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.,.
hge-14-The Daily Sentinel

•'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, August 5, 1987
•

Chrysler, AMC merger ·ap·p roved ·based on_proxy votes

Fair.

•

results
announced

obligations.
obligations.
undisclosed amount In damages that the agency had "voted to
decisions .
By JAN A. ZVERINA
Earlier this week, a dissident
Chrysler's orlgin'al proposal to
" We are In it to actually plus Interest to the plaintiffs.
close the Investigation of the
UPI Auto Writer
buy the ailing carmaker, which Improve the value of the 'stock
The suit-Is separate from three proposed acquisition of Am~rl·
SOUTHFIELD. Mich. tUPI\- group calied Shareholders for an
was made on March 9, offered from $4.50 to $8.80 (per share).'' class-action suits filed oh behalf can Motors Corp. by Chrysler
American Motors Corp. share- Independent American Motors
Corp.
flied
suit
In
U.S.
District
of AMC's 111,000 shareholders Corp. That means the deal can go
AMC stockholders S4 • -share.
. holders voting by proxy over·
Eskin said.
Court
In
New
York
to
hatttoday
's
Jordan
H.
Eskin,
a
lawyer
and
Eskin
said
AMC
failed
to
that said the price is unfair and ahead.·:
wheimingly approved a merger
.
vote,
alleging
AMC
failed
to
member
of
the
committee
that
AMC spokesman Michael
mention $250 million In profits that the AMC proxy statement
with Chrysler Corp.. an AMC
disclose its true value.
owns at least 15,030 shares of from Its Jeep division and soliciting the takeover was in Aberllch said no more details
spakesman .sald today.
In May , Ch•ys ler agreed with
American Motors ' cumulative analyst. projections showing pro· viola ton of federal law .
were available other than that
Spokesman Jerry Sloan said
convertible preferred stock , jec;ted AMC earnhtgs of $3.40 per
AMC spokesman Lloyd Nor· "an approval had been granted
today's shareholder meeting Is AMC's board of direetors and
each worth $2.375, and 6,000 common share In 1989.
!hard dismissed the suits as in Washington."
'little more than a formality Renault, the French carmaker
which owns 46.1 percent of AMC
shares of the common stock,
Chrys.le;;.;;.pqkesman John Gut.·
The suit asks that AMC be being "without merit," and noted
~ause the proxies - which far
ac;cused the company 9f omitting e njoined from holding the stock· that the three class-action suits nlven also . confirmed the FTC
outnumber the votes to be cast In to buy the No. 4 American
materia l facts from the proxy holders' vote, and that any vote "are being dismissed with no concluded its Investigation Jnto
person- aut'i10rized t he$2 billion automaker for $4 ..10 a share In a
deal worth more than $2 billion
statement that were necessary on the proposed · merger be payments to the parties ... "
the merger, but said the No. 3
acquisition by Chrysler.
for shareholders to make pru· nullified until a final judgment is
In Washington, FTC spokes · carmaker would have no lmme·
Today's meeting wUI "put the that includes the assumpiion of
dent 101·estment and voting made. The suit also sought an · man Kevin Arqull said Tuesday diate formal statement.
stamp on It" and give dissident AM c · s Ion g . t e,r m debt
shareholders an opportunity to 1--------.:"::-----~-:--------------~--,-----------------------------------­
express their views, Sloan said.
More than 90 percent of AMC's
common and preferred share·
holders voted by proxy, Sloan
said. Overall, the company has
111,000 shareholders.
On Tuesday, the Federal Trade
Commission closed its investiga·
tlon· of the merger, allowing the
deal to be completed after the
official vote by AMC
stockholders.
The takeover will cost Chrys ler
about $2 billion. Including as·
sumed long-term debt

FROZEN

~

Floridagold
Orange Juice

0
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,;::.

.,~.,~

1'11 111

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lit!\·,

\ " - l f ,t l \
t

IW\'\1 I

l

12-oz.

·I

FROZEN

FROZEN

Downyflake
Waffles

Pet-Ritz
Cobblers

12-13-oz.

Whitman's
Cream Pies

26-oz.

11-Gz.

2 .. sa

SJ78

gc

"NEW" FROZEN GREEN GIANT PASTA

FROZEN TEMPTIN'
TOPPINGS

EXCEPT BEEF, HAM OR FISH
FROZEN

Totino's
Pizzas

Morton
Dinners

tU-13-oz.

11-oz.

DISHES VEGETABLES &amp;

:::!!ts 2,. , $3

(As ol10:30 a.m.)
Provided by ·
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewi

Veterans Memorial
Tuesday Admissions - E li
White, Racine: Judy McNickle,
Pom£&gt;roy: Pam Nitz, Pomeroy:
Josephine Clark, Pomeroy: Car·
rle Osborne, Reedsville; Cha r les
R. Findlay Sr.. Racine: Eva
Seidenable, Middleport: Gle nn
lfludson, Mason; Lisa Jones. Fort
fHood. Texas.
Tuesday Discharges - Wll·
liam Sorden, Robert Hoover,
IJames Duncan, Patricia Bunger.

FROZEN

II II( I

Daily stock prices

Hospital news

Crystal Light
Fruit Bars ..... s-et.
FROZEN JELL-0

&amp;lplo Township Trustees will
meet Friday. 7 p.m .. a t the
townShip building.

Meeting Friday
Meigs County REACT team
will meet Friday, 7:30 p.m., at
Pieasers Restaura~t. All
members are urged to attend.
•

I

Billie school slated
Vacation Bible. School at Ru·
!land Church of God will be held
Monday through Friday, Aug.
10.14, from 6:30 to 8:30 each
evening. Classes for toddlers
through youth. Closing program .
Sunday at . 7 · p.m . Everyone
weJCQme.

-- ---

a1 y

Vot.J7. Nc{B2
Copyrighted 1987

~:=ing .

"" $2 59

Ore Ida
Tater Tots

"~""

•• '"~~~ M~ 10 l&gt;f

•~4&lt;111Y • •.,. • IIk

POSSIBLE Dt\NG£R - Exdtement ran hiKh In
Pomt&gt;roy Wt•dnt'Sday mornln~ '" huzardou s
malt•rlals lrthnlcluns from thr Stat(• Fire
Marshall's ~outhca&lt;tcrn Ohio fi eld olflcf&gt; ,...
mo•ed a small contalnet of explosivt•s from the
salt• ol flark's J&lt;•wt•try Store on Court St. The
· Pom('roy Fir&lt;• and Polite llepartnwnl~ aided in.
hlot·kinR off the arca. It wa• a tommon pracli&lt;'('
.v ears 11110 to placr t•xpJosiV&lt;'S in safes us

Sen. H. Cooper Snyder, R· Hillsboro, who is
aligned with · lhe busines s community In the
many-sided tug-of-wa-r among .tawyers, Ins uranc e
compa nies. manufacturers, organized labor and'
consumers . said he is willing to compromise, but
opposes th e accommodations made for Celeste.
"This senator isn't pleased with the direction
the conference committ ee has taken ," said
Snyder.
Virtually the same pla yers have been negotiat ·
ing the terms of a package since the beginning of
the year. seeking a solution to the availability of
affordabl e liability insurance for business and
local governments.
Celeste vet9ed last December a bill that
lawmakers had worked on since the beginning of
1986. He said .provisions In the sec tion on liability
for de fective products would keep consumers

from obt~fnin g Justified court settlements.
Stlnziano's draft contains several provisions to
eliminate Celeste's objection·s. "Frankly,l expect .
the conference committee will make som e
changes," said 'Stlnzlano. "and every change th at
Is made increases the likelihood of a veto."
Snyder said he objects to provisions in the
product liability section:
-Making a defendant company, regardl ess of
its' percentage of fau.lt, totally liable for dama ges
in.a lawsuit if other defendant-s are unable lo pa y.
-Holding a product defective If It fall s to
measure up to the expectation of a consumer in
normal use ..
Snyder' said the former provision would be "t~e
most liberal in the nation."
' 'We are not satisfied with the product thai the
conference committee is worki.ng with as a final

*'"'" ••••l.olllot

olt10 •u" '""'

COf'Y Ro('.ttT 1 ~ 1
T'"'E KAO CE~ CO 1Ht.IS .- NO f'fl lctS 0000 SV NDU'
AU{\U:i I H I~/ IN CAUII'Olll AU ~ltfl(lf trOllS

10-oz.

'""""'"''I

AI.BAI'IY -

"VC.USil fi1RO\JGI'l SAIU R Oio~ "

r!n,QIOil ,

Save Time, Save Money and Keep Your
Kitchen Cool With These Microwaveable Items
FROZEN PILLSBURY
MICROWAVE

Microwave
Casseroles

French Bread
Pizzas

I- oz.

5.5-6.3-oz.

FROZEN PILLSBURY

Ronald H. Wa r·

Sti ff' !)'

a~.siSI.:t nl

at

Sou thrrn Ohio Coal Company 's
Mdgs No , 2 mlnr. is thP r£&gt;eiplent
of th£&gt; SPCOnd annual Dalton E .
McNI'cc S.,frty Award pr£&gt;sPnted
by thf' Southrastrr·n Ohio Dlstrlc·l
Council of thr Holm&lt;'• Saf&lt;'ty

W[ Il l ~ I. HIIf I ill Ho(,,..T 10 Llt.lol OUiol\jl&gt;lltS fll0flll SOlO 10 Ol.t.llH S

FROZEN PILLSBURY

protection against break-ins. The explusl•e
mal erial has likely heen In Clark's safe since 11
was installed in I he bulldln~ . Joe Clark, owner of
I he store, knt•w the material was In the sale hut
did not suspcclthc posslhle danger until recently.
II&lt;• then got In touch with the prul&gt;"r authorities.
The .material was taken to the county landfill
Where it was detonated.

A&lt;Sociat Ion.
David B. !Bruc PI S;Jltsman , a
s hu ill" car nprrator allhr Meigs
No. 2 minf'. rrcf' ivccl the Humanit:lt'ia n Award wh(i&lt;' Rodney
But chPr. an elec tri c·la n at the
Mdgs . No. 1 preparation plan!.
a nd HNb Elliott. mechanic at the

I

~!~~~~~~~~~$179

FROZEN REGULAR OR SALT FREE
PILLSBURY

Microwa!'e
$ 169'
Popcorn. ... a:~i~~~z.

FROZEN BANQUET

ct;;k;;"'

2 ss

FROZEN MICROWAVEABLE BREAKFAST
DISHES DpWNYFLAKE

~~::~~st .ltL$119

9-12-oz.

Nuggets ...... .
FROZEN BANQUET
MICROWAVEABLE

~~!~r~~l~in~b $199

Totino's
Pizzas
111-'4.2-oz.

FROZEN MICROWAVEABLE

B~dgat .
Go•meL .......

•

FROZEN MICROWAVE

$

2,.., 3
I

•

FROZEN MICROW,AVE

===.
"'=
...,.,
-.=-- . · =

·===·
:

.-

--

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•

•
•

••

.

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••

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...:

Uaz.

, ••

2 Section·s 12 Paget

26 Centa

A Multimedia Inc. Nawspep•

product," said Mark Davidson of the Ohio
Alliance for Civil Justice. a coalition of business
and insurance companies.
But Davidson said it is "absolutely" possible a
negotiated settlement could be reached .
The Ohio· Public Interest Campaign, a
consumer-labor coalition, renewed its plea for no
biil at ali' by releasing Information that the Ohio
Department of Insurance 's actuary has sa id a 30.6
percent increase In premiums for product
liability Insurance premiums is unjustified.
"This action makes it clear that a change in
Ohio's product liabjlity taws Is unnecessary to
·reduce product · liability rates for Ohio bus!·
nesses." said Peter MacDowell of OPIC .
"I t may come down to a standoff and a new set
of conferees may have to be appointed," said
Snyder.

By NANCY YOACHAM
but does plan in the near future,
road will not be widened and that
Se ntinel Staff Writer
reported Ramsey. to install a
the stakes are there to s~ow
A two- hour a nd fifteen minute
slurry line.
workers how far they are going
public hearing Wednesda y with
A public viewing of the road
as the paving Is underway .
the Me igs County Commission ·
was held Wednesday morning by
Roberts also reported· that a
ers on the proposed closure of .R5
the parties involved in the
part for th!' highway departmil e of Salem Township Road
matler. Based upon the v l~wing
ment's mol\'er is to be in by the
326, Pilgrim Ridge, finally ended
of the road, Co unt y Engi neer
end of this week and the mower
in a compromise.
Philip Roberts reported it woould
should be in service by Monday.
To appease Sa lem Township
take in excess of $100,000 to make
The department's mowing efproperty owners Judith and
the section of road SOCCOwants
forts have been hampered th.is
Sandra Murph y, of Obetz, Ohio, closed passable lor tra!!ic.
summer by the inablttiy of lhe
who opposed the closure, the
· Allgood Co., Wadsworth, Ohio, to
Sa lem Township Trl! s tee s
Commissioner Richard Jones
supply the needed part.
agreed to upgrade T.R . ~26 ,
pointed ou t that this amount ·of
·Bowles Road, from Coul)ty Road
money for one seldom trayeted · . · ~lt\lssl.one~J)avld K!&gt;l;l!ltntz
4 Into the M.url'hY property lto!:h . road would be tmposslhte tor tlle'
re
ted on a r-ecent m~l~ tn
the other direction . The comtnis·
Salem trustees to come up with.
Columbus which he attended
stoners then voted to close the
Salem trustees. John F . Col· regarding changes in child sup·
road at the request of Southern
well. Stan ley Hutton a nd Cecil port laws. The county Is required
Ohio Coal Company and upon
Siaeey, township clerk Bonnie to form an advisory board to
recomme ndation of the Salem
Scott and Dewey Mullohan, town·
make recommendations regard·
tru stees. .
ship emp loyee, also present for
ing alternative measures althe hearing, agreed with Jones ..
The tru stees agreed to replace
lowed by the new law. The
a culvert pipe on T.R. 326 a nd fill
Murphy s agreed that under the
advisory board will meet Aug. 14
a large hole which has washed
circumstances it wou ld be impos·
at the Department of Human
out . arrange a turnaround just
sibie for the township to upgrade Services in Middleport.
inside th e Murphys' property line the road. They therefore agreed
Scott Lucas. administrator of
a nd IPvcl the rest of 326 through
to the c los ure with the stlpula·
Veterans Memorial Hospital, ac·
I he Murphy s' land from proeprty
tion s which were me ntioned companied Greg Kaylor and
I ine to propert y line. The trustees
above.
Dick Bradley to the meeting to
are to make the improvements
Paving of Success Road is Inquire about usage.oftheformer
within 30 days ; weath er permit·
underway by the Shelly Co., of . Ohio Bureau of Employment
tlng. or as soon as possible Thornville, reported Roberts,
Services office on Union Ave. for
th ereaft er.
although rai n on Wednesday the Continuity of Ca re Co., a··
The Mu rp hy's own 100 acres in
morning brought work to a
medical equipment supplY.. The
Salem Towns hip . Th e part of lemporary halt . Roberts said it county leases the building from
T .R. 326 to th eir property that
will take three days to comp lete the owner and in turn subleases it
will noi.• be closed, ha s not been
Success Road a nd t hal hP expects
to ·other parties . The commls·
maintained by the tru stees lor
the company will work on Forest stoners said they would know by
Run Road for three days next
m any years because it was
next week 's meeting the details
seldom trav eled . Howeve r, Mu1·· week . After Foresl Run , the about how much space would be
phys contended that this side of company will move to New Lima available and the rent costs.
326 was the closest enl.ry to their · Road whi ch is expected to take
In final matters, the commls:
properly from Columbus a nd · six day s to complete. Shelly Co.'s stoners scheduled a pre·
that th&lt;'y traveled It by ]C'ep.
bid of $4.38,231.70 was accepted construction conference on the
SOCCO, which owns propert y las I week lor the approxima tely addition to the Tuppers Plains
on both sides of 326 . up to 13 Iota! miles of paving.
·
EMS building for Friday, 1 p.m.
Murphys, requested closure for
Commissioner Manning Roush
The board also agreed to
sec urit y reasons. Joe Ramsey, .reported that Forest Run Road purchase additional premises
representin g SOCCO. reported residents were concerned that
li ability insurance coverage for
!hat s mall rec reat ional vehicles · stakes which have been placed
the county's gravel pit . Entire
leave the road and trespass on along the road indicate the road cost lor $300,000 of coverage for
SOCCQ property.
will be widened during the
the pit, through the Buckeye
Presently SOCCO does not pav ing process. Howev er, Ro· Joint -Council Self Insurance pro·
have any facilities in this a rea, berts assured Roush that the gram will be $396.12 per year.

Meigs Mine No. 2 ·employee
earns McNece Safety Award

•o• ...., "' f;j&lt;.~ ~ '0!1"' S1011 • • ~•I" i\ &gt;,...C:•I,..,.., "GI~ ~~
1111&gt; oM I II ... &lt;0. ""' Oul ul . , """"'''"'d olllfl1 - .....
~""""' o l• CO&lt;I&gt;&lt;Mo.tlfo ""'"
tl1ol """ '~ ""'"'!!' or • • •• ' c h...:l "'"'' ~
entolloo ·~(IIJ to II"&lt;Ch.t..,l~• .odv..no .... tr~m "' 011~ olhr•" '""" p ii CO! wotl\01 JD &lt;~• • •
Q, oy '""' ,.~._ ..... LO&gt;t oiJUn - lllJoJ ,OO:&lt;.•t •l~~ ..... , •r n fl'J&lt;Cho..,.,

w•

enttne

Lengthy commission hearing
•
concludes with compromise

o\MR1.D 111• Plllll:f

l•cn u t ,n, .., ·'· "'~n r...o

zero.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Thursday, August 6, 1987

By LEE LEONARD
. UPI Stutehouse Jlcporter
COLUMBUS. Ohio tUPI). - A joint Ohio
Senalc&gt;·House co nfer ence commitlee on civil
Justice and insurance reform will meet Thursday
to sec if agreement ca n be reached on a "wor kin g
dra ft " Issued by th e House side with inpu·t from
Gov . Rlchard{'eieste' s sta ll.
A fina l setl lemcnt would bring lawmakers back
fr om vacation lo rat lfy It. perhaps as early as next•
wePk . Failure or the negot iating sessio n could
result in the appointment of a different set of
co nferees.
.·" It the conference com mittee wants to send th e
governor a bill and be relativel y cer tain !here
won'l bell veto. this is It ," said Rep. Michael P.
Stinzlano. D-Cotumbus, chai rman of the six·
memb&lt;&gt;r panel.

Broccoli
Cauliflower Medley

32·01.

Cloudy tonight. Lows In
· the orotd 608. Partly cloudy
Friday. Highs in the upper
80s. Probability of rain near

Seek agreement on 'working draft' for bill

FROZEN GREEN GIANT BROCCOLI
FANFARE, JAPANESE VEGETABLES,
LESUER PEAS OR WA TEA CHESTNUTS

FROZEN

The Meigs County Common
Pleas Court action of Jack L.
. Ritchie versus the Dravo C.orpo·
ration has been dismissed.

1

Super Lono
36-9-29
2-6-21

•

. . sa

FROZEN LIGHT WITH
NUTRI-SWEET

At-tion dismis!!!ed

To meet Friday

503
Pick 4
74.10

At Kroger with a ''·B eat the Heat''
Frozen Foods Sale ·

He played on a USO show
.. during the Korean War and then
returned to northern Kentucky .
auditioning In 1954 at Cinctnna·
tl's WLW.
He became a n•gular on the
station's ''Midwester n
Hayride."

Firm
Price
Am Electric Power.. .... . ..... . 2i;i%
AT&amp;T ........ ............. ........... .3.2%
Ashland Oil ........................ 68\~
Bob Evans Farms .............. 24 '!,
Charming Shoppes .. ... ......... 3:ll',
Federal Mogul. .................... ..4R
Goodyear T&amp;R .... .. ... .......... 74JI,
Heck's Inc . ............................. 4
Limited Inc... ............ ... ..... .48 \1,
Multimedia Inc ................... 70'4
Rax Restaurants ................... ;. 5
Robbins &amp; Myers ................... 10
Shoney 's Inc . .............. ..... .. .... 32
Wendy's Inti ....................... ll Y.
Worthington Ind .... :.. ........... 22%

Daily Number

Page-8.

Kenny Price
dies after
heart attack
FLORENCE, Ky . tUPi i County-wes tern singer Kenn y
Price died Tuesday night in
Booth Memorial Hospital, one
' day after he suffered a heart
attack at his home. He was 56.
Night nursing superv isor ,l;leg
Green confirmed that Price died
at 11:46 p.m. Price. the chubby
Elrod the Sheriff on "Hee Haw ' ·,
had been admitted to the hospital
after suffering a heart attack
Monday and haa been in crltital
condition since.
Price, who was g_iven his fir st
guitar at the age of 5, has
recorded 23 C&amp;W albums.
Born May 27, 1931. on a farm
near Florence, he feit in love with
country music at an early age
and receive(! a guitar from his
famlly when he was 5. By the
time he was in his teens. Kenny
was playing and singing at local
.events.

Ohio Lottery

.

• RECEIVES SAFETY AWARD. - Ronald H. Wanlngton, a
1 • ; safety llll•lstant at Southern Ohio Coal Company's Meigs No. 2
; · mine and a nutlve of Wellston, Is the recipient olthe second annual
• . D.alton E. McNece Safety Award presented by the Southern Ohio.
• District Council of the Holme• Safely Association.

.

'

l

. '·

Raccoon No. 3 mine. rece ived
Out~ ta nding SafNy Achievement
Awards from the association.
McN&lt;'('C. who diN! .two years
a~:o. was an Ins pector with the
f~d era l Min e Safety and Health
Administration and was a major
forc e in the formati on of the
Hoimi'S Southcastl'rn Ohio Dis·
trict Co uncil.
Warr in gton ha s ber n safety
a"istant at Meigs No. 2 for the
past nin&lt;' years. Prior to that he
work&lt;'d underground lor lou r
vcarsv' as a loading machine
operator. motorman and general
in side laborer.
"Throughout Ron's coal min·
ing and safely career, he has
been very ac tive In serving the
co mmunity of Wellston . Ohio, as
a member of the iocal !Ire and
pollee department s and emer·
gcncy sq uad." his nomination for
the award stated.
Warrington served with the
U.S. Army for two and a half
years while stationed in Fulda.
West Germany. He Is now a
member of the American Legion
Post 371. Warrington and his
wife , Bobbl Jo, live in Wellston
with their nine-year·old daugh ·
ter , Amanda.
In late September, Saltsman
was able to hetpsa1-1ea baby'slife
In a lire In downtown Wellston .
He has been with the Me,igs
Division since February 1975 .
Butcher has served as a safety
committeeman lor the United
Mine Workers of America local
at Meigs No. 1 lor 12 years. A
residt'nt ol Pomeroy, Ohio, and
an emergency medical techni·
. clan (EMTJ. Butcher has been
Instrumental in the Initiation of
various safety P.rograms at the
mine.
~
Continued on page 12

U. S. embarks ·on military
buildup in Persian Gulf area
MANAMA , Bahrain (UPII I ran ian land a nd sea forces held
a third day of war maneuvers in
the Persian Gulf today as the
United States embarked on an
unprecedented military buildup
in the region .
In the latest reinforcement of
American naval forces In the
gulf, the United States ordered
the dispatch of Army helicopter
gunships and Navy fast patrol
boats to .the waterway, Pentagon
officials said Wednesday In
Washington.
Some military ex!N'rts have
compared the U.S. buildup to
that which preceded the U.S.
bombing of Libya last year.
The use o'f Army he licopters on
Navy vessels during an opera·
tiona! mission will be a first.
A "handful" of the helicopter '
gunships, e ither light and fast
observation choppers armed
with machine guns ·or Vietnam·
'era Cobras equipped with
rockets, were ordered to the gulf
aboard Air Force transport

•

planes, bringt'ng Army forces
Into the gulf lor the first time,
Pe ntagon sources said.
The gunships will hunt for
Iranian S!N'edboats carrying terrorist death squads on suicide
missions against Navy warships
and thC'ir charges, U.S.·flagged
Kuwaiti tankers, the sources
·
said.
The announcement of the U.S.
buildup came as Iran concluded
its three-day "operation martyrdom" war maneuvers In the
Persian Gulf. Wednesday's m.a·
neuvers lnvol;:ed speedboats,
planes and the first submarine
built by the regime of Ayatollah
Ruhotlah Khomelnl.
Khomelnl has vowed to seek
revenge against the· United
States and Saudi Arabia for
rioting last week In Mecca,. Saudi
Arabia, that left 402 people dead
- 275 of. them Iranians.

plans to re-tlag thr('(' more
Kuwaiti tank ers and escort them
through the s trategic waterway.
Witnesses said two U.S. war·
ships have anchored off the
United Arab Emirates port of
Khawr Fakkhan in the Gulf of
Oman. There was sppculat ion in
diplomatic circles that re· flag·
ging ceremonies might be held at
the port today to coinCide with
the last daY. of the Iranian war
games.

The second stage of thC' war
games was a "magnificent show
of power Involving speedboats
along with simulated bombing
runs of .·.. helicopters as W('il as
tactical !lights of unmanned
planes , which received logistical
support from the southern re-·
glonal fishermen." the o!!iciai·
Irani&amp; I! news agency !RNA said:·
Middle ,East diplomats said it.
was unlikely Iran would attack
· Despite Iran's threats, dlplo· U.S,. warships because Its small
matte sources said the United ·conventional riavai force Is no.
firepower. ·
Statps . was moving ahead with · match for American
.

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Thlnday, August 6, 1987

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

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,............_...,.., r-T-e!!c:::loo=o

ROBERT L. WINGETr
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBERofTh£' Unll&lt;'d Prrss l nl&lt;'rnatJonal, Inland Dailv Pr£'ss
A~soeiatlon and thE' Am£'rican NP1A'Spapf'r Publ1shrr~ As.socia iJ On.

LEITERS OF O:P' INJON

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Wl'lc'Oml' Thf'\ " hould br l&lt;'s" 1han ;(1(1

&gt;~Old "

Th&amp;nday, August 6, 1987

Navy's gumshoes ___B...:..y_J_ac_k_A_n_d_e_rs_on_an_d_ J_o_se_p_h_S_p_ea_r
WASHINGTON - The sudden
collapse of the Naval Investigative
Service's espionage cases against
some of the Marine guards at the
Moscow embassy shocked many
Americans. But It came as no great
surprise to Rep. Jim Bates. D-Cal!f.
The San Diego congressman.
who was a Marine corporal himself
as a young man. has been saying
for years that the Investigative service Is one of the most Incompetent.
undisciplined and abusive organizations In the U. S. mllttary. Bates
thinks the Investigative service
should be eliminated, and he introduced legislation to this effect last
year. The Congressman and his

staff experts argue that:
-Naval Investigative Service
agents abuse their authortty by usIng unetllical Interrogation techniques and extmctlng confessions
by Intimidation, lies and trickery.
-The Navy detectives rarely taPt"-record Interrogations, relying
Instead on their recollections as evidence against the accused. it's also
rare. Bates said. that they write
down statements that would work
in the suspect's favor.
-Finally, Bates charged. NIS
·agents are heavily Influenced by
their uniformed superiors, who sometimes use them to retaliate
against troublesome subordinates

or to derail Investigations that
might Implicate Navy brass hats.
The Moscow Marines lnvestlga·
tlon wasn't the Navy detectives'
first foulup - just the on(' that
made th£&gt; b1ggest headlines. Bates
wants a House Investigation Into
the cse of Tim Reid. a civilian elec·
trical engineer wbo blew the
whistle on a wasteful program four
years ago and became a target of
the NIS flatfoots. Our reporter Da·
nlel Kaufman has elicited Reid's
story from Interviews and Navy
documents.
In July 1983. Reid discovered at
least sm million In unnecessary
casts In the ovPrhaul of Sea Nymph

Lawmakers vow to
'
:o verpower FCC ruling

:Neologists everywhere
By DICK WEST
. WASHINGTON (UPi i -The only female l ever knew to publicaliy
·admit placing an ad in a " personals" column said she advertised
:herself as an expert player of word games
· I don' t know whether it was the novelty of the approach , or what.
but she told me she had good response and eventually narrowed down
the list to a few suitors.
:· One. at last report, was still holding on. presumably in hopes of one
day beating her at Scrabble.
: I can't imagine why else he pres ist s. Frankly. this female is no
)ooker
Neverthel ess. according to Genesis magazin e, ther e is no longer
any need "to shrink at the Idea of plac ing or answering personal ads."
; "Not too long ago," the "girlle" periodical concedes. " personal ads
were mainly back-of-the-book fillers in sex tabloids or semiraclal
publications."
: But now , it says, "dozens of mainst rea m ptblica tlons'.' carry them .
Chances are, It adds. some publlca tlon in your home town prints
i&gt;ersonals.
· Oh. no! Not the ol' home tow n! Well, as the saymg has it, "There
goes the neighborhood!"
; Genesis attributes the acceptance of this kind of advertising to
"censorship guidelines" that help keep the ads "relatively tame."
Even " married men and women are almost always barred," It says.
: A casual reader might think the letter "M " stands for "married."
However. the magazine claims It means "mature" or "middle-age."
There Is no ev idence that It stands for " monkey business."
. If the day everr comes when matrimony Is considered erotic In my
home town, heaven help us all. But "Genesis is blunt about how to
make fudge," a spokesman says.
·: "If you're trim," he advises. "just throw In height and weight slats.
l)lo problem.
.· " But If you're overweight, try 'huggabl e,' 'cuddly,' ·snutgiy' or
'teddy bear.' And If you' ve got a good job. flaunt It: pilot, cattle
breeder, physician.
"If not. try to sneak In some mealy mouthed euphremlsm, such as
:professional' or : flnancia,l,ly secure' - meaning can raise the rent
money when you have to.
; Tills mavin, however, recommends "avoiding trite come-ons SUCh
as ski· jogging partner. Why not be original?"
You mean, !Ike, "good at word games?''
• My mentor also suggests adding "a dash of spice," where
applicable. He assures me '1you can slip In such suggestive labels as
•svelte,' 'sensual' and 'adventurous."'
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class -nuclear submarines at San
Diego. He reported this to his suPt'rtors, but Instead of winning a commendation, he was subjected to
what he calls "a number of repri· ,
sals" by the Navy brass.
Reid was stripped of his securtty
clearance and bounced from job to
job five limes. His travel expenses
wert' quest.ioned by Pentagon lawyers.
Reid got the clear Impression
that the Navy was out to get him.
And through a Freedom of Information Act requl'St, he found support for his suspicions in a memorandum written by a Navy Invest!·
gatlve official. Referring to Defense SecrPiary Caspar Welnber~er and Rep. Bates. the memo
stated: "We don't want them to
perceive that Mr. Reid is a trustworthy Individual."
The alleged reprisals agai nst
Reid also Included two NJS Invest!·
gallons In the' last 10 months. The
first occurred while Reid was vaca·
ttonlng In Europe last Seplember.
As he learned later. Naval Investigative Service agen ts tried todetermtnewhether he had mad•• plans to
visit Syria or thp Soviet Union After questioning Reid' s friends and
family. and chceckl ng the stamps
In his passport. the Navy dropped
that l nvestlg~tlon for lack of PVI·
dC'nee,

"Sorry- it's been ooe of those months."

Then, last December. while Reid
was workln~ In Hawaii, his boss In
Sa n Diego allegedly found a
" murder lhrcat" on his desk consisting of a hostile note. a brokl'rl
Darth Vad!'r cup and an ace of
spac:Ws. Reid. who said he was led to
believe he was beln~ summoned to
discuss the Sea Numph maltl'f,
found himself bPin~ ~=sed of
scndln~ the threat.

SUTTONS BAY. Mich. !NEAl
-There's a strong temptation to
react skeptica lly when Michigan
Gov. James Blanchard boldl y
promises to create a statewidr
E'Co nomy "t hat thrives on·innov a t I o n . c r e a t l•v 1 t y a n d
entrepreneurship"
Indeed . It's lo gical to ass umc•
that Blanchard Is m erely traf·
ficktng In poltt tca l hyperboi£'
when he speaks of "helping to
s ha pe a business envi ronment
that encourages our boldest
minds a nd most crf'afivr
thinkers t o lau n ch n ew
ventures "

But those commitments are
much more th a n empty rhetoric
State govern ment here - and
elsew here in the country - ts
making unprPCI'dented efforts to
fos ter eco nomic grov. th . create
new jobs and provtde indu stry
with a competitiv e edge in the
global marketp lace.
Thts Is a dram a tic dvparture
from the relat ively recent era tn
which mutual susptcion. if not
hosti lit y, marked the uneas y
rE'Iationshlp be tween the public
and private sf'ctors at the state
level

Although go,•ernors have al ways lried to IUrfl maJ or indu s try
away from other sta tes. thry
have OftPn cared littl e about
('nco uragtng indigenou s business
ventures . helping s truggling
fir ms obtain needed financing. or
providing businesses with a
r rai nO'd and Nlucated work force.
Today. however. there Is s ubsta nttve evidence of a new spirit
ol public-private cooperation In
more than hair of the stat &lt;'s.
Some examples :
Ohio' s Thomas Edison program tnamed after the famro
Ohto-born innova tor and ent rt'·
prencur ) Includes a Seed Dl"vel·
opment Fund. a vcn tu re capl~al
fund that provides up to $.10.000
for prl"limlnarv development of
in ventions artd as much as
$2&gt;0.000 to a td In th eir
co mmercia liza tion
In addition . Ohio has estab·
li s hed both " incubators" a nd
"te c hn o logy cen t ers " Thc
former provide finan ctal and
techntral ass istance to f!Pd gllng
firm s, whil&lt;" th&lt;" iattrr promot e
tech ntcal coope rati on between
thP state's univers ities and it s

businesses .
Massachu sett s has es rablls h&lt;'d
al most a dozen different agen
ri rs . programs and quasi ·
g-ovO'rnmPnt corporations de ·
signed ro provldf' aid to almost
f'Very form Of private enterprise.
ran~lnp: from s truggilnR new
hlgh ·tPC hnol ogy firms to enda n·
gerl'd ol d-lin&lt;' mmpa nles.
Som£' ('Xampl es: The Indu s ·
tria l Fin a nce Agcncv offers loan
guarant.-.l's to stimulate bus iness
grow th . the Trchn oiogv IX'vl' IOp·
ment Corp. provides venrurf'
ca pital a nd tPChnica l rxpNtise .
a nd th&lt;' Indust rial S&lt;•rvlcr Pro-

Ohio. Othrr sta res - Including ·
Mi ssouri. Florida. N&lt;'"' JNsey.
Iowa. Alabama. Ar kansa s.
OreAo n a nd North Dakota have ia un ch£'d somewhat less
rlaborat.-. &lt;&gt;fforrs.

gram assists workC'rs who arC'

Among the m ore lmaglnativt'
&lt;"i&lt;'ml'nts Is the sta tP 's P roduct
IX'v&lt;:'lopm£'nl Fund. which will
apportion almo•t $3 milli on
among fiv(' to W new produ cts.
that ar&lt;" made In Mi chigan a nd
could cr a rc new jobs If they ca n
srcure ade&lt;IUUit• !Ina nclng 10 be
successfull y mark et('d.

. ..

"full -service" privat e lnt r lli·
genre agency? Oliver North says
there was. Hi s former boss says
no. FormPr CIA director William
Casey, who could set tle the
ques tion . Is dead .
Don 't get me wrong . l winced
when news broke tha t thE' Rea·
gan administration. against all
public rhetoric. had traded arms
for hos tages. What na usea ting
brass : to lect urE' the world

Bx COI,UNS n

;ARWOOD
UPI Sports Wrltt•r
Ga rv Ca t•tcr took a Ill t lc hill in!'
.td dr(• from Howard ,Jo hnson.
whO wields 1he Met , . mos t
produ ctive bat . a nd bclped power
New Ynr k 10 a sweep of
Phliadl'IJ&gt;h Ia .
homt'r('d

fwlc&lt;'

and

b\' ram and thPt' r v. as A r : tln
cl~ la~ ol -1:, min u te-s In lht) M'C'Ond

Th~ c&lt;" niNpil"cl' of Michigan's

c•ffort Is the Stratrglc Fund.
wh os~ various co mponent s ran~te
from a S...t'ct Capi11al Pro11ram
th a t provi des hlflh·rtsk ve ntur&lt;'
ea pita l to thl' Bus iness and
Indu stri a l IX'vPlopment Corp.
that offPr s fin a ncial aiel to morr
convrntlona l bu slnesst&gt;s .

inn in}:!

"Th t'ai n d Ia' he lp('(! mr ...
l' art rr said . ·• J wc•nr dow ns tairs
to Jtl(' TV projpc· tion room with
HoJo a nd I looked '" &lt;hots from
the s ldi' angl .
" I noticed somc' thlnA und Ho.Jo
,ogrl'f'd with me l "' '"~ t hilling
down on the bull enough.. I
c:oiJ('('ntrotcd a nd rl'ail y hit the
fit·;t hOmer. Thc' n I hit one In thr
ga p roc· rwo bu sc. It' s rhcrr
.t g,tl n a nd I jus t hop(' It stays It
wns j u.., t a llt110 .Httu slmPnl "

Strnwbr·rrv's homer hi~hll~h
tt'!l a fou r·· r''un fh•s1 Inning that
'"" 'h'(l ~"'" York toward its
c · i~ht h victory In nine Aames .
hrlping th&lt;' M&lt;' ts ~e t us cto'£' to
the d ivisio n lcad a; 1hcy have
tx'&lt;'n sine•&lt;' Ma ~ t5
workln~

" Th is is

now . I ' m

Ae ll in~

the' c·huncc to dr iv&lt;' In·
runs. " Stt·awberr. said . .. art e r
b gell ing hi. co nfide nce bar k. As
a tet'l m we' ha v(' tak&lt;'n t; htu gC' in
1

the Eas t ·
St. Louis lost 2·1 in 13inntngs to
the Mont teal F:xpos.
Carter homered in thC' third
Inning. hi I a two-run double in I he
Mcts ' six -run fifth and led o lf the
six th wtth his l:O th home run . Ne"·
York mou nted a 1 ~1 - h i t a11ack
against [i\l' pltchcrs . Including
ourflc idPr Gif'nn Wilso n. who
madt• his major- league pitching
debut by hurling a hit less eighth .
After Strawberry 's ~5 th home
r un. off s ta rtN Kev in Gross. 6,
10. gii\'C th e M(·ts a :l-!1 !Pad.
.lohn son si ngl ed In the ftnal run of
the [irst Inning IO m&lt;tkc II 4· 0.
" I made some bad pit c hes."
(;ross said " I teallv ca n' t
bd lew how bad . If I had bad
, tuff. I wouldhavedonebc tterby
spoili ng the halt. Th~y hit m y
good pitch&lt;·~ - "
E l srwhcr~ .
Ci ncinnati de teatf'd Lo t.ngf.'i&lt;'&gt; 1;.,1. Pitts·
burgh blanked C hica~o lll-0. Sa n
biego topjX'&lt;I Allnnra 7.:1. Mont·
rC'ai nipped · St Louis '1· 1 a nd
Hous ton cd~C'd San Frn nclseo
6·5
•
PlrateM 10. Cuhs 0
Brian J"ishrr
1\ t Pltrsbur&gt;:h,
tht'f.'l&lt;' a six-hillel', an d Mik e
Dia l. Junior Ortiz and Andy Van
Slvkr eac h drove In two runs

Fraser ho.s pitalized
DAYTON . Ohio tUP i r - Uni
vrrslly of Mia mi baseball coac h
Ron F'rascr was admitted to
Mia mi Vall"' Hos plt&lt;tl In Da~· ·
ron. Ohio a t ·7 ;, m . Wedrtl •sda y,
suff erin g !rom pain cau sl'd by u
k!dn0~· stone .

Scoreboard ...

Thus . ther&lt;''s good reason for
Blanchard to boast of "kreplng
Michigan on the cUlling ('(lge of
chang&lt;'- and on thf' front line of
America's futurP ."

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agai nst the very practices ou r
gove rnme nt had been quietly
perfecting.
Nor was it WISP to risk
congress iona l vengea nce by vlo·
latlng the spirit of the Boland
Amendment, how ever pitt ed
with loopholes it tna y have been Yet st upidit y and a covc r-updo
not a co ns titullonal crisis makP.
It Is long past the hour to move
on.

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Ring down frangate' S CUrtain __V_i_nc_en_t_C_ar_ro_ll
The cu rtain has all but des- c...R umor has . it th a t the special
cpnded on Ac t II of the Iran · prosecutor m ay have to oobb!p
contra mt&gt;lodrama , but never together a case lnv o l v in~ "confear : This is going to beoneoflhe splracy to defraud the United
longest -running pla ys s in cP States" or some equally unlikely
" Fiddler on the Roof."
charge, a sure stgn of a man
Act I was thl' Tower Coinmts· who's reac hing.
slon prbbe.
It was stupid to trade arms for
Act II Is the current congres- hos tages, but It was a pparently
slonal hean ngs.
legal. If a dministration officials
Act III will be the indictments ha d Informed Congress. as they
by the special prosecutor and th e werP supposed to , surely even
subsequent trial s
' that exchange would have generIt goes on and on, like som e att&gt;d much less retrospective
motormouth beside us on a long heat.
flight. but little or It carries any
Mea nwhile, we still don 't know
heft.
whether diver sion of. profils to
Why do we s log on so ea rn· tht&gt; contras was Illegal. des pite
estly• An outline of the affair the assumption by congressional
the attempted tradP of arms for commlte£&gt; members a nd most
hos tages. diversion of profit s, journalists.
cover-up. the president's lgnorNo less a critic of Reagan
ance - has been visibiP for policy tha n Gen. Brent Scowmonths. yet press and political croft, a member of the Towe r
Indignation has hardly subsided. Commission, has marveled that
Does this tangled White House the Boland Amendment could
operation really deserve greater contain such a convenient loop·
censure - nine months of non- hole. Why did It only proscribe
stop anguish and heaven knows "funds available to the Central
how many more to come- than Intelligence Agency, the Depart·
our Inept Lebanon policy that ment of Defense or any other
resulted In 241 deaths In 1983, or agency or entity of the United
th£&gt; doctored Gulf of Tonkin States Involved In Intelligence
episodes In 1964 that helped give actlvltes .. ."? Why not simply
a green light to escalation In ban aid to the contras by all
Vietnam, or the Bay of Pigs agencies and thus leave no doubt
fiasco In 1961, or ... well, you get · aboul the Inclusion of the r·
the Idea.
tiona! Security Council?
The time and energy expended
If criminal wrongdoing o
on lrangate alone have been curred, It probably took pia(
enough to convince people of Its when White Houseoperatlvesfe.
unique gravity. Perhaps It's time the hot breath of public s~anda
to retreat a few steps and put the on their necks and began destroy
affair In perspective - and, If lng documents.
only In the mlndsofsomeofus, to
As for most other Issues, we'll
rest.
probably never discover full
We might start by listing laws answers. For example: Was
that were broken . Hmmm.. there a plan to set up a

Mets sweep Phils; close iri
on league-leading Cardinals

Dart'\'! Strnwbern belted a
r hrre run homPr WNlne, d a~·
ni ght to tc.td th&lt;' Met ' to a J:t. :l
rout of 1he Ph ill iPS a ntl dr a w New
Yot·k wit hin ·I' , ga mes ·or th('
rtrst plat(' St. Loui s Cardln:tl s in
rhr 1\la tional l.cagur l·: ast.
The· ga mt- " tts dela yed o nP
hour und 20 m inutes at th(' s lllrt

r

la id off or whose plants rlosr
Other sta tes committed to
helpin g their workers cope with
indu strial cha nge through rr·
training a nd oth&lt;'r techniques
Include Cali forni a. Detawarr.
Iowa . Ohio Mlc·higan . Nvw JPr·
srv. N&lt;·w York an d Vermont.
Pennsylvania 's Ben Franklin
Partnership I a lso named after a
native son who was a fam ous
invrntorl Is a n ambitious. mult ifaceted program si m ilar to th ose
In Michigan. Massachusett s a nd

·~

hy Mike Marshall during We dnesday's game at
Riverfront. It fell for a dou~le. The Reds won, 6-3.

SLIIlJNG CATC II - AUIOST - Cincinnati's
Dave Collins all&lt;'mpts a sliding catch on ball hit

C'artt •r

States get down to business __r;8__Y_R_o_be_rt_W_a_lte_r...

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The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Reds have big sixth, ll)ake
it two in row · over Dodgers

Page- 2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

](In):!. AII 1£'1 tf'ro.; arf' su b]('( I to C'cllt I njl .1nd must b(' s lgnC'd 'A It h ml m f' addrf'so.; and
lf' l rph o n ~ numtx-1 No unsi~m'tl IC'Ilrors \\111 bl' puhll..,hNI L&lt;'tlf'rsl,should lx&gt; m
j:!OO&lt;I t.l!'h'. .tddrt'sslng 1ssu£' ~ n01 pl"rson al111('S.

By SYDNEY SHAW
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Angry lawmakers are attacking the
FCC's landmark decision to repeal the Fairness Doctrine as the
· ~unconscionable" work of "ignoramuses," and they vow to reimpose
the 38-year·old policy througlllegislation.
"The commission erroneously has decided It knows more about the
Constitution than do the courts or the Congress." grumbled Rep.
Edward Markey, D-Mass.. after the Federal Communications
Commission took jts unilateral step this past Tuesday.
"The commission attempted to flout the will of Congress." Markey
said, and lawmakers will not toleratl? it . As chairman of the House
telecommunicallons subcommtttee, he Indicated legislation on the
issue would come up soon.
"(Thel action was unconscionable, but tt will be short· lived. " he
promised.
The FCC voted unammously to scrap the Fairness Doctrine, a
policy that since 1949 has required broadcasters to air all sides of
controversial issues of public importance and to provide reasonable
opportunity for the discussion of conflicting views.
The commisston, under federal court order to revtew a 1984
decision enforcing the doctrine. found the policy ~nconstitutional and
said it would no longer enforce the standards .
Broadcasters and the American Newspaper Publishers Assocla·
lion hailed the action as a victory for the First Amendment right o!
free speech, but the reaction from many liberal groups as well as
lawmakers was swift and angry .
Sen. Ernest Hollings. D·S.C .. c hatrman of the Commerce. Science
and Transporta tion Committee that has jurisdiction over s uch
matters, called the decision "w rong-headed , misgutded anq
illogical. •·
HP stood by the argument that television and radio broadcaste rs
must meet some minimal public interest requirements because they
use a scarce public resource- the electromagnetic spectr um- and
bec;mse broadcasters must be licensed b~ the government despite
few available frequencies.
A fre,e press is open to anyone who can get their hands on printing
materials, and Hollings said the Fairness Doctrine pro'lided "the
only means for many m the public to be hea rd " in dealing with
broadcasters.
His counterpart in the House. Energy and Commerce Committee
Chairman John Dingell, D,Mtch .. called the FCC's act ion "an
offensive and thinly veiled attempt to end· run the Congress."
"This world is full of ignoramuses and people who don't understand
the Constitution. and I guess I'd have to apply that comment to the
FCC." Dlngell sat d.
Six weeks ago, President Reagan vetoed legislation approved by
wide margins in the House and Senate that would ha ve made the
broadcast policy law. The Senate failed to override the veto, but
lawmakers have vowed to attach their legislalion to some
"veto-proof" btl! that Reagan favors In September
The issue is expected to wind up 10 the Supreme Court. which upheld
the doctrine in 1969 but last year opened the door for reconsideration
by declaring the policy was never made law.
FCC Chairman Dennis Patrick said Tuesday's action was " cause,
for celebration" and long overdue because mosl Americans rely on
TV and radio for the bulk of thetr news and Information.
Patrick told a packed hearing room . ringed by protesterswt th signs
sayi ng "Save the Fairness Doctrine." that the decision will
"Introduce the First Amendment into the 20th century." ·
FCC General Counsel Diane Klllory agreed, say ing today's
profusion of U.S. broadcast outlets - 1,300 TV stations and 10.000
radio stations along with cable TV, microwa ve "wireless cable" TV
sys tems and home satellite dishes- makes unnecessary the doctrine
forged when television was in it s infancy.
"No matter how good the lntentwn, there 1s no way for government
.to restricl freedom of speech and the press and foster a robust and
·un!Ptterro exchan~e of ideas," Killory sa id.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~11!\pt•ndt•d

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[

agai nst Chicago.

Padres 7, Brave• :1
At Atlan la. Rich Gossage
ea rn&lt;·d his 286th career save to
rle Rt uce Suttcl' for SC'cond place
on th e ali-time list and Sta n
.Jefferso n sto oked a three- run
homer to spark San Diego.
Expos 2. Cardinals I
At Montreal. And res Ga lar
raga . who had se nt the game into
exf1·a mn ings with a ninth - Inning
s l n ~ l e, hit a rwo-out homcr tn th e
bottom of the l:llh. ·llfttng the
F:xpos ovc t St Louis
Astros 6, Giants 5

At_ Houswn. ptnch hitter Denn~
Wailtn g singled home Gerald
Young from t~ird ba'e with one
out in the 11th inning to carry thf'
As tros to a three- game sweep of
San F ra ncisco.

Scioto Downs

CINCINNATI (UPil - Ron
Collins. After a sacrifice bunt by
Robinson's arm hurts, but oppoBo Dlaz sent Parker to third and
nen ts keep feel!ng the pain.
Collins to second, Nick Esasky
Robinson. whose right pitching
was Intentionally walked to load
e lbow Is so sore that It aches on
the bases with one out. The
every pitch, limited Los Angeles
strategy backfired when Dave
to just five hits over six Innings to Concepc ion bounced a bad -hop
pace the Cincinnati Reds to a 6-3 single off third baseman Jeff
victory over the Dodgers Wed·
Hamilton' s glove to score
nesday nlght.
Parker.
The 6-foot-4 right-hander with
"The )jail hit a hump along the
bright orangt"-red hair turned In
seam (in the Astroturf) ," exa similar gutsy performance in plained Hamilton. "I was in front
his previous outing last Friday- of the ball, but It came up and
permitting San Francisco only bounced off my glove. We were
six hits in six Innings In another going to get at least one out at
Reds' win.
home and probably get out of the
"I'm putting mind over matt er inning with a double play. "
on the mound ," said Robinson.
··1 don ' t know what happened
"There's pain on every pitch on that play," grumbled Los
som etimes sharp - and I sure Angeles manager Tommy La don't throw the ball as hard as l serda. "It was a perfect double
used to. It's a new challenge to play ball. that's a lii know.
me that I ha ve to adjust to."
·:we s hould hav0 been out of
Robinson doesn't know why his that Inning wtth just one run .
elbow suddenl y got sore earher Fernando pitched good e nough to
th is season.
win. They didn't hit him very
" We have no Idea what the hard ."
problem Is." he said. "X-rays
After the bad hop single off
were negat ive. all nerve tests Hamilton' s glove, pinch-hitter
were negative. It 's a mystery . Lloyd McClendon kept the s ixth
I'm going to see another doct or Inning going by delivering a
soon. I'm worried. I'm 2" years sacr ifice fl y to score Collins and
old a nd obviously have a future m ·then Barry Larkin singled In
front of me. But. right now . T just Esas ky
can't go out there and throw the
The Dodgers' Pedro Guerrero
;.vay 1 wanr to becaus~ of my had three hit s. Including his 23rd
arm."
hom er of the year in the eight h to
Robtnson struck out three and make the final score 6-J.
walked one in outpitcl\ing loser
Cin cinnati's Tracy Jones co lFernando Valenzuela. 9-9. who lided with Los Angeles fi rs t
was rocked for eight hit s and stx baseman Mickey Hatche r on an
runs m s1x innings John Franco infield htt in the ftrst inning and
pitched the final inning for his left the ga me after the third
19th save.
inning because of contusions to
"We always seem ro have a big his left thi gh and left lower back
mning agai nst Valenzuela," said
Cincinnati manager Pete Rose
"It's u s u a ll ~ late. around the
ftfth or s ixth . The Dodgers gave
us a few runs, bur Robby pttched
an except ionally good game lor
us .
The Reds. who concluded a
nine-ga m e homes tand with a 6-:1
record , have been in first pla ce in
the National League West conttn·
uously since May 29
"We've got guys star llng to
sme ll the pennant. " said Rose. "I
get the vibes walking up a nd
down the dugout "
Cincin nati snapped a 2·2 tie
with a four -run sixth Inning off
Valenzul'ia Eric Davis led off
with a walk, raced to third on a
si ngle by Dave Parker and
scored on a single by Dave

.-------------......!-------------

GRANULATED

SUGAR
S ll. lAG

$159
limit 1

CO LUMB US. Ohio 1UPI1
The: first nlf!ht of Stare Fair
Harn ess Rac ing at Sc ioto Downs
s aw record times by Break Fast
a nd E:rtka 's lmpuls(' ..
Ohio Sral&lt;" Fair harn ess racing
will be held nightly a t Scioto
Downs through Saturday.
Break F'ast set a tt ack. na tional season a nd sta kes record
CINCINNATI I UP !) - The
as &lt;he won rhe$70,J100hloFair's
fir
st minor league report on
Flllv 2·\'ear -old rrot Wednesday
Ci nci nnar i Reds pitcher Mario
ntgh t. E r ika' s Impulse equalled
Soto was a good one.
rhc s takes record In the coSoto pttched for the Reds '
fearurt'£1 SG6.R96 Pride of Ohio Sarasota. Fla .. team In the rookie
llll v trot for J )•ear olds
Gul f Coast League Wednesda y
i·htr tv-fo uo 2-.v ear -old fill y trot ·
In five. Innings agalnsl the Los
tc t·s werc e ntcred. forcing the Angeles Dodgers' farm team.
s ta kes race to be split Into thr cc
eltmi na tion divis ions . The fi rst Soto allowed just two hit s and one
unearned run. struck out two and
' three' llni s hc rs from cach div - gave
up no walks.
·
isio n returned fort h@final.
Rreak Fast . driven by Pay
Soto threw 54 pitches. mos t of
Paver .Jr In th£' deciding race. them around 85 miles an llou r.
won the final in a record 2. 02. wltll some around 90 miles an
&lt;"ra s in g by 1-5 second the former hour . So to, who several seasons
track mark shared by Nina's ago relied almost exclusively on
Hope and Crisp 'N Clear.
his blazing fastball. Is try in g to
Paver had Break Fast in fourth regain some of his old speed.
and thtrd as th e favored
Soto underwent arm su rgery a
Kri s ten 's Clow n set the lead. year ago, and his arm was s till
goi ng the ha lf In 1: 00 1·5. But weak when he pit ched briefly for
Kri ste n's Clown apparently ti red the Reds earlier this season. The
a nd Break Fast c harged to a Reds are hopln~ Soto progcsses
three quart e r length win over enough In minor league pitching
Busy Lifc wilh Krts ten's Clown this month so that he can rejoin
holding on for third
the major league club before
Sept. 1.

Soto has good
outing Wednesday

.

Name Iad y wmners , . - - - - - - - - - - 1

Winners for the la st two
sessions of play among members
of the Jaymar Ladles Tuesday
Golf League were reported today. Winners on .luly 28, follow Ing 18 holes of play. were Norma
Custer. low gross: E lizabeth
Lohse. low ne t: Norman Custer,
low putts, and Nellie Wrtght and
Norma Cus ter. c hip In hole.
Winners after 18 holes on Aug. 4
were Norma Custer, low gross
and low putts: Clarice Krautter.
low net .

Reds to aclivate
KaJ Daniels today
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Ctnctnnatl Reds will activate left
fielder Kal Daniels today.
,
He has been out for the past
month with a knee Injury. To
make room for Daniels on the ,
roster, third -s tring catcher :
Lloyd McClendon will be sent to
the club's minor league team In
Nashville, Tenn.
Daniels was batting .316wlth 17
home runs and 37 rm\s baited in
when he injured Ills left knee
running the bases July 5 against
the New York Mets..
McClendon batted .204 for the
Reds, wltll one home run and
seven runs batted ln. He had a
sacrifice fly In Cincinnati's 6-3
win over Los Angeles Wednesday
night.

The Daily Sentinel
CUSPS 1~11-900 1
A. Dh ls ion of MuUhnf'dla. Inc·.

20°/o

PuhJ1shrd ('\ r1 \ .tltf' i noon Mond,l\'
th••ough F't'ICI .w . 111 lour• SL. P n ·
m• ·1·m· Ohio bv Lhf• Ohl'' V.lil£'\ Pul)
lishlng Cnmp.an v Multlmrdld
In ~,
Pnrrwrm Ohio 4~7ti&lt;i . Ph !19~ 21~ ~£'
' C'nntl da s~ posl .tl!r' paid at PomPIOV .
Ohio .

OFF

Mt' mht-1' l 1 nlt('(l P t~''~~ lnt f'r n . nLonc~l
fnl:Jnd O :dh• Pr ro.;s A ssot• l111tnn .m d lh l'
Oh~o Nro\1. sp.tpr'T /\ssflt•!at Inn NJ I IOn J I
A.d\ &lt;'1!Ising- Rrp1 psr ntul" c , R1 anh.tm
N('"' ~paprr S;.tlf'&gt;: , 7:\.1 Thin! A\('nUl',
Nf'W YOlk Nr'A Y&lt;ll'k Tf)OJ 7

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P.ge-4-The Daily Sentinel

·Thursday. August 6, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

• 1987 PGA
Play _u nderway ID

By The Bend

~ALM

He last won the PGA in 1980 at
BEACH GARDENS, ball up better and hit the ball
Oak
Hill, and finished tied for
Fla. (UPO -The change will be better since then."
16th. last year at Inver ness in
barely noticeable, a shift of a few
Nicklaus has made a good
Toledo, Ohio. Nicklaus, who wlli
inches at the most.
habit of finishing high in the
play the first two days wilh
But when Jack Nic.kiaus stands PGA, where he also has four
Arnold Palmer and Tom Watson,
over a putt in this week 's PGA serond-place finishes and three
believes his game Is on the
Champions hip, the five-time third-place s howings. He has
upswing, but said he has been
PGA winner again w!U be using missed the cut only twice In 25
betrayed by that feeling before.
thE'. pu1tlng style he used to years
·
"I felt like when I went to the
capture his sixth MastE&gt;rs' title In
A resident of nearby North
British Open I was playing wei!
1986. Nicklaus · said Wellnesday Palm Beach. Nicklaus won the
and nothing happened," he said.
he noticed during a recent round PGA the only other time it was
" I've made some changes In my
at the Loxahatchee Club, a ht&gt;ld Jn South Florida, In 1971 at
putting
style and It works. but It .
course in nearby Jupiter he built · the JDM Country Club down the
and owns, that he was standing road from the site of this week's . doesn't mean a heck of a lot.
too far over the bail while tournament.
·putting.
r;;;;;;;:;:=======;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
He moved his head back a few It
inches and felt morE' comfortable
on the greens, sinking a few 'putts
to reinforce the change. Nicklaus. looking tired and appearing
aggrava ted by somE&gt; questions
from reporters during his news
conference, said Wednesday he
last worked on sta nding farther
away from the ball before th e
1986 Masters .
"It's a thing I shouidn :t have ·
been doing," said Nicklaus. 47.
IN LIVING COLOR
holder of 20 major tltle.s, Including five PGAs. "You get in bad
habits and pretty soon they feel
like good habits. I have linect the

Beat of the Bend

Twins lose second straight;
New York ends slump, 5-2

If- you want to
competition of
t h e MeIgs
County Fair, -and why not be a
part - now Is
the time to be
getti ng It ail
together.
Closing time lor ali open class
&lt;'nirles will be at 4 p.m. on
Friday, Aug. 14 - with the
exception of the horse pull. Mrs.
Muriel Bradford. fair board
secretary, and some or hl'f'Staff
will be.at the secretary 's office on
the Rock Springs Fairgrounds
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on both

By MIKE TULLY
UPI National Baseball Writer
When Joe Niekro dropped his
emery board, the Minnesota
Twins may have lost some grit.
In fhe two gamcs s ince urn·
pin•s detected the rontraband in
Niekro's pocket, the Twins ha\'e
lost two straight gam es. includ·
ing Wednesda y's 6-1 loss to the
California Angels.
Furthermore, despite shar ing
first place inthe AL West with the
Oakland Athletics. Minnesota
must now contend with the 10-day
league suspension !&lt;'vied on
Niekro for scuffing baseba lls. An
AL spokeswoman sa id the Twins
intend to appeal the decision at a
hearing to bE' scheduled later.
thus delaying the start of NiE'k·
ro's suspension.
Without him , the Twins offer a
starting ,rotation of Bert BJy.
levE&gt;n. Frank Viola, LE&gt;s Straker,
and Steve Car l1 on.
B!yleven. 10-9. surrendered hi s
.Urd gopher ball of thP season. a
thrre-run s hot 'to Bill Buckner.
"It was a fastball that s tayed
on the line." Blyleven said. " I
was hoping it would slice foul. It
was not a bad pitch. He just hit it
in the right place, right in the
cornE&gt;r."
John Candelaria. 6-3. pitched
for California, facing the minimum 18 batters in the first six
innings. He last pitched June 16.
Thrre days later , hE' was placed
on the disa bled list. The left - .
handE'r has bee n arrested twice
this sE&gt;ason for drunken driving.
When asked if he was glad his
personal proble ms are over,
Candelaria said: "As far as I'm
concerned they ' ll never be
over. ''

Buckner. howevf"r, sounds like
a firm believer in thE' new
beginning.
"Ever\'thing has gon E' perfPct
so far, " ·sa id Buckn(,'r. " I'm in a

bubble. it 's fun coming to thc
ballpark. i can't even sleep. I
want to get ou t here early every
day."
.
As for the Twins. they ha,·e
survived their longest road trip
holding on to first place. However. they may have to let go of
Nlekro for 10 days .
"I didn ' t th ink i had anyt hin g
to hide." he sa id . "I g ue ss i was

FREE

SfEVE MAirfiN DARYL HANNAH '

¥~

,\ 's 3. Mariners I
At Oakland. Calif .. Jose Rijo.
promoted from the minors car·
li er in the day, combined with

DATE: Sat., Aug. 8

NE

-·

PHOTOGRAPHER'S HOURS
10:00 A.M. 'TIL 4:30 P.M.

Cenr Nelso n on a rivC'· hitter -

against Seatt le.
Tigers 4. Royals 2
At Detroit. Pat Shct'idan and
Alan Trammcll ·hit .solo homers
a nd Lou Whitaker addrd a tworun shot. helping .the Tigers s nap
a th ree-'g ame losing streak.

wrong

in . ot h.e r games . Oakland
downed Seallle 3-1. Detroit
tripped Kansas City 4-2. New
. York defeated ·Clevela nd 5-2.
Toronto s haded Chicago 3·2,
Milwaukee beat Baltimore 5-l
and Texas overtook Boston 9-8.

~·A !

PLACE: Elberfelds

BARGAIN NIGHT EACH WED.

PHOTO'S 8\' HONE\:' PORTRAITS

Pli t J -......

'

Yankees 5. Indians 2
At Cleveland, rookie righ thander Brad Arnsberg pitc hed

POMEROY, ..OHIO

-~.

si x scorele~s ·innings for his first

major -leagu e victory.
New York .

leading

INGELS

SUPER
SAVING
RUSSELL

N
l

STOV~R

y

(
28

WHILE
THEVLAST

Furniture &amp; Jewelry
MIDDlEPORT

CANDY BARS .
0

END-OF-UNE (LOSEOUT

REG.
40'

:.·~~~··
CEPACOL TYLENOL
$389
2

MINT ·
MOUTHWASH
GARGLE

*********************
Once-a-year savings ·on all Color TV &amp; VCRs!

SUNGLASSES

4 oz.
Trial Size

Complete Stock

All Maior Household Appliances ...... TWO DAYS ONLY!!

1/2 PRICE

33&lt;
Reg. 59'

SOME SCRATCHES,

~OME

Sun~t~~o;

. . . , . CM'I'WOi

PH . 992· 295Si
Pomt~oy ,

POIITA8U

COLOR COIISOLR

Friendly Sen1lce
Oh.'

It 3 Head - On Scr,n n Program· ~
ltming, 14 Day 4- Event. Spe- Jt

L.. ._$___;4;;.. .;;;9__;:;8;._ . •19 6

till 9

-

Mllglc~-

•••••••••••••••••

rt ;JJ;i;J!

CASH &amp; CARRY

I

J

:J

".:J

D.eli\o'ery Extra

Com pod
Chest
FrHztr
ONLT

S19900

FISHER

EVERY OTHER GAME
FREE
FREE Popcorn
FREE Pretzels

POMEROY
BOWLING

,

~~
'
. . ' .........

·~ ~

-··

Gas or
£1ectrit

Range

-

CAlLE READY

2
DAYS

I

Air Cenditionors

.. , CLOSE
~ _::_j I OUT

,. .

INSrANr CIUDir

·;;;

.. EVENT 1 14 D .U

. .. -. - ~
.

'279°0
&amp; !AllY

,,...

. 5266

FISHER.

Visitor returns home

SO WAn RACK
Duot

ONlY
Fll.

AM/1M

AUDIO

Ca1Htfe

I

ONly

SYS1UIS

$444

SAl.

l Only

'

ON TfiE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

LANES

SIX Ylill PICIUI£ lUI( WAIHAifrl
Fl£1 ·STAND W1Tlt 27" POIIAIII Ull

East 2nd St.
Pomeroy
-3432

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY INC.
Middle'p ort

•

I

Only

•349- ..

~!¥0Jt

Gibson

30 in.

The first birthday of Mikel
Philph Milhoan, Jr. was ob·
served recently with a family
party at the home of his pa rent s,
Mikel and Bonnie Milhoan, Route
.1. Long Bottom.
A Cuddle Bear the me cake was
served with other refreshments.
Attending In addition to his
parents were his sister, April, his
grandparents, Mrs. Billy Dailey ,
Mrs. Blaine Mll~oan, Mrs . Ricky
Murphy and Daniel. Mrs . Wli·
liam Milhoan, Amanda and Susie, Mrs. Terry Congo, Tara and
Trlcla. Sending gifts were
Treasa and Brandl Dailey and
Dee Dalley.

V'CR ONLY

On Sc&lt;H" '"'•11''.....,'"11

•&lt;

We have a large
selection of
Stoneswear
School Clothes.
A Good Selection
.of Wrangler and
Lee Jeans.

Milhoan birth

1-800-426-5581

-

-

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/
FroS1-Free ( Only
Refrigerator S499.

LAYAWAY NOW!!

There's a new exercise piacr

:cia! Effects, Remote / Cable •
,.Ready.
•

W. VA. CUSTOMERS CALl TOLl FREE -

Hot or Not
School Opens Aug. 25th

•Floats
•Cash
•A Watch
•Soft Drinks
&amp; Hot Dogs
•FREE Games

John has c hanged living quar·
ters In Florida and his new
address Is .John W. Gllmore, .4136
Heron Way 118 B. Bayshore on
thE' Lake. Bradenton. F'i. 34205,ln
case you'd like to get In touc h. .

.................
,.
RCA VCR
.t

COLOR

etta""' " K DtMU&amp;. eca•

10 00 A.M to 4 :00P .M.

,.

198 7 SCHEDULE fLEA MARKET
MEIGS COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
POMEROY, OHIO

AUG 6 7 8 9
• • • • OCT. 1-2-3-4- -

VISA • MASTERCARD
CREDit TERMS

,,

\

Sp
E T. 3-4·5-6
NOV. 5-6-7-8

Dealers Wanted _
' ·
Come lfll _
Rea~onable

Buyers Waoted

C•lfll •fl

992-2635
,

Mrs.· Bettie Marls, the former
Bettie Lighter, has returned to :
her home in Los Altaos, Calif.
following a visit here With her
sisters, Zei!a Riley and family,
Middleport, and Mary Wingett,
Syracuse. Mrs. Maris came
especially for her nephew, Bob
Ashley's wedding to Dena Hall. It
was the first time the thrre
sisters have been together In ten
years.
.
Also here for the Ashley-Hall
wedding were Paula Ashley
Yonker and children of Joshua, :.
Texas. Mrs. Yonker was an '
attendant in the wedding. ·The /
family visited her porents,
Sharon and Bob Ashley, and
granc!parents, Zeila and Tom
Riley.

If you think the heat's got you.
you 're probably right - and
small wonder. Hope you have
enough energy left to muster up a
little smile- a g;:_ln, maybe?'

SKYLINE LANES HAS OPENINGS
for 9 P.M. leagues on Monday,
Tuesday &amp; Thursday nights.
Interested teams or persons should
call 446-3362 for information.
Both Men and Women Bowlers
Are Welcome.

SKYLINE LANES

.

Upper Route 7
, Gallipolis, Ohio

v

Set-up Rates - Indoor-Outdoor Space

FOR INFOIMAnON CAll:

A

(3041 422·4169 or (6141 742-2882

- .

-W

r~ln~s~ur~a~n~ce:._~In~v~o~lv~ed~_:a~n~d~w~a~-sJ..:===~=~~=::::::~:::::::~========~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

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auiomatic dish positioning and .
stereo decoding. User installable .
included

.

AM/FM Stereo
Headset

(IX:is tenc£".

AUTO.OCM.OII COIITIIO•
OVUIT'I Gfn'.TA&amp;. n - . ,

Oops!
Carolyn Tripp of Tuppers
Plains has played an active role
in a farewell dinner to be held
honoring Eastern Local District
Sup!·. Richard Roberts, who is
leaving the ~istrlct.
The invitations which weni into
the rnail read that the dinner- to
be held at Sebastian's In Parkers-will be held Friday, Aug.

~;cu:s:e:.:S):·r:a:c:us:e::pu:t:a::b:an=o=n~·======t=he=di:n:n:er::w:il!:b:e:h:e:id~

Many of you will remember
John \~llmorc. former resident ,
who for a numbN of years wa s
Pditor of The Dally Tribune, a
• Meigs County paper long out of

Pharmacy
Kenneth McCullough . A.Ph
Charlet Aiff!e. A.Ph ,
Ron1ld Ha r~ing, R Pt\.
Mon thru Sat 8 :00AM To 9 P.M

about Aug. 21.
'
I don ' t know if you ha ve a
vicious dog or not. but I think It
has escaped us a bit that the Ohio
Legislature did pass a Jaw,
signed by Gov . Dick Celeste. in
July that requires owners of pit
bull dogs to carry $50,000 in
liabi lit y Insurance.
The law says that ownership of
a ,pit bull Is "prima facie"
ev idence-that 11 Is vicious.
1 checked with an jns~rancl'
agency to seelfthet·e had been a
run to purchase the liability

Informed that in many cases, the
homeowners policy that the dog
owner may already have· would
meet the requirement so there
hasn't been a rush to purchase a
special policy.
I'm told that other key provlslons of the new law are:
The dogs must be kept in a
locked pen wlt!J a roof, a locked
building or a yard with a fence ·
and locked gate.
The dogs must be muzzled
while on the street and be on a
chain no longer than six feet.
They must be walked by a person
competent to control them.
VIcious dogs havl' been di scussed by local officials, particulariy in Middleport and Syra-

on August 8 - but that will be
Saturday night, not Friday. So
teachers and coworkers of Mr.
bulls and Middleport olflclais · Roberts should note that the
agreed to wait until they received invitation is not correct - the
copies ot the State law before dinner is Saturday -night. Got it? ·
taking action.
Apparently the new slate law
will go a long way in taking care
of any problems-- a..s long as it is
enforced ;

Descrambler ready. Oescrambler not

DENTED, SOME CASH &amp; CAllY, SOME ONE Of A kiND

13"

WISHER LOHSE

coming ta town this month.
The new business will be
operated by Mrs. Nelia Seyler at
the. corner or Butternut Avenue
and Seconc! Sts.,ln what is known
by many .lnthecommunityasthe
Weed building.
This will be one of those places
where the machines do the work
- wei!, 99 percent of It and you
are exerc ised and .kept in shape
through the beds which are run
by electricity. You, as a patron,
just change positions now and
again . Nell expects her beds to
arrive about the middle of the
month and it wl!l take a week or
get them into operation as well as
complete the required training.
The grand ·Opening should be

You ran' t play In the River
City Boys· Band - thai band Is
only fiction.
However. you can Join a
co mmunity band being organl1.ed In Racine. All Southern
Alumni or anyone in the Sout hern
a rea who would like to gel
together to play In the band are
Invited. The first ~et together
was held las t night - but there
will be .more sess ions. For more
Information call 992-2307.

EXTRA STRENGTH

PRESCRIPTIONS

~ails

Thursday
and Friday,
Aug . i3.
and 14, io accept
your entries,
As an exhibitor you must
determine In what class or
classes you will make your
e ntries and you are to flli out
your own entry blanks during the
time s lots on the two designated
days.
.E ntries are welcome !rom
Meigs and adjoining counties
except in the Junior Fair where
e ntries art&gt; l.lmlted to Meigs
County club ml!mbers and the
flowershowswhlcharellmltedto
Meigs Count y r&lt;'Sidents.
By ng
theInway,
co ntr
ibutions keep
comi
and
that'sgoodon
the fair board's Americana proJect - that's the placement of the
old log cabin and smoke house on
the fairgrounds .
Latest contribut ors to thl' fund
drive with moneys to be used for
the roofi ng and chinking of thr
&lt;·abl n are Roger. Phyllis and
Debbie Spencer, M.lddlt&gt;port Tro·
phil'S. Victor · and. Allee Wolf&lt;'.
Robert and Edna Wooo. Kenn
Amsbary Chapter of the lzaak
Wa'lton Lcajtue of America,
Evelyn Luc ke, Robert and .Joan
Tewksbury, Marie Foster, Joseph Foster, Thorne and Ann
Conrlll. Gene and Mary K. Yost,
John and Debl Foster, Carver
and Sally Williams, Addalou and
Robert Le wis and Leonard and
Marjorie Leonard.
If you want .to help, just mall
your con!ribUtlon to tile fair
board at P.O. Box 227. Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

"'0 AGE UMIT
UMn 1 PEl FAMILY
ONE SPECIAL PEl fAMilY
SINGLE 01 GIOUPS TAIIEN

FRI. THRU THUR .

ThuJSday; August 6. 1987

All open fair class entries close Friday

By BOB HOEFLICH

8 X 10

Chad Freeman, Jack Day; second row, David
Banks, Keith Landers, Jason Roush, Shawn King,
,J, R. Blackwell, ,J. T. Humphreys, Matthe w
Dailey: back, coaches Marvin Friend, Doug
Phalin and Bennie Wright.

The Daily Sentinel
Page- 5

PHOTO SPECIAL

SENTINEL SQUAD - These are members of
The Dally Sentiilel sponsored Pomeroy Youth
LeaKUe team for the 1987 season. Included are,
front, I to r, Travis Friend, David Tatlerson,
Jessica Wright, Josh Phalin, ,Jessica McElroy.

~ ... . l. ..

STEREO-MATE"'
By Realistic

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�•

6- The Daily Serltinet

Pomeroy- Middleport, Qhio

Thlnday, August 6, 1987

Pomerov- Middleoort, Ohto

·:Thursday, August 6, 1987

*3,000,000 'tear End Sale
TURNPIKE ()F GALLI PO US SAYS
"YES" TO SAVING YOU MONEY

WE HAVE WHAT YOU WANT AND WE WANT YOU
TO SHOP US. WE MUST &lt;MOVE OUR 1987
INVENTMY TO MAKE ROOM FOR THE 1988
MODELS. SB.ECTION HAS NEVER BEEN BffiER
AND PRICES ARE LOWER THAN EVER BEFORE! .
OONT MISS THIS CHANCE TO GET YOUR
ABSOLUTE BEST DEAL. NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY .
A NEW FORD. LINCOLN , MERCURY, VOLKSWA·
GEN. AMC, JEEP OR RENAULT FROM 'iHE OHIO
VALLEY AUTO WAREHOUSr!

YEAR END SAVINGS

WHY PAY
.
'

Up To

ssoo.

1987
ESCORT
2 door,
4
owrche,
lulchbac~

speed,

doth/vinyl bucket suts.

•

.•

Rebates
CONVERSION VANS

1

"1 1" In Stock
. No. 7806

·s.so/o

F-150 4X2

APR

Ollflters

Reg. from 3.50
Llmlt2
1.00off

Rlg.3.49

·Umlt2

.uP To

Monroe Malic Shocks
Reg. 12.1!1

Reg. 17.115

'

1987 SABLE G.S.

1987 COUGAR

No. 7763

$13,456.
$1.;: S.t 7
~r. frniil eost $1 956
•

$13,632.
$1S6.;;n
·
. ~r f'rnltost $1 132.

528,702. S23, 100.

Anco

Wiper
_, Blades,

300 NEW FORD, UNCOLN, MERCURY, VOLKSWAGEN, AMC, JEEP &amp; RENAULTS
TO CHOOSE FROM... ALL AT"YEAR END SAVINGS'' PRICES!!!

1986 FORD .
CROWN VICTORIA

1?!~1 4g~p~~Q.~I~i ai9power
Jt

1983 FORD ESCORT
Stod&lt; # 777 II. 2 roors !!!dan. 4 cyl.. arr rond .

auto trans.. PS. PB. oower wmOO.s
seat. power door locks. MI/FM radro.
tOes. whne walls.
SAL£ PRICE

aut• !lans.. PS. Pa AM rad~. radial tires. v.!lrte
walh, budet .,.ts.
SALE PRICE

Stock" ll 25 t, 4 doO&lt;&gt; !1!!101, V·8. air rond ..
vinvl roof. au1o. trans. . PS. PB l))wer w1nOOw s.
power seat paoer doO&lt; locks, Itt .toeet.cruise
rontra. AMifM radin ~dia l tires. o!lne wall&gt;
""' w~OO. defo ~
SALE PRIC£

$3627.

~di•

$6521.

1
FORD
F- 150 PICKUP

1985 DODGE
ARIES-K

Stock· # 78271. 6 cvL. air cond.. auto
trans.. PS. PB. AMIFM radio. •; lon
pickup. lon ~ wide bed, rear step romper,
au.iliary fuel tank gaJ!f!S

Stock# 77901. 4doors. ~dan, 4 cyl., air
co nd . auto. trans.. PS. PB. cru~e control,
AM/ FM radio, radial nres. wMe wal~.
bucket ~ats

SAlE PRIC£

SALE PRICE

$8254.

$5493.

1986 OLDSMOBILE

1986 UNCOLN
TOWN CAR
S1ock " I 1340. 4 dOO&lt;s ·!1!!101. V-8, air rond ,

1985 FORD
BRONCO II

1985 FORD
ESCORT

Stock # 75111 , 2 dooo, station waRon. 4
wheel drive. 6 cvl.. air co nd .. aulo. Iran ~ .
PS. ~-B, AM/ FM radio, stereo tape radial
· tires. whrte wal~. bucke! ~ats

Stock # 76221. 4 doors. sedan. front
wheel dnve. 4 cvL. air cond .. auto. trans.
PS, PB. AM radio. radial tires. rocket
seats.
SALE PRICE'

SALE PRICE

SAl£ PRICE

.

$16,365. '

$8650.
i

OLDSMOBILE
CIERA S

AEROSTAR XLT

Stod&lt; H t 1390. van station wagon. 6 cyl., ar
cond . o.rto trans .. PS, PB. power wi100.l
power ·seat paoer door bcks. tilt whee!. cruise
ronlni. MI/ FM radin ~eroo tape ~di~ twes.
lxxM ftts. ""'r winOO. defo~

PURCH~E

\~N&amp;g~~a

· Stock # 11220. 2 doors, ~dan. 4 cyl., air
cond.. auto. Iran&amp;, PS, PB, ti~ wheel.
cruise control, AM/FM roclio, rndi~ tires.

$9668.

$13,270.

.mv.md.

SA1EPRICE

I

1985 BUICK
· REGAL

•

1982 CHEV CAVALIER

whne walls. bucket seats. ~ar window dell~

Stock# 73404,2 doors, hard top. 6 cyl..
air cond., vinyl roof, auto. trans, PS. PB.
tift wheel, crui;e control, AM/FM radio.
radial tires. wMe wal~.

SALE PRICE

SALE PRICE

S1ock " 7749 1. 4 OOO&lt;~ !!!dan, front wheel
drove. 4 cyl.. auto Iran&gt;. PS, PS r.1di~ tires,

auto. trans., PS. Pa ~'~"" winOO.l paoer
seat. pe&gt;'l er 000&lt;' kx:i&lt;S. til wheel, cruise
contr~. MI/FM radK&gt;, sleroo tape odii!llires.
whne walls. sunroof.

SALE PRICE

SALE PRICE

0

Choice

SALE PRICE

$9282.

1986 COUGARS
AN,. .a~~
· ' S5
Your . $

SPECI AL FACTORY

$4650.

$1795.

$7594. ·

-·

-·-··

~

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1895

3495

4295

69~~
488

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10.15- Your 1111111 coat of1er 3.00 mfr'o noblrle . . ... .

99
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Rig. Ull, #500

Reg. 5.49

aaa

3288

Power Flow
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your car. For moal

Car Mate
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with Voltmeter

domeotle a Imports.

Reg. 42.15, #CT61

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6495

From

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Car Mate
Gas Pedals or
Brake Pedals

With step-by·atep
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-·-

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Instructions.

Reg. irom 84.95

$4616.
•

Stockt4fM~Q;l:;2l V8.

rond.. o.rto. tr'"s.. PS. Pa power wmlow&amp;
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contra. MI/FM radro. sleroo tape ~adi al
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·Hops.

Traction
Bars
Reg. 32.95

2488

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Perfection Automotive
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lrom18.15

SAL£ PRICE

. $8954.

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1288
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1988
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JointS

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1'10111

6495 · TRW Mlln llllrlnaa
288 ~:=~.

TRWA.Hters ReQ.3.1111 ..• ••••. .. ... . ..••. •.. ...

PrlcealnettectAug.&amp;throughAug;12, 1987.

-- _______ .;..__ .

F!(llll

Bleciii·Whlte

P."'·

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

From

20 oz. WNIIiaall tl,.

. Store hours: ar3o a.ni. to 8:00 p.m. Mollclay
thro.... Friday, 1:30 a.M. to 6100 p.m. Saturday
and 1t:oo a.111. to 5:00
Sunday.
.

-··

From ·

.

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
--

Reg, from 74.95

From

Reg. 1.41,#W

$6995.

vinyl rrol, auto. !laOS.. PS, pa paoer winOO.s.
power seat ·pe&gt;'ler 00or bcks, ti~ .toeet. cruise
rontnJ. MI /FM radio. sleroo tape odial t•es.
white wals. ~ winOO. defog low mrles.

Cabriolet

lieg. lrom 47.15

CleanrHe Giant
Sponge

Reg. 4.211palr

$12,974.

Stock # 70431. 2 doors. sedan. lront
wheel drive. 4 cyl., air cond., aulo. trans.
PS. PB. tilt wheel, cruise control, AM/ FM
radio.

Monte carlo Landau

Reg. from 3!1.95

Rilg. from 23.15.

Wtltley's

Degreuw,apoli-.
COilOenti'IIICf Cll I Ml'
torllofMendiUio.
Reg. 1.211, #CIM

Wiper Blade
Relills, pair.

TURNPIKE USED CARS AND TRUCKS!!!

CALAIS

1

Dorado

Supe~star

29

Westley's
Clear Magic

Reg . 4.211e..:h

OVER

845
1245
1745

Tfc

49

No. 7430

WAS

Rebate:.

·· Reblle;

SALE PRICE •

,

$1000.
Monroe Malic Plus Shocks

Slock # 62401. 4 doors. station wagon.
lront wheel dr~e. 4 cyl .. PS. PB. AM/FM
radio, radial tires. bu eke! seats. rear
window deloR
..

Do-lt
Yourself
Tip

or under ec:celet 111&lt;on/
dlcllll'ltlon lndicltel
I flulty uniwrsll joint.

CASH BACK
On Seled
JEEP COMMANCHE

1987 FORD .
ESCORT S.W.

1.24, limit 16

Rig. 99e,llmlt 16

A clunking noise when

NOW

WAS

Champion
Resistor
Spark Plugs

Champion
Non-Resistor
Spark Plugs

Pl!ltlng 11141 car In gear

speed.

m,t bendt HI!

R41g.,1.19
Umlt12

Fram
Oil Filters

72 Monlli Twms

RANGER
4X4
6cyl.. 5
cassette, BSWA.T. tires.
IJAS ,

Rea.1.09
Llmlt12

C

Fram
Mumycle

·

Now$12,553.

$15,142.

10W30
Motor Oil

The Standard of Performance.
10W40or
20W30
Motor Oils

•

auto.. 302, XLT, air, ti~. cruin

WAS

.

5.00 OFF

1695
. . ... . .1995

Transmission
Coolers
Reg.lrom 22.115

~~eg.1rom 21.15 ....... .

From

695
495
From

From

3.000FF

TRW Timing Chllns ReQ. Irom 9.95 . .. .. .

Frain

3.000FF

TRW

'

209 Upper Rwer Rd~

Gallipolis, Ohi.et

lroill7.16 " "

�...

-. .

..
Thursday, August

Page-8-The

Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thtnday, August

Jo Hunt . .
Furniture and woodwor k recyWonderful World of Wood:
Ca nine pet care: Rya n Holter , cling: Matt Clark, Joy Swain .
Jason Miller, Tim Lawson, Ryan
JoEilen Crane, - and Janelle ·
Designing Interiors; Susan · Buckley .
.
Neutzllng.
Wolf. .
Bulldlng bigger things : Joy
Pilot puppy: Heather Pauley .
Your first home away from
Swain, and Rebecca Wiles.
Dog obedience and showman- home: ,Betty Jo Hunt .
Learnin~ about computers:
s hip, Kev in Grad y, Todd
Model rocket : Aaron Sheets ,
Steve GradY, and Andy Wolf. ·
Harrison.
Michael Smith with honorable
Learning about progr amming:
Guinea pig: Heather Bu rc h, mentions to Chris Ebersbach, - Sherr! Smith. Ursula Hart.
Mathew Michael. Michael Smith.
The normal animal: Eli se
Cats: Kellle Rldenoljr, Jps slca
Motorcycles : Cary Curtis,
Meier , Jared Spencer, and Lisa
Karr. and Melissa Neutzltng.
Keith Hunt, with honorable menHoffman.
Hamsters: Penny Aeiker , tions to Alban C4rtis and Riehle
Adventures with yourcame~a:
Christine Schultz, and Roxanne Hunt.
Sherr! Smith, Kellle Ervin, an&lt;;!
Williams.
·Exploring the world of elect ric- Caralyn Barton .
Pocket pels : Amber Well , tty: Ryan Holter, Chad Wise.
Exploring Photography: EliKellle Ann Rl!lenour, and Jan el
Ele ctricity's silent partner,
za be th Bryant , and Melody
Spencer.
magnetism: Chad Wise.
·
Weaver.
Working · with electricity :
Veterina ry science: Greta
· Mas tering photograph y: Willie
David Rice.
Riffle.
Hill.
Introduction to the world of
First aid ; Donia Cran e,
Creative ar.ts: Chad Cook,
electronics:
reserve only. Ja mey
Kristen He ines .
J oyce Pickens, Bridget Varney.
Holter.
Mysteries of microwave:
Let's Explore the Outdoors 1:
Your bike a nd you : Bridget
Brent Rose. Aaron Card, and
Ja son Miller, Chritlne Schultz ,
Varney, · Joyce Picke ns ,. with
Bridget Davis.
with honorable m entions to
Me, you and others : Amber honorable mentions to Jason
Christine Lambert, Mike Laugh·
Ervin. Jenny Varney, Aaron e rty and Adria Frecker .
Well.
Genealogy: Debra Frost, Ml· Card, and Kellle Ervin.
Let 's Explore the Outdoors 2:
Enlargln~ your cycling world :
chael Parker with honorable
.Joe Parker , Ryan Holte r, and
mention to Jared Spencer. Mi· Michael Parker, Charles Parker. Michael Parker .
Rope:· Jeff Rose, Kev in Crady,
randa Nicholson, and Ma ndl
A cleaner environment : Donia
and Jason Pullins._
Sheets.
Cra ne.
Assuring safe, efficie nt operaLet's learn to manage money:
Exploring Oh lo ponds : Kev in
tion : honorabl e mention only,
reserve only, Jeremy Imboden .
Geady. Jerem y· Buckley. Ml·
Helping at home: Michae l Ri chie Hunt.
chael Frost.
Working with wood and ·tools :
Smith, MichellE&gt; Donovan.
Muskrat trapping : Aaron
Designing outdoor living spa· Alexa Brown, Brian Ross, and
Knapp,
John Card.
ces : Andy Wolf.
Fishing for the · beginner :

CHESHIRE - Gallia -Me igs
Commur.tty Action Agency will
hold free clothing day for lowIncome persons on Thursday. 9
a.m. lo 12 noon, at the old .hlg h
school building in Cheshire.
ROCKSPRINGS - Salisbur&gt;·
Township Tru stees will meet
· Thursda y. 7 p.m. , a t the towns hip
hall on Roc ksprings Road .

SATURDAY
POMEROY - Physicals for
cross country athletes will be
given Saturday. I ; 30 p.m., at
Meigs High School.

,3 Announcements
JO PUn All AI UU .. J.JU•

SUNDAY
WILKESVILLE -The Gret'n·
Ogdln·Caster famil y re union will
be he ld Sunday a t Columbia
Chapel Christian Church be·
·tween Wilkesvill e and Albany on

REEDSVILLE - Eden United
Brethren Church , Route 124, tw o
mil es north of RPedsv ille, will
have homecoming th is Sunday,
with a bas ket dinne r at 12;30 and
afternoon sel'v lc£' a t 1::10. Special

•

Au.Xiliary holds recent meettng
FOOD JUDGING - Ryan Buckley won .a n honorable mention
with his corned beef casserole In the projeci "Do Your Thing with
Food" at Tuesday's4-H judging. He's pictured IJere ~ith one olthe
judges, Unda Rutan. of Bidwell, former nutriton aide with the
Gallla County Extension Service.

I
I

Food project winners
announced for Meigs
County, state fairs
Grand and reserve champions
in 4-H food projects were an. nounced today following judging
which took place Tuesday· at the
Senior Citizens Center.
4-H members taking top honors
in their respective projects,
listed grand champion, reserve
champion and honorable m ention, respectively, were as
follows:
Do your thing with food : Cindy
RJ:&gt;ush, Jeff Stethem, with honorable mentions to Cindy Roush ,
· Jeff Stet hem, Noelle Pickens ,
Amy Beth Redovlan, and Ryan
Buckley.
. Quick meals: Stephanie Hoffman, Michelle Scott, with hon or·
able mentions to Barbara Cole·
man , Elizabeth Dowrtle, and
Michelle Young.
Portables : Erin Smith, Jessica
Karr, with hOnorable mentions to
Bridget Va,rney. Linda Chapman, and Tonya Thornton.
All-American foods : Joe
Parko:&gt;r, Sherr! Smith, with ho·
norable mentions toAmyRouksh
and Sarah Wiles.
' Making· It with meals: Christine Schultz.
Foods with an international

fl avor: Greta Riffle. andJoEilen
Crane.
Fit it all together 1 : Dorothy
Leifheit, Mis t! Powo:&gt;ll, with ho·
norable mention 10 Jennifer
Mora and Adam Sheets.
Fit It all together 2= Debra
Frost , Kelley Grueser.
Outdoor cookery 1 ' Angle
Chapman.
Outdoor Donna
cookery
2: Missy
Calaway,
Curtis.
Preserve and serve 2: Greta

Ri~~:~ds

1

Ellen Rought was Installed
president of the American Le ·
~rton Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post 39. P o meroy, at Tuesday
night's meet ing held at th e hall .
Installing officer was He len
. Hampson, past Eighth District
president of Lancast er. Othe r
officers Installed In the cerem ony were Francis Hunn!'ll , fir st
vice president; Gerrl. Mille r .
second vice pres ident ; Iva P owell. recording secretary; Robin
Campbell , corres pOnding secrt?tary; Ca therine Welsh and Erm a
Smith, co-treasurers; Veda Da vis, cha plain ; Ja n Jenkins, his to· .

I

Sayre reunion conducted

l~====::::::::::::::::::::::::::========iil

CARRIER
NEEDED
fOR ·sp· RING lYE.

Andy Wolf, Sara

·---...... _,...
........... _
..._,,
_~~:",

ClOUD WMDlY
·
.::_
- - - · o.... .. - -... - .......

Breads 2: Donia Crane, Renee
Young, and Barbara Coleman.

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

for easy living: Donia
Extraordinary eggs: LlsaHoif· ·
!man,. Susan Wolfe.
·

.

We will now be open from.
10:00 A.M. until 5:30 P.M. for
the "9-5 Working Girls"
•
convemence.

Come and See Our New Plus Size
Pepert111ent
'

I

'

'

-·

...

~~ -

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

••

Ut.a

•u•
I I\ .

••••
-·

•Dol•
•
i oo-, ,.

• (10 . ..

1./IC • •
-'1000 10

··-111~ --

•••oa.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

We lcnow where the IMef is.
Wt alto how rht piiiCt tor
llutch«iftg ond procetshtg.
W1 satilfr or y.u don't ,ay
flO: IUTCHUING
WITHIS COUPON
Good thru A'9o'tf I

CAll ANYTIME
446-131 a

PIANO TUNING

Receive 50% Off
SECOND tuning If
dane within on•

MIDDlEPOIT, OHIO
1-1S.I7 I mo.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
•Wa s hers •Di shw asher s
•Range&amp;
•R e fr igeral ora
•Dryers •FreeJ"e rs

Vinyl &amp; Alum . Sidihg

NO SUNDAY CALLS

CAll

1-614-843-5425

4-16-16-tfn

J&amp;L BLOW.N
INSULATION
CUSTOM BUILT
GARAGES
POLE STYLE or
CONVENTIONAL

Riverine Antiques
1124 East Main St.
Pomeroy
HOURS: Tuo.-Wtd.- Fri.
11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
S..nday: I p.m.-7 p.m.
ly ChGIIto or Appointment

FREt ESTIMATES

RUSS MOORE

PH. 992-2772

992·2526

7-30-17-t mo.

1· 3· 11 1 mo.

YOUNG'S

J.R.'s REPAIRS

CARPENTER
SERVICE

TVs, Antennas

(f!ree EsllmQtesl

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-621 S or 992 -7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
.

Satellite Sales
Installation
Service
Electronic Organs
Mobile servicQ

614·843·5248
REASONA.LE • REllAill

8-Z0-'86 tfn

41 5 '86·1&lt;.

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
SWill' Molds · Interpreting Services

zc:J
.
!5 LISA M. KOCH , M.S.

~ licensed Clinical Audiologist

~

BLITZKRIEG

(614) 446·1619 or (614) 992-6601

.m Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio

45631

ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR

.'

DENNY -CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

J&amp;L
INSULATION

992-3410

COOLING

HEATING &amp;

liMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

SALE •••

10·8-tfc

REMEMBER LAST .SEPTEMBER?

'VINYL SIDING
• ALUMINUM SIDING

FREE ESTIMATES

R ESIO£ NTIA.l i C OM~ERCIAl

PH . 742·2027

lillnlf~

New Homes luilt

~, ~ftno~f: ·.

"Free Eslimal8s"

PH. 949-2160
or 949-2101
No Sunday

•

84, 1 mo. d.

let lh F..u 't01l•

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

•'·

PH. 992-2772

ACCENT

INSUlATION

OR

" FREE ISTIMATES "

FENCE COMPANY

'llOWN IN

FIREPLACE.
INSERT

•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS

BUFFERIN

BOX OF 125

·$50 HOLDS YOUR

SPECIAL PRICE

STOVE TILL FALL

Reg.
57.65 .

Box of
165

s.so9

TO

50°/o
FRI.
. AUG. 7

TYLENOL

YOU ·WILL NOT FIND AN EQUAL
QUAUTY STOVE AT THESE
SAYINGS ANYWHERE

EXTRA STRENGTH

IGvarantlld I

AUG. I

'
CAPLETS

5~

BUFFERIN

40°/o

TYLENOl

REGULAR STRENGTH CAPLETS
100 Ct. ·
Reg. S7,29

.$419
VILLAGE PHARMACY
CT.

Reg. S6.00

· MIDDLEPORT

992-6669

SAT.

ONLY
~'We Make·'em Here"
10 A.M.
OLD. TIME HEATING
701 2ND AYE.
GAWPOUS

TO

5 P.M.

BOGGS

••
.,

SALES &amp; SERVICE

•

'
•'
••'

.

U. S. RT. $0 EAST

Roger Hysell
Garage
lt. 124, Pomtroy Ohio

GUYSVIll£, OHIO

AUTO &amp;TRUCK

o.,,.,

Authori1td John
· New Holland, lush Hog
Farm Equipmtnt
DIIGitr

REPAIR

Al10 Tru11tl1tlu
PH. _992-5682
or 992-7121

Eqa
•. Farin
• Parts &amp;Smllu
~

6·17-tfc

I IUStNESS PIIONE
16 r41 n2:nso
RlllDINCI PHONE
16141 992-7754

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYl &amp;.
· AlUMINUM SIDING
•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Window s
· •Repl~cement Windows
•New Rooting

" FREE EsnMATES"

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992·2772

7-30-' 87·1 mo .

DABBLE
SHOP
MIDDLEPOIT, OH.
PLASTIC ClAn

and

CER4MIC BISQUE
1/2 PIICE
Month of

JulY.

·7·' ·lrno.

FOR SALE
MODULAR HOME!
Carter French
Residence
Corner of Fourth "
and Palmer.
Middleport

CAll
614-992-3293

4·21·87-tfn

7-21· 1 mo. d.

TAYLOR BUILDERS
40"/, OFF ON WINDOWS
ahd recore
tors and
healer cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We a Iso
repair Gas Tanks.

THRU JULY

Moo do ..... roofilt .......
ou fot Fm lllllllTE
n7-6116 .. 367-7220
7 -9 ·'87-1 mo .

PAT HILL FORO
992-2196

Middleport, Ohio
1·13 -tlc

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
CIIISftl, OHIO
•ROOFIN,G •SIDING

•WINDOW

AEPl.AC~MENT

·•REMODELING &amp;
ROOM AODlTIONS
•GARAGES &amp; POLE
BUILDINGS

30 gal . electriC hOt water tank
with small leak. Call 61 4 · 388-

422: Long and lean. A

9746.

great vest took. Crochet
in easy openwork pattern
stitch of fingering or baby
weight yarn. Sizes 8 to
14.

Junk Cars. Call61 4· 446-0946.

Each pattern $3.25 plus
75~ postage/h~ndling .

(N.Y. residents add sales tax.t

Stnd to:
F1oldor llait
The Daily .Sentinel
82-41 Norbm fltvd., WOOdllde, ,
NY 11377. Print llllltt, lddMt.
~ Silt, Pllllm Numblr.
S.itl• ~olutott Flrt Dttt.
•••I~ like to l~ll•lhotOJ ·
ura •~• ~•Itt~ It hf thlr
trot~loi lor th Ott~••
Tmttt hll •• -·•· 2,
1911. Stoouu
TME FARMERS IA"K
J &amp; RSPORT SNOP

••r•:

MEIIS TIRE CEIITEIIIMC.

ORAftL1 TRACTOR SALES
&amp; SEhiCE
~~-·BUILDERS

ACE HARDWARE

2

In Memoriam

WANTED TO BUY .

BABY ITEMS

Strollers. Bids, Ores·
sing Tables, Play Pens.
Walkers. Cloth ina (new·
born-4T), High Chairs,
Car Seats.
Must be in good
condition.

"fiFes"

711 S. JRO ST.
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
PHONE (614) 992·7494

In Memory Of
, CLAIR L. NEWELL
Who pas,ed away
2 years ago today .
His smiling way and
pleasant face
Are a pleasure to recall;
He had a kindly
word for each,
And died beloved by
all .
Some day we hope
to meet him,
Some day we know
nat when.
To clasp his hand in.
the better land.
Never to part again.
Loving wife Mary

915-4141
GENDAL CONTIACTOIS

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR
Truck, auto. &amp;
heavy equipment
repairs and
welding.
(All ·makes &amp; models)

PH. 949-2756
John 11. Bentz
Owner /Mtchanic

1-5· '17-3 ....

Dog- to good honie. Call 614 446 -7600.

Must give away abandoned
black kitten. dar!ing with green
aves . Call 614 -992- 3478 .
Used childs swing
614-992· 2077.

set. Call

Female % Pomeranian and Vr
Terrier. First trailer above Ohio
Job Service on Union Ave .,
Pomeroy.

5 PUPPies - half P,ustralian blue
heeler and Pit Bull . 304 ·675 ·
7250 .

Mother dog and four puppies.
small mi.11.ed breed. 310 7tf1
Street , New Ha v•n. 304 -8823655 .

6

WANTED
JEWELRY STORE

MANAGER
Full time. Prefer experience in buying and
retail selling but not
necessary. Send . resume to:
The Daily Sentinel
P. 0. Box 729·1
Pomero , Ohio 45769

NEEDED
CREDIT MANAGER
With retail sites experi·
ence. Handle all credit
sales approvals and col·
lections, and also sales
in retail store. Salary
depends on experience.
Send resume to Daily
Sentinel, P.O. Box 7291.
Pomeroy, Ohio .

3 Announcements

LOSI · Whi1e Hound Dog. Ha 1
lraining collar on neck . Very shy
Of strangers. If seen please call
614· 446 ·8005 or 446 -3587 .

Rick PearsOn Auct l o~eer li·
censed in" Ohi o 'and West Virgi·
nia. Estate, antique. farm , liqui·
dation sale1. 304· 773 -5785 .

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for latfl model clrum
used can .
Jim Mink Chev.· Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson
614-446·3672
TOP CASH patd for '83 modfll
and newer used cars . Smith
BuiCk-Pontiac. 1911 EastMn
Aw., Gallipolis . C.U 614· 446·

2.2.82 .

•

'

MillE'S APPUANCE
REPAIR SERVICE

J&amp;L

•

S.rvitt Call
Onl $1250

INSULATION

••

IIIYIIG WYIWOIIUIIOS~f
IIOIISIHDID APPU.vtGI. ~t
tlPAIII _,dMIIIID t YIAI,
PMnAIII~

992-2772·
.

. _...... .,.,.. ....... ...
~

Strwkin1 rtfr...at•s, fnn-

' ' .r, l( twltulow unlit Olflrl,
! ........,, ........, ....

••
•••

..
i"'

AVON -· All arep, Call Marilyn
WerNer 304·882· 2645 .

R .N . applicat ions now being
ac cepted tor full time position,
Pleasant Valley Nursing C&amp;rfl
Canter. appty perso!'lnfll office
Plenant Valley Hoap. 304· 675 4340. AA-EOE.
FREE INFORMATION PACKET.
$18 .000 in college assistance ·
The Arrhy National Guard. 1·
800-642 · 3619 .
CliMB THE LADDER TO SUC CESS. Gueranteed income wh:h
potential of S25 ,000.00 first
year earnings. Training program
for thoH whp quality . Ap-ply in
person a~ W . Va . Employment
Office, 226 Sixth St. Point
Pleasant. W. V·a. Aug. 6th
between 10:00 am and 2 :30 pm.
WANTED - lady Tllat Ne eds
Home to live in with elderly lady
in city: WDuld have own room
For information call 304 ·675·
1578.
Dar maid for Happy Corner, Call
after 4 :00pm.· 614-446·2625.
Before 4 :00pm .. apply in person
at the Happy Corner ,

12

Situations
Wanted

Dodrill's.PrivateHomeCare. Will
care tor the eldfarly in my home.
can 614 -388- 8193 anytime.

18 Wanted to Do

Grover' s Lawp 'Mower 'Repair.
We'll p·ick up and deliver. Good.
used m owers tor sale. Call
614 -742 - 2393 or 614 · 742 -

3091 .
Will cere for elderly person in my
home. Ref . &amp; Expet"iflnce. Call

for more information. 304· 576·
2989.
Will babyait in my home in tfle

Henderson area day or evening.
Can provKte references. 304·
675 -5880

lAWN MOWER REPAIR SER VICE . Also lawn cuttirig. 304-

675· 1553.

Used mobile homes.· Call 614 ·
446-0175.
Buying daily gold, tilver coins.
ringt. jewelrv. sterling ware, old
coins. large currency. Top prices . Ed B11rkett Barber Shop .
2nd. Ave. M iddleport , Oh. 614 ·

Jim's odd jobs painting, driveway resealing. c8fpenter work 8t
roof repair. trfles S. hedges
e•perienced . Call 614 -379 24 16.

Wanted to buy, Standing timber.
Call AI Tromm at 614-742 ·

2328 .

sao

Anention School Teachers and
etc. Ma1Ure. Christian baby·
sitter . lo cation : 2nd. Al/JJ . Call
614·446· 2750

...
.... ..,..ft.
CALl

,.

trath , . _ .

'"tm.1. .

FOR THE BEST IN

REPLACEMENTS
WINDOWS
CERTAINTEED VINYL
THERMO · BOSS

18 Wanted to Do
C•n do light h11.11ing and roofing .
Reaaotlable r1tes . Mario n
Snld•· 614-949- 2829 .

Business
Opportunity

21

,
I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALlEY PUBLISHtNG CO . recommends thl1 you
do businell with people you
know . and NOT to Ser:ld mon~
through thfl mail until you h8VI
in\lestig at&amp;d tha offering .

Re~taurant BusinHs for tale.
Eutern Ave. Can 614··448·
3077 ar '4 46- 9782 .

23

Proiessional
Services

We provide Home Health Care
f or the eldMiy and disabled. We
provide 24 hour, 7 day . We have
several services. For intorma·
tion. call P .M . and A~aociate at
614 - 992 -2657 or 614- 992 2326. 9 :00am - 5:00pm .
Au ct ioneer Col. Oscar E. Cl!ck,
license # 754·88. 304· 895·

3430.

Real Estal e
31

Homes for Sale

lovely neW 3 BR home builuttls
tp ring. 2 cat garage. nlce area.
Clay &amp; city schools, 6 miles from
Gallipolil . Will consid8J mobile
home as tradtHn. S47. 600 . Call
614 -446- 8038.
Nice 3 BA . doublewideon corner
tot in Thurman . Exc. Cond. Call
614 -245- 5643.
For Sale by Owner : 4 ~ 5 BR .. 3
baths. Appro11imately 4000 ·sq.
h: . 25 acres with tennis court.
$173,000. Will sell with only 5
acre~ for $155.000 . Call for
appointment 614·446 - 3386.
~

BR .. tp .. full basement. 3 mi.
so. of Gallipolis . 34..goo. Call
Deys -614 -446 · 1615 . After
5i00 - Cat1614·446- 1244 ,

402 Founh Ave . 14 room1. 4Y:z
baths. Now used •• 4 apartments . Priced for quick 1ale. Call
614 -446·2957 .
Dfllu•e . in- ground pool. total
AC .. 3 BAS .. e.~tcel . location . A·1
Real Estate, ~rokiJr . Call 304675· 5104.

Must sell· transfered overseas. 2
bedroom houu on Oliver St. in
Middl ePort. Slt.u ated on largfl
tree sunounded lot close 10
schools end grocet"y stores.
Needs a few. rl!ipaiu but is very
liveab le as is. A good uarter
home at only $9500. 614 -9922786 f 'o r information .
Once in a lifetime! 6 room•. 3
bedrooms. mostly furnished,
large lot. Call or contact Bob
Haggerty. Middleport . ~14 992 -5304.
Chester. 2 bedroom. bath, f11ll
basement . large attic with stairs
(could make 2 rooms) . Older
garage. outbuilding . 60~t32S lot .
614·742·2926. $19.600 .
HouM tor sale by own•: &amp;maR 15
room with bath on private drive.
North 5th in Middleport. Nice
lot . Will sell on land contract to
qualified buyer. Cell Bill Childs
614·992 ·6312 . Reduced for
tast sale. $18 ,000.
2 bedroom on Butternut Ave .,
Pomeroy. Clo1e to town. large
yard. Call 614 -837- 1326 after
4:00pm.

3 bedroom. 1 v, bath. co rner lot .
Close to schaals and town. Call
614· 992- 3566 8\/'enings.

QUILTS
.
Anlique-Pre 1940 ' s. Call Marc.
614- 992 · 21 01 {davsl or 1- 592 ·
2461 evenings.

Employment
Serv tees

.......P.om·ero'\'...... ,. __
Middleport

11

&amp; Vicinity

Help Wanted

Area firm seeking local individual for outside sales position.
Tremendous opportunity for ambitiout young person who enjoys
meeting new people. Not only a
job. but a career. Compl ..fl
benefit pAckage. Send resume to
: P.S.C .. Bolt 18 -D , Arrowhead
Yin e. Portsmoutl1, Ohio 45&amp;62.
'Meet nice people and make new
friend•· Sell Avon . Free - Start
up fee. Call &amp;14 -448 -2158 .
Wanted: Three part-time Community Service Worker positiont
available with an intermediate
care facility tor devalopm&amp;ntally
disabled adult1 in Bidwell : 11 26
hours· weP: 12:30- 8 :30 a.m ..
3 dl'(l a week; plus 2 hour
weekly staff meeting. · 2) 34hourt-week: 12 :30 -8 :30a.m .• 4
dtyt a week; pills 2 hour weekly
staff meatlng. 3) 18- hoursweD~!. :
10a.m.- 6 p.m ., Sat.,
Sun .; plus 2 hour weekly staff
meeting. All positions : H~gh
school degree, valid Ohio driller' a lieen1e and gl'lod driving
record required : ability to work
well u a team member. excellent interpersonal communication skills. creative and selfmotivated, ability .to work with
minimal sup8f\llsion. punctt~al,
and good organization skills
required; e~~:periecne working
with profoundly · or MVerely
r .. arded individual• and e•periMee in the applicatkm of
normalization·· prinelpl8:1 preferred. Salary: 14.26 per hour.
Vac;etion end 1ick benetlta. Send
r•ume, indicating which position{•! epptying for, to Robin
Eby, Buckeye Community SentiP.O.Io•I04, Jackson Ohio
41140 . Deadline for applicants :
'8·13-87. Equtll opportunhy eml)toyer.

c...

Blllh hog small flat land n. .
tDwn, H Interested- Call 114•

Yard Sale: Clothes. bowling batt .
M isc. Turn off Rt. 35 at Church
of God on Rodney -Bidwell Rd .
Turn on first gravel road . Thurs.
end Fri.
Yard Sale- 45 Central Avfl .
Thurs .. Fri .• an d Sat.
Yard Sale- 1st time ever· Quail
Creek, No. 17 . Fri., Aug.7 and
Sat ., Aug. 8 . Girls newborn· sile
12 fHealthtfll , Carter' s and
Weather Tamer ). Boys 1'2-24
montfls IHealthtex) , women's
and men's clothing .
V ard Sale: 2 mi. past H.M.C.· Rt .
160. Aug., 6 and 7 . 9 -6. Adult
and childrens ~:lothing. book~J.
toys , llowera, misc.

Mature p.son for : 3 yr. old 1nd
infant. Our home. .3 ehlftt.
Ctntlrlary eru. Call 114- 44f 141&amp; aher 2 :00PM ..
Government Jobs. •11,0'0 tll.230 • ner. Now hiring. CaM

1· 108-887-8000 ht. R-980&amp;
tor ounent fild•ll list .
Friendly' Home Ptrtl• h11 openman..-. and dellen In
your ....a. Larg•~ Hn .. h1 party
plen, fr• kh , brand ni'N christ·
m• utaiDJ. toy,
and hom•
decor cetllog. Qv., 100 tt ......
Top commi11lon end holttu
alfts. Call for " " c:Malotl
1 · 100.22'7· 1510 or call coHect

0 -BU-412·0011 .

Friday 9 - 4. lA mile on Bailey
Run . Trailer on right . Childrens
clothes. tires. more.

Aug. 8th. 10:00· 7. Between
H&amp;R Block and Cleland Realty.
lots ~f clothing. radios. tapn.
etc . little of everythi ng.
Carport sale Aug . 6 . 7 .B. Rein or
shine. 1 mila on Bailey Run Rd.
on left. Wood cabinet lttreo,
chitdrens books. ell sizes clo·
t~ing . misc . items.
Yard 1u1le Aug. 7 and8, 9a.m.- 1.
Clothing . dishware. toys all half
price. .Also sf!Veral piectt of
eMercise equipment pri ced as
marked. Other items also . 3
miles up Sta1fl Rt. 143. First
lrailer on left up Wolf Pen Rd.
Reeves residence.

Fri. and Sat .. 9· 4. Mothar of
Triplets. 344 LeGrande. Lead
cry1tel glaasware, Rockwell figurines , b'aseball card1 , dil ·
hwashk clotheS. toys, Avon
eoileetOf bottles. books .

3 family . August 7 and a·.
9:00- 6 :00. Clothing. livingroom
furniture . dinette. T .V . and 3
wheeler. First house an 18ft .
Bailey Run. Pomeroy .

......_Pt 'Pieasaiif .... &amp;

---.. -P'om·eri:i'Y'··-·.....
Middleport
Vicinity
..... -·---· ... ---·-- -·-·- ··--·-- --

&amp;

6 family . August 5th through
7th. 3 miln ou1 Depot St .•
Rutland. loU of infant to adult
clothing .
August 5th and 6th. College Ad . .
Syracuse. Children and adult
clothing, odds end ends. twin
bed with mattrus, toys, wood
burner. electric stove. 10:00August 6th and 7th. 36 River·
vtaw Dr.. Middleport . 9:00-7
Wolt Pen Rd. 3rd. house on left
from 143. Aug . 10-15. 9 -dark.
Loti ot Qood clothes.

1 f.-nily vard ••le.·Sta1e Rt. 884
H•rrisonvi.e. Aug. I. 7, 8. 9-

Vicinity

3 Family Yard Sale. 4th&amp; Brown
Street. Muon . 304·773· 6640.
Friday 81 Saturday .

13 family ysrd ule. Aug. 6·7· 8.
Gall. Ferry. Shot guns. turn ..
tools, clothing &amp; Misc.
Yerd alile, corner 3rd II Adami
St. Muon. WV . Aug . 6, 1 , 8 .
Industrial garage sale: Wed .
Thurs . Friday, 9 to 15 :00. Insula·
tion. fire brick . tebln, air oom·
pressOr~. weldert , eleclrical
suppli• &amp; much more. 'h fnile
on the right past the Mason
County Fairground s.

Two t.mity yard sale, 107
Walnut Streft, Point Plauant.
Aug . 1 &amp; 8 . Children' s and tdult
clothing end misc.

7p.m .

Ing tor

.ft.

Aug . 6 and 7 . Child rena clothing
etc . leslie Scarbrough residence
on"corner of Vanderhoof Rd . out
o f Tupper·s Plains . •
·

Aug. 7th and 8th. 1 1JJ mi. out
Bulavilla Rd . left Oflta KerrBethel . 8th house on right . Adult
and children's clothing-many
sizfls, recliner cheir, misc. Cell
814- 446·2646.

3 ,00 pm .

•
••
•

1429.

s._.tie tank pumping. rnldenUa\
&amp; commet"icel .
per load .
Ron Evans Enterprises. Jackson.
Ohio. Call614 ·286·5930

448·8471 ohor &amp;'00 PM .

•

AVON . no service charge. open
territories. phone 304 - 676 -

Lost : Black terri&amp;f dog, turning
white witfl age. Popular Ridge Room and board for elderly and
area . Call 614-367-7180 .
· handicapped with personal care.
In Middleport . Call 614 -992 ·
lost : Small light brown mixed 6873 .
Terrier . Male. lost in Pomeroy
on July 31 . Call614 ·992 · 7548 , Irs country living in my home for
the elderly. Private bedrooms.
bath and living .room. No steps.
nice porch and yard, only seven
8
Public Sale
m inutes hom stOfM and hospl·
8&lt; Auction
tal . exp. 614·992 · 5185 .

•

·I

Nurte Aide, all shiftl. 9:00 and
5 :00pm. 102 Court St., Pome.
roy. 814- 992 · 26157. ·P.M . and
Associ ates Home Healtt1 Care
Agency . ·

lost and Found

992· 3476.

REFERENCES

Phone Doy oi' Ev011lngs

SUPPl1

N. 2nd AVE.

949.U63
or 949-2168

•

SAVE

Pho.ne Bills Here ,

'Must see lo appreciate.

7-15-17 I 010. pd.

•

St~pplies

Pay Your Cable 8o

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

8· 13 tin

10 P.M... 2 A.M.

We Carrv Fi1hing

lll8rrtn

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL

Part Beegle puppies: 5 mal$t. 1
femate: Call 814- 387-0185 or
367 -7214 Eve.' s.

HUDNALL
· PLUMBING &amp; HUTING .

PH. 949-2801
. or 949-2860

Howard l. Writesel

-

-

Worked in Home Area
25 ~ .....
-FREE miMA!IS

- Plumbing •nd el eelrlterl
w q,,,.
,

All Maku

AUGUST 7 &amp; 8

•Twin Blowers •Glass Door
•Auto. Tl1ermostat
•Large Ash Pan
•Burns Wood or Coal

tiJI:e all. Call 814·446• 1149.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

- Addona •nd remodeUng
- Roolin g end gutt er w o rk
- Concret e w o1k

985.-3561

THE COVE

Burns Wood or Coal

Junk TV ' S to give away. Mu5t

"At Reasonable Pricts"

i(Ul OUT FOR FUTURE USEI

APPEARING AT

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~

2393.

Complete Remod81ing
Roofing of AU Types

y~ar.

992-3711

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION

.an,:t gray. stripped male

kitten . 8 wks . old . Needs good.
loving home. Call 614· 446 •

1U North Setond
Middltport, Ohio 4S760

The open s hoot' of the hester
Bowhunters Club scheduled for
Sunda y has been ca ncelled.

FREE STANDING
'

=~·-·
::::=~ ..

Blac~

Complete Gulter Work

CUSTOM BUllT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Day ar Night

7·6·1 mo1

Canceled

_
992 21 56

home. Call 614-256-6231 .

.

BU f CHER SHOP

Giveaway

3 - half gro wn kitien1 to good

Business Services
ANY fiME

Retired person• posit to n open
for pan· tlme help. Apply at
Vaughana Cardin"!. Middleport.

M,.._ , _ _ _

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

A11latant manager or grocllt'V

manager wonted . hP•ience

Going on vac11ion. If nHd book
or Cflll a order. Please do before

.

Sat., Aug. 8. Mary 51•"· 304882 -2089 .
.

·=~-·---

Help Wanted

Cook' s TV Service will be closed
for vacat ion from Aug 3 thru Au1

4

."'""eo.,."""'_
i!i:E:.-

11

ne ceuary . Amb i tiou s. good
wrttl people. SalltfV t16,00(Uo
*18.000 per year with benefit a.
A growing company. Appty at
V~ghana Cardinal Middleport.

15.

u:..::.~

pafU etHJer 1hc
J11llawlnf le4ephone 11;s-durn!et ...
-C.. WIO

""'"ou
•'-"'•on
"'""lMJ~·
r...,.. ou

PARTS and

IT'S NOT
TOO SOON!

·-·-·-

·-=. . -

=
5:5r..o-,:.;.

,

ClaM I/I~d

D41 tJO(HOI OUM &gt;f ~11(1"
''Oll~ • • •• ~ •ou

Grinstead
The CrlnstPad re union will be
held Sunda y at Union Ca mp·
ground . ba ck of New Have n.
Pi c nic dinner a t l. All l.rlnstl'ad
· re lat lves lr\vlt ed.

THE DAILY SENTINEL OFFICE

Corner ..Collections
Introducing new store hours
beginning August 1 0.

c;... .,. _

tloH thr. . . A... 30, t 917

IF INTERESTED, PLEASE CALL

Cr~~:.ls

129 Mill Street
Middleport

daug hl l'r of Mr . a nd Mrs. Robert
Co uch, who will be attending Ri o
Gra nde College this fall. Sheolso
noted that J £'nntfer ha d re prese nted Meigs Hi g h School In
bas ketball recentl y In Hung ary.
Dena Ma ntey. daught er of Mr.
a nd Mrs. John Manl ey, talked
about her experiences as Buc k·
E'Y&lt;' Girls St.ate represent a li vl' at
Ashland Co llcgt&gt; in June. Three
past girl sta ters presented Int roduced were Anita Smith, Robin
Campbell. and Jennifer Couch .
Cathy Pullins acco mpanied An·
It a Smith for a vO&lt;'a l so lo to closp
th£' meeting .
Refreshments were served by
thP junio r auxil iary.

..._
10111

~IMYW

....
..'""'"
Oil.. '".
lll.a

.,_

-~...

si nging Invi t e d . Everyone
welcome.
Family Reunions
Parker
The Par ker family reunion will
be held Sunday at Tuppers Plains
E lem entary Sc hool. Baske t
dinne r at I p.m . All rel a tives and
friends welcom e.

a check to .Je nnifer Couch.

_,__

..

......... .

lilATil

.... - .... - .. 1···-111

.;::..~.~-:::.:., .."::. ':::'J:, ......... - '..~... - .... · 1--___
:.-:.::.~..:=-·
~·.. -··~ 4
.,_._
_;,_ _;.:,
____

1 5 Yrs. Experience in
Schools, lh!mes,
Churchoa.

POMEROY

Lambert. and Tara

participants
fromthethe state
food judgSelected as
fair
ing winners were Cindy Roush,
Stephanie Hoffman , Greta Rtf·
fie , JoEilen Crane, Donia Crane,
Amy Wolf, Sara Machr, Missy
Calaway, Dorothy Leifheit, De·
bra Frost, and Lisa Hoffman.

I

The descendant s oJ Martin V. Brooks and Jun!' Say re , Syraand Emma Rou sh Sayre held cuse; Rod and Ma rjorie C rimm.
their annual reunion at the ho me Dan . .Dona, Danny and Dena
of Herbert l. Sayre of Racine.
Sayre, Linley and Mildred Hart ;
Sayre. 89, 1s the las t of a family Ronald and Hilda Hart , Dav id
of 10 children.
and Dorothy Sayre, Lorene
Attending from. out of town P yles. Shirley and Suzanne
were Scott a nd She lli Pickens, Evans, and He bert Say re. all of ·
Paul and Evel}'n North. Alberta ·Racine.
Saunders and Connie Jerry BradThe 1988 reunion was setror the
ley, · Gallipolis; Norman and last Su nday In June at the
Wilma Sl y ter , Waterford ; Shriners Club picnic park at
Racine.
.

Machlr. with honorable mention
to Sherri. Wolf, Sherr! Smith,

gr;;~~tne

ri a n : and Ma rg ie FPtt y,
sergea nt -at -arms.
The meeting opened In ritualistic form with the tiny 10 1 co lor
guard leading In the pledge to the
flag . Mrs. Rought introduced the
retiring officers a nd compll ·
men ted them on the past yea r 's
work. Special gues ts lnt roduced
were Jam es Hampson. Lancas·
ter . pas t Eighth District com mande r. a nd Ger a ld Bolyard,
New Lexington . Post 188, and his
wife. Alice. a me mber of the
Somerset Unit :&gt;8.
Mrs . Hunn t&gt;il, education and
scholarship chairman, preso:&gt;nted

- _ ___

AIIONDA.'f tlwu ffttj,y. I l .ll tt Ji P...
I Lll U..il NOON S4TU.D,t.Y

Jenny Varney , Brian Hoffman;
Michael Smith.
,
Fishing, lntermedlat.e: Chris
Ebersbach. Mike Parker, Ml·
chael Frost.
Aquatic science: Heather Pau ley , Christine g,hultz, K~ llle
Ervin.
Archery: Richie Hunt , Keith
Hunt. Aaron Brown.
Ohio birds: Lisa Hoffman ,
Ad r ia Frecker. April Ross, Ur sula Hart .
Insect world: honorable mention only. Penny Aelker.
Exploring the world of plants
and soils: Robin White, Scott
Burke.
·
Soils: Missy Calaway .
Growing strawberries : Greta
Riffle .
Growing bedding pla nts : Gary
Holter.
Growln!( annual . flowers :
JoEIIe n Crane, Denise Shenefield , honorable me ntions, Becky
Mcint yre and Tara Clark.
Growing house plants; J enny
Varney, Mira nda Nicholson,
Tara Clark.
Gree n sce n e : S t ep ha nie
Hoffman.
Vege table garden : Adria
Frccker , Kim Michael
Family gardening : J eff Rose,
Tim Lawson.
Junior leadership: G re ta Rlf·
fi e. Cary Holl er .

Route 689 close to th e Meigs
Mines . Relatives and friend s of
the pioneer families are urged to
attend. There will be a bas ket
dinner at noon.

The Daily

Announcement s

Community calendar/area happenings
THURSDAY

I

6, 1987

4-H judging results· announced for Meigs Fair
Thirty-four of Meigs County 's the outdoors 1; Joe Parker,
4-H youth participating In miscel· explcrlng the outdoors 2; Kevin
. hmeous judging qual! !led in their Grady, Ohio ponds and streams,
project work to compete at the Lisa Hoffman, Ohio birds.
Ohio State Fair In Columbus.
Jenny Varney, f.ishing ;
The 34 are ln .additlon to other Heather Pauley, aquatic
winners Including Elise Meier , science;: Riehle Htint, archery ;
Nikki Meier and Tracy Michael Bridget Varney , Charles Parker,
who are now In Columbus as Joyce Pickens, Jenny Varney,
State Fair horse participants.
Mic hael Parker, bicycle; Jenny
. Those who qualified were Alex Varney, Greta Riffle, Donia
Brown, working with wood and Crane and JoEIIen Crane, demtools; Jay Swain, building bigger onstrations, and Robin White,
things; Sherr! Smith, adventures Kim Mcintyre, and . Joyce
with your camera; Elizabeth Pickens, creative writing.
Bryant. exploring photography;
In the various areas of judging,
Willie ·Hill, mastering photothe winners, listed grand chamgraphy; Andy Wolf. designing pion, reserve champion, and
outdoor living spaces; Matt honorable 'mention, were as
C'lark, furniture and woodwork · follows :
recycling; Susan Wolf, designing
. Creative writing, Robin White,
Interiors; Debra Frost, geneal- Kim Mcint yre, and Joyce
ogy, junior c lass; Michael Pickens.
Parker, senior genealogy.
Writing and reporting for
Ryan Holter. exploring the teens: Elizabeth Bryant .
world Of electricity; Chad· Wise,
Demonstrations : Single ,
electricity's silent partner ; Jenny Varney, Greta Riffle, and
David Rice, working with elec· Donia Crane; and team; Donia
triclty; Joyce P,ickens, Chad and JoEllen Crane, and Joyce
Cook. and Bridget Varney, crea- Pickens and Valerie Patterson.
tive arts; Jason Miller, exploring
Caged birds In the home: Betty

6 .. 1987

4 famltyyard ule. Fridey 7th end
Sat. Bth . from 9 -4p,m . Grey
Eblin• r•ld.nce 40130 Laurel
CUff Rd.
Y«d .tele Fridsy Aug . 7 . B-1.
Acron trom Grada SchoOl.
Rullsnd .

Yard Sele. 10 till 7 , Friday •
Saturday. 212 Camden Avenue.
Pqlnt Pleasant, clo•• to Harmon
Park.
Gtrage Sal•. Frid,.Y • Ssturday.
1
to • : c~'""· screene.
shutter, trMit' table and chairt.
etc .

o

.,

�..
..

•
10-The Daily Sentinel

- Plgr

LAFF-A-DAY

Home• for Sale

31

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
51 Household Goods

room houM. twQ batha. new
rOof. NVHih whtdawa.

8

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

u••i•·
241 N. Fourth Aw .. Middleport.

114-247-2&amp;32.

e (OOm ~Mtodb1th . 1 '!h acre.
t24,000. CaiiiU-992-7463.

f.ii roOmt with bath. New kitchen
. compl ..e with new garbage
diapoul. CkiH to churetl and

7244.

Why r•n when you can own a

home7 Own• will help finance
this 1 1/!a story home, 8 mil•
nonh of Pt . Pl. ~ acre. garden
apot. · 3 b.cirooms. eat-in kit-

ch..-.. woodburner. Low 30' s.

304-875-.W08.

--------------9
Thr" bedroom brick

90 Davs same 11 caah with
"PPrO\fed credit. 3 Miles out
Bulavine Rd. Open 9am to 6pm
Mon . thru Sat. -Ph. 614 -•:t&amp;-

hom•~

675-6306.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S m.IAliTY
MO.BILE,..HOMf: SALES . 4 Ml
· WEST. GALLi~OLIS . RT 36.

PHONE 114-448-7274.

1984 Shultz. 3 BR . with expand.
Microw•ve. S1 1.000 or beat
off•. c.n &amp;14-446-~725 . ·

1984 Schutta 141t1S6. 2 BR .. 1 Vi
b.th. Like new. Call 304-675·
5950 or 676-18651 .
1957 Vlndale 8 ft .x 48 ft.
t1200. Call 614-992· 7572 .
14x70 Caravan trailor. 1 acre
land. garage, .privacy fence.
located 14 mile out Peaeh Fork
Ad .. Pomeroy. 614· 992· 2473

or614-992-7512.

3 bedroom mobile home. Set up

and i-...ty to mo\fe into. Patio
cover, atepa, · etc. Complete.

06960. 814-992-6687.

On Morning Star Rd., Racine.
Phone 81 4 · 354-4084 .
1970 Hally Park. 2 bedroom.
$4100. Calll14· 992-3100.
14x70 Wlndaor with 14Jt30
eddition. 3 bedrooms, pond,
approx 3 acr", Gallipolis Ferry.

304-575-&amp;930.

1972 Wind.or 12x70 with ex ptndo.. 18;500. catt 304 -675 15&amp;8.
2 br mobile hom a with 1 1 · 3 lot.
CaUafter6 p.m . 304-675-6483.
Muat sacrifice 1977 i4:11170
Crown Victorian 3 br. dining
room. \fery gd. cond . 6 2 acrea.
Or~led wet! or city water. Call
3M-67tJ-2264 or after 3 pm
wortt ,937-2319. $14.000.

"Since getting married, I
wear ffiY dresse.S longer...
twO Or three yearS longer."

t 41

Ho1JSes

for Rent

2 bedroom house overlooking
~gr;.d~ ~iddleport . Call 614-

9

8 room house. 3 bedrooms, 2 full
b1ths, forced air hh1, eir condi·
tioner downstairs. No pe1s. Must
have refMence. Availabte at
onct~ . 614 -949 -2666.
3 bedi-oom house. Mulberry Hts.
Large yard: Deposit. Reference.
$225 month . 614 ·992 · 7890.
3 bed room house in Henderson.
W, · va. &amp;275 .00 month, call
614·446· 9662 .
Two bedroom house , New
Hnen, unfurfliahed, S 155.00
mohth. Deposit required . Phone

Business
Buildings

Apartment
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroOm apanments for
rent.
Basic rent for 1 bdr ..
$183.00; 2 bdr .• S219.00. Also
1equired a 82.00.00 security
deposit . CONTACT: Jackson
Estates Dept. Ph 446-3997
Equal Housing Opportunity.
Furnished Efficienc:y $145 . Utili·
ties paid, share bath. 607
Second A\le., Gallipolis Ph.
446-4416 aher 7PM .
Up1tairs unfurnished apa"ment
Utilities paid. Carpeted. no child·
ren or pets. Call614 -446-1637

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 Br. with separate dining room,
S176 a month . Owner pays
water and trash pickup . 10 mil•
out Rt. 141 . approx . 16 min.
Raccoon Tr. Park. Call 614-3792730.
14x70 Mobile Home for rent .
1'h baths. 3 BR .. totelelac. 3mi.
down At . 218. Call 614 -256·
9360.
2 BR . for rent $150 a mOnth
plus dep. Call614 -379 -2436 .
1 4x70 Memory 1 980. 2 BAS .. 1
bath . Quail Crk. No.6 . Call
614-245 -9629

2 bedroom trailer Of! East Main
St. above Krogers. 614-992·
6215. Evening calls.

Modern 1 BR apartment . Call
614-446 -0390.
Brookside Apartments . 446 1932 M 446·4639. On&amp; Bed room apartment w lth large
country kRchen , new epplien ces , utility room. water. sewer
and treah services prOII'ided.
Quiet area.
furnished eff iciency . 701
Fourth Ave . t160 utilities pd.
Call614 -446 -4416 ahar 8pm.
1 BR apt. 740 Second Ave.
$186 per month . Deposit required. Call 614 -446 -4222 betwllan 9 &amp; 5.
Furnished -downstairs. 3 rms .
and bath. Clean . No pets. Adults
only . Deposit and Ref. Required.
Call614- 446-1519.

44

Apartment
for Rent

Commercial buildings for lease.
Downtown Pt. Pleesant. Stores.
offices. - A-One Real Estate.· Nicely furniShed, 2 BR . apart·
C1rol Yeager, Broker. Call 304- ment. Nice location . Adults only .
Call 614-446 -24a4.
176-6104.
Apartments: New paint, nice.
good location. Call 304-6755104 or 676 -7738.
661 3rd. Ave .. GalliPolis· 3 BR
duple~~: . unfurnished apt .. $260 a
month piUs dep .. Call 614 -245 9595 .

Furnished Rooms

45

Rooms for rent, day. week.
month. Gatlia Hotel. Call 614448 -9580. Rent as low as t 120
month.
Furnished room . *76. UtilitiM
paid. Share blth. Single mal•.
919 Second. Gallipolis. Call
446 -4416 after7pm .

Office Space tor Rent . Eltcellent
for A"orneys, Accountant. etc.
Close to Court House:' Call
'Wileman Real Estate Agency ,
614-446· 3644.
COUNTRY MOBilE Home Park.
Route 33 , North of Pomeroy .
Rental trailet"s. Call 614 -992·
7479 .
Space for smell trailers. All
hooll -ups . Cabl e. Also efficiency
rooms. air and cable. Mason .
W.Va. Call 304 -773-6651 .

35 Lots 8o Acreage

1 SA . Apt , with nove and refreg .
No pets . $169 a month. $100
Oep. Cell 614 -446 -3617 .

SPACES FOR RENT - Trailer
lots. Rt . 1 . locust Road, back of

1.84 acres . nice flatland .
Conven. location . Call 614-446 -

Nic e 3 Br .. 6 rm . apt.. stova. Ref.
and Dap. r&amp;Q ' ed. Gas and weter
turni1hed. C_all 614 -446- 1543 .

Now thru July 31 . first 3
months. lot rent free with 1 year
lease. Femily Pride Mobile Home
Park, Gallipolis Ferry where we
cater to families Spacious lou,
huge playground &amp; picnic area.
304-675 · 3073 (it no answer
leave mesuge on machinel :

7627.
&amp;Acres. 4 BR .. Home in country,
linkfence. outbldga., fruit trees.
t53,000. Call 614_
- 245·9595 .
FOf Sale: 18 acres of uncleared
land, good topsoil. Centerville.
For infar. Call614-682 -6993.
Reduced: 37.789 acres, sur·
veyed. t22 .000. Call614-4462071 .
1 Y.! acres river front prop• tv in
Syracuae, 14~t70 mobile home,
10Jt30 enclosed porch, new
24x32: garage. Call Glenn Cun:
cj;tf

614 -992-3905

'

Nice trailer tot tor rent . Call
614-992 -2101 . after 7 :00p.m .
call 614 -992-2319 .
1Y.! IC lot on Jerrys Run Ad .
Apple Gro\fe, whb rural water.

304-678 -2383.

Nice. 2 Br. Apt .. Stove, refrig .
Furnished . Water paid. Near
Drive-In Theatre. Call614&gt;446 -

7026.
Furnished Apartment : 4 rms ..
bath. Centrally loeated. one or
two adults. Ref. and Sec. Oep.
req 'ed. Call 614-446-0444.
Furnished Efficiency Apanment .
3 rm1., bath, cerpetthroughout .
Prfvate· quiet Single working
person only . Call 614 -446 -

4607.

446 ~ 2602 .

Nice. 2 BR . apt . Stove, refrig ..
water furnished. 4 'h mi. from
Gallipolis. $210 a mo .. No pets.
Call614 - 446 -8038.
Furnished Apt. Adults only . All
utilities paid. Get ready for
winter. Call 614 -446 -9523 .

4 acres. lfNel ground, !i% miles
from Point Pleaaant on Sand Hill
Road. Excellent building site.
C1ll 304· 468-1041 .

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed-room apartments at Village
Manor and Riverside Apart·
ments in M iddlePort. from
$215. inctuding utilitit~a . Call
614 -992 -7787. EOH .

-4.crn with 14x70 mobile hOme
older house on Board Rd . 1 mi .
from Sand Hill Road . "304-675 -

For rent : Efficiency cottage, Mt .
Vernon Ave. Pt. Pleasant. Hud
appro\fed. 614-992· 5858.

a

7907.
Sf'tt..-al types of lots for sale. 1 0
mil" lOUth of Poinl Pleasant on
Rt. 2. Call304 -576-2026.

'h 1cre. Clifton. Road frontag e.

304-773-9138

2 tots Letart riverfront, 100'
•ea. 140 deep, drilled well, city
water eveilable. 304 -773-5982 .

RP.nlals
41

Houses for Rent

Nicety furnished amell house.
Adults onl¥ . References required. Off atreet parking. Ph.

114-441-0338.

.

·2 IR .•

unfurnished house with
t•eglli. Accept on• child. Ref.

end Dep. Cell 614-448-9888.

Houte for rent In good neighbor·
hood. LA ., DR .• Kh:c:hen, 3 BA .,
b.th. lull bnement. ClosetOcity
schools and church. noo e
month plut dep. C•U &amp;1•· 4•6·

1734.

.

4 lA . hou•lor nrnt. 3 mi. ao. of
Oentpolia. •300 1 monlh plus
• · Aef. required . Cell 1814448-1816. After 6:00 PM .• eall

441-1244.

t.coir:• I 'lr\
SoAA:( , 1.1.-

-rtte S\ATIJ&amp;S

K&amp; K. 304-675-1076.

47 Wanted to Rent
3 or 4 Bedroom house in Kyger
Creek School District . Referen ce• Ph . 614-446· 8621 .
Want to rent camp~r for week ot
Mason County fair . 304 -8822045 after 5:00 .

For Lease

49

2-bedroom cottage, 2103 Jefferson Ave . Clean. new carpet,
S210 per month wrth one year
lease. 304· 675 -4100. 9 am. to
5 p.m .

Merchandi se
51 Ho.usehold Goods

Efficiency apartment . Private
entrance. Single woP.ing adult
only . Reference and deposit
required . 614-992 -5942 after

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Oli\le St .• Gallipolis .
6:00.
NEW- 6 pc. wood group- $399.
3 room apt. for rent . Pa"IY ' - living room suites- $199-$599.
8uf1~ bedl With bedding· $199.
furnished. 614 -992 -6908 .
Full size mattress &amp; found811on
starting .- f99 . Recliners
APARTMENTS. rHobUe homes.
starting- 199.
housel. Pt. Pleasant and GallipoUSED- Beds, dreuers. bedroom
llm. 1814-446 -8221.
suites, $199 · $299 . Duk1.
wringllf wuher , a complete line
2 bedroom furnised apt . ret and
of used furniture.
deposit, New Haven, W . Va..
304 -882 - 3267 or 304 · 773 - • NEW- Western boots- t30 .
Workboots 818 6 up. (Steel &amp;
5024.
soft toe). Call 614· 4•6· 3169.
3 rooms and bath, gas heat.
County Appliance. lne. Good
ground floor, wuher and dryer
used appliancn and TV sets.
hook up, no children , immediate
Open SAM to 6PM . Mon thJu
occupancy. No pe1 s. phone
Sat. 114-•46- 1199, 827 3rd.
30•-875-4480 ext 53 or 60.
Ave. Oellipolia. OH .
Apt. &amp;199 . per month plus
V1li~ lurnlture. new &amp; Uled.
utilities. Rat. &amp; small deposit
Large section of quality furnirequired . 304 -773· 9594 .
ture . 1 218 Eastern Ave , ,
GaUipolls.
In Middleport, Ohio, 2 room
furnished apt. 304 -812· 2581 .

882-2223.
M1nhall students town house
aptl. 5 minutes drive from
campus. large enough for 3
students. Deposit Required .
Aef•encea . Furnished or unfur·
·nished. Call 304-896 -3460.

Building Materials
Block. brick. aewer pipes, window•. lintels, etc. Claude W in·
t8rs. Rio Grande. 0 . Call ' 614-

MO\fing Sale: Sofa and 2 chain,
$60. 9 drawer drass..-. head·
board , and bed frame. Misc.
· items. Cell 256 -1738 or 268 1252.
Carper- 31 SQ. yds. lee' s blue
carpet. 4 yn. old. $125 . 1109
Sunset Or. Caii614-446&lt;J257
Magic: Chef Range, like new.
S300. Ca\1614- 446·0103. .

Concrete blocks ell1izes yard or
delivery. ~ason und. Gallipolis
Block Co .. 1 23 '12 Pine St ..
Gallipolis, Ohio Call 614- 4462783
Ready mill conc:rete and all
concrete supplies. Call us Vallev
Brook Cament and Suppli • .

304-n3-6234.

18 pc. angle iron. 4" x4 " x'Yt",
bent in "'h circle. 16 h . in
diamet..- . &amp;500. 304 -458- 1962
atter 6 p .m.

Pots for Sale

56

8unk bed - Dark pine, large
cannonball post. S250 . Large
ct\Ht to match, 1100. Call

Groom and SUppty Shop-Pet
Groom ing . All breeds •.. AII
styles. Julie Webb J)h, 114- 446·
0231

Dryer, washM , refrig .. frost free,
160 eac:h . Air compreaaor t85 .
·ao_. 219 -E. Cox - Mercer\fille
Rd .. Mercerville. Ohio.

Dragonwynd Canary Kennel.
CFA Himitlay1n, Pers ian and
Siamese kittens. AI(C Chow
puppiea, New kittens: Siameae
and H tmelay1n1. Call614 - 446"·
3844 aft er 7PM .

114-441-2044.

General Electric washer. small
bed, 25in . Zenith color tv.,
stereo. couch and chair. Can
614 -446 -0414 .
Maytag dryer. U1i8d \lery liute.
Very good -condition. Call 614992 ~ 6787 .

54 Misc. Merchandise
Elec tri c rang e 11nd refflg ., 10 HP
riding mower . tool boa for a
pick -up truck. woodsto\le, Call
614· 388· 8642 .
neoN manually op111ated
hospitll bed w ith mattre11 and
side rails . Uud just 1everal
week1 Sold new for 11400,
asking only 1500. Also bfand
new folding wheat chair. Never
used outside. Used only J d11'1S
inside. Sold neoN tor S645.
Alking _! 300. 614 ~ 992 - 2786 .
GE Panable dish was,her. Kenmore trash compa ctor , 26 inch
Zenith c olor T.V., Efel wood·
burning sto\le. Kenmore
pt.
Dehumidifier. 61 4-949· 2..1 39 .

•a

12 toot mesh satellite dish,
receiver and tracker . All remot e.
2 years old , new cost $3000.,
willaellforS850 Call814 -992·
6723 eft er 6:00 or 1814 -992 5912 .

AKC Golden AetriiN"erl, Champion bloodli!le. Ready after A1Jg.
15th. Shofl and wormed. Call
aher 6 :00PM . 614·446 -6141

Por1able lighted changeabl e letter sign, 8299 free dellvery and
letters, W . Va, 800-642 -2434or
Ohio 800 -533-3453.
New sh ower well pump, used
one week. 304 -675 -4373 .
Full blooded Amer ican Eskimo
puppies. 7 wks. old. Ha\fe land
for sale 1 mile back Glenwood .
304-576 -2989 .

580 B Case Backhoe Loader.
$9,500 .00 . 304-468- 1031 .
1971 GMC Tende'm Dump
Truck, 671 GM di ..elengine, 10
speed trans., air brakn, PS,
$7600.00 . 304 -468- 1031 .
Harosport Freestyle Bicycle,
8200. Call304- 675· 1371 ; attar

256·8898.

82 HP Massey Ferguaon 01"84
tractor with plows. disc. corn
plant'" end bu1h hog. t2150.
Call 814· 286 · &amp;522 .
1975 Hickory King Stodt ,railer.
32 h . gooa• neck, t1800. Call

614-388·8f94.

John Deere 46 El Combine. 2
roW corn he.cl-10 ft .. 12ft. grain
table. Good cond. 12500. Cell

614 -245-5593.

Bars. cheins, 1nd aproekeu t~ tit
almost any aavv . SIDERS
!EQUIPMENT CO .. Hend.-aon,
Va. 30"· 876· 7421 . ·

w.

Speciats on New Holland Hay
toola lc•h deals\. Two Model
256, 8 'h ft rak ... 12.. 200.00.
One Mod.t 256. 8 1JJ h rekawith
dolty wheel1. 12. 400.00. Two
Mod~ 472, 7
ft h.,binn.
$5, 950.00. One Mod_. 47•. 7 fl
haryblne. 81. •00 .00. TwoModa4
•as. 9 f1 ht~Ybin•. 818. 800 .00 0ne Model •as. 9 ft hJVbine,
17, 600.00. On• Modal 30.
1000 RPM btower. 12.9&amp;0". 00.
One Model 4&amp;2. disc mower,
t3 . 450. 00. Keefeu Service
Cenur . St Rt . 87 Point
Plenant· Ripl8';" Road. Phone
304· 895-3874.

English Setter puppiet . 8 witt .
old. E~~: ce l blood line !Avman
Hemloc.. ). 2 females. 2 maln,
good grouse dogs. c.n 6, 4-

1t' lifthwh..ec .. tletrail..-, 14'
disk. 2•• grain c&lt;Jnvey Of, cra.p
feeder.· 306-676 -19187,

37S-2526.

Male AKC Reg. Brittany Spanl.t
puppies. Liver and while Call
614 -245-6697
AKC Botton Terrlllf Catl 15142518 -9354.
1 miniature poodle pup, AKC
registered , 1 mele 1126. firm .
614·882 · 3672.
Ctteaapeah Retriver pups. AKC
registeted , ahotl and wormed
ready to go. 304·937-28015
after 6 :00.

Musical

57

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Canning tomatoes. you pick
SJ .OO bushel. Mersh1ll Adama,
letart Falls. 614· 2•7· 2065 .
Ouelity Fruits end 1/egetablet
ret1il artd wholesale. 8 &amp; S
Produce acro11 from Piua Hut,
Gallipolis. Ohio.

~orm SupJJIIes

&amp; L1veslock
61 Farm Equipment
CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 35 Wen Jaciuon, Ohio.
614· 286· 6451 .
Mau~v Ferguson, Nsw Holland.
Bush Hog Salet &amp; Service. Over
40 used tracton to chool8 from
8e complete line of new &amp; used
equipment. Largest selection in
S.E. Ohio.
Utility bldg: 27'x36 ' x9' · 13' x8'
track door 6 3' walk door.
$4444 erected - Iron Hor..

l -8.,-id:::-g-:'·.,.6_1_4_·_3_32_·_9_7_4_5_
. - -186 MF DIM .. tractor, 13960.
#12 MF ballll', $1150. 7ft. NH
haybind. $660. 200 ga\lonapray
taf\k, $295 . Call 614 -218 -

-~~o~m~·-~~-~0-h~io~--------­ · lc-

1981 Dodge Omnl0124 M isllf.
PS . PI , AC , good 1hepe. $1250.

614-992-1104.

Homelita AP520 5 hp gMolin.water pump, 1ff 2" Intake hose
and foot VI lYe. t 22 5. 304· 418 ·
1982 a"8f &amp; p m.

2795.

Trailer mounted mobile conces -·
!ion aland equipped whh electr icity , llde~est cupboards .
$2,000 . 304 -675 -2013.

1983 Chevetttl. Stand1rd, 4
1peed. in good condit ion .
• 9. 000 miiH . 132 Bunernut,

6522.

Full Blooded Eskimo" Sprt,- . Male
touneen months old. Female
nine week1 _old. Call 614 -446 4666.

Bunk bed! for sale. 304 -676 Sears Crahman 1O" rad ial s•w.
new . $300. 2 'h hp metal table.
"'Montgomery Ward 16 cu .ft .
freezer 2 years old. e 175 .;
~ringer washer with new tub ,
very good cond. $100. 304896· 3683 ..

1982 Shute, 16Y, ft .. AC .• TV
ant'"na. self-contained . SIMPS
5. E.~~Cet cond. Call 814.· 245·
5017.

AKC · TinyTOyPoodlePupp.l ea. 2
red meiM, t 150 each. -AKC Tiny , Gravtly e«achmentt. B1.11h hog
1200; • · bllld• •150,' cunlrYator
Toy Adult Female- • vrs. · old.
$150; rotary plow 1150. 304cream . 1150. C111 614 -446·
875· 1385 after 9 p .m .
8921.

Wt\ lte nurses uniforms. 4 pants .
Instruments
auita, 1 dren. 2 lab coats. Si1es
15· 16. Call 614 -949 -2459 .
·lc16.00 ear::h.
Ei ec tric Lowery o,gan A - 1
1hape. S700 firm. 614 -992TONY 'S GUN REPAIRS . hot
2571 .
reblueing. now , taking o rder
orders for custom Mausers. c all
Beautiful Kimball piano. Rea•o·
~04 - 675 - 4631 .
nabla priced . C•ll tl'leninga 304 676 - 1879.
AVON look 8t us now. Eern
Extre Money . 304 -675 -1429.
2 HP add on air cond. A coil unn
&amp; thermostat complete. 304 173· 5751 or 773- 5174.

Chev. Malibu Wagon. 1983.
good ,cond., rurts good. AC ..
AM .- FM .-Cess .. MOt .rack, good
tires , v.e engin • . look lilted·
$37150, eaking t3600. Call
614-4 .. 18· 18211 .

62 Wanted to Buy

1986 Ford Eaco;t, Low milugt.
axceU.,t condttion. 2 door.
13500 cnh . 614-388· 9766
after 5 p.m .
1983 Chwv•tte in eacellent
condiUon. 4 door , luggage car·
rier , ttlndard 4 sp..d. 49,000
milei. 12400. 132 Butternut
Ave., Pom.,-o"f' , Ohio.,
1979 Monte Carlo. PI, PS . good
Interior, good tx 1erior . S1560
lirm 814· 742 -31156 o r &amp;U·
742 -2692.

'

CJJ

iN THE:
MOUo.JTAIIJ"
WITH THE
ltUE-L!O ...

1982 Ford E 1tP PS. PB, air,
AM -FM.
raot, ltlth.,. 1t_,1
UOOO c.. h. Call &amp;1•· 381 9755 ~ftlf" 18 p ,rn,

•u"

1•

Cutlll Supreme. t400. or
bnt on.. . Runs GDOd 30'4·
1875-3817

814-388-8194,

---- - - - --le For S1le: 8 Jf'onth old Polled
Hereford Bull af'ld 3 year old
Polled Hereford Bull. C1ll 14·
992· 7458 .

e

7 cow• and 1 bull. c:an ba aeen
mornings PHfw route call 304,

937-2206.

Reg•ttered Thoroughbfed Ye•
rling Filly .. Call304 -675 -3030 or

676-4232.

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Mixed hay 11 . bale on wagon,
Hay for bedding IOc 304-187156679.
Straw and H1y. c:all 304-676 ·

6086.

CCC Certificates , 304 -8?&amp; 2443.

Trans1Jurlol10n
71

Autos for Sale

1977 Buit;k LeSabfe, four door.
air. tteto. crUiae, tilt, new paint,
350 V-B. *1460. Call814· 4•6·

0&amp;77.

::::::::::::::::;:.!For
Plymouth
HerizonSale;
. 4 dr.1983
59,0(}0
miiM. Nice.
Call 114-379-2721.
1970 NO\fl • :i27 eng .. TRW
piaton. full NCe cam. 202
heeders. dualeahautt. Muncie 4
tpd.. Po1l rearend, fiberglas•
hood wi1:h seoop. C.lll14- 441· ·
1881. ask for John .
1980 Plymouth J!toril'on TC3, 2
dr. gaod shape. Lovv milea.

01296. Ceil 614-25&amp;-6753.

1979 Oldt . Cutlaas Sup. E~tcel
cond. AC ., PS .• PB .• new tlrea,
auto., 2 dr. Call 614 -448 - 1522.
1877 2 dr. Grenada. Good work
car. Call 614- 448-4431 or

1185 Trln1 Am, tow m ile-v•.
loaded. ••cell ant eondhion. Will
eanskl• ttad•- Call Mllf'ing1

304·675-2296

Coli 304 ·895 -3006,

1980 Camero. U .OOO miln,
auto on floor. new paint &amp; t ires

304·675-3291.

19n Oldl S"uprama, 4 door,
runs good, good ' shape. 1700.

304·671-2730.

1987 Chryllllf" Nawpon. good
cond i tion . 3220 Fnnkl l n
Avenue, Point Pltaunt. W Va.

•

1975 Volkswegon Rebbh, 4·
spd . dependebl t work ca,
$1550 . Call61•· 446-9d71 .

72

GMC 1981 pick-up. 6 ely .• 3
spd .. low mll.ge. AM ·FM radio ,
step bump•. new ban4!1ry, bodygood cond. Call 61 4-441-18720
aft..- 1 :00pm.
1974 Dodge Picll -up. new t ires
and paint, motot"· great . 1977
Ford ~ ton Pick-up. motor gaod
and p1W1.1. Call 814-669 -3861 .
1982 Dodge Ram 160. Stand·
ard tran1mis~on . tlant silt over·
drive. No rust . goad tires.

83800. 814 -985-4418.

1980 Datsun pi~ · up 1850.
Phone 614 : 742 -2410.

73

13295. Cell114-288-6522.

1179 Muetong. 4 cyi.. good

1974 Ford VIA. 7•12 utility
body . 37,000 actual mil•. Vety
good c:ond. 'Cell 304-676 · 7824 .
1977 1-' ton Dodge Van. ne•d•
work. t200 or beat offer. Call
614·448· 2946 .
'
1979 Jeep V:l ton pick -up. 4W
drive. New tirn, shocks. 41 . 300
acutal miles. 82600. 080 . C111
814 -992-7683.
1978 Conveuion OMC Van. Ps·.
PB, eireond. , 30•-875 -2131 .
Jaep CJ&amp; . Afta( 6, 304-578 -

2702.

1977Chevrolet4wd~ ton, new
motor, new clutch, hew steel
belted radials. Very good cond.

02500. 304-185-3001.

1981 Dodge Power Ram • wd.
318 motor. lodc.-out hubl, 4
apHCI. \fery good c:und. 13100.

Ceil 304-BS&amp;·JOOt.

·

1976 Ford F -100. 300 I cvl. , 3

ep-. Ceil 304-f76 -1804.

Motorcycles

1985 CR 260 Honda. Excel.
cond. V.W . parts far . Ale.

614-388-1358.

EA•te Vehicl• : 1978 LTD .
Brou......- axc:el. cond. 1971

1977 Kaw•ukl 2150 dirt. A unnlng condttlon.$110. 614-912.'

614-245-9162 or 448-8714.

'

point. 1;1

depth feature r1ports. (1 :00)
(l) MOYIE: Horculeo (PG)
(1 :38) .

ROtrf ' S Ttl•v l lion S1rv lc•
Housa e..lt on ACA. Oua2ar,
GE . Sp~i llli ng in
Cell

8:15 (])MOYIE: The Heroeo of
T".-.rlqNR) (2:11)
1:30 D al IIJl Fomlly Till Eager
to join the cool crowq ,
Jennifer becomes
supertrendy, shallow.
D (I) The Charrnlnga Snow

~·

5118.

1887 H.O . SPomer Hugg,.aerln . $3,500...304-876 -2858 .

tl

EEK &amp; MEEK

Rotary Of cable tOOl *illing.
Mott wtllsl!ftmplert.d umed..., .
Pump Min and IIIN4ce. JM195· 3102

and Eric are welcomed into

the comf111Jnit'y by Sally &amp;

~

MEJJJ 10\S N:CUSW
CF VIOLA111J6 TH£ FIJCST

Tru and Lawn l.,.,lce.
law" car•. lendacap ing. nump
; • moVa l , 304 · 5 718 · 28"2 or

Don. (R) I;!
C!l Snnll Previews
9:00 !D 700 Club
D (]) Ol Ctoeero Diane·

AMU!DMWT

5718· 2903

makes Sam a proposition
that he can't possibly turn ·
down . lA) C
a (I) Our World Q
(f) I!]) Mylleryl Vooi61 Sm~h

f ,Ms h immed or remov.c:l .
r euonab le r ate s. 614· 441 -

96&amp;2.

Building 1nd rtmodefing. roam"
additions. roofing. layout. lll'ltt'l·
inu. ·tiding. bathrooma. con·
c: r et• . eltctricel. dryw111. plumb InG 304 ·1876· 371 3.

is followed by a m~terlous

r

OLI\IERS Trae Tt immlng, lop·
pinv. tr imming. pruning dead
wood, storm damav1. tall e
down1, Fr., EsUmatN, 304·

WANT TO~ "YOUR MOM 1'
TONIGHT, WHEN 'rOLl ~ET

Plumbing
8o Heating

UNDRESSED...

AND HEATING

STAPLE YOLJR

..--.....I

___,.._ I

CARTER ' S PLUMBING

~~------------~
CLOTHES TO
T'H£ CEILING-.

man on a bicycle.
@ MOVIE; ' he Darll
Cryolll' CBS Thursday
Movlo (PG) (1 :27)
·
0 Lllrry King Uvol In depth
interviews with top
.

. (II) •

newsmakers and ceklbrittes .'

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

175-3817.

I DOTHAT
EVERY
NIGHT.

I

I NEVER KNOW WHEN

HE:S PUTTING-ME ON.

.,.---."

I

COf . Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Oh io
Phone 614 -«8- 3888 or 1514·
441· 4477

9;30 D (]) IIJl O.ya ond Nlglola
of Molly Docrd Molly 's
unappealing poe1ry
Instructor, uke. makes a
paSs a1 her.
10;00 D (]) IIJl L.A. Law Lovesick
husband courts disaster as .
he crawls back to bimbo
wile. (R)
(JJ Spoedworld

(]) II CIJ 20/20 1:;1

SonUmenlll Joumoy
[]) Newo
II)) Evening Newa A wrep up
of today's news and a look
ahead to tomorrow's news
stories. (1 :00)
(f)

84

Electrical

8o Refrigeration
Res ldantial or commercial w lr·
ing. New Hf\fice or repairs .
llcen1ed electrici1r1 . Eltlmste
traa. Ridenour Elactric:al, JO•·

85

em Soop

BARNEY
FIDDLE
DEE DEE

Geheral Hauling

WE GOT
''HIS AN' HER ''
PANTRIES

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming
poo11. cisterns, 1111fells. Ph: 814 ·
245 -9286 .
R &amp; R Water Service. Home
c:istern1. watts , pools filled.
Formerly Jam" Boys Waler.
Call304-675 -18370.
Waneraon ' s Water Hauling,
rea1onable rates. immediate
2,000 glllon delivery. cisterns,
poo11. well , etc. call 304 -576-

Dump Truck Ser\flce. coal. lime•tOne. ssnd. gravel. dirt, traah
etc. Phone 304-676 · 3190.
Tumatoes for &amp;ale. After 5 :00
cell 304 -675- 1981 .

'•

....• .
..
• l '

.

reports on world economics

.,..~
"J'
••

and llnanclal news woth Lou
Dobbs. (()130)
I1J LoYto ConniCiion
11 :30
~ Tonight Show
(JJ SporiiConllr (L) .
(]) WKRP lit ClnclnnoU
(I) Nlghtlne £;1
!liD 1'noppor John, M.D.
IDl 8porla Tonight Action
pecked sports highlights with
Nick Charles and Jim Hubet.
(0:30) "
eiD MOYIE: 'The Ma~r ot
r.U.011'111' CIS Lllte Mavle
jNA)(1 :29)
,
9 T1le1 From the Derllalcle

1-!'

12:00()) Bumo- Allen

.• '

e

..

I•

..

Mowrey's Upholeterlng 181"\i'ing
tri county area 22 years. The bett
In lurnlti.lre upholstering. Call
304 · 6_75 ·,4164 for free
estimates .

' ~--~------~.,

I

Compieoe tho chuckle

~uoood

Embark - Agile - Crown - Hurtle - ARGUMENT
One thing I found Out very quickly: A ward to tho wise is often
enough to start an ARGUMENT.
·

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

BRIDGE

NORTH

•so

H -1?

•to 6
+to 2

Someone
had blundered

• A J tO .aT 2
WEST
• 9762

By James Jacoby

EAST
• J 10 5

•u
•u

.AJ987
+A9
.96

+Q87654
It may not seem important when
u.e issue of a deal is simply whether
declarer makes 10 or .11 tricl&lt;s in a
SOUTH
.AKQ
three n11-trump contract. However,
.KQ5 3
that extra trick or two .can sometimes
+KJ 3
decide who wins an event. And it's
.KQ5
worth noting that occasionally leading ·
from a suit that dO"s not sacrifice a
Vulnerable: Neither
trick is the best defense .
Dealer: North
,,
North and South were playing a ·
West
Nor1b Eao1
Sou1b
forcing-club system, which explains
Pass
Pass
the one·bid on 23 balanced higb·card
Pass
3NT
points. North's two-club response
Pass
Pass
showed 5-8 points and at least a fivecard club suit. In view of South's jump
Opening lea4: • 7
to the no-trump game, West felt that
South would have the remaining heart
honors including the 10. Hence the
lead of the spade seven, a first cousin
, ly ran all six cluD tricks. Too late he
to the top-of-nothing lead.
: realized that· the three discards he
Declarer can easily make 11 tricks
would have to make would reduo:e his .
by playing two clilbs ending in dumown
band to a point where maximum
my, and then"leading the diamond 10.
overtricks would be hard to come by.
Even though East may correctly cov· And so it was . After taking the clubs,
er with the queen , a diamond trick will
be played a hear\ back to his king.
be Silt up for the declarer, and later · West won
and exited with a heart back
South can force out the heart ace to to· the declarer, who bad to lead away
take 11 tricks.· But &amp;outh firmly befrom his K·J of di'amonds at the end to
lieved that playing a long suit can
take only 10 tricks .
caUJie defensive. blunders, ~ he_quick-

I.

2.

A"1f
c;:;tl
r~~&gt; X-~rt~te
..
by THOMAS J'OSEPH
ACROSS 43 Consumer
1 Discard
crusader
6 For each 44 Spoil
9 Belgian 45 Sluggish
city
DOWN
10 Greedy
1 Louver
12 Rose
2 (Juote
extract
3 Biblical
13 Cut
juniper
15 Area on
tree
the links 4 Moslem
16 Perched
VJ.P.
14 August
31 Crap
18 Mexican 5 Character 17 Inquire
shooter's
"four''
tree
assumed 20 Fatty
19 Big game 6 Paper·
23 Auger
32 llo business
21 Turkey
hanger's 24 Modify
36 Gl'rman
'
portion
material
for UM'
river
22 Printer's 7 "All Ahout 25 Wrong hut 37 Sau&lt;:y
need
- "
pardonable 39 Eggs
23 0 reek "B" 8 Small
26 Meantime 41 Sought
24 Spanish
stream
27 Cocktail
publit•
province 11 Cross out 29 Surmount
offi('e
27 Mr. llates
pla• ·e·
28 Gainsay
29 Batman's
llatmohile,
1--o---+-+e.g.
30 Opposite
of syn .
31 Editor's
mark
33 llakery
item
34 Fitted
J
hy nature
. 35 Necktie
materia;
38 Fortunetelling
card:s
40 Sultan's
decree
42 Exist
·1 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's

how to work it:

• &lt;

8l&amp; ·

AXHlLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
a~lrophes, the length and fonnation of the wordS are all
hinta. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE
8-6
N M

()) lporlaLool1 (R)

~=R~I People

A REAL ~ATTLESNAKE
RATTLES HIS TAIL
BEFORE STRIKING ...

..'

.

eCDLIIte._

PEANUTS

,.

.

YEsTEIDAY'S $CRAM·iris ~ANSWEIS

e
e (])

'~~

Upholstery

A 6 M Custom Couche1 and
R..pholsteryf St . Rt. 7, Crown
City, Oh. 814· 218- 1470, Eve.
81•·••6-3438. Open daily 9 to
4 :30, Set . 9 :30 to 1 ;30. Old &amp;
new UphostMfld.

e

(]) MOVIE: Toke the High
G'round (NA) j1 :41)
C!l Sign Off
·
[]) Tho Alrlceno Look at the
tensions that result from the
Ju•laposl~on of legacies.
0 Monoyllne·Currant

2919.

Formerly Ken-'s now John' s
Water Service. Jahn Wattet"IOn,
Jr. Owner. 1.000 or 2.000 gal
service. 304-171-2248.

10:30 ()) Valloul
[]) Tont Brown's Journal
I]JNOWI
(l) USA Tonight
I I :00 ()) HoodcuUe and
McCcrmlck Faster Heart
D (]) CiJ II til !Ill • a2l
~NOWI

Dillsrd Water Servi t:e: Pools,
Ci1terns. Wella. Delivery Any time. Call 614· 4•6 -7404- No
Sunday calla.

87

1985 Hond• CR126, low hi'S .•
good ahape. Call114-379-2162
eny lime.

Dodge pluup wilh 1opper.

"I'm not lnsecure...don't you agree? ...
Please tell me... P1easel"

74

shape. 1971 DodgeCharg•IE,
good ahape. C•l1114-378 -2e52
..ytlm.:

70.000 milea. 1172 Ford LTD ..
one owner. 73.000 mil ... Call

population, now at a tow

676-1786.

Vans 8o 4 W .O.

"6·0374.
198'2 Pl¥mouth Reliant Station·
wagon • one own• . *1996.
1182 Impala. V-8. auto . •
PS .•PI ., veloUr lnl•r~r. AC.

aJ Scorecrow ond
M,._ King Wadding bells In
the wings, Amanda and Lee
are marked lor murder. (R)
[]) Nltlonll Audubon
llocilly ~~ Examine the
nation 's water fowl

•

82

Trucks for Sale

(1 ;34)

II (I) ~ Hommorl C
(f) Wild AoMrico Look af the
relatio~shlp of the elusive
(II) •

St~tkl

1 97• Pontiac. Catalina Y6fy
dependable, looks goad. t600 .

(R)

(1) MOYIE: Tho Front (PGi

Iyme and the snowshoe hare.

z..,it.,.

5350

Championship from Palm
Beach, Florida: First Round

(0:30) £;1

)04-&amp;76 ·2398 ... 614-441·

'79 Ford F• irmonl 73.000 Of'iQI·
nel mil•. Good oond. 304 -675:

1 Appaloosa, 2 Quart• Horse
mares. All shown suec"sful in
4-H and open showJ. Call

TO IMtJ\O~TA'-ITY I,S"
GeTTtNt:; oN A
MAIL..IN(.; LIST-

rija~t6..~ 1987 PGA

II)) P1tnionowo Wrap ups of
the day's world news and in

63

IU-388-96U.

THING

9&amp;41.

Fetty trH "frknmk'IQ. •wmp
remov1 l. Cell JD-6 ~ 111 - 1331.

3 yr. old v~rv genU• Paa.lnf
horae. 1260, 2 v~ yr old verv
g.,tle grey Stallion, 1 200 Cell

NI:A~E:=&gt;T

frH 1nd stump r•moval. ttone,
m'-l lch. topsoil. 1pravtng. cttaln"
n n .. t• nc ts, shrubs Oon ' s
land1eapes . Call 1814· 4•8 ·

2414.

10 half grown turke¥t fDf sale.
Call 1814 -388 -9336.

iHf:=

Whlll ot Fortune £;1
Croooflro (0:30)
1111121 i!IJ Jeap1rdyl £;1
I]J Mojor Loogue a.oobell
8:00 ()) Doktto~ Undercover Judy
D (]) IIJl The Colby Sloow
The Huxtables demonstrate
things older than Cliff's 50
(II)
II))

44t-0294

2tl6.

Ouroc Boan . Bred just Uka the
boars we IMted at the Ohio
Tntetion that gainecr o\fer 2. 18
lb1 . PtH" dav. Rou• Bent!..,,
Sabina, OH . 613·684 -2l9B

I 11 I

. Home
Improvements

llenoon
(l) Sllr Trek

7:30 D (]) CiJ NewiJWI(I Game
(JJ $peedwllk (T)
D(I)Judge

RANK· AND ERNEST•

Sf!TVII:I'S

SWE..EPER an.,-1 ~ lng Ma() hlne
repair . pens. and •uppll•. Pjctc
up and d•li'vefl', D•v it VtK:uum
Cl .. ntr . one halt mil• up
Georo• Creek Ad. Call 81•·

Now buying th•U corn Of • •
corn. C1il fot latnt quotea . Riv•
City Farm Suppty , 1814 -ot46-

Livestock

-

32 ' 1r1iler. ..tt.eontelnad. bedroom. " ajr ' '. many el tns. •wniog. IC:rodet Park. Pt . pte•ant.
WV . No phont c; allt ple81t . Ll kt
New.

1 980 Oltael V. W. Rabb it
$1860. 1973 Pipat Cherollu
140 113, 000. 1974 wr•c:kld
Corvett1 convetUble 11800
114-949-2751 .

•

.

by fi lling in lhe mining words
1--...l.l-....L.--...I.l-....L.--...I.L-..J you develop
from slep ·No. 3 be!ow .

.Dobbs. (0:30)

i

.

I

and financial news w ith Lou

Wheel ot Fortune

.

G0 N c E T
~--,.~;.5-T::I"..:.:.,.I.:._:rl~~---1 G)

0 MonerHne Current
reports on 'iNo~d economics
IIJ)

.

says he's loo old. He will,
..---------~~~ however, stop and kiss - -.

York. (0:30)
®JeHeraono
7;00()) Hordcollll ond
Mc:Corrnlclc Spare a Crime
D (]) PM Mogoilne
(JJ SporloCenter (L)
CIJ Enl-menl Tonight.
lit (I) People'• Court
(f) []) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewoHour (1 :00)
Ill) NIWI

IT WA'iJ SO !;IIORT!

1978 Crulae air motor home. 28
fl . toad6d. 304 - 882~ 3237 aftllf
5;00 p.m .

2077.

1973 Chevy Caprice. Good
work ~ ar . 8400. C•ll 814-992 -

.

anChored live from New

Ill a))

WATEAPAOOF!NG
Uneondllionaf litMime guarantn l oc at ref.-W!cn fwn ishad.
fr" " limatts . Clll cuHIICt
1 -6 14-237·0otl8 . d11'1 or nlgt"lt
Aogera8•••m•nl
WaterP' OOfinu .

I

Circle (R)

[]) Wooollr Squore
a)) ShowBiz Toclay News of
the entertainment wo~d is

llOf LOOKING ~CK,

I •t

SUKHY
My 11-year-old son won't let me
- "'~--,1,.=.....:;1_.:..:..,;1~T-1---l ; kiss him goodbye becauee he

CiJ 8 (I) ABC Newt I;J
C!l Nightly Bu1l11111 Ropon
Ill) C11 a2l CBS Newo

BASEMeNT

1978 Votk•wagon Rabbit .
Aurq .. gasolin• angtn•. 1600
firm. 814- 992-2771.

Winne~•

I

.

6:30 D (]) IIJ) NBC NighUy Nowo

MEANWHI~E;,

5593.

81

th•
be--

FARTID

I

..

e l1l Boltloallr O.lactlca

1973 23 ft .' Prowl• Camper.
Exc•l. cond. Call 614· 245·

114-992-5328.

1980 MNdl G l C. 4 dr h.Cct.·
bat.k, good cond Talr• uvet p.., ,
Of s..l t -304 · 882 -2418

1~6:•:·:m:·:c:ai~I.;;3:0;4;;·6;;7:6;;·;;69;1;;7:.;;;;J:6:5:2:2:.

'

[]) Secret Clt)l
ilJ Good Tlmeo

1974 CheVy 'h ton p ick -up with
topper, excel. co nd. Call 1814-

1977 Ford Mav•dck Ont
I)Wner· 3 speed. · A .C . t850 .

•

'

.

..,

s 0 uR
E
3 ~I i
. ~--rl::....:;-.1~!

CJl SporiiLook (T)
C!l Dr. Who The Plra1e Planet

79 Motors Homes
8o Camper•

800 Ford tractor, U760. 2•1
lnternadonal round bel•- like
n.w. U210. lntllfl'lat~flll by
·conditioner',· t296 . Gfindtr·
Ml ..r, S860. Call 814 -286·

I

a2l

Ill) •

~Newo

3638.

Auto&amp; for Sale

Reo rronoe le"•rs of
0 four
scrambled warda

EVE~INO·.

• ()) CiJ • Cll

Turbo hydromatic 400 for Oldemobtle t100. and 1974 Mont•
Carlo, good en~• an.,-1 trarie ,
Call after I p .m ., 304 -195-

71

S@ \\cillA- I&amp; t. ~s·· ::::

8:00 ()) Big VoU.y Turn of Card

Usad and Rebuilt"trantmiuions.
lnternf~I'V insp•ctect and guaran·
ta.d. Installation avallabte. Wa ·
tNy junk tranaml11iont. Call

61 Farm Equipment

I

----...:.;_~ UIHI4 loy ClAY I . 'OUAN

THURS., AUG. 6 •

'i

8o Accessorial

01200. Coii614-U9-3&amp;51 .

246-6121 .

CARPET - 9x12 - 11 low as $50' lots to pick h-om. Also c:ut
carpet S6.00 a yd. and up.
Financing avail. Swlval rockers,
$100 . Mollohen Furniture.
Upper River Rd. Call 61• ·446·
7444.

•
•

Auto Parts

76

'::~:t:~'

•

low to form four simple words.

1 • fl fiberglalls. 18 hP Evenrude
motor and trailer. •400.00. C•ll
304-676· 1558 .

1986 Ricoh FT .3060 copier.
.Complete with cabinet, extre
paper and turner. Great bi,Jy·

Wh irlpool Dryer. Avacodo . Real
nice, '125 . Ca11114 -367-0322 .

676-1274.

811\..•

0700.; Ches1 of droworo. 4 55 Building Supplies

THE WORKING

Television
.
Viewing
.

614-446-0966 .

Wuhara, ~ryars, refrtg.,ator.:.
rangea . Sk1ggs Appliances ~
Upper Alvar Rd. beeicle Stone
Crest Motel. 8,4- 448 -7398 .

Appliances for sale. S320. 304·

ARE1AII:BI,

9220.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

3 room furnished garage apt .
412 1st St. New Haven. 304-

IN THE"A\RK

The Daily Sentinei- Page-1 1
'

BORN LOSER

10 ft." flbtfglass , 40 HP. Johf)·
son motot and trell~r . *1600.
Call &amp;14- 448 -1.528 or 4411339.

Coleman 3 -ton . sftlf-eontainad,
air conditioner for traiiM or
modular . 1250. Call 6\4· 4•8-

drawer, $48., 5 drawer, 859 . 96;

and up

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·

Gamef11her • Seers, 12 ft.
aluminum. C•lll14-248· 5532.

room suites from &amp;179.96 to

End tables
from bedroom
169.96 set.
Used
FurnitUre:
suites,
full sized beds, twin beds and
rockers . Recliners from t99.96

t

1 1815 24 ft:' Pontoon ~I boat.
70 HP Evenrude motor, 1raller.
Lott-Extras. See at OaUipotiJI
Boat Club. Call 614-441·4?82.

ou;les. · 0399.96: No .. on.;ng

Like

46 Space for Rent

FOR SALE: Commercial building. metal. insulated. 50' 1t 100'
Appro~ttmately 2 years old. 'h
•ere lot . Four miles from new
dim site.
SOMERVILLE
. REAL ESTATE
30il· 675 -3030

New · wood 6 pc. living room·

MAN'S fRIEND

Furnished apartment. Utb .
utilities paid. 1 bdr. 920 Fourth,
GallipoHs. Call 446 -4416 after
8pm .

___

34

44

304·882-2583.

bottom land; with 2400 lb.
tobacco base. large barn plus 3
Ololtbuildings. Mobile home
hook-up. Nice home site. Call 14x60, 2 bedroom trl iler with
614-258-1774.
expendo living room located on
~.:_:::.:..:_:_:..:.__:_
~-- 1 large fevet lot in MiddlePort.
20 acre f•m whh 3 8ft house, Neer schools and stores. 614Hannan Trac:e Road, Glenwood, 992 -2101 . aher 7:00p.m . call
W. Va. fOt" mora infDI"m..ion call 614-992-2319 .
304-na-.&amp;118 or n3-s1ae
Mobile Home For Rent ........ 2
aft..- 5 :00.
bedrooms, furnished , 304 -675 6512 .

I
I

1

Furnished apt. next door to
Ubrarv. One professionel Adult
only. Parking. Ph. 446 -0338 .

Coli 614-992-7479.
135 acrn·approJt . 20 acrea of

PARsoN.·s FURNITURE

-:;;::::;:;:==:;:=:::=::T:;;~=;;:=~~~==~

2 bedroom, 14x60, furniah&amp;d,
washtM' and dryer. cen.tral air.

Farms for Sale

33

0322.

••

Thlftdry, August 6:"1987

Boetlend
Motor• for S1le

76

·~Callahan's Used Tire ShoP. Over
1.000tlrH, stl'ee12,13 , 1•.115,
11. 11.1. I mil• Dut Rt. 218.
Cslll14-251· 1211.

w.

1ch0ol1. Could 'take poneuion
before achool 1t1rt1. Reasonable. Come and'" at 368 Grant
St .. Middlepodrt. &amp;14 -992 -

....gl living room, deck, free
wet•· septic. 8'h% loan assump'tton. Five minutes to Point
Pleaant. f'ftGf 6 p.m.. 304·

64 Ml1c. MerchandiH KIT 'N' CARL YU! ®by

Sofu and chain priced from
·tJ96 to t996. Tables t50 and
up to S1 25. Hide--e· beds 1390
to $69&amp;. Aaeliners t225 to
8375. Lamps •28 to $126.
Pl11tic cinern atata approvld,
Dinettes •109 end up to ••96.
pintle MP1ic tenkl, .plaatlc
Wood tabla w -1 chairs 1286 to . cutvens, metal . culverts. ,_ON
•796. De1k •100 up to $371.
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jack-·
HutchH $400 and up. Bunk
s_o~. oh. CS14-2te -ss3o .
beta complate
manr•aset
t2"95 and up to $39&amp;. labof beds
STANlEY Homeeare Producta.
1110. Mattre"" or boxapringl
Order tod1y . Make vouc office &amp;
fuM or twin $68. firm t 78, and
house cle1nlng e•lar • pie•
t88 . Queen 1etl $225." King sureable. Call St..,hanie. &amp;1•·
$360. 4 draw..- c:hnt 819 . Gun
446-8886.
cabinets 18 gun. Gas or .electric:
range $37&amp;. Baby manra..es
Smith-Corona Electric Typew136 • $46 . Bed framee $20.
ritter. Call814 -21i6-1989 after
130 &amp; King frame 1150. Good
5:0p.
selection of bedroom s~.dte1.
metal cabinet•. headboard.• $30
10K14 Went:r:al Camping tent.
and up to $65.
0100. Coll814-44t-OOI5.

Mtlle oft•. e14·2&amp;7-•S72 or

_,·,'

Thursday, August 6, 1987

· FLIP, FLOP, FLIP 15
NOT RATTLING 1

L T K

AYNOPR

«D llgn Off

II)) NewaHight Livs news

with Patrick Emory and
Klralln Undqulst (I :00)
12:30 !D Jell of Groucho
IIJl Lilli.Night vt1111
Devld Lettermen
(JJ AINaon, Hillin: A Ltgend

e (])

and • Lolocy CAl

(]) Rockford FU.a
D (I) MOno RNI People

·w x

WEQ

VYE 0 VX

I'' XXI!

E J X

I' 1' N (l I'

L T K

T M

RELNOP

Y E I X
WXNOI'

RJTJJYXA

AT

E
E

NREEV
RNOPXJ
Yeeterday'r Cryptoquote: SHOW ME THE MAN WHO
HAS ENJOYED HIS SCHOoLDAYS AND I WILL SHOW .
YOU A RUU.Y AND A BORE. - RORERT MORLEY
,1

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•

�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Thlnday, August 6, 1987

Hospital news

East Coast cools, thunderstonns · slam MidwestBy PETER ROWE
United Press International
A welcome mass of Ca nadian
air cooled the East Coast tOday,
ending a two-week heat wave
that claimed 82 lives, but uncom fortably hot weather persisted in
the deep South and thunderstorms slammed par ts of the
. Midwest.
.

t

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Meigs ...
.

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Contlnued .from page I
A resident of Rutl a nd. Ohio,
E ll iott h as workf'd a t thf' Raccoon No.3 mine for 12 years. Also
a n EMT. hf' has voluntf'f'red
mu ch tim e to the Meigs Count y
Emergency Service Squ ad.
wher&lt;' hf' serws as t he trai nin g
officer and as a me mber of the
board of directors.
Formed in 1926. the Holmes
Safety Association Is named for
J oseph A. Holmes . the fi rs t
director of the U.S. Bureau of
Mines. It Is dedicat ed to enco uraging and Improving saff'ty in
the mineral indu stries.

Open horse show set

I

'

An open horse show with 25
pleasure a nd cont est classes will '
be held Sunday, s tar ling at 1
p.m.. at the · Athe ns County
Fairgrounds. Contest classes
will be held a ft er 3 p.m . The event
is sponsored by the Athe ns
County 4-H Club.

Fox chasers to meet
The Me igs Count y Fox Chasers
Association will m eei at their
c lubhouse on Eagle Ridge at 7: 30
p.m. Friday.

, Area deaths I
Brandi Fortune

j

I

Brandi Nicole Fortune, 6, of
Syracuse. died Thursday , at her
residence followin g a lengt hy
illness.
Borp F e b. 15. 1981. s he was a
daughter of Charles Fortune of
Elizabet htown, Ky ., and Shelly
Fortune of Syracuse·.
Also s urv iv ing are on£' s ister.
Britta ny Noel Fortune at home:
maternal gra ndparent s, Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Rou sh of Pomeroy;
paternal grandparents. Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Fortune of Ja c kson and
Ma rgaret For tune of Elizabeth·
town, Ky .; mat ernal great
grandparent s. Mr . amj Mrs.
Howar d Pinnell of We irton,
W.Va.; maternal great grand·
mother, Mrs. Myrtl!&gt; Foster of
Elizabethtown, Ky.; maternal
gre at great gra ndpa rent s, Mr.
a nd Mrs. Lewis Rous h of New
Haven,.W.Va .
Se rvices ' will be condu cted
Saturday. 11 a.m .. from McCoyMoore Funeral Home in VInton.
Rev . Don Walker officiating.
Bur ial follows in Vinton MemorIal Park. Frfends may call at the'
fune ra l home Friday 6 to 9 p.m .

Daily stock prices
(As of 10:30 a . m .)
Provldi'd by
BI'Yce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl

Firm
Price
Am Electric Power ............. 26 'h
AT&amp;T .... .. .. .. ............... ...... .. 32%
As hland Oil ........................ 68¥.
Bob Eva ns Fa rms . .. ........... 247\
Char m ing Shoppes .............. 32 \-2
Federal Mogul ....................... 48
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................72Y.,
Hec k's In c . ... .... ..... ................. 4 .
Limit ed Inc ........................ 47 74
Multimedia Inc ... ..... .. ......... 71 Y.,
Rax Resta ura nt s .... .. ............... 5
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 9%
Shoney·s In c ... .. .... ... ... .. : ..... 31 %
Wendy 's In ti. .. .... ................ 10'¥,
Wort hington lnd .................. 23%

EMS reports 6 ('ails
. Meigs Coun ty E m ergency
Medical Services reports s ix
c alls Wed nes da y; Tuppers
Plains at 5:56 a .m. took Elise
Wagenh als to Vetera ns Memor. ial Hosp it al : Pomeroy at 8: 19
a.m . to Mulberry Avc . tor E leanor Lohse who wa s trea ted but
not tra nsported: Middl eport at
11 :47 a.m. to South Second Ave.
for Marie Dudding to · Veterans
Memor ial Hospita l; Middleport
a t 8:38p.m. transported Audrey
Bradbu ry from aQ auto accide nt
on Poplar Ridge to Holzer
Medica l Cen ter: Middleport at
10: 03 p.m . to Ches hire for Ha rley
Null tO Veterans Memoria l Hospital ; Racin e at 12: 14 a. m. to
Bas han fo r Neva Maxson to
Holzer Medica l Cent er.

Free hlood pressure
dini(' set Tuesday
The Harrisonville Senior Cit!·
zens Club has set its next free
blood pressure c Unic for 10 a .m.
to 12 noon Tuesday at the Town
Hall in Harrisonville.

Funds distributed
· The Junedi s tributionolllcense
tax money In Ohio totaled
$27,545,786.40. Of the total , Meigs
County received $107,933.84,
•

'·

A tornado watch remained In
effect early today over parts of
the Dakotas and Minnesota as
violent thunderstorms developed
along a cold front hovering over
the northern Plains. The storms
generated. high winds, hall, and
several tornadoes In the area. but
caused no Injuries or property
da mage.
The bad weather prevepted air
ambulan.ces· In Sout h Dakota
from respo1)d!ng to the fiery
·crash of a motor home on
Inters tate 90 nea r Chl) m berla ln ,
pollee said. Two people were
killed in the crash. anq six ot hers
were
some

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On July 23, 1987, in tho
Meigs County Proboto Coun.
Caoo No. 17.011 , Jon ~.
Karsclw1ik. P. 0 . BoK 339,
Tuppon Plains. Ohio 46783.
was appointed Special Admi~
istrottw of tho 01tato of Augu&lt;!l
T. Snyder, - e d . late of
Meigs Coonty, Ohio.
Charles H. Knight,
Acting Probate Judge
Len1 K. Natselroad, Clerk
30; 181 6, 13. 3tc

m

---------- Weath
South Central Ohio
Mos tly sunny today with a high
in the mid SOs. Increasing cloudi·
ness tonight wHh lows in the mid
60s .
Partly cloudy F riday with
highS In the upper 80s.
The proba bilit y of precipitation Is near zero through Friday .

Winds will be . varia bl e less
than 10 miles an hour today and
light a nd variable tonight. ·
Extended Forecast
Saturday through Monduy
. Fair Sat urday through Mon·
day . Highs will be In the 80s and '
lows in the 60s.

tor.

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On july 23, 1987,. in the
Meigs County Probate Court.
Case No. 16,107, Jon P.
Karschnik. P. 0 .' Box 339.
Tuppero Plains. Ohio 45783.
wa1 appointed Special Admin·
isti'IIIOf' of the estate of Annis
V. Chanin, d8C881ed, late of
Salisbury TownsNp. Maigs
County. Ohio.
Charles H. Knight.
Acting Probate Judge
Lena K . Nesselroad. Clerk
30; 181 6. 13, 3tc

m

·

One bid will be received
for the General Contr ac-t
which will include all work
for the projec t, inclu ding ge neral, mechanical and eleCiil
trical items .
Copies · of said dr~wings
and specifications mav be
obtained. from Panich · and
Noel Architect s. S07 Ri Ch ··
land Avenu e, A1hens. Ohio,

45701 . upon t he deposit
with t hem of 'twenty -five
dollars i$25 00) in cash or
check for each set of draw ings and Speci fi ca tio ns. ·one
half of the 1wt3ntv· five dollar
deposit on each set of d rawings and specificattons will
be return ed to bidders upon
return of drawings and spe:
cifications in good condition
within ten 11 OJ days after bid

Btek To Sehool

SALE

TO

lovt S20

s

any and all bids.

NEW 21'C. U .
UVING 1M. SUI11

55995

$19995

Sawo '2S . ~... ,

!?Pi\

rry

INTRODUCTORY

PRICE',. _ ..... -.

,,, ..... " ... .,, ........... ,....

" " ll &lt;o · . ,,, ,,//,, /, .. . ,,

~

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:\::~~..

SHIRT SALE

STOCK UP FOR SCHOOL DAYS
Men's summer knit shirts, sport shirts and
Van Heusen dress shirts.

1/2 PRICE

Choose fro111 Devon.
Blake, Wrangler and
Ocean Pacific .

PRICE 1/2 PRICE

ia

Back To School

Sizes 8 to 18

$720

SATURDAY AUG. 8th
10 A.M. TO •:30 P.M.

JEANS

Lee and Wrangler in sizes
12 111onths thru size 7 .

,

For 81ek To Se~oel

-1/2 PRICE

50.0/o OFF

.

LITTLE BOYS'

FREE

Junior and Miuea
Sizes in quality
1 00% denim jeans .
All your favorite
styles.

SHIRT SALE

BRIEFS, BOXERS, A-SHIRTS, T-SHIRTS and
Y-NECK SHIRTS
Reg. 56.99-3-Pack Briefs ............. Sale $525

OTO SPECIAL ---·

WRANGLER
JEANS

BOYS'
SHORT SLEEVED
Novelty T-Shirts, Sport Shirts and Knit Shirts

Save on Men's Hanes Blue and Red Label
Underwear

.S9.59-3-Pack T

WOMEN'S

Back To School

HANES UNDERWEAR

Reg. 56.00 to s22.00

Back To School S1le

$4 79 ro$1759

.
I
I
I

Back To School

~~

BOYS'

' ' ~{

· , ' . ..•\..·
'

.

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.. ' 1

JEANS SALE .

Lee and Wrangler blue denim
iel!ns. Includes Storm Riders
909 City Straights and Wrangle;
"No Fault" Straight Lag ..
Bo'!'s regular. slim and husky
11zes. also student sizes.

Reg. S14.9S to S26.9S

·SALE

$11 79.Jo $21 s9

.

STORE HOURS

flll•''•ld•
OHjll
~O·I•ol

9:30 TO 6:00

. A

Ouality 'double Pedlltll dMkt fel ·
ture 3 utillty dr•wert. 2 flte drt'IN·
en end accented br•u· plat ad
hardware. Your choice of oak. pine
or ~In f inish.

All summer sportswtar in
junior, misses and utrq sizes
is redu&lt;td!

Back To School Sale

ONE DAY ONLY

Good studY lwtlltt M hiiC»&gt;t•nt. Oiw
your t10rt or d8ughter their ilwn ~ and
jull maybe their gr.- wil ~.'

sso

'

•--""' BX 10 COLOR PORTRAIT

DESK SALE

Save
Over

Knit tops, tank tops,
sport shirts and blouses .
Ltntf IOY i' SIZES: t 2 Mo•. to Sin 7

1

446 -9523

N~:LY $188°0

20%
OFF!*
.
-.. ... .

Back
To School
.

.., . . . ,'

Clotttl Thurs.

154 Second

i.l4\ " I •U 1L

CH.liCU C~ID

percenrag~

point dec lin e in t heir rat e to 15.5

percent.
Amo ng whit es. the rate dropped Q.l ·of a
percent age point to 5.1 percent, while the ra te for
blacks dropped the same amount but reach ed only
12.6 percent. Hispanics enjoyed the healthiest
decrease of all, 0.6 of a percentage point , e nd ing
up at 7.9 percent.
T he 6 percent rate Is for civilians in the work
force . If one count s Americans in the military and
living on U.S. bases, then the jobless rate falls to
5. 9 percent.
The July report represent s the first time the
Labor Department has counted many of the
thou sa nd s df youths who flood the job market each
summer. June's civ ilian unemployment ra te of ·
6. 1 percent was considered a bit suspect because
the government's job survey that month w as
.
.

taken relatively early. thus catc hing m any
potential stude ilt ·workers while they were still in
school.
Once summe r vacation began , the labor force
swelled by 435,000, but July's 470,000- person gain
in employment proves there were jobs waiting for
them .
·· Job prospects are gett ing better for today's high
sc hool- age crowd because there a re fewer people
compel ing for jobs. The Census Bureau estimates
the number of Americans aged 14 to 17 will drop
from 14.9 million in 1985 to 13 million in 1990.
That shrinking population is doubly blessed in
that it Is living at a time in which the number of
jobs created In the United States has grown by 2.8
million since July 1986 and by som e 13 million
since the current economi c recovery be,g an in late
1982

Ohio State fair is underway

I

Opon 9:30-§:00

Back To School

liiTlf Gllll' SIZES: 12 flo&lt;. to SilO 14

I can't Belieo.eit~aGirdle

FURNITURE

Baek To School
CHILDREN'S
SUMMER
SHORT
SPORTSWEAR
SLEEVED TOPS CLEARANCE
For little girls and boys.

.r.,, w'~"'

Ret ail t rade provided about a quarter olthe new
services jobs, while health services created
.anot her 35,000 and the finance, insur ance and real
estate Industries generated about 20,000 apiece.
T he rise In manufacturing jobs came despite a
40,0()().person cutback at factories producing
motor veh icles and equipment.
The typical manufac turing worker's week was
unc hanged a t 41 · hou rs . but the amount of
overtim e rose 0.1 hour to 3.8 hours. Average
weekly earnings dropped 35 cents to $~11.85.
All groups except women saw their jobless ra tes
ran.
F'or adult men, the unemp loyment ra t e slid 0.1
or a perce nt age point to 5.4 percent , but lor adult
women the rat e rose 0.2 of a percent age point to
.the sa me 5.4 percent. Teenagers enjoyed a 0.4 .

"'*·

Back To School

•

By CRAIG WEBB
WASHINGTON tUP II -The nation' s une mployment rate feil again In Ju ly to. hit 6percent.
the lowest level · in 7~ yea rs , thE' Labor
Department said today .
The rate dropped becau se companies added
·some 470.000 wor kers to their payrolls to total
112.7 mlll.lon while the number of people without
jobs and looking lor one dropped :l6.000toreac h 7.2
million. Both of those fi!(Ures were adjusted for
seaso nal fa ctors.
The na tion's employm en t picture ha s not been
· this br l~ ht since December l979when the rate al so
s tood at 6 perce nt.
As In the past few months, far more
service· than goods· produ ci ng jobs were created
- 230.000 lor serv ices vs. 74,000 for goods in July.
the Labor Depar tment said.

' ·"'" utrt limYsan
,...,
sol~ •••

Rl

I!. I ; . I

r~ NEW Thank Goodness it Fits
SPECIAL

O

CHEST

'"·...

171 26 . 31: (81 6 3tc

il

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DRAWER

2 Sections 14 Pages
25 Cents.
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Nation's uneJ!lployment d()wn to 6 percent

~....litlolll....

lf9. '69

54995

enttne

Pomeroy- Mic!dleport. Ohio, Friday, August 7 , 1987

Vol. 37. No . 83
. Copyrighted 1987

•

CHEST

Cloudy tonight. Low near
70. Cloud~ Saturday.
Chance of s howers. IDgh
near 90.

•

at y

4
D~AWER

reurves the right to reject

·~

SEAMUssucHTLY LINED STYLES

3379

Page-6

'

2 FOI 1

$799

..

Pick 4

OFF

IUY Oltl UCUIIII
'~"""- Gil ONE fBI .

To School Sale
Pried Fro111 011ly

$1 569

214

•

IECUNEIS

opening date.
Bids for the above described w.ork mu&amp;t be made
on blanks to be furnished by
the Architect herein before
nam,-d and must be ad·
drt;tssed to Veterans Memorial Hospital, 116 ~ - Memo·
r!,l , Ori_ve, _Pomeroy, O~lo.
45769 , and endorsed on the
outside
of envelope the
items of· \YOrk bid upon.
Each bid must contain the
full name of every penon or-·
company interested in the
~me , shall stale the price
for labor and materials, and
mu sl be accompanied by •
BID GUARA!\ITY mooting
and requirements of Sectio"
1 63 .54 of the Ohio Reviled
Code.
No bidder mav withdraw
hi~. bid w ithin sixty 160} days t
after the aetual date of the
·o pen'ing thereof.
Veterans Memorial HosPi·
t 8'1 mav accept the lowes1
bid . o r sele~t the best bid for
their in1 ended purpose, and

PLA1TEX .SALE
$9.99

20°/o 50°/o

Special Back·To·School
Sale Pric~s on Lee and
Wrangler d~nim jeans.
"
Sizes: 3T to 14 .

100% Cotton blue
denim. Proven fit with
.. tasting quality. Waist
size 30 to 42 .

Daily Number

AUGUST SALE

GIRLS'
JEANS

MEN'S WRANGLER
PRE-WASHED

DENIM JEANS

Church
•
notices

CLEVELAND (UP)) - Two
tickets sold for Wednesday
night's Super Lotto game have ·
the same six numbers picked In
the drawing, Ohio Lottery offl· .
cia ls said today.
·
. Numbers chosen In the $3 ·
mlll!ondrawlngwere2,6, 9.21,29 ·

~~J~u=d~l:e~M~c:N:I:c:k~le:.E::va~==::~~::a;n:d~~~.~~~~~~~~~ .

Public Notice

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
NOTICE OF
Sealed bids wilt be receive.
APPDI NTMENT OF
by Veterans Memorial Hosp._
FIDUCIARY '
On July 23. 1987, in
tal at the office ofW. S . lucas.
Meigs County Probate Coun. Adminisuator, at 116 E. Me·
Case No. 16,106, Jon P. mo;ial Drive. Pomeroy. Ohio.
Karschnik, P. 0 . BoK 339, 45769. until. 10:00 A .M . loTuppero Plains. Ohio 46783. cal time. on A1,1gust 11 , 1987,
waa appointed Spsci81 Admin· for furOis'hinq the necessary ·
iatrator of the estate of l.ra 0 . l~r and matarials, toOls,
Chanin, deceased. toto of Sat· machinery and appliances reisburv Township, Meigs Coun ~ quired for the .MEDI.CAl AND
DENTAL CLINIC. 5th and
tv. Ohio.
•
Charles H. Knight, Pearl Streets, Raci ne. Ohio
Acting Probate Judge according to the drawings
and specifications on tile in
Le;na K. Nesselroad, Clerk
the o ffice of the Administra (71 30; tBI 6, 13, 3tc

Public Notice

Ohio Lottery

EVERYTHING

Public Notice

&lt;

NOTICE OF DRAWING
JURORS
Office of Commissioners of
Jurors. Meigs County ,
Ohio .
July 31 . 1987 ·
To All Whom It Mav
Concern :
On Thursday, the13thday
of Augu's t, 1987. at 9 :00
o'clock A .M .• at the office of
the
Commissioners
of
Jurors of Meigs County,
Ohio. Jurors will b8 publicly
drawn for the September
1987 Tarm of the Common
Pleas Coun of said County .
Wallace Bradford
t. 0 . McCoy
Commi55ionefS of Jurors
6 1tc

· Veterans Memorial
Wednesday . Admissions
Showers and thunderstorms Karen Reltmlre. Letart, W.Va.;
were also scattered early today Ann Elise Wagenhals, New
across New E ngland through • Haven , W.Va .; Marie Dudding.
New Jersey , a nd from North Middleport; John Nash, MiddleCarolina across Alabama and port; Gert ha Hensley. Northup;
Opal Willison, Reedsv ille.
Mississippi
WedQesday Discharges
er---~----- Micky Oller, Waid · Johnson ,

enough to merit immediate alr·
lilt to a hospital In Sioux Falls
about 120 miles away, but because of the weather other
arra ngements had to be made to
t ransport the inj ured .

Public Notice

Public Notice

Two have winning
Super LoItO tiC
• k ets.
·

PEDALING FOR PROGRESS- A.11roup of
thirty-six c~cll!ot• • turted out scvl'n w(·ciL• ago
from San Francisco, Calli., enroute to WtL•hlng·
ton U.C. 11nd 11 Co n~rcsslonol rec~ ptlon. This
~roup, Ju•l one of many other ]!l'Oups parlidplll·
lng In Bike- Aid 'H7 and making pletL• for solutions
to world poverty, spe1d nmch ol Wedn esday· In
Pomero~ . Thll8c members of lhe group stopped

long enough lor a picture In front of the
courthouse. A brochure distributed hy Blk&lt;~A id
participants quotes the Chinese proverb, "If you
plan lor one year, plant rice; If ~ou plan for ten
years, plant trees; If ~ou plan for one-hundred
~ear, educate mankind." The Bike-Aid participants feel they ar e part of a longterm educational
process.

By DAVID HARDING
COLUMBUS iUP I ) -With
ba nds playing and banners wav ing. choirs sin ging a nd bell s
r ingin g - and ·I he aroma or corn
dogs a nd cotton .ca ndy wafting
through thewarmsummerairan ex ubera nt Gov.' Richard F .
Ce les te Thu rsday olilc!all y
ope ned the 134 th edit ion of the
Ohio Sta te Pair.
" ThiS is terrific!" gushed the
governor . "Boy am I glad today
is fi na lly herr."
Fair ofli clals broke with tradi·
tlon this yea r. opening the
fest ivities at 6 p.m . to give more
people a c hance to attend a nd
a lso to add o·ne-ha lf day to what
~s~d to be a 11-day exhibition that
. began about sunrise.
F'lve thousa nd red. white and
blue balloons were sent s kyward
. at the moment tha t Celes te and
the fair's firs t offici a l visitor.
8·-yea r-old Rya n Huffman of
Washi ngton Cou nt y. cut the ribbo n to open the cx travaga nza .
Huffm an, accompanied by his
mother. grandmot her , great
gra ndmot her a nd grea t uncles.
was presented with a stuffed
a nimal and fair passes by the
governor.
Celeste sai d the boy' s family
was chosen to hel p open the

Park.
festivities because it has been
The park features flags of the
!arming nea r Marietta since
16
states admitted to the Union
1794. close to when the Northwest
before
Ohio. fly ing in a semicirOrdinance was signed. and becje, the Ohio flag flying In the
cause it represents a spirit of
middle, a remindf'r that Ohio was
"Still Pioneering." the fair's
the fi rs t state to enter the union
them &lt;' lor 1987.
We ar ln'g brigh1 red · 0 ' H'1·0 · after the Northwest Ordinance
•
sunglasses . passing out "Ohio- . was estabilshed.
Celeste
ca
lled
the
park
a
The He art Of It All" pins and
"
~nique
opportunity
for
fair·
waving to anyone who looked like
goers to ta ke part in Ohio's
they might wave back. Celeste
celebration
of the bice nt ennial of
earlier Thursday led r eporters
the
Northwest
Ordinance" and .a
and photographe rs on a tour of
"great
legacy
for futu re fair the fair grounds.
·
goers to appreciate our special
The governor , calling the 1987
heritage as Ohioans ."
ex pos ition " the biggest and bes t
After making a quick stop at
state fair ever" a nd " a mos t
the
circus tent to congra tulate
ex traordinar y affirmation of
two
trapeze artists who were
what's r ight in Ohio." said more
ma.rr
ted und,Etr, .the ~ig t.ol/ Tl)ur,s·
than 3.5 mlll1ol) ' pe(tple . ~fe
day mom1ng, Ce.1e!ltt'. al!IF.Itls
expected to attend in 1987.
ento~rage visited .ll, sand sc\JIP·
"Few places capture the spirit
of pioneer ing more lhan right .lure titled '.'Somethmg Great In
America," a nother new exhibit.
here an he Oh io State Fa ir," said
The sculpture- 20 feet high, 65
Celes te. " With more than 69,000
-ff'f't
long and 35 feet wide - is
ex hibit s, the Ohio State Fair
being
put together while the fair
refl ects Ohio' s leadership role in
In
progress.
When finished, it
is
agriculture, as . well as the
will
feature
three Ohio-born
promise of Ohio's youth. "
presidents, Ulysses S. Grant,
The governor. acco mpanied by
Rutherford B. Ha yes and James
F'irst La dy Dagmar CP!este and
A. Garfield •. as we ll as seven
Jack C . Foust . the fair 's general
other Ohioans who have made
mana ger, emphasized the new
significant contributions to the
altract!ons at this yea r' s fair.
nation's his tory.
including the 17-star Mem,orial

Bike-Aid participants pedal
through area, seek support
" II world working together·

... join the bike-aid challenge."
Cy llsts from across thccountry
hav e joined to,;e ther In a second
a nnual bike rldr. ped a lling for
progress In solutions to global
povrrty.
Last year, 75 cyc lists and
hundreds of volunt eers worked to
support self-help effor ts around
the world, ralslnj! $100,000 in the
process. This year's participants
hope Bike-Aid •g7 will be even
more success fu I.
This year 's riders started ou t
several weeks ago from five
Wes ter n and Soulhern c ities,
ranging In dis la nce from 3, 700 to
2.000 miles . In about two weeks ,
· the different groups will join
togethe r In Washington D.C . for a
Congressional reception, and

then r ide t oget her to a gra nd
fina l&lt;' at the United Na tions
Building in New York City.
Age Is not a fac tor In Bikt&gt;·Aid
and the group whi ch passed
through Pomeroy Wednesday
ra nged In ages 15·34 . Any average rider may participate as long
as he or s he Is In good phys ical
condit ion. A vchicle accompa nIes each group of rldet·s. car ryi ng
gear and belongings.
Eac h Bi ke-Aid team becomes a
traveling fam ily. learning, he lpIng a nd shari ng togeth e r . The
r!cie Is non-com petitive, a nd
e ncourages participation for a ny
length of time.
'
Averaging 72 miles a d ay . the
ride Is ex hau st ing, yet exhilarat ·
tng. Riders stop In cities and
small towns alike to cha t with

local reside nt s a nd media, or to
volunteer for co mmunity serv ice. Overnight acco modatlons
Include churc hes, gy mna siums,
campgrounds and even barns .
Occasslonally families will hos t
riders, providing a home-cooked
m ea l a nd the cha nce to s hare
the ir exper ie nces and concerns.
Out -of-pocket expenses are kept
to a minimum.
The main thru st or the Bike-Aid
effo rt Is that "there Is ca use for
hope,"
Anyone wis hing more Information about Bike· Aid may write to Bike-Aid '87, P.O. Box2306. Dept.
B , Stanford, Ca lif. , 94305.
Blke·Aid Is sponsored by the
Overseas Development Network
Inc., a coalition of student groups
on college campuses nationwide .

Iran fires shore-to-sea missile
By JOHN PHILLIPS
MANAMA . Bahrain iUPI)

U.S. radar -jamming planes are ·
conducting a war of nerves with

Power outage lewes 3,024
customers without service
i\ total of 3,024 customers of lhe Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co., primarily In Meigs County, were without eleli'trlcal'
service lor three hours early Friday morning.
Ron McDade. Gallipolis area manager tor the company, satd
the outage was caused when a 89,000 volt breaker at the
company's substation on the Route 7 bypass faulted knocking
out two clrculto. The circuits feed power to upper Cheshire,
Middleport, parts of Pomeroy, the Harrisonville area, a Route 7
area. and an area In the vicinity of Chesler, McDade stated.
The outa11e occurred at 4:58a.m. and workers ofthe company
made the necessary transfers to feed lines with service being
restored at 7: 5'l a.m. More permanent corrections restoring the
original feed line• will .be carried out Immediately and there
should be no mo~e problems, McDade concluded.

Iranian shore· based missile s ites
in the Persian Gulf, where
Te hran Is holding an unexpected
fourth day of "Operation Martyrdom " naval maneuvers today.
Gulf shipping sources said the
United States' pia~ to re-flag
three more Kuwaiti tankers has
been suspended. and the VVashington Post quoted Defense
Department sources as saying
the next convoy has been post·
poned for up to a week to await
the_arrival of mlneswf'f'ping and
other military equipment.

'
The state-run Islamic Republic
News Agency, monitored In
Athens, Greece, reported today
that Iran test-fire(! a ·"shore-tosea missile" In the Persian Gulf
Thursday on orders from Presl·
dent All Khamenel.
'

the Abandoned Mined Lands Program. Work
RECLAMATION PROJECT - This PagevUJe
·
began In June to restore the site back Into
No. 2 strlp·mlned reclamation site In Meigs
productive land.
County Is one project currently underway through

No reason given for Bill Arnott's
resignation from Syracuse ·council
The resignation of William
Arnott as a member of Syracuse
VIllage Council was read . and
accepted Thursday night when
Syracuse Council met In regular
session.
No reason was given for the
resignation. Council has 30 (lays
to name a replacement to serve
for the remaining two years on
Arnott's lerm.
During a lengthy discussion on
the operation of the London Pool,
It was reported that Dale Tea·
ford, who has been serving as
manager, resigned since the last
council meeting and Sherry
Sisson has been named to . the
position.
\
Councilman Ernie Sisson re-

porte&lt;l that a number of trees In
the town need trimming but no
action was taken due to the lack
of fund. Sisson, also announced
that the s treet committee will
meet as soon as the Shelly Co. has
completed cost factors on resurfacing "streets ln· the town. The
committee will decide how many
of the streets the town will be able
to have resurfaced based on Its
financial ability to pay.
The monlhly report of the Chief
of Pollee for July Indicated 14
miscellaneous calls received,
one breaking and en terlng lncl·
dent Investigated, one auto fire
Investigated, two auto accidents,
two .traffic citations Issued, one
citation for overparklng at a

----·-- _____,_____ - ------·

roadside par k. The pollee vehicle
was driven 607 miles and the
r a dar has been sent to Columbus
for repairs .
The report or Mayor Ebcr
Pickens showing collect ions of
$8911n fines and fees for July was
approved .
Due fo · va ndalism council
agreed to place a cable across the
entrance to the s mall ball field as
soon as the tennis tournament Is
over1 and a Labor Day chleken
barbecue by the Syracuse Fire
Department was announced.
Attending the meeting weri!
Mayor Pickens, Clerk-Treasurer
Janice Lawson, and council
members. Glenn Cundiff; Jim
Hill, Sisson and Kat.hryn Crow.

-J•

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