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                  <text>M!)l'lday, July 7; 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sheriff, ·sci investigat~g break-ins, car theft :
Grace M. Caldwell
Grace Margaret Caldwell, 95, Rt.
1 VInton, died at 4:10p.m. Saturday
1n tru:, ~killed ~rsing Unit m
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Pomeroy.
She was born Sept. 6, ll!90, at
Rutland. the daughter of the late
John Solomon and Emma Winona
Smith Kincaid. She was preceded In
death by her husband, Everett
Dean Caldwell, on June 22, 1962.
Also preceding her in death were
two. daughters, Mary Louise and
Margaret Ellen, and one grandson,
Charles Emmons.
Sutvlving are two sons, John
Franklin Caldwell of Vinton. and
David Caldwell of Cnlumrus; tM:&gt;
daughters, Dorothy Emmons m
Brookfield, and Catherine ~ene­
lield of Langsville; and a nephew.
Fraft~ Howard of Lexington, Ky.
She was also survived by three
sisters, Edith Shoemaker &lt;i Colum·
b..ls, Ethel Blake mO&gt;lumrus, and
Bertha Phillips of Cincinnati.
Mrs. Caldwell was a !Tl{'mher of
Rutland United Methodist Church,
a ~-plus year member mthe Meigs
Counly Fann Bureau, a SO.plus
year member of Wllkl'sville Order
of the Eastern star, Chapter 'l!Jl,
and a member of the Star Grangl'.
Servloes wlll be 1 p.m. Tuesday In
Rutland United Methodist Church.
with the Rev. Robert Mussman and
the Rev. C.J. Lemley officiating.
Burial at Salem Center Cemetery
will follow. The body wUllle in state
one hour before the service.
Visitation will take place at
McCoy·Moore Funeral Home In
Vinton from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. IDday.
An Eastern Star service is
scheduled for 8:45 p.m.
Pallhearers will include Rod
Stephan, Bradley Emmons, !)(&gt;an
Caldwell, Carl Shenefield and Roy
Vaughan. Honorary pallbearers
are Carl l)(&gt;nnison, Harold Rice,
Harvey Erlewine, Clifford Might,
Clarentl' Might and Mike Bennett.

Helen Jane Staaltl
Helen Jane Staats, 68, of Letart,
died Suooay at her home.
Born Nov. 3, 1917, in Letart, she
was the daughter of James Milford
and Zora Jane Roush Hoffman.
She was a member mthe Vernon
United Methodist Church.
Surviving are her husband. Stanley Eugene Staats, Letart; lour
daughters, Beverly Kay Staats.
Akron; Glenva J. Hoover, Karen A.
Broadwater, and CarolS. Staats, all
of Letart; one son, Max L.Staats,ol
Letart; four sisters, Freda A. Hart,
and Mary A. Ueving, both of New
Haven; Opal Faye Hoffman, and
Nora F. Staats, of Letart; one
brother, Roy P. Hoffman, New
Paris; and eight grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by two
brothers. Earl H. Holfman" and
DPncel 0 . Hoffman .
Services will be Wednesday at
1: :Jl p.m. at the Foglesong Funeral
Home with the Rev. Bobby Wood
and Rev. Gerald Sayre. Burial will
'

follow In the Hoffman' Cemetery.
Fnends may caD Tuesday from 6-9
p.m.

Clifford E. Manley
Clifford E. (Rooster) Manley, 57,
South Second Avenue, Middleport,
died Saturday at Holzer Medical .
Center in GalHpolis.
A truck driver, Mr. Manley was
born May 19, 1929, In Cheshire, a son
of the late Emmett and Bertha
Frazier Manley.
Surviving are his wlfe, Rosanna;
two daughters and sons-in-law,
Catey and Frank Elliott, Michigan;
Cindy and Steve Hartenbach,
Pomeroy; a son and daughter-inlaw, Toney and Gloria Manley,
Wellston; a son, John, Middleport;
four grandchildren; three sisters,
Audrey Gassney, Massillon; Ancill
Van Matre, Middleport, and Corrine Ambrose, Pomeroy. Several
nieces and nephews also survive.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded In death by a brother,
Barney, and a sister, Midgle
Abbott.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Tuesday at the Rawlings-CoatsBlower Funeral Home with Rev.
Earl Eden and Father Tony
Glannamore officiating. Burial will
be In the Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire. Friends may call at the
funeral home today from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m.

Normal Lucas
Normal (Sparky)' Lucas, 83, Rt.
1, Cheshire, died at lO::Jl a.m.
Saturday in Holzer Medical Center,
having been In failing health for the
past six years.
A retired employee after 45 years
of service lor Marietta Manufacturing Co., Point Pleasant, he was horn
May 21, 1903. in Hurricane, W.Va .,
the son of the late Frank Lucas and
Annie Mooney.
Surviving are his wife, Ruby
McGhee Lucas, who he married on
Oct. 10, 1927, In Gallipolis.
Other survivors Include tM:&gt; sons,
Robert Lucas, Rt. 1, Cheshire, and
Walter (Scotfy) Lucas, Cheshire;
two daughters, Mrs. Patricia
Roush, Rl. 1. Gallipolis, and Mrs.
Ruth Domer, Naples, Fla.; a
brother Cecil Lucas of Point
Pleasant; a sister, Mrs. Minerva
Linton. Royal Oak, Mich., and 13
grandchildren' and eight great granochildren.
l'r'oredlng him in death were one
llln and daughter, three brothers
and three sisters.
Services will be held 1 p.m.
Tuesday In the Waugh-HalleyWood Funeral Home, with the Rev.
Richard Vinson and the Rev. Kurt
Cllne officiating. Burial will be in
the Gravel Hill Cemetecy, Cheshire. Visitation hours at the funeral
home will be 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today.
Pallbearers for the service will be
grandsons Terry, Bryan, Bobby ,
Tim, Raney and Rusty Lucas,
Steve Roush and Rick Domer.

Two breaking and enterings and
a car lbett which occulTed ewer the
weekend are under investigation by
the department of Meigs Counly
Sheriff Howard Frank and BCI
officials. "
The department rePQrts that the
Salem Center Township BuDding
was broken In to lllmetime between

Route
2, Hospital
Racine after
to Veterans
Memorial
Beegle
was struck by an tractor which
overturned at the home of his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Beegle. Rodney jumped from the
tractor as It overturned. He was
later.later to Holzer Medical Center
where he underwent surgery lor

0tm Extended Forecast
Wednesday lhrouJh Friday
Fair Wednesday and Friday,
with a cbance of showers and
Urunderstorms Thursilay. Highs
mostly will be In the Ills each day,
with overnight ilws In the 00s.
South Central Ohio
Sunny and humid today, with

Saturday admissions- Gertrude
Searles, Cheshire; Elsie Roush,
PorUand
Saturday dlschargl's - Laura
Scott, Vernard E;ilwards.
Sunday admissions - l.A'Oria
Hubbard, Syracuse; Matha Fox,
Middleport; Peggy Taylor, Pomeroy; Lucille Pendleton, Rutland.
Sunday discharges - Gertrude
Searles, George Gree'ti.

-·
11

*"'*"

&amp;1111• •

'

Public Notice

NOTICE TO
BIDDERS

2. 1972 lnternattonal bua

Meigs, State of Ohio, to·wit:

peuenger

An undivided ooa·haff in·

links to attlke; thence Welt
13 dlaina 46 links to center

ond noulting TWOWAY RADIO EOUPMENT
wil bo •eceived bo,-theBoenlol
EduC8tion of lhe Metga LOC81
School DiltriC1. st the Ofllcool
the r, • .,,.,, 621 South Third
AvontJe. Midd~rt. Ohio.
45780. until .12:00 noon.
Eoattm Daylight Time on July
10, 1988. Bids wHt bo op.,ed
ot 2:00P.M . on the 11me dty
in

tha

Office of the

Superint..dtnt.

Copies of the specifiations
and propo•l b4.-.ks ere availa·
blo et the Meigl Local School

Diatrict. Office

of the Tr••·
urer, 621 SouthThirdAV81Ue,
Middleport, Ohio, 45780. No
propoul will bo conoldooe:l
union submitted on tho blri
proposal forms lumishod ,.;111
the 1peciffcltions.
Each bid &amp;hal bo acco"".,.

muimum bid. Bids are to be

sealed and addreeud to:

Meigs Locel
School Dm.;ct
Dnlca of the Traoaooer
621 So!Jih Third Avonue
MKid'-rt.
Ohio 46780
Blds .. tobeplalnlymllked
on fto outoide of tho -led
envok&gt;pe os fu.,wo: "TWOWAY RADIO EQUIPMENT
BID". The a1cc:oulul biddo•
w~t be oequired to fumioh •

i\11 Inspection practice lor the
Rock Springs Grange will be held at
7:30 Tuesday night at the hall.
Regu la rmeetingof the grange wi th
Inspection will be held at 8 p.m.
Thursday al the hall and memhers
are urged to attend.

Boosters meet tonight

.

992.3714

MlmlEPORT

CON~NIENT OFF THE STREET PARKING

I

Public Notice

Sealed bid1 for AlflPiyWig.

Inspection set

KING .BUILDERS
SUP·PLY INC.

405 N. 2ND . 'I

Public Notice

ovm•

••

86

#136620H346030 lerelt in and to tho following of atrtot: thence North 14
3.. 1972 tntomotlonel buo rea! ntoto aitueted n the feet, thence East 3 chain•
86 paaenger County of Meigs. in the 28 tlnko to Southoert comer
#138120H348038 State of Ohio, and in the of Mill Lot; thence North 3
4. 1974 tntomotlonal buo Townohip of Scipio '"'d chains 65% links to pleco of
88 paaenger bounded and da1cribed 11 bogining, containing 4.2
#T3872DHA19920 follows:
acres. ·more or la11.
6. 1976 International buo
PARCEL 1: Being all thot
PARCEL 6: Aloo otrect of
88 poaenger part of Lot No. 63. in the land 3 rods wide off tho
#DOB22EHB37766 Town or VIllage ofPogeville, lOuth end of 1 certlin ~reel
8. 1972 International buo Meigs County. Ohio, and be- of lend known 01 tho Mill lot'
86 paaenger mg aama premises as con · situated near tho middle of:
#138820H348044 vayed by Caroline Golden II¥ North hell of tho Nnrthwllll·

7. 1973 International bus
66 pa~&amp;engar

deed of record, Volume 86.
Page 216, said Deed Re-

8. 1972 lntemational bua
18 paaenger

Said parcel being aame

satiataclory Performance

Bond lor 100% of the oona-ect
price. No bid may bo with~;:""...ett.:.;:"';;'f"::l.~o:-".~
teoat li•ty (60! doyo.
Detlvooy dote 10011 be stoted
on fte bid fo(m .,d wilt bo
...., into conoidorohon n tho
awerding of bids.
The Boord of Education.
Moigo Locot School Diltric1.
......,.. th.,ightto reject '"'Y
or o1 bido .. onv p., tlioreof.
By order of the Boord of
Education. Meigs Local
School ·Diotriet 621 South
Th;rd
Av.,uo, Middleport,
Ohio. 411760.
BY ORDER OF THE
MEIGS lOCAL
BOAR 0 OF EDUCATION
ROBERT SNOti\OEN,
PRESIDENT
JANE FAY, TREASURER
(6)16. 23.' 30; (71 7 4tc
Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Boord of the Moigo
Lo.. l School District deairH

Quaner of Section 16, Town'

7, Ronge 14, Ohio Com-

#13882CHA20793 cordo.

pany's Purch11e, 1nd In the

Villoge of Pogevllle. Coonty

premises as conveyed by

of Meigt, State of Ohio .

Canio S. ChaS8, et ol., by
deed datedJuty7,1907. re·
obrded in Volume 97, Page
98 of sold cited recorda.
PARCEL 2: Situated in Ihe
townahip, county and ltota
aforHoid. Being In Town 7.
Ronge 14, Ohio Company's
. Purchue. Beginning in the

Said porceta 3. 4. ond 6

being the 11me premis11 11

convoyed to Poor! ond Mar·
tha Roblnoon by Sorlh M.
Brooks, a widow, 1w dtod
dtted Auguat 8. 1911, ofra·
cord Volume 115, Poge 56.
S8id OHd Recorda of Melgo
County.
center of the State Road m ·
PARCEL 8: S~uated in the
.t ho N. E. comer of Lot No. Township, County and State.
66 of tho Town of Pogevltle, oforeeold, in Soction 11.
the• vehicles , . , be ob- thence South 88'12 da$Jr•• Town 7. Ronge 14, Ohio
talned et tho Meigs Loco! Eaat, 41 Rods 8 finks: Company's Purchaae. Be·
Bus Gor1111•· llutlond, Ohio, thence South 20 dtgreeo ginning atapointintheWot'
742-2990. .
East. 28 rods 17 links; line of Section 18, at E. P.
Termo of Sete will be atsh thence South 81 rods 16 Allen'o southwllll com1r
or check with positive 1.0.

Said Board raservea the
right to waive lnformotltlea,

links: thence South 17
degree• Welt 22 rods 16

and 221inks; thence Nonh 1

bida.

B43A degree• East, 10 rods;

ott or porto of any ond all

Jane Fry, Tre11urer

Meigalocal School District

821 $.Third Avenue
Middleport, Ohio 46780
16)30: (7]7, 14, 21, 4tc

about 162 rods South ott'ha
Northwest comer of seid

links; lhonce Wart 98 rode Section 18. thence Soinh
olong 11fd Willi tine, •tl
rod 6 links; thence North choina, 38 2/3 rodo to a

to accept or reject any and

beech tree; on the point Of

the hill. then .. South 7&amp;W
dogreoo Ealt 4.34 chelno;
north 481'• dogreeo Eoat, thence 82 degrees Eoat 2.
I 91'&gt; rodo; thence North 70 chains; thence North ~
degree• Eoat, 19 roda 17 degrtoo Eoat 4 chelna:
links; thence North 32 rods; the".. .North 60 dtgr101
thence South 841h degrees

Eaat. 11 rods 91inks; thence

thence Welt 4 rods; thence

East, 3 chains; thence Eaat 2

place of begining. Also Lots

North 8 chains to a corner

veya:l by Elmer Haning to

chains to the

Nor'th 72 rods 10 Unkototho chalno to a gum tree; thOIJ"'

Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
Eltete of Jane1lle R. John·

oon. dtc.. Hd. C11e No.
26,188.
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY ·
On JoJy 1. 1988. in 1ho
Molgo Coonty Probate Court.
C.. No. 26,186. Huel A.
Johnoon, 4308 Azoteo Drive,
Columbia, South Caroline
292011, wu appointed Executrix ol tho mete of Joneello
R. Johnton, decoued. h of
36736 Peoch Ford Rood, Pomeroy, Ohio 46789.
Robert E. 8udc,
Probate Judge

Lena K. No-lrood. Clerk
(71 7. 14, 21, 3tc
Public Notice

to r.::eive INied btda for the
PROBATE COURT OF
following:
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
1. Schoof Accident lnour- Eat ate of George M. Frtoonco
land, dt..aaed, Caoe No.
2. Fltet lniiUr.,ce
25,147.
3. Gooolino end Oil ProNOTICE OF
ducts
APPOINTMENT
OF
4. Bread .,d Bokory ProFIDUCIARY
ducts
,
On ·JoJy 1. 1986. in tho
5.. Milk and DolryProducu Molgo
c ... nty Probate Court.
8. Tlreo ond Tuboo
C.. No. 2!1,147. Mitton E.
tn ordtr to bo oonoldered, Rouoh, Box 1!17, Syrocueo.
ott ••tod blda ahatl bo ro- Ohio
46779, WOO oppolntod
celved In the Trtoourer'a Of- E..cutor
of tho 011110 of
flee, 821 8. Third Av.. uo, Gaorvo ·~.
dtMlddtopon, Ohio, on or bel· ....... eto ·Froolind,
of
SyrocUH.
fore 12:00 o'clodc omon.., Ohio 411179.
July 18, 1118. ·
Robert E. Budc,
Tho Boord of Ed-tlon
Pro bote J udga
reoorvto tho right 11&gt; ec..pt Lena K. Nooaelroad,
Clerk
or ow joel •nr ond all blda. ·
(71
7.
1_
4
,
21.
3tc
Jane Fry, Trooouror
Molgo LOCIII School Diatrlct
821 $. Third Ave.
Public Notice
Middleport, Dhlo 46780
(8130; (7) 7, 14, 3tc
IN THE
PROBATE COURT OF
Public Notice
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
DMto H. Raymond,
LEOAL NOTICE
Admlnlatrator of tho EItato
Notice is hertbyglv., thet of Marthe Roblnaon,
1ho Boord of Edu,.tlon of ·
PLAINTIFF
tho MelgolocoiScltool Dit·
VS.
trlct. Mellis County, Ohio, Floyd Gould, et al ..
wHt -lor oa1o by -led
DEFENDANTS
blda for eight {II lchoot
Caoo' No. 24,708
buM1 ond two (21 v'"'o .,d
NOTICE OF SALE
two 121 lftldco, It the Trto·
PURSUANT TO TKE ORaurer'a office. Melga LoC8t DER olthl ProbetoCourt of
' School Dlotrlc~ 821 South . . Meigs County, Ohio, In C~ae
Third Avo~ue. Mlddtoport, No .. 24,708, t wMt offer for
Ohio, et 12:00· noon, July uto It public auction on Au22, 1881.
gust 1, 1988, II 10:00
'l1le vlhlctn 1r1 • tot- o'clocll A.M. ot the front
lowo:
(loor of the Moiga County
1. 1888 Chevrolet .... _ Coilrt Houoo, tho tolowlng
411 po•engor dt-lbed r•I Oltlte. oit•s~I28F1.7824 uated 1n "'" c ... ntv 01

·•.

•

PHONE
992-2156
Or Writf D1illy Sentinel Cllui!ie4 Dtpt

Public Notice

delivering

Classes suspended

So, Grab Arab SOne Shot-It's Deadly on Fleas
'

YEARS

1t 1 Courl St.. Pomerow. Ollia 45769

#CSE622V113604
9. 1978 Dodge Ttedooi1Uin
Von - #B21 BB8X046288
10. 1986 GMC Handi-Van
Clogging classes held at the
-#G1001 PE3718A
1
1.
1986
Che111olat (2 ton)
Pomeroy village hall have been
Stoke Body
suspended, e!fectlve Tuesday, untU
#C8638F132746
iod
II¥
1 10% Bid B..,d
September, Gerald Powell, instruc- satisfactory to the
12. ,1973 GMC Chevrolet
or by
1h Ton Pickup~
tor, announces. The clogging team certified choc:k .., o aoill.,t
#TCY143F7022&amp;9 '
t.nk in the IUm oftfl1 Plf'C*'It
practlces will be announced.
Additional information on
(10%1 of the amount of tho

ulrilllt-

u..-

The Daily Sentinel

An action for $130,1nlln damages
has been flied In the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Todd
Grover, CoiUns Road, Pomeroy,
against Delbert Frklley. Union
Avenue. Pomerov.
The action charges that oo July 4,
1985, Fridley trespassed Into the
residence of Grover and allegedly
struck him in the head, arm and
chest. He lu1her charges that on
June 19, he was attacked by Fridley
while he was seated In a booth at the
Green Lantern Tavern and allegedly incurred facial Injuries.
The !Xalntllf asks for a judgment
of $25,(00 In rompensatory damages, $100,00) in punitive damages,
and $5,(00 lor attorney's lees and
ross.
1n another action in the court, an
entry has been tued dissolving the
marriage of Jimmie Dean Allman
and Unda l&lt;lu Allman

1

caul lftt! lith
-.p' lliln • lias .,

THANKS FOR , 9

=~m=.=====~~~~~I~LL~Y~O~U~N~G~·~··~H~A~P~P~Y~A~N;N;IV~E~R~S~A~RY~!~I~~

Damage suit filed

1 Section. 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July B, 1986

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Milligan videotape outlines state hospital 'plot'

otnce.
The
numbers were rda-Y;::
. wa=s
2, 10, 14,
at,wtnning
24 and 31.
The number of players who

Arab does It better with their
NEW ONE-SHOT FLEA
FOGGER. WHY? Because It
Interrupts the flea's life cycle.
The trouble with most lnsecllcldes Ia they kill only the
adult flea, but the flea larvae
are left to hatch-you still
have the problem. NOT
ANYMORE! Our fogger kllls
flea larvae, pre-adult and
adult fleas lor weeks! This
exclusive water-based formula contains no damaging
chlorinated solvents, so It
won't slain your carpets,
drapery, or upholstered furniture. Alao kills roaches, spiders, crickets and silverfish.

Veterans Memorial

Vol.36, No .46
Copyrighted 1986

picked five and four r1 the numbers
was to be announced today.
Ticket sales for the weekly
drawing totaled $3,512,327. The
estimated jackpot lor next weekend's game Is $1 million.
The Dally Number drawn Satur- ·

CLEVELAND (UP!) - One
player picked all six numbers In
Saturday's Ohio Lotto drawing to
claim the ~.68 mUllan jackpot.
The name of the player will be
announced alter the winning ticket
Is validated at a regional lottery

I
Area SOLUTION tQ
your Flea problem,I

The Racine United Methodist
Church will hold a "welcome back"
party lor Rev. Roger Grace and his
family at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the
church social room.

•

•

ent1ne

Player-picks Lotto ·numbers

FINAL~Y.

Party planned

r;c;lga;ret;;tes;;an;;d;go;t;a;w~a~y;be~l~or~e~o;ne~~mo~r;ni;ng~.;;;;;;;;;
•

'

On Sunday at 9:23 a.m., ihe
Chester Fire l)(&gt;partment went to
Utile Hocking to assist with a
missing person action; Pomeroy at
1:24 p.m. took John Hunnell !rom
Spring Avenue to Veterans Memor·

o! til&gt; owners, Harold H. Cline, and
deputies arrived.v t a!ion Is the
Also underla~ :t!tay night oc
theft o1a car
wned ,by
0
early Sunday mo~! Tuppers
Homer Eugene
~ doned In
Plains. It was found a n
Gallla County on Ohio 1$1 Sunday

highs In the ilw 90s. Mostly clear
tonight, with a low near 10. Mostly
cloudy Tuesday, with highs In the
low 9&lt;ls.
Till! II'ObabUily of precipitation Is
near zt'I'O today and tonight and at
pe-cent Tuesday.
Winds wlll be llght and variable
today and tonight.

The Meigs Local District Band
Boosters will meet at 7 this evening
in the band room mthe high schooL
tal Hospital; Rutland al6 3:42p.m.,
A discussion wlll be held on the
took Lucille Pendleton from Salem lair food stand to be operated at the
county fair next month. The
Street to Veterans Memorial Hospltal, and at 9:37 p.m. Tuppers Plains boosters are In need of a refrtgeratrealed Lucy Barringeron0hloli!1 tor and a restaurant grill. Anyone
with the Items Is asked to call
but did not transport.
!192-595&lt;1 evenings.
r------------------..::~------1

In lerna! Injuries.

"".,

Pomeroy
and Middleport.
., At 4:15a.m.
Sunday a rurglary at

Hawk's Grocery and.GIIsStatloo in
Towers Plains was reported.
Entrance was gained through a
bathroom win(tlw, which set off an
alarmsystem.l)(&gt;putlesreportthat
the alarm system was unplugged
by the burglar onre he got Inside.
He took. about a hundred cartons of

Ohio, area weather scene

Emergency squads answer six calls
Six calls were answered by local
units over the weekend, The Meigs
Counly Emergency Medical Services reports.
'At 1:!17 p.m. Saturday, Tuppers
Plains lreat ed Ma rgaret Ralguel oo
Ohio fill but no transportation was
required; Racine at 6:15 p.m.
Saturday klok Rodney Beegle from

2: :Jl and 9 p.m. on Surxlay and a
township truck, a portable pump,
and a CB radio were taken.
Entrance was gallled through the
dJor,andtherewasalsodamageto
a window and a phone. The truck
was recovered overlllght abando ned on the flood road between

Nos. 64, 86 end 68 in Pogo· and center line of aold Socvilte, contllinlng in all about lion 16; thence Weot 1
40 acres, more or lea, being chain; thence North 15.1
the same premiHI as con· cholna; thence North 2.2
Cherry Run

Rood; thence North with the
July 16, 1907 dood of re- State Roo/! to E. P. Alton's'
cord Voluma 97, Pogo 83, of Southeast corner; then01
ooid Deed Recordo.
Welt on uid Allen's eouth
PARCEL 3: Situated in tho line about 4.6 chalno to the
Peart and Martha·Robinaon,

township. county and state
aforesaid,

in Section

place of beginning, contlln·
ing 44 acres. more or Ita.

16,

Town 7. Range 14 of tho Sold Porco! 8 boingthe aome
Ohio Company'• Purdlase.

premiaes as convtya:l by

Beginning in the center of

Harley H. Honing ond Evo L.

the Southwest corner of a
piece of land known aa the
Mill Lot in or naarthe Village
of Pageville. 11 e atake,
thence east. 13 chains 46

Robinson and Martha Robinton by dead, September

the ltreet 14 filet South of Haning, hit wife. to Pearl

18,1924. ofrocordVolumo
128. Pogo 23, 111id Molga
County Deed Recorda.
links to a stake; thence
Reference Deodo: Volume
South 1 chain 6 links to a 264, Poge 102&amp;, .,d Vol'
ttalce; thence East 2 dteins vmo 213, Page 309, Melgo
90 links; thence South 8 County D..,d Rocorde.
chains 141inks to the Athe no
Said
premitll are ap·
and Pomerov road wMre a praised at 19,985.00 ond
wild cherry tree 12 inch a• in muat bo oold lor not toa
diametBf baar1 North 8% then one-half (l':ol of oold IP·
degree• East thence cbt,..t

praised value. The 1erm1 of

t 4 links; then"' North B8
dagreoo Welt 8 cholna 78
tlnka: thence South 87'!.
dogreoo West, 3 chalna 21
!inko: thence North 88'!.
dogroeo West, 3 chaina 84
linko: thence North I&amp;
dtgrooo Waot 2 cholno ond
94 links to a point opposite

oole end poyment of the

purchase money are: one•

thl•d (l/3l .. oh on hond on
date of ole, the remain.,_g

two-thlrdo (2/31 to be pold
no loter then two (21 wooki
from date of tela.

Dono H. Raymond,

Administrator of the Estate
of Martha Robinton,

the center of the· street,

thence .North 8 choins 56
linlc1 ~o place

0! beginning,

containing 14.38
more or le11.

acres,

(7J

PARCEL4: Situated in tho

dacoued.
49804 Stole Route 864
Albany, Ohio 46710
7, 14, 21. 3tc

Northwest quarter of Sec -

tion 16, Town 7, Rongo 14
of
tho Ohio Compony

By JEANNE REALL
COLUMBUS, Ohio {UPI) - Escaped mental
patlenl Billy Milligan, diagnosed as having 24
separate personalities, says a plot to keep him
Institutionalized made him lear for his safety and
prompted his July 4 escape.
Milligan, in a video tape left In a Columbus
Greyhound bus station Mooday, said he escaped In
sell defense.
"I left the Institution as a matter of self defense. I
didn 't wan! to threaten anyone," he said. "On the
morn-ing !left ... I had a genuine lear lor my personal
safety. My trealment, prescribed by my courtordered physician Dr. (Stella) Karolin, was abruptly
brought to a halt ... "
Mllllgan said the change In treatment was the result
of a personal disagreement with Dr. Lewis Lindner,
administrator of the Central Ohio Psychiatric
Hospital, and was a ploy to keep him institutionalized.

MIUlgan unwittingly may have accompllshed that
by himself, his lawyer said.
Schwelkart said he has been notified that Franklin
Counly Common Pleas Judge Thomas Martin signed
an arrest order Monday specifying that Mllllgan be
returned to the Timothy B. Moritz Forensic Hospital
at Lima when he Is captured.
"That is every place we've tried to avoid,"
Schwelkart said, adding that he had not heard from
Mllllgan since his escape. "He was there before and
we fought and fought to get him out. Now it looks like
he's put himself back there."
Daniel Keyes, author of "The Minds of Bllly
Milligan," said he received a telephone JTl('SSage from
Mllllgan echoing Milligan's fears.
"There was a message on my answering machl,ne
from him ... ! guess the day after he escaped," Keyes
said In a telephone inlervlew from Gainesville, Fla.
"He said he left because he feared for his safely.
Keyes Is an English professor at Ohio University In

Burger leaving high court
with emphasis·upon dignity
By LEON DANIEL
October, Burger, 78, expects to be
WASHINGTON {UPI) -Dignity working lull-time on the Commismarked the last day on the sion on the Bicentennial of the
Supreme Court lor Chief Jusllce Constitution.
Warren Burger, a stickler to the
The celebration begins Sept. 17,
end lor judicial protocol and 1987 - the :roth anniversary of the
courtroom decorum at the nation's signing of the Constitution and also
highest tribunal.
Burger's !lith birthday.
Court Insiders speculated Burger
Without even a stern look toward
may have refrained from deliver- the press section, Burger, Ina deep,
Ing a formal farewell - or even mellow baritone, announced the
alluding to his departure- because court's action on the GrammWUllam Rehnqulst, the associate Rudman law three weeks after
justice President Reagan has nomi- ABC News had beaten him to the
nated to succe€d him, still laces punch with a leak that surely must
congressional conlirmallon have Irked the chief justice.
hearings.
Burger, the 15th chief 1ustice,
Burger graciously thanked the served lor 17 years, a tenure
staff for Its work on the final day of exceeded by only three of his
the court's l985-l!6 term, hut his lack predeceslllrs: John Marshall, who
of comment on his resignation sat for 34 years ending In l&amp;li;
seemed a silent but eloquenl Roger Taney, Marshall's succesaffirmation that he 'WIU be the sor, who served for 28; and MelvUie
nallen's lop judge until his succes- Fuller, who was "the chief" from
sor is duly sworn.
18$1910.
About 2.'i0 people, most of them
Although the chief justice has one
tourists, were In the ornate marble vote, like his eight colleagues, he Is
courtroom when the court ruled 7-2 considered the first among equals
Monday, In a major decision and, beyond his role on the Supreme
wtitlen by Burger, that lhe Court, has special administrative
Gramm-Rudman halancro budget duties over all the federal courts.
law's plan for aulomatlc cuts to
Tourists who saw the blackwipe out :ederal deficits Is rol;Jed, silver-maned Burger stride
unconstitutional.
10 the bench lor the last time saw a
When the court starts Its nexl handsome but portly man who
lerm on the flrsl Monday in looked for all the world like a

Athens. Milllgan was ordered to the Athens Mental
Health Center, a mlnlmum-security lacillly, In 1978
after being found not guilly by rt'llson of insanity of
three Ohio State University-area rapes. Keyes Is in
Florida researching his third book.
Milligan has been transferred to various facUlties
around the state since that time.
Keyes said Milligan's personalities seemed to be
fused when he represented himself In court March 21
In an effort to obtain greater freedom. Martin had
tested Milllgan on the law and determined he was
competent to represenl himself, Keyes said.
"Billy was protesting to the judge that restrictions
on him were too severe and went against an earlier
court order that hebe held In the least-restrictive way
possible.
"Recently he had called and said that ju&gt;1 the
reverse was taking place."
Keyes said that In court, Milligan "seemed

completely fused, completely In control and very
eager to cross examine the hospital administrator,
Dr. Lewis Lindner."
"During that cross examination, Lindner said he
did not believe Billy was a multiple, although nine
other psychiatrists over the years have testified,
under oath, thai he was.
"That was BUly's problem - being treated in a
hospital under someone who did not helieve ln his
Ulness .... He has been fused, but under the stress of
lhe system his cure has not been allowed to g;&gt;
forward. His multiple personalities are a detM!se
mechanism, used when his life is In dangl'r."
Milligan's diagnosed perlllnalities include a
3-year-old dyslexic girl, an escape artist who speaks
Serbo Croatian and an Englishman who reads and
writes fluent Arable.
Doclors say that as a child, Milligan was the vlctlm
of an abusive lather who sexually molested him and
buried him alive.

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

central-castlng selection.
As the late Sen. Everett Dirksen,
R-Ill., once salll, Burger "looks like
a chief justice. He speaks like a
chief justice. He acts like a chief
justice."
Visitors on Burger's final day on
the bench coukl thank the chief
justice for the refurbishing of the
elegant Supreme Court buDding, to
which he contrtruted many furnl tu re pieces.
A wine connoisseur, Burger was
named to the court by President
Richard Nlxon in 1!*!1 to succeed
Earl Warren and
to the
A self-made man, he spent pari of
his childhood on a 20-acre truck
farm outside St. Paul, Mlnn, and at
10 got his first job as a newspaper
boy for the St. Paul Dispatch and
Pioneer Press. He went to law
school at night to get hi~ degree.
Douglas Fergu9:m. a tourist from
Tigard, Ore. , said he and Burger
attended the same Presyterian
church In St. Paul more than Lhfee
decades ago.
'
"0~. I've met hlm." F~rguson
said proudly, "but hP wouldn't
remember me."
Ferguson, who had not known It
was Burger's last day on the bench,
said: "This Is an historic occasion."

PRE!!ENTED- Melissa Coyle, 8, blind slnoe btnh, was presented a
Brallier 1bu~ at her home In Mlddlepori. 'l1le Brallier, a typewriter
which prints In Braille, was provided throop donatlom by ·
oi'IJIIIIIzatlons and Individuals. 'l1le m~ldne
ltllow Mellsla 1o
prepare school wolil jn Braille. She atlendll c l - lor the

wm

sight-Impaired aiiUo Grande live days a week clurtng liE school year
and will be a tltlrtl-grader there In the fal. 1be Rio Grande fa(lutty
provides trallllng tbrouglt the sixth grade. Pictured with tile new
Brallier, Melissa Is tile dausftler ollbeftev. OtarlesCoy1eandtheRev.
Nancy Coyle, who are
at the Middleport Churdl of the
Nazarene.

min.

OSBA chief advocates merit selection of judges
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reponer

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI I -The
new president oft he Ohio State Bar
Association says he wants his group
to be a non-partisan pub! ic service
organization but It will not shrink
from lis responslblllly of criticizing
the Ohio Supreme Court when
appropriate.
"I don't want us to be seen as a

partisan pollllcal organilallon,"
Leslie W. Jacobs, presklent of the
18,5(J().member lawyers' group,
said Monday at a briefing for
reporters. "We are a public service
organila lion."
JacobS said the Supreme Court
has forfeited public ronfldence
because It has politicized l7y those In
conlrol. He said Republican just!-

ces have participated in unneces·
sary bickering and name-calling,
but It was clear from his examples
that Chief Justice Frank D. Celebrezze and administrator Louis C.
Damiani were the main targl'ls of
his criticism.
"Judges should slop being pollti·
clans," said Jacobs, of Cleveland.
Jacobs said judges should be
selected on their temperaments,

open-mlndedness and abllily to
weigh facts and apply the law to
them .
"Those are the characteristics
It's necessary fort he public to locus
on, and that's Impossible In an
election," said Jacot:s.
So the Bar Association Is attempt Ing to amend Ohio's Constitution to
provide lor the "merit selection" of

Rhodes favors tax refonn bill benefits
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -The
federal tax reform bill could
produce a $;ffi,IXXJwindlall lor Ohio
treasury and justify a state tax cut
of up to 15 percent, says former
Gov. James A. Rhodes and his
rurmlng mate Rubert A. Taft II.
Rhodes and Tali, accompanied
by Senate Majorlly Leader Robert
Dole, R-Kan., held ·a news conference Monday to pledge that any
federal tax reform will be passed on
In the form of relief lor low-and
middle-Income Ohioans.

The two Republican candidates
lor governor and lieutenant governor said the federal tax reform blll
may eliminate deductions now
available to taxpayers, thus in·
creasing their gross inoome for tax
reporting PUJllOSl'S.
"Because Ohb's state Income tax
Is based on federal adjusted gross
Income, Ohioans could see their
state· tax bill go up even as their
federal 1ax llabUily Increases," said
Rhodes and Tan.
The tM:&gt; Republicans said ' the

Celeste administration has estimated. the windfall to Ohio's
treasury could be as much as
s:ro.~m.

"A half-blllion dollar windfall
could . justify as much as a 15
percent reduction in Ohio personal
Income tax rates," they said.
"When lhe final ilrm of the federal
tax reform bill is known, the Ohio
General Assembly should act to
reduce state taxes to mfset, on a
do~ar-for-dollar hasls, what . could
otherwise e!'d up as a windfall lor

the state's general revenue fuoo."
Tali said he and Rhodes already
have pledged a 5 percent Income
tax reduction In 1987, whether or not
the state's ecooomlc situation
warrants it. He said the relief from •
the federal tax bill M:&gt;uld be In
add it ton to that.
Dole, who Is member of the
conferenre committee which wlll
negotiate the terms of the federal
tax reform bill, sa ld he hopes
senators and representatives can
reach agreement sron.

judges. lnstead of candidates run·
nlng against each ~her, judges
would be appointed from a list of
qualified candidates recommended
by a special panel.Afterooeterm, a
judge would have to receive a 55
percent vote a confidence to retain
his or her seat.
Jacobs said the Bar Association,
the League of Women Voters, the
Ohio Farm Bureau Federation and
Common Cause will be circulating
petitions this fall to get the proposal
on the November 1987 ballot.
"It will be on the ballot," said
Jacobs, adding that IICelebrezzeis
~lected convincingly In No
vember, he doubts merit selection
wUl be appfewed .
Its success, he said, will be tied
"inevitably" to voter disenchanlment with the way the ligh rourt Is
run.
Jacobs denied that the petition
drive was timed to coincide with the
1986 election and the attempt,
supported by the Bar Association,
r1 Judge Thomas J. Moyer of
Columrus, a Republican, to unseat
Celebrezu-.

Pomeroy
Council
puts levy
on ballot
By BOB HOEFUCH
Sentinel Staff Writer
Pomeroy Village ClerkTreasurer Jane Walton was autho·
rized to place a one mill renewal
levy on the November ballot when
PomeroY' Vlllage Council met In
regular session Monday night
Walton reported that one mill of
the utility levy funds would expire
this year after which council
authorized her to take steps to place
the levy on the ballot for renewal in
November. The renewal wUi be for
a five-year period.
Walton also reported that she has
been advised by the tax dlstrtrutlon
offlce In Columrus that Pomeroy
Village was overpaid In gas tax
revenues, by about $8,100, over the
past lour years. Consequently , the
village has received no rwenues In
gas tax money this year, but,
Walton said, she has been advised
that the villag£&gt; may begin to
receive money from that source
again possibly in August and
deftnltely In September.
Council approved the budget as
provided by the Meigs Budgel
Commission for the 1986-87 fiscal
year and ap!F()IIed the report of
Mayor Richard Seyler showing
receipts of $2,539 for the village In
fl!;les and fees during the month of
June.
Council member Betty Baronlck
reported receiving complaints
about weeds growing in the area
along routes 7 and 33. Seyler
reported that he understands a rew
super service stat ion will be buUt in
tl&gt;at general klcat!on. However, It
was agreed that the weeds will be
cut If some development does not
take place tight away.
Coundiman John Anderson discussed the need lor a meeting of
commltt.ee members to lay ou1 a
ball field at the new park area on
West Main Street. A meetingwlll be
called lor Wednesday evening to do
tbe lay rut and the final declslonwUl
be up to the committee.
. Coundlman Larry WehrulJ8. reported the need for patching work
on Beech and Laurel streets, which
broughl rul that thereareprobl&lt;'ms
with the water line on Beech St rect
and hopefully . a new line will be
Installed there belorr loo much
major street repair work Is done In
that bcatlon.
A discussion was held on th('
(Continul'd on Page !01

•

Gramm-Rudman backers vow to fix budget law

Purchase. Beginning at the
Southwen comer of the
Academy Lot. thence Eeat
10 chains221inkuo 11t1ke;
thence South 3 cheina B7'VJ

to be cut In steps to zero by fiscal decisions on b..ldget cutting.
S. POVICH
1991
but making Congress do the . Senate Republican leader Robert
WASHINGTON (UPI) - ConDole o! Kansas said the "court's
gressional leaders say the Supreme cutting.
"By placing the responsibility for decisiOn should in no way deter us
Court's lnvalklation of Ihe GrammRudman law's key provision means execution of the (Gramm- !rom doing what we have to do they wiD have to balance the buqget Rudman) ... act In the hands of an make the tough choices necessary
"the old fashioned way" . - by r1ftcer who Is subject to removal to 111'1 the deficit down to 12ro as
only by ttseli. Congressineffecthas . aoon aa possible."
voting for It.
The court ruled 7-2 Monday that retained control ewer the execution
Hwae Bud~ Committee Chair·
has inlluded into the man wnuam Gray, D-Pa., said the
the automatic rudget&lt;U tting.proce- of the ect
dure of the law Is unconstitutbnal, executive fttrrtion;'' Chief Justice court decision mean, "Congress
saying the comptroller general . Warren Burgerwroteforthecouri. canoot walk away·from Its reeponcannot make spending cuts because "The Constitution .does not permit slblllty to reduCe the i!deral
defiCit."
.
he Is an officer ot the legislative such Intrusion."
Rep. Leon Panetta, D-Callf., wbo
Sponsors of ·the law vowe&lt;j to fix
branch and only an executive
branch olflclal, can carry out laws lhe provision ruled . unconstitu- was Instrumental in moldln&amp;' a
tional, rut opponents were skepti- House-Senate Gramm-Rudman
passed by Contp'l'SS. -,
cal.
Members ool Conaresa gener- law COillPromlse last year, said tre
The justices, In ~balding a
ally
· reacted lavarab.tY to the ·ruling !IJl'llliS the nation will!ind out
federal court ruling, left the rest of
prospect
r1havlngtomakethe hard _ "II tre IJ'e&amp;ldent and Congress have
the law intact, reqUiring the deflelt
By~

I
Real E1tatti General

INTERESTED IN BUYING
APPROXIMATELY 2111
ACRES OF ST. IT. ·7 NEAR
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL?
'
IF SO, PLEASE PH,ONE
HOME NATIONAL B·ANK949-2210.

and

'ti

"'

the guts to make the tough
decisions." ·
"The only difference ts that
Congress will have-to make rudget
cuts the old fashioned way - by
voting lor them," Panetta saki in a
statement.
The first test fi that resolve
comes ooon because tre ruling also
Invalidated budget cuts made
March 1, and Congress will have to
decide whether to uphold them.
House Speaker Thorn!~&amp; O'NeUl,
0-Mass., said Congress. will begin
"ne11t week on legislation Implementing the .March 1 across-theooard cuts."
.
''Fast action to reaffirm the
March 1' executive tl'der wUI
deJllonstate again that CongreSs

shares the desire of the American
people for a stable flscal poll&lt;$,"
O'Neill said In a statement.
Sen. Phil Gramm, R-Texas and
chief sponsor r1 the law, said he and
the otrer two sponsors - Sens.
Warren Rudman, R-N.H., and
ErneSt HQUings, DS.C. - would
Introduce a "Gramm-Rudman·
Holllrigs 'l' 1hat wruld set the
comptroller general, currently Otarles Bowsher, apart as a quasi·
Independent executive branch
officer.
"Those who have ilught so hard
tD restore fiscal sanity will nol allow
Congress tD get off the hook on Its
commltmalt to balana&gt; the fedenil
budl&lt;'t't," Gramm said.

Ill

Sen. Phil Gramm
.;,

l·

�'

'
'

Tuesday, _July 8. 1986

.

.

'l £omment
.

'

'

P~ge-2-The Daily &amp;.rtinel
Pomeroy-Middlepor-t Ohio
Tuesday, July 8, 1986

_Jefferson and the ladY-------=-J_am_es_J._Ki~lpa.._trrc_·k

The Daily
Sentinel
.
~.

_,,.

U1 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

WASHINGTON

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lh

Bm~ ~L-,.....t~d·~
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher
-

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslslanl Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
•

AMEMBER of Tho United Press International. Inland Dally Pross
Association and the Amer!can Newspape1 Publi sher s Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION arE' Wf'lt'llm£' They should

1:1E'

.

Je-ss than .'JlO word s

long. All IN ters ar es u bj('(" t to editing and mu st be signEd with nam e, address and
telephon{' number. No un stg nro lt"tt f'rs '&gt;''Ill bC' publi sh('(.! Le tters shoul d be In

good tastl•. addressing Issues no t pt&gt;rsona llt JC&gt;s

Tough policy rejected
President Reagan is ket'ping his finger in the dike, stav ing back
widespread public df&gt;mand that he crack down on South Africa for its
,oppressive rule.
So far, the presiden t has r!'Slsted any major turnaround in his policy·
toward the African nation in which ftvc million whites rule 24 million
blacks. Reagan has instituted a few sancttons. but not of the magnltudl&gt;
Nobel Prlze winning Bishop Tutu would like to see
Reagan's failure to take force lui steps against thr South Africa's newly
Instituted repressions is in contrast to his attempts to support rebels
seeking to overthrow the Marx ist-led Sandi nista government in
.Nicaragua.
He has denou nced apartheid on numerous occasions as "repugnanl .'' He
also sent word to President P. W. Botha through the US Ambassador
Herman Nichol in Pretoria calling for an end to crackdowns on blacks.
But he is adamantly oppose&lt;! to slapping economic sanctions on South
Africa . Fears of a communist takeover, through the African National
Congress, should the blacks win, and of a loss of minerals from South
Africa 's rich mining deposil s, including uranium, are apparmtly reason
enough for Reagan not to back away from South Africa
The president believes his course is the best for the nalklnal interest.
But the contrast Is glaring between Reagan's outrage with Nicaraguan
totalitarian methods and his attempt to pursu&lt;" his policy of "constructh(e
engagement" with South Africa.
Whlle rejecting a tough&lt;"r stance in terms &lt;:t sanctions, Secretary of State
George Shultz spoke of exerting more internatklnal pressure through
words, not dl&gt;eds.
Ches ter Crocker, assistant secretary of state for African affairs, said the
South African government has shot itself "in both feet" by placmg
restrictions on the media and detaining anll-apartlrid rebels.
But he insisted tha t the United States Is on tir right track in seeking to
foster change m Sout h Afnca without JXlning on more economtc a nd
political pressure.
Crocker said tha t the adm in lstratkl n wtll ftrm ly oppose legislat ion
passed by the House that would require total U.S. disinvesiJnent from
·South Africa and a boycott against that country except for key minerals.
He said that the United States mu st avoid a "coll£Ctive punishment"
approach to South Africa and will continue to urge negotiations bel ween
blacks and whites to create a new political sy&gt;1em.
The yearning of blacks In South Africa to be free is something aU prople
can understand. The price is high in terms of tlr bloodshed. Alan Paton's
"Cry the Beloved Country" suits the occasion.
'
The barrtng of the media from covering the story oft lr simmer ing revolt
is a tactic that government s resort to when they are ashamed of what they
· are doing. With no publicity they assume II wUI be out of sight, out of mind.
But for all the blackout . arres ts and Intim idation. some of the news Is
getting out and it does not reOcet well on the South Africa government , or
: those who still play ball with Its leaders.
The blacks in South Africa who may have looked totlr United States are
disenchanted . Their leaders say they fet'llet down.
Reagan speaks In ringing tones of those dl&gt;nied freedom and liberty but
such remarks are reserved for those who fight communism. He has yet to
say be Is for majority rule in South Africa: one man , one vote.
Botha has indicated that he wUllgnorc worldwide oondemnatlon of his
· moves to maintain controL But he could be silting on a poM!er keg. The
South Africans. who are becoming more activist in their struggle, are
speaking the words of Pa lric k Henry heard in America rrore than :llO
years ago.
The presidenl will speak of liberty In eloquen t speeches CNer the Fourth
·of July weekend when the re;tored Statue of Liberty is unveiled. They may
give comfor1 to Americans, but not much hope lor South African blacks

ED31kJM
EDIToRIAL CARTooNitiT,
ROCKY MoUNTAIN NEW~ NEA ;
GUN CONTROL ADVoCATE;
MEMBER oF 111E' NATIONAL RIFLE A~&amp;oCIATION .

$

"I UoiNEP lllE HRA, EVEI'l THO\JGH THE MoST ~ETHAL WFAPoN
I OWN IS A PEN. WHV? BECAU:iE I GoT TIRED OF FIGWTING

THI~ PoWERFUL 1.086'1 FRoM THE OUT!;JDE . I DECIDED To
TRY To CHANGE IT~ WRoNGHEADED Ar-lD PANGEI?aOfl A:lLtCIES
. FRoM WtTH!N. IF ENoUGH PEoPLE WHo Fm. AS I Do tloiN
THE NRA, WE CAN TRAN~FORM IT INTO A RESPoMl)IBI.E
ADVoCATE FoR GUN SAFETY.

"I'm the

Today in history
Today Is Tuesday, July 8, the 189th day of 198l with 176 to follow.
The moon ls moving away from Its rlew phase.
The mOrning stars at·e Mars and Jupter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this date are unoor the sign of Cancer. They Include
dirigible Inventor Ferdinand von Zeppelin In 1838; oil magnate John D.
Rockeleller In l&amp;ll and hlsgrandlson, Vice PresldentNelsonRockel'eller, In
19(8; jazz sln~r Billy Eckstine l'n 1914 (~e 72) ; lloone Arledge, president
·.of AOO NI'Ws and Sports, in 1931 (age 55); singers Jerry Valeln 1932 (age
54) and Sieve Lawrence In 1935 (age 51!. and actress Kim Darby In 1948
;:(age 38) .
• 011 this date In history:
. In 1497, Portuguese lljlvigator Vasco da Gama sailed from Lisbon on a
voyage that woukl lead ·to discovery of a sea mute to India around the
:1011thern Jlp ot Africa.
. ln J&amp;!), the Uberty Bell eracked while being rung durtngtbe fUneral r1
Chief Justice John Mao;haU In PhUadl&gt;lphia.
· ~ Ill l9!11, Gen. Douglas 'MaCArthur was designated oommander r1 United
1'411tlonl forces In Korea.
: ... In l9ll!l: withdrawal of American troops from VIetnam.began. Eight
Jllaln..d lnfallttymeo arrtved at McChord Alr Force Base In Washln;ton

Ute;

.
'

~

•

-

Martin

ln all the hoopla over the Statue of
Uberty, the coronary observanoe
and veteran host of a TV talk show, of tbe 210th anniversary of the
was In a mellincholy mood last Declaration of Independence
week. How come? He was 00· seemed to have been subordinated.
pressed by the corrunerclallzatlon What dld Thomas Jefferson proof the centennial of the Statue of claim? He wrote that we are
Liberty' "Schlock!" he groaned. endowned by our Creator I a
"Too much schlock! "
sentiment that would get him in
Horsefeathe!;'! The kind of deep trouble in these days 11 1
schlock that ' was vended last secular hurnaltism) with certain
weekend was as American as rights. Among these are life,
popcorn, as Indigenous as grits and liberty, and more to the point, "the
redeye gravy. For a piice, souvenir JX!rsult of happiness."
hunters could find the Imaged the
There is not a more felicitous line
first lady of Liberty Island on beer In the whole ofAmerica'sdocumenmugs, coffe cups, thimbles and bell tary hlstmy. We have no right to
buckles. She adorns T·shlrts, pen- achieve happiness. We have a right
nants, dish towels and key chains. only to pursue it. In·a free society,
At least :&lt;m different gadgets, that Is what !He and liberty arc all
widgets gewgaws and thlngamaj - about. If the Statue of Liberty
. igs were sold to the wllllng suckers. stands for anything, It stands for the
and I said hooray. On with the paper right of a free prople to buy a little
hats! Mr. Jefferson would have schlock - or a lot of schlock - If it
been pleased.
Agronsky, the venerable newsman

contributes to their happiness. No
one ever went broke by underestimating the taste of the American
people. The sponsors of thls cent en·
nlal flea market made a bundle.
And so what?
This tolerance of the culturally
intolerable IS a part of the doctrine
of llberlarlanlsm, which defends
the right of Ire prople to be
provlskmally, " wrong." Some years ag0, 1 rememlrr a welfare
worker who was uptight because
one of her female clients wa s
wasting her welfare money. The
woman was living in the slums,
eating scraps, wearing rags and
she had bought -sir actually had
oought - she had bought a lipstick!
The social worker was aghast. My
reaction was to toasllhe woman on
welfare. If the dollar spent on the
lipstick brought a ray of happiness
Into the drabness of her life . the
dollar was
investoo.

"Junior's giving up on law- he's enrolling in business school to major in
leveraged buyouts and Insider trading.''

Jl111Jiic

So It was with the parade of
souvenirs. It was objected that
much &lt;:t this junk was, well, junk. It
Is not "dignified." It detracts from
the seriousness of the celebration.
Who·could see the hardships of the
lmmlgranls through the glass
bottom of a beer mug• What c;lld all
those Elvis Presley bokallkes have
to do with the Statue of Liberty?
The answer, plainly, Is that they
had nothing to do with the statue,
bu t they had everything to do with
liberty. In wr dlversesoclety there
is a place for dignity and a plaee for
levity, a place for the phlthannonlc
and a place lbr the electric guiJar.
Must au tlr oommemoratf\t plates
be fashioned of ell ina ? Bosh! Let us
hear It for honest plastic, with the
lady emblazooed imperishably In
four colors that wlll ·fade with the
first was hing.
Mr. Jefferson was right about the
pursuit of Uber1y. He was writing
hokum when he asserted In the next
lin e that all men are created equal.
Except in the metapiJJrlcal or
lhcological sense, there Is not a
word of !ruth in that platitude. It Is
palpably , dl&gt;monstrably false. Morawcr, lhe assertion directly contrad icts one of the fundamental
precepts of a free society, which is
that m&lt;'D ar e by their nature
unequal Some arebom lazy. Some
are born Into wealth, some into
poverty. There Is no such thing as
mathernatica ly equal opportunity.
From lhr infant 's fi rst cries, some
are moll' equal than otbers.
Thank the lord, If you will e&lt;cusc
1n) phrase, for the inequalities that
charac lerizf' a f»e society. We are
noI rrq ulred to have equal tastes , to
enjoy the same books or songs or
sports We are at liber1y to elect
sta to:smen or knuckleheads as we
please. Let us buy mint silver
meda ls ci Ihe lady, and these areas
dignified as all gl' t·wt. But my
fmnd Agronsky slouldn't soom Ihe
schlock. There's nothing wrong
wthl a scale-modl&gt;l plastic lantern
Iha t glows in the dark. Batt eries rot
included.

irrt~e _______________J_ac_.k_A_n_d_er_so_r_t&amp;__J_o_se~p_h_S~p__
ear

WASHINGTON - The Soviets Corky Johnson has learned that the
have been criticized - rightly -lbr Dallas-based consulting firm that
their reluctance to level with their ran the seminar, Commnnicallons
own people andlhe rest of.the-world Coonsel of America, has since
about the Chernobyl nucl ear conductoo similar courses for
disaster .
several other co nt ractors that hold
Maybe Ihey should have hired the federa l nuclear energy contracts.
public relations consultant that two
The aim of the semmar was
U.S. fedl&gt;ral agencies retained after clearly Ia make the federal regula the Three Mile Island nuclear lory agenctes look gOOd, even if that
accident oll979.
meant cover ing up the seriousness
The Energy Department and the of the sit uation. Accordin g to
Nuclear Regulatory Commission various memos a nd course noles.
share regulatory responsibility for the training sessions included:
the plant outside Harrisburg, Pa,
-"Cold Turkey Mini-Hearings.
that came dangerously close to a With your tea mmatC'S, you will
meltdown. The agencies were respond locross-examination by an
ev idently dissatisfied with the static attorney and members of another
they got from the media and from panel, defending your company
Congress Immediately following againsl some of the chargl's
the accident.
expected to eomc from Ihe
So in 1982, the two agencies laid opponenl s."
out $10,001 for a "Witness and
-" Mike-ln -the- Moulh Int er
Media Skills Clinic" that would· views. On-camera twel will conteach their people how to dOij better duct a thrff'·to-five-minu te 'l:x&gt;nch)ob of answering questions from mark' Interview wilh you. Use your
bothersome reporter s a nd interview as a lool 10 improve a
members of Conl(ress.
'second tak e' tomorrow and to
The three-day session. altended track your progress."
by lederal officials and personnel
-"Avoiding Traps In Media
from a private Three Mile Island Int erviews. Adaptmg the crosscont ractor, was held at the Marriott examination model to inlervicw
Hotel in Harrisburg. Our associate

situatio ns. 'Bridge' Ia publtr brncfits a nd to ywr game plan "
The consultant s coached regula
tory officials In detail on "composure t£Cfinlqu es" lo wit hstand the
rigors of congressional hearmgs.
"Accepl that you are uplighl." the
agency bureaucrols wen• advised .
"Lean awa y from batti{'confront ation slighlly. Straighten
spine. slouldcrs. back . Breathe!
Make a comfo11 ing move It hen 1
move body Into ba tliefield.''
If dl&gt;spltr proper posture and
breat hing, the qu estioni ng set:'med
to 1:x&gt; going downhill , the seminar
participants were taught to watch
for cert am "alarm n'sponsf&gt;S,"
which include breaking out in a cold
sweal, quivering voice and irregu
Jar breathing. To make sure thes&lt;"
dreadful symptoms were easily
r~ognlz.1 ble. the ~milja r sessions
were videotaped.
Somr "Coaching Slcps" for Itt&lt;•
seminarians included Ihis succinct
PR gem: "(Give! Impression tha i
things are going well.. Avoid emba rassmenJ Avoid traps. Ell' car~ul
you don'l trap you twll What
posit ion do you want lhe public to
hear?''
They wrrr a Iso told how to

· handlr questions lor which I don't
want to give the answer but I still
want to look good," and were given
this KrPmlin-style warning: "C1on·
tml what ~oes Into the record or the
minds of lhr listeners.''
Our stat pupil was a TMI
cont rac lor rxpeutivr, whoacknowi cclged m a seminar test paper that
TM I radia tion dl&gt;lectors had malfit net io!X'd and werr potentially If
talking to the manufacturer, he
wou ld sav lhe oovlces had been
"very mi:,lrading," he wrote. Bur
'·if l'rit ir Is anli -nuke" he would say
that "lhese are radiation monitors,
not salety -related eq uipment, and
tt.:Tl'forr arc not required to
· operate oorrcc tl~ undrr accident
conditions."
Arc you lislcning. Gorbachev?
Footnote: Onr of lhe e&lt;.nsultanls
involved in the clinic said the
traini ng -was necessary because
"lcchn lcal people do not tell their
story very well." An Energy
Ilcpartmenl official at Three Mile
Island also clalmoo the seminar
was an effor1 to help the nuclear
m ergy spcclallsls communicate
"so Ihe average person can under·
stand us "

More"than moose ________R_ob_e_rt_W_a_lte__rs
VANCOUVER. Bnttsh Columbia lumbia outdoes tlself with three sepa:
(NEA) - One of the stars ol Expo 86 rate pavilions tbat offer animated
is Roger Kuptana. a resident of a re- shipping crates, a s~taeular threemote island community in the North- screen movie and a filmed tour of the
west Terrtlories called Sachs Harbor. province hosted by a 12-year-old girl.
It's almost 1,700 mtles north of here
- Alberta, home of what is argoin the Arelic Ocean.
ably the world's best rodeo, th~ CalgaKuptana isn't actually at the ry Stampede, dazzles its vlsllors with
world's fair , but a striking still photo· a filmed chuck-wagon race disr,layed
graph in the Northwest Territories on a screen that totally encirc es the
exhibtt shows him surrounded by des- audience.
olate snow-covered tundra far north
- Saskatchewan offers an ebulof the Arctic Circle.
lient young woman on stage who inHis contribution is a quotation be- teracts witb a fllm on a screen directneath the photo that makes city dwell- ly behind her, as well as visits to a
ers pause in reflection: "You think we simulated potash mill and a mock-up
are lonely when we are out on the of a grain elevator.
land. I tell you, it's the people in the In contrast, the pavilions of the
cttles who are lonely."
.
world's tbree superpowers are disapExpo IS ~ world-class expostlion tn pointing and many other nations offer
a cosmopolitan ctty._ l! boasts, for ex- uninspired fare. Australia, lor examample, of partt_ctpatt?n by the Vnlted pie, provides a multi-media presentaSta.tes, ·the &amp;lVIet Unton and the Pea- lion dev6ted principally to gloating
pies Republic of China - an act:om- over its possession of yachting's
pllshment unmatched by any of the 23 America's Cup.
world's fairs previously held In North
More than ~0 nations - from rnaAmerica.
jor countries to 15 Island prlncipaliBut Expo 86 is western Canada's ties in the Caribbean and Soutb Paclfworld's fair, presenting a special op- lc - are Expo 88 participants, but too
portunlly for the people of the sparse- many offer dreary Industrial exhibits
ly populated western provinces and or routine promotions for tourist
territories to tell tbelr story to tbe trade.
world - especially to tbe smug bigAs In the case of· the government
city visitors from Montreal, Toronto pavlllons, Air Canada apparently
and other urban areas in eastern trted harder tban mOlt corporate exCanada.
hlbltors and the results are dauliiiJ:
Those provinces aad territories
One of tbe airlines' first planes, a
have made an extraordinary effort to Lo&lt;:kheed L-IOA, ls in the exhibit haD.
provide compelling presentations at At tbe beginning of a compelling film
their pavilions. l!ome outstanding about the airline and Canada during
examples:
tbe past &amp;0 years, tbe plane's engines
- The Northwest Territories of- seem to start as II appears to prepare
fers not only striking still photo- for a takeoff.
graphs of Inuit and llldlan naUves.but
The illlowcase of Canadian lolkilfe
also a bmtbtaklng film and dilplays offen not only captlvattnl· perforthat effectively 111e evecything from miDCI!I by IIJilrited f0W1C artllta but
photomurals to lllllilal pella.
allo lrilled aalmon and buffilo bur·
- The IIGit provu flf Brltlslt Co- ~ pn lar superior \0 the food at tile

McDonald's and Orange Julius
emponums.
The cuisine at tbe restaurants in the
Swiss, Czech and several other national pavilions is also superb - but
that's one of the few instances m
which Canada 's effort has been
matched.

What Expo 86 does nest is shatter
the distorted stereotype of western
Canada - the popular albeit inaccurate image of wbat one magazine ·.
here recently described as "semi·
mythical Canada, that cold, wild land .
of moose and Mounties."

Berry's World
II I II

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

I

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

-Beeker'·s 'victory may offer challenge to John McEnroe
By

FRE~ER·wATERMAN
rta Writer

,

WIMBLE N, England (UPI)
- Two-lime Wimbledon champion
Boris Becker Is being hailed as the
world's finest grass-court player
and that may be the Incentive John

pion's long-time
doubles
McEnroe
needs, the
fannerpartner
chamsays.
Peter Fleming won seven Grand
Slam doubles titles with McEnroe,
who he thinks wlll rise to the
challenge of Becker's acclaim.
"Everyone has sald for years
that McEnroe's by far the best
grass-cour1 player," Fleming sal!l.
"Right now you have to say
Becker's the best and It's McEn-

me'sjobloprclveotberwise. I think approach "one hundred percent,"
he wiH. I tfunk It's a good Incentive as he said after Sunday's 1&gt;4, 6·3, 7-5
tor him."
victory over Ivan Lendl, seeded
· McEnroe, winner of Wimbledon first here because of hls No.1 world
in 1981, 19113 and 1984, left the pro ranking.
tour In January after nine years on
El!'cker was unwllling to stake a
(he clrculttranked No.1 or 21n each claim as his span's top player, but

!shed this year's Wimliedon with
two more titles and a sense of
dlsappointmenl.
,
Determined to wln Wlmliedon s
triple crown of singles, doubles a nd
mixed doubles, Navratllova fell
short when sir and Heinz Gun-

CORRECTION

SUNDAY'S AD SHOULD .HAVE READ
·,

'

The Daily Sentinel
CUSPS 1111-Nil
A Dl\llslon of Multimedia, In c.

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Cycle race winner
EVREUX, France (UPII Pella Rulz-Cabestany of Spain
flnlsbed just ahead of a charging
pack Monday to win the 152-mlle
founh stage of the Tour de France
cycle race by two seconds.
· Rulz-Cabestany completed the
fl at sla!ie from Uevin in 6 hou rs, 57
minutes, and 5 seconds.
Two key riders were Injured
during t~ stage. Dutch national
champion Jos Lammertlnk
crasbed near the end of the stage
and suffered a fractured skuU.

ble for oonyjng Navrat ilova the
honor of takltJg all three crowns. In
1985. Navratpova won the singles
and mixed tltles, but playing with
Pam Shriver losl Ire women 's
doubles to Jordan and Elizatx&gt;th
c
Smylie.

r:;;;;;;;i;··········-----------------\

~

firsttheroQlld six
of the
Masters
bestsay,
in the
&lt;:t
years.
UpseiIninNew
the did
"onworld."
grass maybe I am the
York, McEnroe began a sabliatical
Fleming expected a victory from
sclt!-'dul¢d to end wlth the Aug. 4-10 the hard -serving teenager, who
VOlvo tournament in Stratton, Vt.
collected 106 aces in his seven
In the ~t year, Becker's game matches.
hlls contlnl ed to develop. The
"I tiJJught from the start of the
18-year-old has grown morcthanan tournament that Becker was the
!nell, his top-spin groundstrokesare favorite. I couldn 't sec anyone
ammg . the heaviest and most returning his serve. ve_ry often ,"
difficult to handle, and the West said the American, mtngued by a
German has improved his mental grass meeting between the mntrasting styles of McEnroe and
Becker.
"John plays a good power game
and a fin esse ga me, but a guod
pov;er player beats a finesse player
most of the time and Becker is the
ultimate power playrr 1 think
McEnroe will ha1·e to play welt to
for the British Opm," O'Grady beat him.
said . " I almost didn't play (Sun "He (Becken is comforlable on
day) because my wife was n't grass. at the moment he's byfarthe
feeling well, but I convinff'd her to best player on grass. It remai ns to
go rut and get some fresh air to see be seen whether John's the only
what would happm."
person who can beat him. I think
O'Grady, who says lhere are now the shoe is on Ihe !lher foot."
"serious antitrust laws involved " if
On the women's side, Martina
his suspension Is upheld by the PGA Navratilova will have two goals at
appeals panel, was subdued ·in his the 1987 Wimbledon Another vtc
discussion &lt;:t the Tour hiera rchy tory in the singles wil l give h ~r six
alter his victory.
straighl titles, breaking the r~ord
"I'm not here to ll'ally say she currently shares wilh Suzanne
anything about the PGA. but I think Lenglen of France. It would also
they're really inconsistent In their give her eight singles titl es overall,
rules," he said. "The game of golf tying her with Helen Wills Moody,
will find you at times, and th e game holder of lhe all -timr Wimbledon
wlll crucify you at times. Today record .
was my day to ff'iebrale."
The 29-ycar-old Navratilova fin -

Golf maverick savors
first PGA tour win
CROMWELL, Conn. tUPil Golf maverick Mac O'Grady, who
has gained more lame !rom hls
battles against the PGA than with
his clubs, says there ls swet't
satisfaction in earning hls first Tour
victory during Liberty Weekend.
"We hear about the pioneers who
left Europe and came to America,··
O'Grady said after winning the
$700,!XXl Greater Hartford Open.
"We hear about the pioneers who
went to the West. Then you have
moments like this.
"I've fought the odds. I've
persevered. Then lo have a moment like this on the Fourth of July
weekend."
O'Grady, 35, won $126,001 by
• beating Roger Maltbie Sunday In a
sudden-death playoff. Maltbie
missed a 3-loot putt on the first
ex tra hole, giving the championship
to O'Grady.
"I made a bad JXlt! at the wrong
time," Maltbie said. "I wasn't
nervous. I just missed it."
O'Grady, who shot a 62 in the final
round at the Tournament Players
Club of Connecticut lor a four-round
269, has been warring with PGA
commissioner Deane Beman for
two years.
O'Grady Is appealing a $5,001llne
and six-week suspension handed
out by Ell'man for what the
commissioner termed U11Jrofessional conduct. A three-member
PGAappeals board is reviewing ttl;_
punishment.
O'Grady, meanwhile, said he Is
lookin g fotWard to this month 's
Britis h Open, and savoring his
finest moment.
"Last week 1 cried after the
toummenl," he said of the Canadian Open, when O'Grady finished
five strokes behind Bob Murphy
after holding the lead at one point.
"It really hurt ."
He said he was on the practice
putting green untll!O p.m. the night
before his spectacular 62 Sunday.
O'Grady began the final round five
"' strokes behind co-leaders Tom
Watson and Kenny Knox, then
blister~ the course for 30 on li:x'
front nine and 32 on the back side.
Watson, seeking Ills first Tour
triumph In two years, s iJJt 71 in the
final round to . finish four siJJts
!,)&gt;hind. Knox carded a 75.
'T m going to play next w~k . and
possibly the week after; to get rea dy

thardt fell to KathY Jordan and Ken
Flach in straight sets. Gunthardt
won the 1985 men 's doubles title
with Balazs Taroczy, but his errors
Sunday freq uently Plicited gest ures
of frustration from Navratilova.
Jordan has twice been rt&gt;sponsi ·

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Mall iiuboCJ1ollaou
lnolrle Melp Counl1
13 Weeks ............................. $14 .!16
26 We&lt;oks ....................... ........... $29 .!2
52 Woeka ................................. $58. I

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26 Wooka .................................. ~.l
~~ Woeka .................................. S61.60

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•sWrrctwJLETOUCH·TONEIPIILSE 11it0MS wort&lt; on boih tmur-.1 puloi ~n~t. Tl1trtfl&gt;!1,
stll use soNic• rlqulrillfiiOftll, Nto
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MM:e WNI we sell
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In orw ~onli po1te Irota~ dial) N
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IV«)

DEALERs

�•
,·

By The Bend

Majors

The Daily Sentinel
.

Leaders

...

Tuesday, July 8, 1986
Page-5

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.NFL players critical
Lof drug testing order
By DAVID E. NATIIAN
UPI Sports Writer

.· NEW YORK (UPII - As NFL
·.: training camps open this roonth,
•: ·the method of monitoring the
. players· off-lh,.fleld activities will
be the subject of continued debate
' : betwero the league and the players'

: :unton.
NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle
·: Monday announced the league
·. would Immediately begin a ranoom
mandatory drug·testing program.
;:. making the NFL the first profes·
: sional sports lea'Jile to make
· ·unscheduled tests of their players.
·
The new program brought an
: Immediate outcry from the NFL
·: Players Association , which
·. claimed Rozelle was violating the
:: players' collective barga ining
··-agreement with the league.
· "The agreement reached In 1982
· Is final and binding on all partl&lt;'s
· and Its tenns cannot be changed In
. mld·tenn except upon mutual
·: consent," union Executive Director
&gt;Gene Upshaw said.
· . Upshaw. scheduled to meet "1th

-reporte-rs at a news conference
·later today in San Francisco, sa id
'the union could not abide by the new

: program. His statement did not
• rule oot the possibility of a strike .
• Rozelle said In unveiling the
program he was within his powers
.to establish It without consent of the
Wllon or club owners.
"I feel the bargaining agreement
and the constitution and bylaw s
•· gives me the obligation and author·
&gt;tty to !JUtect tl&lt;- health and welfare
·· d thl' players and preserve Ihe
: Integrity and public confidence In
the NFL," Rozelle said.
'J'hl&gt; commlssloner also ·rejec ted
Wllon claims tbat unar.nounced
ll'Stlng represented an iwa.ion of
rights of privacy.
. "In thl' unique world of PJ'9f!!S·
· snnal sports yoo give up i0!1\e
· rights d privacy to participate."
Rozelle said at a news conferenoo.
"Whether or not they koow It, these
playefS\are role roodels."
Thl' lfnvelllng of the plan comes
10 days alter the cocatne-induced
: death d Oeveland Browns safety
· Don Rogers, the AFC' s 1984
defensive rookie of the :,oear, who
coliapsed alter a bachelor party
thrown In his honor In Sacramento,
CaUl.
Ro:ze(le said there was I'VIdence
: drug u5e among players was
• Jncrmslng.

: Plays 739th game
• Atlanta's Dale Murphy played In
his 7Jhh (.'OIISt'CIIllve game Mon·
day lite 11th toniest streak In
hlst;,y. Pete Rose ts next at 745.

"It is a problem but I ron' t think

NEW YORK (UP!) - A hom,._ tying run at SI'Cilnd base.
Franro allo~ two hits the rest
product Monday night re·
minded the New Yortt Mets about · of the way and l'€Corded his 13th
save.
the pressure of leading the pack.
Parker's homer, his 16th of the
Rffis relle! ace John Franco, a
25-year-old left·bander who was season, !ollo~ a single by pinch
born and still lives in Brooklyn. hitler Tony Pere&lt;Z and came off
choked off a Mets' rally In the Randy Niemann, 1·3, to give the
·seventh Inning to preserve Cincln· Reds a 64 lead.
Cincinnati added another run, off
natl's 7-6 victory.
reliever
Bruce Berenyl, when Eric
"Everybody thinks because
Davis
ooubloo
and scoroo m Dave
we're In first, and the team we play
is In !lith or slxth place, we're going Concepcion's sacrifice Oy.
"We starti!'J poorly at home, but
to win I'Very game," the Mets' Len
Dykstra said. "It Isn't that way. The wewmlO o!oorlast14 (at home),"
entire (NL) West Is in the race and said Cincinnati player-mariager
bearing down oo every pitch and It Pete Rose, whoseteamhas44home
really makes it hard on us. Being games alter the All-Star break,
ahead Is great but It means most In NL
''I think the Dodgers, with their
everybody else is aiming at us."
Dave. Parker's tWo·run romer pitching, and we will be !actors·in
Ignited a three-run seventh inning this race before long. If we can cut
another couple of games cl1 the loss
tbal gave Cincinnati a 64 lead.
column
before the break, we can
''I'm playing with a finger that
tum
this
thing upside ro~W~. And
hurts on certain swings; I've got a
.hyperextended knee, but I want to rtght now this thing Is really up;kle
..a...
" '
play," Parker said. " I don't want to ,.,wn.
Despite the Joss. the Mets are still
miss any games. U I make the
AU-Star game fine, If I don't. fine. I ll'h games ahead of Montreal In
the Natbnal League East.
can use the rest."
"We're way In front, and a week
Franco. who attended New
ago
Davey (Johnson, )\1ets man·
York's Lafayette High School,
Sandy Kou!ax's alma mater, has ager) told me I'd be the filth starter
for a while." starter Rick Aguilera
special Incentive this season.
"I dedk:ated this season to my said. "He said not to worry Ul didn't
mother, who had died February win I'Very game 1 pitched.
"I'm ge«lng be«er. I think they
14," Franco said. "She used to go to
hit
good plcthes tonight. BUt I have
bingo and hand out my baseball
to be concerned . H I ronllnue to
cards. While she wasn't a basebail
fan. she always wanted me to make pitch this way, he wUI be forced to
make a rnJve.' '
the bli! lea211es."
New York scored twice In the
Cincinnati took a 3-!l lead against
seventh on Howard Johnson's Aguilera, srortng once In the first
leadoff rome run and Gary carter's Inning when a passed ball by Carter
RBI single before Franco rel!I'Ved allowoo Eddie Milner to score from
winner Ron Robinson, 7·0. Franco Ullrd, and twice il the fourth on
walked Darzyl StrawbeiTy but consecutive roubles by COncepcion,
struck out George Foster with the Buddy Bell and Ron Oester. Oester

Eblin birthday
celebrated

to~W~

'

WGH FIVE -Dav~Parker, right, ....,elved the lighftve fromTon,y
P~rez of the Clncbmalt Reds after Parlcer hit a hro·run mmerlo ]lit the
~ on lop &amp;4 agalnBI the New York Meto Monday at Shea Stadium In
thl' top oUheseventh Inning. Parlcer got the game-wlnnlngRBiwlhhls
homer. The Reds woo, 7-6. (UPI)

ha&lt;l'iour hits In the game.
Strawbeny's 13th homer, leading
off the lourth, and Aguilera's
second homer of thl' season, In the
filth. drew the Mets within 3·2.
Wally Backman's tWO&lt;Iut oouble
and Keith Hernandez's RBI single
in the Ofth tied thl' score.
Cincinnati took a 4-3 lead in the
sixth oo an RBI single by pinch
hitter Kal Daniels, bu 1 New York
tied the score In Its half of the sixth
on Ray Knight's sacrifice fty.

'

else.
Dave Winfield of the New York
Yankees did exactly that Monday
night and paced his team to a 14-3
rout of the Texas Rangers at
Arlington. Texas.
Angered over being benched for
tile third time In five games,
Winfield responded by driving In
four runs with a tt1ple and a oouble
to help ease the frustration be felt at
not being In the starting lineup.
"Was I angry? Maybe a UtUe
more today than I have been," said
Winfield, who entered the game as
a pinch hitter in lite third Inning.
"It's not over. He (Yankee manager Lou Plnella ) just has to ]lit""'
In the lineup and leave me alone.
Let me play.
"I suspect I'll be In there
(tomonuw ). H I'm not, there's
something fishy In Denmark."
Winfield made It clear that he
wasn 't mad at Plnlella for the
benching. Although be never menti·
oned club owner George Ste!nbrenne'r by name. the Yankee
outfielder Indicated he was certain
Pinella had acted on orders from

anyone is In a poslt b n to give
perc?£&gt;ntages cr say how widPspread
the troblem is, " he said.
The NFL tests will check fn r use
of coca ine, marijuana and heroin.
Tests will scrc-rn fo r alcolnl oot
only high levels will lead to
treatment and possible discipline.
Because of technological restraints.
tests will not he done for steroids.
Under the proposed program,
players testing posit ive fo r drugs
three times will be ban ned from the above.
league and can apply for reinstat,.
"I know where this Is romlng
ment after a year.
!rom."
Winfield said. "and I'm
1\vo unan nounced l£'sts during
mad
.
We'll
get It rut In the cpen . Me
the season will be supplemented
and
whoi'Ver
5 on the ~her end of
with the exam now given at training
this."
camp under Ite 1982 drug agreePinlella never once denied the
ment . Another test for drugs will be
decision
to sit the star out1lelder
conducted at the league' s scouting
came
from
the !rant office.
combine for draft-eligl bk ro ilege
"H It were up to me, to ME , I
srnbrs.
\Wuld
put Dave's name In the
Players testing positive once will
lineup
I'Veryday and let him
rrceivC' ru t-pa tient care Cf' be
produce,"
PlnieUa said . "There's
removed from the club's roster for
ooth!ng
I
wruld
like t.l&gt;tter than
30 days to be rospita llzed . A player
that.
I
told
Dave,
'please
be patient
tha t suffers a rel apse will sit out
with
me
for
a
couple
of
days
....
another 30 days. A third positive
Winfield had been struggling at
test wUI I'I'Sult In a minimum
tile
plate with a .226 ba«lng average
ooe-year ban from lhP league.
entering
the game but stU! had 13
Any pl ayer tesHng positive for
lnme
runs
and 00 RBI. Hemilected
drugs can be tested again at any
his
2,000th
career hit In the !Hth
point.

inning who?n he tt1pled home a run.
He added a three-run oouble In the
ninth.
Scott Neilson , 27. got the victory
in his major·league debut by giving
up three runs and nine hits in seven
innings.
"I was neJVous. I made some
mistakes, ~t fortunately we scored
roore runs than the Rangers,"
Neilson said. "My parents and wife
were here. It was a special
rooment."
called up from COlumbus of the
International League m July 4,
N!elsoo struck out. ftve and and
wallce&lt;l one. AI Holland and Dave
Righetti finished up.
Don Mattingly and Claudell
Washington homered for New York
while Pete Incav!gl!a and OOibe
McDowell connected for Texas.
Elsewhere il the Amerk:an
League, Toronw topped Seattle 7·5,
Oakland edged Boston f&gt;4. Chicago
nipped Cle~~land 4-3, Baltimore
rooted Kansas City 8-1, Minnesota
ootBJugged Detroit 11).8 and callfor·
n!a oo\WII'd Milwaukee 3·1 in 16
Innings.
Blue Jays 7, Marmers 5
At Toronto, Jimmy Key scat·
teroo eight hits over seven Innings,
struck oot a personal·hlgh 10
batters and picked off two baserunners to lead the Blue Jays. The
triumph was the !lith In a row tor
Key, 8-5. BIII CaudUI wocked the last
1 1·3 Innings for his nrst save since
Aug. 3, 1985.
Red Sox 8, A's 4
At Booton, Jose Canseco and
Dave Kingman belted back·to-back
slxth·lnning homers of! Roger
Clemens to spark Oakland Oe·
mens. who bst his !l?Cand straight
game and dropped to 14·2, was
outdueled by Dave Slewart, 1.0,,
who J:icked llP his first victocy since
September 1984.
While Sox 4, Jn&lt;lams 3
At Chicago. Greg Walker'ssact1!lce Oy to deep center fteld with the
bases loaded In the bottom of the
ninth snapped a 3-3 tle and enabled

the White Sox to snap CII'Veland's
seven-game winning streak. Bob
James, 44, earned the victocy. The
loser was Ernie Camocho, 1·2.
Ork&gt;les 8, Royals I
At Kansas City, Mo., Cal Ripken,
Fred Lynn and Floyd Rayford each
homered to Hit Baltimore and
extend Kansas City' s bslng streak
to 10 games. Mike Boallcker
snapped a personal three-game
losing streak, improving to 114.
Charlie Lelbrandt !eli io 8-6.
Twms 10, 11gen 8
At Minneapolis, Jeff Reed drove
In three runs with a rouble and a
bases-loaded walk to lead Mlnne·
sola. Kirby PUckett and Gary
Gaettl each drove In two runs for
the Twins, while Lou Whitaker hit a 1
pair of solo homers for the Tigers. ,
who have lost SI'Ven of their last
nine.
An[ll!ls 3, Brewers 1
At Milwaukee, Wally Joyner
llipled with the bases loaded In the
16th Inning to Uft the An!J!Is to
victory. Teny Forster, 4-1, pitched
three Innings for the victccy. Doug
Corbet! hurled thl' 16th tor hl~
seventh save but was touched for a
run. Dan Plesac, 5-6, was the loser..

at the same place.
Attending were Earl and Betty
Harden, Weston, W.Va. ; Dale
Harden, Earl D. and P.J . and
Becky, Louisville; Bill and LEola
Kendall, Michelle Marshall, D.J .
and Saundra and Cindy. Kendall,
Warren, Mich. ; Bob and Esther
Harden, Syracuse, Debbie Sech·
rest, Fayetteville, N.C.; Jim and
Johnelta Harden, Jacob and Janet:
London; Dorothy Yates, Oak Hill;
Bob and Dorothy Harcten. Racine;

Gertrude Andrews hosted a
recent meeting oft he Adult Class of
the Pomeroy Church o! Christ.
Opening poem was "True
wealth" with CHarles King giving
devotions. and Frances Eskew the
prayer. Elizabeth Duffy was

Eloise EbDn
E blin, Middleport; Pam and lllri
Russell, Rutland.
She also received telepro ne calls
from her son, llm Snyder. and his
wife, Kathy, CII'Veland. N.C.

hymnals for the church . Olive
Smith gave the treasurer's report .
Card were signed for several who
are Ill. Conrad Ohlinger thanked the
group for prayers, cards, and
flowers sent to him during his

totiNG SOOit:
"THE GREAT MOUSE DETECHVE"

"8EniNO YOU THERE S~FELY"

*AUGNMENTS *FRONT END WORK
*BATTERIES *TIRE REPAIR
LOCATED: MAIN ST .• RUTLAND, OHIO
OPEN: 8·6 MON.·SAT.; 8·8 FRI.
PH. 742 -3088
Master Card and Visa Welcome

Last Days Of The Big

VBS attendance
Average attendance at Bible
School at the Rutland FreewUI
Baptist Church last week was 105
including 22 adult workers. 17teens,
27 lnlennediate, 31 primary. and
eight nursery students .
Sixty·seven had perfect attendance for the school. Rose Edmonds
was the director.

Fl E SALE
All Suits.......................... S75 All Dress Shirts ................. $4
All Sport Coats ... $2 5.$50 Meigs School Jackets .... 112 Price
All Dress Slacks ................. $5 All Jackets ...................... $2 5

•Interior &amp; Exterior
•Remodeling
•Kitchens
•Roofing

All Belts ...................... u.,.,•• $4 Sport Shirts .... S4,

•Siding
•General Carpentry
•Repair Work

NOW LOCATED IN THE FORMER SWEETS 'N' EATS BUILDING

REFERENCES - FREE ESTIMATES

(4 doors above the old New York.Clothing House Building)

HURRY II! THESE SALE PRICES GOOD
THRU JULY 13th, 1988
We Reserve The Righi
To Limit Quantities

Available In These Sundrr Stores!
Eaton. OH
Wapakoneta OH
Pomeror. OH
Washin ~ton C.H .. OH
Wellslon. OH
Waverl~ . OH
Wilmmgton. OH
Portsmouth . OH
Delphos. OH
Circleville, OH

INCIAL WEDNESD.\Y
MATINEES

WELLINGTON

.THISIUIIIIERI

WINDMERE 12 INCH

CHAIR DUSHIOIS

OSCILLATIII

WITH BUTTONS

NOW

FAI

lo}VeStprice
In town!*

NOW

897

99

19

97

OUR REGUlAR $9.97

OUR REGUlAR $29.97

IL

FUJI

TABLET 60'S OR
, 50 CAPSULES

DISC FILM

DECONGESTANT
ANTIHISTAMINE

69.

24 TABLETS

15 EXPOSURES

29
Now3
OUR REGUlAR

'

NOW

. 349

99
7
NOW

OOR REGUlAR

WIIDEX

4 0~

Beautiful Heirlootil
P«tait Package
PHOTOGRAPHER
DAYS
WID. &amp; 'IIIIlS.
JUlY 9&amp; ID

.rc··

10 All 'Tll PM

Additional photo
ovalloble
II rwgullr price {lllal!tlv hiGher

·2 PM 'nl 6 PM

dlpollt). ~~Mel oP.Ciil .r.tu'"
our
12 _ , 01 the Blue and Brown Old Mutor. Scenic ond
blci&lt;ground St:OO.Iddltlonol. Speclll olfecte, black &amp; whtto
'-arounctt ond pmpe avlllabtt only In our detlgnor collection. .

~p,tj: I§·3'6

41300 LAIIEL CLIFF

TICKLE

!~GUlAR

CLEANER DISINFECTANT
26 0~

NOW

1(8.d0), 2(5x?8)
and 10 W!lllets b- only...
W deposit rwquiNd r&gt;tus $t.l!O alt·
ttng t• for-" lddklonat aubject

RD~

•

IUDE LIIHT

liOZ.

HOUSE AID URDEI
IIIIILLER .
liOZ.

NOW

1

OUR IEGULM

HINT OF POWDER OR

GENTLE ~RESH 7 OZ.

NOW

YOUR CHOICE

99 .

109

OUR IEGUIM $1.29

FLYIII IISECT
IlLLER

PO.IOY, OHIO

OUR REGUlAR

7 QT. CAPACITY

NOW

NOW.1

1•9

Mill FLIP TOP

150 COUNT

-Jon

S5, S7

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

~ OHIO LOnERY . · ~
"JUST
CASH
GAME"
WIN UP TO $5,000.00 INSTANnY
Cel1na. OH
Chillicothe, OH
Jackson, OH
McArthur, OH
Middleport, OH

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

PHONE 614-985-4141
CHESTER, OHIO
HOME BUILDING

· Mr. and Mrs. David Pierce.
: Mansfield. Miss Ruby Coughenour,
. Langsville. Karl and Krlsll John - ,
: son. West Palm Beach, Fla.
attended the 82nd birthday par ty
· for Carol R. Pierce, on June29at his
· rome in Langsville. Their names
: were omitted !roman earlier llsling
1
: of the party guests.

f~;;;~:;~;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;:;;~;;;;~;;;~~~~~;;;,

hospitalization.
Refreshments were served to
those named and Melvin Smith,
Elizabeth Ohlinger, Rosalee King,
Mrs. Lawrence Clark, and Betty
Spencer .

MARCUM CONTRACTING

·Others attending

and Tavis, Syracuse; Roy and Rose
Ann Jenkins, Kimberly and Rochell, Forest Run Road .
Graduates recognized wer e M! che!Je Marshall and Steven Merino.
Esther Harden wm be secretacytreasurer fo r the 1987 reunion.

named to check on som e new

Saundra Tillis have reached their
halfway mark. The club' s ~th
anniversary and the honortng of
KOPS (keep off pounds sensibly I
was set for Sept. 9. Members are
reminded to keep track of weight
loss for the month and to bring in an
object weighing lhe number of
pounds they have lost.
TOPS weigh-In at Veterans is
held every '1\tesday from 6 to 6:55
with the meeting beginning at 7
p.m. ivlorr infonnatlon may be
obtained by calling 992-7532.

Paula Sayre was the best loser
and Deena Kennedy, runner·up, in
weight loss at the Tuesday night
: meetingofTOPSOH570heldal the
· Veteran s Memor ial Hospital
. cafeteria.
The monthly best loser and queen
of the chapter was Glenda Hunt
· with Juanita Humphrey as runner·
. up. Net loss for the month was 71
pounds.
Belinda Sayre was the best teen
loser, and Helen Hill won the fruit
• basket. Th e club welcomed PhyU!s
· Dreyhel, Shari Stone, Luclile
. Vance, Brenda Darst, and Terri
Houser as new m eml:l"rs. It was
noted that Glenda Hupt and

Pam Foreman, Portland; Dorothy
Harden. Pomeroy; Tamml Nelson
and John Wiliams, Middleport;
Brian and Paige Harden, Mason,
W.Va.; Bob and Teresa Williams,
Pomeroy; Don and Mary Lisle,
John and Janice Lisle, Todd. Scott

LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS
AND LIGHT TRUCK nRES ·

Adult class of church meets

TOPS conducts meeting

Angry Winfield helps rout Rangers
By FRED McMANE
UPI A•"'slanl Sports Editor
When you get angry at your boss,
you often take It out on someone

The ninth annual Harden family
reunion was held at the Syracuse
Municipal Park June 28.
A basket dinner was enjoyed b)!,
the group with Betty Harden giving
the blessing. Receiving gifts for
varbus recognitions were Roy
Jenkins, Mary Lisle. Teresa Wllllams. John W!U!am NeiSCin, Cindy
Kendall. Earl D. Harden IlL
The family enjoyed tennis, horseshoes, swimming and visiting. The
1987 reunion will be held on June 28

Mrs. Eloise Elilin of Middleport
celebrated her &amp;lth birthday recently at a surprise party hosted by
her daughter and son-ln·law, Mr.
and'Mrs. Terzy Powell and family ,
Rutland.
Cake and other refreshments
were served . Gifts were Jresl'!l ted
to Mrs. Eblin . Attending the party
were Ronnie, Zelia. Matthew
Snyder. Pikeville, Ky .; Kenny,
Ginnie, Bran die Snyder of Langs·
ville; Mrs. Barbara Lewis, West
Columbia, W.Va.; Charlotte, Crys·
tal, Amy Smith, Diester; Ruth
Taylor, Chester; Debbie, Pete and
Julla Engles of Midlleport; Larry
Snyder, Midlleport; Larry, Crystal. KrlstY, and Tracey Richmond,
Rutland: Connie and Ricky Patterson, Pomeroy; Dave and Debbi
Ca mpbell, Pomeroy; Cindy Shawn,
Misty King , Pomeroy.
Sending gifts were Lucille and
.Jimmy Casto. Middleport ; Wendall

\
.

Harden family reunion conducted recently

OUR
\

1

'01·

.. ·

VII ISH

AUTOMAtiC BOWL CLEANER

12 0~

NOW

OOR

1°9

PALMOLIVE
DISH LIQUID
22 0~

Now88°

22 OZ. WITH SPRAYER

NOW

1! ~GUlAR

$1.59

. OUR REGUlAR $1.24

AI
PUMP.TOOTHPASTE
4.5 oz.

MINT OR REGULAR

Now99c
LIMIT 2

..

••

�Page 6-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 8, 1~8l

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday,

8,1986

:::~CE: ;:c:
0

Business Services

PROPOSALS

lngThe
Vattoy
Regionet
Dovel ·
Buckeye
Hitia·Hock·
opment Dillilct"a Araa Ag ·
ancy on Aging is requnting
propouta for the operation
of tho t986 Title Ill Nu·
trrtion Program. Propos...
mull ba M~bmitted to BH·
HVRDD / ADD by July 3t ,
1986, fore process of oompetittve negotiation. Propoaalacceptance based on the
avallebitity of FoderaiFIIldo.

AH conditiona, atipulations
and apecificettona relevant
to inclution in the proposal may be obtained by
contacting lynne Sawyer,
Nutrition Program Coordinator/ Area Agency on Ag ·
ing. (614! 374-9436 .
(71 B. ltc

Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO

Rt. 124, PoiNroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto TtlntMi~tlon
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121
6· 17-tfc

THE BIRD CAGE
&amp; FISH POND
Pn SHOP
EXOTIC BIRDS .
. TROPICAL FtS H,
HAMSTERS.
KITTENS. BIRD
SEED. CAGES &amp;
AQUARIUMS

house, Deceaaed. Case No.

Wee Team, headed by Iva Sisson, In the Rutland .July
4th parade. The entry was one of three Grst place
winners in the Doat judging of the parade.

Patdl Dolhengaged Ina baUgamewllhLady Uberty
looking on stressing liberty for Uttle people too was the
cleYer, weD do~ Doat entry of the RUtland Girls Pee

BALLOONS - Marlyn WUcoK agatn was in her role as a clown dlslrlbutmg Bank One baUoons along lhe
.
Rutland parade route.

.

....

-

25,138 .

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On June 25, 1986, in the
Meigs County Pn&gt;bete Court.
Caoe No. 26. 138. Devid Bom ·
house, 43085 Cook Road.
Hemlock Gn&gt;ve, Ohio. 45839
wu appointed Administrmr
w~h the Witt Am8Mad of the
estate of Floyd H. Barnhouse,
- a d . late of Route 2,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789 .
Robert E. BuD&lt; ,
Probete Judge
Lena K. Nesselroad , Clerk

171 1, 8. 15, 3tc

59 N. 2nd Ave •
Middleport
Ned Door To W"ttrn Auto

992-.,84

S-20."86' I mo.

TRENCHING IS OUR LINE
Trenching of Any Type
Backhoe Service
Plumbing Service
Custom Welding
lowboy Hauling
Septic Systems

Licensed S. Bonded

Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO

WH.UAMS lRENCHr.G
SERVICE
Rt. 4 , Hysell Run Rd.
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
Ph 18141992· 2834,
992 ·6704

Ellate of John L. Wicl&lt;ham,
Deceaud. Case No. 25.173.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

On Juno 24. 1986, in the
Moigo County Probate Court,
Coati No. 25, 173. Opel R.
Wickham. P. 0 . Box 3. Chao·
tor, Ohio 411720 wu liP·
pointed Executrix of the H·
tate of John l. Wickham. deceased. lato of P. 0 . Box 3,
ChestO&lt;, Ohio 45720.
Robart E. Buck ,
Probate Judgo

BIG PERCH FOR BIG BIRD - Big Bird was
perched In the oomer ~this vehicle which carried the
CLOWNS' BRIGADE - This clown brigade !rom the Rutland Church of the Nazarene won a Drst place
trophy in the Rutland parade.

Lena K . Nesaelroad, Clerk

Rutland Big Bend Uttlc League Champions. The
group received a first place award.

Chester Garden Club conducts meeting
Flower arrangement photo·
graphs taken by memhers at last
month's meet log were crltlquro
and tips given on how to improve
the image were given at Wednes·
day night's meeting of the Chester
Garden Club held at the home of
Betty Lou Dean.
Janet Koblentz had the program
and gave pointers and handouts as
. a guide to better pictures. She also

showed slides takrn at last month 's
meeting of arrangements made by
members, along wiih some of
gardens.
In keeping with lncl&gt;pendence
Day, a patriotic theme opened the
meeting with Jennie Machlr giving
cl&gt;votklns including a reading and
prayer from Guideposts. For roll
call members told how to keep bugs
out of the garden .
Edna Wood. sunshine chairman,

will remember Evelyn Gaul. An
Invitation was read from the
Rutland Garden Club inviting
memhers to exhibit in a flower
show July 26 and 27 . .
A family picnic was planned lor
Aug. 6 at the Ada and Pat Holter
borne. Homemade Ice cream and
cake were servro by Mrs. Dean and
Jennifer Mac hlr with the three
Machlr children assisting.

Plains held Its annual family picnic
at ReedsvUie Locks and Dam Park
recently.
Hazel Barnhill gave devotions.
For roll caU memhers gave sugges·
ttons on improving the club programs. Elsie Cully_ had timely

There were a nwnher of
hone entries in the Rutland parade and pictured is
HORSE ENI'RIES -

;
I

..'

..,

~'

.,

April Clark riding a horse which i; owned by WendeD
Grate. She took llrst place honors.

'

Mr. and Mrs. Dana Hoffman Sr .. Columws,
Thwers Plains, celebratro their
Five of their six grandchildren
65t h wedding anniversary on June and tbeir farnllles attended Includ~w ith a famUy dinner at the home
Ing Brad Garey, Clearwater, Fla.;
of tbeir son, Mr. and Mrs. Da na Mr. and Mrs. Mark Davidson and
Hoffman Jr., Rulland.
· Jacob, Mr. and Mrs. Scott Davidson
Their three children were there, and Ashley, Mr . and Mrs. Brian
Dana, Jr., Mrs. Hazel Garey , Davidson and Melissa, Columbus;
Clearwater, Fla., and Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Olar!es ·Hoffman,
Kenn eth Davidson (Helen ),

Sarah and Joshua, Tuppers Plains.
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Halfman,
Mltpltas, Calif., a grandson, was
unable to come for the celebatlon.
Ottl"rs attending were Mr. and
Mrs. L.Z. Hoffman. Cambridge;
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Myers and Bill,
Canton; and Charles Stlehm and
Esthe r, Pittsbu rgh, Pa .

Eskew family meets for reunion

'
•

Culley, Grace Stout. Doris Koenig,
Anna Rice, Mr. and Mrs. Frro
Goehel, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Stout,
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Rice and
Diane. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barnhill,
Mr. and Mrs. James Stout and
Terri.

Hoffman 65th anniversary is observed

' '

•'

gardening tips, and l.lorothy Stout
gave the verse of the month.
For the July 111f'('ling the club wO!
travel to Stewart to tou r the Glass
House and then will go to Parkers·
bu rg for dinner. Memhe rs may
take guests on the outing.
Attending the picnic were EliS&lt;"

:'1', ,

Attending were Ralph Frye and
son, Dayton; Clarence and Margaret Eskew Andrews, Pomeroy;
.Roger, Susie, Jessica and Valerie
Karr, Pomeroy; Olarles and Francis Eskew, Pomeroy; Keith and
Janice Nolan, David and Joetta
Eskew, Newark; Charles and
Mltdred Wit bee , . Pomeroy; Ma t·
tbew and Pam Withee, Bidwell;
Raymond and Elteen Hatfield
Pomeroy; Elaine and Jerry Lave~
rack, Penny, Timmy and Tim
Moore, Davie Harris. ' Lary Wade

St2fford Jr .. aU of Groveport ;
Leona and Eddie Webster, DaY·
ton; Maxine and Bob Marcinko,
Jel!, Peggy, Matt, Jeremy, Natha n
Marcinko, all of Thppers Plains;
Joseph, Phillip. Sha wn, and Mary
Marcinko. Roxie and Danny Marcinko, Rerosville; Eric and Mltije
Marcinko, Nathan Marcinko. Dennie, Kelt)\, Eric Jr., Robert and
Angie Marcinko and lamlly, Pome·
roy; Mr. and Mrs. Steven Mar·
cinko, Tuwers Plains, and visitors,
Benny and Fern Stafford, Eula ,
Fla.

'lll&gt;111lo:.;,..i!'llio-

WINNING WAGON - This pony and wagon, the entryofMelvlnandKaylo Cross,tookafirstplace win
in the Rutland parade.

The Daily Sentinel

Community calendar/ area happenings

WEDNESDAY
RACINE - Racine Unltro Meth·
odlat Church "welcome back"
party tor Rev. Roger Grace family,
8 p.m. W€dnesday, church social

I·

~~-

room.

Estate of Elmer Gerald
Young, Sr., deceased . Case

No. 25,164.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On June 17, 1986, in the
Meigs County Probate Court,

Caae No. 25, 164, John
Mora, 4t999 Sonaca ·Drive,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. waa
appointlkl edminiltr- of
the estate of ElmeJ Gerald

Young. Sr.,

decees~.

late of

Rte 1. Racine. Ohio 45nt .
Robart E. 8uclc ,
Probate Judge
(6) 24; 171 1. 8. 3tc

1 Card of Thanks
With the recent loS&gt; ot my
beloved Mother. Patric ia
"Ruthll" Spenm. t wouto like
to ,.tend a special thank you
tot he lottowin&amp; people:
Drs. C. Sholtis . S. Hun111. l.
Schmidt and J. Conde: Conn ie
Carleton. Clara 8inp101 and
the Holzer Hospital staff in 1•·
ner1L Your prohssion1lism
.and compassion durin&amp; her illness witt not be for&amp;Otten.
The Meip County EMS (espt ·
Clllly the Middleport Squad)
lor your promptness and tHi·
ciency in which N&lt;h call 111d
t11nsported was hJndted. lou
are to be hi&amp;hly commended
tor the line job you do.
Rawtinf..Coats-Btower Fu1101at
Home or all the onanpmonts.
A special thank you ll BIUCe
Fisher. My brother and I were
very satisfied with all aspects ot
the SOIViCtS provided.
The family members. friends
and Ministers for the love,
support and prayers throu·
&amp;ftout and now.
Lost. but oot tmt. to my Ills-

FREE ESTIMATES

5-7-2 mo.

REQUEST FOR
PROPOSALS
Buckeye Hills · Hodling
Valley Ragionot Develop·
ment District, located 11:
216 Putnam Street i1 Merietta, Ohio. is requesting
Propotala for Aging Service• in Athent, Hocking,
Meigs, Monroe. Morgan,
Noble. Perry and Washington Countiet. Title Ill tundt
are evailable to provide the
following categories of ter·
vicet: lntormatton and Rt·
terral, Outreach, Transportation, In-Home Services,
Legal Sorvicea. Heohh Ser·
vic:et. and other &amp;enlicea at
allowed under the Older
Americana Act. Completed
propoaa111 mJat. be a~bmit·
ted by July 31 •• 19B6. Pro·
posal acceptance bated on
the ovaitebitity of Foderol
FL11ds.
Funding is available in the·
following amounu :
IAU Countloo) Dlocretlon·
ory. f25.000; (Att Countiaa)
logel Services. $16 ,000;
Athens 849,01 0; Hoclcing
836,180; Meigs 140.936;
Monroe 134,295; Morgon
832 . 760 ; Noble $31 ,220;
Perry 141 .140; Waahington
854 .470 .
Plean contact Cindy Farson , Director I Aru Agency
on Aging, for a proposal
packet or further information, 18141 374· 9436 .
(718. 1tc
•

Reunion set
wtches, hot dogs, · potat&lt;&gt; salad,
ROYAL OAK - FamUy, des· •mararont salad, bakro beans, pie,
cendants of George W. and Lydia and heverages. Shady River
M. Gray Deem reunion Sunday, Shuftlers cloggers will perfonn at
Royal Oak Park; dinner I p.m. 6:30p.m.
Take food lor a buffet; afternoon
music by Bissell Boys. Business BI~School
meeting follows dinner.
RACINE Vacatkln Bible
School at Racine Flrst BaptiSt
Ice cream social
·Church July 14·23. Stgnup at
SAlEM CENTER - The Salem Syracuse Pool July ll when a
Township Volunteer Fire Depart· wiener roast and swimming party
ment annual lee cream social at the . will he held heg!oning 6_p.m. Those
firehouse In Salem Center, 11 a.m. attending to take items t&gt;r a wiener
ID 8 p.m. Saturday. Menu .homeroast. Bible school from 6: 00 to 8:00
made k:l! cream, roast heet sand· . p.m. each evening.

'

Ill Cou1t St .. Pomtroy, Oh1o m&amp;9

PUBLIC NOTICE

BUDGET HEARING
NOTICE
TIM Vllllgt of Mldclioport

Bid wilt be rocttvld untH 3
P.M., Jltf 28, t88e, II h
Mllyo(o olftce of the Villge

wl hold 1 public hilling on
Jliy t4,11ae • 7:30 P.M . In
lhl IXIUncil .......... of \Ill;

of Mlddiopo"- 237 Raoe St.,
Mlddii!IOI\ Ohla 411780 for
. . - . .. d production of
oil ..d .... - " " rill . .

..
oonlldo
. . . . for.,d
...~..
the
"'
t817M::Irv ,\uc~vot. """"" .......•
..

,... _.... br . .

Vlloge
lltuetld In .....ry TO-·
"""· Metal County, Ohio, de-

•1. The ,.,.

oatbod In Volume 227. .....

Public Notice

lilY or

Molgl County DMd R•
Jon
cordi.
to llllt the ' 1
r•t ohol Pftlllldt'thlt June

Public Notice
Rtll.,ue Shoring Funda.
Vttlligt rllldlnta, etiptelotly
-lor cltlz.,a, eralnv!tld ·to
tiiiWid thli lllltllni lltld 10
mlb comment• ragordthg
tho propoud t887 bu~,t .
.
• Jon Bill*
Clork-Tr-rw
Vltt~g~ of Mldditpdrt
July 3
·

REPAIR

Sr:t v J,.l::,

EUGENE

LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

PH. 992-7403

6·23·86· 1 mo.

VINYL &amp; AWMINUM
Complete Guner Work

Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Typos

IMitizld
corpet and
upholatery.

*Slo!J&amp;t Buildincs
WAMSLEY &amp; GRAY

room min .

~

Phont

Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

5-14·1 WI).

7mm or (3041 895-338&amp;

4-16 -'IIi lin

Furnitur1, W1dding

and Graduotion
Stotionory, Mogn.ti&lt;
Sign~ Rubbor Strwnps,
lusiness forms,
Copy Smim, It&lt;.
25S Mitt St ., Middloport
104 Motborry h., Pomoroy

992-3345

3/2/ tln

CALL 667-3271
Cotnpart tlt1 Qallly
Before Vn.f6~f mo.

New

168

~ation:

IKond

North

Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We CarTy Fish ing Supplies

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here
BUSINESS PHONE
16141 9'12-6ll0
RESIDENCE rHONE
16141 9'12 -7714

CLC COINS

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Buying /Selling
Gold, Silver
14K Chains, Coins,
Collector's Accessories
Bullion
SUMMER HOURS
1-7 M-TH

PAT HILL FORD

985 -3937

992·2196

Call for Directions

Middleport, Ohio
t·13· tlc

1 1 28 1 ~

6-16-'86· Imo .

FENCE COMPANY
. PH. 992·6931
Aft.r 5 Call
742-2027

BOGGS

(CUT OUT FOR FUTURf USE)

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILL£, OHIO
Authorized John D11re,
New Hoilond, lush H119
Farm Equipment

Dealer

"free Estimates"
Installation A•ailable

Farm Equl.lllent
Partt &amp; StNiea

1· 3-'86 tfc

I

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation service
AU major appliance re·
pairs (including micro·
waves). Electronic Or·
gan8. Mobile service.

TV ·614-843·5241
APPL.-614-949-2145
7-8·'116· 1 mo.

YOUNG'S

'"NS

•MIDALS
-GA¥1LS

•fiATS
&lt;HARMS

•Washera •Dishwaahers
•Ranges

' 11

•Refrigerators
•Drven •Freezers

t,

PARTS and SERVICE

4·5-ttc

M

HOW LQCARD AT
241 S..:ont! Au.
Gall,.til, Ohfo

~ Co~uterized

-az:

Hearing Air Selectioo
Swim Molds· lntel]lreting SeiVices

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

l: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

-z

work

V. C. YOUNG Ill
"'2·6215 or 992 ·7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
4 15-'861c

ne Selel1 Ot Fer J•lf I
HEAVY lARGE liD lATHS

Paul E. Shorke,, DVM

116.95

PRICE

992-6771
~

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Secood Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
8-13 ttn

I~~~

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

Roduw Panels .. ....... ... 116

73 ·79 Ford Fendera ...... t39
Trudt Bed
Linert ....

. .... Full t176
Mini tHUii

FR£E INSTALLA TION

2 VA WARRANTY
S1t ilfKiion Oulltnl•d

F,.. D1llvery _, Trl 51111 Area

•.VINYL SIDING
• ALUMINUM SIDING
"BLOWN IN
INSULAnON

BISSELL

Pl. PLEASANT OFFICE
305 Jackson An.
SMAU ANIMAL HOUIS

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

Mon.·Wod.-Thun. 3-l pm
Tu". 6:30-1; Fri. 1-2 pm
Soturdoy 10· 11 :30 om

LUGE ANIMAl &amp;

3 black puppies wormed &amp;
lhots. 8 weeks old . Call 614 448-7313.
2 CU1e kittens to 1 good home.
Call 614-448-23 16.
Full blooded lrilh S•tter tem1le
4VJ-6 mo. old, ahot record1 . C.U

614-266- 1274.

Single bed . fram e tnd tPringt
end double bed . frame and
springs to give away. Call

614-949-3095.
1 male Benji type dog. 9 month a.
1 male black &amp; white mixed
bfeod . 6 months. Both had
shota. 304· 676·2320 .

BEND AREA CALL

RAYMOND E. PROFFITT (MAC)

Ripley Office

RACINE, 01110
Offill 949-2438
Emer-gency_

For Hours
304-372-5709

10-14-tlc

6 Lost and Found?
Lost- Billfold between 824
Fourth Awe a. Carryout. Kaap
monev but ratum other articlas
Call 614 · 448-2748.
Lost· Mattock on George Hout 's
property, 7-4-86 between Mar·
tin Or. S. Hou tl Lint on Rt 180 .
Please rerum or call 614-446 ·

0922 .
LOST S-10 160 Homelita WHdeltlf. Vicinity batwaen Chashtra &amp; Kyglf Creek High
School. It found plaau ctll

SIDING CO.

Homts Built

VINYL SIDING

WE HAVE MOST AU POPULAR BRANDS AT

992-3410

eCertainteed •Mastic .• Aloia

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL- SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
10·8·tfC

MANAGEMENT TRAINEES

No

1/ ltltf•

MIDWEST
SEAL &amp;. STRIPE
Strving this ai'ICI .
with PoweStal seal
coating and striping
and making of
Asphalt &amp; Conc,rete.
1-61C-696·133 7
1-614-593-1693

NEW- REPAIR-,

Gutters ,
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting'
FREE ESTIMf'TES

949-2263
or 949-2168
2-17·86•Hn

WANT ADS

PH. 992-2772

6-30 -'86-t ....

~a~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;-----11
~
1

HIGH PRESSURE PLASTIC
WATER PIPE

For Industrial or Residential Use

COUNTRY
CLUI

aiiOt.f LfSSOIS
6 Fol 140

•lEW Uti'S

Thlnfll-"'-111 ..

Wanted To Buy

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and newer used ears . Smith
Buick -Pontiac, 1911 Etstem
Ave .. Gtllipolis. Csll 814· 446 ·

2282.

good cond ., low
miiNge. Ca ll 814· 388·8.248 cw
WOt"k Clrt.

6U·"0· 9993
Buying daily gokt. Iiiii• colna,
rings. jewelry, 11er1lni were, Gd
coins. large currency. Top prl·
c•. Ed. Burkett Btrber Shop,
2nd . Awe. Middleport, Oh. 814-

12.50

Wanted to buy · Silv• phea·
1ants. tamale. 304· nJ-M78 .

146 -11068 alter 7. 614 ·446·
9339 days.
Oak Hill Community Medical
c.,ter ia currentty accepting
application• for GN end RN 's.
Pla11e contact Sheny John1on
RN, Director of Nursing, 614682-7717 Mon .- Fri. fromB to 3 .
Frontier Farms Restaurant now
accepting epplieations tor the
fultowing : waitr111, hottell,
grill rook. but boys, applicltiont
may be filled out between the
hourt of 2 PM &amp; 4 PM at, 387
Jackson Pike. Gtlllpolis. Oh .
We are looking ior uperienced.
qu•llfltd , proftnionallnturance
agtnts who specialize in th
eover - ~ge marilet. We have one
of the molt eon.,t1htve medicare tupplemanti and burltl
producta on todey'tmarttet. Out
medicare suppleman1e110 offers
an .,ttent iuua fetture · · thit
policy may balsMJid at the timl'l
of tala. We are speoiellzing In the
over·-v• m11k1t, tnd we need
tpeclalistl to rapr•ent us. li I've
tutt dttcribed you · · ceU: 1· 814·

386-1049 BAM to 10AM. Send
resunw to F.A. Shtye Agency.
P.O. 8011 4 , Loglfl. Oh 43138 .
Gov~.-nt Jotn.

e18.040 . ·

t59,230-yr . Now hiring. Call
M6·687-1000 Ext. R- 980&amp; for

EASY ASSEMBLY WORK r
1714.00 per ,00. Ouartntaed
pavmant . No ••1•. Detailt 1and
11emp.. envelope: Elan- 71 5
3418 Enterprlsa, Ft. Pierce. Fl.

33482 .
Ro~o~tn evtilable bacoma • Daily
Sentinel ce"iar and eam between ,,6 .00 and •20.00 •
WHk tor mort information con·
tact the Daily Sentinel tod ty at

6t4-992 -21 56.
Job opening for Primary II
TeiCher. Mutt hlveorbetlig ible
ior Ohio Spec:ial Education
CerUficet• to t•ch ttud~tt
who hi'Ve moderate, MVert, or
ptotound menttl reterdatto n
(MSPR}; plen, dtwlop and im·
plement •aining program• fot
nucttnts anign.:l to the ciMs;
ul~ty to commMturate w;th
quewrto.tiens; medlcel, Uabil ity
inturanoe; PERS; tick lean;
per10nel days; vtcetion; life
insurance benefits. 9 month
potltJon. Applictnttthoukt a.,d
retutnH to : Meigs CountyBo~td
of Mentel Retardatk\n, P.O . Boa
307. Syr•cute. Ohio •6n9;
Attention Lee Wedemeur.
Superintendent .
Job opening for Dlrtctor Educatlonll ServiciiiSchool Supervi·
sor). Mull Nveor bleligMJiefor:
Supentilor CenHieate ODMR 00 or 0 DE ; or Principle Cenifl·
Cite OOMR ·DD or O.O .E.;
MSPA Certificate; MPI.,'s Degree detir.t with emphuil on
educati'lg modafatety , ..V.rly,
and pn~foundly MR -DD Individuals; experienca In teaching in
MSPR progrem. S_.ery to oom·
mtnwrete wtth quaiHicationa.
Medical , liability lnaurence;
PEAS; tidlleeve; personal day s;
wteation; life ln•....,c• benlfitt.
Apply to : Matus County lot~rd
of Mental Retardation. P .O. lox
307, SyracuH. Ohio 45n9;
Att ention Le t Wedemeyer .
Superintendent.

We alio have black gas pipe for
industrial use, septic tank pipe
. and
fittings.

all

PH. 742·2656 ·
RUTLAND MINE SUPPLY CO.
340 II Ntw Lima Ad.
RUTLAND, OHIO

7·1-'16·1

· Pom·e-ro;;. ·------ --

&amp; Vicinity

FREE ESTIMATES

J&amp;L INSULATION

Sundoy Calls

E.qtltf'ian08d dn~mmer for ..tlb·
lished rock blind. Need someon e
llternted in vwortdngon originial
material &amp; playing aome weekends. We haVe good connections in the recording indultry.
Call 81• · ~6- 6008 or 614-

···· · Giillrpolrs....... ···

'ROOFING

or 9•9· 2160

614 -446· 1402.

THE SAIII LOW PRICES

HELP WANTED

Ettimates"
949~210 1

9

992 -3476.

DENNY CONGO
WltL HAUL
JUST CALL!

Part-time bllbysiner with refer.. ces in GaHipoltt area. Call

current tedef"ellilt.

TURE . 3rd . &amp; Oliv• St. GaHipo lil. Ca11614-448· 3159.

PH.

AND ASK FOR MR: ANTHONY

3375.

WANTED TO BUV used wood A

· ~FrH

,.,

Small dog houaa. used lumber,
used cement bloc*a, scrap iron.
Must take all. Call 614 -446-

cool hoot.,., SWAIN'S FURNI·

SUIGEIY BY APPT.
PH. 304-675-2441

CUSTOM GARAGE BUILDING

your income .
.
CALL 992·6488 BETWEEN 11 A.M. &amp;4 P.M.

3 acre~ good hay for raking &amp;
hauling . Call 614-4"'6 -81B1 .

614-446 -3872

Howard L. Write11l

Not being paid what you are really worth?
You owe it to yourself. if you are over 18•. to
start building a career where you determme

Tw o 'jlllr old temsla Bauett
hound. Excellent tor breeding.
Call614-379·2114.

Wepty caah fo ' lata model cleen
uNCI cars.
J im Mink Chi\I .·Oida Inc .
Bill Gene John10n

73·80 GM

. GOING NO WHERE?

To ~od home- 1/J chow. ~ lab ..
black &amp; white. 9 month mala
pup. Ca118t4 -38 -8616 &lt;&gt;' 814·
388-9847.

GREAT BEND ELECTRIC, IrK.

' 73 ·'80 GM Fender1 .... U9

Complete T~aining
.
No Canvassmg or Door Knockmg ·
Customers Come To You
Lots of Fringe Benefits
·
Professional Friendly Management

Giveaway

446·1148 Uood bricko. oome booken. 304L - - -·---.:.'·.:.Z·..:t..:m_o..Ji _6 7_ 5_-3_5_1_4 _, _· _ _ _ __

FREE HEARING lESTS WEDNESDAYS

(Free Estimateal

VEmiNARIAN
CLINIC

New

(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)

4

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

- Addons and remodeling
- A oofing and gutter work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electrical

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY

SYIACUSI, 01110

810 11• W. Main St.
Pomtroy-, Ohio,

perron 17110 per week)

SINGLES : Meet others from
your area and al..whera. All
ag81 . Don't be tonely . H.H.C .,
Box B1 , Leivasy. WV 21178.

5 Kittens to giYewty. 8 weeks

•PLAOUIS

446-2168.

614-992 -7637.

old . 614 -949· 2779.

985-3561
All M1ku

CARPENTER
SERVICE

JO'S GIFT SHOP

3-D AUTO CENTER

we are looking for.

Bats Fishermen of Gelllpolla :

Would you like to mNt more

814-440-7910.

Thuro .·Fri. I Sat .
9 e.m. to 6 p.m.
Closed Tueoda

enthusiastic, energetic , enjoy working with
people in a resort atmosphere, you are what

Need Avon ~r•entat;ves in
GalllpolilarN. Free It art up fee .
limited time. Cell to day 814·

3 female kln~ns 1D giveaway.
Calico. creme and while. tiger.
Unertrained. 614-992-7789 .

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Ave .. Gtllipolis . Oh

46631 .

6 kinen s. Friendly a. liner
trained. Caii814·.W6-7783 .

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Mature edult to care for inf."'!nt
11nd todd!.- in our holM. After·
noon• &amp; evenings. Send r81Ume
to lox 1800 r. cere of the
Th ird

-Beginna11 Beti c Ouitt lasaons.
Ctnset starting Sept . 16. Cell

RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
AGRICULTURAL
Custom Design
Service

11 Help Wanted

Gollipolll Dally Tribune. 825

ELITE POLE
BUILDINGS

,.------.:------,1

ACCENT

448-0294 .

men like yourself? If 10 here'o
how to do it.. Join Baii·Anglel"l
Sportlmen Society. For more on
thit: see Cherl81 Blanbnt hip 11
919 Second Ave. Apt. 9, Galli·
.polis. Oh .

S-15-'86·1 mo.

1·27·'H· 1 mo

Day or

SWEEPER and sewi\g machln t
repair , parts. end JOppli81.
up tnd delivery , Davit Vacuum
Cleaner , one half milt up
Georgea CrMk Rd . Call ,, 4 -

304-773-5222

STEAM a.EAN

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

PRINT SHOP

PlUS: Offill SuPfllies &amp;

Choice of
Matariaie

BISSELL
BUILDERS

THE QUAUTY

y,, P111tilt N'"'

ACROSS FROM
POST OFFICE IN
MASON, W.VA.

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

wPo~
Buildi~

" Free Estimates "
CALL COlliCT:

F11 All

DRY FOAM

$1995 2 p•raom

*Melli Bu~dings

•All SIZES AVAILABU:

5· 12-' 86·2 mo .

protected,

•LOCAL LABOR

Worked in home area
20 years

Ph. 16141 843-5425

ALSO HUNTING.
SURVIVAL and
VARIETY ITEMS

Cteonod,

LEr'S BUILD UP rOGErHERI
•LOCALLYOWN EO

3 Announcements

667-3513

Rt. 7, Pomeroy, Ott.
"Free Estimates"
All Work
Guaranteed
OPEN MONDAY
THRU SATURDAY

4/ 1/ tfn

OPEN : Mon.·Wed .

Help Wanted

(1) Weekly pay (a\1. sales
Public Notice

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPliANCE
CHESTIR-985-3307

1/1

WE OFFER:
Public Notice

·

CEMENT DOGS I CATS
10% OfF
lAMPS &amp; FIGURINES

If you are used to above average income,

PHONE
992-2156
Of W1it1 DaiMr Senti 1M ICtan •l••dOtpt.

Shop toh•lelu
ow Dll,

54 Mise: . Merchandise

I am sure I could speak lor
both ol us when I ~·Y thtap·
preciation lor the help. ~ ...
support and pttience you so
willin1 &amp;avethrou&amp;flout her it!·
ness ud now. could ne~er bt
expressed in mere words .
tn myeriel. should I hmfor·
cotton someone, God hasn't.
God Sloss You Att.
Patricio Carson . Dou&amp;llter

11

•SYlVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATELUTt SAlES &amp; SERVICE
We llewl AFall TIN

Public Notice

band Keith and her son-in -law.

Descendants of the late John and
Roxie Lee Eskew held tl~lr annual
reunion at Forest Acres Park over a
two day period.
Greetings, introductions and
prayer were by Francis Eskew.
There was a covered dish dinner
featuring special famUy recipes
and the attendance prize, a hand
crafted rug, was awardt'd to
Olarles Eskew. The annual reunion
has been held tor many years at
Forest Acres Pa rk during the
fourth week of June.

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Special meet·
Jng Middleport Lodge 363. F&amp;AM, 7
p.m., Tuesday at temple; work In
master mason degree. Craft team
to be present. Refreshments.

Public Notice

Lena K . Nesselroad . Clerk

J{ose Garden Club gathers recently
The Rose Garen Club ri Tuppers

17}1 , 8. 15, 3tc

f l!ijilllllill! t•l

Ann ou nGe me111 s

rL--------j--------~r:========T=::::::::Jr.:=::::;::;;;;:;;:;l --------WE ARE YOUR SALES
ARMY SURPLUS
CARPET
Roger Hysell
• L&amp;S
• AND SERVICE
Pick
&amp; CAMOUFLAGE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
TRANSMISSION
CARE
•ZENITH
Sizes 4 Vrs and up
Garage

Elleto of Floyd H. Barn .

DOW ON PARADE .- AU of these Cabbage

The

Ohio

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

July 7-9. 9 · ? Rt 14 1 2.2 miles
pat Village Quick Shop. Uli "
bike . toys, boob, miac.
Thun. l Fri. on Brotd St. In
Thurman. OH ec roH from old
Centarvill• School. 9·1
We ara not hav.,g 1 V11d Sale
Thufl., Fri. Sat. Mty 29 , 30, 31 .
Antiq u•. crodla, wood tuml·
t utl &amp; misc. ltams . 9AM-6PM.
822 Jay Or.
Yard Sale Wednetday • Thursday . 1916 Chethsm Avt.
Big Yard Sale 'It mile oH At. 7,
Ttffl Aptl. on Bulavllla
Add lao n Ad . Baby walker,
playpen. Loti of Juns. July lth
&amp; 9th, 9-BPM.

patt

4 family . July 7.8.9. 10 . Acrou
from Bradbury School onC .R. 6
at l over retklanc:. . Nice, clean
tun ega clothing. 10· 1.
Large u lettenlng July 9 . 9:00 .
1. 8'h miles off At . 7 on 24 8 .
Harold Br8W'et.
4 family yard n le: July 10, on
S alam Street It th e As h
residMce.
Virgil Windons. near C hat ter.
Jui'jl 10th. 9 :00·6 :00 . Rtln .or
t hine.

\

Ger'l• Sale Thursdty, Frtday.
9 -1:00 . Moving. Good ch lldrtn
&amp; oduh olothlng. goH cort.
stroll•. bedapread. Flrtt g,...,el
rood to right oft O.J . Whho Rd.

•'

'

2nd. houM an right.

Eurth Community Y1rd Salt
11. Appro• . 50 to 75
femill11 . RefrHhmenta will be
ootd .
J~

Btu Yord Solo Tuoo.. Wad ..

...... Pf'PI&amp;asiin·t ·----&amp; Vicinity

Thull. 3Famlty . Rt. 7,Chllhire,

Ohio.

l ·l..,lly ·~• oote. J"'r '1-t. a
tilt 1. Ut L - II. Nllw

Furniture. gun1, gun cabinet.

1rr1

Thurt. &amp; Fri . If rain lnlkl1.

turft misc .

clothing. mls•· 31

o..,,

St.

'

Havtn. Cto1hing, Wlqu ... fuml-

�...

1986

I he

11

KIT 'N' CARLYLI ®br Larry Wright

LAFF-A-DAY

H'erp Wanted

Rant

Pllltic citttm Jtltt tiPPrDVed,

A .... ~IDH. .oH-bo

Hlriftg "" ..,..-

·poll-

tiona. No lnwttl'nll'lt. wetltly

NIC. 2 bdr. ept . 4 mil• from wooden tlble t2&amp;. 811 •t 2&amp;8

New TMtement d•lgn embrold·
1 bedroom apt. for r.nt. B11ic erv quilt. hendmede by ch1.1rch
rmlltllrtt t215 . 1 monlh thlt group UOO. Coli 304·937·
lndudla tA utllltl•. DIPQih ·2eB1 or 304-458-1987.

8B2-2485
ASSEMBLERS WANTEDI Elm

-~od

up to •80.00 I dly 11-.mbling
ciaplay clown1. Simple, profit•
bla, materitlt·pattem .. pplild.
Send 1tlf-.c:tdrMIIId ltampld
tnvltope. Hawkl Landing, P. 0 .
Box 13493, Orlando. Fkntdt

lag1 M•nor Apt. Mlddleport.
114· 912-7787. Equll Houtlng
Opportunity.

A.VON, 3 open territories. ctll

Airlin t joDI 117.800 to t6B,&amp;OO
veer, now hirtng. Ctll Job line
1- 518-469-363&amp; e11t A-1980
for informttion 24 hours.

Eam •1 o&lt; ..,,.
304-676-1090.

12

0 ..

1......___ .. __ _

Situations
Wanted

"If you're not completely
satisfied, simply return the
unused portion of our product, and we will return the

unusedn porti(m of your
money,

27 3-4710.d

· Family m1n want1 full or ptrt
· time. jan itor work . M•aon

Couoty . 304·458-1042.

Homes fot Sale

HouM for 11le. 1 108 Adrian
Avenue. Call 81o\-4o68-3718.

135,000. Coli doye. 304·882·

200&amp; 1nd evenings 814-992-

3702.

Lowar laval. Ru1tic HiD. Syr•·
cuse. 3 bedroom. lqe kh.chen,
ierge Uvingroom. air. cond .. diah
Wllher, urplled, largt Q•~··
Price reduced. 814·882-.,.71.

tf111f 5o30 614·992·3402.

18 Wanted to Do
Will do lllwn mowtng and odd

jo bo. Cell 614-446-6266.
Small111ginertptir. Lawn mowers. weed eaters ect. Reaaan~le
II' ieee.

Coli 814-992-3367.

3 l•u• baclroorna, 1Y! b ..h. XL

living roam. XL llhchen, utility
room, gtrage. Arbaugh Addition
In Tuppera Pltlnl. C•lll14-687-

Wo rk wanted , ptint hou~n
inskte end out. wo rk r111onable,

F-A gaa heat, central AC,
euum•ble loan , 304 -875 -

21

Business
Opportunity

202 N . P•rk Drive, 2 baclroom1,
full baitem!Wit, detached g.,tge.

8280.

Home for 1111 by owner, 3
bedroom, ftmlly room. 1 h
beth1, price reduced , Arbuckle,

Wtter w e ll 111rvic~ and dri lled.
Free etlimatll. Call 814-992·
5006 Of 614-742-3147 .

Real Estale

1186.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

WEST. GALUPOUS, RT 35.

PHONE 814·44&amp;·7274.

1979 Libllrly 14.11158. parttv
furni1hed , good condition,
16.500. Calll1o6-266-1450 or

304-876·1336 .

Uaed Hom• Sala. t&amp;OO down,
t 160 per month. lnaurance
induded. Wa hl\ltl 9 to 1111 11
these prices. Delivered in Ohio at
No tktra ch~tgal EI1N Home
C e nter• . ChillicDtht Port•mouth· Clrclevillt. Call 1800-828 -0762 fot info .
1978 Mtniaon 141170 reduced
t1 ,000. Muat IM, 814-388·

9860.

1980 Liberty 14di4. 2 bedroom, unfumi1hed, vinyl under·
pinning included. Mull tell. Call

304-773-6873.

Trailer 12..&amp;0. For 1ala cheap.
814-992-15206 .
New Moon . 1Oa60. Porch.
underpinning, 2 bedroom, ba1h,
kitchen, living room, all fut·
ni•hed but living room. t2600.

61 4· 742-2291 .

1 Ox60 Roycr1fl. t3BOO. Mult
be moved . Call 614-992·7823.

31

Homes for Sale

" bedroom hou1e. fireplace. 3
mi. eoulh of Gellipolil, 129.900 .
Call day1 814 -446-1816 or
evenmgs 614·o6o66-8222
3 bdr . home, clou to town. 2
bethl, p1rtfv furn i1had. Gts
heat . low utilit1e1 . Cal1614·2o65 -

9248.
3 bdr., large kitchen, btth, utility
roo m, lingle gtr•oe. 2 c t r
driveway, nic::a yard. glfdtn
1 pace. finished garege. Ctll

614-446-1358

For 11le by owner J acr" flat to
rolling with 12• 1&amp; mobile home,
t 18.000. city 1chool di1trict
C tll 614-448-8502.
1 2 Evtnl Hgt., Gallipolil. 3 bdr .
remodeled llitch.n. iull bailment with firepl ace. 1 bath. Ctll

1974 two bedroom .. actric
mobile home. Good condition.
Price reduced to t4700. Must
..u. 61-'-985-3926.
MOBILE HOMES MOVED: inlured. r"1onM!Ie rat•. Ctll

304-678 -2336

1973 Baron 3 br: turn .. central
air . t:ottl tlec .. corner lot bldg.
cha in -link fence . 304-7735612 .
2 bedroom mobile home, porch
and twning, 1ir cond, n.w
Cl!l"ll. wuher tnd dryer. phone

304-676-3334 .

1981 Chtmpkm, 14.. 70. good
cond, 1 112 blthl. cenu•lair. ov1r
one acre ground. •1 8.000.00.

304-675·&amp;888.
2263

3 bdr &amp; garag•. chatnlinlt fen ce,
n ~t.v furnace. On Main St. in
Crown City. 121.000. Call

33

Hoult for ttle or trede with 1.!
1 aes. 3 bMirooma. .2 bathe.
L.room 1nd family room. Come
1ee, mtke offer. Call 114-266-

1580"' 814-446· 1511 .

4 bdf . hou ... big 2 car gartge
with ettachld pten houn, fruit
cellar • 3 ter... Cal1114 -448·

8181.
1 '!1 11.or.... 4 • &amp; bdrt .. 2 btthl,
full b•tment. Rrepltce. 14.20
buikJing with geragt, a.1 .cr•
In Rio Grand• nNr lob Ev•n•
fl&lt;m~

fl3,000. C.,l 814-245·

IO&lt;gt lot eo 4· 992·8324.

Oo'llfmtnl homee from •1 . IU

Farms for Sale

For mer dtlry farm on At. 180 in
Ewington . Cl•n puture lend,
eome wood1, ltrQI ba-n, worklhop, grllnlf'V, mitk hou,e.
811uhfully rMtored two at•rv
home with 11one fireplece, fuel
oil furniCI, l•p front po•ch. I I
.ern total. Rural wlter. Shown
by tppoinun~nt only.
Cell

e1U71·2113.

both in good condition . SUghtly

Houses for Rent

Nice 3 bdr. full ballemant,
ctntralair. f•*v•rd . Rt.141 .

*32&amp; pluo dop. Coli 614-B62·

3 bdr. hOUM for ren1 1326 plul
deposit, nice neighborhood iul1
oul of Oalipolil city llmit1. Call
814-448-9280 or 304-875 2 bedroo m furniah.:i hou1a in
Middleport . C1ll 614-992 -

In Pomeroy, unfum'-htd. 2
bedrooms. C•III14-992-J090.
J Hdroom. All electric. wood
burning atove, pey own utilltiea.
Near AHdavllle. Oh. 1250
month or • 300 month with
WIUite. •1 00 deposit. 81 4·

378·838&amp;

3100 or 175-5509.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

1199.00 per_ month. Aent1l

William1on Mut Ma rket .
U.S.D.A. PrimaBtei S•le. Sid•
t1 .29 .' Front qtl. 11 .09. Hind
qta. 11 .70. U.S .D.A. Choice
Beef Sal e. Sidea 11 .26, Fronts
•1 .06 , Hind• •1 .82 . Price Include• cutting. wrapping end
freezing . Whole Prim•l Cuta.
Whole Ribeyll12 - 141b~Verage
13 .90 lb . Whole New York
Stript 12 - 1~ lb l\llraga 14.06
lb. Choice Tenderlion t5 .99 lb.
Short Loin 83.51 lb. Full Loin
13 .25 lb . Prlcelncludn cutting.
Deposit required . Gutrantlld

ret• m-v be hiuher dependktg
on Income. Houaing wm be
available to each 1pplic•nt 1'1·
g.rdiMI of their race, color.
religion, tiP: or nltural origin.
lnterMtld applicanb ahould call
304-n3-6011 or contact
Ri111 Str.&amp;b or Wall• Juttlce tt
the main office, 1178 Brice
Road, Reynoldaburg , Oh io

o,.

43086 0&lt; colle14·883·4514 .

Furnished Rooms

Rqon. for rent, dey. weeh .
month. Gallla Hotel. Call 614441·9580. Rent 11 low • •t120
month.
Furni1hed room 11 U . Ulilitiea
pd 919 2nd Galllpolil. Share
b1th. Single mete. Cell 614-

446·4416 .

46 Space for Rent
Trailer lot fo r rent Rodney aret.
Call 614-246 ·6269.
Mobile tlome 1pace for rent near

2 bdr. 121160 on At. 3&amp;. Dep. •
ref. required. Call 114-448-

4389 Of 304-875-9760.
3 bdra .. 111pendo tivlng roo m,
llrgiYifd, 314 ltd St. Kan1uga.
Ctll 81 4 ·44B-7o673.
2 furnithtd trailer• in SyriCUif.
Pty own utilities plu1 depo1h .
Calllfter 15 :00 614-992·8238.

2 bedroom mobile home, 1..) mile
Jenlcho Rd. Call tftet 6 :00.

304·675·1483.

3 badroom mobile home, fur·
niltled, aiiG 2 mobile home Iota.
phon• 304· 175-861 2.
Treiler, 3 bedroom•, t17&amp;.00
month , waur In c luded ,
1100.00 dtpo1it. 304-8715 -

2247.

2 bMtroom trailer Alhton Upl•d
Road, e1 50.00 month plut
utilitiM. 30o6-&amp;76-4088 .

Apartment
for Rent

Nictly furn ished mobilt home.
flff. IPt .. cantril air and htat in
city, tdult• only. Call 814-448-

0338 .

2 belt. utilitl• ptnltlly furn ..
t176 mo. C.U 30-'·157!-5104

"' 304-875· 7928.

Fumilhed ept. 2 bdr • 17&amp;.
pd .

Older cou,.• 2 bdr., utilliM
plftly peld tao mo., can

Hou• a apartment for sl nglea.
Call 30..-875·110. or 304·

676·5318 or 304-&amp;75·7928.

Furnished 2 bdr. apt. utMitiM

portlolly pold. Ctll 304·875·
&amp;104 O&lt; B75·&amp;386or 304·175·
7928.

2 bdr. furnllhad apt. newly
redecorated , nice loc1tion ,
edulte onty, no peta. Ctll 114·

Tr1iler IPIC81. Sand Hill Road
convenient to 1choolt, 11ore and
hotpltlt City 1ewer l\lailable.
Inquire Rout•. 304-176·4800
betWeen 9 :00 tnd 4 :00 weell
daya.

Nice hou1e or mobile home in
country. With 1 or more teres.
Preftrtbly Racine or Portlend
area or will contider other
loe~tion in Melg1 Counw . Call

Went to rent house or mobile
home, 2 bedroom. prefer country tetting. 304-875-7266.

51 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION S. FURNITUR E 62
Olive St., Gellipoli1. Nf/W S. uaed
wood -coal1tovts, 6 pc wood LR
1uite 1389 , bunk bed1 t199.
entron recliner• 199 . nM S.
u1ed bedroom 1ultea. range•.
wringer wa1tlers, S. aho•. New
livlngroom eultts *199 -t599.
Iamp i .' 1i1o buying co al &amp; wood
rtovn. Call614-448-3169.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
W••herl , dryer1, rtfrigert tOtl ,
r1ng11 . Skegg1 Appl itncu .
Upper River Rd . bnida Stone
Croat Motet. 814-448-7398 .
County Appliance. Inc. Good
u1ed •PPII•nc.. and TV 1111
Open 8AM to &amp;PM . Mon thru
Sat. 614·446-1699 , 627 3rd.
Ave. Gtlllpolla. OH .

a

tote. Tuppar Plltnt end Chllt•.
weter Md IPP1'0¥td roM to NOh
lot. Ro-.obly pricod. will
fln•IDI. 10 peroent down. CaN

614·98&amp;·34114.

Two bdr. tpt, In Mln.-.viHe.

-....

Stovo • &lt;ofrltl. t200 por month
with d-h • &lt;of. Coli 81444f·1157 8·&amp; Mondll"frtdoy.
814-3417·7211 ohtr houri •
1 bdr.

•na utlhl• pd. 7 Ntlt

Golllpol~.

ofttf 7 .

Col 814·441·4411

For aa le porch 1wing1. Call
304 -773-5878 .
8tch trumpet, toft. 2 chain , 2
u1ed carpe11 with pad, 304·

676·1974 oh• 4o00 PM

AKC regilltred Collie puppies.
Sable end White, ahots, wormed

Air c:onditfon, 3 ton, cantrel unit
mobllepack for mobil• honw

•6oo.oo. 304-675·11871 .
55 Building Supplies
Building M1terl111
Blo ck , brick, teWIIr pip11, win·
dow1, lintel1. -.c . Cl1ude Win tere. Rio Granda. 0 . Call 614·

246 ·&amp;1 21 .

- · 11000. Coli 614· 446 ·
2670.

448-1278.

Pic*tnl Utili Furniture. Oood
qualhy u1ed fumlture. OpM 910
8 or c.tl for appointment.

304·176·1483 .. 87&amp;-14&amp;0.

Autos for Sale

Building mtterllll. cement'.
blo cMa all tizn. ytrd or delivery.
Gallipoli1 Blodc Co .. 123 11.1 P~e
S t.. G•llipoli•. Ohio Call 614-

446 ·2783.

BUILDERS

"

CLOSEOUT'S
SURPLUS
BUYBACK 'S
1. New 11lvag• lttel door
bl1nk1. nicks and acratch• 116
to t26 11.
2. Ttllfmal pain an tharm~l bruk
aluminum window1aeverei1i111

1982 Ford Elcort 2 dr .. AC,
~ . 000 mi., t3.000

Und.,

firm. Hugh Grohom, 614-448·
1304.

Bleck AKC reglattred Oermen
Shep1rd pup1. Jerry' • Run
Rotd, Apple Grove, W . Ve. Look
for th1 slgnt . Shota 1nd
wormed, n 60.00.

1974 Pontile run1 good fir.t
•200 drtvu it home. C1ll

57

814-446·1286.

85 Caviller. New tlr11, AM· FM
Daleo redto. A~ C , 24,000 milea.
85 Ford R•ger pickup, AM·FM
cauette. 15 ,000 miles. C•ll

Musical
Instruments

814· 245·&amp;158 . 814 · 246 ·
&amp;410. or 814-268-8713.

&amp;-piece drum1.C wlthcymbelaa
c•rrying ce... Ctll 814-448-

84 Ch~VIttl, auto. 17.000
milta. t3000. 71 Finll, 35.000
mllea. 11200. Cell 614-379 -

8833 O&lt; 814·3417· 7197.
Colll14-992-2772 .
58

1978 Dodge Magnum, 12.000
mH... 1uto. 1ir. Nice. Call

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

814·379·2728 .

Whi1e 'h Nnn• belf1 for 1111.
Ca11114-246-1183 .

Fmn Su ppl ws

seup look. at some o f Hollyw ood's class1c horror and

terror films.

Ell CD Hogan' s Heroes
Iii CD Jeopardy .

I]) Nightly Business Re-

port

&amp;

Li VI:,IIIGk

Equipment

1978 Buick Regal. Sharp. 1
ownlf. 11-8. PS , Pl. 1fr. white
letter tlrea . •17915 . Call 814·

246·688&amp; .

1971 Chevy f•lr cond. utes very
little oil, 17 to 19 mil• per
gallon, 1395. Ctll 1514·379·
2341 no SundiiY•·

U.S . 35 Wt1t, Jtckaon. Ohio.

•

Malley Ftf11Uton, New Holland,
Bu1h Hog SliM II Service. Ov~t
40 ... ed tractort to chooee from
&amp; COR1Jietll line of ntw a used
equipment. Largnt Mltction in

Ohio. Call 414-448· 9777, lVI .
614·441· 3192. Up front trt~C·
tars whh warranty ewer 71 UHd
tractors, 1000 toolt.

7. 4._9 ._ 1-' toung groove waffle
board exterior glued 8 t8 .96 .
8. 4xb l.4 Toung groon ply wood 8 t10 .815 .
9. 4d•'h 4 ply plywood 8

f6.99 .

10. 4-a .. v. lav1n plywood 8

$4 .49 .

1 1 . 4 k811 1!. 11lvtge p1neling

12.99 .

1980 Mercury Marqui1 . ...
cond .. one own•. Loaded . Call

814·446·3870 .

1971 Fibtf111••• Ncw1 327· 32 5
HP chrome engine. M-22 . 4 apd.
1ren1. Ctll 814· 992·69o61 .
1982·1ndy·P•c•Car. Z2B. T-

Top. loodod. t7600. Con1oe1

11n Ceprice Clanic. AC .,
.CNile. PS .• re1r dtiroat 305
engine. low mUeaga. bcellent

Coli e14· 311'7· 7678.
L1te mocW J D baler 1996 . &amp;0 1
Ford mowing machine. llkl nM
•396. AC rake t396. 8 ton
wagon Nming g.. ,. t379.
New Ide• manure apreeder

1350. Coli 814 -281·11622.

HI C tractor wilh cultivatort,
dl1k, pkJwa, mowing machine,
belly ITIOWII .996. Ctll 81o6-

281·11622 .

1178 Chevy Malibu wtgon .
Economicel hmily c:~r. rmial
tWM, v1ry good cond . 11 .5150 .
See or e~~ll Gary F. Hyttll

814·982·63B8 .

1_982 Ford Etoort, SW, AC, new
rldial rirM, very clun. withe.

12.1160.00. 304·882·3200.
1980 Toyota, mutt ull .
•2. 100.00 . Can be IN et Po int
PJe1stnt Auto .
1980 Chevy Citation. p1, tut , 4
cyl. with htah mileage. t7150.

62 Wanted to Buy

304-676·1777 .

Now buying ahtll corn or ,.,
corn . C1ll torlateat quotea. River
City Farm Supply, 81 4· 446·

2986 .

Livestock

opood. t975 .00 . 304·675·
6644.

Pets for Sale

72

Trucks for Sale

1 978 Chevy J.f. ton, 4•-'· Call

3 Holmln baby colv11 . Coli 814' 441' 47411 ·
814·388·11524.
77 FOfd h•H ton. New dr81 ,
1984 4 horN goostntck trail•
with drilling room a hay r1ck.
181l2o6 bam lhiP.:i wooden
building full ofwlltem ..ck. WID
, .. , IIPit"ltl. Cell 81•· 288·

8622.

AKC Rltl . Lohll Apoo puppO.
born MIY 28. Wormed • .ftrlt
•hot, 2 m1ie. 2 fllmtt•. e171

Hor11 trtilart 2 horee dlkne
whh drMiinV room, 11ft. goo11
neclc. horsl • atock trliler. Ctll

814·288,11622 .

For 1111: I yr. old horH, 2 yr. ~d
colt. Priced to Mit. C11t 814-

949· 3057.

many

1170 Ford Dump Tru~:k . C1ll
114-882· 8481 day1 and 11o6·

912·2941 ord 614·992·3301

'78 Feoo 2 ton , 5 apead. 2
tpood, 11 11 tto1 bod, good con d.

304-67&amp;-2377 .

oldl. Coli 814·448·0708.

AKC Rag. Yorltahire Terrlor
puppi.,, wormed • flrl't lhott.

Ctll 814-446-0871 .

AKC.,reg. 8ugl•. 4 mel•. I
wkl -old. 150 oldl . Coli 114·

246-H?I.

w-

Put&gt;py. molo, 13 '
old,
holt
1,000 11r11, tlon1Z , 13. 14,15, lrlttony 8ponl.,, oolor - ·
11. 11.1. 8 mil• can Rt. 218. aome white. Good home only.
Coli 814·26e·l2·1 .
•10.00. CoM 414·441-41:M .
Callah1n'1 Und Tire Shop. Ov1r mo1hor holt lobrldo&lt; •

terrorisos. (60 min .) (RI.

446-1768.

(!) Roller Derby (60 min.)

IR) .
1972 20ft. Trevel Treiler. Sleeps
e. Very gopd condhion. Call
614-992-29o61 or 614-99 2-

6481 .

CII Goodwill Games Tape

11811 Wrecker 440 Holm•
w ith awing boom•.

,w~ch

U .OOO. Coli 114-266-1393.

'*"'

&amp;..ylng henl, 150
Nch. C1ll angine. tuto . t,.na., PS. PB. f'lltr
30o6-937-2211. no lntwer. c.n AC, good cond. t2200. Ctll

ovonlngo.

114·246·1214 .

Beeutlful 15 yr okl Stlnd•rd brad
mare. lirt former St1ble ChamQ
.tao Querter horae broodm••·

1180 Chevy van ex c, cond, dull
air l heat. Cruls1, tilt. 8
P•senger. e&amp;,896. C1ll 114·
378 ·2341 .., Sundeya.

Hay &amp; Grain

1880 ChiVY van lltC. cond. duel
atr a heet. . Cruiat, tilt. 8

Pll..,tllf. U .Sta. Coli 114·

379·2341 .., Sundsyt.
Strew for ... e. CaH 114-448·

1975 OodgeWindowV... High
mllolgo, nHdo btnllrf. UOO.
Good mbced hly on the w-ean. 010. 22&amp; tl• cyNndll&lt; Dodao
.. .oo. 304-178·111111.
.,,,, t7&amp;. Colll14-949-23:!8

.

lfttr 5:00p.m.

r 1dll '. PIIr t.llo rlll

1178 Ita••· good oond, 304·

1974 Ap1che Pop up Ctmper.
Sleep16 CN' 8. Selling cheap. Call

614 ·992·6898 .

Autos for Sale

CAP51Z.E-?

1973 18 ft . trtvel Hailer. Self
conteined. vary good condition.
t14&amp;0. See or call Gery F. Hyaell

74

c....,.. fully laodod. plut 1981 Hond• CB 750 custom,
t.topt, .10.000 mi., oorwne low mil•. • •c. cond. C111
1CC81. lndudlecf. ft.W tk•. mint 614-387·03:::9~7.:.__ __
oon&lt;l. Col441·0112.
1178 Hondtl XL 360, Vllrf good
1112 GMC llorro t-ldo oontl.. ••so .,. b•1 o~~.... co1o
pickup. PI, ' '· overdrlw tran1. 814·381·8118.
rally - · AM·FM -1110.
lrody ......... Col 114·3'11· 1880 70 3 whooiO&lt;,
1914 P!Ymoullt RofO..t outo, ..r.
ONito, 'AM·FM . . . •a.11e.
John'IAirto I 111M, lutnfiiO Rd.,
Oolllpolto, OH. '
.

when he uses mudwres 11ing
as a n e Kampl e 1n Ange la's

advenis1ng class . (R) .

/
81

ril

6~ .

Serv1c es

the b o rder in their search fo r
woma n 's missing BK-

I

Home
Improvements

a

•

hus band . (60 min.IIA) .
® Nova (CCI Sc1en11SIS al·

'

a

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditionll lifatime gutrantae . loc11 referencu furnished .
Free estimate• . Call collect
1-81o6-237-0o688, day or nig ht.
R o ger 1 Bes e m e nt
Waterproofing .

M~~&lt;:Neii ·Lehrer

News hour
®I 81 @ Simon &amp; Simon
The Simons he ad south of

~

tempt to d1sco ver links between environmenlal pollu -

oion and illness . (60 min .)

ALLEY OOP

(R) .

@ MOVIE: 'The Take'
8 :30 Cil 0 Cil Growing Pains
(CCI While Ca&lt;OI flaunts her
s traig ht -A repo rt ca rd , M1k e
scores lo w ma rks .on an ap-

Erterior &amp; interior 1tu c co. Pla•ter lk plllttr rep ain. Low rate1.
Call61o6-256-1182.

li1Ude 1es1 IRI .
9:00 Q (]) @ Hunter Aloe&lt; 15

E.llterior &amp; interior 1tu cco. PI• •·
ter II plllttr repain. Low ratea.
Ctll 614-256-1182.

er" s death was a c ontracted
h 1t s et up by h1 s father 's o ld

yea rs, Hunter learn s his fathbus iness partner . ~60 m1n .)

(R) In Soe&lt;eo .
C!l 700 Club
(!) AWA Wrestling (2 h&lt;S I
(]] 0 CIJ Moonligh1ing
(CCI Maddie and Dav1d

Stanley Steemer 2 room minimum t20 P• room. O•lli •
Meigs· Vinton Count lea. 1-800-

326-6136 .

Evergreeru. lawn cere, lind a.
gravel. top 1oil. mulch. firewood. tree &amp; 1tump removal.
Don'1 Land1capes. 614 -446-

EEK &amp; MEEK

9646.

LISf'E.~ 10 THIS, JOWJ ... ~

lk.ISU.TI..D 1-115

J S. J 'l Home Improve ment .

GJ.N Gar m.l)K ... IJJE!JT

W£.RY'THIOO 11\J

Vinyl tiding , overhang. storm
doora a. windows. guttera . Cell

614-446 ·8073.

WI~ ... LOSr
1H£ DIIQ~E:. . I

make some surpris1ng dis coveries wh e n they are hired
by a disfigured woman to
find the man responsibte for
ohe act (60 min .) (R) .

AIJD 5LI£D HIS

BARTEAJDER

CD MOVIE: 'Grand Pri•'
®l 0 (Hi Magnum , P .l.

f-\:JME. ...

M agnum a"TTd T .C. battle red
ta pe 1n an effort to keep a
boy s clubhouse from being
dest royed wh rle Rick basks
in glory aher w1nm ng a lot -

RON ' S Televi sio n S ervi ce .
Hou18 callt on RCA , Quaza r,
GE . SpecieUng in Zenith. Cell

304·676· 2396 0&lt; 614 -446·
2454.

oery (60 min.l IRI .
® Comrades (CCI Every

Fetty Tree Trimming. nump
removal. Ce11304-676-1331 .

year Mikha1 i Kuzak ov and ht s
son. Yuri. leave the c omforts of . rh e lf home and
s pe nd four months hunting
on horseback 10 the S1benan
w ild erness for fur-be aring

RINGLES 'S SERVICE , up e·
rleneed carpenter. electrician.
muon, paint er, roofing lin cludlng hot tlf appllcetfon l 304875-20B8 Of 875-7388
Sterk• Tree and Lawn Service.
land1caping . 304-676-2010.
Rotary or c&amp;bla tool drilling.
Mott well• completed umeday .
Pump satu and 1ervice. 30o6-

MORTV MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
I 'M RETLJRN IN&lt;i Tf-+15 600K
lD TH E LIBI&lt;ARY ... IT'S

FOUR MO NTH S OVERDUE.

ITS WRI H~ I DIDN'rKNC)WI
ENTIRE:LY
'YOLJCOLILD
IN SPANISH. READSfii'INJSH .

I CAN'T... THAT!S
WHY ITS FOUR
ir'aJTl-iS OJERCUE .

two t eenage lo vers leads
h1m into a potentially deadly

!CCI Spenser' s sea&lt;ch fO&lt;
sio uaoion. (60 min.) (R).

I

896·3802
82

ani mals. (60 min)

0 (])@ 1986 (60 m1n)
Cil 0 Cil Spenser: For Hire

10:00

@) Ill llil The Equalizer
M cCall helps o ut a window
w as he r battling hi s corrupt
boss in an effort to un 1omze

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

his shop. 160 m1n .) (R) .
illl@ News
10:30 IJ) Celebrily Chefs
III CD INNNows
(j]j Making of Comrades

CARTER 'S PWM81N G

AND HEATING

Cor. Fourttl and Pine
G1llipoli1, Ohio
Pho ne 614-446 · 3888 or 814·
f

British journa lisl M ark Frank land interv ie w s the producers o f 'Comrades· on problems in filmmg the senes.

446-4477
83

Excavating

lHl Major League Baseball :
cisco (3 hrs 1

Good· 1 Excavating. basement..
foo ten . drivew•v•. 1eptic: tank•.
landscaping . Call anytime 614·
448-4537, J ~ met L. Davi1on.
Jr. own•.

11 :00

News

Cil Inside the PGA Tour
eD CD love Connection

J .A.R. Con1t ruction Ca .. Ru·
tl and , Ohio. 614-742- 2903 .
8a1ement1. Footera. Concrete
work. Backhoe's , Dozer 1nd
Oitcher, Dump truck l. and
w a ter · gaa · uwer · elec tri c al
lin111 . Cherlie HaJfield operator .

illl Non-Fiction Teloviaion
(CCI A documeno ary ol lhe
f inal days of Pullman . rhe
lasl o f the Ameri can-owned
fac t ories
manufa cturing
subway and ra tlway cars.

1980 Kow-1 7&amp;0 LTD Nlly
CR 80.

d-.
1183 Hondo
Coli 81_, .812·7711.

8

Jame1 Bov• Water Service. Al1o
pool• filled . Call 61o6 -256-1 141
or 814 -448-1176 or 614 · 446- .
7911 .
Ken'• W11• S ervice. Weill. •
ci•t•rn•. pool• end w•t•btd l ~
filled . Call 814-3&amp;7-0623 or '
614-367· 7741 or 304 · 67&amp; &lt;

Tonig ht · s guests a re Bob

SNAKE!!

Newhan . Stanley Jordan
and Ma&lt;vln Hag le&lt;. IRI In

1-lAYE
YOU EVER
HADA Pt::'T;

Stereo .

EAIOFF

IJ) Bums &amp; Allen
(!) SP.,rtsCenter

eOTHYOUR
HANDS?

SNAKE?

Cil WKRP in Cinrinna1i
1!11 CD One Step lleyond
O CIJ ABC News Nlghdine

1247.

t)

Ill

{ll) Simon &amp; Simon A
c us hy job, chaperoning two
teenage g ~ri s on a cruise
shrp . turns serious for the Si·
m o ns when the ship is hr -

l.onilf. 304-676 ·1247 o&lt; 876·
7397 .
B7

)acked . l?O min.) iRI .
11 :45 Q (f) To Be Announced
12:00 ill Jack Benny
· (!) Top Rank Boxing from
Adantic City, NJ 12 hra.)

Upholstery

..

UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Sec. Ave.. Gallipoli• .

TIIAT'5 TI4E D\)M6E5T
TI-IIN61'VE EVER I-lEARD!

I T~INK TIIEV RE 601N6
TO TEACJ4 US W~AT TO
00 IF TI-lE WORLD
COMES TO AN

814· 448-78 33 0&lt; 614 ·446 ·
1833.

A &amp; M Furniture Ma·nufect uring ,
81. Rt. 7, Crown City, Oh. Call '
814-2156 ·1470. caH Eve. 614441 · 3438 . Old &amp; n e w
Uphot terect.
Mowrey'a Upholatll'ing 1erving
tri countytr'ea21 yun. The beat
In fumhure uphola•erlng. ·c ell
304 · 671 · 4154 tor tree
•tim•t,l.

UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWER

.,

Complete ohe chuckle quoled
by fi lli ng In the missing words

you deve lop from Sfep No. 3 be low.

Fml

•

IIIIIIIII

Curafl - Dimly - Hound - Fourth - OLDER
The dad paid for on~ one train fare. "How oldie that kid?"
asked the conductor. 'He's only four," fibs the dad. " Can I
help ij II worry makes him lOok OLDER?"

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

Straight approach
offers best shot

NORTH

+as 4

.4 3
• 10 3
+J98752

By James Jacoby

WEST
EAST
Looking at the hand of a lifetime, +93
• J 10 7 6
South opened two clubs (an artificial
• 872
game-forcing bid), only to hear West tAKQ987 5 2 tJ6
leap right to five diamonds . There was +K6
• Q 10 43
now no easy way to discover if partner
SOUTH
might have an ace. Although South had
+A K Q.2
a potential loser in diamonds and one
• A K Q J 10 9 6
ln spades, South did what you and I
would - he bid six hearts.
+A
If the slam could be made, East·
Vulnerable: North-South
West had a cheap sacrifice at seven di·
Dealer:
South
amonds, but West thought he might
take two tricks, and East hoped that West
Nortb Eaol
his black cards bad defensive value, so
both defenders passed. West led two s t
Pass Pass
rounds of diamonds, declarer ruffing Pass
Pass Pass
in on the second trick.
There- are two approaches to play·
Opening lead: • A
ing this slam. First , declarer could im·
mediately play six rounds of hearts.
The advantage of such a play is that a •. The pure approach to declarer play
defender with four spades may feel 1s better. South should draw only one
that it is important to hang onto his round of hearts and then play A·K-Q of
clubs and so carelessly ditch a spade. spades . If spades spht, all os well . If
Here that klnd of mistake should not they do not, declarer can take a
occur since West should throw his two chance that East, who holds four
~deS as soon as possible to warn spades, also began with three hearts.
t that be must guard ~pades . Such In such a case, South ~an ruff his low
discarding would also Imply that West spade on dummy , scormg up hiB small
beld something ln clubs, so East would slam.
not have to bold that suit.
.,.., _.,.APIII ENTI:RP1UJII: AIIN.

•s

••

~·~by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
4 F'e rmenung
agem
I Cordial
5 Min nell i
glass
film
5 'Envy
10 Soupy fo11d () "( iood
Earth"
ll Exis tinJi!:
h t•rOIJlt '
12 Territory
7 Win1• ( Fr.)
in Brazil
13 Hackneyed 8 Frau
Hitler
14 Pallid
9 - Aviv
I~ Reach
10 Manhandle
across
17 Headline 18 Launching 23 Culture 36 Taunt
18 G-man, e.g.
medium 37 Uniform
Z1 Breakfast 17 ObsU~ele
25 · - Foot 38 Thrice
food
Forward" (Lat.)
18 Food
24 Reagan·
seiE'c tio n
27 Actress 39 Espouse
Carter
19 Spirit
Mich""l 40 Palm leaf
event
lamp
30 Regret U Wllh (Ger )
26 LawfUl
20 Regard
34 Slairway 43 "What Kind
28 Lead-tin
21 Smudge
po!lt
of Fool
22 Nevada ci ty 35 Soiree
?"
alloy
29Asian
donkey
31 JuncUJre
line
32 Craggy hill
33 Uncle's
b-+--1-wlfe
35 On the
house

36 "I - Ideas"
39The ·w·
in NOW
42 Relinquish
44 Choice
4~ Burning
coal
46 0 uunoded
47 Claim
DOWN
I Coui!M
2 Algerian
seaport
3 Catnip
DAILYCRYPI'OQUOTES - He~'• h""'

to work it:

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
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,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words a re all
· hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CKYPToQUOTE
7·8
B RD ' E

A

KA X WHFJYW

A ' K

K A

n

F X

R
Y R

I.

VFAIJ E ADT

.1 W A

n

nT

F X

w

T

y y

THFPW
ZFHEA T ~' Il
Yeatei'IIIQI'o Ceyptoq•ote: ROYALTY CO ~~ I STS NOT
IN VAIN POMP, BUT IN GREAT VIRTUES - AGES I·
LAUS 111E SECOND

c ,,..,.,._. _

IAI

_Inc

CIJ Goodwill Games Tape
d e laye d cove rage of men 's

baskeoball and cycling. (4
hrs'.l
CIJ Entertainment Tonight
Vincent Price takes a clo-

seup look ao some of Holly-

wood's ciassic
terror films.
• (!) Rawhide

,.

and a bore," reminds Mom.
~:ghter ~~~~ge, "I ~ldn 't say he

YESTEIDA Y'S SCUM-IllS ANSWEIS

®l Alice

Cot!, llm• tone. gravel. ete.
OtiNered 1 ton and up J im

~

PRINT NUMBERED 11
LETTERS
•

(60 min I (AI.
11 :30 II Cil @ Best of Carson

uuRt :t ool'ldldon . Clll 114·

99Z·:M21.

Q CIJCIJ O IIJ®I III IW®
IJ) Bill Cosby Show

Motorcycles

n

.

(CCI Tony lands in orouble

614·992·5388.

TRISTATE

'

CD Iii CIJ Who's the Boss?

875-15433.

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

21...

delayed c overage of ·men's
and w o me n·s c ycling; men·s
and wome n 's tra c k &amp; field;
men· s modern pentathlon
and baskeoball. (4 hrs .)

FRANK AND ERNIE

I

" My new boyfriend Ia the one

lor me." says the daughter. "He's
rich andago.gettar." "He's rude

_ _ _.__.J
L-..1-'-....1.._ _.___._

T eam lne s to hide a sexy
roc k st ar m the suburbs to
prevent her kidnapping by

C!l Dak1ari

I~

1-"""11;....;.;.1..:..~~:....;.;.l..:.."'lg,.-.l Q

@ Alice
@ Jeopardy
8:00 Q (])@ A-Team The A·

Chicago Cubs at San Fran·

Vans &amp; 4 W.O .

73

US-1082.
.:::...:::::::_
____~:-:c ·J 1178 Dodge window von, 360

304-468-1117.

closeup look at soma of Hollywood's class1c horror and
1e rror films.

DOVOUWAHT~
TOAH~R1

new'*''·Sherp. •1800 .

Arlblll'l Hor. .. purebred Ara- 1110 Dodgo von. D-100. High
blm ttud Nf'ViiDI. Special dlt· 1M mite.ge, 1 owner. Good
COUntl to youth group1 . R. • J . oond. •2418. Ctll 114·245·
Arlblana. Leon, W. V1. 304- 1488.

71

Wf;LL, WHICH QUlO:,libll

1982 32ft. Shenn endoah trave l
reilor-Park model . Co~~ll 614·

Coli 814-448-4412.

IYtnings.

2 riding hora• eKcellent with
kid1. Cell 61o6 · 379- 2120.

Dr-aonwynd Cattery Kennel.
CFA Hlmtley1n. Peni11n and
Sitmllll kttten1. AKC Chow
puppiw. N..- puppiel &amp; kltt1n1.
c.n "-41-38" att... ?PM.

~Rt/#...1/A~~

WIIA1 WOUI.D V0U LIKE
TO~ W~~H I GROW

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

'71 Fl•• Spkllf convertilble.

304-676-2032 .

1842.

68

19nC-10 V1 ton pidc:-uptruck
306 VB ,engine, a uto, PS , PB .
good tires. cap. 1795. Will
niiJotilte price. 814· 742-2334 .

J..\SIS
DAD, WIIAT WO\J\.0 VW
00 WITH YOUR LIH: If 'IOU

®
M~~&lt;:Neii - Lehrer
Nawshour
Ill Cl2l Divorce Court
@ Private Benjamin
@ Wheel of Fortune
1 :30 Q (]) I]) New Newlywed
Game
(!) NFL Yearbook
(]) Sanford and Son
Ell CD Major League Baseball: Cincinnati at Now
Yoll&lt; Moll (3 hrs .l
0 Cil ®l Wheel of Fortune
Cil Fawlty Towert
81 ~ Entertainment Tonight V:ncent Pnce takes a

Butch Roulh at &amp;1o6·992·72158

1522 .

64

E1111on, Chtrl•ton, W.V. 304 ·
348 · 39 11 . Dealer inquir ev•
welcorM. 216·852 -4134.
ta. b2.fclll72

or 81 4-448·93&amp;0 lfttr 6.

with u·.a· tlkf• • 3' liN. oondhlon. CAIII14•992·&amp;293.
door. 115 ,2515 erectad . Iron·
Hor11 81dgo , 814·332-8746 1178 .fOfd Pin1a flt8 . 080 .
collect
Call 61-'-912 -3501 after 7 :00
p.m.
MF mowing machine clan
1395, 300 gol. eproyor 1296. 5 1978 Old1 Cudn1 Supreme.
ft . bush hog t295. hay w-uon 1980 Hondo 400. 3 Chovy Big
1260. 3 p1. dlok 1296. ftold Btodl1. Auort.d auto plrta. Call
mower t295 . C1ll 151•·288· 814·982· 61 19.

63

trom . CIIoMAu1oPeno. e;dwell.'
Ohio. 814-446-8227 or Byrdo:

flrm.Co11614 · 446·7Bee 9to4.

1970 CheveUe · S .S. '""· Ill

...

73-88 full doon. •79 , Chevy tal•
tnd Ford
finden,
$39.
getes,
169pict-up
. Ford teil
gatn. 176:
Ov~t 1100 ltema to chooM

1984 Lllerlilvlf 61pd. 87.300

CROSS 8&lt; SONS
614-286-1451 .

Nowotoelbodypono. 73-8001\'1

~,..,- IY-A_S_L_
I
A_W_..,,
F R U ME

l:--,,:_;:y....::..;;...:;...-1
6
7
1

®I News

Auto Parts

1979 LTD U AC. PS. PB. 4· d&lt;.
1960. Con 814-446·3093.

$49.96 to t79.96.

3. 8 ' tluminum patio doora et
$199 .95 weith acrMn.
4. Octogtn led tltn..,. glaaa
window• 849.96.
5. 15 lite pine French doora 8
grad ta t89 .95 .
6. 4 .. &amp;.. 1f4 Mnonite under laymen t 129 .96 _ea., 411•h 1/ 4 •1 .00

of tke

(!) SportsComer

2882 .

1 988 Plymouth Duater. 1977
Ctdill1c coup dt ville. 1977
GMC 'n ton pickup. Pickup
compor. Coli 614-448-1662.

C-3 Kimball Orgen for ule.
Great 1hepa. 2 yeers old . 199&amp;.

&amp;immental bull 18 monthl otd.

Ctll &amp;14·446·7181 .

Century dining room euh, teblt
with ai11 ~:hlirs , &amp; buffet. like

71

ond ..,. dleckl. 304-468· 1068
"'468·1503.

U111hy bldg. SPLo 30 'K40'.S'

I'-----------

'
Kitchen
cabkleta very good
condition. 1110 aome butcher
blodc counttf top. Call 814-

Coli 814·441-8244. .

SLIGHT PAINT DAMAGE .
Flalhing arrow lign t279 . Lighted, non·trrow 82891 Nonligh·
ted t239 1 Free letter1 J Few ~t .
s .. lo cally. 1·{BOOt423-0163,
any time.

12. 6" redwood 1t1in picnic t ablt
with 2 bench• 139.95.
1 3 . Prehung tnterior doort all
Valley Fumhure, new &amp; u•ed
1izH tnd finl1hM U9.95.
Laroe 11ctton of ~•lity furni- 1 o6 . Prehung 1teel penel doors •II
ture . 1216 Eeltefn Av a .. 1ize1 t89.9&amp;.
G1llipoli1.
15 . Wood pretiniahed vinyl
wraped colonitl trim 7 pc. 1100.
Uud bedroom tuite co mplete 18. Primed teardrop wood trim
twin mattrn1 eet. bunk btd1, t1 .00 7 p~;.
occ. chair . brtllbed . ~eensb:e 17 . K-tu .. brick corners 11 .00
water bed. Ctll &amp;14-448 -1171
parbo11, 12 bo11 t10.00.
1B . 32 "•76" 'Yt thermal tem·
Refrlgeretor harv11t gold 112&amp;. p•ed gl 111 '89 · 179.915 now
rlfrig•ator whil1 fro1t 1ree 129 .95.
•1&amp;0, rafrigtrttor ttde by li de 19 . Rock fa~:• brown tr~ller
t1 96. upright friiJ:et •95. lkirting 28" .. 60" .3 .99 ...
Kenmortwaah..- t75, Whirlpool 20 . 22 " 1133" 11alnlnl ""110'
Wllhlr *91, GE wa1her 1150, deep 1ink18 grade etUi .96
dry1r hlr'YIIt gotd t95. electric 21 . Stainl1111tHI corner tlnlta
range hlrVIIt gold 1915. electn c 159 .96 8 grtde.
rang• 30 in. copptrton t •12&amp;. 22 . 4pc. lolldoakandbt-Niblth
el~trlc rtng• h1rv11t gokl -30 ln . lilt 123.96 et . J 111.1 and &amp;41
t125. electric rtngt aye level 119 .95.
oven •no. bldroom 1uite 176 . 23 . &amp; g11. 1luminumfivar mobil•
Skagga Applltncel, Upper River home roof coa1.lng 122 .915.
Rd. ~14 - 448- 7398 .
Penn' • WlrehOuH, WeUaton,
Ohio. a to &amp;. a dev•· Ctll
Kenmore 18.0 c:u.ft. 111 froltiHe 814·384-3845.
top frHztr- retrig . with ftc tory
Mlltalled ice maker. 10 mOnth• Bl9clt. brick, mortar and maokl. Almond color with • •miHI aonry IUppli•. Mount1 in st ..•
lin•. power miur • In ex. cond . Blodl, Rt . 33. New H1v1t1 . W.
111tlng 15150. Owner moving. Va. 304-882· 2222.

3 roomo • both, 110vo, &lt;Ofrlgt&lt;1·
tor. 111 utllhiM furnlthld, adulte

Lendforllle: 20or41 ecr11whh
nice wooda. pond,
building
tlte. Locatld In Oella County on
Rio Gt~nd• ·C•erpolnt Ad.

FLAGE. denim, rent1l cknhl'lg.
bQot1 combat. The ttort with the
real ~rmv 1tock. 1lzea. qu1Jity.
Sam Somerville. Junction lnde·
pendance Roed , Old Route 21 .
Fri.Sat.Sun, 12:00· B:OO PM,
call In ordera Point P11uant.
304-676· 3334. Mobile Ho~ .

Merchandi se

1149.

•2315 • month, all utWhlll p.ld,

Pats for Sale

JIM 'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SR 311 W. Golllpollo.

814·245·e818.

446·8221 .

66

Commodor 64 Computer, ditc
drive, 30 dii C. joy 11ickl, 9
month1 old, Ifill in original
ctnon 1300.00 . 20 indt boya
8MX bicycle t30 .00. Set of
Engine Headet'a •3o.oo . 304-

For till good u1ed oolor ftoor
mod1l TV '• - Call 114-oM&amp;-

only, no pill. Call 814·448·
2813.

~~~~~~-~~:;~~~~:;;:=~=;~~~~M

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33. North of Pom•ov.
Large loti. Call614-992-7479 .

Nice lurnlahed apt . BJD rooma,
c:IMn, l•u• biCkyerd. wat•
pold, Moln St.. Chothlro. CoN

Building stt• 3 to 17-acr• 3
mil• Wilt of HMC. Ctll 114-

•

S.E. Ohk&gt;.

3• A. Farm. At. 1 Leon. Mtlta

36 Lot• &amp; Acreage

1· 1

Potnt Ple11ant. W. Vt.

SURPLUS ARMY CAMOU ·

ltHtrl

four ocromblod words below to form four simple words.

Cil Emortainmem Tonight

&amp; Accessories

676-4034.

448·2404.

Olflf, 1·904·596-8429.

1endo&lt;. Coli 304·675-5363.

OReorronge

CD Man from U. N.C.l.E

Boats and
Motors for Sale

76

HMC . Coli 614-446-3617.

8668.

Wotor

Dinette 111 with 2 dleirs. LiVing
room couch. Call 814- 992-

apertmenta in MalOn Aptl li-- Ca11&amp;14-992-3816 .
mit«&lt;. Two bedroom epta 11

614-949·2643.

2 bdr. turn . or unfurn. convt·
nilnt iocatktn . Uppw Rivet Rd .,
111 utiliti.. Ptid tkcept tlectrlc.
SIC. dep. req. C1t1 814-448-

Golnpol~ .

---------·kUp -right freezer for ule. UOO.

47 Wanted to Rent

Furnlthld 2 room cotttga tor
lingle plflon. 156.00 week.
utiltti• peid. phone 304-875·

131\'r 41h

uud . Coli 614·992· 2074.

accepting eppllcatton 1 for rtmal

38B·B&amp;10.

&lt;tf&gt;OI&lt;I. D.,lnquont IP proporty.
Ropo-olono. Col 105·e87· Coli 814·211·H40.
1000 bt. H· H08 for cu"ent 1 to 5 ....... pllrtl.,ly -.tod
ropollt1.
1 room houM. 1.2 •cr•· Double
c• 11r111e. Loclt.S on Ron HIU.
So&lt;!llln pricod UO.OOO. Col

19 ind'l B&amp;.W RCA television,

PUZIUR

D (f) PM Magazine

7:00

614 ·992· 2381 end nigh1 614·
992 ·2609.

gleu shlnglll, 1/3 ortgintl cost.
16,000 BTU eir condhionltf',

0758 .

44

Manville fire-glus 3. White fiber

Fumithed 3 room apt. Utllltiea

For rent Sleeping Room• and
Ught hou111teaping room1. Pt rk
Central Hotel. Call 814-«8-

R l~nl a l s

41

256·1747.

pertialty fumilked . No pet1.

46

304·17&amp;·&amp;10,4 O&lt; 304·675·
use or 304-175· 792f.

5197.
Quality hOmll. n.wly remodeled
choicl location on Colleg• Ad.
SyrtcuH. naw compl.te kltchen
t nd llundry, tk" condltlonld.

21ota for Ale. Alto trlillllf lot for
rent. 304· 875·3407.

Calll14·441-4418 eftw Bpm.

1978 Iuddy 1flillr. ell electric,
12x60, 30o6-6715 ·2809 or 678·

814-4$6-8699.

614-4$6·1511 .

304·578-2338 or 304-676·
2217.

2 bedroom Dupllll hoult partillly furnilhad . Low utillti•. In
Pomeroy. Ctll dll¥1. 814-992 2381 Of 814-892 -2509 IVeningl .

1974 Stardutt 2 bdr .. 2 blth.
DR. LA , e11p1ndo. new : furnace.
c..-pet, hot Wtttr hNtll'. Call
114-4-48-3917 evel .

Professional
Services

Alhtan building lots whh public
wal•. moble hom• permhted.

A ffame hooae, 2 badrooma.
South1Kie, W. Va. 304-676·

Eat•bli1hed buairl•• for 1111.
Indoor miniature golf course.
Downtown Gtllipolis. Call 61 • ·

23

2170 or 814-U7-3470.

5304.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S OUAUTY
MOBILE HOME SALES , 4 MI.

E•trt•n oo me 7 Avon! ln1uran ce ?
Avon! t6 \0 atart1 Avon! Call
6 1o6-99 2- 7180 .

36 actll for u'-. HorH C1ve.
R1cine. Free ••· 814·949·

304·688-9148.

INO CO . recommends 1ha1 you
do bu1in. . with p.,ple you
know , tnd NOT to tend money
through the 111111 until you hl\le
r~ v ntigeted the offering .

Southeutem Bu1in•• College!
The tttining you need! For the
jobt you want. Flnandal • aitt·
.,01 111ailable. Call todty : 814·
992· 5117 .

•kine .,o,ooo. Coli 614·985·
392&amp;.

6806.

!NOTICE I

Strike it ridt!ll Can you INe on
&amp;6 .000 per month? M.,- limit
you to $100,000 hom~ , 2 cera.
boat. etc. Few people have
appetill for thil type inoome.
SaiH •P· a m.JJt 100% financtng . hpen11 ~id training. 1800-2o67·2o64e , Mr. Ray.

7 ICTII with complete mobile
home hoGk-up. Chlltlf aru.

2818 after 15.

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·

446 ·8222.

-,.------···.. end one third tQuares Johns-

31&amp;9.
APARTMENT FOR RENT . Now - - - - - - - - - -

614-693·8812 .

6239 .

Fm anciol

1 bedroom apt . in downtown
Middleport . AU utilltiN paid.
1200 month Rlu• depo1h. 114·

614-949-22&amp;3.

EVENING

Coli 814·379·2708.
Air conditiontf 18,000 BTU
workl goad, t100. C1U 81ot-

992·8111 or 814-992·6783.

1877 Ho~oy H011. olec1&lt;1icgQde,
lull drno. 304-676·4088.

28 foot pontoon boat. BO HP
Mercury, gu grill. atereo, trailer.
Price: with motor •3800., with·'
out motor 11996. C•ll day

Old coal or wood 11ov1 pip•
inctudad 160. Torch tllil• aat·
ftaw never uted •1 !0. Tri-lllte
230 AC -DC welding mal:hine
wh:h euppll• *260 uetd wry

614·992-8763.

lia. &amp;14-44e -a 221 _

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

3 badroom hou11, Tuppen
Pltins. Woodbuming furnace.
.. ectric tiNt , newer roof, some
remodeling dona, rec1nt1y
p1inted . •11,000 owner tnxioua to Mil 814-37B-837o6 or

, Experien011d, reliable baby 1itter
· wittl references. pret• to worlt
"dayl Mondty thru Frid-v. After
·5 00 ctH 304-882-3290

304·676-1936 .

1 bedroom •Pt. in Mlddiii)Ort.
•175 month plu1 depotlt 1nd
utililiea. 814-992-8611 odr

~;:~~~~~~;:;:~~~~::::::~::::::::-1APARTMENTS,
mo~tehomM,
houHt. Pt. Ple•emand
Gellipo- ,

1 'h ttory, 3 bedrooms on 1 2
ecrn . 1 mile from town.
· Work wanted · carp.,ttf work,
roofing , 1iding. gutter•. remodeling, new addlt;on, ... p. by Job
0' hour. Free estimate. 304-

&amp;BBe.

7/8/86

1978 Starer•ft aki-bo•t. muat
11crifh:e. Ca11814-448-2184.

614 ·448-0043 or 114 -446 ·
.442.

814·256-1932 .

t
hou&lt;. 31

Wo nwn, Men, College Students
- Part-time job close to home.

1Bx31 In -ground pool t1.000.
Does not include lin.-. C1ll

Fire

Pomtroy 2 bdr, N..,lora Aun.
e111 mo. •100 dtpolit, yerd.
pat6o, Ctlll .ttar 8pm 114-992-

IIJ oca&gt; ._...~.iW) tv~ 001'Aj.L ~ 9l/Jiti/6VAJ..L '«llt~ oSLIR'eRII.lb Fm,1 ~A:II
otG:e51'...
cu~ure
~~!

IUT DAILY

Vincent Price takes a clo-

Litton full lile microwave, e•.
S1otlorl. &amp;14-992-6215 or 114- cond. 1171. Kindlawoodwood·
bumer, ••· cond. 1460. C111
992·7314.
Acro11 from

wr

*' lHAT I'M

1880 Kaw11•kl LTD 1,000,

75

2 bedroom, total tlac. apt. in

Pom~roy .

32869.

304-676-1429.

ot UOO. Contoct VU·

I~ ~ l'a1. i(J(J 10

Television
Viewing

304:e7&amp;-1433.

Gflllpollo. 810Vt, rofrltl .. . WI • So. Fourth Av1.. Middleport,
ter fumlth... UOO month. No Oh .
pill. Coli 814-448·8038.

World Book·Chiklcraft, repr•
lll'ltltN• ntedld. Part time, full
time, guarentain 11111ilable, 304-

304-675-3950 or 1·800·142·
3619.

boltllrf, t400.00 . 304·876·
2773 .

614·441·4807 O&lt; 814·448 · For 1111: IHartequin Rom~nce
2102.
bookl 270 tor 175. whlto

dl - · floo lrlllnlng, 1Uptll0.
end aemplt kit. Detlh without
obliglllion ..1 aolloct 114-474·
6213.

Your prior military a..-vgic:e ia
wo rth monfv. An E-4 can um u
much • 113'1 . H for one
wMit·tnd each month in the
Army Natkmal Guerd . You l:tn
QJalify tor 1&amp;0,000 life iniU·
rance. IJ'OITI)tioni.IIPtcill trein·
ing. and retirement beneflta.
Education funding 11 alao av•il•bta to qutllfied enlilt... . Ctll

firing, tn.lnk, like new t lre1.

Fumlthod olllol..cy ..........,.. cut¥. . , , mellal .cuW.rts. RON
throughout, lingle working per· EVANI ENTEAPRIIEI. Jock·
aon. t111 Including weter.Cell son, Oh. 114· 281·1830.

Ohio

H&lt;1RN LOSER

Motorcycles

1878 HondoC8360T, 6oplld.

plnllc Hll11c tonko. plootlc

you,., •• ~ an tM gntund floor
of ..... tt~WIIt PMtv pl~n .

74

Tuesday, July 8, 1986

ho rror and

II Cil Hawaii Flve·O
• .1

"
•

(I) SoundsUige: Lover Bov
~

MOVIE: 'Groot Scou1
and Cothou.. Thurodsy'
1 2 :30 II (1) (jJI Leta Night with
David !Jittorman Tonighl' s
guesos are Allvce Beaslev
and comedian J erry Seinfeld . (60 min.) In Soereo.

ffi Best of Groucho
00 ABC News Nightline

til CIJ Rawhide
12 :40 Ill Gil MOVIE: 'Mrs. R'
1 :00 C1l Dobie Gillio
CIJ Archie Bunker' a Place
11J CIJ Wild , Wild West
I

I

j

�·Tuesday. July 8,

Pometoy-Middleport, Ohio

Gas ·e~pert- says prices ·to remain low

Fire units .~··~.,f.. .f.~.
~~~~- ,,set
.. ,,.,. -·
'

-.,~"--

__

l"nB

.

. ._,

BJ R!(;K VANSANT

The Salem ToWIIsblp VO)jliit~r''Fire ·~1 wm .!JQJd Its
annual Ice cream social at the llrehoUse In S&amp;lem Center from n
a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday.
Besides h!lmemade Ice cream, the JIIWP will offer roast beet
sandwiches, hot dogs, potato salad, macaroni salad, bakEd beans,
pie and beverages.
.
The Shady River Shufflers c~rs wUI perform at 6:30p.m.

Mystery farm winner anoounced
Christopher Krawsczyn, 38479 Spen~rr Road, Pomeroy, Is the
winner of a $5 prize tor ldentlflcatlon of the Meigs County mystery
faJllll plcturp published on June 29 edition ot The Times-Sentinel.
There were 10 correct entries In the contest and the winner was
selected by lottery. Krawsczyn Identified the Jack Ervin Farm.
Salem Township, which Is owned by the Orten and Oris Roush and Is
under lease by Ervin.

Patrol cites Rutland resident
A Rutland woman was cited by the state hlgllway patrol for
driving left of the centPr line; resulting In a twCH:ar accident on
Rutland Tciwnshlp Road 58 Monday.
Glenda F. Richmond, 36, was southbound at 4:50 p.m. and
rpPOrtedly drifted left of center, striking a northbound car driven by
Donald W. Price, 31, Cheshire, according to the patrol's accident
rpPOrt. ' .
Richmond's vehicle eventually went Into a ditch farther down the
road, troopers said. Both cars were damaged moderatPiy.
.

Accident cuts electric service
Some. 70 to 100 subscribers of the Ohio Power Co. Wl're without
service from 11:30 p.m. Monday until 5:45a.m. today aftpr a utlllty

pole was struck by a vehicle In Naylors Run.
Pomeroy Pollee said a car driven by VIrgil CoUins, Pomeroy, had
struck the pole causing the outage. Collins Is charged with driving
under the Influence, hit skip and not having a driver's ll~rnse, pollee
said.

Crew fixing water line break
Practically .all of Pomeroy VU!age was without water Tui'Sday as
the rPSult of a break In a main llne near the Farmers Bank and
Savings Co. on WPSI Main Street.
Water !){'partment employees began working oo the IJllblemat J.
a.m. today and thel'P was m Indication as to when SErVIce wruld be
restored as of 10 a.m. today.

Couples file for marriage
Filing for maniage In Meigs County Probate' Cwrt were CUrtis
Dean Peters, 19, Pomeroy, and Ta1)1111Y Renee Lee, Pomeroy, and
Charles Jeffrey Knapp, ~. Langsville. and Mlchl'lll' Renee
Peterson. 17. Rutland.

CINCINNATI (UP!) -A gaso·
line expert predk;ts t~ price of gas
will remain fairly low the rest d. the
summer, ' but wUI go back up to
almost $1 a gallon by the end of the
year.
Mike Kunnen, president of the
Greater Cincinnati Gasollne Deal·
ers Association, said Monday that
consumers should enjoy low
chargPs while they can because oil
prtces constantly are being "fixed"
by · several countries and
companies.
•
Gas prices, which fell last winter
but Increased In the spring, have
been dropping slightly for the past
month. On Monday, gas throughout
Ohio was selling for about70 cents a
gallon. and In some areas slightly
IPSS than that.
"Prices should stay about the
same the !'PSI d. the summer," said
Kunnen. ''They can't go much
lower.
"By the end of the year, though,!
look for prtres to be back up to

'

between Ill cents and $1 a gallon."
"I think the consumer Is Slphlstl·
Altoough Kumen points out It's cated enough to know the fix Is oo,"
dltflcuh to predict gasoline prtces he said. "Unft&gt;rtunately, the consu·
very far Into the future, he has a
mer Isn't able to do anything about
good record as a prognosticator.
If. I've been trying to do lllmethlng
In February, for example, when about tt for 35 years and can't do 11.
gaswasselllngforOOcentsagallon,
"1bere's a oonsplracy among
Kunnen predicted the prtce would certallt corporations and certain
be 70 cents this summer. He W
l\S nations, and you know where that
rtght on target.
,_\ puts the American p!blic. The
Gas prices began. falling from '.,.,IIJ.ar.rlage of a company's and a
l'IIOre than $1 a gallon m December.
country's interi'Sts creati'S a pli·
By the end of March, prices had ..vale government of oil. That's the
dropped a total d 38 ct&gt;nts a gallon. fix."
But In AprU and May, prices
Kumen also noll'S that l~wrnak·
IncreasEd a total d. 15 cents.
ers llke to get Into the act during
"Prices never should have gone perlod'l dfalrly Jowga.sollneprlces.
up In April," contended Kumen.
"A state gasollne1 tax Increase Is
"Companies were just trying to' possible," said Kunnen. "K~tucky
recover from the rapid declines In just rnlsro Its state gas tax by five
the winter."
cents a gallon. It could happen In
In June, prices began to drop Ohio.
.
again. From Jull!' 7 thtough July 7,
· "Legislators ~ke to raise gas
the total drop was 12 cents a gallon. taxes· when the' prtce per g8Jiiin 1s
Kumen looks for prices to go down, so It doesn't look like there's
back up late In the year through the been an Increase."
cooperation of oil companies and
By Kumen's chart-keeping,
oll-tich nations.
here's the way gas prices· have

Revolt's leader will face charges
MANILA, Philippines rUPI) -A

An unidentified Aquino support.e r
"You cannot just arrPSt him,"
GoliZall'S said. "Charges must be at nearby Lull(&gt;ta park was mauled
filed."
by a mob rl. loyalists, but the
Gonzales' spokesman George evacuation was aherwlse peaceful.
Dee, said a suiJ.mlnlsterlal oommlt· witnesses said. One youth carrying
tee was gathering evidence on a hotel coffee pot was arrl'Sted.
Pollee found 13 Molotov cocktails
possible rebellion charges against
Tolentino.
In Perrier water bottles and were
Backed by several hundred searching the premises for 'lither
soldiers, Tolentino swore himself In Incendiary devices. Damage to the
as acting prPSident Sunday and hotel, regarded as one of the world's
formed a government whlll' Aquino finest, was Initially estJmated by its
was visiting a southern port city. He general manager, Franz Shutz·
seized the luxurtous Manila Hotel at man. at $000,(00.
About 300 loyalists attempted to
the edge of · Manila Bay and
declared it as his "seat of !'Plum to the hotel at midday. but
government."
ran away when pollee ftred shots
shots in the air.
Early Monday. 224 soldiers sur·
rendered, saying they had been led
Bane One buys firm
to believe they would be supporting
a coup by Armed Forces Chief Gen.
COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPI 1
Fidel Ramos and Defense Mlnlster
Oblo Extended Forcca.t
Bane One Corp. has purchased Juan Ponce Enrile, leaders of the
Thursday through Satunlay
HCL Ll'a51ng, a small office Feb. ~ revolt that drove Marcos
Fair Thursday and Friday, with a
equlpmmt leasing company with Into E'Xlle in Hawaii.
chance
of showers on Saturday.
about $95 million In assets. from
After Aquino gave the rebels a
Highs
will
range from the upper 70s
TIE Communications.
24·hour surrender ultimatum Mon·
to the middle 00s Thursday, climbHCL, based In Parslpanny, N.J .. day, Tolentlno left tix' hotel to ing Into the 8ls Friday and ranging
specializes In equipment valued at ll(&gt;gotiate with D.&gt;puty D.&gt;fense from the mid 80s to low 90s
under $Z&gt;,IIXI such as office oompu· Minister Rafael Deto. He never Saturday. Overnight lows wUI
ters, telepoone Interconnect sys· returned, signaling the collapse of range from the upper 50s to mid OOs
his attempted coup.
terns and copying machines.
early Thursday and In the 60s
The end came at dawn today
The closing of the agreement
Friday and Saturday tmmlngs.
followed a resumption of negotia- when :'iJ holdout lllldiers slipped out
SouUt Central Ohio
tions that had been terminated of the hotel's backdoor and were
Partly cloudy today, with highs In
JUll(&gt; 6.
I'SCOrted to a suburban army camp.
the
low 90s. Mostly cloudy tonight,
Robert Paulson, exreutlve vi~ Riot pollee armed with truncheons
with
a chan&lt;l' of showers and
moved
in,
driving
away
hundreds
of
prPSident d Bane One Leasing, said
thunderstorms
and a low In the low
Monday Bane One was attracted to clvUian Marcos loyalistsmcamped
70s.
Mostly
cloudy
Wronesday,
HCL by its personnel andoperatlon. at the lB·story building.
with a chanCl' of soowers and
thunderstorms and highs in the low
70s.
The probability of precipitation is
~percent today, 40 perc~nt tonight
and 50 percent Wednesday.
Surviving are two daughtprs and
Winds will be Ugh! and variable
Mary V. Annstrong
two grandchildrm.
today and tonight.
Metmrtal services werP held
Mary VIrginia Bing Armstrong, Monday at ·the First Community
77, Columbus, forml'riy of Pome· Church in Columbus.
roy, died July 4th at Mount Carm~l
CLEVELAND tUPli - Mon·
Medical Center In Columbus.
Grace M. Colwell
day's winqlng Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Mrs. Armstrong was ilrrnerly of
Funeral
services
were
h('ld
this
Dally Number
Pomeroy and was the daughte~ of
afternoon
for
Grace
Margaret
446
the late Dr. and Mrs. Byron Bing.
Colwell of Vinton, who died Satur·
PICK-4
She was a graduate of Pomeroy
day afternoon.
0038
High School, class of 1921, and of
Ohio Wesleyan University.
Services took place at the Ru·
Besides her parents, she was !land United Methodist Church,
preceded In death by her husband , with tix' Rev. Robert Mussman and
tix' Rev. C.J. Lemley officiating.
Warren.
Mrs. Colwell was bulied at Salem
Center Cemetery.
Arrangements were by McCoy·
Moore Funeral Home, VInton.
!Continued from Page 11
development of numerous breaks in
the water Unes, with Seyler report·
Admitted - Henry Cleland Sr.,
lng that one such leak on West
Pomeroy:
Anna Hart, Pomeroy;
Second Street, recently was caus·
ing the loss of 100,11Xl gallons of Walter Haggy Sr .. Rutland: Mar·
shall Slater, Albany.
water a day.
Discharged -Edith Sisson, Carl
Also attending till&gt; meeting was
Cou ncilmen Henry Werry. Absent Rair&lt;k:on, .James Hockman, Lucille
were Councilmen Bill Young and Pendleton, Robert Tyree. Donald
Room Air
Covert, Marshall Slater.
Bruct' Reed .
Conditioners

politician loyal to ousted ruler
Ferdinand Marcos faces charges
for leading a failed, 3t&gt;hour coup
attempt against President Corazon
Aquino, officials said today.
Charges will be flied against
Arturo Tolentino, Marcos's running
mate In .the fraud-tainted Feb. 7
election, unii'SS Aquino decides to
grant him "executive clemency,"
Just Ice Minister Neptall Gonzales
said.
·
Tolentino declined comment as
he was driven away by aides after a
meeting With Gonzales at navy
hrndquarles. He was not taken Into
custody.

dropped, Increased and then
dropped again In the past eight
months:
Dec. 13, down one eent. Dec. 19,
down one cent. Dec. 27, down one
cent.
Jan. 6, down one ¢ent Jan. 10,
down one cent. Jan. ~. down one
cent. Jan. 23, down two cents. Jan.
26, down two cents. Jan. 29, down
two cents.
Feb. 6, down ooe cent. Feb. 9,
down one cPnt. ·Feb. 12, down two
cents. Feb.l4, down twooents. Feb.
20, down three cents. Feb. 24, down
one cent. Feb. 26, down two cents.
Feb. 27, down two cents.
March 1, davin tWo cents. March
6, down one cent. March 8, down
two cents. March 11, do\VII two
cents. March 14, down two cents.
March 18, down two cents. March
21, down one cent.
Aplill2, up one cent. Aprll17, up
ooe &lt;i!nt. Aprlll9, up orie cent. April
25, up one cent. April 29, up three
cents.
May 1, up two cents. May 3, up
two cents. May 13, up two cents.
May 17, up one rent. May 25, up one
cent.
June 7, down one cent. June 11,
down one cent. Jull!' 14, down two
cents. June 18, down two rents.
June 20, down two cents. June 26,
down two rents. July 3, down two
cents.

•

at y
Vot.36, No .46

An entry of dismissal has been filed in the Meigs County OJmmon
Pleas Court In the action of the Farmers Bank and Savings Co.
against Ronnie Dale Holley, Middleport.

White Shrine meets Friday
Mary Shrine 37, Order d the White Shrln&lt;' d Jerusalem. wUI meet
Friday at the Pomeroy Masonic Temple. A practice will be !K&gt;Id at 7
p.m. with til&gt; regular meeting to follow at 8 p.m. Asilent auction will
be held following the meeting and rpfreshments will be served.

Area deaths

Star garden club plans luncheon
Members of Star Garden Club and gup,;ts will have a luncheon at
Dale's Restaurant, Galllpolls, Thursday, 1 p.m. The Jull!' meeting of
the club will be held at the home of Stella Adkins and Ruby Diehl.

Ohio Lottery

Chester trustees meet Friday
R('glliar m('('tlng of Chester Township Trustees will be held at 10
a.m. Friday at thr town haU.

Syracuse council meeting set

1

JUPY WILLIAMS

In case of accident or
illness. Auto-Owners
"Quick Start" Disability
Income Protection Insurance provides you with a
regular monthly income
for up to a year. Thai's
good to know.
That's why it 's also
good to know your independent Auto-Owners
agent.

Auto-Ow.."'r.t;

Vll'l

because of the inability to pay.
For example, If a teenager is
sexually active and desires to go
on the pill to keep from getting
pregnant but has no Income,
then her monthly supply of pills
are provided without charge.
As explained by Mrs. Jenltins,
before a method of contraception which requires a doctor's
prescription (not foam or con·
doms 1 then that individual is
given an Initial examination by
the doctor.
"But before that we do
complete education on the repro·
ductive process, we talk about
birth oontol metiDds, and discuss why the pelvic examination
is Important," she said.
, "Most of the time the exami·
nation Is what the patient is
worried about, so it's important
that she understand the impor·
tanre of that to her health. If's
really education, then examina·
lion, then education again on the
prescribed treatment or method
of birth control," she said.
Mrs. Atkins said that most
young women are not coming in
untll they have ll&gt;en sexually
active for six months, a year, or
more and what pushes them to
come Is usually a pregnancy
scare, or maybe they're coming
in for pregnancy tests. "The
idea that we are enticing young
women to be sexually active by
offering information about birth
control is just not a fact - the
fact Is that most have been
sexually active for many
months before they come in,"
She said.
•
About one-third of the more
than 000 new patients seen each
year at the Meigs Clinic are
unmarlied teenagers, some as
young as 14 or 15, and most all d
them are sexually active. Mrs.
Jenkins said.
She said that it's not unusual
for a parent to acoompany the
teenager,•or to call In and make
arrangements for the girl to
rome in. "Most of the time it's

A hymn sing wll be held Friday at 7:30p.m. at the United Gospel
Mission Church, Bald Knob. Larry Van Meter and the Narrow Way
Singers will have special music . The public Is Invited to attend. '

Veterans Memorial

Bible .~chool continues
The Racine Church or tix' Nazaren(' Vacation Bible school wUI
continue through Friday, 6:30 to 9 each evening.
Them(' Is :walking with .Jesus" and Fern Grimm Is the dirt'Ctor.
The school 1s held at fix' church and tix' VBS program will be
pi'('S{'ntro Sunday at the church after a brlr!Sunday school Sf'S.•ionat
9:30a.m. The public is invltro to attend.
·

•

ht;f,..(nt

Room Ajr
Conditioners

We Are Open 49 Hours
Church slates revival services

A Week

' Weekend revival scrvic&lt;'S will be held at the Poplar Ridge Church
'lbursday through Sunday at 7 each evening. The p!bllc 1s Jnvitro.

To Serve You!

Dance in Rutland Friday

STOP BY ONE OF .OUR CONVENIENT
LOCATIONS IN MASON,·
POINT PLEASANT.OR NEW HAVEN
CHANCES ARE WE'LL BE OPEN.

A dan('(' will be held at the Rutland Civic Crnter Friday from 9 to 11
p.m. Music will be provided by Flashback and admission wUI be $2
for singles and S3 for couples.
'

Emergency calls answered
Six calls werp answered by local units Monday, the Meigs County
Emf'rgmcy Medical Service reports.
At 1:18 a.m. Middleport took Tiffany Allen from Beech Street t&gt;
Veterans Mernortal Hospital: Pomeroy at 9: Ot-a.m., took Anna Hart
from Rock Springs to Veterans Mernortal Hospital: at 12:14 p.m.,
Pomeroy went to the VIllage Green Apartments lor Mtchael Smith.
taken to Holzer Medical Center; Syracuse at 12: 54 p.m., took
Marilyn Davis from the Pomeroy Health Care U&gt;nter 10 Holzer
Medical Centc;or; Pomeroy at 8:10 p.m. took Marshall SlatPr 1\-om
U.S. 33 to Vetetans-Mernortal; at 9:11p.m., Pomeroy took lticllard
Knupp from Union Avmue to Veterans Memorial Hosplllit. Reports
had It that Knupp had been struck by a car. However, Pomeroy
police saW! that the rpPOrts were not lru('.

'~

., .•

• •

~itl))(iol Room Air

Conditioners

Installation • 2-way Alr
~§~~~~~~~:;
t I• J-speedFan •Fan

Wlltl·f.,.{.,r

LOllY &amp; INSTALLMINT HOURS
Monday thru Wadna1day ...................91110 a.m. To 3100 p.m.
Thunclay ... ........................................... 9100 a.m, Ta 12 noon
Prlday......... 9tOO a.m. To 3100 p.m.- 5130 p.ni. To 7100 p.m.
Saturday...................................... .........9t00 a.m. To 1100 p.nt.

.

I

fast~nstlltaliOn

Thermoslat • c0MFOFIT
GUAFIO•• Adjua&amp;lbll
Contmlto
•lnsta·Mount
• IOf
ma.nta.nthecomlortJevetyouserect

DRIVI-IN &amp; WALK.IJP WINDOW HOURI
Monclay thru Thurl4ay........................ ll30 • ...,. To SIOO P""·
Prlday ................................................... IJ30 a.m. To 7100 p.m.
Saturclay ............................................. ·1•30 a.m. To 1100 p.m.

24.Hour Dapo11tory &amp; Free Bank By Mall.

PEOPLES BANK
&gt;

· ELB~RF.ELDS

not a big secret, but if a teenager
doesn't want anyone to know.
then. yes, we do offer birth
control as a confidential service," she said.
In talking about Plan ned
Parentoood, Nancy Jeffers.
coordinator for the agency, said .
that "the best thing we can do Is
teach." With Meigs County's 22
percent rate of teenage pregnan·
cles, Mrs. Jeffers was emphatic
in her comments about the
Importance of sex and birth
control education. While she
admitted that some schools
don't want to even hear the
words "birth control." others
have opened their eyi'S to the
problem and are asking for
speakers and films or for open
counseling SPSsions.
Mrs. Jeffers said also that the
agency Is seeing more young

"'
OU

We. Home. Car. Buslnm.
1 11
0

Pomeroy

Hymn sing slated at church

MAKING A DIFFERENCE - Plwmed parenthood is one of the
Ingredients for happier families. Childrm deserve to be wanted,
nourished, nUltured and loved, and parents are entilled to decide
when to have chUdrm and how many they can care for. Plwmed
Parenthood Is making a difference for women ol chlldhearing age ~
offering access to birth conlrollnfonnatlon and other services to help
In maldn1 wise dPClslom about having children. Here Ferndora
Story, R.N., a RSVP volunteer, left, and Rita Jenkins. LJ'N, in
charge of the Meigs office, confer on a patient chart.

men take a responsibility for
birth control by either coming in
to pick up condoms or bringing
their girlfriends in for clinic
visits.
As for unplanned and un·
wanted pregnancies, Planned
Parmthood outlines opti:Jns
without making any recommen·
da lions. Information on adoption
procedures as well as abortion is
provided but appointments with
agencies for either procedure
are never made by Planned
Parent mod.
Anytime there is an unwanted
pregnancy, there is trauma , and
it doPS n'l make any diffl•rence
how its resolved, the traum a is
still there, Mrs. Jenkins
ex plained.
Women need to have children
for the light reasons, she said.
!Continued on Page 111

•K

fnsumnce

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Syracuse Village Council will meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the
municipal building.

·Room Air
Conditioners

2 Sections, 16 Pages

COMMUNIVERSrrY BAND . COMING - Ronald P. Sorelarelli,
conductor ol the 1986 Ohio University CA!rnmunlversl&amp;y Band, a group ot
about 30 musicians who wW perfonn In Pomeroy, Jub' 17, at .7 p.m. on
lhe . parking lot, was speaker at Tuesday's Pomeroy Olamber o1
Commerce meeting. Here he'a pictured clscu!lllng details ollhe coneert
wHh BUI Nease, Chamber president, left.

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Firemen contain
phosphorous leak
in Dayton area

Planned Parenthood
making a difference
for Meigs residents~ .

Ohio weather

Dismissal entry filed in court

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Wednesday. July 9, 1986

Copyrighted 1986

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
Planned Parenthood, marking its 15th anniversary offamlly
planning services in Meigs
County, is making a difference
- in that the program Is
providing familli'S and unmar·
ried teenagers access to birth
control information and related
services which help them make
wise decisions about having
children.
Children desNve to be
wanted, nourtshed, nurtured ,
and loved .
And parents arc entitled to be
able to decide when and how
many children they can care for.
As explained by Kay Atkins.
execu tive director of Planned
Parenthood of Southeast Ohio,
every individual has the right to
ex~rcise his or her own moral
principles with regard to repro·
duct iv(' choices.
Planned Parenthood's role Is
not one of making those choices
for patient s, but of, providing
services relating to family planning. she said.
In Meigs County, Rita Jen·
klns. LPN, has charge of the
office which is located In the
medical building across from
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The clinic volunteer is Ferndora
Story, R.N.. of the Retired
Senior Volunteer Program of the
Meigs County Council on Aging,
and the clinic physician is Dr.
D.E. Villaneuva.
Services provided at the clin ic
are for anybody In the chUdbearlng years, and include
information and education on
birth control methods and the
dispensing of supplies by the
nursing staff: and pelvic exami·
nations. prescribed treatment
for infections, pap tests, annual
checkups, fitting for diaphrams
and IUDs by the physician.
Ali servici'S are provided on a
sliding fee scale determined by
the family or individual's in·
come, but no one is turned away

•

By RICK VANSANT
MIAMISBURG , Ohio (UPIJ Firefighters early today co ntinued
spraying water on one of seven
freight cars that derailed, spread·
ing a toxic phosphorous cloud over
the area and forcing 15,00) people to
nee tix'ir homes.
"We have the poosphorus contained but there is no solution as of
yet," Miamisburg Development
Director Ron Parker said early
today. "All we can do is keep
pulling water on it.
"It bums when it touches air,"
Parker said. "That's why we're
keeping water on it . We're just
going to contain it until we decide
what to do and that probably won't
be until morning. Chemists and
railroad peopiP will decide what to
do after it gets light."
More than 15,000 people were
evacuated from Miamisburg and
nearby communities, and City
Manager Ilcnnis Kissinger declared a state of emergency in
Miamisburg, a Dayton suburb, at 7
p.m. EDT Tuesday, about 21;2 hours
after the accident.

Seven hospit ais in Ill&gt; area
rrported treating at least 138 people
for minor injurtes. most for skin,
eye or lung irlitatlon, and 11 were
admitted for observation.
When the Baltimore &amp; Ohio cars
derailed, one of t!K&gt;m began leaking
tix' toxic phosphorus. which ex·
pioded into flam es spontaneously in
the hot, muggy weather. sending
the poisonous cloud over the arra.
After consulting with EPA o:fl .
cials, firefighters began pouting
water at tix' rate of 1,600 gallons a
minute on the fire at mid.f'Venlng
and succeeded In haltingthP spread
of tix' cloud.
Parker said about two·thirds of
thr poospoorus in til' :!Jl,OOO.gallon
tank car escapro In the fire. The
remaining one·thlrd of til&gt; poospiJo.
rus remained in the la nk.
Phosphorus, a white, waxyc hem·
icat. spontaneously ignites whl'll tix'

air is temperature is 86 degrees
Farrenheit or higher and will bum
in water. Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency spokeswoman
Patricia Madigan said. The
weather in Miamisburg Tuesday
afternoon was hot and steamy.
Phosphorous is "highly toxic by
inhalation, ingestion or skin con·
tact," Madigan noted.
Parker said he had "no idea"
when tre evacuees would be
allowed to return to their homes.
Officials also were concerned
about a second derailed car that
conlained sulfur.
" ...The nearness of the sulfur (to
the phosphorus) could be a problem
if they get together," Parker said,
adding that the sulfur apparently
was not leaking.
Three or the other cars that
derailed contained new automo·
bill'S, which were believed des·
troyed In the fire. Another car
contained n('wsprlnt and the seventh contained animal fat , some rl.
which leaked into a nearb)' stream
and caused "a small" fi sh kill.
Parker said the leaked animal fat
posed no threat to drinking water.
Gov. Richard F. Celeste toured
the area late 1\II'Sday and held a
news conference after being briefC'd
by local officials .
"I'm glad people are alive and
well and that we haven't had a
gteater tragedy, but I'm also
angry," Celeste said. "We should be
far more cautious in how we handle
mat erials that are dang12rous to our
citizens.
"This underscores the validity of
a community's light to know when
dang12rous chemicals are presmt."
he said.
Tim Hill of Miamisburg, a
motorist who was driving parallel
to the tracks when the accident
occurred. said, " !The train) mu st
have been going about 00 or 65
(mphl, and then it derailed. It
threw rocks and stones everv ·
where. It was an unbPUevabic
sight. "

Communiversity Band plans concert

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
He spoke of -tllr influence of
Sentinel Staff Writer
music, particularly marches and
Ronald P. Socclarelli, conductor patriotic selections, in making
of the 1986 Ohio University Commu- people feel good about themselves
niversity Band which will present a and their coun,try, and commented
concert on the Pomeroy parking Jot on the Incredible turnaround in
at 7 p.m. Thursday, July 17, American prtde In the )liSt decade.
discussed the revival of community
Members were reminded that the
spirit and the role of bands at con&lt;l'rt is lree. Those attending are
1\Iesday's meeting of the Pomeroy asked to take a lawn chair.
Chamber of Commerce.
Also meeting with the Chamber
Meeting for a luncheon at Trinity was Kl'nt Francis or Captain D's in
Church. Socciarelli commended Gallipolis. He outlined plans for a
Bank One, sponsors' of the concert, fish try to lake place on the parking
and complimented the attending lot !rom 4to 7 p.m.the same evening
business reprpsentatlves for PJI· as the band concert.
tlng time and effort Into the project. , Francis said that Captain D's will
the same positive attitude which. he move in a concession trailer and
said, is bringing communities wUI hi&gt; offering an "all you can eat"
across the nation alive.
mea l as well .as regular menu
Introduced by BUI Nease, presi· items. Advance tickets fo r the "all
dent, the conductor gave a com· you can eat" dinner will be sold by
mentaryontheJuly4~rlebrationin
Chamber members and will be
New . York. dPSCrlblng It as a available at the Chamber of
stirling example of the pride Commerce Office In the court·
Americans have in the country. the oouse. Aduh tickets will be $4 while
rPSurgence of patriotism and the tickets for chUdren under 12 will be
workings of the free enterprise $2.
system.
Francis described the roncesslon

setup · In Pomeroy as Oil{' for
Captain D's visibility more than
profit and noted that 15 p&lt;'rcenl of
sail'S under $l,IIXI and :!5 percent of
sail'S over $l,OCO will go the
Chamber.
The Chamber will lx' responsible
for providing tables and chairs for
the serving area.
A farmers market is also being

planned for the afterooon and
evening , and Ill&gt; Pomeroy Bend
Merchants Association announced
that stori'S will remain open untU 7
p.m.
There was a brief discussion ori
Heritage Weekend with a general
consensus Ihat the downtown acflv.
itles were successfuL .

Celeste unveils 6-year construction plar;t
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP))- Gov.
Rlchard F. CeiPSte has submitted a
$1.3 bllllon long.range capital construction plan to the Ohio General
Assembly, lncludlnl; $!m .million
for Improvement of higher education facilities through 19!12.
The state's stx-year capital plan
Is required by law to he updated
every two yPars.
The one released Tui'Sday Includes the $585 mUllon worth of
projects already approved by the
General Assembly for 1987·88 and
another Jist of recominendatlons
for \he next four years.
Among the new projects envlslooed by the CelPSte administration
from J.988.92 are a $25 mUUon
Maumee
~e. a S6 million

,,

Bar

Dayton Performing Arts U&gt;nter,
and a $14.9 million replacement for
the welding engineering building at
Ohio State University.
Also Included among the long.
range plans are $3 mlliion for a
student services bulldl!¥l at Akron
University, $7.5 million tlr renova·
lion of ·Baldwin Hall at the
University of Cincinnati, $18.3
milllon lbr an addition to the
biological sclen~rs buDding at Ohio
State, $7 million lbr the renovation
ct Fenn Tower at Cleveland State
University. and $1.7 mUilon for
renovation of the University of
Toledo aeldhouse.
It Will be 191!8 hefore the General
lwembly consldets the next twoyPar segment ot.the captfal ~an . If .
I

.

Q&gt;lestc&gt; is not governor, the plan
may be !'PVtsed.
"1be six-year capital pfan re·
fleets a comri11tment to Ire economic future of Ohio In a way that Is
financially prudent," the governor
said In a letter accompanying the
document.
The packagp Includes $441 mll·
lion wortli ·d projects tor fiscal
1989-00 that were part of the
governor's last six-year plan released In 1984.
The new )Xlrtlon Is $323 million
worth of projects planned for
1991·92, Including $2!13 million on
Ohlo's· oollege and university
campuses.
' WWiam J. Shkurtl. director d the
state Of!lce d. Budget and Manage-

ment. pointed out the 1991·92
allocation Is deliberately small so
more proj\'/Cts may be added later.
Shkurti !iald the projects can all
bt&gt; finan~rd under . the existing
revenue structure. which will grow
with the economy.
Ohio Slate University would
receive $44.5 million worth d
projects In the third two-year
period, all of tt for general
renovations and building
replacements.
The University of Cincinnati Is
tlckl'led for $39.8 million In the third
biennium, including the final $'ll.1
mllllon for compteti:Jn of ail ambu·
latory care facUlty for the medical
school.

BIG BUcKs - The punch proYided by Tbe Ohio Power~. and the
Southem Ohio Coal Co. lo the OOOIIORIJ ol Meigs C~ was
emphas~ Tuesday when real eetate IMes were paid for tile la~~t half
of U185 at n counly treasurer's olflce. Plclured from the left are Ron

Ash, local Ohio Power Co. m1111acer, pa.yinl $729,225.11; ,Treasurer
George Collin!, and rtpt, AI IUBard, superlnteulent of Meigs Mine 2,
paylnl $109,458.31.
'
•'
.,
1

•

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