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                  <text>Page-;- 10- The Daily Sentinel

Monday. June 17. 1985

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

.Hostage si-tuation

Third lime charm
to Miss Cochran
: MANSFIELD, Ohio tUPil
SuPIIen Cochran, a bk&gt;ncle-halred
pianist, clung to a hand -carved
wooden crown all week at the Miss
Ohio Scholarship Pageant. It must
havP worked.
"My hostess gavp me a hand·
carved wooden Miss Ohio crown
wl!en I got hl'l'E'," saki Cochran, who
was named Miss Ohio Saturday
night. "I sll'pl with It undl'r my
pillow · and carried it with mP all

week...

.

. Maybe thl' good lucl! crown Isn't
· tlle only charm the nPW Miss Ohio
hellevi'S in. Try thP adagE&gt;, "The
tl)Jrd limP's a charm."
·This was the third tlmeCochran, a
music educatiOnstudE&gt;nt at Miami of
Ohio, has appPared In thl'MissOhio
Pageant. In 1983 she was Miss

(Continued from

"An untrained musician doesn't
enjoy classical music;" she said of
her decision to change her talent
presPnlatlon. "A singer can get to
the audience, but a pianist has to
have something light to get to the
audience.
"I had fun with II and no worrii'S,
only the Idea of playing well and
having a good time," said Cochran,
. who has siudled plano for 13 years.

Bl'ni. LebanOn's justiCE&gt; mlnlstE&gt;r
and ll'adl'r, o! the Amal m!Utia .
mad!' no commPnt on his discussions with McFarlane when he
announced tlle transfer of the
hostagE'S.
The Bl'trut airport Is controlled by
Bl'ni's Shiite milltlamen.
Reagan · admlnlstratlon sources
said ll\l'mbers of the "Delta Force"
- a crack antl-tprrorlst rescue unit
based In North Carolina - fiPW to
thE' Middle East Frlday, but the
Defense Department did not con·
firm 11.

.

ANm'IIER LIFI'OFF ~ The shuttle Dlscovecy thundered bdo spaCe
'Monday mombag with live Americans, a Frenclunan, and a
Saudi·Arahlan prince o.n board to launch four satellites and help canoy
out the first '!Star Wars.. experiments In orbit. ~1.

Discovery blasts ·~ff
ori another mission

CAPECANAVERAL, Fla. tUPI)
~ Flve Allll'ricans, a Frenchman
and a Saudi Arabian prince blasted
off today aboard the shuttle Discov·
E&gt;ry for a weeklong flight to launch
four satellites and help carry out ihe
first "Star Wars" experiment in
space.
Commander Daniel Branden·
stein, co-pilot John Cfl'ighton and
crewmates Shannon Lucid, Steven
Nagel, John Fabian, Frenchman
Patrick Baudry and Prince Sultan
Salman Al·Saud took off on time at
7:33a.m.
Lasagna dinner ~~et
Veterans Memorial
. Discovery, making the 18th
shuttle flight, thunde1'1'(1 away frO:m
'
'
Saturday Admissions--James
A lasagna dinn!'r W\ll he held
the .launch stand atop a brtiliant
Pellegrino, Racinl'.
'
Thursday from 5.7 . p.m . at the
ph.lme or name from Its twin s6ild
: Saturday Discharge~c·Cha,rles .. Sacred Heart Catholic Church: The • -rocket · boostets :and qUickly thun·
L.amhert, Debbra Maiden, Sallie menu will include lasagna, tosSed
dPred lhto the hazy mprni~~g sky.
ByE&gt;rs.
salad or cole slaw, hot roll, pie or
The ship's international cargo
Sunday Admissions .. Mlllard cake, andheverage.Cost for dinners
IncludE'S three communications saSwartz, Pomeroy; JamesSpangll'r, ls$4for.adults and$2.50forchlldren.
fPllitl's owned by Mexico, the
Rutland; John Motley, Mlddll'pOrt;
S rd
21·natlon Arab Satellite Communi·
Richard Ramsburg, Middleport.
atu ay program set
ca tlons Organization and Allll'rlcan
Saturday Dlscharges.. Roherta
Tell'phonl' &amp; TE&gt;Iegraph Co., and an
Rutland Bowhuntl'rs Association
Hudnall, Jami'S Drakt'.
astronomical obseiVatory.
certllled National
will conduct
'
BowhuJjters Education Program
Adding to the International flavor
'I
Saturday beginning at 9 a.m. at the
of
space this week, two Soviet
To pay ba Is ,
tlabhous~&gt;. Pre·r~&gt;glstratlon by
cosmonauts
worked aboard the
• - .
.. .
·
.
Thursday Is .necessary With a ·
Russ)Jm Salyut 1 space· station. In
.. Chi'Sier _Township Trustl'l's· WUI · : maxlmiim of · 25 -·:people. The
their 12ili day-of Earth orolt.
lu&gt;ld a special ml'l'tlng to pay bllls... program Is free and·hunter's Safety
NASA was paid about $30 million .
cards wlll he Issued lo participants.
l,'uesday, 7: :.J p.m .. at townhall.
ferry the three relay stations to
to
For morE' Information or to register
orbit
but the overall cosl of lhl'
call R.T. Stewart at 742·3006 or
shuttle
mission was about $l'i0
Sandra BaE'r at 992·5138.
~an fishing derby
mlllion.
The dismal weathl'~ that markl'd
To meet Tuesday
· Thi'MelgsCountyF'ishandGame
most of Discovery's countdown~ a
Club will sponsor its annual Kid's
A meeting of thP program lightning holt hit the launch pad
Fishing Derby Saturday at thl'ir
committee of the Ohio Eta· Phl Sunday nlghl durl~~g thu.~dl'rstorm
lake on West Shad!' Rlvl'r Road.3%
Chaptl'r of Bl'ta Sigma Phi Sorority -cleared out overnight, paving the
miles wi'StofChestE&gt;r. Thedl'rby, for
scheduled for TUesday night at the way for thl' fourth shuttle flight this
childfl'n .ages one through 16, wlll
home of Cathy BlaE&gt;ttnar, presldl'nt, year.
~gin at 8 a.m. andcontlnlll'through
When the shuttle filers left their
has hel'n postponed untfi Thursday
2 ' p.m . One pole per child with
at 7 p.m. Bl'skles thP program quarters for the trip to till' ·launch
partiei~nts furnishing thplr own
committee anyone lnlerested in pad, Baudry donned a black bl'ret
pole and bait. No minnows or
helping with the planning for the and all seven waved to reporters and.
a'r tlficlal bait wlll permitted. Prizes
pll'dge picnic Is Invited to attPnd. photographers and appeared at
refreshements will bl'avallable
MembE'rs are also asked to contact ease.
all children.
ME&gt;xlco's Morelos satellite, that
one of thE&gt; o~icers about working at
the Gavin picnic.
nation's first space communica·
lions station, was scheduled to be
~udgment soilghl
Chester Councll323, Daughtl'rs of deployed about 3:38 p .m , today to
America, will meet at 8 p.m . kick off lhree days of hectic launch
' Jackie W. Jones, Langsvllll', has Tuesday at the halL The charter will · activity In orbit.
tiled an action In Meigs County he draped for ' Mae Spencer.
Saud, a nephew of 'Saudi King
Common PIPasCourt against River· Mm\bl'rs are . to wear white. Fahd and thl' fil'!lf Arab to fly in
side Motors Inc., doing business as Quartl'rly birthdays will bE' ob- space, will monitor the J;~unch of the
TUrnpike ol Gallipolis, requesting a seiVed and potiucR refreshments Arabsat relay station, bul he.has
lease agreemrot bE' set asldl' and a will he served.
little l'lse to do and his assignment is
judgment of$52,015.11. The plaintiff
Is asking for a jury frlal in the
matter.

Meigs County' happenings.•.

a

Meigs County Emergency Medical SI'IVlce reports 10 calls over thE'
weekend, SI'Ven Saturday and three
sunday.
·
Saturday at6: 39a.m., Pomeroy to
681 East Main for Pearl Randolph to
Veterans MPmorlal Hospital;
TUppl'rs Plains at 3:47 p.m. to
Bl'llvue Locks and Dam for Dennis
Stl'pp t.o Cafllden·Ciark Memorial
.Hospital; Ractneat 4:13p.m. to3rd
Street for Judy McNE&gt;ely to Holzer
'Medical CE&gt;nler; RacinPal 6:OOp.m .
to Appll' Grove for James Pelle·
grim&gt; to VPIE'rans Memorial; Mid·
dleport Fire Department at 7: &lt;Xi

On Wednesday,

the, ~ p)ans to

install an S.inch-wi,de ~-assem­
bly in Dlscov~&gt;ry'~ ...,1~· hatch
Window that wiU Sl'rve aell.lilrget for
a low·poWI'r laser In 1'1~UI, Hawaii,
to test.
·

·Come to the Bloodmo.lle
WEDNESDAY, JUNE ·l9, 1985

1;00 to 5:30 P.M.

Co. Multi_-Pu~p~se Building· .••.
MULBERRY HEIGHTS, POMEROY, OHIO

Meigs

When You Sirs Blood ... Then '1 Hope~

,...,-----'--..,.,.."'";..;.:__L.......,----....,.....:.·'---..:....---------....,.....:-

' -

.

•

·.··

-·

.

Look'Out Bust!

· Showers and thundestorms likely

Introducing one-step rust- ·
'rotEtetic•n from RUST-OLEUM.

$3,371,:109.
•
The jackpot for Wednesday's
draWing Is t&gt;xpected to be near Sl
million.

-

Whether You're Dreaming
.
About A New Home, Car, or
Whatever, You Can Count' on Us to
Make a Dream Come True!

•
'

'

Farmers
Ban·k ·

Itt t ....
a
Your
Community Owned
Bank
.
-

Naval force awaits military orders
remaining hostages ~ relieved to numbl'r 43, most
American men - diminished oncE&gt; the passengers
Wl'i'e shifted from the jetliner to hideouts somi'Where
In the lawless capital.
"The scattering of the hostages ma kes a rescue all
but impossible," said a PE&gt;ntagon official. "II's not a
good situation. It would appear that the best hopes
rest with diplomacy."
Two Shiite Moslem gunmen hijacked the Trans
World Airlines plane with 153 passengers and crew
aboard Friday and spent the weekend criss-crossing
the MedltPrranean hetwl'l'n · Bl'lrUt a nd Algiers,
Algeria. Sunday, It flew for a third limP to Bl'lrut,
where It has hel'n since.
Mqst of the passengers were released over the
weekE&gt;nd but s_htlfl' militia leader Nablh Bl'rrl.said the
remaining hostages Wl're removed from the plane

992 5020
. Convenient OH Street

Per~lng

early Monday.
"It's a whole new equation," an administration
source said. "What may have hel'n a viable option one
day no longl'r may he true. It sure as hell complicates
things."
A U.S. counterterrorist team of betwren eight and a
dozen men. known as Delta Force, was flown from
Fort Bragg, N.C., Friday to the British baSI' of
· Akrotiri on Cyprus, about 100 miles wi'St of Leba non,
sources said.
Akrotlri is Britain 's outpost in the MediteiTanean
and the United States does not need Cyprus's
permission to land a military force there. the sources
said.
Unconfirmro repons from London sa id five
commandos of the British · Specia l Air Sl'rvice also
flew to Akrotlri Sunday to monitor the hijacking .

Della ForcE&gt; Is modeled after the British countl'rll'rrorist team .
Retired Army Col. Charles Beckwith, who
commandl'd Delta Force during the failed attempt to
free 52 Amqrican hostages from Tehran in Aprtll~.
spent a year with the Special Air Sl'rviCI' ilthe early
1960s, sources familiar with the groups said .
The Pentagon decllnl'd to comment about any
military moves for SPCurity reasons.
Accompa nying the Nimitz was thP nuclearpowered cruiSI'r South Carolina, the guided missile
destroyer Kidd and the oiler Kalamazoo, Navy
officials said.
With the Saipan Martne force was the landing ship
tank SpartPnburg County and the landing ship dock
NashviliP. thP officials said.

New flashers
being installed
in Pomeroy

Trio given
freedom

BEIRUT. Lebanon I UPil Moslem militia lPadl'r Nabih Bl'rri
today · freed a GrE&gt;ek and two
AmeriCans hijacked aboard a TWA
jet and Israeli officials said they will
corisidl'r trading 5o me 700 Arab
prisoners for about 40 remaining
hostages If asked by thE&gt; lntE&gt;rna·
tiona I Red Cross.
Despite an apparent dl'adlock in
onick pointed o~t that all guaTd ralls
efforts to n~&gt;gotla te the release of thE'
By NANCY YOACiiAM
In the village are In need of painting.
hostages. Bl'rrt today !reed popular
Sentinel staff Writer
Councilman Larry Wehrung resinger Demis Roussos, who has
St·reet Improvements were thl'
ported that · street department
Greek and American citizenship,
main topics of discussion at Monday
workers have hel'n advised of thl'lr
Roussos' American girlfriend,
night's regular meeting of Pomeroy
job
dl'scriptions.
According
to
PamE&gt;la Smlth, and another Greek·
VIllagE&gt; Council.
WE&gt;hrung,
E&gt;mphasis
was
.placed
on
American.
Council agreed to Install nPW 12
Bl'rrt, leader of ShiitE&gt; Mosle m
projects needed now and In the
inch flashers at the Intersection of
Amal mUltla - the biggest of
wintertime. Wehru~~g listed for
Ro11tes 7 and 33 at a cos I of$1.!140. As
Lebanon's Moslem m!Utlas -1 has
council several tools an~ other Items
reported by Mayor Rlcliai'tl Sl'yler,
needed by the depariment.
warnro .lhat if Israel dOl'S not
this figure_ wUI cov.~&gt;r everything
release 700 to800 imprtsonro Arabs
Attmflon Is to he given hy street
Dl'eded for the installation including
- mostlyLPbaneseShiiti'S~ hewlli
workE&gt;rs to a sinking culvl'rt on
setting. a 35 ft. pole. If the Ohio
give the rest of the hostages back to
Spring AvE&gt;. and a washed out area
Department' of Transportation
the hijackers who seiZed TWA
on Plum St. where bricks nl'ed to bl'
would approve 8 Inch flashers, the
FUght 847 Friday.
· vlll.&lt;~gl' -could save ·approidmatt&gt;ly
!'!'laid. The departml'nl -will · be . ·
$120.'
.
; The Shfit~ ll'ader; who ·iS alsQ
patchlpg more potholes and ditch- ·
I.Rbanon's justice ' minist~r, an·
lng
the
roadsides
It
was
fl'pOrted.
The flashers are to be lhstalled 'a f
nounccd Monday thai Ama·l mliliia Briefly,
council
discussed
a
sug·
thE&gt; same time a nPW traffic light at
Pn
had taken custody of the more
gestion from Henry Werry to name
thE&gt; intersection of RoutE&gt; 124 and Nye
than
401W A hostagesalongwith the
an assistant to Pollee Chil'f George
Ave. Is installed. Bid S)ll'Cificallons
hijackers. Some fl'pOrts suggl'sted
Stitt. This matter was tabled Lintll a
for the projects. to be advertlsl'd as
the hijackl'rs were mE&gt;mhers of
later date.
soon as possiblE&gt;. a !'I' being prepared
Hezbollah, a more radical Shiite
Council also agreed to lnslall a
by Clyde Williams, Associates,
group loya l lo Iran's Ayatollah
Columbus.
. water fountain on the second floor of
Ruholiah Khomelnl.
where
the
county
board
villagl'
hall
Council also agrl'ed to ·purchaSE'
U.S. warships patrollro off the
education
offiCes
are
located,
at
a
of
several SPCtlons of guard rail from
coast
of Bl'lrut today a mid growing
cost
of
about
$400.
Bl'n Tom Corp. at a cost of70 cents a
confusion.
over thP location of the
Present
for
Monday's
meeti~~g,
in
SPCtlon and $8 each for galvanized
hOstagE'S.
addition
to
the
mayor,
Baronlck,
posts.' NI'W rail is to he ln5ialled nE&gt;ar
Bl'rrt said Monday all passengers
Wehrung and Werry, were Council·
thl' cpmetery on Mulherry AvE&gt;., on
DEPOI' WORK - The Meigs County Jaycees helng purchased hy Middleport Vlllage and wUI he the
were
off the plane and in Shiite
man Bill Young and Jane Walton,
Mart.in St. and' on a sharp curvp
Monday nlgtlt regan preparing the aged Chesapeake location for the community's Fourth of July
control
in the Moslem wesil'rn
clerk·treasurer. Councllmen John
coming down Lincoln HIU . Council
celebration. Working Monday night were, on ladders,
and Ohio RaDroad dePOt for painting. The Jaycees
secior
·
of
the capital , but Bl'irut
Andl'rson and Bruce Reed WE're
plans to hlr&lt;' someone to. set the
I to r, Steve Bachner, Lan-y Grimes 1111d Mitch
have taken on Improving the building as a community
airport
soul'{'es
said today three
absent.
poles. Council mPmlx'r &amp;tty Bar·
project. The building and IWCOmpunylng land are Meadows; on the.ground from the left, Dick Owen and
TWA
crewmen
and
somp hostagE'S
Brian CondE'.
rl'lllained on the Boeing
A spokesman atBI'rri'shomesaid
thPminlster freed the sing&lt;'r and the
two Americans as a gesturE&gt; of
goodwill in responsetoappeais from
the Greek government.
whPn shl' workl'd in a school
By KEVIN KEU.Y
agencies served by the 648 board.
have arrived ."
Columbus Developmental Center.
But as the three were being
OVP staff Wrirer
She said she agrees with the board's
A McArthur native, Hopkins
psychology program, a nd shE' laiN
Prior to that , she had worked as a
released. the hijaCke rs aboard the
became deputy director of the Ohio TWA jet at Bl'irut lntPrnational
"I'm here to do a job, and I'll get it
Intention to live within Its Income succeeds Dr. Richard E . Hunter, child psychologist at Ga IIi polls
and upon reduced fl'deral and state who had Sl'rved as the board 's Developmental Center after com·
done."
University Cent er for Human
Airport said they W!'fC growing
DevelopmE'n t before going to
With those words. Dr. Romola
funding for mental health services.
interim E&gt;xecutive director sincE&gt;
pleting eight y~&gt;ars In various
impatient with thP apparent lack pi
ODMR-DD.
Hopkins explalnl'd her feelipgsa,fter
"!think the board Is faced with the Nov!'mber 1983. A formeri'XI'CUtiVP · capacities with the Ohio Depart·
progress In securing the fl'lcase of
In one of his last actions for the
situation faced by many boards," · director of Marion County's 648
becoming exreutlve director of the
ment of Mental Retardation and
fellow Shill.esfroman Israeli jail a nd
hoard, Hunter reported that a
Galiia·Jackson·Meigs 648 Mental
shl' said. "There Is a need for board, Hunter dreilned to contract
Developmental Disabilities.
from jails in Kuwa it and Spai n .
preliminary c heck with board
Health Board.
Increased seiVIces, with decreased with the local board for his SI'IVIces
She began her cal'C('r as a tPachcr
In lsral'l, the respected Haart'IZ
finances showed it will be ending the
Hopkins was appointed to the post
fundl~~g . So w~&gt;'re faced with a lot of earlier this year.
after receiving her bachelor's
newspaper said Sh iitl', U.S. and
fiscal year June 31 with a t('ntative
at the board's Ma y 20 meeting and
people are facing: we havE&gt; to
Hunter said Monday he has degreE&gt; In &lt;'lementary l'ducatlon
other officials discussed a com·
attend('(( her first board session
provide continued service."
entered private busini'SS in Marion
wllh an emphasis on child develop· $l&amp;l,CXXl carryover. Hunte r sa id he
promiSE' to give the hostag!'S to the
originally projected the carryover
ment from Ohio Universlly. She
Monday.
To gl't that funding and maintain
and will continue to consult with
Red Cross in exchange for Israel's
would bE' S\Kl,roJ.
other mci!tal health boards in Ohio.
taught for 10 years a nd was named
Hopkins, who sa id she views the c urrent service levels, Hopkins said
commitm&lt;'nl to free its prisoners
"The point is, you'rcfa irly healthy
job ·a s a challenge, sa id one of her "we 'n eed a cooperativP effort,
Hopkins, carriE&gt; to thl' job after Outstanding Young Educator in
"within a shot1 time."
going Into the new year, and that's
Immediate
is to fNrct out ni'W people need to eommunlcatE', and
SI'IVing 15 months as assistant
Ohio In .1970.
" The U.S. has approached us to
important
thing,"
he
said.
the
Hopkins
la
ter
receivro
a
master''
us the International Red Cross
tell
so~u~rce;!·;;s~o~f,!!!;~~~fo~r~t~he~v:,ar~lo~u~s~,;c~ert~a:!,!!!!tl'~ha~t~is~t~he~~:!.,l~n~w~h~lcgh~l~~·s~u~pe~r~ln:t:l'n:de:;:nt:_ o1 operations at
''Within a fi'W days, we'U have a
degree In reading and a doctora te In
may make an approach to us." ABC
hard and fastflgurefor you. But you
l'ducatlon administration and
News quoted Israeli Prime Minister
school psychology. both from OU . · may come back in Sl'ptE&gt;mbE'r a nd
Shimon P&lt;'res as telli~~g school child­
find you can do some things you
Her experience with handicapped
ren in lsra&lt;'l. "If they do, w!' will
didn't think were possibl~. "
children hegan shortly aftprward
llstl'n to them and rPspond ."

Man charged in carry-out robbery
..

I

,.

'

KING /BUILDERS
SUPPLY
_
MlddltpOrt

26 Cent•

648 program under Hopkins' control

LoW interest loans...

405 N. S....t Aw111w

1 Section, 10 Pages

A Multimedia Inc. Newapeper

m.

"Two lotto winners
CLEVELAND (UPl) ~ Two
peoplE' hold winning tickets sold for
saturday night's OhloLotto draW·
ing, Ohll;&gt; Lottery Officials .saki.
· The Identities or those PEOPlE&gt; will
he announced aller they tum in their
tickets and the tickets arevalldaled.
.The winning numbers were 3, 13,
l7, 33, 34 and 39. SaleS totaled

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Tuesday. June 18, 1985

WASHlNGTON CUPI) -A Navy lask force waited .
off Lebanon's coast today despite what officials say
are dwindling prospects for a dramatic military
rescue of more than 40 American hostages held by
Moslem gunmen In Bl'irut .
The force is led by the nuclear·powered aircraft
carrier Nimitz, Which was ordered to the eastern
Mediterranean as a prec~ution iri response to the
hijacking of TWA Flight 847, Navy officials said
Monday.
,
.
At the same time, a thre~&gt;-ship amphibious force
hE&gt;aded by the helicopter carrier Salpan with 1.500
U.S. Marines aboard cut short a port visit to Gibraltar
and steamed eastward in . the Mediterranean, the
officials said. How far east thl' force will go was not
immediately known .
The prospects of U.S. military action to freE&gt; the

Ellis to VetE&gt;rans M~&gt;morial; .
Tuppl'rs Plains at 10:44 p.m. to
ReedsvillE&gt; for Delhert Tolliver to
Carnden·Ciark.
On Sunday at 5:41a .m ., Rutland
was called io North Main Street for
Gl'rturde La Pointe but I\!) transport
was mad!'; Rutland .a t 6:27 a.m .
Wl'nt to North Main StreelforJarnes
Spangler to Veterans Ml'!llorlal;
Middleport at 9:11!a.m. went to 715
Hamill on · for John Motley to
VetE&gt;rans MPmorlal.

'

•

Vol .35, No.45
Copyrighted 1985

p.m. toNorthSI'condfor a structure ,

..

ti:Jday, some thunderstorms possl·
bly severe. The highs will bE' near~.
Partly cloudy with a chance of
shbwers of thunderstorms tonight
and Tuesday. Lows tonight will bl' In
tlle upper 50s and highs TUesday in
themk170s.
Extended forecallt
• Seaitered llhoWtil'll Wedneeday
and 'lburllcllQ' and fair Frll!Q.
HIP will fllllle between 75 and Ill.
JAWS wiD range between liS and 111.

at y

fire atthe Riverboat Inn; Rutland at ·
7: 16 to State Route 684 for Ch~rll's

aild
for

Weather forecast

•

Racinl' United Methodist Women
will havE' a chlcken·noodie dlnnl'r
Friday at thl' church with Sl'rv!ng
bE'glnnlng at 4 p.m.

'

New car winner

Seehle8

Friday dinner

ee a oan?
CObNT ON u·s.~••

•

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

NBA draft 8et today

viewed prima lily as a gesture of
International good will.
Baudcy, an accompllshl'd test
pilot, plans to c;~rry out Q !II'lies of
sophiSticated French J1'jldlcal expdrlments .to det~&gt;rm]Jie I~ physiological effrels iJ! weianf!'i'hess.

Suspended liceawe

'

Emergency .squads kept busy

Middleport resident
wins
car
'
.

. "•'

1)

would ask Israel to relPase th~
prisoners )ts forces . rounded up
during thl'ir occupation of soutllern
Lebation, McFarlan!' said: "No. We
would not consider It."
'
In Israel, news fl'pOrts said
ofllclals In Jerusalem would con·
sidl'r treeing the prisoners only If
. Israel recelvl'd a hlgh-levl'l U.S.
request.
McFarlane said he ·spokE&gt; by
telephone with Bl'ni to win release
of the hos(ages.
. .
"Wf' havp had lots of coni act
during thr night," said McFarlane,
the first U.S. official to contact Bl'ni
from Washll\glon .' He calll'd the
hijackers ' dl'll!ands "unfortunate"
and said the prlsonl'fS stood a lil'ttl'r
chance ol freedom without a
hostagE' connectl(ln.
'

Licking County and last year she
was Miss Southwestern Ohio and
was the fourth runnerup.
Ail three times she played the
piano, but the first two years she
displayed her talent by perfohning
classical music. This year, shpopted
for a Libl'rael'-stylP vPrsion of
"Chopsticks."

A famUy reunion atmosphere
The day's events Included on·lhl'·
existed Saturday afternoon when air inte!lViews and music by the
alumni of Radio Station WJEH formerdlscjockPys.Asockhopwas
joined together to celebrate the
held on Court St.from 6 to9.m.
station's 35th anniversary.
Atty. John E. Halliday, founder of
Seventeen former employees WJEH, pulled out the winning name
turned out for the event at two for the slatlof\'s top award, a l!R'i
downtown Gallipolis locatlons ~ Chevettl'. Lawrence (Lightning)
outsidE' Central Supply on Court St. , Boyd, North Second Ave., Mlddll'and inside the DownUnqer port, was t)le winner.. On behalf of
Rl'staurant.
current station employees, Lynn
Den!' Wagner Pellegrlnort, Presl· Smlth,daughterofDeneandthelate
dent of Wagner Broadcasting and . PaulWagnl'r,presmtedhermother
General Manager Blll Gray seiVed with a color painting a~&gt;rlal view of
as hostE&gt;SSi&gt;s for thl' occasloti. the station.
More than 1,0ll people wE're on
Among the alumni traveling the .
farthi'St were Lou Muell~r. for· . hand for the outdoor activities held
merly of Point Pleasant, now of from lto 10 p.m.
,
The station wUI hold an open house
Cleveland, North Carolina; Doug
Hanington, Winston-Salem: N.C.; for thl' public from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
P.J . Ryal, Circlevllle, Kyle Hill, Wl'dnesday. Durtngthl' day, ll'tters
Cincinnati; BIU Farrell.'Cinclnnati; and taped messagf's will he given by
Doug Lease, Detrlot, and Mike former station employi'I'S.
Cantrell ofWestE'rvilll'.

pa~

PubUcopini.ons

'
NEW DIRECI'OR ~ Dr. RGmola Jlopldnll, left,
new exeeutlve dlreclor of the GaDia.Jacbon-Melp
8411 Mental Health Board, deUvel'll a repon to tile
board Monday wblle Dr. Wchard Hunter, rl.llht.

ll8lenl. Hopldns Willi appolnied May 20 to suoceed
Hun&amp;er, who 11M beeR III!I'Vlng as tmerlm board
director since Novi!Dlher lfl83.

Douglas D. Starcher, 23, of Route
1, Rutland, has hel'n taken into
custody by ME&gt;igs County Sheriff
Howard Frank,andcharged with the
June 11 armed robbery of The LlttlP
Coal BuckPt Carry·Out on State
Route 124ln the LangsvUII' area.
Approximately $.lXl was allegedly taken by Starchl'r from the
carry-out which Is owned by All&lt;'n
Stacey.
Starcher was pl~ked up In PikE&gt;
County on teletype Information
Issued by the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department. Meigs authorities fl'·

turned Starcher to the county
Monday afternoon. A county court
appearance for Starcher has not yet

Business reopens
The Diamond Savings and Loan
Co., West Main St., Pomeroy, the
location of an a tte mpted robbery
early Saturday morning, is open for
business as usual and normal hours
are helng malnlalned. The ~&gt;slab•
llshment was closed for several
hoUrs Saturday morning whil e glass
broken In the robbery attempt was
being cleaned up.

hel'n scheduled.
The sheriff' ~ d&lt;'pat1mPnt will be
returning Lindsay Taylor to Meigs
County on Tuesday a Junl' 26
compl'tency hearing before Com·
mon Pleas Judge Charles Knight.
Taylor Is cha r~ with th&lt;'
·Octobl'r l!!Kl murder of Danf\Y
Ml'lton.
Taylor was found lncompetl'nt tO
stand trtalln a competency hearing
I~ Meigs County c•arller this spring.
At thattlmeTaylorwas transferred
to Columbus facUlties for further
evalua tlon and therapy.

�-

-~- - ----- ~- -.

_,.... - . . . ..... --· -··---.. . ¥- ------··- - 3

The

Commentary
Ill Court Street
t'omeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·~IASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETr
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
LEITE RS OF OPINION arc welcome . Th (&gt;y should

b('

less tha n 300 word s

long. Alllell er s are- subjl'Ct to editing and must be signed with name, address and
telephone numbc'r . No unsigned le!t f'rs will tx&gt; published . Lell cr s should be In
~ood la s t~ .

addressing lssuf's . not personalities.

Tuesday, June. 18, 1985 ·

On a recent Thursday afternoon,
the U.S. Senate fell into prolonged
debate over a policy toward the
contras of Nicaragua. I sat in the
press gallery for much of that
debate, watching the senators come
and go on the 'floor below, and once
again I was struck l)y the fine
theater that is provided when the
Senate is at its best.
And the Senate was at Its very best
tha t afternoon. The subject was
import.ant: To what extent, if at all.
should the United States assist those
Nicaraguans. known a~ thecontras,
who are seeking to overthrow the
Sandinlsla goverrunent that law·
fully is in power? In the evening, just
before adjournment aat ~: 10, the
Senate weuld adopt a carefully
drafted measure that became

Identified as the Lugar-Nunn
amendment. Before that decisive
5542 vote. the Senate first had to
grapple with Issues as ol!l as the
Constitution Itself.
Ordinarily the state manager for
a Senate performance Is Majority
Leader Bob Dole of Kansas, who Is
tall and dark-haired and gifted )oVith
a wry sense of humor, but this
afternoon he had delegated the task
to Indiana's Dick Lugar, chairman
of the Foreign Relations Committee. Lugar Is a much less commandIng presence; he has a scoutmaster's air of patient responsibility. It
was Lugar's task to lead his troops
through a brier patch of hostile
amendments, and to emerge with a
bill the president could live with . He
succeeded admirably.

When I came ln. Edward
Kennedy of Massachusetta had the
floor . The senator recently has lost
some wel!lht; he no longer. quite
resembles the man in the Michelin
ads. but he Is just naturally big. A
few minutes earlier he had been on
the losing side of a roll-call vote on an
amendment from Christopher Dodd
of Connecticut. Dodd's Idea was to
finance the complete withdrawal of
the contra forces. The amendment
drew only 17 voles.
Kennedy offered a much simpler
amendment. One part would urge
the United States to resume
bilateral relations with Nicaragua;
a second part would "prohibit the
introduction of armed forces of the
United Sta!es .lnto or over Nlcara·
gua." Speaking to crowded galleries

'

Letters to editor
We must work together
·In reference to the Roadside Park
in Syracuse, we have had responses
from a few pe&lt;iple who tell us how
valuable this park is to the village.
The village· was given the easement fort his park In 1973 bytheOhlo
Department of Transportation on
ccmdltion that it be maintained as a
park to be used by the peopl~ of
Syracuse and surrounding areas.
About four years later, council
deCided to put the park up for sale,
Pven though the village had no deed
tQ this property. After this they
dl"Cided to trade It for an acre of land
for the proposed Marina. therefore, ·
It Is evident theparkatthattimewas
not wanted for park use.
This park has never been main·
talned as required In the&gt; original
agreement, also it has never been
pollct'd as it should have been.'

The residents near the park have
expressed their concern for their
persomil safety duetothethings that
goon in this park, mostly at all hours
of the night.
Council is now making improvements to the village owned park
which we can maintain for the
peoplE's' use. Therefore, the road·
side park is n&lt;)t needed. We do not
have the money needed to rebuild
the old StatE' Park.
,
Council is also trying to make
administrative progress which has
been needed for several years
although there are a few who would
like for things to remain as they
were. WecouldhavParealnicetown
if l'\&lt;eryone would work togethpr for
the beni&gt;fi t of I he people.

..

.

Kenneth Cundiff, Syracuse, Ohio. ,

Who has charge of Wildlife fund?
When. we buy property, does thi s
land really belong to us? I own
several acres of land In Meigs
· County of which part Is woodlancJ.,
that makes It vPry convPnent for
hunters and flshPrmen togetonand
off my property Without · my
knowledge. .I am no "Simon
:~"who allows no trE'spassing.
·but 1 do think anyone who want ~ to
·hunt' or fish should gel thE' land
'()Wner's Written· J)ermlssion.
Getting lntotheartlcleyou printed
May 26, entitled "Ohio Division of
Wildlife Fund Flat Broke; 1982
Surplus was $19 Million." O.D.W,
had stewardship over a · Wildlife
·Fund which boaster a $19 million
·surplus as recent as fisca l year, 1982. ·
Today that samE' fund Is lla I broke.
Where Is thE' $19 million plus money
collected for licenses sold s ince 1982
to now?
According to Jerry Pickrell
tOutdoorWritersAssoc., written for
UPil funds derived from sale of
hunting and fishing licenses, as well

as permits for hunting turkey, deer,
etc. is legally targeted only for
q~aintaining the ODW 's acti-,Itles
from administration through fish
and wildlife propagation and land
purchases. Since the sport.smen are
the Investors. they are a .right to
know where this money went.
)'l!ith this fun&lt;j Oat broke, will it be
uptoeach individual totakeshotgun
In hand to protect what Is rightfully
theirs? 1hunt and fish and would like
to think that whoevPr is in charge of
ODW will have "guts:· enough to tE'II
us where this money is, or could It
have been invested into something
that went nat broke, due to poor
judgmpnt by the parties who have
stewardship over the WlldlifP
Fund? If such a thing has happened,
will the sportsmE'n and women be
fortunate enough for the state to
"ball out" our Wildlife Fund, as it
has the · Home State Bank In
Cincinnati•. ·
Maxine Diddle Sellers
Racine, Ohio 45m

"This thing is bigger than I thought it would be when we first got into it."

:Mine~safety ·
WASHINGTON For four
mont'hs, the MhieSafeiy and Health
Administration employed a $170-a·
day consultant'with curious creden·
ilals for the job. · His previous
experience · was in political bally·
hoo, unrelated to the safety of the
nation's minerS.
In fact, while Justin R. Swift was
being paid as a consultant on mine
safety matter's, he managed to
squeeze in two missions as a White
House "advance man" -for VIce
President George Bush's trip to
Gren.a da and President Reagan 's
trip to Spain.
A former public-relations and
marketing specialist with th~ Sheraton. Marriott and··Quallty Inn
hotel chains, Swift worked for the
Reagan-Bush rt&gt;-electlon campaign
and was managing director of this
year's Inaugural balls.
"After the inauguration, Jane
Kenny (special assistant to Bush)
got m~ placed in my present job,"
Swift told our reporter Mark
Woolley. "A nyone co nsidered
friendly to the WhltP House was

Kennedy's . amPndment went
· down to defpa t on two roll calls- by
a tie vote of 48 to 48 on part one, by
64·31 on part two. Owing to one of
those human touci)es that make the
SenatE' what it is, Kennedy did not
vote on pa11 two: He had a live pair
with Republican DavE' Duren·
gerger, who had gone to be prPsent
at his son's graduation from high
school.
Gary Hart of Colorado had the
next amendment. ThE' senator's
losing fight for thr Df&gt;mocratlc
oomlnation last yeariE'ft itsmarkon
his face ; his features have been
carved by. tomahawk. Hart's
amendmE'nt would have barred U.S.
surveillance and training exercises
by land, air or sea around Costa
Rica, Nicaragua. El Salvador,
Guatemala and Honduras . Only 14
senators voted with him .

.e xpert._,_ _,...:..._J_ac_k__A_n_d_er_so_n__,&amp;_J_o_se_ph_Sp_e_ar

helped along.".
level official as "highly sensitive,"
· Hl'lpltig along pi&gt;lltlcai'frlends Is . though .mainly in the area of public
done· by every administration. of relations . His proposal tor a
course. But the mine safety agency National Mine Safety Week Was
seems a peculiar dumping groun rejected by his superiors, but Swift
for political plumsuckers.
• was in charge of coordinating the
"Most people in MSHA have a dedication of a bronze statue In
strong background In mining,'' said Beckl.ey. W.Va ., shortly before hE'
Sy Holzman, assistant staff director left the agency at the end of May.
of the House educational, labor,
Swift's political advance work
health and safety subcommittee, was approved by David Segeer.
which oirersees the agency.
assistant labor s€Cretary for mine
And the timing Is certainly safety: "The advance work that he
questionable. "Unfortunately, the has hdone for Bush since he has
Reagan administration wants to been with this office has been on our
cut $5.4 million and ll7 positions for time," Zegeer said. "We've been
fiscal year 191!6,'' Holzman said. told that the work Is non-political."
'"These cuts Include' our safety
Swift's political advance work
Inspectors. The (House) Approprla· was approved by David Zegeer,
!Ions commlt.tee needs to address assistant labor secretary for mine
thE' Increase of mine-related deaths safety. "The advance work that he
before cuts are made."
has done lor Bush since he has been
An aide to Sen. Wendell Ford, with this ofllce has been on our
D-Ky.. said: ·,1 hope notb1ng time," Zegeer said. "We've been
disastrous happens because of his told that thE' work Is non-political."
lack of knowledge In the field of
Swift said Bush's office paid him
mining."
"food money" lor his advance
Swift's work at the minP safety work. This amounted to $1,400 on
agency was described by a high- the l().day Grenada trip in Febru·

Me a

FULL aTHL€TiC
§CHoLaR~HiP 2\ND
THRee t.eTT€R~. W
MoRe COULD 1 WaNT ?

In the last five years, the number government helping those who
did sucCN'd In reducing poverty by
of people living in poverty in cannot help themselves - ll!malns ·more than half. and relieved some
THe
America has Increased some five very much a part of today's of poverty's grlmmrst conditions:
OF THe
million from 29 million In 1980 to national debate.
malnutrlflon. poor housing, lll
more
than
34
million
today.
Whether
argued
In
lofty
phlloso·
health.
aLPHaBeT.
The 15-percent poverty rate In phlcal terms or in cruel. simplistic
To believe that this effort can tx&gt;
this country Is the highest since denigrations of the undeserving abandoned now is to condemn the
1961, when the war on poverty poor, the controversy remains the five millions new poor to a IIfeat the
formally began.
sa me as it has throughout the ages. bottom of the totem pole.
In short , current federal policies
The Reagan administration be·
have just about eliminated thepro' lleves that poverty has been nearly
gress made over the last 15 years. eliminated and that all that's called
Yet Americans remain amblval- for now Is some maintenance of the
ent about this problem, unsureoflts "safety net " for those "few" who
cause or cure. Our national leader- have not yet been touched by the
ship tells us that government should economic recovery.
play almost no role In feeding thP
The war on poverty Itself can
hungry or housing the homelt'ss, claim credit for somt&gt; significant
that any E-ffort to do so simply victories, Pven If the fatal war has "
destroys the ability and desire of the emalned unwon.
The number and Americans
poor to help themsPlves.
The Reagan administration tells living In poverty declined by the end
us that food stamps for hungry of the 1970s, federal programs were
children and social services for the effective· In reducing malnutrition.
elderly help to create the stagger· · In housing, the results are equally
Impressive, the number of Amerl·
lng deficit .
And the administration tells us cans living In substandard condl·
that the free-market system -not tlons fell from W percent In 1900 to
government assistance - Is the eight perc~ilt by 1976. In health
surest way to providE' jobs and care, another revolution had
. · Today Is Tuesday, June 18, thE' !69th day of 1985 with 196 to follow .
Income for the poor.
occurred. ·
' The moon Is new,
·
These positions are, of course, all
Most impressively, from 1965 to
.The" morning st~rs are Venus and Jupiter.
untrue. But the people who espouse 1975 thelnfatt,mortallty rate among
: The evening stars are MPrcury, Mars and Saturn.
them sit today In theseatsofpower. the poor tell by 33 percent. From all
Those born on this date aTe under the sign of Gemini. They include Cyrus
And these fictions threaten to evidence three conclusions are
,Curtis, founder and publlsher of the Ladles' Holl)e Journal, In 1850; actor
become a permanent part of the clear.
;E.G. MarshaU in 1910 (age 75), and Beatle Paul MaCartney In 1!»2 (age
thinking in America.
First, poverty cannot be ellrnl·
That the war on poverty suc- nated simply by full -time hard
•43)
..on thJs date in history:
ceeded is beyond dispute. Its work, as more than ·five million
:In 1812, the Unltoo States deciared war on Britain. ,
programs helped Immeasurably to hard-working poor can attest to.
In 1815, Britain's Duke of Wellington defeated Napoleon at Waterloo in
lighten lhe burden of poverty, and
Second, private-sector growih,
the'
systemic
however
vigOrous, cannot be deto
correct
some
of
Belgium.
In 1975, Saudi Arabian Prince Museld was publicly beheaded In Riyadh
weaknesses of American pended upon to reduce poverty
for the assassination of King Falsal.
. capltallsm.
more than marginally.
In 1819, President Jimmy Carter and Russian leader Leonid Brezhnev
Yet that very question - the
And !lnally, government efforts,
signed the strategic anns control treaty in Vienna.
success and ~en the propriety of ~ no matter how clwnslly and Oawed,

ary. The State Department paid for
the rest of thE' trip . .
HOAX OF THE WEEK: ·I\_leaflet
offering ad~lce to· ex-ronvids m
cently arrived In our office, stating
In bold type: "Being In prison Is the
effect of the Emotional Problem
which qualifies you for Emotional
Disability." lt lls(s the "New
LE'glslatlve Unep1ployment Insu·
rahce B&lt;&gt;neflts" available to ex·
cons under "Bill of Rights 4190" for
prisoners.
According to the leaflet , felons
returning to sociPty can collect
more than $.'i00 a month.
. · There are, of course, no "emotional disability" l)enPflts available
~ for ex-convicts.
We tracked the spurious leaflet to
Hie Southeastern Training Center In
Lancaster, Ohio. wherethesupervi·
sor, Terry Morris, labeled It a hoax.
Former prisoners have a tough
enough time without needlessly
Irritating authoritips with claims
for non-existent benPflts. Morris
plans to call In the local bunco
squad.

The R('agan administration's
attempt to shred the safety net and
the intellectual arguments for
safc&gt;ty·net destruction offer clear
indlcatldns that the war on poverty
has been lost in the minds of our
country 's current leaders.
It n('eds. Instead, to be fought
even more vigorously .

Berry's World

\JII.l.LIRI!dJ OUT - CleveiMd Jncii-• oudlelder
BreU Butler Is called out on a !!leal aUempt In a recent
game ap1nst the American League EaR leaden, the

Toronto Blue Jays. Making the
baaeman Damaao Garcia. UPI.

Bo~ton moves closer

""fl ''"

second

to Blu~ Jays

'

No_outright fe~ale . ~avo.rite · chosel)
"LONDON . (UPI) - For thE' first In any case until the final.
Navratllova has won Wimbledon
time ;lt Wimbledon, thE' seeding
five
times, beating three-time
committee has failed to •pick an
champion
Evert Lloyd in tour of the
outright favortte for th.e worilen's
finals,
Including
last year's.
singles title.
Navratllova took a philosophical
Chris Evert -Lloyd, who went to
, the top of the _world ranklngs list view of .the seeding committee's
following her victory In the French decision.
"You can view It either way,''
Open, shared top spot with defend·
'Navratilova
said of the co-No. 1
lng champion Martina Navratllova
seeds.
"You
can say they are
In Ihe seedings list Issued Monday.
chi~kenlng
out
or giving us both the
It Is the first time there has been
trlbuttl
of
being
champions.
co-No, l seeds in either the men or
"Chris
ovtor
the
last six. months
women:s division at Wimbledon.
Predictably, defending champion · has done better than rilE', but over
thPlastyearlhavedonbetterthan
and t~tlme winner John McEn·
her."
roe is seeded first among men with
Wimbledon I'E'feree Alan Mills, a
Ivan Lend! of Czechoslovakia semember of the seeding committee,
Cond, two-time champion Jimmy
defeilded tht'declsion.
Connors third and French Open
"It was very difficult to Separate
winner Mats Wllander fourth.
them
anc1 we thought they botII
The Wimbledon championships
deserved
to be No. 1 seeds on their
run from June 24-July7. ·
Chris's record this year
record
Navratllova, who lost in the final
as the present holder,''
and
Martina
to Evert Lloyd on clay In thE' French
Mills
said.
~. Js considered th~ world 's top
Apart from the 'top spot, the
woman grasscourt player.
seeding
committee stuck strictly to
Evert Lloyd was surprised at the
the
Women's
· Tennis Association
woman's ~lngs. She had expected Navrattiova to be the No. 1 computer rankings with 1961
· ruMer-up Hana Mandllkova of
seed as defending champion.
Czechoslovakia third ahead of
However, Evert Uoyd added It
·
Bulgarian Manuela l'yleleeva,
dldnot matterwhowaslleededNo. l
American
Pam ShrlvPr and West
or No. 2 because they could not meet

T.C. Ch~n will play

~
t.·e '• •!HI'• ''·

tac was

By COUJNS YEARWOOD
Boston has now WQn six straight, single by Wade Boggs, oil
VPISpol'ts Wrller
14-of-15 and 17-of-19. Df&gt;trolt lost Its Hern311dez.
' In a clash of runners-up Monday
second straight following a sixIn other games, Milwaukee
night, the Boston Red Sox took thE'
game winning streak.
shaded Toronto 2·1, New York
contest a little more seriously than
"! don't think I had good stuff,'' bombed Baltimore 10.0 and Kansas
the Df&gt;trolt Tigers to seize sole
said Hernandez. "I wasn't 100 City mauled Minnesota 1()-3.
command of Sl'COild place in the
percent.
Brewers 2, Blue Jays1
'"Thepaln went away, but Ithinklt
American League East with a
AtMIIwaukee,MooseHaas!lreda
ninth inning, come-from-behind
was the pUis. I stopped taking the three-hitter and Jim Gantner
victory.
pills
slammed a solo homer to lead the
The Red Sox, trailing the Toronto - I don't want to take pUis all the Brewers. 1lle Brewers have now
Blue Jays l:!y 2% games, meet the time-and tbepaln camP back."
won U of their last 12 games against
division leaders after their current
Hernandez, 4·3, failed to save a the Blue Jays. Haas, 6-3, went the
game for only the third time in 48 distance for the fourth time this
series with theTlgers.
Dwight Evans took advantage save situatiOns for Detroit
season to earn the win. Dave Stleb,
AI Nipper, 4-5, went the distance 6-5, took the loss.
Monday of a concentration lapse by
rellevPr Willie Hernandez and tor the victory.
Yankees 10, OrlolesO
slapped a gaml('-winnlng, two-nin
Detroit's lead·ot! man Lou WhiAt Baltimore, Ron Guidry pitched
home run In the ninth Inning that taker staked the team to a lO lead
a five-hitter aM Rickey Henderson
pace Boston to a 3-2 victory. '
with a mammoth home run that had the first five-hit game of his
"That ball went .326-feet, 4- landed on top oflhe94·foot·highroof career. Monday night, sparking a
· Inches," Evans said of his opposite of Tiger Stadium and boun&lt;.'l'd bac~ 17·hit attack to caiT)' the Yankees.
field home run that just cleared the onto thE' field. It wall Whitaker's Guidry, 7-3, won his sixth straight
right field fence for his club-IPadlng ninth homer of the year and marked decision, handing Earl Weaver Ws
seventh gamt&gt;-wlnnlng RBI.
the.13th Umeln his career.that he has • first loss In four games since
"I was looking for .somethlng In ledot!agamewithahomer.
returning as Orioles' manager.
and got something away,'' Evans
The Tigers added a run in the
Royals 10, Twlns3
fourth when Darrell Evans singled,
said. "I just swung at It."
At Kansas City, Steve Balboni
· But Hernandez had an
moveduponagroundoutandscored walloped two honie runs to drtve in
· ·explanation.
· ·••
on rookie Nelson Slrr)mons' two-out four runs, powering the'Royals past
''Sometimesyou pltph.in pain and ...slllgle to right center.
the Twins. Balboni belted his first
you concentrate tno~. .oy· you'i: · · .. BostOn was blanked for lhe first homer to lead off thet hlrd Inning and
pain," said Hernandez, whO ~ld he· ·· six ·Innings l:!y Qan · Petry but
then unloaded a three-run shot oo
entered the gamE' in theelghth with a
managl!d a run in ihe seventh on a
Frank VIola, 7-6, to cap a five-run
, sore neck that he intends to have
two-out singlE' by Glenn Hoffman, a sixth Inning. Bret Saberhagen, 7·3,
check~ today by a doctor.
walk to Steve Lyons and an RBI
earned the victory.

.

Today in history

\

NEW YORK (UPI) - Uke a
deUberate offense, the fndlana
Pacers are taking all the time
available to get off their best shot in
the NBA Draft.
The Pacers, with the No. 2 pick,
had oot decided as of Monday
whether to select 6-loot-9 Wayman
Tisdale or 7-loot center Benoit
BenJamin after the New York
\. KnlckS open Tuesday's proceedings
at 1 p.m. EDT l:!y picking Patrick
Ewing.
Newell, Indiana's director of
player personnel, said the club
probably would not make up its
mind until late Monday evening,
possibly not until Tuesday morning.
Tisdale, the ninth-leading scoi'E'r
In NCAA history after three seasons
with Oklabom3, lookS to be a
guaranteed NBA star. On the
nation's highest scaling team this
year, the left-hander averaged 25.2
points, mainly from the low post ,
'There al'!' some questions con·
cernlng Benjamin, who, like Tis·
dale, left college after his junior
year. The 250-poond Creighton
center Is the third-leading shot
blocker In NCAA history and this

in those familiar Bostonian accents,
Kr nnedy argued passionately that
mounting evidence indicates " that
this administration is preparing to
sent U.S. combat troops to Nicaragua ." He had help from Mark
Hatfield of Oregon, a Uberal
Republican who voted against the
administration a ll afternoon.
Lugar spoke effectively in reply.
He Is not an orator much given to
sawing the air, but he managed a
well-bred note of scorn when he
charged the Kennedy forces with
attempting to "micromanage"'
American foreign policy. Barry
Goldwater of Arizona. who grows
·m ore grizzled year by year, seized
upon the same point. He l'l'minded
an attentive chamber that under the
Constitution, the Congress may
"declare" war, but only thE' com·
mander in chief can move troops.
Since 1789. he observed, Congress
has declared war five times;
presidents have ordered troops into
actJon on 202 occasions.

War On poverty__________lu._lia_n_B_ond_

THe UNiVeRg,iTY Gave

j

No.2 pick, Tisdale
or Benjamin, decision today

Nicaraguan policy_______J_am_·e_s_J._K_ilp_at_rrc_·k.

The Daily Sentinel

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

Pa~ers'

Page-2-:The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LONDON (UPI) - Taiwan's
Impact on the world's major golf
championships could gain further
Impetus next month \when anoitther
Chen makes his dPbut In tbe 4th
British ,Open at the Royal St.
George's course In Sandwich, Kent.
'l'l.e-Mlng Chen, elder bro!)ler of
Tz.e-Chung Chell - who astonllbed ·
the AmertcaM by llldlhlng one
strokebehlndAndyNorlhattheU.S.
Open SundaY- Is among the 73ellte
exempt,lons who go straight into the .
$660,«XXX Brlilsh Open July 18-21.
. Tre·Ming gained -exemption for
being the winner of the Allan order
ofMl'l'lt this year:
British Open orowdutill hold fond

Germany's Claudia Kohde-Kllsch.
There Is a r'najor question mark
about. KUsch being able to compete
in the tournament after the Ge!Til3n
player withdrew from the grass·
court Wimbledon funeup at East·
bourne Monday with suspected
apendlcltls.
U.S. players fill seven of the 16
seeded berthS among the women.
The seedlngs committee strayed
from the men's computer list just
once, giving . the 16th spot to
American Tim Mayotte, a former
semifinalist.
But Ulere Is no place in the
seedlngs for 17-year-old West German Boris BeCker, who won the
Queen's Club ·grasscourt toumampnt Sunday for his flrst-{'Ver
Grand PriX succE'ss.
The rising German star defeated
Australian. Pat Cash arid South
African-born Johan Krlt'k of the
United States on his way to victory.
Cash Is seeded sixth lor Wimbledon
and Krlek ninth.
· Although the U.S. dominate the
mPn's list with seven seeds, Sweded
Is well represented with Wllander
accompanledbyAndersJarryd (5),
Joaklm Nystrom 17) and Stefan
Edberg (14).

..

.

~British Open

' The United Stat.es, with' 110
memories of a previous Tij lwanese
challenger - tbe hat.OO!fing "Mr.
players, provide the largestcontlng·
Lu" of Taiwan, , who snatched
ent among t.he• 272 foreign entries
second place In the 1971 tournament
from 31 overseas countries. Austraat Royal Blrkdale, finishing only one
lia Is next Wtth 29, followed l:!y South
· Africa (21), Spain (~) and France
strokt' behind Lee Trevino.
Organizers have not yet heard (19).
whether North, .who was not 'an
Defending champion Seve Ballesoriginally entry, will be competing teros of Spain heads a list of nine
at Royal St. George's, but a place British Open titleholders among the
hal been left open for him.
exempted playen. Flo!Tiler chamA total of 1,361 playen have pions frorn the United States are
entered the Open, with IMlllle 900 Jack Nicklaus, Tom Wat.!lon, Lee
players taking part In the July 8 Trevino, BW Rogers and Johnily
regk)nal qualifying, from which 172 Mlller, while South African Gary
will advance to the final qualifying Player, NewZealanderBobCharles
field of 500 on July 14-15. Only 10 and Britain's Tony Jacklin complaces In the toomammt will be plete the list of past winners
available fram final qualltylng.

year ·rejected shots with a Mark
Eaton·like frEquency:
Tisdale figures to give the Pacers
or the Clippers- who have the No.3
pick - a billboard attraction Uke
MlchaE'I Jordan but a franchi se Is
rarely turned around by a power
forward . That 's reserved ~or
centers.
So Indiana, which finished 22-00
with center StE'Ve Stlpanovlch
roamiilg the perimeter., knows a
chance to acquire what could be a
dominating plvotman doesn't
happen every day.
"This could beaonce-in·a ·lifetlme
thing,'' NewE'll said. "The way the
draft lottery is set up. we don't know
when we'll be In a position to get a
center like him again."
Some feel Benjamin Is not
polished enough to play the pro
game.
"I like him." Newell said.
"There's not much to develop when
you average 14 !'t'bounds and 5 1·2
blocked shots a game."
Benjamin was a guest of, the
Pacers almost two weeks ago
though he did not partake In any
on-court drills. TisdalE' also was a

guest of the club.
"I had a nice visit in Indiana,"
Tisdale said. " I'm ~xcit ed and ready
to gt&gt;t this thing OVN with. I'm tired
of peopl~ asking me where I'm
going."
Tisdale, joi ned by Ewing and
Chrts Mullin a t a NPw York p['('SS
c;onf~rence, would not say whether
he preferred india na or Los
Angeles. But aitermuchprodlng, he
did admli Indiana would not be
much different than life wit h the
5(x)ners.
·
" I grew upin Oklahomawit h cows
and chickens,'' he said. "Going to
Indiana is llkethat. l'm used todoin '
nothing. That would be great forme.
not having to make much of an
adjustment .'
Completing out the first l'ound.
barring trades, Is Seattle, Atlanta.
Sacramento. G91den Sta te. Dallas.
Clpveland , Phoenix , Chicago. Wa ·
shlngton. Utah, San Antonio.
Dt&gt;nver. Dallas. Dallas. Df&gt;troit,
Houston. Boston, Philade lphia, Mit ;
waukee, thP Lak&lt;"rs and Portland;

Bowhunters should get ready
By JERRY PICKRELL

Ouldoor Wrllers A8en.
Iryou plan tobowh11nt for deer this
· year, now Is the time to start getting
ready; Unless you shOOt year ·round,
It's going to take the next couple of
months to ~t everything - mostly
yourself- into proper shape.
Thegroupofmusclesused In draw
in a bow are ones that may get only
infrequent exercise in any other
activity. It follows then that the only
cure Is to draw your bow. You'll
want to do this enough so that it
becomes a smooth, easy motion.
You'll also want to practice holding
It a full draw as you'll surely have to
do In a hunting sltuatiQ11. You should
be able to do this for several minutes
without excessive strain.
No bow shouldbedrawnand "dry
!Ired" (released without an arrow
nockedl. Damage to the bow may
result and so may damage to the
shooter if the string or cable wE're to
· break or jump a track. There Is an
attactimerit ori the markE't now that.
can be attached to your bow to allow

Pirate owner
ready to sell
·to outsiders
PITTSBURGH ( UPI) - · The
president ot the Pittsburgh Pirates,
apparently becoming frustrated
with the lack of local interest In his
ball club, says he no longer Is
limiting sale talks to prospectivE'
buyers who would keep the team In
Pittsburgh.
"There has been oo l'!'actlon
locally,'' said Dan Galbi'E'ath of ·
Columbus,' Ohio. "I am oow going to•
talk to anyone who wants to talk to
us. What happens from hereon out Is
that if someone buys this team and
wants to move It, it Is their
re5ponslbllltY."
Calbreath said . In the eight
months the franchise has been up lor
sale "there . have been no offers
made at an.:·
Galbreath said originally that
negotiations would be conducted
only with potential buyers Inter·
ested In hoooring a Three Rivers
Stadium lease that runs unt112011.
However, Galbreath's represen·
tatlves have been approached
recently by a group from New
Jersey and l:!y Jack Kent Cooke, the
owner of thE' Washingtoli Red skins.
"I expect a lotofaotlonoow,"said
Gaii:!I'E'ath. "They have aU been
calling. We have heard from evE'ry
city that Is looking lor big league
baseball and made II plain to them
that we wei'!' ·oot going to deal with
them. Now, after eight mbnths
without an offer, we'll talk to anyone
who wants to talk to us ."
Galbreath's comment brought a
quick response from Assistant City
Solicitor Marvin Fein, who said the
city of Pittsburgh would prepare
legal action against any and all
parties wh&lt;l may be negotiating to
purchase the elub with ·the Idea of
movJnglt.
"We'rE' prepared to wage war."
said FPin. "It Is Illegal under
Pennsylvania lawforanyonetotalk
of purchasing a business if the
pullJOSe Is to break a lease and move
out of state."
Galbreath's anoouncement also
brought reaction !rom James
Roddey, chalrmall of the Allegheny
County Port Authority.
Roddey, head of a local group ot
investon Interested In purchasing
the Pirates and keeping t.tu&gt;m In
Pittsburgh, said his group would
make a formal oller for the team
within the next two weeks.
"I'm sui'!' he (Galbreath) Is
frustrated ar111' d!Jappolnted," said
Roddey. '"The club has been on the
market a long time."

It to he fired without actually

shOOting an arrow. These are bandy
for people who live where shooting
every day may be impractical, but
who ·want to keep In shape. Check
with your archery dealer If you 're
Interested.
Once you have the strength
portion of your preseason prepara·
tlons in hand, it 's time to work on
accureacy. After all. the ablllty to
draw easUy and hold comfortably
won't do you much good If you can 't
hit anything, For this. there is no
substltue lor practice on a range.
Standing straight up directly in
front of the target lsflneforstarters,
but eventually you needtovaryyour
shots. DE'er rarely present them·
selves as pe11ect targets, so you 'll
need to be able to shoot from
kneeling positions as well as bending
around obstacles. At least part or
this pnictice should be done using
the broadheads you'll be hunting
with later. All of It should be don!"
with tips of eg~al weight.
· When you reach a point where you
can put a high percentage of the
arrows you shoot into a paper pia te
at 35 yards. you're ready to hunt .

~311ACKSON PIKE - Rl 3~

WEST

Phone 446· 4524

.

BARGA IN AATINEES SAT I SUN
All SEATS 12.25
ADI41SS!ON mRY TUESDAY 12.25
HC£P1 "GOON ItS"

, . ,.., Pike ,_,

Oft ::est -::. ,.,,
1'• 6Long
£ ·~
•.All-seo!On
traction
m11eoge.
de
dftlun
• .smooth, qute1 n

SIZE

P165/80A13
P175/80Al3
P195175.Al4
P205175A14
P205/75A15
P215/75A15
P225175A15
P235175A15

BAnERY
SALE I
SAVE S20

ltMII

PRICE
$34.00
34.00
48.00
49.00
55.00
56.00
57.00
58.00 .

rMIV ..or,.

SAVE saoo to S26oa
Per Tire Off Current
Sale Pric.d
Supreme Firsts

" Rog. Price 169.95

IAU I'IICI ... Mt.9S
ThK ~ bo""'Y txcood•
ongonal oqu;pmont dema!lds
for most doftwutk ond im•
""""" ..t.klts.

72 MO.

606 East Main

Pomeroy, Oh. ·
992-2094

�The Daily Sentinel
Phlladrlphla /Carlton 1_.1 at St.

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Tor

Grand Prix trail
moves to Detriot
.

MONTREAL (UPil -Ferrari's
AlbOreto-Johannson act moves to
Detroit this weekend for what tne
.team hope!; will' be ao1 encore of their
one-two Cariadlan Grand Prix .
finish .
Italian driver Michele Alboreto
won his first Formula One race of
the year by almost two seconds over
Sweden's Stefan Johansson. It wa s
his fourth career Grand Prix
triumph and perhaps the easiest of
• ·the ·v lctorles.
"From ·beginlng to end. there
were no problems," Al!Jol'eto ·Sald .
after he picked up nine points for a
win and vaulted to the top of the
driver standings.
His t riumpfi, coupled withJohans·
son's second-place finish, also lifted
Ferrari to the topolthemanufactur·
er' s placlngs.
" II was easy becaiiS{' the car was
good," AJboreto said. " I didn't mind
being behind (Lotus driver! Eilo de
Angells •because I kni'W I had the
best car. I waited until his engine
was racing hot IX'fore I caught him. I
~ 1 had the better englnP and
better tire traction."
The best Alborelo could accomplish this season prior to I he Montre;d
• race was a trio of second-place
flnlsto(.s. It was merely a matter of
tlmP belol'l' he would latch on to the
gold ring.
·
. Ontheotherhand,Johansson.two
· years on the Grand Prix trail, had
: only a sixth place finish at the ~ n

Marino Grand Prix In lmola, lialy,
t.o show for his l!*lS efforts.
A crowd of 56,961 at the GlUes
VIUeneuve Circuit witnessed a
dra111tlc changp In his drlvlngablllty
Sunday.
·
Thl' young Swede, displaying the
confidence of a veteran driver, held
off the hard-charging McLaren of
frenclunan Alain Prost In the final
10 laps 10 secure the six points lor
,
second place.
Johansson said he was under no
orders to lay back and allow
Alboreto, the team's No.1 driver, to
take the checke~ flag. . .· .
"My car mtsfir'ed badly dul')ng
the race and the engine was
constantly missing toward the end,
so I was not In a positiOn to overtake
Michele, " Johansson said. "I don 't
know what would have happeoed If
the car had been running w~,&gt;ll. I
don't know If then I would have
received a signal to hold position.
"When I came over to Ferrari
(from Tyrrell) I knew I would have
to show something. I think Mr.
(Enzol Feo:rari thought · it would
take me five or six races to prove
myself -and hew as right. I'm still a
llttiP nervous. This Is a big team."
Sunday's rarewasanotherlndlcation that younger drivers are
making_ Inroads on the championship. Niki Lauda of Aus.t rla won the
title last year atage 36. Alboretoand
Johansson are both 28. De "l\ngells,
standings leadE'r untll the Montreal
race, ls27.

,

Mullin may be Cavs' choice
RICHFIELD.' Ohio (UP))
"Has deadly shot with quick release
and great inStinct. A better-thanaverage passes Not a lea)lf'r. but
: grts his share of key rebounds.
= HowPVer.lsslow afoot and that may
• hold him back In the NBA. "
• A capsule swnmary of St. John's
AU-America guard Chris Mullin?
Not so. althou~h it easily cbuld be.
The ·atxl\'e excerpt Is from a
. • · S{'OUting report on an Indiana State
: player nai'TIEd Larry Bird.
So muc h lor slownl&gt;ss.
The Clevelao,td Cavaliers have the
nlnth overall pick In the firs t round of
· Tcesdav's NBA draft and. barring a
trade or Goldeil State's "change In
• stratejzy with their No.7 pick, seem ,
: headed for Mullin.
•
"Well . he is definitely a n Interest·
• lng player." said Cleveland vice
: president and general manager
• Harry Wf!ltman of Mullin. UPI's
1~ Player of the Year.
"Some say Mullin's slow, but that
, also was the word on Bird. He
: . managed toovercomethatwlth his
marveloUs talent."
What about the report the Cavs
• are COIIJIIde!'ing trading veteran
guard Wcrtl B. Free, guardforward ·Roll Anderson and thl'lr
~ tlniNowod pick to San Antonio lor
• guards Grorgl' Gervln and Johnny

v

' TAKEs Hrl' AWAY -San Diego flrsl baseman steveGarveyJ&lt;eeps
his eye oo the baD as he~ dives to pull In a Une drive lll{alnst

go R--1 : f..olo. nn p,. ~,

San Pk'f.'" ........... . ......... ;,; 21&gt; .'ltl - ·
lhli~ I OO ...................... :1! :.'9
'll"• .1! ~,
1 o~..- ''"'-' ''' ' ... ... ... ....... .. .11 :!!' ."tl'l'
I

I

By BOB HOEFUCH
We had beard via the grapevlnl' .
Se1tiuel SW1 Wrlfer
that such an action was pending but
Relatives here have received none had been flied witll·tbe Meigs
word that James
County Clerk of Courts on WednesMorton, Sr.,
day nor on Thursday morning, even
former Pomeroy"
.after the rell'ase arrived rrom the
resident known to
state office.
many about town
At the end of the news re~ase
by the nickname
were the names of two persons at
.of "Coke" Is contioe Attorney General's o!!lce with
lined to Doctor's
phone numbers, Including office .
North Hospital, Columbus. Cards and home phones, to contact lor
may be sent to room 307.
lllrther Information .
I called to ask why a release had
Photos of graduates of Southern been sent reporting tll!' suits
and Meigs High Schools taken at against Mrs. Young and others
this spring's commencements are when no papers had I!Ctlially been
ready. for distribution.
filed In tlle Meigs Comrnon Pleas
SOuthern.High grads tan pick up Court.
their copies .from 8 to 11 a .m . and
Neither person could come onto
from 12 to 4 p.m ., weekdays, a t the the phone to talk to m~ but an hour
high school office and Meigs grads or so later, one of the two did call In
can pltk theirs up weekdays from 8 to advise that they did not know
a .m . to 3 p.m. also at the high school where the papers were on tlle
office.
lawsuit but they were looking Into it.
The papers did arrive about noon on
I'm advised that some residents 'Thursday al the offlceoftheclerkol
have received letters from the Ohio courts via Puralator Truck.
Deparbnent of Taxa lion In regard
What I have difficulty with Is the
to the Ohio .e nergy program with fact tllat. Mrs . Young has been
two cards ·Inside them ·- when taking people Into her . home for
actually each person was to have ovl'r 12 years With no problems that
card.
I've heard of and suddenly there's
gotten only
This apparently means that some apparently this big nosh to file a
peopie dl&lt;ln 't get any since one of court action - so noshed, tt. seems,
the two cards has someone elses' that the horse got before the cart .
•
nameollt.
Oh well - what do I know?
If you got a card that doesn't
Laura Dellavalle'was the winner
belong to you - ca ll the toll free
number 1$282-4310 and Inquire of a cash prize given by the Salem
as to what you are to do with the Center Baseball Association In Its
fund ·ralslng effort.
extra card.

Hf'n-.S:I L..-. ..... ..... .......
!11221-U:Itl .:E!
Mc'f:.rt&gt;, StL ..... .. .. .. .. ...... ~ :D6 :IITI ..lt5
Cnu . Hou ... _
~ tRl 22 !If! .:tl!l
r;wynn. SD..... ..... .. ......... 6.1 :!il'i lll'l .:na .

Y011t 111. H.ill !ll"IOn' 0

Muntbt,\''Jo

-·

tAIISti:U on .1.1 plalf' &lt;lppl'afanc£1S x no.
l'ach !I'am ha.~ playf'd r.
NaUoul i.t'Jtllll'

l!i~ft~No

MIJ-..·aukl'f' :!. Tor·onro 1
Kansa.' Ctr,.· m. Mln••'!iO! l• ,1
'l'Ur7ctll)"'ll GloRll.,. li\11 ""'- Eirr1
SN• York rCowk'y +."lr at Ralllrnul"r
•Dln·t,. 4-2•. 7::!"1 p.m.

......

Support network meets

Double trouble

ni_,,

Pinsb.l~

Ibton :1. Drrrolr :!

J&gt;i n .~!Ju r~h ..• .., ............ 31 :1'' 1 _:tl9

.·

Beat of the bend

rt-4 1 atl.osA~

Cln&lt;'lnnat llll San Frant'l.,.•

Ka nsas ('l~· ... ..... ............tl 11 .Nfl
2'-$
S«'artiP ._ ..... .. , ........ ...... .'. '!1 :u :4.~ 6
Minrot'!'l:lta ..
•....... ); J:l , .-H1 ljl
Trxa!\ .............. ..... ,
:!.&amp; '1!1. .:tt'T 10
M-..y~o~
t

~lnm ~I H

Page-5

\\'~1GA11W11

Cltk'lij:to .................... ... l! :.!£ ."i.'\1 ('aUfonua .................... ..:a :.M ~"i4l
~.-..
Oakland ····'·· ... ·.............l\ lJ - ~ ~'1

:l-~1 .

tDra~·

Sen DklrO

IW('Irtl ).() 1, lO: :!S p.m.

"'
TOI'Onto .•.................... :.
FUton ........ , .. :.......... :fi
l):ol rolt ............... : .......... :EJ

I'~·

By The Bend

LGU'Is

tl'udor.&amp;·it, 7:,\'Jp.m.

Tuesday, June 18, 1985

Moore a nd the Spurs' first-round
draft pick (14th overall)?
"It looks like we'll go lntothedrafl
with that ninth plck,"saldWellmaJI.
"As I've said, though, theCavshave
an open mind on any possibility.
"I don't think It's Ukely anything
&gt;~111 happen 'helore the trading
deadline (midnight EIYr Monday) .
Mullin, a 6-loot-6, 19.S.polnt scorer
led the Redmen to thc NCAA
Final Four, was given a workout.bY
the Cavs last week.
Neither Weltman or director of
player acquisition Barry Heckerwho Is In charge of evaluating
collegiate talent - will comment.
Both men, though, are smiling.
Cleveland Is In nero of backcourt
help. Free Is past hiS peak, Johnny
Davis has a weakoutstdesoot,John
Bagley IS , strlc!ly a ballhandUng
guardandl&lt;evlnWi!llamslserratlc.
''I'd say that's a fair analysll,"
said CaVS: coach George Karl . "I
think we're sirong and Improving up
front . We neEd more ~th at
guard."
What does Karl thlnll.rt MuiHn.
Like Weltman and Hecker, the
coach smiled but also spoke.
"He's quite a pla)'er," said Karl.
1
'1'hat, howE'Ver,can besaldofi!IIIIE' .
other guys comiJoC out thll year. I'd
be happy with any rt them."

whO

'

Los i\ngeles Mooday night. Garvey was a big diftereuce In the Padres'
NL West victory over his lonner teammates. UPI. .

one

I

Sutcliffe·puts foot in mouth, Cubs lose;
Giants whitewash Reds; Padres triumph
ByFREDMcMANE
.
UPI "-::ate Sports_E dltor
Rick SutcUife would not have
Impressed Cy Young.
Although Young might have
admired SutcUife as a pltchl'r, he
certainly would have frowned at his
Iacko! judgment.
"N~er give tlle opposition an
edge, Is a credo that has been
around since before the days when
tne great Young was a sandlotter.
Sutclllfe, the 1981 National League
Cy Young Award winner, ~ored
the rule Monday and It cost hom.
Sutcliffe was quoted Monday as
saylngtlleNl'WYorkMetswouldnot
be a factor In the Natlonal League
East pennant ·r~o~ce- Sutcliffesaid St.
Louis and Montreal WO)lld offedhe ··
stiffest challenge to his own Chicago
Cubsforthedlvlsion IItle.
" Maybe In spring training it was
the Mets, but now I'd say our biggest
competition Is the Cardinals and tlle
Expos," Sutcliffe told the Chicago
Sun-Tbnes.
"I wouldn 't trade any one of our
guysloranyoneoftheirs-withone
exception. lthlnkwf''dbeable.tollnd

room for (pilch~r) Dwight
Gooden."
Sutcliffe singled out Mets' catcher
Gacy Carter specificaDy as one
iJIIiyer who didn't measure up his
Cubs' counterpart, Jody Davis.
"I know all about Carter, but I
wouldn't consider lor a second
taking him over '(Cubs catcher)
Jody (Davis). He can do all the
lhlngsCartercando-hitlorpower,
throw and call a game. In fact , he
calls a bettergame.HistuturelsstUI
ahl'ad of him, " said Sutcllffe.
Naturally; when Mets' m? nager
Dave Johnson saw such things on
print he dEcided to use It to his
team 's best advantage. He under··
llned ~rtain parts of the article and
jxlstt&gt;&lt;l If,' on .jfie ~llibh\)Use bulletin
board. ·
The Mets responded perfectly.
Carter hit a home run and Ron
Darling tossed a five-hitter as the
Mets beat Sutcliffe and theCubs2-ll.
"It's kind of a sweetendtngwhen
he makes comments like that before
the game and thenlhlt a homerunto
win it . He didn't count thE'Mets in,
and I think that'sgolng tocarry 0ver

lor the rest of the season," Carter
Astros4,Braves3
said.
At Aflanta, Alan Ashby went
Darling, 6-1, hurled his third 3-lor-4 with an RBI and Phil Garner
complete game and second shl!tout
homered to help Nolan Ryan to his
of the season by strildng out seven
239th career victory and lift the
and walking four. Darllngls5.(Jin his
Astros. Rya n, 8-3, struck out E'lghtto
last nine outings. The 'right-hander . m ovP within 26 of the 4,1m mark.
has not lost since May 1 when he
Dave Smith plcked 'uphls llth save.
dropped a 10-3 decision to the Steve Shields, H, took the loss.
Houston Astros. He lowered his
Pirates~, Expos2
.,
ERA to2.29.
At Montreal, Tony ,Penahadthree
E lsewhere, San Francis co hits and drove 1n three runs
blanked Cincinnati 4.(), Houston Including two with a sixth·lnnln~
edged Atlanta 4-3, Pittsburgh dehomer, to help the pirates snap the
lea ted Montreal 5-2 a nd San Diego Expos' live-game win strca)c. The
downed l;os Ange les 3-2.
trtumph was Pittsburgh'sthlrd In Its
In American League games. last n games. Jim Wlnn Improved
Ba;ton edged Detroit 3-2. Milwau- to 2·1, and Don Robinson earned his
kec nipped Toronto 2-1. NI'W York
second save. David -Palmer fell to
blaioked BalllmOI'l' 10.0 and Kansas 5-Q.
"
City ripped Mtn·nesota 10.3:GlantS4,-

~0

At San Francisco, Allee Ham ·
maker hurled a four-hitter and Jeff .
Leonard ripped a solo homer and
added an RBI single, leading the
Giants to their third straight victory.
Hammaker , 3-6. struck out six a nd
walked two. The loss went to J ay
Tibbs, 4-8.

Benton toMalne of the International
League.
Benton, s lgne&lt;l as a free agent
J ail. 7, was batting a meager .179
with no home runs and 7 RBI In 31
games.
Corrales. howl'ver, wanted to
send either left-bander Bryan Clark
(1·1, 7.11 ERA) or right -hander
Keltl1Creelt0.5,5.7l) totheTrlple-A
Guides.
But Tribe general manager J OE'
Klein decided Benton was the
candidate.
"I'm not going to arguE.&gt; with m y
GM on the 23rd, 24.th or 25th player
on the rostl'r, " said Corrales. "So be
It."
Corra les put his charges through
a vigorous workout Monday morn·
lng In preparation lor a thi'Ee'game
set with California that opens
tonight.

Red Wings can Verdi
ROCHESTER, N.Y. iUPI)-The
International League Rochester
Red Wings, mired In a nine-game
losing streak, Monday fired Manager Frank Verdi and replaced him
with R!JI:hlng coach Mark Wlll'y.
. At It news conference at Silver
Stadlumln, Red Wings officials said
Verdi; 59, wlll not be o!!ered anot.h er
job In 'he Bal.t lmore Orioles'
organization. H9"'ever, Verdi will
be paid lor the rest of this season,
officials saki.
.
Verdi has been'unable towlnlnhls
year and
half as Red Wings'
manager. The team finished last In
the International League with a

-·---- - -

a

~

52-1!8 record last season and the Red
Wings are in seventh place at 184()
this year.
Verdi, who played third base lor
the Red Wings lrori11957 tol900, was
In his 21st season as a minor league
manager.
Red Wings ·ma~gement denied
reports t/II'Y had apPTOaChed re:
cently !Ired Orioles inanager· Joe
Altobelli to take Verdi's Job.
Altobelli, who lives In the Rochester
suburb of Gates, laughed at the
notion he would g.o back to work for
tlle.organlzation that just dismissed
him.

"We'll have to l'l'bound against
the Angeles," said thl' manager.
"Otherwise, !l 'lllx' a long, long road
trip."
The Indians begin a 12-game,
13-day n;&gt;ad trip in Oakland Friday
night , and also will visit California,
Seattle and Minnesota.
Overwhelming California will not
be easy. The Angels held an 84 edl!e
over the Indian~ last season,
inCluding a 5-1 record' at Cleveland
Stadium.
" We can only do our best," sa id
Trihe third baseman Brook Jacoby.
"We won't pa nic or slit our wrists.
"Hard work will pay off if you're
tough enough to endul't' advPrsity,
and J think we are."
Tonight, the Alll(els' Mike Wilt
laces the Indians' Neal Hl'aton both pitchers are 4-6.
Witt split his two decisions with
Cleveland last season. Heaton wa s
0.1 versus C~ ilfornla in 1981.

The Eleanor Circle of Heath
United Methodist Church, Middleport, hosted a bridal showerrecenty
lor Stephanie Houchins, bride-elect
of Bradley Alexander.
· Tables were covered witll pink
clothsandsklrtsanddecotated with
bells and Ooral arrangements in the .
pink and white color 's cheme .. Cake
Inscribed "Best Wishes , Stephanie ·
and Brad" In blue and silver was
!\f'TVed punch.
.
Games wel'l' played with prizes
going to Susan Houchins and Joan
Robinson. Others attending Wl'l'l'
Mary and Susanna Wise, Let.tle
Young, Clara Criswell, Juanita

(VSPS 1411-1110)
A DIYI!ilon of Mulllmecllii, Inc.
afft-r noon. Monday

rhrouRh Friday. Ill Court

~- ·

~

Po·

m('roy. Ohio, b:V lhf' Ohi o Villlcy Publ ls hln~ Compun.v; Mulllmrd la, 1n('.,
PomC'fi?.V. Ohi O4~769 , Ph . 992-2156. St'o·
oond ·e tas:; p ost p~(&gt; .paid :;n Po'[fiPr o~'· . ·

Indian manager is'frustraled; ··_·.
CLEVELAND (UPi l - Pat
Corrales has termed thl' present
situation as "the most frustrating
moment of my managerialcareer."
That may be understating the
current status of the Cleveland
Indians. Consider:
- The 2040 Indians have the
worst record in the American
League. There are light years·
between Cleveland a nd AL East
leader Toronto, but the Tribe also
fluctuates between six and eight
games behind sixth -place
MUwaukl'e.
- Cleveland has lost 13 of 17. The
Tribe dropped three of lour to
Oakland this weekend, Including
Sunday's doubleheader.
- When the Indians activated
pitcher Vern Ruhle In time for him to
start and 16~ Sunday's nightCap,
the team outrighted catcher Butch

Houchins bridal·shower

The Daily Sentinel

f' Vt"ry

Ohio.

1

•

·

·

·

·

M('mllf'r: U nUM Prf'ss lnl&lt;'rnatlonal.
Inland Dal ly PrC'!i~ Assoclutton and thl'
Ohio Nf'wspap&lt;&gt;r A~5ocla tl on : Nationa l
Adver t lslnR" RC' pr('sv ntallvl', Brarfham
N{•wspapcr Sal('s, 7.\1 Third AvC'nue.
N('w York, Nl' w York 10017.
~ nd

POSTMAS"I'ER:

addN'SS changrs

to, Ttl(' Da11y S&lt;&gt;n!ln('l, 111 Court St ..
Pollli'roy, Ohio 457~ .
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrh..&gt;l' or Motor Route
Onf' W£'f'k . . ....... : .. .. .. .. . : ...... ....... .. Sl .IO
Ont• Month ............. .. ................. $4.80

On«;&gt; Year .. ........... .................... $57.20

A bridal tea honoring Stephanie
Houchins.- whose wJd(llng to Brad·
ley Alexander will take place June
29, was held Sunday at the Heath
United Methodist Church, Middleport. Jayne Hoeflich and Angela
Houchins hosted the tea.
A handmade lace and embrol·
dered linen cloth covered the
relrestunent table which was cen·
tered wlth a blue and white
arrangement of silk flowers In a
white wicker basket flanked by blue
ta )lf'rs. An assortment of tea cakes

PRICE

Dally ............ .... ........ ........... 25 Cf'nt s
Subscrltx&gt;n; not dl'Slrl ng lo pa_
v thC" C'ar·
ri('r; may l'(lmlt In advancf' dlrf'd to
Tht:" Dally Sc-ntlnrl on a J, fl or 12 month
basis. Cr&lt;"dll will lx' ~iv&lt;'n r arrlrr each
month .

No subScrlpllon s by mall p&lt;'rml1 tt'd In

1owns wh&lt;'rf' homC' ('urrlf'r S&lt;'rvlc" l!l'
;~ v'allahll• .

Mall SuhRcrlptlonM
Jn~ldc ohio
13 W('£'kS ..... , ...... , . , ... .. , . , . , .. .. . , , .. $14.!;6
2H WP('kS ..... .. .... .. ................ ..... $29.12
52 W('C'h .. ..... ................. .... .... S.'&gt;8.24
OutMMI~ Ohio
1.1 W&lt;'C'kS ..... ... ..... ...... ..... .......... $15.60
:lS W&lt;'rks ..... ...... ............ ,. ......... $.:'H.20
52 ~t'C'k S ... .. ...... .. ,. ..... ......... .. ... $.')9.80

Reunion

POMEROY - Iles('('ndan!S of
Eliza and Ed Hayman will hold a
reunion at Forked Run State Park
on Sunday. A basket lunch wltl be
served at noon. AU friends and ..
I.'C'! latlv('S are Invited to attend.
Families are asked to take a
cov&lt;'l'ed dish and thE'ir own iable
service.

t~OUI 1'0N

HEARING TESTS
IN MIDDLEPORT
Free Electronic heerlng teall wtu' be gl.,.n by Bettooiel!eer·
tng ·Aid Center at Dr. Rankin Plckena' Office, 508 South 3rd
Avenue, Middleport, Ohio.

1

I

RUTLAND
TIRE
SALES&lt;
"IITTIII YOU TillE SAFBY." .
LOWEST

PIIC~S

ON PASSENGER CARS AND
UGHT TIUCI nilS

*ALIGNMENTS *FRONT END WORK
*BATTERIES *TIRE REPAIR
·LOCATED; MAIN ST .. RUTLAND. OH!O
OPEN: 8·8 MON.-SAT.; 8-8 FRI.
PH. 742-3088

Moat hearing problema c•n be helped today. Many people
who could be helped lllffer IIMCIIeaaJy lrom lhta problem which
•Hecla ml)ll~n• of people.
Anyone whO h11trouble heerlng or underllandlng con.,...
lltlon II Invited to heM I free hHring lilt to - If thla pro().
lem cen be helped! Brtng lhla coupon with you lor your FREE
HEAfiiNO TEST. Adulta only, piMM.
.

·Come In the momlng
of Thuricley, June 20th to '
Dr. Rankin Picken•' .O "Ici lor
free hearing ••••

M..,., Cerd end Vlu Welcome
\

~---'-'\ - ---···-~-

.,. .-.,..

.,

.

Bachtel, Olive Casto, Mary Price,
Marty ;ind Chad Ferguson, Pauline
Horton, Jeanne A. Bl'adbury, VIcki
and Angil' Houchins, Nellie Zerkle,
Nan· Moore, Katherine Swanson,
TwllaChllds,ErnmaK.Clatworthy,
Euvetta Bechtle, Margie and Abby
Blakj.&gt;, . Donna. and Mary Byer,
Mllrgaret ·Weber, Donna and Ga ·
brtel Jenkins, Scottie Hayes, and
Betty Fultz.
Sending gifts Wer&lt;' Jennlfl'r
Harrison, Kathryn Knight. Helen
Byer, Carol Tannehill, Lillian Zerkle, Emily Sprague, Jean Cooke,
Edith Jlv.iden, and Karen Tripp.

·Bridal tea given Perrin , .

SINGLE COPV

The teats will be gtven by • llcenMd H•rlng Aid Speclall.t
Thuract.y, June 20th, lrom 9:00A.M. to 12:00 P.M. ualng modern
electronic equipment.

.

~.

comprehensive training program
developed from the pilot projE&gt;cl for
use is other areas is completed.
•
A wide variety of skllls wer~
incorportated in the training sessions includ ing handling a bedfast
paUent , personal ca~ and 'hyglene,
awareni'S$ or beha viorat changes as
well as biologi cal change$. Alzhel·
mer's disease and · hOw to better
unders tand it , commun ication a flll
social involvement , home designs
for the handica pped, th&lt;&gt; Independent Jiving cent&lt;'!' , dangers of
hypertens ion. emergency $kills,
ambulatory a ids and recreational
activities lor the elderly, techniques
for giving medication, tapping intc)
organlza lions for a ssistance. under·
sta nd ing the na tur&lt;' of aging, death
and dying.

Legion Aux#iary contributes to famine relief
A contrtbutlon was made to the
David Livingston Missionary Foun·
dation lor aid to staovlngchlldren In
Africa when the Lewis Manley
American Legion AuxUary 263 met
Tuesday hlght at the hom e Q! Mni.
Florence Richards .
Mrs. Margaret Bowles' presided
at the meeting and gave a report on
the recent summer district convention held In Lancaster. Mrs.
Catllerine Curl of Unit 222, Crooks·
ville. was elected president of t~
Eighth District. Attendin.o: the

meeting were .42 delegates, 13
alternates and 33 visitors. ·
Among the dlstioigulshed guests
·were the mayor of Lancaster, the
Eighth District commander. and
the .commander of the LancastPr
Post. Mrs. Richards seoved on the
credential committee fortheconference. Field !l"IVIce awards were
made and district chairmen gave
their reports.
Awards received by the local unit
as announced by Mrs. Bowles.

district chairman of community
seovlce, Included four for member·
ship activity. including one lor being
goal on Oct. 16 a nd a nother lor
reaching the 1981 goal by Nov. 10,
and enrolling 1985 m embership
equal to or exceeding the membership goal set by the department.
The unit took first place lnGroupl
for community service, Lucille
Saunders. chairman ; first place In
Group I lor children and youth, Mrs.
Richards, chairman: serond place

in Group 1 for Americanism. Mrs .
Bowles, chairman . Mrs . Lula
Hampton concluded the poppy sale
activities of the unit at the rne&lt;'tlng.
A certificate from thedepartment
president thanked the unit for work
done lor the year. Mrs. Will Winston
had the pra;·er for )X'ace a nd the
group sang " America .'' Refreshment s wcre served by Mrs . Ri chards. II: ext lllCPting will he held at
the home of Mrs. Saunders In
Gallipolis.

Chester alumni have reunion

'

I have It on good word, thai tlle
Frankly, I am baffled about
floral arrangment , gift of the
About. 200 aiumoil and guests
action taken by the Ohio Attorney rain Is get!lng out ql the way early
Pomeroy Flower Shop. The Chester
Gel)eral's office In its suits against this week to make for a sunshine · attended the annual Chester High
Garden
Club provided table arran·
l;lanquet
School
Alumni
Assocla
tion
six homes In various parts of the weekend lor the observance of
and are~ businesses gave
gements
and
dance
held
June
1
at
the
Chester
state operating a llegedly as unll· Heritage Weekend coming up.
favors.
A
vote of thanks was given to
school.
Don't forget- If you are Into ;1rts
censed nursing homes.
Bob Woods for his many years of
Gene
Riggs
presided
at
the
The Meigs County Sl!lt "ls against and crafts, the Bend Merchants
meeting and gave the welcome to · assistance In decorating the
Mary Young of East Main Slreet, Association Invites you to E'l&lt;hlblt on
auditorium.
the weekend. Just give the Pome· · the alumni. Jack Elselsteln had
Pomeroy.
A basket of sllk Rowers was given
prayer
before
the
dinner
served
by
We received via ttoe U.S. Mall a roy Chamber office a ring and get
to
a member of each reunion class
theChesterPTO.
news release reporting the suits registered ln. Arts and crafts will be
ar.d
to the Ofl!' traveling the farthest ,
James
Bailey,
class
of
1919,
was
Including Mrs. Young's on Thurs. • set up on Court Slreet.
MOdred
Bahr Lipsey, Utah. .
.
the oldest graduate and was
day monilng last week. The article
werE"
19:!),
1925,
Reunion
classes
presented with a blue and white
How can there be eight Mondays
was marked lor release at 4 p.m . on
tne Tuesday before we receive(! it . In a row? Do keep smiling.

r;:::==========·:.Publlshl'd

ADOPriON - 'Doe Melp Coonty Humane Society Is offering the8e
three nine week old ldttens l(!r adoplloo. Adoption lees are 100 lor the
malesandl351orthelemaJewhlchlncludesshots,wonnlug,andspaylng
or neutering at the proper age. Interested I'E8idents may caD !l82-4l!4l5 or

Legal 'a spects of care giving were
discussed by - Richard Renner,
Athens attorney, at the final training
session of the Family Support
Network Friday.
The session concluded the Inhome health care training program
tunded witll a .g rant of $17,5ffi
through the Department of Health
and Human Services. E mphasis
was on tf'ac hing family m embers
the necf'SSary skills to keep the
at·risk and fraU elderly In tlletr
homes as an alternative to nursing
home care.
Norene Ondrusko, licensed physl·
clan's assista nt , Is coordinator lor
the project which will cent lnue lor
another several months while cost
effectiveness of home care owr
Institutional care Is evaluated and a

..
Krisian Heines .

and cookies and ~lue and white
mints wPre served wlt.h lemonade
and tea.
Prizes were won by Janet
Alexander and Charlene Hoeflich.
Others attending were Lort Hill,
Debra Bateman, Kim Cremeans,
Judy and Stacie Alexander, Krista
Eason, Melinda SalmonS, Robin
Haning, Billie Jo Krawsczyn, Mary
and Josh Price, Amy Luckeydoo,
Ollve Casto, VIcki and Susan
Houclns. Also presenllng gifts were
Rowena Averion, Pam and Cindy
Crooks, Susanna Wise, Jennifer and
Megan Harrison, Diane Kiser, Lisa
Rinehart, Erin Martin, Cathy
Guarascl, Barb Schultz. Star Bat(..
man, an Erin Krawsczyn.

19:Jl, 1935, the 50th' year. wit h each
belag presented a golq key chain,
l!l&lt;lO, 1945, l!l!Xl, and 19!\5. Given
special rcognition were three fa milies of six graduates, the Pickens,
the Bahrs, and the Smiths.
Door prizes wel'l'awarded during
the evening. Officers elected for the
l!llli reunion were Jean Sexson,
president; Donald Mora, first vice
president; Starling Masser, second
vice president: Norman McCain,
third vice president ; Mildred Gau'J,
fourth vice president; Maxine
Whltehl'ad. secretary; Nellie
Parker, assistant secretary; Helen
The 19'15 grad'l"tlr)g; ciass of · arid 'ta mily, Waverly; Mr.a~d Mrs.' · ·Wolfe, . treasurer; and Rosemary
Keller, ass~taiot treasurer. :
Eastern High SchOOl held a lun - Tom Matheny, Shawnee Hills;
Named to the decorating commitcheon at the homeo!Roger and Jane
and Mrs. Joe, Rosen (Sherrl.tee
were Roger Keller, VIc Bahr,
Coates and then most attended the
Linthlcum) and five children of
Spencer, Mary Rose, Robert
Elson
Eastern High School Alumni ban·
Cincinnati; and Mr. and Mr. ·Rtck
Wood,
Howard Knight, Samuel
quet and daJICE', At the luncheOn
Murphy (Connie Dalley) and sons,
Michael, and Woodrow Mora .
were Mr. and Mrs. Steve Meek
Mr. and Mr. Robert Hanis and
Dancing was to tlle Road Runner
(Louann NI'Well ) and children, of children, Mr. and Mrs. Greg
II
Band
with RedCarrcallingforthe
Mt . Sterling, Ky.; Mr. and Mrs.
Winebrenner and Becky Ebersb·
square
dancing.
Orville Vulgamore !Mandie Rose)
ach. all local.

Eastern class conqucts reunion .

Mr.

. Community calendar I area happenings
'l'UFllDAY
CHESTER - Cheste r Council
32.1, Daughters of America, will
meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the hall.
The charter will be draped lor Mae
Spen~r . Members are to wear
white. Quarterly birthdays wlli be
observed and potluck refreshments
will be served.
CHESTER - Chester Township
Trus tees will hold a special meellng
to pay bills Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., at
townhall.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Lodge 363 F&amp;AM will meet 7 p.m .
Tuesday for work In E.A. degree .

THUHSDAY
POMEROY - The Rock Springs
Better Health Club wlU meet at1; 15
p.m. Thursday at the homeo!Loulse
Bearhs. The program will he by
Teresa Abbott and lhl' contest by
Violet Hysell.

.
ANTIQUITY - ladies Aid of
Faith Fellowship, Route nl, Antiquity, Is having free clothing day
Wednesday 11a.m . to3p.m . a t the
church, located '!. mile north of
Racln,e VFW. Allin need welcome.

Lasagna dinner
.
POMEROY - A lasagna dinner
\VIII be held.Thursday from 5-7 p.m .
at the Sacred HHeart Catholic
Church. The menu will Include
lasagna, tossed salad or cole slaw,
hot roll, pte or cake , a nd beverage.
Cost lor dinners Is $4 for adults and
$2.50 for children .

Pootponed
POMEROY - A meeting oft he
program committee of the Ohio Eta
Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority scheduled for Tuesday
night at the home of Cathy
Blaettnar, preside nt, has been
postponed until Thursday at 7 p.m.

COMPE'J'E&lt;I - Katie Sandt'I'S
competed in a NAPS Pageant oo

Chureh dinner
RACINE- Racine United Met hodlst Women will have a chickm·
noodle dinner Friday at the church
with serving beginning at 4 p.m.
Kld's ll.'!hlng derby
POMEROY- The Meigs Cou nt y
Fish and Game Club will sponsor it s
a nnual Kid's Fishing Derby Satur·
day at their lake on West Shade
River Road . 3!h miles west of
Chester. The derby . for childnm
ages one throug h 16, will begin at 8
a.m . and continue through 2 p.m .
One pole per child wit h participant s
furnishing their own pole a nd ball .
No minnows or artificial bali wi ll
permitted. Prizes and refreshcments will be availa ble for all
c hildren ..

Miiy 3-5 at .Kings Island •. ln the
heauty and ll\lent pageant; she
won a third place lroph.v . In
pho!Algenlc, third in talent, and
secood in heuuty. SIH' lllso won a
$100 scholar!lhip wod quuHfles w
~mpele in the national pageanl.

SUN FUN

PENNZOIL
f,•tl•' I PACK
PEPSI
- 16 oz,
··."i,•r l'in~

lritl1 1 -" milf· ··

located In Ra&lt;int, OH.

RETREADS

Are you tired and confused with Denominational Doc- ·
trines and Divisions? Do you believe that nothing
should It, bound on a person except that .which Jesus
Himself has bound?

(AND MEIGS COUNTY)!

THEN COME!
TO A SPECIAL SERIES OF MEETINGS

MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST

:·$1·995

1•u11 5TIEETI
(COMPlETElY NON-DENOMINATIONAU

Alii UP

JUNE lS-21, 1985

PLUS IXCIIANII

ount&lt;tcl. I · llalancecl Frlf

CECIL 0. DOTSON, SPEAKER ·
SIIYI(ES: SUNDAY IIIU STUDY-10:00 A.M.

GENERAL
.

.

,

To The Residents of Pomeroy

RADIAL
&amp; NON RADIAL

.

. WOISHIP-11 :00 A.M.
WOISHIP-7:00 P.M.
MONDAY THIU FIIDAY- 7:00P.M.

.

TIRE
SALES
.,...,. n......, ........ ••••:· .

N. I • """ •.

~

I

.

TIGHT BUDGET?

N affied . tQ
USAA

Krlstan Heines, daughter of Mr .
and Mrs. Larry L. Helnes has been
nai'TIEd a l!llli United States National
'Award wlnnl'r In mathematics by
theU. S.AchleYmlent Academy.
Krlatan who ahends Eastern
Local Junior High School was
nominated for the national a ward by
Nancy 'Larkins, Jr:tathematlcs
te8cher. Her bloiJraphy wW appear
In the u.s. Achleven1ellt Academy
Qtllclal Yearboclk which Is published anJIUlUy.
·
Criteria. for selection ll1'l' a
student:s academiC performance,
Interest and aptitude' leadership
quaUUes, respoilslbiJ!ty, enthusl·
aam, motlvatlofo to lejlm, and
ImprOve, cl!lzenlhip, attitude and
t-&lt;q~e~atlve ~. depl!ndablllzy, ·
and n!alliltnelldatlon of a teacher.
Kl1slan ~ the eranddaugher of .
Loulle Heines,· Clieater, and Ver·
nard Edwards, Pouoeo oy.

Free clothing day

~r

Jt1:7161

·

..

.••• l(iart, 011.

FOIINFOa.AnOrt CALL 773-5104

C"IHI''''"'·

N; Colll~tlo,,/

�-

·Page 6-The

· -.. •

-

• ••-. •

.. -

• - • • - -..

4

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I

Daily

Sentinel

Births,

Pomeroy-Middleport

Library program set Thursday .in Meigs

bir~hdays ______
Marie Shi-Sunshine, on June 10. The
Infant weighed five pounds, nine
ounces.
Grandparents are Mrs. Ma'rie
Woolard, Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs.
Dwight WaUace, Middleport, and
Ernest Woolard, Washington, N.C.
Great-grimdparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Waiter Woolard, Washington,
N.C.
Mr. and Mr. Wallare and Mrs.
Marie Woolard are . In North
Carolina With theirchlldrenandnew
granddaughter.

Tuesday, June 18. 1986

Ohio

June 1

Business Services

Shipley says "Children Jove to
children. .
the
have stories Wustrated for thehlin
This program ts sponsored by
new ways, and 1 enjoy seeing them
Meigs County PubUc Library and
respondtowhatthestorylssaytngto
theOhloVaUeyAreaLibraries.The
them."
program will last abollt45 mtnutei
the hild , llbr rian and Is open to the pl\blic.
Is
c andren
s County
a
' For more •-"'rmation
on r1the•
atShipley
the Chillicothe
Ross
uuu
Public Library and Uhrig is her Meigs County Public Libra es
assistant.. Both of them have many summer programs and reading
·
ld with club, caU 992-5813 or 992-5713.
years of experienre In wor ~
,

•
There wt11 be tun lnstorefor Meigs
Countychlldrenwbentheytotohear
Jean Shipley and Sue Uhrig In
"Favorite Stortes," a program to be
beld at thlo Middleport Library at 2
Thursd
p.m .
ay.
Many klndi of special props wlll
.be used In telling the stories puppets, sketches, Oannel bOard
figures, ftngerptays and books.

::::::::::t=========T,:::=::======;r::::::::::1
•VINYL .SIDING
tHE QUAUTY ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
•luidentiat &amp;
Commercial
•Denlapmenls &amp;
Commercial Sitts
•Single and ~Ill Unil

· Men's fellowshi1J
announce~"!!!/!~~§ sat?:~
p.m.~rJatlolisaretobemadeby
· Richard M:l(ei'S, evangeUst, w111
be
speaker at the · Fricfay

Thesday with Edgar Abhott, 992·
meettngoflheli"ullGospe!Buslness . 3864; Lawrence Foreman, :.&gt;4-773·
Men's FeiiQwslllp tO ·be held at the 5757; Paul A. Rice, 992~44; or
WilHam Smeltzer, 446-tlO!. Cost of
· PomeroySftdorClttzensCenter.
Dinner will be serJed at 6: ~p.m. the dinJ!er is $6. A planning session
with the ..-ttng to follow at 7: 15 for au mern~rs·of the chapter has

,..-.

Housing
•Wood Mode Cabinotr'
DHigrl anll 'Ianning

Forem

tllt ·

-

.,

d AbbOtt
p.m . at the
an an .
.
St~lnM~rtdescribed as an
"
e s.~ev
Ust with a simple on·flre ~ ~
basis on
straight orw
emp
rth
following the examples set fa
by ,
Jesu• Christ.

GREG ROUSH .

PH. 992;7611

5·7-Hc

ACCENt

Carpenter community happenings
J.C Buzzard

Andy Hysell

Buzzard

J:fyseH

A cookout and ·party was held
rerently In obserJ;U\ce of the second
birthday of J .C. BII27JIJ'd by his
parents, Kermit and Kelly Buzzard.
·cake, hotdogs, tee cream, chips
and koolaid were served · to his
grandparents, John and Delores
Tyree, Stacy and Mark Tyree, Dee
Barber and Heidi, Vivian Phlilips,
Geneva Wtse,EulondaHaley,Jason
Drenner, Judy and Cathy LaudermUt, Tom, ~onda, Tr!Sh, and
Tommy Roush, Greg, Brenda,
Jenny and AmbPr VIning, Carolyn,
Cindy, Theresa and Jeremy Little,
Laclnda and David Kirkpatrick,
Tammy Zedeker, Joy Cundiff,
Darlene Hawley, Sue and Dennis
Little, Shirley and Nakuma Tyree.
Sending gifts were Ronda Little,
Darla Hawley, Brenda and Delmear Hawley, Lucy McKinney,
~ky and Darrln Drenner.
'
Games were played with prizes
going to Heidi Barber, Lactnda
Kirkpatrick, Trlsh Roush, Theresa
Little, and John Tyree. Tammy
Roush won the dOOr prize. Shirley
Tyree, aunt of the honored guest,
baked the birthday cake.

David A. and Alberta Hysell are
announcing the birth a son, John
Andrew, born atO'Bieness Hospital
on May 1. He weighed nine pounds,
seven ounces andwas221ncheslong.
Paternal grandparents are MUford and Polly HyseU. Maternal
grandparents are Albert and faye
Schultz. Paternal great·
grandparents are Violet Hysell and
Stella Thomas.
·

or

Ian Mullen

Mullen

The third birthday of Ian Mullen
was observed rerenUy with a party
at the home or his parents, Charles
and De_bl MuU!!n, Middleport.
His birthday cake baked by his
aunt, Brenda Hysell, carried out a
circus theme with clusters or
miniature balloons and candles on
top. Refreshments of ice cream,
cake, punch and potato chips were
seiVed to Pat, Penny, Jason,
Jacinda MuUen, Brian, Michael,
Howard and Don Mullen, Brenda
HyseU, and Moo-garet and Harry
Bailey. Sending gifts were Kay
Vujaklya, Joyce Selig, and A.J.
Vaughan.

Chester
council
meets

Abby ]o Harris

William C Woods

Harris

·woods

Abb;J~Ha~~.daugliterofMr.

Mr.

.
and Mrs. WliliarnChrlstopher
and Mrs. Tom Harris, Middleport,
Woods, the former Alicia Evans, are
announcing the birth of a son, Aprll7 obserJed her second birthday
Satruday with a party carrying out
at tbe Holzer Medical Center. The
the Sesame Street theme.
six pound, · nine ounre infant has ·'
Attending the party were Abby's
been named William Corey!.
·
brother, Jarnieandhersister,Resa.
.Maternal grandparents are Mr.
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. WU:
and Mrs. Michael j. Evans,
llam ChUds, Middleport, and Mr.
Portland, and the 11111emal grandand Mrs. George Harris, Pomeroy,
paren,ts are Mrs. Mila J . WOOds, .
great-grandmother, Mrs. Martha
Pomeroy, and the late William J .
Childs,
a great-great-aunt, Jo Sha·
WOOds II. Great-grandmother is
nabrook, uncle and aunt, Mick and
Mrs. Ada Van Meter, Portland, and
Twila Chids, and an\)ther aunt,
Mrs. Bernice Evans, Gallipolis.
Cinda Hartis.
Sending gifts were Mary Marie

Francis Rife, Baker •. La., spent
~era! days here with his lllQther,
Mrs. Ethel Rife, brother-In-law and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Wooten
and other relatives:
Mr ..andMt;s. Rayllrookshosteda
family gathering rerently. Attending were Mr. and Mrs. David
Brooks, Summer and Melvin,
Hebron; BUI and Thelma Brooke
• and son, David Ray,Seattle, Wash.;
Richard Boroks statioed In Naples,
Italy, with the
Navy, and BUI
and MoiJ!e Brcxiks and Tonya ,
Carpenter.
Mr.andMrs.RichardJeffersand .
family, New Boston, ill., have
returned home after bl&gt;ing caUed
here by the deatli of her mother,
Mrs. Lois Bailey.
Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan,
accompanied by their son and·

New offlrers were elected at the
Wednesday night meeting of the
Past CouncUors Club of Chester
CouncU 323, Daught~rs of Amrlca,
held at the home of Jean Frederick
Elected were Inzy Newen, president; · Laura Mae Nice, vlre
presld!'nt; . Margar!'t Arnberg!'r,
secretary; Goldi!' Frederick, treasurer; Cora Beegle,,sentinel; Erma
Cleland, flower committee; and
Mary K. Holter, news reporter.
Charlotte Grant presided al the
meeting reading from the 40th
Psalm. Tile ·Lord's Prayer and
pledge were given In unison. Lora
DamewOOd gave the secretary's
report.
•
· AreadingonF1agDaye!1tltled"A
History of the American F1ag" ivas
given by Mrs. DamewOOd. It was'
noted that the lathers of two
members are still living and a
tribute was made to them In
observanre of Father's Day. Refreshments were served by the
hostesses. Games were conducied
by Opal Hollon and Marcia Ketler.
Charlotte Grant won the door prize.
Ot))ers attending were Thelma
White, Margrei Thttle, Betty Roush,
Sadie Trussetr, Ethel Orr, and a
guest, Sandra. White.

ScarbemJ
e:vent
'.I

Hayman, great-grandmother, Mr.·
and Mrs. Bill l-eWis, Houston,
Texas, Mr. and Mrs. John Simpson,
Pasadena, Texas, Mr. and Mr.
Denwr Rice and BUI, great·
grandfather, Lewis Harris, and Mr.
and Mrs. vlrgl l Brown.

o

,. ,;!·

:1·

AI.
.

Christy Cleland

Master of Ceremonies., Zelda
Knapp of Point Pleasant collected
names and addressesforthefamliy
·
manrng Ust.

h.

Smith, Ravenswood; Mal'llhall and
Nellie Fowler, Morgantown; Elsie
Fowler, Carl and VIolet ~laeh;
Beulah and zelda Knapp and ElSie
Pratt, Potilt Pleasant; John Gerl·
ach and Chester and Bertha Kir\Zel,
Letart; Edith Kinzel, Cottageville;
Nelson, Karl, Jason. Karla, AT·
rietta and All~ Clark and Shirley, .
Martqn, Kim lind Heather Rttne,

30

MH~mAI to'; , ~n·,anned V~lma Ga~ . '

"""'
~
.,..
Ptrl Bums Mason ·
1
'
•
, From Ohio were: Gerald GerJ..:Regln Levi
Mr. and Mrs. WilHam Cleland of · at
'
Racine announce the bltht of a
present while 13-month-old James
Elmer Katherine and Chloral daughter, Chrl$ty, March 8 at
Earl Gerlach craw-led away with
Gerladh, McConlll!lsvU!e; Mike,
Hillzer Medical Center.
·
the honors as t.h e yDilngest.
Debbie, Tara and Alban Gerlach ·
u-t~•J gra
· ndpare!lis are ImCledla Mae Brassfield and her
nd 'Thelma """- Middleport·
,..., ~..- a
-•~··
'•
ogene Scott and the late James ·daughter, ,I?onnaBratton,ofi;dgl!l'· - Wendi!Il and ~....GerlaCN
ttleh,

Cleland

~~~~:'::Pof!e~~~:~:~: :~~· ~~e~!~lrs~:l, Col:~bus;

Scott, Gallipolis. Paternal grand·
pare11ts are WIIUam IJid June
Cleland of Racine .. Charleae Webb

c:tl'lorlda 15 8 great grandmother.

Woo1a~d
Mr. and Mn. MIChael Woolard

or

WasiJinillon, N.C., !he ronner
Nancy Wallllce, are 8JlllOUDCtng the
bCrtll of their ftl)lt cbUd, Hamlah

__... 1

~m

-

ton, Kan., ,took honors for traveiUng 1
tbefarttiest.nhDugh they had clole ·
competition from Pearl and Z. B.
Meadows who came from Clearwater, Fla. Except for the long
distance travelerseveryonecame
from either West Vlrgi!lia or
nearby Olito.
From West Virginia were:
James EaH1 James R. S.Ve(J)' and
Grace Gerlach and Chaliea Bruce
------ ~

Aftar 5 C..J

I

'IUS. Office SuppHos &amp;

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

funoituro, W..wlng
... , ...""'lion

1

Stat~wJ ~tlc
Sllftl, I
St..,,,

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SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland. Bush Ho&amp;
Farll) Equipment
Dealer

E•·'~····
&amp; Serwlu

V. C. YOUNG Ill
Pomeroy,

RADIATOR
SERVICE

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

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

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM

.Complete Guner WOrk
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked In home area
20 veer• ·
"Free Estimates"
CAll COll£(T,

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport,

5/ 28/1 mo. d.

Roger .Hysell
Garage
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Trt•••letiOI
PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121
3·24-tfc

RENT A CAR
. CALL

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1'J .'II

I

Public Notice

· f'ublic N.otlce
NOTICE OF FlUNG
AUTHENTICATED
COPY
Of Lett. . of Appolntn.tt of

Non·R- E-m.- E-.

ofNon·R-t
Eotam of W1tey C. White.
De9illld.
Notice io horeby giwn Horrv F. While, Euetrtor of the
Eotam.of Wiley c . White, toto
of Belle, West VIrginia, de-

Public Notice

couod. on the 8111 day of J..,.,
1986, filod In the ProCourt of Meigl County. Ohio,
en authenticated copy of the

1.ottano T-nwrtory, of Aid
Esla18 gron1Bd In Tho Kone-

County Court. County. W. VI. and that the
dlim ar c:lllimo of ony - or cllldiloro of o o l d nN be - o d 10 thiO Court

ct.ie of u1c1 filing ar be ·-

pootiblo lion ~
the Ohio rool of oold

barred •

'614-446-9416

dac-Dallld 1hto 13111 day of Juno
1986.

Pro-

Robert E. Bud&lt;

Coun

Maigl COunty, Ohio
161 17. 25; 171 2, 3tc

EXCAVATING
~OM~ANY

· .....- ·on - In lite
range of 11,215,1166 to
n.841,473.

Will do all types of excavating,
landscaping, basements, aew·
age systems. water
and gas lines. water
well drilling and - vice. trucking (times·
tone &amp; dirt) .

-for-·

The mojol' - - .. lndi·
cotod by tho partiao. .,.,

epproprlloto oMo- ·

c.pltot;
bl tho_....
rota of

retum 10

be...,_,

ct thooppoop io1B ._of the
monthly- ch-;
d) t h e _ . . . amount of
pllrit in OOIYice; ond

Call: 742-2407

&amp; londtd

35185 Oak Hill Roa4
Lone Bottom , OH. 45743

PH. (614) 985·•m2

FREE nnMA!IS

WILLIAMS
TRENCHING SERVICE
It, I, Hystll lup ld.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45169
16141 992-2134
or 992-6l04

We Use

Von Sc.hrader
Equipment Recommended
by Ludin&amp; Carpet Manufacturers.

'FREE

RENT ACAR
CALL ,

-~
MOTEL

446-4522
"We R.nt For Less"

U-S~VE

AUTO
RENTAL

·Pay Ca~h for

.

~once, Moigo,
Morgen. Porrv, R-. Sdoto,
Vinton, •nd W••hlngton.
Ohio. on Tu--,. July 9.

Jockoon,

1988, It 6:30p.m .. II Vinton
County Community Building.
MM!ioog R_,, Routto U.

dd

VInton County, Ohio. (Thlo lo

opp&lt;iximataly o mila ond a holt
- " ' of McArthur, Ohio.)

, ____...;..___......._;...._

1A
ress.
1 Phon•-----~-------

1

I
. ,
I 'rinr 0111 word in eoch
I rpace below.
(a&lt;h iniliol
of figurn counts
1I "as l'""''
a ward. c• ..,, n phent
1 ••d
••mlotr..Wren
if ...... or
y..,•n
901

J Httlf r11ult1

-~_,...,..j--._:-+:-:-::-!

1
:::~::~~~!::~·~~~ l•lll~ll.U•t.iiU
116
otllr or ••_
I'" ---'lf---1:--t--+-:-~
if yeu -"'·

cltrsifJ,
1 .., M. our a4 will Itt

RT. ~2 NORTH
POINT PLEASANT, W. VA.

lotlles !rom
Pomroy-1110!1 Brid&amp;e
SINGL£ 124.95
304-675-·276
•live Entertainment •Free HBO
•Kitchenettes •Restaurant

1,..,.. boa INlow.

.1 .

I !Wanted
1 !For 5ale
1 JAnnauncemenr
I tFor Rl!nf ··

.1

1_
1 2.
1 3

·

~-

I1· ~-·
5.

1 :-

I ·
1

1o.11.
· 12.

ChUik:olbe; Willard e
1 13
Boyer, Pdlwsoy; Floyd ~ VIola · ~ ·

. BLACKSTON

NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING

·

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All Mahs

JIM CLIFFORD
P~ . 992·720

•Wa1her1 •Dishwa1hers
•Renge1
•,, . efrlgeratort ·..-

.•' .

1

25·
:16.
2:'
2·
2?-

. JO,

Jr.

:12.
.
32
:14.

4/2

1-

I1

'

=======

Gerlach, _BJ, Pralr1e; ·and ll;ly
::·
Gerlech, Powell.
..
I ,;
. :1!1.
'
The abiM! l)llmed Individuals are
delcendanta of - either Wllllam,
MaiiThiiC....-wHIIR-Ittllncl
Georie. Fred or Harve Gerlach, , I ·
Tile Dill" I..Unel · _
.·
I
sons ot John lind Dorothea.
1
111 QlrUt.
I
Velma B~ Zelda Knapp and
Elmer Gerlach Will . continue as ..__.._ _ _ . . _
------.-- .
ot1kers for, the lii!'Xt year.

I·

I · - .,.....,..,,011.451.,

I·

•

J

4-5-Hc

Television listening Devices
Computerized Hearine Aid Selection
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

LISA M. KOCH, M.s.

.

REAL ESTATE FOR SAlE

DENNY CONGO

SPLIT LEV~L HOUSE with 3 bed-

WILL HAUL
· JUSTCALL!

'ooms, ~ - complete batha, dining
room, living room ,&amp;1'd large te:
creation room. Located on 8
acre1. Large farin pond. Racine
. area.

992-3410
LIMESTONE

,'GRAVEL • SAND

HOME NAftONAL lANK
949·221

TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

(

10.1·

U-SAVE

AllllllliiiL I' Ill!! Ill .-

·~-.

In Memoriam

C&amp;l

S20 St. St.
.
PH. 9C9·2777
Tht Exponsion

--

·

of

·-"
Senke

to our

To lnciw.1

Customers
-

•Complete Front Eoll Rep•lr • Alignment
•ComputeriE•d w....t ••••nee
.
•nr11 IAII 81zoe-C81', Truok. PIICI

AT A swP DISCOUNT

31

Kittens to giveaWay to good
home, 8 weeki old . Call
614-446-2329 . '

417 Second Avenue, ,Box 1213
Gallipolis, 'Ohio 45631
·

2

I

18 Wanted to Do

446-4522

(614) .46,7619 or (614} 992-6601

Racine, Oh.

baby clothei, mi1c.

Yard Sale. first brick houle .
p..t Bee~ Sct1ool, Gallipoli•
Forry, on At . 2, June 18-19.'

to

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Ph. 614-143·5191 .
-' l0·6·tfc

1
I

PH. 742·23.28

'

P•s BUILDINGS

tun

1

II

•BASEMENTS *SEPTIC SYSTEM~
wFOOTERS *GRADING
*CONCRETE WORK

UTILI'TY BUILDINGS .
Sizes from &amp;'xf Up
to 24'x36'
lnSIIIIttd DO&amp; Houus

8nd 19th. Car sut.'lot• of

Easy assembly work!
per 100. Guaranteed payment . No experience-no
sales. Detail•· 1end 1el.f .·.
addi'eaaed stamped envelope; ELAN VITAL - 716,
3418 Enterprise Rd .. Ft.
Pierce . Fl 33482.

&amp; Vicinity
···· · ····,-· ·· ····-··'·····-~--~

Carport sale . Intersection of
Rt . 143 and 7 . .June 18th

American' made cleaning
Hrvice accepting new cu•·
to mora by appoo'ntment. Call
614 -388 -8190.
l --------N-d
~ cloano·ng done? Wal·
lpoporo'•gl
Call 614-246,.
6567 for more information .

.... -"F»t' Pi &amp;I iiiirti- --;:..
·•
&amp; Vicinity

..

·· ·-········-···· ·············

Homes for Sale

2 bedroom•. full beMnlent,
double car garege, 1 .2.
acr81, Ro1e Hill, Pomeroy , ~
S28,000. 614-1178-2613. •

1----------

Will do ho,uaecleaning in and
around Poinl Pleasant. 304· 7 room hou1e, 1 Y, bath .
Gravel Hill. Middleport . lot
876 -77f!2
70 fl .• 1 00 ft . Garogo. Coli
614-992 -5714 .

1----------

BULLDOZER, &amp;.BACKHOE WORK ·

Sizes Start From 12'x16'.

9'C9·2263
'or 247-C641 .

I

TROMM EXCAVATIN

ALL STEEL &amp;
POlE BUILDINGS

REWARD ·· For lnformetlon
re1ulting in the arrest and
fmplllillli!ill
conviction Of any per1on1
committing theft and van ·
ServiLt: ~
daliem of machinery and
pro p e rti e 1 of R ave n • I""-:--:-::--c-:-:c---;--~ocking Cool Corp ., Meek
11 ·Help Wanted
Energy Co . and Sycamore 1- - ' - - - - - - - - Cooi Co .

...... fiiimeiov ........ .

------

73-79 Clttwy Tr.
10-h Foird lr.
s
Grilln ..................... 131.50
llootls......................... 145
73-79 Clttwy. lr.
13-15 Ford langor
lockor Pcinols ...............l2!
Hoods ................ ......... SJ30
73-79 Chowy. Tr.
13·15 Ford longor
C&lt;* Ca&lt;-o ..................s20
Grillt~ ........................... s7s
Now anol tiled Auto Glan-latt Mooltl Pori•
WHALEY'S AUTO PADS ' 9·13-ttn

PARTS end SERVICE

Guttero • Downopou11
Guttero Cleaned
Painting
Slorm· tloora
• Window•
Siding - Soffit Wortr

I

.· · • ··· _

findtrs.-..... ~ ..... ~·r .. ··-.. ~60 · · fendsr• ~···"'""':"'"":''"~·$~1 ..
75·10 Chtwy lr.
·
·73.79 Ford Tr.
s
Doors ........................ 1125
Doon ......................... 135
73-10 Chtwy. lr.
10·15 ford lr.
......................... SJ50
- . .........................$ 145
73-14 Chtwy rr.
71· 7, ford lr.
lum,...s ..................... $70 - GrHI1 ...................... $52.50

•Dryer• •Frte:rere

Merchandl1e

NEW-REPAIR

21.
2l
Zl.
·
2•

Sen~iu

iCUr OUT FOR FUTUII USII

.Roofing Co.
11. _ _ _ _ __...._
11_ --,..-,--:-~19• -====~=
211. ~

For Faster

Call 614-992-6737

Howard l. Writesel

.

Box, 326
Pomeroy, OH . A5769

.. 7i-7t fqrd' lr. ·

-

Thur~day

and friday, June
20th , 21ot. 1 0· 5. 3 milao
from L•ng•ville on St.
Ylrd. Sale June 20 &amp; 21 It At.326. Fourth hou1eonthe
Carter•• on Oid 180 at Kerr. rig,ht .
Jeanie Gretel, M•in St..
Rutland. Wednesday ond
Thundey .
Middleport

·

St. Ill. 160

"''o ·ctoowy

only . Beohon. Glen 8iOHU .

.. . ......................... 1 ••••••

·-HEATING · .

J&amp;F

DOZER, BACKHOE.
TRENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, 'NATER,
GAS • SEW':R UNES.
RECLAMA'tiC N. PONDS.
SPRING DEVELOPME_NI',
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
• DIRT

I ri":,1 ";:~ :;."'l~r c'~fi;; ---1--t--1--+--i

w'e'd like to infrbduCe·,ou to
Enp&amp;t-A-Car, the modtm way
to ' drive the v1hiele of your
efloiee.
NO DOWN PAYMEN!
. tOWEl MOM!HlY PAYMENT

J----------

uen•·

&amp;4 Mlac.

; INTERESTED IN A
·- NEW.VEHICLE ·

Services

CONTRACTING

At.-

,

1--------Business

ay m. oppfico1kln, catumblo

Goo of Ohio, InC. I rlllll
1 . . - which wou1c1
lte approKimately
17,81i6.400 in oddltion grotO
---ontotol
- e m Rogion and o
- yoot COI1Iiotlng :of tho
~ rilonlht on&lt;ln!J No30, 1884.
of ite "'-tigltlon, tho Com- · . Sid h• ,_,..,.

' .

&amp; Vicinity

Gar•o• sale Wednetdav

Aluminum 1crap. Sell. your
aluminum acr1p direct totM
smelt..-, Buying all gr1~t1 of
You c•n 1lim upfor•ummer.•. aluminum. Premium paid for
AII Natural Wtight ·loaa pro· lerge loads. Calt for quote.
gram can help you loae Scipio Energy , loca1ed 1 'If
10-29 plus pounds in your miles Bllt of Pegetown on
first month or your money To.wn1hip Road 141 . M eig1
bock . Coli now 814 ·7~2· County . 614-992-3466 .
2328 .
· Standing timber. AI Tromm.
NOW OPEN .. Edno'o Tropi- 814-7~2- 2328 .
cal Sunt~n. Galllpoli.- Ferry,
across from Herry Sider~ ' Ba11inet in good cl.. n con·
Jeweler~ .
dition 304-773-6878 .

A
PLUMBING

5-2l-lln

e) the~--:

i'he purpoae of the 1oco1
heoring io to _.m .,._,_
::.:g~':.
. ':o~_ted5~G~._.·,- of · .,_.- compony ' 10-;:of!W
"""' ~ - ·'-lmony, ~ to tho pro:
In the. ~ of tho pOeed incoeeoe. ·
·
· ··
AppiQtion of Columblo G10 181 18, 211. 2tc
of Ohio, Inc .. for on i n . . - in
tho R - to be Chorgod for
Goo Seovico within tho Sou-Region ofite 8anrice
AIM Enco_.ng theCoun·
lioo of Athena, G-. Hoddng.

1 Nam•-------------

I
II

'

Judgo of tho

MEIGS

. Public Notice

o) The

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLST~RY
C(EANERS

4/1/tln

The Pllblic Uti-. Commio·

I .

1
1

0

within 1ix monthl after the 1- --=-:--::---::-:::--Public Notice

·Cu'rl:t lnffation

-II · -.

I
·)

.

lic.,.J~

...... aiiiiipoiiS" ...... .

RENTAL

U:GAL NOTICE

1

11

CH£STER-98S-33D7

.:.. .. 11100
u..,,w....... r~n~..,.. .......................
oo r

Piumbiri&amp; Servite
Weldin&amp;. lowboy Houlinl
Septic Systems

sa\88

Puppie1 to good home, Va Carpenter and helper
German Shepherd 1!2 Border ·needed . Mutt be upe·
Fmanc1al
3 bedroom home, 8'111 per•
Collia. Co11 .814 · 4~6 - 7926 . rienCed in general carpentry.
cent 111umeble loen. gardeo
Apply to The Daily Sentinel.
spot . Reduced down to
St. Rt. 160 North
4 friendly litter trained kit· Box 729C , Pomeroy, 0 .
f49.000 . 304-876-6047.
tens. Call 814-446-2171 .
Gallipolis, Ohio
21
Business
711 1/ll n
Own you r' own Jean Opportunity
3 pup·a. gentle. good with Sporttwear, lldie1 Apparel.
kids . Cal1814-256-1240.
Children• ~ large Size. Com·
bination Store~ Accessorie1.
4 Mescobe duck1. 2 yr. old Jordache. Chic, LH , Levi.
Collie dog, obedient tr1ined, E••Y Street. lzo-d, E1prit.
mo. old femete Collie, both Tomboy . Calvin Klein. Ser·
EXCAYlnNG INC.. Ipruebred
. Call alter 7, 614- gio Valente. Evan Picone.liz
379-2114.
•Oilfield service
Claiborne, Member~ Only,
• landscaping
Organically Grown , Ga1o·
3 kittens, 6 Weeks old, li«er line. Helthtax. Over 1,000
•Basements
trained, while, declawed. others. S7,900 to t24.900
•Land clearing
female cat 3 yr• . old . Call inventory . Training, fiM:tures.
•Ponds
'
614-446-3790 altor 4 .
grand opening , ~tc . Can
•Seplit sy_
stems
open 1 5 ~ey1. Mr . Keenan 22 Money to loan
Homas
32
•Heavy hauling
6 week old male kitten. t305}678·3839. .
for
Sale
•Free estimates
Black &amp; wh'lte, ll1ter trained,
TLC. Coli 614-446- Own your own Jean - HOMEOWNERS •Rolinoncol- - - - - - - - - need
DOIIIOSI
9744 anytime.
Sportlwear, l•die• Apparel, to low fi11ed rete. U1e equity
Offi•• 949-U93
Children•. Large Size. Com- for any purpo11 . Leeder NEW AND USED MOBILE
4 little kitten•. 1 month old, binatiori Store. Acce11oriea, Mongagli Co.. 614-592 - HOMES KESSEL'$ QUALHo- 143-5340
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
'
weened. 2 tig~trs, 2 gray. Jordache. Chic. Lee. Levi. 3051 .
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS,
Coli 614-446 -8264.
Ea1y Street. lzod. Esprit.
RT 35. PHONE 614-446 Tomboy, Calvin Klein. Ser7274.
3 mo old pup1 , h•d 1ome gio Valente, EvMt Picone. Liz 23 Professional
shots . 304-676- t 222.
Sar',tices
Claiborne. Member.: Only,
OupleM: tor pie by owner.
Organically Grown, Gaso·
trailer lower River Rd .
Long_ haired black and tan line, ·HefthteJII;, Over 1,000
kitten , female . 304 -875- others. S7,900 to U4,900 Piano Tuning and Repair. $16,600. Owner will fi&amp;
4.072.
inventory . Tralni~V· fhcture1, Brunicardi Muaic Co ., 614 - nance with downpay_ment.
grand opening, etc. Can 446:0687. TWenti8th year Coli 61~ - 4~11-'2135 t;o•
317 North St&lt;ond
Two 7-week -old female open 1 &amp; days . Mr . Keenan of quality ~ervice . lane tween SAM • 12 Noon.
Utter-trained kitten• to give 1305}678,3639. .
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Doniala, 614-7~2 - 2951 .
Big down payment, shon
awoy. 304-676-5781 .
time
employment, or credit
. SALES &amp; SERVICE
NEW -GI Blll·· Another· be· Water well1 drilled end ser We Alto Carry
3 Killona, 304-675-3734.
nefit for Army National viced . Prices on requtlt . Call hi1torv •topping you from
Fishing Suppllea.
Guard members . You can 614-742-3147 or 614-992 - buying a home? Consider a
reclaimed single or double·
1 female kinen. 1 week• old. receive $140.00 per month, 5006.
wide. *600 down-lake over
Moving Thundey . last in addition to your drill pay,
,~u~~7~~2':'!~~~ chlince,
ptymentl. No charge for
304-675-1141 .
and
1till
•ttend
1chool
.
Call
PIANO TUNING AND RE - dalivory. lnt.,oatodl (8141
II!IOINCE PHONI
304· 676-3960 or 1-800· PAIR , Summer rate1 in
t6141 9U-7754
772-1220 or i614) 773Puppie•. phone 304-676 · 642-3619.
effect · free estim•tet . 3926.
I I&lt;'? l il t
2991 .
Word's Keyboard. 304-875Cabel TV installer service 5500 or 676· 3824.
tech . Send resume to P.O. 1 - - - - - -- - - - 1981 12M:60 office trailer.
central air-he•t. five room1.
SOx ~7 .- G:tllippclis.. Ferr.y ,
tloureacent· lighti-ng~
25516. . ~ .
.•. $6,900. Coli 814· 446 ·
Rea l Eslale
8118 or 614·448·0019 .
Reliable p·er~o'n to baby 1it in
my home 40 hrs . wk. Send
1973 Ariinglon 12•60. with
CLINIC
6 Lost and Found
name and ret. to Bo• C-12 31 Homes for Sale
12x 18 1dd-on, underpin~
cere
of
Pt
.
Pl
.
Register.Pt.
Pl
.
IN MIDDLEPOIT
ning. stove. new carpet,
PAUL E. SHOCKEY. D.V.M.
$6 ,000. Cell 614· 446·
Lost: Reward for any infor- Mature responsible person Fl.t wood orea in Pomeroy 7060
.·
OPEN EACH
matiOn concerning black to care for 2 tchool age for br., FR. BN ceiling, vinyl
•_,·ldron . Must have expe- sidir\g, aluminum window. 1- - -- - - - - - female
Englith
Cocker
Spa·
C
THURS. EVE. 6-8
"
Cameron, will sell
Roloroncoa required. 17 A. availa ble. Ca 11 614 - 1973
·
niel. Mi11ing since 6 -2-85. rl'onco.
Some white on noes, throat' Call 6 to 9 P.m. 304-676· _4_4_&amp;_-2_3_5_9_. - - - - - furnished or untumished.
Air cond .. washer·dryet .
PT: PLEASANT OFFICE &amp;. ch81t, very shy. C1ll
1
7879.
3 or 4 bdr., 3 bath, tam. rm .. new underpinning, blockl.
6,-4-388-9790
or
61
~-388
·
3305 JACKSON AYE.
· 448-~073 or 61~· ·
8720.
t - LR . DR , 2 cor garage. CA. Call
4411 814
4935
Middle-aged or senior cII
SMAll ANIMAl HOURS
zen ro work in downtown Jay Dr. Call614 · ~46-~307.
·
·
Monday l p.m.-5 p.lli..
Found: 2 Beagle pup•. tri- . Point Pleuant oHic:e 3 ~our1
1983
Jay
Skyliner 2 bdr .•
Tu...toy o,)O p.m.·l p.m.
colored male, .area Rt . 664. per day lp re I er some typ e Step up-lere 4 bdr. fabulous
b
h
completoly
turni1hed
opl
WectnHdcry 3 p.m.-S p.m.
tl Y home. 3.000 sq .fl .. 3 at a, bfldrooms. ceiJing fanexc_
·
Coli 6 14· 388 -8720.
oI tice expenence
.· Mos
, AC .
Thursday 3 p.m.-5 p.m.
1
ed
2
fireplacea:
Va
acre.
&amp;
more
.
k
I
h
te ep one wor 1nvo v ·
IIO"O, rofrig., completelw
•
•
Frldor 1 p.m.-! • ·'"·
Lost: black Angus croiS Cal 1614 . 992 . 3283 aII wee· t55 ,000 . Reduced a~to undorpo'nned.
· 8• t 0 utilitv"
Saturday 10 o.m.-l11lO a.m.
·
842.000
.
.
Aa1umable
n.
heifer. All bleck with orange kend or even~ng1
.
Coli 614-448-7019 or 2!6 - bu•'ido' ng, washer &amp; drter,
LARGE ANIMAlS AND '
ear tag. lost in Cherry
·536-8429
. ·
tot•l 1iec1ric, setting on
Ridge-Sumner Rd . area, Waste Water Treatment
SURGERY IY APPOiNTMENT
lerge rented private lot. can
about 1 month ego . Call Plant Operator for Lakin
. 304-675·2441' '
If ld c 11 614 - 44•v 61~·986· ~·54.
Hospital, Lakin WV. MUlt 3 '-....tr
~.A~ . house, Green School , stay
7200 10 · I
~--r-.!£:::!!!!.!, 1
po..eu current wv licen1e. extra lot, fini1hed buement. !- --·- - - -- - S OVED
Lost in Horae Calve area. Employment covered under 2 car gar~ge . 855,000. Call
614 -448· 3040 .
MOBILE HOME M
. ..
Srflilll female. tri-colored WV Civil S•rvice. EM:tel\liVt I ---~~---Insured , 20 years upa- .
Beagle. Wa1 wearing coll•r benefits. Cont•ct Per1onnel
·
304
676
2866
•
or
1978 2 bdr - mobile home, nence.
with name plete. Call ~14· Office at lakin .Holpital or total
'electric. air cond .. uc . 676-2998.
• ..
!149-2171 :
phone 304-875 -3230 Eo!. cond. Call 61~. 268-6460 . ,
26~Tire of looking et run down,_
Lost •mall 'tri.:color dog, n_ear
·
II'
Merri HOul8 for 1ale. owner mu11 uted MH. like N1w ·n ..
Trollic Cricle, 82 N. 30.4 - 4
. openongs u mg
soiL Call 814 · 4~11-0276 .
Oakwood. 12x66 3 bt bath
. 1176·2136.
Mac 1 1()0 percent guartn•nd helf $9700. YOu can
tM:d line of gifts. toys .· home
on rented lot .
1
t Porter, Ohio . 6 room hou• move· or r·ve
h
FOUND male, mo1tly tan
decor,
your
ours.
no
lnVBI.·
on
l.
o
t.
Garden
rpot,
good
1
-3
0
_
~
_-_
s
_
o_
s_
J
.
_
---long-haired dog with collar mant, 304 - 675 - ~758 or 1-·
church 6
and- chain apiral stick:.' 800· 563-9077. Booking !locotl~n
little repeir, -1 974 14x70 trailer 3 br , ·
Mloaeo lto. lomiiy. 30~ · 875· home. and catalOg parties.
ideal
for
retii'~
couple or aom~ opp. $4800. lot 18,
3230. ext. 306 or 304.- 876Federal. StatB and Civil
young family. good neigh - (:omp Conley. Rt. 1, Pt . Pl.
6418.
now available in yOur aree. borhood . $13 ,500. Call WV. Iotter 6 pm 304-676·
7871 . Owner leaving at•le
Call l -6t9 -665 -1522 lor 614· 388-9031 .
must 1eU immed .
wanted
Buy
information 24 hourt.
2 br trailer , .will trede for 3
We pay c11h for latl!t model
room cemper . 304·676 12 ,Situations
'Clean used car~ .
8620 .
Jim Mink Chev,-Oidolnc.
Wanted
. Bill Gene JohnOOI\
1114-446·3·72
Farms .l or Sale
33

atssiUtd

•ZENITH
1.e... of f'IIMIII l..W"' ..,__,

Grapefruh:
Combo
at
weight -PPH
with
New
Fruth Ph1rmecy. Jackson
Pike.

AUTO

6/ 3/lmo.

TllfNCifi; IS 0111 IN
Trenching Of Any TyJII
Dozer &amp; Backhoe Servtce

Buying daily gold, 1ilver
coins. ring•. iawelry, sterling
ware, old coins. large currency. Top prlce1. Ed. Bur·
kett '•rber Shop. 2nd . Av,,
Middleport. Oh . 614 -892·
3476.

Kittens to good home, 2
yellow, 4 black. Call 614387-7116.

"We R111 F~t lm"

Ill C.111r1St., '-roy, OM 457"

WE 'liRE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

Control hunger and 1011

Wanted To Buy

dealer. No
i1 an alternative to Watkin•
·
E expe
26 ·
r~ence necenary.
arn
·
ebortion . frofeuional cou · 60%. Product• for 1ale. also
ple, unabletohevebeby. will B kl
·
rig 4•11
t ..tmg
provide much wented infant c roo
11 814
3316 parties .
8
·
• ~
· -with lov1ng
home and· fam· 1' - - - - •- - ·; L
h1
C 11 1Y· et u1 e P you . •
Greenhoun A11lstant Part
collacl 1914}332· 4088, ov· rime t16-24 hourat por
ening1. anytime weekends. week . fleM:ible schedule .
Prior greenhouse eM:perience .
legal. confidential.
required . Salary depending
on experience. Cal 16144
Giveaway
266-1428 1· 5PM only .

5/ 9/ 2 mo . pd .

Mobile Home
Heating &amp; Cooling

9

Adop~ion

Ph. (6141 843-5425

BENNETT'S
ENVIRONMENTAL
SYSTEMS

Rt. 124,Pameroy Olrio

.

992-6215 or 992-73t4

1/11/rfn

PH. 667-6535
or 915-4353

1·3-rfc

- Roofing 1nd gutter work

, - Concrete wort~
- Plumbing •nd eleot_riul
work
j Free Eltimates)

3 Announcements

Trim oH pounda with Oo·
B••• Oupefruit Extra
Strength Cap1ul81. Fruth
.Pharmacy, Middlepon.

- Addon• and remod•ling

PH. 9ot9·2801
or 949-2160
No Sunday Calls

3/2/Hn

Service

CARPENTER
SERVICE ·

"Free Eatimatao"

992-3345 .

Well

BOGGS

New Homes Built

lusintss ferms,
(Ofl' S.rric01, Etc.
U5 Milt st. Mlokll_.t ·
I04 Mutlltrrr ••· ,_,.,

*Myers Pumps

"Free Estimates"
lnstallaliGn AYailable
4/ IHn

PHONE
992-2156
Or
StttiiMe
Dtft,
Writt Dlllr

,,; All ~H; '"••lllfll

SHADE RIVER
DRILLING

YOUNG'S

•ALUMINUM SIDING
0 ILOWN IN
INSUlA nON

PIINt SHOP

Formerly Hoaton·
Drilling Co.
•Water &amp; Gas

742-2027

Mrs. Clyde Walker to MarysviUe
where they attended the w~dlng or.
Mr. Dyp's grandson, David Irwin,.
son of Cecia Dye Irwin.
Members of the United Methodist
Womenof'l'empleUnitedMethodist '
Church met rerently at.the borne of
Mrs. Arthur Crabtree. Plans were
completed for the vacation Bible
schooltobeheldJuly8-12.Devotions
were given by Kathy Jordan.
·

FUIII
P1rte

The Daily Sentinel

Sawetl _l

Middleport; Jerry and Arlene
Collins and Carrie Lou, Middleport,
Diana Boyd, Middleport . LuciUe
Murray and Gene, Rutland, and
Dorothy and John Bryan, Middleport. Brenda Darst, Pomeroy, sent
a gift tQ M rs. Scarberry.

PH. 992·6931

',/
Carol Lynn Lyon5,JormerofRock Real Estate, Inc. Lyons isalsoahalr
Springs, now residing in Kansas designer and currently working
City, Mo. hascomplPtedand passed witJI 12 otheroperatorsatLordsand
the Missouri R ea l Estate - Lady's Hair Designers, Inc. in
examination.
,
Kansas Clty. She is married to
She received her training at the Leonard Lyons and they have four
Career Education Sustems and has children. She ls ·the daughter ol
ac
ted em oymentwith Re-Max Glenna Fruth, !'.!ason, W.Va .

Classlfleds and

Letart, W.Va.; Dennis and Jackie
Scarberry, Allen a~d Teresa, Leon,
W.Va.; Harold and Dottle Scarberry, J.R. and Heather Davis,

FENCE &amp; SUPPLY

a/
L1/0ns certi"'ied
in re. estate
'1'

,
'
A reunion oft he Scarberry family 1
I
was held Sunday atthe Mason Park. 1
Also observed was the birthday of . 1
Frances ScarberrY. A decorated 1
cake was S£&gt;1Ved and she was 1
prese!lted wlth gifts.
I
Attending were Vlnreht and I Wrile your own ad .and_order by mail with lflls
Louise Laudermllt, Vincent Jr., I coupon. cancel vour ld by phone wnen vou get
Bronson and Francine, Pomeroy;
I resull5. Money notreful'dablt!. ,
Harold and Darlene Cunningham, I

Ger· 1ach·. reu.nton ·· eld·

.. Fifty-four desrendants of John
and Dorothea Gerlach met for t~ir
annual family reunion at the Mason
County Fairgrounds on June 2.'
Marshall Fowler of Morgantown
gave the opening prayer which was
followed by tlje usual picnic dinner
and a brief business arid news
exchange program with Mike
Gerlach of Middleport, acting as

u.s.

daughter-In-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Dwaine Jordan and Sarah, were In
Sprlnglleid to attend the 25th
wedding · anniversary celebration
for Mr. and Mrs. L8rry Rutherford.
Larry is the nephew of Mrs. Mendal
Jord'" and a grandson of Mrs.
Vesta Canode or the Point Rock
a rea.
Murl Galaway, Dale Dye, and
Madge Dye, accompanied Mr. a'n d.

Ohio

3 Announcement•
SWEEPER ond oewlng me·
ch'lne ..,pair;·- pari:a, and
oupottn . · ~lck -up on.d
daUv•ty, Davia Y•cuum
· Cleo...,, one hoH. "''"' up
Georges c;r.- Rd.. C.olt
11~4-446·.0294.

�Page 8-The

Sentinel

36 Lots &amp; Acreage

isc.
Merchandise
.
.

LAFF-A-DAY

OUNii . 700- Rom . 243 .
870-Rom. 12 go. 1100
Rom. 1 2 go. Rod Howk 44
maig. Co111114-387-0482

3 16: acre lot, poeaible owner

financing . Coli 814-3792841 or 114-448-7105.

A:t cott new White' s metal
detectore eelllng out. Al1o
model 19 S • W 367 mog.
Coli 81 4·448-0548 .

Bear Aun Ad. 220 ft . fran·
tage,lover Yr acreJ overlooking Raccoon Creek. 1870
1 2xl50 mobile home. PriCe
nogotlabla. Coli 814-2581577.

Lawn mower1, good quality
uMd. Franll'a Pawn Shop.
430 Second AVo .. Gollipollo, Oh. 1\14-446·0840.

2'A! ton central eir conditioner. New compre11or,
novor run. f400 . Call 814992-6437.

41

Hause• for Re"t

3wt]ael bicyCle for sale. Alao
a biCycle motor. Can be used
on 1 2 or 3 wheel bicycle or

7 room houH junction Hannan Trece • Rt. 7 ·•• Swan

Cr-. J .D. Pollitt. Call
304-122-3221 or814-25~­
lllil7.
5 rm. hou .., 926 Flrtt Ave.
Call814-448-3946 .
Neat four room houte and

..

,
.•
"Our computer tells me
you've still got $129.78 you
haven't spent!"

on a boilt. Will tell chaap.
Can tee it after 4pm evep·
inga. 22'4 Condor St. Pomeroy,O.
·
Canoe. piano, tri-door refrigerator, electric range,
wicker fUrniture. Call 614992-7143 otter 6pm.

both In Middleport; cor. peted. major kitchen apFirewood *~0 . 00 pickup
pliance•. dining aet pro- ' - - - - - - - - - - - r - - - - - - - - - - - l l o a d; e3o.oo delivered. Coli
vided. Garage. Ideal for r
304-875 -6782 or 876 tingle or couple; sorry no
2?9) .
petl or children. I 1 815 a

month plut aecuritv depoalt.
Phone Hoeflich. 814, 9926292 altor 5.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

44

June 18. 1986

Ohio

Apartment
for Rent

61 Household Goods

7401'1 2n•. Avo.. 3 bdr ..
e190 mo .. clap. raq. Call
81 +448-41147 or 814-44114222 b o l - 9AM-IiPM. -

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE
82 Olive Sl .. Golllpollo. Now
• ulld wood-call ltovea, 8
pc wood LR oulto e399.
bunk beda *199. entron
recliner• *99, new Ia und
bedroom euitee. rerige1,
wringer wa1her1, • lhCHtl .
New llvlngroom suite•
•199-e&amp;99, Iampo, oloo
buying Coal A wood 1tove1.
Coli 814-448-3159.

2 bdr. lurniohod. 811 utHitol
pd .. el'!'.cept ele~t ., convenient locetion, 1ecurity depOiit .r euqired. Call ~14· 448·
81168 .

3 bdr. n-ly romodoled,
duplex: 844 or 841 Second
Ava., utility room, kitchen,
dlnlngroom. Coli 814-448.8283.

· New 2 bdr. •II elecwicacrou from hotpital. Oep-

New 2 bdr. 1pt., refrig. &amp;
atove furniehed . 41ft miles
ffom Gellipolil. $22151 mo.
plul electric. depoeit a
reference required. No pet•.
Call 814-448-8038.

66

Pets for Sale

------

Trained Beegle1. male end
lomole. Aloo 7. Boogie pupo.
Coll814-742-21i21..

1985 St1rcreft Star Matter
I , pop· up. Slme 11 new.
UN~ 2 times. ·""'st HH at
once to .nttltl e.tate. Electric, refrig., heater, gae•tove,
Ill Optlonl, t3, 200 firm.
Coot over t4.900 now. Coli
814-446-1841. oerlouo inqulroo only ofter II. 814448-8172.

Fith Tank and Pet Shop.
2413 Jackson Avenue.
Point Ple..ant., 304·176·
2063. Filh, birdt end more.

1971 Winnebago 26ft. fully
contained, . generator. air,
cond, $7,5,00. Call
114-317-0447.

2 AKC Rog. PokOneoe pupP'-•· 1 m•le, 1 female. Call.
614-2&amp;6-9391 .

Moll\ riA Kg M£ TA~ ASAlH!

\

.Musical _
Instruments

Write
Menager:
P.O..
Box 33Credit
Frlodono,
Pa. 1111141
Clerinet and c11e in good
ohope, $160. 304-8755781 .

6 otrlngot*onjo, like now,
f300. Call 304-675 -5393
after 4 .

One 8x20 alum. awning,
8x34 alum. ewnlng. 304·
875-3000.

58

Tony't Gun Repairl, hot dip
reblueing. all type 10f gunt·
mlth. .work fait service.
304:1176-4831.

Strewberrie1. · Pick your
own. CIIUdl Wintert. c.n
614-245-6121 .

Fruit

/

))

Home
Improvements

7:00

r'------------,-------~---1 - - - - - - - - --

64

Hay &amp; ~rein

72

Marcum Roofing A Spouting,, Now inttelling rubber
roofs. 30 yeer1 experience ,
apecializlng ln bt.!ilt up roof.
Call 114· 388-9857.

Trucks-for Sale

AHolfo · hay, wire bolod, l984 Ford F150 pickup . PS,
never wet . Coli 814·211- PB. AC. AM' FM C11oetto.
2331 or 814-228-2094 al- topper, aliding rear wlndow.
18,000 mllu. Excallont
tar 7PM .
condition . Cal 814-9928607.

&amp; Vegetables

Strawberries. Rou1h'1 at
Union Campground (ba,:k of
New t;laven, WVa) 1 ,200
qta. of good jam berriea. You
pick 40 cant• qt. No SUnday
ooloo . Coil 1- 304-882 2237.

({

S1:rV1CPS

81

8:30

Tr ,111, po r Lil i 1111

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditioflal lifetime guarentH. Local references
fumithed . Free eatimetet;
Coli collect 1 -814-2370488, day or ni_g ht . R:ogera1
Ba•ment Weterproofing.

1970 Dodgo truck. 4 opead.
new muffler. new king pinl
a~d tire rode. Heavy duty

71

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH paid lor '80
mOdel and newer used cara .
Smith Bulck-Pontioc. 1911
Eattern Avo .. Gallipollo. Call
814-448 -2282: .

ouopanolon . •460. 814992-2429.

7:30

Tabor Upholatery . For reupholatering. free. e1timate1.
Free pie,kup S. deliv,e ry. Cell
614-379-2860.

19715 Chevy truck. '12: ton.
Rune very good, eome ru".r.
eeoo. Call 814-992-6437.

D.end M. Contrectora . Vinyl
a ·ack hoe 1972 Cite
aiding, replacement win;~~-!411~J:io'7~ peto. Coli
•n.ooo. Chevy dump
1974 Ford Ranchero truck.
dOWI, in1Ulatlng, roofing,
(..AYNE'S FURNITURE
19112 2Yz. ton e1.000. _low
Good mOtor, tirea. Body
Sofaaend
chaira
priced
from
·
Boy
S'500.00.
304-678bodly ruoted . 81 4-U2- new end remodeling, con2 bdr. eppliancee furniahed,
~reto. C.oll 304-773-6131 .
U85.
to
t895.
Tobleo,
UO
2321.
1981
Ronault62.000miloo.
8864.
1 Yt mi . from town. lerge tot. Efficiency opt whh gorege. 1nd up to t12t5. Hide-aneed•. aome work . Cell
e176 mo. pluodopooll.rol.
All type• of maaonry. bricfct,
814-245-6288.
Call 614-446-2238 or 814- private yard meintained. bado,e 390. end up to John Deere modol40 dozer,
blockt, concrete. •tone .
leaH
required.
t221i
mo.
fli50
..
aote
bodo
e1411.
e1800.
304-875-7768.
44~ - 2581 .
FrM eetimate. Call Roger at
Vans &amp; 4 W.O .
1974 BMW 2002 119.000 · 73
weter included, wether &amp; Rocllnoro. *225. to . U76..
304-773-6127.
dryer
hookup.
Call
814from
US.
to
e1211.
1982
mi&gt;dol
..
...,USTANG"
mlleo.
f1.800
.
Coli
814-.
Lempo
2 bdr , mobile home. totei 448 -72(!9 or 1114-4411- pc. dinettes from •1 09 .• to 2-horae .t endem trailer. ht .
388-8720. ~
1977 OMC Vanduro with
elej:trlc, odulto only. no pato. 3287.
4311. 1 pc. • 189 end up. 78", atoll width, 38". Good
·
Midaa interior. excellent me- RON'S Televi1ion Service.
TV. cable available. Call
Wood toblo wilh ol• choiro condition. Coli 304-876- 61 Farm Equipment
74 Gremlin For ulo. Coli chonicol condlllon , high Houa calla on RCA. Quazer.
1114-387-7438.
1- - - - - - " - - - - 814-448-2108.
1 bdr. fumiahed or unfur- UBI lo e746. Dolk · e110 4187.
mHMge· r.cent •F!ginewortt. GE . Speclollng ln. ~enith .' ,
CROSS.
S'
O
NS
nllhod,
utllltiN
,PIId.
•
1
90
to
U26.
Hulchlo.
e&amp;&amp;O.
·
--~------­
up
Call 814-446-80911 otter Coli 304-578-2398 or 11142 bdr. treiler *160 mo . Plu• per mo.. e5o dop.. no Bunk boid complete with
448-2464.
1978 Chl•rolet Malibu oto- II PM.
U.S
.
36
Woot,
Jackoon,
Gold
carpeting,
12x24,
~pool! . 3 bdr. troller t176
tion. re•l. reliable Car. C•ll
mattrooHo,
e276.
ond
up
to
614-288-8461.
Ohio.
children.
no
petl.
Collf!1412x
1
2.
4x
18
feet.
excellent
mo. plus depo1it. Both fur·
Fetty Tree Trimming, etum17J
814-448-3271 otter IIPM.
U95. Blby bods, t1 10. condition. *260. See on
' Malley Fergueon, New
448-34187 oltor 5.
nie)ted, not in p•rk. but In
romovol. - Coli 304 -876-Menre1111
or
box
apringa.
Holland,
Buth
Hog
Sal••
&amp;:
floor,
304-676-4370.
1g15
Ford
Econ
Uno
Von
country, on Raccoon Rd,
Service. Over 40 uted
1989 Bola 1!1111· many now 150, mileage 085610 ond 1331 .
2 bdr. ept. with lull or twln•. ns .. firm. e88.
juet off Rt. 218. Cell any- Attractive
porto, e700. Cell 814-448- take over paymenta. For
tractort to chooae from a
refrig. • atove, carpeted. LA and e78. Queen oeto, f225. SeteiUte Spun aluminum or
tin\e 814-448-8397.
3378.
complete lihe, of new It ·
II DR, conv.nient to Galli· 4 dr. choolo, •49. li dr. meoh . Sove up to esoo on
lnlormotlon call 304-1175- RINGLES'S SERVICE, experienced ca~nter, electri-·
che1t1, tl59. Bed fr111m8t, lheoe dloheo thru July. Pre
u1ed equipment. Llrgett
polio.
olltolde
otorego.
Whh
11393 •Iter 4.
MOdern,. 2 bedroom a, ex:
cian.
m11on, peinter, roof~
1981
Chevrolet
Mollbu
UO.Imd
Ull
..
10
gun
Gun
telection
in
S.E.
Ohio.
lite checked. Authorized
woohor • dryer, Ull~ mo ..
terided Uvingroom, S230 wlthoul
'ing (including hot · ter 1
Cle11ic, 4 dr., auto~ V·l.
coblneto,
UIIO.
G11
or
'250.
mo.
Call
Drake
dealer
,
304a675
mo .. f100 deposit. Soe 314
opplicotlon) 304-175-2068
'
electric rengoo U76. Boby 4173.
340 International tractor wlro whHio, f3,550. 1178 74 Motor.:ycles
3rd.. Kanougo. Coli 614- 814-240-869&amp;.
or 875-7388.
Camero, red, auto. I cyt.,
mottreoHo.
*26
•
U6,
bod
PS.
live
power.
with
mower.
44,11-7473.
Rlvorolde Apto. Mlcidloport. tromea no. Ull, • e3o, Seert 11nd filter end pump 3 bohow plows, draw bar. 67.000 act. mileo. f1.51i0.
Rotery or ceble.tool drilling .
SpeCIAl ratea for Senior king frame •so. Good telec· for above . ground pool. 3 12,595. Call 614-286- Cell 114-288-2394 alter
On prlvotolot. totololoct .. 2 Cltlrona.
1 984 Honda ATV 3 wheel8r Moll wello completed Hmo
5PM.
tion of bedroom eulte1. yooro-old, phone 304-676- 6522 .
*130.
Equol
Houo·
bdt. mobile home. 11'1 bath. ing _Opport.unitlea. 614- rockert, metel cebine.tt, 1889.
w.. h back r•ck, good tiret, day. Pump ule1 and Hr~i­
AC, carpet, on•teitthl mile 992-7721 .
haodboordo
t38
•
up
lo
3000 Ford die1el tractor like 1974 Pontiac Cotalino, 4 g - cond., f800. Coli coo. 304-895-3802.
on lincoln Pille of Rt. 141 .
f86.
new, Altl1 Chalmber mOwer dr.. e100 nogotioblo. Call 814-379-2181 or$14-379ihc4rity dep. required . Coli 2 bedroom apartmenu .
2870.
Sterk• Tree end Lawn Ser66
Building
Supplies
•
Ford hoy baler. e4.4495: 814-448-4123.
814-4411-43()3.
vice, ' atump removal,· 304·
New Havon. WVa. Newly U11d Furniture ·· RefrigeraCall614-286-8.6 22.
1882 Chevotto. AC. PS. P8, 1983 480 Hondo ox. ohape, ' 578-2010.
remodeled. In town. &amp;14- tore, rangn, metal Of1ice
On prlveto lot, 2 bdr. lur- 992-7481
.
auto
.. 4 dr .. 39.000 mileo, never reced. Cell 61 4 ·387~lectrlc _r•!"te· 3 miles
d1ik1.
.
New
1d••
mower
1296.
hay
1
B~:tUding .Ma~terials
nio,.od mobllt :home, AC,
•3.21!0.
- 1 9ti2 Chevetto, 4 0594-alter -.PM .
Mr. ~d'i Speedy W11h. high
out
BulivH!e
Ad
.
Operi
98m
wegon
1295,
9
ft.
hey
bine
Block. · brick. sewer pipet,
carpet. encloeed patio. one-1 1 bedroom .apt. for rent. to &amp;pm, Mon. thru Sat.
preeaure cleaning. liquid
4
opd.,
49.000 miloo,
dr.
,
1796
.
FreeMen
loader
windowt,
lintel1,
etc
.
tenthl mile on Lincoln Pike Nicely located. Contact Vii- 81 4-4411·0322
U,800 . 1981 Chevotto 1974 ' Herley Davidson sand blalting . Mobile
Claude Wintere, Rio Grande, $350. Coli 814-2811-11122.
of ' Rt. 141. Security dop. logo
auto,
elr. 43.000 mlle1, Sporttter, lote of· eliltl"'l, homea. building•. truck•.
Monor
in
Middleport.
required . Cell 614- 441· 814-192-7787. Equal GOOD USED APPLIANCES ·0. Cellll14·245-6121.
700.
Call · 1114-379- f1 , 700. Coli 814- 245- heavy equiPment , poola.
New 6 ton heavydutyunited
43,03.
6610.
parkif'g ereu, boate. EdW•shera, dryera, refrilera- Builder's Surplui-Salvage farm w'agon running geart, 2882.
Houolng Q_pportunhy.
ward Onterreicher, 304toro, rongoo. Skogga Ap- Cloaeouta. (11 Embolled $379;95 . Milley Ferguton
Trell• for rent. Cell aftltr 2 bedroom lumlobod opt. in plloncOI, Upper River Rd.
875-7238 or 1175-1357.
wood grain eluminum aid· bile loader 1260. Call 814- 1973 2 dr .. Pontiac Vent~ro, Go-cert ex . ahepe, 12~&amp; .
4PM. 114-448-4225.
Middleport. All utilitie1 paid. belide Stone Creat Motel.
63,000 mi.-, PS. good tlret, Call814-388·8373.
to·e m backed, twin 4 ' ' or , _2_8_6-_&amp;_5_2_2_._ _ _ _ __
Coli 1114-992-5084 otter 814-448-7398 .
new cerpet. no rult. 1400.
pattern. 'U9.96 oq . (21 ,.
Modern 2 bdr.. extended
1980 Honda CDIOO. Shalt 82
Plumbing
Call 814-.388·9869.
5
:00pm.
woolcdoyt.
1--:--------Twin
rib
white
metal
rotting
Ford
601
mower,
$600,
llvlngroom. e230mo .. f100
drive, .., Mlepenekln. 'rfced
County Appliance, Inc. or 1iding 38" wide a· thru ~erv goO~ condition. C1ll
&amp;
Heating
depooil. See 314 3rd. St .. 3 bedroom furni8hed 1pert· Good uMd appliance• end
·
1978
Cutillo
Supremo
;l- to Hll. 814-992-8710.
18'
lengtho,
141
.96
oq.
(3)
814-388-9688.
Kanougo, Oh. Call81 4-4411- ment for rent In Syracuae. TV eeta. Open BAM to 6PM.
tone maroon. loaded.
Steel inaulated prehung
7473.
814-992-71189 otter 5pm.
Mon thru Sol. 814-448- door'a 111 size• end petterna. 1976 120 M111ay Ferguton 79,000 mil••· e3.300 firm. 1978 7&amp;0 Honda motorcyCARTER'S PLUMBING
cl•. Excellent condition.
1898, 827 3rd. Ave. Galli- $75.00 • up. (4) Hollow sctuare bile h•y baler: Excel· Call 814-245-9498. ·
AND HEATING
2 br mobile home in WV
1_
860.
Alter
8pm
call
814pollo,
!)H.
bedroom .. unfumiahed.
core end 6 panel wood lent condi1ion, 82.400. Call
·Cor·. FOurth end -Pint .
Pork. ·f17B • month e126._ One
985-38118
.
.
.
.
.
cerpeted, totelelectric. Cell 1- ------:...,.....,..._..:.
1979 Olde C:u.t leN S.u p;eme
__
Golllpollo, Ohio .'
,.
depoeit, reference require~. &amp;14-992-2094.
prhung d""''' 120:00 • !JP' 6!4-643-2141 .
· Valley Furniture, new &amp;: (6)
Brougham . . n.e w·-tlrei, air,
4'x8'x5-32
iNood
panel'
PJ&gt;ono
814·448-3888.0
or
·
no peto. 304-876-3000.
1'9.79
·vomoho
'
1
1
OOXS
uaed. large •ection of qual- lng. $4.99 • up.
H F8rr11ili1 ··tr.e ctor 'tor Saie. ;crUitil, dlt, ' exc: con'd. Call,
614-441-4477
APARTMENTS. mobile lty furniture. 1218 Eaoilern Welloton, Oh.
814-448-4073 or 814 -448- completely drooled, oteroo.
Coli 814-949-211&amp;8 .
nice rood bike. 304-875homet, hou"•· Pt. PleiHnt Ave .. Gellipolla.
· Penn'a Warehouae
4835.
JIM'S PLUMBING. HEAT4338.
end Galllpollo. 114-448 Pole
Buildings
Conetructed
&lt;14 Apartment
614-384-3845.
ING. Rt . 1. Bo• 365, Gtlli8221
.
Why
pay
moro7
Chock
uo
1980
VW
Rabbit.
2
door
fo~
commerciel,
geraget,
for Rent
pollo . Call 614-387 -0676.
out. N~ furniture. appliln· Block, brick, mortar and farm. ttorea. etc . Any sire, with AC. moon roof, AM· 83 Honda Shadow 2.100
3 large room• and bath, Cll ou,let. Treda Center, maaonry auppllel. MOuntain free eatimatet. Cell 304- FM. 4 tpeed, black. S3,000 milet. Exc. cond. pluaacceeor boot offer. Coll304-882· torieo. 304-678-2138.
Jefferson Avenue. Point Kaneugo. Oh. Col 814-448- Stilto Block, Rt. 33, Now _6_7_5-_3_9_8_1_._ _ _ _ __
83 Excavating
1
Ple111nt. Adultt, no pete: 7444.
2811.
Hoven.
W.
Va.
304-882·
,.
JACKSON ESTATES 304-8711-3052.
3
wheeler
motorcycles,
Farmal H uactor $700.
2222.
APARTMENTS (Equol
1973 Ford Pinto Squire 1983 ATC-110 tor _eaoo
Special Mwing mechine ule
304-676-2376.
Houting Opportunity)
Good-1 Excaveting. bile60% all Necchi •wing meatotlonwogon . Aulomotlc. and 1878 ATC-70 for e300.
monthly rent atana et S189 46 Furnished Rooms chino. Muot bo oold by Aug.
manti, footers. dri~eways.
..
runo
good.
oacellont
Cell
304-1176-31131.
A.C
66 . Pets for Sa'le
for i bedroom and e204 lor
1eptic
tanJca. landecaping .
11th. Tradaln occopled . Call
Livestock
gu miloogo . 1580. 1980
2 bedroom, dapooit f200.
Coli anytime 814-448collact. 814-386-8026.
Oldt
CuHo11lS.
P.S
.,
P.B
..
1''7
B
'
d
For
ronl
Sleeping
Rooma
located ,.., Spring Valley
6
41537, Jamea L. Davl1on, Jr .
A. C., oxcollont condition.
oats en
'
Plaza end Foodland. pool and light houte keeping Pale green velvet chelr. exc. HILLCREST KENNELS
owner.
Call 814-949-2558.
Motors for Sale
rooms. Perk Central Hotel.
Boerding 111 breeda. Heated Reg . Morgan stallion &amp; filly
ond Coblo TV evollable,
cond. Cell 614-448-4303.
Coli 814-448:0758.
indoor-outdoor fecilitiea . for aale or trede . Cell 614- 1973 Chlv. Malibu, 2 door.
houn aa posaible 10 am to 4
Dozer Work land clearing.
379-2585.
pm end 7 · pm to 9 pm
landaoa,:tlng. etc. Free eatlCountry 01k tablea, chalra, AKC Dobermen puppiea:
350
engine.
Harry
Bollay.
Furniahed
room,
renge,
re18ft.
flberglooo
boot.
t111Uor,
Mondoy-Frldoy, Coli 814motn. Coli 114-448-8038
cupboerdt, dePa,ice boktl. Stud Sorvjca. Coll814-448- 2 re!Jioterod bullo lor ule. 1 128 E. M.., St.. Pomaroy. 71 HP' mOior, fliOO. Call
4411 - 27411 or leovo lrig. •85. oharo beth, olngle Conkloa. Tuppero Plaint, Rt. 7796.
or
514-892-71 19 onytOne.
Price
reduced.
·
mole. 919 2nd. AVo .. OalllTwelve and fourteen months
814-379-2702me••ISJI·
polio. Coli 448-4418 otter 7. Hand croltod and Briarpatch Kennels Profea- old. Citll 614-985-4454.
llnlohed.
lionat All:.breed grooming.
Nicely furni•hed mobile BPM .
84
Electrical
For aale 4 regiatered polled
home. eH. apt .. centrel air
7' piece living room tuite. Indoor-outdoor boarding fe- Hereford bulls.• 15 to 20
&amp; Refrigeration
and heat in city. adultt only. 46 Space for Rent
Perfect condition. Ruatic t:ilitiea. En"li•h Cocker Spa· m.o ntho old . 304-&amp;75niel puppieo. Coli 614·388•
CaH 114-448-0338.
look. Coli 814-985-3610.
1888. '
9790.
S~WING Mochine repoiro.
Fumiobod lfllclency 701
aervice.
Authorized Singer
Mobile
home
lot.
12'x50'
or
4th Ave .• Gallipollo. f110.
Sel•• • Service Sharpen '
amollor, f75 wttor pold. 4th ~4 Misc. Merchandise
utlllloo peld, ohare beth.
Scie10r1. Fabric Shop,
eduho. Coli 446-4418 otter • Noll, Gallipollo. Coli 448Pomeroy. 814-992-2284.
4418
otter
8PM.
9PM.
.

.:&lt;.

lfAHA! TRY
TO TAHE ME

WHY MOT! THE Ot.CI IIWI'6 ·
lOSIN(i Hl6 T{)(JCif!. AHCI 'JEN(lING YOU TliO COMICS 'TO TAiiE
liE OUT PROVES iT!

FOA A AICIE.
l'llll VOU?!

8:00

ALLEYOOP
OR TI4ROW
·THEM BOTH

I)) liD Jefforoon•
George uses his granddaughter as e means to win
the dry cleaning wo rld't
' Men of the Year' award.
IRI
I))
MoaNeilllehror
Newahour
1Il1 Nova (CC) 'Hero's Looking at You . Kid: A young
boy, suffering from .severe
butns as a result of a -fire ,
struggles to recover. (A)
(60 min.)
fJ) MOVIE: 'Jemelco Inn'
Port 2
IH80l MOVIE: 'The Booatmaeter'
(MAXI
MOVIE:
'Royol
Woddlng'
8:30 (J) BIHI Foui-Upa 81oopo/
Blunders Tonight's inhouse guest is John Ritter.
(R)(CC)
liJ I)) ® Allee Mel buys a
nursery school and plans
on turning it into parking
lot for the diner. IRI
- 9:00 I) ~-- Cil . Riptide Co~ \I_..
'N·ick and- Boz learn that
their new dock boy has potentielly .dangerou• underwo rld conneC1ions. (R) (80
min .)
·
. I]) 700 Club
(J) BIHI Who' a lhe 8011?
ICC) Tony lakes on anolher
job around Christmas in order to make some extra money. (R)
Q Cll liD MOVIE: 'Tho
Other Victim' (CC)
I)) Nove (CC) 'Here'slooklng at You. Kid: A young
bo'p', suffering from se~ere
burns as e retult of 1 fire,
etruggles to recover. (R)
(60 min.)
IIll Military and the News
Modlo 'A Question of Access: Tonight's program
poses the queation of
whether or not to involve
the press in a hypothetical
invation of another coun~- 160 min.)
9:30 C!l Aulo Reclng 'B5:
Noocor Von S&lt;:oy Diamond
Mine 500 from Pocono, PA
(J) Gl &lt;HI Holl1o lha Chief
A woml!n is elected Preaidant of the United Statoo.

GASOLINE ALLEY
Ther'you qo.
li'ufus! Jumpin'
into fool
,....,Jl-&amp;~,r;~. , con-clusions!

What wuz
Miss Melba

an' Calvin
doin' in
her office?

I';;;:=:;======

1----------

COUNTI\Y MOBILE Homo
Pork, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lote. can
. 814-992· 7479 .

86

Furnlobod oportinent. 941
Second Ave, Golllpollt, 2
bdr t241 mo. utilhlao pd.
-C•I1448-4411 o1te1: 8pm .

Trailer · apace1, .one emell
child ICOiplod. No peto.
304-875-1078.

fur. .liod opt. 3_room · private lteth; r~nce• re·
qulrltd. 1412nd. Ave .. Galli-.·
pOua. Cll 114-448· 2215.

47 Wanted to R.ent

-n

-n·
town locldon, CA,· carpet,
1 bdr apt.

compltll ldtchln_. Call I 144441•4313 doyoor 1.1 4-448-

Wonled to rent:
traU. either
upright. July 211-Aug. Coli
111 4·441-7731!- IIPM.

01JfM.
1113 3rd. AVo. 1 bdr. !WMto
bolth; f131 mo.. lndudoo
. ...eter, tllpooll reqoilred. Cell
814-441· 4222. bot"\'Mn •

• s.

ut-

&amp;1 ttousahold Goocla

.

,.....,..., lfllclency f14S,

paid,
...... - odulta.
· 107
znd. Ave.
(JoiiiPol(a,
call 4411-4411 alter IPM.

F u - apt . 243 Jeakoon
l'lko.. Oelllptllla. 2 1141&lt;..
U31, .,...._ peld. Call
448-44'1 a1tor I,M.

I .

MoiOic
Chef
- drojl-ln
"'"'"lltOft
with
tOll
ovan
with

77

304-7.73-1430.

'fOU OUGHT TO GO
DOWN TO TH' MEETIN'

HOUSE AN' SEE TH'
SHOW,
L6WEEZY

Auto Repair

•

Shop toolo; 1-11" planer,
1-10" table aaw, 1-ll'r"
lolntor, hoavy dillY aom-rclal, •1.110. Call814-4411010 -1:00PM.
1910 Honda m01or bike,
1889 tl'llvel trlllor, 1913
Chev. lnlakforooltoiwll
for riclhle
Cll
114·2
. .·8140 or 114448·7027. .

•-nrnoww.

Mini bib for 1111 o r - · 4

IIMIICI tm)lllllnla.n for ....

leby furnltuN, ~- quotlty

-.I. , ...... ,...., .......

430 t.oncl AVe•• GIII!ID
Ha. Ofl. 114·441·0No.
·
')

78
72

Truck• for Sele

1 IIO 'Dol.,n - · AM·FM,
' - · •z.719. ""'...,.

P'·fOO, .

ta ....

OU$0,

,.,,.,,

Jolln'l AlltO .....
l_ule_...
_ .._R_d...:."..::Ga...:.":.:',.:..'l...:.lo, Oh.
. •lo-r
-

1. .1 Ci)aVy o.lllae 10

pltlllup tftld&amp;. , _ - ·
Into ,_., ..,_, IIUID-

molla tronoml81lon. v~.
19.100. 81-·94.. 2880.

C1mplng
Equipment

-

. -'

I

IUrJ~E tJ

A I.OAFE~ I ~
Ai.WAYS P:EAC'"(
'TO C'OTHI~, TO
~AY THE LEAST.

INOOBBAI I

Print answer here . THE [Ye!literday's

I

I I XX)

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles: NEWSY SHOWY FIDDLE SATIRE
Answer. Stle began to call him by his first name when
she was afler thi s-HIS LAST

.,,.,

James Jacoby .

Making
assumptions

· min .) ·

Weill, cletanii, pool~. Faot,
reliable oarvlao. Call II 14218-1 240 · or 814-2511130.·Aeuonebte rattt.

·

I)) Military and tha N•-

NORTH
175
• 8 52

By Jomeo Jacoby
WEST EAST
Declarer knew his percentages.
• Q 10 6 2
+98
First he won the spade ace. After
.Q 10
•J3
drawing trumps with lhe heart ace 1
t K 10 8
tH6 32
and king, he Jed a club back to ~is
+AQ1764
+J3
king. West took the ace and queen and j
SOUTH
played a third club, trumped by
+75 3
South. Next South played a spade to
.... 9662
dummy's jack, . which lost to the
t AQ4
+K 10
queen. When the diamond finesse also
failed, so did the contract.
Vulnerable: North-South
South was unlucky in that three out
Dealer: North
of three key cards were badly placed,
West
Nortb Ea11
South
but making the rig~t assumptions
Pass
Pass
19
would have led to a favorable result.
2+
i•
Pass
Pass
First, he should assume that West's
Pass
I nine of spades lead denies possession
of the spade queen. Accordingly, after~
Opening lead: +9
cashing t~e ace and king of trumps,
he should play the spade king, whic~
eliminates t~e second spade from
West's hand. Now it is time to lead
clubs. If East plays low, South should
put in the 10. If East puts up the jack,
South should cover .with the king. In
any event, South ·s~ould leave West on
I won't criticize West for overcalllead and when West plays the third
club, South should simply discard a ing two clubs; I, too, like to get Into :
third low spade from his hand . With_ the bidding early at a low level. ,
no more spades to play, West must However, without that overcall it is •
either lead away from the king of dia- unlikely that a wise declarer could moods or give declarer a sluff and a make all the right assumptions .toruff by playing still another club.
help him play the hand.

L-------------.J

.~Mf."tal' .
- by THOMAS JOSEPH ACROSS
2 riirectio~
1 Infant
5 Phases

on ship
3 Cousin of

11 Border on
12 Pen for
llvel;t(}(:k

a poster
4 Greek letter
5-

Flow

13 Composer
(Orkney Is. ) !l;lll:i"'r1;:
Bartok
6 Sum
14 Comfy
7 "How
15 Indian
Sweet
mulberry
Vou - ·
v..tentay'o Anower
I61le lgian
8 Pupils'
22 Billy
30 Playwright
resort
place
or David
Rice
17 Surrounded 9 Least
23 Clam
31 Path
hy
challendelicacy
to "I do"
18 Servile
ging
24 Admired 35 Metalware
20 British
10 Vehicle
woman
37 Family
on runners 25 Window

princess

21 Barrel

II Math ratio

22 Level (var.) I9 Convent
23 Backbone
women
25Hamhu~
and
Marseilles
28Egg
suppliers
27 Dolt
28 Eye
tribe
32 Court
33 O'Neill play
34Smite
S8 Crown
• 38 Mediocre
39 Infuriate
40 Ringing
UMore

Upholltel')'
I

.

ISNT ni~E SOMETJ.IIN6
E~SE WE CAN DO -r

WE CAN

PLAY ANVTHIN6

YOU WANT... WHAT DO
'IOU WANT TO F\.AY ?

AN'(ni1N6 WHER!i I
T~E TOP
OF T~E TASI.E ! .

CAN SEiE

m•

.

"

;

rubel'K:ent

•

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

pos,s the

vot,dlrl. bulk or baglertilllor
and limo. _Excololor Solt
· Workolnc. &amp;~8 E. Moin St.,
P~meroy. 114-982-3881. · ·

..

42Toward
shelter
"' DOWN
I Polish cake ~~..J.....I.-1-.L...
DAU.Y CRYPI'OQUOTES - Here's bow to worlllt:

Modlo 'A Question of Ac•

Haul Umettone, tand. g~•­

member

glass
38 As
29 Mllitacy
written
action
;=~~~~~~

291ndian

cess.' Tonlght'a program

qu11tion of
whether or not to involve
the press in a hypothetical
invaaion of another coun·
~- (80 .mln.)
crD Newaw1tah .
Ill Odd Couple
IHIO) MOYIE: 'Something
Wlaktd Thle Woy Coma'
(MAXI MOVIE: 'Hal~'
10:15 (J) NBA Ortft R.Cop
10:30 I]) C.labrlty.Chota
illl Adult Y11re
.INN Nowe
10:41 [)) MOVIE: 'Kianaman'
11:00 • (J) Cll
CllllD •
IHl No1]) Bill Coebv Show
(JJ J•n lhtphord Amari.;,
(CC) 'Make School or Die.'
Joon Shepherd vlollt the
Old Weal.

&amp;-18-n

+AKJ4
.K 7H

'

(MAXI Big Break
.
10:00 8CIJClJ Remington Steele
Remington dlscovero the
body of a murdered corpqrate president in his bathtub. (R) (80 min .)
(J) Gl IHl MecGrudor end
loud ICC) Jenny and MiiC91rTt try to help a burned
out friend ,who is suspected of providing infor~
motion to the mob. (R) (80

. ,Waueh'a W1t1r Slrvice .

87

I KJ

(R)

G'ener•l Hauling '

Ken ' I Weter S.rvk:e. Well1
citternt. poole filled . Phon~ '
114-3417-0123 or 814 -3177'741 night or day.

ATTENTION! AmNTtONI
IJ'o locty lhop ~,,... - ....1... No .jM teo
........ 10•...71-218J.

or lrede. C~ll 11 4-44.8 ·
... H . .laotlltnt con-. _ 3370
lncludH r - h -. Call loretta.• · for Irian or
814-918-4454. RICK'S NEW _AND UIED
FURNITURE. C - - our
prieta, llw today. Pllona

BARNEY

Jemea Boya_W1ter Service.
Aloo poolo filled. Coli 814251- 1141 or 114-4461176 or 814 - 446 - 781~ .

Furnlobod lfllclancy e126 Trailer lbt for rent or ute. In
Pomeroy, Wolldng dletonce
"llltloo pold. 919 2nd ..
QeiHpollo, -lingle malo pro- · to town. AM hoolt-upo
fer ...... CaH 441-441 I oltor ovolloblo. Coli 114-9818PM.
. 4427 alter _8 :00pm.

(]) Hot Potato
Cll Felhor Know• Boat
(])
Audu""n
Wlldlllo
Thootro
tnl 3-2-1. Contacl (CCI
fill Bewitched
IHBOI MOVIE: 'Midnight
Modnoao (CC)
(MAXI MOVIE: 'Adam'l
Women'
• CIJ (!) NBC New1
Cil Rlllamon
Cll R•vco•a World Clooo
Women-_.___
CII Groon Acral
(I) GIIHI ABC NIWI (CCI
IIJ CJ) liD CBS Now1
I)) Dr. Who
(fi) Body Eltctrlc
filii Dr11m of Joennlo
. . .CIJ PM Magazine
(])
Chuck
Conno( 1
Wel1em Theater
Cll Sportacantar
[I) Sonlo!'11 end Son
Cll.Entortolnmonl Tonighl
ClJ WhMI of Fortune
G CJ) Whlll of Fortune
I)) Second City TV
IIll Nowa
(fi)
MecNoii/Lehror
Newahour
GIIHl Toys of Yaotordoy
fill Stor Trek
G CIJ Tic Tee Dough
(]) Clooo Kid
Cll Sporto Focuo Jullua
Erving .
[I) Major Loegue BoHboll:
Houalon et Atlanta
CJ) G I)) Family Feud
Jeopardy
I))
Nighlly
Buolnlll
Report
liD WhHI of Fortune
. Gl IHl
Entortolnmonl
Tonight
G (2) ClJ A-Teem iCC) The
A-Team beeom11 in~~tolved
with the recording butl·
ness when they discover
that an e11-1emale singing
group is being rippe~ off.
(R) (60 min.)
I]) Gentle Ben
[!) PKA ,Full ContoC1
Karate Coverage of the
World Light Welterweight
end World Lightweight Title fights it preaented from
El ~oso . TX. (90 min.)
I)) IIIIHI ThrM'o • Crowd
• (CC) Mr. Bradford fi••• his
e~e-wife up on a blind date.

~

OFF THE TOP

OF THE KEE P.'

1------------------

Upetllln unlurnlohed 3 room
apt .. carpeted, utlilloo pold,
no children. no peta. Call
. 814-4411-11137.

Ho•rl Amok! ond llqb Loo

m

ANNIE

1----------

.

by

I

I SPAWM

CIJ [J )(I) fll Clli!D Gl
IHl Nowa

. 8:00 •

Coli 1114-4411-8103 .

fi' THAT IICRAMBLED woRD GAME

Unocrom~&gt;~e thooo lour Jurnl&gt;loo
one litter to MCh IQUII'e, to tom\
four ordinary ~

EVENING

Pop up clmper trollo', oloopo

- --· ----

ft!ll)~ filft

~ \!!I ~~.

6/18/86

Ilk. tully equipped, t&amp;OO.

Spinet-ConJole pltlno bergtln. Wonted: Rooponolble
party to ltke over low
monthly peymenta on 1plntt
pleno. Cen be teen locally .

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9 _ .

Television
Viewing

••c.

Beegle puppies, 8 'A mile•
out Sond Hill Rd. Old Town
Creek, 2 ttory white houoo.

67

Pomeroy-~iddleport, Ohio

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Lerl')' Wright

Reg. Auetrialian Blue Huler
pups. G urantHd to worll:
cottle. Reedy to go. Coli
814-448-2109.

1 factory built porch 8•12
with 1teps and tome alUm.
hand reiling . 304-675 3000.

Air conditioner, conaole TV.
Goodcond. 304-773-9186 .

KIT 'N' CARLVLE

Tuesday; June 18: 1986
DICK .........

One letter st.andol fo~ another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, 1: for the two O's, etc. Single letters ,
apostrophes, the length and fonnatiCJII of the words are all
hints. Each da~ the code letters are different.

· "

CRYPTOQUOTE

8-18
PC 'GY

Vlllf

VC

X

" .KTS C RRK -MQII "

'

RAKHWVKRV

VB H -~R S 0 G

vc

KR

TUAil

X

ll CCi llll

P K Q Q K. X T
Y.
A C C Q K Y Z II
Yestenloy'o Crytoquote: WHY STAY ON. EARTH

UN LESS IT u•: :ro GROW'! LIFE CONTAIN S FAR MORE:
TitAN POWER, WEALTH ANO FAME. - ANONYMOUS

'

.'

�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

I Area deaths

Two more indicted
in alleged spy ring

Energy checking
System offered

Phllllp Russell. 64. of Dayton,
formerly of Meigs County, died
Monday at home following an
extended ll!ness.
Born and raised in Bradbury, Mr..
Russell was asonoftbelatPMaxand
Dora RUSSI' II.
Survivors include his wUe, Alma
Dodson Russell; two sons, Gary and
Danny, both of Dayton; four
grandchildren; and three sisters.
In addition to his parents, he was
preceded lndeathby a .son, Michael;
and two brothers, Hat:dlng and
Johnny.
Graveside services wtil be held 1
p.m. Thursday at Middleport HUI
CemetPry. Tobis Funeral Home,
Dayton., Is In charge of
arrangements.

Admlsslons--Charles.CartPr, Syracuse; Cecil Moore, Pomeroy;
Gladys Moore, Pomeroy; WetZI?l
Bailey, Jr., Dexter; Malvera
Wheel&lt;'r, Pomeroy; Connie Morris,
Racine; Bemard Ralrden, Hartford; Keith McCarty, Middlepm1;
Alan Wilson. Racine.
Discharges--Cecil Moore; William Richmond, Kenneth Michael.
Carl Autherson, Richard Ramsburg, J a m es Spangler.

Weather forecast

1

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30 indicted in cocaine ring
PHilADELPHIA (UPI) -Federal authorities Monday announced
the Indictments of 30 people, many
of theni doctors and lawyers, for
operating a cocaine ling that
dlstrtbuted &lt;IS much as $5 miiUon
worth of the drug each month in
Ohlo,12otherstates, Canada and the
District of Columbia. ,
Thewhlte-collardrugringwasthe
"largest known cocaine distribution
enterprise" In Philadelphia area
history and stretched from Canada
to California to Florida, said U.S.
Attomey Edward Dennis Jr.
He said the suspects were all
believed to be part or a ring
masterminded by a Philadelphia
dentist, Lawrence Lavin, who was
Indicted · along with 13 others .in
September. Lavin fled following his
release on ball and remains a
fugitive.
. Lavin allegedly began the operation In 1978 with several of his
classmates from the University of
Pennsylvania School of IDeiltal
Medicine, and by 1984 the ring was
distributing an aver!'ge 00 to ~

The June meeting of the Meigs
Local School Dlstrtct Board of
Educa lion has been changed from
this evening unt117 p.m . Thursday.

Marriage licenses
Marriage licenses have been
issued in MPigs County Probate
Court to James Arthur Snyder, ll,
Langsville, and Sandra Pauline
King, 26, Reedsville; and to Brian
David Hartman, 22, Pomeroy, a nd
Peggy Ann Wood, 35, Middleport .

Partly cloudy today a nd tonight.
Highs today will benear~and lows
tonight near 55.
Many Meigs County residents
Partly cloudy Wednesday with a'
SPrve as representative payees
who
chance of showers and a high near
for Society Security benflclariPS or
75.
The probability or precipitation Is Supplemental Securtt}' Income 1'1'20 percPnt today a nd tonight and :JJ , clplents have recently receive
accounting forms In the mall.
percent Wednesday.
According to Ed Peterson, manExtended Forecast
ager
of the Athens Social ~urity
Fair Thunoday and Friday and a
Office,
the reporting forms are now
chance of rain Saturday. Hlgfls wW
being
mailed
to a percentage ofthe
he In the 70s 'lbrsday and between 75
representative
payees on a monthly
and 85 Friday and Satunlay. Lows
'
basis
and
that
every
paype would be
· WID ranK!! between f5 and . il5
required
to
complete
a report
~unoday and il5 Qlld 6ll Friday and
annually.
Siltunlay.
ThP Social SeCurity Adminlstra·
t!on appoints fel)resentatlve payees
for children under 18 and for adults
CLEVELAND (UPII - Ohio who are not capabll' of managing
Lottery officials say the two winners their own funds. 'The recent i-elnfrom Saturday's Lotto drawing stated accounting process gives

been granted a divorce in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court from
William D. Bryant, Portland, on
grounds of gross neglect of duty and
extreme cruelty. ·
Oaude J . Humphreys and Regina
R. Humphreys, both of Pomeroy ,
'have filed for a dissolution of
marriage In Meigs County.

Free clothing day

Meets tonight
Group II of the Middleport First
Presbyterian Church will meet at
7; JJ this evening at the home of
Velma Rue. Joan SordPn will
present the study book and Jean
Moore. the devotions.

Democrats to meet
ThP Meigs County Democratic
Executive Committee w!Umeet at
-7: :JJ .p.m. Thursday at CarpPnter's
Hall, E-. Main St., Pon\eroy : All
Interested Democrats are Invited to
attend the session .

kilograms of cocaine per month,
Dennis said. He said one kilogram of
the nearly-pure cocaine had a
wholesale value of up to $56,CXXJ.
Dennis said at Its peak the ring
distributed $5 million worth of the
drug monthly.
FBI agent Wayne AUord remarked surprise at the type of
people allegedly Involved with the
ring, noting most narcotics suspects
are "street peopll' with long ·
criminal records who are also heavy
users of the narcotic.
"However, In this case, those
Involved were from all walks of life
with ... professions ranging from
housewifp and waitress to doctors,
lawyers .. . and stockbrokers," hr
said.
He added many of the ring
members were not drug users
themselves, but apparently regarded the operation "just as a
business."
"This case best typifies thr
Insidious greed that now permeates
all walks of thl' American way of life
which has resulted trom the large

have claimed their shares of till'
$1,423,124 jackpot.
•
Beatrice E. FrarriP, 46, Brunswick and Robert F. Edf,!P1 no agP
'listed, of LexingtOJ · 1\ " , 'Ne 20
annual before tax paythents of
$._15,578.10.
Wednesday's drawing wW be
worth an esttmatetl one-Millkll ·
dollarS .
·
. Monday 's winning .Ohio Lottery
numbers: Dally Number

NEW YOIU{ ·llll'l) - Chemical
Bank of
York has begun a
direct mail and advertising campaign for a special program to lure
Ohioans to open Money Market
accounts with Chemical and take
advantage of the bank's othPr ·
services, includingcredltcardswlth
limited checkwritlng.
Chemical announced Monday
that under it s ChPmPlus plan
reserved exclusively for Ohioans, It
will offer Money Market accounts a t
an Introductory interest rate of at
IPast 8 percel,!t ending July 22 for ·

minimum amounts of $5,CXXJ.
addition, 8aid the gl~ilt New
York bank, It wlil throw in free of
charge Its personal flnanclal ,plan ning SPrv!ce, which costs New York
customPrs $Ill. 'The self'ice Include .
In-depth financial planning, tax
savings and retirement planning. ·

in

New

7,500 at

"QultPbonestiy,lt'sln response to
literally hundreds of leiters we'vl'
received from Ohio asking how they
can participate in our services,''
said Kenneth Hurz, a company
spo~esman . · ·

.
.
music convention
.

.

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'

'

162.
PICK-4
4142.

'

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...·

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profits obtained from the sale of
na rcotics," he said.
.
The 57-count Indictment was
handed down last week by a federal
.grand jury but kept SPaled until
Monday.
Dennis a nd FBI officials said at a
news conference that 19 of the
alleged ring me mbers had been
arrested anq seven additional
arrests werP expected Monday,
While the whPrea bouts Of four pthers
were unknown .
The cocaine originated in Colombia, entered the United States
through Miami and was transported
to Philadelphia by car or plane,
investigators said . In Philadelphia,
the cocaine was stored a nd processed at "siash houses."
The drugs were Pventually distributed to customers In Pennsylvanif!, New York, New Jersey,
Massachu~tts, New Hampshire,
Vermont. Maine, Rhode Island,
Ohio; Florida, AriZona. Colorado,
California, Washington D.C. and·
Canada, according to the indlctmpnt.

_:

.

. Chemical· ~pent tWo m onth$
trying to buy thedefunctflol'l)eSta te · ·
Savings Bank of Cincinnati, but lost ·
out on the last day or the bidding to
Hunter Savings .Association of
Cincinnati.
"Over the past few months .
ChPmlcal recevied overwhelming
Pncouragement from Ohio consumers to offpr commercial banking
services In the state," said William
H. Turner, executive viet&gt; president
of ChemicaL

LASAGNA
DINNER

RIO GRANDE - An estimated top honors In the hog calling contest
crowd of 7,51Xl'gathered to partici- were taken by Ryan Curtis. Jameston, Ohio; clogging first place went
pate In the Seventh Annual Country
to Michael Sayre. Leon, W.Va .. and
Music Convention last weekend at
Bob Evans Farm In Rio Grande. Vaughn Toler, Madison, W.Va .. told
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The CaWinning first place In the band the most unbeliPvable story to win
tholic Bishops of Ohio said they
competition was thl' group One Way thl' liar's contest.
THURS., JUNE 20, 1985
suppori a boycott of Campbl'll Soup T rack, of Davisville, W.Va., Ron
'The Country Music Convention Is
5:00 TO 7:00 P.M. ~
Company products because the · Rigsby of Guysville, Ohio; took the jusi one of nt'arly ~special events
company has not allowed farm
number one spot in banjo category, taking place at Bob Evans Farm
Adults 14.00, Children 12.50,
workers to organize and bargain
with Robin Kessinger , Mason, this summer.
collectively.
W.Va ., earning first place among
The bishops, in a statement, said
the fiat top guitariSts.
the primary issue of thP farm
worker's struggle is centered on the
ln the mandolin competition, Don •
right to organize and bargain
Kessinger, Harmony, W.Va., recollectively.
ceived first place honors, and first
place in the fiddle category went to
Lefty Shafer.• Charleston, W.Va.
This was the seventh year for the
Bob
Evans Country Music ConvenSocial Securtty thl' opportunity to
Insure that funds sent to thl' payres . lion which has beCOme a well
MULBERRY HEIGHTS, POMEROY, OHIO
established event drawing many of
are being properly used for the
the Appalachian region's finest
beneficiary. Social Securtty bene!! is
country
and bluegrass entertainers.
and SSI payrilents should first be
In
addition
to thepmslcalawards.
, used to meet the beneficiary's
day-to-day basic needs lor food,
. shelter,clothlngandpersonal!tems,
Peterson advised. Any money
remaining can be used for specfal
Items or should be Invested or
. Funeral services, like all professional service~ cost
placed in an Interest bearing
money. But unlike_some other services. ·funeral'costs
account.
may have to be pat.d unexpectedly. For this reason we
Peterson also said that asslstancp
rt~O!ftmend pre·plannin&amp; for funerals as a means to
In completfuglhe forms Is available
ehmmate some of that unpredictability.
at thPSoc!ety Securtty'offlcelocated
at 2211,2 Columbus Road. Hours are
P~·pla~nina a funeral need ~ost You nothin&amp;. if you
8:45 a.m. to 4:JJ p.m. Monday
WISh. S_tmply take an hour or so to talk with us about
your w1shes. They wtll be recorded: you keep a copy
through Frlday Pxcept for national
and so-do we.
•
holidays.

SACRED HEART
CHURCH

r-------------"----------.,...--

Come to the Bloodtnohile
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19, 1985
1:OO· to 5:30 P.M.

Meigs ·co. Multi-Purpose Building

When You ~Ire Blood •.. The'l '1 Hope.

HOW CAN I PLAN FOR FUNERAL COSTS?

,Pl-k,~~ rt~-:f}~

MONDAY THRU FRIDAY

.
992-6417

6i

BILL BLOWER

l:00-4:30

106 EAST SECOND
ABOVE BANK ONE
IN POMEROY '
'

If you do wish to plan in advance for funeral costs we
can help you set up a bust fund, this will' assure you
that you nor your family nttd not worry about how to
PlY funtnl costs when they arise . With our &amp;Uaranteed
pre-arraneement funeral plan you can be assured that
there will be no more expense to you or your famil
and .that the exact 11tvlces .You have selected will
Clrrt.ed off.
·

.I

.AnOINEY·AT·LAW
OFFICE
HOURS 8:30-12 NOON
.
~

.

Bishops support
Campbell boycott

D. MICHAEL MULLEN

Vol.35, No.46
Copyrighted 1985

•

•

enttne

at y

2 Sections, 12 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newapeper

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday. June 19, 1985

I

We ~f!!lcome your questions and comments on pre. plan~tne or any other as~ect of funeral services, and
. we Wtllanswer them in prtvate or publicly throuch this
column.

ff,nwa~ .7ftH~u

"1•,1~•

(114) ' ftHl4l

MIDII!.II'OIIT, ·OHIO·
-~·--

-~

President: U.S. 'will have to wait out crisis'
Reagan on Hijacking
"End this cnmc now."

Chern Bank hegins program to lure Ohioans

SSI fortns must be completed

Two lotto winners

Saturday nlpt. The car was provided by Jim Mink
Chevrolet-Oldsmobile of Gallipolis. Boyd Is seen here
accepting the keys tQ the car from Det!e Wagner
PeUegr!non, center, of WJEH, and BID GeneJohn!on,
vice president of Jim Mink Chevrolet-OidsmobUe.

MEIGS MAN WINS CAR- Lawrence "Ughtnlng''
Boyd, North Second Avenue, Middleport, at right,
was winner of the 1985 CheveUe offered in a promotion
sponsored by WJEH Radio during lis 35th
anniversary celebration. Boyd's name was selected

Emergency squads To end marriages
Ruby P. Bryant, Portland, has
an8wer eight calls

The Ladles Aid of Faith FPllowshlp, Rout!' 338, Antiquity, will hold
free clothing day from 11 a.m. to 3
p.m. Wednesday at thP church. The
church Is located '4 ofmUPnorlh of
Raclnl' VFW. All pef!!Ons in need of
clothing are welcomP.

Seea.rteae'a coitm• Cll Pap J%

'

~eigsCounty•••

To meet Thursday

Easy care gardening

e

WASIDNGTON t UP!) - The
Federal Home Loan Bank Board
Monday conditionally approved two
more Ohio applicants tor Federal
Savings &amp; Loan Insurance Corp.
accounl coverage.
The Oakmont Savings Bank and
Sycamore Savings &amp; Loan Co., both
of Cincinnati, previously were
membl'rs of the Ohio Deposit
Guarantee Fund.
Oakmont, with assets of $75.3
mllllon, and Sycamore, with assets
of $23.8 million, also were approved
for membership In the Federal
Home Loan Bank System.

Meigs County Emergency MediColumbia Gas of Ohio customers
cal Servi~ _reports eight calls
In Gallia and Meigs count!PS trying
answered Monday; Pomeroy at
to save money on their hPatlng buts
1:
37a.m. toStateRoute7forCharles
now have a source of hl'lp.
G'antPr to Veterans Memortal
Operation ijome Check, offered
Hospital; Pomeroy at 3: 44 a .m. to
by Gallia -Meigs Community Action
:JJ1 Wright St. for Gladys Moore to
Agency, prov(des freernergy audits
VPterans Memorial Hospital; Ruand weatherization counseling to
tland at 4: 15 a .m. to 31866
Columbia customers WhOse famlly
IVlcCumber Rd. ior Wetzel Bailey to
Income is at or below their county
Veterans Memorial; Middleport at
median income.
12: 56 p.m. to Plum StreE't for Ralph
Th!' service Is a joint venture
Swan to Holzer Medical Center;
between CAA, Columbia and the
Racine at 3:35p.m. to Portland for
Corpora tion for Ohio Appalachian
SummPr
Lee Ann Smith to Veterans
Development.
Memorial;
Middleport at 3: 48 p.m.
All who part.lclpa te in the energy
·
to
·
702
Sycamore·
St. for Keith
check will receivP a free Inspection
McCart)! to Veterans Memorial;
of their homes to dPtE'rmine what
Racine at 5: 06p.m . to East Letart
needs to be done to reduce heating
for Harry Douglas to Vetprans
bills. A followup visit will include
Memor!al; Middleport atlO: 35 p.m.
informa tion on energy conservation, weathPrizalion loa ns , energy- to.61i0 High St. for Linda Pridemore
to Vetei';ms Memorial.
'
related financial assistance and
home energy management. The
Revival planned
home Inspections will be conducted
by energy a uditors trained by
The Christian Brethren Church ,
COAD.
Mason,
W. Va., will hold revival
Families who livf' in either houses
or buildings up to four urllts will be services at 7:JJ p.m. Frtday,
SaturdayandSurulay.Speakerswlll
eligible to participate.
· Further information is available be Rl'v. Bud HalfiPld ·and Rev:
. by calling Ron . Crawford or :Rena Ralph Workinan. There will be ..
Longstreth at CM at 367-7344 or special' sin!ifng and . the public is .
Invited .
992-6629.

.Veterans Memorial

Hero

See hilt,

.
SllrJ..........

Insurance approved

I

I

·Beat of Bend

Phillip 1\U!!!!ell

. NORFOLK, Va. (UPI)- Federal
Arthur Walker has been jailed in
grand juries have indicted two VIrginia Beach and Whitworth in
retired Navy veterans accused of San Francisco.
being links in a famlly-and-frlend
The !our men are being held
spy ring on charges of passing without bond. If convicted, they face
military secrets to the Soviets.
JUe In prtson and Ones.
I ndlcted Monday were Arthur
John Walker, a retired chief
Walker, 50, a retired -lieutenant warrant officer . turned prtvate
commander, and Jerry Whitworth, detective, and Michael Walker have
45, a retlred COmiTlUnlca tions pleaded Innocent to the charges.
specialist.
The Nor1olk Indictment charges
Attorneys for Walker, a former Arthur Walker passed documPnts
engineer at VSE Corp., a defense from VSECorp. tohlsbrotherin1!1l1
contractor, said Monday he will and 1982. HI' has admitted to the FBI
plead not guilty at a hearing today to that he took the Job at VSE in
the seven counts returned against . February 1!81 at his brother's
him by a federal grand jury in urging and received $12,CXXJ for
hl'lplng John Walker spy for thP
Nor1olk.
Whitworth's lawyers said he Is Soviets.
In San Francisco, U.S. Attorney
scheduled to appear at an arraignJoseph Russonlello said thl' lndlctment today in San Francisco where he was indlcied Monday on a mPnt against Whitworth charges
single count . of espionage - but that be received $328,1XXJ In 15
would not say if he would enter a payments tunneled through John
Walker from Soviet agPnts.
plea.
The indlctml'nt dPtalled "41 .
Walker and Whitworth are believed to be links in a wldespead spy separate overt acts" by the rtng to
ring thought to have operated out of further the conspiracy, Including
Norfolk , site or the world:s largest m eetlngslnSanLeandro,CaUf.,San
Navy base and home to the U.S. Diego, Hong Kong, Nor1olk and the
Philippines, Russonlello said.
Atlantic Fleet.
·
"In terms ot numbers of persons
Walker's brother John, 47,
charged as the ringleader, and involved, this Is the largest organJohn's son, Michael, 22, a sailor last ized spy network seen in this country
assigned to the aircraft canier since the Rosenbergs. In terms of
Nimitz. were indicted on espionage monpY pald, It Is very, . very
charges late last month and are slgnU!cant ," be said.
being held in Baltimore.

Happenings around

Major letl8'H' roundup_

P/ut.... Att111tlon to D•t•JI"

Response
"i\nwril·a will lll'Wt' ma~l'
(&lt;ltK&lt;:ssions to lt:rrnrists.. .nm will
Wl' ask ur pr&lt;'sSIIt'l' :my other
I su."
gowm lll&lt;:lll h 1 10

Retaliation
"Tho.' prnhkm is ...who th.:ir
al'l'omplin:s ar.: . whl't\' th.:y ar.:
lucatl'd ... Su·ikinp. a hlow in a g&lt;'nl'ntl
din:clinn would lx: :1 ll'tTorist :ll'tion
in itsl'IL"

Israel
"Wl· s.:.:m hi lx: a tarp..:t. ais&lt;l, I 'm
quit.: sur.:. lx·l·ausl.' uf our frk·ndship
(with) and suppot1 of lsrad."

Nablh Berti
/f' lflt' l/llift•tl .\'IIIII'S dol',\ 1101 11.\'k
i.mwl '" n•/t •a .l&lt;' 1/w .'illiif&lt;• fll'i.lllll&lt; 'l'.l'
i•m•l) II•• mm!tl gil'&lt;' Ill&lt;' IW.I'I&lt;I,~&lt;'.I
llal'k ... ttwlll/d 11111 hold him
;,Y.-s: .1wtlllld."
._,

,,.,,.,,o,,,.;h/,-:'
_

UP! OWIJhiC

WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan, revPaling a rare
gltmpsl' of himself under pressure
and frustration, sayshewlll "have to
walt It out" before ordering any
retallatlo~ against the hijackers of
1WA Flight 847.
At his first news conference from
the WhltP House ln. nearly three
months Tuesday night, Reagan
openly reflected on the difficulty he
faces in dealh;g with "a dangerous
·a nd volatile situation."
He admitted to a nation angry
over thl' latest terrorist outrage,
"I'm as frustrated as anyone. I've .
pourn:ied a few walls myself when
I'm alone about th)s. It Is
frustrating."
But hi' sakl he could not order
retaliatory raids against thP Shill!'
Muslim terrortsts with any certainty that only the guilty would be
victimized.
"You have to be able to pinpoint
the enemy," he said. "Youcan't just
start shooting without having someone in your gunstghts.
"It Is a cowardly crime in that
they hold all thP cards once they
have these people In their power and
we have to consider their safety," he
said of the ShUte rerrortsts holding
as many as 40 Americans from the
plane somewhere In Lebanon.
Hinting that some form of
retribution may bl' in the offing, he
said, " Yes, I could gpt mad roough
now to think of a couple of things we
could do to retaliate. but I would
probably be sentpneinga·number o!
Americans to death if I didlt." ·

But later hi' conceded, '"(ou're
left with only one form of retaliation ·
and that Is, I! you just aim in the
general direction and Jdll some
people, well, then, you'rea terrorist,
too.''

When Reagan took oHice In 1!*!1as
52 Amertcans were released from
444 days of captivity In lran, he
promised "swUt and pffectlve
retribution" against future antiAmerican terrortsts.
He had spent the 1!81 campaign
attacking President Jimmy Cartl'r
for inaction. " I certainly wouldn't
stand by and do notl!lng, ".he said at
the time.
-,
Asked Tuesday night If there are
limits to his pat!Pnce, Reagan
replied, "I have to wait II out as long
as those people are thl're and
threatened and allvl' and we have a
possiblllty of bringing them homeI'm going to say a probability of
bringing them home."
He did make two specific threats,
against Greece, whoSe lax airport
security the United States has
blamed for allowing the hijacking to
occur Friday and against Lebanese
Shiite leader Nahbl Berrl.
Reagan said he ordered oH!clals
to warn Americans against travelIng through Athens, Greece. until
airport security is strengthened and
against . traveling to any Middle
Eastern country " that dOl'S not
publicly condemn and disassociate
Itself trom this atrocity a nd call for
thl' lmme&lt;li!IU• safe relea~ Qf Oi1'
citizens."

PUZZI ED - President RealM wipes his eye at a pre!l'i oonference
Tuesday nlglit where hi' dec~ the "United.stales tQnlgiJIIS a nation
being attacl&lt;ed by lntemai~ lenwlsts. (JJ'I•

Ohio HouSe rejects Senate's.budget package
COLUMBUS tUPI) - The Ohio House of
Representatives set thP stage Tuesday for 10 days of
hardnosed negotiations on a budget and personal
Income tax cut by formally turning down the Senate
Repuplican version, 5240, and SPnding it to a joint
conference commit tee.
· · Six panelists were named immediately, and Rep.
William E. Hlnig, D-New Phil~delphla, chief sponsor
of the HouSP-passed $~.3 billion 1986-8'7 budgt't and
chainnan of the conferenCE' committee, sa id work will
begin Wednesday. .
.
Hlnlg told his colleagues thl' Senate Republicans,
who passed the ir version last week, had tri":""ed too

much out ofthe House 's allocations for jobs programs ,
human services, local governments and state
employees .
·
"All of these were hurt by some oft hi' cuts made by
the Senate," said Hlnlg. "Hopefully we'll have a bill
back here that we can aU vote for by June :JJ."
House SpeakPr Vernal G. Riffe Jr. D-New Boston,
said IieJs optimistic about acomproml~ andwantsto
have ·one ready for a votP June 28 to avoid wetokend " ·
work. The Pxlsting two-year budget expires at
midnight Sunday, J\tne :11.
Preliminary discussions havealreadybegunbl'hind
the scenes to SPt the stage for compromise on the

Man faces multiple charges
a ttempted to Jock him in ja il a nd In
Tim HPrdman , 24, or Kingsbury
·
the process, destroyed some county
Rd.. Pomeroy, wa s arrested by
property . Hewasthen chargedwith
Meigs County sheriff's depUt ies
resisting
arrest and criminal
about 11:45 p.m. Tuesday night on a
mischief.
September 1984 wan·ant for crimi·
Wendell Barber, 21, ReedsVIIII'.
nal t respassing on private proper~);._,
was
taken Into custody shortly after
in Middleport .
\
.
midnight
WednPSday morning after
During a routlnl' search, Herd- ·
being
arrested
on two Meigs County
man was found to a!legely have
Cou
rt
bench
warrants, one for
marijuana In his posSPssionand was
fa iling to comply with a court order
arrested .
a nd the other for falling to appear in
He rdman resisted as deputies

court.
Barber was charged by dPput ies
with resisting arrest at the Reeds·
ville area loca tlon where au lhorltles
picked him up.
After being jailed, Barber be·
came unruly , threatened dPputles
and was charged with disorderly
conduct and aggravated menacing.
Both men will appear today
(Wednesday) in Meigs County
Court.

Senate's streamlined $19.6 blllion spendingoutlaywlth
an accompanying 10 percent annual reduction In the
!ncopte tax rates.
The.HouSI' plan made room for a 5 percent annual
Income tax cut, though both the HouSP and Senate
reductions would bl' the same for tax year l!l\5- 5
percent.
·
···
·
··
"tlhlnk it's going to take some wUUngn~ o.n both
sldeslo lookal wherewedrawthellneson tax,cutsand
leste whose own
spending," said Gov . Rl cha rd F · Ce
•
ortgtnall;Judget in January was for$20 .2 bllllon and a 5
percent annual tax cut.
"I'm concerned about a tax cut that doesn't havf:'
something tied to the economy, especially for the
second year," said CPleste. "We don't want to be back
here next year 1rals!ngtaxes) ."
In addition to Hlnlg, the House conferees are Reps.
Barney Quilter, D-Toledo, the speakerpro te mpore,
and Thomas w. Johnson, R-New Concord.
Senate representatives will be Sens. Stanley J .
Aronoff, RCincinnatl; William F. Bowen, DCincinnati; and Theodore M. Gray, R-Columbus.
Gray's appointment, made Tuesday, Indicates that
Senate President Paul E. Gllimor, R-PortCllnton,also
Is in a compromising mood; otherwise, he might hav£'
chosen a more conservative SPnator bl'nt on flghtmg
for a larger tax cut .
HouSP Republicans wanted to accept the streamlined.SenatP version
send It
to the governor

for signature.
.·
"You 'll ~ever get a c hance to vote for a btgger tax
reduction, taunted Rep. W. ~nnett Rose, R-L~a .
"This Is the best budget were going to get, said
JohnSOn. "It should not be diluted with a compromise
that dwllll :;&lt;~uce the sizE' of the tax cut and increase
- spen ng. ·
•
Critlcl:l.es Democrals .__
·_ .
Rep; Wllllann G. Batc~!ilef., R -Medlna, criticized .
· the Democrats for claiming the Senate "cut" the
budget. Hf:' pointed vut that the Senate proposal Is 16.4
percent higher than the existing outlay, following a 29
percent hike In 19&amp;1.
"Those are monumental increases In spending, and
·r m going to vote for this budget because It's headed In
the right direction," said Batchelder. "Spending is
tailing off."
Rep. Marc D. Guthrie, D-Hebron, complained that
the larger Senate income tax reduction will curtail
income tax revenues reaching local governments by
$~ million.
"At a t1me when the federal gov£'rnment is
recommending theellminatlonofrevenuesharingand
construction gra nts for watl'r and wastewater
treatment plants, il ls not a good Idea to cut aid to local
government ," said Guthrie.
But Rose retorted It only seems like a cut because
local governments were the bl'neflclaries of the large
1983 state Income tax Increase.

Meigs resident reclaims old turtle
We'w aU heard of the p&lt;'rverblal
bad penny that's supposed to r&lt;'turn.
hut, have any of you heard about a
turtle relurnlng- a fl&lt;'r 48 years no
less?!!
Friday. evenilJg, SyracuSP rl'sldent Dana Winebrenner was on
Snowball Hill at theupper endof the
village with his grandson SamuPI
Shain, Racine. The two were in a
barn on thP Marjorie Durst farm
where Winebrenner stores hay for
cattle.
As Winebrenne r ll!ted an old sled
that happened to be in his way, he
cautioned his grandson to watch out
for snakes. Luckily !here were no
snakes to bl' seen. But there was a
old turtll' - VI'IJ' typical looking the klnd of turtle that children in this
neck of the woods are notorious for
trying tomakepetsout of by putting
them In cardboard boxes with
various kinds of w~s. grasses,
fruits and vegetables for food .
Winebrenner picked up the turtle
and handed It to an excited Samuel.
(Remember when you were a
youngster, how exciting It was to
find a turtle?) Well, according to

Winebrenner, Samuel played with
the turtle for about half an hour. The.
boy even doused the llttle feller In a
tub of water in the back of his
grandpa's pickup truck;· just to see If
he rould swim.
Well, It was about that time that
Samuel noticed some markings on
thl' underside of the turtle's shell.
"Grandpa," he exclaimed, "this
turtle has writing on his belly! "
Winebrenner took a gander at the
turtle's underside and carved In thl'
shell was "XV July , L .B., 1937." ·
" I couldn't believe It ," said
Winebrenner. He knew tmrnedlately that thl' Initials L.B. be
longed to Leonard Bass, also of
Syracuse, "becauSP Leonard has his
initials c4JVed on beech trees all
over Snowball Hill."
The twosome took the turtle back
to WlnebrEnDI'rs' and (!01 in touch
with Bass to tell him about his long
lost friend. Bass didn't actually
retnember the turtle, but he did
remember whl'n he was 18 years
old, and not far from the same old .
barn where the turtle was found , he
took his penknife and engraved his

Initials In a turiiP's shell. It was the
sam!' year he and Winebrenner
graduated from PomProy High
School-19.17.
Bass alsO remembered that once,
when hi' was a youngster, he found a
turtle marked "W.D.R.-1894."
W .O.R. stood for the late William
Roush. also trom Syracuse.
It's hard to tell how far that turtiP
has traveled over the past 48 yPars.
"You don't know," said Bass's wl!e
Ora, "hi' might have walked to
Call!ornla and back in that tlme."
' And then again, perhaps the turtle
just stayed in the same vicinity
where Bass picked him up, engraved his shell, and put him back
down on the ground 48 years ago.
Anyway, Bass, Winebrenner and
Samuel tQOk a vot!" and haveopled to
put the turtle back whl're he was
found. "I'm going to Identify him
somehow," Bass noted, .. and
maybe hi''U be found again
9(X'Ileday.'' It's (O!Slble. Bad penn1es always
return you know - and apparently,
turtles do too - at least they do In
Syracuse.

ENGRAVED 'ftlR'lU!: -

Syrt~CU~e 1

al4euu

.._.,. lllllla,left, and Dana Wlnebn.!nner, rtcti, are
amued that INs turtle, held by Winebrenner's
a• Mdllon. Sunuel Shain, of Racine, ls.the same lurile

'*

on whlchBuutllae IBenaraved
W!!eh, L.B.,IIIIII
the date, July 15, Itm. 'lbenwtdnpweremedewltha
penknife on the wltkulcle of the turtle'slhell.

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