<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12882" 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/12882?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-14T06:11:27+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43854">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/cbb3b03c5414b4866e497e8aa4a4576f.pdf</src>
      <authentication>b35832b7cc0ad3e52f683a4598c86c75</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="40421">
                  <text>OhiO-Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Home
Improvement•

"Thlt ain't •o
BULL"!
We have the
right home for
you. Call the
Cleland Clan.
mveslment. $6.500.

POIOOY - Sillit level hnre. 31Edrooms, 2 bltlls,
FA ei«::IC with heat pump, central air, smoage
buiclinj on 2.36 acre lol. $58,!ll0.
.O.IIOY - Commercial lots and buidings. Two
hundred leel ~ frontage - one hundroo teet o1
deptjl, ~ tor details.
lfTAIT - Larae older l'ome with spare home on a
lllQd corre- let Make otter. $27,000.
PD•IIOY- I~ IIIJY frame hOf1'M! wrth new •nyl
sidint 3 IEdrooms, oome f&gt;!W carpeting and patio
$29,900.
IIDOlEPOIT- Price llldad- ~ceolder fllme.
IPQdstreet Garage, basem.,t, 31Edrooms. l ~ batlls.

NOW $20.500.

.

IIDIIlfPOIT -

2 bedroom, one .lbtr home on

50'd20' tJt. locaoon convement to stores. Garage
$14,900.

CMmo - 3.61 acre lot with abundant shade trees.
3 bedroom one fklor plan home wlh I ~ baths
Pond-stttage M:J~~~g-cetlar. $34,900..

HAJIISOIMU£ -Land Conll1ct - 1.4 .:res "th
a 3 bedroom moti~ home that !; 1Jm5hed. ll1l
hoolwp. smaiJX)nd.ootbuidings. Sll.!llO.
•DDLEPOAT - 4 bedroom house, garage, on !lots.
'{nyl sdil!(. wrth worlshop with ~ hal. $18.500.
•111 fARI - Approx 36 acres, 3bedroom home, 2
car
pond and past11e. INiner wil regotiate

Aw••·2 o:re rrim farmwchsmall
1978 modu~r unl. 3 bedrooms.

d!;h, 2 garden arms. flfi81 water wei .
fllme
I
. $39.900..
frame home with 2·3
rmr JX)rcll, fireplace on
br~k

bedrooms, gar"K~

~closed

SO'dOO' lot $29,900..

FOIIEIIOY- Rent it oc ive 111 ~Fenced back yard
and deck. Rernode~ e•cept a few 1111~ and a ltttle
· t WI sel ~nd contract wtlh $2,000 down.
000.
USE- ftgh on a hil but what av~w' Ranch
tyjl! home. Ftleclosure property prK:ed to sell at

c.u 114-218-1112.

ltllnley StMm« 2 room lnln·
lmum t20 p• room. G1li•
Milot· Vinton Countits. 1·800·
321·5135.
E~itrgreenl,

llwn care, .. nd &amp;
gnvel. tap aoll. mulch, firewood, tr• a stump removel.
Don't hndlcep11. · 61 4-44e·

8541.
J a J 't Home lmprovemsnt.
Vinyl 1tdlng. ovtrhlf'tg, ltorm

1

•OOLEI'GIT-

aas

sunlltlfCh. $39.900.

HENRY E. CLELAND. JR ............ .. ....... :., .... 992-6191
JEAN TRUSSELL ....................................... 949·2660
DOTTIE TUANER ...................... ~ ................ 992·15692

•

i

Foottrs. Conc:r•

85

CONSTRUCDON

General Hauling

6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, basement, front JX)rch, back sundeck,

Jtm• lays Wlter SttVic.. Also
poolo rtlod. Cell 814·218· 1141
or 814-448-1178 or 814-445·
7911.

electric and/Or woodburner, FA furnace, white steel sid1ng,
satellite dish. Rural water system, 12'x20' living room. Small
down payment, take over loan. See it now and get all the de·
tails. OWNER ANXIOUS TO SEI.LII
#643

Vol.36 . No.49
Copyrightild 1986

St1rk1 Tr• and Lewn Service,
landiCiplng. 304-578· 2010.
Rota.ry or c•l• tool drilling.

Mostwellt coq»ltted samedsy.
Purf1J Min Md urvice. 304-

898·3802
Cell Eml• Ctrpentery, remodelIng, room ltddiliont, painting,
blocll, free ..timatH, 304-676-

6152 .

82

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

Watltrton' 1 W1ttr Hauling.
reesonable rat11, Immediate
2.000 gallon delivery, cltternt.
pools, well, e1c. cal 304-57&amp;2919.

87

MIAMISBURG, Ohio (UP! ) - Beneath the sign
announcing that I he "Steak International" restaurant
had reopened for business today, owner Ed Evans
added a P.S.
"Miamisburg, Job Well Done," Evans proclaimed
on his sign.
"If's the way I feel and it 's the truth ," said Evans.
"This ls a small town and our people did a fantastic
job when something like this dropped in our laps."
What dropped in on this southwestern Ohio city of
15,000 last week was a fiv&lt;'&lt;lay toxic fire.
A freight train derailed last Tuesday and a tank car
brimming with 12,00l gallons of white phosphorus
ruptured and started to bum . And bum . And bum .
The chemical lire, and the billowing toxic smoke it
produced. couldn't be extinguished and didn't bum

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1103 Sec. Ave .• Gallipolis.

lt4-445-7833 or 614·446·
1833.

A • M Fumiture Manufacturing,
St. At. 7 , Crown Chy, Oh. Cell
614· 258· 1470, call Eve. 814448-3431. Old &amp; new
Uphotttr4td.
Mowrey'a Upholstering nrving
tri county a ret 21 yeers. The bett

in tumhure upholttering. Can
304-176 - 4154 for free
ettimltes.

Gelllpatit. Ohio
Phone 814-... 6-3888 or 61.t448-.-..77

NEW USTI NG -All electric
three bedroom home, livtng
room, large kitchen bu ilt·m,
dining room. New carpet
and drapes. Sits on corner
lot tn SUlxJiYISIOil . Call lor
details.
WHITE'S HILL RD. - Ranch
home with three bedrooms,
large living room, big kit·
chen· dining comb ., lull oo sement w~h woodburner.
16'•32' swtmming · pool.
Price Reduced.
CREW ROAD - lo"IY Perma-Sione Ranch Home. fea·
lures living room. three rwce
size bedrooms, la rge bath &amp;
dressing area, equipped ~~­
chen and dining combo. Big
two C"· garage. Stts on over
one acre ground. PRICE RE·
DUCEO.
LANGSVILLE - On St. Rt.
124, 1/ 3 acre with a ntce
three bedroom home, large
liVing room. dtntng room,
kitchen . Nice corner lot
$12.000.00.
Velma Nicinsky. Assoc.
Pbone (614) 742-ll91
Real Estate General

fEAFORDm

LD

Real Estate ,01111
216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
1-(6141 -992-3326

NEW USTING-8 rms, I ~
baths, gas furnace, shop
carpeting, 2 JX)rches and lg
lot above aII lloods i1 Po·
meroy. Asking $18,000. But
let's hear an oiler oo as is.
67 ACRES - Near Su llVler
area on paved road with T.P.
water available.
EASTERN- Ntce attractiVe
3 BR home with J.P. water,
bath, full basement &amp; out·
b\J tldtngs. Asking $27 . ~0
BARGAIN - Good 3 BR one
floor . overlooking the Ohio
River. Just $12,000.
INVESTMENT --: 22 trailer
spaces and several acres. All
setups ready to rent Want
$70.000.
MINERSVILLE - ~ce reasonable 6 rm . home with view
of river on 124. Gas furnace.
carpeting and all in good condition. Just $29,000.
BAUIIS - Bi·level of 8rms .•
4 BRs, central air &amp;heat, pa·
tio and nice lot. All like new.
60's.
POIIEROY - Small 5 rm.
frame with bath. Only $3,!il0.
MIODUPORT- 6 rm. home
near business section but has
lg. lot, family rm.. lg. porch
and garage for $28,000.
NEAR HOSPITAL- Hasooe
floor. 2 BRs, full basement,
hoi water heat, dbl. garage
and I&amp; corner lot.
43 ACRES - 9 rm. larm
house, barn and buildings in
Eastern. Land lays my well
for crops. $45,00Q.
BAUIIS-Lot allout &lt;DOxilD,
fays lice, reilly for your
house. Zonoo. Sl3,&amp;JO.

SELLING PROBLEMS
Clll 992-3315 '
- ~

flrtihll\!j

HI 'd&lt;lq IJ.I I lt·l ;,
'

·'

enttne
1 Section, 10 Pages

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

SUNDAY PUZZLER
1 Give priority

7 Remote
10 Play on words
13 Unctuous
substance
19 Clergyman
20 Period of time
21 Stout
22 The act of
alighting
24 "Sign of spring"
25 TeutoniC deity
27 Hebrew month
28 Tellurium symbol
29 That man
30 Hinder
31 Raglon
32 Applaud
34 Simian
36 Cry
38 Prefix for hall
39 Female: colloq .
40 Therefore
4 t Incessant
44 Nickname for
Edward
46 Yellow ocher
47 Guido's low note
48 Music: as written

49
50
51
53
54

Slender !inial
Pinch
Nothing
Spanish article
Electrical
engineer: abbr.
55 Gaelic
57 Parisian season
59 llluml~ated
60 Rend asunder
61 Steamship: abbr.
62 Fluctuate
64 Rain and hail
66 Shooting star
68 Female ruff
70 Uncanny

72 Demon
73 Parts in play
74 Cloth measure
77 Shade tree
78 Quavered
80 Ingredient
82 Edible seed
83 Record
85 Moon goddess
86 Do penance
87 Cargo
88 Ancient
90 Receipt : abbr.

91
92
93
96
99
tOt

Emmet
tnte~dlng

Contl~ued

story
Pierce
Nuisance
Vessel for boiling
water
t04 Anglo-Saxon
money

105 Stilt
107 Title ol respect
108 Worthless leaving
109 Lamprey
110 Corrode
1 11 Weight ot India
112 Capuchin
monkeys

1t 4 Appraises
t 16 Real estate map
t 17 Grain
118 Old pronoun
t 20 Stolen property
122 Speck
t 23 Asian oxen
124 Extsts
125 Remain
127 Running
129 Food programs
131 Bridges
13~ Near
134 Roman t ,001
136 Negati'e prefix
t37 Word on
marriage license

139 Sailor
140 River in Germany

14 t Underworld god
142 Similar
143 Ocean
145 Armed conllicl
147 Intractable
persons
t51 Free ot
152 Sesame
153 Eye amorously
t55 Hairpiece
t 57 Transactrons
158 Pale
159 Venomous lizard
160 Sodium symbol
161 Rubidium symbol
t63 Glossy fabric
165 Souvenir

t67 Father
168 At home
169 Breathe loudly in
sleep
171 Sow
t72 Old-womanish

173 African gazelle
175 Trial
176 Hits hard: slang
t77 Fiber plant
178 Zest

DOWN
1 Divide
proportionally
2 Be insubordinate
3 Lamb's pen name

4 Cooling device
5 Latin conjunction
6 Walk unsteadily
7 Iron symbol
8 Macaw
9 Clerical collar
10 Communion plate

11 Rubber tree
12 Compass point
13 Merriment
14 Sun god
15 Goat
16 Fruit drinks
17 Locations
18 Foes
19 European capital
23 Cross~examines
26 Speed contest
29 Succor
32 Small protect"e
trays
33 Head ot Catholic
Church
35 Greek letter
36 Unger
37 Repentant
40 Thoroughfare
42 Insect eggs
43 Single item
45 Dispossess
48 Diocese
52 Zodiac sign
56 Weirder
58 Omit from
pronunciation

59 One WhO ts
shunned
60 Soften in temper
62 Ephemeral
63 Valleys on the
moon
65 Printer's measure

66 Instant
67 Newspapermen

68
69
. 71
73

Soak. as tlax
Guido's high note .
Chooses
Meal

75
76
79
81
84
87
89
92

!I sell out until Saturday.
At the height of the cnsiS, about ll,OXJ area
residents had to flee their homes. Federal Railroad
Administration executive director William Loftus
said it was the largest evacuation ever in the United
States because of a rail accident.
Throughout the week, more than J.IO people were
treated at llospitals for minor skin and eye irritation
caused by the drltting while smoke.
·
The emotional healing process began Sunday, when
thousands of residents gave thanks al church lor
surviving the crisis.
" We opened our services with a prayer oi
gratitude," said Roy Osborn, pastor of the Parkview
United Methodist Church. "The people in oor
community have a wonderful concern for each other.

We are just so happy everybody is able to get back
home safely."
At the First United Pentecostal O!urch of
Miamisburg, pastor Donald Howard devoted his
sermon to fu tu!'E' emotional problems.
"We talked about the crisis and what kind of effect it
may have in the long run," sald Howard. "There Is
going to be a lot of emotional stress and strain surface
In the next few month, and maybe even beyond that.
"But right now, the mood of everybody Is joyoos.
We are just so happy that it's finally over.
·' I told my congregation that things like tlds happen
in this world, but westillllveln the best country in the
world," said the pastor. "That'sbecausewearefree.
We lost some of our freedom when we couldn't go
home lor a few days. Something like this makes you

realize bow great freedom is."
Aller church, a lot of residents went to the
Baltimol'E' &amp; Ohio railroad tracks to look al the
burned-out tanker that had dL,rupted their lives.
Railroad workers cleaned up the mess and federal
inspectors searched lor causes of the accident.
Loftus said his team of federal milroad investiga tors won't issue a report lor three mmths. but he
. ooted that hot weather is suspected of tJ:&gt;Ing a factor In
the derailment.
He said investigators had found that the track was
five inches wider than normal in a 35-foot k&gt;ng sretlon
at the derailment sUe. Loftus said the preliminary
indication was that hot summer weather might have
caused the track to spread, but he couldn't explain
why the track didn't hold up as it should have.

Captives'
release
is sought

Soviets, British
eye arms control
By JOSEPH GAMBARDELLO

Real Estate General

Broker

' "".
"'' ~=

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Monday. July 14, 1986

By RICK VAN SANT

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
Geo. S. HobsleHer, Jr.

,,.~

Toxic rail car fire hums out; town recovers

RINGLES'S SERVICE. "PI·

876·2088 .. 876·7368.

at y

Call today".'

chein link fences ;

rltnCid carpentlf, tlectriden,
m110n, peinler, roofind (lnduding hot ·tar 1ppli01tionl 304-

-~

.

•

'Remodeling
•Replacement
Windows

bklckt. Call Don Waugh 814-

F.ny Tree Trimming, stump
,.mov1l. Caii304-171S-1331.

,,

•fencing

EVtrgrMnl, mulch, gravel, top
ION, flriWODd, tr• S. ltUrftCl

304-571-2388 or 614-441·
2464.

•

sotiDUIING NOW FOI•
•Roofing 'Siding
'Continuous
Guttering

446-4514

a wtndowt, gutters. Cell

RON'S Televition Service .
HouM c1l1 on RCA. Qulltr,
OE . Speciallng 'in Zenith. Call

sr.

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

work. 88ckhot'l, DDil• MEl
Oilchtr. Dump trucllt, and
Wl1er - g II · IIWir· tltctriCII
lin•. Charlie Hatfield optrttor.

114-445·8073.

$38,500.

lANGSVItlE - 4 yr old ranch .,th 3 bedrooms.
large ltv111g. room. frurt trees on approx. 2 acres ~
ground. $42.500.
$25.900
DEXTER - Appro•. 98 acres, barn and lther
•DOI.EPOIT - Colotul wrth al modern features, bUildings. pond, fen~n&amp; appro•. 16 acres bl~b~ . :fi
pod, ireplace, central ar and moce. $43.900..
acres pasture. wtth 2 story home. $43.900..
POIIEMIY- Beautiful 2 story home. 3 tedrooms, RACINE - 4·5 bedrooms. study, I ~ batl'o, full
formal diling room, 2 blths,fuH IJtsem"'( pus much · basemrot garage, carport, ro 2 a:: res d leve land.
llllfe, $59,900..
$35,900..
FOIIEIIOY - f(leclosure IJOperly. Needs "'me
RUTLAND - B10kl111&amp; land, eqtnpment, stock,
repair but prtced to sel. $11.900..
recetpts, knowk&lt;tge, and adVJSe. Th~ flour~hilg
BAUI SUBOIVISQI- 178' by 127' lot.Electnc and
bu~ness can be yours. Gl1!at vdume. Ask for &lt;lltais.
water availa~. Eocel~nt buidingsrte. Wants $9,!ll0
1984 14x70 SXYUNE lllBILE lilliE - 3
POIIEIIOY - Apartment oold~' Marn street bedrooms, bay window . Must rmve to yoor lot.
locatio~ 2-3 apartments. ~rm at $29,500.
$16.500.
RIIJGEWOOD SUBDIVISION - 1 acre butlding lot.
12155 lllBitE HOllE - 2 bedrooms. all electriC.
water and electric availa~e. Starting at $3.500.
Must move to your lot. $6.000.
IIDDlEPOAT -Ash Slnot- 2·31Edroom home • LANGSVILLE - 6.35 acres oountry estate. Barn,
sheds, two ponds, and no:e 1~ sttJY home. \Ill for
2 lots, garage. Gas FA heat $14.!ll0.
IIOIILEPOAT - 2 story frame house on awoo
cheap heat. $43,900..
36'170' kit. 3 bedroom~ firep~e. sttJm doors and
POMEROY - I ~ ~IJY. 3 l:fdroom home onlarll! ~t
wildows. Matte offer. $18,200.
Patio. tnsulatton. $29,000.
BUDIIURY - Farm with no:e 2 story home. 4 POMEROY- Beaut~ut '"" ~ llwe &lt;ltil River. 2~IJY
bedrooms, hee gas to home, rnyaltj tnoome from 2 lltme, 3 bedrooms. full basem!llt 1!li baths. 2 ci!r
~~. Farm has tilable acreage, oorn, garage,
garage. AttiC area and large lront sitt•g tnch.
outlluidinS\. CaM for an appt $63.900..
$24,900.
lfADIIIG CREEl! ROAD -A nmtranch homewrth 3 SYRACUSE- An~eranch tit» home 111 Ru~rc fils
bedrooms, dimng room. large long 100m Mth 3 tedrooms. garage. patio, mce lot $38 ,~0.
fr,pace full basem!llt and deck. $26,1XKl
RUTLAND - ();er 1o:re land, 3bedrooms, 211tths,
FOIIEIIOV - 3 bedroom, lice kitchro, " ' lui basement, latge patiO Many features. $49.~0.
concitllntn&amp; WB stove. located on 4 ~ts Many lthet
IDNG MTTOII -A 3 tedroom home on approo. 8h
feai\Jes $19,900.
acres. M1stly wooded, garage, c~se to state hunting
POIIEIIOV -IIANDYIIWI'S SPECIAL- New 1001. and patk. $15,500.
new winn&amp; new plum!mg. You oo the rest 2·3 FOMEROY - Commerc•llot hcelentlocatron. Ask
bedrooms. lui basem"'t $11.000.
for detaro.
ST. AT. 143 - ~er 3 bedroom ranch rome. 2 RUTlAND - New lima tmd - 3 IPdroom tanch
t.tlls, "!uipped tvfchen. on approo. 2.35 actes. lyt» home wrth bath, full l:o5e'rH''' Back !llrCh, m
Garden space, sl«age butkltn&amp; $29.900..
2.29 .:res t«Jw $33,500.
IJST lilT OF TOWN - flyer 13 acres olland. Great LANGSVILLE- 2 sltJY lltmewrth 5rooms &lt;llwnand
building sites, house needs rep~rs. $9,900..
2 up. Beautiful woodwork, nee carpet and panelng.
UCINE - 1~ ~IJY home wrth up to 4 IEdrooms. ~us a ~zed lie st(le bu ildll&amp; Garage. $29.!1l0.
Full t.sern"'l W8 fireplace. palo, garage $40,500
FOMEROV - 211 feel ol !rootage and 100 ~li d
UCIIIE - 2 story h;mehome on appro•. 'h aite 3 depth CommefCial ~~ .;th aglare bbcl&lt; Mdilg and
bedrooms, fireplac~ forced alf. ~ocage bur~rn&amp; a frame lwo story butkl•g. $15.000
nmral gas heat $16.500.
RUTlAND - tho home features a large yard. new
•oDLEPOAT -South fiflll- Room to gr,..'4 5 root and prced to see at $20.000.
bedrooms on 60'd 13'1otlnsulafed,S((lms, flfeplace
IDNG BOTTOM - Thrs home has 7 rooms. 4
S15.000.
bedrooms and tson 'hacre ~t f~t oosem!llt denand
FOIIEIIOV- lloecll Street- Bnck ranch house. 3 ltreplace $34.500.
bedrooms, I !1, baths, lireplace. basement m ap~oo
IDNG BOTTOII - Neat 3 bedroom ranch. fam r~
1 acre. N~e large INing room. $35,000.
roocn, 2 car garage, on appro•. l acre "'h ganlm
POIIEIIOY - 2 ~IJY 11tme ..th 8 rooms. 34 space and outb\Jrkltng Many ~her leatures $32.000.
bedrooms. lui basemlllt n~e kicalion near scho~s . RUTtAND - Three 1 o:re lots. Eklctrrc avaia~e.
$27,!Kl0
$P03.500EROeaYch or ,make off on al tiYre.
11
RT. 1- ApprOK. 2 .:res d Oh~ RNer hontage.
- 1n sliJY tJdetlltme wrth 3 bedrooms.
N~ ~yllg wooded. has water i11d etectncavaiable. dtmllPoom and rmr patio. ONLY $15,000.
$5,500.
*&gt;d IN - One floor
h ~an lltme with 3 ~ooms.
CHESHIRE- 3bedrooms. l'h ~IJY home.New 2car
rnrng room. suntnc and tS real~ cute. &gt;&lt;o.900..
btx:lt garage. twce bad yard and garden space. R.:tN E- Own 2 acres olland wrth ganlm space,
$28,900.
h~Uit
trees andnd ~bowGaroom Nea2story, 4 bedroom home
POIIE.,Y - Cllse to t""n but secfudtng, large '"
co 1~n. rage. r schoot. $24,000.
homewitttupto41Edroo~m,fu~rnsulatedandhmts
l W - ttke new 1nsl:le and out' Completely
with coal and wood f(llow t.Cilty bi~ Appro•. '• acre ~emode~ home IJ1 large 111. Excellent condition.
tot. $28,900..
GaFOrMage• nyew roo t and slling $27,500.
.IERS'IIW- MINI FARM- lwm• 9.:res, 2
IE110 - 2 ~Is wrth 5 bedroom tJder home.
bedroom remodeled house. fturt trees. fencllg and Needs work Could be rrotal untl. Askmg $12.000.
MINERSVILLE - Appro• 'h acre lot wlh 5 room
l1liC h roe. $12.000.
FOIEIIOY- Com~ete~ remodeled tnSide and out. house, 2 bedrooms, 1arage, and part oosem!llt
3-4 bedrooms. 2 full baths, centtal ai, decktng. $15,000.
$36.900.
FOdM EROdYde- Sm ~I busmess located rn town. Garage
IIDOLEPOAT - l 'o IIIJY ~der home tl&gt;lt needs an 1"" ' al 1or mechantc.
iJve and_repar Ntee tevellol. $12,900.
IIIDDLEPOAT - 2story home w~h 3 l:fdrooms, l'h
IIDDI.EPOAT - 2 bedroom, one lkl« home 00 baths, lull basem.,t. central atr, carpetll~ 2 cat
50'1120' tot. Garage. Locatiln convroienl to stores lli'rage. Many tiher features. $47.500.
$14.900.
IIIDDtEPORT - Old Empire Fwnilu't - Lot
•DDUPORT -Ole ftooc pan ranch type htlfT'M!. 3 approo ~·xtoo. Ask for detai~.
br:droo11•, garage, carport, pus many tther features. NEW USffNG - UNION AVE. - No:e 4 tedroom
PM a 3 room rental with a $200 rmntl'iy rent ranch wrth f;miy room tn !Jisem!llt Breezy enctosoo
$55.000.
11!8$34r :;-ch for cool relall3ton! Alumnum siting.
• ·
OMWII-32lo:res - wasagoodfarm.Milerals,
tinber and an old house. Secluded in the country , NEW USTING- RACINE- Newer sectionallltme'
c:me to Athens Co. Ask for more info.
Occutied on~ a shortlrne. 3 bedrooms, l'h baths,
IT. 7 MUll SUIOMSION- Beat.Ciful brick ranch central ar, eqUipped klchen. AI ~ectr~ E~ra no:e
type home, with full tltsement. 3 tedrooms. 21Bths. condrton. ONLY $26.900.
.
woodbuming fi'eplace 111 the rec. room. Garage. IIDDLEPORT - large ~mmero~ burklmg. Could
· $59,900.
haWJ many uses. Call for mformaton ..
!lAtiN( - Cute IItie 1 bedroom home tn tiJOd · NEW USTING - IIDDLEPORT - fere rs an
atndililn. I.Bvet IIi. al !IOCI1'6, aluninum si1111~ tnvestment property "'lh excelent returns 111
$13,000.
Midd~port '{j~ge. ·Commerc~l b\Jii:Jilg, Cal for
I'OIEJJY- SR 33 ·- 1 •:re buiklng or mobo detar~.
home IIi. Water illld electric m tlable.Aslc fo&lt; (i!tais. NEW umNG - MIDDLEPORT - Bar, wlh all
$5,1XXJ.
eq~ and sfol;lr. lnckldesD·51~se ''2:)3 n~t
2story homewlh 2-3 bedrootm, IJ1 dub . NeiJ)Iilble. Askilg $35,000.
a «&lt;'dl3' lot, FA heat Gaiaize. $14.500.·
NEW US1111G- IIOIILEPOAT -leit.aurantandor
PIIC£ IEliUCEII - •ool!PftT - Remodek&lt;t lltiding with 2 opartments over. Cal for !Eta is l yw
1\1 R!y home on aquiet sieet Many fealllres mu~ want lo own a restaurant
bt-. $2l000.
NEW USIIIIG- RUTlAND- Here is an~ 10 yr.
SftACUS( ~ A real~ lice 3 bedroom, 2 bolt) old ranch lytJI hotre with 31Edrooms. bath, garaee
modullr 1111 on a ~ble lat. 2 car gara~ WB. oo alevel tot. Many new feai!Jres. Wl!lt $36.500.

biHm•u.

tlond, Ohio. 114· 742· 2803.

441·8841.

MeiNE - 3-4 bedroom rnncll type home, ·lull
basem"'t fin~hed famt~ mom. 4.66 acre lot N~e
w(lkshop. PRICE REDUCED - $37,000.
CHESTER - Nice 3 bedroom home, full blsem"'t.
~'II' lev~ yard. Carport. $34,900..
POMEROY - Stx acres Close to town. 1\\ sttJY 11tme.
l4 bedrooms. 10•20 llocage b\Jii:Jin&amp; N:. uRI. All
furmture and appiances 111duded. PRICE REDUCID
- $24,500.
FOIIEROV- 5 acres of wooded land 3 tedrootm. 2
bath home. Basemlllt garage Near town. $28.000.
!lEAR CHESTER - 3 tedroom home. lui blsem!llt.
~rae tot' Many «her features. $29,900..
SYRACUSE - 3 IEdroom modular, ~ce lev~ lot, new
deck, !Aiity butkling. Assumab! loan. $32.000.
IN FOIIEROY - 3 bedroom home, level lot Up to 7
rooms. Owner W11 sacriftce to sel. $11.500
FOMEROV - 2 story home, 3 tedrooms, l'h baths
and t.sement Ori~nal woodwock. $25.ro&lt;l.
RIGGS CREST SUBDIVISION - Eastern School
District - l;nge modern home. Up to 5 bedrooms.
located on 1 o:r' lot 2'h baths. Many «her features.
$54,900
R.:INE- 2 story older horre W1th large lot House
reeds oome repa11 Several outbuid"gs and sheds.
$16,900.
CHESTER - A newer 3 tedroom ranch ..th 1~ 1
basem"'t garage, central atr.Awo•. I o:re ~t Many
other features. $40.000.
RUTtAND - flyer 1 a::re m the country. 3bedroom.
rancll type lltme. 2 111rages OOW $39.900..
RUTtAND - A home wrth everylhtng. 3 tedroom
ranch home. 2 IJtths, ~rge decl&lt;, 2 car carport .;th
stocage. large lot. above-ground pod , satelile d•h.
$55,500
FOIIEROV - 3 tedroom, l '.l ~IJY home. Pr&lt;ed to
~I at $21,900.
FOMEIIOY - large lot. 2 ooths. famiy room. orge
rear deck. $ll.OOO.

!JIOtvltlng.

J.A .R. Conltructton Co .. Ru-

•nDlEPORT -

~" rmdular, nee level tot.
Woodburning fireplace, JX)rcll and deck areas.

Good-1

J..,•

lnt- rtuc:co. Ploa• • ~., fiPiirt. Low ratn.

remove!,

UCIN£ - 5 room tlou5i! with 2 IEdrooms rolot n
bill Needs repar but couij be good rental

hcav!Jting

footlf'l, dri¥1WIYI, septic tlnkt.
l~ndacaping. C.lltnytimt 114·'
441·4137.
L. Dov-.
Jr. owntr.

E-.

doof'l

83

Meadow
Young boy
Printer's measure
French article
Actor Wallach
Great deal
Periods of time
Perceived by
touch

93 Distress signal
94 Previously
95 Spring
97 Refresh
98 Wire nails
99 Bards
tOO Bitter vetch
' tO 1 New Zealand
parrots ·
102 Song
103 Parisien summer
106 Bound ·
109 Antlered animals
113 Narrow opening
t 15 As far as
t t6 Ridicules
t t9 Vast age
12 1 Stunt
123 Sweet potatoes
124 Possessive
pronoun
t25 Buffaloes
126 Fastidiously
tasteful
128 Not"used
130 Bartering
132 Individuals
133 Succor
t34 Posting
135 Staten t 38 Audience
t41 Noise
144 Baseballleag.
146 Grates
148 Leases
149 Tantalum symbol
150 Mountains of Asia
t 5 t Hindu queen
152 Agave plant
154 Bungles
t56 High
158 Source of water
159 Festive
162 Wager
164 Type ol cross
166 Outfit
t67 Teacher's favorite
• 170 Faeloe Islands
whirlwind
174 Article

LONDON (UPII - Soviet For
eign Minister Eduard Shevard·
nadze and Fol1'ign Secretary Sir
Groffrey Howe met today at a
country estate to launch twodaysof
talks focu sing on arms contrul.
The talks at Chevening, lhe
foreign secretary's offic ial country
residence in Kent southeast of
London. included a scheduled
working lunch.
Shevardnadze. who flew to Chev·
ening in a helicopter. was to return
to London later in the day for a
meeting wit h Prime Minister Mar·
garcf Thaichcr at her official No. 10
Downing Street residence.
British officials hope Sheva rd·
nadze's visit wUI clear some of the
roadblocks In front of a projected
summit this year between Prcsi·
dent Reagan and Soviet lmder
Mikhail Corbachev.
The visit by Shevardnadze, who
flow into to London late Sunday,
was the first by a Soviet foreign
minister since 1976 and was a trial
fora y after a decade of what British
officials conceded were rocky
relations with Moscow.
Shcvardnadzc's arrival stale·
ment sa id he hoped to "conduct
mutually beneficial. substantial
talks."
British officia ls said Howe would
try to tesl the sin('('rity of Moscow's
latest nuclear arms proposa ls and

press Britain's efforts to try to
break the logjam in the G€neva
talks on banning chemical
weapons.
Howe, who was scheduled to
confer with U.S. Secretary of State
Grorge Shultz in Washington proba ·
bly later this week. would also seek
to probe Soviet feelings about a
Reagan-Corbachev summit. offi.
cials said.
Britain is pushing for an encoun·
ter like last DecemtJ:&gt;r's summit in
G€neva between the superpower
leaders.
Shcvardnadze, wtD was greeted
in London by Fo!'E'lgn Office junior
minister Timothy Renton. sald,
"We Intend to have an exchanged
views on the main problems of
world politics. first d all- on Issues
of socurity. loWPring in teriiat !Ona t
tension, reducing the military

MANll..A. Philippines (UP!)
Religious leaders attempted today
to negotiate the release of an
American missionary and 10 nuns
kidnapped in the southern Mosie!)'!
city of Marawi.
U.S. Emba"y spokesman Allan
Croghan identified the kidnapped
American as Brian Law!'E'nce of
Madison. Wis .• who wa s abducted
by armed m!'n 1rom his home near
Mindanao State University Satur·
day night.
According to a brief army
message !'E'Iayed to headquarters
from Marawi, 510 miles south of
Manila. LawrenC&lt;''s wife also was
at home, but managed to hide in a
cabinet and was unharmed. the
message said.
State television said the kidnappers may also have been
responsible for the abduction Friday night of 10 F~ipino nuns. who
belonged to the order of the
Carmelites, from their monastery
In Marawi on the shores of Lake
Lanao.
The nuns were put aboard two
motorboats.

threat.·"'··--../
."For us II would be important to
get a clear id&lt;&gt;a of the British
posit ion regarding the complex of
proposals put forward by the Soviet
Union . ... Ofrourseweareawareof
the obstacles on the way to mutual
understanding, but we believe that
common goodwill" can resolve
them, he safd.
" We also have points to be
discussed in the field of bilateral
lies. which are extremely impor·
tant in the contcx 1 of East ~ West
rdatilns," Shevardnadze said.

DIPWMAT'S ARRIVAL - Soviet Foreign
Minister Eduard Shevardnadze shared u Ughl
moment with his wife NanuU Sunday folio Mig their
arrival at Heathrow !\lrport lor a three-day vl!!lt

during which British olllcials hope to ascertain the
seriousness of the Soviet Union's recent anns control
propo!W.s. ( UPH

NASA administrator seeking new shuttle funding
WASHINGTON (UPI I - P,·psi
dent Reagan 's tll('('ling today with
NASA Admi ni strator Jam es
Flet cher may help the new space
agency chid srcure the funding hr
wants for a new shuttle 10 replace

the lost Challenger .
.Officials said Fletcher would
t&lt;'spand to a presidential order by
report ing to Reaga n on how the
agency is implementing recommendations of the Rogers Commls·

sion thai investiga ted thf' shutll e
explosion.
However, the mC&lt;'Iing also could
afford Flet cher an opporrunlty ro
sf11'ngthen his case with Reagan oo
support for a new shu ttle - a
deci sion that has been drlayro

more than two months by questions
about $2 billion.plus in funding.
White House spokesman Larry
Speakes said the decision remains
at least two weeks away, though
several Republican leaders have
said they arecollfident Reagan wlll
support the replacement effort.
Fletcher has said a fourth shuttle
will be needed to allow the agency's
$8 biU!on space-station program to
meet a 1994 target date set by
In a show of unity,t he Democrat s
Reagan.
named Shaffer
national
Speakes sa id that after today's
com milleeman .
briefing, While House officlais
Richardson said she was es pP·
wou ld rcl'lew the direction the
cia lly pleased to see her fellow
National Aeronautics and Space
Democrats leave town "in a unifiro
Administration has taken since the
spir it ."
Jan. 28 disaster that set the
The Republicans. meanwhile.
program back an estimated two
were pairing off I ike street fighters. years .
"Whal wewrnllhrough today - I
F'IPtcher already has announced
don't know if it's good for the party
two major Slf1lS to strengthen the
or bad for the party- but we sure program.
got aU thi' headlines," sald Raese,
He said .June :JJ he was moving
who lost in his 198i polif lea I debut to
direction of the space station
Rockef'eller in the senatorial
project from the Johnson Space
(\ont inuro on Pa ge 101
Center fn Houston to NASA head-

Mason lawmaker loses GOP bid
CHARLESTON . W.Va. iUPi t .John RaeS!''s razor-thin victory
margin in the chairmanship baTtle
appears to have signalled a deep
division within the normally placid
waters of the Republican Party in
West Virginia .
On the oth&lt;&gt;r hand, the Demo·
cra ts, who normally brace for_, a
dogfight at suc h party functions.
chose Sally Richardson wilh hardly
a whisper in the other Saturday
convent ion.
Raese, a Morgantown business·
man with interest s in the news
media and coal industry. survived
by a tnt battle with state Sen. Mike

Shaw, R-Mason, a Point Pleasant
anorney who was Gov. Arch
Moore's choice ro succeed Kent
Strang!.' HaU .
And !here was a hint that Raese's
66·64 win might not hold up.
A move was made to sea l the
ballots following a secret vole that
was counted several tlmes in the
stormy ma&gt;ting.
Richardson , a big name in sta te
politics when SPn . Jay Rockefeller
was goveroor, easily beat Harrison
Count y business man Martin
Shaffer. winning ~·24 In a vote that
eventually was changed to a
unanimous one.

,

BLAST AFTERMATH- A bus that eotaalned memben olthe ClvU

Guard In SpaiD lieS smoking and destroyed alter being blown apart
today by a sUBpeeted guerrilla bOmlmg r.t Madrid. Eight people are
kno~m

II

dead, with atleut f:i lujurles. (UPI)

quarters in Washington. and July 8
he PSfabliSI.-d a new office of
sa fety. rf'l iabilily and quality assu·
ran!l' lo provid&lt;&gt; indPp&lt;'ndPnt over·
sight of key projec ts.
The Rog{'rs Commissio n recom·
mendPd a sa fety oflirr' b!' formed
wlfh wid(&gt; ·ranging re;IXJnslbilitk's
fo help pr('Vent another space
disaster. The panel. headro by
formf'r Secretary olj itale William
Rog~&gt;rs, wa s rspeda lly crif ica I of
NASA managemen t and lheappar·
ent absmC&lt;' of an agency· wide
sa fety organization.
The commi,gion' s first recom·
mendati:ln was to change the
design of the seals In pint s of the
twin solid prop&lt;'llan t lxloster
rockets rojuired to launch each
shuttlf'. The Challenwr explosion
was triggered by a joint fallurP.
NASA is working on a new
boo!;ter joint design, and Flrfchcr
has asked the research arm of the
National Academy of Sciences to
revlpw the design and subsf'Cjuent
testing Pl'OCI'SS.

s~!~!~~~~~!~~!:~§:~ fo~~~!~~tbe~~!!s 8

Basque separatists set off a car
The van. which pollee sald
bomb today and k!Ued eight rontalned about 100 pounds of
paramilitary civil guardsmen and explosives. · was hurled several
injured at least 45 other people in
yards In the air by the blast and
apparent retaliation for the expul· landed In a garden.
sion of an ETA leader from France.
"'The car was p~cked wlt hscrews
and chain links," a pollee official
authorities said.
The bomb, planted In a parked said . " The explosion was meant to
van. ripped through a bus carrying klU as many people as possible."
some.50 clvll guards from the Civil
He sald a tlmlngdevlce triggered
Guard Traffic School as lt drove the bomb.
nearacentralsquareal7:48a.m.in
'The blast also ripped Into the
a posh residential district, pollee front of a socond bus carrying clvU
and witnesses said.
guardsmen and heavily damaged
" I heard a huge explosion. and • ./12 cars parked In the area.
when I looked around, I saw the bus
No groop lmmedlalely claimed
blown to blts," said a newspaper responsibility, but autroritles sald
vendor at the site.
they beUeved the attack was the
The Injured Included three work of ETA's Madrid-based
passers-~y and a stn:el cleaner,
"Spain rommanib" which killed
·,who was teporled In critical fivedvUguardsmenAprU:IB,hours
rondttlon. hospital sources said.
after French pollee announced the
Authorities sent out an urgenl call arrest d the groop's alleged leader,

Aulh:lritles said today's attack
may have been In retallatiln for
llurbe 's !'XJlllslon Saturday from
France to Gabon, a fonner French
colony In southwestern Africa.
Pollee suspected him of being
ETA's milltary commanrer.
ETA, a Basque-language acronym for Basque Homeland and
Liberty, Is fighting for a separate
Basque romeland in northeast
Spain.
A group c1 extreme rightists
gathered at the site of the attack
and shouted slogans against ETA
and the Socialist government.
ETA has claimed 16 victims this
year ln Its armed campaign for
lndepenrence of the northern
Basque region and has killed more
than 500 people since It took up

anns 17 years ago.

Ll. Col. Francisro Cruz. commander of the 24th infantry battal·
ion. told rf1lorrers in Cagayan de
Oro near Marawi today the military
was following up "leads" the
kidnappers tJ:&gt;Iong~&gt;d to a faction of
the Moslem sq&gt;araflsl Moro National LitJ:&gt;ra tion Front .
Bisrop Bienvenido Tudtud of
Marawi new Sunday tot he Moslem
city from Manila. where 1.- was
vacationing. 10 try and s""k the
release of !he kidnap victims.
church !Dunrs said.
Bishop Fr rnanib Capalla of
lllgan City near Marawi joined
Tudtud Sunday even ing and returned to his parlsh early IDday.
Capalla sa id in a telf1lll:lne
interview Moslem religious leaders
and military officlalswererombing
the .takesh:lre areas for the kidnap
vtctuns and I hal Moslem elci:'rsand
ol her religious leaders had of ferro
to negotiate for !heir r&lt;lN S&lt;'
Capalla sa id the kidnapp&lt;'rs
attempted to Sp&lt;'ak to Thdtud by
radio Sunday rvrn ing but thr
"voiC&lt;'s werl' fa in! and garbled ."
" Wr'rr still wa it ln g fo r mrs·
sages, said 01pa ll a.
Pope John Paul II. b!'forr &gt;£Jmr
3,00l pilgrims ond tourists al his
summer rrsid(&gt;na' !DUih of liome.
Sunday rorrl'mned the abduct ton
of the nuns and appealed 1o !I.kidnappers for th&lt;&gt;ir safr rr le&lt;~se .
It was thr second kidnapping or
religious workers in Maraw i in six
wecks and t twc first of an American
missionary sinG' 1979 when the
Rev. Lloyd Van Vactor of Sp&lt;'ar~
fish. South Dakota . wa s kidnapprd
In Marawl and held lor J.l days.
Last Junr 4. suspectro Mostc•m
gurtmen abducted French priest
Mlj:hel de Clgu rd . the MSU cha ·
plain. He w as released unharmro
21 day s tater.
The Moslr m S!'para tist insur·
gency brokl' I)U I in Marawi. capital
of Lanao del Sur provlnC&lt;' on the
main southern Island of Mindanao
In 1972. Fighting in the region has
claimed more than 60,000 liv!'S.
In April. Brig. Gen. Rodrigo
Gutang, commancrrd area forces,
warned ln a report to ml!itary
headquarters of a campaign by the
Moro Front to staw kidnapplngs d
Americans In retaliation lor the
U.S. illr strike on Ubya .

�The Daily

Ohio

Coml/nent

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Monday, July 14, 1986

'

The Daily Sentinel
U
..l 'bourt Street
Pp..eroy, Oblo

DEVOTED TO THE INTE.TS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA
~lb
Bm~
~v

•,;

......;,........_...... ,rT"E!!c:loo=o
·,

!

:

ROBEtlT L. WINGETT
r ubllsher
PAT WIDTEHEAD

:d'

Asslataal Publ~her/Con oller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manacer

D

·ROTHGEB, JR.
J!lews Edllor
f
A MEMBER ol The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the Amerlcl!n Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE'ITERS OF OPINION art&gt; welcome-. They should 1x&gt; less lhan lXl words
long. All letters are subject to editing and JTIISI be signed wllh name. address and
lelephone number. No wtslgnEI:I letters will be published. Letters should be In
,.,'Ood taste, actdrHslng Issues, not persooalitles.

Controlling the issue

SF Giants top division at halfway poinl::-:
B, JOE lLLUZil

Justice White, In his majority
decision, could not have written
more lucidly. He began by saying
thatthedectslonofthemajorltyhad
nothing to do with the majority 's
.views on whether the anti-sodomy
statute was wise or desirable. The
Issue was "whether the federal
Constitution confers a tundammtal
right upon homosexuals to engage
In sodomy and hl'nce Invalidate the
laws of tbe many states that stUl
make such conduct Ulegal." Justice
While reminded us that all 13 states
that enacted the BUl or Rights had
anti-sodomy statutes and that, as
recently as 1961, all 50 states had
such statutes, which rem'aln nowa·
days on the books of 2&lt;1 states and
the District of Columbia.
An interesting aspect of Bowers
Is that a) the clflcer who arrested •
Hardwick entered his quarters to .
serve a warrant unrelated to sexual
activity; bi that seeing him en·

gaged In an illegality, he "had to,"
as he put It, "brtng him In"; c) the
magistrate dealt perfunctorily with
the offense, In effect leaving
Hardwick to return to his bver. It
was Hardwick who then took the
Initiative, seeking to declare that
statute unconstitutional, and per·
suadlng a court d. appeals to concur
with him In that judgment.
Two things would appear to be
sociologically obvious. The first Is
that If between 1961 and 1986, 26
states actually repealed their anti·
sodomy statutes, then we are not
dealing with ancient laws so frozen
In place that no one dares dislodge
them The second Is !hal where a
state has not got around to
dislodging the statute, It Is In fact
not prosecuted.
Now Justice White, canvassing
the Constltuttdnd traditional law
and flndlng !V,J no suggestion of
any "fundamental" right to homo-

State Republicans. led by gubernatorial nominee James Rhodes and his
.I A,I&lt;E'9 YOU 'TO WORK. I..ATE
BUT FIRST, 'I WON~ER IT:
ruMing mate, Robert Taft II of Cincinnati, are pushing wlth all the gusto
Se&lt;AUSE
I'!?
1..\KE
1'0
~ISC.USS
they can muster for the anti-tall turf of the upcoming campaign
YOU'V~ HEAR~ TI-lE ONE
battleground.
YOU~ rUTURE' WITH
ABOUT THE fARMER'S
They figure they've already got the Issue of the hu!\(' personal income tax
THE COMf'A.NY.
t&gt;AUG\-\iE~
Increase enacted In 1983 by Gov. Richard Celeste and a Democratic
)
Legislature, even though much of It was repealed.
Now they arewarnlngof a huge "windfall" to the stateifCongress~nacts
a pendlfll( tax reform blU.
Here's how it works: itemized deductions wUI be reduced by the federal
tax bill, so people's adjusted gross Income will he higher. Since the state
Income ta11 Is based on the adjusted gross Income, Individuals may pay
more state ta~~es even though the rates stay the same.
Rhodes and Taft want the " windfall" ofiS('f on a t:lollar-for-dollar basis.
and they say up to a 15 percent reduction in Ihi' personal income tax mtes
could be justified.
/
That sounds good in a campaign, but there's sdmethlng they haven 't .---------------~--.,
mentioned. The Reagan adminlstrat ion's effort to reduce federa I SjX'fldi ng
tMNY 11MES. AC.TUALLY, TI-ll~ I~
!'!'QUires the states to take more responsibility for various programs.
QUITE A. COINCI~ENCE- I WANT
It only 111&lt;,1kes fiscal sense for Ohio to hang onto any "wlndfall"to pay for
programs palmed off on the state by thP feds.
TO t)I~USS YOUR rUTURE' WITH
To do otherwise reflects thl' same head-in·the·sand fTl('ntalily that saw
THE COM~NY, TOO·
the state, under Rhodes' leadership in Ihi' carl:&gt; J98ls, have to raise taxes
several different times to avoid a deficit.
The clever Rhodes is letting Taft be ttl&gt; "anti-tax" s):Xlkesman br the
tiCket. Olle reason Is that the articulate Tall has a good bac ~ground on
money matters, having served on the Olio Hou se FinanC&lt;' Commit!('{'
several years hack.
But the key reason for pushing Tall front -and-center Is that he ca n gel oot
the GOP line about lax cuts witrnut [\ltting Rhodes through the
embarrassment of having to !'{'Call what happened in thl' past.
Rhodes habitually ~ampaigned on "m new taxes" or on cuning taxi'S.
but the Income and sales taxes wound up higher than ever after his last
tel'tn, and the state still was threatened with going In Ihi' red when he left
offla&gt;.
Meanwhile, when several communities in Scioto and Pike countiE-s had
to cancel their fireworks for the Fourth of July because they couldn't get
liability Insurance, Ohio House Speaker Vrrnal Riffe. D·NE'w Boston. saw
WASHINGTON .- Samuel R. gist explained It, the plan was to cost of HUD at the same limr&gt; we
red, white and blue, and set off some fireworks of his own .
Pierce
Jr. Is fast becoming the coy
"bloody" Cuomo sufficiently - by have increased the amount of
Riffe told thl' Insurance rompanies, the trial lawyers and l'Veryonr elsr
mistress
of
the
Republican
Party.
drawing
away a large chunk cl the assistance we give to the needy. We
Involved that they had tx-tter lx&gt; preparrd to negotiate a solu tion to lhr
Like
the
):Xlet's
hot·blooded
swaln,
black
voteto hurt his stature as a have been a ble to gel more [Xo'Ople
liability Insurance problem, or they wUl have one imposed on them.
GOP
leaders
keep
making
him
presidential contender in 1988. more housing with less money."
• ~life Is not just balling the brceze. Labor and business did not take hi mal
offers- and he keeps turning the m Pie rce 's self-sacrifice would pre·
At lhe same lime, however. IlK&gt;
his won:l last year when hi' called for a negot ialrd settlmienl of thr
down.
sumably
earn
him
the
party's
administration's
only black Cabinet
workers' compensation Issue.
.
As
we've
reported,
the
Houslng
gratitude
for,
say,
a
Senate
race,
memlPr
acknowledged
that housLawmakers ended up writing IlK' IE'rms of lhr nrw law, "'hich j:ka srd
Urban
Development
secretary
and
but
a
bruising,
partisan
race
for
in
g
is
"one
of
the
last
bastions"
of
neither labor nor business.
late
last
month
rejected
the
offer
rJ.
governor
would
hardly
enhan&lt;P
his
rac ial discrimination in the United
• Last week, Riffe threatened the lawyers with a crackdo wn on damagr
a federal appeals coun appoint· chances for a Supreme Court Sta tes.
Sl'ltlements and insurance companies wit h financial disclosure and a
menl , hoping to wln a spot on the appointment.
Far greater progress against
Windfall profits tax.
SupremE'
Court
instt'ad.
Now
we've
A
Cuomo-Pierce
face-off
would
discrimination
has lren made ln
: Both sides know that if they do not compromise wilhin a couplr of
lea
rned
I
Ita t Republican leaders in
certainly
have
been
a
dmr·eut
employment
and
education. Pierce
months, Riffe Is capable of produci ng a srtllrmen t nrit hrr wUilikr . But il
his
home
stale
of
New
York
twice
ideological
race.
In
a
recent
said.
"There
are
more laws," he
Wlll make affordable lnsurance coveragE' ava ilable.
importuned Pierce to run lbr int erview with our associa1e explained. " I ca nnot say tha t we
governor against Marlo Cuomo this Lucette Lagnado the HUD secre· have had tilL• same results in
fa ll. Both limes he said thanks but
lary stressed repeatedly that he housing. We have not made that
no thanks.
remains true to Ronald Reagan's much progress."
Assuming !hal Pierce lacks a conservative political philosophv .
Pierce was enthusiastic about his
taste for ):Xllilical suicide, It's not
He was proud of the savings he
Fair Housing Initiatives Program,
hard to understand his reluctance has made ln his agency budget by which identifies .housing discrimito tacklE' thl' Democrats governor, cutting bac k oo construction of new nation by the use of "testers" who
who is widely regarded as unheata· public housing and focusing instt'ad
Why is Middleport, and no doubt Dotrrmans or Getman She- blc. In fact, though Pierce Is too on rehabilitation of existing units rnse as prospective buyers or
pherds? Th~y can lx&gt; mean and gentlema nly 10 say"' · he may have and a system of renl vouchers fo r renters. The Supreme Court has
Pofll('roy, picking on pltoolls?
ruled that such testers have legal
- President Honon said that coun· nasty dogs too. If Ihe cou ncil bans suspected wha t was behind the lhl' (DOr.
standing to bring a discrimination
the br~d. what a rp we supposed to clfer to head the New York
~il is not picking on any certain
"We have b2en doing exactly complaint, oven urnlng state laws
do with oor dogs, shoot them?
!)reed. U that Is true. why is pitbull
Republican lickel.
what the president said," Pierce that had lbrbldden them to bring
.
wrote In hold black letters above the' Would you stool your dog b2cau5('
As a D?mocralic political strate· said . "We have reduced the size and legal action. Pierce said HUD has
article thai was published in IlK' of some of hls breed are m~an '!And
May 28 Sentinel"! Why isn't any just where dol'S the wuncil want us
to walk our dogs? Thirty mill'S out
Dtlrr type of dog mentioned?
in Ire count.,,., Are Wf' Hvlng in
:. People fail to see any good In America or Russia? I am beginning
littooUs because of their name. A to wondrr.
When Ronald Reagan was elected pattern that could threaten the priva· not be bound by the ruling. Senator
pitooll wUI he as lll('an cr gentle as
Kc·ll&gt;· Ginthrr
you make them. _ What about
Pomeroy pllbuU &lt;M"ner to the presidency in 1980, a lawyer cy of any American.
Charles Mathias of Maryland, a re·
friend of mine said that, from the It is ironic that this decision should spected Republican, expressed his
standpoint of liberals and moderates, have been handed down at the begin· concern over the cavalier attitude of
.... the most disturbing aspect of this ex· ning of the week, when the nation was the administration, noting. "The Unit·
pected right-wing presidency would celebrating the IOOth anniversary of ed States has historically supported
be the impact on the JUdiciary.
the Statue of Liberty. It is even more the World Court, even helped to ereI disagreed.
ironic that such a meddlesome deci- , ate it." He urged Mr. Reagan to "read
It seemed to me then, as it does sion should come from alleged con·
now. that the greatest damage from servatives pledged to "get Uncle S;im
the Reagan presidency would stem off our backs."
from a poorly conceived hard-line
Justice Harry Blackmun, one of the
T HAM/tTON
foreign policy and a lack of under· four dissenting judges in the 5-to-4 destanding of arms negotiations.
cision, said that the result was a viola·
But I agree with my lawyer friend tion of "the most comprehensive of
that liberalism and moderation will rights and the right most valued by
suffer from Reagan 's judicial views civilized men, namely, the right to be
and appointments.
let alone."
.....,~
In the last fortnight, three occur·
In my view, however, the least de/NOI~T!ON'
rences in the judicial area have On· fensible of the Reagan positions is the
l{(}tJR
derscored the early warning of my at- decision to ignore the rulings of the
S·6 p.m.
torney friend :
World Court relating to U.S. conduct
First, the appointment of William in Nicaragua. There is no American
H. Rebnquist as chief justice of the interest in this tiny , impoverished
United States with Circuit Judge John country to the south of us that justi·
Scalia being named as a Supreme lies defying international law and the
Court justice; second, the Reagan ad- International Court of Justice at The
ministration's defiance of the World Hague.
Court ruling stating that the United
Mr. Reagan has made many
States Is violating international law
speeches
in his long political career
~a-_::
on several counts in its covert war
((l 111M Dy ,..__ Inc
7·6
calling
(or
a society of law and order.
agalnllt Nicaragua: and, third, the rul· His conduct
toward Nicaragua has
ing of the Supreme Court that it is been neither lawful nor orderly.
permissible for a state to outlaw cer·
Long before the World Court rule. '
tain fonru of sexual expression that
the administration has. violated
even In private - between consenting
International
law on seven counts, the
adults.
Reagan
team
was violating United
Those who have labored longest in States law as well
·. Today Is Monday, July 14, the !95th day of 1986 with 170 to toUow.
aa tile International
the struggle to expand human and civ· The moon Is In Its first quarter.
code
In
Central
America.
In Its seven·
Il rights overwhelmingly belleve tllat
. The morning star Is Jupiter.
fold
Indictment
the
World
Court found
tbe dual appointments of Rebnquist
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
tbat
Mr.
Reagan
was
clearly
In viola·
and Scalia wUI move the Supreme
1'hole born on this date are under the sign of Cancer. They Include
tion
of
International
law
when
be "au·
Court sharply to the rlgbt and serious·
James Whistler In 1834, suffragette Emmeline Pankhurst In 1858,
thorlzM
a
United
States
government
ly set back the furthering of civil
a~ to lay mines II! Nlcarapan
4Jithors,IrvingStoneln 1900 (age83) and llaac BashevtsSlnger In 1904 (nge rights.
.
Wlh folk singer Woody Gutllrle In 1912, former President Gerald Ford 1n
'rbe Supreme Court ruling uphold· pmrts. .
1913 (age73), Swedish film director lngmar Bergman 1n 1918 (aee 91), and
The administration's respotu1e was
lnga ~Ia law that aff!!Cts ptivate
NBC-TV news ll!r &lt;Jc~lillr Jella CU&amp;IIt!118r • . 1»27 (ace !It).•
1exual
uct CGDflnllla develep1ng f,lmply !fiat tile Unlted States would

?

?

-. c:

sexual rodomy, declined to Invoke
the due process clause of the Fifth
and 14th Amendments. "Other·
wise, the judiciary necessarUy
takes to itself further authority to
govern the wuntry without express
wnstltutlonal author!~
It Is interesting to note the
general dismay of thl' gay commun·
lty. Insofar as thl' decision's critics
are saying that no warrant should
ever ll' Issued that entitles an
officer to walk Into the bedroom to
examine the nature of a seliUal act,
those critics are qualifiedly correct.
The qualification, of course, must
allow for investigating complaints
against Incest, or bigamy. But
although most [Xo'Ople are tinroughly In gympathy with the
notion that the b2droom ought to he
private. what dlsmays the gay
community most Is the subtle
affirmation of homosexual sodomy
as aberrant behavior. Obviously no
statute seeking to har heterosexual
relations. even If heterosexual
sodomy were Involved, would have
got by the court Intact. There Is, the
court Is then saying, a hlstorlc
difference between the heterose~~·
ual and the homose11ual relation·
ship. It may he that weareentertng
an age in which that difference,
under. co nventional law, disapll"!rs. But If t halls going to happen,
then its disappearance need to he
codified, rather than merely presumed out of a general advocacy of
the rights of privacy_
The hearing on the abortion cases
Is obvious. and It Is odd that Mr.
Tr ibe' s "conservative court"
should on the one hand reaffirm thl'
abortion decision, as the present
court did only a few weeks ago, and
In a separate cont ext rule that the
Constitution says nothing at all
about thl' right of prlvacy'ssuperor·
dinate authority over the right of
legisla tures to write laws governing
general human beha\1or.
The happiest of all solutions now
would be for Georgia to repeal its
dead and smelly law, as also the
other states; but fo r the rest d. us to
rejoice that the Supreme Court
sEe ms to he finding Its moorings.

Not picking on any certain breed

. '

dt.
SAFE AT FIR§T - P!Usburp's Tolly Pena Is sale at ftr!lt In
Sunday's NL game at San Frandsco. The league-leading Giani&amp;
romped, 11-t. (UPI).

Scoreboard ...
MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS
NATIONi\L LEAGUE
East
W L Pet GB
New York.. ..... 59 25 .702
Montreal. ........ 46 3t! .548 13
Philadelphia ... 42 43 .494 17 \\
Chicago .
36 48 .429 23
Sl. Louis ........ . 36 50 .419 24
Pltlsburgh .. .... 35 50 · .412 24\\
West
San Francisco. 48 40 .545
Houston.......... 47 41 .534 I
San Diego .... .. 45 43 .511 3
Atlanta ........... 42 46 .477 6
Cincinnati.. ..... 40 44 .476 6
Los An~eles .... 40 48 .455 8
Saturday's Results
Houston 4. Philadelphia 3
New York 10, Allan! a I
San Francisco 3, Pittsburgh 1
Cincinnati 2. Montreal 0
Chicago 7, Los Angeles 4
St. Lou Is 4, San Diego 4
Sunday's ResuMs
New York 2, Atlanta 0
Cincinnati 3, Montreal 2 (susp. In
6th Inn.I
Philadelphia 5, Houston 4, II
Innings ·
San Francisco 11. Pittsburgh 4
San Dl&lt;-go 13, St . Louis 6
Los Ang&lt;&gt;les 4, Chicago 3
Monday's Games
No Games Scheduled
. Tuesday's Game

oow set aside funds to gtve to
groups that carry out
lcsling.
All hough he tx-lieves thai education Is the long-term hope for ending
mclal discrimination, Pierce Is
trying to strengthen the Fair
Housing Act as well. "You use thl'
law." he explained. "You use the
big st lck, and at the same time you
try 10 use Influence. "
·
AI 63. Pierce has vivid personal
memories of di scr imination.
"When I was a kid." he recalled,
"you would go to a place like
Was hington, and my God, a black
person might oot b2 able to go into a
ce rtain restaurant. or you would
have to sit in the back -and that
was lega l! "
He said he skipped his high school
senior class trip to Washington
because re didn't want to be
"Jim-Crowed" In the nation's capl·
tal. "But since then the law has
changed," Pierce noted, "and
[Xo'Ople's minds have changed ... .
We are trying to change people's
minds. It Is a matter of education."
prival~

All -Star Gamr a t Houston . T£&gt;xas

AMERICAN LEAGUE
East

Doonesbury

.

pamter

GB

Boston . .... .. .... 56 31
New York .. .. .. 5C 39
Cleveland .... 46 39 .!'&gt;11
Baltimore
46 41
Toronto.. ......... 47 43
Detroit...... ...... , 13 44
Milwaukee .... .. 41 45
West
Cali forni a ... .... 48 39
Texas........ ..... 47 41
Chicago ... ..... .. 40 46
Kansas City .... 40 48
S..altle .. .. -.. .. .. 39 51
Minnesota .... .. . 37 51
Oakland .. .. ..... 34 56

.644
.562

7

9
.529 10

.522 10\&gt;
.494 13
.477 14 \i
.552
.534
.465

.455
.433

.420
.378

1\i
7\j
8\i
10\i
11 \&gt;
15\&gt;

Tuesday's Game

AII·Star

Gam~

a l Houslon. Texas

Transaclions

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

Basebatt
Boston - Activalf'd rl•hl· haner

Leaders
Home Kun8

National League- Davis, Hou 20:
Schmidt, Phil 19; Marshall, LA 18:
Horner, All 17; Carter, NY and
Parker, Cln 16.
American League- Canseco, Oak
23; Barfield, Tor, Pagliarulo, NY and
Parrish, Det 21; Hrltek, Minn.
Joyner. Cal and Kingman, Oak :ll.
Runs Batted In
Nallonal League- Schmidt , Phil
66; Carter, NY 65: Davis; Hou 60:
Horner, All 56: C. Davis. SF and
Parker, Cln 55.
78: Joyner. Cal72; Barfield and &amp;II,
Tor 65: Pr&lt;'slry, S..a 64.
Stolen Bases
National League - Coleman. S!L
58: Davis, Cln 42; Raines, Mil 41;
Duncan, LA 32; Doran, Hou 31.
American League -

Hende rson.

NY 51: Cang&lt;&gt;1osl. Chi 39; Moseby,
Tor and Wilson. KC 21: Griffin. Oak.
Pettis, Cal and Wiggins, Ball 20.
Pltchlag VIctories
National League- Fernandez. NY
12-2: Krukow. SF and Rawley, Phil
11-5: Valenzuela. LA11·6: Ojeda. NY
10·2: Gooden, NY 10·4 ~ Knepper. Hou
10-7; Mahler, All 10·8.
American League- ClC'mens, Bos

15-2: Bod:llcker, Ballll·5: Boyd, Bos
IJ.6: Rasmussen, NY and Schrom.
Ctev 10-2; McCaskill, Cal 10·5:
Higuera, Mlll0·7.
Earned Run Averace
National League- Hotl1'ycull , LA
2 09: Ojeda, NY 2.24; Scoll, Hou 2.29;
Rhoden, Pill 2.42; Forsch. StL 2.51.
American League - Clemens, Bos
2.48; Higuera, Mil 2.76: Darwin, Mil
2.92; Witt, Cal 3.11!: McCaskill, Cal
3.32.
Strikeouts
National Lt'ague- .Scott, Hou 167:
Valenzuela, LA 134: Welch. LA 107:
Smith, All 105; Fernandoz, NY 103.
American League - Clrml'lls, 8os
146: Morris, Det 128; Will, Cat 124:
McCaskill . Calll8: Higuera, Mil US.
Saves
National League - Reardon , Mit
20; Smith. Hou 17: Gossage, SD and
Worrell. StL 15; Franco. Cln and
Smith. Chi 14 .
American League- Aase, Batt 23:
Rl~hetll, NY 19 ; Hernandez, Det 18;
Harris, Tex 15: Henke. Tor and
Stanley. Bos 14.

Chrls .Brown, the Giants' An· Star
third basem3\l. Isn't quite satisfied
with the club's position In the
standings. Not yet, at least.
"It's where we are In October
that matters," said Brown, who hit
a solo homer In the ninth. "We have
a team with potential because we
don't depend on one player to do It
all. We're winning as a team, and
that's why we're In first place now."
WhlletheGlantshavebeenooeof
basebaU's biggest surprises, the
Dodgers have been a big dlsappolntment In the topsy-turvy NL
West. The Dodgers, who won the
dlvtslon last year, are In last place.
They are only eight games behind
San Francisco, however, and feel
they are stlU In a position to
recapture the pennant.
Los Angeles made some ll'ad·
way Sunday when the Dodgers
actually came from behind to win a
game.
Aiel! Trevino's two-run double
with two out In the ninth Inning
lilted the """"'ers
to a 4-3 victory
~
over the Chicago Cubs, marking the

NEWPORT. R.I. !UPil - Tim
Wilkison Is nervous these days, and
wants to stay that way.
Wilkison, the No. 2 seed, takes oo
Eddie Edwards today, weather
permitting, In the twice-rain·
delayed semlllnals of the $100,000.
Hall rJ. Fame tennis championships
at the Newport Casino.
Bill Scanlon from Dallas meets
Dante VIsser from South Africa In
the other semifinal with the title
match scheduled shortly
a ft~rward.

•

ThP forecast called for
cloudy skies with a. 40

~

nt

"'-rr s

Brill, Mtl
Rani , Mil

N-Le-

1 ' ~ , , II ftl.
87 3U (l&amp;lt'i JU

1328.'E91 .3.1\

" .. ,. 96 .313

79 312 M 101 ,,m

J!&lt;:\13 fTIO! ..I'll

Obrkfll.

82 273 ll 115.311

t,lw

SnwtJrry

... .......

r.o..,s

Sux, LA
Bun,~:

..

-e.
Ray, Pll

Top hitten
GW)'M ,
Btwn . ~F

chance r1 rrore rain.
As hr&gt; sat In the ~kerroom after
Sunday's second ral nout In 24
illurs, WUklson said his biggest
problem was staying keyed up In
this lone U.S. grass court stq&gt;oo the
Grand Prill circuit.
"It's been dltflcult because I
knew I had a chanre to do well in
this toumamBtt, and with 'things
dragging out you have lo guard
against being mentally flat," said
WilkiSon from AshevUte, N.C. "I've
got to lceep thinking I have- a
chana!, but·the problem Is this on
.and oft Situation with !he rain.

" 122 l1

1111

;JJ&lt;

7! M tl 16 .:118

~.

Ptlltt, 'M 1 ''
EIU. NY
RJ«&gt;, Boo
Youlll, Ml
Fltchr, b
F'rnmz.
Bltlnt, 0.
BtU, Tor

82 :m 3J 18 .115
• 211 ., • •:110

~
·'
II Jill MtG11 .!13
II •1 Q liJ .3111
II 311 II ut .Ill
81215
II !10
T.1 "'
l9 :liT

J! • .•

!I UT .11&lt;
.. .. .3!0
18 Ill .318

Ill 3'13 "itt .~.
• l!2 lllllll.ll6
88lit !I Ul .:as

rebounded by the smaller ArgenBy FREDERICK WATERMAN
tines, 23-20. Charles Smith led the
UPI Sports Writer
The U.S. basketball team missed U.S. in scortng, netting 17 points.
Only the Soviet Union and
16 of ll tree throws Sunday,
Yugoslavia
remain undefeated .afenabling Argentina to record the
ter
Day
One
of the three- game
biggest upset of the World Basket·
ball Championships, a 74-70 v1ctory · semifinal round, whlch started
Sunday In Barcelona and Oviedo,
In Oviedo, Spain.
"The free throws were the key," Spain.
The USSR was tested by a
U.S. coach Lute Olson said. "We
good-passing
Greece tr&gt;am, but
shot 46 percent and they shot &amp;l
triumphed
again
105-93. Yugoslavia
percent (17-of-211, and that was it
rolled past China 101&gt;82.
right there."
In the other three games. Italy
Despite the fact this year's team
Includes few highly rated ama· beat Canada ~ at Oviedo; In
leurs, the Americans were cons!· Barcelona, Brazil beat Cuba ~
dered a co-favorite with the Soviet and Spain beat Israel 9f-65.
Valery Tlkhonenko scored 26
Union. despite the U.S. team's lack
points and Arvldas Sabonls con·
of experience as a unit.
troUed the boards_ In the final
Esteban Ca mlssasa scored 21
minutes to halt a comeback
):Xllnts to lead Argentina's offense.
"After this game, the sky's the attempt ~ Greece al)d lead the
limit," said Argentina roach Fior Soviet Union.
The defendlng~hamplon RusMelendez. "We won because of our
defense. Facing the U.S., we had to sians, 6-0. never traDed, taking
leads of :ll-7. 48-34 and ~-47 at the
defend well or we touldn't win. But
we did and that's how It went."
halt.
But the Greeks used their lnsl~
Th~ Americans werr&gt; also out-

Sovi~ts

~~~her

win

H. was the loser.

;: ;

PhiDies 5, A8tros 4
At Houston, Mike ,Schmjdt·
cracked his second home run of tile ·
game, a solo shotwhhooe(XIt In:!he ·
11th Inning, to Ult the phiJI.II!s,
Schmidt roMected on a J.2 pitch
from Dave Smith, 1· 6, for his 19th
home run. Steve Bedrallan worJr,ed
the final three Innings to improveto :
6-3.
·
Padreli 13, Cardinals 6
.
At San Diego, Marvell Wynne .
drove In three runs, and Steve ·
Garvey knocked In twotopower the
Padres. LaMarr Hoyt, 5-4, went sill
Innings for the victory, and Bob :
Stoddard pitched three Innings for ·
his first save. The toss went to Tim :
Conroy, 3-4. ·
. At Montreal, ttl&gt; game between .
ttl&gt; Reds and Exrns was suspended:.
1n the top of thl' six th by rain with
thl' Reds leading 3·2 and batting
with one out. The game wUI be ·
con! inued July 2&lt;1 at Cincinnati ·
before the regularly scheduled :
contest. Till' umpires walled 1 rnur, .
15 minutes b2fore suspendng the
game.
''.

passing to overcome a lack of
height and create many easy layup
opportunities i1 the second half. In
the final 10 minutes, Sabonis, a
7-foot-2 (2.18ml center recently
drafted by the Portland Trail
Blazers of the NBA. scored on a
variety of Inside rroves, became a
force on defense and t:lomlnated
both boards.
'
But when he was ou I cl the game.
Sabonls twice appeared angry with
his teammates. Russian coach
Vladimir Obukl10v blamed u oo the
21-year-old rot feeling he was
getting the ball enough oo offense.
Sabonis finished with 17 points, 12
In the second halt, and a game-high
12 rebounds. Teammate Rlmas
Kurtlnaytts contributed 18 points.
Greece. 3-3, was led by Nlkos
GaUls' 32 points. Theofanls Chrlstodoulou added 16.
"Wr&gt; knew we would win, but we
didn't expect so many problems,"
said Obukhov. ·•we thought It would
he easy and we started badly. but
we played weD together at the rnd ."
Panaglotls Yannakis, who scored

13 for Greece. said. "If the Russians
play well. they ca n heat anybody
here. We did well, E'Ven though we
didn't have any big guys."
.
The u_s. is scheduled to pla)i:
Yugoslavia on Tuesday on the las(
night of lh~ semifinals. But Kresimir Coste, coach of the Eastern .
European team, said Monday'~
meeting with Italy will be more
Important .
.
"My ll'am has ttl&gt; advantage .:
over the U.S. after today," Coste
said. "Tomorrow's game with Italy
will be decisive; If we win, we are 't
practically to Ihe finals."
..
H the United States finishes
second among the teams in Oviedo;
It would likely have to heal the .
defending-champion Soviet Union
to rruch the championship game.
Against China, Yugoslavia. 6- 0.
was led by Drazen Petrovic's 23
points as six players hit double .
figures. The Europeans shot 56
perrent from the floor while thl'
Asians. now 2·4, ooly man31(ed 44
percent .

gold medal in diving event

who grad~ated from the University
of 'Michigan last year. "So I'm
pretty happy."
Ferguson said he would take 'two
years off to prepare for the 198l
Olympics before attendlng dental
school. He trains in Boca Raton,

MOSCOW (UPI) -Soviet diver
Sergei Gurylev clinched the men's
platform gold. medal at the Good·
will Games Sunday, highlighting
his performance with a spectacularly clean Inward 3'1.! somersault
with a tuck.
Gurylev was awarded 86.40
points !or his difficult dlve, ttl&gt;
highest single score. The 21 ·
year-old finished with 609.:11 points
after 10 dives. Dan Watson of the
United States took thl' sliver with
~3.34 and China's Gao Feng won
the bronze with 569.55 points.
In other events. the U.S. team
scored a surprise viCtory over
Czechoslovakia on the first day of
the team handball tournament . The
Soviets outplayed the l)nlted States
10·5 In the waterpolo final.
" I'm a little disappointed, but I
dld a pretty good job," said Watson,
23. who cradled hls prize, a brightly
colored braille samovar (Russian
tE'amaken, after thl' awards
ceremony.
"I had a couple of shaky rounds,"
said the native of Loutsvllle, Ky.
Watson, a recent graduate of
Harvard who plans to attend
medical school this faD, gave a
consistent perlonnance, winning
mostly sevr&gt;ns and eights for his
dives from the seven- judge panel.
"I was a little bit nervous,"
Gurylev said alter his thirdinterna·
tiona! competition.
Kent Fergu!Dn, 23, who took ttl&gt;
silver In the springboard diving
contest oo Frtllay, said he was
happy with his sixth· place fmlsh on
the patform.
"I'm a relative newcomer to
platform diving," said Fl'rguson,

America 's team handball play·
F1a.
ers, newcomers to International
competition. beat the seasoned
Czechs 23-21. ThP u.s. team payed
an aggressive game from the start
In Moscow's Dynamo Palace of
Sport.
With thrce minutes to play, tiK&gt;
Czechs pulled wlthln 22·21, but thl'
United States held.on.
"ThPir onslaught came as a
complete surprise to us, " Czech
coach Vojtech MarE}'l told the
official Tass nr&gt;ws agency.
The U.S. freestyle wrestlers won
the brooze oo the final day of
wrestling competltvn, beating
Mongolia S.2.
The Goodwill Games, which
started July 4, will wntinuethrough

Wins @Oif event
Tu Al·yu of Taiwan carded a
four-birdie. no-bogey final round 70
to win the Hokkaldo Ladles Open
and lead a sweep by Taiwan golfers
with a 1&amp;- under·par :ll6 total that
set a new tournament record at
Sapporo, Japan. After a second
round 66, Tu shot a 70 011 the par 74
Sapporo Country' Club Course to
take the $25,00) winner's check.
Tu' s :ll6 total broke the 210
tournament record set.last year by I
Kayoko Ikoma of Japan.
,

July 20wlth the main events held In all' undrrway in Tallinn. thecaplt~ l
Moscow. Yachting competitions · of IlK&gt; Estoman republic.

~;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~

II

I
I.
i!
!i

-1"

tlf1l'

'tl!!ll* 11'm %..

D! ~{j

J'®!l iiMil.t •

Trucks that
deu.\'let
• • •

ones. ·
¥

micl dlt&gt; sJzecl '

ones. s m ~ ll o nus "

h

- \ \ '1..'

l'l' oJCh:

u

re i'l

to toll

tru ck ho Jlfl !l/ cl

5.5°/o APR 36 MO.
OR
$75000 CASH REBATE

I
I
I
I

I

QUAUFIED BUYERS
CHRYSLER CREDIT 7.5% 40 Mo.
9.5% 60 MO.
m
I IMPORTS 5.6% APR 48 MO.
8.9%

I
\

\

60 MO.

NO 1Eil11S
HOUIS: 1:00·7:30 P.M. ION.·1HUIS.
1:00-5:30 Fll.: 1:00-4:00 SAT.
992-6421

ROYAL OAK
RESORT CLUB·

.

'

...

PIESENTS

LIVE COUNTRY MUSIC BY
I

.

.

GARY
LINK
FIOM FOIT MfEIS, ·FLA.

we come acra11 for ,ou
"THE DO IT ALL DEALER"
WE SEIVICE WHAT WE SEU!

Friday, July 18, 8-12 P.M..
S6.00 PIISON-S7.50 AT DOOI
OFF OF STA1110Ufl,7 OlllSfDI OF POMIIOY

FISHING,
I

COOPER
399 S. Third Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 992-6421

OfEflf·S·P
992·71\l
11

.

.. .

Chrysler•P lymouthtDodge, Inc.

&amp;' SWIIIIIING ·AliA
•

' lr

first time In 35 games this season
they rauted to wtn after the sixth
inning.
"Thi! way we've been struggling,
I think It was alack d wntldence,"
Trevino said. "This was a good lift
tor us. I oon't tltnk we're that far
behind. An Y{e need is to wtn eight
out o112 or 15 out of l$."
In other NL games. New York
blanked Atlanta 2-0, Philadelphia
nipped Houston 5-4 In 11 Innings,
San Diego routed St. Louis 13-6, and
Cincinnati and Montreal were
suspended by rain with the Reds
leading 3- 2 tn the sixth Inning.
In the AL, It was: Oakland 10,
Toronto 5; Te11as 5, Oeveland31n 10
Innings; Minnesota 5, New York 0;
Chicago 7, BaltimOre 0; !).&gt;troll 5,
KansasCityO; Calllornlal2,Boston
3; and MUwakee 5, Sea tile 0.
Meta 2, Braves 0
At New York, Ron Darting
scattered nine hits, and Lenny
Dykstra tripled and homered to
lead the Mets to a four .game sweep.
Darling, 9·2, pitched hls third
complete game and first shutout of
the season. He walked three and
struck out seven. Doyle Alexander.

U. S. cagers fail to hit free throws in
74-70 upset. setback to Argentina .five

Will try tennis semis again 1oday

I -----'
L

Today in history

Pel

Saturday's Resull•
Boston 3. Califo rnia 2
Oakland 5. Toronto 3
Kansas Cit y 7, Detroit 4
Texas II , Cleveland 6
Chicago 6, Baltimore 3
New York B. Minnesota 0
S.allle 15, Mllwaukf'e 9
Sunday's Results
Oak land 10. Toronto 5
Texas 5, Cl~vel and J. 10 innings
Minnesota 5, New York 0
Chicago 7, Baltimore 0
!J&lt;&gt;troll 5. Kansas City 0
Ca lifornia 12 , Boston 3
Mllwakre 5, S..a tile 0
Moada:r'• Games
No Games Scheduled

the opinion" instead of dismissing it
so lightly.
In this instance I would have hoped
the president might have heeded the
words of the Declaration of Indepen·
dence when it suggests that we pay "a
decent respect to the opinions of
mankind."

Sammy Stewart !rom the 15·day
disabled list; optioned pitcher Mike
Brown to Pawtucket of I he lnterna ·
Ilona! League \AAAI .
. Houston- Reactivated outlleldor
BUty Hatcher from 15-day disabled
llsl; optioned Louis Meadows to
Tucson of the Pacific Coast Lt'ague
.(AAAJ .
Los Angeles - Activated third
baseman Bill Madlock and catcher
Mike Scloscla from the disabled list:
sent outlleldor Ralph Bryant and
catcher Jack Flmple to Albuquerque
of the Pacific Coast !..&lt;'ague.
New York (NLI - Sl.'l\1 . right·
bander Bruce Berenyl and left·
bander RandyNiemmntoTidewa!Pr
of the Intr&gt;rnati:&gt;nal League tAAAI;
catlod up pitchers left·handor Randy
Myors and rlghl ·handor Rick
Andon;on.

AmPrlcan LeaguE:'- Canseco, Oak

L

W

Reagan an.d the judiciary___G_eo_..::.:._rge_M_cG_o_ve_rn

Berrv's World

.

..

Declines to run ______Ja_ck_A_nd_e_rs_o_n_&amp;_J_o_se..:....p_h__;Sp,_e_ar

Letters to editor

reversal.

UPI Spolta Wrller
'1'1\e San FranciscO Giants are In
· first place at the AD-Star break.
·Surprised? Roger Craig Isn't.
"I expected to he here," Craig
said Sunday after his Giants heat
the Plttsoorglf Pirates 11-4. "It's
been a team effort. ThP guys who
have filled In for our injured players
have been great."
HarrySpllmandrovelnfourruns
with a homer and a double to back
up Mike LaCoss, who threw a
five-hitter over seven Innings to
Improve to 9-3.
The victory, San FranciscO's
third In four games. gave the Giants
a 48-40 record, and moved them Into
soNle possession ~Wflrst place In the
atlonal League est, one game
ahead of the Houston Astros. The
last time the Giants were In first
place at the break was In 19'18.
Craig Inherited a team that lost
100 games last year, but his
Enthusiastic and optimistic ap·
proach has rubbed off on hls
players. He also taught several of
his pitchers how to throw the
split-fingered ·fastball and that has

Cleaning up its act:_____W_illw_'m_F_._Bu_ck_ley_Jr.
There can't ever have been a
better opportunity for the Supreme
Court to decline to serve as national
legislature than Bowers v. Hard·
wick, In which thl' majority said to
the respondent: H Grorgla has a
law prohibiting homose~~ual sod·
omy, that Is the business of
Grorgla, not the rosiness of the
Supreme Coo rt. Professor Law·
renee Tribe of Harvard, who
argued thl' case for the unconstltu·
tlonality of the sodomy statute, was
quick to denounce the rourt. Oh, he
said, he wasn't really SU!llrtsed by
the ruling, because, after all, "this
Is a conservative court." But If a
definition of a ronservatlve court Is
to he one that acknowledges its
duties under ttl&gt; Constitution, as
also Its limitations under the
Constitution, then conservative
courts should b2 welcomed by all
who b2lleve In the SElJara tion of
powers.

played a major role In the team's

··.
r,

,.

'·

·•'.

'

�The Daily Sentinei- Pag&amp;--;5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 14, .1 986

'

14,1986

our
sllutouts
•

Senior health session . topic Mature Woman·

f~ature

play
m Americah League SUnday

JONES RULED SAFE - California's Ruppert
Jones Ill ruled safe at second base lllrtngSunday's i\L

By UIIMed rr-lnleraitloaal
Ze~ were In vogue Sunday In
the American League.
Four shutouts were thrown Sunday In the league that uses til'
designated hitter In order to
promote o!lense.
Minnesota blanked New York 5--0,
·Chicago shut out Baltimore 7-0,
Dt&gt;trolt topped Kilnsas City 5--0, and
MUwaukee deleatl'd Seattll&gt; 5--0.
Bert Blyleven's three-hit,
complete-game shutout of the
Yankfoes1n thE' Metrodome had the
pitcher thinking pennant again.
In 19'19 when Blyleven was with
Pittsburgh, the Pirates trailed by
11\2 games at tbe AU-Star break,
but went oo to win the World Sertes.
The Twins entered Su!Kiay's game
1112 games out of first plaee, and
Blyll&gt;vm thinks history can repeat
Itself.
"This Is just llkt:&gt; It was at the
All-Star break In 1979 with Pittsburgh. Tht:&gt;y were 1112 out. and we
said the season's not over," he said.
"It's just a matter of more games
!Ike these ·:
The decision snapped Mlnnt'SOta's live-game losing streak, and
halted the Yankees' four-game
winning stll'ak.
Blyleven, ~8. who has served up a
major-league leading ll home runs
this year, struck out eight, walked
one and bit a batter In pitching his
sixth complete game. It was the
first shutout this season by a Twins
pitcher.
"HopetuUy. the way I went at lh;s
game will carry over for the ll'St d.
the year," thE' right- handE'r said. "I
can't do anything about the past. I
know I've given up ll home runs.
It's frustrating. If 1 was hurt or
something It'd be dlflermt ."
The only hits Blyleven allowed
were a fourth·lnning single lo Mike

aellon at Boston's Fenway Pllltl. The Angels wm, 12-3
after a three hour rain delay. (UPI)
"-

·Legion tilts rained out; 1986
tournament starts this week
ROCK SPRINGS - Weekend
rains forced postponement of iwo
Meigs American Legion baseball
doubleheaders Saturday and Sun·
day as Coach Jack Welker's
charges eye the highlight of tt.:o
season thls weekend, the Eighth
District tournament at Athens.
Meigs will travel to Glouster
Thesday for their regular season
flnall&gt; In a single game at 6 p.m .
Meigs will he attempting to raise Its
!'£COrd to .500 with a win, presently
riding a 12-13 slate.
In past actkm, Meigs struggled
through a trto of doubleheaders by
winning two and dropping four.
Meigs spUt with Wellston, iosingG-1
In the opener and winning tt.:o
nightcap 11.(); was stung hard by
Marietta 15-1 and &amp;-1, and split with

a strong Logan team, winning 3-2
beloll' droppin_g a !i-8 decision.
Against Wellston, Jeff Nelson
hurled a brilUant or.--hit shutout In
the 11-0 win, allowing only a fourth
inning c:loubi&lt;' whil&lt;' strtklng out
nine batters In the seven-inning
game. Mike Bartrum led Meigs
with a single and double at tt.:o plate
as all nine starters slapped at least
00£' hit.
In 1he 6-1 Wellston win. Brian
Durst suffered the k&gt;ss and Eddie
Collins led Meigs hitting "ilh a
single and c:louble.
Bartrum pitched Meigs to their
3-2 win over Logan as Phil Bailey
led the way with three singles and
scored two runs including the
game·win!K'r In the fifth. Scot
Gheen added a single and double.

Dave Amhergey was the losing
pitcher In Logan's 9-8 win as the
Hod&lt;in~ Countains scored the
game-winner alter two outs in the
seventh Innings on a walk and two
straight singles. Donnie Becker led
Meigs kl hitting with a first-Inning
three-run home run and a single
while Gheen and . Amber~J&gt;y each
cracked a single and double.
Marietta rou!(hed up Meigs hand Ily in their twlnbill as Collins was
handed the toss In the &amp;-1 bss and
Ambergl"y suffered the defeat In
the 15-1 setback. Bailey had atrtple
and sin~le while RObbie Young and
Brent Bissell eaeh singled and
ooubled to lead Meigs i.n the llrst
game while Marietta allo~M'd only
three singles, onr mch ~ Bartrum.
Bissell. and Yoo ng, In tile seco!KI
game.

Zoeller claims Busch Golf Classic

LPGA event ends in
tie; playoff set.today
By GENE Ci\DDES
UPI Sports Writer
DAYTON, Ohio !UP! 1 - Jan&lt;'
Geddes and Sally Lillie insist it will
he them against the rugged NCR
~ounlly Club course in today's
1&amp;-holl&gt; playoff for the 41st Women's
U.S. Open Championship, and not a
head- to-head duel.
Both Geddes and Little came
from out ol t!Ko pack Sunday,
Geddes with a 3-under par m and
Utile with a 70, to lie at 1-under par
'lKI after 72 ho!Ps of the rainbattered Open. Their playoff, which
began at 1: ~p.m .. was the first in
the Women's Open sine£' 1976 when
JoAMe Carr.-r bested Sandra
Palmer by two shots t?G-78\, and
.- the fifth overall .
· "I'll just go out and play the ~If
course like l'vt&gt;done all W('('k," said
Geddes, 26, who didn't take up golf
·until she was 17 and two years later
was on the women's golf team at
- Florida State. "II I play the golf
. course and play as well as I did
. today, Sa Uy wtll have to shoot a
-. heck d. a rou!KI of golf."
Lilt)('. who has not won a
tournament since 1982, du~ mostly
to physical problems, echoed the
sentiment.
"That's the beauty of golf," said
Little, a native of South Africa who
becai'TIP an American citizen In
l!ll2. "I think you've still got to play
thE' golf course. The!l''s going to hc
a little bit of match play, but as far
as I'm concerned, I've got to kP&lt;'p
with the same strategy I've had all
week."
Geddes and Little took command
of the tournament when Betsy
King. wiD had led tlr rrost of thr
last two rounds, su1fered a c:loublrboiJ'Ysix on lhe323-yard, par-414th
hole.
King and playing part!Vi'r Ayako
Okamota, who tied lor third with

evm par 288 totals, both n€£'dPd a
birdie on onr of theflnaltwoholes to
mak£' it into tt.:o J)ayd.f. but failed .
King had a final round of 75. and
Okamoto a 74.
King had startro the day at thr('('
undl'r par, ont• sh:lt in front of
Okamoto, who faltrrrd badly on th~
front sidr withal over 40.
King bo!"'Yed th:• first thrw h:ll£'s
to fall temporarily behind Little. but
got her gam&lt;' oock togl' ther and
birdied 1he s~v~nth and elg!Jt h holes
to bark on top by two strokes.
Little. who along with King and
Okarrolo were warne&lt;! lor slow
play, birdied the 15th hoi£' with a
10-!oot putt to go rne under par. and
Geddes rolled in an &amp;-footer on the
17th to grab a share d. the lead.
Geddes. who has never won as a
professional. said she didn 't know
whert' she stood in the tournament
until after she hoiPd out a 2-fool par
put on the final hole.
"I didn 't know, " said Geddes,
who had a 15-foot birdie PJII on the
18th. "I wantl'd to look at the
scoreboard, but I didn 't and I'm
gl..:ll didn't. I was nervous enough
as it was. I've hcen in thai position
hefore. but not in the U.S. Opm. To
be honest with you, I was just glad
to make par."
Formpr champions Amy Alcott
and Pat Bradley finished in a ti&lt;' for
fifth at 200, along with Jody
Rosentha l and Judy Dickinson,
while Ca thy Morse and !X&gt;b
Richard were at 291.
Two other forrmer champs, Jan
Stephenson and Hollis Stacy, a
thrw-limr win!K'r. were at 293,
along with Laura Davies. Dl'lmd·
lng champion Kat~· BakPr wou!KI
up at 296.
The low amateur was Joan
Pitcock. a 'lUisa University player
from Fresm, Calli. Her 6-over 294
score equalled the best ever by an
a rna leur In the Open .

JANE GEDDES
('nes For Lead)

Sports briefs...
Racing
Randy Mamoia won a grand prix
formula O!K' motorcycle race at
Laguna Sera, Calli., and rroved
within 10 points d. leader Eddie
Lawoon. who crashed his bike while
attempting a pass on the corkscrew
seventh tum. Lawson, who leads
the grand prix with 84 points.
crashed when his front wheel 1'1)1 off
the edge ol the track, brlngin~ the
backside arou!KI llll degJl'es Into
the hay bales. Law!lln jumped ott
the bike over the hay bales and later
was pronounced okay, Mike Baldwin finished seeo!KI and Wayr.Ralney was third.

.

National and the Heritage Classic
earlier In the year. "I've got thr
British Oprn coming up, and a lot
more golf to play."
Zoeller. who lives in New Albany.
Ind., but is planning to build a new
home within a few miles oil he silr
of the Busch Classic, has hcen
plagued by back troubiC'S lor some
years. He said his back didn 't
bother him this week.
"Last week was a different
story," he said. "Then, I was
rejoining t~ Tour after taking a
rouple of Wl'l'ks ott. and I overdid it
practicing. I rrally paid the JrlCi'.l
was rrnUy hurting.
"But It's okay now. I just have to
realize that my practicr days are
C1JN . that I havr to just go rut thet·r
and play."
Zoeller startl'd the final round
five shots hchind t bird-round lrader
Rirhard Zokol, a Canadian who
finished in the pack whrn h£' turned
In a closing 8- ov!'r 111 for an
rven -par 284.
Zoeller wa ~ b-undt'r midway
through the round. two shots poorer
than Mudd at the turn, then vaultPd
into 1he lead 1111 h birdips at holes 11.
12, 14 and 15.
"But 16 was ll'ally lhP kry ," sa id
Zoeller. "I made my OD:' bad shot of
the day there idrlvin!( into a clump
of trees 1 and could hav&lt;' heen in
trouble If 1 hadn't rrcov£'rro."
ZOeller. hitting a 4-iron, rrachrd
the green Z25 yards away, saved his
par, and coastro in.
"Fuzzy playro outstanding goH

all day, " Sindrlar said. "He's easy
to play with, although when you
play with Fuzzy. especially on the
wPPkend, yru hav£' to expect a larg£'
and noisy crowd."

Garden club
has meeting
- New officers were elected at the
recent meeting of the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners held at · the
!Dme d. Charlotte WUifon!.
Eleeted were Suzy Carpenter..
president; Margl Davis, vice president; Kimberly Wllltord, seeretary; and Marie Birchfield.
treasurer.
The float entered In the Ju!y 4
parade at Rutland was discussed.
Ms. Carpenter was named to
secure the judge for the pla1J,ned fall
flower show. A letter ol resignation
from membership was read from
Mrs. Willford, and d.flcers' reports
were given.
SESSION SET - Dr. Margaret Hamish and Martha Schaefllng
Gardeners Day Out was andlscuS'i the upcoming senior Health Matntmance session, Tuesda.y at
nounced for Sept. 10 at Dawes
the Senior Citizen Center. llamlsb is a member of the OB-GYN
Arboratum with several members
department of Holzer Medical Center and CUnlc. Ms. Scbaeffing fi
planning to attend. The club
president of the hospllal volunteer service league.
presented a money tree to Lorrl
Barnes as a baby gift from the club.
Iva Sisson displayed an arran!J'·
ment a! thl' meeting, and plans
were made for a potluck dinner at
the home of Margaret Edwards for
the July meeting.
The traveling prtze brought by
Sandy Titus was won by Iva Sisson.
Door prizes were won by Ms.
Carpenter
and Judy Snowden. Mrs.
Tht:&gt; Rutland Garden Club will pink or pink blend, one yellow or
Willford
had
devotiOns entitled "A
have a flower show: "Gardeners yellow bloom, a bloom in white, or
Plact:&gt;
Called
Friendship Lane."
Enjoy", on July 26 and 27 at the one ot any other color.
Refreshments well' served.
There are also classes iJ r a s !em
Rutland United .Methodist Church .
The show will be open for public of fiorlbunda, one stem of grandi·
viewing from 1 to 5 p.m on July 26, flora, one stem, any color, gladiola;
cactus or other variety zinnia, large
and from 1 to 4 p.m. on July 27.
and
small types of marigolds, other
Mrs. Jack Robson and Mrs.
Virgil Atkins arrco-chalnnrn of th£' an nuals. and other P£'rmnlals.
Helen Wilson lost the most weight
ThP classes for potted pjants are at Monday night's meeting of the
show which will be judged by Mrs.
J&lt;X' Bolin.
African violl&gt;ts. blooming plant Five Points Slinderella class. At the
In additio n to nine artistic other than violet, foliage plants. Tuesday night Mason class, Lois
arranwment classes, there are 32 cacti or succulent , and ferru; .
Ann Reltrnire was the top weight
classes for horticulture exhibits,
In the junior horticuHure division. loSPr, and ruMer-up was Trresa
a nd four fon:'llucational displays.
the classes are for marigold. any Ord. Amy Roush was the top loser
The educational classes open tor variety, zinnia, any variety. and In the kids class. JoAnn Newoome
C'X hlbit to Rutland Garden Club polled foliage plant. ·
Is the l&lt;'£'tun'r.
memhers only all' "Our Amt:&gt;rican
The eduallonal ci;ISses include a
HeritagE&gt;', a lint:&gt; mass design in red special display of New Guinea
and white: "Beauty in Common Impatiens and a corsage exhibit.
Things", a modem d&lt;'slgn; "Peace There will be a display s!Dwtng
and a Spot cl our Labors", including steps In making corsages, and
fru its and vegetables or eithPr, and publications and books on
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bailey Jr.
"Nalurp's Sculpture", including arranging.
and
Christine BaUey were Sunday
Entries are to be In place before visitors
treasured wood.
of Mr. and Mrs. Roher!
The invitational classes. OP&lt;'n tor noon on the OP£'ning day. A blue. Bailey Sr.
1
exhibit to the public, art:&gt; "Crafts- red. yellow and white rtbbon wil be
Mr. and Mrs. Leslle Frank; Sarah
manship from Other Countries", awarded in each class. Exhibitors Beth of Texas Road were Sunday
designs In a Japlmesr man!X'r; and may makeonl'enlry only In anyone
ol Mr. and Mrs. Euaene
"The Benefits of Our Machine class in the artistic arranjJ'ments visitors
Haning and Gladys 1\lckerman.
division, but may make morr than
Age", an abstract arrangement.
Mr. and Mrs. Cllarley Smith were
one entry In the horticuture Classes Friday evening visitors of Mr. and
In the junior division the classes
a rr "Our Feathered FriE'nds" as k&gt;ng as each entry is of a Mrs. Harley Smith of Kanauga.
including a bird accessory; and different variety.
Friday and Saturday visitors of
"Ecok&gt;gy", using a discart:Ed items
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith were
as a container fort he arranwmrnt.
Stacy and Daniel Worley d Da·
The hortlcultull' classes. a lso
niels, W.Va., Michelle and Amy
open to the public for exhibit, arc
Johnson of Aaclne.
five classes for bybrld tra roses, one
Mrs. Danll&gt;l Worley, Stacy and
bloom. red or red blend, onE' bloom.
Daniel of Daniels W.Va., were
Brenda Sinclair was recently Wednesday and Thursday visitors
selected lor Who's Who Among of Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith.
Amrrlcan High Srhool Students
Eric Downs was recent visitor of
and was also named an Academic his grandmother Mrs. J .R. Murpby
AU-American. She wil l be listed in and Peggy.
the 198! DireCtory and '-':ill bP able
to apply for various scholarships.
Brenda is the daughter of Paul
and Carolyn Sinclair of Shade. She
will be a senior at Meigs High
Schoo! In the Ia II. She Is a member
of the National Honor Society. a
class offieer, on the student council.
and belongs to the Fellowship of
Apple Grove United Meth:ldist
Christian Athletes and Tff'nage Church held a welcome back,
Institute.
carry-In dinner for Rev. and Mrs.
Shr recently attended a flag Ro~J&gt;r Grace and boys, JutE 29 with
camp at L£'banon Junction. Ken - a bymn sing and fellowship meeting
tucky where she won an award lor alter.
outs tanding marehinf( and best
Special singl"rs were !ileklnah
post ure displayed during the Wff'k. Faith, Dan and Tamara Hayman,
She was selectro from !'il other rtnl' as well as congregational singing
and flag corps members.
Brenda Sinclair
and testimOny.

"FERRIS DUELLER 'S DAY OFF"

AMBURGEY AVIATION
MASON COUNTY AIRPORT

MONDAY
POMEROY - Bedford Trustees
m('{'l. townhall Monday at 7 p.m.
POMEROY - Disabled American Veterans meet Monday at 7
p.m. at 124 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy .

-

AdverUslnJ Representallve, Branham

NEWspaper Sales, 733 Third Annue,
New York, New York 10017.

POSTMASI'ER: Send acldr&lt;ss chanaes
to The Dolly Sentinel. Ill Coun St.,

.
•

Pomeroy, Ohio 4:1'1111 .

'

!llllllllliiPTION KATI!S

BJ Corder orlllolar Route

One Week ...................... .. ........... $1.10
One Month ............................. .... S4.M
One Yeor ........................ ......... $57.20

... "
;·~

PRICE
· Dolly ................................... 25 Cento

SublcrtMrs not dettrtna: to pay the car·

rter may remit ill advanee direct to
111• Dally Senllnet oo a 3, 6or 12 month
baall, Credit wtu be given c.arrter each
-k.
No oubon1p11onJ by mall permitted IIi

•

wee~~~

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

!21¥HicJ ................................ ..
Clllol!lelleiPC..,.

IJ

L!ARN TO Fl. Yl
NEW CLASSES STARTING-INTRODUCTORY MEETING
Monday, July· 14, 1986
1100 p.m.

For More Information Phone 675-2354
-EVERYONE INVITED-

I

PORTL:AND - Hymn sing Monday, 7:30p.m., Hazel Community
·church located off 12&lt;1 hetween
Portland and Long Bottom. Singing
by t~e Reflectors.

~-

81NGLBCOPV

........... c..,.

MIGHTY MATCH
ORULTRALm

DISPOSABLE

LIGHTER
SINGLE PACK

79c

2

FOR

GILLEnE
FOAMY
SHAVE
CREAM
REG., COCONUT
OR LEMON-LIME

noz.179

CAN

BUFFERIN
ANALGESI_C
TABLETS

• RITE AID

MEDICATED
SKIN CREAM

RITE AID

~PKG.

BABY WIPES

SHEER OR

RITE AID
-PLAmC
STRIPS

99 c;

I" WIDEREGULAR
PKG. Of 30
OR ASST. •
SIZES- ·
'KG. OFSO

IIOTTLE359
OF 100
'

19'9 ---- 149

OF 80

UM meets

CIJMIN6 SOON: "VN4P" I

Inland Dally Press Aasoclatlon and the
Ohio Newspaper Auoclatlon. National

13 WHicJ ................................. .

SCRIPTO

Slinderella meets

Apple Grove

Member: United Prets International.

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

'AS PEA POSTED SCHEDULE

Rutland Garden Club
conducts meeting

rond class poalagc paWl at Pomeroy,

where bome carrier aervk4!

Mary Harrison, RN, staff devf l·
opment coordinator at HMC is
arranging tt.:o program. and Allee
Wamsley, director of t~ senior
citizen center is making local
arrangemPnt s. The program Is a
community servicP of the hospital
and clinic.
For informa tion, contact Ms.
Harrison at (614 1 446-5147 or
446-5311.
•

COLOR FILM
DEVELOPING*

Who's Who
names girl

Ohio.

naltabl~.

In OB-Gyn at the Medical College
of Ohio afllltated hospitals.
She was chief resident and
clinical Instructor In OB-Gyn at
the Medical College of Ohio at
Toledo In 1980-81, when she became aftllla ted with the Holzer
stalls.
Harnish is certified by Ihe
American College ol Obstetri cians and Gynecologists .

.

.

'

·

.

..

RITE AID

COLOR
FILM

t~lfts _ 199

2A EXPS.

EX·LAX

THE
CHOCOLATED
LAXAnVE
PKG.

Of 19

CHESTER - Eastern High
School ):land .Boosters meet 9 a.m.
· Monday at Ea~tern High SchOOl.
Eastern High School marching
band members and ot)lers Inter·
ested are to meet at the high school
Monday at 7 p.m.

133
GENERIC

Community calendar/ area happenings

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday. 111 Court St ., Po·
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
llshlng Company!Mulllmedla , Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Ph . 992-2156. Se·

are~•

Citizen Center. Mulberry Heights.
Pomeroy. lt ls jointly sponsored by
thE' bospltal and cUnlc.
A native of Cleveland, ·Harnish
graduated from Baldwin Wallace College II_\ chemistry and biology. She received her medical
degree from the Medical College
of Ohio at Toledo. Harnish had a
one-year Internship tliere, fol lowed by a three-year residence

Wolf Pen notes

SPECIAL WEDNESDAY
MATINIIS
THIS IU... IER I

(USPSIU·. . I
A DlvliiOII of Mllltlmecll•, Inc.

Football players begin jail sentences

'

ByDAVIDMOFm
UPI Sports Writer
WILUAMSBURG, Va. (UPIIFuzzy Zoeller had a hunch before he
shot a final-round 6' that the Buseh
Golf Classl£' was his lor Ihe taking.
"The way everyonl' was gliing, I
thought going in that If I had a good
round. I'd havt:&gt; a chance," the
former U.S. Open and Masters
champion said after chalking up his
third victory of the year. "When
you're In a position like that, you
have to keep making birdies."
Zoeller, 34, made sevm birdies,
four In a five-IDle span on the back
nine ·of the sun· baked. riverside
KlngsmiU course, and no bogeys en
route to a 10-undt:&gt;r·par 274 that
Pna bled him to beat runnerup Jodie
Mudd by two strokes.
"I thought an &amp;-under might
win," Zoelk&gt;r said. "That wus what
I was shooting for. But then I went
right past 8."
"Wben I looked up at the board
and saw Fuzzy had gone past me. I
knew I had to make SOm£' birdies."
said Mudd. who finished at m-276.
"I just couldn't pull it off."
Playing In near lOOdegr&lt;'£' heal .
Zoellt:&gt;r, who has won 10 times
durtng his 12-yl'ar career, finished
about an hour ahead of Mudd, who
was In the final thret'som£'.
"Let him try to catch ml'," the
always affable Zoeller quipped .
''l'VC' got my SCO!l'."
Jory Sindelar, onc of Zoeller's
playing partners Sunday, was third
at frl -'!n, and Mac O'Grady, slated
to begin a six-evmt suspension. and
Scott Hoch tll'd lor fourth at 67·Z78.
The victory was worth $00,000,
and raised Zoeller's take for the
year to $.1.12,883, his seco!KI-hlghest
total.
"Th!' year's young yet," said
Zoeller, who won the Pl'bbi£' Beach

The Daily Sentinel

'l'eMls

Top seed Pam Shriver ol Baltimore heads the 32-player draw In a
$150,000 stop on the women's pro
tennis tour that begins Monday at
.the NPWport Casino In Newport.
R.I. Shriver, ranked sixth In the
world , wUI faee Jenny Byrne of
Australia In her opening rou!KI
match 1\lesday In this lone American stop on grass courts on the
women's circuit. Robin White,
ranked roth, Is the second seed. She
will face .Joan!Vi' Russell Monday.
In other matchPS Involving seeds
Monday, No.5Lor1McNellwlllplay
Elena Relnach and No. 6 Grace
Kim will play Kristin Klpney. The
other seeds are: (3) ·Diane Balestra!, (4) Anne Wblte, (7) Wendy
.,. l1llllal , _ lnteraatloaal
placed on two ypars' probation. White, and (8) Gig! Fernandez. The
final tor the nrst prize of $.1),(01 is
Two W~on State University Blount Is a WSU Quarterback,
loolbaU payers began serving Thomasoon a free safety. Coach scheduled lor Sunday.
&amp;1-day JaU aentena&gt;s SUnday at Jim Walden said earlier the two
YIICIIlln1
· Colfax, Wash.. followlllg convlc- WOUld remain on the team and no : The racing yacht Merlln persevered to win the Paclftc ~ yacht
; lions for tbe theft of a stereo, additional d!sclpUnacy action would
author1tJet said. Whitman ~nty be taken by the school. The two race despite loslng lts~rlnglhaft
:Superior Court Judge Phlllp Farts pleaded guUty to one count d. hundreds Gf rniiell from the llnllh
aentenc.Td Edwanl Cleo Blount, 22. ·second-degree thE'It In coiiiii'Ctlon Une at Lijue, Hawaii oo,lhe ISland ol
Kaual. 'lbe Sail li"raftddoo. bued
-. • of Pomona, Calli., and Charles with a $.'fill stereo stolen from a
:: :, Kevin 'l'honiaBIIlll, ~. d. Sacra- WSU fraternity last October. Merlln knocked 16 11aurt 111 the
~: ; mento, Calli., Friday to fiO.day
Blount and Thomasson claimed. !'£COni time. ~ 67·foot white
:;:. \ tenna In the COUIIIy Jail. 'l1ley also during sentenclntthat-the theft waa sailboat made the Sail Franclla).
to-HaWaii CI'OIIlng In 8 ·claya, 14
'· .were ordered to~~ hoursd a prank.
·
)~guts, ll3 mklulielt and 11!1 ~
CIIIMiwllty llt!I'Vk:e IIKI were

Easll&gt;r, and ninth-ln:nlng slngles to shutout of the season. He walked
pinch- hitter Ron Hassey and Don five and registered his fourth
Mattingly.
complete garre. Mike Mooll'
"He was an outstanding pitcher sUpped to .5-9.
today. He hit spots and didn't give In
Elsewhere in the Al., Oakland
at all," Mattingly said. "NolxJdy . wtslugged Toronto 10·5, Texas
beats him today. NObody beats him c:lowned Cleveland 5-3 in 10 innings,
today."
·
and California biltzed Boston 12-3.
Blyleven retired 13 straight bat:
In the National league, It was:
ters before Hassey's bloop hit. He NeW York 2. Atlanta 0; Phlladelhas 105 strlkrolits this year, putting phi a 5, Houston 4 In 11 innings; San
him over 100 for the 16th time in 17 FranCisco 11, Pittsburgh 4; San
major league seasons.
Diego 11. St. Louis 6; and · Los
An~J&gt;Ies 4, Chicago 3. The game
"(Coach) Don Zimmer and I between Cincinnati and Montreal
talked about It In the first couple ct was suspmded In the sixth Inning
Innings, ·and we didn't think he had with the Reds leading 3-2.
A's 10: Die Jays 5
that good stu!!," Yankees manager .
AI Toronto, Mike Davis tripled in
Lou PlnleUa said. "But as the game
the tying run and scored the
plogiE&gt;Ssed, he threw better.
go-ahead
run on lbrmie HUI's single
"'lbe All.Star break came at t!Ko
in
Oakland's
flve·run filth inning.
tight time. We're hurting. It's three
Curt
Young
wor~
1 2-3 shutout
days rest for everybody ."
innings to ('Yen his record at 6- 6.
White Sox 7, Orklles 0
At Chicago, Nell Allen fired a Dave Leipt'r pitched the final 2 2-3
five-hitter, and Joel Skinner hit. a innings for his first major-.league
three-run homer to pace the White savt:&gt;. BUI Caudili slipped to 2-1.
Texas 5, Cleveland 3
Sox. Allen, 6-1. earrro his first
10 Innings
complete game and shu tout sincr
AI Cleveland, Larry Parrish
1983 when he was with the St. Louis
Cardinals. The 28-yt:'ar-oid right- slnglro hornt:&gt; Pete O'Brien with the
hander struck oot four and walked winning run in the lOth inning.
Mitch Williams hu rled the final two
one.
innings br Texas to Improve to 7-1.
Tigers 5, Royals 0
AI Kansas Citv, Mo .. Jack Mon·is Parrish collected his eighth game·
J»tcbed a four-hitter in his second winning hit, off Emit:&gt; Camacho,
consecutive shu tout, and Kirk who rPiieved loser Scott Bailes, 7-5.
Angels t'.l, Red So~ 3
Glll&gt;on and Lou Whitaker hit homr
At Boston, Brian Downing hit a
runs to lead O!'trolt. Morris, who
shut out M~ta on six hils two-run homer, and Dick Schofield
Wednesday, Improved to 9-6 with had a oolo shot to back the
his fifth straight complete game. combined six-hit pitching of John
Scott Bankhead fell to 3-3.
Candelaria and Doug Corbett .
Brewers 5, Mariners 0
Ca ndt'laria. 2·0, making only hi•
At Milwaukee. Juan Nlrves S«"Ond start sincr undergoing
hurled a t&gt;ur-hlttrr and struck out £'!bow surg{'ry On Apri l 16th,
12 to help the BrrW&lt;'rs snap a allowed two hits in 5 2·3 Innings.
se~·en·game losing streak . Nieves,
Corhclt rar!K'd. his eighth save.
8-3, recordrd his AL- leading third Rookie Jeff Sellers slipped to 3-4.

The Mature Woman will be the
topic of the bi-monthly Health
Maintenance Series br area restldents over 55. Speaker tor tbe
session will be Dr. Margaret
Harnish and the Holzer Medical
Center and staff In the obstetricgynecological department.
The program wlll be presented
Wednesday, 1 p.m. at the Senior

DRUGS

COULD
SAVE YOU UP TO

port, 5:ll to 8 p.m. Tuesday.
Featured speaker wlll be Rep. Mike
Shumaker. Tickets can be purchased at the door. $7.50 tor
TlM!DAY
LONG BO'ITOM -Long Bottom indlvlduais, and $10 lor couples,
F1ame Meeting will be held at the wl!h children under 12 free.
MI. Olive Community Church, lledeclcatlon reviYal
Loilg Bottom, 1\lesday, 7:30 p.m
RACINE- Rededication revival
with Ch')rr Totten of Wlntleid, will be held at the Morse Chapel
W.Va. formerly of the Davy Jo Chureh, Racine-Portland Road,
Htsson TV Show.
Monday through Saturday, July 19.
Mlnillter I; thE' Rev. Charles Bush.
Fund ralse!Racine, and the Rev. Georgeo
MIDDLEPORT - A fund raiser Hoschar r1 West Columbia wlll be a
tor Jan Mlchae!Long,candlqatefor SJ)l'aker. There will be special
state senator, will he held at the singing nightly and services begin
American Legion Hall In Middle· . at 7:30 p.m. each evening.

day. 9:30a.m. to noon eac h day.
Information ~all 992-6249.

/o

0

ON YOUR NEXT
PRESCRIPTION
ASK YOUR RITE AID
PHARMACIST FOR
COMPLETE DETAILS!

THERE'S ALWAYS A SAVINGS AT RITE

POMEROY - Meigs County
Salon 710, Eight and Forty. Mon·
day, 6 p.m., althe !Jome d. Loretta
Tiemeyer lor picnic.

RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
208· EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OH.
PHARMACY PHONE: 992-2586

. MIDDLEPORT .- Vacation Bl·
· blt:&gt; ,school, Rejoicing Life Baptist
: Church, 333 North Second Ave.,
: Middleport, Monday through Frl-

•·

•

'i \

..

I

�/

14.1986
Monday, July 14, 1988

Fiber important to daily .loealth,
Pleasant Valley dietJcian ~ays

FRESH WATER - Dlsbict 8811 &amp;tarians In Ohio
Jan helped provide fresh water to a Hondlraa
llOIIIIIIIIIII) through purdlaslng drOIIng equipment,

vehicles and a drlllkJg rig, In addltlontoeclucatlngooe
native In well drilling at Wright State University.

·Ohio Rotarian's project helps
..Honduran village water problem
' · Many residents of rural Honduras are enjoying fresh water for the&gt;
...
first
• • time due to the efforts of some
.• eentral and southeastern Ohio
.. Rotarians.
Following a 198&lt;1 \1sit to Hondu·
,•. ras by five District 669 Rotarians,
the club decided to organize a water
• · project and a medical supply and
· Equipment project benefitting
Honduras.
' · Their goal was to send medica l
supplies and equipment to the
Hondurans and to drill 40 wells in
.i'". ruraJ areas where fresh water was
~·· rot available. Eight wells have

·-

tx&gt;en drilled and the ninth is in
process.
District 1m Rota rians purc hased
used drUling eq uipment. vehicles
and a drilling rig. They . also
educated ooe Honduran in sta te-ofthe-a rt wC'll drilling at Wright State
University. He is oo wthe crew chief
in Hondu ras. Rotarians in Hondu·
ras are paying for labor.
The success of the water projr&lt;:t
has encouragC'd Rotary lnterna·
tiohai thrcugh the Rotary Founda·
lion to grant the Rotary ('tubs of
Honduras an additionai·Sll8,400 to
continue the drill ing of wells in ru ra l

Honduras.
Medical supplies and eq uipment
valued ·at $500,(8) M&gt;rc shipped
from "the District to Honduras. A
direct be~eficiaJ'!' of the projr&lt;: t Ls
the ·town··of Cataclimas. In eastern
Honduras, . where an eight-bed
maternity facUlty was equipped
and Is not functioning .
Rotarians from Honduras at ·
tended the rocent District Confer·
ence In Columws and thanked the
009 Rotarians.
m strict e69 comprises 41 clubs
with 3,370 mPmbers in 22 central
and rou!heastern Ohio counties.

Showboat Becky Thatcher opens
;c_melodramas for current season
MARIETTA - The exciting coquettish soubrettE'S ct acharmlng
,.: Showboat Becky Thatcher Theatre, bygone era.
,·-permanently moored bl Marietta,
One of the popular plays of the
.has just kicked-off the season. liOl's. "Hazel Klrke (or Adrift
·· -Audience memt:ers are mrour· From Her Father's Love") , by
··&lt;!ied to boo and hiss the villlan and StEele MacKaye as adopted by
, cbeer the hero. Salt water taffy Is a Dorothy Mackin,Is also slated . This
must 1n order to obtain the full melodrama Is full of black-hearted
... effect of the performance.
villainy, cheating and lying on the
.. nus year, they offer a western evil side, love on the good side, and
melodrama- "The _Saloonkeeper's a stubborn, untrustlng father in
Daugbter" by Jack Sharkey and bPtween. But, In the end, good
Dave Reiser. This play features a triumphs over all.
western saloon proprietor, his
The fourth show, a revival from
daughter-Swret Lily, and Ihe IE '!flit.-.--- the f(rst season, is "Ten Nights ln A
.. mble villan-Mannly Raush who Barroom" by Kent E. Nelson. '!'he
. tries to become rich rut is !oiled , of show opens on Tuesday, July 22.
(,'OIIrse, and the&gt; sun at last shines In This Is a touching dra ma sho wing
all ct the good poople.
the !!feels of demon drink and lnw
:;:.: "Utile Mary &amp;mshine" has it ruins Joe Morga n, a good fa nnlly
"become a loving la mpoon of man, and the perils of his daugll ter
old-time ~rettas, written by Rick sweet Mary . Tragedy leads to
-Besoyan. "Little Mary" exagger· repentance and then happiness fo r
ates the ave-earnest heroes and all.
·. heroines, dastardly vllllans and
Lunch or dinner t:efore the show

can be scheduled In H.B. Finn's
Resfaurant located on second deck
of the "Becky". The dining room Is
open year-round serving from 11
a.m. to 10 p.m.

Fiber's · beneficial IJ'opertles
seem ,to stem from Its abWty to
promote ellmlnatlon ol waste pro·
ducts !II our digestive tracts. In the
case of colon cancer, fiber Is
thought to help absorb excess bile
acids which appear to promote this
form ci cancer, she sald.
· Additional studies since then
have prompted the American
Heart Association and the American Cancer Society to recommend
adding more high-fiber foods to wr
dally diets.
An average American eats approximately between 10 and ~
grams of nrer each day, Anderson
ooted. However, recent studies
recommend that these arrounts be
doubled to achieve the desired
beneficial results.
crude fiber figures listed on many
packaged foods oftm IDiderestimate- by as mud! as tv.u to thra&gt;
times - the true dietary fiber
content of these foods, she sald.
The possible medical benefits of
fiber first were revealed in the
1960's by a British doctor, Dennis

ATHENS - The Dairy Barn
. Southeastern Ohio Cultural Arts
Center IS celebrating the introduction ci BasketWeave. a national
contemporary and traditional ex hf.
bltlon cl. rrore than :M baskets.
'· aasicetWeave, which will continue thrcugh Sunday, July 'll, has
·been organized· by the Dairy Barn
with the aame creative energy that
produces other prestlgtous,exhlblts
IUdt as QuUt National an American
Cmlemporary Works in Wood.
•• •BailitetWeave Is a diverse exhlbl~ that teatures traditional Appal,acblan weavers to contemporary
experimental artists from New
York to Calitornla.
'
One cl. the highlights of Basket·
Weave wUI be a lawn party on
Saturday, July 12. The public Is
lnytted to bring a picnic lunch to
;,~Joy on the grounds of the Dlliry ·

•

..

~

.

Barn and watch as basketmakers
Tom and Connie McColley rt Chloe,
W.Va .. construct a hugh lawn
sculpture. Also. at 3 p.m. lltat day,
Cynthia Taylor wUI present an
Informal lecture and slide present a·
tlon on white oak basketry.
Those attending are encouraged
to Iring their own baskets and
Taybr wUI answer questions about
their construction and history.
Additional activities In ·cqnjunctiQn with ·BasketWeave are work·
slnps on the Appalachian Mountain
Egg Basket and VIne Basketry. For
additional Information about the
BasialtWeave exhibition or workshops, write to 'tlie Dairy Barn,
P.O. Box 747, Athens, Oh!o, 45701, or
call 6141002-4981.
The Dairy Bam Is located ~n
Dairy Lane, ott Richland Ave. lit
Athens, Ohio. The bours Iii Basket·.

PUBLIC NOTICE
Bids will be received until
4 :00p.m . August 8, 1986.
by mail for tho following
ou'pptlto and products nooded for lhe 1986/ 87 school
year :

BREAD AND BREAD
PRODUCTS
MILK AND MILK
PRODUCTS
GASOLINE AND DIESEL
FUEL
Delivery will be modo to
lllo Carleton School for tho
period of Augull 24. 1986
lllrough Juno 30. 1987.
Bids are to be moiled to tho
addreu below : and;
Specific bid details may be

obtained bv cont.:ting:
Mr. Koiih Block.
Operations Director
P. o . Box 307
Syracuu, Ohio 46779
814-992,- 8883
Bids will'- ower dod ollho
regullr botrd meeting on
AUJIUII 11. 1 988.
Tho MeiQJ County Boord
of Mental ""Aet•dltion reaorvn tile right 10 accept or
reject any or all bids.
Leo Wedornoyor,

Superintendant

17) 13. 14. 16. 3tc

·I

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice ia hereby given thet
lilt Board of Educotion of
tho Mtf111 Loco! School Dis·
tricl, Meigs County, Ohio.
will - · for oslo by . . ted
bids for tight 18) school
bu101 and two 121 vono ond
two (21 trucks. altho Troa ·
Mlrer·a office, Meigs Local
School District. 821 South
Third Avenue, Middleport ,
Ohio, at I 2:00 noon. July
22 , 1986.
The vehicles are as fol lows :
I . t 968 Chevrolet buo48 pa•ongor
RSS628F17824
2 . 1972 lntomotlonal bus
88 poooonaor
#13862DH348030
3 . 1972 lntomolionol bus
P•..,.aor
R138620H346038
4 . 1974 lntornotionol bus
68 PIM111Qir
#13872DHA 19120

ee

Weave. are 11 a. m.-5 p.m. 7 days a 2 In Memoriam
week, with hours extended to 7p.m.
on Thursdays. Admission Is S2 for
adults and $1.50 for senior citizens.
Perhaps you 11111 1lovey
and children IH2; children under 6
card,
are admlttf!d free.
Or sat quietly In 1 dlelr.
Special rates are avallable for
Perhaps fOUislltt 1 fu·
neralspll . .
group tburs. BasketWeave Is
If so wt s it tllra.
funded In part through a grant from
Perhaps. rou spoka tltt
the Ohio Arts CooricU.

kindest words.

Day camp
POMEROY - Training for the

Big Bend Girl Srout day camp ,will
be held Wednesday at the 0J1!o
River campgrouncls, formerly
Roush's Lanting, beginning at ~ll
a.m. Those atteDdlllg are to take a·
sack lunch. Day camp will be held
at Camp Kill81\uta July 21 through
July 25. Further ntonnation on the
training ~ ·thti camp may he
oblalned" 11; caUtne · 949-3ll:i, or
'112·1W/.

Worked in home ar•

20 YHFI
"free Estimates"

CALL COILfCT:

Ph. 16141 143-5425

5-12-'86-2 mo.

5 . 197! International buo
86 po•onger
#00822EHB717&amp;5
6 . 1972 lntomational bus
.
66 pa•ongor
#136620H346044
7 . 1973 International bus
66 paioongor
#I 3662CHA20793
8 . 1972 lntemolionol bul
68 pa•ongor
#CSE522V113504
9 . 1978 Dodge Trodoomon
Van - #B21 BB8X048288
10. 1985 OMC Handi-Van
- #GI001 PE7118A
11 . 1968 Chovroltt12 toni
Stoke Body
#C6636F132745
12 . 1973 OMC Chevrolet
'h Too Pickup
#TCY143F702259
Additional informatiOn On
thooo vehicles moy be obtained at tho Mof11o Loco!
Bus Oorllfle, Rutland Ohio
742- 2990.
•
•
Terms of Sate will be &lt;Bih
or chock with poaitlve 1.0.
. Sold Boord ,.,..,..., tho
nght to waive informalities
to accept or reject any and
~I or parts of any end all
bods.
J•ne Fry, Treuurar

East, 4 I Rods 8 links:
!lienee South 2Q dogrooo
28 rods 17 links;
thence South 81 rods 16
links: thence South 17
degrees Well 22 rods I 6
links; thence Wast 98 rods
and 221inks; lhenco North 1
md 5 links: monee North
84'A degrees Eut. 10 mdo:

As lllf lrltt!d cbuld qy;

.,.

Perhaps rou were not
there ihll,
·
Just
thouallt
of
us
Ill\
1
' . ·,
Whatever you di4 to eon•
. $Ole our hurts,
We think r011 10 . •ell
whatever 1M flirt.

The fami'~ of
J1mes Rlynk)nd
·' .

.Hoffman.

Meigs Local School Oietrict

e....

thence South 84 % deg'rees

East, 11 rods 91inko; !lienee
north 48V:r degrees Eatt ,
19'1:. rods; !lienee North 70
dogrooo East.
19 rods 17
links: thence North 32 rods;
thence West 4 mda; thence
North 72 rodo10 Hnkllotho
place of beglning . Also Loll
Nos. 64, 66 and 661n Pogo·
ville, containing in all ebout
40 acres. more or leu, being
the same premiaes 11 con·
veytd by Elmer Haning to
Pearl and Martha Robinson,
July 15; 1907 deed of record Volume 97. Pogo 83, of

uid Deed Recorda.
PARCEL 3 : Situated in tho

townthip, county and atate
aforesaid , In Section 16,
Town 7 , Range 14 of tho
Ohto Company ' s Purcf'la1e.

8oglnning in tho center of
the llr8tt 14 t.ot South of

the Southwnt corner ot a
piece of land· known •• the

1121 S . Third Avonuo
Middleport, Ohio 45780
16130;
7, 14, 21 , 41c

Mill Lot in or near the VIllage
of Pegeville. at a ltllke .

Public Notice

links to a atHa; thence
South 1 chain 6 Wnks to a
stake; thence Ea11 2 chains
90 links; thence South 8

m

thence

ent 13

chains 46

chains 141inkatothe Athens

IN THE
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
Dona H. Raymond.
Administrator of the Estate
of Martha Robinson,

vs.

PLA~TIFF

Floyd Gould. 01 at..
DEFENDANTS
Case No . 24.708
NOTICE OF SALE
PURSUANT TO THE OR DER oft he Pro bote Court of
Meigs County. Ohio , inCase
No. 24,708, I w ilt offer for
ule at public auction on Au·
gull 1, 1986, II 10 :00
o'clock A.M. at the front
door of tho Meigs County
Caur1 HouH. the following
dascribad r•l astate, lit·
uated in the County of
Meigs. State of Ohio, to -wit :
An undivided ooe-haH interest In and to the following
real estattt situated i1 the
County of Mtf111, in tho
Stott of Ohio. and in lht
Township of Scipio and
bo&lt;ond•d and described 11
follows :
PARCEL 1 : Being oil that
port of Lot No. 63. in tho
Town or Village of PegeviUa,
Meigs County, Ohio, and being 111ma premises •• con veyed by Caroline Golden by
deed of record, Volume 86,
Pogo .216, said Deed Re corda:·
Said parcel being seme
premises u conveyed by

Corrlt S . Chooo . at at .. . by
dood doled July 7, 1907. re·
corded in Volume 97. Pogo
96 of 11id deed recordo .
PARCEL2 : Situatoofintho
township, county and ltete
.toretaid. Being in Town 7 ,

Rongo 14, Ohio Company's
Purd11H . Beginning. in the
contor of tho Stolt Rood ot
lht N. E. corner of Lot No.
88 of tho Town ot Pogovlllt,
!hence South 86Ya degrooo

2

In Memor,iam

In Memory of

II. WAI DLEONARD
who passed away

.April 9, 1986.
lly you alweys welt in

tunshlne

God's love lt'Oulld ,OU

""'

FOI 1M llppinHs IOU
brOUFI t1t1
No ate ·will - lnow .
It broke tt1J hNrt ID loSt

·,/~ 'did 1111-"

elone.

'PIIt or N wtttt wnh ·JOU
t1tt day God calletl ,aU
holtll. '

. .

.

,· · SICily missld by'
WHa, Lilis-.~.' Ltonll'd

.,d Pomeroy road

w~re

a

wild cherry lroo 12 inches in
diameter boars North 8 1tl
degrees East thenat diatMt
14 links: thence North 88
degrees West 8 chains 76
links ; thence South 8711.1
degrees Wast, 3 chains 21
links: thence North
'I•
- degrees West, 3 chaWta 64

chains:

PLUMBING &amp; HEA nNG
New

LO&lt;otion:

161 Nortlt Second
Middleport, Olio 45 760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We C•rry Fishing Suppltel

Pay Your Cable 8o
Phone Bills Here

.,.,r- IUSINISS PHONE
16141 992-6510
RISIINCI PHONE

HEADQUAR1ERS FOR
•ZENITH
.SPUD QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATRUTE SAlES &amp; SERVICE

North 46

North 86
degrees West 2 chains and
94 links to • point opposite
the center of tfw street,
thence North 8 chaina .55
links to place of beginning,
containing 14.36
more or less .

Academy Lot. thence East

10 chains 22 lin kilo utalco;
thence South 3' chains 87 1h
links to a stake; thenc:e West

13 chains 48 links to center

Of llroel; lhenoo North 14

feet. thence East 3 chains
28 Iinke to Southoart comer
of Mill Lot; thence North ,3
dlaino 66'4 links to ploco of
bogining, conuining · -4 .2
acres, more or 1111.
·
PARCELS : Alto a trect of
land 3 rods wide ·off tho
10ulh end of • certain para! I
of land known 11 tho Mill Lot
Jituated neai' the middle of
North haH of the Northwest
Quarter of Se:ction 18, Town
7. Range I 4, Oh'lo Comp,ny'a Purcha~e; and in the
Village of Pogeville. County
of Meigs, Stall of Ohio.
Sold poroolo 3, 4. and 5
being the same premlan 11
conveyed to P. .rt and Mertho Robinson by Sarah M.
Brooks. a wtdow. by deed
doted August 8. 1.916 , of record Volume 1 16, Page 66,
uid Deed Recorda of Meigs
County . _
PARCEL 6: Situated In tho
Township, County and Stole
oforooald, . in Section 16,
Town 7 , Rongo 14, Ohio
Compony'o Purchooo. Be·
ginning atapolntinthoW•II
fino of Section 16, at E. P.
Allen' s . oouthwoot comer
lb0u1 '162 rode So~th oflho
Norlhwnt comer of 11id
Section HI., thence South
otong 11id Will lint. 71
choino, 38 2 / ·3 rods 10 1
beach· triio:
lho point of
tho ,hiH, U.nco SoutH 71 1h ,
c~o,
~~
4 .34 , Chlins:.
lhon~ H '.dogrooo Eoll 2

on

.

... ...

.

MGII F,wrn City sj.;cial!
(llVIIf_....,. IUPPI'Itt

I" c.lrtit ....... '4.15 ft.
NOW 011. y 13.15

10' (!11Jj1 . . . .. 15.15 ft.
NOW 011. Y IUS
11
ltp I I : Jtader',
'
Rig. •2.001.. .
NOW ONI. ~ I 1550.00
,POM~ROY, 0110

.. 1 -

.

1

CHESTtR- 985-3307

Copy Strricos. lie.

25 S Mill St., Mitldloport
104 Mutbtrry b ., PoiiWroy

992-3345

CLC COINS
Buying/Selling
Gold,

SiiYe~

14K Chains, Coins,
- Collector's Accessories
Bullion
· · SU. .I HOURS
1-7 M·lH

985-3937
Call for Directions

"2:30 nigl11club" Ne·
got1able ASKING $35,000.00

NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT - Restauran l an~/ or

buold mg, with 2 apart ments
over. Call for d eta~ls 11 YOjl
want to own a restaurant..
NEW LISTING - RUJLANb
- Here " a nice 10 yr old
ran ch type home. w1lh 3

bedoooms, bath, garage on a
level lot Many newfeatu re!
WANT$36,500.00.

POM£ROY - 3 bedroom.

n1ce kotchen, air cond1IOO.
:ng. W(a stove,locatoo on f
lots. Many oth.er ·fea ture~.
$19.000.00. ·
I
lt!P-

•

Henry E. Cleland , Jr. l
; 992·6191
Jeon· Trussell ..... "9'·2ti6Cl
,Dottie Turner .... .'!IU·56!lt

EASY ASSEMBLY WOAKI
1714.00 I* 100. Guarantied
plymtnt . No tel•. Oet~ll tend
ltemped envek)pe: Elan-7115
3418 Enterprise, Ft. Pierce, Fl.

Announ ce menls

33482.

3 Announcements

yours. get., m the ground floor
of .,..., newett party plt n.
Hiring tor mtn~gement poal·
tiont . No inv"tment, weeldy

SWEEPER and t ewlng m.ehine
repair, ptrtl, and suppllt~. Pick
up and delivery, Dtvit Vacuum
Cleaner, one haft mile up

checks. fr• training, IUppli•
1nd sample kit. Oeleilt wh:ttout
obltgatlon ca ll oollect 614-474-

PAT HILL FORD

CAU 667·3271

992·2196
Middleport, Ohio

CoMpm the Qualltr

Before Y~t~n mo.

1 - 13-lfc

Dtaltr

farm EquipMent
Parll &amp; Servlee

No Sunday Colis

1-3-'86 tic

l / 11 / tfn

e

!CUT OUT FOR FUTURE USEI

00

t-e00-282· 2187 .

Serious -'PiiCMta send complate

All Maku

'l'tNS

•rot.AOUII
•MIDALs

•IIAYI

"GoA VILS

&lt;HAIMS

•Washers •Dishwas he rs

NOW lQCATED AT
241 Stcon~ Awt.
Gallipolis. Ohtt

,.. ,

t.)

THE
COUNTRY
11

· CLUB

oGOlf lll$011 s
6 fOR 140
•NEW GRIPS

EASV ASSEMBLY WORKI
1714.00 per 100. Guaranteed
peymfl'lt. No ••••· Dettilt-und

Free-2 catl a 2 ki«tnl, tigtra,
calicol. blaek &amp; whit•. melt &amp;
fem••· Call 814-448-702&amp;
3 male puppia- h1lf coc:kapoa &amp;
half king haired Dachshund. Too
CUll to mill. CJII 814-266-

installod 12.50
oAll

Fenden

. 139

73-80 OM

MERtHANDISI

Ruck• Panels ...

50% Off

Cwtom graphite drtvera. trophiel 8t 8W'ardl • Complete
ERilraving · - Shrintrt. Me·
aomc. Eed.am St•. Eegl•.

JOHN IIAFOID,

·n .·eo GM

614 -992-7861 .

~

FREE to 900d home. pl1yful
m1le m1nge ki«en. lbout 8
weeks old, 304-876· 6063 .

-a:

I~~~

73· 79 Ford Fender•
TNck led
liner•

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

J: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

.. . SUi
139

·-

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

L&amp;S
TRANSMISSION
REPAIR

AI major appliance re-

pairtlincluding micro·
wavM) . Electronic Or·
gana. Mobile aervice.

B-13 tin

ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949·2168

2-17-86-lfn

ARMY SURPLUS
&amp; CAMOUFLAGE
Sizes 4 Yrs and up
AlSO HUNTING,
SURVIVAl and
VARIETY ITEMS

ACROSS FROM
POST OFFICE IN
MASON, W. VA.

304-773-5222

CARE

1167-3513

Cle1ned ,
protected.

11nltlzed
c1rp11 and
uphoktert .

CJoorvo

M.

Froolonil. do-

oo-'. lllo ot " Syr-.
()lito

46779.

Robert E. Buck.
Prqbeto J utlgo
Ltno K. NoiMiroed, Clerk
(717. 14. 21, 3tc

DAY FOAM

$1995 2 porroom
room min.
Choice of
STEAM QU.N
1· 27·' 11·1 mo

Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Estell of Jonealle R. Johnton, deceaaed, Ceae No.

25. 166.
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On July 1. t 988. in tho
Meigs County Probeto Court
Cooe No. 25,168. Hozot A.
Johnson, 4306 A.zolto Drive,
Columbia, Soulls Corotino
21206, Wll -inled EaoCUiriJI af tho Mirto of Jon•lio
R. Johnson, t1oc uad,latoof
38736 Pooch Ford Rood. Pomeroy. Ohio 48769 .
Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge
Ltno K. No11olrood. Clerk
(717. 14. 21 , 3tc

Real Eetata Ganarisl
'

INTERESTED IN BUYING
APPROXIMATELY 211, ·
ACRES OF ST. RT. 7 N.AR·
:: EASTERN
. HIGH SCHOOL?
IF SO, .PLEASE PHONE
HOME NATIONAL BANK

Restores Faded
Oxidized Finishes To
Showroom Luster

POliSHING

742-2027

992·2038

T

it'

"Free Estimates"

lnslallation Arailablt
4

THE BIRD CAGE
&amp; FISH PONDPET SHOP

" WE COME
TO YOU "
w / APS DUPONT TEFLON

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

992-6784

•AU SIZES AiAilABLI

WAMSLEY &amp; GRAY
Phone

5. 14 . 1 Mo

(304) 773-5527 or (304) 8~ll86

Wanted To Buv

Rt . 4 ,
Ph

Run Rd .
45789
34,

Full tile old• car for demolition

1

, aUsed12'mobile
homes. Pref• 10'
wides. Clll 614·.W6 0175.

Electric typtwrit., . C1ll 614 ·
448-4&amp;37 after 7pm .
Buying daily gold. tllver coins ,
rings, jtwetry. sterling w1re. old
coins. large cunency. Top pric... Ed. Burkett Barber Shop.
2nd. Ave. Mlddl~rt . Oh. 814 ·

RUTLAND, OHIO

TOWN &amp; COUNliY
VETEIINAIIAN

CUNIC
Paul E. Shocker, DVM
PT. PUASANT OfftCE
305 Jlldrsen Awe.

WE HAVE MOST AU POPULAR BRANDS AT
THE SAME LOW PRICES
•CertaintBed •Mastic •AicDia '

PH. 304'·675-2441
BIND AIEl CAU
· llplay Office
For Hours

.304•3J2-17fiG

&amp;ooordov. Coli 814-448-7108.
work wanted . pruning.
hedgll •
bush11 trimmed . land ciMring.
Free 11timet•. Call 814-441·

topping rtmo!lfalt,

t832 .

.

Will do bllbytining in my home.
Phona 814-992-tl87.
Will do blbytittlng In my home
tor workWtg moth er~ . C1R 814·

992-8872
Ou•lijied' Home Ec tMch• w ill
do liiwlng. aherationa 1nd give
lesaons. 304-675· 8712.

Fm anm l
Business
Opportunity

21

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO reeommends thll you
do bu•in•• with p.ople you
know , 1nd NOT to MOd mon-v
throu"' the m1il until you have
in~~&gt;'•tigated the offering.

1974 Dodge Dart. automatic.
ll..,t-tlx engin1. 1500 . ·Cell
814-444-9460. can see after

6 o00PM .

Southeeltem Butin•• CoKegel
'The trafnilg you nHdl FOf the
jobt you went. Financial ••••.nee tvaillble. CaM today: 814··

992·51 n.

Real Eslale

AVOft4 , 3 op .. terri10ri11, call

ATTENTION!! Maton County ,
W. V1. and LJWrtnct County.
Ohio . ONLYIII Now hlrinoouporvisart and demonlttltOfl. Show
Christllllll decor.,iont for party
plan . Part-time or full-time.
melle your hourt. No collecting.
delivering or r."'"trnent. Fr .. ltit
and trafni'lg . Call collect 304-

486·8733

TODAY I {eoltoctt304 · 744 ·
0924 .

Help Wanted

EJII)eri,..OiddtummtrfortltlblithM
ract Mnd. Need sa meant
Interested in working on orig6n lal
materill a playing •me WMk.,..dl . We hive good connec·
tlont in the recording lnduJtry.

Rout• aYallabl• become • Deity

IWHfll

•11 .00 and •20.00 e

week for mare trltormetton oan tMit the

omes

S

for pie

---------'--'
4 bedroom houu. fireplacJ. 3
mi. southofGallipolie, t29.900.
Call dey• 814 ·441- 1115 or
1Yening1 81 4·448-8222 . ;

3 bdr. home. clo11 to town . 2
bathl, partly furnished. Get
hilt, law utllltl11. Calll14 -245 -

9248.
3 bdr., large ki,chen, beth, utilhy
room. tingle u•ao•. 2 • car
drtv.way, nice yard. &amp;aiden
spac1, flnllhtd u•-a•. ,.Cell

814· 448· 1318.

For 11la by owntr 3 Hrll ft"to
rolling with 12~~:81 mobilth6me.
t1 8.000. city school district.

Colt 814-448·8502.

in ~,..tor 2 pru"'oolchildren

12 Evono Hut.. Gollloot~. 3\odr ..
remodeled kitchen , fuM bM•
men1 whh flreplac•. 1 blth. &lt;Call
114·448 ·8199 .
•

i'l Point Pleu111t •ea. Send
r•ume and references to Box
C-11 care of Point P1tas1nt
Regiltlf, 200 Main St. . Pt. Pit.,
W. VI.

HouH for Hie or trade with 1.1
ecre1. 3 bedrooms. 2 batha,
L.room and f1mtly .oom. Com•
' "· rnak• offer. Call 814· 258-

Schooltnch&amp;tr needs baby sitt•

Social ServiCII Suparvilar 111,W. Va. Dept of HumM Service~
il attempting to recruit qutlifi.t
applicant tor the above mentioned pot ition . Undet tupervi·
tion employH in thil cla ..ficl·
lion will perform complek
edminiltretWe. tuperviaory and
tdYilory •rvices in the develop·
m111t and 111:acutk:ln of aptclalAppli'*'t n'll lt bt eligible for
licensure u a .:tclal worker,
grlduatt soci al worker or cert f.
fitd Jadll worktr by the WV
8olt'd of Social Work Eum inMl. .. Sunil rHUnw to Joyce
CampbeH. Coord. Socltl Stnrict
SupttVitOr, WY Dept of Human

Sorv!CII. 3131 18th &amp;o. Rood.
HuntingtOn, W. V1. 26702 by
July 25. 1181.

8680 .. 814-441·1111 .

4 bdr. houte, big 2 car gli~ge
with 1ttechtd vrean t)oult. fruh
cell1r &amp; 3 aer•. Ctll 814 -448·

8181
11ft 11orie1, 4 &amp; 5 bdrs ., 2 Ntha,
full beu ment . firepl ace. 14d 0
build ing with gerlge. 8.1 eer•
in Rio Grande ntJr Bob Evan•
Ferma. 163.000. Cell 81 4-UI -

5197
Rio Gr1nde ntw lovety 3 bdr.. 2

full bath l , full bu~m en t . great
vi ew, 3 deckl. ctd., tiding,

gebl e roo f. 149.600. Call 614 ·
448-8038 . Wilt con sidltf trede In
of mobile horne.
2324 lincoln, 4 bedroom. 304-

&amp;75-2130.

1lo----:::::::::=,:--1----::-::-:-:~-~~

Coli 814-241-tiOOI · o• 814·
241·1101Mi tftor 7. 114·448·
1339 ......
Sentinel carrier and •em M-

H

31

..... -GiiiiTpolil' ····...··

.. ·· · Ponl'ti"rov··· ··· ·· ·,.

&amp; Vicinity

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Dllty Sentinel today 11

814·•2·2118.
41 .200 PER MONfH

DELIVERY. DRIVEl! IALEI

S.tvrday 10· I h31 ora
MGI~Y IY APPf.

S1!1 vI Ll' '

7-7-'86-inoo

SUll A-Al NOUIS
. Moo.·Woti.·Jhun. 3-5 pm
T011. 6:39·1; Fri. 1·2 pm

LAIGI A.Ul&amp;

t 'IIII I11V tl' l't11
11

VINYL SIDING

949· 3014 .

8022 .

lzed human 11rvlce progrtm.

PH. 742-2656
RUTLAND MINE SUPPLY CO.
34018 New lima Rd.

Have vacancy for elderty pertoni , di~abled or retlred, re~p­
Mating. thor1 and-or lang ,.,m.
In country atmoephtrt. Meve
reter.. cn. Cell anytime 814-

Have epert,..nt house for Ale
reuonable. Call 114- 99 2·

NEWI NEW! NEWt F,... trip to
HJW1ii ran b• youra . G1t In Dn
the ground flo or of erea1 new111
party plan with ed.eblitl'led
co~any . Ladi"l HWing for
work at ho,.. mJnagtr poll·
tiona. Flexllblehourt. Great ply.
Detail• without obligation. CALL

Would like to rent or buy a lot
around Langtvillt, S1l1«1 C•ter
or De•ter. Must h•v• hooll·up
fOf' trailer. C1ll 014· 742· 21415 .

WIUAMS TRENCHtiG
SERVICE

814-992 · 7440 .

2282.

Trenching of Any Type
Backhoe SeN k: e

Septic Syltems
licen1ed A Bonded

A""""' Boo~ooblli

usembty work at home, plus
O'llny othert. Info dlal504-841 0091 ext. 3887.

992 -3478

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

Situations
Wanted

12

Tree

TOP CASH p1id for '83 model
1nd niW'er used cart . Smith
Buick ·Pontiac, 1911 E11tem
Ave., G1llipolls. Cell 614-448·

TRENCHING IS OUR LINE
Plumbing Servtce
Custom Welding
lowboy Hauling

0924 .

304-876-1429.

7903.

For Industrial or Residential Use

CALL fcoHect) NOWII For d~
tails. Betty V~rlllo 13~1744-

Lost : Ledi" bifoe~~la . M11. Pearl
William•. In light tan case. CeH

derby . Mull run . Call 61 4·448-

HIGH PRESSURE PLASTIC
WATER PIPE

Ideal job for mothers, former
teachers. ~y plen dlti••-

3819.

WANT£0 TO BUY u1ed wood &amp;
coat M1ter1. SWAIN 'S FURNI ·
TUAE. 3rd..• OUve St. Oellipolit. Callln4-446· 31ti9 .

(mtrgtnly

~

GREAT POSITIONIII D'"''tmilo
this opportunity! Work tromyoour
h:J m1 hiring end training peoples. FREE trtMnlng provided.
Wtekly paych.ckt- Bonu~e~.

between the MLTA and the
Balfd af Educarion, the Meigs
loe1l Sdlool Di1trict is polting
the following !lfacencl81 far itl
regular teechlng Jtaff: Fihh
Grade · HJrriMnville Elementary. Second Grade - Salam
Center Elementary end Frerlch Englith - Meig1 High Schaal.

Eam good wag" for IPI,.. timt

RACINE, OHIO

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

304-&amp;71-6711 .. 1-1100'1921072.

81-· 742 · 2328 .

We pay ca•h tor l1te model elean
uted CJrl.
Jim Mink Chev .-Oidslnc .
Bill Gene Johnton
614-.. 6 -3172

RAYMOND E. PROFFITT (MAC)
Offile 949 -2438

Mtrri Mtc:'• gutrtnleld Unt of
toya. gift•. hOme decor ltema.
fie . NO diUvwing, colltctlnll or
lnv. .ment. Your hours. Cen

Loll: 81Jck cat. 4 white teet.
Male, we•ing collar. lost near
Wilklvilla. 814-889-4985 or

LOST RewJrd far retum black &amp;
brown mtle Gemlln ShiiPherd.
8 mo. old, we1ring red oon.r.

7666.

5-20-'86'1 mo .

*Melli Buiidin15
*:difiiS .1JM··
*S1qt Buildinp

Carol Dov 1·800·227·1110.

814 -992 -2318 o• 814 -992 ·

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

Nut DNr To Wntarn Auto

ine~ntN•.

Your prior military 1ervgice it
worth mon-r. AnE · •Cin ..mas
much •
S131 .N for one
Profeasional
week·end tech month in tha 23
Army NaUon1l Guard. Vou can
SBrvices
qualify for 150,000 1ft intu·
ran01. PfOITDtionl. IPICI., trllning, and rttlr~m«~t benefits.
Edueation funding I• al10 a~~&gt;'Jila· Water wtlll servtced tnd drilled.
ble to qualified ..,Nsttn. Call FrH lltlmat•. Call 814-$112·
304-675-3950 or 1· 800-842· 6008 .. et4-742-3147.

9

59 N. 2nd An.
Middleport

money

rnvattnwnt, no
ooltetlng. Eam big
bonUMI end trav.r
CeM now toH frtl to

H&lt;Ku ecleening Monday thN

Cemetery •••• positions tor
women and men . Mu11 enjoy
meeting people . S at• IXP•
rienea helpful but not nectlllfY.
Cofl1' ..tt tr~ining provided . Cell

lost and Found

. Coll&amp;t 4-388-8793 oftor 10PM.

7/9!'86 / 1

GREAT BEND ELEcrRIC, Inc.

EXOTIC BIRDS .
TROPICAL FISH,
HAMSTERS .
KITTENS . BIRD
SEED, CAGES 8o
AQUARIUMS

5 beautiful ki1ten1 to good
home. lia w"ks otd . 3 grey. 2
yettow. 304-675-6118 .

lOST blue trifokl billfold. at end
of town, Chillicothe Rd . bridge.
C1ll 814-448-2224 .

Presorv1111 8o Seals
From Harsh
Elements

FREE Est . &amp;. Oemon t tretiana AU
Work Guaranteed in Writing

8 month·old h11f Aust r lti~
Shepherd. halt Beagle, very
friendly end good whh children,
208 9th Strttt. Point PINsant .

6

•CARS •TRUCKS
•BOATS •PLANES
&amp; MORE

SYSTEMS
ly Mkhaol Norton

Material•

.

MUft

After 5 Call

•LOCALLY OWN IO •LtJC.ILIA80.1

\

J..,.

FENCE COMPANY
PH. 992-6931

LIT'S BUILD UP TOGirHfRI

CARPET

7-8-'86·1 mo.

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Elloto of Otorao M. Froo,
lend. de~ued. Coso No.
21. 147.
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On
1. I 988, in the
Molgo Coaonty Pratmo Court
Cool No. 21,147. Millon E.
!lou.,, Box 167, Syrocuoo.
()lito 48771, ~..
E . - ot lht of

ACCENT

5·15-'86-1 mo.

TV -614-143-5241
APPL.-614-949-2145
Public Notice

Puppie1. mOther reg . Pitt Bull,
father unknown , 103 1st Street.
c.n 304-&amp;7&amp;- 38 36 .

A golden opponunlty·Joln
Fri.,dty HoiiW Toy ,arlfll, ,.,,
Ioiii or !of 31 yuro. Oponlnpfor
m:;::~:,••o;:nd~delf
. .. We hen
th
boll Nnoln porty

AI per Ar1icle IX , Tra n1fer1 and
Vac.nciet. Section B, Potting,
of the Negotiated Agreem ..t

Coech. Glr~

3886 .

Honotym., to flnilll point ...
...uoo. Poy f4 .110 por - · If
lntor. .od, ool J . Jonl( ot
882-3719 .

18 Wanted to Do

Coach. Gtrl1 Aeservt Soflblll
Coach. GirltJuniorHighlaakttbJII Coach . Yttrbook Advi10r
end Junior High School Chttrleedtr Advisor for the 19B6-87
school y11r. Applicant• mutt
tDid 1 v1lid Ohio teaching
certificate .nd tor coaching
Jl)litiana ITI.III meet certification requirements of Ohio 1port1
medic:tne ll'ld CPR. Persona
ilternted should contact DanE .
Mo""· Superintendent of Me~•
Local School•. at 821 South
Third Ave. fl Middleport, Ohio.

Fr" Kitten• . phone 304·896 ·

z

I

Howard L Writesel

1 yr . old Beegle to give JWey to
good home. Cell 614 -8436164

Help Wanted

11

stamp.t ennlope: Elen-6847
3418 Enterpril8, Ft . Pierce. Fl.
33482.

The Mtigl loCJI School Dittrict
II currently Mlktng 1pplicadons
from certified tpplicantt for 1n
Alliltent VJrl ity Football
Cotch. 71h .. d 8th GtMie
FootbJII Coach , Boy 18th Gradi
Basketball Coach, Bov• 7th
Grade Buketball Coach, Junior
High Track Coach. A11i1ttnt
Junior High Track Coach . Heed
S..allb1H Coach. A11i11ant ••••ball Coach, Girls VolleybJII
Coach. Girls AuiatJnl Volleyblll

1343.

6 kitten• to give twav. Call

z

~

The Oaity

WI 1 part time position. Must
enfoy working with elderly and
ple11ent IUIToundlnga. Salary
commenturate. Contact Nancy
Van Matw. O.O.N . through July
26th 11 614-992 -&amp;806 . E.O.E.

Giveawav

C-' Cof11luterized Hearilll! Air Selection
Swim Molds - Interpreting Services

to

Po ,.roy Heahh C•• Center it
ec:cepting application• far A~'a

~ 446·1848
6·2- l mo. Blond female cock~o. 2 years
1'-------:..:....:..;;.:.J,
old. Good wfth children. Call

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS

reaumt

Tribune. Bo11 T900. 825 Third
Ave .. Gtlllp(llil, Ohio •&amp;31

I will not be responsible for any
dett contracted for by anyone
other than myseH . Roger B.
Oilton.

4

Jewelry Store looking for

innovttNe, enjoy working with
public. and willing 1b leam.

Kitt.-.1 , litter trained . C1ll 81 4 ·
446 &lt;M79.

985·3561

•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE
L------..-!'2.5~11&lt;'-1

Loe~l

tu• time 11lnper10n. Need to be

Rtduce aefe and f81t with
Go8eae Tablet• and E-Vap " we·
ter pllla " Fruth Pharmacy.

\!!1

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

8213 .

SchOOII , churchn, CO!q)IJIY
plcnlcl. birthday p.rtiAII and
femity reuniont. Call 814 · 384-

Seutittai-Page :7

OPENINGS AVAILABLE ooHing

A free trip to H.weli un be

Would you Uka to meet mue
men like yourself7 If to hera'•
how 10 do it .. Join Ba11-Angltrt
Sporteman Society . For mora on
thlt ! aee ChariM Blankenthip ..
919 Second Ave. A~ . 9. GaiHpolit, Oh

Form Equipment

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

4-16-'86 tfn

RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
AGRICULTURAL
Custom Design
Service

6-16-'86· I mo.

•

l~e nse

e.:.

Baas F i th~rman of Galflpolit :

Authoritotl John Detrt,
New Hollontl, lush Hog

312/Hn

NEW LISTING - MlDDL£'PORT - Here os an onvest·

NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT - Bar. w1th all ~ UIP ·
menl and stock. Inclu des 0-5

159,230·yr. Now hiring. Cell
IIOI-A7·8000
R·980&amp; lo•
currtnt fedtr~llfll .

YOU'LLIINI£ lOilEY
IN THE CUI8IFIDI
AIID THAJ'B NO BUI.LI

2108

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILU:, OHIO

" Free Estimates"

NO SUNDAY CALLS

SER~ICE

Furniture, Wedding
ond Graduation
SiationNy, Magorti&lt;
Signs, lubhr Sioxnps,
lusiness Forms, ·

SateUite Sales
IMtallatlon service

menl property w1th excel·
lent 1eturn s on Midd leport
v1 ilage Commerc1al bu1ld .
ong Ca ll lor dela1 Is

Government Jobl. t11.04D -

NOAH 'S ARK ANIMAL PARK.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

New Homes Built

Day or Night

ELITE POLE
BUILDINGS

BOGGS

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

,., All '"' PlllllrtJ NHh

TYs, lnftiWiat

- Newer . sectional hon-.4.
Occupied only'a .short tim~.
3 ledrooms, Ill baths, ,ce
Ira! air, equipped kitch .
All electric. Extra nice cand
lion. ONLY $26.000.00 j

· •VINYL SIDING
• ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULA nON

Reasonable Priles"

"At

RADIATOR

PIUS: Offiu Supplios &amp;

J.R.'s REPAIRS

NEW LISTING - RACINt

6-23-'86-1 mo.

4-15-'86-fc

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Al1o Trans111lulo•
PH. 992·5682
or 99:1-7121

6-23-86-1 mo.

0

1·614-696-1337
1-614-593-8693

992 -UIS or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Ill. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

THE QllUTY
PRIJCT SHOP

PH. 992-7403

991-2259
Nr. usrtiro - u11oi
AVE. - Nice 4 bedr'?1
rand! with family room in~
Sfltlertl. Breezy enclosa:t rfllt
·pordllor cool relaution! Altf.
mnum ~dong. $34,000.00. I

lAMPS &amp; FIGUIINIS
1/2 PRICE

polls. Ohio .

814 -258· 1343.

THRU SAnJRDAY
PO,MI1ROY, 0.

10% OFF

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Roger Hysell
Garage

4/ lltfn

"Free Estimates"
All Work
Guaranteed
OPEN MONDAY

teres,

PARCEL4 : Situated in tho
Northwest quarter of Soc·
lion 16, Town 7, f'longo 14
of
tho Ohio Company
PurchaH. Beginning at the
Southwest corner af tt.

•

•• IIIIJ AFill Tlltll
Shp , .... tile•
• D•t,
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPliANCE

Rt. 7, Pomeroy, Otl.

thence

CEMENT DOGS &amp; CATS

- Plumbing and electrical
work
(Free Estimates)

6-17 ·lfc

AND SERVICE

R8!11 Estate Genaral

116.95

- Concrete work

10-8-tlc

Serving this .areo
with PoweSeal seal
coating and striping
and making of
Asphalt &amp; Concrete.

HEAVY WGI IRD lATHS

- Rooting and gutter work

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL · SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

16141

WE ARE YOUR SALES

degrooo Eut
4 chains;
thanoo North 50 dogrooo
Eart. 3 Ctoolno; thence Eait 2
chains to • gumtrM; thenot
North 8 chains to a corner
and center Jine of seid Section 18; thence Wool 1
chain; thence NOrth 15 . I
Chains; thanca North 2 . 2
chalno to tho Cherry Run
Road: thence North with tho
State Rood to E. P. Allen's
Southoall corner; · lllenoo
Welt on said Allen's south
lint about 4 .5 choinoto tho
place of beginning. contain ing 44 acres. · mora or lass.
Said Parcel 8 baing I he 1ama
pramiau u conweyed by
Harlay H. Haning ond Eva L.
Honing. his wife, to P""rl
Robinson and Martha Ro·
binoon by deed, September
16,1924. otrocordVolume
128. Pogo 23. uid Meigs
Coonty Oood Records.
· Reference Deeds: Volume
254, Page 1025, and Volume 213, Page 309, Mof11o
County Dood Records.
Said
premi111 .-e IPpraioed at $9,986.00 ond
mull be IOid for not loll
lhon Ofll· holf I'!:. I of ooid oppreised v1lue. The t•mt·ot
ulo and poymont of tho
purch11e money ere: onethird 11 1 31 cuh oo hand on
dale of sele. the rem~~inilg
two-thirds 1213) to be paid
no later lhon two (2) weoka
from Ute of sale.
Dona. H. Raymond,
Administrator of the Eetate
of Marthe Robinson.
deceestd.
40804 State Route 884
Albany, Ohio 46710
1717. 14. 21 . 3tc

ae

links;

chenoa

T~e S1lela Ot FerJ1Iyl

- Addone end remodeling

992-3410

MIDWEST
SEAL &amp; STRIPE

SYIACUSE, OIIICI

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Contor. lll JocUon Plko. GoU~

Georg• CreeM Rd. Cel 814-

Public Notice

Public Notice

YOUNG'S

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

Nurting anlatMI uperi•C8d
111d for 1rtlnlng only. No ptlcMt
ctlll, eppty ~~ Plntc:r•t Cart

446-0294.

PHONE
992-2156
Or Writt OaiHy Stnlilltl
Dept.

Public Notice

Public Notice

July 18, 1986.
The Board of EduCition
reaaN.BI the right to accept
or reject ony and all bida.
Jane Fry, Treuurar
Meigs Local School District
621 S . Third Avo .
Middleport, Ohio 46780
161 30: (7) 7. 14. 3tc

BasketWeave opens exhibition,
:_workshops at Athens Dairy Barn

YIJIYl I AW-UM

Compltlo Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of oil Typos

•SYlVANIA

The tho&gt;atre and restaurant offer
Public Notice
a package for only $19.!Xl per
person. The price includes a
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
pre-selected diMer menu. tax,
Tho Boord of tho Meigs
gratuity and the theatre ticket loco! School District dooiroo
adnnlsslon.
10 receive leafed bido for tho
Tickets are available for $8 for following :
1. School Accident Insuradults, $7 for sentor citizens and
ance
l
children (12 or under) Monday
2. Fleet Insurance , ' ,
through Friday evenings and Satur·
3. Gasoline and Oil Pro·
day at 5 p.m. WednPSday and ducts
4 . Broad ond 8oioory Pro·
Thursday 1\latinees are $7 fof ducts
adults an d Sli for senior citizens.
5 . MHk ond Dairy ProduCII
Group ratE'S are available for 2ll or
6. Tir11 and Tubas
In order to be lionoldored.
more people lor all perfonnances
all 111led bids shell be reexcept Saturday at 8 p.m.
in the Tr.. sur•' s OfCall (614 ) 373-0033 or for Informa- ceived
lice, 821 S. Third Avenue,
tion, write to P.O. Box 572, Middleport, Ohio, on or bellora 12:00 o'clock noon on
Marietta, OH 45750.

and perfonn ·sacred ordinances, aeeonlfnl to a
spokeswoman. Pictured are Karen Peden, Darla and
Monica Prall, Letha Thome, Enna Brewer, Frances
Taylor, Jessie Sayre, ~ce Stover, Reva Sines,
Wendy Dyck and Judy Mounts.

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Onlltitd
Ill Court St. POIMIOJ. ()4110 .5769

Public Notice

I..OC)AJ., WCJ~:NVISirTEMPLE- Women from
·' 1be aturdl of
Christ of Latter-Day Saints
(Monnon) In Gallla, illaaon and Meigs Counties
Willed the churdl'stemple In Washington, D.C. The
~ temple Is lo provide spectallnstrudlon lo rnemberN

EUGENE LONG

Help Wanted

11

Business Services

Burkitt, working In East ·Atr.lca, . cannotdlgestwhlletheterm "eniD&gt;
Anderson noted. Burkitt obServed , fiber"·indicated what remains alter
that digestive tract all.inenll! 'Vel'e fiber-has been chemically treala:l
rare In Africans win a tea diet d 'lO outslde·our bodies. Because messpercent ·to 90 percent hlgh;tlber urtng · trehnlques ·have oot been
grains. Later, Burkitt studied the peifected, It slnuld be ooted that
relationships between fiber and
WhUe fiber Is -'necessary !Dr
disease 'In western countries. His
genera) .good health, It soould be
findings confinned his theory that
ooted that too much, tlo roon, can
those. Individuals on k&gt;w·flber diets caU&amp;e unpleasant problem'l such as
developed a higher Incidence of flatulence and abdominal pain.
digestive tract ailments, Anderson Therefore, fiber-rich foods slnuld
sald.
be added to the diet slowly and
Amette L. Anderson, R.D., dletl· gradually, Anderson cautioned.
Uan at PleaSant Valley Hospital
Whole grains - especially In
states that ri'ilst Americans lmow their unprocessed states - are rich
little about Dber and its Importance in Dber. Whole wheat, rolled oats
In the dally diet.
.,brQwri rice, and wckwheat groa...;
Simply stated, fiber - or rough- . contain the highest amounts ci
age - Is the part ci foods that · fiber.
cannot be broken down In our
The best vegetable sources of
digestive tracts. Fiber romes In fiber inciu!l&gt; com, peas, yam;,
many forms Including rellulose, asparagus, celery, broccoli, brussel
hemicellulose, lignlns, gums and sprouts, cabba~e. caullflower, letrelatedsubstancesrtplants,aswe!l tuce, and the skins of white
as the tough coMeclivetlssuelound potatoes. Fruits high in fiber are:
In meats.
pears, apples, peaches, blueberries
The term "dietary fiber" lnqt· and blackberries. Nuts are also
catE'S ail the fiber that our bodies good fiber :llurces.

The Daily Sentinel

The

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

CUSTOM GARAGE BUILDING

J&amp;L INSULATION
PH. 992·2772 '

TuM. IAM·IPM. 11h mU• pan

K,_- C... High 1-1 on

Yord Solo July 141 II, MondO¥

a Tu•dey. 8 AM til~ lr{JIPeon'a
on Ro11 HIM. ltooto I wtllto IV

trJinilg progriiM, .,.. nc.....,

for I -"fuM • - only. Paid

Uttlo K,.- Rood . MeDidt w)th otond, dlo,.., girlo Dif. .ld.noa. Watah tor sllnt. Lots ·thlng. Jr. lll•l-girioollo7
niot tMn ctotMI. indudlng I I , Lt¥1 J-1 IIIlo I sllmo. ~
btlnd name jHne, el10 ta.t.y

-tts. Cil
· Man.
............
or TU..bono!·
lfter

~-mile.

La Oil co,.. any hM opening

FH EE [ STIMAf ES

Carport Salt Juty 14· 15 Mon·

lOAM 114-44a-3117 .

Full ~ tlme houlallelper ·
botoyoittor n '"" homil. Proret-

A-

matuN roolu~ ,. ,
llr0for214yr. oll. f l - •

olonoll. -

-Ired. haln
1Ith.
ClOy ldtool-. Col814-21817t3. -~

Two famtv INti Yord loto

2011\i: ,... Eutem Ava. lun.
thru Tuo. lun lllrl 1 :oo. 111&gt;v
ltem1, home lnt•rhlr. new
• -· D - t from lilly..,,

.......pt.Pfeiiiiin'f--- -a. VIcinity "...

-oK-- "'"
~

•••••••-u••••••••••••••-••-••-• •f

.,.

Yord loll. It

Aoloin,

JW, 14 IIIII II, e,oo Ill l.·KW•
cloth•. 10yt,

�..

.. .
!'Aonday, July 14, 1986

•

Pega 8-The Daily Sentinel
31

POINIIoy-Middlaport, Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

Home1 for Sale

54

•omodol•

Olootlo Hflllo tMico. plootlc
culvon~ mo1o1 culvorto. RON
EVANS ENTERP~ISES, Jou·
IOn, Oh. 114·281·111130.

II

a..,ecuM. new comp.... kltoh•
ond loundry, olr - o d .
l... olot. 114-192·13U.

w-

.......
I. DollnQuonl1u - " "·
fhpasrn:!anL Cd 105-U?·

1000 Ext. H·91DI lor _ . , .
·-llo1.

Lower ·lovol. Rllltlc Hll. Syroc:uH. 3 bedroom. IMvt kitchen.
larg•IIYingroorn. eh'. cond .• dilh

Old coli or wood 1110.,. pip•
indud.d •10. Torc:ft gage aatn• newer und t1 &amp;0. Trl·atate

3 l1r11o bodroonw, 1'AI both, XL
room, XL ~ltchon. utility
roc"' g•ovo. A......gh Add~lon

441·01 04 .. 114·445· 7321 .

8239.

1·1f

"Qne .

thin

b

t

g 8 00
te
mmu you l00k at

bedroom home on 1 •ern.

Hunloro por..loo In Ch.,... tl2.000. c•• 814-9864392
- - · - -- - - 2
• rocm houoo ond both wllh 11&gt;
ecfft, Atlntersectlonol143end
7 . tum llf1:. tirtt grMn hou...
Coli 814·192·7453.

•

know what it is!"

beth. utility roam.

more informetkm cell 614-992-

5204.
Home for 1111 b';' owner. 3
1 Y,

baths. price reduced. Arbuckle.
304-588-9148 .
A framt hOu... 2 bedroama,
Southtide, W. Ve. JO.t-875·

1166.

you

4917.

a

875·3431 .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

3 bdr, one beth. ltrte T.V. rm
with FP. large yard on At. 35.

APARTMENTS. mobil• hornet.
hou .... Pt.PIIMintlndGIIIIpo·

1360·mc. Reg roqulrod.

llo. 814·441·8221 .

2 bedroom fumilhld hou11 in
Middleport . Cell 814-992·
6304.
2 bedroom Dupl• houM Plr·
tialty furnished . low utllh: .... In
Pomeroy. Call diVa. IU-982·
2381 or 814-992·2501 ..,.,.
inga.

Houu for rent in Middl~n . 3
bedroom. c.rport, compl•t•
ctrpet. t260 month plus Hp5 room and b.th houH tor rent in
Pomeroy. C•ll 114·992· 5413
•"• 6:00.
outbuild·
HouM whh 17
ingt. Depot St. Rutlend. *271.

814· 742· 31108 .

fumilhld 2 room cottat• for
lintte penon. t&amp;5.00 wtlk,
utilhi11 pekl. phon• 304·175-

3t00 .. 175·5109.

APARTMENT FOR RENT · Now
accepting applicMton• forrentll
epart:mentl in Mt10n Ap11 U·
mfted. Two bWroom epta el
e199.00 .,.. month. Rental
r•t• mey be high., depll'lding
on income. Housing will be
tviHibll to MCh applicant reo•rdl•• of their r•c•. color.
rel~lon. ... or nllurel or~ln ..
lnter•ted -lictlnlt ehould CIH
304-nl-5011 01' contact D•
nlat Stflib or Wttt• Justice at
the fltllin oHiot. 1171 Brice
Road , Alynoldaburg, Otlio

43011 .. coll614·813· 4614.

.

·

42

_____

Uaed Home Sale. 1500 down,
t11i0 per month. IMurana
included. We have 9 10 " '' at
the.. pric:•. Deliver~ in Ohio It
No extra chiN'gel ElaN Home
Cantua . Chillic:otht ·
Ponsmouth- Circtwlllt. Call 1800· 82&amp;-0752 for info.
1978 Menlton 14x70 reduced a
11 ,000. Must •"· &amp;14· 388-

9650 .

1 2a:83 Vtndale, good cond. Ctll

814·441· 9211 .
1972 Actldemy houte tr~iler
12•85 with 1 4x12 tip out,
completely furnilhed. 111eept

Mobile Homes
for Rent

eleccric. partly furnithed, CA.
underpinning. 8x1 Odedc, uldng

08,200. Coll614·245·9647.

1980 liberty 14154, 2 bedroom. unfurnished, vinyl under·
pinning included. Mu1t 1111. Ctll

MOBILE HOMES MOVED: in·
turld, rNaOnable rat... Ctll

304-578· 2336
1989 Buddy 12x85 with 1974
two room add · l · room.

18,300.00. 30•·882·3786.

114·266 ·

DP Wlighb cut Iron 242 lb1. &amp;
Seer~ bench 1180. C1ll 814 -

0761.

Aoon tor rent. d.y. week .
448-9&amp;80. Aenus tow es euo

8828.

W•tem show IIddie, bridle,
coller &amp; hahtr. other
NddiM, nylon hahert, bridlel,
llddll p.cl1, bl.,kets. trunk.
pony mare. C1ll 614-446· 2222
8 fl. white fibergl•s truck
topplf. Alto 8xB ft . camp.,.wning wfth atorage beg. Both
excellent condition. Ctll 614·

982·62n.

Summ1r Hot Sale! Fl11hing
Furnished room t1 115 . Utiltti• lrTOW tign 82891 Ughtld, non·
pd. 919 2nd Gollipollo. Shore 1rrow "1259! NonUghtad t2291
bath. Single mal1. Call 81 4· Free latter~l Few left, See
looalty . 1-800-423 ·0183. anv ·
441·4411.
tim1.
bed, mttnu81 1125. 2
bedroom mobile homo. awning.

Ho~q»it•l

Goukta water pu~ . Bllence·
f'ow , Old F11hion Wit Of dry
cooler ch11t type freeztr. 14 ft.
tlumlnum Stlf Craft Bolt. 2
motors. 814-992-2818 .

614·"6 · 2430 or 114-441·

0608 .

COUNTRY MOBILE Hom1 P•k.
Route 33, North of Pomeray.

L1'9elot1 . Calll14-992 -7479.
2 bdr. trtiler Wllh•·drv-r,
married working couple. nondrinker, 5 minut• from town or
Holnrs. Ret a Oep. Trah •
Wlter peid. Call814-446-4013.

1 2.&amp;0. 2bdr .. Clortc Chlj)ll Rd.
245·5223.

614·949·2234 .
2 bedroom mobil• home, 'Ia mil•
Jerricho Ad . Ctll 1fter 5:00.
30•·&amp;75·1483.
2 bedroom tflii.,Aihton Upland

Road. t150 .00 month plus
utilitieJ. 304-87&amp;-4088 .
3 bedroom furnithed uailll' with
front porch. newly remodeled,
depo1it requ ired. 304· 876·

3693.

diYS·

t&amp;OO 00. 304·675·6871 .

Buain••man tr1neflftd to Gallipolis. Needs 3 bdr,. home. le••
pret~rtd . C•ll Bill Hell work
448·9540 Df' Holid.y Inn 448·
0090 room 213,
Nice houM Or mobile hom• in
country. With 1 or more ICfft.
Pref1rably A1cine or Portltnd
.,.. or will consld1r othlf
location in Meigs County. Call

614·949·2643 .
Wlnt to rent houtt or mobile
home, 2 bedroom, pref•r coun·
try lltting. 304-675-7288.

Me r r. !l n n lltse

44

Apartment
for Rant

51
2 bdr. utiliti• pertitlty turn.,
1175 mo. C1ll 304·875-5104
or 304-1!176-7926 .
Furnished 1p1 . 2 bdr t175.
, 31 'IJ 4th Gellipolia. Wtttr Pd.
Call 11 4 ·«1·4418 1ft11' 8pm.
Older coupln 2 bdr ., utihl•
Plrt;ly p11d t 160 mo ., Ctll
304-67&amp;·8104 or 304·875·

6386 .. 304·676· 7921.
House • tpllrtment tor lingl•.

876 -5388 or 304·176-7921.
Furnished 2 bdr. •pt. utYiti•
partlaity paid . Cali 304·175·

6104 or 675·5388 or 304 ·175·
792e.

82V, •er• fMm. 1 Yt ltory houu.
bam • outbuildings. hookup f&lt;W
trliler. MPtic tank, dMP well.
Toblcco b... . Coli . Some
timber. •II min•al riljlhtt in·
eluded. Clll814·441·n03.

2 bclr, furnished ept . niW'Iy
redecor1t1d, nice loc1tion,
Hults only , no pets. Call 614·

446·2404.

142 acr• 3 bdr. house. bam, 2
pondl, will ull all or p1n. Call

F1.1rn . apt .. 4 rooms &amp;. b1th.
upatlitJ, 1 or 2 tldultt, 11curity
deposit • r.ter~nce. Cell 114-

114· 245 ·9248 .

446·0444.

34 A. Farm. Rt. 1 leon. Ma..

OHOf. 1·90•· stl·642g,

1 snd 2 bch. 1pt1. fDf'r.,t . Betic
rent for 1 bdr. 1171. B•ic rent
ror 2 bdr. t212 . Al1o t200 IIC.
36 Lots &amp; Acreage
dep. req. Ctoae to F oodltnd end
Spring Vallay Plua . J1clrl10n
Est1te Aplflments. 814-446·
Bulldlng ail: .. 3 to 17 aer• 3· 3997 . Equal Housing
mil" w•t of HMC . Call 814· Opportunity .

448· 8221 .

Furni1hed lptrtmsnt , tdults

only . Colll14·446·9523.

Porttfbroolrl Sub· 'A •crelot. Call

11·· 441·8626 .
1 to 5 ecrn. pertitlly wooded
lott. Tupper Pllint and Chntltf,
weter and approved road to 1ach
tot . ReMOnllbty priced, will
finance. 10 percent down. Catl

614·981-3194.
31 ~ter• for sale. Hor.. CIVI,
Racln•. Fr• g•. 814-841·
81~ · 117·3470.

t178 mo. t100 dopoolt, yord,

petkJ, Call aft1r lpm 114-812·
IIH.

1 bWroom apt . k'l Pomtro,..
Co..,.otoly ........... ~ilcllon
fum-. AI now Nil • 114112·1218 or 114-882·2314.

L- UtliMiooi Fully lnoulmd' 3 rocm lumloh.. op1, t110 por
month. Utlfftl• partlaN¥ fur·
nllhod. No-· Coll814·141·

to--·

...,.,-.
- - tlftlllg
· · 2room,
bdi. 2213.
homo
with forlllli

Nlco olftolonoy op1, ldotl for
lOlly or gM~Ioma
22111'. Mount v - Aw..
- t , _ , Col 114·H2·

llf'll
cetlll&amp;leJ
porchwtm
"'" v-d
- fnMI
....
·
....... -Will
lilt •
lllluot •• 10
....,,.... t:IIO month. Cal

"'oritint

*_...·

.

Wuhert, dry.,., rlfriu•ators.
rang11. Skaggs Appli1nc11.
Upp• Atv1r Rd. bltid1 Stone
Cr•t Mo..l. 614·448-7318.

fill.

1 nfte?# i t"f'' • - ,

2

c)

cao•.

_ip._t, 304·H6-3503.

57

VaiiiiY Furniture. new &amp; uud .
large section of qutlity furniture. 1216 E11tern Ave .,
GtUipolia.
For 1111 good Ulld color floot
madel TV ' a. C111 114· 441·

1148.

Kitchen cebineu """ good
gondttkJn, 1110 ION butd'ltr
b6ocll count• top. Call 814 ·

4441·1278.

114-317·0172.

ecrMn wtth ho1n wood oe·
binl't. Rwmott control with bull
In ,....,_.. 3 Y"· old. boll-

..,, candhlon. t1200 . Coli
I1HI5·433S.

- - u... FumiUiro. Gcod

o...,.

uo• fumiUiro.
810
I or coM to&lt; -tmonl.
304-876·1413 or 111· 1410.

quollly

Like -

Fl•otool llflnd, rod •

.,._.velvet eofa • ahW for l;al1.

304-171·1121.

54 MIIC. Mlrchlndlte
Collllhon'o u ... Tiro lllop, o..,
I .000 - · -12. 13, 14, II,
11, '11.5. I mMot Cllt ~t. 211.
Coiii14·211·UII.

882· 3200.
1878 Tr.ns Am, thlfP. mutt

t2,300 .00 . 304· 882·

1111,

ftD

•newer, c ..

Bl•utlful a 'fi' old Standard bred
mere, 1irt fOrmer Stet• Chern·
pion 1110 Quarter hor11 brood·

more. 304·418·1117.
STEER STUFFERS on oolo 11
your m1rkating diller until

Piano ex . cond. 1600. b11toff1r.

Augult 11. Now telcing ord••·

Colle14·441·6260.

Col fur dotollo. YAUGER FARM

Electric port•ble pleno . Rolend · _s;U;P:P~LY;':30::;4·;17:;;1~·20:;:71:.==
Plus70 . 211rgefloortpelkers, 1 -.

·n

Corvttte L82 for Nla,

'71 Flet Spider conv1rtibl1.
304-175-2032 .
1981 Camaro Z28, 14,000
miln, dark rid, tuned port

'100.00. Phono 304·882·
2062 .

Hay

piano with beginnen
music l••ons, 8100.00. 304·

StriW

for 1111. Cell 814· 4.41·

1970 Chevrolet 1 ton wrKker.
1965 Chevrolet plc*up best
offer. cau 114·441·8201 or

Bundy flute, axe con d. only used
3 monthl, 304-571· 2028 .

6515 .

E1r com for 11le. Call 114· 245·

· 44_1_·8_1_1_3_.':•..- - - 1 1_1_4_

Upr~ht

1642 .

773 ·6376 .

Iundy clerinet. 1t1nd, u-.c~ 2
month1, t300; 3 ~peed bicycle,

&amp;

Good mixed t.y on the wqon,

78 Chov. PU t450. Col 814·
448· 1847.

h~ty,

by lha

Coli 114·-4053.

UO. Phono 304·e78· 1989.

58

c.nt.,...., ••·

t2,489. John 't Auto Sal11,
Buii'Villl Ad .• Gallipoli1, OH.

20 1cr• standing
b1le Of !1111'81.

t1.00. 30~·67&amp;· 5579 .

Fruit
Vegetables

1968 Chevy lh&gt;ngoodbody. 4
ipd. tran1, 8 cyl .• nMda work.

t200. Colll1 4·281·6850.

rr~ n s pnr l.llllln

McCau1l1nd Farm and Garden •
Cabbage 4 h•ld• 11 .00, Sweet
Corn t1 .&amp;0 do1, Htlf nmner
bunt, tomttoll. US At. 35 S ,
15 mil ... Southalda. W. Vt.

1877 t-10 YJton pick-up truck.

305 V8 ongino. Autc .. PS. Pl.
good tirM, Clp.

t796 . WiH

nogocloto prlco. 114· 742·2334
or 114·992·5320.

71

Autoa for Sale

'75 F600 2 ton. 5 oplld, 2

Blackbll'ri•t tor 1111, 16 .00

aplld, 11 It flatbed. goodcond,

gollon, 304·676·1608.

304·171-23n.

1988 Plymouth Ouater, 1977
C adilltc coup de ville, 1977
GMC '1.1 iln pic:kup. Pickup

59 For ~ale or Trade

comp•. Col 114· 441·1552.

Vans

&amp; 4 W.O.

1880 Chevy ven uc, c.ond. dual
lir • h11t. Crull•. tltt. 8
Pil-ger, t&amp;,HI. Coli 814·
379-2341 no Sunday:a.

3 ton control A C. tr8detoraboat
l!o molo•. Coli 114· 379·2240.

Chevy Nove. 4 door.

Cheep. 304·175·3225.

1971 flbergl111 Nov• 327· 325

1974 Dcdgo Romchlfll• FWD
liking 1960. Coli 814·266·
5809.

HP chrc . . onglno. M·22. 4 opd.

Commodore 64 Computer 1nd
dlslrl drive, ph.lt extr11. 1250.
304·875·7224 weninga.

F&lt;trlll

trent. Ctll 114·992·8841 .

Supplti! S

1in Ok11 Cuti111 luprem•

&amp; I IVI!S IIlr: k

t450. Coli 814·441·31 U .
1982 Plymouth Horlzoo 4 opd ..
olr. Allll.fM. wire rlml. t2 .299.

61

Farm Equipment

John'tAutos . . .. lulevmt Rd.,

GoHipollo. Oh.

CROSS. SONS

1913 ChryslerLeBeron 2 d,., •lr,
eN II•. new tir ... 31,000 miltl,
axe. cond., ee,IOO. C•ll 1ft1r

U.S. 35 Wnt. Jack10n. Ohio.

614· 280·5451 .

Bulkllng MateriJIS
Block, brlclrl, ......,., pip•. win·
dOWt. lintela. etc. Cleude Win ·
tert. Rio Grtnda, 0 . C1ll 614 ·

245·5121 .
Building mtterial1, cement .
bklclrllallailll. yard or dellvtry.
O•lllpolll Btodt Co., 123'12 Pin1
$1. , Golllpollo, Ohio Coli e14.

44e·2783.

M1111y F.-gueon, NW~ Hol1nd.
Bush Hog SaiM. &amp;.....,ice. 0\ltr
40 used trectort 1o choose from
a. DOfT11tite ltn• of new II used
equip nwnt. Largnt •ltctton in

S .E. Ohio .

5 :30 114·441· 3031 .
1975 Mercury Zephyr. gcod
cond. Caiii14-2B8-1448 eft•
5PM .

JIM ' S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SR 35 W. Golllpolio.
Ohio. Coli 81 4·441· 9777. ovo.
614· 448 -3692 . Up front friC ·
tort with w•"anty ov1r 75 ustd
tractor~, 1000 tooll .
Utility bldg. SPL: 30'x40 ' ~e8'
with 15 'x8' slider &amp; 3' '"" ·
door . S6,265 erected . Iron
Hor11 Bldga. 814· 332·97415
collect.
Late model JD beler t995 . 1501
Ford mowing miChine. llkt neW
1395. AC rak• 1395 . 8 ton
wagon running !iJIIfl t378.
New Idea manure spreader

t3&amp;0. Coll614· 286·8522.
HI C tflctor with cultiYttors,
dille. plowt, mowing machin1,
belly mower 1995. C1U 814·

286·6622 .

CLOSEOUT'S
SURPLUS
BUY BACK 'S
1 . New utvag1 1teel &lt;Dor
blanks, nick• 1nd ICrltch• t1 6
10 125 ...
2 . Th•melplin an thermal break
aluminum windows •everaltizes
t49.9&amp; to t19.96 .
3 . 8' ihuninum Pltfo doors Mt
1188.88 weith ecrHn.
4.. 0 ctogen led tltn..,
windows t49.96.
IS . 1&amp; 1111 pine fNnd'l doota B
grad11 189.95 .
I . 4a:8~t 'l• Muonhe undtr laym.,t t29.91S .. .. 4•4•'1• 11 .00

ul••

7 . 4K8,.)AI toung groove waffle
board e•ttrior gluld B ••· 95 .
8 . 4~tl• '.4 Toung groov• ply-

whh 2 bondlll ug.98 .

13. Pr.t\ung interior doors 11
sizll end flnllhft t21.18.
14. Prlhung ..... pentl doors all

1979 LTD II AC , PS,' PB. 4 do,
ueo. Coli 814·441· 3013.
1870 Chevrottt. Auto. air, no
Nil,

V·l . 1872 Chovy

lw•

4•4. 1971 Oldl lttrflrl, auto.

V·l . Coll814·211· 1414.
1977 C1mMV,

310 · tngint.

Seely • ln-r good. Now llroo.
t2000 CoM 814·371·2380 .

Le•• Turbo
AC. outo. 1883

1881 Chrvaler

1.000 mil•.
Dodgo Omnl 4
614·379· 2721

*" 4 _,d. C'"

55 Flnllkd. 400 on1ino, 4ip.
l•t offtf', ShlfP .., C1H 014·

Wanted one for~gt blow.- for
tillage. C11\ Jey 814· 258·8818
1fttr 6PM .
Round bela of good. mixed hay;
113 11ch. Good. used Ford
•actor IBN Model) Call 014·

.46· 3992 .
NM Hollend 4&amp;7, 7ft h.ybWtl,

good cond, u.zeo.oo. 304·
273· 4215 .

62

Wanted to· Buy

bl~ctk

Interior. I spd., am ropf,

low mlloogo. tiiOO Coli 814·
44f·7514 oltorllpm.

441·7313
1178 F•h'mont 4 cyl., 4 IPd.,

Pll-gor, t5,8U. Coli 114·

1871 Doduo von 1100. Coli
114· 441·0035 .,... 5.
1977 CJ .5Joop218CU ongln~
6 cylndotr, 3 .,d. on floor. grill
~rd wtth wench a 10ft top.
New htedtfl iuat lnst•ll•. Ctll
WOO~nlghll

814 · 441·1173
only.

1970 Ford Van. ,.built engln•.
eacllltnt tDr cultomlzk'lg. 304·

675·1059.

74

Motorcycles

1 910 70 oorloo 3 whool•.

Now buying lhell com or ••
corn . Cell forl1 ... t quotes. AIY8t'
City F1rm Suppty, 114·441-

2988 .

83

1910 KIK Kowoold 171 t250 .
CoR 11 4·440, 31 12.
1983 Hcndo CB· 1100. 1.200

2 rtdlng hoflll ••c .. lent with

~ldl .

Coli 114-378·2120.

HorN. tr...... 2 hoi'M dMutl
wllh drlllinaroom. 11ft'""

till . 1187 Codlloc Eldorodo
1111. Colll1 4·448·0548 .
1811 Honde CB710 custom.
low mitt~, ••c. cond . C1ll

114·317·0317.
1"3 Hcndo zoocc 3 whooiO&lt;.
Coiii14·379·279S.
1171 Horloy Dovldocn FLH. Coli
114·441·11331 otter 5:00, 114·
448·7557.

A-

.... ...... ...~ ....... Col
114·281·M22 .
I yr. old Thorogh-

20. 2f"Ji:3J" Mlift'IU 11-' 10' Mift tiL ' 4·H profecl II lhtwn.
'doopolnalgndotll ... .
, 100. Coil 114······
21. llllnlooo como. oifta
Ul.98 8 grldo.
I yoor old Rog. groy quon.
22. 4 po. b'M ond br111 both .II'"" gold in g. kid IMolla, - . . ,
Ml U3.H oo. 3 ond up JayJontiO. c,lll14·•1·1101 ·
f11.98.
23. I gol.' olu......,mflv• mobile
lood
Molal
holton R., homo roof cooling t22 ....
grodo.R
......
J_IIolloo'_
P.nn'1 Wtrthou•. W.n.ton. ·lngelloflii.H..._ ..... D.,. ·
Ohio. I "' •• • doyo. ' Col . r;h ••7 ..... .... 11··- ·

~

.1 _'¢ 1 '

'fh

at tr zn ·

c.....

c - c-.

It'
Ttwd IL tt MIIWIIIllrt.

it'N
Clio¥, 4 - ·IooH03,
Coprlco:
.,
.. ....._.4ti.OO.
Polriih Avo. , _ - · ·
104-171-1271.

·a

a.w

CIIJtntty . . . 001111,
MOtor
-·
,.,
,.,
.1&lt;1:,- .ulll
-AM..M Dill lite.
104-1711-:117:1 J:iO. 11 :,1111
h t:i unit r a ,_ '

tit........_

:f!M·,

ALLEYOOP

Ext1rior a intlf'ior I'IUcco. PI•·
t.- a pl•t• repefrw. Low rat•.

$0 YOU "THINK KOOGIE
AND MELB-"' SKIMMED

OfF PART OF THE TAK

Coiii14·2U·1182.

COLl-ECTION'!'

UH·HUH ... TH'

aUT PART,
MORI!'N ~IKELYI

Stlnl..,. St..nlf" 2 room mln·
imum 120 P• room. 0111•

lllloigo· Vinton Count I•. 1·100·
325·51 36.

J'a HolM lmproYiment, •
Vinyl lktlng.. overheng, storm '
doon a win down. guttlf't. Call ~

J •

Evergrten1. mulch. grtY... _, •
soli, flr_.oad. tree a ltump ·
removal, ch1in linll fancu.1
blociUI. Coli Don Wougl1 814· '

440·91148.

.

RON ' S Tlltvillon Service.
HooM call on RCA. Quuer,

EEK&amp;MEEK

_.,.. ....

'

CU,(Ql[)(~~

GE . Spoclollng In Zonhh. Col ·
304· 578·2398 o• 814· 441·
2464.

'lOIClC. VJASTb.'...

Fetty Tree Trimming. nump

removtl. CaN 304-175-1331 .

RINGLES ' S SERVICE. up•

ri.,..Cid ctrpenttr, elactridll'l,
m110n, peintw, rvofing (IncludIng hot tar application) 304-

171·2018 or 511·7311.
St1rk1 T•• end Lewn Service.
lend•c•plnt. 304-17&amp;-2010.
Rot1ry or cable tool drilling.
Mo1t wellt completed tam1day.
Pump Nln 1nd tervlc:e. 304·

895·3802

82

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
'THESE ARE THE.GOLDE:N
DAYS CF 6WMMER 'THAT

SO FAR THIS~.
ALL I'VE~lOL..OOK

WE'LL LCXll&lt; BACK OJ
WHEN WE GWN LJP.

BACK ON ...

CARTER 'S PWMBINO
ANDHEAnNG
Ccw . Fourth end Pin•
GaUipola, Ohk)

Phone 114·44f·3188 .. 614·
446·4477
'

83

Excavating

Oood-1 Eacevltfng. baln'MrltL
toot~r~, drtv.waya, HPfic tanka. lendseeping . Cell enytimt 114441·4137. J.,.... l. oa...taon.
Jr. own• .
J .A.A. Canatruction Co.• Au·

Uond, Ohio. 114·742·2803.

B~tem.,tt. Footera, Concr1t1
worlc. Baclrlho•' t , Doa:• tnd
Ditcher. Dump trucks, and ·
watt r · o•• - uwer - 111ctrical
linet Chtrtl• H1tfleld Olllfltor.

SHHH !! PAW's
TAl&lt; IN' A LITTLE

NAP RIGHT NOW.
PARSON

1977 Htr1ey Hog, electrtlcglid•.
lui · - · 304·175 ·4018.
79 Honde Hawk .00. ••tre nice.

11n Hondo G-Ina. 1. .1ng,

1173 c.r-o. A·1 -dillon.
· -· C.. 114·M2·M21 .

Roger• leatm1nt
Weterprooting.

miiH. dune bu•Y· mui taai

•-!If

1171 C)tdl... blo. GoOd body.
Gcod ..,, tiOO. Col
114-·3· 7.110 1:00.

ON TV.

1·114· 237·0488. doy or nigl&lt;l.

niW'I PurchMid April 1981.

lllluot ooll. Col 114·441·4584
eft• 1:00 prn.

nn.oo. 304-•2·3371 .

HOW CAN

Hge, chrome. Lote of unn.

304-1711-93H,

nooo.

I FIGURE

Coal, Urneatona. 9"1111, ate.
DlliYartd 1 ton end up. Jim
Lanhw. 304· 071 · 1247 or 871-

76

Vtlour Int. ZI . OOO mll11 .

Livaatock

15TO
LIFt=.

'·'"... .......'·. ...

Unconditional Nfetime tutrentee. LoCIII referencee fumilhtd .
frM Mtlmatll. Call coiled

1 9H Hcnd TRX · 'Ill 4· whool
ATV. 11111 undll' warntnty, like

Motor ICDOt.... ' 14 Hond1 ENtl.
PC oond, lotdld. 3,000 mil•.

171CJII.·E-•Icandhlon. Col
114·••·43:11.

_

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

exceUtnt condition. C•ll 114-

1162·1nd.v-P. . .cor. 221. T·
Top, loaded. t1100. Contoct
Butcll RtiUIIItOI 114·982·7211.

tt••

/

992·2428 .

9,000 mHol. 01,000. 304·575·
7224 .. 614· 441-7331.

Turbo Z I .d. AC, AM-Filii
c..-t11. Pl. P8, tntld
wtndowa whh , _ window
louwr. Afld _.. aHvtr trim rid

""-

TH~E=

Home
Improvements

5152 .

IIOCd can d....10. C•lll14·211·
1487.

·
1171 Chovy M.ollbu EconGnicol
aor. rodlol
tlr•. vory tOot - •· 11 .550.
Set or 011 Oery F. HyMH
114·H2-11311.

81

C1ll Emi• ClfPtntery, remodel·
ing, room Mdhiona, piinting.
blo~. !roo .......... 304-575·

For Slit: 1114 Dodt• Daytona

WFIP-' coloni1l trim 7 pc. t1 00,
18. Prlmtd tNrd~Vp wood trim

.,.~~4;·m;, r• , ttn ·..

814· 251·6228 or 814·265·
1417.

PTO . Coii614·441·H93.

olllltii.H.
11. Wood ' prctlnlohod vinyl

f1 .00 7 pc,
17, 11-lua bri~ ....... ti .OO
por bo•. 12 bo• tiO.OO.
11. 32"a71" ~ thoomol •-·
porod glooo .... t71 ... oow
f21.H.
11. llloolt feet blOwn treit•
olllrtlna 21"al0" t3.M oo.

79 Ford O•an•e. nice, AC, wire
hubcopo, AM·FM ,.. lo. CoM

1982 Mozdo RX· 7 ollvor whh

14.49 .

11 . 4KixV• uhleg• penlling
t2.98 .
12. I' redwood 11ein plank!: tab ..

83 C..,ero B«Hnlttl AC, taka
OVtf peym ..U , C81 114· 248·
5024 "'814·245-11860.

T·8 Int . dozer with wtndl
t3, 600. 246 DT K1bot1 trector
with front lolder &amp; post driver
dieJel24 HP600hr1. Forddl•el
k)aderbuclrlat• bllld•lcyt.wlth

wood lt10.115 .

9 . 4JCIK 1h 4 ply ptywoocl B
ti.H .
10. 4x8l'l• Iavan plywood 8

15NT ALL..

you CAN
P..,l.fo WATt:l'f IT"
NO,

114·446-8073.

73

304·875·4157"' 175·7565.

Building Supplies

PLAYING GOLF

Serm r.s

,.
1982 Mudollj)d .. olr. AM·FM.

175·6843.

55

304·175·3275.

5721 .

379 -2341 no Sundl'(l.

H 0 Model tr1in set l1yout.
l -Jhlpfld, IIYifll anginll, Clfl,
mount•int, bJnntll, acenery , 4
feet till, t350. 304·175·5399 .

1971 Chwroltt pic:h·up wilh
c.amper. T.V.• electric end g..
heal. MH·contained, A-1 condi·
tlon . 1 mile 1111 of Ch•te~ on

Grain

I ft. sliding glatt door . 304·

twning,

614·982· 15388.

1878 Okt• St•rFireGT. t1 .200.
or bllt offltf, 304-875-8118.

814· 448·3970 .

8'~t20 '

1973 18 ft . 1r'IVII ,,...... Self
oontain•t 11ttry good condition.
11450. SNorcall G~rtF . Hy...

Camping ttliltf, like nM, 23
foot, *7,&amp;00. 2903 P1rri1h
Ave. . Point PltiUI'It, phone

UKC reg. Enuli•h Coonhounds.
8 waeks old pups. E xc. breeding.

304' 676·3000.

nlco, 18,000. Coli 814·440·
4697.

1973 Volklwtgll'l nNds work

1880 ChiiYY van uc. cond, dual
eir &amp; hut. Cruilt. tilt, 8

Used Dura-Bilt

21 fl. c1 ... A executive fultv
equipped 30,000 mil•. very

St. RT. 248 . •

84

1244.

Summer "HOT" SALE! Fluhing
arrow lign t288! Lighted, non •rrow 1269! Nonlightld t2291
Frft 1111111"11 few left. See
locslly . 1(800}423 · 0163 ,
anytim1.

5536.

injoclion. 110.100. 304·175·
3427.

omoll opook•. 2 microphoneo.
8 14·992 · 7851 or 614·992·

&amp;

1980 Coachnwn 23'1.1 ft. trtvel
tr1il~r •c· con d. C•lll1 4·2&amp;1-

2350.

1980 Mtrcurv Marquis ••·
cond .• one own•. Loedld. Cell

Z.ax 330011 copier, 304·875·

00.

Whirlpool h11vy duty Wllhlr a
drytf woc.to graen *200. C•H

304-837· 2211.
evenings.

Musical
I nstrumants

1982 FordE1oort, SW. AC, ntw
rtdill lira, very ciiM, whhl,
n.eso.oo .. boot oHor, 304-

304-175· 1822 .

lAying hono, 10 -.to ooch. Col

3766

1 971

BUILDERS

Sot. 814·441· 1698. 827 3•d.
Ave. Gllllpolis, OH .

451·1012.

AKC Bilek lab, temelt, 4
months old, worfMCI, full lhot
Hrill, 160.00. c •• 304· 882·

For .. le porch swings. C1ll

County AppHtncl, Inc. Good
1.1Hd epplitnCII 1nd TV 1111.
Open lAM lo IPM . Mon thru

For Solo: lila lc•- T.V. 351ndl

Pomtroy 2 bdr. N1ylor1 Run.

wtlflnorm Mndowt. utre nloe,

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

1 bedroom ept. tor rent. B•tic
rMt ttana t2ta . a month that
inch.ldn 1M utllltiM. Depoatt
required of UOO. Con .. ct VII·
lage M1nor Apt. Middleport.

304·571· 2331 or 304·571·
2217.

Hou1aa for Rlnt

Olive St.. Oelllpolit. New • u..t
wood·coalatovee. 8 pc wood LR
tuit1 t399 , bunk beds 1199,
antron reclinart til , new •
uMd bedroom IUit•. rengn,
wringer w11hera. a tho ... New
INingroom tuitet t189 -t588,
tempi. ttlo buying coal a wood
ltOVtl. Clll 114-441· 3158 '

Krolhl• lfftP coucta. ponlble
IIWing machtne. lingle Holtv·
wood btd, bath nnlty Milt.
W•m Mork'lg gn hMtlr. C111

Opponunity.

R1.111 ,II\

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 62

2 bdr. compl1tlly furn ., 1lletec ..
418 Second Av1. Adulta only
1226 per month ptus 11curity
dopooij I rol. Coli 114·441·
2231 or 814·441·2681 .

Ashton building kits wtth public
w1t.,, mobMe honw Pl'mfttld,

Must 1111 beceu11 of iltn•s eM
my Canerl11,
with el

304· n3·6878.

Chin1, binocullr, powerBootter
7.5 Swiss military rifle with hlftd
Hou~ehold Goods · rttolder .and thetis. Oil p1int
pictura on vetvet. 3l4·876·
6118.

114.441·l112 .

114·182· n87 . E-1 Houolng

20 gueg• Remington Pump
Modll 870. Goodc:ondhion. Call

Air condition, 3 ton, central unit
mobiltpiCk for mobile home

to Rent

Arabian Hor... puNbr-' Art·
blon otud oorvlco. Spociol dlo·
countlto youth oroups. A. • J .
Artbilnl, Leon. W. V1. 304-

15000. 614·H2-6288 .

Treiltr ltpac... Sand Hill Aolld
conveni.,t to achoola, ltOr• 1nd
ho1plt1\. City sewer IVIilllble.
lnqulreRoselee. lCM-875-4800
between 9 :00 end 4 :00 weak

47 Wanted

old Btr~ corrylng fool. tiOO. CoN
814·742·2050.

AKC regia1ered Colli• puppin,
ell colora . Champion ,.,... , .
Huntington 731· 91 82.

undarpinnint. cement lttpJ.
Urge lot Addtson·Bulawill• Rd.

Ooublt Regiat•-' TannMIM
Walking Horn M.,.. Si&amp;Yen y1er

Alrconditionar-21 .600 BTU . E"·
cond, 1300. Ctll 814·441-

month.

Space for Rant

Black AKC registered Gtr!Tlln
Shepard pupa. Jerry's Run
Aold, Appl• Grove. w. Va. Look
for the algu. Shott and
wormed, *1 60.00.

441·3951 .

4063.

Upp1r River Ad. Will eccept 2
ctllldren only, l"'f. &amp; dep. Ctll

Coli 304·175·6104 or 304.
Farms for Sale

•uo. Coli

814·H2·5204.

304· n3· 5873.
1988 Clayton Dr•am House
Mobile Home. Built-in micro·
wave, TV , 1tereo, tnd dis·
hw11hw. Mufl tt41. Call 814·
7·2-2939.

Coli fur
1550.

l•rge privata lot t41 month.
Cent••rv erH. Call 814 -441·

r-..

1974 14x70 Guerdon mobile
honw on '" acre klt, rural wa1er.
C all attar 9 :00PM 114-387-

7172. 118,800.

l11tball ctrda 7,600·8.000
cards. All in good 1hap1 dlling
back from life 60'1 '41' til now.

8558 .

2 bedrooms . t176 per month
p4us t100 deposit. You pay
utilitill. Adults onty, no patJ.

1 972 Fltmingo 12xlt5 mobile
home. 3 bdr.. 1 'II bath, totll

M111ic Chef Ill. range t100 . DP
gym pocll 1500 t200 . Hordly
u.... CoN 814· 448·9678.

• St. Rt. 7. Colll14·441·4265.

For ule
12•51S.
hookup.
District.

1979 14x70 all tlec. 2 bdf. on
1 1h tcr". r~nge. retrtg. waaher
&amp; dryer includ.d, Ill e.rp.ted,
116.950. Call 114-388-8801 .

Klnt woodbum•l200. Oewelt
rtdiel 1rm IIW t200, Call
114·378·2112 .

2 bdr. turn. or unfurn. c:onv•
nient location. Upper AN..- Ad .•
ell utllhln Plid o:ctpt eltctric.
SIC:. dip.
Cell 114·441·

C1ll 814-441·3897 or 114·

1100 dop. Colll14-448·31&amp;2.

for rent Sleeping Rooms 1nd
Ught house keeping rooms. P1rk
Ctntrll Hotel. CaU 114-448·

48

"""'· 1&amp;.500. Coli 114·258·
1449.
or rent 1973 Freedom
2 bdr., wether drylf
air cond., Kyger Cr..._
t4 , 700. 8185 rent and

cutting torch. Young duck•.

br•••

month. Gtli• Hotel. Cell 114·

3 Mdroom. 3 batha, fumishedor
p1rtty furnished, tchool bua end
mail by door. chlldr.,. no Pill.

3tM·468· 1887.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT 36.
;,_..::..
PHONE 114· 441·7274.

tl-4-2. .·1110.

AUTOGI&lt;:APH EIOOK,
CAPTAIN EAfloYl

1979 Mercury

Col 114·440·4410.

act"•.

Modem 3 btdroom home, ••·
IUrM l'h 1om whh amall ~n
p..,m.,t. Mey conalder rent
with option. 304· 875· 3030 Of

2170"'

I WAt; J0j;T WONPER:IWG
IF 'IOV WOU~P t;IGio.l MY

Hotpolnt tlec. rlngl, kltch.,
colllnoto, oink • woll collinoto.
- 0 liken-.

'""""'"""
ch_, frMIIf .

for Rant

..it. 61 4· H2· 7853.

4 bedroom, 2'11 bllth, bridl, 5
level atrn. 1 milt from Maton
County Ftlr Oroundt toward
river. aher 5:00 cal 304-273·

•

I't1

the

~;:;::;::::::::::::lr.;;=;:::~:::~==i
4 b• 1llda diiiYery hty reke.
Houses for Rant
44 Apartment
o•ygon • ocootylono •ogulotc"

ttiNng went to move aouth. For

41

•
lt,

I 41

Garage, •ir condition, central
hel1, good condition. ANIOn for

33

CAPTAIN EASY
Pats for Sale

Ma~quleQDOdNMingconditlon.

r.,, wooden pl•y center. Morning Star .-... Cal 814·949·
2503 .

room.

Coli 814·44 · 1492.

BoOUiy Shop oqulpmonl. Dining
room Ht. oth• fumiture. C•l
814·441·0108.

Colll14·317·7217.

~ltdlon . Lort~o vord with child-

family

"'"'tor

New 12 lnda Crertman wood
l1the, btnah, sat Freud woodtuming tool1, t500. Call 814·

cIt,.,""''

in Tuppen Plak'la. C.U 114-117-

bedroom,

il]) Nowa

Ill G,..n

Blo~. Rl. 33. N- Hovon. W.
Vo. 304·882-2222 .

· 58

7397.

B01111 and
Motora for Slila

••li

11'AI ft. Gl•tron ltoh
mcdol
with 175 HP Evwnudo, 12·24
lrolllna _,.,, low ...,go - h
fin •• oo. COftd. t7,100. CoN
114·39'1··01 .

,. . , -r
21 foot -

Mer~:·

HP
.II.uaoo
-·•till•·
..

W1tteraon '• Water Heuling.
r1110nlbl1 fltll, immtdllll
2.000 gellon dellvlfY, cla1trna.
poo\1, Will, etc . CIH 304·&amp;78·

2819.

87

Upholatery
\

boll, 80

wltltCUI ...... t1H8. Col doy

114·•2·2311 ond
112.-2801.

nltht 114-

111111 .... ,. ....., b,.t.

TRIITATE
UPHOLIT!RV SHOP
1183 s... Avo.. Oolipoio.
114· 448· 71U or 114· 44411133.

·'

n

R • lllll'um""re "-t"""li!'tl.
It, R1. 7, c,.... City, Oh ..~"'!
114·218·1470, ooll Evo. 114"""""
Nor. -111M~
-top
onddu1y
• - .·.A•1
1 441 ·3 431 . Old a now
mit lilt of CMMer Oft lt.Rt.
241.
.

hln- mo..,, •

HP, 01.

.,.......,..,

11'N.'111111AITAR boo1. jQI

V•l. 11~..... AM·AI ot.IIU&amp;

· -.............. _.Tilt
-

·-

1114-711-11:17.

8 four
Rearrange letters of the
scrambled WOtds be·

6:00 llffi.(l)li)CIJIIDJIIl iHJ

18. &amp;a4h111 Ground H1wg
tir•. chrome modul•r
Ya
ton Ford to,MMr or 1tptrate.

llodl. brk*. moner end me·
tonry tupplitl. Mountein Stat•

WOlD
lAM I

EVENING

12

8

S© 1\.ciil}.'\- ~ t.trss

TIIAUAILY
PUIILII
----...;_~ ldltod by ClAY I. POllAN

low to form four simple words.

7/14/86

with IUpplitl *210 used VlfY

living

!i rooms.

~ID't)

Ctl~ TIM~ ... ~~

little. Coiii14-371 · 27DI.

otter 5:30 114-182-3402.

coli, olt, hot wtter htet. niW'

NowStooiSoyPonolo. Chov. PIJ.
... ••. doorl. bod - · toM
gtt•. peldlpan••. c.bcorn•e.
.. ~.. , . . .. grll, grill ohol.
In IIIG~. Col For
Pr::J • .-volloblllty. C • M
~: ~~~· St. Rt. 140, 81.4-

UO AC· DC welding mochlno

wuh•. carp•ed. l1tgt CIW'80'·
Price reduced. 114·.,2·7478,

3bedroomhome. 1&amp;tcrtl,larg•

by

IM A~NTIMM'AL., ~1-'{-yt CAll '711LL ~ lltiAT ~lli.D IIOf,

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Television
Viewing

bu......

982·2219.

grcup 1100. Coli 304·937·
28S1 or 304-4418 · 1997.

lob. Homo h• flroploco. wocd.

Wright

tnd\M by 10 Inch ... 18.00 per
II~ clollver... BHI Slock. 614·

,

B1r11oln prlcod 120,000. CoN
114· 178·2113.

4

RAILROAD nES: 8'AI fl.

loblo tzll. 810 ot 258

NewT11temen1 dllign tmbroid·
II'Y QUilt. h.,dmtd1 by churc:ft

lroomh&lt;lu11. 1.2-.Doublo
c•glrlfl•· LocMedonAOMHfll.

CARLYL!

25311 . Coii304·125·U11.

So. Fourth Ave., Mkldleport.

Oh.

KIT

BftRN LOSER ;

Auto Peru
&amp; Acceaaorias

78

Enquire tint. Champion Mttala,
lox 5002, Cherf•ton, Wtl

For Nle:: Harl..,in Aomenoe
bcolla 270 to. ne. wiMto

11om 11 . 1u

Building Suppliea

Now Qolvonlz.. COI'NIII!til!! oul· .
von pipe U.3S ft .. up. Alllloo.
Oollvory. Wo buy • ool good
ulld 20" ltool goo plpo, hoovy.

Pl•tic citttm llete 1ppruvtd,

Quollly ho- nowly
aholc. locOtlaft an C....o Rd.

a--..,_

56

MiiC. Marchandiaa

Monday, July 14, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

IN~

FU'T\.JRE?

ARE TWO BEE STINGS,
A CHIPPED 'TWTH ANDA
CASE 0::: FOI90&lt; IW.

Acres
(!) Mazda SportoLook
(]) Down to Earth
Ell CZ) Star Trek
(J) Reading Rainbow (CCI
[!) Bodywa1ch !CCI
IHl One Dey at a Time
6 :30 8 ffi 1J1J NBC News .
Ill The Rifleman
(!) Major Leagua Base·
ball's Greetaot Hits: 1983
All S1or Game
(]) Gomer Pyle, USMC
® llJ Cil ABC News
(J) Doctor Who
® tiiHJ CBS News
[!) Body Electric
IHl Welcome Back. Kotter
1
7:00 D ffi PM Magozine
ill Man from U.N.C.L.E
(!) SportsCantar
(]) Groen Acres
II) Enterteinman1 Tonigh1
Christopher Reeve tells
why he decided to don lhe
cape once again in the upco ming film, " Superman
IV".
Ell CD Hogan's Heroes
li) 1Il Jeopardy
([)Nightly Business Report
®News
(j]) MacNeii·Lahrar Newsh·
our
llliHI Divorce Court
IHl Privalo Benjamin
@ Wheel of Fortune
7:30 D ffi (1) New Nawlywed
Gama
(!) Baoaball Classic From
Washing1on, DC . (2 hrs .,
30 min .)
(]) Sanford end Son
Ell C!l Taxi
Iii Cil ®Wheel of Fortune
([) Butterflies
0) ()}) Entertainment To.
night ET goes on location
to Valencia, CA to talk to
Nick Nolte about his upcoming mov1e. "Extreme
Prejudice" .
@ Alice
@ Jeopardy
8 :00 D ffi (j]) Valerio The fa.
mily is divided when they
decide whether or not to
put their old and sickly dog
to sleep . (R) In Slereo
IJ) Father Murphy
ffi Goodwill Games Tape
delayed coverage of men's
and women's tennis and
yachting ; and men's gymnastics and volleyball. (4
hrs .)
l]) li) 1IJ MOVIE : 'The Doll·
maker' ICC) (RI .
Ell CD MOVIE: 'The Pink
Panther'
([) MacNoii·Lehrer Newsh·
our
® Ill !ill Scarecrow and
Mra . King A scientist
whose security clearance
was approved by Amanda
is revealed to be a,Aussian
spy . (60 min.j IRJ.
I
li]) River Journeyo: The
Congo wi1h Michael Wood
ICC) Historian Michael
Wood travels on a river
ferry, cargo boat and a co nvened whaler to the point
where the lualaba and
Lowa rivers meet. (60 min .}
IRI.
@ MOVIE: 'The Maltose
Falcon'
8:30 0 (2J il]) Amazing Slories
After an elderly man dies,
he seems to continue to
stay at hom e with h is un ·
suspect ing wife (R) In
Stereo
9:00 0 (I) (j]) Celebrity Mack
Crawford becomes a TV
and film star. Kleber Cantrell lan ds a writing job
with LIFE Magazine and
T J . luther is transformed
into a powerful faith
healer 12 hrs.l Part 2 of 3.
(AI
IJ) 700 Club
([l @ American Masters:
Charlie Chaplin (CCI The
early film years of Charlie
Chaplm are profiled. lea·
turing vintage movie outlakes. ISO min.I Part 1 of 3 .
® Cll IHl Kate &amp; Allie
When Charles and Claire
cannot go on an allexpense-paid trip to Paris.
Charles gives the tickets to
Allie and J ennie. (AI
9:30 ® Ill IHl Newhart ICC)
Joanna end Stephanie be·
come close friends wh ile
Di ck instru cts George to
build a bookcase accord·
mg to his "how-to' book in ·
struc1ions . {R) .
10:00 (!) Baseboll: ESPN's All·
Star Monday From Hous·
ton, TX. (90 min .) live.
Ell CZ) Soap
([) Round1&amp;blo 160 min .l
® Cll iHI Cagney &amp; Lacey
Cagney
is temporarily
teamed with an ambitious
young woman with a per·
sonal reason tor solving a
rape case. (60 min .) (AI
1
(I]) News
•

CROOK &amp; CHASE cover
Country coa11 10
coao~ tonight 11
10:00PM.
NASHVILLE Ad•

10: I 5 {H) Nows
10:30 Ill Taking Slock
lill CZ) INN Nows
(I]) Thla Old Houu

, 1:oo 11 mCIJ a CIJ ® Cll lill

IJIJ New1
Ill Bill Coaby Show
Ill l1l Lovo Connecllon

(() SCTV
(I]) lnternlllonal TV: Tho
Marketing of Marvoret
(CCI The Conservative par·
ty's ' marketing ' of ·Mar·
garet Thl!eher for 1he Brl·
tiah ; general election is
explored. (60 min.l

ll)Soa-

m·P

.

11:30 G
iJIJ "ronlght Show
· Gues1 hott Gerry ShandUng · welcomes Carria
Flaher and David Stalnbtrl. (80 min.) In S1ereo .
Ill urna Allen
,.
(J)~ntar

a

. .

(Iii WICII.. ttl CiNfftM!I
,.
.
~

.~ .,I;.;. R I I t-ll .'..
,_E=-,E;.;-X..;,.T

:-.!

The fighler hi11hB canvas hard.
"Don't g81 up until elghl," yelled
his trainer. Still dazed, the boxer
asked, "Wha1 - Is ,. now?"

· L.-L~~-III_BlE_CL6_K.JIL-.JI
O Complele
lhe chuckle quoled
.
.
.
.
.
.
by f1lling in the missing words

I

e
8

vou de ... elop from

slep No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBlE U:TTERS
GET ANSWER

ro

1•

1.

1. 1.

YESTERDAY'S SCRAM·IITS ANSWERS
Fl8fca - Polyp - Shawl - Offset - PROPHET
Mother lo her very glum son: "If you keep on saying things
are going to be bad, you have a good chance of becoming

a PROPHET."

BRIDGE
James Jacoby
Sizing it u;;p-----;:::::=====-----.
:O:J"

from a few angles

' · lt·ll

'PA963

t K63
+AB 75

By James Jacoby

It is usually better if the no·trump WEST
EAST
opener becomes declarer. That way, • Q 10 4 2
+B 73
the opponents will probably not see as 'P8
"Q J 2
tAQ1084
many of the high cards . Today 's hand tJB
+6 2
.
is an exception. After West's lead-di· +KQ 1094
reeling double of South's Stayman
SOUTH
two-club bid, North passed on the off+KJH
chance that South might have a few
'PK 10 75l
clubs and decide to redouble and play
• 92
it there. But South jumped to three I
+J 3
hearts (a slight overbid) and was
Vulnerable Both
raised to game . If North were declarer
Dealer: West
in a heart contract , a club would be
led, and when West eventually won a
We1t
Norlb Eas1
Soulb
club trick , he would have an obvious
Pass
I NT
Pass
2+
diamond play. But with South declarObi
Pass Pass
Pass
Pass
er, West had a lecJtimate worry that
Pass
Pass
switching to diamonds might sacrifice
a trick. For example, South might
Opening lead: K
have started with Q-IO·x in diamonds.
Declarer won the club ace, played
A· K ol spades, ruffed a spade and exit·
ed with a club. West won and, not seeing the n~ to lead a diamond, played might have opened the bidding if he
a third high club. East played a low di· held the diamond ace as , ·ell as the
amond as declarer ruffed. East was club king . He played A· K of hearts,
right not to signal encouragement, ruffed his last spade and rufled back
since, knowing his partner had no to his hand with dummy's last club. He
more entries, he hoped declarer might now played his last trump. East had to
foolishly lead up to dummy's king. But win and give up the game-gomg trick
South had rigbtly surmised that West to dummy 's diamond king.

3'

4'

+

~VJ•r
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I C31y Grant's
facial
feature

5 Foot lever

6 Pitch into

&amp;Asylum

11 Remain
s uspended

8 Hubbub

4 Mmh

7 Hoosier wit

121tallan
river

9 Turkish
tlUe

Joselito'

10 Such (Fr.)
Yeote·rd•oy'o Anowe r 1.11
17 Tiny
ZO Bavarian 27 Boxing
38 Engender
river
great
39Wager
21- code 28 Aykroyd 40 Dutch
22 High note 29 Tangy
commune
23 Feminists' 31 Auto
41 "Edward
group
8S Cadence
My - "

Missile

24 French

13 Foolish
UCom~pt

UGuided

18 Reverence
18 Wrath
19 lnhabiLant
24 Viva
2~

2 Misanthrope

3 Dodge

34 Hacienda 42 Tokyo's
river
brick
old
26 Mountain 35 Large
name
pas11
s poon
44 Quarrel

site

26 Group
or unit

29 Custard
apple

30 Buck
heroine
31 Mongrel
32 Football
player

34 Sacerdotal
garh

37 Work unil

38 - es
Salaam
39 Assail
43 Wear a way
4~

Lyric
poem

46 Highborn
47 Gigli
or Schipa

48 Coat fabric
DOWN

I Mexican
rood

DAILY CRYPrOQUOO'ES- Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A 1s used
lhe three L's, X for lhe two O's, etc. Single letters,
AJIOIItrophes, lhe length and fonnation of the words are all
, hlnla. iach day lhe code letters are differen1.
for

7·14

CKYPTOQUOTES

GUQ
ZQXHQN

N GE P Q
TRG

T H M ll

BQEWG U

RJCQ

HW
GN

!,J S V.JX

U H U (,J M L

GUXL

JI'GRU

.I

.I
t

II II 1.1

HUM I./~1./WMW

WMVJEM

O JI XX

Ynterdaf'o Cl')'ptoqaote : INSTINCT IS A('T!ON
TAKEN IN PURSUANCE OF A PURPOSE . Ill 'T WITH
OUT CONSCIOUS PERCEPI'ION OF WHAT Tllf: P UR
POSE IS. - VAN HARTMANN

Ill (!j One Step Beyond

• Cil ABC Nowo Nlghlllna

(() In 1he Tradition
(!)Allee
Ill (}Z Megnum, P.t. Mag·
num 11 ttunntd when he
oeeo 1n old frltnd he pr•
vlously hod thought dead.
(70 min .) (R).
1.1(

@ Trapper John, M.D.

12:00

·m J ack Bonny

(!; Major League Bosebal l's Greotest Hils: The
1976 World Series 160
min .1 IR)
IIJ Goodwill Gamao Tape
delayed covorege of ma~··
baa~elball. vo lleyball

.,

,•

.

�•
hga 10-Tha Deily Senlii81

·- --Local Briefs:-Candidaie wins premium rebate
A generalllabWty rate Increase for the city of Athens was qlpOSed
by Athens Law Director Garry E. Hurter, candidate for state
represEntative, resultlng In a $43,410 pnmlum reduction.
Hunter said the rebate wUI reduce the lll86 premium Ill $119,538.
Last year, the city paid ooly $21,152.
AltOOugb the rebate Is good ~rws, Hunter said the reduced
premium st!U appears too high, based m the city's claim history.
When Athens agreed earlier this year to Jl&lt;IY the ballooned pm!lwn,
Hunter wrote a letter to the Insurance company asking It to justify
the premium.
Hunter saki the company Indicated It was unwilling to adjust the
rate. Only after Hunter flied a oomplalnt with the Ohio Department
of Insurance did Home'Insuranre grant til&gt; rebate, he said.
While Insurance companies have been hard hit by court decisions
concerning sovereign Immunity and by declining Interest rates,
Hunter said drastic rate Increases need to be justified In relation to a
political subdivision's loss experience. Hunter said Athens' success
In getting the rebate shows that cities, counties and school distrtcls
should not just sit back and accept large rate Increases.

Syracuse man suffers injury
Robert Taylor, 21, Syracuse, was taken to Holzer Medical Center
and !rea ted and released for contusions he suffered In an accident oo
Gallla County Road 3 In Cheshire Township Saturday.
Taylor was a passenger In a car, driven by Jai'DES D. Wright, 17,
Eureka Star Route, which went off the road, OVI'rturned and struck
some mailboxes and a house, according to the state highway patrol's
accident report.
Wright, who received only minor lnjurtes and was not treated, was
cited by the patrol for driving while under the lnOuence andfallureto
control the motor vehicle he was driving. The vehicle was heavUy
damaged.

Couples file for marriage
Filing for marrtage in Meigs County Probate Coort are Thomas
Lawrence KeUy Jr., 23, Middleport, and Angela Marie Pooler, 18,
Pomeroy, and Robert A. Venoy Jr.. 26, Hartford, W.Va .. and Usa
Ann Long, 21, Route 1, Ll'tart.

Money action filed in court
An action for money and another for dissolution of a marriage
bave been filed In the Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
The Home National Bank, Racine, has filed an action for money
due on a promissory note against Larry SeDers and Agnes Sellers,
PorUand.
Filing for a dissoution of their marriage were SheDa J . Baltic,
RacinE', and Mickey Baltic, Ravenswood. W.Va.
In other action of the court, thE' marriages rJ. Sandra Susan Roberts
and Richard Lee Roberts. and Anna Vlrgene HOI and Homer
Stephen Hill have been dissolved. An entry dismissing an Qrder to
appear has been filed in thecaseofLI'ta Fetty against Wallace Fetty,
who had been ordered to appear In court to answer charges of
contempt of court for failure to comply with a chDd support erder. An
entry noting that Fetty had entered into a wage withholding
agreement was also filed.
Ordered to appear In court on Thursday at 9 a.m. on a charge rJ.
contempt of court for failure to comply with a child support order
was WOllam W. Harris, Middleport. The action was brought by the State of North Carolina and Mildred Harris.
Also filed In the court was an entry ordering a sheriffs sale of real
estate owned by Richard D. Blessing and Stella Blessing. It was
noted that bankruptcy proceedings have been completed and that
the judgment of the City Loan and Savings Co., plaintiff, has been
satisfied.

Meigs EMS answers 11 calls
Eleven calls were answered by units rJ. the Meigs County
EmergPncy Medical Service over the weekend.
At 1:15 a.m Saturday. the Pomeroy unit went to Plum Street for
Thelma Grueser who was taken to the Holzer Medical Center; at 6:28
a.m. the Tuppers Plains unit took Clara Conroy to Veterans
Memortal Hospital; at 7:20 a.m. the FI:Jmeroy unit went to the
Pomeroy Health Care Center for Millard Van Meter who was taken .
to Holzer Medical CentPr.
At 2: 19 p.m. the Middleport unit went to the Stonewood
Apartments for Mary Gilkey who was treated but not transported; at
3: 25 p.m. Kenneth Rakhold was taken from Reedsville to St. Joseph
Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.; at 6:11p.m. the Tuwers Plains unit
was called to an automobile accident on Ohio 7 where Michael
Workman was treated but not transported.
At 7:52p.m. the Rutland unit went to the RuUandbaWieldfor Keith
Reynolds who was taken to the Holzer Medical Center; and at 10:28
p.m. the Middleport unit went to the MIQ:lleport PoUce Department
for Dennis Hart. treated rut not transported.
On Suroay at 12:01 a.m. Juanita Houcher was taken !rom Ohio 9!1
to Holzer by tbe Pomeroy unit; at 1:41 a.m. the Middleport unit went
to Park Street for Klm Armstrong who was taken to Holzer; at 3: 16
p.m. the Rutland unit went to the Rutland baD park i&gt;r Michael
Neas&lt;' who was taken to Veterans, and at 9:32p.m. the Pomeroy unit
transportl'd Virginia Conrey to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Revival services set in Rutland
Revival services will be held at the Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church beginning Wednesday and continuing throogh Sunday. A
different minister will speak each night and all proceeds wUI go to
"Bucks for Bobbie."
On Friday and Saturday the youth wlll have a rummage and bake
sale on the church lot. also with all proceeds to go to "Bucks for
Bobble."

Multimedia buys cable systems
GREENVILLE, S.C. - Multimedia Cablevlslon has announced
an agreemmt to purchase four cable systems In Kansas from
Karlan Communications, Inc., of New York.
The systems include Great Bend. Larned, Hoisington and
LaCrosse. Kan .. with a total subscriber count of 9,250.
Multimedia Cablevislon, a division ot Multimedia, Inc., currenUy
serves 278,ml basic subscribers and '!10,001 pay subscribers.
Headquartered in Wichita, Kan., Multimedia Cablevlslon Is ooe of
the top 30 Multiple Systems Operators in ~ natkm, with fNer 100
cable franchises In Kansas, Oklahoma, !Uinols and North Carolina.

Area woman named coordinator
GALLIPOLIS - A recent graduate of Rio Grande College will
coordinate a newly established county-wide crime ,r.revention
program through federal and local funds received by the Gallla
County prosecutor's office In AprU.
Mary Lynne Ruff wUl work closely with Sherlfl James
Montgomery and Prosecutor Joseph Cain's fiflce. Ruff wUI be
assisted by two staff members who wUI work with ber coordinating
various crime prevention programs.
The grant enabling the esta bllshment of the program is curren Uy
being lmplememted through Cain's ofllce.
Crime prevention programs was Introduced In Gallla County In
1977. During a three-year period, overall reported crfllllnal activity
declined 18 percent.
· .

•
Monday. July 14. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Southern heat wave
enters s~ond week

Area deaths
Anna Hart

·\t·~

Gra!nwOod Cemetery. Friends
may caD at the funeral home from
7-9 tonight and from 24 and7-9p.m.
Thesday.

By JANICE KALMAR
Kansas and Nebraska as additional
United l'rells lnlenlatlonal
storms threatened low-lying are'dS.
The heat wave In the drought·
The searing temperatures and a
stricken South entered Its ninth day yearlong drought in the South are
today with forecasters predicting withering corn, wheat and saybean
several more days of the hot, 'sticky crops, pushing the region's belea-.
weather that has been blamed for guered farmers to the brink rJ.
three deaths and is threatening to disaster, agriculture officials said.
destroy thousands of acres of crops.
President Reagan has approved
"There's really not much break 25 soutb Alabama counties for
in sight for Georgia and South federal disaster loans because of
Carolina until the end of the week," the drought, but officials said it may
said meteorologist Pete Reynolds be too little too late.
of the National Weather Service.
"It's a disaster," said Bubba
"Georgia and South Carolina will Trotman, head of the Alabama
both have highs In the 90s to the lOOs Agricultural Stabilization and Con·
through at least Thursday."
servation Service. "The wheat crop
Columbia, S.C., reached 100 Is cut at leastlll to !Kl percent. Corn
degrees Sunday for the seventh ·is going to be very short. It's
day, breaking a record of six days already tw iSt ing in the middle of the
of l~egree or higher readings set day. It does not bok good at all. "
In 1977. Records for the day were set
In Virginia, agriculture officials
In North Carolina at Cape Hatteras. predicted the state may lose half Its
92 degrees, and at the New Hanover corn crop.
County Airport, 99 degrees.
With the hea t wave entering its
At least three deatffi In the ninth day today, officials in South
Carolinas durtng the last wpek have Carolina officials warned residents
been blamed on the heat. Georgia to be ready for water rationing, and
officials last week reported two farmers in Georgia continued to sell
deatffi from heat· related inju rtes off cattle because of drying water·
before the heat wave began and ing ponds and bare pastures.
The drought has also provided
Mlssourt officials said a St. Louis
man died rJ. heat stroke last week. ideal conditions for forest fires.
Outside of the heat-wave belt, Since July 1, at least 432 blazes have
thunderstorms rumbled today over burned 2,214 acres in South Carol·
the Rockies, Plains and New Ina, mostlY in remote areas.
"It 's physically exhausting to
England.
In New York Sunday, two fight these fires anyway, and the
chlldrE!l and four adults were weather just makes it worse," state
struck by lightning during a sudden forester Leonard Kilian said.
thunderstorm in Rockville Centre
on Long Island.
The victims were huddled under
a large tree watching a fireworks
display when lightning hit the tree ,
CLEVELAND (UPII - There
said Nassau County police spokeswere no top prize winners In
man Charles KoDer.
The most serious Injury was to a Saturday's Ohio Lotto ga me, mean6-year-old hoy who suffered cardiac ing the next drawing will carry a
arrest and was hospitalized In jackpot of at least $2.6 million, state
lottery official say.
critical condltim.
The numbers drawn were 19, 20,
Thunderstorms with winds up to
75 mph pounded Cheyenne, Wyo., 21, 33. 34 and 36.
Sales were $3.3 million. with a
and golf-ball size hail hammered
Herman and Blair, Neb. A flash jackpot was $1.3 million.
Some 291 tickets had five of the
Oood watch was issued for parts of
six numbers drawn for $859 each,
and l ,:i'i8 tickE'ts had four correct
numbers for $64 each.
The Daily Number drawn Satur·
South Central Ohio
day was 442.
~aS()Il ____________I~C~on~tm~·u=ed~rr~o~m~P~a~ge~1~'------- Mostly cloudy today, with a
chance of showers and highs in the
contest.
tary; Ellis S. Frame In, Nicholas mid !l5. Mostly cloudy tonight, with
Veterans Memorial
Republicans wrangled over hal· County, associate secretary; John a chance of showers and a low In the
toting, proxy votes and par liamen. Wooton, Raleigh County, treas· upper OOs. Partly cloudy Tuesday,
No Admissions S.1turday.
tary procedure, with each faction urer; and Bllly Burke, Gilmer, with highs In the upper !Jls.
Discharged
Saturday: Donald
jockeying for an edge.
The probability of precipitation is
parliamentarian.
Brumfield
and
Linda
Persons.
Moori' extolled his admlnlstra·
Committee members-at-large 30 percent today. 40 percent tonight
Admitted
Sunday:
Charles
Ll'mlion's ~s nearly an hour, ending are ootgolng state chairman Joe and ~percent Thesday.
ley.
Pomeroy.
his remarks with a brief endorse- Bob Goodwin, Marlo Prezioso of
Winds will he light and from the
Discharged: Maix'l Pauley.
ment ot Shaw. A third man i1 the Marion County, and Mara Watson west today and light and variablf'
Clara
Slater, and Lottie Bradford.
race, E!lgar Helskel, bowed CAll.
tonight.
of Brooke County.
"For the governor to come In and ,...-----------------------------------------------------------------00 this at the last minute troubles
mE'," Raese said of Moore'sspeech.
''I've wprked hard for this position.
I've worked harder than the
governor and harder than Mike
Shaw. "
Raese said the governor ca Ded
him late Friday and asked him to
drop out.
Because_electricity is so easy to use, people rarely think about
HaD, woo backed Raese, said ~
it. But, it's important to learn how to use electricity safely.
votes were assured but a shift
That's why we are offering you our free booklet on electrical
began to occur by Saturday, when
safety. Get one and share it with your family. It could save your
Moore's staff fanned out inside the
life, or the life of someone you love.
Marriott Hotel t&gt; buttonoole committee members.
The booklet guides you away from downed power lines, and
"It's pressure tactics," Raese
cautions against working or playing near overhead wires. It progrouSl'd. ''I'm tired of watching this
vides tips for the whole family on the careful use of household
constant .b arraglrtg of wr rElJ resm·
appliances, electrical outlets and more.
tatlves - having his keystone cops
out thl're twisting arms."
'Thke a minute and phone us for your free electrical safety bookAfterward, Moore's press secrelet. We want you to call anytime you have a question
tary, Jom Price, would oniy say,
about using eleCtricity safely.
"It was close. I'm sure the governor
Electricity ... making sure you can
thinks Mike would have worked
get
the most out of life.
better with him. "
Raese vowed to patch up any Ill
feelings within the ranks, saying,
"The most Important thing right
now Is to get united."
Some challenged the arithmetic
EUCTRJCm.__~-~
FLAIIELESS ,EFFICIENT, OEPE~
of the results, asking that baDots be
sealed: Elretion officials dl!lluallfied ohe ballot, leaving the total
number of ballots which oould have
~ cast to 129. But the results
showed Ill votes.
"I tptnk there's a lot of room to
challenge there," said Ann McCuskey, wife of state Finance and
Admlhlstrat ion Commissioner
John 'McCuskey, who held proxy
votes In the election. "I hope
whatever we do, we do quickly."
Shaffer said things were actually
niuch 'closer a day earlier.
'"I'Ill' United Mine Workers
mernll'rs whO were leaning my
may decided to commit toSaDy and
that IW8S the beginning Of a
bandWagon effect," he said.
Richardson's most recent state
job II(IIS that of chairman of the
Health Care Cost Review
Auttqrtty.
"Sally's convincing victory and tile support she received from
acrosS West VIrginia - siDws that
wr party has come together and Is
now United and ready to do ba!UE'
with the Republicans this fall and·ln
the )(ears
to come," Rockefeller
I
said.
W~lle Stowers of Lincoln Cwnty,

Anna Weyersmlller Hart, '11.
Pomeroy, died Saturday afternoon
at Veter~ Memorial Hospital.
Clifford D. Sovel
A homemaker, Mrs. Hart was
born Dec. 2: l888,1nMelgsCoonty, a
Clifford D. Savel, 65, Akron, died
daughter of ·the late JOSEph and Sunday at the·Akron City Hospital.
Kate Grueser Weyersmlller.
Mr. Sovel was born at Long
SUrviving are a son, Thomas .Bottom, a son of the late Harry and
Hart. Pomeroy; a daughter·ln·law, Mamie Kibble Hetzer Sovel. He
Cecelia Hart, . Pomeroy; three was employed by the Standard
grandchildren, Jack Hart, Pome· Slage Co., and was a member of the
roy; Lance Hart, Kenton, and HDda International Union Operators
Hart Tlracp,-Johnstown, Ohio, and Engineers.
.
a sister, Nonna Curtis, Pomeroy.
Surviving are his wife, Betty; two
Besides her parents, she was children, Debra Swinehart, Akron,
preceded in death by .a brother and . and Terry Sovel, Springdale, Pa.;
her husband, Edson Hart.
seven grandchildren; two brothers,
Graveside rites wUI be held at Hany Sove!Jr., Parma, and Garth
1:30 p.m. Thesday ·at the Bur- Sovel, Tuppers Plains; two sisters,
lingham Cemetery. Friends may Helen Bacher, Guysville, and
call at the Ewing Funeral Home Edythe Woodyard, Parkersrurg,
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today.
W.Va.; a balf brother. John Hetzer,
and a half sister, Janet Chichester,
Everett Roush
both of R.eedsvUle.
Friends may can· from 1-3 p.m.
Everett 'Roush, 85, Fourth Street, Tuesday at the Hopkins Lawver
Racine, died Saturday evening In
Funeral Home In Uniontown, Ohio,
til&gt; Intensive care unit of the Holzer where services wm be held ImmeMedical Center.
diately foDowing the calling period.
Mr. Roush was born March '!/,
1901,ln Mason County, W.Va., as9n
Ruby Russell
of the late JOSEph and Angeline
Weaver lroush. He had been
Ruby Russell died Sunday at her
employed with the Union Barge
residence
at 559 S. Second Ave ..
Lines before his retirement.
Middleport.
Arrangements are be·
Survlvlhg are four daughters,
lng
completed
at the Rawlings- ·
Dorothy •Hodge, Liberty, N.Y;
Patrtcia Faye Marcinko, R.eeds- Coats-Blower Funeral Home.
vUie; Ja,e Faye McCloud, New
Haven,\\Wa., andJudyKayeBird, State receives report
Racine; a son, James Edward
Roush, c);lumrus, and a brother.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPII - A
Eber Roush, Mason, W.Va . Also blue ribbon commission's report on
surviving' are l3 grandchildren and school finance in Ohio was to be
10 great-grandchildren.
presented today to the State Board
Besides his parents, he was of Education.
preceded ' In death by his wife,
The report makes recommenda·
Grace L. Roush. on June 25, 1985;
lions regarding equity, adequacy.
two daughters, four brothers, five accountability, and programmatic
sisters ~d a granddaughter.
aspects of school finance, a spokes·
Mr. Roush was a member of the
man for the Ohio Department of
Syracuse Church of God and the Education said.
Racine 1Fire Department. He
The report, which was tbe result
servedln theU.S.Armyduringthe of a six-month study by the
19!ls.
commission. will be used by the
Services wUl be held at 11 a.m. board to formulate recommenda·
Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
tions to the 117th Ohio General
Home with Rev. Charles Coil Assembly for Ohio's local-state
offlcliating. Burial wUI be in the funding partnership.

Vo1.36, No.49

Ohio. ·

Ohio weather

- - =-

ililii

;~:c=~~::lost':c~;

Ohio Power

Part of American Electric Power

1 Section, I 0 Pago1

15 1986

A

Zl Cemt

MuHimedlo Inc. NeWIPIPir

Hemlock Grove man dies
following plunge into river

No winner named

"I'm glad you made me listen."

rnan,j was elreted second vice
chalrplan.
Other state pfflcers elreted In·
cludljd Paul Rusen rl. Ohio Cwnty,
first ~Ice chairman; Shelby Leary
rJ. Monongalia Cwnty, associate
chati·man; LuciUe Meadows,
Fayl!lte Cwnty, n!COrdlng secre-

en tine

•

TOP - At 11: 30 p.in. Monday, the truck Which
carried Terry L. Bertrand, 37, Hemlock Grove area
resident, to his death In a muddy Ohio River, rmched

lhe ' top of the steep
over which the
vehlele bad plunged about 9: 15
near Midwest
Stee~ East Main Street, Pomeroy,.

By BOB HOEFLICH
Seritlnel Stall Writer
A pickup truck carrted a Hem·
lock Grove area man over a steep
embankment near the Midwest
Steel Co .. East Main Street, to his
death in the muddy Ohio River
Monday night.
Dead as a result of Ihe accidmt.
which occurred abou t 9:15p.m. , is
Terry L. Bertrand. 37. 37785
TownShip Road 223. near Hemlock
Grow•. His body was recoverrd
from .the vehicle, sunk in water
estimated to be 25 to 30 fpet deep. at
10:02 p.m. b)' divers from Pomeroy
and Middleport.
Rick Blaettnar, captain of the
Pomeroy Emergl'ncy Squad, reported that Mr . Bertrand was
driving alone eastbound m his tru ck
on East Main Street. when he wrnt
over the steep. approximately
20-foot emba nkment.
One witness ro the tru ck going
over the emba nkment said he
thought rhe truck at first was just
pulling off the road to park on a st rip

of land between the railroad tracks
and the street. Another witness said
that Mr. Bertrand appeared to
&lt;lump at the whff'l before going off
the road and over thl' embankment.
Coincidentally, the Syracuse
Emergency Squad truck was tra·
vellng close by when the Bertrand
vehicle. left the road. Members
were able to pinpoint the bcation
unt ll FI:Jmeroy rescue workers
arrived at the scene.
First on the scene with his boat,
was Jim Webster, a Pomeray
Emergency Squad member, who
went to the scene and was then
joined by the Pomeroy !llUad boat.
Don Stivers and David Hoffman.
certified divers from the Middle·
port squad, along with Terry
Gardner. Greg Thomas, Jay Evans
and Homer Smith Jr., were also In
the water helping with the mission.
Mason and New Haven units were
on standby.
The swimmers and divers lo·
cated Mr. Bertrand's body of Mr.
Bertrand in the vehicle and brought

It to til&gt; surface at 10:02 p.m. The
body was taken via the WellstE!'
boat to the Pomeroy levee, where
Bertrand was pronounced dead by
Meigs County Coroner Dr. James
Conde.
Dr. Conde said that there Is a
possibility that something had
happened to be driver before the
truck plunged into the Ohio River,
rut the actual cause of death Is
pending the completion ct an
autopsy. The body was taken to the
Ewing Funeral Home and then was
taken toPleasantValleyHospltalat
Point Pleasant for examination by
Mason County Ccconer Dr. John
Grubb, since the body was trehnl·
caDy within the jurisdiction ct
Mason County ofllclals.
The body was then taken to South
Charleston, W.Va., to the State
Examiners Medical Laboratory for
an autopsy.
After the recovery of the body,
divers, swtnuners and other
workers In boats began the chore rJ.
(Continued on Page 101

I

Area ·investigator files $~ million ·libel. suit against sheriff
Meigs County Sheriff Howard Frank (aces a $2
million libel suit ·which was filed Monday In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by Gary J . Wolfe and
Wolfe lnvE"stlgallons Inc., RacinE'.
Wolfe alleges in his complaint that on three
separate occasions In 1~- July 15, Nov. 2 and Nov.
15- Frank willfully, maliciously, recklessly and in
bad faith, slandered him In the presence of a number
of people, making statements that he (Wolfe) was in
the business of Illegally dealing In drugs and
Innuendoes meant to convey the thought tliat Wolfe
was undesirable. unworthy and not fit for .•·•

--!!!'P~ll!es:'.b~'

Plaintiff claims that such defam atorv statments by
Frank were and are false, and as a1direct result of the
allegedly slanderous statements; his personal and
business reputations havP wn di rmaged .
Wolfe further alleges that durtiJg the period from
July '15 to Nov. 15. 1985, FrarJjk interfered with
potential business relationships a•f his , including his
relationships with Meigs Local alnd Southern Local
School Districts.
Said interference with busil1ess relationships
allegedly included slanderous 'I statements and
inferences to the effect that Wolfe 1_.vas not qualifiC'd to

' " ,..

Middleport clmrittier · ··
.schedules block party

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Zro, the educational rrobile unit of
Sentinel Staff Writer
the Center of Science and Industry,
Contests. cralts, educational dis· and Gerald Powell's Cloggers were
plays, and musical entertainment discussed .
will highlight the annual Middleport
Teresa Kennedy is In charge rJ.
Block Party to be held on Sept. 13 oooth location and noted that she
under sponsorship of the Middle- has prepared a tetter to be sent out
port Chamber or Commerce.
to area craftsmen inviting them to'
Meeting Monday at Blower's comE' to Middleport for the block
river patio, plans were .discussed • party. Also discussed at the meet·
for the block party and committees lng was the possibility of involving
were named by Bill Blower. senior citizens through their "Yeschamber president .
teryear" program.
He reported that again this year
Again this year several fund
some of the litter problems will be raising projects wUi be carried out.
handled through the Litter Control Bob Freed, Jason ·Ingels, Sue
Office. Steve Powell, litter control Sigman and Paul Sigman were
manager, and a 4-H club will be named to handle ticket sales for a
number of prizes to re awarded
contacted ahou t cleanup work .
Activities planned include ham- during the day.
burge&gt;r and pizza eating contests,
It was decided that T-shlrts will
IDI'S(' SIDE', paper airplane flying, be sold in maroon with white
and bingo . If the stage Is completed lettering. The staff wUl wear royal
at the depot In the Dave Diles blue shirts with whitE' lettering.
Riverside Park. all of the main
Hours oft he party were discussed
entertainment will be presented and while several favored changing
there. Sev~ral instrumental and the hours from noon to 6 p.m. to
vocal groups will be invited to noon to 8 p.m. No decision was
perfonn.
madP pending approval of Middle·
The possibility of bringing in an port Village Council .
animal display from the Columbus
(Continued on page lU) •

pertorm duties' for which he contracted, the suit said.
Wolfe alleges that such statemen ts were false and
that they were made with the intention of depriving
him of business.
He alleges that Frank during the same time perkld
made slanderous statem ents to the' effect tbat the
agency of Wolfe Investiga tions Inc. was not legally
authorizC'd to pertorm investigations. The plaln!Uf
states that his agency was duly licensed in Ohio on
Feb. 4, 1984. and since that lime 'ha s provided
investigative and security services in Ohio, West
Vi rgi nia and Kentucky, employing between one and

nine Investigators or security personnel In providing
those services.
Wolfe himself demands judgment against Frank,
Individually and as sheriff of Meigs County, and
against the county as a whole, jointly andseveraUy,ln ,
the sum of $00J,ml compensatory damages and
SOOO,ml punitive damages.
Wolfe Investigations Inc. demands judgment
against the defendants, jointly and sevE'!'ally, of
$000,mlcompensatorydamagesand$500,mlpinitlve
damages; attornE'y fees and costs.
A trial by jury has been requested.

~-'1:!1~.........-----:--------===-=----__;,;;,._~~
--··---'· New

,r::-.

-_: : - •: - : : l

band

'

director
is hired

FOR
and Brian

golf
recreation
following

.

PROJECI'S - Dick Owen
c!H!halnnen for the Meigs Jaycees
presented checks lor g;25 each for
'Ojects In Middleport and Pomeroy
. 1nday's meeting of the Middleport

O!runber of Commerce. BW Voung of the recreation
committee of Pomeroy V~ CwncU,Ielt, accepted
a
from Owen, with Conde presenting a meek to
BUI mower, light, of the Dave DUes Riverside Park
Conunlttee.

checl!

William Hall ot Colunirus Is
Eastern High School's new band
director.
Meeting Friday night at the
school. the Board of Education of
the EastE'rn High School voted to
hire Hall, who for the past year has
been at Westland High School,
Columbus.
A graduate of Ohio State University with a master's degree from
Catholic University, Washington,
D.C. Hall has taught In both public
and parochial schools. For seven
years he played with the U.S. ArrriY
Band.
While at Westland, Hall's band
took thrf'e superiors In comests and
participated In state competftbn.
The ratlr\gs rJ. superior were in both
marching and conrert band. HaD's
hiring followed Interviewing of
SI'Yeral applicants the evening
before.
Valerie Rarnsbottom was employed by the board as fiag and
majorette oorps advisor. Durtn)!
the meetln~ the lnard voted to
!Continued·on Page 101

!

Middleport council eyes i1 shortage in general fund budget
By BOB HOEFLICH
Sendnel·Stall Writer
A budget for 1!W Indicating a
$72,755 general lund dE'flclt was
approved Monday night when
Middleport VUiage Council met In
regular session.
All of the other funds lnclu~ed In
the proposed budget indicated that
rreelpts will exceed the expendl·
tures. However. the detailed rudget
Indicated that the general'!und will
be short the approximate$72,001 for
l!W.
Mayor Fred Hoffman Indicated
that either harsh cuts will have to be
madE' for the year or Income wUI
have to be Increased. Either avenue
will be a problem, he said. The
budget will P,ot he sent to the oounty
budget commlsslori.
Appllcllllon reje(lted
During last r\lglit's meeting,
Mayor Hoffman al10 read a letter
from the Ohio J)i!parl(nent. of
DeveiOJII1lenl which states that the
town's aPp,UcatJon for •a coniprehenslve housing rehab~lltatJon
grant ,has been turned down. The

tive grant program plus 11 special
category applications.
The amount requested In the 82
applications totaled over $48mllllon
and the special project a pplications
requested $13 mDIIon. The depart·
ment approved 11 of the appllca!Ions with the $4.7 million allocated
and six of the top ranking special
projects.
May0r Hoffman saki that State
Rep. JolYJlll Boster Is In touch with
the department to come up with
suggestions oo how the town's
application lot such a grant can he
more ~tive next year.
~ ~ due
Mayor Hoffman also read
another !E't~r. this one from the
Ohio Department rJ. Liquor Control,
lridicatlng that llcfn~ of allllquQr
permit holders 1'1Ust be renewed on
Oct. 1 and holders · must file
ai!PIIeatlons by 1that time. Mayor
Hoffman pointed oot ':; that ·the
council can reQllest a Jiearlng on
any or all of the applications but
mu~ notify the state board of the
hearl!)g l'l'guests lJ days be!or'e

L.=:::~~=-~:==~·~

have received ci!Jmpla int calls from
citizens about ([Jars and indicated
that council shollid take a hard look
at applicants a~; d the man agement
o_f these estab~
ll• t . hments One coun ·
cllman Indica t &gt;d that he . under·
stood that so 1e action mrghl. be
underway In th~i oommunity to vote
the town dry ·I' Mayor Hoffman
suggested coun~l :il confer with Chief
of Pollee Sid \.ltiltle on the experlen·
c.es of the poiiCIJ? department with
the various est1•blishml'llts which
sale liquor.
11
Council apprd ved the changes In
town ordinance!;. as updated by a
Cle\leland !Inn.
A]iprov es request
A request tt r the Rev. Mike
Panglo to cond~ ct outdoor services
oo tl)l' vlllagE' Pl!•rklng lot on North
SecOad Avenue, •· near the "T, " was
apPfOVed and 1, council members
Indicated they ~ ave no complaints
to Panglo's reqt.llest todo·evangellsUc work on the j ~reels of the town.
Coundl apprGIIVed the 191!7 re·
quest to the ~,tO ~artment of
'))'&amp;{iJ~X~rtatloll ,r public transpor·
tatlQn llllney to ,1\lie contlntla tkln of ..
the,\MI service I! fi\ Middleport and
I

I

jl

!

... J,, I
II

Pomero~ ·. The tot.1l request is for
$45,959. which includes $:&gt;3,789 in
fPderal funds and $12.179 in state
fu nds. Counci l members Indica ted
thai tix'v have hPard nothing but
favorabie romment s on the cab
service, which is operated by Bill
Snouffer.
The June report of Mayor
Hollman showing receipts of $3,375
in fines and fees was approved.
Mayor Hoffman acknowledged donations which were given on the
communi ty's July 4th fireworks
display . A large crowd was on hand
to en joy the fireworks and thanks
were extended to everyone who
helped with tbe project especially
fire department members who set
ofl the display. The department will
take an active role next year In
hl'lping raising funds for the 1987
fireworks display and Councilmen
Bob Gilmore and Jack Satterfield
will work towards extending' the.
Ju(y 4th celebration to Include a
,
parade and program.
.
"'
Cable complalnls
Coupcll gav~ a third resdlng and
adopted ·an erdlnance providing for
drilling for oil and gas on village-

owned property near the sewage
lagoon below Middleport.
Complaints were again lodged
against Consolidated Communica·
lions Inc., which provides television
cable service for the town. Cooncil
Preskient Dewey Horton said that
council had In the beginning of the
service stressed that they did not
want any Ohio stations removed
from the servlre.
Recently, WOUB In Athens was
taken from the service. Council
members also aired complaints
against a roDingtelevislon program
schedule which appears constantly
on one channel. Mayer Hoffman
said that he bas contacted the
company asking them to namE' a
price for the cost of lines and
equipment which It has m Middleport rut he has ra:etved no reply .
Thmlal extended
Council extended thanks il Carl
Hysell, Terry Gardner and their
workers for extensive cleaning liP
and painting the fence at the junior
high football field and for other
work performed In the·town. lt was
reported that Coonty·Engineer Phil
!Wberts is working on details of

.

.

'

establishing tlx' bicycle path.
Councilman Gilmore r£llol11'11
that Feenl') -BennPtt Post 1:18,
American Legion. has commlltl'd
to build a IIE'W sn"ctur~ . a m~tlnR
and oommunlry rulldlng. at the
former roadside park on Mill
Street. A letter of thanks from L.W.
McComas was read;expresslnR his
apprrelation for the town havlnR
honored him with a plaqur at tht'
recent Jayc('(' !lQif toumamrnt at
which he was rhe guest of honor.
Pl&amp;ro118 dlrlwllld
It was rerxrted that thE' tow11's
swimming pool wDI be closed until
Friday. A circulating pump went
out d order and Is belngrewoond In'
GaUipolls, thr mayor said.
Councilman James Clatworthy
brought up tlv' pr'Oblem of (i~J'Qns
In til&gt; town and stressed that th(olf
presence Is a a health hal8rd.'
Mayer Hoffman said that he had'
beellln. twchwlthJonJacob&amp;d~

Meigs Coonty Health Department
on the matter but had been aclvllecl
by Jaoob&amp; that there Is actually no
solutk&gt;n.
A product des~ed to jll!t rid ot
(Contlnu£&lt;1 'lit Page lOt
•

..

�</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="40423">
            <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="40422">
              <text>July 14, 1986</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="725">
      <name>hart</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="275">
      <name>russell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4265">
      <name>sovel</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4156">
      <name>weyersmiller</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
