! IRD lATHS

Sl6.95
CIM£NT DOGS &amp; CA I!

1O"'o OfF

LAMPS &amp; FIGUIIN fS

'11 PRICE
OPEN : Mon.·Wed .
Thurs.-Fri. &amp; Sat.
9 a.m. to 6 p.m .

BISSELL
BUILDERS

8101/, W. Moin St.
Pom•or, Ohio,

992-6778

~

I~~~

'73 · ·eo GM fenders .. .. 839
73-80 GM
Rocker Panels .
. ... .... SUi
73 -79 Ford Fenders ..... 539
Truck Bed
liners
..... .. Full S1 75
,
MiniS165
FREE INSTALLATION
2 YR WARRANTY
Setil factron Guer•nteed
frt~e Delivery in Tri St1teArea

(!)

z

-

a:

l1i

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
Co~uterized Hearing Air Selection
Swim Molds - lnletllreling Services

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

J: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

z

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

DON'S MOBILE HOME
REPAIR SERVICE
UNDERPINNING &amp; SOUP

Sp'I"R Speeial

MOBILE HOME ROOF PAINTING

$9 5

INClUDES PAINT
&amp; LABOR

OFFER GOOD THRU JUNE 5, 1986

992-3361

5-5-'86-lfn

JEFFERS EXCAVATING

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2811,0
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

FiiiE ESTIMA TIS

4-16.'86 tfn

UT'S BUilD UP TOGrTHERI
·~CAL1.4BOR

•lOCIUY OWNlD

*IIebi Buidittl!

992-7089

992-3525

992-5232

446 -0294
NOAH'S ARK ANIMAL PARK
Schools, ct.urches. OOIJ1;IW'Y
picnics, birthday parties and
family reunions . Call 614 -384 2108 Of 1-800 - 282 -2167
Best Fishernian of Gallipolis:
Would you like to m&amp;at more
men liku yourself? If 50 here's
how to do it . Join Bass-Anglef'1
Sporumen Societv . for more on
this: see Charles Blankenship at
919 Second Ave . Apt . 9, Galli ·
polis, Oh
All people )"t'ho tecured kittens
from 614 -992 -7574 ca ll beck
please . Impor tant medical
reasons.
Beginners Basic Quilt lessons.
Classes starting Sept Hi Call

•Pole

VINYL SIDING

4

Giveaway

7313
Milted puppies 5 weeks old Call
3 very nice kittens that ere.littee
train,ed . Call614 -446 -9287
1 year old puppies half Bor der
Collie-half German Shepherd.
Call after 5. 614 -446 -7685 .

*Slorace &amp;iltli~~g~
•All SIZES IVIILABLf

WAMSLEY &amp; GRAY
5-Jol -1 l c

•VINYL
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

•ROOFING
•CUSTOM
GARAGE
BUILDING

Female pure bred Doberman 8
week old. Call 6 14- 446 -4597 .
Gas stove free lor hauling , oven
doesn't work . 444 S . Minnesot•
Ave., Well1ton, Oh . Call 614 384 -5458 Of 614 -256 · 6758
To good home 1 1h yr . old gr ay
femal e cat. litt er trained Ca ll
614 -446-7795 .
App ro.oc . 1 1h ton of coal
giveaw ay. 614 · 742 - 2602

PlUMBING &amp; HEA nNG
New ICCGHon.
161 North Second
Middltporl, Ohio 45760

J&amp;L INSULATION
PH. 992-2772

SALES &amp; SERVICE

OPEN MONDAY
THRU SATURDAY

PH. 992-7 403

6·23·86·1 mo.

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Garage Sal e Wednesday &amp;
Thursday , Rt . 218 . 2mileabove
Merce rv ille . H arold Davis
residence

Wad , Thurs. &amp; Fri. 5 miles~out
Rt. 2 18. 9 to 6 . Clothing adults
&amp; childerns. hou sehold good .

Garage Salo Thurs. July 3. 9 -6.
5th house below Racc o on
Bridge do w n Rt. 7. Children &amp;
adult clothiog, wat er bed. bicycles . toys. sewing machine.
di5hes, home interior. lnforll\8 ·
tion ca l/614 · 256 - 1387 or 614266 - 6569 .
Tues., Wed . 81 Thurs. Cherry St.
Vin ton . Air conditioner. Super
Scanner antenna, CB radio.
police sca nn e.r, TV , boy s bike.
clothes. mise

6. 3() .

86. 1 mo

•Residential
•Commercial

•Industrial

RAYMOND E. PROFFITT (MAC)
~ACINE,

Offico 949-2431

OHIO

f.,.,., ••,.

~

Powell's, Fifth St., Racine . July
1 thro ugh 5. 9:00 til dark . . 6
families -large variety good dothing. misc. items .
4 family . On Rt. 124 in Racine
behind Masoni~ Lodge. Good.
clean clothing. books, misc .
items . July 1 .2. 3 from 9:00 W
5:00 . Dennie Hill resident s.
Garage sale at Art Millers. Wed .
Juty 2 and Thur . July 3, from 10
am to 4 pm on White Hill Rd .
Rutland . Clothing. what- nots.
christmas decoration s, dishes,
quiH tops, and lots more. W•1cb
for arrows. 1'1• mile on 1st. leh
Wm OH after luaving Rutlan'U.
North Main St.
·
Two fM'Iily . Antique wood beds.
stone jan. quilts. chain . collec ·
ttns items, clothn, shoes, rlktio :
table. fru it jars. One mile off 124
between Portland and l.Dng
Bottom -watch for signs. Rain or
sh ine. June 30, July 1, 2,3.
Edgar Brewer . Phone 614 · 843 ~
5334 . 9 :00 -&amp;.00.
•;, mile on 143 at Humphre\r's.
FeBd grinder. New Holland Hiy
Squeezer -Conditioner . chest
deep freezor , clothes . weight
ect. Ca ll61 4 -992 -3859 .
July .2.3. 9 :00· 3:00 .
July 2 and 3. House beside
Pleesers . 9:30 · 4 :00. 3 family . ~
Yard Sal~ July 1 and 2. Behind
VFW in M'son . Two Chevy luv
Camper t~ s. furniture, misc .'

'·

Carport Salo~ Wed . and ThVr.
July 2.3 . 9-4. 311 · Wright St.
Pomeroy . large selection gir1
clot hes. infants . E xce ll&amp;nt condition . MetBl'nity ckJthes, misc .
July hi through Sth . County
Road 28. Bashan . Across ffom
fire department .

Yerd Sale July 2, 3 &amp; 4 Kn ick
knacks . tables. doors . clothes .
FairviOYII' Evergreen Rd .

July::! and 3. 8Bby items, boytto
size 3. First time sale for girls·to
size 6 . Wagoner Stripper. wood
burner - 6150 . Donnie Wood,
Be£lch St. M iddleport .

5 Fmaily Tues . &amp; Wed . J uly 2 &amp;
3. 9 to 5. Clothes ofell sizes. and
lots mor . At Garfield Ave.z.

Yard Sale on corner Route 7 IW'Id
Flatwoods Road. July 3, 9 :00 -?

Yard Sale July 2 &amp; 3. Second
house past old B ildwee School .
Sponsored by Vinton Baptist
Church

3 famii~ · July 3.4. Church St..
Syracuse, clothing , home infe rior, bi cycles , dishes . storm
do or. Watch for signs . .

Pomeroy

Middleport

July 3, 4,6 at Pearl St . Racine.
Ohio . Furniture, glassware. clo thing. household items, and
more.

&amp; Vicinity

· Pt.Pieasanf ·····
&amp; Vicinity
Monde~ .

Twin bed spring • and manreu.
call 304 -676 · 51"22

Lost and Found

6

c-

;n 8e.thol

810 Sou th Second St. in Middleport. July 1 · 7. 2 gas healers.
bedding lin ens. drapes, curt ains.
Avon . pol!. pans, dishes. jewelry, clothing. furniture, ap·
plian cel, towels, spreads. misc.
July 2n d and 3rd. Bethany
Church . St. Rt. 124. Racin B.
Ohio
l ee and Ritchie . carport sale .
Jul y 1.2.. 9-7. Tyree 81\ld.
matching cockta il and end tables, bicycle. electric drill. sabre
saw. IDmps, clothe1. mite .

9

"""'ch 11

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for fat e model clean
used cars.
Jim Mink C hev .·Oidt Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

2282
WANTED TO BUY used WODd S.
coal heaters. SWAIN 'S FURNI ·
TURE. Jrd. &amp; Olive St Gallipo lis. Call814 -446 -3159 .

Hou se orr land contrtct. prefer·
rahley Add...-ille or Cheshire·
Kyger Din 83 .000 down . Call

6t 4-367 -7563 .
Old furniture . tables . chn.
cupb., bookcasn. if&amp; boxes.
iron bed• . chests. w icker , any
cond Call 614 -446 -3769
Reasonably priced 14.oc70 mo·
bile home with 1 · 1 '11 acres of
land . Prefer loe.ltion in·Gallipolis
area. Call 304 -875- 1728 aftB!'
6PM weekdava anytime wee ·
kftf'ldl
Buying daily gold. silver coins ,
rings. jewalry, aterling were, old
coins. large currency. Top pri·
ces. Ed. Burkett Barber Sflop,
2nd . Ave. Middleport. Oh 61 4 ·
992 -3476 .
Wanted to buy : Old paving
bricks . Can Bill Blower 614 ·
992 -5141 .
Forge, 1nvil tnd other biKhl·
mlth IDDII , phone 304 -676 -

Yard Sele, July 1. 2, 110 3rd
Street. Meson . Furniture. kera 1i9118 htNrter. fans . clothing. cri b.
Yard sale. 1405 Kanawha
Street. Tuesday. July 1 &amp;
Wednesday , 2n0':
8~ 4 tamily yard sale, 1, 2. 3. 9
a.m . till? on Rt. 35 . Jun above
old Coastguard 811e. Firsl Time
Th is Yearl

For Sale one lo t flea morket
mdse. Must sell all at once .

r~;,~am=•~-~co~af~ts~b~v~L~oe~.===+3~0~4:-6:7;5-~2;40:6~.~=:::==
Help Wanted

area hat ttg with number il ear
Call 304 -675 -32 66 .

Wanted pickup load corn. 304 -

882-3110

CUNIC

[itll"llilll ' I'

Paul E. Shockey, DVM
PT. PUASAJn OFFKE
305 Jadt- An.
'SIWL A~LIIOUIS
· ..... wttl.·lllwa. 3-5 pm
Tu11. 6.30·1; Fri. 1· 2 pm
SoturdOy 10-li.JO om

LAIGIAtMAl &amp;
MGiiT I' APPT.

PH. 304-675-2441

IIJID AliA CALl
llplty. Office
For llotirs

\ t'

11

•• ·.

rv11-:f"\

Help WanttKI

Mechanic needed in Gelhpo lis to
maintain 1m1 ll fleet of GM light
duty truclls . Experie,.eed in
follOwing · HEL manuel transmissions, differential, suspen sion systems, engines, etc. Send
resume to Bobby Ritter, P.O.
Sox 9247. H'Jntington. WV

!15 704.
District Technician .
•
Galli&amp; Soli &amp; Water Conservation
District. 629 Ja ckson Pike.
Room 308-C. Gallipolis, Ohio
46&amp;31 . Contaet : Pany Oyer.
614· 446-8687 . Destine: July
14. S1lary; Negoci1ble betad on
educatio n an-d experience .
Needed : Person interestod in
promoting conservation of our
soil 1nd water resouurces . Job
rnponsibilitias : Working with
District owned equipment /including 2 no-till grain drills and a
no -till corn planter). Working
with landowners in developing
conservDtton practices, i.e. w•·
terways , di\leraiorrs, ponds,
drairaage srnem• elc. Abiltty to
conduct surveys. 1nd compltto
engineering designs of oonservation practices.

11

Help Wanted

ASSEMBLERS WANTEOI Eam
up to 16.0, 00 e dey a uembling
displ•v clowns. Simple, profita·
ble, materials -pattern ._.pplied.
Send saU -addreued stemped
Wlvelope, Hawks landing, P. 0 .
Box 13493. Orlando. Florida

32869 .
Your prior military lltf'llgice is
worth money. AnE -4 ean earn al
rruch u 1131 .96 for one
week -end each month i1 the
Army NaUonal Guard . You can
qualify tor 160,000 life insurance . P'Omotions. special train ing. and retirement benetits.
Education funding it also av1il1·
ble to qualified enlistees. Call
304·676 -3950 or 1·800 -642:3619 .

AN . LPN to 00 insurance physi·
cals in Point Ple11ent and
surrounding araes . Car and
phone necesury . Part · time
work. 1- 304- 343 -9444 after 10
a.m .
Need pan -time help , call 304-

676 -2295 .
AVON . 3 open tenitories . can
304 -675 -1429 .

Babysitter needed 3 dllvs week .
in my home for 2 1m1ll children .
Cell 614 -446 -2692.

Airline jobs 517.90010 668.500
year, now hiring. Call Job line
1- 518 -469 -3535 e.oct A- 1980
for information 24 hours

Easv AsumbiV Work! $714 .00
per 100. Guaranteed Payment .
No Sal81 . Detail s .. Send
"rlpad envelop e: Elan-684-7
341 EnterpJile, Ft. Pierce Fl.

12

33

Situations
Wanted

2.

Government Jobt. S18.040
159.230-yr. N ow hiring. Ctll
605 -687-6000 Ex1 . R-9806 for
current lederallist.
Live·Wl COIT'fJtnion wilh elderly
lad y ,i1 Huntington , W_v, _ Call

304-n3 -66&amp;1 .
Co -Driver wanted . Mu1t be 23
yrs . Lon~ Haul, 10 rna et~tparience
holplul. C•ll &amp;14-992-8766 .

Work wanted · c arpentet worl\.
root•ng . 51d.,g , guttau . remo deling . new addition. eMp . by ,10b
or hour . Free est•mste 30 4273 -4710 d

t 8 Wanted to Do

honw . . .mbty work.' For info.

all 312·7•1 -8400 arr:t. 313.

62t 3.

3:00 . .

Call614 ·992-3228.

EASY ASSEMBLY WORKI

Will do blby littin~ in my home-.
Call 614 ·992 -61567.

S714.00 PM1&gt; 100. Guaranteed
payment . No ••1•. Oetallt Nnd
•tamped envelope; Elan· 715
3418 Enterprise. Ft. Pi8f'ce. Fl.

41131 .

il~

~

n .oo

w"k tor more information contiCt tht Dally Sentinel today at

114-992-2tll .

•filii.

Financi al
21 , Business
Opportunity
Prie-td to Mil. Night Club on At.

1. 31'"''- rmrth of Ponwray. Dl

bo"

Mquor lh::entewhhcan-y·out
and win a, newty rwnodel.t. Cd

6,.·992-1188t onydmo.
•

'

.'

Seeking to .,tor students iQ
math . BS In mathmetict. witb
tutoring experience.
per
hour . Call 814 -992 -2704 .

tiine1 ' Awn I Insurance
benefits? Awn! 16 to start?

look·CI!ltdcraft, - •
•.....
tvut ...
!rl -attvoo11t
..... fl*'~mo. fult
lr•.-F~
.. _.up
guar.,t- •v•Nible. 304.... Call .,day 114·
~IZ;.a&gt;IB&amp; .. ,•
44&amp;· Z11t. '

Gtllfpolll

Will do ganer11 house cleenrnq_

Pitt

·A•onl &amp;14 · 992-7180 .
Mltuf1 ldult to c•re for inf•nt
and toddler i1 our ho,.. After- Rout81 llfalllble become a Dally
noons&amp; ... ~lnQI : Send rwumo Sontinel cai'Tiar and aam be 1o 8011: T800 in c•r• of the tween t16 .00 and 120.00 1
GtUipoli• ' DillY Tribune, 825
Third Awe.. Galllpolll, Oh

Would like to sit wilh eldert\r
perton •lso Wlfl do cle•n •ng. Cat!
614 -446 -3007 or 614 -446 -

Baby littet w•nted in my home.
BHhtn 1rU. App rox . 30 hrs o
\IIII'Mk. CIII61• · M9·2983 lfter

33482,
Excenent lrrco,.. for p1rt time

ttmll ..

10-8-tfc

•

Tuesday. Wednesday,

a.. atfl ...rock. a..,\iun\ku,.
and m1acettaneoUs. ~
-

Wanted jtJnk autos . Call 614 ·

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

Gortto'n -~8fdvtil. •
Tuppers Plains July 4- !;.
'

-Y\rtt' '{al'e:

6 m iles from Point Pl easant on

388-9303

GREAT BEND ELEURIC, Inc.

3 family yard sa le. July 1 ,2.
McKenzie Ridge Road off Oa shan Rd . Tabl e chairs . clothes,
misc .

4082 ,

VETEIINAIIAN

~92-3410

At . 160 Vint on , Jackson Rd.
Mon .-Wed . June 30. July 1 &amp; 2 .
Children s c loth in g. so me
furniture

Garage sale July 1. 2, 9- 4:00 .
Riggscrest Addition. ebo~e
E.H .S. Medici ne ellb.,at, toy
chest badspreltds. curtains.
toys, cloth• adult andcl1lldren1.
Doria Well .

Black. male dog. long -haired . 1
year old . Al10 3 cats end 3
kinens. Call614-742 -3168.

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and newer used ea rs. Smith
Bulct~ - Pontlec .
1911 Eastern
Ave ., Gallipolis. Call 614 -446 -

We Carry Fishing Supplies

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phcme Bills Here
IUSINISS PHONE
16t41 9'12-6!!0
RISIIINCI PHONE
16141 9'1

to

e14-446 . 3612

FREE ESTIMATES

•Renges

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUl
JUST CALL!

July 1.2.3. Baby clothos. kids
ctothes, 111/t &amp; puppor shak ms.
glassware, misc. 21 28 Chatham
Ave.

11 Henkle Ave . July 2n d, 9:00 .
Pool lounger, hur~icane lamp.
desk clothes. ki tchm stuff .

Vetet"lnl
Memori•l
Call 614 · 7&amp;2
-3094 Hospital .

•Certainteed •Mastic •Aloia

TOWN &amp;.COIINTIY

'·

649 Hilda Or . Thurs . July 3, Set
J uly 5. 9 to 5. (j iris clothing.
0-6x, some largur sizes, girls &amp;
boys, mise items

30 acrn standing hay. In
Rodney area . Call 614 -245·
9448

Found

All M•k••

4~11c

__

2 tovely kitteru to a good home.
Call614 -446 -3897

'

•Refrigeralora
•Dryers •Freezan
PARTS and SERVICE

1st Time 5 Family July 4 &amp; 5. Fri
&amp; Sat . Hom interiar. tupperware. misc. 550 Jay
Or.
_:__

Fri. &amp; Sat. 9-6. Cloth es. girls
10- 16, jeant, lamps, larg e
sortment of houseplant! &amp; misc .
item s
Baside Portar UM
Chur ch.

lost : ladies gta,ses in blu eftowared Calli. In' vfcinlly of

Buildillgl

985-3561
•Wuhert •Dithweshers

First Time N8\N &amp; used item1
July 2. 3. 4. 5 . Five miles south
of Gallipolis. Rt. 7 . 8-1

5 Edgemont Dr. 8 -5. Mini bike.
car radios, household goods,
children s clothes

loat: BltckandWhitemale cat, 4
whfte feet. wearing collar. Lost
near Wilkl ville. Call 614 -889 4985 or 614 -742 -2328

Guaranteed

'-''.

SWEEPER and sewing machine
repair, parts, and supplies . Pick
up and delivery. Davis V acuum
Cleaner , one half mile up
George5 Creek Rd . Call 614 -

5/23/'86/l mo .

We Hove Mosl All Popular Broods
At The Some low Price

"Free Estimates"
All Work

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

&amp; Vicinity

2 mole 1 female German She·
pherd pupa to giveaway. 614 742 -3086

•Water Line
•Basements
•limestone
•Gas Line
•Land Clearing •Fill Dirt
•Septic Tanks •Ponds
•Top Soil

304-773-5222

ro• FUnJlf USE!

3 Announcements

614· 386-9634 .

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

Rt. 7, Pomeroy, OH.

!CUT OUT

... ·Gampolrs
Y•rd Sal e Thurs., Fri. Sat . May
29. 30. 31 AntiqueS) crocks,
.wood furni ture &amp; misc. items
9AM -5PM . 622 Jay Or .

4 puppies wormed &amp; has hMI
ahots . Shepherd m ilt. Call 614 -

POMEROY, OHIO
Backhoes, Bulldoten,- End loader, Dump
Trucks, Self loading Pan, Heavy Hauling and
Winch Trucks

MASON, W. VA.

8 -27 ·' 81· 1 mo

or

3-D AUTO CENTER

5·20.'86 '1 mo .

Closed Tueadll

ACIOSS FROM
POST OFFICE IN

STEAM Q.EAN

oCHAIMI

6-17-tfc

6-23-'86 · 1 mo.

L&amp;S
TRANSMISSION
REPAIR

5-15-'86-1 mo.

The family of Hild• Frederick
wish to thank their r,iends tnd
neighbors tu flower~ and food
sen1 during aur time of sorrow.
The Children.

614-992 ·7537 .

(304) 773-5127 Dl (304) 895-3386

DON lOSE, Ownor
949-2493

~:

eftAYI

Also Transmlulon
PH. 992· 5682
or 992-7121

FOR THE BEST IN
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

FREE ESTIMATES

Oil Field !onict,

RESIDENTIAL, COMMERCIAL
A INDUSTRIAl
jCtrtl1ild Eltctricitnl

•Ptltl

REPAIR

1 -13-tfe

"Free Estimates"

Card of Thanks

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

992·2 196
Middleport. Ohio

New Homes Built

Phone

LandMaptng, lasem•h.
Land Clearing. PDnd~ Septic
Syrttml, Hto•y Houliog,
Stone &amp; Grovtl Hauling
Eltttricol Wor~

742-2027

Cleanld,
protect.t.
..nitized
c•IJiet •nd
upholstery.

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

PAT Hill FORD

, BISSELL
SIDING CO.

IACIIIE, OHIO

FREE ESTIMATES

Utwr 5 Call

-All

i

Annuuncemen1s

I

Roger Hysell
Garage

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

Trenching of Any Type

•ZEN ITH

.ROOFING

•

•

RAOIATOR

•Vinyl Replacements
Windows
• 3A" Insulated Glass
•Tilt In To Clean
•Most Windows Priced
under 1300

BOGGS
Authorized John Deere,
Now Holland, lush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Eotote of Floyd H. Bom• """· _ . ...
. -· .::0.-·- ';·._ _
oalbtd lri Volume 227, ""- houH, D.C.ilod, COlt No.
187, llotolgo County Dood fl•. 211,138 .
corde. Tho olhr to .._it.
NOTICE OF ,
L
,., .... P10W1o thot
APPOINTMENT OF,
.., .... be . . ..whloh
FIOUCIARY
'
w.lnt...... wllllttli...,_.' On J..,. 21. 1818. In 1he
....,_. llalltlol ......_ an Molga County Pita- Court,
NE~lhe,.t-onctlhtt'lhtVII- CoN No. a. ,~8. DowldB-1
.\
Gutte'ra ',' ·'
...,. - - ... ~to . . !lou-. 439lf (:O&gt;k Flo ...
pmv.1t. locjo!W•of ony dril- ~~- GiWo, O,.io,' 4118311
Down..,outa
Inti tltea and the lool*'n dl III'POinltid A!l!ni\litrolor
Gu·tt•r Cleen'lng
OilY proctu....., 1n• ondl Cit . ,'lljtth the W.. Ann- d tt.
'I
'
... lpnwtf.
·
"'!* Gf' Floyd H. -..,.,..,
Tho Vlllogo of Mlddta,iort · ·, '
. , lote ol flautt 2. 1
- • tho right to Nltct Porr-v. ~ 4117e8. . · .
..., at o1 blda,
llobtrt 1!. Bud&amp;,
Jon ..... !;Iaiii·r..... _
'
p'""~ Jucflie
. Vilioge 01 MiddlepOrt ' Lono K. 1\ii-liood, Clerk ·
'
J.,.. 17, 24; Juty 1, 8.16 17! _1. 8,11; 3tc

\

·.

EUGENE LONG

s
serv 1•cas·
.

H9-'86'-l mo.

3/11 /tfn

S'l

.

PH. 742-2306
or 742-3171

PWS: Offict lupplies &amp;
Furniture, Wedding
ond Graduation
Stotionory, Magntlic
Signo, Rubtter Stompo,
Business Forms,
Copy Servius, Eh.
255 Mill St., Middloport
t 04 Mulberry A• .. Pomeroy

•" ·

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS CDUNTY,•OHIO

614-843-5248
614-949-2145

THE BIRD CAGE
&amp; FISH POND
PET SHOP

F11 All ~~~~ p,/,lllf Nttil

Milo B. Hutchison
Contractor

·waves). Also
Lawn
mower repair. Mobile
service.

6-4·'86·1 mo.

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

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

pairs (including micro-

Service

live

.. The Daily Sentinel

!'

J.R.'s REPAIRS

By H.E. SEISER

--Ohio Briefs:-- Pen mmates

Ohio

t=~~::::::;:::;:::;::;r;:=======:f.=======:r========-r:======::i
1
ELITE POLE

Gpvemment bids on foreclosed ·ga_
sification plant

Ohio firew~rks worry Conn. officials

Pomeroy

Business SerVices

•

The department also Is planning department IDOk over operations.
Indian ,Reservation 1n North Da- Natural Resources, a subsidiary of
to
select
an
Investment
banker
to
State
ofilcials,
Including
Attorney
STANTON, N.D. (UPI) - The
koIa; No•-ta
,., · eo., or Blsmarck, too Coastal Corp. or Houston, and
establish
a
value
for
the
plant,
General Nicholas Spath, were which submitted a joint statement Transco Energy Co. of Houston,
Energy Department has tendered
the only bid for ownership d the $2 Farrell said. That selection Is working last weekend to delay the with Wetzel Enterprises Inc., of. recently had a proposal to buy the
bllllon Great Plains coal gasHic:i" expected to be made In the next · foreclosure sale, which was con- Dallas; American Natural Resour- plant rejected by the agency. The
ducted by U.S. Marshal Errol Wood ces Co., of Detro!!, the managing department said the plan was not
lion plant, but it still hopes to get the month, he said.
"The long-term goal is 10 get the of Fargo.
"For a 'I-. lew months, board plant back to the private sector
pattner tor the ronsorttum that viable lor repaying the loan or
plant back to the private sector. We
members, on an Individual basis, eventually.
"We ran rut of time," Spath said. wllt the plant; ArriJco .Corp., of operating the plant in the long term.
nave had · concerns about the
The state was trying to prevent Cblcago; Bohrer Consulting ServlThe department's $1 billion bid would llke to find a buyer to keep
American Natural Resoui'C£'s
the
plant
going
lor
the
designed
llte
overall administration d the school Monday was the only one received
the loss of valuable tax credits held ces, of Royal Oak, Mich.; Carbon presented other options to the
system," said Tegreene. "We had at the court -ordered foreclosure of the !l'OJect, 25 years," he said.
hy the plant's builders.
Resources Inc., ot 'lUisa, Okla.; agency last week, but they also
Tbe plant Is about ID mUes west of
high expectations and In many sale at the Mercer County
In early Aprtl, 10 private sector Epcon Technologies Inc.. Washing- were rejected.
Stanton. It went Into lull !l'oductlon parties told the Energy IRpart- ton; Energy International Inc., of
ways be performed well, but in Courtliruse.
The ottEr original (llrtners were
othl&gt;r ways we did not feel he
ment they might be Interested. In (]Ieswlck,· p a.; an d FHN Energy, • Houston-based Tenneco Inc., ·MidThe plant, the nation's first In November 1984.
performed well.
Con Corp. of Lombard, Ill., and
commercial-scale synthetic fuels . ·Last July, a live-member consor- purchasing all or part of the plant. of Xenia, Ohio.
"Of late, there has been a great fac!Uty, produces about 137.5 mil- tium that buUt the plant defaulted a
Those 10 were the Three AffilTwo of the companies originally Pacific Ughtlng Corp. of Los
deal of contusion over the prepara · lion cubic feet of synthetic gas a $1.5 billion government loan and the Iated Tribes of the Fort Berthold Involved In the project, American Angeles.
lion ofthe budget."
day.
The federal government cur, Tegree~ said Boyd recently rently holds a $1:577 billion judgdeclared that the school system ment against the plant, said J.
HARTFORD, Conn. (UPI) State police estbnated more than An(J'l Co. of Columbiana, Ohio, Is solved for every three validated
faced mulll-mU!Ion dollar deficits, Michael Farrell, general counsel
State
authorities
have
warned
200,000
pounds of fireworks wtth an no81n Itself illegal.
calls to the arson hotllne," he said.
but a state audit determined for the Energy Department.
Connecticut
residents
against
using
estimated
value
of
$750,00)
have
But
many
residents
"have
no
Five Ot the awards were for the
Only $1 billion was bid because
otherwise.
thousands
of
pounds
of
U!egal
been
shipped
Into
Connecticut
in
the
license
to
store,
sell,
use
or
explode
maximum
$1.lXXl and of the 25
Till! board president said as a the government expects to use the
flreworks," 'sald Paige, making the arrests, l8 led to oonvlctions for
result of Boyd's gloomy flnandal rest ol the debt to acquire other fireworks that have been imported past two months.
Into the state.
PoUce have uncovered caches of expensive merchandise subject to terms from 13 months up..lo 10
picture, administrators were assets In the plant, Farrell said.
A large part of the apparent illegal fireworks in a number or seizure.
years.
The agency Is expected to lake
forced to cut back m II'Ograms and
lncreaselnfireworkssaiesthisyear
communities,
Including
thedlscov·
"There
is
an
lnheret1t
danger
to
Paige said 58 callers provided
formal title July 7 after a federal
personnel.
Is
due
to
a
mailing
of
a
glossy
sales
ery
last
week
d
1,500
pounds
of
the
people
and
property
resulting
from
sufficient
Information for a follow
"We had to scale back the · Judge In Bismarck approves the
brochure
from
an
Ohio
fireworks
explosives
In
Danbury.
illegal
use
of
fireWorks,
especially
up
and
the
total did oot Include
summer school !l'ogram and a bid, a routine p/ ,
distributor to thousands of ConnecPaige said In one day alone, • by unsupervised children," said "cranks' or callers who hung . up
tlcut residents, Deputy State Fire almost 4,lXXl pounds of fireworks Paige,
·
abruptly when asi&lt;l?d to Identify
Marshal David J. Paige said worth an estimated $15,00! were
"Oftm, persons with U!egalllre- themselves.
Monday. •
confiscated ~ttrucklngtermlnals In works risk Injury to. lnoocent
The tips helped solve three cases
Wallingford, Milford~ South Wind- victims by throwing them at other each In New Haven and-Bridgeport,
. .
sor and Norwich.
persons or vehicles," he said.
two In Stamford and one each In
Sgt. Bruce Haynes, of the State
On another subject, Pall!(' an- Hamden, Cheshire, Wateroory,
Pollee Organized Crime lnvestlga- nounced that the state program Terryville, West Hartford, Hart·
•- s•
· -~~-••• ·alalfJil'llrrtJ«Ialltn•·wuu·.t
.~
Task Foi'C£', saki the single-day rewarding tipsters on arson !Ires Is lord, Windsor, Enfield, Suffield,
Bank once again have access to their rroney now that it has been
MOUNDSVILLE; W.Va. (UPI) action was typical of the arrount of paying' off. .
Hazatdville, · Norwich and
purchased by a Cincinnati holding company.
- A tockdown has ended In the fireworks being seized since April
, Since tt began In November ]983 Watei'ford.
The bank, declared insolvent and closed last week, reopened
troubled West VIrginia Penlten· from Individuals who do tiot have the state paid $15,350 for lnformaPalge said none of the arson !Ires
' Monday as the newly state-chartered Central Trust Co.-Boone
tiary's North Hall section, an permits to possess or sell fireworks.
tlon that led to 25 arrests In IDarson involved fatailties, although nine
County, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. announced.
tsolatlon unit where guards opened
Palge ssld the brochure mailed cases, Paige said.
people, mostly firefighters, were
Central Bancor(iOratlon -of Cincinnati will pay the FDIC $1.71
fire and wounded four convicts last throughout the state by the Blue
"This figured out ~o me case injured.
mUllan for the rights to transfer the Union Trust deposits to the new
week.
Central Trust Co.-Boone County. ~ntral Bancorporatlon, a$41:illion
Prison officials ·have allowed
holding company that owns Central Trust Co. of Cincinnati, and
Inmates to return to a normal
other hanks In Ohio, also aliree&lt;J to purchase other assets of the failed
routine, which Includes outdoor
bank lor $2.5 million.
exercise.
"Insured depositors in the failed bank can automatically continue
In a related development MooDr l ritt Oaillw Se111int1 C1au~itd Ottt.
to conduct their banking tansactions with the ~ntral Trust Co.,"
day, the state Department of
11 t Courl St.. Polltray, OlliG4S71!
said FDIC spokesman Steve Katsanos.
Corrections went on record as
"They are encouaged to visit the bank during the next several
denying that it is incapable of
weeks to discuss contlnuation of their banking relationship."
properly safeguarding Inmates
The Union Deposit Bank, with $6.5 mllllon in deposits, failed
who are In the protective custody
Public Notice
Public Notice
Thursday alter federal regulators declared tbe institution Insolvent.
unit of thE' maximum security
Public Notice
The FDIC said onl)l tw&lt;1of 2.:m depositors had accounts In excess
prison.
SUNMR SPECIAL
of the S100,lXXl Insured limit. Those two depositors wlll share
Six inmates appeared before
LEGAL NOTICE
lo 4:30 P.M .. Monday thru
Eotote of Elmer Gerold
Svr-roe Vlllogo CouncH Friday:
Young. Sr., deceestd. Ceae
proportionately with the FDIC In the proceeds oft IE saleofthefalled
Ohio County Circuit Judge Craig
Cifttral AC, for up
'
will
hold
1 Public Haring en Gonerol
bank's assets.
Broadwater on June 17, asking hlm lht 1987 ,.. of Fodorol Ro- Fund ........ $1,888,123.79 No. 26, 164.
NOTICE OF
to 1,4i70
Kentucky Financial Institutions Commissioner Thomas Miller
to order them transferred to "'""'e Shoring money en Dog &amp; Kennel... . 10,01111.110
APPOINTMENT OF
had announced the closure of the bank Thursday morning and the
another facUlty. The Inmates main- Thurodoy, July 3, 1886. . . Public A..iolt.
FIOUCIARY
$)) 99' lnstallld
On Juno t7, 1988, in iho
appointment ol the FDIC as receiver.
tained that because they had 7:00 ·p.m. ot lht CouncM · once ........... 2,938,5311.00
Eliott
M~ County Probate Court,
MU!er said the suburban Cincinnati bank had permitted its capital
cooperated with authorities lnvestl- Chombon It the M..,icipol Rut
. r,1ligs Mobile
Building. Tho public illnvltod, A•eaomenl , .... 48, 790.00 Cuo No. 211.164, ' john
to become Impaired to a level that would oot permit It to q&gt;erate In a
gating the New Year's Day rtotthat IIPOCioHy -lor citlltna.
Auto Liconoe &amp;
Moro, 41999 s.n... Orlvo,
Home &amp; Parts
safe manner. He said its practices included "certain deposits not
their Uves were 1n danger.
J•nlce Uwaon Gooollna (County
P.omeroy, Ohio f&amp;7B9. wa
900 l Main St.
Hlghwoy
,,.
1.
411.000.00
CLEAK-TREASUAER
Jllpo~ odmirlWtri!Or of
being recorded on the hooks of tbe bank,"
However, 1n a response flied with
VIllAGE OF SYRACUSE Emervency Medloirl
lht --.. af Elmer G1111d
Po1111ror, 011.
Broadwater, the special judge 171 1 1te
SeNICOI .... :: .. 360,000.00 Young. Sr., '*-•od. tote of
614·992-5517
overSEeing court -ordered reforms,
Tubercutoslo .. .. ,.92.347.08 Rtt 1, Rocino, Oliio 45771 .
Soil&amp; Water ..... 17,818.00 '
.
Robart E. Buck,
Dana Davis, an ass!stan I attorney
~ndllll... ........... 71 , 108.88
Probolt Judge
general, denied the Inmates lace
Public Notice
Montol Rotordatlon ·
Lone K. Nenolrood. Clark
danger.
8onda.............. 21 ,2t 3.00 (8! 24; 171 1. 8. 3tc .
BOLIVAR iUPI 1 - Skeletal remains of two American
DavL~ said the inmates are
Montel
Ratarchotlon
NOTICE
Revolutionary War soldiers who apparently died at the hands of
Oper.tlono ..... 818.531 .00
adequately prot~ted and should
PUBliC
HEARING
Delaware Indians a bout 1m were unearthed Monday In ,
Public Nottc·e
Children'•
not be moved from the MoundsvUle
ON THE
Tuscarawas Coonty hy a team of archaeologists.
MEIGS COUNTY BUD GET Service no ..... 32.531 .oo
facillty .
Youth
ThE' team, headed hy Michael Gramly from the Butralo Museum
FOR t887
PROBATE, COU liT OF
Broadwater Indicated last month
A budget Moring for the S.rvlcoa ., ,., ... 110.000.00
of Science, began dlggi!Jg last week among the ruins~ Fort Laurens
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
he would not rule on the inmates' next IUCCttding fl10111 Ytll Ernorvoncv Medical .
Etitlrtlo
at
John L. Wld&lt;hom,
in Bolivar, near Canton.
request untO the state responded. on ding Deco- 31, 1987. Tr., •. &amp;elY...... 43.901 .118 Ot&lt;UIId,. C- No. 211,173.
Diggers also found buttons, belt buckles and military unifOrm
·
The judge now wDI have to appoint ond RO¥onuo Shoring pur- Stote Footor
liOTICE OF
Care ......... ..... :. 1ll.eu.oo
. fra~nts .
PGtll
wUI
be
Held
Wednt•
APPOINTMENT OF
an attorney to represent the siX and dty, July 11, 1988, lit the
"lorv Hobottttor, Clerk
Historians say the !on was oollt In 1718 ~sa facllity to block the
set a date for a hearing, offlclais Mtlga County Comml ..ion·
Melga Cou'lty
movement of British soldiers statlonedln Detroit . Ruins of the fort,
Commlulo~ero
said.
oro' Office, Courthouoe. Powhich had been occupied hy soldiers for only about a year, were
In the Jan. 1 riot, :iOO rebel meroy. Ohio,lrom2 P.Mcto (7J1 , 11c
discovered In 1972.
p.M . Tho raoldonta af
Inmates seized control r1 half of the 3Melgo
County ora Invited to
Gramly said he expects to uncover as many ~ 17 rrore boc:les
fortress-like facUlty and took 17 provide written ond orol
among the ruins. He said the soldiers apparently were killed by
hostages, most of them guards. comment• 1nd Ilk qu•
Delaware Indians who obtained guns and ammunition from the
Public Notice
Three
convicts were killed In the tlono concerning tt. entire
British,
.
buclget
for
tho
current
flacol
42-hour siege.
v•r. Senior cltlzlf'le ere en·
The team, which will continue digging through August, is Jiannlng
Last week; ~ards armed with courogld to ottond thlo
PUBLIC NOTICE
to uncover what Is believed to be a field hospltal.
shotBUns pumped buckshot jnto a meeting ,
Bid wiN bo recllv .. ..,til 3
Fort Laurens Is said to be the mly Revolutionary War faciUty In
Genorol RIIVonuo Sharing P.M., J~ 28. 1881, ot the
surly cro\W d about a dozen
Ohio.
FW~da
lntendtd to be
inmates armed with homerrtade uoodln ore
tt. foUowlng mon· M~r'• o111oe of tt.
Gramly said the relics will reveal a greatdealr11nformationaboul
knives after they refused to close ner:
~~·~h~'411"=8~; _ _P_u~bl-ic_N_o_t_ic.:..~- r . ... . . n,e~
the area.
the doors to their cells.
Ptonntd Uoe
Amoum lht
ond proc~u-. of
Dov•Konnel
oil
ond
011
under tt. ,..,..
,
Buboldy ........ . I 8.8411.37

•

1.1986

'

�1986

Page- 1Q-The Daily Sentinel
21

LAFF-A-DAY

Buainen
Opportunity

46

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Route 33. North of Pomeroy
Large lots. Ctll 614· 992 -7479.

!•NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PU8LISH·
lNG CO. rtcomnendt th1t you
do buaW.•s with people you

Tfliler ~•cas . Sand Htll Road
convtnitnt to schools, ttoreand
hospitlll City sewer eveilable
lnquireRo~tlee,
304· 676-4&amp;00
between 9 00 and 4·00 week
dov•

know . and NOT to send money
throul1' 1he maU until you have
-...,.t~gated the offering.

Ettabllthtd

bus~n••

54

Space for Rent

tor sale

Indoor mini1ture golf course

Oowhtown Gelhpol11 Call 614446-8222

Merchandise

lntemalional Melli Building Mt·

61

i•dustry j3031 759-3200 EXT
2403

23

Professional
Services

Water wflllt serviCed and drilled

Fr&amp;e esrtm1tes " Call 614 -992

5006

Of

614

74~ - 3147

"Fortunately we live on the
dOCtOf'S jogging fOUte SO
he 'll make a hOUSe Calli."

PIANO T\JNING ANO IUPAIR,
red •••::over your ptano' 1 beaut 1ful
tone eell today Warda Key

board, 30'4-676 5500 or 675
36~4

...-------

~:::::;:;:;;:~~~==T;;;:;;:~~;;;:;~;~
~

32

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

4 bedroom house, fireplace, 3
m• southofGalllpohs, S29,900

Call dtyt 614-446 1616
oven ings 614 446 6222

or

3 bdr home, close to town , 2
baths, pertly furn•shed Gat
hut lowutll1t•M Cell614-2469248
N•c&amp; e ... ecut1ve type home 3100
sq ft lw erea, mground pool,
w1th or Without ecreage, S .R
160. 4 m1 hom Hol:riJr leas•
option a pollibllity Call 814446 -7322
For 11le by owner large houH m
town by grade school '129.600
Cell 614 446 8390 or 6U ~
446 9768
3 bdr., large kitchen, bit 1, ut1ht'V
room. ltngle gartge. 2 ear
duvew11y. mce y~rd. garden
space. f1ntshed g.etage Call
614-446 1368
For sale by owner 3 acrn flat to
rolhngw1th 12x86 mobdehome.
s 18.000, crtv school district
C all 614 448 8602
Ouehf'l home, new l~ remodeled
ch 01ce locat•on on College Rd
Syracuse, new complete k•tchen
and leundry, &amp;If conditioned,
huge lot 614 992 5324
Go verment homes from $1 (U
rep~m ) Delinquent ta ... property
Repnnnsa•ont Call 805 687
6000 E)lt H 9805 lor current
repo hst

-------·- - - 6 roo m house 1 2 acres Double

ca r g1uage Loceled on Rote Hill
B&amp;rgem pnced $20 000 Call
614 6782513

-----

House 1n Chett8f V1llege 7
roo mt buement garage, one
tenth aera. fUtsy care. nrce
nmghborhood 826.500 Call
614 -985 3671
In Middleport 5 room . 1 bath
n-ty ••• ~· . \1 , ~ -'~Ail'
cond•tion v1nyle t1dmg, excel·
lent ne•ghborhood. priced to sell
614 9925018

- -- -

House for sale m M1ddlepor1 4

betlruum, 2 story Cotn8f lot
w1th garage 614 992 -6972
1 roam hOO!Ut l 1/1 ba1h garage.

,.,., Gravel H1ll. M1ddlapon Ohm
Call614 992 5714
3 bedroom home , 15acres.large

41

Mobile Homes

for Sale

1974 Stardust 2 bdr . 2 bath.
DR . lR. expando, naw 1urnace.
carpet. hot water heater Call
614-446-3917 8V81
1979 Liberty 14Jt56 partly
furnished, good cond iti on.
$8 500 C1ll 814-258-1460 or
304-876-1336

•
Three bedrooms. all electr~c. 2
car garage, Staff House Road.
tJOO 00 plutdepostt. 304-876·
2687

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr. furn or unfurn conven•ent location. Upper RIVIH Rd .
111 ut1lit•e• pa•d .... capt electric.
Sec dep req Call 614-446·
8558

1975 10x60 AI In Mob1leHome
2 bedrooms . all gat. partially
furntsh&amp;d with tmall porch on
rented lot On Beech Grove Rd
Rutland 14000 814-742 ·
2738 anytime.

2 bd'r 12x60 on Rt 35 Dep &amp;.
ref required Call e 14-446 ·
4369 or 304-676· 9760
Unfurnished mob1le home for
rent tn Middleport Call 614992-2598
'
-lcIn Recine. 2 bedroom, large
y1rd. clou to 1chools Call
614-387 7148

1972 12x80 Elcona Mobile
Home with easily detached
1 Ox25 1un porch Must relocate
Front k•tchen, 2 bedroom. fur·
ntthed. 15000 614-986-4227
N1ce 2 bedroom mobtle home on
---:-::---:--:--;:-:---:-· lc197412d0 electric 2 bedroom nice lot on Routh lane, Che·
lhire. Ohto Call304-773-5828
mobtlll home A C , underpm
ntng, part•.ely furnished Asking 12x60 two bedroom. furnished
$4700 Call614· 985-3926
S1B6 per month plus d•potrt
MOBILE HOMES MOVED 1n- and Utilltlll Call 614 992 ·
tured. reasonable rates. Call _
7_4_79- - - - - - - , - ---,-.,1
304-576-2336
2 bedroom mobile home, 'It mile
1967 HCJIIey Park 12x60 2 Jemcho Rd Call aher 6 00
bedroom pert11lly furn11hed.
304·676·6483
central elr $4 500 304 896
For tent , 14x66. furn11hed 14
3398 or 895 3593
Burdette Add 304-675 8372
1973 B1ron 3 br turn, central Call 1nytime
a1r. totel elec . comet lot bldg.
cha1n -link fence 304 773
44 Apartment
5612
for Rent
1977 Homette, 14x70, exc
cond 2 br woodbumer, 3 ton
central au unit &amp;12 000 304
Ntcely furnished mobile hame.
675 5641
eft. 1pt • central air end heat tn
ctty, adults only Call 614-4481973 Douglas mobile home.
0339
141(85. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath.
good cond1t1on, 304· 676·403B
2 bdr utilities partially furn ,
8176 mo Call 304-87&amp; 5104
2 bedroom mobile home parch
or 304·675-7926
and awnmg. air cond, new
carpet, W11her and dryer , phone
304· 676-3334
Trailer and land
675 -5551

ro; sale.

304-

33

Farms for Sale

w,u .e·ll or trade sma ll f1rm with

mobtle one Ca ll after 5, 614256 6307

1
star~ 3 bedrooms on 12
acn•s 1 mdu from town
535 000 Call days, 304 882
2005 and ev&amp;nmgs 6149923702

Fum11hed 2 bdr apt uttht••
partlelly pa1d Call 304·675·
S104 or 675 -5386 or 304-676·
7926
2 bdr. furfllthod IPI newly
redecorated, mce location .
adults only. no pett Cell 614446-2404

202 N Perk Dnve 2 bedroom•.
full hBSfiRlfl!lt detached garage,
r A 91~ heat. central AC
auumahl n ln 11n 304 675
6260

32 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

-- -- ------ - - NEW AND USED MOBILE
ttOMES KESSEL S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES 4 Ml
WEST. GALLIPOLIS RT 36
PHONE 614 -446-7274

One bdr all electrc. furnished .
1dult1, ref. &amp; tee dep UOO mo.
Call 614·446-2236 or 614 446 2681

35 Lots

8U!Id1ng 111e11 3 10 17 Beret 3
miles west ot HMC Ca ll 614448 -8221
60 acres 1167 en acre 4 mtl•
trom1'R.o Grande 1 m1le off At
35 Rural water &amp; elee avatla·
ble Call614 246 9444
1 to 5 acres , part•allv wooded
lots Tupper Pletns and Chuter.
water end approved road to each
lot Reatonably prtced will
finance . 10 percent down Call
6, 4 985 3694

7 acres wtth complett mobile
home hook up Barn m Chett8f
area Asktng 810 000 Call
614-985-3925
Ashton butldmg lou wtth pubhc
weter. mobile home~ pet"m!Hed,
304-576·2338

Rentals

1982 neetwood 3 bdr . 2 full
batht. totel eleetr1e For more
tnformation caRl eher 4PM.
614 388-8833
197B M1nsion 14~70 , 10d0
porch &amp; ewrung , underp•nn•na.
2 btlr beth 111 llvrngroom
cethng fin kitchen. 1tove. raftig
den. fmmlace AC, wa1h8f,
dryer Ce ll~1 4 -388 9660
N 1ce 1973 Eutopla 66 ft party

furn 16.200 Ntce 1973 At
llngton eo fl pertly turn
t6 ,200 Cell 614 ·446-9340

--

1969 £leone 2 bdr 12 11 &amp;0. With
porctt good cond , or wilt trade
fo r c empM, t4 ,300 Ca ll 614
446 -1511

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

1973 12x86 Utopt&amp;. 2 bdr
front lw room, owner must sell
Freru:t' C•ty Brokerage. 614446-9340
1973 12x60 Arlington, front.
k1tch8fl, mu1t be 10ld French
Citv Broker"•· 614·446 -9340
mobfte home• largn1
telectmn m the arta Fin1nclng
available French Cit'V Mobile
Hornet Inc 814 -446-9340
Us8d

19 7 3 liberty 2 bdr , wood
bUJner, nM carpet '" bedroom,
stove a refr~ 14,800 Must
sell Cen 814 -2'!;1 9284.

&amp; Acreage

41

Houses for Rent

Newl-r W&amp;dt Oream House
Av11lable tmmedittel'/ · 1 com·
plate •tfurb11hed two bedroom
hofTWI w•th newl wall to wall
carpeting andcoordtnat1ng drap
ef!n provided Gar1ge with
opener , Qlrden spot. and m1ny
other extras Be the first to live in
this •mmacul1te home located at
1066 2nd A\fe lnG1IIipoltl For
more detal\1 phone Denite at
Colontal Properties. 814 286·
6110

1 bedroCJm 1pt for rent Basic
rent stant $215 a month that
tndudes all utlli1tH Deposit
requ!fed of $200 Contact Village Manor Apt Mtddloport
614·992 ·1787 Equtl Houtmg
Opponun1ty

2 bedroom, tot1l elac 1pt '"
Pomeroy Acron from F~re
Statton 614·992-6215or8,4
992-7314
Pomeroy 2 bdr. Naylort Run .
1176 mo 1100 deposit, yard.
patto, Call after 6pm 814·992 8888

2 bedroom furniShed apt In
Middleport Allut11itiesp1id Call
614 992-6084
1 bedroom furnished lpt Utllttttt partitlly furn11htd No pet1.
614-949-2263
APARTMENTS . mobile hom...
housee Pt PleuantandGalllpoltt 614-446· 8221 .

1 bedroom fumilhad apartment
In Point Ple11an1 Aduhs only
No pets, 304-676· 1386

928 F11tt Ava 5 room hout•
Call 614-446-39411

46

2 bedroom fu rn11h~ h6u •• in

3 bedroom, Hartinger Ptrkway
1n MiddiiiiOrt UOO P" month.
Coli 814·992-7tl3.

bo•.

3 room• &amp; bath, stove, rehtgtft·
tor . all uttht111 futnlthed. adultl
only. no pets Call 614-U8·
2593

2 bdr 136 Second ..,.,.. good
neighborhood. refarencet &amp;
depottt Call 614-446 3949 or
814 446-2419

mo1. for more InfO PIHs• clll
1984 14x70 Overhand P~rk
manuf by Holly P~rk 2 bdr ..
large bath whh gwden 'tub a
1howtr ••11- Unturnlthld. lived
In 1 ¥f. Totti tftctrlc, indud"
btock. lfec wire It bt'Ntll•
good canditk&gt;n For more Information pie••• c11l 114-441·
1724

N•ce furntthed apt B1g room1,
clean. lerge backyard, water
pe1d Matn St . Chath~re Call
81 4·246-5818

tumithed. private entrance.
ground floor, utllitlet paid,
1250. month 304-676-8730.

-1981 M1nsion 70x14 lived in 7
614· 99~ · 2269

2 bdr apt , downtown, S t 90
wtthout uttlttu1s , *295 w1th
utlltt;es Deposit requwed . Call
614·446-2129 8 OOam · 5pm.

3 room apartment . everything

Middleport
5304

~-----

1 bdr with nove &amp;. ref11g Na
pets 1169 month $100 dep·
os1t Call 614-446-3617

3 bclr home Will accept on•
child no pets. ref Call614-446·
1168

Ntce 3 bdr full b•trnent.
centrtllir, tencad yard At 141
f32~ plus dep C•ll 814-862·
28161fter 5
Cell 114-9 92 ·

2 bedroom Ouplu houte Ptr·
tltlty furnilhld . Low utlllti•. in
Pomtro-v. Cell days. 114-892·
2381 or 814·992·2108 avtningo
In Pomeroy. unfurnilhtd, 2
bedroome. Call 614-882-' 3080.

Wothen. dryon, relrogerotoro.
ranges Skaggs Appliances,

cUpper
...t Mo1ol
7396
River 614
Rd 446
beside
Stone
County Appliance. Inc Good
used appliancn and TV set•
Open BAM ta 6PM Mon thru
Set 814 446-1699. 627 3rd
Ave Glllipolis. OH
Valley Furn1b.ue. new &amp; used
Large S&amp;ction of quellty furn;.
ture. 1216 Eutetn Ave .
Oalhpohs.
~room

su1te complete
twin mattr&amp;lt set bunk beds,
occ chair, braat bed. q.teen stze
water bed Call 614 446 1171
Refrigerator harvest gold 8126.
refrigtfator wh1te frost free
1150. refr~gerator stde by 11de
f195. upright freezer 896,
kenmore washer t75. Whtrlpool
washer $95, GE washer $1&amp;0.
drjer harvest gold 895, electric
renga l't&amp;Nett gold $96, electnc
t~nga 30 tn coppartone f126,
•lectric 11nge harve11 gold JOin
1125. elecb'•c range eva level
oven 8160. bedroCJm 1u1te S75
Sk&amp;ggs Appliances. Upper R1ver
Rd. 614 446 7398
Kenmore 1 8 0 ct.~ ft •II frostless
top freezer - refng With factory
instelled ice mak81' 10 months
old Almond colo r wtth aeemlesa
liner. power miler &amp; m &amp;II cond
11k10g $650. Owner IT'Civing
Call814·446· 7161
Hit and hers leryboy cha1n, $20
each Call 614 266 ·6637 or
614-446 2715
MCJving Sale Sofa end chair
bunkbeds w•th bookca•e and
drawers, good eond1t10n. make
offer Call 614 446 2629
Tfi ·S tar Compact Sweeper
876 or bett CJffer Call 614 992 7124
Ptckent Used Furntture Good
quality uted turn•ture Open 9 to
6 or call for appointment
304 676-6483 or 875 1460
Exc cond 3 month old set ot
twm beds w1th muten ,
8300 00. 304-676-6174

54 Misc.

Merchandise

Plastic CIStern state approved
plast•c septiC tanks. plastic
culverts. met1l culverts RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES , Jack
son Oh 614 2:86 -6930

11

MUST SEll' Four bedroom
rt:rsrdence on spp10111mately 145
acres w1thm easy drrvmg d11
tllnci'J of GRihpohs. Oh•o Owner
t.nar1c•ng w1th no down pByment
to Quahflod buyer Propeny 11
fen ced and has 50 acrn of creek
bottom Pnced at S75 ,000
Phon e 614 373 1147 eden
••on 76

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Callthan's U1ed Tire Shop Over
1,000 ttr81, IIZH 12. 13 . 14. 15
16 16 5 B m1les out Rt 218
Call 614 268·6261

1973 Grandvtlle. 12x60, ell
fllec. AC. w11her and dryer
redwood porch, new cerpet,
S1.000 DO cath and anume
payment• 8161 90 month, 304·
895 3038

F urniahed Rooms

For ,.nt Sleeping Ao,mt and
light houtt keeping rooms Parle
Central Hotal Call 814-4480716
Room~

for rent,

d~y .

w.tk.
month 011111 Hotel. Call 1144U-9580 Rent 11 k)w 11 f120
month.
Furnilhed room f1 15 Utilitl•
pd. 119 2nd Gellipoh Shere
bath . lingle milt C1ll 11•·
44t·441t.

46

Space for Rent

Trailer lot for,.,.. Rodnf¥' .,...
CoH ~14 - 248·,269 .

•

74

'N' CARLYLE ®by Lllrry Wright

Hotpoint dithwtthlf, •&amp;o.oo.
Two raar11ip up 1e1t1 for Jeep or
4 wheel drive, 850.00 . 304·
678-3909 .
Sears Kenmorasi'Ning mactun•.
YCJrlrl homt stereo unit, 304·
17&amp;-1186 or 876· 31:18

Echo trimmers &amp;88 75 to
&amp;299 95 Husqvarna uws,
Echo saws, Yardmen mowen
New &amp; used all makes Childers
Saw Supply, Koontt · Satlor Ad .
Vinton . Oh Call614 388-8664
For sale Harlequin Roman ce
books 270 for t75 . wh1te
wooden t&amp;ble $26 See et 256
So Fourth Ave . Middleport,
Oh
Round k•tch911 table wtth leaf
and 6 che.rt, t50 Kmdlewood
woodburner used 2 tea1ons
*"50 G111 water heater 30 gal
S!Ee used 2 years good shape
&amp;60 3 cuth•on Norwelk couch
exe shape 175 Call 614 -266
1932
New Testament design embtQ'd·
ary qu1tt. handmade by church
group f100 Call 304 937
2681 01 304-468 · 1997

4x8x l~ toung groove waffle
board e'~' t&amp;IIOr glued 8 f8 95

8 4dx3A. Toung groove ply·
WQOd B S10 96
9 4x8x lf: 4 p i~ ptywood B
S6 99
10 4x8•'1• Iavan ply\NOod 8
$4 49
11 4x8Jt 11• "' salvage paneling
82 99
1 2 6 redwood 1t11n p1cnic table
w•th 2 benches $39 96
1 3 Prehung interiOr doors eR
StEes and finishes f29 96
14 Prehung steal panel doors aM
IIE8S 889 96
16 Wood preftnllhed vmyl
wrapad colonie! tnm 7 pc 8100
16 Primed teardrop wood tnm
$1 00 7 pc
17 K·lux bnck corners S1 00
per box, 12 box $10 00.
18 32"x76" Vi thermal tem·
pared glau reg $79 95 now
$29 96 .
19 Rock face brown trailer
1k1rtmg 28"x60 $3 99 aa.
20 22"x33" sta•nlnt steel 10'
deep smkt B grade 859 96
21 Stamleu steel oorner sinks
$69 95 8 grade
22 4 pc sohd oak and bra11 beth
set S23 95 ea 3 sets and up
819 96
23. 5 gal alummumtlver mobtle
homa roof co11tmg 822 96
Penn's Warehouse. Wellston.
Oh•o 8 to 6, 6 days Call
614 384-3645
RAILROAD TIES 8 1!J feel by 8
mctles by 10 inches fB par tte.
delivered Bill Sleek 614 992
2269
Block. br~ck monar end masonry supplies Mountain State
Btock. Rt 33. New Haven W
Va 304-882-2222

56

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel
CF A Himalayan. Persten and
S1.11mese k11tent AKC Chow
pupptes New pupp1n I. kittens
Call 446 3844 1fter 7PM
Rag•stered Doberman pup Red
female , uce llenl padtgrae .
Good temperament S126 Call
614 256 6403
Baby rex rabbit. SJ 00 a&amp;ch Call
614-448-4608

Ltquot Permit 02· D2:X (Mtddle·
port) for ttle. price negotiable
For 1nformat1C1n, cell 0 Hunter
814-461 -6060 or 614 -992 2720

2 10.000 BTU 1lr conditioners
for c1sement wmdows Qttl
614 992-6133
TON'Y"S GUN REPAIRS . teope
bora sighting, factory rebluaing,
hCJutt 9 00 till dark. call 304
676-4631
Will•amson Meat Market .
U.S O.A. Pnme Beef S1la. Side•
11 29, Front qts t1 09 , Hind
qt1 11 70 US D A Choice
Belf Isle. SktH f1 .26, Fronts
11 06, Hinds f1 82 . Pnce tn
elud" cutting, wrapping and
freu~ng Who Ia Primal C uta
Whole Albeyes 12 -14\b aver~gt
n :to lb . Whole New York
Strips 12 · 1ol lb wtrage 14 .06
lb. Choice Tendertlon f5 .99 lb.
Short Loin 13.&amp;1 lb Full loin
13.2&amp; lb Prlca hlcludas cutting
Deposit raqu~rlid Ouar~ntMd
tendtr C1ll 304 ·876· 6383,
Point Pleuant, W. Vt
8 HP,!1 1 ton) log splitter, Warm
Mornll'lg ltO'IfH, call 304· 676·
3028 attar 15 p.m
,
1971 Ch41YY Monze fiOO '-''·
pine Jt•eo with 6•8 Alpine
.,.kare t210. 304--882· 3397
ZlfOX 3300 II Copi•. 304-671-

1244.

OuHn 1laa hkte-away bed,
U&amp;O. 304·675·2217
truck
4:30,

~---------------------r---------------------1
61

Farm Equipment

Used Tractors
JOFP no 1nt IIH 1-1-87.
White 4·1&amp;0 cab dutll
John Deere 4440 cab A-H OR
1300 hrs
John Oeera 2960 0 676 hrs
w -260 lo.ter
John Deere 2840 Roll gard
cenopy, dual hyd.
John Deere 4020D W F . PS
John Deere 3010D NF
Ford 901 selected speed exue
dean.
John Deere 70 G. roil-a-matte
Allis Chalmers 8 w· 1 row cult
IHC A w·1 row cult
Ross lmpl &amp; Supply. St At 41
North. Wast Union, Ohio Call
613-644-3023.
Used Combin•
JDFP no 1nt 1111 1· 1-87
John Deere 8800 ttydro dtetel
John Deere 4420 di•al
John Deere 4400 diesel 4 whl.
do
John Deere 3300 d1nel
Glaener G gat platform
Gleaner K gas pl1tform 2 mw
c.h .
John Deere 46 double vee belt
platform 2 row com head
New John Deere 4425 combine
11119-1 -87
no
Ro11 lmpl. &amp; Suppty, St Rt 41
North. West Union. Oh1a. C1ll
613-644-3023.

.,t

John Deere hay
614-446 2262.

rake

Call

Sohns 850 with 38 1nd1 mow~g
deck 4 ft cycle bar f900
614-992-7468
New Holland 7 ft hay-bind.
ekcallent Gahl 96 Grinder
mixer 21 " 111111 magn at be
cond. 30 4· 27 3·42 1 5
Allts Chalmers 7030 tractor.
130 HP Bnt offer Sider~
Equ!J)tlW'nt, Henderson, 304·
676·7421

62

Wanted to Buy

Now buyM'lg shell corn or ear

corn Call forl1test quot11. Rtver

Cny Farm Supply. 614·446298&amp;

63

Livestock

2 veer ~d Umou11n Bull for aa la
Pure bred Also uprtght free:r:ar
Call 614-378-6216

Arab11n Horses, purebred Ara bian ll:ud tervloe Spec1al dilwunts to youth gnlups R &amp; J .
Arabians, Leon, W Va 304·
466- 1062

81by Grand P;eno Good cond1
tton 8eauuful oell cab1net
t996 Call 614 742 2957

laytng hans, 60 cents each Call
304- 937 2286. no answer. call
evening•

64

Hay

&amp; Grain

Custom combn1ng f17 .50 P8f
acre Call 614-448-2528 or
614-246-6593 after 8:00PM

59 For Sale or Trade
low 8ov Tn Axel tratler for aale
or trad e Ask,ng S650 Call
614-992-7841

Hay Square bales from 1986
Never wet, f1.00 each . Alto big
.,und bolO$, 010 00 614-74228n
For 18le· NCJw tak1ng ordtl'l for
hay out of the tiald 90 1 bale

614-949-2849 .

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

New Holland mowtng machine
H1y Tedder Fold down camper
614-742-3114

Zemth floor model color T V
Ekcallent cCJndttton . t150 614
7.2 3088

75

61

Good mlxad hay on the wagon.

"

00 304-676-5679

Hay and mulch hay , 75 cents a
bJie. Allo lirfM'OOd. 130 lOad .
304 · "3· 5166 .

Farm Equipment

CROSS' SONS
U S 36 West. Ja ckson, Oh10
614-286 6461
Maney Ferguson, NIIW Holland.
Bu1h Hog Sales &amp; SeJV1ca Over
40 used tractort to choose from
&amp; con..,leteltne of new 6 used
equipment lergatt selection In
S E Oh10
J IM 'S FA:RM EQUIPMENT
CENTER SR 35 W Gtlllpoht.
Oh10 Call 614 446 9777. eve
614·446 3692 Up front tractors with warr1nty over 76 used
1Uctort, 1000 toolt
U11hty bldg SPL 30'~t40 ' x9'
w•th 15 'd' slider &amp; 3' ......,
door 86.255 erected . Iron
Horse Bldgt, 614 -332-9746
collect
0 · 4 du11:er very good con d. 4wty
blade 18.000 Call 814-245
9~49

T0 -30 tractor t1.896 N8'N ld•a
Dine bounce mower 1495. New
Idee hay cond1hon• 1196 Nil
86 baler 8496 Ctll 614· 2888622
19 86 long d111al tractor. OverYIIDrked? Never More hor... per
dollart. Long 810 64 HP tractor
Daliver1 tnty $9,891 Callllrty
&amp; ' " 614· 28.6 ·6522 .
MFNo 12tMII•t1 ,191. 8ft 2
h1y tedder U50. 8 ft drum
mower 11.496 C•lll14 -288·
8822
Uted H1y Eq.tlpment.
John Detre 630 Rd. beltr.
New 11olland 8150 Ad baltr.
John Deere ot10 Rd . bai..John Detre 331 1q bllet
John Dura Z4T baltr.
JDhn DHrt 1.tT btltr
Btdgtr round blltr.
John Daera1217 mow.-,cond.
IHC 990 8' mowtr·- d.
JDhn DHf" leO reb w·trt.whl.
John D..,. 881 rlkt.
Don lihue hyd. bale fork .
Aooolmpl .. &amp; Supply. St. A1. 41
Non~. Wen Union. Ohio. Cell
&amp;13-144-3023 .

71

Autos for Sale

LI!IRAKI~S_i.,+-f...

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1985 Runabout, inboard, OMC.
all equ•p Call 614-286·2827
1969 Crttehf1ekf boat 76 HP
Asking 81,600 Evenings &amp;
weekend• 814-448-6262 or
614-446·7404, message

1r ()tV 11t~ 01.0
Me!~~ COULD TAlK•

1976 Starcraft s&amp;u-boat. must
ucflfiCfl Call 614 446 2184
1982 G MC Sierra stepsida '
ptckup PS. PB. overdrive trans,
r~ll-r wheels, AM·FM cenette.
body excellent. Call 614-379·
2888
1977 Camara 360 head11111 4
1peed trensnneion. white intertor . black carpet. AM-FM tape
player, 40 wtU p::~wer booster,
Cregar S· T wheels. chrome
traction bars. air shocks. rad
paint onglnel Garage kept . mmt
condition 20.900 ougmal
mtlet 814·986·4322
1976 Conttnental 2 dOor, auto.
1660 Sandyt Auto Sales e14992 7403
1976 Cougar 2 door auto .
8500. Sandys Auto S&amp;let 814992-7403

Yukon Delta 26 h house boet
With 40 tiP, Evmruda outboerd
and trailer 614· 986-3327
Mercury gas gflll. stereo. trn1_ler
Price with motor $3800 . w•th
out motor 8-1995 C1ll day
614-992-2381 and ntght 614
992 -2509

19n Bwck Regal V-8 Auto .
new tirH. new exhauJt syJtem.
brakes· m•ster cyl.. factory
mags. tilt wheal $760 Call
814-992-7363

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Fourttref!ms, 15", fourtirea - 2
L 60 and 2 G 60 304 675
7429

79

1978 \lolarie 2 door auto .•
1400 6M1dys Auto Sal" 814992-7403
1982 -lndy-Pace-Cer. Z28. TTop. k&gt;sled 17500 Contact
Butd't Roushat814 992· 7258

1986 T·Bird, loed.:l. auume
k&gt;.,
304-675-.t276 1fter 6
pm
1976 Chevy Caprtca. 4 door.
l.t95.00 u is. Wm fl Kmght,
304-675-3275
'74 Suburu, no rust. 4 cyl. 4
speed, NnS good, 304-876
7241 .
1978 Mercury Zepher, 4 door,
V 8. AC. PS PB. AT AM FM
sterBO radio. wh1te. clean.
69,61 J m1l11, 1 owner, 304·
'876-2880

72

Trucks for Sale

1982 Dodge Ram P•ckup 3tpd
with overdrtve. fiberglass
.,pper. e1tc cond Call 614
367 0394
1981 Dodge van PS. P8.
AM FM redio. 4 new rad1al trru.
f2 .99&amp; Call 614 288 6622
1978 Dodge ,A 4x4 auto , PS.
PB. AM·F M 18,000 miles on
360 engne. new pa1ntvery good
cond Atktng $3,960 also Myen
4-way ~ow blede 1960 Trede
cr belt offer movmg Call
614·446-2746
1979 Dodge 'Alton club cllb 4x4
auto, PS. PB, Ill, AM -FM. ttlt
whllfll , low mileage, 380 eng
new tires. wheel•. brakal, front
gean, lock out hubl. ex. cond
f6 ,000 alto Myers 4--wl'( snow
blade 1960 Trade o.- best offer
movlno Coli 614-446-2746
1978 Cheyenne Ch8'olrolet 'Big
10' Y, ton, IUtO . PS, PB. new
tir•. 78,000 mllet, n .ooo
Call 614 -446-4292.
1982 Data~n f2.999 1980
Dodge 0 -1!0 topper t2, 19!1.
1978 Dat .. n f1.1599. 197fl
Dettun topper f1,499 . 197B
Chevy luy f1,699· John'1Auto
StiH, Bulevllle Rd G111ipohs.

--'-Mf'PAYJ $f'cP~TAF)'
HO~L. 1,5 GOING

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

1976 V
S4,200
K&amp;n&amp;uga
614 446

it) C&gt;~IVf?

ft Impala travellratler

See across from tfle
D11ve In theater Cali
0616

ANP

71

16 Ford Ranger tN4:1k. ot wheel
drive, small equtty, IllUme
blltnce. 10,000 miles 304·
678-7642

Autos for Sale

73

Vans

&amp; 4

W . O.

1971 FtbergllluNov• 327· 325
HP chrome tnglf'ta, M-22, 4 spd.
trans Calll1 4· 892·1941 .

1118 Wrecker 440 Holm1
wench with swing boomt.
02.1100 Coli 814-256-1393

1981 C11m8f'O PS. PB , air, new
tires. I cyl.. 14.200 C1\l
614·446·110&amp;9.

Chevy van or 0· 30 truck. A-1
oondl'tion . Setl or trtdefor Cit or
pickup. Call 81•· 246-9&amp;18

1979 Chevrolet 2 dr Monti
llltk)n wagon,luto, one owner.
1599. John'• Auto Salas. lulaville Ad Glllipolie, OH

1873 Dodge van, new pamt,
t760. Coli 814· 388·9787

1977 Chivy C1mero 350 tn·
gina. auto, good aond., Nbullt
motor, ,.w tirll. Call814·371·
2380
n ZOOx&amp;. 6 IPd .
rp Ctll 814 ·441·

1980 Mer Uf'l Merqult e•.
obnd., one 6wntr. Loaded. CaH
614·448·3870
1980 TO'f'otl Coroll1, 2 dr.
hatchbllc:k with am root, :ood
condkion . Col 114· 286· 837
aft..- GPM.
1977 Okl•mQbll• euu... supr•m• AM.fM Cln. P8, PI,
rally whMII. I'IIW thockt, 1700.
no ruri. Ca1111 4· 441 ·4103.
1170 Buidl Rtil lhlfP, on•
owner. v.e, PS, PB, air, whit•
letter dr•, f1 .711. Cell 114·
241-MIS.

1879 Dodgt0..,1024. 64,000
ml• •too or beat oHar Cd
211· 114t ....
3 1811 MutttnQI. 1 rune. 2 for
porto. Will ull pooll111 fot 1100.
Coli 11 •·371;2130.

77 CorvOfto fully IDodod. pluo
t· lapl, •• aoo mi. , oorvattl
IICdl. Included. new 'tlrea1 mini
cond Ctll 441·0132.

1983 Ford ConversiOn Van . Low
rrile~ge~ R•nonebly ptlced. C1ll
114·992-2588

74

Motorcycles

For tale or trlda 1983 7110
Honda like new, U.OOO milft
Will trede for

~od

car or truck
Coli 614-241-1223
1980 HondaCR260 lotaofnrw
pertt, mult
•400 Call
814-388-87&amp;2 .

••II

SuJ:uki 380, wlndshltld. Addle
t:.Qt, 9.000 mil"- •a&amp;O. Honda

4150 Scr~mbler 20,000 mu...
t32B Co11114-JI7-0106

7'5 7&amp;0 Honda. 1450 or best
oiiOI'IICtll 114·241·9239
1811 Honde Cl 750 cu1tom,
ktw miiM, IXC oond. Ctll
81-·387·0387.

WHAM!

.

ALLEY OOP

Services
81

THIS 15 FJ&gt;.R ENOUGH, DINNY! YOU SETTER
STAY HERE I&gt;.N' LET ME GO IN ON FOOT!
IF I NEEiD YOU, I'LL HOLLER!

Home
Improvements

6 :00 IJlllillOCIJC@Iil @@
News
CIJ Green Acres
I]) Mazda Sportslook
Ill (IJ S1ar Trek
CIJ Reading Rainbow ICC!
(jj) Here's1o Your Health
6 OS ffi Gomer Pvle. USMC
6:30 1J CIIIlll NBC News
(1) The Rifleman
ffi llevco's World Class
Women
ill II ill ABC News
(I) Doctor Who
@ Ill @ CBS News
(jj) Body Electric .
6:35 (]) Gunsmoke
1:00 1J (]) PM Magazine
(1) Man from U.N C.L E
SportsCen1er
(]) Entertainment Tonight
Jill Clayburgh 1alk s 10 ET
about her role as a cancer
VICtim tn the upcomtng TV
mov1e, "leavmg Home '
Ill (1) Hogan's Heroes
0 ill Jeopardy
(I) Nightly Business Fieport
(@News
(jj)
MacNeil- lehrer
Newahour
Ill ill) Divorce Court
CMl Privata Benjamin
@ Wheel of Fortune
1:30 1J (]) (]) New Newlywed
Game
ffi NFL Yearbook
Ill CD Major League Baseball: Lois Angeles at Cincinnati 13 hrs I
0 (]) (jiD Wheel of Fortune
I]) Fawlty Towers
Ill @ Entertainmen1 Tonight J1ll Clayburgh talks to
ET aboul t)er role as a cancer
v1ct1m tn the upcoming TV
movte, • Leav1ng Home··
®Alice
@Jeopardy
7.35 CD MaJOr League Baseball.
San Francisco Bt A11anta13
hrs I
8 00 1J (])@A-Team 160 mm I
IAI
CD Daktan
® Roller Derby 160 m1n I
(I) 0 (])Who's the Bossi
(CCI Babysoller Samanlha
lands tn trouble w1th Tony
when he ftnds she's been
neg le ctmg Jonathan !RI
(I)
MacNeil-Lehrer
Newshour
00 Gl @ Simon &amp; Simon
An tnvestlgatton of a stolen
dtamond leads Rtck and A J
to a patr of star-crossed lov·

of a boy 160 mon I IAI
(jj) Nova: Ute's First Feelings iCC) The emotional development of •nfams 1s
traced {60 m1n ) {A)
®MOVIE. 'Sole Survivor"
8 :30 (I) 0 Cil Growing Pains

ICC) Mtke must choose be·

Exteuor &amp;. mterior stucco Plas
t81' &amp; plaster repairs low rates
Call614 -266-1182

tween

&amp; Interior 1tuccu Plas
ler &amp;. plaster rep11n low rates

9 ·00

HEY, WHERE t-Rf.

Ca ll 614-266-1182

~ano?

Stanley Steemer 2 room mmtmum f20 per room Gallla
Mergs· Vmton Counties 1 800
326 -5136

tn

a

In

iCC) Dav1d's brother. whom

he hasn't seen tn years. ar
nves tn town wtth a new·
found fortune and eyes for
Maddoe (60 m1n I lA)

I]) 1\110VIE. ' Plymouth Ad·

venture'

00 Ill @ Ellis Island iCC)
Pan 3 of 3 Four tmm tgrants
arnvmg at EU1s Island tn
190 7 slrtve for success tn
the melttng-pot of Amenca

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

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

Staflrll Troo and LDwn Serv1ce.
landscaping. 304 576· 2010
Rotary or cable tool dnlhng
Mott wella completed tame day
Pump salea end urv1ce 304
896 3802

HOw, 00 '101..1
MAKE PEACH

ACTUALLY,
I DIDN'T

I JUSTOPENED

FIZZ~

lAAKE: IT.

P&amp;AQ-IES ...

TH/SCANOF

AND/TWAS
FIZZiNG-.

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth 1nd Ptne
Gallipolis, Oh1o
Phone 614-446 3888 or 614
446 4477

PEACH FIZZ 25lt

BARNEY

Excavating

WHAR ON AIRTH
DID YOU BUY IT?

MY!!

Good· I Excevatmg. t111ements.
footers. driveway•. sept1c tanks.
lsndiCiping Call anytima 114
446-41537. Jemn L. Otvison,
Jr owner.

WHAT A
CUTE LITTLE
FELL~R .

12 hrs IIAI
(jj) Comrades: The Education of Rita (CCI 21 -yearold Ausstan Clt1zen R•ta i"tk ·
honova faces new chat
lenges as she co mpletes her
educatton and takes a teach·
tng posttton (60 m•n I
10:00 1J (])@ 1986 160 mon I
(!I 0 (]) Spenser: For Hire
iCC! Spenser opposes a
tough eK-con m a wal ertront
brawl 160 mon I IRI
(jj) Making of Comrades
Bnttsh 1ournaltsl Mark Frank ·
land mt erv1ew s the produ
cers of 'Com rades' on prob lems 1n hlmtng the se r1 e!i
® News
1 0 :30 Cil Celebnty Chefs
Ill CD INN News
(jj) Naws
1 O· 36 CD MOVIE · ' Dollars'
11 ·00 IJ CilCIJ O CD®I III ®Cl~
News
Bill Cosby Show
® Inside the PGA Tour

Evergreen• Tree &amp; stump removal. lawn care. fences, sand &amp;
gravel, mulch. stone delivered.
Call Don Waugh , 614 ·446
9646

ffi

III SCTV
(jj) Mapp &amp; Lucia The miSS ·
tng Mapp and Lucta make a
b1zarre return whtle Ma1or

BenJy moves 1nto Mapp s
home (60 mon I

General Hauling

® Soap

James Boys Water Service Also
pools f•llad Cell'614·266-1141
or 614 446· 1 176 or 614 446
7911

WHEN DID
YOU F=INAL-L-Y
COME TO -rHIS
CONCL-US10N?

Ken' s Water Serv•ce . Wells
cinerns pools and w1terbt~d1
tilled Call 614-367-0823 or
814·367-7741 or 304-675
1247
Coal. limestone, gravel. etc
Delive•ed 1 ton and up J•m
Lln•er, 304-676· 1247 or 676
7397

87

Upholstery

Hondo CM400T. eeoo mll11.
Fully IOod oq,~lppod, Including
big~. Naw 'a•hlutt,· VOC
17QD. Coli 114·992-&amp;818 or
814·992· 1037.

Mowray 's Upholttering terving
•ri county ~rea 21 ye1ra The.,.st
In futnltura uphol'lterlng. C11t
304 - 876 · ol184 tor lr8e
.. umattl.

WHiaN MY .

MOMMY

OIONT

I&lt;NITM~

ANY
Ml-r-rENS'!

1 1 30 IJ Cil @ Wimbledon
Highlights Highlights ul
Wtmbledon ac1100 are fea tured.
CIJ Burns &amp; Allen
® SponsCenter
CD WKIIP in Cincinnati
1!1) CD One Step Beyond
OCIJABC News ~ightline
I]) Sounds11ge
@Alice
ID (jj) Simon &amp; Simon An •
agrl·chemist' s wife h~ras
Rick and A .J to fond her
miSsing husband 'f!hO disappeared while checking out a
maJor polluter. 170 min IIIII. ·
(M) TrepperJohn. M .D.
1 1 :45 D (]) (jj) Beot of Carson
Tonight'6 guests are Joan

.--------,---,---:1 ·

TAl STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1113 Sec Ave , G1lhpotlt
614 -446 -7833 Of 614 ·446
1833
R &amp; M Furntture MtnufactUrlng
St. Rt 7. Crown City, Oh . Cell
614·266· 1470. call Eve 814·
ol40·3ol38 . Old &amp; new

1·

.

. .,

'f'EAH,THE

DENTIST..

UphoJ~red

1

ColllnS1 Whitney Houston
and Roy Blount Jr. 160 m1n I
IRI. In Stereo
12:00 (1) Jack Bonny • ·
® Top !fin~ Bolting from
Lao Vega. NV 12 hrs.) IAI
III Enterlllinment Tonl9ht
JIR Clayburgh talks to ET
about her role as a cancer
victi~ ~n the upcoming TV

t

.

_

_

.

A classified ad for an au:o
repa1r service made me wonder ,/
they used lhe correct cho1ce c•
"Try us once

, - - - - - - - - - , words II read
NA F T E T
you'll never go

II

·-··-· aga~n . "

7 18 Q Comp lete the chuck le quol~d ·
1
,
•
by ldlrng •n the m• ssmg word$
L.-1-..1.-..I..-L-..i.--' you develop from step No 3 be low

I I

.

8
0

•

.

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

I

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
FOR ANSWER
•

Jumbles FOAM'f JUDGE WHEEZE MATRON
Where the geology professor brought hts
students-DOWN TO EARTH

Yesterday's

I Answer

.

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

It's all
academic

NORTH

+

By James Jacoby

EAST
One of the best leads against a slam WEST
• 63
is from a K-Q combmation. Tbe 1dea IS IKQ5
87
to establish Qne wmner and hope that 'KQ5
tJ9875
•
Q
10 3 2
your side can take another. Who
+J 9 4
doesn't know that? A better idea is to +10 8
listen to the bidding and then make
SOUTH
.
your opening lead based on mforma+A
'A6132
tlon derived from the auctiOn.
t AI
Today, West had an abundance of
eAKQ
32
riches to lead from However, since
hearts were bid by declarer South,
Vulnerable North-South
West was not about to lead a heart
Dealer North
honor Spades had been b1d by dummy,
North EaJI
but perhaps a trick could be estab- West
Pass Pass
lished there Then, when West eventu2t
Pass
ally won a heart trick, he would, be Pass
Pass
2e
Pass
able to cash a spade to set tbe con· Pass
Pass
s+
t ract. And so the king of spades hit the Pass
Pass Pass
table. That was no problem. Declarer
won the ace, played ace of hearts and
Opening lead: +K
ruffed a heart, came to his ace ol dia· ·
. .
moods and ruffed another heart. Now
there was only one high heart out- The chances for slam were less than
standing, so declarer played lor a 3-2 50 percent, dependmg on a 4-3 heart
club split, drawmg trumps in three split combmed with a 3-2 club divirounds. He then simply gave up a sion. However. smce East-West's
heart trick.
team was lavored to win this match, it
At llrsl, West blamed h1mself. was rtght lor North-South to be
"What happens 1f I lead a trump? " he aggressive.
asked. Although that would have been P.S. Although North-South had a
a better lead, it would not have alfect- pickup for biddmg and making the
ed the outcome.
slam, the1r team still lost the match,

.J9

S

elltM'ol D,/

by

THOMAS JOSE'H

ACROSS

"

. .. . . .

43 SICihiU1

volcano
DOWN

I Mex1can
president
com mush
9Dupe
10 Phihppme 2 Snake
island
or reef
11 Parts
3 Set aside
4 English
suburb
12 Turkish Inn
cathedral
14 "A ShroJ&gt;town
shire -"
5 Flonda
21 Garter
15 Vigor
city
or
16 Beast's
6 "I Tahard

28 M 1sdo

30 Lagoon

e n c losurr
Camera" 22 "32 "Sunnower ~
17 H1gh prtest 7 Produce
Ameri can
star
18 Turkish
center
Cousm" 33 Turktsh
t1tle
8 Foot lever 23 Heave nly
City
19 Dutch
10 Attack
body
38 In lei
24 Go off
(Sp )
commune 13 Fabnc
the diet
39 Turkish
15 Sylvan
20 Baseball
deity
27 Head}V&lt;&gt;ar
m easure
team
22 Heraldi&lt;·

gullet

wreath
23 '"The - Is
Green"
11945 film )
25 l'ut m
S&lt;'MCe

26
27
29
30
31

Kiln
Des1gnate
My~Fr )

..

Make public
lletween
and Mtss
34 llefore
35 Saolor

36 Pt:-;tol
(sl l
37 Pan1c
39Gumbo
40 Spamsh
city
41 Acute
42 Shade
of blue

DAILVCR VPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work II:
AXVDLBAAXR
Is LONG FELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A 1s used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Smgle letters,
apo5trophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different
CRVI'TOQUOTE
7-1

ZM

SL0 M

R W SM V R D M

FRAARUJGDRM C

S L 0 M

r·

WMZ

NM\ I I.J&lt; ' M

E:

RWSMVRDMF

ZM
VM

K YR0 R GM B MC L NV L E
c· I. US M V
Yeaterday'o Ceyptoquote: THE DIFFEREN CE
BETWEEN A MAN AND HIS VALET TilEY llOTH
SMOKEntESAMECIGARS, BUT ONLY ONE PAYS FO{l
ntEjll. - ROBERT FROST

gu esls are Dr Ruth Westh · I, ' •
etmer. Tom Oreesen ~c ham ·
...
p1on Fr •s hnf'l ca tchtng dog ~ ,
W iZi.tl rl &lt;~nd the :Jud1enco
v1s11 s tlw NBC commissary '

mov1e. " Leav1iig Homo·'

Ill CD llliwhlde
0 CD Hawaii Flve·O

® MOVIE : ' Born Losers'
12:30 (1) Beo1 of Groucho
$&gt;
' C1J ABC News Nlghtflne
RQwhlde
1JJ1 MOVIE: 'R119e'
12:40 • 1ij1 MOVIE: 'The &lt;lentfemlln Bendlt'
12:46 8 (]) illi Late Night wl1h
David. Letterman Tonight's

em

160 m1n 1 /AI. In Sl ereo
Dobie GllliJ
(]) Archie Bunkor'o Place •
Ill Cil Wild . Wjld Wool , ' ~
1·10 IJ) MOVIE. 'Thet'o My , ,

1·OO CD

1·30

Boy'
(I) Father Knows

·'

•

7-1-!1

+JI098712
'10
tK6
765

II m Love ConnectiOn

Trenching Serv1ce water. g&amp;s.
and electric. Free ett1mates
304·173 -6839

85

I

THYAC

1

l-:s=-TI--'"1--',1':6-11.-~ :

5 27th

Stereo

RINGLES ' S SEAVICF. . expe
nenced carpenter, eletetrician.
mason pamter, ro ofmg lmcludtng hot tar apphcatlonl 304
876-2088 or 876 -7368

I

races to stop a former V•et
nam vel now operattng as a

IRI.

I

TAREE

3 lr---r-::1..,..-ll·
r--lr.-c-

I Twmge

Cil 700 Club
® AWA Wrestling 12 hrs I
m 0 CD Moonhghting

Fatly Tree T11mmmg. ttump
ranioval Cell 304-675 · 1331

LISWEV

IJ Cil [W Hunter Hun1er

hlfed killer !60 mon I

RON 'S Televtl!on Sarv1ce
House calls on RCA Ouaur,
GE Speclahng In Zenith Call
304 678 2398 or 614 ·446
2464

83

part1ctpattng

bowling match w1th hts fa·
m1ly or a date w1th the g1rl of
hos dreams IRI

EEK&amp; MEEK

Exter~or

82

I

ers, whtle A J agomzes
over his acctdental shoot1ng

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFiNG
Unconditional hfet1me ufllran
tee Local references furnrshed
Free nt•mates Call collect
1·614-237 -0488 day or mght
Rogers B ase ment
W11erproofmg

For ule: 1182 Honda 710
cntom. NIW' tire~. or11h bert,
bRit rMt, cru61a oontrol 81.t·

148-2734.

TH~N

if-lf20l/Gfi ..

1973 TraveiTratler 18 h S leeps
6. real n1ce 81 301) Sendy! Auto
Sales 814 992 -7403

1983 ,Camero Z28. 20.000
mllel. iDeal ownM. loaded. charcoal gray. IT'Uit ~ell 304-876
6363 afttr 5 p m
1981 Ptymouth TC 3 Hor~zan
hetehback, 4 1p, alr con d. Dolby
lterm. front wheel drive $1600
or bnt offer 304-896-3036

\

28 foot pontoon boat, 80 tiP

76

low to form four s•mplt wora1 .1

rn

OH

Tra nspor I" Iion

eA-!;Y

KNOW9 Wf &amp;~EW
UP THOSE OTHf ~

1976 Honda CB 360'1'. 8 speed.
faring, trunk. like new t1re1,
battery. $400 00 304·6762773

Pomeraman pupa for 1ale. 1
mele 1 female. both are blond
and sable, 6 weeks 8100 00
each. 30 4 882 3110

Mus1cal
Instruments

THI~I&lt;.

SO iT MEANS Hc·s
GO~NA TRV TO STOP
US 8fFOfi!E' WE !ILOW
UP THIS ONE.

11
WOlD

EVENING

PO VOU

sentinel-

~~;~;~' S@\\.~)\-~f.,~Ss UMI
-.,.---...;•:.._ ldltod br CLAY I. POLLAN - - - - - 0 fovr
Rearrange le"ert of
scrambled words

TUESDAY
7/1'/86

CAPTAIN EASY

1975 Xl250 Honda motorcycle.
d1rt or street, mint cond w1th
e•tra full Knobby ttl&amp; 304 · 675
6994

2 Y••r otd Ltmoulin Bull for ule
Pure bred Also upwright
trMJ:er Call 614 -378· 8218

57

A 20 Mnlll'r~ IJ.Iij):!

()

1977 860 1Cew11aki. Good
condition . New parts wrth re·
ceipts from J and R Sport Shop
s 750 Call 614-992 7363.

AppaiCJosa filly 3 years old, 14
gentle and broke 1200
Can 304 675 4514 or 895
3548

).!"~dl

1811.36 in gmund poo l $1 000
Does not mcluda lin8f Call
614· 446·0043 Of 614 446
4442

Sltght Paint Damage Fla1h111g
arrow 11gn 12791 lighted, non·
arrow $2691 Non lighted 12381
F.,.. laH en' Few left See
locally 1 - 800 · 432 -0 163 .
an-vuma

Pets for Sale

'-- -nu::A:: AJ.lD lllAT~

81 Suzuki MotCJrcycla 1!3 000
milliS W•ndth•eld in good shape
81200 Ca11614992 2803

BUilDERS

••
1

to:i•our

'-,_1ll~CQ AT ~
a.6AIJ~5!

The

Ohio

Television
Viewing

Coi1614-742-294B

Bu1ldmg matar~alt, cement,
blockl all 111es, yard or deliVery
Gallipolis Block Co, 1231h Pine
St . Gallipolis, Ohio Call 814446-2783

3t4996to8799fi
8' aluminum pattO doon set
8199.96 we•th acrean
4 Octogan led titney gla11
WindOWS S49.95
6 15 ltte p1ne Franch doors B
gradat 889 96
6 4x8x%. Masontte under laymeot $29 95 81, 4x4x 1A $1 00

~lolbKf(10fi\111{
' lP\11~.. J1QUJP M'l

1eeo Harley Spor1rer. 1000
mtln. One owner. t 100 firm

!;;;;;;~;~~~~
56 Building Supplies

CLOSEOUT'S
SURPLUS
BUY BACK'S
1 New salvage steel door
blanks. ntcks and scratch81 t1 6
to $25 ea.
•
2 Ther"'*' pain an thermal break
alumtnum WlndCJwsteveralsJzes

Motorcycles

1981 Honda CB 760 Custo':"
lighted travel trunk -1port lau
tng New rear tire E C 8000
mllet. Call 814· 992·6037 or
614 992-6686 .

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION l FURNITURE 82
Oliva St, G•llipolts New I ua&amp;d
wood· eoaletoves. 8 pcwood LR
swte $399 bunk beds S199,
antmn recliners 199. new &amp;
u1ed bedroom su•tet. rangea.
wnngar w•hers. I shoes New
lnungroom tudet S199· S599.
Iampi, also buymg coal &amp; wood
atovea. Call 814 448 3159

Used

1980 l1b1rty 14x64. 2 bed·
room. unfurn1thed, vmyl underpinning Included Mutt tell Call
304 n3 -&amp;873

taka Home has fireplace. wood.
r.n11l , 011 hot water heat new
ktt ch'en large yard Wit h child
•en 's woodenplaycanter Morn
1ng Star llffUI Cell 614 949
75 03

Houses lor Rent

KIT

Building Mattrtlll
Block. brick. sewer pip•, Win ·
dows, hntels, etc Claude Wintars, Ato Granda. 0 . Cell 814245-6121

nufacturer Select1ng builder·

dealer m some open arqs Htgh
potent11111 profit in our growth

Misc. Merchandise

..

Tuesday. July 1, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Best

••
•.-::

t

�.
~

-·:;·

.I

Tuesday. July 1, 1986

Plg6 1~-:-~' 0!2 Senti181

/

·-·....

~.. Local briefs~·-....,
'

Middleport fll"eworks Friday

B)' lhe Bepd ........ Pap!ll6-7

Mayor Frell Ho1fman announced today that the JulY 4 ll!'e\Wrks
display~ Middleport wUI begin at approximately 9:30p.m. Friday.
The fireworks display wUI be under supervision Of tiE Mldlleport
Fire Department and will be set ot! on the Ohio River nl!ar the
Chessle ~. which Is being developed Into Dave Diles Riverside
Park by the village and the Chamber of Commerce.
The dlsptay ibis year wUI be slightly larger tjlan the cne In 1985,
with the cost of the fireworks and lnsuranre tOiallng $2,000.
Donations toward the cost of the ll!'e\Wrks may be made at the
village hall.
· The mayor expressed appreciation to the Feeney-Bennett
American Legion Post No. 128 for Its $500 donation and to the p&gt;st's
ladles auxiliary for Its $50 donation.
The mayor extended an Invitation to area residents to view the
fireworks display In commemoration of Independence Day.

CornkJ&amp;.TV .............Page U
Deatla ...................Page 12
Editorial ................. Page 2
Sports ..................... Page 4

The DaUy Sentinel wUI not be published Friday to aUow its
employees to enjoy the Fourth of July holiday.
Regular business hours resume Saturday at 8 a.m. and regular
(&gt;Ublication resumes with the Sunday Ttmes.Srotinel.

•

•

at y
Vot.36, No.42
Copyrlphtod 1986

,

Eastern Boosters plan barbecue . .
The Eastern Athletic Boosters will hold a public chicken and rib
barbecue Friday at the Eastern High School with serving to start at
11:30a.m.

Local 32 to meet Thursday
•
MemberS of Bricklayers and Cement Finishers Localll will meet
•

at Carpenters Hall Thursday evening at the regular hour instead of
at the Riverboat Room c:i the former Diamond Savings and Loan Co.

Water department extends hours
Since water bills cannot be paid at the New York Clothing House
due to the recent fire, the water department office at Pomeroy
VUiage Hall will have extended hours through July 10. The office will
he open until 5 p.m. each day , Monday through Friday and from 9
a.m. to l2 noon on Saturday.

Area deaths
Gertrude Humphrey

Roger Wolfe

'

)

.

Directors OK stock dividend

WASHINGTON (UP!) - With
the last American companies out of
Libya, the administration is moving to seal off any remaining
economic ties. with the North
4-frican nation.
A senior State Department official, briefing reporters Monday,
said that Libyan revenues, partly
because of American and Western
European actions, dropped fron1 an
estimated $ll billion a year in 1916
to an estimated $4 billion this year.
Officials said the economic sanctions against Libya have been
effective because the country is
dependent on a single commodity,
oil, for its revenues.

ILyng announces lower
wheat price supports

•

to rlghl, Anna E. Tumer, ~ra Krebs, Maude Holcomb, lhe oldest In
membel'8hlp, 76 yean, Pauline Atkins, mlllller, Belva WWard and
Margarete &amp;:ott; and back, Nevil' Nlcholsn, Mary V. Ealitertlay,
Stanford Slocldon, Fred Goegleln, Homer Willard, and John Hollldlly.

Under one executive order, five
American oil oompanles that remained in Libya and some smaller
oil-field service companies were to
cease dO'Ing business with the
Libyan government at midnight
Monday. Treasury officials said all
have compiled .

An earlier order made it lllegal

for Americans to remain in Libya,
but the U.S. companies were given
fill extension in order to complete
business. The five American oil
companies involved are Occlden·
tal, Marathon, Conoco, Amerada
Hess and W.R. Grace.

Divorce granted in Meigs Court
A divorce was granted, a fordo- Timothy T. Thomas on a chargP c:i ~
sure sale ordered, and an entry oo a breaking and entering has been. '
breaking and entry filed in the suspended and the defendant
Meigs County Common Pl!;!as Court placed on probation for two years,
according to an entry filed In ~
Monday.
Granted a divorce was Terry court.
In another action In the court, the
Wayne Stobart, Pomeroy. from
marriage
of Michael H. Cline a no·
Catherine Lou Stobart, Lancaster,
on charges of gross neglect of duty Linda K. Cline has been dissolved.
Also !Ued in the court was a,.
and extreme cruelty. He was.given
temporary onler of custody In the.
custody of the minor children.
An entry or! a foreclosure action . case of Ernest L. Jones, Jr. and&lt;
by the Central Trust Co. against Shirley Marie Jones. Temporary;
Osby A. Martin. et al , has been flled custody of Christopher L. Jones
was granted to the petitioner;:
along with an order&lt;for sale.
The six month senleJ?ce of Ernest L. Jones, Jr.

'I

Weathe'r ro·recast

]

New plan...

Hospital news

Fur...niture Sale!
Furniture Sale!

Granted divOI'fle

FOR JUST

$3.25

All
Bedrooms ••••• 25%.
All
Chairs ••......• 25%
All l)illill!l
Rooms ........ 25%
All SleeperI
Sofas .......... 25%
All Gra11dfather
Clocks ......... 25%
All
.
Curios ......... 25% OFF
All Gun
Cabintt~--n.. 25% .
All
Tables ......... 25%

Elh

If you have a safe driv·
lng record, you merit
sorflethlng special when
1t comes to your Auto

Insurance ... top.~

Coverage, low ptllen8d
rates and -service you ,
can deperid 011. That's
exaclly the combination
of beneft1s you'U rec:elve
as a policyholder Of our '

.agency and iitie State
'Auto Companies.

·

.

ALL SF:I' FOR1.~ AN!IiJVERSARY CJ!l.EBKATION - The
Statue of Uberty wUI celebrate her 10tlllt birthday In justtwoclaJa, All I!!

.

Muhimedia

Inc.

26 Canto

Newapopor

l'f8d)' lor lhe July FMAith celebntloa Ia New York. 'Thursday,
President Reagan wiD fenllxlS lhe tordl but the lady dellnltely can 111e
some makeup to conceal her pock marllll. (UPI)

Hundreds of people moved their
belongings to higher ground and
sought shelter with friends loday as
floods washed over towns and
farmland in the Plains, prompting
the governors of Iowa and Ne·
braska to declare states of
emergency.
Ohio Valley storms dumped up to
5 inches of rain Tuesday in Wesl
Virginia and a flash flood watch •
was posted today. A flood warning
was issued today in western
Pennsylvania, where flooding was
reported in Mercer County.
Thunderstorms also reached
across the Southwest - prompting
flash flood watches in Texas and
New Mexico - and from New
England to the Carolinas.
In Nebraska, 3-foot floods co·
vered much of DeWitt- located al
the confluence of Swan Creek,
Turkey Creek and the Big Blue
River - and forced nearly half the
640 residents to flee Tuesday night,
sheriffs'deputy Steve Hensel said.
In West Des Moines, Iowa , a
half-mile-long dike built Tuesday
by hundreds of volunteers ap·
peared to be holding back the rising
Raccoon River, which crested at a
record 10 feet above flood stage
. upstream at Van Meter, flooding
roads and thousands of acres of

farmland, officials said.
"If the dike holds, there shouldn't
be too much flooding," City Clerk
Tom Lay sa id . " If it doesn't hold, It
could be awfu I."
Flood warnings continued along
lhe river, and flooding also was
expected in Des Moines, the
National Weather Service said. A
main Des Moines street was closed,
and some residents moved their
b!&gt;longings to higher ground
Tuesday.
Nebraska Guv. Bob Kl'm'y and
Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad declared
states of emergPncy Tuesday In the
affected regions.
Evacuated res idents from De-'
Witt, Neb., spent the night with
friends and relatives cr took shelter
at a local high school, officials said.
Ken Malone, a teacher at the
school, spent Tuesday helping
l't'Sidents move beionglngs to
higher ground.
"We've been cleaning out basements (andl moving washers,
dryers, furniture, carpets- getting
it all up high on blocks," Malone
said.
The Village Board imposed a 10
p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew to keep
curiosity seekers away from the
flooding .

Rutland water safe o drink ·Patrol will ·HeafY · ra1iitfa s ··rl- "~~ according to Tuesda report watch for in parts of Ohio
violators

While the water in Rutland may the streets will be cleaned and malntenanre gjpervisor.
By United Pres8 Intemallonal
Youngstown Municipal Airport , the
have a " mllky" look, it's perfectly washed down before the Fourth of
The burning ordinance was re·
Heavy rain fell in parts of Ohio ,National Weather Service reported.
July.
viewed . It allows residents to bum
safe to drink.
Drivers this holiday weekend will
late Tuesday and early today, Nearly an Inch of rain fell during a
Herb EUiott said that he had paper but oot trash. A dlscusion have a little extra protection from
That was the report given by
causing flooding of some urban thunderstorm In Dayton.
Vlckj Fink, cou ncil member, at a received complaints about the hole was held on banning ali burning but the prime killers on rural highways
areasland small streams.
A spokesman for the Trumbull
meeting of Rulland Village Council in the street near the elementary the matter was tabled until the - excessive speed and the infiu ·
Flooding of roads and low- ly lng County Sheriff's Department said
Tuesday night. ·
school. General condition of the August meeting.
ence of alcohol- according to Lt.
areas was reported in parts cl. several roadways in the oounty
Fink aavised that a sample ol streets was discusSed and plans
It was reported that two contain· Dan Henderson, commander of tl'f&gt;
Ashland, RJchland, Holmes and were rovered · with water early
water had been sent to Ihe EPA for made to contact the contractor on ers wtll be donated to tbe village by Gailla·Meigs Post of the Ohio Slate Trumbull counties in the northern today, and reports ol' tysement
teslillg and that their report showed the Lima Road resurfacing project the county Utter control board, with Highway Patrol.
section of the stale.
flooding were widespread .
the water safe with the "milky" . to sre 11 some work could.be ~ne in more to be provided lor the July 4 • That protection will come from
Drier and cooler air was expected
color coming &amp;rom the high
viii
hll he
· tis ·
celebration in the town.
1
Ohio's
new
mandatory
safety-hell
A
portion
of
Interstate
75
in
Allen
to
move in to the swte today with
the
age w e t EQU pmen m
May~ James Fink presided al
calcium content .
Ihe area.
· ~
· law, which becomes effective July County was closed for severallDurs sunny skies and temperatures in
General cleanup of the village
11 was decided to sell the old town the meeting with rouncil members, 4.
,. · by high water, which rose to four
the 70s expected oo Thursday.
was discussed and if .was noted by · truck
to chalig!! the title o! David . Wilkes, Herb Elliott, Vicki
"In 1985, 48 percent of ali rural feet at one point, said a county · forecasters said.
David Davis, street worker. that Davis from street worker to town Fink, and Steve Jenkins and Clerk traffic deaths were caused by sheriff's dispatcher.
The dry weather was expected to
.
Greg Van Meier attending.
· More than two and ooe·half rem~n i)J«t~le l:&gt;r lndepend·
speed." Henderson said. "So far
this year, 55 percent of all rural inches of .rain was recorded at the ence Day on Frillay.
fatalities involve a vehicle being
driven at an unsafe sceed.
"Because c:i this increase in
Beesley said its goal is to charge all
he Is pleased with the new interest
By SONJA HW1i~N
SI'Vere
speed-related accidents.
rate policy announced Tuesday by customers competitive rates and to
UPI Fann Editor
troopers
will
be especially watchfu I
offer them a broad rang!! of loan
WASHINGTON iUPII - Fed- the Farm Credit Adrrllhistration.
for
speeding
violation'&gt; during this
eral regulators have given Farm
"I think this represents a nego- packages.
period
of
extra
holiday traffic."
The Farm Credit System. the
Credit System banks permission to tiated step to find some way to give
Henderson
said
the patrol exnation 's largest farm lender, lost
reduce Interest rates to keep .their rur borrowers sane interest rate
The Meigs Coonty Board of Educa tion Research Center pro$2.7 billion last year. Its loan pects a considerable number c:i
mrrowers from shopping for lower relief," he said.
aicolDl-impaired
drivers
on
holiday
Education
adopted a $481,!171.55 gram, the SEOVEC program and
The farmer-owned system 'had portfolio was reduced by S13 billion
Interest ratesatcommerrial banks.
roads.
"The
drinking
driver
con·
budget
for
the
fiscal year. July 1. . the Tri Cou nty Career DevelopH. Brent Beesley, pl't'Sident of I~ asked for lower rates to keep its between the end of 1~ and the first
tlnues
to
be
the
single
most
1986
through
June
·lJ, 1987 when lt ment program. The board entered
system's policy-making arm. the loan base fron1 eroding further. quarter of this year.
dangProus person oo oor highways.
met in regular session Monday into a contra}'!. with Richard Eric
F_'arm Credit Corp. o! America. said
l.f the alcoint-lmpaired driver also night.
Chambers as of July 12 for the
happens to be speeding, he cr she
Th~ hoard hired Jane Good as a
operation of a s~at belt safety
becomesespeclaUy deadly," Hend· speech therapist for the county rcnter two SalurdJ ys each month.
erson said.
office. Good taught at Colorado
Bus driver ccrt ificates were
Henderson
said
the
highway
Springs
for
some
10
years
and
a
issued
to Bruce Myers, East&lt;'rn;
United Pres8 (otematlonal
likely be an outcry from people in Macyland .Uvtng,
that
drivers
and
year
in
Greece.
She
holds
a
patrol
prefers
Esther
Black , li'lha Cott~rlll ,
Sentinel Staff Repol'lll
near,. lhe storage site. Therefore, Boster said. state
front
-seat
passmwrs
voluntarily
master's
degree.
The
resignation
of
Donna
Daniels,
Lt•la Hail GOOdwin,
The Army has tentatively decided to destroy officials, including hersel.f, will oontinue offering
comply
with
the
manda
tcry
safety
Judy
Herbert
as
one
of
the
two
.Jack
Klng,
Cora
Loftis, Emily
. thousands of aging and potentially dang!!rous "strong opposition" to nay plan to ship the gas
belt
law.
school
psychologists
hired
by
the
Manley, Strvrn Morris. Paunn~
chemical weapons at their eight stonlge sites across through Ohio.
"A
properly
adjusted
safety
belt
county
was
accepted.
Herbert
has
Snowden,
'f.ina SitwJrt, Frf'drrlck
tbe nation.
The Army made its prellminacy decision In an
can be yrur best defense against accepted oot of the county employ- Thomas, Rona ld Woodlk, No~man
The decision sets the stage for a confrontation envtronmenwi impact statement compiled Wkler
these errant drivers wiD could
ment. The county board Is accept- Wocxl, Jean Wood and Lois Wyant,
between the Army and members of Co~ess who orders from Congress, which ordered dlsp&gt;sai c:i the
involve
yoo
in
a
sudden,'
violent•
ing
appilcants for the post being ali ·of Meigs Local. All board
oppose on-site destruction of the munitions. Other nerve, mustard gas and other chemical weapons by
collision,"
he
said
.
"Serious
trafftc
vacated
by Herbert
members and Supt. John Ri&lt;'flei
lawmakers, howl'\ler, object tot ran sporting the aging Sept. 30, 1994. It would cost $2 bllllon to destroy the
s
usually
happen
so
The
hoard
agreed
to
take
part
in
accident
were present for thr m '('ling. '
munitions to regional disposal sites.
stockpile, Including some weapons that are leaking,
Continued on page 12
the Southeastern Ohio Special
. "There Is no way that any simple solution will make Roeber said.
everyone happy," Army Deputy Undersecl'l'tary
A ftnal decision on the disp&gt;sal will be made In
Amonita Hoeber told a news oon!erence Tuesday. January by Anny Secretary John Marsh l:&gt;llowlni
"We have a democratic process In this countcy that public hearings at ail eight locations. HLs dedSion
hopefully wtll lead us to a solution."
may di!fer from the tentative me annoufloed
StatP Rep. Jolynn Boster, D-Gallipolls, who Tuesday, depending on the rutcome d tlr hearings,
sponsored a resolution approved by the Ohio HoUle of Hoeber said.
Representatives May 22 opposing the JJ'OilOsed
Most of the munitions were made during the 1950s
shipments, was pleased by the ~ton.
and 1960s and a!'\ death-dealing nerve ea.ses and'
"Maybe the federal government listens to the blisterillg agents 'Whose comp&gt;unds already are
sstates after all," she said.
mtxed· In casings housed in rockets, artillery shells ·
Part of the Army's proposed route lor transporting andhombs.
the gas thrQugh Athens Coilnty. .
·
Leaks !Jave been found in SI'Veral hundred M·M
On-site Incineration was recommended by General rockel.l, which are made Of aluminum and are subject
Aslembly In Boster's resoluoon as well
by Gov. tocon:oeton. They have been put in special cannlsters
Richard Celeste and the Public Utll!Ues Commmls· to contalR the lealu.
slon of Ohio.
,
The admll$traoon wants to build a new generation
"We told the feds that Ohio wants them tostopthelr d· chemical weapcins, called binartes, In which the
plans, listen to local communities, and look tor a compolients would not be mixed Into tlrir. deadlY
NEW ROrAJtY OFFKEB8 - New olllcen were · Frmn the left'·are Ia Md'.ol)lu, tree~urr, Karl·
reasonable soluoon- and they did," Boster said.
form until the weapon Is in filght. These weapons
......... Wllallhe Ml Ill If llri-PCIIIMI'O)' IWar)' c.ab Keebler, ' leelftW)'; iames Diehl, p; 1«11 I; BIJ :
Boster said that the Anny would not make a Dna! could be stored $1lfely.
me&amp;Moildarllf&amp;IKlltiiMdaUalted'llletiiMIMO..rdt. Fnndl, ontaotnr p; twt, and Ron Alii. vtce•
decision untU the end of this year~ and t11ere Would
preeldenl.
.;;.. ..... '

and

FCS lowers credit rates

Meigs board·adopts
·1986-87 fiscal budget

Chemical weapons will not cross Ohio

as

4 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

....

..-992·6687

l
.
.

.•
,,
~

.'

A

By United Press international

support, andbuyersknewthelower
prtce would go into effect it June. ,.---------~------------~
Whilethereducing
actual
jJ'ices
under
l9!fi farm
law,crcp
Corigress
11
'.
froze farmers' Income suppOrts for
1986 and 1987. Thus farmers wUIIM: .
Easl Central Oblo
io percent today, 80 percent tonigh':
guaranteed $4.ll per bushel for
Showers and thunderstorms and 40 percent Wednesday.
I·
wheat that could sell tJr as low as
likely today, with highs In the mid
Winds will be from the southeast
$2.28.
70s. Showers and thunderstorms at five to 10 mph today and~
There is a $00,00l limit on the
tonight, with a low IJ{the mid.60s. A southwesterly near 10 mph tonight1i
per-farm subskly for the difference
chance of shOwers early Wednes·
Southwest Ohio
,.
betWEen $4.38 and $2.85 per bushel.
day and becoming partly cloudy
South Central Ohio
But there will be oo limit on
later In the day. with highs between
Showers and thunderstorms to-';
additional subsidy to lUI the gap
70 and 75.
day , with highs between 80 and 85.
betwren $2.16 and the 1987 price
The probability of precipitation is Showers and thunderstorms likel~:
support of-$:!.28.
tonight, with a low In the mid 60s. A.
Although under political jJ'essure
chance of showers early Wednes.:
to Implement a marketing loan,
day and becoming partly cloudY
Lottery numbers
Lyng said he wruld oot employ that
later in the day, with highs between
1
additional tool to make wheat
75
and 80.
'
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Mon·
prices competitive by permitting
The
probability
of
precipitation
is
day' s winning Ohio Lottery
farmers to repay price support
80 percent today. 70 !X'rcent tonigh(
numbers: Daily Number
loans, with crops as collateral, for
..
and 40 percent Wednesday.
5:xl.
less than the value cl. the loans.
Winds will be from the south near
Ticket sales totaled $1,128,761,
10
mph today and !ro the southwes~
with a payoff due of $511,671.
near
10 mph tonight.
PICK-4
Ohio
Extended Forecast - ,
8147.
Thursday
through Saturday: /'&gt; :
PICK-4 ticket sales to't!ed
Continued from page 1
ch81)ce
of
thuooerstorms
Thursday
$169,019, .with a payoff due of
and Satunlay, with fair weather
resulted In confusion over "exactly $76,119.
who reported towhoandwhowas in
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays Friday. Highs will be in the 70s
charge."
$4,61ll. PICK-4 $1 hox bet pays $192. Thursday and Friday, climbinginto the ails Saturday. Overnight '
"Tile management structure belows
will be In the~Thursdayand ,~
ing proposed for tbe space station
Friday
morningS and in the 60s ~
wtli .m akethatvery, verytlear," he
early
Saturd~y.
·
said. "It will be a strong manageVeterans Memorial
'·
ment structure located In Washing·
Admitted - Patricia Cleland,
ton that wtll he totally responsible Langsville; Roger Smith, Pome·
for the space station."
roy; Helen Handley, Pomeroy;
Fletcher said the reorganization Mayme Manning, Syracuse.
Disch~rged - Hattie Frederick,
will make space station management similar to that of the Patricia Cleland.
successful Apollo moon program. r------------1
help keep costs oown and help
maintain an already tight schedule.
Control of the space station
project had been centered at the
Johnson Space Center in Houston,
which will continue to play a major
role In the project's development.

OPEC...

'

't

United States pushes isolation of Libya
Under a series of executive
orders, U.S. economic involvement
with Libya - which amounted to $9
billion dollars In Libyan imports In
1981 - has virtually ended.
The U.S. actions are part of a
series of sanctions impesed against
Libya as a response to Libyan
leader Moammar Gadhafl's support of international terrorism.
The sharply reduced Income has
created austerity, economic disruption and some disaffection among
the Libyan people. the official said.
"If they (the Libyan people)
decide to chanw the government,
that will be O.K. by us," the cfficlal
said.

.

2 Sections, 12 Pages

Plains floods
force residents
to flee homes

'•

By JIM ANDERSON

•

1

•

GRANGE CEN'mNNIAL REOOGNITION - These 12 nien and
women, aD wlllt more than ill yetllll membership In lhe Gninge, were
honored at Monday nlgllt's eentermlal celebration of the lllelp Count)'
Pomona Grange at the Rod! Sprinp GranRe Hall. They are, front, left

••)oi ......, _....._ _ ,........... , ... _

enttne

.,

Gertrude t..oulse Humphrey, 92,
formerly of Coolville, died Tuesday
at the Arl\ngiDn Health Care Center
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Agriin Parkersburg.
culture
Secretary Richard Lyog, in
She was hom July 12, 1892 In
a
battle
to win back export markets
Coolville, a daughter of the late
He was born Oct. 23. 1918 in John and Ella Shanks Wise. She lost by American farmers. has
Racine, a son of the late Kelly and was a member of Rebecca Lodge trimmed the wheat prtce support
Alm.a ,s.yre y,!ol(e,,·He. waa em· aM the CooMUI&gt; united Methodist for 1987 below ·a dramatic cut made
ployed by the Reliance Electric Co. Church
for this year's crop.
•
in Ashtabula lor 36 years before his
will
compensate
&lt;taxpayers
Surviving are a son. Clarence
retirement in 1982. He was a (Shepl Humphrey, Jr., Coolville; a farmers for income lost in the
graduate of Racine High School and son and daughter-In-law, Edwin H. marketplace due to the lower price.
a veteran of World War II having and Mary Humphrey, Belpre;
As an example of the dramati·
served in the lOth Mountain Div- three daughters and sons-in·law, cally Increased importance of
Ision In Italy. He was a lite member EleaQlJr and OrLs Patton, Zanes· subsidies to farm income, the
or the Veterans of Foreign Wars, ville: · Clarience and Harold Agriculture Department said MonAshtabula, having served as com- Swisher, Athens; Nellie and Jack day that a farmer growing 72.5
mander of that organization In Bums, Parkersburg: 12 grand· acres or wheat next year would
1984-85.
children, several great · receive $6,117 from selling his crop
grandchildren, a niece and a plus $5,024 In subsidies.
Surviving are a son, R. Scott nephew.
Lyng said the 1987 price support,
Wolfe, serving in the ,Air Force at
Besides her parents, she was or price floor, will he $2.28 per
Jackoonvllie, Ark.; a stepson, preceded ln death by her husband, bushel, the lowest amount permit·
Raymond Hall, Easley, S.C.; two Clarence E. Humphrey, an infant ted by law and 12 cents lower than
brothers, Guy of Sandusky and daughter, a brother and a sister.
the 1~ price support, which went
Chestes (Sonny!, North Kinl!Svllie,
Into
effect June 1.
Services will be held at 11 a .m.
and three grandchildren; an uncle, Thursday at the White Funeral
Both figures are much lower than
Herbert Sayre of Racine, and Home In Coolville where friends the 1985 price support of $3.ll per
several cousins, some of whom maycallalldayonWednesday. The bushel, which priced American
reside in Meigs Cou nty.
family will b!&gt; present from 2 to 4 wheat out of many markets.
Se-rvices were held in Erie:
With this year's winter wheat
and 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday.
harvest under way and spring
wheat still growing, Lyng anoounced details of next year's
wheat program to comply with an
early · deadline specified by
'· CINCINNATI - A special 8 the increased number of Central Congress.
percent stock dividend reflecting Bancorporation shares resulting
Officials predicted the lower
·record earnings has been approved from the S percent stock dividend.
by the hoard of directors of Central
The latest stock dividend follows prtce as of June 1 will reverse the
!3ancorporation Inc., holding com- a three-for-two stoc~ split distrib- May agricultural trade detlcit, the
-pany of Central Trust Co.
uted Jan. 7 and a 5 percent stock first in 'l:l years. It was !he last
; ThP directors also declared a dividend paid one year earlier. It ts month of the old wheat price
regular quarterly cash dividend of , the eleventh such action since the
.37'h cents per share on ali shares company's founding in 1900. Also, Seek maniage licenses
.outstanding after the stock dlvi· Central Bancorporation ·s cash divi·
dend. Both dividends are payable dend has Increased in 24 of the last
Roger Lee Manley, Jr., 19,
July 8 to stockholders of record 26 years and has grown more than Middleport, and Marjortejo Smith.
,June 'l:l.
125 percent during the past10years. 17, Middleport.
This action will result in a 8
Central Bancorporation is a
Barry Woodrow Chapman, 21,
percent increaS(&gt; in cash dividends multi-bank holding company h~d· Rutland, and Krlstle Ann Maynard,
received by Central Bancorpora- quartered in Cincinnati with nine 18, Langsville.
tion stockholders.
affiliates: six Ohio banks, Including
The directors intend to mainlllin the $165 mlltlon Central Trust Co. of
a regular quarterly dividend of 37'h Southeastern Ohio, N.A., Marietta , Hymn sing Saturday
cents per share on outstanding a mortgage banking company, a
A hymn sing will be held
shares of the company during 198i. reinsurance company and a rea I
Saturday at 7 p.m at the Bur·
This translates into an annual estate holding company.
llngham &lt;:;ommunlty Church with
dividendo rate of $1.50 per share on
the Smith Family EvangPiistlc
Team to be the special singers. Ray
Continuf'll from page 1
Laudermllt, pastor, Invites the
public.
Roger K. Wolfe. 67, 4313 Route
193, Erie, Ohio, formerlY of Meigs
County, died June 7 at the Hamot
Medical Center in Erie.

~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 2, 1986

i

Squads answer three calls
Three calls were answ~red Monday by local ·unitS, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical SeJ:Vices reports. At 12:11 a.m.
Syracuse took Joyce Cleland !rom Fwrth St., to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 7:13a.m. took Raymond Justice from North
Third Ave., to Veterans Memorial and Pomeroy at 1:41 p.m. took
Helen Handley !rom Mulberry Ave. to Veterans Memorial.

looal briefs
PageS

.

Sentinel will not publish Friday

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�</text>
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