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                  <text>OUR GENERIC DRUGS

Fun with foods •••Page 6

Weather

Can Save You Money

By die Bend ......... Pqes 5, 8

Cla!isllleds ........ Pages 8, 7, 8
Comics-TV .............. Page 9
Deaths .......... ......... Page 10
Editorials ................ Page 2
Sports ................. Pages 3, 4

Generic drugs can generally be purchased from the manufacturer at a lower cost than
brand names . Because they cost us less, they cost you less too . Ask you~ ~actor a~out
generics. He is in the position to make the correct evaluation when prescnb1ng the nght
drug for your particular need. Ask our Pharmacist about the price difference.

Partly cloudy tonlglt. Low
Wlnd!lllghl and southerly.
Wednesday, btcreaslng cloudiness with a ~ chaiJ&lt;)e of
afternoon dnmderslonns. More
humid. High near 90. Chance of
rain 10 percent tonlglt and :1!
percent Wedn&lt;&gt;sday.
~'lO.

e

Vol.34, No .42

summer programs.•Page 5
Legion team loses 4 tilts ...Page 3

•

•

enttne

at

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 12, 1984

Copy,;ghted t984

Middleport

counci~

l Se&lt;lions , 10 Pages

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

will proceed with projects

i

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel staff Writer
Middleport Mayor F red HoHman was authorized to
proceed wtth the development of two major drainage
problems in Middleport - a t an estimated cost of
approximately $.}),001- when vWage council met in
regular session Monday night.
Council discussed the problems in the area of
Broadway and Ash streets, and on Railroad Street.
Not only Is there a drainage problem on Railroad
Street, but it Is so narrow that two cars m eeting on the
street cannot pass. Hoffman reported. He outlined
plans for the improvemen ts in both locations, pointing
out that on Railroad Street, the street's base would be
made five feet wtder. The Improvement would take
care not only of the drainage problem but also the
narrowness of the street.
Hoffman indicated that the Improvem ents might be
possible through use of existing grant monies. Council
authorized him to to proceed with the work. The
mayor wtll give progress reports to council on the
project.
Agreement Made
The four members of council attending last night's
meeting - William Walte rs, Allen Lee King, Jack
Sa tterfield and Bob Gilmore -also agreed to enter
into an agreement with F1oyd G. Browne &amp;
Associates, Marion, for the design of a sun deck on the
southside of the Middleport pool.

This was done at the request of the recreation

commission which, a lthough it has no funds for such a
project, Is looking for a starting point to carry out the
sun deck addition . Cost of the work by Browne will be

:rol.
HoHman announced the appointment of Council men Carl Horky and Dewey Horton to the tax
abatement board which is being established in the
community. Council a ppointed two additional
members to the board, Louis Sa uer and Willis
Anthony.
Opal Kauff, who is employed in the vWage office,
was named housing officer since she wtll be involved
in the record keeping for people utilizing the tax
abatement program being offered by the vUJage.
Bill Discussed

Accord ing to a letter received by HoHman, Norman
Muil)hy, head of real estate for the Chesapeake &amp; ·
Ohio Railroad, "'i ll be visiting Middleport within the
next XI to .lJ days to discuss a bill for $6,400 s ubmitted
to the railroad by the village for services in mo..,;ng
railroad property.
At the time of Muil)hy's visit, a discussion is
expected to be held on the disposition of the
abandoned depot on Front Street. The railroad wa s
given ro days to pay the mowing bill in the origina l
communication to the railroad from Hoffman .
Council agreed to request no action on the transfer
of D-1 and D-2 permits from Mary Ann 's Lunchroom

to the Middleport Lunchroom, a nd voted to abandon a
15-foot ali&lt;&gt;y between Paimer and Main streets wtth
the permission of the property owners. Mr. and Mrs.
Frf'd Hoffman and Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Dailey.
Ordinances Studied
Hoffman distributed a number of ordinances from
other Ohio towns and cities dealing with dog problems
to counc il members for study so council can develop
an approach for the village to adopt in handling
similar problems there.
It was reported tha t signs noting the location of the
free parking Jot In the town have been ordered and
that another group of street signs have a rrived and
will be placed in the community.
Council adopted which is termed a t the North
Fourth Street water line loop a t a HUD project this
year .
An earlier applica !Jon through EDA for the
improvement was turned down two or thrf'f' years
ago. The plan now will be to include the project as a
I-IUD water improvement project for th&lt;&gt; year . The
new line wou ld run from North Fourth to the upper
part of town and would cost about $150,o:xJ. Council
aut hori?.ed Browne &amp; Associates to prepare bids for
the project.
Council discussed problems with the air conditionin g on the second floor of villag&lt;&gt; hall and agreed to
hi re Foreman &amp; Abbott to install a high-effi ciency unit
which will help wtth the hea ting and cooling of the

second floor and will saw the village m the amount of
gas and electricity consumed.
Cost will be about $2,t100. It was also agrl"f'd to
proceed with additiona l insulation overhead in viilage
hall .
Council members were asked to think about the
problem of burning in the community . Burning is
permit ted in a "safe receptacle ... Halfman said but
each sprmg and summer there are many complaint s
received from rt&gt;sidents about burning in the
community. Counci l mem bers will make suggestions
later on handling the probl em.
Gilmore reported tha t the marina area is bemg
wtdely used and Hoffman indica ted tha t Athens
architect David ReiSPr is working on des igning
improvement s for that anea .
King suggested that benches over iookmg the levee
area be repaired or replaced Upon Satterfield 's
recommendation, it was voted to install a new street
light at the rear of the Ford Motor Co
Sa tteriield a lso submitted a llst of streets and allevs
needing resurfacing and this list will tlf' studied by
council prior to the annual resurfacing programs.
Hofjman sa id a representative from an Athens film
will visit Middleport this week to discuss repair to
brick streets in the town Council approvro the
mayor 's May report showing receiptsof$8.722 in fi nes
and fees.

Five year mining permit
approved for Southern Coal

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Kills Flies. Mosquitoes and

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NANCARROW'S PHARMACY
NELSON'S DRUG STORE

A five-year mining permit for
Southern Ohio Coa l Co. was approved Monday by the reclamation
division of the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources.
"They meet all requirements of
the taw, " said reclamadon director
Larry Mamone shortly afters ignlng
the permit.
Southern Ohio Coal filed its permit
applica lion in 1982, but due to a
change in crlterla, the company, a
fuel supply division of American
Electric Power Service Coil)., had
to refile the application a year later.
During that time. ODNR granted
the !lrm an temporary permit to
continue work at the Meigs Mines
complex near Wilkesville.
The application was reviewed and

testimony was heard for and aga ins t
at a public hearing in March.
Citizens Organized Against Longwalling (COAL), the private property owners in Meigs and Vinton
counties opposing the iongwall
met hod of mining, offered testimony to ODNRabout the environmenta l hazards posed by longwalling.
At the time, reclamation officer
Bob Rothwell of ODNR's Athens
office said that all informa tion in the
application was correct, and after a
60-day review, it would be for warded to Mamone for approval.
Rothwell said that due to a clerica l
error, a notic&lt;' was not made
availa ble to Leading Creek Conservancy District. and the approva l

Spratley denies
rig~11~ lltilit)T p()ll
By ROBERT E. MD l ,ER
Assoclaled Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - State
Consumers' Counsel William A.
Spratley wW present the results of a
recent consumer poll to lawmakers
despite charges In high places that it
was rigged to produce his desired
results.
Spratley was asked Monday
about the accusa lion by House
Speaker Vern Riffe Jr .. D-New
Boston, who not only questioned the
propriety of the poll but said the
results were used "for a media show
in which Bill Spratley was the sta r."
Riffe referred in a prepared
statement to the poll, conducted for
Spratley in early May by the
University of Cincinnati, in which 56
percent of 810 res pondents said
public utilities - and not their
customers- should pay thecostsof
new construction.
The poll also showed that twothirds of those responding said they
oppose pollcies that can permit
utilities to charge customers for
plants partially built a nd then
abandoned.

Riffe said the questions asked in
the poll, results of which Spratley
announced at a nE&gt;Ws conference
late last week . were misleading a nd
"obviously designed to produce the
results Mr. Spratley wanted. "
Spratley is lobbying to streng1hen
legislation, passed by theSenateand
now pending in the House Rules
Committee - headed by Riffe which would restrict elect rical a nd
other utilities from passing a long to
customers the costs of power plants
that aren't yet finished.
The speaker was disturbed by
Spratley's announced intention of
passing copies of the poll result s to
House members, who are expected
to vote on the bill June 26. Riffe sa id
the Legislature has worked hard 10
gel a compromise on so-ca lled
construc tion work in progress
ICWIP) language.
Riffe said CWIP is highly compli ca ted and has gone through a
legislative process that included
many experts . He accused Spratley
of seeking "to subvert that process
with a misleading poll beca use he
can'! have his way."

process took longer because the
western Mei gs County water system had to be notified .
"We recommended it for approval." Rothwell said. " I don't expect
any holdup."
COAL President Betty Wells said
her group would continue to present
their case against Iongwalling.·
Since late 1982, whm the group was
created . COAL has been opposed to
the method because it reported ly
causes property damage and loss of
local water supplies .
Southern Ohio Coal has been
negotiating privately with damaged
property owners for individua l
sett lement s.
The longwall procedurp was
introduced a t Meigs Mines in
December 1978. Th&lt;' lonb&gt;wail machine mines out a panel of roa I a nd
a llows the roof to fa ll aft e r llw coa l
has been removed .
It has been linked to subs ide ncethe settling of the earth after the roof
coilapSPs.
Mrs. Wells said the group will
present it s case through informal
conferences and hearings with the
board of review of the reclamatJon
division.
"W&lt;''ll attempt to bring it to the
people again, to show them what' s
happening to the environment .'· she
said .
A positive step seen in the area of
enforcement, Mrs. Wells explained.
is that ODNR req uireS an inspec tor
to be on the scene when a crack
caused by subsidence i' filled .
Mrs. Wells said COAL is taikingto
AEP officials about the proble m and
the group is pushing for an
environmental impact study a nd
post-mining data .

NEW OFF1CERs - Edison Hollstetter, center.
fanner president of the Pomeroy National Bank, now
the Pomeroy Office of Bank One, i\thens, N.A., for
which he serves as COJL,ultant congratulates two

Council agreed to correct the
problems.
A representative of J&amp;L Sanitation met wtth council In regard to
servicing customers in the upper
end of Syracuse. The matter was
referred to the sa nit a tion
committee.
Council went on record in support
of the June 22 appearance of the
flatboat, Adventure Galley II.
Council hired Bob Smith as
supervisor of GR workers and
announcro that pool hours are from
noon until 6 p.m. daily and on
Thursday from noon until 9 p.m.

~p~ntativf' .

Promote Nease to branch manager
B.T. Grover Jr .. prps idenl of Bank
One. Athen s. 1\.A .. announces the
promotion of William NeaSP to
branch ma nagPr of the Pomeroy
Office .
Nease has been with the bank for
eight yea rs holding previous positions as branc h manager at Tuppers
Pla ins and as a loan officPr.
A graduate of Pomeroy High
School. Pa rkersbu rg Commurtity
Collcgl' , the Ohio School of Banking
at Ohio University and the School of
Conswner a·edit a t Kent State
University, Nease m ost recently
became a certified lender for the
Smail Business Administration. His
Inte res ts include tennis and farm ing . He and his wife , Donna , have

two c hildren. Jill a nd Travis. a nd
l'f'Sidc in the !\ease Settlement area
near Racine.
Grover also announced that .Joan
Wolfl' will be returning to the
Pomerov Office of 13ank One a s
customer service repl'E'senta tlve
She will also supervise the day -today act ivities of the Pomeroy
transactions. Mrs. Wolfe has been
with the bank for 23 years.
Prior to her new position. Mrs.
Wolfe was an assistant cashier a nd
ha s had experil'nce with customer
serv ices and thP controilers office.
She is a graduate of Rutland HJgh
School, the Ohio School of Banking
a t Ohio University and holds a
certificate from the American

Institute of Banking.
Mrs. Wolfe is a memb&lt;.'r of Racine
Chapter 1J4. Order of Eastern Star.
and is a mPmber of thP Women's
Auxiliary of Vetera ns Mf'morial
Hospit al. She and her husband . .lohn
T. Wolfe. ii vp a t R&lt;JcinP and hav&lt;:&gt;
two daughtcrs. Regina G ratc and
Michaela Hobac k.
Bot h Ncase and Mrs. Wolfe are
nat ive Meigs Counlians.
Neasr w iU tx:&gt; l.naugua r ating a n(•w

Bank On(' simple int erest program
for home mortgag&lt;'S, home impruvemcnts, mobile homcs and all

loans over 60 mont hs . Mrs. Wolfe
will be int roducing a new Bank One
di scount brokerage sPrY icP a 1 les.o;;
than t radll ional brokC'ragf' f('('s

Wright won't criticize November foe
"I don't have to be critical o!Ohio
Supreme Court Justice J am es P.
Ceiebrcczc." said Celebreeze's opponent in the November election.
Craig Wright, the Republican
nominee for the position, vi sited

Pomeroy Mond ay. Wright earlier
addressed the Athens Rotary Club
a nd later was in Pomeroy tospt&gt;ak to
local lawyi'rs.
Wright is currently Franklin
Coun ty Common Pleas Judge. and

-

Meters council topic
The possibility of placing water
meters at bus iness locations was
discussed at a recent meeting of
Syracuse Village Council .
Meeting with council in regard to
meters were members of the Board
of Public Affairs.
They discussed the possibility of
adding so many meters each year.
No action was taken , however.
Meeting wtth council were Ross
Nonis, Bob Smith and Millard
VanMcter in regard to drainage
problems. Also dlscusseQ was a
drainage problem in Rustle HWs
and at Syracuse Elementary.

employes on their promotions. Bill Nease has been
ruuned branch manager ol the Pomeroy Offiet' and
,Joan Wolfe has been nam&lt;'d &lt;•u;;Wmer M'rvice

DISCUSS UPCOMING ELECI'ION -

Fred Crow, left, local

attorney, Craig Wright center and Probate Jlldge Robert E. Buck
d1scuss upoornlng ele&lt;:tlon of Ohio Supreme Court Justices.

has been a judgP in that county s ince'

race .

1971.

Wrigh t &lt;-.a 1d hf' agn:'C'~ "in
ptinci plf'" w ith thr·judicial commit .
tf'f' set up to rf'\"if'\\.' la wvrrs'
conduct. HP mmmPntrd. h o\\·C'\"f'r.
hP did not know how it wa s working.
Wright sa irl hf'wanh k'gis lators to
stay oul of m aking lrnvs. such ~1s
mand a to~· S(~ nt encin g in thi rd-

Wright intends to visit 75 of the AA
counties in his campaign. He also
plan s to spend betwe&lt;:'n :s:nl.001 and
$400.001 in media promotions in
northeastern Ohio.
The campaign will emphasize
Wright's record as a judge a nd
practicing attorney in Columbus .
" I feel I hav&lt;' the qualifica tions ... a nd the experiencP." Wright
sa id .
"Celebreeze has been wid!'iy
crit icized in many newspapers."
Wright said . He added. howev&lt;'r. he
does not intend to be "d irectly
critical of m y opponent ."
Wright called the campaign a
·'r are sltua tlon where you haw a Jot
of things you can ta lk about in a
judicial campaign ."
The candida ted remarked, "Re·
cently, many lawyers have been
concerned over bad reia dons between lawyers and judges. I think
the relationship can be improved or
I would not have gotten into the

&lt;k'RJW and fouJ1 h·cl&lt;'RJ'N' fPl nni"s

"I haV&lt;' a lwavs hPld a hardlin&lt;' in
seni Pnring." Wright said . Bu t hP
add&lt;'d as a judgP h&lt;' wanted to
maintain cont rol of sentencing in
IC'Sscr degr!'C fdoni&lt;'S .
If elected. Wright "ill hear only
a ppeals from lower coun s ra ther
tha n the mixtun' h&lt;' now hears in
common pleas.
Franklin Count )· Common PIC'Ii's
Court hears 15 1o 20 percent appca1s
cases from thP stale governm&lt;:'nt
and li s agomriPs. Wright sa id with
this expcriene&lt;' hP did not feel it
would be hard to switch to an
a U-appeals caS&lt;' load on the Supreme Cout1.

�The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Commenta1!
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF THE \IEIGs-MJISUN AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAI)

BOB HOEFUfH

I) ALE

.(

, Tuesday, J.,.,. 12, 1984

The Keystone Kops ______Ja_m_es_J_.K_i....;...Lpa_t_ric_k

The Daily Sentinel

Assi!oitant Puhlisher/ ControiiN

Gt·ruoral ManaRer

R~HGEB. JR.

~· ew!'i~~

WASHINGTON - One learns
early in the pundit business to

beware of superlatives. Prudence
therefore dictates that a rhl'torical
question must be posed at the outset
of these observations: I s the report
of the House subcommittee on the
Ca rtPr briefing papers thf' most
stupid report pvcr to C'mC'rgr on
Capitol HiW~
Thf&gt; fi eld of nominations for that
acculadP is so lar~e that "amo n,g
the most stupid"" sccms " just
appra isa l. ThP two-volumr rrport
W('ighs ~ JX.mnds, ..tou nCPs: it ru ns to

It cost $500,000 to
produce; and no person In his righ t
mind will ever read it all.
The subcommittee, headl'd by
Don Albosta of Michigan. set out to
solve a m ystery : Who Ieakffi.
pilfered. stole. five-fingered or
otherwise purloined alxlut 750
pages of material that had been
prepared to assist J im my Carter in
his debate with Ronald Reagan In
October 1900? Who delivered this
stuff lo the enemy camp 7 This was
thP subcommlttee"s $500.000
conclusion:

2.454 pages;

"It is difficult to reach definitive
conclusions as to how the Carter
debate briefing materials entered
the Reagan-Bush campaign."'
There were reasons lor this
disappointing result . For one thing,
the subcommittee's Investigators
could not determine how much of
what had gone where. There was a
Big Foreign Polley Book of 250
pages. a Little Foreign Policy Book
of 10 pages. a Domestic Papers
Book of 170 pages, and some
"Mondale Papers·· that ran to 274
pages The investigators inter·

.1\ MEJ\o1BER of Tht• :\ssoda.tf'd Press, Inland Uaily t"n•ss Association and thP American N(&gt;wspap&lt;'r Publisher .1\ssodatlon.
I.ETTERS Of~ OPI~IOS art' w+&gt;li'ornt'd. Tht·~· ..;hGold ht&gt; h!Mi chan 300 words
too~. Alll etler!l JU t&gt; suhjtod to ' ·ditinx a11d mu!il hi;!Oo l,ll;ru:'d with n arru• , ad drf"!'&gt;"i and
tl•lt•phone numht:r . So umdgn1od IPitt'r., will ht· puhll~hrd l.t•ttl•n ..,hould ht&gt; In
II:;Ood l ll."ili', !lddrt.'SSing ISSUI'S, DO( pt'fSORillltit'OO.

Some problems do
not have solutions
Saying so goes counter to the American grain. but "'m e problems j ust
don" ! havl' solutions that will satisfy most people. One of those problemsand two proposed solutions - arc about to come before a reluctant House of
Rf&gt;present atives.
The problem is illl'gal immigrat ion. or, specifically, the nood of
Mexicans and othN people from Latin America who sneak across the
country's 2,&lt;XXJ.mile &gt;;Outhern border in search of work .
Almost everyone agrel's that somet hing ought to be done alxlut that. A
country that can"t cont rol its borders lacks sovereignty . A nd il is simply
unfair 10 force some foreigners who seek a place for themselves in
America to wait years while other foreigners achil'Ve the same thing by a
nearly painless. almost r iskless rush across the Rio Grande.

How many come?
The Immigration and Na tural iza tion Service makes about a million
seizures a year near the border. and assumes that for every on&lt;' caught .
tliro' g&lt;'l by undPtccted.

How many are here , more or less permanently?
INS says 6 million . T he 1900 census counted 2 million. and guessed there
weiT' a not her 2 million. No one knows.
In addition to those who have come nmth from Central and South
America, INS is well aware tha t there are many thousands of As ians.
Africans and Middle Easterners living and working in America without
legal starus.
The bill that"s supposed to com e up for debate and a vote in the House this
week offers a carrot ·and-stick approach. II offers legitimacy to millions of
people.
These are illl'gal aliens who have livffi and made homes. raised families
and held jobs in America while leading an underground existence. in
danger of exposure and deportation at any moment- and r eluctant to do
bUsiness with the government at any level, in the schools, the police station
or the courts. and therefore subj ect to exploitation.
Legalization is the carrot. Hispanic groups welcome il. Anyone who has
livl'd in the United States since 1982. under the House vers ion of the bill.
could apply for legalization and. ultimately. for citizenship.
The stick is a provision making il ill&lt;'gallor most employers knov.ingly to
hire illegal immigrants. There is no penalty now.
Three presidential commissions have studil'd the problem over seven
year s and concluded that penalizing employers for hiri ng illegal workers is
PSsenlial to closing down the m agnet of employment thai brings aliens
streaming over the border.
Many HL•panlc groups. such as tlle League of Unit ed Latin American
Citizens. oppose such penalties. They say employ~rs will tend to
discriminatE' against anyone with an Hispanic name or appearance.
The Chamber of Commerce oi l he UnitL'&lt;l States al&gt;;O opposes fines for
ertlployNs w ho hirte if legals. ThP chamber says businpssmcn should not be
foreed to become law enforcement agentS.
The AmPrican Civil Liberties Union is opposed It says tllat , while the
pending legislation does no t provide for a universa l work permit or
identilica tion card. thl' pressurr for such a system would in~v it ably rise if
the bill passes. Employers would demand a means of wl'l'd ing illegal
applica nt s from legal applicants. lhl' ACLU believes.
If the opponmt s are strange bedfellows. the supporter s of the bill are
unusual a UiPs, too_ ThP Ru.siness Roundtable. representing big business,
favors t.he bill. So does the AFL CIO. which feels that ill t&gt;gal labor dri v&lt;'s
down wages . And so d()('s Pres ident Reagan . AU thll&gt;e conl l'nders for lhP
Democra tic pres idential nomina !ion oppoS(' i1.

Letter to the editor
Hard to swallow
Yem·round pro football. th~
prolonged presidmlial primaries ,
and thC' f'ver la.stln g wranglin g ovrr
rf'ducing the enormo us federal
deficit b:v both a "do-not hing··

CongTrss and Prcsidf'nl Reagan
arr alik( • in two respPCts: All thrw

arf' ram m£'d down o ur throa ts ~Hid if 's hard to swallow.
While on the subject . C. Churchill
sa id . "'ThP best things carrird to

rxcf'Ss arf' wrong."
Ernes t Thorne
T hurm an

Today in history
Today is Tuesday . .lcne 12. the !64th day of1984 . There are 202days left in
the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On June 12, 1776, the state of Virginia adopted a Bill of Rights- the first
colonial legislature to do so.
On this date:
In 1775. the American sloop "Amity" caprured the British schooner
" M argaretta' " In thl' first naval engagement of lhl' American Revolution.
In !Bll, the Iowa Territory was organll.ed.
In 1917, the Secret Service extended Its protection of the pre•Ident to his
famlly as well.
In 1939, the Baseball Hall of Fame was established in Cooperstown, N.Y.
In 1963, Mississippi clvU rights leader Medgar Ever s was shot to death
near his home.
Ten years ago : Crowds of cheering Egyptians grel'ted President
Richard M. Nixon on the ftrst stop of his tour of the Middle East.
Five years ago: A 26-year-old cyclist, Bryan Allen,
the
man-powered aircraft ""Gossamer Albatross" across the English Channel.
One year ago: Actress Norma Shearer died.
Today's birthdays: Banker Davld Rockefeller Is 69. Vice President
George Bush is 60. Singer Vic Damone is 56. Actor-singer Jim Nabors is 52.
Thought for Today: '"Thou shouldst eat to live; not Uve to eat."- Cicero,
Roman philosopher (106 B.C.43 B.C. I

new

'·

Padres continue surge,·edge
Braves for fourth straight

Puge--2-The Daily Sentinel
Pameroy-Middleptrt, Ohio

viewed 250 persons, lnclucllng both
Democrats and Republicans, but
most of them were afflicted with a
common aliment: They could not
remembe-r.
The subcommittee was able to
identify as "suspects"' two young
women who were secretary-typists
In thl' Carter White House. Some
evidence, described as the "better..
evldenee. '"Indicated"" that Reagan
campaign director Bill Casey wao
fencing the goods. But '"th~manner
in which the domeStlt' poliCY
briefing book was prepared, 0011r
trolled, coplffi and distributed
created a n al m os t unlimlled
number of opportunities and (¥1Ssibilltles for Its unauthorized use."
After Its mountain of labor, the
subcommittee could not bringf.Qrth
even a m ole.
,
According to the title, the r~~PDrt
d e al s with "U nauthorized
Transfers of Non-Public Information ."" This raises a l)lj:fii}W$tlon:
Was any crimes commltti!J(I•. None
of the material was clasllllled as
Top Secret . Secret or evlill as
Confidential. What exa~y " non·
public inlormatlon 7 " Till! s~)lcom·
mlttee's \1ew appears ~!). be that
rna terial prepared speci~IY for
Carter's political campa[fn wa•
··governm ent property." f\eally?
Says who?
Says Lloy d Cutler. wh4l w~s
White House cou nsel to Carter. In
1900 1\i, rendered an opinion th~l
campaign br iefi ng materials were
official govPrnment business

..

Ia

~q~--Piowshares intO
WASHI NGTON - While Iran
and Iraq battle over a parched
piece of deser t. the United States is
making plans to defend the Persian
Gulf. and the Soviet Union is

massing troops near the Iranian

SWOrdS ______Ja_c_k_A_nd_e_rs~o......n

has blithely cont inued approving

sa les to Ira n.
St rictl y spea kin!(. onl y non·
military it em s have been licensed
fo r shipntent. But the Iranians have

become adept at transforming
plowshares into swords. They have

border. The wor ld nervously awaits
the day of confrontation.
F'or four years. the Iran-Iraq

neatly ada ptl'd U .S. equ ipment to

conflict won' acrimoniously on,

Sources with access to lists of the

wi thout either side crossing the

approved export s told my associate
L ucette Lagnado that they include
such critiCal items as spare parts
for American-made Boeling 707s.
T he planes are remnants of happier
days when America and Trdn were
bosom alllt&gt;s. Without replacement
parts. most of t he planes would be
grounded .
As late as 1982, some salPs wprr
made directl y to the Iranian air
for e.. and na vy. But for appearances· sake. the spar&lt;' parts la tely
have gone to the Irania n na tional
airline. Of course. the707s are being
used as military transports.
MALIGNED MOTHERS: I v.T it r
a Molher"s Day column last month
dPfr nding mothers who would
rather r aiSf' their children than
spend eight hours a day in an office.
The media has been portraying
lhesP women as If they ar e depr ived
or. worsf', unfi t for a career .

invisiblP tripwire. Then the Iraqis
attacked oil tankers in Iranian
waters; the Iranians r etaliated
against tanker s elsewhere In the
Persian Gulf; the Reagan adminis·
tration quietly chose sides and
ordered a pro-Iraqi " tilt" "; and the
So\iie1s began making m enacing

moves a long the Ira nia n border.
Cables have now gone out from
the Stat &lt;' Department to U.S. allies
around t he world, urging them to
stop shipping military supplies to
I ra n. But the messagp apparently
hasn' t reac hed the Commerce
Depa rtmPnt only eight blocks
across town.
The depart m ent is staffed " 1th
people whose main purpose in life is
to promote trade - thl' tilt toward
Iraq, the minacious Soviet s and thr
Ayatollah Khomcini notwithstand
ing. So the Commer ce Department

mililai}' use.

As a t y pical example. I citl'd a
CBS News r epor t which implied
that child rearing isn't chic and that
homemaklng Is a throwback to less
enlightened limes. Unhappily. my
column has had no perceptible
effect on the televi sion networks;
ABC News is the latest to malign
mothers a t home.
I have been getting an ea rful on
this su bject from m y daught er,
Chpr l Loveless , who Is also the
mother of live of my gra ndchildren.
As an unpaid volunt eer. she helped
form a molher"s anti -defamation
league called " Mothers at Home."
They held no r esentment for
mothers who prefer office jobs;
they understand that ma ny women
must work to put food on the table:
they beliew women should r eceive
equa l pay for equal work. But these
m others also believe that millions
of intelligent. competent w om en
are staying home, not because
thPy' re unqualllil'd for careers but
because they find it m or e challeng·
ing to raise childrPn.
So I was dismayed that ABC
New s scarcely mentioned the
larges t women's profession of all homemakers in a series on
"Wom en in th&lt;' '81ls. ·· But m y
da ughtf'r C'hrri is morp articulate

on this subj ect than I am . }l!'re"i
what she wrot e to ABC:
" I know you could not have
covered Pvery alternatlv!' avajJaple
to women in a program that toUIWd
less than one hour of air time:
however . becausc th e Iitle implied a
representativf' sampling ofwomerJ,
it w as insult ing to hear motherhood
discussed Qn)Y in passing and
m ostly by those who are not yet
mother s.
"Whether or not it was int ended.
it clearly gave thP message th at
mothering is no longer an option
that smart women are choosing. In
fact. It gave the impression that no
one is doing it at all anymore unles~
they a re working ir into their carE'er
plans ...
" I am more and more com ing to
realize tha t women in general
! whether in the marketplace or at
home! do nut identify with the
va rious sterrotypes presented by
the media. It is time the mffiia
l aced up to this and trim to prPsl'nt
an accura te picture."
Footnote: If you agree or dis·
agree with this vi&lt;'wpoint. please
don"t writ&lt;' 10 me. Address your
comments to Mothers at Home-,
P.O . Box 2361. FaiJiax. Va. 221m.

Over the top ___________L_ow_ell_W_t~'ng:::_e_u
WaiiPr !Viondale. aft er a long and
arduous prima ry ca mpaign for the
Democra tic nom in ati on for prl'si dent. has a t last erne rgl'd as the
winnPr afi Pr lhP last primari es
werP hP ld Tuesday. HP m ade the
announcf'mrnt at a press co nferrncc in St. Pa ul, Minn., Wednesday
noon w hC'n he told the m edia
represf'ntativ£&gt;s and tf'levision au·
diencp tha t hP had 2.00\ pledged
delegaiPS . well above the 1.967
Jlef'ded for nomination. He will
oppose Pr es ident Ronald Reagan in
lhf' Novrmtx&gt;r election .
The last primaries wen' hrld in
fi ve states Tuesday. ThP:-,.' w ere
West Virginia. New .!Prscy, New
Mexico. South Dakota and Ca lifor·
nia. Mondale won thp first two
states dC'Cisively, lost in N('w
Mexico and South Da kota and
about spill the vote in Ca lifor nia.
Both S&lt;'nator Gary Hart and Rev.
.Jesse Jackson said Wednesda y
they would continue thP fight fort he
nomination to 1he Dem ocrat ic
Convention fl oor when il convenes
in Son Franc isco .July 16. Neither
Hart nor Jackson have enough
delegates to oppose thl' front runner
and would not be able to match
Mondale II they combined the
delegates they have. Either together or separately thl'y pose no
serious threat to Mondale"s nomi-nation but do threa ten Democra tic
unity this fall.
You all remember the bitter light
between President Jimmy Can er
and Senator Edward Kennedy for
the Democratic nomination In 1980.
It caused so much dissension In the
Democratic party that Ronald
Reagan slipped Into thl' Oval Office
virtually opposed. Thl' Reag;m
forces have their fingers croS!ed ·
hoping thl'lr 1980 luck will again
give them an easy victory. Wllh thl'
president's phenomenal luck It
could happen again. That Is what is
worrying Democrats most toda y.
Jackson says he has no Intention

of causing a split in t he DPmocrat ic
party . He onl y wants recognition
for his foll owers at the convention, a
demand that will probably be mel
by some rule cha nges. Hart
presents a different problem . He
wants only !he nomination and , like
K ennedy in 1900, will not settle for
anyt hmg less. At least. that is the
w ay he is talking this day alter
f'lcc tion . Remember the bitt er
struggle betwef'n Ronald Reagan
and George Bush in the Republican
partv in 1980? Bush called Reaga n· s
PConomic theories "voo-doo economics·· and a lot of ot her things but
when Reagan offered him the
vice-presidential nomination after
the primary election, Bush snapped
it up and has been a firm adherml
of "voo-doo economics" E'ver sinrfl.
T hat is what Is known In preslden·
tial politics as "politica l expe.'
dlency" but Hart claims he will
have no part of it. He wa nt s all thl'
marbles or he won 't play!
II is my opinion that Hart hasn" t a
chance of chang1ng anything at the
San Francisco convention. All he
m ay succeed in doing Is ca using
Irreparable harm to the Demo·
cra tlc part y and ruin his own fut ure
political ambitions. This Is his first
attempt at the presidency and the
heady at m osphere ma y have
proved too much l or him. Unless
some elder politician like George
M cGovern tells him the facts of life.
hl' may succeed In flushing himself
down the drain and pulling Mondale
after him. Democrats who care
about the future ofthl' United States
care less about Hart's sensitivity
than they do of reelection for
President Reagan. They want the
president defeated and wUI look
with disapproval on anyone who
stands In the way.
Hari would do well to ponder the
case of Senator Edward Kennl'dy.
It was almost a universa lly accepted fact that som e day Trudy
Kennedy would be president. That

was until ht• paved th~ way for
Ronald Reagan to secure the
presidency in 1980. Apparently
K ennffiy realizffi the snafu he
m ade in 1980 and made no try for
the oval Office this year. Early in
the year he announced that he
wou ld not be a candidate. I do~bt If
he ever runs again. Personal pique,
envy or any of the ot her frailti es of
humans have no part In natial
polities. There Is too much at stake
lor that'

Jesse Jackson went on national
televis ion the da y after election to
urge party unity. All through thf'
campaign he has been a steadying
infiu ence on the other ca ndidates,
urging unity and moderation. He
has been a cred it to the Democratic
party and has added millions of new
voters to the rolls. I hope the
convention officials have the gumption to listen to his advice.
I also hope H art com es to his
senses!

Berry's World

~

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Spor1s Writer
The Sa n Diego Padres stole a
game from the Atlanta Braves,
thanks to a rare steal by Kevin
Me Reynolds.
"I don"t runmuch. lliketopick my
spots - but this looked like a good
spot to run in ," the 2ffi.pound
outfielder said alter scoring the
winning run following a tw()-out,
game-ty ing hit and a stolen base in
the ninth inning.
McReynolds scored on Bobby
Brown"s single to give the Padres to
a 54 victory Monday night over the
Rravf's.
Padres Manager Dick WUliams
ad mitted that the sight of M cReynolds taking off lor second base was
"a complete surprise to all of us on
the bench. But thalwas I he key play
of th~ game."
The Padres have won four games
ina row and 14ofthl'ir last 17tomove
2\-2 games ahead of the runner-up
Braves in the Nationa l League
Wes t.
In other N L act ion. 11 was
Montreal 2. Chicago I; New York3.
Pittsburgh 1; St. Louis G, Philadel·
phia 4; San Francisco8. Los Angeles
4, and Houston 3, Cincinnati 2 in 14
innin gs.
With San Diego 1railing 4-.1. Graig
Netlles opened the Padre ninth with
a w alk off Pete Falcone, w ho wa s
repla ced by Steve Bedrosi an, 4-3.
Luis Salazar pinch-ran for Nettles
and moved to second when Terry
Kennedy grounded ou 1 following a
strikeout by Steve GarvPy.
McReynolds singled home Sa ·
lazar to tie the game, then stole
second to set up Brown" s game·
winning hit after being told by first
base coach Jack Krol tha t Bedro-

•,

' " ~~J
. ... .
~-" ~. ~

•

BASE DANCE - Houston Astros Terry Puhl tries to keep his balance after a play at second
base nearly colliding with Cincinnati Reds second basem ent Ron Oester after knocking a double in
the 3rd Inning to left field Monday night in thP Astrodome. (A I..a.,erphotu)

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Bill Doran singled hom&lt;' Phil

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Phone 446 · 4524

Meigs Legion drops 4 tilts
The Meigs Amenran Legion
clroppcd hoth r nds of two doublf'hradcrs ovC'r thP WC'€'k C'nd, losing
~- 1 and HI-nat Lancast er Sa turday
;md ;, .~ and :~- 1 at Parkprsburg
Nort h Sunday.
Meigs vs. l..ancaste r
ThC' :v1rigs Countians drrssro
only 11 playf'rs for Saturday 's visit
to Lancaster as six could n't m akC' if
duf' to eoiiPgf' Pnl ranee tes ting and
vacat ion.
In the opener. Tr~y Cassell toed
l h&lt;' mou nd for MPigs unt il the fifth
whPn Donnir Swatze l ca me in.
Cass0ll fan n('d two, w al ked two a nd
_vif'ldPcl Pig hl hit s v.-hi)(' suffPring:
1 hf'
loss Swa tzC'I L:mned onf'.
walkNI non&lt;'. nnd ga\'f' up two hits.
f'oltPril l of LancasiPr whitfC'd 13
Mr ig-" b ~l tll·rs whilr wa lking four
and allowing four hits .
Nick R&gt;~gs coliPcted half of
;v'!r igs· hi1 ~ wit h a sin glr and triplf'.
"'ott r;hc.' n ond Alan Ki ng had th~
othf'r tv.. ·o hils. Reynolds l('d
Lanca~IP1 · with a hom (' run a nd
tloubll' whilt• Do~· It• and Dt'E'ds l'&lt;H'h
had a do ubl ~ and tripl~ . Wi nning
pitchrr loltC'rill also homerf'd
In lhr \\"i ld nig htcap. Meigs had a
briC'f K-h IPJ.c! af!Pr J. scvC'n ·run
third. but La nc&lt;.~ s ler ca mr back for
thrrf' to hol cl th~ lead thl' r est of the

wa~·.

S\A.."JIZC'I startr-d for Meigs Jnd
gav(' way to loSC'r Dan Thomas in
lhC' third . Sw.:.~t.zpl struck out four.
wa lkC'd thrC'f'. a nd allowod. six hit s.
Thomas f a nned five. walked fi\"C'.
and gavf' up f'ight hits. Winning

pi!Ch('r Deeds rC'Iit:&gt;\'C'd CavC' in thC&gt;
fourt h. T ht:'y' fannr'tl SPVP n and
wa lked 12.
Mrigs hirtC'rs wrrf' Thomas with
a singlr. double. and tr iplf'. Swatzcl
had tw o singles and a triple. Chris
Kennedy a singiC' and doublt', and
R iggs singl&lt;'d twice. WPlsh led
La ncHster with a double and' tr iple
Sunday's gamt&gt;s
With a few regulars back. Mf'igs
played a couple or good ballgam~s
aga inst the Wrst Virginian s. but
manag Pll only · thr PP runs in thf• tH·o

games.

t h{' srcond till. tJut ~uffrn•rlt hP loss.
Thf' Galli &lt;:~ Counfi &lt;J ns fa nnC'd Sf'\'C'n
and wa lked thr("f'. Griffith whiff(&gt;{!
fivC' and wa lkC'd onJ ~· one
Todd Bergdoll had M eigs· onlv
e:xt r ~ basl' hit with a double whilf'
WisP. Ghf'C'n. Cassf'll. T hu m;;~ s,
Swat zel and SpletP rach si nglf'd .
Liltl o had a ~ in gi C' and homf' run for
thC' \.dnn0rs while• Criffith col lf'ct&lt;'d
thrE'(' singles.
Mctgs. no"· 2 -~ . on 1hC' v(•ar , play
thf'ir SC'VC' nt b. str&lt;.~ig hl roo1d game
WffinC'sda):. whC'n the.\ ' 1ravC'I to
Logan for a singiP gam0. Mf'igs
rC'turns home Sat urda~· for couplf'
of game~ w ith ParkC'rsburg Sou th
anJ tra \·l'IS to McArthu r for two
Sunda1
Saturtla ~· t fir"ii ~anw 1
\1,· 1 g ~

IW !Jil 11 - 1

l .. ml ·.... tpr

1~&gt;-1

( .I "'I'Jf

Tony RHflf' wrnt th f' dis ! &lt;'Inc(' in
thr firs t gamr and chalkecl up fi\ 'P
strikrouts, thrrf' wa lks. and Jl ·
luwf-d nine hits. Wi nnt•r D{'IOI.ic•r

fonned seven and walkccl thrcc .
Pa ul Duff and Rick WISe. two of
the ~' Ounge.s t playpr.s for lhP loc;.l l
ninr, lx&gt;th singlr d tw ice'. Cordon
Splr l t: and Thomas ('ach singiPci
o n&lt;t'. Lit liP ami .Jonl'S !{'() ParkPrsburg North \Vilh two s! nglrs apircC'.
Splete hurl ed a fine si x-hitt rr in

(·loti!·!

1!.1' •.

S\l",ili' I'J

r~tl

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iti WP' .tnd 1\u rkt·
iS.:•t"tl nd ( ;an wl
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Sw,lltd. Thorn ;t" •l.l ' t , I t .Htfl I .~ . . ~, · 11.
(;ht~' tl

1'1• . [X'Nb 1\\" l '• 1·l •. ,mol l·· n l.! bml

Dan
HO USTON
tAP!
Driessen, also a veteran of the Big
Rro Machine of tile 1970s. says 11&lt;'
wouldn't mind hearing his mtmt' in
trade talk lil&lt;e short stop Dav&lt;'
Concf'pcio n.
··u they wan t to taik. l"m w&gt;dc
open. 1"11 listen. It's !(omg to be
in teres ting to see what happens:·
said Dri essen , a VPte r an nrsl
baseman of the Cincinnati Reds who
becomes eligible for free agency at
the end of thf' season.
Concepcion, who is also the Reds'
captain. says that it might be best if
he were traded, witl1 several
conditions stipu la ted. The Vl'teran
short stop is angry about being
shifted around from third to fir st
base and being left out of th~ lineup
on Sunday by Manager Vern Rapp.
Concepcion also said if Rapp' s
plans called fur him lo bc plaloonl'&lt;l
with T im F'ol&lt;'y. he would be open to
a trade.
" He"sa playe r.likeanyother, who
has the freedom of expression.·· sa id
Rapp. Rapp said he h&lt;ld mel with
Concepcion on Monda)· alwr hcar mg aOOul his rrintf'fl mmplaints.

"We didn't talk about it. We talked

obout things I felt like• you have to
talk about wit h players:· Rappsaid.
··we• talkl&gt;d "bout 11." ' asserll&gt;d
ConretX'ion. "Somebod)' call''Cl him
and told him ahout it "
Pcapp said Conc&lt;'pc ion 1s back at
shortstop but, " We 'll just hav~IOSl'P
v.11 h 1imc ...
Rapp sa id he did not tPil
Concepcion in Los Angell's hP would
not be in thf' liTlf'upon Sunday for rwo
reasons. l-IP sa id ConcclX'ion had an
ailing wrist . ''1 ju st didn't havctimf'
to tell him t before the game.&gt;"" said
Rapp.
Concf'pcion said the son• \\Tist
was not " prob lem .
"My· w r ist has txY-n sorr for aOOu t
25 days but it' s no bigdml. lt docsn 't
hur1 that much and I' vf' a lwa_\'S
played hurl b&lt;'fore ... sa id
Concepcion.
" I just want 10 continuP pl~_,·ing
short," he sa id . ·· 1 doni want to br
bo uncing around. ThC'rf" arC' 26
trams in thf' major IC'agu£'s. I ~lUI
cun.o;;ider m ysc•lf 10 bf• onf' of lhf' lop
six 1shor1stops).··

A OMISSION EllERY TUESDAY 52 00
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Gamer from third base with the
winning run in lhe 14th inning ,
leading Houston ovC'r Cincinnati .
Garner singled and was sacri·
ficed to second by Terry Puhl.
Losing relil'VerTed Power , 2·3. then
waiked Denny Walling and Jim
Pankovits before Doran came
through wi t h his gaml'-winning hit.
Mike LaCoss. 1-0, pitched the final
two inning~ to not ch the victory·
LaCoss combined wit h fellow reliev ·
er s Bill Dawley and Da ve Smith to
rei ill-' 1i str(jight Red-., ovpr thf' final
52 3 innings.

sian did not have a good move to
first.
" It was a surprise, I wasn't
expecting it."" sa1d Bedrosian.
Dave Dravecky, 3-3, who worked
the final inning for the Padrl'S.
gained the v ictory .
Expos 2, Cubs I
Tim Wallach led off t he ninth
inning with his ninth home run of the
season on the first pitch from Lee
Smit h to lead Montreal over
Chicago.
Smith, 34, had put down an Expo
rally in the eighth innrng in relief of
starter Rick Reuschel. Reliever Bob
James, 2·3. who pit ched two innings.
was the w inner .
Met~ 3, Pirates I
Dwight Gooden and Jesse Orosco
tearnl'd up on a seven-hitter, and
Hubie Brook&gt;; and Kl'ilh Hernandez
homPred to le ad New York ovl'r
Pittsbur!(h
Gooden , 'i-.1. ga,·e up SIX hits.
struck out six- including five in a
row at one pornt - and walked two
befor e leav ing with two out in the
eighth. Gooden · s pcJiormance gave
him Y.1 slrikrou" to ti e him for the
NL lead with Fernando Valmzuela
of Los A ngeles.
Orosco came on to notch his 12th
savp
Cardinal' 6. Phillies I
Darre ll PortPr's two-run doubll'
highlighted a four-run third inning
as St. Lou is beat Philadelphia
D anny Cox , who had lost seven
and had three no·dccisions in his last
10 gamPs, ea rned his lhird victory
with rPlicf help from Bruce Suner.
who earnC'd his l :lth saw'. Marty
13ystrom, 2·3, was th£' loser.
St. Lou is tumed fourdoubleplavs.

POMEROY

�Page- 4- The Daily Sentinel

NBA.'s long season
will end this evening
BOSTON 1AP1 ~ Th.- Bos&lt;on
l'ellirs have played 1lll games th1s
s•.&gt;ason . Tho Los Angeles Lakers
have play&lt;~ 1112. Nunc uf that counts
. w~·morr .

'rhf' i\ational BaskC&gt;tball Associa -

tion st ·ason that began man:- than
mont hs ago in mid -fall Pnds
ronight in a late--spring heat wavP
,,·ith the onl y game that matters.
·· ont· gam('. We play aU year to get
~1crP ... s&lt;-J_\'s l .os Angelps' Michael
1 "clOJ~' r. ·;.;o thro"· tho ball up amJ
lt•t'sgofur it."
Roston. \\'hich nf'\'Pr has lost a
"t..'\'C'nth gamf' of a champions hip
~'Yl'n

in

-,p ric_·~

is host for

_..,L'-;. &lt;..~ppearant.'l'S.

th!' u:innrr take -aU finale' against
I .os Angelf's, \\: hich nPver has won a

-.; f'\ 'Pnth gam(' of a championship
sf'rics in four atrf'mpts.

Some Collies didn't think there' d
rn bl.• &lt;1 se,·ent h gamP .
" \\.-'(' rPa llv fPII Wf' rould finish it
rncL1.\ '.·· sa id E3os1on 's Larr:-· Bird
e-~ ltf'r Tht · L.:.tkl'rs stJycd al ive by
,_.,· inn mg S unda~ ··s sL'{tll gamf'.
1El-IOK. in Los Angell'S to f'\'f'n 1hP

~ ·\

Bosox down rival Yanks, 9-6

gelos has relied on misS&lt;'d Celtic
shots and it s O\V11 de&gt;fensive l'f'-

bounds tu fuel

it s devastating

fas thrmk. Roston has do nP wPII
when it has shot accura 1el:y from
ou t.sidr and domina ted 1ilf" offensivr
boards.
ThP Ccltics . who had thP NBA' s
tx•st rrgula r -S('ason rt'('()rd, han'
bN'n nearly unbeatable at humP.
Thev a11' 44 ·9 this season. including
lJ.l . in the plavoffs. on thP famed
parqul'l noor benm th lh&lt;' :\B,\
r('('Ord of 14 cham pionsh.ip ba nnPr~.
ThP\. arr 2-1 hr rr in th i~ final S('rirs.

Huwl'\'l'L nml' of t he la st U :\l:lA
crm~ns hnvr bcf&gt;n won on the rood.
including 1hP 19801 ille bv thP La kurs
owr Philadl'iphia and the 19R1
championship b\ rhP CPltics 0\'PI'
1-fouston.
Tiw Lakrr s. who had l hP Nl:lA's

n'Cord

Sf'('ond -t::&gt;f&gt;st

thi s year. won

their eighth titiC'. S('('Ond most i.n rhr
leagur, in 1%'2. But 1hC'y \'l'C'!t'S \-vept
in fuur ('Onsc'Cul i\"f' games by t.hr
76cors in la st vear's finals

" I tliouglll ld tx• pla ying black ·
pch: It mJght in Vegas." Crllics ·

"WP could. play in '&gt;: orne, Alaska.··
Cooper said . " We could play in the
Sa hara i)(&gt;scrt . I I d()('sn't mailer. No
m a ttPr if it' s raining or snowing. It

I1H"\V Jrc l ('('I:.! ric MaX\vell said after
'ht • lu . . . s. "I had ~lll thl•arrangemr nts

but .that kind of sluff isn't a factor in a

:~-:l.

.., t•ries,

mav have lx'cn a fa ctor in Game\
··

~a m r7

knc)("l.; ntt BosTon. w hich is 14-1 in title'
mund...... including 7-0 agains t !he

In high humidity a nd a cour1side
ICmJX•ratwl' of 97 dcgTrcs. thr
(\•lt ics bur ned the ! .akers, 121-lm.
last Friday night for their second
COrtS{'('UthT' v ictor;.· a nd a 3-2 SC'riC's
It' ad
Th(' :" iationJI Weather Servicc

l.ak(•J"_.__

sa id til e outdoor tC'mperatw·e a t

Tht · 1., tk l ·1·:-; ~ poil c'(::l thos(' plans.
Tun!)..! hi. t ht•y' II t 1y to IJE&gt;i.·omC'onJ~­
!ht • li! th tt ·am 10 win 8.n NR\
c hampion.sh!p sPr i( •:-; aft(T tr&lt;..~iling
.\ ~ c!TH I 1m I\

fin&lt;:~ list 10

tht• St 't'O mi

"E\ t'JYih ing is I11PIT to lx.• haU ."
&lt;..;d ie\ l. ~ lh:f'r Corwh 1-'ot Rilcy '" \\-'r
haw' ,. chancr to do som ething !hat
r1o unP c lsl' ha~ don(' - win a world

championsh ip tn Boston.
"\\-'p' n' going to win this onf' for
1\t~d Auvrbach." FliiP)' said of ihc
("(']tic
pn•sidc•nt
and
gc nf'ral
rna na g&lt;~ r

Thmughout tJw .':)(' rics, Los An -

Tuesday, June 12, 1984

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

go mrtim&lt;' tonight. scheduled for 9
p.m. EDT, is PXj)('('!ed to be 77
dcgrC'C's, about IO dC'gJ·ees less than
F rid a)' s tipoff rmding. And thP
humidity sho uld be lower
'"l 'hP heal will have no effect,"
sa id Los Angcl&lt;·s· James Worthy .
· Thr crowd \von't be an advantagP.
It's what we plO\ ' for aU year We'll

By JOI\ATHAN \TI'fl
Associau..t Press W!jkr
Although behind by thrr&lt;' runs in
thP ninth inning, the Boston Red Sox
had a l.Jackup plan .
Pinch ~ hi!ting reserve RPid Ni
chols, who hadn't been to tho plato
sinl't' Ylay 19, used a bon·owed bat
from Rick MiliPr. anot hl'r reservo,

In other American League
games, tho [)('nuit Tigers downed
the Toronto Blue Jays 5-4, the
Baltimore Orioles defeated the
Milwaukee Brewers 3- 1 and the
Texas Rangers beat the Oakland A's

h·3
B ill Bucknl'f had lied the score for
Bos ton with a two-run single off
r-eliever Bob Shirley before Nichols
batted for Rich Gedman and drilled
a 2-2 pitch into the left field scr een for
his first homer this season .
A single by JackieGutierrezand a
"·alk to Wade Boggs opened the
ninth and chased New York's Ray
Fontenot, bringing on loser Jay
lloweU, 1-4 Dwight E va ns greeted
HoweU with a single, filling the

to swat a t hr€'('--mn homer that
capped a slx -run rail)' and Ufted tho
Rod Sox to a dram atic 9-6 ,·ictory
Monda y night over thP NPw York
Yank&lt;'&lt;'s.
"R1ck and I did our usual thing in
1he C'lubhou '-;(~ . hitting bOJ LJ:..; oft a }X' 10
g(~ t rf'ad_
\ · if we WP1'f' ne«h'CI ln thf'
lai C' inning s, but I on!~- had two bat s
rPad.1· lx&gt;cauSI' I haven ' t bel•n
playing much. ·· Nichols said.
Nichols. " ·ho Pxplai ncd he shaws
the hand IPs of his ba "· ran I h&lt;• C'O unt
to 2·2 and then fouled ot1 four
conS('('utin" pitchPs, break ing his
sPco nd bat on the last with a foul line

hases.

Jim Ri('(''s single to left scored
Gu tierrez and Shirley came on. He
got Mike Easler to pop up for the
seco nd ou t before Buckner
grounded his single.
Mark Clear. 5-0. got the last out in
the ninth and picked up thP win .
The victory extended Boston 's
winning str eak to fou r games and
gave the Red Sox thPir lith victory
in 14 starts.
Tiger.s 5, Blue Jays 4
Lou Whitaker' s tw o-run homer
snapped a 3-3 tie in the fourth inning
and pinned a fifth straight defeat on
Toronto, extending Detroit 's lead

dri\ 'E'
r&lt;irhols \.~"(' 111 to thE' dugout and
was handC'd onf' of his own bats. H r

rejected it , 1hough.
" R1ck shaves his bats UkP I do, so I
wanted one of his," Nichols said.
"Thrn I got a fast bal l up and over
th e ptatP. I was hoping I would JUS!
hit thr baU . I was so excited I don't
think I rml ized that it had gone out
until I wa s rounding third .
" II was exciting, Uke the World
SPrics or something the way
('VC'ryone came runnin g ou1 or our
dugout. It 's been a while, bull r eally
appredate lhl' opportunity to go up
!herr ·

over
Whitaker'
the 13Jue
s Jays
homer
to eight
off Luis
games.
Leal,
6-1, wa' his fifth of the season.
Dave Rozema, making just hi s
fourth start of the season, aUowed

Resigns Hall-of-Fame position
CANTON, Ohio tAP ! ~ Earl
Schreiber. chairman of the board of
the Pro Football Ha U of Fame since
it was established here in 1962, has
r esigned. saying the job had become
too dPmanding.
Schreiber, 72, who co ntinues as a

member of the board. cited the
extens ive travel nt?Cessary to re -

present the haU at functions around
the count ry. H e has attended every
spring meeting of the National
Foot baU League since 1963 and a1 118
Super Bowl games.

three runs on four hits In his five
innings to improve his record to 2-0.
WUlle Hernandez pit ched 2 1·3
innings for his lOth save.

Orioles 3, Brewer.s I
Scott McGregor scattered seven
hits and John Lowenstein drove in
one run and scored another, leading
Baltimore to victory over siWTlping
Milwaukee.
McGregor, 84, walked two and
struck out five in completing his
sixth game In 15 starts.
The Brewers ha ve lost four
str aight games and nine of their last
11 .
The Orioles scored two runs ln thP
fourth with four consecutive hits off
Brewers' starter Don Sutton, 3-o.
Sutton fanned five batters to m ove
into seventh place on the career
strikeout list wlth 3,118, passing Hall
of Famer Bob Gibson.

Ranger.s6,A's3
Pete O'Brien smacked a two-run
homer in the sixth inning to bring
Texas to a comeback victory over
Oakland.
o· Brien 's home run was his tift h of
the season an d gave him 10 runs
batted in for the four-game series
with Oakland . It was his third
game-winning RBI in four nights.
Texas starter Mike Mason picked
up his third victory of the year
against four losses.

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Ohio Va 11£&gt;y Publis hing Company · Mul li mffl ia. Inc., Pom Proy . Ohin 45769. 99221:•6. Sc&gt;cond class postage paid at Pomf'ro~- ,

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ATTENTION
The Daily Sentinel Is
Looking For A Paper Carrier
In the Middleport &amp; Pomeroy Area
IF INTERESTED, CALL:
992-2155 BETWEEN 9:00 &amp; 6:00

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How about you roundin' up
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classified coupon you can
get so~ off the cost of
your ad.

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-------------------------------,
: PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL I
: PHYSICIAN OFFICE LOCATIONS

I

I
Physician's at Pleasant Valley Hoopital are In the process ol I
1 relocating their offices from the ground Door of the Hospital to tbe new I
1
Medical Office Building. As a convenience to our patients, Pleaoant I
: Valley Hospital w111 publish the phyoltlan'o office locations until tbe I
1 relocation to the new Medical Office Building "M.O.B. " Is rompleted.:

I
1
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
:

PHYSICIAN
r. eor g1anna Burns, M.D., Pediatrics
Mark Cheng, M.D , Internal Medicine
y ,,J11,1' r!:n i , 'v1 D . Su r geon
Isrn ae! .J ;uno ro, M.D., Internal Medicine
John Grubb. M.D.. Obst etrics-Dynecology
Richard Slack, M.D., Surgeon
Shri kant Vaidya, M.D., Urologist
John Wade. M.D.. Otolaryngologist

Tuc•_;,.,_d ;l\ 1hroug l! F'riU ; 1\
It is still not too latf' for c·htlrlrf'n

I
TELEPHONE LOCATION 1
675-1095 " M.O.B." 1
675-5012
Hospital 1
67&gt;-1666
675-5188
67&gt;-3400
675-5267
675-6060
675-!244

Hospital I
Hospital I
" M .O.B." I
Hospital I
" M.O.B." I
" M.O.B."

I

L------------------------------•

(Cash Ads Only)
(Yard Sales Not Included)

Classified Coupon
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Circle. by Daniello Steel ; The
Movie Se-t. by Junr F'laum Singer;
Possessions , bv Judith Milhacl ;
One More Sunllay. U~- John D .
MacDonald . Oir for Love. by
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F'ortune. by Susan Howat ch: F ling,
bv Pam ela &amp;~ck: ThP Killing Doll,
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bv M . M . Ka y&lt;': Thu Tiger in 1hr
Tigrr l 'it, b_v .lanf'llC' 1\Jrn(•r
Hnspi tal; 1\. l kritagf' of ~hJdU\\ "·

bv Madeleine Brent: First Born, by
.l~hn Katzunbac h; The Color Pur ·
pic, by Alice Walker.
Among lhP nt:&gt;w non -fiction titles
arr : FoxfireR: How to LlvetobelOO
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bv Lana Wood ; Living Together:
\Vhat's the Law?" Peterson's Col·
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land and Disn~y World; The Infant
and T oddl ers handbook : The
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npw AmPric(Jn Cooki ng; How to
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Partners hips; ThC' Stoc;k m an's
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l (J

Introducing

Taste that delivers
IN THE MONEY SAVING

pack

4.0 sca l e ) are e li g i bl e for
m Pmbe rship.
A hom e PCo nomics , early child
drve lopm ent ma jor a nd t he rff'ipirnt of a 1984 -R.'&gt; Dean's 1\chit:&gt;vemf'nl Sctlolarship, she is thf'
daught C'r of Mr. and Mrs. Douald
Sa lmons uf So:\ H1 .

Attend
workshop
Ma rgarC'I E lla LC'wis. Pomcro~'­
Rut land Card0n Club m0mix'r. and
Virginia Covt•rt. Rio GrandP. Ri'·
gion 11. Ohio A ss.ocla lion of Ga n1r-n
Clubs, din:•ctor, allended l hP 13ob
Thoma s work shop on flow('!' ar ran ging a1 \\'hN' IC'r sbu rg 1'ucsda~' Anotlwr wor kshop has been
planned for !';ov. l 5a t Whc'I'IPrsburg
~dt h 1:3ob Thoma s, internationa l
rlr slgnr r and in ~ tructo r. wllh thP
pmphasis to bf' on cr-Pativity in
flower ar ranging. A listing of
matcrialo;-, to tx• takC'n to fhC'
workshop is i'l\-~1 il.1h!f' from f'ither
Mrs. L f'w is or M rs. Cov0rt. AdvancC'
r rgistJLlt ions a r1• rf'quinxi.

Scholarships
announced
Fou r area seniors havr l:JN&gt;-n
awarded $:100 principa l scholarships
to Hoc king Tc~· hnica l College' at
Nelson\'U ie They are Tamara
Lou ise Black. Rulland, Meigs lligh
gJ·aduatf': Linda Proffitt, Racine.
Sout h0 m High graduat0; Li sa
Fields. Hartfo rd, W. Va , Wahama
gradual!~.
and 13C'rella Deeter,
Route 1. I.ong Bottom, Eastern
gradual&lt;'.
One such sc holarship is awarded
each spring in som P30Southcast em
Ohio schools. The scholarships are
gran tl~ on the basis of the student 's
high ach ievem ent, in volve-ment in
school activit ies a nd a high recom·
mcndalion by a high school
counSi'lor.

TOPS meets
Sandy Hysell was the best loser at
this week's meeting of Tops 1456
held at the Rutland Civic Center.
Bf'ulah Collier and Joann Eadswere
runners-up. Cathy First received a
cash gift from the club after being
named M ay queen.
Members w!U begin exer cising as
a part of the TOPS program next
week. Information m aybeobtalned
from V icki Ferrell.

'iign up a! thp tibrar:,· for t hf' family
hi story projfft . Thi s is going to be a
real exdtin~ projf'('f to bf' involv0d
v.-it h.
Some ne-w fi ct ion titles recent ly
r('('elvC'd at thP libr&lt;ouiL'S ar(': Full

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The Daily Sentinei- Page- 5

By RUTII POWEll.S
For lhP Sentinel
If !'O u have not taken ad\'antage
of the Homrbound program offcn&gt;d
at thP Pumproy and Middleport
Librarirs. you arP missing out on
i.m ot hP r C'xcell ent frf'E' servic·p
provided by the loc·al libraries. If
an_vonl' is intcrPsted or knows of
anyonP who could usC' this sprvice
cal l 'm ~'i81 J or !fl2-c&gt;71l
.Junf' bPgins thP nEw summPr
hour~ al thP Pomrroy library . Thf'
Jibrar:v· w ill J:x:&gt; open Y a.m . to;, p.m
Monday through Friday. from June
to S&lt;&gt;p!Pmix'r. Hou rs ai Middleport
rPma in thr samP, noon to 8 p.m .
~1ond.:.t~'s, 10: :~o &lt;.t .m To :J p.m

ca mpus lPrC'mony.
Alpha Lambd a DPita 's prima ry
goal is to C'ncourag(' a nd rf&gt;Cognize
superior sc holastic achie\·cment
among frcshmPn . Students with at
1r as 1a 3. ~ g-rad(' point aver age (on a

\..Ito. \\"m
l"tli

1\o·ll_ l'n1nnl t1.

T r. un uwll

Melvin R . VanMeter Jr.

L--------------

Lambda DPI! a nat ional hono r
society durin g a special Athens

II

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r: 1

&gt;1

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n•

Summer
programs
offered

Melinda Sa lmons of RacinP was

Mo,,d J\ T• •l"l lfl l••. \:1
ll i]l k.,l. l ~d llrn&gt; &gt; ll • ;.;_ Wliil.oho' t ~ ~ ·r r ... l

"Il l

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V r~j:l&lt; •

11.'-

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Yo11r Librarie.r

j'('C('ntly init iatC'd into the- Ohio
U ni vrrs it _v cha pt rr of Alpha

\.\ftJ(JI
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ll.-\"1T 1'1. • I ~ ~ .11 t!;ll _, • "I Lllllrlll'll. ll• ·
11.-lc . '\•-v. Yoork
hnllp , ,..._. Yu1i-.

\

Three MeigsCountians have been
named to !he President' s List at the
DeVry I nstitute of T echnology,
Columbu s.
They are Todd Cundiff, son of
GrorgP Cundiff. Eagle Ridge Road .
Pomeroy; David Blake. son of Mrs .
John Blake, Blake HiU Road,
Pomeroy. and Scott Harrison. son of
Mr. ancl Mrs. Dale Harrison. Rout e
2. Pomeroy.
To be eligible for the honor.
students must have a 3.5 and 4.
grade average out of a possible four
points for the last tenn of study.
E nroUed in the electronics tehnlclan
program. all thrPP have four point
averagPs.
DeVry lnsJtu te is a part of DeVry
Inc .. a network of I I campuses
which specialize in eleclronics
technology and compu ter science
for business.

Woman initiated

A.,

h:: l
-• .~
--1-

20
K!l

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\.\ 11-JlH .\.'\ J.l. \4 •• 1-.

PresidentJs
list named

.'Vl-"\ II. '-.l· nsCH 1PTJ O,"-:S

Yor-k. •n•

1'101\, lll• •lp ht: o.

[ J -oL-.. .1 1

:?~Cen t s

S ub ~cn twr~ nr11d rs ir·ing to p&lt;J~·r hccar
r if'r nl&lt;n rrmil i n ad va ncr dir('(' l to
Thr Daii•· St ·nrinf' l on .'\. h or 1:? month
ba&lt;;b &lt;"rPdrl wrll br g-ivf'n CCI !T I €' rPOC h
month .

Scoreboard ...
'VIujors

Melvin R. VanMeter .Jr., son of
Melvin and Nancy Van Mette, 106
Butternut Ave .. Pomeroy, reported
on May 22 to San Diego, Calli., for
eight weeks basic training in the U .
S. Navy.
A 198l graduate of Meigs High
School, VanMeter enlisted in the
navy 's delayed e nlistment
program.
Upon complet ion of basic train ~
ing, he will be eligible for college
credits. He has been guaranteen
attendance to the interior communi ·
cation school which will include
training in repair and in all
communication systems from telephones to closed circuit televis ion.
Friends uS&lt;' the f ollowing ad ·
drt'Ss: Seaman Recruit Van Meter,
M . R.; Co. ill, Division 1, Com ~
m ander Cooper; RTC-NTC, San
D ipgo, Ca lifornia. 921.11.

O hio

POSTMASTER: St'nd

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

VanMeter
reports
for training

The Doily Sentinel

tx• n•acly. ··

l'iTI ' I ~Jrl! h a l \i o'\1·

Tuesday, June 12, 1984

Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determmed
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

LIGHTS 10 mg . "lar". 0 8 mg. nlcOtlne.LIGHTS 100's 12mg "tar". 0 9mg nicot1ne.
FI LTE R 15 mg "tar". ll.mg mcottne. FILTER100's 16 mg "tar". 1.2 mg nicotine, av. per c1garene by FTC method

Af¥NOIDS108ACC0C0

�Page

6---The Daily Sentonel

By CHARLENE HOEFLJ&lt; H
DaliJI Sentinel Staff
Bnght sunshiny days 1m 1gorat
fresh a!T (and I prorrused not to
complam about 11 bE'mg too hot I and
sultry breezes aU mean 1t's a peli&lt;'fl
time to tune mtocnsp cool salads
And w hile the Me1gs Count'
bottoms and the roads 1de stand'
they brmg are st ill a week 01 two
away, scan the superma1 ket pm
duce depa1tments ~A.h ic h "'" sho11
casmg the season's shi p(X'Cl 111
harvest of frt:'sh !nut s dnd \tw.. •tc~
bles and IC't the tdPas mil
Be mnova tJve. go creattvP \~ &lt;:11&lt; h

um

the salads move from thes idPdish to

l 1 o~smg

\\ ds a 1t '(

m\ dt•sk the othC'J d en
tpt• fot d tx&gt;a t l.tw-hea 1IPa

... h,lkt'
111!

I i'(

lfX' (.:dis

tot SLX IPJ bags, a

quL111 of ('Old\\ atPr and a pmt of am

flLn 01 ..,hf'I tw- t or JC'(' ct ('&lt;.tm Jus t
pl. I( £' t ht• IPLl b~tgs m t h(' g lass quart
pll(htrand!Lll\\thco!dv.atf'r
lO\tJ .m&lt;i rcfttgcJa lf' t01 at if'ast
J·lllll

f'Jght hout s
1f

ovPmtght a nd then

01

mm P t h f' h 'd b&lt;Jgs

bl('ndf't combmf' 2 1.! lUps
-.ht tbtol 01 tCt' 1 tr.m1
ptuu ~-. .t1 lltgh :-, ~'('(\ unfll biPndrd
In ~

tt ,~

H!th

(,,11 01 -.h
' ' I II\

the centPr of the plat&lt;' and abo\l•all
enjoy

If \l)U IJkt•

1-x· r r l l ' .tnd

l'lh

t

ntnt •

\\tlh HhO]{'

-.pnl'

lc~rrul\

\\Ill \\4 I( (JITH'

TUI SDA Y

\\1\Jth ( OU /l ( tl -t\\

RACINE - Raum· I ,()llg&lt; II&gt; I

thts t

\ ('IHn g .11

Ill('( !

fht

\\ f'(hwsd,l\

\~111

H_l!(SM

,tt 7

l,()

p 111

It V. t] Jbpp]p(!!O n of nff\C'(' I S

r hcrP wrll bf' .r
\outh JC'\ t\a l &lt;:~ I the Rac mr f'usl
R tpl lsl
&lt; hurch
W('d nesda\
thtough June 17 at 7 30 p m
n1 gh tl1 I 'a nglls t "rll bf' t h&lt;'
Ht'\ l\1tkt A ddms lllere v.tll be
"'Pt'( l dl stngmg PdCh C'\ Pm ng
!{,\( I'&gt;L -

WEDNLSDAY
POMEROY - P.tst Co unt t
loiS Clu b of \ hrs tf' l &lt; ounctl !2.1
Daughter s nf Am011Ca . V.lli
met.'t a t Rpm V\f'rln rsd&lt;.~\ mgh r
al the lodg&lt;' hall F lhf'l 0 11 ,md
Lnzv Npv..e ll a1 f' hustpsSf's
POMERO'I
Chaptl'I HO R -\ !\1

Poml' l u \

and Bo-.

r .AI I II 'O L!S
Go lil a
ltJckson !\1f'igs Mf'nt._ll llca lth
Hoard \\ 1ll m0f't W('{lnescla\ at I
p m dtlhf• bo~ud ot:tJcf'

HappeningJ
( hurt h IlloSf• attC'ndmg aff&gt;
11 J 1dkl' I ~\\ n &lt;ha u s cllld t hc&gt;t r 0'-"ll
t, d)lf' . . en K&lt;' &amp;•u•rages \Vil l be
funliSIHI Thl' putJltc ts mvtted

drs!

Camp set
POMEROY -A M 01gs&lt; ounr'
Jaycee Womens' Da1 ( &lt;~mp "til
be held July 10 11 ,111d 11 101
c htldrc n of MPtgs Count-\ IJ' &lt; (&gt;(
Women
Women w ho aH' mi&lt;'H'S t('ll 111
the ir chtld &lt;.~ ttf!ndmg m a\ o llt JHl
regtsrra llon forms a t a rt ·~ mt•r
chants m Pomcrov :-.1tddlr•po1 I
or Rutland o r b\ \\'nlm,l;! Mt&gt;lg "'
Count ) Ja\C('('V.OmPn Jn (an'ut
M arta G11mrs 1:!11 H..Jilr md
Street MirlriiPpol1 Oh 1u l '1i&lt;&lt;l
Registr atiOn form s must b:~ 1n b\
July t

Wells reumon
REEDSVlLL~.

"- l'h&lt;• S&lt;'lund
annua l rf'umon for fiiPnds .~nd
ck&gt;scendant s of John .tnU i.Ju r. •
Wf'IIS" ill be hl'ld Sa turda' I u Ill '
lti, at F 01 ked Run Std tf' l'c~ 1 k
Reed sv illf', ftom noon untJI LLn k
AU altC'ndmg art• askrd to IJr mg c1
C'OVf'l ed dts h or pltfliC' suppll&lt; 's

Eas te rn reunion
!'OM ! 1(0\ - Cu rirnt Jd
&lt;It ''sS&lt;"s ut mf'mb&lt;' r s of the 19&amp;1
g-1 adu.J I mg &lt;lass of Eastrm
High School ail' bcmg soughl for
d pld rtn Pd t &lt;'Un!Ort
l'h1 20 \C d t

truman

Will br

m

th&lt; form of " fc~mrl\ prcn1c and
" til be hPirl "' 12 noon on
~ .tunl.r \
lui\ l o al Fm kf'd
Hun St t~lf • P,n k Rf'fdsvtl lf'
\n\om•
h ,I\Jn g
mfonn .Jt Jo n
should 1on! at t Tctn dncl J dnf't
fl offm&lt;~n 'IX!l W1 0 1 C.d l'\ Rci:'CI
11 r;K ttZ2lJ

Tennis teacher
sought at prk
VIII &gt;DU I'OH. f ltl~I/Ut ! OJ

(n•TH Jdl

Open house

1:-.

nt•t'(]t.•d

1-LulltlJ..!l 'l

1\ tmrus
Ul

P&lt;Jrk

th('
m

\rltddJt&gt;pOI I

POMEROY- The Umll'&lt;l MPth
odtst M eigs CoopeJ all\f' P.lllsh
\\'Ill have an o~n houSC' a t rls nc \.\
offK'(' loca tr'() on For &lt;'SI f(un
Road , C tv, ow• rm ]( from Stdf&lt;•
Routp 7 un Sund ~l\ .JunP24 2to~
pm
F'ollu\.\ mg f h( • fl!="' n houst ·
tbl'! l ' wtll tx•J c·m f rr&gt;tl d 1s h p!&lt; n1c
al thr• Forr 'st l~un L ntr'() Mr•tho-

\n\ on\ ' ~,.~, ho \vould b(• Willing
ro jJJO\ Kit' tnstru&lt;. llon 1 ~ asked to
u ml.IC 1 Bob Johnson
'\ lso
hTIDups \\ 1shmg to ha\ (1 .t piC'nl(
t~rf tu(o nt J.ct .Johnsontnt('gi1t d

l'l thr· shl'ilf'I hOUS&lt;" Softball
lt ,Jms \\ Jshmg to hav f' to uma

tn&lt;'nl s .md r~m. om' "- tshtng to
Jolll LJ ~ ummf't bas kf'thalllf'ng1Jf'
should ~ll so rontJrt Johnson H1s
pho n1 numh.--'1 1s 9~J2 f..R 1()

SCIC'nC'~ ' d C'grN' lfl bUS!nPSS ,ld m iniS

trat 1on &lt;Jnd man JgPmPnt Sh(' m c.l(lP
thf' df'an s hsl PH'!\ S&lt;•mr·sll'T c~nd

g t tdu.11f·d m&lt;~gna c um Jaud t• Po t

P"''

th1w \Pals shC' hds tx-en
t'mplo\ Pd n 1th Vlf'lrop.Jiilan Life
l nsut~m &lt;rlo mSt A lbans, am.lwa.s
!\"(_ t' ntl\ ptomutf'd to bra nch &lt;Jdmm
JS!J.ttor M1 s Inn Hlll atl('nded
gLtduLII IOn " ''h other mrmlx•t s of
t h f ' grad ua tP s famil\
Th1

Grate birthday
M1c haf'l F: rK (_~ t d l f &lt;.,nn nf Mr
and Mrs Stf'phf'n P n ttr·t" of South
Wf'bsi C't '-" JS hono!T'd on hi" thtrd
bu1hda\ at thP hom r of h1s
gtandparf'nl s Mt .1nd :\li t ' 1-&lt;-m
r enC'C' VanrC' :v1Jddh•po t t \ C d tt
Bca1 lhC'mf' '-"&lt;JS c dl rtf•d (JU1 fut tlw
par1 yw ttll ra kt&gt;andl&lt;t

&lt;

Meigs honor rolls
1

11111 'V rrllr r n I 1 l).! h I &lt;,I I u l ~..:+
&lt;.,pdt\ - \ \o nd &lt; ( .\tkl \ :\111\ H 1!1 1

1 11l 1l ~

1!11111\

11

Scholarrhtp gwen

\&lt;aughan
~

Plans f01 the landscape work at
the Carleton School are nearmg
completion aceordmg to Mrs
Wilson Carpenter, Meigs County
Garden Clubs AssoCiation eontact

chauman
The committee has approved the
plant mg outlme presented b1 G!'
I'U!W Carpf'r of Carp&lt;&gt;r Nui~IY who
wtll donate all of thP labor mvolved
m plant mg the landscapeshrubsand
frees
Shrubb&lt;.•Iv will bP placed at thp

Ma llhl'\-1 ( l u k 11"4'11 I n m
Andrf'a M cDonald f)(&gt;nl!'4: "i h1•nf'fh ld lr"'
sica Mitchell
Third - Rlckv Prlr' MJr hf'll Yuung
AlliSOn Gann awa v Nf'l l B.1 rrf•ll l.or r n•
Olll'f Klmbl'rly F'f'll~
lf'-.~lr.r Sihf r'&gt;
Randall Johnst on
Fourth Sha } nP t\~p ln !kth I lrrk
Andn&gt;a HalP Mallhf'\\. H .t~n, .,
l r1n
McGulrP Darcv Slone
F'llth - Tina Moldf'n Richard Pr·•1• n

a1tists to the community . The
umverstty assumed sponsorship as
lhe cost and size grew and named It
I he Umversity ArtiSt Series. Today,
the series ls supported by Ohio
Umverslly, th!' Ohio Arts Council,
lhe National Endowment ror the
Aris, donations and funds p1 ovlded
by local merchants and rPS!dents,
and season subscribers
The 25th Anniversary celebration
will no doubt enrompass all or the
wonder and excitement or the past
years The season of prog-rams

mcludes eight pertormancPs ap
peanng throughout the academic
year
Appeanng will beth!' Jazz m as ter
himself, Dizzy Gillespte, New
York's famed Joff1ey Con('('rt
Ballet Group, the 1983 PuhiZei pliZl'
wlnnlng Broadway play, "Ntght
Mother," Czechoslovakia's Prague
Symphon} Orchestra, Kodo the
Demon Drummers and DanCf'rs of
Sado, Japan, plamst David Allen
Wehr and dancer F red SllckiPr
along with the Ohio Umverslty

\ lill r M oms or Rltcme has bE'!'n
awarded a $.'10'1 Deans Scholarship
for the academic year l!ll4·85, at
Ohto UnrvPrs rty He ts thcsonorMr
dnd Mr s (ail M om s or Long
flo ttorn and a g'Ja dua re of Southern
H1gh Scl1ool

Svmphonv Orchcst t a Sha k£'sJX'are
&amp; Co 'Rom eo and .luhet,' and the
Jutlhar d St1 m g Quat tel
Reserva1 1ons fm season subscr iptlons a t C&gt; nov. bcmg accepled
f01 til&lt;' l'lR4 R'i season G1oup
dJseuunt 1alPs are now a va tlablc for
~:rroups of 2~ or m on• P01 m o r f?
mforma11on c ..1tl 1fi1l 1 J94~""l.).H o r
594.£211 Com&lt;' 'l'ieb1 " t &lt;' "11 h us
and soml' of 1hP m os1 noted
pertormmg JIIISl S tn thf' 19f!4 g,&lt;;
Ohm Umvcrs11v PC'r fm mmg Ar1s
Series

P l ans \\ Ct C' m&lt;tdE' for a bak e sale at

a la!Pr datf' Mrs Putman pres
t-'nt~l
IX&gt;IIPCI nuwPr'S to thUS('
p1 PSPnt m honor of MothPt 's Day
Pot luc k IPfrp sh mPnts wrre
st&gt;rvN:l to M1 s Leona Rut h Mrs
NanC\ Au ck l f'v
gue sl s a nd
mrm iX' t s. Mrs Putm ~m. Mrs
F:nka Bm mg Mrs Ver na Ros&lt;'.

'Pa tlem s fm L 1vmg" wa s the
thPmP or the Racine Ftrst Baptist
Chur&lt;h mother-daughter banquet
held reePntly at the church
Aftl'r thf' dmner, the 91 guPsts
enJoyed a !a shton show by severa I of
thf' church members Dtane !hlP
narrar!'d lhc l'f'VI!'W wllh LIIIlan
Havman pmv1dmg the piano
accompammf'nt
R&lt;'admgs \\CI'f' giVen by Mariha
Lou fu:&gt;gle and Mary Kav Yost
Devotions fm thP e\ cnmg were
g!V!'n by FlorenCt' /\dams Sharon
lhle and Beck\ Van M etPr con
eluded the progJ am w tt h a vocal
number
F'lowers wr rr prt:'5e1Jted to all
I nose a ltc ndmg SpPetal recogmtton

M rs Ernest Whttehead , Reeds
vtlle pll'scnt!'d her plano students In
a r ecital recently In the RiveJV!ew
School audltortum
Plano solos and ducts v. ell' played
by Letitia Holsinger. Willie Adams,
D an ny Lawrence, JennUer Roush,
Tma Connolly, Caralyn Barton,
Chnsll Adams Amy Well, David
R1ee, Amy Connolly , and Maralyn
Rarton
Rerreshments were Sli'rved to the
sludents and their guests rollowtng
the ree!tal Mrs Paul Roush baked
and served the decorated cake with
a musical motif and Mrs Richard
Barion presided at the punch bowl
Other rerreshment were made by
Mrs Barion

Slinderella meets
Ruth Smith lost the most weight
and Karen Smith was runner up at
the Monday morning Five Points
Sllnderella Class At the Monday
night Mason class, Sheila Proffitt
was the runner·up

PRIVATE
INVESTIGATION
OF All TYPES

Roger Hysell
GARAGE
Also Transmission
PH . 992-5682
or 992-7121
I 1• !c

RADIATOR
SERVICE
We can repa1r and recore radiators and
heater cores We can
also actd borl and rod
out rad1ators .' We also
repa1r Gas Tanks

1 1]

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYlVANIA

•SPEED QUEEN tAUNDRl
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
We Have A Fullltme
Shop Techn•c1an
on Duty

''

Reed Mrs Pat Marim, Mrs Sue
Reed M rs Buckley Mrs Barbara
Ma sters, Mrs Nola Young, Mrs
VIolet Sattertteld, Mrs Vlrglma
Walton and Mrs Lllhan Ptckens
Mrs Mamie BuckJey was awarded
the door prtze The next meetmg
w11l be m the church basement w1th
Mrs Bonng serving as hostess

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER-985 -3307

Harris' note first birthday

and floral arrangements weregtven
to Edna Ptckens, the oldet mother.
Lon Hallllon, the youngest mother,
Erma Norrts, thP mother traveling
the great!'st distance, and Cathy
Berkhumner, I he daughter travel
mg the greatest distance
The Ruth and Esther MisSionary
Cir&lt;lcs sponsored I he !'vent

&amp; Garages

Roofong Work
Alumrnum &amp; Vonyl S1dmgs
15 Years Expertence
GREG ROUSH
PH 992-7583
or 992-2282
II Itt

HOME FOR SALE
TRANSFERRED Owner must sell home,
family room has 20ft. of
windows for pastoral
view, l1n1shed double
garage, ftreplace large
porch, 40 foot deck,
woods, prrvacy, near
Royal Oak Park
$63,900
Call 614-992-5420
17 I m .

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOlSTERY
CLEANERS
35185 Oak H1ll Road
long Bottom OH 45743

PH (614) 985-4212
We Use Von Schrader
EQUipment Recommended
by leadmg Carpet M•nufacturers
'FREE ESTIMATES"
6 6 l mo

DOZER
AND
BACKHOE
WORK

Harns, Dcnvf'r and Nora RtCf' May

The first bll'l hda y of A bbv .To
Harns, daughter of Mr and Mrs
Tom Harris Middlepori, was otJ.
ser,~ed recently "tth a party
Attendmg were rou r generation' on
both th!' paternal and maternal Sid!'
of the ram1ly
Attendmg on t he paternal s1de
were Lcw1s Harns, Abby's great
grandrather, George Harm Sr , her
grandfather, and her father, "-hllc
on the m atemal stdc were M ari ha
Childs, he1 great grandmother, Bill
Childs, her grandfather, and Shtcla
Harns, he1 mother
A bunny cak!' was served WITh 1ce
cll'am to the guests mcludmg thOS&lt;'
nam!'d and her broher .Jarru&lt;'
Harris her SISters, Resa and Carne
Harris Lois Harris, Joan Childs,
Cmda Harns and Twila Chlds, P J

Sauer, and Jf'nn1fer McKtnlf'v
Scndmg gifts werP BO&lt;· and Nellie
Brown, Jo Shanabrook, Mr c~ nd !\1r
Bill IPWJS. and Mr and Mrs John
Sunpson, Texa s c~ nJ M rs Mane
Hayman Also noted as observmg
btrthdays the sa me da\ II Ci l' Abbv
.To s great uncle Cash Bahr and a

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

'

'

We Have the
lowest Rates

Racme Oh
Ph 614 843 5191

CONTRACTING
"DOZER

BACKHOE

"RECLAMATION WORK

. .............·-·.
.... ...

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&amp;'u~&lt;II.Oo

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HoJptialized

.'

STEVE FINLAW
PH - 985-4266

'

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' '

11

Leonard Bass, Syraeuse, ts a
surgJcal patient a I Camden Clark
HospJtal, Parkersburg

I 1 1!0+0

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r ~ A C BAooo &lt;

Public Notice
83-734 TP-COI
LEGAL NOTICE
Nmn- f' rs hPrf'b\o

vr=&gt;n thlt
hf' P11b l r Utrl1! es Comrn ss•o n
n f Oh o has Qrl ns o wr1
n l otllll.&lt;!' fP(JrJ€11f'd 1!1 l!lVPSII
' Jaliurl ((ilsP No 83 73 4 TP
COl t 10 cons ci1•r the potent •al
1nvolv1 rn,.n t ut rntprexchanqp
f urr•N OO.
n thro provrsron o f
opl on 11 r\ lt peak 1011 sPrv1c:~
11n CI1J&lt;i ' q wh eth er tne cort,
nuJ I• 11 o t !111
r crv Cl' rs
lJ)fliOrr ,11P) 15 Wf'll iJ'&gt; 1 the
pr o.:1S0 r1 n l lh~ 10 11 lr eF eme r
Qf'n cy -;r rv CPS callrn q plan
Optronal o tt peak toll serv•ce 1S
a d•sco un ted toll n ff~ r ng that
allows n CtJStomcr su bsc r1brng
to 11 to r: nll Pxchnnqes m t hf'
same Lo ca l ArcPss dtld Tran s
po 11 Ar +&gt;a o r LATA) at trmes
other th a n 9 00 J m to 3 00
p m w eekd ays at set rates for
thP I r&lt;, hout and for addrt1ona1
(j

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~7 M u O C O&lt;I~I~u""' n"

17 AuiO ~00 0

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llhloPO!II~A &lt; o "o'"'

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Blf"''''"

B'IE O&lt; o u ol\.q ,

111e tol nq o f ~-..nt l ~rl ro n\inr-n t
(;m nrrq•n al ;1nrt I 2 cnn ,.. ,, ) llll
011, 101) c hy l!l l r rf''&gt; tl' ri pr r ,() 1\:i
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'&gt;ubscr I)PrS &lt;;Ji d com rnP-nt ~ In
be lrlf'd wrth the Oodf'T1nq
01vrs•on ot !he CommtSSIOn
180 East Br nru1 Slfee1 Colum
bus Oh10 4321 ~no t lrt! Pr than
M ondav July 23 1 98&lt;1 Th e
rnvolved t elt•phonP co rnp1n PS
are requ •red 10 f1lr• &lt;; uch
co mment s A non R:wha1 &lt;;t vP 1q
ol questro n s whrch t he Com

\

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'

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Rt I
long Bottom , Oh
' - - - - - - 5 1 41 mo

''

'CONCRETE WORK

"CUSTOM BUILT HOMES
OIL LINES

c

54 M1sc Merchandise
' •

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~·~

lMI

Guoo •O '

/ 0

&lt;Jl

.

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•TRENCHING
•BACK HOE •DOZER
•END LOADER

•DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
•WATER GAS
RAIN LINES

SEWER

CoiJnty Certrfu~d
SEPTIC TANKS INSTAttED
FREE ESTIMATES

367·7560-367·761
CHESHIRE . OHIO
3 1

·-9

_

~

Ill W 2nd St Pomeroy OH
Open 9 00 to 5 00
Closed Thursdays
~ \J l mo

8o

Alummum

SIDING

BISSELL

Wed ltkt to mhoduce you to

.. ~c e • C1 r

the modern way
lhe vehrcle of your

"No' Down Payment
lowor Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box 326
Pomeroy, OH 45769
For rasltr SerVICe

Call

614-992-6737

'

Ktttens

Ask for Suu

61 4

379-2674

6 weuk old ktttens
blue· eyed. healthy

wh1te
cute

245-5024
Gold female dog 4 mos old

Call 446 8017
2 k1ttens to giveaway Call

614· 256· 9364
Gtve away . a found male
dog
Large , bob ta1led
shaggy tong black w1th
browmsh hatr blond face &amp;
legs Pretty. make a mea pet

Call 614· 742 · 2830
To gtveaway 3 puppies, 6
wks old. % tnsh saner
black With long hatr Call

Free to good home 2 year
old female beagle Call 614

992· 985· 398B
5 mo old hound type male
puppy, very frrendty 304·

675-4216
Gentle stray dog needs
lovmg homa Black , brown
beagle Good watch dog ,
good wtth chtldren 304

Spayed female cat litter
tratned good mouser atfec:
t1onate to a good home

4 ktttens
after 2 30

304·675· 2470

Lost and Found

Found 1n Langsville area
male otder dog bob tart
shaggy long ha1r black wrth
browntsh blond face &amp; legs
Please cla1m your dog 742

S AUTO PARIS
992-7013

New Chevy l1uclt
FENDER
'76 'IS
DOORS
'149 95
HOODS
•t749S
BUMPERS
'69 95
GRILL
'42 SO
R SUPPORT
'84 95
TAIL GATE
'8S 00
FORD FENDER
'69 9S
BUMPER
'69 9S
Also Some Cor
Fenders Avarlable

Black and tan Ternor name
Dutchess. wearmg a red
collar wtth green tag Last
seen at 2401 Mt Vernon

Ave 304 675 3652
Lost a green overmght bag
seen be1ng ptcked up m front
of the Darst house on Jrm
Hrll Road Sat mornmg Who
ever found thrs ptease call,

304 676 · 4198

01

675

1748 mce reward offered

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

Worked in home area
20 years
"Free Estimates

EUGENE LONG

Ph. (6141 843-5425
5 8 2 mo pd

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

"

- Addons and remodolmg

- Aoofong and gutter work
- Concre1e work
- Piumbmg and elecmcal
work

(Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

on r r n "u l0rc, H'll"' v 1111 1
th,..- ll(l 1HV , •' ! !n rth n thr
Lr111ltl ~so n ' I111 1P tJ \ !fl 1
'Tw-~,

992- 6215 ., 9'12·7314
Pomeroy, Ohta

3

J

AAnouncem ents

BUI!dmg 1s atr cond111oned
or1th smoke elim1nators
On Beech Grove Road
In Rutland
Public &amp; Dealers
Welcome
Btll Brown, Aucltoneer

For all your w1r1ng
needs furnaces repalf
semce and Installation

Cash pard for fancy tron or
heavy tron beds $1 60 and
up for certam Metgs Co
stone Jars
Old ttme cup ·
board
call 1 · 304 882

2711

Residential
&amp; Commerctal

Call 742-3195
Or 992-5875

Rrck Pearson Auctroneer
Servtce Estate Farm, An
t1que &amp; hqutdatton sales
Ltcensed &amp; bonded tn Oh1o&amp;

WVe 304 773 6785 oo
304 773-9185
Auctton every Frt mght at
the Hartford Commumty
Center Truckloads of new
merchandtse every week
Cons1gments of new and
used merchand•se always
welcome R 1chard Reynolds
Auct1oneer
304 · 275

11

Auctton Thursday June 14,

1984 Mt Alto W Va 7 00
PM Spectal sale new and
used Emma Bell . Aucuo
neer 429 84

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars
Jrm M1nk Chev · Oids Inc
BtU Gene Johnson

Help Wanted

WRITESEL
ROOFING CO.
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters

~wt'

M~GKEE
'RcaltJ4

M l " Bud" McGHEE
Brokei·Auction Service
Cheryl Lemley
Me1gs County Assoctale
Phone 742-3171

Now Accepting Listings 10 Mei s Co .

Downspouts
Gutters Cleaned
&amp; Painted
Storm Doors
&amp; Windows

949-2263

3 2 tfn

992 3476
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE
Bods, ~ron
wood
cupboards. chatrs
cheats. baskets. d11hes
atone J&amp;ra. anttquea. gotd
and ltlver
Wnte · M D
Mtller. Rt 2 . Pomeroy Ohto

oo

call

LISHING CO recommends
that you do busrness w1th
people you know and NOT
to send money through the
mall unttl you have rnvestt
gated the offeung

61 4-992·

Small farm for sate on 8
acres
house
barn
out
butldmg and tobacco base
Wrth a down payment pas
srble land contact Call 614

256 6663
house &amp;
614 256 1540

Ntce

ba rn

Call

Attractrve small home small
yard at a small pr1cel M1ddle
p ort 614 992 6941

Cell 614 949 2641

678-3639

A &amp; T Cleantng Servtce
H ouses or Commerctal
burldmgs, hourly or con
tract good references hon
est&amp;: reliable Catl61 4 256

Own your own Jean
Sportswear
Lad11es Ap
pare! Combmatton Acces
sones
Large Stze Store
Nattonal brands Jordache .
Chtc Lee Levt Vanderbilt
lzod Gunne Sax Esprtt
Brrttanra Catvm Klern Ser
910 Valente
Evan P1cone
Cla1borne Members Only
Bill Blass
Organ•cally
Grown, Heatthtex 600 oth
ers
57,900 to $24 000
mventorv a~rfare trammg
ftxtures. grand openmg, etc
Mr
Keenan ! 305)67 8

1157 01 256 1278

3639

NAed person for part trme
work
answer1ng phone
304 675 2295 between
3 00 and 6 00

12

Situations
Wanted

There IS a vacancy for an
elderly person 1n Hames
Boardmg Home Pomeroy
Call 992 6022

22 Money to Loan

Lawn Mowmg &amp; Trrmmrng
Reliable and dependable
Reasonable rates Call 614
266· 6251 after 5 30
Rooitng and gutter work,
metal work. housepamttng
carpenter work Exc ref
Free esttmates Call 446

3171
General Hauhng For sale
Ltmestone f1ll drrt , 11nd top
sort
Call Call 614 · 256

1427
Pamtmg. mtenor &amp; ex terror,
exp professtonal work , low
pnce Catl 446 6595
Wtll

plow

tobacco

Call

614 256 1528
- - - - - - - - - lc Water wells , dnlled &amp; ser
Free esttmates

Would 1rke to babys1t days
Pornt Pleasant area Refer
enr:es 304 675 7363
please call before 6 00

3051

23

675 1573

Ptano Tuntng and Repa~r
Brumcard1 Mustc Co . 446
0687 Skt11 and tntegrtty our
trademark
Lane Dantels

614 742 2951
One Jockey servtce and
lrght show
Pro1essronal
equ1pment Commerctal or
pnvate weddmg receptiOns
part res etc Call 446 6595
Proiesstonat Electrolys is
Chntc Probe Type Electroly
SIS
AMA
FDA &amp; FCC
approved Doctor referrAls

304 675 5568

Real Estate

1· 614· 687 4708

Homes for Sale

813 665 1232

lnteo

ested m owmng your own
bus1ness and be1ng tnde
pendent? Ex1sttng dealer
shrp ava1table 1n Metg and
Gallla Countlea
No fee
Inventory tnvestment re ·
qutred Buy back guarantee
Above average mcome
Complete company tratntng
Call Vern Roe 1 · 800·682 ·
7497, or Gene Schroer

$63 900
5420

Call

614 992

8 yrs old 3 bedrm 2 baths
1amtly room wtth wood
burn e r Smglecargarage on
8 flat acres wtth stocked
pond Cny water m Ractne

N1ce home m country near
mmes full basement e el
Iars 2 bedrooms 12 acres tn
Langsvtlle
S29 000
Call

614- 742-2261
12 mrles from Pomeroy
outstand1ng 8 stded home
wrth 9 acres 3 bedrooms 2
baths 3 stdes decked F uti
basement &amp; barn
T ota l
prrvacy tor S50 000 Ca ll

614 -9B5 3575

32 Mobile Homes

S2.000 down take over
S315mo payment taxes&amp;
msurance tncluded 3 bdr
ranch full basement wood
burner ctty school located
rn Plantz Subdtvlston
S24 400 balance Cell 446

1979 3 bdr mob1le home on
'h acre lot . welt •haded
Must nil both together Call
614- 388 · 9967
1973 12x60 remode,ed
trailer, new carpet, doors
plumbmg , electnc AC Cell

446 0221
1979 14x70

3 BR . 2

f~ll

baths on 441 acre well
shaded lot Call 614 388
9957 after 6 PM
1984 Clayton 24x40. 3
bdr
2 bath extra 1naula
t1on spec1al pnce $19 995
Fren c h Ctty M o bile Home

446 9340
Pr rced reduced 1984 Red
man 14x70 2bdr 1 % bath
a real bargam
$14 995
French Crty Mobde Home

446 9340
Orsplay Schultz modular
24x48 3 bdr 2 bath alum
srdmg..,.2,.::6 watts Must sell
French C1ty Mob1l e Home

446 9340
Orsplay Skylme 28x64 . 3
bdr
2 both famrly roon
alum srdtng
2x6 walls
pnced reduced French Ctty
Mobtle Home 446 9340
M o brle home Detro1ter
1 2x60 arr c ond1ttoner
2
po r ches underprnnmg fuel
o rl barrel!
$5 500 good
cond Call 614 256 1317
C1osmg Out Tratler Rental
Busrness Had 22 ONLY 6
LEFT
Sues 1 Ox 50 8t
1 2x52
2 bedroom fur
n1shed A co mfonabl e home
fo r a Low Pnce Brown s
Trailer Park
Mrner svt ll e
Ohto Cal l 614 992 3324
Near Racme m country 3 1
acres wtth 1 4x70 mobtle
h ome 2 bedroom 2 bath
central atr porches &amp; 1 2x 1 6
barn Call after 6 00 p m

614 B43 5240
1970 12x65 ChampiOn un
furnrshed
S3000
Slate
roof1ng
C&lt;1ll 614 742

2578
F or sa le
196 9 1 2)(60
Schultz mob1le h o me Com
pletely furn1shed rnc ludtng
ac
washer dryer m1cro
wave
&amp; 60 ft w oo den
p o rc h Call 614 992 2889
Tra1!er on large wood ed lot
BOAT RAMP and dock
spa ce Call 5 8 evenrngs
304 675 644 8 Terms
1981 Hollypark
1 4•70
exc
cond
1 2•8 deck
un derp enn rng and l arge
room atr cond
mdu ded
304 895 389 5 o r

sgs

For sale by owner Clarence
Htll tmmedrate possessiOn
prtce negottobler or owner
Will help fmance Bt level rn
RustiC H1lls Syracuse. Oh10
2 full baths 3 bedrooms,
fam1ty room w1th fireplace
splfal sta ~rcase hv tng room ,
dmmg room kttchen wtth
d•shwasher &amp; garbage drs
posal
chatn lrnk fence
16x12 barn for storage
msulat ed Ca ll 614 247

3600

1980 Holly Park 14x70 2
bedroom l 111 baths total
ele cHrc central e rr cond
dtshwasher
porch w11h
awntng underpennmg stor
age buddtng
304 675
2604
Campers hardt o p sleeps 6
sel1 contarned good cond
SBOO 304 6 75 511 5 atter

4134

5 p m

Country settmg rn Rutland
Good 3 bedroom home near
1 acre $25 000 Call 614

1968 Nat10naltw o bedroom
trariE'r has bee n re m odeled

S4 500 00

992 6577

3684

Rutland
10 rooms on
47x1 50 lot Nonh Mam
S4995 Needs work but lots
of posstbrhttes Call 2 1 6
394 6741 or wrrte Box 723
Pomeroy OH 45769 Is 8th
house from corner of Salem
on we st srde Make an o H e r

33

304 895

Farms for Sale

Pliny WV 250 acre workmg
farm wrth m ce 3 bedroom
home Call for more details
345 5095 ERA Mall ory
Group Assoc

FOR RENT WITH OPTION
TO BU¥111 14 tt wtde three
bedroom
bath and half
mobrle home srttrng on nr ce
lot
ready to move mto
S225 00 down S225 00 per
month 304 576 2711
3 bedroom Ran c h on Rr

$38 500 00

9

pe•

cent assumable lonns ca ll
304 675 7746 or 6 75

21B3
7 room house 4 lots on At
62 , center of Eleanor Prrced
for qutck sale by owner

304-586 3572
Seven year old h o me three
bedrooms
garden spot
2605 Lmcoln Ave 8 1h pet
assumable loan 304 675

5047

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
4 't, .,ere lot restrr ced 2 1 7
from Galltpoh s &amp;

mrle

Holl e r

Reduced

lo

$ 10 600 Call 446 3485
Surveyed lot wrth w ater &amp;
electrtc hoo+&lt;:ups approx 'I;
a rn qu1e1 subdlvl!uo n near
R o dney 2 mr from Holzer
M edrcal Center Ca ll 446

1380
Lots &amp; acreage 1n Ractne
Ca ll 614 949 2571 o r 949

2686
Rt 35 &amp; K a nawha Rrver
frontagt!
1 1 1 acre
S10 000
Ca ll 614 992

5264

By owner three bedroom
Ashton
W Va
area

$41 500 00
2535

304 576

T0x50 tra d er on l arge
wooded 101 7 mtl es below
Ga11tpolts on Racoon

$10 995 304 675 6448

Older home three bedroom
new stdrng newly ramo
deled ltvrng room 304 675

Renlals

5B54
New l1stmg, movmg need to
sell, 3 bedroom 2 full baths
M eadowbrook addn 8 % per
cent assumable l oa n Lots of
e~etras, prrced 60s
304

675 6425

One acre lot Wtth larg e
1n ground pool torn hner
and partially ftntshed base
ment For tnformauon ca ll

BUSineSS
Opportunity
TOOLS

Professional

Call 1 614 678

Owner transferred must sell
beauttful 3 bedrm bnck
home
F~r6place
deck
woods prrvacy sunshtne

160

PIANO TUNING Lower
prtced regular tuntngs
dtscounts to Sen1or Ctt1zens
Churches &amp; Schools Ward's
Keyboard, 304· 675 ·3824

31

Financial

$32 900
2513

Serv1ces

lntertor and Extenor patnt ·
mg textured cethngs 304

SNAP ON

FIXED

Call

614 992 500601614 742
3147

21

LOANS

RATES Below market rates
Frxed conventional FHA
VA Leader Mortgage
Athens
collect 614 592

&amp;

Buymg datly gold
Sliver
coms, rmgs. Jewelry sterhng
ware . old coms, large cur
rency Top pnces Ed Bur
kett Barber Shhop 2nd
Ave Middleport Oh 614·

46769
7760

'NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB

burldrngs , carport,
garden &amp; orchard mobile
1
home hookup /.r m1le above
Eureka Dam
At 7 Call
614 256 6656

Asststant Orgamst needed I-1_ B_o_o_2_
4_1_2_2_9_4_ _ __
at Grace Eptscopal Church
F o rmer Burger Kmg Chesa
Call 514 992 3968
peake K Mart Center sub
lease . 2 1 50 sq f1 . up to 1 7
Fasht o n Retell Sales We are
yrs at $2000 mth Chuck
growmg 1n the Galltpohs
Warner &amp; Asso c Realtor
area &amp; need you tf you are a
614 221 8300
career ortented
self ·
mottvated
dedrcated
re 1- - - - - - - - - - - sponslble mdtvrdual who Own your own Jean
loves workmg wrth the pub · Sportswear. Lad1es Apparel
he Posrtrons avatlable full Comb1natton. Accessones
Large Stze store Natt1onal
trme store manager , part· brands Jordache Chtc Lee
trme sales auocrates Send levt
Vanderbtlt
lzod
resume wnh salary htstory to Gunne Su Esptrtt Bntta
Gmza 224 Allenberrv Ctr
cle. Pntsburg, Pa 16234
ma. Calvtn Klem
Sergto
Call 412 833 41 7S
Valente Evan Ptcone Cla1
borne Members Only Btll
Blass Organtcally Grown
Help Wanted expenenced
Hea1thtex
600 others
sales clerk. part t1me onlyl
$7,900 to S24 000 rnven
Hours must be fleXIble . send
tory, arrfare tratmng frx
resume to Box S 1 1 tn care
tures . grand openmg eel
of Pt Pleasant Aegtster 200
Call Mr Keenan at 305
Matn St Pt Pleasant WV

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters Swam Furnt

3•d

Business
Opportunity

6 rooms. basement double
garage 1 &amp; one thtrd ac re
lot
Rose Htll , Pomeroy

446 3672

448- 3159,

lnstde moving sale Mon and
Tues 128 S Park Or 10 30
ttll 7

Beautiful remodeled country
home knotty prne mtenor 3
bedrooms 1 '!, baths large
closets large hv1ng room
porch beautiful rtverv1ew.

Homemakers Dreamt No (3031759 3200 •• r 2403
expenence needed to earn
$
25% commtss1on demon
stratmg tn fnends' homes
Local Busrness
You control hours and tn
For Sale
come Absolutely no tnvest
mentl Atso boOking perttes
Attanta Corp seekmg an
Call 446 1270 or wnte Toy
Plan . Johnstown
PA aggressstve Investor to buy
Its servtce equtpment Ac
15904
counts consts1 oi htgh qual
1ty retett storess. tncludtng
Government Job s
chetns Mtntmum cash m
$16 559 $50 553 yea•
vestment $18 000 Excep
Now htrtng your area Call
t10nal tax shelter For detarls
805 687 6000 , E•t R call Charles Kennedy Mon
4562
or lues
only
9 to 6

vtced

ture,

f !I

&amp; Vicinity

lnternattonal steel butldmg
manufacturer awardtng
dealershtp 1n ava1table areas
soon Great proftt potenttBI
'" an expandtng mdustrv
For applrcat1on call Wedcor

Public Sale
&amp; Auct1on

614 367 7101

9

Pt Pieiisari·t ·

HOME

Auct1on every Tuesday
nrght Pt Pleasant WVa
Auct Lonn1e Neal Youth
Center Btdg
Camden St

House for Sale by owner 4
BR house on Lower R1ver
Ad 3 mttes south of town
Woodburnmg ftreplace , gar
age . basement new fur
nace and roof overtookmg
the Oh1o Rtver Call dayttme
446 · 1616
n1ght 446

4 fam 1ty yard sale 1637
Lrncoln H1s Pomeroy Fn· 1 _
1_2 _
4 _4_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
day June 15th from 9 em to 1·
Reduced 2 story 3 bdr
5pm
2 car garage fenced yard
separate entrance 15 Vm
ton Gall1polts . 446 2081
n•ghts $29 900

21

Ohve St , Galhpohs Oh

AUCTION

Every Friday Night
At 7:00 P.M.
At The Ameman
Leg10n Hall

Wanted To Buy

18 Wanted to Do
B

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

7906

age ,

9

25550

6

....P.iimeriiv .. ·

3 bdr
1 Y2 baths Ia rage
rooms
ftreplece . wood
ftoora
new cerpettng ,
fenced yard. 1n town . near
shoppmg &amp; schools. owner
movtng 839 ,900 Call 446

to1let
Heated wtth
attached
gar·
~===========+§~========~full
basement
shower
8t

Employmenl
Services

304 675 5850

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodel1ng
Roofmg of all Types

.

Vard Sale 2 fam1lys Thun
day &amp; Fnday 4th trailer , left
on lmcoln P1ke Just off Rt
1 41 Centenary R1dmg &amp;
push mowers, pans dishes,
glassware, clothtng toots.
qutlts )ewelery feather ptl
lows m1sc 9 7

Giveaway

l 18 r!n

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Serv 1ce

Frazters Bottom Flea
Market
Every weekend
U S 36 Fraztera Bottom
WVa 25082 Dealers Wei ·
come
Don Frazter
Operator 304 · 765· 2779

2830

WHALEY
PH

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

YOUNG'S

.

Public Notice

THE PUBLIC UTII ITIE S COM
MISSION OF OH IO
B..,. M ~•\ 1\r\ll Or I n&lt;;b Sr&gt;r !fl1dry

Reltable person looktng for
persmtsston to hunt deer thts
fa 11m Ohto Would help land
owner pay property taxes for
permiSSIOn to hunt
Call
513· 831 · 8431 after 6 p m

4

&lt;"

"
""
' '

'" • - wo ..

I r1tr\o UW•l' "i t\1 wh r h " '
1v1 hhlr 1 Jnn wr II n 1r•1, 1
tn lhr 0111 lu t 11 1 [) "'
11 "'.
pu h lo r hPJ• l J '!'' t! u " II • '
w1ll b1 • h~&gt; l tll n M nn t ry fl. ,, 1 r
f) 1 '1Rt1
II I 0 00 1 111 11 111•
nP~\, oll11r ., 1JIItl&lt; Cn •lr •uc,c," 11
I All r:~ T l~r n Hi $1onr&gt; [ (Jil l'~
h1 c. Ohln-1\ 2 \ r) I! ] \()!1 111
1\ij rf(l', !() I ly \1 It I 1 r1 I IH t d
F Jlthr l 111 rrn r~ t •f\ 1 1
l i ,f l 11
Obl .l111f'd !1&gt;( trh i f(' "&gt;&lt;;l!l
I NT
tPn
nq1J rv
tl\
M 1r,. ;.\nn
Or1+nsk1 Sl'UCturv Thf' Puhl1f
Utrl1 t1P.S Com mrSSI On n l Oh o
180 f asl Bro.trl S!rPPI f 1JI1 un
htr~ Ohto 4 3215

at The Galley
HolyLandtourspectal $898
Make you reser\fatrons now
Expenenced tour host Call
446 4313

-~

""''
" '

c hme repa •r
parts, and
suppltes
Ptck up and
deltvery
Oav1s Vacuum
Cleaner one half mtle up
Georges Creek Ad
Call

3069
....

JO~

lJ

Junc1?

•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE

No Sunday Calls

SALES &amp; SERVICE

,,

3 Announcements

•Refrrgerators

949-2860

JIM CLIFFORD
PH 992-7201

BOGGS

'

'

. . ~ Go•&lt; "'
lU C"-•' ,
18~ """"

8 5 Q..,o o Hou ""
R~ M fl Auo

Public Notice
15 rn nut~ ppr, nd&lt; lor
(f,sr nu \1 h nm tt-' tol l ( flo' d I•
ttw to lllrP-f' rm"' rq r r1 &lt;t P f\
4 F~ r: 1l11n(j Glcln fl!l 1h f' "' IPio
p honl' o; u b scrrhr&gt; ,~ t•J r( \( h n 1
a l oll lr Pe ha s15 IJ' l &lt;:;(ono, o r
aqf'n r;rPs h,wonq pr+rn 1ry nr
p11 nc f) II fPSponc; l1o loty tor f)! f)
VIS on o l Pmprqron r v "' rv1t P&lt;;
ThP Corn m o'&gt;S10 t1 ~1J' 1nV1!Pd

Huo • o

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges

'

'

I

21 ..... ( " ' . ""''"''"

I] I

I I M

qyoo

985-3561
All Makes

"Beaut1ful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free stdmgeslimates. 949-2801 or

U S RT 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

l! \coo I. •••••••

'"ono.a

ll'lo.,o

" .. "
S) "'"'

~5Pou

H t w- o 5""0'""'

w-..t •••"'

''"""''~""'()"""'
~lCd T~6~o ~ &lt; hooon•n &lt;
5~h.odn~S.

ll .. ""'" ' '"'5o o
lJ • •• , ..., , ...

,

~

~o.,...•H o on

M!¥1 1"

~~lnotoM•
~
~~~
I

'"'"''"o"""'b"''
up".............. ., ..

SERVICE

SIDING CO.

"OIL FIELD SERVICES

.. u~tt

yard, 1816 Chestnut St

June 14 &amp; 15 Yard Sale lots
clothes &amp; mrsc ttems Clean
sale at 902 4th Ave Gall1
pohs Oh10 8 to 5PM

Good for a free c up of coffee

1 In

For Garc1a Zebco Sh1 ·
mano Johnson D1awa
Qu1ck
I)

Announcements

614 446-0294

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

....___. ..

Authomed John Deere,
New Holland Bush Hog
Farm Equrpment
Dealer

••
n

FOR FUTURE USE "

·,•

J&amp;F

"WATER GAS &amp;

The Daily Sentinel

ooo o nodvonu

" CUT OUT

Vmyl

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Parts, Service &amp;
Cleamng

'

.. J

992 7715

3 ~ lie

"DUMP TRUCK SERVICE

REPAIR

' 1

o 1

•

IWIW!EiiE1iliJIII

C L KITCHEN
5/ 21 1 1 mo

W1ll Open May 21st

742-2328

S1zes Start From 11 xl6'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
S1zes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

FISHING REEL

LEGAL
PUBLICATION

Ill

MA!M't".!@M

MON -SAT 10 to 6
POOL SUPPLIES 8o
MAINTENANCE

cousm, G n•g Grbbs

Public Not1ce

·--------

675 1828

' '

Mi!iii!hH'JIIbM

992-2549
OPEN .

TOM'S
SHOE REPAIR

AL TROMM

4 l ltn

FOUR GENERATIONS - Present lor a birthday party honoring
Ahby Jo Harris were her lather, Tom Ranis, her grandfather, Grorge
Ranis, Srr., holding Abby, and her great-grandfather, LcJWL• Harris

The Reedsville Commun11y
Builders Club mpt rPCenll v at the
residence of Mr and Mrs Harhs
Frank A reJX)rt was gwen on thP
results of donat ions to theCommun
ttv Flower Fund
Att!'ndmg w~rc M1 and Mrs
Ronald Osborne, Mr and M1 s Roy
Hannum, Mr and Mrs Donald
Mver s, Mt
and Mrs \Valter
Brown , Mr and Mrs Warren
PtekPns and Mr and Mrs Harlls
F r ank

tf ~

&amp; Thurs
13th &amp; 14th. 10 5 Beck

Yard Sale Wed

Middleport OH
PH.

Homes for Sale

for Sale

·Gallipolis ·
&amp; Vicinity

SWEEPER and sew•ng ma

992-2196

front and Side of the building with
live trees to bE' planted m the area or
the sWings and slides
Gardens clubs are contrtbutmg $1
per member to the project Also
partJclpatmg IS the Riverview
Garden Club, which IS not af!lllat!'d
wtlh the assocaltlon
More contnbutions are needed
and anyone desiring to eont ribute IS
asked to contact either Mrs Wilson
or Eil&lt;'l'n Buck t!'f'aasurer

31

'{ard Sales

498 Gen Hartmger Pkwy

New Homes-Extens1ve
Remodel1ng
Insurance Work
Custqm Pole Bldgs

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

LAFF·A·DAY

PERSONALIZED
POOlS

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

''

M1ddleport, Oh1o

~::~~~~~:. ~~~R:~~?~: i &lt;

of Mrs M ar,~ Alrce Btse
Pr a\N b\ Mt&lt; Mam1c Buckley
openC'd thf' mwtmg followed by a
poem 'CI\ c Mother Your Love'
read bv Mrs MarlPnC' Putman
Mt s Suf' HC'f'd IE'd dC'votJOns on
'Thf' Ascf'n s1on of Chnst
a nd
clos('d w1 1h a po('m praver "God 1s
Al wavs W1th Us '
:-.1 rs
Putman conducted th~
bustnC'ss sess1on Th1rtv mne shut
m call s \\f'l e rf'portPd and card s
~ crf' signpd f01 several fn ends Th£'
gr oup voted to bu y tablecloth
matcn al fm basem ent tables

614-992-7626

PAT HILL FORD

I

ho m ~

MI DOLE PORT, OHIO

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Landscaping planned

Recital given

Mi&lt; hael Eric Gr.llR

Happy Cookmg'

features jazz, theater

110-

A!IPndmg V.l'll ' H; bPt ( .t \ .:uH t
OcbbJP M I ~S\ c. 1ssuh &lt;~nd r,.l( \
Coffr) [)(&gt;bbiP and :-.1ik&lt; • fJ IJilh
and La rr. FJv. P.rmt•la \\ c~llc~r P
a nd Tommv PPnmn g-~un It :Vl1d
dlepon grandpat!'n t \ Mt and
Mrs La ff' Potters Terrs.1 Ltn S&lt; '\
and Adam Taft Ca thv and Ho ndc~
Adkins, Norma Ptqul't I !Sa anrl
Lori Mayna rd Chnstv Pr nn mgton
South WPbster

And forsomeone"ho asked about
fned corn m eal mush, Mrs Wyatt
SPnt along her recipe
USP the luice from a pork roast or
ham then add thre!' tunes that
amount of water Salt to taste Take
one part w&lt;&gt;t yellow or white
cornmeal m the same amounl cold
water and pour mlo boiling jUICe
Cook over medium hPat until the
miXture IS ha rd to stir Then pour
mto greased bread laar pans Cool
Slice thin and roil megg orfloui and
fry

Wolfe
Investigations,
Inc.

Rt 114 Pomeroy Oh1o

1 Co&lt;d " ' lOio nh ""'' •-•oc o

set&gt;'l'd

Sfcond

Thr' OffJCf' ol Public Occasions
has .tnnounced the l!JlW &amp;'1 Ohto
[ Jnt\ f'l s Jt \ Pe1iorm mg AI ts Senes
pror;r am schedule
!'he 19E4 85
season m a rks the 25 th Anmversary
ce!£'btallon of the sen es w h1ch has
prov ided At hens and surrounding
commumt 1cs wlth suc h acclauned
artis ts as Marcel Marcf'au, thP
Ballf't Fo lkloflca, and the Preser
vatwn Hdll Jazz Band
rhc scnes began m the !at&lt;' 1950s
\Vllh a sma ll group of locai i eS idents
v.. ho soug ht tobnng ftnP rx-'1 f01 mmg

. POmeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Business Services

half hour bE'fore servmg

topping
I ounce square unsweetened
chocolate, coursely grated
Prepare the crust In a sauccpan.
combine sugar, cocoa and 2 tbs.
flour, add margarine and mllk, then
cook until the miXture begins to boil,
stlrrlng constantly Remove from
heat, add small amount of hot
mixture to eggs, then rehurn
mixture to pan Fold In haU or the
can of pie flUng Pour Into unbaked
crust, and bake at 350 degrees form
35 to 45mmute or until center ts set
Chill one hour or until cold
Combine two cups toppmg and
grated chocola te, spread over thP
cool pie and then top wtth rematrung
pie filling and topping, and chill for a

And you can top off any dinner
with a Black Forest Pie, the
SpPeJahty of Vlrginla Wyatt who
shares her recipe here.
I mne Inch unbaked pie crust
3~ cup sugar
one- third cup unsweetPDed coeoa
2Tbs Dour
Y, cup margarmP
one- third cup milk
2 pggs bE'aten
I 21 ounce cherry p1e rllllng
I 9 ounce contamer whipped

ou sertes

tt'&lt;~ml)flllJ.!

1np lm.tl o;tx wf'f'k." hnnm roll l••r lhr &lt;., •I• !\ I
( f'ntf'r r::lf'mf'n t.H&gt; Sc hor I h,r.., hi&gt;~ n rn
notmcf'd M,t kln_g ,r g1 ;Jdf' of B r)J 1ho\l m
,tilt hf'n ~ IJ bjrY'I'&gt; trr IX' n rm(l(ll o 1ht roil ~~ r r1
~ rrst - Jf'Sstr a ( or hr .t n Ktrn l••r 11 I 1rn 1
Mandy J onr~ 1.1 bith.r 1 1r).(r S u.., •n F' 11..: 1
Donn if' R,l\
Jo 'i hu 1 S ,gm 1n ( t\ ~1 1 1

dish , top with the tuna and then pour
on the soup mixture. Sprlnkle with
grapenut flakes, slightly crushed,
and bake at 375 dgrees lor W to 25
mmutes

Church honors mothers

Woman grduates W.Va. State
Ten I. Hill ddug hlr•• &lt;tf ( "tl I
andMarlme THill WmfiPitl \\ \\1
and grJnddaughr•l of 1m'/ Hill
R.acln~ g~aduatedll &lt;t'ntl\ from\\
Va Staff' \ol lt&gt;gP w11h " IJ.If h&lt; lor of

thiS hearty casSProle of faYorite
mg~ ed tents that can bE' put together
th&lt;• mght berore, 1efngerated and
then poppc'fl mto the oven just m
tUTie [OJ dmner
II cails for a can of condensec
cream of mushroom soup % cup
mU K, 2 3 cup grated cheddar chese,
11 1 cups mmute nee 1 can s tewed
toma tO£&gt;S d6 ounces ) % cup w ate1.
some oregano a dash or pepper. and
a ran J91_. ounc£'1 tuna dramedand
flak!'d
l'ombmr lhr soup mtlk and
chC&gt;esc U1 sau('('pan . and heat until
the cheese ts melted strrnng
ocas!O nall:-lombme the r1ce.
lom a tOC's, "'ater, oregano, and
peppt&gt;I m greased shallow baking

•

Calendar
m f'C't

Tuesday, June 12, 1984

Summer foods can be fun and easy

Fun with jood1

F&amp;AM. w1ll
7 30p m

Tuesday, June 12, 1984

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Assumable B"• per cent
loan
payments $314 01
month 3 bedrooms large
krt c hen dmrng and hv1ng
room Carport and storage
area large lot 304 6 75

3030 01 675 3431
New Haven Mam St 5
rooms . bath basement
double garage new furnace
carpeted $28 000
304

41

Houses for Rent

Very n1 ce 2 bdr rlupl ex
hous e
co mpl etely lu rn
Metn St
Cheshne
Nn
mstde pet s Call 614 245

5B1B
For rt!nl o r for SA l e 3 bdr
house m Roo GrAnde good
locat ton S 175 mo Or wdl
sell on l and co ntra c t
S 17 500 wrth S 1 00 0 down
at 9 % mterest Ca ll 446
0157 Jack Neal

5 room house rn Eureka full

675 2847

srze basement fuel 011 fur
nance Ca ll 614 256 6547

32 Mob1le Homes

3 bd r h o use deluxe central
a1r pool etc Call 675 5104
or 675 5386

for Sale

8002

1- - - - -- -- - - 40 A house bern , tob base
mostty pasture. pond
fenced Call 446· 2371 for
appotntment

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

Reduced
2 -story
3 BR
fenced yard 2 car garage
separate entrance 15 Vtn ·
ton Glps $29,900 Call

448-2081 ntghto

NEW ANO USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL S QUAL
lTV MOBIL E HOME SALES
4 Ml WEST GALLIPOLIS
RT 35 PHONE 614 446
7274
1966 1 2x60 mob1te home
unfurmshed, $3,900 Catl

448 1340

Pomeroy
for rent
attrc for
no pets
QU!fed

2 bedroom house
bath basement
storage carpeted
$200 dep os n re
References
Call

614 992 3054
2 b e droom
un iurn1shed
S 150 month plus utrltttes
and deposrt
304 675

6544

�Page-8-The

Doily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

They'll Do It Every Time
c;iiVING THE
ME171CitVE
MENCI.VS
ME/HiJE:RS
SOME OF
7HEIROWN
NO-NO 'S·· ·

2 bdr trai le r ful ly furntshed.
good location. sec dep raq

Coil 446 -8558

2 bdr mobtle home. furn .. all
e lec tnc . adults on ly . no pets.

I-IE:'f'.' 'f'OU
170CTORS!
STOP

446 -0508

CROSSING

1 0 1n
brand
g un
S 12~
9441

or

H o m e l1te c ha111 saw.
new. nev er u se d . S85.
c abin et
h o ld s 1 2.
swing set. S25 2 45

Gravely trac tor . self start ,
30 "
m o wer
Sulky rea r
h1tch . 51 900 Law n c hais ,
sa ea . Cheac h lounge 51 5
ea bl~ ck whttt! TV S 35 ea
ant1que whet!l b arrel S1 00.
2 s1y n l1ghts S10 ea 446

Mobtl e ho me furn•shed , AC
tdea l for 1 or 2 men ,
r~verview

R e po ssesse d Kimball Con sole piano, low monthly
payments. D an Ferguaon
Music, Rt 60, Ceredo, W

ca l 614 -256 1529

Fully furn•shed AC , 2 bdr ,
adults only Ca ll4 46 -4110

Qeautlfu l

2 grave lots . 2 vaults , 1
marker . Ohio V alley Memo ry
Gardens . Ca ll 614 · 379 :28' hay elevator . l1ke new
Sears cem ent m1 .~o:e r c ham
hOls t and other m•sc 1tem s

Mobtle home tor rent Ref . &amp;

l)ep
Call
446 1609

57

2659

YoiAR Lf:~S!

Gal l 614 - 367 -7438 .

54 Misc . Merchandise

Fosters

tra•ler Park Call446 - 1602

Trai le r avatlable June 25 ,
Ple uscml Htlls School R d.
C&lt;~ ll 614 -379 -2659 .

Oueen Sl.le h1d a - bed so f fl
Ca ll 446 2 177

2 bdr h o use tr&lt;1iler for rent

Murray garrlen tra c tor w1th
mowmg d ~c: h &amp; snow blad e

Cnll 446 3875

rcqutrcd

Ca ll

2 bdr mobtle home for rent

1 &amp; 2 bedr oo m furmshed
opts Ca ll 614 992 · 5434 or
992 5914 or 30 4 · 882 ·

2566

Call 446 1052
2 bdr tra 1ler 5 mm from
H M C or town water &amp; trash
pa 1d
Ref
r eq u1red
Call

446 -406 3
2 bdr unfurnished H o lley
Pa rk mob1l e hume . 1 2,;60
' , 111ile pa st HM C
Ca ll
446 4369 or 675 9760

-- --- - - - 2 bdr
mobile ho me at
EvergrP.P.n Citll 446 - 7032
1 2x60 2 bdr tra1ler . fur
n1shed g as &amp; water pa1d .
S100 depos1t . S250 mo
rent Call 446 6583
- - - ---- --- 1 b: 60 2 bedroom mobile
hom e . partly furnished . Ra
cme area Ca lf 614 - 992 -

5858
Tra 1lor for re nt . close to
sc h oo l s. stores par ks Dep
o s1t required Cal l614 992
59 14

A P ARTMENTS , mob1le
homes. hou ses Pt Pleasant
&lt;Jnd Gall1pohs 614 - 446 82 21
TWIN RIVERS TOWER
Apartment s now ava1lable to
elderlv ~ r11st1biP.d w1th an
1nr:om P. of IP.ss th&lt;~n
S12 300 Rentmg for 30
per cent at adJusted mcome
Phone 304 675 -6679
N1 ce
and 2 bedr oom
unfurn1sh e d apartments
304 675 2218 before 6

In Middleport . 2 room effi Cie n cy apt
ut1l1ties pa1d

1 -3 04 882 2566
E"c
n1c e f11st floor one
bedroom apt Washer dryer
hookup . stove and ref fur nished Off street parkmg .
qwet ne1ghborhood 304 675 196 2

45

2 bedr oo m trruler kitchen
lu rmshed r:o upl e one small
ch1ld &lt;H:r:ep ted
304 6 75

For rent Sleep1ng Rooms
and l1g h t house keepmg
rooms Park Centrcal H o tel

Mobil e home t o r ren t
2
he dr oo m . furni she d . &lt;11r
r. ond adults on l y, no pets
S150 00 m o nth
New
Haven 3 04 882 2466

Furnished Rooms

Call 614 446 0756
Sleepm!=J room $115. uti\1
t 1e s pa1d Share bath , male
only Ranqe &amp; refnq 9 1 9
2nd Ave . Ga llipOlis Ca ll
446 4416 after 7 PM

46 Space for Rent
44

Apartment
for Rent

Off1 Ce space 5 rm surte.
large receptiOn m ea &amp; 3 or 4
pr~vate o ff1 ces
Call 446 -

3643
JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS !Equal
H o u s1 ng OpportunJtyl ha s
o ne and two bedroom s. rent
~ t a r t 1ng at 5 157 for one
b~d r oo m
and
S193 per
m onth for two b ed room
w1th $200 depos1t located
1H: ar Foodland and Sprmg
V&lt;i llcy Pla.la , p oo l a nd TV
&lt;~nt Ca ll 446 27 4 5 o r leav e
message

------

3 bd r
S250

un furn ga rage ap t .
plus depos 1r
Ca ll

Furn1s h e d apt 9 19 2nd
Git ll 1p 0 11 s 5 17 5 M en only
Cal l 446 4416 after 7PM
Newly r emodeled 2 bdr
f!ou 1ppe d ~1tchen . c entral
a1r
52 50 8 2 1 ', SP.cun d
Ave
Gil ll1p o hs Ca ll 446

2 158

4265
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Route 33. N o rth of
Pomeroy Large lots Ca ll

614 -992 -7479
Warehouse or storeroom .
25.~o:75 .
f o r furniture .
lum ber. roofing . msulat1on.
panel1ng . equ1pment or
othe1 u se C~l l 1 614 486 ·

Merchandise

2 bdr
ap t
unfu rn1 shed .
N1lh e..:r:P.IIP.nl VIP.W rlown
town ArP.a $2 25 Ca ll 446

36 4 3
F.urn ' ed e ffi Ciency apt . ca r
~eted
th ro ugh o ut
Sl 75 mo
Dcp
&amp; Ref
req ed Ca ll 446 460 7 o r
44 6 2602
4 room'&gt; &amp; b ath un f urn iShed
pat
utd J! II~s
pa1d
adu lt s
on l..,.
n o pets
Ca ll 446
3437 o r 446 31 11
Unfu r n i sh ed 2 bd r 1n C rown
G1t y Ca lt 61 4 256 6520

2. b d r un furn 1shed . exl r a
nice. 2 m1 out on At 588
adult s only Call

446 230 0
Delu.~o:e one bed r oom
Oall1p o h s. ga rage no
n.o c hi l dren rehn e n cH .
able June 16 C all614

.lp t
pets
avail
256

1529
1 bedr o om Apt 5196 mu
1ncludmg ut1ht1e s
Equa l
H o usmg Opportun1ty Cu n
tact V1llage Manor Apt s

614 -992 · 7787
Rlvtn s•de Apts M 1rlril ep o rt
Spec•al rates for Sen 1or
Cit•zens S1 30 Equal Ho us ·
6 14
1ng OpportunlllftS

992 7721
Furnished 1 &amp; 2 bedroom
apartments . Middlep or t
Adults . no pets . se cunty
d e posrt
Call 614 · 992 ·

3874
Apartment 1n Pom eroy . 3
ruo m s &amp; b at h Ca ll 614 ·

992-562 1
1 bedroom apar1ment . par·
tiellv furniShed , &amp; 2 bed room apartment for rent .
Both newly decorated
S225 . mth . Deposit&amp;: refer ences required 614 - 992 -

2815 or 992 -2362 .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washe r s. drvers . refngera ·
tors range s Skaggs Ap ·
phances Upper R1ver Rd
bes1de Stone Cre st Motel.

6144467398
Why pay more Trade Center
Futn1turc Outlet
At
7.
Kanauga. Oh Open 9 7PM
Free.ler . 23 c u
Upr1ght S200

ft Gibson
Ca ll 614

245 -5032
1 bed w1th
sprmgs S 75
cha~r S45. 1
446 - 1243 or

mattress and
1 couch and
TV S25 Ca ll
446 - 1615

01-l;l

58

- - --

- - - - -k --

Cherry D1mng room su1t.
drop lent tab le w1th 2 l eaves.
ex t end s to 102 in. huffet 4
cha~rs w1th p added seats
$325
Ca ll after 5 p m

992 -5154
Avo c ado Gas rang e
Ca ll 992 7030

S30

Couch &amp; C ha1r $225 . 2
bunk mattresses_ twm s1z e

S75 Co li 614 992 6376
20,000
BTU G 1b son ;:ur
conditione r brand new .
5500
Death reason for
se ll1 ng Call614 992 5956
L1vmg room su 1te couch . 2
chairs. cofiee table Phone
30 4 -773 -5846
Simmons h1de ·a bed sofa .
extra good cond•t•on An tique oak fl at top d esk
36 m ~t60m Ref 1n 1she d 30 4 -

882 -2612
Used full si1e mattress and
s pr~ng s
$40 00 304 - 675 -

sse

Used Furniture -- Chairs,
dryers, and TV's . 3milesout
Bulaville Rd Open 9am to
6pm . Mon thru Fri , 9am to
6pm Sat

6t4-446 -0322

Rockwell 10 inch band saw,
1/1 HP motor stand. 4 new
blades
925 0
Ca ll 614 -

843 5106
Used A · 40 D1tch Witch
Trencher 1 · 614 694 · 7842
or 694 5006
Camera 35 MM . Olympus
w1th accessofles Ca ll 30 4 -

675 -7476
For salfl 2 o ne room a~r cond
$125 00 eac h Ca ll 304 ·
675 6083 after 4 p rn

55 Building Supplies
LUMBER Rough cut. oak.
poplar 2x4, :2x6. 2~~:8. h4.
1 x6. 1 ~~;8. l ength ava 1labl c, 8
ft through 16 ft Hogg &amp;
Zuspan 30 4 - 773 - 5554
Now ope n tor business,
Mountam State Bl oc k. At
33 New Haven Complete
ma sonry supplies, 4 ''. 8" .
1 2' blo c k De li v!-!r y se rv1c e
Phone day 304 · 882 - 22:22.
even mg 882 - 3239
3 all steel budd111gs 30 ' )(50'
was $8746 now $5044.
40'x75' was $17951 now
$9985. 50'x 1 00' was
S28226 now $ 15767 In
storage. will sell cheap Call

John 13041863 -6670

675-5115 after 5 PM .

CAPTAIN EASY

Services

S traw b ernes . Taylor's Berry
Pat c h
8AM - 8PM
Man .
Sa t Call 446 - 8692 or 614-

B1

56

Pets for Sale

Cl o th es lme post s heavy
duty
Lawn . k1d s ~ w1ng
frames. all types sch 40
P•P e 304 675 · 3677
Gas furnace
304 · 675
:2561 or 675 1627

I~~:========::;===========~
roofs
. 30 years
experience.
~
specializing
in built
up roof .

Bnarpatch Kennels Pro fe s
s1o nal All -breed grooming
Indoor -outdoor boarding f&lt;J ·
CIIJtleS P1ck up and rle l1 very
serv1ce English Cocker Spi!
n1el pupp•es. Calt 614 · 388

Dragonwynd Cattery
Kennel s AKC Chow pup
PIC S. CFA H1malayan . Pe r
s1an and S1amese kittens
Ca ll 614 446 3844 after 6

54 Mise Merchandose

ProfeSSIOnal All Breed Dog
Obed1ence Tro1nm g. lndiVI d
ual &amp; classes avmlable Call

Knauff F1r ew oo d Reduced
pr~ce s thru July 3 1st Have
vour own seasoned w o od
th 1s w1nter 6 14 · 256 · 6245

614 · 388 9790

286 -5930
Coffee table st e reo stereo .
dmette ta hle C all 614 - 256

Livestock

72

c ut up slabs 51 S
p1ckup load Call 614 · 245

446 0857 Parrot w1th cage s 17 5 Cal l

Shrubs pruned . l awn re seeded . re t a 1nmg walls .
Sidewalks . patios . fill dirt .
t opsoiL bark mulch &amp; saw dust Contact Bruce Dav• Sion C111 ll 614 - 256 - 1427
Four Davtona Radial truck
t~r es.
32M115R15LT . lik e

new S350 992 2770

93

Co li

614-286 -6522.

Open 6 days closed Sun
days Sale ends June 30

675-6799.
10 registered polled Hereford heifers, 1 yr . old,
contact Diamond L. Farms.

Trucks for Sale

64

AKC regi ster ed Boston Ter
ner . 510000 304 - 675
651 2 or 675 2485
Co ll1 e

Puppy

30 4 675 ·

516 2

57

Mower conditiond hay for
sale S 1. 25 bale in field.

446-3929

or

256- 6233.

BanJo Aluar e.l delult, 5 stnn g
with cas e, 52 75
Gu1tar
1960 fender straocaster.
custom fin1sh . $600 Ca ll

446 -7502
U sed piano tor sa l e good
cond ., make serious o ffer
Cal l614 · 245 · 5192

KEeP KICKIN6,
GIRLS. WHILE

!

GO INIO

Good mixed hay. $1.25 in

field. 304-675-5579.

614 949 2644

614-446 -2282

1976 Ford Tonno. 64.000
actual mi., AC , Interior
good, good t~res. S1250.
Call 446 :2419 or 446

1416.

1- - - - - - - - - - Pacer.

1979 Ford van, customized,
including sink and refrigera tor, very good con d . low
mileage, 302 engine, blue
and silver. 304 - 773-5060.
1982 Ford F260 4x4 heavy
duty lariet blue &amp; white, air,
tilt wheel. cruise. automatic,
am-fm tape, p windows.
sliding back g l ass. cab
lights, dual tank, new tires
400 engine. 48,000 m1les .

96.250.

Call

304 - 675-

5421 between 7 ·30 a.m to
9 p .m
1982 Ford 4x4 F250, lock in
and out hubs, s lidin g rear
wtndow. gauges, radio.
black w1th aluminum spoke
wheels &amp; Firestone radia l s. 6
cyl , 4 speed $6500. Call
304 - 675 - 5421 between
7:30a.m. and 9:00p .m .

74

Motorcycles

Runs

1972 Mustang Grande,
302, auto .. good on gas.

446 - 1326

Massey Hams Pony tractor
&amp; eq u1pment . EMc co n . Call

eves.

614 -985 4454

1980 Renault LeCar deluxe.
sunroof, AM-FM, AC was
$2,495. new $2.195 Johns
Auto Sales, Bulaville Rd
Ca ll 446 -4782. Gallipolis

1 980 Agro Power 1 1 3hp .
farm tractor . PS
remote
hydro lin e, 6 cyl diesel
16 9x34 1ires
Used 10
hours
S 12,000 00
304 -

458 - 1610

62 Wanted to Buy

Tobac c o all otment m Mason
Coun ty 304 -675 · 11 97

63

Livestock

1978 Monte Carlo Landau
green, V -8, 54,000 miles,
$3.000 1978 4 dr blue
Impala V -8, 63,000 miles.

S2.500
2705.

Coli

5 yr old Sorrell Quarter
horse ma re, 2 yrs Eques tui'ln tra1n1n!=]
Mendeth
manor. S650 Call 614

992 - 2488

Chevy S 10 P1ckup,
mileage. 446 ·3 797 .

low

256-9364

1979 Chevy Caprice Classic, 2 dr. ac. ps. V -8 engme,
body good condition. eMc.
performance. Will consider
all offers. Call 614 -992 7412 after 5 p .m
1979
Ptvmouth 6
cyci.,PS,PB', auto transmission. 61,000 miles no rust .

Call 614-992 -3798 or 742
2143.

614 - 388 8824

'75 Pinto stationwagen, V 6,
27 MPG , runs good,

614 -949 -2526 .

GET

your

or

675 -

carpet

SHIP

... 'IIITMOUT
5Nfl'll~ Y, I'Cl

WITH

PROB'LY

CAPTIAN

STEAMER . Water removal.
furniture cleantng, free esti-

mates. 304-675-2295
Water wells commercial and
domestic, test holes. pump
sales and service . 304 - 895

3802 .
BASEMENT

WATER

PROOFING . Unconditional
lifetime guarantee . Local
references furnished . Free
estimates . Ca ll collect 1 614 - 237 -0488. 9 am . to 5
p .m. Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .
Remodeling . 51d10g, Interior
and exterior, textured coat ing
Simulated bnck and
stucco, thermo replacement
windows 304-675 -1 560
Roofing and extenor paint
ing. ca ll 304·675 - 2792

ALLEY OOP

ATC $1,696 both m showroom cond . Call 446 7521
1977 Honda CR 125 Elsi nore. Call 614 256 · 1778
eve.

82

'

8 30

I

9;00

Dav•dson
conditiOn .

S2600 .
2620.

614 - 992 -

6t4-445 -4477

1 979 Kawasaki 750 KZ,
new tarring. Exc con Call
614-992 - 2042 after 5 p .m

304-675-7138
t 98t Honda XL500S . 304 675-6810 after 5 p m.

83

Excavating

He just did a
Actually
it belonqs commercial for
to Teddy~ r----. Lollydadsr

$2.000.00 304-675 -5486

75

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Chns Craft cabin cruiser. 36
ft . With 40 ft . trailer

Isn't that

the other
brand hes

Is it? I hadn't
noticed

1974 Grand Prix 400 , AC,
PB. PS. clean. Call after

Basements, Footers. Concrete work, Backhoe's,
Dozer &amp; Ditcher, Dump
trucks. &amp; w ater-gas . sewer
electncal lin es

1970 VW 16,000 m•les
$900 .00 Stereo componet
system in cabinet S 200 00.

304-675 -6535 af1er 5 .00

WV 304-422-8433 or 304 422 -2367
Bass tracker 2 man boat.
swivel seats, trolling motor
and battery. exc . cond

CIJ G)

suckinq on?

BILL, I'M VERY DISAPPOINTED
AT YOUR PERFORMANCE
HERE DURING MY A!l5ENCE.

WHAT
THAT

TODO

FIRING Ml55

MARSHALL?

SHE WA5
INDISCREET...

BILLY.

WHAT

HAPPENED? YOU'RE

A5 WHITEA5 A
GHOST.

AND IT
AFFECTED
HER 13U5/NE55
JUDGMENT.
BUT YOt/'J?L'
JU5TA5MUCH
TO BLAME.

EVQ¥ .MORE

so.

tland. Oh.614-742 - 2903;

B4

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

BARNEY

NO CARD GAME FOR 'IOU
TONIGHT, SNUFFY·- YOU GOT
A TETCH OF TH' FLU BUG

I'D LIKE
TO GIT
A SECONT
OPINIOI\I

THAT'S
FINE WITH
ME -------,./&gt;-- -n----.

-- BUT IT'LL
COST 'IE DOUBLE
~

9400.00. 304 -882 - 3551

72

Trucks for Sale

1979 Ford Courier XL T
sports package, PB, rack -inpenning steering, new tires.
auto transmission, 4 cyl.,
approx. 32 MGP, selling
price $2.495. retail 93,026.

MY FLYIN6

Call

C}'.MEL..
I&lt;OllTINE:

daytime.

76

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

2 Craiger 14'' rims and tires .
Call 614 -256- 1528.

SEWING Machine repair s,
service Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors
Fabric Shop.
Pomeroy 614 -992 · 2284 .

85

General Hauling

6t4 - 388 - 9906

1952 Chevy PU truck

Call

1983 S 10 longbed pickup, 4

AM -FM like

n8'W', &amp;6,995. Johns Auto
Sales, Bulaville Rd . Call

.

448· 4782. Gallipolio.
1976 Chevy luv with
topper. good con d ., 34,00

miles Call 6t4· 379· 2706.

"-.JIT'G....,

Camping
Equipment

James Boys Wat~r Service
Also pools filled . Call 614 ·

Ventura pop - up camper.
sleeps sill. 1973 Dodge
motorhome, 21 ft . sel1 con tained . Cen be seen wee-

Johnson Water Sarv1ce. Call

kends. Call 245-9183.

JIMS

78

PEANUTS

WATER

SERVICE

Call Jim Lanier, 304: 675 ·

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

7397.

87

1974 Ford JA T .• super cab

Upholstery

1963 International pickup,
heavy duty cab, 6 cylinder, 4
spd .. Call after 8 p .m .

614-992 - 7492
3716.

or

992-

BURDETTE CAMPER
SALES Bo SERVICE. Open
dolly 9 to 6 :30. Sot. 9 to 4 .
Clooed Sunday. U .S . Rt. 60.
Coolville. Oh 614- 667 3386.

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave . Gallipolis

614 -446 -7833 or 614 -446 1833

I LOORIE±

@I Arthur Hailey's

NBA Basketball

;&lt;;;;Eo

cuss w1th officials th e fulurc
use of the atom1c bomb . 11 IS
dec1ded that the homb w1lt
be used o n Huush1ma and
Na gasaki (R) (QO m111 )
jCiosed Capt ione d]
ll1J Strokes of Genius
1 0 ·00 0
til li J Remmgton
Steele Rem1ngton and Laura
1flf11trate the c 1r cus 1n order
to 1nve s11qate the po~s1Ule
murder of a c1rcus per·
former (AI (60 mm )

W MOVIE : 'The Sling II"
(f) Assaulted Nuts
(II Major league Baseball :
Atlanta at San Oiego
Cil 1EJ @ Hart to Hart The
Hart s are 1n dang er when an
a nc 1ent Jade carv1ng leads
th em 1nt o an encoun t er w11h
a Ch1nese arms d ealer (R)
(60 mn 1[Ci osP.ti Cap ti oned[
(1) S1x Wives of Henry VIII
(ill Newswatch
@) Independent Network
News
10 :30 W MOVIE : 'force Five·
(I) My l1ttle Margie
1J.1) Inside Story Cash1ng In
on the New s · Hodd1ng
Cart 10 1 Iouk s at ~re ss cov erage of ac!IVIlles o n Wall
Stre et m hght o f rece01 ai IP.ger1 1mpropr1et1es on th e
part of reporters w1th 1n s1d e
1nformat10n
fl) Love American Style
1 1 :00 0 Cil ® Gl @I News
(]J Another Life
ffi News/Sports/Weather
@Odd Couple
11 :30 0 CIJ CD Tonight Show
(I) Best of Groucho
ffi SportsCenter

r'D'NP,O'( WHO
'"''-""' F IR:SI

YES, SIR, IF YOu'RE THE
SC~OOL PS'fCHOL0615T, I'M
SUPPOSED TO SEE 't'OU .. I0M

YOU !-lAD TROUBLE WITH
ISC~OOL,TOO, W~EN VOU WERE
YOUNG. NO, I DON'T MIND
HEARING ABOUT IT...

0 CIJ

® News
Cl) latenight Amenca
Gl © Nightline

MI5Hi DOTH/5,

\YOUTCHt

[) I

Cil Linda

Ronstadt

Now arrange the circled letters lo
form the surprtM answer, as suggested by the above cartoon

J

KI XI 1 )

Answer:

XX)

FROM THE (

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles SANDY

Yesterday s

I Answer

KNELL

What a backseat

UPROAR
dn~er

GULLET

never seems

to do- RUN OUT OF "GAs··

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

It's only common sense
by East was a weak two-bod .
a popular modern method

describing a hand w1th a sixNORTH

6-12-64

• J 10
• 65

t A843
+At0762
WE.~T

+943
tQI0965
+KJ53

•QJ 10972
.KJ2
+Q84

•s

card su1t and less than lull
openong-bid strength. South
made an uncomplicated
overcall of four spades,
wh1ch North raised to fivt( ·· , ~ ~,

EAST
+5

SOUTH
+AKQ8762

II it were legal to talk acr~
the brodge table. that fivespade bid would be interpreted thus "Partner. I
thonk you have a good hand
If you can keep the opponents from takmg two heart

r

tricks.

.A K43
tl

·~

West

North

ing neart lead with the ace
and was about to play the

Pass

5+

Pass

Pass

Vulnerable . North-South
Dealer: East

z•

s1x spades He won the open-

East

South

Pa ss

6+

4+

Pass

Openong lead

~/

think we have a

slam 1"
That's the way South took
the bid, and he happily bod

king,

but

common

sense

went to work If the heart
king was trumped by West
and a trump led, declarer

•s

would come up short. Was
there a solution.,
Declarer found it. At tnck
two he led a little heart from
h1 s hand . East won and led a

spa de,

By Oswald Jacoby
Many

of

the

but

South

could

trump hi s last losing heart in

and James Jacoby
advanced

plays that bridge columns
attnbute to experts are Sim ply a result of puttong a little
common sense to work . If
there IS a safe and certain

approach to makmg your
contract. that's usually the
way to play
The openong two-heart b1d

dummy
contract

and

make

his

Was there a way to beat
the contract? If West leads a
spade and then trumps his

partners good tnck (the second round of hearts) to lead
another trump. the slam can
be beaten That defense will
only happen in a bridge

player's mghtmare.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN 1

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

4 Grafted

ACROSS
I Heap
5 Insect
9 Arab

her )
5 Forded
1

a stream

6 Turkish
standard
10 Wooden
harruner
7 One who
12 Pew
tames a
13 F'omi a
masher
though!
8 -out llirect 1
14 Be a hothead 10 BIShop's hat
16 Beverage
II Cylioodrical 23
17 Inflamed
15 Soviet sea
18 Before
19 After s igma 24
26
1prefix I
20 Witticism
28
19 Sailor
21 Dnnk of
2ll Hun mto
the gods
21 Brazilian
22 Aeneas·
countr~

seaport

companiOn

Most
ha ckneyed
Fervor
Callow
Journalist
.Joseph
or
Stewart

29 Hallie

311 On the edge
31 Showy
nov..er
3J London
art gallery
34 Hi~h
cards

24 Throng
25 Betge color
26 ·· 1 - Ideas"
11951 song 1
27 Greek letter
28 ConstellatiOn
29 Wagncnan
heroine
32 Goss1ps
3!i Comfortable
36 Succmct
37 Be contm·
gent
38 Advantage
39 Footprint
40 Prophet
DOWN
I Turkish

offocial

2 Perfect
3 Pennis.'iiOn

-DAILY CRYPTOQt:OTE- HHe's ho11 to work it:
AXVDL B AAXR
Is

I. 0 N G F E L L 0 W

One letter Simply stands (ur another In lht s '\amp l e ·\ IS
used for the three L 's, X for thl' t"'o 0 \ l'lr Smg le lett ers,
apostrophes, th e length and formation of the words are all
hints Each day t he code lrlters arc dtffcrrnt

CRVPTOQUOTES

KZMH

Q f'

VEMQMRSUR t\

XRFKYMSAM

fl) Gunsmoke

11 ;45

ANP

iH INI&lt;6 AF'TERWAR:t:&gt;5

[[! WKAP in Cincinnati

DUMB KIC' WHO FAILED...

pickup. $660. 246-9441 .

.!

L_1_~_J~~~--~~~ · t====t~~~~--~~~,·~w.~~~~J

256 - 1141 or 614 - 446 ·
1175 or 614-446 -7911
6 t4 -266- 1743 or 614-256 1120.

700 Club

go es to Wa shmgton to dts-

Dozer Work free estimate.
Call anytime. 446 - 8038.

Correct Craft &amp; Ski Su preme, family ski boats.
New &amp; used. Parkersburg,

Riptide Cody .

Hotel Peter 1s court l::!d by
Mrs Cabot 's bus1ness nva l.
a JOurnalist gets an lllSJde
scoop on a ro ck s1ng er and a
cnupiP- returns to reliv e the~r
w edd 1n!J rlay (R) (60 m1n )
j Cios l::!d Cap t1oned]

WINNIE

Good -1 Excavating, base ments. footers , driveway s,
septic tanks, landscaping .
Call anytime 614 - 446
4537, James l. Davison, Jr
owner

S500.00 304-576-2736.

Call

Cil CD

PlayoHs Shou ld thiS qame
not be necessary, then regu lar programming w1 ll be
shown
® American Playhouse
'O pJ.H::&gt;n he iJTU::&gt;r
Fifth of 7
pans Aller Opp enheimer

W ITH YOUR

J A A Construc1ion Co . Ru-

$1 t .000.

0

0 (Ij :JQi

1982 Honda V -45 Sabre,
exc
cond .. 5.000 miles,
after 5 00

Five

(!)Top Rank Boxing from
las Vegas, NV Top Rank
Boxmg present!&gt; a 12· ruund
bout featunng Tommy Cordova -...s Freddie Roach for
th e
ESPN
L1ghtwe1ght
Champ1onsh1p

ING . R1 1. Box 355. Gall• ·
pohs Call 614 -367-0576
SHULAW'S Plumbing and
Heattng. 211 S1dh St.
Point Pleasant. W . Va 304 ·
675-5420 . Licensed and
msured .

'The

Penntes'
1t21
(jJ
1D
Three· s
Company
Jad..'s
fathP.r
s how s up lor a surpr1sP. V l ~ lt
(A) [Ciu::ied Capt1oned j

W

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

1957 Harley
chopper, exc .

MOVIE ·

N1ck and Boz getmvolved 1n
a slmnge murder case (R)
(60 m1n )

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

Cor Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis Ohio
Phone 614 - 446 -3888 or

Call

PROB'LY FORGOT ITI

@

304 -675 -2440

1983 Hond 200X ATC,
S 1. 195. 1984 Honda 250R

AW, TH' SIGN MAKER

Y'DON'T SUPPOSE
WE MISSED TH'
TURNOFF, DO YUH?'

All bu ildi ng and remolding
lntenor -E.~o: terior
Concrete
roofing. electrical. etc [lt .
penenced and affordable

304-676 -

Grcenb11er Stables now
boarding horses 304 - 675

6799

8.00

ANNIE

RINGLE'S SERVICE eMpe rienced roofing. including
hot tar application. carpen ter. electr~cian. mason. Call

1731 after 6pm .

5 00 304 -675 - t285 .
Baby turkeys Wt1te or con·
tact . Lou•e M . Chnstlan RD
4, Harr• sonv11\e Ad. Pome roy, Oh

446 -3738 .

1980 Honda 750 SS 1400

1969 Cadillac Fleetwood,
mint condition. $995. Call

Call 446 -4344.

83 Honda 750 shadow.
excleent conditiOn. 2,300
miles 2 helmets. Ca ll 614 -

miles. Call evenings . S1400.

Sell or trade 18 HP 6 speed
g&lt;~rden tractor 3 pt. hitch
Too b1g for my yard War ·
ranty good til 5 - 1 -87 Call

One larg e family cow with
he1fer calf One black white
fa ce cow w1th heifer calf

7 .30

2398 or 614 -446 -2454

304-675 - 2088
4560.

r

I I

0 (]) ®I Gl 1121

(I)
MOVIE ·
' Between
Friends '
ffi New Treasure Hunt
ffi Mazda Sports look
ffi Andy Griffith
(J] News/Sports/Weather
ti)
MacNeil/lehrer
News hour
ill) Powerhouse
Star Trek
0 Cil CD NBC News
Cil MOVIE;
'Snoopy.
Come Home'
OC Rifleman
CI: This Week on the NBA
~· Carol Burnett
Cil Gl © ABC News
0 Cil @ CIIS News
IJI) Bits and Bytes
0 Cil PM Magazine
Cil Here Come the Brides
II SportsCenter
Il Sanford and Son
I ) Entertainment Tonight
CIJ Wheel of Fortune
0 (]) Wheel of FortJ,Jne
([)
Nightly
Business
Report
@News
CID
MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
(i)
·:It Entertainment
Tomght
Jeffersons
0 Cil Tic Tac Dough
(!) Auto Aacmg '84: Cart
Dana Rex Mays 200 from
Milwaukee. WI
ffi AU In the Family
0C 0 (Ij Family Feud
C'L· love Connection
OC Dr Who
lj1)1 Wheel of Fortune
&amp;J (iZf People's Court
fl) One Day at a T1me
0 W CD A Team The A
Team take::&gt; 0 11 a gang of
modern -day
stagecoa ch
r obbers at a Nevada gam b ling cas1no lA) (60 mm )
(I) MOVIE · 'Psycho II'
::1) MOVIE : 'Blue Thunder'
(I) Gentle Ben
®
Cousteau/Amazon,
Part Ill
liD Gl l t~ Foul ups.
Bleeps/Blunders
D (!J ( t~ Welcome to
Paradise Thr ee sa1 lors f md
them ::ie lve~ 111 I he m 1ddl e of
th e theft of a sacre d 1dol
\1\i hlle d1vmg olf the coas 1 of
New Zealand 160 m1n I
(]J 1111 Nova To L1ve Until
Y o u I11P. Th e Work of Elisa beth
Kulde r-Ross
To n1qht s pr o qramf.H~ se nt s ar1
11lt 1m a1e portra it of Dr Ross
as she w o rk s Wltt'1 pat1ent s
who learn to face dcilth (RI
(60 mm) [Clo sed Capt10ned j

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT1981 Cheverolt Corvette
black w1th red interior,
33.000 dry miles Showroom cond Call 446-0648

256- 1528
Reg Polled hereford bu11 &amp;
ca ttle 8ft homemade metal
pipe co w rack Call 614

1981 Honda CA BOA. ex .
cond Call 446 - 3485.

6t4-379 -

spd .. 4 cyL.

~ -r

extras.

SHAPE
TOP CASH paid for late
model used cars.
Smith
Buick·Pontiac, 1911 East ern Ave, Gallipolis Call

one •er to each SQuare, co form
follr ordlnai'J words.

m

100°a&lt;XK!

scotchguard · water extrac ·
1ion. deodorizers. FREE esti mates. Reasonable rates
Gene Smith, 992 -6309

Fetty Tre_e Trimming, stump
removal. Call 304-675 -

with

IT I'll L-L. ~ A Sf'I::LTAC.l&gt;L-AI'!
DISPLA'( AJ.ID IT srARrs

~~161-iT.,

GENE'S DEEP STEAM
CARPET CLEAN

1975 Dodge Van $550. Call
614-992·6159 .

loaded

304-675·3044.

Autos for Sale

Call

lOW octi'T FCI&lt;t£ro Ollt.DRal, '115
MlJSTJ.l'T MISSlllf SIPIJEI&lt;

1331.

Transportation

AMC

BORN LOSER

H &amp; S Home Improvements
vinyl siding, roofing, room
addition, storm windows,
stone Calf 614-367 -0409

$3.000. Coil 446-0515 .

spd .

'83 Ford Ranger, FWD, 5
speed, 6,000 miles . sharp.

71

exp. Ca11614 -388-9652 .

RON'S Television Service
Specializing m Zenith and
Motorola , Ouazar. and
house calls Call 304-576 -

3846

of1er 5PM , 445 - 1380

,

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

73

1979 Jeep CJ-5. 6 cvL. 3
Baled hay in the fiel d - round
or square . Call 614-985 -

614 -379 -2669 .

9500 . Call 614 -245 -5575
or 614 -379-2621

304 - 458 -

Ronnie Skeens.

R e m~ngton model. 31 . 16
gauge . very good cond it1on .
Cremeens Gun Shop Call

1969 International COl BOO
truck . 18 ft . flatbed. air
brakes, good tires. good
cond ., 63,000 . 1970 International 1600 good cond .,
good tires, 66,000, $3,500
Fayette 9 ton tag -a-long
trailer good cond ., $1,800 .
Ma ssey Harris 30 farm trac tor good cond .. &amp;500 . 1972
Buick Electra 225 , PW, air,
power seats, tilt , mechani cally sound, some rust ,

$2.300.00.
1610.

well . Call614 -256 - 1608.

Musocal
Instruments

6t 4 -992-3921

PAINTING- interior and ex terior. plumbing. roofing.
some remodeling. 20 yu.

or 614 -367 -7244

Hay &amp; Grain

1975

Black Angus bull Call 614 AKC black German Shepmd
pupp1e s, 304 675 7771
5150

Dodge D-200 club

1976 International Harvester No. 1600, 12ft steele
flat bad. eJtc. cond,

1267

26 1nch rear 1ill er for 1138
Gravely tractor New never
been used Call 614-742 -

t973

cab automatic. transmission. recently rebuilt , p.s.
p. b. new flat bed, winch,
$800. Will consider tandem
axle trailer on trade . Call

304-675-1888.

Su lky snow blade. set duall - - - - - - - - - - wheel s for Gravely tractor . 1963 Ford Fairlane 4 dr.
Call 446 - 4149
200 6 cylinder. auto.
65,000 miles, new paint
Al hs Chalmers tractor, disc Call after 8:00PM , 304 ·
&amp; plows . New paint. good 458-1874.
runnmg co ndition Call 446 1976 AMC Sport-a -bout
2544 after 4PM .
PS . PB. AC. auto trans.
A1diug mower $150 . 256 - S600 Call 614 -256-6049.

614 992 3694

5804
Bu •lt o n your lot a new hom e
you can afford over 1 , 100
sq ft . 6 rms &amp; bath , c ar ·
peted. ready to move Into
S26 500 Also garages &amp;
basements
Cal l Patnot
Home Budders anvt1me
446 -8038
Will
cons1der
mobile home as trade m

E)(ll rl t! Saddle Shop June
Bug Sale 81g S1lver Royle
Show saddle bound to catch
Judges eye $ 799 vale, sa le
S599 One ear silver royle
headstalls S79 99 value.
sa l e S59 99 S dver rovle
show halters S89 99 value,
sa le S59 00 S1lver rayle
stamless stee l show bits
$29 99 value. sal e $22 .95 .
NavaJO blankets $28 99
value sa le S22 95 Brow
band heat sta ll'i with silver
$38 50 value. sale $19 99.
A bsor hn e paste deworner
S3 99
Absorb•ne show
s heen S5 50 a qt Show
eamngs S7.99 value . sale
S3 99
Corner feeders
S14 99 value, sal e $10 .99.
Brow band bridles w1th b1ts
&amp; re m s $14 99. sa le $9.99.
2 m1lc s N of Jackson on SA.

Greenbrier Stables, we buy,
sell or trade horses . 304 -

after 5.
AKC Reg•st c red Poodle pup pi es start1nq a t S75 Call

6417
F~rewood

Tr&lt;tctor, m o del 8 w1th c ulti ·
vators Call 614 - 256 - 6417.

7 :00

Call 6t4-388-9857.

63

S2.000

3471

Pla st1 c c1stcrns stat e ap
proved . plastic sep t1c tank s.
plastiC c ulvert , m e tal c ut
verts , RON EVANS ENTER
PRISES , Jack son . Oh 614

Farm Equipment

International model 430
baler Good cond1t10n Call

9790

L1m estone
Sand. Gravel
Dc l•v ered 1n Mason . Me1g s.
Ga lh a or p 1ck up at R1chards
&amp; Son Call 446 - 7785

61

Bomding a ll breeds . Heated
1ndo or outdour facll1t1es
AKC Doberman pupp1es
Stud Serv1ce Call614 · 446 ·

Early Amencan Couc h and
Chan $2 00 00 3 04 895 -

lik e

Farm Supplies
&amp; livestock

2274

614 -367 7220

Home
Improvements

6 : 30

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout ing. Now installing rubber

1rc

@

~THAT SCIIAioiBLI!D WORD GAllE
by Henri-and lloto L"

Unscramble theM tour Jumbltl.

m

2 455 12 1

HILLCREST KENNEL S

7795

ANY lilT O F , - - - - - - , WELL, HE WAS THE GUY WHO
EVIDE~CE
KNEW THAT PIECE OF TRIYIA
WOULD
ABOUT THE OLD DALEY HOTf.L.
HELP.
RcM8MBER.EA5-Y'!'

YOU o&lt;NOW, Ff:LLI\5, THERE 150~&amp; THIN&lt;5- I'LL NEVf:lt F01t6f:T
AIIDUT THAT GUY WHO MADE
THAT PIC~K~U~P~·~
.._)~~~

245 -9557
Strawbernes P1ck your own
Call Cl aud e Wmters , 614 -

0 Cil

ID'il

9

News

nice, $6,950 .00. 304· 7735222 before 6 PM .

Co il 304 -882 -2237

Rototiller Call 446-4217 .

Judy Taylor Groommy Cal l

SW AIN

LAYNE'S FU RNITURE
So f a c ha1r roc kfH n tt o
man 3 ta bles lextrfl hfHivy
h'f Frnnt1 er l $6 85 Sofa
cha H and l o veseat_ S275
So f a'i and chtm s pr1ced from
S2 85 to S89 5 Tab les $ 4 5
and up to S 1 25 H1de -a
br.d s 5 440
and up to
5 525 Recltne r s S 175 to
S375 Lam p s from S28 t o
S75 5 pc
dmettes from
599
t o 435 7 p c 5189
an d up Wood table wtth s1.1o:
cha1rs 5 425 to S745 Desk
S110 up to 5225 Hutches .
S550 and up, mapl e or ptne
fin1 s h Bunk bed c omplete
w1th mattr esses. 5250 and
up t o S395
Baby b e ds .
S1 10 Mattresses or bo"
spnngs, full or twin . $58 .
firm ,
and 578 Qu een
sets. S 195 . 4 dr c he sts.
542 5 dr ches1S. 954 Bed
frames . S20 and $25. 10
gun
Gun cabinets . S 350
Gas or electric ranges 5375 .
Baby mattresses. $25 &amp;
935. bed frames S20. 525,
&amp; S 30 . king frame S 50 .
Good se lection of bedroom
suites, cedar chests ,
rocker s. met a l c abinets ,
sw1vel rockers .

Call 614 - 992 -3249.

5646

51 Hou se hold Goods

&amp; FURNITURE
62 Ol1ve St . Galhpol• s New
&amp; u sed wood &amp; coa l stoves
6 ptece wood l1vm g room
SUite w1th 6 1nch flat arms
5399 bunk bed s co mplete
w1th bunkies S199 2 p1ece
antron liv1ngroom su 1t es
5 199. antron rec lmer s 599 .
othl:!r re ctmer s sao. maple
d•n et te se t s S1 79 . box
sp rmgs &amp; mattre ss twin or
full $ 1 00 ss t reg u l ar · i1rm
$ 1 20 m&lt;~ple d mette cha1rs
S35
wash sta nd s S34 ,
maple ro c ker s $59, 7 p•e ce
chr ome rlmell e se t S149 . 5
p1 eC f! dmette se) $99. USHd
bed roo m s u1t Ps refr1gera
t o r s ran g es . c he st . dressers
wnnger washers TV 's. dry
er s &amp; sho es Call6 14 · 446
3159

1 adm1ral window an condi tioner 8 .000 BTU . 11 5 volt .
575 1 occas1onal uphol ste red sw1vel c ha~r. S10

6:00

1971 Scotty Camper , hard top, sleeps 6, self contained ,
good cond . &amp;800.00. 304-

tJ ••.u.rHEA

~ll~Nl

Page

~ ~ ~~-

EVENING
1979 Large Bonanza Travel
trailer with 2 pull outs, very

Strawbe rnes You pick 76
r: ents or w e pu;:k S 1 . 00 per
Qt 2 miles back of New
Haven. WV of Un1on Camp
Groun d No Sunday picking .

Fru1t s &amp; Vegetables . c lean
Strawbem es, p 1ck your own
9 - 8 Sorry no checks We
acc ept food stamps , peas
a r e ready 40 c lb
$9.00
bushe l Happy Hollow Fruit
Farm. Gallipolis Ferry 304

The Daily Sentinel

6/12/84

new. C$11614· 928 -2300 .

~s
(o
Pl.-11~ !

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Ohio

Television
Viewing

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers
28 ft A.rgosy travel trailer.
self- contained roof air,
electric hoist. rear bath , like

SoY .

Va 304 -453 - 1153

Heavy duty Jack f o r sa le,
Ca ll614 992 2861

Carpet for rentals for SJ 99
sq yd Ca ll 61 4 · 992 · 6173

18 .000 btu a1r c ond
new 304 · 773 5397

AUCTION

Furn1shed Apt
920 4th
Gallip olis
522 5
Utll1t1es
pa1d Ad u lt s 1 b dr C all
446 4416 af ter 7PM

52 00 mo

Tuuler lo t on Upper At 7.
565 mo 367 -0232 o r 446

5553

446 3786

TV &amp; Apph cmc es, 627 Tlmd
Ave
Galllp o l1 s. 614 446 ·
1699 Sp1n washers gas &amp;
e i P.ctric dryer &lt;;
auto
washers . gas &amp; ele c tr1c
ranges . re fr 1ge rator s. TV
sets .

pm

2 bf:ldroorn mobile home
adults unly For sa le or rfnt
Co li 614 992 · 2 598

1076

by Larry Wright

576 - 2026 .

Fu ll y lurntshed 2 bdr mobrle

Ref &amp; dcp
446 3671

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®

33 84

porter a re a plenty of shade.
r1ice b •g lot Call 6 14 -367
7101

home . Easter n Av e Water &amp;
sewer P&lt;11d S225 ad ult s

Musical
Instruments

P~roy-_Middleport,

TueiCiay, June 12, 1984

CFD

SF'

Rf' Q

G

ZG N M,

in

Concert w/ Nelson Riddle

ffi

Mazda Sports Look
12:00 (I) Burns &amp; Allen
Cil Nightline
0 CIJ Magnum P.l. When
TC ts arrested by the Coas t
Guard. he refu~~s Mag ~
num·s help and Intends t o
plead quilty (A) (60 mm )

CFD

WDIQ

HFZH

IF'DRS

LMGDSFUH

QfQGYY C
GRS

IDEM.

MNMEMQQ

WGQYUR.
Yesterday's Cryploquote; WHEN NEITHER THEIR POVER·
TY NOR THEIR HONOR IS TOUCHED. THE MAJORITY OF'
MEN LIVE CONTENT. - NICCOLO MACHIAVELLI

.~

�IG-The

Sentinel

Area deaths
Dareld Putnam Sr.
Dareld !Bill ) Putnam Sr., 62,
Coolville, died this mornlng at his
residence, following an extended
Illness.
Mr. Putnam was born at Long
Run, W.Va ., the son of the late
William and Cora Skinner Putnam.
He was also preceded in death by
one son, John; by one daughter,
Judith Diane; and by two brothers
and two sisters.
Mr. Putnam a ttended Grace
Bretheren Church. Coolville, was a
veteran of World War II. was a
logger amd in the business of
remodeling horPes.
He Is sunived by his wile. Dora
Putnam: four sons. Dareld P.
Putnam Jr.. and WiUiam H.

Putnam, both of Columbus, Delbert
P. Putnam of Waverly, and Ernie
Lee Putnam of Belpre; three
daughters, Dora Janette Wilson of
Kalamazoo, Mich., Rebecca Tuttle
of Parkersburg, W.Va., and Cora
Regina Putnam of Columbus: lour
sisters, Gertrude Kelly of Guysvil le,
Mildred Clem of Lottridge, Ohio.
Kathryn Moore of Kansas City.
Kan ., and Betty Scheuvront of
Shinnston . W.Va .; and 12
grandchildren .
Funeral servi('('s will be held
Thursday at l p.m. in White Funeral
Home in Coolv ille. with Pastor
Robert Markley offi ciat ing. Burial
will be in the family cemetery m
Coolville. Friends may call at the
Funeral home aft er 2 p.m .
Wednesday.

Court issues restraining order
AGuysville man will not be able to
entl'!' the property of a Pomeroy
resident, according to a restraining
order issued Monday by Common
Pteas JudgP Charles Knight.
Billy Joe Butcher issuing Richard
C. Meredith Mary L. Meredith of
Pomeroy for $23,500 and $1.600 per
day while Meredith prevents
Butcher tram removlngrquipment
from Meredith's lamd.
Meredith countersul'&lt;l Butcher to
prevent him from t&gt;rttering MPtt-dlth' s land and for $50,lXXJ in
damages to Meredith's timbt&gt;r.
ThP tt&gt;mporat)' restraining order
prevents Butcher from t&gt;nt ering
preliminary injuction ean be held .
Meredith's
lard untilthea hearing
KnJght scheduled
hearingforfora
June 20. The restraining order is
elfectlve for 14 days.
In other act ion. thrccdivorces and
one dissolution wcw grant&lt;'CI . Robet1 Lawwncc Imboden. Rutland .

Inside today :

Board hires
twd teachers

and Patric ia Ann lmbodten, Pomeroy, divorce granted: Karen S.
Roush and WUIIam Joseph Roush,
divorce granted.
Cheryl A. Cremeans. Reedsville,
and Russell M. Cremeans. Coolville,
divorce granted; Mary Lucille
Stafford. Middleport. and Hubert
Stafford. Pomeroy, dissolution
granted.

Rehearsal set
The Voices of LibertY will
rehparse Weclnesday and Thursday
a t 8 p.m. at Pomeroy United

~~~~~~8: ELESS HAMS H~~: H~ 1~ :fi~oJe•• $1.19 LB.

Two teachers were emp!oyed lor
the next school year when the
Southern Local School Dlstr1ct
Board of Education met In regular
session Monday nlght .
The board hired Debra Hill as art
teacher and Donald Dudding as an
English and language instructor.
Jeni Stewa."1 was approved as a
rultlon student for the next year.The
board also voted for the district to
participates in the Trl-County
Career Development Program at no
cost to tile board.
The district will have access to $1
million wort h of learning equipment
through the program. All members
of the board were present along with
Bobby Ord, district superintendent ,
and Dennie Hill. treasurer.

Board to meet
Eastern Local Board of Educa·
tion will meet in special session
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. to discuss
personnel.

A NEW SERVICE
IN POMEROY
UPS p
1
a rce 5
Picked Up At
p
0 me roy
Bowling Lanes
9-5 Daily

We Are Not Affiliated
it PS

riM!c~t~hodl§s~tlClh~u~rc~h~-~~~~~~§§§§~g~~~~~§~

..

HAMS Half• • •s1.79
Whole $1 69 LB
••• • • •••
•
BONELESS
HAM SLICES ........ $1.99
Ha"\&gt;:n~~·S::~~g~ieners 99¢ LBE
F
GR0UND BE
lUNCH MEAT ....... S1.49LB.

KAHN'S HICKORY GROVE

•

sroREsucEo
*ALL MEAT BOLOGNA
*CHIPED CHOPPED HAM

25¢

VALLEY BELL

~,..~,inning

RC COLA
HEINER'S

Bonus Bread

tAP!

-

nlght ln the Ohio Lottery's daily
"The Number." was 901.
In the "Pick 4" game. played
Monday through Fridav. the wmni ng nwnber was h342.

~arne,

GAY 90's

COTTAGE
CHEESE

Pies, cakes needed
for Boosters booth
The MPigs Local School Distri ct
At hletic Boosters are in n&lt;'ed of pies
ard cak..s for a food boot h whil'h
they will operate Saturday at the
Spring ExpoofWMPO Radio at tht•
Rock Springs Fa ir-~'I'aund s.
Cont ributors may call Mrs.
Jamf'S Soulsby a l 992 Z:!Ti. or nta)·
take thPir contributions to the Rock
Springs Grange Ha ll on thf' grounds
Saturday .

Correction
A guest a t a pafiY for the Chester
High School graduatillg class of 1924
held by Fred a nd Bertha Smith was
Mrs_ [larbara Tripp and not Mrs.
Barba ra Reed .

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

200Z. 5 9 ¢

606 E. Main
992-2094

Pomeroy

STIHJ:.

PllliS

LETTUCE

FREE

Limit I

With each purchae of two

boleS of Cereal .

VIETII

HOT DOG
SAUCE

FREE

200Ct.

ROOT BEER

99¢

CASE
OF (6)

Limit I

GAL19 ¢ Limtt I

4 ROLL
PAK

Limit I

19¢

Ltmit I

VALLEY BELL

2% MILK

CRACKERS

3

9

$1.00 OFF
PI

ONE CARTON OF

us
Tax

CIGARETIES
Limit 5

Coupon Expires 6 / 17/ 84

C .K. SUPERMARKET

THRIFT KING
SALAD

:R§§1:t3

Coupon Expires 6/ 17/ 84
C. K. SUPERMARKET

RC COLA
Plus Dep.

Coupon Expires 6 / 17184

C.K. SUPERMARKET

GRAPE JELLY
3 LB. $ 1 9 9

$119
B PACK

16 OZ.

2

$l39Pius
Oop.

ICE MILK

5¢

1\GAL.$119

DR. PEPPER
8 PACK

69

¢Plus
Oep .

With each purchase of one baa

of 10 lb. Idaho potatoes .

GENERIC

DOG FOOD

¢ Limit I

With each purchase of 2 packs
ot cheese

of two

KRAFT

POP

li mit I

ZEST A
SALTINE

IB~~-

59~0ZEN

boxes of Cereal.

Wtlh each purchase of two 10

¢ Ltmtt I

SMALL EGGS

lim11 l
With each purchase of two

With each purctlase of two 3
lb. bag s of apples

lb. bags ldatlo Potatoes .

99¢
GRADE "A"

GENERIC

2 LITER

Bath Tissue

ICE MILK

2LB.

BAGS

19¢

GENERIC

Witheach purchase of 2 packs
ol I lb . Eckrich bologna .

JELLY

TEA

W1th each purchase of two
bags of Franklin Candy .

Limit I

JAMBOREE

$379

100 CT.

2% MILK

10 lf, OZ.

With each purchase of two
bans of Cereal.

69¢

GAL.

Paper Towels

VAllEY BELl

FREE

DISTILLED OR
SPRING WATER

GENERIC

99¢

CAMPBELL'S

89¢

Coffee Filters

~lJB. $ 1 9

ONE CARTON OF

CHEWING TOBACCO

In Stock

Plus Tax

Limit 5

Coupon

9umit I

With each purchase of two
of I lb. Ecktich t

$1.00 OFF
Expire~

6 / 17/ 84

VALLEY BELL

2°/o MILK
GAL.

$139

Limit 1

Coupon Expireell / 17/8..

C.K. SUPERMARKET

C.K. SUPERMARKET

SUGAR
5 LB. $14 9 Limit I

DR. PEPPER

~l~f_K

Coupon Expires 6/17/ 84

Coupon Expires 8 / 17/h

C.K. SUPERMARKET

VALLEY BELL

99¢ UfWff f

C.K. SUPERMARKIT

15 4 OFF

ICE MILK
~ GAL
Limit I

MARGARINE

Coupon Expires 6 / 17/ 84

Coupon Expires 6 / 17/ 84

C.K. SUPERMARKET

C.K. SUPERMARKET

99¢

I Lb.

Yout Choice

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SUNDAY. JUNE 17TH

GREAT
VALUE I

"FREE
PARKING"

106 Main St.
Pomeroy

122 N_ 2nd St.
Middleport

•

_;o

Celtics do it again...Page 3

•

•

at y

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, June 13, 1984

SUPER
MARKET

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Slalf Writer
Despite strong public pressure,
the Meigs Local School District
Board of Education Tuesday night
-for the third consecutlvemonth failed to renew the contract of Meigs
High School Band Director Ma rilyn
Goodnlte.
Soon after the opening of last
night's meeting, board member Bob
Snowden stood and made a motion
to renew Goodnite's contract in
instrumental music for one year.
President Bob Barton then acknowledged the Rev. Richard T.
Stewart, Meigs Band Boosters
president, who spoke on Goodnlte's
behalf.
Stewart commented said Goodnile had good programs going In the
school and that the parents an9

students wanted her back. He
pointed out that no reasons had been
given for tile failure to the board to
wnew her contract.
Bob Arnold. representating a new
group, Concerned Citizens for Miss
Goodnite, was authorized by Barton
to speak on Goodnlte's behalf over
objections expressed by board
member Dick Vaughan.
Arnold charged that board
members voting against Goodnite
at earner meetings had done wrong
and had failed tohavethewelfareof
children in mind.
He said failure to rehire Goodnite
will have a long-lasting effect in the
district. Arnold said there Is strong
public support for Goodnite in the
district and that she had been
favorably evaluated by several
people.

Limit I

SOUP

GEM

FROSTY

$}29

10 OZ. CAN

With each purchase ol two
packs of Kahn's Wieners

BAG

Meat .

GAL 9 9 ¢

8 PACK
16 OZ.

With purchase of two frozen

ICE

YOUR CHOICE

BUTTERMILK

32

oz.

$329

CANDY BARS

VAllEY BEll

In
Stock

ALL FLAVORS
6 PACK
12 OZ. CANS
Limil I

PACKS $ 1

With each purchase of two
pack s of Kahn 's Luncheon

9

FREE

8

89¢

GAL

6/99¢

GAL. 9

RC

MAKES 2 QUARTS
7 FLAVORS

DRINKS

Dof A spring rally...Page 7

'2 Sect ion, , 12 Page'

25 Cenh
A Mul ti media lnt Newspaper

Despite public pressure, Goodnite not rehired

DRINK,MIX
BROUGHTON'S

e

*COOKED SALAMI
*PICKLE LOAF

WYLER'S

'h GAL-19 ¢

I

CHARCOAL

'h GAL$}49

BTLS

I

GENERIC

20 LB.

oz.

I

4/S}

oz.

12

BREAD {

240Z. $ } 2 9

6- 16

I

GENERIC
REG. OR DIET

Limit 6 Bars

number drav.m Monday

I

CAN POP

Orange Juice

The

I

9 9 ¢ EA.

16 OZ.

VAllEY BEll

-.!.•

ClaMIIIeds ....... Pap8 8, 9, 10
Co1nk5-TV ............. Page 11
Death!~ ................... Page 12
FAitAJrlals .... ........ .... Page 2
Sports ................. Pages 3, 4

Partly cloudy tonlght. Low
near 70. Light southwesterly
winds. Thursday, partly cloudy
with widely scattered showers
and thunderstorms. High near
~- Chance of rain 20 percent
tonight and 30 percent
Thursday.

Vol.34, No.43
Copyrighted 1984

2¥·

Oep .

'hGAS 1 0 9

1
/,

I

BACON BITS

Plus

VIT. D.
MILK

•

3 OZ.

, All flmJrl

'

I

BACON CHIPS

8 PACK $ } 4 9
16 oz.

$}89

I,

I

Limit I
With each purchase of 2 packs of
Kahn's Wieners.

GAL. $ } 6 9

Sam and Nancy Davis. missionar·

The Stihl FS-50E - a
lightweight, elec tronic weed and grass
trtmmer powered by a
two -stroke gasoline
engtne. Smooth. longrunning performance
with no extension
cord needed .
Features a fully ad justable "loop"
type handle,
and a low
weight of
only 10 .5
,
lbs _ A
great gift
for Father ' s Day!

•

194

8 Ct.

limit I
With each purchase of 2 packs of

FRUIT

Lottery chosen

•

HOTDOG BUNS

6 PACK CANS

The Middleport Amateur Garden erswill meet Weclnesday at 7p.m .at
the home of Mrs. Harry Moore.
Kathryn Hysell will be co-host&lt;•ss
for the meeting. The group will tour
the organic ga rden of Lionel Boggs .

•

*DUTCH LOAF

HAMBURGER BUNS

2% MILK

•

All FLAVORS

Club to meet

By lhe Bend ... Pap8 5, 6, 7, 8

LB.

To speak

CLEVI-:L~D

lb.

BONELESS

R.C.

if'S to Mexlco. w ill be speaking a t
Pomeroy W~s l eyHn Holiness
Chu rch Weclnesday at 7:30pm_ The
public is invited to a ttend

Vote buying...Page 2

Weather

NO
SALES
TO
DEALERS

OPEN DAILY &amp; SUNDAY-9:00A.M. TO 9:00P.M.
SECOND &amp; MILL ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OH
. We Reserve the Rivht to Limit Quantities.

WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS &amp; "WIC" COUPONS

Meigs board to
place bond issue
on Nov. 6 ballot
By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Slalf Writer
The Meigs.Local School District
Board of Education Tuesday night
voted to place a $Dl,&lt;XXl, no-cost
bond Issue before voters on the Nov.
6 ballot.
The issue Is similar to a $1m II lion,
no-cost bond levy which was passed
by voters of the district in 1001 and
has provided money tor improving
facilities.
Present to discuss the measure
with the board was Deloris F .
Learmonth of the Cincinnati bonding firm of Peck, Shaffer &amp;
Williams.
Ms. Learmonth pointed out thatin
1967 the district entered into an
agreement with the Ohio Department of Education lor bonded
indebteclness in providing a school
facility .
The agreement was for 23 years
and Involves 4 mills of taxa lion with
a minimum lor one-hail of a mill to
go to the state. This means that 3'-'i
mills can be kept locally for the nex t
six years. providing voters approve
a no-cost bond issue Nov. 6.
The measure, if approved by
vote rs, would provide $Dl,lXXJ
locally for tmprovlnglocallac illties.
If voters do not approve the3t;;-mill
bond Issue. they must continue to
pay the 4 mUis of taxation and all 4

mills sent to the state, ra ther than
the $.lXI.&lt;XXl being kept on the local
level.
The evaluation of properlY in the
district has increased since 1001
when a similar Issue was approved
by voters. thereby making the
additional money available locally,
if approved by voters.
A system o/lssulng notes rather
than the bond lssueroutewasalsohlt
upon by Ms. Learmonth , but
payment on the principal varies
from year to year and the board
would have to make sure that it had
adequate monies to pay off the
notes, she said.
The boani agreed to go the bond
issue route and passed the necessary resolutions to place it before

Board members voting against
Goodnite should resign, he added.
Procedures Questioned
George Wright tilen spoke, inquiring why nonnal procedures were
not being followed since Goodnite Is
represented by a union and there are
regular procedures to follow.
Wright said thai he has grown
weary of the hassle going on in the
district.
Barton pointed out that the
nonnal union procedures on Goodnile's behalf might take two or three
years and residents of the dlsrrlct
wanted Goodnite on her job without
that delay.
Susan Guinn, an Athens attorney,
said she had talked with members of
the Concerned Citizens Group and
felt the board was making a mistake
in not rehiring Goodnite.

She pointed out that members of
the group are constituents and felt
the board should consider their
wishes in regard to Goodnite.
Board Member Speaks
Board member Arland King said
he has been threatened and insulted
about the Goodnite issue.
He said he was elected to ma ke
decisions and that he ha d mabe
them the best he knows how . Re
urged the group . of concerned
citizens to proceed with recall or
whatever they wish to do.
King said that he followed the
recommendation of the high school
principal and the district superlntendent In his voting on Goodnite's
employment and would not change
lt.
The board voted an the motion to

rehire Goodnlte and there was no

change in the orig;nat J-2 vote taken
in April.
Board members Larry Powell.
Vaughan and King voted against
rehiring her. - and Barton and
Snowden voted for Goodnite.
Action Proposed
Following the meeting, Bob
Arnold told The Dally Sentinel that
his group has learned that there is no
procedure ill law which provides for
the recall of members of boards or
education.
However, he said that the group;.,
a ttempting through tegtslators to
get special legisla tion passed to
make provisions for recalling
members of boards at education
since officials in other government
posts can be rPCalled through
exist ing laws.

Employment Matters

The board arc&lt;epted the resigna tion of Tom Doolf')'. a substitute bus
driver. ('tfectlv£""-dan. 1. this .vrar and

granted a matcrnif~ · lcavp to
Victoria Bump&lt;Jss.
Th&lt;' resignation of [)('bra Hill as
an teacher was accepted. and
Teresa Mauve wasgi\'Cn a one-yPar
leave of absC'ncc as a IPachPr in

ordf'r to work on hPr master·s
degrf'&lt;'_
Rogf'r Holman. dirrctor of transportation. wnsa uthorizPd toattf'nda
dif'SPl cngi nr training sPssion at
Atlanta. Ga .. Junf' 2:)-~l

Marv Ha ggert)' and Becky Windon \\:ere h.irf'd as co-advisor s for the

new school year for the high school
cheer leading squad .
Jesse R. Vail was named Meigs
Junior High School football coach
Continu&lt;-'d on page 12

PROGRE'lS AT LAST- With the wei weather of spring, pro~
has been slow at lhe cormructlon site of the $1.4 million senior citizens
complex on Mulberry Heights in Pomeroy. Over the past week the hot
sun has dried out the soli enough that Northland Park Homes of
Columbus, the contractor on the project, has been able to begin culling
down and leveling for the lower level of the new strudure which will be

comected to the existing chHdrem's home building. TI1e underground
sanitary and sewer sy!!lem ha.• been installed and Thursday the
trenching equipment will move in to prepare for the concerte footers
which are expected to be poured later this week, according to Bob
Groman, project superintendent. And the completion date, acconlingto
Groman, will he "late '84, early '85."

voters in November.

At last night's meeting, the board
also agreed to accept bids for
student accident insurance lor
1984-85 and authorized the treasurer
to advertise for bids on neet
insurance, tires and tubes, gasoline.
oil. anti-freeze, milk and dairy
products. and bread and bakery
products.
The board agreed, before moving
into executive session. to join the
no-cost Tri-County Career Development Program for the next school
year.

Out-of-county
landfill users will
still pay more
The resolution presented to tile
By TERESA MELCHER
commissioners
was aCC'€'ptable in
Sentinel Staff Writer
principle,
Jones
said. However, he
"The landllll L• tor tile people of
wanted
the
recreation
board's
Meigs County and if others are going
representation
changed
to
Include
to continue to use 1ill, they are going
more
of
the
county,
Jones
said.
to continue to pay a premium
The recreation committee said
price," said Meigs County Commisthey would change the representasioner Richard Jones.
Jones made that comment Tues- tion plan and re-submit tile resolution at the next meeting.
day when New Haven Mayor Pat
County Engineer Phil Roberts
Williams asked for a reduction of
reported
to the commissioners tilat
dumping rates for the Mason County
several
road
improvements arc
community, which has been using
undeiWay
or
completed.
the landfill for some time.
The slippage in Olive Township on
Williams said the high rates for
Big
Bigley Ridge has been repaired.
out-&lt;&gt;f-rounty users of the landfill
Roberts said. The township reunreasonable.
'"'They are wrecking the budget ceived $5,00&gt; in block grant money
for the project.
(of New Haven)," Williams sald.
Crews plan to begin today
Williams said the rates have
blacktopping
Bailey Run Road in
"doubled." New Haven currently
Salisbury
Township,
the engineer
pays $50 a load. New Haven lakes
townshiprecelved$5,545
in
said.
The
about four or live loads a week, New
block
grant
money
and
then
Haven o(flclals said.
New Haven would be able to contracted the county for the work.
Commissioners opened bids Tuesafford $f;a load, Williams said.
day
for a new copier for the Meigs
In a related matter, the commls·
sioners will meet Friday at the old welfare department.
Bids were received from Superior
landfill to dtscuss reseeding lt. The
Office
Servtce, American Business
need for a new access road to the
Co.
and
RDpho Sales Inc. Following
landfill was also diSCUssed.
or the bids Jones stated
the
opening
The conunlssioners also met with
he
was
not
satisfied
with two of the
JoyBentleyandYonlceMllleraoout
bids.
sanctioning a county recreation
The commissioners voted to
committee. The group wants be an
(Continued on page 121
"official group of the county."

Heritage Weekend local chamber topic
By TERESA MELCHER
Sentinel Staff Writer
Pomeroy Area Chamber of Commerce discussed Heritage Wcck&lt;'nd
promotions and other upcontlng
events at its regular meeting
Thesday.
Heritage Weekend is sch&lt;'Ciuled
June 23 and 24. The chamber and
Meigs County Historical Society a re
co-sponsoring the event.
Major event of tile festival will be
the arrival of a replica of a flatboat of
the 1800s.
The flatboat was built in Cincinnati as an educational project and
cost between $~.&lt;XXl and $100,lXXJ to
build .

The boat has a steel hull which IS
invisible when the boat is 10 the
watrr. the ehamber learned .
Wooden planks hide the hull !rom
view. An upper deck and living
quarters are several fea tures of the
boat.
Arrival of th&lt;' boat is slated for :1
p.m. Saturday at the Pomeroy levy.
"Sweet Mount ain Sounds." featuring Jennifer Sheets. Roger a nd
Mary Gilmore and Tim Glaze will
entertain on the ypperparking lot at
1:30 p.m. and 3lp.m. on Saturday.

'

./

After the weekend. the natboa t
will crave! on to the World' s Fa ir in
New Orleans.

S!X'&lt;'ial events at th~ Meigs
County Museum arP anothf'r ff'a tun• of th~ weekend . The musC'Um
\\ill be open from l4 p.m. on
Sa turday and Sunday. Sp&lt;'cial
exhi~i t s include a new room \\i th
woodworking and ntlning toots, a
ha t display a nd old-fashion&lt;'CI
r&lt;'freshmcnt s.
The chamber Is organizing gamf'S
!or 3 p.m. Sunday !or bothadu ltsa nd
child ren . 1\ damce ls planned from
R- ll p.m. Saturday.
Arm merchant s are planning to
promo!&lt;' old -fashioned dress a nd
special sa les for the cvmt.
Also discussed was thea circus for
5: .10 and 7:30p.m . .June 2ll. A clown

\\ith Uw circus will bf' in to~,~.- n tl1P
day' bcfon• to publil·lzp thf' f'Vt'nt.

Gallipolis Busint-ss Culll'gt' rl'prr
Sf'ntalivr Ba rbara Kl'm{.X'r disruss&lt;'CI specializf'd courses olf~rf'd
by CBC during the su mmf'r.
Two classes wi ll int rodUCf'C'Ompu ters to rlrm~ntan· and junior high
studC'nt s. Ot hPr rou1~1'S nr(' lx'gin·
ning word procP~sing. ff'al f'stn tr
principiPs anrl (·ompu trrs in
bu SiOC'SS

In othf'r husinrss. thf' hlard
C'lrct Pd fiw ' m r mh('rs toth f'tUirdof
dirfftOI'S

to

~I

IWC)- ~ 'P[lr

IP!m .

EIN.'ted w~rr Tom H('('f[. ,)(](•Clark,
.Jim Hill . Shirlr\· !Vtbnf'r . &lt;1nd Ron

Ash .

Ironton citizens to get update on cleanup
IRONTON, Ohio !API - Residents of this Ohio River city are to
hear tonight how the Ohio Environ·
mental Protection Agency and
Allied Chentlcal plan to clean up a
hazardous waste site rated among
the state's worst.
The abandoned Ironton Coke site,
owned by Allied Chemical, Is
eligible for cleanup using federal
Superfund money because It Is
considered among the nation's 400
worst sites, said Pat Madigan. Ohio
EPA spokeswoman.
The National Campaign Against

Toxic Hazards reported earlier this
week that the waste site has a rating
of 60.2 on the EPA's ratlng system ,
making It one of the state's worst
sites.
Once a site reaches a score of28-'&gt;.
it beCOmes eligible for the U.S.
EPA's priority cleanup list.

look a t cleanupopl ionsand the third
is the actual cleanup. Ohio EPA and
Allied officials are to explain the
process at tonight's session.
Allied has agreed to pay for a
study of the site and the feasibility
study, Ms. Madigan said. Sh&lt;' said
state officials will try togPt Allied to
pay for the actual cleanup as well .

Ohio EPA spokeswoman Pat
Madigan said the slate and Allied
have signed an agreement to start
the three-step cleanup process. The
first step Involves a study of the site,
the second Is a leaslblllty study to

She identified the wastes stored
there as "primarily coking waste
from the plant operation" and said
the property also conta ined lagoons
that stored wastes.

She scud 1hr FP/\ ranko.; sit E&gt;s

based on their prox imity· to ground
water, rt"Sidcnlial ar('as and drink·
ing watrr wPU s.

"A site can scot&lt;' a lot of point s if
there's a document ed problE'm . ... or
If you can show potential lor a
problem," shr said .
Ms . Madigan c-ould not sav how
th&lt;' Ironton Co kt• sile was scofect.
A spokeswoman for Allied Chemi .
cal in New Jersey said t.hP company
had retained a grouptostudythesite
and is awa iti ng !11~ results.

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