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                  <text>Inside today:

NBA draft ...Page 3

Weather
By the Bend .......... Pa,:e 7, 8
Classllleds ..
Pages 8, 9, 10
Comics-TV ............ . Page 11
Deaths ................... Page 12
Edltorials .... ............ Page 2
Sports ....... .... Pages 3, 4, 5, 6

:.c ..

Beat of the Bend...Page 7

Mostly clear tonight. Low near
60. Winds northeasterly around
to mph. Panlycloudy'lbursday.
IDgh bt the mid-I!&amp;. Chance of
rain near zero percent tonight
and 20 percetl! 'Thu.....tay.

e

Vol.l.t, No.48
Copy•;ghted t984

Reds humble Dodgers ...Page 4

•

at y

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio , Wednesday, June 20, 1984

Sect1ons, 12 Pag es
2S Cenh
A Mult imedia In (. Newspa per

Slackening of recovery is apparent
KNEE-HI
HOSIERY

%GALLON
HEXGONAL SHAPE

FISH BOWL

ONE SIZE FITS ALL
PAIR
FOR

$100

2.47
Value

1

59e

VELCRO WA LLETS
AND CHECKMATES

DIET SC ALE
Co mes with table listing
674 different food items and

2 FOR $500

OVERSTOCKED SALE!
PRICES DRASTICALLY REDUCED
WE HAVE TOO MUCH MERCHANDISE AND MUST MAKE ROOM FOR NEW ITEMS ARRIVING DAILY • OUR ANSWER?.
DRASTIC MARKDOWNS, MOST BELOW OUR COST! COME SEE • YOU'LL SAVE! OUR LOSS IS YOUR

5 PC. KITCHEN
TOOL SET
WITH CERAMIC HOLDER

CRICKET
LIGHTERS
2 PACK

Five wooden kitchen
· tools- - -3 spoons, spa tula and fork- - - in a
beautiful two- tone
brown ceramic holder.

Limited Quantity!
100 Per Store

BATH TUB-SHOWER

O RGANIZER
Handy holder fits snugly into
corner next to shower. Keeps
accessories within easy reach
yet takes up a minimum of
space.

'•

AU. STOlES
OPEN t .DAYS
A WEEK!
fREE PARKING~

$

2 99

weren't surprising enough, the report a lso said that
despite the rapid growth, a closely watched infla tion
gauge is rising in the current quarter at the slowest
pace in 17 years.
That inflation measure, a GNP-linked gauge that
takes into account changes in buying patterns as well
as prices, Is rising a t a rate of just 2.8 percent in the
April-June period, the lowest rate since the 1.5 percent
lor the second quarte r oll967 .
Good as a ll the news seemed, reaction was bound to
be mixed in the fina nc ial markets which heavily
influence U.S. interest rates.
Econom ists expected that second-quarter growth
would be slower tha n the new report indicates,
thereby easing demands lor loans and reducing
pressures driving inflation and interest rates higher
and threatening to bring the expansion to a premature
end .
Commenting before today's report, Robert Gough,

No. 18901A

Copying machines were once
again the topic of the Meigs County
Commissioners during their weekly
meeting Tuesday.
The commissioners reviewed the
need lor a new copier lor th£&gt;
recorder's office. A representative
from the Xerox Corp. of Jackson
presented her company's machi ne
that would fit the needsol theoffi ce.
Also presenting its m achi ne was
Ropho Sa les of Charleston. The
representative explained the Minotta
ma c hin e
to
th e
commissioners.

The representative also discussed
last week's bid lor lh£&gt; copier lor the
welfare department.
At last week's m eeting. the
commi ss toners rejected two of the
three bids for improper submission .
The thind bid was that of Ropho
Sales.
Commisstoner Richard Jones
proposed thP bid lor the heavier
volume copier be rejected . He also
said the bid should be readvertised
with more definite specifications .
Jones also proposed the bid ror thP
welfare annex copier be accepted
from Ropho Sa les. The bid was lor a
Mlnolta 450 !or$3.295.
The comrnissionPrs accepted
both of Jones' proposals.

B ids tor the copier lor the
reconder's office have not yet been
advertised.
In other business , New Haven
Mayor Pat Williamson sent a le tter
to the commissioners proposing the
usage Ice for the Meigs County
landfill . He asked the current fee of
$.'tO be reduced to $35 per load .
Williamson said he considered the
lee reasonable. considering Meigs
County residen ts are c harged $21 a
load. He added New Haven was "not
asking lor a iongtermcommittment
from (the county!."
Conunissioner Manning K. Roush
said they were carefully considering
it and are going to stick with our$50.
The commissioners voted to take
the mayor's le tt er under
advisement.
Also discussed was the slip on
Bigley Run Road in Olive Township.
The county highway department
was contracted to fix the slippage by
the township. The township received Community Development
Block Grant money to fix the road.
Olive Township Trustee Everett
L. Schultz said several residents had
complained to him the highway
department did not do a n adequa te
job.
Jones commented, "The highway

The perfect Occ.slonai table. For ny hall.
living room, ~Jet'oom, any room that ntldla
touch of eleQilMll. lin singly or In pairs. Marble
with goldtone trim on bale. ·

!WI J ackton Avr .
Pe~l nt Plra u nt . W. Va .

314 Jatll1411l Plb
Galllpellt. Olllo

IDI Sheth Avr.
lluntln(tton . W Va .

7M N. Sec::ond Strnl
Ml.dlrpert. OMo

11 2~ !\1aln Strrrt
Mi lton . W \'a .

Itt W. SH:orul Slred
Wrlltton. Ohio

$1499

de partment has tried todoa!avoron
Bigley Ridge. I happen to know
there was a lot more work tha t went
into the job than there was grant
money . .. .It's just unfa ir!or them to
be crilicized lor it."
The original job was to install a
pipe to try to stop the slippage, said
Phil Roberts, county hi ghway
engineer.
Roberts a !so said a la ndowner
near the slip, Herb Rice . had used
heavy eq uipment on his land near
the s lip. Roberts said the equipment
traveling over the slip might have
caused it slip again.
Schultz also asked the commiss ioners to install a gua rdrail along
the road. Jones said the grant
application did not Include a
guardrail and said it was the
trustee 's responsibility.
Some or the resident s in Oli ve
Township were upset over "all the
work done on the western end lOft he
county) bu t none on the eastern
e nd ," Schultz said .
Schultz added. " I don 't know what
it is they're talking about ," He said
he had agreed to bring the matter to
the commissione r s at tent ion.
however.
Jones said he did not know what
Schultz was talking a bout.

SIGNS IIERffAGE WEEKEND PROCLAMATION- C.E. Blakeslee (left) and Rfln Ash (right)
watch as Pomeroy Village Ma yor Richard Seyler
signs a proclalllation designating .June 22 and 23 as

first quat1er or 1984.
In the past two weeks , a variely or economic
sta tistics have indica ted a slackenmg of grov.~h in
May .
-Retail sales increased JU St 0.2 percent after rising
3. 1 percent in April.
-Industrial product ion was up 0 4 percPnt aftPr
increas ing l A percent
-Personal income held steady. but wages and
salar ies rose less than in April
-Americans' personal consumpt ion spending also
rose more slowly
-Wholesa le pric£&gt;s were flat for a second stra ight
month .
Add to that:
Some interes t ra tes continued rising in ret'l'nt
w""ks, hut rhr widely publicized prime rate stayed
quiet.

With it s 15-star Am eric an fl ag

Gen. Hartinger earns
USAF Space Trophy

\

•

Adven ture Ga lley II is 54ft--et long
by 14 f('('t wide. has a sod roof and

fl yin l'( hil'(h and oars in place. th£&gt;
Adventu re Ga ll ey II is ma king its

fea tures antiquP furnishings. as

\·Vay down the Ohio Rive r .
I t w ill m ake one of its 71. stopov t'r
vi sits of comm unit ies along th£'
Ohio and Mi ssissippi Ri vers a t

we ll as ot her artifacts or piorneer
lifr. It is enrou te to r\'pw OriE'ans for
the World's Fair .
Built by students uf Captain Jim

124

Coomer in thP Ci nci nna ti Public

betw('(&gt;n SyraC'USf' ann Rac ine.
Friday evening w here a ri verfest
IYJX' evf'nt is plannPd.

School's Inl and Waterways Occ upa tion Course, and supported b)'
moc!Pst coni r ibutions, Adventure
Galley II is the non-profit pro ject of
Va ughn P . Wendland . Cincinn a ti

Roush Landin !(. off Rout e

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP I -Wit ·
nesses from Ohio's big and small
cities a like havesetved up the sam ~
message for members of a Se nate
panel, telling them that hunger is a
problem a nd som ething needs to be
done about it.
"Contrary to what someprople in
Washington believe, there is hung~r
in AmeriCa and especially here in
Ohio, and it is time we address the
proble m ," Ma tt Ha bash, execulive
director of the Operation Feed
Foodbank in Franklin County, sa id
Tuesday.
Habash said the more tha n 901ood
pantries which make up the county
network aypraged 40,045 client s
setved per month in the !irs! quar1er
oll984.
GENERAL HARTINGER, right, Commander of Spa&lt;.-e Command,
" Thi s represent s a 340 percent
receives the 1983 General Thomas D. Whlre Space Trop~ bronze
in th&lt;' number of clients
increase
plaque from Secretary of the Air Force Verne OJT during JWJe 11
served
over
1981 ligures," he said in
ceremonies In Washington, D. C.
writ ten testimony lor the Ohio
Senate Hunger Task Force.
Another 29,718 indlviduals have
been served each month in 1984 by
the 10 congregate meal sites In
Franklin County, Habash said.
The task force , headed by Sen.
associated
with
the
trophy
which
is
Micha
el Schwar zw aider , D(Note- The following Is a release
Columbus , is holding a series of
prepared by the PubUc Affairs on permanent display at the
statev.1de hearings on the problem .
Ofllce at Peterson Air Force Base on National Air and Space Museum in
It is expected to issue a report and
a recent honor conferred upon Washington, D. C. General Charles
A. Gabriel, U. S. Air Force Chief of
recommendations.
General James V.llartlnger).
Staff, gave General Hartinger the
Habash sald the food pantry
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. network cannot continue to survive
General James V. Hartinger, for- accompanying cltatlon.
General Hartinger earned this
as a maintenance rather than an
m erly of Middleport. Commander
prestigious
award
for
his
significant
emergency
supply of food .
of the Space Command. received the
and
lasting
contrtbutlons
to
aero"An
undue
burden has been
1983 General Thomas D . White
space
progress.
He
was
cited
as
a
placed
on
the
pantry
system to make
USAF Space Trophy In ceremonies
leader
who
recognized
and
federal
cutbacks,
unemployup
lor
mUitary
held on June 11 in Washington, D. C.
articulated
the
crltlcal
·
ment
and
bureaucratic
snafus
In the
clearly
Secretary of the AJr Force Verne
Food Stamp program," he said .
(Continued on page 12 l
Orr presented the bronze plaque

••

Heritage Weekend. Blakeslee is president of the
Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Sodety. Th•
society L' co-sponsoring the event, along with th•·
Pome roy Area Chamher or Commercf'. Ash l•
president ulliN' chaJ1ltx•r.

Adventure Galley II will be
in Meigs area over weekend

Hunger
problem
in Ohio

MARBLE TOP
TABLE

No. 1B87A

vice president of Data Resources Inc . in Lexington.
Mass., said a second-quart.er growth rate under 5
percent was "what we're looking for."
He said he wouldn't be dismayed by a figu re in the 5
percent range but that anything much higher than
that would almost surely lead to increases in the
interest rates tha t have a lready been rising in the past
several months , hurting such interest,sensltive parts
of the economy as housing.
One year ago, the Reagan administration was
procl aiming the 191\1-1&gt;;2 rf&gt;Cession over . But officials
we re hoping lor better evidence than the modPSt rea l
GNP gain of 2.6 pPrccnt recorded at an annual rate in
the first quarter.
They got the Pvidcnce - a boom Iawr pegged at a
9.7 percent rate of expan sion in the second quarter of
1983 - and the C'COnomy kPpt growing strongly
through the year. The rates were 7.6 percent in the
third quarter and 5 percent in the fourth before the big

Commissioners review
requests for copiers

For adults, teens. Fabric
wallets with velcro closing
come in black a nd trend y
colors.

No. 6416

By ROBERT FURLOW
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (API - The pace of the IJ.S.
economic recovery is slackening In the nearly
finished April-June quart er but not as much as
expected, the government reported today. And
infla tion seems to be remaining well under control.
The Commerce Departme nt , releasing its early
" ftash report" on
econd-q uarter expansion,
estimated a ~.7 percent an nual rate of growth in
infla tion-adjusted gross nationa l produc t, the broad·
est measure of U.S. economic activity.
Meanwhile . the department revised the a lready
robust first-quarter growth ra te ol8.8 percent upward
to 9.7 percent, matching the highest one-quarter
figu re in six years.
Both the first-and second-quarter ligures were
higher tha n had been expected by both government
and private a na lysts. And if the GNP numbers

Adve nture Gal ley 11 will dock a t
Rous h Landing between 3 a nd 4
p.m . a nd the rivcrfes t pro gra m .
sponsored by a com mitt ee representin g the two towns. will begin a t 5
p.m .
Th r flat boat. a repli ca of a
historic flatboat suc h as those used
on the Ohi o a nd Mississ ippi Rivers
durin!'( 1790's a nd 1800's. will ix'
avail able for lour by the pu iJiic
thr oughou t thf' pveni ng. T hPrt:&gt; is no
admission charge to tht&gt; OOat.

Historical SociPty, which will bP st&gt;t
up on shor e.
T he pr ogra m at Rou sh Landing is
schPdulf'd to be l esiurcl~ · wit h thf'
Sou thf'rn High band presenting turu

concerts. a ta lk b)' Waldm Roush of
P oint Pl easant, string music.

fE'a ~

turC'd songs by thr "VoicC's of
LibE.'rty" group and an old-fashion
si ng-along . T hf'r f' w il l bP mncf'sions
on th f' grou nds.,

suppor ted the building of the craft

The Rous h Landing visit of lllP
natboa l is bf'i ng !inanciailv supported bv .!0 Drilling of Racin£&gt; a nd
Homr Nationa l Bank of S)Tacuse

Tiw lx&gt;at has bef'n approved as a

and Rar inc.

rd uca tors and

businesses

haw•

project by ihP Cincinnati Bicen ten-

Ad,·enturr Ga ile)' 11 will

i Pa,-~

ni al Commission and will f'\'entu ·
all \ be given to Cinc! nnat i as a
permanent historical museum

Rou sh Landing at about noon on

1n addition to touti n!( the boat.

Sa turda) a nd Su nda)' under spon
sorship or thr Pomero)· Cha mix'r of
\ommf'rrr and thP MPigs C'uu nty·
Htstorical Societv.

pc'Ople ca n look at an educat ional
display on r iver history prf'pared

by the staff of the Cinc innati

Satu rd ay and travC'l to

Pomf'ro~:

\Vhf'rf' it will d()('k for publlc tours

Plummer found not guilty
on charge., issues comment
Maxine Plummer was found not
guil ty of a c harge of using her offi ce
to influence a public contract wh ile
she was executive dirC'Ctor

or

the

GaUia -Jackson-Meigs 643 Me nt a l
Health Board.
The ruling was made in a brief
hf&gt;aring this morning by Hocking
County Common Pleas Judge
clames E. Stilwell a lter Mrs .
Plummer entered a wtitt&lt;'n plea of
no contesl to the charge. which was
accepted by Stilwell.
"Upon careful consideration of
the indictment . joint exhibit s, stipulations and arguments of counsel,
the court finds that the defendant
had only a minima l, Indirect interest
in the public contracts at issue,"
Stilwell said In a written ruling.
StU well also found tha t " no fraud
was involved, tha t no risk existed,

that prh·atr co nsidf'ra ti ons would

detract !rom setving the public
interest, a nd that a fu ll disc losure of
the nature a nd extent of the
contracts was made kn0\.\-11 to the
governmenta l agency involved a t
time lhf' contracts W£'W entered
int o .''
M rs . PlummC'r was S('('!'C'tly

indicted by a Ga llia County grand
jury on the c harge last December.
along with another indictment of
the rt in office.
On Monday . when the tria l was to
begin in Logan on a rhangPol venue
motion won by :vtrs. P lummer's
a ttorney, a n agre&lt;'ment was
reached by Gallia County Prosecutor Joseph L. Caln to dismi ss the
theft in office charge lor payment or
$6,500 of the more than $9.CXXJ listed
as taken in th~ original indic tment.

Ca in said this m orning pu~ ·mf'nt

would be' made to Gallia
genera I lu nrl .

Count~· ·~

At the sa mf' 1imr. Mrs. P lummf'r
('ntered a n ora l piPa of no mntP't to
the cant ract s charg~. A wtittPn piPa
was to tx- entered late r. as di11'Cted
bv sta le law
Exp""'""' ~lief
Followi ng the h£&gt;aring. in a
written sta tPmPnt re!Pased b)' her
a ttorneys, Mrs. PlummPr ex pressed !'('lief at hPr "vindication"
!rom wrongdoing by Stilwell' s

decision .

" I wa nt to cxpl'('sS my gratitude
for th£&gt; public vindication of me by
J udge Stilwell 's dec is ion. and the
complete public exone ra tion of the
c harges which had been improperly
brought against mp, " the statement
tContinuc'&lt;l on page 121

'

�l'ententy M'ddleport, Ohio

It's been done __________J_u_lw_n_B_ond_
R ichard Nlxon did it . Ger ald
ford did it. The Democrats can do It
too.
The "it" is defeating Ronald
Reagan, a task many Democrats
have concedPd is Impossible. But
these Democrats have forgotten
that Nixon and ford deFea ted
R&lt;&gt;agan in his First two tries for the
pfE'sidency, and that his " lands·
!ide" victory over Jimm y Ca rter
was far more modest than 1he
illusion that has been Fostered .
Beating an incumbent president
is never easy. Officeholders- from
president of the United States to
president of the city council -enj oy
advantagPS their cha llengers ca n
seldom match.
And whPn the incumbent 1s
possessed of a pleasing persona li ty,

111 Court Street
Pomeroy , Ohio
DEVOTE() TO THE INTER~T OF THE MEIGs-MASON AREA

AI~

~m~ r-rL..-..1'--.-•~=·~
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

P .U WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

D.&lt;\LE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
.; \ \1 E:\'IBER of The :\.ssodall'd Press, Inland Dally Press Assucla·
tion and the American ~ewspaper Puhllsher Association.
lETTERS OF OPINION are Wt'komed . They should he less than 300 words
long . .\II lt&gt;ttt&gt;r!O urt&gt; su bjt&gt;d t u t&gt;t.lltlng IUid mu st bt' slgn6!1 with name, addre!!i8 and
telephon t&gt; number . ~o unsigned l f"tters wUI hf' pulllished. Lt'Uen !i!hould be In
,~t;ood

laslf', addr('Ssing l!lsurs , not personallll es.

a winning sm ile . and is able to
present himself as a man without

In praise of
old ideologies

responsibility for the harm his
policiPS have creatPd. the task of
marshaling a majority against him
is difficult .
But the lessons or the last rour
presidential elections demonstrate
that the mnventlonal wisdom about
the "power" of Incumbents ca n't be
trusted.
The last four pre-Reagan incumbents - Jimmy Caner, Gerald
Ford, Richard Nixon and Ly ndon
Johnson- were all ousted. The last
two - Ford and Carter - were
deFea ted at the polls; Johnson
withdrew rather than fa cP a hostile
ek'Ciorate. Only one Incumbent
sine&lt;• I960 has won a second term Richard 1\Lxon In 1972. And he, or
course. was forcC'd out of office two
years later.
The 1980 Reaga n v ictory margi n
was statistically impressive. Fifty-

As (;.,orge LodgP S('&lt;'S thP Arrwrican economy. we arc llf1ing our voices
in prais&lt;' or old idl'Oiogies while rt•fusing to m:ogniz£' that our practices
havp gone far astra:.·.
We arl'. sars LodgP. a p ro r~ssor ot Harvard Businss School , ignoring the
realities of a world in changr. I t is a sickness, he says, a psycholog~ca l
disorder. an Amf&gt;r ican diSf'ase.
Th~rc arc S)'mptoms cverywherP, he says - the notion that big public
CO!lDrations are ov.med by investors. that government's economic rolP is to
be only a rereree rather than a designer.
ln ~ffPCI, he savs. Americans don· t know themselves and their
institutions, and ~s a consequence suffer from [ailing indust1ies,
unemployment. stagnant productivity and overseas comp&lt;&gt;tition - and
don't know what to do about it.
" The hynms are hvpocrit ical." says Lodge. who has fonhrightly named
!tis new book " The American DiSPaS&lt;'." [t may some shock readers. but it
might also offer a new perspect ive to po litical leaders who cloinn to offer
We cling to idmlogies os if thry werE' our value system itS&lt;' If, which
Lodge point s out the)· arE' not. We car IX'tieve in freedom, he says, without
limiting ourselves to outda ted ways of achieving it.
The pmfessor, who lost to Sen. Edward KennPdy m his bid for that office,
offers a message that might shock a lot or politi cal candida tes who claim to

know what is bes t for America:
Recognize openly that we are a "communitarian" society, a nation

or

interdependent people whose individuality is best expfE'ssed cooperatively.

a nation gradually moving from contract to consensus.
"How do you obtain individuality'1 " he asked in an interview. "You get it
at IBM. You get it by being pan of an organization that provides you with
rewards and an ident ity."
He continues: "Individual self-!ulfilinnent and self·respect arE' givens.
Thf&gt; question is how you attaln them ln contemporary America. Most of us
have them as pan of a team. group, community
" The ot her wa)· is to IX' a .John Wayne . Some people can do it if they are
willing to pay the price. But then• is nosecunty, no pension. no insur ancewhich arr pa r1 s of commit arianism ."
The vrrv idea shocks those Americans who choose to maintain that they
are in the individualistic trad ition of Wayne, in spite of rt:al -lifE' experienC'1?s
that arf' vcr:.· diffcrcn1.
We must tx-come consistent v.ith rC'ali t y if we an~ to deal w ith the nat ion's
problems, savs Lodge Oth erwiS(&gt;, he sugg('SIS. we do morp damage than
good.

It wouldn't be an
election year if...
It wou ldn 't be an election yea r i[ polill&lt;'ians didn·t say how much they
don't want to be v ice president
Or how hard they'd hav~ to think beFore they'd be willing to make the
sacrifif'f'.
The list or Democrats grows each da y. Ga1y Han. Lloyd Bentsen. Mario
Cuomo. John G!Pnn. Mi chael Dukakis. JesS(&gt; Jackson. LPc Iacroca . E rnest
Hollings. Next: The Mannon Tabernacle Choir . .ti.!J the runners in the
Boston M ara thon.
All that disdalll about a job tha t pays $9J.OOJ.plus a year. includes
rent -fret:• uSP of a very nirf' houS(', interesting travel. chauffeured
Jinnousines. jets· in-wailing, a $10JOO expenSP account and other perks the
Prince of Wales might envy
The polil ician s fall int o two categories: thos&lt;' who say "not inlefE'sted"
and thoSP who say "coax me.·· nut it doesn't seem to make any dilfefE'nce.
Some who say .. not intcres tro· · end up as viCP president .
George Bush wasn't intercstf&gt;d in 1900. He' s vice president now and
wan ts to tx_:&gt; again.
Lyndon .Johnson said no. no, no until John f. Kennedy offered the job.
1\elson RockeFeller insisted. ·Tm not vice-pfE'sidential material .. but
with a chan):!e or pn'Sident and vice prE'sident in midtenn. he took it by
appointmPn t.
Few, very rew . politicians will own up to a longing to be v ice prE'sident. In
1972. a former Massachu setts governor named Endlmt1 Peabody, and a
political noviw na med Stanley Arnold cam paignPd seriously for the job.
The thanks they got from the Democratic mnvent ion was guffaws tha t
suggested they were not tightly wrapped.
John Glenn, who made a suborbit aJ flight as a presidential candida to this
yPar, was asked last week if he'd like to IX' vice prE'sldent.
"Would I consider it?" he said, r hetorically. "()&gt;Jiainly I'd consider it.
Rut wou ld I automatically acerpt 117 No:·
Sen. Lloyd Bcn tSPn or Texas has a predict ion of his own : " ! don 't expect
to IX' askPd and I'm not SPeking the job, .. he said. "My guess is he will ask
sommnc like Cary Hart."
Hart says "I am not intefE'sted in the office and the idea or the thought
ctoesn •t appeal to me ...
But. wou ld he lake it ir offered'? "We'll wait and see on that."
True. the job of vice president had a bad reputation for a long time. a
reputation aided and abettPd by prople who had held the job.
"About as U!'eful as a cow's [lf1h teat." said Hany S. Truman, who knew
cows too. "Four years of silence... said Truman's veep, Alben W. Barkley.
·'A sparP tire on the automobile of government," said John Nance Gamer.
tw1ce Franklin D . Roosevelt's vice president. That line about "not wonh a
bucket of warm spit ," so often attributed to Garner is actually a cleaned up
version of what he really said.

Today in history
Today is WPdnesday, June 20, the 172nd day of 198l. There are 194 days
left in the year .
Today's highlight in history :
On June 20, 1893, children's rhymes notwithstanding, a jury in
Massachuset ts round Sunday school Ieacl~er Uzzle Borden innocent of
charg&gt;"S she had axPd to death her father and slepmother Ute year before.

f

~

Until recent ly. this femalemli!Ot·
itv didn't make much diffel'llll"'·
F~r tlle 20 years between 19112
1972. as many women as men were
registered Democrats . Republl·
cans or independents. But the last
10 years have seen a gradual- and
now rapid - shift by women away
from the Republlcan Party.
J
In 1980, as 55 percent or male '
voters were choosing Reagan. 53
percent of women · voters were
choosing somPOne else. In the 1982
congressional elections. In districts
with no incumbent, Democrats
averaged a 16 point lead among
women voters. In the 1984 preslden ·
tial primaries, women have been
voting at or above their percentage
or the electorate.
This dilferenCP between the
political behavior or men and
women .. threatens to swamp the
Republican Pany." That's the
assessment of Reagan's campaign
manager Edward J . Rollins. He
called the gender gap "an enor·
mous wave of demographic change
that is sweeping the country."

~a

More lives than a cat ______.J_ac_k_A_n_de_rs_on
WASHINGTON- Yasir A ra fat ,
the wily Palest inian leader, has
more lives than a cat. Last year, he
was lucky to escape from L12&gt;banon
onf&gt; jump ahead of a Syrian supponed assa ult force that was
gunning [or him. Now he is
maneuvering to regain the leadership or the Palestine Liberation
Organization. \&gt;ilh the support of
nonr othf'r than thr Syrians .
That·s right , Arara t not only is
try ing to ingratiate himself \Vith his
mortal enPmy. Syrian Pres idPnt
H &lt;:~ff'z Assad, bu t he may act ually
grt a ...._·a~· with it . He has the backing
or Svrias ban kroller, Sa udi Arabio.
and arms suppliPr, the Sovirt
Union.
Arafat wa s drfratf'd anrl di scJ'f'·
ditf&gt;d w hen he e.sraped from Syrian
clutches in r .f'banon. Hf' spent thP
next sf'veral mont hs \l.:andf'ring in
the political \l.tilderness. sf'f'king
rrfugr m one Arab rountr).' aftf'r
a nother.
During thP lsraC'l i bombardmpnt
of Beirut two vra rs ago. I !:ipc nt a
couple&gt; of hours \.vith Arafut in his
bunkPr. facr to fnr~. he wa~

imprrsslvr. r\·rn magnet ic. But
thPrr was a tf'n seness about him, a
warinPss

of

f'~'f'.

a

sen ~f'

of

bc l£'agu crmPnt .
T hC' lsraf'lis b&lt;:~ckf&gt;d him int o a
corn{'r, a nd he negotiatE-d hi s way
ou t. T he Syria ns bac ked him into a
cornrr, and again he got out. Assad
tried to replace him wit h Abuh
Musah as PLO chieftain . lnt elli·
gpm·c sources tell mf' Assad still
dPtPsts Arafat ~Wrso n a ll ),. ancl
distru sts him politically. Y(' f a
rC'C'onciliation is possible. C"\"f'n
probablC'.
F'or ctespitf' his rq::e ated humilia tions. Ara f'at still retains thP loya lty
of thp Palestini an masst.-'S. The
same ca nnot be sa id for Musa h. So
in thr ca use of Pa lfls tinia n un i t~·.
Araf&lt;:~t has sought to make up with
Assad.
/\rafat has rnlistf'd the intrrcc--;sio n of thP Sovirt U nion . Saudi
Arabia and Egypt So i ar. Assad
has withstood thC' prcssurC'. But a
r0C'onciliation, based on th e hard
rf'alilif's of Arab polit ics if not
mutual trust, might be workP&lt;:I out.
f or hi s part. Arafa t is reportf'fl
rr•adv to kowtow to Assad in tY'tum
fur a gpsturr of S:v-rian 'i upp:wt.
such ilS a public l'PC&lt;&gt;ption in
Dama 'icus as an ac knowlc&gt;dgQd
Pa\C'sti nian leader . l ntelligPnce
anal.vsts cmphasizr that em~· dral

would ha\·f' to lX' on S.\ Tian te rms .
Assad would insi st on rC'taining
ultimatC' cunti'Ol ove r Arafat, or at
lea st \'f'to powrr ovrr his military
and diplomatic movrs.
J\s onr intC'lli gr ncf' ana lys t
summ&lt;'cl it up s u cci nct!~ - for m_
,.
associa tr l.ucf'lle Lagnado, Arafat
would ha\' P to bf&gt;come Assad's
.. pupp-'· dog.·· 13ul Ararat is capable
of doing ~-hatPvC'r is nP('PSsary to
assurf' hi s suP.i\·aJ. a11d Assad
&lt;.~pprf'C"iates th L' clout Arafat still
has with the PalPstinian peoplr and
international lcadrrs.
Ci\RRISON UPDATE · In past
colu mns. I have chargPd that the
Garrison Oi\'Prsion Unit, which
would irrigate a han dful of North
Dakota farms along thP Canadian
tx:H'dC'r , is mor&lt;' than a billion-dollar
boondoggle It could a I so be an
environmrntal disaste r. upsclting
thr df'lieatt• PCO!Og)' of Cana dirt n
ri\T•r s with "alir n" fish from thr
M issouri Riv&lt;'r
No rth Dakota ·s pork·barrel pol iii·
cians ha\'C hirrd a press agent to
alia~' thf' Ca nadians' fears. ThPy
are also pavm g ~"20,00J a year to the
Nor1h Dak ota Water Use r s A ssocia·
lion, a prh·Jte group that lo bbirs for
HlP project in Congrf'ss. Of coursr.

Cong-fE'ss dolPS out the federal funds
that keep the boondoggle alive.
Expenditure of public funds for a
pnvate lobbying effort, inciden tally, appears to violate the state's
constitution . StatE&gt; funds have also
been used to send former governors
to Was hington, and to pay a
Was hington·based lobbyist to hus·
liP Congress for the Garrison funds.
The public relations firm Nort h
Dakota hired has tried to mislead
the Ca nadian public. for example,
one press release gave the clear
impression that no construction
would proceed unti l a U.S. ·
Canadian agreeme nt was reached .
Not so, North Dakota's lawyer
wrote in a memo. "The United
States is not obligated" to secure
Canadian approval, he wrote , and
should IX' .. extremely careFul to
avoid making even an implication"
that thi s is so.
Meanwh ile, Int erior Depanment
sources tell me that eonc£'rns they
f'XI.&gt;ressf'd over Garrison's water
quality were not passf&gt;d on to
Ca nadian officials. In short. both
thP Federal and state governm ents
arc conspiring to hoodwink the
Canadian people a nd its
represrnt a lives.

Now I understand _______A_r_tB_u_ch_wa_ld
Our to an illn~s. my wife has been
ou t or action and I have round m ysrU
in the role or home manager . I must
admit, I nC'v£'r paid too much
attention to whar a wi[e did to
maintain a houSf', and assumc'd it
was a snap companxl to s.olving 1hl'
lran .I raq War .
lam nowrmlizing the!1'ismoreto
housekeeping than the TV commer ·
cials would have us believe. Herr
arE' some of thc things I discovered
in m .v nPw consciousness-raising
position:
A laundry hamper on ly holdsdi11y
c lothes. It does not wash them .
TherE' is no such thingasanrmpt y
diswasher.
Garbage disposa l unit s do not
grind up steak bones. or forks ancl
spoons.
AppllanCP rPpairmen all have
answPring SC'rvices but never call
them for their messages.
You cannot grow rood in a
refrigerator. You have to go to a
supermarket and buy it. No matter
what you buy [or dinner your bill
always comes to $49.:-il.
Many varieties of food have to be
cooked . This requires pots and pans.
Fresh fish and m eat do not mme
with instructions. Neither do fresh
vegetables. Frozen meals taste just
as good as frozen meals.
A person can overdose on
hamburgers and scramblPd eggs in
less than flw days.
Garbage has tobeputon the street
once a week, or no one will take It

away.
Cr ass has to l:x' w a trrr'fl or if wilt
tu m brown.
After m aking up bed:-. two da_vs in
a row, the thrill is gone.
A nPighlx:n· nPver conb-,rratuiat cs

:v·ou on ~~our waxed floors.
Polyester blend sui ts sta11 to
smell lf you don·t take thPm to th&lt;'
dry cleaner.
When a fu se' blows in the housr it
has to be rcplacPd or the light swon' t
com&lt;' back on.
U nitPd Parcel only rings your
door w hen they have a package rur
somrone nex t door w ho isn't home .
1l1e telephone only rings when
you're in the bathroom, or ouLsid&lt;'
watering plant s.
You nPVPr have enough mrd when
you're vacuuming a tllg . But you
always have too much whC'n you're
trying to put it back in the closet.
PPOple who live in glass houses
have to wash their windows all the

IllC'gal alien housckwpers ar£&gt;
better than no aliens at aU.
rr s amazing how littlo mmfon
you get out or hearing sy mpathetic
Friends tell you t.hPy know exactly
what you are going through.
I discovered thPre is no such thing
os upward mobility in home
management. no chancE' for ad-

!?aiL

vancrmen t. and no opportunity for a
wage incfE'ase. I now understand For
the first tim e why wives need soap
operas and "The National Enquirer'' tog&lt;&gt;t them through the day.
It's their only link with fE'ality.
Somebody else's infidelity SUrE'
beats the hell out of getting grease
ofr the stove with the perfPCt paper
towel.

OtJT,

SaiL OUT!

NUMBER ONE TO HOUSTON - Akeem
Ola,luwon holds up his new jersey aller being selected
by the Houston Rockets In the Nadonal Basketball
A'l""datlon draft In New York Tuesday. Rockets

owner CharUe Thomas looks up at rigla. Ola,luwon
was the flrsl person selected In the l!I!W-85 draft. (AP
Laserpholo ).

I '
'-'agers
ref urn
fr0ffi Wee kl00g
•
camp session

Scoreboard ...
Majors

326: En~ l('. MlnrK'NO!a, ..12-1 : YCJ.lnt. Mil
wauk{'(' . .124

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(APl - Out·
nelders Mel Hall and Joe Caner
CLEVELAND

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n

3

dl8c:.'oYem1 the Olbs had neglected
to clear HaU and Carter tllroogh

Jx&gt;ll of OhJO Stale . No. :111 by Detroit;
0-7 Forward Ken ny Fields of UCLA,
No. 21 b)· Milwau k"' and 7-0 Earl
Jones of thf' Unin•rs!l _
\' of th e
District of Columbia. !'Jo. 23 by the
Los Angeles Lak1•r s.

~··tJ~~~~~~iliq.

531 JACKSON PIK E RT 35 WEST
Phone 446 · 4524
BARGAIN MATI,.,EES SA1 &amp; :;uN
ALL SEATS $200
ADMISSION EVERY r Ut SUA\' $2 00
{H CEPl "G R[!" ll N ~" &amp; I N)!AN. ~ J011l S-)

Lewis nails down 3 spots
LOS ANGELES (APJ-TheU .S.
Olympic Track and Field Trials are
proving no birulatlon for the
amazing Carl Lewis.
In the pressurE'·packed tests
during which the sllghest error can
OO'lt an athlete an Olympic berth,
sprlnter·long jumper Lewis has
confidentlY -and spectacularlynailPd down spots In three events on
the U.S. team.
"1luw down and one to go." a
smiling Lewis said Tuesday night
after he'd long jumped 28 feet, 7
Inches, fourth best ever outdoors. to
win the trials final.
Earlier in the day, he blazed to a
19.84-second clocking in a qualifying
heat of the 200 meters. That was the
second fastest ever In a 200not run at
high altitude. topped only by his 19.75
of last year. The world record of
19.72 was set by Italy's Pietro

Mennea in the high altitude of
Mexico City .
Lewis had won the 100 m eters
Sunday in 10.06 to earn IX'rt hs in the
sprint and on the 400-mcter relay
team. Now. only the 200 SPmiflnals
and tina! on Thursday, following a
day's break in the trials today , stand
between him and the chance to
realize his d11'am or duplicating
Jesse Owens' [our gold mf&gt;dal
pertormance in the 1936 Olympics.
"Carl feels pretty confident now
with just one more tfinall C'Oming
up," said JOP Douglas. a track mach
who is Lewis' manager. " I think the
key to his pcrfonnances here has
been relaxation: he seems able to
relax despite the pressure .'·
Lewis' talent and versatility also
recelvPd a tribute from another
quarter while he was competing
Tuesday .

\4E.'l11'

Cinnamon
Toast

Plan tourney

Tas~SI·

The A.."-A district 12 Industrial
Tourney wlU be held June 2'l and 24
at Hadley Fields in Marietta, Ohlo.
AU Industrial teams are welmme.
Entry fee is $8J plus sanction fee If
your teams is not sanctioned. Four
teams will advance to the state
tourney August 3. 4, and 5. Major
wiU be in Mansfield, Ohio. Entry to
State will be paid for wlnnner.

,

Cruncti.

(~'flr

304-773-5710

Rt. 33

Milton, W. Ya.

2 Free Dinners At DuH's

A652 I MFA COUPON I NO EXPIRATION DATE I

In Galllpolla, Ohio

If We Install Your Windshield
During The Month Of June.

week.
Carter, along with minor league
pitchers Don Schulz.e and Danyl
Banks, to Cleveland.
But after the trade. It was

Thomr_)son of ~" l'f'snoSta tP, No.19 by
Portland : h-1 fon\ ·rtrd Tony Camp-

POINT-MASON AUTO GLASS

Indians, completing the trade that
sent veteran pitchers Rick Sutcll1fe
and George Frazier and catc)ler
Ron Hassey to tlteChlcagoa.tbslast
In the trade last Wednesday, Ute

unpabiotlc.
just didn't
the
that people I didn't
thinkhave
I was
desire and motivation that I relt I
needed to make the team ...
Bowie was selectPd [or I hP 1980
Olympic squad that didn 't partici·
pate in the Moscow Games because
of the U.S.·l&lt;&gt;d boymtt.
As a Nigerian citizen, Olajuwon.
of course. isn't eligible for the C.S.
Olympic tPam. But he was happy to
be staying in his adopted Amerlcar

"I feel very lucky to stay in
Houston," Olajuwon said. " ! don't
think there'll be any problems with
the contract.'·
The 250-pound Olajuwon said he
needs to incfE'ase his strength to
meet the physical play and 82-game
travel demands of the NBA.
"When I get back to Houston, I'm
going to start tlft ing weights and
running to keep in shape," he said .
Houston joined Kentucky and
North Carolina in having two
players taken in the first round. In
addition to Olajuwon. forward
Michael Young was the :24th and last
first ·mund selecti on. by the Boston
Cvlt ics.
PltiJadelphia, w ith three first round picks. took guard Tom Sewell
of Lamar w 1t h t hi' 22nd selection in
addition to Barldc·y and Wood . The
76Prs later 1rac!t&lt;J thr rights to
Sewell to Wash.ing1 on tor the Bullets
I~ first ·round pick.
Other first-rvund(•rs were li-9
Forward OtiS Thorp&lt;•ol Providence,
No. 9 by Kan ."" City; 7-0 center
Kevin Willis ol Michigan State, No.
11 by Atlanta: 6.:1 guard Jay
Hwnphries of Col uraclo, No. 13 by
Phoenix; 6-9iorw;ml Michal~! Cagl•
of San Dipgu St~tc• . !'Jo. 14 by the Los
i\ngelcs Cl ipJx•r,;; fi4 guard Ter·
encC' Stansbu1v ufTPmple. No. l5 by
Da l1a!:i :
ll-h forward
Be rnard

DA.';t:R.U.L
Nllltorud l.t-qu('
NF.W
YOIU&lt;
Ml-:T~ ~IflT'I"d
"'B!Jrl&lt;-1·'" i\ulrv. lhlrd ha!il'lnill\

finally have joined the Cleveland

Cubs agreEd to send Hall and

Fourteen Meigs High cagers
recently returned from the week·
long Dan Bumgardner's Sbootlng
Camp in Richmond, Indiana at
Earlham College.
The Meigs kids were among 340
prep cagers partlclpa ting in the
renowned camp. Shooting and other
offensive manuevers are the main
puflJOSC for the camp.
The Meigs athletcs competing In
the camp werE' Jay Carpenter. Lee
Powell, Brad Robinson. Rodd
Harrison, Chris Kennedy, Scott
Powell. Steve Musser. Jesse How·
ard, Huey Eason, Donnie Becker, J.
R. Kitchen, Phil King, Marty Cline,
and Brian Tannehill.
Three of the above placed hlgh in
the individual competition. &amp;:ott
Powell reachPd the semr.tlnals of
the one-on-one contest in Ute ninth
and tenth grade level. Jesse Howard
won the jump shot contest. also in
the ninth and tenth grade level while
Huey Eason was second in the same
category. Howard and Eason fin.
!shed one-two among more than W
panicipants.
Two othPr Meigs varsity cagers
arE' currently competing in the
distinguished Cage Scope Blue Chip
High·Potential Basketball Camp in
LouisvillE', Kentucky at Bcllermlne
College.
Mike Chancey and Rick Wise
were among the Invi\ees for the
camp. Jay Carpenter was also
invited but mu ld not attend due to
BoysSiateparticlpation a I the same
date.
MorE' than 300 collegP coaches wtll
witness the Kentucky camp, In
which enrollment is by Invitation
only .

The 7-!oot Olajuwonlelt the soccer
neldso!Nigerla three years ago and
took the Cougars to the NCAA Final
Four three times. He is the fourth
Wlderclassman In the last six years
to be selected No. l.
Two Kentucky players who decided not to try out for the Olympics
and eight American Olympic final·
lsts shared the spotlight at the NBA
draft.
After Olajuwon, Sam Bowie of
Kentucky was laken by the Portland
Trail Blazers with the second pick.
and his "Twin Tower" tearruna te
with the Wildcats, Melvin TuJllin,
was the sixth selection, taken by the
Washington Bullets.
The rights to sign TuJllin later
were traded to Cleveland in a
blockbuster three- team deal.
Bowie and TuJllin were conspicu ·
ous by their decision not totryoutfor
Ute U.S. team. All eight Olympic
basketball team finalists who were
eligible !or the drart were taken in
Ute first 18 picks .
The run of Olympic finalists
started when Ute Chicago Bulls.
picking third. took 198&amp;8&lt;1 college
Player of the Year Michael Jordan
of North Carolina, and Dallas
selected Tar Heel Sam Perkins as
No.4.
Other flrst·round selections who
are among thp final 16 at the
Olympic Training Camp at Bloomington. Ind .• were Alvin Raben son of Arkansas. No. 7 by San
Ante nlo; Lancaster Gordon of
Loulsvllie, No.8 by the !...as Angeles
Clippers; Leon Wood of Fullerton

home.

State, No. 10 by Philadelphia; Tim
McCormick of Michigan, No. 12 by
Cleveland; Jeff Turner of Vander·
bill, No.l7byNewJersey, and Vern
Fleming ol GEorgia. No. 18 by
Indiana.
In the same deal that sent
Turpin's draft rights to Cleveland,
McCormick's rights were traded to
Seattle, whlchalsoacqulredveteran
Ricky Sobers from Washington.The
Bullets acquired veterans Gus
WUJJarns from Seattle and Cliff
Robinson from Cleveland.
Two other players who made the
flnal20 at the Olympic tryouts. but
later were cut, also were taken in the
first round. Charles Barkley or
Aurum was the No. 5 pick by
Philadelphia and ohn Stockton of
Gonzaga was taken 16th by Utah.
Marty Blake, the NBA's director
of scouting, said he was not
surprised by the potential Olympi
ans draftPd early.
"They were outstanding players
In the first place,' ' Blake said. " lt'sa
credit to their ability that they werE'
picked so high, but it provesalsoUt at
the judgment of (Olympic Coach I
Bobby Knight eolncides with th~
judgment of the top brains or
basketball."
The Nets' SPiectionofThmer , afi-9
forward, was greetPd by boos from
fans at the draFt headquan ers in
Madison Square Garden.
'Tm gPtting a lot or exposure at
theOlympiccampthat !didn't get at
Vanderbilt," Thrner said. "I hop&lt;&gt; l
can earn the respect of the fans in
New Jersey."
Bowie. like Olajuwon a Hoot
center, said his prinneeoncern in not
trying out for the Olympics " was

Transactions

Trade completed

National League waivers.

Oak -

P\l!sbur,~:h. • ~

-

~7

Monln'u l h. sr Lot.UJ.. .l
Phllllck'lpNa h. Nr.,..· YnrM ~
lhlr;IJ!(I ~ - PIIISt.lr~ .1
Allan la tl . San Francl ~!;
Clr\C'Inna ll 111. 1~ Arijlt'lf'!; -1
San Dk'$10 1. 1-ku-.roo ll
M't~ay' " Gamt'!O
San F ran cLwo:J r Roblnsoo J-"ir -AI A!lal\1,1
i Barlwr ~~
ST. l..ouls 1And.r!at ll ki• a t Mon1rral
1PalmM" 1-ll . &gt;Ill
Pttlladl·lpNa rl"artlon Or at ~- Yld
i DarllrtRI&gt;-.11. 1nt
Clll&lt;"lijltl •1)1UI : -.11 .11 PU! :o~burJ~:h !DI'
l«:ln ,\-.4 I. In I
[,a; AI¥W~ 1Pf&gt;na 7 2r ar \lnl"lnnall
IR~t'i-...-11 :Hit , 1n1

.ro.art

R~.

FIA''WS.

land . :II; G:Jreia. Toronto. ?t: f'(&gt;lfl-.. f"al j
fomla. 1t; BullA". (lP•riancl, :22; Collins.
Torooto. 1&lt;
PnniJNr. Hi drd~kllt~t
1.oll('"r. 111 '·
troll. Ml. l.flll, "l.l\l: \A'al. Toronto, : -1.
K'i'l. 1.79: ("'aLKHII. OaMland. ti-l. .lt'i7. J.til,
R.Liark.-.r:I"I . Ton"lnlo. ,;.1_ ffi7 . l!J: (ll'ilr
lUTon. ~ 1. Krl. -t~ 1}\anctxoz. Callfor
r.la. "1-1. A.l.l. l .li.l
STRikYOt!fS· Will C&lt;~l lfomlu _ K1 :
Monl'i. [l(&gt;l !oll. 76: N~itro. NN· YCI"M .
~ : SUrb. Toronto, 7t ~ A"'&lt;d. Toronto. "i:l.
SA\'F.S: QuiSt"'ntx'f"r\·. K;m!WS Cll\ . 17 .
Caudill. Oakb~nd , 1&lt;1 : lltnw m.ll~~;. 1111mil
11: R.D;:n· L~. MJflflN;(fa . 12. !' iank·v. lblon . U

nArnM; 11:-.11 at

Tcrort~o

MCH"ffi

II

Sc&gt;a nk' 8, Chi('~ 1

r:'l"

~:

Tcrooro, 17: FUpkm. Ralr lmort"'. -r. :
1Tamrnl".f.l. DMrol l. li; RHm&lt;rrwn. ~k
la11d. -L'"t: Whllakr-·r. [)ptmll. ~~
HBJ · F:Mun-av, Raltlrmn·. Rl: R J("t"'
Ho1;1oo. ~; Kin~, OaXiancl . 52: 1..\P
Mrbih. T(•JUis. ~: ADavl~. Sl:'art ~. 47.
HITS: Gaffin. Toconto. K'i'_ T rammt&gt;ll.
DN'rolt . K1: MaMingl'.·. j&lt;,'~· York. It!:
Yrun1. MIIWa ukw, IQ: ~ an&gt; ll&lt;'cl ,..l!h Uot .
DOUFILES: r.afl'l&lt;l. Toruuo. 17: TNff'l,
Mini"'IMO!a , 17: r.FJrou. Toroolfl. lti_ 1AP
ar rl'&gt;h, Tf'X.as, l ti: Mallin~!'.· . NN· Yock.
1~ : OBrlm. T ('lliiS, lti ; Tramrllf'l.l, 1)(11111!.
16.
TR!Pl.E'i : ~·- Toronto. !): Collins.
Torooto. 7; C"Mrn, Sl&gt;attk&gt;. 7: Upsha..., , Toronto, li; R L~"· · C'hlcaJ&gt;!O. !'!.

AD&lt;I\"L~.

S.!tlrnor'(' 9. Bostoo ;

GBo-~1.

•

"the

like a dn&gt;am. I just want to be the

AMERIO\N LEAGl 'F.
AA "rflNG tlMI al ha!S I: : lllfl('ld, NN

I'M BRiNGiNG
HeR iN!

nicknamed

best! can be, to play hard every time
out."

Leaders

GaRY,

time.
The only item you n&lt;'€d to
complete a chorE' is upstairs when
you'rE' downstairs and downstairs
when you're upstairs.
Dogs and ca ts have to be fed or
they'll tum on you.
The best way to clean up your
son's room is to cloSP the door and
pretend It is not a pan of the houSP.
Taking a headache fE'medy does
not necessarily mean there will be
less dust In the Jlv ingroom.
No one gives you a bonus for
getting a stain out of the sofa.
~

Oiajuwon.

Dream" during his outstanding
career at the University of Houston,
said being picked first by the
Houston Rockets In the opening
round of the National Basketball
Assoctatlon draft Tt!esday "feels

'qn4

Public opinion polls show that
wome n - by a margin of seven
p&lt;&gt;rcrnt to 15 percent - believe the
Democrats are better able to deal
with America's present problems.
That gap. the increasPd votes of
blacks and Hispan ics. and a return
to the ranks by blue·collar workers.
cou ld provide \ictorie~ for the
Democrats this rail.

Jl('W idt&gt;i:lS.

ByWIILIIUI R. BARNARD
AP Spona Wrtter
NEWYORK(AP)-TheHouston
Rockets have their "Dream," and
so does Nigerian Akeem Olajuwon.

a rate higher than Increases among
whites or Hispanics. Also. the Jesse
Jackson campaign has energized
blacks and elfons by Jackson and
others have added thousands of new
black voters to the rolls.
In addition, women today ac·
coun t for 53 percent of American
voters. ln 1980. six mllllon more
women than men cast votes. By
EIPCtion Day 1984. as many as nine
million morP women than men may
choose the next president.

one percent of the votes cast went to
the Former California governor. But
that 51 p&lt;&gt;rcent reprPSentPd only 26
percent of those who could have
votPd on Elect on Day. A quaner of
the electorate provided the Reagan
" mandate," but the electorate that
passes judgment on him this year
appears to be qualitatively and
quantitatively different.
for one thing, t here will be no
third· party candidate. In 19ffi John
Anderson's miniscule vote in the
South made the difference [or
Reaga n in st.:lveral key stall'S.
Carter suften'&lt;J as well from an
appallingly low turnout of black
voters. whose Increased pcrfor ·
mance could have won North
Carolina. South Ca rolina. A la·
bama. Mis.&lt;:.issippi and Tennessee.
But black v ot ing levels have
increasf&gt;d between 1900 and 1982 at

P1 ga

Houston Rockets ·have their
'dream,'; so does Olajuwon

Page--2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, June 20, 1984

The Daily Sentinel

The Oaily Sentinel

I

1)-

when

I

I

Save 25&lt;: EL

AI C..rd &amp; StaH Df Polnt-Maaon Auto Glaa -~~~ lib to .., thalllta
10 tile .....,.. Of 11M Tri-County Ana tor llltlftt oa ..,Ia yeur llals
IIHC!sforlllepast l)J. .n ... We R.. A;p wcl81t Ill

u,

POINT-MASON AUTO GLASS

·--1L lJ

aM-77N710

.... I.

.... ,..,.KlAn rOCM etJ IIHIII"

I -·-----.I
I ...I I.I H.Ilooti . .
. ,. . , _o·..

hntiii'IQ. rn ICCOnSinct With au-'.ademphon pol.c~ coptes fvarlaole uoon rwutsl ~nd couoon~ lo
GM1 COUPON REDEMPTION, PO Boll 900. MPLS , Mill 55-400 or our &lt;IIJIMr•ze~ ctear•nQ hOuses

c..-..... 1,• • .,.~,.,..,....,.~. ~U. SA

9t

~

5

1111''""''''

I

-·-------------

I

-

••

G-tMilto

�Wednesday, June 20, 1984

Ohio

-.

Wednesday, June 20, 1984

•

BASKETBALL

tes,
m
10-4 romp over LA Dodgers
extend Its winning streak to six
games and move l \1, games ahead
of the second-place M ets in the NL
E ast. Ex-Met Jerry K oosman
allowed four hits and two runs in
seven innings as tlle M ets lost lor
only the fourth time in their last 15
games. Al Holland pitched the l ast
two innings and allowed hom e runs
to Ron Gardenhire and Hubie

By HERSCHEL Nl!lSENSON
AP Spotts Writer

..

game in Tiger Stadiwn. Detroit came from hehlnd In
the late irmings ro edKe the \' ankees, 7-6. (J\P
l..aserpholu) .

DOUBLE PlAY - Detroit's l.aJTy Herndon l• out
al second ha"' as New York's Willie Randolph relays
ro first and gets '11ger Tom Brooker._ for a double play
In se&lt;·ond rnrung of Tuesday night's Am&lt;•rican League

Murray turns things around
for Orioles with grand slam
By KEN RAPI'OPOHT
AP Sports Writer
For SC'\'C"n innings, i t \.~:as d g LJ.nlf'
that Edd ir M UITa )' wou ld lik&lt;' ro
fo rget
thrn hC' rnadl' H onp to
remf'mbr•r .

A st rikl•o u t \ 'il't im his fi rs t th rN'
tirm""!-, at bat . thf' Baltimorr fi r st
baseman suddPnl)' turned things
~round w ifh iJ gr and sl.q m homr r un
in the erght h innin g. r hPn punch('{! a
!"W·o-r un si ng ]( • in thf' ni nt h to hr lp thp
Or iolf'S pounrl out a 9-7 dcton· oYf&gt;r

thr Boston Hro Sox on Tu.,•sdov
night.
·
" I hadn ·r lookf-d tha t bad in a long
t im e." Murra.\ said of hi .~; thn 't'
strikrout s. "\V(' \.\·rrp r r LJ. IIV nat
f'a rl~ - in
tlw gamt'. but thf'n
everybody contributt&gt;d in thl' last
couplE' of innings."
MuiTa _
v ·s honwr camt· on ;1 pit ch
fro m rC'i i{'\'l' t Rob Stan](,, · anf1
sa ilrd a lx&gt;u t .r:J( ) f( ~t'l , m ·pr rht • k&gt;sron
buUfX'n and ~1bou t IJ rows imo th('
bleac hPr s in r ight -cr•n tr r in Fr mva \
Pa r k. It wa s hts 1-trh hnmC'r of t h~
SPason and th&lt; ' t ·ig tlt t1 gr a nd -; IHm of
his C&lt;lfN ' f
In othrr r\ 1. ~w l io n . it w a_.., JX&gt;troit
7. r\(' \\" Y ork li: :\1il\\-;tukt'( ' l"i,
T omn l n :1: ( ' !t •\·!' l,lnd 7, .V lin nf•&lt;.,nfa
-t : TC'.xa .., -t . ( ";.d i! o!ll i ~1 2. 1-\. ; m sa ~ Cit\ ·

i

h. Oak la nd 2. &lt;tnd

.)

St •;~tt!P H. f hica g~

T ht · l ~ &lt; l it t mt &gt; n · \ "it ·ro n · w l' ·nt tn 1~ i l l
Swaggt •rt\·, 2 1. w ho pi !("h('(l a
pt•JiPct ~ · 1g hth .1;-. l ht • thi r d Or iul1•s
hu r i(•r. T ipp\ \1itrllnt '/ (.H"o! ( '( "l&lt;'d
the lt •a rl in fht· ni nth fflr hL" ni n th
SU\"f' . S tan tr•_\ . I h. to(1k thf• h-.:-. .
VlutT. I\ ·, ll f 'I"! II C.' m·t·r shadoHt•d
tht• P&lt;' lintlll.tll("( ' o f Bos ton'-. .!irn
Hir ('. \\·hod roq • in four n m s H·ith hi.s
Dth honwr 0nd a .-. ing iP.

TigPrs 7, \' ;Ulk t"f ·~ 6
_ftu ..,t_
\ ~ unt z\ two -run singif"'
ht _L!hl t,e: hli'&lt;l a fl)u r run Pi g htll inn ing
10 hoo:-. r I )( ·r rn it o\-l' r \." t w y () r k .
,\ Onf• out o.., ing lt • b\ · Larry fl 1-.rn rlnn wi th l hf~ ba &lt;., es t0ad•'&lt; l hdd t il'tl
th r gamf' ;II -t -1. &lt;tnd J-\ u n t; follt Jwr 'tl
wi th hi:-. ..., jn g ](' nfl Y ankt'\' ldt hand( •r Hnn ( ;u Jdn. :)-\ lo st·nn • thf'
\vinn ing r un .
'fll&lt;' los:-, W(•nt 1() ,\ Ut'(•l i() l.OPf'Z.
1}-- 0.

B n ·wt'" 6. RILH · .J a\-~;;
.Jim Su nd hl •r).:" &lt;-. i n gh ~~ in thf'

w inn ing run wi th lh&lt;• txJSL'S loadf'd in
rhr ninth innin ~ to lead M ilwa ukf'f'
m·f'r Tor ont o and Pnd thf' Rl uC' .JCJvs·
w inn ing .streak a t fi\'f' ga mf's. ·

CN' i I Cooprr. Flrn Ugliv ir andT!'&lt;l
Simmons hit consC'Cut ivC' two-vut.
11..1n -scor ing sing les i.n t he• fif th lnnjng
to pJ d t hP (jrC'Wf'r s' l&lt;'ad t o 5-1.
nut Buck M a r1 in&lt;•z bm ug hr th f'
Hlur Ja vs buck w it h a t wo~ nm rriplf'
in thr s ix th to na rmw thl' margin to
:&gt;-.l Thl• Blue' . Ja~· s tHldN:l a r un in th f'
st'\·pn th on an RBI sing lP b\· Willi e
Ups ha w and Gf•fwgp &amp;-.11 i if'd thP
gu m r .'i~ o w hen hr lrd off rhrr rghrh
in nr ng w ith ht s n mth Jmmf'r of thP

lndii.UJ s 7, Twino,; 4
( ;•'Orgp Vukov ich droH• i.n thJ l 'i '
run s \Nith a hom e run and two slng l&lt;•s
anfl Mikf' ll argr ovp and C.rr a lct
\: 'illitrd f'ac h knockc&gt;d in a pJi r a s
{ lr\'f' land lx'at Mi mlC'sota .
Wi nnf'r Ht-rt R l~ · lt ·n· n . ~.1, l"f'lil"('{l
rtH• fi r~ ! l :l bal !f' J~ and wou nd up
sc c ~tt~ · rm g Sf'\ "Pn hit s in 7 1 - .' ~ inning&gt;.;_
stnktng out thtT'(' ami wa lk ing t wo
Mik1 · .ld f i 'O&lt;J J ami FrniP c·ama c- ho
ft nishrcl up.
I JJS(' r Kr n Sr hrom . 0-L. la'-il('(l just
rwo th ir ds nf an inning H" h('n tlw
Ind ians t':l kPd him fnrfin •nf th1 'ir 1-t
l1 il s
I C.UIJ,{t.' N -1,

( ;; u ~ - \\" ;t r d

,\111-{t'l"i :!

.'-. ]U g).;l 'd

;t

IWO tliTl

hom t 'l" J nd D a \"1 ' Si 1W~l r1 Lind Odt ·11
.lonPs ("ombint'&lt;..l•m a fin • hill t·r ' ' "
'1'4'.\tl \ dm\'m'(l r ati forni; t.
\-\"Jr d . {"Ont inu ing ro fi gh t nft ; t
s1·asnn long slump. fnll n\\'f'(i ;1
!I JUI" tll inning wa lk to I .an)- ·1\ nTi sh
Wlth hb sixth lwm t·r- ol th(· Si ' d .'-.1 111
and Sf'i 'o nd in two gam C's to g i\"l'
T f' xas a .l -0 lr c.J d and thf' R.a ngl'rs ·
P\"t·ntutt l H·in ning run .
S it .~,,- , 1 r t , 4-H. WJ iki'd tht "N' am i

' tl'ur k ou r fo ur in H1 :1innings l, ,tn r&lt;'
.Jom•s l'amP on 10 JX&gt;st hi s .'\N-ond
san"'. Strwarl gan' up a homrr to
~ggk ,/iJck son in thf' fifth inni ng,
hJ s 11 th . anrl su rn 'ntl(' n '&lt;l ;tncJ!hez
so lo shot in the · '-'C'\ "t'll l h tu B ria n
IJowning . his nin th .
Mariners X, \\-'hitt' Sox 2
Spikf' 0\.\.-·C'n ·s two-r un ho rnf'r
snapped a L-2 ti l • in th1 · six th in ning
&lt;tnd Phil Bra ciiP_
\· arlcl1·d a bd ~C'~ ­
Ioadf'd I ii piP as S4 •att k• pu l.lf'd ; tw ;1\
ro d&lt;•feat Ch icago.
·

'

Korn has one stroke lead in
43rd Ohio Juniors golf event
('(If .! ':Vll li: S, Oh11&gt; ! AP 1 - StrH·
Korn (J f f-:lmnn· hC' Id a illlf'·Shotlf'ad
Ill Th f' Jh-lX ag(' di\·is ion going in to
tod a_\.· _, final ro und of the twu-da v
Drd ( Jhic' . J unin r."i Champinnship ,; t

Ohi o Stdll'

L' ni v1•r s it ~ ··s

Sc;Jr lf't

Cou r S( •.
K om . &lt;1 mPmhf'r of \&gt;Voorlmorf'·s
Class ,\ staf f' golf ('h.ampionshi p
h •am it " a sophom(J r f'. said hf'
undPr stO(XI I hC' SUITJrisf• of SOm f' o f
h i s compt:' l itor s on •r hi s fi r st-round
lf'ad .
" I don' t h:t \'f' a n ~' C'St ablishf'd
ha ndicap . and thrv a ll do." hr said .

"' r\ncl I was a !all ' (' nt rv - hu t I li kP
tx•lng in thf' h ·ad . 1 likf' two-dew
tournamPnts. · ·
\-"l 'a r old gradual! ' o f
1-\.orn . a 11·_
Woodmorr H ig h ~ l10ol. gra iJix'Cl

2~o\' Pr~par

74
plan·
w ith a
Tfirst
uf'sda.
v . Headt-d
for Ohio Univr r ·
sil)' on a combined acadr mic and
golf scholarship . Kom had four
b )gC'ys. onf' hirclir and thf' rC'st pa rs.
( ;rou prcl a t 7o. one st rokr back .
W&lt;Tr Tony M ollica of Columbus.
Ra n y Fa byan of Wor1hington.
Doug Mart in and J im Wilkins of
1-'indl av and .John Doc·kry o fTol('{!o.

BIG FOOT PARK
*BOAT DOCK
*BOAT RAMP
*BATH HOUSE

WOODED SITES - NO DOWN PAYMENT
PHONE 614-256-1216 FOR APPOINTMENT

Brooks .
V irgil hit a two- run hom er offloser
F.d Lynch In the second inning and
Sclunidt hl! a solo shot in the fift h.
Samuel singled home a run In tllr
fourtll inning and two m orf' in Ill&lt;'
eighth lor a 6-2 lead .
Padres 2, Astros 0
Eric Show hurled the second
two-hitter of his career and allowed
only three baserunners, orir on a
walk. Houston's hits wer e singles by
Jerry Mumphrey in the second
inning and Enos Ca bPII in the
SPventh .
The Padres scored a run off Bob
Knepper in the second illlling on
sing i&lt;'S by Gr aig Nettles and Terry
Kennedy and a double by Carmelo
Martinez. They added run in the
fifth when Show singled , wa s
sacrificed to second. took third on
Tony G wynn's singlr and scored on
Steve Garvey' s sacrifiCl' Oy .
Br.lVL'S II, Giants 6
Rookie B r ad K omminsk's first
major~ league gra nd slam of!Sl't two
home runs by San F r ancism 's Bob
Breniy as Atlant a r allied alter
spotting the Giant s a live- run lmd in
the first inning. The Braves scored
three times in the bot tom of thdirst

a

na ls 6~3.

Owpn's second homrr of the
season carne off Chicago sta t1 er
Bti t 1 Burns . 2 ~8, and highlight('{! a
r h r rr~ nm sixth inning that rnablrd
Sc&gt; &lt;:illll~ ro l ak e a !l--2 1ead .
T hf' M a r ine r s added thr('(' morC'
ru ns in the Sf'\' Cnl h on Gr adiC'v's
tr iplf'.
·
Sf'a !tlc's Jim &amp;-a tt ic, h-1, a nd
Mikr Stanton combi ned on a
fi\ "P-hill l'I as the Ma r iiiPrs brd1
C'hicdgo for thP first tinlf' sinc-e .Junp
~ . 19H:l . Chicago had won r ight
stra ight .
I!&lt;Jyals 6, i\' s2
.l o r grOrt a drm·p in fou r run':-&gt;. tw o
on a four! h-inn ing hom r run tha t put
thr ga m r ou t of rra ch . as l&lt;ansas
C t!\' df'fm t('{! Oa kl and to sna p a
fi\"C'·gam f' losing strC'ak .
Bud Black , 1 ~ &gt;. got the victo!&gt;'
with n ·liPI" hf' lp from Dan C,Ju iS&lt;'~­
IX'rr v, 11·ho pir chrd thr fina l 2 2 ~:1
inning!-. to notch his lC'agliC'·If'&lt;:J ding
17th .'i&lt;J \"P. Oakland s tartf'r Chris
Cod imli. 4-:l. laste-d only two innings
and rook l h&lt;' loss

Sutcliffe . who was acquired from
Cleveland in a sev en-player trade
last wcek. struck out nine and
wa Iked three hefore giv ing wa y to
Smith in th e ninth afl er a w a lk. an
er ror and Tony P ena' s RBI double.
Smith yielded a sacri1icP flv to
plnch~hitter Doug Frobel · and
wa lked thrce batter s h&lt;'fore na iling
down his 13th save.
Krith More land drove in a pair of
runs with a triple and a double for the
Cubs against John Tudor. Ground ~
er s by Ga r y Mat tllews and Ron Cey
produced Chicago's other two runs
as lh&lt;' Cubs snapped a four~game
losing strmk and rf'main('{! two
gam rs out in the Nl.. East.
Thr sa v&lt;' \-\-'as Smith's 11th in 16
suc h situations, wh ich e xpla inf'd
w hY M an agpr. J.tm F reydidn' t have

,--------------1

H Pr a lei -D ispa 1c h ·s
;1w; ml -w innin g SJ.XH'l ~w ri ll • r E r ni i'
Sa i Y &lt;~tOil' I T'C'( ' ntl ~ · ~ TOI P a hPa r1
\\"a r m ing stor:,· L.lhout Mf'igs Coun tv
and O:n ·c Di iPs in hi:-; ·n own
I".J"()nf" d~ tit~ - cn lum n.
F ol l 1 1\~· i ng is &lt;.1 f('w r x cr tvs fr nm
t ht ' s li JJ'\" .
Si.x H'i:l t· s ago IJ&lt;J \ "C' D ilrs dc·d inc&gt;d
to n·n P\\- hi s cont rL~cl w it h A H( ·-T \-'
,1s ~~ m•twork SlXH1scastf'r and
t"t'lurm "CI1 tl hi s rKitivP r oots in MC'ig..,
Cou nt). Ohru. one of lhl' poorl•sl bul
Oil( ' Of lhl' pn'! I iC'S! of t hr fluckt '\'('
St ~J t P·s ~
·

If u nt i n.(!l nn

tO

,\
mJ t1Pr of princ ipiP w as
rm·oiW'fl M on&lt;'\' . Davr had d isn&gt;
\ 'l'n '&lt; l 1ha t om' of hi s collr agu c•s.
.... tt"ict i,Y a no talr nt. no f'XpPrirnce.
p rd ty facr . wa s; ea rn ing nC'arly· rwo
ancl onr -half limf'S more pa ~- than hP
\\ "d .... .

" T h&lt;Jt told me t wo thi ngs ... D m ·f'
s;litl n 'C'Pnt l.v . " T ht• kid had a Jx•t ll 'r
agPn t lhJ n I d id, &lt;.~ nd tha t to thirlf'
ow ns('] ( om · mu st i x' IJUC'. "
So . w h&lt;'n Roon&lt;' Arledg&lt;'. 1il&lt;'
,\ i3C s higll pri&lt;'St on the m•ws a nd
spo 11s all " r s. offf' r f'd him hanclsomf'
fin &lt;tnr iul a mPnrls a t r f'n r\-va l timf' .
Da\·c· qu t r kl ~/ sa td "t ha nk"i but no
thanks." H e'd a lrr ady exam ined
hi ~ oplions, :vou Sf'f', and lhP tT•in Jip~:;
a not hr r sto ry .
Though ba'&lt;'&lt;l in J..l&lt;&gt;troit, bur

~

going whC'r f'V('I" i\ BC would SC'nd
him , DavP found hi m SPlf inciT'asingly &lt;'Scaping to Mvigs Countv 's
Ju stir solitudP bPt wwn a ss i~
nlf•nt s. A nd . hunger ing to br there
whm he was n't. and hating to lmvr
whf•n hC' w as . A ff'w VPars earlier
hr 'd boug ht a qua int uiue placP nea~
Hacinc w hr re . frl'&lt;'d from big l ime
p tT'ssurC'S and e-gos, he c-ould live 3!:1
he thought hf' should br . Not ABC.
T hus, whr n he cxaminrd his
options. whilC' Roone 's new contract
hung ovl'r his neck , a sword of
Dam o&lt;.' IC's ~~· ith tx:mu sclauSf's. Dave
Dill's chose M eigs Cou nty. RPJ&lt;'&lt;'ted
WC'I'C thf' g littf'ring glamor bvwavs
of thP world . Latf'l' hr would C'V~n
rf'jC'CI a proposition from The Mou th
him S&lt;•If. Howard Cosrll , who inv ited
htm to jorn his 'Sport sbeat' staff. For
onf' thing, thC' " sa lary" was insu lt mg. F or another , Dave wou ld be
liv ing out of a sui! case aga in .
Astonish&lt;'(] at such tr mrrit y . H owie.
w ho earns m on• than $1 million a
ymr aggravating the sensibilities of
the nation. has nevrr forgivf'n him .
No mat ter. In Racine Davf' D ii&lt;'S
wa s alrrady com binrng the best of
all w orlds. Hr was ti v ing lh&lt;' life of a
count ry squire and stili fulfilling
hi msf'lf prol&lt;'ssionaliy . doing free
lancr sportscasting and writing
sport s biogr aphies as net'll of br£'ad
and drr n~'ll .

= Aluminum Fibered

'

Black Fibered

FOOTBALL
NEW

YORK

tAP ) -

Steve

including a 47~yard TD run.

Young, quarterback for tlle Los
A ngeles Express , w as nam ed the
U .S. Football League-Lite Beer
Player of the Wcek for leading his
team to the P acitlc D ivision title
which carne w ith Its 24-19 win ove;
the Oakland Invaders last w eek .
Young established a new singlegame completion percentage m ark
of 87.5, by connecting on 14 of 15
passes for 195 yards and one
touchdown . The TD cam e on a
76-yard strike lo M el G r ay. Young
ru shed for 82 y ards on eight earri&lt;'S,

TENNIS
WIMBLEDON , England (APIJohn M cEnroe will meet Au stralia's
Paul M cNamee and Martina Nav·
ra t il ova faces fellow American
Peanut Louie in tlleopening round of
the Wimbledon tennis champion~
ships, according to the d raw lor tlle
tournamen t.
After announcement of the draw
for the All ~ England Lawn Tennis
tournament , the Ladbrok es book~
m a king fum m ade the two top seeds

ROOF COATING

$2370

TRACK AND FIEI.Jl
LOS ANGELES (AP I - Ca r l
Lewis, ripped
a dazzling 19.84~
second clocking - !he rourtll fastest
PVer- in a secona'round heat of the
m en 's IDmeter ' tlash at the U .S.
O lympic Track and F ield Trials.
M ary Decker, tlle American
!'€COrd holder ani:l world champion
at 3,llXI meters, cruised through her
first ~ round heat in a relatively slow

oti

9:01 .00.

I USPS 14~Ntl)
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Publlshf'd f'V(' ry aft~rnoon , Monday
throu2h Fr iday, 111 Coun Stre-et, by tht
Ohio Va lll'y Pu blt s hln~ Company . Mul-

COPYRIGHT 1984
THE KROGER CO IT £MS ANO
PRICES GOOD SUNDA Y. J UN E 17. THROUGH S AT V ~
OAY , JUNE 23 . 1984 . IN Wtttpolts lnd Poi!Woy

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WE RE SERV E TH E RIGHT 10 LIM IT O UANlll i ~ S NONE
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Membfor: Thf' A.s soc laled P re:;s, Inland Dall y Pn•ss AsSO&lt;'Iaton and lheAmen ca n N{'w spapt&gt;r Publlstlers A ss(J(·! all o n. Nallo na ! Advertlsln~ Repr?Sf' nta ll vl" . Rrn nh am Ne wsp&lt;l Pf'rSales
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York 10017 .

POSTMASTF:R: s.&gt; nd a ddl'E'SS to ThP
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The Dal l_v ~ntlnf'l on :l . 6 or 12 month
ba si.-. . Cr f'd ll wil l bC' £1vE&gt;n ca rrlf'r f&gt;ach
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b~-

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w lw' rf' ho mf• &lt;·arriPr S('f\-' IC{' Is

c

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ln.-..df&gt; Ohio
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~f, WPI"h
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Uul~ld f'

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CANNED HAM ......... ~ ~~; $}.59

~~:: fuos

BOILED HAM ........... ~~; Sl.97

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MA RK ET BA SK ET GR A DE AA LAR GE EGGS .DO Z . 73C

Ohio Colby longhorn

12 01 . Kraft Swiss 16 Slice

3 lb . Golden Del .

Singles Processed

APPLES ...........~!,.11.29

Kroger 2%
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Kroger 0.5%
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G al

Ga l.

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ADVERTISED ITEM PDLICV
Each o f these adv enrsed 1tem s os re Qw red to he rP.rnlll-y
ava ila ble to r sale on ua c h Kr o qer Stm c . c~ c e pt as

sp ec1hc ally n o ii:' L1 w. th• s ad I! we do r un out a t a n
act ... ert• Sed •1em we w ill off r.1 you -,.ou r r htliCt! o f a
c om p;:u atl te •tern wh en avaola ble. relle c t1ng th e same
S&lt;! VIn gs or a ra,n ch ec t wh 1Ch w,u ent 1l le you 10 PUI Chase
the Ctdven 15 e d 1t em ~ • Hw .tfl ven 1s to d p11 c e worh1n 30

oa vs On ly one vendor Cfl uDOn w rtl be a ccepted oe 1 1te m
pur cha sed

14 Count

MARGARINE .. ... .. 2/79¢

Gal .

KROGER

SMITHFIELD

HEAD
LETIUCE ...........~~~. 79'

Homogenized Milk ...... . Jug

.. . .. . . ........... .. Ju g

LIMIT 2 PLEAS E

CHEESE ........ r.~~ .. s1.93

t en ni s

The Daily Sentinel

a\'a ila hl f'

8 01 . Shedd's Tumbler

b o u r ne
won:te n ' s
tournam ent.

Red9 10, Ikllll"n 4

~ ~~

CHEESE .... ......~~ , . 11.95

the mnst prohibit ive favorites since
World War II, with odds of 4- ll lor
M cEnroe and 14 for Navratilova.
Tournament officials announced,
m eanwhile, tha t Yannick Noah or
France, tlleseventhseed, had pulled
out of the tournament, which slar1 s
M onday, citing an "a bdominal
strain ."
EASTBOURNE, E ngland tAP r
Martina N avratllova, Chris
Evert Lloyd and Zina Garrison tlle three top seeds - all advanced to
tlle fi nal 16 of the Sl70,1XXl East·

5

Ron Oester, who brought a .198
batting average into the game,
doubled home thrre runs to cap a
seven ~ run lltth Inning that gave
Clnci nna II an S.3 lead and saddled
the Dodgers with their sixth
consecutive loss. Loser Fernando
Va lenzuela took tlle brunt or the
attack .
·

!own .~

k now why." F'r C'y said . " HC''s d one
as good a j ob as anyone in thf' league.
Normally·. hP dOPsn' t hav0 control
problems .· ·
Phillies 6, !\Ids ~
Mike Schmidt a nd OzziP Virgil hi I
hom(' ru ns and Juan SamuPI drovC'
in tht'{'(• runs to l1rlp Plliladrlphia

MOBILE HOME

-

connected againSt rellever :Jeff
CorneU. It was his thlnl horne run
since being called up from tlle
minors M ay 30. Brenly's two-run
homer capped the San Francisco
first and he added a solo shot In the
eighth.

" If you look at his statistics. you

fr~~~~~~:;~:;;:;::::::::::::::::~~
-

and ' trailed 5-3 when Kmunlnsk

NEW YORK lAP) -The Houston
· Rockets made Akcein "The
Dream" Olajuwon tlleflrst selection
in tlle National Basketball Assocla~
lion draft.
The 7-foot Olajuwon, a Nigerian
who took the Universlty of Houston
to the NCAA Final Four in each of his
three season with the Cougars, is the
fourth underclassman In tlle last six
year s to be selected No. 1.

anyon~
wa rming upd&lt;'Spi!P Smith' s ~-=====::::::::::::::~~~-==============~
wildness .

Veteran Huntington scribe
comments on Diles" activities

5 GALLON

OWN YOUR OWN CAMPSITE

Rick Sutclltfe's first National
League appearance In more than
three years was a success thanks to
a wing and a pr ayer .
The wing was the sturdyright arm
of Chicago relief ace Lee Smith , who
put down a three-run uprtsing in the
bottom of the ninth Inning Tuesday
night and retired four-time batting
king BUI Madlock on a pop n y with
the bases .loaded to presetve the
Cubs' 4-3 victory over the Pittsbu rgh
Pirates.
·
The pr ayer came from Sutc liffe,
who sought som e div ine inletven~
lion as Smith w as in the scary
process of walking three batters to
force in Pittsburgh 's final run.
" I said a little prayer," sa id
Sutc liffe, w hoblankedthePirates on
four hits over the first eight innings.
"'The greatest thing about it is being
in a pennant r ace again. I can't w ait
to pitch in Chicago. This was a lot of
fun , but there's a long w ay to go."
In other NL gam es , the Philadel·
phia Phillies beat tlle New York
M ets 6-4. the San Diego Padres
blanked the Houston Astros 2~. tlle
A tlanta Braves outslugged thP San
F rancisc o Giants 11-6, the C incln ~
nati Reds thumped the Los Angeles
Dodger s 10-4 and the Montrea l
F.xpos down('{! thr St. Louis Cardi ~

Sports
briefs...

The Daily Sen fine I Pag 8

Pome10y-Middleport, Ohio

Kroger
Sugar

Del Monte
Catsup

8 OZ. Bl RDSEYE

COOL WHIP ............. ~!~.· .. 99¢

yOu r p u rc hase P"C t!

Diet Pepsi
or Pepsi Cola
8-Pak

58

PERCH .................... ~.K.GS1.99

11 0 ,,

IO !al ~ II SiiiCIIOrl r e gdr O lf'S~ o l m&lt;Jf1u !.IC! oo •r•• It ~ O "
are not sat1 ~f,ed K ro qf'r ...,,u r.- pl ;u ,, V""' ' " ' "' ....,, 1,
lt1e sa me b ranrl or " c o mp ,l r .;~ll h• h • &lt;~ n.-1 n• " ' ' "' " '

PINT RET U RNABLE BO TTLE S
MTN . DEW . PEP S I FREE . .

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TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
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48
PLUS
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IOVz OZ. CAMPBELL'S CHICKEN

LIMIT 1 PLEASE

NOODLE SOUP .......... . 2/79~
3 OZ. INSTANT

NESTEA ................... ~~~s2.97

15Vz OZ. WHITNEY

RIPE SWEET

PINK SALMON ......... ~!'.NS2J9

Southern
Peaches

17 OZ. DELMONTE

APRICOT HALVES ..... ~~-~ .. 99¢
27 OZ. DEL MONTE WHOLE LEAF

SPINACH ................. ~~-~ .. 89~

JUMBO ROLL BLT

PAPER TOWELS ........ ~~.L.L•• 97~
20 CT. 9"x12" HEFTY PICNIC

FOAM TRAYS ........... ~~~ 1. 79

•
•

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Bunch

c

''

•••
•

Fresh
Broccoli

lbs.

~ roger
Welcomes
Your Federal
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24 OZ. ARMOUR

BEEF STEW .............. ~!'.NS1.59

4 PACK ZEST BAR

TOIL

p ....... .

••

�Tne

Weclne rk•t, June 20, 1984

Sentinel

Beat of the Bend

Cavs

BOB HOE-

Tht·h'l.'lin~ didn'tlast

long.
·· J
"1\"vll . it happens like that.·
I \\;t~(l!:-.dppoiu t Ptl, '' said Turpln .a
hIt 10, )1 II rooki l' CPI11Pr rrom Krn -

''"I.

1Ud\\

by thl' Cavaliers

llhiJt m'll

Wrller

We R8S8fV8 The Right To

Some of the
Pomeroy merchants are doing
an excellent job with their show
windows reflecting yesteryear In
eonjunction with the weekend visit
of the replica of an early barge .
Wonder where they found all of
those goodies.

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

Umit Quantities.

lly ( "IQI('K MELVIN
.\1' Sports Writer
,·u-:1"1-:I A 'I D 1AP 1 - Mplvin
'l'lltpin'..., fi r~ t n)ac tion UIXJO learning
h~ ,.d [)I· pla _\·ing basketball for the
t'l('\t• l.trtt.l Cava liPr s
was
di.'-:lp point rm· nt

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., JUNE 23, 1984

If Katie Crow's eyes seems a bit
misty to you thes&lt;' days. il"s
understandable.
After much deliberation, Katie
has decided to retire after some 18
years of handling newsbea ts for The
Daily SentineL
Katie's decision comes with
mixed emotIons and that ·s probably
a universal problem .
On July 6 from 3 to 4: ~p.m .. our
staff will be holding a rPCeption for
Katie at our Court Stn:-et offices. If
you've had contact with Katie over
the years du feel free to stop by and
wish her well . Incidentally. wp arc
having cake but we might b!' in short
supply. If that happens. you can
have mine.

durit:~-: Tw ·~cLI _v·s Nat ional BaskPt-

h.tll .\~:-.&lt;.X'i:ll ion JrJ.ft.

··Hut 1ht •tt lihought tho 1Clf'\'cland
t .u1 ht , .1 L;ood 11 ·am. that th&lt;'~· n·adC'd
. 1 L!l •I 11 I pi.J _
\'1 ·1· for mr• dOd 1ha r 1could
t J~ ·rwt 11 1ht 'Il l and t hf'\ could ix'nrfil
rr 11' . · Turpin -.a iel

Tuq)J JI \\'J. -" thl' Washington
I :u lit ·r "· t ir~t ruund drJft pick TUPSd.J \. 1l11 ...,j_
, tli plJ.~ 'L'r taken 0\'f'ra ll .
Til t· J.:ullt •t.., thL•n tradf'd him to
( ·11'\l'i,uHl I'l l!" \ '!'lt•r&lt;J. n fmward CUff
\ ~()IJm..,t m, ! ·d\'Jilrrs· first -round
pwk Tilll .\kCurmick of Mic higan
,If!( I \'.t.., )l
\lt ('twrn ic k wound up in Sca ttlf'
.t . ., p.1r· 11l c1 trad(' that Sf'nt Gus
\\ ;llldrW·· HI \\';~ :.. hinglon
Turp1n. l.;nnwn &lt;J~ a good shootrr
.Jild . 1 nor ...;(J-goorl rf'hm mdC'r. is
t'\pt·•·rti l 111 " HP right into Clf'\'C'J,uJd ·.. , -.rc~r tin .L: lineup. \V hich h&lt;-~s
Ltcf, , \ I .1 &lt;..trong C{'Oif'r for vf'ars
:-:..~ -~ ~nr l _\ t 'i tl'&lt;'t•n ttT Rov HinsOnwUJ
no\~

P!l \'ision Rov
pl~l\ IIlL: powl' t' forn·ard, " sa id
&lt;·a\ .llu ·r..,· ( ;l'nf' ra l Managf'r Har rv
\\ 'l'ltntt~n
" \\'(' think hf' will
l'! 1t rt ) d(•nwn r Tmpin
Vf' rv· Wf'll
ht '( .tlJC...! ' Hm· ·s .: 1 good shot ..bJock(•r
dtHI w rll dl'\'j• Jnp into a good
Wf'

tx·t.'.JU-..t·

('Ontm uP to look tor
hl'l p ltnrn 1 c.. l.tt 'li ' rl L,onnic S hf' lt on
c~ntl f !'l ,ll l I ' tlil lluhbard at ba('kup."
T llr]lin .IU'I'd),~l'd 1~ .~ poin ts and
11. I r~· I)JUttil ~ .1 g c~mf' las! S('dSOn .
\ •:t11 ·n ll1 · H · ;~ rn '&lt; I w 11h ";" .J Sam Bowie
10 h 11'1ll h t ·!lllH'h: .\ ' S "CJ\\'ln TOW(' f S"
tmnrlm1 ·
·· \\1 rlt 1rl' t I1Jok lor 1\1rpin to ix'
u,t,dl\ d (!tn tn.mt 111 his first w~a r,"
H1··!1

sal(!_ "Hut llin.so~·s rf' tx,undi nt..: :Htcl shot ·blcx:·kmg ski lls
\\E'! ! I I1Jll

\\'ill l 'i!lllplt •ml'nt hi.m. And wi th
Lonn iP - and cvf'rybOO.y knows
u. h;t 1 h1 · 1·;u1 clu - W(' should ha\·r a
pn ·ll\ t..:o11d ddPnsiq· f ront lin P ·
\ \1·ltrn.m. whu conductf'd lhf'
(', n ,tltt ·r ·-.. dr&lt;t ll wilhout thC'a ido(a
&lt;'II , wh , II· 1 ·1 t rnng ·rom ~\ issa lkf' last
n loll ! II " d id h1 · r·(•greltPd h;,.!\·ing to
L:"i\'1 ' up H n l)m~on. thP CJ\·aiic&gt;rs'
-..11 ·r JIH I lt '. t( ! i ng -.corf'r txohind Wur ld
f-: 1-'t t'! ' Lt..,! r..;pason. f{obinson
, J\ ' I 'l. t, :t11
t ";"_X p:llnls and 10.:1
rdH1111 d -.. 111 I ~ !S.J-S-L
"Tilt · 1r ·, 11 IJI'I ·n -q uJ.r. ; it&lt;' to t hP dPJ l
\\,1-.. 1 ·1111 Ut,btnsun. W('ltmanSCJid .
" ! 11,." hr .L:~1 h · n·g,t rdC'd CJround th r
II'. IJ-:Ih ' .,,ld)lxl.\ c· l.&lt;,( • could co m m.tnd .~-. much m&lt;H-kf'l \ ';_duC' . VVe
~\ - 1 '-ll l11111 \ \ 't ·II."
ilrrpt11 c...; nd ht' W cl.'- not C'OilC'PrnPd
.d ~ 11 1 t
ll1r· ~ n·ss un·s !hit! w LII
.llr -' Wt )J.!Il\ ' . t c-ICJrting j11h in thf'
'\ I : \
\\.h1·n I fir., ! got lo Kl'ntucky , I
hr ·,trd lit. II I ,,·ould sll'p right in. antl l
did m ·l!. " lw "&lt;ltd. "So I thi nk I can
ll;mdlt · th o~ t H'dl. "
In thr· " ' '~ 1 1n d ruunU, ('Jpveland
: ('ht &gt;'-.1' )~11 ft . \JI([Pr~m. u t-il shooting
h lll.\.t1d 1\'1 111 , l \'£• ra~r'd 17.6poin tsa
~.t/111 ' ]111 l·' r f•s noSidl£' .
Tl1t ~.- ~ \r', n old Andf'rson might
h;n 1· L_ l )/l t · tu l!hl •r in thr draft if hC'

LB.

,,

, .1 ·ry

c... t~t ll 111'I

·,1,

Wieners • • • • • • • • • • •

Chicken • • • • • • • • • • •
Ground Beef. • • • •

12 Oz. Pkg.

LB.

WHOLE

Cut &amp; Wrapped

Beef loin

n &gt;&lt;rl-..htl!

$} 99

LB.

BUCKET

Cube Steak ••••• .$199
LB.

th is .vmr was gra nted to the club bv
t hf' NBA whPn George and Gordo~
c;und hough! thdranchisefromTm
StPpicn .

academies

-

air fore(', naval,

military and merchant marine.
The office address is 21Xl N. Hi!;h
St., Room tro, Colwnbus, Ohio
43'215. DeadlinP for submitting these
applicat ions is Nov . l of I his year.

Too many moons haVl' gonf' bv
since I promised Jim Adams.
Sou them High School principal, that
I wou ld men! ion that Fra ncis F lorist
provided roS&lt;•s for Southern Prum
Qul'&lt;'n La rcn Wolfe. You can t&lt;'ill "m
get ling H1 ady to V&lt;Jl'cttion- I &lt;J iways
try to concrl'le public rt'lations
bl'forl' that li mP evPl} "year.

Melissa Coleman of Long Bottom
eontlnues her writing and is gaining
ground in being published. Shf' is
now l isted as a departmPnt head in
the Indian Artifacts Magazine,
June-July ed ition, and has an nice
cryptogram in the curren t issuc.Shc
has had another article acc&lt;'pted for

Why is it that somP of thoS&lt;'
restauran ts which specialize in
seafood have to display those big
posters show ing PV&lt;'ry ki nd of fish
imaginable in plain v iew of where
I'm sitting? The place thai has the
b!'cf docsn"t bug me with posters of
ail of the different ca ll i!'. T it we
m eet again . do keep smiling.

Star Grange meets
Ruby Lambert received first
place in the national stuffed toy
contest, and Bernice Midkiff was
first In the state sewing eontest held
at the recent m eet ing of Star
Grange.
Plans were made for the group to
host the .July Pomona meeting.
Fllowing the meet ing a wedding
shower was hel d for Ca rla Rife and
Martin Davis.

NEW HAVEN - The New
Haven Firemen's Auxlllary w1JI
have a checken barbeque Satur·
day w1 th serving to beglln at 11
a.m. Both chicken and hot dog
dinner will be available.

Happenings

Hill reunion
scheduled
POR11..AND - Descendants
of the la te Albert and E liza Hill
will hold their annual reu nion
Sunday at Portland Park, with a
basket dinner at noon. All
relat ives and friends are invited.

Youth League
to meet
MIDDLEPORT
Youth
League Sunday will he observed
at Middleport Church of Christ.
F ifth and Main, on Sunday, June
24. and all little league teams
from the youngest to the oldest
youth are Invited to participate.
At 9: :lO a.m., there will be a
paradf' of the teams during the
Sunday school hour, and at 10:~
a.m .. thf'rf' will be team judging
during the morning worship
srrvicf'.

ro~' . is the student attending from
F:as1rrn High School, while th0
following have been seit'Cil'd from
SouthNn High School : Lois lhlf'
Racine; Charlotte Lyons. Racine:.
David Powf'll. Rt. I , Racine: Karen
B Hemsley,Syracuse; Ju lieHouda ·
she it . Syra cuSP.

SATURDAY

The service is In recognition of

youth and a freeswimmlngpany
will be awarded to the team with
the greatest percentage of play·
ers and coaches present

Weight loss
classes slated
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Health Department is
offering another six week series
of weight loss classes. One class
will meet on Tuesday evenings
from 5-7 and another on Friday
afternoons from 1·3. Ca ll992 ·66~
for information and to register
for classes.

Supper slated

A potluck supper will be held 5-8
p.m . June 23 at the Coolville rirf' , - - - - - - - - - - - - House.
The dinner is sponsored by

Revival set

Mocirrn

CHESTER - There will be a
revival at the Living Word
Chester Church of God Friday
through Sunday with Dick
Souder as evangelist . Services
wUI begin at i p.m. with special
vocal music each evening. Pas·
tor Gilbert Spencer invites the
public .

Also on . display will be many
handmade hats using silk, sat in.
plwnes. beads and handmade lace.
A particularly handsome hat is a
wedding hat from the Bkhman
family . The hats of 1864-1900 arc
from the Bichman and Titus
families.
The audio-slide show. Rivers.
Roads and Rails will be shown at

Woodmen

of

DOWNING-CHILDS

America

Camp Hl:l&lt;kl to hf'nefit the fire
dPpartment s of Coolville. ChcstPr
and Tuppers Plains
The homP office of Modern
Woodmen will match the proceeds
raised, up to$1.COO.

AND

MULLEN INSURANCE
113 SECOND AVE .

The cost of the meal is a donation

POMEROY

to the firemPn.
The m ea l will featuw barbcque
ribs. ch icken. b!'an and home haked

Meigs historical society,
museum preparing for
Heritage Weekend
ThP Me igs County Pione('r and
Historical Soctety and the Meigs
rou nty Museum in coopera tion with
the Pomeroy Area Chamber of
Commerce wUI b!' welcoming
Advcn tu r&lt;' Gallcv II on Saturday,
June 23 and Su nday , June 24.
Herit age Sunday will be observed
at the Meigs County Museum oo
Sundav from l p.m . to4 p.m.
In add it ion to previously an·
nouncccl features, the an tique doll
coiiPCtio n of Mrs. Clinton Fisher w ill
be on display.

will be harvested with a l9()j
McCormick-Deering grain binder.
Other pioneer crafts to be
demonstrated during the two-day
event includeshelllngandeornmeal
grinding, broom -making and sev·
era! other pioneer crafts.
On Sunday beginning at 2 p.m .
there "ill bP a hymn sing. County
gospel groups are Invited to
participate. All groups wUI sing
from the Museum·s new outdoor
stage eon,tructed under the direr·
tion of Burl Tennant and BUiy
VanMeter.
The Country Kitchen will he
S&lt;'rvi ng cornbread and b!'ans and
othf'r good ies both days.
The annual Pioneer Days is one of
thP Museum·s major events during
thf' yf'ar. It s main purpose is to
pwSl'rvf' somf' of the pioneer crafts
and to crmtra bettNunderstandlng
and dC&lt;'pf'r apprE'f'iation offarm-llfe
heritage.
The Museum is located four miles
north of Point Plmsant just off
Routf' 62. Admission Ls frff.

CALL 992-3381
992-2342

pa s1r iPs.

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK ...

.....

$1.14

~

1:15, 2: 15 and 3: ~ p.m. Special
music will be presented by The
Sweet Mountain Sound at 1: :JO and 3
p.m . featuring Jennifer Sheets.
Roger and Mary Gilrr:orP and Tim

Glaze.
Admission to the museum will be
frff to mem bers. Adult non·
m embers attending will pay $11 and
children 40 cents.
The Ohio Rolling Hills Dairy Goat
Club will be selling homemade pies,
cakes. bread and bever ages.

~

PIZZABURGER

ADOLPH'S

~~

DAIRY VAUEY

,_

WITH FRIES ..... $1.64

~
~
~

··AI The End of lhe Pomeroy-Me"'" B&lt;idge ·

~. . PO.M
. . ER·O·Y
. . .O·H··................PH
. .~
. .,•.2.~.~6.....

fl

!,~======================================:

GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS

The account with
the extras ...
A BONUS* GIFT

IUM
~Tli

5" Magnavox: BIW Telev•s•on

Tappan M•cro-wave Oven

10 Lb . Bag

'84 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT
1,400 miles, white, blue cloth tnterior,
AM/FM / Cassette.

BROUGHTON'S

'81 CUTLASS SUPREME

J-: ,

\'

V-6, AC, AM /FM stereo. Extra sharp

'

Plastic Gallon

1

"

8-Pc Revere S1gna1Ure
Copper Cookware Set

25" Magnavox Console
Televiston

2°/o Milk • • • • • • • • • • •

lll.tktng thf' tf'nm ."

St;1 tt · ,t;u;t rd fonva rd Darrf'll SpaCP.
"lllC' ( ·m ·&lt;JJi('rs · fi rst -round cho ice

entering the swnmer te1m of 19ffi.
Thf' nominations arC' to bfo four

POMEROY - M eigs Food
C!Hlp will be taking orders
Thursday at the Senior Citizens
Center from 1-3: ~ p.m. for

The Mason County Regional State
Farm Museum. which is now the
West Virginia State Farm Museum
Inc., wUJ hold its third annual
Pioneer Days on Saturday. June 23,
and Sunday, June 24.
The special featured activity
during the two day event will be
cutting wheat with antique grain
cradles.
After the wheat is cut it will be
raked. and tied in sheaves by hand.
and then placed in shocks. Some of
the wheat will be threshed during
the Mason County Fair.
Until about 1900most of the wheat
In the arm was harvested with grain
cradles. The demonstration will
prov ide people the opportunity to
observe a pioneer harvesting craft.
Any of the ""old timers·· who used
to cut wh!'a t by this met hod are
invited to try their hand at swinging
the grain cra dles. Somcofthew heat

Apple lie Computer Sys&lt;em

Potatoes. • • • • • • • • •

up that part of

strm g1h,"" sa id Georg!' Karl. Clevela nci" s di r('('t or of playPr a&lt;:quislt ion.
In thp fina l threp rounds, Cleveland tcwJk 6-1 Oberlin guard E lliott
R&lt;•ard . 1}.-1 XJvif'r guard John
Shimko :tn cl fi ..J Northeast Illinois

accc&gt;pling appUcations for nomination to the service academi('s

lHURSDAY

delivery on Thursday. Thls will
be the last order until
September.

U. S. NO. 1 IDAHO

intd li gr•nt player."

\\ 11!1two 111m! rnr1nd picks - thr
l..('{'()IH ! IJ flt ' ori)-..'i n:lll:v· hfolonging to
~·o rt rl t ·
ihl' C': L\'alrrrr..; took 13f'n
:vld )(ln;J id. 01 h-X fonvard from
('; rlifr n·ni;r lr Y IIll '. an d !.i'Onard Mi1 rhd l. .1 h -: !t JI'\r, ml from L.ouL~o; i an&lt;J
Sr .111 •
In tilt !tJUJ1h rnrmd . lhrCavaliC'rs
( !111'-.1· t. ~ tnnranl A11 Aaron of
'\. r 11'i t-:\\ 1·-.r, •rn
T ilt· ( o~ L Llit·rs pickf'd Vi nC'P
!fin&lt;'ht·n . ;1 1 1--~ gu ;:m:J from BoiSf'
Si.til' . in thr fifth r ound. and 6-7
rul'\~ ·; ml Mall DohertY of North
(·.rml 1n:t in thf's Lxth ro~ nd .
.li11 · .bkubirk . a r;.:, guard who IC'd
."\i ( ·A-\ f &gt;1 v isinn I players in scoring
\nttr er n ;r\'(•ra gr of .1U.l }Xlints a
g; tmt· ;II ,\kron, was tablx&gt;d by 1hP
&lt; '.t \' iiiH ·r~ in thPSf'VPnt h round :
". h)(: S a fun ,I:.,JUY to we~lc h and an
inh · re~ tmg pla .n •r, but I think you
hd \'C' to queslion his spet.-'d and

Senator John Glenn an nouncc.os
that his Columbus office will be

MIDDLEPORT - A child·
ren ·s program on foods, dress
and folklore of India w111 be
presented Wednesday In the
Middleport Ubrary by Madhu
Malhotra, a native of India.

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS INC.

ll l:..., ,~ gooflk i rl who h asa

. 11

Nellie Price of Village Green
Apartments is eonfined to Veterans
Memortal Hospital, Room 139.
Mrs. Price observed her 80th
birthday on June 12 and w as
hospitalized just after her birthday
celebration. which included ice
cream and cake served to June
Smith. Tina and Kelly Smith , Mr .
and Mrs. Michael Smith and son,
Michael . Jr.. Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Templeton. Kathleen M cNickle and
Debbie Davidson . There were
tpiephonc calls from Elizabeth Fick,
Margaret Johnson and Elizabeth
Legg. plus gobs of cards .

Dr·. John Ridgway attended thf'
Ohio Osteopa thic Associat ion Convention held in Cll:'veland and
enjoyed the even t tremendously. Hf'
found information on the new ora l
anti -diabetes medication which is
now on the market most intPresting.

Six student s from the PomProy
area have been ar-cPpiPd into thP
Ohio University summ&lt;'r scholar
program which began this wrek.
The program is designt&gt;d for
talented high sc hool student s who
want the experience of att ending a
university while exploring an arc•a
of their acadPmic or career interPst.
Summer scholars m av enroll for
the first sununpr session for seven
credit hours of tuit ion-frcr coursework. usually at the college fresh ·
man leveL
Students admitted int o thf' pro·
gram must be junio rs and In rhf'
upper 10 percent of the cla ss.
Recommendations from principa Is
and guidanN' counselors arP
·required.
Renee L. Buckley. Rt. 3. Pome-

LB.

· 1-ft' ~ an f'XCC' Ji en t

1111 ( d ll t)f'(•f

, ,ur l!·!lltt ·

publication In the near future.

Eastern, Southern students
selected for summer prograrn

SUPERIOR FRANKIE

GRADE A WHOLE

'.\"1'1 1 ' \•IU IH.!( 'I' Ill' workrd i n a
·r'\ c...ru r'l' !or two Vf'a rs alter
hi~ h c.. 1 111 ~~ ,[ l &gt;d r•l 'f' going to collegP
"Ut~n · ,,

LB

Bacon ..... .• • • • • • • •

~n 1n

\\'('1 1!1l.ltl c.. .r td

Round Steak

89
$1

9
1°

COLUMBIA

1'1 1Joltl1 &lt;il 'l

'.\lo\ lll;t..: I~O\ to thf' forward spot
)...'in·.., rt-.. ,1 \' 1' 1) ' ~t rong front line

Chuck Roast ..L~.

$

USDA CHOICE

]!1\ t ' i,', /lllJ\t 'I O] (H\.\'OilTi ,

' I :n:nl

WEDNESDAY

FIJCH
Stafl

Mason Farm Museum
schedules celebration

. Calendar

Yesteryear recalled

select
Turpin

The Daily Sentini'I-Page 7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

.

13" Magnavox Ponable
Telev1ston

BROUGHTON'S
SUNBEAM WHITE

Bread

Fruit Punch

3/$1
oz. 4/$1 Pudding Popsl2Ct$1 49

16 Oz. Loaf

• • • • •••• • •••

JELLO

VIETTI HOTDOG

Sauce • • • • • • • • • • • •
10

.
. ..
"COUPON···
PRE-SWEETENED

KOOL-AID
#8A6Wf- 07 S =8

Q~art

$}4 9

10
Cannrster
limit One per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires June 23, 1984

·····couPON······-·•

•

:

•

•

•

•

•

e ••

ELF VINEGAR
~hite or $14 9
Crder

Gal.

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires June 23. 1984

e

I

•

NESTEA INSTANT TEA3 Oz.

• Jar

$199

Limit One Per Customer
Good Dnly at Powell's
Offer Expires June 23. 1984

COTTONELLE

TOILET TISSUE
6 Roll
Family Pak

$1 39

limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Exires June 23. 1984

•••
••
••
•
•
•
•

•

Grandfather Ctodt

Airway Royal Tour
4-Piece Luggage Set

Magnavox Modular Stereo
System

AM /FM Magnavox
Telephone Clock Radio

Minotta X-700 Camera

Television

Howard Miller

'80 CUTLASS SUPREME

Light blue, white landau top, Y-8. A.C.
cruise, AM -FM stereo. "Very Clean"

'82 PONTIAC 6000
2 door, A.C., P.S., P.B.. one local owner.

1978 fORD BRONCO Well set up with V-8. 4 speed. lock hubs.
1978 CHEVY lf2 TON PICKUP 6 cyl.. 3 speed. very good body.
1981 OLDS. DELTA 88 ROYAL4Door, beautiful maroon, "Loaded "
1978 PONTIAC leMANS WAGON 4 Door. V-8 wtth air.
1980 CHEVY LUV PICKUP 4 cyl., auto. trans , very ntce w/ topper.
flU!

Open a 3Y2, 5 or 7 year certificate
account at Gallipolis Savings
and receive a BONUS gift.
Your account earns high
interest and is guaranteed .

Seldom do you have a better
opportunity to accomplish your
investment objective and receive an
extra ... a BONUS gift.

~

GALLIPOLIS

SAVfiN&lt;GS

44t 2nd Avenue

Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

(6!4)446·3832

�8- The

Page

Daily Senhnel

Parneray-Middleport,

Wednesdgy. June 20, 1984

Ohio

Environment, decaying facilities plaguing once-great Istanbul
By JOIIN·11fOR DAHLBURG

Asooclaled Press Writer
ISTANBUL. Turkey tAP! Aysel Arln. 14 sle!'ps m a hovel
across thP road from a govenunent
billboard procla1111mg, " Lucky IS hf&gt;
who can call hunself a Turk ..
The peasant girl tn a blueshaw!Is
one droplel tn the human IIdP
overwhelming Istanbul, a migra
non that has pushed the population
ofthlsclty from 700,00ltomol'i' rhan
5 million tn 25 years Aysellives m a
dusty shanty on Istanbul 's eastern
hills, In a slum where cucumtx•1 s
grew m Ottoman t1111es
Outside the walls of thiS mPTropo
lis built up by Roman emperors and

their

Byzanttne

succes s01 s.

hundreds of thousands of hovels likP
rhe one where Aysel now lives haw'
sprung up m the past dPCade The
wooden shanties are only the most
VISible symptom o f a host of woes
that have afflicted Ist anbul O\ et the
past three dec ades
"My City has so many problems
that If! wereronameallofthem , you
couldn't wnte fast enough to take
fllem all down." said Istanbul's nPw
mayor, Bed1ettm Dalan. elected
last March The 4&gt;-year old electn
cal engine!'r closed hiS eyes. ran his
hand through gJaymg hatr. and
made a list anyway
-Half of the drinking waiPr
pumped by the I stanbul waterwOJ ks
s....ps mto the ground from a p ipeline
system buUt morf' than i:l ecnl ur\

ago
-Cars driVIng over more than
l,l:XJ rrules of unpaved tracks In the
shantytowns drag enough mud Into
Lstanbul to cloak many of the
world's mosr beautiful buildmgs In a
y~ar round crust of grune.
-The waters of the Golden Hom
are now poisoned wtth tndustrial

chemtcalsand human waste The
mommg breeze off the Sea of
Mannara wafts the stench of
Istanbul s leather tannettes to the

room whf're Avsel trv es
As many as 300,00)

prop!~ m
search of work flock ro rhts c!ly
astnde Europe and Asta each year
from the steppes of Ana rolla or the
hill country o!Thrace They settle m
one of ,100 gecekondus ... Turkish
for the shantyTOwns that often are
II ret allv IJurll overnight
For 4ysel Ann, a shantytown IS no
place to tive " I like gomg to my
familY vtllage tn the summer. and
pla\mg With rhe cows and sheep,'

Landers en listment
Mark A Lande r s has enllsted m
the United States Martne Corps
l:lt:-laved Entrv P r ogra m
Thts program enabled h1m to
f' nltst now, rvservp an o(Jf'nmg m thf'
field of hiS chotce and delay trammg
unttl grad uatmg from school
P\1 '"'mdet s mltsled m the
mfanlf\ field anrl wtU t eport to

M.n lnl ' rmvs Rff'ru1t Depot. Parns
l sl,tnd . S C . on June 12. 1985 Ttme

spent

Omitted

tn

DEP

ts credited

as

tn placeit."
hPfore
ng theKpeople
around
saidsettli
Abdullah
unan,
Professorofarehitecturalhlstoryar

TOPS meets

A sentot ai Metgs Htgh School
L&lt;:~ ndC't s 1s th£' son of Mr and Mrs
Ra\mond Landers who live al l5Jl
N\ ('A. ve , Pamer oy I nfonnat 10n on
thP program can be secured from
SSg1 (,IV Harva rd at J/4-2fi24 tn
Manct1a

Cancer society outlines
early detection methods
"Ea rl:; detec Tion IS the key w llh
colorect.al cancet ," savs S M tchael
of flle Amer tcan Cancer Society of
Meigs County
"Seventy five percent of paTients
facrng this second leadmg lonn of
cancer can becun'd If this diseasp IS
found at an early swgr," she satd
The Amencan Cancer Society
recommends three ards rndelectmg
this cancer The drgtlal recta l
examination Is performed by a
physician durmg an oflt&lt;&lt;' VIStl and
IS recommendPdymr ly afrcrage40
The stool IJiood rest done O\ the
patient at home ts a stmple method
of test mg for hidden blood The ACS

recommends !he test every vrar
after age 511
ProctosJ.gmOldoscop\, known as
the "procto, ' IS an exammat 1on m
which a phySICldln tnS)Jl'( IS lh&lt;'

rrcrum and lowPr rolon wtth
ltghtrd

ruiJc

The

.t

ACS

recommends a procto P\ rn thre£to-fJve yPais aftpr ~ followmg lwo

annual exam s w1th nPgat JVf' rPSu lt s
People at higher n sk for lhts
cancer have a J)f'rsonul or faml l\
history of rolorf'Ctal canCi'r or
polyps m the mt est rnr Pallen I s w tl h

ulcerahvecobtJs at C' at an mn C'as.f-'d
risk for lot !Ius fur m of cancer too

PORTLAND - IRIJanon Townshtp trustees will have a federal
revenue sharmg proposed use
heru mg on July 3 at the township
gar age Thr federa l revenue shar
mg budget hear mg and annual
budget hearmg wr ll be held July 10
Surrunary of ena&lt;&gt;led budget will be
ava ilable for publtc InspecTion,
Pspec tally semor c ll tzens. alter July
17 at the home of townshtp clerk
Shu lPV .J ohnsun

Lung

cancet IS very dilftcult to detec t
early, and only 9 percent of all lung

cancer pattents hve five years or
more after diagnosis Only 39
percenl of people with early lung

cancer surv1ve five vears or mon.~
RPl~'nl trends indtca rc that the

dl'.Jih ra te from lung cancer for
women IS qu ickly appmachmg that
ol men ThiS has be!'n attnbuted to a
nar mwmg uf the ga p bctwf'f'n malf'
and fema le sm oking rarrs
' f1le OeSI protect ton aga mst thiS
ki ller IS for people to stop smokmg,
or n&lt;:'\ e1 stat! at all." Pxplatnro
Mtchael
· lr 's tmpct alive that everybody
km'" what thetr persoiJal riSks for
ca nce t arc because thiS Will affect
tiwu habtl s and health actiOns and
follow measures ro guard agamst
these cancers." Michael said
"MPdical science has made great
ad,ances to the fight aga mst
cancer bu t the 1111portant defense.
rhc protection aga inst lhts disea se.
h.IS to begin at home ·

Ury
Jeffrey S Un sun of Marv 1.
Keeler of 2~lR MonrCX' A\C' .tnd
William T Cry o f llfl'i Me.JdO\\
Brook Drive, IJoth of Pomr P!Pa
sant , W Va has bP£&gt;n promotC'd 1n
the US Air For ce ro the ra nk of

senior airma n
Ury is a t'ommumrattons compu
ter

speclaltst

N..1vv a nd Marinp Corps
jo1m'Cl 1n .m . ground and S('a
m&lt;~nPuvPrs
to f'mp hasJzp com
m&lt;1nd and control of forces in a
s1mu latf'd cumba 1 environment
The l'Xerc lsP ts designed to
drmonstrfl! e and tmprove the
rRpo bthty of th~ Untied Staes to
prolf'C't J nd mainl .:un th e free uSl&gt; of
lh(' Sl'J llnrs of communlca t10n In
thr CarlbiJean Bastn and t he G ull o!
Fo1C"f'

with

the

2fblth

Commum cat10ns Squ.tdton ar
Sheppard Au Forcf' Basr TPXds
His wlfe. Carla Is 1he daugh!Pr of
Torres A and MaXJ ne Wtl liamson
of Southside, IV Va

Buzzard
Michael R Bu&lt;.zard son of Leon
F. and Gloria F Ruzzard of Rural
Route 2. Letan W Va . has ~&gt;Pen
promoted In the US Air Force to
the r ank of airman first class
Buzzard ts a power production
specialist at M cClellan Air Force
Base. Calif. with the 2049th Com
munlca!lons Group
Hlswl!e, Tammy,lsthedaughter
of Willia m and T J ean Yoho of 112
Howard St . New Haven. IV V a
He Is a 19131 grad uate of Wahama
High School, Mason . IV Va

WH 1'1

M

'c .... a,,~,,..,,P•""''""'"""'

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Zln-

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IP•OonOI!•or&gt;&lt;ol

Gumm
Air Force Airman Fit st Class
Jame• H Gumm, son of James R
and 1\ariJara L Gumm of 23
Home l ead Drive. Wtlliamstown .
W Va partic ipated In Oeean Ven ture B&lt;. a combined exercise held In
flle C2 r!bbean, the Gulf of Mexico,
Straits of Florida. A tl antic Oeean
and th e southweste rn U nit ed
States.
Members ot the US Anny. Atr

:~: ~~~ohu

•.. ..........

•' ~"" ~' ""d '"""" ~ --~···

RITCHIE'S
MASON SERVICE

it."

CENTER

Ma ..n, W. Va.

-

l4 ...... ,,.a., ,,."~~"
l5 . ....
l f Aool [.,,,. Wontod

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I$ SchOGII

h l'il lll l lj Wlll l lP l)p l(j

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1-J M II ' lhP I r l" ur f' r s n tlo ( F&gt; ll
11

E.J'O i f'rn H1qh School l' .. rposf
nf lhP hPan n q 15 to '"'-II'W 1t11
198·1 h11d f'l frH !hi S( 'lOO I
l1 s r t I
1 hr l' lld'lf'l Will !Jf
l\ Hl.! h lf' to r Hl'lfl !'f 11011
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Pubhc Notice

r IIi

FOR SALE
1 ') ~) 11 If·"'&gt;

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Mise Merchandrse

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8 n, 1td

11'5 ( IVPS

!i~IP( I
111 I

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$•6""" ' " "

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v\11 !!1 c;()l 1 11 !li P rps, rJ r nt P nf
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M r on d !V JIHII' ? 5 l l 1 10 r M
RP l l PC. I li P
tp pr 1t &lt;"f! rl ,11
$ 1"- ~QQ Q(l Il l j I 11 111111 [)f&gt;
ol f l o r 1. ~.-.. 1h 11 1 1+ H' ,11 111 IIS Prl

J ll t tdS

Every Friday Ni~ht
At 7:00 P.M.
At The American

Butldrng ts a11 conditioned
wtth smoke eltrnrnators
On Beech Grove Road
In Rutland
Pubhc &amp; Dealers
Welcome
Bill Brown . Aucltoneer

SMALl - But nearlj one
acre 4 rm s bath coa l fur
nace and full basement,
wtlh ga~age Onlj $17 500
NICE Remodeled 7
room s m1crowave refnger
ator, cook and bake un1ts
db! garage on lg level lot
Ju st $27 500

coupon. Cancel rour ad br phone when rou get
Monev nat refundable

1 results

Reunion set

SWIM POOL - Nte e 3 bed
rooms moder n kttchen. car
petmg fu ll baseme nt. new
dbl
garage
and near
sc hools

18 ACRES -

ThP Nelson lanhly tl'union will be
held at Forest AcresPark on ,July 22.
Lunch w ill be setved at noon

Has dnlled
we ll bottom land trees 5
rm house etc Asktn g on ly
$12 000
RIVERFRONT - I or 68 x
93 Good 8 rm home wood
burn1ng ltrepl ace. lam rly rm
and cen tia l heat Ask tng
$37 500

1

15 77

2

71 { ill

$SAVE$
AT THE

Trxas

These cash rates

PH .

ON DENTURES
DURING JUNE &amp; JULY
SAVE 1120
ON A S£T OF OUR
VERY BEST DENTURES
SAVE $60 PER DENTURE
PHONE 304·372· 3222
RB SMITH
RIPlEY W VA

t

2
3

and the late Gemma

•
5.

Rl. l24.Pomeroy Ohto

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmiuion
PH .

992-5682

~ud'

M~GKEE
~niY+-

20

POMEROY,
992 · 2259

0.

992·7121

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

NEW KITCHEN - Mrddleport
- 2 bedroom home wrth a
new breaklasl nook new
kttchen new utllrty and a mce
yard $27 500 00

New Homes- Extenstve
Remodeltng
lnsur1nce Work
Cui!Qm Polo Bfd&amp;s

Gar11es

Roof1n1 Work
Afuromum &amp; Ymyl Sidtnp
1 B Yean Expertence
GREG ROUSH
PH . 992-7513
or 992 -2 282

REMARKABlE HOME IN MID
DLEPORT Seven 10om
home on a large double ~~
Three bedrooms equtpped
krtchen and a pa~ basement
Ntce and neal 311d owner~
wa nts an of fer Ask1ng

II I H!

29

JD.
31.

32. _ _ _ __

NEW liSTING - SYRACUSE
- A beaubful spltl entry heme
wrth 2 3 bedrooms new
krtchen that IS equ tpped wrth
range relngerator dishwasher
and drsposal Carport and a
mce s11e lot Just $44 900 00

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS
PH 992 -7013
New Chevy Truck .
FENDER
176 95

POMEROY - Laige 6 room
house wtlh a huge lrvtng room
2 beaulttul ttreplaces ongtnal
woodwork and a huge storage
butldrng and ga~age Ju ~

DOORS

1149 95

HOODS .
IUMI'I!RS

1174 95
169 95

GRILL.
I . SU,I'ORT
TAIL GATE

m•

'4 2 SO

184
185
FOlD FENDER
169
169
BUMPER .
Al•o Some Car
F•nden Available

$41,90000

BEAUTIFUL REBUILT HOME
- l arge ltvrng room 2 large
bed rooms and a guest room
Central a11 basement deck.
large paho. and a gaiage Frurt
trees and a garden space

95

00
95
95

l 71 tin

3

Announcements

Home IS m gre31 co nd1tlon

$39 900 ()()

REAlTORS
Henry Cleland. Jr
992·6191
Dante rurner 992-5692
Jean !russell 949-2660
Jo Htll 985-4466

GOOD USED
GAS &amp; ELEC OI!YERS
Waslttrs to match UpuJht
frMltTS. S~tn Washers GE.
111m!JOOI lty111
TV &amp; APPLIANCES
'27 lrd A" G.1lhpohs 0~
(0,.. 0.1 11 &amp; S..lurd.ly Ill 6 PI l
PH U8 1699

"Mud River Band"
Featunng Lanny Tennant

Something Special
For The Lad res
Every Sunday Ntght
9:00 to 1:00
6/14/1 mo

BOGGS
SAlES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

Aulstant OrganiSt need•d
at Grace Episcopal Church

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked m home aree
20 years
" free Esttmales"

Call 614-992 3968

f •ve cute part German She
pherd pupp1e1 to gtve away
to a good home. four famales. one mala &amp;· weekso ld, phone 304 - 882 - 3210

Government Jobs $16 669
· 860,663 year Now H~ring
Your area Call 1 - 806 -6 87

black ,

phone

Lost and Found

LOST m Galhpol1s area con·
tact l enses tn whrte case
Reward Call 446 -0522

needs ; furnaces repatr
se rvice and tnstallalton .

lost fiberglass lid for motor
cycl e saddl e bag turquo1se
m color lost betwtten Hem
l ock Gro\le &amp; Chesh1re on
6 - 17 REWARD If found .

Residential

&amp; Commercial

EUGENE lONG

call 992 5998

Call 742·3195
Or 992·5875

(614) 843·5425
5·8·2 mo. pd.

~-;,.'j)

Tick 304 ' 882 - 2573

LOST Dog reward offered
gray male We• naraner wtth
red collar Call 446 4926

For all your w1nng

8000 E_, A 9805
Servtce R apresentattve Be
assoctated w1th one of the
leaders m consumer ftnan c•el servtces Immediate op
enmg for quahf1ed mdiVIdual
rnterested rn consumer ft nanclal serv 1ce - cons um er
loans Home mongages In
surance Sales Credtt Cards
Income Tax preparatton and
General off1ce adm lntstratlon Successful cand1date
w11l be self- motiVated. hka
cha llenging work have good
communrcat1on skt ll s tntel
hgant aggrentve and able
to absorb and apply comprehe n siv e trammg programs to
perform succesfully 1n
cred1t
sales
col lect tons,
and admm1strat1on Com·
pat1t1ve salary commensurate w1th ex pertence and
excellent benefitS It mter
ested
Ca ll 1 614 - 992
Snodgrass
2111
and foraskyour
forcareer
Jtm
rntervr ew
Benef1cral Oh,

3424 or 675 5532

Po m erov Oh 45769

Inc

·GaiifiJcilfs _.. _
&amp; Vicinity

LOST tn v•c•mty of 8 M1le
Road, hght brown &amp; whne
part beagl e, male 304 675

Parts

&amp;

ES
EXCAVATING

•TRENCHING
•BACK HOE •DOZER
•E ND LOADER
•DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
•WATER GAS SEWER
RAIN LINES
County Cert1f1ed

SERVICE
We can repa1r and re core radtators and
heater cores We can
also acrd boil and rod
out radtators We also
repm Gas Tanks.

SEPHC TANKS INSIAttEP
FREE ESTIMAJES

PAT HILL FORD

304 895 33 t 3

8

Au c tion every Tuesday
mght Pt Pl easant WVa
Auct Lonm e Neal Yo uth
Center Bldg, Camden St

300 W Second St.

J. , - t

R 1ck Pearson AuctiOneer
Servtce Estate Farm An 11que &amp; i1QU1dat10n sal es
lr ce nsed &amp; bonded tn Ohto &amp;
WVa
3 04 773 5785 or
304 773- 9185

1tc

1 1 3

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHI CLE

Wolfe
Investigations,
Inc.

Auct1o n e'.lery Fn mgh t at
the H artf ord Commumty
Center Truckloads of new
1nerchand1se every week
Co n s1gments of new and
used merchandiSe always
welcome Archard Reynolds
Au c t io n eer
304 275

We d l1ke to rntroduc e you to

Engage A Car the modern way
to dr 1ve the ve hicle ol your
chorce

No Down Payment
Lowe 1 Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR B.
TRUCK LEASING
Box. 326
Pomeroy OH 45769
Fot Faster Serv 1ce
Call 614-99 2· 6737

''

3069
Auct1on Mt Alto Thursday
June 2 1 7 00 PM Co ns 1gn
ment accepted Emm a Bell
AuctiOneer 429 84

CARPENTER
SERVICE

498 Gen Haiilllger Pkwy
Mtddleport OH

- Addoms and remodeling
- Root1ng end gutter work
- Concrete work
- Piumb1ng end !M&amp;etncal

PH .

Fraz1ars Bottom Flea
Market
Every weekend
U S 36 Frazrers Bottom
WVa 25082 Dealen Wei ·
come
Don Fraz1ar
Operator 304 756 2779
Beautiful

Colha

Fn &amp; Sat
SubdiVISIOn

Porter Brook

Yard Sale Thurs -Fr1 June
21 - 22 9-4 C11cle Dnve
Plants Subd1v1110n

Pomeroy

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

pupp1es

446 3897
Yard Sale 4 m1 past hospital
on old Rt 160 at hergreen
Frt &amp; Sat Hospttal bed
dresser qu1lttng frame p1c
n1c, etc Call 446- 3249
Yard Sale Fnday &amp; Sat June
22 &amp; 23 Ba ck road across
from Kyger Creek Plant
C l othe! ant1ques d1shes
dolls. tools, much more

3 Fam1iy Fnday 6 22 &amp;
Saturday 6 -23
Clothes,
mtsc
furniture , 1 957
Chevy pickup R oush lane
Cheshtte
Jrd house on
nght off At 7

S1mpsons Rose H1IL Thurs
evamng, June 21, 6 p m . •"
day Fnday June 22 G•rlf'
c lothmg s1zes 5 -6 and 14
One gold sequ1n baton cos- ·
tume stze 14 and boota
Newly pamted plaster crah
1tems end more
Dav1s restdence. Rose t+ill,
Pomeroy Thursday even1ng
June 21
6 p m
all day
Fnday June 22
Yard sale at Unrted Penecos
tal Church 1n Mtddleport
Thursday
Frtdav
&amp;
Saturday

~:::::::::::::::::::::1~::::::::::::::::::~
23

31

Professional

Servtces

OPEN
MON .-SAT. 10 to

work

{Free Est1mates )

Homes for Sale

992-6215 •• 992- 7314
Pom eroy, Ohio

C L KITCHEN
5/ 2211 mo

'

'

PH. (614) 985-4212

POOL SUPPLIES &amp;
MAINTENANCE

V. C. YOUNG Ill

rn

FISHING REEL
REPAIR

446 3672
Wanted to buy used coa l &amp;
wood heaters Swam Furnt
ture. 446 3159
3rd
&amp;
Ol1ve St . Ga ll1pohs. Oh
Buym g datly go ld
St i ver
coms, nngs 1ewelrv sterl1ng
ware o ld co m s large currene.,. T op pnces Ed Bur
kett Barber Shop 2nd Ave
M1ddl epor1 O h 6 14 992

Parts, Service &amp;
Cleaning

For Gareta. Zebco. Sht·
mano. Johnson. Drawa.
Qutck

STEVE FINLAW
PH. - 985-426,6

Rt 1
long Bottom ,

SEWAGE PIPE
REULATORS &amp;
FITIINGS

hou&gt;e- 985-3813

Wa ..

·~""" "- 985-3837
5113 1 mo pd

L _ _:._ _ _ 5 14 I mo

All STEEl &amp;
POlE BUilDINGS
Stzes Slart From 12'xl6'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
S1zes from 6'x6' Up
to 24 'x36
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUilDINGS

THE
DITCHING
SERVICE
GAS LINES
WATER LINES
SEWAGE LINES
FREE ESTIMATES
BUS .:
RES .:

985-3813
985-3837

1n o, fj ,

RIAl TOR

61181 \ mo pel

Real Estate General

FOR SALE
(I) HOUSE IN CHESTER:

M L 'Bud" McGHEE
Broker-Auctron Servtce
Cheryl Lemley
Metgs County Assomte

Tine acm with a
COI1Sinrcted

mcely
conc:me block

hoTI1e 26x30. 3 bedrooms,
one blth, 12xl5

Phone 742 -3171

IM~

room and 24x24 flmily
room. P.tially carpeted.
fuel oil fumiCI witlr facHi·
ties for woodbumer 12xl5
bloct storap buildir&amp;

2lk30 blocl 11111111· Riclrt
atr RL 24&amp; coun!Jy stttir&amp;
'h mile •st c4 Chesler.
Ohio.

Hobstetter. Jr . Broker
Phone· 742· 3092

(2) TWO STORY HOUSE
IN RACINE:
Down·

NEW liSTING - 20 acres wtth ntce 3 bedroom home Large
ltVIng room wrth ftrepfaace, large kt tcheo wtlh plenty cabr
nets, butlltn stove and diShwasher Family 1oom 13'x22' un
fr mshed and I car garage Some lrmber very pn va te toea
!ton Off Hysell Run Rd Reduced $40 000 00

RUTLAND - Ranch 3 bedroom home. 2 baths large itVtng
room, dtntng room, full basement . carport and stora ge bldg
Reduced. $43,000 00

.

Velme Nicmsky, AssoCiat e
Phone 742-3092

AND

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
46353 Scout Camp Rd

NEW- REPAIR

Chester. Oh10
Ph. 985 · 4269
If No An swor , Ca ll 985 4312
We Serv1ce All
Makes &amp; Models

Antenna Installation

House Calls and Shop
Servtce Avatlable
Se•v1ce lhat Towl!fS Abo~P
Th!' Re ~l , IR
o

mo

27 1t

3 Announcements
chm e repa•r
parts
supplies
Prck up

and
and

delt very
Oav•s Vacuum
C l ea n er one half m1le up
Georges Crock Rd
Ca ll
6 14 446-0294
The M e1gs Co F1sh &amp; Game
Cl ub w• ll have 1ts annua l
Childre n s F1shmg Dorby
Saturda y June 23 rd at W Ast
Shad e Rrver 3 11:1 m 1les west
of C h ester at the C lub
HOusse Follow s•gn s o f1 Rt
7 From B a m unt1 l 2 pm
Ag es 1 to 16 food drmk &amp;
f1shrn g are free Prrzes for all
Bnng own fr shm g eQU IP
menr &amp; bart Nomrnnowsor
art1f •c •ai ba1t Everyone p res
ent wrll be so at own u sk
The M e1gs Co F1sh &amp; Game
Club w1ll not be respons1ble
for any acc1dent pArsonal
loss or damages to anyth1ng
or anybody or the1r property
Cl ub members w111 ha'.le a
chi cken barbeque after the
derby at 6 pm All members
are to brmg a covered d1sh or
$5 00 for supper C lub w1ll
furn1sh chicken 8t dr~nks

4

Gtveaway

K1ttens 245 5804
Krttens

Ca ll

614 245

5804
Black Lab
Retnever , f e
male Call 614 388 9967
Beautlf'ul

Collie

Vrnyl &amp; Alumrnum

949-2860

SIDING

BISSELL

SIDING CO.
"Beautiful. Custom
Built Garages"

No Sunday Calls
] II "'

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

pupp1es

Call 448 3897
Part Doberman part Coll1e
pupp1es Ca ll 446 3640

614 256- 1763
K1t1ens

free to good h ome

Call 614 992 53a2 o• 992
7339

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY

3 part long ha1red k1ttens

•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

Call 614 742 2460

We Have A Full Ttm e
Shop Tec hniCian
on Duty

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

CHESTE R-

985-3307
V l l tln

Kitten s- to good home only
3 yetlow tiger stnp ped males
&amp; 3 multi-colored bla ck
fe male s
Call 614 - 992

2042
3 kitten s to a mea home.

304 675-2474 af1ar 5 00

Lawn Mowmg &amp;. Tr.mmmg
Reliable and dependabl e
Reasonable rat es Ca ll614
256 6251 after 5 30
Roofrng and gutter work.
metal work h ousepamtm g,
carpenter work
Exc ref
Free est1mates Call 446

3171
General Haulmg For sole
L1mestone fill dtr1 and top
so11
Call Ca ll 614 256-

1427
Dozer work g r ou nd clear~ng
&amp; eJCcavatrng S25 per hr

All types of butldmg con
stru ct1on
roofmg srdmg
rs mo de lmg moon and con
crete wood custom butlt
cabm ets By the JOb o r hour
Call 446 2 162 El oway n e
Mast
Want ed to do Tree work
Prunmg topp1ng take dow
Wil l al so tr~m hedges &amp;
brush Ca ll 675 7669
Water wells . dnlled &amp; ser
v1ced Free est1mates Call

1

FURNITURE
Beds. ~ron ,
wood
cupboards. c h eurs
c h ests
baske t s d1shes
stone Jar s ant1q u es gold
and sliv er
Wr1te M D
M1ller At 2 Pomeroy Oh1o
45769 or ca ll 6 1 4 992

Employment
Services

Financial
21

8usrness
Opportumty
I NOTICE

I

THE OH IO VALLEY PUB
LISHING CO recommend s
that you do bUS inesS With
people you know and NOT
to send money Hnou gh t h e
ma1l unt•l you have 1nvest1
gated the offenng

Homemakers Dream ! No
exper~ence needed to earn
25% commiSS IOn demon stratmg m fn e nds h omes
You control hours end Income Absolutely no mvest
mentl Also book1ng parttes
Ca ll 446 1 270 or wnte Toy
Plan
John s town
PA

15904

704 753 4738

Part trme Instructor for
Mental Health Technology
Program 1 year pOS'IIbdlty
of renewal Teach one 2
hour lab and superv 1se f1eld
work students
Ph 0
or
Mast ers degree 1n Psycho!
ogy or Gu1dan ce and Coun
sehng, chmca l e11.penence
requtred $4 200 Send resume transcrtpt and three
references to Thomas 0
Oe ll en c h
C h An Depart
mentof Soc1al Wo rk 53 1
Mort on Hall Oh1o Untverslty Athens Oh1o 46701
Oeadhn B June 29 1984
Oh10 Un1ver s•ty ts an Equal
Opportumty Employer

Own your own J ea n
Sportswear Ladtes Apparel
or Ch1ld ren's Store 300
Brand nC:tmes $14 900 tn
eludes 1n1tta l rnventory ,
st ore fnttures tra 1ntng and
much more Mr Tate 704-

Help Wanted

Broadcast Company ex
pandtng sa l es terntory
Brand new sa l es area ava rl a ble tn t he tr1 cou nty acrea,
Gellla M e 1gs. Mason Coun
t1es Salary and comm •ss1on
based on expenence Send
comp lete resume to M1l
hken Investment Corp

WSGB-WVKV. I B9A MaiO
St , Sutton, WV 26601
EOE
Government JObs 8 1 6 659950,663 year N ow hinng
For d~rectory Ca ll 806 687
6000 ext R 10189

Reduced 2 story
3 BR ,
fenced yard 2 car garage
separate entrance 1 5 Vm
ton G lps
S29 900 Call
446 2081 n1ghts
House for Sa le by owner 4
BR house on lower R1ver
Ad 3 mtles aouth of town
Woodburmng frrepl ace gar
age
basemen t. new fur
nace and roof over lookmg
the Oh1o Rrver Ca ll dayt1m e
446 1615
n1ght 446

t244
Reduced 2 story 3 bdr
2 car garage fenced ya rd
separate entrance 15 Vm
ro n Gall1pohs 446 2081
mgh ts S29 900
N1ce h ouse &amp;
614 256 1540

barn

Ca11

Anra c u ve sma ll home small
yard at a sma ll pncel M1ddl e
port 614 - 992 6941

753 4738

22

Mon ey to Loan

HOME

LOANS

FIXED

RATES Below market rates
F1xed conventiOnal FHA
VA Leader Mortgage
Athens , co llect 614 592

3051

23

Professronal

Services
P IAN O TUN1NG Lower
pr tced regular tuntngs
discounts to SeniOr C 1t1zens,
Churches &amp; Schools Ward's
Keyboard 304- 675 - 3824

992 3006

FOR RENT WITH OPTION
TO BUY III 14 h w1de three
bedroom
bath and half,
mobile home sttt1ng on n1ce
lot, ready to move mto
$225 00 down $225 00 par
month 304 576 2711
Seven year old horne. thr ee
bedrooms
garden spot
2605 Lm coln A\le B'h pet
assumab le loan 304 6 75

5047
New hst 1ng mov1ng need to •
sel l 3 bedroom 2 fult baths
Meadowbrook addn 8 '1:~ ptH
cen t assumable l oan Lots of
ex tra s prtced 603
304

675 6425
For sale or trade 2 112 bed
room all modern house w1th
bath attached garage vmyl
sta RI &amp;lumn Sel l ortradefor
late model 2 or 3 bedroom
trailer and l end 304 882

3590

32 M obrle Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL S QUAL
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES

Two story 7 room house
bath screened poh, carport ,
on 4 acres 5 m1 southeast
Oak Htll O H oH St Rt 279

4 Ml

$15 000
6173

19 79 3 bdr m o btle home on
acre lot well shaded
Must sell both together Ce ll

Call 614 682

S 1 500 down take over
S3 1 S mo pavment taJCes &amp;
msurance rn clud ed 3 bdr
ranch full basement wood
burner c1tv sc hools located
1n Plantz Subd i VIS I On
S24 400 ba lance Ca ll 446

8002

Coli 1 6t4 678

8 vrs o ld 3 bedrm 2 baths.
family room w1th wood
burner Stogie car garage on
8 flat acres w 11h stocked
pond Crty water m Racme

Co li 614 949 2641
For sale by ow ner C l arence
H1ll l mmed1ate possess1on
pnce negot1ab l er or ow ner
w 11l help f1nan ce Br level 1n
Rust1c H1lls Syracuse Ohto
2 fu ll baths 3 bedrooms
famtly room w1th f~replace ,
sp~ral sta~rcase hvrng room ,
dm1ng room kitchen w1th
di shwas her &amp; gArbage d1s ·
posal, c ham hnk fen ce
16x 12 barn for storage
tnsulated Call 614 247

4t34
Rutland
1 0 rooms on
47x150 lot N orth Mam
S4995 N eeds work but lots
of possJbdttJes Call 21 6
394 6741 orwrtteBoJC723
Pomeroy OH 45769 ls 8th
house from corner of Salem
on west s1de Mak e an otter
Rustic Htlts, Syra c use 3
bedroom famtly room cen
tral an. char1n hnk fence
st orage butldmg $32 ,000

Coli 614-992 2521 o• 304
882 3197
Owner tunsferred must sell
home, famdy room has 20ft
of Windows for pastoral
v1ew. f1n1shed double gar
age trreplace. large porch
40 h deck woods prtvacy,
near Royal Oak Park

$63 900
5420

WEST GA lLI POLIS

PHONE 614 446·

6t4 388 9957
1973 Baron 12x65 2 BR
many ext ras
exc
cond
French C1ty Br okerag e Set
v 1ce Ca ll 446 9340
Schult 50th Anmversary re
bate S 1000, rebate any
Schult purchased through
June 30 French C 1ty Mob1le
Homes Call 446 9340
1978 N ashu a 14x70 3 bdr
1•12 bBth 2 aJJ condrt1oners
appl1ances d rapes 1n c lu ded
Ca ll 614 367 0691
1976 141170 3 bdr total
el ectuc underp1nnmg
t1e
dow n anchors 8 000 good
cond 1t1on storage bu1tdrng

St75 Call 446 3 t 62

6 rooms basem ent double
garage 1 &amp; one th11d acre
Jot
Rose H1ll
Pomeroy

S32 900
25 13

AT 35
7274
1n

304 675 6297

Cla ssy Fashtans 1nv1tes you
to own your own Jean
Sportwear, ladtes Appa rel
or Infant Pretee n store Na
tiona! corporat ion seek1ng
store owners for new l oca
t1 o n s
One t 1m e fee
($12 900 to 15 9001 m
eludes buy1ng tnp begm
n 1ng rnventory store f1x
lures rn stalled
store
supplies, l ocat 1on ass rst
ance tra1nrng program and
more Ca ll nowl Mr Tate

11

Bt36651232

4 BR larg e eat m k1tchen
lar ge hvmg &amp; fam•ly rooms
also, 16x32 1nground
heated pool al l on a one ac r e
Would love to ha'&gt;~c 1 elderly I fenced lot many o th er ex
lady to stav m my home for 1 tras
F1 nanc 1ng avadabe
week 1 month whartever
$59 500 Cal l 304 773
Lots of TLC Call 614 949
5877
30 14 anyttme
s 500 down 2 bdr tra1ler on
W1ll babys1t m my home
large wooded lot Your own
re sponsible , dependab l e boat dock Call 614 256
mother
C h a ndl er Dr~'&gt;~e
t216

7760
Old f as h1 onod cast 1ron bath
tub Cr~ ll 614 742 2 1 37

One acre lot w1th large
m ground pool, torn hner
and partially frnrshed base
ment For mformat1on call

6t4 992 50060&lt;614 742
3t47

CO MPLET E HOUSEHOLDS

SWEEPER and sew mg ma

2 p upp 1es •;, lrsh v~ bla ck
lab 6 V2 woeks o ld Call

If interested con!Kt

ill! Racrnt. 949·2210.

3 2 lin

p~

Call for free siding es·
timates, 949-2801 or

Home Netiontl Bank

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

949-2263

stairs equrpped with
kitchen . lrvrn&amp; room,
dinine room and den;
upsta1rs has two bed·
roo11s and , one balh;
house also his base·
men!. Lot srze approx.
4fxl01'. Needs warlt .
Till

••

WRITESEL
ROOFING CO.

S&amp;W TV

Cash pard for fancy tton or
heavy ~ron beds $160 and
up for cett81n M e1gs Co
stone Jars
Old time cup board
ca ll 1 304 882

Announcements

GAS - WATER

VOLUME DRIPS

Oh

WANT ADS

Homes for Sale

W anted to Do

Ca ll Ray 6 t4 446 3109

3476

G&amp;W PLASTICS
&amp; SUPPLIES

18

Remodeled 2 bedroom
house near Pomeroy on 1
acre Storage burldmg &amp;
cellar 817 000 Call 614

112 Maple Place corner of
Lasley, 2 bedrooms fam1ly
room k1tchen Must sell t;o .
sett l e estate Ca ll co llect
VJrg 1m a Crew 1-614 891
0442 or 431 0633

Real Estale
31

304 675 4808
Want ed To Buy

304 675 5568

304 744 0924

Bass plaver wants JOb w 1th
well estab li shed cou ntry
square dance or polka band

We pav cash for late model
clean used cars
J1m Mmk Chev O ld s in c
B1 ll Gene John son

We Use Von Schrader
Equtpmenl Recommended
by leadmg Carpet Manu facturers
'F REE ESTIMATES"
6 6 1 mo

6

LADIES - ID EAL IN HOME

Pr o fess1onal ElectrolySIS
Cltmc Probe Type Electroty
!lis
AMA , FDA &amp; FCC
approved Doctor referrals

JOB now h1rm g area super
v1sors mall towns H1re and
manage toy p arty personnel
Exc mcome. bonus free
tra mrn g over 23 Ca ll collect

FLEA MARK ET ~ Casey's
Park1ng Lot 2 m1les north
Po1nt Pleasant , Rt 62, every
Sa turday
set up $3 00

9

35185 Oak Htll Road
Long Bott om. OH 45743

992 -2549

992 9968

Ca ll 446 9638

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOlSTERY
ClEANERS

PERSONAliZED
POOlS

Sw 1mm1ng Instructor
needed rm med1arely at M1d
dleport pool Contact Pat
Kitchen at 992 6212 or

6143677101

Mtddlep ort. Ohro

CHESHIRE OHIO

PRIVATE
INVESTIGATION
OF All TYPES

YOUNG'S

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

992 2196

367-7560-367-761

614-992-7626

Service

LOST - Beagle pup, Toml1n
son Run area
Reward ,

RADIATOR

MIDDLEPORT . OHIO

Au thorrzed John Deere
New Holland . Bush Hog
farm Equrpmen t
Dealer

Racme. Oh
Ph 614-843-5191

POMEROY - Approx I\\ acres wtth bain ntce 3 bedroom
home some furnrlure Close to town Askmg $28 000 00

Mall This Coupon wltfl Remltflnce
The Deily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh.

MillER
ElECTRIC
SERVICE

'

HOBSTElTER
REALTY
S
Geor&amp;e

;ncountry,1yoaroldfamalo

Lost Dog Reward offered
Gray male We1manaraner
w1th red collar 446 4926

l 5 lie

·: ," ·: " lhe

Real Estate General

28

LIVE BAND EVERY
WEEKEND

$36 50000

23

211.

1343

Lowest Rates

m

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Ph

brt. 304 676-2332

6

601

Now Accepting Listin

27

We Have the

E M a rnllo.:.:,l;:;;:k,:..:,...l

21
22

Open: 9 :00 to 5.00
Close d Th urs da s

I I '•

Real Estate General
17
18
19.

742-2328

Jtc

Farm Equipment

) 24 lk

6

7

992· 7201

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

Real Estate General

Housing
Headquarters

! IWant&lt;!d

Wellman

West Columbta

JIM CLIFFORD

1nclude discount

( »For Sale
( ) Announcement
I I For Rent

JONES BAR

CONTRACTING

DENTAL CENTER

BEAUTY SHOP - All eqUip
ment goes Own your own
bus tn ess butldmg and lot
tor only $14.000

Gu mm 1s a IC'if'Communlca tlons
ronll ol SIJ('Ctalts t \\llh the 602nd
T.11 Ileal Ai r Cnnrrol Center Squad·
ron ru Bergastrom Air For('{' Base.

•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE

J&amp;F

'OIL FIELD SERVICfS
"DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
'CONCA ETE WOR K
"CUSTOM I!IUILT HOMES
'WATER. GAS C..
OIL LINES

olf

NEW liSTING -One floor
5 1ms full base ment home
Ntee carpel tng equtpped
kttchen ce ntr al heat on I 3
acres dbl garage Only
$34 DOD

I" ( (

!i ts w tfe. Sue. Is the daughter of
R,l\ mond C
Llevlng of West
Columht.r. Vv Va

•Ranges

•DOZER 8ACKHOE
• RECl AMATION WORK

1u&lt;&gt; t Jl 1

tnv

NEW liSTING - Re mo
de led m51d e and oul 6 rm
one l!oor home cook and
bake untls carpett ng, panel
tng. fu ll baseme nt and large
lot on H1gh S! $35,000

COURT SALE

Ill
. n I
Pomeroy, OH

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

Makes

Nftd babysiner for 2 children Call eher !PM 446

To gtve away to good home

9;

Help Wanted

Free Ne1herlend Dwarf Rab·

304-875 6531

00

I rP "l~urP r
lWIUO '-,R 7

1·(614)· 992-3325
Public Notice

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

11

Page

"'

t In•~ ·

VIRGIL B. SR.
2t6E 2ndSt
Phone

(hl20 7 1 '2? ;rJ 2f&gt; 77 Gic

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

The Da1ly Sentinel

Giveaway

Doberman,

OJ 00

oT•••••••
••••• "'""''"'"
" ton

111

Jtli r I( 1 JA 1
Ql I dw It~&lt;"

thf' ll'lh l

1nv

6/20 / 1 mo Pd

4~

Pubhc Not1ce

Ill 'on,lrl• rl'1 '

1110 11

S,lt i

992-2478

•Washers •DIShwashers

"Free Estimates"
lnstallatron Avarlable

~

~u
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Jl .......

hrr"l'i o;h oll hi' ro, , &lt;\I 1! 11
l tf' Si 111 &lt;.; U l l ( • !11 1 /

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-SEPIIC SYSTliiS
lARGE or SMAll JOBS

All

AL TROMM

w2 ds

o

Vpo o 1 b , ,. d,

1r1

4 58
611
7 IJ
811

-r~~:

-GAS tiNES

985 ·3561

TEAFORD

fam11 v Thc v also VIsited \\IJ! h Mrs
John Murph\
M1 and M1s Elmf'r Ra JIP}' wPrP
rf'C'rnt VJs itm sof Mr and Mrs Guv
sarg('nt .Jonat han a nd Kristi
Mr and Mr s Leo Frank and
Sa1 ah Bf't h \H'H' H'f'f'nl visitors of
:vlr .1 nd M1 s F: u!(ene Hamng,
Ron.llci .md Clad\ s Tuckf&gt;rman

Minnesota
Case!.

SUPPLY

8ACKHQE
WQ RK

- TRENCHER

Ohia

Austrian Blue Heeler Blue

AND

=~~.:,1RucKs

""' Coo''"

II M 10 Aopo"

In ru Orr

''" "'"'""""

Po '""d

or

'J92 ? no

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.....,."'

Mood"""'

Real Estate General

S2 I 00 0 (l (l VV II h1 ~Il l j tr) II W
h (]hf -. 1 bo d fl l't 11 10 00 1 ll
July I 1 !Jfl·1 t! nl1 1rP n l 0 Br •f 'n
&amp; ()B r l'l l •'&gt;!! u 1 nP \ ~ 100'&gt;
Co 11 St r&lt;"r 1 P 11111'1 v O t1 o
F oll
h ll i!lf"'l
II)J I'l1lor)f1 ( il l

V.f'rf' recent VISit ors
of Iva .Johnson H a r lcv Johnson and

llesuiTeCtion Lutheran Church,
20:131 KeDy Road, Detroit, Mich.
A reception wW follow In the
church hall. C-.1 attended
Coooordla Seminary in Ann
Arhor lor lour years and served
as an Pfflis'ant pastor In Flint,
Mich. He graduated with honors
alter three years at St. Louis
Lutheran C&lt;1Uege. He is the son of
Paul Case! of Middleport and

&amp;

I

I

Moo o" t o KY
4ooo Co1o lO&lt;&gt;

HI '""" lo&gt;lo
141 - Ao.,,.
101 Mu l&gt;nd

Wo&gt;nu&gt;

])'1

Legion Hall

Th dfl

It ~,·

I I II

54

SH

tn c .......

AUCTION

lhr 8rHl n trd ,r .-t ' rJJ1

r

111

JU - t,.on•o
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2oWI - A o Cl•.,.• •

Bu.:vd n f FrllH 11 "111
~ l'&gt;lf' r P I &gt;1( .tl Srhool D o.;t1 c:t

22 /tl tl lo

NOTICE TO BIDDERS

7

Ul

Public Notice

La• n l B o arrl

[,l ', l f'ln

..., _ [)011 polo

••••~otwod•O"

Public Notice

ll ('d'lt ll t r

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FtP I \A/ ( rnv\ All Hr1 f'\lo l"' ll h(J ill~ g q 2 1 1 \ 32

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.,.,g, cou&lt;"'
A&lt;OoCoooe • •

az Pl~"'~•nv &amp; Hooung
13 ho-oung

Public Nottce

PUBUC NOnCE
A ~11bln

Cl"' 0 Cou M¥
'"''" Cod• &amp; 4

2M o,..-o"
eu '"'"b"O"

11 ,....,.,,..,.,,..,.,.nh

41 YI..,MII Iall"'"'
41 louop..,.rn fo • Ron
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612011 me

ACCENT

DOZER

TOM'S
SHOE REPAIR

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

PH.

,H . 992·6931

n1J\I..,o
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Chdr\oiiP N C

TO BE ORDt\INEI)- Arthur
Case! of Middleport wiD he
ordained and lMtalled into the
office of the rnlnlstry in the
Lutheran Church of the Missouri
Synod at 3 p.m . Jucy I at the

m The 111

94 Octane
Ethanol Enhanced
Avaua~o~e Only At

w;;gt;plii h+

e111 ..Cd"""""'~
-·
lV&amp;IIod..,(qupmo.o

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MPXICO

Atrman David A Wellman . son of
Bi ll J and Sonia N. Wellman ot 711
Main St . Point Pleasant . IV Va .
has been assigned to K e!'sler Air
Force Base, Miss , alter complet
lng Air Force basic training
During the si x weeks at Lackland
Air Force Base. Texas. thP airman
studied the A ir Force mission ,
organization and customs and
received special training In human
relations
In addition, airmen w ho complete
IJaslc training eam credits toward
an assoclale degree In applied
science through the Community
College of the Air Force
fhe airman will now receive
specia li zed Instruction In th e
com munica tions electro nics systems field
He Is a 1983 gradua te of Gallla
Academy, Gallipoli s

Tht most powerful pre-

FENCE

Wnte vour 0\N'n ad and order by mail With this

News of area servicemen

"SUpER 94"

220 I . Mein, Pometoy

Wolf Pen news
Mr and M rs F't ank Sarver of
Hatfield. l nd WE'!&lt;' r ect'nl \H'&lt;'kf'nd
VISitors of M r and Mrs Howard
Thoma
Mt and :vtrs Howard T homa.
M1 and M rs Frank Saner and
Mrs I va Johnson we1e rPCPnl
Sundav d tn nt'r gupsts of Mr and
Mrs
L an v Ban. David and
Michelle of Rutland
Mrs E thel Clark of Page1own
wa s rC'CC'nl \ 1stt or o f Mr and Mrs
RoiJcrt Russell
Mr and Mts Wtlltam Russell of
Mmf'rsv lll f' w£'rP rff'enl Saturday
f'\'f'nlng v Jsllors of Mr and Mrs
RoiJert Husscll and Bertha Russell
M1 and Mrs Okey Burdett e of
CharlolfP N C were recent v1s1tors
nf Mr ,md Mrs Char ley Sm it h
Karl a nd K eVIn Knapp
M r and Mrs Okpv Burdett P of

NOWAVAII.ABLf/ '

Or Wnte DIJIIJ Senttntl Ctmif11d Dlpt
Ill Court St P'omtror Ob10 45769

wtu;;

4

r-=========~rr=========:;-r.:=========:;-rr:===~::::::::::::==;1

r~==================~=========--~===-===l-- --- - - -1
\
The Daily Sentinel
PHONE 992-2156

Publrc Notrce

Trustees slate
budget hearing

b

Pomeroy-Middleport,

Business SeiVices

Despite th&lt;j,decay. the mix of let ld
aromas and the traffic that chokes
meandermg alleys, evt:nlng restores some of this city's grandeutr.
The setting sun gilds the six slender
minarets of the Blue Mosque, and
the Byzantine bulk of S! Sophia
looms against the night sky like a
gtant beached ship
"To serve this ctty IS like a holy
calling '' said the mayor. ''There Is
no city In the world like Istanool. and
we must do all we can to preserve

Completed, thP plan will govern all
tlevelopment in Istanbul's 2,600
flquare mlles . "Until now. the
l!lanners have always been one.
rnaybe two steps behind the
buDders, " the mayor sald.
Laws have alreadY been passed to
rake growth In the shantytowns
'l'he Turkish government has
llgreed to grant deeds to owners of
the shanties, and Dalan said he has
encouraged comp!Jance with con
struction codes by streamlinmg the
wall for a bulldlngpermlttooneday

I

Arcordmg to the Al~. lungca nce r
ts another leadmg fonn of cancct A
pet son c&gt; at much greatPr riSk for
lung cancel tl he or she has a hts rory
of hPavv rlgarC'It£' smokmg or
C"X!XJSUre to certa m mdustnal sub-

stances such as asbestos

Booporus University. "They also
could shift po!AllationsatwW, soclty
sizes never got out of hand ..
1\Jrkish authorities can no longer
do fllat, so 1stanool's problems have
forced them to draft the city's first
urban master plan since Onoman
sultan Mehnned Fatih and his
Janlssaries conquered the Byzan·
tine Christians 1n 1453 and took
control of the city then called
Constantinople
Drafting a master plan will take
on&lt;&gt; year. Dalan says \Vhen

Judy Eblin was honored as the
week's best loser at Tuesday night's
meeting of TOPS OH 1466 of
Rutland
Glona Oiler presided a t the
meetmg which opened with flle
TOPS pledge. The contest was
concluded with the blue team as the
winners The red team will treat the
blue team to a salad b.aroutlngm the
near future. P lans were made for a
new contest ro begin on June 2fl
Conme Ba les was named as flle new
leader

lungl'\ 1tv for future pav ra JSPS.

The name of JoA nn We;ersmlllct
Smrth was unmtenhonallv omlltm
from a groupo! women ol thP Laure l
Cliff Fn&gt;t&gt; Methodtst Church attend
mg a mother-daughter oanquet tn
Point Pleasant recen!lv

hollow ,

she sald In the slums of Sumer
Mahallesl, the only sound Ls the
rumbling of dump trucks ar a
n&lt;&gt;arby rockp1t.
The problems of rapid growth are
novel for Istanool, a city founded by
C!'T'Pks seekmg the route of Jason
and the Argonauts 'ZI centuries ago
and the seat of three successive
empires. the Roman , Byzantine and
Oil oman Turk
" ThP Ottomans saw to It that the
nucleus of a new neighborhood , like
mosques, IJaths and fountains. w as

' "'- 20, 1914

Call 614 992

7 Room h ouse, laundry
room 4 bedrms. f1hh S t
Syracuse Can be seen at
Ons Hubbard res Call 992 -

P1eno Tumng and Repan
B ru ntcardl Mus1c Co 446
0687 Skill and tntegnty our
trademark
lane Oan1els ,

2239

814-742-2951

for more mformat1on

Houses for sa le m M1ddle

port Call 1-215 · 835- 3952

1973 12x60 remodeled
tra1ler new carpet doors
plumbmg electr1c AC Ca ll

446 0221
Clos 1ng Out TtA rler Rental
Bus1ness Had 22 ONLY -6
lEFT
S1zes 10JC50 &amp;
121152
2 bedroom fur
m shed A comfortable home
for a Low Pnce Brown s
Trader Park
M1nersvJUe .
Oh 10 Call 614 992 3324
Near Ra c 1ne 1n country 3 1
acres w1th 1 4x70 mob1le
hom e 2 bedroom 2 bath
centra l alt porches &amp; 1 2x 16
barn Ca ll n.ftP-r 6 00 p m

61 4 843 5240
ltke new 3 bd r m sectional
h omf! on beautifu l "} a erA l of
t n Arba ug h add1t•on
Tuppers Pla1ns
excel lent
neighb or h ood
S32 900
mcludes new retr1g renge
washer &amp; rlryer fman c 1ng
ava1l abte w11h l ow down
payment to qual1fred part 1es..
Ce ll 614 992 7034 days
6 14 992 7671 evenmgs
You Better Hurry for a
com fortable mob1le home at
a low pnce Had 22 only 3
left 1 2x52 &amp; 1 2•44 s11es 2
bedroom furn1 shed Closing
out rentals Br own s Trarler
Pt~rk Mmersv11lP. Oh 614

992 3324
1971
12x68 R1tz Craft
Rovale w1th 6• 12 expando
gas h eat good cond1t10n ·
F~tst $5000 buys Wilkes
v1 lle Ca ll 614 669 5 10 1
1981 Hollvpark
14x70~
exc
cond
1 2x8 deck
underpennmg and large
room a1r co nd rn clu dod

304 895 3895
3600

or

895

1982 C layt on
1 4x70, 2 ...
bedroom
2 baths. d11· ,
hwasher stereo , ce•hng fan,
hreplace m1crowave c&amp;r't
tral atr co nc rete s t eps and
underpe nnmg, $15 , 500 00

111"1 304 773 5650

�10--The Daily

Pc:ga

32

They'll Do It Every Time

Mobile Homea
for Sale

Wednesday,

f&gt;Gmeroy-Mlddleport, Ohio

Sentinel

51

Houaehold Goods

GE refrlgerator- frHzer •
eiectric Magic Chef ltove,
both almond color &amp; 8
montha old. eBOO pair. Call

1980 Holly Pork, 14•70, 2
bedroom. 1 'A baths. total
electric. centrel air cond.,

614 - 992 - 5017
6655 .

dishwasher , porch with
awning, underpenning, stor age building . 304 - 675 -

or

992 ·

55

Trailer &amp; lot. 304 - 773 - 5848

Misc. Merchandise

Building Suppllea

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYL£ ®

Now open for bualne11.
Mountain State Block, At.
33. New Heven. Complete
masonry supplies, 4", 8 ",
12" bloc;:k. Delivery aervice.

Holly

Park mobile home,

fully furnished . Very good
condition , 1 lf2 acres .
&amp;1 6 ,000 . 304· 458· 1686.

33

Knauff Firewood Reduced
prices thru July 3ht. Have
your own seasoned wood
this winter . 614 - 256·6245 .

Farms for Sale

17 ACRES

in

Ew ington .

limestone. Sand. Gravel.
Deli\lered in Mason, Meigs.
Gallia or pick up at Richards

along Raccoon Creek . Road
frontage on St . Rt . 160. nice
building sites, barn, chicken
house, septic tank , and
mineral rights .

B. Son. Call 446· 7785.

Call 388 -

8510.
Small farm (1 8 .25 acres) in
Portland, Ohio. bordered by
Ohio River &amp; highwny . No
buildings, some trees. 112
mineral right1 . Fair market
price, $40.000 . For information , write 8 . Graham,
4616 Emerald . Nacog doches, Texas 75961

8 ft. t980 Col•.! n•n folding
pickup truck ce-:nper, aleepa
4.
atove, ice boa.. Exc.

a••
con . Collt14-992-8030.

Ash1on area 5% acres. 2
houses , 2 barns, 2 car
garage, pond, $56.000 .00.
Phone 304-576 -2320 .

&amp; Acreage

35 lots

4 1h acre lot restriced 2 %
mile from Gallipolis &amp;
Holzer
Reduced to
$10,600 . Call 446 -3485
lot ior sale in Mercervi lle.

Call 614 ·256 ·6618 .
for sale - 6 acres of ground in
lebanon TP. Good building
si1e on hard top road . Asking
$5000 or beat offer . Call

61 4 -843-5231 .
1 Ox60 trailer on large
wooded lot. 7 miles below
Gallipolis on Racoon .

$10,995 . 304 ·575 -6448
5 acres, can be split. 600 ft .
frontage . located 8 miles
north of Point Pleasant on
Rt. 2. Fletrock . Call 304 675 - 1248 after 5
3 acres Southside , lJ.. mile
off main highway. 304 -676 -

1894.

36

Real Estate
Wanted

1 floor
trailer .
Meig s
ment .
attar 6

3 bedroom home or
On land co ntract in
Co No down pay Call 614 -992 -6582
p.m .

Rentats
41

Houses for Rent

3 bdr . house deluxe, centra l
air . pool etc . Call 675 -5104
or 675 -6386 .
3 bdr . house in Rio Grande.
accept children . deposit reQUited . Call 446 -0157

2 bedroom hou se in coun try
Ref . and deposit required .
Call614 -246 -9284 or 614 -

2 bedroom mobile home,
adults only . For sale or rent .

2619 .
2 bedroom unfurnished
house. no pets, deposit . For
information stop at 222 N .
3rd . Middleport . seo Sandy
rear apt .
Modern 3 br house . full
basement , garmge. cen tral
air . heat pump, fenced yard ,
144 English Rd . Pt. Plea sant . S375 . month plus
rlamage deposit . 304 - 675 ·
7789 or 304-675 -7467 af ·
tAr 5 p m _ and weekends
Suburban , 3 bedrooms, 1 1/,
story frame , secluded lace ·
ti o n. phone 304 -675 - 1460 .

6 rooms and beth with
basement . nice neighbor·
hod . references and deposit
required . $250 month 304 ·
675- 1090
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr . trailer fully furnished .
good location. sec . dep. req .
Call 446 -8558
Mobile home for rent Ref . S.
Oep . Call 446 -0608 or

446 · 1609.
Mobile home furnish ed. AC ,
ideal for 1 or 2 men.
beautiful rivarview . Fosters
Trailer Park . Ca11446 - 1602 .
1 2Jt60 2 bedroom trailer.
furnished, gea S. water paid,
*260 mo., • 1 00 deposit .

Call 446 6583 .
2 bdr . unfurnished. extra
nice. 2 mi . out on Rt . 5B8.
8200 mo ., adults only Call

446-2300 .
1 2x&amp;O 2 bedroom mobile
home, pertly furnished, Re cine area. Call 614 -992 -

11868.

2 bedroom. total electric
with central eir. on Ea11
Main St.. Pomeroy above
car wash. fully furnished.

Call614 ·992· 7314 or 992·
6216 .
2 bedroom trailer, kitchen
fumlehed. couple one smell

child eccepted. 304-871110711.

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light hoU!·e keeping
rooms . Park Central Hotel .

Call 614 ·992 · 2598

Call 614·446· 0756 .

44

Sleeping room S 1 1 5 . utilities paid. Shere beth. male
only . Range &amp; refrig . 919
2nd Ave ., Gallipolis. CBII
446 -441 6 after 7 PM .

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS {Eq ual
Housing Opportunity) has
one and two bedrooms, rent
starting at $167 for one
bedroom and 8193 par
month for two bedroom.
with $200 deposit located
near Foodland and Spring
Valley Plaza. pool and TV
ant . Cell 446 -2746 or leave
message
3 bdr . unfurn . garage apt .,
$260 plus deposit . Call

446· 3786 .
Furnished apt . 919 2nd ..
Gallipolis. S 176 Men only .
Call 446 -4416 after 7PM _

46

Space for Rent

Trailer space for rent . Call

614 ·367· 7438 .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Parlt . Route 33 , North of
Pomeroy. large lots. Catl

614- 992 ·7479 .
Warehouse or storeroom.
25M76 , for furn i ture ,
lumber. roofing , insulation .
paneling. equ ipment or
other use. Call 1 -614 -486 -

5553 .

Boarding all breed• . Heated
indoor- outdoor fecilitiea .
AKC Doberman puppies:
Stud Service . C•ll614 · 448 -

Trailer lot&amp; for rent _ 304 -

675 · 1076.
large lot for trailer, gas,
electric, city water . 304 -

2158 .

675 ·3216 .

furnished Apt ., 920 4th ..
Gallipolis
$226 . Utilities
paid . Adults , 1 bdr . Call
446 -441 6 after 7PM .
4 rooms &amp; bath , unfurnished
pat .. utilities paid. adults
only. no pets . Call 446 3437 or 446 -3111 .
Unfurnished 2 bdr . in Crown

City Coli 614· 256-6520 .
One bedroom apartment,
furn . or unfurn ., 8190 per
month, utilities paid, 850
deposit, 6 month lease. no
children, no pets . 446 -3667
after 5 .
First fl oor furnished apt ..
utilities fumished , adults
preferred . referen ce re quired Inquire 631 -4th
Ave .. GaltipGiis
Furnished efficieny, private
bath . all utilities paid. s 1 55
mo . at Rio Grande . Call

446 · 0157.
first fl oor furnished apt ..
utilities furnished. adults
preferred . references re quired . Inquire 631 4th
AVe .. Gallipolis .
1 bedroom apartment furn .
or unfurn. S190 per month,
utilities paid . $500 deposit _
6 month leue. no children.
no pets . Call446 -3667 after
7
2 bdr . apt . newly decormted,
860 to $200 per mo . utilties
part . paid. Cal! 675 -5104 or

675 5386 .
1 bedroom Apt . $196 mo
including utilities Equal
Housing Opportunity . Con tact Village Man or Apts.

614 ·992 ·7787
Riverside Apts . Middleport .
Special rates for Senior
Citil'ens _$130 Equal Hous·
ing Opportunities 614 ·

992 · 7721.
Furnished 1 &amp; 2 bedroom
apartments, Middleport
Adults. no pets. security
deposil . Call 614 - 992 ·

3874 .

2 bedroom unfurnished apt

Coffee table stereo. stereo.
dinette table. Call614 -256 ·

6417 .

Shrubs pruned. lawn reseeded. retaining walls .
sidewalks. patios. fill dirt,
topsoil, bark mulch &amp; saw dust . Contact Bruce Davision . Call 614 - 256-1427.
10 in . Homelite c hain saw.
brand new. never used. 685:
gun cabinet. holds 12.
$126; swing set , 825 . 245-

9441 .

614· 367·7220 .

614- 388-9790 .

12 mo _old Reg. Pit Bull . Call

$36. baby goat $15 . Call
446 - 1 364 after 6 .
Cockipoo puppies . S26 .
each. Call 614 -992 -3640.

Musical
Instruments

Merchandise
51 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION B. FURNITURE
62 Olive St., Gallipolis . New
&amp; used wood &amp; coal stoves.
6 piece wood living room
suite with 6 inch flat arms
$399, bunk beds complete
with bunkies $199. 2 piece
antron li'Jingroom suites
8199. entron recliners $99,
other recliners $80, maple
dinette sets $,79, box.
springs &amp; muttress twin or
full $100 set regular -firm
$120, maple dinette chairs
S35. wash stands $34.
maple rockers 659, 7 piece
chrome dinette set S 149, 5
piece dine11e set 899, used
bedroom suites. refrigera tors, ranges. chest, dressers,
wringer washers. TV's, dry ers, &amp; shoes . Catl 614-446 ·

3159 .
LAYNE·s FURNITURE
Sofa. chair, rocker. otto·
man . 3 tables. (extra heavy
by Frontier). S685 . Sof11,
chair and loveseat. $275.
Sofas and ch11irs priced from
S285 . to $895 . Tables, S45
and up to $1 25 . Hide -abeds. S440 . and up to
$525 .. Reclin ers. S1 75 to
S375 .. lamps from S28 to
S76 .5 pc . dinettes from
$99 .. to 435 7 pc . 9189
and up _ Wood table with sht
chairs 8425 to $745 . Desk
8110 up to $225 . Hutches.
8550 . and up, maple or pine
finish . Bunk bed complete
with mattresses . $250 . and
up to $396
Baby beds.
S 1 10 Mattresses or boJC
springs. futl or twin, $58 .,
firm . S68 . and $78 Queen
sets, $195 . 4 dr . chests ,
842 . 5 dr . chests, 854. Bed
frames , 820 and S25 .. 10
gun
Gun cabinets, $350 .
Gas or electric ranges 9375 .
Baby mattresses. S25 &amp;
836. bed frames $20, $25,
&amp; 830. king frame $50.
Good selection of bedroom
suites , cedar chests .
rockers, metal cabi nets .
swivel rockers .

$100 month plus S100
Used Furniture .. Chairs ,
deposit . At 208 N . 3rd,
dryers. and TV's 3 miles out
Middleport, key at 222 112 N · 8ulaville Rd Open 9am to
3rd . Middleport .
6pm . Mon. thru Fri .. 9am to
5pm , Sat .
APARTMENTS . mobile 61 4 · 446 ·0322
homes, houses . Pt Pleuant
and Gallipolis . 614 -446 - TV &amp; Appliances. 627 Third
8221 .
Ava .. Gallipolis, 614-446 1699. Spin washers , gas S.
TWIN RIVERS TOWER
electric dryers . auto
Apartments now available to washers. gas &amp; electric
elderly &amp; disabled with an
ranges . refrigerators, TV
income of less than
seta .
$12 . 300. Renting for 30
percent of •djuated income.

9767

379· 2665 after 5PM .
Spinet Piano, excellent condition. S600 . Call after 6

Fruit
Vegetables

63

livestock

Strawberries . Taylor ' s Berry
Patch . 8AM -8PM. Mon.Sat. Cell 446 -8692 or 614 -

245· 9567 .

7500 BTU Gibson air condi tioner $200. 23 .1 cuft .
heezer $250. e~ec . cond

59

For Sale or Trade

Greenbrier Stables now
boarding horns. 304-876-

1977 Chev. truck, % ton, 6

cvl. ltd shift. PS, opoka
wheels.

Greenbrier Stablea. we buy .
sell or trade horaea. 304-

llo

Grain

Hay, $1 .25 bale in field,
phone 304-6711·2130.

Transportation
71

304-675·

2196 .

1----------1980 VW Pickup. 50.000

675-6798.
Hay

Good condition.

t1.500 . 00.

Autos for Sale

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

61 4 · 446-2282.

miles, 2 new tires. See at
Village Pizza.

73

3 Gelding walking hones,
TV, chest. couch. rung .
Yamaha organ . Cell 446 ·

phone 304-675-6531.

4052 or 446· 2248 .
stall

horse

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

trail er.

&amp;650 . Call 614 ·992 5382
or 992-7339 .
Complete mobile sound sys ·
tern . Professional sound au dio equipment . Good for a
band. perfect for OJ . lights
included. Call evening after

1 976 Dodge van. needs
work, good work "'an. make

9 p.m. 614· 992 ·5547 B. aok
ior Nick Jr
Double contour chair, as
advertised on TV, with heat
&amp; vibrator. Call 614 -949 ·
3014 anytime
loretta 's Guns, Gallipolis .

61 4 -446 · 1 822 ,

8 :00

am

10:00 pm, 7 days weekly ,
New Remington 30 -30 am ·
munition 2 bo~ees. 40 rounds
$16.00. All staniless 22
auto target pistols with Gin
and Sin barrel! length. regu ·
lar $269. loretta' s $240 .
includes , 00 cartridges .
Bint;:~ham 22 all steel auto
rifle ventilated sleeve over
barrel! . carbine length 50
round magazine reg . S239
new S180 includes 100
cartridges . Al so. h ave S &amp;
W, 44 mag _ $360. Rugar
Stainless Red Hawk 44 meg .
$340. We ere a class three
dealer . law enfo rcem ent or
individual . Call us on y o ur
class three wents .

Farm Equipment

2887.
Clothesline posts. swing
frames. all types. picnic
table frames with or with ou t
lumber. 304· 676-3677
1 pairQueenAnnewingbaclt
chairs, like new, reduced
price . See at 179 N . Parlt
Drive, telephone 304 -676 2323. Eleanor lanham .
Top soil and fill dirt deli ·
vered. 304 -676 -7771

55 Building Supplies
LUMBER -Rough cut, oak,
poplar, 2M4, 2.116, 2JC8 , , ,.;4,
1 x6 , 1 x.8. length available. 8
ft . through 16 ft . Hogg &amp;
Zuspan. 304 -773 -5564 .

Coli

614 - 446-

9905.

130 Farm all tractor with
culti\lators, eJtc _ cond . &amp;
tobacco baler. Cell 446 7838 after 5PM .
1968 Ford tractor $6,000 &amp;
1978 Diesel. 840 hours.

67.000 .
2423 .

Ca ll

614· 379-

7 ft _ haybine. exc. cond.,
John Deere 24T baler, New
Holland 66 baler, Farmhand
pull wheel reke, New Holland hey crimser. wagon
new hay rack . 501 Ford
mower . Ford cult\lators. ro tary hose. fertilize spread ers , wheat drills. Farmhand
grinder mi~eer , hay &amp; grain
elevator, other field ready
equipment . Howe' s Farm
Machinery , Rt. 1224 &amp;
Mayhew Rd .. Jackson. Oh.

61 4· 286 · 5944 .
Massey HBrris pony tractor
&amp; equipment . Ex.c . con .
$1995. may t rade or make

63

livestock

5 vr . old Sorrell Quarter
horse mare. 2 yrs. Eques·
1rian training
Merideth
manor . 8660 . Call 614-

992 ·2488 .
Reg. Polled Hereford bull 3
yrs . old, 8750. Call 446·

0212 .
Must sell. Matched pair of
sorrel Belgium Gelding
Horses. 8 and 4 years old,
good pulling horses. Mrs.
Harley Grate, Langsville, OH

pkg.

350

engine.

304-676·

1977 Harley Davidson low

1958 Harley Davidson . Call

446-4149 .
1979 KDX 400. runo good.
Call 814-992-3846.

1979 Dodge Omni, 4 apd,

AC. PS. PB, radio, 47,800
miles . Call 614·446- 2610
after 6pm.

t2900 .
6B46.

Call

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

614 · 992 -

lA. finished.
Make oHer, 304-675-6397.

81200. Call446-1328.
1976 Camero, 4 dirt biket.

cellent condition. 6700
miles . Serious cells only.

Calf 446-4382 .

304·675· 3960.

1978 Lincoln Mark V. 2 dr ..

Su1:uki RM BO, like new,

8400. 304-1176-1 480
304-675-3698 .
75

mi.. stand . shift plus aeon·
omy ahih, air. Call814-3791978 Old a Cutla11 Supreme
good cond ., f2,000 or beat
offer. Call 448-3836.
1980 VW Rabbit air cond.,
many extras, one owner,
showroom cond. Cell 4469515 anytime.
1979 Chevy Caprice Cia•·
sic, 2 dr, ac, ps, V·8 engine.
body good condition. &amp;MC .
performance. Will consider

all offers. Call 614-9927412 after 6 p .m .
1982 Cavalier. auto .. p .s..
a.c .. e.m. f .m .. rear defogger. 20,000 miles. like

new 28 MPG . Coll614-9926810.
78 Tran Am T-Top, limited
edition, everthing new .

Call

614 · 992 ·

1980 Pinto. standard trans·
mission. Call after 6 p .m.

or

Boats and
Motors for Sale

16 h . inboard with 1.17
overdrive; V -drive. spare
propellers. 427 Chevy en·
gine. Thi1 boat will run all
day on 1 4 gallons of gas;
picka up aix akiera out of
wa1er easily, runs 60 mph
with power prop &amp; 80 whh
eaooo. includes trailer &amp;:
new battery . Cell 614-446 -

14 ft . aluminum boat whh
tilt trailer, twivel ben Hats,
ehtctric motor battery &amp; life
jackets. 3 moa. old, e~~:c .
cond. $9150 for all. Other
itemo. Coli 446-4635.
Larry's Boat Service. E11pert
outboard motor repairs .
Specieli1e in Mercury Outboards . Aho Inboardoutboard repairs. Mlnnekota
SeMce Canter. Propeller
tales &amp; service center . Uve
bait &amp; tacltle. 88 Main St ..
Coolville . Call 814 -667-

8389 or 867-6607.

'78 two door Pontiac Grand
Prix, PS, PB. AC. crui1e
control. VB - 301 , black.

Correct Craft It Ski Supreme. family ski boats.
New
used, Parkeraburg.

a.

304·675 -6286.

WV 304-422-8433 or 304422- 2367.

Buick Electra Umlted, 1 981 ,
fully equipped, eJCcellent

1 0 ft. John Boat, o•ra. life

PO Locka, cruise control.
AM -FM caaeette. tilt wheel,
asking price 88995. I 1 .000
under book . By owner, 304676· 2976. Don't welt · this
will go fast .

iackato. 1150.00. 304-8755912 .
16ft. tri ·houl, 56 HP. make
offer. 304·676-8397.

76

1976 Triumph Spitfire, con vertible, 2 tops, new paint.

614· 669 · 4242 after 6pm .
Reg Quarter mare with colt.
2 year old Aqha mare
Reasonttble. 694 -5816 e,.;t

1 984 Pontiac Fiero SE.
black, fully loaded. *3.000
down, take over payments,

4 radial tires on Chevy rally
wheel•. 1 5 "x 10" insulat1d
topper for •hort bed, phone

304·675- 31 23.
Camping
Equipment

com per.

Front apartment. partially
furnished , rent e226. water,
electric paid . Phone 304-

8711- 3771 .
1 bedroom furniahed apartment. ell utilitiea paid. 304·

876-7112 .
2 bedroom ep•rtment, $200
month. plul utilit~l . Camp

Conley areo . 304 · 875 4883

U5. 3· 5.000 BTU aircondltionert e95 each. Speed
Queen washer e&amp;o. Whirl pool washer 8 85. General
Electric: washer &amp;95, dryers
•96 each, king size boJC
aprings &amp; manreae &amp;66.

Skoggo Appliance• 669
Upper River Rd. 448-7398.

c.,pet for rent•ll for .3.99
oq . yd. Cell 814-992-11173.

•860.

.

INTENTION-

carpet

SHAPE WITH

.'

SHIP

CAPTIAN

STEAMER. Water removal.
fumi1ura cleaning, free eatiWater wells commercial end
domenic. teat holes, pump
sales and service. 304-896 -

ALLEY OOP

3802 .
BASEMENT

WHAT'S GOIN' ON
HERE1' WHO ARE

WATER-

l'HEY?

PROOFING . Unconditional
lifetime guarantee . Local
references tumished . Free
estimates. Call collect 1 ·
61 4 · 237-0488. 9 1.m. to 6
p . m. Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .
Remodeling, siding, interior
and eJCterlor. textured coat·
ing . simulated brick and
stucco. thermo replacement
windows. 304-676 -1560.

.

THAT'S RIDICULOUS! TH' KING'D
NEVER DO ANY1l-11NG THAI
SlUPID' I THINK ll-IEV'RE A
COUPLE OF TROUBLEMAKERS!

.THROW 'EM
IN TH' GULCH!

1

Custody of Strangers·
Cil (!1)) MOVIE
'Somewhere In Time'
® [ffi JFK : A One Man
Show M1ke Farr ell portr&lt;'lys
John F Kennedy rn a o ne ·
man show hosted by Walt er
Cronkit e (90 m 1n l (Clo se d
Captioned]
9 :30 0 ffi 11) Du ck Factory Ro ·
land tne s 10 co nfess to h1s
fath er that he has grven up
de ntiStry 10 ' draw a duck

0

Rufus
isn't t'

304·676·2440.

home!

Plumbing
llo Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine

Golllpollo. Ohio
Phone 61 4-448· 3888
61 4 -448· 4477

C1l MOVIE : ·rhe Runner

or

Stumbles'

®

Self

1 974 Ford '&gt;I T.• ouper cob
pickup. 18110. 246·9441 .

lowboy 8 ft . aluminum
truck camper, roll -out windows and roof vent, panelled

ond llghto. 11211. 304-8823378 .

1983 S10 P.V .• 4 opd, 4
cyi,AM.FM,IIkt new 18995.
1982 810 P.V ., 4opd,8 cyl,
AM FM , vinyl cover bod 79 Motors Homes
lo Campers
158911. 198t ChiVY Luv.
4opd,4 CVI. AM FM. tope.
vinyl cover bed Uli91i.
John'o Auto Solei Bultvllle BURDETTE CAMPER
Rd .Golllpollo, 61 4 · 446- SALES
SERVICE. Open
4782 .
dolly 8 to 8 :30, 811. 8 to 4,
1973 KW 290 Cummino, Clootd lundey. V .8 . Rt.IIO
RTO 811t3. SGHD, RTE Coolville, 011 t14-!167:
380, priced to Hll. Wllk... 3311.
1-------~­
ville. Cellll14-869-li101 .
Torry 21 ft. , oolf contoiMd,
74 Oodgt '&gt;I ton !ruck, 72 olr conditio-. c o - .
·lntometlonol 4 whool drive. ....... olo, wry nice. Coli
1114-2811-1472
Collll14-892·11122.

a

PKA

Full

Contact

Karate

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING . Rt . 1. Box 366. Go IIipolio. Cell614- 367-0578.

10:00

SHVLAW'S Plumbing and
Heeting, 21, Sixth St ..
Point Pleasant. W . Va. 304676-6420. Ucenaed and
insured

83

MEANWHII.E. •.

I THIN!&lt; I'LL GIVE
iMRGE TIME TO
THINK ••• ROOM TO
BREATHE.

Excavating

Good- 1 Excavating. basementa. footers. driveways.
septic tanks. landscaping.
Cell anytime 614-448 4637, Jamesl. Davison. Jr .
owner .

0 CIJ CD

St . Elsewhere
The re s•g nau on o f h•s hou·
scke cpcr forces Dr We stphal! to make some b 1g
de c•s•o ns and a hean n a nsp lant pa!ICOI IS SO anXIOU S
to leav e that she la1l s to
m ention a 'm•nor' problem
to the doc tor . (RJ !60 m•n)
Cl) life or Death in the
Emergency Room Th1 s docume nHtry f1lm ed at St
M ary 's M ed1cal Center an
l on g Beach. Cal1forn•a . ex ammes th e d ay-to d ay pre ssures
of
the
med1cfl l
profess1on
fit Independent Network
News

CD

J .A .R .Construction Co. Ru-

1 o ,JO

tland. Oh.61 4 -742 -2903;

(]) Jeannene Rankin ' The
Woman Who V o ted No ·
T o nrght' s pro gram pro f des
th e fir st woman elected to
th e U S House of Represen
t &lt;.l llves
(tf1 Newswatch
fl) Love American Style
10:45 ffi TBS Evening News

84

BARNEY

LOOKV THAR !!

Electrical
Refrigeration

MA NATURE'S

DID VOU EVER
SEE SUCH A
BODACIOUS
PITCHER?

~OOK AT
THEM PURTY

COLORS

.. ~N' THAT
GREAT BIG OL'
SCREEN

OVER TO THE
COWBOYS AN' INJUNS

SWITCH

11

My Little Margie

,oo o m m o

CIJ

oo m lt~

News
(2)
MOVIE :
' Between
Friends'
(]) Another Life
(!) SportsCenter
(!) News/ Sports/ Weather

Pomeroy. 614 · 992 -2284.

85

[]

Answer here: " (
(Answers tomorraw )
Jumbles GR IPE

Yesterday 's

I Answer

!II

UNEASY

OCCULT

What people often do at the oeauty
pa rlor - CU RL UP &amp; DYE

Joint he Jumble Lavers FenCiublnd rBCal.-a sb alght·word Supe• JlJmble!ii e.-ery mont h
F01lrn um~s Wflta lo: Jumbl• Lovers F1n Club . t:Jo 1t11s new spape1, Bo• ~241 .
GrandC&amp;nlreiStet ion. New 'l'olfi, N.Y. 10163 Include your name . address 1nd zip coda

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Slam in the slammer
described

11 :15

......... 1,1

Aloo pools filled. Call 814268 - 1141 or 814-4461176 or 614· 446-7911.

~

Dave Allen at Large

®

live From the Met

®

ESPN's Horse Racing

Weekly
11 .30 0 (I) 11) Tonight Show
ill MOVIE: ' A Midsummer
Night' s Sex Comedy '
CIJ Best of Groucho

6 · 20

I1J Catlins

Johnson Water Service. Cell

(I) WKRP in Cincinnati
0 ([) Police Story A detec ·

PEANUTS

614· 266-1743 or814-2&amp;e1 120.

NORTH
• 32

&amp;-20..84

.H32
• J4 3 2

. Upholttery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 1 63 Soc . Avo .. GoNipello
814-448-783301814 448 .
t833.
•
•

poetry

by

EAST
• 8 765

WEST

+J 10 91

it is not surprising that
South bid seven wtth his 34point hand. North's two-dia -

•to 1 6

.98
• 8765

• 10 9

+10 8 7

+ K J 96
SOUTH

The play at seven hearts
was stmple. South won the
spade lead with h is ace,
drew trumps with three

tAKQ

+AQ2
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
North

East

Paos
Pass

2t
3•
Pass

Pass

leads. and cashed the top
diamonds
Soutb

2+

Pass

z•
79

Pass

Pass

Opening lead

mond response showed any -

thing from no points up to a
lot more.

+AKQ
.AKQJ

Wes1

is unusually good; the poetry
is below the Shakespeare
level. In today 's hand, all the
players are lifers in a high ·
security prison. In addition,
South i s a card mechanic . So

+&gt;u

and

the

spade

king. Then came the key
play. He ruffed tile spade
queen i n dummy, discarded

tbe deuce of dubs on the
jack of diamonds. took th e

club finesse and was home.

Most of the reSI of the
field were m six no-trump .

+J

down one. In no- trump there
was no way to get to

dummy .

The last two lines of t he
Joker's poem are worth

By Oswald Jacoby

and James Jacoby

repeating :
"An appeals commtttee

One of the most interesting features of the Ameri can
Bridge Teachers· Associa ·
lion Quarterly IS a hand

was destined to fat!

What could they do. throw
in jail''.

him

(NEWSPAP ER ENTERPRISE ASSN !

tleve•~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

36 Cove!Rd

I Unhanned

37 Greek
mounta ins

5 Actress
Ina
10 "Great
Compr&lt;r
ITliser"
11 Undisturbed
12 Auk genus
13 Ukesome
beds
14 Sanskrit
school
15 V.F.W.
member
16 Perfonned
17 Timorous
19 Iranian

311 Early

years
39 Really :
DOWN
I Shoo!
2 Parcel

Yesterday' s An.;;wrr

out

3 Smit!Rn

23 Beatty

9Goad

in ·· Rect.,··
24 Poem
25 Te nnagant

11 Coal

by

leather
Cupid
15
Passport
4 Watch
endo rse5 Inclination
ment
6 Weapon
IS
McKmley
7 Certain
or Sinai
actresses
8 Hoosier
19 Rages
22 .. Sweet - "'
State

coin
20 Nuzzle
21 Singer
Murray
22 Toad
. 23 Latvian

28 Lasso
30 Perce tv es
32 .. K1ng Kon{ ·
star

34 AnaiS -

35 l;tw 1 Fr

1

ctty

24 Aesir
ruler
25 Betray
26 Parking
lot
mishap

27 Romero
29 Building
addition
30 Turf
31 Morning
moisture
33 Hlsname

means
"young

lion"
35 Mendaci ous

one

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here' s how
AXYDLBAAXR
Ia LONGFELLOW

trve JOins the v1 ce squad m

.,.,

SHE DOESN 'T
REMEMBER BECAUSE
SHE WAS ASLEEP!

of the crime unrt are accep tIng bnbes . (RI (60 m1n .1
(I) Latenight America
(.fll All In the Family
(i,J Jeannette Rankin 'The
W o man Who Voted No ·
Ton1ght' s program prof•les
th e fnst woman ele cted to
the U .S . Hou se of Aepresen·
t811VeS

Ul li2i Nightline
1
g) Gunsmoke
1 1:45 (&lt;) ESPN 's SportsWoman
· 12:00 ill Burns &amp; Allen

1o work

it :

One letter simply !!lands for ano th&lt;&gt;r I n th 1s ~amr!e .'\ is
used for thf' three L's . X for the tw o Lr~. r tc :-:; in glr' l rtlcrs
apostrophes. the length 11nd formatio n 0f t h(' l\11n:h art• ;-~ !]
hints. Eal"h day the code letters are difTerrnt

CRVPTOQUOTES

an effort to learn 1f members
JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Coli Jim Lanier. 304-8711·
7397 .

1n

Arthur Wemste1n. The hand

W Odd Couple

General Hauling

James Boys Water Service.

87

DERBY

{R)

C1) 700 Club
!II I!) @ MOVIE : 'I n the

All building and remolding.
Interior-Exterior. Concrete,
roofing, electrical, etc . Experienced and affordable.

82

...TI-IEV SAID TH' KING
LDST TI-l' COUNTRY
Ot.J A BET, AN' WE'RE
UNDER MOOVIAN
RULE NOW'

or beat

evenlnga.

Why pay more. Trade Center
Furniture Outlet. Rt . 7,
Kaneuga, Oh . Open 9 · 7PM .

Large Freezer $96. 5 TV ' s
•36 &amp; up, couches $35-

or 675 -

Wheel of Fortune
(I) Wheel of Fortune
Cl)
Nightly
Business
Report
(JQ) News
®
MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
Jeffersons
7 ,30 0 C1J Tic Tac Dough
(]) Not Necessarily The
News
(!) Inside the PGA Tour
(f) Family Feud
li) love Connection
0 Cil Family Feud
!II Dr . Who
(.11) Wheel of Fortune
I!) Cl2i People's Court
fit One Day at a Time
8 :00 0 CIJ 11) Real People
(J) HBO Premiere: 'Sak ·
harov '
f.I) MOVIE : 'Catastrophe '
C1) Flipper
® Auto Racing '84 :
Formula One Canadian
Grand Prix from Montreal.
Quebec
® C!) @ Fall Guy Col t
wmds up o n a pnson ro ild
gang afler go•ng after a ba•iJu mpmg envirO nmentali St
1Ri{60 m•n I
0 ([)~ America ' s Junior
Miss Pageant Bruce Jen ner
hosts th1 s 27 th annunl
beauty pas.Jeant 1r 1 whiCh
h1gh school scn1 ors fr om a cross Amen ca com petP for
the tl\le or Am euca's Jun iOI
Mrss 1984 (60 m1 n I
I]) [j}) Walk Through the
20th Century with Bill
Moyers 'Post-War Hopes.
Cold War Fears 81 11Moye rs
exa m~nes the 1950 's, a trm e
of nostal gia and neur OSIS
(60 m1n ) !Closed Capt1one d I
fll MOVIE 'Send Me No
Flowers'
8 :30 ® MOVIE: ·rr ue Grit"
9 :00 O CIJClJ FactsoflifeToo ·
11e tnes 10 conv1ru;e a
youngster to come o ut of h1s
fam1 ly's apnnme nt wh en an
eme ryency forc es the eva·
cuat 1on of th e wh ole bl ock

SEWING Machine repaira .
service . Authorind Singer
Sales
Service Sharpen
Sciuors . Fabric Shop .

offer. Coil li94- 5B1 8 ext.
187. doyo; 814·992- 7300,

675- 1962 or 675-4580 .

llffT/CIPIITEIJ

rienced roofing. including
hot tar application, carpen·
tar, electrician, mason. Cell

your

IREPHOGI

Mazda Sportslook

rlQ) CBS News
(jj) Great Outdoors J1m Ta ·
bor looks at the bas1cs of
c ross- cou ntry skung an d
ca tches the exc 1tem ent o f
Ma1n e ·s Win ter dog -s led
races IClosed Capt1onedl
O (]) PM Magazine
(I) Here Come the Brides
ffi SportsCenter
(]J Ul 1121 Entertainment
Tonight

a.

6

7 . Coli 448- 8033.

~EFLE XES

OWN TV, PAW

78

evenings.

.. IT COULDN'T

RINGLE'S SERVICE expe-

&amp;

304· 6752218
p.m

All new 3 room, bath apt.
Close to Plee1ant Valley
Hoap. Private. quiet. 304-

1331 .

1 ~ E~~ GUE5S SNAWMV'$

ARE PRETTY
I CKIOII. HUH, DR. ~OT?

304-675-7110.

1 6 It. truck

Waahert &amp; dryers 169.95 &amp;
179.9&amp;--Thia week only.
Hupp'a Applian ces &amp; Glanware, comer At . 141 &amp; Rt.

Fettv Tree Trimming, stump
removal . Cell 304 -876 -

a.

contelned.

304-676-1 386 .

ANNIE

Baaemen1s, Footers. Con·
crete work, Backhoe's,
Dozer &amp; Oitcher, Dump
trucks,
water -gas -sewerelectrical lines .

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Nice 1 and 2 bedroom
unfurnished apartment! .

One bedroom furnished apt,
Pt. Pit . Vary clean. nice .
Audits only, no pets. Phone

RON ' S Television Service .
Specieliz:ing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quezar. and
house cells. Call 304-576 -

1822.

Phone 304-675-8879 .

before

otone. Cell 614-387-0409
or 614- 367·7244.

304- 675 · 2088
4560 .

I
I
·-·
....--c-.-rJ r []
I (J

m

lOSTOPMer

opoed prop . 1974 model

614- 992 -3917.

condition, AC. PW, P8, PS.

Sl.ft't?SW T'TRY

mateo . 304·6711-2296 .

-------7
1 982 Honda lnteratate. eJC·

1243 or 446-1616

v:A~D 'ft)O'REO

2398 or 814-448- 24114.

Motorcycles

'Snoopy .

0

exp . Call 614-3B8 -9852 .

1982 Chevy Von loaded.
26, 500 mil eo.
1423.

I

CD

PAINTING· interior and exterior. plumbing. roofing,
aome remodeling. 20 yra .

GET

$1,500.00. Moke offer.
304· 676 -6397 ,

167 days: 614 -992 -7300

Call614-388·9857 .

Gene Smith, 992-6309.

74 Harley Davidson Super
Glide chopper. All chrome.

e4900.
6846 .

Marcum Roofing • Spouting . Now installing r~bber
roofa . 30 years expertence.
specializing in built up root .

acotchguard-water axtraction, deodorizers. FREE eati·
mates. Reasonable rates .

rider . Cell 446-701 II oftor
5PM .

1979 Ford Courier XL T
sports package, PB, rack -In·
penning lteerlng.new tires.
auto. tranamitsion. 4 cyl. 32
mpg. selling price $2495.
retail $3026 . Call814·388·

7 :00

1984 Chevy &amp;10. 4 wheel
dirve, 304-882-3184 .
trailer

Unscramble these four Jumblea,
one leftlr 10 each aquare. 10 form
four ordlnarv words .

CII 1D t12l ABC News

Improvements
Home

GENE'S DEEP STEAM
CARPET CLEAN.

2726 .

offe•. Call 614· 985· 4454.
6 wheeler ultra terrain, good
condition. $400. 304 -882 -

S1 000 .
0193.

1983 Plymouth Colt 1B.OOO
Tractor, model B with cultivators . Call614 -256-6417.

®

byHonrl~rnoldondBobLeo

0 !II

offar . Coli 614-992-6647.

74

sky root. 22.000 mites . exc .
cond.. 87.496. Call 446-

61

TOUR OF

a.

llo 4 W.O.

Vans

Cll

11

~THAT 8CRA1t11~ WORD GAME

C:!J ~ ~~~~

(]) Rifleman

H
S Home Improvements
vinyl aiding. roofing, room
addition. storm windows.

1958 Harley

Call 514·256 -6582.

~PCOMit.IG

([)
MacNeil / lehrer
Newshour
ffi} Powerhouse
fl) Star Trek
0 (%) CD NBC News

MOVIE :
Come Home'

AIJD 511JCE; l'M
,POIJ501tiiJG THE

Trucks for Sale

72

1974 Ford Comet 2dr.6 cyl.

TV, chest. couch. rug, Vm - Jam Strawbarries 1000
maha organ . 446 -4052 or . quarts of good jam berries
60 cents per quart . Pick your
446 ·2248 .
own . 2 miles back of New
Old model road grader. 1 2 Haven at Union Camp
h
blade. good engine, Ground . Clal 304 -882 ·
2237 .
6500 . Ca11614· 256 · 1216.

Two

~~::::::~:::::::~;y~~;;;~;o~-~.,~-~~181

Blonde Wulit~er spinet piano , $600 . Call 448 -0264.
Kimball console piano 1 1fz
yr. old, like new . Cell 614·

6 30

Scrv1ces

t.dtl

64

&amp;

(J) News/Sports/Weather

OFTHI9 ROC!&lt; GltOUP-

Rex n1bbitts $3, Milk goat

58

(]] Nevv Treasure Hunt
I]] Fishin' Hole

676-1423.

6799 .

57

News

self -contained. Call 304-

Briarpatch Kennels Prof••·
sional All -breed grooming.
Indoor -outdoor boarding fa cilities . Piclt up and delivery
service . English Cocker Spa·
niel puppies. Call 814 -388 ·

64,000 ect.miles, ex. cond.

10 gallon aquarium with
acc . &amp; fish _Also youth bed &amp;
mattress . Call 614 - 388 -

e:oo o m CIJ o m ®t m ®I

CAPTAIN EASY

ftf}I}Nt !]}~

Senlinei-Page-

BYRIN

EVENING

1972 22 It Holiday cemper;

p.m . 614· 949-2677.

For Sale : Red velvet antique
love seat, chair; antique oak
couch; Cabal -Nelson piano.
wicker lamp . jCall614 -643 -

WEDNESDAY

·~

roy. Ohio. 304-875-1413.

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call

614· 446 · 3249

Built on vour lot a new home
you can afford O\ler 1, 1 00
sq .ft , 6 rms . &amp; bath. car peted. ready to move into.
826.600 . Also garages &amp;
basements . Call Patriot
Home Builders anytime
446 -8038 . Will consider
mobile home as trade in .

CIRCULATEO THE
TELEPHOTO CL.OS.E-UP
5HOT AROUND THE
DEPARTMENT-

36ft . camping tniiler. AC ,
new ltove. new 1hower.
patio screened in . Can be
seen at Hidden Lllkea, Pome-

7795.

2101 .

Newly remodeled 2 bdr .,
equipped kitchen, central
air, $260. 821 '12 Second
Ave .. Gallipolis. Cell 446 -

388·8243 .
Small house . 2 bedroom.
S100 . mth .. $25 . deposit .
Does not include utilities &amp;
11duhs only Call 6,4 -949 ·

Furnished Rooms

1

Mote, oleepo 8. In good
condition. Coil e14-9923221 .

HILLCREST KENNELS

The

Television
Viewing

17 ft . aelt contained Tr.vel

Professional All Breed Dog
Obedience Training. lndividual &amp; classes available. Call

45

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pets for Sale

9790.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

1984

Motors Home•
1o Campers

Co11 446-1943.

aher 4 p .m .
Chain sew. king coal &amp; wood
stove, large Motorola ste reo . Call 614 -256 - 1768.

79

Starcraft pop-up camper, 17
fl . aetf contained cemper .

Phone day 304- 882- 2222.
evening 882·3239 .

66

1984
June

2604 .

64

Ju;,. ~.

KPWVA
y X p'

BPP

DP
KX

KX
AOZP

KAWK

XKAPSB

BAXY

NPPT

WLXK Ars · B

KAP

N WI T K

D P S V F

0

KAWK

0

K X

DPSVF

BAXY
KX
DP
W
JXJP
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: WHEN TiiREE PEOPLE TALK ON
TilE CORNER, TiiAT'S CONVERSATION . WHEN ONE·
LEAVF.S,
TiiAT'SGOSSIP.
- ANONY .
I
.
..
'

'

�Page

12-The Daily Sentinel

Banking organization elects chainnan

Local Briefs:
Pomeroy lodge to meet
Pomeroy Lodge 1&amp;1 will meet at 6 p.m . June 22. Refreslunents wUI
be served. E.A. work will begin at 7 p.m. All Masons welcome.
The lodge Is challen~ all area Masons to a golf match Saturday
at the JayMar Golf Course. Glft certlflcates from Jaymar's and
Clarks Jewelers will be awarded after the first nine holes.

Central committee meeting set
Th~

Meigs County Democratic Executive CommitteewUI meet at
7:30 p.m. Thursday in Carpenter's Hall on East Main Street. All
interested Democrats are invited to attend.

Ice cream social Saturday
Salem Township Fire Department will sponsor an ice cream social
Saturday, July 21, beginning at 11 a.m .
In addition to homemade ice cream, sandwiches will be available
for lunch, and games will be offered.

Antique display set for weekend
In observance of Heritage Weekend Bank One, Pomeroy branch,
will have on display antiques and will be serving cookies and punch
Friday and Sa turday
Employees to fit th~ occasion will be in old fashion dress. The bank
invites one and all to stop m and v iew their antique display and enjoy
rpfreshmf'n 1s.

Mailing instructions offered
" H .vou TT'C('ivc mail by rural canier you shou ld use your assignl'd
fiw digi t house number and road name as your mailing address and
not Rural Rout~ 2, .1, or l" advised Pomeroy PostmastPr .Jim

Soulsbv.
Our to a change schPdulrd to take pffect July i, four rural routes
will be Pmanating from lh!' PomProy office instead of thr preSI'nt
three.
The reduction of the length of the present routes a nd and adding the
fourth could result in earlier delivery for some rural route
customers. Some cu stomers will not be servrd by their preS£'nt
carriers therefore makmg the designation of Route 2, 3. and 4
obsdetc.
Customers may obtain the ir five digit houS£' number and road
name by contacting the Meigs County House Numbering System at

992-2994.
Customers "ill ha,·c !10 da)'S from July i, to notify publishing
compani&lt;'s of their con-pet mailing addrPSS. After the ~ay period,
the post offic&lt;' will 'ubmit c hanges on second class publications and
t:"ndica ls tha t ha\·&lt;' not !xvn c hangrd by thC' customer.

W uod strikes car
.4 Starke, F la. man escaped injury Thesday night when the
windshield of the car he was dr iving was struck by a piece of wood
falling from a pa ssing truck.
The Gallia -Meigs post of the s tate highway patrol said l::mmil E.
Rodgers, 40, was eastbound on Ohio 124 and a Mack truck driven by
Lesley U. Frank. 2.1, Rt .1, Pomeroy, was westbound. When the
vehicles met, a piccC' of wood fell from the truck, striking Rodgers'
windshie ld the patrol sa id .
No mjuriC's were reponed and Rodgers' car received light damage
in the i: 4&gt; p.m. incident Lf.,;Jey was citrd by the patrol for an
unseeurP load.

By CHRIS'IDPHER LINDSAY
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP I -John Reed,
a youthlul field commander in !he
banking revolution led by Citicorp,
has emerged from a three-man
power struggle as the next chairman of the world's largest banking
organization, a company source
says.
Reed. 4!i, will rPplace Waltl'r B.
Wriston, who Is widely respected
within the industry as a crusader
against Depression-era banking
regulations. Wriston, &amp;1, is sch&lt;'duled to retire at the end of August.
The selection of Reed, which was
made by the baaed of directors
Thesday, ac'COrdlng to a Citicorp
executive who asked not to be
identified, ended a battle between
Reed and two other vice chainnen
handpicked by Wriston in 1978.
Telephone ca lls to Citicorp staff

Pomeroy mayor fines 14

consuming J:x:&gt;t:r in motor vehicle.
$6.'1 and costs; Philip Ohlingt•r,

Pomero.v, illega l tum on tT&gt;d, $6.1 and
costs; Victori a !\ottingham, Pomeroy, running traffic light, $63 and
costs; Wayne Dent. M idd1Ppot1,
illega l left rum. $1.1 and costs .
l.;,w n•ncc HermJn , Middleport,

open flask. $88 and costs; Donnie
Stone, Pomeroy. disorder ly
m annPr, $63andcosts,$25forfailure
to appear; Ronald Boll'S, New
Springfield, fallur&lt;&gt; to stop at traffic
light, $63 and costs; Randal Kim&lt;'S,
Long Bottom, ran n·affic light, $63
and costs; James Gh"'n, Middle·
pori, no protective or eye equipment, $43 and costs; Shawn Gil m ore, Pomeroy, no eyr protN'tion,
1&gt;4:! and costs.
Forfeiting bonds were Susan
Abbott, Athens, speed, $45; Sa muel
Rooseve lt Howard Jr., Baltimore.
Ohio. illegal turn, $63, consuming
alcohol in motor vehicle, ii4:!; Ray
Roush, Racine, speed, $47; Darlene
Jeffers, Syracuse, $.'il, speed; Cindy
!J&gt;e Furnla, Marion, Va., speed ,$47;
Roy Brooks, Athens, speed. $4R;
VictoriJ

PaintPr .

M iddi C'port,

' JX'rd. $49

Mayor accepts bond forfeits
Four bonds were forfeited and
five nnes W('f(' i.ssuffi Tuesday in
Middlepor1 Mayor's Coun
Forfcittng bonds wpre: Mark A.
Haley, MiddiPport, $450 for OWl,
$100 driving whi lPunder suspension,
$12i possPssion of marijuana a nd$.10
no oprra!Or's li('{'nSf': Hl'rtx•r1
Farms. ChauncPy. $XO disorderly
mannPr and $100 disorder-lv
manner; Douglas D. Starcher,
Rutland. $Ui fleeing police and $!"Jit
running a rrd light: Wallace Reuter,

Middlepon. $&lt;150 OWl.
Fine'S Issued wert': Ricky D.
Ashbum, Langsville, $10 and costs,
wrong way on a one-way street;
Tommy Schulocd, Middlepon, 10
days, probation and restitution,
criminal mischief; Don Lovett,
Middlepor1 , 5 days, disorderly
manner; George McDaniel , Middleport, 10 days, two disorderly
manner charges; Wllliam Hayes,
Syracuse, $10 and costs, expired
tags.

seeking confltmatlon of the execu·
tlve change were not returned
Thesday night, but the source was
consideredtobelnapositlontoknow
about the move.
Bankers worldwide speculated
for months over which of the llhree
vice chairmen would be Wriston's
successor.
Reed, an engineer from the
Massachusetts InstltuteolTechnology, joined the organization in 1965
and has held vartous domestic and
foreign !""llions. rn· 1974, he was
charged with makingtheConsumer
Services Group rum a profit. With a
huge commitment to high techno!ogy, that goal took 10 years to
accomplish and was oneofthemost
massive investments in banking
history.
Under Reed's stewardship, Citibank , th!' prime subsidiary of the

By MITCHELL LANDSBERG
Associated Press Wrtter
NEW YORK !API - A man
accused of killing eight children a nd
two women on Palm Sunday in a
case of misplaced jealousy was
being held in "extreme protectiv~
custody" today in a specia l ja il ward
for notorious killers.
Police believe Chris topher Thomas. 34, smg le-ha ndedly shot the 10
victims to death at close rangP at
their home in one of the ctty's worst
mass murders. He has been in police
custody since JunP 9 on unrelated
charges .
The slayings, di scowrrd by

relatives a nd a neighbor who found a
baby crawling amid the corpses,
originally were thought to have been
the resu lt of a soured drug deal
because drug paraphernalia was
found in the home .
But at a newsconferenceThesday
night, Police Commissioner Ben jamin Ward said Thomas apparently killed "in the erroneous belief
tha t his estranged wife was
having an affair with Enrique
Fk'rmudrz," the owner of the house
whrrr the killings occured.

Dissolution filed

Two couples filed for marriage
licenses in Meigs County Probate
Coun .
Thomas Charles Poner, 43, of
Middlepon, toJudyAnnStewart,39,
of Middlepor1, and James Roland
Reeves, 39, of Cheshire, to Emily
Sur Lewis, 33, of Cheshire.

One coupiP fi lrd for dissolut ion in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Cout1 : Alicia C. Council of Rutland
filrd against JamC'S D. Council uf
Langsvilll• .

PI ummer

File for marriage

'"Theobald walks, lihat'sa glven,"
said TIIomas H. Hanley, chief bank
stock analyst for llhe investment
firm of Salomon Brothers. The
selection of Reed Is also expected to
send shock waves through the many
Cltlcorpofflcerswhollnedupbehind
the losers .
Wriston, who earns $1.2 mtuion a
year in salary and benefits, joined
Clticorp ln 1!115.
Citlrorp directors include lihe
chairmen of such companies as
Exxon, Xerox and Union Pacific.
But It was widely held that lihe flnal
choice on hls successor would be
made by Wriston alone.
Wriston, once considered a Irontrunner to be President Reagan's
treasury secretary, hadbeenmenll·
oned by industry Insiders as a
possible successor to Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul A.
Volcker.

the commissioner said, declining to
elaborate.
Asked how one person could have
accomplished the killings, since
police said two guns were used,
Ward replied, "There were 10
people, but there were only two
adu lts."

Bermudez' pregnant girlfriend
and two of his children were among
those who dled in the attack in a
first -floor nat in a predominantly
black and Hispanic Sl'Ction of
13rooklyn.
"At this time we believr hi' acted
a lone," Ward said. " We have no
evidenc:.-e thatthercwasanyoncPlsc

involved."
Ward said detectives used "oldfashioned pounding th&lt;' pav(•m&lt;&gt;nl"
to place Thomas at the scene of the
crime. "Physical ev idencr" inside
the house indicated hew as the killer,
he sa id .
"It was the physical evidence that
we believe will be the most !Piling,"

Hartinger ...

Veterans Memorial

0 0 0

_,_c_o_nr_in_u_ed_r_ro_m.....:..p_ag_c_l_,_ _ _ _ __

continued. "ThPSI' false allegations
wl're an attrmp1 to f'mbarrass mr
a nd members of my family.
" I want to note that all criminal
c harge'S aga inst me arP now
dismisSI'd. but I have not dismisst'li
my civil case in U.S. Civil Com1
aga ins t those who have violatrd my
right s," the statement said.
"This dismissal and aquit tal in the
crimina l case !('aves me even moiT'
confident that an ultimate jury
verdict in thefederalcouti proceedings will provide further compiPie
vindication of my successful and

Meigs 648 Board," the statement
concluded.
Mrs. P lummer referred to her $12
million la wsuit filed in February
19Rl in U.S. District Court against
the 648 board. county commission ·
ers , the Ohio Department of Mental
Health and other official,.
The lawsuit was filed a month
aftrr

a

state-apJX)intPd

rf'vicw

group released a report of Mrs.
Plummer's activities as 648 board
executive director, criticizing her
opcrwation as "extravagant." She
was dlsmisSI'd by the board la st
September.

tive director of the Gallia-Jackson·

Area deaths
James C. Pauley Jr.

c:

James
Pault&gt;y Jr., !i6. Mason ,
dird Tuesday in Pleasant Vallt•y
Hospital.
Bam April4, 1~28. in Wa11:l, W.Va.,
hi' was the son of the laiL' Jamt&gt;s C.
Pauley Sr. and Lottie A. Goodson
Pauley, who survivf's at Cedar
Grove, W.Va.
HI? was master machinist at the
Phtlip Sporn Plant. He was a charter
member of the First !Japtist Churc h
in Mason, a chaner member of tlw
first Southern Baptist Church of
Pomeroy, a c hart~ r member of the
Fat lh Baptist Churc h of Mason,
whic h h£1 a ttC'ndr-d. Hr SC'I\'Pd in Ihe
U.S. Navy during World War II.
Sunnving are his wife, Betty .J .
Samples Pauley of Mason; two sons ,
.JamC'S C Pauley lil of Le tart, and
.John R. Pauley of Coo lv ill~; and
four grandchildren .
Funeral sprvices will be held at
l :.l'l p.m . Friday in Faith Baptist
Church in Mason with the Rev .
,Jerry Scott officiating. Ruria Iwill be
in Kirkland Memorial Gardens .
Friends may call on Thursday 2-4
p.m . and i 9 p.m. at Foglesong

Funeral Home in Mason.
The&gt; body will be taken to the
church on!' hour prior to ser.1ces.

Georg H. Reuter
Georg H. RrutPr, 73, White Lake
Township, dird June 7.
Mr. ReutPr was retired from
In spector Army Tank Automotive
Command and a mPmbcr of BPOE
810. fina nce cha irman of Major
Projects fund, SI'Cond degree team,
Pontiac ShrinP Club, past president
of Warren ShrinP Club, F&amp;AM
Wayne Lodge. Fm1 WaynP, Ind .,
and U.S. Army World War II.
He was prccrded in death by his
wife, Dorothy.
HE' is survived by one daughter,
Mrs. Edward !Carolyn! Canady;
two granddaughters, Sarah a nd
Laura; one sister, Mrs. Lawrence
tMarjoriel Ll'Onacd of Pomeroy.
F'unera I services were held June
11 in D.O. McComb and Sons
Funeral Home, Fort. Wayne, a nd
burial was in Lindc-nwood Cemele ty, For1 Wayne.

imponance of space to nationa l
defense.
His selection as the first Commanderol the new Space Command
recognized the role he played in
Force, the [}('pa rtmPnt and [}('fenS&lt;'
and the Administration on the
growing imponancr of space to
national security. The generalis the
key operational commander toda y
who has been out front in advocating
survival sateUite systems. He al'io
has led the drive for improwments
in satellite surveillance, protection
and negation systems that will
impmve th£" nalion's detPITent
posture in space.
Under General Hartinger's lead ·
ership, the Space Command com pleted the transfer of three Air
Force bases, lour Air Force
stations, 22 worldwid~ missile
wa rning and space smveillance
sit e s and two operational satellite
systems in just nine months, fivp
months ahead of schedule. The
Space Command a lso took over two
new satellite systems now under
development--the Global Position Ing System, the Depanment of
Defense navigational satellite systPm, and Milstar, the next genera lion strategic and tactical military
satellite communications systPm.
Another Important achievement
was establishing close links between
the spacr research and development community a nd thl' opera tional US£'rs of satellitr systems. In

Emergency runs
Four emergency runs were madC'

January, 19&amp;3, GenPral Hartinger
persona lly sponsored a major
review of current technology in high
energy lasers and other directed
Pnecgy development programs.
On&lt;' tC'sult of the techology review
was identifying the potential of short
wave length ground -based lasers.
This was pat1icularly important in
light of the President's speech on
March 2l, 1983 ca lling for a defense
against ballistic missilPS.
Genera I Hartinger played a
major role in consolidating previously fragme nted space-pl anning
activitiC'S. Spac(' Command is now
the focu s for centralized planning,
consolida ted requiremPnts and operational supprt . He sponsored
many projects and srudies that will
shape Air Forces pace programs far
into the future. Among these are
documenting the Soviet space
threat , developing space strategy
and inc luding space activities in
Joint ChiPfs of Staff exercises. He Is
also promoting space education,
trainlng and carPer development
and advancements in Air Force
space medici nP.
The Genral Thomas D. ll'hite
USJ\F Space USAF Space Trophy
traditionally has been awarded to
those outs tanding people who have
fur1herrd Ihe U. S. aerospace
pgm·ams. Among thr recipients
were Col. Michael Collins, Apollo II
astmnaut and astronats Neil Arm ·
strong and Col. Edwin Aldrin, Jr.
In accepting the award General
Hartinger said : "To be included In
the company of such men as the past
recipients is an honor that willbeone
oft he highlight s of my life."

rr=============i

by local units Thesday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service reported.
At 1:20 a .m ., Pomeroy to Union ·
Avenue for David Edwards, taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; at
3: 2i p.m. Rutland lor Rick Johnson,
taken to Holz£&gt;r Medical Center; a 1
7: 15 p.m., Middleport to Brownell
Avenue, for Jerry Collins, taken to
Veterans Vlemorial ; at 8:45 p.m.
Middleport to the Friendly Tavern
for Janice Birdwell, treated but not
transported .

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By lhe Bend ........Page 7, 8, 9
ClassUieds .... Pages 10, ll, 12

Mostly cloudy tonight and
Friday WW. a chance of showers
and lhuodel'!llonns. Low near 65.
High near 80. Winds easterly to
southeasterly 1~15 mpb tonight.
Chance of rain 110 percent tonight
and Friday.

funlcs-TV ............. Page 13

Dea&amp;hs ................... Page 10
Editorials ................ Page 2
Sporis ..... ........ Pages3, 4, 5,

e

Vol.34, No.4q
Copyrighted 1984

Merchants hargains ...Pages 8-9
'Hillbill

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Reagan promotes agency against major crime
By MICHAEL PUTZEL
Associated Press Writer
HARTFORD, Conn. !API - President Reagan,
whose political car('('r has been built on the bedrock of
fighting big government, now is promoting a new
federal agency to fight \1olent crime.
In a speech Wednesday to the nation's sheriffs
gathered in Hartford lor their annual conference,
Reagan announced creation of a National Cen ter for
the Analysis of Violent Crime.
He said it would use " the la test computerized
technology for detect ive work" to identify and track
"repeat killers." murderers who kill again and again,
usually preying on a particular group or community.
White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said
alter Reagan's speech the new center actually would
concentrate on solving several kinds of crimes,
including child abduction and molestation cases,

sexually oriented homocides, rapes and arsons.
Many such crimes, he said, are committed by
nomadic criminals who drift across the country,
passing from one police jurisdiction to another.
"The next jurisdiction (where a crimr is
committed! s tart s all over ," Fitzwater said. "The last
one never follows lihe criminal. We've always had
trouble relating a crime in one state to a crime in
another state."
The new center, he said, "'111 "focus on behavior
patterns" and a ttempt to establish nationwide crime
patterns that suggest a single person is involved.
"Often these are particularly vicious or repetitive
crimes, and it is nossible to identify patterns ," the
spokesman sa id . He added that seemingly " motiveless murders " nrc among the center's targets
bccauS£' such cases often st ump local police lorcPS

accustomed to solving crimPS by determining who
had a motive for committing them .
F itzwater said the center, which will be located at
the FBI Academy in Quantico, Va., wlll cost about $2.5
million to set up and start operatingdutingthe next 16
months. After that , he said, it is expected to cost about
$1.!i million a year.
Asked how Reagan could justify establishing a new
agency to do work traditionally left to state and local
government when he has campaigned so long against
government interterence ln local affairs, Fitzwater
said: "Occasionally, the facts warrant it," the same
ra tionale Reagan had used earlier in the day to justify
his new-found support for legislation that would
penalize states which fail to adopt 21 as their legal
drinking age.
But most uf Reagan' s speech to the friendly

audienee of law enforcement officials was devoted in
this election year to what he calls his administration's
war on crime and to blaming unnamed liberal
Democrats for holding up an anticrime bUI in
Congress.
Reagan said Il'Jl'lrled crime dmpped 4.3 percent in
19ll'.!, the first decline since 1977.
"Now I know llhere are a few people who want to
attribute the encouraging downward trend in crime to
a statistic, the fa ct that fewer nnembers of the
population are now in the crime-prone age group,"
Reagan said. "Well, a coincidence isn't a
correlation .''
Reagan attributed the decline mstead to a "new
conl'l'nsus
that unerly rejects the counsels of
leniency toward criminals and thP ilhPral philosophy
that fostered it."

Special primary will
cost Ohio $5.5 million

--~=}
.

.

- .. -

;~,,
1&gt;

Sllo\RING TilE SPOTLIGIIT durtng Wednesday
night's sixth annual Dave DUesHWbillySupperwere,
left to right, ~rge Harris, a member of the
committee who "worked beyond the call of duty" for
lihe annual charity goff toomaments; General James

Hartinger and Da •e Diles. The three will be at
Riverside Golf Course in Mason today taking part in
the swing ofthings. (See additional photo and story on
Page~ today).

Storms batter Dixie
By The Associated Press
Persistent rains that have tuined
millions of dollars in crops in tl1e
Midwest continued today as power·
ful thunderstorms cooled record
trmperatures in the Southeast,
where the mercury was at 100
degrees.
Thunderstorms were reponed
today from the lower Mississippi
Valley into Georgia and South
Carolina. In FayPtteville, Ark ., 2\1,
inchC'S of rain fell ina six-hour period
ending early toda y.
Overnight, rains in the Midwest
fed floodwat ers which c la imed two
lives and damaged more than $430

million in crops, whill' volunt eers in
Ida ho bolstered anearthendam that
broke.
More rain was forecast today
from the nonhern Plateau region
through the Rockies, the nonhern
P lains, across th!' upper Great
Lake'S region and the Ohio Valley to
the southern Atlantic Coast.
In Texas, mpanwhile, a lack of
rain was theocderoftheday. Corpus
Christ i has joined the city of Alice in
orderin g water rationing, effective
Julv 1. Violations of rt'strictions on
washing cars , lawn watering a nd
other hom!' use could draw a fine of
up to $:W.

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DAN'S IN MIDDLEPORT

A FRIEND WHEN YOU
NEED A

Inside today:

Admissions John Edwards,
Pomeroy; Maxine Russell,
Syracase.
DisehargPS - Twila Clark, Clifford Plantz. l&lt;athlcen Clonch, Edith
Teaford.

focusing awarenf"ss within the Air

THURSDAY SPECIAL

WITH EACH HAIR CUT
&amp; BLOW DRY

holding company, has become one
of fhe best-known retail banks in the
country and fhe largest credit-card
Issuer. Reed's division alone, with
deposits of ~billion, would be the
lOth largest bank in lihe country.
The other two men considered
contenders for the chairmanship
were Thomas C. Theobald, &lt;16, in
charge of theCitlcorp's Institutional
Banking Group, and Hans H.
Angermueller, 59, chief legal
officer.
Known for Its bitter competltlon
for key positions, Citlcorp and
Cltlbank executives and underlings
had been lining up behind one -or
more - of the "big llhree," not
anticipating a flnal decision on a
Wriston successor until the July
board meeting.
Analysts expected Theobald and
perhaps Angermueller to quit
rather than remain on as losers.

Mass killer held in protective custody

effective administration as execu-

Founccn defendants wt•rc finrd
a nd seven others forfeited bonds in
the cour1 of Pom&lt;'roy Mayor
Ric hard Seyler Tuc'Sday night.
Fined wprc Shauna Tackett.
Pomero)·, open nask. $.1&lt;;; Steve P.
Fisher. Rac inP. disordf'rly manner.
$63 a nd costs. disordf'rly mannPr
and disturbing lh&lt;' Jlf'JCe. $63 and
costs, tr..,spa" . S211 and cost s;
Timolh,·Thomas. Pomcroy.$4.1and
costs. improper turn ; Chris CaJX'han . Rutland. open flask. $88 and
costs; Rick Hawley. Middleport,

Wednesday, June 20, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Henderson issues reminder
on use of seat belts in cars
Only six percent of 2,230 drivers
and passengers involved in ru ral
fatal traffic accidents during 198.3
were wearing safety belts according
to Ohlo State Hi ghway Patrol
officials.
Lieutenant Dan Henderso n, commander of the Gallia-Meigs post of
the state highway patrol, said 121 of
139 restrainPd occupants survived
fatal collisions.
Henderson said the summer
months are the most dangerous of
the year because good weather and
vacations prompt some people to
drive at higher speeds. In addition,
Henderson added there are also a
greater number of drinking drivers
during the summer.
High speed collisions an&gt; mure
frequent In llhe summer Henderson
said, and a lot of drivers do not
realize they are in a trouble until It is
too late to take evasive action and
·'the only thing between you and
deallh or Injury is a seat belt and
shoulder harness."
It can be a fatal assumption,
Henderson said, to think It ls better
1o be thrown clear of a vehicle
involved in an acclden I. "They

ignore the fact they will be travelling
the same speed as the vehicle whrn
they arc e jected," Henderson sa id .
"They also diS£'0unt thP fact our
roadsides are lined with trees, pole'S.
roc ks, fences and other structures."
" In the nmrly m caS£'s in which
wf' know what happened to thf'
ejected occupants of a motor
vehicle," Henderson continued, "68
percent were thrown clear of the
vehicle and received their fatal
injuries when they struck some
roadside object. Another 27 percent
wert' crushed by their own vehicles
after being thrown from the
passenger compartment. "
A considerable number of these
people would have survived if they
had remained in llhe vehicle
Henderson added. A recent in-do&gt;pth
study dlscovered that 70 of 158
fatally Injured occupants were
ejected from a relatively undamaged passenger compartment
Henderson said.
These studies, Henderson said,
leads law enforcement officials to
belleve the consistent use of safety
belts could cut the traffic death toll
by at least one-half .

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP!
Ohioans may know by mrly July
what a U.S. District Coun panel will
do to resolve a dilemma over the
state's unconstitutional congressiona l districts, says Secretary of
State Sherrod Brown.
"I have no idea what they' regoing
to do exco&gt;pt I think that's about the
time we'll know,· · Brown said
Wednesday.
"U the court says 'yes you have to
redistrict this year and have a
specia l congress ional dL,trict prim ·
ary,' it means that likely the coun
will tell the LegislaturP to do it (and I
they'll give the Legislature 'X'
number of days," Brown said.
"ThPcourt thenwillhavetolookat
those lines because somebody will
challenge them, likely, and that will
take a few morP days," he said.
Attorneys for Gov. Richard Celeste and Brown have smt a lett er to
thecoun pledging to cooperate in an

Heritage Weekend Schedule
SATURDAY
3 P.M. Concessions open on upper riverfront parking lot.
The flatboat, Adventure Galley II, arrives at the
landing. Music provided by the Sweet Mountain
Sounds.
R P.M. to 11 P.M. Dance begins in parking lot, featuring
"Sugar Bear"; in the event of rain, dance will be
held in the City Hall 1\uditorium.

SUNDAY
I P.M. Old-time children games in the upper parking lot ,
prizes will be awarded.
1: 15 P.M. Doors open in the Meigs County Museum . i\udio·
slide show on rivers, roads and railroad in the mu·
seum, to be presented every 45 minutes.
1:30 P.M. and 3 P.M . Music by the Sweet Mountain Sound
3 P.M. Simon Says contest in the upper parking lot , 50
cents entry fee, $25 prize to the winner, sponsored
by the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce and the
Meigs County Museum .

a tt empt to speed up the proc-ess but
also stating thPy s till do not want ro
see redistricting affect lhP 19&amp;1
elections if at all possible.
"It's going to cost the state $.'i.!i
mill ion ... to conduct a special
primary congressional district clcc
tion, and I don't think thrstateor any
other government entity should
spend that kind of money," Brown
said . "And I don't think we have it to
spend on something like this that
many of us see as unnecessary.''
The U.S. Supreme Court on June4
let stand a lower-te'Ourt decision that
said the Legislature, in creating the
districts fr om which Ohio's
members in the U.S. House are
e lected, failed to comply with th&lt;'
high-court' s one-man. onevot£'edirt
of 1964.
As a result, the case is headed
oack tothet hree·judgefederal coun
panel that originally ordered new
district boundaries be drawn . The
lower court had issued a stay of it s

original dec ision p&lt;mding the Su ·
preme Coun review .
Brown sa id pat:"twork from the
Supreme Court had not arrived.
But he will continue to argue that
election timetables for absentee
ballots and other matters spelled out
in current law effectiv ely would
block holding a second congres ·
sional dishict primary this year
"J think the a rgumPn ts are
s tronger in our behalf this limP than
when we granted thestav because ...
people have already been nomi ·
nated for office and we've already
had a congressional district primary in May," Brown said .
"I think our arguments are
strongPr, but the SupremeCoUJ1 has
spoken in themeantimeand I gues s
WI' haw to weigh how ... big a part
1ha I will play in their decision," he
sa id .
Brown's comments camf&gt; as he
certified sta tpwide results from
Ohio's May Bprimarv.

Adventure Galley II flatboat
will dock in Pomeroy Saturday
Pomeroy is one ot the 72 liver to»w; the ;\dven!un' GaUey U
flalhoat will visit.
The Oatboat is a reptica of a 1800&gt; Daiboat early settlers used to
travel down the Ohiu River. After visitinK town' along the Ohlo and
Mississippi rivers, the Dathoat will he t•xltihited in the World's Fair in
New Orleans.
The Datboat's cn&gt;w of six has furnished the hoat with antique tools,
mw;kcts, powder horns and historic liver displays as weD as items
necessary to Hve on the flatboat.
The boat. whlch is a project for lhP bicentennial of Cincinnati in
ISSR, will remain there as a museum lor the city after its journey.
Some of the display. include an educational display on liver
history by llhe Cincinnati llistolical Society.
Pro61s from the Dathoat will go toward ket&gt;ping the Dalboat in
operation.

Newsprint prices
going up July I
By The Associated Prt'SS
News print priCPS charged by a
number of Canadian and U.S.
producers will go up by iperrPnl on
.July l. the companies say.
The incrf'a'&gt;C will boost prices for
U.S. customers to $535 a metric ton
from the $500 leve l that currently
prevails in the industry.
Consolidat ed-Bathurst Inc. of
Mont real was the first major
producer to announce lhe price
increase . Its operating capacity of
917 ,0CO nnetric tons in 19&amp;3 reprr&gt;sented about 9 percent of the
Canndlan industry 's total of 10.1
million tons.
Consolidated-Bathurst said in
March that it was proposing the
increase to "offset increased costs ...
Iandi restore theeconomlcvlabillty
of the newsprint sector of our
business." The company confirmed
Wednesday that the hikewoulcl take
plact&gt; as scheduled .

FLATBOAT IN BEND AREA TIDS WEENEND
- The Adventure Galley D flatboat will be in !he

Racine, Syracuse and Pomeroy art&gt;as this weekend
IUid the Point Pleasant area through Wednesday.

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