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                  <text>Monday, June 24. 1985

Page 1 o~lhe Daily Sentinel

County Agent's Corner

Cincy family
• •
among victims

•Dairy picnic set
By JOHN C. RICE
. Extension.Agenj
Apiculture, Melp County
The Salad Matertals - U there Is
one thing I nkl!, It Is !alads and this
area raises some of the best salad
Ingredients. We are now In the
middle of cabbage harvesting.
Within two weeks sweet com and
tomatoes wUJ be coming on the
. market. Some growers are also
picking green beans. So watch the
roadside stands.
Dairy Picnic Set - The Dairy
Service Unit wUI be holding a picnic
at Royal Oak Park on Sunday, June
:Jl. The picnic will start at 1 p.m.
and an dairymen and families are
·Invited.
Nitrogen Now -Do you need to
apply more nitrogen to your corn?
You could add more nitrogen now.
One reason to delay nitrogen
appllca tton untU now is to reduce
denltrogication or loss of nitrogen.
S(!lrt your nitrogen . side dress
program when .you are at the
three-four teat stage. That allows
enough time to get the job done.
There are several ways that
nitrogen can be applied to corn
after It has emerged. Anhydrous

ammonia Is one but In this area
more people use 28 percent Uquld
nltrogen•and urea. The 28 percent
can be Injected three to four Inches
deep or drtbble It on top of the
ground In bands spaced on :Jl and 00
Inch centers If they are In :Jl Inch
row width. Urea can be broadcast
using a spinner-spreader.
F'leas, Flea Bites! - To relieve
Itching use carbolated vasollne,
menthol, camphor, calamine lotion
or tee. Control In the house! Collect
fleas with a strong suction vacuum
cleaner In places where lint and pet
hairs accumulate such as along
baseboards, around carpet edges,
or ventUators, around heat regis·
ters, In floor cracks, under and In
tutnlture, and -where pets sleep.
Destroy vacuum bag contents.
After the use ·o r a vacuum cleaner
you can apply a coarse spray to
floors, molding and baseboards up
to one toot high. Spray with
malathion pre~lurn grade three
percent, dlazlnon (Knox Out 2FM)
one pei'cent. To relieve Itching of
pets apply d~ts of carbaryl (Sevin)
five percent, malathion four per·
cent, or methoxychlor one percent.

Mr. Ables was the owner of Ables
TraUer Court near Ravenswood. He
was a veteran of the Korean War
having served In the U.S. Anny. He
was a member of Local 18,
Operating Engineers.

Joseph D. Hayman
Joseph D. Hayman, 73, of 816
Walnut St., Belpl'\!, died Sunday
morning at Camden-Clark Memo:
rial Hospital In Patkersburgtollow·
lng a brtef Ulness.
Born In Long hottprn, a son of the
late Clarence E. and Eliza Newberry Hayman, he was a retired dis·
patcher for the B&amp;O Railroad, a U.
S. Anny veteran of World War ll
and a member and trustee of the
Hazel cOmmunity Oturch, Long
Bottom.
Survivors Include two SOII/I, Rotlert R. Hayman, Tolono, ILl.,
arid M~nnlng C. Hay!llan, Port
Charlotte, Fla.; a daughter, Mrs.
Ray (Jaitlce) ' Young, Reeds·
ville; six grandchildren; four
great-grandchildren; and spe·
clal friends, Peg Murl-and Anna·
belle Carney both of Belpre.
In addltlpn to his parents. Mr.
Hayman was preceded In death by
his wife, Elva, In 1977, three broth·
ers and a sister. • .
Services wUJ he p:m. Tuesd8y
at White-Ethridge Funeral Home,
125 Lee St., Belpre, with burial In
the Sand Hill Cemetery, Long Bot·
tom.
Friends may call at the funeral
horne today (Monday), 24 p.m. and
7-9 p.m., and untU the time of services Tuesday, ·

.I

i

William G. Ables
;.
Ji

l.

Dewey W. Hud"?n'
Dewey W. Hudson, 87, Middleport, died Saturday athis residence.
He was born May _31, 1898 to the
late J9hn Hansford and Amelia
Caroline Roush Hudson.
He w&lt;ls precetled In death by three
sons, Dewey Jr., John Robert and
Otarles H. Hudson.
He was a coal operator and
a !tended the Rutland Bible Methodist Church.
· Surviving are hls wife Cassie J.,
. Middleport; four daughters, Mrs.
GuytMarle) Bush, Pomeroy,; Mrs.
Sherman (Margaret) Williams,
Gainesville, Fla., .Ml'!l. Kenneth
(Donna) Ebline, Rutland, and Mrs.
, Laura Au)herson, Middleport; five
.·:sens, c;;eorge o( Rutland; Denver of
Nqtion, OhiO, Bernard and Sonny:
· both of Middleport, and Lewis of
Racine; 19 grandchildren. 29 greatgrandchildren.
·Funeral services will be Tuesday
at 1 p.m. at the Foglesong.Fulieral
Home with the Rev. Amos Tillis
officiating. Burial will follow In the
Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Monday from 24 and 7·9
p.m.

•

CINCINNATI (UPii - The
Gupta tamUy of nearby Anderson
Township was aboard the Air India
jet that crashed in the Atlantic ,~
Ocean Sunday, kiiUng all 329
passengers.
. Rajesltwar Gupta , 45; his wife,
Swatantar, 38; and tllelr chilqren,
Vanclana, 15 and Sllatfi, U, were
travellng to their homeofPunjabfor
a six-week vacation to vlsltfrlends
and relatives .
The Guptas had lived In tile Unlt!!d
States for five yeara and had never
returned to their native IJidla in that
time.
The Guptas left Cincinnati Friday
morning and drove to Toronto,
before taking off for Bombay. An Air India where they visited relatives before
AIRUNER GOES DOWN- An Air India Boeing
spokesman sail!
747, reported to be the actual plane that crashed int&lt;l
. It appear!! aD 325 people aboanl were their Saturday evening flight to
ldDed. (UPJ).
the Atlantic Ocean Sunday off the coat ollreland, sits
ndla.
on the tannac at re&amp;n~~n International Airport hours
"They were very, very excited,"
said De. Haria! Choudhury, a friend
of the family and fellow Hlndti
Indian. ·
Cincinnati's Indian comm11ni(Y.
. bodies," said Flight Lt. Jim securtty precautions taken prior to paid us respects at the home of
CORK, Ireland (UP]')
the flight.
Rajeshwar's sister, Sneh Garg, In'
Searchers combing the Atlantlc.off Woodburn.
.
Prtme
Mllnlster
Garret
FitzGe"There
are
no
bodies
out
·
there
Washington.
Mount
western Ireland recovered one
rald
traveled
to
Cork
to
Inspect
the
now,"
affirmed
Flight
Lt.
Jan
Rajesltwar, a.formersecretaryof
more body today from uie Air India
McFarlane. "Bodies usually float search-and-rescue operation. He the Hindu Society of Greater
jet with 329 people aboard that "fell
out of the sky" In a suspected for a day then sink for abOut three visited Cork Regional Hospital Cincinnati, was an ·t,nsurance sales·
days. Thechancesofflndlnganyone where pathologists began an exam!· man for MONY (Mutual of New
terrorist bomb attack.
A total of 131 bodies have been alive are extremely remote. But we nation of more than 80 bodies York). Hewas.prEpatlngtotakethe
Ohio bar exam for a second time.
recovered In the 26 hours since the were just tryingtouptheheadcount. brought there.
"Their work-Involves the examl·
Before coming to the Unltett
Boeing 747 sudde~ vanished off
nation ol the possibility of criminal . States, Rajeshwar was a practicing
radar screens, plunging nearly 6
"The bodies are pretty intact.
'
miles before crashing into the sea' They.show high-speed Impact with action. It will be meticulous and wlll civil attorney In India.
take some time: That possibility
"He was a friend of everybody/'
without ever issuing a distress caD.
the water,'' he said.
Rescue officials said there was no
Most of the ?IJl passengers and 22 . cannot be Ignored ... " FitzGerald Choudhury said. "He was always
· happy, a !ways smiling. There was .
hope ·any of the ?IJl passengers of crew aboard Air-India Flight 182. en said.
An Irish warship was Jrylng to never any sorrowness In his face." •
seven crew members survived . .
route from Toronto and Montreal to
Swatantar Gupta was a computer
After daylight broke, four Sea New Delhi and Bombay,lndla, were find the "blacl&lt; box" fllght data ·
recorder
from
t.he
Boeing
747,
which
programmer-technician
for Globe
King helicopters from the British Indians or Canadians. At least eight
Sun·
could
explain
what
trtggered
Corp.
Rllyal Air Force began sweeping a lived In the Uniied Sfutes.
day's dlsaster.''lt has probably
20-mlle-wlde area some 120m lies off
InNe'w~lhi,Air·IntllaManaglng
· southwest Ireland for five hours. Director Dhruba Bose told repor· sunk," said James Gee, a Defense
They discovered the 131st body but ters the airline would fiy relatives of Ministry spokesman.
Searchers have less than 24 hours
foundnoslgnsofllfe.
the victims to Ireland to aid In
to
locate the device In waters more
"The wreckage ts now spread out Identification.
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Two
than
one n111e deep before It stops
over rnlles. There's a lot of debris
Bose sa!d sabotage may have
tickets sold for Saturday night's .
A-om · the plane, but we saw no caused the crash but defended signaling.
OhloLottodrawlnghadthesameslx
..
,.
numbers on them as pulled In the •
drawing, the Ohio Lottery Cornmts· •
slon said Sunday.
Those numbers w('re 4, 15, ,ZJ, 23,
31 and ;13.
Ohio Lottery Comrplsslon offl·
clals said $3,316,733 worth oftlckets
were sold, creating a jackpot of $1.4
mUllan. Holders of those two tickets
will each get $700,&lt;00 OVI!!' a W:year
perlnd.
.
How many tickets had four of the
six and five ol the six tickets.will be
announced today. . ·
. .
·. Meanwhlie. the'Jaclqx!ffor·Wed: ; ·. '··
nesdi.y nlibt's drawing starts all · ·
over at $1 mllllo~.

Services for William George
·.Ables. 57, Raven.WQOd, fof\1\er)iPf Orville-Cole . . .
Pomeroy, wpre held at 2 p.m. today
at the Pleasant VIew United
Relatives have received word of
Methodist Church, MUiwQOd, W. Va. thedeathofOrvUieCole, OO,Dayion,
Burial was In Pleasant View former Meigs resident and son of
Cemetery.
the late Pearl and Ruby Caldwell
Mr.AbleswasbornJune30,1927in Cole of near ·Tuppers Plains, at
Jackson County, W. Va., a son of Kettering Hospital Sunday.
frank Lester Ables and the late
Mr. Cole graduated from the
Olive-Orange High School • In
Lora Ables.
Surviving are his wife, Betty Tuppers Plains In 1943, but spent
Joyce Vannest Ables; two sons. most of his life In Dayton, retiring
William George Ables, Jr:, and from Frigidaire.
Lester DeWitt Ables, Ravenswood;
He Is survived by his wife, Mae,
two daughter, Karen Sue Whited of four children, eight grandchildren;
Ravenswood and Beth E. Lewis of a half-brother, Homer A. Cole,
South Charleston, W.Va.; his lather · Tuppers Plains; two brothers, Otis ·
and stepmother, Frank L. and Cole, Cincinnati, and Floyd Cole,
Jessie Ables, Parkersburg, W.Va., Gallipolis; three sisters, Marjorie
two grandchldren; five brothers, Mercer, Belpre; Angle Miller.
RlchardGlennAbles,LongBottom;
Richmond, va·., and Enid Cole of
Charles Edward Ables of Azusa,
near Tuppers Plains, and several
Calif.; John Wesley Ables, New nlecesandnephews.
Castle, Pa.; Everett Ray Allies,
He was preceded In death by his
Ravenswood, and Robert Paul parents and three brothers, Dorsel
Ables, Wampum, Pa.; two sisters,
L., Bernard and Dwight Cole.
Mrs. Frankie VIrginia Potts, MarrtServiCes wlll be held at 10 a.m.
ottlsland,Fia.,andMrs.EisleJean Wednesday at the Emar.uel CaMcCullough, Parkersburg.
thollc Church In Dayton. Friends
His mother and a sister preceded may call tram 5 to9 p.m. Tuesday at
him In death.
·
theToblasFuneraiHomelnDayton.

C0· )eman may .eaet d eath· penaJty
CINCINNATI (UPI)- Hamilton '
County Common Pleas Judge
Simon Leis has 5et today as the day
he will pronou~ sentence on Alton
Coleman, alleged mastermind of a
Midwest crime spree last summer.
for the aggravated murder convlc·
Uon of a 15-year-old Cincinnati girl.
The ~man,10-woman jury that
convicted Coleman ofldUingTonnle
Storey last summer reconunended,
June 9 that he be put to death In

·
·
Ohio's ~lectrl~ chair.
Afteraseparatetrtalfor!hesame
crime, HariiUton County Common
PleasJudgeWIUlarnMorrtseyJune
u gave the deathe sentence Debra
ted
•
· Brown ' Caleman s conv1c
acrornpllce on the alleged crtrne
spree.

MaiTill@elicenses

Marriage licenses have been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Gregory Scott Cole, 21,
Tuppers Plains, and Kristl Ann
Gaddis, 1'7, ReedsvU!e; · Thomas
~ne&amp;day reeeption
Eugene Allen, 24, Marietta, and
~.~
'
Juanltal..eeGuinthel',l7,Syracuse;
. .. ~1011 ]lonorlng the Rev.
Chrlslq)her
Jon Circle, 23, and
~Grace and h1l fa.mlly will be ,
Petra
Marlon
Jenldns, both of
held. WednfldaY at 7: 30 at the
Racine:
JoelyJUt
Keith King, :Ml,
Ractne .United Methodist C)lurch.
New
Haven,
and
Tina Louise
Member&amp; the church and friends
S)'raCt.tse: Mark A.
IN! Grace family are Invited to Pierce,
Hotter,
and Melissa Mae ·
~=I A money tree will be Thomas, both
ot Long Bottom.
pt
ted to them:

.

w

or

ro.
ro,
ro,

f

..

.329 die in latest air disaster·

Two win Ohio lotto

ro

Weather forecast
Partly cloudy today, with a
chance of showers and thunder·
storms and highs In the mid In&gt;.
Clear tonight, with a low between 00
and 65. Mostly sunny Tuesday, with
highs In the mid In&gt;.
The,proll@blllty of precipitation Is
:Jl pe~nt today and 10 "percent
•,
.
torilght ana Tuesday. .
~xtended fOI'eCIII!t

These three cloge1'8 from
Charleston, W.Va., were weD received Sunday
afternoon as they danced on Ute upper parking lot
lltage as a part of the Heritage Weekend ob!lervance.
CLOGGEKS

-

Square·dancing and Clogging were among the variety
of enteriablment used at the fllage area on Saturday
and Sunday afternoons although some acts on
Saturday were rained out. '
·

FalrWedneaday, wlthadlllnceof
showers and llundenltoml8 ~
day lind Friday. Highs wW l"lllllt!
from the . 8011 to lilt! low 9011
Wednesday
111unda,y' anc1 rrom
the mid 'lU8 to the mid 808 Friday.
Overnight lows ntolltly wW be Ill the.

and

008.

Happenings around Meigs County..
Emergency squads
answer seven calls

Veteraris Memorial

Two ea~ dismissed

NOTICE .
CABLE TV

INTERRUPTION
Saturday Adrnlsslons··Charles
Two cases have been dismissed ·
Searles, Cheshire; Timothy Lan· and a resiralnlng order Issued In i While upgrading existing line
nlng, Pomeroy; Nellle Nelson, Meigs Cdunty Common Pleas
equipment in Ma&amp;an &amp; Meigs
Middleport.
Court.
·
Counties, Cable TV ·subSaturday Discharges--Rita StO- · Actions dismissed by Judge
scribers could notlce~o of
bart, Gladys Moore, Valerie Han· · Charles Knight are the Racine
. .coble service between . orly
stalne, Beverly Byers, Helen Frank, Horne National Bank against Gary
morning hours of 12:
a.m . .
Curtis Polly, Misty Clay.
Lent, JacksonvUie, Ohio, and the
and 7:00 o.m .. Monday thru
Friday.
Sunday Admissions.. Benjamin Ford Motor C!'e!ltt Co., Melvindale,
Fields, Hartford, W.Va.
Mich., against Gary L. Longenette,
THANK YOU FOif
Sunday Discharges-Charles Sea· Long Bottom.
.
YOUR PATIENCE
rles, Wanda Gordon.
A restraining order has been
Issued by the court against Michael
CDNSOLIDATED
C.
Dorst, Pomeroy, pending a
Meets W~~esday
COMMUNICATION
div9rce action filed by Tammy 'Jo
GROUP
The m'onitey mi'E'ting ot the Long Dorst, Middleport.
Bottom Community Association r---------..---'-~-~-------.._
will be Wednesday, 7:30p.m., atthe
·Long Bottom Community Building.
Election of officers wDI be held.

Meigs County Emergency Medl·

cal~rvtcereportssever~c;~llsover

the weekend, four Saturday and
threeSunday.
Saturday at 7:46a.m., Middleport
toCheshlretorCharlesW.Searlesto
Veterans Memorial; Syracuse at
3: 02 p.m. to the ball field for Mark
Venoy to Veterans Memorial;
Middleport fire department at 4:17
p.m. to a structure fire ai the Cluff
buDding on North Second st... the
fire was contained In an hour;
Middleport ·a t 6:59p.m: to County
Road 5 for Edith Forrest to Holzer
Medical Center.
Sunday at 1:35 a.!ll .• Pomeroy to
RockSprtngsRd, tor Carl Jennings
to Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers
Plains at 6:30p.m. to Curtis Hollow
Rd. for Paul Ray to Veterans
Memorial; Middleport at l!: 02 p.m.
to Noble Summit and McElhinney
HIU for Nora Cambron to Holzer
Medical Center.

Meets Tuesday
The Auxtltary of Veterans Memorial Hospital wlll meet at 7: :Jl
Tuesday night In the cafeteria.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.
VETERANS MEMORIAL· HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROA·T
GENERAL AltERGIST .

•

at y en tine
e
New .business coming to Middleport

•' Vol.35, No.50
Copyrighted 1986

1 Section, 10 P1111•• 25 Centt
A Multimedia Inc . Newspeper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. June 25, 1985

By BOB HOEFLICH
Se"llnei Staff Wrtter
Middleport VIllage will be getting a brand new
business ~ a Dairy Queen-Brazier Restaurant at
Diamond St., and N()rth Second Ave. This was
announced at Monday's regular council session by
Mayor Fred Hoffman.
The restaurant, which will employ some 25 fulltlrne
workers 1ln addition to the some 12 workers hired
· during construction, will he operated by Wayne and
. Deborah Davis of Middleport. Davis has a 26 year
family Wstoty of success In a Dairy Queen-Brazter
operation In Point Pleasant, W.Va ., having managed
the Poin.L Pleasant store .for five' years. The
Middleport store will he the 51st operation ol
·American Dairy Queen.
A $371,300 Investment will be Involved in
construction and equipping the Middleport location
which wlll not ol;lly have drive through services
offered by Dairy Queen, but wUI have seating for 52
customers. A Community Block Gran! Funds of

. $U0,900 will be Involved as well as $50,&lt;00 cash equity
by the owners. Council approved the plan for
developrne)lt of the new facility.
GOkey employed
In other actions, council employed Bernard Gilkey,
former Meigs County Commissioner and form er
head of the Ohio Department of Highways In Meigs
County, as director of the town's litter control
.'Program.
The program Is funaed for siX months, July through
December. Gilkey, as director, will be paid $7 an
hour. Opal Kauff, village employe. wUl serve as partlime secretary for the program.
A committee composed of councilmen Bob
Gilmore, Jack Satterfield and William Walters
studied applications for the director's post and
Gilmore reported last night !hat the committee
recommended naming James Brewer to the position.
However, councUrnan Allen LeE! King said that he f~lt
.Gilkey's qualifications were good and that Gilkey had

Sharing plant revenue
draws stiff opposition
.

"Add another condition ...on behalf
of Amal. ..that the American fleet
moves away from our seafront."

.

· By KEviN KELLY

Lindley. His order was struck down ,
OVPStaffWrller '
by the Ohio BoardofTaxAppealsln
GAlLIPOLIS - Gallla County
November 1983 and was upheld by
Local school officials were to testify
the Ohio Supreme Court In July 1981.
before legislators In Columbus this
Repayments
afternoon against two bills Intra·
Meigs ~ounty must repay $44,997.
.du~ in the legislature that would
Othercountlesaffectedbytherullng
take away :Jl pei'CI'nt of GaUia
Include Lawrence, $312,2745;
Ad81l)S, 6,435; . AI !)ens, $33,925; .
County's power plant tax revenue. ·
':'"'11ie bU!coriglnallng-lli.the Senate · . Jacksori,-~.437; Hocking: ~.rot;
. ..,. would atsowlthlx!ld state ioundatlon · SCioto, $76!!;709 and Vtriton·, $158,228. ..
paymentsintheamountsthecounty
Under the 7030 split, the 30
won back when 30 percent of the
percent taken away from GaUia
James M. Gavin plant tax money
Caunty coffers was ' dls\rtbuted to
was lost In 1981-83.
more than 00 Ohio :counties. The
AHouseblllwouklinstltutea7030 declslon.to return the money, plus
split of that revenu~. The 30percent
what was lost between1981andl983,
shareout was decreed In 1981 by
to GaUia's county auditor created
then-Tax Commissioner Edgar
"more losers than winners," Gallla

--Amal militia leader Nabih Bcrri

Counly Local Schools Superintend·
ent Nell Johnson observed earlier
this year, prompting legislation to
return the 30 percent to the other
counties.

Four-ship task force
has come within
five mites of
Lebanese coast

Mediterranean Sea

...........__.

Johnson told the Gallia County
Local Board of Education Monday
that If either blll 'become law, the
.
-sch.ool district will icise $1.2 t:n!lllon .
(l&lt;lr year.. .- . _
· ·
. ·Helicopter .Carrier · ·
''li will have a dramatic effect on
USS Saipan
our school dlstrtct, as we all know.
and we'll do everything to get. these
bills out . of committee," he said.
"Since we area minority, wewlll be
Landing Ship TanK
hard-pressed to fight
USS Spartanburg County
Johnson said It's hoped that
(Continued on page 10)

.-. .

~

&lt;

'

:•,

•

..l

WASHiNGTON (UPI)-.~ense
Secretary Caspar Weinberger says
the seizure of 40 American hostages
Is "the beglnnlng of a war, " and
deployment of u.s. forces to within
striking distance of Lebanon 1$ akin
to "military movements In
wartime."
Weinberger alsd has shrugged off
a demand by Shille Moslem leader
· Nablh Berrt to withdraw U.S. naval
and Marine forces from the vicinity
ot Lebanon.
The defense secretary made the
particularly tough comments Mon·
day tn an Interview with CBS, NBC,
ABC and CNN, a transcript of which
was released by the Pentagon.
·

o

'•

M

•

•

Carrier USS Nimitz

u:"

'

"'

:

•

"" ' ·

' ' "•

'

'',

Wt&gt;lnbergersald.U.S. ·lnt~Uigence _.!llove aW)ly .from our seafront'.' as.

knows "pretty well who the terror· another condition for·the release of
Isis are'' who seized TWA Flight 847 40 hostages still held In that country. ·
and Its passengersandcrewJunel4. The first condition was that Israel
But he appeared to rule out any release 7li6 Moslem prisoners.
IJ:nmedlate muttary action or retail· Israel freed 31 prisoners earlier
atlon fortheselzure, because it could Tuesday.
mean ha1ming Innocent dvlllans.
. Weinberger dismissed the new
demand: "The U.S. fleet Is In
He stopped short of branding lntematlonal waters. It's. nol In
Bcrrl a terrorist, but said the J,.ebanese waters. There Is no
Lebanese leader "Identifies himself . ln(llcauon of any change In the basic
as a person who Is In control of the government policy thai we don't
situation, by which It's understood give Into demands of hijackers."
that he not only knows but has
A four-shlp task force headed by
contact with the terrorists and Is the nuclear-powered aircraft carspeaking for them."
rler Nimitz has been off the
In Beirut, Lebanon, Berrl de-· Lebanese coast since the middle of
manded that ihe "Arnertcan fleet last week.

'USS Nas/willfl

t'4

Cruiser USS South Carolina . . ·'·

'?*b.,..-.

Ho~tage situation: beginning of war LandingL::h
Ship

. ·..

. _..·..

.5.'*

Destroyer USS Kidd
.,,,,.,

·&gt;

Oiler USS Kalama~oo ·

I

• '

. Council gave a first reading to an ordinance
changing the zoning of the area from Rutland St.. to the
corporation limits from B-2, highway business, toS.i
local business. Thechangelsbelngmadeat the request
of the Mlddleport PlanJ\Ing Commission. A first
reading was also given to an ordinance establishing a
public transport.atlon fund . The fund is for the
administration of the taxi service being Initiated in
Pomeroy and Middleport .with state and federal funds .
The service is expected to be inoperatlonbythel'ndof
July .
A bid from Mitch Meadows for a 1974 vehicle no
longer needed by the Hre department wa.s accepted .
The bid was for sro;l.
Last night's meetingalsoserved as a public hearing
for the allotment of l~federal revenueshartngfunds .
Mayor Hoffman said that a 25 percent reduction Is
expected In the $15,&lt;00 received for 1985. CounCil
. agreed to divide the expected $11,250 between the
street and general govenment funds.
(Continued on page 10)

done favors lor t)le village In previous years. Gilkey
. was employed as director with flvecouncllmen voting
in favor of his getting ihe job and Gilmore casting a
dissenting vote.
Closing process near
Mayor Hoffman reported that the closing processes
on Hve new houses In the Hartinger Parkway Housing .
Addition will he taking place the first of the WI'E'k and
council voted to transfer the Hartinger housing
subdivision from the village to the Middleport
Housing Corporation. The corporation wUl now
transfer homes over to the new property owners.
The mayor said also that a Supreme Court decision
regarding wage policies will affect Middleport
leading to a smaller staff or less hours worked by
employes, particularly the police department. Mayor
Hoffman said that proylslons are vague at this point
but that he and Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck will attend
an Ohio Municipal League Seminar In Columbus
Friday to learn more of the effect of the decision.

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Dock .
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SYRIA

LEBANON
Amphibious assault
force with 1BOO U.S.
Marines positioned
30 to 60 miles
from Beirut

30
miles
UPI Graphic

MORE DEMANDS - Amal militia leader Nabih
Berrl, the top negotiator for gunmen holding 40
t\merlcan Wjack hostages Monday demanded that a

Navy task force senl to Lebanon after the hijaddng
move fwiher out to sea. UPI.

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

Ya PRIC
BeDDIII9 89 -

•v•rwMattress
'
.&amp; ~x 8prlngl

Anw ,81zel •v•rw QuaiHwl
No •;xoeptlonel
ACIIIBVI!:R8- Aclllever awll'dslol' ~werepresentedMondtly
u the IIIUIUal Melp CClunt)' Jaycee award&amp; banqUet held at llle
hSele Reltaurant. Wllh their awardll are Charles Payne, left,
nip&amp;

: NEW OII'FroEII8 - 'l1ll'lle ere the - olllcel'll ~ till! Melp County
· JQC~~&amp; Snhd, \lflldl Meadou, .. llllldeltt; hack, I to r, Sieve
W.' 1 ,vlce!W II rt,llldRidludOMit,tl'eUUI'ei'.Not .. ertw•
the new aa t•ey, Bob F1nt.

CALL (614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244
'(

Jirlne operations

I

Marietta Jaycees, rep.naJ director, and LaiTy Grimes of the Melp .
J~ Denni8 Ra11dolph, Marietta, dllltJtd dlrl!clor, wll aiiiO be
J11 etlellted one of the awll'ds, but wu unable to attend Monday nl~'s

meeting.

OUTSTANDING - Awll'ds to • hi lillnl membe1'8 ~ the
19tlt-&amp; year were presented to Melp Jaycee~ at llle - . 1 awlll'lll
nl~ bekl at theb"·"" Relt&amp;eurant MOIIday nqtJi. Wlllllllelr awardll
are, front, ll8ated, Mlldt Melldowa, ~ I lendal memher; INidl, I Ill r,
Steve Bachner, oot'Menllng flrllt year member, and IIIII YCM~&amp;.
.oulltandlng olddmer member.
·I

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�The

Ohio

Commenta

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tu81day,
. J""' 26~ 1986

.

WIMBLEDON, ENGLAND
(UPI) - Ivan Lend! enjoyed the
distinction of winning the only
match completed yesterday on a
rainy opening day at Wimbledon ,
and John McEnroe settled for his
nrst dispute.
Whlle66other scheduled matches
were washed out, Lend! patiently
• walled four hOUrs for the opportun·
tty to play, and then defeated
American Mel Purcell, 64, H , 7-6,
taking both lie-breakers 7·2.
sun, the second seed was not
.
happy ,
"I think It was very dangerous,"
L!mdl said sternly, "and since they
stopped every other match they
• should have stopped ours. 'The
ChaJ1ces were Very high something
would happen.
"It was hot fair to us as players
because any bad step could have
inOuenced the match."
· Oddly, and yet typical for Wlm,
bledon, the sun came up In the
course of the match, which con·
eluded at 3:45p.m.
The Center Court malch between
McEnroe and Australian Peter
McNamara was the only other
contest to begin, but after they spill
the first six games they agreed they ·
didn 't want to continue. McNamara, making a tenuous return
following knee surgery, slipped to
the wet grass three t lmes In the six

'

Outlaw nations ____-..--______.,...._L_ow_e......ll~W_m....;'

.The Daily Sentinel

ge:::......_tt

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Uke rrlwtons of other American~
I spent the last weekend gl!led to the
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MJ!:IG8-MASON AREA
televiSion set watching our coun·
try's latest ignominious encounter
~lb
.
with
the Shllte MoslemS In the
~~· ........_,._"T",,...,.._c::;j,_
Middle East. By now,llls plaint hat
the Republican administration, at·
ROBERT L. WINGETT
ter spending a trillion dollars and
Publisher
fow- and a half years reatmlng, Is
no more capable of meeting
than was the Democratic
ten-orlsm
PAT WHITEHEAD
BOBHOEFUCH
admln1stra
tkm of Jimmy Carter.
General Manap;er
AAaiAiant Publisher;conlrf!Uer .
Will tile Great Communicator be
able to ialk his way out of this one?
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
We'll have to walt and see!
News Editor
If you will remember back to the
presidential election in 198l, you
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They !hould bE&gt; less than 300 words
wtll know that Ronald Reagl!ll took
long. All letters are subject to editing and must be !!llgned with name~ address and
full advantage of his oppopent's
telephone number. No unsigned lett e-rs wtll be publishe-d. Letters should be In
good taste. addressi ng Issues, not penonaltUe.s.
· helplessness when 66 Americans
were prisoners at the U.S. Embassy
In Iran. On Carter's last day In
office, the captives were released.
For more than a year, Jimmy
Carter had kept his cool and aU the
captives returned home without a
John Glenn, who suffered last year's campaign, has emerged !rom that
single fatality. Ronald Reagan
unhappy experience with some strongly held views on how the national
promised "swift retaliation" If such
parties should proceed with the selection of presidential candidates.
an. act occurred whUe he was
· The l~as. of (X)Urse, are not new. 'lbere possibly no longer extsts ,any ·· president. Now he knows Just how .
fOJ1ll of refonn tha,t has not already l;leen discussed.
helpless a president Is In a matter
Glenn has proposep a national primary day, larger tax credits for
such as this. He's damned If he does
Individual contributions to campaigns and keeping the polls open 24 !lOUrs
and damned If he does not take
on election day.
·,
some sort of retributive action. Can
All the chan~ suggested by theOhloDemocr\lt have appeal but, for one
President Reagan's Teflon Image
reason or another, none are going to be put Into effect- certainly not by
stand on the long haul without
1988 and posslb)y never.
peeUng off?
"
Yet, Glenn's testimony to the National Commission on Elections last
I hope that In ills frustration and
week has a disturbing element - a touch of elitism that sounds strange
helplessness the president has as
coming
him.
.
.
much courage as his predecessor. I
Glenn rejected the view of those who argue that a National Primary Day
hope he wtll not be stampeded by
"woold clearly favor well·known and well·Hnanced candidates, whlle
public opinion Into some rash act
reducing the prospects for so-called dark horses. which wt11 lead to the hostages'
"But In my view, IIQbody ever promised the dark horses that they would
death . Now, whether he likes it or
be running for the roses anyway," Glenn said. "After all, thepurpo&amp;eofour
not, Is the time to follow Jimmy
nominating procedure Is to choose a president and in the modem age, I
Carter's example and play It cool.
believe that any candidate who has failed to buUd a national record and
He Is facing the same opponent, the
reputation - whether In politics, labor, the sciences or any other field of
Ayatollah Khomelni. the leader of
endeavor- probably has no business on the. ballot In the llrsl place."
all the ShUte Moslems Jn.the Middle
The, cilrrent system Is probably a disaster, giving the small' states of
East, whether they are In Iran or
Iowa and New Hampshire an almost-or·break power over the nominations
Lebanon, He calls the shO,ts and he.
with their early cacuses and primaries. But Is does not discriminate In
Is an enemy of the u.:;;. because of
favor of tl\e well·known and the well·Hnanced.
our fonner friendship with the
Without attributing a selflsh motive to Glenn, on all counts an homrable
deposed Shah. He Is an Insane man
man, Gienn's system would have weighed the 1984 Democratic primary
leading an Insane ctllt that believes
heavUy in favor of Walter Mmidale and John Glenn.
the quickeSt way to heaven Is to die
In the field of eight that went Into the Democratic primaries, only
In the service of the Ayatollah. All
Mondale and Glenn were well-financed and nationally known. The rest
the suicidal acts of the last four
'were those dark. horses mentioned by the Ohio Democrat.
years can be traced directly to him.
, And yet, the argument can be made that Alan Cranston of Calllomla,
Ernest Hollings of South Caronna and maybe even George McGovern, on
the basls.of their public records, were equally qualified.
·And what of Jesse Jackson, who contributed so much to the campaign,
and Gary· Hart, who eveiltU&lt;!llY·became Mondale~s chief clu\[lenger on the
WASHINGTON .::; 'ibekeytothe '
basis of wtn til New·Hampshlre:'
. · . : · ··.
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mystecy
of .Josef Mengete, the
·
· Should they, as dark horses, be eUmlnati!d from the process· because
Auschwitz
"Angel of Death," may
they lack national recognition and. lacking that, cannot match the
In
the
memory
of a ·78-year-otd ·
lle
front -rurmers In the crucial area of fu!!d raising.
dentist
living
in
seclusion
In il hllliop
~en Glenn himself, altOOugh providing a mlddJe.of·the-road alternative ,
house
within
the
Black
Forest.
to Mondale, might have found himself In the role of dark horse without a
He was the Mengele famUy;s
chaitce run "for the rose" had Ill&gt; not been the first American toorbltEarlh.
dentist
for over 30 years, and he
Glenn Is 'a dutgent , solid member of the Senate, but there can be no
clearly
remembers treating
question that his nallonill recog~~ltlon and, to an extent, his ability to raise
"Bebbo,"
as Josef Mengele wsa
money was based on hl,s astronaut exp1olts.
nicknamed by his family and I
Would John Kennedy In 1960, George r.)cGovern In 1972 and Jimmy
friends.
The young man who was to
Carter In 1976 won the Democratic nominations - given their lack of
become
the notorious death-camp
"national record and reputation" at lh&lt;l! Hme?- Probably not.
and.
perfonn hideous medl·
doctor
BUt Richard Nixon would have won the GOP nomination in 1968 and 1972.
cal
experiments
'On helpleSs vic·
·And kiok at.whalhaJl[Jeiled.
·" · ·
.·
·
tims,
the
dentist
rec·
alled with a wry
The present system Is not the anwer. But any system that closes the door
smlle.
was
an
extremely
nervous
to any candidate for the presidency is certainly not the answer.
patient.
~er all, Isn't this the country that has so long prided Itself in the
Though government lnvestlga·
knowledge that any kid can grow up to be president.
tors and private Nazi hunters from
.

Rains halts Wimbledon play

Page--2-The Deily Sentinel

Touch of elitism

Why do the admlnl$tratton's lead·
ers In Washington spend long hours
placing the blame for the kidnap- ·
pings when the answer Is so
obvious?
·
The Reagan administration
would not have been In this
embarrassing position I! they had
taken some sort of retributive
action when the hostages from the
Carter administration were returned. Instead, they viewed the
Carter misfortune as something
that could never happen to Republi·
cans and .Jet the insane act go
unpunished. They should have gone
to the Congress and asked that the
troublesome nations of the Middle
East be officially classified as
outlaws and · e~etnies of the United
States with whom no other nation
should have political or commer·
clal dealings. A few years of
political · and moral quarantine

might convince them to straighten
up imd Oy right. Nations that have
already earned the·outlaw classlfl·
calion are Iran, Libya, Syria and
Lebanon. Any Qther nation that
continues to violate the quarantine
would also go Into the ·outlaw
classiftcation. All nations deserve
the opi&gt;QrtunUy to live in peace as
long as they act like peaceful
nations. Relations with Iran should
have been stopped after the last
hostage eplslde.
I think It Is lime that we In
America should begin to choose qur
bUsiness associates with more care.
The recenty college demonstra·
lions against apartheid hi South
Aft1ca are · but a forerunner of
things to coine. Historically, the
student demonstrations have preceded cultural changes. Within a
few years we will look back on
apartheid like we now look back on

Civil Rights legislation In this
countcy. The students of today will
be the leglslatoi;S of the future and
the countries that will not change as
the world changes will be the
outlaw countries of the future. It
should be the duty of the Congress
of the United States to regularly
screen ow- business partners to see
I! they are worthy of our continued
friendship and support.
I doubt If there Is enough oU In
Iran to pay for the humiliation we
have suffered from that country In
the last few years. There Is not
enough oU to pay for the Joss of 241
Marines by a Shiite suicidal truck
driver who went to his death with a
maniacal smUe on his Ups, sure he
was going to the Ayatollah's Shllte
paradise. What do we lose I! we
cross such countries off our trading
list?
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N'othingl

.Late model vehicles on racing card

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MINERAL WELLS, W.VA. Stock appearing late models of
the locaL variety are on the
marquee at the new West VIrgi nia Motor Speedway June 30
vying. for a top cash prize of
$1500. '
Receiving · second billing at
$350 to win Is the area's hobby
stock class.
The state's newest and most
eloquent racing facility, West VIr·
ginla Motor Speedway Is a %mile
smooth banked red dirt oval, prepared . to perfection. .The racing
surface '· I~. compllmehted .. by. unequal\'(] seatlng ""capaclty for&lt;
· 4,000 in the concrete bleacher area
and 10,000 on the grassy, terraced
hillside, each serviced by delicious
concessions catered by tlie Cal·
abash at ~arkersburg's Holiday

•

blinker."'

Today in history
Today Is T.laday, Jtme 25, the 176th day of 1985 with 189 to follow.

The moon 11 lllltJ firSt quarter,
Tile mornlllllllani are Vllllla and Jupiter.
ewnJIW,..... are M illlr)', Man ud Satllrll.
111a1e lJOnl • 11111 !late are lllldllr a. liP • cancer. 'lbry ~~~elude
Frllleh .,...,.,.... Ollltaw O.Upaallet In 181D, playwrlltat-dlrecllor
aeoqe A1JboCt 11 ll87, lllllllar' Gear~! Orwell ("191M") In
J1!0Y1e
dJI'eCIOI'Silb!Y Lumet In 19'JC (~61), actressJuneLockhart lnl925 (qe
1)), 8Jiillllltpr CMie)r· Simon In ~.
On thll date In hlstocy:
In 1876. Gee. Gelqt Culler and blf force olD men were annlhllated by
Chief SlttJIW 81111'• Sioux tdbelliltlll at lJIIJe Ilia Hom.tn Mootana.
In 1111, Ncril KlnaD fclrcellnvaded Soutli Moree·
.
In JIG. ........... Court beDf1ed doWii I deciiiOII Interpreted U
bMidiWIJft)'t!l' ID public """"'s.
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ano~rtheworldare-tryb)gt6scilve

Merigete•!Heeth Is of. extr¢me • thedti~t!st.
_· . .
. . ·.. · ·
the Mengele mystery, not one.had · Importance In deie rnilnhig ·
Thedentlst told:ourassoclatethat
located the old dentist. Yet his whether the remains found In
he had treated the three Mengele
firsthand knowledge of Josef Men· Brazil are Mengele's. Or If someone
brothers, Karl, Alols and Josef, but
gele' s teeth could be decisive In else Is burled there In an elalJ!lrate
was particularly close to Joseg who .
establishing whether the skeletal attempt to deflect Nazi hunters
was close to Ids age. (In fact,
remalns exhumed In BrazU are 1 r om M e n g e I e ' s a c t u a 1 Mengele when he returned to his
Indeed those of the' world's most
whereabouts.
·
home town of Gunzburg during his
hunted Nazi war criminal.
It remained for our associate university years.
Forensic experts have said the Lucette Lagnado' to track
seven teeth found In the grave near M~'s dentist - . the only
The old dentist described Mel)·
Sao Paulo are cruclalevldence. Yet journaliSt, official Investigator or gele as "vecy nice .. . frienllly ...
all theyhavetocomparethemwlth private Nazi hunter to do so.' She channing ... thoroughly likeable." ,
Is Mengete's SS dental recordlt. · _had to prOmise not topubllshelther-- He said Mimgele showed nc!lnfefest
-.
These don't include-X·r'ays, whicli . the old man's name or his village. In jlolltlcs or the Nazi iia'rty; wliich ''
were not then as widely used' In
u.s. authorities were also Inter· during. those years was growing
ro1,1tlne dental procedures as they
ested . In the dentist. When they · from a little-regarded fringe group
are today.
agreed to honor this commitment to the dominant political force In .
So the testimony of the only llvlng
anci respect his anonymity, we Weimar Germany.
persons known to have worked on
provided the name and address of

down

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History Is a one-way street. You ' Congress made a pledge !Qr aU the
never know what would have
world to see. Because superpowers
happened If we had acted differ·
can't back out of public commll· ·
ently. Had Hitler been stopped · ments easily, the leverage on the
Sandlnlsta Is greater. Cornman·
before he got started, one would
never know that wise poUcy saved
dante Ortega should sense that he
· 60 million lives.
will not prevail; Nigaragua won't
Still - even If we never know it go communist.
my sense Is that something historic •
So too: A big vote for Jess of a
program Is better than a small vote
happened when the House of
Representatives voted to gtve aid to
for a big program. Some hawks are
the Nicaraguan democratic opposl·
foolishly saying Reagan could have
gotten a tougher program If he had
lion. To see that, Imagine what
would likely have happened had the
jJeen willing to SI!Crlflce SOIJ!'! of his
House not acted.
big miargln In Congress. They miss
In Central Ameiica, his: To the point. Wedon'tneedyetanother
assure survival, the Nicaraguan
on.agaln, off·agaln policy that can
Sandlnlstas would have moved to
be debated and theii reversed by
tighten their grip on Nicaragua and
one more vote. The large vote
to subvert their neighbors. The puugtn should tell the Sandlnlstas
Soviets would add fuel to the fire. that they can't Just walt us out.
Notltll\g could help them more.
And bipartisanship is critical.
Sooner or later, the United States Almost a third of the House
would have ahd to act miUtarlly in Democrats broke with Speaker Tip
what would have been a sloppy, O'Neill's position. This Included the
unpopular and perhaps lnconclu· chairman of the Foreign Affairs
slve way.
Committee,. the chatrrnan of the
Around the world, there would · Anned Services Committee and the
have been another toll: The word chatnnan of the Htapanlc Caucua. .
would be that the United States Is
O'NeUJ was hurt on this, perhaps
till Vletnamtzed, Impotent to act bumlllated. He gave an interview
even aga!nlt a Soviet probe close to · saying his advisors were MarY·
home. What serious nation would knolls - a missionary order' that
rely on America? The alllance sympathizes with the Marxist·
could unravel.
Lenlnlsts In Nlca,qua. He prelnBtead, the House vote tel up a vented Democratic Conareuman
dlffemat aceuarlo. For Ronald Dave ~· Mille fi'OIII ~
Reaian aot more power than he , peartn1 u C»&gt;.-x' ~ 11»
asked for.
wlmalng bill, theNlly denytna 1111
Conllder four characterlatlcs of own party 110111e ol ~ credit l'llr
lhe·d{!CIIIon. II was for overt, not fashion IIIII a responsible
~aid; ltc~edtheHouleb)la
compamalllle.
big margin; It ran 8CI'08II party ..,. O'NeUI, Reagan and Ortega
Unee; It wtll likely give political should team the same Jeuon !rom
' rather than mllltary ald.
this vote: You can't make headway
Overt 1s better than covert. wltliout the support It the moderate
. Gowmments UiUal1y act secretly Deiaaoctata In Conaress· 'I'bey are
to lower the stakes: Covert aid c:an the swtna 'VO!ft. They're cautloul,
easily be dented or ended . .But the but not Wl!llk-w111ed.

'-

· Finally, ald to a political coalition
Is more Important than aid to the
mUitary. 'lbe House bill provides
help to " the democratic resistance
forces" of Nicaragua. H Reagan Is
smart, that should mean the
contras will become the Instrument
of a broad spectrum of Nicaraguan
poUtlcal leaders pledged to detrocracy. That' will help the contras
shed their dark Image, boosting
theni In Nicaragua and the United
Stales, putting more pressure on

Berry's World
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"C 'mon, Dad, PLEASE/ AJI.fh• oth•r guys are
getrlri(J pefi'Mnent eyeliner /Obi/

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Boyer of Batesville, Ark. in an
extremely competitive and excit Jng race .
1n addi tion to the $1500 first
prize a t WVMS on Sunday, at
$2,000 first place payoff has been
sc heduled at Skyline Speedway
on Saturday evening. Promoter
Darrell Willie and J. D. Drllling
Company of Racine will be sponsoring the "Bob Adams, Sr. Memortal 100" in honor of the late
loc a l racer. The race will boast
the biggest pur se ever at Skyline
Speedway and _should . draw a
large' flel_d of c~~s fqr bOth·l«!ca l .
' tracks'l:ls one driver could pock'er ·
· $3 ,500 s hould he win both events.
Several out·of-lown cars and
the local speed ~ tei-s should create
inuch excitement as a variety of
driving skill~ will be needed on
the contrasting ovals; the small
Skyline oval and large % mile
West VIrginia Motor Speedway.

,

Tench vs . Dwight Hill and Don nie Hendricks; Nate Thom as a nd
Bob Kiesling vs. Herm Koby and
Joe Matthews; Diane Lawson
and Donna Nease vs. Carol An·
derson ·and Jackie Night.
7:00 Karen Stanley and Becky
Anderson vs. Kareri and Nancy
Smith; Kathy Fry and Rick
Cloak vs. Diane Lawson and
Rick Crow; John Bentley vs. Bill
Gray. ·
8: 30: Steve Mullins and Dwight
Hlll; Don Hendricks and Rhonda
Wood vs. Winner; Nease and Nea·
se/Anderson and Anderson ; John
Bentley and Rick Crow vs. E . s.
Vlllaneuva and Manny Casa·
nova; Brent Johnson vs. Rick
Pickens.
·

Neale, new Red Wings coach

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DETROIT (UPI) -Harry Neale,
who coached at Ohio State for lour
· seasons beginning In 1966-67, yester·
day was nameed to succeed Nick
Polano as coach of the Detroit Red
Wings.
Polano was named director of
player development and ~sslstant to
General Manager Jimmy Devel·
lano In a reorganization of the front
'
office.
"He Is personabfe, witty, artlcu·
late and he's also a good teacher,"
Oevellano saki In announcing the
signing of Neale, the former
Vancouver general manager·

.

NAJA PARTICIPANT
Kevin Smith, a Junior al Rio
Grande CoUege, recently com·
pleted In the JavUn throw allhe
NAJA national track and field
meet recently al Hlllsdale, Mich.
Smith WIIS a second team
AU·Di&gt;.-trtct Selection for the
Redmen Ibis !Ieason. Other
participants In the NAJA · na·
tional meet were Mark Plei'!IOn,
Darren Mlller, Ray Pen-y and
BW Mangus. Along wllh the nve
national qualltleJ'!I, other returnIng Redmen wW btclude fonner
KC Bobcat Jam Ranager, Mark
Davison, Devron Steele, Rick
Blakeslee, Paul McAIUsler, Jeff
Rowley and Ken Urata. c.

coach, to a two-year contract. Neale
was fired by the Canucks this year.
Neale, 48, becomes the 14th coach
of . !he Red Wings In 18 seasons.
Detroit has changed coaches 16
times In that. period with Alex
Delvecchio and Doug Barkley
serving separate terms.
Neale's record at Ohio State was
49-48-3. He also was coach of the
Hamilton ~Wingsln1971·72, then
became an assistant toGienSonmor
of the Minnesota Fighting Saints .Jn
the World Hockey Association In
1972·73, succeeding Sonmor late In
the season.

Big Bend Foodland unbeaten
In summer league action Big
Bend FOodland upped Its record
to 7·0 with wins over Rutland 12·0
and Whaley's Used Cars 20·2.
Rutland's c;~nly hit was lripled
b:Y Jeremy Rope as Robbie
Fields struek out seven and
walked only four. Fields also led
the hitting with a walk. triple,
and single. Otber hitters were
Kevin TayiQ.r willa a double, and

...

...,_._._ .... ,.. ..

..

I

~

., __ . .

- .. . .

- .. .

Rozt"er st"P'llS
'w·t"th o·.·tewog
.

'

e~-.

.1.;::,

PHILADELPHIA (UP!)- Mike
Rozier apparently reached an
agreement yesterday on a four· year
contract 'wortll over $2 mtulon with
the Houston Ollers of the National
Football League.
The league ruled yesterday that
Rozier did not have to wait untUAug.
1 to sign with theOhllersbecausehis
contracl with the J!~:~~~:~e~~ 1
ct0es not bind him to .
until then.
·
Rozier's agent , Arl WUklnson ,
held !I press conference yesterday to
announce he had reached an
agreement with Houston. Later
yesterday, the league office ruled
that Rozier does not have to walt
because of thenatureolhis contract .
"The deal is done," said Brendan
Moynihan. an assistant to WUklnson. "We Just want to get the names
on the dotted lines. We believe It's
the best contract of the year (for any
NFL player)."
Rozier finished the season with
ih ~ USFL 's JacksonvUJe Bulls
Sunday by scoring four touchdowns .
" It looks like he'll be coming In
later this week," Oilers spokesman
Greg Stengel sa ld in Houston. "They
have told us we can go ahead and try
to sign him . We're no! quilesureyel
(when). We've really not gotten
Wloldofhlm. We've just talked to his
agent."
Rozier finished seeond in the
USFL with 1,361 yards rushing.
The 1983 Helsman Trophy winner
signed out of the University of
Nebraska with the Pittsburgh
Maulers, who folded alter one
season In the USFL. Wilkinson
negotiated with the Oilers last year
but could not reach agreement and
Rozier signed with Jacksonville.
' " As a rookie, Rozier gained 792
yards In 14 games and was
hampered by injuries In Pittsburgh.
Wilkinson yesterday said the
decision togototheOllerswas based
on the lack of stablllty of the USFL
and that It was a gamble lor Rozier
to play In tlle league this year.

SIZE

P165/BORJ3
P175/BORI3
P195/75RI4
P205/75R14
P205175RI5
P215175R15
P225175RI5
P235175Rl5

BAnERY
·SALE! ·
SAVE S20

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all .

SAVE saoo to S26oo
Per Tire Off Current
Sale Priced
Supreme Firsts

Reg. Price 169.95
IALII'ItiCI... M9.9S

This ~bahry ucood,
J"''l'""'
d•mando

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motf 4o~ ond imPQrtod '""kt...

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992-2094

..

•J
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Pom~roy,

OPEN: 8-B MON.-SAT.; 8-8 FRI.

.

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Like our lndetermi·
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606 East Main

*ALIGNMENTS *FRONT END WORK
*BATTERIES *TIRE REPAIR
LOCATED; MAIN ST., RUTLAND, OHIO

PH. 742·3088

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

72 MO.

LOWEST PIICIS ON PASSIIGII CAIS AND
UGHI TIUCI tillS

M111er.Card 1nd Vl11 Welcome

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$34.00

RH"

...

BOGAN
. . =l.e-..
RNER

Clark, a former lineman , played
with the49ers, the Cowboys and the
Browns. A spinal disc injury finally
ended his playing career and he
went to the Miami Dolphins In 1970
as offensive line coach under Don
Shuia, In 1976 he became head coach
for the 49ers and In 1976, made the
move to Detn)ll . At thai time. the
Lions had not had a winning season
In six years. In 19lj3 Clark led the
Lions' to their first division title In 26
years . Clark's Detroit career was
mixed wllh public praise and
crtttclsm.
·
He and Griffin wJU.joln the crowd
at Meigs High Wednesday evening
lor the hillbilly supper before teei ng
It up on Thursday morning a I
Riversldl'Goll Course in Mason.
DUes and thl' tournament com·
mlttee Invites all Meigs and Mason
residents to visit the golf course
.. ThurSdayto meet Grif.fin ..Oark and
the other celebrities playing In the'
charity evf!!l.

"IEniNI YOU THERE IMBr'

Eric Heck, Tercy Reuter, Jason
Wright , Randy Moore, an(! Pat
Gcyskt~ each singles. Terry Reu·
ter doubled while Eric Heck, Jer·
emy Heck and Joe McElroy each
singled. For · Whaley's Shawn
Hawley tripled, Randy Corste
doubled and Monte Swindell,
Chuck Mash and Brlaq Smith .
singled. Conte took the Joss.

'
"'

Two lat.e en hies to the Dave Diles'
Appalachia Golf Tournament for
charily are Archie Griffin. the
country's only two-lime Heisman
Trophy winner , and Monte Clark,
former heacj coach for the Detroit
Lions.
.
Whlle a freshman at Ohio State,
Griffin, who has played In the DUes'
Tourney since Its Inception in 1979,
cameoutofnowheretlmeandagaln
to gain a school record of W yards
rushing and was never out of the
starting lineup during his four·year
career as a Buckeye. A former
recipient of the DUes' Good Guy
award, Griffin Is looking forward to
seeing many Meigs and Mason
County friends.

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

....

(

.. .

Ortega.
What happens when America Is
publicly, solidly and blpartlsanly
pledged to support a political tront
In Nicaragua? Ortega wtll sooner or
later cut a deal that will set up
democratic rule. the Russians will
then leave Central America alone;
the worl«! will know that the
VIetnam War has ended; the future
will probably hi! safer than It would
have been on history's one-way
street.

Inn . Permanent restrooms add to
spectator comfort: Camden/Clark ·
emergency medical aid is available on premises. Wood County
Rescue Squad provides safety.
. Free overnight camping.
Sunday's get acquainted prices
are $8 adults, $3 children under 12
and, as always, children under 6
are free. Grandstands open at
10:30 iJ.m.. warm ups begin at
noon and the first race will roll
onto the track at 2:30 p.m.
West VIrginia Motor Speed·
way Is located Just south of Par·
kersburg on I ·77. ·Take ·tne Ml·
hera) ·wens -exit . and foll~w the,
signs. For further Information,
call the track at (304) 489·9125,
Winner of last week's UDRA
"Stroh's National 100" was. Billy

Cancer Tourney
resum~s . Monday ......

Resufts from Mo11day, June
24th lor 4th Annual WJEH·
IWYPC Cancer Society Tennis
Tournament:
Open Slfigles: _Tim I,u_nch d .
rl Chuck Johnson 6-3, 6-3; Rick
Pickens d. Kevin Carty 6-2, 6-2.
35 &amp; Older Men 's Singles: John
Bentley d. Frank Johnson6·0, 6·1.
Mixed Doubles: Allen and Barb
White d. Eric and Kerr! Saunders
61, 6-1; Rick Crow and Diane
Lawson d. Allen and Barb White
6·2, 6-4; Jim .Elliott and Nancy
Mullins d . Bill Gray and Ann Jen·
klns ·4-6, 6·3, 6-2.
Tuesday Matches:
3:00 Alien White vs. 'Sam Hllton .
5:30: ·chuck Johnson and Rick

Vote chould change world_____B_e_n_J._~_a_it_en_be-rg::;_.

"Tod•y. one of the fellows at the club called me
'a flnii!Cial services Institution,' Instead of, 'a

game

Mollday's
In Boston. The Tigers' Larry Hemdon
was called out after BoSox second sacker Marly
Barrett dropped and 'retrieved ball on a throw from
s11orWop Glenn Hoffman. Boston won &amp;-2. lJPI.

MAKES POINT -' · Tigers' manager Spar1cy
Anderson, left, uses two lingers to make IWI point wl&amp;h
second base umpire Derryl Cousins ( t1~) after
oonti'OYenlal call by Cousins a&amp; second base of

Qe~ti~t Jmew Mengei~ ____
Ja_ck_A_nd_er_so_n_&amp;_Jo_se...:..p_h_S=-pea-r'

Berry's \JYorld

added that It wasn't his right to
request the contest be stopped.
" I'm happy It's over and I'm not
hurt," he said. "But I would have
preferred to play It tomorrow on a
safe court."
The only other excitement of the
day occurred early in the afternoon
when a holt of UghtnJng struck tlle
corner of the roof on the new
ext.e nslon of Wimbledon , emitting a
sha rp, cracking sound. A small
piece of the roofwasknockedoff, but
there were no Injuries.

Griffin, Clark join
Diles celebrity list

trow

a

games and McEnroe, who relies
greatly 011 movement, had no
confidence whenever he had to take
a step.
·"It's not like we have to finish the
match today ," McEnroe yelled out
to umpire David Johnson after he
broke at 15in the sixth game to draw
even at 3-3. "It's only the first round.
not the semifinals."
·The big crowd at Center Court had
been patient dUring the long delay
and then greeted McEnroe with a
standing ovation, but quickly turned
on him with derisive shouts. The
defending champion requested that
Johnson summon Alan Mills, the
tow-nament referee. Mills arrived
with Grand Prix supervisor Ken
Farrar, and afler a brtef consultatJon they postponed the match .
McNamara , after being sidelined
for most of 21 months following
surgery to hls light knee, has failed
to survive the opening round In all
three tourname.n ts he has played
this year. But with his knee stU!
bandaged, he broke McEnroe at
love to open the match and then held
al15 to go up 2.0.
McEnroe. trailing 1-3, held at love
and broke back on a backhand
service return before requesting the
match be halted.
Purcell slid to the ground consist ently during his match, and Lend!·
said he also was uncomfortable but

••••

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�.. .....
Tuesday, June 25, 1986

The Daily sJntinel
,

-- -· .. •

By The Bend

...

: Of course, you remember John
and Janet Carpenter Young.
· Well - their daughter, Lisa
: ~thleen, graduated with high
·· honors In a class of 4!ll this spring at
: f.ancaster High SChool.
··•· .
'
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..

~amily rr{edicine ·. Rabies
By Edward Schreck, D.O.

Am'd·• Prole.or
ol FunDy Medicine
Ohio Unlvenlty Collexe
ol Ollteopathlc Medicine
QUESTION: I live ln a rural
area, and I'm concerned about my
chlldren's exposure to wild anim·
:a1s. What should I do If an animal
bftes · my son or
- daulihter?
ANSWER: The
major problem
with animal bites
ts rabies, a fatal
· ~viral Infection of ,
: the .c entral nervous system trans:

· Family night was observed re: cently at the Harrisonville Presby: terlan Church with theLend·a·Hand
· Women's Society sponsoring the
: activity. A P,Otluck supper was
enjoyed by the 22 attending.
Hazel Stanley. president, opened ·
· the meeting with group singing of
·. "Love Lltted Me." Norma Lee gave
: Father's and Flag Day tributes

~fooles

which Included a reading, "Build
Me a Son" by Douglas McArthur,
Wid a poem, "The Old Ragged Flag"
after which the group sang '"Amer·
lea, the BeautifuL"
The Rev. Kenneth Wllklnson,
Interim mlillster gave a talk on
stewardship and had the closing
prayer.

Bobby Jo Poole, Mr. and Mrs.
Shannon Poole, Mr. and Mrs.
Melvin Barnett, Kathleen and
Joseph Poole. While there they
toured Moblle Bay Beach, Dolphin
Island, and the Gulf shores. Enroute
home they visited Mr. Wid Mrs.
Rupert Schrader, Fran_kfort, Ky.

Bridal shower is given
A brldal's howerwas held recently and Mandy Roush, Margaret Edwards, Sue DeLong, Pat Noel, Linda
honoring Cathy DeLong, bl'ilk'-elect
Cllne,
and Wllma Davidson.
of RiCk Edwards, In the Riverboat
Others
preenttng gifts were Syhll
Room of the Diamond Savings and
Ebersbach, Sarah Gibbs, Barbara,
Loan Co_ HOII!lng the shower were
Ruth and Sue Fry, VickieMohr,Eva
~Wee Butcher, Leona Hylll'll and
HyseU, Donna and Susan Jones,
Maxine Lee.
A I)!Ue color scheme was carried Carmel and Cathy Dean, Lois
out tn the decorationS and a cake · Thompson, Gina Thomas, Cindy
tnacrlbed "Congratulations Rick Bumgardner, Barb Dugan, Doris
Soowden, Maryln Wilcox, 1...«1
and CathY" was llei"Ved with punch
Patterson, Sandy Hendet:1011, Meandcolfee.
linda
McLain, and Audrey Kimel.
Games were played With prizes
goiDJ to Ellzaberth Clay, Beatrice
Smltb and Marlyn Robinson. .
Olllm atteadlng were Betsy
Clair AlanMorrlagraduatedJune
HawtlxrneandRyan,GiendaGum,
15 from Ohio Unlvenlty with an
Adria Eblin. Beth Knliht. Loraine
associate deiiee IDaviatlollti!c:IIDoland RobyD Veaoy, Tbla rume, Joan
oeY· He Ia CIIITI!IIIb' WlllidDI em
Wolfe, Millie Midkiff, Marilyn
fllcblliiltructllr ratlna Uld Jill u
asslatant81ilp teaching pound .
Wolle, Han1elt 'IluiiJ)MI. Lydia
tiCI1ool 1t ~ IUIMnlly'aldiDol of
DPJq. Rdl ~ Jled!Y,
·aviation.
Bobby Jo _ , lll!ldl DeLong, VlcJde

.

nma1ns coilstantant for I% . ltoors. alter birth, to
stabilize body lemperature. This wW be on display at
the annual health btfonnatlon fair Thursday, 11 a.m.
tAl 7 p.m. at Holzer Medical Center In Galllpolls.

' '
. '.

Health fiair planned at Hotze_r
On Thursday from 11 a.m. untU 7
p.m. a publlc Health Information
Fair will take place In the French .
Five Hundred Room at Holzer
Medical Ceoter.
One of the neW exhibits this year
will be Obstetrics, featuring a
number of pieces of equipment used
In the care of a newborn. Included
will be a fetal heart monitor: an
Infant radiant warmer, to provide
controlled thermal heat to keep the
baby stabilized following birth
whlleat the same time the staff can
assess and observe the newborn; a
heart ·respiration monitor that
provides a constant display of the
heart heat and breathlngpatteo:n of
the newborn. Also KlSS seats,
, printed brochures 4nd other" take
home materials will he avaUable-

mltted by the bite or Saliva or an
Infected anlmal. Signs ·or the
disease- 'fatigUe, lrrltablli\y, and
diffuclty In swallowing- develop In
:II to 60 days. Once symptoms
appear, treatment ts Ineffective.
Because there is no cure for
rabies, any animal bite should be
l&lt;!f&lt;en seriously. Wash ·the area
lrrunedlately 11111ri soap and ._water, ....
t~h dry and bi.ndage the wound
with a clean cloth. Call a doctor
promptly.
Your physician will probably
want to examine the chUd's wound,
and will also check to see If he or she
needs a tetanus shot.

return from Alabama

Mr. and Mrs. Joe Poole and WUl
·have returned from a trlpto.Moblle,
· :Ala. where they visited hls parents
- and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Harman
· Poole and Roxy. The elder Poole ls
recovering at home following a
massive heart attack tn May.
Other relatives with whom they
visited In Moblle were Mr. and Mrs.
.

HEAL'IH FAIR DI8PIAV -In the Holzer Medical
Ceater nunery, olil!erviD' a newbom In the radlent
wanner are lllll!lei'Y IIU1'IIe Cheryl FraDer R.N., right
and Gertmde Hysell R.N., OB supervisor. The
wanner aii!IUl"e8 the baby's - body temperature

The Dietary department will also
place emphasis on pregnancy and
the proper high calcium diet so
Important to, assure proper nutrttion for the expectant mother. 1'\t
their exhibit will be nutrltlo•s
snacks· and an abundance of
Informational prln\ed material.
From the Emergency Department wlll he the Polslndex, a piece
of equipment that readily provides
information on the correct antidotes for a · variety ot toxic
substances that are dangerous to
-both chlldren and adults, and
commonly found ln households. The
Polslndex ls avallable 24 hours a
day in the Emergency Department.
The Laboratory wtll have a
mlcrosc9pe aild slides for viewing.
Pediatrics will have, along with

Gradaution announced

An animal which has bltten a
child needs to be caught and
examined to determine If lt has
rabies. u it ts wild, the animal wUI
be kllled and examined for rabies.
Domestic animals are confined and
their behavior observed for 10 days
to see If rabies symptoms lethargy, , aversion to water and.
death withln .acweek and a half .- ·
develop.
QUESTION: What If the animal
can't be found?
ANSWER: A series of rabies
shots are given only' when there Is
some suspicion that the animal ts
rabid. The doctOr makes this
decision based upon several consld-

Members of the church and friends
of the Grace famlly are Invited to
attend. · A money tree wlli be
presented to them.

TIIURSDAV

a.m. All children ag~ two through
elementary school as ·invited.
Theme will he "Walking in the
Footsteps of J esus" . Commencement wtu he at 7:30p.m . on Sunday,
June30.

POMEROY - The Women's
POMEROY - The Auxlliary of
Veterans Memortal Hospital will Fellowship of the Meigs County
meet at 7:ll Tuesday night In the · Churches of Christ meet at the
cafeteria.
Dexter Church, 7: :II p.m. Thursday.

WEDNE8DAY

FRIDAY

RACINE -A reception honoring
the Rev. R.ogl!rGrace Wid his family
will be held Wednesday at 7: llatthe
Racine United Methodist Church.

RACINE .,., Vacation Bible school
will be held at the Racine United
Methodist Church Monday through
Friday, June 28, from 9 a.m. to 11

,I

Homebuilders

Lightfoot, Wilt to marry ~~~~r~~~dM~r:.n~:~A~:~

NE'W York. N&lt;'W Y o rk 10017 .

POSTMASTER: Send address changes
to ThE' Dally &amp;&gt;ntlnel , 111 Court St. .
Poi'J"'eroy, Ohio 457m.

·"

~

GIFI' ro PVH- 'l1ie Letan (W.Va.) Sealor aJbm O.b donated a
red WaP lo the PedlcaMc DepUtment at PleMIIIt Valley Hoepltal
-uly. Plclured are Helen Sn!ltiBin. LeUrt S!lhn chab. Jlll'fttt
Gerlach, patleot and Jaaet Lamp, R.N., head pec1atr1c nunoe.

Subscribers not d E"Sirlnglo pa y lht&gt;carrle r may remll In advancf' direct to
The Dally Sentin el on a 3,1ior 12 month
baSts. Credlt wllltx&gt; giv(ln carrl&lt;'r each
monlh .

Lt. Col. and Mrs. M..C. Christine
of Olympia, Wash. spent a week
with Mr. and Mrs. Olden Thaxton.
Miss Wilma Rose of Columbus
speilt Memorial Day weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Ward Sayre.
Jean Burnside and friend, Robert
Stevens, of Ft. Myers, Fla. spent a
week with her chlldren and Mr. and
Mrs. Ward Sayre.
A farntly get-together was held at
. the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
: Hart. Those . present llicluded Mr.
· and. Mr5. Alan Cunningham, Ollvia

Mall Subscriptions
lnsldlt Ohio
13 WPek!i ..... ... .. ..... ...... .... .. , , ,,. Slt.56
26 Wc&lt;'k~ ... .. .. ... ............ ............ 'S29.12
52 Weeks ........... ......... ...... , .. .. .. $!l8.24
.
OutAide Ohio
13 Wec-ks ... ....... ....... ............ .. ... S15.60 .
26 Wef'kS .... , .. ,,, ... ... ............ ... $31.20
52 Weeks ......... .. ......... , ............. $!}9.80

··: Laurel 'Clt'ff
·· '
;::h.appentngs
.

Yosf whci was also honored -fo~
Father'S Day. Pictures were taken
and a timeforvlsitlngwasheld In the
afternoon. Others at tending were
Mr. and Mrs. Vlrgl!Hamm, Mr.and
Mrs. Thomas Hamm, sons. Chris '
and Phlllp, J .A: Smith, and Tony

La&gt;.

Travis, Grant , and Carrie. Terri
Stout, Cindy ·Souls by, )3utch Stiles,
and Jeff Miller.
Sending gifts were her great grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Jed
Will, Nonna Goodwin, and Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Mlllhone and Jonathan.
A second party was held for
Shannon at the home of her uncle
and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Pat Soulsby
of' ReedsvUle. ·Attending besides ·
Shannon and her parents and the
hosts were Tara, Amanda and
Steven Soulsby.

.

Carpenter happenings

Margaret Brooks spent several
days In Port Neches, Texas, With
her son·ln·law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Thompson.
Mr. and Mrs. La&gt; Jeffers, Down
and Zackary of Coltag1!ville, Mr.
and Mrs. Greg O'Briel' of Colum- Pedro, Call!., Mr. and Mrs. John
(Janet) Dunham and family
bus, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hart and
Jonathan of Columbus and Brtce members from Illinois and Iowa,
and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Jeffers,
Hart of ~llvl!l' Springs, Md.
Mrs. Gretta Simpson, ¥rs. Ln: new Boston, Dl., were called here
llan Hayman, Mr. and Mrs . Gerald following the sudden death of their
father, Reed Jeffers.
Simpson spent a recent weekend
Rev. and Mrs. Arthur Crabtree
With Mr. and Mrs. Bud Simpson at
attended
the annual conference of
Seymour, Ind. They report Bud ts
the
United
Methodist Church at
Improving after an accident.
lak,eslde.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Badgley and
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Cassell and
children of Manassas, Va. and
Steve Badgley of Columbus were Christine, Za11esville, spent a weerecent visitors of their parents, Mr_
kend herewithherparents,Mr.and
Mrs. Clay Jordan.
and
Mrs.
Ralph
Badgley.
Goldie Lowther Bobo, who llves
Mrs.
Ray
Sayre
and son Gordon
In Chtlllcothe but visits here at her
and daughters Betty Koehler and
farm often, has undergone by-pass
Crlta Moore of Roseville and
heart surgery at University HospiZanesville vislted Mrs_ Ora Hlll,
tal, .Columbus', and 1s reportedly
Mrs. Ura Morris and Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Sayre and the cemetery for " convalestinc satisfactorlly. ,
Memorial Day.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Peny were
There were 26 family members at Groveport for the funeral of their
presentatthehomeofMr. andMrs.
23·year·old grandson. Others from
the area attending were Rev. and
Kenneth Turley on Easter.
Mrs. Ora Hlll spent a week Mrs. Michael Perry and chlldreD
recently with Mr. and Mrs. Wald
and Mae McQulrt. A heart aliment
· Foster at Marietta.

Racine commurtity notes ·

No S\.lbsrrlpllonf\ by mall permitted In
towns Whf'rr home carrier ser vlcf' Is
ava ll abl(' . .

.
AttendancealtheFreeMethodlst
·: Church was 137. Mrs. Bertha
' Parker received the Mother's Day
·· present being the oldeSt mother
there.
Youth revival was held over the
weekend with Denny Kiubcheldel.
holding the services. Zone ·youth
rally will be held at the local church r~::;;;;;;:;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~::;-1
May 17-18.
• May 28 Holiness rally wlll be held
at the tOea! c;hurch. Every one 1s
Invited.
·
Bob Barton and Sheldon Baker of
the local church call~ on neighbors
and trlenda Monday evening_
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Alkire,
, Columbus, and Miss Cleo parker
, visited Mother's Day with Mrs.
10&amp; EAST SECOND
: Bertha arker.
Mrs.
Jacobi spent the
ABOVE BANK ONE IN POMEROY
•.
: weekend with relatives tn

AnOINIY·AI·UW

OFFICE HOURS 8:30-12 NOON
1:00-4:30
MONDAY THRV FRIDAY

nna

. .colurht!ua.

Va ~' PAICE
89

was the cavse of death.
Among those who gathered atthe
homeofMr.andMrs.CarlCasterto
help hlm celebrate his birthday
were Mr. and Mrs- Dave Townsley,
Dayton, Mr• and Mrs. Clair Dale
Stansbury and Bobby Joe, Groveport, Lany Stansbury, Scott and
Ben, Reynoldsburg, Mr. and Mrs.
Merle Davis, Rutland, Clemma
Vale, Chardon, Edith Talbert,
Salem Center, Rev. and Mrs.
• Grover Deskins, Mr. and Mrs_
Wayne Caster, Mr. and Mrs. Dave
Colemart and daughter and Helen
Turner, all of Albany , Wanda
·Oxley, local, and Julia Barton and
· chlldren, Grov~port.
r------------L--------'~---------------­

Every Mattress
&amp; Box Spring!

Any Size! Every Qualltyl
No Exceptlonsl

WHAT SHOULD I DO FIRST?
The hours folio win&amp; the passing of a love done are always difficult. Decisions must be made, arranaements must be put
into action. It's important that you know how to co about
makin&amp; this time a liitle easier.
The survivor most seriously affected b~ a death. a spouse for
example, should be comforted by friends who ~an help with
the little thinas like transportation . The famrly clerayman
should bt notified as soon as possible. for he will want to offer support to tha bereaved. And a call to the funeral director
to make arranpments for services or to put into force plans
that were pltvlously made. should bt made as quickly as·
possible after the death. That means anytime, day or nicht.
We att available 24 hours a day to serve the needs of our community.
Business associates. relatives and close friends should be
told of the death. so they can attend funeral services or to be
of whatever assistance Is needed.

D. MICHAEL MULLEN

&amp; lalanctd Frw

v
·-"·~--

.i

'

, ........ ••••:·
II.,...........,. n......
"1-7161
.......... 011.
\

Mr. aiid MrS. Charles E. YCISI of ·
Forest Run Road, Racine, entertained Sunday with a family picnic
dlnner.The occasion honored the
birthdays of Dorothy Smith, E.R . .
Yost,JamesAUenSmlth,sonofBob and Sue Smith, and Charles E. Yost.
TheplcnlcwasasurprlseforE.R.

SUBSCRIPTION R,\TES

GENERAL
TIRE SALES

iilijiiN Sh.8AWPOUS

6:llFrldayeveningat the Bradford
Church of Christ with music to begin
at6p.m.RobertPurtellwlllperform
the ceremony. A reception wlll be
held In the church social · room
fottowtng the wedding.

, Din_n.er he/4 re~et'lt/y by ·Yosts

By Carrier or Motor Route
Ont' WE't"'k ............ ... ... :....... ..... . ... $1.10
On(" Month ... .. .. ..... ............... .. ....$4.80

.......

UTHOI.K CIUCH

Plans have been completed for the
open church wedding of Suzan ·
Lightfoot, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Everett Ughtfoot, and Brian WW,
son of Mr. and Mrs. James WUI.
The wedding wUI take place at

Mi£'mbrr: United Prt"Ss Internatlonai.
·Inland Dally Press AssOCiation and the • .,·
Ohio NC'wspaper A!isociatlon ..NatJonal
Ad\;H ll s in~ R&lt;'prf'S(Inlaflvt&gt;, ·Bra'nham
NewspaJX&gt;r Sal (&gt;!&gt;, 733 't'hlrd Avenue,

PlUSU(~

...........

4-H club

Soulsby birthday

PUbll~hro every affcrnoon, Monday
throuRh Friday, 111 Court Sl., Po.meroy, Ohio, by th(' Ohio Valley Pub·
llshin ~ Compan y/ Multimf&gt;dla.
Inc .. '
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. P~ . 992·2156. Se·
cond r lass posta2e paid at Pomeroy ,
Ohio.

LOSE WIIGm OilY SMOIIIIGI

aun1t•d

Fell reunion held recently

Pickett birth

(USPS 145-910)

RADIAL
&amp; NON RADIAL

Mist ,..,.. ... • ollher with • """'
1S lllinutt .,.., ltloiH. lloeus-.ls
..." .-1 ..,_.... - . . NypMois
,., ..... t!Mti..... J.ti.. loalllt ....
............ etlltr ........ _ ,....,...
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. . , ertldlt.lla'l 1 II-,. Ill......,. CMts. No r_..tieols -ne•r·
h r - .......11w ... SU·t4J.JSSO lll O.izu•ti.

Pomeroy UMW

Friendly Circle

A lllvh•lon of "'ulllmedla, Inc.

TIGHT BUDGET?
RETREADS

HYPNOSIS

prayer for peace.

G reen and Jonathan .
Rosetta McGuire a nd Sandy and
Tammy, Shell a Scott, Mary Bleg,
Marjorie and Becky Green, Mr.
a nd Mrs. Pa ul Sheldon, Mr. and
Mrs- J ohn Middaugh, Eric ShUllng,
Mr. and Mrs . Glen Gooldln and
Mellnda and Dee, Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Gooldln a nd Nlld. Allee
Clary.
Mr. and Mrs. Benny Clary and
Brandy, Mr. and Mrn. J lm Merrick
and Jarnle, Tina andTlm Ciaryand
Amy Hill. T he youngest member
was Jonathan Gr een, the oldest was
Pearl Kemper .

Women's Fellowship

Steven Walburn, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Walburn , Middleport,
recently graduated with high honors
from tl\e University of Tennessee

•

The farntl y of Albert and Maria h
(Watterson) Gooldtn met. June 23
Middleport Church of Christ was
for their yearly reunion a t roadside
held at the home of Glenn Wid
park.
Kathryn Evan6.
Attending were Sarah Ha lley,
Co-hostesses .for the outing were
Jim
and Martha Gooldin, Junior,
WUlard and Nettie Boyer, and
Jennie
a n'd Brian Ca ll , Butler a nd
MarylnWllcox. BudWUsongavethe
Geraldine
Halley and Connie Honblessing. Others there were Coleen
ious,
Kathy
Pitcox , Mr. a nd Mrs.
VanMeter,Brenda,StacieandBrad
Shuler, Clay and Geneva Tuttte, BUI ' Pearl Kemper, Joan Langford .
Mr. and Mrs. Dwayne Marcum,
and Flo Grueser, Hazel Wllson,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kemper , Mr.
Raymond and Farle Cole, Ray·
mond and DorthY Baker, Delete and Mrs. Ray Kemper and Rocky,
Diane Kemper and Bob Kiesling,
Forthe, Bob and Martha Hunnel,
Elsie King, Thelma Boyer, Dorothy Sheryl and Amanda Harder. Marjortie Green, Mr. and Mrn. Darrell
Roach, Danny Thomas al1d a guest,
Carmel Dean.

and servicemen and Closing with a

Collection of clothing, seeds,
coupons, eye glasSes, and labels as a
· part of the Pomeroy United Me!Jlo.
dlst Women's phllanthroplc work
wasdlscussedatarecentmeetlngat
_the church.
Members were asked to saVe and
collect old nylon hose, store coupons
tor cat and dog food, vegetable
seeds, clean baby ' and chUdren's
clothing, labels . from Campbell
soups, pork and beans, FrancoAmerican and all Swanson proThe annual Fell farntly reunion
Mr . a nd Mrs. Fred B. Smith, Mr.
ducts, used eye glasses, either
was
held
at
thefalrgroilnds
lnLogan
. and Mrs . VtrgU Windon, BeckY and
lenses or frames.
Sunday.
Clair, Mr_ and MrS. Rodney
It was noted during the meeting
· Attendtngwere Mr . and Mrs. Leo Chevalier and Adam , Mr. and Mrs.
that 72 sick and shutlncallslladbeen
Stx Meigs Coilnty youths have
Fell Sr., and Mrs. Debbie Harreld Brian Windon, Mt. and Mrs. Alvin
made by members of the group_ returned from Columbus where
Tiffany, Logan: Mr. and Mrs . Ti-tpp, Rod and Todd, Mr. and Mrs.
and
Handling the canteen at the blood- they attended the 68th Ohio 4·H
Annual picnic of Friendly Circle,
Jr., and son, Mr_and Mrn.
Leo
Fell
Robel1 Ritchie. Bob Jr_ and Lany
mobUe this month was dlscussed Congress held on the Ohio State
Trinity Church, was held Tuesday
Ken
Davisson,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ritchie, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
the
family
night
potluck
to
he
and
UniverSity campus.
evening at the home of Allee
Fell and Mrs. Norman Fell , Ritchie, Alice and Amy, a ll of Meigs
'lbey are Tammy Calaway,
Globokar, Mason.
' held on July ll was noted .
Mr. and Mrs. Roy County.
Mechanicsburg;
Dorothy Downie opened the Pannela Ash, Dan Leonard, Joe
Guests were seated at tables on
Wolfe,
Mr.
and
Mrs.. Raymond
meeting with devollons. Nov. 1 was Parker, Jared Sheets, an(! Kbn
the porch overlooking the river. Gay
Wolfe
anct
Heath,
Carroll;
Mr. a nd
annOunced for the next meeting of Ryan.
Perrin had grace. Ves(ll!r service
Mrs.
Darrell
Ch!"'lalier,
Mr.
and
Church Women United of Meigs
A home Dower show was held was by Enna Srntth and Included
Meigs County sponsors for the
Louie and Judy Pickett, Route 2,
Mrs. Darrell L. Chevalier, MatCounty. The school of Christian youth'lnclude Central Trust Bank,
when the Star Garden Club met poems and ~adlngs on friendship
Racine, a re announcing the birth of
thew, Amanda and Jason; Denise
Missions wUI be held from July Middleport, the Meigs County
Thursday afternoon at the home of and giving. Twelve members and a
their second child, a son, Zachary
Chevalier
and Don Martin, all of
22
at
the
Ohio
Northern
15-July
Stella Atkins and. Ruby Diehl.
the
Meigs
Ryan,
born June 2 at the Pleasant
Agriculture
Society
and
guest, Genevieve Meinhart, enPataskla.
University, Ada . Thebookstudywil County 4·H Committee.
Janet Bolin, vice president oHhe joyed the outing. .I
Va lley Hosplt a i.The infant weighed
l!e on Daniel and the global concern
Ohio Association of Garden Clu!&gt;s,
The Congress brought some 700
seven .pounds, 13 ounces and was :oJl
area
of
study
will
be
Native
Inches long.
top
4·H
youth
from
over
the
state
was judge for the show, aild also .
America ,
talked at the meeting on how to
onto the campus_
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
The district annual meeting was
the keynote address "Why Not
and Mrs. Cha rles Michael, Racine.
preparerosesforjudging.
"I Am Me and I'm Glad," a
Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
In the class for entrance or program on self-esteem and self- announced for Sept. 26 at the Our Best?' was given by Johnny
Mrs. M8J( Pickett of Xenia. Materhallway, Neva Nlcholson took first,
confidence, was presented by Cindy Immanuel United Methodist MU!er, director, Institute for Motinal great-grandparents are Mr. and
Pauline Atkins, second; In modem Oliveri, Meigs_ County Extension Church at Logan. The local o!flcer vation and associate' professor of
Mrs. Russell Findley , Racine, and
.design, Pauline Atkins, flrnt, Vtrg!- agent, at the recent meeting of the enrlchrilenteventwill beheld Oct.l7 lndustr1al and Organtzattonai Com·
Mrs. Marte Mlcha!'l, Racine. Mr.
nla Nelson, second, Wanetta Ro- Women's Fellowship of the Meigs at the CoolvUie l)nlted Methodist municallons at Kent State
and Mrs. Pickett also have a ·
University.
dekin, thij"d; In table arrangements, County Churches of ChriSt held at Church.
It was decided that ihe hook of
daughter, Tracy, age eight.
Miller ~~J~nually speaks and con·Pauline Atkins, first; In coffeeorend
the Zion Church.
table arrangements, Martha (:hap-'
Mrs. Oliveri talked about gaining JohnwUicontlnuetobestudiedwith · ducts team buDding and manage·
man, first, Mrs. Nicholson, second, self ·confidence and esteem. She a subject to be decided on at the next .ment communtcallon seminars
throughout North America to a
and Mtss Diehl, third: tit television gave a quiz deigned to help each meeting.
Marte
Chapman
had
the
program
variety of professional assocla ttons.
design, Mrs. Rodekln, flrnt and
person determine self-esteem and
and
Out':
as
using
'Integrity
Inside
has actively partlclpa ted ln
He
second, Mrs: Nicholson, third.
then concluded with comments on
her
topic.
She
.
gave
examples
of
seminars In Europe, Japari and on
In mass · arrangements, Mrs. the theme, "I'm Special and I'm .
"show" Whei'f' man lookS at the . three different occasions ln the
Radekln took first and third, With Me."
Shamwn Sotdsby
outward appearance, noting that lt Soviet Union. His former s'tudents
'Jl IACMSON PIKE · Rt35 WEST
The group voted to make ·a
Pauline Atkins, second; In line
Phone 446· 4524
mass, Binda Diehl, first, Mrs. · donation tothealrcondltlonerafthe ls the Inward motives and pure heart include Olympic gold medal
that
show
Integrity.
TI1ose
with
BARGAIN MATINEES SAT &amp; SUN
winners, major .league baseball
Radekln, second, Mildred Jeffers Darwin camp. Next meeting was
All SEATS 12.25
Shannon Kay Soulsby, daughter
players and 14 members of the .
third.
announced for June 27 at the Dexter Integrity help people In need, not for
what men see but because of ihelr National Football League.
For speclmen exhibits, Ruby Church at wliich time talent nlgbt
of Mr. and 'Mrs. Jlmmcr. Soulsby.
love of God.
Another speaker was Charles Pomeroy, recently celebrated her
Diehl took first, seco11d and third In Will be observed. Mrs. Ida Murphy
Prayer for those in the commun- Dygert, president of the Motiva·
tlrstblrthday withapartyheldatthe
roses; for clematis, Allegra WUl 'conducted the business meeting.
home of her grandparents, Mr. and
Vada Hazelton led In group itywhoarellland In needwasglven . tiona! Enterprises International,
took first, Mrs. Chapman, second
and third, while Mrs. Nicholson took singing and Muriel Bradford had a Martha Hoover had the benediction, Columbus. The activities Included Mrs. James Soutsby.
A Care Bear cake, homemade ice
poem, "I love America." Devotions -and a desert course was served by 4-H career explorations, workshops
first In another speclman class.
Grace
Whaley
and
Dorothy
Downie.
·
on resumes, applications and Inter- cream , tea, koolald and coffee were
MlssDiehlhaddevotlonsandMrs. were by Edna Evans who had
viewing; as Well as vistts to the served.
Atkins, a poem honoring the flag. scripture from Eccl. 1 and readings
Mrs. Nicholson, Pauline Atkins, on May Day, Mother's Day,
Center of Science and Industry, the
Others attendtng were her materMrs. Diehl, andMlldred Jeffers took Memorlal Day and Flag Day, no!lng
Theannua!familywelnerroastof _Art Museum, the Ohio Center, and
nal grandP!lrents, Mr. and Mrn .
Jamrs ·· Stout, .her . g r e a_t.
.. the Walkeena )QUrand. rrJX~l1ed_ on
theim{Xlrtanceofhonorlngmothel'$ . · the . -Homebuilders · ciass of UJe : .toursofthecltyandamphit.heatern.
-·
- -·
··
·
· ·•
'
graildparen.ts, Mr. and. Mrn . Carl

One Year ........................ ......... 157.20
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Dally .............. ... . ........ ....... .. 25 Cents

LONG BOTI'OM - Monthly
meeting of the Long Bottom
Bible school
CHESHffiE Community Association will he begins Monday continuing through
Wednesday, 7: 30 p.m., at the Long . Friday at Cheshire United MethoBottom Community Bulldlng. Elec· dist Church, 6 to 8:30p.m _
tlon of officers will be held.

'POMEROY - Arnerlcan Legion
Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39,
Pomeroy, and the junior untt meet
at 7: :II p.m. Tuesday at the hall.
Installation of officers, junior
members host meeting.

that. At the July meettngmemllers
will tour the Stahl'sNursery at Little
Hocking and then goon to Belpre for ·
a dtnn""r and 11us1ness meettng.
Pauline Atkins' topiC for the
program was "Roses and (heir
Care." She suggested buying only
good -roses recommended by the All
Arnertcan Rose Association, selectIng strong varleties with strong
stems. She saki the hole must he
large enough so as not to cramp the
roots and about lfjlnches cJeeP, with
the graft knot to ~ just above the
gmuid. Well!&lt; shoots should he
removed, the plants should be fed
frequently, and sprayed and dusted
to control Insects and diseases.
Refreshments were served following the meeting.

The Daily Sentinel

Community calendarI area happenings
TUEIDAV

Walburn
graduates

other equipment on display, a
hooding ceJ?mony. While In law
pediatric blood pressure machine
school Walburn'sactlvltieslncluded
and an assortment of printed take
the dean's list, the Student Bar
home materials, valuable to par- Associationandworkontheschool's
ents ln ,child rearing and safety In
judicial newsletter. He was also
the home."
president of the Christian Legal
"These are just a few of the 29
Society forth~ school year, 1!114-lfi,
exhiblts that wlll be set up for , . Upon completion of the bar
Thursday's Hea lth Information
examination this summer, Walburn
Fair," according to Mary Harrison , will begin the practice of Jaw with
R.N_, coordinator of the event.
the ·ftrm of Moore, Stout, Waddell
"VolUnteers wlll have a special
and Ledford in Kingsport_ Tenn_
display area and also be at the
HeisthegrandsonofMr.andMrs.
refreshment table at the conclusion
Raymond Walburn Sr., Middleport, "
of the tour," she added.
and the late Mr. and Mrs. Robert G.
All residents of the surrounding Clarke Sr., Letart.
service area of the hospital are
Invited to "attend the Health Information Fair, a free community
Scratched mahogany can be
service on Thursday, 11 a.m. to 7 helped by painting the scratches
p.m.
with Iodine, then polishing._

Human Diploid Cell Vaccine has
eratlons. If an animal's attack 1s
unprovoked, It might be rabid.
recently been developed which,
Certain animals are also more when given, Is no more painful than
a penicillin or tetanus shot. Patients
llkely to be susceptible to the rabies
receive the vaccine In arm, leg or
virus than othern. In the United
·
States, skunks, bats, raccoons and buitocks muscles.
foxes are more llkely to carry · While rabies In humans is rare In
rabies than are rats, rntce, rabbits,
the United States, animal bites
be taken seriously. l,f tl).ere is
should
chipmunks and squirrels. The
any·
Pos.Stblilty.
that an a·nima-i is ·
general tole is - wm:n tn do ubi,
vaccinate.
-.
· ralild,' irhmuilizatlon- of your child
QUESTION: ' What are rabies should begin at once.
"Farntly Medicine" is a weekly
shots like?
ANSWER: The Center for Dis- column. To submlt que~tions, write
ease Control 111 Atlanta recom- to Edward Schreck, D_O,, Ohio
mends a program of five tnjecllons University College of Ost~pathic
for rabies, gtven over a four-week Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
period. A new vaccine called the Ohio 45701.

MASON, W.Va. -Veterans of
Foreign Wars Post 9926, Mason,
W.Va., will' hold a special election
Tuesday to elect a two year trustee.

•

Star Garden

·. co~~~~!~7~:ir~~o7:~~~~:t~as
held May 24 with the traditional

signs ·a.nd _symptoms,

· Family night conducted

A school of missions to be held
July 15-21 was announced at the
recent meeting of the United
· MethodlstWomenoftheForestRun
Church held at the home of Erma
Roush.
Hilda Yeauger presided at the
meeting which opened with
members repeating the purpose of
the UMW. Mary K. Roush gave
devotolns uslngscrtpturetrom Lui«&gt;
and a medltatloli frOm the Upper
Room. Officers' reports were given
and a love offering \ collected.
Thirty-five sick and shutln calls
were reported.
. _
The program Included readings
and poems on June. Attending were
Mary Nease, Carolyn Salser, Lllllan
Napper, Edith Sisson, Kathleen
Scott, Mary K. Roush, May Holter,
Evelyn Hollon, ~s. Yeauger, Betty
Blackwood, Faye Wiggins, Sandt
Hawley, and a guest, Marcia
Arnohl. Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Roush.

Emma AshleY, a member of the
West VIrginia State Grange lecturer 's commtttre, attended the Mid.
Atlantic Lecturer's Conference at
Front Royal, Va . recently.
As a part of her duties, she,
· developed a worshtp servlceforthis
conference as r a modt&gt;l for other
subordinate and Pomona lecturers
within the Mid-Atlanttcdistrtct. The
district lnch1des West Vlrg!nla,
Virginia, New Jersey, New York,
Maryland, and Delaware.
Keith Ashley attended the annual
West Virginia Deputies meeting In
Tyler County, W.Va. Ashley reported on his activities as Mason
County deputy state master since
organizing Letart Grange 546 last
year . Other plans were made for the
expansion of programs In the state
since West Vlrglnla is the fastest
growing state grange in the naflon.
Ashley served as secretary for the
meeting.

--

For all of us who have felt' that
flying ts the way to go, events of the
past 10 days or so certainly are food
for thought. Frankly, I don't rellsh
the tholight or being hijacked or
blown up and the highways continually take their toll.
How's about a vacation In the
back yard? Do keep srntllng.

Forest Run UMW

Attends
conference

Two local students received their
associate · degrees of applled
science In welding fabrtcatlon
technology on June 14 from Wa·
shlngton Technical College ln Marietta. They are Steve Bunce, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Lany Bunce of
Middleport, and John Lyons, son of
Mr. and Mrs. John Lyons, Racine.
It'theater Is your bag, you might
want to know that the Ohio Valley
Summer Theater ln Athens - and
they do such a good job - ts ready
to open its season_
This summer's first presentation
wj1l he "AU the Way Home" In the
patio theater. Dates are June 27-:11
and July 3-6. The range of
presentations this sununer Is var·
led and we'll let you know as they
come closer to stage.

1~86

Page-4

Lisa has received several scholarships Including the Ohio Regents
$1,COO a year one - which her
coi!Sfn, Jay Carpenter, received
this spring at Meigs Htgh SchOol.
Both Lisa and Jay are grandchlkl·
ren of Mr. and Mrs. Wllson
Carpenter of Pomeroy.
Usa ts enrolled at Ohio State
University .anc! plans to pursue a
career In pharmacy.
Through tests and 15 hours of
calculus at the Ohio University
Branch ln Athens, Lisa has already
earned more than :oJl hours of
college credit.
By the way, John and Janet have
. two other children in college. They
are Phillip, a senior at Kent State,
· and Robin who attends Eastern
Kentucky and was on the dean's llst
this semester In addition to helng a
member of the field hockey team.
Phillip 1s president of his fraternlty,
Delta Tau Delta.

The Daily Sentinel- Page 6

Organizations meet___.._·_·. ... .- - - - - - - - Gooldin reunion conducted

,

.

I didn't ask for rain
Don ·~look at me_ I didn't bring on
the rains for HerItage Weekend ln tact, I gave up
my rain dance
long ago.
The Meigs
County Pioneer
and Hlstorlcal Society, the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce and the Bend Area
Merchants Assoclatlon worked to-gether well to plan a pretty nice
• weekend of actMtles - nothing
earthshaldng, of course, but who
needs that?
I thought some of tbe merchants
did such a great job In prepartng
their windows to cany out a
·yesteryear theme- quite effective.
By theway,dldyouknow that one
group of the dancers- some great
cloggers - came all the way from
Charleston, W.Va., free of charge to
entertain on the stage Sunday
afternoon. Even 1. wlth two left feet
· felt llke I wanted to learn to do that.
How about 11 Glg Powell? Is,thls,
too, possible?
The rains on Saturday really hurt
the arts Wid crafts. people. They
were out In the wide open and could
do very Utile but throw In the towel
- or perhaps, I should say grab for
the towel to help them dry out.
Kbn NelSon and Ruth Ann and
Tamml Taylor worked hard getting
their crafts ready for the weekend
and then had the rain problem. As a
· result they're staging their own
county craft show Friday from 10
· a.m- to 9 p.m. and Saturday from 10
a.m. to 3 p.m. two miles out on the
Flatwoods Road. There will be
- lllgns to mark the location of the
:$oW. If you have any questions you
· can call Kim at 992·2903 or the
: T-aylors at 992-3566.

I

Tuesday, June
, 26,

Beat of the .bend

By BOB HOEFLICH
StDinel Stalf Writer

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BILL .BlOWER
. .

'

.

- ...........

· In any elSe tht primary concern is for those closest to the deceased , for they will feel the loss most deeply.

*-

Your questions and com~ents are invited. We will answer
them privately or publicly throup this column .

,Pl~..t:,~rt:~~
' §;,_,.,/
~~:~,::.~~10"

' 11$,rl~l Pfiii.... Attlllfllfl fl

Dlfll/
._--~~--.---··-~~~~·-1~' --~-.-~~t ·~~--·----·----~--------------~----------~~

..

11

1

�Page 6-The Daily Sentinel

. . .....

Tuesday. June 25. 1985 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.Parents get choice on what
·school·to send their children

The Daily Sentinel

- ... ·- . - . - --- --

RE

A CA

"W• R.ul '" U.t"

~: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

U·SAVE
AUTO
RENTAL
St. Rt. 160

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

~ -

North

•.,..

TIDICIING IS 0111 Ill

Trtnchina Of Any Ty,e .
Dozer &amp; Lckhoo Servoce

•
••

Plumbinl Service
Weldin1. Lowboy Haulin1
SIJ)tic Systems

PH. 949-2777

1ictmod&amp;hotolod
Fill ISIIMATIS

AnnoUIIctl

74·1hW~~rdn

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n .,;.,,. .........,

,., ....." r_.w '" .,...,.. ,

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

11-c:.....n. ,..........

""'. . . . 1111 • •...,....

BOBY RETUitNED - The body of Marine Sgt.
'~'hun!- F. Handworllls placed Into a heane by !lix
Mar1ntB while family members John and Trudy

JbndWotto IIIII parepls, lllld sister, Tammy, embrace ·

n -c-.,... • M"•' """..,.

lhe o.,tcJn fliernatloauJ Airport. Handwork Wall
one of four Marlnee kiDed In (IWlflre In EI Salvador.last

.,u.w..,-..to""
..................,

week.UPL

U -Hol,lo.-.

at

11 ·- " " - - 1 1

a. MIIIHII
IH-"'11

. ......... ,.............
" ........ -...
II ·,..,...

......... ,..,._
IJ .. . -

17-11..... _ . ,
···--"-.......

O•llloo Cn""''

•••• c .... 1111
441,... QUIIIDII11
1•7- CII_..I

lll,1411111II•Ul71 -

vl .. ,~m
fiiOCkiMI
0IIron D•oh:l
AooW.D-..CI
Wol•ll1

...... c .......,
111 - Mht~tl

11 71 - PI . ........... ,

l'oilll.....,
1 •- CI'out.,
343 - 1'-llld
247- ~ 1" .. 1&amp;
141- IIICIIM
7U- fhnllnll

···-'"*"' a,,,.

SHADE liVER
DRILLING

73-10 Chewy Tr. "
ftfMitrs .........................'60
73-10 Chewy Tr.
Doon ...................... t t U
73·10 Chtwy. Tr.
......................... '150
73-14 Chewy Tr.
.
_1 u ~.·,···T--r................. $70
73 7 9 ,..
Grillos ;••,.................. , •. 50

•Water &amp; Gas
Well Service
•Myers Pumps
Sales &amp; Service

PH. 667-6535
or 985-4353

1711 - Ap""'

71:1- MIIOIO

1112- H_M_,.
l t l - lll1111

a nd you'll most likely get 10
different answers. You can hear
The primary ,purpose of Social that a benefit Is based on anything
Securtty IS to replace a portion of a
from the last five ye ars of work to
person's earnings which are lost the best high five.
due .to death, disability, or "retireActually, .a person's entire work
ment. The benefits pajd are not history IS considered to CO!Jipilte a
Intended to be the sole source of Social Security · benefit and the
' dropped out.
lncoine during your retirement
lowest five years are
years, whlle you're diSabled, or for
AU years from 1951 or the 21st
tbe famUy In case Of your death.
birthday are considered and the
It's up, to you to supplement the earnings for each year are indexed,
fot1J.¥latlon Social Security provldes or adjusted, for the charge In the
with savings, pensions, or other value of the dollar over time. With
lnvettments. Now most people
thiS met]lod, we get a figure that
readily undersiand that ba~lc ·r on- . reflects an average monthly earn-.
· cept of Soctal !lecurtty cOVerage ·.. , . -lngs In tenris ·or tQday's·dollar;· an.
but · you find some real disagree- average over ihe ilfetlme of
earnings. That Indexed monthly
ments when !be question of which
earnings amou)'lt IS then .plugged
eaflllnllll are used to _figure the
into a formula which · gives us the.
benefits comes up. As we' ve said
before, you an ask 10 people how
unreduced monthly Social Securtty
Social Security benefits are figured
benefit.
Not only are your earnings

:I

'

•I

.-

...

'

.

Parer~. Orange.
~hE. Darst, Helen E.

Darst
helen ~­

to KemJeth E. Darst.
MIM'epw.1 vw..
B'dlltt Jelten. Helen Jeflen to
M.il.a• . CO., A LJrnited Partner·
Dpt, t.ot

NOTICE OF FlUNG
AUTHENTICATED
COPY
Of Letton of Appointment of
Non·Rooicleo!t E""""'or Eltate
of Non-Reoldent

SALEM TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEES
26239 legion Road
Llngl\liHe, Ohio
45741
c/ o Bonnie Scott.
1
1
o!:!tof Wl!ev. C: White,
On July ";'986 at 7:30
Notice io hereby given thet P.M. at the Salem Township
HenyF. White, Executor of the Firv Houoo. A Budget hearing
Elllote of Woloy C. White. late will be !&gt;aid· Revenue Shoring
of Belle, Wott Vll'!llnll. de- monev 11 P&lt;OP&lt;&gt;tod to be UMd
ceuod. on the 6th dey of June. to pay for the township grader.
19B6. filed in the Probote
Aloo thenJ will be uummory
CO&lt;Jn at Moigl County, Ohio, of the ontirv tax budget.

f

an authenticated copy of the
Chizen1 have the right to
latter!~ Testamentery·, of llid . pre•ent oral and written
Eate g&lt;ontod 1n The KIN- comments:
·-~- c~- c. . . - ~--........Senior cmz
.' - . ~·are. invited.

.. .thoit 1!10
t&lt;ountv. ':N' Ya. and
~·~

~-··

~

~··~~ '

doimo of oily CfWditor (61 Z6, 1tc
or c - o of sai&lt;f decbe pt8M!11od to thioCciun
within aix: monthe after the
dote ofooldllling"' ~ , _
barred ao a poulbte lien . upon
the Ohio root ottote of oold

·doirti'Of

;.

~·

.

rr.

Right of Way, Salisbury.
Garland A. Miller. Sieglinda
Miller to Leading Creek ·Conserv. ·
Dlst., Righi of Way. Rutland.
Seli9J J. Blazewicz, deceased,
VIrginia V. Blazewlcz, AfOdavlt, ·
'Pomeroy VIllage.
William C. Gaddis, Jacqueline A.
Gaddis to William C. Gaddis,
Jacquelin!' A. Gaddis, Lot 19,
Orange.
. ·.
Kenneth D , Cooke, Jeanne Cooke
to Helen D . Smith, P!. Lot 25,
Middleport Village.
Luk McDaniel, Kathy Sue McDaniel to John M. Matson, Sharon E.
Matson, ParcelS, Sutton.
Paul H . Roush, Helen E. RDush to
Mary J. Murray, Tracts, SUtton.
, Tracy Tackett, deceased, to
Prlcy Tackett, Randall Tackett,
Wanda Smith, Judy Nelson, Juanulatl Johnson, Cert, of Trans.. Salem.
Rockford Met:rlman, Suanne
Merriman to Everette W. Holcomb,
Vera Holcomb, 'Pipeline Ease., ,
.columbia.
Ethel N. Clark to Michael ~.
Norris, Walter G. Norris, Michael
W. Norrts, Parcel, Scipio.
R. Craig Matthews to Barbara
Becker Matthews, Part Lot, Pomeroy VUiage.
Staie of Ohio to OhiO Historical
Society, Parcel, Portland. ·

LIWl'I!IICe

Coleman ·given death penalty
.

decedent.
Doted tf&gt;l• 13th day of Juno

1986.

Letart

Bayd D. Klllzel, Audrey C. I&lt;Jn1.el

tD I eed!!Jf en.k QJnlel'\'. Dllt,

•

Judge of tho Coun
Meigs County. Ohio
(61 17, 26; (71 2. 3tc

CINCINNATI (UPI) -Convicted
killer Alton Coleman has been
sentenced for a second time todle In
the electric chair.
HamUton County Cotnmon Pleas
Court Judge Simon Leis yesterday
sentenced Coleman todeathforthe

aggravated murder conviction of a
15-y--oldanctnnatlglrl.

Let. ldN!IIIJed Coleman'I elfeCIIo
tllill l'lir lilt Wild her' I ldiJinc of
Tomte 11t1ny torNov.l8. Coleman

Coleman, ,29, and his accomplice
and common-law wife Debra
Brown, 22, also have been convicted
In the murderofMarlmeWalten at

suburban Norwood. She was kiUed ,
and her. husban~ bealell at their
home last July.
Brown wu aentenced to Ufe In
prllon for that crtme, and Coleman
waa given t~ death penalty.
Prkr to le!ltenciJia by Lets,
Colemln, at Waukepn, IU., asked
lor • ti'8IIICI'Ipt of )Ill trial, lnd iaJd

Ill t•llnqaelted ,the tranlerlpt 'IWQ

Eloise Boston,

Plaintiff
K. Lambert

Defendants
No. 84 CV 338
In purauance of an Order of
Sate Common Pleoo Coun of
Moigl County. deled May 17,
1985 in the ·
entitled
oction, I wilt offer lor llle It
public IIUCiion, It the door at
tho Courlhouoe ·1n the \'llago
.of ROlli"""; In the libolte ·
nomic! Coon~. on Frjdiy, the·
26th tJtry of July 1981, It
10.30 o cfock A.M.. the lotlowing described .,..I Oltote,
in the County of Moigo
""" S - of Ohio, end In the
Vlttoge of RUttend to-wit:
Being Loll N u - Ten
(10). E.._, (111. T - . (12)
end the Eoot hill at Lot
Thlrt_, t13lln FIAWUNGS
APDmON to tho lllld Vll&lt;lge
of Rutlond. Ohio, oitluotod
,;, the South on&amp;-holl of the

1-

VIIIIYl &amp; ALUMINUM

at Eel!em High School on Juty
6, 1986, at 1:00 P.M.

w.
Jimmy lambeft and Annette
t6) 26. 1tc

I !Announcement
I IFarRenf

11------II. -,--___;_ __
"· --~--- I

211. - - , - - - ' - - - -

Public N otlce

21.
22. ·- - - - - ' - - 2l.

II

_____
_
21.-----I
1

"·------1
25. _ _ _ _ _
,.,

21.====

29. _ _ _ _ __
.31.

31.===~~-

~.

~

The Public Utilities CommioJiOn of Ohio heo ochodutod for
lieorio\g~No. 84-652' \)4-. '• c .. ·

~~~':.,.,~, ~:.~ d:.':

446-4522

YOU

•'We Rl!lf For Less"

AUTO
RENTAL•

- Addont 1nd remodeling

- Roofing and aun•r work
- ConClrete work
- Plumbing •net electrlcel

St. At. 160
Nortfl
Gioltlpolis. Ohio 1-lH

wooll

'

tFree Ettlrnetool

· - . · -"'lP!

. --·--- -- ·-

·· ·· ~+·· · ·~ -A.I I

J&amp;F

v. c. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992·7314

CONTRACTING

Pomoroy, Oltio

DOZER, BACKHOE.
. TIIENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. 'NATEFI,
GAS 6 SEW'iR UNES.
IIECIAMATTC N. PONDS.
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
!40ME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
• DIRT

JIM CLIFFORD.
PH. 992-720
. •VINYL SIDING
'ALUMINUM SIDING
'ILOWN IN
INSULAnON

SIDING CO.

Ntw

Homtl

luilt

"Free Eadmatn"

·PH. 949-2101
or 949·1160
No .Sunday Calli

ROUSH
CONSTRUCT,ION

htlgn aM Plnnong

GREG ROUSH

I'M. 992-76115-7-tlc
•

•

;:::::::::~R~ea~I~E~a~t~a~te~G~e~n~e~ra~l~::::::~ :.
l
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
•

614-446-9416
6/ll lmo.

,•

THE QUAUTY '
PIINT SHOP .

WE ARE YOUR SAlES
AND SERVICE

F11 All '"' Plllllrlf N,.

•ZENITH
•S.LVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON
REFRIGERATOR
1

PlUS: Offlco ~ &amp;
fumituro, Wostdlng
on4Gradueti•

St~Lt'.~lc
St-s,

Sigm, I

HEADQUARTERS FOR

•SATELUTE SAllS I SERVICE
W• HIWJ ~ Fill Tl••

.....,

Shtl.. hlelu

Copy Soni&lt;n, Etc.
US •• St., -~·'P•rt

IOt......,,a•• r-.y
992-3

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER-915·3307

4/1/tfn

BISSELL

•Weool Modo Cabiswtr~

l

I

Mobile Home
Heating &amp; Cooling

lutiMII forlftl,

•S•lltsuslng

...

iENNEn'S
ENVIRONMENTAL
SYSTEMS

CARPENTER ' .
SERVICE

U·SAVE :

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 E~ST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorizad John DNre,
Ntw .Holland, Bush Ho&amp;
F.arm Equipment
DNitr

FirM e••,•••••
P1rt1 &amp; Ser.le~

1·3-tfc

PIONEER CARPEl
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS

35185 Oak Hill Road
Lon&amp; Bottom, OH. 45743

PH. (614) 985-·4212

Use Von Schrador
Equipment Recommended
by l11din1 Carpet llanulacturtn.
'FREE ESTIMATES"
3-22-tfn
1 .
We

RADIATOR
SERVICE

.

r

HOME NAnONAL BANK
CALL 949·22 i O-A1k for

Day ,

Night

1-614
992-2$49

1·304
773-5634

auppUe1.
Pick up •nd
dellwery. Davia Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up

Georg&lt;io Cr11k Rd.
' 814-441-0294.

Coli

You can 11im up for iummer.
All Noturol Wolght-lou progrem cen help you lose
10-29 plu~ poundo in your
flret month or your money
~1i. Call no"!' 814-742-

6-19-tln

•

••+···• •+•+-••·····-·········· ~

·· · ···Ga iii!?oiia ~----- - ­

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

&amp; Vicinity.

••

Y•rd S1le : Tope Residence,
Clicker f!d .. Juno 27 • 28 .
clothll, mite.· iteme.
Juno 27. 28. ond 29 II
Hobson Aaifroed trecka.
3 F•mily. W~d . Thur, Fri. Dishes , curt•lna, clothing.
crib, firepl•ce ecreen, toys. lh11ts, apreeda. and· many
lotsll Circle Dr . Plantz sub. more iteml.
8th houoe.
-~--c------~t,ooning Wed .. June 26 thru
Yard S•l•. 1 mile out Clartr. Fri.. June 28 . 9:00-5 :00.
CN!pel Rd. Fri . 8a Sat . June Children and adult clothing
28th • 29th . Clothing. crah. and many other iteme. 137
i1etr~a. afghans, 14.. tires &amp;
PNr1 St .• Middleport, Ohio.
misc. items.
.:..::.:.:_.:.:__:_

11

______ ..

Adoption 11 1n elternetlve to
ebonlon.· Proft~alonel cou+
plo, unable to havo boby. will
provide much w1nted infant
with loving home and fom....
ROSES'
lly. let uo hotp you. Coli
Garage Sale: Thurs. 2 mi.
~
cotloct (91 4) 332-4088. ev- NHd 3 lodloo to nH AVON .
EICAYI'IING INC. enings.
from HMC At. 1 flO, rotaenytlme wee1c.end1. Caiii14-448-336B.
31 Homes for Sale
tiller, mise::. items .
Legal , conlldtntiol ,
•Oil field service
Woman toltveln with eldorly •.::::::::::::::::::~ ---------~·
•Landscapin&amp;
couple. Room a. board plut p.
.•
REWARD for inlormotion aalery.
•Basements
weekends off. Mutt
Price reduced on home with . J
reeuh:ing
in
the
arreat
and·
*Land clearina
4 bedroom&amp;, 2V.. bathe • • ,
conviction Qf any persona heve ref•renclt. Call after
•Ponds
0
wood burner nove in femlly • ;:committing theft an"d nn· 12:Noon 814-441-9444.
18 Wanted to 0
room, flreploco in llvln- .,
•Septic systoms
daliJm of machinery and . Experienced cook, kitchen
groom. Auume mo·rtege •t :
•Heavy hiul.ina
propertlea of Ra·ven · worker. Apply in per1on.
BVJ pei' cent, 304- 875 t. ...
*free estimates
Hocking Coal Corp., Mock Holiday Inn Gatllpotlo . 1110 · Would like to paint haute 4604.
Energy Co . and Sycamore phone cella pleiae.
' DON itOSI
trailers , roofa. Cell 814~ 1----'--'------c-Cool Co .
·
,
266-1528 .
GRANDVIEW HEIGHTS Office 949-2493
4 bedrooms. 2Y.a b1th1. 11rge
Experienced betuticlan, 6
Ho- 143·5340
family room with extra kit·
Will
plow
tobacco
.
Call
deyo-waek,
Apply
In
peroon
4
Giveaway
chen. other extras . :14 Krl or
814-266-1 628 .
1t Rtphlel' e Heir Aemediea.
mort 304-676 -2981 by
45 Court St. Goltlpotio.
Kitten• to good home, 2 BotWHn 10 • Noon.
Wilt do bebyslttlng. my eppointment.
yellow, 4 block. Coli 614home, 2 opening• left~ 5
387-7118.
Attention Men and Women minutn from HMC. exp. I Secluded peocelul country
18 and over:
Due to eiiiC. referenCel. C•ll 61·· living. hal en older home.
4 kittena liner trained. Cell expan8ion , Urge Nation1l 446-8881 '
Schult Mobito Homo. 2 bdr.
114-448-1284.
CA. over 5 acres. K. Creek
Conc~rn now h11 5 pollSch . Call 614-448-3831.
dons opened, immediately.
Sizes Siart From 12'x16'
FrH pupplao to good holM, Must be nne and dependa~
UTILITY BUILDINGS
6 wks old, "10IIIY block . Call ble . No experience nece•Home elmo1t completed.
F1nanml
614 -448-0399 9-4 oak lor ury. Secretary, W1itre11, or
being built to 1811 on T•ylor
Sizes from 6'•6' Up
Lorettl.
Rd In Comp Contoy, nlco
other
public
releted
job•
to 24'x36'
. neighborhood , well built.
Holplul, but not roqulred .
Refrigerator to give eway. $110 to UOO to otort.
must see to 1ppreciete.
Insulated Dog Houses
21
Business
Ci11114-367-7429.
prlctd to uti. Clll304-87ti,
Bonu• Plllin1 •nd Paid HoliOpportunity
6022 .
doyo. NO PHONE CALLS! II
3 block pupplol. will bo for interview 1ft
Mr1.
Racine, Oh.
""'II dogo, oloo klttona. Call Booher at the B11t We1tern
6 YJ ICrtl, 2 hDUHI. 2 car
I NOTICE I
Ph. 614·143-5191
614-258-1683.
Wllllom Ann Motet, 918 THE OHIO VALLEY PUB- gerage. pond. aaklng
136.000 or boot offer . Coli
10-6-tfc
Second Avo . Gtlllpolls. Oh.
Metal Honda crltel, pick up Thun. June 27, betwMn liSHING CO. rocommondo 304-578-2320 .
that you do bualne11 with
11 Beu Hondo, No phone
10om • 2pm.
people you know. ond NOT 3 bedroom brick. AC.
Cillo piMIO .
--~.;_-~--lcft" ~rnd """1\n'Jy through the
Easy aiHmbly work! •tiOO. rntM until you hive invtlti· 30A40. dc \adH:d 11)3rane-.
---------,, J Kltteno, "" to good hoOM. per
hall tcro. GaHipolio Farry, •
100. Guarontaod PlOY· lilted the offering.
U3.900 . 00 . 304-171Caii814-B43-5127.
ment. No txperlence· no
6181.
11111. D1ttll1 send self-·
Only one left. Cute long- 1ddr1111d ltlmJ)ed I"VI·
22
Money
to
Loan
haired, odoroble ' fluffy kit- lope; ElAN VITAl- 716,
32 Mobile Homes
ten . Call 814-992-7674.
3418 Enterprloo Rd., Ft.
for Sale ·
Plorco, Fl 33482.
HOME OWNERS· Rollnonco
2 kliteno, 1 block, 1 tiger
otrlped . Coli 304- 876- Stano Pooltlon Open. Legot to low fixed rate . UN equity
6 766 .
experience preferable, for any purpo.,_. Le1der NEW AND USED MOBILE ,,
would otoo IIIIa applicant Mortgogo Co., 814-692- HOMES KESSEl'S QUAl:· ' •
with bookkeeping and word 3011 .
ITY MOIJILE HOME SAU!S.
6 Lost and F
proc111ing knowledge·. ln4 MI . WEST, GAUIPOltS.
torHtod oppllconto plooo~
RT 36. PHONE 614-448Profe
..
ional
forward reaume toP. 0. Box 23
7274.
LOST brown leather check- 481, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Services
book. vicinity of Rt . 218 . If 45789.
Dupl1111 for Mil by ownw,
you have any informltion
trailer lower River Rd . .•
ploooa coli 614-258-1628. Help nHded for elderly. In
Tuning and Repeir. *18,600. Own• will fiprlvete
home.
Muat
work
8~::;:~~;
Mualc Co .• 114- n•nce w•~~:~h :~~~~r.~~mb'::
Lost : glrlt clusring, W•· nlghto. Calt 814-992-3695. 4
Twentieth yur Colt
4
3~4~-ni~5~3:.'n ..... Own. vou;. ow.n . Je.-.n·- .
Sporto-ar, Lidlto Apperot,,
1.983 Jay Skyliner. 2 bdr .••
LOST small ar•y
Chlldren1, Lerge Size, Com- Superior E111terrilineting Co.. complet•ly "'mi.t1ed except '
vicintty Rt. 2 end 82.
blnatlon Store, Acceuor~l. Inc. 'People who ,IPPfl· bedrQOmt. ceiling flll'l, AC,
' MOTEL
304-676-6403 or 676- Jordlche, Chic, Lee, Levi, ciate• your Bu1ineu'. Ll · stovll!l, refrig .. completely
RT. 62 NORTH
2B86.
E•oy Strllt, lzod, Eaprh. cenood : Ohlo-WVo , Coli underpinned. Bx10 utHity
POINT P.LE~SANT, W. VA.
Tomboy, Calvin Klein, Ser- 614-246-9152orl14-379- building. w11hor • drtlf, '••
miln flam
totel .electric• . Mttlng 0.(1 ..
gio Valente, Evan Picone, Liz 2712.
Public Sal~t
Pomeroy-lluon Bridle
8
Claiborne, Members Only,
l1rge rented private lot, Clln
Orgonlcolly Grown, G11o- Woter ·welto drilted and 11r- otoy if oold. Colt 614-448- •
SIHGif 124.95
&amp; Auction
line, Helthtox, Over I ,000 viced . Priceo on roqueat. Colt 7200.
304·675·6276
othero. a7,900 to $24,900 614-742-3147or814-992 •live Enteminment ofree HBO
1978 Holloy Porlr 7x24 FT
•Kitchenettes •Restaurant
RICK PEARSON AUCTIO- lnventory . Trolnlng,llxtureo, 6008.
oxp., 2 bdr .. CA, ollappllln•
A.U.
,
NEER SERVICE. Eototo, grond opening, etc. Con
farm, antique. llquidetlon open 16 doyo .. Mr . Koanan PIANO TUNIIIIG AND RE· ceo, underpinning. corpet ·:
(30&amp;)878-3&amp;39 .
PAIR , Summer ret11 in throughout , ••c . cond .
sales. liceneed Ohio and
l ------l:!!::!:!:!!:J:I Waot
effect
-free eatlm•tes . *10,000. Call days 81•·
Virginia . 304-773- Own your own . Jeen +
Word'.• Keybo.,d, 30,-~76 - 441-7368 or .ovoo. 6145786 or 304-773-5430 . ~
Sponoweor. La dill Apporel. 61100 pr &amp;7,!"-38.24. .
266-.1124.
, ,- ..
Childreno. large Slzo, Combinetion Store. ACCIIIOtill.
1974 12x64 Buddy 2 bdr.
9 Wanted To Buy
Jordlche, Chic. , Lee. Levi.
with or without lot. Cell
Etoy Strut. lzod. Eoprh.
814-448-9219 or81 4-448We p•y caah for late model Tomboy. Calvin Klein, Sor3346
clean used e~rs .
gio Velente, Even Picone, Liz
Jim Mink Chev.-Oidt Inc.
Claiborne. Membero Only. 31 Homes for Sale
1989 12x80Chompionwith ·
Rt. 124,Pomtroy Ohio
Bill Gene Johnaon
Orgonlcolly Grown. Gooo1975 1 2x24 odd-on . Very
- 814-446-3872
linel Helthtex. Over 1 .000
go.od condition. Wesher,
othero. f7.900 to 124,900 Step u·JS·I•re 4 bdr . fabulous dryer, etove, and air condl·
Wanted to buy : tObacco inventory. training. fi111ture1. homo. 3.000 oq.lt .. 3 bltht. tionor. Coll614-992-2189 ...
poundoge. Colt 61 4-446· grand opening. etc. Ctn . 2 fireplace•. 'h ecre. 6 more.
166, 000 . Reduced to 1982 oU otectrlc. 14x70. 3
1437.
open 15 d1y1. Mr. Keentn
142.000 . Aooumobte 8%. bedroom•. 2 lull betho,
1306)878-3639.
Colt 614-446-7019 or 218 - central
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
PH. 992-5682
eir.. porch. awning•.
FURNITURE. Bodo, Iron. NEW Gl BILL--Another be- 636-6429 .
outtide storage buHdin1 . ...
wood. cupboerds: ch1lrs. nefit tor Army N1tion1l
Will Mil rl-lront lot oloo .
cheat•. beaketa, dithea, Guard membllr1. You can J • .,. Drive . 3 bdr. ranch wieh Loc1ted Front and Lincoln '
3-24-tfc 1tone jera, antiquee. gold receive I 1 40.00 per month. att•ched 2 car gerege. Hf.in St. in Middlapon. Coli 814and ailver . Write-M .O. in addition to your drill pay. kitchen, livingroom. family 992-3348 olter 6pm.
Mitior, Flt .2, Pomeroy, Ohio and 1tlll ettend school . Cell room with fireplece. 2 beth
45789 or :atl 814 -992- 304-871-3960 or 1-B00- rooms, utility room. tlr 1972 Chomplon Trollor In
cond., lluminum aiding. Cell Pontond. 1 Ox60. now Cola~-~~NT~E~RE~ST~ED~IN~A~.~ .I-7-70-0·--------~ 642-3619.
8i4-448-4829.
furn•ce, p•rtlllly
man
NEW VEHICLE
Buying dolly gold, oitvor Legel experience prefereble.
lumlohod . 12800. Colt 114- /
Moving.
owner
mutt
1111.
We'd like to introduce•you to
colna, ring•. jewelry, sterling would al1o like applicant
843-5310 or 114-843EnP&amp;t-A-Ctr. the modern WIY
were, old coins, lerge cur- with bookkeeping end word Will consider land contrlct . 6408.
to drive tlte vehicle of your
rency. Top. pricea. ~d. Bur- proceaaing knowledge. ln- Coli 614-446-0276 .
C:hoice ,
ket1 Btrber Shop, 2nd. Ave. tereated tppllc•nta. plUM:
1984 Schultz. 14•70, •3
NO DOWN PAYMENT
Middleport. Dh . 8t4-992· forw1rd resume toP. 0 . Box 8 room houae tpprox . 8 bedrooma, 2 b•thl. Uved in ·
lOWEI MOIIIHlY PAYMENT
3478.
488. Pomoroy, Ohio 46789. teres. Bam , building•. cellar 3 monthe. Call 814-94i·
house ,. ne1r ¢ureka. 2102.
·
BLACKSTON
Aluminum acrap. Sell your Gino'• Point Ple..ant now •21.000. Colt '13 -370- l- - - - - - - - NEW CAR &amp;
•luminum acrap directtothe accepting applications. 3824.
MOBILE HOMES MOVED,
1meher. Buying all grades of apply in P'rton, •fter 3:00
TRUCK LEASING .. eluminum.
ln1ured , 20 ye•n expe·
Premium paid for PM. No phone calli pie•••· 3 bdr, brick. 2 bathe, centro! riencl. 304-678-2881 or ..
8or, 326
air, 3 ecre1, Rt . 160. 2 mi .
98
lerge loede. C•ll for quote. Muet ... v• own cer.
Pomoroy, OH. 45769
29 "
"
Scipio Energy. locotod 111&gt; 1 - - - - - - - - - - from HMC . Coli 814-441- l7l ·
For F111tr Strvlct
mllel Nat of Pagetown on Wanted beauticien with fol - 2857.
10•46, good cond, elton,
Call 614·9'f!·~•737
Townohlp Flood 141 . Mllgs lowing to rent booth, in
nlcoty toid out, 13,200.00. :
3
bdr
house.
sitting
on
3.
6
County. 814-992-3468.
downtown Point Pleeaant
Gtltlpotio Ferry, 304-17&amp;shop. Send re1ume to Box acres. overlooking Ohio 4831 ,
&amp;tending timber . AI Tromm. P-21 care or Point Ple111nt River. FR . kitchen, LR. 1'h:
814-742, 2328.
Reglater, Point Pl••unt, W. b•th. newly redecorated, 1987Coottrottor. 2 bdr, very "
priced tow 40"o. Coli 114- good cond.. UOOO. Coli
v•. .
446-2151.
304-937-2182 olter 6pm.
W•nted-~
of honey I·
beoo. Coli Swarm
304-171-1484.
2 bedroom•. full ba1ement.
12 Situations
mobi!o homa, 1 4x65,
double c•r gerage, 1.2. 1974
Good uood rtlrlgarotor or
Wanted
price reduced, " Eltrlt.. ,
acres.
Roae
Hill.
Pomeroy
.
wlmng to trado gOod g11 1 - - - - - - - - - 304.B9ti-3594.
U8.000 ..814·878-211 3.
atovo for one. 304-871- •·
7821.
Room • bolfd lor ltdy In Price reduced 15 room&amp;, beth,
Farma for Sale
private room, b•th, large utility. storm window•. 33
IR ·Iounge, TV, rea10nable. door~, new roof. wifing, - - - - - - - - l c I JII',IIIVIIII'i:l
Coli 814-211-1101.
orogo . Coli 614-982 - 212 1cre farm. P1rker Run
\1 I ~It I''
Ad . Mu1t Mil. Moved to 1
204.
Peraono lody 8hop, LUCIII
Arizona . Mineral right• tn- '• '
Line, Pt. PltaNnt, WVe. 6 roomo · ond both. Oak eluded. Moko offer. 61411 Help Wanted
near K.K Mobile HomH. floors. family r.oam, 742-2BI2 . No ..ooonablo . r
Populor prlcn. 614-911- equipped lor wood bumora. offer refueed. Term• aVIIIIe·
Watklno deotar. No · - 4174.
mohogony tiding. dock bit.
1.;.,.. nooeaury. Earn 21porch.
cOl'- lot with prl1011. "-oto for ula, olio lobyllttlng In my hoOM,
I '
vocy
Natoon Fld. ,
lroololng
t
·
pertlat.
Mltkllepon araa.' h... aqoe- Flutlond. Calf lltl WltNomoon 35 Lot• &amp; Acreage
MIIGS
.,•
Call 814·448-U1B .
Call t14-112· 6HI .. at 814-742-2007.
EICAYA'IUIG
lAVON upto110!1-nlntl.2 Room tnd llolrtl or tl..ptng 12 ICMII 1., AthiM11 County. For ule on conuact, 'AI IOtt • ·~
COMPANY ·
woyo to 11m, Catl614·44t· room. Call 8t4-112-6022 Wourloo Townahlp , 5 lot. Rt . 160, •4.100. Call ,,.
WIU do •II typea of •~­
2118.
or 814-181-4418.
ioomo, both, furnltu... olr 1 _e _14_·_4_48_-_o_7_0_8_.- - - cevatlng.
lanclecep.
conditio-.' gao furnec., o·
lng. '--menta, - porch, deck, beoomont, 1.25 acr11. floccoon l'Wp, ' •
18 Wentad to Do
tome form equipment, fruit on Rt. 184. Wttar • _,llo ,
1111• IY8Ieml, Wlll8r
treao. UI,OOO. CoM collect MIY to obttln . Coli 114· 1. •
and 11111 II,.., Wlll8r
44t -3124. .
' ••
COLEMAN WATfFI WELl 614-183-1481.
well drtllng and • ·
DRILLING '
vice. trualdng (llfnae.
3 bedroom homo, 1\&lt;lo ,.... 1 ..,. building or tnollar Pump - · - oorvlcoa . Flagio' ' oant.oaarmallta loan. gort1en lor
Cal 114-112-7411
In Ohio. AI -rll opot. Fled.- to or a.lol-112-2311 or 114g-tNd. Cotl 304-273741·1~17
tt21P43.
2811. Flo.,..._ood. W. Ill&gt; . an,ooo. 304-171-1047.

_______ ...

~

Middleport,

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Outtera • Dat!lnlt~ou1:al
Outler Cleaning
Painting ·

FREE ESTIMATES

!CUT OUT fOI MUll USII

Ill'S
APPLIAICI
SIIVICI
915·Ji61

AIMIUI

oDiallwuhero

949.-2263

•- •••·2U.~

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992•3410
LIMESTONE

GRAVEL • SAND

..

4

t~~~~~~~~~t:n:·.J~~~~~~~~~;:

~
a

1----------

Roger Hysell
Garoge

AUTO &amp; TRUCK t

REPAIR .
Alto Tr••••l.,lo•

or 992-7121

g••

l

992-2196

Wrlta111ll

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

"

PAT HILL FORD

Howard L.

491 Gon, Har!i1114f ,.wy.
Midtlloport, Ohio
HilS. 1D a.m. lo 5 p.m.

I. SWEEPER
ond •-lng mo:
chine repair, perte, and

..

1:=:::::======

We can repair and recore rad 11tors and
heater cores. We .can
also acid boil and rOll
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

~

SPLIT LEVEL HOUSE with 3 bad.'
'
rooms, 2 complete baths. dining ' ' '
room. living room and large re- l
creation room. Located on · 8"
acres. Large farm pond. Racine
area.

VINYL LINER POOL
ACRYLIC WAll POOL
ABOVE GROUND POOL
Owor 400 CNic11

Pre ·tchool Instructor t9
month po1ition) at the Quid·
lng Hond School. Bocholono
Dagroo. Ablo to m- Ohio
Deportment of Educotlon
M.S.P.R. Certification r•·
quirernenta or be wiiUng to
obtain . lnuruction tor
handicapped developm•·nully delayed
children -oe• 0-fi. Aveil•bl•
for the1985+88 school ye•r.
Appllc1tion1: InClude official
trantcrlpta. copy of certiflCition. and 1 one page
philosophy of educetion .
Writo: Galllo County Board
of Menul Rerardation·
Developmental Dloabititlea.
P.O. Box 14. Chaohirt, Ohio
46820 "' coli 814-387.
0102. Appllcotlon deadline
July 8. 1986.

TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

··PH. 742-23.28

•o..

I --------~~~~~~--~--~---- ·.

I

pd.

' (-.cial
al.,...nll 1
Cononrcial Sit11
aft4l •tti Unit

... bo held

Y.AN'TADS

1110 .

...........1&amp;

Elll·

T'*'tlln-·lnthe

51912

CALL

LEGAl NOTICE

_._of.__
A public hllttng on the

.,. loclol

(6141 143·5425

RENT ACAR

tho public ochooto of
for tho floclt v-r
of 1916. ore on lito In the office
of tho undeoolgohlll T-rw
of tho of Educrion end
-tho public,
to public
lnop '"""
of
punuont
to the
propoood budget for tho

*BASEMENTS *SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•FOOTERS ;;GRADING
•CONCRETE WORK

CAU (OllfCT:
Ph.

Aid -

I lFor5.111e

BULLDOZER &amp; BACKHOE WORK

20 YHrl
"FrH Eatirqatea"

including the coot of

I )Wanted

........

.TROMM EXCAV

Worked In home aree

Tre81Urer '
Eaotem Local
Boord of Education
38900 SR 7
RoodsviHo, Ohio
45772

-·duo•.
9hlo
-·duo·
fhttt tash rates
inducle discount

i!!Jt.!~~~ st30
13-IS fll'd lang•
•2o
Grillls ...........................•7s
Now an4 lhod Aula Glaa-lolo llotlot Ports
WHALEY'S AUTO PADS
9-13-ttn
13

c• c.,...,._................

Compltote Guttor Worll
Complete FlomodeHng
Roofing of oil Typeo

-ng

.

lathun &amp; dnwtermlndofacrlme
apree acn. the MidWest llqt
M. Stewart, Beatrice summer.

o Stewart to John W, Cue. Gloria
J." Cue, .49 acre., Pt. Lot m,

Tony A. Taylor, deceased, Velma
L . T!'ylor, Affidavit, Meigs.
Virginia I. Edwards, deceased,
Vernard D. Edwards, Cert. or
Trans., Pomeroy Village.
J . C. Chal)cey, dece-ased, Lou)ean
Chancey, Roberta Chancey, Cert'
of Transfer, Racine.
Ronald ·Smith, Linda G. Smith.
Charles Smith to Buckeye RuralEiectrtc Coop, Inc., Right of Way,
Rutland.
Bradford Lewis, Hazel LewiS to
Buckeye Rural Electric Coop Inc ..
Right or Way, Rutland.
Dana C. Hysell, June Hysell to
Dana C. Hysell, June HyseU, 9.24
acres, Meigs.
Dana Clair Hysell, June Hysell to
Dana Cl~lr Hysell, June Hysell,
Parcel, Rutland.
Harold H. Blackston, Helen E .
Blackston to Mark Allan O'Dell,
Tracey Lee O'Dell, 2 Acres,
Salisbury.
Russell E. Quillen, Velma QuUJen
to Russell E. Quillen, Velma
Quillen, Lot 10, Letart.
,
Jerome Goldberg by Executor to
Charles Sloane, Parcel, Sutton.
Hazel Weston to Charles Sloane,
,Pt. Lot 1223, Sutlon.
Luke McDaniel, . Kathy Sue
McDaniel to Leo C. Hill, Helen M.
Hill, 1 acre, Sutton.

Public Notice

S!!ERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
The Sta18 of · Ohio. Moigo
County.·
Chemical Mortgage
Compeny

i~~~~oiol::. .............l25

SUPEIIOR
SIDING Co. ·

of Ohio, Inc .. for en inc- in
the Roteo to be C""'ved lor
Gu Setvice within tho Southeallom Region at ill S.,OC.
ANI Enco...,llling tho Countlta of Athono. Gollla. Hocking,
Joclcoon, lawrS~ce. Moigo,
Morgan, P""Y. Rou, Scioto,
Vinton , and Washington,
Ohio, on Tuoodey. July 9,
1986, at 5:30 p.m .• at Vinton
County Community Buitd0111. '
Meeting Room. Route 93,
~quonerof­
No. 8. T-. I, R-14, at Vinton County, Ohio. (Thio Is '
tho Ohio Comtu~nY'I Pur. apprqximMely a ,.,.... aQd a t)tif. ; •
I10flh of McArthur, Ohio.)
~. ll~ln.PfotR_.t
By ito application. Columbia
No. 3. , . . 17, of the Plat
Gao of Ohio. Inc. - . 1 rote
RooonloofTowno-~
kept In the Flocorder"a Office•. ln.,.... which Would - •ate approximately
Moigo County, Ohio.
ALsO KNOWN AS: Rt. 1. t7,9ti6.400 In Oddttion gru10
Rowtinga A"""", Rutlllld, annual revenue baed· on tDWl
Dhio41177J
s~ Regjqn 111&lt;1 •
PRIOR . DEED ·REFER - yeor consleting of the
- . . months
NoENCE: Book 279, l'lge 821
Sold PnmloM f.MMICIIt Rt wmber 30, 1984. Ao 1 rloult
1. Rowllnga Avenue, Rutland, of ito "'-tigllion, tho Commi..ion's Staff ha retomOhio 411775
Sold Pnmilet Appoollod It mended a,.. incree• in the
$16,000.00 and CIIMOt be range of 11,216,656 to
ootd for lea then two-thiido of 11,841 ,473.
!hot lmount.
Tho mojor luuea. 11 lnticotod by the ponieo, ore:
lJ:RMS OF SALE: Cuh
a) The appropriate alloHowanl E. Frri
wance for wortclng capitol;
Sheriff
b) the aPP&lt;OPriote rata of
Meigs CO&lt;Jnty, Ohio
"'tum to be oi!Owocl;
JEFFREY V. lAURtTD
Attomev
cl tho """""'""te lovol of the
monthly cuotomer c:h-;
!81 26 t7J 2. 9. 3tc
d) the •-riote amount of
plant In ooNice; Sid
e) the IPPfOPnote expen-.
Public Notice
Tho purpooo of. the local
hearing is to permit customers
NOTICE OF
of the C:ompeny to olt&lt;li
BUDGET HEARING
tettimony relative to the pro-.,
Notlco II hereby glwn thlt poted increa~e .
~
two c:opieo of the propoood (8) 18, 25, 2tc
budgot o n d - of coot of
of tho e-.. Loool
City Plotrlct. R"dovlllo, 64 Misc . Merchandise
County of Mo~go, s - of

'

· lh!p/ Patee!B. Sallltlury.

f

a.m.-4:

County property transfers..•

E11gene A. Singleton, vuan D.
Singleton to Columbus and Southem Ohlo Electric Co., Ease., Olive.
Gerald T . Wildermuth, Faye .C.
WU«Mrmuth to Donna J . Nibert, ·
Tracts, Pomeroy Village.
'fhOmas E. Roush, Rhonda L.
Roush to Greg L. Vining, Brenda L.
Vtn)11g, Lot342, Middleport Village.
Barbara Shuler to Barbara
Shuler, Geneva Wise, .fl! acre,
Middleport VIUage.
sirbara Shuler to Geneva Wise,
.096 acre, MlddiPport Village.
Martin P . Nesselroad, Margaret
Ne5selroad to A.. Abigail Cauthorn,
.2!1 acre, Ollve.
Margaret R. Groce, Margaret R.
Nessel road, Martin P. Nll58elroad
to Aihon L. Cuahotn, Parcel, Olive.
Ben Eblin, deceased, by Exec., to
Jay' Halt, Jr .. Admin. Exec. Deed,
SaUlbury.
'
Hirbert M. Nelson ' aka H. M.
Nelson to Ethel M. Nelson, Helen
May Nelaon, Karyn Dee Euler,
Katliy Ann sChultz, Cert. of Trans.,
Rutland.
Rupert L. Steele, M. Irene Steele,
Cert. of Trans., Salem.
Allen E. Jenklnson, deceased,
Curtis L. Jenkinson, Cert. o!Trans.,
Middleport Vlllagl'-Chester.
Aaul K. Strauss, Richard 'A.
Liebmann to Martin A. Ueb.m an,
8. 74 acres, Rutland.
·
Ronnie Dale Holley, Elva Louise
Holley to Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., Sherttrs Deed, Middleport VIllage.
·
·
Dale Hill Ford Tractors, Inc. etal
to Fanners Bank and Savlnf!S Co ..
Sllel'ltf's Deed• Pomeroy V!Uage.
Ja,ck N. Tommce to· A,udrey
TCli'I'I!IICI'. Paul Richard Torrence,

"

·aaaa

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

73-19 ford Tr.
Ftndtrs ......................... s4a
-73-19 ford Tr.
Dean ........................ 1135
10-IS ford Tr.
Doon .........................$' 45
71-79 Ford Tr.
Grils ..................... $52.50
10-IS Ford Tr.
lfotHI! ......................... 1145

EUGENE LONG

u,."' , ...... ..11•• ., w...m.n ......... ~. •• .oo

Robert E. SuCk

~eigs
~

adjusted for lnOatloil, the benefit
formula IS also designed to account
for the year to year effects or'
Inflation. U you'd like to give this
· method a try yourself. we have a.
free pamphlet available caUed
"Estimating Your Social Securtty
Retirement Check Using the IndexIng Method"' it 's yours for the
asklng.
If you are 60 or older and would
rather we do the work tor you, we
can give you an estlr:nate of your
retirement benefit In just a few
minutes. Just give us .a call at
9921622 or stop In the O!ftce at 22llh
Coliuribus
.ln. Athens:. 0\lr:
office IS Open from 8:45
;lJ
p.m., Monday through Frtday.
Don't forget, If you have a question
about Social Security, SSI, or
Medicare that you'd llke answered·
in thls ~lumn, just drop us a line lit
the Daily Sentinel.

Customers
·

13-79 Chewy. rr.

H7-C- -

u, to 11W..... ;.T11fM.tayioo.-,!••......... .. .oo

By Lou Horvath
Field ftepraeniatlve

73

5128/I mo. d.

U7 - luH....

'-----,--------~
1
Up II 1 I . . . . o.....y 1roa-1&lt;1!o11 ........... U .O()

Social Security supplements income

our

AT II SUPD DISCOUNT

••MIO Co . W\1
....., C-3(M

..... CoMIU

Expcinsion of S...vict to
·
To Include:

•c·o mpl,te Front En"d Repair &amp; Alignment
•Computerized Wheel Balance
.
*Tirea (All Sirea-Car. Truck, Farm)

Clanit~td

fiiiSOIWIZID POOlS

Announcemenu

.

320 5th St.
Tht

jol/tJMPif!~ ffl lflpltnne Uf.'hllrl8fl.l ...

71·'1'-•4WO

-

•

Alllllilllli,l ' Ill I' Ill'

HYDIOftCH c•MIC.l lS

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992·6601
417 ·Se~ond Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

llqllipolis,

Clfl111ijird pal(I'I coucr r hi!

,.,........_,_a.
...... ..._.A.a.,_...

-z

..

•

"SPAS"

Licensed Clinical Audioloaist
.

1&amp;1 1
::1:

Drilling Co.

lltlol"' · -·

"'··---·

f.· ·

Formtrly Htolon

~ ... .........,.

·- --·-··- ·

Television Listenin&amp; "oiVlCe"s·
• Computerized Hearin&amp; Aid Selection
Heaiin&amp; Evaluations For All A¥fS

CALL
,t46-4522

111 Cour1 51., PoftMJOW. Ohio U7&amp;t

1-e...l~,...... I .,.liM~~

-

-

-----------------r-----------------P-----------------P----~----------~ ~ 3

PHONE
992~2156
Or Wrl1t
Stt!Untt
Otpt.
DIIH~

-

usiness Services

GALLIPOUS Parents In that could not be housed at the old
who now attend AddavWe and C-K.
sections of Morgan and Springfield
Seven
parents said they . prefer
B-P, o!ftclals said.
townships, Gallla County, who have
sending
their children to NG
Johnson's recommendation reassent their chlldren to Kyger Creek
s igns students living In the affected
buildings.
area schools since 1979 can choose sections of Morgan and Sprlngtleld
Johnson said transportation wUl
this coming school year between the to the NG area. But, st'!ldents living be provided for s tlldents In the two
KC and North Gallla attendance
In that area, or children of those townships to attend either KC or NG
areas.
..
schools . The s ituation wlllbestudled
property owners as of July 1 wUJ be
The choice was recommended to allowed to continue attending KC
over ihe next three to five years
the Gallla Couniy Local Board of . schools on a tuition-free basis as long
before the board takes action to
Education Monday by Superintend- as their homes remain there.
reestabllsh the pre-1979 attendance
ent Nell Johnson, based on a suJ"Vey
area boundaries. Board members
"flowever , no.other new students
of parents taken at a meeting last
ln thl.s area wiU be permitted to indicated the action mig ht betaken
week.
If tbe overcrowding situa tion IS
' attend Kyger Creek schools," the
Johnson's recommendation calls
ended with the newB-P .
recommendation reads.
for the abolishment of a resolution
"We're not forcing anyone to
An exception to this assigns
passed by the hoard onAprtl28,1979
students living on Ward Road In
change.'' Johnson told a group of
that redrew the boundartes of the
patents at Monday's hoard meeting
sectlons 3 and 4 of Morgan and
KC and NG areas to relieve
Kemper HOllow Road In sections 3
who attendE'd toflndoutwhat action
overcrowding at BldweU-Porter
and 4 of Springfield to attend KC
the hoard would ta ke.
Elementa\y School. B-P students
schools.
The direction the parental chdlce
along a fivl'-mUe ·area and other
Students living at the Children's . takes over the next few years may
sections of the townships were Sent
also determine if additional space IS
Residential Treatment Prngram on
to AddavUle and Cheshtre-Kyger
Ohio 160 wiU be assigned toNG area
needed at Addavtlle, · Johnson
elementartes that faU.
schools, "despite their prevlous
explililied.
New buUdlngs under construction
school assignment," according to
Addaville's student population IS
a_t BldweU and VInton are expected the recommendation.
expected to Increase, !Ie added .
, to handle the mqnber of studeniS
School officials met June iS with
''I think ll's done In everyone's
parent!; of 55 children In the area
best Inte rests," Johnson said.

--- - --

~

""'"'•nd

1

taM.
,c.

st•-·

fen••·

•to.

�June 25, 1985
The
41

Houaea for Rent

LAFF·A-DAY

I rm. houu. 92&amp; Firat Ave.
Colt 114-441·3845.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by urty Wright

&amp; Campers
; 986 Starcrafl Sgr Mester
8 . pop-up, same as new,
used 2 times. must sell II
once to settle estate. Electric, refrig .. heater. gas stove,
all options. $3,200 firm .
Coat over $4,900 new. c .all •
814-446-1841 , serious Inquires only after 6 , 614-

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds. Heated
indoor-outdoor facilities.
AKC Doberman pupploo:
Stud Senilca. Call614-44677$5.
Briarpetch Kennels Profira·

Upttllrt duplex:, 2 bdr.,
Nfrlg. It atove fum .~ ref. li
dap. Vlrte St. near rNer. Call

1114-448· 3949.

.

2 bdr. full alze baNment.
fuel oil furnAce, ,in Eureka,
.lloferoncoo. Coli 614· 251·
11547.
for Rent· near Holzer: 3 IJ!dr

home. ax. cond., nice neighborhood. low uti:lhiel. c.-n
814-288-544;7 for !"'re
information.
2 bdr coHage, unfurnished,
•2215 mo. plua utilttiea. call

814,448-3791 lifter 6 .

·sional ·All-breed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa cili1iel. Enqllah Cocker SpaWhlt ...ewlng mochlneo reg- niel puppies. Call614-~88·
ular price • 279 now ,, 00. 9790.

Dragonwvnd Cattery Ken nel. CFA Himalayan. Per1ian

Wool carpet, over tOO sq. ft .•
enough for 4 room,, &amp;296.
154 Flrot Avo. Ca.ll 814·
448-1816 or 614 -446 ·
1243.

and Siamese kihena. AKC
Chow puppiea. New litter.

RemingtOn Wingmaster
model 870 pump with extra
slug barrel, 1200. Air cond.
18.000 BTU. f250 . Air
cond. 15.000 BTU. 5225.
Call 61 4·448·8333.
Beby baninet &amp; aWing for
oale: Call 8·1 4-446-6688.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

I

.

'

2 bdr. furniahed, all utillt"
pd.. ••capt .elect., conve·
nlent location. aecurily depos._ rauqired. Call814-448·
8568.

J

II

'

I

3 rooms, lower Second
Ave . Private entrance, pri·
2 bdr .. appllencea furnlahed, · veta parking, utllhlaa paid.
1'1.iml.lromtown.lllplot. Ref. &amp; dep. roq . Call614·
1176mo. pluodepooit&amp;ref. 446-7515.
Coll814-446-2238 or 814·
448-2581.
Efficiency apt. with garage,
'
private yard maintained,
2 bdr. mobile home. total laaae required. 8225 mo.
ele1ctric, adults only, no pets. water inclUded, washer &amp;
TV: cable available. Call dryer hookup. Call 61 4·
611'·387-7438 .
446-7209 or 8, 4 -446 •
3287.
2 bdr. trailer 1160 mo.
deposit. 3 bdr. trailer I
One bdr. ap1 .. partly fu;.
mel: plus deposit. Both
nlshed. Next to Rio Grande
niohed. not In pork. but
College. Call · 614-446 co~mtry, qn Raccoon Rd,
2054.
ju$ off Rt. 21 B. Call anytl..,. 814-446-8397.

._..,_,-----~-~-:-1

.

'
2 iclr.. tufty fumiohod. utili·
tiee Jll!!l, .....s only . Coli
81'~·-41 10.

Musical
"Instruments

81

Tr "n~pu rt olio n

1981 Renault

needs, some
614-248-6288.

78 Ford Gronodo Ohio body.
black, new paint, 11,000.
Call 814-379-2116.

71

Autos for Sale

1969 Muotang. 302 VB
engine. Good condition. For
aale by original owner . Call
304-773 -6687.

72

Trucks for Sale

1 977 Ford Ranchero auto,
air, $1.499. 'J ohn' a Auto
Sale, Bulaville Rd ., Gallipollo, Oh . ,

1977 Ford 260. % ton.
Supai' cab. axe. cond. Call
81 4·448-01 83.
1979 Ford P.U .• 6 cyl atd.
radiale. one-owner. sharp .
Call614-246-9480 or 614245-6131.
For Solo: 1974 GMC. Coli
614-448-3042.
1984 Ford F180 pickup. PS.
PI, AC. AM -FM Caoootto.
topper. sliding rear 'window.
18.000 miles. Excellent
condition. Call 614-9928607.
1984 Ford Ranger pick-up.
V · 6, standard , longbad,

heavy duty oprlng pkg. Coli
614-849-2983.
1984 Chevy \loXH 4x4 Silver
Rodo. Fully loaded . Excellent shape, must see. Call
1114· 667-8780.

nlco. air .;~, Sond Hill
Road. 30~. &gt;?7,6 · 3834.
44

Al*'tment
for R~t~~t

1977 GMC Von.dura with
Mldaa interior, eJCcellant mechanical condition,,' high
milea"ge-recent engine work.
Call 81 4·448-8098 after
&amp;PM.
79 Chevy window van . Call

• '

7:00

74

Motorcycles

•·

... WI-I~fi!E:

·ANNIE
WHI!W/ L00f5 UHE HEY! LET ME
. I~ aoT lilY ~«JAM CAIIRV THOSE!
CliTQJT

NO Allc:;Uii\ENTG! WOMEN
OON'T HAVE THE

MIJSCUI.Iff"fi!IE TO HEFT

HIJCHY!

HEliN LOAfl6!

'· .,

a...tnMa

IIJ

Tonlgh1

SOMEWHERE

EntiiU!IIIIftMt

.

B:oo eWCDA·Ttlllti(CC)Thl

ICAN

A·Team helpo the proprte.
tors of o mom oncl pop elinor
who ... being driven out of
busineao. (R) (60 mln.l

THIS WOVIVIO.:,.J

•Qu

.

()) DIIJ Thnle'o 1 Crowd
ICCJ Vicky wontu about

her fotller'o romenco with o
mud! younger wom11r. (R)

1-lll-15

.QJZ
tKQt
+11:711
WEST
.11:1712

.
The coldell rull! of brlqe 11 slmpl)i
ltated and euy to remember: mal&lt;e
life euy for partner. Wbat 11t11 mea....
fram a praetleel point of view II that
WfteD ·you tile way to let a
C!Ontract, you llbotlld lbell ,ull; yourself
If t1tero II any way that partaer can
10 ~- Yoa olloald keep blm from

(!) 8upor Bowl VII HIIIIM
(I)
Mafdnti/Ptlr1ro

Ameriato

NORTH

Simplifying
partner's life
a,J-J~

())Gontfehn

••a
tn

+QIOB

.J

EAST

•u

8.\1

t71U
+AtsU

IIOOTII

104
.AII:IUf
t AJ 101

+J

makJni a millake, If you can.

...,

Vulaerable: Not:th-South
The · open1t1c lead apllllt four ·
Dealer:
South
wu tile apacle tbree. Eut won
George II """"'""' about
tbe ace and Soitth played the 10. If the
PO&lt;f""'llng in Louioo'o chor·
apacle three wu a fourtb-beot lead,
ity totem lhow Until he dlo·
then South bad to bave at leut three
2NT · Plio
covers whet' 1 In ~ for him.
apaclet. II Weat bad the tine, Eut
fRI .
P111
could pt a tblrikottnd raff and aet
Puo P111
(I)
MecNolf/IAinr
the eontract by caablnt the club ace.
Newohour
. &lt;BINcM!ICCI'La110F""er:
WeU and pod. Baet came the lillie of
This daedly vlruo, whi&lt;h.
ap8dea. South plo1"d tbe J-ck and
struck · a Nigerian vilege In
Wett woa the tine- You aacl I bow
1989. il ..amined. (R) 180
that Eut CUI DOW ruff lbe third •
,
min.l
11p11cle,
bat
Welt
wu
eeqbt
up
In
· the aee, and that wu it for the
•
MOVIE:
'Kettr'e
Wtlltdertnc whether declarer mltbt : clef-.
H..,..•
ba.e 11artet1 with J;IO dotlbleton of
BecaUR Eut lmowl tbat declarer
ltteol
MOVIE:
'Tho
:apadM and two Utile cluba. If that lw at leut three llpadel, be mast
IMAXJ MOVIE: 'Ill eo.by . were tile cue a clab. bad to be led make Ule euy for par\Der by caablnc
, . ~ HimMW' - .
- , ·.
·tlliouab·ille cltl)J tine rl&amp;bt 11010. After .the ace..of ~&gt;lube before fetiiJ'II!Ill ~ . ·
B:3o ()) ." PKA ~ , eon- l·..,m. aptl"•c, Welt t.td ~ club · ~- nine. Now Welt bu "DO ucuae ,
K - : 12 RauncU.Igltt- 1.
doWn oa tile table. South called for IOIDC wt'OIII llid wlll · lnevltably
mlddleweJght Clwnplunthe tine from dummy, Eut "on oet the band.
•

Cll &lt;ll Ja,._• ICC)

,.,

.,

.......

.,.,_N

This stuff

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

...,., Covoregit of thlo hrote
avant - - · Bob Tt..-man onc1 John Moncr,o io
preoantad ~om West "-lm
llooch, FL. 190 min.)

Don' be

weiqh'a
tOll! ..

a f.ool,

1

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614-448·3888 or
614-446-4477

Rufus!
Banks
does it!

(1) ................. 1:

.

Atl8nto ., ltouriln

(I) DIIJ Foui-Upa II a 1po/

IRIICCI

dlt~a'fltr'

e ()) Ill Alice ICCI Jo1ono

is paKf an unexpected visit·

.. l

lNG. Rt , 1, Bo• 356. 6alli·
polio . Call614-367-0676.

from .hi
. r f.ami... IRI .

· . ·

w m lil.mca Cody.
Nick a"nd Bor try to pr""ant

~:® •

Good -1 Excavating, basements. footera, driveways,
septic tanks, land1caplng .
Call anytime 614 · 446·
41537, James L. Davison. Jr.
owner.

LOOK AT
THAT GRIN ON ·

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

01: BULLET'S

FACE,PAW

.Odd

'Haul ' llm81tone. sand, gra vol,dlrt, bulk or bag fartllltar '
1nd lime. 'Excelskn Salt
Worko Inc. 838 E. Moln St ..
Pomeroy .. 814·992·3891 .

'11:00

'

•

' I

R a M Furnhure Manufao"' "' ~
turing, St. Rt. 7, C City, Oh. Coli 814-Uf.. . ,
1470. con Eve. 814-4413431 . Old &amp; now
Uphootored.
·
~

=WeD.

(I)

l]t News
(I) Ill eo.r., .,_

co-

tit.
•

(]) .,_, llhaphord A-·
kill CCCI 'I lo•e Cora. So
There. Relph Nedorl'

.'

•

-'

mud
TLonded
(poet.)

Iion man

.'

10 Clltfdoen
lncllon
II Afrlcon
people
II Brink
14 Moll
(India)
17t~

at Blactra-'cl
•1 Exte!ld
GMountaln
rid!~~!
.S&amp;!tof
•
bellel'l

•

DAJL:;mc:m~~;::;:;;::
AllYDLBAAllR
laLONGPBLLOW

One 11tt.er llandl for ...Gcher. In thla 18J11Pie A Is u.ed
for the tine L'a, ll for the two O'a, etc. Sintlle letters,
........... the~ llld fGrntlon olthe warda are au
hints. Eac:h 1111 tbe COlle leUwl are different
CDP'I'OQOOI'B

...

. VJCP'

a - lot looM in thla

•

•

ber""'

conolnK:-

••

IH-==c:om..trJam
Howie Mlll!del. Poul llodr;.
auez: Dave Coutlor onct Mike

ot'lled

• Nltht

(Fr.)

IMAXJ MOVIE: 'lochwtar

Upho!atary

s Deleri-

27 Cleorlng
18Yeam
It U.S.N.

' IHIIOI Hltcltltlllor: "-tty
Thle!vn

i

I Not eot
I No -

%1 Florkla 31 Give
county
birth to
I Control
II Molding sa Advantage
expe,...
at;yle
SO Cor
a speech
1 Card
ta c-ty H Penetrotins
zo Early
10 Jnronnol
U Footnerly 37 Jeonne
· French ·
room
II LouvH
· d'~
kinR
17 Conawned 27 CMrall sa Exclude
ta Conb1bute II Unconunon D
40
dirt
lllmpecllmen&amp; 1
Ill !let-..

Couple

•a:~ ~
Adult v..-.~

· bellovo

DOWN

t• lnvl~ I Toothed
·t Volcano

®No-tch

•

•

1 Sallow

15 Weigh&amp;
unit
(Bril)
III"A of Honey"
18 Deliver

Modio 'Ghootar: A Mottor
of ln1elligance. · The issue of
whether or not to lllow ..,. ·
cret govarnmen1 ·informs· ·
tion to be . modo public
knowledge is exp!Med. (R)
(60 min .)

••
•

.

ICaeoar

pailoter

min.)
·
(I) Mlllt8oy and 11tt1 N -

&lt;

•

11 Dutch

Loud (CCI Jenny goes undercover '"11 the rori1anlic in- '
terest of an influerltiel
gambling kingpin, (R) 180

•'

• t

vivid

Footboli

WHA'T"Db

'

11 Texao dty

(I) · · IDl Moc:Grvdor and

Ken ' s Water Service . Walla. ·.,. "'
ciaterna, pools filled. Phone
814-387-0623or814-367- •:
7741 night or day .
•'

.

ia one
II Still

e

General Hauling

· lly. THOMAS JOSI'"
ACI088
44 Make
• '

•

the oale ot • defective hell·
coptlpr to the U.S. Armv. (AI
~60 min.)
()) 700 Club
(I) DIIJ Who'o tt1o llou7
(CCI Tony· a aerobic a elisa
for the neighb¢oooct 11)8ids
gets him Into trouble with
Angela. (RI
D (I) ill MOVIE: 'Not In
Front of ttlo Childroro'
(I) Novof(CCj 'La1oa F-.·
This ~eadlf virua, which
struck a Nigerian vtlloge in
1969, is examined. (R) (60
min .)
CID Mlllt.lry and tt1o NO)ri
Media 'Ghos1ar: A Mmer
of Intelligence.· The issue. of
whether or not to aBow s&amp;cret government information to be made public
knowledge is ••plored. (R)
(60 min.)
. .
9:30 ()) .I]JI. Hall to tho Chief
CCCI A nltrrow·mindad minIster betievea that e woman
president is lhe work of the
. · devU. (RI
10:00
(I) Rorrilngton Steele
The romance between Laura
and Remington is put· on
hold untU • toy fraud can be
cleared up. (Ril60 min .)
(!)
Auotratton
Rulos

Excavating

.

.......,. Tonighfa inhouoe gueot is Tad Knight.

'·

...,

,_n.

Nightly

•

ifiOTT'HOlE

Jamea Boys Water Service. ~ • ~
Aloo poolo filled . Coli 614266- 1141 or 814-446- 1
1 176 or 614-448-7911 .

ATTENTION! ATTENTION!
8J'o Body lhop now open .
Fru oltlmotll. No Job too
304-178-~113 . .

.

~~of FortUne

'

Starks Tree and lawn Ser·
vice, stump removal. 304·
576-201 o.

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1113 Soc, Avo .. Golllpollo.
814-448-78:13 or 814-4481833.

.

(I)Joapolodf

•

SWAIN
.
AUCTION • FURNITURE
dUplla: 844 or 84f Jle:t&gt;Ond .12 Olive lt., GoiiiPQIIo. N...,
Ave .• utNtty room. kitChen, • uied wood·Oolllt.,.,..., I
dlnlngroom. CoN 814· 441· pc wood LR IUito 1318,
.,_ ..,.... 1188, ontron
1,113.
.....ttnoro . .9. new • u..,t
Now 2 bdr.· ept .. rofrlg. • , bedroom oultu, rongeo.
otovt fur ........ 4'1.1 mlln wrlng1r waahen, • llloel.
from. Golllpolll. f2211 mo. New llvlngroom aultaa
Ull·11198, ltmps. oloo
piUI electric, d - l t •
rafortnoo r11qulrod. No polo. buying CMI • wood otovto.
C.. 814-441-3118.
II
• Coli 814-448·8038.
,

.

MecNoll/~
Newaholw
.
• ()I Toya af Y-ont.y• SWTralt
7:30
())Tic Tec Dough

•

J Wr. newly NmOdlfld,

on '""lght-CAUTION

&lt;Hi

())

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most wells completed same
day. Pump sales and s~nvi·
·~· · 304-895-3802.

87

pulling

Cl!l Noww

Ervlntt

•

Fu,..hod opt. 243 Jocklon
Plko
Gotllpollo. 2 bdr. ,
1 ul. utlltol poid, Colt
448-4418 oftor IPM.

~tomouow)

YOUTH PIETY BECKON FAMOUS
Anlwer: What to txet'(:IM when you fMI you're

(I) Alf In tt1o Family
(I) D ()) Foritlly Faud

Salea 8t Service Sharpen
Scinors . Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 814-992·2284.

Futnllhld oftlal•ay •148.
utlhiel pold . ...... beth. 807
2nd. Ave. Oolllpolls. eduho.
Colt 441· 4411 oftar IPM.

J-

())-of,__

())Ct.coKld

RINGLES'S •SERVICE . ••·
perienced carpenter. electrician, meson, painter. roofing . (including f'lot Ur
opplicotion) 304 -676·2088
or 876-7368.

Waugh's Water Service .
Wells, claterna, pools. Fast.
ralloblo aorvlco. Coli I 14 ·
258 · 1240 or 114-2611 1 30. Raaaonable ratea.

...enlay't

I

(!) &amp;porta Focuo Jullua

SEWING Machine repairs,
tervice. Authorized Singer '

Boat• and

v

•'

(I) S.oond City TV

e

J .A.R. Conatructlon Co.,
Rutland. Oh . 614-742 2903. Baaemantl, Footers,
Concrete work. Backhoe' s.
Do1er A Oitcher, Dump
trucka,'iti water·gaa-sewerelectrical lines.

Motor~ for Sale

e()) (I) Chuck
PM Mogatno
. Connor'•

•

Al&lt;E 1-PJ
. CALLI~

Dozer Work land clearing,
landscaping, etc . Free eati·
mateo . Call 814-446-8038
or 614·992· 71 19 anytime.

76

I IINMI af J-lio

. ((). Sonfard -..ct Ban
(I) Entortalnment·Tontgh1
(I) Wheel "' Fartuno

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
romovel . Call 304-675 ·
1331 .

85

Evening

(!)~

RON'S Television Service. , ·
House calla on RCA. Quazar, ... • ~
GE. SpeciaUng in Zenith . •• ~
Call304-576-2 398 or 614- ,
448 -2454.

84

()) lit CIS

WH18mn-ter

~e._,_•~·a_~9_c.·~":"-::---:-'--.- I JIM'S Pb~M Bl NG a. HEAl· ·

1966 Ford Bronco. 6 cyl. 4
wheel drive, good tlrea.
phone 304-875-4188.

WHJI:T 'TH.A:T TWIC&amp;M A~lttii.C' ewii~E .
C:OU!.D HAVI !IHN.

@locly 13Bieoccbtrlclc

•

crete. Call 304· 773-61 31 .

83

tDISNALj ·.·

.

News
(I) Dr. Whci

8 9

1880 Chevrolet Suburban.
economical 350 engi•o.
fully equipped ; 38, 000
miloo, 18900. Call 614448-2967.

II

()) D 11J ABO Nows (CCI

•

O.and M. Contractors. Vinyl '
aiding , replacement windows. insulating, roofing,
new and remodeling, con-

82

Vans&amp; 4 W.O.

FfY1j

Women
(I)GrMnACNS

Tabor ·upholstery. For reupholstering. free estimates.
Free pickup &amp; deliverv . Call
6, 4-379-2859 .

73

1914 Ford 42ir engine, 8pc(;
rum1ii1g con4, $200.00.

2 bedrQ&lt;)m mobile home.

()).Rltloman

(!) " - ' • World Clau

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local reference•
furni1hed. Free estimates .
Call collect 1-814·2370488. day or night . R_ogers
Basement Waterproofing . .

304-89&amp;-3984.

drive. $1,200.00 or boot
offer .. ~04· 676· 6217.

()) CD NBC Nightly

News

M"a rcum Roofing 81 SpOuting. Now ins talling r_ub~er
roofs . 30 year• exper~enca.
Specializing in built up roof
CoU 614-388·9857 ..

8
&amp;
D
HOME
IMPROVEMENTS -- Re placamen.t "'?indows, ~l~m .
soffit. ·vinyl · siding; eon11nu·
oUI· gutter,. fr.-e· ••1iffUttes.
all work o.uarant.eect ·. Calr
avoninga 304· 676-2644.

1978 Subaru Brat. 4 wheel

,.PN

11:30 •

~----------,----------'"'!

1985 Deluu 10 Chevy
Truck. PS. PB, Auto, V-6 .
$9,300 . Call 614-949 2660.

2 bedroom.lurniahed. AC. 1
child, iiO pets. *180. per
morith.
Haven, W.Va.
Colt 304-882-2486.

Ho.me
Improvements

I

"(MAXI MOVIEi 'AM Fill
'Down'
' .

----:-;--- - '

AMC Spirit DL hatchLowrey Or'ilan. 8600. Hardly 81
back, great gas mileage. exc.
used. Origmal colt, 8120q. cond
., must aell. Calll14Call 614-992-7851 .
245-6040 oft., 4PM.

Fum Suppiii!S
&amp; liV8SIOGk

~-~\ Coittact (CC)

S~)~ VIC BS

4 mo. old puppieo. ml•od l--,.,..-~-:~--f:---::S:-;-1breed. will bo medium aize. _71___
A_u_t_o_a_.o_r__a_e_
has had sotne shots, 110 ea. 11·
Call 304-676-1222.
TOP CASH paid for '80
Two yea-r old talking Mine modal and newer used Cllrt.
bird with n.ew cage Smith Bulck-~ontlac , 1911
8400.00. 304-882-3650. Eootorn Avo .. Gallipolis. Call
614-446-2282.

67

....._

(1) F81hor K,_ Boat
· .,. (1). A')dl1tJ a.e
Wikltfe

Star Craft fold out camper.
sleeps 8. f?OO.OO. Coli
304-675· 2387

Fish Tank and Pat Shop.
2413 Jackson Avenue.
Point Pleasant, 304-8762083 . Flah. blrdo and more.

r......
lJ-.. tJ

t:IJHot"-

International travel
trailer, 30ft. self contained,
many extras, must 1ell,
make offer. See anytime '
Krodel Camping Ground Pt.
Pleaaent.

AKC 8a11et hound, pupa tor
sale. Tri-colored, 8 week•
old. 6 male &amp; 2 fomole. Coli
814-266-1862. .
.

Black male poodle. 1126.
Call 304-882-2518.

• 8:00 • CIJ (I) CD D (I) lit D
l]tN-.

1986

Call 446-3844 after 7PM.

Himalayan , need niale t~
breed with my female, 304578 -2611 or 304- 762 ·
2036.

•

l

446-8172 .

and - 30% off on Necchi

sewing machine . Cell cqllect
814-385-8026.

Television
Viewing
6/2~/85
..... .
..
, . ----..IM::~:lNilliNO:::____

79 Motors Hcmes

64 Miac. Merchandise _&amp;_&amp;_ _P_e_t_s _f _o r_sal_
_ e_

N- 3 bdr. llvlngroom. 2
bath, femHy room, central
air. dlshwlllher, drapes It
curtaina. carpet, downtown.
Coli 11 4 -448· 1409 oftor
IIPM.

1985

Tuesday, June

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10-The Daily Sentinel

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Killer explosion
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•

Vol .36, No.5t
Copyrighted t986

WElLS IN FLOOD PLAIN. - 'lbla Jllllllll, ...a
seve~ others In Addlaon ~p. rllhtllloag !Male
Route 7 In GaDia COunty, are ral8ed oo platforms
because they He In the Oood plain. Brine from the8e

New business

wells Ill IIIIDJIMrly llloiiued Ill faciiMiee on lbe hDI
above the punlp!l. The wells produce only a bllrrell of
brine a week
to driller Terry ~-

aeConltnc

BRINE m- Tills brine plllnGaDipoHs Township

guests Joined Chuck Leach IUld Dean Hatris of

enttne
2 Sections', 14 -P_.g_e ; . ·. - ...2~· «;ebta
A Multimedia Inc. Newipaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Wednesday, June 26. 1985

T~

cut ratified.;
welfare hot .i ssue

Leading Creek for a tour of aeveral well llitel Ill lbe
Gallpollsarea. Tills pit lselghl.yean~old.Come.J~
I, 1986 under new Ohio law, brine pits wW not be
allowed

.wa examined Frld&amp;J' morning whell several Invited

•

at

e

Pace u

&lt;Conunurofrompagel)

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

It was reportro that lhe Meigs carry out the plan and stlll would
Jaycees should complete the paint· . permit dog owners living · in the
In reference to plans for Middleport ' lngoftheC.&amp;o. depotlhl~k.The deslgnatroarea totakethelrdogs in
to annex land below Mlddieport and
vtllage Is In the process ofjlurchas· and out of the prohibited area.
.Lawrence Manley appelired -beStory will adVise the village as to the
ing the depot and the nearby land.
fore
councU in regard to a large tree
steps to take in carrying out an The Jaycees took on painting the
near his home. The large tree,
annexation program and an est!· depot as a Community project.
mate of costs Involvro.
located
between thf: street and the
Council d~ speromg In the
After a discussion, It was infor· vtllage, disregard of safety rules by sidewalk, Is dead and should he
mally agreed that qick or treat some blcyde riders. more Ughtlilg removro. The vUiage has no
night will probably DQt be observed . at the depot and better marking of provlsloi!S for the removal of large
In Middleport next October giVing access roads from the Route 7. •trees, the mayor said. However, It
way to a community party. :tbe bypass to Middleport's business was agreed to make contact with
several tree cutters to see If one of
group agreed that an active grpup section.
should be askro to stage tbe party ' A discussion was also held on an them would cut It down tor the
and Mayor Hoffman wllldlscuss the ordinance which would prohibit the lumber involved.
Attending the session were GU·
party with the Middleport Chamber walklilgofdogsonNorthSecondSt,
more, King, Wllllam Walters,
of . Commerce. The Middleport from Rutland to MW SIS. and from
Chamber wUI be staging Its annual Second to Third on the "1"', ,Mayor Dewey Horton, Sattertlel(\ and Carl
block party In the fall, it was Hottman will attempt to get an Horky; council members, Mayor
reportro.
ordinance wrttten which would Hoffman and Clerk Buck.

Mayor Hoffman reportro that he

has talkro to Altomey Steven Story

COLUMBUS (UP]) - An Oh,lo
Senate-House conference commit-·
lee has ratlfled a state Income tax
reduction that will bring Individual
taxes back near the levellmposro in
late 1982, .before Gov. Richard F.
Celeste was elected.
·
The six-member panel actro
q'!lekly Tuesday, adding Its lnfor·
mal blessing to a $19.9 billion
"control" figure for1986-87 spending
aiTivro at by the two top Democratic and Republican leaders in the
General Assembly.
The conference committee. aimIng at presenting a compromise
budget and tax cut to the House and
Senate.floors Friday, still must hack
out the detaUs and adopt a formal
report.
'
The conferees met briefly In
public, agreed on two dozen minor
areas of spending and reverted to
private talkS, probably until
Thursday.
"I guess you could call that the
easy stuff,'' said Rep. WOllam E.
Hlnlg, D·New Philadelphia, conference. committee chairman, in
appraising the spending and tax cut
figures . handro down by House
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D-New
Boston, and Senate President Paul

.,

sbaring revenUe

,

consideration of the bills c~ be
delayro until · after the current
session of the legislature adjourns
later this week. The b!Us' supporters
are seeking action before the recess.
~·The problem Is, a number of
people ate putting on pressure to
have It passed,'' Johnson said.
Since the Introduction of the bUls,
Johnson ·s aid he and Pther school ..
· officialS ·havE? consultecr With at'tor·
'neys troril Baker · &amp; Hostetler,
Columbus, and held an Informational session with school adrnlnlstrators and county l)fflclals last
Frlday. at Buckeye Hills Career
Center.
·
Statement prepared

With the assistance of the GalllaJackson-Vinton Joint Vocational

--...-:.:&lt;C:.;;::on:;:;.:tln::::uro:..:fro:.:;_m::..:;pa.:;:;:ge.;_1;_)- - - -

School Dlst~. a rebuttal has been
·prepared alldwas to be presented to
Rep. WUilam Hlnlg, D-New PhUadelphia, chalrman of the House
.Ways and Committee, and other
legislators. Hlnlg reportl!dly.. tavors
ll)e'10-3lspllt.
·". '·· ,
"My understanding Is ~t Rep.
(JolynnJ Boster, who has been
helpful to,lia. bali~ 10 ~!II' a
rneetln'g withHinlg;_andwlllqet\llL
testimony for us,'' Johnsoil ·said.
"That Is a very couragrous thing to
oo, because there are members of
Iter parfy who would like to see.this .
passed."
.
FollOwjpg Boster's testimony,
Johnson Is schedulro to speak and Is
expected to be followro by three
Baker &amp; Hostetler attornevs reores-

TANK BA'ITERJES - Tills baltery pf tanks at a
with new law. The plastic lank In lhe foreground
well site In Acldlllon Township In Gallla County Is an replaces a ·brine rlt which wiD now be filled.
example of what musj; i1e done at well sites to comply ·

entlng the school district- Jay Van
Heyde, Rick See! and Kevin
Shoemaker, son of Lt. Gov. Myrl
Shoemaker.
·
Additional statements were ex'
'
peeled to be ·made by JVSD
allegroly broke loose·from Voreh's
Superintendent Jerry Brockway
AMelgsCountymanwascltroby 5: ~ p.m. accident, whlch caused
vel)lcle, went off the left side of the
and Gallla Local board member
the Gallla=Melgs post of the State light damage to Gaul's vehicle,
road and struck an embankment. A
Claudia Lyon. Several other local
Highway Patrol following a two-car troopers said. Smlthwasclted by the
_peop~ - will ~- Pl'es!!!ll , for the
·accldenl Monday afternoon at the pa!J:ol.for failure to yl~Jd , . • · . ' .. 'refrlgeratO'r - ·apparently beCame
. M~anwhlle•.plc)&lt;-tiptrucks.driYell · dl.slodgro · trom the trailer a8d
hearing, Johnson llllld.' .- '· · ; :;, . lnterseetton of ·Ohio ·7 ·alxl -M~lgs
bytwoGalllaCoUntymensustained
struck Plymale's vehicle a5 It
Arguments against the bllls wUI
County 25.
:
·
moderate
damage
when
they
colpassed by at 8:44 a.m. No Injuries
center on whethfir taking away the
Chloris L. Gaul, 40, of 39761
lldro
Monday
morning
on
U.S.
11,
were
reportro In the Incident. which
llllllll!)lafterlthasbeenwont~Jrough
S~ Rd .. Pomeroy, was northaccordlngtotheGaUia-Melgspostof
took
place
around one mile east of
the courts Is constitutional, Johnson
bound on 7. when troopers said a car
. Gall Ia County 3.
saki. Ai(lrneys wtu also ask why
operatro by James H. Smith, 23, of the State Highway PatroL
Troopers sal&lt;1 Eugene F. PJy. ·
power plants wUI be subject to the
463ro Morning Star Rd., Racine,
split when other Industries, such as
reportedly liegan to pull onto 7 from male, 68, of ~11 Fourth Ave., . - - - - . . , . - - - - - - - auto plants and breweries, are no~a private drive. The patrol said Gaul Gallipolis, was westbound on l5 and
•
apparently swervro to avoid Smith, WalterVoreh Sr.. 52, of Rio Grande,
went off the left side of the road, was eastbound, when a trailer
striking a fence and a stop sign.
CABLE TV
No. 'Jnjurles
were
reportro
In
the
INTERRI,JPTION
.. .
. . . ·' ..
. '
'
'
~v.emments ' m· ~~ regtml that
'
·could exert ·Influence · to· end the·
Whlle· uj)g-racli~g e'xlititig i1ile
hostage crisis.
equipment
in Mason &amp; MeigsCarl W. Hayman ·
Speakes told reporters Reagan
Counties, Cable TV sub·
was considering a number of
scrlbers could notice loss of
Carl WIUiam BIU Hayman, 42.
proposals submitted by his national
cable,
service between early
Leon, died Sunday evening from
security advisers Monday.
Meigs County Emergency Medi- Injuries sustalnro In a car accident.
mornong hours of 12:30 a.m.
and 7:00 a.m ., Monday thru
cal · Service reports seven calls
Services wUI be Wednesday at
Friday. ·
Monday; Middleport at 2:26p.m. to 1:30 p.m. at the Wilcoxen Funeral
the Middleport Pool for Teresa May Home with l.h eRev. Everett Snyder
THANK YOU FOR
who was treatro but not trans- officiating. Burial will follow In the
YOUR PA TlfNCf
portro; Rutland at 5: 59 p.m. to Leon Cemetery.
Southern board okays
Meigs Mine No.2 for DaVid Watson - Fliends may call at the Wilcoxen
two tuition students
CONSOLIDATED
· to Holzer Mrolcal Center; Raclne 'at Funeral Home on Tuesday from 7-9
COMMUNICATION
7:28 p.m. transported Judy p.m.
!;ROUP
Southern Local SchOOl Board,
McN~ly to Holz~r Medical Center;
meeting recently In regular session,
Pomeroy at 8: 51p.m. transportro
approvro R&lt;lyan Young and Jenl
FerreU Randolph from the station to
Stewart as tuition students; apVeterans Memorial; Rutland at
provro Don Smith as .a volunteer
9:
11 p.m. was callro to a motorcycle
coach tor girl's junior hlgh basketl
on New Lima Rd. and
accident
baU; employro teacher Debbie
transported
Dave Gardner to
Llghtfrltz as girl's reserve basket.
Holzer
Medical
Center; Middleport
ball coach; ·employro Sandra Baer
at 10:32 p.m. went to Hobson for
as high school cheerteadlng advl·
Ellen
Stewart. to Veterans M~or­
sor; rehtrro Suzanne Wolfe as
lal;
Rutland
at 10:59 p.m. went to
reserve volleybaU coach; and
St.
for
B.J.
Kennedy to Holzer
Depot
adopted a student's grievance
Mrolcal
Center.
'
pollcy.

Meigs man cited following acci~ent

hostages. ·
:.
Against achllckdri&gt;pofmtenslfled ·
diplomatic activity, Wblie House
spotresman Larry Speakes sak:l
Reagan was prepared to order
economic and other pressures on the
hljacki'!'S, their accomplices and

.

to

Em~rg~ncy squad

.· Area death
_.
.

Free clothlng day wiU be held
Thurday, 10 a .m. untU noon, at The
Salvation Army In Pomeroy. All
arearesldentslnneroofclothlngare
welcome.

Veterans Memor,ial
Admlsslons.Jettrey McKinney,
Racine; . Helen Frank; Pomeroy;
Alma Woods, Racine; Henry Sayre,
Racine.
Disch~· Elson Spencer.

•

WASHINGI'ON (UP!) _ ProspectsforgainingHousepassageofa
bUI that would fund three waterways projects in west Virginia
following apProval Tuesday by a
sutiCommlttee, says an aide to Rep.
Bob Wise, D-W.Va.
·
··
"This 1s a preliminary ~fep," Erin
. Splaine said_. "But It's 'trnpo~nt
because It's-the best shot we've had ..
so far."
The Omnibus Water Resources
BUI would authorize $600 million In
construction funds to West VIrginia.
·The measure was approvro by the
Water Resources Subcommittee of
the PubUc Works and Transporta-

.

answer seven calls

Meets Thursday
Rutland Township Trustees wlll
meet in regular ·session Thursday, ·
6:30p.m. , at theRutlandftrestatlon.
The public Is invited to attend.

Reunion plannt:d
Descendants of David and Cathel'ine King lll1d James and Kate King
will have their first King reunion
Saturday, July 6, at the Paul .Baer
campsite on. State Route 7, Pomeroy. Pot luck dinner at ,noon. For
more Information call l·ll4'773·

To end maJTiages
RDbert E. MWer, ·Rutland, has
hem grantro a divorce In Meigs
Coonty Common Pleas Court from
Frances Marte MWer, Blackduck,
Minn., on grounds of gr06Sneglectof
duty.
·
Lavonne Blake · Robinson and
Merlin Robinson, bothofReedsvUie
have ntro for
dlsllolut·lon
marriage In Meigs County.

a

oi

5128.

Plan July l hearing
ThevlllageofPomeroywUI have a
federal revenue sharing proposal
use hearing on July 1 at 7: ~p.m. at
the Pomeroy V!Uage Hall.

Meel8 Thul'!lday .

Meel8 Wednesday
'
\
Long Bottom Commu!!lty Associ·
atlon will meet Wednf!llday 7: :io
p.m. at the community building.
Officers wiD be elected.

M~license

Ohio lottery winner

Marriage llcenles have hem
tssuro In Meiall County Probate
Court to Ronald Paul Wllkllll, 'l7,
and Edith Geraldine Grimm. ~
both of Pomel 0)'; and io Robin Earl
Slater, 23, Dexter, and Tina Marie
Goode,19, Langavllle.

The winning number drawn
Monday night In the Ohio Lottery's
daUy game was 910. In the Pick 4
game, the winning number was
lllm.
'

The annual meeting of the
Carleton College Board of Trustees
will be held at 8 p.m. Thursday at
Syracuse VUlage Hall. All trustees
are asked to be preRelll.

Weatfaer fol'ft88t

Water turnoff set .

night. Hl(lhlln the lOt; lowi.ID lhe

Water wUJ be off In IIOnle areas
south of Mlll St., on 90UthThll;dAve.,
and Gen. Hartinger Parkway tram
11 p.m. tonight untll approximately
2 a.m. Wednesday for tlJI! lnltalla·
lion of a new valve In the area.

,-------------.1....--:----------

Mostly llllllll.Y todaY, cleat to-

6011. Partly cloudy We41'eeday.
HlgmSI-90.
Eel WF-..t
F* •

..._

I'

'l'llllntlaJ . . a

.. ..... l'ltlliQo ...

~.IJalw'lltalll;ltln•llle ·

~~

s,M,, PEPSI
i

\

PACI -16 OZ.

$111

"Sflrr'in~

.

Wirh A SmiiP "

Served wltlt
Mashed Potat..s,
Chelce of l•lod, lell &amp; Drink

CROW'S FAMILY REST AU RANT

~

ON Whirl ol HIGH EFFICIENCY
ROOM AIR
. REG. S309.00
REG. S409.00
REG. S529.00
REG. $609.'00
REG. S779.00

5,~00·

BTU.......SAL£ S279.00
7,500 ~U .......SAL£.S389.00
10,000 BTU .......SAL£ S499.00
12,500 BTU...-....SAL£ SSS9.00
18,000 ITU.......SAL£ S6C)9.00

Elberfalds

,..~------~~~~----------~- ~~----~~--~~~--~------~
PH. 992·5432

Pomeroy, OH . .

2064
5258 5 .
REASoNABLE COMPROIIDSE - "Tills l&lt;i a respollllible tax cut that
should protet.1 118 against any down1Uf1W In theeconomyth18 biennium,''
·saJd Governor Richard Celeste foDowlng Tue8day's agreement. "I am
pleased to see that the leadershlpofthe House and Senate,ln proposing a
tax cui lor the 1911&amp;419 biennium, has recognized the Importance of tying
any future tax cut to the perfonnance ol the national economy.';

'

PENNZOIL

•

lion Committee. The bill will be up
Splaine said the bill's cha nces along the new Island Creek Basin in
for a vote In the full comnilttee
were Improved Tuesday when a
Logan County. The project would
Wednesday, Splaine said.
section supported · by President
reduce the average annual flood
"This Is the second or third time
Reagan wa s includro.
damages by approximately 00
theauthorlzlngleglslationhas come
"The President supports the bill
per&lt;~nt.
up.ltwasdefeatro In thepastonceil ' that was added on which affects
Rahall said language has be(&gt;n
gotto the floor, " Splaine said. "This
non-inland watl'rway projecls ."
Inserted In this bill lo provide for
year It has gotten a wide range ofbl·
Spla ine said. " It does not affect
wa ter releases from the SummerspartiSan support."
anything In West Virginia. We feel· ville Dam that will facllllat e white
. . The measure would 's.e t aside$~ · · that Reagan's suppart In Itself will
water recreation on the 26-mlle
milil011'1or the GaUipolls Locks 'and -protlably .en511 re !he .bill 's q~jc)&lt;.. :. ta ilwater segment ~f th~- Gau!ey
Dams, $134 million for the'Winfleld
signing.
River. · · '
·
Locks and $158.3 million for Locks
"We're prNty cerlain that, it will
The bill also contains a prov ision
Seven and Eight on the Mononga- be done fairly quickly."
10 pmvlde the Hunting1on Wa ler
bela River. Italsolncludes$4mllilon ·
Rep. Nick Rahall . DW.Va .. said
Corp. with a $2.4 million loan to
for flood control prevention on Cabin
the measure also authoriz!'S $&amp;i
improve Its pumping facililies.
Creek.
million for flood control P•'OjPCJ S

Officials feel impression made with legislators

Truck driver
critical
'
after SR 7 accident

SUN FUN

( R-Cinclnnatl) answer questio!'S concerning a
proposed tax cut over the next two years as part of a
$19.9 bWlon general fund budget for J986.87.

.
.
t•
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.
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b·11
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1m1s
1c
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..

Happenings around ·Meigs County•••
Free clothing day set

DISCUSS TAX CUT - Senate Presldenl Paul
GIDmor, rlghl, and Sen. Slanley Aronoff, left

0

NOTICE

Reagan . weig~s pressure proposals
· · BE!Jitfr, .Le~~n . (m,(-,
Shiite M0slem ·mJIItla chiel Nablh
Berrl met with the British ambassadar to discuss the hostage crisis
today as President Reagan weighed
proposals to pu\ pressure on the
captors of the 40 American

E . GlUmor, R·PortCUnton.
Celeste took office.
" We still have the difficult stuff to
Although state Income. tax withdo," said Hlnig.
holding will decline by 10 ~rcent
Hinlg said the conferees were
wllh "tlte enactment of the bucJget,
working toward a 4 percent hlke In
the rrouctlon will amount to only 5
public assistance benefits starting . percent tor tax year 1985, since the
July 1 and another 4 percent In July
cut wiU be In effect for only six
1~. contingent upon m;mageable
-months. of the year.
welfare caseloads. That would be a
The cut wW amount to 10 percent
compromise between the House's 7, In tax year 1* and l-5, possibly 17.5,
· per~nthlkeandtheSenat~'slreeze.
percent In tax year 1!1!7.1'hereafler,
In addition tothe15percenttaxcut
It could be as high as~percent.
over the next two years, Riffe and
Glllmor callro for a 5 percent
Reas-"'e compromise
rrouctlon on July 1, 1987, Ohlo
Celeste. wlloearllerhadproposed
only a 10 percent tax cut over two
economic conditions permitting.
'Three-stage plan
years, lmmedla'tely embracro the
The bulk ofthe three-stage tax eut
legislative leaders' recommenda-lOpercent -wUI take place when ' tlon as "a responsible and reasonathe budget Is enacted, perhaps by
ble compromise."
Monday. The second 5 percent wUl ·
"This Is a responsible tax cut that
not begin untU Jan.1,1!*!7.
·
should
protect us against any
The Ohio Deparlrnent of Taxation
downturns
In the economy thls
Issued figures showing that the .
biennium,"
said
the RQvemor~
initial 10 percent cut wUI .drop the .
income tax rates . to just 6 percent
"l am pleased
see that the
above the level enactro In July 1982
the
House
and Senate,
leadershlp
of
on a "temporary" baSis under
In
proposing
a
tax
cut
forthe't!&amp;-89
former Gov. James A. Rhodes.
The next cut wllldropthe tax rates biennium, has recognized -the Importance of tying any future tax cut
to 4 percent below that 1982 level.
to the performance of the national
The taxes had risen to .40 percent
above that level in 1983, shortly after economy."

A West Vlrgtnla man Is llstro
In stable condition In the lnten·
sive care unit at St. Joseph's
Hospital in Parkersburg when
the tractor-trailer he was opera!·
lng overturned Tuesday evening
on Ohio 7. .
W!Ulam H. Mealey, 64, ·of
Walkersville, W.Va., was transferred to St. Joseph's from
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
where he was treated for back
and wrist injurtes before his
transfer, hospital officials said.
The Gallla·Melgs post of the
State Highway Patrol said Mea·
ley was southbound on 7, around
one mile north of U.S: 33, when
the load on his rig apParently
shifted. causing him to loose
control of his vehicle. The
tractor ovetiurned and struck a
guardrail at 7: 14 p.m., troopers
Sl,lld.
I

His vehicle sustained heavy
damage In the accident: The
patrol said charges against
(
Mealey are pending.
A Meigs Coonty woman was
cited by the patrol following a
two-car accident Thesday afternoon on Ohlo 7, ~round one-half
mue north of the Gallla-Melgs
county llne.
Kareit E. Gilbert, J,B, of Rt. 1,
Cheshire, was southbound on 7,
when the patrol. said a car
operated by Teresa L. Wise, l¥1,
of Rt. l, LangsvUie, allegedly
pulled from a private onto 7 In
the path of her car. Gilbert could
not stop In time . and struck
Wise's vehlcle, causing heavy
damage to both cars, the patrol
said.
No lnjulies were reportro in
the4:25 p.m. accident, Wise was
cited by troopers tor failure to .
yield and no driver's II~.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallla officials
testlfylrtg Tuesday before House
and Senate committees In Colum·
bus feel they made an Impression,
but warned that the battle againSt
rrolstrlbutlng Gallla County's
power plant revenue wiU continue
through the summer.
Government and local schOOl
leaders preseritro the county's case
againSt separate bOis In the House
and Senate caUing for 30 percent of
the local utility tax money to be
distributed a.way from Gallia
County to more than 60 Ohlo
counties.
That 30 percent was 1051 from
IIJI!al coffers between 1981 and 1983,
when then-Tax Commissioner Edgar Lindley oqierro the rrolstrlbuUon. Lindley's order was overturnro by the. Ohio Board of Tax
Appeals In Npvember 1983. A
subsequent appeal by the state was

dented by the OhloSupreme Court in
Julyi~Th~ counties

receiving part of the
30 percent have now lost the
additional money , prompllng legislation returning to the 70-30 split.
Gauta County Local Schools
Superintendent NeU Johnson said
some "exceUent" testimony was
offered to lhe House Finance and
Appropriations Commlttef' a nd th&lt;'
Senate Ways and Means Commit tee, although resolution of the state
budget loomed o ve r t h e
procerolngs.
"I felt there was a problem
because the big thing they are
considering Is t~ budget. for the
biennium," he said. "We really
didn't get to talk to as many people
as we did."
Johnson said he consulled with
Sen. Oakley Collins, R-I ronton, and

with Willia m Phillis, asslstanl
superintendent of stair lnslrulct ion.
"He (Phillis I indicall'CI the stale
department (of educat ion) will
work with us. and he gave us sO/llC
suggestions on wha t to do, .. J ohnson
said.
13€causc of what he termed a
"steamroller effort " to gel one of the
· two bills out of commltl ee a nd
approved , the county's slrategy Is to
convince legislators to slow down
and consider the impact of Ihe 70-)1
split.
The school d;strict and other local
officials will continue plugging the
issue with state leaders, Johnson
sa id .
" I think II went well ," said Nancy
Powers. a legislative a Ide to Rep.
Jolynn Boster, D-Galllpolls, who
testified on the county leaders'
behalf. "I lhink II (the testimony )
was well -receivt&gt;d. I didn't hf'ar too

many nPgative quesllons from Ihe
panel. Ther£' Is no IndiCa lion that it
will move quickly this week:"
Officials are hoping to delay any
action on the bill until the legislature
recesses. possibly by the end of this
week .

Boste r's tesllmony proposed that
the state reimburSe school dist riels
that have IOSI Ihe extr a money a nd
tha t a "slower look" be taken on
utility tax policiE'S. J' owers sa id .
Boste r will rema in in contact wit h
House Speaker Vern Riffe and with
Rep. Willi am Hinig, 0 -New Phila delphia, chairman of the fin a nce
and appropria tions commiltf(',
Powers sa id .
One oft he point s stressed by loca l
leaders was of equal ta.xa tlon - that
power plants were subjected to the
split when ot her industries are
exempted.

Reagan threatens action against Lebanon, Syria
WASHINGTON (UPJ)- With the
clock ticking away, President
Reagan today looked to behind-thescenes diplomacy to run Its course
before .resorting to a blockade or
LebanonorO!-herpressuretoendthe
hostage taking.
Anned with what aides callro "a
tu11 ranae ol optJons" to force tbe
release of the 41 /Unerlcans held
somewhere In the chaotic country,
Reagan played for time as the
Unltro States 90J811t a peacetull
settlenll!llt at the drama.
Hangin(! over the back-channel
diplomacy was a threat to take
action qabut Lebanon or other
natlonA-- lncludJa&amp;' Syria and Iran
- that cmld be In poslllo!ll to
persuade the hljacki!I'S of Trans

World Airlines Flight 847 to tree
the cent ral figure In discussions to Sta tes and E ut'Opc ..
their hOstages.
free the Americans, said the
· The Arab I.Rague vlrwed the
Wblte House spokesman La rry hostages were visited by the
threat of fu tture action as a
Speakes said Tuesday Reagan was . lntematlonal Commiltce of the Red . welcomed agreement by Reagan
prepared to Invoke those steps Cross and promised to offer
" to forego, at lcasl foe lhe mo.ml'nt.
Including economic sanctions or .suggestions today on how the
any precipitous action tha t might
even military action - once Impasse could be broken.
tend to Innamr the host ag&lt;' cris is."
diplomatic efforts \vere exhausted
In Beirut, Chrtstlan Voice of
The principal demand of the
"In the next day or so or the next
Lebanon radio said a U.S. threat to
hijackers, reaffirmed b)· Berri, ha s
several days."
Impose a military siege on areas
been the rel~ase or more than 700
''The president will let diplomacy where the 4il Americans wen•
Arab prisoners held by lsrael.lsrat'l
run Its full course before tuklng believed held was conveyed to Beni
freed 31 of the prisoners Monday.
further steps," Speakes said, " but through two Eur o pean
During an 85-m inute mf'cting
he Is prepared to take whatever ambassadors.
Tuesday with his national &amp;'Curtly
actions are neeessary to bring an
The report a lso said the United
advisers - hi s seeond In as many
end to the use of International States was threalenlng to freeze days __: Reagan relt!&gt;ratro, "The
terrorism as a means for testing the Shiite asse1s In the Unltro States,
United States will nol make com~cs·
United States and Its allies."
l;larLebanese Shllt!'Sfromobtalnlng slons to terrorists and will not a sk
The veUed ultln111tum came as U.S. visas and work permits and others to do so." Speakes said.
ShUte Moslem leader Nablh Berrl. ooycottingShllteflrmslntheUnlted · ·

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