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                  <text>Page- 14- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

City Holding enters trade market

Pomeroy Mayor's Court

CHARLESTON. W.VA . - Tho common stock of City Hold ing
Company began trading on June 23 in the NASDAQ market,
according to James L . Burns. pres ident and chief executive
offi cer. Cit y Holding Company. whose trading symbolts CHCO,
Is a bank holding compa ny which owns Th e City Na t lanai Bank
of Charleston, The Bank of Cross Lan es, and effecti ve .June 26,
Tho Peoples Bank of Point Pleasant.
Bl\rns not ed that Cit y Hol~ing Compa n.v 's entry int o the
NASDAQ market provides broker s and other s with immediate
access to the best bid and asked pri ces and other Information
about th o company' s shares throughout the trading day. Those
prices an• avai lable over more 1han 150.000electronlc terminals
In brpkers' offices th roughout lh(· United Stales and tho free
world . ·rrading dat a are also distributed wid&lt;•ly through wire
services for selective dissemination by newspapers and r adio

Seven dPfendanfs forfeited
bonds and three others were
fined In the courT of Pomeroy
Mayor Richard Sey ler Tue ~ day
nlghl.
forfeiting were Car l Qualls,
Pomeroy, S43. failure to yield the
r ight of way; Tamal a Jones ,
Pomeroy. $45. speeding; Earlene Stobarl. Racine. $43. speeding; .John Ingels, Oak Hill, $4:1.
pa ssing on a double yellow line:

cmd t elC"v ision station s.

Cit y Holdin g Co mpany repon ed r&lt;'Cord ea rnin gs in the first
quarter of 1987 of $451!,000. Earnin gs per share increased to 97
cent s, compared to 86 cents per share in 1986. an in&lt;'I'Case of
almost 1:1percent. The mos t rcc(•nt known sa le of City lloldlng
Compan y stock was $:l1.7S.
In addition to increased market vi sibil it y, NASDAQ givrs
Cil y Holding Compally the advantage of muiliplc m arket
makPrs That m mprtr to offrr th e brst bid on asked prices. as
opposed to a singl e specia list on the fl oor or a stock exchan ge.

Area deaths
Ira HiJI

i ra Hill. son of Elijah and Clara
Morris Hi ll, iorrnerly of Meigs
County, diC&lt;I .Juno 12 at l(oekledge, Fla .
He Is su rvived by his wi le,
Allee Theiss Hill and two so ns
and daughters-In-law. Gail and
Nancy Hill and Dal e and Kathy
Hill of New Wat erford. Ohio.
Besides his parent s. he wa s
prec eded In deal h by two sist resrs, Ed na Pay nI cr and Ma r.v
Radcliffe and lwo brothers, Wni lace Hill and the Rev . A ibN! Hill.
Burial wa s In Rock lcdgt• Mcmorlai Gardens.

Divor&lt;~t'S

!,'l'anted

Di vorces have been gra nted In
Meigs Coun ty Common Plea s
Court 10 William R. L.evacy fr om
Fred a Sue Lcvacy: Phil Zedcker
from Tammy Zcdeker: ,Ia nice L.
Leo from Louie D. Lee.
Hen a Parks has been gra n led a
di vo rce from Thomas Parks and
rPs lor ed b.v lhl' court to hf'r
former namr C' heviJlirr.
Phy llis A. McConihay and
Emmons A. McCo niha y have
been granted a dissolution of
1heir marr iage.

night.
Fined In the court were Robert
H . Shamblin, Mason, W. Va., $425
an&lt;) costs and three days In jail,
driving while Intoxicated, and
Thomas Quillen, Middleport, $50
and costs, driving while under
suspension.

. ds have 4 ca IIs
Squa

Cases dismissed

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
111 Second St., ·Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

FOR THE BOTH
3RD

t.

OF YOU

TANNING BEDS

AIR CONDITON
GET READY FOR VACATION
START YOUR TAN EARLY

PERM SALE

F~sr.n•L

. l

With Fries .....................
SJ .79
,.,
. ..

. POMEROY, ott.

PH. 992·25511

_

30% OFF SALE
ALL
SWIMSUITS

FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY

, 30°/o OFF

30°/o OFF

2-9-5

at y

Vol.37, No.3&amp;

LADIES'

1 LARGE RACK OF

ATHLETIC SHOES
30°/o OFF

GIRLS, JUNIORS. MISSES

By NANCY YOACHAI\1
Sentnel News Staff
A request lor pay raises from 26 of 33 workers at
the Meigs Cou nty Department of Human Services
was denied Wednesday by the Meigs County
Commissioners.
A letter. dated Ju ne 10, officially requesting
raises "comparabl e to the total cost of living"
since their last pay raises. was forwarded to th e
commiss ioners last week by Michael Swisher.
director of the department of human services.
Commissioner Richard Jones stated that in the
11 years he has been commissioner, he has "never
had a singl e issue cau se as much public
comment."
Although loca l department of human services '
salaries are reimbursible to the county from the
Ohio Department of Human Services, salary

increases must be approved by the board of
county commissioners.
However. Jones said ,thai after hearing
comment s from people of the county, he could not
support a pay increase for the employees of the
department of human services at this lime,
regardless of what state ceilings on salaries for
that department might be.
Commissioners Manning Rou sh and David
Koblentz agreed with Jones . Said Roush, "I feel
exac!ly the same way ." Said Koblent z, "I'm also
against any raises at this time."
Koblentz added !hal for Meigs County - and
working for the taxpa yers- he felt employees at
the department of human services are bein g
well -compensated.
Jones said that in comparing surrounding

JEANS

30°/o OFF

290
NORTH SE(OND
MIDDLEPORT

ENTIRE MONTH OF JUNE

HOT WORK, HOT DAY -In the 9()-plus degree
heal Wednesday, members of lhe Middleport and
Pomeroy Fire Departments haUled a blazing
gasoline tanker. Here, they foam down the fuel a.•
the fire was nearly extinguished. The tanker,
driven by Gary W. Gregory of Reedsville, was

2 Sections 12 Pages

26 Cents

registered to MGM Farm City. He colllded wlih a
coal truck which was attempting lo pass a car on
SR 554 near Cheshire, driven by Charles A.
Weimann of Cheshire. Weimann was cited for
Improper passing. (Sentinel photo hy Lee Ann
Welch)

Two area men escaped serious
injury Wednesday as the two
trucks they were driving co llided
head first on SR o54 near
Cheshire.
Th e Jl : 45 a .m. accident saw
Charles A . Weiman. 23, of Route
1. Cheshire. cited for Improper
passing, when th e empty coal
truck he wa s driving met a
loaded gasoline lanker. driven by
Gary w. Gregory, 3o of Reedsville. Both men were wearing
sea t belt s at the time of the
accident. and neither were
trea ted at the scene for injuries.
Gregory 's truck was regis tered to MGM F'arm City . Wei·
man was attempting to pa ss a car
at the time. and his truck
sustained heavy damage.
According to emergency per sonnel at the scene, the tanker
dumped approximately half It s
2. 000 gallon load and exploded
two times. After the fire was
ex tingui shed, th e remainder of
the gasoline was pumped from
the ta,nker, whi ch was a total
Continued on page 12

In anllclpation of passage by
the state l eglslat ure of House Bill
231 regarding child support enforcement , the Meigs Count y
Commissioners discussed Wed·
nesday how their board will be
affected If The bill becomes law.
If the bill does become law. the
county's bureau of support would
be removed from the jurlsdlcltion of the common pleas court.
and the commissioners would
have authority to contract wi th
the common plea s court, the
prosecullng attorney's office, th e
department of human services or
another agency under their direct control, to take over operations of the support bureau .
If the bill becomes law and the
commissioners would not take
action by a certain tim e to
contract with an agency to take
over the support bureau. it would
_automatically become a par t of
the department of human
services.
Funding from the slate would
help support the bureau reported
Jones.
In other matfers, the commissioners voted to extend a verbal

50% OFF
Women's Summer

Sandals, Casuals,
Dress Shoes &amp;
Handbags

50% OFF

Men's &amp; Children Selected -

Casuals &amp; Dress S

50% OFF

Selected Men, Women's &amp;
Children's

arrangement between the county
and Genera l Telephon e Com pany of Ohio to help eliminate
accident~! damages of burled
tel ephone cable and pedes tal s
dur ing road maintenance by
count y highway department
workers.
Forrest Turner and Earl
Draper, of GTE. reported they
have had no problems with
equipment damages since they
entered Into the trial arrangement with the county in January .
Turner reported thai GTE Is
Impressed with the arrangement
in Meigs County and is looking
toward it as a model for working
out similar arrangements with
other counties. townships and
municlpalilles.
Said Phil Robert s, Meigs
County engineer. In regard to the
trial arrangement, "It's ama zIng what a little co mmunication
will do."
In other busines s the commi ssioners scheduled a public meet ingfor I p.m . next Wednesday , in
their office at the courthouse, to
hear comments regarding an

application from Bill Pullins to
use salt brine for dust and lee
co ntrol on a
driveway and
parking area on private propert y
In Salisbury Township. The brine
would be applied by J.D. Drlllin~
of Raci ne.
Robert s reported that Count y
Road 21 (Hobson Drive) Is
scheduled for hot mix pa ving on
Thursday morning. and that if
possible, tralflr will be mainta ined during the paving proc ess.
He reported that 700 tons of hot
mix will be needed to pave th e
half mile stretch of road.
He also report ed he expect s to
receive color proofs of the new
M eigs County map by the end of
Ju.ly.
In a related matfer , the board
accepted bids for bituminou s
ma terials for July from Asphalt
Materials Co. for mixing and
sealing grades, and from Ash land Oil Co. for priming grades .
In final business, a! the request
of County Auditor William Wickline, the board approved an
advance draw of $60,000 for
county operations, to be repaid
from the next tax settlement .

adding thai at the time. "the)' knew what the
sal aries were" and wPre satisfied just to be
getting a job.
Roush pointed ou t th at the sa laries of those
emp loyees have increased si nce their Initial .
hiring, since they received step increases within
1heir classifications (Which are es tabllshed by the
slate). not Including- fully paid Insurance benefits
and longev it y pay after a certa in number of years.
The commissioners moved to nolify Swisher to
infor m his emp loyees that after cons idering Iheir
request. they have decided, by unani mous vote, to
deny the rai ses.
Tht" commissioners said they will be exploring
tbe cou nt y's overall financia l condition with the
auditor and treasure!' to determine If and when It
will be possible to give raises to the other
employees they feel are being underpaid.

Tanker,
coal truck
collide

lo~s.

You won't want to miss
these savings.

passes
locks bill '

Wi\SHINGTON (UP!)
Thirty-four mtlllon dollars for
a new lock and dam on the
Ohio River ncar Gallipolis L•
included in a $16.2 hllllon
energy and water approprla·
lions htll approved Wednes·
day hy the Hou se.
Last week word was received loca lly that S34 mllflon
had hceen approved by the
House Appropriations Com·
mlttee.
The new lock and dam,
when completed In several
years, would replace' a 40year-old stru c ture that
shippers say Is one of the most
antiquated on lhe river.
The allocation could mean
as many as 500 construction
Jobs for the area at "It's
peak," according to Army
Corp of Engineering olflclals.

EX:PLI~N~&gt;TI()N GIVEN -11 lhe
of Tupper. Pl-.ilta
reject an
i\ granlto upgrade their New age sy•tems, It will be up
to the Meigs County Health Department to see that sewage
prohlems In the community tire corret:ted. Jon Jacobs, Melp
County deputy henllh commissioner, cxplalM to Tuppers Plains
residents at a public mcellng held last nlghl at the Tupper. Plain•
fire station, what they should expect if the health department II
placed In chllrg" 11f the slluutlon.

.

Tuppers Plains citizens
.
giVe vtews on proJect

.

Thanks, but no thanks . We
ca n' t afford your generosity.
Thi s seemed to be the messa ge
from the majority of resident ~ at
a Wednesday night public meet ·
lng In Tuppers Plains in regard l o
plans to move forward with a
slwblc Environmental Protection Agen cy grant to upgrade
sewa~e
systems within the
co mmunity .
Based on the wi shes of the
people of Tuppers Plains . the
Meigs County Commis sioners
will be making the final decision
within th e nex t three to 14dayson
whether or not to proceed with
th e project.
Conductin g idS! night's meet Ing wa s Commiss ioner Ri chard
.Jones.
Thus far, according to .JonPs,
approximately $90,000 has been
spen t on the project; $4,,WO by
E PA and
by the co unt y .
Under the gra nt , EPA Is to payS"
percent of the total projec t costs
and the Individual proper ty
owners arc to pay thl! remaining
15 per ce nt to upgrade their ow n
systems.
Before taking questions, .Jones
reca pped the projecl whi ch began In 1978 with enforcement of
an EPA building ban In Tuppers

s:.o.ooo

'

Plains. due to sewage disposal
probl ems. An original ban in 1972
was never enforced.
The comm issioners then began
a search lot funding sources to
assi st Tuppers Plains In bringing
the sewage systems into compllancewlth health standards . At
I hal tim e, EPA pledged at least
7f&gt; percent of the costs, in the
form of a grant, and possibly 85
percent, .Jones said.
In the final analysis, EPA
could be putting In as much as
$:i16,000 .Jones rcpor ·cd.
.A public meeting Nas held at
Eastern High School Jones said,
to discuss the EPA ofrer. Residents told the commissioners to
procred with the gra nt
application.
The grant was approved and
the englnrerlng firm or ,John
David Jones and Associates,
Columbus, was hired to develop
project pl ans. It was determ ined
1ha 1 the most cost effective
measure of corrr•cting the ,ewage problems In Tuppers Plains
would be to upgrade each Individual system .
Residents wrrc kept Informed
Of lhP proje&lt;'l through periodic
public mee tin gs .
Continued on page 12

Jackie Gleason, 71, 'The Great One,' cancer victim

Tennis Shoes

FORT LAUDERDALE , Fla.
(UPI) - Jackie Gleason, who
emerged from the working- class
world of the Ralph Kramdens to
savor the sweetness of life as a
· show business gianT In all respects, has died. "The Great
One" was 71.
Gleason died Wednesday night
of cancer In his home In !he
fashionable For! Lauderdal e
suburb of Lauderhill, with his
third wite, Marilyn, by his side.
"He quietly, comfortably
passed away," she said.
Gleason had been released last
week from Imperial PoinT Medical Center In Fort Lauderdale,
where he was treated for cancer.

Chap.ntan Sho_es
Phone 992-2815

Thunderstorms likely
night. Low ht upper
Morning showers Friday,
highs near 80.

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

co unties, he has found that co unty employees
being support ed by monies from th e county
general fund arc the ones that are being
underpaid.
The average annual employee sal ary at the
co unty courT house Is $11 ,158 - more than $6,0011
less than the average employee sal ar)· of $J7.449
at the department of human services. The highest
paid Meigs Count y deputy sheriff rece ives $13,811
per year.
,Jones said he would be making every cffm·t in
the next two weeks to give some amount of pay
Increases to the other employees in order to close
the gap slightly between them and the department
of human services.
.Jones noTed that he assisted many of the people
who signed the petition for pa y Increases at the
department of human services grt their jobs.

Meigs Commission dis_cusses
effects of House Bill 231
House

Begins 8:00A.M.
Thursday, ]une .25

E. Main St.
/SA

en tine

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, June 25, 1987

Copyrighted 1987

JR.
MISSES
WOMEN'S
SIZES 3-13 SIZ,ES 8-18 SIZES 311-44

UMMER SALE

Pomeroy, OH.
Master Charge

Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs., Sar.9-5; Fri. 9-8

'

Pi&lt;'k 4
6305
Supper Louo

r-----------------~

Chapman Shoes

IT'S
OFFICIAL!

456

Commissioners deny request for pay raise

oo•~••••o

LEE
COOL RIDERS

Daily Numlwr

•

,.

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY
VALLEY
"It. the End of the Po1111rvy-Mason Bridge

The Meigs County. Common
Pleas Court cases of Larry E.
Cummins. et al. aga)nst Flson'sWestern Corp ., et al, and Linda
Milliron against Ronnie Keith
Hubbard have been dismissed .

SYRACUSE

992-3982

\

Speelal of the Week

Ohio Lottery

Reds win
5-4 in
tenth
Page 3

Sharon Stewart , Middleport, $48,
Gallia-Meigs Community Ac· •
Veterans Memorial ·
speeding: Joe Proffitt, Racine,
tlon Agency will hold free clQTuesday
AdmissionsHillary
$46, speeding: Harold Johnson.
Purley, Pomeroy: James McCo- Ihlng day for low-Income perso ns
Racine, $46, speeding.
on Thursday from 9 a.m . to 12
fined were David Leach. Ma- mas, Proctorville; Grace Camp- noon . The clothing bank Is
bell, Pomeroy.
ri etla, $57 and costs, speeding;
located In the old high school.
Tuesday Discharges .,., None.
Betty Mankin. Pomeroy, $100
building in Cheshire.
and cost s, cruelty to another's
animal. and Lance Herman,
Middleport. $63 and costs, no r--~-.--"'"'
..--_----___,.,.,..._,..,~.,_~_,
_,.,.--.:-::_,..--~
. ~-r"".. -.~r-\
operator' .s license.
~
~
._, ._,

Harold A. Reeves, .Pomeroy,
forfeited a $450 bond posted on a
charge of driving willi e intoxicated and a $50 bond posted on a
cha rgf' of failing to control hi s
vehicl e in the court or Middleport
Ma yor fred Hoffman Tuesday

M eigs Cou nt y Emergency
Medical Serv ices repor ts four
cal ls Tuesday; Middleport at
9:30 a.m . to Syca more St. lor
Dorothy Davis to Holzer Medica l
Cen ter; Tuppers Plains at 1:22
p.m. transported .James McComa s from an auto accident on
Route 7 to Ve!Pran s Memorial
· Hospital: Middl eport at 3: 4&amp;p.m .
to Bradbury for Mary Ann
Carsey who wa s treated but not
tra nsported; Pomeroy at 4: 12
p.m . to Pea coc k Ave. for Gra ce
Campbell to Vetera ns Memorial
Hospit al.

Free clothing day

Hospital news

Middleport Mayor's Court

r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=====;;;;;;;;;;;;==;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1

A marriage lice nse has been
Issued In Meigs Cou nt y Probate
Court to Ricky Joe Morris. :16.
and Kathy A . Perr ine, 3:!. bo th of
Pom eroy .

Wednesday, June 24, 1987

\

He had triple bypass heart
suq;ery In 1978 and suffered from
emphysema and diabet es .
Gleason called himself " The
Great One, " and so did many who
knew one of the most flamboyant
stars In history- a comic genius
who disdained rehearsal and
eagerly consumed prodigou s
quantities of food, liquor, cigarettes and anyThing else that
wou ld prompt his classic declaration, "How sweet It Is! "
" He was brilliant," said Milton
Berte. "He led the life 'The Great
One' wanted to lead."
"What Is there you can't
remember about The Great
One? " added June Taylor, sister

of Marilyn Gleason and leader of
the leggy dancers who became a
fixture on Gleason's television
variety show .
" Jackie Gleason wa s a man
who loved to make the world
happy," she said. " He loved life.
He was bigger than life. He
enjoyed what he did . He enjoyed
his fun . He enjoyed making
people laugh."
Gleason sold millions of records as a bandleader, won a
Tony Award In the Broadwa y
musical "Take Me Along" and
received an Oscar nomination
for his gripping portrayal of the
aging pool shark Minnesota Fats
In "The Hustler."

But his grea tes t success wa s in
television, a medium th at he
dominated in the 1950s and 1960s
with his va riety shows - and
which he has never left , thanks to
reruns of his clas sic series, ·'The
Honey mooners."
Set almost entirely In a bare
kitchen at 328Chauncey Street In
his native borough of Brooklyn,
Gleason, as the blu stering bu s
driver and marital combatant
Ralph Kramden. blended slapslick and pathos to create what
many consider to be the greatest
situation comedy In TV history.
Gleason developed the show
from a sketch fea tured on his
195~· 55 va riety show and then

spun II off Into a series In J%o- ,6.
Art Carm•y , who portaycd Ed
Nor ton , Ralph '' bumbling upstairs neighbor who workrd In
!he sewer and always wore a'('.
shirt , ves t and a· hat , explai ned
the succps s of the series by
say ing, "Hi s humor and mine
just st&gt;emed to click."
But anoth er explanation was
offered by Audrey Meadows,
Ralph's wile Allee. who Invariably was offered a trip to the moon
courtesy of her husband's fist
and wound up with an embrace
and The compllmen!, "Baby.
you're the grea tes t ."
"Every thing about him was
larger than life." she said.

•

�Commentary The Daily Sentinel
ll1 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF TJIE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb

S!m~ r-T""L.....I'--.,~r=:::~,~

~v .

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A M EMBER of The United Press Interna tional, Inland Dally Press
AsSociation and the American Newspaper Publishers Association .
LE'T'l'ERS OF OP INTON ·:in·- welcome They should be less than lXl words
long. Allleuers ares ubjoclloed Iling and rrust De sJ~,: nal with name, addr ess and
telephone number. No un slgnOO IN1£'rs w!ll be P':bllshed . Letters should be Jn

WASHINGTON - Paul
Volcker, who will soon vacate the
cbalrmanshlp of the Federal
Reserve Board, assured the
White House press corps that he
had no feeling of being pushed
out. If so, i1 must be because his
dorsal nerve endings have atro·
phled during his 7'h years In the
seal of government financial
power.
The plain truth Is that Volcker
qull before he was given the
bum's rush. According to lnsid·
ers, Volck er realized he was on a
collision course with his Reagan ·
appoin ted colleagues on the
board. He confided to associates
at the Fed that he would have had

to resign with in a year anyway
over policy differences.
Thanks to an unusuall y high
number of retirements and reslg·
nations In the past seven years.
President Reagan has been able
to stack the Federal Reserve
Board to it degree not seen since
Franklin Delano Roosevelt's pre·
sldency . With Volcker's resigna·
tlon , Reagan will have chosen all
seven members. of the board,
ensuring a half·lifeof Reagan ism
wei) past his departure from the
Oval Office In January 1989. The
term of Volcker's successor,
Alan Greenspan, doesn't run out
untll1991.
Though Volcker was often

called I he second most powerful
man ln the United States because
of his influence on the economy,
his . power had in fact been
severely diluted by the new,
Reaganite m~keup of the Fed.
The new members are generally
gung·ho deregula tors of the II·
nanclal system , more sympa·
thetic to easy money and willing
to let the dollar's value shrink in
hopes of restoring a favorable
trade balance.
Voicker, on the other hand, still
clings stubbornly to the Idea that
Inflation is the mortal enemy and
must be kept In check by a tigh t
rein on the money supply. He is
convinced that healthy economic

Attention Sali..~bury voter.~!
To The Voters Of
Salisbury Township:
We, the Trustees of Sal isbury
Township, wish to Inform you
why we have not put dust con tt'Ol
on yo ur roads this year.
As we are sure most of you
know, the Federlll Revenue SharIng Fund s were terminated at thr
end ol1986. The Township lost In
revenue this yea t' $27,000 dur to
this ICt'mlnallon of fu nds. Of this
$27,000 we received In 1986,
$12,000 wa s spent on du st control.
Due to the loss of funds we also
cut the sa laries of the Trustees
and the Clerk, and put our
employees on a four day werk .
We have tried to obtain other
funding to offset 1his loss but
ha ve not been able to find any
help.
Some of you seem to be under
the Impression th at the County

supplies the dust co ntrol for the
asking. The County does APPLY
the dust control bull he Township
pays for the amount used . You
have also quest ioned the Trus tees as to why the extra 1t sales
lax you are now paying does not
generate more many. None of
this tax money goes to the
township. Il ls all retained by the
County
If you have any questions or
any answers to our financi al
situation, our meetings are held
on the first Th ursday of each
month at 7:00 P.M. at th e
Township Hall on Rockspri ngs
Road .
Respectfully.
Trustees of Salisbury
Township
Richard Batley
Nathan Biggs
Gregory Eblin

Today in history
By Unlled Press lnlernnllonal
Today Is Thursday. June 25. the 176th day of 1987 with 189to follow .
The moon Is wa ning. moving toward Its new phase.
The morning sta rs are Ven us and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Ca ncer. They Include
french composer Gustave Charpentier In 1860, Broadway producer
George Abbott In 1887 (age 100\, English novelist and critic George
Orwell ( "1984" ] In 1903. movie director Sidney Lumetln 1924 tage63) ,
actress June Lockhart in 1925 (age 62) , civil rights advocate James
Meredith In 1933 (age 541. former Miss America Phyllis George In
1949(age 381. and pop slngersCarly Simon In 1945 1age 42) and George
Michael In 1963 1age 24).
On this date In history :
In 1876, Gen. George Custer and his force or 208 men were
annihilated by Chief Sitting Bull's Sioux at Little Big Horn in
Montana.
In 1950, North Korean forces Invaded South Korea.
In 1962, the Supreme Cout·i handed down a decision Interpreted as
barring prayer In public schools.
In 1973, White House attorney John Dean told a Senate committee
that President Richard Nixon joined In a plot to cover up the
Walergate break· in.
ln 1982. Alexander Halg resigned as President Reagan's secretary
of state in a dispute over policy.

Fleet-footed Davis gives Reds 5-4 win
By MIKE TULLY
UPJ Nnllon~l Basj&gt;ball Writer
The Giants thought they snould
have won thegameoncel hey tied
the.score. They should have tied
up Erie Davis as welL
Davis drew a pickoff attempt
then scored all the way from fir st
when the ·throw )Ve nt wild Wed·
nesday. giving the · Ctnci,onali
Reds a 5·4 victory over San
Franci sco.
Davi s led off wit h a single to
left and reliever Scoll Garrell s,
5·5, threw the ball away while
attemp ting to pick Davis off firs t.
When firs t baseman Will Clark
had trouble picking up the ball,
Davis scored.
· " He !Clarki knew Eric was

progress is Impossible when
prices soar out of control.
The Reagan administration
went along with Votcker In 1981,
cyn ically letting him slay the
Inflation dragon - and take the
blame for the high Interest rates
and recession that resulted . In
the depths of the 1982·83 reees·
slon, White House and Treasury
economists admitted to our asso·
el ate Michael Einstein that the
administration had known that
tight . money would cause a
recession. They figured It was
necessary but blttermedlclnefor
curing lnfl'atlon - provided that
Dr. Volcker wound up with the
blame.
While letting Voleker do its
dirty work. the Reagan admlnls·
tratlon undermined him by ap·
pointing new board members
hostil e to his policies. Yet despite
his dwindling support on the
board, Volcker still managed to
forestall defea t until Feb. 24,
1986. He was outvoted "when he
tried to l'revent a ,cut ·. In the
discount rate for short·term
loans.
'
The proposed cut In the rate.
supported by Reagan appOintee
Martha Seger, a staunch advo·
cate of easier money, touched off
a weeks-long debate. Volcker
argued that the Fed should wait
for Japan and West Germany to
cut their discount rafes first; this
would prevent a sell -of! of \he.
dollar, he pleaded.
But lor the first lime, his
pers uasive powers failed to
subdue the oppostlon. Seger
r allied the support of vice chair·
man Preston Marlin and two
other Reagan appointees, who
voted to cut the discount rate.
Volcker lost a 4·3 decision.
The chairman was furious, but
by the end of )he day he had won a
postponement by changing one
governor's mi nd. Though he won
in the end , it was Volcker's firs t
1

Tides set
record in
'

124 rout

HARD BOUNCE - Cincinnati shortstop Kurt Stillwell lets th e
hall bounce In front or him and then lost'itln the sun in Wednesday
afternoon's game against San Francisco. The Reds won 5-4 In 10
Innings. (UPI)

Scoreboard ...

been worse .
Not exac tly a subtle case,

right ? In fact. the shower of pub·
liclly It received only underlines
the more typical Impotence of
ci tizens th ese days before o!fl·
clal edicts reducing the value of
I heir property.
Still, perhaps we should be gral·
eful whenever the court does man·
age to notice the Fifth Amend·
menl's requirement of "just com·
pensation" for government sei·
zures. This decision may not have
been bold, but at least it reminds
us that constltullonal protections
extend beyond personal liberties
such as freedom of religion and of
speech.
Most people forget the extent
to which the Constitution empha·
sizes economic rights, toe. Yet
th is amnesia Is probably natural,
since courts have often shared II
during the past few decades .
Consider the fate of the Four·
teenth Amendment , which says
"No slate shall " ... deprive any
person of life, liberty or property
wit hout due process of l aw." As

Harvard professor Stephen Ma·
cedo has written , this amend·
menl c learly means to limit "the
ways In which the slate can Inter·
fere with private rel ations."
Yet, Macadeo notes: "The
co urt has simply shifted its inqui ·
rles away from the economic
sphere. When It comes to state
economic regulallon. the court
requires nothing more 'than the
merest 'rallonallty' to justify
restrictions on individual lib·
erty ."
The fault doesn't lie with "II·
beral' " jurisprudence, either. Con·
servalive judges defer regularly to
laws eroding property rights, too.
That 's one reason Richard Ep·
stein's book, "Takings: Private
Property and the Power of Eml·
nenl Domain," created a stir when
It was published a couple of years
ago. With forbidding logic, this
University of Chicago law profes·
sor flattened the legal concensus.
Epstein favors a principled actlv·
ism for courts, one that entranches

,,

degree. (This Is a lower educallonal level than that of the
general public, but welfarereclp·
Ients are better educated than
many believe.))
% About three-fourths (76
percent) of the families have one
or two children- a figure almost
Identical to the st atewid e
statistic.
% More than half (55 percent)
the families on the welfare rolls
remain there for l ess than a yea r.
while only 14 percent are public
charges for six years or more.
One Important reason for those
relatively .short stays : Welfare
assistance Isn 't very appealing.
After paying for food, clothing.
utilities and rent, a famil y of
three has less than $2 per day for
all other needs.
Finally. there's the matter of
work. When the AFDC program
was created by federal law In
1935, II was envisioned as a
means of providing financial
assistance to widows, so they
cou ld raise their children rather
than put them up for adoption .
Most women did not work at the
lime and few people thou ght they
should .
Now, however, there Is a
consensus among Republicans
and Democrats, liberals and
conservatives, that the thrust of
the welfare system In general
and AFDC In particular ought to
be shifted from Income malnte·
nance to job training and
placement.
Bul that agreement obscures
substantial differences. A typical
point ol disagreement: How old
should the children ol a female
welfare recipient be before she is
required to work? The suggested
answers range from6months to6
years.
1

Those differ ences have
spawned a host of new Initiatives
I all accompanied by clever aero·
nyms) vying for support. Among
them are Greater Opportunities
Through Work or GROW. Jobs of
Employable Dependent lndlVId·
uals or JED! and National
Educational Training and Work
program at NETWork .
Approximately half the states
(Including Massachusetts) have
experimented with transforming
Income suporl programs Into

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Individual rights against govern·
ment In all spheres -Including the
economic.
The sad alternative submits
personal treasure to lawmaker
whim , a lesson bitterly learned
by the people of a Detroit neigh·
borhood a few years ago. They
resisted a plan to condemn and
raze their homes so that General
Motors could build a new plant,
yet the Michigan Supreme Court
refused to Inte rvene on their be·
half.
Never mind that lh both state
and federal conslltutlons restrict
seizure by eminent domain to a
"public use," and thai GM Is
hardly a unit or government. The
court said a "public benefit" was
reason enough to proceed.
By that sta ndard, of course,
the local city council could de·
clare your downstairs bathroom
public latrine and Invite In the
Fourth of' July parade.
All right, l et's be lair: Even the
Supreme Court would probably
balk at that one.

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•

LPGA's top money winners
compete at Rochester

The facts of welf~re ______Ro_b_ert_W._a_lte__rs
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (NE Al
- Here's a portrait of a typical
welfare r ec ipient : a bl ack ,
poorly educated woman with a
large brood of ch ildren who has
littl e Interes t In work and has
been on the public dole for much
of her adult life.
Although that stereotype Is
widely embra ced, It Is not the
reality In M assachusetts -or In
most states wehre welfare programs and their be.n eflclarles
l ong h ave b een widely
misunderstood .
Comprehending the realities of
the welfare system Is now
es peciall y Important because the
nation Is poised to undertake a
major overhaul of Its low-Income
assistance programs.
Useful In making thai trans!·
lion Is a Massachusetts Depart·
ment of Public Welfare stalls II·
cal analysis or the recipients of
Aid to Families with Dependent
Children. by far the l argest of the
country's federal-state welfare
programs.
Nationally , AFDC provides
almost $18 billion per year In
cash benefits to 11 million people
In 3.8 million families, most of
them headed by women.
This Is a statistical portrait of
those AFDC families In
Massachusetts:
\i Almost two-thirds (64 per·
cent) are white, while 18 percent
are black and 17 percent are
Hispanic. (The state's population
Is 4 percent black and s.5 percent
Hispanic, so both groups are
substantially over-represented
among welfare clients- but they
hardly dominate.)
\i Exactly half (50 percent)
graduated from high school,
while 16 percent attended college
and 3 percent received a college

l'rld~t,\' '~&gt; (i ;lflH'!&lt;o

Majors

Let'S he)p property 0WDerS_---:-rea_dV_fi~_-ce_nt_C_ar_ro_ll
Thank the Supreme Court for
small favors. They're very likely
to be the only on~s you'll get.
That's because the court seems
to content Itself with pecking at the
edge of Issues. lis recent decision
protecllng properly owners from
unjust regu lation Is simply one
more proof of the pattern - al·
though it was greeted, depending
on the source, with lavish praise or
regret.
Actually, th e case invo lved
such an extreme Instance of go·
vernmental " taking" of property that Is a wonder even three
justices wou ld dissent.
Judge for yourself: A church In
Glendale, Calif., tried to reopen a
recreational complex alter a Oood,
but was prevented by a new drain·
age ordina nce. So, the church sued
lor compe nsallon, polnllng out It
had lost all use of Its propert y.
1! the count y had simply seized
the ent ire 21 acres , the effec t on
the church could hardly have

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3
'

~o)c){er ~it ______________k_ck__A_n_de_r_so_n_a_n_d_D_a_le__~_an__A_u_a

Foreign debt more
than doubles in 1986

Letters to the editor

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 25, 1987

good taSie, add ressing ts su('S, not personalltle5.

WASH INGTON - The Unlled States' foreign debt more than
doubled In 1986 lo r eac h $2616 billion, more I han I he nex t three most
debt ·rldden nations co mbined, th e Co mmerce Department said .
earlier this week.
. The United States showed a surp lus In Its Net Inlernallonal
Investment Position until 1!185, when II slipped $111.9 billion Into the
red . That marked the first lime since 1919 tha i foreign interests
owned more In the Unit ed States than Amer icans owned abroad, the
Commerce Depa r tm ent said.
Wllh this week's report. the U.S. debt dwarfs even llsclosesl rivals.
The developing wor ld 's biggest debtor, Brazil, stands far behind at
$108.8 billion. Add No.3 Mexico at $101.6 billion and Argentina's $51
billion debt to Brazil' s and the total still is smaller than the Unlled
States' debt.
Economists agree a U.S. deficit cannot directly be compared with
other nallons.
The U.S. deficit reflects to a large part inves tment by fo reigner s in
American stocks, bond s, land and compa nies, they say, while much of
The developing world' s debt comes· from bank loans .
.
· Nevertheless, officia ls as prominent as outgoing Feder al Reserve
Chairman Paul Volcker have warned debtor status means the United
· Slates Is In the unco mfortabl e poslllon of depending on other nations
to keep li s economy going.
The government said the United Stales International i'nvestment
position weakened In 1986 mainly becau se foreign assets in the United
Stales grew faster than U.S. assets abroad.
U.S. assets ahroad totaled $1.07 trillion as of Dec. 31, about 1.1
percent more than they were worth at the end of 1985. At the sa me
time, foreign assets In the United Sl ales Increased 26 percent to reach
$1.:!3 tr illion.
About $!iii . ~ billion of I he $~70.~ bil lion growth In foreign asset s ca me
from gai ns In the val ue of American stocks held by foreigners. th e
Commerce Department sai d.
Another $9~.7 billion of the Increase reflect s liabilities to privat e
lorclgncrs and internat ional financia l instllullons -mainly deposit s
that foreigners and foreign banks have put In American banks. lh('
j!Overnmcnl said.
Foreigners Increased th ei r purchases of U.S. corpora te and other
bonds by a remrd $o9.6 billion and fattened their holdings o! U.S.
Treasury securities by $12 .3 billion .
All he same. time, foreign direct inves tment In the United Stalesmainly lhrougtl purchases of U.S. companies- grew $24 .7 billion , the
government said.
On the American sid&lt;• of I he ledger, th egove t·nm ent said about $2Vi
billion of the $11R.o billion Increase In U.S. assets abroad ca me simply
because I he dollar' s depreclat ton made foreign assets mor(' va luablr.
U.S . direct investment abroad Increased $30.1 billion as Americans
purchased $18.2 billion more foreign S('curltlrs.

Thursday, June 25. 1987

Page-2-:- The Daily Sentindl:
Pomeroy· Middleport, Ohio ·

work preparation Initiatives but among the m any unresolved
differences Is the extent to which
the government should provide
those seeking employment with
transportation, child care , health
Insurance and other services.
Indeed. many policy-makers
are reluctant to relinquish the
myth of lazy, shiftless "welfare
queens" more Intent upon cheat·
lng the system th.an regaining
their lost dignity and pride .

·Berry's World

PITTSFORD, N.Y . tUPl i Six of the top 10 money winn ers
on the LPGA Tour are schedul('d
to co mpete in the $300,000 Ro·
chester Int ernational that begins
toda)' - including leader Bet sy
Kin g, despite a sore ankle .
King and Jane Geddes head I he
list of golfers expec ted to play In
the tournament. .F.ac h has won
three tournam en ts this season ,
wllh King lopping the money list
with earnings of $302 ,806. Geddes
Is seco nd with $258,797.
King, who pulled out of the
Lady Keystone Open in Hershey,
Pa ., las t week with a badl y
sprained left ankl e. said she will
try to play.

hoi&lt;' mat ch that Lopez won by
four shots.
Th(' tournament has drawn
four other top·lO money winners:
Patty Sheehan, Bradley, Cindy
Rar ick and Chris Johnson .
Jan Stephenson, who had
signed up to play, withdrew
because of pain in her rib cage,
an injury she suffered In an
automobile accident two months
ago.
LPGA Commissioner ,John
Lauphelmer said officials and
pl ayers a"e looking forward to
the Rochester stop of the to ur .

" I' m kind of going day ·b.V· day
now. seeing how much it Improves ," King sa id. " f was
r unning in the house and stepped
on a rug and it turn0d on me."
Oth er player s likel y to chal ·
tenge for thP $4:i,OOO first prize
are Nan C)' Lopez. a 1hree· lime
winner of the tournament , and
two-time champion Pal Ilradley.
" I 'm swinging well, " Lopez
said . "1 had a good round Sunday
in Hershey and that helped m e
coming here."
Lopez and BradiPy started
tour nament week, pla ying nine·

The Daily Sentinel

By United Pr ess International
The Tidewater Tides set a club
record with 10 hit s in a nine-run
fir st inning Wednesday night en
·~oute to a 12·4 rout of the
Rochester Red Wings in an
in ternal ional League game.
Andre Mill iga n and Andre
Dav is led Tidewat ~r' s 17-hi t
attack with four h its each in Ihe
game at Rochest et·.
Rochester starter Mike
Razcka. 2·2, managed on ly one
out before being removed .
Razcka allowed five singles, an
intentional walk and was
charged wit h six runs.
Ron Mu sselman, who re lieved•
Ra zcka, surrende t·cd lour si ngles, a tt·iple to Kevin Elster and
was charged with three runs .
Tidew at er sent 14 men 10 the
plate in I he Inning. Euch of the
first four hillers in the lineup
collected lwo hil s .
Tidewater s t a tle r D o n
Schulze, 6·1. went Pighl innings
before Gene Walter ca me on in
the ninth.
Elsewhere in th&lt;' IL, Maine
downed Tol edo 6·1. Pawt ucket
shaded Columbu s :,..1 and Syra ·
cuse slammed Rirhmond 9· 1.
A 1 Old
Orchard
Beaa ch,
Maine,
Kevin
Ward
belted
home
run
and M ike Maddu x and Wally
Rit chie combined on an eight·
h'itler to lead lh ~ Guides over lh~
Mud H~ns. N;lte Snell.lh&lt;' firs I of
fou r Toledo pitc hers, took th&lt;•
loss.
AI Pawtucket . R.I., Garv
Miller-Jones hil th e second of two
home r uns in the 12 th inning to
push the Red Snx pa st the
Clippers. Wes Gardner pitched
three innings for the tr iumph.
Randy Graham was the loser.
At Syracuse, N . Y., Tod d St at ·
llemyre and Du a ne Ward com·
bined on a th ree - hitter and the
Chiefs scored , six run s In the
sevenI h inning to power past
Ri ch mond. Rob Ducey and Glen
Hill each had a homer and I!Jrcr
RBL

ran and mQ\Ied to third on a
groundout. Bob Melvin walked
and Thompson bunted to the
right of the mound. Franco
barehanded tho ball and threw
home, but hi s throw was too late
ro get Milner.
In other games , New York
downed Chicago 2·1, St. Louts
topped Philadelphia 5 3. Pittsburgh outscor ed Mont real 9·6,
Houston ov~ rpowered San Diego
12·7 and Los Ange les shaded
Atlanta 5·4 In 10 Innings.
Mcts 2, Cubs I
At New York, Bill Almon's
.John Franco, 4·1. pit ched I 2· 3 one -out single in th e ninth drove
in Kevin McReynoldS. dropping
innings for the victo ry .
"It's pretty amazing," Franco Chicago reliever Lee Smith to
said of his 1987 season. " I 've been 2·5.
Cardinals 5, Phlllles :1
pretty lucky so far. J:m not doing
At
St.
Louis. Terry Pendleton's
anything different from last
homer wi th two out in the
two-run
year. I'm just getting lh&lt;' outs
eigh
th
lifted
the Cards.
when I have to."
Pirates 9, Expos 6
San Francisco t led the score4-4
At Pit tsburgh, Brian Fisher
in the ninth on Rob T hompson's
suicide sq ueeze . Bob Bi·enly sca iiC'rcd nine hits over rivr
reached second on an error innin gs and slammrd a thrc('·
charg&lt;'d to th ird basema n Buddy run homer t o spark the Pirates.
Astros 12, Padres 7
Bell. who mis hand led his
At
San
Diego . .Jose Cruz lined a
grouoder. Eddie Milner pinch

By Jim Soulsby
The Meigs Marauder Raskct ·
ball Ca mp · for boys In the
seventh. ei"ghth and ninth grades
clo st•d out its second W&lt;'ek with
one to go for girls throu gh grade
nine .
The camp, under I he di rec tion
of Head Coach Mlck Childs, was
geared to instruct elementa ry
st udents i n the fundamen tals of
baske tball in hopes of preparing
I hem for high school play in the
fpture .
During the second weeks com ·
pet ition, Todd Grinds taff won the
one on one cham pionship, Ter ry
Reuter look lop honors as free
throw shooter and Mike Van
M eter and Todd Grindstaff
shared the Most Va luable Player
award . Th e all defensive tea m
wa s n1ade up of Frank Blake,
Darin Logan, Jeremy Rupe,
Kevin Musser, Mike Van Meter,
Monte Swindel l and Robbi e

Prku Starting
l1ltiw As

S$99

Pom&lt;'roy. Oh.lo !5169.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By C•rrltr or Motor Routr
Onf' W('(lk .................................... $1 .2!\
Onr Month ............. ....... ,........... S.-'1.4!'1
COPV

PRICE .
Dally ... ...; ............................ 25 CC'nll'i

\

SublltTi bfon not drslrlnl'! 1o pay th e C'ar·
rll•r may rr mll In ad vam·t• dlrrct to
Thf' Dallv Sl&gt;nllnf'l on a 3. 6 or 12 moot h
basis. crrouwil l be ~lvcn carrier l'ilrh

No subsc riptions by ma ll J)('rmlllf'tl In
wh('rl' homr carrier IK'rvlce Is
on•allablr.
area ~

•

..

.

MATHEW BRODERICK
IN

..

,.......... -.: ~

" Well, you know what they say pt!Jr/Sh.

PROJECT XPG 13

'publish or

TONIGHT: IAII£QUtN
AND ANGEL HEART

Ill

f

I

13
2ti

Mall Subscription.•
lulde Melp County

w.-.................................. Sl7.29.116
w
1'&lt;'1&lt;5 .. .. .............................. $34

52 Wl't'ks .. :........... ... ...... .. ......... 160.56
Oal!dtlr. Melp Counl)'
13 w..,_.ks .. ......................... .. ..... S1 8.20
26 Wl't'k5 ............ ...................... S.'l5.tO
52 Wl'&lt;ks . .. .............................. . $67.60

OPEN
DAILY

9·6

MON . &amp;
FRI . 9-8

non

,\l'lh itll'd

ILr.~l

M al1 1n~l.l : .'ol'lll Ulllllt·!dt' r

\);.tll l~u;.quu lu ( 'ulumhu" ti f I ho• lnt l•rna·
llnntt.l l o~• nJr~ •• ·: .. r~nl • d ~ frN' UJ;l'hi!O und
i!,'&gt;l&gt;llllll'd 1!11'111 In Cltli'IHIIII llf u... N••ll'
\'~&gt;rk· l 'o• nn l ~·~~~ UI ' (/\): plll'llo•r f:dv.·ard
i\1urlt'l , .,,,,.ltml h t~'''l\1 1111 l h'tut Kt•ll,·,
lnfit'ltlt•r·olulflt•ld• •t Mar~ :mt,-t... t! 1tntl
outfll'ltll-r l ..t·wl'll~· n IIII I.
ihlohnul -

1\1' 111'111 1'11 uultll'l(lt•r
nntl omlri,Rhkd h ·fl·
hund&amp;·r ll111 ,. \ 'u11 11111 1•11111 'l' ;u ·tflll !l 11f 1h1•
l';wlfll' l'O il!'l l..o ·a~ut •: ... ·nl t·nl o ho •r .k rr~·
\\'ill:t rd tu T i n 'lllllll 0 11 r~ • h a h illt :11i u n
(1~· 11~ ~~ ·

l'llllJflh~·

l(.~i'&gt;il!ll lll\' 111 .

To' \ I t~ - Sl~: ut •ll tro· ,· ~111&lt;' 1111 1'11 h:uHII• r

ll rh111 ll ith :mQII tn

~

t : u\1 (

u :t~ l

Lo•nj!lll'

( I! Otolih ·l o·unl rtlo 'l .
n~hkt·ll• t• ll

1 ~ nhl1 • n Sl:uo• - llo •&lt;

lolo•d null" pk&amp;. IIJI
n jtllnn 1111 •·11nlr .1d nl li&lt; rlt ltr!l l'lll' lb
Shurl , unt&amp;.lnr. hhn ;1 il't'i' a~ownt .

Other s particip~llng In the
camp were Tim Peterson. Jamlr .
Harr is, Jason William s. Chase
Cleland, Robbie Wyall. Malt
Craddock, Mike Mayer, Jason
Wright. Charles Mash, Chris
Knight, Micah Bunch, Steve
Ca ruthers. Matt Haynes. Eric
Shou lt s, Bobby Johnson , Shawn
Hawley , Todd Dill , Carl t on
Drummer, Kyle Si mpson , Ran·
dati Moore. John Haggy, Micha el
Kincaid ; Trevor Harrison, L .J.
Mitch, · Phillip Hovatter, K.C.
Arnott , Jeff Allen and Gat·y
Adams .
Coach Childs extends special
thanks t o Locker 219 of Middle·
pori and Pleasers Restaurant of
Pomeroy for prov iding special
favors .
A co mplete list of coaches and
helpers will appear In the final
a rtlc le upon co nclusion of 1he
girls cump.

5Jt JACKSON PIKE · RT.3~ WEST

Phone

446 · 4~24

BARGAIN HATtNEE SAT/SUN &amp;WED
All SEATS 11.75
ADMISS ION EVERY TUESDAY 11.15

L NOW SMOWIN(i
THURSDAY~ ~
FRIDAY thru

~. (COVEtS

1985 GRAND AM
ONLY

SHARP

$1 91 1OMO.

1980 CHEV. MONs0!:.9........... J7031 MO.
1982 V.W. RABBIT.. ...................$896 9 MO.
1984 FORD ESCOfsOL0)N......S1216 2 MO.
1984 CHEV. CAVASOLP ...... ..$125 62 MO.
1982 MERCURY ZEPHER ....... J 12 79 7 MO.·
(2) 1985 FORD TEMP0 ..........$1 569 5 MO.
!YOUR CHOICE!

1986
1984
1986
1987

D-50 PICKUP ................. $1 5753 MO.
CHRYSLER NEW YORKER ...J 1822 7 MO:
DODGE ARIES ................ S1826 4 Mo.
PLY. SUNDANCE .......... ..$186 10 Mo.
1985 PLYM. TURISMO 2.2
ONLY $1 06 32 MO.

MAY VUYI

•Simmons •La-Z-Boy •Holiday House
•Stearns &amp; Foster

W('ek .

illlM'IIlllll

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK

OnC' YC'ar .. ,............................., $6.~ . 00
~ INI;LE

t '' '' " t
\ "o, rk ( 1\1,) -

•2.00 Cover Charge
bt 21

ALL ON SALE NOW!

PosTMASTER : SI-nd addrrs~ chang~
to Thl' Daily ~nrlnf'l . 111 Cour1 SL,

Nt•~~o·

FRIDAY &amp;
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JUNE 2.6 &amp; 27

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Guests with Top Quality Sleep
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M..rrtnt•r : Unltt•d PrN! ~ lnternutl ona l.
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Ohio NrowsPap!"r Assodat lon. Nat ional
Arl\'{'rlls lns: Rropr Psf'nl a Ih 'f' . Branham

M iniM '!oolll ;t ~1 • n l
ttht•ho•r llilml.1'"
In l'orlln litii i!IIH' l '11dll••l lliL~l

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MIZWAY
TAVERN

2217 Jackson Ave. - Point Pleasant
With lhis Ad Get SJO.oo Reading For Only ss.oo

Ohl!

Transartions

f"jFjiljeiljidjis.P.I'I~"I;j"'ijjjjiiiiiiiiT-----------~

FIRST 11ME W 11115 AREA
MRS. Alii WANTS TO HEll YOU!
Open From 9 a.m.- 10 p.m.
(~ For One free Question 675-788'1

Publl .,h£'d {'V!'rv afi Prnoon , Mondav
lh rouc h F'r lda~. 111 Courl St .. Po·
m&lt;'ro.v. Oh io, by l hf' Ohio Vail ('v Pub·
llshin ,g Company rMulilm£'dla . lnr ..
Pomt" JV. Ohio ~!'!769. Ph . 992-2156. Sfo
cond ':is!' pa;laJ!f' pa lrl at Po meroy.

doublr off right fielder Tony
Gwynn' s gto,·e with two out and
the basrs loaded in the seventh :
Inning, leading the t.stros.
Dodgers 5, Draves 4
At Los Angeles, Mike M~r s h al l :
si ngled home Dave Anderson ;
from third ba se with two out m
the lOth innin g, leading the :
Dodgers .

Marauder cage camp ends
second week of instruction

Tells You Pa.sL , Pre.sent &amp; Puture, Gives
Advice On All Affairs (){ l-!fe Su.ch A.s tnve,
'Warriage 4 nd Bu.sine.ss.
All Readinp; Guaranteed 4nd Confidential.

(USPS t4~9611 i
A Dlvhdon of Mullimt•dla. In&lt;' .

Nrw.sp11prr Sale-s. 7.\1 Third
Nr\1.' York , Nrw York 10017.

ru nning and tha i's what happens
when a gu y can.run, ".Cincinnati
Manager Pete Rose said.
" What can he run the 100 in?
9.n, " ·Ciark said. " If l could run
a 9.2100, 1 could make It around
the bas es like that too."
" I fell we ·would win the game
once we tied it up," yiant s
Manager Roger Craig · sai d.
"Gar relt s norma lly doesn't
throw a ball away like that and
then w~ should have been able to
handle it. We struck out the next
two batters so the runner never
should have made it home."

•FREE
PA~KING

•FREE
DELIVERY

SELECTION OF THE BEST!

BASED ON LOCAL BANK RATES AND TERMS
All Vehicles Available With Warranty

SEE CAROl, MARK or lARRY

COOPER
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-DODGE
MIDDLEPORT

2-6421

�Thursday, June 25, 1987

Pomeroor-lliliddleport, Ohio

The ·Daily Sentinel

Page~5

Baltimore .Orioles .blank Yanks; ·T~ins pound Indians, 14-8
By MARK COHEN
UPI Sports Writer
The Baltimore Orioles found
the missing Ingredient Wednes·
day night (o go 'flth their home
·
run-powered offense.
.Dave Schmidt pitched the first
complete game by an Oriole at'
Memorial Stadium this season
and benefitted from three first·
In ning homers to lift Baltimore to
a 4·0 triumph over the New Yo rk
Yankees.
Schmidt, a reliever.t urned·
starter, threw only 94 pitc hes, 64
of them strikes, to regisler the
shortest game of the year t2
hours. 9 minutes) . The Orioles
had lost 22 of their prev ious ·25
games.
"I like to see it because it can

become contagious," Baltimore
Manager Ca l Ripken Sr. said. of
Schmidt's performance. "Now.
with the day off, the players will
have a chance to think about it and that's good. We've been kind
of down on our pitching staff. but
the whole team needed this win,
not just the pit chin g staff."
The three homers - by Cal
Ripken Jr ., Eddie Murray and
Ray Knight- ca meoffloserRon
Guidry, 0·3, and increased Balli·
more's ma jor league-leading to·
tal to 111.
"I loved th e big lead ."
Schmidt, 8·1, said. "They played
right into my ha nds after that.
We ju st have to keep ball ling and
plugging away."

J
MAYOTI'E STRETCHES-TimMayotte oflhe
United Statt'S stretches for a forehand return to

JeaQ Lcurlari of France during Wedn esday's
Wimbledon tenn is action. (UP!)

Defending champs resume play
By STEVE KE'fTLE
UPI Spurts Wrllcr
WIMBL E DON , E ng land
IUP IJ - Defendin g champions
Boris Bec krr and Martina Nav.

ratilova resume lhcir ques ts
today to move into Jhe Wim·
blcdon record books.
Becker meets Australian Peler
Doohan as he co nt inues toward a

GET
READY ~TIRES
NOW FOR
·VACATION
DRIVING.
CALL .US .AT

992-7151
FOR PRICES
ON ALL YOUR
TIRE NEEDS

GENERAL
TIRE
SAL

thi rd successive Wimbledon
crown. Only Fred Perry of
Brit ain and Bjorn Borg of
Sweden have a ccomplished lhe
Co ntinued on page 5

radial tires, bucket seats.
Stock No. 0609·A

TARTAR CONTROL
GENERIC

TOOTHPASTE
6.4 01.

$149
TDIC

CASSETTE TAPES
60 Min.

90 Min.

$527

$627

Reg. 16.77

Reg. 17.77

WATCH BANDS
1/2 PRICE

2 dr. , front wheel drive, 6 cyl., air, ·.auto., PS, PB, Power door locks,
tilt wheel, cruise, AM/FM radio, rear window defogger.

WAS S6995

7%
STEi\L'i SECOND - Cleveland second baseman Tony
Bernazard (right) is sale stealing second a• Minnesota second
baseman i\1 Newman (left) puts tag on him with an empty glove.
The Twins won, 14-8. (UPI)

TYLENOL
CAPLETS

lOO's

$419

Defending... continued from page 4

•

Reg.
$7.27

'

VILLAGE PHARMACY
992-6669

MIDDLEPORT

CHEYEnE
2 dr., 4 cyl., 4 spd., radial tires, bucket seats.

Was 54495

NOW

$3495

Stock No. 0577-A
1 •

'
,.,

'•
2 DAYS ONLY

..

JUNE 26 &amp; 27

FIREPLACE INSERT
OR

FREE STANDING
HEATS UP TO
lOOO SQ. FT.

.__H_o_u_sE_.,

1985 OLDSMOBILE CALAIS
•Twin Blowers
.
•Automatic Thermostat
•Glass Door
•Large Ash Pan

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY ONLY •••
FACTORY GOOFS

2 dr., front w"eel drive, 4 cyl., air, auto., PS, PB, AM / FM radio,
bucket seats

WAS S8995

NOW

$7995

SAVE

..•

•

TO

.'·

50°/o

SOME HAVE SMALL PAINT' DEFECTS •••
SOME HAVE SMALL DINGS .&amp; SCRATCHES•••

-·

....
,..-.
~;;;.

,. ,

1985 CHEVIOLO EXTENDED CAl· S·
4 wheel drive, 6 cyl .. air, auto .. PS, PB, tilt wheel, AM / FM / Tape.

YOU WILL NOT FIND AN
EQUAL QUALITY STOVE AT
THESE SAVINGS ANYWHERE
(Guaranteed)

550 WILL HOLD YOUR
STOVE TILL FALL
90 DAYS SAME AS CASH
PLINTY OF FINANCING AVAilAilE

FACTORY701 WAREHOUSE
2ND AYE.'
OPEN

9 A.M.-4i30 P.M.

GALLIPOUS, OHIO

IRING YOUR
PICI-UP

Was 56995

NOW

$499 5

Stodl No. 0428-A.

JIM COBB
CHEV.-OLDS.·CADILLAC

LOCARD ALOIIG THIII¥11111 PO.IOY, 01110
301 E. MAIII ST.
992-6614

"We want to play aggress ive.
like we did tonight. ail the 1ime,"
he said. "We think we can get
bac k into it tthe pennant race) ."
Schmidt and ca tcher Terry
Kennedy had great rapport ail
game.
"Dave threw onl)' four slid·
ers," Kennedy said. " He made
rre look like a genius. He dldn' l
shake me off once. He had great
location and great command of
his pitches. Remember . his palm
bail breaks like a slider. He
stayed strong to the end. His
Intensity was high. "
Elsewhere. Oakland defeated

Ka~sas

City 4-2; Toronto downed
Detroit 5-3; Boston edged Mil·
waukee 8- 7; Seall le beat Chicago
10-7; Minnesota routed Cleve·
land 14·8 and California ou llas ted
Texas 4· 1.
i\thletlcs 4, Royals 2
At Oakland, (:a !If., Mike Dav is
drove In 1hree runs a nd Curt
Young and Dennis Eckersley
co mbined on a five-hitter to
spark the A's,
Blue Jays 5, Tigers 3
At De troit, Rance Mulilnlks hit
two home runs off Jack Morris to
snap the right· bander's nine·
game win ning streak and lead
Toronto.
Red Sox S, Brewers 7
At Bosto n, Rookie Todd Ben·
zi nger stroked a pair of two-run
singles a nd Wade Boggs ex·
tended his hilling strea k to 25

At Minneapolis. Kent Hrbek
games with two hits, including a
a
nd
Gary Gaeltl drove in three
solo homer, to power the Red
runs
apiece to carry the Twins . . ,
Sox.
i\ngels 4, Ran~:ers I
: ;
Mariners 10, White Sox 7
At Arlington. Texas. Don Sut· :
At Chicago, Alvin Davis and
Mike Kingery each belled home ton notched his 314th career ·
victory and Dick Schofield drove ·
runs to lead Seattle.
in two runs to pace Ca lifornia .
Twins 14, Indians &amp;
'-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.
II

SAVE SAVE SAVE

30°/o OFF ON

WOMEN'S SHOES
BY CONNIE, DEXTER &amp; CONTEMPOS

ALSO

SELECT GROUP OF

MEN'S DEITERS

Hartford Open
play underway

4 dr. front wheel drive, 4 cyl., auto., PS, PB, AM/FM radio,

WAS S4495

Sc hmidt' s three-hit perfor·
mance was his sixth straight
triumph and first shutout since
October 5, 1985. He lowered his
ERA to a league-leading 2.24.

.~:r:

........

-

"""

• "l

•

feat since the tournament form al
was changed In 1922.
Navratllova faces Japan' s Et·
suko Inoue. She Is aiming for a
sixth success ive singles title and
a record-equaling eighth In all.
" My game is good, and as long
as I'm pla ying I'll keep bounci ng
back," said Navratllova, who
has not won a tournament since
November . " My best te nnis is
ahead of me."
Becker's rivals polnl 10 his
serve bei ng less devas tat lng th is
year . Still. the 19·year-old West
Ger man showed no signs of
weakness when he beat Czechoslovakia's Karel Novacek in
straight sets in the fir st round .
Becker leads all16 men'sseeds
into the second round - a
distlncllon last ac hieved in 1976.
Similarly, Navra tilo va
sparked the leadin g wo men' s
seeds to an awesome display of
flr st·round power. None of the
fir st five seeds was on court mar('
than 45 minutes.
Navratllova co nceded but one
service game in defeating West
German Cla udi a Porwik 6·1, 6· 0.
No. 2 seed Steffi Gra f also
dropped a service !(arne but beat
Adriana Villagran of Argentina
6·0, 6·2. No. 3 Chris Evert lost
only orie game agai nst Britain' s
Sara Gomer, No. 4 Helena
Sukova dropped fi ve ga mes and
No. 5 Pam Shriver gave up three
games.
Among th e top 10 men. only No .
2 Ivan Lend! dropped a set.
Today, lhe Czechos lovakian fa ·
ces It alian Paolo Cane and Is
followed on Center Court by Graf
and Tine Sc heuer·Larsen of
Denmark.
A fu ll day of play Wednesday
helped cut Into the back log of
matches caused by Monday 's
washout and further rai n delays
Tuesday. And Evert , Navratilava and Jimmy Connors were
among those luxu ria ting in the
return of the sun.
Navratilova needed but 31
minut es for her victory while
Evert required 42 against

Gomer.
"Of ali the players, Martina
and I are the angriest, we've got
the mos t to prove," Evert said.
"Everyo ne seems to think
there' s a changing of the guard.
We're both champions. We've got
a lot of pride and we'd like to win
the tournament."
Connors defea ted America n
compatriot Mar ly Davis, 6-l , 7· 6
17·3). H 17·11 .
"I thought I played quite well,"
he said. "One reason I'm playing
so well is I'm loose, I'm relaxed ,
I'm enjoying th e ten nis a nd the
atmosphere. I'm In a no.pressure
situallo n." .
·
Three other America n seeded
men joined Connors In the second
round wit h No. 10 Tim Ma yolle
beating France's Jean Fleurla n,
6-2. 6-3. 6·3, No. 15 David Pate
slopping Spa nia rd Sergio Casal,
6·4, 7-6(7·51, 7·5, and No .16Kevin
Curren de lea t lng compat riot Ben
Testerman . 7·6 17-5). 7-6 111 ·91 .
6·3.

Pam Shriver . seeded No. o
among the women, routed Nata ·
lia Medved ev a of lhe Sovlrl
Union, 6·2, 6-1.
Among the ot her opening·
round men' s winners were th ird
seed Mats Wllander. No. 5
Miloslav Mecir. No. 6 Ya nn lck
Noa h.

40°/o OFF

------·- --

: (h~fu!~ h~U$~

CROMWELL, Conn. iUPII The Greater Hartford Open features the seco nd -place finisher
from last week's U.S. Open, the
runner·up on the earnings list
and a defendin g champion upset
by his exclusion from the pre·
tournament shootout.
Mac O'Grady, who did not
commit himself to this yea r's
tournament until Su nday, was
shu t out of Tuesday's $10,000,
elght·player shoot out.
"Every defendin g champ is in
the shootout everywhere on the
tour. " O'Grady said . " I expec ted
to be in il when I came here
today.
"If I won the U.S. Open, are you
telling me I co uldn' t play?"
O'Grady snapped at former
Grea ter Hartford Open chair·
man Ted May Jr.

O'Grady shoi a course·record
62 in the fina l round of last year's
Greater Ha rtford Open and won
the first playoff hole by parrlng
the par·3 No. 16.

Since moving to the Tourna·
ment Players Club of Co nnec ti(·ut from the Wethersfi eld Coun·
fry Club In 1984. the tournament .
which begins Thursday , has
gained In respect, popularit y and
prize money. The total purse has
mo re than doubl ed si nce the
move. from $300,000 in 1984 to
$700,000 this year, wilh the
wi nner walking away wit h
$126,000.
The list of co mpetitors in this
year 's tournament shows th e
Increased respect players are
giving to the eve nt.
Tom Wat son. who finished
second in last week's U.S. Open,
leads the list of this year's
par 1iclpants. Wes t Germa n
Bernhard Langer, who tied for
fourth at the ·Open, a nd Paul
Azinger, who ranks second on the
PGA earnings lis t. are also
scheduled to play . In addition,
expected to compete are F uzzy
Zoeller. Ray Floyd and Roger
Maltbie, who finished second In
last year's Open when he lost a
playoff to O'Grady.
Scolt Si mpson. the l:J .S. Open
·champion and the tour's leading
money winner . Is joined by Greg
Norman and Seve Ba llesteros as
the tournament 's most notable
absentees .
O'Grady lied for ninth at the
U.S. Open and has sna pped out of
a slump lhat bega n a ller his
To urn amenl of Cha mpions
victory .
Maltbie has also struggled but
was th ird In the Wes tchester
Classic and fourth In lhe
Mas ters .

Stock 1177671. 2.&lt;Jr. V·8 en~. lact air
oond., auto. tra ns.. CI·COntr~. P:Steer in ~
p·b!akes. tiH st-wheel.am·lm, stereo tape,
.radia l~ '+ ton pickup. long wKJe bed. rear
step bumper. au•. fuel tank gauges.
SALE PRICE

r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- -1

1
I

MIDDLEPORT

~.

L-~~o~. _P~~c~~.=--"
992-5627

USED CARS &amp; TRUCKS

Our Tent Sale Was Such
ASuccess.Our Used Car
Inventory Is Over Stocked...
Management Says "Move'em Out"!!
1986 FORD
F-150 PICKUP

S1 0,555.

Stock #11190. 2-dr. 6 cvl. eng.. fact. air
cond .. p·steering, p·brakes. am·lm. \1 ton
pickup, long wide bed, rear step bumper.
lowMiles.
SALE PRICE

$10,943.

$11,254.
1984 JEEP
GRAND
WAGONEER
Limited
Stock #74881. 4-dr
wagon. v.aeng., tact. '""''""
auto. lrans.. p·steerin ~
b!akes, p-windows, p-seat,
door loc ks. II ~ si·wlteel.
contr~. am·lm. stereo.
wlt·walls. rear wind.
p,auges.
SALE PRICE

Stock #83031. 4-dr sedan.
en ~. lad. air cond., vinyl
auto. trans., p-steering.
brakes, p-windows. p.seat,
door locks. M ·sl·wheel,
co ntr ol. am·lm,
wlt·wal~ .

SALE PRICE

Saturday, July 4, 1987
in observance of Independence Day
For your banking convenience...
we will open our main offices in
Middleport and Gallipolis

9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.

_Thursday, July 2, 1987
THE
CENTRAL TRUSf COMPANY

[!]

•
•

•,•

'

'•
•

.•

•

''l
.

.•

•

•

$9891.

$7258.

$SAVE

•'

Stock #11200, 4-dr hardtop, fact air
oond., auto. trans., p-steering, p·brakes,
p-door locks. tilt st-wheel. am·lm, stereo
tape, radia~ . wh·walls. bucket seats.
window del.. gauge~ low M~ es.
SALE PRICE

IS

Stock #7n41, 2-dr
lr- wh.&lt;Jr~e. 4 cyl., p.sle&lt;!ring
p-brakes, p-windows. ti ~
wheel. cr-control, am·lm,
tape, radials. bucket
gauges.
SAlE PRICE

'

C-10 4X4

1984
GRAJe
MARQUIS

1985 MERKUR
XR411

.

1986 PONnAC
GRAND AM

1985 OIRYSLER 1985 CHEVROLET
BLAZER
LEBARON GTS
Stock 1111180. 4·dr
se1M. lr·wh-drive. fact
cond, auto. trans., o-steering
P·brakes. p-door locks,
control, radials.
SALE PRICE •

Stock #77001. 2·dr station
wagon, Y·Ben~. fact air cond.,
p·sbJeri n ~ p.brakes, am·lm,
tadials. bucket seals.
SALE PRICE

1984 DODGE
D-50 PICKUP
Stock lf76701, 2-dr. 4 cyl.
p-brakes. '~ ton pickup,
wide bed, gauges.
SALE PRICE

$7235. $10,050. $3099.
1984 PONnAC

1984 MERCURY

All
Banking
Offices
Will Be
Closed

.o-

6000

LYNX
Stock lf76031. 2-dr,
dtive. fact. air cond .. P·st~!rin~
am·lm.
·SALE PRICE

Stock #720n. 4-dr
lr·wlt-dr ~e. 6 cyt. enP.. lact.
cond .. auto. trans..
P·brakes.· tilt Sl·wheel.
contr~ . am.fm. stereo.
wh·walls. rear window del.
SALE PRICE

$3892.

S6975.

1983 FORD
T-8110
Stock lf76705. 2-dr coupe.
cyt. en~. fact air cond.,
trans.. p-steerin~
ant·lm. stereo tape.
SAI.E PRICE

$5912. ' $5915.

1912 PONIIAC
6000 l£

Stock lf75621
SAl.£ PRICE

Stock lf77491. 4-dr
lr-wh.&lt;Jrive, 4 cyt.
lrans..
radials. wh·•valls.
rear window
SALE PRICE

S3274• .S2247.

...

•••

..
•

•
•"

.'

�Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Beat of the bend

Making a big splash ...
By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
Melgs County children are
wel co mP to the
· · s um m c r
splash" .
No, it isn' t being held at the
sw i m m I ng
P o o I , •.. t he
summer spl ash
'I s a program being carried out
thi s summer at the Pomeroy and
Middleport libraries to empha sI z c I h c s ummer rea din g
proJ;:ra m.
Children t ak ing part will be-

bard. in Pomeroy 's mini -parks.
----The long-planned fir st all
Meigs High School Alumni Assoelation reunion will be held
Sat urday night at the high school.
The bu si ness session and prelim!narles will be a! 8 with an dance
to be from 9 to 1. Reser vations
ar c $5 a person if they arc sent to
the association at P.O. Box 25,
Middleport, right away . Price at
the door will be $7 a person.
----I washed my car and even thai
didn' t bring rain. Anybody for a
rain dance? Do keep smiling.

Hamburger eat
winners
.named
Winners In Saturday 's

hambur~:er eating contest sponsored
by Pleasers as ,a part or the
Heritage Weekend program
were announced today .
Plaques were awarded to the
first place winners with ribbon s
going to the second and third
place winners . In the 12 and
under category, Brian Frederick, Chester was the first place
winner, Melissa Neutzing, Pomeroy, second , and Katie Sanders.
Pomeroy, third plac e.
In the 1.1 and over class,
Melissa Frederick of Ches ter
was first, wllh Virginia Boyd,
Pomeroy, second. The adult
class win ner was Bob Thompson,
with Pete Parker ta ki ng second.
and Jerry Frederick and Howard

Thursday,_June 25, 1987

The Pixie awerd was presented to Linda Broderick . voted
by the membership as the most
outstanding member, al Thursday tilght 's potluck picnic of the
Middleport Child Conservation
League held at th'e Route 33
Roadside Park.
Carol Rupe, district president ,
was a guest and installed the new
officers , Nancy Morris, president ; Mrs. Broderick, vicepresident ; Peggy Harris, secretary:
Susie Abbott. treasurer; and
Clarice Kennedy , historian.
Peggy Houdasheit gave devotlons and members responded Ia
roll call by telling thei r favorite
picnic food as a child .
The Mother's Prayer and

.MINI WORKSHOPS

pledge to the flag opened the
meeting. A note was read from
Mrs. Rupe thanking the club lor
the gift presented to her by the
distric,t. Members were remindedofthestateconventlonto
be held Oct. 2 and 3 at the Hyatt
Regency, Columbus. Dr. Landon
Smith and·Jack Hanna, director
of t_he Columbus Zoo, will be·
among the speakers.
Guests at the picnic besides
Mrs. Rupe were her daughter
and granddaugher, Cynthia and
Katie Love, Van Wert. Harold
Blackston, Ken Harris, Dale
Colburn, Roger, Travis, Grant
and Carrie Abbott, Frank and
Vincent Broderick, and Gene
Houda shelt.

SIIIR

$111115

.. - -

WOIISIDS

---I
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-·ritiog

'"M -.w s 145.10
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1.,00,

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l;oW Wrlti9
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YO-NO 1

l;oW luildina

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YO-'NIO

.41..
41..
4SAO
41.00

41.00
3101

1111 INia ui:wb4

'

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Clall She n lellnilhll.

CALl 446-4367

,Southeastern

BusineSs College

Jn;r=i-.:::V=:;:;:;::"=\j:;;~-=·ll~t~Jodo;...
~,..;·~~=C~I·;~I';.•,;;;Dk;;,4;,;1 ';1iolt

·~ . ~

~S't.,

1

band s ca n

pick up ;r little ~xtr a change on
.July 4th if lhr·y win In th e
co mpt'l it io n to be hrld at 1he
Hullancl 1-' in· Q(·purtment's ox
roast. l 'rizcs of $!0(1. $7~ and $:.0
w il l lJPu lfcred to thrthree bands
j U(igl'd to be 1he bes t. Any groups
in1Pn •s trfl rna~' t a ll 742 -2421.

9 oz. paste. Reg. 3.89, # AS902
or 18 oz. liquid,
Reg . 3.99 , HAS907

Gunk
Motor Flush

~

Reg . 1.95, # MF-2

Chieftain

J

~

Racing
Motor Oils
20W50, 30W,
40W,50W
Reg. 1.19
· Llmit12

Wire Wheel
Covers

*3r115.00

*5,173. 47

.........

Ill-

.... Oil

.......1'/Ct.CI

UNBE-ATABLE
PRICES

99

¢

Alter
Rebate

UNBEATABLE
SAVINGS

*1,000 CASH

-

Engine Brite
1.~9 ule price

- 50¢ mtr's rebate

Gunk
Engine Brite

yourcost
99.¢ after
rebate

1

OLDSMOBILE

REGENCY BROUGHAM

4 Door. "LOADED" W / Leather Interior

1088

$16,99900

1987 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88
ROYALE BROUGHAM 4Door
Was $18,92C)GD

3 To

f,om/

NowS14,99900
You Save

You Save

t3,921.00

*4,091.00

Many styles, corrosion

LeBra
Front End Cover

resistant. mainten ance free.
Reg . t4.88

Baby Moon
HubCaps

Unique 2"Piece
design otlowa
you 10 raiN hood
or hlldllghts

For most cars, reg . 15.88

without

Trim Ring
Wheel Covers

rem.. lng
cowr. Reg. 49.95

HOURS: Mon., Wed ., Fri. 8:30 a.m. - 8:00p.m.
Tues .• Thurs. 8:30 a.m.-5:00p.m.
Saturday 9:00 a.m.-4:00p.m., Closed ~ ..n.rtAv

For most cars, reg. 7.98

6995

Air Conditioner
Compressors
Silo prlco good
with e•chongo.
Reg. lrom 84.95

94¢

freon

For cw olr conditioning, window,
unlit,,_.,

County Water Conservation
District. He received a trophy
and $3 cash. Ray, 1%, wUI be In
the seventh grade at Southern
Junior High.

You Save

You Save

Your Choice

From

essay contest of the Meigs

$14,58400

$22,123 53

NOW

Th r Wi nding Trai l Garden
Club mrmbrrs and members or
the Meigs County Marvels 4-H
Clu b pitr h!'d In to plant many
flowr r s, dona t ed by Don Hub-

a co-champion winner In the

Was $17,6991111

Was $21 ,09IJCIO

Rr ss ir WPh s trr. Tupp e r s
Pl ai ns. who was associat ed with
the W•' b.&lt; lf'r F ruit Farm In Long
Bot tom for many years. will be
markin g her ~l:l r d birthday on
M01nla_v, .June 29.
Cards may lle sent to th e
Dod r ill Privalt• Home, Atl ., Bes·
sic Wrllster . Dodrill Hoad. Vinton. Ohio ~ 51)8!; .

WINNER - Ray Rogt?r
Prolfltt Jr., son of Ray and
Sheila Proffitt, Syracuse, WIIS

Was $27,2961111

NOW

t6 oz. spray quickly
removes engine grease. grime
Reg . 1.95. #EB·t

16 oz ., removes gum , varnish
and sludge in 5 minutes.

"LOADED" Including Bucket Seats.
Console, Electric Astro Roof.

"LOADED" Including Astra Roof

349

88

'87 OlDS CUTLASS
SALON COUPE

'87 CADILlAC
SEDAN DEVILLE

~

@Kendall
¢

f\ln n prorcss iorw i

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

CCL conduas meeting

come summer splash detectives . - - - - - - - - - - - - J e f f e r s, third, all of PomeroL __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
and track down who made the
splash as lhPy receive their book
titl es i n thrir case book . There is
no set tlmr fo r chi ldren to vlsll
the librar ies nor is there a list of
required books.
Younger children ca n join in
thr fun by becom ing summer
spil•s. Th ey wi ll gel credit for
book s rea d aloud to them. And al l or I he ch ildren in volved in the
program will be invited to a
su mmer splash party on Aug. 15.
Th ere's m uch go ing on. For
examp le, every Wednesda y and
Thu rsday there will be a story
· hour at lhP li bra r irs. ON Wednesdays. it is at 11l::l0 a.m. at the
Pomeroy Li bra ry and al 10:30
a.m. and 1 p.m . on Thursdays at
tho Middlrpo rt Library. Norma
Haw th orne is the stor y teller.
And sp0e·ial rvents co ming up
- well , let me tell you.
On .July I. .Janrt Koblentz wil l
hold a erc·a t i ve wri ting workshop
from 10 a.m. to ll a.m. at the
Pom eroy l.ibra ry_ On .Ju ly 8,
Shirl ey Houslon wi l l have a
After Rebate
Rebate
AIter Rebate
ba sket wea ving works hop at th~
10W30
10W40
Pom eroy. Library from 12:30
5W30
a.m . to :1 p.m. Regis tration Is
Motor Oil
Motor Oil
Motor Oil
required and there Is a $5 fee for
Reg.99¢
Reg.1.09
Reg .1. 09
malcrla ls.
Llmit12
Limit12
Limit 12
Then on .Ju ly 15. Cindy Oliveri
from the Mrigs Extension Ser10W30
vice Offl c c will hold a snack
5W30
10W40
69¢
sale price
makin g works hop at the Pome89¢
sate price
79¢ sate price
- 25¢ mfr's rebate
roy Libra ry.
- 25¢ mfr's rebate
- 25¢ mlr's rebate
Movi ng r ight along In July,
¢
your cost
your cost
6 4¢ your cost
44 after rebate
54 ¢ after
.Jane Coat es will hold a ceramics
· after rebate
rebate
workshop IJrg inn lng at 2 p.m. on
lhc 22nd at the Middleport
Ll br ary and I here Is a $5 fee for
mat('l' ials in volved.
August's spC'cl al C'vc nts aJ7 4¢ sale price
rPmly pla nned are an Icc cream
25¢ mtr's rebate
maldn g work shop from 2 to 3
your cost
ACDelco
p.m. on Aug. 5 at the Middleport
49 ¢ alter
rebate
Purolator
Li br ary co nducterl by Cindy
Non-Resistor
Oil Filters
Ol iVi'ri '"HI at !he Middlepor t
Spark
Plugs
Reg. 3.39. ttmit 2
Library on A ug. 12 from I to 3
Reg. 99e, limit t6
After Rebate
p.m., .J anet Kobl ent z wil l be
holding a pal nllng c lass with
rrg lstration rw tulrccl along with
Resistor Plugs
a $rl rnalrr i,IIS fN'.
1.09
sale price
ACDelco
How I irnrs ha ve changed 25¢ mtr's rebate
retn l'mbr r when you whispered -Resistor
your cost
Purolator
and not to loud ly at that - In th e
84 ¢ after
Spark Plugs
rebate
llbrw· ~ rs.
Air Filters
Reg. 1.24 , limit t6
Alter Rebate
Reg. 4.39. 1imlt2
l'ongra t u lations of Dick Nease,
son of 1\ll co and Pau l Nease,
Houle 7 res idPnts.
Dick r rcriv Pd his master's
degn '&lt;' in English, speech and
drama at thr recent rai ny Ohio
Super Blue Wax
Molar Flush
Stut r• Universi ty graduatio n.
2.88
sale price
1.49
sale price
Dick r&lt;'CPIVl'rJ his degree with a
After
1
.00
mtr's rebate
1.00 mtr's rebate
:1..1 m'e r a~e. He wor-ked as a
. Rebate
your
cost
your cost
superviso r of student teachers
Aller Rebate
1•88 after rebate
49¢ alter
rebate
Simonize
whil(' gl'l lin g hi s new degree.

Super Blue Wax'-~==--

. Thtnday. June

Rig., .••.

195

From

Fuel Pumps

Yourself

1--Tip

Loaa of freon from 1
... t..r ayatom Is one ol
the moln couaoa or
cooling In olr 'con•~lilo.,ln11l
unila. Ackllroon to bring
•ny tYtttm up to

988

A.O.L. Valve

Slla price good
with e•chonge
R19. lrom t2.115

nomiii=~=J

'87 CHEVY
CONVERSION VAN

Cover Gaskets

Great For ~lettion!
"fUUY LOADED"
Was S23,99900

Reg. !rom 2.85

-"'---'!!!

199
Pennate•

NOW

Gaslret Sealer
Reg. 3.11, ,..,.

$)7,99900
You Save

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
· Sttrt l!oun: 1:30 ••· to 1110 p.M. MandiJ through Friday,
1:30
to 6110 , .... Sat••'f 1114110100 ••· to 5:00 p.111. Sunday. ·
llleprtuaJnw.lwl,...llllvouglloluiJ1, 1117.

a.-.

•6,000. 00

209 'Upper liver Rd.
Gallipolis, Ohio

Call

(614} 992-6614

Located Along The Ohio River In Pomeroy
300 W. MAIN SIREEI

POMROY, OHIO

Sale In Efted 6/25/87 To 7/1 /87
I

i

·-

_._

�Page-s ~The

Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 25, 1987

. Thursday, June 25, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Community calendar j area happenings
•

.

THURSDAY
SYRACUSE - Carleton College Board of Trustees will meet
Thursday, 7: 30 p.m., at the
Syracuse Municipal Building.
Members urged to attend.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Vii·
!age Council will meet Thursday,
6 p.m ., at the municipal building.
POMEROY The Meigs
County Churches of Christ will
meet Thursday evening at 7:30
p.m.at the Pomeroy Church of
Christ. Eileen Bowers and Janet
Venoy will have the program.

EAST MEIGS -Eastern High
Boys Track Team picnic, 7 p.m .
Thursday at home of Dennis
Eichinger: those attending to
take covered di sh and tabl e
service.
CHESTER - Meigs County
Fish and Gamex Associa tion
members to m eet at 6 p.m .
Thursday at the clubhouse for a
work session· preparalory to
Sa lurday's fi shing derby .
RUTLAND - Rutland Tow nship Tru stees will meet 6: 30p.m .
Thursday at lhe Rutland Fire
Sta tio n.
MIDDL EPORT -

Women's

Association of the First pres by·
terlan Church. Middleport, will
have a meeting Thursday, 7:30
p.m at the church.

ment sponsored by Racine vu.
!age at· 7:30 p.m. Saturday at
Shrine ·Park with music by
Freddie Sayre, organist; Sue and
Harold Hager and the Bend
River Boys Band . Take lawn
chairs.

949-2594 after 4.

BASHAN - An lee cream
social, sponsored by Bash an Fire
Department and Ladles Auxll·
RACINE - American Legion
Jary, will be held Friday, starting
Auxillary, Racin e Post 602, wl II · at 5:30 p.m ., at i he fire house.
meet at 7: 30Thursday at the hall.
Everyone w el come.
New officers wil l be Installed.
SALEM TWP- Salem Town·
SYRACUSE - Ther e will be a ship Trustees will m eet in regu Big Bend Day Camp meeting for
lar session Friday , 9:30a.m ., at
all leader s and Interested people
the fire hall. Closin g of a portion
Thursday, 7 p.m .. at Syracuse of Town ship Road 326 will' be
Methodist Churc h on Route 124.
di sc u ssed. Th e publi c Is
welco me.
REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Garden Club will have a potluck
GALLIPOLI S
Gallipolis
picnic supper Thursda y 6 p.m. at
Flame F ellowship will mee t
the Belleville Locks and Dam
Friday at Dal e's Smorgasbord
Park.
with Pastor Charles Bush of the
Fellowship Church of Racine as
FRIDAY
speaker. Dinner at 6 p.m . fol·
POMEROY- Pomeroy Senior
lowed by the m eeting at 6:30.
Citizens Dance Club is having a
dance Friday from 8 to ll p.m .
SATURDAY
Music by Larry Hubbard and
RACINE Norris family
True Country. Admission $1.50.
reunion will be held Saturday at
Everyone welcome.
noon at the Shr lners Park,
Rac ine. Relatives and fri ends
RA CINE- A women's softbal l
a re in vited.
tou r nament, sponsor ed by South·
ern Athletic Boos ters, will be
RAC INE - Southern Local
held Friday and Saturd ay at
School District Board of E duca ·
Southern Hi gh School in Racine.
tlon meeting, 8 a.m. Sat urday
Entry f ee $65 and two softballs.
morning in high school cafeter ia .
Trophi es to be awarded. For info
ca ll 949-2493 during the day or
RACINE - Free entertain-

---

CHESTER - Annua l fishing
derby of Meigs County Fish and
Game Association, Saturday, B
a.m. to 2 p.m . at the farm near
Ches ter for young people 16 and
under: prizes and free lunch.
Participants must provide own
poles and · bait, no minnows
permitted. Evening dinner for
members only.
CHESHIRE - H ym n sing at
Valley Baptist Church, Cheshire,
7 p.m. Saturday featuring the
M cDaniel Trio and J erry
Frederick.
TUPPERS PLAINS - There
wi ll be a chicken barbeque on
Sat urday at the Tuppers Plain s
firehouse, sponsored by the East·
ern Athletic Boosters . Serving
will begin at 11 a. m. Dinners will
b&lt;' $3.50 and wil l includ e chicken,
baked bea ns. slaw and roll.
EAST MEIGS - A Class 0
softball tournamen t . sponsored
by Orange Township Fire De·
partment . will be held Saturday

and Sunday at Eastern High
School. Entry fee $65 and two
softballs. Trophies will be
awarded. For lnfocall667-6986or
667-6762.

SUNDAY
RACINE - Annual family
reunion of John RosE' and Annie
Cox Rose, Sunday at l p.m . at the
home of Jjm and Karen Holter
Werry, nea r Morning Star,
Racine.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.The descendants of Sam and
Melvina Birchfield will hold a
r eunion Sunday , June28, starting
at 12 noon, at the youth center
building, Harmon Park, Point
Plea~ant, W.Va.

c.. ..__
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WlCNUDAYOAOIO
liiii~IOAY•A•i ~

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follov.•in! u;/eplt one exdt.tln!t:l ...

--··-··-

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···-·-=n---- -·-...··

T-.,. •

~ (614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-.6601

ti'J- -

U . S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
FARMERS HOME ADMINISTRATION
BALLOT FOR COUNTY COMMITTEE MEMBERtSI

State(name) _ _ _ __ _ __,
O.:,:H::;IO:___ _ _ __
County 1name) _ _ __ _:A:T.:,:H
.:,:E:.::N::;S::.. .:.:
M:::E.:,:
IG,_,S::.·.:
V.:.:
IN::T.::.Oc;N:.._
'Cand idate( s)_ _ __ _ !!!M!!!AR!!CTH!!!A,_,A"-.-"
LEceE_ __
RON IASTMAN

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____________________ 0
J. .. CANDIDAIE(sl

VOTER CERTtftCAitON STATEMENT
Subpart Vol Part 2054 of Tille 7. Code of federal Regulations re·
quirts that ali voters tor FmHA cou nty or area committee elec·
lions meet the follow ina eligibility requirements: (a) be farmers~

(b) derive the principal part of their income from farming (lhal is
more than 50 percent of their cross income must come from acri·
cultural production): (c) have th~ir principal !ar~ing ~pera t ion

By submitting this ballot. I attest that I meet the criteria to vote.

Mr. and Mrs. Mark Norton
stationed at Oceano Naval Air
Station. Virgi nia Beach, Va .. are
an nouncing !he birth of a son,
Anthony Aaro n, born April 5. The
Infant weighed seven pund s,
three ounces. Gr andparents are
Mr. and Mrs . Harold Norton,
Pomeroy. and M rs . Violet Murray. Coolvi lle, and the great ·
gra ndparent s a rc Mrs. Eula M ae
Odega rd and Mrs. Della Norton.
both of Pome1·y . Mr. and Mr s
Nor ton have two daughtet·s. And I
and Marlena.

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PARTS~PR:ew:e

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6· 17-lfc

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•

PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121

'

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••

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Tram1lsslon

•

••••

•

Rl. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

o

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AUTO

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!AGL!I UUI- POMIROT, OH.
IHUIS.:7 1111- 11 6:4!
]0 HaHl rnd l~urn~1

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N.EW
GFitPS

The Daily Sentinel

'3. 00

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wotl• !lq ·!I (Jf1!l IJU' ·
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Trenchinc of Any Type
Backhoe Service
Plumbinl Service
Custom llioldln1
lowboy Hauling
Septic Systems
We Carry Concrete CutYerts
Licensed I. Bonded

WILLIAMS
TRENCHING SERVICE
Rt. 4. Hysell Run Road
PomOfoy, Ohio 45769
PH. (6141992·2834 or
992-6704- free Eslimetes

''.

1·13·1 ....

...' '

....·...

NATIONWISE AUTO PARTS 209 Upper River Road in Gallipolis 446·4103

"""

Delco
I

GARAGES
POLE STYLE or
CONVENTIONAL

FREE ESTIMATES

PH. 992-2772

6-2·87-1 mo.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

•VINYL SIDING
• AlUMINUM SIDING
*IIOWN IN
INSUlATION

HOMES &amp;GARAGES
"At Reosonoblt Prius"

PH. 949-2801
or 949·2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

RADIATOR
·SERVICE

•w•••••lllilt

····2160

PAT HILL FORD

BISSELL
"Free Eltlmate1"

PH.

... ····2101
lieS

jtC.

3-11-1111

992-2191
Middlepon. Ohio

1-13-tfc

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Public Notice

•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

LEGAL NOTICE
. . TO BIDDERS
Shied proposals. in dupti·

PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-lk

cate, bearing the title of the
wortc and the name of the
bidder, will be received in
the office of the Treasurer of

BOGGS

the Board of Education
Southern local School Dis·

SALE~ &amp; SERVIC~
U. St RT. SO EAST

trict. Post Office Bok 176,
Racine, Meigs County , ·
Ohio, 46771 by Dennie Hill,
Treesurer, for the Board of
Education of th e Southern
Local School District until

GUYSVILLE, OHIO

o..

Authorized John
re,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

12:00 Noon. Eastern Day·
light Savings Time on July
10, 1987 for the installation
of new heater and modernnization of the existing warm
air heating and ventilating
system in the present Racine
Junior High School, Racine,
Meigs County, Ohio, alf in
accordance with specifications on file at the office of
the Treasurer of said Board .

Fatlll EquipMent
Patts 8. Setvilee

by popular
request and in larger
sizes. Crochet prelty
Bids witt be publicly
·pineapple
lop in worsted
opened and read aJoud at .
12 :00 Noon Eastern Day .
weight cotton . Women's
Saving• Time on July
Sizes 40 to 46 incl.
. 1987 in the office of the
Each pattern $3.25 plus
Board of Education .
the Southern local Board
75¢ postage/handling.
Education reserves the
IN.Y.resK!enls aciJ sales tax I
to refu se any and all

I~;:~~::.~Hilf.
Tre11urer
I~
Local Board

Send to:
Rlltltr IIIII

The Daily Sentinel
62.()8 Hortt1em Blvd., Woodllde,
NY 11371. Print Nlme, Addms,
Zip, Silt, Plfte!IIIUnbel.

MARCUM
CONTRACTING .
CHESTEI, OHIO
•WINDOW REPLACEMENT

ACCENT

Let Us Fuce You In
FREE ESTIMATES
AEStD ENT IAL/ 1;01!4M EACIAL

•REMODELING &amp;

ROOM ADDITIONS
•GARAGES &amp; POLE
BUILDINGS

REFERENCES
Phone Day or henlng1

985-4141
GEIIEIAL

AClOIIS

PH. 742-2027

Jt(J~tB~·
e'l1J m . :
I~·J

PEAT'S SHARPEN UP
A COIU INU.,.IS(

915-4112 or u·r.A•n•

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry fishing Supplln

'

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here
·
t iUSINill PHON!
t6141 992-·!10
IESIDENCE PHON!
.t6141 992-77S4
1178111"

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949-2168

I

SUPERIOR

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL
Riverine Antiques

SIDING CO.

1124 (osl Main St.
Pomoroy

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked in homo area

HOUR!: lut.-Wod.•frl.
11 a.m. to 7 p.m .
Iunday: t p.m.-7 p.m.
By (ho,ct Of App.tntmtnt

20 year1
" Free Estimptes"

RUSS MOORE

EUGENE LONG

992-2526

CAll:

5·21·87· 1 mo.

Ph. (6 I 41 843-S425

1&amp;1 BLOWN
INSULATION

Residential and sm•tt com·
mercia! uails. lnstalllt:ion of

duct wort humidifiers. fur·
ntce. hut pumps. and air con·
dltianinr
At! worl cumn!otd. C•tl:
(614)915·4222(rosidence)
'$i&gt;ttili: Hltl PiiCiiCe cent" I
air condltonil&amp; for mobile or

modut1r holies. tnslalttd on
pad
r•rly to cool. Price:
Jl
plus ln.
2~ too Htet Pump ift.
Jl!ll!l:.tlt&lt;t!K fu,.....

VINYl &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•Insulation

•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Window•
•New Roofing

" FRH £SitMAIES"

JAMES KEESEE
PH; 992-2772

CAlm
III'IIOUliiY PWS

446-6323 - t;!.,
Any liri.. l -

llttll - 134.95

Alty21.........
Haft- 144.95
Ally, ........

IWI-SSUS

AJsr5.._ ..
IWI -JtUS

I / lUI ...

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR

Truck, auto, &amp;
heavy equipment
repairs and
welding .
(At! makes &amp; models)

PH. 949-27 56
John II. Bentz
Owner /Mtchani£

J. J.'I7· l "''·

6-2·17·1 mo.

L&amp;W CLEANING
-

YOUNG'S

J.R.'s REPAIRS

CARPENTER
SERVICE

TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation

Addona and remodeling .
Roofing •nd gun• work
Concrete w ork
Ph.tmbing •nd el•ctrical
VII'Ork

I Fro Estim1tn)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
"2-621S or 992-1314

,_oy, Ohio
4-15-' 86-lc

An nou nee me nts
3 Announcements
Captain O'a All Vou Can E•t Fi sh
Dinner Sunday, July 6th. 11 :30·
4 100 at the Southern High
School Cafeteria. Racine. Sponsored by the Southern Sand.
Ad11ance ticket• for eg.. 13
through adults , t4.25: under
13. •2.60. TheaatickMI may be
obtelntd from eny band memb..or 11 the High School Of11ce.
Ticket• at door S4.60 and
02.76.

4

Givaaway

Kittens: 2 black males. 1 gray
male, 1 grayS. wl'llte female. Call
614-446 -3539.

Service
Electronic Organs
Mobile service

614-843-5248
IUSDIIAIU • HUAILE
8-i0-'86 tfn

11

Help Wanted

Meet nice peo ple. Mak e new
trlendt . Sell Awon &amp; earn 85$ .
Call 6,4-446-2166 .
•40 or more free merc~andh!llil
far hev inQ just a S136 needl e
cfatt clan . New Christmas
catalog. Call JoAnn , 614-3888833 .

Reps Needed for business ac·
count&amp;, Full -time. 860,000 880.000. part-lime. t12.000818,000. No selling, repeat
butln"'· Set your own hours.
Training provi ded . C11ll 1-612938-8870. M-F. 8am to 5pm
{Central Standerd Tlmel
Progressive Heelth Cere Facility
is actively soeklngan RN to serve
in the capacity of director [)t
nurse1. For a ,00 bed, SNS·ICS
Facility. Loeatid In Southealt·
ern Ohlo. Pr8\liOul ~kperlen ca ia
deeired but not required. Exc .
selary II b11nelits. Appty at
Scenic Hilla Nur sing Center.
Rt.2 8o~ 262 Bidwell, Ohio
45614 or sand reauma.
Someone to live in S. care for
elderly lady-not bedf u t, li ght
houaewDfk, non·amoker. live•
in Gallipolis . Cell 614 -4462386. 614 ·446 ·0322. 01 6t4·
446· 3617..

8 bags yard ute Items. Clothes,
odd ende ... Mutt teke all. Call
614-446-6566 :

5 long htlred kitttnt. 6 weeks
old. Cell 81 4· 446·•858.

Wanted: L&amp;dy to live in wi1h
elderly ambul81ary lady . S1ay
nights, (:Ome end go during day.
Prepare Me111. light housekeep,lng . Ca n 6U - 99~-5439 .
Dental Auiatant full t ime hr
Columbus. Ohio. Must be nonsmoker. Pi ck up applications at'
206 N. 2nd . Ave. Middleport,
Ohio and send to 446 W.
Schrock Rd .. Westerville. Ohio
43081 .
Independent COntractor wanted'
to tear down house. WriHen bids
IJlUSt be received by J l1ly 6,
1987. Co nta c t Middlepo rt
Church of Christ, 5th and Main
St ., Middleport , Ohio 46760.
614· 992 -29 14.
Truck dr i ver~ naedad. Male or
female. Call 614-992·2321 or
1-800· 247-4516 .
Ap plicarions now being &amp;c·
ceptod for 11 part lime ovoning'
shift po1itlon for Med icsl l1b
te&lt;:hnlcan. Contact penonnel
office Pleasant Valley Hotp,
Valley Drive, Paint Phtl'ltllnt , W.
v•. 1 ·304 -675-4 340.
Full tima, Applicant mutt be

Dllperi&amp;nCDd in changing car.

hu ck &amp; tractor tlros , front end.
alignment 11 plus. Must tle11e
mechaniclll td~iliti os . Ap-ply In
person only. No phon e calla
pleou . Ohio Vellay Tir e Outh!ll ,
Gallipolis Ferry. WV.
Need country Ot blue grass band
tor July . 4th. VAlley Vol. Fire
Dept. 304-676-2434 or 678-'
2479 .

Choo se •so In marchendite free
in addition to your reoular
Hosten award when you are a
Queen'• Way Fashion Hosteu:
between June 29 -July 19 .
1987 . Affordable laahlan all
re11on·all season. Call 614·
448· 7287.

Area Ottmonstratora needed tor
Christmas Around The Wotld.
Set own haur11. Party Plnn . Frea
I&lt; it. No collecti ng or dellwerlng.
For d eta ils call 304·676· 56081
Th e aky'a the lim it I Can t odayI ·

Floral dt1lgner. hperlence n11·
ceu•rv. Fu ll-time. Send re sume
to box T-240 o&amp;rt of the
Ga11tolle Dally Tr ibune, 825
Thlr
A11e. Galilpoli1. OM
48631 .

M1ke new friend a, mak e money I
Sign for A11on. now I 814 · 388·
9340.

Heating S. Air Co nditlonlnq
service·man; tlto ineta llttlo~
man with at lea1t 6 yeart
experience. Reply t o Box C· 23.
care Pt . Pl. Register. 200 Meln
So. Pt. PI , WV .

..

12

Situations
Wanted

Mowing. trimming, odd
Call814· 992· 6589 .

jobs .~

Brenda take~ care of elderly:
people In h11r home. 10 vra ~
el'lpe rlen ce. Lo11lng cere. Call
814·992 · 8940.

16

Schools
Instruction

Discover musi c th la aummer
with lndiYid1.111 guitar. batl
gutter, leUMI at Brunl01 rdla
Mu• lc. Call tqr openlnga 614446 · 0687, lnstructar J fl fJ
Wamsley , 814 ·448-8077.

18 Wanted to Do
Septic tank pumping, realdentlalo
&amp; .c amm erl cel. tBO per load.

Ron Evan• Enu1rprins. Jlckton:
Oh io. Ctll 614 · 288·5930
Jlm'1 odd jobs Plintlng. dr lweWIY reeullng. c arp ente r wor k !I
roof repeir. trefla &amp; l'ledgM
experienced . Call 614 -a79 2416 ,
J im's odd job•. pJiintlng, dr l11e·
wav re16allng. cerpAnter work &amp;
root repelr, tree• &amp; hedgtl ,
uperlenced . Ph . 614- 379(
2418.
Houae or office cleaning wulcly .,
Call 814·446· 2427.
Can dD llghr h1ullng 1nd roo ling.
Rouontble ruu . M11r lo n
Snider. 81 4 ·948 ·2829 .
lawn mower reptHr. Will ph;:k up
and delhtar. AIIO light hauling,
Call 014· 742-2393 or 814742· 3091,
Will oau1 f()r person In thfllr •
f1 ome. Hftvfl kad home nursing
t rtinlng. 304-89&amp; -320 38. , :
College ltudents need W[)rk.
LAwns, hedge., windows, wuh
&amp; wex c.r1. 304-876·221 3.

r:;;~~=======1::::.L:=~~:~~;:;:;:;:=.

been in back of a pic kup , Plaa1tt
Call 814·446· 7222 or 446·
9287-llk Sheron . Rew1rd.
Found: 4-lteye: (one with picture
of elephtntl in back of park. Cell
to Identity .,,,._4415 -3807 .

Earn txtr.!l money! Hilve fun !'
Re ceive big awards and prizeal
Sell Av[)n. 1 bottle free cologne
to first ten to complete M
application and accept a am o~ ll
territory. 6,4 -99 2-354.3.

Needed - 2 people forp&amp;rt-tlme
help. Cell 304 -676·2295 betwaen 5 · 7 evenings.

Small mate poodle type dag . 1 Btbyaitter needed. Rio Grande
y11r. , m•l•. 1 temele ca~ . 1 •aa. Cal1614· 882· 7373.
female khten. Ca ll 814 ·44t!l·
GOVERNMENT JOBS .
2646 or 614· 44,· 2828.
•16,040 · 159,230 vr. Now
Hiring.
Call 80&amp;-687-6000 Elct .
Kitten to gtveawty. 5 Y, weeks
uld. Ready to go . long haired A·8805 for current federalll1t.
blue ty'ed Persian stock. C1ll
The M1lgs locel School Ola trlct
6U·2•&amp;-5024.
It currently ••eking •ppllcat lon•
trom
clftlftad eppllcants for an
Upright plano. Need• tuned. Cell
Aulstent Veraitv Fo otball
814·949· 288 1.
Cotch, 7th 1nd 8th Grade
8 to 10 large baga of clothing 10 Football Coa ch, Boye' 8th0rade
give away. Good clothing. ell Buketbtn Coac:tl, Boya· 7th
Grade Baskttball Cotch. A11l11·
typ e~ . C1ll 814· 843· 6174 .
ani Hlgh School Trtck Coac.::h.
High Trtck Coach, A11l1t·
Several carton• of church u1ed Junkrr
1n1 Junior High Tr;ck Coech,
hymn baolta. 304·175-48&amp;5 .
Girls Volleybatl Caach, Glrl1 '
3 mtle klttent. 304·875· 0930. Anlstant Volleybtll Coach.
Girls' Reserve loftbtll Co1ch,
16•18 wooden garage. Mull ba Girls' Junior High Beakttblll
removed from premiaes. 3408 Coach, High School Chtlfltader
Adv iso r. Frestvnan Ch•erlatder
Franklin Ave .
Advleor and Junior High School
5 WMk old part Germen She- Chtetletder Adv ltor tor the
phatd pupplea to good home. 1987· 88 schoo l ye~r . Appllctnll must l'lold a walld Ohio
304-171 · 7968.
&amp;etching certificate tnd for
Whitt temele poodle l Y1 yeer1 w•chlng positions must meet
certlllcltlon requirement • or
old . 304-675· 7882 .
Ohio for eporte medi ci ne tnd
Share the joy of new lif• with CPR. Person• in1era11ed thattld
your children. free mother cat. cafttect Dan E. Morrlt, Superln·
tendent of Melg t Local Sehoul•.
304· 875-8617.
et 621 South Third Avenue In
Middleport, Ohio.

6 lost and Found

11 · Help Wanted

E11p . Child CareWorlcer. Reaum e
required. Contact Ohio Job
Services. Call614 -448 -1683 .

District Technlclen fot th e Gellle
Soli &amp; Weier Conservat ion O'isPuppy : 1/ 2 pefl;inge~e, 1 / Gorgi; trlet. Minimum raquiremenu
Include a high tehool diploma ,
3 1h moflths old. Ce ll 614· 367·
with tddltlonal education tnd or
0209.
axper,ance preferred. farm baelcground. eblllty to wark wllfl
5 pleyful kittene. Call BH -446no·tlll equipment. good ma·
7920.
thtmatical 1nd communication
AKC 7 year old Doberman skills. and the ability to work
Femele. To good home. Call with people. Appllott lons will be
accepted et the District Oftlce tt
614·446·4886.
529 J1cKaon Pilt!t, Room 308·C.
4IOYelbleklttenJ. 3 meletabbyl Galllpolle, OH 4663, through
July 9, 1987. Contact 1 Pett'f'
&amp; 1 male g,ay. To goad home.
Oyer, District Conaervetlonlat.
Calle 14-367· 7228 .
t!l14•44t!l-8t!l87 . .. elary i1 negoc·
ieble
be1td on tllptfience and
3 male klttena, 2 montha old.
Black &amp; white. Call after 8, educetion. In addition to, prom&amp;14-379-27&amp;4 or &amp;U.-448· otlng no-till practices the applicant should hava an lntarast In
4987.
working wllh loc:at ltndownen
7 pupplee. 4 male. 3 lemele. C•ll In promoting aound conserve·
after 8, 814-379·2784 or 814· tlon preotie4ts 1nd thewiseute of
our aoll 6 water resources.
446·4987.

vard S&amp;I8B
1

·.. ···· Gamjjons·....... .. .......PfPieasii'rif .... ·
'

loll : Juna13th-2 fl1hlng rode a.
reels at Tycoon Lake. Ca ll
61 4·388·9938. Reward ,
lOll eat. long h1ired malt. Tana.
brown . Sl•meu m•rlting .
Brown coller . 325 ne~r Rio
Grande. Reward. C•ll 1514--2469591
Found; Old female B•egle dog.
Found by Bee(:h Grove Ceme-tery. 814·992-2754.
LDst: femMe Fo• ti ound. White
with light tan ears. Wtt.,lng
orenge co ll~r . 6,4-843 -534t!l,

5·22-87·2 mo. pd.

HEAnNG &amp; COOLING

~AliT Am}

Lost
; Saturday,
87, Ohio
gray
&amp;
white
female 6120/
cet: ne•r
Vellll'y' Livest ock. She may htv4

({1

VINYl &amp; ALUMINUM

II THE

4·22 - 87-ltn

,r-~.~rif4.

;&gt;

51 1/ rln

HAND II CIR. SAWS
CARBIDE TIPS
SCISSORS · SNIPS
PLANER BLADES
ROUTER BITS
CLIPPER BLADES
KITCHEN KNIVES
PRUNERS · BAND
SAWS · CHAIN SAW
CHAINS
3S 171 Ook HiM ld.
Lo"l httom, OH. 45743

168 North Stcond
Middleport, Ohio 4 57 60

ROOFING

FENCE COMPANY

•ROOFING •SIDING

HUO
ALL
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

Howard L. Wrltesel

' 4-16·J6·1fn

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

SIDING CO.

GEIERAl 8AffERY
COIIPORAT/01

CUSTOM BUllT

tCUT OUT FOR FUIURI U!ll

•Waehera •Dishwashers

10·8-lfc

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Profonional
CHESIEI, OHIO 45720
6-15·87-1 ,mo.

All Mahc

.

........' ... .. '

'

CUSTOM BUILT

JOHN TEAFORD

. IJ8S-35&amp; 1

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

TRENCHING IS OUR LINE
'

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

TROPHIES
PLAQUES
BADGES

FREE OFFER
3 Craft Books {value $8.85)
when you order one oilhe
$2.95 books listed below.
111-Hairpin Crochet
t 1~asy Ripple Crochet
t t7- Art of Needlepoint
t 3f&gt;-Oolls and Clothes
Add $1 .05 lor poslageAiandli~.

1H'"'"'"·25Ohio
: (7) 2. 9, 4tc

992-3410

i:f(l' 110 i'I'.IP!!
~ I, 'r P• (,j!l'"' •

1111'1' : ~,, iU\Iom,, fl''
ltf1Q(l (,(IU'IIl

Operated by R.A.L. Auto Parts, Inc. a licensee of Nationwise, Inc.

Oil Filters *Complete Chaisis lubt *Check Fluid le..ls *Check
lattery IVehiclts Requiring Special/Extra Oil slightly Hightr)

I
992-6421
I
I
I m tnO"'Qf Coupon Good OPEN 8-S.I
"' ·-···
thru
~::: Y I
I ~.
July 15, 1917
FRIDAY
I

•

'

'

I

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

•

•

•

....
... .

III

Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge

0

•

I

COOPER

. .... .... .
....
..... .
......
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.............
. . . . . .. ...
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............
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.
.
.
.............:::: ::: :::::: :
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....
. . . . . . . . ....
. . . . . ... . . .
........ ..............

Roger Hysell
Garage -

' 8 . 00

Sencl to:
Rtldor Mail

Business Services

Norton birth

GOLF
LESSONS

z"

of Education

(6) 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 28. 29. 6tc

THE
KOUNTRY ClUB

i2118 Northern 9~d., WOOdside,
NY mn. Print Name, Addfts~
Silt. Plttem Number.

placed inside the envelope you use to mail your ballot.
Your name and address must be legible on th&amp; outer
envelope. Fe:ilure to provide this informatipn will
render Your ballot invalid . Ballots and envelopes may
also be obtained from your local FmHA office .

ANTHONY AARON NORTON

417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

940-Popular pineapple
design is used for a
handsome afghan. that's
easy to crocf1et all in one
piece . Use synlhetic
worsted. Complete direc·
tions.
Each panern $3.25 plus
75e postage/handling.
jN.Y.resxienls add sales !al l

TON COUNTIES are listed in the ballot below. Th e
qualifications of persons votin(l are described in the
" Voter Certification Statement." For further information regarding voting and voter eligibility. see the
county office listed above. FmHA elections are: open
to all eligible voters without regard to race, color, reli ·
gion. national origin, age, political affiliation. marital
status , sex, and / or handicap .

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

~ .Licensed Clinical Audiologist

;;~~~~~

ensure a secret ballot. This blank envelope should be

THERE'S NO

-~

t~-

nut Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio, not later than JUNE 30,
1987. If you do not vole in person you should mail
your ballot inside a blank envelope marked ballot to

WAY

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
~ Swim Molds • Interpreting Services

n--.~~ot•

n-v..•-··

FARMERS HOME ADMINISTRATION , 105 Butter·

POMEROY The annual
lam ily picnic of Pomeroy Chap·
ter 186. Order of the Eastern
Star. will be held at 5:30p. m . on
Sunday at the home of Nial and
Virginia Salser, Syracuse. The
picnic is for members and their

__......

.,.

11- -'l'oiCI••·

........

NI- e - o
~-­
NI-~
.. a.·~­
• t- a-Dioo
Nt- &amp;oo!Wo11'1-•-•

Services

....

u--

We pey oash for'lete moderc: leenusad ears .
Jim Mink Chev.-Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson
614-446 -3672

Employment

,,_,
,._,._,.a.

- C . . Wif

.o.-e .....

Wantad To Buy

=~:.:::z....

-· -- ·-

~

with in the county or area for wh1ch the elect1on ts btmg held.

TRUCK~""!!~ 95

~--

. . .,

...,.._
...
.......- " ............
.. ..............

9

a - - .......

--··-·
..1u---.--•
__
1---

oTt .•

The Farmers Home Administration (fmHA) County
Committee election this year will be held on JUNE 30,
1987. The ballot below must be filled out, detached
and mailed and received or returned iil person to

TO OUR
SELECTION

S1695

_,_t, ____ _

t!UII

tU.
Nl.
IJil ,.,

Please detach this notice befor e voting ballot

SPECIAL

I

· ·· ~

·=':."
........:::- ~-:::=
::~ ~'!7 : :-;"
4 .. .. - .. ...... _ , _

' ONLY VOlE FOR

1 lndudts: *New Oillup to 5 qts. cars/6 qh. trucks) *New Mopor

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

".................
1--··. --.. _...,.:::.

- _ ...
-

...

...
.,...

NOTICE OF ELECTION

POINT PLEASANT - McDa·
nlel Trio and Jerry Frederick
will sing at 10 a.m . Sunday at the
Grove Baptist Church.

·------------------1LUBE, OIL &amp; FILTER I

I

·•-• ee .... _, ,., ___ _

.......
.o_,._,
. .......-Cl.lo.....
. _ __ .......... ..

10.0...

lOA..

t D•I'I
IOCioll. .
tltlltrrll

r------------

Summer corpJ
begim work

CARS

.. . ..

RATf.&amp;

POINT PLEASANT - Reun·
Jon by descendants of Sam and
Melvina Birchfield, noon at
youth center building, Ha r mon
Park, Point Pleasant.

JORDAN MARK WILLIAMS

I1

...,.11........ _ _ _

,_.._ .._......
r;e;-:. ·-.
·---

. ,._Ill ,. . _Il ··-·

Tho state ol nominees for ATHENS. MEIGS 8o VIN·

' ... The firs t bi r thda y of .Jordan
·'Mi!Tlr Will lams was observed
re&lt;:e nlly with a family part y at
the home of his paren ts, Mark
and Trudy Williams, Hysell Run
Road , Pomery.
A teddy bear theme wa s
carried out In the decora ti ons
and a theme ca ke was served
with other r efreshment s. A tt end·
Jng and presenting gift s besides
his parent s werE' his sister.
Ka sey, his grandparent s, Car l
and Dorolhy Roach and Ray and
Iris William s, hi s great grandmother , M arie Franci s,
Raymond Roach, Glenn, Co nn ee
, ·and Clay E nslen, Ri chard, Pen·
nee an d Courtney Knapp, Roc,
Ter l, Roxane, and Zachary Wllll·
ams, and Darin Roach.

I

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

. ... ... _

'woo••
•.l#to
~~~D~ ¥ .0"10

Williams birthday

Summer Youth Litt er Corps,
working the r oadsides of M eigs
County. T he youths will be
opera ting through August 14,
collecting litt er under the super ·
vision of Larry Driggs.
In addition to Driggs, Char les
Jacks, Ga ry Rife and Kenton
Ramsey comprise this yea r 's
SYI.C crew.
The Summer Youth Utter
Co rps Is partially funded by a
special gra nt or $2.:&gt;00 from the
Ohio Depa rtment of Natural
Resourees. Office of L.IJter Prev·
entlon and Recyc lin g. This gra nt
Is used by thr Meigs Co unt y
Commissioners to pr ovide trans ·
portation and other mat erial
support for the SYLC. Additiona l
support Is prov id ed by the Ohio
Depar tment of Na tural Resour ces. Office of Li t trr Prevention
and Recyc ling for bags · and
supervisor sa lar y. Wage support
for the youths Involved Is pro·
v lded through the Ga llla·Melgs
Community 1\ctlon Ag ency
JTPA Program . Additional support Is bl'lng provided by county
and state highway depar tments.
PleasNs Rrstaurant aiHI the
Meigs County Office of Litt(•r
Control.

JO PIJCI AM ao UU. t91-2116
MONDAY lhru FiliAl. AJl t. S P.M.
I AJt. ~til NDON SATUIOAl
ClOYI SIJND.U
"'Jl!tt!l
,~

PORTLAND -' Descendants of
late Albert and Eliza Hill annual
reunion Sunday at Por!)and Park
with covered dish dinner at noon;
all relatives and friend Invited.

Business
Services

families .
KYGER The Bradbury.
Jenkins family reunion will be
held June 28, at the Kyger
Community building.

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 9

B

Public Sale
8o Auction

Rick Punon Auctioneer licenled ln Ol'lio end w..t Vlrgi·
nle. Real Eetete, •ntiqut, ferm,
llqu ld•t lon ulea. 304 · 773 ·
6785 Ot 773-5430 .

9

Wanted To Buy

TOP CASH paid lor '83 model
tnd newer uted c1u . Smith
Buldi·Pontlae. 1911 Eutern
AvtL , Gelllp olis . Cell 814 -446·
2282.
Buying d1ity gold. sltver coinl,
rings, jewelry, aterling ware. old
coins, l•g• currency , Top pri·
c•· Ed BurkeH Blrbtf Shop.
2nd. Avt. MiddlttPCrt. Oh. 014·
992·3478 .

&amp; Vicinity

&amp; Vicinity
·
..................................

ESTATE SALE-CompiMe hou1s·
hold of furniture . e~tra nice.
toole, an~lques , clot hing 6 etc.
Starting Wed . 24 until ell eotd.
On Rt. 180 tbout 7 mllln h om
ho1plta l -yellow home--o n right .
Welch for 1igns.

Thur. Frl S11t. Living room Illit e , :
coffee tllble. dllhAI. nic-nac• .
toy a. edult &amp; children cl01hing. A •
little bit of evaryth lng. All i1em• •
Chup. 607 Henderson St •
H•ndttno n, WV .
•

V·tWd Sale: 1604 Chath t m.
9:00-IS :OO . Frldey S. Saturday .
Stle, Second hou1e on
Butwllle Pike. 1 mil t ltom
Poner. Nawborn 10 adult clo·
thinp. furniture, free nandlne
fireplaet. home Interior, cur·
taint . Thurs. Fri. a. Set .

Y~rd

Cen1en11ry Townh ouatll. Sat. An tiques. pi• safe. drt1111rs. lionel
train. ul•uwart. ki,chen collect lbl", clothing, tools .
700 Third Av• . Girls&amp; boystilel
2T-3T. Lawn mower1. Thurt .. &amp;
Fri. 9 · &amp;.
Michigtn Sele, Oululng due to
haalth problems. No reasonable
oHttf refused. 50 Neil Ave.
V'lfd Stlt. Johnson'• Tra iler
Ptrk. No. 39. Slturdly, June
27. 9AM ·IPM . Ftreperlng to
bf'uk up housekeepin g.
V'lfd Sale. U2 Portsmouth Rd.
At SperltltSupply Co. Juna26 &amp;
27. 9AM·l

..... "Pt 'Piiiiisii.rif ....
&amp; Vicinity

Gar119B u ltt, baby hums and lot• ~
more. Juno26 · 27 , 9 :00to3 .00 .,
303 7th , New Haven.

....... Pom·erov......
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
.............................

-··

Hou&amp;ehold lu rntt ure and vard '•
u le. 6,4. 992 -3543 Ju ly hi. '
2nd. a nd 3rd . 9 .00 s:oo:·
Oueen·• l1ed ltn d fu ll til ed hid II::
8-bed s. aofe and chflir, rttclinar..
t~ nd !ova co uch, wood lrd tcheno..
dimrtt e 11nd cha lu, belly horse :
wtlllo,er. end clo thes New ltt · •
va lor Bllndt , ~r~~trfou s silos, ~
•&amp; .00 , each, Chlld"m and adull ·
clothr1111. all 1bet-1ome new. :
Junt , lamp and mise, n1.1w hot •
Wiler heater blt nk et 88.00. •
TOGis, toys, bowling ball. 1 mile •
aatt at Rutland, 372!56 St. Rt. •
1 24- betwaen Enon and Sub· •
St11ion.
l-luge 5 tamlly, June 26th and :
27th. 9:00 .5:00. In front of •
Rutland Mintt Su pply.
_ _ _ _ _:..:_:__ -le - •
June 25th. 26th and 27t h. 9 10"
6. North aide of Sttte Gar1ge, :
Rt . 7. Pomeroy .
'.
3 family, , 16 S . Second, •
Middleport. Frld~. Juno 2G . •
9:00-1.
•

::---:---:--:-::--:--- - - -

.

Don't mi11l Saturday only, June :
27th. 8 :00·4:00. 291 Walnut :
Middleport . All tlzet children tO~
ldulu. loll of Misc .
'•

•

�Page- 10- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursdi!y, June 25, 1987

====~--~~~--~~~~~~~~==~~~~~-~
Financial
...
44

21

Business
Opportunity

APARTMENTS . mobile homes,
houset. Pt. Plaatant ·and t)allipo lia. fS14-441 -8221 .
·
1 bedroom ground floor, private
entr~nca, rec&amp;ndy remod81ed.
Everything furn., loc . outakirts
Henderson. UGO. month. 304·

! NOTICE I
THE O HIO VALLEY PUBLI SH ·
lN G C O . Htcomm&amp;ndl that you
do buslnesa with poopl e vou
know , and NOT to send money
through the ma il until you hiiYe
invoJtigo~~t&amp;d

87&amp;.6730.

2 bedroom fu rnlaed apt. ref and
depoail , Nflw Haven, W. VI.,
30 4-882 -3 287 or 304 -773 ·

th e offering

5024.

Tno A8 c app i ng Bus i ness .
S26, 000. All equipment. Recap
tir e t : 13 to 16 inch . Call
304 -787 -3495 . Nor men Setliff.

45 Furnished Rooms
Roomt for rent, day. week.
month. Gallia HOtel. Call 614 446-9716. Rent ea)owaa8120
month.

Real Eslale
31

Furnlaf1ed room . 81 15 . Utilitiet
paid. Sh~re bath. Single male.
919 Second. Gallipolis. Ca ll
446 -4416 after 7pm .

Homes for Sale

New 4BR , 2 bath, Clar k Dr.
862,000. tQwtv remodled Ha.

"Think he's had enough?"

2BR . t22.000 in Addison. Call

446-8898

••for Sale or Leau ..
· 48ft 2 bat h, tull blll&amp;ment , with
abovegrou nd pool &amp; XL deck on
1/ 2 ac re acron from Addll\lilht
grade sc hool . Financing avai l•·
ble with small down payment .
Pricud th ousa nda below &amp;p·
praiaed vttlue. Call Botz: 919 ·
791 · 2162.
Lovely new 3 BR home bulltthis
spring. 2 car yarage. nice erea,
Cia-., 8. ci ty ac hoola, 6 miht1
grom Galllpo!la. Will co naidar
mobile home 111 trad e-in .
147.600 . Cal614·448-8038 .
8y owner: Sm8 11 2 BR home.
From St. Fh 218 -takeKri nerRd.
1/ 8 mile-fir'at houae on right .
S12,000·wlll help finance. Call
814- 446-2917.
2 BR , 10 yr., mint condition,
beautiful location; Near Nor thup. Priced right or will trade.
Ca11814 -268· 8200

0426.

------- ·

3 BR . viny l aiding, rural wate r,
nice neighborhood. $19 .000.

Call 614-446-3249. 614-4481339 ,

Of

61 4•446· 1528.

3 BR hou ao. ce nt . air, attached 1
car gara9e, 39 Chillicothe Rd.
Call8· 5. 446·2683.
For ule by owner: 21tory houae
In Middleport overlooking peril.
30 yr . guarntited vlnvle t iding.
v.J -W carpet, 1112 bath. unique
woodwork. 614 -992 -61261
Fully turnl1hed 2 bedro(l m home
in Ra cl nfl with equ ipped kitchen ,
river view property. acron fretm
Oeneral Store. Euy acceu to
Ohio River boat launchin g and
eandy baacf1. 116,000. 614 949 -2188 or 614 - 9 49 ~2268 .
In Pomeroy , 11 nico houto wit h 6
rooma and b11th. Alao full
baaement end fireplace. Phone

614·992-7462.

3 bedroom, 2 bath on 1 and one
1hlrd acre I M~el lot. Cen lral air,
elate to Meigs High School.
Pri ced rtUIJOnllbly , Ph one 614·
992 -3226 atter 9:00 p.m.
7 rooms. 1 VJ bath s. furnished
kit chen . Corner lo1. close to
town 11nd achoo ll . Ca ll 61 4992 -3685 fl ft er 6 :00p.m
Ru aeic HUla, Syracute. 3 bedrooms, altached garage with
electric door opener. covered
patio, chAin link fen ce, central
&lt;'lir. solid w ood cabinet s, garbage
dl1po11l, newly remodeled bathroom. hllrdw ood floors, Call
6 14-992 -6192 ett er 6:00 pm.
Large 2 fe rn lly haute. live in ono
t~p artment. renl other . 2 and 4
Mdroom . full b111ement , cen tral
gas heat, vinyl aiding. 307
Sprin y Av e .. Pom e r oy .
529 ,000 . 614 ·949 -2626 .
1-i ouae In villagn of Chflstor.
Ohio. Barg 1dn at t24 .900.
Comeaeel Cft ll 614 ·986 ·3571 ,
6 room houu. 2 bath I , nftw roof.
11iding, Nusash Windowt. N. 4th
Sl. , Midd leport . Make offer.
614 - 247 . 4672 or 614 - 24 7 -

2632.

5 room horne with b11th and
laundry room 1 owr•er, situa led
0 11 1 double lot in Pomeroy Corp
Umlta. Tuppen Pl &amp;l nt-Chetter
W11ter , 3 stor11ge buildlnga .
Priced to ~e ll . Call 6 14· 992·
3763 , 614 -992 -3769 or 61 4·

992· 7669.

N EW AND USED MOBIL E
HOMES KESSEL' S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI .
WEST. GALLIPOLIS, RT 35 .

PHONE 614-446·7274.

Big down payment. 1hort time
employment or paat credh hit·
t ory alopplng you from buying 1
home? Conalder a re -C laimed
14lll70. We have aeveral. Only
5500 down, payment• to fit your
budget . Free deliwery. Inter·
u ted ? Toll free in Ohio 800·
828·0762 Mid Ohio Financi&amp;l
Service

882-2096

By Own11r · Price rud ul';ed 3 br.
1 'h ba ths, dining , recre11t ion
room. 2 ur grH11ge 30 4-675·

1979 2 BR mobile home.
Elllcellent condition. Ca ll 814256 -1366 or 614 -266· 1567.
1983 Nuhua 14x70, 3 BA .
woodburn or. In elllcellent co ndi·
tlon. 113, 500. Call 614 -446 -

0844.

1211:661971 Eagle MobileHome
include• 10JII20 porch with
railing. dura·builtlwning, T-lock
vinyl skirting. n.w intM1herm
furnace . Partially furnlahad .
Ver-., N ice. Ca ll 814- 448· 3689.
Beautiful 1 2x65 mobile home
with 1 Olll20 e111enalon. Central
air, new carpel. very 90od
cond ition . Mutt tee to ' appreciat e, uking 18000. Wilt sell on
land contract. Call 814 -669 -

3561 .

Farms for Sale

Owner will finan t e J br . dh11ng,
fam . room-w-burner. 2 b11ths.
cent 1ir, 2 -c11 r g11r . 2 ou tbldgs.

for Sale
Oldlf

model mobila tlon, e.
12~60 . 2 bedwom. Mak e giid
camp home. Phone 14-992 -

5106.

e

For ule or rent : 1972 mobile
hom•. 1211.60. Good condition. 2
bedrooma . Alto 1980 Suzuki
motorcycle. Call 61 4 · 985· 3931
0t

&amp;U -98 6·3839.

1975 Rochettar 14•70 mobile
homa, total alec.· new carpet.
*7,900. Neg. 304 -675· 7616.
1973 Biron mobile homt,
12ll.66, t35.000. Ph diiVtime
304·676· U23 evening• 937·

2486.

1971

121180 Schlu mobile
hom~t. unfurniahed. 2 br on
rented lot. 16,000. 304· 882·

6 rooma and bath at lang1villa.
1200. per month plua depoait
Approwed references required.
Call 614 -992 -7286 .

8 room houae in Pomeroy . Call
2

bedroom . Full batflm&amp;nt.
plenty of yard and garden apace.
free g11 and water. Clean. f300
month. 614-843 -6309.
6 room houte C•mp Conley
area. t226 .00month, 304 · 67~ 1371 or 675 -3812 .

3 bedroom hou••· 2206 N. Main
St . 304-458-1728.

Commerci al bulldinga for laue.
Downtown Pt . Pleasant. Storea.
ottic1:11. A ·One Real Elute.
C11rol Yaeger, Broker. Call 304 676 -5 104 .
7 471ndduatrial storagfl 12 f oot
over heed door, 3 phaaea of
electric. 18•48 t teel building
614 - 446 - 23 82 For
appointment,
747 lnduttrial storage 12 toot
overhfllld door. 3 ph1111 of
ei&amp;Gtric. 18x48 neel building.
Cell 614 · 448 -2362 for appoint·
ment
Beautiful Ohio River C1mp
Groundt. 21 full hook-ups, 2
apartment s lurniahed. 7 Yt acrea .
room tor more . Call 614 -949 ·
262 6.

1 '11 Cllr bloch garage-Appro111 . 1/)
ecte 1111nd with Wll tllr tap , aeptlc
sn tem. eloctic hookup. Approx.
1 mile oH Rt . 7-Georgtl Creek
Rd . Mutt Sell . Call 304 ·882·

2365

Trailer lot for rent . Nt tural gat .
1 2 mile out Addison-Bullville
Rd. Call 614 -367 -7438.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Rent a l ~

41

Houses for Rant

Nicely furn ithed 1maU houae.
Adults o nly. R•f•rence1 f l·
qi,lred. Off tlr"t Plrklng. Ph.
614-US-0338.
Unfurnl1hed houn. 3 bdr. Rod·
ney Village II. f27&amp; . C•ll 441·
4416 •f1:ar8pm.
2 BR furnistutrl or unfurnl1htd,
AC , utilities pd. C.ll614-441·
1200 attar 6.
fot t ent or 1111. 3 BR , 2 blth.
Wooded lot. near Melg• High
School, Can 14-441-8881 or

e

114-992-6304.

Z BR, O.FI .. 1 bath, utility room,
ttoregt building, t250/ month.
e2eo Deposit. Ctll 814 ·448·
0475. afler I PM .

2BR, AC, uble, Hud accepted.
Riverview in Kanauga. Fot ters
M obile Home Park. Ph. 614446-1602 .
Nice furnithed 2 bdr. mobile
home. UpptnRt. 7. $200month.
Water paid. Call814- 246 -6818 .
3 bedroom , furn ished. AC .
Good. clean condilion . 1160
per month. New Haven, 304·
882 -2466.
2 bedroom mobile home, Rouah
Lane. Cheah ire. Nice lot. Cell

304-773-5828.
3436.

Double wide on priva te lot, 3 br,
2 full beth a. ac. family room. See
to appre ciatle. Gallipolit Farry.
8326, 304-676· 30 87 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartment• f or
rent.
Bnic rent for 1 bdr..
1 183.00; 2bdr .. 5219 .00. Alao
required a 5200.00 secu ri ty
deposit. CONTACT : Jackaon
Estate• Dept. Ph 446 -3997
Equal Housing Opportunity.
Furlliahed &amp; unfurnla hed aptt ..
1160.00 and up, rllferen cea Ph.
304· 676 -7738 or 304 -676 6104 A-1 Real Estate.
Furn iahed Efficlenr:v $145. Utili ·
ties paid. ahare beth. 807
Second Ave ., 01llipolis Ph .
448·4416 after 7PM .

3 or 4 Bedroom house In Kyg er
Creek .SchOol Dia trict. Refer ences Ph. 814- 446-8621 .

Furn lahed apartment, 12215.
utlliri 11 paid. 1 bdr. 920 Fourth,
Gallipolia. C1ll 448-4416 aftar
8pm.
Furnished apartment . 1225.
utllltlat paid.
1 bdr.
939
Second, G•llipolit. Call U6.u 1e atter 8pm.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waahen, dryers. refrigerators.
ran{lel . Skagga Appli ances .
Upper River Rd. beside Stone
Crett Motel. 814 -446 -7398.
LAYNE·s FURNITUR E

Sofas and chain priced from
$396 to 1996. Tables 150 and
up to 1126. Hide-a-beds t39 0
to 1696. Recliners S226 to
1376. Lamps 528 to 5125.
D inettes 1109 and up to 5495.
Wood table w -6 chairs 1285 to
5796 . Ouk $1 ()0 up to 8376.
Hutchfll 1400 and up. Bunk
beds complete w · mattreues
12 95t~ nd up to 1395. Baby beds
S1 10. Mattrellfll or boll: tprlnga
full or tw in
firm $78 , apd
Queen seta S226. King
8350. 4 drawerchflst 569. Gun
ceblnets 8 gun. O.aa or electri c
rang e '375 . B1bv matUelllt
$36 &amp; &amp;46 . Bed framus S2 0.
830 lr King frame S60. Good
•election of bodro om suitu,
metal &lt;:abinett, headboards 530
and up to 566.

•ea.

Good uaed Color TV ' 1 for tale or
tradt. C1ll 814· 446-1149.
larg• capacity upright freezer,
very good condition. Call 614 446-8832 after 6 .

•

RlftHr HE:~ Atlb ALI.Ljg OF 'f~R,
Wlil-

75

Musical
Instruments

1286.

e

·811.1 flat bed tl\ndom trai ler,, 6'
dump bed. 304·882 -3237 after

5:00.

9 pc. t.eavy wood liwing room
suite. 83 50 .; 10 foot satelite
1ystem 85 00. 304 -675-5389
after 6 :00.
Motorola color TV, S75. worlct
good. 304-676 -1646.
Gravely tractor refrigerator, cotrae &amp; end tablaa . Kirby 1waeper,
co ncrete models ready for busi·
ness . 304 -675 ·5162.
3 pc -blue bath tb:tu re•. lighted
med. cabin!H , 8110. Call aher6,
304-675- 5646.

5 hp, 2 -t p Wlzerd {Western
Autot riding lawn mower, 26"
cut. Ca ll 304 -675 -3092.
Bed sprea d. cu nains. clothe•
Pfflll, Ironing board, smell table.
oi l lamps. 2311 Lincoln Ave. Pt.
Pl.
Couch and TV stand. 304-675 6394.

Quality Fruita and Vegetab le•
relail and whoiOaale. B. &amp; S.
Produce acro11 from Plna Hul,
Gallipolis, Ohio.

INTO TH' WOODS
SY ~OMEOF
T~E I!OY5 ...

6 14·9 ~2 - 3413 .

61 Farm Equipment
CRO SS &amp; SONS
U.S. 35 West, J ackson. Ohio.

614-288-6461 .

Mauev Fatguton , ~ew Holland.
Bush Hog Sa ill &amp; Service. Over
40 used t ractors to choo1e from
&amp; complete lina ol new &amp; uaed
equipment. largeat telactlon in
S.E. Otlio.
273 New Holland 1q. Baler
S16 00, Ford 3pt. Rake 8326 .
&amp;hewer Poat Driver •700. 7ft.
locust po11a 51 .36 each Ph .

1978 Pinto 3 door, automatic.
8800 or trade on motorcycle.
riding mower. Cfleaper caah .
Call 614 -446 -7019 ot 614·

"etVERI.V HILL51LLIE.~"
RE-RVNf&gt;, H,l.vt~'fl/00 l

through bow. $5500. 614-992 76 53 atter .4:30.

1970 Chl\lelle SS , 4 apeod . Call
614·986 -4306 after 5 :oop.m.

e

ie Btn1011
Stir T,.k
FRANK AND ERNEST·

614-388-9832.

1976 OodgeAspin. 2 door, good
mechani cally, fair body. Be st
offer. Call 614-949-2693 be·
fore 10 :00 pm.

Utility bldg: 27 '~t3 6' 1119' - 13 '~~: 8 '
1raell door &amp; 3' walk door.
S44 44 · a1eeted - Iron Horta

1979 Chev. Caprice Cl1uic.
Fully equipped, 55,000 actual
mil es . Locally own ed . 52600.

81dgo . 814-332-9746.

614-949-2674.

36 MF Dieael tra ctor with new 6
ft . finiahed mower t 3796 . Pott
hole digger '276. Grader Blade
8176. landteape box 5296 . Call

1976 Nova. Stron{l engine and
transmiltlon, new brakes, AC .
good condition . n oo. Ce ll
614-9 86 -4377 evenings.

614-288-6622.

801 Ford Trector·Run a goodS2860. Late model Ford mow ing machine-&amp;860 . J 0 baler·
5860. Grinder. mi iiBr 1696. Call

614-288-6622 .

1983 Ford T·Bird. AT . PS . PB,
AC , One owner. Ellltra cleen. Call
6 14-992-3703.
1978 Ot damob i l e Cutlau
Brougham . 1981 Podge Omni

024. 614·992-6804.

62 HP Maney Ferguaon diatel
tractor 12396. 7ft. NH Hay Bind
S995, NH Square Baler-sharp
t996, Vermeer Roun d Baltl'
S2196, hay wagon 1300 . C1ll

1977 Chevy C66 dump truck. 6
ap· trentmiuion . 2 sp-ule.

t4.660. 304-468-1031.

7:05 (J) BtniOns ond Son
7:30 G (%) (I) New!Jwlld Qamo
(!) SpetdwMk (T)

- -

eCil Judge

ill Whttl of Fortune Q

0 Crottftre (0:30)
lUI JIIOpltrdyl Q
I!JIIIotp

•c

79 Motors Homes

•

..

&amp; Campers

LOOf&lt;$

Of jt-ff=.S"e?

T~.s-rs

wc'vt:- llt:eN

eNvOYING Oup!SE=L.VE.s'

AcPAIN, t:H?

22 ' Star Craft . 81,900.; 17' De
Camp. 81 .400. 304-576· 23 83.

7:35 C1J HoneymOOMrt
8:00 (l) Dtktlll
e W lUI Tht Colby Show
Did leaves with the boy
Denise 1hought was her blind
date. (R) Q
(!) lpMdWortcl CART
Portland 200 lrom Portland.
Oregon (R)

1 9ft. N omad camper for sal e or
trad e. Nice end clean. 304 -675·

(I)

eCil Our Wortcl Q

·ALLEY OOP

(J) Wild Amtlrica Look at the

Services
Horne

MOVIE: Tho Dlop lPG)

(2:03)

4431

wolverine, considered the
lar~11and dw.~lllng weaseL

~ ~'&amp; lcarecrow and

-

Improvements

1- - -- - - - - - -BASEMENT
WAT ERPROOFING
Uncondilional lifetime guaran t ee. local references furnished.
Free altlmetea. Call collect
1·614· 237· 0488. day or night
R ogersBasemen t
Wat erproofin g.

t!!JSING A CLOUD OF INK

AS COVER (CONVENIENTLY

FURNISHED BY SHIRLEY,

THE GIANT SQUID)ALLEY
AND THE TWO MEI;!MAIDS

LEAVE THE FEEDING
THEM .

FREN~Y BEHIND

SWEEPER and sewing machine
repa ir, parts. and supplie&amp;. Pick
up and delivery, Oawis Vacuum
Cleaner . one half milfl up ..
George• Creek Rd. Call 614 446 -0294.

Ht.RE'S A

Vinvle &amp; Aluminum Si ding.
Storm wlndowa 8r doors, Ot.'er
hang {!utters. Free estimales.
Ph. 614 -446 -6332 .

((JTE

FOR MAKl"-G
FAL$£ (lAIMS

m.vL

,.
..

E111terior Stucco. Pinter end
Plaster Repair. Work by the hour
or by the job. Free estima te. Call

Mre. King Foreign secre1
agenll plot to destroy 1he
U.S. Trltanlum supply. (R)
llll Moy.,.: In Btorch Dl 1M
Conalllullon The Constitution
challonglld by a world
d1Heren1 trom the toundars'.
(NRIC
0 Prl-w• Wrap ups of
the day's world newa and In
depth leature reports. (1 :00)
i1J1 MOVIE: 'Tho Ntklld
F-' Prime Tlme(R) (1 :43)
(I) MOVIE: Kty 10
Aobocco, Port .2 (~RI 0 :40)
1:05 (J) MOVIE: No Mon lun
lillnd (NR) (1 :54)
e:30e(%) IDl F-tly ,..
t.OO (l) 700 Club
e (%) 1111 Chllrl Norm has
NCOI1d lhoughta abou1
~nlng CIIH"s ntiW ledge. (R)

614-268-1182.

e

501 7 ft . mowing machine. Call

65 Building Supplies

Buy one any aizec ttaln SfiW Chaln
and get second chain half price.
SIDER S EQ UIPM EN T CO,
Hand&amp;fson, W. Va. 304 -675·
7421.

1977 Oldt Cutten, good oar.
Air, am· fm 8 tnck. t800 .

RON ' S Televisi on Service.
House callt on RCA. Ouuar.
GE . Sp ocialing in ZMit h. Call
304 -576 · 2398 or 614- 446 2464.

~ 'i Myoteryl Wealthy

1982 Buick Sky hawk 4 sp, 4 cyl.
a-c, ps, pb, extra nice. 304· 675 -

Fetty

Building M ateri als
Block , brick, tewer pipes. win ·
dowa. lintels. etc. Cleude Winters, Rio Granda, 0 . Call 614·
246 · 512 1.
Concrete blocks allalzes yard or
delivery, M ason !and. Gallipolis
Block Co., 123 ¥2 Pine St. .
Gallipolis.. Ohio Ca ll 614 -448·

2783.

Ready m illl concrete and all
cqncretesupplies. Call us Valley
Brook Cement and Supplie a.

304-773-6234.

66

Pets for Sale .

Reg. Beagle pups: 9 wkt. old.
wormed , 160. Call 614 -266·

614-379·2164.

· New Holllnd 7ft. h1y bine. Gehl
95 grinder ml•er, New HoUand
717 Forage Harvlltflr. All good
con d. 304-273 -4215.
Farman M tra ct or w ith mower.
304· 882 -3237 after 5 p.m.
3 Vl hp Junior Troy Silt roto tillar.
bought new. Uald 2 hrt . hiller
furrow. extra tune up lcit. S500.

304-676-2302.

Gehl grinder mlxerwlth magnet.
6 screena. sheller, good cond.

448-4688.

8 month old run short haired
m lniltu re Da chl hund. Call 614 -

448-3243.

Black 8J ten coon hound. 7
months old. e55. Sea at 1926
Che1tnut St.- Gallipolis.
Apricot poodle pup. AK C regia·
tered, wormed , tailed &amp; ahou.
Sire chtmpio n l ine. Cell 614 -

446· 7372

Male namater I cage. 115.00
Cell61 4 -446 -4070.

I ,;;=====;;:;;:;;:;;:;::J;;;;;~;;;;;;;;::==;;;~

t

8 ruce Beattie

6662.

'74 Corvatte . 360 auto, air,
t·top, red. 88,900. 304· !576·

2383.

' 78 Cruiu Air motor home, 28
h . loaded. 30 4-88 2· 3237 after

5.
1980

Toronado

loaded at~

1983 Chevy 6 cyl. aut o. ac. ps,
pb. very nice Cllf . *2.996 .

Now buying ahell corn or ear
corn . Ctlt fofletaatQuotaa. Rivef
City Farm Suppty, 814 -4415·

For Sale or Trade. 1983 Chevy
half ton 4 wheel dr. Short bed.
V-8. Aulo .. with lockout hubs.
new tiret. &amp; mag1. Lota of
P:trll. Needa painted. Call

Livestock

Trucks for Sale

1978 Frankl i n Skiddar ·
114. 000. Prflnnie loader on
Chl\lrolet truck· t7.000. 1974
Int. truck 12,000. 1974 IUtO.
car &amp; trailer (40 ft.J· I7,800. Cell

oft" 4:00. 814-388-9873.

1978 Ford F-100 Yt ton. auto.,
Duroc Bo tta. Brad jult like th e good lh•p•. • , 900.
6, 4boart we tested at the Ohla 448-3852 ..... 6.
Testation th1t gainld over 2 .8
lba. per day. Rogtr Bentley, 1987 S10. PS , PB ,4 apeect, long
Sabin•. OH. 613-58• ·2398 .
bed. 1600 lb. payload. 9000
miles. eo.ooo milel or e yean
Four year old App1loon. C.ll
warranty. For ul• or trade for
614-,48-0481 afttr 6PM or older pick· up, Call 814 -992 -

c•n

_2_6_s-_e_s_o2__D.:
•r. :t_..,_•_· ______ 6678.
Small ,;diog horoo. good for troU I~19::7::6-:C::h-:..
-v-=r••-• •--.--.--4::6::
0.- c=-.-l-l
ridif!g. Y, Ou1rter, 1h Artbl•n . 8 1•·992·7463.

uoo. Coli 304·773·6061

0' 1:--------------

304-nl-!U!i23 after 4:00 pm .

64

Ford log truck. Very good bunks.

114-742-2473.

73

Vans Ill 4 W .O.

Str~w

82.00 btle. Morgan
Woodlawn Ftrm, At . 35. PUny,
W. Ve. 304 ·875-.1 286 or 1 top 66 Jelf), 74 HlfltV Da '-'ldton
by.
lportJ. .. 304-676-5870.

1811 Ford Aenger 4X4 auto.

Autos for Sale

2 bedroom furnl1hd ap.nm.,.t.
AU utllili• furnished. t225 . pll'
month 0t ISO. ptr week. 307
Spring Aw., Pomeroy. 814·

Cf\liH, am -fm. V-e . fuel injaction, unlimited motor warrenty:
tOWing pkg. 35,000 mil•. Will
CIOnlkMr whlcl1 on trede. 304tJJ· 7842
3pm,

•ft•

1188 CJS Jeep, new ovlrhaulld
motor 8700. 3CM·II2· 2041.

1983F04\IE_, _
_4spd.,
AM -FM tope, Cl, t24U.
John'oAutolol•. a..-oRd.. 74

1149-2526.

Go111poiio.

Clun apt In Hend•aon. penilliy

1177 Dod.. " -· V-1, 311
outo.. "'"' poet. Noodo grill.
Oood cor. ..00. c.n
614-44t-7711.

fvmlohod. 304·171-1172 of1or

5:00pm.

"I don•t know If the uniform stilllit s...l can' t
get into the attic lo try ... "

1111

Trin1 ~ Am :

La.ded ,

45.023 •4.100. c.n
&amp;14-J?t-att.

WE'VE STARTED A PDOL
ON WHSN YOLl'RE: L64-VING
R:JR 0-.MFJ NASTY.

Starkl Tree and Lawn Service.
lawn care. landscaping. stump
removal, 304 -676 2842 o r

15 THAT RIGHI-+

A DART BOARD WITH
'IO.JR PICTLJRECN IT.

WHAT!sTHE
BIG PRIZE-:f

576·2903.

(PO) (2:19)

0 Lony ktng Uvet In depth

lntarvltwo wl1h lop
newomoktrl and cetobrl11ts.
1:30. (%) lUI D1y1 lnd Nlflltll
Dl Molly Dodd Molly, on the
verge ot a breakdown,
deeldtt to'" a
~ychotoglst.

B2

Plumbing
8t Heating

10:00

CARTER ·s PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gellipoli t , Ohio
Phone 614 - 446 ·3888 or 614·

e (%)

1111 L.A. uw

~=~o;:Q
LIIMI

,.
,.
'•

atorln 11 :00)

BARNEY '
Electrical
8t Refrigeration

Retldential or commercial wir·
ing. New service or repairs.
Ucenaad electricien. Estimtte
free. Ridenour Electrical, 304 -

,.

..
'·

PAW !! I JUST GOT

0~

BULLET ONE OF

.(I) 8otp

I SHOULDA
BOUGHT TWO

THEM 80DACIOU5
FLEA COLLARS

General Hauling

• (%) Cll • (J) GJ • 1121

IDS!gnOif
IIJ)IIopltll Sidney Polller
txlllllnet the compllx
conflict - - blaclt pollee
whO tnforet the IIWI Of

apartheid and bltcks whO

oppott the ayatam of whitt
rult.

..

•.

0 MouoJII!tt Currant

roporll on wOOd eoonomlcs
and financial newa wl1l1 1..011

Motorcyclea

1985V·t5Mogno. 8.000miiH.
OOOd eond. 814-441-0388.
1910Hor'-!&lt;Oov-lorMioDf
trodo. 304-175-1143.
1173VomohoErtdOvro171,coil
104-&amp;71-2'75 "'615·2342.

~Y filling in the missing words
you develop fr om sfep No.. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN

6
'1::111

THESE SQUARES

6 ~~R~~~N~~~E lEITERS

I .I I I I I I

YEsTERDAY'S SCIAM-i.ITS"ANSWIIS .
Penm111 - Decry- Savor - Insult - MARRIED

Not·so-briglil huablnd to wife as he prepared to leave the
house, "Be reaaonable, dear . I madelhls date months before
we were MARRIED."
NORTH

f.ll·ll

+A I

•au

James Jacoby

+Qil2

+AQ6 5

Play it.safe

WEST

EAST

+K tO 3

• .J 8 7i 2
• K 973

.QJ5

+to 2

+J9873

+Ka

By James Jacoby

+65

SOUTH
1\fany partnerships have the agree+QPS
ment that a jump raise of partner's
• A 10 6
opening bld in a minor suit is onl~ In vi- .
+AJ10 73
tational to game. In fact, that s the
+KI
way I prefer to play, but I wouldn't
Vulnerable: North-South
recommend It to a beginners' class.
Dealer: South
With North's hand you would respond
by jumping to three diamonds whatev·
Nor1b E111
Sotllb
er your methods. If your jump raise Is Wet!
I+
game-forcing, you're stretching a bit; Pau
3+
Paao
!NT
if it's only invitational, you surely Pa..
PallS Pass
have full values with your two and a
half quick tricks. In either event,
Opening lead: +5
•South, with 14 high-card pomts. a hve·
card suit and some lO·spots, Is happy
to bid three no-trump.
The play Is a simple test ol human the spade ace in dummy at trick one
nature. The player who loves over· and lake a diamond finesse. Even If
tricks will surely duck the opening that loses to the king In the West hand,
spade lead in an attempt lo lake ~ declarer's spade queen Is still a stop-,
trick with his queen. That greedy mdl- per with West on lead, and he has nine·
vldual should be penalized when East top tricks.
wins the king and decides that declarWhich way should you go? At rubber
er has the spade queen. A switch lo the bridge you clearly should guarantee
queen of hearts now sets declarer making your contract. If you're play· :
when West holds the diamond king.
lng In a duplicate tournament, follow
The practical player who p•L• scor· the Jacoby family tradition and go for
ing his game ahead of taking over- everylhinK that's not nailed down by
tricks will do better. He will rise with ducking the first spade In dummy.

~tWd'"w
by JHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

39PGA item
DOWN
1 Peerless
2 "Rain"
heroine
3 Sailor's
assent
4 Window
need
II Plunder
6 - Merkel
7 Biblical
18 Glimpse
sinner
111 Lay odds
8 Off-key 21 Prlnctr.at
22 Korea s
16 Verily!
10 Prod
17 Mescalero's 13 Hindu
former
name
shelter
woman
19 Doctors
servant 28 Braid
(abbr.)
111 Ballpark Z4Jam
together
20 Adolescent
beverage
21 Mrican
republic
22 "Silkwood"
co-star
23 Patti
of song
2• Mince
211 Gilded
26Gypsy
27 Pe118Y Lee
1 Silent
- clam
4 Dilapidated
district
8 Whip
9 "-the
Barbarian"
11 Mining
find
12 Bellowed
14 Black
cuckoo

211 Was pleased
28 Uncle's

favorite
29 "Pony up"
31 Abject
34 British
mller
811 Bon -

recording

30Snake
31 Somewhat
32 waterfall

·

'(Scot.)

38Desert
plant
311 Encounter
31 Snare
37 Fonnerly
38 Lack
DAILy CRVPIOQUOI'ES- Here'• how to work It:

Qllolttyft\0011111

poolt, ci1terna. wells . Ph. 614·

246·9286.

112&amp;

=rc•nllr
P Cluctowllll
•t:IIQ
a
P.l.
0 lpolta T~ Action
til 'flOIII hllflhte wl1l1
1::
Chlrftl 1 Jim Huber.
(0:30)

•

(I)

Ill

••
••
'·
••

2919.

••

Formerly Ken 's now John'a
We1er Service. John Watterson ,
Jr. Owner. 1,000 or 2.000 gal
tar-vice. 304 -!78- 2248.

In

(L)

• tD 'Night Hell' Clll Lltl
Night Tht potitlcl of I

,...

'-,

A &amp; M Cu1tom Couches •nd ~

!

Aeu pt.olltary, St. Rt. 7. Crown
City. Oh. &amp;1•· 261-1470. Eve. • 1
614~ 446 · 3438 . Op~n deity 9 to ..;;
4:30, Sat. 9 :30 to 1:30. Old . ...., .
new Upho•t•red.
Mowrey'• Upholttlflng Hr~ing ..,
lrlcountyarM22yews. TheHit •
In ful'ntture uphol8tering . Cel
304 ~ t71 - 4114 f o r frt ~ll
Htimtt~.
" •'"

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

e (I) ~Coo JOt etlan
11:30 e (%) dl Toniglll Show

,,'

Watterson· , Water Hauling .
reuonablfl rate•. Immediate
2,000 gallon delivery. cis tflfna,
pool s. well, etc. csU 304-676 ·

Upholstery

Comp lete lne chuckle quolod

Oobbl. (0:30)

6370

B7

tnd

1111-

..

R &amp; R Water Service. Home
cisterna, walla, pool• tilled.
Formerly James Boya Wat er.
Same rates . Call 304 -675·

e (I) UIA Tonight
Hlld~utle
~

,.

Dillard Water Service: Poota,
Citterna. Wella, Delivery Any·
time. Call 61 4·446 -7404 -No
Sundty calls.

10:30 (l) ' - ' d .__
(I) Mtjor LlllfUIBtHblll
IIJ) Tony loown'o Joumll

11:00 (l)

'·.·

676-1786.

85

.

ahead to tomorrow's newt

446·4477

B4

.

llll 91 Newt
1121 !tlllllng Nawt A wrap up
of 1odoy's news and 1 look

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming

Hay &amp; Grain

71

MORTY MEEKLE AND W;:.:IN_T_.:.H_R_O_P_~----, , . . - , - - - - - - " '

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most wells completed same day.
Pump u les and aervice. 304 895 -3802

614-266-6887.

63

e

"

rem ovt~l .

1D K11111wha County on 1M

72

low apeed worm gear fof
L-model. gr~n~e~¥ Tr1c1or. 7.8
HP. 304-876· 4439 after 5 p.m.

Tree Tri mmin'g. stump
Call 304 -676 -1331 .

Monty Jonts ask• Tommy
and fuppenca to help him
wtn 1 bat. C
ill D MOYIE: AoclcJ Ill

304-676-2563.

62 Wanted to Buy

2986.

(I) Hoort D1 1M City
Robin's desire lor birth
control pltta ahlktl Kenntlly.

14.600. 304-675·3753.

01.200. 304-273-4215.

1619.

AK C Regl ltered mate
Dobermen· Aod. 3 yean old. To
ra1ponalble owner. Call 614 -

304·675-6118.

-.L.--l

L

e

EEK&amp;

lttwllllook-." ·

1-..,.1-;s-11--,lr'
-o.l''rl--i 0
-.J.L..J..._.J.-..1..

or go for broke?

(I)

676-6768.

81

LEXFAN

BRIDGE

reports on world economics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
1121 lUI WhMI of Fortune

BUDGET Tra nsmission s: Uaed &amp;
Rebui lt. AU types. Guaranteed 11 .
minumum o f 30 days, will · .
deliver. cash &amp; carry or inatal.
Ph, 614· 379 -2220 or 1·304 -

Words you don 't want to hear
from your halrdr911er: "Before
you look altha blck, If I fluff II up

w

ill~···
1121 Moneyllntl Current

Auto Parts
8t Accessories

1; ; - ; ; - -- - , - ; . , - - , - , - , . - --

-l
l
:.!
I I 1~ I .

t-,:G::...:E;-;W:.:.,E:;-;-D

ID llll MtCNall/ Llll,.r
,.._.,.,r
(1 :00)

17 . Glastron 1976 302 Ford v·8P
motor 190 hp a·1 con d. &amp;3,995 .
304-89 5-3436 .

367-7771 .

2

McCormick
e (%) PM Mtgulnt
(!) llpoi18Center (L)
Cll Enterttlnment Tonight
• (I) People'l Court

HA! vou·v~ ~'"

1983 16 ft . Bay Liner Boat with
85 HP Chrysler motor. Walk

1 I I I' .

e

4866.

1979 Camaro, 51900 . 1973
Jeep Wagoneer. OuadrHra c.
1300. 1986 Honda ROXR,
5600 . Ca ll 614 · 446 -7821 .
2014 Eastern Ave.

NEODRY

hr.i-V_,.o-=LTE:..;RT.--i, l'·

614-286-6522 .

773-8821.

,

,•'.

1 6 ft . Glaslron Boat and tntiler, ~.,
No motor. 8500. 080, Call '

76

I
I II I I I

THURS.. JUNE 25 •

Doubl e WAdding Ring and a
Manh a Ro ae quilt. fin ished;
1·half bed quilt and f our quill
t OI)S. 304 -676· 6396 ,

Effici ency •pt. for rMt on Rou1h
Line ln Ch•hh'e. Sult11bl1 for
one Or two peopl•. Call 304-

"

THEY SAW
EVELYN CHASED

1973 Pontiac 400, runs good.
·
5300. Good tirea. Call6 14 .446 · 3 51 Fo.rd . Clewe . serut&amp; motor.
3852 aher 6.
I Transmtssmn C-6. ?!her Ford
parts. Good condition . Call
1974LTO. Black. Power. S200 . 614 · 367-7866.
Call 614-367 -0446.
1986 Red Chevene. ste nd ard ,
AC , 28.000 miles, undercoated.
Mutt sell. S6200. Call614·446·

Farm Suppltes
&amp; Livestock

5150.

1318.

1960 EmpiOune bu ggy . Alum i·
num wheels . Wide tires. Lott of
chrome. 82 895. Calt 614 -446·
0844.
~ew rear win dow louvers for 82
Ford EXP. New price $160.
Asking 5 100. Cell 61 4 · 245·
9256 after 6pm .

Fruit
8t Vegetables

Wood table end chairs. Cherry
vanity. mena fringed leather coet
1iz:e 42 . 1oys, clothes. Excellent
condition . Call 614 -387-7780 .

3-pc cherry dining roo m set,
6· 24" base kit cabinett, sofa.
Call Andy Slg lnr . 304 ·876 -

1982 Monte Carlo. air, AM / FM
radio, 3.8 V·6 engine. E11cellent
Condition . Call 614 -446 -8753.
1984 Dodg e Omni, 4 apd .. like
new. S2899 . John' s Aut o Salel ,
Bulaville Rd. Gallipolis .

For •ale: Bundy Trumpet. New.
Call 614 -992-2772 .

58

Autos for Sale

1984 Chevy Chevette1 4 dr., no
rust. sharp. 82996. 1981 Olda
Cutlasa: 2 dr .. shari). $2995 .
Call 61 4 - 286·6522 .

Oragon~ynd Cettery Kennel
CFA Himalayan. Persian and
Siameae klttent. AKC Chow
puppi81. New kittena ; Siamese
and Himalayans. Calt 61 4·446 ·
3844 after 7PM .

Color

TONY ·s GUN REPAIRS. hot
rabluelng, free puppy with each
blueing job, call304 -676-4631

-·'

16' lowe boat, 25 HP Mercury
,
motor, drive on trailer , trolling ; '
motor, rigged for bass f ishing. 1';j
Call 614~ 448 - 4163 after 6pm. • 'S..'

1980 Chevette 4 spd .. runs, no
ru11! $400. Call614-379 -2140.

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming . All !Jreeda .. . Atl
styles, ~ ulie Webb Ph. 614 - 448·

57

1 bedroom futnlahH 1p1. In
Mlddlepor1, All utllltln paid.
1210 Per month. Call614 •992·

2 btdroom hou11 and ap1. tor , One tMdroom apt. In Pt. Pl ...
r.nt Jn Pomeroy. Parti.UV fur· Hnt. Extr1 ciNn 1nd niot.
niahed, depolit taqulred. Cell Aduho On~ . No P01o. 304·176·

71

Pets for Sale

8600 BTU Whirlpool air conditioner. CasemMt window design . hcellent condition $1~0 .
Ca ll 61 4 · 446 -1797.

Us ed Maytag wa sh or &amp; Was linghou se dryer. Good cond. S 1 00
for the pair. Al ao Sears Best
large car top carrier . S50 . Call
614- 446 -31 5 1.

Y~TERDAV

FOLKS 5 AID

...

0231 .

Sewing machine.
B&amp;W TV. chain saw , cheat
freezer , antique plano. Call
614 -446· 782 1. 2014 East ern
Ave.

WE WERE PLANNIN'
ON GETTifJ' MARRIED

Lot a· Eitrat. See at. Gallipolis .., '
Boat Club. Call614-446·4782.1 t

66

tAM I

the
below to form four simple words.

ID Dr. Who Horror o( Fang
Rock, Part 2
llll Secnt City
iiJI Qood Tlmtll
e (I) lllllleltar Oallcttco
8:05 CIJ QUIIgen'l llllnd
8:30 e (%) Ill) ,.BC Nlflhlly Newa
(!) Wfnner'l Cln:lt (R)
(I) e (I) ABC Nawo !;I
1D Nightly Buolntao Report
GJ
1121 CBS Nan
llll Woooter Squo,.
0 Showlll&amp; Todly News of
the entertainment world Is
anchortll live lrom New
Vork. i0:30)
iiJI Jtfferaonl
8:35 (I) Ltlvt II To Btlvtr
7:00 (%) Htrdcllltlt tnd

CAPTAIN EASY

1985 24 h . Pontoon floatboaL .(";
10 HP Evenrude motor. trailer, ,,_.

IlLio 1...

WOlit

0 Rearrange
. letters of
leur Kromblod word•

III)Newl

•
•'

Boats and
Motors for Sale

S©\\4UlA-~£trse

- - - - - - 141to4 ~y CLAY R•. ,OUAN - - - - - - -

(!) Sponolook (T)

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

'IULIR

• (%) Cll 8(1) GJ taaJ

SOMETIM!'. SOO~.t!&gt;UT-

614·379-2746 .

TV .

~

1974 Suzuki GT -750. water
cool ed. wi nd shield. $~25 . Ca ll
614· 379 -2730 alter 7pm.
-lc-

(I 1.. 1

TIIAT DAILY

EVENINO
8:00 (l) Big Vlltey

'

1981 Bejatl motor scooter,
needs mechanical work . S200.
Call 614 -446 -4141 aher 6 or
weekenda .

Lawn tr actor mo~~~wer, MF 1665
Hydro with 3 pt . hitch, 54 inch
mower, 4 tt. blade. $3.000 . Call

19 incfl black &amp; white TV. 650 .
Men s 3 spd. bike. 840. Call
614-446·4141 after 6.

•

85 Honda Shadow 500. Water
cooler. theft driven. 3000 miles.
$1450. Call614-388-8288 .

3 .050 National Geograp hic
Magazine• : 1981 to 1987. 2
oHice detks with typewriter
extention. 1 child's desk/ chair.
C'•binet sew ing mvchine &amp;
ltoot. oceeuories. Ca ll 614 446· 7781 after 6 PM .

9288.

Television
Viewing

1974 Kawasaki 250 Dirt Bik•
$320. Ce ll 614 -446 - 2899.

dH

Wagon wheel ceiling light. 24".
5 light. wood and antique bran.
140. Cali 614-367-0451 after
SPM.

The Daily Sentinei- mPage11
· , r

2608 after 5:00 PM.

~Ell) ~tiE ~&amp;SC.Rli&gt;TI c«~
SW!:r ~1.T WEI!t:=!

Heatilator all metal fireplace,
co mplete· 8310. Caii614- 446 1340.

Ashley woodburner . $650 new,
will sell f or 8300. Call6 14 -388 -

BORN LOSER

1978h Hnrlay Davidson .. 80 cu.,.1 :•
in. 76th annlvara'ry model,
Electra Glide. Fully dre11ed. 1
stereo. ndio. 9.000 miles. E111tra . 1
nice. , 84,500 . Call 614-379-

Jl))'f M 'f4 fri.w~~

Plaati c cistern ttate approved.
pl1atic aeptic tanka. plettic
culvena. metal culverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jockson, Oh. 61 4- 286 -6930.

$300. Cell 614 -388-8436. ·

Pomeroy-- Midcleport. Ohio

'•

Callahan' • Uud Tire Shop . Over
1.000 tiret , t iz .. 12. 13, 14, 15,
16. 16,5 ..8 mll &amp;t ou t Rt. 2Ht.
Cell 614·256·62 6 1.

Colligan Wat er Purification syatem . S400., 67 key RMI electric
piano, organ, &amp; · harpscord.

Thursday,
June
25, 1987
' S
-

Motorcycles

--------' .

54 Misc . Merch•ndise

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
room apar1menu at Vllltge
Menor and Rlv-.ide Apart·
menu in Mlddlepon . fram
1215. Including utitit ln. C•ll
814-992·7787. EO H.

1979 Holly Parle mobile ~om1,
701114, Cln be IHn lot No. 31. K
&amp; K M obile Home P1rk. 304·

74

0094.

sea.

Public Notice. Save over 50
percent, New maHress liquidation u le to ba held Thur1day.
Junt 2&amp;, intlde the Gallipolla
Holldtv Inn. Sale run a from
10:00 AMtiiB :OOPM . No phon e
c.tla pl e11e. Twin mattJeuea
atlrt et t29. Huge t election.
Free balloon• for th e kiddie1.
Oon 't Mill l tl

Apartment for Rent: 3 roomt .
8126 / mo. Adultl. C1ll 304·
67! -5104, or 876· 7738.

2 BR a~artment. furnithed.
Large rooms &amp; yard . Mein St ..
Cheahlre. 1200 month. Water
paid. Caii6 14-245 -IS818 .

Valley Furniture. new &amp; used.
Large 1ect ion of quality furnitun . 1216 En tern Av e ..
Gallipolis.

New wood 6 pc. living room
aultes, t399 .95; New living
room auites from $17 9,95 to
I 700.: Chest of draw ers. 4
drawer. 148 .. 6 drawer, S69 .96;
End table• from t69 .95 set.
Ut6d Furniture : bedroom ault et,
full alzed bedt. twin bedt and
rocker1 . Recllne ra from 899 .95
and up
TH E WORKING
MAN 'S FR IEND

Coll8 14 - 4~8 - 1619 .

266-1903.

County ApJ)Iiance. Inc. Good
uaed appli•ncet and TV sets.
Op8n BAM to 6PM . Mon rt.ru
Sat. 614 -446· 1699, 827 Jrd.
Ave . Gallipolis. OH .

PARSON ·s FURN ITURE

Garage apt. 3 rooms &amp; bath.
Furnlahed, including wether,
dryer &amp; air . CleJn, No peta.
Adult• only . Ret. 6 dep required.

Unfurniahed garage 1p1.: 2 BR,
322 Third Ave.. Adults only, no
pen. Ce ll 814· 446-3748 or

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITUR E 62
Ollwe St., Gallipolla .
NEW- 6 pc. wood group- t399.
Living room suilel· $199 -5599.
Bur,~k bedt with bfldding· 8199.
Full tlze mattreu &amp; f oundation
l!ilart i ng - 599 . Re c lin era
atar1ing- t 99.
USEO· Beds. dratters. bedroom
auitu, t199 - t29 9 . Ouk s.
wringer weaher, a co mplete lin e
of utad furniture.
NEW- Western boots- S30.
Workboot t 118 &amp; up. (Steel &amp;
soft toel . Ca ll614-446-3159.

0322.

Furniahed apt. nut door to
Ubrary. On e profttslonal Adult
only. Parking. Ph . 446·0338 .

2048.

814-882·2311 .

4 7 Wanted to Rent

90 Days same 11 cuh with
approved credit. 3 Miles out
Bulaville Rd. Op en 9am to 5pm
M on. thru Set . Ph. 614 -446 ·

Upalairt unfurnished apartment .
UtUitlet paid. C~rpeted . no children or pelt. Call814· 448· 1837

3 bdr. ht, In Kan1uga, F1nced
yard . Cou nt\' w•ter. UIO
month. Callat•-379·2441 .

878-7979.

304-676-1078.

61 Household Goods

8038.
3 to 6 Acrea on At. 36 with
highway frontage. Cell E.R.A.
Town &amp; Country Rul Eatate
Broker, 304-676 -615 48 or 675·
25 17 atter 6.

Spaca for rani , trailer spaces,
l ocult Rd. Rt. 1, Point Pleasant.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE &lt;ilby Larry Wright

Und refr l g~ator . 18 cu. · ft.
Kalvinator . t60 . Call 614-446-

For Herbalife Ca ll 614 · 4483131 or 614 -446 · 220 0.

Fl io Grande, New 2 BR Apt.
Stove, refrigerator &amp; Wtter
turni1hed. t225 . pltf month. No
pets. Daposlt. Call 114 -446-

36

Space for amall tra ilers. All
hook-up1. Cable. Also eHi ciency
rooma. air and cable. Meson.
W.Va. Call304 -773 ·5651 .

Merchandtse

614·268-6790.

Business
Buildings

747~ .

2130.

4 BR very nice homo. 2 bath a.
Modern kitchen-loti of cabinets.
40 acres. Small orchard. Ca ll

34

C OUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Route 33. N orth ol Pomeroy.
Rental trailers. Ca l l 614-992 -

4 br house for re nt. 304-675 -

2 bedroom mob ile home f or tent.
Vine St .. Racinfl. Call 61 4 -367 ·
7148.

20 ecre l arm Hannan Trace
Rofld, Glenwood. W . V1. l or
more Information call 304-773·
6118 or 773 -6188 after 6:00 .

Mobile Home Speca-60 ft . Of
ameltM. 876 . Wat8r' Pd. 920
Fourth, Ga llipolit . C•ll 61 4448 -4416 after 8PM .

61 4-992·3436.

Plu s ltore building, warehouu.
3 BR hou se, barn . cellar, plua 2
other buildlnga. AU black top
road . Ca ll 304· 458 ·1818 . Call
&amp;h91' 6PM.

304·676·5893

32 Mobi le Home s

3187

8 acrea on Tribble Rd. off Rt. 62.

PI t55 .000. 304-895-3681.

Ni ce home· A.rbiiCkl e. 3 br , din·
ing, fa mil y, lt~unrlry rooms . 1 'h
b1th. lit acre. water 536,000
304· 586· 9148 .

In Pomeroy, a nice home with 6
rooma and b81h, full balemant
end fireplace. Phon e 814 ·992·

2 bedroom trailer i or rent in
Middleport. Call 614 -992 ·

4604

All elec. 1 '11 acres. FttA ap·
proved. Clly WA tet, outbldgs ,
privAt e. Rt . 2. 12 min. tron, Pt

Houses for Rent

Offi ce Space for Rent. Excellent
for Attorneys , Accounttnt. etc.
Clou to Coun House. Call
Witeman Real Est ate Agan cy .
6 14-446·3644.

304-675-4088.

Remodeled 1970 Hallmark Mobile Home. 1211162 . 2 Bedroomt,
14600. Ca ll 614·888-6669 .

33

47 Space for Rent

3 bedroom . Rant plus utilitiea,
Gelllpolia Fer~ . For inl . call

35 lots 8t Acreage

Two home• on Rt. 33 MdiM cent to
H1r t l ord Comm unity Bldg. 3
bedrooms, 2 bllth s. dining room.
fantily roo m, ea t In kitchen And 3
bedrooma. 211J b1tlh1, dinir1g
room. family room. eat in
kitchen. gerage. low down
p~tvmon l. ln t ere• t flee loan 10
qualified buy11r lor rern• inder of
1987, owner lin ~~n ced , 304 ·

41

6846.

Call 614 -367 -

J BR , 2 batha, gar•ge. large
kit ctlen, larg e dini ng room, AC,
9YJ% interest. 13,000 ' down.
take over payments. Call 614446 ·2472 .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

12111 10. 1976 Sctlultz mobile
homa-e~~:c , cond. Price negotiable. Ca ll evening• 814-448-

4 room houae for tale. 48 Neil
Ave . $ 1 2.oory

61 Household Goods

Apartment
for Rent

PEANUTS
SOUNDS TRAVEL FAR
ON A SUMMfR Nt611T..

SOMEWIIERE.SOMEPLACE,
SOM£0HE 15 OPENING
A CAH OF D06 FOOO,
MP I'M NOT TllERE !

Cal1lbtln ltllnd IXQ!Odl
with 1 VlngNIICI. (1'1)
g Tlltlll* o1o1t11 MD C.O.D.
• al Lltllllow
12:GO (J) 1111rntll1d Allin
(!) lpDnllaDII (R)

i;t::&amp;l'eople
OS!gnOII

0 IIIWINIIht LIYt ntWI

with Plfrtclc Emory ond
Kllltlf1 ~. (1 :00)
·12:11 (I) Men liM! People
t2:JII (J) IIIII ol ClrDuc:l1o

e

One letter stands for another. In thls sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apotllrophes the length and fonnatlon of the words are all
hinta. Each day the code letters are different.
CIYPI'OQUOTE
8·25

U A
GALD

B Q

KUB
DU A

YC QA

N G

G B V S C D C .B V J

J A y y J

JBHY. - GUNFYAJ RNHSAYNCFA
Yetteiday'l Cr,ptoqaote: IF ONE PERSON TELLS
YOU YOU HAVE DONKEY EARS, TAKE NO NOTICE;
~HOUIJ) TWO TELL YOU, GET YOURSELF A SADDLE.

- HEBREW PROVERB

�Page~ 12-

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

fuppers Plains residents give views...
Upon co mp le tio n of del all ed
pl&lt;tn s, 1.1 7 systr ms wer e Included
in t he p roject. Of the 137, 8~
systems we re sched uled for
re pl acement while nothing was
to be done to tho&gt; other 52.
II was fur the r deter m ined tha t
thc 137 housPholds In clud ed In the
project wou ld IJe required to pa y

a user' s char ge of $5.44 per
month, to cover cos ts of yearly
inspections of the system s by the
loca l health depart ments. Because the systems wou ld remai n
under con trol of the individual
prope rty owners, the fina ncial
burde n of re pairing · any future
proble ms with the sys tems would

....-- Local briefs------.
Sqtuid has eight calls
MPi gs County E m ergency Medi cal Serv ices re por ts eight
ca lls Wednesday; Tuppers Pl ains a t 1: 10 a .m. tran sported
1\url rcy Fra zier to Camden-Cla rk Me m or ia l Hospit a l; Pomer oy
a t 9· :,:1 &lt;~ . m . to Locust St. for Beatrice P r ice to Ve te rans
Memoria l ll os pi la l; Midd lepor t Fire Station at 11:58 a.m . to
Sta t(• Route Ci54 for a gas tan k truck accident ; Pomeroy a nd
c:a ll lpolis call ed to ass ist: Ra.c ine at 2:06p.m. to Fifth St. for
Ma rie Roy to Veter a ns Me morial Hos pital; Pomeroy at 2:29
p. m. to Dr. Cond e's office for Ka tie Felter to Holze r Medi ca l
Ce nter : Midd leport a t 6:40p.m . t ra nsported Ke nny Byers from
th o• sta tio n to Pl ea sa nt Va lley Hospita l: Tuppe rs P lains a t 8: 14
p.m. to I he!\ r baugh Addition for Be tty Jean Swiger to Ve te rans
M~mo r ia l Hos pit a l; later to St. J oseph 's Hospita l; P omeroy at
11: 05 p.m . lo Ma in S t. for Ke ith Musser lo Ve te ra ns Me mor ia l
Hos pita l.

Bloodmoobile collects
93 pints during visit
MorP 1han Hill perso ns reported
to a n Ame rica n Hed Cross
Bloodmobil t a t the Me igs Senio r
Citizens Cenl&lt;·r Wednesday to
glvt• fJ:I pin ts of blood.
Twe nly-one of the 102 donors
rcpor ll nl( ga ve blood to repla ce
Iha l used by a rela tive or fr iend.
f irst time donors we re Ma ry
La v&lt;•nda r. Ka thy Mc Da ni el and
Kr lst le F: ;Jso n. Bre nda Cun nin gham , Laura G. Proud foot ,
Na ncy Mu llen and Ebe r Pickens
becam e one ~al t o n donors; Glor ia .I. Pca v!Py , a 1hree gallon
donor: Ma ry !&lt;. Spe ncer a nd ·
Pau l M;o rr . !'our gall on donors,
and Ar iel I" Va nover, a six ga llon
&lt;lonor du r ing lhr v is it.
Supervis ing [Jhyslcian s were
Or. James Withe re ll and Dr .
Wilma Ma ns fi eld and nut ses
workin g wC'rc Beula h Ward, .Ja n
1\l ki ns . Kr is E:aso n a nd Joyce
Kerns. E MS per sonnel helping
with

thp

v i.c; i1 wer e

l"uud 1, Hr o·ntho :\t•ub lln•, Luu n1 (: . l'mudfllnt.
IIJ ~· ld II . Kl nJt, ll ryu n Sh .. k. -luyn• M. fl u II, l':~m

Kllt' ht·n .. Jr .

N e as~.

Huey Ea-

son, .Joan Corder and Jeanelle

Radford . Me mber of the rell rcd
senior vo lu nl c('l' progra m help·
lng wen• V l r gl n~a Buc ha nm&gt;.
Dor olhy l.ong. E rma Roush,
Lula Ha mp ton. Es ther Harden,
.Jac k a nd J oa n Surden, Mary
Nease. Wil liam Hoback, T helma
Dil l. F lorence Ric ha rds . Evelyn
Gilmor e. Philomena F oll r od and
J ess ie Cur tis . Me mbe rs of t he
!loc k Spri ngs Rell er Hea lth Club
se rved the ca nt een.
Don ors were give n cerllfica tes
&lt;'ll ti lllng the m loa tur tle s umlae
a t P l ea s Pr ~ Hr stau ra nt as ;:t
s po'Ci a l promotio n car r ied out for
t he v is it.
ll o no,· s b y c o mmun l ly
included :
l ' om ll'l 'u,\ - \ i'li 'IL,I \ nlln\l't, U d111r11h l .tnnr,\ ,
lla n
t'u ll r u~l. ' "' " n •m••• IA•ml t•,·, ~ · oy Nih .

t:

I .A' IIlll'll ' kKn ll( hl, ll n• ml ;o ( ' un nln ~t l m r n , "' unoo
ti I u llut u~ . l\1111 11111 l!u dl u ril, l ..o~•l~ .1. \\ y unl,
l looho•r t \ 1 ·~ '' '" ' 1. l' h,\ 11 1• S . :\I ll ~' , M Ji t ~ .. ro•l
linrrl•, llun.1111 \ . ~ 1:t ) • I ~· t•rnll. ,\1tl ru, \\ 1111 Pr It

re pair eosts. ,
Yearly costs to opera te t he
sys te m wer e es tim a ted a t $35.250
per month.
Jones s a id II was his opinion
thai the sewer district would try
to build a su r plus with the use r's
char ges. In yea rs to com e. a
surplu s could result in a redu ction of the c harge.
J on ,Jacobs, Meigs Coun ty
de put y hea lth commissio ne r , ex pla ined tha t If the project is
termin ated, contro l of the situ ation will fail back in 1he lap of the
loc al hea lth depar tme nt. whi ch
by law, mu st enfo rce EPA
sta nda rds.
Jacobs said his depan m e nt
would be requ ired to ins pect all
t he syste m s included in the
problem area . The owners of the
sys tems would then be advi sed if
problems existed a nd be give n a
lime limit to make repair s. If
re pair s would not be made ,
J acobs said he would be req uired
to turn to the cou nt y prosecuting
atlorney who cou ld, or cou ld not,
lak e action. One recourse to the
prosecuting allorney , Ja cobs
sa id , would be to di rect the health
depa r tme nt to make repairs, a nd
tha n asse ss the costs again st the
property owner's tax setlleme nt.
The building ban in Tuppers
Pl a ins would remain in effect
Ja cobs sa id, unt il a ll sewage
proble ms are corrected .

owners .
Bu t reside nts were opposed to
the user' s c harge a nd a citizen's
petition agains t the $5.44 was
forw a r ded to EPA. Ma ny fell it
was unfair because t hey eit her
had no sewage pr oblems . or had
a lready repaired problem s a t
th eir own rx pense. Sin ce the
people without problems we re
sti ll required to pay the $5.44 .
they felt they wo uld be paying for
I he problems of their neig hbOrs.
The next word from EPA was
th at the projec t . since It was a
pilot project. wa s being sent to
I he Oh to Allorney Gene ral for
revie w. The a tt orney gene ra l
opinioned I hal the syste ms could
not rem a in unde r the control of
t he priva te indiv idua ls , but had
to be owned a nd ma intained by
the county a nd a sewa ge dist r ict
for med .
I I wa s the n necessa ry for th e
e ngin eers to re vise t he 'sys te m 's
ma nage me nt pla n a nd as a
resull , the user' s fee was a lso
rev ised- from t he ori gina l $5.44
to $21 pe r mont h.
Bec ayse I he system slili had to
be ma intained under one um bre ll a. eve ryone. eve n th ose
Individ uals without curren t problems, would s till be required to
pay t he $21 whic h would cover a ll
cos ts related to th e operation of
I he systems, includ ing a ny futu re

!

While Thev Lut

1/2 PRICE

STOCK UP M
LANE CEDAR
CHEST SALE
CLEANUP SALE - SOLD

WOMEN'S and CHILDREN'S

SUPERCOVERINGS
BUYS ON L~~=::::==::::::::::.
FlOOR

NG

12' Vinyl linoleum

JUNIOR SIJJKS ................. 2S0lo .OFF

ONlY

CHILDREN'S SLEEPWEAR .... 2S lo OFF
LITTLE BOYS TOPS .............

2 -FOI

1

SALE

~onstruction

years of enjoyment.
Assorted colors.
OUR REG. 5188.00

Special

$1 29
REG. S439.00

BEDROOM SUITE

SPECIAL

living loom Suite

IUY ONE IICLINEI
Gil ONE FilE ,

1/2 PRICE
END·Of·MODEL YEAR

SPRING BASE
LOUNGER
Quality
for

2 piece
Early American

RECUNEIS

sq. ft.

LLOYD

Close-out sale prices
• •
on our rema1n1ng
stock. Hurry in and
save on a new
Lawn-Boy

$599 95

quality Howard Miller
Grandfathlr Clock •. naw's
the time to buy!
Only 3 to sell.
REG. II 050.00 to 11150.00

See our larJtc f(roup of ('arpet
naniM. Many dilft&gt;re nt s ize• &amp;
colors at fans as tlc

CLOSE-OUT SALE

lEG.
sa99

$5,95

$

Model 5254 - Rog. $359.95

288
MOdel 1035 - Rog. sm.t5 - Self Propelled
$ .
21" W/CATCHER · STEEL DECK .............. 321
Mooloi703S -: tog. •2nts
W/ Caicli.r
-. ·S -21'' Steel Deck .............. ............................ 242
Moolol 7271 ;_ Rog. S419.95 - W/ dutrh systom
21" Self-Propelled wI grass catcher ..... S336
19" DELUXE CAST DECK""'""'"""'"""'"
~

Super Buy

$329
NIGHTSlAND- Salt$49

SUMMER CLOTHING

MEN'S SHORTS &amp;JAMS ........................................... 25Ofo Off
IOYS' SU._R TOPS ............................................... 250fo Oft
MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS ............................................... 250fo Off
MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS ...................................:............ 2 5Ofo Off
BOYS' SHORTS &amp; JAMS............................................ 2 50fo Off

MEN'S KNIT SH._TS .................................................... 25'/o OH

MEN'S SUMlER SlACKS ........................................... 2 5°/o Off

ELBE , FELDS

STORE
9:30 toHOURS
5:00
Monday-Saturday
'

enttne

2 Sections 14 Pages

25 Cend

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

F inal ac tion was anticipated on bills in creas ing
the speed limit to 65 mph on r ural freeways a nd
rev amping the "certifi ca te of need " law which
governs new construction and equipme nt at
hos pita ls a nd other health ca re facililles.
Sent to a joint House-Sena te confere nce
commillee for negoliallon was a ma jor over haul
of the civ il justice sys tem , insurance r egu la tion
and product lia bility Jaw.
The House was to meet at ll a.m. and the Senate
at 1:30 p.m .
Both House Speaker Ve rna l G. Riffe Jr ., D-New
Boston , a nd Senate P res ide nt P a ul E . Glllmor,
R-Por t Clint on, said a Saturday sess ion probably
would be necessary to co mplete business, or else
the Legisla ture would have to re turn next wee k.
" I think, realistically ; we' re looki ng a t a

Sa tur day sess ion, or next week ," said Glll mor.
Riffe wa s opti mistic about the 1988-89 s ta te
budget. " I think we can ~a ve a budge t by
Sa turday," he sa id.
The House paved the way Thursday fo r a public
vote this fa ll on a $1.2 bil lion bond issue for local
highway a nd br id ge r epair . approv ing It 97 -1.
The Sena te adopted a mass ive Hou se-pa ssed
budget la nguage bill alt ering sta te policies In the
area of welfare, c hild support and tax Jaw
enforcement.
The Se nate was to have voted Thursday on the
highway m aint ena nce ap propr iation whic h also
contai ns a 2:7-ce nt lnc rease In the tax on a galion
of gasoline. and a two-year hi ke in the
beer-dr ink ing a ge .
Bu t tha t bill was sent to the F in ance Committee.

which scheduled an 11 a.m. meeting for today .
T hu rsday' s aciJon saw bills sent to Gov.
Ric hard F. Celes te giv ing new car buyers
r ecourse with ma nu fact urers of " lemon" a utomobiles. limiting the scope of medical m a lp rac li~e ·
lawsuits and giving local gover nme nts the r ight to
recover cos is incurred in clea ning up tox ic spills
or dischar ges.
As r eported by the Se na!e Hi ghways and
Tra ns porta lion Commit tee, the highway construction a ppropr iation a llowed Ihe gasoline ta~
to go up by 2. 7 cent s a galion Imm ed iately, a nd .aas
mu ch as 0.8 cents a year until 1993. The prOCeE; $
are used for highway maintenance a nd cons tru~
lion. Tra nsportation officials have said tl!e
existin g formula will increase the tax by a bout 0 . ~
cent s a .galion eac h year .
••

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

Ohio's development director
is searching .for ·another j~b
The center, opera ted by the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) Ohio Development Dir ector Cl ar - state's Thomas E di son P r ogr a m,
is fi nanced in par t by a $4 million
e nce D. P awlicki, who is leaving
grant from the Ohio Department
his state post July 1, is looking for
of Development .
another development -type job in
In a wr itte n opinion reques ted
his home town of Toledo.
by Paw licki, the Et hics CommisThe Ohio E thics Com m ission
s ion ruled tha t slate law prevents
ruled that P a wlicki cannot acPaw licki from rece iv ing comce pt the pres idency of the E dison
pensation for one year in anoulIndustrial Systems Cente r In
Toledo a s he had planned , side pos ition created unde r his
gu ida nce with the state .a gency .
beCause of a confli ct of interes t.
The commission also ruled tha t
Pawlicki , 60, sa id he still pla ns
to retur n to Toledo to pur sue it would have been a co nflic t of
"o ther c areer oppor tunities " in lnle res t for Paw licki to represent
the center in reques ting funding
•
the area of development.
Pawlicki was to have headed !rom the sta le.
the r esearch and de velop,me nr · ·"- Wn'l ir"l' CMidn'r fi ve with
•consor tium of the University of eas ily wa s the fa ct that! couldn' t
Toledo, Bowling Green St ate be pa id for one year , " said
Univers it y, Owe ns Tec hnical Paw li cki.' adding tha t he was
College. Medical College of Ohio "disa ppoi nted" with the commiss ion decision.
and 22 businesses.

Pawlic ki sa id a Tol edo foundation had agr eed to pay his salary
for one year wit hout sta le matching fun ds , but the commission
still ruled aga inst him .
The commiss ion had pre·
vlous ly given Pawlicki a ver ba l
go-ahead, sta ling the posilion
would no t be a conflict of Interes t.
"Wh ile I a m disappointed wit h
the opinion, I a m comfor table
knowin g I took the rig ht steps In
protecting the fu ture of the
Edison Cent er," Paw licki sa id.
" II was a close ca ll. I rea lly
wanted to do II. But I d idn 't want
to ta ke it with a n body looking
as kancC'. '~

-

Dr . Ja mes McComas, pres ide nt of the Univers it y of Toledo
and t he center 's governing
board, sa id a search will beg in
immed ia tely for a new di rector.

By United Press Inte rnational
After weeks of August-a nd
· July·like wea ther, the Nationa l Weather Service says
Ohioans can expect a taste of
Sept ember-sty le weather durIng the weekend.
A co ld front tha t stretched
south from eas tern Ont ar io
Into Ohio tr igger ed the developme nt of sca t tered s howers
a nd thunderstorms ove r the
eas tern por tions of the stale
overnight . Brief heavy ra ins
fell in some of the thund er stor ms . but pr eci pitat ion
amounts were genera lly less
tha n a hall a n Inch.
Skies we re ex peeled 1o be
par tly cloudy today, wit h
nor thwes t winds of 10 to 20
mph s preading ac ross the
sta te as the cold fr ont pushed
east. Afl ernoon temperatu res

were to be a lit tle cooler . wi lh
highs 75 to 80.
Skies will be par tly cloudy
tonig ht bul there will be
enoug h clearing to a llow over night lows to drop into the 50s.
A beautiful Septem ber -like
day is In store for Saturday .
Skies will be cr isp a nd cl ea r
with a fternoon tempera tures
In th e 70s.
Sunday' s wea ther Is expected to be muc h t he sa me,
with fair skies a nd highs in the
mid· to upper 70s.
The early morning weathe r
map s howed a co ld front
throug h eastern Ont ario, cen·
tral Ohio, Ke ntucky, Te nnes·
senne and Miss iss ippi. A large
area of high pressure was
mov ing into the upper Plains .
The co ld front will reach the
East Coas t tonigh t a nd the

high will m ove sout heas t Into
the Midwes t.
Da ytim e highs shou ld be
back around 80 Monday a nd
well into Ihe 80s by Tu es da y.
The lower tempera tu res for
the nex t few days will make
worki ng co ndi t io n s for
farmers more com fortable.
Livestock producers should
fi nd this we at he r more co nducive to wo rking wit h or tra nsporting a nima ls , with heal
st ress a sma ller fa c tor.
Drying ra tes were still to be
a lit tle low today. Re lative
humidities were likely to remain abov e 50 percent In most
of the sta te. As dew points fa ll
int o the 50s, however , re lative
humdltles should fall below 50
percent Saturday and rem a in
low as air tempe ra.tures ed ge
upward through the wee kend.

WHEELCHAIR LIFr VAN - Representatives
of organizations and othel'!l who contributed
toward the cost ol this new van with ll wheelcha ir
lilt, Jathered around II Thu l'!lday morning for a
plctur.c. Wheelchair Thurman Smith ol Middl eport who will he using the van for transporta tion

as he necdllt, Is pictured on the 1111. To the rl1hl,
G~'O rge Harris rcpreoentlnJ! the Fraternal Order
of the Eagles , pretwnts a 11,000 check to Wanda
Vining, trans portation coordlnlllor, from the
nlltional organization' s Memorial Foundation
ll'und .

Donations total $5,888 for ·
Meigs Senior Citizens van
A total of $5,888 In local
contr ibu tions wa s made toward
the cos t of the new Senior
C' ll izens Center va n w llh • a
wheelchair lift whic h was put
into operation t his week.
The la rges t con tribullo n, $1.000
from the Frate r nal Order of
Eagles Memoria l Fou ndation
Fund, was presented Thu rsday
morn ing by George Ha rris to
Wa nda Vi ning, tra nsportation
coor dinalor. Contributio ns fro m
other or ga nizations and indiv iduals ranged from $10 to $500. Total
cost of the va n was ove r $20.000
with the state r equiring local
matching funds of one-fo ul'lh.
Th e coni rlbutlons e xceeded
that a mount wit h $4,195 going
toward the mat ching cost, $1,617
for Insura nce, a nd $300 fo r a two
way radio .
Va ns now run into e very area
. of the county on a twice a week
basis . with daily trips to Middleport a nd P omeroy. The center
has five vans and th ree wagons
with the wagon s being used
pr lmar iy to take senior citize ns
to out-of-cou nty medical facil ities and voluntee rs to their
respective stallons of service. All
of the vans a re equpped with
two-way radios for e mer gency
use.
In com me nting on the res ponse
to the Council on Agi ng a ppeal for
funding fo r the new van, Mrs.
Eleanor Thomas. executive director. said she is always ove r·
wbelmed by the support and
generos ity of Meigs Countlans.
" We still have that wonderful
nelghbor·heiplng· nelghbOr con·
cept tha t is missing In so many
rural a reas ," she said.
Orga nizatio ns co ntributing
were Apple Grove United Me tho·
d ls t Women, Am er ican Legion
Auxiliary , Feeney-Bennett Pos t
128, He mlock Grove grange,
He m lock Grove Ch ristian
I'

Chu r ch, Fa it hful Fo ll owN s
Class, 1\mc rlca n Legion AuxilIary :19, Pm eory Churc h of Christ
Sunda y Sc hoo l, Columb ia
Gra nge, Te m ple Un it ed Met hodis t Church . Ea st Le tart Me thodis t Church Sund a y Sc hOol.
Pomeroy Unit ed Methodist
Church Women. Ea st Leta r t
Un ited Me th odi s t C hu r c h

Women. Star Gra nge, Dex ter
Church of. Chri st, Long Bottom
Senior Clllzens Club, Rock
Sp r ings Unti e d Met ho di s t
Church. Ad ult Class. Rock
Sp ri ngs U .M.W. , F ra te rn a l
Order of the Eag les , Disa bled
American Vet rans, Episcopal
Chu rch Women, Racine UMW,
Continued on page 10

Committee doubtful if North
will tell truth, even under oath

lndudes double dresser and
mirror, 4 drawer chest of
drawers, headboard and bed
frame. Pine or oak finish.

•::;:n•NT

•

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio. Friday, June 26, 1987

Predict cooler temperatures
for Ohioans over weekend

If you've lletn wanting a

12' Nylon Carpet
2 Shades

O.EVON
SPORTSWEAR ........ 30°Io OFF
.

2S0lo OFF
GIRLS' SUMMER DRESSES ..... 30°Io OFF
WOMEN'S
SUMMER SLEEPWEAR ......... 2S0lo OFF
liTTLE BOYS' OUTFITS ........... 30°Io OFF
GIRLS' SHORTS &amp; TOPS .....2S0lo OFF
SUMMER JEWELRY ............. 2S0lo OFF
CHILDREN'S SWIMWEAR .... 2S0lo OFF

GRANDFATHER
CLOCK CLEARANCE

2 patterns
ONlY $4.00 sq. yd .

0

at y

By LEE LEONARD.
UPI Statehouse Re porter
COLUM BUS. Ohio (UP1) -State lawmakers
strained m ight ily towa rd summer adj ournme nt
today, but it appeared too many controver s ia l
is sues stood in their way .
Still unresolved were the state's $22 billion
· gener al bud get, now in priva te co nfer ence
committee negotiations . as well as a t horny $2.4
billion highways appropria tion bill conta ining an
Increase in the gasoline tax a nd the minimum
· beer-dr inking age.
Scheduled for a H'ouse vote was a bill
overhauling the regulation of savings a nd Joan
associa tions, whic h also ex tends for one year the
25 per cent ceiling on credit card and ba nk loan
Int erest r ates.

jeans, f01hian (Oiors, ston1~ washtd."
REG. 120 to 130

2S0lo OFF

•

Pa rtly uloudy tonlghl. Low
In the m id 50s. Mostly sunny ~
Saturday. Highs between 75
and 80.

Prospects dim for lawmakers adjournment

Missts, Juniors, Petitt Sizts
100°!. COtton denim jHm, stretch

WOMEN'S SWIMSUITS .......

Page 6

Copyrighted 1987

Firm
Price
Am E lec t r ic Powe r ......... .... 27 %
AT&amp;T .... .......... .. ....... ... ..... 28%
Ashl and Oil .............. .. .: .. .... 63\1,
Bob E vans Fa r ms .. ..... ... .... 25\1,
Cha r m ing Shoppes .... ... .. ..... 31)4
Federal Mogui. .... .......... ...... 44:Y,.
GOOdyear T&amp;R .. .. .. .. .. .. .... .. .68:V,
Heck' s Inc ... ..... .. .... .. ... .... ... .4 \{,
Limited In c . ........ .............. ... .45
Multimedia Inc . .. .... .. .. ........... 59
Rax Restaura nts .. ........ ..... ... ;;:y,.
Robbin s &amp; Myers ....... .. .... , .. 10\&lt;J
Shoney's Inc . ......... ................ 30
Wendy' s Inti . ... .. .. .. .. .. ........ 9·)\
Worthin gton Ind .. .. ... ...... ... .. 21 y,

Tanker
...
Conti nued from page l

Veter a ns Mem or ial
Wednesday admissions- Bea t r ice P r ice. Pomeroy : Mar ie
Hoy , Po meroy ; Ma t:vln Ra ndolph. Racine: Debra Faw ,
R utland .
Wednesda y discharges- Ber·
t ha Diehl. Gera ld Hay ma n. Cheste r You ng.

Daily Number
121
Pick 4
5144

•
notices

Vot .37, No.37 ·

JEANS
CLEARANCE

The Tight Seat is Here! The problem is solved! No
more worrying with 3 cushions moving up and down
and arou nd. The tight seat i s all one cushion with a 3
cushion look . Fastens securely in place.

.

(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Prov ide d by
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt E llis &amp; Loewi

() "" II . C ' u llu nJ ~.
l .ll rlun. \' &amp; - r'l:nru Nih.
Uu lluud - Mll'llf' ll •· ft . H11tr , .\ lur \ nu 1ld~o~on,
II Pnllll llln ld,..m.
·
I ~ IR fC'o\' ll l t •- J-;m, t:. M,vo·r :oo.
ltt•l' dMIIIt• - .Julin C. Rl •·o·, Ur ian .1. ltt•o•tl,
Fundu 'l' hu mu~ .
l'o rl huul - ~ l o • pl" '" r'l:t •a.o-t•, Ka r la Smh h.
~.fr:w ll .,. , - ·lim IIIII , llo•hr1o 1.. Olft•nl" '' ll' 'r ,
M:u ,\ .f . l .n\'I'IIIW•r . nll. r t aT bn m :t~ . t :lw r l'h·k••n,.,
t•;n hl l.aw...un,

Hospital news

page

Daily stock prices

WOMEN'S

SUMMER C
SALE

Ohio Lottery•

Church

as possible.
" If t he money · goes back to
E PA ." warned Bob Levenl ree ,
project engineer, who was also
present for las t night's meeting,
" it's gone. The re' s no alt ernate
plan."
If t he project is te rm ina ted, the
commissioners pledged to wor k
wit h the reside nt s of Tuppers
P lai ns to find new solu tio ns to the ·
on-go ing problem s of sewage
d is posal in the com munity.
Approximately 60 people were .
in a tte ndance at the ·meeting.
EPA decli ned to aflend:

ll i~ W I• •l'·
ll ~ mliw k c ;rn~t ·-

The Wait's Over!

.

Although not ail residents
Included in the project were at
last night' s m eeting, those who
were present we re as ked to vot e.
by show of hands, on whether or
not to move forward wit h proj ect
co nstucllo n. On ly one res iden t
vo ted in favor of const ruction.
The commissio ners pointed out
thai they are only interested in
carr)·ing out the wi shes of t he
people of Tuppers Pl a ins and
based upon those wis hes. will
ma ke the fi na l de ter mina tio n on
the futu re of the proj ect as soo n

.

Th o Middlepo rt and Pomeroy
F lt·e De partme nts . Middl eport
E me rgency Serv ice a nd Gallla
Cou nty E me rge ncy Med ical Ser·
v ices , in add ition to t he Middlepor t Pollee Departm e nt, Ohio
Highway Pa trol a nd the Ga llia
Count y Sheriff' s De pa r tment res ponded to the acc ide nt.
One fi reman, Ke nny Bye r.
wast lre al ed at Vete ra n's Me mor ia l Hos pita l alt er bei ng overcome from the hea l of the day,
wh ic h was Qvrr 90 degrees. a nd
the exl reme hea t of the fi re .

1987

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

ltud tw - Vlr~~:ln la rllllnd. fbtiM•M Kll t·hlt•,
I l tath·10 \\' . ll u!o! h. M•.r lt• ,\ , H u ~ h . Uurulh a Rllfh',
.runn 1. . l'nlltlt•, ft ••ll )' Su,vr•·. Uav.·na K. flr m'!'Ot 'r,
William 11 . Httlnu·k. 1\ll.r hun l,y nn f hllJimun ,
Mar,,· t'. Huslt, Uu nuld t;, Bu,; h, .h•Jull'lh· M.
lt ndfurd, ftarh aru Ro•t•M:It•, :\l ary 1\ . fo'uw lt&gt;r ,
1.11 n111: lkH t nm - V ~ nf'!oo &lt;oJ t Sl d" l' ll , l ~ • hhh•
t' lnhaw. K11 thy .\'I C'IInnh•l, Rrut·•• llawlo•,v . I..1U1 m

Wanda

Har ris. /\ rir.o rw Stl'wa r t. Norma

_co_n
lin-ued_lr_
om_P•_ge _l

~lil h • r . ,J IU! It~ · t 'i' lt ~· • .John f' Dtoilo•r , Tr i«'I'Y II 'dt'll,
\'lrl{l n Windon, t' r1•dt•r ll·k H, Thumroo1n, Kt•lly It,
Oluthn , l lowurd l' . l.u ~~:UJ, t ;t•rald Housh, t\ d l'lt
1.. Whll t•, Rll,f tnnntl f' . ,, ..,...,,.11, l,o r o-tla 1\ . Br owu,
,f:ll'klt • 11 1 111dll'~olll d , Mur y i\p t'nt·t'r , Hil l,\ ' Sp••ntw ,
~b r ~· ~u rdt• n , •\ rl111na :-!t l'wart , C"11roly n ('h url!'!.,
Ch olf h·10 M:lll h, llomdd K. S mll h. Krl,..tn fo~a.•utn ,
' l 'h•~•d n rt · f ' . t"h, IH•r, l'mll Marr. l'hy UII'\ lla kt 'f.
·" l ddh•JJOrl - ,lol, "r alt f'owlr r . IJ ndLI 1.. llull·y,
lll mlil 1bh, ,\n ~~:t• l it l' t•ll l'rs, ld~ Mart in. Ml l'l t ~l'l
" ltfon~: , ' " ' IIID' l'lt w- h•t'll, Ci1•rwld Anthon)' , Kl t•l
JI Pr rmm n. nu,·ld ll u d~o n , Nnrm u WI I ~~&gt;• , Hnrolh)'
1\'lt-('luml. Worht l't• u\' \t•y, ~ll n t -y ,\'l nlh·n, Tl·
u wt hy i"nolllt. i•utr ll'lu l.o a: 11n, (~ t •u r a:• Hurrls .
Maur b; hu N t · l~n n , l'lll ri•·ILI Klldwn. F.d wa rd t:.

Im bod en and Pa m Imboden.
Clrr ical wm·kcrs Include Pegi(Y
.Jewe ll , M11ry

also rest wllh the Individual

Th~~June2s .

_....

f,.,,,,,,
......,.....
! 1111 ftl . "

I

WAS HINGTON I UP]J - After
23 days of testi mony a bout
diversions, cover-ups, lies and
profit eering, doubt is grow ing
within the congressional IranCont ra commit tees that the centra l fi gure In the sca ndal, Lt. Col.
Oliver North , will tell the truth
even unde r oat h.
The decorated Ma ri ne was
11ra ised by many . comm ittee
members at the outset of the
hearings seven weeks ago as a
dedica ted patr iot a nd a tireless,
II perha ps misguided, National
Security Council a ide to P res l·
dent Reagan .
But since then - and s ignificantly Thursday - his image a nd
those of other figur es ln the case
have been tarnished severely by
teltlmony t hat :
- They alte red p roposed coneres sional testimony of the late
CIA Director William Casey in
November to cover up the
administration 's role In selling
arms to Iran through Israel in
1985. The Idea was to blame the
)

deals on Israel, all houg h Jnvesllgators have since fo und Reaga n
approved t he sales.
-North oversaw the d iver sion
of at leas t $3.5 million to the
Nicaragua n Contra rebels in
pr ofits from secret U.S. arm s
sales to Ira n, t hen altered documents and destroyed others to
cover his tracks as J ustice
Departme nt officia ls c losed In
wllh wha t critics say was a
sloppy Investigation.
-Principa ls in the !ran· Contra oper a tions apparently pro·
liled persona lly from the a ffair .
wllh Nort h handlin g thousands of
dollars in traveler's checks fr om
a Contra leader, arranging lor
bogus bills a nd le tters to hide the
source of payment for an expensive security system at bls home,
and being singled out by the key
money man ln the deals fqr
"death benefit" accounts at
Swiss banks.
Charles Cooper, a top Jus llce
Department aide to Attorney

...

Ge neral Edwin Meese. offered
seven hours of explosive tesllmony Thu rsday a bout ear ly efforts
to investiga te the controversy
tha t opened in November like a
ca n of wn.rm•

CIWILIII COOPBB

MEMORIAL DONATION ~ The Meip '-lgh ClasH of 1118'7 lw
made a donation of $417.17 to the newly formed Melp Alumni
AIISoclatlon In memory of their claBsmate, Dua ne !lowell, who was·
killed in a one-vehicle accident juot before graduation. Shannon'
Kindy, tre lllluter of the Class of 191!7, presents Bob Werry ,;
president of the alumni 118soolatlon, with the check. An alumni•
dance Is belnJ held Saturday night In the Melp High gymnasium:.
The dance, with music by Mega Sounds, will start at9. Social hour;
8 tarte at 8 and a ceremony honor ing retiring football coach, ·
Charles Chauncey, will he around 8:30. At 7:30, members olthe.
athletic &amp;~~~~ociatlon wUI he at the school to aell the old Melp
basketball a nd football uniforms. E ach uniform piece may be•
purchMed for $5.
:

'r!

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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="39293">
              <text>June 25, 1987</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
