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Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, July 6. ·1987

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Korea·begins freeing polit~cal .prisone~ .
Bl JAME'l KIM
civil and politic!' I rights restored men! and oppasltlon leaders. The tear-gas borhbwhlledemonstrat- - SEOOL, SOuth. Korea (U Ph :·- soon ' u:nder reform pr.omlses 'major opposition Reul)trieation ing with friends on the YqnseL
-President Chun Doo Hwan' s
announced byChuilonJune29 . In De mocratic Party canceled all campus June 9. He was the thi r d
government. began freeing
the . announcement, Chun . also . planned activity until his funeral, person to die in anti· government
·political prl$oners today under
accepted direct presiden-tial elec· · ·scheduled for Thursday .· · · - . demonstra-tions J:lur-lrig las t
proposed reform package, but. .lions _thro\jgh · consti.tu.ttonal ·
" We crown the studeiit'sname month.
tensions persisted as prote~ts
amendment. · ·
· - with a title · of hero," 's aid the-An ·autopsy found two tiny
erupted after the death of a ·
The death early Sunday of Lee National Coalition for Demo- · m etal, fragments tn his brain,
· student wounded las t month by
Han-yo!, 21, who died after 27 cratic Constitution, which s pon- said Seoul District Prosecutor
an exploding tear-gas grenade
days In a coma, Immediately so red 17. days of. violent n!ltlon'! tred by P.Olice.
triggered ma.s slve protests . wide protests In June, " We will
A total of177 people arrested In About 2,000 students at Yonset devote everything to · achieve
· recent anti-government protests University In Seoul clashed with democratiza tion which was his
were set free, including a leading police who fired tear gas to keep goal."
opposition politician and U other the protesters from spllllngto the
The coalition urged the governpeople who . organized massive streets. The students planned ment to single out those whci
protests on June 10. During the another rally later In the day .
fatally Injured the student and
week, about 310 more will be
directed the action and declared
released, authorities said.
Lee's death delayed -by at least all this week as a mou r ning By TRACY WILKINSON .
PANAMA CITY. Panama
About some 2, 100 blacklisted one week full negotiations on the period for him.
1
UPI)
- President Ertc Arturo
dissidents also will ·have their reforms between the governLee was hit by an exploding
Delvalle,' faced with ·pe r sistent
opposition to his mltltary ·
backed government , has urged
the armed forces to ret urn to
their "legitimate function" of
defense and sec urity.
At the sa me time, private ,
school teacher s announced plans
for a one-day strik e today as
opposition to Delvalle's government continued unabated tn the
strategically located Ce nt ni l
American na tion.
The teachers issued their
s.t
rl
ke call before DelvallE' made
....
•
his comments · In a nationally
tele vi sed broadcast Sunday
night.
Delvalle called fo r a "truce of
passions" a mong protest ing Pa n·
a m anians a nd ordered a n lnvesti·
gat ion -Into c harges -agai nst mil it ary 1 strongman Ge n. ·Manuel
A~tonlo Norirga.
He urged t he milit a ry to fulfill ·
Its promise to " retu rn to Its

a

y 00 Sung·~oo, who was present confirmed today that the tiny
at a n autopsy sunday along with . fragments were from a tear-gas
15 students.
bom'b. Prosecutors began an
· The ·pfl?secutor said. much of Investigation . into the _lnhdent ·
Lee's bratn·was decayed and 'hls · . after Lee was Inju red.
lUng was largely decomposed.
PolJce, are Instructed to !Ire
The National Scientific Investi- tear-gas bombs 30 feet ;~bove
gatlon Research Institute, a crowds to prilvent ~njurles from
gove rnmeqt Investigation office, the exploding canister.

Panamanian President calls
for a · 'truce of passions'

•

.;

BUDDIES--These five men, all members of
Feeney-Bennett Postl28, American Lerlon, have
become .real "buddies'_' over the past months as
they have served a . key workers for the
constructi\)n of the new American Legion Home In
Middleport. The new building was unveiled at an
open house held Saturday afternoon In Middleport. Four of the five are retired and have donated

"

~

endless hours of labor on the construction and
finishing of the post home. Pictured from the left
are VIrgil Parsons, Albert Roush, Ralph Miller,
Henry Clatworthy, the retirees, 'and Fred Hanel
who played an active role but donated many hours
of labor even though he was recalled to his
employment durlg the construction period.

UNVEILED--Mrs. Delsle
Roush, active member of the
Ladies Auxiliary of FeeneyBennett Post 128, · American
Legion, is pictured with a
. restaurant size S2800 range In
the kitchen of the new American Legion Home in Middleport. The 10 . by 90 foot
structure was unveiled for
public inspection at an open
. house Saturday afternoon.
The new building, which ac·
cording to plans, will be a
center of community activities, includes the audlllorlum,
an excellent stage area, a
modern kitchen, a storage
area, and reslrooms equipped
f~r the handicapped. Refresh/·
ments
were served during the
Jpen house and musical enter·
talnment was provided by
Denver Rice.

Me anwhile, the Wa s hington
Pos t report ed today that former
foreign minis ter Aq ulllno Boyd
had gone to Wa s hington, D.C., as
a special ambassa dor t o' defu se
the tensions that have brought
the Reagan administration close
to a confrontatio n with Noriega .
Th e Post said Boyd will at ·
te mp t to counter an anti· Noriega
ca mpaign being waged In Washin gton by Ga br iel Lewis. one of
tht&gt; key negotia tors of the 1977
Panama Canal treaties .

•

LAHORE, Pakistan iUP i i Three bombs killed seven peopl&lt;;&gt;
a nd injured. !i7 on the lOth
anniversary of Gen. Mohammad
Zla ul Haq ' s seiZ ure of power. a
da y marked by thousands of
protesters calli ng for elections .
No f(roup cla imed responslbil·
it y for t he bombs that ex plodcp
Sunday within minut es of o ne
a nother on a rai lway p"latform, at
a near by taxi s tand a nd a! the
ceillral bus stat ion.
Aut horities declined w com me nt on w het her 1~0 bombs were
related to thl' anniversary or a
c;onvention of ShHte MosiL'mS
scheduled to begin toda y.
Opposit ion leaders and polit J.
cal rivals held rallies across 1he
na t ion Su nday to marl&lt; the lOth
anivPrsary of Zia's coup that led
to the hanging 22 months later of
Prime Minis ter Zulflkar All
Bhutto .
The fir s t bomb went off at the
taxi sta nd out side the ra ilway
s ta tion. killing two people. A
second , mo rl' power ful · device
r ipped through an iron bench on
the platform as pa ssengers were
boarding a train. A woman a nd

two boys believed to lx? her ·city, a bout .1 2.000 demonstrators
cha nting " down with Zla" and
children were killed.
Ofllcials at Mayo Hospltul said "hold •'il"cl ions ," 1urncd out for a
o girl wounded at the taxi sta nd ~occ fu l. 6· mile march fr om theand a man hurt on the plat form home of oppositlo'n leadl'r Be·
nazir Bhutto.
died later.
" r heard a terri ble explosion
Bhulfo, thc dau~:htcr of the late
and saw dl'nse smoke billowing, prime minister. did not partlcl·
and tht"n I heorq the walls of the pate In the march .
).A'ader Of I h ~ opposi tio n COatiInj u red ," a rallwa: co nductor
said. The bomb dismembered , tlon Movemrnt for the Re tora ·
many of the v icti ms, and left the tlon of Democracy staged a ratty
railwa y platform stai n('([ with In La horc. A crowd o r 2, 000 .
bloop and l.ittered with cloth ing . people gat hered In a bataar near
A th ird bomb cx pl,o ded later at the rall"•ay sta ti on to hea r
thP cent ral bus station , injurin g oppositio n leaders de noun ce
·
four people a nd ca using slight Zta 's nile.
Zla ruiNI under maptal taw
damage to fo ur bu es , author!·
I rom 1he July~. 1977, coup to Dec .
lies said.
St ate-run Radio Pakistan said :10, J!!R!l, followi ng the non- part y
altogethrr :, 7 people wrre ~IC\'tiOn of the national assembly
wounded in the explosions. In- and the approval of a·con trover- ·
sial refE-rend um that ~ave him
cluding 10 SE'r iously.
·
The bombs were the fi t's! such · another fl~c years In power .
Zla
's
crlttc.s
blame
him
for
blasts in Lahore, th t&gt; provincial
capital of the Pu njab. 190 miles des troying a framework · for
south east of the national capital ci vilian rule , wtdespread·corr upof Is lamabad , sin ce eigh t people , lion a nd grow ing dlv Is tons be·
Including the leader of a political tw!'l'n Pa~lstan 's ethni c groups:
group, were kill('([ on Pakistan Diplomats, military sources and
even Zta's rivals say he remai ns
D,ay March 23.
In K.1rachl. the nation's larges t flrmlych! coiuml..

PTL minister pr~ises Jerry Falwell
who fled angry protestors Saturday
By DA•VID CRAIG
FORT MILL, S.C. iUPI) The pastor of PTL's Heritage
Village Church denounced
protesters who forced the Rev.
Jerry Falwell to flee their
wra th and warned that only
God ca n save the "sick
m in ls t ry" from its own greed
and idolatry.
"You try your plan and your
plan will fail miserably, " the
Rev . Sam Johnson shouted to
more than 2,000 people In the
church Sunday . '"There Is only
one plan and that is God's plan ."
Neither lawyers, television
preachers, nor a Baptist from
Lynchburg, Va. -a reference to
Falwell - can save PTL If Its
follow ers do not repent, Johnson
warned.
"This has been a s ick ministry, " Johnson said, s haking his
finger. " Greed, selfishness, Idolatry, sins of the flesh - I'm not
talking a bou t a man. I'm not
talking about a few pe&lt;iple. I'm_
talking about us."
Johnson, a minister of the
c har is mat ic Assemblies of God
. Chu rch, pra ised Falwell for
putting "his reputa tion on the
line."
"I'm s ure there are Pentecostals today who can't understand
what I'm doing walking down the
same street with a fundam entalist Baptist." he sa id . " I'll tell :you
what I'm doing - I 'm getting
ready for heaven. " .
Turmoil has dogged the ministry since founder Jim Bakker, a
charisma tic, resigned In a sex
. scandal In March, handing over
the PTL empire to Falwell, a
fundamentalis t Baptist who
founded the Moral Majority.
Bakker, although defrocked by
the Assemblies of God. has since
I -

1-

--

said he wants to return to PTL,
but Falwell has refused, deeming
Bakker unfit to lead.
Because of some $72 million In
debt Falwell said PTL accrued
under Bakker, PTL sought Chap·
ter 11 bankruptcy protection.
Many PTL "partners" - people
)who contributed at least $1 ,000 to
the ministry- bitterly criticized
Falwell. and many are seeking
Bakker's return.
Several· hundred dissident s
converged Saturday on Heritage
USA, the PTL theme park, to
confront Falwell, who was there
for; Fourth of July activities.
They pushed Into the lobby of
the Heritage Grand Hotel, where
Falwell was staying, and cornered Falwell near an elevator. ·
"This Is awful. I have a
meeting. I've got to go," said
Falwell, walking bris kly through
the open atrulm toward the
elevator, security guards In tow.
A handful of protesters followed.
:'Stand ba~lt . If )IOU col'!)e any
closer I'll arrest you," a security ·
guard shouted as Falwell leaped
toward a glass - enclosed
elevator.
One protesster, Eleanor Everhardt, ran past the guard,
shouting: " I don't support you a
bit, Mr. Falwell. You haven ~ tgot
a dime In .this place."
As the elevator ascended to the
fourth floor, many protesters ran
up stairs and took other elevators
to balconies overlooking the
lobby. "Farewell Falwell, fare·
well Falwell, farewell Falwell,"
they chanted.
· A pianist In the lobby played
the . hymn "I'll Fly Away. Oh ·
Glory" as Falwell's elevator
rose. Protesters sang the hymn
and th,en · disbanded after 25
minutes.

Falwell later rode in a pa rade
as grand marshal and received
applause and cheer s from most
onlookers. There were sca tt ered
boos.
He la ter told United Press
l'lternatlonal that the de mon-·
Stratton "helped everybody see
how Ir ra tional and undisciplined
they (protesters) a re" and pronounced it. " a resounding and
e mbarrassing defeat.
"My guess Is that this Is the e nd
of the story for them," he said.
Falwell said that he was hOt
worried about physica l harm
when he fled .
"I don't think that the d issident
partners. are a da ngerous
group," he said. ".I think they a re
IrrationaL They have qu es ti o n ~ ·
ble leadership."
. ..
J

. thunderStorms. and a ll)w near ·
70~ Partly cloudy 11nd ,humid'
We dnesday , with a chance of
thunderstonns and highs near .
90 . .

•

~ot . 37 ,

No.43

';,

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio 1UP I I - Dewit e so me
obj ecflons, Gov. Richard F . Ce leste has signed a
494 -page bill co nta ining the af(e ncy and program
policy chan ges which go with the $22.5 billion
appropriation for 1988·89.
The so-cal led bud get la nguag.c bill, sig ned
Monday, co nt ai ns some bud g&lt;' f· balancing mec ha ·
nls ms not Inc luded in the money bill.
It will not take effect for 90 days beca use Senate
Democrats objected to the sa me provision s
crit tclzed by Celes te a nd refused to suppor t a n
Pm erge.ncy clause putting the bill into Jaw with the

.

'

1 Section, 10 Pages
26 Cent&amp;
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Po!lleroy- Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. July 1·, 1987

Copy&lt;ightod 1987

governor's sig na tu re.
Th_e bill creat es a sin gle s tatewide systPm of
en forcin g ch ild suppor t pa yme nt s, reducing the
number of missed payments by fathers and the
lengthy waiT s by mothers .
Celeste sa id Improved enforcement will enable
the state to reduce paymen ts of ai d to depe nde nt
children by up to $60 million In two years, a nd
qua lify for another $8 million in federal matching
funds .
The bill prov ides ·additional ince ntives for
general re lief reci pie nt s to work a nd closes a
variety of loopholes In eligibili ty requirements,
leading to sav ings of up to $72 mllllon In wei far ~

benefit s.
The bill a lso provi des for accounta bilit y in
school pupils' achi evement , wit h testing In grades
four, six and eight. and a competency test for high
school graduation s ta rting l n 1992, and stre ng·
thens the s tate's tax enforcement law.
Also in the bill is a s hift In the 1988 Ohio
preside ntia l primary from March to the fir st
Tues i-lay in May.
· The governor h ~d signed· legislation la st yea r
sett tog the ea rly primary in hopes Ohio could join
wit h Ill inois an d other stale~ in focusing attention
on t he Midw est. _
.
But th e state Jac ked the $5 million to pay for the

special primary, and county ,boards of election
needed to return their pre-election calendar to Its
original schedule.
Celeste said tha t although he signed the bill , he
"deeply regrets" two provisions:
-Allowing public utilities to join with corporations In forming political action committees to
contribute to election campaigns.
-Requiring non-char.itable groups, such as the
Ohio Public Interes t Ca mpaign, to file reports
with the secretary of state on their door-to-door
solicitations for various issues.
Celeste said he will'try to get legislation passed
to overturn those provisions.

Pomeroy .Council
••
votes on raises

Flood
center
opened

Pomeroy Village Council gave
the·third rea,d ing and adopted an
ordinance raising salaries of the
mayor , clerk-treasurer and
members of council and the
board of public affairs, ret roa cBy United PrC!15 lntern~ttlonal
tive from. Jan. 1.
The state ha s opened ari
The ordinance increases the
In forma tion c~ n ter In Ma ns field
mayor' s a nnua l salary from
to a nswer questi ons from flood
$~.000
to $3,600; the clerk·
viet tm s about asslstanc~ avalla ·
treasurer's from $8,400 to
ble to them.
$10,000: councilmembers from
$10 . per meeting to $25 per
Thr rent er , sN up by the State
meeting; and mem.bers of the
a nd Local Governm ent Commls·
board of public affairs from $5 to
ston, wil l refer ra ilers to various
$10 per meeting.
~ tat e drpartments a nd agencies.
Council also approved a n anTHe comm ission plans to keep
nual salary increase of Terri
the ct'nter open through the
Long, Income tax administrator.
remainder of this weeK: ·
from $15,000 to $16,000.
Council a cc ~pted a projected
Meanwhile . Gov . Richard F.
budget for the village for 1988
Ce lest e · has add e d Crawfo rd
totaling $9o7.165. 72, as presented
·Co unty to the list of four non h
· - by· Clerk-Treasurer Jane Walton.
centra l Ohio counties ror w hi ch
The projected figures must be
he's asked for ft'dera l aid tn lhe
submitted to the county budget
wake or l~ s t wre k's floodlnJl .
·
commission by July 20.
A
blind
Intersection
ar
Lincoln
• Last week. Cetest0 dectar('([
Hill and Butternut Ave. was
o(.taware, Marlon. Morrow a nd
again
discussed. Several suggesRic hl and cou nties disaster
tion
s
to elimtnat£" the traffic
areas .
hazard were offe red, but no
definite
decision was made by
Monday , the Cra wford .ou nt y
the
board.
Councilmen Larry
commi ssioners est Jma t!'d dam Wehrung
and
Bill Young will
a~e In their count _
, . a t about $4
view
the
site
again before a
million . brln~lng the total In the
decision
Is
made.
fiv(' L'O untl es to a t-- leas t $.1 1
At the request of the Ohio
million , So nya Ela m . a spokesDepartment
of Transportation,
woman tor the O hi o Disastrr
uncil
pass~ an emergency
co
Services Agenrv. said.
Investigating the Incidents. Damages are exVANDALISM- Monsignor Anthony Glannaordinance allowing ODOT to
pected to run about $6,000. Repairs will be the
more, pastor of Sacred Heart Church, examines
improve and r esurface 0.30 miles
I nv&lt;'s t lga t ot·s from t hr FC'der at
responslbily of fllmitles, somc of whom have no
one of some 16 monuments which we re vandalized
of U.S. 33 east of Route 7 between
E mrr ge n cy M a na gemc nt
surviving rel ativ es locally. The damaged monu·
·at the Sac red Hearl Cemetery In Pomeroy . The
the Beacon Station and the
Agency and th e Small Bus iness
me nt with Monsignor Glannamore marked the
vandallzlng ·ts believed to have taken place either
four -lane.
Administratio n. who will dl?ter·
graves of the Blel Family.
Friday or Saturday and Pome roy Pollee are
At the request of Middleport
mine If homes and busi nesses are
Mayor Fred Hoffman, council
eli gible for federa l assis ta nce.
pa ssed a resolution indicating
toured the fl OOd r avagt&gt;d arcas
that
Pomproy Village would not
Monday.
be applying to ODOT for funds to
Mea nwhil e, th e Nat lanai By LINDA RAPATTONI
Defense attorney Arthur Bar·
operate a subsidized taxi service,
WeaJher Sen·Jce wa rned that
SANTA MONICA . Ca lif. iU PII e ns sa id he Int e nd s to a ppeal the
'
hcavv ra in this wee k could ca use _A judge sente nced Billiona ire gu ilt y verdict returned by a jury
more flooding over parts of Ohio . Boys Club foundE'I' Joe Hunt to April 22 after a 2\-t.!-month trial.
The ~round Is sat urat!'d from
life In priso n for mu rderin g a n
The jurors recomm ended life
the Dayton a•·ea . north' through admitted eon marl whose body in priso n. say in g the dea th
the central highlands and up to wa s never found, say ing the penalty "would be too quick for
Greater Cleveland. the weather punis hment would be hars her for Joe Hunt ."
service said. Rainfa ll amou nt s of the forme r boy-genius tha n the
Martin LPvin told the judge his
By ALISON GRANT
·
son's - deat h-- ·s·tiH - hau nt s the
DAYTON , Ohio tUPI ) - A
a t leas t two Inches tn three hours gas c hamber .
or tess could cause more floodin g
Followin g a sen te nci ng hea r- family.
pilot project to es tablish a sick·
of s treams, rivers and roads, ing Monday th at_ in clud ed e mo·
"A lovi ng yo un g ma n was cut
leave "loan bank" for federal
forecasters sa id.
tiona ! testimony from the vic- down in the prime· of his itfe,
employees will help a Waynestim 's fat her, the judge se nt enced bru tally murdered by a coldville woman stricken with cancer
Thunderstorms with very Hunt , 27, to life Without the blooded assass in ," Levin said.
who also cares for a child with
heavv rathfall ·and hi gh winds poss ibilit y of parole.
"What do you do when your wife
severe resptra)ory problems .
·
Were. scatte r"•
"" across south ern
Hunt ,chainedatthewrlstsand
wakes up In the middle of the
FredaSouth,40,1soneofonly
Ohio Monday· The s forms wear in g prison blu L's, smil ed night , night after night , and asks.
three federal employees nationdumped large hall In part s of slightly as Superio r Court Jud ge "Do you think he suffered a lot • •
a lly participating In an experi·
Cincinnati and the start of the Laurence Rllt enband sent enced She' ll say, 'Do you think he was
ment allowing fellow employees
Reds-Ph lilies ba seball game was him for th e June 1984 mu rder of s mothered to deat h? How long do
to donate their sick and vacation
dela yed more than lin hour and Ron Levin, a n admit ted confl- you think they tortured him
timetocolleagueswhohaveused
one-half by rain.
dence m a n who had sw indled before they shot him ?"'
theirs up because of Illness.
A severe thunderstorm watch Hunt out ,of millions in a commodHunt was described as a boy
· South underwent a radical
was Issued for the southe rn third ltles tr~d,lng ruse.
genius and finan cial wizard. He
mastectomy as treatment for
of the stat e, while In nor thern
"It will be a grea ter punis h- had joined several former prep
breast cancer In December.
Ohio, It wa s a humid night with ment for you, Mr. Hunt , to be sc hool classmates and other
Because she participates In a
wldel sca tt er('([ thunderstorms. confined tp priso n for the rest of young men from prominent Los
JOE HUNT- Convicted of
trial program of accelerated
~~...!!c"'-"'--'-'="-'-'"'-"'--"=====.:..__..;y:;;our· life Tha n to - be""'given nte--A'Ifgel!!S-r:rmllll's--to-torm-a,~---..m'"'U"'r6u---!\itd glven---..- Ufe----c-ehemotherapy---t-reatment-s -, sheThe warm humid weathl't' dea th penalt y," Rlttenbantl said. business and socia l group called
sentence wlthou c parole .
was unable to return to her job as
pattern Is forecast to' continue
Whe n the judge left th!) bench, BBC Consolidated of .North
(UPI)
a security ~tdmlnlstrator for the
Into the firs t part of the weekend. Bob Levin. the victim's . step- America - the so-called· Blllio·
Department of Energy at the
There will be areas of thunder· brother, pointed a fin ger at Hunt naire Boys Club.
Mound Facility In Miamisburg
s torm activity but most of the and shouted. "I hope you have a
The group lived life in the fast
sa nds of doll ars in bad until March when she began
time It won't~ raining.
good time there t·ln prison)."
lane but lost hundred s of thouinvestme nt s.
working four hours a day.

Hunt gets life

BuiTet
·Entree

•Sundae Btlr
'

Meigs property
.
transfers

Meigs County Recorder
Herbert Eugene Noel, Pa trlcla
Louise Noel, to Herbert Eugene
Noel, Patricia Louise Noel , parcels, Salisbury.
r
_ Jean Will, John M, Richmond,
bec'd , John Wesley Richmond,
Dec'd, Rebecca L. Richmond,
Dec ' d , :' Affld. minerals" ,
Suttop.
Dwight W. Corbin, Elva Corbin
to Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
Dlst., right of way, Lebanon.
Elsie Garnet Circle, Dec'd, to
G. Douglas Circle, Affld.,Sutto"l.
Leona Hamilton, Dec'd, Russell H. Hamilton, by Atty'., Affld.,
Olive.
"1
Mauri ce Durs t , Marc ella
Durst to Frederick E . Werry,lot,
Porn. Vlll.

Parlly cloudy_tonight, wUh .

a chance of' . shOwe.r s . and ·

e
at y enttne
Governor liaS objection, but signs budget bill

Oelvalle said . he would ask
Panama's attorney general to
launch a n Immediate probe Into
ch'a rges made by Col. Roberto
Dtaz Herrera, former chief of
staff , against Noriega and other
milit ary officers.
Shor tl y after De !Ya lle ' s
speech, a ntl -governm'ent. protes·
ters drove through Panama
Cit y's s treets honking their horns
In a noW- common· ritual of
protest.
Ricardo Arias Ca)dPron, head
of the oppositIon Christian Democratic Party, sa id Delva lle's
speech was "void of concrete
action. and bellevablt' propos·
als ." He labeled Delvalle's order
for an Investigation "a farce. "
The o pposition, which on Sat ur·
day stag~ th e largest a nti·
govern ment demonstra tio n yl'l,
has demanded an Independ-e nt
tnvestlg'atlon Into c harges
against Noriega and ca lled for
hi s removal. ThP opposition -also
wants a new goyr rnmPnt free of
mil itary control.

Bombs kill seven; thousands
•
protest on coup anniversary

-61-7 '! -'•
Pjck 4
.4628

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legitimate function" of national
defense and security, saying the
civilia n governmen t should be
allowed to "exercise .. , the action
of governing." The president
then called on all Panamanians,
regardless of politics or professio n, to establish a "truce . of
passions."
While Delva lle Is the' titul ar
head of Panama, Noriega, head
of the Pa namanian Defense
Forces. is regarded as th e real
power be hind the govern men t.

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Daily Number

Page 4'"'

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Ohio Lottery•

Heart
Association
fondraiser

Co-workers aUowed
to share sick leave

Fu~ding
There's a family feeUng at PonderO&amp;a~

iii

~~ =-=po=NDER=-=-:::OS~Jf. ~iiiiliiiiiiiilli

and giving Middleport authority
to administer such a service for
both villages. This is the same
resolution as originally passed In ·
1985 which enabled the Blue
Streak Cab Company to go Into
bu siness. Funds for the subsidized service are av ailable
through the Ohio Elderly and
Handicapped Tra ns it Fare Assistance Program .
Wright St. reside nts have requested that a street light be
placed a t th e end of their street.
Cou.ncll has asked Columbus and
Southern Electric Co. to relocate
a street light which was removed
when an old building was torn
down in the village, to the Wright
St. location.
Larger post office quarters are
tieing considered for Pomeroy.
according to ·a letter 'from Margaret M. Rucker , manager:post
master, Zanesville. Rucker
stated that a new Pomeroy post
office Is be ing considered as part
of a . long-range Improvement
plan, but a new building is not
necessarily imminent .
Council accepted the mayor's
report of $5,411 in fine s and fees
collected during June.
And finally , It was reported
that village workers have been
commended by residents for
mowing areas of the vUiage
which before had to be maintained by residents. Among locations mention!'!~ were Mulberry
and Lincoln HPights. It · was
reported that income tax money
has en_a bled Village workers to
·take on the upkeep of additional
a rea s.
Present for last night's meet Ing were Mayor Ric hard Seyler.
Clerk-Treasurer Jane Walton
a nd Counciimembers Larry
Wehrung, Bill Young, ·Henry
Werry a nd Betty

Prior to her own Illness, South
cared for her dau ght er, Melissa ,
who was born with respira.tory
problems a nd has had allergies
and bronchitis._
·
After Melissa was born In
Augu st, 198&gt;. South said shew as
ready to go bac k to work in
Novem ber. b ut s he foun d ou t h cr
baby was ex tremely Ill.
South took off almost a year to
care for Melissa .who had to have
therapy four tim es a day, whic h
involved pounding on the girl' s
back to loosen secrctlons in her
lungs and passi ng a tube throu gh
her nose a nd mouth· to suck out
mucou s.
.
South found the lump In he r
right breast while on a trip to a
DepartmenL of Energy officl' in
Albuquerque. N .M .. last year·
" Even though I moved rea lly
quickly ,, it was still quite large
and had de finitely gone through
th,e lymph glands, " she said .

for schools in high ur,employmerit areas-sought .

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPl) Rep. James Traflcant, D-Ohlo,
has •asked Gov. Richard F .
Celeste to help obtain more
funding for schools In chronically
high unemployment areas, such
as the Mahonlng Valley.
The congressman visited the
governor's office Monday with
Jack C. Hunter;a member of the
state Board of Education from

the Youngstown area. They met ·
with Celeste and Franklin B.
Walter, state superintendent of
public Instruction.
Celeste has proposed ·a SP!"'ial
"blue ribbon" commission to
study education funding and
measuring student achievement.
II would Include seven appointees by the governor, seven .· by
the president of the Ohio Senate

!

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be as ked repeatedly to furnish
more money for schools because
while their Income has been cut ,
their' property taxes keep going
up, they have mortgages and
children In college.
" There has to be ~orne specific
targeted action," said Traflcant ,
adding that the fede ral government needs to. help.
The congressman said he feels

and seven by the speaker of the
Ohio House.
"I think the governor Is on
target," said Traflcant following
the meeting. "His position with
this commission makes sense. I
just wanted to make sure !t's on
the font burner."
Hunter, a former mayor of
Youngstown. said areas of
cl\fonlc unemployme nt cannot
'

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that the commission can come up
with a solution If "respected'''
people are appointed who understand the problem. He said
recommendations could be made
In six or eight mo.nths.
Traflcantsald he also brought
to the governor's altention the ·
fact that the 711 Connector an&lt;l
King's Grace Road - two badly
n~ed road projects In the
.

...

, . Jungstown area costing $24
million- are not on the administration's list of priority construe:
tion projects with the new gash&gt;
line tax money.
,
"I reminded him that I brought
some federal highway monl!y
Into the state, and he said he' ll
look Into (the projects)," sa'ld
Traflcant.

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Tuesday, July 7. 1987

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

Comment

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio
T~y. July 7, 1987
.,

" T~e Daily S~ntiriel

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U 1 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oldo

.'
DEVOO'ED TO THE

~~~~'n!

~lb
IS:m~
~v

OF !HE MEIGS-MASON AREA

r-n;,_,._
-.-. f'"T"'':!5!c::::loo=o

RQBERT L. WINGET!'
·Publisher
PI\T WHITEHEJ\D
AssiStant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER o!The United Press Intern a tiona!, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE'n'ERS OF OPINION ire-welcOrr»-. They shoukl be less than

:m words

WASHINGTON - We t ook
some heat a few months ago from
House Speaker Jim Wright,
D-Texas, when we broke the
story of his efforts to save
floimderlng Texas savings and
loan associations at great risk to
the taxpayer-backed federal Insurance fund. Wright claimed
that federal regulators were
unfairly picking on the Texas
s&amp;L's -like Vernon Savings and
Loan of Dallas.
Our associate MiC!\ael Binstein
obtained confidential examiners'
summaries on Vernon prepared

'

'
In April, the FSLIC filed suit
by the Federal Home Loan Bank
Bo-ard. Theiiocuments dispel any against Vernon's owner, Don
notion that the Vernori S&amp;L was Dixon, and s ix other executives .
an innocent · victim of cruel The · agency Is · seeking $350
million , charging the one-time
government gum§hoes .
In point of fact, Vernon was on high-rolling S&amp;L big shots with
the ropes because Its owners ~· tooting and selfdeallng" that
maintained a lifestyle worthy of caused Vernons ' !allure.
Here are some of the alleg a- ·
Jim and Tammy Bakker and
mismanage d the S&amp;L's finances tlons a bout Vetnon Savings &amp;
outrageously. Several weeks af- Loan gleaned from FSLIC docuter our original story on Vernon ments flied In a bankruptcy
ran,.the s&amp;L failed . leaving a bill proceeding this month:
for· $1 billion to be picked up by
- Dixon and other §enlor
the Federal Savings and •Loan. officers falsified . the thri ft' s
InsuranCe Corp.
•
financial statements and "fraud-

... Al-lt&gt; fOON9 A

good taste, addressing Issues, not perscnallttes.

STAA~T ~l-lt&gt;

~\l'JB t:lMt&gt;.

The harder they land.

The Lighter Side

Where has all the
luggage gone?

-

__..Local briefs:----------------.

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~=;=:::::;:::~

· Owners of goats sought

••
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••
•

Ka rl a nd Cla ri ce Kra utter got somebody's goa t ovE'r th ~
holida y weekend - mak e tha t "goats"- plur aL
Two w hjte goa is wa ndprcd ont o the Kral!tter pro pprt y in the
F ive P oint s ar ea a nd no o ne has cla imed them . ThP twoarrim als
_a re QO ntalned a nd Mr . a nd 'Mrs Kra utter are wall ing to hea r
from t hE' ow ners a t 992-5816
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Te1esa Brow n, d aug hter of Mr . and Mrs . B ill Brow n, Rutla nd,
IS con fin ed to O 'Bieness Hospit a l in Athe ns as the res ult of
inju lies r ccp ived In a n aut o acc ident in Athens . She was
'sch0du led to undNgo surgc1y today . Cards m ay be sPnt to roo m
:101.
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Mondav admiss iOns: U ll a Strauss. Raci ne; Ru ssel l Mills ,
Middl eport ; Cecil Roseberry, Pomeroy: Pa ul Micha e l,
Pomeroy .
Mond ay disc hargt&gt;s · Bett y Tay lor, Steven J a mes .

Lo ndon Poo l in S1 rac usf' wil l bf' o ffer in ~ a n a dvanced
· lif esav in g course sta ri mg Mo nd ay from 7 to 9 p m T h(' course is
$20 a nd the cos t of th o book . P art ic ipa nt s mu s t be 15 o r oJder. To
reg iste r . ca ll th e pool a t 992· 9902 o r Heidi Cobb at 992·3402

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EMS reports emergency calls

..

to the chu rch one hou r prior to ·
services

Mrs. Nell Middleswart , 87. Bess L Jeffers
Portland, died Mond ay aft er noon
at Veterans Memor ial Hospit a L
Bess L Jeffers, 91, o! 427'Fhlrd
fo llowin g an ext ended lllness .
Ave.; Ga llipolis, died Monday a t
, A homem a ker , Mrs . Mlddles- Holzer Medical Center [ol)owing ,
wa rt was bor,n April 18. 1900. ar a lef\gl hy illness.
. -•
Port la.nd, a da ught er of the late · Born Apr il I , 1g96 In Gallia
Will iam a nd Molly Wolfe Talbott. County, P rospect Communit y ,
She is s urvived by two sons , she was a da ught er of !he lat e
J a mes E . Middiesw ijrt , P o r- Thomas J. a nd Ma r garet Livetla nd, and All an F . Middleswa rt, sa y Moore.
.
Sa tellite Beach, -Fla.: a dau gh·
She m arried Char les P . ,Jeffe r s
ter , Grace Alien of P o rtland ; a
In J a nuar y 1917, a nd he precede d
s ister, Ad a Fox . .Belmont: two her in deat h in 1945.
brothers, He nry Johnson, Wintersv ille, and Henry Talbot.! .
Surviving a r e one sister, Mrs_
Steubenville; 13 grandchildre n, Marguerit e Hinem a n of Gallipo18 grea t-gra ndc hildren and one lis: and· sev eral ne ices a nd
grea t-grea t-g ra ndchild .
ne phews.
Bes ides her parent s. she was
She was precede d in death b y
preceded in dea th by her bu s- three brothers, Ea r l. Ja ke a nd
!land, Osca r ,C. Middleswart ; a Te d Moore : and two sister s,
so n, William Mlddleswar t: . a Flor ence Sp r ague a nd Leo na
daught er , Ma ry Lewis , six brot h· T rout .
er s a nd a s is ter.
She was a me mber of Fir st
Gra ves id e services will be held Presbyteria n Church : Spring a t 16 a. m . Thurs day a t the fi e ld Grange 210; a nd Ohio Stat e
Middl eswa rt Family Ce metery and Nationa l g ra nges.
in Portla nd with the Rev. Roger She taug ht sc hool a t Prospect ,
G r~ce offici a ting_ Frie nds ma y
a nd later was a bookkeeper for •
call at the E wing Fune ral Ho m e Moore Mot or Sa les . She a lso
fro m 7 to 9 p .m . Wedn!O's day ·
operat ed the Ohio B ureau of
Motor Vehicl es at T rout Dodge.

Me igs Cou nt ~ E merge ncy Me(l ical Services repo rt s four c alls
Mond ay : Rac ine at 12:24 a.m . to Hill Road lor Ulla Strauss to
Veteran s Mem oria l Hos pit al: S) racuse a1 8:05a. m to Troubl e
lsalwlle M. Lofty .
C
ree k Road for J am es Hink ley to Holze r Med ica l Cent er:
An Am er ica n Red Cr·oss bl ood mobile w ill be a t the E li
Rut la nd at 11 a m to Dye Road for Lucille La mbert to Ho lzer
Dc· niso n AmPr iean LPglon 467 Pos t Home in Rutl a nd Fn day
Isabell e Mildred Loft y, 73, of
Medical Center : Syr ac u se a t 9: 58 p.m. to the pall park fo r
fro m 4 to 8 p.m . Donors s hould be in good hea lth a nd bf' bel ween
Ruule 2. Little Hocking, died
Crysta l Ri ch m ond to VetC'ra ns Mem oria l Hos pit a l.
MondayHos
a t p1ta
ages
of _
17 _
a nd
Ca mden-Clar
k Me m...._thl'
_.;...
__
_68.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . . ; _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ' orial
l, P a rkersburg,

Bloodmobile to make ."itop

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W.Va.

Storms rumble along
lly Unit I'd Press Internal tonal
HNI'Y thundf'rs torms rumbled
fo·o m the souther n At Ia ntic oast
lhrough thp nor th e rn P la ins,
s paw nmg to rnad(){'s in seven
s wfPs a nd In ju ring a t leas t fh·e

Twisters foll owPd hea v.v ram
and hi gh winds in Flo rid a.
Indi a na. Ke ntu cky, Ml nn t'Sota .
NC' bra ska. South Dakot a a nd
Wis cons in . Severe thund ers torm

50

R_ob--,-er-'-tw_a_lte_rs

admits Gov . Stev E' Cowper . " It
would ha ve be&lt;'n wiser to h ave
adopted a more restra ined public
spending poli cy."
Among the most frequ e ntl y
cited ex a mples of pront ga te
spending Is the Point Mac Kenzie
Agricultura l P roject. Indi v idua ls willing to esta blish d a iry
farms were given low-cost s tate

subsldil'S
To a g r ea t extent , the constru e·
lion mat e ri als and the wo rke r s
with spec ialized s kills required
lor those projects have com e
from the Seattle a rea , providing
little stimulu s to the local eco nomy. Too little of the oil windfa ll
wa s in ves ted In roads and other
Inf ras tru c ture improv em e nt s
likely to promo te long ·te rm
~~~~:d a~~m~fite ~~~~:pl~e; h~~ ,::rowth .
produc ing milk
The pr ice or a barrel of crude
But the local milk was nl've r oil , whic h peaked a t more tha n
abl e to compet e In price ~ ith $35 In 1981, plumml'ted to less
milk s hipped In fro m the s t a lP of th an SIO las t yea r. 011 prices ha ve
Was hington . Alaska had to ball
recovered somewhat , but Ala s ka
out the proj ect' s insolvent c rea- r&lt;'main s m o re de pendent upon
mer y. Ihe n ea rlier this yea r was
pet roleum than any sta te in the •
forced to dump tens or thou sa nd s " lower 48 " a nd econo mlc dls loca - , ,
of pound s of excess milk It has lion he re has been especially "
been unabiP to sell a t a ny p rlce.
SPven• .
Anchorage has a new s por ts
With o il revenu es a ccounting
arena and yearns for a profes· for 80 to 90 perce nt of all s tate
s lona l baske tball or tee hoc key ~:overnm e nt income . the buge t
fran chise. It has a new co nven · for a fi sca l year that began July I
'lion cent e r, a long with unfulfilled has a shortfall of more than $300 ••
visions of attracting mld ·wlnt('r million - a nd · Cowper now ha s
mee tings A new pl'rformln g art s been forc ed to ca ll the legis lature
cent er be ing built in the cit y a t a Into spec ial session to deal with
cost of $60 m illion will require_ the crisis .
$900,000 in annua l opera t ing

coas~

Plains States

wa tc hes 1em a mcd in 0flcct ea r ly
toda y fo r parts of Minn esota .
Nebr aska. Iowa, Ill inois, Tc nn es
sec. Mi ssou ri a nd Kent uck&gt;' ·
The stor ms in the upper
Midwt•sl were t riggered by a cold
front m the nOI'IhC'r n Pla ms , t hC'
Na t to nal Weat her SPn ice sa id
No net heless . tempera tures were
expected to !'!'ItCh the 90s toda y m
Chicago a nd MonnPapoli s .
In north wes t Indiana, thJ-ee
pcopi P were Inju red , no ne scrio us i.v , by a tor nado th at destroved two house !railer s a nd
dam aged Jo ot hrr build ings in
Morocco.
A torn ado that t ouc hed dow n m
Pine lla s Pa rk , F la ., south o f St.
Pcte1~ bu rg, did an .('S t im a tecl
$80,000 .dam age to t6 mo bile
hom f'S a nd dis pl ay booths a t a
near by n ca m ar ket. Thel'&lt;' WC' rp

prop it•

"NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 7+87

no i nj uri('s .

r:::.:::JSNOW
-RAIN
~SHOWERS
FRONTS: "
Warm "Cold
. . Static
Oceluded
lAtip s11ow1 mlrimum ....,.,.,._, At IHII 50% of any &amp;haded .,.ala IO&lt;WCMI

fW

to IIOiiYe jndpitldlcin inlblecl

UPI

r

SHOWEI(S CONTINUE - ShowerN have been corning down
heavily, only to de posit trac~.,. of precipitation at odd intervals In
lhe GalllpolL•-Polnt PleW&lt;IIDt area . During e ... ly WednL&gt;sday
mor'nlng, showers and thunderstorms are p08s lhle In parts of the
Ohio Vl\lley, lh~ Great Lakefl region, the inld-Atlantlc Coa._~t stat es,
1110111 of the Mlssil&lt;Mippl Vlliley and the central and northern Plains.

Po lice in the Vi lla gl' of PPwa u
kce, Wi s .. sa id a late after noon
torna do lift ed a hou se off Its
foundalion Mo nda y and bl ew the
roof off a publ ic buildin g T wo
peopl e suffPred min or injuri Ps
In west ern Wisco ns in . a tor nado
touc hed down a t abou t tile s a me
ti me In St Cro ix Co un t)·, dam ag
lng trees.
In Nebra s ka , a tornado des·
trovPd a ba r n on th(' Br uce
Rey ma n ra nch nonnwcs t of
Wood I:;ak/!111 Cherry Count )' but
no injurif's wC" r c reported ,

£1U·

thorit ies sa 1d

Bonnie Pelc,'tli s patc hcr fo r th e
B row n Cou nty Shcnff' s o ffi ce,
s a id she l'ecc ived wo rd of the
da m age !.rom KBR Rura l Public
Power Dis trict, whi ch s hut off
powe r to th e bar n
" He sa id it 1t hC' barn ! wa s
demolis he d, so I g uess that ta kes
ca re of that H&lt;· sa id the house
wa s OK. " sa1d Pf' lc, who d1 d not
know-how close t he hOuse w as to
1he b;-n n

Th r R0y m ans wer r

IV AS H JNG T ON

t

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'

I UP II
Chrys!N Co rp , in the seco nd
blow to the co m pa ny in tw o
"ccks, h as agre&lt;'d to pay the
lar gest ~o • · er nm ent hea lth a nd
' alety fin e for more th a n 1!00
•·Jolai Ions in the workpl ace Sl.5 m ill ion - wit hout admittin g
to a il of t he c harges.
The Occupa tiona l Sa f!' ly a nd
Health Adm inistra tion proposed
t he ,fine Monday for a lleged
\' lola I Ions a t 1he Chrvs!C'r a s sem ·
bi)· p!"ant in Newa r k. [)(i t, that
I nc lud e d wlllfull v ex po s in g

How ever . C r!'emva ld s.n d . the
workers to arsenic a nd lea d. The
No. 3 au tom a kCI' " 1'Cta 1n s the
co mpany pro mptly a nnounced it
rig ht 10 dlsag reC' wit h OS HA 01 f'r
would not cont es t the n 'co rd
spC&gt;c lflc al leg at io ns at Newa rk ,"
mo netary punishment.
a nd he l ndi c&lt;~ t e&lt;l th e com pa n)'
But Chrys le r sa id it would
would act within the prPsc rl bed
co ntest so m e of t he s pecifi c
15 days to co nt &lt;'S t the Cita tions
alleg ations .
•
'
befo
re the Inde pendent Occ upa "C hrys le r Is proud of it s
t
iona
l Safet)' a nd Hea lth Rcv 1ew
ovP.raii sa f ety record a nd we will
cooperate with OSHA 's intens i- Commiss io n
"These a rP issues that we Wi ll
fi ed efforr. to assure he alth and
have to reso ll e with the agenc&gt;
sa fety in the workpla ce." sa id
as soon as poss iblE'," Greenwa ld
Gerald Gree nwald, chai r m a n of
said . " Most of t he IIPm s 1a t
the subs idi a ry Chry sle r Motors
Newa rk! Involve re lat ivc lv mi Co rp. In De troit .

Projects set in Cinti

Th .. Daily Sentinel
1\ ISPS 14 ii- ~4Mil

COLUMBUS, Ohio tU PII The state Controlling Board ha s
released S4 .5 million for two
red t&gt;velopment project s in dow ntown Cinc innati.
The Aerial Tramway project
receiv ed $3 million Monday and
the Garfield Place Housing project received $1. 5 million. Both
w ere funded in the 1986 ,s tate
capital cons truction approprla·

1\ Oh•h..ton ol Multlnwdhl, In•··
Pubii !O ht'd 1' \'l ' f\ .l (ll"l'nonn, M ontl.l \'
th rough F • lcl.n , I ll C'nu11 Sl
Pnm C'rov , Oht o b\ thf' Oh io Vuiii •V Publl~ h l n~

f&gt;om• ··

C'o nd

Co m_p &lt;~ n v

Mu lli mNI I.J

ln r

1\' , Ohio l!i7t\fl. Ph AA:! - 2 1 ~ S&lt;·
1 1 s~ po~ t. t ~ • · l&gt;,!ild ,11 Pn mc:rn\

· Oh[l
Mf•m or·r· ll nlt NI f'll'"" lntl 'l'n.l l ll)n,JI
1n land Da I\ v P1('"!&lt;: A ~s o("l. ll h'J n

.1

n&lt;l l hi'

Ohi O Nf•w :o; pupl' l i\ S&gt;:ot· l:ll lon, N.t l ltlll, ll
Ad H•t 11'( 1ng Rr·pr1rosr'nt :ll 1\ '1' B1 :111h.1 m
NPwsp.t p(•r ~n it "" , 7U T hh cl A\t •nut·

NPW Ymk . Nf•W Ynrk 11 W11 7

Daily stock prices

P&lt;&gt;l'TMi\STF. R Srn&lt;l ;.ullin&gt;"" ' h.lll j:{l-...
to Th1• Ddl l · S.•nltnl'l . 111 Cnw t ~~ .
SU OSCKIPTION

(As of 10:30 a.m.)

KAT&amp;~

Provlde,d by
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl

8y ( 'llrrlt•r or Motor Rout('
On1· W1; •k .....

,, .... .

fl rw Mon1h .

. ... $ 1 2 ~

. . $!).45

Om• Yc•. n ... . . .. . ...

. s.,:) (ll

SINGLI&lt;~ COP''

D.lil v

PRICE

:

2!1 Cr nt "

Suh"l ' l' ibcrs not (h' slrlnj:! tnpa v lht•&lt;·urr h ·r m dv rf'mll In .1d v anr c·· fl hC'C'I to
Th r Ou llv SPnlint&gt;l on ~:~ 3. 601 1:.! m onth
b .t ~ls f rPdlt w ill br g l\'t•nc•;.tll i('r t•;u'h

Wf' r k
No ~ubsc rlp t!on ~ b~ mall pPrm l11t'd In
arra s whc•re homf' c ~:~rr i C'J Sf' l'\' lccr I ~
a valh•biP

l

.

Firm
Price
!.m Electric Power .. ... ...... .. 27 'h
AT&amp;T ........ .. ....... ..... ........... 28%
Ashland Oil .... ........ .. .. ........ 63%
Bob Evans Farms ........... ... 23%
Charming Shoppes : ........ .. ... 30%
Federal Mogul ...... .... .... .. .... 44%
Goodyear T&amp;R .... ....... ....... .67Y,
Heck's Inc . ........... .. ............ .4'riJ
Limited Inc ........ ,,,, ....... , .43%
Multimedia Inc . ........ ....... ... 58'%
Rax Restaurants .... .... ... : .... .. 5%
"Robbins &amp; Myers ... ... ....... ..,10~
Shoney's Inc ....... .. .... ...... .......30
Wendy's Inti ... ... ............. .. ... 9%
Worthington Ind ......... .. .. ... .. 21 Y,

___ . ,,_.---

lion to help rebuild dow nt ow n
Cinc innati.
The boa rd approved a $1
million contrac t with Ad vocacy
and Prot ective Ser vic es, Co lum·
bus , for prot ective ser vices for
2,854 mentally retarded or d evei·
opmental!y di s abled c lie nts
served by the s ta te.
Also approve d was a $12. 8
million contrac t with Ohio State
Univer s ity Hospital for hos pltallza !ion and clln ic services at
Orient Correctional Ins titution
for the next two years.
The hOspital 1akes in ill and
injured Inmat e s from 17 s tat e
corr~lional institutions through
the Frazier l:lealth Center a t
Orient.

.,....

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nor elect r ic,o \ a nd mec ha nical
s ail'gua rdin g d tsc r epa nc1eS. aA d
a
m a j o r ll &gt;' h ave
b ee n
addrPssed .' '
The c ha rges a n'd the fin e
re presen t the second ma jor b low
the com pa n)' has s uffe red in less
tha n two weeks. La te last mo nth,
Chr ysler a nd two executives
wPre ind ic ted by a federa l gra nd
ju1y m St . Louis on cha r ges of
se lling ca rs as new tha t ha d been
dr iven by exec utives w ith the
odo meters disconnected.
ThP mdi ctme nt prom p ted a
public apology fr om Chrysler
Corp . Ch a ir man Lee la cocca and
a promise to reimburse a ffected
c us tomers by various mea ns .
OS HA s a i ~ it s pr o posed
!\l ,o76,100 penal!&gt;, the la r ges t i ~
it s hi stor y. was issued against
the plant with m oro th a n 4,000
wo rkers for 8ll lis ted hea lth and
sa fety v iola tions.

Su 1vivo r s mcludc he r husba nd,
Andrew G _ Loft y, Ravenswood.
W Va . on e daugh ter and son· in·
law. P t&gt;ggy S and J oe Miller,
P a rkers bur g, one son and
dau ght er-in -law , Ro be rt E . a nd
Carole Lofty Littl e Hocking ,
fl" e g randch ildre n. Kimbe rly .
Ha milt on of Martms burg. W.Va .,
Mi chael Scott P yles of Columbus, Doug las Ke ith Holber t of
Pa rkersbu r g, Andrew N Holblo'rl
of Columbus and Ro bert Shane
Loft y of Little Hockmg; two
s isters. Ruby Gregg of Pa r ker s
bu rg and Audrey Phillips or
Silver Spr ings, Md .; s!'ve ral
nieces a nd nephews.
Bes1d!'s her pa r e nt s, Mrs
Lofty wa s preceded m de al h by
two brothe r s. Co urtney and Bub

Symru se .

Addie D. Archer
Addle D_Archer , 91, 71 5 Sunset
D r .. Columbu s. for m erly of Gallipo li s, d1ed Mond ay a t her res ide nce foll owing a brie f Illness .
She wa s a retired hom em ake r .
_ Born Sept 6, 1885 in Allia nce , .··"
Oh io, she w a s a daug ht e r of t he
la te Thomas Ca ll a nd Sarah
G ilmore Call.
She was married to William B . · ·'
Archer , w ho preceded her in .'
death in 1953.
Survivin g arc 1hree sons,
De lmer B. Arc her of Dayton,

.

J am es Archer of Columbus and ·. '
Robert L. Archer of Florida, fiv e ·' '

grandc,):liidre n: and one sister
F aye Hamilt on of Gallipolis.
Two s is ter s a nd two brothers
a lso precede d her in death.
She wa s a me!Dbe r of Eure k a
Methodis t Church .
Services will be conduct ed 1
p. m. Thursday at Wau g h-Halley Woo(l Fune ral Home, Rev. David
M. Elliott offici a tin g. Burial
follows in Mound Hill Ce mete ry .
F riends m ay c all at the fun e ral
home We dn es d.ay, 2-4 and 7-9
pm.

JACKSON PIKE

WEST

....... 446-4524

BARGAIN MATINEES SAT/ SUN I WED
All SEATS 12 . 75
AIJ&lt;I SS ION EVERY TUESDAY l2 15

PH 7·00 • 8:ZO DAILY.
Ill KI.TIIJEES.

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t iEl~~~~~:'1~~2'~""~'~'~'~"~M~TI=~~··~~
1.00,

POMEROY 'HOME &amp; AUTO

Red :· Hot
July Stecials!

Ho"izer Medical Cente r
Discharges, July 6; B renda
Bail , Kimbe rly Chri s topher ,
J a m i Colegrove , Ka te Da lton.
Ja ck G uss ler , Sonya Ha tten,
Mark Killen, Jason Miller,
Nan cy Neville, Marilyn Riffle,
Marcella Rothgeb. Joyce Rumley, Lowen Sande rs, Te resa
Stroop a nd Dorothy Wya nt.

"
' t ••

BRAKE SERVICE
We'll install
new brake ·
pads and pack
front wheel
beari~.:~gs.

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

_LOCATED: MAIN_ST., .RUTLAND, OHIO
OPEN: 8-6 MON .-SAT.; 8-8 FRI.
'
PH . 742-3088
Master Card and Visa Welcome

--- ,....._ __ ___

Pomeroy Home ·&amp; Auto

CARS

*ALIGNMENTS *FRONT-END WORK
.*BAnERIES *TIRE REPAIR

I

600 EAST MAIN

.

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POMEROY

992-2094

- -'

.

MUALLIC BlAKES EXTIA

~

L~WEsx::•fi~H¥1l:l~Wt/s1

', ,

ADDITIONAL PAITS &amp;

"8ETTINO YOU THERE s·AFEL
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Services will be conducted 3
p.m. Thursday at Wa ug h-Halley - "
Wood Fune ral Hom e. R ev. Ronnie Nichola s, Rev . Les lie Shear
and Rev . Lawre nce Ha ley will
officiate . Burial follows in Mound
H1ll Cemetery.
Friends m ay call at I he fu n~ra l
hom e WednJ sday , 2·4 p.m a nd
7-9 p.m. We dn es(l ay

~J\

He wo rk&lt;'d at the Gallipolis
Deve lopme nt a l Cent e r. wh e r e he
ret 1red in 1977. Ht&gt; w as a m e mber
of the Good News Ba ptist
Chu rch. wh ere he w as an u s her.
He was preceded in death by a
s ister, Ann a Mae Ha rpold.
Surviv in g him is hi s wife
E unice; a son, .Ja m es W.. of Rt . l ,
Georges Cree k, Ga llipolis; a
s iste r, Hazel Fox , and a brother,
Dan, both of Ra cinC': and thr ee
g1 a ndchild ren.
Funer a l s'e rvices will beThursday at 1 p.m . at the Good News
Bapt lSI Church. The Rev Robert ·
CoM n will officiat e .
Friends may ca ll the Wiills
Funeral Home We dnesday from
7 to 9 P-m . Th e body Will be taken

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BUJ ro~ s .

Hosoital news

0

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A home m a ker Mr s Loft y was
bu r n .Jan. 19, 19H in T yle r
Count y, W. Vo ., a da u ght er of the
late Oliver K. a'nd Hattie

unreac hable by lf' lephonc.
F or the seco nd t ime In as m a ny
da ys, sf'verc thund er s to rms
s wept Ken tucky
Th e stor m s uni Pa shPd w ind'
that gusted .to 80 m ph a nd a
tor nado tha t t ouc hccl dow n
s hortly bPfoo-•• R p.m. ncar
Wa ynesburg, K y., about 40 m1les
south of Lex in gton. No In j uries
Burrows .
were repor ted. but t rees were
Serv ices will be T hu&lt;Sda )' . 11
felled. roads block ed and po wer
a
m . a t Wh !lc·E thndgc F unera l
dJsruplf'd ovPr a w id e area .
Home,
125 Lee St ., Belpre. R ev .
a u thor ities sa 1d
Roy
Dt&gt;eter
will offi c-ia iP. Burial
Gust ing wi nd s a lso knocked a .
"
ill
be
m
Tor ch Cem e te r y.
p iece of co ncrctf' off the top of a
nend
s
m
al'
ca
ll a t the fun e ral
F
;10-s tory off1 ce bu ild ing 10 L ou ishom
e
fro
m
b
to 9 p .m .
v il le The lao ge bloc k fell to the
Wedn esda y .
s treet and s ha tt ered , but caused
no inju 1·ies or da mage to
prop&lt;'rl y .
Waltl'r Shane
Two fu nnel douds were reported ca s t of St. Pa ul , M 1nn .
Wai ter E. Sha m'. 7:1, of Rt. I,
Ceor ges Creek. Gal lipolis. died
lat e Mondav a ft ernoon bu t the
tor nadoes d; d not touch dow n ah d
Monda) C\'enin g a t H olzer Medi no dama ge was r e port ed
cal Cent e r.
He was born Ja nuar\' 21, 1914,
Othe r tw isters touc hed down
m Letart , W Va., a son of th e la te
h a r m l e~ s lv In Peor ia a nd Knox
c oun ties in cPnt ra il illnols .
Frank and Anna Sha ne.
He mar n ed th e fo rmer Eunic(•
Say re o n August 12, 1941. in

- Chrysler agrees to pay $1.5 million fine
"'

Sewing up the safety net _ _ __B_en_~_a_ue_nb_e_rg

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Admissions, discharges named

Lifesaving course planned

1 2

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Mem bers a nd gues ts of thP St a r Gar,de n Club will meet a t
Da les Res tau r a nt , Ga llipoli s, Thu rs d a~ for a noon luncheo n.
Aft er the met&gt;tm g tht&gt; group will tour the Farm Mu seum nea r
• Point Pleas ant a nd Pullins Ro' e Garden.

The Sisson Fa m 1ly of Ga llipoli s w111 be fea tu red s inger s at a
hymn s in g to lx' held a t 7· :10 p.m . Sa turda y a t the Apple Grove
Un ited Methodist Chu rc h. Th e church IS loca ted 10 miles above
Ra c in e on Rou te ·n~ a nd the public 1s invit e d

The standard of American
that employprs of these unln - necess ities and no t mere ly de - that des ire-necess it y thresho ld. "
health care Is probably the best
sured workers provlde group sirE'S. Why? For reason s of Th e Issu e is not free lunch , but
WASHINGTO N - Look at it this way. The mon• pa s s&lt;'n~C' r s an
In the world. Why? Because It's
insurance'.
humanitarlsm and sell int e rest.
minimum lunch. There Is too
airline can attract , the mor&lt;' opportumtiC's it has to misdirPPI some of
mostly private rather than goIt Is humanitarian to say we
much that modern medicine ca n
the bags.
•
vernmental, because our doctors
The approach goes with the won't Jet people go hungry . It Is offer the s e days . Can we accept
Currently , according to one ba ggage- mak&lt;'r, mor£' luggage is be ln~
are well-tralneq and w ,e ll - · flow of the new political and also selfi sh : We don 't like the
the Idea that someone with
" lost by airlines tha n ev er bE'fore_ " But t('('hnoiogical advancPm ents,
rewarded, because we have
budgetary circumstance. It adds sight of skeletal beggars. So we curable cancer will not be able to
government deregulation , c heaper fa res and IC&gt;g room alone can'.t
devoted great resources to de- to fhe private, not the J:lUb!ic, part have welfare programs and food
afford the cure?
explain th e phPnomenon.
velop new technologies, medi- of the medical system; there Is stamp programs . Thus : As a
Kennedy's bill Is not perfect. It
Contrary to popular belie f, wh en your a tickrt to , say, Bangor,
cines and procedures.
no big-spending government pro- society , re latively recently we ought to be closely scrutinized In .
Maine, your luggage does n' t necessarily wind up in Bangkok,
However, OUT' private system gram. Kennedy takes a non- haye come to believe that ade- some of Its Important details _But ·
Thailand.
~,
has one central flaw . It is not
ideological view of his shift from quate nourishment is a huma n its direc tion is sound. It goes a
For one thing, t airline must fl y ovPrseas. as well as domestic
available to everyone. Because a public to a private plan. He desire that Is also - a social
long way to stitching up a big hole
routes, to carry Am rican -bound luggagE' to As ia. For another, the
our health care Is so good, It Is says, ".This can do the job. Let 's necess ity .
In the safety net.
Transportation Department assures us that ' 'n early 98 percent of all
expensive. Most Americans only get the job done ."
Heaith care is now cros sing
mispla ced bag s are r Pturned to their owners within hours."
feel safe because their medical
The Kennedy proposeal has
It only sePm s like day s, or, weeks. Particularly when you are
bills are paid through group other advantages: No one need
.
wailing in Bangor for luggage to a rrive from Ba ngkok .
health insurance provided by stay on welfare just to get
, De lsey, a Fre nc·h luggage co mpany, warns against putting bags
their employer. The government' medical benefits. It takes a big
into thP hands of " an out - of·uniform porter." To which I say ,
steps In only when there are step toward offering catastr o,''.
'"Amen. "
typicaJ..1Y no employers: Medi- phic health Insurance for all . It
An out -of-uniform porte r might be tempted to searc h your luggage
care for the elderly and Medicaid should' also has some allure for
or trade 1t It for th0 missing uniform pieces. Epaulets, for instance.
for people in deep poverty.
conservativ!!s: They complain
I always pack a n extra st•l of epauiPts in case the other one rolls off
About 85 percent of Americans ' that an lnc ~ease In the minimum
the hotel chilforobe top and breaks whe n I was dressing 10 go out:
are covered. But what about the wageratchetsupeveryo.neelse's
More likely , howev,er. your bags wll~ be stolen by an out·of-umform
rest- the 15 percent who aren't wages In order to retain exist
porter .
·
Insured? · That' s 37 million peo- wage intervals. TT~he~~$,~~~(----1-..:__ _ _ ~ ._
You never ·know wher e the missing luggage will turn-up. Or when-. - ple:-Inlley get Ill IIIey can be In plan fsa" beneflf,''-·
Delsey tells us that airlines ge nerally " walt three months before
trouble. They s~ek a charity and , would not generally have
declaring luggage officially lost. " All I can say Itt hat three months is
ward or just forgo treatmenf.
that effect
a long time to wear the same set of epaule ts .
,
.
,
There Is a hole In our social
Still, most conservatives opThe luggage-maker also makes the point that alrlmes ~?n t
safety net.
pose 11. They don't want governSen. Edward Kennedy has long ment mandates. It could slightly
a utomatically pay the full ~mount of evPry claim they receive .
W~at about claims for m•s;tng epaulet s, found In lugg;~ge stashed
been a champion of a• broader,
Increase unemployment. And
by an out-of-uniform porter· I can only guess but Delsey says the
safer safety net. But In the past they recite their mantra : !'There
amount of any cash advance you may receive depends, among other
his remedy Involved a greater Is no free lunch." In lunch terms,
'''
' I
things, on "how long It takes to track down the lost luggage.''
governmental role. Opponents they are correct. Most of .the ,
It has been my experience that It may take three months or longer
characterized It as "socialized costs are borne by' the businesses
''·
to recover missing epaulets from Bangkok. So be patient.
medicine " He never could get It Involved, so costs will be passed
" I'
Also It Is well to keep In mind that the "liability ceiling" for airlines
enacted 1 ~ 10 law.
along to the consumer.
r
Is $1,250 per passenger on domeS11C 'flight!f and $9.07 per pound of
Now Kennedy has come up
But the q!}estlon at Issue,
''
baggage for International travel.
with a new way to skin the cat, or central to the debate about the 1 •
•'
Therefore, a potential traveler might be wise to stock up on
about two-thirds of It atayway. Safety Net State, Is not whether
•
I
inexpensive epaulets. Particularly if he Is going to entrust his luggage
Twenty-four million of those 31'* we should provide entitlements,
I
to any out-of- uniform porter~;
million uninsured are In families but which entitlements. Should
'
Fortunately, Delsey says, excessive valuation coverage, which
where a member works full- Wll guarantee vacations over~
·
will entllle Ihe passenger to reimbursement abOut th~.statcd ceiling,
time. But their employers don;t seas? Me,nbershlps In country
I I
I' IH1 by NI!A ' PIC
, •
can be purchased tor a nominal fee at most airlines. . ..
, , provide group health coverage. clubs? No.
·'- r
As to what fee a luggage manufacturer would consider nominal,
Individual coverge Is often proThe Safety Net State offers
'
"LOVED 'The Untouchables'/ NICE violence!"
Icanonlyguess.However,myadvicelsgofortheexcesscoverage ·hlbltlvely expensive : So ~sand services that the
anytime you fly to Bangor.
Kennedy's new bill mandates society has come to fiee as

.

Star Gard(m Club to meet

Hymn .sing planned

Berry's World

,.

The Gra nde Sq ua res of Ga llipolis will ho ld a Wes ter n style
square da nce Sa tu rday from 8 to 11 p.m . at St. Peter's E piscop a l
Churc h in Ga llipoli s w1th Da le Eddy calling.

¥

•

The episode typifies a spend ·
CHUGIAK, Alaska (NEAl thrift
era that began In 1969 when
In the early 1980s, when Alaska
the
stat
e received $900 million for
was awash In money generated
by crude oil, state officials
oil and ga s leases on land It
owned .adjacent to Prudhoe Ba y
devised an ambitious plan to
on Alaska 's North Slope
construct two massive dams
That money was spent In lour
spanning the Susitna River.
years, but the real wealth began
The project was supposed to
to fl,ow when oil was discove red
provide low-cost hydroelectric
on those state tracts and the
power to the three·flflhs of the
Alyeska Pipeline was opened on
state's rPsldents concent rated in
June 20. 1977. Since then. the
south-central Alaska - a region
state has spent $26 billion In
that Includes ltnchoragP, by, far
the state's most populous city, • crudE' oil royalties, taxes and
and the Kenai Peninsula to its
Investme nt income.
south and the Matanuska-Su_sitna
Valley to Its north .
A substantial portion of the oil
For more than five years , the windfall was handled wisely. A
state government commissioned 1976 law requires that 25 percent
a seemingly endless serk .; oi of all royalty payment s to the
studies and analyses of the plan . s tate be placed In the Alaska
" Every consulting firm In the Permanent. Fund, a "ne st egg"
country probably had a piece of now worth $8 billion.
.It," says an Anchorage-based
In addition, Alaska communijournalist familiar with the ties were able to build or upgradE'
project.
schools and roads and finan ce
Last year, however, the pro- olh"er de s perate.ly needed
ject was abandoned as economi · improvements.
cally infeasible - after the state
But much of the mon ey was
had spent an estimated $150 squandered on proj ec ts that we r P
million without turning a single wholly unju stified or ab surdly
shovelful of dirt .
extr; vagant . " In re trospect,"

Sq~are dance planned ...~

L

Area 'deat~s ·.

· Nell Middleswart

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The Daily Sentinel- Page 3

I

A weekend m eeting w ill be held a t the Re d Brus h Church o f
Chr ist on Bash a n Road at 7 p m Sal urday. There will beSunday
mo rn ing wors hip at 9 and a t 6 p.m . Sund ay even in g ser vice.
Chandl
er Bak er will be the spea ker a t the specia l ~ erv i ces •
wh ich an • open to t he. publ ic.

.Accident victim· h~s surgery .

•
ulently overstated" Its net worth
•
•
to justify millions of dollars In
'•
dividends , bonuses and expen•
sive perquisites. Dixon alone
collected more than $8 million In
bOnuses In the last few years .
During much of this time, Vernon
•
S&amp;L had a negative net worth.
••
- Dixon and others had the
•
savings and loan pay ' 'hugesums
•
of money" that were diverted to
1
t
their personal use. These pay"!llents greatly Increased the J
s&amp;L's cost of doing business, and
'
increased the pressure on Its
executives to " falsely Inflate
re ported profits and net worth, "
ac c ording to an FSLIC
' document.
Our original report that Dixon
had the savings and loan , buy a
t
beach house for his personal use
•'
Is confirmed by the government
•
documents . The beach house, in
Del Mar. Calif, cost about $2
••
million. Dixon and his wife
••
moved Into the house In June
1985, and lived there for a year
rent-free .
••
The S&amp;L a lso paid Dixon 's bills
for about $800,000 worth, of
••
personal e xpenses since 1982.
These Included $36,780 for flow · .,
ers, $44,095 In c ash, $381) for pet "
services (though apparently no
B a kke r -st y le air condliloned
doghou se), $1,794 for cable TV
service, $13,446 for cterlng , $4,420
for pool service and $2,408 for ·
someone's graduation party _
- Dixon squande red Ve rnon
S&amp;L's a s se ts to maintain his
" Indulgent and opulent lifestyle ," the FSLIC cha rges. Examples thE' agenc y c it es Inc lude
lavish, unjustified trips to Eu rope. a n expen s ive fl eet of
a irpla nes, the beach house a nd a
yacht.

Alaska's ·bubble bursts _ _ _ _

Red Brw•h church meeting .set

l

Lavish ·lifestyles __.;___J_a_ck_._A_rid_e__rs_o_n_an_d_D_·a_l_e.....~_an_-.·A_t_ta___: ·!

long. All letters ar e subject t o editing and nus! be,slgned with name, address and
telephone number No unsigned letters wm be p.:bUshed Letters should be In

By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON &lt;UPIJ -As part of his "program to create world
peace," Maharishi Mahesh Yoga will demonstrate for Congress this
week his technique of "yogic flying."
That' some of Yoga ' s followers are able to levitate by thinking
coherent thoughts probably Is the best news since an American
evangelist tevealed last week tha t he had resurrected a few dead
people.
But you don't have to equate the two to appreciate how "yogic
flying" might save money. Certainly , it Is cheaper than, say, building
B1 bombers or H uey helicopters
The maharishi says there has been "scientific veriflca1ion of
coherent brain function " while ~orne yogic fliers were aloft. His word
Is good enough for me. '
"The higher they go, the happier they become. " he was quoted as
saying.
That could be a takeoff of the old line about the higher they go, the
farther they fall. However, there has been no scientific verification
that yogic flying necessarily ends in crash landings.
It is true that one photograph I saw showed five fliers barely off the
ground. A drop of a few Inches isn't likely to hurt anyone. But a
caption explained that this was only the "first stage."
With the Washington Monument In the background, I ass ume at
least one of the yogic fliers eventually got as high as that 555-foot
obelisk.
At any rate, His Holiness tells us that "for the first tim~ in history
there exists a practical and scientifically validated program to put an
end to violent and negative tendencies' on Earth, remove the basis of
terrorism and war and create a permanent state of world peace."
Among the validators, I assume, IS a Harvard University graduate
who was described as " one of the world's leading authorities on
unified quantum field theories " as well as an expert on "particle
physics research ."
He once said, "Only from the level at which all the fundamental
matter fields are unified do we have natural command over the local
curvature of space-time geometry which gives control over the
gravitational field of which 'yogic flying' Is a direct demonstration."
Fortunately, r also a s sume, all Harvard graduates don't talk that
way .
To which I reply, "Everything in 1t's time, including world peace
and an end to terrorism." l et Congress balance the national budget
first .
i was a trifle put off by indications that the maharishi's plan for
world peace may be dependent on " economic self- sufficiency for
every nation." As to how economic self- sufficiency would help, he did
not make clear.
The next thing we know , some holy person will be extracting blood
from turnips . But we'll cross that stream when we come to a bridge.
Meanwhile, I gather that the yogic flying method of inducing
"coherence in world constiousness" was introduced to insufficient
nations last year at the first international competition In New Delhi.
Too bad Lt. CoL Oliver North tried to end Middle Eastern and
Caribbean terrrorism another way .

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: Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

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4 The Daily Sentinel

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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

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:Tuepy, July 7, 1987

Tuur'ly, July 7, 11t'7

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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The Daily Sentinei-Page-!5

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·Angels
!down
-·~Bosox
.
...

' :- ...

.

-

By JOE
t)PI Sports l
Effectlve relief pitching and
aggressive base running made it
possible for Jack Howell to win
Monday night's gam e for the
-California Angels.
· : Howell blasted a three- run
'homer with two out In the 12th
inning to give California to a 10-7
_victory over the Boston Red Sox
·after a game-saving play and 6
:2-3 Innings of scoreless relief
;turned In by Gary Lucas and
;Greg Minton kept the Ange ls in
·the game.
: Brian Downing led off the 121h
)dth a double to reach base safely
·for the seventh straight time In
:t he game and ninth straight over
two games. After Devon Whit e
grounded out, Wes Gardner , 0.4.
.:w alked Wall y J oy n e r
~ntentlonally .

· Doug DeC!nces hit a potential
i:louble-play grounder to second
;t&gt;aseman Marty Barre tt , but
Joyner slid hard into second and
shortstop Ed Romero cou ld . not
make the throw to first. Howell
~hen ripped a 2-2 pitch to right
;field for his 13th home run.
· "With runners at firs t a nd
second I hey were paying more
;attention to Downing beca us e he
was the winning run, " Joy ner

said. "(First baseman ) Dwight
,Evans was playing behind me so
«cheap hit wouldn't get thro)lgh .
So (Angels firs t base coach )
f)obby Knoop kept telling me.
'Take another step, take another
.. step.'

';:

"When the ball was hit. I must
' have been a quarter ol the way to
',.second
.
already. Since I got a
~'bigger lead than norma l, I wa s
: right on top of Romero wheri he
~ gil_t the ball. That turned out to IX'
•: a . key, since about fiv e pitches
· later, Jack hit one about 4:10
:·reet."
:; :Minton, 2'0, pitc he d three in . nlngs for the victory, California's
:12th in its last 15 games .
:.::: "You've got to g ive credil to
the bullpen," Howell said. "They
; held them and we came ba ck .
: Wally Joyner's breakup of the
· double play was key. "
:.: -The. Angels, who trai led 7-0
: al,ter six innings, lied the sco re
· 7.-~ In the eighth with three runs
against reliever Ca lvin Sc hi, raid!. Schofield led off with a
- w~lk. One out lat er, Mark Rya l
: belted his fourth homer. mov ing
· the Callfornla to within 7-6'
: 'Downing walked and Joe Sam' blto relleved. Sambito ind uced
White to fl y out. Joy ner blooped a
double to shallow rig ht -center ,
; scoring Dowmng with the tyi ng
· run .
Twins 2, Yankees .0
: At New York, Tom Brunanskv
; and Kent Hrbek hit homt&gt; r un s to
account for two of Minnesot a' s
.' three hit s off Ron Guidr·y. and
· Frank VIola pit ched a five -hit ter
: to move the Twins into fir s t pl ace
:jn the AL West .
Indians 9, Royals 7
. ..
• At Cleveland, Cory , Snyder
; powered a grand slam in the
· eighth Inning for his second
: homer of the gam e and Kan sas
; City ace Bret Saberhage n suf·
: fered only his third loss of the
• season.
; ;
Orioles 4, White Sox I
• At Baltimore. Eddie Murrav
: smashed his 16th hom e run and
; Alan Wiggins sin gled home the
•game-winner to help the Or ioles
~ break a seven-game los ing
! streak.

~hils' , comeback

.
B
.....
-, ...
•
':
.
,, Y Jim Soulsby
be.ca~se
of her ~cademlc ·· - ·· · Rto ·arande Volleyball Coac·h
achlt"vem.:&gt;nts and athletlc.alill · ·
• ·· · •
- ' · ·patsy· Fields hail announced the . . " lfy... ·
. .
· · .. •
· · signing ot· Meil!'s.'·Htgh· ,School · · As a membe{ot Hie Meigs Vol.- : _' · ·: ;
,,
..
l'
-..
graduate Jennl Couch who will
leyball·squad , which posted a 13· "•
·(?ecome a member of the Redwo- 3 TVC and a 21· 5 overall record
mel! unit In the upcoming season . last season, ·Jennl was credited
Jennl, a 1987 graduate, was an
with 188 points, the highest Indl ·
outstanding scholar at Meigs
vidual total. An All TVC First
with a 3. 7 grade average and will
team selection, she also had 93o/.
reeelve full tuition at Rio Grande of her serves Inside with 65 aces .
She returned 89'!! of serves re ·
celved and 'completed 89!11 of
passt"s. Other slats show Jennl
I
had 23 digs I where she must dive
for the ball) , 135 assists, 59 kills
and 8 blocks. Jt&gt;nnl was also an
outstanding guard on lhe ehamplonshiP' Marauderette basket ·
ball team where she was a three
year starter for Coach Ron Lo-.
gan.
---Coach Fields said she had beMARTIN LADER
come Interested In Jennl when
LONDON (UP!) - Once the she attended a volleyball clinic
euphoria or victory has settled, at Rio Grande last year and that
Martina Navratllova will find the they had chartt&gt;d her progress
war has not yet been won.
during I he season just pas t.
For the time being, Navratll"We are very high on Jennl, "
ova can take great comfort from Ms. fields statl'd. "SHe'll be our
her gutsy performance at Wim- number · one setter (quarterbledon, where she fought off the
baek) . She has super hustle. good
challenge of Stetfl Graf to earn a speed and good hands," she conrecord sixth successive si ngles tinued .
crown. In I he process , she halted
"Jennl
Is
easy to coach,
Graf's winning streak at 45 doesn' t get down and wllJ deflnl·
matches.
tely be the tea m leader. Our sue·
The next btg hurdl e comes at
cess will depend largel y on her
COUCH SIGNS - J ennl Couch, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Waller
the U.S. Open, beginning Aug. 31 ,
leadership ability. WI' feel she
R. Cout:;h. Pomeroy, si gns teller oflntent ·to play v,olleyhall at Rio
at which time Navratllova will can do the job for us ," Ms . Fields
Grande College a• Coach Patsy Field.• looks on.
have to prove once again s he Is
concluded .
the world's best women's tennis
player, a position she has held the
last Jive years.
: Three women have won the
Grand Slam events this year .
Hana Mandllkova beating Nav'ratllova In the Auslrallan final
·and Grar besting Navratllova at
: Paris . This leaves the U.S. Open
· as the key elem,·nt In helping 10
·decide who wtll reign as No. 1.
• "Should someone else win the
:u.s. Open, then I guess the No. I
· ranking will be up for grabs, "
' Navratllova s aid. " If Stef!l or I
' win tt , that person s ho~ld be No. I
·fo r th(' year. J feel my c hances
arc good since the U.S. Open
;fav ors serve and volleyers with
•It s last s urface . I feel l'O mforta ble playi ng there.''
Gral dtsagrres she will be at a
dlsadvanta!le a t flushln~

.

HEARING AID CHECKLIST

Meigs Legion wtns twin bill
By ,li m Soul sby
Meigs gave up onr unear ned

ru n the first innin g ol th e opening
gam~ a nd then. b~ h i n d th eone
hit pit ching of Dave Am burgey,
went on to dow n Well ston 7·1.
Ambu rgey. m a nother great

mound perform a nce. struc k out
13 bat\ Prs. yie ld ed seve n free
passes a nd gave up only a s ingle
to St0ve H e n r~' a !'i hi s t ea mma te~

p layed errorless ba ll behi nd him .
Meigs got its fir s t score in th e
second a ft er Jeff Ca ld well got
aboa r d v ia n si ngk

r:~ nd

cros sed

the pl at~ aft er two We ll sto n mis·
cues. AftN one ou t in th e third
fra me. Brent Bi sse ll hi t safely,
s t ol~ second a nd scored on two
wild pi tc hes. J eff McElroy walked in the fif lh lrume, stole second
and crossrd th~ p l at~ on Jeff
Caldwel l's \r ipl&lt;'. Ca ld we ll scor·
ed on a noth er wild pit ch. AmburgC'v rf'achrd o n a n er ror a nd

scored after Br·ya n Du rs t s in ·
gled. A walk 10 Bi sse ll. a sca r! ·
fl ee by Todd Cas&lt;'y , Mik~ Bar·
t_rum '~ single . a wild pi tch a nd a
passed ba ll acc ounted fo r Meigs '
fin a l two runs. Durst had two
oth er base hits , Ba rtrum pic ked

up a seco nd hit, a nd Ed Colli ns con trol a lhlrd strlkt&gt; pllch .
and .Je ff Mc Elroy h!l safely .
'I Becker. Casey. Bartrum . Ca ld·
Llnescore:
Wt&gt;ll and Freeman all seorect unMeigs ............. 011 003 2-7 10 0 earned runs as a result of fi ve
Wellston .... ..... 100 000 0-1 I 3 Wellston errors.
Batteries: Me igs : D. AmburWellston picked up two run s In
gey (WP \ and J eff McElroy . the
six th as A . Hammond
Wellsto n: R. Kuhn tLPI and B. s ingled. M. Pelletier and M. Wll Ward .
--si
ngled. walke
La nt zd,hit Into
Iiams
B. a double
Mike Bartrum and Bre nt Bis- play and S. Henry 's si ngle plated
sell s ha red mound dut les for Williams.
.
Me igs in the second conies! with
Bartrum, In four frames, gave
Bart rum getting credit forthe7-4 up two runs on four hit s. fanned
Wi n.
three a'nd Issued six free passes.
Spotting Wellston two runs In · In relief, Bissell allowed two
the lirs t frame on a walk toM . rilns on four hils and walked two.
Williams , B. Cra btree's sing!&lt;&gt; Besides the aforemenUoned hit s,
·a nd a double by J . Lant z, Meigs Bartrum had a double. Ed Col·
came ba ck to 'pick up onP In the llns singled and Becker and Caldfounh on Ba rt rum's solo homer. well each had another base
The next !fifth) fram &lt;&gt; sealed knock.
Well s ton 's fatt&gt; as--nine batters
Lantz picked up another single
went to the plate a nd before th p and a double for the losers and
dust had set tled . Meigs had Crabtree another single .
forged a five run lead.
Llnescore:
Bry an burst led off with a sin- Metgs ......... ...... ooo 168 0-7 9 0
gle, Col lins was out on a grou nd - Wellston ........ 200 002 0- .4 S 7
er to short, Don Beck&lt;&gt;r singled
Batteries: M. Bartrum 14)
a nd Dursl came home after a (WP), B'. Bissell (3) and M. Jen stol en base and wild pitc h . Brent kin s, Bissell and McElroy. Well Bisse II flied to. left, Todd Casey ston: M. Smith (LP) and B.
walked and stole second, Bar- Ward.
trum a nd Jeff Caldwell singled
Meigs will host Parkersburg In
a nd Brian Freeman reached a double header on Saturday ,
firs\ when the catc he r failed to July II, starting at 1 p.m.

,. GREAT PR'IZE- Hit a hole-in'-one 'on No. 9 during Thursday's
~merlcan Heart Association Golf Sc ramble at Jaymar Golf
Course and drive home In this 1987 Ford Ranger ·4x4 pickup,
·courtesy of 'TUrnpike ol Gallipolis. With the truck are, from left to
:nght, Bill Nelson, Turnpike sales representative, 'Sandy
:Janaarelll, tourney chairman, and John Sang, owner of Turnpike
;of Galllpollll. Tournament sponsor Is Budweiser or Jackson. Tee off
.
.Is aJ 1 p.m.

EXPERIENCED, DEPENDABLE ONES AT:
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126 W. Union

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.

CfN CJNNATT IUPI\ - Cincinna ti Reds second base an Ron
Oester underwent a three· hour
operation for total reconstruction of his left knee Monday and
will be s ideli ned at least six
weeks , the team announced.
Oester, who was place d on the
15-day disabled list earlier Mon . day, will wear a brace for six
weeks , then start rehabilitation.
He was on a nine-game hitting
strea k when he went down with
the Injury . '
'
" I can' t see Ron playing any
more this year ," said Reds
manager Pete Rose.

DILES

PLEASE COMPARE, THEN CALL THE

Oester was Injured when New
York Mets outfielder Mookle
Wilson slid Ini(&gt;hlm Sunday while
trying to break up a double play.
(){&gt;ster was taken-from the field
on a stretcher.
Outfielder Kal Daniels also
was Injured Sunday. Ht&gt; aggravated an old knee injury while
running out a double. He was to
undergo arthroscopic surgery
today.
Dave Coneepelon replaced
(){&gt;ster at second base Monday
night and Tracy Jones patrolled
left field.

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• " TheU.S. Openls golngtobea
l better court lor m e," the 18·
,year-old West GPrman sa id. " 1
•would say hard court Is my best
:surface , clay Is my socond and
!grass f5 coming liP- _The U.S.
· Open may be the nex t hlp;hllght of
: the year. but there arlo' many
. other tournament s and I takP
every on&lt;' seriously."
: Although grass 'was •supposed
to be her weakest surfaclo'. Graf
played with superb confldrnCP
' and sklll at Wimbledon , and was
highly pleasl'd with her e ffort.
·: "It's been a prNtl( good Wim bledon for me, tt still Is, " Gi·a!
paid after sufferln(l her first
~feat since last Novpmber .
~'Coming to the final Is a 11reat
thtn(l and eVen II I lost It I feel
~ about It . I'd llkt&gt; lo play
Hartlna again soon. "
•! If Graf had won Saturday, she
iyould have ovprtaken Navratil ~· for thl' No. I ranking. Now
lhe must be patient a bit more,
!iflth the lull confidence she
/!Yentua lly will rise to the top. She
also Is antl~lpatlng hrr next
j:pnfrontatlon with Navratllova.
"Why shouldn't I be confldl'nt
·~ut playing Martina again~."
af asked. "I've beat e n her
Ice tthls yeart and lost only
ce. After you losl' you want to
lllay the other one again . Next
tlmt&gt; I hope I'm going to do
!:tetter. I think my game lmIJroved affer Paris , my serve has
ll'otten better. I'm looking forlfard to the next one because it's
Ill ways nlcl' to play the No. I."
·: Two weeks ago, Navratllova
~mltted concern about hearing
. llo much that she might be
slipping at age 30. With an eighth
ltylmbledon singles title lh hand,
lind the memorv of how brll·
llantly she performed, she Is
·'~ '• ~jlklng a new vie\~\· of 30.
·, \ ·' '' ·"· · "I felt as athletic as I have in a
'
· iong time. quick and agile and
eager," Navratllova said follow ·
lng her semifinal victory over
Oris Evert. "So many people
J(ave tol.d me that women hit their
tK"lme at 30 that I'm sta-rting to
believe them ."
the
straight sets, American
!;upper Ken Flach and Robert
Seguso won the men's doubles,
Melena · Sukova and Claudia
~
Kolide·Kilsch
took tlie women's
1
· ~; .!loubles, and Jo Durie and
t1eremy Bates provided Britain
With Its first mixed doubles tllle
~lnce -1936.
·
· ; Cash said Monday that alter
hll Davis Cup commitment tor
l\uatralla ·ln three weeks against
Mexico, hla most Immediate goal
• • to' do well In the U.S. Open.
, .fte didn't play at Flushing
' li!eadow In 1985, and was a first
loeer Jut year.
.
: ' "[ want to pr9Ve something tq
~tlt'lf Ill the Statea," the 22}Ur-old Australian Mid."

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BE AN INFORMED CONSUMER

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'

CINCINNATi (UPI ) - Base- · curveballs In the game," said .. Mll&lt;e LaCoss pitched eight ;
ball seemed out of the question.
Parrish, the former Detroit Innings and drove In two runs
Sheets of rain were pounding Tiger c11tcher who joined Von . leading the Giants to a victory ""
Riverfront !&gt;tadlum as the Cln·
Hayes and Juan Samuel for . over the PI rat'?$ lp the second
·
clnnatl Reds.o and Philadelphia
three-hit · nights ·that ·paced the · game.
• Ph !Illes waited Monday ~lghl . At•. 15-h(t Phlllles' attack.
. . .
"I'm ·h appy with tlie trade,
-&lt;
.ttie best guess-the garne would'be : · ."'When ne gets his curve over Dravecky said-.·I thl-nli !-gained 12·
postponed and rescheduled.
along with his· faSlball Mike Is games In the standings by • · •
Weath!ll'.pr.edlctlons called for very tough."
coming to this bal(club. I knew ·
·a le tup with another front ex•
Rose resorted to some highly that from what I had seen In tlie
peeled to bring more rain later.
unusual strategy In the fifth past they were good organlza·
True;-there was a letup and
Inning after P.blladelphla tied the tion and things had really
then more rain In the air;_ but It· score &amp;6 and Samuel was Improved ."
was In the form of base hits that
perched on second with the go·
rained !om the Phi Illes' bats as ahead run with two out. · He
Astros 9, E"pos 3
they came from behind to drown ordered · Power 10 lntenllonally · •
At Houston, Danny Darwin
out the Reds 9-6on a flood of extra · walk Hayes to pitch to the one of
base hits.
the game's premier powE:r hlt- pitched a five-hitter over elgM
Innings and Alan Ashby belted a.
"We had our chances." said ters. Mike Schmidt.
"Want to know why I did that? two -run homer to defeat
Cincinnati manager Pete Rose
after Cincinnati's western · dlv· Rose asked after a Schmidt Montreal.
lslon lead had been sliced to 2¥.,
lofted a routine fl y to centerfield.
games over the Houston Astrbs. "I did It txocause Schmidt told me
Cubs 7, Padres 0
"But we just coi'rldn 't hold them before the game that he hates to
At Chicago, Andre Dawson
and Ted (Power) made a couple face Power. I hated to do It drovj' In four runs with a pair of
of costly mistakes that actually because I could just see that ball
homers to back the four-hit·
cost us five runs ."
flyi ng out of the park. But Ted
pitching of Steve Trout to beat
Rose was alluding to a pair of made a good pitch to him .''
San Diego.
home runs Ihat Power gave up, a
The Rt&gt;ds will send Ron Robin·
three-run shot by Lance Parrish son, 3-3, againsllhe Phlllies' Don
that tied the game at 4- 4 and a Carman. 4-6, tonight.
two-run blast by Glenn Wilson
· Giants 7-a, Pittsburgh lH
that shattered a 6-6 tie in the fifth
Dave Dravecky, a new San
and proved to be the game- Francisco Giant, scattered five
winner In a contest that s tarted hits over five innings In his first
one hour and 42 minutes late and a ppearance as a Gia nt in the fir st
Thert&gt; wlll be a girls softball
ended at 15 minut es after game of a twllll(ht doubletournament the weekend of July
midnight.
header. The Giants swept a
11 at Ordinance Field In Point
double-headPr
from
Pittsburgh
Pleasant for two age divisions, 12
· "They were terriblt&gt; pitches,"
7-~ and 7·4. " I normally have
·
yea
rs and under and 13 years to
Power admitt(!d . "I threw a high
butterflies
befo
re
I go out there
15
years.
slider to Parrish In the third and
Anyon(' lnlerested m·aycontact
then got a breaking ball up to and s tart thegam&lt;&gt;an yway. They
were
a
little
larger
butt
corfllcs
Greg
fowler at 675-3869 or Fred
Wilson In thl' fifth . and that was
roda;·."
Surbaugh
at 675 7441.
'
the difference. We scored plent y
of runs but I just gave away too
many ."
Clutch pitching by a rookie and
a veteran had the Phlllles new
manager Lee Elia smiling after
his team overcame early deficits
of 4· 1 and 6-4.
Twenty-two year old Mik e
Jackson, 3-6, hurled 4 1-3 Innings
of three-hit baseball to get credit
for the victory and 40- year-old
Kent Tekulve came on to mak e
one pitch and ground the Reds'
E ric Davis Into a double play that
ended the final Reds ' th reat In
the sevl'nth Inning.
·
" That kid . (.Jackson) has a
chance Ia be a great s tart er or a
fine reliever," proctlrted Ella .
"H(' reminds me a lol of Lee
up· FOR GRABS- Tiger's third baseman James Walewander
Smith of th!' Chicago Cubs, the
rcadoes up lor a hall hit hy !\ 's .Jos e Canseco Monday night in the
wa y he throw s the ball. "
first inning. (UPI)
"He's got one of· tht&gt; pes t

O~ter.,

..

beats Reds

Most MaJor CredH
Carel• Accepted

�•

•

The Daily Sentinel

By TheBerid

Business Services

----------..,.----------,-----------l

Tuesday, .July 7, '1987

J

'

,'

Page- 6

-:.: !:hope. you had the opportunity
to Yankee Doodle all around on
the holiday.
I dld! I went to
two. paradeS ··
one In Rutland,
the other. In
Middleport--an
open house at
tbe . great new
American Le·
gton facility In Middleport. and to
an . evening program in
Middleport.
~II\' between the exci ling events,
I cleaned windows.
· I · know! l3efore B.C ...tllat's
before Charlene.. I always said:
"I don't do windows."
,Jiowever, that all changed one
day when Charlene asked:
"You like to eat, don't you?."
Well .. I'm dumb but you don't
have to draw me a picture.
'SO now ..J DO windows.
Meanwhile, back in Rutland,
l,ll Kennedy again proved herself
a good organizer.
Lil had asked me on Thursday
where I would be located before
I he parade.
. Answering like I had it all
planned, I answered:
: ''In front of the Nazarene
Church."
And that's where I was when a
motorcycle riding messenger
brqught me a list of the parade
parflclpants.
I was pleased.
, ..People seeing this probably
think I'm getting a communique
from the Office of the President
or: a Message from Garcia." I
thl&gt;u'g ht, while deep down I knew
they were probably thinking:
J'Well, finally, he's being sub·
poenaed to court."
•The parade moved as sche·
dlil!!(l and near the end, Lil
dismounted from a fire truck and
handed me tickets for a free roast
I:Nle!:sal\dwich and a soft drink.
"Hey! This ISt.JllY day," I
tho)lght with satisfaction.
·Too soon, the parade had
passed me by and traffic was
thick so this meant a walk to the
Rutland Park, the scene of post
parade activities. There were
scads at people along the way·
-Seated In lawn chairs in their
front yards or in comfortable
fljrl)lture and swings on their
porches. It was a pretty good
siZed jaunt and several times I
admired a chair or swing that
W'!!S . empty at the time of my
passing, thinking someone might
pick up a hint and get a bright
Idea.
You know. Something like:
"That old !ella with the camera
looks pretty - warm and tired.
Why don't we offer him a chair?"

-.

bream on, Bunky-it just
didn't happen.
T.oo pooped to pop, I arrived at
the park. Following some great
conversations with a lot of
people, I spotted a popcorn stand.
Now ordinarily, I'm a bottom·

Yankee doo""""'zng~.-.:_
less pit when It comes to popcorn,
so I purchased a bag. It was
great! However, I've never
tackled popcorn before 11 In the
morning before-so In no time. I
was full to the eyebrows. That
took care of the roast beet
sandwich-Just no room to go
in-so Lll, you owe me one.
I headed back to town wlthLII 's
.word that she would have lists of
all of the winners of the day's
events..and Lil came through
like a trooper .
Things really weren't too much
better for me in Middleport. It
was a good slt~ation as far as
seeing the parade though IJe.
cause you could watch it on Third
and then move over to Front St.
and see it again. I did that. You
KNOW that I love a parade.
I suppose I may as well lay It on
the line. I did get a little miffed at
Bob Gilmore who pulled together
the Middleport celebration which
was well received.
Actually, what ired me was
that .I thought I should have
gotten at least the second place
award in the parade for tap
dancing down Third Avenue in
my crepe soled shoes.
After the parade when I was
picking up the names of the
parade winners from Bob, I
questioned thl' situation.
His comment :
''But you didn't judge."
Having leveled with me, Bob
then forged ahead to tell me that
he 'had gotten the sound system
all hooked in at Diles Park and
then found out that there was no
e!ectrlci ty .
I could have been compassion· .
ate with some comment like
"The best laid plans of mice
and men"-or ·•you can' t win
'em all, Bob"
But no, not me--when I don ' t
get an award, I get mean.
Next on the agenda was a visit
to the new building of Feeney·
Bennett Post 128, American
Legion, at Mill and Fifth Sts. It' s
going to be a great community
!acillty..and the open house was
held to unveil it to the public.
They had great cookies .. (eat
your heart out) and I'm one of
those people who can eat cookies
forever and never gain an ounce.
So what the heck, I pigged out.
The whole Story family was on
hand for the open house-Vern,
Ferndora, and John. who was the
tali Uncle Sam In the parade. I
tried to lure Ferndora to the big
oven on a -giant stove in the
kitchen of the new facility . I was
going to do a Hansel and Gretel
bit on her, but she wouldn't
budge. You know Ferndora. Her
motto is " Don' t go near the
water-or the oven door".
Denver Rice was on hand to
provide entertainment with
those great old songs ..everyone
loved it. I also volunteered to do
my tap dance on the beautiful.
shiny stage at the Legion build·
ing. Woe Is me-no one was

In the· spotlight:

receptive.
Then tpere the evening pro·
gram at Middleport which I could
have lived without, but I thought
It was really neat for former
Middleporter Jan Long to return
as State Senator to speak. His
family must be very proud.
Jan did mislead me ·a little
though. He said that whenever he
appears on such a program, It
always rains. Well-there were
13 drops-! counted them-and
we really needed the water
too-however. Sunday took care
of that.
Really popular with the crowd
at the Middleport evening 'actlvi·
ties w~re the Shady River
Shufflers. How in heavens name
do those people move that fast
and lor that long in all of the
heat? Not only that, but they're
smlling..did you notice espe·
cially Paulette Hudson and Kay
Hemsley? I've got to contact
thpse people to see what kind of
vitamins they take-and how
many.
Overall I had a good day. I only
called two, people' (that I know ofl
by the wrong names-these were
George Skinner who became
Art-and Naomi King who be·
came Bessie. Well. that's not
bad-at least I kept in all in the
family-and besides how well do
you do with popcorn before 11 In
the morning?
I know. You thmk I 'm going to
wrap this up by saying It was a
great "Red, White and Boom".
No way I'm foundered with the
expression. I'm just going to
back up a number of years and
say:
"It was a Grand and Glorious
Fourth-and I hope you're
smiling."

LONG BOTTOM -Long Bot·
tom Flame Fellowship Chapter
meeting will be Tuesday, 7:30
p.,m .. at Mt. Olive Community
Church. Speaker will be Suzanne
Bush. Special singing will i3e
fejltured.
POMEROY - Drew Webster
Post 39 will have a cookout 7 p.m .
Tuesday to be followed by the
regular meeting and installation
of new officers.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Lodge 363 F&amp;AM will be held 7:30
p.m. Tuesday. Refreshments
will be sprved.

Run United Methodist Church
will have an ice cream social
Friday ev,nlng beginning at 6·
p.m. Pie and cake will also be for
sale. The church will provide the
containers for carryout orders
for the ice cream.
CHESTER - Chester Town·
shtp Trustees will meet Friday,
7:30p.m., at the townhall.
SALEM CENTER - Salem
Township Trustees will hold their
annual budget hearing on Friday
at 9 a .m. at the township fire hall.
The public is welcome.
~

Deem reunion
POMEROY - A reunion of the
descendants of Geroge W. and
Lydia Grey Deem will be held at
the Royal Oak Park on July 12.
Dinner at 1 p.m ., take table
service, covered dish

the American Legion Auxiliary,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, are
now payablf,'. Dues may be sent
to Mrs. Albert Roush, 33178
Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy, or
will be collected Aug. 3 or 4 by the
membership committee.
Reunion
LANCASTER - The annual
Matlack family reunion will be
held July 19 at the Lancaster
Fairgrounds. A covered dish
dinner will be at 12: 30 p.m. and
all family and friends of the
family are Invited to attend .

-

thf' lovrl;v flowE'rS In bloom

R Is for tht• r('ason you' ll
sln~ a happy tun£'.
I Will always ]O\'f&gt; April In mv hf'a rt
L is ror thE&gt; ll,e: ht or !OVf'

..
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riJoto•l
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. . ....y ••,.. .

'"""n••"'l

ln.

Hold Onto

lh ~

Come Ml«hty Sa"lour

Glorious Cod JJ;boVP
Com f' might y Saviour
and fill our ht&gt;iHl s wiTh lovf',

c

J a mf' ~

GoOO Thinp

For Flacel Veer Ending

Come mighty Saviour
ha nd

Hold ont o ! ht&gt;

Wf' art' vou r forlorn s h('('p

Receipt1 ........ 48.622 13
lnteres1 , .......
All Other

Comr mlg hr y Sa\·lour
Lord~

Plpasf' llna:N nf'ar
Come mlghrv Saviour
Our f'ars your word do hf'ar.

Miac:.. leneout ..... 2, 616.17

!1,11 h.n.l ,la mr"'

Totei ·Aeceip(a Over/ __ ,,

-

........... o:&gt;.·

74.-·~
1-·-·

~ --­

TOTAL DISBURSE·
MENTS ......... 86.267 44

,,·_---·-·
--___
-· -----·

·-..--···

Dee 31 . '811 .... 56, 182.26
NON -EXPENDABLE
TRUST FUNDS
OPERATING REr.~IPTS ·
lnt..HI ................ 253.89
Git11 .. .. ........ 263 17
TOTALS &amp;
FUNO BALANCE
RECEIPTS:
ToxH ........... ., .. 20, 926.74

Q
----.. ...-

u-.._
.. ,_
·· ~--·-­

~

:::::-a:.-,:-

Board of MR / 00, P 0 . Bo)C
307,

ChantS and body to be bid
COI'Jlplete unrt Com·

A pubhc hearing on the
proposed 1988 budget will

lnvettmentt .
Tolal Treasury

.. 2 . 700 .00

as a
Bolonce .... .. 68,786 41j plate

Len Outstanding

lh"t ,thf'f' ttJ,:IM kf'I OW f1 um bir th
0 1 -.o:., rln-.: . ~llt\fn ~ Pf'&lt;JC'l•f ull\
sq l:u u iJ0\'1' lht• rarth
Vou knr,w lhr '-Ons:, l! f nJ!~ lt l n ~ "' l nd
! til' Pn!!lnt•'s ..,Wl"f't r c•fl a in

offer tnput
Jane G . Beegle.
Clerk

1717, 1tc

BELL CONSTRUtTION
General Contractors
5·18.'87-tfn

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

I cenlfy the following report to be correct end true,
to the beat of my knowl·

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM

1 1 Help Wanted

LOCAL GENERAL
MOTORS
DEALERSHIP IN
NEED OF
CERTIFIED
'GENERAL MOTORS
MECHANIC.

Rutlond. Ohio 45775
742·2B05
171 7. 11c

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIOUCIARY
On -June 24 . 1987. 1n the
Meigs County Probate Court
Can No 25554. Patricia
Suchou,
1 16 Cle•rvlew
Ori\le, McMuuay , Pa.; Car
olyn Podbesek. 8916 Tra1l·

Phylli1 May. 33137 Hy101l
Robert P. Meier, 29B008
Bradbury Road. MiddlepOrt,

OhiO. were appoitltltd Co·E•·
ecutora of the e••••llll of Ber

S. Meim. dece•sed.
3 Wehe Tenace.
Meigs Covnty,

QUAUFIED' APPUCANTS SHOULD SEND
RESUME TO BOX 729J IN CARE OF
THE DAI.Y SENTINEl. 111 COURT ST.,
POMEROY, OHIO 4S769.

OhH&gt;. 46769.

Robert E , Buck,
Probate Judge

lena K N esselroed, Clark

3 Announcements

.

f'k1rln ~

I

lis all in thP namf' o f Jrs u ~
In Him all thin gs wllll.M• found.

-.

I

Salvation f or you and 101 mr·
Its all in The namf' o f .ll" sus
Yes, Ht' can :&gt;f'l all mf'n lnlf'

li s all in th l" namt" o f J••sus
His prlomist• Ht• 1·an f ulfill
It s all In t he nam f' o f .ll' su ~
JuSi l TrU$1.1 Him and do God,; Will

20th
Birthday,

17 purebred. 3 percentage, including cow &amp; calf , pairs. yearling
heifers &amp; bull.

J,tm P~

a

,._

BOGGS

Don ' I E(IVl' In '

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Though t roub lr S('('m s to follow you ...
"'OU fE&gt;el you canno t win

U. St RT. SO EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

Thoujlh churehes of our Lord and Saviour
a.rC' att ac kE'd from within

Look up to Jesus
Don 't RIVP Jn
Sat;;~n knows hi s time Is shorl
H~ want the sou1s o f mrn

Authorized John Deere,
Now Holland, lush Hog
form Equrpment
Dealer

... ..

'nturllftce
~·

Beautiful ar(&gt; thl• promises mat.l l'
by God

.,,.,

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SlLL

Business

Riverine Antiques

Services

1124 East Main St.
Pomeroy
IIOURS: Tue.·Wed.- Fri.
11 o.m. to) p.m.
Sundar;, I p.m.-7 p.m.
.ly Chance ar Appointment

· Farm Equl~ment
Parts &amp; Ser•lce

State Auta

Look up to Jesus
Don' t ~lve In

S/ 1/ !t n

HUDNALL
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
168 North Se&lt;and
Middleport, Ohio ,45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Fishmg Supplies

Pay Your Cable &amp;

;

RUSS MOORE
992-2526

I· J. '86 lfc

Phone Bills Here
· BUStNEJS PHONE

16141 992-6550
~EIIDENCE

PHONE

Truck, auto , &amp;
heavy equipment
repairs and
welding .
IAII makes &amp; models)

PH. 949-2756
John K. Btnh

292·6900 !ext A369\

AsofMayJO. 1987, I wtllnotbe
respons1ble for any debt other
than my own Perry E. Livingston
11

7 puppies . part Collie&amp; Cot:kens·
pantet Call 614-446· 3484
Kitten• to good home or farm .
10 wkt old. Littertratned . 2 gray
str~ped, 2 wh1te. &amp; 2 black Call

61 4·266· 1793.

Call

GET PAID for reeding bqqbl-3
$1 00 per title Write ACE -·33A~
2 P1ma, Naperville,IL 60540: •..-&gt;•J;

Calico mother cat &amp; 5 little
adorable kittens- tamed Call

area. $16.000 · t68,000 C•11
602· 838· 8885 Ext 1449 1 ••·?-·,

3

Slk

week old kit1ens

614·446-3897.

Gorgeou1 long·haned k•ttens
Beautiful markmgs. Call 614·

992·7574.

Small miJI8d breed puppies to
good home. 304· 676· 5377

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CALLS

4·16 86-tfn

PUIUC INVItED

Government Jobe . ne.o4'0,....,1~\
859,230 . year Now hiring .•e.u

t -806-687-6000 E•t R·9806 ,
lAB TECH

LOST· 760.1t Angus he1fer Call
61 4-367· 7676
FOUND Btg female Doberman
Very friendly, black , choker
chain. must be family pet. Gall

Technolo~

and a current ASCP·.r't
Registry HotpH•I offers BJft.el ~· ,
lent nl•rv •nd benef1ts fOI' mouP
tnformatron call. Pertonnli'Dtrer'f..,
cotr 304· 372· 2731 or apply -t: .
Hospttal bussrness office.
"

. ....
-~

614-446· 1189
LOST: dog · mad, · lg. size white
wrth brown head Two darll
spots on bach . Oot:ked tail.
Reward for 1nfo. lead•ng to
return Cell 61 4- 388·8720

7

Yard Sale

WHO SHOULD SORT
THE DECEASED BELONGINGS?

APPLIANCE
REPAIR SERVICE
Service Call

-,r--.,-_

i'

!

onlr

\~,

Doot of tho "'"' tlifflaolt ..,., o roc.,. wWow or wWow1r
~ - 1- iJ JOrt!ftt tho
lpOUtt'ollol........ AI·
lhootth o wiH oft111
that • - •tlct11 ohoatd 1M

512so

Str•ing al1 maier brDtuh of
htHtlthold applioncn All
rtfMiirs .,.rontNd 1 year
p•ll ond Iober.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

"~

MLT Certified or eligible,for P.I?;Jo. ,
time eventng• pos1tlon MonltaY"-~
thru Friday . Contact Personn'el
Dept. Pleasant Valley Hosphal.
Valley Drive, Pt PI WV 26.650
AAE -EEOE .
:~ , f ( ''I.J',
!

REPS

NEEDED for

VINYl &amp; · .
ALUMINUM SIDING

CUSTOM BUILl

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Wtndows

GARAGES
POLE STYLE or

FREE ESTIMATES

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772
6·2·87·1

.

!R.~~ , 'M.~fj

.

account• Fuii·T1me, seo.OQO·
S80.000· Part· Time. $1 2, 00&amp;·
$18,000· No Selling, repeat bliJ.{t
mess. Set your own houn.
Traintng provided Call 1 · 61 2·
938·6870, M-F, 8am to Spn1l •
(Central Standard Time).

•1'J

ataa..-

Arou11d the World Peny
Free kit No collect1ng ordeltvermg Call ~04 · 675 · 6608 todiiiVI

5·16

1 8 Wanted to Do . . _

Movmg Sale· F~rst house-lett.
after Rarlroad croumg on
Georges Creek. July B. 9. &amp;10
9·6
I

..... p·c;;n·e:rciv .........

"--

J1m'!l odd Jobs p81f1llng. dr~e·
way reseal~ng, &lt;::arpenter w§~&amp;l
roof repan. trees &amp; h
••
experienced Cell 614 -~ 9 H

24t6

Can do light hauling and roofing
Renonable rates . Ma] 1Qn
Snider 614-949· 2629
. ,.,.. ~

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

PAT HILL FORD
992 -2196
Middleport, Ohio
t -13-tfc

9 30-3 30 July 10th Aero ..
from Methodist Church 10 Ra·
ctne Ratn cancels"
''

Room and bo•rd for eldafly'lall.,._
handiCapped with personal t:p~
In Middleport Call 614· 992· ~
6873
1.,.•·-:J

.. · ·PfPieiisii.n f ....

Grover' s lawn Mower Ra~afr~
We 11 p•ck up and deltver. GO'o(Q')'
used mowers for sale. Call

&amp; Vicinity

614·742-2393
3091

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

-

I

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP-SOIL
FILL DIRT

6TH STREET
j614) 667-3110
coOLVILLE, OHIO

Payable
POMEROY - Annual dues for

10·8-lfc

-- -

-.

-·

-·

---"- -

- --

WI know whoro tho beof it.
W• also ~110w tht place for
burchtring and processing.
We satisfy or you tlon't pay

FIE£

'

,. '

'

v... Porl••l•

S•••••••tie 1
MASONII RISTOIATION,
SWIM POOLS, STill, IARNS,

CAll ANYTIME
446·8318

7-6-l mo

YOUNG'S

MARCUM
CONTRACnNG

CARPENTER
SERVICE

CHiml, OHIO
•ROOFING •SIDING

- Addona 11nd remodeling
- Roofing 1nd Q\.ltter work
- Concrete work
- ~lumbing

•WINDOW REPlACEMENT
•REMOOELING &amp;
ROOM ADDITIONS
•GARAGES &amp; POLE •
BUILDINGS
REFERENCES
Phone Day or heiiings

•nd electrical

work

(Free E1timoteo1

V. C. YOUNG Ill

985-4141

992-6215 or 992-73i4
Pomeroy, Ohio
4·15.'86-lc

GIIIDAL C01111AOOIS
6· 10·!7·1

mo 'pd.

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TYsr Antennas
SateUite Sales
Installation
Service
Electronic Organs
IVJobile servic_11_

614-843-5248
REASONABlE - REUAilE
8·20·'86 tin
~w

· -- -

I'll Ce•• Te

Good thru Augu11 I

6-2-87· 1

1110.

RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAl, INDUSTAtAL

3 family yard ole, baby items.
boys and women ' s clothing,
toys, TV, mite 2324 Uncoln

Ave. B00-5:00

pm

I

Finanml

July 6.7.8

Yard Sale, Thurt and Fri. July 9
and 10. 117 Pleasant St . Typew.
riter, Knic Knacks, clothes. tuba.

Howard l. Wrifesel

ROOFING

21

Business
Opportunity

"

11

•

•

-

··

-

&amp; Auction

WILLIAMS
TRENCHING SERVICE
R1. 4, Hysell Run ROid

Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
PH. (614) 992·2834 or
992-6104- Free Estimates
5-13·2 mo

,,

J

'

' t.

know .. arid NOT to send monll'l~,

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

liquldalion sales. 304 ·773·
6786 or 773-6430

Real Eltate, antique, farm ,

ntl

Auctioneer Col. Oscar E. Chck,

304·B95·3430.

Through the ma1l until you
envest1gated the offering

I

hay-A: ~

•'-·
•
r~
DISTA18UTQ.RSH1P. H1gh, YP.-t .;

lume route for •ale in GallipOIIi.
Average 1ncome S17,000'J.((, ol/.!
S 19,000 PLUS One d•v :"'!""'-:&gt;
wee"" Sell for $115.1500
Call 1· 800·828 · 9273

RE~:~~~~~~s-~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~==~~~~~-949-2263
9 Wanted To Buy
Fo• .. 1. cove a., At · 1.
Pomeroy, Oh1o $40.000 firM .. ; .
Or\ 949·2168
Wepoyc11h
used cart. torlotomo~elcleon ~6;14;·9=9~2~-;99;0;t;;:;="::3',;~
4 22 87 tl
.

. 0

~

Jim Mink Chev .·Oidt Inc.

·

Licensed &amp; Bonded

'.

&gt; '"-'

lNG CO . recommends that you
do bustness weth people ~du

Bill Gono Johnoon

Sot&gt;tlt Systems
We Carry Concrete Culverts

.

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·

Rick Pearson Auctioneer li·
censed In Ohio and We!lt Vtrg~

.

TRENCHING IS OUR LINE
Trenchmc of Any Type
Bacthoe Son~~ce
Ptumbin&amp; SorviCe
Custom Wetdmg
lowboy Houlin1

o• 614·7:ll'·

------~~~

canning jars. etc .

WELLMAN'S
PAINTING &amp;
SANDBLASTING

J

Demonstrators needed frori~
Ashton·Gienwood area to Ntft!
Haven· letart area for Chrisifn••

~

.-

992-3410

!F~· -*~

PH. 992-2772

ANYTIME
BUTCHER SHOP

••')..'

bu~nen

Wed. Thurs..

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

S- 5·'17·3 mo.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

~

VETERANS· Earn extrt money m ~~l
the Army National Guard ~04· ~
675· 3960 or 1· 800·642 · 31iHf!-''"

1 NOTICE

MI~E'S

'o

, •·

quahfted appht:ent. Will heva • 2
or 4 year degree in Medttfti-

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

RADIATOR
SER"ICE

Get paid for reading ~o'ktt'i':
$100 per title Write: ACE !3J'I'A fi1'
2 Pima. Napervrtle, ll 605~ •

6 Lost and Found

Fri Rt 160
Vinton Green House on left, m
re•r Water,bed, furniture, child
rent clothing Sizes 5· 7. Boys

h,_ 1""11

oJ..

Jackson General Hosp, Rip,Y 'II
Va is acceptmg appl•catton•IO~-~
full time medical Lab Technloi_ao.,_Jr.

9·4.

he 1100~ 01

1

more women ' ~r'e·:
becoming !luccenful In • t"i ·•
butinfts world today At N•t•RJ1 ~ }
Wide. a growing numbe~.
women have found exc1tm'g::o~ '
satisfying t:areers •• tn kltu rance Agent W11h our Complf'IY\t
F1rst with 1 Year Income dni'be ·~
$20,000 or more in S1la~ tiU.s
addtt1anal bonuses Call for'\ •~»
appotntment at 614· 374-8248'
An equal opportunity emPio'Y't1$1j;,
More and

Small mixed breed puppies to
good homes, 304-675-6371

218 Third Ava lots of 8\lery·
thtng See ad on window Mon ,
Tue&amp; , S. Wed. July 6. 7. &amp; 8

Repairs on All Makes
Transa~le Repairs
lo&lt;aled Halfway letwnn
Rt. 7 and lashon
HRS : 12:00·6:00
Monday-Saturday
CLOSED SUNDAY

HIRING! Government 'job•· ~'~'o'Ur

for current federal hst.
' · ' t:&gt;' •
-------..,..----~"·)!

&amp; Vicin.ity

Owpner /Mechanic

1·

Single? Divorced? For conf1den·
tlal telephone hat of singles in
your •rea who are lookmg for
companlonthlp . Call 1· 616-

I ?I! !111

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
CENTER

6 · 30· 1 mo .

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR

Chole1terol too high? Lower it
wtth Heert· Fio fish· oil capsules.
Fruth Pharmacy

(6141 992-7754
•

·•

3 Announcements

6 mala puppies, 6 weeks old. 2
all wh1te. 304-895-3939

'

Now lllrtng LPN I •nd RNa . Mu,r,
posse11 strong le.clerstHp 1,kiJI•.•
Experience tn long term •c.r, ...
preferred Plee1e Call. ~DU'~
Winds Nursing Facilities, Jeck:,7

Announ cement s

Big white cat with couple black
spots. 304· 675· 2931

GOLF
LESSONS
' 8.00
NEW
GRIPS
' 3.00
TROPHIES
PLAOUES
BAOGES

J - .... ,

Make new friends Mekemolfey!·"
Sign up now. can 614i M~
8915
~
'
.

son. OH 614· 286-7561 .

..... "GiiiiTP'olis......... .

698-3531 or 592·2322

Your lltf' may sf'Cm to f.!O

4 5 tic

F1ve 8 week• old kittens, 304·
675·4088

THE
KOUNTRY CLUB

BUY - SELL- TRAOE

down hill
~rim ...

•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE

' C OMME~CtAl

6·17·1fc

PH. 949-2969

Under f:lew Ownership - JIM ATOR

Skeeter:

Look up to Jrsus ...
Don't gtvr In

RES I OF NTtAt

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
~lso Transmission
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

Don' t Give In
and lhln~ s look pre tt y
LOok up to J('sus ..

FREE ESTIMATES

PARTS - SERVICE

Its all in thr n.t ilw o f J('sus

Its all In !hi' na m f' o f Jl'su,;
Power to ffi('('t ra ch nt&gt;v.' d;n .
Its a ll In thf' nl! m C' of J r sus '
F'oll ow h im Ht" Is th e w.t\'
Mrs. Barbara

Let Us fence 'lou In

Rt . 124, Pomeroy Ohro

Profauianal
CHESTD, OHIO 45720
6·15·87·1 mo.

SATURDAY,,JULY 11-SALE AT 1:00 P.M.
ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALES

7·2·1 mo

FENCE COMPANY

JOHN TEAFOID

SPECIAL CONSIGf11MENT

JulY.

ACCENT .

Roger .Hysell
Garage

Oul .

! POP F. YF: I~ a ll' r m u~ b\ 11 mllh11 rV
pil ot to no!Uv o thl' rs that hi' ~~~ ~~~ Ina In th(·
•·Iouth 1

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators

614-446·7100.

lf2 PRICE
Month of

.'

Part Husky puppy· 21f2 months.
Call 614· 446· 2203, or 446·
1835

'

Don ' t dnrl' n·l.t' - li•t duwn \ UtU gu.11&lt;1
Yuu'rt' POl r.·n~: ORC"f' .Jw
••ln '

Mit'htt r-1 Gtu nl

CEiAMIC BISQUE

5·22·87·2 mo pd

P 0 . Box 326

5

nnd

Ph. (614) 1143-5425

6/ 29 / 87
Opal Dyer . Deputy Clerk

161 30: 171 7, 14, 3tc

PLASTIC CRAFT

CAll:

St!rVII.I:'.

.Giveaway

N. 2nd AVE.'
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

Complete Gutter Work
Complete R~modeling
Rooftng of all Types

EUGENE LONG

rtdge .

late of 11
Pomeroy,

DABBLE
$HOP

20 years
" Free Estimates " ·

Oec 31 , '86 . . . 5,333.34

nedh,e

949-2748 .

,RACINE, OHIO

Worked in home area

Outstanding

Copit1l Outloy ...... 180.00
Happy Ads

the Council Chambers at the
Shrine Club Park Building.
Residents are invtted to

Operation s D~rector
Jon. 1, 1988 .. ... 8,000,01
161
16,
23
. 30 171 7. 4tc
Retired .......... ... 2.666.67

Run . Pomeroy. Ohio. and

Miscellaneous .... 2.866 ,67

be hold at 7·00 p m . Wod·
nosday, July 15. 1987, et

Outstanding

,3 ,269 .63
Gttu .......... , ... 2&amp;3 . t 7
AH Orher

Revenue ........ 11 ,498 .01
TOTAL
RECEIPTS ........ 84 ,468 68
DISBURSEMENTS:
Gonorol Gov 't.,. 22 ,801 74
Public Sofory ........ 176.20
Public Worko ..... 6tl.767.U
Hoolth .............. .,2,6 76 .20

bid specifications may

be obtained from · Keith
Checks ..... ..... 2.824.19 Black
at the MC8MR / DO or
TOTAL
callmg 614·992·6681 .
BALANCE .. 56,162 26 by
Delivery w1ll b e required by
SUMMARRY OF
January 31 . 1988
INDEBTEDNESS
Kenh Black

FREE
ESTIMATES
ALLWORK
GUARANTEED

LEGAL NOTICE

5.00 p.m, July 5th through
July 15th

wood Court , Mentor. Ohto

Recoipll ..... 4B .622.13

Syracuse, Ohio 45779.

NEW HOMES
RESIDENTIAL
RENOVATIONS

A copy of the proposed 1988
Racine Village Budget is
avatlable for public inspec·
tlon at the Racine Depart·
ment Store and at the rBSI·
dance of the Village Clerk on
61h Street. from 9 :00a.m to

! lllpiiiVI'II'\11

~II Mt~ku

(614) 446-76i9 or (614) 992-Gsol
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Public Notice

' ~

985-3561

8· !'3 ttn

the followmg vehicle
Ooc. 31. 'B6 ... 56,162 26 for
purchase
Depository
I um1 diesel·41 passen8olonce ...... 56,086.46 ger(1conventional
school bus.

Its all In the naml' o f .lt' SUs
HHppinl'!l.!' and lovt' d o abound

In reviYat
HOBSON - Hobson Chut.ch of
Christ In Christian Union Is in
revival through Wednesday with
services at 7: 30 each evening.
Speaker Is Okey Cart. Everyone
welcomP.

~ litensed Clinical ~diologist

,

PUBLIC NOTICE

Total Receipt• Over /

Intergovernmental
Inter••• .. .. ..

And 11 0 \l Y0\.1 !l h ;l rt' thp 11'1-t '(!Om

lis all In t ht• nanw o f J(•~&gt; u ~ .,
Bh•ss lnJ: S. pt'acr, and mur h m nr·f'
It s all In lht&gt; n11mf' o f J f'!'U S
Jus t call and ht•' ll OJWn T:tw door

will be changed to 3 to 8 p.m.
Tuesday through Sunday, the
hours will remain the samP, 1 t o~
p.m.

-~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

.

Piette Clll $14· 993 · 3,1r40_.... __

KIN'S
..APPLIANcE
SERVICE

Computerized Hearing Aid Seleetion
Swim .,.Ol~s • Interpreting Selvices·

i

u -c.t.'IVafl_f.,_

Bids wrli be r eceived unt1l

, "fREE ESTIMATES"

~ -·-- -----..----'----

111-~·--

Public Notice

Fund Ceth Belence

IT S. C'l. F.:Mt BF:I.OW' ''

Its all In t hf' namf' o f Jf'SU!i
Just look and you ' ll f1nd nil thlnJ: s thrrr·

And H(' will return

:::::.-~

-·
••11-•
_._,..,.&amp;&gt;.

11'1- 1 -

Oec. 31 . '86 ... 66.951 12

Y ou·,.,, rhPa!('('1 d f'.:Jih agnl n'

Allin lhP N•mt' uf .h•l!l'Ul'&lt;i
11:-. l:lll In t ~ f' nam(• of Jes us
All hOPf'. art joy, and all rarP.

It SN'ms sur h Jonp: ,~ llmr
In my h('art I do yf'arn
God knows wr ar£' lookin g

..

l'JJ - Irll-

Fund Ceah 8alence,

~

You "enn In r o n,tun t c ru•N hN' k
Y•Jut r.IC't' l:o~ whit t"' w1111 ~ u .lln
TJil At lr\'0:1 Y()U rU·~ f RPE'

B .: ~ rb.1ra J :1m1 ~

Si't'fll s llkt' such a i o n ~ llmt' .
Jesus lef~ us bt.' hlnd ..
When Hr comes bark from hea vf"n
Our fallh hf" will find

74

Cop•tol Oulloy .... . 180 00
tOTAL DISBURSE·
MENTS ........ 85,257.44

Y(J ur tn..:Trunw·n t .. l ht•I'J nh thing
~ou and oo uddt•n dra th '

Mrs Barbdfa Jamt&gt;5

Such A IA•A: 1lm e
II 's bf&gt;('n such a long tim£'.
Sine«' Chri st WE" nl away
Kf'l'p hoping and pr ayln~
HE&gt; eQuid romt' bad today .

3 .015 8,.

Public Solety . .. .. 176 20
Public Works ., .66. 757 e3
Hoolth ............... 2.676.20

' lllt't•n

Hnld ont o thr p:oOd thln R:-;
Tht• om•s 1hat br1ne vou ehN'r
Hold ont o thr ~ood thlnp:$
For tht"S{' brln $! m('11'10rlrs dr&gt;11r.

=._
t'o:.=,_

~-·
••-c-.
,..,_,_,
"~ ........

_. __-·-

~=~':.t':

:1: ::;:,:~-

·. ·.....--_. ... -··-·-"-

-~.

_-__
·-7,1---·-

,._._._,

Fund Cash Balance

Intergovernmental

You 111 tot . l l t•LHIL't111tJ,lllrm.
~n rl you rlan• t o drow ,, btf'.tl h

Don' t livf' ~· our ll vf's In ff'ar.
Hol d onr o t h(' ~ood thin ~~
Ou r Saviour 's always nf'a r

Comt' Mig ht y Saviour

Comfort tho!if' that '""'"'P
ComP mlf!:hly ""Slt\· lour

_
_
_
__
_
,._
_,_.

_e.,.. ..
,,._.,..,,_
......,,_
··-~

'

=~·.-:::-. -

,,,.

Jon t , '86 .... 56.951 12

SUMMARY OF
CASH BALANCES ,
RECEIPTS ANO
EXPEI'IOtTURES
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
RECEIPTS .
T•••• .. .. ......... : 20.925.74

If·,,,

~ood t h l n~ s

-

Fund Cash Balance

Rutland Township
County of Meigs
"Thia is an unaudited
Fin1nc:ial Report"

Th r nw 1no r v oi l! h;run tJnl,! H"l!.t
OPJ.IN'MIIVf' llkt• a ._hr(llltl
thn t nl1\'l'( t'l\ 4'1
• · ~, (1\J
;1 ~ ~ ou rlt m b l n! O thC' dnud-.

happlnt'ss
And ll\'t'!l In hnrm ony

.....

-(off'¥

:::Oe::":l•

..._,.,._
.-

=~·.::T

.....
~·

P.M on Augus1 3,
(Under! Oiob .... '78B.86J 4.00
1987, at the Meigs County

Oocember 31, 1986

Alr nld It• tn O\ I' '\'Ol" R!-: JIAH.\I.I ZF.l)•
itnd t·an' l 11' 11 up from dOil' n
But kn(lwmg :tlwm" kn o~ l n~
I httl ~ UI't' dt"lllh .tw nlll&gt; - T H t I , f(() t J'\ IJ'

Ho ld Oni Q Jht• litoocl lhlnJZS
Th r th l n ~s th:u m akl' you $!1l1d
F'or ~t·t abQut lht~ bad th l n~!i .
Til&lt;' thlnJZ~ Jhat m ak.l' you s;td.

1111
... .

... ..... .
·-

_,_......
---··aM.

- ···
':!i:
w-e:.-:-...

·

- Ill . .

Public Notice

FINANCIAL REPORT 01
TOWNSHIPS

not kn ow l n ~ 14 hi•rt • In ~ o
Whit h ~ ltlr 1~ lrft" Wh it h .,ldl' ,., rl(!ht"

8rln~

Thrrr's troublE" In thf' land

I 1111 0 .. WIQ..._ $ 110.&gt;
/DO, IO Tlti.IUOU
I~~~~ ~ .. • II!Dh

Generel
(lovernment . . 22 .801

F; mll}'' "' (~ut',.Uun ,
Jo'l.t' In thr ( 'louds '!
You·rr t mppt-d l m;\!1!' a ro 11on t mll

Hold o nto thf' j:!ood thln l!s
No cos t to us thl'\ ' rf' frN•...
J ov and l)f'RC'I" ·

S~tvlour

11'10 011 1\WIDU

Under) Oi1b ...... 11295 721

Hold onto thr .'f&lt;XKI thlnj:i ~
Th t&gt; SavlQur rf'I,R:ns on hl ,ll:h.
Hold onto t h t&gt; ~ood th lni("C
Not o ne-s that mukf' you r ry .

Com r mlght v $avlour

II. . III QI ( ~u ltoeo "oo.
,,..., ..... IAIY'IDAo
/110 011 ... o..., ....

TOTAL
RECEIPTS ..... 83,961 .72
DISBURSEMENTS .

\\h 1d ',_ II Ukf' 1u

_
...

...,

Public Notice

Th lt~ &lt;1 rf'.!l d{l(1 \' t•,. tl ~o ·

Mrs Burbara Jam rs

Oh ,

~ l vr

\

(CUT OUT FOR FUTUII USEI

IN THE ClASSifiE~ .

In

M r~

Barb ara

Sh£&gt; has a special c har m

tr (' mblfn~

Don ' t

Th is world Is In dl ~rre~s
WC' must k('(&gt;p on lookln lil
An d God 's word ro nf ~s

Bible school
RUTLAND - Rutland Free·
will Baptist Church, Salem St .,
Night swimming
will have Vacation Bible School
SYRACUSE - Monday night
classes for nursery age through
swimming Is being added at
teens, July 1J.17, 9 to 11: 30 a.m.
London Pool, Syracuse.
, dally. For more info, call 742·
Beginning next wee)&lt; on a trial
2992.
basis the pool hours on

Woodmen picnic
BURLINGHAM
Bur- lingham- Modern - Woodme·n
Camp 7230 will hold their annual
picnic on July 12 at the south·
bound park on U.S. 33. Pot)uck
dinner at 12:30. Entertainment In
POMEROY - A represents· the afternoon. All are welcome.
live ·from the office of Clarence
Miller will CO!Iduct an open door Family reunion
session on Wednesday from 11
RACINE - The Clrcle-Zirkle
a.IIJ.)O 1 p.m. at the courthouse In family reunion will be helfl July
Pomeroy. Anyone having any 26 at the Larry Circle ·residence
questions about the federal go- on Carmel Road, Racine. Po·
vernment Is asked to-stop- by~
!luck dinner-at 1 p.m-.

The Forest

C O~f tit OOUMI

Our Lord .-~nfl SLI\ IOU!' .li""U~ lhrl"l
hu!' p:lirl lor thl"' ~·o rld ' , '' "
l .ook up Jo . h·s~.,

Sf.l'm !S such :1 J o n~ 1lm r

Sh(' can bf' frl('ndl y &lt;:~nd warm
or bring an unPXJWCTP:d wlnt r r sform
Sf lll I IOVC' April
•
II dOPsn ' t mC'an no harm
With all hrr dlftf'rt'nl Ia cPS

To hold our

~h •'

Our Saviour To SM'k

April Is flrkll'

Come mlahty

IJnn I

. .... '

Clauijie.d PfiPI cover t#te
faUotdnlrrelepltorw e..-cltonse•

Revenue ....... 11 ,498 01

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -The Middleport'
Amateur Gardeners will meet at
the home of Mrs. Charles Blakes·
lee -at· ·6: 30 p.m.- Wednesday
evening for the annual picnic.
Mrs. Harold Lohse will be
assisting hostess.

FOREST RUN -

.:..

Tht•\ l'f' 11U f' \ OU kntl~ " " win .
Look up 10 .J,~ ..,u~

Sl&gt;ftlls such a ion~ llmt~
And thln ~s. look so bh;•ak
Now is th P r iJ;:ht lime

that shlnf's throu~h thf' ('yf's
of thosE&gt; born In April
lf'ar fllll'd ryf's
l t's Aprtl It's April ,
a nd In my hf'art It lii:'li

POMEROY - Pomeroy Chap·
ter 186, Order of the Eastern Bible school
Star, will meet at 7:45p.m. at the
RUTLAND - Rutland Free·
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. Past will Baptist Church on Salem St.
matrons and past patrons will be ' will hold Vacation Bible School
hoJi'ored. Officers are to wear from 9 to 11:30 a.m., July 13-17,
~~~~dre_
sse__
s. _ ~~--~~~~~~~~~~~}1·-~-

--FRIDAY

...... . ..
·--

Meigs County poet's corner...
Sfo('m s SUC' h &lt;I lon,R" tlmC'
Siner God ~ai d ROOllbvc
and wt•nt o'r(' 10 hf'H Vf' n
To th£' F'athf'r on hl ~h'

.. •

J - I I , UIIIt

.'

Community calendar/area happenings
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
I:odge 363 F&amp;AM Is meeting 7:30
tont.;ht (Tuesday). Refresh·
· ments will be served .

o) •

By Cindy S. OIIYerl
handling during preparation bowl a nd cover with the dressing.
County Extension Arent
which Increases the . chance of
Dressing: 1 teaspoon garlic
Home Econemlce/4-H
contamination. Cleanliness Is a sa lt , '14 teaspoon pepper, Y.
Uneasy about eating chicken vital factor In preparation of te&amp;spoon· paprika, 1 tablespoo n
salad, potato salad and similar such foods . Also, these foods instant onion, ~ cup white
dishes at summer picnics be· should be mixed and chilled we ll vinegar. 1 teaspoon basil, 113 cup
cause you've heard foods made before transporting or serving.
oil.
with mayonnaise are apt to cause
Mar inate, in refrigera tor, at .
Keep picnic foods In a cooler
food poisonlnt;:? The mayonnaise · with' Ice or commercial reusable least 4 hours before serving.
Is not the culprit, time and cold paifks until serving time. If
Zucchini and Apple Salad
temperature are.
using lc'e, pack the food in tight
Dressing: 113 cup sa lad oil, 1
In fact, studies show that..foods containers or plastic bags so It
ta blespoon le moh juice, 2 tables·
with mayonnaise may be slightly won't get wet when the ice starts ~ poon white vi negar, 1 teaspoon
safer because the acid In the to melt.
sugar, 1 teaspoon chopped pars·
mayonnaise slows bacterial
Using mayonnaise in food
ley, y. teas poon pepper
' ·
growth. But, perishable foods- doesn 't necessarily mean they
3 medium-sized app lE's , \-S
with or without mayonnaise may will spoil more quickly but
medium -sized mild red onion, 1
not be safe If they have been held neither does it mean that mayan· green pepper . 1 lb. or 3 c ups
at room temperature for more nalse or food with It can be left
choppedzucchlnl. 2sta lkscel e ry,
than two hours. On hot days, food unrefrlgerated . Keep the mayo 6 radishes.
spoilage occurs more - quickly. and mayo-co ntainin g foods well·
Dressing. combine a nd mix
That Is why the basic food safety chilled .
fir st 6 ingredients Coarsely chop
rule Is "keep hot foods hot and
For a different treat at a apple , onion. grt&gt;en pepper . zuc·
cold foods cold". Temperature is
summer picnic and a way to use chm i. ce lery and sli ce rad ishes.
a more Important factor to worry up some of that bountiful zuc· ' Mix Iogeth&lt;'f well, then a Cid
about than mayonnaise.
chin I. here are a few Ideas to try.-, dress ing and mix Chill a nd
Mixed foods such as chicken
;. sPrvc.
Zucchini Salad
salad have been associated with
4 zucchini - 6W' long , or 3
Did You Know Thdt ,- 1 c up
outbreaks of food poisoning. cups sliced zucc hini. Cook for 5 zucchini cont ai ns Jess th an 30
These foods undergo a lot of minutes in small amount o.f ca lories. That 's with out the but·
water. drain and cool. Place In
tt'r of course.

Gillogy · reunion
is conducted
Mr. and . Mcs. Cecil Gillogl,·
hos ted the annual reunion of the
family of the late F e rn and
Goldie Boring Gillogly at their
home, Albany .
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Crabtree, Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Crabtree, Kevin and Ru s·
sell; Tracie Woods, Carbondale;
Mr . and Mrs. Jim Rutan and Mr .
and Mrs . George McKnight.
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Roger
McKnight, Mt Sterling; Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Gaston, Route 3.
Albany , Mrs. Da\'e Norris, Ser·
ena and Michelle, Nelsonville;
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Frazier,
Gallipolis.
Mrs Danny Frazier, Brynna
and Jacob, Bidwell; Mr. and
Mrs. William Ashcraft; Mr a nd
Mrs. Bruce Gillogly, Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil Gillogly and Jeff. all of
Alban)/; Beatrice Eckhart and
daughter, Mansfield; Fermin
Boring, Hamden; Violet Baird,
Radcliff, and Mr. and Mrs Bill
Casto, Nitro. W. Va .

'summer salad' safecy·

"t\prll"
A Is fol' a llt hr bea uty oi Aprll .
P Is tor th(' petal s of

,

I JI ....... Df_ Tl W-IIJ,. · - · f

I 'ln.....
-a.~.

Wented to buy, IC.ndinSI timber.

C•ll
2328 .Al Tromm •t 614·7•2 ·

W•nt~ to buy. Cemen1 Stock.

.. ...
.
•o•.,. ...
... ·
"""'"" ..
"'. . ..,.. '"· .
...·.. --... -·- ....... ............
~,

Beat of the bend

The Daily

"VINYl SIDING
"ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULA nON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New Homes Built
"'Free Estlmetea"

PH. 949·2160
or 949·2101
No Sunday

.

23

Services

&amp;14-446·3672

TOP CASH plld tor '83 ,model
•nd newer used cart. Smith
Buick· Pantt.c. 1811 Eut•n
Ave. Gtllipolit C•ll 814 -U6-

'i·~~

Professional " "" ""'
~ J ~ ..~

----~------~
-~-~- .

22B2.

Uttd Mobile Homes C1ll 814-

441·017&amp;.

••w

Real

Wll'tttd: 12 lrit:h raditl arm
or 10 inch or better tlble saw.

Cal1614·446·7025

Buying dtlly gold, sliver coms,

Eslo!t~

"i
. l: h •.: \41~

·Homes for Set~ .. .:; ,

·31

ili'iis. Jeweerv. aterUno wire. aid
cotnt, lwte currency. Top prl·
cu. Ed ' lurkMt a.rbllr Shop.
2nd Ave Middleport. Oh 81•·

992-3478 .

,

••

�••fr;M Sele ot Leue••
.t BR . 2 beth, full b•ement, wilh
aboveground pool • )(l deck on
11 2 acre •cro•• from Addll\lllle
grade •chool. Financing aveila·
bte with 1m1ll doWI'I pt~yment,
Priced thouunda btKow ap-praised value. Call · letz: 91 9 · .·

791-_2162. '

.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

.

.tovel(new 3
apring. 2 car g•aga, niet~ area,
Cl~ &amp; city . schools. 6 ~il-.
grom dallipolla . Will con••der
m o bile home tl tude - in .
S.t7. 500 . C.l 614-.W&amp;-8038.

-

2 SR. 10 yr., mint condition.
beautiful location, Ne..- Nor'thup. Priced riS~ht or will ·trade.
Call 614-256-8200.
5 Bdr., 1 Y2 story, all electric. full
basement. 8 .1 acrn. located in
· Rio Grande. $47.000. Call
614-245-6197.

3 BR brick. carport. amall barn .
12x60 mobile home. Eke . cond.,
one lot (9 / 10 aere} Hannan
Trace School dhlt. At. 218. Call
61 4· 266-11 86 by appointment.
3 BR house. central air. attached
garage, 39 Chillic:othe Rd . Call
614-446-2683. 8 -5 .
For sale by owner; Z ltOflt house
in ,_,.iddleport overlooking patk.
30 Yf· guarnteed vlnyle ai~ing,
w -w carpet. 1 Y, bath. un1que
woodwork. 614-992·6128 .

Sof.. and chair• priced fro·m
S;J95 to 1995. Tablea t50 and
up to t125 . Hide-a· b.cl• 139D
to t!95. Aecllnara t226 to
1376. Lamps $28 to I 1 2&amp;.
Dinette• 1109 and YP to .149~ .
Wood table w-6. chain 1285, t'o
1796. Dealt t100 up to t375 . .
HutCh• 1400 . a_nd yp. Bun~
bed• c9mJIIeta .w -maHre~,J~~a
1295 and up to t3t5. Baby beds
·1110.·Mattrell81 or box spr'inga
full' or twin 188. flrm *78. and
taB . Ouun 1et1 t225, king
f360. 4 drawer chat 118 . Gun
cabinets 6 gun.
or electric
range t376 . Baby - mtttreue~
&amp;36 &amp; t46 . Bed tram•• ·no.
130. &amp; King frame ISO . Good
selection of bedroom suites,
meltll c.blnets, headboards ·$30
and up to $65 ~

o..

90 DaYs lima 81 cash with
approved credit. 3 Miles out

-=
promise

Bulaville
Rd.Sat
Open
9am
to !ipm
Mon . thru
. Ph.
614-446·

.SCHW.;ttOP-- ~~ ~~... , -.. ;,..........~......

"If elected, I
to
resist the temptation to have
affairs, and to work on
improving my relationship
with my lovely wife, Denise."

,0322.
PARSON'S FURNITURE

...

Pintle cittern ttM:a approved ,
pla~t:ic
Hptlc tanka. plutic
culverta. mNI cutw,rts. RON

EVANS ENTERPRISES,

Hi tt , · aluminum fishing _bOet •
Wtth trailer ar1d electric rriotor, h
17 ·tt. Grumman Cenoe wilh~ '.
Ironing motor. 814-7.t2-2&amp;35.• ..

Jilek·

.on. Oh. 114-288-5930 .

'

For lale quHn lila water bed.
e~tC. cond: Minor head board,
burT)per .P•dt . .'11&amp;0. 304.~ ·753213·.
. i •
..,

Rentals
41

44

3~30.

Gas 1tove or bottle g,. It burns
on either one, 2~11 Lincoln Ave.
11ae Wednesday thru Frldey.

Houses for Rent

house for ule or rent on Lincoln
Hts . 614 · 992 - 7689 after
5:00p.m.
• roOms end bath, double
garage, lev$ lo~ . good location
on Grant St. Middleport. Price
reduced tor quick sale. 814·
992-5429 .
Government Homes from $1 . (U
reptir) . Delinquent tall property.
Repossea1ions. Call1 -805- 6876ooo Ext. GH -9806 for current
repo list .
,Nice 3 bedroom home. dining ,
, fundry, family roomS. 1 ¥.1 bath,
% acre. Arbuckle. t36 .000.

304-686·9143.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

e14·44e-0338.

76

3634.

1 2·· black and white TV tlB .QO.
GE dryef 125.00. 8 ft truck
topper 860 .00. 30~·675- 41 23:

l;3;04;::·6~7:6:.·;68;4:e:.::;;::::;,:::.::

1 BA furnithed apt. Very Clean I
HouM for Rent 'or Sale: lend Call 614-446· 889'8 or 992 contract. good houte. school 6304.
dilt. Call 814-446- 7&amp;72. Eva' sBrookside Apartments: 448 6o00 446:1522.
19l2 or 4.t6-4639 . One Bed·
Kitchen furnished. carpeted, 2 room apartment: with large
BR , 1 1h bath. no pets, Oep. &amp; country kitchen, new tpplian·
Fief. 233 Second Avenue. ces, utility room. wtter, sewer
$350/ mo. Call 814·446-4926. and trash s..-vices provided.
Quiet area.
Split level 3 BR. 1Vt baths,
combined kitch..,, dining. baa&amp;- Gracio111 IWing. 1 and 2 bed·
ment. city school. Dep. t326 room 1Ptrtmtil11 at Village
Manor and Rivilf"ide Apartmo . Ca11814-388-8323.
menta In Middleport . From
3 bdr. ranch home at LeGrande t21 ! . Including utlliti•. Call
Blvd .. Rt. 141 . Call 61.t-379- e14-992-7767: EOH .
276~ .

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME S:ALES. 4 MI.

GALLIPOLIS, RT 35.
PHONE 814-4U-7274.

. 1'/EST.

Oeneral Hartinger Parkway In
Middleport . Cali 8 ·1 4 -992 7683.

1968 Custom Manor. 12x60, 2
BR J gal heat, porch, rafrig.,
stove. W/ 0 ; fully carpeted ..
gOod conditron. $4,600. Call
614-256·6225.

Neat. smaH home in Mlddlepon.
Four rooms. bath. attached
gartge. Carpeted. ttove •nd
refrigerator provided. Ideal fot
single or wMking couple. $175
monlh ptus security deposit.
Sorry. no peta or children. Call
614-992-6282 after 5.

4,48-0904.

1984 14d5, fenced yard. 3
lots. Rt 160 at Evergreen.
S18.500. Cali 614-446-1339 or

614-44e-1628.

1984 Shultz 14x:70 with 8k·
pando. 3 BR &amp; 2 b'a ths. Land
contract available. Call 614·
446 - ~726 .

1983 Skyline: 14x60 2 BR . AC .
extra nice. French City Broker·
age Services. Call 814-446-

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

1 977 Kit 2 BR mobile bome.
Asking 53,500. Will negotiate.
Call614 -446-2903.

- - -- - - - - : : - ·lc-

ModUiar tiome! Carter Ftench
residence. Middleport. Corner of
,.. 'Q):Irt'h af'ld ~almer . Must see to
appreciate. Call614_. 992 -3293.
1973 14K70. 3 bedroom, fur·
nished. $7250. 1968 2 bed·
room, ptrtly furnished. $5600.
614· 992-7479 .
'79 Manchin mobile home,
14k 70, new carpet, 3 bedroom.
87,200.00 or besl offer, JO.t 458-1774.
.
Mobile home. ·two lots. nice
block yarage, total electric.
central air , 11rge screened porctl,
new underpenning, washer and
,-::tryer, fo(ld fre8l'er, New Haven ,
all goes for one price. call
jo4 - 675 - 4466 tor more
information.
1973 2 bedroom mobile home,
partly furnished with lot in
t;tendenon nking S6.700 .QO .
Call after 2 :00, 304-675-2288 .

·as

Nashua. 14x70 mobile
home . 12x7 expando.
819,500 .00 negotiable. 304·
578- 2401 or 676· 2075.

1975 Rocheuer 141170 mobile
home. total ehtcuic, new carpet.
$7. 900 .00 negotiable. 304·
676-7616 or 614· 367· 0311
after 5 :00 pm

Farms for Sale
~

9 acres on Tribbl&amp; Rd . off Rt . 62.
Plus store building. warehouse.
3 BR house. barn. cellar., plua2
other buildings. All bla~k top
road . Call 304-468-1818 . Call
after 6PM .

1 bedroom ground floOf, private
entrance, recently remodeled.
Everythinu .turn .. loc. outtkirts
Henderson. 1260. month. 30.t·
676 -15730.
Z..Pedroom furnlaod apt. rei and
deposit. _New Haven, W . Va.,
304· 88f!3267 or 304 · 773·
5024.
One. bedroom apt. in Pt. Pleasant. EKtra clean 1nd nice.
Adults Only.. No Pet1. 304· 675·

1386."

3 rooms and bath. gas heat.
ground floor, wether lrtd dryer
hook ~o~p, no children, immediate
occupancy. No ptt:1, phone
304-675-4.t80 ex:t 53 or 60 .

Rooms for rent, dey. week.
month. Gillit Hotel, Call 814·
4.t6-9715 . Rent •• low as 1120
month.

2BR . AC . cable. Hud accepled.
Riverview in Kantug1. Foatera
Mobile tiome Park. Ph . 614·

1 "F;;;;~;;;,-;;;;;;;;:&amp;-!_OO~itiii~
446-1602.
room . $100. Utilities
2 bedroom mobile home.- Ever- paid. Share bath. Single male.
green . Call 614-379-2678.
919 Second. Gallipolis. Call
2 BR mob'ile home f(lr rent with 446 "" 416 after 7 pm.
e11pando. Children welcome. no
deposit. Mercerville area. $176
47 Space for Rent
mo. Call 614-266-1675.

r

Nice 2 BR Mobile Home. Upper
At 7 . Furn~lhed. water paid. Call
614-245-6816 .
Mobile homes lor rent. 2 and 4
bedroom, furnished. 2 cttildran:'
614- 446-0508.
2 bedroom trailer. p•nly fur nished, nicelot. f200 .00 plu1
deposit, G111ipoli1 Ferry, 304676· 7942.
Mobile h(lme for rent, 2 badroom. furni•hed. phone 304·
675-6512.

44

Apartment
for Rent

, and 2 bedroom apartments for
rent. Bulc rent fer 1 bdr ..
8183 .00; 2bdr .. -219.00. Alao
required 11 t200 .00 lecurity
deposit. CONTACT: Jilckson
Estates Dept. Ph 446-3997
Equal, Hou1ing Opportunity.
Furnished &amp; unfurnished apta.,
$160.00 and up , reference~ Ph.
304- 675-7738 or 304-876·
5104 A-1 Real Eltate.

K•nmore v., renve With bfoUer.
Kenmorf! 10,000 BTU air.condi·
tionar. Call 814·446-3821 .

Office Space for Rent. Ext:.llent
for Attorneys. Accountant. ate.
Close to Court Hou... Call
Wiseman Real Eatale Agency.
614-446-364.t .
Mobile Home Space-10 ft . or
smaller. 175 . Water Pd. 920
Fourth. Oallipolil. Call 614·
446-.t416 after.8PM .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33 . North of Pometoy.
Rental trailers . Call 614-992·
7479.
Space for small trlilera. AU
hook-ups. C•bla. Also effici.ncy
rooms, tir end Clble. Mason,
W.Va. Call304-773-6661 .
Spaee for rent , trailer tpaces.
Locust Rd. Rt . 1 . Point Pleea.tnt.
304-676-1076.

47Wanted to Rant
3 or 4 Bedroom houu in Kyger
Creek Sehool Olltrict. Raferan"
Cltl Ph. 114-446-8821 .

Tan aofa and matching lovese•t.
., 00. ,.Matti wardrobe. 160.
Two sofa sleapers, e&amp;O. and
t76 . CoHHt•ble. no. S~~¥ivel
TV stand, t20. Walnut book·
cue, f20 . Misc. rugs, 120. and
130. Anr seM for Surburban or
pickup with leal belts and •II
tlardwafa. 860. Call 814- 2.t6 ·
9157.

53

Antiques

truck. motOf ho,nt orelllslccar.
Wrth llf•tlme warranty. MuHI.Man. 9 Stimpeon Ave .. Athar11.

Ford traeto~ with plow11t diae. 2
row corn planter, mowing me·
chine. hiY bal..-. UIOO . Ctll

Ohio. 1 · IOO· e4~· 3787 .

51 Household

0231 .

Dtegonwynd Caffery Kennat.
CFA Himalayan. Perthm end
Siemaae kittens. AKC Chow
puppies. New klnen1 ; SiamMa
and Himtltytns . Call 814-448·
38.t4 tfter 7PM .

Cocker Spanlet pup. Fern•••· 7
mos . old . AKC f8Qitterld .
t100 . Call81.t-2.t5-91117. ·

lnternatk&gt;nal Forage Harvntor
with one rt:Nt corn head . Good
eondhion. 61&lt;4-117-IQ37 .

c ...

230 H.., bal.,.

7403

•too. In

1978 Dodge Asp..-.. 2 door .
Good meehnleatty. Ftlr body .
Best off•. 8U--949-2693

good condition . 1 Miniature
male Oonkr;- . 11 month• old.
tf25 . C1ll 614-992-7689 .

1982 F'ord Escort Gl. Auto. AC ,
cruiH. aKcellent condition . 614187·1937 .

8~o~yonetny

.U:ech8in_..wchtfn
and ge-t ..Cond chain half price.
SIDERS EQUIPMENT CO ..
Hend•ton, W, Va. 30.t-67S-

7421 .

1980 Clmtro. Good condition .
111100. 814-985 -438&amp; .

.

For uleorTreda M .f . No. 9 hltY
b-'•· U1.ct tractor lire- 16.9 ·

62 Wanted to Buy

1911 Dodge Omni. 2 door
hatchbtclt. Front whetl drhte, .t
eyl . auto ,~ AC , very~~ conditfon. t1_250 . et.t-8 2-1804. ,

Now buying shell corn or elf
corn, Call fori_. .., quotM. Alvtr
City Farm Supptv. 614· «•·

63

QOOCI, body gooct. u&amp;o. c.n

.1.·192·751'7.

Lillestock

1983 CaltviM. 4 door. st•nderd
tr•n•. atrcond. 1 . 300 mUte. "erv
llood cond. t2 , 500.00. JO•·

t76-8730

e14·992·2807.

I_:______:_____

5888 .

LOST -REWARD. Shihtru malt.
name Splka, white with brown
markings, 15 vra old, 304-175'·
1468 ,
I

For · uta-Copying m1chine. A
Minolta Electrographic 101 and
tupplin for only 1219. C•ll Oty61&lt;t-· 4.tl ·7899. Evening after
6pm, 814-446-9639 ..

57

GE 30' corning warettone-used
8 monthl. Reasonably priced.
C11l 61.t·882· 6345: .

Bundy clarinet! &amp; .s tand, beginnen book1 . Call 61.t- 317-

Bowman's riding lawn mower·
1400. General Electric color
26" tv · t1~0 . lewn build ing
Bx:10 -1200 . Call 614 - 4~6 8898.
1 lot of 4 spaces at Ohio Valley
Memorial Gardens for information Call 8U· 446 -2907.
Affordable rebuilt lswn mowers·
19 to 26 inch. Cell 114-2466091 .
Catalyt ic Converters, only
f89 .95 . Most modtll. lnstalla·
tion al10 available. Muffler Man.
9 Stimpson Ave .. Athans. Ohio
1· 800-843-378'7.
1 O'h ft . Continenttl Satellite
dish with 18'olen tenthaaaleetor.
6000 receiver. Paid t2800 . Will
take J1000 or trade. 814-&amp;92 ·
69.0.
Gibson window air·conditloner.
16.000 BTU . *195 flrm .'.614 367-0322 .
20 inch lennox COli or wood
furnace . 1.t ft. aluminum bolt
with 25 tiP Evinruda motor and
tr.llar. 3 grave plot• In Grave£
Hill Ce~etery . 400 ktwnakl,
leu than 1200 miles. Call
614-992-2396 Paul Baker.
Used .g aaoline powered
trimmera lnd brushcutters for
sale. Pomeroy Home and Auto
614-992-209• .
TONY'$ GUN REPAIRS. hot
rebluelng. now t1kinv order
orders for custom Mau ..n . call
304-676-4631 .
ELECTROLUX 1ale1 or service.
ask for Larry or Karen. 304 -6751.t57 .
For salt, tir eond . , 1 ,600 btu,
f200 .; Zenith 19" TV $100.;
Ful Bulter •200. 304 - 676 ~

Musical
Instruments

Hammond Orgsn M3, Pereul·
sion. lullt SpiMer. Ideal tor
home or church. t800 .00. 304 -

58

ohOf 5o00.
Fruit

&amp; Vegetables
Gl81sbU.rn 's F~rm Market . St.
Rt. 1 60 near Porter is now open.
Farm trash vtgetlblee. Call
&amp;1.t-388: 9027 .
White peschu·Pick your own.
$10 / Bu . or 6 lb. for f1 . bring
o~n conttinen. Fri. a Sat.
Raynort Peach Orchard. Rt . 7
lower River Rd . Gallipolis. OH.
614 - 441 - 4807 . Cloud
Sundtvs.
Quality Fruita •nd Vaget.bl•
retail .nd wholesale. a . • s.
Produce •cross from Plaza Hut,
Gallipolis. Ohio.
·

Fmn Suppl11:~
&amp; LIVI:~IIIGk

.

t•7t C•m•o Betllnetta. V-8
308, Pl. PS. AC, good cond.

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S . 36 Waat. Jackson.
614-288·8461 .

Ohio .

Mesaav Fsrgu10n. New Holl•nd.
Bu1h Hog Sat• &amp; Sarvk:e. Over
40 uaed trlctOrltO chOOH from
6 complete Une of new &amp; uud
equipment. largest Hlectktn In
Ji. E. Ohio .
•
Utility bldg : 27'k36' x9' • 13'x8'
1racll door &amp; 3 ' walk door .
t 4444 erected · Iron HorN

Bldgo. e14·332-9745.

2

Black Angus cow with red tnd
white factct cal1. 814 · 4.t6·

1978 V.W, Rabbitt. 304 ·4&amp;8 ·
1541 .

Hay 8&amp; Grain

' 71 Monte Ca.rlo. '310. AC. PS .
Pl. R1lly wheels. shafp ,
•3.000.00 or b"t offer. 304 ·
1571 ·2'01 or &amp;71· 2075.

8785.

Good mixed h..,· IOO lb. bal".
no.oo each. Call 114· 279·
27&amp;8 tvenlngs.

72

Hay. b•ley and slrew. 304·171·

1177 ChiVY P/ U trwck: runs
good. nice body , *1.286. C•ll

C••• 8 ft. pull-type combine.
Wheat and Straw. Call 381·

8478.

.

Two Gravely tractors and attach·
menta. Alto used ptr1t for
Gravely tractor. Call 114-.448-

Trucks for Sale

&amp;oee.

814-2el-8522.

Oat hey and ..,.., t1 .71i ptr
bal._ tobacco. tomato aak.•
11Ceech. More.,·• Woodlswn
Farm, Rt. 315. PUny, 304-6715 ·

Dump bed with hydraulict a
cylin6af &amp; anachman11 for S10
P/ U truck -*4711 . 1911 ChM~y
p / u one own..-. 42.000 ,mRal.
tll915 . Call 814~ 86·6522 .

1288.

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

un Chwy truck. 6 cyl., liuto.

trans., new 111-H. tiOO firm. Call

814-448·3200.

1171 Chwy pi~up truck, 6 cvl,
auto , new paint job. rwns good.
t5150.00, 304-.t&amp;B-1732 . .

Auto• for Sale

11l171 Chwetl•wrv aooct condl·
tlon , t1 ,000. Call 614-25&amp;·

.73

- \1

Home
-Improvements
IASEiolfNT
WATERPROOFING

_..... .

Uncond idonal llf.tlmt gutran ,L.ocal r4tfertnea:t turnlshtd
fiM Htlm11••· C1ll coUitct
1-61.&amp;-237-0488, d-v or night
AogersBasemtn ,t
Wa1erprooflng.

-- ···. ·~--

t. ..

ALLEY OOP
WE'LL CROSS ntA.T
BRIDGE WHEN" WE
COMElO IT!

ht•rlor Stucco. Pl"t• and
P111ter Flepair. Work bw thehOUf
or by lhejob. Fr~t••tlmsta. Cali

V.ans 8&amp; 4 W .O.

the day's world news and in
depth leatuill reports. (1 :00)
® MOVIE: llldiOIICII (PG)

Awnot• eonuodad. ' btn . oper·
•tad. no etedric connect~n1 .
furnace or central air, mon11 or
1v1taml. 2 YJ al5 " . OlsphrythOUrt
fin , or •lllm.,td COlt 12:9 .95
t5.00 da.llvery. FrH 15
min . instal. tnd 30 d.,y fTMir lal.
Safe. ...Y to aplfeta, pat.,•.ct
Ca1111.t· l92· 3718,

(1 :35)

EEK

pt"''

814-448-ltSO.

.,.c.

1914 Celebrity,
cond ..
d .. uxt interior. PS / PB, air, tilt.
crulu , AM / FM t canetre .
Ctlll14-441-2o7t5 ....
aftet e.

1:00PM 814-378·2447.

••aoo.

1984Ktw•nki KLR 600, 1 .800
•ctutl miles . like n•w .
t1 . 200.00 . 304 -882-2790 .

1976 Ford. fair condition. bc.i·
lent for working. Call e14- 448"-

1884 Hond1 1~0 Night Hawk,
4 . 000 mlles,llke new .

4537.

1979 Honda XL~ . only 1.400
mllaa. U50.00. Phon• - 304·

876-4118.

814-218-8822.

1987 Sauuki ITISO. • wheel
tSOO. or bNt oHw.; 211" Color

1949 Chtvy Woody- I stsntd
rHiorlna. you might like to
fi"iah . l::an . 114-448-9475 or

614-24!1-15097.

TV

.

0100. 304·678·3822 .

rM.avt: C£ -nm. rors wH::&gt;

she wants to use it on a ·

Bt\:t:s crr ~ rr E.VW

un5

nose job. (A) t;1
9:00 (l) 700 Club
8 (2) d)) MOVIE: 'Popeye
Doylo"NBC Movlo ot the

LIKt. A FIGHT...

WHit

(!)Top Ronk Boxing
(l) Ill ()) MoonllghUng

Tr'H Trlmm1ng, •1ump
r.maval. Call 304· 811 ·1331 . ~

Maddie and David try to

tra·c k down an indl.IStrial
secrets leak. (A) t;1

I

Aour; o, c ab.. tool drlllint ..
M01t wet11 com,.-.,ld s~m~•dt'1 .
Pump ..In and IIKYice . 304·

·&lt;D liD SOUth Amencon

JoUrney Visit th8 ruins at the
Inca emp l ~e and meet

.

Starks TrM and t..w n Service,
l.wo care, landiCaping, stump
removal. 304 -&amp;76-28'2 01
157&amp;-2903.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Drvw.tl end Repelr. 20 v•a,.
exp•ience Fr . . hUmate. 3€M·
675· 3287.

WHATSA
"Ca&lt;N UCOPIA ;'

IT's A BIG HORN a= PLENTY
Ff&lt;OM WHICHAL.L&lt;fi&lt;X)D

5FOTL E:55~

SORT OF LIKE A
6RANDMOTH5R?

TH ir--65 FLOW.

747e.
76

Boats and
Motors for Sale

4149.

Memo to the Future. Pater

82

Plumbing
Heating

examine the Reagan
Administrauon·s ability to

a.

arrive at a foreign policy In

moments of crisis, using the

CA.RTEA ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
CDf . Founh and Pine
Gallipolis: Ohio
Phone 614 -441 ·31188 or 814-

Persian Gull and U.S.S.

Stark inc idents as examples.

~ Wor. ACommontlry by

448-4477
84

Electrical
8o RefriQeratioh

LOOK't' WHAT

I GOT FER
TATER

Residential or commtrcial wir·
lng. New ser\otice or repairs
Llcented electricltn . E1tlmate
free. Ridenour Electrical, 304·
876·1788.

85

Gwynne Oyor A profile ot

BARNEY

professional soldiers, career

military onicers. 1:;1
liD @ Nitwo
1121 Evening Now• Awrap up
of today's news and a look

MELISSV !! THAT LITTLE
E'I&lt;TRY WEIGHT LOOKS

ahead to tomorrow's news

REAL GOOD ON VE

stories. (1 :00) ·

e CD Ono Million Children

-~

are Willing
10:15 (])MOVIE: TM Deop Six
(1:45)
10:30 (]) Celebrity Chefs
·il]) Monoymakora
11:00 (]) Hordcootlo ond
McCormick
mC2l (l) Ill ()) IIAI IIIIDI
d)) Newo

General Hauling

Dillard w .. er Service: Pools,
Cistern•. Walla ." Delivery Any·
time. Call 614 ·4415-7404· No
Sundaoy ctlls.

Commercial buildings for Ieese.
Downtown Pt . Pleasant . Stores ~
offieea ' A-One Real Estate.
Carol Yeager. Broker. Call 304·

676-6104.

36 Lots &amp; Acreage

Deluxe 3 · room unfumlahed
apartment. New· kitchen. carpet
throughout. 1st. floor, oflttrett
parking. Call 614-4-tl-4607,
448-2802 .
Upstalrt, 3 BR , 1 bath. kitchen
furnlahed. no pet1. Dep. • Raf.
231 Firtt. '260/ mo. Call 814·

'

22 acral on Qt . 16~J. Barn &amp; _
4_4_1_-4_9_2_1_.------:-g•rage. $32.000. After 6 call 1
614· 38.8-871 1 .
2 BR . 2 btth. carpeted, kitchen
furni.tted, no Jtetl, dep. &amp; rat.
1 .84 acre building site, nice level t325 / mo. 11 Court St. Call
lot. Close to town. Call 814· 814-446-4928 . ·

44e-7627.

~ 1"h •c lot on Jerrys Run Rd .

Apple Grove. with rurlil water.

304-578-2383.-.

-

9 tcrltf. nice water, 0 mil.- fran)
locks · • dam. Varv private.
s...,....l hoult si1•'· 304--578-

2998.

••

114-441-7028."
County Appliance, Inc. Good
used appllane11 and TV eets.
Open lAM to IPM . Mon thru

Sot. 814-448-1898, 827 3•d.

Ava. Gallipoll1. OH .

Valley Furniture. nM • utad.
Large aectlon at qutllty furniture. 1211 Eutern Ave .,
Gallipoll•.

GOOO USED APPUANCES

Furnithed Apt .• 3 rooml, share
bath. 701 fourth, Gelllpolis.
t195 . Utllitl" paid. Cell 814·
4.t6-U:II after 8PM .

Waah.,.-, dryers, refrig••tora.
r•nga1.. Skagga Appliencel,
Upper Rtver Ad. b•lda StoneCraft Motel. 114-448·.7398 .

Furnithlld Apt .. -2 BR. UBI.
Walar pMI. 1 1 31 leoond, 0.111-

Mongolian drOp IMt llble." 4
chM1, matching hutch. •eeo.
or best offer. Ctll 614-441-

pollo. Coli 814·448-4418 oft«
8PM.
7812.

1980 lloyln«. 17 fl.

•a~7'
· -.U7p~h~o'ls~t-er-y~-- ,

Coli 114-117-0611.
1113 Toyoto Co11co. loodod .•
11711 Toyou 4 wo, 1tn
Toyota Coroff•meny e•traa.
Colll1~-441-1810, 44!1-4131.
1170 Ch.yoior- Yo-·483

t4000 FIRiol.

9 lilght Owl T,.pper
0 8porta Tonight Aclkln
packed eportl highlights wl1h
Nick Charles and Jim Huber.

PEANUTS

R • \ M Cultom COuchu and
Rttupholtt•ry. St . Rt. 7, Crown
Ctty. Oh. 114- 2111-1470, E'4e. 1
814-4-41·3431 . Open deity 9 to
•:30, Sat . 8 :30 to , :30. Old &amp; .
n.., Uphott.,....

,.

eng .• auto. trent., 41,000 ~ual
ml•. 1114 Ford Pl«*up. ruM
good. nMCI aome work. lett
Offer. 111• or II ..-.mbt•
outlot! wogon. noo. C.lll14•

Hl-1301.

(!) lportoCenter (L)
"
(l) WKAP In Cincinnati
8 ()) Nlgldllno t;l

c

C.ll

1702~2pm.

M¥ Life
Story
.

'

I come from a large
family. We were
very poor.

I DON'T BELIEVE 't'OU
WERE BO~N IN A .
L06 CABIN D061i0USE!

THIS IS 600D...
E)(CEPT FOR TilE'
NEXT PART..

..'
..

~

'·

•

'

'
·~'

(0:30)

.

~

. ..
'

.

•1121 'T.J. HooUf CBS Loll
Night Hooker pursuee gangs

you deve lo p from step No . 3 below.

-

YEsTEIDl Y'S SCIAM-IITS 'ANSWEIS
Double. - Haunt - Umbo - Pallid - BUILD

Sign outsides custom home building company: "~ill Build
To Suit." Next door at a tailor shop the' sign read:· W1ll Sun
To BUILD."

BRIDGE

NORTH

.Q J 10 9 3

l -l-17

.Q 10632

· IIY Jamea Jacoby

.K

t94

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

2 Field
3 Spoil

1 "Mairzy

· Doats"

4 Flare
15 Calumny

animal
15 Score of
the lanes
10 Uprlllt!t

. 6 Court
attendant
7 Moslem
11 Beer
title
12- bouffe 8 Cravat
13.Expectant
fabric ,
Yesterday's Anawer
14 Boston
9 Before
party
~ 10 Word (Fr.) 23 Kitchen- 36 Deep
115 "The Twi- 16 Paddle
range
mud
light~·
17 Nazi to Nazi
section
37 Brink
17 "Goin' Out 18 Phone
25 Lab job 38 Driver's
of My -"feature
27 Loss
. place
18 Patriots' 19 Greek
30 Stannum 39 Favorite
descendriver
34 Present 40 Actor
ants
20 Harvest
theatriVigoda
21 Hawthorn 21 Slovenly
cally
41 Sine
fruit
one
311 Roger
qua 24 Hit
22 Peruvian
Bannister 43. Music by
the sack
distan1cce~--r~~~~
26 Purple
r
28 Vaquero's
rope
29 Breakfast
favorite
31 Rebuff
32 Forbid
33 Stallone

....

...

· film

315 Candy
36 Opera site
39 Financial
crisis
42 Tolerate
44 Italian city
45 OVerfill
46 Basic
precept
47 Fencing
sword
DOWN
1 Run

DAILY CRYP'l'OQUOO'ES- Here's bow to ~ork it:

."

A.XYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

• •
...

CRYPTOQUOTE.

7-7

- QI
J H
XPH
p

H

...

w

JWZHG

JWM

ZH HR

J B

ULJILCX

Z H H R G

woman ·he loves. (R)
® Tnopper John, M.D.
' VICtims
GCDLotoShow
12:00!]) lums and Allin

~~~,e., Poople

X P H

G W J H

.

... .

TQGXWMUH,
QG

XPWX

·p Q G

me111Cel'1 who a!tlekld the

!D~(R)

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·

~ -., r=C:. . .U;.·~-.:E:.·rl~;-:A-il-.6.:L:. i'-l' 0~;liJ:~; ;~h~h~~~~~;;~gq:~:'d~

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
• --~o~"~~:Zi.,.~'~'"""~~~~~~~~~for the three L X for . the two O's, etc. Single letters,
.~
on
the
and
of the words are all
Dobbs. (0:30)
® Toloo from lhl Darkokll
Everybody NH&lt;Is o little love
m CD Love ConARIIon
11 :30m (l) d)) Tonight ~

Formerly Ken'• now John'a
Weier Ser'4lce. John Watt.,.on,
Jr. Owner. 1.000 or 2.000 gal
urvfce. 304 -1171- 2248. ·

hp Mercury motor. ·
trail..-. lo~vht new

~~=~~::::;~~-, she'd have .the last word with · -

liD Wor. A Commentary by
Gwynne Dyll' A
of
proleaalonal

a Watar Hauling ,
rate•. immediate
I
delivery, cisterna.
I etc. call 304 -&amp;71 ·

1884 Pro Crtft b•• boat, 115
HP Johr1110n, tilt • trlm,ltailnlau
eteel pro. trolling motor, 2 ltvt
wells. more. E•c. cond. Call
304-871-11071 oft• IPM .
1171 Ch. . . . . nMCia motor.

I

(J) Sign Off

R &amp; A Wtter Service. Hom• •
tltterns. well•. pools f.illed ~
Formerly Jam" a·oys Water. ,
Call 304- 875-8370.
J .. J Water

21· ft. lkHiereft Cabin Crult~.
Sieeps 4 to I . 120 HP Mercury
1·0 mow. Naeda Nfurbhlhl"" &amp;
r..,_..lng. Will ull ar trade for
llwltock. Aeldl'!g t1800. Call

interviews w.ith top
newsmakers and celebrities.

Jennings and Ted Koppel

1881 Honda Z&amp;O Rebel , black,
1 ao mH11. new cond. 304- -675-

1984 FordT.mpo, 4 Or.• 4 spd.,
AM·FM tape. •3119. John's
Auto 81111. · B~o~lavlll• Ad.,
O.llipoUt.

modern Inca descendants.
®l 1111121 MOinE: 'Foot
Tlmoo 11 Ridgemont Hl9h'
CBS Tuoldoy Movie (R) (1 :32)
I!]) Lorry King Llvol In depth
10:00 (l) m ()) ABC Ntlwa Speclol
Jennings/Koppel Report:

11,800.00. 304-182-2710.

1980 Mercury Capri.
SunfOOf, AM.·FM-Cenetta ,
Wine wheal covers. •1 296. Call

8:30 (l) m ()) GroWing Paino
When carol wins a jackp_ot,

Fetty

Motorcycles

1978 Super Glide. new top and,
· new t!r... Ieath• bag•. Ctil•h..-

&amp; MEEK

KltJD.. .

RON ' S Tele\otlslon Servi ce .
HouM caMs on RCA. Quaur.
GE . Speciellng in Zllftith. c;.u
304-676 · 2)98 01 . &amp;1• ·446·
246.t,

304- 076 · 31~0 .

74

CD MOVIE: Tender
l orcltll
(PG) (1 :29)

I CAI-JT STMJD
(0/VFLKT d A!.H

1981 Chevy Mellb~o~ . Good
ahape, one owner. ctoth lnttrior.
1981 Honda Cfvlc 17k. 815
AHiance 47K. 14 Pontiac T·
1000 33K, 815 ChM~ette40K.81
Chwetta 42K , 77 MOB Conv-.
64K. 77 Dattun truck . Call

~-·! · My sister likes lo always get-her
way. Her husband says she
•
I
I
I_ I. _ . .- own
goes beyond persistent and that

-,R_...:.Ir::BO-f1'-,_o,'
1-1

The North American Open Pairs is a
grueling
event. Competitors play ini- WEST
EAST
Dobbs. (0:30)
tially at the local brldge-'club level, .K7
.A542
aJ 1121 d)) Wheel of Fortune
and those who qualify advance to their •9a 7
•Ks
+a
unit finals and then district finals. Two t10 6 3 2
+ .Q a 6 53 2
Ill CD Star Tnok
or three pairs from each of the Ameri- .A J 9 4
can Contract Bridge League's 24 dis7:05 (]) Sanford end Sqn
SOUTH
tricts then travel to the site of the
7:30 8 C2l (l) Newlywed Game
+a 6
spring North American Champion·
(!) NFL Yearbook 1986
.AJ4
ships to ~lay for all the marbles. Any·
Miami Dolphins:
tAKQJ75
Rollercoaster Season
where along the way, one bad session
•to 7 ·
8()) Judge
can send a competing pair to the show·. '
Vulnerable: North-South
®J Wheol of Fortune 0
ers. This year's winners were Denver
Dealer:
West
1121 Crollllre (0:30)
experts Jan Janitschke and Dick
1111121 IDl Jeoperdyl 0
Reed. Jan found himself on lead Weo1
No,.. Eut
181 Soap
against today'9 contract of three-no- Pass
Pass Pass
3NT
7:35 (I) Major Loaguo B111eball
Pass Pass
trump.
Pass
1;00 (]) Daktori
The opening bid was described by
G (2) d)) Motloc;k Ben
Opening lead: • A
. the opponents as a long solid minor
enters the seamy world of
suit, with perhapS one outside stopper.
strip joints to defencl a
.. Jan knew that with favorable vulnerastripper. (A)
bility his partner would likely bid in
(!) Profeaalonol Karato ISKA
third seal with a decent major suit, which club? When Jan decided to lead ·
Championship from Denver
even with less than opening-bid the club ace, he netted top score on tlje ,
(A)
strength.
If partner didn't have any- deal for his side. The choice of leads .
(l) Ill (l) Who'l 1111 Boao?
thing worth mentioning in either rna- made a difference of seven tricks
Geoffrey pops the big
question. but rt's not the one
. jor, J.an certainly didn't have anything since a low club would allow declarer,
expected. (A) C
worth leacjing. And he knew the open- to win the singleton king in dummy1
. (!) liD Nova Wllat do
er's long minor had to he diamonds. So pick up the heart king and run 12
dinosaurs, panda bear,
.it boiled down to a .club lead. But tricks.
thumb &amp; peacock's tail have
in common? Q
®J aJ 1121 n.. Wizard A
Simon's home. (R)
1121 Primenowo Wrap ups of

Home repair. roof inv. plinting.
build inu .nd haullr,g. phone
1981. J.,.P,J10 pickup, .t whHI
dirve, low milft, new trentmls·
olon. 8 cyl, 3?4·882·2S92,

anchored live from New
York. (0:30)
® Jllforaons
8:35 (]) LIIVI 1110 lleavor
7:00 (l) Hai-dcoado and
McCormick ·
mm PM Magazlno
(!) Spoi11Cintll' (L) ' .
(l) Entortolllmonl Tonight
m ()) Pooplo'o Coul1
(!) liD ,..cNell/ Lehrer
NewoHour (1:00)
®J Nowo
1121 Monoyllne Current

chimpanzee trained by
master criminals invades

ltone. n•vreen •tuubiJ.. Oon's
Land.e8l)el. 61 . .......... ._.. 6.

89&amp; - ~802

3·

-

"'

8225.

~h.,.p

166 Massey Farguton tractor •
#12 Mu•av Farguaon b1ler
t4.960. 3 pl. hitch mowing
machine 13110. Hay condition•
*1-60. 200 gallon spray t1nk
wi1:h cart 1296. Call 614· 280·
6622.
.,

AFI'IIE', BuT .I. PFEF£:~

VULI'4f(?A~Lf' MEN.

Serv 1ces

l*O ' Holst~n CCW\1'1 and
heifers. 304-17&amp;· 3024.

71

.I,'/11 So~fY,

aher 5 :00pm.

1979 Dodge Aapen. e cyl, auto.
AC. GOod eond, 304-17• ·
8441.

64

FRANK Al'&lt;O EllNEST · •

'78 C rulae Air m otor hom e. 28
tt , loeded. Cl•u .A, c111 304-

01 .900.00. 304·812-2295
814-258·11e:i.
1t701Ch-oSS3804·oPHd, Trtt Ia ttump removal. chain 1lnk
304·675·1387.
fencn. seed ing. m~o~lch. topsoil,

:t-1-r~t"-u;-1,::;..,i7r.--,_j-tl .i

.

(!i SportoLOCik (T)

ilion-

1974 &amp;ta, crah Oaltky Swinger
fold down umper , aleepl 8 .
Good Cond. 11 ,.tl50. Call 814 ·
288- 11.t2 after 3PM .

2 yelf old R-o•t•.ct Sorr~l
quan• ·hor... Show quality ,
wood conflrrnedon. For sale or
trade tor 1 ye..-Hne fMiy. C.H

12.360. Coli 814-2SI-8622.

61 Farm Equipment

2688.

81

J

reports on world economtcs
and financial news with Lou

3421.

.. 4-218-6822 .

0884 .

~76 - 6030

Hereford bull. !Enforcer Ill .
Weight ; 1400 ,lbs. t910. Call

1·0•2·7018.

1977 Apa c he fold down
ctmper. SIHpl. liX , .I.C .. DC •
converter . Stove, let~•- E.•cel.
l..,t eondltion. Call 814 ,379 -

'83 Otcls Cud••• f4 . 900.00 . ' I 1
Ptvmouth lePPQt"o 11 ,700 .00.
·eo Dodge Diplomat
• 1 , 100 .00 . ·eo Camero
&amp;2.&amp;00.00 . Phone 304 -882 ·

AKC regiat..-ed Beagle puppi ..:
good gun dog stock, 304-176 ·
C•Uahan's Used Tire Shop . Over
1 ,000 tires , sizes 12, 13, U., 16 , ,
18. 18 .15 . ·8 mila out Rt . 218 .
Call &amp;14· 256 -8251 ,

"

COlli. lo. \.Oiolli Wi.V f11~
fEEL%001&gt;, DO IT"!

.

79 Motors Homes
&amp; CarApers

1974 Olda Om19t. auto. Runt

AKC Reg . m iniature Daehehund
puppy. AKC Rag . Peking ... · 2f86.
p~pplea . Also adult Dachshund ~;::==::;;::;::==:::;::==

Coli 814-448-

Struta, f1 19 . 9fi pair, Installed.
Most modela. Muffllf Man . 9
Stimpson Ave .. Athans. Ohio A

88~- 1237

~;

I' t ·Lr I

the entertainment world is

Auto Repair

"

'ONowo .

Dr. Who Image of Fendahl .
·liD Secret City
·®Goodnm•
• CD Botlleolllr GiiiiCtiCII
'8:05 (]) Down to Earth Stereo.
8:30 8 (]) d)) NBC Nightly N-o
(!) All Amerit:lln Pulling ·
Slnoo "From Montgomery.
Alabama (A)
(l) • ()) ABC Nows !;I
(J) Nightly Buslnou Report
®l 1111121 CBS Nowl
liD Notional Academic
C_!lamptonshlp 1987
1121 Showlllz Today News of

•.

1-e00-1143-3787.

8:00 (])" ilig Vllloy
.·
. 8 C2l (l) II ()) IIlii _, 112!
(!)

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories-

1tl1 Buiclc&amp;llyltlrii . PS, PB. AC .
crutaa, V•l , new tii'H. Pion...AM ·fM c1111ne. Prie.d to sell .
8141-992-1389 aher 3 :00p .m .

30"'. 304-875-302t.

AKC Registered Cairn Terrltf
female puppy. No chedta . Call

USED MATERIAL
Large 2 nary houae. 1ocafid
center k&amp;K Mobile Home Park,
2146 Ea1tern Ava .. Gallipolis,
will be torn down weekofJuty-15,
1987. Anyone wishing to purGoods chase uMd mataritll for out·
buildings. g•reg ... etc, can save
100' s of •• · Firtt come first
serve whilei materials lut. For
more information ctll K&amp; K of62 fica 304·676·3000, PT. P.lt ..
W.Va

Me rchandi se

1979 Chevy Chevattl. auto,
1700. 1981 Plymouth Hori1on,
4 lpiNd. 1&amp;80. 1971 Ford
Courl•. 4 sp..ct. *&amp;50. 1979
Chwy Monze. auto, •soo.
SencfY' • Auto Saln." 81.t-992-

W•tern Saddi• &amp;110. Calli 1 4 ·

Groom end Supply Shop·Pet
Groom ing . A~l breeda . .. AII
styl• . Julie Webb Ph. 814-441·

~~io•k;ngue.

2267.

Furnithed Efficiency t145 . Utili·
tlea paid. share bath. 607
Second Ave.. Gallipolis Ph.
446-4416 after 7PM.

Pets for Sale

8 month old rust 1hort h_.rad
miniature Dachahlind. Call 814446-3243.

APARTMEN.TS . mobile homn.
houses. Pt. Pleasant and Gallipo·
lis. 614·446-8221 .

2 .bedroom unfurl"!jahed house.
607 Yl Second Sl. New Haven.
304-882· 2606.

1973 Arlington 12x65, 2 BA .
new carpet, new porch-8x12 .
underpinning. new doors &amp;
screens. Ca11614-379·2898 .·

Now oustom mllde tor yoor

38S·87tS8.

Total electric one bedroom un·
furnished apt. FrH w1ter and
trash service. 81.t--992-2094.

Rerrodeled house for rent- in
Cheater. New · panelling and
carpeting. 3 BR .. whh small den .
ReasOnable rant. Call814-986·
4246.

9~40 .

9234.

6 room unfurnished tpt . Call
614- 992-6434 or 30.t -882 ·
2566.
'

~--~----~--~. 1

3 bedroom hOUM, familY room,
double garage. 3100 Parrish
Ave. Pt. Pit. 304-4158-1078 .

1979 liberty Mobile Home wilh
storage building on 11J, acres off
Rt. 160 at Porter. Call 245·

992·6160.

2 bedroom house lnd apt. for
rent in Pomeroy. Ptrtiatly furnished. depoa!t required. C111
614-992-2381 .

1984 Nuhua 1.tk60. 2 BR
completely furni!lhed if desired
ExCellent condition. Awning &amp;
ctwared patio . CA. C•ll 614-

33

Fur~iahed apts. in Mlddlepor1, 1
bedroom, •210. 2 bedroom.
t220. t100 deposit . Call 614-

3 room house-furnilhed. good
locetion . Call 61.t·446·0893
anytime.

56

Good uied color tv 't for sale .or
trade. Call61.t-446·1149 .

•

Du.al e11haust kits, 199.95 in·
stalled. Mo1t Fords. Chavy
Truck•. Vans, •x4's. MuH18f
,...n . 9 Stlmpaon Ave., A,then~ ~
Ohio 1 - 800-843- 3787 . ·
"'

304-n3 -&amp;234.

44e-0373.

..i

•1

'

'·

875-87&amp;8.

·55 Building Supplies

~

I

.

BUDGETTranlmlssionst t.isect·• •
Rebuilt . Alllypn . Guaranteed •
minimum ot 30 itav-. wiD
deliver, C81h a .c arry or inst•l.
Clll 614· 379-2220 or 1-304-

Cheat fnuuer. call' .after 1 :00.

Ready miK concrete and all
concrete suppiiH. Call .... VaU.y
Brook Cement end Suppu...

king used wood &amp; coal burning
stove. Good cond. Call 614·

...
I

;;;:;::::::;::::::;:::;:=::: ..

Two 6 wheeltd ATV, need ltttle
work , &amp;460 .00 . · 304-1·7 5·'

614-288·8822.

Nicely lurnished smell houae.
Adults only . References re· Modern 1 SR. apartment. Call
quired. Off street parking. Ph. 614 · 446 - 03~0 .

•

.

.

77

Naiwly remodeled 3 bedroom

·.

87 Model V·Hiul bolt, 11 ft . .
aoHP Evenrudt. 1900. 304;- .
676-2479 .
'

1984 Monte C•rlo, euto . .
PS I PB, AC , taka over p-v·
menta. Call614· 387·0&amp;32 .

Apartment
for Rent

. .

• Pohtoon boat ·a x24. 304·882- ·.•-

Stitinl•a 1teel exheult •vstemt.
6 room house. Ron Hill, Porn•
rgy. Oh. 1.3 acres. 811.000. AI
r,tartin 614-678-2613.

. coli 114•.9~2 - 786~ ·, ·

6 ;00, ·'. ,·

AVON. 'Look" •• u• now. Earn
bti-a ~Oney. 30~· 6715 - 1429. · ·

&gt; I·.....:.r,Mc...:Ir....:..T.;:.S...;:S;,;..E::;,:Ml..

boat with tral,lir, 81 ••

·

X

Q J H .

S L M w•· X P w· M
G E Q I X
Yaterdaf'a C17)1toquote: FORTUNATELY FOR SER·

IOUS MINDS, A BIAS RECOGNIZED IS A BIAS STERILIZED.- ~YDON
'
.. ...
. - -----

..

. '·'

W X • ......

..

.·.·.• -..

�t'age-.1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, July 7, 1987:

Ohio Lottery-

Meigs County property transfers-.- -.- ----------=-:...------------Ccimpllelt'by
Linda Warner·Eason, parcels,
Emmogene Holstein Congo
Chester.
. · Keith Sutherland to Elsie SuMeigs County Recorder
. · Eugene· E.).Jrrderwood, Ruth . ·th.e rland, parcels, Rutland,
··
· · M. Underwo9d. to Re)olclng'J..I(e
John L.R. Gillilan, Mary M. ·
s ·a pt lst · Chu rc h, 1ot ~3 6 , Glllllan, to William 'Gl!lllan·, .
Middleport.
· . ,
Susan Joyce Gillilan, parcels..
Michael J. Hill, Armlnta Hlll Chester.
a~a Mindy, to D&lt;;mglas C. Sands, · Diamond Sav. &amp; Loan Co.. to
Cindy J . .Sands, parcels, Sutton. , Samuel Fry Jr. , Martha L. Fry ,
Pauline R Bentley, by Exec., Jot 161, Porn . VIII.
·,
toCaroJE . Kennedy , ShelvaJean . Joyce A. Blake, to Diamond
Kennedy, lot #14, Rutland .
Sav. &amp; Loan Co., Sheriff's Deed ,
Di iamoMnd SRav. &amp; Loan Co., to Mldd , Vlll .
,
.
Ph. 11P
· · oberts, Ka ren L.
Esther Price , Dec'd, ·Clarence
Roberts, parcels. Sutton.
v. Price, Affld .. Lebanon . '
l;'ermelia A. Cox, by Exec., to
Robert E. Lee, Donna L. Lee.
Bo Frazier, Donna Powell, lot to .Robert E. Lee, Donna L. Lee,
#47, Mldd . ·
parcels, Bedford.
Frances E. Luckadoo, Carl
Robert Alkire, Frances Alkire,
Cline Luckadoo, 0.515A, Rutland. ' to Board of Township Trustees.
· Chester Oden Rogers , Loretta Scipio Township, Meigs Co., Oh .,
Elizabeth Rogers, to George B. 0.024A. Scipio.
·
Hudson, p;Jrcels, Bedford &amp;
Stephen H. Nease to Stephen H.
Salisbury.
Nease, parcels, Lebanon .
Farmers Ba nk &amp; Sav. Co, to
Harold R. Lohse, Elizabeth B.
Terry W. Stober:t. lots #158 &amp; 159. Lohse to Lawrence M. Stewart,
Poin. Viii.
f)ea trlce 0 . Stewart, lot #6, Midd.
Robert R. Eason, Krista Ea· VIII.
Marion Francis Reynolds Sr.,
son, Randall L. Arnold, Jeff
Warn er- E aso n, Linda R . Dec'd, to ElnoraReynolds, Af.
Warner-Eason, to: Robert
,._ R. fld ., Ches ter.
.
Eason, Kris ta Eason, Huoert A.
Adam c . Brandau Jr. , Sandra
Eason , Jeff Wa r ner -Ea so n, A. Brandau to Danny L. Bur·

bridge, Ancti H. Burbridge, Bl!l Dlst .. right of way, Orange .
Burbridge, tracts , Scipio.
William H. Hoback, Audrey
Ancll Burbridge, Louise Bur- (Hoback ) Bolchyn, to T.P . Ches·
b'ridge, ·Dan L. ,E)ur.bt'!dge,. Judy ter Water Dlst. , rtglit of .way;
· ..
·
··
.C. ~urbrldge, Bl!l Jc Burbrlctge, ·. Lebimon.
Lori J .. Burbridge;. to Danny L.
Nancy Jaspers, toT.P . Chester
Burbridge, Judy C. Burbridge, Water Dlst. , right of way,
18.29A, Scipio.
·
Lebanon.
Dan L. Burbridge, Judy C.
William A. Warden, to T.P.
Burbridge; Bill ·J . Burbridge, Chester Water Dlst. : right of
Lori J . Burbridge, Ancll Bur· way, ·Lebanon.
Clarence ·wtckllne. · to T.P.
bridge, Louise Burbridge to Bill
J. Burbridge, Lori J . Burbridge, Chester Water Dlst., right of
18.57A; Scipio.
·
way, Lebanon.
Freeman Wtlllarns, Mildred L.
Wade Smith Hannah to Mabel
Williams, to T.P. Chester Water
Hannah, Cert. of Trans., Scipio.
M'!nnlng D. Webster, Dec' d, by Dlst., right of way, Lebanon.
John Staples Codner, Beverly
Exec., tci James W. Suttle, Gretta
M. Suttl~. 113 int. gas, oil, other L. Codner, to T.P. Chester Water
min. except coal, Lebanon.
Vi cky L. Nicinsky. J. Craig
Niclnsky, to Diane S. Young, Jot
1, Chester.
Do rot hy Clark Lowman,
BETH-EMR
Dec'd, to Wlllarq H. Lowman,
I talk
aka William, Cert .. Rutland.
explain , r{'()eat
nothing cli cks!
Gary L. Bates, Linda L. Bates.
to T.P . Chester Water Dlst., right
I gras p
to rind a wa y
of way, Sutton:
to hel p you Undrr sl'and
Jimmie L. Bailey, Beverly
fiE.t h. 7 tim eS 8 Is 56~
Bailey, to T.P . Chester Water
!Oh, how I want that fo r t to be as £la S\' for
Dlst ·· Orange · ·
you us It is for m('. i
·
Paul W. Holsinger, Brenda
I try f'very thin g I know
Holsinger, to T.P. Chester Water
~ut thE&gt;r~ Is no underslahd l n~ In your ('yf's.

Dlst:, J lght of way, L~banon.
Ches't er \Vater Dist. .. right 'It
Ancll VanMeter,. Norman Van· way, Lebanon .
~
Meter, Audrey Gaffney, Todd
Ar)hur T. Warnet, · Janet M.
Manley, : Tim .. Mantey, Handi . Warner, to. T.P. Chester Water
J;&gt;opp, Vivtan 'May, Donald May, ·Dtst, right of way, tebarton. · • ·
Gene Abbott, · Cindy Abbott,
Phyllis M. Stobart, Thomll,ll
Cindy flartenbach, .Steve Ha r· ·Stobart to T.P. Chester · Water ·
tenbach, John Manley, Toney Dlst. , right of way, Lebanon . . :
Warren Manley, Gloria Manley,
William H. Hoback, Joyce E( . .
Cathy Ann Elliott, Frank Elllott, Hoback, to T.P. Chester Water
Rosanna Manley, to Corrine M. Dlst., right of way, Leila non.
Ambrose; Part. lots, Mldd. Vlll.
William Eugene Plcken·s;.
William H. Lowman, to Evelyn Claudett e J . Pickens , to T.P .
B. Thom11s , GOA, Rutland.
Chester Water Dlst. , right of
Dennis H. Manuel, Anna , G. way, Lepanon.
· ,
Ma.nuel, to Frank W. Porter Ill, · William Eugene Pickens;
Patricia Al)ne Porter , 02.65A, Claudette J . Pickens. to T.P.
Letart .
·
Chester Water Dlst., right of
Charles F . Wagner to ,~T.P . wa y, Lebanon.

Meigs County· poet's corner...
t- 'rustratton ta kl'S over:
WHY AM I SO USE LESS?

Wh v do I pu t mys£&gt;lf throUgh this
tlm·c and !lmr again?
Why not ~ l v e up?

l'vr studled-rf'searchrd -prepared :

Th('r C' 's ~ o t to twa b&lt;&gt;11Pr wa y
to mak" a l lv ln~!

ang:€'r rises.

s1111 th f' k('y t o your under sta ndln A
f' Sj;&lt;tp("S m('.

Wh ar s th i:IL Brth?
Yo u'v(' gott r n all of lhC'm to rrf'tt.. .'!

My wa ntln ~ you to un d ~r s t a nd . to IN1rn
do£'sn' t makr It happen
for you .

All byyour'!i£&gt;1f??
Bf' th. I'm proud of y ou~

1 wC' &lt;'I&gt; lnsldr - for us .
ho pln~ you wl.llgrasp

N ow . Std on 10 t hf' nex t pagl:'.

ju sl l hl s onP co nC1'pl.

( ~ · Pm ~

I havr o;omPthlng In my ey£' 1.
_Michael Gr~ nt &amp;:lr;-lnp:

'

. . ...··

Daily Number
195
Pick 4

..

· Pagel\. ..

'

..

-.
at y

I '

Vol.37. No.44

Partly cloudy and humid
toii3Y; with a chance of
·thunderstorms and highs In
·. the upper. ~Os . Partly · Clou~y·
. tonig!Jt: wlt,lt·a:Jow near !Q.,,
·Partly.· · cloudy anil l!•i'mld.
· Thursday ·highs.In upper 80s.

4356

en tine

25 Cents

leport, Ohio, Wednesday. July 8, 1 .

Col. North

d~scribes

cover-up

By JOSEPH MIANOWANY
Congress . .
WASHINGTON iUPil- Lt. CoL Oliver North, who points a finger
Tuesday, Hamilton said he believed North' s testimony about the
at top U.S. olflclals In efforts to cover up aspects of the Iran -Contra
memos was the most significant part of his first day of questlonlilg
scandal, says he wrote at · least live memos for President Rea~an
because they were so .c rucial. "One. wonders .. , why he could not
describing a diversion of money to Nicaraguan rebels from arms
remember what happened to them."
.,
sales to Iran- a nd all but one (jlsappeared.
·
·
White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater refused to comment on
In his first day of testimony t.o the congressional comm,lttees
the testimony, but a senior White House official reiterated that the
probing the scandal, North said several top administration officials,
only diversion memo Reagan saw was the April document .shown to
Including Attorney General Edwin Meese, were a war~ of att.empts to
him Nov . 24, the day before the diversion was exposed publ!c!Y and he
. write a false chronology last fall thai would hide the U.S. role in early
fired North from the NSC staff. ·
arms shipments to Iran .
·
"We've.never seen any of the others . We've never heard of any of
Regarding the memos outllnlng.the diversion scheme, the Mar,l ne the others . We don ' t know what (North) is talking about, " the official
said he sen! them to his superiors on the National Security Council
~~
.
staff with the intent that they would go to ,Reagan for his approval.
North, meanwhile, testified that he ho!)ed he had shredded all those
Now. however.· there Is no such· evidence of presidential knowledge memos himself. He Jold the committees he "started shredding
that could challenge Reagan on a key point.
documents In earnest In early October" after it became clear, in a
•'I want to make tt very clear that no memorandum ever came back conversation with CIA Director William' Casey, that news of I he
to me wtth the p.resldent 's Initials on It or the president's name on It ," •· secret operations was about to explode.
North testified Tuesda y.
·
·
"Director Casey and 1 had a le'ngt.hy discussion about the fact that
Indeed, only one such memo has surfaced In the case- an April this whole thing was coming unraveled and that things ought to be
1986 document by North that was found In his flies by Investigators In tl¢a ned up and I started cleaning things up, " North said.
November - and Reagan has denied any prior knowledge of the
Wh.en he learned the Justice Department was beginning to probe
diversion at a lime when U.S .. military aid to the Contras was Illegal. I he affair, he added, he stepped up the pace of his shredding Nov. 21.
Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-Ind ., chairman of the House committee That confirmed earlier testimony given by his secretary. Fawn Hall,
Investigating the scandal. has said If any evidence turned up to who described such shredding.
,
contradict Reagan's denial. It could prompt Impeachment action In
t Contin ued on page 3)

.

le

SALE PIICES 1001
THRU JULY 12,.1117
WE IESEIIVE THE RIGHT TO
' LIMIT QUANTITIES

Ltll F. Ill lEI-TI-l
SPECIIU TIINIT TIE STilE!

Blli 8 ROLL PICK

• • • ••

BATH TISSUE

JDillates
'gatekeeper'

~1~~ . ~
1Z It IIZE
''SPECIAL ..IIUSE"

FIIAL lET

141L SIZE

99

HAIR SPRAY

.IIIUL.
PE-l lAIII

FROST
I TIP

LOVE .,
CARPET"

........

$l.5t
WMU£

IEIIIIIZU

Sl.tt

PIL If I

99

OUI IICUUI
$7.3'1

69
...._

11

IR. WILL'S

OUI IICUIAI tM

c

TWII
BLADES
7.1 IZ. • JIO IFF UIQ

12 IZ. SIZE

CEPICOL
MOUTHWASH

49
QUI

lf""-'1

$l.M

·89

VISELIIE
PETROLEUM
'JELLY
11 OZ. SIZE

SO"'o MORE.
FREE!

OUI l!ctJLAI
12.07

12

PO
liDS
CIIUI I CICII •m11
SICII LOnOI

99

••• albUm
page and
enlargement

101 OF 24

ACTIFED
IASlL DECIIIESTIIT
OUI lt!GULAI $5.11

· 'lz OZ. SIZE

AFRII

IISIL SPRAY

49
QUI I!GULAI $3.69

49

TABLETS

NICE 'I
EASY
HAIR
COLORII&amp;

29
OUR REGUlAI $3.4! '

"SPECIAL $3;99

ev,e l-y order
We use oniJ .Kodak paper, Kodak
chemicals and Kodak Technet
Center
for
.
.
--- - com.puterizld ~qualifJ contr~l~ - -

IOIZEII
Sill
CREAl

SUIIIIIOO
lltl

Coll4lltlntn
All TYPES

DEIIDIIIn

BODY POWDER

Ohio .River
area .targeted

Ohio Power

IIIIUBmHW

OUR REGULAR $2.19

A program which may prove .
helpful to the elderly population
of Meigs County has been in·
ltlated by Ohio Power Company.
The "Gatekeeper" program
was explained Tuesday to Ohio
Power Company's. Pomeroy em·
ployees who deal regularly with
the public, such as the meter
readers and office personneL
• • ~l!ller~r began· in Washing·
· ton State by Puf!Uet Sound PoWer
and Ugilt and Is designed to be a
helping hand to the community . ~
In Southeastern Ohio, It ap·
pears that Ohio Power Company's Pol)'lt&gt;roy office has led
the way In Initiating thP
program.
All that Gatekeeper rt&gt;qulresof
Ohio Power employees Is for
them to " keep ears and eyes
open," according to Ron Ash.
manal!er of the Pomeroy ofllce.
11 an employee st&gt;nses something Is out ol the ordinary with
an elderly customer, the n the
employee s hould contact Ash,
local program coordinator, who
will In turn contact the Meigs
County Councll on Aging.
From that point on, It Is up to
professionals with the Council on
Aging and Meigs County Sen lor
Citizens Program to det ermine If
a problem does exist with the
l'lderly person, and to Inform the
person of services that are
available thr oug h Senior
Citizens.
All calls will be confidential
and only the Gatekeeper coordl·
nator will know the source of the
referraL
Eleanor Thomas, executive
director or the Meigs County .
Council on Aging, and Leafy
Chasteen, Information re!erra I
coordinator. and Pam Garret ·
son, of Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Valley Regional Development
District's Area Agency on Aging,
encouraged power company
workers to respond to their " gut
sense" and observations of problems. Potential warning signs of
elderly people at risk were
discussed.
To .m eter readers In part.Jcular.
Garretson pointed out that problems with an elderly person may
occur suddenly, ·or a gradual
decline In condltlons around the
. horne of an elderly customer may
was showne~~~~~~~tlGl~a~t;e~keeper
by Jim
adml·
nls1rattve assistant out of Ohio
Power's Portsmouth office. The
message of the video was that
"with one phone call, a power
company employee could save
the · dignity', and perhaps the
Ute," of an elderly person who Is
experiencing dlf!lculty · with
dally living.
Miller said that Ohio Power Is
" not asking employees to do
more work, just. to be more
observant."
Ohio Power workers through·
out the rest of the company will
·also be asked to participate In
Gatek~oer. Ted Swartzwelder,
Continued on page 12
·~

... .

·'

·- ....

'

Pla,n to

...

~plift

river economy

~

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Jteporter
COLUMBUS. Ohio tUP!) -A special state task force has drawn ~p ·
. a . 20..year .plan to_pull the Ohto ,BWer -basin out of. the econo~mc
doldrums, prov'tde quality liylng for Its residents and make 1t a •
magnet.for tourists from throughout the courltry.
But il wlll cost money.
·
"Conlinued Improvements in the riverfront . area will rt&gt;quire a
renewed commitment to finanCial and technical ass istance," wrote
the Ohio Riverfront Redevelopment Task Force in Issuing the draft
report of a one-year study Tuesday .
"State and local governments, as well as businesses , labor unions
and other organizations in the region must now cooperate to develop
and implement programs that can make... slgliificant changes over
Jhe next 20 years."
.
To raise the money, the task force recommended that the 14
counties along the Ohio River set up regional port authorities with
bonding and taxing powers. It also called for a 33· member Ohio River
Development Commission with the power to issue bonds and mak e
loans for the various development project s.
The commission. dominated by representatives of stale govern·
ment and the affected counties, would oversee implementation of the
redevelopm ent plan In five· year segments.
.
.
PLEASED WITH NEW PROGRAM - Ohio · Eleanor Thomas, executive director ol the Meigs
Power Company's new Gatekeeper program ·county Council on Aging, Leafy Chasteen, ·
The draft report wa s issued in preparation for a ~erles of public
•hould prove beneficial for Melp Count~ which information refe~ral coordinator lor the Council
hearings in the 14 river counties in September . The !Ina! r.eport,
hu a high percentage ol elderly residents. The on Aging, Pam Garretson, with Buckeye
requested last year by · the Ohio General Assembly, Is due In .:
new program, designed to lend a helping hand to Hllls·Hocklng Valley Regional Development
November.
the community, was discussed Tues'day by Ohio District's Area Agency on Aging, and Jim Miller,
The Initial report contains 78 specific initiatives fo r developing the
Power.C.ompany employees and, Jell to right; Ron admlnl~tratlve asslstant with Ohio Power,
45 J.mile Ohio section of the river economically, environmentally and
Ash, manager of Ohio Power's Pomeroy office, Portsm«?uth.
recreationally. ·
1
£
Among the suggestions are new state park s, greenways · and
recreation trails along the rtver; better housing. education . training
·
and health care for residents; and upgraded port facilities and ·
transport a lion for improved commerce.
With st!H SOil'\!' six weeks Rife. for trustee of Rutland clerk· treasurer : In Racine vo ters
The task force proposed that the 14 counties band together for will nam e a mayor, two increased clout In Columbus and Washington. and cooperate with the
remaining before the fll lngdead· .Township.
This fall there wl!l be a trustee members to village council, two five oUler Ohio River states -Indiana, Kentucky, West Virglni!l,
line, four candidates have filed
peiltlons of candidacy for the elected In each township as well members to the board of public Pennsylvania and Illinois.
.
.
.
November election , the Meigs as the township clerk. In Salem . affairs, and the clerk-treasurer .
Specific recommendations of the task force mclude: mcreasmg the
There are school board post· number of liquor permits along the river, controlling erosio n and
County Board of Elections Township, two trus.tees will be
lions
opening In all three local flooding; getting rid of abandoned barges, floating docks, junk cars
named since there Is 'an unex·
reports.
school
dlsirlcts plus on the Meigs and old tires which pollute the rjver; and ex ploring the feasibilit y of a
There will be a variety of.local plred term to be filled.
County
BOard of Education. In canal linking the river with Lake Erie.
There wlll be vl!lage officials
races on lap for the fall election
·
and residents wishing to fil e for named on a non-partlsa n' basls in the Meigs Local and Southern
Many of the economic development recommendations could well
posts can pick up their petitions the villages of Rutland, Syracuse Local School Districts, two be applied in all sectors of the state. But the task force recom mended .·
members wlll be e lected to eac h special emphasis on additional low· Interest loans to businesses ·
at the board office located on and Racine.
board of education while in the locating or expanding in the Ohio River area, where un e mpl~ym ent
In
Rutland
,
residents
will
elect
Mechanic St . In Pomeroy.
Eastern
Local Dis trlct and on the exceeds the state average by 3.4 percent, a nd on targeted ass1slance
Filing to dat e are Sha ron a mayor, two village council
Meigs
County
Boards, three to river industries. "
Cremeans for trustee of Lebanp n members and a clerk-treasurer .
will
be
named to each ..
members
Township; James W. Ha yman, Voters In Syracuse wlll elect a
Also ·-recommended were regional fo re ign Irade zones with
Residents
have
until 4 p.m . on tax-exempt status at cargo poinis for company warehOusing,
for trustee of Lebanon Township; mayor, two village council ·
·Wilbur Robinson, for trustee of members, two members to the Aug. 20 to file their petitions with distribution centers and processing plants, and a data · link with barge
Orange Township, and Charles board of public affairs and a the board of elections.
lines to enable out-of-state shippers to !dent.lfy ret urn cargo when
they export goods to Ohio. · ·
The task force suggested that If, for example, East Liv erpool were
a foreign trade zone lor a single manufacturing facili ty, Steubenville
and Martins Ferry could be a sub-zone for a plant or warehouse. .
Other recommendations :
The proposed Racine Vlllage make a decision on July 15. The regarding vicious dogs. ·
ECONOMIC
-:::.- Prod]!ce a gyldebook for developers, compare
budget Is available for public park committee reported that • ~ Supply purchases were ap·
business
tax
allowances
with other states , encourage lock and dam
.viewing at the home of Clerk work on the stage roof at the park proved for Rizer and the clerk
and maintenance.
Jane Beegle or at the Racine Is progressing and another free was authorized to contact the construction
RECREATION
- Develop shared Insurance risk programs
program of entertainment will be Meigs County Board of Elections
Department Store.
between
counties,
fishing and boating facllltles near
This was annoanced Monday held this Saturday evening. The In regard to forms for placing a hydroelectric dams,develop
encourage
the use of land fo r recreation,
night when Racine VIllage Coun· report of Marshal Joe Kirby tax renewal on the November incr.e ase dock construction outside Cincinnati, use uniform signs fo r
ell met In regular session. The showed 10 calls answered and 203 ballot. ·There Is a levy that wlll ·
of facllltl~s .
council w111 hold a public hearing miles driven.during June. Street expire this year, but because of promotion
CONSERVATION
- Preserve, among other areas, the Oxbow
on .the bullget at 7 p.m. on July 15 Commissioner Glenn Rizer re- an Increase In street light costs, Area at the mouth of the Great Miami River, Aberdeen Woods in
at the council chambers with the porlect 22 loads hauled to the contained In a contract , council Brown County , the mouth of the Little Miami River. the mouth of Red
idea of adopting the budget landfill in June and 3,508,100 will ask residents to .renew the Oak Creek In Brown County, and a wildflower area one mile upstream
gallons of water w.ere pumped. , levy. Councll commended the
following the hearing.
Letart Falls In Meigs County.
During a discussion, It was The annex was painted and nine fire department for another from
OF LIFE- Emphasize low-cost houslnp; for the elderly,
QUALITY
successful July 4th celebration.
brought out that costs are going . traJ;h barrels placed. ·
establish
quality
standards for rural housing, remove old residential
Council decided to check a
Attending the meeting were
up but that receipts are down. It
buildings
and
closed
factories, encourage planned neighborhoods,
was noted that fines and costs so request from the Baptist Church council members, .Frank Cle- establish vocational and
technical school courses related to river
far this year have amounted to regardlng sidewalk ·repair and land, Robert Beegle, Carroll
•
Industries.
will discuss the matter on July 15. ~ Teaford ·and Larry Wolfe; Cler~
$487.50.
· ZONING- - Have local governments develop "crea~lve zoning :
Fred Sayre requested that two Action on a pit bull ordinance was Jane Beegle; Street Commls· techniques" to give them legal authority to ~on tro l the use of private
trees on Fourth ·St. be cut. tabled until a check can be made stoner Glenn Rizer and Fire land for waterfront activities by setting standards for public access.
Council will look at the trees and on the newly enacted state law Chle! Robert Johnson.

f •Je d petitiO
' • • OS
Four have I

1.0r

•
eIectiOD

Racine budget is.. available to public

"·

I

·-- -- -

,NORTH TESTIFIES · Lt. Col. Oliver North gestures during
testimony before the Iran-Contra Committee Tuesday. North said
that he assumed President Reagan approved the diversion of Iran arms sales profits to Nicaraguan rebels although they never
discussed the scheme.

J

r

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