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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 .

Specialty Graphics
Middleport, Ohio

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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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rContin ued from page 11

DAN'S IN MIDDLEPORT

A FRIEND WHEN YOU
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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.

�The

Ohio

Tournament experience difference, Ohio junior :.:.u1u. harnp reports

Comment

Page 2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thunday, June 21, 1984

E.\8T DIVIIION
1\MEJUf'AN I..EAGUE

EM,. DI\'IHON

Campaign mysteries ______W_i_llia_m_A_._R_us_h_er

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Stret't
Pomeroy. Ohio
IJEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGs-MASON !\REA

UOBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

!\ssbotant Publlsher/ ( 'onlrollt&gt;r

General

~anager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News EdUor

NEW YORK tNEA i - This
pause between the end of the
ptimaries and the opening of the
Ot&gt;mocrat ic convention in Sa n
Francisco nPxt m onth may be just
the time to clear up, once and for
all , one of the minor m ysteries of
the 1980 ca mpaign seaso n. Such
footnntes to histor y may not tx•
important s ub specie aeternitatis ,
but to political buffs they are soul
food_ HerPw ith I offer a particularly
c hoir£' m orsel.
Ronald Reagan had the \ 9~
RC'pu bliC'an presidPn tial nom i nil ·

tion all sewed up nearly two months
lx&gt;fore the opening session of the
convention in [){&gt;troit was caUed to
order. A certain amount of excitE'
ment was bf&gt;ing generated, how·
ever, over whom Reagan would tap
for th!' vice presidential spot. That
decision, in such situations, is
invari ably th f&gt; presidential nomi ·
n('(''s to make. but Reagan had kept
his intentions strictly private. say ing only tha t he was dPtPrminf'd to

policies.
George Bush, Reagan's most
tenaci ous 1ival for the nomination.
was probably the choice of the vast
majority of the GOP's professional
politicians for the second spot, on
the time-honored principle that It
would "balance the ticket " ras
Mondale may welt balance his this
yPar. by tapping Gary Hartt . But
many of the party's ronservatives.
having triumphed at last over Its

chooSt? a running matP who. if

pesky

cal led on to step into his shoes. could
be depended on to carry out his

mood to SPf' Bush. a veteran
moderate himself. walk off with the

"moderate~."

WC'f(' in no

,.\ i\1 EMBER of Tht&gt; Associated Prt&gt;SS, Inland ()ally Ptf'!ijS Association and lht&gt; American Newspaper Publisher Association.
OPI~ION urt' wr-komNI . T~t&gt;y ~ hould ht" les.s than :roo words
lltf&gt; subje('t to {'(ilting and mu st bt• slgnt&gt;d wllh name, addres~ and
h•lt&gt;phont' numtwr . ~o unsll(nl'd if&gt;tters wUI bt• published . L l• Ut't!oi !!ihould hf' In
good ttL'itt•. addr~slng I!OiiSIIt'S , not pt&gt;NOonaiUit•s .

Lt;'ITE HS Ut'

J o n~ . r\llleUt&gt;r~

Here go interest
rates again, and ..•
Here go interest r ates again and tha t means. according to the
conventional thinking, that fewer folks wiU lx&gt; able to buy cars and houses
or cfl:late new businesses or make m oney on the stock market.
High interest rates have a negative lmage. justly des&lt;&gt;rved. but there is
also a positive side to them that seldom gets mentioned. Prople can and do
lx&gt;nefit from higher rates.
Higher rates keep people from going in over their heads. They put the lid
on fanciful, unreallstic spendmg schemes that cannot lx&gt; afforded. They
encourage people to make do with what they have.
But above all, they tend to resurrect a latent creativity and ability in
people, a rediscovery. a recognition of abilities that in lx&gt;tter times would
have remained hidden from sight.
The ability to do-it·yourself. for example. had almost been bred out of
many people. or knocked out of them by education and mores, but it has
come back stmngly in recent years of volatile economic events .
When interest rates rise. so do bankruptcies. Bu I during the high-interest
recession of 1979-1981 there was simu\t aDl'ous str.-nglh in the fonnation of
new businesses. a result of jobless workers reacting aggressively lo bad
timPS.
People who earlier didn't like to get th&lt;&gt;ir hands dirty began changing the
oil in their automobiles, and supennarkets that once would have shrunk
from the verv idea lx&gt;gan stocking motor oil among the canned goods.
One of the. must dramatic co nsumer changes in recent years came in
attitude towards housing. and it wa s forced largely by high interest rates.
More than anything else , for example. it was high mor1gage cost s that
made new housing unaffordable for millions of people. I.:lf'nied the chance
to "buy up," they decided instead to fix up the old place.
The people at what used to 1x&gt; the local \umlx&gt;ryard - now probably
called the home improvement center- can probably tell you all about it.
ln many areas the home fLx -up mowment brought soartng sales to such

retailE'rs.
It hasn't dlmimshed since. and last year more money than ever lx&gt;fore
was spent on ret at \ purchases of lumber. building materta.ls and hardware,
a om•yea r increase of 18 percent to $52.8 billion. according to one survey.
Some people have gone even further: They have built their 01!.11 homes.
Scores of thousands of peop!P have done it, and a large numlx&gt;r of them
ronfpss that until pressed by f"C''nomic pressures they never would have
done so.
Stat istics document that pressure. l nti1 1Y79, most people who 0"11ed a
Jot and desired a single· family home hired a co ntractor to do the job for .
them. In 1978, for example, :;t;percent of lot owners who huilt did it this way.
In 1979, the Census Bureau percentages changed sharply, with more
than 51 percent of houses- more than 200.00l- being built by lot owners.

etcting as their own general contractors or actually cuning wood and
hammc&gt;ring naUs.

Fritz., mating dance
\\'alter f . !\londalc's mating dance with potential v ice presid£'ntial
nomtnr&lt;'s is " political ritual that n•nccts his belief in the impor1 anceof thc
joh as wf'\1 as his instinctive desin• to t'\'ach out 10 intPr&lt;'St groups .

.Jimm\ l artPr's fornwr ,·icP p!PsidPnt also is unjquPly sPnsitivf' to
L'l0mocratic Pa t1 y· constiluPnl politics. thoSP special interests that were a
tJJpc;~lng to his camP&lt;Jign during thf' primal)/ season.
Thdl SPnsit i\'i l\' liH'Yilably rdiS£'S lh{' qurstion whPih£'r much or t hP show

mix1'Ci

tGtking placr&gt; in Minnpsota in thi s prP-convPnt ion pt-•riod is t!Psignl:od mon• to

SJt is f: · int pn·st group~ than to find a \'('('p .
Du nng thl' campai).'Tl, Mondait' oftm promised that no one would be
f•xc ludf'd from eonsidPratlon fo r viet• prPSidPnt. par1 icularl.v not becauSPof

rare or

M&gt;X .

Hf' s k£'Ppin g that

promiSf'~ ~

liw invitation'S slart goinJ;: out to potPntiJ!
candidatPs to comf' to Minnesota and ta lk about the job.
Tlw intpn:icw nwthod is rf'minisccnt of how Cartrr searched in 1976.
MondJ )(• is not limiting himSC'If to whitf' mal0i. The firs t thr('(\ candidate~
announced wer£' !\1ayor Tom Brad lev of Los Angdes, a black : Sen. U oyd
lk'nt Sl'n of Texas . a conSf'n:ativP Df&gt;mocrat from a kC'y state. and Ma yor
Uiannf' FPinstrm of San Francisco. a .JC'\'-'ish woman.
Bc·ntsrn ha s long i:Jc&lt;'n consider&lt;'Cl a possible Mondale running mat!'. bu t

Bradlry nor Mrs. FPinsiPin are considered likely choicPS.
In fact. thf' joumf'~ · thf' two mayors \vill makC' to MinnC'sota is consid0red
man• an f'ffor1tocom·incf' tht•ir conslituf'ncif's that MondalC' is not leaving
rn'JlhPr

lhC'm out
·rwo Sf'nators. both whHr mt:~l{'s, and one wom an. are thP namPs most
oftrn mrntiOn('(f for thf' joh
l 'hey inc lude Gar• Hat1. who n ·mil ins m thf' rae£' for thf' top spot on thf'
ticket. anrt Sen. Dalf' Bumpers of Arkansas.
Rep . Cer aldine Ferraro of Nf'w York v isited with Mondale on Saturday
in hf'r role as chainnan of th£' l)(•mocratic Pany platfonn commilt('('.
Monda\£' said thcv did not discuss the v lcf' presidmcy. Monda\c described
her as "one of thP stars of the IX'mocratic Pany."
Th&lt;' nex t day h!' mf'l with Gov . Martha Layne Collins of Kentucky. who
will hl• pn:•siding uffi ct_•r of 1lit• co nvent ion and. one£' again, said they did not
discuss the s&lt;'Cond spot on the I ic kpt. H&lt;' ca \il'&lt;l her ··someune I admire a
gn'al df'al."
V\'hpn he sa id Monday Brad ley would come to Minnesota, Mondale said
hf' is "onf' of the most respected public servants in our country."
Trips to Minnesota may not produoe a promis!' of the vice presidency,
llu.t thev cer1ainly give the tra veler a good doSP of flattery .
Thf' interview process seems more style than substance. an effort to
satisfY demands other than finding a running mate.
Monda\e'sdecision is likely to lx&gt;based on highly personal factors. his gut
ffl&lt;'ling whether Han can expand the Democratic electora te, or whether
tbe time is right to make the bold move of SPlecting a woman .
The former vice president's r!'put atlon is that of a caut ious politician
\mlll&lt;ety to make any SU!flrlse move. But there also is a feeling in the party
!flat a bold move may 1x&gt; what Mondale needs to upset Ronald FlL·agan in

NovPmbf&gt;r.

Today in history
Today Is Thursday, June 21, the 173rd day ofl984. There are 193daysleft
Jn the year. Sununer begins today.
· 'l'oday's highlight In history:
On June 21, 1788, the U.S. Constitution went into effect as New
Hampshire became the ninth state to ratify it.

vice presidency rand thus Inevitably position himself for a bid to
succeed Reagan In 1984 or 1988).
They much preferred Rep. Jack
Kemp. or some other equally
hard-headed conservative.
On the third afternoon of the
convention. rumors began sweep-

ing the Joe Louis Arena and
flooding the nation's television
screens. to the effect that Reagan
:was unwilling to accept Bush as his
running mate and had asked
former President Gerald Ford If he
would consider serving as vice
president. If true. the offer was
unprecedented. and Its aceeptance
would make history. Ford was seen
entering Reagan's suite high up In
the Renaissance Plaza Hotel. an
hou r or two later, reporters discovered that a "Ford negotiating
team" led by Henry Kissinger was
negotiating with a Reagan team
headed by Bill Casey. apparently
on the precise division of duties
lx&gt;tween the putative president and
vice president. Around 10 p.m.
Bush. exhausted and dejected,
gave up hope and went to bed .
I was in the press section as the
evening progressed and the hyster ia grew. At one point. ford
appeared on CBS-TV and was
interviewed by Walter Cronkite.
who elicited from him an admission
that under the arrangements being
discussed, Ford would, In effect, 1x&gt;
"co-president." I was appalled:
Much as I admired Reagan's
confidence that he could control
such a situation, I was sure that
having a former president as
"co-president" was a prescription
for political disast!'r.
Luckily something - observers
later suggested it w as Cronkite's
inte rvipw with Ford - seemed to
change RPagan 's mind .

,.1

~

Control of the seas_______
WASHING\'UN - Df'f'p in lhf'
PC'nt agon' s secret planning coun ctls. the Joint Chiefs of Stan have
com&lt;' to the conclusion that a
nuc lear holocaust is not like\)·. l'hc
r&lt;'ason for thC'ir guardC'd optimism
is that the Soviet leadf'rs arr too
c au tious- and thf' llnitro StatC's is
too stmng.

ThC' gT'('atf&gt;r thrPat , according to
our top milita ry Pxpens. would be
llmit&lt;'Cl military confrontations.
"ith conventional weapons. The
Soviets -who for yPars haw bem
the world' s greatest land power ar{' now l'hallenging the United
Sia tcs for cunt ru\ of th&lt;• sms.

It has bc:"lt:'n our c&lt;:~rriPr t &lt;:~sk forers
that haw given the U.S. Na,·y its
j)O\VC'r and reach. Not s urpris ingly ,
this is prcciSP!y when thf' Kn•mlin
has dC'Cided to challenge us. After
decad£'s of neglect. the Soviets have
S('('n that car riC'rs arf' an l'ff('('tivl'
m eans of extending their power.
Thr la tPst intelligencr rf'~rts

wam that the Soviets are building
four new ~im i tz -c lass carriC'rs nucl&lt;'ar-powcred ships wit h conventional takeoff and landmgcapability
that are expected to be deployed
bclor e 1990 The carriers w ill likely
ha,·e GO to 70 planes. including
MiG-2Js. an ear ly warrung aircraft .
One secret Pentagon srudy estima tes that by th&lt;' year 2IXXl the
~viets may have ninC' aircraft
carriers. including the four new
ones.
The Sov iet dC'Cision-making process on the carriers. and what they
hope to gain with the ships, are
tl'Vea\ed in highly classified intelli gence n:•pot1 s and other stud il's
n.1 Vi&lt;•w('d by rny associates Dale
Van Alta and Donald Goldberg.
ThP Sov if'l navy's first proposal
for an a ircraft canif'r came in 192'&gt;,
but s.:mk likPa stone in thrcountry 's
ovt1 niding n('("cssi ty: for df'fPnsivC'
mPasuJt&gt;s aga inst a su ppoSC'dly

hostile capitalist world. The proposal suriaced again in 19:l6: Stalin's
admira ls wanted a carrier with
icebr~akin g capabilit y.
In this
period. a prC'sitigious American
company offered plans for three
varia I ions of a combined ballleshipcarricr.
Thf' Sovi('ts hi ed in vain to stpaJ
pla n s tor the Nazis' aircraft canier,
Graf Zeppelin. lx&gt;fore World War II.
i\1 th end of the war. the Russians
cap tured the tncomplete Gennan
carriC'r, whjch had been scut1led but
not des troved.
Thr So'/iets raisf'd 1hC' carrier and
studied it close ly. But it ~ither
rapsiz!'d while under tow to Lenin grad \ ~den with w~r booty or was
uSC'd for ta rget practice and sunk in
thP G ulf of finland .
Stalin ewntually ordered a
medium siz&lt;'Cl carriPr built. but
Krllshchev halt&lt;'&lt;! construction af ~
ter Stalin's dmth. Kt1Jshche\'

n~d:.: . :er. :. :so:. :. :.n

____::.l.::..::ac.:..:...k:. .:. :A

vicwNJ carriPrs as floatin g dinosaurs militarUy vulnrrablP to nu clf'ar missile-s.
But with Ktllshchev's abtlJpt
departu re in 19f4, Leonid Brezhnev
ord ered fuU scalP production and in
1976 the Soviet's first carrier, the
Kiev, appeared in the Mediterra nean. As a Defense Intelligence
AgPncy report interpreted Brezh nev's thi nking. "an aircraft carrier
would 1x&gt; mtlitarily ad,·antageous
and poli tica lly useful." giving the
Soviets "another of the trappings of
great power status."
Although I heClA pronounced the
SoviPt's Kiev-c lass carriers "no
military match for U.S. attack
rarriPrs." thr nPw Sovif'l supercar riPrs arc a different matter. They
suggest to the Pcntagon'sKremlinwatchers tthat the Sovif'ts have
embarked on a dPiibera tc policy of
cha llenging the U.S. for control of
the world's oceans.

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.391 11 ....!

COLUMBUS, Ohio (t\P)- Barry
FabyanofWorthlngtonsaystouma·
ment experience was the difference
In his victory In the 1&amp;-lBagedlvislon
of the 43rd Ohio Juniors golf

victory .
Trey Cassell waschargcdwiththe
loss after completing 2 and 2·3
innings while fanning 1, walking 3,
and allowing 2 hits. Gordon Splete
was called in for relief as he went the
final distance giving up 1 walk, 6
st tikeouts, and 3 hits .Earning the
win for Wellston was Williams as he
struckou t 4. walked 5, and allowed
three hits.
Leading the hitting list for Meigs
was Scott Gheen w ith a solo home
mn. followed by Dan Thomas and
Brian ShPpler w ith onP hit a piece.
For Wellston it was Bush with 2
singles. Cheatwood a double and
Jordon and Rice each singled.
1n rC'Cent Junior Girls softball the
New Haven Little Falcons impmved their record to an outstanding -l-0. The Little falcons downed
Harrisonville H -5 and then went on
to defeat Meigs 22- 1. Hitters in the
Hanisonville game were Pam Frye
w ith a triple and single. Michelle
Gress hit two doub!l'S, Missy Roush
added a double and sing !P, Tracy
Wolfe hi! two singles, and Cheryl
Ger lach and Debbie VanMeter
contributed to the " in by hitting a
double and single each. Carol Myers
also added a single to the list.
Tracy Wolfe allowed only three
singll'S for the V\'hite Falcons as
Matthews , 1\a\1, and Karla Osborne
those si ng l es for
co llected

llarrisonville .
The Little Falcons blanked Meigs
22-1 with Lana Arthur pitching for
the winn!'rs and Marsha King
collecting the loss for Meigs. In
scoring. Missy Roush had a double
and single. Tracy Wane. La na

John Hlnk of Upper t\rUinglon won
the 10-and-under championship by a

1 rlj

.~Xl

£'1

.4&amp;1
...

.w.t

whopping 12 shots over two golfers.
Fabyan, a 17-year-o\d senior at
Columbus Academy High School,
rolled In a blrdieputt on the final hole

to shoot a 74 in the final roUnd
Wednesday for a two-day total of
149. HP edged St&lt;'Ve Kom of Elmore
and Tom Carr of Dublin by one
stroke.

TRUCK SALE

...,_

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Plllsbufllh ~. Chlcaj:tO 1
Cind nOilll 4. J.a; A~II'S 2
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1hll'lllay'1 GIUJ'Iell
PhJladdphia tlhtdson 7-41 il l Nrw \'ark
tT('t1"{'11 ~til
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San 01(11;0 1\\.'tlhson 7-ll ill ll ous!Oft
tl'.:i&lt;'kro ~7 t, tn l

*

Summer league results
ln recent American Legion baseball action, Wellston defeated visit ing Meigs by a score of 4·2. After no
tlJns were scored in the first inning,
Wellston took the lead 1 to 0 in the
bottom of the second and never
looked back. Despite an attempt by
Meigs that tied the score in theihird.
it wa s not enough as Wellston scored
three tlJns in the last half of that
inning to tak!' the lead to 4-1. Meigs
scored again in the sixth to make it
4-2 but thats all that was needed for
Wellston as they claimed the

championship at Ohio State Unlverslty'sScarlel Course.

*

LARGE SELECTION

Arthur , and Cheryl Gerlach had
three singles each. Paula Bird and
Debbie VanMeter each had two
singles, while Pam Frye Teres
Arbaugh, Tammy Elllott,Heather
.M ankin, Linda Knight, Heather
Hargraves, and Michelle Gress
each collected singll's for the
winners. For Meigs it was L. Newell
with a trtple, H Caurhtersa double,
T. Bartels and K. King with two
singles, and S. Newsome and M .
King added a single.
Pony League Action
The Eastern Eagles Pony League
went down to defeat for the first tlme
this season by a hard fought 3-2
score against Rutland.Eastern was
without five of their star1erswhohad
previous eommitments of which
three were participating in AAU
Basketball Tournament held in
Columbus.
For the winners It was M .
Banrurn going the distance for
Rutland giving up 2 hits on 13
strikeouts, and 7 walks. Despite a
fine effort by Bryan Durst he was
tagged with the loss while giving up3
hits. 8 strikeouts, and 7 walks.
The hitters included Dailey,
Sisson. Nonnan, with singles each
for the winners. Durst collected two
hits for the Eagles with a double and
single.
Despite the Joss to Rutland the
Eagles defeated Mason by a
walloping score of 12-0. Eddie
Collins pitched an outstanding game
giving up only two hits on 5
strikeouts and no base on balls to
pick up the win for Eastern. Decker
was charged with the loss for Mason
as he was relieved by Tucker and
Lloyd . The trio eombined for 13 hits
on 9 strikeou1s and .3 walks.
Leading the hitting Jist for the
Eagles were Eddie Collins with 3
singlcs, Greg Leachman with a
homPrun and triple. Steve Horner
collecting a slng!P and double, Jeff
Caldwell added two singles. Ronnie
Maxson with two singles, Mark
Griffin had a triple. and Brya n Durst
and Kyle Davis doubled and singled
respectively. Hawkins and Tucker
led Mason with a single each .

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Reagan nixes summit.______Low_e_ll_W_in-=-ge_tt
The RPpuhliran membf'rs of the
U.S. Senate have finally dr&lt;·idcYI
that honf'y will catch morr tlirs th;-m
\'incgar. i\s a rpsult of this decision.
Majority Lcadery Howard BakPr.
R -Tenn .. and Sen . Chari&lt;" Perry. R .
Ill.. Chairman of the Foreign
Relations Committee. called on
Pn•sidmt R&lt;•agan at the Oval Office
last Wf'f'k to suggest a su mmit
ffi('('fing with tht-' Russ ians. In ~·n
Ba ker's own \\'Ords, "To k('(•p our
two countries from blowing f'ach
ot h&lt;'r up." True to his policy of not
taking good advice whf'n it is
offered. th&lt;' presidPnt told the
.&lt;;;('na tors "Noway."
Prcsidmt Reagan is the first chid
cxecutivf' sincP World War II who
ha~ not met w ith the Sovif'l leadcrs
to try for somP kind of COC'xistC'nrP
ITY"a~' to IPsSf'n thf' rhRnce of a
nuciPar war. He gives as his excuSC'
that \'Prification is impossiblr ancl
hf' dorsn ' tii1.JSI thr S4J\' iC't!'i to li\'C' up
to an.v agff'f'mPnt His prf&gt;df'&lt;'f'ssor.
Jimmin Carter. sign&lt;'Cl a SALT IT
agt'('t'ment during a meeting Leonid
Brczhnev in 1979. Due to consrrva t\veopposltion. the treaty wasnevN
ratified but thP Russians have li ved
up to the tprms of thP trmty. This. at
least, earns thl'm a measure of trust
which t h&lt;' present administration
has ncVPr acknowledged. Until this
el€C'tion year whPn he has started
cooing like a dove, th&lt;' pn'Sidmt has
lx&gt;en hurling harsh words at the
Sov iets at every oppur1unily and
finally succeeded in driving them
from the G&lt;-neva negotiating table.
Now h(' refuses to make any
over1ures to get negotiations going
aga in .
This fall the average Republican
vo1er ~.&lt;11\lx&gt;t his pocketbook aga inst
his \lfe. In my opinion, that Is what
thr presldPntlal e!PCtlon will boil
down to by November. The Soviet
Union ~nd the United States
lx&gt;twren them havr 20 times the
numlx&gt;r of nuclear war hrads
needed to hring on a nuclear wi nter

thJI w illdPstro:-.· thPworld . Thisyra r
thr prC'sidcnt is adding a nPw
dimPnsion to thP cold war. H&lt;' is
addtng Star Wars to the preS&lt;'~t
insanity. HP is asking rongrC'ss fo r
thr money to conduct rPsea rch on
weapons to be uSC'd against incom ing missilps high abovr lt hr f'art h.
El&lt;'fore making his request to
Congress. th£' adminiStration re
leaSf'd publicit y pictur&lt;" sho.,.ing a
dummy missil&lt;' bl'ing shot down in
spac&lt;'. On lh&lt;' strr•n1,.1h of this
~raphic demonstration, CongrPss
will probab lv vote the requested

mont?y, something more tha n a
bi llion and a half dollars . The
controi\N:! experiment was child's
p\av for the experienced engineers
at NASA. ' \'hey knew tthe location
from w hich the dummy missile was
released. its speed and all the oth er
informat ion needed to intf'rccpt.
Thr prob!C'm of intf'rcPplion was
s imply a mattf'r of logistics, simplC'
enough for peop le accustomed to
gu !ding sa lel litPs anrt sh uIlles
through space . Will \ongn'ss \'Ole
thr rf'SC'arch monry without asking
if the int£'rccptor will pertorm
eq ually well on a rml, li vP missil£'
bf'nt on dPs truction?
Proponents of the anns ra('(' will
argue that the So\·Jpts hove in
creased thf'ir destrurtiveeapabillty
sin('(' thl' 19i1l \I'Caty was signed . So
what ? So have w e. Each country has
been bullding and improving their
missiles likl'crazy. That's why each
ha ve enough nuclear capability to
destroy thcworld.Addingmorecold
war weapons to what we already
have will not help our defense or
detract from the Soviet thr&lt;&gt;al.
D\sannamenl by both coun tries to
the level that w\11 not threat en the
world cannot lx&gt; achieved by
building more powerful Star War
weapons but by negotla lions lx&gt;tween the two countries. George F.
Will. writing in the l atest issues of
Newsweek, claims than arms
control Is lnjurtous to U.S. lntPrests.

H0

m&lt;'ans, instf'ad. that it is
injuriou~ to the interC'sts ·or the
Reagan administration and the
defense contrac tors. If the Soviet
threat was rC'moved there would no
longer be a need for the massive
defense buildup.
The !{eagan administration is
depending on defense spending to
tid&lt;' thC'i r vaunted ('('()Oomic recov ery through the Novemlx&gt;r election.
Even that is doubtfu l because' the
massivP drficit s wiU show up in the
C'C'O nomy soonC'r or later. In thr

mighty effor1 to arouse the Ameri can patriotism aginst Corrununism
while the presient preaches peace .
L ater in the week at a WhiteHouse
press conference he completely
reversed the stand he had taken with
the two Senate leaders. ! think it was
a bit of politica l posfuringandhehad
his fingers crossed. It was his
message to Baker and Percv that
w ill count in Congress~

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Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Th1.1ndoy, J1.1ne 21, 1984

Padres, Mets keep on winning
B KEN RAPPOPORT
YAP Sports Writer
~
i h
h d
,
r or a p tc er w o
oesn t get
much hitting support from hJs
1 h hand
te ammates. I. LOUIS r g 1er
Joaquin Andujar Isn't complaining.
· doln 1 In ·
All he s
g s w rung.
F'or two straight games, the
Cardinals didn't give Andujar a
single run to work with. And
Wednesday night, that's the way tt
was until the ninth Inning when
David Green finally socked a
two-&lt;Jut, two-run homer to power a
2-0 victory over the Mont real Expos.
"Everybodyknowswe'regoingto
score nms sooner or later " said
i\ndujar. who improved his' record
to 11-6 with a four-hJtter. "WP don't
have a grPat hitting team but we
have good enough hitting. I don't
worry about the hitting.

s ' ·

GOOD GUY A\\' ARIJS - Receiving the Good Guy
.\wards at the sixth annual Davt• Diles AppaladaGolf
Tourn:unt•nt's Hillbilly Supper Wednesday night
wen•, left to right, -Jim Bunning, fonner ba.&gt;;t•hall
!{feat who sern'll in the major; for I&lt; )'t'ars pitehing
00 hitkN in the Satiunal i.Uld :\nwrkan u~a~t'S;

Dante U!wiU. Pro Football Hc~l of Farner
n&gt;&lt;cin'll stardom with the Cleveland Brown•;
Rohr, ath!Nie dirt'&lt;'lor of ~tiami l 'niwrsity, a11d
start Gmcral ,Jamt-,; Hanlngt•r. ( 'mmn:u•der
Chief of tlwl. S. Spa&lt;'!' ( 'ununand .

who
Rill
four
and

'-Hillbilly" fete kicks off '84
Appalachia Golf Tournament
ThP "homf'lik(•" atmosphC'J'P ot
f{oy·aJ 0 ; 1k Park hosted the s L"&lt;Ih
;m nual Davl' DilC's-r\ ppalach ia Coif
Toumamrnt'-.. " Hillbill_\ SupPf1 r "
\\'PdnPsda.Y f•\·f'ning. l"x'ginning l'f's-

Pirates 5, Cubs I
Jose DeLeon held Chicago hitless
for 5 2-3lnnings before sett ling for a
thro&gt;e-hitte r as Plltsburgh, With the
he lp of a key run -scoring double by
IJale Berra, beat the Cubs.
DeLeon retired the first nine
batters he faced until Bob Demler
drew a lead-off walk m the fourth
inning. DerniE'f promptly stole
second a nd came home on fly ball s
by t{ynP Sand berg and Gary
Matthews to tie the score at 1-1.
Dernier then touched DeLeon, 4-4,
for the Cubs· first hit. a two-out
single in the sixth.
With the score tied l -1, Tony Pena
singled off loser Chuck Rainey, 5-6,
tostat1thePira tes' fourth, then stole
second. Berra followed with a
two-out RBI double for the winning

to move within a half game of thP
East -leading Phlllles. .
Ron Darling 7-3 gained his first
• '
victory over the PhJIJjes after three
defeats with relief help from Doug
Sisk, who gained his eighth save.
Steve Carlton, 4-4, was the loser.
Reds 4, Dodgers 2

reached base on an Infield hit.
Gwynn tripled to score Wiggins and
SteveGarveysingledhorneanother
run The rail helped the Astros pull
·
Y
away from a 3-21ead.
Lollar lasted six Innings before
Dave Dravccky finished up to
record his seventh save

·

Jeff Russell knocked In the
winning run with a fourth-Inning
single and scattered six hits for his
first victory since May 11 as
Cincinnati beat Los Angeles.
Russell, 3-8, snapped a personal
five-game losing streak with his first
complete game of the season,
handing the Dodgers their seventh
consecutive loss. It's the
'
longest losing streak
ce they
dropped eight In a row in ~Winning for only the six h time In
the last 21 starts, the Reds scored
twice in the fourth off Alejandro
Pena, 7-3, for their go-a head runs.

Padres 6, Astros ~

Triples by San Diego pitcher Tim
Lollar and Tony Gwynn and two
errors by Houston highlighted a
Uu-ee-run sixth Inning that boosted
the Padres over the A"u-os .
Lollar, &amp;-5, trtpled to start the rally
and scored on second baseman Phil
Garner's error. After Alan Wiggins

.----------------1
Professional Counseling
and
Family ~rvices

. The Doily_ Sentinel
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Publishf'd t-VNY afternoon, Monday
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BASEBALL
National League
NEW YORK lAP ) -Cincinnati
pitcher Mario Soto and outfielder
Cia udell Washington of the Atlanta
Braves, suspended and fined by
National League President Chub
Feeney, have appealed thPirpunish
ments and will coni inue to play
pending a hearing .
Soto was suspended for fi\ ·e davs
for fighting and throwing a bascb;ul
into a pile of players during a fight
that developed after Washington
wa" knocked do'WTI b)• a pitch.
Was hington, who was suspcndf'fi for
three days, was punished for
pushing an umplretotheground and
starting a fight.
TENNIS
EASTBOURNE, England tAP !
- Top-seeded Mar tina Navratilova
defeated Canadian Carling Bassett
h-1. 6-3 and fifth -S!'&lt;'ded W('!ldV
Turnbull of Austrailia defmted
Chritiane JoUbsaint of Switzerland.
6-2. 6-0, in the quarterfinals of the
$!75,o:xlEastboumPwumm 's tennis

I

NORTH RANDALL. Ohio tAP!
- Tony D'Amico rode Planned
Together to victory In the featured
eighth race at Thistledown on
Wednesday. touring the six furlongs
in 1: 11.
The winnf'r paid $4.40. $3.60 and
$2 .60.
Rigas Port was second, returning
$B.20 and $.5.20, while Dock Strike
paid $3.60 for coming in third.

Reds to a 4-2 victory over the
slumping Los Angeles Dodgers.
At the suggestion of Reds Manager Vern Rapp, the right -bander
has been doing extra bicycle work to
increase his stamina . After a s haky
sta11 Wednesday, he rolled to his
first victory sin~ May 11 .
"I felt really strong," "aid Russell.
3-8. "Vern pJJI mP on a bike
program, a nd it's work out really
good .
"Therewasa lot of re lief to get out
of that ninth inning and !WI my first
comp lett&gt;gamP. I wanted to prove to
Vern that I could go the di"tance ."
Russell a lso prov&lt;--d hP's a pretty
fair hitter, lin ing a single to center to
knock in thf' go-ahead run in tlw
fourth inning. But it was his pilc hing
in lht&gt; second inning that s tarted the
Dodgers on the road to thei r seventh
straight loss.

cooning

Scioto Downs

"Wf! W C'f'(' a hit a\vay h·om rr&lt;JIIy

J)odgrr s. w ho an · om· los!-. &lt;..,h\· of
matching lhl'ir &lt;•ight-~-:amt• l o~ ing

putting the hurt to him, but hP got out
of it, " said the DodgPrs' MikP
Marshall. "He seemed to gPt
stronger a fter tha t. "
The Reds I ted It on Ron Oester' s
RBI single in the bottom of the
second, and Russell suiT?ndPred t hP
only othPr Los Angeles run in thP
third \\ilh a ba lk that scorf'd Steve

has somPlhlng likl' thi ~,"

Vf'ar -

ga mf' again in thf' fourth against
srartPr A!f'jandro PPna. 7-3. and
RusSf'll singlf'fi home F:sasky . Da\'('

ParkPr arldf'fl a solo homrr. his fifth .

makr a ma gk !XJl !(J n . ··

Marshall

Sax.

Ntck E sasky's douhlf' tied lhP

soon

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WOODED SITES- NO DOWN PAYMENT

LOCKER 21

Q

T-SHIRT

With Each Leofher Tenni s
Shoe Sold This Wee ken d

OPEN
'TIL

7 P.M .
FRIDAY

PHONE 614-256-1216 FOR APPOINTMENT

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

st rn·tk of l ~~ - Los A ngPil~ hds
droppf'fi lfg blast 38 ga mes to fall to
thP .:ill m ark overoll. earning thin:l
placr in thf' NJ tionall.J•agul" Wf'st.
" It SCf' m ~ li kt' ('\"l •r:.· tl'am maybf' DPtroit won 't h &lt;J\'t' it thi s
sa id "You plav 16~
gamf'S . I t 's ):::O inl-! to hJIJJ.K 'n. You
just horx · you can br('ak out of it a~
qui("k]~· &lt;.~s !)(J.'-&gt;Sihlv ...
Sax addf'Cl. "" \-\ '{'\" t ' got to kt't.'P
ha ttling . So mr•t imP~ \"tJU just cJn .,

.~~

nals art" Marty Davis who outlasted
G1anni Oclepr-o 6-4. l.i-7, h-2; Uoyd
Bourne who dispatched R1cardo
Acuna 7-6, 6-3; Johan Krick. who
dumped Ramesh Klishnan b-4, 64;
and Tim Gull ikson, who bested
Mark F:dmondson h-2, 3-!i, !&gt;3.

,--------,

5

in the e ight Inning for ins urancP.
When MikP Scoscla lined out to
end the game. Russell Ou ng his
gloVP high In the air in C'l'lebration.
" I can't blomc him for lx•i n[:! that
happy ." Happ said . " li s IJel'n a
while."
l t's also tX'f'n i.l \\.'hi iP for thf'

Your " Extra Touch"
Florist Since 1957

West of England tpnnis toumamcnt.
Also advancing to the quat1erfi -

Array a of Prru.

Page

Los Angeles loaded the bases with
none out in the second on three
straight singles. Bul Russell got
Terry Whitfield to hJt into a doublP
play to score just one run , then
struck out DaveAnderwn tomd thP
threat.

POMEROY . Old Jr. High School
THURSDAY . JUNE 18
1:30 &amp; 730
IS~onstlled by Chambe1 of Commerce

COLUMBUS, Ohio tAPJ Timix'r Lad, driven by Marty
Wollam, won the $4,o:xl featured
eighth race at Sc ioto Downs
Wednesda y night , finishing the mile
in~ : o:u to pay $14.00,$5.60 and$4.20.
K D's Gestu re finished second,
followed by Silver Secret.
The fir st race trifecta combination of :,-4-:l paid $1,nl. 40.
The crowd of ~.948 bPI $23.'&gt;.513.

In other malrhcs, Zina Ga rrison
was upset 6-4, 6-3 by 13arbara
Potter: Claudia Kohde-Kilsch out lasted Britain 's Annabel Croft &gt;-7,
!i-4, 7-5: Kalhy .lordan overcame
Rene Uys, 6-:l, 4-6,6-1: Te rry Phelps
ousted Pam Casale 6-2, 3-1i, i -5, and
HciPna Sukova downed Kim
Shaefer 6-.J, 6-J
BRL')TCL. England tAP1 Unrankl'd Jeff Turpin knocked out
fourth -seeded John Fil z-gPrald 7-5,
6-2 to ga in the quarterfinals of thc

I

MIDDLEPORT

992-6910

Ponderosa Presents

The Great Burger
Give-a-way•.

PAINT SPRAYER

$199

Car Wax
YOUR
CHOICE

REG .

999

1

16 OZ.

#11080

THERMAL
LIMITER lor
Air Conditioner

PRICES
START
AT

S44995

ssgoo

EICH

PART UP7019 .................... S8.70

MUFFLERS
I

For The Practice of

Living Rm. Su~e

Radiation Oncology

$149.95

V1lid 11ntl!

PARKERSBURG. W. VA.

•so

~,

12 Oz.

ARVIN
ALUMINIZED
STEEL MUFFLERS

VIPlM Shocks

8 A.M. ilL 5:30 P.M.

.,

1704 Eastern Ave.
446-4204
8 A.M. 'TIL 7 P.M.

- SAVE 2

REG . 189.95

S6995

v•••r water worries

SALE
,

$1295

REG. '18.95
#77509

instantly w1thout

sggs

UP
TO

TRA CUP

SMALL ENGINE HEADQUARTERS
FACTORY AUTHORIZED

PARTS
CLEANER .

SALES &amp; SERVICE

··v~'&gt;'o ­

,fJ'h-·~·
•115V . Motor
•Dependable
Pump

$8999

•Safety Cover

8 A.M. 11L 5:30 P.M.

Let Homelite®solve

#77495

Seals sma ll holes .
seams. or cracks
d1smantling OR
DRAINING !he
tank .

REGULAR \240 00

REG . 169.95

'l'l'I~

119 W. 2nd Ave.
992-2139

S4Q05 (
.,;... .. ' '' -&lt;·

$4995 i~RJ,

Exch .

wv.
446-1813

•

#FC29001

FOR MOST

1Q8.4 Pollderosa . Jnc

240 Third Ave.

Clqsed Thurs.

'

F-*MFQ.

. . ,.,.,,

215 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, Ohio

9:30-5:00

PH. (304) 424-2744

$21!~.

AfTUI ftEIA fE

\

GUN
WITH CUP

$299

LAST MORE THAN
TWICE AS LONG

p , _12!9

Save

BRAKE FLUID

,;::..-...;,., SALE PRICE $1.25

"'/.·l'v" ''\'·;...-

SPRAY

INSTANT GAS
TANK REPAIR
~· .
PATCH

;]

The Associaton of
New 2 pc .

WI\GNEA .

DISC
BRAKE
CALIPERS

Most Cars &amp; Light Trucks

I
I

S29

a

NUC1106

Axle Set

ANNOUNCES

•Oil

AMC· FO.R DAND
CHRYSLER CARS
&amp; LIGHT TRUCKS
80

Summer puts an ellfra
strain on belts. After
lour year1, It's time lor

S795

of Radiotherapy, Inc.

,

•Sealers &amp; Stains and Varnishes

GMC CARS
AND LIGHT TRUCKS

WAGNER'"
ISC BRAKE
PADS REMANUFACTURED

OF PARKERSBURG

•latex

52Q 40 Exch

SAVE S200

Effective July 1, 1984

For Alf Cond System

\

REG. S399.95

SRINI VASAN, M.D.

BLOWER MOTORS

.,

FREE LOVESEAT

Chandra KeKar, M.D.

•Acrylic lacquers
•Acrylic Enamels

Remanufactured

$179

Couch . chair. 2 end
tables, coffee table.

\

~WART·WR~

PROTECT ANT

N ER OF THIRD &amp; OliVE•GAL

When you buy this
new Early American 2
pc. living room suite .

i

8 OZ.

SALE
1599

5 PIECE
WOOD GROUP

=

I

}
I

•30160

•FREE PARKING MON. &amp; FRI. TO 8 P.M.
" WHERE CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
IS OUR MAIN CONCERN."

IF INTERESTED, CALL:
992-2155 BETWEEN 9:00 &amp; 6:00

IC::

CLEANER

•FR EE DELIVERY OPEN DAILY TO 5 P.M.

ATTENTION
The Daily Sentinel Is
Looking For A Paper Carrier
In the Pomeroy Area

'\

#2001

$299

HIDE-A-BED
ROY COVER .

\~

SUN SHIELD

,,

dilf' \H 'I"f ' fon1w r major l••agut&gt;
pi tchrr \t'(l &lt; ;a n ·pr : A ssociate
,\thiPt ic Dinx·t or of Miami Umq•r ·
..,r r:· flan1•ll llrx1ric: Hoi\" Cross
'J g t~ Cn.tch &lt; ~f'(Jt"gf' Hlanf'\", Har ·
\ arc! ( ·agt• &lt; "n; rch Fr;tnk :vlcl.augh
lm: \:&lt;t\"il ' l" .- \thh •tic U irf'C' t o r t ~n b
S! J ;1k : f); •nn_
\ :\{ '( ', HrLtn Hurkf'.
,~nd D r
Chu&lt; k tli~ in ... of Ohio
l .'nin• t"" ll \,
formtT \-\ "a~hin,1..,rton
IU '{bkin ..., Hun \kDoJp and Hill

Hom elitei! J
Centrifugal Pumps

ELECTRIC

Get a FREE BUW!l:rs
when you buy tt;d Buffet:
Biggest, Best Sa . · . .. _

,\]tllOll g h lll &lt;lm· IT·lchtili t~ Ltn '
c·annot ;J!If'ncl
t..M i lh da~ ·.., nf l h t' t'\ "f•nt . man~ · such
... tar-.; \n 'l"l ' 11T1 htind . ,t nd \-\"(' !'( •
n'C'ngnw'tl I n&lt;'ludt'(l a rno n g 1hC'
tn u g h &lt;.J •ht"lu il '" ~ 111cl

800 GARFIELD AVE.

Thistledown

In other American l.Rague
gam&lt;'s, Detroit outslugged New
York 9-l:i in 13 tnnings, Texas edged
C'.alifornia 3-2, Milwauko&gt;e nipped
Toronto 5-4, Chicago shaded Sea ttle
5-4, Oakland trounced Kansas C'ity
8-1 and Minnesota thumped Cl&lt;&gt;veland 8-2.

Chris Evert, thl' second SPed,
rolled to a &amp;-4. 6-1 victory uvN Laura

I

By JOE KAY
AP Sports Writer
CINCINNATI (AP) -Cincinnati
Reds pitcher Jeff Russell Isn't yet
rt"ady for a bicycle race, but his
recent pedaling has him in shape Jo
go the distance again.
Russell broke a personal flvcgame losing streak with a six-hit
complete game Wednesday night his first of I he season - to pitch thP

setback was Hoston's seventh ln a
row .

tournament.

Sentinel

Russell stops Dodgers 4-2, ends streak

slam and four more in the ninth .
This time, Baltimore did it with a
four-run seventh, highlighted by
Mike Young's three-run, two-out
doublP, after Boston's Dennis "Oil
Can " Boyd pitched six hitless
innings.
"It was a ball game he deserved to
win," said Boston Manager Ralph
Houk . "The kid pitched as good as
you can pitch." Instead, the 4-1

Sports briefs...

Onf' Month .
.. ... ... $1 .80
On(' Yt•ar
.... . ·. $57.20
SINGLE COP\'

992-2192

a ..., ;1 lim&lt;' for thf' lucab to
ming lf' with the· CPlf'bri1i(•s , a tim('
for laughs. J tim£&gt; for r t•cognition.
and a limP for thP ~f'i gs · M ason
contingr nt t o offt •r it " ·· watm
hosp itality" that oftf'n prompts
tournament ho"t IJa,·c Dilf''-' to ca ll
thts arPa his homt ·.
Lnitiall _\·. Oil&lt;'" wf'lcornf"d (' \ ' C" ·
r~. :onf' to tll f' an nual sllpfXT. lh(•n
pt"()('("('(h"'C1 tn t•x ff~nd a sincf'rC"
"Thank You "" to mc•mht'rs of the
tournamt~ nt committe'('. \A:ho !1an•
pu t in m uc h l!mf' ancl effort in
ml:\king lhC' &lt;Jitair a S UCCL'SS.
A special tributf' was madC' to
Horacf' i.lnd Oorntll~· K:..ttT for thf'ir
suppon and cto n:11ion of I hi' Ro.v al
Oak farilit.\·, lhf • Roush famil.v fn r
1hi'ir rlom 1ing H i\"Prsidc &lt; ;ol f
( "o ut'Sf'. sit!' nf thl' toumam(•nt :
Kf'lln~ · 1\CtT of 1.-:f'tT Distributin g.
St roh"" Rt~pn•sf'nt.tl l \"f'S Bill Rog·
1' r s. Mikt · ·nwmpson . ;rnd :vlikt ·
Tndd : and ltx·d l bu smp-;s \\·oman.
Ynmnt • ~· all\ ·

Ry HERSCHEL NISSENSON
AP Sports Writer
Yogi Berra may have coined the
phrase "It ain't overuntU lt'sover,"
but Joe Altobelli's Baltimore Oriole"
are making It come true.
The Orioles won their third game
in a row, downing the Boston Red
Sox 4-1 Wednesday night. And for
the third game in a row they did It
with some late-inning heroics.
Granted It wasn't as spectacular
as Sunday's 6-2 victory over New
York with Gary Roenlekl'' s grand
slam capping a five-run eight hinning rally. And It certainly paled
next to Tuesday night's 9-i triumph
owr Boston, a game in which the
Orioles trailed 7-1 after seven
innings but scored four times in the
eighth on Eddie Murray' grand

The Daily

Middlepor1, Ohio

Pomeroy

Orioles make it three
straight, trim Bosox

Onf' Wf'e k . ........ .. .. .......... . .. ...... $1.10

MAIL SURSCH I PTIOt-.: S
lnsldt• Oltlo

Pomeroy

Thll!'ldtly, J1.1ne 21 , 1984

Route 33

773-5511
8 A.M . 'TIL 5:30 P.M.

BRIGGS &amp;STRATTON
TECUMSEH
KOHLER
WISCONSIN
PEERLESS
FOOTES
MURRAY
HOM ELITE
JACOBSEN

POINT PLEASAN:r
515 Main St.
675-1520

I

wv

2611 .lltkson Ave.
675-2731

�Page

6- The Daily Sentinel

Famenty Middleport, Ohio

lhunday. June 21, 1984

Thursday, June 2 I , 1984

The Doily Sentinei-Page- 7:

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Family Medicine .

Find everything you need in Daily Sentinel classifieds

Research continues, new produas released for birth control
By Edward Schreck, D.O.

Assistant Professor

MGM FAR

of Family Medicine
Ohio University College
of Osteopathic Medicine
QUESTION: I have heard a lor
about new forms of birth control
like the sponge. Can you tell me
more about some of these new
alternativPs to
lhe birth control
pill?
ANSWER : The
v&lt;)glnal sponge Is
...
one of several jl.
-..,.
barrier types of

CITY, INC.

Owned by Local Investors In Meigs, Gallia and Mason Counties

FARM CITY INC.

&amp; -=awllght

_a

contraceptives

6 P.M. TILL MIDNIGHT- FRIDAY, JUNE 22, 1984
ONE NIGHT ONLY - CASH AND CARRY -

STORE WILL CLOSE FRIDAY AT 2 P.M. AND RE-OPEN AT 6 P.M.

BRING ·YOUR TRUCK - LIMITED SUPPLY

In Stock Merchandise Only - No Rainchecks At These Prices - Factory Representatives On Hand To Demonstrate Their Products

We Welcome You

~

DOLL And many

Jack W . Carsey

oth~r

Dour

There will be plenty of refreshments. This is a coin·
pletely
independent
locally·owned business .
You'all ~ome and maybe you, too, will want to in·
vest.

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

BUY A MAJOR APPLIANCE (REFRIGERATOR
STOVE · WASHER· DRYER or DISHWASHER) AND
GET A TAPPAN MICROWAVE FOR ONLY $99

TAPPAN GAS RANGE
SALE

$323 95
Diane Lewis

Chrome bowls, pilotless Ignition, back light, black gass door.
Was

1

695.95

$544 95

SPECIAL· SPECIAL
SPEC IAL

Special
Sl58. 95
318 .95
356.95
436.95
511.95
648.95

GREAT SALE ON

HOOVER SWEEPERS

BIG RED

PLUS A

SCISSOR SHARPENING
CLINIC

A big 6-fool Puppy
Dog will be here giv. Mark Michael

Reg.

4000 BTIJ .............................. S3l9.95
5000 BTU ................................ 406.95
5800 BTU ........................ .. ...... 454 .95
7600 BTU ................................ 556 .95
9800 BTU ................................ 652.95
11,800 BTU ................·...... .. ..... 826.95

TAPPAN DOUBLE OVEN --~~~.:.1:~.~~~~~·-·· SJ87. 95

,

June Wells

ing out dog food sampies.

UPRIGHT HOOVER
SWEEPERS
Reg. '99.95

Get Your Scissors Sharpened
Friday Night While
You Shop
REGULAR ...................... 79'
. 99'

$8.99
BIG RED CAT DINNERS, 25 lb ...... Only $6.99

"siG RED NUGGETS, 50 lb ............ Only

COLOR TV 13 AC 3504 ...................... •292.95
COLOR TV 17BC4602W REMOTE .
. .. 335 .95
COLOR TV 19PC3704W ......................... 374 .95
COLOR 19PC4730W REMOTE ................ '405.95
COLOR TV 25PC3802 ............ ................. 599 .95
COLOR TV 25PC4832 PUSH BUTTON ..... 703.95
BLACK &amp; WHITE TV 12X34114W .............. 91.95

GREAT BUYS ON
HOTPOINT
AIR CONDITIONERS

CUSTOM RANGE

Mary Jane Lewis

13 "
17"
19"
19"
25"
25"
12"

Rhonda Wood

OR

SPECIAL

OF THE

$69 9 5

HAY SAVER UNIT

/

)

'

'229.00
263 .00
299 .00
319 .00
469 .00
555.00
71.95

one of the modern miracles of

loday's medical induslry. How -

cocaine -

C'ver, in increasing numbers. drugs
are bf&gt;ing misused and abused a t a

10 HP TRACTOR MOWER, Reg. '1.110.95 ..................................... 1988.00
16 HP TRACTOR MOWER, Reg. '1.896.00 ................................... 1 1.595.00
3 HP 18" CUT MOWER. Reg. 1146.00 ........................................... 1135.00
3 HP 20" CUT MOWER, Reg. 1142.95 ........................................... 1127.95
3 HP 22" CUT MOWER, Reg. 1154.95 ............ ............. .................. 1138.95
31/2 HP, 20" CUT MOWER, Reg. 1218.00 ....................................... 1194.95
3112 HP 22" CUT MOWER. Reg. 1233.95 ........................................ 1207.95
SELF-PROPELLED 3\/1 HP 22" MOWER. Reg. 1218.95 ..................... 1194.95
SELF-PROPELLED 4 HP 22" MOWtR, Reg. 1343.95 ................. ...... 1306.95
TILLER, 3 HP, CHAIN DRIVE. Reg. 1276 .95 .............. .................... 1246.95
TILLER, 5 HP CHAIN DRIVE, Reg. 1366.95 ................................... 1326.95
TILLER, 5 HP, CHAIN DRIVE W/REV .. Reg. '391.95 ...................... 1349.95

TAPPAN
GAS RANGES &amp;
MICROWAVES

CHANGE

79(.

16 Oz. Bottles

3

$22

95

$

REG.

$25° 0 OR MORE

AT THE STORE THIS FRIDAY NIGHT
YOU WILL RECEIVE ACOUPON ENTI ·
TUNG YOU TO PURCHASE 10 GALLONS OF REGULAR OR UNLEADED

GAS AT $1 °9ER GALLON
Gas must be purchased between Friday Night, June 220d
ond Salurday Night. Juno 30th
~~

Gary Gregory

HAND TOOLS jSh
LANtERN BAT

KERO CADDY ..

••.

Etc.) ................................................. ····· I

-~-~-~-~~::::: : ::::: :::::::. ::::: :: ::: .:::: .. ---··---·· ·· ····· ········· ·······i'1~2J9

INSEClAWAY PAINl.. .........
POUlTRY FEEDERS &amp; FOUNTS ....

Sludics

show

no

a

or wet:&gt;ks for the hormone levels in

thP woman' s body to return to till:'
ll'vel needed for conception_
.
As this discussion indicatM, there
&lt;.~re an increasing num~r of birth
control options availablf' to tod.ay'fo
ad ult s. and prosJ')f'&lt;·ts of some even
morC' ronveniPnl and effective
mt'lhods ~oon Bu1 birth control is 'a
\'c-rv individual cirrumstancl?'. Th
mctkf' thf' lx'sr de-cision about whitt
ts lx'st fo r your nN'ds. you should
ti..l lk O\'('r all thP possibili ties with

\·our physician

IC'ngths of time. Wornl'n who do

•

Virl uall y any drug. laken in lhe

SJX'Ci fir drugs v.ith ;:1 largl~ quantity
of alcoho l is a rommon in cidf'nt 1h;1t
is quitr dangrmus .
A JX_"rson suffering from multiplf'
drug ingestion must r&lt;'f'ri vf' immf'diatl' m~:.'dicaltrf' &lt;Jlrncn t sinf'f' f'&lt;:tC'h
drug rn&lt;:t y incrf'asr thr cffrct of 1hf'
others and llw ir combinr d cffPct
ma .v be rnon• rapid and p&lt;)\\'Ptfu l
than that of an.v unl' dru~ b) ' itsrlf.

It is important that thP

rrll'dic ~ d

dPl&lt;.~\. taking

p::&gt;ssiblP alJuut t hP numl::!Pr ancltqx·
of
Uru(;s
ha s takf'n rnom
Takf'
with
_
\ uuthC'
to patirnt
t hf' f•mf'rgf&gt;nn·

~·~Ei~ij~~~~~~·

staff at thl' hospital PmPrgrnc-v
drpart rm•nt IX' told as much dS

o.tn~·

m:.ttf'rials f'ound around m on

thf' pJ tit&gt;nt so ml'dical pc-rsonnl·l
can idf'ntit\ thr drugs that h LI\'f'
hr'(•n inge&gt;stf'd_ Howf' \'f'r. do not

amount s. can C&lt;JUSl:'
rPartions ranging fro m vomiti ng

and lack of coordination to an
irrrgular heart beat and mu.sclC'
spasms.
Taking a combin&lt;:.~tion of drugs

can

also

lead

reactions.

The

to

undesirable

combin ation

of

!&gt;3 1 JACKSON PIKE · RT. 35 WEST
Phone 446-4524

SUMMER SIZZLER

BARGAIN MATINE[S SAT &amp; SUN
AU SEArS $2 00
ADMISSION EVERY TUl:SDM $200
{[)([PT " ~RU"L.N '&gt;" 8 I I!O I AA~ JOI!( S")

ENTIRE STOCK OF

HANDBAGS

50o/oQ,E,t.
"l}ualit ~ \pparP I

FREE PARKING ON THE MUNICIPAL PARKING LOT

Bible schml

"Over 48 Years In The Same Place
Under The Same Management"

Vaca lton Bible School will b£o held
al Poplar Ridge Fm:w ili Baptisl
Chutrh on June 2.1 throug h June 30.
Therf' wlll b&lt;' classt•s for ail ages.
Persons nC'f'ding tt·a n srx:&gt;r1at ion arP

rgm,.u

Use Our Convenient

STORE
HOURS:

tJII

ooom

11Ah'lli ,1,, 'J.{l

Lay -A -Way

SORR~

NO PASS[S · NO BARGAIN

SHOWS

Mon .-THurs 9 30 to 6:00
Frtday 9:30 to 8:00
Saturday 9:00 to 6 00

ENGAGEMENT.

T~ I S

4th WlE~ 7 - I~ A 9:30P.M.
SAT &amp; 5UH MATINEE l . l~ &amp;3. )
COMl rH..

~OO N "

BAC.H[LOil

ca li .167-016Bor 742-2220.

.... .

.

1------=~.:::..

Lawrance Bush

. ...... . .. :::::::::::::·::::·:::::::: :::::·:

TIRE

SALE

BELOW COST SPECIALS

~·

VITAMIN SALE

VitamirtC
Bonus
Bottle

____ /

15 CU. FT . 15DAB CHEST ........ ...........
20 CU . FT . 20DAB CHEST .... ...............
26 CU. FT . 26DAB CHEST ...................
11 CU. FT . DF17 UPRIGHT .. ................
20 CU. FT . DF20 UPRIGHT ...... ............
6 CU . FT . C!iABLAL CHEST.. ........ .....
8 CU . FT . CBAALAL CHEST .................
10 CU . FT . C10AALAL CHEST .............

'32B.OO
'422.00
'476.00
'431.00
"456.00
'240.00
'286.00
"316.00

I ea. Director 205/14 .................. 135.37
3 ea. Director 185/14 .................. 132.97
ea. Director 225x75R-15 ............ '40.17
ea. Director 235/75R-15 ------·---- 141.97
ea. Director 195/70A·l4.. ......... '32 .97
ea. Director 225/75R-14 ----------- '35.97
ea. Director 225/75R-14 ........... 135.97
ea. Director 215/75R·I4.. ......... '34.17
I ea . Director 195/75R-14 ----------- '31.
2 ea . Director 155/80R·I3 ........... '28.n
2 ea. SPD C78/13........................ 123.97
I ea. SPD H78/14 ........................ 129.37
I ea . SPD C78/14 ........................ '23.97
4 ea . SPD F78/15 ........................ '26 .97

I ea. SPD D78/14 ........................ '23.97
2 ea. SPD F78/14 .......... .. ............ '26.97
I ea. SPD PI85/75D·I4 .............. '23.97
I ea. SPD P205/75D·l5... ............ '26.97
2 ea. SPD P225/75D·I4 ............... 129.37
2 ea. SPD 225/75· 14 ................... '29.37
2 ea . Redi Grip L78/15... .............. 129.37
2 ea . Redi Grip G78/15.. .............. '30.24
2 ea. Redi Grip G78 / 15 ............... '29.76
I ea. Redi Grip A78/-13 .. ............. '24.00
I ea. Grip Spur 700xl5 LT........... '43.20
ea. Custom Belt P235/75B· I5 ... '31.20
ea . Multi Carrier 700xl5 ............ '35.37
ea. Multi Carrier 750x16 ............ '41.97

OYSTER
SHELL

~ 625mg

4001.V.

~===' .!~;~t~'

;; $4.99
100 TA flU: TS

Stress
• Lecithin $
•Kelp

Lecithin
B -6

#l:!flf

#1424
#1425
#/4 '!i

$3.99

CALCIUM ...m

11/JiO

•Niacin

with Iron
wilh Zinc

IOOmg

#1:!81

11/.1.!:!

evilamin

8·12
500mcg

$3.95

10.

e

ooo r.t.

#/.1/fl /00

BETA
CAROTENE

15 mg

#IJ62

CAPSl u ;.o.;

500 mg

.

MGM(Formerly
FARM
CITY.
INC.
Meigs Landmark)

Melllltt~ llltCIIIIoultl. Ull.

Ctltrtn llffl1. Uh

Mon. t~ru bt. 1:00 1.m. to 9 , .m.
Sundlr IOJO '"'to U )0 p111 tnd tto I p m
PIUFIIPTIONS
'" H2·215S

JACK CARSEY, MGR.
I

In! lhm St.

Fll'"dty SttviCI

~ JU&amp;!'IIltllll

Pomtro,. Oh

Skin Cream
11HOO

Skin Oil
•l.i!O

~

I

II
I
I

1
I
I

·-------------------'

/00

TAiiU; T~:

SKIN SAVERS

/00 TA HU.'T~

lDNld "'""'"' ..,,._

3,29

•NUTRA-E"

IJO T.4 HU." TS

-----------------SWISHER LOHSE
tf/681

#1.1&gt;11&gt; /Oil L ll''i I f ..'

IWJ.S

Narural
$3.59 eL-Lysine
$3.99

#1314 IOOCAPSt'L£5

r-WU.T~

$3.79

50 meg

$3.99

$2.19

/1)(1

•Selenium$

Bonus Bottle

111:!.90 lOt! TA III.I-J"

eNaturarA
Vitamin

550 mg

M

100 T4 /JI. E1'."

2.'i0 TA I'U.T"i

$1.49

IOOmg

• Bee
Pollen

$2.49

~.ior&lt; lll_ fT,

Dolomite$2.49

e Vilamin

B·l

$3• 99

•Natural

6(1 TA IIUT'i

100 TAUI.ET.'-i

u·ith Vila min D

SHELl.

$3.99

11-1205 /00 CA ,,_'i/ IU .'."i

Natural
OYSTER

nrou 1

~OtR

2, 99

19 gr.

•

BcoMPLEx

Pharmacy

181

E

CALCIUM

111439

1

,~~

._""\._'\/,1'1

Vitamin

Exira Sln?ngth

~

500mg
1Rose Hips!

~~

Special
Price
3 ea. Golden Mark 235x70R· I5 ........ 144.97
6 ea. Golden Mark 205xl4 ............... 137.77
2 ea. Golden Mark 235x70R· I5 ........ '44.97
I ea. Golden Mark 225x75 R-15 .. ..... 141.97
I ea. Golden Mark 205x14 ............... 137.77
I ea. Mark 74 P205/75R-14. .......... '47.97
I ea. Mark 74 P205/75R-15 ............. '47.97
I ea. Golden Mark P205/70A·l4 ... '35.97
7 ea. Golden Mark P215f70A· l4 ... '38.97
LIMITED SUPPLY
I ea. Golden Mark P225/70R-14 ... 141.37
PRICES GOOD TILL THEY ARE GONE
ea. Golden Mark P245/70R-15 ... 147.97
HURRY ON THIS ONE - FREE MOUNTING ea. Golden Mark Pl95/70R-13 ... '34.n
BALANCING EXTRA
ea. Golden Mark P225!14 .......... '41.37

ade ®

BACK-TO-SUMMER ~ - ~

95 ROLL

to the

thf' patient

, ..,tf;ran_.., Mrmorial llospitJI pmer~c nc~· ronm in orclpr to searcll fo1·
. ., uch matrrials.

.-\ ffordahly Pril·t~d"

(THIS PRICE FOR FRIDAY NIGHT ONLY)

iEv~J\ 1 :!~~:s~_ow .......... ·•~oo ~9 .95
I ~0 ~
..... · .. ... ............ 3.49 2.9'1

ow• ' ·

ANSWER:

incrPased frequency in chromosomp abnormal ities in chJ ldrrn
born to mothPrs who hav0 takt:n
birth control pill s for var;.in~

taking oral contraceptives have-

ahoul lwiC&lt;' the chance of having
haby \\Oih birth defe&lt;'I S.
When a woman slOps using the
pill. her chances of becoming
prPgnant immediately are rE!duc&lt;'&lt;i. II usually takes a few da~

impr opPr

OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS
UNTIL 8:00 P.M.
STOP IN AND REGISTER
BETWEEN 5 and 8 P.M.
FRIDAY EVENINGS FOR
FREE GIFT CERTIFICATE
TO BE GIVEN AWAY

ALL FENCING ON SALE
FABULOUS
FREEZER SALE

PAINT PAN ~ROLLER .............................. '2 .39
MARBLE CHI ........ ................................... •3 .99 •2.99
PEAT MOSS 3 / 4 ...... ............. ...... ... ........ 12 .97 t2.19
PEAT MOSS '2 ....................... .. ....... ......... .. •4 .87 '3.79
PEAT MOSS 4 .......... ............................ .. 16 .77 ss.l9
PEAl MOSS 6 ................................ .......... 19.87 '7.69
ECT~IN RY TAGS ............
. ....... •100
91
11\ GAL WOIITH SI'IIAYBI ................... 124.7'1 •17.9'1
=~E&amp;~D ........................................... •1.&amp;9 •us
AIN OIL ........................
.. .... •4. 19 •2 .99
~ALT PELLUS _
................... ~. ..... .... . . ... 14. 10 IJ .89
A~NT .............................. .................... . ..... I 0% OFF

WITH EVERY PURCHASE OF

dC'fects sometimPs. Arf&gt; pill s morP
dangerous in thi:!t r espect th~ln
other contracC'ptives?

become pregnant while they arr

WHITE &amp; BONE

Thirty-six arm students have
txoen namf'd 10 thf' Washington
Trchnical College President's lisl
and 57 students havf' ~n named to
thi'dran"s tisr forth esprlngquarter.
· Named to lhe President' s list
from I he arm with a 4.0 grad&lt;' point
m·erage were Ernersl Vin&lt;'yard.
R('('((svilie: Sleven Bunce. Middlr[Xlrt: Lawrence Lisle. S}Tacust';
and SI&lt;'VC Roberts. Pot1 iand .

ONLY

FRONT-END ALIGNMENT, Plus Parts
SPECIAL

barbilu ·

decreased response 10 pain. brea ·
thing difficulties. impaired coordlnalion and reflexes. low blood
pressure and constipation.
Haliucinogtns- LSD. peyot~and
mescaline - can cause dang-er ous

Dean's list

BARB
WIRE

$} ~u~Deposit

$ 00

When Your Purchase
5 Qts. Oil &amp; Oil Filter

Reg. 16.95

Drugs that depress -

ra tes, marijuana. narc-otics. tran quilizers and ant i-convu lsa nt s can ra usf' IPthargy, sleepiness. a

improper amount s.

VIDEO RECORDERS
HOTPOINT MICROWAVES &amp; GE TVs

CHASSIS LUBRICATION

1

a rash. hives, swelli ng, bruising or
fever. At its extremP, thf' rea eli on
rna~· lead to an acute.
lifrthreatC'ning asthmatic-likr attack.

CJVaturo

DEMONSTRATE OUR NEW

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8-Pack

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a n allergic reaction, manifested by

sion can set in when t hC' drug is
discontinued.

There are five major effects:
drugs that stimulate ;uppers):
drugs that depress 1downers 1:
drugs thai cause hallucinations:
drugs lhal cause an allergtc
reaction: and drugs taken In

WILL BE HERE TO

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alters the structure of the sperm
and lessens their ability to mow
towards the egg. Allhough oral
forms ot gossypol are currently
being tested in China. the mel hod i s
still in early stages of research.
Another approach to contracC'p·
lion in men also being investiga tN:I
involves mPChanirally blocking the
passage of sperm lhrough I he vas
deferens. also called the s[l('rma li r
cord . Though the principle is lhr

procedure has a better potential for
belng reversed at a later date and is
somewhat easier to periorm .
Contrac-eption takes place by
injPCting a chemical blocking a~wnt
into the spermatic cord via a very
thin needle inserted through the
wall of the man's scrotum . Reversa l would probably require a simple
su rgical procedure that would
bypas." the obsructed area.
QUF.STION· My friend sa.vs I hal
birth control pill s cause&gt; birth

FACTORY REPRESENTATIVE

GREAT

1

fore is not yet a reliable form of
birth control.
Anot~er interesting birth control
measure for men that is now being
tested uses a subslance called
gossypol. a compound thai occurs
naturally In cotton plants . Gossypol

same as that for vasPCtomies, this

A wiener roas 1for lhc childr&lt;'n will
ilf' hf'icl on June ,'lQ.

GENERAL ELECTRIC

ONLY

FACTORY
REPRESENTATIVES
FOR

cide a ttempts.
Almost any drug. but especially
anlibiotic s and iodines. can ca usr

heart rate. blood pressure and
breathing rate. ExtrC'mC' de-pres-

reactions can occu r with t he
combinations. And th ese adverse
rC'ac tions often require em C'rgency
medical treatmPnt.

SALE

psychiatric behavior, including sui-

st imul ate the ne!V'ous
system and can in crPase a person's

dfecl on I he mind or body of I he
drug user, however, undesirablf'

Willie Sellers

2 LITER COKE

DON'T MISS THIS!!

inhibits conception by redu cing
sperm production. Current tesls.

ANSWER : Research is currently
under way on a "ma le pill ." A
substance which chemically resembles the male hormone testosterone

Stimulating drugs- amphetamines, anti-asthmatics, caffeine and

Drugs. when used properly. are

abuser.
Drug s arC' designed to have an

IF YOU EVER WANT
TO BUY A MOWER
NOW IS THE TIME

FACTORY
REPRESENTATIVE
WILL BE
HERE TO

DEMONSTRATION

many women, the cap seems to

developments in contraceptives for
men?

however, show that the experimen ·
tal oral contraceptive does not
lotaUy eliminate sperm and there -

Physicians detail uses, abuses of current prescription drugs

10

LIVE

prevent

high cost to the health of the drug

Sale

Reg.

ONLY$169

Prizes and Givf'"-A- Wavs.

CONCEPT.. .~!A·.~~.I.t~~

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GENERAL ELECTRIC
TELEVISIONS

TAPPAN
MICROWAVES

Wt&gt; will havt" Door PriZt"!!i in•·luding a CABBAGE PATCH

they

stay in place more reliably and
block the cervical opening better
than a diaphragm.
Researchers are currently at
work on a contraceptive vaccine for
women. The vacclne produces
antibodies to a unique protein found
in the spenn and causes an
"a track "" on lhespermaslheyenter
the vagtna and uterus. Such a
vaccine would offer long-term
contraception to a woman w1thout
requiring her to remember to take a
pill or insert a barrier deviet\
QUESTION: Are there new

•

UNBELIEVABLE PRICES ON
MAJOR APPLIANCES

MGM wants to welcome you
to our Grand Opening Sale.
I'm sure we have many Items
you may now or later be Inter·
ested in purchasing .

-

pregnancy by forming a barrier
wh)ch keeps sperm from reaching
the female egg for fertilization. The
sponge is of man-made material
which has been treated with a

chemical that destroys the sperm
as they enter the vagtna. Like the
diaphragm and other barrier contraceptives . the sponge musl be
Inserted before lnlercourse to be
effective.
Unlike some other forms of
barrier contraception, the sponge
can be purchased without a prescription and used wlthoul fitting by
a physician. The sponge also can be
kept In place for a slightly longer
period of time than the diaphragm.
Another new barrier contraceptive that may be available In this
country soon Is the cervical cap. a
device that has been used In Europe
for several years. The cap Is a small
rubber cap that fits over the end of
the cervix. Once Inserted it can be
left in place for several days. For

$1.99
$3.99

:!UZ.

I f'l_

fJZ

Love that
Body Glove "
Love the way rt looks. lhe way tt teets These
Samsontte chatrs fit your body ltke a glove

• Strong, welded tubular steel fr ames
• Rust-reststant Samson -Gard" frame ftntsh

• Cool . comfortable Super TuM • slrng s
• Cho1ce of decorator colors

0

Samsonite
I
UR~&gt;J 1 • ,JP~

PA~n· ·

�Page

8- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thunday, June 21, 1984

From Conmmer R epUJtJ

tGDDD DLD PASBIDID BO!St

Removing old furniture polish markings
By the Editors
.
of Conswner Reports
DEA R CONSUMER REPOR TS:
I ,;.. ~x&gt;&lt;~n us ing furniture polish tor

stripped away, you should be able
to go back lo your regular polishing

mQrf' th&lt;:tn Xl ypars . But now.
a nythln~ I use on the furnltur(' ~
induliing thP dining room l&lt;:lblf'-

reduce thP wax buildup .

h·iq•s a mark . PIPa se tell mr how
lo fPnl!'dV Ihe problem .
DEAR READER: Consumer

Ropon s rnginwrs

sa~·

thr marks

Ill&lt;,( ' bt· thC' r esult of a w ax build up
O\l'r rhc _vt•a rs . Repolishing doc-sn't
n ·mo\'r thl• prrvious roa rs . Try'
rL·mu,·ing thl' old wax usin )::: a clo th

dal:nJX'n&lt;'tl with mineral s piri ts.
l 'Sf' t•x trPmC' c;;~ ution. hO\VC'\'f'r.
bt."&lt; ;&lt;.tU~P spirit s c:~rP VC'ry fl&lt;.~mmd ­
Ull•· CIPaning thP furniturr outdoors
would tx-• be's!. but if that\ not
possib!P. b(' sun' \T'n tilati on i n thf'
room \l.'h&lt;•rp _v ou'rf' working i'
ad~u ~t! P and tu rn off ;1n_
, . pil ot
flamps in nearby arf&gt;as.
1-.., YO U ~:~pply thP m inf'ral spirit .s.
tu!Jl lhP c loth frequf'nt ly and use a
nt""' one lf the first c loth b('('OmC':"
d~rh. Once lhe old wax has been

habit s. The enJ.,rineers sugges t you

use as !itt!&lt;' »&gt;iish as possible to
DEAR CONSUMER REPORTS:
The paint on rny house has bet:&gt;n
peeling , possibly lx&gt;cause gre&lt;&gt;n
woc:xl m ay ha\·p been used when thP
house was buill. I'm considering
putting aluminum siding on m y
housp so I don't have to paint even ·
year. Will aluminum siding causP
dt?terioration to thf' house' b~'
absorbing moistw·p?

DEAR READER: ConsumN
Report s paint PXPf'rtS say p&lt;'&lt;'llng
paint can tx&gt; ca usf'd by· a varier:-,· of
conditions. such as an improperly·
prf'parC'd SUJiare prior to painting
or moisture co ming m through bad
caulking. Properly· instaliE'd al umi num siding shouldn't rausC' an~·
dnmagr.

DEAR CONSUME R RE PORTS:
1\\'0 Afgha n i:x'dspreads shrank
after I machine washed and driPd
thrm . I havE&gt; thrPe other A fghans
t hai nrf'd c iPaning. ll ow ca n I wash
thrm \\.'ilhout shr inking them?

DEAR READ!Cil: Our engineers
say it sounds £Js though thP two
A fghans .vou washC'd arE' made of
wool. T hrr£' s not an awfu l lot you
can dn now aOOut thPir shrunkrn
sizP. You might try soaking them in
cold wat er and then stretching thP
Wf't s prC'e~ds on a rack to dry. A
commC' rc iall a und ry ma~· J:x&gt; abl£&gt; to
do this for ~·ou if .\ ·ou can' t rig a

RGC-CC trustee
Roush honored
H.io Cra nd&lt;&gt; Community CoiiC'gC'

........
Lart'll M. Wolle

L1ren Wolfe receives
RC£-CC scholarship
.

Larcn MaC' Wolff' of fuld nf' has
bt~ J\Yardffl the District Honor
Sdiolarship lo att&lt;&gt;nd Rto (;randc
Co~eg&lt;' a nd Commumtv Collcgl' .
'Fhc dis 11ic t honor sc holarship is a
foW·-yrar. full -tuition scholarsh ip
aw~rdrd annually to an outst;.mding
St•rrior from C'ac h of thf' four-count\·

an\o high schools.
Wolfe graduated from Soul hrrn
Hig,h School w hprc shf' \A ·as act j~,. ·C' in

voll&lt;&gt;vba ll , baskl'lba ll. a scorC'·
kl.,;p;,r lor boy s' baskc&gt;tball. studt' nl
~cil . vie-r• piT's idrm1 of sophotrHJI'"C' cl ass. scholastic tf'am . n•Jr-

Do&lt;ik

:-.t&lt;.tff. ~&lt;.lt iona l Honor Sol'it.• t\

an&lt;ll~l'l

prom qur~'n .
~ ~f' rC'Ccived S\i A(· lragut• ho·
no~, m ost \'aluablr playrr in
voUcvball in the· SVAC, honorable
m"'tion on thc stat&lt;' voU&lt;'ybal l
ll'&lt;i!1l . co-most ,-a lua blf'playrr in thP

SVi&gt;.C.

rl'C&lt;' i'ed

th&lt;&gt;

Danfonh

A.$rd and \\&lt;:ts a dC'lf'gLIIt• to
SlR"kPW Girls St;rtc•.
'.t'olfl' W&lt;.lS narnt&gt;d sa lutatorian of
hPJ! sPnior cbss and JH't'l'-'l'd th('
scirnn ·. f' n~=:li ~ h and citil.('"·"' hip
kf •VS. ShP is 1h(• dJU,L! htPr of Mr. and

Mr:S. '·'""'wolff'

OOard of tn.Jst('(' mrmbt:-r Ori on
Housh rffC'nt I:v rrcein&gt;d an awa rd
of &lt;.lppn'&lt;·iatio n from fellow board

mpmbC'r-;.
ThP a\\.' d J-d wa s prPsf'ntf'd b~
Manning Wf'tht•rholt in Jl'f'Ognilion
of Housh'scant ribut ions to th(' boanJ
and the comm uni !_
\.· &lt;'Oil( •gt&gt; .
Housh was om• of thP ori.[!inal

board mPmlx'rs. He i:x'gan his
Sf'l'"':icr at thf' Conununity Co!Jcgp' s
organiz&lt;J tion&lt;.ll

mo•1ing

in

Scp-

tcmbr.'r 1972. HC' is cuiTPnllv in his
third lcrm on lhl' board. which
Pxpirf'S in Sc-ptt•rnlx.•r 1%7.
Roush is a n•tin&gt;d dairy farmPr
and a rf'sidrnl of Rac inP.

Honor roll
'lht fln&lt;ll ~ L\ " " ' .. h&lt;&gt;no~ 1'1&gt;11 tn \lo-11." IUOIHI fl 11!n
"'t ~ • ·t n,, _
, r)• ·n .•noo•I.HI&lt; '•• l

\ ll ~r uclo 'fll• h.&gt;l l ' .l l l. un• ~ l .&gt; 11 l!l .l&lt;io 'HI l~ ·fl o 'l
&lt;.;!-\ I '\'Ill f'hn•rm.1 I~ '" I hrh ] ~, ko·r 11•111'\
] ll)l ll ,o!l.lll I O. &gt;J io•ll o• 1,1111•
'-'"'1&lt;·\ 1,!1 1 i 'h,ul
1 ·"""''" r,,, , ,l 'l. u~ ~1 . •r• 1·,,,.,,, 'oi,JI '\ D ,l lio&gt;ll l,,...,,n
l~li .:••n t_. ·,,t' n.11&lt;b::1 ~''''' dm•!l(l' . l'lo ·lli l · '-'1111.:
""·"' 11 I· 1'!1', T1•11'\ VI&lt; ·ld' ~l i' \ ' 1 F nu ilo ~&gt;I. l ~ ut.,,, ,,
v.... · , . ~ ),, H.• I" ' · '~'~ 1-h"•ll. .1••11 h•ft1'l'
l~ · m 1 .1&gt;'111 '1' 1.o•l&lt; '11,, '·•U I) lfT",I Il_ \ml ll11 ko'\
d&lt;., 11'11 .\11 ~I I"' I 11)(1\ \1. 1\ !l.ll 'd JC II"' ' \'l n ll 'l
.II ,lll\ \11111 1 k&lt; ·l 1!1 { ~ h•J. T· dl I ''"' I'! I. H&lt;~)Ill ()U, I II •
\ 11Tl(h 1&lt; 1~' Tm.r H••nun, · .],,,,,, ~, , , ,
l1•.h
r,,,,, ~
,\Jo•nl• .• 1\u no·• 1/u h.J rd \ ', tnt~ · ; .. 1\1111'
\\ ,o\l. IIHI 1- •11!1~ \\' "'
"~-1.••' 1\ ho• •lf'l .... l hl'lfl.l
\\ ,J,on :&gt;kh,,.l ' ' ·· ··b ,tJ1d
Y&gt;Hl11J.:
111 .~n·H 1·., )(11• · ]1 ,.,., :.l.u~w l 'l&lt;! k1 ·1 \, wh ,ll'l
ltull un' [1,&gt;\ ld 1~•'1.( 1 1' 111111\ n~ lli · l• lo~ll lh&gt; MI1
' Jl, ,n • · ··t~ ·• :.1 ,mrh r n I•• · l,,un~ .., ""' '''
11.HIIl.ll j.: l·h.11l• ollo 11.11'1 1- • '. lllll ,l fi i ~H I• · •"• n l l 1• ·l
)1, l lll.l/1 \IH IJ &gt; 11••&lt; .,1 •11• II
lh,ri •-. Jiuo l •· &gt;ll h • ''ll t\ f... 1111: !l 1.u l 'll' " l~ · n . &gt;
'.l .m io", i', ,loi \l dr..n I ,~, , \l1l l• ·• I"'' '\,~,lll.&lt;n
I ' ·' l'oTro ·t-. ~1 I !Juo "-l"lil l ill ' '-'tl.!lll~orl\ 1,11 Ill \H)Clo
'ok,n ' '" orlll!li r ur,. ... \\ ,u11t t. uul....,..,nll ilh •nl'

n,,-,,,.

~ OLD FASHIONED BARGAINS
DURING

r~llJ)l~11mmD~
SPECIAL FOR

FRIDAY:

HAIRCUT

SHAMPOO
SATURDAY: STYlE &amp; CUT
SPECIAL FOR

$JOO

$500

suita ble rack. The safest wa y to
wash the remaining spreads Is to
have t hem dry-cleaned rather than

Cit y Station, New York. N.Y. 10019 .

trying to do them yourself.
(For a special repri nt of ConsumPrs Union's evaluation of thE' new
dil't pills. send $1 for each copy to
COI\'SUMERS. P 0 Box 461 . Radio

Send your questions to Consu -

school attending .
Betty Ann Loft is. ofPomero;'. was
appointed as Burwell City Direclor
of Law.
Benitta Ocr:, o.:~~ ler and ,\ngr• Ia

me" Union . Box DCB. :?56 Wa shing'l on St. , Mt Vernon, 1\' .Y .
1005.1. Volume of ma il prohibits
pcrsonal rf'plies .

Marie Col lins. both of Long Bottom,
werc elecled to city council . [)epter
rPsides in Sherman w hlle Collins is a
citizen of Hobart.
The participants elect and appoint
governmenl officia ls who actually
nm the government. Each girl is
assrgned to a pa rty, a county and a
crtV' by her room assignment.
Girls Stale. whic h ends Saturday,
ts the
Iargcs l projecl of the

Mrs. Pa ul Haptonstall rPacl an
anic lc. "Peace and thP lountr;.•."

a bout The Phill ippines.
[)(&gt;votions \\1C're rpad by Mrs.

Dw ight Wa llace . She spoke about
.. New Wine and Old Rott!Ps ...
Progra m leader for thePVent was
Mrs. Tom Ruc. The lhilllk offering
was tnkrn. Hostc'SSl's for thP pvent
w('rC' Mrs. Davicl Cummings and

DRESS and CASUAL SHOES

20°/o OFF

FRIDAY

CHAPMAN SHOES

POMEROY - The Nelson
family reunion will be held
Friday at Forest Acres Park.
Lunch at noon.

NEXT TO ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

UNDER NEW OWNER/MANAGEMENT
NOW SERVING
LUNCH 11 to 2 and DINNER 5 to 10 DAILY
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

TRY OUR DAILY SPECIALS
VISIT OUR DOWNSTAIRS PIZZA SHACK
NOW SERVING LUNCHEON SIZE PIZZA
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK- CALL 992-6674

Sf'rV('(I

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••
••
•••
••
••
••
, •
OLD FASHIONED
•
CLEARANCE
SALE
ON
All
SPRING
••
(j );rl! DIAMOND DAYS
•••
•• AND SUMMER MERCHANDISE
\I) l[jelfJO''J
FRI.-SAT
•
•• FOR MEN. WOMEN &amp; CHILDREN •
•
••
•
1 GROUP OF TENNIS
•• WE HAVE ROLLED OUR DIAMOND
••
SHOES ARE DRASTICALLY
PRICES BACK 20% FOR OLD
••
REDUCED
•••
••
FASHIONED HERITAGE DAYS
••
••
•
All
HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.
:
•
•

tiJ.tafo.

POMEROY

e HOURS:

210 East Main •

• MON .· SAT. 9:00·5:00
• FRIOAY 9:00 ·8;00

Pomeroy •

992· 5272 •

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
-------·-·--·-·----~-,

HERITAGE WEEKEND

j]IDBDNIII)Ii~ I

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY ONLY

20°/o OFF

..

: ~ND ST .

:-

992 -6720
POMEROY . OH .
MON · SAT . 9 TO 5 ; EVENINGS BY APPT .

DIAMONDS
IN
STOCK

.
. ··
:

SAVE 20°/o
ON

CALICO and PILLOW
PANELS

'

:~TOP AND SEE OUR WINDOWS DECORATED
•

FOR HERITAGE WEEKEND

OFF
REGULAR
PRICE

GREAT SELECTION AND PRICES

r6)l~

SEE OUR
ANTIQUE DISPLAY
IN OUR
WINDOWS

1 JJ COURT ST.
POMEROY

OLD FASHIONED
VANGUARD

STOREWIDE
MARGUERITE SHOES
"The Middle Shoe Store In The Middle Block"
POMEROY. OH .

·---·-·-----------------PRIMER

SAVE

ralae funds !or the CoolvWe
Volunteer Fire Department,
Chester Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment and Tuppers Plains Fire
Department and Rescue Squad
on Saturday !rom 5-8 p.m . at the
Coolvllle Fire Station. Free wW
donations wlll be accepted.
POMEROY- Services at Red
Brush Church of Christ Saturday
a t 7:30 p.m. and Sunday at 10
a.m. and 6 p.m. Denver Hill will
be t he speaker. Public Invited.

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

NEW HAVEN - The NPW
Haven F iremen's AuxUiary will
have a checken barbr.&gt;que Saturday with serving to begin at 11
a.m. Flath chicke n a nd hot dog
dinnPr will be available.

PORTLAND - The descend·
ants of the late Albert and Eliza
Hill will hold their a nnual reunion
Sunday at Portland Park with a
baskel dinner a t noon. AU
relatives and friends are inv ited.

Happeningr
Middlepori Church of Christ.
Church slates revival atFifth
and Ma in, on Sunday, June

Hysell Run Church
plans bible school
POMEROY- The Hysell Run
Holiness Church wilT hold a
vacalion Bible school June 25-29.
Classes will lx' hdd from 9:.10
a. m lo noon . The Iheme tor the
school will i:x' "Wort h Mot'(' Than
Gold."
Fonda Tillis is dirC'C ior. All
c hildre n arP asked to a Itend.

Youth League
to meet
MIDDLEPOR T
Youth
L&lt;&gt;ague Sunda)' will be observ&lt;'&lt;l

CirCle of Helpin&amp; Handa Zion
Church met June 7 at home of Mn.
Marjorie Purtell.
Kathryn JohnSon had devotions.
Poems were read "New Start" and
"Flowers Leave Their Frail'ance
on the Hands that Bestow Them"

Car wash Satl.lrday
Th!'re will be a car wash
Saturday, June 23, al Sugar Run
Ashland Service Station from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m ., sponsored by the Laurel
Clilt Free Methodist Church.

Bible school slated
Vacation BibiP School will be held
at the Christian Fellowship, 333 N.
Second St., Middleport, Jun&lt;' 24-29
from 9:30 a.m. until noon tor
c hildren three through 12.
A special cartoon movie will be
shown on Tuesday and Wednesday .

from the youngest lo the oldest
youth are invited to participate.
AI 9:30 a.m., there will be a
parade of the teams during the
Sundav school hour, and at 10:30
a.m., ihere will be team judging
during the morning worship

Named to lhe dean's Irst for the
1984 spring semester a t Eastern
Kentucky University from Meigs
County was Audrie A. Culley.
Tuppers Plains.

ThP service is in recognition of
youth and a free swimmingparty
wi ll be awarded to the tea m with
1he greatest percentage of players and coaches presenl .

Weight loss
classes slated

Snyder reunion
The lith annual neunion of thP
Charles a nd Alma Snyde r family is
planned !or July 1 in Portland Park .
AU famliy members are invitm lo
a Itend .

Dinner slated

POMEROY - T he :\&lt;l eigs
\ountv Hea lth [)('partment is
offf'r uig ano! her six we-ek series

of wctght Joss classes. One class
w ill mf'f'l on Tuesday C'vcnings

from ;,. 7 and another on Friday
aft c rnoons from 1-3. Ca ll 992-ti626
for information and to r egister

for classes.

ThP Ladies Auxiliary of the
Orange Volunlecr Fire Depa rt men I
is having a spaghe tt i dinner a l 4: 30
p.m. June 23 in the Tuppers Plains
FirC'house.
Spaghelti. tosS&lt;&gt;d sa lad, garlic
bread . colfec and lea will bC' served .
Price of the dinner is $2.~ for
adulls and $1.25 for children undL·r
12.

CASUALS &amp; DRESS HEELS
ONLY

$6 to $1 2

for scripture read ing is 'Cruth .

Kathryn Johnson will be hostess.
Marjorie Purtell wil l ha ve

SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR

devotions.
Those present besides ones men tioned were Helen Johnson. E velyn

IN THE HEART OF POMEROY

Thomas and Ida Murphy.

----~-~-§~~~§~§-~-~-~~~~-~-~-§~~~~~~~~-----.,

t lltml.lmD~

IN OBSERVANCE OF

HERITAGE WEEKEND
The Pomeroy Branch of Bank One
Will Be Serving Cookies &amp; Punch
on Friday &amp; Saturday .
STOP IN AND SEE OLD RELICS OF OLD FRIENDS
AND HAVE REFRESHMENTS
Antiques and Old Fashioned
Dress on Display

I Ill L Main

---·

BANK ONE .
MembBr FDIC

DOLLAR
GENERAL STORE

POMEROY, OH .

Gallery
Hair Arts
Ponwroy. 011.

~t.

INFANTS

PH . 992-:l2 :B

OLD FASHIONED PRICES
FOR OLD FASHIONED DAYS., .
Saturday Only-9:00 to 7:00

Bible school
The First Presb;· lrrian Church
a nd Hea th United Methodist
Chun.·h. Middlepori, arc sponsoring
vaca tion chu1rh school a t lhc
Ptl'sbytC'rian Chu It'h, 16.1 N. Fourth
St .. Vliddlcport, June25-29 frurn9 : 30

SIZES 32·46

Different chwThes In the area
will provide desserts tor camp
again this year. Zion will provide
desserts we&lt;&gt;k of July 9-13.
Nexl me&lt;&gt;ting will be July 5. Word

T herewtll be a closedAA me&lt;&gt;ting
Tonighl from 7:30-8:30 p.m. at the
Mpntal Health Center, Mulbeny
Heights. Pomeroy .
AA meetings arc held evt'ry
Thursday.

On dean's list

A carry- in dinner will welromf'

back Ihe Rev. Andy R ubenkJng and
his wile. LJarcy.
Th&lt;' cvml will la ke place a t noon.
.Junc 24 in th&lt;&gt; Rutland United
MC'thodist Church.
RubC'nking is the paslor of the
R utl a nd Uniled Mclhodisl Church ,
Ihe Sa !C'm Cenler United Melhodisl
Churc h and Pearl Chapel a nd
Snowville United Vlcthodisl Church.
Tab!&lt;' spr.•icrs. drinks and rolls
will br.• pruvided .

9·

BERMUDAS
SLACKS
BLOUSES

4.

AA meets tonight

24, a nd all little league teams

service .

by Helen Steiner Rice. Suzanne
Warner, vice president, presided at
the meetlni ln the absence of
Vlrg!nla Wyatt, president.
In new business a date to pack for
Grundy w!ll be sometime ln August.
Men's fellowship w!ll meet al Zion
Church June 18 and ladles wUI
serve refreshments.
Plans were made to take water·
melon to the Cou nty Home for July

Carry-in dinner
planned Sunday

Children going into kJndergarlen
to Those pntcring junior high ar&lt;'
weicamP. The theme of Iheir year's
school is "Shar P ThP Good News."
For addit ional Informa tion call
Ha l Johnson ai992· J~'i0.

ItS OIL BASED

COOL VILLE Modern
Woodmen of Amerlca Camp
10900 wW hold a benellt potluck
supper, open to the publlc, to

POMEROY Pomeroy
Lodge 164 wlll me&lt;&gt;t Friday at 6
p.m. Refreshment s will be
served.

L.AUH.ELCUFF - A revival
wi ll bC' held at Laurelcliff Free
MC'Ihodisl Church a t 7:30 p.m.
June 22-24.
Serv ices will be presented by
the Rev. James T . Ma nning and
the Rev . Robe1i Miller.
The public is inv iled to attend.

~ag•

Circle of Helping Hands meets

POMEROY Pomeroy
Lodge 164 will challenge all area
Masons ln a golf ouTing at
Jaymar Golf Course on Sat ur·
day . Gifts will be awarded .

a.m. until noon .

CREEPERETTE
ALBERTO

SHAMPOO

Shampoo, Cut, &amp;Style .............. SJ.OO
Shampoo and Set.. .................... S4.00
Men's Hair Cut ......................... s4.00

OR CONDITIONER
• Regular or
Extra Body

15-0Z.

Free Beard &amp; Mustache Trim With Cut
Children's Hair Cuts ...~~~~r.~.~~a.r~.~ 1.d. S3.00
For Appointment
Call:

Cindy, Shirley,
or Cathy Jo

$1 ~~~~

HEAVY DUTY
BRIGHT PLATED STEEL

COVERED
COOKWARE

• Lock· light plastic covers

'S, BOYS' OR

YOUTHS'

OGGERS

PIE PAN - tO 'Io K t·
LOAF PAN - 9 1 /,~ ~~: 5 '1( x 2'1,*
SQUARE CAKE PAN-8" '8" '2·
CAKE &amp;UTILITY PAN - TJ" x 9" '

• Men's size 6'12· 12
• Boys' size 2r;,.s
• Youths' size 10Vz·2

YOUR
CHOICE

lt7 OLD MARIETTA

0°/o
ON ALL

OIL BASE HOUSE

$1 3G~II2
lt l015 LATEX

1928
·.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Democrat executive conunlttee
Will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m.
at Carpenters Hall, East Main
S~t, Pomeroy. All Interested
Democrats Invited to attend.

MANY STYLES &amp; COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM

TRUDY ROUSH, DIXIE EBLIN ,
SUSAN SISSON &amp; MARY POWEll

Top of the Stairs
BEAUTY SALON

ENTERPRISE - Ente!llrise

GROUP OF WOMEN'S

Mrs. Harlf'\' Brown. Refreshment s
of c hPrry pic, i('(' c neam a nd coff('('
WC' n~

'IHURSDAY

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Calendar
WliUJli Workers cla.u Will meet
at 7; ~p.m . Thursday.

au xiliar~:.

Church group meers _________
Group 1\vo of the Micldl rport
Presbyterian Ch urch mf't rf'&lt;'r ntly
a t the church .
1\vo Meigs High studen ts received Bib!C's presenled b;· the Rc1·.
Wanda .Johnson. RPCf'i\ ing Rillit·s
wC'rC' Pu tricia Nru !Zling and Sanrlra
Vaughan.
Mrs . Oa\1d Cumm ings presided
at th&lt;' meeting .

FRIDAY and SATURDAY

new diet pills.)

-

E"xerciSP with 1,30J juniors in high

FOR HERITAGE WEEKEND SALE

BP sure to ask for t he reprint on the

Three appointed to positions at
annual Buckeye Girls State meet
Three aJ'Pa rC'Sidcnts are partici pa ting in lhe American Legion
Auxiliary's Buc keye Girls Stat&lt;' a nd
we reelected toposil ionsV&lt;othin thetr
cil ies.
Girls Sta le is a mock government

Th~y. June 21, 1984

HOUSE PAINT

$9G~I~

JEWELRY
#100 PREMIUM

LATEX HOUSE PAINT
#951

PREMIUM OIL BASE

$1 3.~,?n
$1 s.~,?n

TERRY
MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE, Reg. '27 to '29

PRICE

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

DRESS SHIRTS
liEN'S LONG SLEEVE

SPORT SHIRTS
1 19.00

REG.
liEN'S

to '22.50

$1995
20o/o OFF

SALE

KNIT SHIRTS

IJ2 PRICE
SALE PRICES 59.50 to 511.25

FASHION JEANS
ODD LOT liEN'S

DRESS SLACKS
MEN'S HOSIERY
BOOT CUT LEVI'S

1/3 OFF
20% OFF

20% OFF
$16 90

Reg. '25.50

NEW. YORK CLOTHING HOUSE
"KERM'S KORNER"

OH .

BATH
TOWELS

16-PAK

PLASTIC
HANGERS

• Assorted solid
and print s

• Unbreakable
• For drip-dry hanging

!A~ FOR$1
13 Qt. Stainless Steel

Panasonic®
LONG LIFE

BATTERIES
• C · Cell
• D · Cell

PACK OF

4FOR85e

BOWL " Great For Canning"

$5 QQ

CHINET

PLATES
• 16 count
• 8 3/4'
diameter

PKG.

�Page

10- The Da1ly Sentinel

Pomen~y-Middleport,

who su;., Jves at Letan
Hew as a m nstructlon worker and
a \ eteran of the US Army during
the Korean War He wa s a member
of the DAV Chapter 014
AJso SUJ\. 1\ mg are his \.\.iff' £\£1
Lou Mt ller Yonker one daughtet
Mrs T homas (RoxannJ Russell of
\1ason a stPpmother Mrs Olga A
Yonkr1 of Pumerm, !htPl' S lSIPI~
:vlts Jack tJo) 1 Roush of Letart
\1t s l'.tllJt'd 1Matx&gt;l t Hendel son of
Spa t1a 1 mn an d Mts Dona ld
1B&lt;&gt;rnm st Brumilteld of N,1sh1 tll r
1 enn
rno brother s Ra' I
Yonkf'I
m thr lJ S A Im\ tn

EH•rett E Kmg 72 Petu !\ \
died TuPSday at CV PH Medtral

CentPr
Mr Kmg"as born!\o1 lu 19ll m
l'omero) the son of thr late Alb&lt;&gt;t1
and Flmena Young Kmg
HP v...as a rctin'CI wddPr e~nd

'ieam ftt 101

HL

was J mPmtx• r uf

K('('SC'\ illr I udgc uf Elk.&lt; 2C'fi2 Lutal
7'i { Plum bPI s and S!Pclm fillf'l'S

""I Yot k Ohto Masontc Lodgp""l
!'('ottJsh Hill' \"all!'\ ofStPutx•m UIP
H&lt; mlcx k Cra nge 1\14~ IIPmlock
(,JO\(~

( n&gt;nnan\ dnd C.Jf'•orgP 'A '\ onkrr of

Hf' ts s unJ\(&gt;d b\ hti.i \ \ Iff' M r "
l uc iJif' C. unungs h . mg on( srstpr
\1rs flf'IPn t~llov.C'Il of Marton .tnd

Ra(! nt_ and t\\ o g-~.mdcht l drPn
!'cntt c~nd ( .r eg RusSI' II
Funeral Sl:.'t'\ tCf'S u.. J!l lx held on
Sa turd a1 at 1 p m m r og \esong
F unf'ra l Homf' m M ason '" 1th thP
R&lt;·l D tr k CarlJ&lt;'nler offt u&lt;J tmg
fl uttal" UJ bi• tn Gt aham (\ m e 11 n
F rJt•ncio.; rna\ ca ll at thP funr 1al
home o n Fnda; !1 om 2 I p m ancl
from 7 9p m
M1ht a rv g rm PSJdP 1i!( ''i \\ tll br
'ond uctec\ b\ Smrt h Ca peh&lt;~rt
\mC' r tca n ' f'g1on Post 14tl of "Jf'H
l l avpn and the Stf'\1. art Johnson
\'F\\ Post 4~2bof Ma son

Sf'\f'ral nJ('(t sand n&lt;'phf'\\s

Pll\ a 10 srn

J(.'('s v. til OC&gt; hdd Jt t hr•
l om 0n w·ncr ott hr fam1h

Sht&gt;rwood H. Yonkt•r
Sherv.ood H0nn l onk(•t -ll \\&gt;rst
Columbra v. as dead o n .11 n' al
Wedn('sdd\ at PlrasJn t \ a UC'\
Hospit al
Bom June 11 19!" tn LJ'tat t IH •
&gt;~a s the son ot thP latP Rotx•rt R
Yonkpr anrl Ot a F Lrl\ mg Yonkrt

Forty·slx units at blood were
recelvf'd Wednesday at tlle Arnerl
can Red Cross Bloodmobile held at
thE' Senior Citizens Center Forty
eight persons attended
Of the 46 units recelvf'd 26 were
replacements F irst tlmedonor was
Ric hard Swanson
Nme gallon donor was Mace\
Barton and stx ga llon donor was
llomcJ Baxte1
Nurses ass1stm g w ere Ferndora
Storv. '.enm a Letfhett
Debra
Houb&lt;&gt;r June Kloes and Emma
Adam s Ooc tOJ s WPil:' J am t:&gt;s W1th
L't Pll and V. tlma Mansfteld
In charge of t he Lant('('n was

Local Briefs:

Senlor c tt izens asslStlng were
Thelma Dill. Florence Richards.
Matton F.bPrsbarh Ph1lomena Fol
!rod and Myrtle S1sson
Donattons were made by QuaUt;
P t mt Shop. The Dally Sent mel The
A thens M essenger WMPO Radto

M[l)DU; I 0 \lv N Ohto &gt;API Aim &lt;o Inc officia ls sav the v w11l
appt•&lt;JI \J1e But let County Boatd of
T ax RP\ Js10n 's 1PJ('('flo n of 1ts
rrquest fm a ~78mt llwn mJuc tton m
the appratSI'd 1 alu~ of Jt s tndush tal
propPm
Annro a t a hf'armg Junf' 7 asked
th,tt r ountv appratsed property
'al ue ot $1111 1 mU IJOn fo r !l5 A tmco
pallets mc lud mg ti s Mtddletown
\\arks. b&lt;&gt; rroucro to $:131 mJJIJon
Tiw reason fm the df'C'JS JOn was

th&lt; 1~~ 1 )('",

hwl "at lot
handJld pJX""Ci studPnt s rna\ tX' \ IC'Wf'd tn thl' SUPf'J tniPndPn t s ofl 1u
m F.a sll' t n Htg h S.: hoot am nme I ttddl

f\r~,.~,

Llnd usPtl riot h1ng ,.., l:x•tng

("O II l '&lt;

tr'll fm lnd1a ns m Chambf&gt;rs

l.tfl \l

Oon.JIIons tor tht t np In \rrJon r ~md tnr!dr.J\ thf' (Os tof c lothmg
il i P .J iso hf'lng ()( ('t' p! Pd r h(• li! p IS schf'du!Pd fm A u g 1
Am om v. ro,;hmg to dnn..tiP should ( ~Il l Sh.uon OUJ ham ~ )" 12 22.1 1 01
hC'r .tl tli JIII \S('IJ Hun I {O.Icl Pomt-rm

LitterinK r('(ISOtl.S

li.~teJ

St udu •s s huv.. ft\ t' rn.Jm rt \ ISOOS ror lrf! Pr tng

s~ r tl

KdJ l: UUfl):! Itt]( '!

prog1 am .:J SSJstant fo r Mcrgs ( ou nt\

Th&lt;' SLX lf'Ll SOn S aJt

p,, C' nms

IDLEf)(l Ohto 1 \P 1 - F,tt m
\\orkf'I s sm the'\ nr"'" (l tOJ if'ts d nrl
'" a tcr ncar thf'll wor k sJi ps bu I c lar m
tht' agllCUltU I'P Jobb\ l "i l1kf'l\ t o
squdc h a propnSI'c\ f"h't a I r cgu J c~
tto n m cmdatmg thPm
takf' on thu t tssUI ' 1s to tak1 un
the .l);ltru ltut ol Jobb\ tn l'. ashmg
ton
S&lt;clld Baldf'mcJt \ r la ..,quf~/
p wsJdf'nl flf t hf' F.u m : a bo r
( n ganumg CommJt lf'f'
\ 'P ia squt'Z othf'r fd r m l.tboJ
ll'.rdf'l~
~w d
tannt 1" \H ll to
&lt; ontmuf' trst1mom lfXLJ\ m lh('
third da\ uf hPa 11ngs b&lt;&gt;!or ~ the
t)c(upa ttonal Sa frt1 and Health
:\dm mtstl at 1o n m 1 olt•d u

ro

The hea r mg..,

('QnU' Jnt..~ pro~Sf'CI

OSHA rulP that &gt;~ould J'('qUJTP
famwrs to p\acP port&lt;~bh • t u dct sa nd
\\.&lt;11Pr for clnnking c~nd v. a..., hmg

\\ 1th1n

a quM if r mile' of farm

],t00rf'fS \A.Otk

Slt f'S

\ C'lasq uP"/ -.a id that lhP OSHA
h r.Hmg ll'Stuno n) s&lt;'t ms to
f.!\ o r thf' p1oposrd rf',h.l\l latJon-; but
that t hf' RNtga n admmtstJ al ton
li ke \\ &gt;~illcutbam furthPr C"f for1 s to
.tppt O\ e them for fmr of lusmg
f.:..tl mPrs \Otrs lil thC' Nm 1-iPIC'&lt; !JOn
h 'L~m

F.vf'n boch

sa\ s

"r

It'

.tgd m s t O\ rtwh rlmmg ()(Ids

up
hr

sa 1d
C hariPs IIOI O\\ltz of thf' M1gt mt
l,cgal Ariton Program V. ashing
to n. sa1d Mid\H'StPrn fann ers havr
('X pr f'SSf'd tllC' s t rongrst OPlXISlllon
to thP t "~'"!at tons of all speakct s he
ha s hea td at OSHA hear mgs tn
\\ ashmgi on F lortda c~ nd ·Texas A
last hra n ng 11 til b&lt;&gt; conduct f'd tn
F rf'sno Calif

Twenty on!' ddrn dant s \\ere
ftned anrl 'IX ot hPt s fOJiPtiPd bonds
rn Metgs County Cour1 WPdnl'sdd)
rmcd b} Judge Patnck 0 Bn cn
wer(' lurtts Gail 1\d son\ illP OV(' r
load
$.'\77 and cos ts
Claudta
Wtthrow. Bd11• \~ Va
a nd It
moth; Mtt chdl Columbus and
'l.ndnw P halcn NC'\\ Ha\l n sp&lt;'l'd.
$21 and costs mc h Roger Manul'i
Raci ne fa ded to tlt spla y valid
\tccnse plate $10 and cos ts
Debra Thomas Pol1l{'rov sp&lt;'l'd
$26 and costs •. Ja y Caplan Pills
burgh. drtv mg wrong way on four
Jane. $10 and cos ts Dt,ma Pape
Gall1polts. f all f'd to ;oeld $HI and
costs. Dora Cooper Ravrnswood
W Va • expul'd Ohio hcrnse plate"
$10 and costs
Charles W tlltams. Clwsapeak e
speed
$l1 and costs. .lamPs
Oam els Calllpolls. fm led to dtsplay
certifi cate of rrglstratton cost s
only. David D tckson Ga lltroli s
failed to stop for stop sign . $10 and
costs. Robert Johnson .Jr Racme.
speed. $22and costs. Clilford P lantz .
Pomeroy assured clear d1stance.
$40 and cos ts. opera tor s license
suspended :Kl days
Raymond
Ginther Raci ne. fat lure to control

1cluciP $:t'ia nd cost s
Kmnl'lh McKmght M tdd \epat1
fa tlure to cont rol veh tc\0 $.1.'\ dnd
costs no 1a ltd opcrato!S ltCPnSI'
$1\ll and costs three da;s conftnP
mont suspend $.'\11 of fmc dnd Jail
SC'ntf'OC(' If ]ICC'n SC' Obta mN:l In 30
davs JOC' Kn stos1k, Pomrro\ no
Opf' ra tor s hcenSf&gt; $-UJ and cos ts

ordered to obtam Ucense m lJ dav s
c.arv Martm Svt aruse. OWl $250
a nd costs , 1111'(&gt;(' d avs confinme nt
licPns&lt;' suspmd&lt;'ll fl) davs left of
u.•nt L•r. LOsts only, Gluna Crovf't
M lddlcpon. It tierin g $25 and costs
Dwa mc M rDan\1'1 Rutland rx
plted opera tor s ltccnse ~15 and
cos ts three days confmem ent
suspend Jail sent ence tf hrensr
obtamed bv Frtday Mary VanMe
trr Hut land. telephone hat ass
m ent, On&lt;' year probatton
Forietttng bonds w ere Alan
Bra ke Monttcello. K y speed SIO
.fam C'S Damels. Ga llipolis. over
load
$.J21l I Rf' Ann Wycoff.
Co lumbus. speed. $70, Mrchael
Fraley, A lbany, overnidth $45,
Lall)' Cooper. Portland disorder!;
conduct
$45
Franklin Jewel
Pomeroy fishing without Ohio
IJ• hmg JICPnsr $45

PAT HILL FORD
992·21 96

Mtddlaport. Ohto
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EVERY

For The Ladtes
Every Sunday Ntght
9·00 to 1:00
6/ 14 / 1 mo

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coupon Cancel your ad bV phone when you get

•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
We Have A Full T1me
Shop Tl!u:hn1c1an
on Duty

RIDENOUR
TV &amp;APPLIANCE

CHESTER - 985-3307

121 tin

(I / In

WRITESEL
ROOFING CO.

New Homes- htenme
Atmodeltng
Insurance Work
Custqm Pole Bldgs
&amp; Gara1es
Rooftng Work
Alumtnum &amp; Vtnyl Stdtngs
15 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7683

Business
Services

t==========
The ma st powerful pre
m1um gasoline 1n The B1g

Gutters

Available Only At

Every Fnday N1ght
At 7:00 P.M.

RITCHIE'S
MASON SERVICE
CENTER

At The Amencan
Legton Hall

Mason, W Va
6/7 0/ 1 mo

-

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
DOZERS

~ BACMHDE S

Mtsc

Merchandtse

Address,-------------------

.

,.

~~

_

Teen cited
Mf'Igs Count) man v. dS CJtrd by

Sl 01 NG CO.

- Concrete wor..
- Plumbing and electrtcal
work
(Free Esttmates)

"Beautrful, Custom
Butlt Garages ··

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or 992 ·73 14

' /

St
Pomeroy . OH
Open 9 00 to 5 00
Closed Thursda s

5

24

)

25
26

8

2)

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1t
12
13

28
29
30
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22
13

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Camp training

6

18
19.
20

33

15

~

16

JS

Mail

This Coupon with Remittllnce
The Daily sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

~~--------------------·

Real Estate General

~wf

M~GHEE
~

2 pupp1es % hsh % black
lab 6 1J., weeks old Call
614 256 1763

7 wk

o ld ktt1ens male &amp;
fema le black &amp; whtte yet
low &amp; whtte Ce ll 614 446

3551

Call for free stdtng esttmates, 949·2801 or

3 part tong ha~red kttten s
Call 614 742 2460

949·2860

Kttten s to good home only
3 yellow ttger stn ppe d males
&amp; 3 multt co lored blac k
females Call 614 992
2042

No Sunday Calls

Pomeroy Ohto

Pert Doberman part Collte
pupp1es Call 446 3640

2 gray &amp; calico kt1t e ns Ca ll
614 446 4426

BISSELL

- Addona and remodehng
- Ro oftng and gutter work

' "

Free Nethe rland Dwarf Aab
bit 304 675 2332

S&amp;W TV

PERSONALIZED
POOLS

AND

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
46353 Scout Camp Rd

498 Gen Harttnger Pkwy
Mrddleport OH

992-2549
OPEN·
MON -SAT 10 to 6
PH .

Chester Ohto
Ph 985 -4269

If No Answer Call 91!5 4382
We Servtce All
Makes &amp; Model s

POOL SUPPLIES &amp;
MAINTENANCE

Antenna Installation
House Calls and Shop
Ser vi ce Ava1lab te

C l KITCHEN

Ser~tCI:&gt;

S/2211 mo

thJI
Ti l'

T o w !'!~

R!'st~-,

To g1ve away to good home
.n country 1 year o ld fem ale
Austrtan Blue Heeler Blu e
T"k 304 882 2573

F1ve cute part German She
pherd pupptes to gtve away
to a good home four f e
males one male 6 weeks
old phon e 304 882 321 0
Doberman
black
304 675 6531

phon e

Abo vf'
I R J " " Ill

Part collie must have goo d
hom e 304 773 9509

Resident tal
&amp; Commerc1al
Call 742-3195

Or 992·5875

6

THE
DITCHING
SERVICE
GAS LINES
WATER LINES
SEWAGE LINES

PH (614) 985-4212
We Use Von Schrader
Equtpment Recommended
by leadtng Carpet Manu
facturers
"FREE ESTIMATES'"

FREE ESTIMATES

BUS .: 985 -3813
RES .. 985 -3837

6 6 I mo

LOST tn Ga lhp ohs area con
ta ct lenses tn wl'rtte case
Rew a rd Call 446 0522
lost Ftberglass ltd for m otor
cycle saddle bag t urq uo tse
1n color lost between Hem
Jock Grove &amp; Cheshtre on
6 17 REWARD If fo und
call 992 6998
LOST - Beagle pup Tomlin
son Run area
Reward
304 895 3313

8

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeltng
Rooftng of all Types
Worked m home area
20 years
· Free Esttmates··

EUGENE LONG

mo pd

INTERESTED IN
NEW VEHICLE

Wed like to tntroduce you to

SERVICE
985-3561
All Mal&lt;es

614-992-7626

•Washers •D11hwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

£ngaae A c,r the modern way
to dme the vetucle of your
chotce
No Down Payment
lower Monthly Paymenl
BlACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box 326
Pomeroy OH 45769
For Fa ster Servrce
Call 614-992-6737

APPLIANCE

KEN'S

Stzes Start From

M l

Bud' McGHEE
Broker

Chetyl l!mley.
Metgs County Assoctate
Phone 742-3171

Stzes from 6 x6 Up
to 24 x36"
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racme Oh
Ph 614 843 5191

' '

G&amp;W PLASTICS
&amp; SUPPLIES
GAS - WATER
SEWAGE PIPE
REULATORS &amp;
FITIINGS

PRIVATE
INVESTIGATION
OF ALL TYPES
'"

VOLUME DRIPS
Wm•ho-~ 985 -3 813

... do~·~ 985-3837
6!18 1\ mo pd

MMR 537 - lovely 3 bed room total electnc ranch home New
carpet throughout Maintenance free outs1de ga rage and mce lot
Sells lor $36 500
MMR 543 - Matn St tn Rulland - Thts home would make a
mce starter home 2 bed rooms total electnc large 12"•24 deck
l&lt;ke new AI an affordable $25 000
MMR 546 - Well kept 3 or 4 bedroom home Handcraffd b&lt;rch
krtchen ca b&gt;nets form al drnrng room lull basement large
wrap around pc11ch low ubhbes Loca ted on Mulberry m Pomeroy
Askrng $32 500
MMR 539 - 10% land contract ava&gt;~~e to qualtlred buyer 4
bed rooms. formal dmmg room INJng room has lead glass wrndows
Small yard Walkrng dtstance to stores and soopptng East Ma&gt;n tn
Pomeroy PRICE REDUCED to $18 000
MMR 547 - New alumtnum sidrng Anderson wtndows new
plumb&lt;ng and wtnng are [Us! alew of the amenrtres o1 thts lov~y 3
bedroom home located on Hamrffon St. rn M&gt;ddlepor1 Call lot yout
appt A real buy at $30 000

FISHING REEL

BOGGS

FENCE &amp; SUPPLY

SALES &amp; SERVICE

I

"free Estimates"
Installation Avatlable

12 xl6

UTILITY BUILDINGS

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

ACCENT
220 f Main, Pom•roy
PH. 992-6931

REPAIR

Parts. Service &amp;
Cleaning

U S RT 50 EAST

GUYSVILLE. OHIO
Authonzed John Deere
New Holland Bush Hog
Farm Equtpment
Otaler

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

For Garcta Zebco Shtmano, Johnson Dtawa.
Qu1ck

STEVE FINLAW
PH. - 985·4266

Rt I
Long Bottom, Oh.

L-~--- ~

14 I mo

r Jll

Announcements

DOZER
AND
BACKHOE
WORK
AL TROMM
742-2328
We

Have the
Lowest Rates

Public Sale
&amp; Auctton

A

Wolfe
Investigations,
Inc.

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

lost and Found

611811 mo od

113 W 2nd

th~ \.a \lt,r M etgs post of the state

21

ttn

SIDING

35185 Oak Htll Road
long Bottom. OH . 45743

;,_ _;;/ ' -

2
J

Beautiful Colhe pupptes
Call 446 3897

32

CARPENTER
SERVICE

For all your wrrmg
needs furnaces repatr
servrce and tnstallatton

5-8-2

TOM'S
SHOE REPAIR

) Wanted
JFor Sale
l Announcement
)For Rent

Storm Doors

Vtnyl llt Alummum

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS

~ L0 · 80YS

- !RENCH ER
- WATER
-SEWER
- GAS liNES
- SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LARGE •• SMALL JOBS
PH 992-2478
6110!1 mo pd

Phone-------------------

htgh" av patrol foU ow mg" Wcdni'S
day ntght acctdent
OffJCia l s s aid a car di lVf'n bv
Cha r\es Hupp . .l~ LongBot tom was
southbound on Ohto 124. "hen a
nm~hbound car dttv&lt; n by M tchael
G tllian 16 Rrro svtne rl'portroly
went left of &lt;"!'ntet strtkmg thl' fmnt
cornPr of Hupp s vehtcle
Hupp s f'dr rN e 1vcd heavy dam
agP and G1lhan s car w as moder
a td) damaged m the 6 41 p m
acrt dent G illian was c Jim b) the
pa trol for dnv mg left of cenlet

Black Lab Retrtever fe
mate Call 614 388 995 7

949-2263

YOUNG'S

Call 614 245

Gutters Cleaned
&amp; Painted
&amp; Wtndows

1fc

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Ph (614) 843-5425

- DUMP TRUCK S

54

Giveaway

Kittens
5804

Downspouts

Ethanol Enhanced

AUCTION

8utld1 ng IS a1 r conditioned
wtfh smoke el1mmators
On Beech Grove Road
In Rutland
Publrc &amp; Deal ers
Welcome
Btll Brown. Aucttoneer

4

NEW-REPAIR

or 992 ·2282

II I

~UNDRY

94 Octane

Ice cream social
An tu• Ctl'am soctal wt ll b&lt;&gt; hPld
F1tda; J unp 22. a I Bas han F tre
Sw non begm mng at 6 p m a nd
sponsored b\ the ouxtltary a nd
fu rmcn
In addi tion to homf'madc ICC'
c ream the\ o,."' 1!1 have ho t clogs
sloppv JOCS pt&lt;' rookll" and
bevrragcs 11wt c \\ tll a lso be li v e

u•tlU-.&gt; 1':.

r

ut

JIM CLIFFORD
PH 992-7201

Bend area

res ults Monev not refundable

Name _____________________

'" "'

"SUPER 94"

' '

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savell I

,

NOW AVAILABLE'

Public Sale
&amp; Auctton

*SP£10 QUIEN

Club
wilt hevt
Its ennual
Chlldren't
F•ahang
Derby
Beturdey June 23rd at West
Shade Atver, 3 1h mllet we1t
of Cheater et the Club
HOu11e Fottow stgnt off Rt
7 From 8 am unttl 2 pm
Ages 1 to 16 food drtnk &amp;
f11h1ng ere free Pnrea for 1111
Brtng own fiah.ng eqUip
ment &amp; batt No minnows or
ar11flclel ba1t Everyone pres
ant wtll be 10 at own nsk
The Metgs Co F11h 8t Game
Club w1tl not be responstble
for any acctdent personal
loss, or damages to anything
or any body or their property
Club memben w111 have a
ch 1cken barbeque after the
derby at 6 pm AU members
are to brmg a covered d1sh or
$6 00 for supper Club wdl
furntsh chicken &amp; dnnks

/ I ')

I

,----------------------~

'velma Quillen
Morns Ra r ln f&gt; Bf'r
Mtddterort
Fl!'rt h"

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REFUSE AND
INOPERATIVE
VEHICLES

Publrc Nottce

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OIL LINES

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"CUSTOM BUILT HOMES

Public Notoce

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Public Nottce

Publtc Nottce

•ZENtlH
•SYLVANIA

Tiro Mtlgt Co Flth &amp; Gomo

A oo Codo Jo•

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AND SERVICE

HEADQUARTERS FOR

........ c. wv
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WE ARE YOUR SALES

BUMPER
169 95
Also Some Car
Fenders Avatlabl•

3

Roger Hysell
GARAGE
Rt 124 PomOKoy OhiO

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
J 2• tfc

llllpl ti VIIW\11

Announcement•

Sl!l VII; I!!)

M d .. op o"

9 91

G• o• •

n~

c.oo~

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS
PH . 992-7013
New Chevy Truck ..
FENDER
'76 95
DOORS
'149 95
HOODS
•t74 95
BUMPERS
'69 .95
GRILL
"42 50
R SUPPORT
'84 95
TAIL GATE
'85 00
FORD FENDER
' 69 95

3·1 - '

·o uMP TRUCK SERVICE

Ut J
ntJ ' Buck
I tuSS!'ll Pom~t O\
D tschargt'S - \1abd Kester son.
rxm ald (, rJmm

6429

367-7560-367-767

Featunnr Lanny Tennant

••••

~~c.

07Won&gt;••••"•"

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I l'loono.. l oO•

wcrv madr bv MC'Jgs

There w t\1 b&lt;&gt; a day camp tramlng
sesston for those who are going to
h!'ip at thp G trl Scout Big Bend Day
Camp th1s year beginning at 9 a m
Sa turda y at Camp Klashuta near
Chi'Ster
Day ca mp will be held .July 16 to
July 2J thls yea r Those planrung to
help will need the trammg Anyo ne
w tth quest tons should call 614 6!&amp;

FREE ESTIMATES

"Mud River Band"

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SEPTIC TANKS INSTAltEp
c.,..

WEEKEND

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Veterans Memorial
Rc~ r m P

•TRENCHING
•BACK HOE •DOZER
•END LOADER
•DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
•WATER GAS SEWER
RAIN UNES
•
CountJ'

LIVE

PHONE
992-2156
Or
Stnltntl Cituihed Dept

e nt~:rtaJnnl t ' nt

Court concludes cases

We can repair and re core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also actd botl and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

West Columbta

•·mmrm•uw

ihililifl

MJUU ]IJUhhNtiM

Coun tv Emct gencv Mf'dtral Scrvt
Cl'S lltl:' squad s !'('\)OJ tf'd
Ru tland 11 as called ot 10 Oli a m
to Sa \pm St rwt for Cr vsta l Pt tdf'
m ore taken to H olzet Med"al
Ccnt et Racme wa s calk'([ at 4 20
p m to Ohto 124 at Pot1\and fat
R r'f'nt r .drk ms a nd Sandi a Kay
\\. h1 tr !Liken to \ c tr r ans Mcmon.t l
Hosp1tal m a bu s acCJdf'nl
Pometov responded at 7 05 p m
to Vvolf Pen Road for Bert ha
R ussell taken to Vetet ans M emor
raJ Hosptt a l R&lt;lc m ~ look. Ca t!
S&lt; hultz .Jr M tll' Htll Roa d at 19 10
p m Ia Veter ans Mcmot tal Hospt
tal Pomerovwas al soca \ledat 10 22
J• m to:l041'. MdmSt forAngw ,tnd
( h tt !C's .lrlmf'S takPn t o Vf'lerans
:v1 r mona l

Farm workers push
for sanitary facilities

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Something Special

Emergency runs

I Jt trrPrs ff&gt;f' l thf'\ \H&gt;n 1 gf'l c. JU g ht Jhf\ doni Cdl( dbout thr
l and scapl' l hC'\ ft'f'l sumrum '"paid to jJJck 11 up thf'tP ' " .1hr a d \
trash lhr r'f' .tnd l hP\ fC'f'l v. hal lhf'\ do Lo;; not ilff('rmg
For e ach m1\e of r oad t here af(&gt; average 199 }X)unds of lltt('r
Ymmg Sd ld
Youn g r c m 1ndf'd jX'OplP 1n l 11H11t hr fcdt't al gm &lt;•mmPnt sprnt S67 I
mil !ton ptckmg up htt et Ohro a ton&lt; ' spPnl $J tr.!.l "' rr~ dm p11 kmg up
ga rba g (' along Oh1o s "td !C' hlg h\\a\ s
Somf' litte r b](xlcgl ddPs Youn~ Sd td Bu t 11 take-; a tm can HXI
\Par s to d Jsa pprill and Jn alum111um cL1 n ~""OJ \t &lt;:~ r s I oung &lt;.~del('{)
An\ o nP \.\.ant mg to Ol"):!:d n tzc ttkl d" illc liPan ups ur 1f-&gt;t. \ cl mg eli lvt •s
should conta&lt; t \uung tn the M&lt;•tgs (ount) F:x tensto n Offtcc a t
992 0696 Young satd s h~ ts ~ork m g toot ganJl&lt;• I Hand otht• t lOUth
);IOUpS

- ----- 1
Il l CoL/rt St Pomemr 0•10 4576!1

Ga lle\ II flatboat at Roush La ndmg.
off Ohto 121 bc• t11 1~ n S\1 a&lt; USJ' a nd
Rae me
Pt!les \\'Ill ix' $2!1 $ \(I ond $"J to b&lt;&gt;
piT'SPntPd to thoSf' JUrlgrfl to ha vf'
thf' h: st Pionf'C'I Oil\ s \ 1\ 11 Wa 1
Oa\S Ga\ 'lOs upt o 192Js at tuc
Ad I\ 111es mc ludmg tours of th f'
fl atboat 11 Ul b&lt;&gt;gm a t 5 p m w tl h thp
Stat Spangled Ban net b&lt;&gt;mg pla v f'd
b1 the Southet n Htgh School band
and sung b\ famcf' : ... avrnde r

Thl' 1 lot hmg ts bi•mg co lli'CI&lt;'d b1 Sh,u on llUtll.tm fo t B toth&lt;• t C ui
and Sistrr P 1.11 ~ogg l &lt; I hl i\ogglcs .Jif' m JSS JOrW.r\ \\Ork('r s m thr

do evervthing posstble to assure the
proftt abtltty of the Middletown
Works
The compa ny askf'd that the
&lt;~ppratsed valueo!$13 211 per square
foot for the mdustnal property ln
tvllddletown and St Cla1r Township
b&lt;&gt; reduced to about $3 per square
foot
Ttl ton sa td thP dec tston could be
appea lf'd to the Butler County
Common Pleas Court ot the T ax
Rr' tSton Board rn Columbus

3

-----------r------------r-----.:..-----4

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Wlltt DltiiW"

A I f'ml ndCI has l:)c(&gt;n L'iS UC'd 1ha t a
hislonca l d1 css up co niC'~ I w JIJ tx&gt;
hf'ld In C'OO]UnCIIOO Wllh lhf' a rnval
F'rrda\ aftC' rnoon of the Advcn turt•

Altz

co nt &lt;-~c t

FVF.' AT\D

Dress-up reminder

Clothing collected

wuuam

Bland, MarthaM Dudding,
H H oback. Paul F . Marr alld
Palllcia S Young. Racine. Angela
Sellers. Joyce V Vartrum. RusseU
Nltz. Gloria J Peav ley. Judith
Hunter. M1ddJeport, Harlan A.
Barrard. L ong Bottom, Teresa
Drummer Syt acuse. Rob&lt;&gt;rt A
Harmon and Gregory M Stewart.
Rutla nd
Fonda G Thomas. Shade. Ellls
M vers. Langsville, M ace! Barton.
Reedsville. Chatles W Searles
CheshtrP. Lawrence Groggel and
Dotma M D av tdson. Portland

The Daily Sentinel

tAP 1
The
u.1 nnmg ntlmi}('l dra wn Wrdnf'sdLl\
ru ghl m the Oh to l ottcn s d&lt;~til
ga mf' Thf' ~ umbel
" .::~-. ~
In the ' Ptr k 4 gam!' pla\ed
Monday tht ough I· tJda y l h!' wm
nmg nwnlx&gt;r \\as 39 ~7

SJ

Jeanette M Radford, VIrginia M

the dectston wtll be appealed
"The rPal estate tax level IS far
gn?atet than the m at kel \a lucof the
property &gt;~ a tt ants . " Moot e satd
H e satd costs have to b&lt;&gt; cut to
m a ke Middlet own l'.orks cons tsl
en ttv profit able
·nus 1s o ne cost th at must comf'
down Armco ha s £J !wavs J:M:&lt;:&gt;n a
responsible, carmg companv a nd
\.\(' w1.ll cant muc to be, Moor(' scud
'But out ftrst responstbt \tt ;, to our
emplOVE'('S and to our netghbot s lS to

bas 1ca 11) the same r eason we had
ex pressed du r mg the heat mg
count y Audtt or Jam es Ttlton. one of
lhr e&lt;:• board m embers. sa td of the
Wcdn~sday deCJston
We dtdn t
f('(' \ the fac Is prPsented to the board
JUS! if1Pd a tlL-'CI case m valua t1 on
De\aluatton could have meant a
loss m tax !Y'VPnueofabout $900 IJOOa
year mcl udmg about $675IJOO to the
Mtddletown School Dtstnct
J ohn :vioore assistant to lh P
Mtddletown Works manager sa td

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Business Services

Pomeroy

Senlor Citizens
and Vete·
rans Memorial Hospital.
Donors were Deborah Pickens,
Roben Vaughan. David M King,
Dorothny J Oliver. Hober G
Baxter, Mary L Starcher. Gerald
Rought, Susanna Heck . Helen E
Blackston. Margaret Y Harris
Richard Swanson H oward P
Logan, Mary K SpenCE'r. Billy .J
Spencer, Vaughan Spencer. FayeF
Clifford . Vtrgil Wmdon, P hyUss
Bearhs Lynn Sexton W tlltam C
Qutckel, Caro~yn A Jeffers. J anet
Duffy, Addle ReJtlTilfe. Nancy J
Re tlrrurP C harles Rf'ttrrure. WU
lt&lt;Jm Radfod and Paul A R tce

Armco officials appealing tax decision

r'

Flow-throuf:{h inspection amilable

Program

Preceptor Beta Beta Sorority.
RSVP employees were In charge at
placing chairs and tables.
Oerlcal workers were Mary
Nease. Jean Nease. Emma K
Clatwon hy, VIrginia Buchanan.
Judy Spencer. JoyCE' Hoback .
A ngela Sellers. Erma Roush. Peggy
Harris Llnda Friend. Joan Lyons.
Esther Harden . and Vernon Nease

Lottery winners

11tc Flu" Tht ough ptOJC'l t for

Thunday, June 21, 1984

Bloodmobile collects 46 units at stop

Area deaths
Ewrelt E. King

Thunday, June 21 , 1984

Ohio

Announcements

SWEEPER and sewtng machtne repair. parts, and
supphea
P1c k up and
delivery , Dav11 Vacuum
Cleaner one half mile up
George• Creek Ad
Call
614 446· 0294
Balloons for Get Well. Annt
versarys. Btrthdayt. part•••
Singing Gomlla Call Bet
loon• &amp; Co 446·431 3
Try lllltng 1he New Avon
Wey For tnformatton call

614 446 2166

A uctton every T ues day
nt ght Pt Ple uant WVa
Au ct lonnu" Neal Youth
Center Bldg Camden St
6143677101
Rt ck Pearson Auctton eer
Servtce Estate Farm An
tlqu e &amp; hqu1dat10 n sales
ltcensed &amp; bo nded m Ohto &amp;
WVtt 304 77 3 57B5 or
304 773 9185
Auct1on e very Frt mght at
the Hartf ord Commumw
Center Truckloads of new
mer c handtse every week
Co ns1gm ents of new a nd
used mP.rchandtse always
wel come Ate hard Reynolds
Auct1oneer 3 0 4 275
3069
Auct1on Mt Alto Thursday
Jun e 2 1 7 00 PM Co ns tgn
ment acce pted Emma Be ll
AuctiOneer 429 84
FLEA MARKET - Casey s
Park1ng Lot 2 mtles north
Potnt Pleasant Rt 62 every
Saturday set up $3 00
304 675 4808

9

Wanted To Buy

1 1 Help Wanted
Homemaker• Dreamt No
experience needed to earn
25% commtslton demon lhetmg tn fnend• home•
You control hours end In
come Ab10lutely no mveat
mentl A lao booking partial
Call 446 1270 or wrrte Toy
Plen, Johnstown . PA
15904
Part t1me tns tructor for
Mental Health Technology
Program, 1 year posatbthty
of renewal Teach one 2
hour lab and supervtse field
work students Ph 0
or
Masters degree 1n Ptychol
ogy or Guidance and Coun
selmg, cl lntcal expenence
requtred $4 200 Send re
sume transcrtpt and three
references to Thomas 0
Oeltench Chatr Depart
mentof S oc1al Work 531
Morton Hell Ohto Untver
9tty Athens Ohto 45701
Deadhne June 29 1984
Oh10 Umverstty IS an Equal
Opportunttv Employer
Broadcast Company ex
pand1ng sales terrttory
Brand new sales area avatla
ble 1n the tn-countv acrea
Galha Metgs Mason Coun
ttes Salary and co mmtsston
based on expenence Send
complete resume to Mil
hken Investment Corp
WSGB WVKV 1 89A Matn
St
Sutton WV 26601
E0 E

Need babysttter for 2 ch tld
re n Ca ll after SPM 446
1J43
Asststant Orgamst needed
at Grace Ep1sco pal Ch urch
Call 614 992 3968
Governme nt J obs S16 569
$50 553 year No w Htrmg
Your area Call 1 805 687
6000 Ext A 9805
Servtce Representative Be
associated w1th one of the
leaders m consumer fman
eta! serv1ces lmmedtate op
on mg for qualtft od md1v1dual
mt e rested m consumer ft
nanc1al se rvtce co nsume r
lo ans Hom e m ortgages In
su rance Sales C red1t Cards
Income Tax pr e paratton and
Geners l otf tce ad mtmstr a
tton Successful can didate
w 111 be self mot•vated like
ch allengtng work have goo d
co mmun1 cat10n sk1lt s tnt e l
hgent eggresstve and abl e
to absorb and app ly com pre
he ns1ve tra1 mn g programs t o
p erform s u cces fully 1n
cred tt
sales co llec tio n s
and admmt stratton C o m
pet1ttve salary commen su
rate with expe n e nce and
e~ece llent beneftts It mt e r
ested
Ca ll 1 614 992
21 1 1 and as~ for Jtm
Snodgrass for you r caree r
mte n11ew Be ne ftc1al Oh
Inc 300 W Seco nd St
Pomeroy 0 h 45 769
Sw tm m tng tnstructor
ncod ed tmm e dta tel y at M1d
dl eport pool Contac t Pat
Kttchen at 992 6212 or
992 9968
Preschool In stru c tor (MR
00 Chtldren) Pe rman ent
pos ttton St a rt mg sa la ry
from $11 100 to $ 14 985
Must have Bachelor s D o
gree 1n Specu1l Educatton or
re lst ed 1tel d and be cettlfta
hie tn MS PR Appltcat1o n
de adline July 20 Starttng
date August 22 Apply to
Ohto Job Servtce 39350
Un1on Ave Pomeroy Oh
45 769 Telephone
992
6671
Wanted persO n!'&gt; t o rt o phon e
&amp; ltght de lt ve ry work for 2
w ee ~ s Apply at 2 66 M1ll
St Mtddleport From 10 to
4

Stmmon s O l ds Cod
Chevy Inc tstakmgapplt ca
t1 ons t or an euto mec hant c
3 years gene ral e xpertence d
mechsntc wtth 1 year e~e p e
n ence computer c ommand
control Apph catton can be
ptcked up at th e servtce
offt ce ln tervtews wtll take
place after a ll app ltcattons
have been rev1ew ed

LADIES - ID EAL IN HOME
J 08 now htrm g area super
v•sors tn a ll towns Htre and
manage coy party personnel
Exc tncome bon us free
t rammg ove r 23 Call collect
30 4 744 0924

12

Sttuat&lt;Ons
Want ed

We pay cash for late mode l
clean used ca rs
J1m Mmk C hev Olds Inc
Btl! Gene Johns on
446 3672

Wdl care for elderly person rn
my home over 14 yrs o f
expertence Call 614 256
6509

Wanted to buy used coa l &amp;
wood heaters Swam Furnt
ture 446 31 59 3rd 8
Ohve S t Galllpolts Oh

1 8 Wanted to Do

Buytng datly go ld Stiv er
coms rmgs Je welry sterlmg
ware old co ms lsrge c ur
rencv Top prtces Ed Bur
ken Barber Shop 2nd Ave
M&lt;ddleport. Oh 614 992
3476
Cash p1ud for tancv tron or
heavy tron beds $1 60 and
up for certa1n Metg s Co
stone Jars Old ttme cup
board call 1 304 882
2711

l awn Mowmg &amp; Trtmmmg
Reliable and dependable
Reasonable rates Ca ll 614
256 6251 after 5 30
Aoo fm g and gutter w o rk
metal work housepatnt1ng
carpenter work EltC ref
Free estimates Call 446
3171
Genera l Hauhng For sale
Ltmestone ftl l dtrt and top
so tl Call Ca ll 614 256
1427

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLD S Doze r work ground c leanng
&amp; excavatmg $25 per hr
FURNITURE
Beds 1ron
Call 446 96J8
wood cupbot'llrdl c hatrs
c hnts baskets dtahes
stone Jars anttques. gold Bass plttyer wants 10b Wtth
well established co untry
and 11lver Wrtte- M 0
Mtller Rt 2 Pomeroy , Oh1o square dance or polka band
45769 or call 614 992 Call Ray 614 446 3109
7760
All types of budd1ng con
Old fathlon&amp;d cast tron beth struct1on, rooftng ltdtng
remodeling moon and con
tub Cal1614 742 2137
crete, wood custom bu1lt
Hou1e tn Gathpoht Ferry cabmetl By the JOb or hour
area priced e40 1 304 Catt 446 2182 Elowayne
676 4579 01 675 5540
Matt

The Daily S.ntlnei-Ptfee-11
18

Wanted to Do

Wanted to do Tree work
Pruning, topping, take dow
Will e l1o trim hedge• &amp;
b1uoh Colt 8711 7819

~~-''ll''iliiN~~

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

Would ltke to do baby•lnlng
1n my home day or night low
rates Call 614 379 2708
Water walla drilled &amp; ser
v1ced Free eattmates Call
614·992 6006o•614 742
3147
Would love to have 1 elderly
lady to stay 1n mv home for 1
week 1 month , whartever
Lots of TLC can 614 949
301 4 enyttm e
Will babysit m my home
responsible dependable
mother Chandler Dnve
J04 675 6297

Financial
21

Bustness
Opportuntty

t NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB
LISHING CO recommends
that vou do busmess w1th
people you know and NOT
to sennd money through th e
ma 1l unt1l you have tn\lesh
gated the offe rm g

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

Classy Fashtons mvttes you
to own your own Jean
Sportwear Ladtes Appare l
or Infan t Preteen store Na
t ton a l c orporatton seekmg
store owners fo r new loca
ttons
One t1me f ee
($1 2 900 to 15 900) tn
eludes buy1ng tnp beg1n
nmg tnventory store ft x
tur e s tn sta ll ed store
su ppltes locat1on as s1st
ance t ra tnmg progrsm end
more Call now t Mr Ta te
704 753 4738

22

HOME LOANS FIXED
RATES Below market rates
Ftxed conve nttonal FHA
VA Leader M ortgage
Athen s col lect 614 592
305 1

23

Professional

Servtces

1- - - - - - - - - - PIANO TUNING low er
pnced regular tuntngs
d1scounts to Senmr Ctttz e n!'i
Churches &amp; Sc hoo ls Ward s
Keyboard 304 675 3824
Ptano Tunmg and Re patr
Brun1 cardt Musi C Co 446
0687 Sktll and tnt egnty our
trademark Lan e Oantels
614 742 2951
Professtonal E lectrolys •s
Chmc Probe Type Electroly
SIS
AMA FDA &amp; FC C
approved Doctor referrals
J04 675 5568

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

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

4 bdr 1 112 bath 6 ac res
garden s pot h m1 below
Eureka Worksh op w tth cs r
port S29 500 Coli 446
4222
One ac re lo t w1th large
tn gro u nd pool, torn hn er
and parttally flnt s hed base
men t For tnf ormatton cal l
8136651232
For Rent 1n town wtth opt1on
to buy 3 BA fenced yard
Call 614 446 2081 n1ghts
Hou se for Sale by owner 4
BR house on Lower Rtv e r
Rd 3 m tles sou th of town
Wo odburnmg fireplace gar
age basement new fur
n&amp;ce an d roof overl aokm g
the Oh1 0 Awer Ca ll dayt1me
4446 161 5 ntght 446
1244
Ntce ho use &amp;
6142561540

bar n

Call

Attractive sma ll home small
yard at a small pncet Mt dd le
port 6 14 992 6941
Two story 7 room house
bath screened poh carp ort
on 4 acres 6 mt sout heast
Oak Htll OH off St At 279
615000 Colt 6 14 682
6173
4 BA large ea t m kttchen
la rge l1vmg &amp; famtly rooms
also
16 x32 tngr ou nd
heated pool all on a one acre
fenced lot many other ex
tras Fmancmg avarlabe
S59 500 Co lt 304 773
5877
S500 down 2 bdr tra tl er on
large wooded lot Your own
boat do c ~ Call 6U 256
1216
s 1 500 dow n take over
S3 15 mo paymen t ta~ees &amp;
1nsura nca 1nc luded 3 bdr
ranch full basement wood
burner City schools located
•n Plantz S u bd lVIS ton
S24 400 balance Cell 446
8002
8 yrs o ld 3 bedrm 2 baths
famtly room wtth wood
burner Stngle car garage on
8 flat acres w1th atocked
pond C1ty water m Racme
Ca ll 614 9 49 2641
Rust1c Htlls Syracuse 3
bedroom fam1ly room can
trat &amp;If , chatn ltnk fen ce.
storage butldlng $32 000
Call 614 992 2521 or 304
882 3197
Owner transferred must se ll
home, fa m1ly room has 20 It
of wtndows for pastoral
v1ew fmished double gar
age. ftreplace. large porch .
40 ft dack wooda pr1vacv
near Royal Oak Park
863 900 Call 614 992 ·
5420

Tool• furniture apphancll
other 1tem1 June
21 22 23 9 5 101 Rt'&lt;&gt;ler
St Kanauga OH

&amp;

FraZiers Bottom Flea
Market
Every waekend
U S 36 Fremtrs Bottom
WVa 25082 Dealers Wei
come
Don Fra:zter
Operator 304 756 2779
Yard Sale 4 m1 past hosp1tal
on old Rt 1 60 at Evergreen
Frt &amp; Sat Hospital bed
dresser qutltmg fram e pt e
ntc etc Call 446 32 49
Yard Sale Fnday &amp; Sat June
22 &amp; 23 Back rosd across
from Kyger Creek Plant
Clothes anttques dtshes
do tls tools mu c h more
3 Famtly Yard Sale good
c lean mens &amp; w omen c lo
thtng Some maternity
clot hes some baby clothes
M1sc household 1tem s Pa
tnot Cadmus Ad
Ell1 ot
restdence
3 Fam•ly Fttdav 6 22 &amp;
Saturday 6 23 Clothes
mts c
furnttur e
1957
Chevy ptcku p Rous h Lane
Cheshtre 3rd hou se on
nght off At 7

June 22 &amp; 23. cloth••· kmck
knacks 1 1111 tenth m•le out
Kemper Hollow Ad
Yard Sale Add1son Butavtlle
Rd 2 mt from AI 7 June
22 &amp; 23 large venetv

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
Stmpsons Rose Htll Thurs
e venm g June 21 6 p m all
day Fnday June 22 G~rls
clothtng 11zes 5 6 and 14
On e gold sequ tn baton cos
tume stze 14 and boots
Newly pamted plaster craft
ttems and more
Davts restdence Rose H1ll
Pomeroy Thursdayevemng
Jun e 21 6 p m all dsy
Frtday June 22

Yard Sale Thurs Fn June
21 22 9 4 Ctrcle Ortve
Plants Subdtvts1on

Yard sale at 699 Bro adway
St Mtddleport June 22
Otshes sea shell art c lo
thtng
3 w heel b1ke &amp;
arnttques

31

32

Homes for Sa le

6 room s basement doub le
garage 1 &amp; one th1td acre
lot Rose Htll Pomeroy
$32 900 Ca ll 1 614 678
2513
Remodeled 2 bedroom
house near Pomeroy on 1
acre Storage bu 1ldm g &amp;
cella•• $17000 Call614
992 3006

Money to Loan

Fri &amp; Sat
Subdlv1110n

Houses for sa le m M1ddle
port Ca ll 1 2 1 6 835 3952
fo r more mformatton
112 Mapl e Place co rn e r of
Lasley 2 bedrooms famtly
ro om kttchen Mu st sell to
settle est ate Ca ll collect
Vtrgmul Crow 1 614 891
0442 or 431 0633

FOR RENT WITH OPTION
TO BUY tit 14 tt w1de three
bedroom bath a nd half
mobtle home sttttn g on nr ce
lot read y to m ove mt o
S225 00 down S225 00 per
m onth 304 576 2711
Seven year old home th ree
bedro o ms garden spot
2605 lmcoln Av e 8 1h pet
assumable loan 304 675
5047
New hsttng movmg need to
sell 3 bedroom 2 full baths
Meadowbrook addn 8 'h per
ce nt assumable loa n lots of
e~~: tra s
pr~c e d 60s
304
675 6425
For sale or trade 2 '1:1 bed
room all mod e rn ho u se wttl'r
bat h attached garage vtnyl
steel alumn Se ll o rtrad e fo r
late mode l 2 or 3 bedr oom
tra der an d la nd 304 882
3590

!===========:.
32

M obrl e Homes
for Sale

NEW AND USED MOBIL E
HOM ES KESSE L S QUAL
lTV MOBIL E HDME SALES
4 Ml WEST GALLIPOLIS
RT 35 PHONE 614 44 6
7274

Mobrle Homes
for Sale

Tra1ler &amp; lot 304 773 58 48
after 4 p m
Holly Park mobtl e home
fully fu rmshed Very good
condttton
1 'I~ acres
516 000 J04 458 1686

33

Farms 1or Sale

17 ACRES 10 Ewmgton
along Raccoon Creek Road
fr o ntage on St At 1 60 nt c P.
bu1ldmg s1tes barn cl'rtcken
hou se septtc tank
e nd
mmeral r1ghts
Ca ll 3 88
8510
Sma ll term (18 25 acres) m
Portland 0 h1o bord ered by
Ohto Atver &amp; highway No
bu1 ldm gs some trees 'h
m1nera l ughls Fan mar~et
pr 1ce S40 000 For tnfor
ma11on wnte B Graham
4615 Emerald Nacog
doches Te xas 75961
As ht on area 5 11:1 acres 2
houses 2 barns 2 car
garage pond S55 000 00
Phone 304 576 232 0

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

4 ' 2 acre lot restnc ed 2';2
mt!e from Galltpolt s &amp;
H o l ler
R e duc e d to
S10 600 Cel t 446 3485
Lot tor sale m Me rcervtlle
C olt 614 256 6618

for sa le 6 ac res of ground tn
lebanon TP Good butldtng
Stte on ha rd top road Askmg
S5000 or best o ffer Call
614 843 5231
10 x50 t rader on large
wooded lot 7 m1les be low
Galltp o l• s o n Racoon
510 995 304 675 6448
5 acres can be spltt 500 tt
fronta ge locited 8 mtles
n o rth of Pomt Pleasant on
Rt 2 Flatrock Call 304
675 12 48 after 5

1 979 3 bdr mobtle home on
11,
acre lot wP.ll shaded
Mus t sel l both togeth f! l Calt
614 388 9957

3 acres Southstd e l;• mtl e
off mam htghway 304 675
1894

1973 Baron 12x65 2 BA
many e xt ras exc cond
Fr en ch C tty Brokerag e Se r
vtce Call 446 9340

36

Sc hult 50th An n1versary re
bate S 1000 rebate any
Sc hult purchased th rough
Jun e 30 French Cttv Mobtle
Homes Calt 446 9340

1 fl oo r 3 bedroom h o me or
tratler On land contract tn
Me• gs Co No down pay
ment Call 614 992 6682
after6pm

1 978 Nashua 1 4x70 3 bdr
1 17 bath 2 atr co ndtttoners
apphances drapes tnc luded
Call 614 367 0691

Rentals

1976 14 x70 3 bdr total
electnc underpmnmg t te
down anch o rs B 000 good
co nd11ton st orag e butld mg
$175 Catt4463162
1973 1 2~e60 remolieled
tra •ler new c arpet do ors
plumbmg e lec tnc AC Call
446 0221
2 BA m o btl e h ome Rt 7
be low Eureka adu lts onlv
no pets s 135 m o Cal l
614 256 115 7
8X32 house t rat ler 2 BA
new carpet ms•de new pa1nt
outSide S950 or make off er
Ce ll614 446 9283
Closmg Out Tra tl e r Ae mal
Bustn ess Had 22 ONLY 6
Sues 10~t50 &amp;
LEFT
12~e52
2 bedroom fur
ntshed A comfortable home
tor a Low Pnce Brown s
Tre tler Park Mmers v1 1te
Ohro Ce ll 614 992 3324
1971 1 2x6B Ritz Craft
Royale wtth 6x1 2 expando
gas heat good condtt1on
First $5000 buys W1lke s
vtlle Call 614 669 5101
1981 Ho llyperk
14 x7 0
e•c cond
1 2x8 deck
und e rpennmg and large
room alf cond mc luded
J04 895 3896 01 895
3600
1982 Clayton 1 41t70 2
bedroom
2 baths d11
hwesher stereo ce 1hng fen
ftreplace mt crowava cen
tral atr concrete steps and
underpennmg $15 600 00
f"m J04 773 6550

41

Real Estate
Wanted

H ouses for Rent

3 bd r ho us e de l u~t e centra l
atr pool etc Call 675 5104
or 675 5386
2 bedr oo m house m co untry
Re f a nd depost1 requtred
Call 614 2 45 9284 or 614
388 8243
Rent 4 BR house
upper
Rt 7 Call 614 44 6 0429
Small house 2 bed room
S 100 mth S25 depos•t
Does not tn clu de ut 1l1ttes &amp;
adults only Call 614 949
26 19
2 bodr oo m unfurntshed
house no pets depos tt For
1nfo rmat 1on stop at 222 N
3rd Mtddle port see Sandy
rear apt
House for re nt near Metgs
M1ne No 1 3 bedrooms
S225 mth 5100 depostt
Call 614 742 2126
Modern 3 br house full
ba sement garage central
atr heat pump fenced yard
144 Engl1sh Ad Pt Ptee
sant $376 month plus
damag e depoStt 304 675
7789 m 304 675 7467 of
ter 6 p m and weekends
Suburban 3 bedrooms 1 %
story frame secluded lace
t ton phone 304 675 1460
6 rooms and bath wtth
basement mce ne1ghbor
hod re fe re nces end deposit
requ1red S260 month 304
675 1090

�Thursday, June 21 , 1984
Puge

12 The Daily Sentinel

They'll Do It Every Time

42 Mobile Homaa

54 Ml1c. Merchandl•• 118

for Rent

• Vaget1ble1
lulh on your Iota now home
you aan afford over 1, 100
IHI·fl.. I rmo. • bath, oor·
petod, ready to movo Into.
UI,IOO. Aloo gorogoo •
boumenu . Coli Potrlot
Homo lulldoro anytime
•41·1038. Will oonoldor
mobile homo 11 trado ln .

2 bdr. tre ller fully f urnl1 h1d,

good

loclt~n .

no . dep . req .

Coli 441 -8111 .
Mobile home fo r rent . Ref . •

Dop . Cell 441 -01101
448· 1809 .

or

Loretto' o Ouno. Golllpollo.
114-448- 1822. 8 :00 om
10:00 pm. 7 deyo weekly.

beautiful riv erv iew . Fost er S
Tr ailer Park . Call 446 - 1602 .

New Remington 30- 30 em munition 2 boxes. 40 rounds
e1&amp; .00. All at•niless 22

12x 6 0 2 bed room t ra iler.
furnished., g al!l &amp; water pai d .

auto t•rget pistols witl'l 6in
and Bin berrelllength. regular $269. l oretta "• 1240.
includes 100 cartridge1 .
Bingham 22 all steel auto
rifle ventilated sleeve over
barrel!. c arbine length 50
round magazine reg . $ 239
new a 180 include• 100
c artridg es. Al so. have S S.
W, 44 mag . $360 . Rugar
Stainle s1 Red Hawk 44 mag .
$340 . We are a class thr ee

S250 m o .. S100 deposit .

Coli 44 6 -65 83
2

bd r un furn is hed, ext ra
nice, 2 mi . out on Rt 588.
$200 m o . , ad ul ts on ly Ca ll

446 -2300.
2 BR . in co unt ry,

s 100 deposit , $1 75 mo

Call 614 -367 0478 .
yaB
rdA. Trailer
$ 1 75 mon
o . pl
usr,u tf en
ilities
2
ri ve
ce d,
S50 d eposit . Ca ll 6 14 - 4 46
808 0 or 4 46 -704 4 .

1 2x60 2 be dr oom m obil e
hom e. pa rtl y fu rni s h ed. Ra c.ne a rea Ca ll 6 14 -992 -

58 58
2

be dr oo m

m o bil tt ho m e.

adult s on ly . For sal tt o r rent

Ca11614-992 -2598
2

be dr oo m . total e lectri c

w ith

ce ntr al ai r. o n East

Ma in S t ., Po m eroy a bove
car w ash , tu lly fu rni shed
Ca ll 6 1 4 - 992 -73 14 or 992 -

individual
. Call
u1 on your
~~~~~~~~~~~~~:==~~~~~;~~dealer.
law
enforcement
or
clan three wants .

44

51 Household Goods

Apartm e nt
for R e nt

APART M E N TS . mobile
homes. h ou ses. Pt. Pleasa nt
and Ga lli poli s 6 1 4 - 4 46 -

822 1
Ni ce 1 and 2 be droom
un f urn tshed apartments .
304 - 675 -22 1 8 befor e 6

pm

62 15

O n e bedroo m furnts hed apt.
Pt Pit . Very c lea n. ni ce .
Au dits on ly, n o pe t s. Ph one

2

304· 675 13B6

bed r oom
fu rn ished
mobile home tor re nt. a.c
adu lt s. no pe t s. tn N ew
Haven
S1 5 0
m th
Ca ll

30 4-88 2 -2466
2 bed r oo m t ra tl er. k itc hen
fu rni shed. co up le one sm al l
c hild accept ed 30 4 - 6 7 5 -

10 76

A ll n ew 3 roo m . ba th apt
C l ose to Pl eas ant Valley
H os p Private , quiet 304 675 - 1962 or 6 75 -4 5 80
Fron t apartm ent . parti all y
furn is hed . rent S225, wa t er.
elec trt c paid Ph one 30 4 -

675 -377 1

44

A p ar1me nt
for R e nt

1 be droom fu rn ish ed apar t me nt . all util ities patd. 30 4 -

6757 11 2
2 bed roo m ap art m ent . S2 00
mo nth , pl us utilit1es. Camp
Co nl e y a re s, 30 4 - 675 -

JA C KSO N ESTA T ES
A PARTM E NT S (E qu al
Hou sin g Opport unit y ) has
o ne and t wo bed roo m s. ren t
st ar t ing at S157 fo r on e
bedroo m an d S193 per
m on th f or two be droom,
with S2 00 deposit loca t ed
n ea r Foo dl and and Sprin g
Valley Pla za . poo l and TV
ant Ca ll 4 4 6 -2 7!1 5 o r leav e
m e ssage

---3 bd r . unfurn ga rage apt .
S2 5 0 p lu s depos it
Cal l

44 6 37B6 .
Furnished apt 9 1 9 2n d ..
Gallip ol is S 1 75 M en onl y
Ca ll 446 -4416 af1 er ?PM
N e wly rem o deled 2 bdr. .
equippe d kitchen . ce ntral
at r. S250 8 2 1 1h Se co nd
Ave . Ga lli po lis Ca l l 446 -

21 58
Furn ished A pt . 920 4 th ..
G all ipol is
S225
U tilities
p aid A dult s. 1 bd r Cal l
446 -4416 af1 er 7 PM
4 roo m s &amp; ba th . unfu rni shed
pal . u lllt t1 es pfu d . adult s
on ly . no pe t s Ca ll 446 3 4 37 or 446 · 3 11 1
Un furm shed 2 b dr 1n C row n
C ity Ca ll 6 14 -25 6 - 6 5 20
On e be dr oom ap artm en t ,
.fu rn o r unfu rn . 5 190 per
m on t h. u t ili ties pa i d, 550
d epos tt . 6 m ont h lease. no
cht ldr en . n o pets 446 - 3667
aft er 5
f-I rs t fl oo r f u rms h ed ap t .
uttl lttes t urn 1shed
adult s
pr e l erred
r e f er en ce re
quired
lnq u tr e 631 4t h
Ave GA IIt polis
Fu st fl am f u rn tsh ed Afl l .
u t iltttes f urmshed . adull s
pr ef erred . r ef er en ces re ·
qu1red
lnqu trtt 63 1 4 t h
A Ve. Ga ll tpo lts
1 bed r oom apa rt men t f urn
or untu r n . S190 pe r m onth ,
uttl tttes pa td. S500 d ep ost t .
6 m onth lea$e. no children .
n o pet s Ca ll 4 4 6 -366 7 aher

7
2 bd r apt ne wl y d ecorat ed .
S60 to S20 0 pe r mo utilties
part . pai d Ca ll 675 -5 104 or

675 -538 6
4 room s &amp; b Ath. t urntshed.
c lean . n o pet s. adult s o nl y.
d epos it &amp; ref er ence r e q uired . Call 6 14 -446 -1 5 19
5 1 3 Thir d A ve. $135 m o.,
adults o nl y. de p osit re
quired . Ca ll 614 - 446 · 4 222
betwe fln 9 -5 .

2 rm f ur n efficiency apt
carpet e d thr oughou t . $175
m o .,dep &amp; ref req u ired
Ca ll 614 - 446 -4 6 07 or 44 6

2602
1 be dr oo m A pt S 1 9 6 m o
in c luding ut il it ies
Equal
H ou sing Opportunity Con tac t Vill age M an o r Apt s.

6 14-99 2-778 7 .
R ivenid e Apt s M id dlepo rt
Spe cial rates tor Sent or
C itinm s S 1 30 . Equal Hou s·
ing O pportunit ies 614 -

99 2-7721
Furni sh ed 1 &amp; 2 b edroo m
apartmen ts. M tdd l epor t
A dult s. n o pets. sec uri ty
d epo si t . Ca ll 614 - 992 -

3874 .
2 bedr o om u nfurnis hed apt .
$ 100 m o nth plus S100
depo sit . At 208 N 3rd.
M iddl ep o rt , key at 22 2 111 N .
3 rd . Middleport .

TWIN RIV ERS TOWER
Apartme nt s now available to
elderly &amp; disabled with an
i n c ome of le ss than
$ 12,300 . Renting for 30
percent of adjusted income .

Phone 304· 675· 6679

4683
Ap ar tm en t. p arti ally fu rnished in Ga ll ipolis , 3 0 4 675 - 14 58 .

TV &amp; App liances. 627 Third
A ve ., Galli poli s, 614 - 446 16 9 9 S pin wa sher s. gas &amp;
e l ec tr ic dry e r s. auto
w as her s. g a s &amp; electric
r an ges. r e fr iger ator s. TV
set s

Furnished R oo m s

Fo r re nt Sleepin g Rooms
an d lighl hou se keepi n g
roo m s Park Cen tr al H o t el
Ca ll 6 1 4 44 6 -0756
Sleepm g roo m S 115.
ties p atd S h are ba th .
o nl y Ran ge &amp; refr ig
2 nd A ve . Ga llipoli s
446 - 441 6 aft er 7 PM

utili m ale
9 19
Call

46 Space for Rent
Trilt ler space f or re nt

Ca ll

6 14-367 74 3 8

lumber. 304· 675 -3677.
1 pair Queen Anne wingback
chairs , like new, reduced
pri ce . See at 179 N . Park
Drive. telephone 304 - 676 2323 . Ele an or lanham .

GOOD USE D APPLIAN CES
W as her s. dryers. r efrigera ·
t or s, r anges Skagg s Ap ·
p lian ce s. Upper River Rd .
be si de St o ne C re st M o tel.

614 -446 -7 3 9B
Why p ay more. Trade C enter
Furni tur e Outl et . A t. 7 .
Kana uga, O h . O pen 9 -7PM .

Top s oil and fill dirt deli vered , 304- 675 -7771 .
Used garage door, 7x9 ;
good lawn mower motor ,
gas engine, phone 304 - 882 -

2232 .

1- - - - - - - - - - S1 o rm

windows .

phone

304-6 7 5 · 1098.
W ashers &amp; dryer s $ 69 .95 &amp;
$ 79 9 5-- This w eek only .
Hup p's Applian ces &amp; Glass wa re. co rner Rt . 1 41 &amp; At .

7 Call 446-8033.

7297 .

l arge Fre ezfl r $ 95 . 5 TV ' s
S3 5 &amp; up . c ouch e s S35 S6 5 . 3 -5. 000 BTU a if co ndit io ners S9 5 eac h, Speed
Que en w asher $50 , Whirl p ool washer $65 , General
Elec tric washer S95. dryers
S95 eAch , king size box
springs &amp; manress $65.
S k agg s Applian ces 559
U pp er Ri ver Rd. 446 -7398 .
2dr Refri gera t or. G eneral
Elec trt c. $ 60 . Call6 14 - 446-

On e ponable Kenmor o dis hwasher with butcher block
top. perfect condition , 304 -

882-3362.

6 14-99 2-5154 .
Re fr igerat o r . 12 cu . ft .,
w h ite . Call 614 -992 - 3678 .
C u sto m dr aperi es . mini
v en et i an blind s. Roman
woven wo o d shad e s. verti·
ca l blinds . Samples and
estimates in your home . P.
A . Sayr e. 304 - 458 - 1078 .

54 Misc . Merchandise

614 -992 -747 9
Wa reh ouse or st or eroo m .
25K75. f or fur n ttu re.
lu mb er. roo f tng. m su lalto n.
pane l 1ng . equtp m e nt o r
othe r use Ca ll 1 · 614 · 48 6 -

Kna u ff Fir ew o od Re duc ed
pric As thru July 31 st . Have
you r o wn se as on ed wo o d
thi s w int er . 614 -2 56 -6245.
limestone, Sa nd, Gravel .
D eliv er ed 1n Maso n. Meigs.
G allia o r p ic k up at R ichards
&amp; Son . Ca ll l146 -7785 .

5553
Tr ader lot s f or ren t

30 4 -

675 -1076

Merchandise

Pl as ti c c ist er ns state ap prov ed. pl as ti c sep ti c tanks ,
p las ti c cu lvert . m etal c ul vert s. RON EVANS ENTER PRISE S . J ack son . Oh 6 14-

2B6-59 30
Co ff ee tab le st ereo, st ereo .
din ett e tabl a. C all614 - 256 ·

5 1 Househo ld Goo ds
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FUR N IT U RE
62 O hve St . Ga ll1po li s N ew
&amp; used wood &amp; coa l st oves.
6 p 1ece woo d ltving room
sutt e wt rh 6 tn ch fla t .um s
$399 . bunk beds co m p le t e
wtth b unk1 es $ 199 . 2 pt ece
ant r o n ltv t ng r oom sutt es
S199. an tr on rec liners S99
o ther r ecli n er s $ 80. m aple
dt nette sets $ 1 79 . boK
sp r1ngs &amp; ma ttr ess t wi n or
full S 100 se t reg ular -firm
S1 20 . map le dinett e c hairs
S35. w ash stan ds S34 .
m apl e roc kers 559, 7 pi ece
c hrome dinett e set $ 149 . 5
pi ece d in en e se t S9 9 . u se d
bedroom su it es . re f rige r a t or s. ranges . c h est. dresser s.
w rin ger was h er s. TV 's, dry er s, &amp; shoes . Call 6 14- 4 46 -

55 Building Supplies
lUMBER - Rough cut. oak .
pop lar, 2x4 , 2.~e6 . 2x8 . 111.4 ,
h6. h8 . length available. 8
ft . through 16 ft . Hogg &amp;
Zuspan . 304 -773 - 5554 .
Now open for business.
Mountain State Block , Rt .
33 . New Haven . Complete
masonry suppl ies, 4 ". 8 ",
1 2" blo c k . Del ivery servic e
Phone day 304 -882 -2222 ,
ev ening 882 -3239

3159
LA YNE'S FURNITUR E
So f a. c h air . rocket. o tto ma n. 3 ta b l e~ . (eK lra h e avy
by Fron t ier). $ 685 . So fa .
c hair and loves eat . S27 5 .
So f as an d chairs priced fro m
S2 8 5 to S89 5 Tab les. S4 5
and up t o S125 Hide -a beds. S440
and u p t o
$525 . Re cl iner s, S175 . t o
S375, l am p s from S2 8 t o
S 75 .5 pc
di nett es fr om
S99 .. t o 4 3 5 . 7 p c . 9 189
and u p . W ood t abl e wi th siK
c h oirs S4 2 5 t o S745 . D esk
$ 11 0 u p t o $225. Hut c hes .
$550 and u p . ma ple or pine
f inish . Bunk bed com pl ete
with mattre sse!l . $25 0 . and
up to S3 9 5
Baby be d s.
S11 0 M attr esses or b oJC
springs . full or twin . 858 .,
firm . S6 8 . and S78 . Queen
1et s. 9 195 . 4 dr. ch e su .
S42 5 dr. chest s, 9 64 . Bed
frame s, S2 0 .and S2 6 ., 10
gu n
Gun c abin ets. &amp;3 50 .
G as or electric rang es S376 .
Baby m attresse s. $25 &amp;
83 5 . bed frames S2 0 . S25.
&amp; $30. king fram e $ 60 .
Go o d selec tio n o f be dro om
s uit es, ce d a r c h es t s.
r oc k er s, m e tal cab in e t s,
sw iv el rock ers

56

Pets for Sale

1983 Pl-,.mou t h Colt 18.000

Massey Harris pony tractor
&amp; equipment . EMc . con .
s 1995. may trade or make

Front end loader. fits tricyc le
type tractor, 6125 . Call

Hill C REST KENNELS

Big Discounts on new and
used tractors and hay equip ment. Siders Equipment ,

304 -675· 7421 .

Full sized bed in good
condition. Call 614 - 256 1716 after 6pm .

63

livestock

5 yr . old Sorrell Quarter
horse mare. 2 vrs . Equestrian training
Merideth
manor. 9650 . Call 614 -

992 -2488 .
Must sell Matched pair of
sorre l Belgium Gelding
Horses, 6 and 4 years old.
good pulling hones . Mrs.
Harley Grate, langsville. OH

614· 669· 4242 afler 6pm .
Reg Quarter mare with colt
2 year old Aqha mare.
Reasonable . 594 -5816 ext

167 days; 614· 992 ·7300

Old model r oa d grader . 12
tt
bl a d e. g o od engine .

$5 00 . Ca ll614· 256 · 1216 .

9 -vear - old Appaloosa, mare,
good riding horse, $400.
Phone 304 -675 - 6352 after

Judy Taylor Grooming. C&amp; ll

614 · 367-7220.

TV . c hest , c ou ch , f u ng ,
Y amaha o rgan . C all 446 4 0 52 or 446 - 2 2 48
Chain saw . king cool &amp; w o od
st o v e. large M o t o ro la ste reo Ca ll 61 4 - 266 - 1768.
En ga g em e n nt ring &amp; wed din g b and {size 6 1. m en 's
w edding b an d. all t hree for

675 -6799.

5.

Briarpat c h Kennels Profes sional All -breed grooming.
Indoor-o utdoor boarding fa c ilities . Pick up and delivery
servic e . Engli sh Cocker Spa niel puppies . Call 614 - 388 -

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Hay . 91 .25 ba le in fie ld,
phone 304 - 676 - 2130

Transportation

614 · 388· 9790 .
12 m o . o ld Reg . Pit Bu lL Call

614 -446 -3249.

Autos for Sa le
---------71

ReK rabbitt s $3 , Milk goat
535 , babv goat $15 . Call
446 - 135 4 after 5 .

TOP CASH paid for late
model used cars.
Smith
Buick -Pontiac. 1911 East ern AVe ., Gallipolis . Cal l

M i n itur e female dach shund, $ 50 . Coli 614 -446 -

614·446 -2282 .

7036 .

1979 Ford Courier XL T
sports package, PB . ra c k -inpenning steering . new tires.
auto. transmission , 4 cvL 32
mpg. sel ling price $2495.

Cockipoo puppi e s.

&amp;25 .

each Call 614-992 -3640.

57

75 00 BTU G ib son air c ondi ti o ner S200
2 3 1 cu ft
fr eezer S2 50 . exc co nd

Call 614 -2 56-6582

6799

7795 .

Prof essional All Breed D o g
Obedi en ce Training . Individ ual Bt c las ses available. Call

4 46 22 4B

Greenbrier SUbl es now
boarding horses . 304 - 675 -

Greenbrier Stables , we buy,
sei l or trade horses. 304 -

Shrub s prun e d . l awn r e seede d , re t a ining wall s.
si de w alk s. pati os. fill dirt .
to psoil , bark m u lch &amp; saw du st Cont ac t 8ru ce Dav t·
stan Ca ll 614 - 256 - 1427

TV. chest . co u c h. ru g . Yama ha org an , 446 - 4052 o r

omy shift, air. Ca11614 -3 79 -

2726 .

Musical
Instruments

,etail 83025 Call 614-388·
9905 .
1979 Dodge Omni , 4 spd.

AC , PS . PB . radio, 47 .600
miles . Call 614·446-2510

Kimball co nsol e piano 1 %
yr . o ld. like n ew . Call 614 ·
379 -2655 aft er 5PM .

.after 6pm .

58

81200 . Call 446 -1326 .

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

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

1976 Camara. 4 dirt bikes.

Coli 446 -4382 .
Str aw berries . Taylor 's Berry
Pat c h . 8AM - 8PM. Mon .·
Sat . Call 446 - 869 2 or 614 ·

1978 Uncoln Mark V . 2 dr.,
sky roof. 22 .000 miles. exc .
cond ., $7,496 . Call 446 -

6 509
Oliv er super 77 diese l . 3
bl ock sawmill , e x co nd ..
pri ced on inspec tion . Call

614 ·388· 8701 .
C omplete mobilo sound sys t em . Pro fauional sound au dio equipment . Good for a
band, perfec t for OJ . Lights
include d . Call evening after

9 p.m. 614 -992 -5547 &amp; uk

OUR BOARDING HOUSE ®

with

1978 Olds Cutlass Supreme
good c ond ., $ 2 ,000 or best

o!for . Coli 446 -38 35 .
19~0

81

VW Rabbit air c ond ..

1981 Honda Xl 18 5 S. N ew
in 198 2 1 . 100 m iles . Call
d ays 446 - 18 73. ni ghts 4 46

7272.

many eKtras. one own er.
showroom cond . Call 446·
0616 anytime .

446 -4149 .

1978 Thunderbird. sell or
trade for truck . 6 5. 000
miles. maroon . good shape

1982 Honda Nighthawk C8
650 . black with sil ve r strip e.
ex ce ll ent co nditi on. 6 1 0
miles, $1 .7 0 0 . Call 6 14 -

Call 614· 256 ·6215 .

19 5 6 H arley D a11 id son. Call

256 -1964.

1981 Mazda GLC
614· 446-1336.

Call

1973 Kaw asak i 900. good
cond.,

S1060.

Ca \1 614 -

245 -5818 .
1976 lincoln Continental.
fire damage interior. goo d

19 7 9 KDX 400. r u n s good .
Call 614 -99 2 -384 6 .

U sed Fu rniture
C h ai r s,
dryers . and TV 's . 3 miles o ur
Bulaville Ad . Open 9am to
6pm. Mon . thru Fri.. 9am to
5pm . Slit.

Utility wagon , 4 ft .x 6 . 5 ft ..
13 in . high mahogany bot tom , he•vy t•il gate, lights,
aluminum aides . Call 614 -

614 -446-0 3 22

965 ·4134.

THE- KIDNAPPilR

WHY YOU CA'-I'T
JUJ;T TE-l~ THE
POU CE A&amp;OUT
THIS .

~AID

HE WOULD KI~L ~PIDER I MloA'-JT
IF THE PDLI CE 6ET

6 ·30

614 -992 -6954 .

239 8 or 614 -446-2454 .

S4900
6846 .

1958 Harle y 1/ • fi nished
Make o ff er. 304 676 -6397

Fe tt y Tree Tr im ming, st u mp
r emova l Ca ll 3 04 6 7 5 -

Call

614 -99 2 ·

1980 Pinto. standard tran smission . Call after 5 p .m .

614-992 -3917.

1978
6400

C all

6 14 -992 ·

Kawasaki K Z 200.
mil es . S5 5 0 . Call

198 2 Honda Inte r s tate . eK ·
c ell en t con d iti o n . 6700
miles Seri ou s ca ll s only

1982 Olds 99 Regen c y . all
power. eKtra clean . white on
white . 29 .000 miles . 1
owner Ca ll 304· 453- 21 0 2 .
1976 Old s 98 . 4 d o or .
$500 . f irm . 45.000 miles.
rough exterior . Can be seen
at 129 Mulberry Av e . ,
Pomeroy .
'78 two door Pontia c Gran d
Prix, PS. PB. AC . crut se
control. VS - 301 , bl ac k

Su zuki RM 80. like new .
S400 , 304 -6 7 5 - 1 48 0 or

304 -675 -369 8 .
1981 17 5 KO )( Kawasakt.
eK Cellent condit ion . S650 ,
ph One 30 4 -88 2 - 28 87
X. S 650 Y am ah a. IT 175
Yam aha . 4 K7 utility tr ail er
pho ne 304 -77 3-5 1 78 .

75

Boa t s a n d
Mo1ors for S a le

304-675 -6397 .
1984 Pontia c Fier o S E.
b la c k . fully lo ad ed . S3.0 00
down, take ov er payment s,

liflback. 304 -675-5149 at·

1 6 ft . inboard wi th 1 17
ov erdriv e; V - d r tve, spa r e
pr opeller s. 4 2 7 C hevy en
gin e. Th is boat w ill ru n all
d ay o n 14 g all on s o f gas .
p ic k s u p siK s ki ers ou t of
w at er easil y. r un s 60 mp h
with po w er p rop &amp; 8 0 w it h
speed prop 1974 m ode l
$3 000 in cl udes t railer &amp;
ne w battery C all 614 -44 6

ter 5

1822 .

304-675-7110 .
1972 Ford LTO , all pow er.
call 7 -12 noon or 3 - 8 p. m .

Phone 304-675 7166 .
Toyota

GT.

1973 Dodge Polara . " d em o lition derby c ar " regul atio n.
ready to run . 304 - 882 -

3236.
1972 Chevy Camero SS .
350 4 barrel! engine. 3
speed. AM -FM cas sett e,
very good condition . M as on
beside l e s' s Carry - out
1975 Audi . front wh eel
drive . gre at co ndition . 30 4 ·

675-2517 .
1978 O lds , 4 door, V - 6, air ,
PB . PS, AM - FM , c rui se,
phone 304 - 675 -6286. Call
after 4 .

72

Trucks for Sale

1974 Ford 34. T ., super cab

pickup . $650 . 245 -9441 .
1983 S10 P.U. 4 spd. 4

14 ft . alu m inu m boat wi t h
tilt trailer. swivet b ass se&lt;~ t s.
elec tri c m o t or ba tt ery &amp; life
jacket s. 3 mos ol d. e"-c
cond . S950 for all . O th er
it em s. Call 44 6 -4 635
1 5 6 Boa t &amp; Trailer 4 0 h p.
J oh nson Engi ne. Trade or
Se ll . Ca ll 6 1 4 -44 6 - 4 327
l ar ry ' s Bo at Ser vice Ell pert
o ut bo ard mot o r r ep ai rs
Sp ecia lt ze in M erc ury Out b o ard s
Al so I nb oa r d o utboard rep airs Minnekot a
Servi ce C ent er
Prop eller
sa les &amp; se rv ice ce nt er . Live
bait &amp; tackl e. 88 Mai n St .
Coolville . C all 6 14 - 667 -

6389 o• 667 -6607.
Corr ect Craft &amp; Sk i Su ·
pr em e. family sk i boats
New &amp; used . Parkersburg.

WV 304 -422 -84 33 o• 30 4·
422 -2367 .

cyi.AM .FM.Iike new $5995

1982 510 P U.. 4spd. 6 cyl.
AM FM . viny l cover bed
96695. 1981 Chevy luv,
4spd. 4 c yl. AM FM . tape .
vinyl cover bed S3595 .
John 's Auto Sales Bula ville
Rd Gallipoli s, 614 - 446 -

15ft tri- h au l, 55 H P, m ake

otte r. 304 -6 7 5 -6 397

76

4782 .
1971 GMC Step Von , trade
or sell . Call614- 446 - 4327 .

S - 10 - 1982 -V6 . 4
Topper .

Call

GET

your

67 5 -

ca rp e t

SHIP

0 Cll Family Feud
Cll Dr . Who

s pd ..

614 - 446 -

1336.

Nell t n es to help wh en the
Chtef asks hts fa ther to
co m e ar1d !tvo With t he fa mily b ut Grandpa Kan 1sky
scoffs at t he off er . jR)

Hll Hll! YOllf!E
TICH/.15/f, 5NAINHY'
HE'S OOT A

.• 6EIIIJ6 /)ELP/1/tf{}S
CAH NO MOAE HELP

E~C.LU51 VEL

l'M,ER ~ l'iLAD Y' EXPLAINED
T'ME THAT 5 NAWKYCAN'T
REIILLY LAU6ti, OR. 1'/0TOfl l'O THINH HE
i;EIN'

LOOHIN6 PllciiG/,1/fTI
THAN A 5HIIfll1

TERRIFICSENSE
0' HUMOII, DR.

CAN HELP LOOHIH(i

VIOT!

C2J MOVIE c 'Still o! the
Night'

C2J MOVIE: ' First Blood'
lil Circus

[!) This Week in the NBA

VIC/0/JS,~

'Season Wr ap-Up ·

Cil &amp;l Cl2l U.S . Olympic
Trials Coverage of rhe track
and fi eld tn als IS presen te d
fr om the los Ange les Memo rtal Co l1seum . los Angeles. CA (2 h rs )
0 (I) (jQ) Magnum P .l. A
co srum e pa rt y b ecomes a
sce ne o f m urder that trtes
M agnum's d educ tt ve p ow ers . (R) (60 mtn)
(j) Great Railway Journevs

o! the World

lory
beco mes
confused
when her college b o yfn en d
wa nts to expan d t he1r relatt o nshlp. (R)
C!J Top Rank Boxing from
Atlantic City , NJ
® New Tech Times

Au1o Parts
&amp; Acces sories

4 ra dial tires on C hevy ra ll y
w heels. 1 5 "K 1 0'" tnsu lated
t o pper for shor t be d . phone

fo rm er
teamm ate -t urned spo rt scaster show s up to
do a storv on Sam (R)

11) 700 Club
(jQ) Simon &amp; Simon

0 Cil

The w tfe o f a m1 SStng ch e·
1nt st htres A J and Rtck to
ft nd h11 n (R) (60 mt n)
([J Up Pompeii
(tll Mystery! ·o Utet as a
Nun · Jemtma flllds the
m tss tn g stu den t Tessa b ut .
at the y ret urn to th e con
ve nt . the ftgure o f the bl ack
nun catc hes up w 1th th en1
IRI 160 m &lt;n I !Closed Cap
! toned !

Ev'rybody think
I is n~thin' but: a
nuthin''

Miss Melba

a nuthin'!
Joel

thin~
is d

r

nuthin'.'

9 c30

Cil

WI N NIE
ALTHOUGH I 'M DISAPPOINTED IN
YOUR PERFORMANCE DURING /I'IY
All5ENCE, I 'M NOT GOING
LET YOU GO.

10 :00

380. priced to sell. Wilkes villa. Ca ll 61 4 · 669· 51 0 11 .
74 Dodge 3/a ton truc k . 7 2
International 4 wheel drive

78

Camping
Equ ipm e nt

Exca v at ing

W MOVIE: 'The Hus tle,-

1])

Good -· 1 EKcava tin g, base ment s. f ooters. dri v ew ay s,
sept ic ta nk s, lan dscapi ng .
C all anyt i m e 6 14 - 446 4537. J ames L Davison , Jr
ow ner
J A A Con str uc tio n C o . Ru tl and . O h .61 4 -7 4 2 - 2 90 3 ;
Basemen ts, Fo o t ers, Co n cre t e wo r k , Bac kh oe's,
D o Le r &amp; D i tc h er . D ump
t ru cks. &amp; wat er - gas - sewe r elec t rtca l lmes

84

El ec tric al
&amp; R e frig e ra 1ion

1980 VW Pickup. 50 ,000
mile&amp;, 2 new tires . See at
Village PIZJa .
1963 Chevrolet dump truck ,
new battery. new paint job.
new front tire. runs goo d.

304-682 -3236.
Vans &amp; 4 W . O .

15 ft . tru ck cA mper Self
cont ained $650 . or bes t
offer. C all 594 - 5816 l:IKt .

167, dAys; 614 -99 2-7300 ,
evening s.
low boy 8 ft . alumi num
truc k camper, roll - out w in dows and ro of v en t, pan elled

and lights. $125 . 304-88 2·
3376 .

Knots Landing
Ga ry co nv tnces Ca th y t o ac ce p t a 10b o n th e t anc h and
t hen pr oceeds to he 1g hte n
her resemb iJncc to t he lat e
C IJI [R ) (6 0 mtn )

(l) MOVIE : ' The Import ·
ance of Being Earnest "
lt_fl Newswatc h
fE Independent Network
News

BARN E Y

DID 'fOU
COME TO VISIT
OL' SNUFFY.
PARSON?

AMEN!!

HE CAN'T HIDE UNDER
TH' BED THIS TIME

10:30 !1l My little Ma rgie

til TBS Evening N e w s
CH) Bits and Bytes

11 :oo

offer. Coli 614-992 -5547 .

2 56 · 1141 o • 6 14 -446 ·
11 75 0 0 6 14-44 6-7911.

pkg ,

360

engine.

28 .1100 mlleo . 304· 6761423.

11 :15
11 :30

I'll Odd Couple
ffi Mazda Sports l ook
0 I]) mTonight Show
(IJ Best o f Gro u c ho

Nurse Bra ncust makes !he
d ec ts ton to become an un·
!A) (60
m am ed m oth er
mtn)
([) latenight America

PE AN UT S

@ All In the Fa mily

6 14 -256 -17 4 3 or 6 14· 25 6
11 20 .

TI1E MEETING OF OUR

JIMS

LOCAL CACTUS CLUB
WILL COME TO ORDER ...

WATER

SE RVI CE .

7397
Upholste ry

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

daily 9 to 6 :30. Sa1 . 9 to 4 .
Closed Sunday . U .S . Rt . 60,

116 3 Sec . Ave .• Gallipoli s

Coolville. Oh 614 -667 ·
3386 .

61 4·446-7833 or 614-44 6 1833 .

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

A dose of anti-squeeze
entitled today·s ha nd "The
P lay's the Thing."
His bidding is give n here
exactl y as he wrote it and H

NORTH

+n

• J 10 8 6

IS

• Q2

+AJI098

WEST

EAST
• 83
.AKQ93
• 7 52
• 10 9 6 H
Q 7 81
+K 5 3
SOUTH
+AKQJ I09
• 8 42

.3

+

••

.AKJ87

a squeeze. He now leads a

+2

low club a nd South has lost

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

w...

Nortb

Eut

Pass

t+
4•

Pass
Pass

6.
Pass

PIISI!
Pass

,.,

Pus
Pus

superb . West's opening

lead is an automatic king of
hearts. The queen of hearts
would be the a utomatic second play with most players,
but Gordon said, " Now is the
time to think." West rea.ons
that if South holds the king
of clubs, the hand is sure to
make
He sees tha t the low club
must be the lead to prevent

his

slam, since the

squeeze

can't work a fte r the club
lead ha s t a k e n a wa y
dummy's e ntry.
Let's see wha t ~appens

against a hea rt or

di amon d

or spade play . After losing a
beart. South simply ru ns six
spades and the A-K-Q of di a·
moods to c ome

Opening leadc•K

down

to a

three-card ending and a perfect double squeeze situation. South leads his last hig h
diamond and West bas to

By O.wald Jacoby
ud Jam.. Jacoby

come down t o a bare cl ub

honor to keep a high heart.
Now South chuc ks tne
heart from dummy a nd it ls
East's turn to be squeezed .
Because East must hold on
to his high diamond. he also
comes down to a single ton
club. South scores the slam
with dummy's A-J of clubs.

Many wrlten for the
American Bridge Teachen'
Association
Quarterly
ellplain bridge in its simplest form . One e~ception is
Gordon Knight, whose hands
often rank with the best
hands we write about. He

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .I

~tU . .~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
I Yearn
5 One kind
of buggy
10 Africa n
lake
II P ollen
holder
13 Meander
14 Hit the
sack
15 Before
16 Actor
Alasl&lt;!ir
17 Lunar
ve hicle
18 Separate
thing
20 Language
of
T haila nd
21 E xude
. 22 Conlmed
23 Costl y
fur
25 Throng
26 Corner
27 " Betty - "
28 Candle nut
tree
29 Atl&lt;!ck
31 Thr1ce
(La!)
32 Va t
33 Escape
350ne
of the
kingdoms
37 Seaweed
extrac t
38 Printed
matter
39 Gael
4G Concur

41 3 in cards
DOWN
1 Land

measure

2 Job
3 Be irre le-

vant
I Nigeria n
city
5 Paint
mgredlent
6Foe
7 Siam ese

Yesterday's Answer
16 Bulk
19 Tmware

29 P la tf orm
30 Roman
Z2 Minnesinger
e m blem
23 Of a state
34 Na tive
24 Where
Indian
Eri van LS
serva nt
25 Noise36 Disma ker
fe ature
27 Deep
rav1ne
37 Statute

coin
8 Scary
film , e.g.
9 - now
1at present!
12 F a r fetched

(I) Catlins

(j) WKAP in C incinnati

J oh n son W ate r Serv ice . C all

87

1982 Chovy Van loaded,

m News /Sports/ We ather

(ff) Tony Brown ' s Journal

Ja m es Boy s W ate r Serv ice .
Al so pools fill ed . C all 6 14-

79 Motors Home s
&amp; Campers
BURD E TT E C AM PE R
SALES &amp; SERVI CE. Open

At The Movies

o m oo o m t1QI m t1l!

0 Cil Trappe r J ohn . M.D.

1984 Chevy 510. 4 wheel

dirve, 304-882 -3184.

fit

News
(}) Anothe r life
(!) SportsCenter

Ge n e ral Hauling

C all Jim Lanier . 30 4 -6 7 5 1976 Dodge van . needs
work . good work van , mak e

m (j2) 20120

0 CIJ l10l

SE WIN G M ach tne r ep airs.
se rv tce. Auth or ize d Sin ge r
Sales &amp; Serv ice S harpen
Sc i ssors
Fa b ric Sh o p ,
Pome roy 6 14 -992 - 2 2 84 .

85

Call 614-992 ·6522

0 Cil ClJ Hill Street Blues
A co p ktll er con tt nues to
k ee p the Blues paranotd and
laRue
and
Wash in gton
d elve deep er tnto th e p o lice
corr upt 1on rtn g (A) (60 m tn)

304 -6 75-31 23

1973 KW 290 Cummin s.

' Sophie' s

(J) AF : W aylo n Jenning s
(E Sneak Preview s Ftl m
cn t tcs J effr ey L yon s nncl
Neal Gabl er spot ltght ' Mov Ie S t o Wa tc h For .' f tlms m
ltm tt ed re lease th at you
sh ou ld no t m tss suc h as
·oa nron' and 'C arrne n ·

J IM 'S Pl UMBIN G II HEAT-

83

MOVIE

Choice '

6 14 -44 6-44 7 7

S HUlAW 'S Plu mbin g and
Hea tin g. 2 11 SiK th St .
Pa int Pl easan t , W . Va 3 04 6 7 5 - 5 4 20
Licen se d and
i nsu red

0 Cil ClJ Night Court A lei-

low JUd ge ac cuses Harry of
rockt ng the JUd1 c1al b oa t (RJ

Cor Fo urth and Pin e
Ga llip o lis. O hi o
Ph on e 6 14 - 446 - 3888 or

ING A t . 1. BoK 355. Ga lli ·
po li s. Ca ll 6 14 - 367- 0 57 6 .

Cil ClJ Cheers Sam's

9 :00 0

EFFIGY

" FIRE PROOF

ill) Sneak Pre views

I'll MOVIE : ' Pillow Talk'
8 :30 0 CD ClJ Family Ties Mal-

GOPHER

Answer Wha t t he boss ·s son was . naluratly-

BRIDGE

8 c00 0 Cil ffi Gimme a Break

PROO FIN G Unconditional
lif etim e gua rante e. Local
r ef eren ces f urn ished . Free
est imat es . Call co llect 1 6 14 -237 -048 8, 9 a .m to 5
p m
R oge r s B ase m e nt
W at erproofi n g .

CART ER'S PLUMBIN G
AND HEATIN G

Jumllles BRINY OXIDE

Jumbl1 Book No. 21, cont1lnlng t 10 puu:l11, i1 • ••il•bl• lor S1.85 plus s~ po11101
1nd handllnv tram Jumbl•. do lhlt n1w1p1per, BoA 341, Norwood , N.J. 076-41.
lnciUO. -;'OUf n•m•, 11)(1,.11, zip codtt 1nd m1ke c heck1 p1~ 1 bl1 to Ne ws p1 ~ rbooh .

[}OJ Wheel of Fo rtune
(12} People's Court
fl) One Day at a Time

W at er we ll s co mm erc ial and
rtom esti c. tes t hol es. pump
sn les and serv ice . 304- 895 -

Plumbing
&amp; H e ating

I

lil

STEA M ER W ater re moval.
f u rn iture c lea n in g. ft ee est ima t es . 3 0 4 -6 7 5 - 2295 .

82

Yestetday's

San Francisco at Atlanta

::7] love Connection

"( I I I I I J'
(Answers tomorrow)

Cll Family Feud

S HA PE WITH CAPTIAN

Rem o d eling. sid ing . i nte ri o r
and eKt erio r. te Ktur ed c oat ing . sim ulat ed bri c k an d
stu cco. th erm o repl acem ent
w in do w s 3 04 -675 - 1560

Print answer here:

iJ) Major League Baseball :

R IN GLE'S SER VI C E e&gt;e pe rien ce d roo fin g. incl uding .
hot ta r ap p lica ti on. c ar p en - ·
te r. elec tri cia n . n1 ason Ca ll
0 '

Now arrange the ctrcled letters to
lorm the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon

7 :30 0 (I) Tic lac Dough
(!) ESPN 's Speodweek

1 33 1

304 -675 - 208 8
4 560

WHO NEVeR S EEM
'TO GS.'T A ~ OUND
TO MA I'l:F!:YIN5
JLJST 15E:T.

I I I IJ

II)
~
Entertainment
Tonight
fit Jefferson s

BASE M E N T WATER ·

1975 Triumph Spitfir e. co n vertible. 2 tops , new pa int.
S1.500 . 00 . Mak e o ffer.

Cel ic a

"... W1511 IMA'l',VJI~
I MlbflT1 1-lAV~ ll18
VJISH I VJISI1 mNIOHT!"

38 0 2

304-675· 6286 .

1981

RON ' S Televi sion Servic e.
Specia li zin g in Zenith and
M oto rola , O u az ar , and
h ou se ca ll s. C all 304 - 576 -

WH AT &amp;OM!: GUY5

ICRONARt

I'll Star Trek
0 Cil CD NBC News

[I) Here Come the Brid e s
(!) SportsCenter
(l) Sanford and Son
l]) Entertainment Tonight
ffi Wheel of Fortun e
0 lil Wheel of Fo rtune
(I)
Nightly
Bu s iness
Report
(jQ) News
f_ffl
M acNeil / Lehrer
N ews hour

GE NE 'S D EE P STEAM
C ARP E T C L E AN .

78 Tran Am T -Top, limited
edition . everthing n e w

S 2 9 00
6846 .

I KJ

(I) Q) Cl2l ABC News
0 (I)@ CBS Ne w s
[jjJ High Feather
7 :00 0 (I) PM Magazine

BORN'LOSER

I

--LULET

(]) Rifleman
(I) Numero Uno
I]] Carol Burnett

I~VOLVED .

H &amp; S Hom e l m pJov em ent s
v in y l si ding , ro oting, ro om
add itio n, st o rm window s,
st o ne. Ca ll 614 - 3 67 -0409
or 6 14 - 367 -7 2 44 .

74 Harle y D avi dso n Super
Glid e cho pper All ch ro me

tr•iler

,.. I DO~' T ~~E­

PAINTIN G · interio r and exte rior . plum bi ng. roo fing .
so m e rem odeling . 20 yr s.
eK p Ca ll 614 - 388 -9 652 .

1979 Ch evy Capric e Cla ssic . 2 dr. ac. ps. V -8 engin e,
body good condition . exc.
performan ce . Will consid er
all offers . Call 614 -992 7412 after 5 p.m .

73

CAPTAIN E ASY

M arcu m R oofing &amp; Spout·
in g . N ow insta lling ru b b er
roo f s. 3 0 yea r s eK perience,
sp ecia li zi ng i n built u p roof .

scotc h g uard -w at er e xtra c tio n. deo do ri ze r s. FREE esti m at es
Reason able r.a tes
Gen e Sm ith. 992 -6309

1--

CD News/Sports/Weat he r
([)
MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
(llJ Powerho us e

Home
Improve m e nts

Guess he 's havtng too
much fu n as a bachelor

·-~-c-.-.-""

Cil Andy Griffith

Cal l 61 4· 388 ·98 57 .

f or Nick Jr.
D ouble c ontour chair, as
advertised on TV . with heat
&amp; v1brator . Call 614 -949 30 14 anytime.

(]) New Treas ure Hunt

Services

1977 Harl ey D avid son low
rider . C all 446 - 7 0 1 5 aft er

four ordinary word s.

(!) Mazda Sports l.ook

675- 14 23.

Motorcycl es

$100. Call 614 -446 -4659 I,:2:4:5:-9
: :5 5:7
: .= = == = = J ;:1:2;:4:3;:o;:r;:4;:4;:6;:·;:1:6;:1:5;:
. ;::;;::;~ RTO 9513. SQHD . RTE
o r 446 -3 369 .
~
la rg e 1 6 ft _o v or he ad garage
d oor. co mplet e. also 8ft .•
door , e-. . g as fl oor turnace.
reasonabl e . Ca ll 614 - 256 -

(I) MOVIE : 'Tho Hunter·

5PM .

cond . Call614 -446-1754.

Boarding all breeds . Heated
indoor - outdoor faci l ities .
AKC O o berman puppie s:
Stud Servic e. Call614 -446 -

9790 .

9441

Autos for Sale

304 -675-3960

6417

10 in Homeli t e c hain saw .
b r and n ew . n ev er used . $85 .
g un ca bin e t . hold s 12 .
S1 25 . swing set , $2 5 . 245 -

..
~-~~~~~~::~::~~:;::::::::::::::::::::~
r~o~·
71
74
mi .. stand . shift plu s eco n -

614-286-6944 .

News

1972 22ft _ Holiday camper: &gt;
self -contai n ed Call 3 04· ~ :

~ &amp;
ll.f)lef~

John Deere 24T baler. New
Holland 66 baler. Farmhand
pull wheel rake. New Holland hay crimser , wagon
new hay rack , 601 Ford
mower. Ford cultvators. rotary hose. ferti lize spread ers, wheat drills, Farmhand
grinder mixer, hay S. grain
elevator, other field ready
equipment. Howa's Farm
Machinery, At . 124 &amp;: Mayhew Rd ., Jackson , Oh,

evenings .
CO UNTR Y M OBI LE H o m e
Pa rk . Route 33, N or t h o f
Po m tHOY l arge lot s Ca ll

35ft. camp ing t rai l er, AC,
new stove. new sho wer,
patio sc reen ed in . Can be
seen at Hid den Lake s. Pome roy. O hio . 30 4 -6 75 - 1413 . .

7 ft . haybine. eMc . cond.,

C arpAt f o r rentals f o r S3 .99
sq vel Ca ll 614 -99 2 -6173 .
Ch erry Dinin g Room suit
w it h d ro p leaf table, Call

322 1

Farm Equipment

62 Wanted to Buy

2 horse-horse trailer . good
condition , S1 .000 . 304 ·

I

1 7 ft. self conta ined Travel
Ma t e. sleop s 6 , in good
condition
Ca ll 614· 992 -

l - - - - - - -- - --

87 ,000 . Call 8 1 4 - 3 7 92423 .

6 00 O CilCIJ O Cil@ Ql Clil

con. Call 614-992-6030.

Far 111 Suppl ies
&amp; L1ves1ock

882 -2200.
1983 250 3wheeler. small2
wheel bike: swing set; elect r i c motorcycle for pre schooler . Phone 304 - 675 6277 &amp;h er 7

'

Unscrambte these lour Jumbfes.
one lettet to each square. to form

I I K

EVENING

pickup truck ca mper. alaepa
4, gas st ove. ice bo x . Exc .

phone 304· 875·8631 .

David Yost, 614-949-2853 .
2517 .

e 1. 100. Coli

ID'il

ftjfi}N}
~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ '"
by Henri Arnold end Bob Lee

THURSDAY
6/21/84

8 ft . 1980 Colomon !oldlng

3 Gelding walking horus.

1968 Ford tractor $6 ,000 &amp;
1978 Diesel, 840 hours,

.'

;

Slldo compor !or PU truok,

For Sele or Trede

Tractor , model B with cuttivators . Call614- 266- 6417.

"

•

11lf co ntained. IIHPIIIYin,

oxc. con d ..

;i'

lJ

Point

olfer . Call 614-965 -4454.
Zenith Allergo stereo. v ery
good c ondition , 304 - 675 -

TRAC Y f

The Daily Sentinei- Page-13

Television
Viewing

ENOUGH T O 1'
PICK HIM UP, ' '

e14-3 88 -9 3114.

Rabbit pen , $10, 304 -676 -

33 13.

45

Clothesline posts . swing
frames. all types , picnic
table frames with or without

WE GOT

Cemper~

Coli 441· 1 943 .

Ploo11nt. 304-87!-13111.

61

&amp;

Starcref1 pop· up camper, 17
ft . ttlf contelned e~mpar .

2237.

59

Motor~ Home•

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' eARLVLE ®

Jom ltrawllarrloo 1000
quano of good Jom berrlte
10 ooMo per quan. Plok your
own . 2 mllao baok of New
Hovon at Union Camp
Oround . Clol 304· 112·
Blec k r•apberrlll.

Mobile home furn lahed . AC.
ideal tor 1 or 2 men .

12X65.

Thursday,

Ohio

Ohio

21 , 1984

WE WILL NOW HEAR.
THE TREASURER.'S REPORT

WE DON'T HAVE AN'&lt;'
MONEl' .. WE 'VE NEVER
HAD ANI' MONEV AND
WERE NEVER 60NN A
HAVE ANY MONEY!

I ALWAYS ~ATE T~E
TREASURER'S REPORT...

&amp;l (12J Nightline

m

DAILY C RYPTOQ UOT E

Atlantic City . NJ

~) MOVIE : ' QB VII' Port 2
(I) Nightline
® MOVIE : 'Scream and

Scream Again'

Ill CIZ Eye on Hollywood
12:15 Cil MOVIE : ' Dead and
Buried'

~ ~

how to wor k it :

X R

Is LONG I' F.LL OW
One l ette r simpl y stan ds f or an other I n t h1 s .!'amp)(' A i s
u sed for the three L 's, X f or th e l wo o·s . rtc Smg\e i&lt;' lters.
apostrophes . th e l ength and f ormat i on o f \h(' words are all
hin ts . Each day t h e code IC' tt er s ar e diff1•n·n t

Gunsmoke
11 :45 (]] Top Rank Boxing from
1 2:00 (I) Maximum Sec urity Th1s
dr ama focu ses on ltfe tr1 S1de
a federal penttentiary
(]) Burns &amp; Allen

~ H ere's

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L DGO D GO

Dl.

LE HH S

S N D I. .

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MOLL . - VB T HL
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Yeslerday's Cryploquot.e : TEACH ME TO FEEl. ANOTHER 'S
WOE, TO IDDE THE FAULT I SEE; THAT ME RCY I TO ·
OTHERS SHOW, THAT MERCY SHOW TO ME . ~ A. POPE

�Thursday, June 21 , 1984

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

Horse carriage usage in Cincinnati limited by city council
C!:"&gt;/CINNATI !API- Clly roun ~
r U has passro a watered ~down
vE'rsion of a proposal to restrict thP
use of horses for the horse-drawn
carriage trade in the dmvntown

area, an apparent victory tor the
operators.
Thr ordinancr rPStrict s to USf' of
the horSPS to no mor0 than ~ight
hours a day and sL' days a w~k.

Bul C&lt;Juncildroppedeontrovcrsia l
measures that would have banned
horSC&gt;S from working when it· s
hott~r t ha 1 '11 degress or colder than
25and would have made it illegal for
a horse to pull mor0than 10 people
Counc il members said they' ll
.wccpl fu rther testimony from the
public before giving tl('W suggestions on tcmpera rur0 a nd load

limita lions to City Manager Sylves~
lt'r MurTay, who will decide the
matter.
Carriage operalors had objected
to the load llmll, saying it was too
a rbitrary and vague and did not
consider the many sizes of horses.
They also questioned lhe need for
tempera lure limits.
LouiSC' Anderson. president of the

Royal Carnage Co., said the
90-degree limit would pose a
problem for groups. such as
wedding parties, thai book rides in
advance.
"I do n'l wanllo b!' there when the
bride eom&lt;'s after me wilh a hatchel
because I tell her lhat her ride ts
canceled ," she said.
The 25-degree minimum would

horses." said Arnold Applebaum, a
member of Mobilizat ion for Anim·
ats. a g-roup lhat r•ncouraged the
guidelines.

hurt her company's popular
Christmas-season business, Ms .
Anderson satd. The modern-d@Y
carriage rides began in Cincinnati
five years ago as a way to attract
Christmas shoppers downtown .
"ChUd labor laws were enacted
because c hildren can'l speak for
themselves, and we are here in th('
same respecl to speak for the

Th~

discussio n of horses broughl

1au g ht 0r 10 SP\·('ral counci l
memOCrs. while r arJidgf'oJX•rators
and animals- lights e~cti\·i st s sat
straight-fact'!l .

Inside today:
By the Bend ......... Pages 6, 7
Classlfleds ....... Pages 8, 9, 10

Cootks-TV ............. Page II
Deaths ....... ............ Page 12
Editorials ................ Page2
Sports .............. Pages 3, 4, 8

Panly cloudy IGoliht with a
chance of showers or thunderllionns. Low80-Qi. ~
winds III'OUIId 10 mph. Saturday,
palily cloudy with a sight
chliiiCI! of showers or lhunderstonns. Wgb In the ~
Chance of rain to percent lonlgllt
and 00 percent Saturday.

LITTLE BOYS '

LADIES'

TOPS AND
SHORTS

SHORT SALE

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

Jea ns. poly /c otto n slacks
and dress pants .

Wran gler junior s horts, Lord Isaacs
s horts. mi sses and extra size open
stock s horts.

Ta nk tons. sh1rts. ~. n1t lops
and ball slmts
Kn11 sho1ts. denrm s hor ts
and gym shorl s
Monlh s srzes thru "IP 7
Reg. 13. 50

Slacks &amp; Jeans
L1ttle Boys' S1zes
mos., 2 to 7

L1ttle Gtrl s' S1zes 12 to 24
mos, 2 to 4. 4 to 6x . 7 to 14.
REG . 16.00 to 117.00

REG. 19.00 ........ SALE 17.19
REG . 112.00 ....... SALE 19.59
REG . 117.00..... SALE 113.59
REG . 120.00 ..... SALE 115.99

Sale 1279

....
5.50 .... Sale 14.39
18.00 .. .. Sale 16.39
11L50 ... Sale 19.19
1

GIRLS'

Sale Priced

$479 to $1J59

Bahydoll paJa mas. 111 gh l slmts .
short gowns. shorly pa tamas tong
gown s an d robes
S1ze s 6 to 24 mos 2 10 4 4 Jo 6x . 7
to 14
1
1
1
1

$]15

3'&lt;· ou n ce

s ke tn - mothproof ~
non -a ller ge ni c Fa mou s Coa ls
and Clark qual1ty Bi g selec tion
of co lor s.

BRA SALE

Regula r Pnce

-Cotton lmed active bra s
- Colton l1 nerl fiberfill bra s
- Full F1 gu re lace and lflcol br"
-Silaple ss bra s
Choose wh1te or be1ge 1n a com ·
plele ran ge of lad 1es s1zes
1

\

(1

,..

\

J :• .

$1.69 .

(

I

to

\

~

Pre-leen s ize s

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

3/6

to

'I
r

, !

1/14.

'.) '1

19.00 ....... Sale 16.29
113.00 ..... Sale 19.09
117.00 ... .Sale 111.89
123.00 .... Sale 116.09

,

j. \

·! ~~

LITTLE GIRLS '

SHORTS &amp;
TOPS SALE

ANGEL TREAD

1ank top s. llll d· lengUl to ps. kn 1t lops
and blou ses

SLIPPERS

REG . 1 2. 95 TO 1 12 .50

Kn1l shorls. de mm shorts and poly
i coil on sho rt s
1
1

Reg . 3.50 ....... Sale 2.79
Reg. 16.00 ..... .. Sale 14.79
Reg. ' 9.00 ...... . Sale 17.19
Reg. I} 5. 00 ... Sale 111.99

Sc uffs. ballenna styl es
and boys' slip-o ns.
Chi ldren 's sizes.

$239

TO

$999

."i.tl.E'
LEE AND WRANGLER
MEN'S

Fashion Jeans
Re g ul a r s ize s a nd fuller c ut 1eans
St1lch de n 1ms . IOO ~o c ottons. An
exce ll en t se le c tion S ize s 29 to 42
a nd ext ra la rge sizes 44 to 50.

s2L95 Fashion Jeans ..... 116.50
124.95 Fashion Jeans ..... 118.70
126.95 Fashion Jeans ..... 120.20
129.95 Fashion Jeans ..... 122.50

Sale! 'lee" &amp; "Wrangler"
BOYS'

DENIM JEANS

nro

Sale Priced
From

Reg. 116.00
Sale 1 13.60
Reg. 122.00
Sale 118.70
Reg. 129.00
Sale 124.65
1
Reg. 34.00
Sale 128.90

Only

$399

Special sale pri ces on gUitar stnn gs,
banJO stnngs, violin s tnn gs. dulcimer
string s and mandollll strings
Famou s brands lik e Gib son . Fender.
Mart1n and D' Ad da no.

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

14.95 ......... . Sale 14.19
16.95 .. .... .. .. Sale 15.89
19.95 .......... Sale 18.49
s12.95 ... ... Sale 110.99

DAY SALE!
SALE!

BOYS' SHIRTS

MEN'S BLUE CHAMBRAY

Includes our entrre se lection kn1ls
- westerns- sport sh"t s ~ta nk tops
. sho rt sleeves . Cool and co mlorta
ble rn s1zes 8 to 20. Coord1nate w1th
short s. Sa le prrced now .

WORK SHIRTS
B1g Ben by Wra ng le r per manent pr ess Fulllengtil lerls
- two-button throug h poc kets Short sleeves 111 Sill' I S
M. Land XL. Long sleeve' " s1zes S, M. Land XL. pl111
extra s1ze 18. 19 a nd 20
1

'6.95 Shirts ...... Sale 15.48
18.95 Shirts ...... Sale 17.08
'9.95 Shirts ...... Sale 17.88
111.95 Shirts ..... Sale 19.48

8.95 Short Sleeve Style ...... ... 17_30
19.95 Long Sleeve (Reg Sizes)
'8.30
110.95 long Sleeve (Extra Sizes) ... '9.30

SHOP FRIDAY UNTIL 8 P.M.
SATURDAY UNTIL 5 P.M.

,.

En trre selection sa le prr ced
Boys· reg ular and slim SIZes 8 to
16.Hu s ky s1zes 8 (27 wa1st1 lo
18 (34 wa1sl) and student Slles
26 to 30 waist. (Choose your
co rr ec l le ngth)

14.95 Jeans ..... 111.66
116.95 Jeans ..... 113.26
119.95 Jeans ..... 115.56
121.95 Jeans ..... 117.16

"Certainly some people paid more in the way of taxes
and some people paid less. And there are people in this
state, we shouldn 'l fo rget, who dldn'l pay any taxes
because lhey aren' t working."
The movp by majority Democrats was seen as an
attempt to diffuse at leas I some campaign criticism
from Rl' pubticans who have said Celeste's 90 percent
tax increase enacted shortly after he look office was
excessive. GOP legisla tor s also have charged the
surplus projecled by the administration is artificaily
low .
Celeste said he did not expect the refund to silence
Republican thunder. "Based on past experience I

would expect the thunder would roll in any even I." hP
said .
A bill providing for tax refunds in the evenl of a
large budge! surplus and lowerl'd unemploymenl was
inlroduced earlie r al Riffe's rl'Cjuest a nd passed by
the House.
It had not previously drawn support from Meshel or
Celeste. The governor had said part of any surplus
should be set aside lo help pay off the sl&lt;lle's $2
oillion-plu s debt to the federal government for
unemployment com pensat ion benefi ts.
Celeste sa id today he was sWI concerned aboul that
debt but lhat it should be dealt with on "its own
tenns."

One a. nd two p1ece s u1ts in
miss y a nd ex tra
SIZeS

STRING SALE

CHILDREN'S

Co logn e spray dust10 g powd e r
rol l on CiHICPil il ale . grit set s.
hand a nd body lotion ami pull on powde r

Sale Priced

"The goal will be to have a refund mechanism that
is as simple and fair as possible. " the governor said.

) __!_li~ 1iir.

$139
Cot)I
Erneraude Safe

conference.
He was joined at the session by Senate President
HaiT)I Meshel , D-Youngstown and House Speaker
Vernal G. Riffe Jr .. D-New Boston.
Riffe said he hopes refund c hecks can be mailed
within the next 90 days.
The a mount of indlvldual refunds has not been
determined and would vary If legislators adopted a
proportional dlstribution mechanism based on a
taxpayer' s bill . But based on a total of $50 million and
about 4 million taxpayers. an average amount would
be aboul $12.50.
'" Don 't spend the money before you get the check,"
Celeste joked to one reporter.

$4355

[r-

Sum me r styles 111 s kirts. blou ses.
s horts, kntt tops and s lacks.

Reg. 18.00 ...... Sale 6.49
Reg. 19.50 ... ... Sale 17.99
Reg. 110.50 .... Sale 18.99
Reg. 111.00 .... Sale 19.49

\

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press WrUer
CO;..UMBUS, Ohio (API - Saying he wanted to
" keep faith with Ohio'sctttzens and taxpayers, " Gov.
Richard Celeste said today he would ask the General
Assembly next week to refund $50 million in surplus
state tax revenues.
The money will come from a $131 million fund
balance which the state is expected to reeord a t the
June 30 end of the current fiscal year.
Celeste said the othe r $1ll million would be kept as a
reserve representing about 1 percent of the general
revenue fund.
"It is, in fact, a $50 million good management bonus
for the citizens of Ohio," the governor lold a news

C::'
SWIMWEAR
\~ · SALE

PRE-TEEN
SPORTSWEAR

The quality yam

Knitting Yarn

Governor Celeste agrees to refund

Sale Priced

ri \''t.

''

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ,

2 Section1, 1'2 Poges
25 Cenh
A Mul1imedio Inc N~wspope1

Reg. 1 11.00 to 167.00

SALE

RED HEART WINTUK

enttne

Save on 1u nior. m1sses and ex ·
dresses.
Coo l su mme r sty les and colors.

Reg. 111.00 .... Sale 16.60
Reg. 117.00 ... Sale 110.20
Reg. 124.00 ... Sale 114.40
Reg. 134.00 ... Sale 120.40

rr ('f' h:-F:n d Sa l e

•

tra ~s t ze

Select g10up of pants. sk"ls.
blouses an d lops by Devo n. Dolly
Mann and A1leen . M1sses SIZes.

Reg. 5.00 ...... Sale 3.99
Reg. 8.00 ...... Sale 6.39
Reg. 1 13.00 .. .Sale 110.39
Reg. 118.00 ... Sale 114.39

Diles golf results...Pages 3.,4,8

DRESS
SALE

SPORTSWEAR
SPECIAL

SUMMER
SLEEPWEAR

12 to 24

Church directory...Page 5

e

Voi.J.4, No.49
Copyright.d 1984

CHILDREN'S SUMMER

Long pants ...Page 2

Weather

POMEROY

1

SINCE 1864
"""'

...

WW TEAM GROSS WINNERS - Meigs Sheriff
James ProffiU presented wbming plaques lo low
team gross winner.; following 'lloursday's Sixth
Annual Charity Benefit Dave Diles Golf Toumament

at Riverside Golf Course in Mason. Left to right aN'
Ron Toler, Jeff Parsons, Red Tucker and Proffitt.
Absent - Don Stanley. 'l'he team shot a 30 L &amp;'!'
AddHional pictures, writeup on pages 3, 4 and 8.

Gallia school
leader resigns
Dr. Gary E. Toothaker, superintendent of the GaDia County Local
School Di'&lt;lrict for the pa.'&lt;l flve years, has resigned to become
superintendent of city schools in Bartlesville, Okla.
The local board of education accepted Toothaker's resignation
during a special meeting Thursday on a motion by Daryl Salisbury
that was seconded by Bllley Halley.
The vote to accept was unanimous, with Fred Dee! abient.
In a letter to the board read aloud by Board President Carl Waugh,
Toothaker thanked the board for Its support.
"I am convinced that whatever contributions I have made to your
schools has been the result of coDaboratlon between the boanl, the
local school diWict faculty and the conununlty," he said.
"I have an unqualified hellef in the strength of the GaDia County
Local Schools - in its potential, Its values, and most of aD, In Its
people," Toothaker oontinued. "While I will oot be here In person, the
Institution I have come to love will always have a special place In my
heart and I wtD maintain a special Interest In the district's growth
and development for the rest of my Ufe."
The resignation Is eUecttve Aug. I.
FoDowlng the meeting, Toothaker said he had been contacted In
May by the con.subnt handDng the search for a new superintendent
at Bartlesville. Toothaker subsequently submitted 811 application.
He was one of four finalists for the Job Invited lo Inspect the dislri&lt;-1
ftrsl-hand, Toothaker said. Banle&gt;ville Is oorponde headquarlers of
PhiUlps Petrolewn and has an esthnated student population of 7,000.
Toothaker said the salary Is "significantly better" than his
$40,000-p!mrper-year salary with Gallla Coonty, but he declined lobe
specific.
Waugh said the search for a new superintendent will begin
lnunediately.
"I hope the board can name a new superintendent in three weeks,"
be said, adding that the board Is oot presently looking nt appointing
811 acting superintendent after Toothaker's depalture.
Toothaker came lo GaDia Cowoty in August 19'l9, succeeding
'Thomas E. Hairston as superintendent after Hairston resigned.
Since then, the district was successful In passing a bond Issue in 1983
for the construction of new elementary school buDdlngs and
renovations lo others - the ftrsl new construction In the local
district's 111-year history.

BOYS

SUMMER
SHORTS
S1zes 8 through 20. Colors and
styles lhat'll please you . Btg se lection . Many coord1nales w1th
boys' shorts on sale thi s week en d.
1

Boys 15.95 Shorts .... 4.60
Boys 17.95 Shorts .... '6.20
Boys 19.95 Shorts .... 17.70
Boys 110.95 Shorts ... 18.50

Public hearing on
plant draws 1,000
PADUCAH, Ky. (AP ) - U .S.
Department of Energy otrlclals
were told at a public hearing here
that the Paducah area economy
would suffer a $676 mlllion loss It a
federal gaseous diffusion plant were

closed.
About 1,&lt;m people showed up at a
public hearing Thursday night Iotty
and convince department reptesentattves that It should not close the
Paducah Gaseous DiffUsion Plant,

which processes uranium Into fuel
for nuclear reactors.
Among those speaking on behalf
ot the plant were Gov. Martha
Layne CoUlns, U.S. Sen. Walte r
"Dee" Huddleston, and U.S. Rep.
Carroll Hubbard, !rom Kentucky's

1st Dtstrlct.
The plant employs l,:nJ people,
and Is the mainstay of several coal
operations that provide fUel for the
plant.

TOUR"'AMENT CHAMPIONS - Claiming overall low gros&lt;~ honors in this year's Dave Diles heneflt
golf tournament at Mason were Jeff Parsons and
Gary R&lt;lOL&lt;Jl, who both shot 71's. Picturt.'ll are ,Jeff

Parsons, Bill Francis, Gary Roush, IUld Larry
PoweU. Ty Roush ;uod Tif'l Wilkin•, PG A pro from
Kings Island, each shot a 70. Sentinel photos hy Katie
Crow and &amp;'Ott Wolfe.

Consumer prices up in May
By SALLY JACOBSEN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (API - Consumer prices, restrained by the
steepest drop in food prices since
lasl Jutl(', inc hed up just 0.2 percent
in May, the govemmen l said today.
Also aiding the moderation in the
overall plice increase, which rose at
a rate less than halfthat of April, was
a tiny 0.2 percent ga in in gasoline
prices.
So far this year. inflation is
running at an annual ra te of 4.6
percenl as measured by the Labor
Department 's Consumer P rice
Index .
That's s lighlly bettPr than mosl
analysts' predictions o f a 5 percent
lnflalion rale for a ll of 1984 and
seemed to fly in the face of some
predictions that the eco nomy's
s urprisingly s trong growth cou ld
rekindle more serious lnflalion.
Last month's 0.2 percent food
price decline was the result of
cheaper beef and vea l. poull ry,
vegetables and eggs.
Over the last three mon ths. food
prices have tumbled al an annua l
rate of 1.5 percenl. Food prices had

he ld steady In April Jftcr falli ng 0.1
perccnl in March.
As for energy, the depar1 ment
said that. th ruugh lasl month,
gasoline pri('('S, which nonnaily rise
al the s l &lt;~ rl oltlle summer driving
season. were 11.8 percenl below
1l1eir peak level of :\larc h 198J.
Gasoline pricco had been up 0.4
percent in April and a ful ll percent
in Marcl1.
For the lasl 12 months, prices
overall have risen 4.2 percent. The
pria:&gt; index had risen 0.5 percent of
April and 0.2 percenl of March.
Retail prices rose 0.8 percen I las I
year for the best showing since the
early 1970s. Prices rose 3.9 perce nt
in 1982 after shooting up 12.4 percent
in 1981.
Today's report was in line with
Wednesday 's preliminary estimate
on the Gross National Product. the
tota l va lue of the nation's goods and
se1vices.
Thai reporl. whi ch projecled the
economy growing at a robu sl 5.7
lJ('rcent annu al ratp in the current
qua rter, a lso estimated a n inflation
rate of 2.8 percenl in the April -June
period , theslowesl climbin1 7years .
Inflation. according lo lha t mm ·

s ure , had b&lt;&gt;en 3.9 percen t m thefirst
quarte1·.
Detailing May price octivity, th&lt;'
depart rnent said :
-Beef a nd veal prices plunged 2.1
percent while poultry prices were
off 1.9 percenl. The east of
vegelables plummeled 7.7 percent
and egg prices fell o sharp 6.7
percent Pork prices were up 0 6
percent while fresh fruit pri ces
reversed Apri l's decline and rosc03
percent
The cost for m eals ea ten out side
the home rosc0.6 perccnl. Alcoholi c
bcvcrag~ prices held sleady .
- Housing costs rose just 0.2
percent. one-third of the April garn
Costs were up O.J pPr&lt;"f'nl for
homeowners and 0.4 percent for
rPnlers.

-Home heating and utility costs
edged up 0.2 percent aflcr asharpO.R
perce nl gain in Jiprli . E lectricity
bilis rose 0.3 percenl after surging
1.5 percenl in the prev ious monl h.
Natural gas prices were unchanged .
- Overa ll transportation costs
werc up 0.5 percenl . New car prices
W&lt;'re down 0.2 percenl while used
car prices eontinued rising sha rply ,
soaring 1.2 percenl.

- Medical care costs rose jus I 0.5
percent. th r sa mf' as in the prE'viou s
lwo months . Still. this has been the
steepest-r ising component of the
overall index in the last 12 months.
-C lothing prices were up just 0.1
percent.
-Entcrtn inment costs fell 0.1
percenl
All thP c han!(es are adjusted for
nmmal seasonal variations.

If last monlh's 0.2 percent
incrcase held sleady for 12 stra ight
months . the yearly advance would
br 2.-l percent. The annua l ral e
r~ported by the department is based
on a more precise ca lculation of
monthly prices than the figure made
public.
In ail, the Consumer Price Index
slood al 309.7 in May, meaning thai
goods eosting $10 in 1967would have
eosl $30.9'/ last mont h.
A eompanion index, the Consumer Price lndex for Urban Wage
Earners and Clericai WorkPrs, rose
0.3 percent last month
Thai index is widPly used in
ca lculating eosl-of-living increases
in rollect i\'P barga in ing contracts

and government brnPfit progra ms .

Salt may be used by blood pressure patients
ByWARRENE.LEARV
AP Science WrUer
WASHINGTON (APl -Getting
the full, recommended amounts of
calcium and other nutrtents in a
balanced diet may keep people from
getting high blood pressure even
with unrestrtc ted use of salt, say
Oregon researchers.
In a report published Friday in the
journal Science, theresearcherssay
high blood pressure, or hypertenslon, is more c losely associated with
deftctencles in certain nutrients
thanwithexcessesof others.such as
sodium.
Researchers from Oregon Health

Scien es University say a study
based or, "o tistlrs from a federal
heal th survey indica tes ··calcium
was the nutricnl for which reduced
intak e was most consislcnl in
hypertensive individuals."
A finding which indicales an
inverse relal ionship between salt or
sodium intake and blood pressure
stirred immediate cont roversy
among hypertension experts.
The report said I here is evidence
that high sodium Intake results in
lower blood pressure, eontrary lo
what other human and animal
studies have eoncluded for decades .

Ur David A. MeCaiTOn and
eoworkers said their findings ··raise
the importanl queslion of whether
sodium restriction is routinely
advisable in many hypeo1enslvcs .·'
McCarron said in an inlerview
lhat rnounling evidence indicates
calcium may mediate the role of
sodium in hypertension, and he
called for experts lore-examine the
relationship between sodium a nd
thPdisease.
" ! don "l wan I people to go oul and
ea l a lot of salt now," he said, "bul if
they ea l a balanced diet with the
right amounts of dairy products,
fruits, vegetables and fresh m eats,

there is a possibility I hat the sodium
"il l have no effect ton blood

pressure \."
Dr. Anlonio ~1. Gotl o of Baylor
University, presidcnl of the Amc ri·
can Heart Association. sa id in an
inlerview I hal he would not advise
hypertensiv~ patien ts on reducedsail diets to hry to decrease their
blood pressure simply by raising
calcium levels.
"This is a preliminary study a nd .
as the authors point out, onet·annot
conclude from a stalistica l associa ~
tlon thai ther0 is a cau&amp;~effecl
relationship," he said.

Embezzlement-sparked measure becomes law in State
By JOHN CHALFANT
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A bill
that was sparked by a $1.1 mUllan
ernbe2zlement in the state treasurer's a !flee has been signed Into law
by Gov. Richard Celeste.
SPOnsored by Rep. Robert

Hickey, 0-Dayton, the new law
requires that a public employee
eonvlcted of theft in office restore
the stolen money or property.
It also allows a court to order use
of an otfen~r· s pension beneflts,
trom a ny of the state's five

retirement systems. to pay such
restitution.
Hickey introduced the bill a fter a
scandal in which Elizabeth Jane
Boerger, former head cashier In the
treasurer's office, pleaded guilty in
the theft ofstatefundsover a span of

about three years.
Officials discovered later that Ms .
Boerger, who has been diagnosed as
having hysterical amnesia, Is eligible to coil€{:1 state disability
beneflts. The new law wtli not apply
in her case. however.

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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    <tag tagId="2023">
      <name>yonker</name>
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</item>
