<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12878" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/12878?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-14T04:23:54+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43850">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/b6282e2eea2601f9c2b5b616e39efee0.pdf</src>
      <authentication>3349877485be5e2fe4e2d723a9297848</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="40409">
                  <text>·Tuesday. July 8,

Pometoy-Middleport, Ohio

Gas ·e~pert- says prices ·to remain low

Fire units .~··~.,f.. .f.~.
~~~~- ,,set
.. ,,.,. -·
'

-.,~"--

__

l"nB

.

. ._,

BJ R!(;K VANSANT

The Salem ToWIIsblp VO)jliit~r''Fire ·~1 wm .!JQJd Its
annual Ice cream social at the llrehoUse In S&amp;lem Center from n
a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday.
Besides h!lmemade Ice cream, the JIIWP will offer roast beet
sandwiches, hot dogs, potato salad, macaroni salad, bakEd beans,
pie and beverages.
.
The Shady River Shufflers c~rs wUI perform at 6:30p.m.

Mystery farm winner anoounced
Christopher Krawsczyn, 38479 Spen~rr Road, Pomeroy, Is the
winner of a $5 prize tor ldentlflcatlon of the Meigs County mystery
faJllll plcturp published on June 29 edition ot The Times-Sentinel.
There were 10 correct entries In the contest and the winner was
selected by lottery. Krawsczyn Identified the Jack Ervin Farm.
Salem Township, which Is owned by the Orten and Oris Roush and Is
under lease by Ervin.

Patrol cites Rutland resident
A Rutland woman was cited by the state hlgllway patrol for
driving left of the centPr line; resulting In a twCH:ar accident on
Rutland Tciwnshlp Road 58 Monday.
Glenda F. Richmond, 36, was southbound at 4:50 p.m. and
rpPOrtedly drifted left of center, striking a northbound car driven by
Donald W. Price, 31, Cheshire, according to the patrol's accident
rpPOrt. ' .
Richmond's vehicle eventually went Into a ditch farther down the
road, troopers said. Both cars were damaged moderatPiy.
.

Accident cuts electric service
Some. 70 to 100 subscribers of the Ohio Power Co. Wl're without
service from 11:30 p.m. Monday until 5:45a.m. today aftpr a utlllty

pole was struck by a vehicle In Naylors Run.
Pomeroy Pollee said a car driven by VIrgil CoUins, Pomeroy, had
struck the pole causing the outage. Collins Is charged with driving
under the Influence, hit skip and not having a driver's ll~rnse, pollee
said.

Crew fixing water line break
Practically .all of Pomeroy VU!age was without water Tui'Sday as
the rPSult of a break In a main llne near the Farmers Bank and
Savings Co. on WPSI Main Street.
Water !){'partment employees began working oo the IJllblemat J.
a.m. today and thel'P was m Indication as to when SErVIce wruld be
restored as of 10 a.m. today.

Couples file for marriage
Filing for maniage In Meigs County Probate' Cwrt were CUrtis
Dean Peters, 19, Pomeroy, and Ta1)1111Y Renee Lee, Pomeroy, and
Charles Jeffrey Knapp, ~. Langsville. and Mlchl'lll' Renee
Peterson. 17. Rutland.

CINCINNATI (UP!) -A gaso·
line expert predk;ts t~ price of gas
will remain fairly low the rest d. the
summer, ' but wUI go back up to
almost $1 a gallon by the end of the
year.
Mike Kunnen, president of the
Greater Cincinnati Gasollne Deal·
ers Association, said Monday that
consumers should enjoy low
chargPs while they can because oil
prtces constantly are being "fixed"
by · several countries and
companies.
•
Gas prices, which fell last winter
but Increased In the spring, have
been dropping slightly for the past
month. On Monday, gas throughout
Ohio was selling for about70 cents a
gallon. and In some areas slightly
IPSS than that.
"Prices should stay about the
same the !'PSI d. the summer," said
Kunnen. ''They can't go much
lower.
"By the end of the year, though,!
look for prtres to be back up to

'

between Ill cents and $1 a gallon."
"I think the consumer Is Slphlstl·
Altoough Kumen points out It's cated enough to know the fix Is oo,"
dltflcuh to predict gasoline prtces he said. "Unft&gt;rtunately, the consu·
very far Into the future, he has a
mer Isn't able to do anything about
good record as a prognosticator.
If. I've been trying to do lllmethlng
In February, for example, when about tt for 35 years and can't do 11.
gaswasselllngforOOcentsagallon,
"1bere's a oonsplracy among
Kunnen predicted the prtce would certallt corporations and certain
be 70 cents this summer. He W
l\S nations, and you know where that
rtght on target.
,_\ puts the American p!blic. The
Gas prices began. falling from '.,.,IIJ.ar.rlage of a company's and a
l'IIOre than $1 a gallon m December.
country's interi'Sts creati'S a pli·
By the end of March, prices had ..vale government of oil. That's the
dropped a total d 38 ct&gt;nts a gallon. fix."
But In AprU and May, prices
Kumen also noll'S that l~wrnak·
IncreasEd a total d. 15 cents.
ers llke to get Into the act during
"Prices never should have gone perlod'l dfalrly Jowga.sollneprlces.
up In April," contended Kumen.
"A state gasollne1 tax Increase Is
"Companies were just trying to' possible," said Kunnen. "K~tucky
recover from the rapid declines In just rnlsro Its state gas tax by five
the winter."
cents a gallon. It could happen In
In June, prices began to drop Ohio.
.
again. From Jull!' 7 thtough July 7,
· "Legislators ~ke to raise gas
the total drop was 12 cents a gallon. taxes· when the' prtce per g8Jiiin 1s
Kumen looks for prices to go down, so It doesn't look like there's
back up late In the year through the been an Increase."
cooperation of oil companies and
By Kumen's chart-keeping,
oll-tich nations.
here's the way gas prices· have

Revolt's leader will face charges
MANILA, Philippines rUPI) -A

An unidentified Aquino support.e r
"You cannot just arrPSt him,"
GoliZall'S said. "Charges must be at nearby Lull(&gt;ta park was mauled
filed."
by a mob rl. loyalists, but the
Gonzales' spokesman George evacuation was aherwlse peaceful.
Dee, said a suiJ.mlnlsterlal oommlt· witnesses said. One youth carrying
tee was gathering evidence on a hotel coffee pot was arrl'Sted.
Pollee found 13 Molotov cocktails
possible rebellion charges against
Tolentino.
In Perrier water bottles and were
Backed by several hundred searching the premises for 'lither
soldiers, Tolentino swore himself In Incendiary devices. Damage to the
as acting prPSident Sunday and hotel, regarded as one of the world's
formed a government whlll' Aquino finest, was Initially estJmated by its
was visiting a southern port city. He general manager, Franz Shutz·
seized the luxurtous Manila Hotel at man. at $000,(00.
About 300 loyalists attempted to
the edge of · Manila Bay and
declared it as his "seat of !'Plum to the hotel at midday. but
government."
ran away when pollee ftred shots
shots in the air.
Early Monday. 224 soldiers sur·
rendered, saying they had been led
Bane One buys firm
to believe they would be supporting
a coup by Armed Forces Chief Gen.
COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPI 1
Fidel Ramos and Defense Mlnlster
Oblo Extended Forcca.t
Bane One Corp. has purchased Juan Ponce Enrile, leaders of the
Thursday through Satunlay
HCL Ll'a51ng, a small office Feb. ~ revolt that drove Marcos
Fair Thursday and Friday, with a
equlpmmt leasing company with Into E'Xlle in Hawaii.
chance
of showers on Saturday.
about $95 million In assets. from
After Aquino gave the rebels a
Highs
will
range from the upper 70s
TIE Communications.
24·hour surrender ultimatum Mon·
to the middle 00s Thursday, climbHCL, based In Parslpanny, N.J .. day, Tolentlno left tix' hotel to ing Into the 8ls Friday and ranging
specializes In equipment valued at ll(&gt;gotiate with D.&gt;puty D.&gt;fense from the mid 80s to low 90s
under $Z&gt;,IIXI such as office oompu· Minister Rafael Deto. He never Saturday. Overnight lows wUI
ters, telepoone Interconnect sys· returned, signaling the collapse of range from the upper 50s to mid OOs
his attempted coup.
terns and copying machines.
early Thursday and In the 60s
The end came at dawn today
The closing of the agreement
Friday and Saturday tmmlngs.
followed a resumption of negotia- when :'iJ holdout lllldiers slipped out
SouUt Central Ohio
tions that had been terminated of the hotel's backdoor and were
Partly cloudy today, with highs In
JUll(&gt; 6.
I'SCOrted to a suburban army camp.
the
low 90s. Mostly cloudy tonight,
Robert Paulson, exreutlve vi~ Riot pollee armed with truncheons
with
a chan&lt;l' of showers and
moved
in,
driving
away
hundreds
of
prPSident d Bane One Leasing, said
thunderstorms
and a low In the low
Monday Bane One was attracted to clvUian Marcos loyalistsmcamped
70s.
Mostly
cloudy
Wronesday,
HCL by its personnel andoperatlon. at the lB·story building.
with a chanCl' of soowers and
thunderstorms and highs in the low
70s.
The probability of precipitation is
~percent today, 40 perc~nt tonight
and 50 percent Wednesday.
Surviving are two daughtprs and
Winds will be Ugh! and variable
Mary V. Annstrong
two grandchildrm.
today and tonight.
Metmrtal services werP held
Mary VIrginia Bing Armstrong, Monday at ·the First Community
77, Columbus, forml'riy of Pome· Church in Columbus.
roy, died July 4th at Mount Carm~l
CLEVELAND tUPli - Mon·
Medical Center In Columbus.
Grace M. Colwell
day's winqlng Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Mrs. Armstrong was ilrrnerly of
Funeral
services
were
h('ld
this
Dally Number
Pomeroy and was the daughte~ of
afternoon
for
Grace
Margaret
446
the late Dr. and Mrs. Byron Bing.
Colwell of Vinton, who died Satur·
PICK-4
She was a graduate of Pomeroy
day afternoon.
0038
High School, class of 1921, and of
Ohio Wesleyan University.
Services took place at the Ru·
Besides her parents, she was !land United Methodist Church,
preceded In death by her husband , with tix' Rev. Robert Mussman and
tix' Rev. C.J. Lemley officiating.
Warren.
Mrs. Colwell was bulied at Salem
Center Cemetery.
Arrangements were by McCoy·
Moore Funeral Home, VInton.
!Continued from Page 11
development of numerous breaks in
the water Unes, with Seyler report·
Admitted - Henry Cleland Sr.,
lng that one such leak on West
Pomeroy:
Anna Hart, Pomeroy;
Second Street, recently was caus·
ing the loss of 100,11Xl gallons of Walter Haggy Sr .. Rutland: Mar·
shall Slater, Albany.
water a day.
Discharged -Edith Sisson, Carl
Also attending till&gt; meeting was
Cou ncilmen Henry Werry. Absent Rair&lt;k:on, .James Hockman, Lucille
were Councilmen Bill Young and Pendleton, Robert Tyree. Donald
Room Air
Covert, Marshall Slater.
Bruct' Reed .
Conditioners

politician loyal to ousted ruler
Ferdinand Marcos faces charges
for leading a failed, 3t&gt;hour coup
attempt against President Corazon
Aquino, officials said today.
Charges will be flied against
Arturo Tolentino, Marcos's running
mate In .the fraud-tainted Feb. 7
election, unii'SS Aquino decides to
grant him "executive clemency,"
Just Ice Minister Neptall Gonzales
said.
·
Tolentino declined comment as
he was driven away by aides after a
meeting With Gonzales at navy
hrndquarles. He was not taken Into
custody.

dropped, Increased and then
dropped again In the past eight
months:
Dec. 13, down one eent. Dec. 19,
down one cent. Dec. 27, down one
cent.
Jan. 6, down one ¢ent Jan. 10,
down one cent. Jan. ~. down one
cent. Jan. 23, down two cents. Jan.
26, down two cents. Jan. 29, down
two cents.
Feb. 6, down ooe cent. Feb. 9,
down one cPnt. ·Feb. 12, down two
cents. Feb.l4, down twooents. Feb.
20, down three cents. Feb. 24, down
one cent. Feb. 26, down two cents.
Feb. 27, down two cents.
March 1, davin tWo cents. March
6, down one cent. March 8, down
two cents. March 11, do\VII two
cents. March 14, down two cents.
March 18, down two cents. March
21, down one cent.
Aplill2, up one cent. Aprll17, up
ooe &lt;i!nt. Aprlll9, up orie cent. April
25, up one cent. April 29, up three
cents.
May 1, up two cents. May 3, up
two cents. May 13, up two cents.
May 17, up one rent. May 25, up one
cent.
June 7, down one cent. June 11,
down one cent. Jull!' 14, down two
cents. June 18, down two rents.
June 20, down two cents. June 26,
down two rents. July 3, down two
cents.

•

at y
Vot.36, No .46

An entry of dismissal has been filed in the Meigs County OJmmon
Pleas Court In the action of the Farmers Bank and Savings Co.
against Ronnie Dale Holley, Middleport.

White Shrine meets Friday
Mary Shrine 37, Order d the White Shrln&lt;' d Jerusalem. wUI meet
Friday at the Pomeroy Masonic Temple. A practice will be !K&gt;Id at 7
p.m. with til&gt; regular meeting to follow at 8 p.m. Asilent auction will
be held following the meeting and rpfreshments will be served.

Area deaths

Star garden club plans luncheon
Members of Star Garden Club and gup,;ts will have a luncheon at
Dale's Restaurant, Galllpolls, Thursday, 1 p.m. The Jull!' meeting of
the club will be held at the home of Stella Adkins and Ruby Diehl.

Ohio Lottery

Chester trustees meet Friday
R('glliar m('('tlng of Chester Township Trustees will be held at 10
a.m. Friday at thr town haU.

Syracuse council meeting set

1

JUPY WILLIAMS

In case of accident or
illness. Auto-Owners
"Quick Start" Disability
Income Protection Insurance provides you with a
regular monthly income
for up to a year. Thai's
good to know.
That's why it 's also
good to know your independent Auto-Owners
agent.

Auto-Ow.."'r.t;

Vll'l

because of the inability to pay.
For example, If a teenager is
sexually active and desires to go
on the pill to keep from getting
pregnant but has no Income,
then her monthly supply of pills
are provided without charge.
As explained by Mrs. Jenltins,
before a method of contraception which requires a doctor's
prescription (not foam or con·
doms 1 then that individual is
given an Initial examination by
the doctor.
"But before that we do
complete education on the repro·
ductive process, we talk about
birth oontol metiDds, and discuss why the pelvic examination
is Important," she said.
, "Most of the time the exami·
nation Is what the patient is
worried about, so it's important
that she understand the impor·
tanre of that to her health. If's
really education, then examina·
lion, then education again on the
prescribed treatment or method
of birth control," she said.
Mrs. Atkins said that most
young women are not coming in
untll they have ll&gt;en sexually
active for six months, a year, or
more and what pushes them to
come Is usually a pregnancy
scare, or maybe they're coming
in for pregnancy tests. "The
idea that we are enticing young
women to be sexually active by
offering information about birth
control is just not a fact - the
fact Is that most have been
sexually active for many
months before they come in,"
She said.
•
About one-third of the more
than 000 new patients seen each
year at the Meigs Clinic are
unmarlied teenagers, some as
young as 14 or 15, and most all d
them are sexually active. Mrs.
Jenkins said.
She said that it's not unusual
for a parent to acoompany the
teenager,•or to call In and make
arrangements for the girl to
rome in. "Most of the time it's

A hymn sing wll be held Friday at 7:30p.m. at the United Gospel
Mission Church, Bald Knob. Larry Van Meter and the Narrow Way
Singers will have special music . The public Is Invited to attend. '

Veterans Memorial

Bible .~chool continues
The Racine Church or tix' Nazaren(' Vacation Bible school wUI
continue through Friday, 6:30 to 9 each evening.
Them(' Is :walking with .Jesus" and Fern Grimm Is the dirt'Ctor.
The school 1s held at fix' church and tix' VBS program will be
pi'('S{'ntro Sunday at the church after a brlr!Sunday school Sf'S.•ionat
9:30a.m. The public is invltro to attend.
·

•

ht;f,..(nt

Room Ajr
Conditioners

We Are Open 49 Hours
Church slates revival services

A Week

' Weekend revival scrvic&lt;'S will be held at the Poplar Ridge Church
'lbursday through Sunday at 7 each evening. The p!bllc 1s Jnvitro.

To Serve You!

Dance in Rutland Friday

STOP BY ONE OF .OUR CONVENIENT
LOCATIONS IN MASON,·
POINT PLEASANT.OR NEW HAVEN
CHANCES ARE WE'LL BE OPEN.

A dan('(' will be held at the Rutland Civic Crnter Friday from 9 to 11
p.m. Music will be provided by Flashback and admission wUI be $2
for singles and S3 for couples.
'

Emergency calls answered
Six calls werp answered by local units Monday, the Meigs County
Emf'rgmcy Medical Service reports.
At 1:18 a.m. Middleport took Tiffany Allen from Beech Street t&gt;
Veterans Mernortal Hospital: Pomeroy at 9: Ot-a.m., took Anna Hart
from Rock Springs to Veterans Mernortal Hospital: at 12:14 p.m.,
Pomeroy went to the VIllage Green Apartments lor Mtchael Smith.
taken to Holzer Medical Center; Syracuse at 12: 54 p.m., took
Marilyn Davis from the Pomeroy Health Care U&gt;nter 10 Holzer
Medical Centc;or; Pomeroy at 8:10 p.m. took Marshall SlatPr 1\-om
U.S. 33 to Vetetans-Mernortal; at 9:11p.m., Pomeroy took lticllard
Knupp from Union Avmue to Veterans Memorial Hosplllit. Reports
had It that Knupp had been struck by a car. However, Pomeroy
police saW! that the rpPOrts were not lru('.

'~

., .•

• •

~itl))(iol Room Air

Conditioners

Installation • 2-way Alr
~§~~~~~~~:;
t I• J-speedFan •Fan

Wlltl·f.,.{.,r

LOllY &amp; INSTALLMINT HOURS
Monday thru Wadna1day ...................91110 a.m. To 3100 p.m.
Thunclay ... ........................................... 9100 a.m, Ta 12 noon
Prlday......... 9tOO a.m. To 3100 p.m.- 5130 p.ni. To 7100 p.m.
Saturday...................................... .........9t00 a.m. To 1100 p.nt.

.

I

fast~nstlltaliOn

Thermoslat • c0MFOFIT
GUAFIO•• Adjua&amp;lbll
Contmlto
•lnsta·Mount
• IOf
ma.nta.nthecomlortJevetyouserect

DRIVI-IN &amp; WALK.IJP WINDOW HOURI
Monclay thru Thurl4ay........................ ll30 • ...,. To SIOO P""·
Prlday ................................................... IJ30 a.m. To 7100 p.m.
Saturclay ............................................. ·1•30 a.m. To 1100 p.m.

24.Hour Dapo11tory &amp; Free Bank By Mall.

PEOPLES BANK
&gt;

· ELB~RF.ELDS

not a big secret, but if a teenager
doesn't want anyone to know.
then. yes, we do offer birth
control as a confidential service," she said.
In talking about Plan ned
Parentoood, Nancy Jeffers.
coordinator for the agency, said .
that "the best thing we can do Is
teach." With Meigs County's 22
percent rate of teenage pregnan·
cles, Mrs. Jeffers was emphatic
in her comments about the
Importance of sex and birth
control education. While she
admitted that some schools
don't want to even hear the
words "birth control." others
have opened their eyi'S to the
problem and are asking for
speakers and films or for open
counseling SPSsions.
Mrs. Jeffers said also that the
agency Is seeing more young

"'
OU

We. Home. Car. Buslnm.
1 11
0

Pomeroy

Hymn sing slated at church

MAKING A DIFFERENCE - Plwmed parenthood is one of the
Ingredients for happier families. Childrm deserve to be wanted,
nourished, nUltured and loved, and parents are entilled to decide
when to have chUdrm and how many they can care for. Plwmed
Parenthood Is making a difference for women ol chlldhearing age ~
offering access to birth conlrollnfonnatlon and other services to help
In maldn1 wise dPClslom about having children. Here Ferndora
Story, R.N., a RSVP volunteer, left, and Rita Jenkins. LJ'N, in
charge of the Meigs office, confer on a patient chart.

men take a responsibility for
birth control by either coming in
to pick up condoms or bringing
their girlfriends in for clinic
visits.
As for unplanned and un·
wanted pregnancies, Planned
Parmthood outlines opti:Jns
without making any recommen·
da lions. Information on adoption
procedures as well as abortion is
provided but appointments with
agencies for either procedure
are never made by Planned
Parent mod.
Anytime there is an unwanted
pregnancy, there is trauma , and
it doPS n'l make any diffl•rence
how its resolved, the traum a is
still there, Mrs. Jenkins
ex plained.
Women need to have children
for the light reasons, she said.
!Continued on Page 111

•K

fnsumnce

r----:--------~====:"':":":m:':':Y'::":":·==-=

Syracuse Village Council will meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the
municipal building.

·Room Air
Conditioners

2 Sections, 16 Pages

COMMUNIVERSrrY BAND . COMING - Ronald P. Sorelarelli,
conductor ol the 1986 Ohio University CA!rnmunlversl&amp;y Band, a group ot
about 30 musicians who wW perfonn In Pomeroy, Jub' 17, at .7 p.m. on
lhe . parking lot, was speaker at Tuesday's Pomeroy Olamber o1
Commerce meeting. Here he'a pictured clscu!lllng details ollhe coneert
wHh BUI Nease, Chamber president, left.

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Firemen contain
phosphorous leak
in Dayton area

Planned Parenthood
making a difference
for Meigs residents~ .

Ohio weather

Dismissal entry filed in court

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Wednesday. July 9, 1986

Copyrighted 1986

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
Planned Parenthood, marking its 15th anniversary offamlly
planning services in Meigs
County, is making a difference
- in that the program Is
providing familli'S and unmar·
ried teenagers access to birth
control information and related
services which help them make
wise decisions about having
children.
Children desNve to be
wanted, nourtshed, nurtured ,
and loved .
And parents arc entitled to be
able to decide when and how
many children they can care for.
As explained by Kay Atkins.
execu tive director of Planned
Parenthood of Southeast Ohio,
every individual has the right to
ex~rcise his or her own moral
principles with regard to repro·
duct iv(' choices.
Planned Parenthood's role Is
not one of making those choices
for patient s, but of, providing
services relating to family planning. she said.
In Meigs County, Rita Jen·
klns. LPN, has charge of the
office which is located In the
medical building across from
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The clinic volunteer is Ferndora
Story, R.N.. of the Retired
Senior Volunteer Program of the
Meigs County Council on Aging,
and the clinic physician is Dr.
D.E. Villaneuva.
Services provided at the clin ic
are for anybody In the chUdbearlng years, and include
information and education on
birth control methods and the
dispensing of supplies by the
nursing staff: and pelvic exami·
nations. prescribed treatment
for infections, pap tests, annual
checkups, fitting for diaphrams
and IUDs by the physician.
Ali servici'S are provided on a
sliding fee scale determined by
the family or individual's in·
come, but no one is turned away

•

By RICK VANSANT
MIAMISBURG , Ohio (UPIJ Firefighters early today co ntinued
spraying water on one of seven
freight cars that derailed, spread·
ing a toxic phosphorous cloud over
the area and forcing 15,00) people to
nee tix'ir homes.
"We have the poosphorus contained but there is no solution as of
yet," Miamisburg Development
Director Ron Parker said early
today. "All we can do is keep
pulling water on it.
"It bums when it touches air,"
Parker said. "That's why we're
keeping water on it . We're just
going to contain it until we decide
what to do and that probably won't
be until morning. Chemists and
railroad peopiP will decide what to
do after it gets light."
More than 15,000 people were
evacuated from Miamisburg and
nearby communities, and City
Manager Ilcnnis Kissinger declared a state of emergency in
Miamisburg, a Dayton suburb, at 7
p.m. EDT Tuesday, about 21;2 hours
after the accident.

Seven hospit ais in Ill&gt; area
rrported treating at least 138 people
for minor injurtes. most for skin,
eye or lung irlitatlon, and 11 were
admitted for observation.
When the Baltimore &amp; Ohio cars
derailed, one of t!K&gt;m began leaking
tix' toxic phosphorus. which ex·
pioded into flam es spontaneously in
the hot, muggy weather. sending
the poisonous cloud over the arra.
After consulting with EPA o:fl .
cials, firefighters began pouting
water at tix' rate of 1,600 gallons a
minute on the fire at mid.f'Venlng
and succeeded In haltingthP spread
of tix' cloud.
Parker said about two·thirds of
thr poospoorus in til' :!Jl,OOO.gallon
tank car escapro In the fire. The
remaining one·thlrd of til&gt; poospiJo.
rus remained in the la nk.
Phosphorus, a white, waxyc hem·
icat. spontaneously ignites whl'll tix'

air is temperature is 86 degrees
Farrenheit or higher and will bum
in water. Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency spokeswoman
Patricia Madigan said. The
weather in Miamisburg Tuesday
afternoon was hot and steamy.
Phosphorous is "highly toxic by
inhalation, ingestion or skin con·
tact," Madigan noted.
Parker said he had "no idea"
when tre evacuees would be
allowed to return to their homes.
Officials also were concerned
about a second derailed car that
conlained sulfur.
" ...The nearness of the sulfur (to
the phosphorus) could be a problem
if they get together," Parker said,
adding that the sulfur apparently
was not leaking.
Three or the other cars that
derailed contained new automo·
bill'S, which were believed des·
troyed In the fire. Another car
contained n('wsprlnt and the seventh contained animal fat , some rl.
which leaked into a nearb)' stream
and caused "a small" fi sh kill.
Parker said the leaked animal fat
posed no threat to drinking water.
Gov. Richard F. Celeste toured
the area late 1\II'Sday and held a
news conference after being briefC'd
by local officials .
"I'm glad people are alive and
well and that we haven't had a
gteater tragedy, but I'm also
angry," Celeste said. "We should be
far more cautious in how we handle
mat erials that are dang12rous to our
citizens.
"This underscores the validity of
a community's light to know when
dang12rous chemicals are presmt."
he said.
Tim Hill of Miamisburg, a
motorist who was driving parallel
to the tracks when the accident
occurred. said, " !The train) mu st
have been going about 00 or 65
(mphl, and then it derailed. It
threw rocks and stones everv ·
where. It was an unbPUevabic
sight. "

Communiversity Band plans concert

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
He spoke of -tllr influence of
Sentinel Staff Writer
music, particularly marches and
Ronald P. Socclarelli, conductor patriotic selections, in making
of the 1986 Ohio University Commu- people feel good about themselves
niversity Band which will present a and their coun,try, and commented
concert on the Pomeroy parking Jot on the Incredible turnaround in
at 7 p.m. Thursday, July 17, American prtde In the )liSt decade.
discussed the revival of community
Members were reminded that the
spirit and the role of bands at con&lt;l'rt is lree. Those attending are
1\Iesday's meeting of the Pomeroy asked to take a lawn chair.
Chamber of Commerce.
Also meeting with the Chamber
Meeting for a luncheon at Trinity was Kl'nt Francis or Captain D's in
Church. Socciarelli commended Gallipolis. He outlined plans for a
Bank One, sponsors' of the concert, fish try to lake place on the parking
and complimented the attending lot !rom 4to 7 p.m.the same evening
business reprpsentatlves for PJI· as the band concert.
tlng time and effort Into the project. , Francis said that Captain D's will
the same positive attitude which. he move in a concession trailer and
said, is bringing communities wUI hi&gt; offering an "all you can eat"
across the nation alive.
mea l as well .as regular menu
Introduced by BUI Nease, presi· items. Advance tickets fo r the "all
dent, the conductor gave a com· you can eat" dinner will be sold by
mentaryontheJuly4~rlebrationin
Chamber members and will be
New . York. dPSCrlblng It as a available at the Chamber of
stirling example of the pride Commerce Office In the court·
Americans have in the country. the oouse. Aduh tickets will be $4 while
rPSurgence of patriotism and the tickets for chUdren under 12 will be
workings of the free enterprise $2.
system.
Francis described the roncesslon

setup · In Pomeroy as Oil{' for
Captain D's visibility more than
profit and noted that 15 p&lt;'rcenl of
sail'S under $l,IIXI and :!5 percent of
sail'S over $l,OCO will go the
Chamber.
The Chamber will lx' responsible
for providing tables and chairs for
the serving area.
A farmers market is also being

planned for the afterooon and
evening , and Ill&gt; Pomeroy Bend
Merchants Association announced
that stori'S will remain open untU 7
p.m.
There was a brief discussion ori
Heritage Weekend with a general
consensus Ihat the downtown acflv.
itles were successfuL .

Celeste unveils 6-year construction plar;t
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP))- Gov.
Rlchard F. CeiPSte has submitted a
$1.3 bllllon long.range capital construction plan to the Ohio General
Assembly, lncludlnl; $!m .million
for Improvement of higher education facilities through 19!12.
The state's stx-year capital plan
Is required by law to he updated
every two yPars.
The one released Tui'Sday Includes the $585 mUllon worth of
projects already approved by the
General Assembly for 1987·88 and
another Jist of recominendatlons
for \he next four years.
Among the new projects envlslooed by the CelPSte administration
from J.988.92 are a $25 mUUon
Maumee
~e. a S6 million

,,

Bar

Dayton Performing Arts U&gt;nter,
and a $14.9 million replacement for
the welding engineering building at
Ohio State University.
Also Included among the long.
range plans are $3 mlliion for a
student services bulldl!¥l at Akron
University, $7.5 million tlr renova·
lion of ·Baldwin Hall at the
University of Cincinnati, $18.3
milllon lbr an addition to the
biological sclen~rs buDding at Ohio
State, $7 million lbr the renovation
ct Fenn Tower at Cleveland State
University. and $1.7 mUilon for
renovation of the University of
Toledo aeldhouse.
It Will be 191!8 hefore the General
lwembly consldets the next twoyPar segment ot.the captfal ~an . If .
I

.

Q&gt;lestc&gt; is not governor, the plan
may be !'PVtsed.
"1be six-year capital pfan re·
fleets a comri11tment to Ire economic future of Ohio In a way that Is
financially prudent," the governor
said In a letter accompanying the
document.
The packagp Includes $441 mll·
lion wortli ·d projects tor fiscal
1989-00 that were part of the
governor's last six-year plan released In 1984.
The new )Xlrtlon Is $323 million
worth of projects planned for
1991·92, Including $2!13 million on
Ohlo's· oollege and university
campuses.
' WWiam J. Shkurtl. director d the
state Of!lce d. Budget and Manage-

ment. pointed out the 1991·92
allocation Is deliberately small so
more proj\'/Cts may be added later.
Shkurti !iald the projects can all
bt&gt; finan~rd under . the existing
revenue structure. which will grow
with the economy.
Ohio Slate University would
receive $44.5 million worth d
projects In the third two-year
period, all of tt for general
renovations and building
replacements.
The University of Cincinnati Is
tlckl'led for $39.8 million In the third
biennium, including the final $'ll.1
mllllon for compteti:Jn of ail ambu·
latory care facUlty for the medical
school.

BIG BUcKs - The punch proYided by Tbe Ohio Power~. and the
Southem Ohio Coal Co. lo the OOOIIORIJ ol Meigs C~ was
emphas~ Tuesday when real eetate IMes were paid for tile la~~t half
of U185 at n counly treasurer's olflce. Plclured from the left are Ron

Ash, local Ohio Power Co. m1111acer, pa.yinl $729,225.11; ,Treasurer
George Collin!, and rtpt, AI IUBard, superlnteulent of Meigs Mine 2,
paylnl $109,458.31.
'
•'
.,
1

•

�'

'

The Daily

Commentary'
lll Court Street

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

l:&gt;lmR!
~v

..,....,.,.,d.=

&lt;""T"&gt;.....o.._

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, ,JK
News Editor
AMEMBER of The United Press InternationaL Inland Daily Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE'ITERS OF OPlNION are welcome. They should be less than

JC(I

words

long. All letters are subject toed lt ln g and nrust bE's~nEd with name, address and
telephone number . No unsignOO letters will be publishl:'d. Lett ers should be in

good taste, addressing is sues, not pPrsonalltles.

The Lighter Side

A state's right

'•

By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Sun Bell prldemaybea powerfulemolionbul I
: remind tbe honorable senators that America has 49 other states besides
New Mexico.
When Sen. Pete Domenici of Albuquerque introduces a resolution
. putting tbe majesty of the United States behind "New Mexico Is a State
Day," it raises more questions than it answers.
For one: Do we also need a "Massachusettes Is a State Day," an "!Uinois
Is a State Day," an "Alaska Is a State Day," a "South Carolina Is a State
Day" and so on down the line?
I certainly hope not, for it might mean the Senate would have little time
for anything save approving resolutions.
The Domenici resolution, as duly noted in the Congressional Rl'cord,
"was considered and agreed to" on the same day the Senate adopted a
resolution designating a "Nat ional Nuclear Medicine Week."
That shows you how busy senators have been this year.
Questions about New Mexico's statehood were ra ised by a Treasury
official in a letter published here, incici&gt; nta lly, on the same day that news of
"insider" trading at the Commerce Department came to tight.
Could there be any profit in knowing in advance that the Treasury
Department was about to question whether New Mexico was really a part
of the United States?
You ca n draw your own conclu sions abou t that.
Anyway, under a letterhead of the Bureau of the Public Debt, David
Cargo, a former governor, was told to send in two forms "if you are not a
citizen of lhP United States, but a citizen of New Mexico."
In reply. Cargo insisted that New Nexico had bt&gt;&lt;&gt;n part of the United
States sincp it was admitted to the Union in 1912.
Although a spokesman was quoted as saying the Treasury lett er was a
mistake. I personally am inclined to go along with the [X)S it on taken by the
federa l. government
Cargo may not be aware just how lucky he was.
The ex-governor could have been ordered to show up for a tax aud it ,
bearing all pertinent documents and records.
· It was "Section 1441 of the United States Internal Revenue Code ri.19&gt;l,
as a mended" that apparently brought Cargo to the Treasury's attention in
the first place.
If the Internal Revenue Service. a branch of the Treasury Department,
ruled that New Mexico was not a state for income tax purposes, would he
stW have objected?
Anyone whose address "Is in the New Mexico" Is automatica lly suspect.
I should think, and certainly Cargo was poorly served by his res[X)nse
He noted tha t New Mexico "is located equidistan t bPIWP!'n Texas and
Arizona" and that "Colorado borders on the oorth ."
While Ca rgo , a lawyer by trade, might be geographically correct, f
certainly would hate to be a defendant in a tax case with him choosing the
character witnesses.
Texas and Colorado would be a !rrang~&gt; choice li:Jr co n·oooration. and
Arizona, which also was granted. statehood in 1912, might give biased
testimony. Or at least its ev1denC'C' could be attacked on those grounds on
appPal.

Berry's World

/r-----.
ASK ABO/IT
bUR

IJOMlSTIC

WIMP
TOtJRS

•

Today in history
_,

Perez hit ·cinches second Reds ·victory

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, July 9, 1986

Majors

Lesson of Len Bias._____W_ill_iam_F._B_uc_kley_._Jr.

The Daily Sentinel
'
~~

1· ··

Today Is Wednesday, July 9, the !90th day of 1986 with 175 to follow.
The moon is moving toward Its first quarter.
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
The evroing stars are Mercury, Venus and Sa turn.
Those born on this date are under the sign r:i. Cancer. They include Elias
Howe, Inventor of the sewing machine, in 1819: historian Samuel Eliot
Morison in 1887; actor-singer Ed Ames In 1927 tage 59); actor Richard
Roundtrre in 1942 (age 44); and athlete-turned-actor O.J. Simpson in 1947
(age 391 .
On this date in history:
In 1900, Australia entered the British Olmmonweahh.
In 1943, American, Canadian and British forces invaded Siclly during
World War II.
In 1956, Bill Haley and the Comets' "Rock Around the Clock" hit Number
1 on Blllboard magazine's best-seller n!COrds chart, marjdng what some
consider -the beginning ol the rock 'n' roll era.
In 1900, Soviet Premier Niklta Khrush::hev threatened the United States
with rockets If American forces attempted to oust the Castro communist
regime from Cuba.
,
In 1982, a Pan Am Boeing 727 Jetliner crashed in Kenner, La., after
takeoff from New Orleans. In the second worst U.S. air disaster to date, .154
people died, eight of them on the ground.
In 19lfi, Penthouse and Playboy magazines both featured nude photos of
Madonna, made when the rock star was a struggling New York artists'
model.
"A thought tor the day: Historian Samuel Eliot Morison wrote, "If the
Ainerican Revolution had produced oothlng oot the Declaration rt
Independence, it YjOUid have been worth while.''

The death b:om cocaine of the'
basketball player Len Bias was inevitably - the subject of talkshow discussion last week, including the David Brinkley program.
The question was asked in effect:
Who killed Len Bias?
And George Will, a panelist on the
show, answered quickly and
acutely that Len Bias killed Len
Bias. Well, someone objected, is
that exactly accurate? Didn't The
System kill Len Bias?
How's that again? Well, The
Systell) says that drug selling is
illegal. Drug selling nevertheless
goes on. Therefore, if Len Bias was
able to buy cocaine, then doesn't it
follow that The System was gullty
of non-performance, therefore The
System killed Len Bias~
The syllogism is supPrficially
attractive, but begs certain questions, among them that an individual cocaine user doesn't know the
ex tent of the toxic impact of a single

drawn by the reader, on completing
sniff of cocaine on hi• constitution.
George Will gave an example of the story, Is that k 5 !X! fer In New
what cocaine can do, citing our old
York City to sell cocaine than It Is to
friends the rats. It apperars that a
walk across' Central Park. " If you
curious doctor put a rat in a wooden
ruy, sell or carry drugs on the
box. At one end of the box ws plain
streets of New York, the odds are
old food, at the other, cocaine.
overwhelmingly in yrur favor that
Having nibbled tbe coke, ' the rat
you wlll oot go to prison, even If you
attempted to get" more of it, and
are arrested.''
died of starvation in thP effort.
Operation Pressure Point, a
The implied thesis here Is that
major effort to rid ,the Lo~r East
some human beings would starve to Sici&gt; rt drug dealing, has resulted in
death (or kill! rather than forsake
17,761 arrests for drug dealing. The
their dose of coke. Georg~ Will's
result• Some 476 sentenoos. of a
conclusion was less than compellyear or more in prison. "We have
ing. It is that when the Jaw says to · some people arrested lB or :!1 times,
you, you cannot take cocaine, the
and they're back on the streets."
law ought to mean it. Toughen up
With the acquiescence of the
the sanctions.
· judges? You have to bP kidding.
The following day, reporter Jo "The judges," comments Rae
Thomas of The New York Times Downes Koshetz, wiD supervises
published a depressing story head- the screening of some of the cases
lined , "Odds Heavily Favor Le- that come into the Special Narcotniency For Drug Dealing in the ics Prosecutor's Office, "rangP
City." The regrettable conclusion from apathetic to downright abusive on drug cases ... At the plea

NATJON..U. lEAGUE

....

appointment to the U.S. Court of Court watcher told us it would have
Appeals in Washington, D.C. which been wiser li:lr Pierce to have
faces a vacancy with the nomina - accepted the offer of an appellate
tion of Judge Antonin Scalia to the judgeship, which historically has
been a solid steppingstone to the
Supreme Court .
Pierce declined the offer and highest court. Even a brief tenure
joked to Thurmond that he was on tbe appellate bench would make
holding out for a sea t on the high him an attractive choice for the
court. Neither Pierce ~ his press Supreme Court - espec ially if he
spokesman would CdRI,II:Ient, but had breezed through . his earlier
sou=s told our associate Lucette Senate confirmat bn, as PierC('
Lagnado that Pierce's lighthearted could have been expec ted to.
At !&gt;!, Pierce has more than
response cloaked a serious hope
ethnic
and political considerations
Iha I he will get a Supreme Court
nomination. His decision to decline going for · him . His intrllcctual and
the appPlla te judgeship, therefore, professional background is
distingu~hed .
is clearly a gamble.
The White House certainly has a
He grduated Phi Beta Kappa
"short list" of possible replace- from Cornell in 1947, and from the
ment s ready for the next high rourt law school there in 1949. He served
vacancy, and Pierce may not be on as a !li-s t lieu tenant with the AllT\y's
It . Thurmond may havp teen trying criminal investiga tion division durto signal Pierce that an appeals ing World War II.
court Sl'at was the best be could
During the Elsenholll'r adminishope for anytime soon.
tration, Pierce tecame the first
One knowledgeable Supreme black to serve as assistant to an

I\ON· \'ork
Montrrul .,
Phllack&gt;lphia
Sl loul~
C'hl&lt;'atO
Pltclillll)(h

baralning stages, they ask. 'Why
did you bring me this garbage?"
Now the complaint In New York
City is as one would expect: They
need more judges. Therejustaren't
enough of them around to try all the
cJ&gt;ft'ndants, with the result that they
get off on probation, and resume
selling drugs. If we had more
judges, of course we sould have
more convictions. And If we had
more convictions, we wruld n!l'd to
build more jails. Having done oo,
would we then put an end to the
drug problem?
Probably not, and for two
r€11sons. The first is that although
the odds might Increase that the
seller will go to jall, his odds would
remain favorable. If we read that
there were 17,761 arrests in a given
year, we must assume that there
were - what, 10 times as many
legal infractions? If by superhuman effOrt one raised from the
existing one-half r:i. 1 percent (your
ctirrrot chanoo r:i. landing in jail If
you deal coke I to, say, 20 percent,
would the flow of coke significantly
diminish? Probably not. Why? Ask
that rat .
, This does not call for strategic
ci&gt;spair over the problem of
discouraging the use of cocaine.
The death of Len Bias may have
saved a thousand Jives. The use of
acid is severely diminished tecause
young people became alert to Its
eccentric toxicity. We learned over
the weekend that AIDS is now so
enci&gt;mic in Haiti that it is teing
transmitted as much by heterosex uals as by homosexuals. It Is hard to
imagine that . conventioneers in
Port au Prince would heavily
patronize the whorehouses there. It
is the general knowledge of the
danger of drugs that will dampen
the curiosity to taste them , not
fustian legal measures.
An enlightened society would
focus its energi es In two directions.
The first is to advertise the awful
dangers of drugs, the !a'Ond Is to
help those who slipped to reform .
The proposal of rrore oops, more
judgPs and' more jails will do very
little other than to continue to
subsidize a criminal subculture.

Panama is different from most of no interest in the Cuban economic
model and on numerous occasions
. It is not gripped by crisis and has made himself useful to U.S. interests.
the appearance, at least by regional A strange fish.
standards, of prosperity. Panama
Whatever his ideololgical inclinaCity is a consumer paradise of duty- tion , Torrijos ran Panama witlt fi free shops stuffed with imported nesse and considerable popular apgoods, a mecca for visitors from proval until his death in a 1981 plane
countries where shortages are the crash. His eventual successor was
rule.
Noriega , a very different fish. Finesse
Arrival there from almost any oth- is not Noriega's forte . A heavy hand
er point in the area can be a cultural is .
shock. I wrote something to that efWhich brings us to !984 when, unfect not long ago when I flew in from der pressure from Washington, which
battered Managua.
was eager·to keep the tide of democBut you can't always go by appear- racy rising in Latin America, Noriega
ances. Panama's military chief, Gen. agreed to hold Panama's first elecManuel Antonio Noriega, is now being lions since 1968. The winner was Ar·
fingered as a drug-trafficker, gun- nullo Arias, the same man who bad
runner, money-launderer, election- been ousted by Torrijos. But in the
rigger and possible double agent. And vote counting, the military's candithat could be just for starters.
date, Nicolas Ardito Barletta, got the
Actually, most of this has been presidency. He didn't hold it long. He
known or rumored for some lime. The crossed Noriega on a sensitive issue
Wall Street Journal had a low-key and was ordered to resign.
piece on the subject _in April. But , Which brings us more or Jess up to
when the New York Ttmes splashed date. Whether the charges now being
an expose across Its front page for made against Noriega are or are not
several days runnmg - and embar- substantiated is incidental to PBllarassed administration officials reluc- rna's real problem: And tltal is contantly confirmed the allegations - tinuing military rule with American
the story became news.
connivance.
On the surface, it would appear to
Q tl ed h tit
be merely anotner case 01 IUK,ll· ltll'ta,
ues on t e o er day on Pana·
large-scale corruption, scarcely un- rna, a· discomfited George Shultz acknown among U.S. client states. Re- knowledged tbe fraudulence of the
member Ute Philippines? But Ute real 1984 elecllon but said the_admilllslraissue here Is something more disturb- llo~ went along because ,t,l was P~na­
lng. Or should be.
rna s bWilness, not oun: We don t go
It Is military rule, the crippling at- arou~d .. Ute world certUylng
fiictlon of most countries to our south. electtons.
Panama, despite ·appearances, Is anyBut Mr. Secretary, 'we did certUy
thing but immune.
that election. The miscount was
Let's back up to 1968, when a duly scarcely complete before Presidentelected civilian president Arnulfo elect Barletta was on a plane to WashArias was ousted Ia a mlllljlry coup lngton for an .official visit, In effect
led by Gen. 0mar Torrljos. Torrljos Is certified ·as our man. And, In effect,
a lutrd one to peg. A chum of Fidel we were thereby certlfylng tbe man
Castro and an· early tan of Nlcara- who gave Barletta the job, and the
gua's Sandlnlst.u, he nevertlteless bad system that mad~ it all posaible.
its neighbors.

'

,

W I. Prt. GB

lt 69ti 44 Jli 500 ll !IJ
J'} .1() - ~ 15'h
.'\:l ~' .4ll Z2 '

j5

:n "''

.....

4tH 22

.m

11 f1

22~

Hou ston

15

S11n Dl'llQ
All&lt;lnW

t'l
41

Jt! ~ ~0 .5111 2

~

~2

4~

Cincinnati
n tl .-Jti.l
Los i\nl:f'lro. '
Ti 4tl .4&lt;16
'IUI'May's ft.Nlltt~

-

~

lil'l

H

F1!11adr!J:lhl ot 1', AtliUllil ~

\to'f'~ay·, Guntt~

l

1LaCUM&gt; S.l1. J:~ p.m.
Hooston 1Kn,ppprr IO-+i1 at Mon1m1i
I Youman s 1\-!h. 7: fl'l p.m
PIU~rlfh I Bidrekl ~ - ~1 at Sa n OIE'f.?U
1~cCuUrn; 4·21, lO:m p.m.
St LouiS 1Mattrw s4·1or AumsHtat Lo~
· i\m(t•lq;, !Valt'l121.1l'!a IQ.61. 10:.\'\ p.m
'llmr'!ldii.Y'sGame~~

PUI!btf'J!:h at San Frll!k' L'C'O
St l.uui~ ill San Dii'j.'O
i\thmt11 at NN.· York. n~S:h l
rtnrlnnall u1 MoniiT'Ill. nl~hl
PhlladPiphit~ at Hou ston . niJ,!hr
fllic Jgo al Los An~dNO. . nil'(hl

1\MERICAN lEAGUE

""' "
:•

L

.\:1 :.1!+

... -

Po . GB

'"l3 .!7. ""'"'iTl '
'

.. "

+I

Baltlmorr
Toronto
Mll~~&gt;" llUkl'r

" ""
"
"""

Dl·troil

~~

Cu lHomia

j~

Tf?la ~

.17

311

.

1.,

Kiln.~a~ fi t~

.l i

~£

MinJl('Sofi.l

"f)

~7

~·il tllr

I&gt;

~9

Oakli!nd

:r2 ;.1 ..li6

.-WI
Hli
0-l

j24 Hll..,,
w~

U

l mUn~!!­

1 ~I IN ~

7:l'ipm

NN· Yot·k ITM'-"ksbu!'" ~.11 at Tl'11a ~
tCwm.ln "-Ill 11: 1.'&gt; ~ . m
II.IIUmon• oHnn1 i .1-111 ar Kansa~ \it\ .
i.lufk .';tm I 1;, I&lt; ··;,11 m

11anwlttY'" (Jamf!oo
flll"ltmt ;1! Kan,.l ~ \ ·111 Ri,:!h l
Sf'anlr ut Mllwaukl'l·. nigh t
T(')(a~ at C'lr•wli.l!ld. nlj!ht

lHiilmntu at Bos!On. nl'" ht
Oakland 111 Turonto, nl~ht
~- York at Mlni"W'SOta . niJ:!hl
Rli!IIT\0((' ut CllicaRO. nlf,:! ht

facing trial
NEW ORLEANS tUP!) - ThE'
four remaining defendants accused
in tbe Tulane basketball sports
brlbPry seandal that resulted In the
ll!rmlnatlon of the program must
stand trial, District Attorney Harry
Connick has decided.
The key d£'fendant in the 1985
case, former star forward John
"Hot Rod" WUUams, was acquitted
Jultl' 16 during a retrial on chargt&gt;s
he accepted drugs and money for
shaving points at two games in
February 19!6.
Williams and eight others were
indicted last year on charges of
fixing tlr outcome or games
a·gainst Memphis State and Southern Mississippi.
The second-round draft choice of
the OC'Veland Cavaliers spent last
year in limbo Jrcause the NBA
would not allow him to play while
the chargt&gt;s were (l61ding.
Piior to Williams' trial, two other
Tulane students pleaded gullty to
tbe sporls brit.l&gt;ry chargt&gt;s and
former ~ayers Clyde Eads and Jon
Johnson received immunity from
prosecution in exchango2 for their
testimony against Wllliams.
Former Tulane point guard
David Dominique, &lt;;anvlcted bookmaker Roland Rulz, alleged bribe
courier Craig Bourgeois and Thlane stuci&gt;nt Kenneth Turkel stUI
face trial in the case.
"I told my people to set them for
trial," Connick said. "I feel they are
char!J'd and they violated the_law
... and they should bP male to
answer for 11."

Berry's World

~2

h pd .

103
86
U:l
112
120

611 2.'&gt;3 4 ~
1!.1 .162 ~i4
1-!2 .l.."lO ~ t
84 :1."17 ~7
76 2ill .15 92

•

Ric1·. Bas
Man lnjt ly. l'Y

.369

.340
.340
.339
.331;
.331

"iti2113 :IR 9fiJJH
115 'fo2 ~1111 Ji~
111
:IR 111

79

m

.m

m

H t97 .312

National Leagur - Da~·is. Hou 19: HorrM•r. At I.
Marshall. LA and Sr hmidl. Ph1117: ParkN. C'l n
IIi .
Am...-kan LE'a"'E' - Rflrflrld . To r and Cu nsrro .
Odk 21 : Hrlx&gt;k . Ml nn and .Joynrr . Ca t 20: Parr ish .
[lf•l 19.
RuR&gt;~ Balll'd In
National Learue- Schmidt . Phil ~1. f&lt;~rtrr .
1\"Y ~7 : Hornrr, Arl56: Da\·l s .Hou~5: C.Oa\· is,SF

and Parkrr . C'in 53.
,\Jnertran Lraaur- Can~f'ro. Oak 7.1: .Joynf'r .
f 11l Iii: Prl'§lrv:S ra 64 : Rllffirltl Tor. b.1: Brll.
Tor and HrbEok. Mlnn GO .
Stoll'n B~t"'H
NaUonall.eal(llf-C"oh•man, Stl.~:i: Davls . \ln
and R&lt;JIRf'~. Mi l ~: Duocan, LA 31: Doran, Hou

2R .

Aml'flcan ll~r· Hr ndrr son. NY 4!1 :
Ca nRr losl , C'ht .lti: Mo&lt;;f'hy . Tor21: Wl~ln s. Ra il
20: Griffin . Oak. Wilson. K£" 11nd Hr; nolds. St·a 19.
Pltchlnx Vlt·ioriE'II ·
National Ltoa1111t' Frrna ndr•t. :'&gt;JY l l 2:
Rawlrv. PhiiiJ.4: Coodrn . 1\ Y \0 -.'l . Kruko10·, SF
10 · ~: Knt'Ppc'f. Hou. and Vall'nzwl&lt;t . LA 10-li :
Mahl rr . At\ 10-7.
l lrmf'ns . Bos 112 :
.o\ml'!"lc"ll.n Ua~ar Flodd lr kl'r. Fl;•l t IH : Bo.v d . Has 11-6: H i.I:\.IC'fU . Mil
Jll-6: Sill pi !C'hf'fS tll'ri with ninr \"iCIOrlf'S

'

Bell supplied the answer with the
homer, his fifth of the season after
Dav&lt;' Concepeion opPned the ninth
with a single off Orosco, who had
replaced starter Darling an inning
earlier.
"That's the great thing about this
game ," said Reds manager Pete
Rose, "yoo keep giving a guy a
chance. You can do this and that,
this and that tbe first three times up
and then yoo can redeem yourself."
Bell hit into a dlubleplay with two
Reds aboard in the second. struck
out to end the fourth with the bases
full and hit into anotber doubleplay
with two mates on in the seventh.
Dav!' Parkerq&gt;ened the lOth with
a double off reliever Roger McDowell, 7-2, took third on an infteld out
and scored the d!'clsive run on
Perez' single up the middle through
a drawn-in infield.
"Today I just wanted to hit the
ball hard somewhere. l just went
with the (itch," said Perez, "and he
threw one right in the middle of the
plate."
New York remained lll-2 games
in front in the National League East
as the Montreal Expos lost to

Houston 4-1.
"It doesn't really matter what
Montreal does," said McDowell,
"we have to win. f think our
expectations are even high&lt;'r than
the fans.'"
Darling limited the Reds to five
hits and one unearned run over thE'
first seven innings but w]]en Eddie
Milner opened the eighth "ith his
sixth homl'r of the year, Orosco
replaced Darling.
New York had wilt a 3-0 lead with

Ohio amateur results
CINCINNATI iUPI) - Chuck
Smith, a 51-year-old Delaware
developer playing it) his ~th Ohio
Amateur, and Doug Martin, a
19-year-old University ofOklahoma
sophomore from Van Buren playing in his first, were tied at ~going
into today's serond round of the goli
tournament .
Knotted at !-under-par i2 after
Tuesday's opening round were
Denny Gallagher, a former Ohio
State golfer and one-~me Cincin
natl city champion; Jim Stahl, a
47-year-old Queen City businessman: and Scott \Yyckoff. who will
be a fifth -year senior at OS L.

one run in the fifth on .Johnson 's
RBI forceout and two more off
Cincinnati starter John Denny In
the six th on a bizarre play on which
both right fielci&gt;r Parkl'r and
second baseman Ron ()('ster were
charged with Prrors, allowing both
runs to score on Darryl Strawberoy's smgle to right.
Parker booted Strawberry's hit
and when Kei th Hernanci&gt;z overran
third baSf', ()('stpr's throw went into
the stands, allowing both Hernan dez and Strawberry to bP waved
hom E'.

D'OWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
111 Second St. Pomerey

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

Earnt•d Run Avrra~··

N~ttlomtl

Leacur -

H n n~·,r utt . I.A :1.11. ~ ro t I .

Hou 2.22: Rhodrn, Pi t t 1.J j ; Oj 1•da, :\Y ~ ..n

N~ttlonal Ll'"a•tlf' - llr•arrion . ~111
Go5sa ~r .SD 15: F'r&lt;~nro . Crn.
~ nd \\'onl'll, S!L 1.l

19: Smllh :
Smi th . C"n t

AmPrlcan LE'IJU&lt;'- A ;l.'w. Billl ~2 . R t,ll hl'l ll

NY and Hrrr~ a ndf'7, JXot . 111: Harrl~. T t ·~ 15 :

'

(."alllomla - Artlvatrd p llrhr r .John ran lk'lo
r iil : p lac..-.d rr!l rl pilrhrr Tr r~ · fors tf'l" on thr
15-d a,· d Is a blf'd list .
~ A.nKelefi RC'callrd outfic ldr r R&lt;~lph
BT)'&lt;IRI fr om Albuquf'rquf' nl thr ParHir ro a~t
LraRU(' tAAA •: opllonrr1 outlit'ld r r Ed Aml•lunj!

to Albuqurrqur
Philadelphlit. - Plarf'd pltchf'f fr&lt;'d Tollwr on
thr 15·dav dt s~tb lrd lis t 1rlhol'&gt;"l. rr~·ntl f'd Hark\
rhll drf'!i; S from Portland of thf' P~•r i f lr Cn a ~ t
LraJ(ur rAI\A'
San Dh~ l{U - PlaeNi ri~ht · han drd P' lrhr rE ric
Show on rhl' 15-duv d l&gt;;;~ bl l' d li~l; purr hu srd lhl'
contru r t of ti Rht handf'r Bob Stl)l)dond fmm La ~
Vr,ea~ olthr f' urllir lOJS I Ll'UI!Ii{' u'AI\1
TPxllli - Hrartl\att'd mftrldN To~· Ha l"r~ h :
o ptlonN1 outllt·l drr Bob~ .lOR{'!; to Oklahomu

Crest Pump
· to'dthpaste

('Jt~

Kan11u Slalt• bast•buli l"Oaeh .
Ml111100rt

-

Coll!!ll:t&gt;
r-&gt;amc-d

Anthon'

Ml~t·

Cliir k hrad

Smith. an

&lt;1'- \l~ lan t

ba skf'tboll coaeh ur Wcosr Tr •"as St11 rr. ar"&lt;'&lt;'PIPd a
po~ t l l on i.IS ~~~~ i ~ t a nt roa('h
Foolhall
N- ,ll',...I'Y (ltSn. ) - Si$!f!l'!1 puntrr ·kwkN
Ru~ M- 1 E r•l i'l&gt;l'n . kkkl'r Tonv M ~~~~J: I \ l'!o"ldf'
n •rdu'r \ "l nr{' Coun·Uir ~nd· drlrMivr tar·k ll'
} ]1 · i ~

llull t•r

C/100$9 (rom regular, mint, gel,
tl!ftfr;lgel or tarter control
ftirlilulas/
4.6 ot. Umlt: 2.
•,..-'
'
'

Bribery
..
suspects
'will be

Don Graff

r

75 'li9

adoubleplay 1, so what am I going to

do?"

BaM hall

Oit kland 1Y0u1Jl.! ;,.51 ;11 Boston

~------------------------~
This administration has been mak- racy, a sham that is a gross disservice
ing a lot of noise about thai perceived to those striving for the real thing.
rising tide of Latin tocracy. But
It won't do, Mr. Secretary, it simply
the reality is not quit
advertised. won't do. AGen. Manuel Antonio Nor-,
What has been happening in Panama iega is every bit as much our man in.
and Honduras and elsewhere is not de- Panama as a Nicolas Ardito Barletta,.
mocracy. It is the pretense of democ- wherever he now may be, ever was. '

1 all

NEW YORK iUPI I - Tony
Perez got the game-winning hit for
the Cincinnati Reds, but to some
degree, it was an anti-climax .
"We came back when Buddy
tBelli hit that homer and tied the
game," Perez admitted after his
RBI single knocked in Dave Parker
with the winning run In the lOth
inning Tuesday night to give the
Reds a 54 comeback victory over
the New York Mets.
Bell, who had stranded seven
runners and produced a total d five
outs in hls first three at bats, hlt a
two-run homer off reliever Jesse
Orosco to tie the ·game 4-4 in the
ninth and set the stage for the first
Mets' defeat this season in a game
In which New York led after eight
Innings.
"I was aware of it," said Bell,
who hit Into two doubleplays and
Struck out with the bases loaded in
his threE' previous at bats.
"On the other hand, if you try to
be realistic and rationalize things,"
Bell said, "Darling (Mets' starter
Ron Darling! made three real good
pitches on me when I struck out
with the bases loaded (in the fourth
inning) . Howard Johnson made a
beck of a play at third base ttostart

Transactions

Wl'dltetldiQ''! Ga.mtti
Do:-trol! rMorTi..~ i.f.1 at Mln~ &lt;l 11\nrk'r
!;OR 2-11. 1: l.'i p.m
Ckvf&gt;land t 1\lfokru !Hit ~~ C'tiin.1~o ~Dolson
7-71 2: .1 1pm
Cullforn.la 1~11on i'i1 ill Miill'aull'r
tHIJ:Ur•ra l0-61 . .'Hfi p.m.
Sc&gt;~nll' tMoomo ~il ill Toron to iSIIrh2·!11
i :l"lp.m
,
~ -J 1 .

Bo,ll:)!S.

Stanlr .1·. Bo~ 14

ltt.o!iuitA

Srank· ~- Toro nt o~
flol;mn )!, Odkland ;
("hlra~ G. (1('Vf'land 'l
TMCIIS ti. NN" York 1
D«roil ~- Mlnnrsola 1
C'alifomla 14. M\l~t.•a ukti&gt; .1
Kansa.~ Ci t~· ~ -

Bos
Younl, :v111
Puckf'lt , Min

Lea~ur

Hou Ill:

!H4 -

4~

Amf'rlcWl

~~ ..
ljl,_.

·~

-~

Banimorr 8.

~:!Ill 49 117 .294
TI :.!t\9 32 7!1 .294

til.._.

'

10 1 ~

12 1'.!
11

Ch ir a'"o

1\J81!da,y'~

m~3

ForS&lt;'h. S rl 2. ~~ Amt:rlcan t.earr Hilf'Jl'ru . Mil B&lt;:
Ch' ml'n~ . Hos ~ . ~: Durv1in . Mil ~ .Oil: V.il l. Cal
Jfl6; Hou Rh. Tr~ :UI!I
StriiiPOub
N~ttlonlll Leal{IM'- Sooll. Hou 1~ : Yalrn t url ;l.
Ll\ 1 2~~ : Wrlch.I.A JO.l P a lml'r a11dSm11 h. Atllfll
Amrrlcan Lea(UE' - Clf'mrn ~. Ro~ 1;111: Will ,
Cal U7 : H ii!'UNil . Mil 1lt MrCa.,klll. Cal and
Morris. [)(·t 11 2
Savf'S

:'IlK

. ~Jotl

40 !H ..110

32 7~ .:llli
:!9 75 .296

HolDE' Rum

Atlanta tAk-xandf&gt;r 1).(11 at Philaddpi'Ya
1Gross ~1 . 12: 3."ip.m
Cindnr.ati 1BrowninR ~ i1 1 r-o(•w York
1Goodrn 1()...11. 1: .15 p.m
Cli ie[ijlO ILy rrh 0.01 at S11 n F'nmrlsrn

fll'-'rland

Obrrld f'll. All ·
KniRhl . NY

F'rrnandN. Tot
Bf'rnazard, Ck
Bains, lhl

Cirlt'lnnalll. Nrw York t Ul inntnl!"
St. l..oull&gt; 1, Los An£f'll'S 0
San DitW 4. Pltlsbu!ll;h 2
Ch lriij!O ~ .Sa n Franrt!IC'O 1

49 99 .1'16
46 89 327
43 101 ..'r ll

70 272
79 3\.1
1!2 ~3
Ti ~~

Broolai. Mt l
Sax. L l\
Ra ss. Hou

Easlrr . NY
Hr~k. Mlr1

MOnTIY'ull

BJ!;.10n
1\N York

'1!129~

Rai"n('!" . M t l

Sm ith . St l

:IR

Hou ~10nf.

Hro~o~.· n . SF
G ~ v n n . SO

!ia n . Phi
~5

Sa n F'ranr iM'O

undersecretary of labor; during the
Nixon administration, be became
the first black to be g~&gt;nera l counsel
to the Treasury Department.
Pierce served as an assistant
district attorney and assistant U.S.
attorney in Manhattan , and ws
twice appointed to interim New
York state judgeships by the late
Gov. Nelson Rockefeller. He bst
two campaigns tor full! 14-year
judgeships, running in a heavily
Democratic district.
Pierce was the first black to
hecome a parrtner in a major New
York law firm, when he joined
Battle, Fowler, Jaffin and Klteel in
1961. He was earning a six-figure
income at tbe prestigious labor law
firm when he left to become HUD
sec retary in 1981.
Unbeknownst to Pierce, a high
FBI official in the 1900s suggested
he bP p.Jt forward to replace the late
Martin Luther King Jr. as the
nation 's top clvll rights leader.

Our man in Panama

Batllnr
Nalklnal Lt&gt;apr
rahrhpct .
68 2'i l :L"\ K~ :US
KUN ~ 109 ..l.1ti

By UnKed Pnt~Slnlfrnalloftal

He's not the man ---------------------------------Jack Anderson &amp; Dale VanAtta :
WASHINGTON -Theonlyblack
member of President Reagan's
Ca binet , Housing and Urban Devel·
opmcnt Secretary Samuel R.
Pierce Jr., was recently offered a
federal appellate courl seat. But he
politely turned it down, evidently
hoping that he will be named to the
Supreme Court before Reagan
leaves office.
Pierce is well rcgarci&gt;d at HUD
and the Whit e House after nea rly
six years in the Cabinet. But when
he was fi rst appointed, he was so
unassuming that Reagan mistook
him for one among a delegation of
big-city ma yors invited to the White
House.
According to congressional oour~
ces, the offer of an appPJiate
judgeship was made in a telephone
call to Pierce on June 26 from Sen.
Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., chairman of the Senate Judiciary
Committee. ThE' senator asked
Pierce if he would be interested in

Leaders

~

.

((~

.

~

'

031 JACKSON PII&lt;E·AU5 WEST
-~·4824

BARGAIN AATINEES SAT - SUN &amp;
WEDNESDAY • All SEATS 12.50
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY 12.50

~

40count.
.A..F~m plates, 50

oqu;., ·'
lfB.+-~- F()4M c~s. . ,

r ®~r .-.. SALq -2 ff1J~J

~~men's Sftotts··

·:I.'l 9 .'•

fiP!y.tlytQtJ ;¢ - end stf/ef&gt; in .
ibid calM: 1,m,t.

•

C()lt NG ' SOC»!!
"THE GREAT HOUSE DETECTIVE"

IPI!CW. WI!DNUDAY

MATINED
THIS lUI. lEA I

IJ'l ACREAl DEAl

IN
THE
ClAlllfl£0.AD~ .

'·
'
"I'm not Important bflcause I never appear on
television and 1don't make a lot of money. "

•,

'•.•

•,

~

I•

..
•

s:;~~~1~;~::v~2 . .:. . .
Management
reserves the
right to Nmlt

qusnrnles

ll'lllttottlitl_

fJ: 4f1: I ~ 36'¢ a

For a Better Brand of Savings
.....

41 .300 LAUREL CUFF ROAD
l

•)

�,Wednesday, July 9. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Blyleven homers boost Detroit's 5-1 wm
~

WHAT IS TillS?- New York Yankees manager Lou PlnieDa,lelt,
gestured to first base while first base umpire Greg Kosc HsU!ned
attentively Tuesday as PlnlcUa argued a caD"!! out. Yankee Don
Mattingly and and first base roach Joe AltobeUI, along wlh PlnieUa, felt
Mattingly was safe on a c1ose play In the fourth inning of the Yank's
game with the Texas

Rangers. (UPI)

·

Pat Bradley resumes
Grand Slam pursuit
DAYTON, Ohio tUPII - Pa l
Bradley is seeking to lPcome a
trendsetter on lhe women's professional golf tour .
Bradley, who earlier this yPar
became the first woman golfer to
earn $2 million in her career,
resumes her chase of lhe elusive
Grand Slam Thursday when lbe
41st U.S. Women's Open begins at
the NCR Country Club.
No woman golfer has ever won
four major championships in a
si"gle year, but Bradley has won
thi- firs! two played this season th~ Nabisco Dinah Shore and the
LPGA Championship.
. "I admil il's in til:' back of my
mind, bu l il's not cont rolling me by
any means." Bradley/said of her
chase of the Grand Slam at tlv:conclusion of Tuesday' s practiCE'
round .
:" tl's not going to make cr break
rn)i year Uil doesn't happPn. butlhe
way my year' s been going I
wouldn't bt• surprised to sw it
happPn," Bradley sa id.
: Bradley is having one of the finest
years of her 13-year cara:-r. In
a&lt;!dil ion to winning tbe two majors,
sil&gt; won the S&amp;H Gall Classic. has
placed or lied for second five limes
and tops the earnings list with

year's final Grand Siam event, will
be held in Toronto July 24 -27.
"''ve always enjoyed play ing thr
Open," said Bradley , who won•lhe
lournament in 198i. "One kry is
havin g a psychologica l liking 1o thr
goU course, which I immedialely
got (duMng the practice round .t "

By GERRY MONIGAN

UPI Spolts Writer
Eric King gave up nothing but
doubles Tuesday night. Ben Blyleven shouid have been so lucky.
King, the Detroit Tigers' rookiP
slarter, allowed f~ur hits - all
doubles - to the Minnesota Twins
over 8 2-.3 Innings. Twins starter
Blyieven yielded three home runs
- all in a row_ The Tigers came
away wilh a 5-1 victory .
"The horne runs were all fast ·
balls," said Blyleven, who owns a
$1 .45 million·pPr-yPar contract largely because of hiS viciouseurve. "I
just have to keep pitching . There' s
not much else I can do and I'm
trying not to worry abou l it. I don't
really know what's wrong. I only
hope it gets hetler soon ."
King, obtained from San Fran cisco last October, had a bad outing
in his last start, but got beller in a
hurry.
" I juSI said whoever's nexl. I'm
going to get them. Someone'sgolng
lo pay," he said. "It's a long five
days when you have a bad start."
The young right -hander, 5-l.
helped the Tigers lo !heir third
victory in !heir last 10 games with
help in the ninth from Willie
Hernandez. who got the last out for
his 18th save.
Kirk Gibson. Lance Parrish and
Darrell Evans hit consecutiVE'
home runs off Bly lPvPn in til&gt; fourth
inning. Blyleven, 7-8, has served up
ll home runs. lops in the majors.
He is nine stw of lhe Minnesota
club record of 39, sPI by Pt&gt;dro
Ramos in 1961 and Jim Perry in
1971. The American League r!'&lt;'ord
is 43 held by Ramos when with I he
Washington Senators in 1957. ThP

major league record is 46 set by
outrorst in lhf second inning, to
lead the Mariners. Reliever Mark
Robin Roberts Q! the Philadelphia
Phillles in 1956; ' ·
Huismann lmpi'bved to 2-2. Toronto
Paul Foytac of the Calllomla starter John Cerutti fell to 4-2. Matt
An&amp;!'ls is the only pitcher in major Young pitched 2 2-3 innings for his
league history to allow four straight eighth save.
home runs. to Cleveland in 1963.
Red Sox 8, A's 7
"We've been slrUggling a little
At Booton, BUI Buck~r drove in
four runs and capped a five-run
bit. bullf Lance is swinging goodif ail three &lt;i. us are swinging good "" sixth Inning with a bases -loaded
- we're going to score runs," double, ra llying the Red Sox.
Evans said. "It doesn't happPn very Dennis "Oil Can" Boyd, 11-6.
often . You go up there and you're scattered six hits over six-plus
thinking aboul (home runs), there's Innings. Steve Crawford got the last
no question about it.
ou t for his third save. Rick
"I'm sure tBiyleven 'sl a little Langford, 1-10. was lhe loser·l\n
shook up about H, rot you have lo relief.
6
take advantage of that."
White Sox 6, lndi ... s 2
At Chicago, Harold Baines had
King also lied a major league
record, held by Blyleven, for rrost
thrff' hits, including a thr€(' -run
putouts in a game by a pitcher with homer to cap a four-run fifth, and
six.
Neil Allen allowed five hits over
In other games, Sea ttle downed eight innings to lead the White Sox.

Allen, 5-1 . struck out three and
walked two before being relieved in
the ninth. Dave Schmidt got the last
IWO outs for his fourth save. ·
Rangers 6, Ymkees l
At Arlington. Texas; Pete
O'Brien and Oddihe McDowell each
hi I 1wo-run •homers 10 back the
five-hit pitching of Mike Mason and
lead the Rangt&gt;rs. Mason, 6-2,
struck oul three and walked one in
his second complete game. Yan kees starter Alfonso Pulido fell to
1-1.
Angels 14, Brewers 3
AI Milwaukee, George Hendrick
highlighted a six-run fifth .inning
with a grand slam and sparked the
An&amp;!'ls- John Candelaria , making
his first slart since April9, gave up
five hits. walked 1wo and siruck oul
three aver five innings to notch his
first viclory of the season.

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Wednesday, July 9, 1986
SAN FRANCISCO (UP! I _:: The
NFL players union awaited word
loday on whether the league's
Management Council would go 1o
arbitration over allegations that
commissioner Pete Rozelle's drug
testing plan violated the collective
· bargaining agreemenl.
Players' Association legal counsel Richard Berthlesen Tuesday
told a press conference the union
had filed a grievance wllh · the
NFL's Management Cooncll In
New York City. He said the council

NFL players
await word
on arbitration
in drug issue

was asked to answer within 24 hours
U it woukl accept arbitration on the
Issue.
"We filed a grievance to protest
the drug program unveiled yeslerday by the league," Berthlesen
said. "It was flied against not only
the Management Council. bul each
of the 28 clubs In the league. II was
flied against the league itself and
Commissioner Rozelle."
Berthlesen said under the agreemen! league management would
normally haw• seven days lo

answer . a grievance. However.
because of tbe "extraordinary"
circumstances surrounding this
case, theunionaskedforthe24-hour
IimU.
"We are not asking them to rule
on the legality of the argument." he
said. "We are asking them only to
say !hey will go to arbitration on the
issue. "
If tlte managemenl council does
not go to arbitration, Berthlesen
said the union would S9'k a
temporary Injunclion agalnsl lhe
league.

" We are looking Into that right
now," he said. "We don't know Ill!
will he In federal court · or stale
court ."
When asked about a possible
strike overt he drug testing Issue, he
said: "We' Ucross that bridge If we

ever come to it."
In New York. Rozelle said he had
expected tt-e challengP.
"I am disappointed that the union
is planning to block lhe league's
new drug procedures," he said .
"The lssue of drug abuse by NFL

players has arrived at a stage
where everyone Is Iring hun players, clubs and til&gt; league In
general. My preference wwld have
been Ill implement these Improvements tooorcurrent drug program
with union support."
NFLPA President Gene Upshaw
said the players were willing talk
with the commissioner about a new
drug plan, rot said lhe program
Rozelle anoouneed Monday was not
acceptable because negotialions
had not tEen li'Id trtween both
parties.

ALL WEEK

'l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;t

Toronto 8-5. Boston nipped Oaklana
8-7, Chicago tnppled Cleveland 6-2, 1
Texas clubbed New York 6-1,
California whipped Milwaukee 14-3,
and Baltimore defeated Kansas
City 8-4 .

Mariners 8 Blue ,Jays S
At Toronto, John Moses collecled
lwo hits and lwo RBI. including the
_game-winner duting a six-run

r;====::::::::::;;;;;1i
REMEMBER
WITH· TnFLOWERS
a lwau1Uulh
~1'11 d

dt'llif(nt'd funf'nl ·
arranl(rmi•nl, ju 111 rllll
or vi11it

S. K. VAIDYA, M.D.
UROLOGIST
IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE
THAT HE WILL BE AVAILABLE
FOR SEEING PATIENTS AT
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

Manufacturer's

COPYPIGHT 1M · THE KROGER CO . ITEMS ANO PRICES GOOD SUNDAY , JVLY6 THROUGH SATUR ·
O,i,Y, JULY 12. l!JE. IN [,~ILIPOI.I S ij. POM!ROY
'

-

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLO TO DEALERS

POMEROY, OHIO
BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
PLEASE CALL 304-675-6060

IN OIL OR WATER CHUNK LIGHT

Star-Kist
Tuna .......................

6.5-ol.
LIMIT 2 PLEASE

Heinz
Ketchup .............

32-oz.

LIMIT 1 PLEASE

s;ll2,lXl.
Her viclory al the LPGAoput her
c3reer winnings over the $2 million
mark.

While' no woman ha.s ever won
four majors in a season. two have
won ail the majors played ina year.
Babe Zaharias won the U.S. Open ,
Titleholders and Weslern Open bt
1~. and Sandra Haynie won the
U.S. Open and LPGAin 1974. one of
10 s&lt;B sons wllh just two majors.
The du Maurier Classic, tt-e

FROZEN ALL BEEF SANDWICH STEAKS

$

Steak-

umms·...................

Scioto Downs
COLUMBUS tU PII - Early
Ieadrrs Tanlallon Winnie and
Springfield Lobell won their respec tive divisions of the opening round
uf lhe $~.00) Budge! Reni·A-Car
1ro1 tlng series ')'uesday nigh I al
Scioto Downs.
Tantallon Winnie, driven in 2:01
35 by Charles Morgan. dcleated
flori s Pride by nine and lhrf'f'quarters lengths and paid $7 ,
Driwn bY Don Irvine Jr. In 2:03,
Springfield Lobell post!'d a six·
length win over Floridana Hanover
and returned $5.60.
Jeff's Slick Andy. Single's Sa m
and Nardin's Julep combined for a
9-3 7 first-race trifecta wot1h $385.
Attendance was 3,223 and the
handle $252,401.

U.S:D.A. CHOICE GRAIN FED BEEF
BONELESS

FREEZER PLEEZER

Ice Cream
Sandwiches.

14-oz.

BUY ONE·
GET ONE
12-Ct.

FREE!

Rib eye

%"

•

Ste.aks . . . . . . . . .

lb.

TRIM

The Daily Sentinel
tUSPS U5-!tlilt)
1\ Dlvl&lt;tlon of Mulllmedla, lnl·.

WITH $10.00 PURCHASE

Publis hed £'very aflrrn oon. Monday
th rough Friday. 111 Courl St . Po ·
me roy. Oh io, by lh (' Ohi o Va11Py Pub·
llshing Company r Mu ltlmf'dl a. I nr ..
PomNoy. Oh io 45769, Ph . ~n21S6. $(!.

FRESH FROM THE OVEN

ro nd class IJOSiage pa id at Pom£'roy.

Angel Food or
Pound Cake . ,l~6~.

Ohi o.
Mrmbl"r : United Prt'Ss lnl£&gt;rnallonal.

Inland Dall y Press Associallon and th£'
Ohio Nl'wspaper Assoc iation . National
Adv£&gt;rtt ~ lng
N~· spapPr

This week your manulacturered produCIS " cents off" coupons are worth double a1 Kr oger wtth $ 10 00
or more purchase. Limited to manufactured products coupons worth up to and •ncl udmg SOc Ott _
Coupons worth_ more than 50(: are redeemed at lace value only . Limit one coupon for ea ch produ cl
purchased. Ltmtt one coffee coupon. No beer, wine or cigarette coupons will be double . Nol valid on
l ree coupons, Kroger coupons or retail food store coupons. The amount refunded cannot ex ceed th e
pnce of the 1tem. You must purchase product in sizes specified on the coupon This offer applies only to
manufactured products "cents off" coupons for items we carry . To assure product avail ability for all our
customers, only one coupon per shopping lamily, will be doubled on any brand item during each store

R&lt;'pr esent a tlve, Branham

Sales, 733 Third Avf'n ue,
N('W Y ork. New York 10017.

POSTMASTER: Se-nd addrPSs chang..s
to Thf' Dall y SE'ntlnol, 111 Courl St .,
Poml'rOy, Ohio 457tB.

VISit .

Fresh Yellow
Sweet Corn

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route
Onf' W('('k .....
.. .. 51.10
Onr Month . ................
..... $4 .M
Onr Yea r
... $.';7.20

SINGLE COPY
PRICE

Dally ,, ...

.. .. .......... 25 C('nts

PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES,. RC-1 00,

Subscrlb&lt;'rs not desiring to pay the ca rThe DRily Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 mon th
bas ts. Credit will be given carrlf'rro ch
Wl"ek.

No subscriptions by mall perrnllll'd In

r

'

areas where hom£" carrier servlct' Is
available.
Mail Subltt::riptlons
lnskle Melp Counl)'
13 Weeks .......... ................ .... .... $14.56

26

w..u ................................. s~.J2

112 w..u ..... ,............................ S58.24

Oultkle Melp County
13 Weeks ......... ....... ................ .. $18.20 ,
26 Weeks ....................... ........... $35.10
52Week.l .................................. l67.00

Ear

'

rh•r may rrmlt in ad va nce dlrrc t to

)

X·

W'

t~'
., .

Diet RC
or RC C:o·la ..... ~......

8-Pak

PLUS
DEPOSIT

;
)

••

�.,

Page -6-·il'he Daily Sentinel

l)ofA holds meeting
: Apatr1otlct!Emewascarr1edout
at last WE'ek's meeting Of Chester
Councll323,Daughters d America,
jleld at the hall. Dorothy Ritchie,
councilor, read Psalins 70, the
ilrwP gave the !»edge and sang the
national anthem to open the
l!'llll!llng. Betty Roush read "Happy
Birthday, America."
Members were reminded of the
state session and asked to take
Items for' the sales tables. Hattie
Frederick and Nettle Hayes were
reported In tiE hospital. The good of
the order committE'E' had a cake
walk with Esther Smith winning the
cake. The audit report was read,
and Ev!'rett Grant and Bob Rltchle

Correaion
Chester Council323, Daughters of
America, conducted served for
Mary Karr Nesselroad at the
Ewing Funeral Home rather than
the Auxiliary of the Disabled
American V!'t!'rans.

Birth announced
Mlck and Twila Childs of Middleport ar!' announcing ihe birth of
their first child, a daughter.
KathrYn Joan, on July I at the St.
Joseph Hospital, Parkersburg,
W.Va. The infant weighed s!'Vm
pounds, two ounces, and was 20
Inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Jim
and Emma K. Ciatworthy, and the
paternal grandparent arP Bill and
Joan Childs, all of Middleport.
Paternal great-grandmother is
Martha Childs, also of Middleport.

were named to the t'Efreshment
Twenty-one Meigs Count!ans at·
committee lor the next meeting.
tending Hocking Technical College
At another recent meeting quar- at NelscinvUI!' were named to tile
terly birthdays were observed. Iva spring quarter dean's list with a 3.3
Powell, Goklle Frederick, Everett grade point average being required
Grant, Eva Robsoo, Betty Young, for listing.
Ethel Orr, and Erma Cleland were
Making the list according to the
homred. The illness of Mrs. Hayes school were Susan M. Bailey, Long
and Kathy Pullins was lilted as was Bottom; Janie!' M. Baker, Porn!'·
the death ol John Wickham and roy; Beth A. Berkhlmer. Reeds·
Evelyn Ramey's son, Manning.
ville; Sheila M. Buchanan, ReedsThe meeting opened In ritualistic , villi&gt;; Angela Collins, Long Bottom;
fonn, a report was givm on
auditing books, and a silent auction
was held. Bell Biggs, Margaret
CotterUI, and Est!Er Harden of
Syracuse lodge were guests.

Larry Cowdery, Long Bottom;
Katrina L. Dooohue, Pomeroy;
Avis Kean, Pomeroy; Troy Ma·
nuel, Racine; Kathy D. McGuire.
Rutland; Jeffrey Moore, Cheshire;
David H. Mora, Pomeroy; Franres
Moxley, Pomeroy; Linda Proffitt,
Racine; Carlotta Reed, Reedsville;
Jan E. Rees, Middleport; Paul B.
Roush, Racine; Russell P. Sexel,
Pomeroy; James A. Weber, Reeds·
vtue; KyleS. Woods, Pomeroy, and
Jeff A. Wyers, Reedsville.

An outdoor pizza party was held
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Jacks and children honoring Christopher Gorby, Mrytle Beach, S.C.

Christopher is returning home after
a few weeks' visit here with his
grandparents, Carl and Pauline
Gorby, Langsville.

and Marlin Evans, Racine; Alva,
Velma lllckeydoo, Letart, W.Va.;
Tom and Phyllis Roach, Effie
Roach, Freda Bass, Senna Russell,
Eleanor EU!ott, Mickey Elllott,
Point Pleasant; Sammy, Julla,
Noel, and Nicole Birchfield, Pedro;
Gall Blankenship, Proctorville;
Scott Wright, Addison; Gary and
Mary Ann Osborne, Winfield,
W.Va.; William and Hattie Dudding, Michael. Karen, and Mike
Dudding, Logan, W.Va.; Samuel A.
Birchfield, Neola, W.Va.; Francis.
Junior, and Danny Luckeydoo,
Point Pleasant; Roger, San«fa.
Lee and Amy Luckeydoo,
Mldd leport.
Recognized were William Dud·
ding, Logan, W.Va., who traveled
the farthest; Eleanror Eliott, Point
Pleasant. the oldest, and Mike
Dudding, Logan, W.Va.. the
youngest.

Book completed
The book, "John Washington
Circle's Roots and Branches", has
been completed by Su!' Hager.
Racine.
The 90 pag!' book contai ns 11
g!'Derations of Circles. Including
Strohmeyer, Rasp. Wills. Gibbs.
Jomoon and Spencer families. The
Orst half deals with the history and
generallons while the second haU
contains 76 liographies of John
Washington Circle descendants.
Publication is limited to nJ
copies and may be obtained !rom
Mrs. Hager, Box 443, Racine, for $7
with $1 handling charge. lnformat:lon may be obtained from Mrs.
Hager, 949-2241.

Assertiveness
• •
trammg
set at OU
ATHENS - An Assertlvmess
Training workshop will be held at
Ohio University from July 14-18.
This workshop, directed ~ Dr.
Sally Navin who has taul!tlt assertiveness training for six years, will
assist college students, teachers,
counselors, administrators and
community agency personnel In
beCOming more assertive In their
personal and professional lives. ,
Assertiveness Training will examine the psychological theories
upon which assertiveness training
Is based, will teach tiE dlffei'EIICES
between non-assertive, assertive
and aggressive behavior and will
teach recognition and reduction ol
cognitive and affective obstacles In
acting assertively.
Partic!patlon In the workshop is
limited. Information on reglslratlon
·tor graduate &lt;r undergraduate
credit can be gained by calling tiE
omce of Workshops at 594-6851.

FANS· FA.NS
FANS

MOMS '&amp; DADS
REGISTER AUG. 2
·%112-3 YEAR-OLD DAY NURSERY
4-and-S YEAR-OLD KINDERGARTEN

~~

pecials
•Money Saver Items
•Everyday Low Prices
•USDA Choice Meats
•Tender Fresh Produce
•We Welcome Federal
Food Stamps and WIC
•We Sell,Money Orders

=nl'--

an South Third, Mioldleport
~-

-~-

Summar Progra~F~r Your Child Care

TENDERBEST USDA
CHOICE BONE-IN

Round Steak

1our Low-Priced,
Independently Owned
Customer Service
Superrna·rket

/

,.

'

LOW IUJnON liTIS

TINY
TECH
Call 992 -3824

.,

•Box Window Fans
•Oscillating Fans
•Box Fans

Clluk Ou1 P1lee

Ohio

NATIONAL BRANDS A1

It was voted to use tiE least coin Your oWn Backyard."
offering for lOcal charlt~ through
Group 2 had a play about Simon,
Church Women United when the the Zealot. Mrs. Haptonstall and
Women's Assoctatlon met recently Faye Wallace gave the presentaat the First Presbyterian Church, tion with Mrs. Sorden having the.
Middleport.
Introduction.
Joan Sorden presided at the . The fall ineetlng of the Associameeting during which !line the fall tion was announced for Sept. 25 at
learning opportunity workslllp to be 6:30p.m. It will be a potluck suwer
held at th!' church In QctQher was with Group 1 to have the program,
planned. Lennie Haptontall was at and Group 2 to be host. Singing of
the plano for singing of "What a favorite hymns closed the mE'E'tlng. •·
Friend" to open the meeting. Sh!' Refreshments were served.
also gave devotions mtitled "In

WE'VE
GOJ

Pomeroy-Mi~~leport,

STO.CK UP WITH

Pizza party conducted recently

,,.

BONELESS

'

PICKENS
HARDWA
RE
MASON, W. VA.

$179 II.

.,.
'

""••

Seedless
Grapes

..

~

,.
r----~----~----------------------~---------------------- '•··

..

"•

~

995.

Nectarines

Sweet
Juicy
Cherries

99S.

TENDERBEST

89S.

or

Plums

Wieners
.

TENDER
•

Blood pressure
winners announced
Lettie Young, Middleport. was
the winner of the electronic blood
pressure kit at Rite Aid, Pom!'roy,
following a rerent blood pressure
clinic at the drug store. Mrs.
Young's name was drawn from
those who came by for a free blood
pressure check.
A second clinic has been set lor
Tuesday, Aug. 5, at thestore.10a.m
.to 2 p.m.. and again an electronic
blood pressure kit will lie awarded
to one of those who stops by to have
their pressure checked.

Wednesday, July 9, 1986

, Dean's ,list at "Hocking 1annouf!ced Wo~en's group meets

.Birchfield reunion held
The annual Birchfield reunion
was held at Hannan Park, Point
Pleasant, recen lly.
Attending were Irene Birchfield,
Poca, W.Va.; Jim, Jean, Jimmy
and Danny Smith, Charleston,
W.Va.; April McGrath, Becky
Rlcky, Janey, Eugene and Randy
Blrchfteld, Rutland; Everett. Charlotte. and Michael Grant, Debbie

Wednesday, July 9, 1986

&gt;Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

,... "

Be in our
A va are actor are
a w oe otmore.
for one monthly premil,1m.
Ask your employer how you can get this
kind of health care benefit, with this kind of
coverage, with this kind of quality, at such a low
price. If you are an employer, ask Adva~re. For
the details. call 446-5283.
~~
Or visit Advacare head~ '
quarters at Holzer Clinic,Ad,taea~~~~e'"
385 Jackson Pike,
y,
1-,
Gallipolis, Ohio.
The health care plan that

TENDERBEST USDA
CHOICE WHOLE

TENDERBEST QU
FRESH LEAN

CRISP SOLID

89t Head Lettuce

York Strips

.,

•

•

•..

•

Specialists in pediatrics, OB/GYN, family
practice, internal medicine, general, thoracic,
and vascular surgery, neurology, ophthalmology, cardiology, just name it.
They're a part of the Advacare HMO your
employer can offer you to provide almost every
medical and surgical benefit you'll ever need.
When you're an Advacare member, all of
these physicians are right behind your own to
help and support your doctor in treating you. All

GREEN
BROCCOLI

IRAND

PORK LOINS .

HUGGIES
DIAPERS

SAUSAGE

$1 79 LB.

S99!g.

1-Lb. Roll

•'

help• keep rou hulthr.

~ '- GIIADt

A

OODtAND

Eggs

•

DOZEN

INSTANT

Maxwellltouse

Coffee

$3'99

. HERR'S

· Potato Chips
10 oz.
BAG

$129

Ill I. It I \II I I

II

1I II \\II I

SPRITE, TAB
DIET or REGULAR

RAGU .

II

Spaghetti Sauce
32 oz.
JAR

Coca-Cola

$129

an.

t I'll'

laiR

MT. VERNON

2°/o MILK

$129

99&lt;

2 UlER

!
I1

Canning -Jars
REGULAI $399
QUAm
·CASE Of 12
lllloit 2 c- With

c..,..

. Good thN lot.. July 12. 198&amp;

~--~------------------·
. i
'
•Not Re1pOnoiblll For Typogrophic.ll Errort

�Page 8-The Daily Sentin81

July begins the flea's itch for -your pets~----

Cnunty agent's corner

program. Various educational displays aimEd at helping producers
Cwnty Extmsloa Agent
Improve their selection and mainteA&amp;rlcuJiure
Sheep Day and Ram Test Sale nance d. breeding stock will be set
wUI be held Saturday, July 19 at the · up at Sbeep Day. A lamb lurrh is
Eastern Ob!o Resource Develop- available.
Are You Selling or B\1\'lng Corn?
ment Center (EOROC) near Belle
Valley. Sheep Day starts at 9:00 The answer to this question dea.m. and ~he sale starts at 2:00p.m. pends on whether rey next stateThe July 19 Sheep Day program ment Is good news or bad news.
is designed to help sheep J;rQducers Despite an expected lO to 12 percent
take the best advantage of superior cut In this year's acreage, J:rlce
genetics once they have them. J:rOSpects for corn oontlnue to
Specialists will discuss the Impor- deteriorate.
A record-breakbtg oorn suwly
tance of managing rams properly.
both In and rut of breeding season. for the 1986 marketing year, and a
Talks on clinical mastitis control, projected SU!lllUS of 4.5 lilllon
the effect of Bova toc on growing bushels from the fi-87 season are
lambs' protein rEquirements and two major obstacles hindering any
sources of selenium carriers wUl price Improvement.
Good weather oould push tbls
also be part of the morning
BY John C.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Wednesday, July 9. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohib

Rle~~

slon. I'l!ts may easily become
Infested and bring their parasitic
companions Inside or tn oontact
wlth people. Since adult fleas
cannot oormally survive more than
t~ weeks without animal or
human blood, they hop from host to
IDst causing discomfort and possl·
bly disease or allergic reaction.
Keeping your pet, home and
surrounding areas clean Is the best
way ID prevent a flea problem.
Wherever a pet wlth fleas sleeps,
there ls a good chance eggs will
drop ouf of their .hair and then
hatch. The larvae don't need blood
to mature but ooce they do you have
a whole mess of mature fleas
jumping around, latching onto
people or animals, sucking blood
and laying more eggs. Thlscan be a
particular problem during real
warm weather.
The adult flea ls one-eighth inch
long, wingless and has tliree pairs
of legs. Its body ls reddish-brown.
Racine. A weiner roast ls planned Catherine King and James L and Oat and hard. Adult fleas can jump
at 6:ll p.m. with hot dogs and buns Kate King. and Revna Sr. andVada
seve-a! feet off the ground and use
to II' provided; those attending to Klrig will be held Saturday, July 12.
at the Racine Locks and Dam Park that abUlty to attach themselves to
take a covered dish.
new hosts.
at Letart. W.VA. There will be a
White socks are the best way to.
SALEM CENTER - The Salem potluck dinner at noon.
find out where flea~ are. Walk
Township Volunteer Fire Depart·
through a suspected area and look
ment annual ice cream social at the . Cookbook ready
for dark fleas that wUI jump from
firehouse tn Salem Center, 11 a.m.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
the floor ooto your feet looking for a
to 8 p.m. Saturday. Menu home- Health Care Center cookbook dedi- tasty IDst. Then It's a matter of
made re cream, roast beef sand- cated to its residents ls completed using a strong vacuum cleaner to
wiches, hot dogs, potato salad, and now for sale. Those who have
mararonl salad, baked beans. pie, already purchased the book fbr $4 suck ~p the pests. You can either
and beverages. Shady River may pick it up at the Center burn the bagged fleas or seal tl~m
up for a trip to the landfill.
Shuffiers cloggers wUJ perform at anytime between 8 a.m. and 4: 3()
Getting rld o!flea populations can
6:30p.m.
p.m. while others may purchase lt
there for the same price. Many of take some time. Wash pet blankets
and tb:&gt;roughly treat the pet ·and
the recipies contained .In the book
SUNDAY
areas where lt lays. Sanitation is the
ROYAL OAK - Family, des- have been submitted by patients or
key both Inside and outside your
cendants of George W. and Lydia members of their families.
M. Gray Deem reunion ~nday.
RDyal Oak Park; dinner 1 p.m.
Take food for a buffet; afternoon
music by Bissell Boys. Business
meeting follows dinner.

year's yields near 1911i's -rocord of
118 bushels per acre, (llltlng the
1986 crop measurably above the 7
billion bushel annual
disappearance.
Diagnostic Clinic Ready for
Business - The Oblo Cooperative
Extension Service's Plant and Pest
Diagnostic €1lnlc is set up to help
Ohioans answer questions about
problems with plants. This Includes
everytblng from bomegrown flowers and vegetables to greenbouse
products and farm crops. The
serviCe ls unique to Ohlo and offers
quick answers to problems that
could spell doom for your garden
salad or taU corn harvest.
It's unique In that It's the only
clinic where you'll ftnd five agriculture related dlsclpllnes - all five

areas d. expertise In ooe centrallz.ed
location. The adllantage ls you'D get
a more rapid and accurate disease
or pest Identification. This ls critical
when lt comes to controlling the
problem. The more accurate your
ldentlflcatlon, the more accurate
you can be In your treatment.
tnsoct and vertebrate pest dam~e. (iant disease, weeds, nutritional problems and herbicide
damage are just some of the
!J'Oblems received and diagnosed
at the OSU cltnlc.
F1eas Itchtn To Be Active - July
ls the beginning of flea season and a
few tips can make life much more
(ieasant for both man and beast.
The key to controlling fleas is
knowing where they are and
J;reventlng any population explo·

Community calendar I area happenings
WEDNESDI\Y
MIDDLEPORT - Mil\dleport
Amatrur Gardeners wUI meet at 8
p.m. Wednesday night at the home
of Mrs. Harry Moore. Ruth ElWin
will glve a program on herbs.

Silent auction following the meeting: refreshments.

RACINE -Racine United Meth·
odist Church "welcome back"
party for Rev. Roger Grace family,
8 p.m. Wednesday, church social
room.

BALD KNOB - Hymn sing
Friday, 7:30 p.m., United Gospel
Mission Church, Bald Knob. Larry
Van Meter and the Narrow Way
Singers will have special music.

SYRACUSE ~Syracu se Village
Council meets Wednesday 7 p.m.,
municipal building.

POMEROY - The film, "'The
Secret of NIMH " will be shown at
Pomeroy Library, 2 p.m. Friday.

CHESTER - Chester Township
Trustees meet 10 a.m. Friday at tt»
town hall.

TinJBsDI\Y
POPLAR RIDGE - Weekend
mival services will be held at the
Poplar Ridge Church Thursday
through Sunday at 7 p.m. each
!'Venng. The public is invited.
GALLIPOLIS - MemiX'rs of
Star Garden Club and gu£&gt;Sts will
have a luncheon at Dales Restauran t. Ga llipolis. Thursday, 1 p.m.
The J une meeting of the club will be
held at the home of Stella Adkins
and Ruby Diehl.
CHESTER- Shade River Lodge
45.1 mffting in •: hester. 8 p.m.
Thursday.
FRIDAY

Rl!fLAND - A dance will be
held at the Rutland Civic Center
Friday from 9 to 11 p.m. Music will
be provided by Flashback and
admission will be S2 for singles and
$3 for couples.
POMEROY - Mary Shrine 37,
Order of the White Shrine of
Jerusalem. will meet Friday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. Practice at 7 p.m .. meeting at 8 p.m.

CHESTER -Shade River L~e
453, F&amp;AM. will hold an ice cream
social for members and famllles at
the hall at 7: 30 p.m. Friday.
SATURDAY

RUTLAND - Saturday is last
day for Marauder basketball camp
registration at Meigs High School
or Rutland Elementary School for
fifth through ninth graders.
POMEROY - Scipio township
Fire Department Ladles Auxillary
will hold a car wash Saturday at
Pleasers from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT - Film, "The
Secret of NIMH" wlll be shown at
Middleport Library Saturday ,f 2
p.m.
GALLIPOLIS- Grande Squares
Western Square Dance Club wlll
sponsor an open danre from 8 to 11
p.m. Saturday at St. Peter's
Episcopal Church. Gallipolis, with
Bill Adkins. caller.
RACINE - Annual Van Meter
Reunion wlll be Saturday at Buck
Van Meter's Lacy Day Ranch in

Man tries to
pet leopard

Bible School
RACINE - Vacation Bible
School at Racine First Baptist
Church July 14-23. Signup at
Syracuse Pool July 11 when a
wiener roast and swimming party
will be held beginning 6 p.m. Those
attending to take Items bra wiener
roast. Bible school from 6:30 to 8:30
p.m. each evening.
Bible sdlool
RACINE -Racine Church &lt;it he
Nazarene Vacation Bible School
oont lnues through Friday. 6:30 to 9
p.m. Theme ls "Walking wllh
Jesus" and Fern Grimm is the
director. VBS program, Sunday
after brief Sunday school session at
9:30 a.m.
ReuM8n

LETART, W.Va. - A reunion of
the descendants of David and

STOREWIDE CLEARANCE
MANY COLORS 8t STYLES

GRASSHOPPERS

•us•ooMS

CH ICAGO iUPI I - A Chicago
man who jumped into a Jeopard's
den at thr Lincoln Park Zoo
IX'cause he wanted to pet one of the
jungle beasts probably didn't gl'l
the rrcE'ption he expected .
Gene McL&lt;lughlyn, 39, was scheduled to undergo surgery Tuesday
night 10 rrpair lacerations on his lt'ft
forParm and right index finger, a
spokesman for Grant Hospital said.
The spokesman said McLaughlyn was admitted to tt» hospital
earlier in !he day, soortly after he
!raped into tir leopard's den.
McLaughlyn sa id he " rea lly
wanted to jl("t lhr Afghanistan
Jeopard," the spokesman said.
Poliff dccllned to oomment on
thr incident. saying an investiga tion is under way .

SAII$14

$

95

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
•

._

'

I

'

PRICES EFF~CTIVE THRU SATURDAY,. JULY 12, 1986

Limit
20

..
I

"JULY SPECIAL" •
24'x8'x32'
GARAGE

Coupons

1-9x 7 overhead alii 1 -3'
walk door, 2 windows, 29 ga.
painted steel - choiu of &lt;olors
- &lt;omplete trim po&lt;kage, top
quality _material &amp; workmanship.
Co,...letely Encflod

~

$3789

z

COLUMBIA

oz.
2• I $1
Bacon •••••••••••••••••

667-3271

12

YOU MONEY ON THESE AND MORE.

HAND TOOLS.............................. 40°/o Off
ROOFING ................................... 40°/o OFF
GENERAL HARDWARE •••• ~•••••••••••• 30°/o OFF
PAINT and ACCESSORIES ••••••••••• 30°/o OFF
PLUMBING .................................. 30°/o oFF
LAWN ·MOWERS ••••••••••••••••••••••• BELOW COST
I FINAL DAY JULY 191

EBERSBACH

HARDWARE
COMPANY
PH.
21 0 EAST MAIN
•

~

•un

99
S~usage .•••...•.!'••••• $1

$ 39
NEW YORK STRIP
Lunch
.
Meats
••
~a.....
1
99
Boneless Steak .•~·. $3
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
$ 89
Round Steak •••••••• 1

"'
0

=
;•
•

.,...

M

.

1'1

g
I

LB.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Chuck Roast ••••••••• 99&lt;
SUPERIOR FRANKIE
oz.
99&lt;
Wl·ene·rs •••••••••••••••••
LB.

~

&gt;
~

"'
0
A

~

&gt;

=
~

~
{"'l

0

~

.

•s:"'
0

•

"'

0
2

PKG.

95

$6

~ &gt;&lt;

' .

BOYS' LEATHER WHITE -:

$2 95

$

95

BOYS' LEATHER

1 TABLE

HIGH TOPS

LADIES SHOES

$1200

$ 00
•

lf2

$7

Potatoes •••••.•• ~~!····
FLAVORITE SPREAD
(
•
99
Margar1ne ...•••.• .-••••
BROUGHTON •
$ 49
2°/o Milk .........::~.. 1

GIRLS

AEROBIC SHOES
PRICE

BELTS, TIES
&amp; SLIP-ON SHOES
NEW SHIMENT MEN'S

$

1995

SIMON'S PICK-A-PA·IR

ite Bread::~::. 3/ Sl

BORDEN'S

59(
Bleach •••••••••••••••••••

BANQUET

COUNTY FAIR
Havina felled to attend 1 friend's funeral service, one1111y
eq~trience &amp;Jill difficulty in flcinc members of the ~­
ruved flmily without emberressment.
.
So. loo. 1111ny members of the deceased's flmily find it
hard to face someone who tid not pay their rnpectsatlhe
funeral service, tnt wake 01 other ilrm of visitation.
To evoid such embarrusment. 1 person wt1o IIJuld not at·
tend the service ouptta.lllkta personal mlldolenc:e ~II
afterwards. He should also erplain to the f11111ly why he
multi not anend.
Alttlou.. one 1111st make thnt dtcisionslndivldtrllly.u thl
sitlrllion r1qu
~ must be pointld out thlt t1111111lllten·
dtnct Mid condoltnc:e c:eMI art social rnpot~Sibil~la. We
ocuiiDniiiJ observe tlil "loll "friiHIIiD" wltln.l sittlple
pholt call ml;lt haw 11!-'tt~ thl llrrt IN!inp.
If y011 111 not clur ebout visilation etiquette 01 duties.
fltl frN to call on us formisiMict. Wtwill be pleuld to
help you et any time.

CHATEAU

•

GALLON

ir•.

39
Ice Cream .;....:.:-.'.. $1

$ 39
Fried Chicken .. ~:~1. 2

MAXWELL HOUSE

MASTER BLEND COFFEE !!'It• FLAVORITE SUGAR
39

oz.

$669.

SlB.
lAG

BRUa FISHER

CHEER DETERGENT

$12.9

lillllt 1 Por Customer
11M Owly At Powtll's SlaptnMrl&lt;tt S
"""' 1 .... c.Only At Powll'a s.,onnGrf11t S .,... .
OHor' Expires Sat, July 12; 1986
---,. .._~ bplrtt Sat. l!rly 12, 19U
•
.

"$,riot Plut... AttMtlot to O•t•ll"

...

•0

0

~

~

...

= !..
&gt;
~

~
{"'l

0

~

""C

0

I:

-a&lt;z

"'

2

3LB

$1 0

HOW CAN ONE FACE THEM?

$ 79
1

U. S. NO. 1 IDAHO

LOW CUT CONVERSE

LADIES SHOES

tll•l .......

~

SUPERIOR

DRESS &amp; CASUAL SHOES
TO S199S

PONYS

ff~ .Yfom~

PKG.

HILLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED

12

POMEROY

...

c:

"F , .. door Opentr with 1111ch
building sold".

lADIES' VEif PIEm SliMMER

MEN 'S WHITE LEATHER

f!ltMQit"?!J- 'fOIHlj(4.::JI. («Qe,.

$ 39 ---·---,
•

FRESH PORK BUTT

$

95

1 TABLE

YOU'LL SAVE MONEY
Ill THE CLA881FIEOS
AND THAT'S NO BULLI

OFFER
GOOD
NOW THRU
MONTH OF
JULY

CANDIES

NilE DUTY SHOE

$1

STORE HOURS
Mon.~Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM·

LADIES '6

LADIES WHITE LEATHER

SMAU GilLS'

limit Quantities

BROWN 8t TAN SADDLE

REG . '24.95

$

~

We Reserve The Right fo

LADIES GOLF SHOES

LADIES' UNGAIOOS

$

ELITE .POLE
BUILDINGS

~~~SAVE
30 '" 400J.,'%'e.,9.
~,~ EBERSBACH HARDWARE CAN SAVE :~"~"'

16141 992-7811

$998

home.
Dusting powders are the pre·
!erred flea treatment for pets. Pay
special attention to the areas
around ears. between legs and
around the tail. Be careful not to get
the dust in the animal's eyes, nose
or mouth.
After thoroughly vacuuming
your home, pesticides may be
needed to make sure the entire
(X)pulatlon is ellmlnated. We have
Information on which chemicals
may work best In various situations. Indoors, pay special attention
to areas around molding and
baseboards and other areas where
llnt &lt;r pet halr tends to accumulate.
OJ tslde, spray areas where pets
~nd time such as under bushes
and on porches.

'

1~7 oz. $4·99

••·• ·-

Limit T· Ptr CustGOIII Only At Powtll'a $upot'nlprtilt S
••·•••
Offor &amp;lflros'sat., Jllly 12~ Ul6

ln.l BLOWER

111-.0\1~

).•

It

,,.

•The total value of the dou ble coupon may not aKceed
$1 .00
•Any manufacturer's cou ·
pon greater than 51¢ will be
redeemed at face value
only.
•Only one manufacturer's
coupon per item .
•The total value of the dou·
ble manufacturer's coupon
cannot exceed the purcha 10
pric a of the item . Money
will not be refunded .
•This offer does not epplyto
Powell's Super Valu Cou·
pons, fiee coupons. or any
competitor 's coupons.
•This offer excludes ciga·
rettas. or any other items
prohibited by law.
•Offer is only good for product on hand . No Rain·
checks.
•There is a limit of 20 cou·
pone you may redeem .

�•

•

Wednesday, July 9. 1986 ,

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Wednesday, July 9, 1986

Pomeroy:-Middleport, Ohio

'

The Daily Sentinei- Page-11.

(

Subway gunman expect~g grueling tri~1..
.

....

NEW YORK (UPli - Subway char~J&gt;d any of his four victims tor of a serious crime to go free an individual ... would allow citizen~;::.:
gunman Bernhard Goetz. ordered altoough at least one of them !Did simply because that person be· to set their own standards lor thf! :
to stand trial for shooting four Dally News columnist Jimmy lleved his actions were reasonable permissible use of force," Wac htl~ ,:
teenagers he thought would mug Breslln that Goetz was an intended and necessary to )revent some &gt; 'd
....
~ru .
. -~
him for 55. says he wishes the trial robbery tar!l{'t.
pera&gt;lved harm," Wachtler wrote.
Goetz scoffed at tl"t&gt; court's,;..
could be a "calm discussion" of
"U New York City would prose·
"To oompletely exooerate such conception of self -defense.
~"
events that generated a national cute criminals only hall as sever€'ly
furor.
as victims. they wouldn"t have any ,....---------------------~:
But Goetz, 37, said Tuesday night victims," Goetz said.
be expects. Instead. the trial will be
Goetz said he now feels ··a little
a "trying experience'"- and one In bit like the gladiators, or those
which "the press isn"t going to animals who are put in cages and
·~
' '-'
help."
told to fight." .
...
On Tuesday. the Court &lt;:I Appeals
The 1·0 decision by tiY2 Court of
_.
- New York"s highest court Appeal,s in Altany reversed an
•
•
CORN DOGS
reinstated attempted murder and Appellate Division ruling dismiss·
,
assaull charges against Goetz In the ing the attempted murder and
Dec. 22, 1!&amp;, shootings aooard a assault charges.
subway train. Thetlialdatewasset
Chief Judge Sol Wachtler, wrltlng
WITH FRIES •••••••••••• S1.09
for Sept. 2.
. ....
the decision, said the lower court's
The decision capped a more than action imposed a "subjective stand·
' .,.~
yearlong chain of changing events ard" that would permit the use. of
..::.
· centered on whether Goetz would deadly force In almost any case
be charged with attempted murder. where a person feels threatened.
.. .
The high oourt said New York
The case drew Widespread atten·
lion, polarizing those who think law €'stablishes an ·•objectlvestand·
"At tht End of the Po- roy-Mason Bridge
Goetz acted like a hero and those ard" that permits use of force mly
when
a
person
••reasonably
be·
POMEROY, OH.
PH. 997-7551&gt;
who believe him a criminal, and
LEADERSHIP CAMPERS - Pam Ash ol ~lne and Dan Leoruu1~
lieves•• it ~ needed.
raised
questions
about
when
a
of Pomeroy have been named wfllners of scholarships to the 1986State
"We canoot ... allow the perpetra·
person is justified in using deadly
4-H Leadership Camp. They will be sponsored by Nationwide Inourance
force tn self.&lt;Jefense.
Companies and tbe Ohio Fann Bureau Federation. Pictured from left
'"What would be nice would be a
are Nationwide Insurance Representative Paul Pauley, Leonard, Ash,
nice,
calm discussion about every·
NatlonwJdr Insurance Representative NeacU Carsey, and Fann
thing
(during the trlal)." he said.
..
Bureau Representative Zlha Midkiff.
•
Goetz said he was disappointed
•
by Tuesday's decision but would not
appeal. He added that t~Y2 ruling
would likely do nothing to stop
•'
otherS
from
acting
as
he
did.
Two Meigs County 4·H members will f&lt;'ature in-depth leadership
Goetz said he noted "with
will be sponsored by Na tlonwide development workshops and expe.
Interest"
that prosecutors have not
InsurancE' Companies and The Ohio riences. Dr. Gabe Campbell of
Farm Bureau Federation as partie· Akron will lead four half-day
!pants In the 1986 state 4· H leadership seminars with aU dele·
•
Leadership Camp at Camp Ohio. gates, and Ohio State University
July S.13.
faculty and staff will conduct 45
Ohio Extended Forecast
Pam Ash , daughter of Ron and leadership option sessions from
Friday through Sunday
Mary Ash of Racine. as been an which campers may choose.
Fair Friday and Saturday, with a
active 4·H member for four years.
In addition. participants will be
chana&gt;
of soowers and thunder·
She is a member of the Country involved In hands·on leadership
storms
Sunday.
Highs will ran!l{'
Clovers 4·H Club.
experiences In actually planning
from
the
upper
70s
to the mid Ills
and conducting portions of the
Friday,
climbing
into the Ills
Dan Leonard, 5on of Nick and program, Including the evening
Eleanor Leonard of Pomeroy. is a programs. lnspirat ions and citizen· Saturday and ranging from themld
Ills to low 90s Sunday. Overnight
nine·year member and Is currently s hip ceremoniPs.
enroilro in the Meigs County
The leadership camp ropes to lows will be tn the 60s Friday and
Shepherds 4·H Club.
help instill personal leadership Saturday mornings and between ffi
The sponsorship will provide full skills, personal growth, and the and 75 early Sunday .
South Central Ohio
program costs at the camp, which ability to share idea s and met rods.
Showers and thunderstorms
likely today, with highs in tiY2 low
90s. Show!'l's and thunderstorms
likely again tonight , with a low in
Eli! Andrews, president of the tl"t&gt; upper 60s. Mostly cloudy
CHICAGO (UPli - Members of
the Unltro States Steel Workers of union, callro the agreement "the Thursday, with a chana&gt; ofslrl"'E'rs
America Local 1010 Tuesday over· best steel industry contract that will and tlrund!'rstorms and highs In th&lt;'
mid 81s.
whelmingly approved a new con· be negotiated this year."
The probability of precipitation is
Inland released a statement
. tract with Inland Steel of East
60
)X'rcent today and tonighl and~
Chicago, Ind., ·officials for roth saying: ··we believe the new
percent
Thursday.
conttact will benefit both company
sides announced.
Winds
will be light and from the
and employees.''
west
today
and light and variable
Inland was the fourth of t~Y2 "Big
The contract, which takes effect
tonight.
Aug. r. was approvro 8,472 to 1.173. Six'" steel producers to reach a
The local represmts approxi· contract agreement with t~Y2 USW. r - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
mately 14.ml product Ion and main·
tenan&lt;X' workers at the indiana
Harbor Work.s.
The new three·ymr pact Includes
.CLEVELAND iUPII - Tues·
a wage freeze, a proflt·sharing day's winning Ohio Lottery
POTTERIES Inc.
pian. a voluntary gain·sharing plan,
nurnb£&gt;rs:
C
rahsmen
II)(
over
a century
an employee tax.exempt savings
Dally Number
plan, an extra week 's vacation In
594
198!, suspension of rost ·of·living
PICK-I
adjustments and improved health
·.·-~ .
0342
InsuranC&lt;' and pension benefits.

'l ·.-..
-.

-·.·
..
.,
,",

54&lt;

~

~

.,.,
...
..

-

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

3 ·a iG DAYS

Friday, July 11th .......... &amp;:oo·p.m.
Saturday, July 12th ...... 3:00 p.m.
Sunday, July 13th......... 3:00 p.m.

OF

·BIGFOOT EXCITEMEN
AND SAVINGS

oo•

ill&gt;

THE ORIGINAL MONSTER TRUCKrM

Stock# 6822

Rates or Rebates
As Low As•10,999.

As Low As '5999.

FACTORY SPONSORED FINANCING
AVAILABLE ON MOST NEW CARS&amp; TRUc.;KS

EXCLUDING FAEIGKI', OP'nONS. STATE. LOCAL TAXES &amp; FEES .

EXCWDING RIBGHT. OPTIONS. ST4TE &amp;. LOCAL TAXES&amp;. FEES.

OR

Rebates

Uplo

Ohio Lottery

$6QQOO

On Select New Ford Cars &amp; Trucks

Planned

Prices Crushed On AU Of Turnpikes Used ,car &amp; Truck Inventory - 3 Days Only!

1984 JEEP

1978 FORD
FAIRMONT

1979 FORD
LTD

1980 BUICK
SKYLARK

1980 FORD
GRANADA

1985 MERCURY
COUGAR LS

Stock ~ 62421. 2 doors. hardtop, 6 cyl , a11

Stock H66131.4 doors. hardtop. !alan. V·8.
31r mnd.. auto trans. PS. PB. AM/fM rado.

Stocki 68021:2 doors. 6 cvl. "' mnd,auto

Stock N 67541. 1 doors. 6 cyl.. a~r cond , •;
vinyl roof, aL1o. ~a ns.. PS, PB. AM/fM rad~.
stetw tape, r.Kiial l1res

Slod&lt; H66001. 1 doors. coupe. V·8, air mnd.,
~ VInyl roo!. auto. ~ans.. PS. PB. power
llinOO.s. l'l•er seat l'l•er door kldts. I~
wt...t. cruiSe cootr~. AM/FM rad~ . ~erl!l

WAS

WAS

CHEROK~E

Stock H66531. 4 ooo" . 4 wl'oel dnve. 6 cvl..
31r COild . auto. trans.. PS. PB. AM/ FM rado.
buck&lt;' seats.

NOW

WAS

'9895
'8895
1986 FORD
.ESCORT
. Stock H 64151. 4 doors. front wl'oel dnve. 4
c~ . a11 mnd .. 5 speed. stand trans. AM/FM
rti1K&gt;.

WAS

NDW

'8595 '7595
1982 TOYOTA

cond . auto trans . PS. PR AM/FM rad10

WAS

NDW

'1995
'1295
1984 FORD
TEMPO GLX drive. 4
Stock I Mill. 2 doors. front
wl"t~

air mnd . auto. ~am .. PS, Pa !XlWer 00o1
kiCks. tilt wl'eel. cru•e mntr~. AM/ FM rad~.

c ~ ..

'3295

'2295

9 •9 %

A.P.R.

NOW

WAS

'3195

'2195

FINANCIN

(Up To 48 Months)

sterro tape, rad1al t1res. bucket seats. re ar
Wlndow defllgger

WAS

NOW

WAS

trans.. PS. PB. AM/ FM radiO. rnd1al hres. wMe
walls

Avallabl&amp;f'On Most Used
Cars And Trucks.

NOW

NDW

3295
'2295
1983 FORD
ESCORT

1

Stock H 68251. ~ doo~. stat~n wagon, •ont
\\flee! drive. 4 c~ . 5 speed. buck&lt;! i'al&gt;
liaS

TERCJl

1982 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX

1982 CHEVROLET
CAPRICE

1981 OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS ·

Stod&lt; N 67361. 2 doors. sedan. front w1...t
drive. 4 c~ .. 4 speed. radial tires. oflrte wall&gt;

Stock I 6641 1. 4 doors. 4 c~ .. a11 cond.. 4
speed, AMIFM radio. bucket ""~·

Stock H 68452, 1 doors. hard top, 6 c~ .. air
mnd.. auto. ~ans . PS. PB. power winOO.,
power seali'&gt;Wer door locks. tin wt.el. cruoe
ron~. AM/FM r~. 13dial tires, "' roof.

Stock H 66551, 2 doors, V-8. '" mnd . auto.
~ans.. PS. Pa !XlWer winOO. &gt;tihl"l!~. cruise
mntrol. AAVFM rad~. ~erl!l lallf. ~dial tires,
•Me walls, ""r wi&gt;OO. defogger

Stock N66171.1 doors. hardtop,v.a.air rond ..
•; ~nyl rr.ol, auto. b'an•. PS. Pa ti~ wt...t,
cruise mntl(j, IM/FM radKJ, radial toes, white
walls. ""' wmmw defogger.

budletse&amp;

!3795

NOW

'2795

WAS

•3795

NOW

'2795

WAS

NOW

'5295

WAS

WAS

'6795

'6.195

•

NOW

1982 CHEVROLET
MONTE CARLO
Stod&lt; I 659!2.1 doors. coupe,6c~.. air
auto. tr&gt;ns.. PS. Pa AMIFM rad~. •Me walls:••

NDW

1982 CHEVROLET
CHEVETTE

!rAS

Truck Load

DAYS
ONLY

/ttHa~e~.
!!'
'
/
&gt;

TURNPIKE FORD FEATURING THE AREA'S LARGEST
NEW TRUCK INVENTORY

'fi·.

!Continued from Page 11

because they love and want
children and arl'ft"ddy for them.
Too many times , ttl' staff
conceded. teenagers are getting
pregnant thinking it is a way to
!l{'l out of a bad family situation
or of !l{'ttlng a YOUflll man to
marry her, or to Increase a
welfare check. And what usually
happens is that "they're digging
a deeper hole" - .thE' boy
disappears and too often the
pregnancy is a pr~lude to a
lifetime of poverty and welfare
. dependency.
Twenty·thrre percent of all
live births in Meigs County last
year w~re tc teenagers 19 and
under. many unmarried.
According to statistics In a
study by the Alan Guttmacher
institute, American teenagers
become pregnant, give birth and
have abortl:&gt;ns at signlflcantl)r
higher rates than do adolescents
in other industrialized nations.
The AGI study reports that the

Unitro States is tl"t&gt; only devt&gt;loped country where· teenage
pregnancy has been Increasing
in recent years.
This, perhaps. is a sign that
tePnagers are not being given
adPquate sex education in the
oomeor school and ar€' not being
educated and Informed abou I.
birth control.
What It finally comes down to.
the executive dlrretor said, is
"caring about yourself, caring
about others. and taking res pon·
slblllty for yoor actions.··
"As tbr Planned Parmthood.""
sheooocluded. "birth oontroi is a
personal dl'('lsion , It is ttl'
responsibility of every woman of
chllqbearing age. We"re ootherc
to take care of Jot&gt;r. that's not oor
role. We are here to give
accurate info~mation , to give
certain types of medical treat·
ment, and to dispense birth
control devices and supplies."

I
,,

JULY 10-.JULY 11-JULY 12
Description

Stock#

Upright Vac

34301

S69.99

24971

5329.99

88762

NOW

SAVE

50°/o OFF
THIS WEEK ONLY

ss.oo

3

$17999

S150.00

3

$369.99

$2 3999

5130.00

3

23741

$469.99

$33999

$130.00

10

65731

$339.99

$2 5999 sao.oo

8

65821

$619.99

$46999 suo.oo

2

2.

COME CHOOSE FROM
OUR MANY 'STYLES AN6
COLORS.
3.

~~

'Q'Jettelen

ltl E. Mlln, Pomtroy

Microwave
4.

Washer
5.

8.

Refrigerator

WE' SERVICE WHAT WE SELL
&amp;ch of meu advlrtllld ltaml II readily a,tlllbll lor 1111 II ad .. rtlaod.

NOW

'5195

WAS

Quantity
tn·Stock

t.

Dryer

Stock #69191. 2 doors. caul". 4c~ . 4
PS, AM/FM rad~

..,__.••••o

Area 4-Hers win sponsorship

USW, firtn reach agreement

6.9% A.P.R.

.

~----------------~ ,

Ohio weather

1986 FORD BRONCO II

~

Prlc.. •• C&amp;IIIOO prlcts -

OPENASEARS
CHARGE TODAY

lhipping, lnll&amp;llat ion e •tra

Ask About A SEAk)
Maintenance Agreement Special

SEARS
CATALOG
MERCHANT
l~fl¢!t'rJ~
, IIU &amp; JENEW HAPTONST AU, OWNERS
N. SECOND

t92-2171

MIDDLEPORT

�'
July

9, 1986

1986

'

Fast-food chains reveal ingredients
AUSTIN, Texas (UP!)- The top Tai:o'Jile!L
Malt()l( saicl the five companif's
law enforcers in Texas and California have successfully led a were "doing a tremendous service"
"McMattox attack" on fast - food for the millions of Al\1erlcans who
chains to win disclosure of nutri - -eat fast foods. He jokingly referred
tional information for consumers of to lh!l' campaign to win the
hamburgers, french fr!E's and agreement as a • "McMattox
chicken.
attack."
Five of the nation's largest
Officials of the restaurant chains
fast-food chains - McDonald 's,
voluntarily agreed to provide nutriBurger King, Jack in the Box, tional and ingredient information
Kentucky Fried Chicken and Wen- after negotiations with Mattox and
dy's - agreed Tuesday to disclose California Attorney General John
nutritional · information to their Van de Kamp.
customers nationwide, Attorney
The . agreement rff)uires th~
General Jim Mattox announced. companies to provide ingredient
Negotiations were continuing with and nutritional information -

,.....,.,,ow.,
992·6771

• including calories, protein, carbohydrates, fat, cholesterol, sodium.
and !o&lt;Xl additives or dyes without charge and without the
need to make a purchase.
"I eat plenty of theS&lt;'fastfoods, so
It wUI D&gt; nice to know what kind of
fat the chicken is cooked in and how
many calories and carbohydrates
I'm having lor dinner," Mattox
said.
Before the agreement, the companies had limited product Information avail able at corporal&lt;
head&lt;fllarters only, not at \ndividuar
ooUets, he said .

~

FLAG ro scours- Boy Scouts, Mike PumnSand
James Rood give assistance In dlsplaybtg a new flag
which was presented by Camp IO!MMI, Modem
Woodmen of America, to CoolvUie Girl and Brownie

scouts, Shannon Breedlove, Cecelia pencer, J!Uiice
Pullins, Leader, !Uid Roberts Pullins, for use in scout
I mop activities.

Modern Woodmen celebrate liberty
A party in celebration of the
Statue of Lib&gt;rty's 100th year was
sponsored by Mo&lt;Ern Woodmen of
America. Camp 10900, at MaloneHendE&gt;rson Fann, CoolvUIP. The
camp had raised $100 and contributed ii to tlr restoration fund.
The Woodmen's Creed program
was led by Hooort Swartz, Alfred,
Ida Livingston, Bethany Ridge;

Bob Pullins and Frances Henderson, Coolville. AU veterans present
were given speeial reeogniti:ln, and
a nylon U.S. flag was presentro to
the girl and brownie scout troops of
Coolville.
Charmin Snodgrass, Athens, received a hall-century club pin and
certificate. Jennifer Coza rt. Coolville, was welcomed as the newest

memD&gt; rof the camp. Candles on a
hugh birthday cake were lighted as
the group sang "Happy Birthday to
the Lady."
Charles Byron, Stewart, artist
and philanthropist, painted go ld
trays as mementos of the even t.
Door prizes were awarded and
chPPr plates Sl'nl to shut ins.

ex tt"nsivP, ex~r imPntal Sf'X Pduca -

tion program with birth contml
centers next door while the other
two schools taught only the basic
sex education requirro by Ma ryland law.
Girls in t11e special sex education
program experienced a 30.1 pPrcent decline in pregnancies &lt;Ner the
Ihree years of Ihf' study, while
pregnancy increasal 57.6 percent
among girls not in the program
during the same period, the st udy
sald.
"We thought the program would
PRESENTED '- Allhe recent 52nd annlver·
sary observance of Chester Council 323, Daughl·
ers of America Lodge, Mrs. Betty Roush, right,

deputy slate councilor for Chesler Council, presented 50 year pins to Mrs. Ethel Orr, left, and
Mrs. Pauline Ridenour, center.

Murray reunion
conducted recently

Members of Olarles H. Murray
family gatherro on the land of
Olar\es 0 . Murray for three days of
cam ping.
Tho department said Warner
The occasion not only was a
owro income taxe-s of S:~1.006 dating reu ni on rut marked the wedding
back to 1978 and sa il'S taxes of $4 ,330 anniversary of Charles H. and
from 1981 and 1982 trom hi s Margaret Murray. and Mrs. Mur
business - Minnetonka Restora- ray's birthday. A hay ride and
tion Co. Inc., of Mound , Minn .
games were enjoyed by the group.
Th&lt;' old cars also included 28 Attending were ChariE'S and MarLincoln Cont inentals dating back to garet Mu rray, Pllmeroy; Anna
1908, two Thunci&lt;'rbirds and a Murray. Abe and Jennifer Russell.
Buick.
Dallas. Texas; Wiloor H. Jr .. and
Charlott e Rowley, Iron ton; Mike
Denise, Heather, 80njam in , Ashley
Rowley of St. Clairsvil le; Keith,
Angie, Amber Jorden, SPth Kettel.
Angry relat ives then opened the Frankin Furnace; .Jack. Minada
wroding rf&lt;'Pption at a Nak uru Murra y, Eddie. Brent Simms,
restaurant- prepaid b:c the groom Dav id and Natalie Fooce, Gallipo- to a ll com('rs, including vttgrant s lis; Charles 0, Debra, Mary F. lien
who beg for tips to guard and David Murray, Aloony.

Tax payment keeps classics from auction
ST. PAUL. Minn. it:Plt -Stall'
rev£'nue officers pursuing a coUeetor of historic cars for payment of
an 8-year-old delinqumt tax bill
finally got . their money - by
threatening to auction off 33 of his
automobiles.
Frank WarJI('r of Ed ina paid
nearly $44.0Xl in back taxes and

penalties Tuesdav to thr Minnesota
Drpartmf'nt of Rf.venur, saving hi s
1913 REO roadster, a 19W Hupmobile and 31 other classic cars from
the auction block .
The cars were S&lt;'ized by the
Wright Count y sheriff June 10 and
had been stored in a born Tl('ar
Monticello, Minn.

Wedding breakfast to beggar's banquet
NAIRORlt UPlt-Thefamilyof
a bride-lo-b£' turned her wedding
breakfast into a beggars' banquet
upon learning that the groom was
already married and the father of
three. the Daily Nation newspaper
reportro.

The bride's family found out
shm1\y bC'fore the ceremony Saturday in Naku ru . 90 milrs nor1hwcst
of Nairobi. that the groom had ix'&lt;'n
married for nine years without
gettin g divorced. the newspaper
said Tuesday.

Aack• Ptnell .... ....... .. tHi

13·79 Ford Fenders .... t39
Truck Bed
Lin.,. .............. ... FuH 1175
Mini 1185
FREE INSTALLAnON

2 VR WARA A.HTY
Sltlltaetlon G-..lttnt•d
Fru O etivwv in Tri St.-• ArM

Better ·late than never for Sail
By SEENA D. GRESSIN
NEW YORK (UPh - A Polish
ship that set sail off the coast of
Portugal for the Statue of LID&gt;rty
celebration docked In New York
harbor three days late and sent Its
first mate to tell a PQ)iceman on the
bl&gt;at It had arrived.
"It's a bit late," pollee spokes·
man James Coleman said.
The 37-foot sailing yacht, called
the Stomll, landed at 8: :JOa.m. EIJr
Tuesday but It was 13 h01,1rs Ia ter
that wUce became aware of the
ship, Which was to have taken part ·
In July Fourth's Operation Sail,
part at festivities homring the

returblsheci.Stal!le.

11

A first mate and another sailor
from the ship approached pollee Lt.
John McDonald, who was assigned
to crowd control for an evening
outdoor rock concert near Pier 84.
"They came walking out of the
crowd tn us," McDonald said.
"They were docked at the end of t he
pier with other boatS that are her e
fort he Cf'lebration and their captain
was concerned that they hadn 't
really gotten in touch with a
government o!llclal."
The first mate, Darluse Szymanski, quickly bi!gan relating the
tale of the . tardy shlJI, McDonald
said.
·
I

We also have black gas pipe for
industrial use, septic tank pipe
and all fittings.

Real Estate General

fEAFORDm

Real Estate~
216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
1-(614}-992-3325
~

NEW LISTING - In the country. 2 BRs, one floor. bath &amp;
Lead1ng Creek water. Llrge
level lot. Only $21.~0.
RANCH - like new 3 BR
home. Real mce lg. kttchen
plus servmg bar, dmmg, lull
basement &amp; db!. garage
near 5 Pts
POMEROY - 2 story 2 or 3
BRs, near the stores. Gas
lurnace, lg modern k&gt;tchen,
ca rpeting &amp; garage Asking
$19,600,
MINERSVILLE - Remode led 8 rms., 4 BRs, gas furnace, db!. stnk, fr eez er &amp;
range, T.P. water and I acre
36 ACRES - Easterr. schoos,
9 rms., 2 story wrth niCe
krtchen. 4 or 5 BRs.
35 ACRES - Near Pomeroy,
has 2 old er homes w1t h
leadin g Creek water
POMEROY - Nrce lookmg 2
story home m excellent cond&gt;lion overlooking the Oh10
R1ver Remodeled. n1ce car
peting, hot water lurnace,
full basement, 3 porches &amp;
garage.
SYRACUSE - 7 rm. home
ilemg remodeled . 2 level
lots, near the schools
SYRACUSE - 175 acres
w1th old 7 rm. home. all City
ut&gt;littes, shade &amp; garden
BUSINESS BLDG . - lg. 2
story li ke new front. 2nd lo
Main Street. Has good tn ·
come wtth lots more for ren t-

Surveys also showed students in
the comprehenstve progra m were
more knowledgable about birth
control. more informed about
sex-related JSsues and were more
likely to u s~ co ntraceptives when
sexually active.
The privately funcrdexperimental ,Program, startro . m 1'l81 and
ended June 1984, pro~ tded student s
with informa tion on co ntra ception,
free cont racep tives and courses in
"values clarification" in which
students discussed sex and rmrals.
"The implica tions of thi s study
are very high," said resffirch
leader Laurie SchwabZab in , diree tor of tlle fertility research unit at
Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.
"! hope it will encourage others to
invest more funds over longer
periods of tim e."

By WILLIAM C. 'ffi&lt;JIT
United Press International
KENNEDY FIREWORKS: George Plimpton . whose man ~
books include an authoritative volume on fireworks, says the
Liberty Weekend display was dazzling "I tmught it w"'
awesomE'," he said.
•
"There were mistakes, .which only Pxperts would have noticed
... but from an audiPnce scale, it was overpowering." Plimpton's
va nta ge point for the July 4 show was ABC's command post, from
where he was supposed to have oone the ooom-by-boom
commentary on the fireworks. "There was so much noise they
decided td"let the show on Its own," he said.
Plimpton's next assignment is putting on the fireworks di splay
for CaroHne Kennedy 's Ju ly 19 wedding to Edwln Schlos.•herg on
Cape Cod. "We haven't really talked about what W&lt;''re go ing to
do," Plimpton said. "It's sort of fun to S&lt;'nd off something to a
particular person that brings that person to mind" (a pymtf'Chnic
dedication, of sorts) . "She' s an old fril'nd and it's nicP to gpt to do
something like that."
LET TIIEM EAT FANCY PASTRY: Robin Leach. host of
"Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous." and two rich and famous
publishers. Mort Zuckerman of U.S. News and World RPport and
Malcolm Forbes. will be among thE' celebrity ju&lt;jges at the first
annual Bastille Day "Let Them Ea t Ca ke" pasl!y chefs
competit ion.
The July 14 cookoff will bring together some of New York's b&lt;'st
past1y chefs to see who can creal&lt;&gt; the conif'Ctio n most li ke what
Marie Antoinette had in mind when she issued her haughty kiss-off
to the French peasants.
·
RAID ON HOUSE OF GEORGE: Boy George and heroin arc
still making news. Narcotics sq uad detectives raidPd his London
home but found no illicit drugs, law enforcement sou rces said .
Boy's houS&lt;' was checked in what appar&lt;&gt;ntly was a sweep in
northwest London but the Cultu re Club singer was not homcwhen
Scotland Yard came calling.
Source~ say the police stU! want to talk to him about his alleged
US&lt;' of heroin, however. The drug co ntroversy all started when
George's brother wa s quoted as saying the sin ger had a bad heroin
habit and that doctors had warned he had only weeks to live.
The s inger. describPd as wan and sunken, later told a
newspaper he was using eight gra ms of heroin a day . He rncrd up
retraeting that statement , denouncing his brother for speaking in
public and saying he was in good health.
LOOKING INTO '111E FIJI1JRE FROM THE WEST: Loui'i
L'Amour writes about a bygooc era but thinks about th~ future.
The hest-S&lt;'lling Western author spo ke at the Western Governors
Association meeting in Colorado Springs, Colo., and told the
governors they have to "build a laun ching pad for the future."
The key to that, he said. is giv ing people a liberal ar1s roucation
to help them attain the kind of resourcefulness that was common
among the early settlers of the West. "They became problem
solvers," L'Amour said. "They had to do things for themselves."
L'Amour also urged the governors to bok out for the West's
trees. rivers and motntain_s. "We can cut down tn'es but people
don't realize that we an't exist without them," he said." A Iree is
much better In the • rest than In the sawmill being made Into
toothpicks."

mg.

SHING PROBLEM?
CALL 992-3325

Housing
Headquarters

THE BIRD CAGE
&amp; FISH POND
PET SHOP

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

59 N. 2nd be.
Middleport
Nut Door TD W'nltrll Aute

"He told me, 'I am from a Polish
ship. I have landed here and we
want to stay here,'" McDonald
said.
"I thought they had jumped ship
and were seeking asylum. Then I
realized he wasn't trying to jump
ship or anything - only that they
had arrtved," he said. " I wasn't
quite sure If they were P:Jlling my
leg."

The yacht, carrying Capt. Jan
P1asekl and a crew of six men and
one woman, had set sai!June5 from
the lslandofMadelraolftheroastof
Pllrtuga\ en route for the Uberty
Weekend celebration.

RADIATOR

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

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

992-6784

5-10-'86'i mo .

PH. 742-2656
RUTLAND MINE SUPPLY CO.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

· 34018 New Limo Rd.

RUTLAND, OHIO

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL- SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

ELITE POLE

BUILDINGS

RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
AGRICULTURAL
Custom Design
Service

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

REPAIR

Also Ttantlllluiu
PH. 992-5682

CALL 667·3271

e••,.,. lht Qallty

or 992-7121

ARMY SURPLUS
&amp; CAMOUFLAGE
Sizes 4 Yrs and up
ALSO HUNTING,
SURVIVAL and
VARIETY ITEMS

Rt. 7, Pomeroy, OH.
"Free Estimates"
All Work
Guaranteed

OPEN MONDAY
THRU SATURDAY

•Certainteed •Mastic •Aicola

ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

INTERESTED IN BUYING
APPROXIMATELY 2 112
ACRES OF ST. RT. 7 NEAR
-EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL?
IF SO, PLEASE PHONE
HOME NATIONAL BANK
949-2210.

PH. 992·2772

waves! . Electronic Or-

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

gans . Mobile service.

APPL.-b I 4-949-2145

0922 .

YOUNG'S

RAYMOND E. PROFFm (MAC)
RA&lt; INE, 01110
Office 949-2438

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Board of Education of
Eastern Loc,lll School Dis·

trict desires to receive
sealed bids on the following :
Dairy products
' Bakery products

Public Notice

work

PUBLt t:WioncE
On July 14, 1986 et7:00
p.m. the Orange Townahip
Trustees will hold a public
meeting for the purpoae of
the proposed uae of Federal
Revenue Sharing Funds for

Specificatton aheeta are the coming year. AU citizens
available at the treaaurer'a will have tho opportunity to
office .
give written or or•l comIn Order to be considered mentt on the ultt of funds
all sealed bids 1hall be re-

(specially

Mnior citizens).

ceived in the treaturar' a of. Tho Public Budget Hearing
fice by 12 o'clock noon on wilt oliO be hold at this time.
July 29, 1988. Sold Board Tho meeting io to be hold It
of Education retervea the the honw of tho dart&lt; .
right to accept or reject any

ond oil porta of any and all
bids.

- Dorothy M. Cotaway
Orange Townahlp Cleric
111 9 1tc

DRY FOAM

992-6215 or 992-7314

Pomeroy, Ohio

415-' 86-lc

Choice of
Materials

ly Mi&lt;haol Nortoft

ACCENT

992-21138

FENCE CO.ANY
PH. 992-6931
Ut.r S Cal

'\"

Eastern loco!

School

w ! APS DUPONT TEFLON

Diatrlct
Eloiae Boalon. Trflll!ls.

171

38900 SR 7
Roodaville, Ohio 46772
2, 9, 16, 23, 4tc

" AI Rtcnonallle Prim"

"Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

lnslallatian bailable

•LOCAUI OWNED

otOCAL LIMR

••lbl BuiWinp

i

M. KOCH, M.S.
~ LISA
licensed
Clinical Audiologist
:z::

4/ I

·-llll*lp

Trench ing of Arry Type
Beckhoe Service

MIDWEST
SEAL &amp; STRIPE
Serving this area
with PoweSeal seal
&lt;Gating and striping
. of
ani moktng
Asphalt &amp; Concrete.

.•

A
PLU. . .G &amp; HEAnNG

N!W LISTING - WOLF PEN - One lloor plan lrlme wrth 3
l!edrooms. d&gt;nm~ room. sunp orch and &gt;S really cute
$26,900.00

Now l.o&lt;ali..,
161 IMrtt1 S.lftll

available for pubic inspection
m weMdiVI at the rllkfa1ce

POMEROY - You shOu ld •M thiShouse' Rivervtew ,comple·
tely remodel!(( inside and out. 3-4 bedrooms, 2 baths, deck,
central air, and more 36,000.00

Cheater Township Cleric
38338 Toxaa Rood
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
9 1tc

Miofllltpor1,

W• CI"V Fithftg Suppl*

Pay Your Coble &amp;
Phqne Bills Here
li'-'!P- IUSIIIJS PitON!

"14) "2·6.110
IESIIIII Cl PIIONI
(.,4) "2· 71S4

11211tttn

W[ ARE YOUR SALES
All DSERVICE
H[ADQUARTEIS FOR
•ZEIITH
•SYLVMIA
•SPUD QUI£1 LAUIIOIY
•GII$IJII Hfll&amp;lDTOI
•SATIUJT( I'AlB &amp;SIIMCl

992~2156
'

a

6-23-'86-lmo.

....

llfW USfiNO - UCIII£ - Own 2 acres~ land with gar-

Wt.. .JAPIITI•

den Sjlate. fruit trees 1nd elbow f!lom! 2 storv. 4 bedroom
home in good conditlotl. Qmge, near schootsf $24,000.00.

••tltt.. lt!H

JIAII fRUIS£LL ... ,.................... , ................... 949-2MO
oon11.TU.IIfR ............................................ 992-52!11 ·

"VINYL SID ..G
• ALUMI&lt;IUM SIDING
"ILOWN IN

..._AIJUIS

-1

•M•ALI

orftiAYI

~AVILI

&lt;MAIMI

'7
f.

~

-

tAICAIIDA1
141 .....

&gt;,..
r~
~

. :·

'· ·t•.U6-1141
·

"

WANTED TO BUY u.ed wood.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

IISSBL
SIDING CO.

" Free

lu~t

Et1im1t11"

OIISTEI- tiS-1307

304-172-5709

\0-14':1fc

A ftN trip 1D Htwlii Clft b1
yourt, g•t in tr1 tht ground ftoor
of 1rea1 nt"Welt PlriV p4tn.
Hh'lng for rnaniQtmtnt poti·
tlo nt. No invnunern , wHidy
ci'IICkl, fr" t,.inklg, tuppli•
and urnple kit. Oetlllt without
obltgatlon ceH colleet 814--474-

5213.
Local Jew1lry Stor1 loold•H~ to;
fuN time , .....,lfton. Need to bl
inno..,lttvl. tnjoy wortling wtth
public, 1111d wimng to l•1m.
hriou1 8PPliCantl IMd COni·
ple11 JIIYmt to . Th• Otily
Tribune. 8oJI 1900, 8215 Third
Avt .. O•llipolfl . Ohio 48831 .

Pomeroy H••llh C1r1 Ctnt•r it
fOf' A~ 'l
ln • J)lft time position . Mun
enpy working with elderly end
pllllll'll IUrroundingt. Sllery
corrm~tnturlt• . Contlcl Nency
Vtn Met«. O.O.N. through Juty
25th It 814 -992-6808 . E.O.f .
World look·Chitdcrlft. r11n•
tll'lti1N• tlltd41d. Plft time, full
dmt. gUifiRt..l IVIilibfl. 30··

882·2415 .

ASSEM8LEA6 WANTED I

E~&lt;n

tilpll';' clownt. Simo'-. profh•·
btl, tnltlti.tll-patt.,., atpplil!d.
hnd llif-eddr•Md ltemptd
II'IY•Iopt, H1Wklllllding, P. 0
8oJI 13493 , Orttndo, FIOridt

814-448-9993.

Your prior military ltnfQic. ''
worth montY. AnE -4 C8ft Hm tt
much 11 •131 .91 for 001

Buying d1ily gold; til"lllf coint,
rlngt. leW'IIty. 11!Wiing Wtrl, old
coins, 181'UI curren cy . Top pri-

Army N1tion1l Guard. You cen

- - - -ph••
-

\\ .. •ted to buy · Sil'ol'lr

tantl. femllt. 304- nl -5878 .

WHir.·., d llch mot'lth in th t

q.,1lity tor 1150,000 lift intupoomot6ont. tptclll train·
in g. tnd mk'lfftlft1 benefit•.
EducltiOn fund_,g i11tto .VIII•
tile 10 qu11tfltd tnW.t.... Cell
304-175-311110 ., 1-1100-&amp;42·
"" C8!.

3819.

·· ·· Ganrpolii · ... ·· · Pome;ov :
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

&amp; Vicinity
Thu" • "'· on 8 ro_,

St "'

Thurm~~n. OH acrott from old
C~nttrVill•

School. 1·1

&amp;•••

r.......... , ......
O••og•
1-8:00 . Mov;,o . Good chtldr.,

shine.

roedlori!lhlolfO .J . V...itoRd.

Y11d Sale MondiV Juty 14, 9111
dlfll Otvit rMidenc., Rote tillt

eo

10 76

No S1111day Cals

8ig Y1rd le&amp;. T11• ., Wed .•

Thure. 3 Ftmity . At. 7. Ct.hir•.
Ohio.

Ftni'lurl. gun1. ~ clbln.._
t;tothing, mite::. 36 Gr..,. St.
Thurt. &amp; Fri. If rtin lntid•.

•W•Ihers •Oiehwalhert

...,., ctolf••· ...... woi!Mnt -.~

Ylrd lelt Ctothing fofthllln'tir•

•Oryen •F,..zen
PARTS

J/t IIIIo

and SERVICE

UMc

Virgil Windont . ~~~ Chettet.
JIJ.y 10th 9:00 -5:00 Attn or

tdult dothing. goH C8f't,
ttroll•. btdaprMd. Flrn grw•

cMdrlftt cloth•, btby tw6ng,
car Mit. giMtw," •· dinlftt.

•R•n••

··············· ············ . . . .
4 l1mlfv ~.,d ttle: Juty 10. on
Stlem Street 11 the A.sh
t'llid ...ee

•

I F•mifv Thurt., Fri., . ht. July
10, 11 &amp; 12 . Aou.. 514 Kygw.

•R.trigeraton

tiMily . L011 of boyt II girlt

c:tom., to IN fumhure. Thure.•
Friel.

•at..3 miMI out

Jlld. Wltcft to, lftM.

luJ1111il,.

Ytrd Selt July 1' • 15. Mondey
&amp; Tuasd•y. 9 AM til? Si"'C)ton ·•

on Rott Hill . Bleck &amp; white TV
wrth 1t1nd. dithn . g•rl• do ·
lhino. jr tillt .. linle o•rll 111'1 7
I 8, Levi i.en• tize I tlimt
Yard Stle July 11ft!. 12th and
afternoon on 13th tt Devkt
8rf!Wer' l . Stiv•tvil... Turn 11
foot of StiYIUviUe Hill off
Portl~nd laid ICnobl Aoed

(ChtiPl Some tntiqu"
Jtio, tth to 12th. 9:00 to e:OO
3'h mel... Depot St. off 124
Autltnd 01 Storyt Aun SU "'
I.Mdiflg C'-" off At. 7

Ma....,.,g S1le: Town.hlp Ad 11
blftlnd Rodl.,"'gt t.itgroundt
CtM ktftn• cloth... rHcyct.t. fld·
ing IO'ft, driP•· mil e. AM diV
ThurtdiY.

. Pf Pteiilaiif

30S.IMII-Awe.

&amp;

t61 ,230· vr . Now hlrtng. Ctll
805· &amp;87 -8000 Ellt . R-98015 fDf
curr ..t fedtrtllial.

32869 .

Work clft, good cond., low
mileage. c.ne1•· 388· 8248 Ot

915-3561

-All M1ku

PH. 949-2101
or 949-2160

TOWN &amp; COUN11Y
VnDINAIIAN
CUNIC
raul E. Shockey, DVM

• ...,. rr Am.
PH. 304-675·2441
•11 Alii CAll

c.n 814-448-3159

'-2· 1110.

!CUT OUT FOI IUTUII USII

..suLAnoN

Ntw Homts

SIW&amp; .-&amp;liiOIIS
..... wiii.·Tittor~ M ,...
T- 6:30·1; fri. 1·2 ,...
Snrr..., tO· ll o30 .,.

P.O. Box 4, Log .... Oh 43138 .

up to NO.OO 1 dly 1tt~ blir1g

.,)d ,

992-3345312/ nn

llfl-y.Office
For l111n

4111111

2282 .

ftmiU... RefriM"*'tl wHI 1M

2SS Mill St., _...,,
104 lltAo&lt;ry h ., , ...,..,

•DENOUI

TV&amp;APPUANG

tnd nll'll'tr uted t::lfl . Smtth
Buiek -Pontltc, 1911 Eettem
Ave .• Gtllipotit. C1ll 814·. . 8 ·

J\llv 11 . Appro• .

,.,, s.,,;,.,, lh.

.,

TOP CASH peid for '83 mod•l

2nd. hoo .. on•taht.
~...._ _ _;..:;::;..;;;..;:.;;;.;,;.., ,~..._ _ _ _ __;:;:_::.:;:;..JI E...... com .... nijy Vord ....

and Gr ..utilll
!totieMry, llogolli&lt;
Signs, hflll• l1110p1,
a..tillet Forn,

Uilll

814·441-J672

!I , ..~

n. rllASAIIT OffKI

OFfiCi .,,, ,,,,. ,.... ,,, ..... ,................................ 992·2259
ffffitf J, CIUAIID JR ..................................992·61·1

'

Ollie 45760

SAlfS &amp; SEIYICE

IIEW USTIIIO - IIIODLIPORT - Thts one should be soldt
Exce\lenl condition home In a Krettt nerahborhood . 3 bedrooms. I'II b1lh1. d&gt;ninM room. fir II buemertt. 2 car prage,
central"' and nw,!llllorma, ~w heatbi\11. carpet&gt;ng and
many great features. $47 ,500.00

'

PIINT SHOP

_,,_
.,,

,.,..,.,., WHiling

CLELAND REALTY INC.
POM(IO y

MIDDLEPORT - NICe rernodelert I'h ~tory hOme on a qu&gt;et
stteet 1n M&gt;ddlepo• t Many \aeiur es. mu st ile seen-PRICED
REDUCED. $23,000 00

1-614-696-1337
1"614 "593 "1693

THE QUAUTY
Offic• !upphl

W. ere looking tor expll'lenotd ,
qu1tifild , profeulonlllnsurence
19 lf'lll who IIJ)tcllli.. ln 1h
IO'oltr · IQI ma rktt. We htve one
of the moll competitive mld.i ·
Clfl IUpptemtntl ll"'d burill
product• on today't mtrke1. Out
medlclfltupplement 1110 oH1rt
1n ittt1n1 iuu• t..tu,. ·· tftil
policy mev be ittutd 1t the time
of ule. We trt tpeciall16ng In the
over-ege merk ... end w~ nttd
Ill ac:ltHttt to reprtt.nt u • . It i' VII
jutt dltcribld you ·· cell : 1·114 ·
385-8049 SAM to 10AM . 81111d
resume to F.A. Sh1y1 Ag•u:y.

! -13 Hn

WIUAMS TIIENCHifG
SUVKE

F•t AH ,,, ,tftllltllllil

Frontter F1rm1 R•teurant now
eccepllng eppllcaUont for tht
tol&amp;owing : wehr••· hotiUII ,
grill oook. bu1 boys , 1ppNcatkmt
m•v be tilled out betweln the
hourt of 2 PM 8. 4 PM 11. 387
Jtcklon Pike. G1H~olia, Oh .

Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

lowboy Hauling
Septfc: Systems
Licensed &amp; Bonded

rw~

601 EAST MAIN

Shamg Funds. All lntoreetod •
dtiz.,a will have tho' oppor· ·
tunltv 10 give wr11t1n and orll
comniOnl. The budget witt be
W. Michael Will.

S-14-llo

m -5!27 ar (384) ns-1316

MIDOL[POAT - Beauttful olrler colon&gt;at w&gt;th all modern
features, tncludmg IO ·itotrnd uool , frrep lace , cen tral au. for -.
mal dmmg room. 2 h8th•. lam1ty room and more
$43.900.00

the Cheeter
Town Holt. The propoaed bud·
get for fiacal year 1987 wHI be
open lor public diawuion .,d
wlllndudotho useofRovqnue

CLRSSIFIED RDS

'hole

'

Wtp., c11h for l1te model cle.tn
uttd Clrt
J im Mink Chev ·Oidt In c.
Bill Gent Johnton

Ed. Burll.tt B1rber Shop,
2nd. Awl . MlddltpOn. Oh . 81•gp• '1478 .

- (614)
446·7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213

TRENCHING IS OUR LINE

Wanted To Buy

ce~ .

z

Rt 4, Hysell Run Rd.
Pomeroy. Ohio 46789
Ph 18141 992 -2834.
992 -6704
FREE ESTIMATES

*"*lliltifl&amp;l

9

coli Mttert . SWAIN'S FURNITURE , lrd. I OIN• St. G•llipo-

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
CJ Co~erized Hlllrin&amp; Air Selection
z Swim Molds · Interpreting Services

0 ak Hill Community Mlldlcel
Ctnllf it cuuentty ICCepting
appllcttlont for ON tnd RN 't.
PI elSe oonttct Sheny J ohnton
AN. Director of Nurtlng, 814·
&amp;82 -n17Mon .- Fri. from8to3

ac:c~lirtg IPPIIC11iont

lit.

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

IUJLD U' TOCfTHfll

at 7:30 p.m. at

Read the Best Seller
Read the

7/ 9/' 86/ 1 mo .

FREE Ett. I Demonttr•tiont AN
Work Guaranteed in Writing

Custom Welding

sion Thursday. July 17, 1986

f7l

TO YOU "

Elements

f)tumbing Service

PUBLIC NOTICE

Board of EQucation

"WE COME

7'42-2027

BISSELL
BUILDERS

NO SUNDAY CAUS
4-16-'86 tfn

The Chost1&lt; ToW!lship Trus- wHI meet In Special Seo-

&lt;A tho cleric.

RestorBI Faded
O•idized Finishes To
Showroom Lus1er
.CARS •TRUCKS
•BOATS •PLANES
&amp; MORE
Presarves &amp; Seals
From Harsh

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Day or Night

54 Misc . Merchandise

School. If round pleiSe e~~!l
814- 448-7910.

0837 .

(Free Estimates)

WAMSLEY &amp; GRAY

Public Notice

949-25 I 6

LOST S-10 180 Homeltte Wuct.ller. Vicin ity Mtwten Ch•·
thlre &amp; Kyger CrHk High

LOST Grey male dog , IOokllike
Elkhound, WNring blutcolltron
v., . z~t Rd . c.u &amp;14· 387 ·

•MI. SIZES AVAILUU

Public Notice

Emergency

9339 diVI

Government Jobt. t1&amp;.040 -·

lott· M1ttock on George Hout ' t
propertv. 7 ·4-88 between M•r·
tin Or. &amp; MDUIIllne on At 180 .
Pie••• nrtum or call 814-448-

- Addon1 and remodeling
- Roo fing and gu11er work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electrical

ClfP .. •nd
upholat...-y .

We 4oarl "Horu Atoull4"1 Call thl
Cleltll4 Cl111 to Buy ••• Still

30•·

6 Lost and Found

7-8-' 86 -1 mo.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

·~ilil.t

TO HELP YOU BUY A.ND SELL

1 mtleB.njitypedog, 9montht,
1 m•l• bltck a. white miJI.ci
breed . 8 montht. Both hl!d
thOII . 304-8715-2320.

pairs (including micro-

prot«:ttd.

"CLELAND CLAN"

flmtle Doberman, black tnd tan
to gl'ole eway . Very friendty .
Good with kids . 2 Vlltl old . Ctll
81 4 - 742· 2982

Utld brickl, 10m1 broken,
875-3614

All major appliance re-

Ctuned.

SEE ONE OF THE

814-949-3096.

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

lmtallation senice

5-15-'86-1 mo.

Raal Estate General

01 W11!t Oail ly Stnhntl Ctm1lrtd Oept
Ill Cu~ 1 ! St Pomtruy. 01'110 •5769

Single bed . frame and tPrlngt
and double bed, fr1me end
tprlngt to give iway . Call

6-30-'116-\ mo.

Experl .. a.d dNmmer for eeteb·
llthtd rock blind. Netd tomeone
inttretttd'in working on origin lei
matttrlll &amp; playing .orne we...
ktndt. We htve good oonntc·
1ion1 In the recording induttry .
C1ll 814 -245 -6008 or 114·

246-11066 oft., 7 614 -445-

6 Kit1un1 to giv&amp;Way. 6 week•
old . 814-949· 2779.

GREAT BEND ELEaRIC, Inc.

Antennas
Satellite Sales

814-446-2318.

3 female klnent 10 giveaway .
Calico, creme end whhe , tiger .
Utter tr1lned. 814· 992 -7789 .

J&amp;L INSULATION

TV s,

POST OFFICE IN
MASON, W. VA.

1167-3513

2 cute kitten• to a good home .
Colt

Free kittens . C1ll 614 ·448 4514 or 814· 446-4841 .

1-17-86-ttn

TY-b 14 -843 -5241

CARE

Ptlt-time blbytltter wllh ref•rence• in G111ipollt ''••· Call
614·448-1402.

614-446-0269 .

CUSTOM GARAGE BUILDING

949-2263
or 949-2168

ACROSS FROM

CARPET

Smell dog haute, used lumber.
uttd oement bloCks, scrip iron.
Mutt take til. Call 814-448-

Good linlfl farm dog, un1ble to
1tke. w1nt1 1 _.od hom~ . C1ll

FREE EST! MATES

a.

Babytltter needed It my home .
C1ll 814 ·268· 1769 .,.ytlmt.

tcr81 good hay tor reking &amp;.
hauling. Ctll 814·448·8181

614-266-1274 .

VINYl
RfPLWMlN i
WIN~llW S

Hourly .CUnlc tldt nteded p1rt·
time In fllmUy plenning oftlcn
Mul1 hl'oll high tchool diplome
or equiv1lency; orgtnlltd, •
FIIPORiiblt. Tr.. nlng IVIillblt
for m11Ur1 lndlvktu1l who 11
"nthlve to reproducttve h.. hh
nttda of cllentt. looking for
10mtone who it tetf-mottvlted
S. cen· grow In the position 11
nttd "''•· Mutt hiYI rtlllble
trenaportetton; be wHIIng to
trtvellocally. Welkdey, tvenlng
S.turd1v hourt trt to bt
expected . &amp;end rtlllrnt. lnclud·
mg two empk)yment rlferenc"
to Pl~nn.t P~renthood of Sou·
th111t Ohio, 39e Aichl1nd
Avenue , Athent, Ohio 48701 ,
by July HS. 198&amp; .. PPSEO It an
ECJJal Opportunity Employer.

3

Full blooded Irish Setter fem1le
4Y2 -Ii mo. old, 1hot recordt. Cell

304-773-5222

PH. 9

Giveaway

446-73 13,

WE HAVE MOST AU POPUlAR BRANDS AT
THE SAME lOW PRICES

J.R.'s REPAIRS
L&amp;S
TRANSMISSION
REPAIR

4

3 bltck puppi11 wormed &amp;
th.ott, 8 weekt old . Ctll 814-

VINYL SIDING

10-8-tfc

BtFort v:.tr~Y mo.

6-17 -tfc

a .. , Flthtrman of GalllpoU1:
Would you like 1o mHt roort
men like yourtelf1 If to htrt ' l
how 10 do II.. Join BIII·Anglers
Sporttman Society. For more on
thit: tH Charln Bllnktnthip 11
919 Second A'ole . Apt 9. Gtlll·
pollt, Oh

3375.

1-13-tfc

Roger Hysell
Garage

7-7-'116 -1 mo .

992-3410

Howard L. Wrltesel

Real Estate General

PHONE 992-2156

Help Wanted

44&amp;-2155.

'13-'80 OM Fenders ... 139

Thl' bride was rcportro tm upset
to att end the ra:l'ption.

invitation to wrile GOP Chairman
The governor sa id RPagan's
Frank Farenkopf Jr. a blistering disregard fo r thf&gt; domestic oi l and
letter accu$ing the RPagan admin - ga~ industry " is crippling the oil
istration of failmg to help the ailing industry in Texas and has put
domestle oil and gas industry.
thousands of Texans ou t of work."
White ended the letter by saying:
"Every day the admin istration
"Thank you again for your
fails to impose a var iable tariff on
Imported oil, the more thi s nat ion consideration, but I will he working
txx:omes depencrnt on foreign with thr De mocra tic Party in
sources of oil and th e more our laying the fou ndation for Demonational sec UJity is lhrPatened," cra tic victories.''
White wrote.

11

73-80 OM

-People in the news__,

The Daily Sentinel

3 Announcements

Netd Avon Npr•ent•ttvee lr.
01ll+pQIIt • •· Frtt t11rt up f",
limited time. C1ll todey 814·

automobiles.

Dem governor declines GOP invitation
AUSTIN, Texas (UP! t - Demo·
cratic Gov. Mark White respect fully dee lined an errant invitation to
eontribute to the Republican Na tional Committe!', complaining that
GOP policy "has put thousands of
Texa ns out of work."
The RNC sent an invitation
addressed to the govl'mor's mansion s!'eking financial support for
the GOP fall cleetion campaigns.
White took advantage of the

mt have any effect when the
students D&gt;gan having sex," Hirsch
said. "Our study shows this particuJar program had some very positive
effects. It taught them how to say
'no."'
But the lbunder of the American
Life League, a political group that
opposes sex clinics in schools,
crltlcizro the program.
"If the study had found that girls
waited until they were married to
have sex, then I would say the
program was a success," said
Judie Brown, of Stafford, Va. "But
for thf' thousands of dolla rs it takes
to place a sex clinic in a school, the
difference is not extraordinary."
A1984 survey at the schools found
9l percent of the boys and 72.3
percent of the girls sa id they were
sexually active.

:.;t~ r w'll.l'~

~~

Study says sex education class
reducing teenage pregnancy
By GAYJ.E YOUNG
NEW YORK (UP!) -Girls in a
special "sex education class were
drastically less likely to get pregnant than girls not in the program
that taught the teenagers "how to
say no" and keep their virginity
longer, a Johns Hopkins University
study found.
Tpenagers in the comprehensive
classes not only kept their virginity
an average seven months longer
than girls not in the program, but
pregnancies in the educated group
decreased one-third- while pregnancies doubled in the control
group, which knew less about birth
control and sex-~elated issues, the
I
st udy found .
Girls who were taught about
sexuality remained virgins until an
average age 16 years. two months,
but girls in a control group not in the
program had their first S&lt;'X Ua I
encounter at the median age of 15
years, seven months, the study
found .
"One of the biggest arguments
aga inst sex education is that It
pmmotes sexual intercourse. This
study, for the first time, refutes that
argument with facts," researcher
Marilyn Hirsch said.
The three-year study, to br
published today in a journal of the
Alan Gutrrnach&lt;'r Institute in New
York, focused on 1;700 student s who
attended two junior and two senio r
high schools in Ba ltimore's inner
city.
Two of the schools- a junior and
senior high school - had an

ltitplllVrtlllll

Allllllitllt: I! 11\1 :ill'

Business Services

3-D1101/t
AUTO
CENTER
w. MaioSt.

Sentinei-Page-13

The

Ohio

snAca.-

n. Salt It 0• F•J•Ifl,
.

HUn LAHI •e IATIISI
116JS

un
' a.TDKS&amp;
10% Off
IMPS &amp; IICI litiS

11 PIKE .

1

.

BOGGS

SALIS &amp; SDYICE
U. S. IT. SD EAST
GUYSVW, OHIO

A.tlwi,. ,... o.r1fott••
.......

llnr IIIIIOJI,.W

,.,.. &amp;;dp!IIR'f

•.,..

fl,. E4fJ,p•rlt·

&amp; Vicinity

�•

/

'

/"' .

. Page-14-The Daily Sentinel
..~ 45

LAFF-A-DAY

11 H.-, Wari.t td
·-·.
EAIY ASIEMILY ·.WORK!
1714.00· .... 100. Gu..........
11-rm.-t. No tat•. Oeteill Mnd

(

Furnished Rocms

For rent Sl. .lng Room• and
light hou•e kiiPing room•. Park
C1111tral Hotel. CeU 814·4410758.

1t11mpilll •velope: Elan· 71 e
34)8 Ent"'1'riiO, Ft. P -. Fl.
33492.

Aoorm far rent, d.IV. week.
month. Oallla Hotel . Cell 614·
448-9580. Rantatlow u t120
month.

Women, Men, College Students
- Pen-tlmt job clou to home.
Elm •7 or more per hour.
304-8'78· 1090.

Fumlahed room 1116. UtlitiN
pd. 919 2nd Gallipolis. Shere
bath. Single malo. Call 614·
448-4418.

ATTENTION!! Mooan County,
W. Va. and L..wrenc. County,

46

Ohio. ONLY!!! N- hlrlngou...,.
vito,. and dltiiOnatrAnli. Show
Chril1mu decorltiona for Plrtv
plan. Part-time or full·tlme,

COUNTRY MOBI.LE Home Pork.
Rout• 33, North of Pomeroy.
Lerge Iota. Ctlll14-992-7479.

485-8733.

Situations
Wanted

"And it's so easy to put up

Lot to rent or buy in Aadneeree
whh country 11t1ing. Cll 11 4992-71123

Hwe
vecancyorfor
ekl.ty
per·
10ns, d•lbltd
retired,
recoupontlng. lhortond-orlongtorm.
In country etmoaphere. HIIVe
m.ren~. Cell anytime 114·
949· 3014.

and take down!"

Wanted to Do

Will da llwn mowing and odd
jobo. Call 614-416· 6266.
Smell.nginereplir. Lawn mow·
ers. wei&lt;! eaters ect. A eaon•l•
fl'icot. con 614· 992· 3367.
Experien01d, ntlitble blby ainer
with rlf•en CM, prefer 10 work
dey1 Mond1y thru Friday. Ahlf
5 :00 call 304-882 -3290.
Work WWitld, I) lint hou 181
inakle and out, work r•aonllblt,
304-876·1938 .

Ftn anml
21

Business
Opportunity

bu•in••

Eltabliahed
for "le.
IndoOr minieture golf COUf'M.
Downtown Gallipol~- Call 61 •·
446·8222 .
Strike it ridtlll Can you live on
15, 000 per month7 May lmit
you to t100,000 hon., 2 c.l'l,
bolt. etc. Few people hiVe
. eppMite tor thil typt income.
Sala •P· a ~Ta~lt 100% finenc·
ing. Exp~ae pakl training . 1·
' 800· 247· 2olote . Mr. Ray.
Southaaltem 8uain111 College!
The training you need! For the
toM you w111t. Fin~r~cial •aiat·
enc. avaHible. Call today: 614992·6177.
Extre ina:une? Awon! Insurance?
Avon! •s 10 ltart7 Avon! Call
614-992·1180.

Own your own jean· JPOrtlwear,
ladlu apparel . childrent mlt.,ity, large aizn, petite.
dlncewllr, ICCIIIOrill or bridll
ahop. Jordlche. Chic, Lee. Levi.
lzod, Oittno, Gue11, Catvin
Klein , Sergio Valente. Evan
Ptcone, Liz Claiborne, Membert
Ontv. Gatoline, HeatthteA over
1000 othen . 114 , 300 to
1U.900 inventory, training,
ftxturn. gr.nd op~ing etc. Can
op.-. 16 dayt. Mr. Laughlin
1612)888 G28.

Professional
Services

Water weU• HNiced and drilled.

Fr" •timat•. Call &amp;14· 992·
5008 or 814· 742-3147.

12 EVIftl Hgt.. Gallipolis. 3 bdr.•
remodeled kitchen, ful bas•
men1 with fireplace. 1 beth. Cell
814·441-8899.
3 bdr. • garage. chain link fence.
niW' fumace. On M1in St. in
Crown City. t26,000. Call
814-449-1&amp;11.
3 bedroom house. Tuppera
Plein•. Woodbuming fumace.
electric heat. newer roof. eome
remodeling done, recently
pairned. 117.000 own• anx loue to Mil 814-378-8374 or

614-&amp;93-8812.

Homes for Sale

4 bedroom houae. fireplace. 3
mi. IOuthoiGal!ipolil. *29.900.
Cell days 814-44&amp;-1615 or
evenings81•·.W8· 8222 .

3 bdr. home. cloae to town. 2
bethl, partly furn fthed. Gas
hMt, low U1iliti•· Call 814-246·
9248.

4 bedroom home on 1 acr11.
Hunter• P•adiae in Cheeler
ern. 132,000. Call 814-9864392.

3 bedroom home. 16 acr•. large
like. Home hM flreplece. wood.
coal. oil, hot water heat. new
kitchen. large yard with child·
rent wooden play center. Morning Star area. Call 61ol-949·
2603.
Home lor 11le by ownet, 3
bedroom, femily room. 1 "'J
bethl, price reduced, Arbuckle,
304-688-9148.
A frama house. 2 bedrooma.

Southside, W. Va . 304-876·
I 165.

4 bedroom, 21&gt;1 bath. bride, 8
level aeru. 1 mila from Mason
County Fait' Grounds toward
river. after 6:00 call 304-2730917
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST. GALLIPOLIS. AT 35.
PHONE 614-446-7274.
1974 Stardult 2 bdr .. 2 bath.
DR . LA, eltp..do. new : furnace,
carpet. hot Water hett•- Cell
614-... 8·391 7 8W'el.
Ueed Home Sale. 1500 dOwn.
t1 50 pet month~ lnaurende
inctudtd. We have 9 to ull et
rh•e pricts. Delivered in Ohio at
No extra charge! El111 Home
Centers . Chillicothe Portlmouth· Circleville. Call 1·
801)-828-0762 for info.
1978 M1niaon 1 4A70 reduced
11 .000. Muat ' "· 614-388·
9850.
1981 Shultz mobile home
1olx70. 3 bedroom. total elect·
ric. new cenbll tir condition•.
vinyl underpinning. Verv good
condition. •lrllldy set·up on
rented lot, t11 ,600. Call 81ol·
367·0147 .

New Moon. 1 Ox60. Porch.
underpinning. 2 bedroom. bath,
kitchen. living room. all furnished but INing room. $2600.
614·742-2291 .
10J1&amp;0 Roycnh . 13800. ·M ott
bo moved. Ct11814-992· 7623.
1974 two bedroom electric
mobile home. Good condition.
PJict reduced to 1•100. Mult
..n. 814·9S8 · 3926.

3 bdr., lerge kitchen, b1th, utility
room. tingle garage. 2 c•
driYewev, nice yarJ, gtrden
spece. finilhed gll'age. Call
814-448 ·135B.

1986 New Moon. 101156, 2
bedrooms, loCited on 1ol3 and
king1bury Rd Call ISU-742 ·
2214.

For 811e by ownH 3 ecr• flit to
rolling with 12AI56 mobile home.
118.000. city sc:hool dittrict.
Call 814-448-8502.

1988 Clayton Or11m Houu
Mobile Home. Built-in miCJO·
wave. TV. stereo. and dis·
hwaaher . Must sett. Cal! 614·
742-2939.

HooM for tale. 1109 Adrian

Avenue. Cell 814-446 -3718 .

MOBILE HOMES MOVED: insured, r811onable rates. Cell
304· 676-2338

HouM....for sale or trede with 1.6
1crH.. 3 bedroorm. 2 b1th1,
L.room and famity room. Com•
see. meke offer. Call 614·266·
6580 or 814-446· 1511 .

1973 Beron 3 br. turn .. central
lir. ltltal elec .. cornM lot bldg,
chain-link fence . 304· 773 5612 .

4 bdr. houll, big :Z c~r g•ag•
wttb anechlld grHn hou~t. fn.th
pilar • 3 .erN. Ceii614-44881SI .

2 bedroom mobile home. porch
and awning. air cond, new
cerpet. w11her 1nd drver, phone
304· 876-3334 .

1YJ atorill, 4 • 5 bdrs., 2 batht,
tun baHmlnt, firepiKe, 141120
bulkUng with garage. 8.1 ·ecr11
tn Aio Orende nur Bob Evan•
Formo. 183.000. Call 814·24&amp;·
&amp;197.

1881 Chempion. U~t70, good
cond. 11ft batt11. centrllllr. over
one tc:re ground. 118 .000 .00.
304· 678 ·58S8.

For Mle
Uxl8.
hookup,
Olttrlct:.

Of rent 1973 FrMdom
2 bdr., walher dryet
aif cond .• Kyg« Creek
t4.700. 1111 r•and
UOO dtp. Coli 814-441-3·1 52.

Quality home. newty remodeled
choice location on Coll1ge Rd.
8yrKUH, n.w compl ..e kitchen
and !Mindry, .., condhionlld.
lorgolot. 814·992·1324.
Oov•ment homea from 11 . IU
r-irl. Oeflnquont tu proporty.
R.,:a rM'atont. C•l 101·11?1000 Ext. H-. .08 for currrapo !lot.
lroomhouM. 1 . 21CNI. 0GU~I

0, ..,..,• . Loc.ctd on RoM Hill.
lorgtlh prlood •20.000. Coli
814-178·2113.

.._.,. lootl. Ruttlc Hill, Syro...... 3 -....m. lorv• kH chlft.
l. . . l!vlngroom, .~. cond. , dloh
wooh•. corptttd,. lorto 1""'0·
Prlco reducod.' 11'4·112· 7471.
1:10 114· . . 2-3402.

35 Lots

1978 Buddy trill•. all electric,
12d0, 304·87&amp;·2808 or 876·
2283.

I 9&amp;9 8uddy I b66 with 1974
two room edd · l · room ,
18,300.00 . 304·882· 37S6 .
33

Farms for Sale

34 A. Farm. At. 1 Leon. Malle
Ollar. 1· 904-&amp;91-8429.

35 Loti

S.

Acreage

311 icr• tor alt. Hor11 Cave.
Aoclnt. frft gM, 814-948·
2170 .. 614-167· 3470.

Athton bu-g lola whh public
wat•. mobile homee permltlld,
304· &amp;76·2338 or 304-8712217.
)
2 tota lor tale. Alto tr•Harlot for
...t. 304-178-3407.

S. Acreage

•It•

Building
3 to 17 acr• 3
mll11 w•t of HMC. Cell 814·
449-8221.

1 to I acr•. p1n1111y wooded
Iota. Tupper Pl ..nsMd Ch_n ter,
water and approved road to e,ch
lot. Ae110nably priced. will
finance. 10 percent down. Call
814· . . 5-3594.
7 IC,.. with complete mobile
hol"'''l hook-up. Ch11ter ern.
aaldng t10.000. Cell 814-986·

3925.

3111'01 bedrooms. t'h beth. XL
living room. XL khchen. utility
room, garage. ArbeughAddtUon
in Tupp.,. Plains. Call814-8876239.

1980 Llbarty 14•64, 2 bod·
room. unfumished. vinyl underpinning included. Must sell. Call
304· 773-6873.

Real Esliile
31

Homes for Sale

6 room house and bath with 1'YJ
ecr•. Atlntenectionof143tnd
7. tum left, tiflt green hou11.
Call 614· 992-7463.

!NOTICE!
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recomrnendl thlt you
do butin•• with p-.ple you
know , and NOT to aend money
throu~ the melt until you hne
i'IV•tlgMid the offering.

23

31

Trailer apacea. Sand Hill Road
convenient to tdloola. tt:ore and
hotpitll. City aewer avall•t•lnqulre Aotllet. 304-676·4800
between 9 :00 and 4:00 week
day a.

Trail• apacll, 111'1111 children

1~;:;~;;::::::;~::;:::'1r;;~~:;:;::;:::::;=1

flmity man Wllltl full or part
time janitor work . Muon
County. 304·458-1042 .

18

Space for Rent

Mobile home tpace for rent ne•
HMC . Coli 614· 446·3817.

mtke your heun. No collecting,
delivering or inv11tment. FrMICit
Wid trtining. Call collect 304·

12

Wadn~y. July 9, 1986

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

accepted, At. 1, Locutt Rolld,

blck of K &amp; K Mobile Hom•.
47Wanted to Rent

Bulin•arnan transfered to Galli·
polla. Needs 3 bdr .. home. leue
prefered. Cell 8111 Heu work
448-9&amp;40 or Holldov Inn 446·
0090 room 213.
Nice houae or mobile home in
country. With 1 or more acres.
Prtferably Racine or Portland
.,.. or will con1ider o1her
location in Meigl County. Call
el4-949·2643.
Want to renl hou11 or mobile
home, 2 bedroom, prefer country setting. 304-876-7288 .

2 bedroom fumlahed house in
Middleport. Call 614-992·
6304.
•
2 bedroom Duplex houH ptr·
tlally furni1hed . Low utilhi81. in
Pomeroy. Call dtyL 614-992·
2381 or 614·912·2&amp;09 oven·
ings.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wuhen. dryert. retrtger1tora.
ranges . Skagg1 Applianeu,
Upper River Rd . betide Stone
Croot Mottl. 614-446· 7396 .
County Appliance, Inc. Good
used tppllances end TV tats.
Open SAM to 6PM . Mon thrv
Sat. 614-446· 1699. 827 3rd
Ave. Gellipolis. OH.

Fumithld 2 room cottage for
lingle pnon, 1111 .00 we.t,
utllhl• pold. phone 304-875·
3100 or 878·5509.

Valley Fumlture. neYJ &amp; u1ed .
Large HCtion of quality furniture . 1216 E11tern Ave .,
Gellipolit.

2 bdr. ·tUm: ·6r' ·\.lnfurri. conveniw location, Upper ANer Rd ..
all utiliti• paid except .,ectric.
Sec. dep. req. Call 814-44885&amp;8.
2 fumlahed trail•• in Syrecu...
Pey own utilities plu1 depoait.
Call titer 6:00 614·992·8236.

2 bedroom mobile home, 'h mile
Jerrlcho Rd. Call ohar 8 :00.
304· 676·8483.

Refrigerator hllrvtlt gold t126.
refrigerator whha frost free
1160, refriger1tot side by side
1195. upright freezer 196,
Kenmore wa1her 17 5. Whirlpool
w1ther •es. GE wa1her 1160.
dryer hai'Yftt QOid t95 , electric
rangtt haNnt gold 196 , electric
range 30 in. coppertone t125.
eltctric range hiMtlt gold 30 in.
1126. electric range eye level
oven $1150, bedroom suite S76.
Sklgga Appliances, Upper River
Rd, 614·416· 7396 .
For sale good uted rotor floor
model TV '• · Cell 114· 44CII 149.

3 bedroom mobile home. fur·
niahed. alto 2 mobile home Iota,
phone 304 ·875-6512.

Kitchen cabinet• very good
condition. also some butcher
block counter top. Call 814446·6278.

Treiler, 3 bedroom•. 1175.00
month . water Included .
1100.00 deposit , 304-6762247.

Whirlpool heevy dutv wnhar &amp;
dryer avocMto green 1200. Call
814·446·3152 .

2 btdroomtrailerAshton Uplllld
Road, t1150.00 month plu1
utilltill . 304· 675·4088.

Gibson chNIIreezer 16 .3 cubic:
ft . in uo. cond . Call 614· 4462386 envtime a~teapr 12 PM to
3:30PM .

44

Apartment
for Rent

2 bdr. utiliti .. partielly furn.,
1175 mo. Call 304·675-&amp;104
or 304·175-7928 .

Older couple~ 2 bdr .. utilti•
partly pekt t160 mo. , Call
304-876· 6104 or 304-675·
6386 or 304·176· 7926.
Houae &amp; apartment for lingl•.
Call Jo•·-67&amp;· 51 D4 or 30•·
678·5388 or 304·676·7926 .
Furnlahed :Z bdr. apt. utlliti•
partially ptld. Call 304· 676·
6104 or 875· 6388 or 304· 8715·
7926 .
bdr. tuml1hed apt. newty
redecorated. nice location,
edulll only. no peta. Call 814446· 240•.
2

Furniahed etficttncy ept. , c•ptt
throug:1out, Jingle working Pet·
son. ,, 1 85 Including water.Call
614-448-4807 or 814 ·446260'1.
~=----:--::-::::-:---:-:

1236 a month. all utilittea !)lid.
Call 614·448-9244.
Two bdr. apt. in Minersville.
StO\ e &amp; refrlg. 1200 ptr month
with depoah • ref. Call 81ol·
446·1157 9·5 Mond..,· Friday.
814-3t7-7218 aftar tlour1 &amp;
wtekendl.
Nict 2 bdr. apt:. 4 mil11 from
GtlllpaUa. Stove, refrig .• • we·
ter furnlthtd. UOO monlh. No
POll. Coli 114-41&amp;-IIC138.

55

Building Supplies

Building Materials
Block. brick. aewer piptl, w4n·
dowa, llntela. etc. Claude Win·
lers, Ala Grande. 0. Call 614245.· 6121.

Guarantied Used Bargains.
Wringer Washer&amp;, t1ol9. Rtfrig M'ItOJll , 1249. Air Conditioners.
t199. Auto. W111h1r1, t139 . up .
Gn or Electric Drytrs, 175. up .
G11 or Electric Rang•. 169 . up .
Firlltone in Mkldlaport.
Pickena Uted Furniture. Good
quelity uted furniture. Open 9 to
6 or call for 1ppoint ment.
304-676-6483 or 675-1450.
FrN1er and 911 ltove for aale.
304-675·6073 .
2 living room sultll, exc con d.
satellite Unlden and 7.000 -v•lem, 3 months old. 304-876 87&amp;0 .
Living room chairs, day, eAc
cond. 304-675· 6687. apt . l01 ,
Twin Towers.
Gibson. aide by lide white
refrigerator -freeler, 1300.00 ,
e111C cond, 304· 773-&amp;217.

54

Misc . Merchandise

Ctllahan'• Uted Tire Shop . 0'11er
1,000 tfrN, liZ" 12 , 13, 14 , 16 ,
16, 18 .5. 8 mil11 out Fh. 218 .
Ctll 814-256-6261 .
Pintle clatem nete epprovfld.
plastic septic tankl, piMtic
cutvertt, met1l culverts . RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES . Jac k·
ton , Oh. 614-286· 6930 .
FOf lila: Hartequ~ Romance
bookl 270 for 176, white
wooden tebte t26. Sea at 266
So. Fourth Ave .. Middleport,
Oh.
New T"tament deaign embroid·
ery quih, handmade by church
group 1100. Cell 304-937·
2661 or 304·456-1997.

CLOSEOUT'S
SURPWS
BUY BACK'S
1. New utvage 11111 door
blanks, nick• end 1cratch• 116
to 125 ••.
2. Thermal pain antherJTIII break
alu~num window a aeveralaizu
149.95 to 179.95.
3. 8' aluminum patio doort 111
$199 .96 weith •creen.
4. Octogtn led tim.., glau
wlndowa e49.96 .
6. 16 lrte pine French doors B
gtadll 189.96 .
6. 4x8•'1• Ma10nite under layment 129.96 ea .. 41t•ltlJ• 11 .00

•••7.

toung groove waffle
board exterior glued 8 18 .96 .
8. 4~t8x V, Toung groove ply·
wood B 110.96 .
9. 4d~t 'h 4 ply plywood 8
88 .99.
10. 4•8•1f• Iavan plywood B
$4 .49 .
11 , 4x8xV. ulvege ptneling
12.99 .
12 . 6' redwood uain picnic table
with 2 bench• 139.96 .
13. Prehung interior doors all
1iz11 and lini•h" 129.96.
14. Prehung ttMI panel doort til
Iiiii t89.95.
15. Wood prefini1hed vinyl
wraped colonial trim 7pc. 1100.
16. Primed tllrdrop wood trim
81 .00 7 pc.
17. K-luA brick comn 11 .00
per boA. 12 box 110.00.
18. 32" x78" 'II thermal tem·
p•«i gla11 reg . 179.95 now
$29 .95.
19. Rock face brown trail•
skirting 28" x60" 13.99 11.
20. 22 " x33" 1tainl111 steel 10'
deep sinks I grade 159 .96.
21 . Slllnl•• ltHI corner -'nkl
169.95 B grade.
.
22. 4pc. aolidoakanilbraubalh
set 123.95 ea. 3 1et1 and up
lt9 .96.
23. 5 gal. aluminum fiver mobile
home roof coating 122 .96 .
Penn'• Warehouae, Wellston.
Ohio . 8 to fi. 6 day1. Call
61&lt;· 384-3846.
4x8~t 1A

Block, brick. morter and ma·
sonry tuppliea. Mountain Sta1e
Block, Rt. 33. New Htven. W.
VI. 304-882-2222 .

56

Pets for Sale

Dragonwynd Cattery kennel.
CF A Himelayan. P1rai111 end
Siam•• kitter11. AKC Chow
puppiu. Naw puppill &amp; kittent.
Ctll 448 · 38441fter 7PM .
AKC
born
shot.
OICh

Reg . Lahsa Apao puppiea
May 28 . Wormed &amp; firlt
2 meta, 2 femJiaa , 1176
Call 814·446·0706.

A.KC Reg. Yorkshire Tertior
puppies, wormed &amp; flrat lhotl.
Cell &amp;14-446· 0871
AKC reg. Beaglea. 4 maiM, 8
wk• old . 150 each . Cell 614245-9678 .
Puppy, male. 13 weekt old,
mother half lebr.. or &amp; half
8rineny Speniel, co~r blac:k.
aome whhe. Good homt only.
$10.00 . Call 614·448-4824 .
AKC regiltered Collie puppin,
S1ble 1nd Whitt. lhot1, wormed
and eye checks. 304·oll8·10&amp;e
or 468· 1603.
Bl1ck AKC riglltered Gerrpan
Shepard pup1, Jerry ' t Run
Aoad. Apple Grove. W. Ve. Look
for the signs . Shot• and
wormed, 1150.00.

Musical
Instruments

&amp;·piece drum 111 whh cymbala &amp;
Clrrying Clll. Call 114-448·
8633 or 614· 387·7197.

C-3 Kimblll Ora• ' for ule.
Great lhape. 2 y_ea" old. 1915.
Unon full 1iz1 microwave. e x. ' Call 814· 112·2772.
c:ond. t176 . Klndltu~~ood wood·
burnll', ex. cond. 14&amp;0. Call Upright pleno whh -beUinnen
mutic t•10n1, 1100.00. 304814-2&amp;e -1932.
773-8278.
Old coal or wood ll.ove IMP•
Pomeroy 2 bdr. Naylors Run, lnctudM 150. Toreh gage lit·
Fruit
t17tl mo. •1 00 d-..oalt yard. nM never ulld 11 ISO. Tri·state
plllio. Call altar lpm 614·992· 230 AC·DC wtldlng mtchlnt
S.
Veget1bles
6888.
with tupplilt 1250 used vary
lttllt. Call 814· 379 · 270&amp;.
APARTMENTS, mobllo homot.
hou . .. Pt. Pl . .1nt end Gatlipo- New 12 lndl Craftmen woad White Ya Nttn• bl1n for llle.
Call 814· 24&amp;·8883.
llt. u 4-44•·1221 .
lithe, bend\, 11t fr•d woodtumlng toolt, 1100. Call 11 4· Httf runnar baana, you pick,
APARTMENT FDA RENT · Now 446·0104 or 8\4· 418-7321 .
13.78 buahtl. Coli 614·448o.....,...g oppllcttlontlor ronttl
.....,_,. In M - Aptt L~ 3 ton home air cond., NVeral 4897.
mtted. Two bldroom ltptt at
"'-•-....,-~
Ctlt 514. McCeualand Farm 1ncl G1rden~
UH.OO par A!Onth. Aonttl 381·8331
.
Ctbb,o 4 hoodt t1 .00. Swoot
rOIM bo hlgll• dtplridlng
Com 1 .10 dol, H111f runner
on ~oome. HOUiing will be
30 In"' 780.rang, ·~ Call boont, tomotD-. US At. 31 S.
aveflable to each IIPPMaent ..- 614-418·
U mllorll. loutMido, W. Vo.
, . . _ . of thllr ,._ ootor.
- : : : - : - - -·lortUgkwt, aex or natuiel Origin. :4 -:-:-and one 1hird lquerH John•·
lnt-'od oppN..,.. thould ool Monwllltlht·giMa ~. Whltoflbtr
59 For S1le or Tr1de
304-77,3· 5011 ·or -toot D• DIHI thing!•. !ol original 0011.
nile 81re1• or Wah:• Juetlot It II Inch I&amp;W ~CA ttl ..!tlon
tho 'oflloo. 1171 lrlot 1&amp;,000 STU air oondntonar:
Ro•d· lloynoldoburg, Ohio both In good condNion. Slightly
31on control Ac, trade fOr a boat
41081 or col 114·113·451'4.
• mot"' ~"'-:" ... 4 · 3'71· 2240.
UUd. CaN 814·1t2· 2074.

1 bedroom ept. ior rlnt. Bllic
r.nt llartl 1215. a month that
tnc:ludll an utHittea. ·Oepoak
raqulrod of UOO. Contoot VII·
lege Manor Apt. Middleport.
8U· 992·1787. Equal Hauling
Opportunity.

&amp;B

~

s••

and
Motors for Sale

76

S.

EVENING

Auto Parts
Acce88ories

CAPTAIN EASY
WHE;N I Gf:T MY
HAN~ ON THOSE
CREEPe&gt;-

New ttHI body pont. 73· 80 GM
1nd Ford pick·up linden. 139.
73·85 IIIII doorw. t79. ChOV'Itoll
go..' "· 119. Ford tel
17&amp;.
ov..- 1t00 hem• to .chooae
from. C • M Auto Parta, BidwelL

a••.•·

Ohio. 814-416·8227 or 8yrdt
Euon, ChJrleeton, w.v. 304348- 3811. Dealer inquireys
weloomt. 216· 8&amp;2·41 34.

7:30

61

Farm Equipment

71

CROSS. SONS
U.S. 31 WMt. Joolcaon, Ohio. . 1984 Lttor tllvor 5lf)d. t7,300
814-286·54&amp;1.
flrm.Ctii814·416·78U lto4,
MM.., FergUIOn, N.- HoiiMd. oil14·416-9350 tftor 6.
Buah Hog Sal• • Service. Over
40 UJid tractort to chooee from 1880 Mercury M1rqut1 ex .
&amp; oa""letel~e of n.w &amp; uMCI cond.• one own•. Load MI. Call
tqulpnwnt. LargMt IIIIICtion In 814·411·3870.
S.E. Olllo.
1971 Flborglou Novo 327· 326
JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT HP .,,.,. ...Int. M-22. 4lfld.
CENTER. SR 38 W. GoRipollo. trMit. Ct11SI4·99~ ·8.941 .
Ohio. Ctl 61 .. 41&amp;·9777, eve.
814-418-3592. Up hont ~roc­ 1977 Okll Cutlau Supreme
ton with wan-Idly over 76 ul&amp;d
M&amp;O. Call 814·418·3182.
tr actora. 1000 tooll.
1982 Plymouth Horilon 4 apd.,
Utility bldg. SPL: 30'x.a'l8' air, AM-FM, wirerlma, 12,298,
with 1&amp;'~t8i' tlkt• &amp; 3' llfV, John' a Auto &amp;liM. Bulavllle Rd.,
door. 11.211 erected. Iron Gtlllpollt, Oh.
"
Hortt 81dgt, 614· 332·9745
collect.
1983 Chryii«LeBaron 2 dr., eir,
cruile, n.wllr•. 31,000 mil•,
MF mowing machine cleen ua. oond.. U.IOO. C1h 'l'ftiW
1391. 300 go!. lllri¥Or 1295. 5 5:30 614·416·3038.
ft. buth hog 1298. hay - n
1260, 3 pt. dltk 1291, fttld 1978 MMCUry Ztphyr. good
mowor t298. Call 614-281- cond. Call 614-258·1448 altar
6822 .
&amp;PM.
Simrnentll bUll 18 months old. 83 Cornaro lorllnttto AC, Uko
Ctll614· 357·7176.
ov• paym.,t,. Call 614-24&amp; ·
5024 or 814·245·5860.

HI C tractor wllh cuhtvatora.
disk. plow.. mowing machine.
bolly mowar 1995. Call 114·
28e-&amp;1522.

T· 6 Int. doztr with wench
13,100. 2415 DT Kabota tractor
wtth front lo .. ., • polt driver
dl•tl24 HP 1500 hn. Ford dl•ol
laMar bucicll &amp; bllde8 cyl. with
PTO. Call 814· 418·Ht3.
3 btoolc oowmlll
814-388-aesa .

u.aoo. dan

1872 20 h . Travel Trailer. Sleeps
6 . Very good condition. Call
114-992-2941 or 814·992·
1481.
1874 Apachl Pop up Campar.
Sletp,~ll tw 8. Selling ch11p. Call
814-992-llt8.

Now buying lhell com or ••
corn. Call for llt111 quo111. AIYW

63

Liveltock

3 Holstein baby calvet. Ctll

814-388·1e24.

1984 4 hone goollneck trail•
with dr111ing room 6 hly reck.
18x24 blm shaped wooden
buikting full of w111em tack. Will
sell ••••te. Cell 114-2816622 .

2 riding hors• excellent with
kldt. Call 814·379· 2120.
HorH tr•llera 2' horte deluxe
with dr...lng room. 11ft. gooM
.-.ck hor11 • ltOcll treiler. Cal
614· 288· 5522 .
For Hit: 15 yr. old houe, 2 yr. old
colt. Priced to lllle. Cell 114949· 3067.
Double Aegllterld Tennei~~
WaiiUng Horse Mere. levin ye•
old Bay carrying toll. 1600. Cell
&amp;14· 742·2050.
Arabill'l Hor... purebred Ar•
bi., ftud aervlc.. Speclel dla-countato youth groupa. A. • J .
Arebitnl, Leon, W. Va. 304468·1082.
Llying hens, 60 centa Ndl. Cell
304· 837· 2218. no 1nswer, elll
IYiningt.

Be. .lful &amp;yr old Stondordmare, lireformtr Sttble Champ
alto Quarter horee broodm••304· 486· 1817.

64

Hay

S.

Grain

StriiW for tale. Cell 8U·448 ·

1542.

WHICH AP-E You- • •

Camping trail If. like n•, 23
loot, t7.500. 2903 Pt"lth
Ave., Point Plellant, phone
304-876·3275 .

81

Home
Improvement&amp;

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondhlonll IHellme guaran'"· Local referenc11 fumilhed.
Frea lltimltea. Call collect
1-614-237-0488. dey or night.
Aoger• Beaement
Weterproofing.

.ALLEY OOP
OKAY, MI'N, WE'RE
MOVIN' OUT! FOLLOW
1'1-l' CAPTAIN.'

Exterior • interior stucco. PI•·
ter It pl•ter r-..airt. Lowa tn.
Ct11614· 266· 1182.
Stanley Steam• 2 room min·
imum 120 per room. GaHI..
Meigs- Vinton Coumi•. 1-800- ·
325-8136.

1973 Corvont, T·Topa 1698&amp;.
114-892·1421 or CM Ml 11
Coop• Chrylllf in Middleport.

Evll'greena. lawn care, und a
top sol, mulch, fir•
wood, tr" &amp; ttump removal.
Don'• Landlc••· 814-446·
9841.
tr~Vel,

1962 Ford Etoon, SW, AC, radiel tlr•. very ctaan, withe,
12.11110.00. 304·882-3200.

live.

CIJ 0

,.._...,t

1980 Chevy Citation, pa. eut, 4
cyl, with high mllaoga. 1750.
304·878·1727.

WHW I

~TA'ftD

RON ' S Televlaion Service .
Houae calla on ACA, Quuer,
GE. Spocltllng In ZonHh. Coli
304-878·2388 or 614· 446·
2464.

1970 Cheval!• S.S. 454. 4
splld , 1971 .00 , 304 675 ·
8644.

Autos for Sale

18 84 Plymouth Rlllent euto, air.
cruiae, AM-FM tePe. 13.791.
John'• Auto 8•1•, lulaviHa Rd ..
Qalllpollo. OH.

19S2 Ford Etoort 2 dr., AC,
otond.. 411,000 mi., 13.000
firm. Hugh Grth. .. 114·411·
1304.

I]) Hardcastle and
McCormick (CCI Hardcas·
tie attempts to help his unlucky brother pay off a gam·
bling debl by upsening the
anal of a beautrful model. (60
min.I lA) .
(j) National Geographic
Special ICC I After conquer·
1ng Mount Everest more
1han 30 vears ago. Sir Ed·
mund Hillary has spent much
of h•s time serving the
Sherpa people. who helped
him achieve the remarkable
l eal . (60 mon .) (R).
@ 111 GZI Airwolf Hawk e
and a group of paraplegics
on a camping trip are threa·

EEK&amp; MEEK

J &amp; J 's Home lmprovem.-.t.
Vinyl ~lng, overhang, ltorm
doort &amp; window•. gutters. C•M
614·418·8073.

1980 Toyota . muu tell.
t2. 100.00. Can bls• It Point
Auto .

WA~AKID 1
!WE. A LOT...

'(AIJSE. I DID\J'T LIKE. &amp;I~G
&amp;Al'9J UP~ TI-E TIME.

liJHE1J I

VJ~

WA~

a.rr

A "ID 1
A LOT ~

'THE.~~

4

Fltty TrM Trimming,

stump
romoval. Call 304-876-1331 .

'18 Flet Spider c:onvertiabte.
304·878· 2032 .

RINGLEI'S SEAYICE, ••oe·
rltnced carp••er. eiiiC'lrlcian,
m110n, painter. roofing (Inducting hot tllr 1ppllutkJn) 304876-2088 or 17&amp;-7388 .

1971 Chav, 4 door, Coprico,
Nnt good, 1498 .00. SH 2503
Penilh Ave, Point ptelllnt.
304·87&amp;· 3278.

~

'

I
9

PM.

B2

tened by a deranged moun·
1aon man. 160 min.! IAI .

lllJ

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Ro.. ry or cable tool drilling.
Moat Milt c:ompllted aemeday.
Pump 111M and 1ervit». 304·
895·3802

' 82 Chov Ctltl,tty, uc oond,
nM motor Md trantmlatkJn.
PS, Pl. AC, CNill con1rol,
AM -FM CIIHtll, tltt ••ring.
304-875-2273 3:30 to 11 :00

72

..

!

Sterkl Tr11 end Lawn Service.
t.ndocaping . 304·87&amp;·2010.

•• Mercury Lynx, uc cond,
304·87&amp;-3593.

'TQ.J KNO.V, IF THER&amp;
WEREN'r ANY PEOPLE

IN THE WOR LD .. .

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

WE wa.JLDN'r WIVE
10 WORRY A60LJT
NUQ66.R WARFARE,

YOU S HOULDN'T' TRY ro

g1ves Matthew $2000 to
open a bank account 10 an

THINK .. .YOLJ'RE l-IABLE
'IV HURT YOLJRSELF.

effort to make Matthew
more respon sible with his

WOLJLD WF;?
10:00

'

CARTER'S PWMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth 1nd Pine
Qollpollt, Ohio
Phono &amp;14·448· 3811 or 614·
448·4177

181'0 Chevrolet 1 ton wrecker.
It&amp;&amp; Ch-ltt pickup olflf, Col 114·416·8201 or
814·418·SII3.

" ' " " ' •·

I

83

Excavating

S. 4

W . O.

1910 Chwy van uc. cond, duat
air • helt. Cru•e. tlh, 8
P....fiOf, 15,115. Call 814378-2341 ,., Sundoyt.

85

INTO COMIN'
SUNDAY

1111 Plymouth Duttor, lin
CtdHioc ooup do wlllf. lin
GMC Mo tDn pl..._,' Pl&lt;*up
- ·· Colll4-44t· 1&amp;11.
1178 Oodlo 'MIII!ium. ti.OOO

74

Motorcvcl11

B7

rocket boom town established in Cape Canav eral .
FL . (60 min.)
@ Q @ Weat 571h
lllJ@ News
10:30 1IJ American SnapshOts
(ffi Moneymakers
11 :00 D ([) Cil 0 CIJ liD! Ill CiZlllli
News
llJ Bill Cosby Show
(!) NFL Films (R).
1111 (!) Love Connecllon
CIJ SCTV
lllJ Rockin' &amp; Rollin' with
Phil Spector The remarka·
ble su~cess of Phil Spector
in the 60' s music scene is
recouhted llvough inter- ·
vie ws with friends and ass ociates . 160 min .!

General Hauling

Upholstery

lHJ Soap

1178 Hcrulo XL380, vory good
oOnd., e110 ,. belt, ott•. CaH
IIHII· Ie&amp;&amp;.

11 :30 D Cil Gil Beat of Carton

TAl STATE
UPHOL8TEIIV SHOP
1183 Sac. Ava.. Golllpolla.
814· 446· 7833 or 1 14· 446·
1133.

1190 70 torlol 3 w-or.
....alo!n -dklon. Cal 814·
112·:M2t.

A l M Fwrnitura MIIWfacturin•
II. Rl. 7, Crown City, Oh. Coli
1190 ux K - 17&amp; e250. 114·2&amp;&amp;·1470, alii Ew. 114·
'
44• · 3431 . 01~ • fttw
1178 LTD II AC. H , i'l, 4-dr. · Cill 114· 448-11 U .
UpfloliMOd.
eHO. Ctlll14,-_,,,
1190 - - 780 LTD fully
1111 c.,..Y •• _.d. uoio • ..., dl'l!l'""· 1111 Hmdo Cll 10. Mowroy'o Upliolt1orln1 • ..,,.,
Coll14·11•·2711.
ut~n~yeree21 vflll. T"'ba,t , ~
!Into oil, 11 til II - - P!ll'
In fllrnKu,. ullllolotorlnl· Coli · '
•111. Col 114-.1 11·
1190 K..,HOkl LTD 1,000, 104· 171 · 4114 for fru
·U41 no lund.,.. .

m"- - 2'72t.
· . • :, Ntoo..Aiol·
114·111·

•IIIIo•.

104-~8-ilolli .

eatlmet~.

..

I

'

.

.

I

HISKRN

-~ ,'IL; . . UTI"Q;:. .,I; . .E I -il-~!·
I
I
TA
~

.

.

.

~

It seems as If lttakesalifetime

when you're trying to keep asmile

.

on your lace until the llhutter -

CASTOC

...,1:;...5T.l,..;;..,.;-1-11....:..,..1--1

.

c~uckle

t)

Complele tho
quoled
by filling in the missing words
1-...I.--'--'L-....&amp;.-.L......J you develop from Slop No. 3 below.

.

.

.

.

.

·1-1

•

_

_

.

•

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

u~~R~~N~~w

THE5E ' ARE
CAMOUI=LA6E SUITS ... ·

'

Tonight 's guests are Roy
Clark . Red Bunons, Belle
McKee and the Mighty Car·
son Art Players. !AI In
Stereo.
(J) Bums &amp; Allen
(!) SportsCanter
Cil WKAP In 'Cincinnati

IIII.C!I Gne Step Beyond

g

())ABC NoWa NIQhllllle

(f) Autdn City Umlhl
~Allee

,
(}t T .J . Hooker Hooker
investigates the murder ol a

a

LETTERS

IIIIIII

YEmiDAY'S. SCRAM-LEIS ANSWERS
Laxity - Ceue - Femur - Alwaya - FAULTLESS
"My new boyfriend Ia the one lor me." says the daughter.
"He's rich and a 110"118ller." "He's rude and a bore,"' reminds
Mom. Daughter ehnige, "I didn't say he was FAULTLESS. '"

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

Howtosh~o~c~k--~====~----,
NORTH
1-1·11
+AQJ 107

your partner

'I'K8
• 96
+8753

By Jamea Jacolty

The hardest plays to make are those
that go against all our instincts. And it
is certainly true that players who
trump their partoers' aces are not
highly regarded in bridge circles. Nev·
ertbeless, there is a time and place for
every play, even for that one.
Place yourself in the East seat defendinl a1ainst five hearts. Although
your side is vulnerable and the opponents are not, your partner bas blithely bid five clubs over four hearts. A
glance at dummy confirms that he bas
a lot of bolea in his band. Furthermore,
he caooot bave the A·K of diamonds
since with that holding he would be
leading the king of diamonds rather
than lbe club ace. It is very likely, for
two reasons, that be bas an eight-card
club suit - fint, to justify his bidding;
second, If South bad begun with the
guarded club king, be miBht bave pre!erred to infiict a penalty double on
West rather than bid on to five hearts.
East must hope that West bas at
least the diamond ace for his solo-bid·
dintc at sueb a .big!l level. And that
should be enou1h thinling for the cur-

WE'IT

EAST

.7·~

.986 3 2

....

t643
.QJ 1043

t A 8~

+AQJ109642

SOUTH
+K4

tAQJl09~2

• K7 2
+K
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West
North . Eall
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

WHI

••~·

I+

Pass

Opening lead: • A
rent defeasive Pr;&lt;&gt;blem. He should
trump his partner s ace and lead the
diamond queen. Please don't tell your
friends !hat Jacoby always trum!IS biB
partn.!r s a~ .• But he_does sometimes,
hopmg that 1t s the nght play.
'"" rmmoAPER IIHTIIJill'RlSE ...,.

~"lttl ,,. tt'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
4 Pe nnissiv('
ACROSS
I Sulk
5 Adjective

G Syndicate
6 Russian
hemp
for bacon
? Suffix
10 Palo wtth hero
II Profit
8 Indian
maker
weight
12 Transaction
13 Cantanker· 9 Snoop

11

ous

Thug

II 00 sees

14 Tread

the boards 18 Cover

girl
18 Oceank:
18 Needle&amp;h 17 On guard
21 "Man With· 18 Departure
19 Rectan·
out a
Country"
gular
22 Goofy ·
pillars
24 Seaport
ZO Old Brit.
in Yemen
coin
25 Anlb bread
28 Australian
city
28 Code
or colony
29 Hgt.
SO Vindicate
32 Money
(sl.)
SS False front

21 Calif.
valley
23
slricted,

unr,...

32 Abject
33 Meager
number
34 Biblical

as trade
271ndurate
28 Shade

lion
3$ Bounder
37

Eggs

of green 38 Kill (sl.)
31Swerve

39 Young pig

SGSeepage
40 Steno's aid
41 Face shape
42 Dilate
43 Engrossed

DOWN
1 Hippie's

home

House"

through the eyes of a young
girl who grew Up in the

poo..

1-- - - ------

I

( 1954 song) 'rt--t--t--t3 Lizard
..
genus
7·'

DAJLYCRYPI'OQVOTES-Hert'• bow to work II:
AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

ica's space program as seen

1871 Chw. Btu• 4a4 380. P8,
u ··tlrw. l01e1ter•. allcerpet.
1874 Pontiac Nnl VOOd tint · 1111 or trlde. CaM 114·"6· K1111'1 W1t11 Service. Wells.
cilterns,
1nd waterbedt
1200 drn h honw. Coli 2708.
114-411-112...
fHiod. Coli 114·367·0823 or
187. Dodge Aamcharg• FWD 814-367-7741 or 304· 676· .
85 Covtllor. N- t!roo. AM-FM Mldng e110. Call 614· 218· 1247.
Doloo rodto,' A-C, 24. 000 mllot.
55 Ford R - Diokup. AM,fM
Coal, limlltone. gfev1l, etc.
Delivered 1 ton end up . Jim
COhttto. 15,000 CoM
814 · 245·81&amp;1, 1514· 245 · 1178 Blulf. good oond. 304- Lonlor. 304·878· 1247 or 67&amp;·
7397.
871·5433 .
8410, or 814·218,8713.
84 Chavotto, outo. 17,000
mlliot.' 13000. 78 Flotto. :11,000
mloa. 11200. Coli Sl4•.3'71·
2882.

low 10 form four ~mplo words.

teacher torments a sensit•ve

rn

TO CHURCH

J1m .. Boy1 W.ter Service. Alao
poola flllod . Ctll614·288· 1 141
or 814-448· 1178 or 114-446-'
7811 .

-·

Ofour
Rearrange letters -of tho
ocrombled words be-

z '1'his -

the

youth while on a school tour.
and a jack -of-all-trades 1nes
to land a job at the St. Gre·
g&lt;&gt;ry 160 min.)(RI
Growing Up with Rock·
ets (CCI The story of A mer·

'

1980 ChOV'I von .... cond. duol
tlr • boat. Cnrlto, ti~. 8
pll-ger, 11.998. Call 114•
371·2341 no &amp;undoya.

••••

war. a macho

ing

I THOUGHT I'D TRY
TO TALK SNUFFY

J.A.R . Conttructlon Co., Autlend. Ohio. 814-742- 2903 .
8asem1nta:, F.o ote'n. Concre11
work. Backtloe'l , Dozer and
Dltcher. Dump truck1. tnd
w tter · g a a· taWer · elecUical
llnM . Charlie Hatfiaad operator.

1978 Dodgo window von. 310
engine, auto. tran1., PS, P8, re•
A~. good cond. 12200. Call
&amp;14·248-5294.

namese waiter as the man
who once tortured him dur·

HOWDY DEW,
MIZ SMIF··

Oood-1 ElCavltlng. b•em.ntL
footlfl, drivewayt, eept ictlnka,
llnd•capino. Call anytime 814· ·
448·4837. Jorn• L. Dovlton.
Jr. owner.

304-878·2327.
Vans

Caldwell is confronted -about
his harassment of the
wQITlen at St. Eligius . (60
min.JIRI
(J) IJ (f) Arthur Hailey's
HOiel (CCI A Vietnam ve·
teran recpgnizes a Viet·

BARNEY

'

IPMd. 11ft flat bed, good cond.

money. (R)In Stereo .
0 Cil @ St. Elsewhere
Wes1phall tries to h1de h1s

Salvadorian housekeeper to
prevent her deportation. and

Stove tnd fum-=• aiN'Ic.t and
"""'"· 304-871-8073.

1970 Ford 0u"''l TNck. Coli
&amp;14·H2·M&amp;I dtyt ond 814·
IU· 2t41 ord 814· . . 2· 3301

CINEMA: 'Justice a

lout prix '
9:30 D (I)@ YouAgain7Henry

Trucks for Sale

1878 Chevy lA ton, 4x4. Call
&amp;14·41S·4745.

73

lr oiiiSIJIIrLillllll

. ...

. ·-.

'78 FIOO 2 ton. 5 111oo&lt;1. 2

Good mlxtd hey on th• wagon,
11 .00. 304·878· 5879.

· r-~~ .·

BEACH

'

'"··very

A E?uFF BuFF
op A iAN FAN'?

NUDITY
PROHIBITED

Serv 1ces

~

CHy Form Supply, 814·441·
291&amp;.

FRANK AND ERNIE

1973 18 ft . •nel trailer. Self
wnta6n.t. very good concltton.
11450. s.. or caiiQaryF . Hy~~ll
614·992·11388 .

1878 Olda Cutl111 Suprema.
1980 Hmdt 400. 3 ChOV'I Big
Blocks. Aa0rttc11u1o p1rts. Call
614-992· 5119 .

1983 CemtrO Z28. Loaded.
Mutt ttl!. 17900. Coll814-941·
2045.

Hollywood's classics .
@ Alice
@ Jeopardy
8:00 D (I) @ Highway to
Heaven ICC) Jonathan and
Mark attempt to help a mis·
guided angel who has been
trying to earn his wings for
200 years . (60 min.)(A).
ll) BomFree
(!) Superbouts Ken Norton
vs . Muhammad Ali (March,
1973 from San Diego, CA).
(60 m1n .)
CI1 Goodwill Games Tape
delayed coverage of men's
and women's basketball ;
men's and women 's track &amp;
field , men·s water polo and
cycling;
and
women's
rhylhm !!'!mnastics. (4 hrs.j
III 0 11J MacGyver ICCI.
MacGyver finds trouble iN
Bulgaria when a beautiful
woma n slips some valuable
towels in1o his pocket 160
mon)(A) .
til (!) MOVIE: 'The Alamo'
I]J
MacNeii·Lehrer
Newshour
®J ill @ Burger Years
lllJ National Geographic
Special (CCI Alter conquer·
ing Mount Everest more
than 30 years ago. S~r Ed·
mund Hillary has spent much
of his time serving the
Sherpa people. who helped
him achieve the remark a ble
feat (60 m on.)(R)
@ MOVIE: 'The Brink's
Job'
9:00 D Cil @ Gimme a Break
Alter Nell buy s Addy 's car.
Nell discovers the car is alemon . (R)In Stereo .
C1) 700 Club
@ Bowling: PBA Tucson
Open From Arizona. (2 hrs.)

1880 Coachmen 23'12 ft . travel
trail• axc. cond. Call 614·268-.
8&amp;35 .

1977 Coprlco Cloulc. Ac·..
CNill, PS .• r•r defrolt, 3015
engin1. low miluge. ExciiLMtt.
oondHion . CAll 614·992· 5293.

62 Wanted to Buy

'uvn

'

1982 32 ft . Shennandoah t111vel
traitor-Parte. model. Cell 814·
448-J716.

1982·1ndy-Pac•Ctr. Z28, T·
Top. loodod . 17500. Contact
lloltdl Routh ot &amp;14·992· 7268.

1978 Chovy Malibu wogon.
Economical femity' car, radial
good -d. 11.&amp;&amp;0.
see or call
0..-y F. Hy ..ll
614· 992-11388.

e

79 Motors Homes
S. Campers

1978 Olda Cutlua Supreme.
12.000 or beet offer. Call
814-143-2211 .

Mary Hart begins a five -part
series which reunites the
ca sts of some of Holly·
wood's classics .
fJI CD Hogan's Heroes
0 I]) Jeopardy
Cil Nlghlly Business Re·
port
@ News
lllJ
MacNeii·J.ehrer
Newshour
Ill @ Divorce Court
lHJ Private BenjaiJlin
@ Wheel of Fortune
D Cil Cil New Newlywed

(!) Major League Base·
ball's Greatest Hitil: Take
Me 0111 to the Ballgame
Cil Sanford and Son
fil C!l Taxi
0 Cil@ Wheel of Fortune
CD Sweet Silcteen
@ Entertainment To·
night Mary Hart begins a
five-part series which reu·
nites the cas1s of some of

·
,_np-·up ru •·
308 va on9ine. auto. PS. PB,
good tir•. cap, 1795. Will
nogotltte priot. 614· 742-2334:

Autos for Sale

D ([)PM Magazine
Ill Man from·U.N.C.L.E
® SportsCertter
III Entertainment Tonight

WOlD

Game

~!;=========:;::=========~ ~---lt,bZ.fclu72
1927 C 10 ••- 1~
t c•

Mutt Mil becaaue of illn., ell .
my CenariH. cegn. with all 71
equipment, 304-895· 3803.

57

7/9/86

Boats

114-992-2381 and night 814·
992·2509.

Bach tNmplt, 10fe. 2 ohaifl, 2
UMd carpet• with pad, 304676·4034.

Zerox 3300 11 copier, 304· 876·
12.4.

Cf: IS rr lH~&gt; 01\tlilt
WA'I Af:DOilD... ~

21 loo1 pontoon bolt, 80 HP
Mercurv. g• grll, ttereo,1reller.
Pftce: with motor 13800., with·
out motor 11981. Call dey

For 11le porch awlnga. Call
304· 21 Hi878.

Air condition, 3 ton, centre! unit
mobilepiCk for moble home
$500.00.· 304·876 ·111171 .

Television
Viewing
7:00

SLIGHT PAINT DAMAGE.
~ething arrow 1ign 1279. Llgh·
tad. non·arrow f2691 Nonlighted 12391 Fr" letleral FIIW left.
See locolly . H8001G3·01S3,
anytime.

BMX bicycle UO.OO. Set of
corton f300.00. 20 In"' boyi
Engine Headert 130.00. 304·
876· 1974ther4:00PM.

-~--

'73 H.O. Sportier. 304-896·
3&amp;30.
75

Th8 DailY Seoltinei- Page- 15

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ol'lio

...

BmtN LOSER

1927 Ho~oy Hog.oloctrtlcgllde.
"'" drltl, 304· 678· 4088.

SURPLUS ARMY CAMOU·
FLAGE, donim, ""ttl clothing,
boots combat. Theatorewlth the
rtal •my stock. tiz•, quellty.
J•m Somerville. Junction lnde·
'flondltlco Rood, Old Routo 21 .
Fri,Sot.Sun. 12:1)0.8:00 PM,
call in ordert Pok'n PleMant.
304·876-3334, Mobile Home.

Commodor 64 Comput..-, dilc
drive, 30 dlac, Joy nicks, 9
montha old; ltill In original

Motorcycle•

74

Up-right heuer for ale. UOO.
Call 814-992· 3816.

51 Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive S1., Galllpolit. New &amp; uHCI
wood -coal•tovM, 6 pcwood LR
suite $399. bunk bed• $199,
antron recliners 199. new &amp;
usld bedroom tuit11, rengea,
wringer wastlers, 81 aho11. New
llvlngroom suites 11 99· 1699.
lemps. alto buying coal&amp;: wood
atovn. Ca11614-446-3169 .

Wednesc:lay, July 9. 1986

KIT ·w cARLYLII!b, a.arrr Wrtiht

Air condHton• 18,000 BTU
worlur good. UOO. Col 814,
'256-1747.

BUILDERS

3 bedroom. All electric:, wood
burning ttove, ply ow-n utilltlea.
Neer Retdlville, Oh. 1260
month or I 300 month with
utlllite. 1100 daposh. 614·
378·8368.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

54 Misc • •Milr~handlee

Mercilan!lise

Houses for Rent

3 bdr. houn for rent 132&amp; plu1
depoai1. nice neighborhood jull
out of Gallipolis city limits. Call
814·441·9280 or 304· 875 ·
&amp;806.

.

Building materitll, cement,
blodl;s •llaizet, yard or delivery.
Galllpoli• Block Co., 123Yt Pine
St., Gallipolia. Ohio Call 614446· 2783.

Re11lols
41

.. if'

•

" '

One Jetter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for lhe two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, lhe length and fonnaUon of lhe words are all
hlnta. Each day lhe code lettel'llare different.
CKYPI'OQUOTE
7·9

u

~

p

sz

BVJSQUPS

EUCP S Y
PQK

VB

ll

YW UZS OKK ,

p

O ROMNQLP SY

RPAP S PQN

s

RM P KL OS

r

PSQV

p K

L O UMQ

.

KEPWOK . - F .
PMR P S Y
Yeat.enlay'l CI7JICOqaote: I OONT Ml ~rl REING
MISERABLE M LONG AS I'M PAINTII\G WELL. GRACE IL\RTIGAN

..

Ci t·~--

gi~

from his daughter: s
school. (70 min.)(RJ .
@ Tflf&gt;P8I' John, M .D.
11:45·• ([) To Be Announced

12:00 (]) Jeclt BennY

CD Llldty · Light• Darts
CN!Ienge
Citv.

From Atlanlic

rs Goodwill Games T i:'IPt'
delayf' d coverage of mf'n s

track g, !1eld . man·s bask etbail : aM women's cycli ng
and rhy1hm gymnastiCS . (4
hrs I
.
IIl Entert-ainment Tomght

..

�'

Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday. July 9. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.--Local Brlcfs:-- Authorities press manhunt. for Milligan
Eastern football meeting Thursday

A meeting for all boys grades nine through l2interested in playing
football at Eastern High School thls faU will be held at 7 p.m.
Thursday In the hlgh school gymnasium.

Area couple file$ for marriage
Filing for marriage In Meigs County Probate Court were Charles
WOllam Bailey Jr., 21, · Middleport, and Lena Kay Riffle, 21,
Mlddleport.

Court issues appearance orders
Seven perstins have been ordered to appear in the court of Judge
Charles H. Knight at 9 a.m. on July 17toanswerchar~sof rontempt
of court for !allure to comply with a prior order of child support.
Scheduled to appear are Michael V. Gardner of Mason, W.Va., In
the action of Alice Faye Gardner and Michael V. Gardner; Ronald
Keith Campbell of Point Pleasant, W.Va., in the action of Loretta
Faye Campbell versus Ronald Keith Campbell; Steven P. Hawk in
the case of Roberta A. Hawk known now as Roberta K Rodehaver·
Richard Kevin Dailey, Rut~d. in the actionofPamei~Jean Dalley,
now known as Pamela Jean Satterfield.
Richa~ Rathburn, Columbus, In the action of Unda Rathburn
agamst Rrchard Rathburn; Gary Duane Slaven, Middleport, In the
action of Jan~t Sue Slaven, now known as Janet Sue Reitmire; Gary
Duane Slavin, Middleport, in the action of Donna Lee Slaven agalnst
Gary Duane Slaven; and Garland Kurt Nalstetler, Co!umoos, in the
action of Anna Mae Naistetler, now known as Anna Marie Baxter,
agamst Garland Kurt Naistetler.
Also filed in the court was an action for dissolution of marrtage
flied hy .Jeannie D. N~ase and Steven H. Nease, Portland, and a
petition for divorce filed by Cindy Lou ClUidlff against Larry Lee
Cundiff, both of Pomeroy.

DA V chapter meets Monday
Disabled American Veterans will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at 124
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.

Free clothing day set Friday
The Gal!ia-Meigs Communlty Action Agency wUI hold its free
clothing day for low Income persons on Friday from 9 a.m. 1o noon.
The agency's clothing bank is now located in the cld high school
building at Cheshire.
·

Round, square dance scheduled
A round and square dance will be held at !he Meigs Smlor Cltlzens
Center .. Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy, from 8 to 11 p.m. Friday.
Admrssron Is $1.50 and music will be hy the True Country Band
with Clint Gilkey as caller. Those att~ndlng are to take snacks. Th~
Senior Citizens Dance Club is sponsoring the event.

Parish slates outdoor revival
The hill stage area at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds is the setting
for an outdoor revival being held by the Meigs Cooperative Parish of
the United Methodist Church. Services wUI be at 7:30 p.m. this
. evenmg, Thursday and Friday with Rev. Chester Lemley speaking.

County court fine clarified
Kenneth W. Hartley Sr .. Pomeroy, was fined $100 and costs in the
Meigs County Court on a reckless operation char~ and not Kenneth
W. Hartley .Jr.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - A Lindner, the llospltal admintstra·
hearing Is scheduled for Friday on tor, and Dr. Stella Karolin, the
posslbll' ch~ In the treatment &lt;1 psychiatrist assigned to treat him.
WU!Iam Milligan, an escaped men·
·:On the morning I left ... I had a
tal patll'nt ancl rapist dlagnos€d as
g~?nuine f!!ar lor my personal
having 24 personalitieS.
safety. My treatment, prescribed
The Ohio Highway Patrol has by 11'\Y court-ordered physician; Dr.
been coordlnat.lllg' the search for Karolln, was abruptly brought to a
MU!Igan since he escaped from the halt," he said on the videotape.
Central Ohio Psychiatric Hospital
Assistant Franklin County Prolast Friday. A patrol spokeswoman secutor Edward Morgan obtained a
Tuesday said there was no progress warrant for Mtlllgan's arrest Monin the investigation.
day from Common Pleas Judge
Thomas
Martin, who also ordered
Several Columoos ~ws media
outlets were advised Monday that MUUgan. 31, be placed in the
MU!Igan had left two videotapes in Timothy Moritz Forensic Unlt, a
storage lockers at the Greyhound maximum.securlty area of the
hospital, when he's arrested.
oos terminal.
Morgan said be requested the
MU!Igan said on one &lt;1 the tapes
order
because of the posslbtllty
that he left the lllspltal, fearing for
bis safety, because of adisputeover . MUllgan could become dang~?rous If
his treatment between Dr. Lewis he nrns out of medication or If he

falls to take· the medication he's
IPen recevlng three times a day.
Martin wUI convene a hearing
Friday to discuss Milligan's
trea trnen t.
The Columoos Dispatch said
MUllgan 's curre~~t problems appar·
ently began about 10 days ago,
when he called the lllspltal and said

costs; Charles Stewart. Dexter.$:&gt;,
and costs, tratfic light violation;
K1m Cool, ColumOO.S, speeding, $47
and · cossts; A. J. Walbarger,
Okeechobee, Fla., !allure to display
plates, $63 and costs; . Danny D.
Brown, Pomeroy, squealing tires.
$63 and costs; Peter L. McKinney,
West Columbia, W.Va., failure to
display license plates, $63 and
costs; Terry D. Hayes, Pomeroy,
reckless operation, $163 and costs,
and no protective equipment, $43
and costs; Donald Wright, Albany,
speeding, $49 and oosts; Greg A.
Laudermllt, Middleport, traffic
light violation, no operator's ll·
cense, and driving while intoxl·
cated. $400 and costs; Virgil Collins,
Pomeroy. leaving the scene, no
driver's license, driving while
Intoxicated, $701 and oosts; Joe
Scott, Pomeroy, assault. $213 and
costs; Jeanette A. Smith, West
Columbia, W.Va., driving while
Intoxicated, no driver's license, left
of center and open flask, $569 and
costs.

Marilyn S. Davis
MarUyn Sue Davis, R.N .. 51, 552
S. Fourth Ave., Middleport, died
Tuesday at the Holzer Medical
Center.
Miss DaviS was born in Columbus
on Dec. 30, 1934, a daughter of the
late Wyllts F. DaviS Sr.. and the late
Grace E. Mooney,
She was a graduate of the Holzer
Hospital School of Nursing and was

Ladies golf winners
Twenty· two women attended the
ladies day play at the Jaymar Golf
Course Tuesday.
At the conclusion of 18 holes of
play winners were Joan Childs and
Margaret Follrod, tied for loss
gross; Sue Arnold, low net; Joan
Childs. low putts. Nine ho le winner
was Julie Hysell. Starting next
Tuesday, tee-offtimewillbe at 8:30

WE HAVE THE LOWEST PRICES ON
CANNING SPICES IN TOWN!

Ohio Valley Bulk Foods
514 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

992-6910

We Accept
Food Stomps

McClel~ tliiiliiliiliiliiiii.iiii;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;:;;~~

10 ~u J I I I • ~

ti J~lJI oloW C~C I\ [U iq b o l~

m lB. SHEDD'S CROCK
MARGARINE .......~P.,~ s1. 19

3 18. NEW

12 OZ. KRAfT. t6 SUC (PRDCESS

10 lB. CAliFORNIA lONG

PIMENTO
CHEESE ............... u,q, S1.89
HILENDALE

SMAll EGGS.l.Ml..CI~ Sl .69

YEUOW ONIONS ......... 89c
WHITE
POTATOE.. .....\.....~1\G. s2.49
15 CT. CALIFORNIA

CANTALOUPE ......~~...... 93&lt;

11 01. BANQUET REG.

TV :DINNERS ...................". S1.19
COOL WHIP •••••••••••••••••••• wa .... 99 &lt;
[ltrl CriSM;;',
• .___ _ ___,

15 OI. IIEUOGG'S

41'
-----.
.
.
$2
v, $2
TtMtr and 1 u1c~ o~ the
1M10e ilnd crun~hy on

41' ______ ,
25 .!ti~d!l s... \

1111 Welt
p~y

992·22.4

FRUIT COCKTAIL ••••••••••••.m.... 99&lt;

1
I
I
I .......,.,....._._s-J_................... I

16 OI. VAN CAMP

=
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.I. ..........
. . ,_ .tJill". t'!'~
"'A0·-1==~·- . .·--,·:::.:·...
...,_,....,.
.,... ~
··~~ I
~
.. .
I
\ ......
1

et..-er_,c•ill•

... , lift!,.. lkult

..

~--'::c"'..::...-

.

Mtolf Price 11Q.7S

I
~'r:::Lt=~~~ I
•&lt;..,..,
I ~......
,..-.
....,.................
l..n.-..c
.,. • ....,.._
• ......._ I
Includes

22 01.

'$&gt;·---- c\

~-----c
faonil
logular
'$899 9·PIIIe

I

PORK &amp; BEANS •••••••••••••tu~.. 97&lt;

I

·-·~~·~·

999

Rog~ar

Price '10.79

COFFEEMATE ...................~~ S2.79
6 OZ. STOVE TOP

STUFFINGS......................uo1 S1.09

I

I
..,.. • ..,.,. ......-::,:-. .............. I

. 46 OI. PINK DONALD DUCK

Get 15 Pieces of the
Colontl'1 Chicken

l ......•~=
;~
.
-·
...," *'.r: ,~~ 1;;--;.·
c..-~~
.. .... _..
I
.
'
~-c;o~:s·-- ~
,

Stcond St.

17 01. DEL MONTE

Meat
45'
!'.::;;!!:,~· Dlki"'
Includes .,,.. (1'.-y(•ill•~
...., e.n..a hllh

~~

Basement

FROSTED FLAKES •••••••••••.101 S1.8 9

theout~e

....,

FAMILY
RESTAURANT
POMEROY
221 WEST MAIN
992·5U2

DUST- As the Beacon Service Sialion toppled to the ground Tuesday
afternoon, there was only a cloud of dmt to be seen where the station at
once stood.

used as a point in giving directions as to various
ioca tlons in that part of Pomeroy.
Tuesday afternoon at least three pieces of heavy
equipment of the Pullins Excavating Col were on the
scene to demolish the landmark. The equipm&lt;'nt
chipped away at the back and sides of the structure
and then brought it tumbling down .
However, It's all in the name of progress fort he lard
on which the station sat is being joined to other land
owned by Roger Davis, Darwin. a Pomeroy

mini-grocery store for residents of the sectio n of
upper Pomeroy and motorists.
At the death of Dick Davis, tbe station went to his
son, Carl Davis of Syracuse, who operated the
oosiness for a number of years Into the 1900s. At his
death, of course, It became the property of his widow,
Glenna. now a resident of Mason, W.Va.
"The Beacon" became known hy. about every
resident in town over the years and was often,
because of its location near Ohio 7 and U.S. 33, was

SLICED BACON ••••••••••••••••••• S1.69
ECKRICH
· SJIIIEDDED 12.19 lb.
JALAPENO LOAt ••••••• a~IP.~I.. S1. 99
HOMEMADE
HAM SALAD ..................... ~.~t•. 99&lt;

8 01. BIRDWEYE

51°0 Per Yard Table in

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Sial! Wrler
A Pomeroy landmark- the Beacon Service Station
at the Intersection of Nye Avmue and Ohio 7- was
destroyed in the heat of 95 degree temperatures
Tuesday afternoon.
The station was built in 19:JJ by Dick Davis. )Vho
resided on Nye Avenue, and has been owned by the
famUy ever since. Besides gasolllle and ether
products for motor vehicles, the station served as a

1 LB. CRISPY SERVE VACUUM PAC

~lf.&gt;\o'C n 11.. , t •&gt; J oK! &gt;IJ' t C ~

Includes :l.::::f!~~(IIQ"'

Potneroy landmark, Tuesday afternoon.

assJstant lo.cbe·dlrector ~develop­
ment, arranging appointment s.
making contacts, gathering infor·
mation and generally working with
Shields on local projects.
in talking about what can be done
to improve the economic picture c1
the county, Shields mentioned the
bumed-&lt;lut Meigs Inn, and indi·
ca ted that sc)me work Is going on
with the owners, Meigs Investment
Corporatbn.
Shields announced that he plans a
meeting with thE' may&lt;rs c1 the
vUiages next week or the week
after. so that "we can just talk, and
determine our concerns."
He said the main emphasis IS on
securing grants from state and-or
federal agencies, such as the Ohio
llepartmenl of Development and
HUD, to the county for projects of
ecooomlc development. That money Is loaned to the tilsiness or
industry doing the development at
below market Interest rate, is
rt'llald with Interest to the county's
development fund, and then Is
recycled Into another · project,
creating a revolving loan plan for

By CHARLENE HClEnKH
Senllnel Staff Wrler

Pomeroy regains water service

II

Station, a

Walls come tumbling down on longtime Pomeroy landmark

WIENERS •••••••••••••••••••••••• rtii. S1.19

25 .~;:.:.1
s...
Meal
4s·

TOPPLED - And down came the

,

12 01. SUPERIOR

l'r C' ~~ uri' £(J(J k ~ O

26 Centl

businessman, on Nye Avpnuf' ro create an p.ren larger
plot for the canst ruction of a super service station and

a convenience store. Davis is a nephew of the late Carl
DavL,.
A meeting will be held by Roger Davis with the
architect on the proj&lt;'Ct Friday and he lllpes that the
nrw self-service station and convenience store will be
ready to go in about OOdays. The new business will be
under his management and is being built at the site in
conjunction with I he Burlile Oil Co.

Development director outlines program

resisting arrest, and 10 days in jail,
assault; Russell Robinson, Middleport, five days in jail suspended on a
loitering charge and $:5 and costs.
disorderly conduct; Waymo Capehart, Pomeroy, five days in jail,
loitering, and $:5 and costs, disor."
derly ronduct; Charles McCloud,
Middleport, five days In jaU,
loitering, and $25 and costs. disor·
derly conduct.

Two calls were answered Tuesday by bcal units, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services repons. At 1:42 p.m. Tuppers Plains
took Edna Lee to Wterans Memorial Hospital and at 5:40 p.m.
Middlepon took Lottie Bradfonl from Plum Street to Veterans
Memorial.

•All Singer Sewing
Machines &amp; Cabinets •.•. 20% Off
•T. Shirt Knits ................ 20% Off
•Swim Suit Fabric .......... 20% Off
•Sweat Shirt Fleece ••.•••• 20% Off
•Terry Cloth ................... 20% Off
•Big 112 Price Table

llea.V"i equipment of the PuDins Excavalktg Co.
of the Beacon Sen1ce Station in Pomeroy
Tuesday afternoon to weaken the structure. 'lbe biDding was
brick-covered by a stucw fin~h.

Squads answer two calls

SUPER SUMMER
SALE

2 Sections. 12 Pages

A Mult imedia Inc. NewiPIPer .

Admitted - Margaret Dutton,
Middlepon; Edna Lee. Pomeroy;
Lottie Bradfonl, Middlepon.
Discharged - Martha Fox.

reckless
operation;$25Rick
lan,
Middleport,
and rosts,
disorderly conduct; 10 days In jail,

Pomeroy N&gt;Sidents learned the hanl way Tuesday and Wednesdav
that one newr misses the water 'til the well nrns dry.
·
All ?f Pomeroy residents and businesses except Lincoln Heights
and Lmcoln Hrll Road. served by the reservoir, lost water service at 3
a.m. Tuesday morning. Water department workers, battling the
problem plus 95 degl'E'!' weather with extremely high humidity,
started repairs at 3 a.m. Tuesday and servlc&lt;' was restored about
1:30 p.m. Tuesday when repairs in the water main near the Farmers
Bank. W('St Main Street. were believed completed.
However. more problems developed at the spot and workers were
back at the repair project at 5 p.m. Tuesday and worked untU about
1::.1 a.m. today when service was again restored. A new piece of
equipment known as a band might have to be installed but this wilt
again cause loss of service only for a short dme.

en tine

Veterans Memorial

r.========:::::;;:::============:.

of disorderly manner, $2i and costs
on each; Paul LaudermUt, Pome·
roy, intoXication, $:5 and rosts;
Greg W. Knapp, Middleport, $:ll,

Fined In the court were Guy W.
Schuler, Rutland, $425 and three
days In jail, driving while lntoXi·
cated, and $:5 and costs, no valid
operator's license; Fred Boggess.
Middleport, $25, disorderly
manner; Tom Vellure, twochar~s

at y

employed at the Woodland (l&gt;,,,p,,&lt;
Inc.. in GallipoliS. She had also
worked In the nursing field at the
former Meigs Ger,eral Hospital and
at Veterans Memorial Hospital In
Pomeroy.
Surviving are two brothers.
· Wyllis F. DaviS Jr. of New Haven,
W.Va .. and Jeny Davis, Sumter,
S.C.; an aunt, Lillian Frazier of
Columoos; an uncle, Gerald Moo·
ney; and several nieces and
nephews.
Services will he h&lt;'id at 10 a .m.
Fliday at the Ewing Fu~ral Home
with Rev. David Fields olliciating.
Burial wUI be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Thursday.

a.m.

Middleport court fines nine
Two defendants folfeited bonds
and ninE&gt; others were fined In the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds of $450 each
posted on charges of driving while
intoxicated were Terrence W.
Matthews, Pomeroy, and Ken~th
W. Juspan, Middleport, and Zuspar\
also forfeited a $50 bond posted on a
weaving course charge.

•

Area deaths

Pomeroy court ends cases
Twenty·seven cases were pro·
cessed Tuesday night in the court c1
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler.
Forfeiting bonds were Kendra J.
Bass, Clifton, W.Va., $43, !allure to
yield tbe right c1 way; Timothy
Compson, Mlddlepor~ $43, assured
clear distance; Richard Hysell,
Middleport, $43, iUegal lurn; Brei
A. Wyatt, Pomeroy, $44, speeding;
Thelma D. Flowers, New Haven,
$45, speeding; Bonnie S. Lascar,
Pomeroy, $43, failure to yll'ld;
Faith D. Dickens, Middleport, $45,
speeding; Valerie Batley, Long
Bottom, $43, speeding; Frederick
A. Coloom, Pomeroy, $«i, speeding; Louise Graves, Marysville,
$52, speeding; Ralph H. Shirley,
Mount Alto, W.Va., SCi, speeding;
Verna P. Gibbs, Rutland, $43, left c1
center; Mary C. Fry, New Haven,
$46, speeding; Larry Hoschar,
Pomeroy, $63, squealing tires;
Jeffrey L. Brandon, Columoos, $63.
oo drlver's license.
Fined were Richard T. Friley.
Pomeroy, resisting arrest, $313 and
costs, and intoxlcatbn, $113 and

he had lost his medication. He was
told to return for more, ttl' paper
said.
Milligan, who was employ('() by
state Public Defender Randall
Dana, drove to the bops ita I in ooeof
the state cars assigned to the
defender's office. Once he arrived,
his privileges were revoked .and he
was confined, the paper said.

GRAPEFRUIT JUICE •••••••••~•~ s1.1 S
12 01. ARMOUR TIIEET CANNED
I
'

LUNCHEON MEAT •••••••:•••"~ S1.69
12 01. PIIG• • STLE

BUTTERSCOTCH ·CHIPS ....... S1.89
25; OZ. DUNCAN HEINS REGULAR

CAKE MIX .......................101 S1.29
16 OZ. IEnY (lOCKER

RTS FROSTING MIX ........toJ S1.S 9 ·

OFFICE OPEN! - Kim SNeldl, left, an
economic development consultant, has been hired as Melp.County's
tllredor ol development, and will be n Meip Coumy TuesdiiJS and
'1\'ednesdaY!I to work with coumy, village and toWJB~p olficlals on
projects geared to job creation and retention. Ills local Msistant
~on a five-diQ'·a·week basi!&gt; wm be Steve Powell. '!be office In
I
al the Intersection of Union Avenue and the Ohio 7 bypas&amp;
I

Firemen back off
&amp;om tanker blaze

An outlined how Meigs County's
new economic development · program will benefit new and developIng businesses and Industries was
given by Kim Shields, director of
development, at Wednesday after·
noon's meeting of the Meigs County
CommisSioners.
Shields, who wUI spend t.ro days
a week In Meigs C:ounty working
under a one-year contract to the
commissioners for m.OOJ. said tba t
he views job creation and job
retention as the single most impor·
tant goal of the new position.
Here he wUI work out of an cffice
In the building at the intersection of
Union Avenue and the Ohio 7
bypass, which also llluses the
Bureau of Employment Services.
The otflce will be open on a dally
basis with Steve Powell In charg~?.
and Shields will be ooming to Meigs
County every Tuesday and Wednes·
day, and other Urnes as the need
demands.
Powell will serve as general

Reagan touts
reform action

\

WASHINGTON tUPli- Presi·
dO'nt Reagan and hi s aides are

I

I

' By RICK VAN SANT
Mi),.MlSBURG, Ohio (UP! I
The '~xtreme beat of a toxic
chrmfal fire forced firefighters to
back ~way from a burning derailed
tankeqcars after the blaze flared up
uneXJJilctedly Wednesday evening
whtle 30,1XXJ people woo left their
homeslduring a second evacuation
waitedi
Toda¥ firefighters planned to get
closer :to the tanker, carrying
phoSphQrtc acid, which spilt open
and started to bum w~n seven cars
of a Baltimore &amp; Ohio freight train
derailed Tuesday.
The ~umlng phosplllrus sent a
ooxlous white cloud of pbosphortc
acid vapor over the Dayton area .
whUe ttre evacuees waited for
autllllitl&gt;s to tell them when they
could return home.
"There were oo people oo the f.lre
all nlghtf Mia,mlsburg City Councuman . 1Mark Steck said this
moming.\Hr said ftretlghters would
be able to get closer to the burning
tanker ~Y and again try to bring
the blare .under control.
·
Firefighters, pumping-5,1)X) gal·
' Ions of w~ter a minute on to the
ruptured fank car, la!pt the blare
under COI\trol throughout the day
Wednesday, and · state and local
autooritles; had just finished a
meeting 10 coordinate salvage

lng was. dlscu- 111 Oie."""-tlrrg. •
county.
It was also noted that the new
Job prnd~ctlon , expansion or nrw
dump
truck is in and wUI be put into
industry, has to be a criteria for
op&lt;"ra
tlon
in a couple of weeks .
loans from the development fund .
Robert
discussed patching and
Shields stressed.
du st control projPCts underway.
EMS oomputer purchase
In other action, the Commission- and noted some guard rail repa lr
ers accepted the bid of Computer and painting to be done.
Scenic rivers program
Communlcation Concepts, Middle·
On
recommendation of Steve
port, for a computer video training
Powell.
commissioner, Meigs
program for the Melg County
County
Park
District, the commtsEmergency Medical Service, sub·
slo~rs signed a resolution request]eel to approval by the EMS boanl
ing I he Ohio Department of Natural
of tnr stees.
The bid was for $31,248.81 and Resources to study Shade River for
includes hardware, software and designaton as a component of the
consulting services . A $19,1)X) grant state scenic livers system.
As explained by Powell . the
from the Ohio Board of Regents will
ODNR
plans to do a survey In the
be used for partial payment.
summer of 1987 of the Shade River
Highway activities
County Engineer PhU Robert s and If the liver m~ts require·
and David Spencer of his deparl· ments, It can be designated as a
ment rq&gt;orted to the commission· scenic river and developed for such
ers that delivery is expected toda y things as canoe routes, nature
on a liquid asphalt distrlbtltor at a preserv('S. wildlife habitats.
Attrnding the meeting were
cost of $83,500, purchase'llrom the
Commlssioll('rs Manning Roush.
Southeastern Ohio Equipment Co
The cquipmrnt will be pad for ovrr Ri chard Jones and David Koblentz
a three J'('ar-perlod and the flnanr- and Clerk Martha Chambers.

the

exultant ovC'r thC' immlnC'nt pas-

sage of a tax reform bill that critics
laughed a 1 a yea r ago when he
stumped the country singing Its
praises and Con~rrss seemed deaf.
Reagan is no11 launching a final

I

. l'

efforts when the fire erupted again
for an undetermined reason.
Another white plume of phos· ,
pborlc acid billowed over the area.
SC'ries of campa ign·sty le ap)X'aran ·
prompting authorities t.o order the
ces to pr'f'ssurr a House-Sf'natC'
O'vacuatlon of Miamisburg and the
conference comm ittee that tx&gt;gins
neighboring communltles of Momeeting ncxl W&lt;'&lt;'k to mold a
raine, West Carrollton and Miami
compromise bilL Deliberations arc
Township, a total of more than
expected to last at least a month.
:.J,IXXJ people.
Today the president travels to
"!! we have to go door·to-door to
Dothan, Ala.. 10 addres s the
evacuate people In the city, we
Chamber of Commerce to "em·
will," one pollee &lt;1ftcer said.
phaslze most ~rongly that lndil·id·
"Evacuated people sllluld stay
ual rates be hold dovm," said White
where they are," Miamisburg
House spokesman Larry Speakes.
Development Director Ron Parker
Both the House and Senate tax
said at midnight We'lnesday. "The
reform measure.,; would cunail
all-clear has not been sounded.
· numerous tax deduct Ions In ll'tum
Their homes ... are safe and police
for lower lndil'idual and l:Aisincss
are petrolling tbe neighborhoods."
tax rates. but there are major
Evacuation renters were set up
'!be crews were WISUOCessfulln their alt6npts and
Dl\&gt;\STER SCENE - Crews tried Wedneadtly
dilferences.
at tl;le Dayton Convention Centrr
aftemoon to patch a rail car carrying while . the car reignited taler In the day. Nearby 101ms have
The House bill has four Individual
and the University of Dayton
phollphomus that derailed near Mlamllibui'J, Ohio. · beea evacuated. (UPI)
rates of 115 percent. 25 percent . ~
Arena, about ~ miles ·northeast of
About 275 people were treated for percent and 38 pcro:rnt and would
Mlamlsb.trg.
fighters had decided to let the fire bly less l!lan earlier thls evening,"
raise business taxes by about $140
Fire crews, which at various bum Itself out while continuing to he said. "We'Djust have to watch It minor injuries wch as skin, eye "''d billion in five years. The Senate
lung Irritation at seven hospitals oo
times Included hundreds dflreflgh· Dood It with water.
and see what happens."
measure has two rates, 15 percent
ters from nEIIrly every community
''When It wUI oom Itself out, 1 Thm Winston, district chief for Thesday and Wednesday, Including and
27 percent. and would hike
In the rounty, Including Dayton, have Ill earthly Idea," he said.
the EPA, said. "We don't think 62 who were treated after the
corporate taxes by $100 billion in
managed to re'luce the cloud
Allan Franks, a spokesman for there's a lot of material left to bum, second fire Wednesday evening.
Franks epeculated that the phos· five years.
considerably wlttdn a rouple of the Ohio Environmental Protection· alttllugh there's no way 1o know lor
Despite the lower top rate, thlt
lllw:s, oot the people were kept Agency, sali! the phosphorus, which sure. We'll have to walt tnt daylight phorus had been smoldering all
Senate bUI has been crlt lclzed as
away from their homes as a btms even under watB", would · to make an assessmmt; to see, for day, even tlllugh llreflghters were
providing too much help to the .
precaution.
likely smolder throogh the early·
InstanCE, if we can. cover It with fioodlng It With water, and the tank
wealthy and not enough to the
.
John: Welthofer, Mlamlsoorg's morning hours.
sand and put It 01 t once and for an.'' car finally became too hot .
middle class.
assistant city manager, said fire- . "It's stm burning, btt consldPr•

'

,.

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="170">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2760">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="40411">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="40410">
              <text>July 9, 1986</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="299">
      <name>davis</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
