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                  <text>'o lympics
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·--. schol~hip

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Vo1.38. N~.84
Copyrighted 1986

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enttne
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1 Sections. 10 Page.s
25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper •

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 1, 1S85

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ordeal ends for

HO!n'AGE DISCUSSION - President Reagan
4alb with Chief of Staff Donald.Regan,.c:enter, and
National Security ,Adviser Robert McFarlane on a

weekend
(UPI).

mght

concerning

the

-

FRANKFURT, West Germany
· (UPI) - The 39 Americans held
hostage in Lebanon reached freedom In West Germany early
Monday, ending a 17-day ordeal that
began with the hijacking of a TWA
jetliner.
The U.S. Air Force C-141 aircraft
carrying the hostages touched down
at U.S. Rhein-Main air base outside
Frankfurt at 5: 25 a.m. Monday
(11: 25 p.m. EIJI' Sunday). after a
six-hour flight from Damascus,
Syria. ·TI)e hostages were released
Sunday by their Shiite Moslem
c&lt;;~ptors In Beirut, Lebanon.
In Washlngion, President Reagan,· vowJng ..to fight back against
"cowardly attacks," said, "The
•· · United States gives terrorists no
rewards and no guarantees. We
make no concessions, we make no
deals."
Many of the hostages' relatives
had flown to Frankftrt for reunions
and crowds of excited Americans
gathered at the base before dawn
Monday to give a carnival welcome
to the hostages.
The staff of the base hung a large
hostage situation.
white banner ·on the main Control
tower bearing the words, "Welcome
Home." Other banners read "Freedom, " "Freedom at Last," "We
Flipped When You Were Freed."
Anonymous well wls.!Jers had
bunches of flowers dellv~red to the
airport control tower.
Vice President' George Bush

Syrian President Hafez Assad was
relations with Syria had Improved.
working to free the seven remaining
President Reagan, in a tel vised
hostages in Beirut, Lebanon.
White House statement, earlier
Shultz; interviewed on ABC's vowed to ffght back against "co"Good Morning America," also said . wardly attacks," saying " the United
U.S. relations with Israel were States gives terrorists no rewards
"stronger than ever" as a result of and no guarantees. We make no
,.,. the crisis, and suggested . U.S.
deals."
,.

Hostages Route
·to Freedom
Atlantic Ocean

~rrlvedatthebasefromParlsabout

Amal rnUitia in Lebanon to hand off
hostages to Syria.
He was disappointed with a
last-minute snag Saturday when the
captors became incensed over
Reagan's denunciation of them in a
CIIJcago speech Friday as "thugs,
murderers and barbarians" with an
implied threat of retallatlon.
Reagan's rhetoric and the fact
that four of the hostages were stU!
being held by extremists Shlltes
caused a 24-hour delay In the
release.
The president did make a
concession late Saturday by approv'ing a terse State Department
statement requested by Syria
reaffirming U.S. policy toward the
"preservation, stability and security" of Let5anon.
·

the

half an hour earllertogreetthemen.
A group of seven U.S. cohgressrnen·
and four senators was also on hand.
In Washington, Secretary of State
George Shultz today said Iran
"clearly had connections with the
people" who hijacked TWA Fllght
847 June 14 and that he believed

AFRICA
.

-------route ot plane

1000

0

11Jiles .

Celeste .i nks st~te hud_get hill
COLUMBUS (UPI) Gov.
Richard F . Celeste, declaring it to l)e
"a win for all Ohioans," today signed
a $19.9 billion state budgetfor1986-87
Including an Immediate 10 percent
reduction in state income tax rates.
In signing the giant spending bill
at a ceremony in his Cabinet room,
the gover:nor made 10 item vetoes,
but non appeared significant.
The budget, adopted along blpartlsan lines in the Ohio General'
Assembly late last Friday, provides
for an 198 pe~ent increase in

spendlng.It totals $:ll.2 billion when
federal and special funds are added.
The budget was 'signed almost ll
hours after the new two-year fiscal
period began, but there was no
interruption in state services.
The income tax ~ut totals 15
percent over two years, but the
second 5 percent will not come until
Jan . 1, 1987.
A third cut of 5 percent would
begin· July 1, 1987, in the unlikely
event Ohio's unemployment rate
dropsbelow7percent.Celestesaidit

·Syrac~se ·r esidents
monitor.roadside park ·
TheSyracuseRoadsldeParklson one wlll be permitted in the park
trial untll September and its future after that hour. This, too. will be
. will depend upon support and enforced bypollceandvlolatlonsare
to be reported by residents of the
monitoring by Syracuse residents.
This Js
decision of Syracuse toWn.
Village Council which recently held
In a third step, couilcll agreed to
a public meeting at the Syr;Icbse accept an anonymous donation of
School to discuss the possiblity or $1,00Jfortheparklrnprovementand
-abandoning the park. At the according to the stipulations of the
meeting there were pros and cons gift, councll must match that
expressed by various residents. amount. New picnic tables and'
Some complained against noise water into the park will be a part
and behavior at the park. while the improvements.
Councillsinslstlnguponhelpfrom
others commented that theparkls a
valuable piece of property for the the community in the maintenance
vlllage to suqender back to its of order in theroadsldeparkandwill
take a second look at the park on
owner, Vernon Bartel~. ,
Meeting Jn special session Thurs- Sept. 1 to see if situations have
day night following a discussion on Improved.
aspects of the park, a motion was • "People wlll have to utilize the
made to vacate the _park. However, park. and rules must' be obeyed,''
It was defeated 4-2.
said Syracuse Councilman BUJ
Discussion the park f\Jrther, Arnott who served as c;halrman for
council decided at a 5-1 vote to keep the J:X~blic meeting held recently on
the park on a. trial basis until· the posslb)llty of giving up the park.
September. AccoPcting to reporis,
Meanwhile, Arnott reported that
an earlier council agreed to permit the other park located ')ear the
traDers from semis to be parked • swtmmlng pool is undergolrtg
overnight at the park. This policy several Improvement&amp; 'and addlwUI be discontinued and the law wUJ lions. Tennis courts are now lighted
enforce that change so that such untll 11 p.m. A second shelter house
parking wUl not be taking place.· ·
is being built. horseshoe courts are ·
being built ·and volleyball areas are
CouncllagreedthatlOp.m. will be to be available. A I1J.'W public·
the closing hoUr for the park and no reslroom facUlty Js being readied.

_j

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Presidential warning:
'We will fight you,'
. WhUe the hostages, their farnUies
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Pres!·
artd thenatloncanshare"amoment
dent Reagan says tbe release of tl)e
of joy," Reagan said the drama
39 'IWA hostages brings the nation
joy now, but there can be no demonstrated that "civlliz€d socle·
ties" must band together to halt
celebration whUesevenother AmerIcans are he!~ In Lebanon and the terrorism.
"Terrorists, be on notice: We will
"vicious evU" of terrorism remains.
At the close of a weekend's fight back against you, in Lebanon
diplomatic 1'9ller&lt;Oaster, Reagan and elsewhere," he said.
"We call upon the world communsaki In a nationally , televised
message Sunday he waited with ity to strengthen its cooperation to
"bated breath" while the jubUant stamp out this ugly,' vicious evil of
Americans traveled from Damas· terrorism .... We ~11 not rest until
justice Is done," Reae:an said.
cus, , Syria, to Frankfurt, West
German)', on their way home from
National security adviser Robert
their 17-day ~rdeal In anarchic McFarlane, in an Interview with ·
Independent Network News, ruled
Lebanon.
In a four-minute address, a grim out "the random act of vertgeance"
Reagan said: "We can be thankful but warned the United States may
that our faith, courage, and firm· use its pow,!"r to strike against
ness paid off.
locations In the Middle East where
"But this is no moment for · terrorists are trained.
· celetiratlon," he said. "Let It be
In his personal trial since the June
clearly understood that the seven 14 hijacking of TWA flight 847,
Americans still held captive In Reagan · insisted he made "no
Lebanon must be released along concessions, no deals" in the
with the Innocent hostages from frenzied behind· the-soenes maneuv·
other countries."
ering that led the Shiite Moslem

er1cans

is too early to speculate on whether
that cut will take place.
The governor was flanked at the
signing ceremony by sen. Stanley J .
Aronoff, R-Cincinnatl, · and Rep.
Thomas W. Johnson, R-New Concord, both of whom served on the
conference committee which put
together the final version of the
pudget during the last two weeks.
···"As a result of a strongliipartlsan
effort. this budget will keep Ohio on
the comeback trail," said Celeste. "I
am pleased this budget includes a
reasonable tax cut compromise that
still allows fimding of key jobs and
education programs. "
"!fully believe that I he com prom.
ise was a good one," agreed Aronoff.
, The governor also signed a $2.9
billion transportation imd highway
safety appropriation for.the next two
years, including $1.9 billion for
highway construction and improvements. Th;;tt measure is funded by
highway user taxes and not general'
state revenues.
•

Charges net
•
prison
terms

the

of

TAKE ME OUT TO THE BALLGAME, MOM ! When ta-e two go ootto RadDe's blllpmel to watch

their 1111 bro&amp;hen pla,y, they really don't care If ~hey
ever get back home. SpedatGn even forget to root,
root, root 'for the home team when these future big

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leaguers, Jonathan Ev.ans, 110n of Joe. and Cam,1el
Evans, Racine, and Joshua Adldns, liOn of Roger and
Tammy Adkln&amp;, I..etart Falls, both two-years old, do
their trtciOi on the skJellne.
•
•

Two men pled guilty tb va1ious
charges this morning in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Douglas Dean Starcher, 23. ,
McCumber. emcred a plea ofguiltv
to the June 11 armed robbery of the
Little Coal Bucket Carry:out near
Salem Center. Starcher was sent enced to not less·than three year!; nor
more than 15 in the Chillicothe
Correctional Facility.
Clarence Butcner. 27, McConnelsville. previously arraigned in Meigs
County on a charge 'of burglary,
Monday changed his plea of
innocent to ~ plea of gullty. The
state amended me ..charge of
burglary . to a lesser charge of
breaking and 'entering an unoccu pied structure owned by Richard
Fl&lt;;k, Long Bottom. on Oct. 5'of last
·
year.
Judge Charles Knight sentenced
Butcher to 18 months in the
Chillicothe Co rrectiona l Facilitv.
Butcher is to be credited for ttu;(.e
months in jall served in Texas while
awaiting extradlllon and a month Jn
jall in Meigs County.
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Monday, July 1, Ht85

I

'W..I Court Street
Nteroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTEII,ESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~ -

B'm~ ~.._.,...,r""'T""El!c:::l.~

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

BOB HOEFlJCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Edllor
LETTERS OF OPI NTON are welcom~ . They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subjec t to editing and must be signed with name, add"r~sand
telephone number. No unsigned letters ""'Ill be published. Letlers should be ln

good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

New

pr~sence .

William A. Rusher

'

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WASHINGTON - Israel has a appeared on ABC's "N!ght!lne", to
powerful lobby In tht&gt; United States reject, with undisguised contempt,
looking after Israeli Interests. the suggestion that Israel release
the 700 unlla terally.
There Is no u.s. lobby !q Israel.
.
unfortunately, to look after Amen- . Americans are beginning to get
angry at Israel, not without reason,
can Interests.
This wa's all too apparent as the though not wtth much purpose,
Israelis refused to help get the either. Israel has taken b!lfions In
United States off the hook with the Arnerlc'ln aid, along wtth effusive
ShUte terroristS by releasing the 700 expressions of U.S. support, while
ShUte prisoners Useized in Lebanon ~alln!l' very deviously with the
IJ! April and, over U.S. protests United States. Recently it admitted
-(ft;eble, needless to say), removed having acquired several hundred
to Israel. Having precipitated the American-made krytrons- timing
crisis, "our only reliable ally In the devices use!ul for nuclear weapons
Middle East," as its lobbyists call It, - whose sale abroad is Ulegal
allowed the United States to lake under U.S. law. That story dle&lt;l out
the heat alone. A sullen Y!tzhak quickly, as had an earlier story that
Rabin, the Israeli defense minister, Israel had acquired 11omb-grade

enriched uranium ' produced In tbe

United States.
·
Israel Is confident that It cap .~t
away with tills kind of conduct
indefinitely. The power of the
Israell lobby ls only part of tbe
reason. the main reason 1s that
Americans are, collectively, a
! 1t
t
prlmltlve.trlbe- emot ona ' orge .
ful, guUible, man!pulaple. We don't
hold grudges: Our attention span Is wasn't. It was the work of Israeli
too short. we have no Idea what we ·. agents, wbo were caught trying to
are doing !n the Middle East, plant more bombs, with the goal of
beyond :·seekingpeace"ao(lnego· wrecking Arab-American
tlat!ng the return of the current relations.
batch of hostages.
Shimon Peres. now tne Israel!
Probably Israel can weather any
a me-I)ber of
flare-up of Amertcan outrage. One prime m!Ji!ster,
thing Americans neyer do In their the government at tbe time. So was
Moshe Dayan. : remembered by
Americans only as a war hero with
an eye patch.
.
But the larger lessOn of.the Lavon
affair transcends IsraeU ethics: It
'
Is that Israel has a natural Interest
ln.discord between tbe Arab world
and the UOtted Staes. In this, for
once, Its interests coincide with that .
of the Soviet Union, though for
different and far more defensible
reasons .
.
The, Soviets ' want to generate
bost!llty toward the United States'
everywl)ere. Getting the MO$lem
world furious . at us Is quite a
windfall for them, especially at a
tlme when they are Incinerating
'Moslems In Afghanistan. This
couldn't have been accomplished
without' our help.
The lsrael!s, from motives of
self-preservation, don't want to fact ·
the Arab world alone. They can'tbe
,altogether displeased when Mol;.lem terrortsfs beCome the focal
point of Amerlcna pubHcopln!on; It
'~ ~ N1, LIVE ,WI1ll ~.ZOO (R!Xo\I.IN. WHO's tWEI( HAI.f-S~R Wl6 00 wmE1&gt; lo A'rn\~ con!lrms the American alignment
with Israel.
(OJSINOFOI'E OF ~c 6~1rruf ij)SI'A~... ~~~. iEU.US ~at/1JU ~ C&lt;l'ING IN 11-l~c; CRISIS!

.

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House sitters --'------'------:------A-'-r_tB_uc_h_wa_L.;__d

T~day.

NOTICE

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I

and Gossage relieved Hawkins. KennedY advanced to third on
Is nothing if not confident, and he lWse then grounded a 2-1 pitch Martinez's Infield out and SCQred on
says not even one of the mostfeared through tbe -left side, making a . GarryTempleton'sstngle.
flreballers In baseball can throw a winner of John Franco, wbu pitched
the final two Innings to raise his
pitch past him:
Rose singled off Rich GOssage In record to H.
the top of the ninth Inning Sunday to . Rosewent2-for-5andmwneeds39
score Nick Esasl&lt;Y trom second hits to break Ty Cobb's career
CABLE TV
base llii!I gtve the Ctnclnllatl Reds a record; of 4,191.
INTERRUPTION
3-2 triwnph over the San Otego
The Padres took a 1-0 lead In the
Padres.
second. Cannelo Martinez led off
While upgrading existing line
"Maybe I'm wrong, but I do~'t
with a .wl\lk, was sacrificed to
equiP.ment in Mason &amp; Meigs
think there's any guywhocan blow a
second by lfawldns and SCored on a
Counties, Coble TV subfastball by me," the Reds' playerdouble by Jerry Royster.
·
scribers could notice loss of
manager said.
tried a sinker
the
score
1-1
in
the
Clnctnnatl·tled
cable
service between earlY,
down on me and really got the ball ·
fourth.
The
Reds
loaded
the
bases
morning
hours of 12:30 a.m.
wh~ he wanted, but I hit the hole
with
our
out
on
singles
by
Dave
and
7:00
a.m . , Monday thru
with lt. I wanted to bat In that
Parker and Dave Concepcion and a
Friday.
situation, especially since I'd alwalk to Wayne Krenchlckl. Parker
ready batted two other timeS with
THANK YOU FOR
scored on Ron &lt;lester's sacrifice fly.
ruiUiers In scoring position, and I
YOUR PATIENCE
hadn't knocked aJllORe ln .••
San Diego took a 2-llead In the
Esasky led off !he ninth with a fourth with an unearned run.
CONSt!llctDATED
single off starter Andy Hawkins, Ca!cher Terry Kennedy led off by
COMMUNICATION
11-2, and was sacrlllced to second by lofting a !IY ball to center field that
GROUP
Gary Redus. Eddie Milner walked Milner dropped for a two-base error.

SAN DmGO (UPI) - Pete Rose

momentso!highdudgeonlstodraw
lessons from experience that may
ti ha
prove useful when the emo on s
died down.
.
'
Consider the Lavon affalr,another of those stories that died out
quickly, In 1!154, a series of bolllbs
e]!ploded In American-owned buildlngs In Egypt. It looked llke the
. work of Arab nationalists. But it

A fascinating Flap has broken out In the wake of the International
Youth.Year Conference held April t;-91n Kingston, Jamaica. Inadvertently,
It may tell us more about the shape of things to come than all·of this year's
• '1-ddresses by heads of state put together.
The United Nations, being Incapable of doing anything more useful,
had proclaimed 1985 "International Youth Year." This naturally pleased
the Russians (who no doubt Instigated the resolution), and they promptly
set about planning Its obseJVance at a conference to be held In Moscow In
late July, under the auspices of their Soviet-controlled World Federation of
Demilcratlc Youth. Susceptible youngsters from all over the world have
been Invited to take expenses-paid junkets to this mass brainwashing, and
will thereafter return home predictably singing hymns of hate against the
United States.
Entirely to their credit, the Reagan administration and the· West
German government decided not to· take this, Russian propaganda stunt
lying down. Accepting the offer of Jamaican Prime Minister Edward
Seaga to play host, an International Youth"¥ ear Conference was scheduled
tor Kingston, Jamaica, over the Easter weekend. Some 1,100youngpeople
from every continent and a hundred nations · attended, representing
(though not by any means proportionately) the entire sP..,trom of
democratic political opinion, from youthful Third .World socialists to
Young Americans for Freedom.
,
. What happened at the conference depends 'to some extent on whom
you talk to. On certain basics. there Is agreement. The conference was
Soviet tntentlorui. For obvious
key-noted by \11adlmlr Bukovsky, an expatriate Russlan dissident, who ·
WASIDNGTON A 'major fear that successful development of · where the SOviets are constructing
or
have
already
completed
spoke eloquently of the dangers posed by Soviet lmperlaUsm In Intelligence breakthrough has such a system would allow us to
reason~. we won't go Into details 6f
the breakthrough, lest the Soviet$
Afghanistan and Central Amertea. There were delegations of Afghan enabled U.S. analysts to determine launch a nuclear sttike against ABM facllltle~ .the disclosure comes In the
be able to piece together what
freedom-fighters and Nicaraguan contras. On the other hand. the that the Soviets are constructing a them without fear of an overwhelmrecent, top-secret "National Inteill- happened and take corrective
conference's final product, the "Kingston Statement," did not contain a massive antl-balllstlc-misli!le sys-· Ing SoVIet response.
Yet now the United States finds gence Estlm~tes" of Sqviet
single condemnation of either the Soviet Union or communism. There was tern. Such a system would com·
action.
a separate resolution virulently ~enounclng South Africa. The Third World pletely upset the delicate balance of Itself In the .ftighten!iig position of strength- a document nmnlnglnto
Suffice It to say that some unsung
delegates pushed tbrough, for Inclusion In the final statement, a series of nuclear terror that has existed tor facing a gigantic Soviet ABM hundreds of pages and representlqg genius In the U.S, Intelligence .
self-seiVIng resolutions attacking such supposedly outmoded concepts as decades bet ween the two defense In only a few years - long the distilled wisdom of all U.S, community , discovered a "key" ·
overpopulation and the repayment of International debts. It Is fair to say superpowers.
before "Star Wars" Is eveq off the 'military and civilian lnte)l!gence ' that' unlocked the mysteries of the
The new tntelllgence revelations drawing board. Pot!tlcatly, this agencies.
that rhany (though by no means all) of tbe delegates were anti-Western and
enonT10us amount of ~raw. hittErto '
For years·, a source said , this • Indecipherable Information on tbe
loudly anti-American, In tbe w~y .of soclallsis the world over.
make It ominously clear that, for could -be a devastating embarrassThe final explosion came over the management of future such · the Sovjets, the 1972 ABM ireaty Is ment for the' Reagan administra- particular series of NIEs 'was Soviets gathered from various
conferences. The socialists were In co~trol, and they successfully beat . dead. They've spent too much time tion, as a high-level White House delayed because of "the intermina-. sources. Analysts were then able to
ble wrangling over the nature of pinpoint hundreds more mil!tary
back an effort to provide for elections to the secretariat, so they wilt remain and money on construction of the source admitted.
In control. That prompted a walkout by ahout a tenth of the delegates, secret ABM network to pull back
The ABM discloSure ''has us very Soviet strategic forces.", The CIA sites than they could before Including most of the American and Eurppean and all of the Central and for the sake of a treaty they have worried," the official said , adding ,invariably argued that,Sovlet straparticularly the previously unSouth American conseJVatlves, who later announced plans to form their already violated.
with suprlslng- candor: "Despite tetlc wei'pons, were strictly defen- . known ABM locations. •
..
own International youth organization.
The V.S.-SOvlet restrictions on our ·own defense buildup, this sive, designed to launch a retaliaThe National Intelllgence EstiIt Is Important to understand what Is gq!ng on here. Ever since World weapons that can shoot down means we may be far more tory blow at U.S. pOpulation l"nters
mates don't hatard a guess as to
War II,.the West's answer to Soviet propaganda Initiatives has been to push Incoming missiles were designed to vulnerable now than what we said . after an American first sttike.
exactly when tbe Soviets will have
forward the West's own "democratic socialists, who subscribe to vlrtualiy maintain "mutual assured destruc- the nation was under Jimmy
But all that changed In 1980. the an effective ABM network In place.
tion" as a deterrence against either Carter. And It 's happened on our source explained, when all the But they do diSClose that one new
every Item of the communist agenda e:&gt;~cept domestic totalitarianism and,
' agencies agreed that the Soviets Soviet system, i.BM-3, has actually
Internationally, subserv!en~ to Moscow: inGod'sgood t:)rnethere has now side attempting a nuclear first watch."
arrived on this monotonous scene a relatively smallalid poorly organ!zed,
strike. The Soviets' near-hysterical
What exactly was the Intelligence were In fact bu!idfng an offensive . been tested - successfully.
but scrappy, knowledgeable and articulate group of youthful conservatives opposition to President Jreagan' s Information that has administra- strategic force, which could take
Add!t!onaly, the Soviet SA-12
who disagree with communist lock, stock and barre.l. They spoiled the so-called "Star Wars" !Program, tion leaders ·ln. such a tizzy? .The out most U.S, missile systems In a surface-to-air missile has been
social democratic pageant scheduled for Kingston the way a skunk spoils a · which would enable the United identification of literally hundreds
pre-emptive attack.
tested successfully as an ABM. The
garden party.
·
States to shoot down Incoming of previously undlsclo...-d sites
A rec~nt intelligence break- Soviets will soon be able to produce
But they· are a formidable new "presence In the room" - the first
missiles In sP.ce, isbased on tlle!r
through confirms this appraisal of hundreds of ,these mobile SA·12s.
really fresh development on the International YO\Ith scene In many-years. It
Is now up to the Reagan administration to decide whether It wUI throw Its
weight behind this v!gorou&amp; new force. or keep on backing the pallid
socialists and their liberal allies, whoSe routine response over the past 40
years to t~e challenge of communism has been a pathetic rl'-€nactment of
The best time for parents , of thai when we went away yqu'd each kid they throw out In the
years in the house, •after we get
Napoleon recrossing tbe Njemen.
·
teenagers Is when they can get ldnda keep people out of the house. street, Let me speak to my son
home from vacation.
away and take a short vacation by Isn't that what we agreed on? ... I again.
_"Look, son,· after the sergeant
" Alfred, the oergeant has offered
themselves. The worst time is when tell you what , son. Why don't you
boOts everyone out he could take •
1
GOOD eveNiNG.
DaY TweNTY
they call home to find . out. It just ask everyone to leave the house to persuade the Detroit rugby team
you dOWii to the station house and ,
OF THe ijo~aGe
• qu~Uy, and if they don't want to go to leave the premises. Tellthemnot _boOk you for disorderly conduct. 1f
everything Is going all right.
"Hello. Allred, this Is Mummy. -tell tliem you'll kick their butts In . to take It personally. I've asked him
he does, he may give you the right to
Welt, we just arrived at the beach. for them ... No, I must 'adm!t f have to bounce ever)fonewhetherthey're
make one telephone call. If tllls
Where's Grandma? ... Wljy did she never asked 'a Detroit rugby team Involved In sports or not. It has
~UI'IM~·~ ~eRIJN~.
happens , son, don't waste your
go home? She said she would stay to leave my house. At the same nothing to do with your friends. It
quarter oh US t:Jecause we're going '
fortkeweek ... What'sthatmuslc!n time, since you let them In, you're · has to do .with your mother's and
to try to get some sleep."
the background? ... How many -going to have to figure ·a way of my dream of spending a few more
'
friends? You're not sure? ... ffow gettingthemout...Aifred,arethose
many did you Invite? ... You only sirens? ... Out of curiosity are they
asked 10 but 40 showf&gt;ll up? ... pollee sirens or fire sirens? ...
Allred, we toltl you you couldn't Pollee sirens. Well, at least that
'
~ave parties white we were gone. .. means the house lsn' too';;;rn~ln?;;g,-"·---:--_l·~~e
If It's not a party what Is It? .. .. A down .. Any Idea, Alfred, why the ·
Dt: I
high school reunion? ... But you pollee are at our house? ... You'd
don't graduate from high school prefer to put the sergeant on.
•until next year .. . It's a reunion of
"Yes, ~rgeant, this Is Sam
the kids who have a1ready gradu- Savage. I know $(lmeth!ng Is wrong
a ted from the school? Where do you so we better !WI to It right away ... t
come off entertaining college see. There have been complaints
freshmen?
from the neighbors about scream... They're not freshmen , they're !ng: shouting obscenities, breakrugby players from Detroit? ... !ng wtndows; beer cans on tbe lawn
That does it. Put your sister Grace and some nudity In the bushes.
on ... How can she be out? She
"Yes, there Is a poss!bllf{y that
promised to stay home and guard our son could be hosting , such· a
the house white we were gone ... party. If hts head comes tel a point
•
Allred, you gave us your solemn and If he strikes you as a first-class
word you .would not fight with yoor Idiot w(lo can't say no when his
•
sister '" What was that crashing parents go out of town, then that has
-oo!se? ... Where are you talking to be our Alfred .,. Sergeant, how
from? It does make a difference. If niuch damage do you estimate has
you're speaking from the kitchen it been done? ... Yes, Include the
Today Is Monday, July I, the 182nd d~y of 1~ with lB3 to follow.
means
someone has just broken'my bottle of red wine that was spllled on
The moon is almost full ,
china
and If you're speaking the sofa ... Two or three tbousand
The morning stars are Venus and Jupiter.
from
the
upstairs
bedroom It meims dollars? ... Welt, it seems 'Mrs.
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
.
someone just smashed my perfume Savage and I got off cheap .... What
1bose born on this date are under the sign of Cancer. They Include
boltles. l'm going to.put y011r father do I want you to do? I'm oot tn a
novelist George Sand (Amantlne Dupin) In lffif, actress Olivia de
pn."
position to say. Are you people Into
Havilland In 1916 (age 69), actor Jamie Farr In 1936 (age 49),
•"Hello, son, ho": ~ It? -1 hear pollee brutall,ty? I'll tell you wlult,
t!horeographer Twyla Tharp In 1M1 (age 44), and actor-comedian Dan
f.Ykroyd In 1952 (age 33).
you're throwing a little party? ... It sarge, any way you could clear out
"GOODBYE, -Athens/"
sounds
Uke everyone is having a lot the house would be very much
• On this date In history:
:. In -1859, the first Intercollegiate baseball garne __was played In Pittsfield,
of tun ... Seems tp me we had a deal appreciated. I'll see that your men'
Mass. ~rst beat WIUiams 61!-32.
·
.
·.
In exchange for yoor using my car get a commendation medal for

TN

Confident Rose gives Goose,
P~dres gander ~ 3-2 victory

America StuiDbles On ______Jo_se-=-.ph_S_o_&amp;,.,_an

The Daily Sentinel

..

Sentinel-Page-~

The Daily

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pagtr-2.:.._The Daily Sentinel
Pomerov-PJ!iddleport. Ohio
Monday; July 1, 1986

. (:Ommentary

PAT WHITEHEAD
,.Asslslanl Publisher/ Controller

•

WINNING RUN Clnclnnall Red lhlrd
baseman Nick Esasky,lefl, ci'oaseahomeplltesalely
ali the Padres' catcher Terry Kennedy, rllht, lakes
lhe late throw during nlnlh Inning acllon Sunday In
.

.

San. Dlep. E8aoll;y ;..,.,...,.. oo a lllngle by llle Beds'
lint bueman .Pole Rolle and tbe nm IICOrlng lllnl!le
turned out to be the game winner as the Reds went oo
1o defeat the Padres $-2.
'
•

Boston whitewashed again;
Indians·defeat Marine~, 7-3
'

'\

/

'

'

By JIM LUTTRELL

Ul'l Sporis Writer

This past week would have been a
good time for the scoreboard
operator at Fenway Park to take a
vacation.
.Boston was shut out three times In
its six-game home stand against
Detroit and Baltimore - the latest
coming Sunday at tbe hands of Mike
Bpdd!cker, who nipped an eight. hitter In leading the Ortoles to a 3JJ
victory. All three shutouts were by
the same score.
The Red Sox, who .possess one of
the more potent lineups In the
majors, Were shut out seven times
last season and have ·already
•equaUed that mark this year.
The Red Sox, who have lost eight
of their last 12, got enly one man to
th1rd base against Bodd!cker, S-7.
The right-hander stranded eight
runners over the first five Innings In
pitching his first · shutout of the
season.
Bob Ojeda, 4-3, allowed three runs
on five hits In tl)e first two Innings
before settling down and yielding
just f!ves!ng!es the rest ofthe way.

I

Elsewhere In the AL, Minnesota
defeated pucago4-3, Toronto IJ!!Ited
Detroit 6-5, Milwaukee downed New
York 7-5, Kansas City topped
California 3-1, Cleveland dumped
Seattle 7-3 and Oakland drubbed
Texas7-4.
TwDi 4, White Sox 3
At Chicago, Roy Smalley's tworun double In the seventh tnnlng
gave Minnesota a sweep .of their
three-game series. The loss was the
ninth In the last 10 games for the
Chicago, Including seven In a row at
home. 'John Butcher, 5-7, broke a
personal five-game losing streak.
Blue Jays 6, Tigers 5
·At Detroit, Darnaso Garcia homered and dOubled home the
winning run In the eighth to propel
Toronto. The Blue Jays also got
homers from Ernie Whitt and Willie
Upshaw; while Lance Parrish and
Tom Brookens homered for Detroit.
Gary Lavelle, 3-2, earned the
victory.
c
Brewers 7, Yankees 5
At New York, Charlie Moore
qrove In three runs and Paul
Householder and Paul Mol!tor ·ied a

14-s!ngle attack with four hits apiece

-to spark Mllwaukee. Reliever Bob.
McCiure: 2-0, notched the victory..
The Brewers broke a string of :rlgames In which theY had.eollected at
least one extra base hit.
Royal&amp; 3, Angels 1
At Kansas City, Mo., Mark
Gublcza allowed three singles o'Ver
eight Innings to llfl Kansas City.
Gubfcza, 6-4, won his fifth straight
game and Dan Quisenberry picked
up his 14th save.
Indians 7, Mariners 3
At Seattle, Carmen Castlllo's
three-run homer helped Cleveland
snap Seattle's club record eightgame winning streak. Rich Thompson, 2-2, earned the victory In relief
of starter .Roy Smith, who was
struck on the side of tbe head by a
line drive In the third Inning.
A's 7, Rangers 4
At Arlington, Texas, Donnie Hlll
drove In three. runs and Dwayne
Murphy and Dave Kingman each
homered to pOwer OaklaD(I. Steve
McCatty, 4-3, was the winner and
Jay Howell hurled the final 1 1-3 ··
Innings for his 16th save,

Guerrero
ties June home run mark;
.
Cards take over lead in NL East
.

.

By United Press lnlematlonal -,
Independence Day may have
come three days early for National
I:.eague pitchers. As of July 1, they
are at last free of Pedro Guerrero's
month-long tyranny at .the plat&lt;?.
Guerrero, who began the month of
JUlie wtth his fifth home run of the
year, a shot off National League
save leader Jeff Reardon, ended It
with liis 19th blast Sunday, a
game-winning two-run shot off
Atlanta relief ace Bruce Sutter.
Guerrero had gone Ofor-14 since
cracking his 14th June home run on
Wednesday night. But In his last
at-bat for the month, he followed
Ken Lan&amp;eaux 'Selght)l-lnnlng sin·
gle by clubbing a shot to left to lilt the
Doi:lgers to a 4-3 victory.
The shot equalled the major-.
league home run record of 15 for
June held by Babe Ruth, Robert
Johnson and Roger Marls. Guerrero
alsO tied the Dodger mark for
homers In a month set by Duke
Snider In August of1953.
·
Guerrero also kept Atlant'a from
lYing the score by catch!pg Albert
Hall's ninth· Inning looping linedr!ve
In left field and dpubllng Gerald

Perry off second base.
.
The victory went to Dodger
reliever Ken Howell, 4-3, who
pitched the last two Innings after
Bob Welch yielded three runs on
seven hits·.
The Braves used fifth--Inning
home runs by Ciaudell Washington
and Dale Murpby to take a 3-1
advantage. Washington drove ~
ninth homer of the year off right
fielder R.J.Reytiolds' glovetot!ethe
score 1-1. Rafael Ramirez then
singled before Murpby hit his 18th
homer of the year Into the Dodger
bullpen In left.
Elsewhere In the NL, St. Louis
~ged New York 2-1 ln lllnnlngs,
Philadelphia shaded Montreal 3-2,
Chicago drubbed Pittsburgh 9-2,
Cincinnati defeated San Diego. 3-?
and Houston took the first game of a
doubleheader with San Francisco
6-2. dropping the mghtcap 7-4.
Cardinal&lt;&gt; 2, Mels I
At St. Louis, Vince Coleman
singled borne IvanDeJesu~withone
out In tbe bottom of the 11th !nnlngto
lift St. Louis over New York. Ken
Dayley 'Pitched one-third of an

P_erlod ended.,

Inning to Improve to 2-0. Reliever
Jesse Orosco sUd to 1-4. Phlllles 3,

,

EXJ10112

At Montreal, Derrel Thomas
singled home the winning run to cap
a two-run ninth Inning that helped
Philadelphia , past Montreal. Kent
Tekulve posted his fourth triumph In
six decisions In relief. Jeff Reardon;
2-3, took the defeat.
Cubs 9, Pirates 2
At Pittsburgh, Davey Lopes
cracked a two-run homer and Keith
Moreland drove In three runs to
power Chicago. Scott Sanderson,
4-3, allowed onlyflvehitstngolngtbe
distance. Don Robinson was the
loser In relief and slipped to 2-3.
Astros 114, Giants Z.7
At San Francisco, Mike Scott, 6-4,
allowed six hits over eight Innings
and Houston clubbed three home
ruils to take the opener. Dave
LaPoint, 3-7, suffered the loss. Chris
Brown scored three runs and Scot
Thompson had three hits to back
Vida Blue, 4-2, and capture the
second game, breaking a 10-game
l~lng ~tre3k. Ron Mathis, 3-3, was
(he loser.

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Den~er Gold, 48-7

Followiilg Porter's third quarter
touchdown, Leonard ~ill!ams
scored on a a:&gt;-yard run and Derrick
Crawford scored on a 63-yard punt
return.
Porter added a second touchiklwn
' in the fourth quarter when he went
overfromoneyardouttoextendthe
Showboats' advantage to 41-0.
Denver finally scored with five
minutes left when backup quarterback Bob Gagliano hit Leonard
Ifarrls for a 22-yard touchdown.
•
Memphis closed out the scortng
two minutes later when Mar~
Raugh caught a 26-yard touchdown
pass
quarterback Walter
Lewis,
Memphis forced Denver Into
three. turnovers In the ftnt quarter
and six tor' the game. Two Denver
quarterbacks were Intercepted
three times and the Gold also lost

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Showboats blast
By Unlled Press lntemlltloru!l
The Showboats, who tied &lt;1 club
record when they scored31flrst-half
points In their last ~gular season
game, sc!lred only 13 Sunday.
Memphis, however, added 35 points
in the second half to romp Into, the
second round of tbe USFL playoffs.
The 48-7 thrashing of the Denver
Gold was the worst playoff beating
In the league's three-year history
and the Showboats' point total was
the highest ever.
·
Memphis takes 01.1 the Oakland
Invaders, the Western Conference
champions, In the second round of
the playoffs Saturday at home.
Oakland eliminated Tampa Bay
30-2'7 Sunday.
· Memphis, 'which led 13-0 at
halftlme, opened the third quarter
with a 67-yard touchdown drive
capped by Ricky Porter's 1-yard
run, and the Showboats struck lor
two (llOI'e touchdowM i;le!On! the

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86 points In Its last two games and
won a toial offour straight, wlll take
on anQuier hot team In the Invaders.
Oakland has won nlne of Us last 10.
At Oakland, Calif., Novo Bojovic
hit· a 23-yard field goal with two
seconds left Sunday to lead the
Invaders to a :D-27 triumph over the
Tampa Bay Bandits. ·
Oakland, which trailed 14-10 at the
half and 21·20 after three quarters,
took the lead 27-21early In the fourth
period when Ton Newton went over
from the 1-yard-ltne.

But Tampa Bay quarterback
John Reaves, who tossed lor 202
yards and a pair of touchdowns In
the first half, foond WWle Glllesple
tronH5 yards out to lmotthescore at
2'7-2'7 and set the stage for Bolovlc.
In the final first-round playoff
three tumbles.
~- the New Jersey Generals
The Gold rushed lor lustOOy
· host ihe defend1bg champiOn Balli·
.
Stars Monday night.
Memphis, which has mw scored

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�•

Peg a 4-The Daily Sentinel

.Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 1, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Bright days on Wiinbledon horizon for McEnroe, Lloyd
WIMBLEDON, England (UP!) -,As dismal as the
weather may be, John McEnroe and Chris Evert
Lloyd botll appear to have bright days ahead.
Wltll·the Wimbledon ChampionShips scheduled to
resume today at Noon (7 a.m. EDT), both Americans
enjoyed the prospect of meeting qua!Hiers to ensure
their berths In tile fourth round. Looking further ahead,
the path to the semillnals doesn't appear strewn wlth
. too many obstacles lor either o! them.
McEnroe, aiming lor a third consecutive singles
title, was due to meet South' African Christo Steyn,
ranked Wlst In the world, on Court Two today, while at
tile same time Evert Lloyd Opposed J.B.year-old
Auslrttllan Jenny Byrne, carrying a rank of 162, on
Court One.
ShQUld McEnroe get past Steyn, his next opponent
would be yet another qualifier, West Gennan Andreas
Maurer, ranked No. 100, and his lll&lt;ely foe In the

''
•

quartertlliais will be either elghtll SE!!d Kevin Curren
or No. 14 Stefan Edberg, ·against whom be has a
combined career record of~Evert Lloyd does not · have a seeded player
remaining in her quarter o! the draw, and II she beals
Byrne would next face Anne Smith or Isabella
Demongeot of France. The thJ'ee.tlmechamploncould
contend with Barbara Potter, who Is dangerous even
though unseeded, IIi the quarterfinals, and in the
ll!'llllflnals Is projected to meet elthe{ No. 3 Hana
Mandlll&lt;ova or N&lt;r.7HelenaSukova, agalnstwhomshe .
Is ll combined 2&amp;3.
This wUibelhesecondtimeBymecrossespathsWith
Evert Lloyd. Thef!rstoccaslon was In her hometown o!
Pertll when she got to play a set of doubles with her
during an exhibition. "Chris was helping me along
then," Byrne recalled.
The se&lt;:~&gt;nd meeting wUI be far more meanlnglul.

"The prospect IS maldng me nervous, " said ~~·
who also Is entered In the Junior Wimbledon. I
haven't really played someone as great as Chris
before, hutlguessyouhavetogolnfeellng~tso
you can go out and play aggressively."
After six succesSive days of rain interfered with the
schedule, It was hope&lt;fto complete the third rounp
today. Other featured men's matches Included No. 2
Ivan Lend! against Israeli Shlomo GlickStein, No. 5
Anders Jarryd against Vince Vari Patten, No. 11 .
Yannlck Noah against Vljay Annrttraj and No. 14
Stefan Edberg against Chip Hooper. In addition, No.7
Joaldm NyStrom and Boris Becker were to resume·
!heir match halted Saturday by rain at one set each.
Amoog 'the women's matches we~ Np. 3 Hana
Mandlll&lt;ova against Elizabeth Smylie, No.4 Manuela
Maleeva vs. Robin White, No. 5Pam Shriver against
VIrginia Wade, No.l'l Steffi Graf vs. Stephanie Rehe,

MONDAY
LETARTFAUS- Letart Township t:rustees wUI hold a regular
meeting at 7 p.m. Monday at the

hall.

-

'ltJliliOAY
PQMEROY -PQmeroY-Chapter,
Order o! the Eastern Star, wtilmeet
Tuesdayat7:45p.m.atthePomeroy
Masonic Temple. All o!!lcers are to
wear their chapter dresse$ as
lnlt!atory work wUI be perlormed.
POMEROY - Rock Springs
Grailge will have a .practice for
Inspection Tuesday at 7:00p.m. at
the hall.
· LEBANON 'IWP. -

Lebanon

Township Trustees wlll meet at 7
p.m. Tuesday at the township
garage.

•

•

-

"· SYRACUsE - Sutton Township
Trustees wUI . meet at 8 p.m.
Tuesday at the Syracuse Municipal
Building.

RUTLAND - Rutland VWage
Council wUI meet at 7: 00 p.m.
Tuesday at the Civic Center.
MIDDLEPORT - . Middleport

Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, wlll

-

meet at 7:00 p.m. Tuesday at . the
temple. Relreslunents . wUI be

.

Albert Roush reported on .work wUI be a nag bumlngcermnony held . announced that the post color guard
being done to the pond at the Legion to dispose ol unserviceable Amert· will meet at the post home-at 3 p.m.
Farm when .Feeney-Bennett Post can flags. AJ1 persons wishing to on July 4 to lake part In the
Eesten~
i28
American Legion, met at the haveDagsdlspo6edofproperlymay Middleport VIllage hollday
EAST MEIGS ...:_ The Eastern
'
post
home.
' leave their Dags at the Legion home ~lebration.
Athletic Boosters will . stage a
Rouslt
said
lrtiprovements'
to
the
on Fourth St., by 11 a.m. Sunday
It was announced that named
barbecued chicken and lib dinner
pond
Should
be
completed
In
the
morning.
omittedfromtheJune1iwerethose
July4 atthehlghschoolbeglnningat .
Past Commander John Metzger of Laitny Tyree, who was elected
11: OO.a.m. CostofthediMer ls$3.75. near future and announced that the
annual
Legion
picnic
will
be
held
was
preseflted With a plaque lor a treasurer for the new year, and BUI
There wUI be a dance from 8 to 11
JuneJO at 1 p.m. at the farm. There job well done the past year. It was Gilmore who was presented a past
p.m. With music by Itomlc Sounds.
served following the meeting.

Flea liJalolcfj
RACINE - Racine American
Legion will hold a Dea market at the
hall from 9a.m. to.6 p .m . on July 6-7.
Table rental Is $2.00.

commander'~ for

[~..;.

The post a
ary and
t o!
before the meeting
a vo e
thanks was giJimvenHtodsothe groupln.
Commander
u
n was
charge of the meeting and ~ap~
WalterBuncegavetheope ng
closing prayers. ·

·Cub Scout packs ·involved in olympics

Cub Scout Pack 256of New Haven Eric Hill; Lee Connolly, Joe Karsch· Grimm, Reggie Pratt , David Fetty,
hosted the MGM District Cub · lilk, Jared Ridenour, Willie Adams, Chris Knight , Eric White, Israel
Olympics recently on the. town hall
Tyson Rose, Eric Tutlle, Eric
Grimm, Jaso.n Taylor, Jered Hill,
Forked Lake
fields.
_ Hollon, Mica Otto, Todd Michael ;
Benny Ewing, J .P. Davis, Erjc
REEDSVILLE - Special actlviThe
Cub
Scout
Olympics
are
·Jell
Steth&amp;,
V.J.
VanMeter,
J
.R.
Qualls,
Nathan Brown.
tleswUI takeplaceJuly4tllweekend
·
similar
to
field
day
except
the
Ridgway,
Jerrod
Van
lnwagen,
Pack 253, MaSon - Steve Davis ,
atFor~RunLake.
Andy Wolf.
contests are aimed more towards
Michael
Mattox, Michael VanMe·
On Thursday evening movies,
Pack 238. Langsville - Adam· ter, BillyHannack,Jim.P ibbs, Chrt s
development and testfng physical
comedies and nature tllms, will be
Barrett, David Stewart, Jason · Davis, Jon Adkins.
sk)tis, particularly track and field .
shown In the amphitheater about
The
events Include baseball
Dellavalle, Jamie Barrett, Joey
Pack 256, New Haven - Robbie
8:00 p.m. On Friday there wUI be
Barrett, Matthew Clark Randall Thomas, Jason Roush, Troy Bumthrow, football kick, 50 yard dash, 2'i
Bluegrass music near the CORee!\·
yard dash !or seven year . olds,
Johnston .
garner, Matthew Benson, Keith
sion stand by the Shade Valley Boys
jumping jacks, obstacle course,
Pack 245, Middleport - Willy Weaver, Rocky Stewart, Adam
at 8: 00 p.m. and on Saturday
standing and running board jumps,
Johnson, Keith Darst, Kyle Simp- Jones, Chad Weaver. Louie Lam·
evening, therewUI again be movies.
javelin thl-ow, sack ·race, and
son, Mathew Craddock, P.J. Chad- bert, Jarrett Flesher, Dean Scltes,
The events are open to thepubllc.
marksmanship done with water
well, Chris Chapman, Jason With· Tyler Batey, RJ. Roush, David
pistols.
Packs
competed
against
erell,
· Jason Stewart, Bobby Duncan, Heath Hesson, Kim
Poetponect
each other In the tug of war and lour
Johnson.
Capehart.
MIDDLEPORT - A meeting of man relay events.
.
Pack 249, Pomeray - Travis
Pack 258, Pt. Pleasant- Michael
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order of
Drenner, Todd Mitch, Jeremy Adams, Steven Shu low·.
A traveling trophy Is awarded
Eastern Star, scheduled for July 4 . each year to the pack which
has been changed to Thursday, July accumulates the most points In all of
11.
the day's ev"'Jis with this year's
. , outstanding pack being Pack 235, .
Cbester, Ohio.
Jndlvldual outstanding cub SCOuts
Richard and JessleGrueser,Edand In each age category were Mica Ott,
Bernice Nelson, Joah Stewart, Jeff Pack 235, Chester, seven year old;
and Carol Snowden, Fay Sauer, Todd Michael, Pack 235, Chester,
Margie Bishop, Marjorie Davis, eight-year-old: Tyler Batey, Pack
Edna Davis, Arnold and Mildred 256, New Haven, nine-year-old, and
Grate, Myrvllle, Karla and Teresa Jamie Barrett, Pack 238, Langs·
Brown, Kelly Lambert, Marjorie ville, Ohio, 10 year old.
Members of Chesler Cub Scout Pack 235 were the
and Harold Rice, Katie Cremeans,
Participants were:
LUlie Robinson and Edna Maf
Pack235,Chester.:.RyanCionch, ... Winners of the traveiJn&amp; tropJw asthe'oolstanding pack taking part in the
Brian Hoffman, Michael Smith,
MGMDistrict Cub Olympics held recently at New Haven, W.Va.

a

·Shower_held for Cathy Delong

.-

.

Cathy DeLong; bride-elect of Rick
EdWardswashonoredrecentlywlth
a shower at the Rutland United
Methodl.st Church. H(llting the
shower were Marcia Denison, Ruth
Erlewlne, Rosalie Nichols, Donna
·Williamson, Janet Morris, and
D
R benklng
arcy u
·
Games were played ·With prizes

,,

WINNING TRIO - Benny Hickel, left, holds the
checkered 0ag and his first place tl'opJw alter winDing
the Hobby Stock portion of the Bob Adams, Sr~
Memorial IOOsaturday nigh!. Hickel, ol Pomeroy,has·

had an oullltandlng season behind the wheel of lils
munber 51, Dan's Exxon Carnaro.Piacing second,
center, was Stelle Burnside of Mineral Wells, and
'lblrd Gary Cooftol Athens. Ashley Nelli Photo.
.

RACE WINNER- Bob Adams, Jr.lsaU!IIllllesln
victory lane Saturday evening after copping a big
victory In the 'Bob Adams, Sr. Memorial 100' atS!cyllne
Speedway.ThevlctorywasoneofAdams'blggestever
and was worth $21500 to the Racine driver. Shown wlth

Adams are his wife Belinda,

'children,

and family ·
members celebrating the victory. Adams, driving the
"Biad&lt; Bandit" AM Raybum chassis defeated many
great drivers In the event. Ashley Ness PhoW.

·Adams wins Memorial race
ByS&lt;XYITWOLFE

time with tlle move or the night checkered flag. Gary Coon of
coming on the fifty eighth lap when Atllens placed third, Joe Mernel
·Adams' A55, 'BiackBandit'Camaro fourth, and Tim Buckley llfth.
charged past Combs and on to Rounding out the top lOwere Donnie
victory. Toile great finish came after Kinnison, Porky Shores, Marc
Adams continually pressured French, Jim Lanham, and Jotui
Combs for the number one position. Hooper.
The victory was Adams' biggest
Meigs Countian Cene Whaley of
career pay-off, worth $2,500 and was Whaley's Auto Parts contributed
especially specla1 since It was In $100 to the winner of the Hobby Stock
honor of his father. Originally the feature.lncreaslngthewlnnlngtotal
race was to have paid $2,!XXl,
to$400. ·
·
however, J.D. Drilling and friends of
Heat winners were Terry ColeBobAdams,Sr.addedanextra$500 · man and Porky Shores of St. Albans,
to the purse prior to the feature .
W.Va .

STEWART- Marking one of the
biggest races in Skyline Speedway
history, Saturday evening's "Bob
Adams, Sr. Memorial 100" was a
hUge success, and approprtately
enough the winner o!thefirst annual
late model event was Racine's Bob
'Adams, Jr., son of the late Racine
driver for which the event was
' named. Pomeroy's Benny Hickel
claimed the Hobby Stock feature
wlth his sixth Skyline win this
SliD)mer.
Skyline Speedway promoter Dar·
than$4,000
was collected
for
rell Willie, J.D. DrilllngCbmpany of. theMore
Melanie
Adams
trust lund,
Racine, and the friends of Bob show.ing tile great generostty 'ofthe
·
Adams Sr. co-sponsored the' race crowd.'
wlth the prOC-eros going to the
Placing second was Larry Yantis
Melanie Adams Trust lund, daugh· of Fremont, who also slipped by
SPEEDWAY WINNER - ftodr!ey "J4htenlng
ter of Adams.
Combs. Rounding out the top ten
Rod" Coinbs struck with violent lon:e Sunday
Steadily Improving each year he was · Combs,Larry Keefer, Earl
afternoon as he thunde~ to the 2:1-Jap West Virglada
has raced, Bob "Buckshot" Adams, HUI,Roger Adklns,TomAmos, Mike
MaCor Speedway vldDry In Mineral Welh. Combs
·:Jr. Is today one of the finest driver's Smith, Frank Wilson, and Bud
. In the midwest, and With a $2,500 Frazier.
pay·off at stake Saturday night,
Mount Vernon's Danny· Dean set
Winning was no easy task as many of fast time of 15:21, while Combs won
the nation's top drivers were on · the helmet dash over Adams, Jim
hand.
Adams, and Dean.
By SCOTr WOLFE
Adams
bested
one
of
the
nation's
Mike Smith won the first heat over
Former NDRA champion, vetetop non-sanctioned fields, that Tye Long, Larry Keefer and
MINERAL WELLS- Nationally ran stock car builder Rodney Combs finish llite first followed by .Smith·
Included some 30 cars, representing Letart's Roger Adkins. Long had
known racing driver Rodney set fast time with a clocking of21: 90. ,Tye Long,Jim Adams,Bob Adams,
"Lightening Rod" Combs of Lost won the first heat, then won the 251ap Jr., Roger Adkins, Rick Elllsonthe best driver's from aU of the . just returned from a two and a
Creek, W.Va Invaded the high bankS A-malneventtoscoreacleansweep ,Nick Alvaro,Larry Keefer,and • tri-state's tracks.
half-year working stint In Saudi
Keith Al,tlers.
of West Virginia Motor Speedway fortheday.Combsaveragedaround
Rodney Combs, a premier driver Arabia, while Adkins towed ·from
' TraDing Combs In the flrst heat
Sunday, thundering around the 95 miles per hour In qualifications,
from Lost Creek, W.Va., was the Georgia for the weekend.
event
was agairl Smith, Racine's
early leader and certainly seemed
f!ve-&lt;&gt;lghths mile oval wlth bUster· then weaved through traffic with
Veteran Earl Hill won the second
to be the man to beat, leading most of heat over Frank Wilson, Roy Sheets,
lng spool in his Tamroy Coal blistering speeds, utilizing all of the ' Bob Adams, Gary Gellner, and Roy
the sixty lap event. Combs, a former and Zanesville's Don Goff.
Company Special to claim the25-lap track to his a~vantage In scoring an Johnson of Galllpolls.
•
Keith Altlers won the second heat,
ASA asphalt driver, past national
open competition Ia te model tea ture impressive win.
Portland's
Gene
Adkins
won
the
holding off several · challenges by
over a fine field of cars. Steve
NORA champion, premier chassis race over DavE Robinson, Steve
Combs jumped from his pole Jim Adams who finished second.
builder at WRC enterprises and Shaver, and Ted Johnson.
Burnside of Mineral Wells made it position to an Initial lead, beating
three In a row in the hobby stock Mike Smith into (he flrst tum at the Rick Ellison was third. Tom Amos
occasional grand national stock car
Another exciting race developed
driver dominated the early portion in the Hobby Stock division, which
class, havlngtllgpistinctlon of being drop or the green. Both Combs and carne to an abrupt halt against the
··'the only-hobby stotk driver to win a Smith were driving . Identical concrete · tetalnlng wall,escaplng
of the race with Adams and Larry featured another large field of cars,
inj!'ry despite extensively damagfeature on the West Virginia oval.
Yantis rtght on his tall.
however, a common face In the
Tamroy-WRC Camaros, built by Ing his car.
L8p after lap the field produced victory circle this season returned
Combs In his Lo$t Creek shop.
Tye Long went nip-and-tuck wlth
Sunday marked the first nonsome of the most excltlng,close-knlt as Benny Hickel edged hardAlthough· Combs himself was Paul Davis in the second heat,
: .sanctioned. race or the year at the never seriously challenged, some
action. this area has seen in some charging Steve BUI'II$1de at the
lrmnaculate Mineral Wells spool very tight wheel-to-wheel racing edging Davis at the ·!lnlsh. Rdger
plant, and after \1ewlng the close occurred in the pack as driver's Adkins flnlhsed third. .
Middleport'S Marc French
competition, the . results spelled jockeyed for position on the 120 mile
hustled
to a heat will over PomeMEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP() - Hal beat David Ogrln and win the
nothing but success for the highly an hour straight stretches.
roy's
Benny
Hickel. Joe Memel and
. touted facUlty ,
Sutton
has been mnslderea the next $500,00) Memphis Classic.
At the finish Combs crossed the Steve Burnside claimed the other
Jack. Nicklaus ·of the PGA TOll{,
heaj events.
·
'
although he hasn't been living up to
· Thenextevent!orthespoolwayls
that billingoflate.lfthlspastweek's,
scheduled for Sunday July 14 when
per!onnance Is any indication, the
an NDRA qualifying feature will
19&amp;1 Player of the Year Is back on
· EAST RlTi'HERFORD (UPI ) pushed me Into (Geoff) Brabham," highllght the' late model-Hobby
track.
MariO Andrettl's bubble was burst says Andrettl, who has won three ol StQ!:k program. Many of the
· Sutton fired his second 1-underby a repe~t performance SUnday.
four previous races this year. ·~ 11 nationally ranked drtvers as well as par 65in four days Sunday and then
Andrettl's car became a casualty damaged the right - front drivers from our immediate area
sank a 30-foot birdie putt on the first
In the 34th lap of a CARTraceat the sus~nslon.''
Will again bean taptoputonanother . hole of a sudden·death pli!YOff to
Meadowlands after Bobby Rahal hit
fantastic show.
Leaders
him from behind, knockmg him out
of contention for the second tlmethls

Combs wins late model race

Sutton wins Memphis Open. .

r-;::==========:::The Daily Sent~el
(USPS 145-960 )
A Division or Multimedia, In\!.
P.ubll5hed every- afll!~Mo nday

through Friday. 111 Court St " Po· .
meroy. Ohio, by 1he Ohio Valley Pub·
llshl ng Compa ny/ Multimedia, Inc ..
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph . 992 -2156. ,sp.
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Ohio.

Membt&gt;r: .UnJted Press International,
tnlond Dally Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper As.Soclatlon. National
Adverllslng Representative, Branham
Nt&gt;w.!ipaper Sa les, 7:c) Third Avenue,
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Outside Ohio
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r---:------:-----..1.----------:...__

Unser captures CART race

season.

-

•

games "ach team has pla)IM) .

race,
'

Sunday's race was won by AI
• Unser Jr., one or .a batch of young
· d!Wers whom Andrettl predicted
would soon become dominant in
CARTrae!ng.
"Rahal hit me In the .back and

NM~Du~Le..,...

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7126848l1 ..'H7

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Parkt'r,Cin .. , ............ ,.... 72282~1W .3l6
Gwynn,
7J 296 43 9'l .311

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Mortind, Ch ..... , ..... ......... 12 25t 31 T1 .EJ

RaJDI"!!, Mtl... ................. 10 a;..'t ~1

'18 :m

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Trnpltn, so .................... '7.12511: 3115 .!H ·
M~. Att .................... 7J 776 52111 .290
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~l..eape
Hndrsn, NY ....................
tiogp,
Bnrtt, KC "·t""........ .. .
Bradley, St-~ ...................

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912296lHl.:IW

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

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
. GENERAL ALLERGIST

ICE

EvervMattress
"
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.&amp; Box Spring!

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Any Slzel Rvel"y Quality!
Nfi» Exceptloasl

'CALL (614) 992-2104
(l04) 675-1244 ·

72 ~ 31 liD .33l
11236 3IJ 7B .;Jl.l
7J 2M
.D:l

a:,.

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.
l

.
~-

.

'

.

. I

going
to Robyn
and VIckie
Ferrell.
·A ngelaVenoy
Edwards
and
'Evelyn Edwards won tile door
prizes.
Others attending were Charlotte
Wllllord, Jeanette Davis, Janet
Nakamoto, Joan May, Heather and
Hollle Ferrell, Beulah Grate, Arny
Rubenklng, site DeLong, Adrtoli
Eblin, Marie Birchfield, Pebble
McLaughlin, Minnie Young, VIvian
Coy, Janel Botin. Barbie Hatlleid,
Donna Edwards, Evelyn Edwards,
Donna and Allison Wllllamon.
Margaret B. Weber,DonnaJenklns
and Gabriel, Laura Harrison,
Romona Hesch!, Iva Sisson and
Missy, and Charlotte Hesch!.
Also presenting glftswereCherrte
and Dave Williamson, Edith Wllllamson, Reva Snowden, Suzy Carpenter, Ruth Grate, Wanda Vlrting,
Margaret Parsons, Ethel Chap·
man, Elizabeth Ann Webster, Bea
Dugan, Bill, Janet, Diana and Darla
Williamson, LUiy Kennedy, Betty
Hutchinson, John, Gloria, Aai'on
and Tamara Grate, Kiitleand VIcki
Fink, MOdred and Marvin Morris,
Joan and Jane Wise, Patty Clark.
Allee Young, Wayne, Crystal, and
Travis Edwards, Kim Willford,

Dean reunion
• The Dean famUy reunion.was lleld
Sunday at Senecaville at the Clyde
George home.
Oldest member attending was
Sanford Well, 85, and the youngest,
·· Shawn East, two months, both of
Athens. Tl)e ones traveling tile
farthest was SSgt. Richard Dean,
Kennetll and Michelle of Langley
Air Force Base.
· Enjoying a picnic lunch at noon
were Mr. and Mrs. Sanford Well
(Florence Dean) Albany: Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald GOkey, Rick GOkey,
Courtney Gilkey, Daniel GOkey,
Cindy and John East and Shawn,
AmberWolfe,allofAthens: Mr.and
Mrs. Ralph Well of Guysville, Mrs.
Sylvia Robenstine (Sylvia Dean)
Canton: Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
George, MartY George of Canal
Fulton: Mr.andMrs.La!TyBryson,
Tammy and Alissa. Canton: Mr.
• and Mrs. Paul Paynter (Althea
Dean) Albany: Mr. and Mrs. John
Dean, Mr: and Mrs. John Walter
· Dean, James, Jeremy and Sarah,
Pomeroy: and SSgt. Richard Dean,
Kenneth and Michelle, Langley Air
Force Base.

oo!:iiS -

STARTS WEDNESDAY, JULY 3rd
"BACK TO THE FUTURE"

r~S:w::tc;:k:._.-------------=-,.--,.---------------------------,-.L___________
•

••

•

*Not ava'Hable in all areas.

'·'

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That C~arette Smoking Is Dangerous to Y~ut Health.
SOFT PACK: 9 mg."tar", O.Bmg. n~otine. BOX. MENTHOL BOX: 12 mg.
"tar". 1.0 mg. nicotine.av. per cigarette bv FTC method.

,.

NEW
.SOFT
PACK*
.

· Also available in regular
and.· menthQl box.
.'

Health club meets
New officers were elected at
'Ibursdoy's meeting of the Rock
Springs Better Health Club held at
the home of Louise Bearhs.
Elected Wl!l'e Pbyllls Skinner,
president: FranC!!" Goegleln, vice
president: Nancy Mor:ts. secretary· and Louise Folmer, treasurer.
A~oonplcnjcwas planned lor July
16 at the IIOme'Of Frances Goegleln.
ntose attendlng are to take ·a
, covered dish and their own table
service.
.
Mrs. Skinner opened them~
. with the pJedte and the Lord s •
, Prayer In unison. Lenora Leifheit
gave deVotions trun the Uppper
• Room u.slni llCI'Ipture trom I Theis.
:. 5 llld 8 meditation, "This Thing
• : called Prayer'' with a poem,
· ,.;\IWlysa Way.')
Repol1ll .were lfVen and several
were rt!(JOI ted Ul. Also dlscu8led
was the uae of tile club owned
IPpltal equ~-

BeDDID9B9

!EiaSfd on 3.1 platf' lf)prarance~~ • no. of

.

At a receqt !ROC series race at
Mid-Ohio, Andrettl was leading
Rahal with 10 laps remaining when
was cllpped and spun by the Dublin,
Ohio, driver, whowentontow!nthat.

r

=

Pond ·improvements outlined to feeney-Bennett post

Calendar

No. 14 Wendy 'I'Wnbull vs. Pascal Paradis and No. 16
Katlly Rlnaldl against Alycla Moulton.
Jimmy CoMors, who could lace McEru:oe In the
semifinals In a replay of the 1!1!4 !Ina!, alreally Is
thrQUghtotheroundofl6,asareMaurer,KevlnCwTe.n
. and Tim Mayotte. The women who have reached the
fourth round are defending champion M~
NavratUova, Zlna-Garrtson, Helena Sukova,
· ·
rtne Tanvler and Rene Uys, w~ols NavraWova ne
opponent.
·
· .There already have been lJ seeds ellmlnated,
including seven men-Mats Wllander, Pat Cash,
Johan Krlek, ~aron J{rlcksteln, Mlloslav Meclr, Ellot
Teltscher and Tomas Smid. Women seeds gone are .
Claudia Kohde-KIIsch, Bonnie Gadusek, Katlly
Jordan, Catarina Llndqvist," Carling Bassett and
Gabriela Sabatini.

1'I:MI Daily Sentinel-Page-S

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MondaY. JUly 1, 1986
Page- 6 -

•

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

--·

11-f Daily Sentinel

---~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~P~~~~ro~y~M~id~dl~epo~n~.~O~h~~~~l[,~~~~~:=,-~::~~~~~~~~~~~
...
Business Services
9 w-odToB" " "'"w"'"'
--·~...,._,
'{ard saleS
;:::::::::c======~:;:__:::.:::.::..::.:.:~~~~~-...:.-~~J
Monday, July 1, 1986

PHONE
992-2156
Of Writi DeiM' SeAtiltl (lauihtd D111t.
111 COIIrt St., Pof~MJ, Oitt 4S1i9

clean used cars.
we
pay caoh for leta moctet
Jim Mink Chev.- Oidslnc.

_C!.-'fi.a ~· C(nter
follodna

-.........

l~tlepll one

th.l!-

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t-ffloilllll .....

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up•t•w... .1111....,~~! .... noo ·

,,1l.ll-.TV•C•Il....
n.w-..no.

320 5th St.

11ysellls Louloe Bearhs with Juanita Norman, rlgli.

,;NOTICE OF SALE

_The Bertha M. Sayre Missionary
SoCiety of,. Racine Flrst Baptist
ChurCh held the quarterly meeting
the church sanctua_ry wllh ·'l3
present
Guests were Rev. and Mrs. Steve
Deaver and Nikkl Ihle. President
Mrs. Barbara Gheen opened the
meetlng with a medltatlon, _folJnwed
'with prayer by Mrs. Mary
"TT ,.
Kay Yost.
• There were discussions on pro·
·eetS, anq reports given. The Love

In

A

Senior Citizens .... . 16.000.00

FO~ 1986
budget hea~og

.A

Tol81 ....... .. .... . $100,149.75

Beiow il a 11..nnma,:Y of the
entire budget, which, along
with the intended uses of
Revenue Sharing funds is
available for public inspection
at the Meigs Coonty Auditor's
office from July 1, 1986. to
J~ly 10. 1985. betWeen the
hours of 8:30AM to 4:30PM,
Monday thru Frida:y:
Fund
Amount
General

tor the

next succeedtng filcal yMr

Terms of Sale: Cash .

be

ondinu o_,ber 31 . 1986.

Revenue Sharing purwilt bo hold on Wed.-doy, July 10, 1986, et the
Meigl County Commillion.,.. office. Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio from 2 PM to 3 PM.
The roaldenta of Meigs County
are in\litad to provide wrinen
and oral comments and ask
quenons concaming the en·
tint budget for the Cun'll'lt

and

Fund .. ...... $1,804,049.35

filcal yeM. Senior citizens ara
encouraged to anend thiS' ·
hNring.

'"'

and Kannel

Sublidv .. . ...

$

A. L. 8t G. (HIQhWB\1

Dept.) ..... 1,500,000.00

Soil and Water ... 16.030.0Q

Landfill. ... .. ....... 56.723.16
Mental Retardation

7,410.00

Opeoations .. .... 638.662.00

Oioatll'

Children'• SeMcM

'Sorvicel .... ........ 1,400.00
Wortcert Compensa-

50 ........... :... 29,616.00
Tuberculosis .... .. .. 72.787.49
E. M. S . .... ..... 364.454.57

tion ................ .. 166.78

Public Employees •
'Aetiremont
• .,.... ............ . 1.1 99.70
Soil and Watsr

9\iblidy ........ .. . 18.858

, Assostanco .. 2,721.090.00

Real Estate

A...ssmont .. .... 49,693.25

Genlf'll Revenue Sharing
fundi are interided to be used
in the following mannel:
Amount
PbliMed Use
Oog

Dog and Kennel .. .8,000.00
Public

Youth Sflf\lices

Grant .. .... .. .. . .. 50,000.00

E. M. S . Transfer

Service·.. . .. . 43,393.66
Meigs County

00

Crippled

Commtssioners
Mary Hobttetter,

Classifieds and

l

.

I

.own
S avelll

· Wr1te your
ad ;and order bY.. mail with this
cc:~upon. cancel your ~d by phode when you get

, results. Money notrefl!lldable.

aor group of figurn c:ountl
as a word. Count nome
and addren or phont
nvmbtr if ·u$ed. You ' ll gtl
better results if you M·
scribe fully. g1ve pt"ite. The
tribune reser"s the r~ght
to donily, tdit ar rej«l
tny ad. Your ad will H
put 1n th proper dauifict·
t1on if you'll c:htc:k th1
proptr bo• below.

ltH

,CALL 949·2210-Ask for Tim

.

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Mail ThiS CCIIIp4111 Willi Remittance
The O.IIJ S.atln,l
111 Cltlrt St.

.
Pomeroy, 011. 45719

I
I

t
I

I

I

I

&amp;,.:....,.-----·--.:.....:------------.

1

Cieri&lt;

Board of Meigs County
Commieslonera

----~-1I

12.

16.

I
-1

I

21. _ _ _ _ __
22.

10.
- -_
-_
-_11 . _ __::,_

1

I

Truck.
•
Bid apaclfications may be
picked up at the Meigs
County Engineer's Office or
the Maigl County Commis·
sionera oflica.
The Meigs County -com·
mi11tonen may accept the
lowest bid. or telect the belt
bid for the intended purpol8. and re&amp;erve the right
to accept or reject any or all
bids and / or any part ther·
eof.
~
•
1
Mary Hobltettar,

I
11------1t,
I

8.------

I

11. _

3 . _ _ _ _ __

I ••·
I 15.

I

s2s.ool

1.-..------

__._

I

$4.00 $1.00 $13.00 $21.00:

211

9. _

1986 or 1 986 model Oump

$5.00 $'1.00 $13.00!

'i

7 . ----~-

1

doy•

lhnt c:oth roUt
in'd!Hie dinount

6.- ----

i

6
clays

lo .ll $1.00 110.00 •ts.OO

5. -..-----

I

3

lt IS $3.0~

4. _ _ _ __

• REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

. ,.

..,
I

'ttouls

2.------

fill THE

Truck .
Propoaal No. 2: One new

Ad Wanted

( )For Rent

'CLA~~IFI.ED AD~

aloud for the purcha1e of the
following vehicles:
PropoHI No . 1: One new

1986 or 1986 model Dump

to

1Oth ANNIVERSARY
mon~
receive 1

the

*SYlYANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY

•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATElliTE SAlES &amp; SERVICE

We

-

,0.

992-2U9
-

.

NEW LISTING - Near Rt.
33 - Looking tor a mce
14&gt;70 mob1le home all set
up on ipprox. I acre lot?
Garden ' space and lrUII
trees . Small barn for stor·
age. Home " furmshed .
BUih·m microwave, a1r conditionmg umt, range and re·
trigerator. $24,900.00.

ALL STEEL &amp;

·POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start 'From l2'xl6 '

1O"'o DISCOUNT

UTILITY BUILDINGS .

RENT A CAR

In eppraciatiorl of vooJF 1
tupport for 10 yeara.

Sizes ·from 6'x6' Up
lo 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

CALL

PcM E. Shocker. D.V.M.

446-4522

PH. 3D4-675-24n

P&amp;S BUILDING~
Racine, Oh.

Ph. 614·843·5191
10-6-tlc

TRENCIING IS OUR'IH
Trenching Of Any Type
Dozer &amp; Backhoe Serv1ce
Plumbing Service

Welding, lowboy Hauling
Septoc Systems
IKenllll &amp; Bond..S ·
fREE EITIIIIATfl

WILLIAMS
TRENCHING SERVICE
Rt. 4, Hystll Run Rd.
Pomtroy, Ohio 45769

16141 992-2134
or 992·6704

5-20· 1 mo.'•

THE QUALITY

PRINT SHOP

F11 All YHtl'rlllll•t Nf.lil

·.

•

HOBSON - ApPr~. 2 acres
of .wooded nver frontage.

PLUS: Olliu l"ffplilt &amp;
Furllituro, Woddlng
and Graduation
Stationery, Magnetic

Sigm, Rubhtr Stamps,
lusineu Form1,

Great for any water recreatiOn.
N~e layin~ $10,000 Oil
REALTORS
Menry E. Cleland Jr.
992-&amp;191
.
Dottie Turner 992-5692
Jean Trussel 949-2660
Jo Hill 985·4466

(opy. Strwic", Etc.

,.,

755 111111 II., llliddloport
104 Mul,b.ny Av., Pomeroy

992-33453/2/lln

Help Wanted

PLEASANT VALLEY
HOSPITAL
DIRE;CTOR OF PHARMACY

AlB
~1011

______ SERVICES '
Pleasant • Valley Hospital is
currently seeking a Director of
Pharmacy Services. Thi~ position
will be responsible for supervision .
and direction of Pharmt~cY . personnel and · will ftll written medi·
cation end prescription reques ts.
Must l)e a licensed Registered
Pharmacist in the slate of West
VIrginia. with hospita I experience
being desirable. Administration and ;
communication skills necessary.
Exc;ellent fringe benefits ... Salary
commensurate with education and
experience. Send r!'sume to:
Director of Personnel, Pleasant
Valley Hospital, Valley Drive, Point
Plea . .nt, WV 25550.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

NOTICE PF

For mfo. cell312· 741 -8400
Bkt. 313
·

In Memoriam

Nue AFull Th••

· S~o.

Teoh1lol ..
•• Dllf

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESUR-915-3307

~~ctric.1an :

Our sincere thanks for your nenced, home or commermany kindnesses during our cial, tmmediata employrecent bereavement . We ment, if qualified. Apply at
also appreciated the contri- 1124 West Mound St .•
butions to the Cancer So- Columbus, Oh . acro11 from
Ciety and to the Flatwoods .Franklin Stadium, daily 9 to
Church in our fatt)er'a name. 6 30. •Set. 9 to 12.

The E.J. Hill Family.

-z

SWEEPER and sewing machine repair. parti, and
supplies.
,Pick up and
delivery, Davts Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
George• Creek Rd .· Call

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

You can sltm upfortummer.
All Natural Weight-loll program can help you lose
10-29 plu1 pounds in your
fint month or your money

beck. Call now 614· 742·
2328.
I

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM
Complete Gutter Wof'k
Complata Remodeling
Roofing of all Typtts
Worked in home area
20 years
'' Free Estimatea''

CAll COlLECT:
Ph. 1~14i 843-5425
S/ 9/2 mo. pd.

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
' U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
John Deere
New HoU,nd, Bush Hoi
Farm Equipment
Dealer

A~thorized

farm Equl~ment
Parte &amp; Sllrt~loe

l·l·tfc

Roger Hysell
Garage ·
II. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also TrueMiul••
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121
3·24·tlc

RADIATOR
SERVICE

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

PAT HILL FORD
992-219~

Middleport, Ohio

and giving information
about houstng for the elderly
lage 62 or older). handi ·
capped. or disabled in The
Mlll!plaa located in Pomeroy
Ohio. A representative wili
be available at The ·Senior
Citizen's Ceoter from 9 :30
am .- 1:30 pm. on Tueaday
July 2, 1986 Equal Houstng
Opportunity

CONTRACTING
DOZER, BACKHOE,
TRENCHER. SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER ,
GAS &amp; S'EW !R LINES,
RECLAMATIC N. PONOS,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS,
OUMP TRUCK STONE
l!o DIRT

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

BENNETT'S
ENVIRONMENTAL
SYSTEMS
Mobile Home
He~ling &amp; Cooling

614-446-9416
6/ 3/ lmo

S~U

I will olferfornleatthe premlsesat244 North
Second Avenue. Middleport, Ohio, on the 13th day
of July, 1985 at 10:00 A. II. the followin&amp; rnlestale:
The residence ot the late Essie B. Ru11tll
consistin&amp; of an 11 room, 2 bedroom residence and a 1 car prep witlr tipatalrs tPirlmtnl. ·
·
Tht real estate is btin&amp; offerttl lor Silltfree and
clear of all incumbrancH ucept rultstllt t1111
lor the year 1985.
• The und11aianed reSttvts tht ri&amp;ht to reject
any and all bid1.
.

J" II. Bolin, bacutor
of Estate of £salt B.
RIIHII, DecttMII

PEISONAUIED POOls
V'iNYLLI NER POOL
ACRYLIC WALL POOL
ABOVE GROUND POOL
Over 400 Choi•••
;'SPAS''
MYDIOTECH CHEMICAlS
491 Gtn. Hertingtr Pk.wy.
Middleport, Oh10
HIS. 10 a.m. to S p.m.

Day
1· 614
992·2549

Night
1·304 '
773 ..5634

'

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

ROSES'
EXCAVAnNG INC.
•Oil field service
*landscapinl
*BISements
*land clearing
*Ponds
deptic systems
•Heavy hauling
•Free estimates
DOll 1051
Of.fko 949-2493

SHADE RIVER
DRILLING
Farmorly Heaton
Drilling (a.
•Water &amp; Gas

Well Service

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

*Myers Pumps
Sale~ &amp; Service

PH. 949-2801
or 949·2860
No Sunday (oils

PH. 667-6535.
or 985-4353

3/11/tfn

PIONEER CARPET
&amp;UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS
'35l85 Oak H1ll Road ·
lone Bottom. OH.
PH. (614) :m:&gt;·lllll:'-1
.We Use Von Schrader
Equipment Recommended
by leading Carpet
tacturers.
'FREE l:STI'""'r&lt;&lt;"

6·19·11n

" - 143-5340

'

*VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULATION

ACCENT
FENCE I SUPPLY
Pll. 992-6931
After S Call·

742-2027

:1·1

"FrH Estimotts"
IMtallation hallablt

5/28/1 mo d

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

317 North !O&lt;ond ·
Middleport, Ohio 45760

&amp; SERVICE

Also Carry
ng Supplies.

IU~NESI"PHONI

16141 99%-6550
RESIDENCE PHONE

16141 992·

. ' ..

-

•

Pertona Body Shop, luca1
lane, Pt. Pleannt, WVa .
near K•K Pt4obile Homes.
Popular prices. 614-985-

4174.

Room and board or sleeping

room. Call 614·992·6022
or 814-985-4416.
.

18 Wanted to Do
Will

plow

tobacco. Call

614-268-1628.

Out door housapaintlng .
Very reasonable. Call 614-

245· 61 97 or 614·245·
6658

Automatic transmiuion

COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING
Pump Nles. service. Regia·
tered in Ohio . All wot*
gueranteed . Call 304-273·
2811 . Ravenawood, W. Va
Painti_ng eKterior. 20 year•
expenence, free 81timates .

Sales person, Commluioned aalas peraon to sell
construction laaar 1y1tems
&amp; ·other specialty productt
to the conatruCtion, induetrial, &amp; municipal markeu .
Will cover tha Parkersburg.
Clarksburg. Charleston.
Huntington. Athland. Port·
mouth, &amp; Jackaon area.
May carry other products.
Contact Grant Fritzsche,
Adwanced Companlea. 513·

Financi al

874-0626.

Physical OeveiOP.ment
SpOA'tialist- Haad Teichet :
Physical Development
Specialist- Head Teacher.
Bachelor or higher degree in
education. graduate from an
accredited college or univer·
s1ty, curr&amp;nt certificate from
Depanment of Education in
phy!lical education,
M.S .P.R., and Supervision .
Contact Ohio Bureau of
Employment Service•.
Pomeroy, Ohio, 614·992 ~

Giveaway

Kittens to good home

2

yallow. 4 black. Call &amp;'14367-7116.
Metal Honda crates, pick up
at 8etz Honda , No phone
calls please.

Own your own Jean·
Sportswear, Ladie1 Apparel ,
C.hildran1, Large Size, CombtnatJon Store, Acceuories.
Jordache, Chic, lee, levi,
Eaay Street, lzod, Esprit,
Tomboy, Calvin Klein, Sergio Valente. Evan Picone, Liz
Claiborne. Member• Only,
C?rganically Grown, Gasoline, Helthtex, Over 1.000

Good 4-H project•. free

kittens. Call 614·256-6486

athars. f7.900 to $24.900

after 6:00.

7 puppies to good home

inventory. Training. fixture1,
grand opening. etc. Can
open 15 days. Mr. Keenan

1305)678·3639.

mootly black, Call614-446:
0399 ask for loretta.
Female dog, 1h German
Shepherdr \1 Collie, 11 mo .
old. eK. with children . Call

614-446-1149.

4 kittens, long haired. to give

away. Call614·446·7344.

Own your own Jean Sportswear, Ladie1 Apparel
Children1. Lllrge Size, Com~
btnation Store, Acceuartel.
Jordache. Chic, lee, levi ,
Euy Street , lzod, Esprit,
Tomboy, Calvin Klein. Sergio Valente. Evan Picone. Liz
Claiborne. Members Only,
Organically Grown, Gasoline, Helthtex. Over 1.000
~then $7.900 to $24.900
tnventory. Training. fixtures.
grand. opening, etc. Can
open 15 days . Mr. Keenan

Sofa and chatr. Call 61 4 ·

949-2638.

1305)678-3639.

Cute long -haired adorable
kitten . Only 1 left . 614· 992 ·

Secretary-Receptiontlt. experience necessary. Pleasant telephone voice. Sand
resume to P.O. Box 490. Pt.

Cute long-hatred whtte
•mall terrier-type dog with 2
black ears. Good with child -

Plea5Bnt W.Ve. 26550

7574.

J. l

McCoy Inc is now
accepting applications for
uperienced tractor-trailer
drivera.
Mual be 23 years of
Goat, phone 304 · 89 5 a_ge have two OTR expe·
3084.
nence. Flatbed experience
and excellent safety records.
Apply in person, 8 miles
6 Lost and Found
' South of Ravena wood on

ren. 614-992· 7674.

lost : Female Beagle, Tycoon
Lake area. Call 614-246·

9202.

'

FOUND in Camp Conley,
mala black and tan short
hair, med si:re dog. 1986
rabies No . 544799 on
chocker. Phone 304-675-

7660.

lost small blaCk dog wearing
black flea collar in New

Lady to live m on weekends
care tor invalid. Salary
$50.00, if lntereated sand
name and phone number to
P.O. Box 264, Point· Plea-

~o

oant, w. Va. 26560

HAIR STYLIST WANTED '
NeW York- New York of
Point Pleaaant. it looking for
talented and ambitioua atv!ilt Good pay, good benefIts A.pply 401 Viand St ,

Hevan ar~a. 304·882·3146. 304-675-7311.

·a

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Phone 304·676-6384.

RICK PEARSON AUCTIONEER • SERVICE . Estate,

Middleport
8t Vicinity

'

Mathodi1t Church Rummage Sal~· Baked Goods,
July 4 , 5,6, Bidwell. next to
Donnett•af'! Repair Shop.

.

Garage and tool aale. 623,h
R.uasell St .• Middleport, be·
hmd Haineu Bakery . July

1.2. and 3.

Gigantic Mult-family garage
name brand clothing,
household itam1, Rt. 7 Chi·
shire, July 2-6.

Yard sale at Marilyn Powells
Vine St., Racine. July 1.i

and 2nd. 9:00-3:00. Nlco
clothing . Rain cancels .

Vard Sale : July 1.2, from 9
tib&amp;, 17 Vinton Ava .• spon·
tared by Hannan Trace var·
11ty cheerleadert.

Tuppefs Plains at Gordon

Coldwell'o. July 4.6,6.

.4 family . July 3-0. h ·

2 family , Mo· n . Tue1
Bulavilte-Porter Rd.. on~
mile past Layne• Furniture
TV, kids clolhea, misc.
'

throom fixturet, doOJa, toy1,
c~othll, dishes, pillowa.etc.
F1r1t house p11t Methodist
Church in Chester

~araga

Sale: July 1, 2,3,
Little Kyger Rd.. Cheshire.
boya clothing, a. baby item1.

Business
Opportunity

liSHING CO. recommends
that you do businen with
people you know. and NOT
to send !"oney through the
mall until you have investi·
gated the offering .
International steel buildjng
manufacturer awarding
dealer-ship in available areas
10on. Great profit potential
in an expandmg tndustry.

Call Wodecor 303· 769·
3200. Ext. 2403.

22 Money to Loan
HOME OWNERS-Raftnance
to low fht!d riJI Usa equity
for any purpose . Leader

Mortgage Co.. 814-692·
3061. •

Carport Sale · July 5,6,
lestttr Plymale residence
St . Rt. 688. 1 mile east of
Rodney.
"

Large yard sale, Florance
Siddara. Darwin. July 2nd

through July 6th 10:00·1

3 Family Csrport Sale: 202 - Miac . of ell kinds.
Kineon Dr., July 5th, drapes.
bad apraada. atghan, kitchen July 1, 2. and 3. 3 mile• from
lightsi' clothing.
Rt. 1 on Rt. 124 going'
toward Rutland. 10:00 till?
Yard Sale: 1127 Second
B_aby to adult clothing,
Avo.. July 1 &amp; 2. 9·1, d•ahea. small electric apglassware, toys, clothes.
pliance~ end much mora.
home interior, all things
reaaonable.
810 South Second, Middleport. July 1 through 6
Monday &amp; Tuesday: 10 till Beddil'!g. linena, drapet, cur~
dark, . yard 1ale·first this tains,. plothing. appliances,
year .• cl~thes all kindt, toys,
furmtur.e. fishing equiptapes, d1shea, books . Collac- ment, dishes. pans, toys,
tore platea, Avon care. je.- Avon. lamp•. tools. lots
welry. home interior. furni- mtsc.
ture, lots of everything. 1
mile off Route 7 on Teens July 1-2. Hutchinson Sub
Run Rd .
~Division. 4th hoi"1e on right
Stereo, clothing, etc. Time:
Y!frd Sale- Wed. July 3, 834 8 :00 am.·4:00 pm.
Ftrst Ave. Gallipolia. 9-6 .
J~ly

Family sale: Mon . 9-?',
clean &amp; cheap, antique
radio, aterao, clothes &amp;
curtian•. turn right u
Clipper Mills, follow aigns.

Superior Exterminating Co.,
l~c.
'People who appra·
ctatas your Buainesa'. Li·
c•nsed . Qh1o· WVa . C"all

614·245-!fi 52 or 614·379·
2712.

Water walls drilled and aerviced . Pricaaon request. Call

614· 742·3147 or 614-992·
5006.
PIANO TUNING AND RE·

PA IR. Summer rates in
effact · fre8 estimataa .
Ward's Keyboard, 304·675-

5500 or 676·3824.

Yard Sale : Mon . 9- 1 ~ baby
stroller, glanware. twin
bad, clothing, much more,
turn at Clipper Mills , watch
for signs .

Community

Homes for Sale

6 room house approx. 6
acres Barn, buildings. cellar
houae , near EurakB .

Yard

families, Friday July &amp;, Refreshments will be told .

:~j~~d roe: 1Xo·~·d~:~r;t:::

446·2151

R.iver front , large lot, very
mce. 2 bdr houaa, 2 car
garage, $65,000. Call 614-

446·8128.
2 bedrooms, full basement,
double car garage, 1.2.
acrea. Ro1e Hill, Pomeroy .

Homes for Sate

3 bedroom home in the
village of Pomeroy, over·
looking the Ohio River. Will
consider a Ieaia with option
to purchase. Call 61 4 · 992·

2186.

Nice. 614· 742·2390. 614·
742·2674 61 4·992· 7786.

U9,000. 304-676-6047.

3 bedroom brick. AC.
30x40. detached garage.
half ac:;re, Gallipolia Farry,

143,900.00.

61 ee.

ment. 304-676-1708.

Yard Sale : Tues. Wed, Thura
2.3,4 July. Canarys and
cage. dolla. picturet, planta.
lamps. much more. 2218

Loan and Maaon County
Bond Money Call304·676· J.;J:o:ff:i:r:oo:n:A::ve~n:u:e:.:::::;;

1474 after 6 PM .

Excellently located near
Point Pleasant High School.
3 bedroom ranch, fenced in
yard. Aasumable 7 .4 per
cant loan . 304-675-6347.
Houaa, 3 bedrooms. full
basement, 6 acret. 1 mile
from t6wn., Rt. 2 . phone

304-875· 6844.

loan. Colt 304·e76·0822.

l

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

----NEW AND USEO MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES
4 MI. WEST, OALLIPOLIS,
RT 35. PHONE 614-448:
7274.•
1974 12x64 Buddy 2 ·bdr

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

with or without lot. Call

1972 Champion Trailer in
Pofttand . 10x50, neW Coleman gee furnace. pan .. lly
furnished . S2800. Call814-

1973 Arlington 1 2X60 with
12X16 add-on, 2 bdr, new
carpet. "Underpinning

1984 Schultz. 14x70. 3
bedrooms, 2 bath1 . Lived in

3 months Cell 614· 9492102. .

614·446·9219 or61 4·4463348

$6,000. Call 814· 441:
7060
198b·Nashua, 14X70, with
12X66 add -on , 4 bdr, study,
CA. garbage dispoul
woOdburn in~~ · atove. Cali

614·245-9109.

14x70 mobile liome. 3
bedrooms. 1 'n baths, gat
furnace. stl)va,refrigarater.
waaher, dryer. underpinning

Mobile Home on 'h acre lot
at Tycoon Lake. $12 500

12x60 mobile home with
acre lot. n•ar town. hsoo.

elecnec , bargain price, 2
montha free lot rent, cable

and porch. 614-949-2388.

Cell 614· 448-0706. '

'

1985Fioetwood, 14XSO.all

Cell 614·992·7841 .

ready. Call 814-446-9307
or 6t4-446·4144.

For sale or rent. trailer on lot
with free ga1. Ceii614· 9492008.

·1972Cestle14X70. 2 bdr, 2

1---------MOBilE HOMES MOVED.

wood dock, $8 600. Call
614-446-8216. •

Insured, 20 year• ekpBrience . 304-1578-2888 or

1969 t 2.oo Chompion with
1976 12x24 add-oo. Vary

576·2998.
12•66 SchuHz with 11x7
alll:pando, AC. wood burner
ref, atove.· di1hwa1her:
wether end dryer, dining and
bedroom aultft, 10x10 back
porch, 10K20 front porch.
underpannlng . 304-882·

2886.

1---------304· 676· 14•65 Barron, 2 bedroom,

Log home:. 3 acrea, 2 mi. out
Jerrico Rd .. 81h aasumeble

·--··-··--··· - ·-·····~

Movi,ng Sale. clothe•, tome
furniture , TVa, dlahea,
drapes, toola. June 29 thru
July B. 4 milea from POint
Pjaasant on At. 2 Nonh.

1 !It Street area. 2 houses on
Deed of Truat, 8 percent
interest. small down pay-

U8.ooo. 614·67B·2513.

I

8t Vicinity

Yard Sale, 110ThirdStrMt
Mason, July 1&amp;. 2. Clothing'
' ?4 Ford Truck, gl•uware'
b1cyeles.
·

$27.000. Call 71 3-370· 131 Pleasant St., Pt. Pit.
qualifies for Farmers Home
3624.
3 bdr house, sitting on 3.6
acres. overlooking Ohio
River, FR. kitchen, LR. 1112

.......P1.Pieiisa·r.t··· ..
July 1, 2, 3 Five family yard
sale a·oo to 7 :00, large end
small men• and womens
clothing, children.s clothing
home interior. what nob'
123 Park Drive. Point
Pleuant .

Sale. down Rt. 7. 30 to 50

31

'

Street aale: July 1•t and
2nd 9:00 to 1 Ri"er¥iiiW
D.riv.. M'ddlepon, Ohio. ae.
hmd Imperial Electric.

........

Moving Sale: Sun. Mon
Tues • .,it1na 30. July 1 • 2'
furnitlhe, miac. items. 1 mil~
out 141 to Safford Sa. Rd .,
3rd house on right .
Eureka

1,2,3, 617 High St

Middleport, Ohio

Rea l E31 ate
31

The annual 5 family garage.
tale. Denver Weber resi·
dance. Reedaville. Clothing·
a.ll sizet. furniture, boOkl,
tuaa. toya, household Item•
misc. July 2nd and 3rd:
Start1 9am .
Yard Sale : 850 General
Haningar Parkway. July i! A
3. 9-6.
.

2

Professional
Services

lmme&lt;Qate Salas Openings
Here's your opponunity to Coll814· 992·5714.
become aaaociated With a
5785 or 304·773-5430
leader in the advertiaing ·3 bedroom•. large livihg
specialty induatry. Sell ca- room, kitchen, laundry
lendars, pan• and gifts to JOOm, central air. new dis·
9 Wanted To Buy
lofal tirms on a full or part hwuher . 18x24 garage .
time basil. Weakly commit· Ruatic .Hilla. Syracuae,lower
Spinning wheal in working .lion•. No inveatments . No lovol. Phone 614·992· 7478
order. 1 spool cabinet and a collections. Our 78th y..r of or 814·992-3402
wooden filing cabinet Call prompt. friendly servic, .
614.949-2093 after 5:00 Rated AAA-1 , For more 12 acres in Athens County.
pm.
information write Kevin Watarloo Townahip . 5
Palka, Newton Mfg Com· . room•: bath. furniture. air
Good ~ed tmall manure pony, DoptC3360. Nowlan , condihoner, gas furnace,
opreodar. 304·676-3534.
Iowa &amp;0208. 1
porch . deck, balarnent.
aome farma, fruit tree 1.
Bu.ying daily gold . silver BIG . BUCKS! ~ Your prior ·~5.000. Call collec1 614co•ns, rings, Jewelry, sterling serv1ce It worth e lot of 693-841!8.
w•ra, old' coins, large cur· money. Monthly payeheckrancy . Top prices . Ed. Bur· 8:36 .000 Life Insurance- 3 bedroom- home. 8Y2 per·
New training , Call304-81li- cent •••umabieloan, garden
ken B"btr Shop. 2nd. Ava.
3960
or 1-800·642-3619. apot. Reduced down to
Mldclloport, Oh . 614·992·

eod Nation. Call 304-676·
3950 or 1-800-842-3e19.

Juno 2nd and 3rd. 9:00·
4:00.

1818,

7 room hpuu. 1 'YJ balh, on
Gravel Hill, Middleport
Ohio. lot 70x 1 00. Garage :

find yourNif7 Why not check
with the Army National
Guerd? Good Pay -Good
T raining - Eduoatlonal
1\Hiattnce-Great BenefltaOelay your Active Training
un•l fall. Serve your State

Yard •ale at 631 S. Second
Ave. In Middleport. Ohio.
Tueaday and Wedneadey.

Yard Sale: 66 G•rfield · Fri.
28. alao Mon 81 Tuaa July
1-2. a lot of different things
each day .

8900.

GRADUATES·Stlli lrtlng to

Gigantic RltChli and L•
family yard tale. July 1 at and
2nd Ritchie residence at
corner Tyree Btvd. and Elm,
Racine~ Ohio. Bed, TV. bed
and bath linena. Mr. Cotf•.
clothea, miac. item• end
much morel 9 :00 till dusk.

Three Family Moving Sale:
167 Woodland Or., July 2-3,
8 :30 &amp;ll1 • 6 pm, antiques
electronic parts, motors, vW
parts _. reduction gean .
c;:lothas, collechlbles. oddt
and enda. A delight for the
collector and do-it·your·
telfer. lots of goodies I

Cozy country home. 2 bdrm . 843· 5310 or 814-843New carpeting, roof and ·6408.
outbuilding. 1A. Muat sell .

farm. antique. liquidation
aalea . Licensed Ofuo and
Welt Virginia . 304-773-

3476.

8t Vicinity

to 5 pm, each day. Bi~ ­
Variety. cheap pricea. Vinton Park, Vinton. Ohto. See
You There/1

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·

23

...... "Pomerov .....-. ..

YardSola: July2&amp; 3, 10om

I

21

...... aiiiiii:ioili.........

Earn up to $6 ,000 . monthly
as a Real Eatate forecloture
rep . No license or experience
requlfed. National Company
provtdea complete aaaistance. ForbHocall: 3,17-839-

'
'

Situations
Wanted

Taking applications for route
salesman, 7up-Papsi Ware~
houae. Rt . 7 Ch11hire,
Wed1, July 3, fro.m 1-3 pm .

·l

'

12

6671 by July 6, 1985.

4

6. part Chihuahua and part
Pttbull puppies . Firat trailer
on right past Meigs High
School.

J&amp;F

lady . Colt 614-446-3419.

· ovorhaul. Call 614·379·
Mutt be 8Kpe· 2220.

Rl 2.

MIDDLEPORT :.... Small and
cozy 2 bedroom home with a
carport, level lot, fireplace.
Would make a mce starter
home. $20,000.00.

.

2

~xcallant Income for part
tim~ home aasembly work .

614-446-0294.

SUPERIOR
SIDING co·.

PARTS and SERVIICE

10-8-tlc

of July will

Annou ncemenls

Licensed Clinical Audiologisl

KEN'S ·
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
•Washat'l •Diahwasheu
•Ranges
•Refrigerator•
•Dryers •Freezers

TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Small 1nimala rec.Jiving
vaccinajions, worming.
and routine work during

11 Help Wanted

•ZENITH

~ , .LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

:r'

EUGENE LONG

All Makee

WILL HAUL

PRICE REDUCED - Mid·
dteport - lots ot rooms tor
your family four ~edrooms,
July 10, 1985. Tho -:-::-_ ''"'' 2 baths, 2 car garage, lull
basement Good streets. Re·
then t&gt;,- opened at 1
on July 10, 1986, end reod duced to $39,900,00.

C ircle

WI ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

Television Listening ·Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

ICUT OUT fOR FUTURE USE)

985-3561

vised Coda, seated bids
I
be received by the Board of
Malp• County Commission·
ars. Court House. Pomeroy,
Ohio 4&amp;769, until Noon

Phone·.~-----------1

( )Announcement

HOME NAnONAL BANK

1
1

A'd d r e ' s s . - - - - - - - - - II

...;;.__

SPLIT LEVEL HOUSE with 3.bedrooms,, ~ complete baths. dining
• room, Jiving room and large re- .
.creation room. Located on 8
·,-ere•· Large farm pond . Racine
·area.
·

lI

I

Print one word in eoch
• 1pau btlow. Eo1h initial

DENNY CONGO

OWNER MOVING - Wants
Quick s~le. Eastern DIStrict.
Extra nice 3 bedroom ranch
woth full basement. Family
Public Notice
room, 2 baths. Appro&gt;. 11h
acre
lot. Assu111e 10'11 loan
LEGAL
w1lh
$7,000.00
down fo r 25
ADVERTISc••'""'
Notice to Motor Volniclel yr. term w1th payment of
$407.00 month, mcludes
Oealan :
In accordance with
taxes and insurance. Total
lion 307 86 of tho Ohio
price ol $45,000.00.

I
Name·-------..,...---- 1

Child..., .... ...... 17,535.00
I
sUctieyo HiM
Cler1&lt;
Hoc:l&lt;ing Volley Reg.
.pew! Oill. ,, ...... 2,364.10 17) 1, 1tc
, .•
•
( )Wanled
......,_....,.-+-----~.o.i 1
I ( )For Sale

I

ot

Howard E. Frank
Sheriff of Meiga

l

THURS. EVE. 6-8

614-74~2328 .

We are taking applications

JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
I GRAVEL- SAND

OPEN EACH
Real Estate General

~

Pomeroy, Ohio

•Kitchenettes •Restaurant

IN MIDDLEPORT

Standing timber . AI Tromm.

3 Announcements

992 -6215 or 992·7314

•l1ve Entertamme~l •free HBO

CLINIC

992-7611
5·7·tft

E.Mai'''"
POME

V. C. YOUNG.lll

46769 or call 614· 992·
1760.

PH. 742-2328
'

304-675·6276

VETERINARY

-on

"'~ley;

(Free Estimates)

RT. 62 NORTH
POINT PLEASANT, W. VA.
I miles from
Pomtroy·Mason Brid&amp;e
SINGLl 124.95

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY

GREG ROUSH

PH.

WO"'

Call: 742·2407

•Dtnlopments &amp;
Commercial Sitts
•Singlt and Molti Unit
Housing
•Wood Modo Cobinotr~
Dasiga and Planning

J::

for. len than

I

&amp;

·. Commercial

~G~tf~t;s~fro~m~th~e~cl~r~c~le~s=,l~n~c~h~a~r~ge~o;f;:;~ln;t~h;e~f~e;llo~w~shl~plroo~m~~=·====~==~~~~~~~~==~~ Seid real estate was ap·
~ • · Public Notice
Public Notice
1 Real Estate cannot sold
I
'
c
b
fl
•
I
two~thirds
I
.
u r In a tl 0 n,
II tho approioad value.
I
PUBUC HEARiNO
ON THE
Pay Cash for ·I 16!24. t'il 1, 8.~~~nty, Oh.
.' MEIGS COUNTY
BUDGET
Bank Notes ...... 22.651.00
Fa1r Board .... · ··" 3.600.00

Will do aM types of ex·
cavating. t•ndscap·
ing. buements, sew·
age systems. water
and gN Hnes. water
well driling and ser·
vice, trucking (limestone &amp; dirt).

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

praised at •20.000.00.

Soil Survey ......... 10,075.00

EXCAVATING
COMPANY

RENTAL

•R~tidtnfial

~
MOTEL

MEIGS

St. II. 160 Narth
Gattipolis,

25. 1908 ond recorded in Vo·
lume 98, Page 677 of the
Meigs Courrty Deed Records.
=.l::rtto~s"r.:! ~~
Martha Lou Beegle, presented
east by what. was forme~y
were $224. Missionary report to
Theodore Foos'lot: for about
date to date, $1,754.
140 .__,on the 1e outh
23 1 by •
the west by what
Installation of officers was con·
....,..
tor was form·dueled by Mrs. Naoml Stobart.
erly Henry Hamm'a lot ond
After givlng the charge to the
about 186 feet on the north
ofllcfrs Ihey sang "I'll Go Where t---:-----------~ by former
the pangrantort.
of the lot retained
You Wanl Me to Go." Prayer was
MOVING YARD SALE
Reference Oeed: Volume
by Mrs. Slobart. Deaver gave a talk
213, Pogo 623 and Volume
on missions and mlsslonarles. He
GREAT PRICES
279 Page
363Recorda.
ofthe Moigo
County
Deed
read Matthew 24.
JULY 1 &amp; 2
Also known by tho otraet
After the close of the meetlng the
addreo• of106 Maple Place.
Esther Circle served refreshments
280 7th
Village
Pomeroy. Meigs
Middle
rl, St.
Ohio
County,ofOhio:
.,-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ _ . . . , . . . . , . .

- Addons and remodeling
- Roof1ng end gutter work
-Concrete work
- Plumbing and electrical

U-SAVE
AUTO

from Ita inteuection with
the alley; thence southerly
along aaid line 69 feat to the
place of beginning.
It being the Intention of the
former granton to convey the
southe~v part of the lot conveyed to them from Jolm F.
Wrtlgel by deed daiO&lt;I March

'

CARPENTER
SERVICE

~46-4522
. "W• R111 F~t l.m" '

point slxtv·nino 169) teet

For the program, Edllh WOllam·
·
ad
·
l ti
son re a paper on roses, var e es
available, and tips on planting,
pruning, disease oontrol, and cut·
ting for arrangements. Mrs. Emma
Ledlte, hortlcultuiechatrman, gave
apaperonhortlculturehlntslornew
gardeners. ,
tJ
'I;"C\.U~ will ""'8
~
Next m""""n
plcnlc at
the homeofPaullne Aikins.

6-13·1 mo.

YOUNG'S

CALL

lands and tenements, to wit:
The following real estate
situated ;n the VIllage of Pomeroy, County otMaiga and
State of Ohio :
Commencing at a pott at
the comer of the lot tormt~lflV
owned by Theodora Fou on
Lasley Street in uid village.
on the allay; thence in • wet·
terly direction one hundred
forty 1140) feet. mora orlall
along said alley to the line ot
the lot formerly owned by
Henry Hamm, thence In 1
northerly direction along
what · Willi formerly Henry
Hamm's line One Hundred
Twenty Three (123, feet;
thence in ·an aestariy direc·
tion 186 "!eat, more or 1111.
to what wei formerly Theo·
dore Foil' walt line at a

Nicholson, Mrs. Diehl, and Mrs.
Turner planted flowers In the
planters ln the park at the lower end
of Rutland.
Ruby Diehl thanked the members
for flowers and cards during her
Illness. , Provldlng flowers for
churches and other organizations
during the past month were Mlss
Dlehl, Mrs. Nicholson, Marcia
Denlson, and Mrs. Parsons.
The county meetlng was an·
nounced for July 10, 7:00p.m. Mrs:
Webster displayed an 'al'l'angpumt
of roses at tl)e meeting.

*BASEMENTS •SEPTIC SYSTEMS
'ltFOOTERS *GRADING
*CONCRETE WORK

4/ 1/lfn

26th day of July. 1986, .t
10:15 a.m .. the following

wood, cupboards. chairs.
chest•: ba1kets • . dilhes.
stone Jll'l, antlquea, gold
and 1ilver. Wrlta -M.D.
MilleJ, Rt.2 , Pomllt'oy. Ohio

tiii(Jioylllrnl
Serv1ccs

S~rvite

AT A SUPER DISCOUNT PRICE

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLOS
FURNITURE. Bodo, iron.

BULLDOZER &amp;-BACKHOE WORK

9·13-tfn

to our Customers
To lntlude:
*Complete Front End Repair &amp; Alignment
*Computerized Wheel Balance
*Tires (All Sizos~ Car, Truck, Farm)

said Court. I will otter for
sale, •t the front door of the
Courthou" in Pomeroy,
M'aiga County. Ohio, on the

Club work fundamentals discussed

'Missionary society holds
_fjrst quarterly meeting

"2 .7013

·
Jlacine, OH.
PH. 949-2777

The Expansion of

c... No. 84 CV 218, io

iog

.

how

1145

Announces

By virture of an Order of
Sale iaaued out of the Common PINI Court of Meig1
County, Ohio, In the Cll. . of
SeMy A. Aleahira, now Sally
A. Fowler, Plaintiff, v1.
Stanley E. Aleahire. et. al.,
Dafttndlnta, upon a judge·
mant therein rendered. be·

Durtng the meeting conducted bY lobbY and that $25 wlll be given tn
· Norma Jean Hysell, daughter of
her memory to the scholarship
Mr. and Mrs. Nonnan Hysell. Juanita Nonnan, plans were made lund'
the AuxlUary to have a dinner at
Pomeroy, was presented an ~ for
Attending the meettngwerethOse
Bob Evans, Rio Grande, on July 23.
nurslng scholarship at the reccnl Members will meet at the hospltal named and Mary Folmer, Kelly,
meeting of the. Women's Auxiliary
at noon to travel ln a group. A Crystal and Pam Folmer, Clara
of Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Bunis, Jestte Molden, Carrie
Hysell who graduated lhls sprlng · speclal meeting was announced for Kennedy, Marahelle Frecker,
from the Polnt Pleasant Bible . Aug. 6 at I p.m. to make Mildred Fry, Mldred Withee, Mary
SChool, will attend the Rio Grande arrangements for a booth at the Rumfteld, Eulonda Rumfleld, Jes·
College. School of Nurslng. she has Melgs County Fair.
It was noted that the name of ste White, Mrs. Norman Hysell, and
~n a candystriper al Veterans
Norma Jean Hysell.
Memorial. Louise Bearbs made Ihe Mldgte Abbott wlll be added to the
memorial board in the hospital
preSentation.
.

Nicholson presented her with a gift.
It was announced during the
meetlng that the Rutland club had
received a 98 on Its pfOgram book
and will be recognized at the state
coriventlon. Mrs. Webster gav~
devotions reading "Welcome Is a
Word of Love" and "Heart Gl!ts" by
Helen Stetner Rice.
Pauline Atkins, Binda Diehl and
Mrs. Nicholson look the Wahkeena
tour in May, it was noted, and
Margaret Belle Weber,.Margan?t
Parsons,· Rulh Erlewlne, Mrs.

IO~~J,ord Tr.

C&amp;A AUTO REPAIR

Pomeroy resident receives scholarship

· Janet Bolin, flrst vice president of
the Ohlo Association of Garden
Clubs, talked on fundamentals of
club work at the Monday nlght
meeting of the Rutland Garden Club
lie1d at the horne of Mrs. C.O.
Ch'apman and E lizabeth Ann
Webster.
Mrs. Bolin also talked aboul
mt&lt;Jnal and state garden club
aetlvlttes, and shared with the group
the Garden Path, the OAGC
publication, is laid out for prinling.
Orl behalf of the club, Neva

Grills ...................... ssuo

WHALEY'S AUTO PADS

frOm the Women'• AuxUlaey of Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Pictured pn!Selltlng the scholanihlp to Ml88

CAVATING

'135

10 •15 F.;;;ri;: ...- .........
Doors ........................ .$145
71. 79 Ford Tr.

Rt. 61l West Darwin Ohio

Business Senices
RECEJVEll SCHOIARSIHP - Nonna Jean ,
Hysell. with ~ parents on the left, Mr. and Mn&lt;.
Noiman HyseD, received an $800 nursing scholarship .

73o!!r~ord Tr.

73-79
" 13·15
""""Ford
""'"""""""'""'
R kCh..
p y. Tr.
R'"'gor
oc Chov
tr anols ...............l25
Hoods ......................
3-79
T
.. '130
7 ·cab c V· ' ·
13·15 Ford Rangor
orntr1 .................. s2o
Grilltt ...........................t7S
Ntw and Used Aut•~Gian-late Modtl Parts

1J....._ .......

Bill Oene Johnson
. 614· 446·3872

73 79
.Fenders
Far~·········~···"'"'''•"'48
Tr.

Housekeeper to livl-in, permenent home for the right

centralatr. carpeted. all elac,
located Graen Terraced

Park, Galllpolla .
., , .1100.00. 304· 676·
2196.

bath, washer

a..

dryer, red-

vood condition. Wa•her """'-'
d_ryer. stove. end air condl:

honor Call814·992· 2611.
198~

all ol""tric, 14x70, 3

bedrooms. 2 full bathl,·
cenlrel air, porch. awninga,
outside storaoe bulldlng
Will sell riverfront lot 1110·
located Front and llncol~

Ss. lo Mlddlapon. Coli 8!&lt;1·
992·3348 afler &amp;pm,

1~74,

14x61 mobil• ho...-.

prtce reduced,

304-895-3&amp;94.

"extr.:s" •

•

�-

'

..
54 Misc. Merchandise

. 33 ·Farms for Sale
- - - - - - - -lc212 acre farm . Parker
Rd. Muot sell. Movod
ArizQne. Minartl right1 in·
'Col

Knauff Firewood Summet'
ratea· big loadt. May 1tt·
JUly 31st. Doean 't apply to
HEAP. 814·251-1246.

eluded. Mtke offer. 614-

742-2862 . No
offer refused . Terms avail•·
ble.

35 Lots

8t

SPECI~L ~ ut alabs 6 PU
tNdt deti\tered in dump
tructli t 100. or 21oads $180.
You pickup $15. Call 8'14·
246-6804.

Acreage

614-992-5724 or Gallipolis
614-446-3061'
GUNS . 700- Rem . 243 .
~70 - Rom , 12 · go. 1100
Rem . 12 ga. Red Hawk 44
mag. Call614 · 367-0482

3 Y.t ' acre lot. rural water.
electric. Call61 4-379-2845
or 614-446-7 105.

\

•

"We'd better be awfully ·darn

4 level acres with 12.w.65

total electric mobile home .

certain before we make a
move."

Good condition and loca -

tion. $17,000. Coli 614. ' 992-6096.
So acres $36 Ooo 00 304
' 675-7641. '
· ·
.

t-.,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,.."T.,...,...,...,...,...,...,.._.,.._,
44

Apartment
for Rent

fiP.nlals
41

.

Houses for Rent

.

:-..

New 3 bdr . livingroom, ·2
bith. family room. central
air, dishwasher. drapes &amp;
cun•ins. carpet, downtown.
Call 614-44&amp;-1409
5PM .
for Rent near Holzer : 9
home, e_x. cond., nice
borhood, low utilities,
614-286, 5447 ·foo more
informat~on .

2 ltdr cottage, unfurnished,
S225 mo . plus utilities. call
614-446-3791 after 5 .
Mostly furnished, small 2
bdr house, 2 baths.
K ~ mart . Call 614-446after dark.
River front , large lot,
nice, 2 bdr house, 2
garage. $325 mo. plus
tie,s . Call &amp;14-446· B12B.
In Langsville, 6 room house
with bath . Garden space.
$200. per month plus deposit. ApJ)roved ":~'~~;~~~!~I
· required. Phone 13
7285.
House in Mason,
, some repair. Has
butner an~ nice yard. $125.
per month. Call 614-8435149 .
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

3 bedroom furnia¥d '.railer
for rent in Rutland. $160.
per month plus· $100 . dep·
.osit . Call614-992-2777 .

Upstairs, furnished, utilities
pd. $60 deposit, 1196 mo ..
94 locust .• Call 446·3870
or 446·1340.

2 bedroom mobile home,
nice. air cond, Sand Hill
Road. 304-675· 3B34 .

One bdr apt. in Gallipolis,
furnished, $225 mo . includes utilities. Call 614446-3791 after 5. '

2 bedroom trailer with stove
•nd ref . in country .
$160.00, references and
deposit, 304-675-5307.

3 rms. &amp; bath. "'good neigh borhood, appliances furnished, utilities pd .. private
entrance, convenient to
shopping, Oep . &amp; Ref. re·
quired. Call614 ·446· 7515 .

2 bedroom furnished trailer, Apartmerits in Henderson,
Crab Creek Ro.ad, $1 .50per 304-675-1972.
month, no pets. 304-6761206.
45 Furnished Rooms
44

Apartment
for Rent ·

•

Nicely fumished apt, central
heat, air, parking. next door
to library. One professional
adult only. Call 614-446·
0338.

51 Hous~hold Goods

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.
Call614 -446-0756 .

'

Furnished room, range, refrig . $125 , share bath, single male. 919 2nd . AVe ..
Gallipolis . Call 446-4416
after BPM.

Modern one bdr apt, conve·
nient location. Sec . Dep . no I··-'&gt;-::---::--::---pots. Call 614-446-;2055
Space for .R erit
after 2pm .

6 HP air comprenon 8995 ..
Coll614-379-2220.

16" Homelite saw, rouder
with table, 3 belt Sander,
Skill saw, Eureka sweeper.
Call 614-256-176B.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
JACKSON ESTATES 62 Olive St., Gallipolis. New
APARTMENTS IEquol &amp; used wood-coal stoves; 6
Housing Opportunity) pc wood LR suite $399,
'monthly rent star1S at $169 bunk beds $199, antron
for 1 ~edroom and $204 for recliners 899, new &amp; used
·2 bedroom, depoSit $200, bedroom suites. ranges,
located near Spring Valley wringer washers. 6. shoes.
Plaza and Foodland, pool New livingrdom suites
and Cable TV awailable. 8199-$699. lari1ps, also
hours as possible10 am to 4 buying coal &amp; wood stowas.
and7pmto9pm Call 814-446· 3159.
Call 614or leave
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
message.
Sofas and chairs priced from
Nicely furnished mobile $2B6. to $B96. Tobleo. S60
home, eff. apt., central air and up to $126. Hide-a·
and heat in city, adults only . · beds,$390 . and up to
8550., sofa beds t145:
Call 614-446-0338.
Recliners, $226 . to $376 ..
Furnished efficiency 701 Lamps from $28. to $125.
4th Ave .. Gallipolis . $1 60. pc. dinettes from 8109 .. to
utilities paid. share bath. 436 . 7 pc. t189 end up .
adults . Call 446·4416 after Wood table with six chairs
$285 to $746 . Desk $110
BPM .
up to $225. Hutches, $550.
Upstairs unfurnished 3 rqom Bunk bed complete with
apt.; carpeted, utilities paid, mattresses, &amp;275. and up to
no children, no pets. Call t395 . Baby beds, $110.
Mattresses or box springs.
614-446-1637.
full or twin, 858 .. firm, $68.
Modern 1 bdr apt. down- and 878 . Queen seta, 8225.
town location, CA. carpet, 4 dr. chests, $49: 6 ~r .
complll!t8 kitc~n . Call614· chests, $69. Bad .frames.
446-4383 days or 614-446- S20 .and $,26 .• 1 04un ·Gun
cabinets, S360. Ges or
0139 eve.
electric ranges &amp;376. Baby
513 3rd . AVe . 1 bdr .,private mattresses. t26 &amp; $36. bed
bath, $135 mo ., includes frames $20. $26. &amp; 830,
water, deposit required. Call king frame $50 . Good selec514· 446-4222, botwoon '9 tion of bedroom suites,
rockers. rrietal cabinets,
&amp; 5.
headboards $38 &amp; up to
Furnished efficiency $145, $65.
utilties paid. share bath. 607
2nd . Av,. Gallipolis, adults.
Call 446-4416 alter 8PM .

74011:!: 2nd. Ave ., 3 bdr.,
2 bdr . furnished. aU
$1 90 mo., dep . raq. Call
pd.. e~ecept elect .•
814-446-4647 or 614-4411nient location.
· t;JSit reuqired. Call614-446- 4222 between 9AM-5PM .
. 855B.
3 b(ir. newly· remodeled,
duplex:
644 or 8'46 Second
2 bdr. appliances furnished .
. 1 Y.t mi. from town. large lot Ave., utility room. kitchen.
$176 mo. plus deposit &amp; ref. diningroom . Call 614· 446·
Coll614·446-2236 or 614- 0690.
446-2581 '
New 2 bdr. apt .. refrig . &amp;.
2 bdr .. fully furnished . utili- stowe furnished. 4¥2 miles
ties paid, adults only. Call from Gallipolit. S225 mo.
plus electrict deposit &amp;
614-446·4110.
1
reference required. No
2 bdr mobile home. Upper Cell 614·446-B038.
Rt. 7 . Call 614-446·050B.
2 bdr. apt., utilities per1ly
Furnished 2 bedroom moblla paid-nice . $149 · mo. · Call
home, no pets . Call 614· 304-675-6104"' 304-6755385.
949 ~ 2263 .

Mobile home. 2
fumished . ao4-676·6612 . .

BUYING ANYTHING OLD -Visiting here until July 8th.
Furriiture. quilts. glassware,
bukets. pocket knives.
straight razors, etc . If you
h.ave old items in your yard
sale, attic, garage. Dr basement. call usfirst614-3677241 .

7-j

Black &amp; White TV's, good
cond., 12" GE S25 , 13"
Sears $50. Call 614-2561909.

Western Auto riding mower.
16 hp, 42 in cut, not quite 2
years old. eKc cond, must
tell, 81 ,200.00. 304-8953013.

F~r111

SUPillie s
&amp; Liv estock

.
61

Farm Equipment

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S . 35 West, Jackson ,
Ohio. 814-286-&amp;451 .
Ma118y Ferguson. New
Holland, Bush Hog Sales &amp;
Service. Over 40 used
tractors to choose from 6.
complete line of new ~
used equipment. Largest
selection in S .E. Ohio.
600 Ford tractor. new
rubber, 601 mower. 3pt .
rake, Ford baler $3750. Call
614-286-6ij22.
136 Massey Ferguson tractor, bush hog, Massey Fer·
guson rake, Massey Fergu·
son bale thrower $3860 .
Cell614-286-6622 .
Oliver 70 tractor, 3 bottom.

New 6ft . P'-'11-type bush hog
$496, New ldia mower
$296, New clean ·2 00gallon
plastic tllink $76 . Call 614286-6522 .

Building Materials
Block, brick. sewer pipes,
Windows, lintels, etc.
Claude Winters. Rio Grande,
0. Call614-245-5121 . 1

County Appliance, Inc .
Good usad appliance• and
TV sets. Open BAM to 6PM .
Mon thru Sat. 614· 446·
1699, 627 3rd. Ave. Gollipolia, OH .

Block, brick. mortar and
Valley Furniture, new a. masonry supplieS. Mountain
used. Large section of qual - State Block, Rt. 33, New
ity furniture . 1216 e..:•• ," Haven. w. Va . 304-882·
Ave., Gallipolis~
· 2222 ·

I

Why pa.v more? Check
out. New furniture, applian ces outlet. Trade Center,
Kanauga. Oh. Call614·446 ·
7444.
'
2 Matching ovenize chairs
with ottermans, end tables
$300, Family Room set,
solid oak pla.,k , sofa. loveseat. extra chair, rocking
chair;, 2 end tables. coffee
table to match $400. Must
sell' to settle estate, like new
cond .. 1 yr. old. Coat &amp;1800
new. Call614-446· 1641 or
614-446-8172 after 6pm .
One 6000 BTlJ air
cond. $96, Two 11 DOD BTU
air cond .$96, One 14000
STU air cond. $150, 23000
BTU air con d. S 195, Frost
Free refrig. $160, Side by
Side rehig . t 1 96. Kenmore
auto. washer $95, Elect.
range, 896. Gas range $96 .
Skaggs Appliances Upper
River Rd .. Gallipolis 614446-739B .

-----56

Pets for Sale

HI~LCREST

KENNELS
Boarding all breeds. Heated
indoor-outdoor facilities .
AKC Doberman puppies :
Stud Service. Call614-4467795. ,
Briarpatch Kennels ProfessionaJ All-breed grooming.
lndoor-outdqor boarding fa·
cilitlas. English Cocker Spaniel puppies. Call 814-3889790.

~~~~~~~~~~J
KenDragonwynd
nel. CFA Hirrialayan.
and Siamese kittens.
Chow puppies. New litter.
Call446-3844 after 7PM .

Parakeet for sale. Call 614446-3732.

Sale of the Season: · Large
Selection of good used
tractor! . MF36 gas. dtl.
MF65. 165 dsl, MF256 dol.
MF240 dol, Ford- BN.
600,3000,4000,5000 d&amp;l,
Ford Dexters. IH-444 gat.
tools of all kinds. Trade Now
and Save. Jim't Farm"Equip.
Center. Rt. 35 W, Gallipolis,
Ohio, 614-446-9777 or
614-446-2484.
53 Ford trector, .Golden
Jubilee, good cond. $1660.
Coli 614-643-005B .
1966 Ford Tractor for sale.
Good co.ndition. Call 614992-6276 .

l

660 International die1el
with plow, disc. buah hog,
trailer, 'Carrieeland boom·
pole. 304-675-31990.
Malley Ferguson hay bailer
Model 12 . S900.00. ' 67
Chewy 6CJ two ton. lnterna tiona! cub tractor. grader
blade, belly
mower. 304
endloader.
$2, 760.00.
676 ~ 2166 ·

One 62 inch heavy guage
Simonds saw blade, same as
new. 304-695-3053.
63

Lives1ock

Registered poll Hereford
herd bull. Call 614-9927458.

71

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH psid lor '80
model and newer uaed cart.
Smith Buick-Pontiac, 191 1
Eaatem Ave., G,allipolis. Call
614-448-2282.
1978 New Yorker
Brougham. 2 dr., loaded .
Coli 614 - 446-7404
anytime.

2 bedt'oo.m apartments .
New Hawen. WVa . Newly
remodeled . In town . 614·
992-?48,1.

APARTMENTS , mobilo
horn••· hou•e•. Pt. Pleaun1
and Otllipollo . 614-446-

1221 .

1984 Chevrolot S -10 P.U ..
long bed, em-fm 111dio. V-6,
4 wheel drlwe. rear sliding
window. 24.000 miles. ex.
cond. Coii614-367-01B8or
614-448-0182 ext. 28.
1979 Datsun p.u .. 67,000
miles. $1900. · Call 614·
256-6228 or 614 -2561417.

1979 Hondo Civic, 1200
serle1 , standard , 3 dr ...
hstchback .. Coli 614-4481570.

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Moat wells comple.ed same
day. Pump sales and servicao. 304' 895 -3802.

1979 Bonneville Brougham. 1979 Chevrolet Luv truck. 4
low mileage. Call614·446- wheel drive with flberglau
9442.
' topper. Also. Flymo lawn
mower . Great for mowing
1978 Datson 610 Hatch· hilloide. $200. Coli 614·
bock,l1200. Coii614-246- 992-5171 .
581B.
1978 Subaru Brat, 4 wheel
drive,
$1.200.00 or best
1978 Volkswagon Rabbitt,
4 dr, 48,000 milao, SIBOO. offer. 304-675-6217.
Caii614 ·245· 6B18 .
1977 Chevy 3AI 1on camper
apecial,
4x4 axe ,cond, with
1982 Chevette, auto. air,
PS , PB, $2800, 19B2 Amerigo ceb·O'tfer camper,
Chevetta. U350, 1981 tleepa 6. stove, refriiJ81'at0r,
Chevette. auto .• air $2400. sink, furnace. AC, toilet,
ohpwer. ate. ,t4,600 or
· Cell614·379-2882.
·
camper only $1.600. Phone
1972 Cadillac coupe De- 304-895-3006.
Ville, most factory options.
very nice. dark blue. must Miller Tilt Trailer, 8x16. dual
wheels. 8 ton capaclly,
ooe . Coli 614·446-0577.
S1,200.00 . 304 · 896 1975 Buick Centry. Call 3879.
614-367-0581 '

Starks Tree and lawn Service. stump removal, 304·
576·2010.

1979 MGB , 2 topo, A· 1
cond. Call 614-246-5294.
1983 Mustang Gl Hotchback, sunroof, PS. PB.
Cruise, AC, low miles. Call
614 -446-2030.

73

Vans &amp; 4

1979 Jeep Wag~neer li·
mited. leather interior, PS.
PB, tilt wheel, cruise control, RC, very good cond.
blue book $6,900. must sell
$3.600. Phone 304-B963006.
74

Motorcycles

rie. after 6 614· 446·9741 .
; 977 New York Chrysler,
one owner. Call 614· 266·
176B1977 Chevy Monza Hatch~
back, 2.5 l , 4 cvt. 4 &amp;pd.
good cond ., 30 MPG,
$1200 . Coli 614·992·
5190.
1984 Cavalier type 10. 6
spd, aluminum wheels. fully
loaded. 48900. Coli 614·
448· 7399 .
1966 Dodge Custom Rovlt.
Only one of its kind ..ft.
Everything original. 88,000
mile1 . Must tee to appreciate. Lik·e new. Call 814446·1534 or 304-6753242
.
1976 MGB. two tops.
S1595. 1980 v.w . Robbit
Diesel. Stereo, air. •1795.
or best offer. Caii814-911&amp;9228B.

1 979 XR 186. bean rebuilt,
axcellant condition: ~600 .
Call 614-367-71108 .

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park. Route "33, North c;»f
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
614-992-7479 .

Uaed sectional, $260. Used
sofa·chtir, t76 . U11d sofa~halr, *150. Uted sleepers,
!._26 0 . Call 614-992-3307.
RICK 'S 1\lfW AND USED
FURNITURE. Compsre our
prices, 11we today. Phone
30t ·773-6430.

1978 Pontiac Grand Lem•-.1.
3011 tngl,.., om·fm. oc
ca ...tte, pw. p d locka, new
radlala, a•hauat and air
•hocks, low miiNge. 304671-1949 oft.,. 4 p.m.

like new Cub Ctidette 782
Hydro, 17 hp )awn trlctor,
34 hours, sacafrlce price.
304-675-6813.
Scales. 30 lb capacity with
automatic tape feed ou1, 5 ft
ttainle.. steele cooker .
Phon• 304-882-22B4 .

~~::::::;;;;v:

Admiral 20 foot •Ide by side
refrigerator *1 00.00. 304458· 1078'
ll£ci:.::i]=:::::!i:2i!~

'BO Morcury XR7 Cougar,
43,000 mil" needs tome..
repolr. a ·ook prlc\
•f.IOO . OO ucrlflo•
U.IOO . OO . 304' 87&amp;6347.

0

H 0

M

E

IMPROVEMENTS -- Re Placement windows. alum.
soffit. vinyl siding. continu ous gutters. free estimatea,
ell work guaranteed. Call
evenings 304-576-,2644 . :
82

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

GASOLINE ALLEY

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cot . Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 614·446-3888 · or
614-446-44 77
&amp; HEATING . Rt. 1, Box 356. Galli ·
polis. Coli 614-3 67 -05.76 .

83 . Excavating
Good-1 hcavating , base·
ments. footers . driveways.
septic tanka, landscaping.
Call a.nytime 614-44,6 4537, James L. Davison, Jr.
owner.

min .l

9:30

19B3 Honda Moped, good
cond. Coli 614·446 ·0B54.

•

• Hours•

8

1978 Harley Davidson superglida t3200 . Coli 614379-2608 after 5pm .
1972 350 Honda Scrambler
$460. Coli B14-379 -260B
after 5pm.
82 Kawasaki Spectra. Full
Fairing Radio wllh calletle,
saddle bags, luggage rack,
back rest, 'Cruise control .
Mull Mil t2800. Coli 614992-6928.

BARNEY

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

ser.~1ce . Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen .
Scissors . Fabric Shop ,
Pomeroy, 614-992 -2284.

85

Water Service. Wells,
c1ate.rna, pools f_illed . Pho~
614·367-0623 or614- 3677741 night or day.
Waugh-'s Water ServiCe. ·
Wells. cisterns, pools. Fast:'
reliable 8ervice . Call 61'4-'
266-1240 or 614-2U ~
1 130.
Reasonable ratea . · ~ •
.
~ ~

87

76

TRISTATE .
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
·
1163 Sac. Ave, Galllpollt. I
614-446· 7833 or614·4461833.

300, I cyl Ford motor porta,
304·178-11428.

a

~en' s

1.7 tt:' Deep V Flberglua,
100 HP·Dutboord motO&lt;,
cuetom drive · on trailer,
JICcasaorlesf *900. Call
114-441•2030.

running aond. *200.00.
304·B115·3964.

OAV

James Boys Watar S,rvice.
Also pools filled. Call 614·
2511- 1141 or 614· 4461175 or 614 -446 -7911 .

Haul . limestone, sand, gra:
vel.d1rt, bulk or Oag fertilizir
and time . ExcelsiOr Salt
.Works Inc . 638 E. Main Sr.~
.Pomeroy 614•992-3 .B91 '•

. '
1974 Ford 429 engine, exo

TH' RAIN ALL
LONG

General Hauling

21 ft. K.Yot .Pontoon bOat,
60 HP Johnaon . motor,
trtiler, flr1t $2500 . · Call
114-268-1909.

Auto Pans
&amp; Accnaories

m ro_m

PAW FISHED IN
SE~ING Matffiine repairs,

Upholstery

·

(J) ® Cagney &amp; Locey
ICC) Master thief Alba'!
Grand resurfaces and Cag·
ney is determined to catch
him ..
Cl) Smitheonian World
ICC) 'Time and Light,' Various methods used ower the
year~ 10 measure time and
light are discussed . (R)(60
min .) ·
ill) Newowotch
till Odd Couplo
[HIO) MOVIE: 'Circle of
Iron'
"
(MAXI MOVIE: 'Purple Rain'
CCC)
10:30 Cll Together. Boonea
ill) lndopondontl
till INN Nowo
11:00 •
Cll
CIJ ® •
il2l N-1
Cll Bill Coaby Show
I]) ESPN'S lntldo Boubolll
()) Monty Python
till llen!!J Hill Show
11:30 G (l) CD Tonnlt Update
Cll Belt of Groucho
I]) SportiCenter
Cll WKRP In Cincinnati
ta Cll Simon &amp;. Simon
()) Lllt•nlght Amorlco
® ·Taxi ·
ill) Star Huttlar,
OIIDl' ABC News Nlghtl!ne ,
Honoymooriera
IH80l MOVIE: 'Ovor the .
Brooklyn Bridge'
11:4&amp; 8 ffi (!) B¥t of Ceraon
Tonight's guests are Steve
landesberg, Liz end Jean
Sagol and Joo Williams.
(R) (60 min.)
(MAX] MOVIE: 'Btch•lor
P•rty' ICC)
12:06 CIJ Wendy ·~d ·Me
r:Il Spirit of hcollonce~
1984 LA Olympic C!omn M•n's Oymna.tla1 and
Water Polo
'
()).Benny Hill Show
(!) MOVIE: 'Tho V... r ol
llvl~ Dongerauoly'
• QJI Eyo on Hollywood
• CherUo'l Angelt
t 2:30 Cll Love Thot Bob
(() MOVIE: 'A q1~ For Joe'
()) ABC No- Nightllne
D Cll Columbo 'A Cue of
Immunity,' IR) 1110 min.) ·
()) 11t4r Hultlor
iD N•wo
•
t 2:4&amp;
Cll (!) tete Night with
Devlcl Lotterm•n
t:OO Cll I Marrlocl Joan
()) Entertlllnment Tonight
OI!Dl CNN Headline Newt

Dozer Work land clearirig,
landtcaping , etc. Free estimates. Call 614· 446-8038
or 814-992-7119 anytime.

84

tiJ Cll ®

Newhart An admirer Wants .to stan a Dick
loudon Fan Club. (R)
10:00 ill MOVIE: Tho Gallant

PEANUTS
1
1VE

BEEN 'fi.UNKINp
A60VT SOIOOL

I'VE DECIDED

TO

STI!DV f{EAL

~ARD

NOT '\)lE RICH ..
JUST TilE FAMOll5!

ntiS 'r'EAR,ANP 6ECOME
RIC" ANI' F~MO\J5 ...

l

R &amp; M Furniture Manufacturing, St. Rt. 7 , Crown
City. Oh . Coli 614 · 26 ..
1470, ' call Eva, 614-441·
343B . Oid &amp; new
Uphostered .

I

•'
•.

&amp;

J•-

J .A.R. Construction Co.,
Rutland, Oh . 614-742 2903. Basements, Footers,
Concrete work, Backhoe's.
Honda 350, 4 cyl. new tires, Dozer Bt Ditcher, Dump
trucks, &amp; water -gas-sewerbattery. paint, like new , electrical
lines.
cond .. &amp;600. Coll614·4462030.
M. L. Couller, backhoe and
dur,np
tNck service, FREE
1985 200 X 3 wheeler, ex.
cond .. *1600. Call 614- ESTIMATES, call 304- 273 - •
387-'7633.
Y.JI. '

197B flborglaai old-boat 16
It, 75 HP. ou)board . Call
614-446-4694.

54 Misc . Merchandise
Trailer spaces. Small child•
ran accepted . 304-676 - 7 hp. Ma11ey Ferguson
1076.
riding lawn mower, 36 inch
cut, Tecumseh engln", good
for yerd 1 acre or less. good
ohopa, t300.00 firm, 304Merchanrlisc
B82-2334.
·

8

(!) NBC 'Nightly
N-o
Cll Rifleman
(]) Marcia Sporttlook
()) • 1IJ A(IC Nowa (CC) ·
D ClliJD CBS N•wo
,
Cll Dr. Who
C!D Body El-lc •
• f-Traop
Cll CNN HNdllne N•wa
D (I) PM Mag•zlno
Cll
Chuok
Connor'•
W-mTh-r
(]) Sportaoenter
Cll Sanford and SOn
()) Enterttlnm•~t Tonight
(!) Wheel of Fortuno
tiJ CllWheel of Fortune
I]) Second City TV
(!)~·
ill)
MacN•IIII.ehrer
Newehour
Ill II2l Now Nama That
Tune
•sterTrek
8 Cil Tic Tee Dough
CIJ Choco Kid
(]) Spl~ , of Excellence:
1984 LA Olympic Clamao •
Men~a
Gymnaetlca and
Water Polo
Cll Sa~ at Home
Cll D ()) Fomlly Feud
(!) Jeoperdy
Cll
Nightly
Bu•lnoiS
Report
(!) Whoel of Fortuno
Ill IIJ Enterttlnmont
Tonight

8:00 • Cil Cil TV"o Bloopera It
Pr8ctlcal Jokoa Tonight' a
pi-actical joke victima are
Jane Sadler and Mary Ann
Mobley. (R) 160 min.)
CIJTheMoni'DN
()) MOVIE: ·'Tho Pride of
Hallam•
()) Ill till ABC Monday
Night Bootbolll: THmo To
B•Announoed
ta ()) liD Soareorow and
Mro. King
Cll
MocNoll/lohrer
Newahour
ill) HISrt of tho Dragon
(CC) 'Corrocting.' ChiQa 'l
judicial system is explored,
with emphasis on how its
people wiew ·the law in
ll!nerol. 160 min .) ,
1111 MOVIE: Th• Bermuda
Trlangl•'
IHIIOI MOVIE: 'Ccnen the
Deoiroyer CCC)
IMAXI MOVIE: 'Cantonnlal
Summtr'
9:00 II (I) (!) MOYIE: To Bo
Announced
Cll 700 Club
,
' 8 Cll 1)1 Kate &amp; Allie
Emma is crushed, ~en she
finds that her handsome
new piano teacher is more
"
interest8d in Kate than in
~or. jR)'
()) HNrt of the Dragon
ICCI 'Correcting.' China's
judicial system is explored,
with emphasis on how i1s
people view the law in
.ll"neral. (60 min .)
.
(JJ)
Smithaonl•n World
ICC) 'Time and light.' Various methods used ower the
years to measure time and
light are discussed. IR) (60

1980 Yamaha YZ100. ex~
cellent condition. Call 81 4992-64BI5 . .

75 · Boatl and
Motors for Sale

5 acresonS .R. 124, approx.
3 miles below Ravenswood
8ridge. Ideal trailer apcit.
Cell304-273-3623 or 814'·
843· 5·1B5 .

,

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Call 304- 675 1331 .
.

1980 Chevy 'lz ton P.U ..
V-8, auto, PS. PB .• ,. . con d.,
84000 . Coli 614-446·
B62B.

Dune buggy, fiberglass
body. street legal. Calll14643· 2813 .

7 :30

ROI\i!'S Tellivision .S ervice.
House calls on RCA, Ouazar,
GE . Specialing in Zenith.
Call304· 676-2398 or 614·
446-2454.

70 Ford F600, wHh 2000
gal . water tank, $2600 . Call
614-643-006B.

1981 HondsG.L. 1100with
lots of e•tras. Phone 614992-3312.

1 tJedroom · apt. for rent.
Nicely located. Contact Village Manor in Middleport.
814 · 992 - 7787 . Equal ' 51 Household Goods
Houaing Opportunity.
New. furni•h•d one bedroom apt. in Middleport. No
...o. Coil 614-992· 5304
between 9:00 and 5 :00.

1961 P.U . ltlterna1ional "!J
ton. CaN 614-388-8717.

BMll'S P.li1C4C:IJAF'f'LH
~ CAA PN1MEIJT
~OV~Abl\1~1

D.and M. Contractors . Vinyl
aiding, replacement win dow•. inaulating, roofin~ .
new and remodeling, concreto. Coli 304 -773-5131 ,

1977 Red, white, Monte
·Carlo, ex. cond ., PS, PB,
PW. AC, stereo, swivel
bucket seats. Caii814'·446 8010:

20~4 .

Aivenide Apts. Middliport.
Special rates for Senior
Citlr:ens. $1 30. Equal Hous·
ing Opportunities . 614 ·
992 -7721 '

Trucks for Sale

8:45
7:00

Tabor Upholstery. For reupholtterlng, free estimatet.
Free pickup &amp; delivery. Call
814-379-2859.

RINGLES'S SERVICE, u·
perienced carpenter, e1ectri·
clan, mason, painter , roofing (including hot tar
opplicationl 304-6'75-2088
or 676·7368 .

Attic apt., furnished $176.
utilities pd .. 919
Gallipolis, .male preftVred ,
share bath . Call 446--16
aft81' 8pm .
1 Y, bdr , apt, utilities pd .,
partly · fu'rn ished, in Rio
Grande . ·call 614 - 446 -

72

For Sale: 1974 GMC . Call
614-446-3042.

~;-:,~:~r-~~~~-~1976
Monte Carlo.
Call
614 · 446~9267
ask for Jur·

Pole
for
garages.
farm , stores, eta. Any size,
free estimates. Call 304·
675-3981 .
~

Beagle pups. Call 614-379·
2330.

Country Oak tables, chairs, Two year old talking Mynah
cupboards, desks , ice boxes. bird with new cage
Cookies, Tuppers Plains . At. $400.00. 304-882-3650.
1 . Hand crafted and
finished .

Tran spor1 a110n

PEOP~E .

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
l,lnconditionellifelime guarantee . Local references
furni•hid. Free aatimatel .
Call collect 1~614 -237 ·
048B. doy·or night. Rog ero
Baument Waterproofing. ~

MOVIE: 'Mitundf!r-

ITHRAW

e (])

8:30
THOUG~T

MV

.Responsible
PIANO FOR party
SALE.toWantod
a.ssume: t;;::;=:;;::;:~==r~=~;=.~::;:~;;::;~i
omoll monthly Payment' on 64 Hay &amp; Grain
71
Autos for Sale
splnet-con1ole piano. Can
be seen locally. Write: lin•
ciUde phone numberl c.-.dit
1978 Mercury Cougar XR7.
,..anager, P.O. Box 620, For Sale: good clean. ear powar •tearing. poWer
Beckemeyer, 11182219.
corn. Call 614·446-1642.
brakas, air cond. AM· F.M,
614-446-2866.
Barley for sale . $2. bushel.
304-876- 5086.
58
Fruit
1972 Pontiac Catanlla.
0
good cond, 304 -875-4687.
8t Vegetables

duty 6 ton, wagon running
gears $379.96 . Coli 614286 -6522 .

56 Building Supplies

IM~

atOOd'

~ou !&gt;AlP
THESE WE~E

Marcum Roofing S. Spo,tt·
ing. Now installihg rubber
roofs .. 30 years •xperience,
specializing i,n built up roof.
C•ll614-388-9857.

plows, disc. $850. Heavy

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers. dryers. refrigera·
tors; ranges. Skaqgs Appliancea, Upper R•ver Ad.
beside Stone Crest Motel.
614-446-7398 .

C!D 3-2·1, Co-ct(CC)
til HOfllln't H•roet

Serv1c es

Violin with bow, case ,
books, $130: Call after 8pm
614-38B-9705.

~

large alecirlc range, cle.-n.
good cond, best offer. 304~
676·1126.

T-tre

1

81

3~·576· 2026.

TON,Y' S GUN REPAIRS,
hot dlj&gt; rebluaing, olltype1 of
gunsmith work, fast service.
304-675·4631 '

1:00 •
Cll 9 •
!DN-a ·
CIJHotPOUIIo
()), Proe Confd·
()). Audubon
Wlldllf•

C~PTMNEASY

Courier spinet elect. piano, 2
yrs. old. used very little. A ~ 1
cond. Coli 614· 246-6294.

THAT SCIWIILEO WORO CWIE
by Henri
Bob Lee

UniCI••Ibkt
~-ane
lllt•lo..::h
~.to form
lour ordinary -

m ()) ro •

New · replacitment pickup
truck porto. O.M . 73-80
fendorl, ' t59. Ford 73-79
fenders. 849 . Teilgat11.
hood, rocker panel11 doors,
etc. available on mo11 pitk·
ups and c.rs at 810V. W.
Main St .. in Pomeroy. Ohio.
814-992-6778 or304·8823681 P¥enings.

Antique oak piano, newly
rofiniohed. &amp;200. Call 614446 ·0231.

J-

\"lfJ9Nf fi)'i} \jl

~ ~ ~~

EVENING

614-446-4525 after 4 .

Library table, 48 in . long, 1 B
in . wide, 30 in. length, Lamp
tsble, 191h X 191!2, 31 high,
shelf below., Stadium or
boat seat 85 .00. Call &amp;144,6-3628.
.

Firewood 820.00 pickup
load, $30.00 delivered . Call
304-676- 6762 or 6752991.

Television
Viewing ··

Auto Parts

All porto for 1977 Cordollo.
Coll304· 773·5651 .

300Amp. &amp;channel. Peav8y
Mixer Ainplifier $300. Call

Home grown sweet corn,
Happy Hollow Fruit Farm ,
Gallipolis Ferry. W. Va .

Nice tobacco stakes or to·
mato stakes. Oak . 0 . 10
Mch . 614-949-2801 .

76

&amp; Accessories

Musical
Instruments

Jennings Compound Bow
8125, Coll614-446-79~5 .

10.000 BTU air cond . &amp;:
girl's size 7 roller skates. Call
614· 256-6426.
..

KIT 'N' CARLYU: ®by a..rrr Wright

The Dailv

Ohio

...
Pet• for Sale

Fish Tank and Pet Shop.
2413 Jeckson Avenue.
Point Ploaoant. 304~ 1762063 . Fiah, birdi 1nd more.
57

MOnday, ~uly 1, 1986

•

Monday. July 1, 1986

Goldon Retrlowtr pu)pin, 7
mo. old. haa had all thot•.
Call 614·3BB·9a6B ovoninga . .

Shock liqUid $~ . 66 9..11~ PH
u·p s3:so 4 po . Mlddl~!port

'F or ule on contrlict. 3A acre
lot, Rt. 160, S4, ~00 . Call
614 -446-0706 .

\

56

Pool People Special:

1 acre building or trailer tots
for Nit. Call6 1 4-992· 7481
or 614-992· 2386 or 614992-3543.

..

Ohio

. Page 8 ·. The Daily Sentinel

'.

,.

.,

K

J.I

I YECKALj

KJ K . I I I

IACTUFEj '
KJ K I
Prlnranswerhete:
Saturday's
.

'

CLASSROOM

WO~I&lt;.

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answeJ, as suggeated by the atKwe cartOOI'I .

rI

I )( I I I 1
(AnSW&amp;fS tomqrrovr)

I Jumbles:
Answer:

'}

STEED ~AOOR SCARCE RELISH
·
_Wha~ Samson was after Delilah cut o·ff ail
~Is halr~"OIS·TRESSED "
. .

.

MINE

James Jacoby
NORTH
7-l·BS
.K5'
.• 83
+QJI0964

Much to gaio and
nothing to lose

•• 2

By Jameo Jacoby
West had spent enough time around
a bridge table to know t hat there
wasn't much chance that he would
score a diamond trick against six
hearts with his A-K. Still it was a safe
lead, and perhaps leading lhe ace
Instead of the king would produce dividends later in the deal. Why didn't he
think the diamond ace would live'!
Siinple :- when someone jumps to
slam wilhout asking for aces, either
he has all of them or he's void In some
suit . .That's not a law of bridge, but
it's common sense.
Dedarer failed to back his aggres·
sive bidding with the best percentage
play . He rufled the opening lead and
played A·K ol hearts. True, there was
a slightly better than even chance
that the queen would come clattering
dow~ . The opponents had only four
between them , so declarer would win
if the trumps split 2·2 or if the queen
was singleton , but the queen didn 't
drop.
South- missed his chance. The best
line of play is to go to dummy with
the spade king before leading trumps.
Declarer takes the club finesse, plays .
ace of clubs and ruffs a club, comes
back to his hand with the spade ace
and tries to ruff the last club. West

WEST

EAST
.QJ0962

's

• Q92

••

•s 5 s

.KU4

• 8

+ AK 67

• 53 2

SOUTH
.AJ
, A K J 10 6S 4

...

.A QJ 10

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Weal North Eas1
Pass .
Pass
Pass
Pass

2t
3+
4•
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: t

~

can trump in with the nine- of hearts

drop

but now the trump queen will
later and the slam will be made .
There iS nothing to lose by this
approach. If the club finesse loses,
declarer will still be back to square
one , hoping thai the heart queen will
fall.
.

t!l ~· ,.1t' •~~"

by THOMAS JOSEPH
...,,.
ACROSS ~ Reloied
1 Davis Cup
ma~mally
coach
41 Thoughl (Fr.)
5 Inscrip-

DOWN

lions
· 1 Pungent·
on coins
z Specter
10 Chin
3 Thought
11 Pressed
about (sl.)
13 Ukraine
4 Greek letter
legisla5 Enlarge
ture
6.Mounlain
14 Missive
crest
22 Celt •
29 Impudence
15 Ritual
7 Tyke
23 Estimalo
(sl.)
response 8 Come as a 24 Chuckle 30 Une8rth!y
16 Club
thought 25 South
31 Winged
17 Dutch
9 Sowing
Korean 36 •- and
commune 12 Excavate
statesman Sympallly"
18 Toothed 18 Company 27 Morally 37 ·- was
20 Free
19 Bound
pure
going to St. lves"
21 Prong
22BeU

23 Hurt
25 Grazing
ground
21 Lean-to
27Weight
of Malay
28 c·ry
29 City near
Boston
32Go wrong
33 MereditJt
- Mac-

34 Allen
or Blanc
35Prestige
37Grass
genus
38Most
cunning
39 State or

agitation

DAILy CRYPTOQUOTFS- Here's bow to work II:
AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
One l~tler stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the_. three L's, X for the two O's,' etc. Single letten;,
apostrophes, the lengt!l and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are diff~rent. ·

·

caYPToQliOTEs

X.U R WUG P

TRBA
' AQU

. VP

QRKU

GJXU

PARAU

R

..

TGURAVBD

VB

JS

LVBW ·

PJTVUAF . - MIQB

.-

PV. DBVSV.

AQRA

DRG WBUG

' Yestenlay'a Cryptoquote: ANYTIMI;: A MAN AIN,.
FISHIN' HE'S rnnTERIN ' AWAY HIS LWE. - PATRICK

MCMANUS
• 'I

'

WHAT THE KALFISACI(
WA&lt;e IN HI'5-

�•

.

Ohio

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

'

Monday, July 1,

preserves

Countian charged with DWJ.
· A WeStVJrglnlamanwascitedby · County 17, approximately two and
A Micwgan woman was cited b)''
. the Gallla-Meigs PQSI of the State . one-tenth m11es south of Ohio 588. •
the patrol following a single-car ..
Highway Patrol following a singleTheGall1a-MeigspostoftheState accident Saturday afternoon Qn
car accident Sunday afternoon on HlghwayPatrolsaldacardrlvenby Ohlo325.
·
,
·
Meigs County· 24, around three- Hershel A. Gilbert, 33, of Rt. 3,
Wanda S. Ham1Jton, 26, of Ami'
tenth$ of a m11e north of Ohio 7.
Gallipolis, was northbound on 17, Arbor, was southbound on 325, when :
. .Troo~rs said Larry R. Grimm when he reportedly Slid across tile troopers said she apparently lOS! .
Sr., ~ 36. of Mason. W.Va., was highway and struck a southbound control of her car, went ott the rlghi
westbound on 24, when he appar- car pperated by Tony L. Saunders, side of the road, came back across 'l
ently lost control of his car, went off · 24, ofRt. 3. Galllpolls.
the highway, went o'ff the lett side
the left side of the highway a nd ·
Bothvehiclessustalnedmoderate and struck a fence at 3:2() p.m.
struck a gtlardrail.
damage In ihe 7:30p.m. accident, . Hamilton's car sustained moderate ·
His vehicle sustained light dam· the patrol said. Gilbert was cited by damage and she was cited for ·

r~troo~per::~s:fo~r~d~rl~vln~g~le~ft~o~f~cen~te:r~.;~fa~n~u~re~t~o~co~n~t~ro~l.;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;·:·.·

. age
in the
p.m.
troopers
said.12:55
Grlmm
was incident.
cited by
the .pa trot for DWI and failure· to
control.
·
· Two Gallla County drivers escaped injury when · their cars
colllded Saturday evening on Gallla

DINING lOOM ONlY.

Session II swimmlng lessons will
he taught July 8-19 at London Pool, ·
Syracuse. Advanced lifesaving
classes will })e&amp;in July 14 and.
continue approximately two weeks . .
To register or for inore Information
call992-9909.
·

PH.

Area death s
contribute to the Pomeroy Emergency Squad' or the Meigs County
Cancer Society.

Earl Preston
Earl Preston, 73, Groveport,
formerly of Meigs County, died
Saturday at Mt. Carmel East
Hospital.
He was a retired printer and a
member of the National Graphics
and the Groveport United Methodist
Church.
He is survived by his wife, Ruth,
daughters, Margaret Stein, Columbus-, Nada Vaughan, Chesapeake,
Va. and a son, James, Groveport, 9
grandchldren, ·and ' 12 greatgrandchildren. Local survivors include an aunt, Mrs. Tina Jacobs,
·
Pomeroy.
Funeral serVIces wUl be held at
the Myers Funeral Home, Groveport, at 11 a.m. Tuesday morning.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7 to 9p.m. Interment will
he at f:ranklln Hills Cemetery.

Several items stolen June 19 from
the Delores Mlller residence, Route
·7, Hobson, were recovered about
10: 15 p.m. Sunday ev~ing by
Sheriff Howard Frank. The Items
were found in a bam In the Hobson

area.
Danny Wade Kuhn, 2(), of Cheshire, was taken Into J'UStody at the
scene by the sheriff and charged
with receiving stolen property .and
trespassing, both charges stemming from the breBklng and
entering of the Mlller residence.
A second man is also being sought
by Meigs authorities ln conne&lt;;tlon
with the June 191ncident.
Sheriff Frank reports. , all th!'
stolen items were recovered except
for a gun which the sheriff's
department is attempting to locate.

EnJergencysquads
answer seven calls
Meigs County Emergency Medl·
cal Service reports seven calls on
Saturday and six calls on Sunday.
Rutland on Saturday at 12: 13 a.m.
wenlto Salem St. for Linda Smith to
Veterans Memorial Hospital ; Rutland at 1: 45a.m. went to Long St. for
Debbie Moore to Holzer Medical
Center; Pomeroy at'12: 27 p.m. was
called to VUlage Green Apartments
for Michael Smith to Veterans
Memorial; Tuppers Plains atl2: 36
p.m. went to Rt. 124 for Stewart
Sisson to St. Joseph Hospital;
Pomeroy at 1: 25 p.m. was called to
County Rd. 37 for Lutchle Riggs to
Veterans Memorial; lj.utland went
to Strongs Run Rd. at 4:18p.m. for
Beatrice Rhinehart who was taken
to O'Blenness Memorial Hospital;

and Pomeroy at 6:05p.m. went to
RoCk Sj)rlngs Rd. for Archie Swanz
to Veterans Memorial.
Sunday at !2:26a.m. Racine took
Thomas Willoughby from Skyline
Speedway to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Racine fire department at 12: 50
a.m. was called to a hay fire on
County Rds. 28and30; Middleport at
9:48 a.m. went to 320* S. Third for
Luia Winebrenner to Hol2er Medl·
cal Center; Middleport was called to
247 N. Third at 1: 20 p.m. lor Brian
Hayes- who was treated but not
transportrid; Pomeroy at 6:56p.m.
was called to the Pomeroy Health
Care Center for Gladwin Werner to
Veterans Memorial; and MiddlepOrt f\re dipartment at 9:47p.m.
Sunday wa~ called toLynnSt. where
a power lqw'-was down.

enttne
1 Section, 10 Pagel

Athens -.... , ............... ... 715 (j!.8)
GaDia ....... ................ 8.6 (10.9)
Jackson .................. 10.2 ( 10.9)
Lawrence .................. 9.3 (12.3)
Meigs .......................9.0 !10.8)
Vlnlon ..................... 12.1 (13.3)
JOBLESS RATE - Unemployment feU throughout southeastern Ohio between AprD
and May, reports the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Serv~
ces. 1be jobless rate In lour of six
counties In lhe region stood at
below 10 percent during the
period. (April ftgures In paren·
Utesls).

Meets tonight

White · House sjx&gt;kesman Larry Speakes said
Reagan was planning "a very simple g&lt;eeting
ceremony" and he said he expected most of the 39
former hostages would be aboard the alrlillef.
· He said the president "wants to have as Utile
disruption In tllelr Uves as possible" and to permit
them to fly home without too much fanfare.
In what a State Department official called "the
beginning of a campaign," Reagan Monday ordered a
termination of both U.S. landing rights for the
Lebanese carrier Middle East Alrllnes and authority
for air cargoservice~en thetwocountrles by either
·U.S. or Lebanese carrters.
A senior admlnlstratlon official said, "Beirut
Intei'natio!llil Airport will be off-limits untO Bel rut puts
terrorists off:11rn1ts."
.
In Beirut, MEA Chairinan Sel1m Salam said, "If .

anyone wants to close the airport, that's his business
but I don't think lt will have much effect on Lebanon.
Other ways will be found to bring the essentials ln.''
Administration officials had been hinting lor days
that a boycott of the airport was In the works.
Reagan approved the -restrictions after two
high-level White House meetings 1n which Reagan
reviewed the hostage crlsls, the latri of seven
Americans stUI held In Lebanon and possible steps to
combat terrorism.
The official said the action is "designed as a pressure
on the community of Lebanon" to find the killers of
Robert Stethem, the young Navy diver slain the fli'st
day of the hijacking.
. But he conceded the United States does not "know
who puiled the lrtgger."
Secretary of State George Shultz said Monday the
United Stales knows the Identities of the original two

Tax cut
effective
this week

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions--Linda
Smith, Rutland; Michael Smith, Sr.,
Pomeroy; Lutchie Riggs, Pomeroy; Archie Swartz, Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges--Ellen Stewart, John McDaniel, Lind;&gt; Smith.
Sunday Admisslons--Ersel Blevins, LangsvUle; ·Gladwin Werner,

~.

ffiLUMBUS (UPI) - Some
Ohioans may see a reduction, In
, paychecks issued late tl)ls week, of
10 percent in the ·amount withheld
for the stale Income tax. And the tax
'cut won't be far behind for others.

ll,~werejoblesslnMay.

'

InGaWa,a2.3Pft'Cellfdl'cllneWa$
reported, as that county's rate fell
from 10.9to8.6percent. 1
•
In Athen$ County, where the
lowest unemployment rate in the
region was reported, OBES figures
·showadecllneof1.3percent-from
8.8 to 7.5 percent between April and
·
May.
Lawrence County reports a full
three percent deCline, as theratefell
from 12.3 to 9.3 percent.
The jobless rate in an other
southeastern Ohio counties also
declined. They 'r emain, . however,
·above 10 percent. Those rates are:
Jackson, 10.2 percent; and, Vinton,
12.1 percent.
'
Unemployment througbout most
ot southeastern Ohio remained
above l;Jith state and national
averages during May.
Nationally, the jobless rate feU a
modest one-tenth of one percent
between April and May - ·f rom 7.1 to
7.0 percent.
Statewide, the unemployment
rate lell1.4percent during the period
-from 8.9 to 7.5 percent.

INKS BUDGET BILL -Govemor Rlcltan!Celeste
and members olthe Conference Commlltee on the

smiles at a press conference In Columbus Monday,
where Celeste signed into law the new budget lor

Budget, Rep. Tom Johnson, &amp;-New C&gt;oncord (Jell),
and Sen. Stanley Aronolf. &amp;-Cincinnati (light), are all

1986-87. UPI

29. fonner hostages. enroute
home from _West Gertnany
FRANKFURT. West Germany
(UPI) ·- Twenty· nine of the freed
American hostages, sornecl\ltching
flowers and small American flags,
left West Germany with their loved ·
ones today and Oew to the United
States and a presidential welcome.
A red and white TWA L-1011
aircraft, carrying 29 of the 39
hostages, departed tiom the U.S.
Rhein-Main Air Base at 1:24 p.m.
(7:24a.m. EDT) . It was expected to
arrtveat AndrewsAirForceBaseat
3p.m.EDT.
Ten o! the 39, hel&lt;l as hostages for
17 days In Lebanon after two ShUte
Moslem gunmen hlj acked TWA
Fllght 847 from Athens June 14,
chose either tocontlnuethelrtravels
In Europe or to return to the United
States separately. The hosta,ges

were released Sunday.
The departing hostages, some
carrying TWA travel bags and
clu tchlng flowers and·small American fl,ags, received a rouslngsendoff
from a crowd of about 400 people at
the airport.
"Thank you very much," Allyn
Conwell of Houston, a spokesman
for thegroupdurlng the crisis, called
to the crowd as he boarded the plane
amid cheers and applause.
State Department terrorism speclallst Robert Oakley, who was
accompanying the group, told
reporters about 40 family members
were on the flight but'TW A declined
to say el&lt;actly who they were.
The White House said President
Reagan would greet the main group
of.returnlng hostages at Andrews. ·

Meigs SWC.D among tops .i n Ohio

Pom~roy.

Sunday Discharges--Gertrude
Pellegrino, Maudle Wood.

,·

Spokesman Larry Speakes saJd
Reagan was planning "a very
simple greeting ceremony" and
that he wanted "as Utile disruption
In tlleir (hostages) llves as
possible."
·
The departing hostages were
bused to Rhein-Main starting at
noon from Wiesbaden • U.S. Air
Force hosp,ital, where they received
physical checkups, stress counselling and debriefing.
The siJE&gt;ctators cheered and
clapped when the hostilges, walking
In tight groups, headr!d for their
plane m·three Mercedes Air Force
buSes. They shook hands with U.S.
Consul General William Bodde and
Rhein-Main commander Col. Ron·
nie C. Peoples and waved as they
cllrnbed Into the aircraft .

will

v-me.

Of IM 24,150,000tlckeiA produced for thle
lhtlt! .,. 9,Q25,B2A e~ to
win,. Including 19 priZe&amp; rJ &amp;75JII~1 1·4.490 Prb:.. 01 a&amp;O, 31,225 priHI Dll25,
"83,000 prlznof$5, 2,2&amp;4,690 PflZ"Of ~and 1.207,500 """ Ucktt" Wlnntrt.
Wlnnen: of $75,000 ~- mu111ubmh ~lmllof valld.ll:lon and pey!M!II: • .ny
Ohio LOftltfy Regional Otriet,fx:at.t In Canlon, Clnclnn•l, ~. ~ ·
Dty1on, Marietta and Toledo. All othtr win,.,.,. can coiled tl'ltlr pnz.ITom any
lklen~ Ohio loti~ Agetll

•

Gov. Richard F. Celeste put the
official seal of approval on the tax
reduction Monday, as contained ln
the $19.9 billion state budget for
1!186-87.
Although-the tax cut w1ll average
out to only 5 percent In 19111,
withholding wlll be lr1mmed by 10
percent for the last sll&lt; months of the
year, starting this week at flnns
with a payroll due.
Stephen J. Nolan, deputy state tax
commissioner, said revised income
tax withholding tables were being
mailed out to about 250,(XX) employers of Ohioans located throughout
the country.
Nolan said the revised tables
would all be In the man by tonight .
·'Some employers are already
changing their withholding formu las- those that are on computers,"
said Nolan .
The Income tax cut totals 15
percent over two years, but the
second 5 percent wlll&gt;not come until
Jan. 1, 1987.
A third cut of 5 percent ' would
begin July t 191fi, In the unlikely
event Ohio's unemployment rate
drops below7percent. Celeste said lt
is too early to speculate on whether
that cut will take place.
The budget, adopted along bipar·
tlsan lines ln tile Ohio General
Assembly late last Friday, provides
for aii ' 18 percent Increase In
spending. I !.total~ $.ll.2 bUlion when
federal and special funds are added.

In signing the hngespendlngblll at
aceremonylnhlsCablnetroom, the
governor vetoed 10 Items, mainly
language he deemed either duplicative or unworkable under the
funding levels.
Celeste was particularly pleased
A new traffic light at the Prospect Hlll Rd. and Lincoln Hill at
that
his research and development
Intersection of Routes 33 and 124 at Riverview Drive. Ran may also be
and special projects for
Initiatives,
Kerr's Run and new flashers at tile IDstaUed at a few other locations
' academic excellence had been
Intersection of Routes 7 and 33 Anderson said. Once the USed rail is
Meigs and 'Hardin c;ounties Soil sixth grade essay contest. A Theiss, Racine, district board' restored.
should be Installed within a week installed, lt will need to be painted.
and Water Conservation Districts conservatlon fllrn and preentatlonls chairman, will represent the Meigs
tie also praised lawmakers for ,
depending on weather conditions Anderson says Ben-Tom w111 begin
are Ohio's top winners ln the 38th given at each participating elemen- SWCD on the grand prize tour. giVing him a budget on time:, and
reported John Anderson, president Installing the rail as soon as possible.
annual · Goodyear Conservation tary schooL Also soU Information ls . Repre8entatlves of o~her winnlng based on "realistic, rea5onable
of Pomeroy Village Council, at
presented to vocational agriculture dlstrlcls throughout the United revenue estimates."
Council disCussed repalrlng two Awards Program.
Monday night's meeting.
The winners were chosen by a students and a county soU jUdging States Will join the local pair.
Anderson said installation of the · flredepartment trucks, but made no
The Hrst place and runner-up
The governor was flanked at the
committee composed of James· L. contest fQr FFA members ls held.
lights is now underway by tile final decision on the matter.
districts
wlil receive plaques In
The
Information
J)rogram
carried
signing
ceremony by Sen. Stanley J.
Rush,
program
speclallst
for
area
According
to
Anderson,
who
was
In
Trafway Co .. Lancaster. Money for
presentallons at a meeting of the
'out
is
through
the
no-lUI
field
days,
Aronoff,
R·Clnclnnat1. and Reji.
six;
Frank
MlDs
III,
Gallla
SWCD
the new Ughts ls coming from tile contact with Fire Chief Cbarlle
Ohio Farm Federation of Soil and
farm
tours,
radio
programs
and
Thoi'Tll!s
W.
Johnson. R-New Conrepresenting
the
Ohio
Supervisor,
village's state highway fund. Cost Legar, repairs needEd by tile
Water
ConservaUon
Districts
on
newsletters.
"
cord,
both
of
whom served on the
for the traffic light up(latlng
he/ ~nt's pumper truck No. 1 Federation of SoU imd Water
ll
at
Cincinnati.
Also
plaques
July
programs
In
which
the
Other
conference
committee
which put
approximately $12,(XX).
would cost about $8,&lt;XXJ.$9,(XX) and ,Conservation Districts; Roger
w1ll
be
presented
to
the
outstanding
Meigs
SWCD
participates
and
·
together
the
final
version
of the
M~yor Richard Seyler report¢ would el&lt;tend the life of the 'lbck Hansen, dputy state conservationcooperators
with
all
competing
sponsors
which
helped
win
the
during
the
last
two
weeks.
budget
Ist, Soil Conservation Service; Gary
that' village council Is considering abautlOyears. Thecosttoreplacea
Aronoff took the opportunity to
Buehl, memberoftlleSoilConserva- award Include a first year fish sale, districts.
- making repairs to a water line from . water still'age tank on the depart·
At a regular meetlng of the Meigs ensure that Republlcans, who
tree
packet
sales,
MelgsSoll
Survey,
Uon
Commlssion.
Judging
was
on
, Sycamore St. to the Meigs Inn on
ment's truck No. 3 would be $3,750
District - a picnic at the home of · wanted a 30 percent We cut over
Second Street. · The mayor said
Anderson said. Council plans to the basis of resource conservation membership ln. tile Buckeye Hills
Alan
and Kay Holter - cooperator
Resource Conservation and ~­
three years, received credll for the
mala! a decision on tberepalrsat the accomplishments.
cost estimates should beobtalnedby
approved
for
Joe
agreements
were
leopment
Project
and
the
Rural
reduction.
Buter and Richard Districts were
mid-week.
next meeting.
.
Proffltt, Lebanon Towhship; Frank · But Sen. Richard C. Pfeiffer Jr.,
In addition to repairs on the water '
The inayor's report ~ $45t0.50 for runners-up .ln tile competition Abandoned Mine Program
D. Morgan, Columbia Township;
Two
representatives
for
each
of
0-Coiumbus, ' made certain the
line,. the mayor proposes to repave the nnonth o1 June was accepted by sponsored by theGoodyearT!reaild
Brian
Windon,
Chester
Vlrgll
and
place
districts
will
receive
the
first
Democrats, who boosted the income
Rubber Co., In cooperation with the
· SecondSt.andralsethecatchbaslnS
councll.
Township,
and
James
and
Earl
vacation
trlps
·in
expense-paid
tax by 40 j;lercmt ln !.!11[!, got their
along the street. ·
Present tor the meeting ln National Assoclatton of ConservaAdams,
Letart
Township.
to
the
Wigwam
Resort
Decemller
share
of the credit for tlle cut.
'
'
The vUlage ls contracting with the
addition to Seyler and Anderson tion Dlstrlcls.
Area
6
summer
meeting
was
The
and
Goodyear
Farms,
Litchfield
One of . the governor's vetoes
The Meigs Olstrlct excelled In lts
Ben·Tom Corp. to lltstaU approxi·
were Council memberS Betty Bar·
announced for July 3 at Ohio
Park,Artz.
denied
a $3.25 fee Increase paid by
education
and
lnfonnation
promately 700 feet of used guard rail
onlck, Henry Werry, Blll Young,
Unlversity
Inn,
Athens,
and
·!hi!
Reedsvllle,
Warren
Pickens,
the
state
to licensed pharmacists
grams.
EducatiOnal
programs
car·
·
Larry Wehrllng and Jane Walton,_
along some areas tn ' the v1llage.
summer supervisors school for July
chose
by
Meigs
SWCD,
as
its
providing
services for Medicaid
rlec1
out
Within
the
schools
are
the
According to Anderson, rail w111 be
village clerk·tl'ea.\UJ'ef'· Council28-29-30 at the Maniot In Cincinnati. P3rtlcipants.
oolstandlng
fanner,
,and
Tom
·
fourth
grade
poster
contest
and
the
man Bruce Reed
absent. '
Installed on sections of Martin St..

was

•
f

hijackers of TWA Fllght 847 and would iake legal or
"other" steps to bring them to justice.
Sfmltz made the statement In an Interview on the
McNeULehrer NewsHour, but deClined to name the
two hijackers or describe all steps that would be taken
to bring them to justice,
The airport sanctions were described as "a clear
signal" that the White House ls determined to combat
air piracy and "a first step" towarddenylng terrorists
what Secretary of State George Shultz called "a safe
haven'' In the Middle East
The senior offlclal said MEl" has twice weekly
passenger service to New York. TWA and Pan
American World Airways have authority for cargo
flights but are not making the flights . Also with
authority to fly to Beirut are Air France, the Belgian
airline Sabena and Cyprus Alr.

· Jobless rates consistently cl1mbed
throoghout the region during the
first quarter of the year.
· . Between AprU and May, accord·
lngtotheOBES,Meigs'Joblessrate
fell a full one and eight-tenths from 10.8 to 9 percent.
,
According to the OBES, 1,()13 of .
'Meigs' estimated work force of

.Work ~ill begin
on tra(fic lights

Racine Vlllage Council wlll meet
at 7 this evening at Racine Village
Hall.

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

'

'

WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Reagan goes to
welcome the hostages from DI-lated TWA flight 8ol7,
today, having made good on his vow to crack down on
the airport In Beirut, Lebanon, and destroy it as a safe
haven for terrorists.
In retaliation for the 17-day hostage ordeal, Reagan ·
took steps to close down the Beirut airport and to
encourage other nations to join In the crackdown by
barring their airlines from flying to Lebanon.
The moves were aimed at maklnggoodonhisvowto
•'fight back" against terrorisr:n after the release of 39
American hostages held byShiiteMoslemslnLebanon ,
since the hijacking of the Trans World Airlines Boeing
747 June14.
Before going to Andrews Air Force Base In the
afternoon to welcome the hostages who come to
Washington, Reagan arran~ed to brief a group of
business leaders on tax refonn . .·

Percentage

Meigs County Pomona Grange
will meet 8 p.m. Friday at the Rock
Springs Grange · Hall. Racine ..
Grange wUI host. All members are
urged to attend.

85.

'

..

Reagan begin~ .retaliatory measures

Area jobless
tate in May

Meets Friday

tered showers and thunderstonns
and highs between fll and &amp;'i. Mostly
cloudy tonight, with scaltered
showers and thunderstorms and a
· lownear60. ParUycloudyTuesday,
with a chance of showers and highs
·
. nearfll.
The probabUlty of precipitation Is
. 50 percen!today and tonlSht and 30
percent Tuesday.
Extended Forecast
; Wednesda,y lhroolh Friday
Fair Wedne&amp;diQ' and 'lbursday,
with a chance · ol l!lbowe,rs and
lhunder!ltonns on Friday. JDglls
wiD range !rom 75 to 85 each day,
with overnight lows between 115 and'

FAMILY RESTAU

at y

••

·Pom-eroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 2. 198~

·The unemployment rate throughout much of southeastern Ohio including Meigs County- fell below
10 percent In May, according to tile
Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services.
In addition to Meigs, otller
counties reporting joblessness
below double digits were Athens,
,.~ gajlla ap4 •Lawrence. U~·
,.,., ment hiiVI'rOOJust above-lOpetl'enl
in Jackson and Vinton counties.
May'1ll0werflguresrepresenttlle
secondconsecuUvemonthiydeellne
reported In the area during 19&amp;'i.

"No jackpot winn-:r Weather forecast
.
in Ohio Lotto
Mostly cloudy today, with scat·
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Ohio
Lottery Conunlsslon officials will
determine today how 'llany tickets
sold lor Saturday night's Ohio Lotto
drawing had four or five of the
numbers that were drawn.
Lottery ·officials found no tickets
among the $3.732,122 sold for
Saturday night's drawing that had·
all six of the numbers. That means
the jackpot for Weddesday nlght's
drawing w1l! beat least $3.3mlllioo.
T!)e numbers drawn were 2, 5, 13,
17,30 and 35.
Saturday's winning Ohio Lottery
nuinber:
Dally Number, 029.

$3.25

•

I

May jobless rate
dec,ines in Meigs;
'falls below 10%

Meigs County happenings ...
Cheshire man charged
in recent theft case

.

Served with Whipped potatoes, chicken
gravy, ~ole slaw, hot roll. butter &amp; coffee.
Sorry, no substitutes ucept' beverage-with
a~ditional price.

PRIZES - Mlck Ash, owner of the Main.st. Markel In Pomeroy,
presents Cabbage Patch doUs to Marge FeUy, left, and Ruth Ebersbach.
The dolls were awarded as aUendance prires for the recent open house
staged by the market.
.

Archie C. Swartz, 76, well-knQWn
Pomeroy resident, 156 Mulberry
Ave., died Sunday evening at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
A retired bus drtver, Mr. Swartz
was born April 19, 1909 In Wetzel
County, W. Va., a son of Ellzabetht
ConleyRoblnsonofEikton,Md.,and
the late Charles Swart2.
He was a member of the
Methodist Church. A 32Jld degree
Mason, he was a memhefof Aladdin
Te(Dple, the York Cross of Honor,
Ohio Valley Commandery, chapter
council and was past master of the
blue lodge.
Survlvlng In addition io his
mother are his wife, Genevieve
Sisson Swartz, Pomeroy, and a
·stster, VIrginia Walsh, Elkton, Md.
He was preceded ln death by his
father and a sister, Naomi Ross:
There will he no services and no
calling hours. The Ewing Funeral
Homelslnchargeofarrangements.
In lieu of flowers, friends may
•

e
Vot.36, No.66
Copyrighted 1986

Plan swimming lessons

Archie C. Swartz

iiiJJt-lli•Pap I

!"'' ~

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