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                  <text>Pllge-8-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday. August 5, 19ri

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·. ----Local Briefs:----- Companies reach agreement with USW
Mason County fair schedule
Tonight
Market hog show ..... ..... .. ...... .. ....................................... 6 p.m.
Fair Queen oomest ......................... ......... 6:30 p.m., main stage

Fair Wamlnr; ..................... .. ......................................... 7 p.m.
Jr., open swine show ...................................................... 7 p.m.
Youth horse show .................. ..................... ................... 7 p.m.
ExDe ................ ...................................... .. .. .9 p.m., main lllage
Wednesday a.m.
Pretty baby colllesl ........................... ............................. 9 a.m.
Dairy goal mBk-out ............................... ..................... 9:00 a.m.
Gr"'"y pole climb ................................ .. ................. 10:00 a.m.
()pen sheep !Jhow ........ ~......... u .......... . .... . ....................... l] a.m.

Squads respond to 11 calls

"

Meigs County EmergPncy Medical Service reports II calls
Monday.
Pomeroy at 12:18 a.m. to Ohio 7 for Harvey Faw to Veterans
Memortal Hospital; Middleport at 5:39a.m. to Shady Cove Road for
Woodrow Engle to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 5:52
a:m. to Ohio 684 for Earl Arlx to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 7
a.m. to Meigs Mine No. 2 for Jeff Maynard to Pleasant Valley
Hospital; Syracuse at 8:23a.m. to Bashan Road for Charles Bissell to
Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 8:38a.m. to Meigs Mine No. 2·lbr
Edward Dancy to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Pomeroy at 3:09p.m. to
Mechanic Street for Steve Haning to Veterans Memortal Hospital;
Tuppers Plains at 3:29p.m. to Ohio !ill East for Lucy Barrtnger to
Pleasant Valley Hospital; Pomeroy at 4 p.m. transported Keith
Klein from an auto accident on Children's Home Road for Veterans
Memortal Hospital: Pomeroy at 6: 26 p.m. to Village Green
Aparonents for Dale Call who refused treaonenl; Pomeroy at 8:25
p.m. to the lower parking lot for Clifford Icenhower who refused
treatment.

Couples file for dissolution
James R. Reeves and Emily Sue Reeves, both of Cheshire, and
Carl L. Wolfe and Brenda S. Wolle, both of Middleport, have filed for
dlsrolutions of their marriages in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
Rosemary Werry, Pomeroy, has filed for a dlvorc&lt;.' from
Frederick Eugene Werry Sr., SyracuS&lt;'.
Granted a divorce was Michael Ray Dent from Carrie Dent.

Six charged' in Monday brawl
Six Pomeroy residents have been charged with disorderly conduct
aft er b&lt;'ing involved in a fight on the Pomeroy Parking Lot Monday
night. Pomeroy Police said.
Charged in the incident which sent one of the six to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for treatment of head injurtes are Robert D.
Icenhower, injured and taken to the hospital; Donald Icenhower,
Rhonda Phelps, Charles Whittington, two counts on disordery
conduct : Dean Whittington and Jay Whittington.
The incident occurred about 8:18p.m.
The Middleport Police Departinent and the Department of Sheriff
Howard Frank assisted with breaking up tho:' fight and making the

PfiTSBURGH (UP!) - Na · continued. USX demanded conces·
tiona! Steel Corp. and the United silns In wages and benefits from
Steelworkers ha~e signed a con· USW members.
No further negotiations were
tract containing many provisions
sought by union members picketing scheduled, said USW spokesman
Gary Hubbard.
USX Corp., the union said,
"The National Steel agreement is
Alro on Monday, three independ·
what
we're looking lor," Hubbard
enl Iron ore mining companies in
Minnerota accepted a contract said.
About 7,200 USW mem!Ers are
extension with the USW, a move
that was rejected last week by USX. covered under !he National Steel
As the job action against USX agreement at the Great Lakes,
entered Its fifth day, ah Allegheny Midwest and Granite City steel
County Common Pleas Court judge divisions.
The contract contains provisions
was expected to meet with union
and company lawyers today. The lor employment security, profit
Company wants to limit pickets at sharing and limits on contracting
its Clairton works to no moll' than au~ USW spokesman Dick Miller
five at each of the plant's gates. said.
Hubbard said the contract ext en·
USX alleged that the union refused
sion
with the iron ore companies
to allow managmenl access to L'le
"show.; that our position is not
gates.
transparent. USX could have acSome 44,&lt;XXJ USW members cepted the same thing."
nationwide are picketing the plants,
But Hubbard does oot !Elieve
including 23,&lt;XXJ who already were either labor move wtll impact the
laid off pttor to last week's work
USX work stoppage.
stoppage.
"USX has never been Interested
USX rejected a union offer July 31
in compromise," he said. "Our
for a cont ract extrnsion while talks
members are prepared for a long
work stoppage."
The last strtke by the USW was in
1959 and lasted 116 days.
The union conten&lt;is tts members
South Central Ohio
Today, mostly sunny. High in the
mid 80s. Light and variable winds. Velerans Memorial
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low in the
lower Ills. Light and variable winds.
Admissions - Clifford IcenWednesday, mostly cloudy with a hower. Shade: Robert Rinehart.
chance of showers and thunder·
Middleport; HarveyFaw, Rutland;
storms. HigH in the mid 80s. Chance
Bernice Fry, Pomeroy; Woodrow
of rain 40 percent .
Engle. Middleport: James Bennett,
Ohio Extended Forecast
Clifton, W.Va .
Thursday through Salunlay
Discharges - Eva Triplett,
Chance of showers and lhunder· Harold Jeffers, Nellie Perry, Leo
storms with highs between 8Sand 90 McMillian, Verna Saytl', George
and a low between 65 and 70.
Warner.

Ohio weather

A rea man returned to center ·

TIE UCITI. OliO LOmiiY
0 THE HEART OF IT ILL"

Federal National MortgageAsso·
elation., Chicago, Ill., has flied a
foreclosure action against Paul T.
lmhoden and Gale Imboden, bothql
Procterville, et . al., lor property in
Syracuse Village. A judgment of
$19,207.32 has been req uested In the
matter.

There wil l be a hymn sing at the
Bald Knob Church on Stiversville
Rd ., Saturday, 7:3() p.m . Dan
Hayman and Faith Trio will IE
Everyone

••llble •• llltM S.Mrl st-1

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S2.t9

Consolida led Communications
·Inc. of Point Pleasant, W.Va., will
. switch the Racine cable television
system to the Syracuse cable
system sometime in mld·August.
Racine VIllage Council discussed
the upcoming switch when tbey met
. Monday evening in regular session.
Marty Crawford, regional man·
ager of the cable company, has
reported that company representa ·
. tives will be going door to door
..i!xplainlng the change over. Ra·
: cine's basiC · rate will continue at
;111.95 for l5 channels, Including two
nfrom Columbus, instead of tbe
.present 11 channels.
Council dld vote to wrtte a letter
. to Consolidated Communications
protesting the removal of chan nel
~ :.Jl from the evening schedule.
~ According to information from
.Crawford, channel :.Jl will b&lt;' olf at 6
p.m.
It was announced that Charles
Shain will work evenings as village

1!6314

By ANDREA NEAL
WASHINGTON iUPI I - Senate
' Judiciary Committee Democrats
·.are .crutinlzing documents Justice
:wuuam Rehnquist wrote as a
· Nixon administration official to see
:If there is new evidence that could
;affect his nomination as chief
' justice.
The Democrats won the right to

Deadline Friday
for fair entries
All open class entries lor the
, , 19116 Melp County Fair must be
• . made by 4 p.m: this Friday.
Mrs. Muriel Bradford, seer..
1ary of the Meigs County Fair
Board, wOl be al the lair board
olftce on the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds, from 10 a.m. to 4
p.m. both on 'ftlursday and
Friday, this week, to oocept
· entries. The hoard wDl strictly
, adhere to the enlly deadline.
' Horse puB entries do oot have to
Ill! IUed by the Friday deadline,
however.

By JUDI HASSON

An·
' tonln Scalia. whose nomination to
;_the Supreme Court is opposed by

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21

·YoUR CHOICE Of COLORING MARKER
OR LIGHT !NO BRIGHT 8'S

1

He added the UMW will need $2.'5 mlliion a month to
strtke and Is prepared "to spend every dime in the
treasury to preserve the union."
But the vice president would not specify what
particular labor groups the UMW has talked with
about mergers or tbe forming r1 affiliations or
federations.
"We have talked with many labor organizationssome desire to come in and rome desire us to join
them," he said, add ing his statement "does not mean
we will push to merge with the AFL·ClO."
On another front, the Miners Pensio n Committee
said it has balked at divulging its records fD UMW
international auditors.
Committee . Chairman Don Nunley of Glouster,
Ohio, said he feels the auditors were sent by union
leaders to "hamper the pension reformovement and
is another form of harassment !Eing orchestrated by
the union's top officers."
The independent panel was organized by some
UMW members to push lor !Etter pension benefits in
future contract talks.

deputy marshal in the absalce of
Marshall Joe Klrby. Shain has been
instructed by council to enlb rce the
10 p.m. curlew. Parents of youngs·
ters on the streets after 10 p.m. are
to he cited to mayor's court.
More than 169 people attended
Saturday night's free entertain·
ment at tbe Shrine Club Park.
Council exten&lt;is thanks to the
musicians woo provided the entertainment. Another program has
tEen slated for Satunlay, Sept. 13,
!Eginnlng at 7 p.m. lnslead r:1 7: 3()
p.m. Interested entertainers are
Invited to participate and the tllbic
is again invited fD aMend free .of
charge.
Jack Wolfe and the Bob Beegle
family have adopted picnic tables
at tiE Shrine Club Park. It was
noted that a recent nempaper
article failed to mention that Karl
Grueser of Minersville assisted
Hank Moore In building a picnic
!Continued on Page 12)

Goodyear
•
expanston
planned
By JUDY MORGAN
OVP News Editor
POINT PLEASANT- Goodyear
announced today that it will Invest
more than 500 million to expand its
polyester packaging resin plant at
Apple Grove to meet growing
market demand.

TilE GOOD LIFE -A Utile eating, a IIUJe resting,
a little wading, a lillie stretching, a little pru.Ug, and
then back to the waler for a lelaureiy swim. It's a good
We lor Canadian g'IIOfll!. These gl!e!lt! maintain their
swnmer homes at ForlredRunSiate Park. According

a

to Randy Woohter, park manager, the geese prefer
hanging out by the boat dock oo the lake. Of course,
when the weather tums cool the birds wBI migrate
south. ''But," says Wachter, mnaey'D be hack in the

The Investment is part of the
company's strategy to double
polyester resin capacity starting
next year, Wllliaril B. Hlrlcll, Yloo
president and general manager of
Goodyear's recent ly formed f'o.
lyester Division, said in a news
release. "Demand for polyester
packaging resins is far outstripping
industry supply," he said.
"Because of polyester's broad
appeal as a packaging material,
this growth wlll continue well Into
the future, and our invesonent will
assure packaging customers r1
adequate resin to meet future

spring."

needs."

see the material Tuesday after
days of negotiations and President
Reagan's claim of executive prtvl·
lege to protect the material from
scru tiny.
Democrats may want to recall
Rehnquist, a member of the
Supreme Court since 1971, after
reviewing the material. They had
threatened to delay Rehnquist's
confirmation If they did not get the
documents.
"We are getting access to
everything we asked for ," said Sen.
Joseph Blden , D·Del. , wbo with
Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass.,
led the iight for the sensitive
information.

Committee members were ex·
peeled to review the material late
Tuesday and today, and Blden said
that alter reviewing the documents,
Rehnquisl could IE recalled for
testimony about the material.
"U there is reason to bring him
back, we'll brtnghim back," Biden
sai~ .

The documents Include Rehn·
quist's writings and correspon·
dence in seven key areas while he
headed the Office of Legal Counsel
at the Justice Deparonent. the

office which advised President
Nixon and Attorney General John
Mitchell In the early 1970s.
It Includes about 30 documents
relating to mllltary surveillance ol
civilians, investigations of sensitive
leaks, the arrest of antl·war May
Day demonstrators In 1971, the 1910
killings at Kent State University,
wiretapping and the 1971 burglary
of the psychiatrist's olflce of
antt·war activist Daniel Ells!Erg.
Members olthe Senate Judiciary
Committee hammered oot the deal
on the first day of ronfirtnation
hearings lor Antonln Scalia,
anotber Reagan nominee to the
high court.
Reagan nominated Rehnquist to
replace retiring chief justiCe
Warl'€11 Burger and tapped Scalia
to ftil Rehnquist's seat.
In another development, Rehn·
quist acknowledged to the commit·
tee In a letter that he forgot his
lawyer told him 12 years ago that
the deed to his summer home In
Vermont contained a clauseprohibitlng its sale to Jews.
Rehnquist told Committee Chair·
man Strom Thurmond, R.S.C., he
reviewed hlsfllesandfoundaletter

describing his Vermont summer
property In 1974 - the year he
bought the property and three
years after he became a justice.
"Whlle I do not doubt that I read
tbe letter when I received It, I did
not reca ll the letier or its contents
be !ore I testified last week," said
his letter, dated Mooday.
Rehnquist said he Instructed his
lawyer, David Willis, las t week to
take the legal measures necessary

to ll:'move the rest rictive covenant

from tbe property.
In a letter da ted Ju ly 2, 1974,
Willis wrote the S&lt;'ller of the
property deS&lt;'riblng various rest ric·
lions including "ownership by
mem!Ers of the Hebrew race.·· A
copy of that letter was sent to
Rehnquist.
The res trictive covenant, and

another on a home he once owned in
Arizona, were revealed durtng the
hearings

Area man injured at Sporn
NEW HAVEN- A Middleport man is listed in stable condition in
the Intensive care unit at St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington. W.Va.,
following an accident at the Phllip Sporn Plant here Monday night.
Assistant Plant Manager N.R. Humphreys said Tuesday
afternoon that William "Perk" Ault, 29, was working on transformer
spray piping when he came In contact with an electrtcal conductor,
sustained an electrtcal shock and apparently fell a distance of
between three and four feet.
Ault was transported by the New Haven Rescue Squad to Pleasant
Valley Hospital and then transferred to St . Mary's. A nursing
supervisor there said Ault is listed in stable condition but wou ld not
describe his lnjurtes. Humphreys said it is believed Ault ls being
treated for head injurtes.
The accident, which occurred at about 9:30 p.m., is under
Investigation by Appalachian Power Co., Humphreys said.

Feminists oppose coo~ nominee's abortion stance

31 Oz. ...

~ WASHINGTON (UPII -

NOW

making International Executive Board. It will be first
gathering of its kind In the 97·year history of the
UMW. The next regular convention isn't until 1987.
Roberts said the delegates, to IE elected by each
local on the basis of membership, will discuss
collective bargaining goals to IE addressed who:'n
contracts run out over the next two years.
· "The historic action serves to underscore just how
critical the next set of negotiations is to the future of
oor union and how seriously we take the changes
before us, " Roberts said.
The UMW will not accept non-concessionary
contracts and Is prepared to strike, Ro!Erts said,
noting miners williE asked to build a lund larger than
the $70 million one before talks with coal ~raters in
1984.
Rob&lt;'rts said the fund, which sttll has 500 million in
it, williE fattened, if necessary, because the union Is
prepared to revive a 2.5 percent assessment on
working miners.
"We will spend whatever it takes to protect our
miners," Roberts said.

..

,·
•

79

Treasurer John Banovic appeared in Evansvllle,
Ind., to announce the special convention, set lor Oct.
27·2Bln Atlanta.
The timing and setting did not sit well with a
dissident faction in the union, the Miners Pension
Committee.
"We oppose It, first ol all, because, as far as I know,
this Is the first convention in the history of the UMW
which is proposed to be held in a rlght-to·work stale,"
said Frank Thurman. an MPC spokesman.
"Secondly, II happened In such a rapld·flremethod.
I just learned about tt today. Miners nationwide will
not have sufficient opportunity Io draft and form
resolutions of lhelr own from local unions and that's
what our concern Is."
Thurman said the UMW leadership should hold the
convention In Detroit or Philadelphia - two major
cities hit by public employees' strikes- to give them
tax revenues to help cover pay raises and benefits lor
government workers.
Roberts said the special convention was unanim·
ously approved Monday by the 24-mem!Er, policy·

:Senate committee ·examines Rehnquist documents

~

I!GUIAII1.47

TWO SUS
Of PIINn,
FOIIllllDW
Pita Of

OII!ATnll
OfomutriK

•.feminists because of his views on
::;.bortton, says Judges should not
~rule on the Issue If their moral views
,_.ershadow their Impartiality.
"' At his confirmation hearing
':.Tuesday, Scalia declined to say
,,whether he would overturn tbe
~l!ourt 's histort~ lll73 declsio" legal·
:!zing aborttod and assured the
;..Sena(e Judiciary Corm;nlitee he had
, oo personal Ot;lcialagenda to follow
;as a justice,
:: He told the committee he re:slimed recently from an exclusive
;Wilshlngton men's club that dis·
;i:rlmlnated against women but did
;bot consider the policy "Invidious
~(tiscr1m1nat1on.''

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Racine briefed
on cable changes

99

REG~R

2 Sections, 12 Pages

leadership plans special war coUDcil

By PATRICK McMAHON
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UPI)' -Amidgrumbilngs
by a pension committee, the leadership of the United
Mine Workers union is sending l,!lXl delegates to
._ Georgia for a special war council to prepare lor the
_ next round of contract talks.
UMW Vice President Cecil Ro!Erts also disclosed
', Tuesday that a move Is afoot to put more grit In the
.: miners' hargalning posture by possibly merging with
' other unions.
Separate rontracts with operators are set to expire
In 1987 and 19~. and Roberts said his WJion Is
prepared to leave the pits if negotiations fall to
produce new ones .
"Our members are now confronted by the
consistent anti-union , anti-coal miner agenda In this
transformed !coal ) industry," Roberts said. "We wlll
do whatever it takes to restore a fair measure of
economic justice to our entire mem!Ership .. working, unemployed and retired."
As Roberts spoke in Charleston, UMW President
Richard Trumka was in Pittsburgh and Secretary·

NOI"mal, Ex tra Bod,

99

REGU~I

'

enttne

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, August 6, 1986

FLEX SIIIPOO

Bill ROLL·OI·

49

..

"OETTIN810U THERE SAFELY"

Cirtletilll, 011

ELlERS
SCHOOL GLUE

:~u
....."'

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

HURRY II! THESE SALE
PRICES GOOD THRU
AUGUST
1Oth,
1988
OILY
We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities

WIN UP TO $100,000.00 INSTANTLY
w.llt~llfll

Hymn sign set

substances.
According to a Mason County Sheriff's Department spokeswo·
man, deputies responded to the accident at 6:25 a.m. The
spokeswoman added that two empty cars and a caboose had
derailed.

PLAY

•-If.

Foreclosure filed

singers .

, Vot.36, No.86
• Copvrighsad 1986

Mootly cloudy wKh a chalice of
showel'!l • aDd lluldenionnll
through 'ftlursday. Hips loday
and Thursday wW be In the mid
80s. Lows lonlghl wOl be In the
mid 80s. The probabUIIy of
preclpitallon Is 50 pereent today
and tonight and 30 percent
Thursday.

•

at y

'

'I

cities,

EmE&gt;rgPncy Senrict:'s.
Taylor said the cars werP not ca rrying toxic or contaminated

Jimmy .Jude, Pomeroy, was tl'turned to the Athens Mental Health
Center at 11:57 p.m. Monday night after walking away from the
center earlier in lhr evening.
Pomeroy Police apprehended Jude at his home on the old Chester
Road after being not~ied a t 10:55 p.m. that he was missing from the
Center.

•

Parent board to meet
The Parent Advisory Council of
the Southern Local School DistriCt
will meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday at
Southern High School to organizt&gt;
for the year.
Represetlta tives of each grade
school, junior high and high school
serve on the committee.
·

Daily Number: 991

PICK-4: 0022.

Monday's confel'€1lce call .:"".
between Ohio Transportation f!trector Warren Smith, Kentucky
Transportation Secretary C. Leslie
Dawson and both slate's ft&gt;de~i
highway administrators - was ap
attempt to resolve the dispute aft~
a call for reconciliation last week
from U.S. Transportation Secre·
tary Eliza!Eth Dole.
·

FRANKFORT, Ky. !UP]) -The
only decision Teached during an
hour·long telephone conversation
!Etween Ohio and Kentucky trans·
portation officials on the diversion
of truck traffic from "Death Hill"
south of Cincinnati was that the
officials should talk again.
Following a nine-car collision on
the steep hill on Interstate 75 south
of Cincinnati, Gov. Martha Layne
Collins issued an order Ju ly 8 to
divert traffic heading north on 1-75
!Eyond Cincinnati to 1-275. which
loops around Cincinnati.
But several southern Ohio com·
munities along 1·275 have ex·
pressed concern that the diverted
truck traffic has created a danger·
ous situation, and have asl«&gt;d the
trucks not be routed through their

Flower judging
at county fair
-Page 3

,.

Ohio, Ky. officials
eye road dispute

Two Belptl' men were injured Monday morning when a Chessir
System train derailed along W.Va . 62 ne-dr Cottrill Farm and
Kirkland Memorial Gardens in Mason County .
Arthu r Stephens and David Hennen were treated for minor
injuries and released. according to a Pleasant Valley Hospital
spokeswoman.
Thrderaiiment is reported to havroocurred at approximately 6:15
a.m., according to Fred Taylor. direc tor of Point Pleasant

arrt'sfs.

operating while negoti~tions cop·
tinue on a day· to-day basis, the
USW said.
Two other companies, Erie Min·
ing Co. and Cleveland-Cliffs Iron
Co., each signed a nine-month
exten sion of the 1983 basic st.eel
Industry 'agreement last week, sald
Eldon Kirsch, director of USW
District 3.3 in Duluth and chairman
of the union's iron ore negotiating
committee.

were locked out by USX after the
company refused the ex tension
offer, but USX · maintains the
members authorized a strike and
refused to work under its last offer.
The ltcm ·ore extension agree·
ment~. covering about 1,550 USW
members, were approved at the
National Steel Pellet Co., Hibbing
Taconite Co. a11d Eveleth Tacon it e
Co., the union said. The mines arP

featured
welcome.

Mason rail accident injures 2

Ohio Lottery

He a1ro defended his conserva·
Uve legal philosophy and said he
disagreed with atfinnatlve action
programs If they discriminated
against one group to help another.
Scalia, a federal appeals court
judge in Washington since 1982,
COIT\Jlleted his testimony in Clle day
before the committee, which scheduled another healing today for 40

witnesses,
The. A'~rtcan Bar Association
was expected tD' testlty It gave
Scalia Its highest rating lor a judge
and that his Integrity was "above

reproach.''
"My kids !llCiallzed with and
dated people ol all races. I have
absolutelY no racial prejudlcles,"
said Sealla, ~. tbe first Italian·
American oominated to the high
court. .

•

Scalia, often smoking a pipe,
testified for several lx&gt;urs at a
subdued hearing marlu!dly differ·
ent from the confirmation hearing
last week llr WWiam Rehnquist to
be chief justice.
Reagan nominated Rehnquls~ a
Supreme Court justice since l971, to
replace retiring Chief Justice
Warrm Burger and tapped Scalia
to nu ~IInquist's seal
Sen. ~ard Kennedy, )).Mass,,
asitl!d Sealla It he w~ld dverrule
Roe vs. Wade, lhe. 1973 Supreme
Court decision that legalized abor·
tion . .The !Jiestmri dreW lin audible
gasp !rom the back !1 thEi IJ!Idfenoe.
·~tor, I don~ tblnkltivould be
lJI'(IIle!' br me to ilnawl!r that
fJiestlon," Sealla,aald, mUng thai
the lasue was likely il CCliJle before
the court.

But Sealla trted to dismiss
concerns from Kennedy that he was
oomlnated to the court by Reagan
because of his antl·abortlon views.
"I assure you I havenoagenda .1
am not going on to the murt with a
llsl o! things that I want to do," he
said. "My only agenda is fD be a
good Judge and decide the cases
that are brought before me accord·
lng to tbe law as I can best figure It

out"

·

Sealla added that he believes a
judge should excuse himself from
any case in which he Is "personallY
mnvmced he could not tleclde the
question tmpAruauy because he
teels Ill arongl)' about the morallty
ot the Issue."
ScaUa, a Roman Gatlx&gt;llc who Is
penonallyoppoaed to abortion, !aid

The announcement of tbe expansion plans came jointly from
Goodyea r olllclais and Gov. Arch
A. Moore Jr., who saldtlismornlng
the state wllllnvest from $9JO,&lt;XXJ to
$'100,(1)) toward job re-training in
the micro-processing field for the
nea rly 400 employees at Goodyear's Apple Grove plant.
The goveroor said loday's an·
oouncement "demonstrates the
stablllty of Goodyear in the
community."
The expansion, he added, would
"put those (4601 job! In cement for
Maron County" as well as create a
"modest Increase in the job base."
The goverror said the state has
been working since Octo!Er 1985 to
convince Goodyear that there has
tEen a change lor the better In the
business environment in West
VIrginia and that the opportunity
for profit was as good as II' better iil
West Virginia and Mason County
than In other areas of the country.
The slate, he added, did oot have
too much of a selling job to do 19
convince GOOdyear r1 the quality ol
the work force In Maron Coonty
where the company has operate(!
the Apple Grove plant lor ovpr 2fi
years.

"This Is good news for us," thr
goverror said. "We're happy 1Goodyear! chose 1\'rst Virginia."
(Continued on Page 121

he did oot think his views on
abortion tell Into that category.
Feminists are opposing both Scalia
and Rehnquist on grounds they are
determined to overturn the Su·
preme Court's landmark abortion
decision.
SeaUa, asked about his member·
ship In the aU·male Cosmos Club,
said he did oot believe social groups
that rntrlct their membe~hlp to
one sex practice "invidious
tllscrlmlnatlon.''
''I certainlY would oot belong to a
club that practices racial dlscrtml·
nation becau5e I don'tthink there is
any bosis for socialization on the
basis of race," said ScaUa, addlol&amp;
be resigned his $3,&lt;XXJ yearl,y
membership in tbe Ca.mos Club
last year because he rarely used It

'

�••
••

.

Wec!nesday. August 6. 1986

·Gomment
,. ·'

.,

.

. •

"

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

,

DEVInED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG!l-MASON AREA

~lh
CS:ffiiltl
~v

~'-...,...., ,...,....., c::loo=

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Pu ..lsher
PAr WHITEHEAD
Asshtant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFUCH
General Maaager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Edllor
A MEMBER of The Unll€d Press Interna tional, Inland Dally Press
Association a nd the American NewspaperPubllshers Association .
LETTERS OF OPlNION are welcol11£&gt;. They should bl' less than DJ words
long. All letters ar(' subjl'('t to editing an&lt;lrru st biP' signed wUh name-. address and
telephone numbt&gt;r . No Wlsigned letters will be published. LetiE'rs should 1M' In
good taste, address ing Issues . no t persooalitles.

Repeal 22? ----:----____W_i_llia_m_F_.B_u_ck_ley_J:~
The televlsi:m news in particular
has taken to inviting people seriously to weigh the (XlSSibUity that,
In deference to till' popularity ri
Ronald Reagan, a constitutional
amendment wUI be passed repeal·
lng tbe amendment that limits a
president to two terms. Concerning
all of which, a few observations :
1. The 22nd Amendment was a
reaction to Franklin Delano Roosevelt In three parts. There was to
begin with the smtlment to ron·
tinue the tradition of a president's
retiring after two terms. Then there
was the reaction that followed the
news that gradually leaked out
about the seml·lnvalid we elected
tor a fourth term. The sb:&gt;w put on
by FDR and his doctors dunng 1944
was one of Ire great deceptions in

American Wstory . It transpired
that well before he accepted
renomination, FDR had been told
by Ws doctors that he should limit
his workload to t'Ml or three hlurs a
day. There are those who wish he
had limited his oorkload to ll!ro
hours per day going back to 1933,
and thai Is the third element that
contributed to till' passage of the
22nd Amendment : the anti·
Roosevelt sentiment.
The amendment passed a Demo·
cratic Congress in March 1947, and
was ratified by the 32nd stJite In
February 1951, the speed a Uttle
grudging, but suggesting a rellec·
live resolution, by the people, that
the unwritten rode of two tems
should be explicitly reinstated.
2. The Irony lies in the partisan

shift In sentiment. A!tlxlugh the caD
to repeal the 22nd Amendment Is
anything but a national Issue, it Is
obvious that were It to become one,
the sentiment In favor \Wuld be
predominantly Republican, the
sentiment opposed predominantly
Democratic. This Is in sharp
contrast to sentiment at the time of
the arnendri'lent's passage. Elmer
Davis, the populist inteDectual wbo
ran several of FDR's wartime
programs, denounced It as "an ac.t
of retroactive vindictiveness ."
They couldn't beat him wWie he
was alive, he said (or words to the
same effect), so kick him around
when he's dead. So, altlxlugh the
issue Is oot national, in fact
Michigan Rep. Guy Vander Jagt,
who was the keynoter at the

The Lighter Side

Freckled, but nice
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UP! 1-Burke's Peerage reporls that Sarah Fergul&lt;ln
" is the first royal princess this century who has not ll'Ceived ooe electric
·
appliance" as a wroding gift.
. U it's any consolation. sht' also may be the first royal princess this
·century in whose honor a cocktail created by a British bartender was
· · Acconling to the gift list published before the royal wedding schl'dulro
July 23, Ft'rgugJn and Prince Andrew had received presents valued at
more Ihan $350.&lt;XXJ.
Among the gilts were 18 breakfast sets, 38 salt and pt&gt;pper shakers and
: about thousand water glasses. But not a single elecl rlc loaster.
. How will Ihe poor dear keep from burning the toast on their honeymoon?
· Well. servP Print'e Andrew enough "Royal Freckles" before he ea1sand he
: pmbably won't know the difference.
· Its inventor. Buchanan Ailkt'n, says the inspiration of the "Royal
Freckles" cockt ail came from the bride's freckled face.
· "I decidro on freckles because everyonP associates them with Miss
Fergu oo n," the Loch Lomond barkf't'p said. '"The dfect is cneated by tiny
pit....es of pun' goal leaf.
·"n t&lt;'Y remain in suspension in a drink and resemble freckles &lt;ll a bridP's
·:check. Stir the cocktail with a st raw and the freckles appear to be
: dancing."
.
· , As to wh&lt;•lhr r Agt'nl 007would appmve was nol made drur in any of the
· ~tt'ra turp I read.
. 1'vc bt'en looking over Ait ken's recipe and I'm pretty sure t!K' gold du st
doesn't com&lt;' from the ounce of scotch whiskf'y he includes to add "a touch
· of nobilit y" lo the cocklail.
II usually lakes at least three oonces of nobility before I see gold dust.
· Probably tht' freckled effect also could be achieved by crumbling bum I
·loas l into a cocklail, bulthat is anolher slory. I Cl'rtainly don't recommend

u

· Maybe thc gold dust seems to come from the sco tch, to anyone oo
enoobi«l. but lhe frt'Ckles mu st be t'it her in the ounce of Goldwasser
fiqumr , thc ounce of Fraise de Bois liqueur, tht' thr('(' oonces of passion
.fruit ni'Ctar or lh&lt;' dash of egg white.
Aitken says that '.'the freckles ane crt'ated by lhe inclusion of Royal Gold
.· L.iquru r." So the old flecks "in the blushing beverage" must come from
·. that brand of Goldwasser
· · Fraise de Bois. I'm infonned. is a strawberry liqueur. Presumbly. you
. ;jlready know whal passion fruil nortar is. If oot. ask the bridegroom . He
· wasn't ca llrd "Randy Andy" in the British pn'Ss for nothing.
· Onl~' you hav&lt;' asSt•mbled alii he cocktail ingn'&lt;lients. you 'resuppoS&lt;'&lt;l lo
·: shake them with i('(' and pour "into a cryst al goblet." Ordinary glass won't
.:do. apparcnlly. Let's not be gauche while toasting Ihe happy couple.
· 1 would have thought the gr('('n or red tint provided by lhe mint or
: &amp;trawben)l garnish caliro in Ait ken's rec i]X' might havr clashro with the
. gold flecks. bu t I guess not. My infonnant insists the cockta il is "London's
· tn·ndit'st drink" this WC&lt;'k.
Wlto am 1 to argur? Thosr London bartlirs arr · nothin g if nol
·:color·conscious.

Berry's World
W£1.1..,
GC0t) .,.161'\T, 80S!
I/IE''If 601' 1'0 SE
GOINI:i "40\AI.
4

F~IENOS BV

E~'TERT/1-.IN.S

St\OWI!IlG 1·\IS

fliAN\C PIC'TIJRES
A.\.L 57,000 Of THEM!
~ 19MbyNEA Inc

t:llf:ac

~

_Today in history
By United Press lntemallonal
Today is Wednesday. Aug. 6, till' 218th day of 191li with 147 to follow .
.

ThP moon is mov ing away from Its new phase.
The morning stars ar~ Mercury ·and Jupiter.
The evening stars ane Venus, Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this dale are Wider the sign of Lro. They Include poet
·Alfred Lord Tennyl&lt;ln in ~ British scientist Sir Alexander Fleming,
discOVerer of penicillin, and Hollywood gossip columnist Louella Parl&lt;lns,
both In 1881; comedian Lucille BaD in 19U (age 75); actor Rorer! Mlchtum
In i917 (age 69); L. Bruce Lain~n. hlghesHankingdlplomat arrongthe52
Americans held hostage in Iran tor444 days untO Jan. al, 1981, born I~ 1922
(age 64) ; and artist Andy Warhollp1927 (age~).
. On this date in history:
·
· In 1926, Gertnlde Ederle of New York became the first American to
swim till' Engllsh Channel.
: 1n 19.ll, Judge Joseph Force Crater stepped rut of a New York chop
)¥)use never to be heard from again.
In ~ l@ly Invaded British Somaliland, shirting the Battle r1 North
Africa In World War II.
In 1945 an atomic bombwasdroppedon theJapanesedtyoflflroshima;
later. after Nagasalcl also was bombed, Japan surrendered,
eight
ending World War I ~
··
,

days

BIGGER AND BE'ITER - 'l1lls year grandstand
at the Meigs Counly Fair will have a
larger stage on which to petfonn. An Iron extension
has been added to the traDer which has been pulled In
hy the Fair Board for the past seYIII'al years and used
as a stage. 'The extension with Its plywood floor which
folds Into the trailer when not in use has been added
enterialners

&lt;.r":\..
. .· \·:---

(CCAJ~

..... -:~-,

AIDS on hold _____J_ac_k_An_d_er_so_n_&amp;_D_a_le_JI;_an_A_t_ta
WASHINGTON- In a !Esper ate
ract' againsl time. do ctors and
scientists are try ing to find a cure
for AIDS. the vlrus·borne disease
that destroys its victims' immune
syslems with fatal results. So far,
one of the brightest hopes l:lr AIDS
patients Is an experimental drug
that has - temporarUy at least held the crippling virus al bay In
limited tests.
The drug is azidothymidine, or
AZT. II is manufactured by Bur·
roughs Welicome Co. at Research
Triangle Park in North Carolina.
'' AZT is an experimental drug first
identified as possibly being effec·
live in the treatment of Alffi in the
spring of last year," ex pained Tom
Kennedy, a vice president of
Burroughs Wellrome.
Following this tentative dlsrov·
ery, the first scientific testing began
last fall on 19 patients at several
different institutions, including the
Nalional lnslilules of Health in
Bethesda. Md . Fifteen of the
patients given AZT slltwed In ·
creases in the number of cells tha t
are part of lhc human body' s
natural immune system.
Word of that success, trough

hardly a cure , spread throughoul
the medical community with pre·
dictable results: Demand for the
drug became enormous.
"Thousands of people are asking
for the drug," Kennedy told us. "It's
a whole, big. complex Issue of
attempting to deter!lrlne whether
or not these things work, against a
desire to gel the drugs. period."
The company has received
hundreds of calls from AIDS
patients and their families. Some
fatally slrlcken patients have even
walked into the company headquar·
ters buDding lobby to beg for tre
drug. "ll's a very difficult. emo·
tiona! issue with all of us In the soop
Jight now because It Is a life·and·
death matter," Kennedy said.
The latest statistics show that
10,475 men, women and children
are now dying of Allli. From all
these tiousands. just 28 have had
Ihe . prlvUege of being AZT guinea
jigs at the National Institutes of
Health. One of these, as we
reporled, Is Roy Cohn, lhe recently
ctisbarrro New York celebrity
attorney who cut his professional
teeth on suspected subversives in
the 19~s as chief red-hunter for the

late Sen. Joseph McCarthy, R-Wis.
Confidential medical records we
obtained do not show exactly when
Cohn Hrst was given AZT- which
the government has approved only
fo r treatment rt AIOO ..:: but he had
the medicine before June.
A spokeswoman for the govern·
ment b:&gt;spltal vehemently denied
that anyone could use political
connections to get admitted to the
AZT program. She explained that
the extremely selective process
requires potential patients to fix an
exacting "protocol," or criteria for
the clinical testing. Applicants are
usually referred by physicians
across tbe country, and are subject
to review by at ieasl one profes·
siena! committee.
An NIH nurse who has dealt with
AICS patients told us the new drug
has dfmonstrated an ablllty lo
"kick up the Immune system
enough .. . so they don 'I get
pneurnocystls (pneumonia), which
is the biggest kUier."
The nurse. woo requested anonymity, addro: "It's a drug that
can actually hold the Allli patients
where tl'f'y are and keep them from
getting any worse. It does not cure.

An anniversary slipped past me Franco's forces.
unnoticed the other day.
But they didn 't, and we well know
July 18 marked a half century
since Francisco Franco called upon what their restraint did oot buy for
all ~anlards oolding "a sacred Ihem -shelter h'Om the gatheting
love" for their country to join him storm. Within six months rt the end
and overthrow their government. of the Spanish struggle In March
That began the Spanish Civil War, a 1939, they were at war.
Under Franco's dictatorship, exbrutal three·year curlain·ralser to
hausted Spain sat out the world
World War II .
Both sides in the struggle were conflict. For three decades after the
coalitions. Franro's Nationalists war's end, his grip nemalned
included a rigidly conservative unrelaxed as late as 1974 when the
church hierarchy , a land-owning illegal Spanish Socialist Party
upper crust. most of the mlittary, chose an energl'tlc new leader, who
diehard monarchists and hlme· used the code name "lsldoro" to
gmwn fascis ts. The Loyalists sup· shield his ldentiry from Franco's
porting the shaky five-year-old secret pollee, It was at a secret
convention In Paris.
~anish republic were a jumble &lt;i
But Franco died a year later. and
leftists from l&lt;JCiallsts through
Spain
began to change more
communists all the way to anar·
chlst!l, and what !bene was of a rapidly than anyone, especially
Spaniards, could have expected.
liberal deroocratlc movement.
Choosing sides was a tough call The dictator's heir, King• Juan
for the beleaguered derrocratlc Carlos, presided over a transition
world of the time and In many from autb:&gt;rltarlanism to parlla·
respects It foreshadowed the fatdul mentary democracy. Facing down
choice that would shortly have to be an attempted military coup in 1981,
made between Hitler and Stalin. the restored monarch has sb:&gt;wn
Totalitarianism Infected b:&gt;lh Span· himself to be Spain's most deeply
Ish camps. But at least the Loyalists committed and politically adroit
represented a legitimate, elected democrat.
Within seven years of Franco's
government and Included tlxlse
demise,
"Isldoro," now revealed as
Spaniards woo belleved In demo·
Felipe
Gonzalez,
was swept Into
cracy. Franco's Nationalists at·
tracled oo support from that office as prime minister with an
absolute majority for his once·
quarter.
That drew tens of tmusands of · outlawed Socialist's. Surviving
ldeallstic volunteers from cxher early fears of possible cou)l!l ~
countries to the Loyalist side. Fro!ll disgruntled rniUtary elements, he
the governments of till' dermcra· was returned by Spanish volel'li this
cles, however, ~aln 's democrats spring,
got only sympathy, and not too · By row It is clear tha! whUe
much of that. There wijl always be Spanish democracy may have I0$1 ·
speculation as to what might have the clvU war, It has won the peace.
happetted if tre Frenm and British As conflnnatlon, ta)ie !he furor last
had aided the Loyalists miUtarlly, year when President Reagan sugas the Germans lllld Italians did gested In an oflhand remark that

the thousands of American volun·
teers woo fought for the Loyalists
had been "on the wrong side."
Gonzalez promptly responded, " I
don't agree with him."
What appeli:rs to have escaped
presidential ootlce Is that Spaniards
ronslder their present government
the heir to the principles of
democracy and individual liberties

And they are well awareofthat. But
what it does Is buy them a year,
maybe two , maybe three. We don't
know yet. We're only up to about a
year now -of time- sothatbigger
and better drugs that might be able
to kill (I he virus mtgtit come :
along)."
One One of .Cohn's doctors,
Robert Yarchoan, has emphasized
that "althlugh patients receiving '
azidotbymidlne soowed some im·
Jrl)vements, they stUI have AIDS."
He added: "We do not know It the ;
drug will be useful for patients in .
the long run. We have no evidence
Ihat AZT Is a cure for AIOO."
Cohn, whose condition appar·
ently Is deteriorating rapidly , Is no
longer being glvm AZT, according
to July records. But new trials rt the
drug now Involve ~ patients in l2 ·
institutions, including NIH.
Footnote: Because the drug
testing program will be expanded '
by the end of tbe year, AIDS
patients interested In treatment
may have I heir physicians contact
the Medical Department of Bur·
roughs Wellcome at 919·248-ml. :
Individual patients or family :
members should Nar call.

for which most of till' Loyalists :
fought and which Franco's Nation· ;'
allsts rejected.
In the long run, a people's desire ·
for freedom has proven stronger •'
than the heavy hand of repression. I ,
find that encouraging and. for that; ·
rea!;(m, Spain's oomber annlver·:~
sary especially worth noting.

1\vo flower shows, lhe flrsl using
"Baseball" as 1he theme and the
second. "ll' s a Small, Small
World.'' will be staged a t lhe l23rd
Meigs County F.air next week on the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
.Jane Thompl&lt;ln is chairman of
the shows and wUI be assisled by
committ ees from the various
ga rden clubs of the county.
Shr emphasizes. however, that
all classes of the shows arr open to
all residenls of Meigs County and to
all members of Meigs County
Garden Clubs. Exhibitors do nol
have to belong lo a garden club to
exhibit . The in vital ionai classes are
open to bot:l res.dents of Meigs
County and those woo do oot reside
in Ihe cou nty. J unior classes ane for
exhibit ors under 19 years of age.
Entries must be made at the
secrelary's . office on the fair·
grounds no later lhan 4 p.m. on
Friday. They may bt' made by
mail , but no telephone entries are
.
accepted.
The fi rst show will be staged on
Tuesday with oral judging to begin

"Seventh Inning Stnetch," tradl·
Ilona! vertical arrangement, "Trl·
pie Play," using three flowers:
"Bottom of the Ninth, and Two
Ouis", a modern arrangement.
The junior artistic arrangements
are "Bat Boy, " using treasured
wood; "Cardinals, Orioles, and
Blue Jays," incorporating one or
more birds as part of the design,
and "Little Leaguers," modem
arrangement.
The horticulture classes ane rose.
hybrid tea, florlbunda, grandiflora.
climbing, and other; Gladiolus, any
color; zinnia, dahlia flowered ,
caclus flowered, small, three of the
same kind in one container; dahlia,
pom·pom, ball, decorative, cactus;
sunflower, large and small; marl·
gold: celosla. crested and plumed;
chrysanthemums, spray ~. and
any olher flowering annuals.
Classes for potted plants. cacti
and succulents, ferns. other follatp
plants, African violets, and bego·
nlas, and miseellanrous.
In junior horticulture. the classes
are for zinnias, dahlia and cactus,

all p.m. while Ihe second show will
be held on Thursday. Both shows
will be judged by an accredited
judge of the Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs .
At each show. in addition to the
ribbons and premiums awarded in
three places in each class, a best of
show, reserve besl of show, and
horticulture swf't'pstakes will be
awarded In both the adult and the
junior div isions, with premiums
ranging from $1 to $3 .
On each ol. the show days. entries
must be in place before noon at
which lime the show area will be
cleared In preparation for the
judging at 1 p.m.
Thesday Show

In the Tuesday show, the classes
in the senior artistic divlson are
"Grand Siam! " invitational, a
mass arrangment ; "Double Play",
using two containers with tradi·
tiona! design; "Three Strikes.
You're Oul!" abstracl; "Home
Run!", fea turing favorite wood;
"Hot Dogs, Peanuts, and Popcorn.''
pop art : "High Fly, " a stable;

WEDNESDAY
R\J'I'LAND - George Haw·
thorne will speak on his mission
work in Haiti, 7 p.m. Wednesday at
the Rutland Bible Methodist
Chu orh.
MIDDLE PORT - Special free
program of crafts. games and
stories cspeically for kindergarten
through lhird grade children, 2p.m.
Wednesday at Middleport Library.
APPLE GRbvE- Revival at
Apple Grove United Melhodlst
Chu rch begins Wednesday evening
and extends through Sunday, feat uring Rev. Mel Franklin. Rev. Carl
Hicks and Rev. Steve Nelson
speaking on different evenings.
Special music each night.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - ' Salisbury Township Trustl!es ~eetfng, 7 p.m.
Thui'sday at township hall on Rock
Springs Road.
-·
.
RACINE - Racine American
Legion Post 602 and its auxiliary
will oold a special meeting at 6p.m.
Thursday. The · regular Legion
meetingwUifollow-at 7: ;I(! p.m. with
refreshments to be served. following
the meeting.
'

l

. POMEROY - Meigs 'County
Historical Society wm conduct a
workshop on writing articles for the
upcoming history book at 7 p.m.
Thursday at the Rock Springs
Grange Hall. Free help will be
provided fo r all interested peroons.
POMEROY - Story hour for
pre-schoolers wUI be held at 2 p.m.
Thursday at the Pomeroy Library.

. ...

",..

•

~c,c,.~-

.
•

. . CARPENI'ER - The 62nd
annual Hayes-Young-Holiday

i,

Sl 09

WITH FliES;....................s1.64

·, ADOLPH'S
DAIRY. VALLEY
"At the End of the P-rey-laMii

POMEROY, 011.

oo(+. .

t

Organizational
MIDDLEPORT- An organiza·
tiona! meeting tiir Meigs Junior
High School football will be held at 7
p.m. Monday, Aug. 11, at the
stadium in Middleport. All youths
planning to play are to report.
Closing

forROCKSPRINGSaU open class. entries
for the
Oosingtime
annual Meigs County Fair is 4 p.m.
Friday. The secretary wW be at the
fair board office oo the Rock
$prings Fairgrounds from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m. on both Thursday and
Friday to accept entries. The
annual horse pulling contest is not
governed by the entry closing
deadUne. Closing time rules will be
strictly adherred to.
ReviYal
FIVE POINTS- Gospel group
Saved will re singing Thursday
evening at the tent revival pres·
· enUy Wlderway on the Don Mora
property, Ftve Points. Services,
With Evangelists Herbert Inscoe
and Patricia Eastham, are being
held nightly through Aug. 15.

r;:=~==:;=================11

, ,

.,_:i

CHUCKWAGON

MONDAY
POMEROY - Meigs High
cross country runners wm begin
practicing Monday. 9 a.m., at
the school.

POINT ROCK - The annual
Green-Ogdln·Caster fannlly
reunion wUI be held Sunday at
till' Co!Qm~a ChapEl Christian
Chruch, Poblt Rock, bei'M!en
Albany and Willt:ewllle. Ji'lcnlc
lunch at l2 ooon. Entertainment
Ill till' afternoon.

Hymn sing,

will be' the officers and Carrie
Grueser and Faye WigginS. '
Guests for the picnic were
Paulin£&gt; Eynon, Rebecca ColUns,
Ruth Moore, Sarah Hawley. and
Jennifer Arnold.
'
.

SUNDAY
RUI'LAND ...;. The Black
family reunion wUI be held
Sunday, beginning at 10 a.m., at
the community park In Rutland.

R UI'LAND - The 4lth reun·
ion rt the latP Theodore and
Myrtia Titus Smith wUI be held
Sunday at till' Rutland park.
Basket dinner beginning at 12:ll
p.m.

8(\TURDAY
SYRACUSE - Hymn sing with
the Gloryland Believers. Saturday.
7: 30p.m., Syracue Mission Church.

BALD KNOB -

School Reunion wUI be held
Sunda at the old li&gt;Uday School
Grounds oo Gilkey Ridge. Lunch
at 1 p.m.

NEW HAVEN - The Grin·
stead family wlll lxlld tlll'ir
reunion Sunday at till' New
Haven, W.Va. park. A picnic
diMer wUI begin at noon.

FRIDAY
POMEROY- Round and square
dancing wiD be offered Friday from
8-11 ·p.m. at the Senior Citizens
Center, Mul~rry Heights. Admls·
sion $1.~ each. Music by The
Stringdusters. Bring something for
the refreshment table. ·

"S~eel•l of tbe Weal

• .. ,

~

r-;::::::::::::::::::1!
II
REMEMBER
WITH TnFLOWERS
"'md a hn ulifullv

tlt•P~o ill'nfil ru nrral .
arrtlnflf'mt'nl, ju ~l rull
or ,- i~it

STOP .iN AND TRY SOME OF OUR

LOw :-;pRICED HIGH ENERGY
HEALTH FOOD ·sNACKS.

California Snadi Mi• S2 .50 lb.
Ftttive ~ruit .............. s2.~0 lb.
Just Frutt................... SJ .IO •·
Carob lalsiiii'""'"'"'S2;50 lb.

PineapPle lings ..... SUO lb.

la~na Chips......... :1·:~ II.
Apncotl................. 1. • ·
Papaya................... 51.95 •.
Prunes ·
s1 70 lb ..ilins .................... suo •·
WIGLE • • " PASTAS.
WE AlSO HAVE HORSIIADISH, HORSERADISH SPIEAD &amp;

"Wi'lLio"C:Di,

·

-

' •s: TtOYEI'S NOODIIS

Shop il•'C•pire - C)., Prlei• Ari,'Lower
lrldttt

PH. 992·2556

••••.o

· ~. hi~ Valley
514 EAST MAlt
POMEROY

Foods

.•. '"'''

992-6910

F.-Siwlps

531

JAC~SON

PIKE · AT. 35 WEST

l'llone44e· 4524
BARGAIN MATINEES SAT -SUN I
WEDNE SDAY - ALL SEATS 12.50
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY IZ .SO

I

•

POMEROY
FLOWER
SHOP
. ,.,,, II
lm•·'"" """'!' f_,.,.,.m

The Daily Sentinel
t USPS J.I ~960J
A Dlvl'ilon of Multimedia , In c.

Publ!sh('d f'Vf'TY aflf'rn oon. Mond&lt;Jy
throur.::h Fr iday . 111 Cou r t St .. Po·
mero~· . Ohio. bl,l th E' Ohi o Va ll ("y Pub lishing Company tMultlmrdi a, In C'
PomProy. Ohio 45769 . Ph ~ 2 · 2 1 ~ . Sr rond class postugl' pL!Id at PomP ro.~· .

Ohio.
MrmbN : United Prt&gt;Ss lnt C'fnalional.
Inland Da!ly Pr('ss A ssociation and th r
Ohio Nrwspaprr Associa ti on _Nat ional

RAI.PH M \CTHI

Br anham
NPw spapl'r Sales. 73.1 Th ird Aven u£'.
Nf'W York , N£'w York 100 17.

-

POSH.'lASTER: Sfond addrrss rha ngf':"i

· ,.

to Th £' Oa ll v

Saturday. 7:30 p.m., Bald Knob
Church, StiversvUie Road . Special
singing lea lured. Eve ryone
welcome.

RACINE - The 38th annual
reunion of the James Wolfe
family wUI be held Sunday at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Wolfe. Racine. Covered dish
diMer at 1 p.m.

RACINE - Meeting for new
kindergarten students and parents
in the Southern Local School
District. Thursday. 7:30p.m. PupUs
who havP not registered earlier
may do so at this meeting. Birth
ceritficates and Immunization re·
cords are needed.

~+_____. ·+oo

\ .

"

potted
plant. show also has two
The Tuesday
special non-rompetltlve exhitils,
one on line drive, showing line
materials for arrangements and
oortlculture information on the
growth of rna terlals by the Winding
Trail Garden Club; and the other by
the Chester and Rutland Garden
Clubs on still life design and
creation.
Thursday Show
The Thursday show has six
classes only, all artistic arrange·
ments. They are "Really Smurly,"
flvp inches or smaller. featuring
blue; "Two's Company. Three's a
Crowd ," three inches or smaller;
"A Chip Off the Old Block," using a
stooP, des ign eight inches or
smaller; "Good Things Come in
Small Packages," usin g a box
container wllh a design five Inches
or smaDer: "Faith as thP Mustard
Seed Had Faith," inspirationa l
design under eighl inches; and
" Micro·chips." mode rn eight
inches or smaller.

~mlin£'1 ,

111 Court SL.

Polll('roy, Oh.lo 457W.

Garden Club. Meeting for a plcJjlc
at Grueser' s Pond, Evelyn Hollon
outlined the schedule for lb;! floWer
Show and each member drew a
category.
.
Kathryn Miller, president, neported on lhe OAGC convention
.
.

"I'd better not eat the Brussels sprouts. They
may have been tampered with. "

and any

Community calendar/ area happenings

"America, Th~n and Now" Will .whlo~ she attended In Cincinnati
be the theme of the Oowep show to and gave highlights of the event.
be :held in August by the Wildwood , Host~ for the August meeting

-,.6

marigold, sunflower,

Circuit Is res(Xlnsibie for the
Future plans by the members of
selection or its own videocassett es the Circuit Include increasing the
fo r the Circuit . A mix tuft' of adult numrer of videOs from twenty P,er
and chUdren's videOCassettes hav e drrulatlon collection in 19fll to ·40
been pu rchased. Only VHS cassette per circulation collection in 1987. 1n
tapes are available.
addition to lhe circulation collec·
Display cardi(Xlsters are avalla· tlpns , some of the llbrarles In the
bie on each cassette. The display Cirru lt are adding local permanent
cards /posters wUJ help patrons coDections. Some of the Ubrarles
know what cassettes are ava ilable also have VCP 's to circulate.
In each library .
While vldeocassett es are a lready
To learn rrore about what titles
a permanent part of many public
library collections and services, are ava ilable, you should contact
your local public library In J&gt;ome·
ooiy two of the OVAL libraries had
permanent collections prior to the roy. phone: 992·5813.
establishment of the Circuit. Na·
Established in 1973 as the first
tionaDy as well a sta tewid?. state·funded regional public library
videocassettes (Xlpularlty is grow· agency In Ohio, today OVAL
ing and librarians clearly agrCl' ad mln lsters a variety of progra 111s
thai they otter an appropriate and through b cal public Ubrarles de·
exclllng way to expand and m· signed to Improve and extend
han Cl' library service.
sen&lt;ices to local residents. OVAL Is
An October, 1985 survey by made up of aulonomous public
Ubrary Journal indicated that libraries in the Ohio Counties of
most librarians believe thai the Athens, Hocking, Jackson. Law·
availability of videocassettes In· ren!P. Meigs, Pickaway, Pike,
creased use of the library. '" How· Ross. Scioto and Vinton. These local
ever," Ms. Powers said, " In librarians and trustees plan all
addition to in creased use uf the OVAL services . The OVAL Board
library. I expecl to see many new of 1Tuslres. which consist of on P
faces- people woo have not been In trustee from each member public
the habit of using the tradlllonal library board determines policy,
services of the library wUI be contniis finances. and makes fina l
inleresled in the new audiovisual decisions on whal services wUI be
service provided through video· offered .
cassettes." Vidros may stimulate - - - - - - - - - - - - crossover inlerest in lo traditional ,·
services but II Is uncerlain. Most
frequently, an Increase in the use of
lhe children's services is noled.

AdvC'rfl sl n ~ Rl'pr~ rnta llv £',

Wildwood .Garden Club meets

Berry's World

~1MIDVI'tlli~.~.

creating a staKe area of 16 by 24 teet for Perfonners.
One end of the 48-foot trailer h1111 been made Into a 12
by 8 toot dres81n1J room: On Moadtly Dani\V Blslell,
Ted Smith and Dan Smith, fair board member, were
~~ the work on the Iron expanm In preparatlnn
lor adding the Ooor.

A videocassette circuli has come
to the libraries In l&lt;Jutlll'ast Ohio.
Eleven public Ubrarles and Hock·
lng Correctional Institute, In a
cooperative venture supported by
Ohio Valley Area Libraries
(OVAL), in July began sharing
videocassette collections with one
anotlll'r with a monthiy shipmen tto
each library.
Videocasselte rollectlons are cir·
culated to each parllclpatlng U·
brary for a ooe month period. The
videocassettes are shipped to the
next library on the circuit the last
~Wrking day of the month arriving
at the next library during the first
week of the new rronth.
Ubrary directors of the public
libraries in OVAL began meeting in
January to develop the guidelines
and procedures lor establishing the
OVAL Videocassette Circuit. The
Meigs County Public Ubrary Is a
member of the the OVAL system
and Ubrary Director Ruth Rlwer s
served on the planning committee.
For 1986 each ci the 12 members
of till' CIRCUIT committed $1,000
for the purchase of the cassettes iJr
a total of $12,000. OVAL ha s
committed up to $500 iJr the
maUing of the cassettes between
libraries.
Each library participating In the

Flower show planned for Meigs Fair

Delayed victory________no_nc_ra_iff ·

"-....

ROBERT 6"LLARD

•

Republican National Convention in'
Kansas City in 1976 that turned:
Reagan down In favor of Gerald:
Ford, has introduced leglslatio(
calling for repeal.
:
3. Ronald Reagan, speaking lit
Texas two weeks ago, was clear!~
reing kittenish with the crowd whe~
he said, "One more try?" '1'116;
crowd roared, even as they roarect
for Roosevelt at the convention lit
July 1944 that nominated him for a:
fourth term,
•
Now, If the repeal of the 22nd:
Amendment were to become (;
serious proposal, almost certainly~
the wording of it would be as dlrec~ ·
as that proposed by Vander Jag!. IC
doesn't take a lot of language td;
repeal an amendment. When tJH::
22nd was passed, Coogress needed;
a sm tence the dfect of which would:
be not to affront Harry Truman:;
The 22nd says that any pnesldent:
woo has served for more than t'Ml ·
years in a term to which anothep.;
person was elected, and has setveQ.
a !uD term besides, can't servEC
again. Truman became president a;:
few months after the re-election do
Roosevelt and wuuld have been:
)revented from running again
1952 save for the phrase, "But thts;·
Article shall oot apply to any ~rsorr ;
lxlldlng the office of.Presldent when·
Ihis Article was proposed by the ;
Congress... "
.,.
4. Ronald Reagan has lndeect,
come oot several times in favor ofthe proposition that if the people"
want to elect a presldentfor three or
more terms, that ought to be their
wsiness. But he has always been
careful to say thai this excludes
him.
Almost certainly he Is sincere In
saying so, but one step might be
taken to remove the proposed
debate from partisan contention,
namPiy to write Into the legislation
the reverse clause used for Tru·
man :

tn:

~ named.

•

OVAL video cirruit tn operattoti

Ohio :

Wednesday; Aupt 0. 198&amp;:

I

•

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Page- 2- The Daily Sentine(
PomeroY,-Mid~~grt.

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

II) Carrlrr or Motor Routr

PA T

MORITA

Ka~Kid

Partll

;;a ·
7tn WEEK ' 7:00 P.H. O" LI .
SAT/SUN/W£0 MATINEE 1:00 P.M.

On£' W('('k ....... ........................ $1.25
Onl' Month .....
. ...... $5.45
Onl' Yea r ..
.. $1i5.00
SINGLE CO PY
PRICE
Dai ly ..
SubsNibl'rs not d£'s iri n_g 1o p;a,v t hf' car·

rkr m01v rf'mil In ad va n('(' rll r('('t to
Th r Daliv St&gt;ntlnl'J on a .1. 6or 12 mont h
Dasts . c r'f'dt t will tx' glvl'n ('&lt;tl'fif'r ('&lt;l('h
Wt'f'k

No

AL ATE
~ ~~ ~ ~· rllf' Mm lo
....ou. II~ tl.ltiiW!IIl~l

J lw

subscript ion .~

by m all prrmll!f'd in
art&gt;as whNf' homP r ar rlr r Sf'rvlrf' Is
av allablr.
Mall Suhst•rlptions

Jnstdf' M el~!'~ Co unly
13 W('{' ks ..
. $17 .29
2ti Wf'(' ks .
$.14 01i
52 Wl't'ks . . ... ..... ....... ...
. $66.56
Oub:r.ld ~ Mf'IKN Co unly
1.1 Wr&lt;'ks..
.. Sl R.:W
26 W['{'ks .....
.. .. $.15 .10
52 Woeks ... .. ........... ............... $67.W

"1 (I\, I') '''I~ 1!0'

IHI8MIIM
liM
FRI I SA T ONLY 12:00 •tONIGHT!
CIJOJ NG SDDft! "THE FLY"

SPECIAL WEDNE-Y

MATINEII

THtlltn.."MIRI

hfiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

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BANDS l/2 PRICE
When the·feeling is ·forever.
express it with beautiful karat
gold jewelry. Because real gold
is as lasting as your love.
Let us show you our
selection of karat gold wedding
bands in traditional and
contemporary designs today.

NOTHING ELSE

:FEEUJ'LIKE

REAL GOLD

i-.!
. I

�'

PRa•

4 · The Daily Sentinel

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

J

•

I

'

•

)

WILMING'I'(?!"LOIIlo

~ ''

.SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Steve Carlton Slruck out Cincinnati's Eric Davis In the thlnUnnlng
Thesday nlgbt to become the
second major-league pitcher In
history to record 4,000 strlkrouts.
Carl10n entered the game needIng three to reach the mark
previously attained only by Nolan
Ryan on July 11, 1985.
-Carlton struck rut WadeRowdon
and Mario Soto In the second Inning
ID set up his milestone.
In his career, "Lefty" has fanned

10 or rmre batters In a game 83
Urnes. ·
His 11rst strUceout came AprU 14,
1965, when he tanned Dick Ellsworth rl. the OllcagO Cubs. He
recorded No. 1,(00 liy getting Ron
Bryant of San Franclsro m May 7,
1m. No. 2,(00 carne.on July 10, 1976
against Dave Winfield of the
Padres.
·Carlton's 2,883th strikeout,
against Tony Scott of St. Louts on
July 6, 19!ll, mille . him the
lett-handed strikeout king. No.

r~

'l)lesday,

S'IEVE CARLTON

. I ~Wa

will battle
Eld00 MI•JIer' S team

CEDAR FALLS, Iowa IUPI ) The University of Iowa wiD play a
non-conference basketball gaine a\
the University of Northern Iowa In
19119, marking the first time the
Hawkeyes will travel to the Panthers' UNJ-Dorne, school officials
said.

Iowa Coach Tom Davis and UN!
Coach Eldon Miller, both In their
~year at their new schools, said
~Y the teams have agreed to a
lldme-and- home series, beginning
~th the Panthers' game at Iowa
~ty In 19!ll. Dates for the games

Mvemt~nset.

'~ Davis. who coached at Boston
~e and resigned from Stanford
lD take the Iowa job. replaced
~rge Raveling, now . at the
llntversity of Southern California.
:;: Miller, who resigned after 10
· :fji!ars at Ohio State, led the
)!uekeyes to the NIT championship
·IS.st season.
•: !The last time Iowa and UN! met
was In 1~1 when the Hawkeyes won
84-53 in Iowa City. Iowa State beat
the Panthers at the UNJ-Dome last
year' 69-61.

The California Angels collected
18 hits and 11 walks off five Twins
pitchers Tuesday night on the way
to a 13-1 victory over Minnesota.
The Angels extended their lead to
2'h games over the Texas Rangers
In the American League West., '
Elsewhere, Kansas City topped
Toronto 8-6, Detroit swept Cleveland 1n a double- header wlnnlng &amp;5
1n the opener and 11-9 1n the
nightcap, Chicago nipped Boston
3-1, Baltimore bombed Texas 9-2,
Milwaukee edged New York 2-1in
10 Innings, Kansas City topped
Toronto ~. Callfomla crushed
Minnesota 13-1; and Oakland beat
Seattle 104.
Til"rs 6-11, Indians 5-9
At Detroit, Lou Whllaker started
a four-run !Irst with a leadoff oome
run and finished a five-run third

WHAT IS HOME:r,,

~

H .557 ., ,

'lA ~~ .\37
~i "JJi ..\ '\1
.~ :t! . ~l'l

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another hurdle In h!!r·quest af'thf:
U.S. Tennis AssciCillti!Jn Girls' ·1~
tournament by clashing with an
opporient with the.s811)f first name.
Paired with the week-long tournament's No. 1 seed today ws
Andrea Farley ol ~clnnati, Ohio,
a nattVe ,ol Point P~i!SlUit, W.Va.

'

•

.
t
·~~~ ···:'

.

l

'

·..;

.

'

"$1111~•

~ in !bt IIIDth. Ed Whitsoll,
1-J, took die Ids&amp;, !liVIng up t..o nms
on 9lx lilts illiK Innings.
"With someiotly yw haven't
seen before, after tile !Irst Ume Ill
the crier, we soould have a feel for
what . he throws, " San Diego
manager Steve Boros 91lid.
In other games, Ollcago downed
New York 8-5, Montreal blanked

.·''

•.'
extmded the Astros' lead over ~
Dodgers In the NatloMI Leag~~~
West ID 6 1-2 games.
:;
Cubs 11. Mets 5
At Chicago, pinch hitter J eri)(
Mumphrey belted a tbree-rwl:
tDm er In the eighth Inning to lilt the
Cubs to their fourth straight victory
over the Mets and make a wlnneraf:
reliever Lee Smith, 7-7.

Plttsblrgh 3-0, St. Louis whipped
Phlladelphla 7-4, Cincinnati blasted
San Franclsal 11-G and Hooston
ripped Los Angeles 10-2.
Astros 10, Dodgers 2
At Los Angeles, Bllly Hatcher
hammered a grand slam and
Denny Walling smaeked two home
runs to snap the Dodgers' eightgame winning streak. The victo ry

..'
.,.

...

ALL WEEK

WITH $10.00 PURCHASE

ou

••
:•
••
•

••
•

Manufacturer's

••
•

.

•
'
•11• COPYAIGHT
, • . THII!:ROGER CO. ITEM $ "NO PAICES GOOD SUND•V. •uo. 3.
THROUGH
AUG . I . 1B , IN
•• WE
THE
TO
NONE SOlD TO DEALERS.
••

ons

~

SATURDAY,

RiSEAVE

RIGHT

C~t u r•OltS

&amp; POME RO~

LIMIT QUANTITiiES .

Widll8&amp;1 mil PmEf
bl;h of ltiMIIIMtlilld illml is ,..uillld to bl 1-..dilyo IIVIW!IIIor •ill ~ MCh ICrtlp' StuN ,
..019111 IPICIIictlly nOIId In d'lilld , tf wt dG Nn out af an ICMniMd M , wt wl off., )'OU
yout cftoice Oil c:ornr-..U. ~-"1, l'fhln IYI!IIbll , ref!K til1~ tt\t Mme MYingl or I rtlnthle•
whleft w11 tn11111 you to pun:"--lhll adwrliMd hem a! ThlldomtiMd pric:l withifl JO fllrl .
01'11 'o'tnOOr CCJU porl wil l bt 1ccepted I * Item purch~

coupons. The amount refunded cannot e)(ceed th e pr ic e of the

item . You must purchase product in sizes specified on the r.oupon .
This offer applies only to manufa ctured produ cts "cents oH"
coupons for it ems we carry . To assure pro du ct av ail abi!i1y for aU
our customers, only one coupon per shopping family , w ill be

doubled on any brand item during each store visit.

MIDDlUOit1'1 OHIO

REGULAR OR BUTTERED FLAVOR

'

Crisco
Shortening ...........

·-.....·-..
"

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~.~

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3-lb.

LIMIT 1 PLEASE

,

....
·-·
'

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

-o ur

OIL, OR WATER

'

.Kroger
Tuna............................... -.- .............. .

...
'

•.,

sees

$
6.5-oz.

$

'
•••••

0

••

••

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•••••••

••

•••••••••••

•••

16-oz.

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1M 'ij l~i ~ 1h
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MIM
Oalo.land

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' • Si·a nk'

That's entirely possible. you know. Already,
over 45 doctors are participating in Advacare,
the health maintenance organization that
your employer can offer to provide just about
every medical and surgical benefit you'll ever
need-for a single monthly premium. And
doctors know the advantage of seeing a good
doctor occasionally.
What does that mean to you? That
AdvaCare has some important advantages to

.J-14 11

-lb h.l .~ZJ 1:11•,
'f'Ueo.dlly'. ~ult~
.
[)r&gt;truirli. nl'\'l'lalld ~- lsi
0!'1 mil 11 . Clt•ll'land ~. l nd
M llwaui\N&gt; :.! . r-f'VI i' nrk l_ 1(1 mnln ~
K:..ms;r.s Cit\ II. Tomnlo ~
&amp;.11imolv !f. T1"11.a ~ 1
Chk'iiiO :1. fb.ron l
C'.alllondll 1.1. Mlnrt'SOia L

Olkland lfl. ~·aut&gt; .j
"'~11)''111 G IUlJI'II

C'aHJornla

tSutron lfl.7 t at Mlnrl'sOia

rntflt'vcn IM Or, 1: l'i p.m.
MUWiu iiN' ll.L'ary 7-111 at

York

[l;f'VI·

!Guld~ "&gt;-~I .

;

i ·.l \p.m
Klln!iliS Cir-.· dar kJon fi.7t at Tlifonto 1Krv

you in getting the finest medical ~ are available in
the region.
To take advantage of the Advacare advantages, call your doctor- a~k if he or she is participating. Then talk to your employer or AdvaCare
at 446-5283. Advacare
• •
headquarters is at Holzer
~~
Clit~ic, 385 Jackson PikeAd·~ .
Gallipolis, ohio.
.

VCR.r8re'"
The hMtlh c~r• pltn

'-7 !.7:1'1pm
TM!n tWin 1&gt;-'ltut Balll mor&lt;' tDixonlO·fl •.

thai helps kHP you healthy.

~ 7:.~ p.m

Ollcaj!O tBannl.~ ll,.
fk"11 . 7:1'1 p.m .
~·r b nd

lt-~1

t {'aJJrlmt t1

~ t'ft&gt;rT1'11 U ~IH.

:11

'

·Kroger
Green Beans......

Call This Number Toll Free With
Questions And Talk To Our Trained
M_eat Expert~l

%" Trim On All Beef
14" Trim Means 10-30% Less
Fat And Fewer Calories

a l Boslllrl rHuna
H~t

WHOLE KERNEL OR CREAM STYLE KROGER
CORN, OR CUT OR FRENCH STYLE

•
.•,

DPTmi l

16-oz.

Lfi p.m.

OWe land 1PluM .l-71 ~~ So:&gt;attll• rllmjo!Ston

.,

~l. m: ~ p . m

Tllll'lldil.y•!l G lllll r~~
MUwauiiN' at Nt"ll' York. nl2ht
Tt'liiL\ at B..tl! .,.,.r. '"'ilht
K&lt;1n&lt;;ru; Cll\· u 1Toronto.
hi
Ck-.·1'1and d t Orlrolt . nllif ht
~a n lr &lt;~ t CaU fornla . nl¢1t
!'l.'.t110N.o\L I.LA(;n:

...

•

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Drumsticks
,·or Thighs . . .:....

M' L Pt1. Gl
.t."Xl .')) (1 16••.
~ '1.! _"'J 171..;

NY

lfl .1-l

M n trl
Ptii i.J

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Ji ~7 .j.Ji !1

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$

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE GRAIN FED BEEF
BONELESS CHUCK

~

A l.ldnt -1 :1. San Dl' ~ ~
{'Lnrlnnati II, San Franrl'lt'O ~&gt;

ttl Lol Allllt'.,·"

lb.

IP.o1

Cllk'ii,L'IJ ~. l'i t-.~· Y ork~~
Mon t i'!"~ I .I P ltt~ll.lrJlh (I

ltooston

Diet RC or
RC Cola ....................~Pak

m !J•·,

1\u11dfoy',. R-*"

Sl . l.ouls 7. 1'hU;KII'Iphlll

NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE, CHERRY RC,

U.S. GRADE A HOLLY ~ FARMS

'"'II:

Roast or
Steak..............................................

~

w.-..AJ'8 GIUtW!i
Nl'Y&gt;' Yo rk 1Ga:&gt;&lt;rn ll-&lt;1 at&lt;ll\ndl•f!.1m O.Hr
at Chlrlllif(l rTrou1 Han~ ~\'I'K' h 2·1r. t 11 .00
p.m
Clnrinnarl •Brolrll'illl: !\-~1 at San Fran ·
rl!iro 1Rkw H-t&gt;1, l:ffi p.m
Hwsron I I«'OO~h Mh 111 Los Anlilf'k'!;
rttor.:,.·cu n 7-til. l: rTlp.m.
Moftl mal tYoumans Vl-il 011 Plllsburah

lb.

Del Monte
-.Catsup ........................................... 32-oz.

1Rhodrn U-61. &lt;::n p.m
P'tlll&lt;ldPiphla •Ca rrt~W~ -.h ar SL Louis
I M 11 1/II'W ~ tO-l l, ~ l'l p.m
Atlanta iM ahit'r JI).UI at SanD I~ 1Hoyt

!'t-7!. VI:Ill p.m
TllinldQ 't G...-...
P!l lladtipnl~ 11 St LoU!s

... : Nc'W' York ~t Chlraao

49

c

AVAILABLE ONLV IN STORES WITH DELl DEPARTMENTS

NO PRESERVATIVES, WHEAT OR
HOMESTYLE WHITE

Fresh Baked
Bread....................

Mon111"111 .at PlM iWIJ:h. nlll:ht

SIZE

Scioto results

66--CT. SMALL, 48-CT. MEDIUM OR 32-CT. LARGE
BLUE BARRIER
··

CoLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Ollnbro Hawaii, a gelding . pacer
that flnlsbed lOth in his last ~
ooUngs, changed things Tuesday
nlgllt and won the featurEd
at
. Scioto Downs in a lifetime best ol

.! .

pace

1:58.

-

-

Elvin Long had Chinbi'Q Hawaii
oot front aU the way, beaUng out
Sovereign Sam by a length and a
quarter with MoonUght Noble
coming in third.

. -,)

,,
'

'

Di.ap.t=r~. . . . . . . .

'

' !

·'

•

Famous Westside
:· C.antiiOupes
Eadl

Comforts

{

'·:

:t
·;

each

.

•

This week your manufacturered products "cents oH" coupons are
worth double at Kroger wrth $10.00 or more purchase. Limited to
manufactured products coupons worth up to and including 50¢
OH . Coupons worth more than 50¢ are redeemed at fa ce value
only. Limit one coupon for each product purchased . Limit one
coffee coupon . No beer, wine O' cigarette coupons will be double .
Not valid on free coupons. Kroger coupons or retail food store

BILL BLOWER

ere

J
'
•"

Plui ...Attlllfloll to D•ttll"

BRUCE FISHER

IIUI-4l

Olwine, who gained his ttrst
major-league save, retired nine
straight batters !Flore surrenderIng a two-out tllmer to Cannelo

:=

maan•

~IUHI .Y'tme

Speck, called up from Richmond
of the Triple-A International
League July 27, was a last-minute
replacement for Smith, who was
bothered by an Inflamed tendon In
the middle finger ol hts left hand.
He pitched 5 2-3 Innings and
surrendered one run on five hits to

...•
"''
I

' Tht terminally Ul have bo.Ome rllhorlaoloiod fromthl
.~frUt of us. Tlil nature·Ot ·their Illness often den11lnda
: thl.t !My .Pend'rnUm lil1ho toat .port of thlir '"'~'~in
·· h611Pkll1 or nursing hciinol.ii
,.
•
.&lt;;But Iii lild:fiahloned --'- .ondW.thinkodmlroblo - QIO"iOm lt"becorTiing more ·pOpuler: the cara 8t ho.me 'of
••ia'Uaty II_people who n11d no immtdilte medical
triltiM.nt. h '1 cetled aimply ·~home cart / '
~
awie often. those With but.,a·lhort time to llvft ar.
chOosing to epend t'hat 11ine with their families, in ·
ltMd of tn the hoapltal. Thi1 requlrel co,-.illlttation
with the person's physician, ot ·course; and home cere
it not advilabte or fe11iblt In some cite~ . ·aut wH:h thl
physician's ataent, home care
thlt the per·
10n'alaat d1y1 art 11 ••tlafying lnd heppy 11 po11ible.
The movement toward ho1picet. 'Or minirnei· Rrl 18cilitiel, alao reflecttthfr hon. a-re philosophy. Aw.y
from the stren of a hoapttaltUy, a dying person oen
do the things ha feel• are most meaningful for him.
As profeniontl funenl diractOrs. we c;en explain the
options for home care. Pleate call us or ttop by if you
would like to talk about it .

11~-

The Daily Sentinel Page

---.

,. '

.•

Padres.

gain his first major- league decision. He struck out four and walked
three.
"I don 't know how you're supposed to act," Speck said. "Ifyoo're
supposed to act happy, I am."

•

~
f; t.!

Mtwlwl&gt;

wilb nu~~. one seed
' ' w;v,;.(UPI)CHARLESTON,
Top-seeded Andre8: ae~ !ailed

3-2 victory over the San Diego

..•"'•

f,~

Dc&gt;lrull
Torun!ll
Clv lntl

Andre&amp; Farley;·palred

By Unlled PrOs. fntemalional
Atlanta pitcher Cliff Speck r.icelved his first starring role as a
stand-In for Zane Smith Tuesday
nlgbt and forgot his lines.
~ He remembered how to pitch,
liowever.
• !!peck, making his first majorH!ague start, combined with Ed
Olwlne on a six-hitter in the Braves'

~

~·

L Pl1. 0 8
.W .'181 -

·

I

with a two-run soot 10 help Detroit
complete a double-~eader sWEep.
In the ~er. Darrell EvMs
smacked a three-run homer to pace
the Tigers. The sweep moved the
Tigers lniD fourth place In the AL
Eali~ ahalf-gamebehlndNewYork
and five games behind first-place
Bos10n.
.
While Sox ·3, Red Sox I
At Bdston, Carlton Fisk hit a
two-run homer and Richard Dotson
had a no-hitter for five Innings,
l!elplng \he White Sox spoil , the
return of Dennis "011 Can" Boyd.
Boyd, 11-7, In his first start slnc'e
being suspended for his July 10
walkout, went 72-31nnlngs. Richard
Dotson Improved to S-12.
Orioles 9, Ranl!"rs ~
At Baltimore, Jim Traber and
Lany Sheets smashed back-toback lDme runs and Fred Lynn and
Jim Dwyer had two RBI apiece to
spark 'the Orioles.

AMEIUf.M' I.Et\UIJE
l y l 'ntwd r MI" lalernMt.ll
~I

· ·

•• ·b

Majol'!!

Bos10n
Iltnu·
NY

mdllli ·~ 12-day·hcildout

·

r-----------------------~--~--------------~--------------------------------------------------------------~~
....

Scoreboard

....

··

as a free agent -'
~arsky has been the club's
3,100, came against Tim Wailachaf
rose. guard :since he was
backup
Montreal, AprU 29, 1981.
He set a National League record, signed by the Ben8als In the middle
since ecUpsed by Hoostoos' Nolan ar the 1982 season. Terms of the
Ryan, the aU- Ume lea~. with No. contract were not disclosed.
~arsky's signing leaves the
3,118 against Andre Dawson af
Bengals
with four players unMontreal, Sept 21, 1981. On May a!, .
signed:
veteran
and staring line1983, Carlton passed Walter Johnbacker
Jeff
Schuh;
first-round pick
son for S€CODd place on,the all-time
list with No. 3,009 agalilst Gany Joe KeUy, a linebacker; secOnd
round pick Lewis BUiups, a defenTempleton of San Diego.

Angels extend lead
By JAN LOVE
UPI Sports Wrller

flliYarSky

ooae gUard )err}

'

Ohio

Braves stop Padres; Houston humbles Dodgers, 10-2

slyebaCk; 8Qdtljfd-I'OIIM!'ckJUO
SkoW, (llefensiVe (!lid. ·

(UPI) The Cincinnati Bf{ia&amp;I slpeil vete-

-

.

Po~-Middleport.

s1gn veteran :nose

Carlton ·reaches milestorie·with 4,000th ·career strikeout

.,

Wednesday, August 6, 1986

88

•.

--

..
'•

•'

�,,.

'

Paga ' &amp;--The Dally Sentinel

.

Pomeroy- Middlepon, Ohio

lf' •

ppreciata

.I

'I

NOW
ONLY •••

Free Give-Away

,.
'

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

79&lt;

Good
Sunday

298 SECOND ST. ·

Aug. 3

POMEROY, OH.
I

'

thru
Saturday

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAl, AUG. 9, 1986

TENDERBEST USDA

FliLL CUT

Round

FOODLAND ENTRY BLANK

Aug. 9

·steak

NAME _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Limit
20

ADDRESS - - - - - - - - - PHONE - - --

-------

Coupons

DRAWING SATURDAY, AUGUST 23. 1986

SUPEIIOI MEAT .

TRUCKLOAD SALE
CAUFORNIA

Cucumbers or

Canta- JUMBo

Green
Peppers

Loupe

'

. '

We Reserve The Right To

WIN A FREE NEW
WHIRLPOOL WASHER
AT EACH OF YOUR
FRIENDLY FOODLAND
SUPERMARKETS.

•Money Sever Items
•Everyday Low Prices
•USDA Choice Meets
•Tender Freah Produce
•We Welcome Federal
Food Stamps end WIC
•We Sell Money Orders

Your Low-Prleed,
lndependenllf Owned
Customer Servlee
Supermarket

The Daily Sentinel- Page 7

. Wednesday, August 6, 1986

12 SIZE

ALL THIS

$ 49
Chuck Roast .. ~~•... 1

WEEKI!

-·

I

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
·~(1(55

ROUND STEAKS II.

4 $1

$

)

$

BUCKET

BOB EVANS

FoR

lll~ $199

HOMEMADE

Sandwich Spread.~. 99&lt;

·
(
$ 99 Chic:ken
Leg Quarters .!~••••• 49
Str1p Steak .... ~~.••. 4
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
Sl 09
'

•.c:z

...
.
·.UI·
=•
0 ="'
&gt;
~

~

179
Cube Steak .... ~~ •...

arm Sausage

~

&gt;

~
~

0

•
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"C

c:

1"'l

.ft.

Q
c:

~

0

0

·C!z

2

U.S. D.~. CHOICE BONELESS

Chuck

CUIED

.tiCKET

. $199

• DEW, PEPSI FREE, DID PEPSI

Pepsi Cola

lEG., ADC, RECT. PEIK

Folger's Coffee

r

~

&gt;
t"'

Ul =&gt; "'
•
0 "'
~

Chicken Livers·~•• ~•• 49(
29
Ground Chuck!!.••. $1

STEAiS

""·"'

Roast.~~....

--

0

t"'
~

1"'l

.ft.

0

~

I=•

"'

"C

0
2

oz.
ans.

-

16

'

3LB.
CAN

Plus
Deposit
MINUTE MAID

...

'---------~~TIAILIIAZ£1

ORANGE
JUICE

~~.

~

DOG
FOOD

$129

:$299

Bananas ..........~..... 29(

$ 49
2°/o Milk .........6:~... 1
BROUGHTON',S

~,!~.
R~C.
2UT£R
Ill.

Cola

89·c

FOODLAND

Hamburger·Buns

Vegetable Oil

12CT.
PKG.

69C

. liOZ

99&lt;

•Tide Detergent

$149·

lOX

.

11

oz.

89(

Whi;; ·Breod·::::~. 3/$1

179

. 420Z. $

KRAFT

Bar-B-Que Sauce ••••

REG. • UNSCENTED 4.0• OFF

SUNBEAM

DIET liTE, DIET IC

$

GRADE A MEDIUM

DOVE
LIQUID

~~,

Eggs •••••••••••• ::!~... 2I 1
DAIRY LANE
$ 09
Ice Cream •.••• ~~.':;... 1
DINNER TREAT

Pot Pies ••••• :.~z~ .... 5I

·.II II' ~II i &gt;IIIII ANil 1111' 111 IIIII IiN

I

. vnvn
ICE ·(IEAM

I

FlESH

. .

:,o{ $299 1 / ( _)
Umlt 1 wllh c... pon

1

-

.

'I

1

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

.

oWeR III&lt;W TIM Right 'ro Umlt Ou1ntltln •Pricet Etfectivo Wednes tlll v Auq. 6 thru Snt urrl~v. Aug, 9. 1986
l

oo,od t~ru •••.. Aug. 1.1sse.

..

I

HEAD LEnucE .

i

I•~~!
::::a. · ;

2 $1 00 !.
HIADS

Limit 2 wHh Coupo"
Gi&gt;od lhru Auguot

a. 1888.

I ·
I

~--~---------------~~~ ·

•U~DA Food llaJ!II!I Glildy Accepted •Not AllfiOIIIIible for T:YPOII'IPhicel E1rore
"'

:"ltfSTANT COFFEE

I

•

..
.

. S39·9

. Llllllt 1 ,. enAt , ......
r~~.,
~rtl . .....
1916 .5
'

s-. ....

AJAX

BLEACH •
GAL

59(

1111111 I hi C•"""r
Oollj At ,...••
~~~

1

0

~

o4

t"'
t!'l
1"'l

=
-a

!
= ..

&gt;

0

~

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0
2

•The tot al value of the dou ble coupon may not exceed
$1.00

I

•Any manufacturer's cou pon greater than 51 ¢will be
redeemed at face value
only.
•Only one manufacturer's
coupon per item.
•The total value of the double manufacturer's coupon
cannot exceed the purchase
price of the item. Money
will not be refunded ,
•This offer does not apply to
Powell's Super Velu Coupons. free coupon s, or any
competitor' s coupons.

•

PRI(E SAVER

'

$

•0

&lt;
&gt;
t"'

$3 59

•Offer is only good, for product on hand. No· Rainchecks .

147 Oz.

s.........,
1916

LAUNDRY DETERGENT

•This offer excludes ciga rettes. or any other items
prohibited •bY law.

s'

•

lilnit 1,., (UtiAt ....... s-.u .... rttt
fll!llns..,.. ' ' 1916 s·

•There ia • limit of 20 .cou. pona you may rlldetm ,

•

�'

Wadneaday. August 6. 198~

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, August 6, 1986

commended
1or volunteer effort ·
.·"::-:
.~~-. J''
._· ,i•·,l

.

•)..'_,''·.a-.a..d
-/{:_.

~

. ~to
.,Ciinlnllnlty woo
d!i perfonn var·

ws

: Services in
lion to managing
tllelr
·practices.
One of the ser·
vices Is conducting the physical
. ~amlnatlons for young IJI!Ople of
· .the local hlgh schools Involved In
1¥1l only football but other sports
~ I,Ji'ograms. This activity consumes
a great deal of time - as do other
. qqmmunlly services provided by
doctors - such as the bloodmobile,
when Or. James Witherell and Dr.
WUma Mansfield serve ·as unit
~leal supervisors. Recently Dr.
·John Ridgway and Dr. James
-Conde conducted the physicals for
· ~lgs High athletes and Dr.
Ridgway and Dr. E.S. Villaneuva
did the physicals at Southern High.
· · The physicals are required and
would cost schools a bundle If
o;loctors dldn' t donate their services.
And- the doctors frequently serve
as team physicians. Our doctors
:.aJso have always st&gt;emed willing to
·serve In various capacities with
local groups and to work on various
community projects.
Wltat I'm probably trying to say
Is when you see local doctors
working on !llme wlunteer project,
the bottom line is they are giving up
precious, valuable time whlch
·might well be spent instead m their
own per!lmal flnandal gain.

· Members of Ute Meigs County
Fair Board met Monday night to
wrap up loose ends for the
upcoming fair.
Board members are pleased with
the renovation of Ute aged grandstand. It cost big bucks but It is
Improved and all of the necessary
Inspections have bt&gt;en held and the
grandstand has been approved.
The board has expanded camJ)"
lng facilities for this year's fair
making it available in three
different areas on the Rock Springs

Community
group has
•

meetmg
AJTangt-mmts to replace some
tunilshlngs with proceeds from the
recent ice cream social were mad&lt;'
when the Long Bottom Community
Association mPI f('C{'ntly at the hall.
Melody Robe11s. tlPW president.
conducted the meeting du1ing
which time committee and officers'
reports were given. It was noted
that a handmade quilt had been
donated by Barbara Fitzpatrick to
be used in a fall fund ra ising
project. A thank you note was ll'ad
from the Olfl Newlun family .
}lorold Brewer was appointed to
repair the ice cream freezer and
also to secure brass snaps for Ute
lJag pole. Mae McPeek oot!'d a
homecoming held at the building
last Sunday. Cards for the ill will be
sent. Ada BisselL Mae McPeek,
LEona Hensley were nam!'d hostesses for the next mePiing.
Melody Roberts and Ernestine
Hayman served refres hments to
LEona Hensley, Delores Hawk and
Robbie, Bud Adams. Harold
Brewer. Kenneth Bissell, Francis
Andrew. Mary Andrews. Ada
Bissell, Alia Ballard. Harlan Bal·
lard, and Mae McPePk.

Personal notes

• •

· Rreent visitors of Mary Andrews,
Long Bottom, were her brother and
hiS wife, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Curtis, St. Petersburg, Fla, and her
sister, Josephine Corrigan , Colum·
bus. While here they also visited In
Clarksburg. W.Va.
Mary Andrews was In Columbus
l'Ecently to attend the Curtis
reuniOn at the home r1 her son and
his wife, Paul and Jill Andrews,
Westerville. Thirty-two attended
the tamUy reunion. 1

Fairgrounds and a new stage has
been secured lor the grandoltand
entertallunent. This Is a portable
job will\ a small dressing room In
one comer which certainly smuld
Improve . the situation for
entertainers.
Senior cltlzens day will be
o00ervec1· on Thursday, Tickets lor
the day are $1.&amp;1 and may be
secured at the renter (I" through the
Golden Buckeye or the Mountaineer cartls at the gate. Jncldentally,
the Meigs Senior Citizens will not
have a tmt or special exhibit this
year at the fair. I oowant to report,
however, the the group was never
charl!l!d for any Ifill space. The
Meigs County Senior Swlngt-rs will
be perfortnlng on the hill stage at 5
p.m. Thursday.
The pretty baby and Little Miss
and Mister Meigs Fair contests
must be entered through a !onn
which appears in The Dally Senline! · and that fonn will be
appearing this week so that you can
get the kids logged ln.
Board Secretary Murlel Bradford reports that all livestock for
this year's fair must be on the
grounds by 9 a.m. next Tuesday
excluding, of rourse, the feeder
calves which are brought onto the
grounds on the day of the feed!'r
calif show.
Mrs. Bradford also reports a
couple rmre additiOns to the hill
stage entertainment and they
Include the Peggy Gillespie
Stylettes at 7 p.m. on Friday and a
"today" Instrumental group,
Blitzkrieg, at 9 p.m. on Tuesday.
Juniors have added new
bleachers and have painted the
rabbit exhibit area In preparation
for Ute fair .
Now - last but not least - signs
will be posted this year ~n!orclng
the policy that aloohJUc beverage
are oot pennltted on the fair·
grounds. ChargE's can be filed - so
- a word to Ute wise.
Am I the first to tell you that this

Is National Smile Week• I'll count
on you to observe the week 1o the
fullest.

tending the convention held In
Cincinnati were Margaret Edwardol, Janet Bolin, Judy Snowden,
Judith Hill. Iva Sisson, and Suzy
Carpenter.
The Rutland Garden Club's
recent flower show was noted, as
was a dinner and worksmp held at
the home of Pauline Atkins.
Members were remlnd!'d of Gardeners Day Out to be held Sept. lOa!
Dawes Aboratum. New program
books were discussed and oostcss
dates set. Next
held

814-441-3719.

THE QUAUfY

*VINYL SIDING
'ALUMINUM SIDING
*BlOWN IN
INSULA nON

F11 A"

New Homes Built

~rt.

suo Aclminion, tide the
rides Frtt. lringi" yeu tOp

.

CALL
992-2156

stan from Nalhwillt.

Eagle Scouts announced

104

Jeff Hawk and Scott Hanning chargE' was given by fub Workman
were advanced to the rank of Eagle of Troop 249.
Lanny 1)-rt&gt;e, scoutmaster of
Scouts In a court cl honor ceremony
held recently at tbe American Troop 245, assisted in the cerem·
Legion hall in Middleport recently. my, with Brent Bolin and · Bard
Both Hawk and Hanning are Roller, both Eagle Scouts, serving
members of Scout Troop 245 which as esrorts. Mem!Ji'rs of Troop 245
is sponsored by Feeney Bennett taking part In the cermonles were
Post 128, American Legion. Master Frank Blake, P.J. Cbadwell, Del
of ceremonies for the rourt &lt;:i moor Laudermilt, Bobby Johnson, Matwas Bob Arms, Troop 249, Pome- thew Craddock and Dennis Lillie.
Jeff Is the !lln d Ray and Cberyl
roy. The invocation, Eagle poem
and benediction was given by Bob Laude1milt, Pomeroy, and Scott is
Smith. Pack 245. The scouts were the son of Donald and Sandra
certified bY Howard Duncan of Hanning, Bradbury .
Troop 245.' and the Eagle Scout

'

Roger Hysell
Garage

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TRANSMISSION .
REPAIR

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
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Al•o Tr...111lulo11
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

Rt. 7, Pomeroy, OH.
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THRU SAtURDAY

8·13 tfn

8

CUSTOM GARAGE

J&amp;L INSULATION
PH. 992-2772

GREAT BEND ELEaRIC, Inc.
N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

THURSDAY EVENING. AUG. 7
AT 6:00P.M.

Terms: Cash

·

Case No. 25.051
lunch

JIM CARN

R

BANK

"The letter lank"
MEMBtR F.D.I.C.

5th St'"t

2212 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant. W. Va.
675·1121

Ernergertcy_949-2Sl 6

HIGH PRESSURE PLASTIC
WATER PIPE

New Ha11111, W. Va. ·

882·2135

Real 'Estate General

. I

I

SEE ONE OF THE

PHONE 992-2156

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

3-D AUTO CENT£1
IIO'It W. Maio St.
'-f, Otolo,

"2·4771
~

'~!~iii;_
'13· '80 OM F*'der1 ... .. tlt

~~'!.~·- ····· ...... •u

TO HELP ·YOU

A)ID SELL

+ TAX (WITH COUI'ON)

Good thnl Sept. 1

AIR CONDinONING

IFIEON &amp; 0~ ADDm
SLIGHTlY HIGHIII

•Performance Teat Syatem
•Add Refrigerant If Necessary
•lnopect Syatem for Leaka
•Check Drive lett Condition It Tension
•Test (with t._rmomet•) Degr• of Coldne11
GREAT DRIVING COMFORT BEGINS HERE

REGUlAR '44.50

''•tpeelel Prlee

$2 595
+ TAX

Good thru Sept. 1

HAPPY 30th,
KENNY!
love, Tammy,

and Brad
(WITH COUI'ONJ

ClEAN UP WITH n..,

PUBLIC NOTICE
ClASSRD ADS~ 1
r~ Section 111111.16
oft.. Ohio RMIII Code. tho 1-----":---...,....--~ In v...ltlan• .....,
Public Notice
"-' ""~ lnU. aounty I ----~--~
for tho Ill&lt; Ylil ol 1981.
Tho c:htngtl In vllulilon
NOTICE OF
wMI re11oct th1 general NIP·
APP.OINMENT OF
~ end , _ conllliictlon
FID!J.CtARY
ID! tt. t .. v•• or 1981.
E11111 oi 'Ctiflord G. New·
Y•lu• mey bt viewed ot
.. Mtlti• County Auditor'l tun, dectaHd. Cue No .
211,192. . •
Offa.
· WHiiem R. Wickline. On July Zti, 1988, in U.
Probito
Molgl County Auditor Moigo County
Court. C•n No. 211, 192; '
171 30: (8)8, 2tc
John R, Newlun, Bolt 2.
'--------1
Long Bottom, Ohio, 4&amp;743,
r
wu tppolnild Af'llnlltrotor
of t .. ntlrle of Clfford G.
Newlun, ittceiWid.' iet. of
8011 52. l.oltj · Bottom,
Mtigl County, Ohio 411743.
Robert E. Buck.

, PrDbtto Judge

LM11 K. Nelio~OIId. Ctork

(7) 30: (B) I, 13. 3tc

7071

54 Mlac. MerchandiH

LUBE, OIL AND FILTER

Lubricatuuepenslon, drain oil and replace filter using Mr.
Goodwrench Oil and AC Delco Filter.
In this special we insist oo us ina quality Mr. Goodwrltlch Oil &amp; A/Cfiitm not an off bra~d or cheap filttr and oil. This is an honest to f!Odness special
on quality GM Parts &amp; GM Slrvice. no substitute for quality. limit 5 qts. Oil.

REGUlAR 126.95

.,.Speelll Prlee

$19 95

directions details, 'incl.
Send S3:25 plus 75C
postage, handling. for
each panem. '

Good thru Sept. 1 + TAX (WITH COUPON I

Sondlo:
_ ..... CIIfto,

2.6 POINT
SAFETY INSPEOION

_...

REGUlAR S19.95

SPECIAL
Good thru

+ TAX

S~pt .

'

FQR ONLY 'St ·

96-~.

11!1-oolor Ceilloti~ er.tt. -lilttems,

IWITII COUPONI

Wl(et, b8(h

frame,
re~~~~;~.~!·~$21,000.
, central
ni ce !g.
need work but just

Zip. . . . . . . . . .. .

•

11 ··-·
~.·u glu him • calli

CLELAND REALn INC.

608

fA~T

MAIN

NEW LISTING - Bradbury - Recently remodeled 3 bed·
room home With partral basement. hu~ equipped
. kitchen,
din ing area, and free ga s to house. $35•,000.00
NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT ...., Nice 2 story ·3 bedroom
with l'h baths, enclosed front ~tting jX)rch, fireplace, car·
txJrt, lots of storage -space. Many other features. All for
$37,500.00.
RACINE - Newer sectional home. Occupied only a short ,.
time! 3 bedrooms. l'n baths, central air, equi~ped k~di en ..
All eleclric Extra n1ce condition. ONLY $26,!110.00.
POMEROY - Si1 acres close to town - wrth nice I 1\ 51ory •
frame home, with three to four bedrooms. Equjlped kHchen
wllh nice cabinets, 10x20 storage bu ilding, patio, garden ·
space, and an A/Cun it. All furnrture &amp; appliances included,
Price reduced to only $19,000.00.
RUTLAND - Ahome with everyting1 Beautiful tanch 'home
wilh an outstanding family room C0111!lete with blr and fire·
place 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, separate utility. large deck, 2.
car carport, with storage on large.lot. Also has a sateU~e. and
above ground pooL.$55 ,&amp;10.00. ·
MIDDLEPORT - North lhlrd - 2 storr homewrth 2-3.bed · ·
rooms oo 40'xll3' lot Gas FA. heat. ·Garage. Would maku
· nice home for your family for only $14,&amp;10.00.

1

iiil_ _ _ _ _ _.. ,

7071- Sew 5" tall Mr. &amp;
Mrs. Santa in red velve·
teen to hang on tree.
72115-Dotl :!5'. of charm:

Tissue paHern pieces,

stitch, r\eedlepolnt,
latch hook, quilling, and ·'

more. ·'

.,

· ALICE 810015

·:c

R A F T.

S

1

HENRY E. ClELAND, Jll . ................. ...............9t2~6191
JEAN TRUSSEll .... .........................................~f.l61G ..
,DOniE TURNER .... ,, .......................,............ 2·!1ta
OFFICE .... !......., ................ ~ ........................... !It 2·22 59

BuJing I Selli"
Gold, Silwer
14K Chaim, Coins,
Collector's Accessories

•moo

SUMMER HOURS
1-7 M-lH

colt... Colt 614·667·3126 .

We pay cuh tor late model clean
u1ed c•r~ .
Jim Mink Chtv.-Oida Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

667·3513

(all for Directians

6-16-'86- I mo.

H-ard L Write11l

ROO.FING

NEW -- IEPAIR
Gutte..Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

"At Reasonable Prictt"

IMittzad
C8111 .. tnd

""""-1...

2282.
WANTED TO BUY Ulad wood &amp;
co•l heaters . SWAIN'S FURNIlURE, 3rrJ. &amp; Olive St. G•l1ipo -

Ho . Colt 614-448 -3169 .

Used mobile homes . Call 614 441-0175 .

DRY FOAM

PH. 949·2801
or 949-2860

CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addon• and remod.tlnt
-Roofln~ .,d wor!t
- Concm. worll
- Plumbing •nd ..ICiricM

-

(Free

We can re~ir and rt-

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

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314

Pomeroy, Ohio
4-15."86-fe
WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEAOQUAITEIS FOR
•ZENITH
.SYLVAIIIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY

•GIBSON I!FRIGERATOI

.SATIUITE SAliS &amp; SlmC!

W1IHJ AF•ll Tl•
aep Tt~.•lllel
II

PAT HILL FORD

992· 2196
Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

Eltlmetool

Pity

lire4 of Hanl
lustr Water?
We Ha11 Tho An·

····-·

FENCl co•ANY ·

PH. 9U-6931

.,.., s c•
J42·2017

fstimatls"
lmttllalltn A•allalllt

Mon.·Wod.·Thuro. 3·5 pm
Tue. 6:30·1: Fri. 1·2 pm
Saturday 10-11 :30 om
LAIGII-AL&amp;
SUIGIIY IY APPT.

WISt Stfl Str11t

:304-112-2996 7· .

PH. 304-675-2441
lEND AIEA CAU
llpley OHio
For Hours

IO'S Gin SHOP
SYUCISI, 01110

ne Salt I• 0• FerJ•Iyl

I.

10-14-Hc

SJI!.95
.
aiiiENT DOGS &amp; CATS
IO"Ie OfF
WI'S &amp; fiGUitNIS

CHESRI-915·3307
4/1/tlrt

Thuro.·fri. &amp; Sot.
I o,m, 10 I p.m.
CloHdTUH~

An noun ceme nt s

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAU~
JUST CALLI

992·3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SPIL
FIL.L DIRT
·tic

lEN'S
APPLIANCE
SEIVICE
915-3561
All M1be

•Wu.... •DIIhwtohlrl

•Rang11
•Rofrlgerotoro

•Drywl •FNIItrl

PARTS end SEIIVI&lt;:E

3 Announcements
SWEEPER 1nd sewing machine
replllr. p...ts. and supptiee. PI~
up tnd dttkttry, Onis Vacuum
Clttnar, ont htlf milt up
Georgi~!" Creek Rd. C•ll 111tl·

SUPEIIOII

SIDIIIG CO.

·Y•n I 'ALI.JII
COII'Iiltet• QutW IM!rlt

Complete RomotWI!tiJ
Rooting crl til Typee
Worked20In,..,.
hllrnt • • .

"Frw E•iiN!toa"

CALl COLLECT:
Ph. (614) 843~5425

7·11·• Jmo.

BOGGS

SAliS &amp; SRVICI
U. S~ IT. ·50 EAST
GUYSYiil, 01110

Atrfl!oiiae4 .W. Dllra.
NtwiWI.,,Wifit
,_Etjtrljllilll '
'

,.~

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

Pam &amp;ltf¥111
.
.,.•• tic

·MIDWEST
SEAL &amp;' STRIPE
Sri!.. tlii. Dill
with PoweSealst~l
coati.. cnl striping
and nlcing of
Asphttlt &amp; COIICttft.

1·614-696-1337
1·614-S•IJJ-1169311

EASY ASSEMBLY WORKI
e714.00 per 100. Guartntefld
paymen t. No ••les. Det1il1 IClnd
stamped envalope: El•n· 716
3418 Enterpriu. Ft. Pierce. Fl

334a2.
StgnM-Ig up dealer• now for
Friendly Horr. Pllftin. Eam your
kit by heving Friendly Panlcte.
Toys •nd Giftl. a good way to
make extra income. C•ll your
friendly Home Dealer now . Also
booking parties. Megnolie Nitz
at 814 ~ 992 - 3881 .
.

NHd 10 rr.one fur light houM
cleaning in my home. Oay1 and
some weekends . 614 -992 -

6683 or 814-992 -7314.
Need e»ttra mon eyi' FRIENDLY
HOME TOY PARTIES hllimfllediate openi1gs for manegan and
demonstrltort In this •r11. lt'1
easy. fun and proflttble. We
have over 700 eltciling toy1 and
gifts fe•turing the netN animated
talking doll Cricket which will be
advertised on national T.V. No
cash Investment. no coMecting,
no delivering and no service
charge. All you neediltdeaireto
make money . have fun and a few
houra of sp•re time. No experien r::e neceuary . Call 1· 80,0 ·

3000 government jobl list.
116,040- 869 .230 year . Now
hiring . C•ll 805 -687-6000 Eu.

R-9806.

11

Help Wanted

Hiring! Federal government jobs
in your area and overl8aa . Many
immedi•te ~ening1 without
w•ltint~ lilt or test . •16 eeB.OOO. Phone c•ll refundable

e.o. eoe.

3000 Govemnwnt jobs list
U8,040 • •&amp;9.230 yr . Now
hiring. Call 906-887 -6000 ext .

R-4662.
bp•ienced building material•
ulesman to c•ll on contr~ctor
and industrial customers for
retail lumbery•rd . Must be wil ·
ling t bc.te in Meig1 , Gallia.
M11on II'M. Send ,..,me •nd
ul•ry requirement• to S•I8J·
n\lln, P .0. 80.11 445, GaUipolil.
Oh 46631 .
Wtnted : Cathitf'l. tpply in per •t V•ugh.,s C•rdin•l in
Middleport . Person• posMtting
•bove •verage •bllities in
numbers end friendline11 .
ton

Need part -time baby siner.
A8ference1 required . Recipe
aree. Send resum1 to Daily
Sentinel. Box 7298 . Pomeroy.
Ohio

The Metgs Lace! School Di1trict
is neking • driv8f to tr•ntpol1 a
handicapped 1tudant to and
from Bredbury Elementary
School on a d•ily b•sl1. The
driver mult have a vtlid Ohio
Chauffeur's license. • ute
vehicle with 1 current 11fety
in1per:tton •nd be eligible tor
•ppropri•t• insurance cover•u•The driver' s dutin will commence Augu1t 26 . 1986. and
continua through the 1988·87
sdtool ve•r when the hMdicapped lfudent is in ntMd8noe.
lnttr..tad persona lhould con tact the Meigl LOCII School
District
614· 992·2153.

•t

Help wanted : Clarki. appty in
person at Vau"'WII C•rdlnal in
Middleport. Pertons pos1es1tng

above aver~ge tbllities in work
athiCI •nd friendlinn1.

..... ··p·· ......................
omeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

&amp; Vicinity
......................... . . .. . . .

Gl•llwtre. cenning i•rs . mis e
141 tum left 2 miles on At . n&amp;.
Thurs .. Fri. &amp; S•t
Y1rd S•le Thur1d-v &amp; friday.
South on Rt . 7 . Old Clipper Mill
Churc:l'l.

3 F•mily StbY clothn, misc.
Rodney Vill~~ge. Thurs.. Fri. &amp;
Sat.
Y•rd Stle Aug. B. 9 &amp; 10. Lewn
mower, chain uw, bo•t dilhM.
some •ntiquM. 9 ·? 414 l•rl•l

D•.
2 F~ily Garage S•le boys &amp;
girls clothing. toys , redwood
fuminlre, misc. R•in or 1hine.
Thure. •nd Frtday. Aug . 7 &amp; 8 . 4
miln out BultNille Rd .

Gtrag t Sale 478 K•thy St.
Thurs .. Fri., Set . 9·? Lerge dro~
lnf dining teble. bllby clathtl,

6 family . Men s. womens child·
ran• clothinu Lg . 1ize. Mite.
Berween H&amp;R Stadt andCiel.,d
Re-'tv - E M•in St. Pomeroy.

Aug . 4-9. 9:00 -4:00.

3 miiM ou t of R.cine on 124
go ing toward Atwenswood
Bridge. Augu1t 6th end 71h.
9 :00· 6 :00. Furniture, bunk bid,
clothes .
133 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy
Friday end Stturdey, Aug .Sth
ttnd 9th. Rollewey bed, porch
swing, b•by btd, hlghdl•ir,
dinnette. desk, triple dreulf,
rocken , luggege. L.R . chlirs.
talevtsion , bike. bar noola , lin·
en1. dilhH. much more.
234 Mulberry Ave . Thur. •nd Fri.
10 am .· 1. Beby to .tuh
clothing, kerosant h111er. HDINI
lnterjor ltemt.

Big 6 family v•rd nle in Meson.
4th tnd Brown St. Aug . &amp;·ai.
9 :00am. 1 color computer 10ft
wea r.

Porch S1lt 714 2nd . Av1 . Aug . 6
• 7.

Fri. •nd S•t. 406 South 3rd.
Ave. Middlepon. Ni ce wariety ·of
items .

4milttout 141 onleft . Thu ra . &amp;
Fri. 9· 1 Clothing .

Thu rs . &amp; Fri . August 7 S. 8 . New
lim• Rd . Rutl•nd . Men1.

Yard Stte Aug . 7 &amp; B. 10-5. 1 'h
mi. peat HMC on 160. Cloth es
, •llsizn, bookll. toy• end misc .

womens clo thes, school cloth e•.
co• l ltowa, 7 3 Do dg e D•rt . 2
Magic he•ts . cer wheel• . mu ch
mort. 814· 742 - 2502 .

lion .

Fri.. S~ . 9 -1 M•ny household
ttem1, Khool c:loth11,
w•re. kus of good!• . 448 Jerry

Y..-d ••le Augult I&amp; 7. 9-5. 640
Grant St .. Middleport . Ctoth•s.
books. whatnot. di1h• .

81101 .

St .

Ctre for the tlderiy , 10om.
botrd. leundry . 24 hour c.-e.
Rtaeoneblt rttft. Lott T.L.C .

Moving Sale Thurs.. Fri. &amp; Sat.
Furniture • hou...,old items. J
mll11 out 110 from Holzer
hospit•l. Call 114-448 -8593 .

D.cortttd a•• for My OCCI•
Wlddint~• 1 1pec:lltty. Will
d~r for .... 11 let . 814 -982·

304-nJ-11821.

ol••·

Ytrd Stle .t F•mltv

Aktlnu

mower, bunk boldl, 10y1, mudl

Giveaway

4

"!Ore· Rtght off 180 on 564 . Fri

.s...
1 yr. old dog. Mothlf ctmtfrom
doornpion tlni ot Boogloo. tltt!or
bird

doG.

good natul'ld. Ctl

01111111 St4t 101
Fti. &amp; Sot .

J ~son

Pike

old.

R.......tP.,p~l14- 111· •11.

114· 111' • • or 114·111·
4311.
............. dog . . . . . _ , !0

DOOd homo. Fomllo. Col 114742·:1311,

nn.

ltool! ond Tin Coon

773·1122.

dog.

304·

Pf Pliiiisiiiif ' .
&amp; Vicinity

J uly 5th. y• rd .. ,., 9 till dark .
G•llipolis FertY. Rugt , bicycl e a
m ise.
Y~rd S•le. one mile watt ot Mt
Alto on At 33. Thur• d•y and
Frid.,-, Aut 7 tnd I . 9 :00 to

lumber out of old buildi'lg,
tlreedv down. phone 304· 89&amp;-

F,.u Femlty at " ' old Po11
Office builjling ln ~!dwell . ;. d

3958

Swt1 Thur•.• Aug. 7 m Fri ..

Yard Stla. 112 Pleuant St .•
Saturd-r. 9:00 AM to 7.

off Rt. U4 .., Rliho.t St rMI.

Aug, · I, from 9:00 · 3:00.
Clollttng.
- ·h-ero.
. , -· dtohoo,
..,.,.,. end
Cindy
......_114-·8·9137.
O'lf... lc c-nlly Y11d Solol
frOm one end of lho•tring

l•nty laottert. 30,4· 811·

~

5 '00.

11 4-441-2274.
FrM Col\10 ~PP'-· I -

IIGIIil LOJIG

Government Jobt. t11,040 ·
e59.230-yr. Now hiring. Call
806-687· 6000 Ext. R· 980!i for
current federal list.

Person needed for part• and
tervi ce. write up and shop help.
Call 614 - 992 - 6421 for
appointment.

Friel..,- Only . 333 3rd . Ave.
Antiqua &amp; clothing.

441·0294;

ICUT OUT FOI FUTU. USEI

6 14-388-8689 .

appointment

morel

OPEN: Mon.-Wect.

TV &amp;APPLIANCE

Baby1ltter nelded in theeven~u
tva . for 2 children. Age• 18 mo.
&amp; 4 yr1. C•ll 614-387 - 749&amp; Of

Service Mechanic· Technici1n
needtd . Hours:8 - !i Monday
through Fridty . Experienced
111tv Coli 614·992-8421 for

304-372-5709

,HSI

~ -

ACCENt

PT. PlEASA)IT OFFICE
305 Jaclr1011 An.
SMAll ANIMAl NOUS

DAN'S WATII IIFIIIIG

l!J PRICE

IDENOUI

Paul E. ShoCktJ, DVM

!..tty Owno4, 20 Yrt. hp.

IAJG( . . . .

ell 3 lhift1 . c ..t.niii'Y er... Call

vard sales

TOWN &amp; COUNIIY
VEIUINAIIAN
CUNIC

SPIING son
NowAS,..H
lllathly bntol
Phrt lrtltitrl lnsta.. tion
Puts A Soft-r 1rt YH- l. . y 1l1111 with
Option to luyl

HEAVY

Need mi1Ure tdult to ctre for 2
yr. old boy in our home. NHCifor

2-17-86-tfn

4-l&amp;."li tin

YOUNG'S

Pomen:Jy Eltm•tary, Chtpttr I
time Middleport Elementary,
112 time Rutland Elementary. and
Bu1in111 tnch• (Typtng •nd
Accounting) Molg• High School.

-n

992-3478 .

949-2263
or 949·2168

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

At per Article IX. Trantfert and
vacendet. MCtion a, po•ting, of
tht ntgotiated ... r..mn· be-twnn the MLTA end tht Bo•d
of Educetion, the Me~t Local
School District il potting the
following vacanci.. for it1 regu·
l•r te~ching lttH: Chapter 1

227 -1510 .
Buying daily gokl, silver coins.
ring1. jewelry, lterling ware. old
coin1. large currency. Top pri·
en. Ed . Burkett Barber Shop.
2nd. Ave . Mtddlepor1. Oh. 614 -

16021 838 · 8886.

985-3937

CUSTOM IIILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGrS

C-od.
fii'O..od.

J.R.'s REPAIRS

SERVICE

ICE REDUCED TO BARGAIN L£Vtl - 2 story home .in
-~~1!1'~~1 i nice condition - owner will Slcrifice a(

booka, ~-. crewel,

Found: July 27 •t Succns Road
in Reed1ville. Coon dog with

.. "G&amp;nrpoliS

RADIATOR

Cou1ln

BUILDINGS

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CARPET
CARE

7-8-'86· 1 mo.

~

TO&amp;
9TO 3
POMEROY, OH.

~.ail~'-!

UUII:II . •&lt;fill

NY11S77. ~-.,...,,

$995
.

SYRACUSE- 31\ acres, nice
floor
7 rm. home.

3-l .,

i2-12lldlnliw,W ,- ,; -.

SAFETY SERVICE INSPECTION

67 ACRES-All . mineral;
tractor land in hay at summer, oo hard road. $600 per
acre for all.
POII£10Y- Nice 6 rm. ·
home for a retired couple.
CarP.eled , modern kHchen,
utility rm. and s-rage.
22 SPACES-For trailers,
city; water, or bus1ness gte.
Several acres on State
Route.
MINERSVILLE-51\ acres
with remodeled 8 rm. home.
4 DRs, range, lreezer, ca r·
peting and lg. carport.
RIVER VIEW-$12,000. Ni·
cely remodeled ooe floor 6
rm. hofll\ near Pizza Hut.
81-lEVE[-4 BR mod.ltome
in Baum Subd. Very nice
kitchen. carpeting, patio
and low heat bills.
36 ACRES- Ne•t
Pornemory with 2 older'"'"'" &gt;· ~
VERY NICE- bcellent condition , 3 BRs, hot water heat,
cook and bake units, foyer,
·full· -basement and river
view.

The Daily Sentinel

L01t:1 Red -white. 1 biiiCk· white
Beagle. Hysell run tree . Steve
Stew•rt81.t· 992-6349 or 614992·7008. Rtw•rd if found
alive.

l•tldtctlon GuerMt•d
fr'll D.WW~r;~ in Tri ltll• At•

AU major appliance repalro (including micro·
wave~). Electronic Organ•. Mobile oervice.

'

CLC COINS

CALL 667·3271
C••t•re lite G•lllf
••,.,. 1:-t~~t ~~~-

FAEE INSTALLATION
2 VR WARRANTY

TV-614-143-5248
APPl.·614-949-214S

~ ..

IU\(NISI PHONE
16141 t92-6SSO
REIIOINCE PHONE
(6141

ELITE POLE

Service

Lion ................ . full t175
Mini 1115

lnstallotioll H"ice

216 E.
Phone
1-(614)·992·3326

,...,, -

7-7-'16· 1110.

73· 71 Fofd F.ndata...... 139
Trudl Bid

Satelite Sales
«feel Eatata General

Pay Yaur Cable It
Phone Bills Hara

RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
AGRICULTURAL
Custom Design

·•··

"CLELAND CLAN,

HOUSE OVERFlOWING?

Public Notice

0688.

EllliJ ioy rnenl
Se rv rces

For Industrial ar Relidential Use

RUTLAND, IIIlO

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We C•ny Fi1hing Supplin

388-9338

34018 New Lima Rd.

INTERESTED IN BUYING
APPROIIIWAIELY 2112
ACRES;OFF ST. RT.' 7 NEAR
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL?
IF SO, PLEASE PHONE
HOME NAnONAL BANK
949-2210.

Ntw la&lt;ation:
161 North !o&lt;ond
Middlopart, Ohio 45760

HOURS:
Monday· Thurodey
10 A.M.·9 P.M.
Fridty l1o Saturday
10A.M.-11 P.M .
Cloaed Sunday

RACINE, OHIO
Ollke 949-2438

RUTLAND MINE SUPPLY CO.

,.

PlUMBifG &amp; HEA nNG

2 111111 fro• Jlilwelf
, 111111 .._ Ylot..

RAYMOND E. PROFFm (MAC) ·

PH. 742-2656

PEO:. PLES

Sentinel

lost or Stolen female Norwegian
Elkhound. VicinityofLi«lekvger
Creak area. She nead1 medica·
tlon 8t 1he 11 a v•lutd family
mem'*· Ple111e call 814-367 -

TOP CASH p•id for '83 model
•nd ntwer used c•ra. Smith
Buielc-Ponti•c. 1911 East em
Ave., G• llipoli1. Call 614 -446 -

RED'S

ESTATE OF FLORENCE A. BAY

lll Caurl St .. Pomeroy. ~11 45769

S1995

"W.f-0

Waot11 MiR load

TVs, lntemas

Speelel Prlee

POLISHING
SYSTEMS

CARRY OUT

PICK UP ASUPPLY OF PREPAID ENVELOPES
AT ANY OF OUR THREE CONVENIENT LOCATIONS

CHEVROLET;.QLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC

• TAX

IIPLEi

PUBLIC SALE

Pearl Swain, Jr., Administrator

Or I! itt Oarlly StRt-.1 CIMsilil• 0.,1

Give your hilh tech auto the edp with our new Allen Encine Analyzer.
State of thurt dia,nostic center that's way ahead olanyof the compt·
titioo . The newest tn the field of General Motors. Trouble shootin1 di·
agnostic equipment with computer and dataloe capabilities.
REGUlAR 526.00

Reatores Faded
Oxidized Finis._• To
Showroom Luster
oCARS •TRUCKS
•BOATS •PLANES
&amp; MORE
ly Mic._l Norton
Preserves &amp; Seals
From Hirsh
992-2038
C.?o~~.
Elements
w/APS DUPONT TEFLON
FREE Eot.• Domonotrot;ono AM
7/9/'86/ I mo.

,•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

AUTO
1975 Plymouth Valiant 8 318, 4 door. 3.5 HP M&amp;W lawn
mower.
IMlUEHOLD
Signature washer &amp; dryer (coppertonel, Signature 15 ft.
Frostless refng.-freezer, Roper electric range, cabinets,
wood din1n g room table &amp;4 chairs, living room suite, reclih·
ers, 2-'h beds, dressers, metal clothes press, RCA TV, Turco
10,500 BTU kero. healer, Ed1son humdrfrer, misc. hand
tools, I small building of ying yangs .
WATERBURY MANTEL CLOCK

We Pay The
Postage ·Both Ways!

D~ily

COMPUTERIZED ENGINE ANALYSIS

6-30-'86· 1 mo.

i

6·23-86-1 tnO .

The Estate of Florence A. Bay will be sold atthe resi ·
dence located on First Street in Reedsville, OH. near
the boat dock.

'""'

Second Sheet
Mason, W. Va.
m-5514

C.u

hOme .

2848 .

PH. 992-7403

AT REEDSVILLE, OHIO

\

'

good

814-448-3872

Bank -av~Maill

The annual reunion of the Travers, chairman of games.
Recognized and presented gilts
descendants of Orlando and KaUtryn Davis was held Sunday at were Merle Davis, the oldest ·man;
Forest Acres Park , New Lima Freda Davis, the oldest woman;
Shawna Davis, youngest girl;
Road, Rutland.
A basket dinner was enjoyed al ·Bobby Joe Schuler. youngest boy;
noon by the 49 family members Bury! and Evelyn White, who
attending. Gary Holter had the travel!'d the larthesl.
Mr. and Mrs. Travers conduced
blessing.
Mary Kahryn Hotter, president, games and awarded prizes to the
conducted the mePtlng when plans winners.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
were made for the 1987 reunion on
Aug. 2 at Ute Park. Jim Davis was Gary White, Shannon, Leslie and
elected president, Susie Travers, Amy, Mr. and Mrs. Bury! White,
secretary, and Rick and Susie Eleanor Williamson. Circleville:
Mr. and Mrs. Mar lin Evans, Mr.
and Mrs. Curtis Riffle and Greta,
Eagle Ridge: Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Schker, Bobby Joe and Joe Bob,
Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs. Rick
at home of Joan Stewart on Aug. Zl. Travers and Marc, Wilkesville;
Lorrl Barnes won the traveling Jim Davis, Jackson.
prize brought by Cllarlotte Willford. · Mrs, Dian Molden, Tim. Tina and
Klm\Ji'rly Willford, Margi Davis Teresa, Langsville; Mr. and Mrs.
and Sandy Titus brought arrange· Bruce Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Merle
ments to !be meeting, and Mrs. Davis, Mr. and Mrs. David Davis
Stewart did the program on and Shawna, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
"Impossibly Modem." The four Davis, Mr. and Mr. Kenneth Davis,
arrangt-ments made by Mrs. Ste- Mr. and Mrs. John Miller, Lisa and
war! were critiqued by Mrs. Bolin, Derek, Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. R.
accredited judge.
Gary Holter and son, Gary, Mr. and
Door prizes were won by Marie Mrs. Gordon Holter, Wes and
Blrchfteld and Kimberly Willford. Martie, and Mr. and Mrs. ArvU
Homemade Ice cream was served. Holter.

to

Lott: 2 female Germ•n•hon heir
Polnter1 . Lett 1een on Beech
Grova Ad. near Rutland . One
wearino red nylon collar other
brown INther coll•r. 614· 7tl2·

Work Ouarenteed in Writing

FREE

Puppy

:

814-446-9416 oft• 2:00PM.

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

.

I-t••

6 Lost and Found

::z:: Licensed Clinical Audiologi~

3/2/dn

6-17-tfc

Davis reunion conducted

The

'

Mulberry Ay., Po!Mroy

992-3345

II. 124, PorNroy Ohio

.

~

•Certainteed •Mastic •Aicola

Al•h.n Hutkv 1 year Qld perier
country home.
htd all shot s.
C ott 614· 448 -8201 .

e t 4· 379-2803 . ·

a:

2SS Mill St., MWdtoport

No Sunday ·Calls
3/tl/lfn

DON'T FORGET THE 1916
MASON COUNTY FAIR
AUG. $ THRU AUG. 9.

- LISA M. KOCH, M.S•
-z

THE SAW LOW PIKES

Copy Sorvicn, It&lt;.

PH. 949-2801
or 949·2860

FREE HEARING TESIS WEDNESDAYS
r.o-.nzed Hearirw Air Selection
Swim Molds • lntlqlretina Services

"
z

lulintll Forms,

"Free Es1imates"

EAGLE SCOUTS -Jell Hawk, left, andScoU Banning, meniblin ci
Boy &amp;out Troop 245, ~. were advilnood to tiE rank ol Eagle
Scouis In ceremorlies held recently at the American Legion haD ·In

y,, P1IIIIIIIIIHII

PWS: Ofmo lufllllot &amp;
Furniture, Wedding
artd Gradvatiott
Stationory, Magnotk
Signs, Rulibor Stamps,

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

It Pays
To Advertise

VINYL
SIDING
WE HAVE MOST All POPUlAR IRANDS AT

PRINT SHOP ..

·.~

•m

Call 6U·

Old piano to h-..1 tway. C•R

Rutland Friendly Gardeners meet
Plans lor a flower show to be hPld
on Aug. l1 and Jl were made when
the Rutland Friendly Gardeners
met at the Margaret Edwards'
farm for a potluck dinner.
11teme of I he show will be "Let's
Go Crm tivP thP Modern Way." It
was decided that a bake sale will be
held in conjunction with the show.
Mem!Ji'rs dnw cl asses in which
they will exhibit and each member
was asked to make a JX&gt;Ster for the
show.
For roll call members dlsplay!'d
their smallest flower. Offict&gt;rs'
report s were given and a thank you
notC' was read from Jan!'! Bolin for
the sundial presented to her at her
lnstailation as president of the Ohio
Association of Ga rden Clubs. At -

B e ~gle.

Help Wanted

11

-----------------r-----------------r-----------------r--------------~~----------------~--------------~ -3-87_·7_8_21_.__________

.,

· :., ·. lfY BOB IIOEI"LLCCI

Giveaway

Male dog %

t

\}~ '

.

4

.

-

-

The Daily Sentinel- Page- S

Bu·_. ·;si·ness ·S'e·•rv·I·ces

'Bend
~

PQmeroy-Middeport. Ohio

Rldgotot!to o-ltt Comotiown
Rt. 7 11&gt; Clipper Mtllo li follow
thutont. Aug . .. F~. a Au~ . 1-

Sot. From

tlol, .....

t ·t
· - · 21 F""tbit of ...-ythtnf.

*'"'· ••• --•

OlgMtlc Yorrl Silo. Aug 7,8,1.
Former PoweU't larber Shop.
Oottlpolil Flrrf. Clotlttng. joorio,
dilh ... p,lftl, appltnOII. WheMI
.,..d tlr... toott of aM ldndl. tube

2 mowwo. 'lllint, ...... ;o~

tomp, do•. - .. tnlido dooro,
CO-clot mop Md 2 lruckllt
ond
poin i, toto of mloc 01\d
ioltofborgolnt.

•*'·

w
.....L
I - T*- ~Itch., MI. · Lorge Ylrtl Solo. Ill. 1 Toytor
1100,
Colt 114· 441-2847 Kev in Rood. Comp CIWitoy, Fri. Donn•.·
Sot Cloth• end _ • .., _ _
~--~--~--~~

•• •

'f

•

�•

Wednesday. August 6,

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

74
Rent

11'"'1 ........ t100; ~·

l.loht

/uin .•

2 bdr. u)llhlll portlol1y
nn mo. CoM 304-671·11114
or 304-671·7121 .

Okltr ~pj- · .2 , bdr., utlhi•
portly· pold n8o mo .. Col
304-871·8104 or 304-878·
5381 .. 3114-171-7128.
Houoe304-878-8,1'114'
• oportMtnt "",or
'""'"'•·
Coli
.30~678-5388 or 304-171-7128,

A !i,lln• Je H

Fumithtd 2 bdr. apt. utM1tl11
portlolly plld. Coli , 3114;8756104 or 675·1381or 304·8717928.
•

•17, 100 t o

. tii.IOO.Y.., naw hWtng, Cell
···J.. UIIo 1·818·419-3138. ut.

1 end 2 bdr. epts. to, r*t~- Betic
~Wtt for 1 bdr. *171. IMIC rent
to• 2 bdr. U12 . Alao •zoo sec.
dep. rtq . Close to Foodlend .-d
Spring Vellev Plaza. Jtckton
Eatete Apertmenta. 614-441·
3197 . Equel Houalng
Opportunity.

.........

• ·1880 lor inlormotlon 24

...... .ecr.-y, typing end
lhot...,H11Idl.. nec•MrY· word
IIJI"G.CIIIInt helpful. SendriiUmt
10 loa C4, CIIN Point PIIMint
........ 200 Mein St . Point
" - - •· W. Va.
•

~
~~~
~~~
,... "'= 'tllollll..,. ........

12.

"Some people have -all the

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

Situations
Wanted

Wlnoarolo,rol~orlylnmyhomo
T-odWid ..p . ltU92-8883
'·. I

~114~992·7314.

Heve vaceney for room end
bolrd tu .tderty. Reaonlble.
1!4-882-1022 .

Aoom ll'ld bo•rd for low income

8Mior CitiiiWit. CaM 11&lt;1- 99~ -

: 18

'

Wanted to Do

, lueh Hog. Gtllipolit Ferry and
Hendenon erea . 304-875, 5400.
Ray' • Detail Work, Interior or
Eat•ior of eutormble at your
· kn:ttion to r t38.95. 304-676 ·

6Tn .

flll diiC iii l

. 21

Business
Opportunity

luck. Not only are they liVing
off the fat of the land, their
ChOleSterol l' S lOW,f" ,

I NOTI!;E I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ·
. lNG CO . Ncommendt thet you
do buskl•• with people you
know , end NOT to tend money
throu~ the meil until yoo hiVe
innstig.t.d the oHerin g.

31

Hames for Sale

Aeedtvllle, by owner. Two for
the price of one. 2 bedroom•.
living, dining room, kitchen,
b1th with extra room. All fulty
cerpcHed. large porch, fenced
yard with tetillite T.V. Atao
apartment which includn 1
bedroom. living room. kitchen
aree with beth, woftahop and
garage. Forced air get hett. own
water well. large lot end maintenance tree tiding. *415.000. Cell
8t4·378 ·6t56.
7 rooms with beth. g•rege and
buildings., 2V' ecret. Cloae to
1chool and store . Setillite with
rotor and power bo,; , 814-74226e6 .
Government homea from •1 . (u
repair). Delinquent 11x property.
Aepo11e11ion1. Call 8011 -1876000 EAt H-9806 fo r current
repo list.
4 room cabin on 2 acrfll in
Additon . Calll14-279-4908.
- - - - - - - --lc5 bedroom 2Ya belh, large
kitchen. 5'1t yeert new. 1 ltlile
lilt ot Autlend. *66,000. 1.11
acre. 18x30 Pool end '·••ck.
6t4-912·3843.
Modern 3 bedroom home. reduced to 848,000.00. 304875-5047.

,

Carry out, grocery• deli for 1ale.
Sunday Mles C· 1, C-2 licente.
N.., Mtige min ... Call 614742· 2t32 .
Need e111tr" money? Friendty

· horre toy pert tel ._, immediate

. optnings tor menegen end
'dlmanltrMort in thll 1re.1. It' I
eaay. fun .,d profitabl e We
hevt ovtr 700 1111citing toy11nd
giftt ,...,.ring the ntw animated
taJking doll " Cricket' ' whidl will
ba M".n6ud on nattonallV No
cath inv•tm.nt, no colt.cting,
no deliverfn9 and no service
d'llfge. AI you need is • desire to
mMe mon"f. have fun and a few
tcura of IPate time. No exp•
rien01 necnurv. Catl 1-800-

leon Area , 7 room yard and
gerden spot, school but route.
8115,500. afte r 9 p.m. 1-304364-2459.
12,.;60 mobile 1-tome • lot on
Hereford Line. Will conaidtr
trade. 304-578-2953.
8 room house, 21 acr•. 11x32
blOck building. other out~lild·
inga, Gallipolis Ferry area. Moving. muat ull. Asking 157.000.
304 -675-3628 .
6 room house. full b11ement on
'h acre. 6 miln up R1 . 35 on lett.
304-875·7t49 .
8 room 1-touae. 1. 2 tcr•. Double
cer garage. loclted on Ao11 Hill.
Btrgein priced 120.000. Call
814 -876-2513 .

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

227· 1510.
Southeastern But inetl CoHege!
Tl'te tralni'\g you need! For the
jobs you want . FinM"Icia! au •st.., 01 avail.ble. Cell today: 61 4 .
992-5177 .

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL ' S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SAlES. 4 Ml
WEST. GALLIPOLIS, RT 35 .
PHONE 614 ·446 -7274 .

Ow~

yOtJ r own jeen-sportsw u r.
led1e1 apperel. ·chlldren t metemrty, l~rge sizet , petite,
dlnoewetr. t ccetiOfi• or bridal
shop . Jordeche. Chic, lee. lev• .
lzod. G!teno , Gue11. Calv in
Klein. Serg io V&amp;~l.-.te. Evan
Picone, LQ: Claiborne. Member~
Only , Gttoltn e. Heahhtex over
1000 othe rs . 1 14. 30 0 to
126.900 inventor-y. trtining.
fblture~. grend opening etc. Can
Ol)tn 15 dt yt. Mr. Loughlin
612 -BBB· 42 2e

1966 Buddy, 2bdr . 12JI 60
1 2800. Call614-446-0390

Fund rlil.n tor t ale, minimum
invel1mentl. MaAimum potentiel. 304· 895-3038.

1 2JI5 0 fully turn il hed on
86x 171 all level lot. one th ird
acre more or leal l ocated·
Porter. St Rt. 180, netr St. At.
664 Center of town . 117,000.
Call 614-388-9893.

Fornwr Town &amp; Country Beauty
Shop for rent . Equipment com....... 304-176-3388 or 676·
213111.
StH4 Building Oetlerth ip w•th
MejOr M.-wfacturer - Sal1111 &amp;
Engln•ringeupport. Starter ads
tumilhtd . Somt areat tak en.
CIII303-769-3200 tJit. 2401

1970 Champion 12A60, 2 bdr.
1399 6. Call 614 -367-7410 tf·
t er 6
1977 Skylyne 3 bdr. Mobile
home . geble roo t w1111 11-tingl•
house lap ti ding Cell 614-9926305 .
1971 Winch es ter 3 bdr . good
cond. Call 614-245-9422.

76 14 x70 Rosemont. 3 bdr .. 1
btth . AC. WB hook-vp, 89000.
Possen ion 30 dey t . Call 614 ·
379-2866 or 614-379-2608.
1982 14•70 Fleetwood, 3 bdr.,
2 betha. tots! ele(:tric. For more

informatio n 614-3 86 -8633 al ter 4PM .

23

Professional
Services

Water welh tervieed and dr~lled .
Frw ... m.t... Call 614-99 211008 tit 814-742 -3147.

''

HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES .
11 your fu1ure atilt unsettled?
Check into the Army National
Guard. We have good pay.
training, and up to *18.000
ava illbltm educat ional benetit l.
Serve pan-time. 304-676-3960
or 1 -800-142· 3619 .
MOBilE HOMES MOVED : insured. flltoneble rt1 et . Call
304· 576-2336

31

Homes for Sale

3 bdr ,. hOme. cloee to town, 2
t.tha, prtly fumilhed. Ge1
...._lOW utlliti•. Cal1614-2468241.

_.....

QI!II'Wnmtnt horN from 11 (U
. . . .. Delk'MIU..,~ 1111 properly.
R~r Mions. ·Call 805-U7, 11000 'Ext . H-4112 tor curren1

a on t.~cre, cloa to Aiu

a..-.
HouM

2 bdr. uptteinaj:)t., untumlthttt.
corpllod. Ulllliloe pol d. No children, no ptts. Cell 614-441t837 . .

1-----------"T----""'-----~

SpecialnurtinD cere for eld•ly
1ft private lmJN. Call614-992·
34}11.

3896 .

Fum iahed tpertment. adult a
only. Coli 814 - 4~8_- 8823 .

in Southw.. tem ldtoot
flltrlct. MuotiiOII. 025,000. Coli

f14-241·t241 .

1977 3 br. Shultz: mobile llome.
co mplattly tumi1hed lndud ..
stove. ~ frigerator . dill'lw aatter.
dMp freeze. washer. dryer, new
living room surte . 26 " color TV.
3 beda • 2 ceiling tan1, porch,
t l'ted &amp;: underp.,n ing Cen be
left on Jented lot. 111 ,0C)O
304-175 -1699.
12a86 mobile home on .9&amp; 1cre
lot, located 3 m ilet out Crtb
Creek Rold. 110,000.00. Call
304-875 -t 120 oftor 4 00 PM.
1976 Governor 12x8i0. 8x16
porch· wittt awnin g, all applianexc con d. 304-896-34116
8,oo PM.

35

Lots

Fum. lpl. 1 bdr., t2. utillti•
patid. 120 4th Ave .. Gellipolil.
Cell 441-4411 after 8pm.

Acreage

Rec:t+ving bidt-oHer• on 20 Of
41·· acr11 of lend with pond
located in Oalliii'County on Rio
Orande-Cent.,solnt Ad. For informetkm CaU 114·281-1140.
60 ecrea more or leu on Sl. Rt.
233 andtownshlprold. Oltl Hill.
Ohio. Pond and electric. Asking
122.000. Cheri•Delenev. 614882-6t73.
1 ecrt 2 car gtrllt ll.c:. wet•
seplic tenll on ttlte route 564.
will consider uadi. Call e14·
3BB-B741.
Ashton building loti with public
water. mobile h&lt;l!'111 permitted,
304-576-2336 or 304-576·
2267.

41

Houses for Rent

8 room11 houu tor rent Inqu ire
91•- Second AVe.. Gellipoli1,
Oh. No phont cells.
2 minutea from new o.. l.,.il
Pooll Mint condhiDn, 2 Hdroom
hou11 with n.w plush cerpeting,
draperi•. windows. inauletion.
wtrlng. Hou.. it,tpOtleeal 1360
per mo. Cell114-288-5110

2 bdr . ha. in Midd1aport. AC,
dithwather, ex . locetion . *250
month. C,all 114--441-9206 af·
ttr 6:15.
Houae for rtnt in Addilon
town1hip. Clll814-317-7458.
Modem 3 bdr. home, lg. IN-in·
groom, "' cerptted. modern
ki~ch•,. d61ihwuhtf', range,
trig .... or. cen1rll lir. a• heat.
partial bettment . 1350 per mo.
No ptt1.· Lotllted n..- gall
courtt. Call 114-448-2673 01'
814-448-1171 .

r•

2 btdropm mobilt home at
Evergreen. CtH lf4·441· 7032.
3 bedroom doubla wide with
girege llld lerge yard. Pertialty
furnished. 3 miltl out of Pom•
roy on Rt. 143. Require depotit.
t276 plf month 114 -992740t .
Newer Ranch 1-tomt. 3 bedrooms Ret. and depo1it r•
qvired. Rutland area 114-7423171 .

3 housn for tent : 1905 N. Main
51. 4 bedroom~ t300.00; 2324
lincoln Ave. 4 bedrooms 1250.;
2207 Olk St. 2 bedroomt 1260.
Deposit a. Aeferencea . 304675·2130.
Nice 3 bedroom house on Staff
HouH Roed n .. r M11on County
Feirground1 . UOO.OO month.
deposit end ttftr.nce requ ired,
304-875-2$97.
3 bedroom houn in Henderson.
304-876-7448 .

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr . tulty turnill'lad. adults
only. utiliti n ptid. Call 614441-4110 .
14x70 t250 indudtt watll' •
gerbege. 160 tecurity depoait.
No drinking, fighting or pets.
Cell evenings 114-387-7217 .
3 bdr with e111p1ndo livingroom.
Nice yard. 314 3rd St. Kenauga.
Call814-441-7473.
2 bdr. mobila home lor rent in
Everareen. Cell814 - 446 ~7032 .
Mobile home tor rent 2 bedroom
in country. t150 mo. t 7&amp; dep.
Call614-37!iJ· Z436.
Trailtrl'for rent. Air can d., clble,
beautiful riv'er vi..,, K1n1uge.
Foattr'a Mobile Home P1rk.
614-446-t802.
10x50. *180 lncludeswttlil'lnd
garbage. ptus •so tecuritv dep·
otlt. No dfinklng, fighttng or
p.. a. 614-.387· 7217 ...,eninga.
'Trailer tor rent in Tupp•s Pllina,
acrou ltrMt fro m Shake Shop.
Couple onty, no pets. Cell
614-887-380e .

1-- - - -- -- 1971 Community 1411170 2 br
furnitl'ttd, IC, fron1 porch. \In·
d•rpenn lng , w-wet er hd.
washer &amp; ch'yer. 304-773-&amp;94&amp;.

. ~ ....... ueflc HIM, Svra·
··wte. l ' a.dr'oom. WttWichen.
~· ..... IMniJOOm. eir. cond., dish
........
lorp povo.
,' ·
_ -·
r
-· 114·912·1
47B.
.' ~ t:J!) 114·992· 3402

; ,a ...,Om

hO,. on 7 acra.
· 'tlwitllft .,.,..... In Chill"
.na.- . coM 114·888·

....

711110010t. 1\-\ ..0f'?l'tOUte. 3to
4l I GOIM. d'-hWHhw. double
' . . . . ._,., fully clrptt.ct,
',1Wlliillll 1..tt oofll bur"fno ltOVt .
, . ClaM to - 1 and holjlltol.
Caii14-992-- 0. Any,....,_
. '.fiiMI
be contid..-.t.

.,._filii¥

Pomeroy 2 bdr, NI\'IOfl Run,
•17&amp; mo. t100 deposit. yerd.
p.tio, Call after lpm 814-992IBB6.
1 bedroom epl. in Pom•oy .
·completely remodeled kitchen
furnlthtd . All new ruga. 614892-8215 .. 814-992·7314
Panty furniahed . Cai1614-992590B .

4 room ept. bedroom, bathroom.
living room. kitchen. All new
carpet, moat utilities peld, applienctl furnished, convenient
to shopping, 8215 mo. Call
614-446 -78t5 .
APARTMEN'TS. mobile t-tomn,
houMt. Pt. Ple•ant and Oellipolit 61 4- 448·B~21 .

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping ~ooma and
ligl'tt houtt keeping rooms Perk
Centrtl Hotel. Call 614-4460758.
Rooma far rent. dBY. week.
month . Gillla Hotel. Call 114446-9680. Rent •• tow t1 •120
·montfl .
Fumi1hed room t116 . Utilitiet
pd. 919 2nd Oellipolis. Share
beth . Single m.t e. Cell &amp;14448-44t8.

46

Space for Rent

Lerge lot on Addison BullVille.
Small tot on Rt. 7 . Celf814·U64285.
Mobile home 1pace. good lac•

lion. can 114-446· 3&amp;17 .

For rent trailer lot GeorgnCreek
Rood. Coli 614-446-3668 .

Trailer spaeet. 1mell children
1ccepted. Rt. 1. locust Road.
btck of K • K Mobile Home.

Merch~IHli~ e

51

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Oliva St., QaHtpolia. New &amp; used
wood -eoalatov11, 8 pc wood lA
IUitt 1399. bunk beda .,99,
tntton reclln . . t99 . new &amp;
us~ bMiroom suit... rengt a,
wnngtf w.. hers. • tho•. New
ltvingroom 1uit• t199· UBI.
lamps. 1110 buying coal &amp; wood
ttov-ea. Call 814-448-3169
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wuhers. dryen , refrig•ator~ ,
unfit . Skagga Appliancu.
Upper River Rd . bel:ide Stone
Creat Motel. 114·441 -7398.
County Appliance, Inc. Good
uHd appllencea end TV sets.
Open BAM to IPM . Mon thru
Sot. 814· 446-t899. 627 3rd .
Ave. Gallipolis. OH .
Valley Furniture. neoN &amp; unCI .
Llrge section of CJ.!IIity fumlturt . 1211 Entarn Ava ..
GaHipoUI.
Check ou r e:v•rvdey t&gt;w prieea
on fu rniture • applleno11. Mollot-tan Furniture. Rt. 7 North.
Keneuge. Call 014-.-.6· 7444 .

throom venlty with' m.....' .-.~~:
wMh motcfllng mod~oelll!riot
minor t180 .' Coli· lf4-371·
23211.
'

bo~~: •mga tul or twin .. 3.
llr m t73, llhd t83. Quion Htl
n21. Klllo · no. - .......,
..,., eu.,D r - •••· a...
cebtn..a I, 10, • :12 lr!l"· Get
or tlectrio rinit t371. ltbv
,. mottroo,. t311; ,:q, loll
t20, •ao·• King fromo
tiiO. Gciod ooloctlon ol

fr"""

· bedroom euh•. mtt.l • ·
6inlll. hiOdbo•d• no .. d up

...u .

Business
Buildings

t-.

U•• Furniture; W•her •
dryer. o• rent~•. ~ltatfic .......
omol - l V . - d
2
boncfl•. boclo. dr-or, •
roolill.,, I rii!hio wt lullivllo
1Ad. Oi&gt;oO MM to I,M, lilian.
..N lot. 11~· 448• 0321 .

FDr Sale: 50x90 ft. commtrdll
aoned building. Brick Conttruetion. l.,-ga garega doon, South
Filth Avo. MMitll-. Phono
5t4-992·8868 dovo. 614-9U11113, 114-982·2028 evenings.

1868 y..,o~~o 4 w-IOCC!
ohoft drivo UOO llrm. Fir!!
ho\IM Blelalna Rd . off L'"ocili\
Pikt.

Couch, lovMMt. ohlir; llld
..... and lempa. cott.. teble;good cond .. all UOO.OO. Phone
304·676· N81.

1912 KM•IIki Spectra. 4100
mlln. UOOD. Col 8 t4· 742~
2018., 814·742-Z703.

75

Mile. Merchandise

f

c;..,.

Colloi\WI't Uood Tire~.
t .OOOtlrll. illoo 12; 13. 14, 11.
18; 18'.1. S .mlloo cut Rt 218.
C.oll 114-311, e211 .

D-4Cetiplllerd0zer4wevbtldt,
good
condttion, •8.000. Cell
814-241· 1248.
Ytmlhe 200 trl-moto 3 mos.
wen-~~rt\"laft, t1 ,010. can 114246-I28B.
A6r condltktntra. (2) 11 &amp; ...Oit
window Kerry Kool units. (21
230 vott central units. Cell

Musical
I nstru mentt

6t4-246-5t31. .
2apac• in Ohio Vlltev MlfDOry
Gardtwts in prime location. CeM
814-446-7032 .

Upr!ilht piMD, taiiii.OII . Old not
1111 eorllor. 304-713·8178.

19e8 modliATC 350X .. ,...,_
tition e111h. .t tirn. rima •
apacert. t xc: cond. 4· 13 inch
Ford 4 lug rime. Jeriningl
compound bOw. Call 814-371·
2574.
Childers Stw Supply, Vinton.
Ohio. Cell 814· 388· 8514 . Augull Specials. 20% off Echo
uwt, 20% ott Echo trimn,efl.
Hutqwtm•aawa, chlinaewa11 "
111.50. Bl r oil 11111 . t4 .011.
Chain ll'tlfl)~ing, repeir worh.
Open 8'· 15 Mon.- S1t CloJtd
Wed &amp; Sun .
Keroaun heetar redlent 8, llkt
niW. 8615. Turbo g• grill llki
new- . 6 h . redwood pk:nic bench
&amp; table 1100 for both. CaN
614-446-Bt75 .
Wedding ring &amp; dl.-nond. 12
gtuge 1ingle 1ho1 lhotgun. Call
614·446-2761.

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Red ra1be"i11. Tay~r1 Berry
Patch . Cel 114-44&amp;-8892 or
8t4-246·5&amp;084 .
Cenning tometou. Picked
14.00, pick your own 13.00 .
Revmand Rowe . Brifwg contain,,.. 8t4-247-4292.
Canning tomato11. Supply own
contalntr. Pick own U .OO bulhel. Otb Milliom 114· 2473471 .
Yellow Fr" Stone Canning
PeiiCh• now evlillble. Call for
prlcll ertd varleti ... Bob'a
M•rlltt. Muon, W. Va. 304-773·672t . Opon 7 deyo.

59

For Sale or Trade

For Sale: Se1r1 fuel oil atove,
66.800 B.T.U. ou·tput. whh ped
1nd pip•. 2-7&amp; get. tenk witll
atand all lOr *180 . · 114~ 9926620 aft• 5:30pm.

F 11111 SuiJ IJ iir•&gt;

I.
61

L 1 vn:. 1 r1 ' :~

Farm Equipment

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 38 W11t, Jeckaon, Ohio.
114·,216-11461.
Met..Y Ferguaan, N.w Holl.,.d,
lutl'l Hog StiM • 8trviet. Over
40 -~ trec.:Jra to dtoost from
• oonllltttline of new • wiled
equipnwnt. Larg ..t •*tion in
S.E. Ohio.

Firewood for sale. Caftl14-742 2646.

JIM_'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SR 311 W. Golllpolio,
Ohio. Coli 81 .4 -446·97n. ovo.
Fair Special, chlin a.W chains.
614-448 ·31192 . Up ftonl troc·
buy one get seoond half price. tore wrth Wlrflftty over 16 uaed
Sidera Equipment, Hender1on . . WaCtof'l, 1000 toola.
W. Ve., 304-875 · 7421
Utility bldg . SPL' 30'•4D'd'
1918 F100 •at&amp;.; Hou11 for with 115 'x8' slider &amp; 3 ' serv.
rent tZOO. month. 1100. D.P. door. t&amp;, 266 erected. Iron
depo1it . 1 -304-675-4822 .
Horae Bldga, 614-332-9745
collect
100 ft . andque Iron fencing .
Gatn • comer poat1 included . International H tractor new
304-675· 29t9.
rul:lber, with cultivetor, plow1.
cllc, drew bar. t696. Cell
SAlE! 50 pet. OFF! FI•Mng 8t4· 286-8122 .
arTow tign t289; liattt ... nonenow *261.; Non lighted U29 .; 340 lnttmttion tractor wide
Free ltttilf1. Few ltft. S" front, PI, live power. Uvt
locally . 1 · (800)423 - 0183 , hydfllllict, with mow'"g maanytime.
dline &amp; draw bar. 12, 296. Cell
814 ·216·8122 .
Guns for sele. dealer oostpklt 10
pot. FFL holder. 304·185-3036 1970 5000 Ford di11l tractor
eveninga .
•3.9&amp;0. 4 bOttom ln1. plowa
'215 . 5 ft. wood buth hog
Haevv dutv eqtdp,..nt pr•a 30 •310. Naw ldn dyne bounce
ton hoM:t, under ho'lst. trantmia- mowing machintllkent~N 1495.
lion jeck. Phone 304-175- Coli 814-211-11122 .
13t9 .
J . ~ . 4150 do1er, 8 wey bl.. e.
Welk behind Grl'\l'ety , call eft• wwnt;ft. CMDpy. 614· 742· 2328 .
6,011, 304-178 -6182 .
John ONrt 310 Di11el Dorer . ln
40A tria:tewy viae with dill. Coel good oondhton. Call 114-982llove, good cond. 304-87&amp;- 7401 .
1484.
~8 hp Power King traetor. •a
Mayteg eutomaticwnl'ter. Hida- 1ndl mowar, anowbllde, dlle
t · IMd titce n8W' . 304-676-3098. plaw. 3 pt hitd-1. hydr•ullc:
*3 . .00.00 . Sertoua callers 304&amp; hp Meuit Ftrguson rototilllf 195-31117.
13,2150.00. Porttble M1yteg
wather. 2912 .Me ..owbrook
Drive, Po;nt Pleoun1 .
62 Wanted to Buy
18 indl Craftlman Chain SIIW
l"'o , _ t125 .o0 , '73 Chovy
307eng1neovtrlltuiMI never n..tn
t350.011. '73 Triu""h 860
motorcycle "T~tr" eeoo.oo.
Rod. 304-875-8t86 .

66

Building Supplies

1- - --------Now buying lhtll corn or ,.,
corn. Ctll tar letest quot11. River
City Farm Supt~ty . 614-44129e5 .

63

Liveetock

Building Meterltla
For lilt Rag'-tarld Herefc)rd bull
Blodl. brick, .WIIf pip•. wln- 3 yr. old. Coli 814· 448-3688.
dowt. lntela, etc. Cltu• Win·
ten, Rio Grtndt, 0 . Cell 114245-8t21
64 Hay llo Grain
Building mettriela.
blocklellaizll, ylrd
Clllipolo jlloclt Co.,
So., Gdlpolil, Ohio
441· Z783 .

~·Y and field oorrt for tilt. can

o14· M9-2237.

"!"~·

:;:~~r.r.~~~ - Cal

r..

""""loo.

AKC ~
floooly"'
I .A.....Idu111; luclloliolld .
....... Ohio. Jllll oil 111. 7 .
Coiii14'M7-3818.
'
'
.
·"

tale. •1 .11 Hie. New

8,14·819· 3641.

I I .IIIS II 111 Lil lllll

Pets for S111ti

Dragonwynd Cett'ery k•nll.
CFA Himtll'yMI, ~ Ptrtitn •d
Slem•t ktnMI. · MC Otow
P\IPPIM. Coli lt4 -446-31144
ah•7PM .

-

. ·-·

Auto• for Sale

1986 Horilun 4dr.. 10.000
m/111, r«&lt;. J ..t lika new. Cell
814-245-956&amp; or 814-2415613t .
1980 Oetaun 200 SX 5 tpd.,
30-40 milll per gelon. good
cond. 12100 Call 114 -448·
30411 .

Bleok extertor, arl'f vl&amp;our interior. AM -FM c•aette take over
peym.,tl. Ctlll14-288-7044.

~~

~

,.,

ET t;~oes on loc ation to Eng-

TV movie . " Suepicion ".

CD Hogen's Heroes
0 C1J Jeopardy .

Camping
Equipment

79

1981 Ford heart W•gon .
43.0110 mlloo. Coli 814·992372t .

'•

Sophia Lore n.

IRS

1986 Fodirac.-nptr, 28 ft.AC.!
21 ft awntng, roH up TV lf'lt.n-.!
304-1175· 1423.

S i! IVI CI!S

81

(jOoF ofF A L.Ci

Home
Improvement•

•

'73 Camero Z 28, AM ·FM. neW

tirea, good cond. •1 .300 .00 .
3114-676-7375.
1978 Grtnd Pri111 , nice ctr.
11 , 100.00 or bett offtr. 304875·724e.
1975 Chevy Now•. 2 door. 8 eyl,
3 1pted , ct11n. new pllnt.
tt ,IOOOO . Phono 304·17553e4 .
;1982 Ford hcort 1tatiOn
'wagon. newty rlbuilt engine.
3.200 mittJ,- Very clan, white
wi1ft· ~· tnt trior. N.w Mill
tir11, AC .' 12,200.00. 304·8623200 .
•
'T1 Otd1 C\lt..lt
304·6711-624t..

RON ' S. Taltvialon
Houtt cda on RCA. awuar.
GE . Spoclol;ng In Zonhh. c.11
304-578-2391 or lt4·44·
2454.

1178 Oe11wft pidlup run1 good
11 ,000. Colll14· 446·0924 .
1974 GMC truck a.t ton. hevy
&lt;lJty. 1973 JHp CJ8 . Phone
3o•-675· t318.

'73

Vana

&amp;4

W.O.

1182 Chwv van. ntw conver·- . ROIIoy whoolo, AM ·FM
CMHIIe, 11rth tone color pttg.
CoH lt4·241·51lt or 8t4248·98U.

81 Chovy 4•4 ohortbld . :JC!8'
V·l. 4 IPood. I'&gt; ton, AM -FM
........ , _; cluol ' tonloo,
1Ubotri1CtiiiOO . Colll1 4-88141111.
'
'tl78 Ford VWI, ·I oyl. 3""'ood
1,710. , • • offer. efttmooM
3114· 171· 4113. No lu~dov
oalta.

Autot for Sale

74

Rotary or cable tool drill*
Mott wtlllcomplatedllmtd
f"wmp ..... •nd aervic.. 3
195-31102
'
••• Roofing • Plinting. e~~:·~ .
roofing, repair, peintine intkteCW
9Ut. Fret El(imett. '-ocel Ret-.
. . -. 304-&amp;?S-7991 .
••

.

..

Excavating

Lots

llo

85

opt. J04-112· 2UI.
~

!

•

~room

"

'

fG'rniiUd Apt,
gro~nd ftOO~
,
Itt aM,.dCtt .
oil u - ·
, outlldrto Hon&lt;f'
arsan, t 10. 00. 304-171."
87311.
one

MltonCountv. 80 eer•. 9room
houM plus beth. 4 mil• from
j.Oon. MUOII. 304-768·21110
Of 711·1712.

&gt;

••'*';;,,

.

liD

Remembering
the
Bomb (CCI The pe rson a l
storiat uf t w o Amer tc ans
wtlo plann e d the atomtc
bomb anacks on HiroshIma an d Na gasak i are
co un te red wi t h th e sto ries

VEP·· LIGHTNIN '
STRUCK TH'DAOBURN
TREE I WAS UNDER

'IOU OUGHT NOT
STAND UNDER TREES
WHEN lr'S LIGHTNIN'..
DON'TVOU KNOW
BETTER'N

of two J ap anese surv ivo rs.

(60 min.!

9:30 I) {1) 9 You Again/I n an

---------------,~·

Service. ~~

Jem11 8oy1 Water
pools lilted. CtH 114-288-11
or 814-441 ·117&amp; or 114·4
7911 .
.
.,

1

·Ken' a Weter Strvlct w
dlttrn1. pools end water~
tiiiMI. Call 814-317;0123 or 11
814-367-7741 or 304-67&amp; ·
1247.
. ....
Dlllard'1 Wattt D•tivtry. Ciiti
""'· wslla, PGolt. Anytime bu ·
Sunday. Ctll 11 4-441· 7404.
Wetter1on' 1 Water He.auni!
rtllonablt r11ea. lmmedlete
2 .000 gallon d..ivery, ejsttm ..l
pools. well, ete. cell 304i571·
2118. .
'

effort to g ive Matth e w
more d 1scipline . He nry en·
rolla him In tha tough
l~hool which was his own
•lmo miter. (RI In Stereo.
10:00 G I)) lll1 St. E118where
Cr;oig , , e nd&amp; lhe night a t
the hos pit a l after h1a w if e
kic ks h im out of the house.
an4 Wostphall has I surfor an enraotive medi·
cal student whom he invilli to d inner. (60 min.)
. (AI.
Ill Major Leag. . Batoball:
Attenta at San Diego (2
hrs ., 30 min.)
CIJ 0 (() Arthur Hailey'•
Hetel (CCI A pregnant
maid illegally in lhe United

•rl••

..

HOW WIL-L- I

YOU CAN'T

RECOGNIZE.

. Ml55 WHE.RE

YOU, SNAKE.'?

I L-IVE:
• · 11'"5 ONL-Y A
1HI:a}IN FROM

KOAL.A

fM
COVE~EDIN

BANDAGES

ANDIVE
A HE:L..ME:T
ON II

Slates faces deportation . a
young woman romantic•l ly
eyes s mill ionaire. and Mrs.

CaOot's father-in-law · re-

C R E EK"

turns fo r tile hotel's 75th
8nnrteraary
celebfation .

i

8 -b

•

DO I{OU -miNK
TELEVISION CAMERA5 '
SllOULD 6E ALLOWED
IN THE COORTROOM ?

.

min-.IIR).

CD;• rtenwn
!WoP
. .rinl

L.- ..1.- -'---..1.-~.1.-...l.-.J

e
I

Mowroy'o Upllolltorlnio ~
tri county Ire• 21 ~-· Thllllii
In furn~uro ..ho........ Cfll;
304 - 178 · 4.114 lor ' flo j(
Htimat•.
· ,
·
___.:.

____ __-·...
.,. .,....

ONLY IF I'VE
TIME TO

MV HAIR !

Comp lete the chuc &lt;l e qu oted
by fdlm g 1n 1he m1ss•ng words

you develop fr om step No 3 below

PRIN T NUMBERE D
l ETTERS IN SQUARE S
UNSCRAMBlE lE TIERS
FOR ANSWER

I

Crunch - Saute - Noble - Assail - SHRUBS
The guy who used to chop a winter's supply of fuBI b'
hand has a son who uBe9 a chalnsaw lo prune his SHRUBS

-·

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

Carelessness
costs a game

NORTH

!-f-11

+A J9 7
• Q9 6 53

t62
+KI

By James Jacoby

WEST

When the opening lead is an obv ious
singleton, a good rule is to win the
trick and draw trumps quickly. But
there are exceptions.
Why didn't South, with all his highcard points, make a slam try after
North's jump to three spades' The answer is that they were playing limit
raises, so North had no more than 12
points. Slam was therefore unlikely,
and South merely bid game. But as
careful as South was with his bidding,
he was careless with his play. Following today's rule. he won tbe ace of
hearts and drew trumps. Tben he
played another heart. East won and ,
surprise, played a diamond. Declarer
had to try the queen, losing to the king,
and went set in a contract he should
have made.
Although it may go agaonst the
grain, declarer should let the heart!O
hold trick one. No matter what happens after, declarer will be able to
draw trumps and play ace and a heart.
Although East will now win the lead
and attack diamonds, South can rise
with the ace and shed · the diamond
queen on dummy's fifth beart. Whallf
East had the club ace? Then West

EAST

+5

• 632

•to

.KJ 8
10 8 7 3
+ 109 632

+

tKJ9 5 4
+A J 8 7

SOUTH
+ KQ IOR4
• A 74 2

HQ
+Q 5

Vulnerable: North -South
Dealer· South
West

North

East

Pass
Pass

3•
Pass

Pass
Pass

,.

Soutb

Opening lead • 10

could play a club lo hrs partner's ace .
and a diamond back would set I he con·
tract. But remember, East would have
to hold the club ace, and West would
have to know to play clubs Even un·
der these circumstances. declarer
would certainly be as well oil as he
was before, when he haphazardly
grabbed the first heart trick.

t!'l~lftl1 ~·,t
llr THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
3 "O.? mh Py and
I Coontry
star
5 O ne typ&lt;'
or numerals

10 Ha utboy
11 TranquiliZf'
12 Ke nya rive r
13 VeneraLPd

14 Pai nt

4 Fro nt - pa~t·
t")'4'-{:at c hr r
5 Cheap
wh is kt')
6 Tln uqut '!
7 Spo il
8 f.on sumt•d
9 f' ompt Jst•r

Ro rt&gt; m

ingredient

t8111ness

pt lrt
HurriNi
Mnth r r ,
in Tijua na
Ward nrf
Mak•·
merry

11 S UI' l

18 Streel (F'r ) 15
16
2 1 Seek
plunder
17
22 Edit
24 Ge nf's is
18
pl acC~

25 EaJ.wr

19 An·nnl

28

20 lcl'landw

Old

FT.

dec ret~
28 Ml chel29
30
:12
33

ChlSS H"

angt&gt; lo
wo rk
Hire
In halant "t'
Angl(' r' "'
has ke l
Brooke
Shi e ld!'~

film
:J8 l&gt;t•Lail

40 Tooth
substa nn

41 Church
pan
42 Clrw nf

.'

Sanla s
n •indN• r
43 Pitc hPr

DOWN
I S l l•t•pi n ~
sf"' up

2 Arab
garmt•nl

DAILYCRVPTOQUOTES - Here's how to ~ nrk il:
'

AXYDLBAAXR
is LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this samp .• ,\ r.' used
the lhree L's, X for the two O's , e tc '" '•" ' ' lr tlt ·rs,
apostrophes, the length and lonna lion of the " '"d' are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dilferent
CRYPTOQUOTE
for

..
.

8 -6
AE W H S K

SZ T
M A

MA

OP MC IJ TV'.!T

R MWK;
K SE MP \j
VR (.JTKS

ZT

r

..

t' E T
Y W

K

c

H P V T T V

t'D il

.., 1-; ·1

S Z T

MA

c; T

~

I&lt; F I'

Z )1
~

I

T

YF E H

the

llenlll ICCI The pinonal

.

1t71

~.....

."" . ...

I(

I

~ua"'l 10 • Owed runn.-r 4
-.:r71.00· ....
tlroo.
......OOnd,
304·882-attt

2
ChMt of . . . .a.
tw!n ...' youth bod. Col 614·
441 ·'7313.

,{,

General Hauling :

.

Hotpo)rtt weaher haavy duty,
wllhll (IOOd. U6. Coli 114·
441·7815.

I LOVE TO WATQ-i THEIR
REACTI CNS WHEN IT
FI NALLY S INKS IN .

Ste reo.

'

Mlddl.,.,rt. Ohio. Aloo 2 l'I&gt;Om

Acreage

,, .............,_ , ........ _,'. ' ....

Oood·1 E111t evetlng. bnementl;\
footert. driVIWI'fl, MP1io tanka.\
lendtctping. Cell anytime 114· \
448-4637. Jem• l. Dav..ot..:
Jr. owner.
\
,

2 bodioomfutn-•ortrno!lt

35

M 05TOF THE I&lt; IDS CON'T
KNOW YET THAT l 'M 6ACK
FRO\\ SUMMER CAMP.

BARNEY

88ilondi3.-Whoolor. 200S with
14 CluNetto 4 cyl., 2 - · 1
Jpd.. AM·FM Clltent; tow 1 :r:o~· 00. Coli lt4- ~6 ""'"""' . eon 614·448-0137
-.
'
olt• "M.

'

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

CARTER 'S PWMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
QellipoNa, Ohio
Phone 614· 441-llil or 114-1
448 -4·t 77
1

83

Ill) ~ MOVIE : 'Christopher Columbus' ICC) Part 1
of 2, IR).
liD National GeOGraphic
Speaial: Jeruulem: Within
Th•18 Walla (CCI W l1hin '
t~e walleG city of J e rula lam are the shrines hell.1
most sacred to the Muslim ,
Christian. and Jew is h religions. (60 min .) (RI In
Stereo .
® MOVIE : 'Damien: Omen
II'
8 :30 (]) 0 (I) Mr. Sunshine
(CCI W a rre n falls for a c onnivWlg female
student
wllo's after his job. (R).
9:00 8 ill ® Gimme a Break
Wh ile s srving as the ma n a ge r of an e11-con roc k
g roup, Nell is asked to be
on Gary Collms' tele vision
s how. Pa rt 2 of 2, (R) In
Stereo .
700 Club
(!) P1IA lowling' 8uflale
Open 12 hrs .l
([) 0 :]) MacGyvor (CCI
MacGyver. forced to ma ke
a landing in Afghan tst a n.
b efr iends a young Afgh a n
b oy. (60 m in.I (R) .
(]J Na tional Geographic
SpeGJal: Jerusalem: Within
Those Walls (CCI Wit h1n
th e w a lled city of J er usale m are the s hnne s he ld
mos t sac re d to th e Mus ltm .
Chns t ia n. and J e wts h reliQIOn s 160 min I IR) In

crt

-Plumbing
llo Haatlng

Motorcycle•
,

"f,EK &amp; MEEK

Starkl Tret end Lawn 8~
landaceplrtt- 304-176-2010. 1

Ll!lht h'"llng: 304-671-872DC

71

- ~

SERVICE, oap•
rieneed earpll'ltlf', tltetl'id..._
milan, paint•. roofing (In=
ing lioo ,. oppli-} '
871· 2011 or 675·7381.
,

Trucks for Sale

1979 Chevrolet "AA ton pic:lr;up.
4 x4 with utlity bed. Oood
condition. CaM •14-441-8201
or 114·448-lt13 .

-.

•••

RI~GLES ' S

82

t9e2 Oodgo PU ll!lht duty. 228
4 tpd., brown wtth Cfottm
fibergl•• topp•. Call81·· 317·
0394.

our

®

atu.,p

!

1114 S-10 4-drivoplcllup,
AM -FM c..1ett1 rldio . Camper
top, Nnnlng bOarda. 21.000
mil". clun t7 ,100 or cen http
with rl'fin 111olng. Celll14·24.6·
9244.
.

CID MacNei l-Lehrer Newsh-

Fetty TrH Trimmine.
Nmoval. Call304-1715-1331 .:,

Co~ Emlo.. c,orpWitry, ...,......;
. lng, siding, roofing, GORCI'...
'79 Bonnwttlt, loaded, ehlf'Pe, 4 · work, block. peinting. Pi'M eittJ
door, *2.400.00 fir~ . phone' met... 304-871·5112.
304-678-21113.

72

LOOK AT THA.T!

''
Service:

Bupl'eme.

•

WH0o0 EEE ! WOULDJ UH

Ellterlor. Interior ltUCCO. PI-"'
1er &amp; plllter repairs. LG¥1' ret ...
Co118t4·261-ttl2.
,..

1982 Z-28 Pace-Car. T-Jop.
kllded . 81976 firm. 814·992·

to

girl. (60 min .) (Ri.
Cil BD&lt;n Free
liJ Superbouts Muhamm ad
All vs . Ken Norton (New
York, Septe mber. 1976) .
(&amp;0 min .)
Cil MOVI! : 'Rio Lobo'
11J 0 ® Perfecl Strangers
(CCI Afte r Larry te ach es
Saiki lhe art of sayi ng n o .
Larry's tiuddtn9 photojoumaism c areer may be
ruin ed when he c8 n't get
Balkt ta say yes to a spec ial
favor (R) .
Ei) CD MOVIE: 'Death
Wish'

AiW~~-

•
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional llfitlme g.....-,.:
tee. local raterencea turnillhtld.
Fr• •timet•. Cllll cohct
t -61 4·237-0488 , doy or .......
Rogtrt Baatmenf
Waterproofing.
,

Highway

Heaven Working as highschool teac hers. J onathan
and Mark anempt to moti va te an arrog an t athlete
and a lon e ly overw e1 ght

A~

.

Shrubbl t14.00 t e c h , =
teed. Tree • atu,..
'
muiFh. und a graveta'--atonilt
deliver«&lt;. Don' l UndlclllkMII
Coll614-446-9t48.
~ ·"

'81 Chevelte, ec , em-fm
ceatette, 4 IP•d. t1885. firm .
Aftl!lf 15;30 CIH 304-17&amp;-4831 .

li

(j]) Jeopardy

U (}) rllJ

a ,oo

fA~N~D INCOME:=?. .

J 6 J 's Home lmprovem...
Vinyl tiding, overhang. ttodl
doc1ra &amp; window•. guner1. GiJ
114-441-1073.
~1

1976 Pinto. Body rougl'l . mech.-.icelly .,und. Celll14-992·
81B6 .

ll] Alice

f)o Yov t-IAV~ To
~C:AT

1979 Buiek Riviera. lo .. ed to
the max. lu1tter Interior .
18.000 mil•. Will consider
partial. trme. Atking 13150.
N agotiabl• . C til I 1 4 - 7422057 .

7258.

I

I0

ANYUSE

1--i-~:...;;1,_..:..,1;.7~~6,..:...,.1---l

YEnEIDAY'S SCRAM·IETS ANSWERS

Game
@ NFL's Greotest Moments: Son of Football Follies ·
1
(!) Sanford and Son
Ei) CD Toxi
0 (])® Wheel of Fortune
® Up Pompeii!
Cil ~ Entertainment Tonight
Interview
with

Motor• Homes
llo Campers

1183 Dodge Omni 4 . .. euto.
48.000 mil ... •2 .100. Ctll
814·379-2726.

1977 Oldsm~bile Cutlua Supreme, PS, PB. eir. rally whtela.
good body. rims good •&amp;oo. Call
8t4-446·4B03.

.
.-- - --

Have you ever noticed depart·
menl: People today are wearing
.
things on their T shirts that lhey
- - - --. onc e wouldn't telllheir .

ll] WKRP In Cincinnati
@ Whoel of Fortune
7:05 ([) Green Acres
7:30 U (1) I]) Now Newlywed

1972 Jeyco 20 ft cemper witll
tllltret. 1971 Bltz..-. Bo1h de
cond. 304·175-3341 or 871·
5685 .
.. .

1984 Chevy Cevetier ltltionwegon , new engine. only e.ooo
miltl, very good eond . 14,200.
CaR 814-246-&amp;408 or 614446-0212

• ~
T.:.,Y:-:,..F
.....jl"'
'"!,
5

mIW Divorce Court

22ft. Covered W~gon . Excell~
condition. Cell 814-992-7382. ,

1177 Ok11 Cutlut 3&amp; ,100 2nd
CMner mil11. new radiela. IJI.·
haurt. 1hocka, betts. hot... no
rekl or tnow, titt, cruilt, RWO .
Coli 8t4-441-t749 .

--iF~l
~ I I 1 I'

,-

Ei)

® Nightly Business Report
@) News
liD MaoNeii-Lehror Newshour

t992 Dodgo 024 4 opd.. 2 dr.,
sporty rid &amp; black paint. Cell
614-379-2728 .

1980 Suberu 4 dr., auto., e111c.
oo nd .. •1 .800. Call 114·4412429 .

~nterteinmant Tonight

land to visit Jane Cunai n
on the set of her upco mi ng

med•a:

1118 MUllane v-e. ..... o. •soo.
CoH 814-441-01141 .

1971 F~ II . V-8.- 11100. Ctll
8t4-448-3460.

low IO lorm fou r simple words.

(j]) News
crt Green Acres
@ Mazda Sportslook
® Fathor Knows Best
Ei) CD Star Trek
® Reading Rainbow ICC)
liD Living With Animals
6:30 I) (}) (j]) NBC Naws
crt The Riflemen
@ Inside the PGA Tour (R) .
® Gomer Pyla, USMC
(I) 0 C1J ABC Newa
® Doctor Who
®I IE) 1nJ CBS News
liD Body tleC"tric
7 :00 U (}) PM Magazine
Man from U.N.C.L.E
SportaCenter

4- 14 indl chro,...rimt,
Rocktl. ft1eFord.'Condition f•lr,
• 78 . Coli 614 -388-8811.

78

0 four
Rearrange letters of the
sera mbled wcxds be·

a wwo w® m ~

Transmls!Nons . All
front, rtll', 4 whtll driVe. PriMI
ltart •100 .• Will dliliver. C . .
814·379-2220 .
..

.

.,__ llr Hlo. U .IIO por bolo
CoM ,6t 4-Mt-30Q llf!or. INo. ,

Hay tor

156

e :oo

88 Ford Escort FT P$, P8, AC, 5
spd .. l..a then 5.000 mil ...

For Mit or lrlde. Girls 10 IPeed
Sale! 50 percen1: •oHI F.ltahing blkt, will tr.ct.. tor girl1 regular
arrow Ugn t2191 Lighted, non - bike or tell tor ne Of bitt offer.
arrow U&amp;8 1Non-l;ghted t2281 Cell 114-992-7304.
FrH lttteral Ftw left. SH
lo ca_llv . 1 - 800 - 423 - 01153 .
enyt•me.
·

t872 Ford LTD. t150 . Smoll
ttble with 2 c:tlailt, *10 . love
18111 and m1tcttirtg chllir, 120.
Soft. 110. LoveiNtJ 110. Twin
bed with mattrMt ad boll
IIJJingt t11 . RoCking chair with
stool, •10 . Strl'ight·blck
ehlir.*10. Admirel bladt end
white TV •• 115 . AM -FM eight
track stereo ptayer •1 0 . Antlqua
piano. 1500. Call 114-992·
8539 . .

71

..

EVENING

~~=========:;;:=====::::~~~j ----------_,
""'~
t1P8f. ~
67

WOlD

8/6/86

••llow,

Auto Parts

IAMI
'~~:t:~' S@\\JllA-~£!rS"
fdltod by CLAY I . POLLAN _.,;__ _ __

WEDNESDAY

Boats and
Motors for Sale

s. ACllenoriaa

Puvey Merk 2 MC8 I channel
starto mixing board *150. Pta·
vey 2t0 boott« amp 400 wen
•100. Coli 8t4-38S· IIBOD.

Elec . refrigeretor, fro1t·fret.
white. 875. Elec. renge, whitt.
890 . Lawn mower, •20. Child•
awingaet, UO. Dining room
table. derk finish . t1 0 . Call
614· 448·4719 .

Television
Viewing

78 Mork Twoln lrl·houl inboor:loutbOII'd. 140 hDraa,
welk tllrouctt wrindlhitkl. ~
covert . Shoreline tr•U•J,.
n.011o. col 814·388·t7e3. "

'

Pt11tic Clatetr~ stett epproved,
plastic septic tanb, plllltlt&gt;
Ct~lvertt, mftj f cUivtrtl. RON
EVANS ENTERP"\SES. Joch.... Oh. 11~- za•- 11130 .

r

_....

Motorcycle•

Picll.ent Ualll Fu,...re . Good
quollty uood furniture. (lpon hi
I or , ce" for IPPO!n1"*'t.
304· ,76·6483 or f78·:1 4io,

·5 4

The Daily Sentinel- Page- 11

Ohio

t8S3 Hondo Shldow. CoW 1141
441 •3112 .. tnin9a.
I

.

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE '
S ofa1 and chain priced ho m
1391 to •till . Tlb... ffiO 1Rd
up ta t125. Hide-e-Nds 1390
to *Ill. RecHn . . t221 to
t375 . .._. tzl .to t125.
Oin tttll *109 enCI up to M95 .
Wood tlble w-e dllin *2115 to
1788, Dllill tiDD '4' to t376 .
Hutohoo t4011 on~ '4'· lunh
bed1 co"""'• w·mimreu11
1298 ond up to t398. lilly
beda •1 110 • *171. MettrMt"

6, 1986

t888 KIWIIold 410. tl~2 . . .'
Mexlm Yemlhe. 1 ..1 or tred(.
Coli 614·441-7414.
;

moni w01111r uso.r.ooli"''••h•·dNer . 111 • 10, bl·

or

· Apartment
for Rent

I home in Flatwoods
of
17 ecr• &amp;
~Pring fad pond waileblt. Call
514· 446 ·2359 .

34

1 bedroom apt. for rent. Bal ic
rent starta t215 . a month th ..
includtl all utilitiea. Deposit
requir.. af t200 . Contect VII·
lege Manor Apt. Middleport.
114-992 ·7787 . Equal Hou1ing
Opportunity.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33, North of Pomtroy.
l • rge lOti . Call814-992-7479.

rill• • .
·· QullitY home. n.wtv rtmodeted
, ~ locotlon on Coli,.. Rd.
lyteeuH. new complete kitchan
,w IIUndry. ..r condh:ton.cl,
'"""lot. 114-992·1324.

Modt rn 1 bedroom epanment.
Cell114-441-0390.

1 bedroom apt. for rent in
Middleport. Cell614-992·8783
evening~ , 614-002-1611 days.

44

· 2 stort. 31idr. boule on N. M•in
lt. 'In Vinton, Cal 814·2458434 - r o I , 614·388-8147

llo

2 bdr. opt. noor Silvor Bridgo
clop
. ....
Coli 614·441·7026.
Plus
. lmmtdilte
oecuptney,

1986

llll&gt;flei of two Anoerlca ns
wlto planned tho 11onoic
bomb · ani cks on Hirosh·
ima and Naguokl Ire
c ountered with the 1torles
of twO Japanese survlvort.
(60 min.)
(j]l (I))-NtW8
t0:30 ill A - n Snepehota
• (}) INN Ntwl

~ ln""'!ftiOn! Oor Allllng
llioiU New mtthlfl In

..

.'

UM!l TF. R VtiT
Cryptoquote: NO W, AS All\ ,\ IS Till:
MOST AUTOMATE!l APPLIANC E IN Ti lE JI OI 'SEIIIl l.ll '
. IS TH E MOTHE R. - llEVERLY .JONES

Yetterday's

•.,
treating back problem s a re
e Jtam in e d In a vis it to New
York Hospltii·Corne ll Mod ·
jcol Center.
1 1:00 • ill (]) Ill (]) (j) Ill (j})
1)11 New1
(1) 1111 -C:oally ShoW
I]) ·Am•rlca't Cup: Chel-

.,

Iongo Dow n Under: USA
Prepares

Eil (1) Love

.

Conntcllon

(() SCTV
{fi) Non·Fic t ion TtltY IA ian
(CCI T h ~ 1939 Now York
Wo rld 's Fatr is rem em bered (60 min I lA).

'

~,,

' ..

.........·
·~-

'"

�r-age- I~-. I he Dally

~tinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, August 6, 1986

r---Local Briefs:-- Ohioan helps ~ab rob~ry suspect
Celebrezze managers named
PETERSBURG, W.Va. (UP!)Foster H,edrlckdld Ids duty, and the
suspect In the tlrst robbery of the
66-year-old Potomac Valley Bank
was captured within two hours.
Grant County Sheriff Larry Ours
credited Hedrick's actions for
nl'ltlng tbe admitted professional
bank robber following hiS $3),00l
heist.
Bercha Ray Snyder, 51, of

Attorney General Anthony J. Celebrezze Jr., announces the
appointment of D. Michael Mullen and Ernest Wingett as Ids
campaign managers In Meigs Crunty.
·
Mullen Is an attorney in Pomeroy, having received Ids law degree
from Capital Law School In Columbus. He is a member of the Ohio
and Meigs County Bar Associations, the Meigs Jaycees and ts a
member of the board of directors of Meigs Jndustrtes. Mullen
residents on Lincoln Heights In Pomeroy.
Wingett, a retired school teacher and a farmer In Racine, was
mayor .of Racine for 18 years. He has also been engaged 1n the
newspaper business and Is active In Democratic circles. He has been
on the Meigs Boand of Elections. HE' and Ids wife. Maxine, reside In
Racme.
Meigs County residents who are interested In wlunteertngto work
on the Celebrezze campaign may contact Mullen at 992-6417 or
Wingett at 949-2441.

Goodyear

(Continued from PagE.&gt; 11

Goodyear's board of dlrl'Ctors
met Tuesday afternoon to approve
the expansion plans which call for
the construction of additional units
and the refinement of the existing
faciUty at the Apple Grove site.
J.O. Carver, plant manager at
Apple Grove, said engineering will
begin at the md of next week, with
construction expected to begin In
about six months. The expansion
should be compiE.&gt;ted by thE' E.&gt;nd of
1988, he added.
Carver assured that Goodyear
will uSE'd local craftsmen In the
construction phase r:i the rroject.

Clarks return from convention
Joe and Susan Clark of Clark's Jewelry Store in Pomeroy and
Gallipolis havE.&gt; returned from New York Qty where they attended
the four-day JE.&gt;Welers of America 1986 July lnll'rnatlonal JE.&gt;Welry
Trade Show and ConvE.&gt;nlion.
In addition to attending a convention program for retail jE.&gt;welers,
Mr. and Mrs. Clark also previewed the DE.'wesl jewelry styles and
trends on display by more than 1,100 leading manufacturers and
deslgnE.&gt;rs who exhibited from the United States and abroad. Many d
the new styles will be available in lime for fall and Christmas
gift-giving, the Clarks report.

Cleveland .was heldlnGrantC014nty
Jail in lieu of $100,00&gt; bond. Snyder
was arrested after pollee hurled
tear gas Into a mobile home at the
rear of a motel whl'n he faDed to
respond to commands to emerge.
He offered no outwand resistance,
but was a pistol was taken from
him, Ours said.
Snyder, believed by authorities to
be crlglnally of D:xldrldge County,

In a meeting with members of thE'
Mason County Development Authority's executlw committee
Tuesday, Carver commended thE&gt;
governor's officE.&gt; for the coopE.&gt;ratlon and assistance It has given thE'
company. "A good strong job has
bel'n donE' by the governor's
pl'Ople," he said.
The local Goodyear plant currently produced polyesll'r resins lor
packaging, powder coatings, adhesives and other specialty typE.&gt;s of
resins. ThE' plant Is In operation
seven days a W!!E'k, 24 hours a day,
Carver said.

Pre-kindergarten meeting set

4 fined for Monday brawl

A meeting of childrl'n who will enter kindergarten In the Southern
Local School District this month and their Plrl'nts will beheld at 7: 30
p.m. Thursday at Southern High School.
Pupils who havE.&gt; not registered earlier may do so at the Thursday
night mi!E'ting. Parents arE.&gt; to takE' the Immunization rl'Cords and the
birth certificatE's for thl'SE' children.

Four pE.&gt;r~ms Involved in an
altercation on the PomE.&gt;roy parking
lot Monday night were fined and
given jail sentences when they
appE.&gt;ared before PomE.&gt;roy Mayor
Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
Facing the disordl'rly conduct

Mason County fair schedule
Tonight
Market lamb show
5:30p.m.
Sarrow Way Singers
6p.m.
Uttle Miss, Mr. Masoo County
7p.m.
4-H Leader Memorial Award
7 p.m., Jr. bldg.
Jr. open dairy show
7 p.m.
Demolition derby
7 p.m.
Junior style show
7:30p.m.
Gospel Harmony Boys
9:30p.m.
Thursday a.m.
Kid•' Kid Show .............................................. 9 a.m., show rinK
Open beef show .... ........................................................ 10 a.m.
Pie eating mntest ......................................................... ll a.m.

EMS answer8 five calls
ME.&gt;igs County Emergency Medical ServicE.&gt; reports five calls
Tuesday.
Middleport at 2: II a.m. to Hobart Street for Roy Boggs, who was
ll'!'alro but not transported: Pomeroy at2: 34 p.m. transported HE.&gt;Ien
Jones to VE'terans ME.&gt;morial Hospital: TuppE.&gt;rs Plains at 5: 22 p.m.to
Long Bottom for Josephine WE.&gt;lis to St. Joseph's Hospital; Racine at
8:41 p.m. to Ohio 124 for Karl'n Turley to VE'terans Memorial
Hospital: Racine at 10:17 p.m. to Ohio l241or Mina PlckenstoHolzer
Medical Center.

Ohio weather
South Central Ohio
Mostly cloudy with a chance of
showers and thundNstorms
through Thursday. HighS today and
Thursday will bE' In the mid Ills.
Lows tonight wUI bE' In the mid OOs.
The probability of precipitation is
50 pE.&gt;rcent today and tonight annd
ll percent Thursday.
Winds will be light and from the
south today and light and variable
tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday
Chanoe r:i showers and thunderstorms Friday and Satunday. Fair
Sunday. Highs will be in the Ills
Friday and between 75 and 85 by
Sunday. Lows wUI be in the 00s.

cha~s

werE.&gt; Dean Whlltlng1on,

Pomeroy,$100andcosts,l5daysln
jail and six monthy probation;
Charll's Whlltlng1on, Pomeroy,
$:50andcosts,30dayslnjallandsix
months probation: Don Icenhower,
PomE.&gt;roy. $250 and costs. JOdays in
jail and six months probation. and
Rhonda Phelps, Pomeroy , $150 and
costs, five days in jail and six
months
Othersprobation.
lined Tuesday night were
Richard Friley. PomE.&gt;roy, $113 and
costs, Intoxication, and Charll's
Ducan, Star City, W.Va., $63 and
costs, lmpropE.&gt;r pa~slng. BUI
Childs, Middleport, forfeited a $47
bond posted on spl'edlng charges.

Racine
(Cont inued from Page II
table for Ihe park.
Council recessed until 7 p.m.
Monday, Aug. 18.

Is wanted by the FB!forburglary ol
banldng Installations. He admitted
to authorities Tuesday to robbing
sE.'Ven other banks since December
cllast yE.&gt;ar- four in CI!'Veland, one
in Salem. W.Va., one In Buckhan-

Ohio Lottery

In the
spotlight
-Page 9

mn, W.Va., and one in North
Carolina, au thortties said.
Hedrick. 40, and his 11-year-old
daughter werE' Inside the Potomac
Valley Bank durtng the Monday
morning robbery.

li~nses

Vo1.36, No.66
Copyrighted 1986

Marrtage Urenses have reen '
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Donald Gondon Yeater, 62,
Torch, and Ada Louise Barnhart,
68, Reedsville; Henry Eblin Sr., 76,
and Helen Dorothy Johnson, 71,
both of Pomeroy; Ronald Ray
WUllams. 18. Mason, W.Va., and
Christy Ann Dye. 20. Middleport.

and
Trudy R. Spradling have bl'en
granted a dissolution cif marriage In
Meigs County Common Pleas

111 Sec d s

Case dismissed

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

an

A case by Ohio Power Co. against
Lillian Marlene Hall, et al, has bl'E.&gt;n
dismissed In Meigs County Com·

Sentinel Stall Writer
Indications from the Meigs County Commissioners
are that the Carper's Nursery access road projl'Ct Is
not dead In the water yl't.
Meigs County Engineer .Phil Roberts reported to
the commissioners Wednesday that he ml't with
George Carper last week to determine another site
(rom which to enter thE' CarpE.&gt;r propE.&gt;rty with an
access road from U.S. 33. The proposed location for
the road was one of the state's main objections to the
project, which has bel'n in thE' works for SOmE' lime,
Roberts said.
It was believed by those who have bel'n Involved In
thE' project at the local ll'vel that proposed

p
t., omtroy

WE WILL BE
CLOSING AT
NOON THURSDAY
AUG. 7th, TO ENJOY THE MASON CO. FAIR

By ELIOT BRENNER

WASHINGTON (UP! 1 - The
Navy's plan to build more ports for
its growing fleet remains afloat
today, kept alive by SenatE' supporters who rejl'Cled a challE.&gt;nge from
opponents who branded It a porkbarrel project on a grand scale.
The 65-34 vote against an effort to
cut money for the port construction
- Initially at Staten Island, N.Y ..
and EvE.&gt;rl'tl, Wash .. and later along
the Gulf Coast- marked a day of
slow progress Wednesday on the
$292 blllio~ 1987 defenSE' approprialions bill on Capitol Hill.
ThE' House was unable to get to
the but but hoped to return to It
today once a hitch on ground rules
goyernlng dE'ball' was resolved. An
altiim)i(' li)cut ~g lor ''Star
Wars" ·research - from the $3.7
bllllon contained In the House blllto
just $3.1 billion - was E.&gt;xpected
when debate resumed.
On the Senate side, membl'rs
expl'Cled to reach debatE' by latE'
morning on efforts to stall a nl'W
chemical wE.&gt;apon, the troubled
BlgE.&gt;ye bomb, and to challenge a
NATO rerttfication that cleared the
way lor the nl'W binary wE.&gt;apons, an
artlllery shell and the BlgE.&gt;ye. The
weapons mix seperate chambers of
two relalivE.&gt;Iy harm!E.&gt;ss chE.&gt;mlcals
Into a IE'lhal concoction after being
!Ired.
The Navy port plan, which is not
contained in thE' HouSE' bill, would
build facllllil's at the NE.&gt;W York and
Washing1on state locations and
E'ventually at sevl'n Gulf Coast
points to sprE.&gt;ad out the fleet.
Supporters claim this would redure
the risk d a devastating SDE.'ak
attack llke PE.&gt;arl Harbor.
The move against "strategic
homeporting" was launched by
SE.'n. Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M., who
proposed laking $141 million out of
the blll and spending it Instead on
ammunition lor the Navy.

SEE YOU THERE!

CLIP AND SAVE

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CHEESE .................... S1.89
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MARGARINE ... A~.1t'A8~. 79&lt;

•

HEAD
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LEMONS ............. 2 FOR 69&lt;
3 LB. LODI

COOKING
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The Navy puts the price tag at
under $1 billion. but critics likE' SE.'n.
Barry Goldwater, R-Artz .. chair-

5 OZ.. BANQUET OR MORTON

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COOK IN THE BAG ••.••••• l.tos •• 99&lt;
12 OZ.. STOUFFER$
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By ANDREA NEAL

MUSHROOM SOUP ••••••••• l.~os •• 99c
15 OZ.. SHOWBOAT
PORK &amp;.BEANS ..............t~oa .. 79&lt;
15 OZ; CHEF-BOY-AI-DR
ROUER ' COASTER .....~ ....... ~ot4••• 89&lt;

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rr~r ; :r•' lralr;an pw avarlablt afnr 4PM Monday · Fr~ay nnd all d~~
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f"ltaM" pruent coupon when llrdrrrflll Qrw. coupon rer par~ y IX' V~&lt;n
.rt parue~paunt Pr:u Hut "rtJta\.nants Valid on rr~lu menu ptrc~~
only N01 valid rn combkllnion with any 01Mr c~ or promrnional
nHer G()O(( on eat-In OtCU'f'l'OUI. ~rvinR ume' may
v~ r ~ m snmt r~1tauran11 Offer aood rhrmJ!i!h

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Please prevnr toupon ""~" orderma One- ~(rupc&gt;n per pany per \' ISH
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only Not valid rn combinarioo wuh any mhtr coupon or ptomouonal

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4 ROLL WHITE CLOUD

TOILET TISSUE .................... S1.39
151ft OZ.. ftOPICAL

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"
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24 OZ. WILCH'S

GRAPE JUI ••••• ~&lt;~·············· $;1.19

business was greatly e!!ecled when the 33 lour lanE'
was constructed years ago, cutting his nufSE'ry off
from the main flow of traffic.
Roberts also reported that county highway
dl'partment workers havE.&gt; Installed 150 feet of drain
pipE.&gt; in front of the SyracuSE' EIE.&gt;mentary SchooL The
pipE.&gt; was Installed to eltminate a rl'Currlng flooding
problem durtng rains.
Ted Warnl'r, county highway supE.&gt;rlntendent,
reported that County Road 31 has bel'n grader
patched and that patching started Wednesday on
County Road 28. Mowing Is underway on the Leading
Creek section of County Road 3, he added.
At thE' request of Michael Swisher. director of thE'

Meigs County Department of Human Services, the
board accepted a two-year contract with Racine
HomE' National Bank lor the handling of food stamp
transactions, at a rate of $1 to the bank per
transaction. The said lee Is to be retroactive from
Aug. 1, pE.&gt;nding approval by the stale. Without state
approval, the fee will be in effect as of Aug. 6.
ThE' board !hen met in executive session with
Carson Crow, assistant Meigs County prosecuting
attorney, to discuss pE.&gt;ndlng iitigatlon.ll was reported
by Jones thai a suit by Belty Williams against thE'
county is scheduled to begin trial this morning at 9
a.m. The suit stems from the letting go r:i Williams In
August !983 as an employee at the county Infirmary,

Janrik-7

man of the Anned Services Com·
rnlttee, said It could run into thE'
billions.
Goldwater, noting t~ political
clout the extra ports would give the
Navy, sarcastically said more than
a quarter d thE' SenatE' Is "Indebted
to the secretary of the Navy."
"The whole thing Is ludicrous. It's
a total waste of money," Goldwater
chargl'd. "It'll cost SlO billion before
you're through fooling around with
this homeporting."
Supporters countered thE.'ir motives were baSE'd on national
security nel'ds, not political greed,
and said the nl'W ports could cut
travel limE' to Europe and the
Pacific In the evenlofwaras well as
reduce rtsk to the neet. which wUI
hit 600 vessels In a .few years.
But Sen. James Exon, D-Neb.
and a supportE.&gt;r of Bingaman· s
ammdment, said tt "could better
be described as 'home-p:Jrking'
instead ct homeporting."
"There's about as much politics
in this Issue as we'll deal with" on
the defense bill, said Sen. Alan
Dixon, D-Ill., terming lie Drst-year
costs "chicken feed .... It Is going to
cost billions of dollars."
In other actions, the Senate:
-Told the Pentagon to set up an
offiCE' to supervise special opE_&gt;ratlons forces such as the Army Delta
IE.'am and Navy Seals and to
esta bllsh a special rommand within
the military structure to oversee
their opE.&gt;ratlons.
- Directed the Strategic l:RIE.&gt;nse
lalllallve office to report on what
the near-term posslbllitles of the
"Star Wars" anti-missile resoorch
program are to make t~ administration sharpen the focus ri thE'
program. Critics say Presldl'nt
Reagan's staunch insistenCE' It can
proll'Cl wtw;lle populations, whE.&gt;n a
morE.&gt; !risible option might be
protecting misslle fields, Is hurting
thE' program on Capitol Hill.
-Rejected 57-43 an attempt to
boost cigarettE' prlres at base
commtssarll's and post exchanges
to the rost at nearbycivUian stores.

• •

recipient
dies at 54

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olthe leltertng, numbering and art work on the entry.
which is spon....,red by the L.T.D. Carry-Out of LaiTy
demolition derby at the Meigs County Fair. Bob wW and Terry Deem. Bauer has driven In derbies at
be driving the entry In the pboto. The mechanical Marietta, butthls marks his flrstllme to participate in
work m the vehicle was done by Terry Qmgo and BW the local event.
Milhoan,
and Unda GOWan, at. right In ..cture, did all
.
READY- Bob Bauer, Ohio 248, near Olester, left
in photo, is ready lor Tuesday night's IUimal

-

•

Rehnquist document review
turns up nothing offensive
when hE' worked lor Attorney
By JUDI HASSON
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Senale General John Mitchell in the early
Judiciary Committee Democrats 1970s, Including writings on domesare reviewing sensitive documl'nls lie survl'lllance and the student
JusticE' William Rehnqulst wrote as killings at Kent Stale UnlvE.&gt;rslly.
Sen. JosE.&gt;ph Blden. 0-Del.. said
a Nixon administration official. but
a key Republican says nothing In Democrats had not completed
rt"&gt;~lewlng the dowmenls, which
the memos could "hurt him."
As the commlttl'E' wound up two
President Reagan last week refused
to tum over to the commlttl'E',
days of hearings Wednesday on
Antonin Scalia. another Supreme clllng executivE' privilege.
Court justiCE' nominee, Democrats
"TherE' Is nothing In thoSE'
said they had not ruled out bringing documents that can hurt him," said
RE.&gt;hnqulst back for more testimony Sen. Strom Thu!TllOnd, R·S.C..
on his nomination to he chief chairman of the committee. Sen.
Charles Mathias. R-Md .. said thel'l'
justice.
Rehnquist tesmted lor two gruel - werE.&gt; no "smoking guns" In the
ing days last wl'E.'k, denying materiaL
Earlier In the day, ThulTllOnd
charges hE' had harassed black
voters In the early 1900s. He also disclosed he was asking the FBI to
said hE' was unaware hE' had owned look into a possible IE.&gt;ak of thE'
two propE.&gt;rtles with deeds prohibit · documents. which have been the
lng their sale to blacks or Jews.
subjl'Cl of controversy since Rehn·
Democrats demanded andflnally qutsl's confirmation hearing ended
obtained key documents he wrote last week.

Bur Blden said the incldl'nl "was
much ado about nothing."
Mark Goodin. Thurmond's spokesman, said the chairman would
wail to see if any of thE' material
was published or broadcast before
deciding what action to takE'. ·
"TherE.&gt; was genuinE' concern thai
the security of the dowments had
been brl'ached, " Goodin said.
Goodin said his offiCE' received
several calls from reporters indicating they knE.&gt;w the contents tithe
documents that had bel'n rl'leased
to the committee.
The documents sparked a confrontation b&gt;tween Congress and
the administration when Reagan
assened exl'Cutivl' privilege and
refuSE'd to make the malE.&gt;rla t
available durtng RE.&gt;hnqulst's conftnnatlon hearing.

Scalia appointment to high court appears assured

1OJf• OZ.. CAMPBELL CREAM OF

• MjuSl .Cir ~ed

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

74 CT.

LETTUCE ...................... 59&lt;
KRAFT 12 OZ. 16 SLICE
AMERICAN PROCESSED

rrtct" tnc 1uae ~ (For f"nqtnt&gt; \ w1!ti
f'INtlonrC IQili(IOnl
• ln~t ~111 Mo ~rtChrtmp1or1 sp.-ul. ph J!.i~

E•pirel 8115188

HAM SALAD ................... .UI.••••• 99c
PACKAGED WIENE.RS ••••••P.to.S1.29

S34!~ S39!~

Budde up lor sat'etyl

HOMEMADE

16 OZ. LUTRER OLD FASHION

~ make Priano"Ponofmo Italian pie cheese and bake it to perfection.
with thick, tangy sUces ofltalian sa usa~.
Thats new Priazzo• Portofino Italian
green peppers, onions, our special sauce pie.The newest recipe in our line of
and mozzarella and cheddar cheeses.
l'riazzo'ltalian piE'S. So delicious. we
layer it between two light, tasty crusts.
could only think of one way to make it
Sm,nrhPr it with even more sauce and
better. Coupons.
·''•

399 SO. THIRD
MIDDLEPORT
614·992-6421

SHREDDED LB. S2.39
$
BOILED HAM ••••••••••••••••••••
ll· 2.1 9

SLICED BACON ................... S1.19

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

Dodge, Inc.

AGAR

1 LB. CRISP·N·SEIVE

itzes

construction of the access road had a verbal okay
from Ohio Deparlrnent of Transportation officials.
Costs for the construction were to be shared ~ Carper
himself and a grant which the county secured through
the Appalachian Regional Commission, It was
believed.
HowE.'Ver, when finished plans were sent tot he state
lor final approval, the project was rejected, with one
reason being that the road would Interfere with the
entrance to the northbound roadside park on 33.
The commissioners and Roberts are hopE.&gt;fu I ODOT
will rE.'VeTSE' the dl'Cislon to scrap thE' projl'Ct once
plans have been revised with an alternate routE.&gt;.
Commissioner Richard Jones noted lhat Carper's

Senate approves
Navy port plans ,

r~m;o~n~P~I;ea~s;e~C;ou;rt;.::;:::::::~~::::::::::::;;~~;;;~

Crash injures officer

mo

2 Sections, 16 Pagel 25 Centl
A Multimedia Inc . Newapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, August 7, 1986

By NANCY YOACJIAM

INSURANCE

Court .

enttne

Nursery's access road project not dead yet

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

Dissolution granted
Franklin w. Spradling Jr.

and thunderstorms.
wW be in the mld.s&amp;.. The
of precipitation ill 211
tonight and ~ percent

•

at y

COME IN AND CHECK
OUT OUR SELECTION.

•

Super Louo: 13, 32,

•

Veterans Memorial

MANSFIEW, Ohio !UP! I -A
Galion pollee ill'Utenant was in
unstable condition In MansfiE.&gt;Id
Gi'neral Hospital with injurtE.&gt;s
suffered when hi s cruiser colllded
Tuesday with a car carrying three
boys fl('('ing police. authoritil'ssaid.
Lt. Richard Mackey, 43, suffered
head and ehl'St injurtes and a
broken leg. while Ihe thrl'E.' boys, all
14 and all from the Manfield arE.&gt;a.
were in stable condition at a
hOspilal in Ga lion .

Is

expired license, and $25 and costs,
expired registration; Robert Scar·
bl'rry, Middleport, $50 and costs,
disorderly manner, and Scott Frazier, Middleport. $100 and costs,
theft.

MalTiage

I c~~!~Frlday with a chance rJ

40, 38, 30, 33

PICKENSMASOHARDWARE
W.VA.

Admissions - GracE' Whaley.
Pomeroy; Karen Tur!E.&gt;y , RacinE'.
Discharges - Ruth Betzing,
JamE.'s Bennett Helen CarpE.&gt;r.

Daily Number: 231

Bonds forfeited in area court
Six defendants forfeited bonds
and three others were fined in tile
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were George A. Spradlin, Cheshire, $40; StE.'Ven E. Nunn.
Gallipolis, $41; Robert Hickl'l.
Hartford, W.Va., $40, all posted on
speeding chargfes; David C.
Fisher, Middleport, $00, no opE_&gt;ra·
tor's license; John D. Hlll, New
Haven, W.Va., $450, driving while
intoxicated, and · $00, weaving
courSE', and Stanley LanE', Portsmouth, $100, disorderly mannl'r.
Fined were Carl D Hughes,
Pomeroy. $425 and costs. driving
whilE' intoxicated: $Zi and oosts.

Partly cloudy tonight wl&amp;t
in the mid 60s. Becoming .

'

'.'

WASHINGTON (UPil - Supreme Court nominee Antonin
~alia E.'merged unscathed from his
SenatE.&gt; confirmation hearings, despile criticism he has "Ice water In
his VE'ins" and Is opposed to equal
rights for women and minorities.
Hearings on President Reagan's
nominee to be the Supreme Crurt's
106th member ended Wednesday
after two days of subdued debatea sharp contrast to last week's
raucous hea!'!r~Q on chief justice
nomlnl'e Justice William
Rehnqulst.
In addition to being calmer. the
Scalia hearings were eclipsed by
continued controversy surrounding
the Rehnqu!st . nqmtnation and
memos hE' wrote from 1969-71 while
an attorney for the · Nixon
administration.
Republican senators said Scalia,
50, smuld have little trouble
winning SE.'nate con!trmatlon, Sen.
Orrin Hatch, R· Utah, called Scalia
"among the best avallable for
appointment to thE' Supreme
Court .••
Evm Democrats on the Senate
Judiciary Committee, diSillllyed ~
the way Scalia avoided thl'lr
questions durtng his testimony
Tul'Sday, seemed Inclined to vote
for him on Aug. 14 when the

committee considers both
nominations.
Sen. Dennis DeConctni, D·Arlz ..
called Scalia "one of the more
E.'Vaslve nominees I've ever seen."

but said he probably would wte lor
him because of his fine reputation .
Sen. Paul Simon, D-Ill., also said
he was "leaning toward voting lor
him," altlx&gt;ugh he was not convinced Scalia could be open· minded
on the high court.
U the committee recommends
them, the fuU Senate Is expected to
take up the nominations In Septembl'r after tbe Labor Day recess .

SCALIA

· o~­

Sen. Edwlll'd len fly cldrlftd
'lhe American _, 4_....•HM
Weclnelldlly filr not riDnga IQOd
job ·Ia evllualla1 nominees for
lhe Supreme Coon by &amp;he ABA
gave 118 lop l'llllng to Judge
Anton~

Scalia. (UPI)

Some dozen wltnl'sses who testi·
fied for and against Scalia unan lm• oosly praised his legal acumen, but
ctvll rights groups said they feared
the appE.&gt;llate judge would work to
turn biick the clock on abortion,
affirmative action and other social
Issues.
1
"Judge Scalla's got Ice water in
his veins when a ~preme Court
justice really OUght to hav~ com·
passion,' ~ saldJosephRauh, repres. entlng the Leadership Conference
m ClvD Rights. ·"He makes jokes
about things about which
feel
deeply. He laughS at a!llrtniltlve

we

actiOn. "
National Organization lor
Women. President Eleanor Smeal
said Scalia's !oui yE.&gt;ars oti the U.S. .
ClrcuU Court of Appeals for the
Dlstrtct of Columbia have dis-

played "a hostility toward the
E.&gt;nforcemenl of rl'medlal antldtscrlminatlon laws pasSE'd by thE'

Congress:·
She said Scalia Is oppoSE'd to
abortion and affirmative action and
"has Uttle Inclination to help move
this country towand equal rights
and equal opportunities for all Its
citizens. In fact ... he Is willing loUSE'
the Constitution and laws to
olxitrucl the advancement of equal
rights."
Kate Mlchelman. executive director r:i the National Abortion
Rights Action LeaguE', said Scalia
and Rehnqulst - taken together pose a JVajor threat to the 1973 Roe
vs. Wade ruling legalizing abortion.
'"This nominee and thE' nl'Xl
nominee to the Supreme Court wUI
l:E the deciding votes on whether
the Roe vs. Wade dl'Cision remains
as precedent,'' she said.
On those same Issues, ScaUa won
a strong endorsement from the
conservative group, Concerned
Women br America.
"Hill vlinant philosophy o! judi·
clal restraint wW helP protect thE'
Constitution from jud~made erosion,'' tesUded the group's JreBI·
dent Bevevly LaHaye. "We need
judges who Uve by an acttve
conunttm'l!llt to judicial restraint."
President Paul VerkuD of the

CollegE' of the WOllam and Mary
also tl'Stifll'd in Scalia's behalf,
saying. "I have never seen a bl'tler
coalition builder. He uses his
charm, humor and lnteiiE'Cl, frequently in thai order, to bring
prople together."

LOUlSVlll.E, Ky. (UP!) William J . Schroedl'r. who died
alter a rl'Cord 620 days on a Jarvtk-7
artificial heart. "took a chance'.' '
that has saved lives and wlll save
more when future permanl'nl
pumps are Implanted, his doctor
said.
Schroeder, the longest-living pE.&gt;rmanenl artificial heart rl'Ciplenl
and the first to llve outside a
hospital, died Wednesday from a
SE'ries of strokes. respira.tory problems and in!E'Ction. HE.&gt; was 54, and
his family was with him.
·

Dr. William DeVries, who pl't·
fonned thE' surgery on Nov. 25, 19!11,
mourned Schroeder as "a pl'rsonal
fril'nd and a pionP.er" who proved
pl'Ople can nve on arti~clal hearts.
IRVrtE.&gt;s voW!'d to continuE.&gt; ImplantIng the paslic-and-ml'tal pumps as
permanent devices.
"WE.&gt;'re roody to go again," he
told a nE.&gt;ws confE.&gt;renre at Humana
Hospital Audubon. "We're looking
lor another patient."
Schroeder, a plucky Air Force
vetE.&gt;ran who asked for a bel'r after
surgery and fussed at President
Reagan about a late Social SE'Curtty
chE'Ck, was the SE'Cond artificial
hE.&gt;art recipient - following Seattle
dentist Barney Clark.
The family of Schroeder, a
JaspE.&gt;r. Ind., munitions Inspector,
bad decldl'd against the use of a
rl'Splrator It onE' was ever needed.
DeVries said, "When he stopped
breathing, we honored their
dl'Cislon."
"We have been through many
rough limes In the PIS I 21 months,
but the PISl two days have been the
handest," his famlly said In a
statement read by a son. "We are
all saddened by the loss ct our
lathl'r, a truly great pl'TSOn.
Schroeder suffered his first
strokE' Dec, 13, 1984, but was well
E'DOUgh by Aprtl6,1985,tomovelnto
a special aparlment across from
the hospital. A month later, howE.'Ver, he suffered his second stroke
and moved back to the hospital. HE'
suffered a thind stroke Nov.lO and
multiple strokes on Wednesday .
DeVries said dE.&gt;spltE.' the trOblem
of strokes - four of the llvli:
pE.&gt;rmanl'DI Jarvlk-7 reclpil'nts·
havE.&gt; suffered them - thE&gt; perman·
ent Implant program had made
progress. He pol nted oo r tha (
Schroeder had been well enough 10
an end a baSE'ball game and return.
to JaspE.&gt;r lor a day while living on.:
thr Jarvlk -7

Convicted slayer awarded
new trial by appeals court
LOGAN. Ohio (UP!)- DalE' Johnston, whO has served 2~ yE.&gt;ars
on death row for the dismemberment slayings of his stepdaughtPr
and her boyfriend, has won a new triaL
The Ohio Fourth Dtstrtct Court of AppE_&gt;als Wednesday reversed
the conviction that gave the Logan man the death prnalty.
Defense lawyl'rs say they wUiseek a jury trial thi s timE' and lry to
get the case heard outside of Hocking County.
Johnston was convicted and sentenced to death ilr the CX:tober .
1982 slaylngs of Annette Cooper and Todd Schultz. Pieces of their ·
bodies were found in the Hocking River and a cornfield.
:
Johnston was arrested the following June and had a trial by three ::
judges In Hocking County Corrunon Pleas &lt;::ourt in ~uary ~~- •
· Tholl!! three judges convicted him and sen ter10ed him to die In the :
electric chair.
:
Defense· lawyers say they have new lnlonnatkm and will present ·.
new witnesses In the !je('Ond trial.
:
The appeals court said Its decision to overturn the conviction was :
based on teslirnOny by one wltnl'SS who was hYJllOIIzed during the ·trial. Defense attorneys say ansWE.'rs !tom that witness varied •
greatly from his normal state to that of being hypnotized.

.' .
......
.. ..........
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