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                  <text>Plge-1 0-The Doily Sentinel

POrn~ Middleport. Ohio

...------ Local Briefs:-Lifesaving class date changed
Advance lifesaving Instruction a!"the London Pool in Syracuse has
heen changed to start on Aug. 17. Those needing tmre Information
may call 992·9900.

Wilkesville fish fry slated
The Wilkesville Volunteer Firemen's Association will hold its llth
annual fish fry on the square In Wilkesville Saturday. July 26, from 11
a.m. to midnighl.
There will heJ ivr entertainment during the aft erooon and evening
Including the Son Shiners and Joyfu l Noise at 2 p.m. There will be a
street dance from 9 p.m. to midnight and games will be ava ilable all
day.

Group to perform in area
RPsidrnts are invited to attend an evening of music to be present('()
by lhP Viclor Quartel and the Lordsmen Quartet at 7 p.m.
Wednesday at the First Southern Baptist Church, 41872 Pomeroy
.

p~

The Victors are from Cleveland. Ga., and are led by David Young,
who I&gt; a mu sic teacher. songwriter, publlsher and record producer.
For 10 years. Young has traveled as pianist and arranl&lt;{'r for gospel
groups including the Kinsmen, Sons of Song, Foggy River Boys, the
Prophets and tht• Cou riers. He has also worked as a studio pianist
and arrunger for groups such as the Rambos, StatemPn, Sp€t'rs and
the F'l01ida Boys.
The Lordsmen arc from Ironton. and madP numerous
appearances lhroughou t Sout heastern Ohio.

Squad$ respond to 10 calls

Hospital panel meets Wednesday
Mrig&gt; County Hospital Commission will met'! in ttl:' cafeter ia of
\ "!'trrans Memorial Hospital ~i::lO p.m. Wrdnc-;day.

Willing Workers meet Friday
Thr Wi ll ing Workers Class of Ent erprise United Methodst Church
will me('t Fridav al 7:.10 at lhr home of Marw fuwm .

Native son thanks Middleport
Midd lrpo11 Vi llage rcce1vrd a $1.000 gilt from an appr(('ia tive
nal ivr son M ond&lt;IY nigh t.

S.·nding thr gift to Midd lrpor1 was Dr. Edward Lt•wi s. Hennick('r,
r\pw Ha mpshirc. who Sl'nl along a IN!Pr rf('a !ling his rarlier yrars in
Middleport a nd extending apprf'C iation to lawn officials lor recently
hav ing named a &gt;lr('('l en thP Iown in mrmory oi lhe late Art Le\\'L•.
Art l.rwiS, a brolhrr of Dr. Lt:owis. g-a ined natbnwide recogn it ion
not onlv as a foolball player bu t also as a West Virginia Universit y
fool ball roac h. Hr. tbo. was reared in MiddlC'port as was Dr. Lewis.
They wrw sons of thr· la te Mr. and Mrs. George Lewis.
Naming of the slr(('t afl er the latr Art Lel'.is by council recenrl\'
was doni' al lhr suggPst ion of Councilman .James Clatworthy.
Upon rrcPiving lhc gilt Monday nigh! , council approvfd the
purchasr of nrw str('{'t signs for th£' town with the money. Mayor
Frrd Hoffman reponrd that the villag-P needs a number at new street
signs. thP cost of which totals about $2,500. H&lt;• airrady has on order
somr$1Jl1l wonh so th~ gift of $1.000 wi ll make thr pU rcha se of new
s1 1l'r1 signs nrf'{)pd almost rompiPI&lt;' .

Eastern board to meet
Easl('rn l.ocill Bmrcl of Fducation will ho ld special m('('tings
Thu rsciLJ _
\ . '1. p.m .. and Frida\. 10 a.m .. wit h ('X('('Uli\T• ~f'S5 ions on
pt•r somw l m ~li i Pr;o; .

.

Southern football meeting set
,\11 lx•l&gt; iniJ·1r·str-d in plaving foo tball al Southern High School

whuulcl ml'l 'l Tilursd"-'. li p.m .. at thr foolba U building ad jacpnt to
I h1• :-.r iUJOI.

Physicals Saturday at SHS
Ph_\_:-; w ; ll ~ v. _ill !)( gi vf'n StliU I'di!\'. 2 p.m .. for Southf'rn High and
.l lln inr ll ig h lnoltxJI I and \ 'OIIr~- bal l pla~·ers. and ch ff'rlcadf'rs.

I 'In ' ir:tl' "il l lp gi\m ;II Ihi· football build ing, adjact•nt lo Ihe high
..,d10ol. and ;!II \\'ho ;1n · intrr f':&lt;ilrd o;;ho uld atiC'nd.

Racint• .'ihrine plans event
/\n l'\ t•nmg
~.

Il l

lr'l'l' C'nlr •r tainmf'nt V.·'illlx• ofr('n'(! Sa turda v. from

:1111o Y p.m .. al lh&lt;' Shrine Clu b Pa1 kin Rarinr.
·
Sponsrll"rrl b\ thr· Shrinr Club Park Floard. thP cvrning will feature

cnunrr' and hluqr r&lt;~ss mu sic b~· t h&lt;" Be-nd RivPr Boys Band. Mak ing

up Ill!' IJOJnct arr I_. I"Jnk Clrlan rl. )\·an Pnwell. Paul

~VI"&lt;'

und Krn

Hwharrl ... on Thosv pl~.mning to attrnd ill'r ~ dvls&lt;'d to bring lawn
dl .~ ir.., l~ dn·~hmf'nt~ will lx • ;n·&lt;JilahiP .

Communil·ersity concert Thursday
,.\n

of fin1 · f'nt c·rt;linmc ·nt w ill lx' offt•rrd Thu n;dav on thr
I 'nrn1 ·r••.\ pc.1 rki ng IDt
..\ !Jrmcr~ m;1rkrt. ~po n snrr'(l b\ thf' BPnd Ar0a Mrrrhcmts
A-..~•ci;lllon . wil l he fc·atur('(L and \ ' i l l a~r sl orrs will n:•main open
until '7 pm .
Pomri'O~ · . \n•a ( 'ham txT of C'omm rrrr i~ sponsoring a Cuptain D's
('\ .1'11tng

fi.sh t" from l7 p.m. with lir krls fo r thr• "all vou can Pa t" dinnN
a1 :dlablr· !rom rhamix'l mrmbcrs.
·
,\1 4 p.m .. an oi.Jtclour CU TK'('rf b.\· t hP Oh io Univprsi t\·
Commu ni\·t·r,.it.\ Ba nd will h(' fPaturrd a t thf:' s lagrJrf'cJ.llin k On~·
is spon~oring the ('011Cf'l'l.
En'r;- one is invit('d ro &lt;JII('nd I he' rvf'n ing's frslivil ies.

-

Murder trial begins
in Gallia County court

Area deaths
· Maude Bailey

Thoo L Smith

Maude Bailey. 103, of 33500 Perty
Road, Long Bottom, died Sunday
evening.
Born April 22, 1883, in Mlnnora,
W.Va ., Mrs. Bailey moved to Meigs
County In 1965. She was a member
of the Minnora Methodist Church
and had been a residcnl of the
.Pomeroy Health Care Center for
the past 6% years.
Survivors include two daughters,
Mrs. Virginia Starcher of Mlnnora,
W.Va ., and Mrs. Greta Suttle of
Long Bottom; a son, K. Hu!':b
Kelley of Akron; one son·ln·law,
Jim Suttle of Long Bottom; 10
grandchlldrl'll; Z! great grandehlld·
ren and two gr e at ·gr e at ·
grandchildrl'!l.
She was preceded in deal h by her
first husband, Lymen Kelley, in
1912, and by her second husband.
Lester Bailey, In 1972.
Services Were held 2 p.m. today
!Tuesday) , at the Minnora Metho·
dlst Church in Minnora, W.Va. with
Revs. Kenneth Crookshank and
Johnny Alfred officiating. Burial
was In Prudence Chapel Cemetery.

'

Meig-s Cou nl) Emergency Medical Services reports 10 ca lls
Monda y:
TupJX'rs Plains ill 7:53a .m. to Long Bottom fo r Millard Ball to
· \"rlf'rans Mr·morial Hospital ; Pomeroy at 8:02a.m. to the county
infirman· for H01en Crabtn'C' who was trea led but not n·ansported.;
Rull;md at 12:32 p.m. to Mf&gt;igs Mine No. 1 for Gary Hixon to
O'TIJcn ness Memoria l Hospilal; PomProy at 1:44 p.m. to West Cave
Stm·l for C01 rl Hendricks 10 HolzPr MPdica lCE-nter; Syracuse at 4:44
p.m to Lu ndon Pool for Scott Carsey to Velrrans Memorial
Hospllal; Pomrrov at o: 17 p.m. to rhc Pomeroy Healt h Care Ct'ntf'r
for Richa rd Win ebren ner to Veterans Memorial Hospita l;
Mtddlepor1 at R: 1h p.m. Ia Pea r l Str(('t for Sally WaltPrs to Veterans
Memorial Hospit al: SyracusP at R: 19 p.m.· to an auto fire on
1\mlx•rgcr Road. no injuries; PomProy at 9:1.1 p.m. to East Main
Stm·l for Trrrv Brrtra nd who drowned whm his vehicle went Into
Ihe ri1w; :.1 idd1Pporl Rescue arrivrd at the scene wil h divers at 9:33
p.m

Tueaday. July 15, 1986

Ruby Russell
Ruby Russell, 68. of 5.19 S. Second
Ave., Middleport, died Sund ay
evening at her home.
Mrs. Russell was born May 23,
1915, to Mr. and Mrs. Denver Smith,
bot h deceased. She was a member
of the Middleport Baptist Church.
She is survived by a niece,
Kristen Friedman of Atlanta, Ga.
She was proceded in death by her
husband, Austin Russell . in 19&amp;'i
Graveside services will be held
1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Riverview
Cemetery with ReV. Earl Eden
officiating. Frk&gt;nds may ca ll at
Rawli ng·Coals·Biower Funeral
Home after 9a.m. Wednesday until
time of serwices.

Theo L. Smith, 76, Pomeroy,
owner and operator of the Sugar
Run Flour MUI, died Monday night
at Veterans Memorial Hospital
after a lingering Illness.
Born on Jan. 23, 1910, he was the
son of the late Harry P. Smith and
Effie Humphreys.
He is survived by his wife, Gladys
G. Smith, Pomeroy, two daughters
and sons·ln·law, Sue and Danny
Zirkle, Pomeroy, and Joy and
George Stamm, Chico, Calif.; two
grtll\dsons, Bryan and Brent Zirkle,
Pomeroy, and a granddaughter,
Lorrie Foster, serving In the U.S.
Arnny. Also suiVivlng are two
stepbrothers, Lee Humphreys rJ
Michigan, and Neil Humphreys of
Florida, and a stepsister, Avis
Donaldson, Florida.
Besides his parents he was
preceded in death ~ a brother,
Walter, his stepmother, Elsie
Smith, and his stepfather, Alfred G.
Humphreys.
He was ' a member of the
Pomeroy United Methodlst Church
where he served as g,perlntendent
of the Sunday school for many
years. Active In all bodies of the
Masonic Lodge, he was a knight of
the York Cross at Horm, a past
patron of Pomeroy Chapter, OrdE-r
of the Eastern Star, and along·lirne
member of the White Shrine of
Jerusalem. He was a past Jresldent
of the Pomeroy PTA and a former
member of Chester Grange".
In lieu of flowers, the family
requests that donations in his name
be made to the Meigs County
Cancer Society or the Pomeroy
Fire Department Emergency
Squad.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home Wedn&lt;'Sday from 7·9
p.m. Funeral services· will be held
at 10 a.m Thursday morning at the
funera l home. The Rev. James
Corbitt will officiate. Burial will be
in Beech Grove Cemetery.

County happenings •...
TUE&lt;IDAY
LONG BfJI1'0M - Long Bot tom
Fla me Meeting will be held at the
MI. Olive Community Church.
Long Bottom. Tuesday. 7:30 p.m
with Charr Tott en of Winfield,
W.Va . formerly of the Davy J o
Hisson TV Show.
MIDDLEPORT- A fund raisrr
for Jan Michael Long-. candidatdor
state smator. will he held at the
American Legion Hall in Middle·
pon . :i:30 lo 8 p.m. TUesday.
Fea turC'd spea krr will he RpP. Mike
Shumaker. Tick£&gt;ts can be pur
chased at the door. $7.;-11 for
indil·iduals. and $10 for tvu ples.
wilh children under 12 free.

sack lunch . Day camp will be held
at Ca mp Klasruta July 21 through
July 2'i. Further Information on the
training &lt;X" the camp may be
obtained by calling !119·lll5. or
ffi2·5567.
POMEROY - Cindy Oliv£&gt;ri.
county extension agent , hom~
economics. will hold "safr kids"
workshop for ch ildre n at 2 p.m.
WC'dnesda)· at Pomeroy Library;
she will Introduce safrty p!"OC('·
du res for children at home along as
W£&gt;11 as Instruction on how to deal
with situations which. might arlsr.
Pr&lt;'Smtation also will include tips
on quirk and nu tri tious snacks
which parents ean easily provide .

RAC1 NE - RC'drdication revival
will he h('ld at the Morsr Chapel
Church. Racinr-Portland Road.
lhrough Sa lu rdav. July 19. Ministpr
is the Rev . Char les Bush. Rac inr.
and Ihe Rev. George Hoschar of
West Columbia will he a speakPr.
There wil l he special singing ni gh t Jy
and sPrv ices bej:ln at 7:30p.m. Parh
r•vrning .

obsC'r van('{'.

·

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges July 14 - TammiEAshwm1h, Tammy Cade, Phyllis
Daniel, Lulu Flshrr, Edgar Grlf·
lith. Georgp Harris , Mrs.. John
J£&gt;nkins and daughter. Gusta Man
non, Jes~lca Marcum, Mrs. David
Matheny and son. Mary Mayes,
Katie McCoy, Nora McMillan,
Keith Reynolds. Gertrude
Richards.
Birth July 14 - Mr. and Mrs.
John Carter, son. Oak Hill.

Council eyes ___ c_o_nt.:...in.;.;ued..:....;..lro..:.:m.::...:...Pa:::g::.e.:..11~-.:._1

has received no reply from Pome·
roy Village in regard to a sugges·
tion Ihal Pom£&gt;roy givr Middleport
Village a small section of ground
near the lower COilX&gt;ratbn limits.
Under thr plan Middleport could
then supply the sewage needed by
two oompanirs who plan to open
businesses in the Jocatbn. A
representative of one of th£&gt; two
compani&lt;'s had been In touch with
Mayor Hoffman asking the out·
tvme of th~ rEquest made to
Pomeroy, the mayoc reported. The
mattPr was not discusSed at last
week's meeting or Pomeroy VIllage
Council.

COUPON

HEARING TESTS IN

TUESDAY N16HT

MIDDLEPORT'

Eleclronrcs near ing tests will be given by Bellone Hearing AIQ Center

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY

· FOR JUST

Served with whipped potatoes. chicken gravy,
co le slaw, hot roll , butler and coffee: ~orry,
no substrlules except .beverage with additional
·

$3.25

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT .

PH. 992·5432

.

NIMEIOY, OH.

Fried Chicken

getting the truck out ollhe water.
Greg Thomas earlier had gone
oown under water to roJX' off the
vehicle in order to help with thf&gt;
accuracy for dlvPrs in recovE-ring
the body and the vehicle. DriVPrs
attached a hook and cable onto the
vehicle so that It could be p.~lled up
the steep embankment . It neached
the top of the bank at about ll:W
p.m.
Hundreds of residents lined the
river bank watching emergency
workers on the dark night wrestle
with the probl£&gt;m of retrieving the
body and the truck from the Ohio

River which Is extrem£&gt;1y muddy
due to the recent heavy rains.
Members of the Pomeroy Pollee
Department !l.Qd the department Qf
Sheriff Howard Frank were on the
seen£&gt; to hold the crowd away from
operations and particularly whep
the vchlrlr was pulled up the bank
what with the danger of a snappin~
ca ble. Pomeroy and Mlddlepor:f
£&gt;mergency members were also on
hand to help with the crowd at ili&gt;
site. Traffic through the area was
onr ·wuy and at times was com·
petely blocked as the vehicle was
taken from the river and· pulled
·

New band

Tif(jJlSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - The 50th
annivrrsary ol the Rock Springs
Brtter Hea lth Club willlx• held at
ooon Thursday at thr hom£&gt; of
Francrs GociiPin. All memhers
and past memll'rs of the club are
invited lo at tend the anniversary

them has not been par tlcu larl~
•'ffrcl ivr. hP said. 1t was suggestrd
that •·esidents might stop fC'C'd ing
birds lor several months and this
sometimi"S Pncv urages pigeons lo
if'ave a community. the mayor
S&lt;Jid. Meanllmt•. owners of build·
in gs were as ked 10 make surr tops
of the Wildings arr closed lo
disoouragP nesting by pigeons.
Council discu~•C'd the ann('xat ion
of property below Middleport and i1
was rrported that attorney Strvr
Story and Bob Wilson who will
P•'O bably pass the pet It ion will he
ge nlng together on the maiiPr.
Mayor Hoffman rq&gt;ortrd that hr

flrea ______________~,C~on~t~in~u~ed~f~ro~m__P~ag~e-1~1--------

away~~ a wrecker .

WEDNE5DAY
MIDDLEPORT Vaca tion Bible
school. Rejoicing Lifr Bapt 1st
Chun:h. :m North S!&gt;cond Ave ..
Middleport . throug-h Friday, 9:.10
a.m. lo noon each da\. Informat ion
call 992 ·ti24~ .
·

POMEROY- Training lor llr
Big Irnd Girl Scout day camp wil l
he held Wednesday at the Ohio
Rivrr cam pgrounds. formerly
Roush 's La nding. heglnning at 9: 30
a .m. Those attending arc to take a

GALLIPOLIS - Jury selection ney, Donald Andrew Cox.
Mrs. Gilman has been coliftned to
began this morning in Gallla
the
At hens Mental Health Center,
County Common.Pleas Couriln the
rut
arrangements
have beeri mad~
trial of a 71·year·old Perry Town·
ship woman charged with murder to return her to Gallla County for
In theshootlngdeathof her husband !Jial, accordl1111 to court rerords.
The way was cleared lor trial 1)1
last Jan. 12.
Grace Gliman, Rt. 4. Oak Hill. · June when Roderick deternnlned
has pleaded not guilty and not guilty that Mrs. Gilman was cornpetent fD
stand trial, meaning that slJ!'
by reason of Insanity to the charge.
Court officials said sealing a jury understands court procedure and
was expected to take up most ott he the roles of her attorney anil
morning session. If a jury was Prosocutor .Joseph L. Cain. Roder·
seated by noon, jurors would be lck 's decision came following a
taken to lhc scene of the alleged hearing on the findings of thr~
crime at Mrs. Gilman's home on examiners who tes ted Mrs.
Cora·Centerpolnt Road In the after· Gilman .
At the same time, RDderlc)t
noon. Opening statements are
anticipated lor Wednesday ·denied a motion from Cox to
suppress statements Mrs. Gilman
morning.
reportedly made following tl\f.'
The trial Is expected to last a shooting. The statements were
week, officials said.
made to the late sheriffs Deputy
Mrs. Gilman Is charged with Erskine Blanton.
fatally shooting her husband, Jim
Roderick said it was proven
Gilman, 72, following an alleged Blanton had read Mrs. Gilman her
"domestic dispute." He was dead at rights and testimony from Rio
the scene of a single bullE-t wound. Grande College and Community
Gallia County sheriff's Investiga - College security officer Mike Wal·
tors said. Investigators recovered a ton "clearly corroborates this fact,
.~-caliber revolver at the scene.
and that the defendant made a
ThC' gun was ordered checked for knowin!'( and voluntary waiver Qf
fingerprints by Judge Richard C. her rights before she gave her
RDderick Jr.. with results to he various statements to the officers In
shared with Mrs. Gilman's attar· tt'i:&gt; caS(&gt;_"

!Continued fi·om PagE- 11
replace bandequlpml'llt reportedly
stol£&gt;n from tbe ochool at a cost of
$l,ll99 from Rex of Parkersburg.
W.Va .
Rosemary Keller, repr&lt;"rnting
the Eastern Band Booslers. dis·
cussed band camp wH h the board.
A resolution was adopted to partie!·
pat~ in lhe Ohio Hig!l School
Athletic Association.
.The resignation of Rick Martin as
principal ol Chester Elementary
School was accepted upon campi~·
tlon of paper work. Arrangements
were made lor Carol Brewer,
developmentally handicappE-d
teacher. 10 attend a clinic In
Columws.
Att~nding Friday night's meeting
were Jim Ca ldw~ll . Susie Heines . .
KatliY Manlckc and Roger Gaul.
board memhers. .lim Smit h,
another board memher, was at thr
Thursday night executive session.

Fire strikes home .
Damages to the kitchen of tllf'
Car l DeLong home on RDute 143
were estjnated at $2,(0) as the
result of a lire Monday afternoon:
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles
Legar said the blaze started in thE'
kitchen from a tt&gt;aster ovrn. There
was smoke damage to the rest of
the home.

Veterans Memorial
Admissions - Avery Searles,
Middleport; J ohn Hunnell, Pome·
roy; Rose Curry, Racine; Millard
Ball. Long Bottom; Murl Harris,
Ew ington; Richard Winebrenner,
Pomeroy.
Discharg&lt;" - Peggy Taylor,
Preston Parsons, Arlher Schol·
de rer. Elsie Shahan, Edna Lee,
Betty Mankin.

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

Ora nge Township Trustees will
hold a special meeting Wednesday.
7 p.m., at the home of Dorotby
Calaway. township clerk.

Statt Auto

,.ni..

lnsur•llc•

c...

ROYAL .OAK
RESORT CLUB
PRESENTS

LIVE COUNTRY MUSIC BY

·G
,
A
RY
LINK
FIOM FORT MYEIS,' FLA.
'Friday, July 1., 8·12 P.M••

THE TESTS WILL BE GIVEN BY A LICENSED HEARING AID SPECIALIST.

OFF OF STATE IOUTE 7 OUTSIDI.OF POMIIOY

COME IN. WITH COUPON FOR.
· ....,'

.;-. ..;.,w,

S6.00 PJISON-$7 .50 AT DOOI .

Jr SWIMING ·AREA

OPEN fOI' SvMII
' .99J•f111

oi'-·~~\I;""''I.'A•..,;U[I ..iHI"';-..4-'III):;;-;1:,;.;,~.'f..at.:..V:t""~'"·'~-11)1'4Ait~'!illl'~«.i'V e/~Jff

at y

Vot.36. No.60

en tine
2 Sections. 16 Pagoo

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday. July 16, 1986

Copvriphted 1986

Ohio EPA forms phosphorous cleanup plan
By RICK VANSANT
MIAMISBURG, Ohio (UPI) - Environmental
officials have worked out a derailment clean·up plan
that includes the "controlled burning" of phosphorus·
laden soil.
"It will be a safe operation and there should be m
health hazard," Ohio Environml'!ltal Protection
Agency spokesooman Pat Maplgan salo11n announc·
ing the plan Tuesday. "The Mlamisrurg Fire
Department wlll maintain a 24-hour suJvelllanre to
make sure nothing like last week ha~pens."
Last week, a derail('() 12,(0) gallon tank car of
phosphorus burned and billowed a white toxic cloud
for five days. At one point, about ll,OOO people were
evacuated from theh' homesandmorethan nlprople
suffered mUd skin and eye Irritation.
"Smoke and vapor In the clean·up will be kept to a
minimum," said Matll,gan. "II too much of a cloud

develops at any time during the controlled burnings,
the fire department wlll stop It with water or wet
sand."
Phosphorus remaining In the tank car and In a
stream at the derallment site also will be disposed al,
but officials expect no wmlng at those sites because
phosphorus, which ignites when exposed to air, won't
be In the air In !hose operations.
"We don't know how 101111 the clean·up wlll take
because we don't know the amount of phosphorus
remaining," said Madigan .
The contaminated soU and ballast from the railroad
track bed wUI he dug up and placed on a 20-by·ll·foot
steel pad for the controlled burning.
·" '"!be material then will .be tested for complete
reaction and taken to a disposal," said Madigan.
"The Ohio EPA and the city of Miamisburg have
directed O.H. Materials Co., the primary cleanup

contractor, to take precautions to minimize smoke
and vapor," said Madigan. "Both water spray and
wet sand are to be available to control smoke and
vapor.
"The city of Miamisburg will retain authority to
stop the cleanup and order corrective actkln If It
determines smoke or vapor are excessive," she
added.
Madigan said a three-Inch layer of "pbosphorus
mud" remains in the burned·out tank car.
' 'Tile outer jacket of the Insulated car wlll be
removed and the top half of the car wlll then be cut
away, leaving a bathtub-shaped container," she said.
"The remaining phosphorus residue wlll then be
removed from the car and placed In drums for
disposal.
"This operation will be conducted with the residue

under a layer of water and with a water spray wben
necessary to mlnlnnimlze phosphorus emissions,
After the residue is removed, the tank will be
decontaminated and removed from the scene."
Because phosphorus and sulfur from another
derailed car entered Bear Creek, a triWtary of the
Great Miami River, the creek will be diverted and
cleaned.
"Bear creek will be temporarilY re-routed front
above the spill site to the Great Miami River," said
Madigan . "Following the diversion. any remaining
sulfur and phosphorus will be removed from th4!
stream bed. Sediments (of phosphorus and sulfUr)
wlll remain under water during the removal
operation to minimize vapors."
Madigan said a plan to sample the Great Miami
River, Bear Creek and soU ln the spill area lor
pollution Is under developml'llt.

Senate-backed sanctions meet opposition
By E. MICHAEL MYERS
must be forced to negotiate ap end be may change current policy - did
· WASHINGTON (UPil -Prest· . to Its apartheid system of racial not mean he is willing to accept new
dent Reagan is looking lor new segregation before the strife-tom sanctions or a demand for U.S.
Ideas to shift administration poUcy nation buckles under "a massive limns to end investment In the
toward South Africa and stave off civil war."
region.
.
congressional pressune without glv·
"This has been studied to death.
" We are against punitive ecolng In to new Senate demands for 1t is time to lake action now,"
nomic
sanctions and agalnstdlslnv·
tough economic sanctions.
Kennedy told a Senate Banking
estment,"
said WhiteHouse spokes·
Reagan met with Republican subcornmlhee.
·
lawmakers Tuesday and asked for
"I think we are at the very end of man Edward Djerejlan.
"We would certainly be wllllng to
suggestions, while on Capitol Hill, the possibility of achieving peacefUl
Sens. Edward Kennedy and Lowell change," added Welcker, R·Conn. look at a different approach," said
Welcker called for passage of a "That Is why we should have the Albert Brashear, another spokes·
,.,.,..~
'.
man. He said Reagan told GOP
,&lt;'
·~ ~'.
House bill requiring a U.S. trade strictest sanctions Imposed now."
/
embargo against South Africa.
Reagan opposes the House mea· leaders: "We want belp from you
Kennedy, D·Mass., said the sure and aides said his request for and the Congress in developing
white-minority regime In Pretoria new Ideas - apparently Indicating oonstructlve Ideas."
Kennedy and Welcker said they
wlll try to force a Senate vote on the
new sanctions wttlin three weeks
or at least before Congress recesses
Aug.15.
They fac e opposition from Senate
.
.
Republican leader Robert Dole of
DETROIT (UPI) - Domestic firms have sold more than 4.3 Kansas, who sald the bill the House
million cars, about 4 percent below passed June 18 should be held untU
automak~ reported an 8.9percent
gain In car sales for the first lOdays the nearly 4.49 million units sold In after Congress retwns Sept. 8.
of July from year ago levels as top the comparable 1985 period.
The ntPasure, which would force
For the period GM's sales were 260 U.S. firms with nearly $2 billion
manufactu,rers extended buyer In.
centlve offers throughout the re- up 7.8 percent, while Ford posted an In South African assets to pull out ci
8.8 percent Increase and Chrysler a tbe oountry within six months of
mainder of the 1.986-model year.
The seven companies, General strong :5.6 percerlt gain.
enoctment, wlll be considered by
Among the smaller companies, the Senate Foreign Relatbn&lt;&gt; Com·
Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co. ,
Chrysler Corp., Honda Motor AMC's sales fell 55.9 percent from
mlttee next week.
Corp., American Motors Corp., year·ago levels despite ongoing
The committee also expects to
Volkswagen of America and Nlssan incentive offers. Sales of Honda 's hear t.estlnnony from Secretary of
Enthusiastic lbcal support lor a General. He has served as an Motor Manufacturing U.S.A., re- U.S.·Wllt models declined just 1.1 State George Shultz, who met
' native son, Jan Michael Long, now assistant prosecuting attorney In portEd Tuesday combined sales of percent, while Volkswagen's Tuesday with Dole, about the
an attorney In Circleville. was Plckaway County and assist law 189,441 cars In the United States domestlc·made models showed a administration's current review of
demonstrated Tuesday night when director ;lor Circlevllle.
during the first 10 days. This 49.7 percent Increase.
South African policy.
Nlssan said m domestic cars
a Democratic fund· raiser was held
Long has been an attorney sinee compares with 174,019 units sold In
were sold because Its U.S. plant Is
for Long, who Is opposing Sen. 1979. He was joined at the fund· the year ago period.
oown for changeover and supplies
raiser
by
Michael
S.
Shoemaker,
Oakley Colilns, R·lronton. for the
of
domestically runt Sentras are
17th District seat in the Ohio Ohto House al Represl'!ltatives
The daily selllng rate of 23,680
General Assembly in the fall member from the 88th district, cars compares with 21,752 for the exhausted. The carnnaker has been
which Is composed of Plckaway same period las t year. There were selling Japanese-made Sentras to
election.
The event was staged at the and Ross counties.
eight selling days this year, the satisfy demand.
Chrysler was the only one d the
American Legion Hall In MiddleSb:lemaker was the speaker for same as In the year·ago period.
Big Three to make a substantial
port . Long Is the son of ..Mrs. last nlght'.s fllnd·ralser using as his
The annual rate lor the lndustty
By HELEN 1110MAS
Dorothy Long and the late Lewis topic, "What Do You Expect from during the period was a projected year·tO·year gain in Its market
UPI While HOWle Reporter
Long of Middleport, and serves as Your Elected &lt;Xflclals?" stressing &amp;8 million cars, compared with 8.2 share, up to 15.7 percent from 13.6
WASHINGTON (UPI) special counsel to the Ohio Attorney responslblt? leadership.
million last year. So far In 1986, the percent .
President Reagan, playing
down concern about Pakistan's
nuclear capabiUty, expected to
discuss drug tnlff!C and support
for Afghan rebels in a meeting
a defense, we wouldn't be here
was a calculated act.
By PAM McCAI..Lf!TER
today with Pakistani Prime
Cox. In his OPffiing statement. said
tnday. If sy mpathy was a defense,
Mrs. Gilman, 7L has pleaded not the Gllmans' 47·year marriage had
OVP Slall Wrler
Minister Mohammad Khan
guilty and not guilty by reason of been a stornny one and that Mrs.
GALLIPOLIS - Attorneys on ·we wouldn't be here today,"
Junejo.
insanity to the charge of first· Gilman had suffered pbyslcal and
both sides cautklned jurors a~alnst Assistant Prosecutor Brent Saund·
A full ceremonial welcome
degree murder . ThE- defense aJ. verbal abuse at the hands of her
allowing sympatby sway their ers said In his opening statement for
w1th military honors was scheleges that Mrs. Gi lman Is psychotic husband. He added, however, that
judgments today In opening state- the state.
duled on the White House !lluth
and beVeved she was acting In "the case Is not about sympatby"
Saunders said the state would
ments for the murder trial of Grace
lawn for Junejo, who arrived In
self-defense at the time of the and said the defense would attempt
Gilman In Gallla County Common prove that Mrs. Gilman's alll'!(ed
Washington late Tuesday. His
shootin)(.
shooting of her husband, Jim
Pleas Court .
agl'!lda Included a luncheon
to JrOVe that Mrs. Gilman was
Defense attorney Donald Andrew ~ychotlc and had been ~ychotlc at
"'The crime is murder. If age was Gilman, at their home last Jan. 12
today with Secretary of State
George Shultz and a White
the time of the offense.
House state dinner In the
He added that testimony would
evening.
be Included to sbow that Mrs.
An administration official wm
Gilman believed and had told
requested
aDOI\Ymlty attempted
several prople that her husband
TUesday to dampen speculation
was having sexual relations with
that Pakistan's apparent grow·
three neighborhood women under
lng nuclt&gt;ar capablllty Is of
her bedroom window.
concern to the superpowers.
Saunders, who was first to give
He said the highlights of the
the opening statement, said evl·
state visit wouk! be an Increase
dence would show that Mrs. Gliman
In Pakistan's lllegal drug trade
had bel'!l preparing biscuits and
and
U.S. support lor the U.N.·
honey for breakfast on t.le morning
sponsored
talks on a peace
of Jan. 12, 1986, while her husband
settlement In Afghanistan.
Gilman sat In a chair in the llvlng
The official reiterated that
room. Mrs. Gilman, whom Cox said
U.S. aid to Pakistan Is aimed at
was a singer In her church choir.
forestalling developn'jl\t of nu·
was singing a hymn as she worked.
clear weapons by the Moslem
Jim Gilman mocked her singing,
nation, which is bordered by a
then threatened to throw her out In
longtime rival, India, that is
the rOad , Cox said. When he got out
believed
to have an atomic
of the chair and JIX)Ved toward her,
arsena).
Mrs. Gilman believed sbe was In
"Wt&gt; have certified each year
daniJ!r, got a .atkallber pistol from
to Congress that Pakistan does
her bedroom, and shot her husband
mt JIOIII&amp;e'IS a nuclear device,"
Gllman twice.
the olllclal said, responding Ill
The JrOSECUtlon added that Mrs.
reports that Pakistan is on the
Gilman had cocked the gun a third
verge of producing an atomic
time, then went outside and shot
bomb.
Into the ground. Saunders JJald
c,RD - Thill old, ~ ~ Pctmeloy fruin
"We see m reason at this lime
itlboaf 1••• DfipM111W &amp;lire, wltlch h d .. Gilt witnesses' testlmoi\Y would show
that when law enforoement ctficlals
to
dtaniJ! our conclusion," he
IIIIOh!J' era- Ealt •
8&amp;re111, '!'lall,.u IIDowD
pboto beloap *» Eimla .rue arrived at the house, Mrs. Gilman
M&lt;OWock, Rldbe.
81 Froal S&amp;reet 'l1le lrolle)' '.,...., .. ~
(Continued on Page 16)
lrUII lbrvu&amp;b tile c:oilliiiillq, Ill IJie ~ ..

Domestic auto sales
"s~owing upwar~ tilt

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26 Conto

A Muttimedie Inc. Newspaper

Opening statements heard in Gallia murder trial

Meet Wednesday

FISHING, CAMPING

•

"The matter should be on the
president's desk," Welcker In·
slsted. "That means acting now.
We' re not going to sit arqlllld and go
through a process Intended to stall
any decision."
If the bUlls passed before Aug. 15,
supporters ~rould have time to act
after Labor Day If Reagan vetoes hi
If It Is held up, they might not lx'
able to gather votes to overturn a
veto before Congress adjourns for
the year Oct . 4.
Congress approved some sane·
!Ions last year, Including a ban on
new commercial Investments, but
Reagan said they would hurt South
Africa's 23 m!Uion blacks and
opposed them untO tt was certain
Congress would override his veto .
He vetoed the blll but signed an
executive order imposing lighter
sanctions against South Africa.
Senators upheld his action and tht&gt;
tougher measures died.
1n a movt&gt; that could JIX)Uify !llme
critics, an administration source
coliflrnnEd TUesday that u.s. off!.
dais have spoken lnfornnally to the
South African government about
the possibility Reagan may name
black businessman RDbert Brown
as U.S. ambassador to South
Africa, replacing Hernnan Nickel
Brown, 51, a REpublican wm has
worked In the State Department on
South Africa and was President
Nixon 's top White House aide br
minority affairs, runs a p.lbltc
relatlons limn In High Pl&gt;in_t, N.C.

Reagan meets today
with Pakistani leader

DR•.UNIIN PICKENS
509 SOUIH TIIID AVENUE
· TH..SDAY, JUlY 17
FIOM 9:00·12:00 P.M.
who has •trouble hearing or understanding con,.,aatton Is tnvlled to
a fret hearing ttot to- it thla PfQbtem can bt hetpoctl Bring thla coupon
you tor your FREE HEARING TEST of S50 value. Adutto only. Please.

,

Local support greets
native son cantiidate

Middleport
· (Continued from page 1)
As in previous years. plans were
made for a merchants' luncheon on
Friday with the Kim Blower and
the stalls al Dr. Larry Kennedy and
Dr. Craig Mathews to have chargp
of arran!;"ments.
Other committees na med werP:
Entertainment - Dr. Mathews.
Dr. Kennedy, Blower, Yvonne
Scally and John Kerr.
Airplane com est- Blower. Brian
Conde. Bob Fred, Kim Blower,
Robin Harris and Ha rold Hubbard.
Stages and el£'C'trlc - Dr.
Mathews, Dean Harris a nd Blower.
Traffic control - Bob Gilmore
and Sid Llttlr.
Promotion: Dick Owrn , Dan
Arnold, Larry Byer, Caley Males·
lck, and Bill Ha ptonstall.
Trophies- Gilmore and Blower.

(tji*l

said.
The Washington Post reported
today the administration ex·
pects to conclude an agreeml'llt
allowing Pakistan il Wy sensl·
Uve American technology with
strong bans on the use of R In
nuclear programs.
Adrnlnlstratfon o!llctals told
the Post the agreement would
Ioree Pakistan il abide by U.S.
nuclear proliferation reslrlc·
tbns In exchange for technology
such as mainframe computers
and advanced telecommunica·
lions equipment.
The CIA reportedly has ga ·
thered lnlormat iln on a highly
socretive, advanced nuclea r
program In Pakistan. Report s
indicate the government of
President Mohammad ZJa ul·
Haq has sucro&gt;ded In develop·
lng l'llriched uranium.
The official who briefed repor
ters TUesday declined to discuss
a report of warnings to the
Soviets about the U.S. commit·
ment Ill Pakistan's security.
Uke Israel, South Africa and
Japan, Pakistan Is one of a
hanclul of nations oon&lt;&gt;ldered
capable of ruUdlng nuclear
WPapOIIS. Congress, OOJICI"rned
about proliferation, has required
the adminiStration to realfimn
annually that PakiStan is ·mt
wilding nuclear weapons as a
sttpulatlon for continued ald.
The ciflctal said plans call t&gt;r
a new six·year $4.2 bllllon
package or military and economic asslstanre to Paklstap
w~ the eurrent aid package rJ
$3.2 bllllon runs out next year.
"Wt&gt; want to dei!X)nstrate our
suWC)rt for the poUtlcal·Jl'ogress
evidenced In PakiStan," the
rillcial aald.

•

�·-·-·~···

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'"~

Wednesday, July 16, 1986

Com_m
...· ·. entary

r,~:e;,-.~~~~~r:~

1

.

The Daily Sentinel
'

D1 Court street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

{lib
qJv

IS!MI!ill ,...,_,._.....,.........,.doo=&gt; •
•

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Aalllstanl Publlllher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Mana~rer

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
Li:ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They !!hoold be less than 300 words
. long . All letters are subject toed lUng and miSt be !J.gned with name, address and
. telephooe number. No unstgaBI letters wUI be published . Letters should be in
: good taste, addressing Issues, no1 persCI'Iaht~s.

The Lighter Side

:T he real scoop
By DICK WFl!T
. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Even durtng this period of budget-balancing
testrictlons, It appears Congress stlll can afford one of ~mre experts on
~ractlcally anything.
So meet Wayne Smith of Frederick, Md., an authority of Ice cream
scoops.
It may betruethatSmlth, a mailman, only coll€Cts icecrmm dippersas
a hobby. But since one never knoWs when Congress may need his type rt
~perUse. It Is good to have him on tap. so to speak.
· I ran Into Smith at the fourth annual Ice Cn•am for America party given
til a senatorial courtyard.
: According to a printed list of events, he was scheduled to discu ss the
history of the ice cream scoop, .but someone had negi€Cted to tell him he
was part of the speaking program.
"I mainly just answer questions, anyway," he told me.
So I asked him a few.
·. Like: have there there been any major modern Innovations In Ice cream
&lt;!lpplng?
·Smith Is lndeecl extremely knowledgeable In his chosen field. Or else I
am so abysmally Ignorant about Ice cream dipping, he seemed that way to
me.
·Anyway, he told me an Invention In the 19lls still serves as the bas ic
model for scoops used to dip ice cream today.
· He pointed to a couple or senators who were helping themselves to a heap
ot the frozen confection In the "V1P DIP" U&gt;n t.
"That's the kind of scoop they're using," he confided.
: I didn't lnquirl' whether the senators were among the charter members
of the "Ice Cream Lovers Extraordlnaire Society," but they could well
have been.
The scoop they were using looked like a throwback to the Pioneer Era
(circa 1876-19001, when Ice cream dippers were first invented. At any rate.
It had none of the levels, springs and stuff that cam!' along during the
Innovative Era (1900-10). Nor was It representative of the Novplty Era
(~ll) when a system of serving square-shaped ice cream was
~troduced.

·Smith Pxplalned that the Depression Era (19ll40l scoop had a oollow
hilndle that could be fU!ed with a chemical which, when warmed by the
human hand, would cause the dip or Ice cream to melt sufficiently to come
freely out of the dipper.
• See? That would explain the absence of springs and levels. It might also
ej!plaln why the senators were able to rl'trteve Ice cream untooched by
human hand.
. Until mass production began after the turn of the century, Smith said, it
~nerally took two hands to dip ice cream, even with the aid of a metal
SCIJOP.
Most of the early scoops were made of tin and steel and "'were no! very
sanitary," he added.
:Then cam!' brass scoops with wooden handles wlxlse springs, lt'Vels and
other tricky release mechanisms made It possible to dip Ice cream with one
h!ind.
\
:1was Informed by the event\xmsors, the International A!!Soclation of
lei' Creame Manufacturers, that) a number of present-day members of
Congess onre held jobs as soda jerks.
-Presumbly, when customers ordered a "Coke float." they could dispense
the iCe cream with Olll' hand.

Letter
to
the
Editor
.·
Get our ditches clean
Would you believe It the state Is
cleaning the ditches rut along
ROute Seven again? I can't reaDy
say holY many times they de that a
year and WI' see Stat!' Route 124 to
Rutland and on oot with ditches that
won't drain wren we get a real hard
rain. Some places the water even

runs across the road and you would
think they would clean them out at
least one a year. But I haven 't seen
It done for a longtlmesotoourstate
crew out there how about cleaning
the ditches oot t!4 this year.
Floyd H. Cleland
Middleport

Today in his~ory

•

Today Is Wednesday, July 16, the l97th day of 1986 with 168 to follow.
The moon Is moving toward Its full phase.
The morning star Is Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercucy, Venus. Mars al!d Saturn.
Those born on this dati' are under the sign or Cancer. They Include Mary
Baker Eddy. foUDII'r of the Christian Science Church, In 1821; Norwegian
polar explorer Roald Amundsen Ill 1872; actor Percy Kllbridl', who (iayed
"P.a Kettle," In 1888; actress Barbara Stan~ck In 1!Kl7 (age 79):
actress-dancer Ginger Rogers In l9U (ce 75): actor Barnard Hughes In
1915 (age 711: vloUnlst Plnchas Zukerman In 1948 (age 38), and rock
dnlmmer Stewart Copeland of "The PoOre" In 1952 (age 3H.
On this date In history:
In tm. Coogress designated the District of Columbia as the permanent
seat o! the United Slates government.
In ~. the first test of the atom bomb was conducted at a secret base
Jlt&gt;ar Alamogordo, N.M.
.
· In 19QI, Apollo-11, the first moon-landing mission, was launched from the
Kennedy Space Center, canylng ~tronauts Nell Armstrong, Edwin
"Buzz" Aldrin and Michael Collins.
··
In 19111, Ronald Reagan was unanimously nominated as the Republican
candidate for president at the GOP National Convention In Detroit. HI'
chOR George Bush as his running mate after tailing to reech agreement
with tanner President Gerald Ford.
,
1!185, Belgian Prbne Mlnlster Wllfried Martens ~lgned In a political rltt
avfir responsibility for the soccer stadium violence .. Brussels May 29
WhEn 38 peq&gt;le died. ,so
•
A lhOughtfortheday: Macy Baker Eddy wrote: "Sin makes its own hell,
and goodness Its own heaven."

Wednesday, July 16, 1986

Evaluating report ______W_:_il__lia_m_F_.B_u_ck__.ley. ;;..._J_r. '
Herewith a guide on how 10 are many definitions or porno· 'whether capital !llnishment derespond to the Attorney General's graphy. The accusation has been creases capital offl'nses. Well, we
Commission on Pornography, made that the con,unisslon never all knowthatlt does, but would have
whose findings have been so widely defined it. Well, It did: Porn, said a difficult tJme proving It beyond
dertded.
the romm!ssion, Is material that Is cavil. The commission, In other
1. It was a mistake for the "predominantly sexually explclt words, accepted a mandate It could
commission's executive director, · and Intended pl1ma111y lbr the not hope to handle .
Alan Sears, to write to rrerchandis· !lllllOse of sexual arousal." The
There Is hardly any question that
ers who handle the big three best way to cope with tiE argument Penthouse et al. arouse and semi·
pornographic magazines (Playboy, that Penthouse also publishes satisfy lust. One asks these days:
Penthouse, Hustler) using Jan. non-(Dmographlc material Is to Well, Is that bad? Lust Is a human
guage both hortatory and lntiJ1lidat· laugh at it. Ask yourself the predicarrent, and just as ~ood
lng. (You "are Involved In !lie sale question whether Penthouse would satislles hunger, so lust need'&gt;
or distribution of pornography .... survive without the sex. Its reader- satisfaction. The civilized answer to
Failure to respond w111 necessarily ship would be about the size o! The this Is of rourse that lust as appetitE•
be accepted as an Indication of no Homlletlc and Pastoral Review.
Is satisfied In marrtage, and !halt
objection": i.e., to pornography.)
2. The commtsstop atien)pted to unlike food, which Is necessary to
He was. properly rebuked by the demonstrate that reading porno- !J"Olong life, sex can be, and
court ilr exerting quasi-legal (res· graphy tncllnes some readers to everywhere Is, contained and ev('jrl
sure without due process.
Illegal behavior, for Instance rap!', sul:ilmated. People enter voluntar·
On the other hand,lt Is disingenu- or "aggressive sex." It Is !J"Obably lly nto celibacy.
ous to take the position that the correct that II does, but almost
The maiD argument against th.e
three mags 'are not pornographic. Impossible ID prove. It v.uilld he pornographers Is less that they
In order r1. appeal to lubricity. they much easier 10 prove that Hquor depictlust than that In oolngso they
rank: Hustler (sick), Pentlxluse enhances lu brlclty than lha t Pent· depict not the love of Romeo lor
(much porn) , Playboy (least (Dm), house does. In the 21st century. Juliet, satisfied by love and mar·
so let us·speak of Pentrou5e as "Ia they're going to he arguing about riage, but the sexual hunger of Joe
revue moyenne sensuelle ." There

lbr any Jane he can lay his hands
upon. A typical ending of a sexual
episode In the pornles sees Joe off
after a casual encounter with Jane,
In search of other prey.
Now a free country countenances
publishers who advocate callous·
ness toward women, licentiousness
as the prtmal urge, utter lnsouclanre and Irresponsibility for the
fate of ethers; the devil himself Is
free to publish In Alnertca.
But !) Is public sentiment free to
react. It violates no me's lights at
all to organize boycotts of any store
that traffics In matertal the effect of
wlich Is Ill encourage uncivilized
behavior. If a boycott were organIzed against bookstores that ·sold
books and magazines urging racial
tlscrlmlnation, preaching the utilIty of the l:iack man prtmarlly as a
m~ial, urging the vii'W that the
Jiiw Is genetically avaricious or
untrustworthy, one doubts that the
Arnertcan Civil Liberties Union
would object 11&gt; crganlzed boycotts
of such rutl!'ts.
The commission on pornography
In effect encourages such boycotts,
and tIE wonder is thatthe flrestorm
In the cultural press Is aimed not at
the philosophizers who preach the
kind of activity that results In
Illegitimacy. and broken homes
and Is governed by the priaplc
Imperative, but at lOOse who seek to
call public ·auentlon ID smut-for·
profit. The crttlcs join many
liberfar\ltDS In wondering how this
all becall)l' a federal question. the
answer to that is that the First
Amendml'nt Is Invoked lri the least
community, when efforts are made
Ill counteract the smut peddlers. If
the Supreme Coort Is going to
become Involved evecy time a
citizen objects to "1111' DeYH In Miss
Jones" being soown at the local
theater, then you are going to need
federal findings on pornography.
And, finally, It Is the feds who pay
ttl:&gt; rost- that cost that Is payable
- of wanton sex. The Aid to
Families Wlth Dependent Children
program costs about $15 billion per
year. And It will take any social
scientist about flvemlnutestoflnda
~orrelation between the birth of the
sexual revolution In Am1'11ca and
the multiple birth r1 the bastard In
Arrerica.

Confused

Senate~____;_J_ac_k_A_Ill_de_rs_o_n_&amp;_D_a_le_J!;_a_n_A_u_a

WASHINGTON - A billboard
industry bbbylst who claims to be
an pnvlronmentallst Is trying to
recruit state officials In tre ftght
against a Senate bill that would
toughen federal regulations of
billboards.
Supporters of the tougher bll·
!board rules belleve George F.
Mcinturff III is masquerading as
an environmentalist In an effort to
confuse slate officials about the
mertts of the blll.
Mclillurff sent out a letter on
June 2 to state highway officials,
warning the m about "extremely
restrictive and punitive prpvlslons"
of the Senate bill. It would deny
federal highway funds to states that
faU to remove non-conforming
billboards along federal roads.
"I suggest that you advise yrur
senators as 11&gt; your department's
t'ecommendatlons concerning this
bill," Mcinturff wrote. The letter

Identifies him only as a "ronsultant
on environmental affairs. "
Altlxlugh he admits to worldng
for billboard Interests, Mcinturff
assured our associate Stewart
Harris that his credentials as an
Pnvironmentallst are !lllld: He
belongs to five environmental
groups and lives m the Ches~eake
Bay. "I haver a mallard lll)fher oo
nine eggs wtderrny (Drch," he said .
Mcinturff also spent eight years
In charge of the Federal Highway
Administr a tion's controversial bD·
!board removal project, which has
not exactly denuded tiE landscape
of outdoor advertising.
Nowadays, Mcinturff Is better
kno~ for his work on behalf of the
litllxlard lndustfY. HI' descrtbes
himself as a "longtDme consultant
to too outD:lor advertising industry"
in a Jan, 13 memo advising Industry
lawyers how to challenge testimony
offered by University of Georgia

.

'

Proft&gt;ssor Dr. Charles F. Floyd.
Mcinturff described Floyd as "the
most active and vocal critic of the
rutdoor advertising Industry."
And, in a Feb. 19 report to
blllbo ard company exec utives,
chief Industry lobbyist Ver'!lon A.
Clark said Mcinturff devotes a
large part of his time "ID state and
local legislative issues where there
are also matters of great concern"
to the oo tdoor advertising Industry.
" Maybe I shouldn't call myself
an environmentalist," Mcinturff
conceded. "I dcn't know. Bltlt I think
I'm a much an envlronmetntallst as
anyone."
In an angry June 'l7 letter to
highway officials of all !:ll states,
Sen. Slade Gorton, R-Wash., author
of the billboard blll, defended the
legislation - which has the support
of environmental groups and
Transportation Secretary Eliza·
beth Dole- and added: "I would

Troubled waters

also like to set the record straight as
to Mr. Mcinturff's Identity .... Mr.
Mcinturff does not represent the
views of the environmental
community."
Sens. Steve Sfmms, R·ldaho, and
Quentin BID'dick, 0-N.D, have put
an Informal "hold" on Gorton's bill.
Both have collected modest cam·
palgn contributions from the Indus·
try, and Symms was paid $2,ll!Oior
a speech to Gannett billboard
executives.
'
In addition to rewarding Its
friends, the billboard Industry tries
to jllnlsh Its enemies. Gorton's
challenger this fall, Democrat
Brock Adams, transportation secretary In the Carter administration, received $6,100 In blllboard
donations In the ftrst three months
of this year, Including $5,101 from
biiiiDard baron Barry Ackerley of
Seattle, and his associates.

Robert Walters

Safety board's crash report draws airline, pilot.criticism
By ELIOT BRENNER
could be blamed on limited pilot
WASHINGTON (UP)) - A training and a lack ot weather data
federal safety board's decision to to warn the .crew it could risk facing
the dangerous wind shear that
pin Delta Air Lines with much of the
blame for last year's jumbo jet slammed into the plane.
In a response ready even as thl'
crash in Dallas was decried by
board
was adopting its decision,
company executives woo Insisted ·
the crew "did everything numanly Delta termed the report "lncom·
posslbll'."
plete, inaccurate and most paln·
The National Transportation fully flawed ."
"Delta Is shocked and dismayed
Safety Board wrestled for oours
Tuesday with a staff report on what at the board's misunderslanding
caused the crash of Delta Flight 191 and misinterpretation of the facts
before concluding a crucial factor surrounding the accident," said
was the crew's decision to tljl spokesman Hollis Harris. "(The
crew) did everything humanly
landing in a deadly storm.
The board also said the deaths of possible to save their aircraft and
137 people in the Aug. 2 disast er passengers."

law, has a mandate 10 propose a off Port Angeles en rout€' to Arco's
comprehensive management plan Cherry Point refinery at the
lbr the sound by the end otthis year. mrthern end of the sound near
This difficult task Is complicated by Bellingham. A spill of almost
the fact that jul1sdlction over the 240,1ll0 gallons of crude ()11 caused
body of water, which sprawls extensive environmental damage.
across 2,670 !l)uare miles, Is shared
Mercury, lead, zinc, mpper and
by hundreds of lederal, state and other toxic heavy metals have been
local government agencies.
found In the sound's sediment. Also
These Include 12 countrtes, 100 (resent ar!' dozens of hazardous'
cities and 14 tribal governments as
well as six federal and five state
agencies. In addition, there are
srores ~ spectallzed parks and
recreation, soU and water conservation, · port, sewer, drainage and
flood control districts.
Neither that llst nor thl' current
cleanup Efforts Includes Canada,
which shares tiE sound with the
United States. Thus, Vlctorta,
Bntlsh Columbia, continues to
dump raw, untreated municipal
sewage directly Into the sound.
Of the ,approximately 100 munlci·
palltles In Washington that dis·
char!J! their municipal wastewater
Into the sound, more than two dozen
still rely upon relatively primitive
prtmary treatment rather than '
more etl!'ctlve seconda·ry
treetment.
More than ooe-thlrd o! all hOmes
In tile region - principally thole 1n
rurlll areas at·the DJI1hern end of
too 900IId - dispose o! waste.water
In septic tanks, thus conta~atlng
the ~roondwater that seeps Into the
sound.
There are other problems. "High ,
levels of p&gt;lychlorlnated biphenyls
or PCBs, ·have been found In the
soond's harbJr seals. Cancerous
liver tumors have appeared In
llounder and 110le cauallt In the
sound's urbanized areas.
Late last year, the hull r1 the oil
tanker Arco Anchorage war''---~------­
~erred when the ship went qrOutxl
•

compounds, raging from arsenic
and cadmium to benzine and
naphthalene.
One ci the nation's most valuabll'
natural resources Is In trciuble. The
time has come, notes the Puget
&amp;lund Water Quality Authortty, "to
correct problems before It's too
late, before costs become too high
and damages are too great."

Harris said air traffic controllers
and forecasters should have
warned crew members of the storm
invisible to them. He added that
Delta has "assiduously followed
and complied with evecy wind
shear training strategem approved
by the (government) and utilized
within the aviation industry. "
The Air Line Pilots Association
also criticized the NTSB report,
maintaining "the actual cause was
the failure or inablllty of the system
to provide pilots with timely,
accurate Information on hazardous
weather conditions."
Flight 191, a Lockheed L-1011

GAO says secret project material
WASHINGTOi'! tUPIJ - As
many as 800 Lockheed Corp.
records relating to U.S. weapons
programs - so secret their cost Is
kept from Congress -are missing
or have be&lt;on falsified, congressional investigators say.
ThP General Accou~t ing Office
has confirmed allegations by two

Lockheed employees that several
hundred documents are missing
from the defense contractor's
facility In Burbank Calif., staff
aides on a House panel said
Thesday .
The missing mater ial inclurles
blueprints, fiims. and photographs
related to Lockheed's work on

Seven persons cited to Meigs
County Court Monday for hearings
on a charge of violating Ohio's new
sea t belt law did not to face those
hearings.
They took th~ alt!'rnatiw of
attending the seat belt safety school
which was conducted for the fir st
time Saturday at the quarters of the
Meigs County Board of Education
in Pomeroy Village Hall.
All first timeoffenci'rs caQattend
the approximately 45-minute
school, held every two weeks,
rather than be fined as violators of
the new taw. Howt'Ver. tre school
can be used as an "'out." one time
onlv.
Twenty-six cast:'S were processf'd
during Monday's county court
session conducted~ Judge Patrick
O'Brien.
Forfeiting oonds. ai l posted on
speeding charges, were Mark
Bryan, Gallipolis, :i&gt;'Xl; Larry Cline.
Canton, $00; William E. Smith Jr ..
Newark. $43; Gilbert Tabler,
Athens: Larry Baber, Plymouth,
Mich., $00: Lonny Rosen, Colum-

Baxter, Pom!'roy, $21 and costs:
Shari Ston~. Marietta, m and
costs; Charlotte HarbPr, Praetorville, $21 and costs: .Jay Sesecker,
Bluffton, $al and costs: Norman
Smith, lndianpolis, Ind .. $22 and
costs, a nd Brian Kuk&gt;n. Union
Lake, Mich., $21 and msts.
Ottx'r cases included Harold E.
Hysell. Pom·eroy, driving while
intoxicated , $llO and costs, 30 days
in jail , license susiJ('nded six
months ; driving while under susprnsion, $100 and costs, 30 days in
jail, and lefl of center, costs only;
Kevin Griggs. Rl'!'dsville, expired
registration, $10 and costs: Keith
Abels, Ravenswood , W.Va .. fa ilure
to control, $aJ and costs: Ann
Collins. Cheshire, following too
closely , $10 and costs: Greg
.Johnson. Racine. assault. six
months in jail. suspended ali but
seven days: one year probation:
refrain from complainant.

bound for Los Ao!J!les !rom Fort
LauderdalE', Fla., with a stop at
Dallas-Fort Worth International
Airport, crashed 6,:1Xl feet short r1 a
Dallas runway.
· The death toll included the drivl'r
of a car hit by the plane. Twenty-six
passengers and three flight attend·
ants survived.
The N'ISB rejected a conclusion
that would have placed sole blame
.on the wind shear phenomenon the sudden and violent chan!J! In
wind speed and direction asso·
elated with thunderstorms that
fatally affected the aircraft's
handling.
But the tnvesttgatbn sho~ that

•
• •
IS ffilSSIDg

"black programs" - weapons
projects so secret their co~t is kept
from Congress, the aides said.
Earlier this year, two Lockheed
rorporatelnvestlgators, ex(X"esslng
concerns about nati&gt;nal security,
told the House Energy and Corn·
mere!' subcommittee oo investlga ·
lions and oversight that internal

Seven attend seat belt class

company audits sho~ up to 800
oocuments could not be found or
had been tampered with.
The subcommittee has scheduled
a July 24 hearing, where it will
question Lockheed Chairman Law·
renee Kitchen and Donald Hicks,
undersecretary for defense research and ·engineering, about the
oocuments:

crash data for the 11rst time
oo&amp;!mented a long-suspec ted
danger- vortices at the ruter edgl'
r1 the storm known as a microburst
swirling up, over and mwn like a
breaking wave.
The final conclusion slxlwed the
aircraft first hit an increasing
headwind, boosting its Indicated
speed, then slammed Into a strong
downdraft before bucking under a
strong tailwind thai saw Its lndi·
cated speed drop sharply - ~
almost 00 knots.
Just as the plane was stablillzed
and there was hope of recovery, it
hit the vortices and smashed to the
ground.
The NTSB, an Independent organization that makes safety recommendations but has no autlxlr·
ity to order toom efl€Cted,
recommended Improvements in
systems designed to get severe
weather data to pilots.
It also recommended that Na·
tiona! Weather Service radar
screens, at offices with aviation
weather warning responsibilities,
are marked with airport sites.
Evidence indicated the storm reD
that downed Flight 191 appeared
several minutes before the crash on

a Wl'ather service radar elseWhe(e
in Texas, and word about It was
relayed to a forecast office at the
airport.
But forecasters decided the
storm's intensity at .that point, two
minutes before the cras h, was not
sufficient 10 issue a warning·.
A Federal Aviation Administration weather radar specialist else·
where was on a dinner break and
did not see the storm cell, but said:
he woold have issued a warning had :
he been at his positi:m.
The board noted that pilots who
landed before the doomed flight
saw tunnel clouds and lightning but ·
did not warn tlr tower, andth wind
shear alert system at the airport did .
not trigger untO 10 minutes after the ·
crash.
·

REMEMBER
WITH ToFLOWERS
send a beaullfullv
fL-11i~ed

fuiM"ral ·

atran@:emt"nl, ju Ill call

or vi•il

POMEROY
FLOWER
SHOP ·
• ,.,.,. """ tm.. rinl ."ironrl. r....... •

iscover t e

bu s,$~ .

Fined on spe'ding charges were
Herman Lambert , Chesa'peake. $21
and cost!\; Donald Maxson 11,
Rl'!'dsville. $21 and costs; Timothy
R. Kenton, Pickerington, $23 and
costs: Raymond I. Bolyard , Scott
Depot. W.V a .. $22 and costs;
Franklin J . Adkins .. Chesap&lt;'ake,
$21 and costs: Kenneth L. Young. ·
Parkersburg, W.Va ., $:!3 and costs:
David J. Koblentz. Pomeroy, $26
and costs: David Sigman. Middle
port, $21 and costs: Ronald Raffan.
Gallipolis. $23 and rosts; Anna

The Daily Sentinel
(liSPS IU-9litli
A Dlvbdon of Multimedia, Inc .

OJ 1 JACKSON PIKE · RT. 3&amp; WEST
l'tlone 446· 4524

BARGAIN MAT INEES SAT - SUN &amp;
W
EDNESDAY - All SEATS $2 .50
ADM ISSIO N EVERY TUESDAY $2 .50

Published f'VC'f V aftrrnoon. Monday
through FridaY. 111 Court St.. Pomeroy. Ohio. by the Ohio Va ll ry Pub-

lish in~': Company tMultlmr'(Ua. In c .•
PomNoy. Ohio 45769. Ph . 992·2156. SC'·
cond class posta~C' paid a! Pomer oy,
Oh io.
Mt"mber: Unllrd PrPss lm crn utl onal.

Inland Dall y P rf'Ss AssQ(' Iation and \h('

Ohio Nf'w spapc'r Assoclallon . National
Ad vPr llslnR Rf'pr£&gt;Sentatlvr, Branha m
Nrw~papN SaiPS. 7.1.1 Third Av&lt;'nu£',
Nr w York . New y o rk 1001 7
POSTMASTER : Send address ch a n~Ni
to The Oail\' Senlln r l. Ill Court SL,
Po mE' roy, Oh.lo 45700

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By "Carri er or Motor Rout('
Onr WN.'k ........... ..... .. ...... ...... ..... $1 .10
Onr Mon 1h . .
. ... .. .. .. ... ....... •$:1.1(1
Onr Year ...... ............... .......... SS7.20

·--------------------------~~~~==~

ANACORTES, Wash. (NEAl Puget Sound sparkles In the
summer sun as tt swirls about the
spectacularly beautiful San Juan
Islands- but beneath the surface.
the sound Is a profoundly troubled
body of water.
Several times In recent years,
health officials have temporarUy
closed highly productive shellflst
harvest areas near Olympia at the
!llund's southern end because of
bacterial pollution.
One of the sound's major baysCommenrement Bay bordering
Tacoma - Is so contaminate:! that
It has been deClare:! a hazaroous
waste site eligible for high -(X"Iority
clean-up financing under tre fed.
era! "Superfund" program.
Toxic "hot spots" and canrerous
fish have been lbund In ether urban
embayments - Including Elliott
Bay adjacent ID Seattle, the largest
ctty on the sound.
More than 00 perrent of the
sound's original wetlands have
been ftlled, drained, developed or
otherwise Irrevocably altere:! or
lost &lt;!!Iring decades of lntmse
development.
'Thase problem; are of more than
local interest, because Puget Sound
oo the West Coast and Olesapeake
Bay oo the East Coast are the
nation's two leading estuarine
ecosystems. They provide !J"O·
tected harbors, commercial ftsher·
les, recreation and a host of ether
benefits to the millions of peope
who Uve along their shores.
"The sound Is not In a crisis arid
It's not dying," says Katherine
Fletcher, wiD chairs the Plt!J!t
Sound Water Quality AutiDrttY,
"But we have a lot t1 problems that
warrant prompt attmtlon."
The authority, a seven-member
panel created a year ago by a state

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

SINGL E COI'V
PRICE

....... .. 25 Crnt s

Dall.v .....

• · .74-Pack lvorv soap

d C's lrln~ to pa y thf'car rlf'f mav rf' mlt in advan('(' dlr('('l to
ThP Da iiv S!'nlin&lt;&gt;l on a 3. l.i or 12 month
basis. Cr.edl! wlll tx&gt; ~ lvl'n &lt;'arrler each

SuDser lb('rs not

Stock up·and save ott personal size :f.s-oz. bars.

Wl'C'k .

·Glass
~rks
Trigger spray ole#lns counter tops.

.,

appliances and more. 22 oz.

:--Jo s ~bscrlptlons by mall prrmllll'd In

arras whrrr hamf' carr ll'r w rvicf' Is
availabl e.

Mall SuhMCrlpUon s
IMide Meigs County
13 We('kS
. .: ..... .. .. j ............. $14.56
26 WN'kS ... .................. ······· ··· · S29.12
52 W&lt;'&lt;'kS .
....... . ........... $58.24
Outside M el~ County
13 W&lt;'&lt;'kS . . ..
.. .............. $18.20
·2ti w...ks .. . . .
... Slo. IO
52 WN'kS .
. ...... .. ........... $67.60

.SPECIAL WEDNESDAY

MATINIU
THIS SUMMER I

3·Pieq, Mixing

-'

' '

\

Bawl Set

ROYAL· OAK
RESORT CLUB

"'

$5

1..Quart, 1'12-quart BIJd?'h-~rt Pyrex®
mixing boWf« fie rall:r ChtJCks. At feast 12

per afcw. ·REG. &amp;99

PRESINTS

LIVE COUNTRY MUSIC BY

GARY
LINK
FROM FORT MYERS, FLA.
\

Friday, July 18, 8·-12· P.M..
S6.00 PERSON-57 .50 AT DOOI .

.

OFF OF STATE lOUIE 7 OUTSIDE OF POMEROY
'

FISHING, CAMPING &amp; SWIMMING AREA ·
,

........___________....________
PRICES EFFECTIVE
THRU

•

SATURDAY, JULY 19
Management
rullll(Vfls the
right to limit
quantities

I

.,

'

..

•''

.'
~

....,.__...

,~.

~~~~t¢1=-:! ;

For a·Better Bra.nd of Savings

. OPEN FOR SUMMER
992-7111

41300 LAUREL CLIFF ROAD

I

..

'"

.., •

' ,.
/'

'

�_.,..

....."

v+c_.
_
__......
--~~-

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

''

......... _. ._..

Wednesday, July 16, 1986

Page- 4- The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 6

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

BRING YOUR CHAIR

BRING YOUR CHAIR

'ON THE POMEROY PARKING LOT"

THE 1986. OHIO UNIVERSITY COMMUNIYERSITY BAND "
ftti£ ·
RSDA·Y JULY .17·, 1986 · . 7:00 P.M.
11Et
·-· ALL DAY
THURSDAY

SALE DA Y.S ARE HERE!

CO"CfRT SA~INOS

w/IACII-HOLDS 7 Ql. JUS

30°/o OFF

GROUP OF MEN'S SHOES

BESPAC

LADIES SHOES

THURSDiyI JULy 1 7TH

$750

--

\}::::,,.:.::-::

$10

s150

10 ONE PINTS
8 HAlF PINTS
6-0NI QUARTS

3-LB.

PAIR

Midd

HARTLEY SHOES

ho

~~:~a~:~

MAn C. VAN VIANIIEN
OWNER

THE OLD SHOE STOR E WITH THE NEW LOOK

DECORAnYE
GLASSES

CAN

* ssoo *

MARGUERITE
SHOES
"The
Ia S a Store In

PKG.
YOUI CHOICE

Coffee ·

* 1/2 PRICE •r·
1 RACK WOMEN'S SHOES

GROUP OF

FREEZER CONTAINERS

MAXWELL HOUSE

YOUR
INDEPENDENTLY
OWNED, LOW
PRICED, CUSTOMER
SERVICE
SUPERMARKET.

COMPI.E11 STOCILADIS •

* 1/2 PRICE*

QTS.

•ADC •REG. •DRIP •ELECT. PERK

30°/o SAVINGS

GORUP OF WOMEN'S SHOES

SPORT SANDALS

21 111

•Weekly Specials
•Money Saver Items
•Everyday low Prices
•USDA Choice Meats
•Tender Fresh Produce
oWe Welcome Federal
Food Stamps and WIC ·
•We Sell Money Orders

THURSDAY, JULY 17
S P.M. TIL 7 P.M. ONLY

5 P.Al•7 P.M. ONLY

GRANITE
CANNER

Summer Clearance

210 EAST MAIN

POMEROY

4PlCI

12 01. lEG. 12.00
16 01. lEG. 12.50

SOC
OFF PEl PACII

NOW

(
Nectarines 69 Potatoes

JUICY

OHicf (;ROWN
NEW WHITE

LB.

10 LB. BAG

FABERGE

FRESH CRISP

$199 ~~:.uce

Ho.

2 HOUR

ORGANIC

S9(

15

UPTON

SII.
BAG

$115

TEA
BAGS

8

oz.

if

SHAMPOO 01 CONDinONER

~r.'$278

THUR . 4- 9 P.M ONLY

-STOREWIDESAVE

.

EVENIN~

CONCERT
~-:-./-~· ~
SPECIALS

TREND

DETERGENT

- THURSDAY, JULY 17th

42 01.

~

$100

S:00 -7:00

~

FREE TO FIRST 50 CUSTOMERS A
SHOPPING BAG &amp; PA1TERN

2 HOURS ONLY
THURSDAY, JULY 17TH
5:00 P.M. TO 7 P.M.

LEADING LADY

BATH TISSUE
4 ROLL PACK

MARTHA WHill

FLOUR

BONELESS

ROUND
STEAK

'

~--------"'\ :.~· 98(
•REG. •UNSCENTED

' $188

•DIET RITE •CHERRY R.C.
f.C:W:w..J.:t'-t1 •BARQ'S ROOT BEER •RC

Tide Detergent ·

R.C. COLA

~

STORE HOURS
MON. til SAT. 9 A.M. til 9 P.M.
SUNDAY
12 NOON nL 6 P.M.
PH. 992-3586

DOLLAR
GENERAL
STORE
202 E. MAIN

Plus
Deposit

oz.
ans.
COUNTRY

. STYLE PORK

SPARE RIBS-

.:~~- $188

3 oz.
CANS

3 88&lt;

98&lt;

. REG. 1119.00 NOW

CATCH ALL
ORGANIZER

$ S999

aiR

.· ····· -&lt;-·
A

L£R

~

},

601.
Pou,hn

GAL.

68(

SLAB
BACON

DOG
FOOD

$158

$288 .

Steaks or Roast
LB.

$188
KAHN'
S
'

Hot ·Dogs
..
'
'

- ::... $ 138

. '--------~

:

11

'/2 PRICE

TRAIILAZER

SLICED

Saltines

68 (

~~xoz.

Bounty Towels

~~T:o

NESCAFE INSTANT

Mountain Blend .

7ac

LONG LAmNG

RID FUA

COLLAR1

SHAMPOO

EA.

JAI

$398

oPricet Effective Wed .. JulY 16 thru Sat.-. July 19, 1988
•

$349

Ill.

FLEA &amp;TICK

DIP

.POWDER

UCH$149

(lN ••

992-2054

.

The 1986 Ohio
Communiversity ·
Band Concert
7 P.M. In The
Parking lot

XL (46-48). Short sleew styles,
excellent selection of styles and
colors.

Reg,

16.95

119.95 .

to
YOUR CHOICE

Many styles and lense shades
to choose from .
Sun sensor lenses. polari zed
lenses.

"S to 7" Special

/2

·1 PRICE

PLAYTEX

$259

MEN'S .&amp; WOMEN'S

SUNGLASSES
KNIT
SHIRTS
S (34-36), M (38-40), L (42-44),

ENTIRE STO(II

1/2

PRICE

LIVING ROOM

SUITES

20°/o OFF SALE

Special group of sofa.s.
chairs and loveseats.

Stock up now on vour favorite
Playtn products!
·

"S to 7" Speelal

Special bonus: FREE Dinskin Camisole with any
Playtex purchaSe.

50°/o

Willi TillY UST All~:amisolu lrt ladits' size L
Only ant per custo111r.

FUA &amp; TICK SPRAY
MP

5 to 7 SAUl
MEN'S

TIIURSD~~

BUY 2 PAIRS, AND GO
AN EXTRA 20%
DJSCOUNT OFF THE
LOWER PRICED PAIR

$3 79

FLEA &amp;TICK

Coffee
IOZ.

POMEROY, OH.

992-2294

SHOES

fOODLAND

113 COURT ST.

(6/Jih~

115West
Second St.
Pomeroy

ALL SALE

USDA CHOICE BONELESS
ENGLISH SHOULDER

..

WE HAVE ADDED YA.RDS &amp; YARDS
OF FABRIC TO OUR 1/2 PRICE TABLE

Q: .

30°/o OFF

·EVERYTHING .IN STOCK

REG.III ,9S NOW$895

ONLY31NSTOCK

THURSDAY, JULY 17th, .5 P.M. to 7 P.M.
FOOD, FUN AND SUPER SAVINGS
COME AND 51 AY THE ENTIRE EVENING

BLEACH

CORNBII£AD IWX

POnED MEAT

FOLDIN(i
SEWING TABI,J

CONCERT DAYS SALE

HOMEBEST

cono11 PICIIII'

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42 oz.
BOX

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16

POMEROY

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OFF

LADIES'

PANtY SALE
Our entire stock is reduced tor
tllis speciai " Sto T' sales ewnt .
Elastic leg briefs. hiphuggers. bi·
kini s. bandlegs and sport pa nties.

Sizes 4 to 10.
Reg. li.SQto 14.50

Sale Priced

$119 $359
to

Thrt4ay "5 to 7" Sale!
CANNON ROYAL FAMILY

BATH TOWELS
Fine quality - floral
pattern - $5.99 bath
towels. $3.99 matching
hand towels.
$2,49 wash cloths.

YOUR CHOICE

1/2

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$298 . AIIOS!a$349
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Wednesday, July 16, 1986

Ohio

The
'

MIDDUPORT, OHIO
PHONE 992-2635

ANY
..
We Resern The Riaht To
Limit Quantitl's

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

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GOOD
NOW THRU
MONTH OF

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, JULY 19, 1986

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R. C. C0 LA ...... 10¢
COME HAVE LUNCH
OR DINNER WITH US
AT 1940 PRICES'

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$ 99
Round Steak •••••·••. 1
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$ 39
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�Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

FBI foils
•

convicts' try
to flee Pa.
•
•
penitentiary

L-----------

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) - A prison yard and then shooting out
reputed mobster and a fellow the guard towers with grenades and
convict waited In the yard of a machine guns.
..
federal prison for the helicopter
Agents, tipped ri.f'by a helicopter
that would lift them to freedom, but · supply company, went ahead with ·
when the copter came, It carried the part of the plan calling for the
FBI agents who lolled the escape swoop Into the prison to determine
attempt.
who was supposed to escape wjth
The FBI Tuesday arrested four Stephen Vento Sr., 44, the repuied
other men for their part In the plot organized crime figure whosesoo Is
to spring the two prisoners from.the charged with helping arrang~? the
U.S. Penitentiary In Lewisburg, escape attempt.
Pa., by landing a heliCOpter painted
As the helicopter hovered :aJ feet
with state pollee markings In the above the IJ'isOn yard at 11:45 a.m.

Wednesday, July 16, 1986

EIYI', Vento, a convictEd drug
dealer, and Noah Vanre, 42, a
convicted bank robber, ripped off
their Prison uniforms TO reveal
shirts stained red with cranberry
juice to enable their woold-be
rescuers to recognize them.
Guards grabbed the men as the
helicopter pulled up and Dew away.
The FBI actkln mar~ the
second time this month tt foiled a
plot to tree a convict In a rellcopter.
On July 3, the Fm quashed a plan to
Oy In to the federal prison at

Leavenworth, Kan ., and tree reputed FALN leader Oscar Lopez.
On Dec. 19, a woman · rented a
heUcopter, forced the pilot at
gunpoint to land Inside the Perry
Correctional Institute near Pelzer.
S.C., and earned away three
prisoners. All four were captured
four days Iaiii'!'.
Agents said Tuesday's plan was
hatched by James Dld!erson r1
Rochester, N.Y., a "self-styled
mercenary who advertises In the
Soldier of Fortune magazine."

Wednesday, .luly 16, 1986

Tum 1 lcAnh11r
Loser l
Wi!WIII 4

G.ome4

G.oiM7

Winner 7

loser 2

l

Tum 2 Athens

Loser J

G.o•el

WiMer 8

I ' Go..,!

Winn11 2
Winntr 9

G.omo!

Te1m 5 I.Jncasttr
Game l

Winner 3

'lo

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loser 3

- G•me I

~~"2-~. .!~.!~~~~~.

WiiVIII 5

Game 5

Tum 4 Wellston

Loser S

Game 10

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lostr 6
Winner 10

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Gomol

Go .. &amp;

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loser 9

Winner 6

C1me 12

Tum 1
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Winner II

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Winner 12

G1me 13

f-

(if needed)

lose1 12

Frtd11~ .

G;Jml' 1- :'i:

ALL WEEK

ons

COPYR IGHT 19116 THE KROGER CO IT EMS ANO PAtCfS GOOD S UNDA Y JUlV 13 THROUGH
SATUROAV J ULY 19. 1!186 IN CAlUPOt.IS &amp; PQIWWY
WE RESER \IE THf RIGHT TO LIMI T OUANTITI(S NOlliE SOlD TO DEAlE AS
IOVfRTISHI tUM roi.ICY
E1ch o f thMlr il!l w ~rt•sed r!ems '' reQulfed lo be rud~~ a~aolab~ +or u1e ,,.. eac h IO..rog pr SIO'f
e• cep1u lPtC•hcallv n01&amp;d rn 1h" ao If we Cia run o ul ol an adwtM•std •! em w f! w1ll off er ,nu
~ OY • c hooce ol a co ml)lrill:l te rlttn when a wa rlltlle rf!llec ung lh ~ 'l.ilml'l ""v 'nlis o&lt; ~ r&lt;Jrn( hec~
whiCh w• l tnlll ll! vo u 10 pur chn e The Ad 11e rt'sed o U~m ft 1~ i 0vef1o~ed pnce w•lh•n 30 Il l~ ~
'&lt;{)n~ 01&gt;1! veoao&lt; coupon wolf be eccs pted per •lem purchnl!d

Gamr 12- !\: :KliJ.m .-Traulll' rin F'il'ld
Thuntby, July 24
Ga me 13-!'\: :Kl p.m.- T rautwrin F'lr ld 1lf O('('t:irdl

Sund:.a)', -Jul:r tO

This week your manufacturered products "cents off" coup~ns are
wonh double at Kroger with $10 .00 or more purchase. Limited to
manufactured products coupons wonh up to and including SOC
Off . Coupons wonh more than 50C are redeemed at face value
only . Limit one coupon for each product purchased. Limit one
coffee coupon. No beer. w1ne or cigarette coupons will be double .
Not valid on free coupons, Kroger coupons or retail food store
coupons. The amount refunded cannot exceed the price of the
item . You must purchase product 1n SIZes specified on the r.oupon.
This offer applies only to manufactured products "cents off"
coupons for items we carry. To assure product availability for all
our customers. only one coupon per shopping family , will be
doubled on any brand item during each store visit.

Kroger
Pork &amp; Beans . .

Mondlly, .July :tl
Ga m(' 11- ~ : .'1.1 p.m .- Trautwr ln F'll'ld
WdnHdit.)' , July ::3

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F'it'ld
{~ ffi( ' 1-:i: :\fl p. m.-'&gt;hai N Sl. Firl d
Suturd~toy, ,July 1!1
C;Jmf' :1- 11 : UO &gt; J.ffi .~ T r auTwl.'t n Fl&lt;'ld
I ;arnf' 4-ll · f(l ;1.m . ~ Shaf&lt;&gt;r St . F' ldd
1;.-m r ~- 1: Oil p. m.-Tr auTIIl'ln F'l r ld
(;amr +i- :\: uo p. m.- ShJfr r St. F"lrld

WITH $10.00 PURCHASE

Manufacturer's

,Jul,v

~ p . m . -Tr J Utll·~ ~n

(;amc&gt; i - l l : ro ;1 .m.- Traut11·1'1n Flrld
r;amf' K- 11 · 00 &lt;l .m .-S hafC&gt;r Sl F lr ld
Camr ~- : \ : 00 p.m.-Trau Twl'in Flrld
Caml' 10- .1: IWI p.m.-Sh af f'r S1. F'idd

Meigs• Legion to play winner
of Logan-I ancaster encounter
ATHENS - Looking for their
first district championship In 15
years, Meigs' American Legton
baseball team plays lhe LoganLancaster winner Salfurday at 3
p.m. on the Shaffer Street field In
the 1986 Eighth District American
Legion tournament.
Meigs drew a firsl round bye
among the tourney's seven teams
and automatically advanced to
second round action In the doubleelimination affair.
In other first round games,
McArthur plays Athens and Glousler takes on Wellston Friday while
Lancaster and Logan square olf
Saturday morning.

The Daily Sentinai-Page-9

AL All-Stars end hex

1986 EIGHTH DISTRICT AMERICAN LEGION TOURNAMENT

The FBI said Dickerson, 43, and
twd others were hired for SOO.OOO by

Vento's son. Steven Jr.. who was
free oo bail oo a murder charge In
Camden, N.J.
'
The elder Vento. a reputed
associate of the Nlcodemo "Little
Nicky" Scarfo organized crime
family In Philadelphia, Is serving 18
years for selling methamphetamine, or ''speed."
Vanre, of Mount Verrnn, Ohio, Is
sl'f'Vlng 63 years for armed bank
robbery.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Lancaster has won the tourna- with tre championship game schement eight straight years, last duled for Wednesday at 5:30. If a
losing In the Onals TO Logan In 19'77. second title game Is needed, It will
Meigs won the tourney In 1971. be Thursday at 5:30.
Winner of the district advances to
Last year, Meigs narrowly
the state tourney. also held In missed dethroning Lancaster as
Athens.
Meigs handed the always-strong
Southern righthander Dave Am· Fairfield Countalns a 3-2 k&gt;ss In the
bergey Is expected to get the call first round. Lancaster battled Its'
way through the loser's bracket and
Saturday for the 13-13 Meigs club.
With a win Saturday, Meigs Meigs oontlnued on capture the
would play Ihe at 3 p.m. Sunday but winner's bracket finals with wins
a loss In their.openlng game wauld over Athens and Logan.
pit them In the loser's bracket In an
The finals were a different story,
11 a.m. Sunday game.
however. as Lancaster defeated
After 10 weekend games, the Meigs 14-8 and 17-0 to nail down
tourney's loser's bracket winner another title.
will be decided Monday at 5:30p.m.

UPI Sports Writer
HOUSTON (UP!) -Alter a few
fluttering moments when It looked
like they would catch nothing at all,
American Leaguers finally caught
a break.
The Americans beat the Nationals 3-2 Tuesday night - but only
after a late comeback efforl by the
NL fell a ball- swing short.
Frank White lurned rookie Chris
Brown 's checked-swing grounder
Into a game-e~dlng double play
with runners on first and third and
one out
Power hitting by second basemen
I.ou'whltakerandWhltepluspower
pitching from Rog~?r Clemens and
Ted Higuera gave the AL only Its
second win In the last 15 games of
the series.
The NL pulled close with two runs
in the eighth when Rich Gedman
experienced the first nasty
knucklersofhislife-allthrownby
veteran Charlie Hough.
The rally was vaguely remlniscent of Ire one that cost Hough a
no-hitter and a victory over CalllornJa- when the knuckleball pitcher
lost a one- hltlerbecausehefalledto
cover the plate on a wild pitch.
Hough threw a wild pitch. balked,
Gedman had a passed ball and the
NL came up wllh rwo runs even
though three straight batters struck
out.
"I thought Gedman did a heckuva job," Hough said. "He walked
Into an AU-Star game cold. had to

brought with me !rom Texas.
"The balls hit the glove," Hough
said, "and they just popped out.
You wouldn't take Cal Rlpken, give
him my glove to take out to
shortstop and say. 'Here. catch lhe
ball."'
Gedman wasn't convinced.
"You're here because you're an
All-Star," he said, "and here you
are missing aU those balls.
Wouldn't you be embarrassed•
"I worked with him before the
game," he said, "but tbat was
nothing. In the game, those
knucklers were nasty. Hough said.
'II you calch me a couple more
times, you'D never miss a ball.' He
didn 't have to say that. He could
have said I was awful."
Brown drilled one of Hough's less
nasty knuckleballs one-hop to Ihe
walllnleftcentertostarttheelghth
with the NL lralllng 3-0. He took
thlrdwhenChillDavisslruckouton
a wild pitch and was thrown out at
flrsl.
Brown scored while Hubie
Brooks was striking oul on a passed
ball by Gedman, sliding around a
tag try by Hough- who dlvk&gt;usly
learned a lesson !rom the California
loss.
A balk moved Brooks. who had
reached base when Gedman
elected to go ID the jjate Instead of
first on the passed ball, to second.
He scored foOowing a strikeout on a
sharp single to left center by Steve
Sax.

knuckleball pitcher," NL catcher
Joey Davis said after watching
Gedman's problems. "and I'm glad
I haven't. I feel br htrn- rut I'm
gloo 1 don't have to do k."
Gary Carter of the New York
Mets had rn such experience but he
also sympathized.
"You're datn rlghll have a lot d
sympatby lor him," said Carter,
who called the hanglrig 0.2 curveball Whitaker hit for a rwo-nm
home run following Dave Winfield's
two-rut double In the second.
"That's one of the tooghest things
for a catcher to do, catch a·
knuckleball pitcher. when yoo've
never done It before," Carter said.
"He was battling.
"I was talking to (fo!Tllel'
catcher) Mike .Roarke and (Los
Angeles manager Tom) Lasorda ~
the du!Jlut," Carter said. "Thfiy
were saying how dllflcult tt is. Y&lt;lil
have to snatch at it. And that jllst
comes from learning and
experienll'.
"I don't know how to and I hopei
don't have to," he said.
Dave Righetti got the final out of
the eighth- but only after Sax stde
second. Righetti forced Glenn
Davis to foul to third. The break
was the first big one the AL has
caught In an All .Star Game In some
time.
The second AL break came when

White turned Brown's half-hearted
swing into a double play.

Junior circuit finally
came up with big play

16-oz.

The NL was most impressed with
MVP Roger Clemens of Boston.
HOUSTON (UPll-FromRoger who retired all nine batters he faced
to starl the game, throwing 21
Clemens' stroilg slart to the
down-to-the-wire finish, the Ameri- slrlkes in 25 pitches.
"He's everything they say he is,"
can League finally camP up wlth
New
York Mets outfielder Darryl
the big play In the big spots of an
Strawberry said.
All-Star Game.
Clemens. pitching before a homeTwenty six years afte1· Its last
town crowd. said the victory was
previous one-run vlclory, theArner·
leans used a game- eq~g dOuble especially big, coming In a National
·
..
play with the. !Y.!Oi' l;ill),Qlll third lo League park.
"Today, coming out to tlie
seal a 3-2 triuifipti 'l'uEsdily night. ·
Not since a 4-3 victory In 1958 had Astrodome, I got all the adrenalln
the Americans captured' a OlJ!!-run flowing," saJd Clemens, who struck
decision. In the meantbme, the out two. " It really worked out well
Na Ilona! League had wo'n 11 of with (ratchen Lance !Parrish 1. He
was working my fastball In and out
them.
"In a close game, evPrytlhing you real well."
Clemens was not all the AL bad lo
look back at will make u differoffer. Mllwauke&lt;-'s Teddy Higuera
ence. " said Houston's MikE' Scolt.
The AL' s young ftreballers and aJiowed only rwo baserunners In the
long-ball offense generate.l a 3-0 middle three Innings and, by lhe
lead before a veteran bullpen time Texas knuckleballer Charlie
Hough took over In the sevenlh, the
sweated oul four outs.
"They did what they had to do," AL held a 3-0 lead.
Detroll's Lou Whitaker pul the
San Diego's Tony Gwynnsaidofthe
AL up 2-0wlth a second-Inning blast
AL . ·'I was Impressed with their
pitching, all of II. That's lhe kind to rlghl off New York starter
Dwight Gooden.
lhat wins ~~:ames."
Los Angeles lefty Fernando
,Valenzuela pitched the mlddle
three Innings for the NL, striking
out five In a row to lie an All .Star
game record. Scott took over tn·the
seventh. struck out the first two
batters he laced and had an 0.2
count on Whitaker's replacement,
Frank Whited Kansas City.
Scott threw a fastball down the
middle that White liftell over the
left -c1m1er Deld fence lor a 3-0 lead.
"It has been a fantasy camp this
year," he said. "Coming home and
pllchlng like this In the AU-star
Game wllh ll\Y family here Is like
dream come lrue. I'm just kloklng
forward lo the rest of the smson
with the Red Sox. I wruld like 1o
have the same kind of seasoo In the
ROGER CLEMENS
second half as I did In the first half.
By RICHARD LUNA
UPI Sports Writer

FROZEN

Fox De Luxe
Pizza ..................................................
'

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1o-oz .

...

Kroger
Peanut Butter ............................ .

18-oz . .

KROGER SALAD DRESSING OR

Kroger
Mayonnaise.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE GRAIN FED BEEF 9-11-LB. AVG. BEEF IN THE
BAG "UNTRIMMED WHOLESALE CUT" CAP-ON

Whole Boneless
·Sirloin Tip.......

38

lb .

'

SLICED
FREE

32-oz.

NON RETURNABLE BOTTLES, SPRITE,

Diet Coke or

Coca Cola . . . .

2-Ltr.

c

a

(All-Star MVP)

BONELESS SIRLOIN TIP ROAST LB . . . $1 .99

Kroger Chilled
$
Orange Juice .................. ........... _Gal.

79

KROGER

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Barbecue
Sauce .................. .

Charm in
Bathroom Tissue ......................... 4-Roll

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SAUCE 19-0Z. $2.79-- SALSA SAUCE 14-0Z. $2.59

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Transactions

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plk'hft- JJm Slwron;
opllonrd pl tC'hrr JOhn Pll«''la to Noud"'llk&gt;Of
t/r Ai'M'IriVI AMOt"ialk'tft lAAAI .
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Majors

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WD H .n~; l\ui'I"K'CC Tom Nf'Wri1 a5sl!ll&amp;nl
('()M.'h: ~~ auard Oclr-:Jn Houston ~d

Kansus Cl~- - Rumina- beck Ttl'otts
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Mlilml- RunninA bork Rotrrt · ~·"

Ptllladrlphla - !'~ flvr trw 81lMII~:
llnroarlwr· BA·nanl KinJ1 of S,\-nK'\18('.
ik'fr&gt;r.~~tvr C'nd JrtJ Smllh or Earlhllm,
d&lt;'ll'MIVI'l'nd·kltkrr Gary f!okkon ol SG\11111/ .

mmt OkliiOOma and drit'rwl\·r baclw Rou
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f'I'Om N('brltllka .
S..a"'t' - !'iiWiftl r111111Mgbltlt Paul Mlk'«

from Nriraaka. d!'fmik-r fnd AJorRO MITZ

from Florldi andq•rt~k David Norrk'

-Utl.A.

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Mlchtl1ro • 3-yr~r rontrlet.
l&lt;a1amazoo. Mk'!l. rAJAAt ~PiuiKato.

\.

'
'

'

Slll"K'd

DULY HAUGJfl'ON
BROWN SCORES- San Frandsco's Otris JlrGwn

Harness
race driver .
Haughton d1es
VALHALLA N.Y . iUPII- Hall
of Fame harness driver Billy
Haughton. winner of over 4,900
races, died at a suburban New York
hospital of severe head Injuries
suffered In an accident at Yonkers
Raceway .
Westchester County Medical
Cenler spokesman Jim Patrick
said Haughton died at the Valhalla
hospital at 8:ll a.m. Tuesday.
Haughton, 62, was thrown on his
head during a July 5 accident. In
which his horse. Sonny Key,
collided with a downed horse. At
one point, Haughton stopped breathing. He was revived but later
lapsed Into a coma.
A dlreclor of the U.S. Trotting
Association. Haughton rose to
prominence as one of the leading
drlver-lralners in the 1950s and

slldes across home plate lor the National League's

Clemens felt sluggish before contest
HOUSTON (UPI l _ Roger Clcmens felt the adrenalln building
hours before he took the mound lo
facelheNatlonaiLeaguelnthe57th
All -Siar Game.
He was almost as excited a lew
hourslater.aflerhPwalkedolfwilh
Most Valuable Player honors In the
American League's 3-2 victory over
the NL.
"I felt sluggish all day yesterday " the Boston Red Sox rlghlbander said Tuesday night after he
pitched a perfect three Innings In
his first professional appearance
near his hometown .
"Today, coming out lotheDome.
got all lhe adrenalln flowing. With

all the home folks here, I was really
jumping. The best part was when I
walkedlnlhedugoutandlsawallof
those greal players In there with
me. I thought we had made a major
trade."
Many of Clemens' family and
friends !rom his hometown in
nearby Katy. Texas, were In the
stands. and they saw the reason
why he has posted a 15-2 record at
the halfway polnl or Ihe season
Although he had pitched nine
Innings as recenlly as Salurday,
Clemens was overpo"Aerlng In his
stint.
By retiring all nine batters re
faced. re sel 1he lOne for the AL

vlclory. It was enough to make him
the first Boston player since Carl
Yastrzemskl 16 years ago to
achieve thai honor.
"I really felt good al the start of
the game because I went rut to just
have lun." Clemens said . "I ft&gt;lt
really good warming up, and I knew
I would have good stutl. I just didn't
want TO leave It In the bullpen.
"It really worked out well with
Lance (calcher Parrish of Detrolll .
He was working 11\Y fastball in and
out real well."
Qemens, who was only a so- so
pitcher during his high school days
at nmrby Sprtng Woods lfigh
School, said his success this year
has been mlnd-boggllng at Urnes.

19ffis.

"There was no one more widely
respecled as a professional horseman," said USTA spokesman John
Pawlak. "and Mr. Haughton represented all the best there was
about the profession of driving
harness horses."
NeurologlsiS confirmed
Haughton sustained severe brain·
Injuries and losl brain stem !unction, Patrick said. From the ttme of
admission his condition was
critical.
Haughton, a Jericho, N.Y., resident, was born In Gloversvllle,
N.Y., and was known In harness
circles as "The MaS~er. " He won a
total d 4, 910 races.
Among horses he drove were
"Green Speed," 1977 harness horse
of the year, "Handle With Care," a
well-krnwn pacing mare and "Nihllator." who last year became the
richest standarcllred ever.
Haughton was among the top 10
money,wtnnlng drivers each year
from 1949 to 1!118. ranking first 12
times. He was the top moneywinner from 1952-:B.
In the same period, Haughton
was ranked In the top lD tn victories
18 times. Including six straight
Dash-Win tltles between 1~ and
lB.
Haughton cuttaUed his driving
~eiltly but stul 1tlrove '13 winners
and Will $1.8 monon In 1985. His
total career winning purses were
Ul.2million.

~~r~ua·BGWm, Malt Ilona,

IIICI.Jetoo11ee
lin'• IIIII

Boy lleed, ...., Blab

c.la-. Tldrd roW -

¥1"111

Steve

COliC"" 'l'en)' Snrt&amp; lllld Bod l'lllrlll.
No&amp; ~ - .JGIIilthaa A'\ts, llo*ll!)' llulee ad
Colcll Boll c.laway.

. r-- ...

,.

�Wednesday, July 16, 1986

'

•

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, July 16, 1986
Page-10

8

Beat of the bend

J

Have a bang up time
Power 1'\illt has ,retired.
He began his career at Sporn In
1952 and · 1n ~ · 'ent:er:ec~ the
malntenanre department. In 1957
he was promoted to auxlllacy
of~.!·T=~· equipment operator and to equlp111¥1 a bad
~t operatcr in 1966. 1n 1971 he
-~ M0110ay
beCame a unit llreman, utility
night when
foreman In 1972 and 11tllity supervi·
hand was badly
sor in 1978.
cut by the blade
He and his wife, Jean, a oorse you
on a weed eater. Yep - some of
know from the local hospitals,
them do have blades.
reside at 100 Beech St. in Pomeroy.
He was rushed to Ve!E!"ans
Tiley have two sons, Danny and
Memorial Hospital by his wife,
Michael, and five grancrhUdren.
Susie, and after S9f1H! treatment
Uoyd had planned to walt untU
was returned home and then went later to retire llut decided Instead to
back to · the hospital Tuesday
go with It now. He and Jean !lire to
morning tor surgery.
travel and hope to do a lot of that
He's done a considerable bmount
whUe they have good health. They
ol damage to the Inside of his hand.
go to Grand Old Opry frequently
He · was returned to his home
en route to Florida where they have
Tuesday evening and Is expected to
a rmblle home at the Free
he off work from his employm&gt;nt
Metllldist Campground. They also
with The Ohio Power Co. for four to
enjoy Myrtle Beach and do spend
six weeks.
some time at their cottage on the
church camp ground in Ohio.
Enjoy!
And - If you are one of penple
who like to bang 'em up, perhaps,
Business Is winding down at the
you'd like to get into the demolition
Ebersbach
Hardware Store In
derby to be held on Tuesday, Aug.
Middleport. It has been a family
12, the opening night of the Meigs
operation for many years serving
County Fair.
therommunlty well. I, for one, hate
You can get applications to
participate at the Fleet Wing
to - that lluslness - or any other
local.llusiness- close.
Station and M.G.M. Fann City
I have high hopes that someone
station, East Main, Pomeroy; the
will
have a history of the store
Sunoco Station and the Exxon
operations
llut so far, I'm not
Station on West Main, Pomeroy;
having nmch luck.
the Exxon Station on Route 33 at
Mason, W. Va., and atr the Sugar
Run Mill in Pomeroy.
At the lar!J' gathering on the
river bank Monday night when a
I hope you're looking forward to
truck driven by Terry L. Bertrand,
the Ohio University Communlver37, Hemlock Grove area, went Into
slty Band CollC('rt on the upper
the Ohio River, I heard more than
parking lot at 7 Thursday evening.
one onlooker comment that there
There are local participants In
should be guard railing along that
the band and they are Jeannie and
section.
,
David Bowen, Angela and Tim
Erosion is eating away at the
Sloim. Jeff Arnold and Mark Clay.
shoreline and there's not much
And Pomeroy merchants wUI space there before you drop into the
stay open until 7 with special drink. In fact, It woold he especially
pf'!lmotlons and there will be a fish easy on an Icy road.
try .and a fann market is planned.
Now you don't suppose the State
No one has told me about Plan B of Ohio would do anything !Ike
that's In case of rain.
placing oome guardralling along
that area do yw? I mean. It Is a
Uoyd Wright, Pomeroy, utUity state rout&lt;'. and we don't really get
supervisor at the Sporn Electric much else.

HONORED:_ Rev. LoweUP. Ford, left, paltorcithe Rutlaadaturdl
of the Nazarene, presents a dlslingufBhed service awanl to Charles
·BaneU and his wife, Florenre, of RuiiiUid, lor Barrett's lallhlumess
over the yeara to the churdl. Tluoogh the presmtallon, the church Is
both honoring BarretiiUid helping to promote mls!ilo111 tll'wgh the
medical plan and retirement lund for the General Clnlrch of the
Nazarene.

Grange conducts meeting
The charter , was drapl'd for activities chairman. was In charge
Grace Colwell at a recent m('('ting of the literacy program. It consisted
of readings, "Eye Safety" by Opal
of the Star Grange.
It was reported that 11 members Dyer; "Vacation Safety Tips" by
of Star Grange had attended the Rick Macomber, "Water Is Life"
five county get together held at by Maxine Dyer; "Care · 40 Years
Rodney in June and that the grange of Caring" by Larcy Montgomecy;
was viell represented at the releba- ·'Around the House Safety Tips" by
tion of the Meigs County Pomona Patty ,Dyer; "Thoughts and
Quotes" by Becky Rile; "Water
Grange's liXlh anniversacy.
Upcoming events Include Satur- Conservation" by John Holliday;
day, 7 p.m. open meeting at and a closing thought "Look Up" by
Columbia Grange; Sunday, July XI, Linda Montgomecy.
Alter the m('('ting, members
at 12: ~p.m . at Star Grange hall, a
enjoyed
a potluck dinner and
picnic and work session; July 31, set
homemade Ice cream. •
up state lair booths in Columbus;
Aug. 2 regular meeting with
election of ofncers and judging of
contests.
Patty Dyer spoke on the multiflora rose bill with a lengthly
discussion following. Opal Dyer
Plans have been completed for
gave a report on the youth contests
the wedding of Robin Ann Buffingwhich were judged before the ton, Middleport, and Richard Maumeeting. The winners were Opal
rice Payne; Bidwell. It wlll be held
Dyer, tie dying; Patty Dyer,
Saturday at 6:~ p.m. at the MI.
banner; Bridgett Vaughan, Ccystal
Carmel Baptist Church, Bjdwell. A
Vaughan, and Cathy Lambert,
reception wlll be held In the church
plastic bottle craft winners in their
fellowship room Immediately folrespective age categories.
Linda Montgomery, women's lowing the wedding.

Buffington, Payne
to wed Saturday

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Treasure Island,
will be shown at the Pomeroy
Library at 2 p.m. Thursday.
POMEROY - The Willing
Workers Class of the Enterprise
United Methodist Church will meet
Friday at 7: ll p.m. at the home ol
Marge Bowen.

house. Covered dish dinner 1 p.m.
Bring item br white elephant sale.
CHESTER - Revival services
wlll be Jv&gt;ld at the Living Word
Church of God at Chester, Sunday
through July 23 with Evangelist
Harcy Wingler. Gilbert Spencer,
pastor, Invites the public to attend
the services to begin at 7 p.m.

SATURDAY
-MIDDLEPORT Vacation Bible
sthool, Rejoicing Life Baptist
Church, 333 North Second Ave ..
Mkldleport, through Friday, 9:~
a';Jn. to noon each day. lnformatlon
call 992~249.
·RACINE- Rededication revival

will be held at the Morse Chapel

Olurch. Racine-Portland Road,
t~gh Saturday, July 19. Minister
Is' the Rev. Charles Bush, Racine,
alld the Rev. George Hoschar ol
West Columbia ~ill be a speaker.
There wUI be special singing nightly
alid se~ begin at 7: ll p.m. each
e!enlng.

TlllJRSI)AY
. POMEROY - An evening of
entertainment wUI be offered
T)lursday on the Pomeroy parking
101. A farmers market, vlllage
slores open until7 p.m., Captain D's
fiSh try from 4 to 7 p.m.. At 7 p.m.,
ait ootdoor concert by the Ohio
University Communtverslty Band
~I be featured at the stage area .
·ROCK SPRINGS - The 50th
ai!niVersacy ol the Rock Springs

POMEROY - The annual reunion o1 the children of the late
Junior High botball and volleyball Charles and Alma Snydl'r will be
!Xayers and cheerleaders may get held Sunday at the roadside park on
tlv&gt;ir physicals Saturday, 2 p.m., at Route 33. Those attending are to
tlv&gt;Southern High football building. take a rovered dish and ali relatives
are Invited.
RACINE -The Bend River Boys
Band wlll be playing Saturday
CHESTER - A (Xltluck break·
evening. 7:3(Ho 9, at the Shrine Club fast wlll be held at the Chester
Park In Racine. Fr€e to the public. United Met IDdlst Church Sunday at
Bring lawn chairs. Refreshments 7: ~a . m. The event is heingheld to
available.
welcome back the Rev. Don Archer
and his wife, Sandy, who have befon
DEXTER - There wlll be a reassigned to the church pastorate.
hYmn stng at the Old Dexter
(burch, on Olunty Ril. 6, Saturday,
WILKESVlLLE - ~th ann)l81
7 p.m., with special singing by fish try ol Wilkesville Volunteer
Sunrise. Everyone welcome.
Fire Department on the square. 11
a.m. to midnight Saturday; live
SATIJJIDAY
entertainment alterlJJOn and evenMIDDLEPORT - Treasure Is- Ing; str€et dance, 9 Ia midnight;
land wlll be slllwn at Middleport games.
Ulnry at 2 p.m. Saturday.
RACINE - Southern High and

~-

SUNDAY
Pf. PLEASANT - John Riley
and Virginia Gibbs Edwards reunIon, Sun~y. Krodel Park shelter-

Reoognllon
BURUNGHAM Modern
Woodmen of America 7230, Burlingham. wlll hold a community
service recognItion and picnic
Sunday at 12: ll p.m. on Route 33,
the state park on the left traveling
south. Recognition will be given to
C.E. Blakeslee, James Bail and
Mrs. Jessie White for their out·
standing community service.
Meml:ers, friends and neighbors
are Invited.
MI. Union revival
CARPE f'ITER - Calvin Evans,
Pedro, tell"''l&lt;llon l"''angellst from
Pedro, wlll be speaker at revival
services to be held at the Mt. Union
Baptist Church, nmr Carpenter. at
6:~ p.m., beginning Thursday and
running thrwgh Saturday.

WHOM SHOULD I CALl AT THE TIME OF DEATH?
lllny phone calls will have to be considered IIIII tilt
dtath of a member d tht flmily. Here aretht ails you
should plltl to make immediattly.
lii£DIAT£ fAIILY IEIBERS - ptrhaps ont or two
could be piKed end thty ~ tum could All othtr1.

J$US Christ of Latter Day Saints
Rellrf Society homemaking meet·

YOUR CLERGY PERSON - ht an.providuplrltual ~upport
and susllnence to htlp you with tht -tlonally dtHicult
tuki .. Nd. Htwlllllso work directly with tht funtrll dl·
rector to nsure that tilt lunml service mutsall your
nteds.

btl. T!Nnday, 6:ll p.m. at church

011 Route 1ro. Topic "A Smart
Start" using basic guidelines for
njJney management at home. Also
~ miniatures &lt;1 &amp;ruW;
s.1ac1 1m mini-dinner. Open to
P!bllc- For lntonnatkin call Fran~ Tbylor, 446-3.'DS.

YOUR fUNERAL DIRECTOR - ht will proviclt tht IIKII·
sa~ proftsslonalu!Yicts rtqulrllllor jl(optr dspositlon
of tht body. His urvimtlso ~cludlsu•tstlonsna
Mlpful pidt to furlhtr calls that may han to be lllde.

-

Our servic11 provide co·optrllivt pl11nitl&amp; with cltllYIrattmlltnd family mambtra to matt possible 1 funeral
StrYiCI thlt Is ptriDIIIIIY pl11nld lor you.

PJ,""~

-

"

Bible school
HEMLOCK GROVE -Hemlock
Grove Christian Olllrch Bible
school will be held from 6: ~ to 8: ~
p.m. Monday tlrough Friday.

' . .

·PI'. PLEASANT - Church ol

.

Football meeting
RACINE - A meeting wlll be
held Thursday, 6 p.m., at the
Southern High football building, for
aU boys Interested In playing
football this fall.

r~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'~

~ter Health Club wUI be helc} at
'nOcill Tlwrsday at the home ol
Ftances Goegtein. All members
llild past members cl. the club are
!Jivlled to attend the anniversary
otjservanre.

::RAClNE -AIIboysinterested In
playing football at Southern HJsb
l;911lol should meet Tburlday, 6
pi)n.. · at the football buDding
aitjacent to the school
•
',
']tfiDDLEPORT- Stocy hour tor
pre.aCooolen at Middleport U·
ltnly, 2 p.m. Thursday. ·
.
~

wlll be held Thursday and Friday, 9
to 5, seven and one halfmllesout Rt.
143.

Yardllllle
HARRISONVlLLE - A yard
sale to raise lunda for the Harrisonville junior girls' softball team's

"$ewl4• PIII...A#ft~tlll , Delli/"

§".,.,,J .Yft'Me
~141 ''!'1-.ou, 0\110
(tlAj -

I

•

..'

BRUCE FISHER

The eighth annual reunion of the
Charles and Fannie Wolfe Beaver
family was held at the Royal Oak
Park July 4 with more than a
hundred attending. Table grace as
given by Russell Cline.
. Recognized and presmted gifts
were Mattie Beaver Hlll, 83, the
oldest woman; Russell Cline, 79, t)le
oldest man; Anthony Morris, nlne
months, the youngest chUd; Tracy
and Moille Morris, the newest
married, two years, Arnold and
Iona Huw. the longest marrleed, 43
years; Lany Cline of Faye N. C.
who traveled the fartlv&gt;st.
Door prizes were awarded to
Michael Wolfe, Jr. and Robert
Forster. Officers elected were
Gra~ Holsinger, !l'esldent; carl
Cline, vice president; and Helen
Wolfe, secretacy and treasurer.
'I'irn and Glenda Owens were
named to have charge of games for
the youth and Carl and Charles
CUne cl aduh games for the July 4,
1987 reunion. Music for the reunion
will he handled by John and Geneva
Cline. Ernest Bush had the closing
prayer for tlv&gt; business meeting.
Next year's reunion wU be held at
the Gran!J' hall oo the Rock Springs
fairgrounds.
Attmdlng were Alva Jr., and
Grace Holsinger, Brad, John, Jay,
Paul and Brenda Holsinger; VIcky
Gillilan, Reedsville; Russet! and
Leona Cline, Ernest and Flossie
Bush, Don Manuel, Loretta Smith,
Macy E. Smith, Melvin and Macy
E. Forester, Roberta and Robert,
Shirley Simpson, Wib McClain ,
R::.rlnP.

Dwight Spencer, Pam Jude,
Jimmy Jude, John D. ·Perez,
Tabitha Perez. Macy Doerfer and
Annette, Pomeroy; Roy and Macy
GUillan, Russ and Freda Holsingl!r,
Chester; Ryan and Sue Martin,
Andrew and Matthew, Mansfield;
Tracy and Molly Morris and
Anthony, Richa:rd and Paula Cline
and Rick, Todd Childers, Rick and
Annette Lucas, Ricky and Raymond, New Lex.lngton.
Arnold and lana Huw. Sharon
Huw. Jeremy, Jamie and Jared,
Long Bottom; Arthur and,· Qpai
Barr, Middleport; carol Cline·alld
Seva, Patricia Smith, Bea Cline,
Tina Forster, Circleville; Tim and
Glenda Owens, Teresa Sigman,
Leroy Forester, Lurinda and Melody, Mount Vernon; David and
Glorine Cline, Donna Cline, Damlan Lang, Greg and KellY McAiarney and Chance, Katby Cline, Doug
Thieman, Frankie Zumbro,
Waterlord.
.
Wlb and Macy GUiilan, Francis
Gillilan and .Jim GlllUan, Canton,
Mattie B. Hill, Michael Sr., and
Joyce Wolfe, Mike Jr. and Paul of
Columllus; Helen R. Wolfe, Lindli
Black, Jason and Larra, Jennifer
Poling, Adam Poling, Carroll, Jim
and Margar·et Cline and Darla, •
Beverly; Jim and Kathy Cline,
Chris and Becky, St. Clairsville;
John and Geneva Cline, Sandyville,
W.Va .. Carl and Betty Cline and
Tammy, M:~son, W.Va.; Charles
and Lois Cline, Charlie and Steve,
Moundsville, W.Va.; and Larcy
Cllne, Fay, N.C.

Bll BLOWER

Do microwave ovens affect vitamin content in food?

By EDWARD SCHRECK, D.O.
Aailstant Profelil!iOr
ci Family Medlclne
Ohio University College
II osteopathic Medlcbte
Question: My wife and f are
thinking about buying a microwave
ovm, and we're curious about the
nutritional value ol the food cooked
In such an oven. How does
microwave cooking affect vitamin
content?
Answer : Food cooked In microwaves retains rrore of its vitamin
rontent than food cooked In ronven-

tiona! ovms. To understand tlis
phenomenon. It Is necessacy to
discover the dlfferenre between
microwave ovens and conventional
ovens.
A convmtional oven simply
applies heat to load. The heat is
applied from the ootslde and
gradually penetates to liP nslde.
Microwave ovens, oo the otlv&gt;r
hand, rely on electromagnetic
waves to heat up food. These are the
same type of "energy waves" used
In light transmission and radio
broadcasting - but at d!Uerent

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Chapell II,
Pomeroy, are announcing the birth
of their first child, a son, Scott
RuSS£'11 , born July 1 at the
University Hospital, Coiumllus.
The infant weighed five pounds, two
ouoces and was 21 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Russell Lee-,
Pomeroy, and maternal greatgrandmother is Rachel Wilson.
Middleport.
Paternal grandparents arc Mr.
and Mrs. William Van Meter.
Middleport. and the late Richard
Chapell Sr.
Paternal great -gi-andparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Chapell,
Sprlngiield, Tenn.. and Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Priddy, Middleport, and
Alma Zimmerman, Clifton, W.Va .

Olapman, Sheryl Lambert, Joann
Fetty, Jean and Lori Kelly.
Games were played with prizes
being won by Mrs. Barker, Mrs.
Fetty and Mrs. Bailey. The door
prize was won by Mrs. Chapman.
Sending gifts were Denise and
Dana Flck, Macy and Charles Flck,
Marcella Chapman, Virginia Hartley, and Kim Argabright who
baked the bridal shower cakes.
Special prayer was held for the
hooored guest and her fiance.

•

Chelsey Renee Wood

Wood birthday
Ch~IS£'y

Renee Wood , daughter of
and Paula Wood, obS£'rved
Jv&gt;r first birthday recently with a
party.
A Cabbage Patch cake as s~rvcd
following a cookout. Attending and
sending gUts were her maternal
grandparents, Pa~l and Betty
Hawk, paternal grandparents, Ivan
and Evelyn Wood. Bob, FranO's
and Robyn Hunt, Gary, Bonnie,
Jason Warner. Lora Wood, Dorothy
Hawk. Don and David Williams.
Sending a gift was Rodney Wood.
K~lih

Phone '142-2 100

BOILED HAM ............)UR.ll·$2 .19
ECKIICH CHOPPED
HAM LUNCH MEAT ....... JI. S1.39
HOMEMADE
HAM SALAD••••••••••••••••••••a... 99&lt;
SMIT..IELD OLD FASHION
DUTCH LOAF ................JI. S2.03
.

MED. EGGS ..... .Wk.~tt.. 69
KRAfT 12 0!. t6 SliCE PROCESS

PIMENTO CHEESE ..... S1.89
BROUGHTON'S

CHOC. MILK .............W••• 69'

HEAD
LE'RUC.E••••••••••• ~......U •• 59&lt;
CELER~ ................V!lliU..69'

NEW GREEN

~RGARINE ......Qill.\, 2/99'

CABBAGE,................LJ...2 S'
Rusty Donlal llo hlnson

Robinson
birthday

I 01. BIIDSEYE

COOL
WHIP ..................,w.... 99&lt;
16 01. NEW YOII
GARLIC BREAD ••••••••••••LQtt S1.37
5 01. MOlTON 01 BANQUET
BO.IL IN .• AG ................11PA.99&lt;

. 29 01.

Rusty Donlal Robinson was
honored recE-ntly with a p~rty in
celebration of her seventh birthday
at the home of her mother, Ma ry
Roush, and stepfather, Chester
Roush. Middleport .
A Cabbage Patch theme was
carried oot In the cakE' decorations .
Attending were her brother. Russell, her father. Russell Robinson,
Tony, George Harris, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Lee. Mr. and Mrs. Curtis
Roush. Sylvia and Jonatha
Grueser. Also presenting gifts to
her were Barbara Harris, Avis
Lawoon, and Mary Lou Boggs.

~L

PEACHES ........................"&amp;~ S1.29
16'/1 01. nOIELY WHCIE KII ..L
CORN .........................1SMSS1.19
5 Ol.AIIOUI
VIENNA·
SAUSAGE •••••- 1SMsS1.19
SOL
SUGAR FREE JELL0 ....1JAW...89&lt;
250 CT. NOIT..IN
NAPKINS
.....................
eKo. S1.4 9
2 oz. .
'
.
NESTEA ........................
UI. S2.29
2101..
.
PEANUT BUTTER ••.••••••••u1. S2.79
15 Ol.AIIO ..
CORN BE'EF HASH ...1:.uu.~ S1.29
32 OZ. WA,.EI
.
ORANGE· DRINK .............. tn,.85&lt;
5 OZ. -LD IAI
TOILEl SOAP ........~ .......... S1.29 · .

Harris birthday
Ben Harris Jr. was honored with
a- party In observance his seventh
birthday at the home of his parents,
Barb and Ben Harris, Middle(Xlrt.
A wagon train theme was carried
out In the cake decorations. The
cake was served with Ice cream
and juice. Attending were Ben's
brother, Tony, Rusty and Russell
Rolinson , Jennifer and Charlie
Eakbts, Robbie Price, and his aunt
and · uncle, Macy and Chester ·
Roush. Others · presenting guts
were his grandmother, Dana Wy ant, Avis and GacyLawson, Kenny
MCClellan, John Rayburn and Ann
Radbrd.

a

..•'
. - \.

...

...,,'

a

••
~...

Ru...ell ChapeU

•

lnfonnatlon necessary to properly
answer your question.
Be clear about what yw WIUit
Sometimes I hear penple say that
they got several different answers
to the same question from dlffermt
representatives at different ttmes.
It's been my experience that In just
about evecy case that question has
been asked somewhat differently In
each Instance. Social Security Is a
pretty complex system of coverages and benefits and tlv&gt;re is
seldom a simple, general answer to
cover all situations.
Try to be specific with your
question and what you want to

belp, here are some guidelines that
wlll make t~ process simpler and
quicker.
Know your claim lHIIDber
Whenever you have a question
about your Social Security benefits,
always have your claim number
handy. Your claim number l&lt;l the
Social Security number of the
person wbose earnings were used
for your benefits.
That number will have a letter
following It which designates what
type of benefits you get. By havlr)g
that claim number ready, you
make it a lot easier tor your Social
Security representative to get the

know. II you give your representa- .
tive as much lnfonnallon as· ;
(llSSible about yourself and you~ •
situation, you'll be sure to get the ..
answer for your particular ques- ..:
lion. Consistent questions get con-. ·
sistmt answers.
Bring tho leUer with yoo
Whenever you recleve a notice or.'.:
letter that you feel needs more .
ex!Xanatlon, be sure to have It with. ~
you when you contact your Social .-~-.
Security office. More often than mt.the ootlce came from one of · .
regional program centers. Local.::
offices don't get copies of those , ,;.
letters. To better help you under- .· •.
stand or respond to tlv&gt; notice, your ·
Social Security representative .
n€eds to g'(' it .
,..
With the letter In hand, your
representative can usually clarify
Wingett and Brian, Hendersonville. the matter tlr you In a short time...
Tenn.; Mr. and Mrs. Roger Wall as.
Probably the best advice of ali I~ .:
Linda and Roger , Galloway; Davtd to be certain to contact Social .-.
Kre1se,1 Mountveroon, w·as h.; Mr.
d M' "'E Kr · 1 G !Ia
· Security with your questions rather
an
rs. ". . elSe , a way, than a neighbor or an acqualn· :
K hy Gilenwater an d Da me
·IIe.
coat1umuus.
.... · M
d Mr Da · 1 tance. That's the best way to avoid
r. an
s.
me hassles and misinformation.
Talbott, Long Bottom; Mrs. Elma
Weese Syracuse· and Mr. and Mrs.
·•
·
Dana Congo, Syracuse.
Diana Herdman was the top loser ·
with Ruth Smith as ru!VIer-upat the
Monday meeting of the Five Point!&gt;
Sllnderelia Class. At the Tuesday .·
Mason class. Naomi Young lost tile o:
Members took pari In a Dag quiz , most weight, and there was a tie for
the kazoo band played and refresh- ruMcr-up between Wilda Van
ments were served. Next ml'!'ting Meter and Barbara Vickers. JoAnn
Newsome has charge oft he classes . .
will be Aug. 7.

Edwards family reunion held at Syraruse

'

and Mrs. George Strode. Grove
City; Mr. and Mrs. Ellsmrth
Edwards Galloway· Mr and Mrs
•
·
· and Kei-·
"aughn Kln'm
Elizabeth
'
' ,
lie Galloway· Ro'-rt Wingett
•
' Syracuse
""
'
=tt
Eleanor Wln •·
·
·
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Mills,
Angle Mandy and Amher Syra •
·
, .
·
ruse; Mr. and Mr. Wt!ltam Knapp,
Bll!y and Tommy, Johnston; Mr.

'

and Mrs. RaMie He~sley, Sasha
and Joseph, Stoutsville; Jean rue
Casto Red House, W.Va.; Mr. and
'
Mrs John
Crooks, columiJJs; Mr.
·
·r
and Mrs Jame Lawrence., Jenru er
·
.
dMr
and Jason Syracuse, Mr. an
s.·
'.
J
·
Brian Colims, Jason and anue.
Galloway.
Mr
d M s Robert Weedy
· an
r ·
•
Logan; Kathy Wedy . Reyooillds·
burg: Mr. and Mrs. W uam

Slinderella meets

ney management for fanners , the
cycle of cold weather and the crisis
In liability insurance. It was noted
that 15 members visited the
Harrisonville Grange and presented a program June 27.
Keith Ashley reminded members
to write stories and famUy histories
lor the second Meigs County histocy
book which is to be !J.Iblished by the

Annual inspeclion of Rock
Springs Grange was held ll'cently
by Mendal and Elizabeth Jordan.
deputies, with the first dPgTI'&lt;' being
presmted by Lucille Potratz, past
mast er.
The lair booth commitlff' had a
n,ort as did those on ·til' community S£'rvice proj('('t. Pat Holter' s
!~isla t ive report consislrd of rna·

Meigs Historical SociPty: Dl&gt;adline
for submitting material is Febru·
ary, 1~7.
Linda Broderick had the pro·
gram with articles relxting to
stroke alerts, facts on the Statue of
Liberty, statistics on farming in
Meigs County and Ohio by Roy
Holter; Information on the Great
Seal of Ohio by Barbara Fry.

.

t ·

Past Councilors Club has meeting
Members of the Past Councilor's
Club of Chesler Council 323,
Daug\lters of America. met at the
hall recently lor a picnic and
meeting. Ada Morris gave the.
bl('SS!ng, and Jnzy Newell and ,
Erma Cleland served as hostl'Sses

for the picniC .
Lora Damewood, vice president.
read Psalm 54 and presided at the
meeting. The Lord's Prayer and
pledge to the flag were given In
unison. Reports were glven by

Wolf Pen happenings
Mr. and Mrs. Roben Picket of
Darwin, Mr. Charles Picket of
Florida a nd Gwendolyn Roach of
Arlington, Texas visited Thursday
with Mrs. Iva Johnson.
·
Mrs. Iva Johnson was Fourth of
July guest of Mr. and Mrs. Harley
E. Johnson. Tammy. Also visiting
was Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Holley and
Calvin Lee.
Iva Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Larcy
Barr and family of Rutland were
Sunday dillner guests of Mr. and

Mrs. Howard Thoma.
Mrs. J .R. Murphy and Iva
Johnson were Monday visitors of
Mr. and Mrs . John Downs and
'
family of Trimble.
Mrs. Daniel Worley: Stacy and
Daniel of Daniels, W.Va. were last
W€ek visitors rl. Mr. and Mrs.
Charley Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank and
Sarah Beth of Texas Road were
Sunday visitors of Mrs. and Mrs.
Eugene Haning and Ronald.

haiL
Mrs

recent surgery. Bob Reed gave the
blessing before the group enjoyed
refreshments served by Dana and
Bernie!' Hoffman, Fred and Avanelle George. and Charles and
Jenny Williamson.

r-;:::::;=:::=::::::::::::::::::!1
DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN ·MUSSER

Atkins and past matrons, II
past patrons, honored Masons.
those hav ing grand appointments.
and past grand appointees, along
with 60 vear member. Ruby Diehl.
were presented and wE-lcomed.
A thank you card for a baby gift
was read irom Glen and Brenda
KennedY . The. altar was drapl'd for
two pas t grand patrons. and the
bit1hdays of Bob and Golda Reed
and Norma Lee were noted. Larcy
Well reported that his father,
I:X'nvE&gt;r Well is recovering from

INSURANCE
St. ,_,..,

Charlotte Grant. secretary, and
Laura Mae Nice. treasurer . Officers Installed by Mrs. Damewood
werE' Cora Beegle, vice president ,
and Thelma White, secretacy.
Games were conducted by Jean
Frederick and Erma Cleland and
prizes awarded to the winners.
Others attending were PauUne
Ridenour, Marcia Keller. Leona
Hensley. Mae McPeek, Macy K
Holter, Sadie Trussell , Margaret
Aml:erger, Ada Bissell, and guests.
BoiVIie Landers iind Sandra White.

\

Spaelal of ••• Wee•

,,:

FISH.;;:REs

(;

WITH FliES ................ S1.34
' '&gt;

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

"At the End of tht Polllti'IIY·MaiOn lrldgt

.....__.••••o
--

POMEROY, OH.

PH. 992-2556

oo+
._

BANK£0N£
Presents

The 1986 Ohio University
Communiversity Band

Ill Second

YOU- INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

+----...+oo·

~

'

IN PO.MEROY*

Thursday, July 17, 1986

NEW HOURS ANNOUNCED

7:00P.M.

J COBB

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile-Cadillac
TO BEnER SERVE O.UR CUSTOMERS
OUR PARTS &amp; SERVICE DEPT. IS NOW
.OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEI
MON.-SAT. 8:00 TILL 5:00 ·
DIOP'·OFFS CAN. MADE AS EAILY AS 7:30A.M. AND
PICKUPS AS LAn AS 5:30 P.M.
CAlL FOI AN APPOINT.NI - 992~6614
WE AI.SO IAIE WAll(•• SEIVICE CUSIO.IS

Ronald P. Socciarelli, Conductor
CAPTAIN D'S WILL PROVIDE AN "ALL YOU CAN EAT"
FISH DINNER THURSDAY 4 P.M. TO 7 P.M.

$4 ADULTS

$J ClllDBN 12 I

,

•

.'
•.

UNDEI

*Bring your lawn chairs &amp; picnic supper to the Pomeroy city parking lot for
· a music-filled evening.

'

·.
'

FREE ADM I

;'·

N!
--~----------~- ­

. .;.
~

••
\'

Over ~ mllllon Americans now
receive monthly Social Security
checks and every oo olten, oome cl.
these people need to contact their
Social Security office with an
infonnatlon rtquest, a problem , a
notice or letter that needs turtlv&gt;r
explanation, or report a a change
in benefit status. As a matter of
!act, last year Social Security
offices handled over 66 million of
these after application actions.
If you have a question about your
claim, a change In status to report,
or some notice with which you need

A repon of her visit s to other
chapt ers was given Mrs. Stella
Atkins. grand reprPSI'ntative to
Florida, at thcr('('ent lll('('tingofthe
Harrisonville Chapter 255, Order of
East~rn Star. held rE'Cently at the

30 CT. CI.LIFORNIA

I LB. PRICE SAVER

Fleld Repl'e88ltallve

Pork should be 170 degrees,
chicken, l85 degrees.
It wasn't too long ago that
pbyslclans and scientists w~reoften
asked about the safety of microwave ovms by people who were -~
afraid of radioactivity and other •,
health risks they thought microwave ov'!ls presented. Now, such
mncern seems almost comical; the;
Food and Drug Administration t.
regulates microwave ovens carefully. A properly used microwave is
as safe as any other appliance.

Guidlines for problem solving

OES meeting conducted

24 CT.
1

By LOU HORVATH

cardiologist before purchasing a
microwave ovm to make sure you
are not at risk.
Microwaves tend to undercook in
spots, so If you microwave chicken
or pork, make sure they are cooked
l"''enly and completely. Otherwise,
)100 rtsk eating meat contaminated
by !IICh organisms as salmonella or
trlchln~. To ensure unUorm heat·
lng, cover meals tightly and rotate
them while cooking. After cooking,
check the Internal temperature cl.
tti! meat with a meatthermometer.

Rock Springs Grange inspection conducted

DEPARTMENT STORE

HIUENMLE

Your Social Security

·

RUTLAND .

'

frequencies. When trey are applied VItamin C, which Is' likely to be
to foods, the foods absorb them
reduced by heat, Is best preserved
Microwaved toods actually cook by short-term steaming or microfrom the inside out The rays cause waving. Mlnerals are unaffected by
the water rrolecules In the tlod to microwaving.
vibrate, creating heat. Since the
Question: Are there any dangers
microwaves act upon the water in associated with microwave
foods, we can think of the process as cooking?
a type &lt;1 steaming. This makes I
Answer: Although you sitU see
(Xltentially an excellent way to warnings about pacemakers and
preserve nu trlents.
microwave ovens, most pacemakAny cooking process can destroy ers In use today are mt adversely
vitamins, but microwaving has a affected by mlrcowaves. U you
less destructive effect on B vitam- have a pacemaker, talk to your
Ins than conventlona I cooking.

The Edwards ramilv reunion was
' held July 4 at the home of Robert
. tt · s
Wmw
. · ·vracusc. .
B k
Anending were Jo:slher u ey,
·
d p I"
Long 8ottom; Bnan an
a •i
Murray and Lucas. Ga IIoway;
N
K · e1 J kl c L ke
ancy . rets .' ac : ox. u
and Jesstca, Ctrclevile, Ernest and
Maxine Wingett , Racine; Mr. and
Mrs Frank Bright ColumlJ.ts· Mr.

Shower given prospecitve bride
The Full Gospel Ughthouse
Ladles Auxlllacy recently hosted a
bridal shower for Angela Pooler,
bride-elect of Thomas Kelly Jr. at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Kelly, Sr.
cake, punch, nuts and mints were
served to Dorothy Gore, Elizabeth
Milton, Ann Bailey, JeneU Barker,
Helen Combs, Bonnie, Melissa and
Terri Brewer, Lou Hutchison,
Shirley and Gina Gibbs, Maxine
Jordan, Carolyn Van Meter. Rita

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11

Family medicine:

Chapell birth

Pf11ClS Lll ECfiVE TIIRU SA i. JULY lq 111cHi
ECKIICH
SHREDDED •2.!19 Ll.
.

Community calendar/ area happenings
WEDNEIDAY
RlJTI.AND - A five night
revival will get underway at the
Rutland Freewill Baptist Church
Wednesday. A different speaker
will preach each night and all
proa!eds wlll go to "Bucks for
Bobble." On Friday and Saturday,
tile youth ct the church wlll have a
nimmage and bake sale on the
cburch lot for the lund.

Beaver reunion held

Pomeroy-Mi&lt;ldleport Ohio

�,,

Wednesday, July 16, 1986

Ohio

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ol]io

Carol A. Smith

Dawna Grues(\i' ·

Terrie A. Starcher

Trustees scholarships awarded
Three spring graduates of Meigs
lli gh School have been awarded
lmslce sc1101arsh ips to attend Rio
l :rande College and Community
College.
Tho Truslf&lt;' Sc holarship is
aw&lt;~ rdcd lo students who are
r&lt;'sid••nts of Ohio, in lhe lop 10
~ ·rcenl of their graduating class
:llld have a composite of at least 18
on ll1e ACT. The scholarship is fo r
$:JKI lor freshman and sophomore
·' t•ars and $1500 for the junior and
:-1'niur yea rs.

Thr loca l rec ipients are Dawna
t; ru&lt; ·Sl'r. daughter of Bill and Doris
1;I'U« ''-rr of Raci ne; Terrie A.

Starcher, daught er of Roger and
Jacqueline Starcher, Racine, and
Carol A. Smith, daughter of Jonnle
and Bonnie Smith, Middleport.
A graduate of Eastern, Grueser
was a member of the concert,
marching and pep bands, the Meigs
AU-Cou nty Band. was band presi·
dent, assistant field commander, a
member of the newspaper staff, the
National Hooor Society and ttl&gt; Rio
Grande College Summer Scholars
Program. She is also actlve in the
Eagle Rige Community Church.
Grueser plans to major in nu rsing
at Rio Grande.
Also a graduate of Eastern,

Starcher was a member of the
National Honor Society. She plans
to major in education at Rio
Grande.
'Smith is a graduate of Meigs High
School when; st.&gt; wa s a membe r of
ttl&gt; Na tion(ll Honor Society, the
student council , computer club,
Junior Civitan and served on the
prom committee. She was a Girls
State all~rnate, a faculty assistant
and was oolhe softball team. She is
a past honored queen of the
Internat ional Order of Jobs Oaugh·
ters and was a member of a league
softbaU team .

r·~

..

'

Brides left scrambling after
dressmaker shuts doors in N J.
.

,\CDUBON . N. J . tUPI I
81idi-s-to be complaining they may
hcwr to march down the aisle
wi thout their wedding gowns told
ou thoritirs a bridal shop shut it s
tluurs wi thout delivering their
dr essl'S or rC'Iuming 1heir deposits.

·1he dressmaker. Stanley Fin&lt;',
ownN of Modern Bride Inc., is
undf'r invPStigation and is srhe·

tlu k•d to meet with authorities
1tJday. said George Kerns, a
' Pokesmon fo r the Camden County
prosecutor.
f 'olin• say FinE' may have $40,000
in dr posits from nrarly 70 womf'n

for wedding gowns and brides·
111:1ids' drf'sSf's.
Finr m~ I J' ha vf'

gGJl('

ou t of

r
business and left the dresses locked

in his store. police said. "Th is is
some way to get married," said
Diane Hughes, 23, of Audubon
Pa rk. who had deposited half oft IF
$570 price for her custom-designed
wedding gown.
Hughes. who is to be married
Saturday, sa id she suspt.'Cted some·
thing was wrong when reppated
attempts in June to pick up ll&gt;r
dress were rebuffed by Fine, who
kept saying he was out of lace, st.&gt;
sa id.
Ot her concerned brides- to-be
with visions of ruined wedding
plans have bem telephoning the
prosf'C'u tor's of fi re to"try to find out

.

what they can do, said a reception·
is t, who as ked to remain
anonymous.
"TIJere's been quit e a few," she
said. "U you were supposed to pick
up yrur gown Tuesday for a
wedding Sat urday and you had no
idea iii you could get ill , wouldn't
you be a bit distraught?"
No charges will be filed against
Fine if police determine IF has
legitimately filed for bankruptcy,
Audubon Police Chief William
Tau lane said . If Fine did not file for
bankruptcy prolf'C'jion before clos·
ing his shop, he may be chargpd
with lhefl by deception. Taulanr
said.

Quirks in the news
Nol·so· las ly toasted toad :
l.lENVEH 1UPI I - An escaped
t nnvk·t might have lea rned prison
chow ca n be quito tasty compared
'"lh II~· toas led.tood he tried to ca t
\\·hilt• on the run in the Colorado
I :uck if's.

Workman, who escaped
.J ulv 4 fa1m a minimum· securi ty
bunkl1ouse al tho Colorado Dop" rl ·
l il&lt;~ rlrs

rw nt

ur Curr('('tirins in Canon City,

""' """PIUJ'!'d Monday, authori·
l i1 · ~ ~t i t1 .

1'I ·JI~IIIllU'lll

SJXl krsman

Tom

I' 1 •'.\l ·II sc.lid a SC'areh ll'a m picked

up ll'urkman's trail at an old
n nn it tg fa bin nea r

Tex &lt;.~s

Creek.

I n llw t'abin, Sf'a t-chrrs found

" il

bw.11J wrapper, a fire built of pin&lt;·

COII t·s and pariS of a cooked toad."
l 'o"&lt;'il ""id. " I hea rd he skinnr&lt;l it

Homeowner sees red: SPRING·
FIELD, Mass. &lt;UPI I - Elaine
Laino transformro her house into a
wild display of red flowers, purple
ice r r0am cones and pink stripes
when the local Historical Commis·
sion refused h0r req uest to put up
vinyl siding.
Now the 34-year-oid Sp ringfield
woman says il will stay that way
unt ill he governing body rethinks its
dec ision.
"Some parents say I should turn
my house inlo a day-care center,"
said Laino, a single parent who is
employed as an X- ray lechnician.
"Their ch1ldrcn ali lhink it's
da rling "
Laino said she saw red when the
commission refused to allow her to
side h0r house alter siP told Ihem
she cou ld rot alford to sandblast
and paint it.
She and her fr iends responded
last weekend bY pa inting piclures
colored mi. blue, brown, pink,
yrilow and purple. The symbols of
hr r disconten t include a giant

8y SANDRA L. LATIMER

Polka, mund and square dancing
United Press International
are featured at Summerfrst at the
Sf•Vf'nlr'(•n yea rs ago this Wff'·
Sandusky County Fah::grounds Fri·
k•·· 11d Wapakoneta native Neil day through Sunday.
r\ 1111 "11ung lX'(.'amr I hP firs I man to
Bob Evans Farm near Rio
walk on the su1face of the moon .
Grande In Galila County holds a
Th i.&lt; w"•kr nd tho Armstrong Air Dulcimer Festiva l Sa turday and
&lt;lllJ Sp&lt;II'C Museum ncar Wapa· Sunday.
ko111 ·ta has S&lt;"hodulr&lt;l a Fes tival of
Jamboree in the HUis Satu rday
f' lint in honor of that event.
' and Sunday at Brush Run Park In
Thl' Lancaster Festival U.S.A. St. Clairsville is billed as the
'llJUrsday through July 26 is a superbowl of country muslc.
gig&lt;~n tic music and arts fE'S tival
wit h r'O tH.'&lt;'rls by the Columbus
Programs on t~ Ohio Historica l
Symphony Orchestra.
Society calendar ilclude:
Num&lt;•mus olh!'r events in Ohio
-Bedrock Geologyof9hio Work·
Ihis Wl"&lt;'k also takr a look at life in a shop Saturday at ttl&gt; national
dlf1rn•nt era.
RoadZan e Grey Museum at
l&lt;ellr}:S Island Days Thursday Norwich.·
lhrough Sunday features a boa t
-Ohio Prairies Nature Walk
crul."' and barbershop mu sic.
Saturday at Cedar Bog Preserve
The Appalachian Festival in the near Urbanp.
Cuney Isla nd area of Cincinnati
-VIctorians at Home Concert
1-'riday ttuuugh Sunday is a sam· Sunday at Ill&gt; Ohio VIUage, adja·
piing of Appalachian me.
cent 10 the Ohio Historical Society
The Old Steam and Gas Engine Museum In Cblumbls.
Show will be held Friday through
- Architectural mini tours and
Sunday at the Musklngum county schoolhouse lessons will ' be held
1-'a iqrrounds in ZanesvUie.
Sunday at ttl&gt; Ohio VIUage.

Rl. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

~llo Trlll!lllttlon

PH. 992-5682
Or 992-7121

Tre~~~~go~fS~ic~pe

•lOCIUY OWNED

Plumbing Service
Cullom Welding
Lowboy Hauling

*Met.lllttHdilgs '
*Pole

Li~:::!':t ~;:.,m~d
WWAMS TRENc:HliG
SERVICE
Rt 4. Hysell Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 46769
9
Ph IB~:k. a~~f834 ·

6-17-tlc

CLC COINS
Buying /Selling
Gold, Silver
1411 Chains, Coins,
Collector's Auessories

Bullion
SUMMER HOUIS

1·7 M·TH

985-3937
Call for Directions

FREE ESTIMAm mo.

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation serrice
All major apptianoe repairs (including microwavllll. Electronic Organs. Mobile service.

TV -614-843-5241
APPL.-614-949-2145

L&amp;S
TRANSMISSION
REPAIR
Rt. 7, Pomeroy, OH.
"Free Estimates"
All Work
Guaranteed
OPEN MONDAY
THRU SATURDAY

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16-' tri tfn

PH. 992-7403

6·23·86·1 mo.

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH

Howard L.

•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

We Hm Ahll TIN

Wayne Hinson, Abilene, Tex.,
assistant pmfessor of marriage and
family therapy a t Abilen e Christian
University, will be speak er at a four
. day gospel meetin g to he held at
7:30 each evening Sunday through
July 23.
Hinson taught in Tennessee, W!'SI
Virginia, Arkansas and Ohio before
going to Tex. Hi$ eveningtopit's will
be How to Listen on Sunday: How a
Healt hy Family Looks oo Monday:
How a Healthy Marrtage LQoks on
Tuesday and Rearing Children to
tllC' Glory ofGodon Wednesday. His
Sunday morning topics will be
God 's Plan i&gt;r Marriage and What
It takes to Make II Work.

Shp Teehlelu
Dlly
RIDENOUR
OR

Personalized phone numbers?:
SAN FRANOSCO tU Pil -Trend·
setting Californians may ooon have
a chance to acquire personalized
phoiw numbers, so long as the
words are not vulgar, sexually
obscene or offensive to any race,
religion or nali::maiity.
For a fee, a Pacific Bell
su bscriber could gel a number
exrressed in lett ers thai spell
som ething, s uch as his name.

sta~e ·
Special ex hlbll ~:
- "The Crea m of the Cmp"
Exhibit at the Southern Ohio
MuSC\Im and Cultural Center in
Portsmouth is a juried ~hi bit ion of
work by area artists. This exhibit is
open through Sept. I.
-The National Basket Show is an
event at The Dairy Barn in Athens
lhrQUgh July 27.
On the thealrlcal schedule:
-"Blue Jacket"' outdoor drama
plays at Caesar's Ford Park
Arnphitheatre .near Xa1 la through
Aug. 31. Performances are nightly
except Mondays. For tickets,
Ohioans can call!IJ0.222-BLUE.
- Melodramas are pt'flormed
aboard the "Showboat Becky
Thatcher" at Marietta through
Aug. 30. A schedule of performances and ticket information is
available ~~ 614-:173- 0033.
-"The Living Word" outdoor
drama near Cambridge is In its 12th
SEIISOII with perlonnanres' 'offered
Thursday.s, Fridays and Saturdays
through Aug. ll. For tickets, call
614-439-Zl~l.

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Board of Education of
Eastern Local School Dis-

trict

desires

to

receive

Malad bids on the following:
Dairy products
Bakery products

Specification

sheets are
available at the treasurer' s

Public Notice

Vitlogo of Rutland, Box 420,
Rultlnd, Ohio 46776. Tho
truck can be'"" by calling
614-742-2121 between 9
A .M . and 12 Noon Monday
through Friday. Thil vilhiclo

TV

&amp; APPLIANCE

2· 17-86 -tln

4/ 1/ tfn

a few pennies spent here

comes back folding money

992-2156
GUINTHER-KISER ENTERPRISES
'RESUME WRiliNG
'DRESS FOR SUCCESS
'INTERVIEW TECHNIQUES
'CAREER COUNSELING
'WORKSHOPS/SEMINARS
'CLUB/ORGANIZAnON
CONSULTING

is offered for 1111 at is. Rut·
land

Village Council res-

erves the rtgl:!t. to

ra~cl

any

MAKE IT ARULL
USE WANT ADS

and all bidt. Bkts will be ac ·
cepted until roon August 6,

1986.

Gregory VanMeter
Clerk ·Treasurer

Vilfogo of Rutland
Meigs County, Ohio
171 16. 23, 30, 3tc

773-552~ ,JG4) aS~JiB6
0

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

- 'MARKETING
'PUBUCATIONS
'BUSINESS
CONSUL liNG
'GRANT WRITING
'BROCHURE
DESIGNS

PROVIDING A VARIETY OF CONSULTANTS
FOR YOUR BUSINESS AND INDIVIDUAL
NEEDS!

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

July 29, 1986. Said Boord
of Education reserves tt.
right to accept or reject a~y

and all parts of any end ell
bids .
~
Board of Education
Eattem Local School

Dlllrict
Eloise Boston. Trtaa .

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
Geo. S. Hobstelter, Jr.
Broker
NEW USTING - All electric
lhree bedroom home, li~mg
room, large krlchen buill·•n.
dining room. New ca rpel
and drap es. Sits on corner
lot in sulxl•vrsion. Call for
details.
WHITE'S HILL RD.- Ran ch
home with three bedrooms,
large liv ing room , big kit·
chen · dining comb., full ba·
semen! with woodburner.
16'x32' swrmming pool.
Price Reduced.
CIIEW ROAD - lovely Per·
ma-Siooe Ranch Home. Features living room. three 111ce
size bedrooms, large bath &amp;
dressrng area, equippro ~I·
chen and dining cormo lljg
!No car garage. Sits oo ~er
ooe acre ground. PRICE RE·
DU(lO.
LANGSVILLE - On St. Rt.
124, 113 acre wrth a nice
three bedroom home , ~rge
living room, dining room,
kitchen. Nice corner lot.
$12,000.00.

TEAFORDm

Real Estate~
216 E.

2nd St.

Phone
, ·(6141·992-3325

NEW LISTING-S rms , Jlh
3B900 SR 7
baths, gas furnace, shop
Reedlvitte. Ohio 46772
t7) 2, 9. 16, 23, 4tc
carpeiiAg, 2 11mhes and lg.
lot above all lloods fi Po·
Public Notice
meroy. Asking $18,000. Bul
let's hear an offer oo as is.
PUBLIC NOTICE
67 ACRES - Near Sumner
Tho Vittav• of Rutland hu
area on paved road wilh T.P.
the followtng item UJ:I' for
water available.
sale: a 1976 Do~e Swo·
EASTERN- Nice att ractive
plintf Pickup (Mft 1 Serial
No. D14BB66 3360181.
3 BR horoo wit~ T.P. water,
Sealed bids can be sent to
bath, full basement &amp; out·
bu ildings. Asking $27,!j)O
1 . Card of Thanks
BARGAIN - Good 3 BR one
lloor, overlooking the Ohio
River. Just $1 2,000
INVESTMENT - 22 tr ailer
.spaces and several acres. All
To all of the
setups ready ID reAl. Want
neighbors and
$70,000.
MINERSVILLE - Nice rea·
friends of Rock
sooable 6 rm. home with view
of river oo 124. Gas furnace,
Springs who
carpeting and all in good con·
sent flowers for
ditiorl. Ju~ $29 , ~0 .
BAUMS - Bi·levelof 8rms.,
William Miller
4 BRs, central arr &amp;heat patio and nrce lot. All like new.
THANKS ...
60's.
Mr. &amp; Mrs.
POMEROY - Sm~l 5 rm.
Yeltlll
sky, Assoc.
lrame
w~h bath. Only$3 . ~0.
Kenneth Miller
Phone
742-1192
IIIDDLEPORT - 6 rm. horne
IJlar bu ~ness sectioo but has
lg. lot, family rm., lg. porch
and rrage for $28.000.
R IEt
G
I
-;;;;====~e~~~~~
~at:e~~en~e~ra~====,ll floor,
NEA HOSPITAL- Has oo e
t
2 BRs, full basement,
hot water heal, db!. garage
and lg. corner lot.
43 ACRES - 9 rm. larm
house, bam and buildings i1
'
Eastern. land lays very well
for crops. $45,000.
BAUMS-Lot altoul :DOxllO,
lays nice, ready for your
house. Zonoo. $13,500.
SELLING PIOBL~IS

INTERESTED IN BUYING
APPROXIMATELY 2112
ACRES OF ST. IT. 7·NEAR
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL?
IF SO, PLEASE PHONE
HOME NAnONAL BANK
V4ltll.7710.

PH. 304-675·2441
BEND AREA CALL

PH. 742-2656

E. MainW
POMEROY,O.
992-2:159
NEW USllltG - UNION
AYE. - Nice 4 bedroom
ranch with fam ily room in ba·
semen!. Breezy enclosat rear
porch for cool relaxatiOn! Alu·
rrinum sidmg. $34,000.00.

FRENCH CITY LIMITED
· TEMPORARY JOB SERVICE
PROVIDING :
*JANITORIAL SERVICES
*BOOKKEEPING SERVICES
*SECRETARIAL PERSONNEL
*COMPUTER OPERATORS
*INTERIOR / EXTERIOR / PAINT! N G
*WALLPAPER / STENCILING
*FARM HELP
*MOTHER 'S HELPER
*HANDYMAN
'YARD WORK
If you have a need, we can fill it with qualified people, whether for a few hours or a
few days .
For further information, call us at
446-8018.
Division of Guinther-Kiser Enterprises

NEW LISTINil "7 .ACINE
- Newer sectional home.
Occupied ooly a shortlrme!
3 bedrooms, I\? baths, cen·
tral air. eQu•pped kitchen.
All electr ic . Exira nice condi·
lion . ONlY $26.~ 0. 00 .
NEW LISTING - MIDDLE·
PORT - Here IS an invest·
ment property w1lh excel·
lent returns in Middleport
vill age. Commercial bu1ld·
mg Ca ll lor detarls.
NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT - Bar, wrth al flluipment and stock. lnc~des 0-5
license "2:30 ~ gfJI club". Ne·
~liable ASKING $35,000.00.

Signs, Rubbor Stamps,
lusin•• Forms,
Copy Sonit11, Its.
2SS Mill St., Middleport
104 Mutbtrry Av., Pomoroy

NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT- Restaurant and/or
building, with 2 apartments
over. Call for details d you
want to own a restaurant.

Thursday Evening, July 17, 1986
6:00 P.M.
Located in Syracuse, Ohio on College Road (lower
end), 5th house on left all he Dick Harris residence.

NEW LISTING - RUTLAND
- Here is a nice 10 yr. old
ranch type horne, with 3
bedrooms, bath, garage on a
level lot. Ma_ny new features.
WANT $36,500.00

POWER TOOLS

lat he, wood or metal: chop saw, 2 drill presses. Foley 13w
sharpener, 7'h rn . rad ia l arm miter saw, power hack saw, Ctr·
cular saws, bench grinder, 4 drtlls, 5 vrbralor sanders,
Craltsman planer join lei, Craftsman 12 " band saw, 12m.
surface planer with sharpener. bell sander, router table wrlh
attachments, router, !llrlace sander, Craltsman router craf·
ter.
MISC. TOOLS
ESKA 6 HP outboard motor, ~rge v~e. RCA portable col.or TV,
centrificat pulfll, wood clamps, ~p e clamps, corner damp.s,
C-clamps, 2 small hydraulic i.acks . boxes d fl.nchers, drrll
bits, files, hand planer, pipe dres, fllpe cutter, f)lpe vrce, box
of brass; small air compressor.
·
'
COLLECTIBLES
Stone jars, 6 chairs, wooden knick-knacks, wooden salt,
kraut cutter, block &amp; Iackie, misc.
lot r11ponsibl1 for eccitllllts or loss of property.

POMEROY - 3 bedroom,
nice kilchen , air cond•loning, W/ Bstove, locatll:l on 4
lots. Many other leatures.
19,900.00

s

Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
Jean Trussell ..... 949-2660
Dottie Turntr ..... 992·1692

Clll tl2·3325

-

cas•

HoustiHI
H L·, HI q ll d t I' · r s
'

'

JIM

HELEN HARRIS, OWNER

CARNAHAN, AUCnONEER-949-27DS

RUTlAND, OHIO

2432.

7-7-'86·1 mo.

GREAT BEND ELECTRIC, Inc.

667-3513

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

Cleaned.
protected,

992-3345

312/tln

BOGQS

11niti~:8d

"AlUMINUM SIDING
"BlOWN IN
INSUlA nON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

No Sunday Calls
·

~,

NOW LQ&lt;AI!D AI
241 S.«1nd Au.

M

44'·1848

.··

!111 / tfn

ICUT OUT fOR FIITURI USEI

, ~7
·

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

GalliJ»Iil, Ohia

Htmo .

•Ranges
•Refrigerators

•Dryers •Freaz:ers

PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-tfc

AOPLEII

POLISHING
SYSTEMS

Work

Guar~nteed

in Writing

Buying deily gold, sillier cotns,
ring1, jewelry. sterling were, ol~
col ns, lerge currency. Top Pfl·
ce1. Ed. Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd. A'lle. Middleport. Oh . 614·

992-3478 .
Would like to rant or buy • lot
around L1ngsville, S alem Cantil
or Dexter. Must ha'ole hook-up
for trailer. Call 614-742· 2146 .

VINYL SIDING

Employm enl
Se rvtces
Help Wanted

E~erienoed

WE HAVE MOST ALL POPULAR BRANDS AT
THE SAME LOW PRKES
•Certainteed •Mastic •Aicola

PLUMBING &amp; HEAnNG
Ntw LO&lt;ation:
168 Narlh Second
Middltport, Ohio 45760

-

614-992· 2168.

Addons and remodeling
Roofin g and gut1er work
Concrete work
Plumbing and electrical
worlc
(Free Estimates)

CUSTOM' GARAGE BUILDING

46882.

J&amp;L INSULATION

V. C. YOUNG Ill

We CarTy Fishing Supplies

Management Tralnea.
Ettoblilhld ret1il store chain
INking m.,ogement trainee
candidates. no experience re·
"'lred. Sand reaunw to P.O. Box
, 308 , Portsmouth , Ohio

FRH: f :...fiMATES

992 -6215 or 992 -7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
4-! 5."86-tc

SALES &amp; SERVICE

drummer for en.ab·
lis hed rock blind. Need someone
interettad In working on orlglnial
moteriol &amp; ptaying tonw wet·
kend ~-; We have good oonnec·
tlons in the recording indu1try.
Call 614-246-6008 or 614·
246-5066 attar 7 . 614 -446·
9339 days. ·
Aoutet ..., 1 illlble become a Daily
Sentinol cerTI&amp;r and 11m be·
tween t16 .00 1nd t20 .00 1
week for more information con·
teet the Deity Sentinel todoy at

CARPENTER
SERVICE

PH.

992-2772

6·30-'86-1 mo.

OeUvery per1on: Own car &amp; Ins .,
willing to worlc hard. Appty in
person Oonel\l's, Spring Volley
Plaza .
N&amp;ed babysiner ., my home.
infant &amp; toddler ref. required .
Cotl614· 268· 9381.

Pay Your Cable 8o
Phone Bills Here
IUIINIII '"ONI
16141 992-6S50
PHONE
f6!41

~ESIOINCI

ARMY SURPLUS
&amp; CAMOUFLAGE
Sizes 4 Yrs and up
Al~O HUNTING,
SllRVIVAland
VARIETY ITEMS
ACIOSS FROM
POST OFFICE IN
MASON, W. VA.

DENNY CONGO

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
CJ Co"'uterizad Hearing Air Selection
z Swim Molds - lnteTPreting Setvices

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

~

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

J: licensed Clinical Audiologist

-z

8-13 ttn

10·8-ttc

HELP
Loca l c:orpor~tion now accept·
ing applications for several
po1itions in Man agement.
Marketing and OeU'olary. No
experience. Will train . Company benefit1.
TO

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

OUAUFV

304-773-5222

5·15-'86·1 mo.

ELITE POLE
BUILDINGS

RESIDEN'riAL
COMMERCIAL
AGRICULTURAL
Custom Design

Service

CALL 667-3271
Co•p•re thl Qlllllf

SER~ICE

SYUCIISI, .OHIO
Stlt h 0• '"J•Iyl

HEAVY LUG! liD lATHS

SJ6.95

CIMINf DOGS &amp; CA II

PO SHOP

EXOTIC BIRDS,
TROPICAL FISH,
HAMSTERS.
KITIENS, BIRD
SEED, CAGES &amp;
AQUARIUMS
59 N. !nd AYI.

Iiddle

.. _. hor To

Y?t.fn mo.

RADIATOR
JO'S GIFT SHOP

THE BIRD CAGE
&amp; FISH POND

Honn t
Dependable
Enthu1i1at ic

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

rt

:f!.,,. Alllfo

992-6784

5-20-'86' I mo .

ACCENT

FENCE CO. .lNY
PH. 992·6931

Application• accepted by
appointment Cl'lly 10AM to
4PM. Thun . &amp; Fri .. SU· 446 ·

3587 .

3

CloHdTuN~

440·0284 .
NOAH'S ARK ANIMAL PARK.
School1, GhurchM. COn"ft.lnY
picnics. bh1.hday ptrt i" 1nd
fomily reuniont. Cell 614· 384·

I will not be ,...,onsible for any
debts contractad for by onyone
other than myself. Roger B.
DMton .

54 Miec. Merchandise
MGM Farm City Specials
CIIVEIT-ltMIT. lUPrLYU
a~· Cuhert •• bg. 1.4. 1$ ft.
NOW ONLY 13.75
10' Cttlvtrt ...... IS, IS ft.
NOW ONLY IUS
11 hp l I t lawn T ,

llortd f.mltt cocklpoo, 2 v••rs

,_.,, otoio,

SUPERIOR

i tov, 11. tlloio St.
.. 2.6771
~

t!liii

·n .·ao OM fend•a ... .. us

73-IIOOM

"-'*•
lt1nH .............. 111
n ..,. ford
Fend.,.. .. .... .,,

TN&lt;* lod

Lion ..... . .. . ...:~1

:m

, .. I!E INITALLAfJON
. 2 VR WA~JIANTY
S.liltectklofl Out~rtr~t•d

F"' D..Wtry ln Trl, ltiii•ANI ·

VINYL &amp; AWIIHIUM·'

Comploto G~ar WOfl&lt;
ICamploto RomodoHnv·
Roofing of ott TYPH
Worked 1ft home • •

20 .,..,.
. "Frea Eathn'll•"

.
'
uu cower,

Ph.

·

(614) 143·542$
· 7- 11-.96 2 mo.

•'

July 17 . 18 It 19 . 9·5. St. Rt.
664 tum Iefton Bulevitle Rodney
Rd . aecond house right. Otho
Mit chell rMidence. Lots big u .
clothing for men &amp; worMn,
1ho•. purs81, ster.o &amp; eight
trock upn . perfume• •
jiYVelery.
~~

.h. .

(hregl Sill Friday &amp; Soturday
Jutv 18th • 19th. Anliqu1
furniture. tools, fruitjors.
dolls, c~thing. 11 " ptowa. ~ HP
bendt grinder new, a mM!c.
ittml. 1at houN on .._tttle Kyger
Rd . juet off Rl. 7 .

4 Fomlly Little 8ull1kin Ad. ofl
At. 211, S1t. 8· 5.

114· 211-1343 .

2 fll""'llogo mottly now ctolhoo

2371.

tH 11nL John10n1 MobHo Hom~
ltll'k. trliler 115, blue • white
treiltf', .
4 IlK week okl

SIDING CO.

&amp; Vicinity

Solo· INYing the1re1 , Truh ond
treoeure. You ere invited . N..t to
Cloy Twp . Hall. Coil 114-441·

etd. Qood with children. can

EUGENE LONG .

·······Ganrpolis...... ···

2108 .. 1·600-282·2187.

F,....2 cots &amp; 2 ldnons. tlgen,
ooiiOD8, blect a whit•. molt &amp; 1
tomoto. Clllll4·441·11l25

3-D AUTO CENTER

Wanted· Enthuslutic ond ener·
getic person . Prefer18 · 2&amp; yelf'l
of IQI , with gDOd oommunin·
ticm tkille . Posi tio nt 1v1ieble to
work for South1oetem Ohio'e
outdoOr recreation firm . No
experience need.t . Will troinl
Start Immediately . Coli be·
tweem 10 · ~ at 61 4 · 28&amp;·2248 .
Ask tor Pom.
Govemment Jobs. •18,040 ·
859,230·yr. Now hiring. Cell
9)6·687·6000 Ext . R· 9806 for
current faderellist .
ASSEMBlY WORK!
1714.00 per 100. Guaranteed
paymoot . No 11181. Detail• send
stamped envelope: Elan· 71 6
3418 Enterprise, Ft. Pierce, Fl.
33482 .
EASY

EASV

ASSEMBLV

WORKI

8714.00 per 100. Guaranteed
paymoot . No saLes . Details-send
stamped envelope: Elan· 6847
3418 Enterprise, Ft. Pierce, Fl.
33482.
The Me;gs Local Schoo l District
is currootly seeking epplications
from certified epplicanu for an
A11iatant Vanity Football
Coecfl. 1tl1 and 8tl1 Grade
Football Coach, Boys 8th Grade
Basketball Coach. Boys 7th
Grade Basketball Coach, Junior
Htgh Treclc Coach, A11 istant
Junior High Track Co1ch. Heed
8a111ball Coach. Assistant Bose·
ball Coach , Girl a Volleybllll
Coach, Girls Astiltant Volleyboll
Coach, Girls R nerve Bos~etblll
Coach. Girls Reserve Softball
Coach, Girls Junior High Bnket·
bell Coach . Yetrbook Advisor
and Junior High School Cheer·
leader Adv~r for tha 1988·87
scttoot ye~r. Applieonts must
hold a 'oll lid Ohio tea ching
cartificate 111d tor catching
position• ITLIIIt meet ~;artific:e·
tion requirarrient• ot Ohioeport1
medicine and CPA . Parsons
interested should contact Dan E.
Morris, Supertntendent of Meigs
Local Schools, at 621 South
Third A'lie . in Middleport. Ohio
Cematert ..les potitions lof
women and men. Must enjoy
meeting people. Sales expo·
rience heJpful but not necessary.
Cof'lllletatraining pto'olided . Cell
614· 992· 7440 .
Handyman to finish Pl inting
house. Pay S4 .50 per hour . If
i'lterllted , cell J . J onn at

A gt:llden opportunit y -Join
Frtendtv Horne Toy Panies. the
leader for 31 vears.Openlngefor
menager1 and dealers . We ha'ole
the 11rgest 1nd best line in porty
plan. No caah i'IYtltment, no
delivering or collecting . Eam btg
m:~ney plus bon\IMI end tre'olel
incen tives. Cell now toll free to
Carol Day 1· 800· 227· 1610 .
Naw

products. E•cellent in·
Distribute Mini-Vaults.
Guarlr'tted inoome. No selling .
913· 537 ·2916 .
COrM .

Mature. nard working pl'lf1t:ln
with common aenae ond good
work ethica to fill an apprenti·
ahip meat posit ~. No expo·
rience necnur"9. Must be 18
yeors o f age. Pay odvoncn end
promotions eccording to pro·
gresaandability. Appty in person
at V1u~111a Cardinal before
10:00 em Mon . lhrough Sol.
PRIOR

MILITARV

SERVICE

INDIVIDUALS·hm extra mo·
ney .-.the Army Nation II Guard .
An E·4 oould moke u mucl"l u
1131 .96 for one woek·end 1
rmnth. Other benefits W. clude
160,000.00 life inaurence. pro·
motion•. IIPecitll training. retir•
mont progr~m lend educational
funding . Cell to •• if vou
CJ.IIIify. 304·875 -3860 or 1·

800-642· 3619.
AVON , 3 open tltft'itoriM, cell
304·876· 1429.
AnENTION U M11on County,
W. Va. and Lewrenoe County.
Oh io. ONLYII I Now hiring super·
'lliaorsend demonstrators . Show
Christmas decoration• for perty
plan . Plrt· timt or full-time.
make your houri. No co llecting,
deli'olering or lnvutment. F
it
ond troining. Call collect 304·
486-6733 .•

'"It

NEWI NEWI NEWI Free trip to
Haw1ii can be your•. Get In on
me g10und floor of era11 newest
party plan with ertablitlhed
COf'lliii1Y· Led l"l Hiring for
worlc. et homa manager posi·
tion s. Fle11 iable hours. Greet p•v
Oetails without obligation. CAlL
TODA.YI !co lle ctll04 · 744 ·

0924 .

SWEEPEA and sewing machine
r.poir, perta. ond supplin . PiQk
up 1nd delivery, Dovis V.euum
Cleaner. one half mile up
Otorg• Creek Ad . Call 614-

Afttr S Calf
74!·2027

992-2198
Middleport, Ohio
1- 1a-tfc

lAMPS &amp; FIGURINES
1/1 PRICE •.
OPEN : Mon.·Wod.
ThOr1.-Frl. &amp; Sot.
9 o.m. to 8 p.m.

Pon- time clerk lldl• app.-11
lhop, Gollipolls. Sendreeunwto
Bo11 T10 In W~rl of the Otlllpolil
Deily Tribune, 825 Third AYtl.,
Gotllpolls. Oh 41831 .

Announcements

PAT HILL FORD

1O"'o OFF

Nurtin g .. st.tent experienced
ond·or training only. No phone
calte, apply at Pin.,r81t Core
Center. 6&amp;15 Jockaon Pikt. GoHI·
polis, Ohio .

Eam ~od wog .. for spsre-tim e
••.mbly work et home, plua
meny others . info dill 604·&amp;41 ·
0091 axt . 3667 ,

Vt:1u mu st b e:

Willing to work

Ann oun cements

Help Wanted

862 -3799 .

11

YOUNG'S

6-23 -'86 -1 mo.

•

Used mobile home•. Prefer , 0'
,2 ' wid ... Call 614-446·
0175
&amp;

Restores Faded
Oxidized Finishes To
Showroom Luster
•CARS •TRUCKS
•BOATS •PLANES
&amp; MORE
By Michael Norton
Preserves 8o Seals
From Harsh
992·2038 "WioC~0~~Elements
w / APS DUPONT TEFLON
7/ 9/' 86/ 1 mo.
FREE Est. &amp; Demonstration• AH

All M1ku

1·614-696·1337
1-614-593-869 3

NOW ONLY 'IUO.DO
POMEROY. OHIO
814- 992- ~ 81

RACINE, OHIO
Emergen1cy

Office 949-2438

•Washers •Dishwashers

Serving this area
with PoweSeal nul
coaling and striping
and making of
Asphalt &amp; Concrete.

Aog. '2.008 .96

RAYMOND E. PROFFITT (MAC)

WANTED TO BlJY used wood &amp;
coa l heaters. SWAIN'S FURNI·
TURE. 3rd. &amp; Oli'lle St. Gatlipo ·
hs. Call614-446·3169 .

985-3561

MIDWEST
SEAL &amp; STRIPE

ne

TOP CASH paid for '8 3 model
and newer used c1r1 . Smith
Buiclc.·Pontiac, 1911 Ea1tem
Ava .. Gallipolis. Call 614·446-

YINYL SIDING

or 949·2860
•ftA U
&lt;HAIMS

Jim Mink Chev.· Oidl Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson
614-448-3872

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

2282 .
0

New Homes Buill
" Free Estimates"
PH. 949-2801

-MIDALS
IIQAYILS

used cars .

SfEAM Q.EAN
6· 27·'88· 1 mo

1-3-'86 tfc

''INS

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model clean

Choice of
Materials

FarM EquipMent
Parfl &amp; SeNice

.,._lOUIS

Found: Large Collie dog wearing
collar. Found at Pomeroy Haohh
Core Center Call 614·9926608 .

DRY FOAM

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GU\'SVIUJ:, OHIO
Aulhorizod John DHrt,
Now Holland, lltlsh Hog
Farm Equipment
Dtaltr

Small bl1clc dog 1iuofaC oclcer
Sponiel male. May be Poodle
mix. Debbie Dr. Call 614-446 ·

9

cerpel and

$1995 /:.~oo=•

&amp; SERVICE

LOST blue Crifold billfold , u llrld
of town, Chillicothe Rd . bridge.
Call 614-446-2224 .

4751 .

CARPET
CARE

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

PUBLIC SALE

34018 New Limo Rd.

10-14-tlc

Before
8

RUTLAND MINE SUPPLY CO.

For Hours
304-372-5709

6 lost and Found

LOST Aug. 13, black· brt:lwn
Doberman, · 5 yr . old, apayed
female, friendly Fairfield Ch. Rd .
aree. Call GOri Gibson R-13 Bo~~:
160, Gallipolis, Oh . 614- 379 ·

Stalion•r, Magnetic

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
(614) 446-8016
SIIVICES OFFEMD

ceiv&amp;d in the treasurer's of·
fica by 12 o'clock noon on

304-675·5381 .

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

PIUS: Offin SuwliK &amp;
Furniture, Wtdding
and Graduation

414 SECOND AVENUYE, SUITE 200

Real

Variety of 111 co lor kit1ens .

Ripley Office

office.

In order to be considered
all sealed bids shall be re ·

~:~:7 5.~020~ 0" 11 ~ctudod.

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

,, All r,, ,,,,,,,, N"''

SALES

gray, 2

SMALL ANIMAL HOURS

WAMSLEY &amp; GRAY
(304)

old. 3

vattow, 304·675·81 18.
Smoll mate 8 month old fiJp,
block &amp; whkt, m;, broed. pori

For Industrial or Residential Use

Mon.-Wod.·Thun. 3-S pm
luH. &amp;:30-8; Fri. 1-2 pm
Saturday 10-11 :30 am

Writesel

949-2263
or 949-2168

CHESTER-985·3307

PHONE '9~2-2156

Public Notice

oAll SIZES AVAILABL£

ROOFING

•SATELliTE SAlES &amp; SERVICE

Or llllt Oailly Stntin~ Classthrd Dtpt .
Il l Coull St .. Pomt1or. 01110 457&amp;~

Public Notice

Paul E. Sho,key, DVM
PT. PlEASANT OFFICE
los Jackson he.

upholstery.

OFFERS

The Daily· Sentinel

Siding would solve the problem
for good and cost an estimated
$8,250, st.&gt; said . Bul painting it
would involve sandblasting the
home an d replac ing some clapboards, and would rnst close to
$12,500, Laino said .

half Aultrelien

Sheph•d. halt Beagle, very
fri.,.dly 1nd liJOOd with children,

HIGH PRESSUR~ PLASTIC
WATER PIPE

VETDINAIIAN
CLINIC

•lOCAW BOR

a.it~~p
*SIOflt! Builllp

7-8-'86-1 mo.

6-16-'86· I mo .

A TRAINING/DEVELOPMENT FIRM

Diana Thompson, a Pacific Bell
wit h a pif'Cf' of broken g lass."
product manager, said an individ·
Ilq Jo rl rn en t Direclor Chasr
ual might want a number like
B•vdond sa id Workman appar931-JOHN and a barber shop might
en tlv was following thP old philo·
want a numbe r th ai spells
" 'Pily, " If you Pat a toad first thi ng
HAIRCliT.
in 1he morning, the res I of 1h&lt;' day's
A 1984 marketing survey indi·
t\ll l ~) bad ."
cairo those mosl likely to seek
\\"utkman. who was Sf'JV in g a · gingrrbrrad man . iCf' crram cones,
vanity numbers arr young and
:~ 1 ." '' " . &gt;l'n tnp·. was capt ured
rod flowers. a Pac Man and a middle da%, dress fashionably.
afi•T lx·ing dclainod by a famUy at splattered game of fic ·tac·IOI'.'
like to own expensive things a nd
;-t t ;m d t houS&lt;" n&lt;'ar thf' old mining
"I've had favora ble response have personalized license plates on
C&lt;~lli n . I 'owf'll sa id Workman ap·
from all my neighbors," she said . "I their cars.
p,11 ('Jtt!y ttad brokrn into somr
ran keep il like this until ttl&lt;' city
Under Pacific Bell's pian , which
11l l"ll'l" ("&lt;tbins in thr arra and stolf'n
does something."
will
be considered today by the
t"i\·iJian clothrs.
The comm Lc;sion frO"-'IlS m siding California Public Utilities Comm isl'&lt;'llaaps alrf'ady tirrd .of his within historic dislricts and pro·
sion. the charge to res identia l
nt ·\1.: found cuic;ln(', \\1orkman had a
moles restoration inslead. But customers would be$10 in iti ally a nd
!-.p('a r , a lx•w and arrow, and it
La ino said her house suffers !rom a $1 .50 a month therl'afll''· Busl·
fb hing ~l(' wit h him whrn hr was
moisture problem tha t causes painI ness!'S also wou ld pay $1.50a month
II tblx ·&lt;l
10 bubble and [X'(' I.
with an initial charw of~ .

Festivals slated around

Garage
.

Gospel meeting
announc;ed

AWARDS ..:.. Mrs. Ed (Bemlce) Nelson and Mrs. Bill (Shirley) Smith
were presented Memorial RoD Certiflca1es by the RuUand Churdl d. the
Nazarene in honor of their deooased spouses, V. Edward Ne~n and
· WUIIamJ.Smlth. TheGeneralChureh ~theNazarenereceivESalarge
share ol the support for its medical plan and Mirement program lor
their missionaries Utrough the Memorial RoD.
'

&amp; month-old

11

208buutiful
9th Strett.
Point Pl
ant.
6
kittens
to••good

reading, "Sound of a Million
Children. "
The traveling basket was pro·
vided by Denise Manuel and wen I to
Shirley Ables. Donna Hill donated
new binds for the church annex.
Edith Manu PI had the program
using "The Task of Mending God's
Creation'' with Brmda Anderson
and Denise Manuel assisting. Scrip·
lure was from Eph. 3 and John 10.
Plans were made lor serving the
county council mreting. Members
were reminded of the reviva l to be
held Aug. 6-10.
FoUowing tbe mreting a baby
shower was heldforTeresa Aikens.
JuUa Norris and Brenda Andrson
served refreshments. Mrs. Hill and
Eileen Buck will saw at the next
meeting.

were purchased fort he chu fi:h with
Art Hill donating money for the
American flag and the church
providing the Christian fiag.
Donna Hill presided al t~
meeting with Mrs. Grace giving
prayer. Vicki Abi!'S gave reports,
and the group. Mrs. Grace had a

Giveaway

f~~~~~~~~i"rr~;~;i;~;;-~~~~~~~;;;~rr~;~~~;.~~~~~G~~~~~~~~~~~~====~
Roger Hysell · tRENCHING IS OUR' LINE urs IUiLD UP TOCfTHflll TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
homo.~. weou

tll&gt;re are classes lor ~brid tea ' Janet Bolin, accredited judge and
roses, fiorlbunda, grandifiora new president ol the OAGC, will
roses, gladioli, zinnias, marigolds, judge the show orally all p.m. on
and other annuals and perennials. July 26. Entries must be In place at
In potl€d plants, there are classes roon that day.
lor African violets, other blooming
Committees for the show are
plants, foliage plants, ferns, cacti Mrs. Jack Robsoo and Mrs. VIrgil
and succulents.
Atkins, co-chainnen; Mrs. MalVin
Several classes have been in· Wilson, Mrs. Eugene Atkins,
eluded lor junior gardeners. "Our judge's clerks; Mrs. Harry WUU·
Feath:&gt;red Friends", including a arnson, Mrs. Carl Dennison, Mrs.
bird accessory, and "Ecology" Octa Ward , registration; · Mrs.
using a discarded item as a Roh:&gt;rt Canaday, Mrs. Harvey
container for arrangments, are t h:&gt; Erlewine, placement: Miss Ruby
artistic arrangement classes, and Diehl, Mrs. Dayton Parsons, junior
the horticulture section lor juniors classes; Mrs .. Vernon Weber, Mrs.
includes marigold, zinnia and Dennison, Mrs. Olrls Diehl, public·
potted foliage plant classes.
Uy: Mrs. Jack Robson, Mrs. VIrgil
A display on making corsages, Atkins, Mrs. Dennisoo, Mrs. Eu·
and another on publications and gene Atkins, Mrs. Erlewlne, Mrs.
books on arrangtngwUl be featu red Weber, Mrs. Wilson, staging, and
at the show.
Mrs. Dorotey Woodard and Mrs.
Weber, special displays.

UMW group conducts ·recent meeting
The church picnic to be held in
September was discussed at the
recent meeting of the Apple Grove
United Methodist Women held at
the.chureh.
Ji was noted that Ill&gt; moneymaking calendar will start on Aug.
I with all rroeeeds to be turned in at
the September meeting. New fl ags

4

Business ·Services

Flower·show announced in area
The summer flower ·show of the
Rutland Garden Club to be held at
the Rutland Methodist Church July
:a&gt; and 27 will be ilclude artistic
arrangpments, h:&gt;rllcultW't' spec!·
mens and potted plants, as well as
educational displays.
The show wlll be ~ i&gt;r public
viewing from 1 10 5 p.m. on
Saturday, July 26, and I to 4 p.m. on
Sunday.
While five of the artistic arrange·
· ma1t classes are limited to exhibits
from Rutland Garden ·Club
members, there are two invitational classes, "Craftsrnan shp from
Other Countrtes" In the Japanese
manner, and "The Benefits of Our
Machine Age", an abstract, open to
anyone.
All d the horticulture dasses are
open 10 the public lor exhibit and

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 13

kitten• to

... , . 114-148· 2179.

give

Short· ~olrol Cotuo millod fiJP·
ploo. 114· 742-2714.

3 puppioo li 8hopord. \1 ......
olil, otoo 1 fomllo

c-.•
.......... 114-742-2801.

.....

, .,. ., -or
,_ -

.

· ,._. 304-....

rot· Pttt 8uH,
flthlf' pntcnown. 103 1tt ltrNt.
Clll 3114-171-2831 .

344 L10roncle. ClothM, boo~.
fumlture, tay1 &amp; mile. Thurt.,

Fri .. 6 S1t. 8·1.

Moving Sel•. Uteful thinge
ch...
Next to CIIY lwp.
buUding. Coli for directions

81 4-UI-2371.

l
.......
p........................ .
omeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

2 family yerd ... le, Riggacrnt
Menor. July 17. fro m 9 to 4 .
Cloth as, bik•. ping·pong tabla,
c;:hair• etc .
Sat. July 19. 9-1. Benadums.
Succ111 Rd . just off of R t. 7 .
Fur niture. dlsh81 , cloth81 , mil e.
200 pr. new 1choo l lhoas. Boya
end girls 14.00 pr. Baby ehoet
14 .00 pr. Mens and boys tNer
shoet tl .OO pr. Olrls over tl11
shoe boots 13.00 pr. Plu1 meny
other lteme will be sokt 11 1y1rd
11le. Sat . July 19 behindleJach
Club corner oH At . ,43 and Rt.

7. 9·1.
2 mUn out 143 July nand 18
li enderson r•idenot.

...... Pt'Pieiisiinf·····
· &amp; Vicinity
..... ·-··········---····· · .. ··-· ··

Yard sale1 .3 miiMout Slf!d Hilt.
Cretm houtt on hlft. Fri. S1t.
tlk\1, Avan boUI11, tlb .... 9·3 . Oualit'f kids cloth11. blby
hems. curtoma. •• klndl of
cloth•. Rio Grlnflop_, oolloltO th'nga.
New WVU end MU
.,.,; rlghlll ooutkin light Choooy T·llhirt1.
A~, 1 -oniltlht tl-4.
· f~mlly yord IIIIa. Fri. S11. Sun.
YSoto F~. 11th. Sot. 18111. l112
Svo1more Line. New
~ull off 141 on l[tna&gt;tn Pike II
Cent.nery. Movtng . .letoote of Havoo. Jack HHton. Look for
tlgns . "Everyt~lng".
all -'indl. I lot of everything .

Gar... S1le BodeprNdl,

at.~r·

�'•

Page-14-The Daily Sentinel
11

Hlilp Wanted

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY
•ttt•

School tiiiOher need• baby
In ho rr. tor 2 pre tohool children

1n Point ,..,,... 1nd

c••

. - ..

For Nnt liMPing Roome end
l'"ht houoo kooplng rooma. Park
'" o1 H-·~
C II 114· •••
- ·
Contr
•- 1
0711.

slox·
..d

rar...ce~ tD

C-11
ol Point PlHI•nt
Rogloter, 200 Moln St .. Pt. P~ .•

Apome tor rent, dey. wealr..
nonlh. OaMia HOM!. Cel 114-U8-H80. A... uwu• 1 2°

W. Va.

OPENINGS AVAILAIL! lltlllng
Merrl Mtc't guliMtMCI line of
toyl, gifU. holM Hcor ittml,

-nonth.
Fumtehecl room eHI. Utlliti•
pd. 118 211&lt;1 Ooil;polio. Share
bllh. 1111(111 mola. Call 114·
'-46·4418.

etc. NO dtlltverlng, collecting or
inv..t...,.t. Vo\lr houri. Call

304-875·8758 .. 1 ·800·992·
1072.

66

Furnilhed Room•

46

Oeptndeble lady to 1tay with

31

Homes for Sale

be your own boas, cell 304- 676·

30111 11ter 3:00.

Green ecret has opening for
Hygienic Aid. Point Pleuant
woup homa . Contact Homer
Rutherford , 304 -878 -&amp;009.

Well uperienoed ledv for occ•
siGnal blby1itting, o\lemight
ampklyment when parents are
out or town . Good pay, reference r-aulred . Write Box P.15 in

cere Pt . Pleuant Regitter. Pt.
Pleasant. WV.

12

'

alderty. Rasonllble ratM . 814-

992-8022 .

Wanted to Do

Tree

wor• wanted , pruning ,
topping removals. hedget &amp;
bush• trimmed . land daaring .
Free estimel81. Call 8, 4-4481832.

Will do l.wn mower repair and
mowing yarda. 197 Kelton Rd .
614-446-3176
Will do babysitting in my horne
tor working moth&amp;ra . Call 6, 4 992-6872
Qualified Home Ec taachM, wilt
de •wing. alteration• and giva
leseont . 304-176-8712

lower IINel. Ruatic KiM. Syra·
cus1. 3 bedroom. 1.-ge kitchen.
lergelivingroom. eir. cond .• dith
wash•, carpe1ed. l~rge garag•.
Price reduced. 114-992-7478,
efter 6:3C 614-992-3402.

4 bedroom home on 7 acr...
HuntMI plrMiile in Ch11ter
area. $32,000. Call IU-9854392 .
5 rooms, bath, utility room.
Garage. air condhlon. cenu11
hnt. good condition. Re110n for
selling went to move south. For
more information cail614·992·
5204 .
Bilevet hou1e In Aiggacr•t
Manor. 9 rooma, elate to
achoola, email bam. ni~ . C1ll
614-985 -4279.
Home tor tale by owntf, 3
bedroom. tamlty room, 1 'II
betht. price reduced. Arbuckle.
304-586-9148 '
A fr•ma house. 2 btdrooma.
Soulh1ide. W. Ve. 304-8761,16.
Madam 3 bedroom home, reduced to t48.000.00. 304675-5047.

Financial
21

4 bdr. hOUII, big 2 Cit Dlrlgl
with .rtached green houae. fruh
cellar S. 3 acrn. Cell 814-448·
8181 .

3 large bedrooms. 1 1h bath, XL
living room, XL lr.llchen. utility
room, garage. Arbaugh Addition
in Tuppert Pleinl . Cail614-187·
6239.

Situations
Wanted

Room botrd and ltundry for

18

2 324 lincoln, 4 bedroom. 304676-2130 .

Business
Opportunity

NOTICE. !
THE OHIO VAllEY PU8L\SH1NG CO . recommend• thtt you
do buain•• with people you
know. and NOT to tend money
throu~ th11 mail until you have
rtv11tfgat«&lt; lhe offering.

Southaal1:arn Ousin•s Collegal
The training you naedl For tha
jobs vou want Fin.,.ciat aaailt·
anCIJ available. Call today : 614 992· 61 77
$9 .99 One Price St-toe Store
from liberty Faahiona. Inc. Un believable pricas for qu ality
aho• r-orrn~lly pr iced from,, 9
to 180. Over 160 bland name~ 25C stvl.. . One-time tee inclu des inventory. buying 1rlp,
tixturaa. a~ppliea. in1t0nt train ilg. more. can combine with
ovet" 1,000 brands of fashions
.-.d ac&amp;astorias. Dan Kottacky
501 -327-8031 .
H.ve apartment hou1a for sale
reuonab le Ctll 614 - 992 6022 .

23

Professional
Services

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

4 bedroom house. fireplace. 3
mi. touthofGallipolia. 129,900.
Call daya 614-446 -1616 or
evenings 814 -448·6222
3 bdr . home, clou to town, 2
bJtha, par11y furnished . Gu
haat. low utili1iet . Ce11614 -246·
9248 .
3 bdr .. ltrgakitchan, bath. utility
ro om. single glt'age. 2 car
drlvewa~ .
nice 'tltd, garden
apace. finished garage. Call
614-446-1358
, 2 Evans Hgt. , Gallipolis. 3 bdr .•
remodal.t kitchen , lull bat&amp;manl with fir~t~~lace . 1 b&amp;th. Call
514-448 ·8699 .
1 11 ~~tor i at , 4 &amp; 5 bdn .. 2 batha,
full basement. firepl ace. 14x20
buUcltng with QlftQe, 8. 1 acr•
in Aio Granda near Bob Evant
Farmt. 1!3.000 . C11il 614-2455197 .
1

Rio Grande new lovely 3 bdr .. 2
full baths. full baaament. great
vhrw. 3 dedit, e.dar siding,
gable roof, t49.500 . CaM 814i48-1038. Will conaidtr trade in
of mobMe horne.
QuM~ho~. n.w~r~td

choice locMion on College Ad.
Syracun. new complttelr.ltctltn
and teUndry, air conditioned,
......... . 114-882-&amp;324.

'"""'" prlaod •20.000. Col

.'

I

2 bdr. furn . or unturn. convenient loeatton, Uppw River Rd ..
all utilitin paid excep1 electric.
Sac. dep. req. Cell 814-441-

8568 .

Upp• River Ad. Wil accept 2
children on~. rat. &amp; dap. Call
61 4· 448·2430 or 614-4410508 .
14x70 furnilh_. thr11 bedroom.
btth &amp; 'h. centrel llir. •210
month, t250 depoail. Call 614·
446-3793.

2 bdr. Mtuhs only. no

322
3rd. AVe .• Gallipol ... Oh. Call
814-446-3748 or 614· 2561903.
pe-11.

3 bedroom furnished trtil• wtth
front porch. newty remodeled,
deposit required, 304-1753893.

3 bedroom mobtle home, furnith..:t elao 2 moble home tot a.
phone 304-876-1612.

44

GOOD USED APPliANCES
WIShers, dryltl, refrig•atort,
rena•• · Slr.lgg1 Appli1ncu,
Upp• River Ad. bMide S10ne
C,_t Motel. 814-446-739e .
Caunty Applir.nce. Inc. Good
uNd appliance~ and TV seta.
Op., lAM to IPM . Man thru
Sot. 814·448·1899. 827 3od .
Ave. Gallipolis. OH .
VaUey Furniture, naw II Uled.
Large tection of quality fumi ·
ture . 1216 Eastern Ave .,
OoiNpolll.
oa.on air condition• 18.000
BTU . Call Ifill" 5PM, 814· 4419637.
For Hie good uaed color floor
model TV' t . Ce ll 614-446·
1149.
Pidten1 Uaad Furniture. Good
.,_lllty Ulld fumhure. Open Ito
I or call for ~ointment.
304·175·1483 .. 876-14&amp;0.

Apanment
for Rent

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Furnlthld apt. 2 bdr 1175.
131Yt 4th QaHipalla. Wet• pd.
Call 814-448· 4418 after 8pm.

One 18.000 btu air cond,
12.000 btu •" oond, 11 o Zenith
colo rid floor model TV, ehllt
type freezar. good cond, 304773-8185.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL' S QUAliTY
MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST, GAlLIPOliS. RT 38
PHONE 114 -445-7274.
12x63 Vlndale. good cond. C.ll
814· c.t6-9266 .
For Nlo or ren1 1973 Freedom
12x66, 2 bdr., wa1her dryer
hookup, eir cond .. Kyger CrMk
Oil1rict. 14,700. 1185 rent and
t100 dep. Ca11814-448-31&amp;2.
1979 1•h70 all alae. 2 bdr. on
1 h acrta. range, rllfrig. washer
&amp; dryer included. all c~rp.ted.
116, 960. CJII8,4-388-8801 .
1972 Flamingo 1 2xl5 mobUe
homo. 3 bdr .. Hl bath. totti
etectric, pll11y furnithed , CA.
underpinning, Ba 1 0 deck , etldng
t6.200. Call514-245-9647.
76 Kenwood 12x80 2 bdr., til
alae. Call 614-379-2662 or
614-379-2354 .
1972 mobilehomewithoneecre
11nd, 2 milll from town. CaH
614-448-1841 .
1960 Uberty 14•54, 2 bed·
room, untumiahad, vinyl underpinning included. Mutt tell. C•U
304-773-5873.
MOBil E HOMES MOVED: lnaurad. rnaonabla retat. Call
304-576-2335

1977 3 br Shultz mobile home.
completely fu[.nlahad indud•
11ove. refrigerjt:or. dlahweahet".
deep freeze, waaher. dryer. new
INing room autte, 215 " eolorTV.
3 bedt and 2 ceiling fen1. porch.
thed tnd underpenning. Ctn be
left on rented lot. t 11 ,000.
304-675-1599 .

33

Farms lor Sale

U2 tcr• 3 bdr. houu, bMn. 2
ponds. will tetl ell Of part . Call
614-246-9248 .

J.a A Flfm. At. , L.an. M1k1
OHeo. 1-904-698-1429.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Older coupl• 2 bclr .. utittiM
perttv plkl t 1&amp;0 mo.. Call
304·87~·5104 or 304-8755386 or 304-175-7921.
Hou11

a ..,.,.ment for

alngl•.

Coli 304-178-5104 .. 304·
676-63!1 .. 304-878-7828.
Furniahed 2 bdr. ept. utilitl•
pirtlllly paid. Call 304-8175·
6104 or 87!-1381 ot 304-17!7926.
2 bdr. fumiahed

apt. newly
redecorated . nice lo cation.
ldulta only, no pets. Call 814446·2404.
Furn . apt .. 4 rooms &amp; bltl\.
upateirt, , or 2 .cjylta. 18curhy
dtPOiit &amp; reference. Call 814·
445-0444.
1 and 2 bdr. apta. for rent. Iaaie
rent tor , bdr. 1178. B•lc rent
for 2 bdr. 1212. Alto UOO tee.
dep. ,.q. Clo•e to Foodland end
Spring Valley Piau. Jackeon
Eltatt Apartments. 8U-·4463997 . Equal Housing
Opportunity.
Furnished apartmtnt. adulta
only . Col\ 114-448-9523.
Furnished or unfurnished 1pt. ,
low rent. mu1t have refarencaa.
Coil 814-448-76441ftlf 1PM.

5- Court St. 3 bdr., 1 'Ia be1h,
ltitchan fumiahld, no pata,. 12!C
mo. plua depottt &amp; refarMce.
Call 814·448·4921.
11 Court St. 2 bdr., 2 bJth,
kitchen fumlahad, no petl, 1325
mo. ptua depo1tt • reference.
Call 814· 445·4828.
1 bedroom ap1. for r•t. Balle
rent 111r1s 1211. a month that
indudll all utlllti•. Oepoait
required ot UOO. Cont1ct VIIlege Manor Apt. Mlddl.,an.
814·992-n87. Equal Houetng
Opponunity.
Pomeroy 2 bdr. Neylore Run,
1175 mo. 1,00 depo11t. yard,
patio, Cali after 8pm 814-992·
8886.
1 bedroom apt. in Pomeroy.
Complet:ety remodeled lr.hchen
fumlthed . All ntM ruga. 114992· 6215 .. 114· 992· 2314.
Nice atflclency 1pt. ldtll tor
working lady or gentlemen.
2215'h Mount Vernon Aw ..
Point Plellant. Cell 8114-9926861.

Building elt• 3 to 17 eer• 3 Apt. on Mlin St. In Pom•oy.
milll w ..t of HMC . Call 114- Coil 51 4 ·992-6069.
446-e221 .
APARTMENTS, mobile hom•.
Porterbtoo .. Sub- 'h tcra lot. Cell
P1. PINMnt •nd 01lllpo.
1\a. 114-445-8221 .
614-44&amp;-el28 .

hou••·

Ulr.e

ftiW

Refrigerator runs good
UOO.OO. 22 cu rt traezer
t221 .00. E111Ctricltovel28.00 .
Phone 304·8915·3181.

54

Mise. Merchandise

Calllhen 'a Ueld Tire Shop . Ovar
1,000tlr•. siz:•12 . 13. 14 , ,5- ,
18, 18.6. 8 mil• out Rt. 218.
Col\ 51 4-258· 82&amp;1.

New T•temant dMign embmidery qultt, htndmade by church
group 1100. Cell 304 -8372581 or 304-415e-1897.

Beauty Shop IQU.,mant. Dining
room Mt. othlf fumlture. Cali
114-446-01106.
Air oondrtionar· 21 ,600 BTU . Ex.
cond . 1300. Cali 8U.. 446 -

8128.

W.-tem show IIddie. bridla.
breeat collar • hall er, other
saddl•. nylon hailers. bridlat.
alddle pede. blanket•. trunk.
pony mare. Ctlll14-448-2222
Ootf clubl81 MacGregor Tournoya. Coli 814· 448-1807 .
30 In~ . Crotlly ltove white
176. Coiii14-441-0780.
RHblt hutch with feeder •
wa1ar botlia. Or••lf with mlr·
ror. utility kitchen cablnat,
CUJ)Itwlth pld, metaldelk. Cell
81 4-446·4289 .
Summer Hot Still Fl•hlng
errow tign 12181 lighted, non·
•n-ow •2181 Nonlightld 1229 1
FrN letters! FWI left. SN
loe~lty . , -800·423·0113. any time.

20 QUIOI AemWtgtoll P\l fJ1)
Mod• 870. Good condition . Call
11 4-882·6204.

UHCI Dure-llh 1 '11.20' IWnlng,
304·875·3000.

Fumlalt.t on• bedroom apt on
Mt. Vernon Aw .. ntwlr ,.,..,..
................... - . h • o t *
· pold,
lint duplu.
pr~ - g odult.
•:too .oo month. depoelt.

......... ueo. 30&lt;1-87&amp;-1388.

921 Fktt AYO .. OoH\pol\1, Oh. 5
rrn. ltouoo. Coil 814·441·3148
•ftw 4PM.e

2 bedroom Dupl• houM ,.,.

tlally lurnloltod. Law utlltloo, In
Pornoroy. Coli doyo, 11'1-N2·
2311 ot 114-882· 2801 .....
lnge.
'

Bummer "HOT" &amp;ALE\ Fl•hitg
INlOW aAan •:test Uclhltd, non·
arrow -.2881 Nonllghtld 12281

Free l.tt. .l Ftw l.tt. IH
11100142'3 · 01 63 .

locolly.

ony~lnto.

lnt••ld 1111111..,.• altouklcoN

"••d.

,.,.,.,..,01.

2 br t•ll• ept, Leon. On th1
rlvor. n78. month, HUD Approved: Muon 2· btdroom
homo. hlao 1"'1• lot, goroao •
baHment. •zoo. inanth, H•
m . - Rlllty. 304·6711-6&amp;40
ot112-U06.

.

'

N.w gelvtnlzed corrugated cui·
vert pipe12.l5 ft.• up. Allailea.
OeliYIIry. We buy &amp; Hll good
ua_. 20" ateel gu pipe, heavy.
Enquire flrtt . Champion Metals.
Box 6002. Chtrleeton, WV
25361 . Coll304-925-6211 .
RAILROAD TIES: 8'Yr ft . by 8
ind'tte by 10 inch ... 18.00 per
tie, delivered. liil Slaclr.. 814·
992· 2269.
Blodl, brick, monar and maIOnry IUPPiill. Mountam Stl1a
Blodt, Rt. 33, New Heven, W.
Vo. 304-882-2222 .

66

Pets for Sale

H 0 Modll • • layout,
L·thaptd, MW•alenvln•. c ...

MOUntMnl. ., ... ..._, aoen-v. 4
WonHr OOti•WOOd burner,
t100.oo. 11 Inch blcvclo
UI.OO. Col JO'I-·1-JOtll.

1171 Kow-1 KZ 810, 4 .....
etrHI bike, 11.000 mllet.
1700.00. 10K,.,.•n-*1QOO.OO. Col :1114-871·,.to,

DouW.Itod tto., tWinllod t40.,
..
1 10. 304-116·3111
......
200-30
-·-·
· ....

3071.

.•

Poodle puppy. 8 willkt old .
304-675-8381 '

57

Musical
I nstru menta

1982 Ford E1oort. SW, AC~ new
tlr•. VIJIIY clten, white,
t2.110.00 or belt off.,-, 304·
882·3200.

Wanted ona forage blower for
ailaoga. Coli Joy 814-286-11118
after IPM.

1978 Tran1 Am. aherp, rnu11

Heovy duty 8 INu ... ltog 3 pt., u .
cond. t&amp;OO. John DHflmanure
epreeder good oond. t300.
Oltvar 3 bottom plow1 high
cluranoa trip thank good cond.
UOO. Coli 814-379-2711.
2 horn trail•. 1800. Cel
814-992-2315.
New Holland 417, 7ft h~bine.

good cond, 12, 260.00. 304273-4215.

62

Wanted to Buy

Now buying ehell aom or ear
corn. Cell for lal•t QUotn. River
Ctty Farm Supply, 814-448 2985.

63

liveetock

Horae trtlllf'l 2 horse deh..lxe
wi1h dr. .ln,room, 16ft. gooae
nec:k hor'll .. oclr; trailer. Call
614 · 286· 6822 .
gr~y

8 yur old Reg.

qu•nar
hortegtldlng. ldd broke. tired by
Jty Jamn. Call 114-388-8801 .
Arabian Hor1•. purebred Ara bi., ltud eervlce. Spacial dis count• to youth groups. R . &amp; J .
Arabi. .. Leon. W. Va. 304-

461-10112 .

HOJa• and lltddle for .... and
Olher tack. 304· 88 2-2782.

1978 Plymouth Trail Ouatlt'
4x4. Will trllde for a newtr 4
wheel drlv• or •n oldar cer or
truck in trldt. 814-H2-2112.

f m•1 Supplil''
('; liVI'~.I111 I.

81

F erm Equipment

CROSS •sONS
U.S. 38 - · · Joclloon. Ohio.
114· 281-IIU1•.
MUM'( FlfVIuton, NM Hollend,
Bulh Hog 81'-1 • Service. Ovar
40 •ld trac10rs to Clho01e from
CO'f1J'-teline of n• uaed
M~Uip ment, Lara•• aalectlon In
s .E. 0111o.

a

a

JIM'I FARM EQUIPMENT
CENT!R . SR 31 W. OoHipolio,
Ohio. Coil 11'1-446·11777. ovo.
11 4-448·3112. Up ffttnt IJIC·

tore wtth

...,..,ty over 71 ulld

triCiton. 1000 toolt.

Ulllltv ltldg, IPL: 30'1140'al '
wtu;; r11'4' eNd• a 3' 11rv.
door. tl,215 ertoted , Iron
Hotoo lldga. 81•· 332·1741

-

L otonoodiiJDNier . .te.I01
FOfd rnowlnt mochlno, ... noW
t315. AC rllto •n5. e 10n
-on IUMing gllrt U78 .
New ldll lftii'IUI'e IIN'Mdlf

Ullll.

~ :II ~:

.. • ---22.

_____

ull. t2.300.00 . 304-882 ·
....:..:...
2350 .
'71 Corvena L82 for
30.· 87&amp;-1822.

1986 Camero Z28. 14.000
mil•. dartt red. run_, port
itJoctlon . a1o.soo. 304-1753427.
1973 Voiktwegen naMa work
•&amp;oo.oo. Phone 304-882 2062 .
1978 OldtStarFireGT, 11 , 200.
or ban offer, 304-875-8, 18.
1974 Volknwagon. good cond.
304· 773-9185 .

.
.
.·
.. :

'72 MG Mi:lgat. 1275 cc. 4
good Gond. com-

11).-d. very

pltte carpeting, Rote
Whool. 304-415e-1514.

Pedal

1878 OkttnDbile Cutla.. Su·
pr.,..e, PS, air cond, 350 V-8
engine, good cond, 1700.00 or
bHt oflor. Call 304-675-2918.
1986 Thunderbird t12 ,100.
low mileage, exc. condition,
loaded with enru. C•ll after
6:00 . 304-87&amp;-4276.

72

Trucks for Sale

1982 Mude 6 apd .. tir, AM ·FP.C,
12.499. John'• Auto Salea,
Bul111llle Rd.. Qal\;po\la, OH.
1972 Chevy PU. 307 engine.
nand•. nso. CeH 114--258e&amp;&amp;o.

64

11pead 'h mn . AM-FM etereo. lilt

Hay

&amp; Grain

20 acr• ttendlng hay, by the
bale or lher•. Cent.-...-y ara.
Call 81 4-441-4063 .
Good mixld My on the wagon,
" .00. 304-875-6578.

Tran sporl a111111
71

Autos for Sale

1988 Ptymouth Dutter. 1977
Cadillac coup de ville, 1977
GMC Yt ton pickup. Pic:kup
cemp•. Caiii14·448 · Hi82.

black lntlrtor. I !lpd., .,n roof.
low rrtlllllll- "1100 CoM 814448-78M ~or lorn.
81 Flrtblrd. 400 •-'"•· 41P.
8111 olfor. lltlfl&gt; ... l:o\1 61•·
441 · 7383

1878 Feirmont 4 tv\ .• 4 'Pd.,
-dcond . .. IO. CoN814·251·
1417.
1874 OOifte Dirt. eloltamatlc,
.-em-tlx engine, 1600. Ctn
614· ..1 · M50. con Iller
·1 :00PM.

81 C..olltr n.., draa. AM· fM

o.too radio. AC, 2•.000 mllea.
11 Hong• ....... AM-fM
...-a. 16.000
CoH
114 · 246·6111. 8U ·2U ·
&amp;• 10. or 11•· 281-871 3 .

mil•.

1182 C utlooa lupramo
8roupem low mHtige, exo.
cond. -•lnr liN.. oollti.IIO.
Col1114·28 ·1131.

14 Chlllotto 4 oyl .. 2 door, 6
AM.fM
low

.d..

•-o.

,979 Dodge pick up h1if ton,
good tirM, uc running cond.
12.200.00. negotiable

73

Vans &amp; 4 W .O.

1980 Chevy ,v •n eac, cond. dull
air &amp; heat. Cruise. tltt, 8
pntanger, t6,891. C.al 614·
379-2341 no Sundays.
1880 Chevy van exc. con d. dual
air &amp; hell. Cruite. tltt. 8
pata•ger. 15,886. C•n 814·
379-2341 ,., Sundeya.
1171 Dodae ven tiOO. Ctlt
114· 446·0035 """ 6.
Wilty'a JHp 310 ..gin•. 4 bbl .,
du•l exhauat. two rolt b1ta,
whita II)Oke whttll, nM~¥ tlr..,
tach, grill ..ard,. wtnch 11 ,400 .
Co\1614· 379· 2768.

drive, tuto, 3810 V-8, very good
tDdy and meeh cond, 304-458 ·
1514.

Motorcycle a

1 Ul Hond TAX· 70 ... , ...
A.TV, ltiK und..- warrlftty, like
_ , Purcltllld April 1981.
llo!uot 11i. CoM 814·441-4684
oft• 6:00 IIIII ·
1113 H..,do CB-1100. 1,200
mil•. dune butDV. m~~xl •••I
•&amp;g&amp;. lt67 CldiM10 Eldorodo
tal&amp;. Coil 81 4·448·01141.
1111 Honda Cl710 cuttom.
low mil•. exc. cond. Call
114·317·0317 .

1171 Hili ... Dovldaon FlH . CaM
114·441·13H llf1er 5:00. 614·
445·1117.
1112 Hondo XR 1100 A ox c.
oond. Col t1 4·317-1)618.
1111 Handa watom u . cond.

only e.ooo noll•. noo. Call
614·311 ·8751 .

78 H - Howk 400. Plro nlco,
1.000 m\111. •1.000. 304·175·

. . 4:00.

1177
·o. Corio.
:110 ·
oil.
Folr....
1711. 1171
Pllllo

N
Mello&lt;. good - · till
oao.-Colll1'1-742-afl.

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

1112 Fotd 1-.t. N- lloro'
point Job. a ... rMf, taooo. Col

tnt--

81

THE )U~VIVAL

eASEMENT
WAT ERPROOFING
Unconditional lifl'time gu•rantM. local referenc• furnished.
Fr• lltimet•. Call collect
1· 8, 4-237-0488, diV or night .
Rogers Basemen t
W1terproot1ng.

Hr~r

~ATE'

;W~ ·Pf=AL.ING

WITH THt:.SE

~OPlt-~~

.$aNGLE·IN'I'f~!:&gt;r

Tt&gt; MEE-T

GfrolJP&gt;!

WITH 'yOU.

'-~-1

,

1--------

nigh&amp;

i
•

I I I I'

t

PRINT NUMBfRED
lETTERS
UNSCRAMBLE

ANSWER

I'

IIIIIIIII

FORI

Aglln BAI!ATfiER."

------::-=--

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

®

RON'S Televl•lon Service . ~
Houll ctlls on RCA. Quater,
GE . Speci11ing in Zenith. Call
304 -178-2398 or 114-446 2454 .

••P•

RINGLES 'S SERVICE .
rienctd Clrp.,ter, alectrician,
muon. painter, roofing (including hot llr tppllca1ion) 304875-2088 .. 175· 7388.

ex's attempts to date a new
man are disrupted when
she is sent to Spanish Harle m t o convin ce a reluctant
w itne ss 10 testify against
an accused murderer. ~R) .

- ~ ~-----

Cell Ernie Cerpent*'J. remodeling, room addltlont. painting.
block. free ..umat•. 304-1765152 .

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CHAMCWIIL~ 15 CS00D

BUT I PONT HAVE
A 5TDVIACH..oct-\E .

Fa&lt;.

COLD5AAD ~E5
ANDSTWFF.

Excavating

YOO HAVEN'T HAD ANY
C HAMCWdLE YET.

HOT C/1~1i.C

25&lt;1 A CUP

Good· 1 hcavatlng. bllementa.
footlft, drlvM'aya, 111rtic tanka,
lendeceping. Call anytime 814 441-4537. J1m11 l. Oevilon.
Jr. own•.

HOW ABOUT
A FEW KERNELS
OF CORN.

MELISSY?

...

•

"'
••

•
TRIITATI
UPHOI.tTift Y IHOP
11113 Ita. Avo., OollllrONo .
11•· 441· 71U or au.ue1UJ.

1

A • M'U'"Itur•MMUftatuf~g,
11. ftl. 7. Crowo
Oh. . oil

c,.,,
f14 · 2tl· 1•7o. •tit •••· 1 4·

••w

I ONCE WENT

FO~

WfT140UT CARROT

1110 Ford. . . . .
"""clition. Cal 11•·Mt·IOII
otter I p.m.

...,.

'

.,

·II'

I

~

,.

i

Yeeterday'o Anawer

president
II Smallish

25 "The Legend 32 Early
of Sleepy
Latin
- "
Scripture

lhou?

14 Automaton28 Iron

Dorothy's

I? Offtclale

S3 Pre1end

34 Booking -

Curtain

38 Edilor's

mark
39 Mar!M bird
41 Hooray!

pnnent

the Huns

sa Dock union
Be Hellos

37 Yoong sheep

38 Nine,
in music
40 Addre9s the
c::onventJon

421naWI
eloctricity
41Drawing

room
UTiny
rolonist

411111nnese
U.N.
ataiHmln

DAD.y CRYPI'OQVOI'ES- Here'lllow to worlllt:

AXYDLJAAXR
. IILONGFBLLOW

'
=

One leiter lllndl for IJIOiber. In IIIia SIJIIIIle A Is used
fwlhe tine L'1, X for l!le two 0'1, etc. Single letters,

,..,,

A.-loan 8n1~ "

IDN-

8 Classic
hone
7. CumJne
84th U.S.

31 Kina of

.......

II) INN Newt
N-eiGh

I!Oddess
I Fowl place

for Moees

.• IIJWtltlnn '

10:10

16 Soul {Fr.)
11 Caplllre
18 Japanese

SO Sacerdotal

power blackout olrandil
Weolphall in on elevalor
with an angry young man. ·
t60 min.) (R) .
__,
•
(I) • (JJ Arthur Holloy'tr·
Hotel ICC) Chriotine may
be lhe 1orget of an unk·

!"in.)

composer

dog
20 Gate
land
Z4 UMW&gt;Ie
recelpls 27 Beat it!
Z? Playwright 13 Camping 29 Philippine
Jun
need
peasant
28 Lamp style 24 Blemish
HNumber

2.1R).

.

Plunder

4 Greek

U

(I) Water. llklll. the Pllnet
Earth Tht impomnce of
weltr In life lo explortd.

CAKE~

Pus

13 Snllce

Zl WIM!re -

lege Irion&lt;!• hold. reunion,
and the hotel'• ucirrlry
head beg lnt tctlno •u•of.
ciou•ly. (80 min.) Part t of

HALf AN HOUR

I French

21 Klnaman

nown llllttln, threl col·

WHO CARES ? 1M
6ETTIN6 ~UN6RV!

ahrine

tO Horveot

ataiHmln
19 Mexican
Indian

cut falla in love and 1

.I '

Upholatary

Eaat

I NT
Pass
Pus

Z Texas

9 Lamina

u

10:00 G [l)I!J St EIMwJlt,. Fit.

Nor..

Wnt

6 Weapon

Tho hottotl NEW
CO'JNTRY by Honky

Men Dwight Yoakam
1onlghl ot 9 :30PM.
NASHVILLE

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: East

ltr THOMAS JOSEPH

Tonk

•

+A9

ACIOSS
DOWN
I One of the I Europe1111
liiUeees
fWt

fererit categories. (90 m1n .1
(AI.
9 :30 D [l).iliJ You Ageln1 Man.
suffering from pinkeye, hll
his eyes bandaged at tht
same time Hanry breaks
his foot: IR) In Stereo.

Y

+AJ 10 H 4

••o
a2
+KQ

~

(j]) Nllional Geographic
Special: Land of the Tigor
[CCI The behavior of w 1i d
tigers is explored up .close
in t his special filmed m two
of Ind ia's national parks.
[60 min.! IR).
lllJ MOVIE: 'Tho Big Sleep'
8:30 ® II) CI2) Charlie &amp; Company [CCI Charlie anamp11
10 become Juniors paL (R)
9:00 II [1) iliJ Gimma a Break
Ne ll overreacts when she
learns that J oe y is a gifted
child. (R)I n Stereo.
(I) 700 Club
.
(!) Bowl ing: PBA Au111n
Open From TaKas . 12 hrs .)
Li ve.
(1) 0 (I) Hordcallle and
McCormick (CCI Harden·
tie rounds up his old basketball team to help out an
old college friend in trouble . 160 mi n.l [R)
CIJ Nllional Googrephlo
Special: Land of the Tiger
ICC) The behavior o1 wild
tige rs is explored up clote
in this special filmed in two
of India's national parks .
160 min .IIR).
® Ill CI2) Alrwoll A wouldbe model saves Hawke
fro m assassins and tags
along while he eludes th e
Fir m to recover stolen information . (60 min I (R) .
(j]) Championship Bollroem
Donclng T.op dancero from
around the country com·
pete for honors in three ~ if­

Jan'llt Boya Watar Service. Alao ~­
poola tiHid . C•ll 814 -218-, ,41
Of 814-44S-1176 Of 814 ·44e - '
7911 .

i

(I) MacGyvor fCC)

ets'
(i) MacNoii·Lohrer Newoh-

Aotery or cable toot drilling.
Moat waH• completed 11meday.
Pump Hie• and service. 304895· 3802

441 · UU . 01~
Uphoalorai.

14

min I [R).
fj) (1) MOVIE: 'Green Ber-

H£. SAID~ lRIW
10 10t:6 HIM LN:,T ~

·

SOUTH

to take klnp, Eut foollsbly won the Pus
ace. He tileD led a low beart back.
Openiog lead: +J
South tlloagbt lUI over for a moment
and 111en put II the e!Cbt. wbicb loMed
.
the_jack. Now thlt South's 10 was es.
. _
tabi!Ned. be 1111111e the contract.
the heart 10 inlt1~lly, West Will s101ply
Altboullll d«Jarer made the wrong cover with the ract, and once agam
play East eully defeats blm If he East will p~vall by s1mp~y allow_mg
dtldli the kin&amp; of lleartl. Whe1l the suit dummy's high honor to won the first
11 pllyed ICala the clefeaders will trick.
'take two 11eert trlcb to aet the band. Both East and South forgot to ~unt.
South'• belt a~ is to play West East failed to count the declarer s dis·
for both tbe ck and the nine of trlbutlon, and South failed to count tbe
bearll, Iince
th 1mow1 from the high cards East needed to open the
openlog no-trump bid thlt East must . bidding with one no-trump.
hold tbe beartlce. But If South leads
'IIIINmPAPD-~- .

Mac Gyve r matches w its
with a corrupt military
force when he attempts to
save a beautiful photojournalist from a South Ame rt.
ca n crime s yndicate. (60

EEK &amp; MEE
_K_ _ __ _ ""

J to B 7 s 4
7
• 43

a bridge player
and remembering !hat aces are meant

our
(j) Ill CI2) Foley Square AI·

Fetty Tr• Trimming, atump
removal. Call 304-875-U3L

Coal. llm•lon•. grav... etc.
Delhtertd 1 ton and up . Jim
l.onlor. 304-576· 1247., 1757397 .

0

EAST
+Q!
• A9 3
+A 3 2
+KQJ6S

1'blllilng. blmlelf

Goodwill Gamq Tape

I])

____ __

Ken '• W1t11r S1r¥1ct, Wella.
citt..-na. pool• end Wlltrbech
filled . Cell 8,4-317·0823 Of
114-JI? -7741 Of 304-176 1247.

to take them.
After 'lrilllllq the ace of diamonds,
~Jlayed the club iing. Ilt!clarer atthat to bold the trick. Another
biJIII club was played, and declarer's ,
ace ftD the trick. South now played a
spade to the kinl and ruffed dummy's
third club. Tbe ace of spades came
nat, followed by 1 winDing diamond.
Ollly now did tleclarer play a heart to

hrs.)

Evergreans, mulch, gr!IV'al. top ·
toll, firtwood. tr• • a1ump . :
removal, chain llnlr. fences. ' .
blooka. Call Don Waugh 114"'I -H4t .
~,~·..

General Hauling

I

tile king,

1·11-N

+u
+to 8 2

Wbat brld,e player doeln't know WEST
thlt- are meant to take iinp? But + 8
a go.d player knows the proper time ' •. J U

talks

volleyball. and bo• ing .

NORTH
+K 7 6 2
.KQ74

By.lameaJ~y

delayed coverage of men's
and women 's figure skat·
ing; and me n 's tennis, judo.

J • J'a Horne Improvement . .
Vinyl aiding , overh~. storm "'
doof1 II windows, gutter~ . Call ·
s14-441-8073.

86

Take no king
before its time

Superbouts Marvelous
Marvin Hagler vs. Vito An tuofermo {las Vegas, November. 1979). [60 min.l

,S tHm• 2 room minimum UO per room. Galli•
Melga- Vinton Counti•. ,.aoo325-51 36.

J .A.R. ConatNICtion Co .. Ru tland. Ohio . 814·742-2903.
Batementt. Footlfl, Concrete
work, Backhoe'•· Dour and
Oitcher, Dump trl.fckt. end
watar - g·u - uwer· elect rice l
Hn11. Charlie Hatfield Gplf•tor.

Bonet

by filling In the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

INpcll - TIOUt- Abov. - V818UI - BREATHER
Granny wqllwayl doing needlepoint. A8 a gift, she hand·
ed 1 11nllll Dlaaueto my uncle who had quh smoking: "A Born

C!J

7·"
.·. •. , D_.,.....__
\HAVES

s..nll'{

B2

Lisa

tho chuckle quoted

ftmtDAY'S SCIAII·II1S AIISWEIS

about her feature film debut in the up co ming film,
" Ange l Hean".
1H1 Alice
il1l Jeopardy
8:00 II [1) illl Highway to
Heaven Jonathan ' kidnaps ' a Soviet official in an
effort to reunite him with
his long·lost mo1her. (60
min.) (Rf .
ffi Born Free

Exterior &amp; intarlor 11ucco. Plat- ·
ter • piUtet" rtpei,a. Low rat11 .
Co\1614-256· 1182.

87

801t1 1nd
Moto,. for S•le

ot-t, .:t

·~1111

Of THE PLANET''

Home
Improvements

ltiJ Cll 126. oxc1111111 condl-

1177 H..,do 0-lng. lorrlng,

3Q.. 87a.l388. 13000.

----~--~.-~~~------·
..

,,

Serv1ces

biiO......... LAtta ol ntroo,

or 114-. .1 ·7331.

I

I
L.....I....J-..L.-L-..J......I

([) Sanford and Son
fj) CD Taxi
0 (I) il]l Whoel of Fonune
(I) Sweet Sbrteen
01 illl En1enoinmon1 To-

FRANK AND ERNIE

to

cept lhoee waiting to uee the

.~-,..,;L:..';;E,..:GTU:..:E;.:DT.-il G Co·m"plete

[R).

Camper slaeps I, 13 fl. g11 or
electric, t1 ,900.00 . Phone304895-3885.

wae talking

L_:~-~~-:;:~-=-~·;:~"All the world lovee a lover, 8~·

(!) Major lo~~gue Boaeball's Qreatesl Hits: Forties

1978 24 ft . Starcrlft h'evel • ·
trailer 11H conttined , new tire~, ~ ·
good oond .. tleep1 I. Call • :
814-245-5569.

Watttrtort ' l Water Havling ,
••••onablt retet, Immediate
2 ,000 g1llan deUvery, ci1tarne.
pools, we ll. ela. eaU 304·!78·
2919 .

711

PICK ME Uf':1

Allt~~D~

The young girl

her boyfriend lor quite aome time.
The fellow waiting In line moaned, _

..

m

83

Jeep Wegonetr, 4 wh"'

1 I [' I I'

Game

1970 Ford Van, Nbulh tnglne,
ucellent tor cuatomb:lna. 304875-1058.

7224

roco~AND

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers ·

1950 Jttp V- 8, 4 wh. . l drfvt.
1376. Col\ 814-742-261 a.

74

I A~ED11V'

I'V£ ME14
51GNALIHG

8 foot elide-in truek canopv . .:.
Carpeted t17&amp; . 614 -742 - ~ ·
2618.
'

CARTER'S PlUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth Met Pine
Gtllpolla, Ohio
Phone 814-446-3888 or 114·
446-4477

·n

...,;:...,;:..:,;:-:.1;-il-~!
T HA L C ._

I"

wood's classics.
fll C7l Hogan's Heroes
8 (I) Jaopardy
IIl Nightly Business Repon
il]l News
(j]) MacNeil-lehrer Newsh·
our
Ill il) Divorce Coun
@ Private Benjamin
iliJ Wheel of Fonune
7:30 II
I]) New Newlywed

Star ..• Tree and llwn Senrice.
llndiCtping. 304-578 -2010.

ntl...
t . Coli 114·44f·OU7 I= 4-;P=I·;20
: "=·; : ==
......
8PM.
I·';"';":' 30

1gee c.m.,.. ftol\' lport. VI.
outo, Pl. Pl. - olr.
tl700. Col 1,.·112·11303 of·

Camping
Equipment

1985 4x4 rhonllod 305 V-8 4

wheel. dutl tanks. 18800. 814·
985· 4180 .

a mCIJ om®e cnJ

the casts of some of Holly-

78

~mp'- words

low 1o f0t111 four

(I) Green Acres
([) Entenalnmenl Tonight
Mary Hart begins a five·
part series which reunites

4 Model A 28 lnd'l wheel rima.
Cell 614-949· 2474.

'71 Ford Pinto. V-8 euto rebuilt
_.gWte, AM -FM caautte. body
good thape. 1750.00 . 304·
882-3221 .
1971 Ch.V 307 auto ,, 50 .00.
1971 Dart 8 cyltuto 1160.00.
1174 Dodge 318 euto 1150.00.
1973 Marlin jet boet 4&amp;15 Olda
engine, 304-875·8628 .

loner• of
0 harrano•
four ocramblocl -d• be-

1!1) News
(I) Green Acres
(!) Mazda Sporulook
([) Fetner Knows Boat
fj) I1J Star Trek
IIJ Reading Rainbow ICC)
[l) Cats and Dogs ICCI
lllJ Dna Dey et e Iim!
D (IJI!Il NBC News
(I) The Riflemen
(!) Inside the PGA Tour IRI.
([) Gomer Pyle, USMC
I]) 8 CD) ABC News
Cl) Doctor Who
I]) 01 CI2l CBS News
[l) Body Electric
@ Welcome Back. Koner
. 7:00 D (f) PM M~~gozlne
(I) Man from U.N.C.L.E
(!) SpomCen1or

ule,

Chicken• · fryera. h.wa &amp;
rooster•. Fi111t houtt North of
Leon . 304-418-1878.

1912 Mudo ftX -7 ollvor wHh

For Sale or Trede

r~ellal

1877 C-10 1hlon pick-up INCk.
308 VI engine. Auto .. PS. Pl.
good tir11. cap, 179&amp;. wm
r.gocllte price. 8U-742-2334
or 614-992-1320.

Declr.lt' Broa upright piano , h11 1971 F\lto&lt;tolooo Novo 327 · 326
been refinished tnd -. good · HP chron engine, M·22, 4 apd.
condltlon. Cell 8,4-9•'9· 3088 , . ,• . Coii814· H2·11•1 .
aftat" 5 pm .
83 CemtfO llll'llnetle AC, tllke
Upright pi1na with beglnnen ~lr PtYI'nlnlt. CaM 114·241music l•ton•. t100.00 . 304- 6024 .. 814-245 ·11610.
773-5376.
19n Cam.o, 310 engine.
Iundy c: larlnet:. nand, uNd 2 Body • lnter6or good. New tlrM.
monthl, t300; 3 spe.d bicycla, t2000 Cal 814-371-2310.
160. Phone 304·1715-,189 .
1988 Chrytler Lllllf Turbo
1,000 miiM. AC. auto. 1813
68
Fruit
Dodga Q..,l . ... 4 .d. CaM
814· 37f·Z721
&amp; Vegetables

69

A Ut 01 fo r S8 I8

71

HI C trtctor with cultivators,
dtelr.. plowa. rftowlng machine,
belly ""''"' Ul6. Col 114286·5622.

1971 Chtvy flllr amd. u•• very
little oil, 17 ID 18 mU• per
gollon. U95. Call 514-37123111 no 8undey1 .

Blackberrln for aale. M .OO
gatlon, 304·875· ,808.

8:00

Auto
--- -Repair
-----

Farm Equtpman
'
t

lAMI

EVENING

~~=~=~~~==:::r~==~~~~~~i 77
61

WOlD

TIAfiMI
PIZJLII

7/.16/86

Two liege 1ervice 1t1tkm type .
air GOfq)ruaor . Call 114-9927364 nights or 814-992-1801
d-va.

7·'"

AKC Bilek leb, lemale, 4
months old. wormed. full shot
urin, UO.OO . CaH 304-lll2·
3758.
3 female Beagle pup1 for 111a.
110. each. betwNn 9 • .m. tiH
7 :30 p.m. call 304-468-1683.

1HJ:

~D~MP'!IXz 1

NI'N atlll bOdy parts. 73-800M
.nd Ford pick-up finders. e39 .
73-M full doors. t78. Chevy tlil
1111... •59. Ford tai~patll, t?l .
Over , 800 heme to chooea
frQm. C &amp; M Auto Parts, Bidwell.
Ohio. 814-448-8227 or Byrds
Euon. Cher111ton, W.. V. 304348-3911 . Dealer lnqulreya
welcome . 21 B-8&amp;2·4, 34.

STEER STUFFERS on 1111 11
your M1rt:lng deMar until Augult
15. Now taking ordara. Call tor
detaill . YAUGER FARM
SUPPLY. 304·875·2078.

Regiatered Chow, red . 10
month• old . Houaebrokan .
Needs big ytrd. •u&amp;, Ctll
614 -9&lt;19-2042 '"" 3:30 prn .

T e,levision
Viewing

302 engine UOO. can hear run,
.uto . tren1 .. •II out of 74 Ford
PU . 72 Pinto 2000 .,glnU 100.
auto . trans, whMII, roton, other
part1. C1ll _
814·
::.=.::_:.:_
_2&amp;1-8550
_ _ _ .lc-

AKC RegittMed German She·
ph..-d pupe, 8 wka. old, female.
Call61•-4·16· 0373.

AKC Bolton Tanitr 7 wka. old. 2
females . 1hota II wormed .
0200. Call 814·256· 9354 .

r;r;&gt;11 ... I'M ~~~~·

5

The Daily

Ohio

BI1RN LOSER

NewltaeiBoyP.,ek, Chw.PU
r.ndert. dool'l, bed sldee. tall
gai:M, p.tG-tpantii,GabCOfntn,
rocker ponall. grill, grill "'oil,
bu~lrl In atodc. Call For
Pricing &amp; Avoilobll\ly. C llo M
Auto Pert1, Sl. Rt. 110. 814446·9227.

Beeutiful 6 yr old Standard bfed
mara, sire fornwr Sttta Cham·
pion ateo Ouener hor11 broodmare. 304-411-1817.

AKC Reg. Lahti Apto puppl•
born M1y 28 . Wor!Nd II fint
ahot. 2 mala. 2 lem~11 . • 175
each. CaN 814-441-0708.

Auto Pans

&amp; Acceaeories

Dregonwynd Cattary Kennet
CFA Hlm1layan, Pertitn end
Siam•e lr.ittana . AKC Chow
poppin. Cell 0, 4· 448- 3844
afttr 7PM.

Goulds Wltlf pu,.., . 8.ttt~ce­
flow. Old Feah6on wet or dry
oooler chett type freuer . 14 ft.
elu mlnum St• Craft 801t. 2
mG10fl, 814-982-2919 .

304-773·1011 or contact D•
nile &amp;ullb or Walt• Juttlollt
the m• office. 1171 lriot
Raynoid1burg, Ohio
430N ot co\111'1-113· 4614.

3 bdr, one bl1h. llfOe T.V. rm
with FP. Large yard on Rt. 31.
135D· mo. Reg required. C••
814· 446· 4319 or 304·178·
9780.

8.
Toung
·
wood
8 110.95.
9. 4•1•'"
4x8xl;
4 ply vnoove
plywoodolyB
99
" · 4x811'.4
·
,0,
levan plywood 8
••-49.
H . 4d•IJ• aatvege penellng
U .99 .
12. 8' redwood ttaln picnlctllble
with 2 banchea 139.96.
13. Prehi.lna ln1erior doors all
alate 1nd tlnlth• t29.95.
, 4 . Preflung ltMI p•nel doore ell
aiJ.a t89.95 .
16. Wood prefinlshed \linyl
wraped coloni1i trim 7pc. e100.
16. Primed t•rdrop wood trim
•1 .0C7pc.
,7. K-lu• brick eomen •1 .00
p• box, 12 box t10.00.
18. 32"x78" Ill thtrf'llll tem·
pared glua reg . 879.91 now
t29.95.
19. Rack f1e1 brown trailer
l kif16ng 28"d0 " 13.99 ...
20. 22 "1t33'" ateinl111 tt"l 10'
deep tlnkl 8 grldl 189.91 .
21 . Stalnl111 tteat corn• ainka
'69.95 8 grode.
22. 4p~.IOiid oak end brau bath
ae1 123.95 ... 3 aetl end up
., 9.96.
23. &amp;gal. aluminum flYer mobile
home roof coating t22 .96.
Penn'a Wal'lhoull. Wellston,
Ohio. 8 to ! , 15 dtyiL Call
614-384· 3545 .

AKC reglatered Collie puppie1,
ell colora. Chet'l'lpion p.arentt.
Huntington 736-9192 .

41

Houaes for Rent

ClOSEOUT'S
SUAPWS
BUY lACK' S
1 . New •lvage •teet door
biMka, nlcke and ICfatct.lt e1!
to 125 et.
2. Thermalptln enthermelbreak
elurNnumwlndowe•ev•alail:ea
t49.96 10 t71.95.
3. 8' aluminum patio doort aet
1199.8&amp; welth ICfllf'l ,
4. Octogen led titnl'f' gl1u
wktdow1 t48.H.
6. 1 I ltle pine French cDort B
gredee•89 .95.
I. 4x8x'lt M110nhe under lty·
ment 128.915 .. .. 4114•'.4 e1 .00
eo.
7. 4x8x:l4 toun$ groove waffle
board o.t•lor glued B 18 .• .

For aal« Hartequ-. Romance
boolr.l 270 for 176, whitt
wooden t . .e U5. s .. at 258
So. Fourth Ave.. Middlepon,
Oh .

Hoepitel lted. manuel t128 . 2
bedroom mobHe home, twning,
underpinning, cement stepa .
••ooo. 11•-H2-II288 .

78

BUILDERS

Bltck AKC regil1ered German
Sheperd pupa. Jerry ' • Run
Aold, Apple Grove, W. Ve. Look
for the algna . Shots and
wormed. t160 .00.

Commodofe M Computer end
dllk drive. plut anr•. 1280.
30.·876-7224 ...... go.

R1:nLil s

Building Supplies

Pl•tic c:ittam 11111 epproved .
pl•tic ttptic t.nks, plll1ic
culverta. fMtll culvertt. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES. Ja""·
aon. Oh. 814-286-5930.

Alhton building tots with pubiiCl APARTMENT FOR RENT - Now
weter, mobile homea .,.-mined. tcceptlng fiPPIICitk&gt;ns for rente\
304-571- 2331 or 304-678· apartments in Muon Apta Umhld. Two bedroom apte .t
2287.
l188.00 per month. R.noi
rll'tll mr; be higher depending
on inaome. Housing will be
evailllbla to aech apPlicant ,...
e•d._. of their rl04, color,
Nllglon. .. noturli origin.

&amp;JI)4,

114-171-2113.

for Rant

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 82
Olive St .. Galllpoll1. New &amp; used
wood-coale1ov11. 8 pc wood LA
..Ita Ull, bunk bedl 1199.
1ntron reclln.. 199. ntM &amp;
uaed bedroom suit-. range~,
wringer w.th811, II aho•. New
llvlngrvom euh• •199-1199.
lampa, elao buying co•l• wood
stovM. Cell 114-448-3159.

2 bdr. utMhl• penial~ fum .,
t17&amp; mo. Call 304-876-6104
.. 304·875 ·7928.

2 bedroom furftlahld In
Mlddltport. Coli e ••· 112·

•oatroom
houte. 1.2 •ar•. Ooubl•
11r.... Loc.tlif'onRoaeHIII.

42 · Mobile Home•

61 Household Goods

6 room Muae. full basement on
'12 •ere. 304-675· 71 49.

Trailer and land tor ••le ,
1&amp;.000.00. 304· 575-5551 '

Watet" wella ltNited and drilled
Fret •timatat . Call 614-992 ·
6005"' 614-742 -3 147.

Houae with 17 ecr•. outbuildinga. Depot &amp;1. Autland. •275.
61 4-742· 3001.

Flex11MI btand, red 6
gold velvet aoft &amp; chair tor 1111.
304·875· 182&amp;.

I

A golden opportunity. Join
Friendly Home Toy Parties. the
le.ciar for 3, Yllrt . Openings for
~n-uen and dealars . We heve
thelergMt and beat llnaln party
plan . No ca1h investment. no
delivering or collecting. Elm btg
money plut bonu1M and travel
inCIInlivas. Call now toll free to
C&amp;rol Day 1-800-227 -,510.

Merchan111se

5 room end Hth huuaefor rent In
Pomeroy. Coli 614-992-5413
tfttr 5:00.

16, 1986

8ulldlnt M.. erlala
llo~ rick
~
win
-·
• - · ,..,...
·
dowa. lln1ola. IIC. CIIUdl Wln,.,., Rio Orondo. Q, Coli 814·
246·5121.
l- -.,-------Building m1terlala, cemen1,
blocklelltb:n, yerdordlliv.-y.
O•lllpollt Block Co .. 123Y.t Pine
~i-~:rua, Ohio Clll 81~

48 Space for Rent

elderly woman, stay In preferred.

Wednesday. July 16. 1986

.

.

11:00GWCJJeCIJID.9

vpbel.llle ~and fonJ~allon of the words are aU

EKh dly U. eGde lelten are llfferent.

'

caYPTOQtJOI'B

1·11

VXB

CFRBAV

YBV
YXNEG

NA

ZM 0

YC E

VXB

N

YC E

CIB . -

BT B I
ZM 0

QI CEG RNE

H .
I M M A 8 T B -R V
' Y•ll•'l CliPU . . . ., A MAN'S OWN GOOD
lliiBIOO/G 19 THE BEST BECURm' AGAINST 011fER
P80P1ES
IIIANNERS. CHES'I'ERF1E.U&gt;
dllng welcome• Sally Kell·
orman. 160 mln.IIR).
(I) 8um1 6 Alltn
ill &amp;por1actnter.
(I) WKIIP In Clnclnna,r
• CD One Stell IWfond
• (I) ABC Ntwa Nlilhtllne
(I) Aualln Ctry Llmilt
I!D Allee
I

�~'ega

•

16~The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

r--Local Briefs:-----.
Telephone directories in mail
Copies of the 1986 General Telepmne ct Ohio dlrectocy are in the
mail to more than 4,500 customers who use the Pomeroy-Middleport
area book.
·
Phil RaJ!ll')l, Athens district service manager, said any customers
not receiving a ni.'W dlrectocy by July 31 s hould contact the
company'~ seiVIce order ceriter.
Exchanges listed in the OOok along with Pomeroy and Middleport
are Letart Falls, Racine and Rutland. An illustration of the Statue of
Liberty Is featured on the cover ot the 100.page volume.
Residential customers can pick up an additional free cow of the
dlrectocy at the company's Phone Mart at 238 W. Main St., Pomeroy,
or at 19 W. Washington St., Athens, Ramey said . Business hours and
the number of the service order center are Usted on page 2 oft he
dlrectocy.

Middleport answers 38 fire calls
The Middleport Fire Department answered a total of 38 calls
during June Including slxfirecallsand32emergency runs, Chief Jeff
Darst reports. AU vehicles were driven 1,334.6 miles during the
month.

June police activities detailed
Forty arrests were made by the Middleport Pollee !Rpartmen t
during June, Chief Sid Little reports.
Eight accidents were investigated and aU vehicles were driven
4,93! mlles during the month. Parking meter collections totaled
$1,004.50 with merchant pollee collections totaling $52. There were
515 parking violation tickets written.

EMS units answer six calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports six calls
Tuesday:
Middleport at 9:36 a.m. to South Front for Katie Anthony to
Veterans Memorial Hospital: Pomeroy at 11:04 a.m. to Willow
Creek Road for John Nelson to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 11:12 a.m. to Arnold ROad for Maggie Arnold to Holzer
Medical Center; Racine at 11:57 a.m. to Apple Grove Road .for
Charlotte Atkins to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 5:35p.m.
to Ohio 338 for Henry Lemley to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Rutland at 7:48p.m. to King Ridge for Ida King who was dead on
arrival.

Marriage license issued
A marriage license has been issued In Meigs County Probate Court
to Robert Dale Lehew, 31, and Barbara Gall Wilhelm, 32, both of
Ravenswood, W.Va .

Banking firms file suit
Farmers Bank and Savings Co.. Pomeroy, and Bank One of
Athens. Pomeroy, have filed an action In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court against Marjorie Fetty and Wallace Fetty, roth of
Pomeroy, et. at., requesting judgment of $;7,415.44.
Diamond Savings and Loan Co., Delphos, has filed an action
against Joyce A. Blake, Middleport, et. al., requesting judgment of

•

$:.11,634.09.

Star Grange will visit Columbia Grange this Saturday for a potluck
dinner at 7 p.m .. followed by an open met&gt;ting. The dinner and
meeting will be held 'at the Columbia fire station.
On 12::ll p.m. Sunday, Star Grange will have a rookout and picnic,
followed by a work session. Members and non-membersenrouraged
to attend.

Hunter safety course scheduled
A hunter safety course, to be held at the home of John Costanzo is
being offered Aug. 4·9 from f&gt;.9 p.m . each evening. Class size' is
llmlted and all participants must pre-register hy calling 843-5405
after 6 p.m.

Lonnie E. Jewell
Lonnie E. Jewell, 84, NI.'W Haven,
died Tuesday at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
He was born June 30,1002, In New
Hliven, to the late Willlam C. and
Macy Alice Roush JI.'Well.
He was a former owner and
operator of the Garden Center and
Applianre Store In New Haven and
was a memb&gt;r of the Graham
Baptist Church for several years.
Surviving is his wife Ethel V.
Jewell of New Haven; one sister,
Edith Roush of New Haven ;
several nieces and nephews.
Services wiU be Friday at 1: 30
p.m. at the Foglesong Funeral
Home with the Rev. WOllam "Bun"
Hatfield and the Rev. Bill Skeen
officiating. Burial will follow in

Six defendants fQrfeited hands
and seven others were fined in the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Seyler Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Harold Darst,
Nelsonville, $45; Peggy Selby,
Vienna , W.Va ., $49; Cynthia J .
Stanley, Mason, W.Va., $48, all on
speeding charges; Michael Stow·
ers, Bid..ell, $43, failure to yield;
Will Zahran. Pomeroy, $63, disor·
derly conduct, and Ronald R.
Williams, Mason, $43, stop sign
vlolatlon.

CLEVELAND iUPli - Tues·
day's wi nnin g Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number
910
PICK-I
7341

Homer Laudennilt
Homer Laudermilt ol Mason died
Wednesday morning at Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Funeral arrangements wiU he
announced later by the Foglesong
·Funeral Home.

Ruby Russell
The date of death o1 Ruby
Russell, 91, found dead at her home
at 559 S. Second Ave., Middleport,
Sunday, was set a rout July 9.
officials said today . Graveside rites
were held today at Riverview
Cemetery.

Fined were Karen Phalin, Pomeroy, $!il; Gerena M. Robson,
Pomeroy, $43; Dlnny C. Russell,
New Haven, $44 and rosts; Gacy L.
Dunning, Chaunrey, $48 and costs.
Daniel Sloan, Fairmont, W.Va., $46
and costs, all on speeding char~s;
John F . Myers, Ravenswood, $63
and costs. no driver's ticense. and
$375 and rosts. driving while
Intoxicated; Earl Phelps, Pomeroy, $263 and rosts. leaving the
scene, and $315 and costs, driving
while intoxicated .

Bonds forfeited in area court
Four defendants forleited bonds
and four others were fined In the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tu esday night.
Forleillng were Lendon H. Ad·
kins, Brush Prairie, Wash., $450,
driving while intoxicated, and $.'il,
weaving rourse; James R. Warns·
ley Jr .. Pomeroy, $5(), failure to
yield the right of way; Loretta J.
McQuaid, !Rxter, $40, speeding,
and Etta J . Halfhill. Cheshire, $41.
speeding.
Fined were Kelly Thoma, Pome·
roy, $425 and costs and 10 days In
Pomeroy Wes leyan Holiness
Church on Ohio 143 will be having
Bible school the week rt July 21-25.
Classes will be held 6: J0.8p.m.each
evening. All children and young
people are welcome.

Veterans Memorial
Admissions - James Milliron,
Reedsville; Kathleen Anthony,
Middleport; Henry Lemley, Par·
tland; John Crider, Lowell, Mass.;
Donald Brumfield, Shade.
Discharges - Charles Lemley.

Ohio Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday

Ohio Lollery

Graham Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home on
ThuiSday from 5-9 p.m.

Fines 'set in Pomeroy court

Ohio weather
Fair a nd humid through the
period, with highs ranging from g;
to 95 each day. Overnight lows will
be between 65 and 75.
South Central Ohio
Partly cloudy today, with a
chan&lt;l' of showers and thunder·
storms and highs In the low 90s.
Partly cloudy tonight. with a low in
the low 70s. Mostly sunny and
humid Thursday, with highs in the
mid ros.
The probability of precipitat~n Is
30 perccnt today and IX'ar zero
tonight and Thursday.
Winds wUI be light and variable
today and tonight.

Ex·Youth Senrices

Area deaths

Bible sehool set

Star Grange meeting set

Wednesday, July 16, 1986

jail, driving while intoxicated;
Trlna D. Mays, Racine, $10 and
costs, failure to control vehicle;
Brad A. Young, 327~ N. Second
Ave., Middleport, $25, drinking
under age; Doug Freeman, Middleport, $25 and costs, disorderly
manner, and $100 and costs and 10
days In jail and restitution, destruc·
lion property.

chief pleads Innocent
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Former Ohio Youth Services Dlrec·
tor James E. Rogers has pleaded
innocent to charges of bribery and
theft In olflce.
Rogers, 51, of Worthington, was
arraigned Tuesday In Franklin
County Common Pleas Court on
four counts.
Assistant Franklin County Pro·
secutor Daniel Abraham said
Rogers entered a general plea of
innocent, and that a trial date may
be set later this week.

Opening
(Continued from Page U
told them "I killed the man I love."
Saumers said altmugh evidence
smwed that Mrs. Gilman did have
psychological problems, her state·
ment to arresting officers showed
that she knew right from wrong and
therefore did not fit the legal
definition of lnsan tty.

Rogers is chargt&gt;d with one rount
of complicity t6' rommlt theft In
office, two rounts of theft in office
and one count of bribery.
Following his arraJgnmen t, Rogers was returned to the CUyahoga
County jail In Cleveland, where he
has been held on slmUar state and
federal charges.
The former member of Gov.
FUchard F. Celeste's cabinet was
Indicted last month ~ a federal
grand jucy in Cleveland and county
grand juries In Cleveland and
Columllls. He has pleaded innorenl
to aU char~s.
The Cuyahoga County charges
stem from Rogers' actions while he
was director of the East Cleveland
Public Uhrary. He is accused of
stealing more than f;ro,OXJwhile he
served' as the library director.
A five-count Indictment handed
up by a federal grand jucy in
Cleveland accused him of taking
some $1l,OXJ In kickbacks from
contractors as director rt youth
services.

We have what
you need•••

•Horseshoes
•Horseshoe Nails
•Halters

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

Vot.36, No.61
Copyrighted t 986

Officials from the Ohio Department ofTransporta·
lion will be in Pomeroy Monday night to explain what
may be expected when the Pomeroy-Mason bridge Is
.closed for repair.
Local residents and merchants have been
concerned since ODOT announced the structure
would be off limits to traffic whllerepairs were made.
As yet, dates for the closing and ensuing ronstructbn
have not been announced.
Meigs County Commissioners discu ssed the
upcoming meeting briefly in Wednesday's regular
session. CommissioiX'r Richard Jones said he
received a call from State Rep. Jolynn Boster telling
him of the meeting, which will convene at 7 p.m.
Monday at the senior citizens center.
Jones said a public announcement of the meeting
would be forthcoming from ODOT.

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CHEVIOLD
·OLDSMOBILE~ CADILLAC
"FOI.M.Y SIUOIIS ·OLDS.·CAD:.(HEY."

301 L IIAIII ST.

••ov,

.PH. (614) 992·6614

HOUlS
Moll. WN., Fri. 1:30·1:00
· T.-s. &amp; Thurs.' 1:30•5:30
Sat, 1:30-4100: Sun. 1:00·5:00

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The hoard adopted a proposed 1987 county rudget
showing required general fund expenditures of
$1.888,123.79 and projected Income of $1,009.8:li.99.
These figures represent a deficit $lll8,296.00,
however, Jones pointed out that the budget would he
trimmed and balanced before final adoption In
January.
Noting that utilities, insurance and the state
required annual audit of county books are the
"biggest expenditures," Jones said the deft cit
"usually runs about this amount." He added that each
officeholder submitted "conservative" proposals
with no ma jor equipment purchases or salary
increases.
It was also noted that the county's share of public
assistance Increases by 20 percent annually. Next
year's share Is anticipated at $46.001.
Richard Patrick of McNelly·Patrick lnsuran e&lt;&gt;,

Jackson, hired by the board as an insurance
consultant . was present to update his study of the
county's Blue Cross-Blue Shield coverage. Patrick's
examination of the coverage was delayed because of
difficulty in obtaining Information on the rounty's
claims experience. Upon finally receiving the
necessary information. Patrick determined that the
county 's claims experienCP for the Blue Cross portion
of the coverage "was very good." In 19Ri. the county
paid out $97,0XJ in premiums, with claims amount tng
to $64,001. Since the company's profit is built Into the
premium, the more than S32,00J differen ce "was
honus" Patrick said.
Overall during the past five years , premiums
exceeded claims to the tune of $77,00&gt;. Because of
these figu res, Patrick said Meigs County should have
received either a refund or rate reductbn. Instead,
the company slmply extended the rates.
Patrick suggested the county "needs a different

mechanism for paying" for the coverage. He said he
will ask the company why they did not reduce rates (I'
give a refund. and will then determine alternative
payment mechanisms for the commissioners tD
consider.
Commissioner David Koblentz questioned the
status of the Tuppers Plains sewage project. Jones
said that as requested, a revised plan d management
was submitted to the Ohio Environmental Protectlbn
Agency, after which OEPA had four questions m tlie
revisal. "Those questions were answered over a
month ago," Jones said, "and still no word from
OEPA."
The commissioners received no comments regard ·
ing application by Robert Michael Roberts for a Cl-C2
permit for beer and wine carry out only at the Five
Points bar, therefore no hea ring before the Ohio
[)(&gt;partment of Liquor Control will be required .

Tax reform
conference
opens today

AEP chief predicts
higher consumer bills
if legislation passes

POMEROY, OHIO

I

2 Sections, 16 Pagn 26 Cent1
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Thursday, July 17, 1986

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentmel Staff Writer

Sugar Run Flour Mills
110 MllliERRY AVE.

enttne

ODOT schedules meeting on bridge closing

Mill Will Be Closed All
Day Thursday Due to
the Death of ·Owner,
Theo Smith

t•••••••••••'toUPONo••••

OET READY FOR THE FAIR ••••

at y

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -The
American Electric Power System
Wednesday said an acid ra in bill
pending before Congress would cost
AEP $1.1 billion over 10 years and
the company would pass that along
to Its consumers In seven states. ·
An analysis showlngthattheAcld
Rain Deposition Control Act of 1986
would result In "large capital
requirements and massive rate
Increases" was released by AEP.
W.S. White, AEP's chairman,
said the report estlmated rate
Increases would average 18.9 percent for residential customers, 18
percent for commercial customers,
~:l ~rcenL~.~ :.l.lldt!s!Iial custo·
· mers and 35.1 percent for otjlers.
AEP' s subsidiaries include Ohio
Power Co. ~nd Columbus and
Southern Ohio ElectYic Co. in Ohio,
Appalachian Power Co. in' Roa·
noke, Va., Indiana &amp; Micplgan
Power Co. In Fort Wayne,' Ind.,
KentuckY Power Co. in Ashland.
Ky., Kingsport Power Co. In
Kingsport, Tenn., Michigan Power
Co. in Three Rivers, Mich. and
Wheeling Electric Co. in Wheeling,
W.Va.

By JOSEPH MIANOWANY

requirements of oor customers In a
reliable manner," White said.
Researchers have traced acid
rain to sulfur dioxide emissions
from roal -fired plants, with the
sulfur dioxide reacting with rain to
form sulfuric acid. Fish in thou ·
sands of lakes and streams In the
Northeast have died because of
acidic waters.
White said that to comply with the
restrictions on sulfur dioxide emissions proposed in the bill, AEP
would have to shift 10 of its
generating units to low-sulfur coal,
make major rrod!Dcattons to holl·
ers on 22 other .units .and install
expensive desulfurtzation equip·
ment on another four units.
· "It should be borne In mind, that
these costs are for only one electric
utility system -American Electric
Power- and that the costs t&gt;r the
natio n as a whole would be much,
much higher," Whit ~d .

He also said there was no
assuranre that making utilities
comply with stricter emission
standards would have any effect on
White said the report estimated the Non beast.
The rate Increase estimates for
Ohio Power Co., based In Akron,
the
dher AEP members:
would b&gt;ar the worst of the rate
-Appalachian PoW!'r: 13.6 pl'r·
Increases ~ 33.9 percent reslden·
tial, 37.1 percent commercial, 44 cent residential, 15.2 per&lt;l'nt compercent Industrial and 66.4 percent mercial. 15.9 percent industri al.
19.7 perrent others.
for others.
-Columllls · &amp; Southern Ohio
Wheeling Electric, which bu ys It s
Electric:
12.2 percent residential.
power from Ohio Power, would face
percent
commercial, 8.6 per·
!3.4
similarly strep hikes- 33.5 percent .
residential. 37.9 percent commer· cent Indu strial, 17 percent others.
-Indiana and Michigan Elect·
clal and 54.3 percent Indu strial- he
ric:
14.9 percent residential, 15.9
said.
percent
commercial. 22.9 percent
He said another adverse !!fPC! of
industri
al,
20.8 percent others.
the proposed bill could b&gt; tOC&gt;
-Kentucky
Power: 19.3 percent
closing of .13 electrical generating
units, with a capacity of 3.1 million residential, 14.6 perrent commer·
kilowatts, which would have to he clal, 11 .5 pei'Cl'nt Industrial, ll.3
replaced over a short period of percent olhers.
-Kingsport Power: 12.6 percent
tlmf', at great cost.
residential, 13.7 percent commer·
" In !'act, should this bill bC' clal, 22.8 percent industrial.
-Michigan Power: 15.9 percent
enacted In Its present form. It would
raise serious questions regarding residential. 16.8 percent commer·
our abUity to met&gt;t future energy cia!, 19.8 percent lnduslrtai.

FJNI&gt;HING UP - The Meigs County Hllhway
Department finished on Wednesday the blacktopping

was $9,9!n and was paid for by a Community
Development Block Grant to the Salisbul)' Township

of SalWJw'y Township's portion ol Nayior'sRunto the
Pomeroy coqJOration lbnH. &lt;Alst of the blacktopping

Trustees.

WASHINGTON (UP!) -House
and Senate forces; meeting today in
the opening sesslon of the tax
reform conference, were rommlt·
ted to straightening twisted codes
while defending provisions that
each side has championed.
The 22-member conference panel
wUi tcy to write a compromise tax
reform biU in what Is expected to be
a month of wrangling over how to
best reconcile the dtlferences between the reform verslons passed
hy each chamber.
Heading into the bargaining, the
divergent leaders - Senate Fl·
nance Committee Chairman Bob
Packwood, ROre., and House
Ways and Means Committee Chair·
man Dan Rostl.'nkowski, D-IU. assembled 11-member teams that
seemed Ia give each man a strong
hand.
A majority of Packwood's delegation included senators woo
helped him write the Senate's
radical tax plan and salvage the
Issue when it seemed dead this
(Con~ued on PIIJ(l' 12)

House·panel prepares liability coverage action
By LEE LEONARD

UPI statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPli
Within a month, the Ohio Housc
Insurance Committee ropes to
have a handlf' on tegtslatlon aimed
at providing affordable liability
lnsu ranee coverage for toeaI government s. businesses and the
medical community.
The committee took extensive
testimony Wednesday on that
legislation. Rep . Michael P. Stinzi·
ano, D·Columbus, chairman of the
committee. put four of the bills In a
subcommittee headed by himself,
and promised a report back to the
tUU committee by no later than
mid-August.
Stlnzlano said he intends to
comply with the directive of Hou se
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D·New
Booton, to have legislation ready for
a floor vote by late August or right
after Labor Day.

Stinzlano said the legislation will
be folded into two bills. One will
upgrade the regulatory powers of
the Olo Department of Insurance
and empower the attorney general
to prosecute ·deceptive and unfa ir
Insurance practices.
The ot her, a comprphenslve
fi ve-part Insuran t:~' reform btu will,
among other thlngs. allow banks to
offer reinsurantr, ~ac tivate the
joint underwriting association for
pooled coverage and require insu·
ranee rompan ies to disclose certain
finan cial Information.
Riffe has become annoyed at the
continual complaints that local
governments and members of the
medical rommunity are unable to
obtain Uability insurance at a
reasonable rost.
He has promised legislation that
will force lnsuranre companies to
show why they cannot bring down
the cost of their coverage ac insure

certain risks. On the other hand , he lmportant step in the right direction
has assigned another committee to toward Increased availability of
expore "tort re'orm" -changing liability insurant:~'," he said.
Thomas H. Hardy,executlvevtce
legal procedures to Umlt huge
president
of the lndepelldent Jnsu.
la-M;uit awards which may be
Agents
of Ohio, agreed that
ranre
contrirutlng to the problem .
Dennis W. Toivonen . vice presi· increased activity by private lnsur·
dent of the Chase Manhattan Bank ers will provide affordable
In New York. said it would mak e coverage.
He said his association favors
sense to allow flnandai Institutions
banks
offering reinsuranre "but
to offer reinsurance, which backs
there
smuid
be an absolute prohibi·
up primary coverage.
Many insurance companies are tion against their enll'rlng the
backed by London reinsurers, insurance distrillltlon market," he
which the committre was told have said .
Working on the insurance bills
become reluctant to offer coverage
wlthStinzlanowUibeReps.
Willlam
In view of Increasing risks and large
G.
Batchelder.
R-Medina;
'Robert
damage settlements.
H.
Doyle,
R·lleavercreek,
Paul
''By passing House BUI fl72. more
reinsurance wtiJ be available and JoiX's, D·Ravenna; Robert E .
this will give primacy Insurers an N e12ley, R·Laura; Barbara C.
incentive to underwrite more diffl. Pringle, D-Cleveland; Ronald J .
cult lines of insurance," said Suster, D·Cleveland; Jam D.
Thol)'lpson Jr., D-Cieveland; and
Toivonen.
t&lt;:ont lnued on Page 12)
"The passageoftlis billwUibe an

Prosecution rests in Gilman trial
By KEVIN KELLY
and PAM McCAIJ.I&gt;'lER
OVP Staff Writers
GALLIPOLIS - The prosecu lion
rested Wednesday aft ernoon in the
Grace Gilman trial In Gallia County
Common Pleas Court following
testImony tram Mrs. Gilman· s
12-year-old grandson. who was
present at the time Mrs. Gilman
allegedly soot and killed her
husband Jan. 12.
Mrs. Gilrilan, 71, Rt. 4, Oak Hill. Is
charged with murder and has
pleaded not gullty and not guilty by
reason of insanity. Her attorney,
Donald ArulreW Cox, was tQ open
the defense this morning.
Mlchilel Marcum, who testified
that he hid lived with the Gllmans
since the age of 16 months, told the
JulY that between 9:!! and 10 a.m.
on the day ot the alleged crime, ,Jim
Gilman, '12. who was sitting In the
living rilom ct the Gilman home m
Cora-Centerpoint Road, told his
wife to "liush that jUnk" when she
began singing a rellglous song as
she worked in the kltcllen.

Dldn'lltear abol
An argument between the two
ensued and lasted for about 10 or 15

minutes. during which Gilman said
"he ool(ht to blow her to pieces and
throw her out on the road, "
Marcum said.
Gilman then got up from his chair
and walked toward the kitchen to llO
to his bedroom to get his gun, said
Marcum, who was playing with
Lego blocks In the living room at the
·
time.
Gilman only went two to three
feet toward the kitchen, then
''cooled down·' and went back to his
chair. Mrs. Gilman then appeared
with a gun and soot him, Marcum
said. Marcum testified that he
didn't hear the shot.
"I looked up; I seen blood on his
shirt and seen·JUnJ falling over," he
said. ''Grandma·then went around
saying, ·~ got you,' and then went
into my room."
Marcum said he told Mrs.
Gilman shortly afterward that he
was going to call his mother, to
which· Mrs. GUman responded,
"Call.your~mm.J•hot her daddy."
"Did he (Gilman)• have any
weapon?" a•ked Assistant Prosec·
utor Brent ·Saul!ders.
"Not that I know of,'' Marcum
replled.

"Did he st rike her?" Saur\(lers
asked.
"Not that morning," Marcum
said .
NoisEs annoyed defendanl
During cross-exa mination, Mar·
rum noted that Gilman was "doing
something" while Mrs. Gilman was
singing, which appeared to annoy
her. When Cox asked him If the
"sometting " was pig squeaUng
noises. Marcum said, "I don't
know."
Cox noted that In a statement
Marcum made to deputies after the
shooting that Gilman "was getting
a kick" out of making some kind of
noise while Mrs. Gilman sang, "and
your grandma was getting mad."
"He was getting a kick out of It
until they started arguing," Mar·
Cll1ll said.
'
Marcum was expected to be
recalled as defense witness.
.
Earlier, Capt. Carl Langford.
chief lnvestlgator for the sheriff's
department. ,testified that he was
mtltied of the ~ing, ln!~ed
the II'OPeT otficlals and went to the
SCl'Jle, where he fOund deputies
taping a staten\ent !rom Mrs.
(Continued on Page 16)

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