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Pege-10-lhe Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 22, 1981'

.------· Local briefs :-----t Westem U.S.: f~t fire, now the flood
EMS reports 8 weekend calls

•

Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reportS eight caDs over
the weekend, four Saturday and lour Sunday.
On Saturday, Racine at 8:59p.m. to Third St. for Judy McNeely to
Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy a t 9: 50 p.m. treated but did not
transport Scott Reuter from the scene of an auto accident m Co. Rd.
25; Racine at 11:26 p.m. to Letart FaDs for Wllnna Anderson to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 11:27 p.m. to D
Stonewoods. Apartments lor Cecil Frazl~r to Veterans Memorial
·
Hospital.
Sun~y at 6: 17 a.m., Middleport to 33 Custer St. lor Terri Hall to
Holzer Medical Center; Racine at 9: ma.m. to BroadWay St. forWard
Sayre to ,Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at6 p.m. transported
MarUyn Taylor to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at8: 33 p.m .
toNewLlmaRd.forPerryEstepwhowastreatedbutnottransported.
,,

.

Soil, Water Unit io sponsor tour

Thousands of bridges pose
safety threat, experts say

Meigs Soil and Water ConserVation District and the Meigs County
Extension Service are sponsoring a twilight dairy tour at the Nease
181ll1W farm on Tuesday at7: :JJ p.m. The. farm is located on Forest
Run Rd. (County Rd. :I!) at Nease !iettlement In Sutton Township.

Four Gallians hurt in wreck
Four Rt. 4, GaiUpoUs, residents were treated and 'r eteased Saturday
morning at Holzer Medical Center lor Injuries suffered In a two-car
accident on Township Road 4.
..
-Loren E. Beaver, 44, was treated for multiple scrapes and bruises.
Three passengers In his car, his wffe, Shirley Beaver, 42, was treated
for cuts to her left foot ; Steven Beaver, 8, was treated for minor
trauma; and Nathan K. Beaver, 6, was also treated for trauma,
hospital officials said.
TheGallla-Meigs post of the State Highway Patrol said Beaver was
southbound on 4, around seven-tenths of a mile northof0hlol41, when
northbound car, driven by Bruce A. O'Rourke, 17, o!Rt. 4, GaUlpoUs,
apparently struck Beaver's car; continued on, struck a rock and
overturned.
O'Rourke was not Injured In the 9: :I! a.m. accident, which caused
heavy damage to his car and moderate damage to Beaver's, troopers
said. O'Rourke was charged by the patrol wlthspeedlngfollowlng.t he
accident.

Kent apparently withdraws
attempt to buy Multimedia

I

Cooke lor $70 per share, plus
relmburse"!ent of certain
expenses.
Cooke has also agreed In connection with the repurchase not to begin
a previously announced tender o1'ler
for approxlnnately 40.3 percent of
Multimedia's outstanding shares at
$70.01 per share.
The purchase agreement also
provides for the dismissal of
litigation between Multimedia and
Cooke.

Area deaths

Chelsie Wood
Chelsle Leigh Wood, Infant daugh:

ter of Donald E . and Debra Mankin
Wood of Middleport, died Friday at
Cahell-Huntlngton Hospital In Huntington, W.Va .
Born July 10, she was nine days
old.
Surviving In addition to her
parents are a sister, Raeml D.
Wood; paternal grandparents, Donald and Luella Wood. New Haven;
maternal grandmother, Eloise
Mankin, Pomeroy, Ohio; and paternal great-grandparents, Russell
and Flo McMlllln, Mason.
Graveside services were held
Saturday at Sunrise Memorial
Gardens In Letart, W.Va ., With
Luther Raines and Eric Brown
otHclatlng.
Foglesong Funeral Home, Ma son, was lnchargeofarrangement s.

Dovie B. Hale
Dovle B. (Shepherd) Hale, 70, of
Langsville, died Sunday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
She was horn Nov. 10, 1914 In
Kentucky, to the Luther and Alma
Steele Young.
Surviving are her husband, John
Hale, whom she married on March
5, 1982; four daughters, Mary Leigh
of Groveport, Betty Overly of
Washington Court House, Carolyn
Dunn of Ewlngton, and 1\llce
Shepherd of Salem Center; lour
sons, Herbert Short of Texas,
George Shepherd of Rio Grande,
I.ronard Shepherd of Wilkesville,
and Edward Shepherd of Salem
Center; one brother. VIrgil Young of
Delaware; and one sister, Joan
KcKitrlck of Cheshire; 19 grandchildren and three great grandchll·
dren.and a sister. Joan McKitrick,
Cheshire.
She was preceded In death by her

lsi at the u.s. Forest Service's
Forest Fire L.aboralory In River·
side, said the heat fmJn the !Ires
'p roduces a varnish-like substance
thai forms a layer close 10 the
surface and keeps the Willer from
belng absorbed.
Authorities blamed the !Ire In the
San Jaclnlo area for a ~foot hl&amp;h
wall of boulders. waterandmqdthat
Wiped out a one-mliP section 1- the
Aerial Tramway above Palm
Sprlngs, stranding eiPven lllkers on
an 8,5oo fool mountain.
Power still · was out to the
tramway Sunday and pollee said the
tram prooobly would remain closed
fora week.
Road crews continued to repair
washed out roads In Joshua Tree ·
National Monument, the road to '
Pioneer Town and the thoroughfare
beneath the tramway.
The downpour also w~ blamed •
for the deaths d. three people kllled
when their smaU plane crashed In
heavy raln Friday In the c;:ajon Pa"" ,
north of San Bernanllno.

rr.~~;~;;;;;::;::::;:;.;::;;;;iiiiiiiiiii;;;~

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GREENVILLE, S.C. - Mlllionalre lawyer and Washington
Redsklns owner ,Jack Kent Cooke
has apparently withdrawn his
attempt to purchase Multimedia,
Inc., which owns Ohio Valley
Publishing Co.
Cooke has agreed to sell to M.M .
Acqirlng Corp.. the company
formed to effect Multimedia's
proposed recapitalization plan, the
1,626,500 shares of stock owned by

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (UPI)- mudandwaterSundayunderpartly who supervises the Los Padres
Recent Hooding In the high desert is cloudy skies after 18 homes were
National Forest wa~rshed above
partly the' result or the rash of Ht:XJdOO during heayy thundershoW· Ojal Valley. "When the rains come
sununer wildfires that burned ers, said Yucca Valley HreHghter some of those watersheds will blow
· out, Uketrelghttralns."
water-holding vegetation from
Mike Fagan.
more than lXI,OOJ acres ln Call!or"We stlll have a lot or roads
Fire officials bought 1 rnl,lllon
nla, and offlclals say the fall rainy covered with debris," he said. "We pounds d. rye grass seeds Friday to
season could bring more trouble.
heard !here's a new stonn coming plant on hills to prevent erosion, said
'Tbe 22,001-acre brushfire that next week, but you never can tell."
Dale Wierman of the Calffornla
scorched the MI. San Jacinto . Forest Service officials are con- Department of Forestry. They plan
wilderness area was pattly blamed cerned about Hoodlng this lallln the to sow the seeds In late September or
by Palm Springs authorities for
light of Hres that destroyed much of early oCtober to prevent rodents
three days of Hooding and mud the Vegetation that prevents muds- from ea tlng them before the r alny
slides that iorced dozens of desert
lides aJid soaks up rainwater.
season beglns.
residents from their homes and
"The situation there Is set up lor a
But even If the burned-over areas
killed three people Friday.
much bigger disaster than the fire," are reseeded and the winter Is mlld,
ResldentsofnearbyYucca Valley said Dave Haney, thedistrictranger the 27,00J people living ln the Ojal
and Twentynine Palms balled out
•
area probably wlll not escape some
Hoodlng, scientists said .
Richard Minnich, a wlldflre
research scientist at the University
of Calffomla, Riverside, said a big
fire sears the soll, preventing it from
absorbing rainwater.
In Massachusetts, the Harvard
"The sediment comes off no
WASHIN9'f0N (UP!) - Disaster Is a persistent threat on many of Bridge, spannlnglheCharles River matter what ... The rains are no
the country's 545,o:xl bridges, which and carrying :IJ,IXXJ vehicles dally
longerabsorbedbythesoll," hesald.
Phillip Riggan, a research scient·
need $45 billion In repairs, safety between Boston and Cambridge, Is
experts say.
In an "advanced
state" of
disrepair,
officials
say.
Nearly half of the bridges need transportation
"The two outside lanes are closed.
~ work, handle traffic conditions
due
to deteriorationofthesteel" and
beyond design capacity or have
rusting
was so bad the bridge was
Incorrectly posted weight Umlts,
"considered
Inadequate to carry
Department ofTransportatlonengl·
neers and Investigators have found . vehicular traffic," said David
The warning was sounded again Briggs of the Federal Highway
last week by James Burnetl , Administration.
In West VIrginia, a national
chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board, who said historic landmark - the Wheeling
Inadequate Inspections have set the Suspension Bridge- is unsafe for a
"good-sized car with three or four
stage for disaster.
In an Informal survey by United people In It ," but remalnsopeil, said
Press International, offlclals Robert Nickerson, a regional dlrec·
pointed to a bridge too weak to hold a tor lor bridges with the federal
car with passengers, one posted for highway agency.
12 tons more than it can support and • Transporation Department fig·
scores that should be closed due to ures show that 45.3 percent of the
nation's bridges are structurally
structural damage.
In theabsenceo!dlsastet, such as deficient - needing repair - or
the 198:1 collapse of the Mlamus functionally obsolete - operating
beyond design capacity.
'
River bridge In Greenwich, Conn.,
that killed three people, daily
damage caused from the pounding
by cars and heavy trucks Is rarely
Mostly cloudy today, with a
considered by the public.
chance
of showers and
It was the Mlamus c;ollapse,
thunderstorms
;md highs ln the low
Burnett said, that prompted the
!lls.
Clear.lng
tonight,
with a low In
safety board to push the Federal
the
lower
OOs.
Mostly
sunny
Highway Administration for a more
Tuesday, wlth highs In the low 8Js.
rigorous Inspection program.
The probability of preclplta lion Is
Many run-down bridges are on
30
percent today, 20 percent tonight
busy routes, such as the Mlamus
and
10 percent Tuesday.
bridge -' a link for suburban
Winds will be light and variable
workers to New York City.
today and light and northerly
tonight.

I

first husband, George Wlllls Shepherd ln·l976and a brother, Harry
Young.
Funeral seJVices wlll be 11: :IJ
a.m. Tuesday at the Hunter Funeral
Home ln Rutland with Rev. Lloyd
Giimm officiating. Burial will be In
Wright Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 2 to 4 p.m .
and 7 to 9 p.m. today.

•

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Three
players who have Ohio Lotto tickets
from the' Satunlay night drawing
With the numbers 5, 13, 19, 29, 32 and
35 wlll share more than $5 million,
the Ohio Lottery Commission sa id.
Lottery personnel found only
three winning tickets among the
$7,115,337 worth of tickets sold for
Satunlay night's drawing.
Lottery officials say those who
hold the winning numbers can
redeem their tickets today at any
regional lottery d.!lce.
Also today, officials will determine how many tickets had four d.
the six numbers and flve fA the six
numbers.

•

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
Pomeroy's Union Ave. slippage
repair project, two years ln coming,
has hit a snag and may have to be
postponed until spring.
This was the Information given by
Mayor Richard Seyler when Pomeroy Vil\!lge Council met Monday
evening In special session.
According to Seyler, · the Ohio
Department of Transportation
wants !rom the village an additional
$30,00J "cash on the barrelhead" to
front the Union Ave. repair. Seyler
said he was Informed of the need for
additional funding via telephonecall
from Howard Gffford of ODOT's
Marietta office.
Differences.In estimates provided
by the village's engineering firm
aqg ODOT's engineers account lor
thP$30,00) the mayor was told by
Gilford.

By 1108 HOEFLICH ,

..
DESTROYEDBYFIRE-Volunteerflremenfrom
Orange Township and CoolvUlc were oo the scene
Monday in Tuppers Plains when lire struck the Inez

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Spurlock residence In 'l)lppers Plains. (See article on
page 10. ).

US W says memb~rs will
'back strike unanimously'

•

PTITSBURGH (UP!) - Striking ;vorkers at nine the company's financial condition at the time.
Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel Coi'p. plants in three states
A company spokesman said Rockefeller's proposal
are solidly behind union leaders in their contract fight
would be given "careful consideration." There was no
with the bankrupt company, a union &lt;tlicial says.
immediate·response !rom the union.
More than 5,1XXJ employees gave "thunderous and
The walkout, which began Sunday, Is the first USW
u-nanimous" approval to the job action at ~parate strike agalnsl a major steel producer since 1959.
meetings Saturday, Sunday and Monday, said Paul About 14,1XXJ USW members staged a four-month
Rusen, United Steelworkers District 23 director and strike in 1978, but tha\ walkout Involved mining
chief of the bargaining committee.
operations In Minnesota and Michigan.
"The workers have spoken," Rusen said. " Thls ,ls
The walkout stems from eight months of bitter
the workers' strike. They have said loud and clear negotiations ln which the company first sought a
that they will not workfor$7 an hour and thattheywlll
reduction in hourly wage and benefit costs from $21 .40
not bear the major bunlen for solvlngthe oompany's to $15.~. The finn then filed under Chapter ll of the
financial problem ."
·
U.S. Bankruptcy Code April 16 In an attempt to
Rusen said the company does not need I he $3-to restructure a $514 million-debt.
$4-an·hour wage cuts it wants to Impose to help its
A federal bankruptcy judge ruled J uly 17 that the
reorganization under Chapter n. of the. federal
company could dissolve its USW contract. The
bankruptcy laws.
company then offered a $17.50 an hour package, but
Picketing was peaceful Monday at plants in Ohio, the union said it would not consider anything less than
West VIrginia and Pennsylvania, with no trouble $19.50.
repot1ed at any of the mills, where 8,:nl USW
Under federal bankruptcy law, a union has the right
members are employed.
to strike if a company voids a cont(act and sets wage
Meanwhile, Sen. Jay Rockefelier, D·W.Va .. called rates thai are unacceptable.
on the company and union to consider an adjustable
Wheeling-Pittsburgh remlnded strlklng and !ald-ol!
wage scale. The pllm would set a mutually agreed to . bargaining unit employees that Insurance coverage
wage rate and then adjust It annually on the basis of had been terminated because of the walkout.

"

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"Our heat pump is cleaner
and better than a
wood, oil or gas furnace."

irst of~· the
by a~ is expensive,
and gemng more expensrve every year. But the heat
pump doesn't hum anything. Rather than generating
brat, it pumps the heat that's already in the air. That's
why a heat pump saves so much money.
Scrond, a heat pwnp is cleaner than a ronventiona1 filrnat%. Bcontse it doesn't bum anything, there's no
dirt or soot.

F

fuellrurn«!

.

Ftn~lly, ~e .a li.unace, a heat ~p ~mes an

arr oondinoner m the sununer. By reversmg itself, a heat
pump takes the heat out of the house and keeps the cool
air circulating.
Winter and summer, an electric heat pwnp iS a
complete romfurt sy:;tem. That's
many sman
homeownen have made the switch
a wood, or oil
or gas furnace to an electric heat pwnp.

Ohio Power Company

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Electricity. It's the power oF dxlice.

w%:

1 Section,

;·o Pages

26 Cen1s

A Multimedia Inc . Newspoper

Funding for the Union Ave.
project was arranged through a
cost-sharing agreement between
the vlllage and ODOT.
Initially, Pomeroy's share of the
cost was to be approximately
$77,1XXl. That amount was secured
through the Ohio Department of
Development's Imminent Threat
Program to cover $55,1XXJ in actual
construction costs, plus right-of·
way, engineering design and legal
and administrative fees. Based on
estimates by ODOT's engineers,
Pomeroy's share will now fall ln the
$100,1XXJ bracket, thus the need for
the additional $.ll,OOJ.
Seyler said he was told by Gifford
that the project could wait until
spring if the village could not come
up with the $30,00l immediately.
According to the mayor, Giffonl
said a letter of credit would not be
acceptable.

The mayor was also told by
Gifford actual construction costs
could fall below ODOT's esilmates
In which case the village's money
would be refunded.
A decision on whether to proceed
witli tbe project is needed by ODOT
early TueSday afternoon according
to Seyler, because the state's
bidding process Is scheduled to
begin right away. However, the
mayor and council were reluctant to
commlt the $30.1XXJ without some
additional explanations from OD·
DOT. "Weneedtogetsomeanswers
before we can give an answer," said
the mayor.
Council's main concern is
whether or not the funds from the
department of ck,veiopment will be
secure if the project Is held until
spring. Jane Walton, village clerktreasurer, has already dispersed
Continued on page 10

Property deal closed
by Middleport Council

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Hospital news

enttne

Pomeroy project hits
snag, may be delayed

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Preceding Mrs. Reva Snowden,
Tl, well-known Rutland resident
who died recently, In death In
addition to three brothers was a ·
daughter, Mrs. Homer (Jean)
Parker.

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ELBERFELDS

Ohio Extended Forecas - WedPast Matrons of Harrlsonvlile · nesday through Friday: Generally
Eastern Star will have a potluck l'alr through the period, wlthhlghs In
picnic .6: :I! p.m. Tuesday at the the 8ls each day and overnight lows
home of Dcnna and Jim Nelson.
In theOOs.

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 23, 1985

ON SALE

Plan potluck picnic

Reva Snowden

The Harrisonville Senior Citizens
wlll hold their regul{lr meeting ·
Tuesday, 7: ll p.m. , at the townhouse. All memhersareencouraged .
lo attend and bring snacks. Visitors
welcome.

Vol. 35, Np.69
Copyrighted 1985

at y

Color Televisions

John Henry Warner Sr., 83,
formerly of Meigs County, died
Satunlay evening at his home In
Athens.
He was born April 1, 1900 In
Rutland, to the late A. Richard and
Emma Cobb Warner.
.. Surviving are three daughters,
Esther Franklln of Oakland, Calif ..
Mary Emma King of Athens, and
DcrothyHillo!Columbus: twosons,
John Henry Warner Jr. of Athens,
and Richard Warner of Rutland; 15
grandchidren, 19 great ·
grandchildren, and one great great
grandchild.
He was preceded in death by his ,
wffe, Harriett In January 1985; a
daughter, Betty Warner; eight
sisters and seven brothers.
He was amemberoftheRutland
First Baptist Church and served as a
deacon there for many years.
Funeral services wlll be I p.m .
Wednesday at the Rutland First
Baptist Church wlth Rev. Amos
Tillis officiating. Burial wlll be ln
Mlles Cemetery : Friends may call
al the Hunter Funeral Home In
Rutland from 2 to 4 p,m. and 7 to 9
p.m. Tuesday.

To meet Tuesday

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ALL RCA

John Warner

Veler8118 Memorial
Saturday admissions- None.
Saturday discharges - Beverly
Spires, Sandra Luckydoo.
Sunday admissions - Wilma
Anderson, Racine; Wade Sayre,
Raclne; Thomas Lambert, VInton;
Ethel Carter. Beaverton, Ore.
Sunday discharges- None.

By the Bend ......... Pages ~. 6
Classllleds ........ Pages 6, 7, 8
Comks-TV .............. Page9
Deaths ................... Page 10
Editorial ................. Page 2
Sports ................. Pages 3, 4

Ohio weather

Three winning tickets
sold for Ohio Lotto ·

Inside today:

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Saltii:el New•!l&amp;all
Arrangements to close thed~alon
the purchi)Se of the Middleport
Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad
depot and the adjolnlng property
were made Monday night when
Middleport Village Council met ln
regular session.
Mayor Fred Hoffman read a
letter from the railroad company
Indica tlng that the company will sell
the .52 acres of property Including
the depot buildlng for $40,00l. The
village had made a down payment of
$4,1XXJ and now will send the
additional $36,00J to pay lor the
property. A$7,lXImowlng bill which
the village had charged the com·

r

more than usual, the cost of
electricity jumped 1.3 percent.
·The beginning of the $1 local
access charge added to telephone
bills In June holstlngt hat Index by4.6
percent, but housing costs decelerated to a rate of Increase only half as
strong as j'v1ay's 0.6 percent.
Modera:tlon tfi the cost of gasoline
and used cars made the transportation index actually drop, down 0.1
percent, lor the second consecutive
month.
·
Overall the prices of goods, under
hea\o)' pressure of import competition, have goneuponly2.2percent ln
the past year. But the prices of
services, which are not facing

WASIDNGTON (UP!) - White
House c~ief of staff Donald Regan
acknowleged a need for Increasing
spendlng to deal with the farm
economy, and a Midwest senator
called it' 1muslc to our ears .."
Regan, after meeting Monday
with Senate Rep~blicans, said, "We
want to do all we can, but we
recognize we also have budget
problems."
"We know that this Is a very
serious problem ," he said. " We're
very sympathetic to thepUght oft-he
Iarmer."
Regan's attitude was markedly
different from the administration's
position earlier this year, when
Congress was sent a proposal that
would have required dramatic cuts
In farm spending. The admlnlstra ·
tloil agreed to reduce the size of tile
cuts during budget negotiations.
Continuing declines In the farm
economy, plagued by a 25 percent

Import competition, have risen 5.4 omy because both months were
percent.
supported by exceptionally blg
The department's Consumer Increases In defense orders and not
Influenced by the business cycle,
Price Index was 322.3 In June.
equivalent to cost of$322.:JJforthe Had defense orders been excluded,
government's sample "market June's orders for "big ticket"
basket" of goods and services that factory goods would have gone up
just 0.7 percent and May's only 0.6
cost $100 In 1967.,
VIewed another way, lhepurchas· percent.
The Labor Department's price
lng power of the 1967 dollar Is now 31
report showed food prices going up a..
cents, the department sald.
In a separate report today, the scant 0.1 percent ln June, the same
Census Bureau said new orders for amount they went down In May.
Grocery prices decllned for the
durable goods rose 1.8 percent ·
following a 3.3 percent Increase in fourth straight month.
Although the index lor meat, !Ish
May.
But the Improvements were Jess and eggs registered ltsfirstlncrease
Impressive for the Industrial econContinued on page 10

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the lowlands where they reside. It
was pointed out by the trio also that
items such as a lunch bucket; a large
ball and a ball bat were inonesewer.
While Mayor Hoffman and council Indica ted I hat heavy rains were
too much for the sto1111 sewers to
handle. Over three inches of r aln fell
one afternoon, they said . However,
they did agree that the sewers
should be cleaned of foreign objects
and tha t grill work should be placed
over them. It was also agreed to do
some ditching and ciearlng out of
ditching. Mayor Hoffman said that
it is now possible to take video
cameras lnt o sewers to study
problems and council agreed that
Continued on page 10

Administration recognizes
plight of American farmers

Consumer prices up 0.2 percent·in June
By DENIS G. GULINO
United Press International
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Consumer prices rose just 0.2 percent In
June, keeping inflation at a moderate 3.7 percent annual rate despite
big Increases for medical care,
electricity and telephone calls, the
Labor Department said today.
The latest change In the department's Consumer Price Index was
Identical to May but half or Jess than
the acceleration In March a nd AprU.
Medical care prices went up the
most of any major category, 0. 7
percent, with medlclneandmedlcal
supplies up a strong0.9 percent
Wlth summer rates cllmblngeven

pany for services over the years at
.the property wDl be &lt;!lsmlssed .
Money for the purchase is provided
by HUD funds. The company wlll
salvage the railroad tracks.
Three residents appeared before
council Monday night to express
concern over Hooding which has
occurred near their properties as
the result of heavy rains. They are
Den Lowery , Fred Puillns, and Bob
Bru1on and they reside in the Logan
and Hysell .Sts. area. Pullins said
durlng the last hea\o)' rains which
Hooded the Lowery property did not
affect his property . The three
indicated that drainage from too
much of the uphill area, Fairlane
Drive and Bone Hollow is runnlng to

decline In expor1.s since 198J and
bountiful crops, have forced tile
administration to revise upward it s
estimate for ·this year's farm price
support spending.
That · means the Senate and
administration can abide by their
agreement to "cut" farm price
support spending by$5.5 billion from
the higher number, although federal
spending and the deficit would
actually Increase.
Regan carried an Indian peace
pipe as a birthday gffl for62-year-old
Senate Republican leader Robert
Dole with whom he has public
differences over budget cuts.
Regan and Agriculture Secretary
John Block met in Dele's office with
Senate Agriculture Chairman J esse
Helms, R-N.C., and five other
ikpubllcan senators who are writ·
ingmajor farm legislation.
The.admlnistra tlon has estlma ted
price support provisions tent atlvely

approved by the Senate Agriculture
Committee - for grains, cotton,
dairy, pearluts and sugar- would
cost from $33 billion to S42 billion
over three years.
The cost of the administration·
Senate budget agreem ent ranges
from $27 billion to $32 billion .
Randy Russell , executive assistant to Block, saiditwouldbedifficult
to cut costs in thi' oommi ltee, which
"ill continue work today on price
support provisions. He said curs
may have to be made on the Senate
Hoor.
"I think what Donald Regan said
was music to our ears." said Sen.
Mark Andrews. R-N.D.
He said the administration recog·
nizes a need to address the SC'Veritv
of la1111 conditions "while staying
somewhat close to the budget 11€'eds
of the country . He was here to say,
' Let's work out somet hing
sensibly ....

Restraining order limits
number of C&amp;SOE pickets
ATIIENS (UPI) - A Judge has Issued a tempordry restraining
onler Hmillng the number of pickets at Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co. facUlties In the Athens County.
Athens Coonty Conunon Pleas Judge Thomas Hodson on Monday
Issued the onler restricting the number of ptckets Ill three at any
entnuwe of C&amp;SOE !acUities In the county, a company ;;pokesman

said.
It Is tile second restraining order Issued against Local 1400 of the
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers since the union
struck the utility on July 14.
On July Ui, a temporary resll'alnlng onler limiting the number of
pickets at the company' sConl-svUie generating plant nc arCoslMJcton,
following an outbreak of violenre at the plant.
Negotlattons between the union and company were scheduled to ·
resume today In Cohunbus.

�-THIP:lly, July 23, 1986

•

Commentary
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED .TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

rs~::l:::lt.
m~ ,. . .,. ,__.. ..__,...,
~v

.
r-T"""[':=!' c:::::tJ.F=f

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publis her
BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

Page 2-The Daily Sentinel

DALE ROTHGEB , JR.
News Editor
LETTERS OF OPINION are w£'1rome . Th£'y shOuld be- Jess th a n 300 words
long. A-ll leltf'rs arP subjiPct to edit in g and mu st be signed w ith name , addrl•s.s and
telephone number. No unsigned ll:'!lers will IJc publi shed. Lt:'ller s should be in
good las1c. addr('sslng- iss ues . not !=x&gt;rsonatlti('S.
·

'

The Ulness of Ronald Reagan has
force-fed thought normally ln re' pose; thought about hlm, his office,
imd his successors. Commentators
have canvassed many aspects of
tlje Illness, lncludlng highly improbable, but not ofor that reason
hypothetically Inconce ivable, alternatives, for instanc e his
resignation.
When Dwight Eisenhower had
his stroke late ln 1955, someone
asked Len Hall, Republican GOP
boss, what would the party do If
Eisenhower decided not to run
agaln In 1956, to which the answer
was, "When we get to that bridge,"
we'll jump lnto the river." Funny,
compliment;Jry, and Just the thing
to say when you know that the
president, your client, wl)l read it

Knotted phone lines
In the coming months, millions of people will be participa ting ln a
crucial nationwide election- but they'll be castlng their ballots tor long
distance telephone companies, Instead of canaidates for public office.
The election Is part of the federal government's attempt to transform
the teleco11l{l'lunications business from what long was virtually a regulated
monopoly, dominated by American Telephone &amp; Telegraph, into a
competitive industry.
. The mixed results that effort has produced to date are reflected in the
agency and ecstasy of Allnet Communication Services, Inc., a
Chicago-based firm typical oft he scores of new companies to enter the field
since the Justice Department began pressing for AT&amp;T divestiture.
AT&amp;T still controls 85 percent of the long distance market, followed by
MCJ CommunicaUons with six percent, GTE Sprint with three percent ,
Allnet with one percent and dozens of other local, regional and national
firms sharing the remalning five percent.
·
For Aline!, the good news is that i1 has experienced phenomenal
growth since U was founded In March 1981. Sales this year probably Will
exceed $350 million - a figure 10 times as high as the company's sales
volume only three years ago. Similarly, it has 300,000 customers today
compared with fewer than 30,000 in 1982.
The bad news Is that Aline! faces intense and ceaseless financial
pressure - Induced by heavy capital costs, intense competition from
AT&amp;T and erratic, unfocused federal regulatory policy.
For years. AT&amp;T's challengers were able to undercut the lndustry
· leader's prices by 50 percent or more because they were restricted to
o: trfferior, Inexpensive connecUons with local telephone companies.
~:: . In re~urn for bargain prices, customers of the alternative services ,
:;-,typically had to dial15 extra digits , then cope with connections and circuits
'"of varying quality.
•
Thai began to change, however, ln mld-1984, when local telephone
;:"!/mpanles started implementing a federally mandated procedure to allow

•= ;

,,.. fuJephone customers "equal access" to all long distance carriers.

'!.: .. : Customers were asked to designate the company they preferred as
• · their long distance provider, but those who made no selection- about half
\ of all subsctibers- were allocated by default to AT&amp;T, thus frustrating the
federal policy of encouraging competition.
Jt was not until late May - almost a year after the equal access
process began - that the Federal Communications COmmission ordered
' local telephone companies to begin distributing ballots to their subscribers.
: ; Under that procedure. whic h will remain in force until the equal access
: pl:ocess If completed late next yea r, subscribers who decline to select a long
distance ompany will be apportioned among a lithe competing firms in the
$arne ratio as those who have made a choice.
But for AT&amp;T's challengers, equal access a lso means they will have to
PaY considerably more for the high-quality connections to local telephone
systems -while si multaneously spending vast amounts of money to build
nationwide networks.

A study commissioned by GTE Spring concludes that the a lternative
carriers are not likely to be very profitable for at le a st five yea rs because
during that period they must spend $0 billion to construct transmission

systems.
Those companies insist the government must modify rules that
remain skewed In AT&amp;T's favur. "They've gone to a lot of trouble to move
the country into a competitive m a rket situa tion," says a n Allnet official.
"But with the current system. we'll end up with AT&amp;T as a n unregulated
monopoly. "
The debate next moves to the Senat e, where committee hearings are
sc hEduled for late July -but it's likely to continue for months and years
into the future.

3

· And his Impact on his party's
minnesota! But ... Wait untu he has
the next day ln tile papers, But here
politics
was
negligible,
When
Elsen·
left
office. Then you will see that in
are some differences between Ike
hower
was
elected
In
1952,
after
five
Ills own personality was
fact
and Reagan worth thlnking about at
Democratic
presidential
terms,
Indispensable
to Republican sue·
this point.
there
was
a
higher
percentage
of
cess.
All
that
has
·been done under
Dwight Eisenhower really wasn't
'
registered
Republicans
than
when
. his sponsorslilp will evaP9rate, and
particularly Ideological. There Is a
he left office in 1900. We know, by
the world will come back to Its
considerable revisionist school that
senses,
ts having a successful time eleva!· contrast, that five years after the
At the other end are those who
lng Eisenhower, asslgnlng to him first Inauguration of Reagan, the
number or' registered Republicans
feel that the fmward Inertia of the
sldlls we know now' he had but did
conservative movement requires
not affect to have. Murray Kemp- js at an all-time, post-FOR high. ·
Frustrated liberals, in parllcular fresh blood. It was frequently
ton wrote 10 years an arllcle called
complained about FOR by hungiY
"The Underestimation of Ike." But after the last election, decided to
even it we acknowledge that anthropomorphize political devel- liberals that the New Deal. really
went no furtber after 19:16; having
although Ike pretended to be aloof opments durlng the·past few weeks.
Ah,
you
see,
It
all
has
to
do
with
exhausted
the ideological ~rgies
from politics, which aloofness gave
You
see,
he
!s,
simply,
Reagan!
of Its patron. It was oot unffi LYndon
him the prestige he wanted whlle all
Johnson became president - goes
the time·he was as shrewd a politico magic! He says all those dumb
this theory - that the welfare state
as Mayor Daley- sWI,hewas 110ta things, and people believe theln,
finally fiowered. The comparable
president who had a considerable and they go to the polls, and they
give him every state except
commentary would have us beUeve
Impact on his country's politics.
· that the natural rbythm of politics
will require that further reforms
come later, In tbe post-Reagan
period: conceivably much later,
allowing for a hiatus either at the
hands of a sleepy Republican or of
an unlikely Democrat.

THE' UN~D HME ~ ~li 'f'IR£'F161111N6 UNtr AT WtiRK.

Airplane cuisine probe
' .WASHING'i'ON- The next time
you feel a little queasy after flying
your favorite airline, the cause
might not have been tbe air
turbulence or your white-knuckle
nervousness, but the in-flight meal.
The Food and Drug Admlntstra·
tlon has designated a "danger
zone" for food storage of from 45 to
140 degre€s Fahrenheit. Between
t~ose two departures, bacteria
growth occurs that can lead to food
poisoning.
FDA inspeclorS are currently
conducting spot-checks on on-board
food temperatures at Chicago,
Baltimore, Atlanta and Dallas
airports. The agency's stated goal
Is to spot-check 408 planes by Sept.
30, although only 82 had bene
inspected at this writing.
Looking on the blight side, an
FDA.spokesman said "70 percent of
the planes passed with flying
colors." But that means 30 percent
flunked .
This Is a higher percentage than
the FDA uncovered in a check of142
planes from 19 airlines In the New
York area a year ago. That check

turned up only 28 planes from 10
airlines, or ro,ughly ~percent, that
falli'd to me€! the FDA standard for
food storage. So the current !allure
rate 1s running 50 wrcent higher.
According to a sutlllruiry of the
1984 spot checks, prepared at the
request of Rep, Dennis Eckart,
D·Ohio, the FDA found Instances
"In which foods such as steaks,
chicken, !Ish, milk and non-dairy
creamers were being loaded on
aircraft with .Uttie or no dry ice and
stored at unsafe temperatures."
Our associate Tony Capacclo
obtained the FDA Inspection re·
JXJrts and reviewed their conclusions with William Adams, chairman of the In-Flight Food Services
Association, which represents airline· caterers. Adams made the
point that the FDA samples only a
fraction of the nearly 350 million
meals served in the air last year.
·"I don't know of any food-related
illness because of temperature,"
Adams said, adding: "But that
doesn't mean the posslbUity Isn't
there."
Here are some of the reports'

Such further reforms as what?
Well, for Instance, a foreign policy
that encourages•counter,Sovtet salIents in extramllltary areas; for
Instance, agriculture (between Europe and the United States, we are
keeping the Soviet Union from
stavation). In domestic policy, a
nat tax, a voucher system ln
schools, and a reversal of the most
conspicuous arrogations of power
by the Supreme Court. Some think
that a president simply can't get
mpre than what he asks lor during
those few golden weeks alter he 1s
first lnaugurated. Not many people
would be willing to say that the tax
reductinos of 1981 could have been
Introduced by Mr, Reagan In 1985.

lack· Anderson &amp; Joseph Spear

A Pan Am spokesman '¥lid tbe
airline; which serves more than 10
million meals a year, took steps to
"tighten up our supervision or the
caterlng operations," and has slnce
been given "a clean btu of health by
the FDA."
:- On an American Airlines flight
from Newark to Dallas, Inspectors
found caterers loading plates of
steak, chicken cutlets and fish that
l~m was "extremely minor," but
had lnternal temperatures of 68 to
that the company had followed up
72 degrees. Two servings of
with re-educat!onat efforts.
'.'braised beef Portugal" had
- On one Pan American ntghl
temperatures of 70 degrees.
from Chicago to New York, FDA
- On three Delta flights, headed
Inspectors found three chicken and
for Dallas -Worth Worth and
steak dinners In the front galley at
70 degrees,·and three of 35 chicken Atlanta, inspectors found coffee
dinners in the rear galley at 66 to 70 creamer and milk stored impropdegrees, 'Ibe FDA, "Notice of erly, and four plates of chicken
Adverse Finding" said that Pan cutlets at 65 degrees.
- Capitol In lerna tlonal Airways
Am personnel were told of the
responded promptly when FDA
problem, "but Indicated that due to
the length of time required to . inspectors found 123 turkey, veal
and chicken dinners stored at 62 to
re-stock the plane, the meals would
70
degrees. Its flight from Kennedy
be served" anyway, so the flight
could leave on time. Adams said AirJX)rt to Chicago was delayed an
hOur while the !n-Hight meals were
there would be no health hazard If
replaced.
the meals were served within two
hours.

findings:
Inspectors found storage
problems With five Eastern Airlines
flights, bound to Bermuda, Atlanta,
Miami and Fort Lauderdale. On
J wo of the planes, for example,
steaks waiting to be served in Dtght
were found to have Internal temperatures of 54 to 59 degrees. An
Eastern spokesman said the prol&gt;-

Answering service ________A_rt_B_uc_h_wa_ld
(What Fra.nk Sinatra and Art
Buchwald have In common is that
pecple prefer their golden oldies.)
MARTHA 'S VIN!O:YARO What I did on my summer

vacation:

~04

•

Today In history
Today is Tuesday, July 23, the 2()lth day of 19&amp;'i with 161 to follow.
The moon is nearing its first quarter.
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
The evenlng stars are Mercury a nd Saturn.
Those born on this da te are under the sign of Leo. They Include actress
Charlotte Cushman in 1816, actor Michael Wilding In 1912, and actress
Gloria DeHaven ln 1924 (age 61).
On this dMe ln history:
In 1829, William Burt of Mount Vernon, Mich., received a pa tent for a
' device called the "typographer," believed to have been the first
, typewriter.
In 1973, Wate rgate special prosecutor Archibald Cox served subpoenas
· on the White House after President Nixon refused to turn over tapes and
documents .
In l!E!, Japan 's worst flood In 25 years hit Nagasaki, leaving more than
:WO people dead.
In 1984, the first black Miss America, Vanessa WJUiams, relinquished
her croW!t two months early because of nude photogrliphs of her publlshed
In Penthouse magazlne.
A thought for the day: English writer Samuel Butler said; "The man who
lets hlmselt be bored Is even more contemptible than the bore."

•

•

·Meigs advances
to championship
tilt in District 8

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Tuesday, July 23, 1986

The illness of R.R. ~----w_ii_liam_F._B_uc..--kley_Jr_.

The Daily Sentinel
,.,~

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

•

I was a telephone answering
service. Only pecple who have
children between the ages of 14 and
3D will appreciate what an important func1ion I performed.
I always started after dinner as
soon as my daughter Jennifer
asked, "Can I use the car?"
"What lime will you be back?" I
asked .
"Not late. If Debbie calls tell her I
went with Tony over to Mike's, and
if she doesn't gel us there we'll be at
David Crot..an's Bar in.Oak Bluffs. "
"! gotcha," I said, writing it
down.
Half an hour later the phone rang.
"Is J e nny there?"
"Is this Debbie? " I asked
"No, It '~ Sarah. And she was
supposed -to meet me at the Cafe du
Portln Vineyard Haven, " sbe said.
"Well, she went with Tony over to
Mike's."
"Which Mike? "
"She didn't say which Mike. Is
there more than one?"
"There are three. If she calls
back tell her I went to the party at

Ben's."
''The party at Ben's. I've got it."
. Fifteen minutes later the phone
rang again. It was Ben, who wanted
to tell Jenny about the party.
I explained that she with Tony at
Mike's, but was going to David
Crehan's Bar.
"Well, If Angel calls," Ben said,
"tell him I need Ice and wlne.''
"Wby would Angel call?" I
asked.

"To find out where Tony went.''
"I gotcha," I said, writing it
down. "Tell Jenny about your party
and Angel about brtnging ice and
wine. Do you have any message for
Debbie?"
"Who's Debbie?" Ben asked.
"I don't know, but she's supposed
to call Jenny and I'm to tell her
she's with Tony and they went over
to Mike's and then they're going to
David Crehan's Bar."
"Well, don't tell Debbie about the
party because I can't know how
many people will be with her."
" My lips are sealed," I promised.
I got into a bot tubwben tbe phone
rang again.
The party 0n the other end asked
for Jenny.
''Who's calling?''
"Gordon Manning."
"You can find her at Mike's,
David Crehan's Bar or Ben's party,
depending how luck .you are.''
"I'm calling from Ne w

David Crohan's. We're at the
Phillipls ' in Lambert's Cove.
"Now you tell me," I said angrily.
"Everybody's trying to find you,
with the exception of Debbie, who
never called."
"She's with us," Jenny replied .
"And where the hell Is Angel?" I
wanted to know.
"He went back to BOston."
"Do you realize Ben wascountlng

me?"
"I couldn't get to a phone. Who
else called?"
"Naval headquarters. They told
me to tell you to report back to your
ship Immediately."

"Dad, are you drunk?"
"Not yet, but by the time you get
home I will be."

Berry's World
HOW ABOUT ·
A LitTLE
PR.IV~Y,
fOLK~?

Hampshire.~

"That's too bad. There're lots of
great things going on here," I told
him .
"Well, wili you tell Jenny I'm
coming down on Tuesday and ask
her to leave my beack pass with
Ellen In Edgartown? But tell her
not to tell Betsy I'm colng. You got
that?"
"Of course I've got it. You think
I'm a dumfl)y? Listen, I have to get
off the phone because J'm expecting
a call from either Debbie or Angel
or the pollee In Chilmark, depend-.
lng how lucky I am."
"I started to worry about why
Debbie or Angel hadn't called. I
was watching Johnny Carson when
the phone rang again.
It was Jenny. "We didn't go to

on him to bring the Ice and wine to
his party? Why didn't you call

1'ttiS IS A

RE'CORPI~G-

,•

•

3

ATHENS - Catcher Scot Gheen
and second baseman Jaclde Welker
combined lor six hits and nine runs
batted in as Meigs defeated Logan
12-7 bere Monday, ;Hivanclng that
squad Into Wednesday's championship game of the Eighth District
American Legion tournament.
Meigs Is the only team ln the
tourney without a loss, and only one
win away from a berth in the state

tournament. The state tournament

EAin'I!:RN 'BIG BEND·CHAMPIONS' -

Faottill'8

Pony League

te.n caplurecl&amp;lle 11811 Biii!Md Pmy J.eaaue Champlonoblp Monday

1!1/fUia a&amp; Mlddlepmt's Gt!Dera&amp; Hartinger Park as It delea&amp;ed Mason

n.a

ID lhe lllwnplonlllllp pme. Team members are, Jeff Caldwell,
Bryu Dllnl, Eddie Collln8, Brent JliaoeD, Jelf Jom&amp;on, Steve Homer,

· Jelf Homer, Kyle Davti, Allen Tripp, Cbrlll lalce, Paul ~der,Scott
Fllch,Keany CaldweD,Howle Lawrence and Derrick YOiiker.Eastem's
BJ'Yan Durst was Mmed as the · tournament's MOI!I Valuable
Player,Eastem Is mwJhed by ,Jim Caldwell and CbarUe .Colilns.

Eastent Big Bend Pony League champ
BySCOITWOLFE
Sos4ne1Sialf

MIDDLEPORT -

Behind

a

slx-nm third Inning, Eastern scored
a ll-3 come-frbm-behlnd victory
over a talented MaBon J team bere
Monday evening to cll,dm the 1985
Big Bend Pony LeagueTournament
CbampiQnshjp at General Hartinger Park,
P!. Pleasant Town and Country
claimed a victory In the consolation
3

gamevlaa~ttromNewHaven,

Eastern's

Brian

Durst

was

named the tournament's most
valuable player wltll clutch hitting
at theplale and several key pitching
perl'onnances, and received the
Farmer's Bank-sponsored MVP
trophy. Mason'sJeffHenrywonthe
'Most Hits' tropHy sponsored by the
Blue Tartan In Middleport. Henry
turned ln a tonid hitting performance at the plate throughout the

tournament.
In the first innlngotthechamplonship battle, which featured twooftbe
area's premier pony league teams,each having just one loss aple·
ce,Mason scored one run lor the
lnlt!allead, 1-0.
Jeff Henry led off with a long
double, then crossed the plate on an
RBI slngle by Brian Decker.
All was silent until the bottom of
the second frame, whenwlthtwoout
Kyle Davis singled, Allen Tripp
singled, and Jeff Caldwell singled to
plate Eastern's first run lor a 1-1
deadlock.
Meanwhile, Eastern hurler Eddie
C&lt;illlns was getting stronger agalnst
the hard-hitting Mason line-up,
retiring the s~ in onler for three
straight [nnlngs.
Then Eastern's bats.awakened In
the iblrd frame, when four big hits,
an error, and a walk broke the game

wide open, Bryan Durst led the
Inning off with a slngie, Eddie
Coillns walked, Brent Bissell
reached on an error,and Jeff
Johnson teed off with a booming
three-run triple.
But the firewor-ks had not ended
for the Meigs Counttans as Steve
Horner delivered a sacrifice fly,
Kyle Davis singled, and Allen Tripp
tripled, later scoring and a fielder's
choice.
Mason later scored In the sixth
lnnlng on a JeffHenryslngle, a Chris
Noble single,and a Brian Decker
· Sacrifice ny puillng Mason closer at
8-3.
, Eastern scored three lnsurance
runsln the sixth lnnlng, whlleColllns
struck out the side In the seventh.
Collins was the winner ln a super
fine effort, allowlng just four hits,
walking none, and strlklng out nine.
BUiy Marshall suffered tbe toss with

relief from Chris Jewell in the third
luning as both turned lngoodefforts.
They cornblned for three strikeouts,
only two walks , and allowed eleven
hits.
Eastern hittlng was led by Eddie
Colllns, who had a perfect night with
three singles and a walk. Kyle Davis
also had a perfect night with two
singles and a walk, whlle Allen Tripp
tripled and slngted,Ourst singled
twice, Jeff Johnson trlpled,and Jeff
Caldwell slngled an&lt;\ walked.
Jeff Henry had a slngleanddou ble
for Mason, Chris Noble tripled ,
Brtan Decker slngled , and Troy
Meadows singled.
Despite its win ln the championship game Eastern stU! has Its work
cut out ln the regular season as the
once deffat.ed Eagles again meet
the tough Masonltes for the. league
championship at alaterdate. Mason
also has just one loss.

Braun's safety gives Cards 4-3 victory
By Unled l'mlolntematlonal
Pinch-hitter Steve Bmun stroked
his second consecutive gamewinning hit Monday to Uft the ·St,
Jails Cardinals to a 4-3 victory over
the San FrancisCO Giants,
Bmun, batting for wlnnlng
pltchef' Joaquin Andujar, singled
home Tlto Landrum In the eighth
Inning to give the Cardinals a 4-3
lead.
Andujar, 16-4, is the majors'
wtnntngest pitcher. He allowed
seven hits and three runs ln seven
Innings. Jeff Lahti earned his lOth
save, pitching the flnal two lnnlngs.
Dave Lapolnt, 4-9, yielded seven hits
and tour runs In 71·31nnlngs.
With the Giants leading 3-21n the
eighth, LaPoint walked Willie
McGee and gave up a single to
Landrum. Garrells relieved arid
struCk out pinch-hitter Andy Van

Slyke, before yielding an RBI single
to pinch-hitter Terry Pendleton to tie
the score. Brnun then singled to
center for a 4-3lead.

Braun had a two-run homer,
Sunday In the Cardinals' 4-2 victory
In ~0 Innings over Los Angeles,
The Giants took a HI lead in the
first when Dan Gladden led off with
a single', moved to second on a
' stole third
' and scored on
gtoundout,
Ron Roenlcke's single.

The Cardlnals took a 2-llead ln the
third on lnfleld hits by Vlnce
Coleman and Ozzie Smith, a passed
ball by Bob Brenly and a two-run
single by Tom Herr.
In tbe fifth, singles by David
Green and Jose Uribe, a sacrifice by
La Polnt ' and Gladden's lnfleld
grounder tied It 2-2. Jeff Leonard's
&amp;olo hOmer lit the sixth, his 11th, put

the Giants ahead 3-2.
In otber games, It was PhiladelElsewbere, Cincinnati stopped
phia beat Houston 7-6 and PittsNew York 5-l, Atlanta downed
burgh defeated Los Angeles 6-3.
Montreal 7-land Chicago defeated
At Philadelphia, Mike Schmidt
San Diego 5-3.
blasted his 13th hOme run of tbeyear
At Montreal, Bob Horner, Terry
with two out lit the ninth Inning to Uft
Harper and Bruce Benedict each
the Phillles. Schmidt rec.,lved a
knocked in two runs to lead the
second chance In the lnnlng when
Braves. Rick Mahler, 14-8, went the
third baseman Phil Garner dropped
distance: for the fourt.h time this
his foul pop for an error, then
season. David Palmer, 6-8, was the connected on the next pitch off Jeff
loser.
Heathcock, 0-1, for his tie-breaking
At San Diego, Keith Moreland's homer.
tie-breaklng RBI singled ln the
At Los Ange les, rookie Sam
eighth lnnlng to score Davey Lopes
Khallfa's first major-league home
run , a three-run shot In the fourth
from tliird base and carry the Cubs.
Moreland hit a two-bouncer over the lnnlng, carried the Pirates over the
head RDy Lee Jackson, 0-1, and Dodgers . The loss prevented the
Lopes easily scored. Rookie Ron . Dodgers · from lncreaslng their
Meridith, 1-0 pitched the eighth half-game lead over San Diego In the
lnnlng for his first major-league NL West. Larry McWIU!ams, 5-7,
was the winner.
victmy and decision.

Twins nip Orioles, 5-4;. Indians lose
After helng tossed out, Weaver
Injury.
walked out to left field to talk to
" (Sunday) I played first base for
UPJSportiJ Writer
Bush.
,
Earl Weaver put on a sideshow the first time In a long time and I fell
"He didn't catch the ball, "
Monday' night fitting for the out of place, I felt like it was a new
Weaver ·said. "Bush looked like he
ctrcus-UkeatrnosRitereattheMetro- season, " said Hrbek, who knocked
was getting mad . I don 'lblamehim.
dome, but lor Twins fans, Kent
loser Storm Davis' first pltch for his
What's
he going to say? Some Idiot 's
Hrbek was the maln attra~tion.
12th homer of the season.
walking
out to left field. He's got to
Hrbek, hampered by a sboulder
The 25-year,old slugger hit just
think
'this
guy's golng to shoot me.'
sprain, belted a grand slam - the .2431n the first half of the season, but
third home run In his last seven opened the second half with a
"I said 'Tell him you didn't catch
' at-bats - to cap a five-run second game-wlnnlng grand slam in the
the baiL"'
.
Inning and lift Mlnnesota to a 5-4 Twlns' S4' Win over the New York
Elsewhere, Boston beat Oakland
victory over the Baltimore Orioles.
Yankees Thursday. Hrbek hit a
6-4, Toronto topped Seattle a-1,
"He's just dolng what be's two- run plitch-hit homer In a 5-2 loss
Kansas City beat New York 5-4,
capable of," Twlns manager Ray Sunday to the Yankees.
Chicago defeated Detroit 94', Texas
MUter said ofHrbek, who also made
Weaver, the Orioles' colorful
edged Cleveland 2-1, Minnesota
· two key defensive plays in the nlnth.
manager, was In vlntageformwhlle
shaded Baltimore 5-4 and Mllwau"He got some rest and II; using a
being ejected for the first timeslnce
kee clo\!!lered California 16-3. ·
short swing. When he uses a short his retum ln June, Weaver argued ·
In the NL, It was : St. Louis 4, San
swing, he'll hit borne runs,"
fllr about 12 minutes after he
Francisco 3; Clnclnnati5, New York
Hrbek, who was making his first claimed left fielder Randy Bush
1; Atlanta 7, Montreat 1; Chicago 5,
start at first base since July 9, has dropped Fred Lynn's fourth-Inning
San Diego 3; Philadelphia 7,
seen limited playing time due to the fly ball.
Houston 6; and Pittsburgh 6, Los
Angeles 3.
·
RedSox6,A's4
At Boston, Wade Boggs collected
. three hits toexten&lt;J,hlshiltlitgstreak
to 25 games - tops In the majors and drove ln twohtnstolead the Red
Sox. Tim Lollar, 4-5, making his first
start since being acquired from the
Chicago White Sox, earned the
victory. Mark Clear hurled 2 1-3
innings of relief before giving way to
Bob Stanley, who notched his nlnth
save. Chris Cod!roU fell to 8-7.
Blue Jays 3, Mariners 1
AI Toronto, Tom Flier and three'
relievers comblhed on a four-hitter
to lifttheBiueJays. FUer,l-0, threw
seven shutout litnings and allowed
one hit en route to his first
major-league VIctory since July 3,
1982. Bill CaudUI recorded his
club-record 12th save. Mark Lang·
ston, 5-7, took the loss,
Royall II, Yank-t
At
Kansas
City, Mo,. WllileWUson
'
TAOOEDOUf-~'IIJoydMoeebfiltagedautbySeeWe's
and Hal McRae each had two RBI to .
W •
taalnl,.lrumll*dcmally balllnlhefowthlnDmg
propel tbe Royals, Mike Jooes, 2·2,
o1 ~s .U..pme In rc-.&amp;o, The&amp;M!Jay~~WIIIl, J:l. (UPJ)
pitched 2 2-3 tnnlngs In relief or
By JOE ILLUZZI

7MJ.,...

starter Ma rk Gublcza. Dan Quisenberry hurled the flnal 1 2-3 innings
for his 19th save. Dennis Ras·
mussen , 3-5, was the loser.
White Sox ~ Tigers 4
At Chicago , Carlton Fisk hit his
major-league leading 26th homer
and Gene Nelson , 6-4, pitched a
five-hit shutout for seven Innings to
send the White Sox to their, sixth
victory In their seven last games.
Jerty Don Gleaton recorded his first
save. Detroit starter Randy O'Neal
fell to 5-3,
Rangers 2, Indians 1
At Arllngton, Texas, rookie CJd.
dibe McDoweil wen! 3-for-4 and
ripped the game-winlng homer ln
the eighth Inning to send Texas to Its
fourth victory ln Its last fiv e games.
Greg-Harris , 3-3, pitched two petiect
lnnlngs of relief for Ihe v Jctory,

Is also played In Athens and begins
Monday, Aug. 5.
COach Jack Welker's crew can
rest up today while Logan and
Lancaster battle it out. Meigs wUI
face the winner tomorrow at 5: 30
p.m. at Trautwein Field. Lancaster
reached the loser'sbracketflnalsby
eliminating Glouster 14-4yesterday.
Meigs cracked out 13 hits against
Logan pitching and were also given
15 base on balls . Meigs narrowly
missed putting Logan away early,
leavlng the bases loaded ln the first
two tnnlngs and strandlng 16
runners In all.
After Meigs had led 3-0 by tbe
second, Logan bunched six ri their
eight hits to score two In the second
and took a5-31eadwlth three more In
the third.
Welker brought Meigs back ln the

.•

3

•

one.
Logan hurlers Alan Thompson '
and Sean Spartarcomblned to strike
· out nlne and walk 15. Spar!¥
relieved Thompson ln the seventh. :
Other Meigs hillers Included first
baseman Jay Carpenter wh&lt;i
slngled , doubled, walked three
times and scored two runs. Deke
Barnes added two slngles whUe Phil
BaUey, Dave Hendricks, and Chris
Kennedy each singled once. Jeff
McCort, Jose Medlna, and the
pitcher Thompson all singled twice
apiece In pace Logan at the plate.
Logan falls to 13-12 lor the year
whlle Meigs goes to 22-8.

Eddie Brown one
notable absentee
at Bengals' camp
WU.MINGTON , Ohio !UP!\
The Cilicinnati Bengals opened
tralntng' camp for rookies and
selected veterans Monday with only
one notable absence - first round
draft cboice Eddie Brown.
Brown, a wide receiver from the
University of Mlaml (Fla.), is
Clnc!nnat!'s only unsigned draft
pick .
Seven previously unsigned rookies, lncludlng second-round selec·
lion Carl Zander - an litslde
linebacker from \he Unlverslty of
Tennessee- signed contracts when
they,reported S!Jnday nlght.
In addition to Zander, the Bengals
signed Anthony .Tuggle (fourth
round, safety), Tony DeGrate(flfth,
nose tackle), Eric Stokes (sixth,
offensive tackle J, Keith Lester
(sixth, tight end), Keith Cruise
(nlnth, defensive end) and Harold
Stanfield (11th, til!ht end).
Brown's agent , Jim Ferraro, said
he wasn't worried about lack of
progress on a contract. He said he
expects a new offer from the
Benga!s soon.
"Everythlng is kind of ln aholdlng
patlern. But (Bengals Assistant
General Manag~r) Mike Brown
menlloned it .looks like their offer

will be adjusted upward," Ferraro
said.

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

AA Player of week

Auto-Owners innova·

INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) -lndla·
napolls Indians lnf!eider Razor
Shlnes, who hit .435 with three
bomers and nlne RBI for the week
ending July 21, Monday was named
Player of the Week of the American
Association .

MEIGS COUNTY
DOG POUND

rive approach to life insurance is another reason
why one name says it
best .
Like our Indeterminate Premium Life In·
surance . All it means is
that in the event of, say,
longer life expectancies
in the future, Auto·
Owners has the nexibility to lower your premiums accordingly.
Ask your independent
Auto-Owners agent for
the detai Is .

vl11to-Ow~rs
:Insurance

•

Lire. Home&lt; C'1r. Buslnel5.
Onf' nam(' 'fa _v~ it all.

· A memorial service , which is scheduled some time after the
burial or cremation of the deceased, is an oPPOrtunity for the
friends of the deceased to express their support and sym pathy to the family of the.deceased . The casket Is not present.
This service may include inspirotional roadincs. reli&amp;ious seleclions, hymns, musical selections and tributes to the de ·
cened. Personol, fraternal and religious tributes to the de ·
mud may properly bt included, as well as music which may
provide comfort to those who aHend .
The memoriol service of the deceased is for those who live on .
It is held at your churth, our funeral home or even in your own
home, It provides an olternale time for relatives, friends and
ossociates to express lheir personal thoughts and support.
Our services include helpin&amp; you make all the necessary ar·
ranpments or lht disposilion of the body of the deceutd as
well as for the memorial services.
If you hiYt other questions, feel free lo cat!.

Clll) Wf:llll

•

fourth with a tw!Hlut three-run
doubie that p~~t Meigs backontopto
stay at.6-5;
Gheen's two run double in the fifth
made It 8-5 and the Meigs backstop
drilledanothertwo-nmdoublelnlhe .
seventh and later scored to put it out
of reach at 12-6,
Gutsy Dan Thomas hurled seven
solid lnnlngs to pick up the wln.
Thomas came on strong once Meigs
grabbed their 6-5 lead, allowing but
two runs and two hits In the fourth
through seventh lnnlngs. He fanned
10 and walked six. Rod Roush
pitched hitless eighth and ninth
ilinings, fanning m~ and walking ,

WHAT IS INCLUDED IN A MEMORIAL SERVICE?

111118UPDRT,O!IIO

•

g,,,,.

Pl~t. . .Affllfllon lo

D•ffll/

�•

Page- 4- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

\
'

Tueeday. July 23, 198!5
•

The Daily Sentinel

Reds explode in seventh, down Mets 5-l; Soto ends slump

l:

By MIKE TUlLY
UPI National Baseball Writer
NEW YCJRK (UP!) -You seldom see a major-l~aguer show as
much dejection as Sid Fernandez did Monday night.
·
The New York Mets left-hander pitched six hitless tnnlngs, tben
· atlsorbed a shelllng that gave the Cincinnati Reds a 5-l vlctocy.
"Sometimes I think I'm wasting my time, " he said In a low,
quaking voice. "I'm llavtng_ no luck. I have to keep tbem from
scoring.
·
· "Bad luck. It never changes. It never ends. I don't know what to
do.''
Fernandez, 3-6, struck out a career-lllgh 13 batters in 71-31nnings
but was unimpressed by that total.
"Why should It matter" he asked rhetorically. ''I'm not getting any
wins."
New York manager Davey Johnson sounded una1armed by
Fernandez's comments.
'Tunderstand his thoughts but I'm not going to address tbem right
now," said Johnson. "We've given him no support."

MaiUy. ~y
fl.'lolftor.ML

Majors
\\'

L Pet . GB

T'r'rslf'Y ,

....
......... 5oll6 .!ill NP\1.' rc.·k ....................... 5.1-E .!'ll:! 1\!r
Montrrol ..
. .. 5.2 41 - ~ 31,1z
('hicago . ..
~ -lJ .5'!1 6~
Phil~lphl
............. ..:l 51 .410 U ",
PIHshurJ.(h ........................ J1 ffl .3H i1
\\'f!llll

!.!: Kln]ltnaA. oax 21: and

Houston .. .....
44 49 .47:1 It~..,
Atlan•••--- ............................ -u ~ .-m 101,&lt;,
San Fran cis&lt;' ............. , .... ~ ...:fl ~ .:m; 17 ~

Natiooal Lc!ijZUe - Co~an. StL 66:
McGee. SIL 37: ~. C.lll 35; Raines,
Mil 34: a nd Rr&gt;Ws. On ll.
Arnf&gt;rlcan Le'liji!Ut' - Hmdl'rson, NY
4.);
Pettis. Cal :D. Buller. C1ev 29 ;
Wilson. KC 28; Culllru;, Ottk 25.

Monday's Rfsukoi
St. L ruL~ ~- San FranC'L~ro 3

C'!ndnnatl .'i·. N('W York I

l'ltdlln~

· Allant1t 7, Montr~·1ll 1
H ou~lon li
Pl!lsburgh 6. LO!'i An~·les 3
tuesclal)'s Gam611 !AU TtmCll J:;DT)

1Cox l Eu at San Francisco

tK•uktwf.-?1. 3:/Y,ip m
Ctnclnna ll 1Brownln.e: Hi at

N~·

Yot'k

t Dart~~l !J.2t.

7: :r&gt;p.m.
At tam a tSmlth &amp;~• • at Mmln&gt;a ltHi'Skloth
&amp;41 , 7:.'1."! p.m
,
Hooston r!{n(&gt;pper S.7J, at Phrtatk&gt;tphia

tKoosman +.2t , 7: .1) p.m.
C'hlraro ISUtr tltfl' 7 71 at San [l~
rHa~."kins 12-21, 10:00 p.m.
PlttsburRh (fWusctwl fl.2 ) at Los An!ll'k'S
tHcrnhiS!!t S.JL IO: :t'&gt; p.m. Mledntslay' !i

Lell1Ue - AnduJar. StL 1£..4;
Coodlion, NY 14·3; Mahler, A1l U -8; H~ t .
SO 134: H3"-'klns, SO 12·2.
~rlcan League Guidry, r.;y 13-J:
RomarJk:k. Cal U-4: ~d. Bo!i ll-8;
SPII(&gt;II pi!Cht'rs tk&gt;d with 10 vlcfortrs.
E'&amp;nwd Rw1 Awrqe
!Based on 1 lnnlnJol k r-..mber of RafflE'S
each tt'am has pla}-ed) .
National l...t&gt;agut&gt; - Ga:ldm. NY Ui:
Va!mzuPia. lA 2.17: San!k-1'!100. Chi 2.26:
Dnt\'eeky . SO 2.~: Tudor, StL and
Hcsl«''h. Mtl 2.38.
American l.eagut&gt; - Stll'b. Tor 2.00:

Guidry, N\' 2.61: K~·. T«
l.c&gt;lbrandl. KC and Wilt, Cal 2.92.

('lt1

t0-61, 8:~p . m .

NN' York 1Wh ltsoo 561 at Kan!l.: t ~ &lt;'ltv
( S.1hforh~('ll tn.5r.H: :Ji pm
·
Clt.,·t•l antl illt'aloo ~ tli a1 Tt&gt;.'la ~ 1Hough
8-101. S:ll p.m.
Bal!ilnorc- IMrf;rt'Jior 8-f i at Mlni"V'!It'Jia
1Butcllf'r 11-9&gt;. 8: l'i p.m.
C'OTIIIornl :r !McCaskill 5-iit 3t Mllwauk('(•
1Darwin li- Jrl 1, 8:31p.m.
Wrdw!ll"la,v'!l(iam.,.
C'&lt;tllluml~ a t M llwu uk~~ ·
Sl·atHr at Toronto. nl.l:ht
Oakland al Boston . niJI:hl
O..•t10il til C'hk-ai!:O. n~ h l
J\;('1.1' Ycrk at K a n.~ a s City, lll.l!ht
CJl'\·r tnnti HI ')PlUis, n~hl
B:l himo ~l. ' ui MlrHl('SOW. nl,11h1

......

tl\l~rYI on J 1 l&gt;lll lr
~:amt "' t'arh lt•&lt;tm ha•

appr ar ai\('('S x no. or
pla\Hh

~· aalonull.l:•~«~~.­

H&lt;"rr. Sl.

ltllhrhpt'l.
R.l :12fi :-11 110 :tr.
~
52 110 .3211.

Gllt"rTI'O W\

11..1

Mo1••lnd lh

1• 1.'I 'll :11 !fi .2!1':1

rnr·kJ. Cln

t% 46 1116 .2!19
H+ .ll7 :rr 91 .296
H7 .1:1-1 tH !!1 . ~16
fOl :Jil-18 llr. - ~l!lf;

Md;._,., Sl

.n-.

m m !1..1 .:n.1

~I

Tmpll1m.SD
R..;• inf~. M1
C 1i/\'hiL SD
Crut.. I lou

PO 311 :l:l ~~
!fl :124 ~ !H

Clark . .S L
Aln•rk~

29!i 7!1 ll'fi :\"Jtl

"jti

Rn·11 . Kr

""" .'()4 r6

~~. Has

Cooprr. :0.11
Whiner. Dl'

fltodmn Pos
Bradl!.~ St

. ~!

IA'UK\I l'
It all , h pt1.

Hl'flthn NY

1.&lt;!(' 1. R:ol l

- ~-1

Iff,

.:r....

!l l 3ffi 5~ 111 . :»--~
III ili:l :o K"l .:tbl

¥&gt; Ill!
&amp;&gt;351 ti.'l 100
K"' 2H1 .., fr.
91 :JiG 51 11.1
~

llf;

:n5
.:n1

:no

:rn

Hemamlt•z. DEl .

How('li. QQk, Moore. Cal and QuiSCtlbl'r
ry. KC 19; .film{'!!, Chi and Rlf!:hPIII, NY

17.

Transactions
Montrl'BI -

.........

Aetlvall'd pitcher Dan
!;chatzt'd&lt;'r from 21-day dL.&lt;&gt;abiC'd IL~t:
fl'C&lt;t lled lnf!Mdcr-calchl'r RN.or ShlnP.!i fmm
lsldl.anapolis of lt.&gt; Afn(&gt;rkan 1\ssod;•IIOn:

.n

Oak land tLan¢ord (H I at Bol;ton tHw-st
6·71. i::f!p m.
n.:-t roll rTan1111a -1-9) al C'hkaao tBum.~

17; SuTTer. All 16

Arul'rlcan !.RaJoll.lt' -

-

&amp;-61 , 7::fJ p.m

116;

Sit\'eli
National League - Reardon. Mtl 23;
Sm ith. Chi 22: Go5.&lt;;8$:e, SD ;n PCM'E'r,

W L Pt.'t. GB
Tcronlo ···· '··· ......... .. ............. 36 :r1 .ID2 New York -· .
.. .............. 52 .'1! .m8 2~
[)(&gt;!rolt ... ... .. ......... ......... , ....'l!l U .~ $! ~
Ba!lton ...............................411 -H .Sl.O! · 7¥..
Baltlrncn•.....
... 46 .U .511 8' 'z
Mltwaukff&gt; ................ ............ .oao -19 .449 14
Clf'V£'11Illd ........................ ..... 29 62 . .Il9 26
C'allro rnla ......
. ........... 54 :M - ~Oo.kland .............................. f3 44 .522 6
C'hlcaj&lt;O .. ...
.46 -ll .517 6lh
Kansa.~C!ty ...................... 47+1 . ~16 61,1
Scanlr- ............. .................. ,.. 44 ~ .478 1fl
r.nn~ta ........ .... .... .... ......... 42 ~ .
U
T(')[as .
., .... , .. .'li ~7 ..1f71R).oi
Mondt.,,'.o; JW.tlto!
Toronto .1. &amp;&gt;all if' 1
BoMon 6. Oakland~
Kansas City 5, J\ C"'-' \ 'or·k 4
O!lcaJ~o 9, Dl'lrofl 4 ·
TI'X:lS l (.'1('\'i'l.lnd I
~'llnh'Mtil :i. Balt imorf' ·I
Milwaukl•t lfi, C&lt;!ll lumlll J
~ s Gwne~ tAll 'l'lrnt'S ED'I'J
Srattk· I Moore S:i J at Thronto tAit'xurw:lr•r

J,'l2;

107:

smt k"tflel&lt;t'r·wtfkolder Sk('('!(&gt;l' Bam!.'S and
pltc hC'r Ml ck~ Mflhlcr' to lndlanapol!s.

.

New \'ork 1M. 1 - l~tacf'd c-atchl'l' Butth
Wy fll'!lar on l'l-day d isabled llsl.
Plnsbur~:h OpiiOnl'd pltche'r Jw
l)('J..l'on to Hawaii of Ill&gt; Pacific Coast
l....:·u ~f': actlrltated rf'li('l.•l'r Rod Scu n'\-.

llaKkeiOOII

.

fl\l('ago- Sl,e:n«&lt; Cl'nlf'r MlkP Srnrl'k ol
Can!sh.l.~ -

Dert\·('r -

Ru ~r.r.·ll

IU&gt;Ieasrd !orwar&lt;F

Cross. J(l(' Cartablno. Mark l.an!i:IU:rnp and
F:ddit&gt; Smith an d ~ards Lenny Drnj)l'l' and
Krnny Brown.
Indiana - Cut Boti)y Wllkrr.;on. Ra\•
Ta lhr&gt;r1. Carl Nicks. Ivan Danie ls . StU
Primu!o and J('ff Akers
Coil...

1\"otrr Damr a ~si'll anl

!rack and

Named I))uR Sl\Ydl•r
eros.~

Foothall

cwntr.• COilCh.

.

Atlam a - Slgn(l(l TarkiC' BUt Fral\c.
t "lncinnlltl - SUmed llnl'bock&lt;'r Carl
7.andfor. s;1ftoty An ltmy Thlo(ll;it!. I1CN' t;t(,'kk'
Too.~ ~oCr&lt;~ It', offlonslw tat•kk:- Erl..: Sl o~ .

tll'!:ht ~ds Kt'lth I.L'St('l' lind HaroldStunfll'ld
[md dl'fmlilvr r nd Kl'ith Crul&lt;tt'
Dt,W{'I' -

Si~ttd runnln~&lt;:

back Slf'\·r

S(&gt;w('IJ.

Gm:'n Bay -

SIJmrd tacklr

\ .rnr

Knlckrehm of Dal las: l'l' l('ll~ offmslvr
llll('!Tirn Bob Wlnckk'r 3nd Ellll Mavo.
N1'V.' York filanl~- Slgnf'd runnlrtjot' back
.. C,ror~ Adams.
Nf'V.' York Jt'ts - Slwl&lt;'d wldl• rrek"VI'r
l )ru~~: Allr n. llnl'backN' Trm" Bcn!«&lt;and
.,. ldf:o r~Xir'.' er BUI Wnflact' .
St. Louis - SIJt1100 tackk• Lanl"t' ~1llt1.
rumlnll batk Ron Wotnc;.·. wid(' !"l'('('l\l'r av
N,.,..·aN'k. to&lt;"klr Hob Mon!!CO. t11d'11 md Srot!
Williams, puntt•r·kldu-'r rtlc~~ An::il•rwn .

PEREZ sa&gt;RES -New York calcher Gary Carter nJCelves ball too
late as Cincinnati's Tony Perz slides In lor the Reds third run of the

seventh bmlng in New York Monday oipl. Cincinnati ended 118 !!lump
against the Mets wWt a

~1 .vlctol)'.

Owners now say losses ·too
high; strike ·deadline nears

NEW YORK (UP]) - Negotia- · they would and we know that
tors for major league baseball
revenues are rising faster," said
Hocke)'
F ehr, explllining why the players
players .and owners met twice
Edmonton - As.~L~Iant rooch Tl'd f.tl'f'n ·
Monday,
but
the
only
movement
asked the owners to redo their
ll 'S igm_
\l
Phlladl'lphla - ~ amt'd Pa ul Holml.'fl'n
toward reaching a new contract
numbers.
aJooSL'IIanl coach.
before an Aug-. 6strlkedeadline was
The projections were recalcuLinescores
the owners' concession that tbelr lated using the clutls' 1984 financial
Natlunall.to~~KU~
projected losses were too high.
statements whereas the original
St. Lou~ Ot'l 000 0!0 - " 10 0
In a one-hour afternoon session at estimates used 1983 data, said Lee
~ f.' mc· 100 Oil IIIII -; :1_ 7 I
Andujar. Lahti rSh and NMo. Portl'r·
the Major League Baseball Players MacPhail, chief negotiator for the
La Point, Ga tTf'its till llnd Brttt l)' . W- ,,n'
Association offices. tbe owners owners.
duJar 116-n . L - LoPolnl l+!tl . HR- S:ln
Francisco. Lrorlard 1Il l.
presented revised estimates of the
"We've got It down under a $100
losses exJ)ected to be realized by the million loss now, but It's still a vel)'
('~ctnm Wlllllll ~ - Ill 0
N- \'rk 1110cm•n - 1&amp; 1
26 Natlonai and American League sizeable loss and one that continues
&amp;Ito and Bllanko\lu; F('fnandr'"l , Stsk Hk
teanis - cutting them by nearly to concern us vel)' much. " said
Gol·man 191 andCartcr'. W-Solo 19--1.11 . LFI"mMcW-t 1.'l-fir HRs-Ondnnatj, Conel'phalf.
MacPhaU.
·
dun 161 , Rt-du~ 1!i1.
The owners, who have been
The next meeting between the
contending for months that the sides is set for Tuesday rrornlng.
major lssueoftbe negotiations is the
Though the brief afternoon sesprecarious economic health of the sion was limited to a discussion of
tiona! League pitcher of the week
lndustry, now say tbe clutls will be
and thiFd baseman Kelly Gruber of. losing "under $.l)mllllon" this year, the financial estimates and tbe
owners' concern about team obllga·
Syracuse the player of the week.
said Donald Fehr, acting executive
Swaggerty went 2-{1 with a 0.50
tions for players'
deferred
director of the Players Association. MacPhail
and Fehr
and asalaries,
smaller
earned run averagein18inn'ings last
In March, tbe owners projected ' group of nego\lators met earlier lor
week. He pitched two complete
this year's combinoo team losses about tbree hours to "Informally"
games. including a shutout, slruck
would amount to about $58 million
out 10andgave up 14 hits, lrunand3 · and In three years would mushroom discuss strategy.
The mornlngmeetingwas "to talk
walks.
to$155mi1Uon. The revised estimate · about whereweweregoing, how we
Gruber hit .476in21offlclalat-bats
for19881s now $86mUIIon, Fehr said. were going to try to approach our
last week. He scored 8 runs and
"We knO)V tbat salaries have not problems. (We) talked at some
collected lO hits, 24 total bases, 3
been rlslng as fast as you thought length about the major Issues in the
doubles, a trlple,3homersand5runs
batted ln.

Attend l'age camp

•

Wesley Young, son of Roger and
Yvonre Young, Rock Springs Road;
Jay · Humphreys, son of Mr. ·and
Mrs. Norman R.Humphreys,Jr.
· and Randy Hawley, son of Randy
and Darla Hawley, Mlddleport ,and
Spring Ave., Pomeroy, were among
the :JlO high school players learning
· baskeball fundamentals at the sixth
annual Ohio University Basketball
.School.
- There were given · lndlvldual
:coaching, opportunities to meet and
talk With outstanding college and
hnlgh school coaches and players.
; Ohio University's head basketball
coach, Danny Nee, and assistant
coaches, Billy Huhn and Fran
·· Fraschilla, were in charge teaching
~hoot techniques. offensive moves
and correct ball handling
procedures.

Volleyball girls
to mee~ Monday
• All girls interested In playing
volleyball at Eastern High School
should attend the organizational
sessions to be held Monday. Girls in
g~;ades nine through 12 will meet at 5
p.m . and girls in grades seven and
eight will l'!leet ·at 5:00 p.m. Girls
interested In being a team manager
should also attend.

RUTLAND
TIRE
SALES
. "8Enltl8 10U TIIERE SAFELY"
LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS AND
LIGHT ·TRUCK nRES
*ALIGNMENTS *FRONT END WORK
*BATTERIES *TIRE REPAIR
LOCATED: MAIN ST., RUTLAND, OHIO
OPEN: 8-6 MON.-SAT.; 8-8 FRI.

PH. 742-3088

Muter Cord ond Vloo Welcome

\

I

A paper on tips to young
gardeners was given by Rutb
Curtiss at tbe recent meeting of the
Walk-In Garden Club held at the
home of Leota Smith.
Noami Reed presided at the
meettng which opened with the
Lord's Prayer and the pledge to the
flag. For roll call members ans. wered by reading a garden poem.
Belva Willard and otbers discussed
ways to keep animals trom damaging gardens.
Mrs. Willard was given a blue

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 145-9&amp;0)

A Division of Multimedia, Inc,
PubllshC'd ('very afternoon. Monday
through Frida~·. Ill Court St., Po·
mt•roy, Ohio, by lhP Ohio Valley Pub·
lt shtng Compan~· .' MullimMia. InC'.,
PomPro_v. Ohio 457f;9, Ph . 992-2156. &amp;&gt;·

paid

at

Pomerov.
'

-.
..
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Mt&gt;mbi-'T: UnltPd Prrss Tnt£&gt;rnatlonal,

•

tnl und Doily Pr('ss Assoclallon and th(' .,..
Ohio Nrw~ papE&gt;r Association . National
Ad\'('rtlsln~ ReprPSenta tlv(', Branham
Nf'W.~ paJX' r Sai£&gt;S, . 7.\1 Third Avenuf&gt;.

v

N&lt;&gt;w York. N£&gt;1A• York HXI17 .

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POSTMA!-:I."l'ER: Se nd addl'f"SS chan~

...

In Th(' Dally Srntin£&gt;1, 111 Court St..

•

St lBSCRIPTION RATES
By C•rrler or Motor Route

A dlstrlct meetlng to be held at
Logan Wednesday at 7 p.m. was
announced at the recent meeting of
CheSter Council 323, Daughters of
America, held at the hall.
VIrginia Lee, councilor, presided
with' members being reminded to
· .take 25 cent gifts to the next meettng
for a stlltesesslon projectonAug.19.
The pledge to tbe flag and Lord 's
Prayer In unison opened the
meettng. ScriPture was taken from
John14.
It was reported that Sadie
Trussell remains Ill, and that
Ellzabetb Hayes is home from the
hospital. Plans were announced for
the Past Councilors Club picnic at

On&lt;" \V('rk ........ ............. .......... ,.. .11 .10
.. ..... $4.80

On(' Year ..................... ,.. , .... .... ~7.20
SINGLE COPY
PRIC'E
Dally ......
................ . 2~ Ct' nt~

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Subsc-rlbC'rs not dC's!rlng to pay lhf'car ·

SUN FUN

r iC' t' · ma_v tTmll In advanc f' dir("rt to

Th&lt;' Dall y S&lt;&gt;ntinl'l On a :1, li or 12 month
bLI ~ls. Cn•dlt will b£o ~lwn car r li•r (':n·h

PENNI OIL

~

month .
No ~ubsc rlpllon.~ 11.\ ' mail pt'rtili!!Pd In •·
town s w h('rf' h om(• c.trrlf'r M&gt;rvicC' Is

PEPSI

a\'allahi C'.

.1 PACK -16 OZ.

. Mall Sutmcrlptlon!l
lnsld1• Ohio

D \\'f'('ks ......... ....... ................. . $1&lt;1.56
26 WC't"ks ....

.. ................ $29.12

!rl Weeks

..... .................. $58.2"
. Out"ildc Ohio

•·sr•rr-inl{ IIYir#1 A ;~milr•"

I:IWC'C'k S .

.. .... ............... $15.00

21'1 WC'('kS ..... .

Located In Ra&lt;int, OH • •

5:.! Wf'C' kS ..

.. ................. $.11.20
. ........................ $59.Rll

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

·OUR
,PRIC

"Whtre

N. 2nd he.

lultbor .... The load"

992-7161

TUESDAY ·
HARRISONVn.LE - Past MaIrons of Harrlsonvllle Eastern Star
will hav~ their picnic Tuesday at
6:00 at tbe home of Donna and Jim
Nelson. Potluck.

'
:
•

GENERAL
TIRE SALES
TM
Mlddl..-rt, Oh.

And - · speaking of vets - tbe
82nd Airborne Division Assn. will .
hold Its annual convention Aug. !HO
at Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Anyone
who served with the unit can get
turtber information on the upcomIng event by writing "Airborne,"
Box 82, Mantua, N.J. IB!i1.

MEIGS AWARD- Meigs County won an award
which was presented by Secretary ol Slate Sherrod
Brown at a summer COIIfermce held by Bl'llwn at
Mansfield. 'l1te award received by Meigs Coonly was
tbe only one given for elpt Southeaslem Ohio
counlles. It was for not only maintaining accurate
voter registration records but ltH- keepinK theomceof

HARRISONVILLE- The Senior
Citizens of HarrlsonvUie will hold
. tbelr regular l'l'll,'e(lng Tuesday at
i 7:00 at the Townhouse. Bring
snacks. AU members please tl)' to
, come. VIsitors welcome.'

1
•

POMEROY- The Meigs SoU and
Water COIIIII.'I'Vatlon District and the
Meigs County Extensloli Service
are spon!IOI1n&amp; a twilight dairy )our
at . the Nease family farm on
Tuesday evening, July 23, at 7: 00
: p.m. The farm Is located on Forest
Run Rd. (County Rd. 00) at Nease
· Settlemellt In !katton Township.

~

' Meigs Countlans reFourteen
celvoo degrees !rom Ohio University at the spring quarter
graduation.
The group includes Barbara Jean
Thomas, Cheshire, bachelor's in
business administration; Richard
Keith Rader, Route 1, Coolville,
bachelor's degree In communications; Harold Dean Graham, Route
143, Pomeroy, bachelor's in educa-

lion; David Wayne Wilkes, Rutland,
bachelor's In electrical engineering; Shawn Patrick Thomas, Route
1, Cheshire, bachelor's in chemical
engineering; Mark Allen Simpson,
Middleport, bachelor's in electrical
engineering; Rebecca Brewer Baloy, Pomeroy, bachelor's in home
economics; Mark Rigg~ . Pomeroy,
bachelor's in mechanical engineerIng; Mal)' Beth Obltz. Racine.

bachelor of arts degree; John
Michael Morris, Rutland, bachelor's In education; Sheila Edna
Horky, Middleport, bacehlor of arts
degree; Jyl Zerkle Beaver, rnaster's.degree in education; Cynthia
Thomas Langona. Route 1, Cheshire, master of arts, and Roger
Wllllam Karr, Route . I, Long
Bonom, master of science.

Dean's list at OU given
Twenty-eight Meigs Countlans
attendlng Ohio University have
been named·to the dean· s list a !Ohio
University for the spring quarter.
Making a grade polnt average of
3.3out of sealeof4 polnts to be named
to the roll were Suzanne Elizabeth
Nay, Barbara Jean Thomas, Shawn
Patrick Thomas, all of theCheshll'l'
area; Anne Marie Tekach. Dian
Blake Weaver, Chel)'l Lynn Williams, Coolville area: Randall Davl!l
Bahr, Long Bottom; Edward Chris·
tlan Burdette, Shella Edna Horey,

Stephanie Jean Houc,hlns, Middleport.; Sheri)' Renee Arnold, James
Fitton Couch, Ronald Clair Cozart,
Joseph Richard Freeman, Harold
Dean Graham, Bonnie Morris,
Lynne Dee Oliver, all of Pomeroy:
Kathryn Lynn Baker, Chris Jay
Bostlck, Gerald Lee Dill, Jr .. Julie
Marie Glbtls, Melinda Joan Salmons, Rita SueSloter, Racine area;
Karla Kay Brown. Kevin LeeGibtls,
John Michael Morris, David Wayne
Wilkes. Rutland; Dorothy Dalene
Warner, Syracuse.

The Meigs ·County Council on
Ministries of the United Metbodlst
Church hosted a picnic for the
cooperative parish at the Route 33
southbound roa~ide park recently,
The Rev. Carl Hicks had grace
befol'l' the meal, and the Rev. James
Corbitt had special prayer for tbe
Rev. Paul McGuire family in tbe
death of a loved one. A sing-a-long
was enjoyed by the group.
Attending were the Rev. and Mrs.
James Corbitt andMark,Porneroy;
the Rev. and Mrs. Roger Grace,
Todd , Scott and Ryan; Betiy Roush ,
Faye Roush Shiflett, F'rances Roberts, Racine; Dolly Wolle and
· Florence Smith, Apple Grove: tb~
Rev. and Mrs. Steve Nelson, Donna
and Steven. Syracuse charge; Doris
Grueser and Mildred Phillips,
Minersville; Vernon Nease, Forest
Run: Mildred !hie, Morning Star;
the Rev. Melvin Franklin, Rock
Sprlngs charge. Mr. and Mrs. Blll
Crane, Donia, Jo Ellen, BUly and
Ben, Enterprise; the Rev. and Mrs .
Andy Ruhenking and Amy, Rutland
charg»; Mr. and Mrs. Harold Rice,
Rutland; Edith Talbert. Salem
Center; Jim Brooks. Alfred; the
Rev. Sonny Zuniga, Middleport
Heath Church, the Rev. and Mrs.
Carl Hicks, Eagle Ridge.

Plans completed
Final plans have been completed
for .the wedding of Zandra Vaugh an
and Brian Well.
The wedding will take place on
Saturday at 6: l) p.m. at First
Presbyterian Church in Middleport.
Pre-nuptial music by Fred Lewis
will begin at 6 p.m. The Rev. Duane
Sydenstricker and the Rev. Kenneth
Wilkenson will officiate at the.
wedding.

Everyday low price

$2995
s;ngl• pfstvn Am•r. con.

~·

Chatter Club conducts meeting

ribbon for her arrangement of wild
flowers, as was Ruth Francis for her
gladloll specimen.
Get-well cards were signed for
several friends and members of the
club.
Next meetlng wW be Aug, 8 at 8
p.m. at the home of Lutchla Riggs
wltb a familY picnic. Besides tbose
named others attendlngwereOla St.
Clair, Jessie Curtis, Mll!lred
Zeigler, Audr~ WeD, Lutchle Riggs.
Refreshments were served.

tbe Reedsville Locks and Dam.
Those attending are to take game
gifts.
Refreshments were served to
Mrs. Lee, Estber Smith, Erma
&lt;;)eland, Betty Roush, Margaret
Tuttle, Faye Kirkhart. Ada Bissell,
Lora Damewood. Opal Hollon,
Everett Grant, Charlotte Grant,
Thelma White, Mae McPeek, Leona
Hensley, lnzy Newell, Doris
Grueser, Dorothy Ritchie, : Cora
Beegle, Jo Ann Baum, Eileen
Martin, Kathy Pullins, Iva Powell,
Sandy White, Eva Robson, Genevieve Ward, Alta Ballard, Mal)'
Holler: Helen Wolfe, and Goldie
.Fredrick.

The Chatter Club met ~ntly at Dottie Jones, Janice Fetty, and
tbe Route 33 Roadside Park for a Debbie Cleland. Mal)' Starcher won
picnic. Francis Carleton was hos· · thectoorprlze. Debbie Cleland was a
tess for tbe evening and gifts were guest. Others attending were Susie
Cleland. Linda Gheen, Ruth Young .
presented to her.
An anniversal)' gift was given to Brenda Bolin, and Linda Hubbard.
Next meeting will he held Aug. 22 .
Delores Whitlock and a blrt txlay gift
to Doris Wilt. Games were played at the home of Lola Harrison with a
with prizes going to Mrs. Whitlock, grab bagsaie to be' held.

Kelly Rizer

Girl competing

Kelly Rizer, daughter of Mrs.
Gertrude Rizer, Racine, will be
competing for tbe title of Miss Teen
of Ohio in Delaware, Aug. 2-4 .
A senior at Southern High School, .
she is a varsity cheerleader, and a
member of the Na tlonal Honor
Mr. and Mrs. Vernal Blackwood
Society.
hav~ returned from a tour of the
Miss Teen of Ohio Is a scholarship
province of Ontario. Highlights
program. The pageant uses six
Included a cruise aboard the Lady
judging categories t~ find the mo.St
Muskoka on Lake Muskaka With a
outstanding young women. They
visit to tbe North Bay Museum , a
are scholastic record. achievement
·
visit to tbe North Bay Fish
and service to school and communHatchel)', a slx·hourcrulseonLake
Ity, personal development of hobNlppising aboard the Chief Com·
bles and interests, general awaremanda 11, and in Cobalt, Onfarlo, a
ness, poise and personality, and
visit tothemineandmuseum with a
judges' interview.
guided
our of a mine.
This year· the official pageant
charity is the American Cancer
The tour also included a train ride
Society. The fund raiser~. producaboard tbe Polar Bear Express
tion rehearsals, judging activities,
which took them toMoosonee, up the
and other events lead up to the Miss
Moose River from James Bay,
Teen of Ohio pageant finals to he
where the Indians and fur traders
held oQ Aug. 4 at 5 p.m. at Branch
are located. They traveled to Moose
Rickey Arena on tbe Ohio Wesleyan
Facto!)' Island In the Moose River
University Campus.
via the Polar Princess boat, and
Rizer is sponsored by Linda
enjoyed a sa'mpllng of bannock ·
Diddle, J . D. Drllllng, Racine Home
break, baked over an open fire by
National Bank, Ewing Funeral
tbe liidlans.
Home, Hemlock Pipeline. Wanda
There were vlslts to St. Thomas
and Franklin Rizer. Sun Fun
Penzoil, and Rose's Excavating.

__

P.'fi_,
We'll install new front
pads, inspect rotor
and other brake ·hardware.
(SEMI·METALIC
PADS EXTRA)

Gmple returns from Canada

Items to be discussed will be milk
RACINE -A fifties-through-theproduction, soils, datry records. hay . eighties dance will be held at the
and com production and pasture
Racine '. Amert&lt;;an Legion hall,
management.
Racine, Wednesday from 'lp.m. to 1
Followtng a short tour around the a .m. Cost Is $1.50 for singles and $2
farm, refreshments wUI be served
for couples . Refreslunents will he
by the Meigs Soli and Water
sold. No alcoholic beverages
Conservation District Ladles Auxllpermit too.
181)' and the Nease family .
POMEROY - Feeney-Bennett
CHESHIRE - Cheshire Chapter Post 128, American Legion, and the
OES meets for familY picnic at Auxill8!)', will meet at 6: 00 WednesKyger Creek Shelter house, Tues- day night for a dtimer preceding
meetings by both groups at7:'3Jp.m.
day, 6 p.m. Slloan Lodge members
and tariilltes will be guests. Being Reports will he glvenondeparlrnent
conventions. Members are urged to
food and table service.
pay dues.
' WEDNESDAY
PAGEVILLE- Scipio Township
THUII8DAY
Trustees will hold a special meeting
POMEROY - The Twin City
Wednesday, 7 p.m., atthe township. Shrtnettes picnic will be held
Thursday atCoraBeegle'shomeat
buUdlng in Pagevllle.
6: l): Brtngcoverect dish.
_..._

•

the Secrejary of State, Columbus, updated wllh the
inlonnatlon. PIL'Iured at the presentalion are, from
left, Brown, Mrs. Laura CIJI.IU't and her husband, Bill
Cozart, who received the award on behalf of the Meigs
County Board of Elections, and Michelle Jenkins,
district field representatlveJor Brown.

Ohio University grads announced

~-=---....:::....--

•

If We Don;t ·Have lti
Maybe We Can Get lt.

The location is between Uurrlcane and Winfield on Route 34, and
VIetnam and era vets !rom Mason,
Gallla and Meigs Counties are
invited.
.,
Those attendlng are to take a
covered dish. There wUI be hot dogs
and son drinks provkled. Marcel
Fortin wUI do a hot alr balloon
takeofl. AU activities except swimming are free and there· will be
music by the VIdeo Cowboy Band In
the evening.

Comm~nity
calendarI area happenings
. ·_.;._____
__..:._________
..
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'·,
,
·,
•

l'

I

Pool.

Chester Cnuncil meets,
announces distriCt meeting

PomProy, Ohio 45769.

On(' Month .................

Thffe are so lew events lor
VIetnam Vets so I'm glad to pass on
to you Information on tbe fourtb
•annual Vietnam and era vets
family picnic which ahs been set for
Saturday, Aug. 3, beginning at. 11
a.m. at the Putnam County Wave

Walk-in gardeners meet

r-=~==========~

Ohlo.

bargaining;" said MacPhail:
The negotiators. are under pres·
sure to reach a new contract by Aug.
6, the strike deadline set by the
Players Assoclatlon last week .. The
previous contract expired Dec. 31.

s,.t~,,

'
.
son (of Guilford) and runrlng back
Todd St. Louis (of Augustana) are
gone," said tbe coach.
"Maybe they thought our practl- ·
ces were too hard - I don't know.
Some of the coaches have told me ·
that thlllgs here are easy."
In Saturday's rookie scrimmage
against Buffalo at Edifiboro (Pa.)
University, Schottenhelmer relter-'
ated that Tom Flick and Tefl)'
Nugent will be tbe Cleveland
quarterbacks.

· oond class postn~t&gt;

Rochester player named IL's top_pitcher
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Right·hander B UI Swaggerty of
Rochester has been named lnterna-

(UPI).

Browns' safety position 'up·for grabs'
Carthage, Mo .. says he Is making ·
By ROBER'ro DIAS
cornerback to free safety.
UPJ Sports Writer
" Felix has batted away a number the adjustment to tbe NFL.
KIRTLAND, Ohio (UPI)
of passes in camp so far, " said the
"We 'p )ayed ori a larger field in
Though the name of the position . coaeh. "He made 12 interceptions
Canada,"
he said. "MORE INImplies security, playing safety for
witb the Tiger Cats last year.
dependence,
but It also means you
tbe Cleveland Browns tbls season is
"Felix will provide stiff competican
make
more
serious mistakes.
not a sure bet for anybody.
tion for (6-year veteran) Clinton
You
have
to
be
awake."
"I'd sayoursafety situation has to
Burrell. He wUI also battle (3-year
For one, Gross acknowledged tbat
be one of the most competitive this
veteran) AI Gross.
the
competition was "something
year," Browns' coach Marty Schot"In fact, I'd say Felix also will
tenheimer said Monday.
challenge (Browns' No. 1 pick in you have to expect."
1
"I've heard of Felix Wright," said
"We have a lot of talented
1984! Don Rogers for playing time."
defensive backs in training camp
What does Schottenheimer like so Gross In a phone interview. ·'I know
he wants playing time, just like
(at Lakeland Community College).
much ahoiut Wright?
That means there may be a surprise
"He has tremendous range," said anyone else would.
"It will make me work that much
or two.''
the coach. "He has awareness of
harder."
Schottenhelmer said he was
what to do out there, how to make
Schottenheimer also announced
"vel)', vel)' impressed" with defensure his man doesn't get by him.
that
two players have left camp,
sive back Felix Wright, who played
" Felix is agile, though not blessed
the last threeseasonswithHamUton
with tremendous speed. He wants to brtngtng the number of hopefuis to
85.
of the Canadian Football League
make this team.· ·
Wright, a . 25-year-old native of ·-·. "Defensive back Per nell Jefferand is making a switch from

probably also adding to his collection of pollee department patches
while on tbe trlp.

If you are planning to enter ~n
class competitions of the Meigs
.county Fair, closing time for all
I'm sure that you will remember open class entries will he at 4 p.m.
that Sheri)' Epple was seriously on Friday, Aug. !~--exception being
the horse pull which has no closing
Injured several months ago In an
auto accident in Florida.
time.
Fair Board Secreta!)' Muriel
You were so good in remember·.
ing Sheri)' during those months d
Bradford and her helpers will be at
struggling that ~he faced in getting the fair board office on · tbe
fairgrounds !rom 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
pulled back t~ther - and Sheri)'
on Aug. 8 and 9 to accept your
appreciates that.
Sheri)' wrttes that she's doing entrtes and tbat tsn't too far off.
great - she can do everythlllg
At least one alrllne Is otfertng a
again - but just a little slower than
before. She hopes to return to Meigs special to married COUples. One
pays the full fare and the spouse's
County for a visit in August.
ticket costs only a fraction of the
total fare cost: ·That's good. It
The Ray Manleys have been
proves
that two can bed terrorized
vacationing In the Cherokee crunalmost
as cheap as one. Do keep
ll)' In North Carolina and enjoyed It
Immensely. Undoubtedly, Ray is smlltng.

1 ~7.

eoodm.

A~U.-rF.IUit

If zlgsaw puzzles are your thlng
- tben you might want to know tbat
the fourtb annual Hallmark National Zlgsaw Puzzle Champion. slllps have been set for Aug. 17 and
18 at The Dairy Barn in Athens.
· Morethan$7,(0)iso1feredin prizes.

2.'13;
·' .

Si. .IMI.Itll
NaUonal U&gt;a~o:- NY
Soto,
Clrt 13l:
Ryan.
Hou
Valemui&gt;la. LA 12!1: Df'U&gt;ort Pitt 116
American lRague - Morris. Det
El:rleYen. Cil.' U~: Bannister, Ghl
Wlll. Cal lffi : Bo,Vd, 8os 101.

Garm_
'fl

Ci.ndnniltl at Ne\0.' York
St Loo L~ at San Fmnci~~CC
Atlanta at Montn&gt;nL nllo(ht
Hooston a t Phllock&gt;lphla. nlj;(ll1
C'hk-lii!O at San Dk&gt;go, night
Pittsburgh !II LCfoi Angi'l~ . nJght

Leaders

Vkiorle!ol

N;.~llona l

Dl(1!:o 3

1-'hlladf&lt;lphi o 7.

•

Dll!ord Ferrell of Syracuse must
he getting hospital weal)'.
He's been at University Hospital
in Columbus for . the past two and
one-half montbs and IIOW has been'
' transferred to Zanesville.
Undoubtedly, he'd love to hear
tram Meigs Countlans. The addtess
is Good Samaritan Hospital, Fifth
Floor, Room 559, 9:)0 Forest Ave.,
ZanesvWe, 'Ohio 43'101.

-B-

C'lnclnnall ......................... H oLl . ~ ~

Lools

By BOll HOEFLICH
-lliel stall Writer
The Orange TOWDShlp Volunteer
Fire Department
will hold an open
house !rom 1 to 5
p.m. on Sunday,
July 28, at the
hea&lt;kjuarters In
Tuppers Plains.
Flremmareinvltlng everyooe to come out and S&lt;'e
tbelr equipment and tbey tnvlte
corriments or questions from the
public.
On top of tbat - there'll he
refreshments.

and Glb!!on. Dl&gt;t 19.
RIIDIBaUN In
National Lt-agur - Murph;y AU, 73:
Herr . S!L i'l; Clark, Sll . and P arke!', Cln
~: WUsoo. PhU !W.
An"'r-rlcan Li'agul' - MaTtinll:b' , t-.'Y 7t
G ln&lt;;on , l)('t amd Murray, llall In: BWT ,
KC 63; Baylor, NY and Rlplwn. Ball IE.!.

.............. ~I J9 .fl67 _
~nD~Q ---··•··· .............. .a:!'ll .::ti9
'I:!

Parish
picnic held

Open house planned
by fire department ,· .

Brunan~ ky. Ml~

l.&lt;Js ,\nj:!'l~

- nt.

Beat of the bend

81lli7 4~ UO .DI
87l'il 60 I(II .DI

sea

Page-5
''

lilll"rrt&gt;ro. LA 71: Clark, Stl. 18; Parklor,
Cln 17: }101'11(1'_ Atllll.
AITII:'rleart i..t';U:\JP - F'lsk, Chi ai;

SI.Lwi~

Chl&lt;'~.e:o ~-Si n

By The·~-· send

"He was more confident tonight," New York outtll!lder Darryl
Straw be!'!)' said of Soto. "You cruld S&lt;'e It in hls ·eyes. He knew he
was going io win."
"He pitched the best ball of his career In April," Rose said of Soto.
"Then he started getting some ttngllng In hls ann betwren starts
because of the four-mao rotation. You can't have a four.. man rotation
If your ace is unbappy."
The Reds tben tried a five-man rotation. Bergesch sakj they are
~'!'turning to a lour-man rotation.
•
Cesar Cedeno drove in tliree runs, backlDg Solo. ·with no score,
Dave ConC~?PCioh led o1f the ClnctrmaU seventh by hitting his sixth
home run of the season. One out later, Buddy Bell reached on an
error by third baseman Howard Johnson and Tony Perez walked.
Cedeno then lined a double IPto the left-field corner to make It 3-0.
In the eighth, Gal)' Redus led off wltb !lis fifth homer' ~ the'season
and Cedeno later stngled home a run.
Clnctrmatl's Torn Browning, 7-7, is scheduled to oppose New
York's Ron DarJ!ng, 10.2, on the moul)d tonight when the two learns
resume their series.

Honw Rur111
Na tional Lelll!\l£' - MW"ptty, All 24:

By IJrUI:~'d l'rt'!IIN lnl:l'fMiorwJ
NatiunaJ ~WI(lle

....

On tbe same night Fernandez was fEeling so much lnlstratlon,
Reds' r!ght-handerMarloSotoescapedsome.Hesnappedapersonal
eight-game loslng streak, whlch ls a good stgn for Clnctnna tl's hopes
tn the National League West.
"We dld thls without Soto," saki Reds' exec BUI Bergesch, the
clear lmpllcatlon belng that the Reds can draw even closer than their
current 4~ game deficit wllb a productlve ace.
The vtciol)' was only the second in nine games thls season for the
Reds against the MetS.lt was only New York's third loss ln ltslastl8
games.
,
.
Reds player-manager Pete Rose dld not play and stUI needs 34lllts
to break Ty Cobb's record of 4191.
Solo, 9-11, allowed only six hits in pitching !lis sixtb complete game
of the seasop. His lifetime record against New York Is 94.
"I 'II be honest wltb you, I think the Mets were tired," Soto said.
"They had scored a lot of runs over tbe weekend."
The Mets had carved up Atlanta pltchlllg ln tbe previous two
game!!, scoring 16 and 15 runs, respectively. They found Soto Jess
generous.

Tuaeclay, July 23, 1985 ·

'

Anglican Church and Revillon
Museum. The villages have no
cement sidewalks or roads and the
only access is by train or plane.
FromTimminstoTorontotheyrode
the Ontario Northland viewing the
country sides and farmlands of the
area. Stops enroute home included
Weiland Canal and Niagara Falls.

POMEROY
HOME
&amp; AUTO
11011 EAST MAIN, POMROY
992-2094

D. ·MICHAEL MULLEN
AnORNEY-AT-LAW
OFFICE HOURS 8:30-12 NOON
1:00-4:30
MONDAY THRV FRIDAY
105 EA.S T SECOND
ABOVE BANK ONE IN POMEROY

992-6417

I

of 6 e~~tre: ttet•
vo~~r cfao~... roll with "$149
potato CJJJU }.s loaD cas .
Check your' white pages
lor Ponderosa toca110n nearest you .

~ 1985 Ponct&amp;.OSI . Inc;

I

�..
•

The Daily Sentinel

·Meigs County property transfers
•

Tuaaday, July 23, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Secretary or Housing and Urban
Development to John E . Blake,
Sylvia B. Blake, Lot 186, Middleport
VIllage.
Ina Helen Dalton to David E .
Carr, Bonnie J. Carr, 8.35 acres,
Scipio.
Byrl Griffin, Donna Griffin to
Roger L . Griffin, .63 acres, Orange.
Fellx Alkire, deceased, Mildred ·
Alkire, Cert. or Trans., Scipio.
Diamond Savings and Loan Co. to
Herbert Short, Martelle A. Short,
4.45 acres, Cbester.
Lora E. Rogers to Janette J .
Englebrecht, Parcels, Letart.
Shirley J. King to Clarice Jean
l;ltrauss, .51 acre, Bedford.
Arthur J. Biggs, deceased, Ollie ·
Biggs, deceased, Norman C. Biggs, ,
affidavit, Meigs.
Norman C. Biggs to David Biggs,
Kent Biggs, Klm Hugill, Parvels,
Pomeroy VIllage.
Gertrude M. Stewart fka Ger·
tr\ule M. Swartz. Ross Jr. Stewart
to Ruth W. Gardner, Lots 56 and 57,
Mlddlepori Village.
Robert F, Duncan, Sharon K.
Duncan to Herbert Eugene Whaley,
SheUa Whaley, Parcels, Bedford.
John E. Umbarger to Cinda L.
Umbarger, Parcel, Bedford.
Betty Ann Jewell, Harold R.
·Jewell to Betty Ann Jewell. Harold
R. Jewell, 2.1020 acres, Sutton.

Oliver E . McKinley Jr. aka Betty

L. McKinley to Oliver E . McKlnley,
Jr., Betty · L. McKinley, Tracts,
Middleport.
Frank Cleland, Delores M. CJe.
land to Ronald L. aark, Judy A.

Clark, .2.acre, SUtton.
Helen Marie Leifheit to John
James Lellltelt, :n a~re. Pomeroy
VIllage.
·
·
Eugene Phillips, Raymond R.
Cotterill, Donald Weaver to LeadIng Creek Conservancy Dlst., Right
of Way, SCipio.
Lawrence Hysell to Ohio Power
Company, Right or yvay, Rutland.
Nancy Roush, Virgil G. ROush to
Thomas C. Scally II, James Ray
SCally, Pt. Lot 296, Middleport
Village.
Jerry L. Rowe, Veleeta Gall
Rowe to Fred E . Smith, Ruth A.
Smith, Parcels, Racine Village.
Donald C. Shaffer, Fred E.
Smith, Ruth A. Smith to Jerry F .
Rowe, Veleeta Gall Rowe, 1.()6

acres, Sutton.
James G. Mays, deceased,
Esther Mae Mays, affidavit,
Pomeroy.
Thelma R. Rue, Velma D. Rue to
Carol Ann Harper. Parcels, Middleport Village.
Leslie Hayman, Patricia Hayman to Michael Todd Smith,

Parcel. Salisbury.
Walter J. Robb II, Rita M. Robb
and Ohio Co. Purchase, (Decl. or
Land Patent), Meigs.
Middleport Housing Corp. to
Charles C. ·Hon'man, Martha F .
Hoffmal), Lot 18, Middleport
VIllage.
.
James Casey, Co11nle A. Casey to
Paul E . Kaurr1 Frances M. Kauff, .
H · I-Wf .......
1 1-llhoi!MoroW...
...
,
Lot
Salisbury.
•
,
...
John D. WandUng aka Jolm
1t· lllo.lllo. TYlCI ........
David and David, to Peggy Wan,.
11.w .... uroo..
dling, Parcel, Scipio.
John D. Wandling aka John
David and David, to Peggy Wail·
3 Announcements
dllng, 211.72, SCipio.
John D. Wandllng aka John
SEMI·DRIVER TRAINING
David and David, to Peggy Wanc._,ificolion
dling, 10 acres, SCipio.
•]tationalllocal jab place·
Barry Hart to Monty R. Hart,
ment assistance
Cathy J. Hart, Lot 115, Middleport
•Homo/rnidonl
Village.
•Eligible institution lor
Franklin Real Estate Co. to
Fod.oral Aid
Monty R. Hart, Cathy J. H!)rt, Lots,
•Guarani.-.! student
Pomeroy /Minersville,
loans
Farmers Bank and Savings Co. to
1--100-231-2233, Ext. Ul
John F. Fultz, Marilyn K. Fultz,
UNITED TRUCK MASTERS
Tracts, Pomeroy Village.
COI.UMIUS, OH.
Essie B. Russell, deceased by·
Heml
Office: Cltor•ottr, flea.
exec., io John F. Fultz, Marilyn K.
Fultz, John Marcus Fultz, Tracts,
64 Misc. Merchandise
Middleport VIllage.
V. Joyce Bartrum to J. Craig
Nlcinsky, 10 acres, Rutland.
flhsolutrly thr
~fttlollfot

~o~Nrt~ott~ ............

••.ot

·Scholarship ·established at RGC
Tile new scholarship will be
permanently endowed, with the
principal remaining intact 'and the
annual Interest only to be used for
scholarship awards to students In
the Rio Grande School of Nursing.
Additional funds will be made
available In the future from a
partial interest In ·a gas and oil well
In Lawreoce County, ownership of
which also Is being transferred to
the college. Tile funds realized from
these mineral royalties may either
be used for dfrect scholarship
awards or be added to the
scholarship endowment.
Tile trustees or the Jenkins
Memoriai Nursing Education Fund
are responsible for the establish·
ment of the Thomas W. Jenkins and
Mabel W. Jenkins Memorial Nursing Education Fund. Tiley are
Harold Rofph and Mrs. Dean
Massie, both or Ironton, and Mrs.
John Zlmmerlv of Jackson .

City can't zone her out
mobile home park, but they cannot
rorce you to reduce the spaces from
10 to eight.
I urge _you to have an attorney
write the city attorney and advise
him of this fact of life, of which I'm
certain he's aware.
DEAR BRUCE - I have a very

have ~meone . - your mother,
yourself, a brother or a sister appointed administrator to carry
out the laws of your state.
You might polo( outtoyour father
that this will be a whole lot more
expensive, since the administratOr
will have to purchase a bond with

touchy problem.

your father's monev.

My dad Is 68 years old, has
considerable assets, but he wUI not
even entertain the Idea of drawing a
will. He says that it's not necessary;

Maybe that wlll convince him.
But If he simply refuses to make out
a will, remember that ·old ·saytng:
You can lead a horse to water, but

he's not worried about It, and f...:y:.;o;,:u;_c:a::n::'t::m~ak=e;:h~lm;:d;rin=k:.= = - I
-furthermore, he doesn' t want .to
talk about It ,
Public Notice
I know your position on wUis Is
that everyone needs one, but how do
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
I convince my !;lad? - J.J .. SALT
ESTATE OF OTTO HARTEN BLAKE CITY, UTAH
ACH. DECEASED
DEAR J.J. - UnhappUy, there
c - No. 24847 Ood&lt;ot 12
Isn't much that you can do. You
NOnCE OF
can't force your father to meet his·
APPOINTMENT
responsibilities.
OF FIDUCIARY
On July .10. t 986. in tho
Having a will drawn Is like saying
Moigo Counly Plobel8 Court,
In writing "I am going to die." J'hls
c.. No. 24847, M-m
Is a verj difficult thing for many
311344 To- flood • .
Pomoroy, Ohio. 45769 people to race. If some o! the
_...... E - of h
property Is jointly held In your
-of Ono Hort...-.
mother's and father's names, that
dod...... ofStateRouto
124. P011-V, Moigo County,
property wlll not present a problem
Ohlo46789.
If she survives him. But other assels
Robert E. Buck.
will.
Probote Judge
If your father, dies without a will,
lena K. N-etrood,
you or your mother wUI be obliged
Clo!i&lt;
to appear before the surrogate and
18, 23. 30 18) 8. 4tc

U-SA~E

.·

.Authorized John DMII,
New Holland. Bush Hoc
firm Equipment
Dealer

AUTO
RENTtL
St. Rt. 160 orth
8tlll~ollt,

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
.. ZENITH
.. SYLVANIA

-Addont 1nd remodeling
- Roofing •nd gutter work
-Concr••• work
-Plumbing •~d electrie•l
WDtk

..•..,

Sht hehlelt• '

V. C. YOUNG Ul
992-6215 • 9U-7S14
,_.,,Ohio
12·8-Hc

lOYAL OAK PAll
CJM.•GIOUNDS
St. Rt. 7, P0m.roy, Oh.

FENCE &amp; SUPPLY

.Under N•• M•l"""l

741-2027

After

Primitiwa c...ping AYGilable
fishing Included W/Camping
SWIMMING DAILY
Ulooguo"d On Duty

........

m

I

Rumtl......

ICUT OUT fOI FUTUIE USE!

ROYAL OAK PARK
61
11

lEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Serial

No.

1G2AL08C5EY218589 ,
Awraisod 1t •4:ooo.oo.
C.- can not be sold for ,..,
than two-thirds of the ap.
pn~il8d value.
· Terms ol Sale: Cash on dlly

choice.

~

No Down Payment
Lower Monthly Payment ·
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp; .
TRUCK LEASING
801, 326
PomorOJ, OH. 45769

Complete and lnstalled ..................... $1495°0

MOTEL

IT. 62 NOITH
POINI PLEASANT, W.VA.
miltS from
PamBaJ·••on 8rld11
SINGU 124.95

a

304·675-6276

•llw Mttrtailllllftt effll HIO
•lildiiMtltl •ltltlllfln1

A.U.

,

SOUTHERN SPUN 9ft. Installed .......$135000

.
•

10112r RAYDX BLACK MESH DISH
System with 324 Rec .......................$179500

i!
l
,

304·675·6276

...

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
VINYL &amp; AW.NUM

FUTURE T.V. SATEWTE SYSTEMS
Dexter, Ohio

CALl COLLECT:

Phone: 614-669-3761 or 669-3765

I

Ph.

THE QUAUTY
PIINT SHOP .

hi AN

r,, ,.,., ,.,.

w...._

PIUS: Office s.,,ln &amp;
fwnitort,
and Groduollon

•I
'

73-10 Chewy Tr.
"'· flltll.~ .........................'41
73·10 Chewy Tr.

'
- I'

n~:r~h~·;·~·:·r;:........... '

.................. ,............. '150
73·14 Chewy Tr.
7~-~;mth::;..
$70
Grillt1 ..................... •38.50
73-79. Chewy. Tr.
Rod&lt;" Pontls ............... '25
13-79. Chevy. Jr.

I

Stoi.,_J;~k

r;·:··· ........

s_,.,

SigM, I

htlnolo Formt,
Copy Sorri-. Et&lt;.
ns Mil St., •·• n,.,,

•RangM

104

-ry

Aw, , _ . ,

992-3345

312/tln

100

5/9/2 mo. pd.

73·79 Ford Tr.

Fenders .........................1.4 1

73-79 Ford Tr'.

ao~'F~;~rr~·:·· ............ ''·35
Doorl ......................... $145
71-79 Ford Tr.
1o~;~~~-;;;r1;: ......... $52 .50
Hoods ..:...................... 1145
13·15 Ford Ranger
H-......................... 1130
13-15 Ford Ianger
1

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS '
Sizes Start From 12'x16'

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rocine, Oh.

9·!3-un
·WHALEY'S AUTO PAUS
!'. &lt;.L...--!R~t-~6~8~1~W~t~s~t~D~a~rw~i~n~O~h~i~o~9~9~2~-7~0~1!3
_____

10-6-tlc

r·

Curb Inflation

I

'

'•

Pay Cash for

C&amp;A AUTO REPAIR

320 5th

Write your

mail wit11 tnis

coupon. Cancel yaur .., br

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
VETERINARY
CLINIC
IN MIDDLEPORT
OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE. 6-8

ph~

when you get

'""'tts. Money notreflnlablo.

•
'

•'

'
"

receive a

304-675-2441

·we U1e Von Schrader
Equipment Re&lt;Dmmended

...

In appreciation of your
support for 10 years.

PH.

I ·'

••
;.

D.YM.

'·
I

&lt; !Wanted
&lt; IForsale

Sheriff of
Moigo County. Ohio.
171 23, 1tc

"fREE

&lt;&lt;TIIIIATW'

THE MIDOLEPORT

( )Announcement
&lt; !For Rent

DABBLE

SHOP

1.-------

.•

2.

J.

'

4.
5.

Ceramic Bisque
Plastercraft
Brushes. Paints
Sprays, Etc .

OPEN

6.----7.----8.--------

Mon., Wed., Fri., ,S at.
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
7·5·1 mo.

9. _ _ _ _ _ __

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

by loading Carptl ManufaCturers.

Thnt cash ratn
in(lude dillOUIII

of Sale.

Howard E. Frank

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS
35115 Oak Hilt Road
Long lottom, OH. 45743
PH. (614) 985-4212

1 O"'o DISCOUNT

Gutters · Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Pointing
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949-2969

4129/ tfn

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•R.e placemant Windows .
•New Roofing

*VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULA nON

BISSELL

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY

12. -----~--

13. - - - - - - - 15. _ _ _ _ __

ld.

Mail Thll COIIPGI Willi R.mllhlnce

Th• O.llr Sllltlnet
111 Clurt St.

HOME NATIONAL BANK
949-221 0-Ask
Tim

Pom....,.,OII.4S7D _____

j

Will do all types of
e•cavating, landscap·
ing, boosemants, 18Wage systems. wster
and gas lin.,., wstw
well drilling and - vice, trucking (Iimas·
tone &amp; dirt).

Call: 742-2407

'

Kittens to good home. All
Large dog 'h labrador 1f:z
lri1h Satter needs hQme in
country, loves .children. call

9 beautiful puppin part
Shepherd. Catt 814-3888480 or 814-3B8·8&amp;69.

Block kitten a. Catt 614-446·
4520 or 814-446·9517.
AKC Cocker Spaniel . 2V.z
years old. Male. Buff color.

61 4-949 · 2196 alter
4;30pm.
Precious black and white
Tarrier, hed all shot1, excel·
lent watch dog and cOmpanion for elderly. 304-675-

SIDING CO.
New Hames · luilt

.,Free Estimates ..

PH. 949-2101
or 949-2860

"flU ESTIMArES"

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

SHADE RIVER
DRILLING .
Formerly Heaton
Drilling Co.
•Water &amp; Gas
Well Sel'lice
•Myeis Pumps
Sales &amp; Sel'lice

PH. 667·6S35
or 985-4353

No Sunday Calls
3/11/tfn

T~~".:J:a::l~~
FIIIIHtl '"' s..,,,.

Sramllr T•ulrl /IIi
c......... .,_.,..... t
-

6 'Lost and Found
Black Cross pen; writel!l
black. Gallipolis Daily Tribune vicinity, 826 Third Ava.,

45831. tt
information-please call 814448-2342.
Lost: Blue Tick Coon Hound,
•mala, In Laurel Cliff area .
Has chain and colllr on.
Oscar Smith. 614-992-

5594.
Blonde and apricot long·
haired Terrier-type male dog
lost in Middleport . Antwert
to Bu11er. Wearing dog 1ags.

Catt 814-992·7636.
Lost in Flatwoods Rd. area.
long- haired yellow-orange
cat. Children's pet. Please

992-7771

colt 614-992·7574.

1111-10 , ...........

Found 2 Beagle• on Sand
Hill Rd. Must identify and

11 SESSIONS l35
Old customera ... biing a
friend who signs up and
get one visit FREE.

FOUl SEASONS
• TANMNG SALON

pay for ad. 3D4·882·334B.
LOST • Female Brittany
Spaniel, collar. Brighton ·
Greer Road area. Plea•• call

304-876-3340.

1·11-1 ....

\

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING '

317 Nortli.Socond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
Also Carry
Fis•hir•g Supplie1.
IUStNm PHONE
(614) 991-USO

lfltDENCI PHONE
16141 ""''.!·'·'

COIN SHOP
Court St.

farm~

liquidation

llln. LlconHd Ohio and

EHIKiivt July 3, 19J5
IIOUIS: 10 'til 2

Buyin1 &amp; Sellin1
Coins, Coin Supplies
&amp; Misc. Items
7 · ~-1

antique.

mo.

Weet Virginia.

304-773-

6785 or 304· 773·6430.

9

Wentad To Buy

botllroom olnk, 304-88228U.

·'

Homes for Sale

For sale or lease . 2 bed rooms, double car garage,
1 .2. acres. Rose Hill. Poma·
roy . Reduced S26 . 000 .

614· 678· 251 3.

15

Schools
Instruction

HIER'AV 2 day ground
1chool. Private. commercial,
Ohio .

Call collect

1 B Wanted to Do

Ohio. Coll814-992·5714.
·For sale to the highest
bidder. Lo1, 5 room house. 3
car garage, located at 105
Maple . Place, Pomeroy.
Ohio . Ttme-July 26, 1986 at
10 : 15 am. Place-Court
House steps in Pomeroy;
Ohio . For more informalion.
call 614· 992-6624 or get
key at B&amp;nk One, Pomeroy,
Ohio. Ask for .Bill. See to
appreciate.

Ex.pariencad cook• AM &amp;
PM thifts. ApiiiJy in person at
Holiday Inn. Gallipolil.
Monday-Friday. No phone
calls please.

Would like to do babysitting
in my home. Call 614-446-

Cell 814-992 -2007.

7447.

3 bedroom home, 8% percent assumable loan, garden
spot . Reduced down to

Food Service aupervitor for
progre11ive healt care facility. QualificatiQns : mus1
have 90 hour approved
course management ski,la,
e~perience in food aervice .
Apply at Scenic Hill• Nursing Canter. 8-4:30.

Pump sales. service. Registered in Ohio. All work
guaranteed. Call 304-273·
2811. Ravenswood. W . Va.

604. Jackson, Ohio 46640.
Deadline fOr applicant•: 729-86. Equal Opportunity
Employ.

COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING

Will take care of an elderly
person in my home or 'do
babysitting, 304-~75 -

5714.

Ftnancial
21

Business
0 pportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommen_dt
that you do busin~ss with
people you know, 8nd NOT
to 1and money through the
mall until you have investi·
gil ted the offering.

Avon --For limited time 01dy.
Start your Avon career · for
85.00. For more information. call 614-698-7111
collect.

$49.000. 304-675·5047.
Log home, 3 acre1, 2 mi. out
Jerrico Rd .. 8 112 assumable

loan . Call 304-675-6622.
Eleanor. House with or
without exli'a lots. Rt . 62.

304·586- 3572.
6 room house, basemer~t
screened in porch, breezeway. double garage, big
yard , garden .12.54 acres.
beautiful view . 2 miles out
Jericho Rd.

PRICED TO SELL 3 bed ·.
room house. Palestine Rd.
Ash1on. 34 acre. central heat

$29.600. 304· 762·256-7.

HOME OWNERS-Refinance
to low fixed rate. Usa equity
for any purpose. Leader
Mortgage Co ., 614-592-

3051 .

,Services

1977 Victorian 14x70 2

bdr. $10,500.

.

1975 Elcona 14x70 2 bdr.

$7,995 .
1973 Fleetwood 1 4x.65 2
14J~66

2 bdr.

$7,995.
1973 Schult 14x60 2 bdr.

aft:er 5 PM .
1 979 liberty mobile home,
1 4x60. with garden tub,
total electric. S6 .600.00.

$13.000 .00 . 304-675 ·
5855.

For sale: One acre lot with
nice large in-ground pool .
partial basement , aome
trees . For more information

phone 502· 683 -1044.
1 acre building or trailer lots.
for sale. Caii614-992-74B1

or 614-992 -2386 or 614 ·
992-3543.

$6,495.

614-742-3147 or61 4-992·
5006.

1974 Kirkwood 12x60 2

PIANO TUNING AND RE·
PAIR. Summer rates in
effect-free estimates.
Ward's Keyboard, 304-675-

5500 or 676·3824.

1975 Nashua 12x52 2 bdr.

$6 ,796.
$6,995.
$3 ,995.
bdr . $6 ,495.
1969 New Moon 1 2x60 2

bdr . $3,996.

1973 Heritage 1 4x70·
expando 2 bdr. S9,500.

1!)71

Schull .1 2•60 ·

expando 2 bdr. $7,496 .

1974 Schull I 2•60 ·

Real Estate

33482.
Wanted : live -in lady for _3_1__H_o_m
_e~s~fo_r_S_a-;le__
elderly lady in . Pomeroy,
lnves1ment- Shelter no hasOhio. Call614-992-2806.
sels . Multi·unit apartment
Break into the Financial complex, all 1 bedr~om ,
lnduatrv part time. Insu- 1ome furnished, . re11dent
rance agents needed imme- manager. Renters pay all
diately. Earn 300 to 600 utilities. leas than 5% vamonthly and keep your cancy. Approx. $1,400 mo.
present job. Preparation and income, seriou1 inquires
training for licence pro - only . Days 814·592-1 189
vided. For interview, call oven. 614-594·2874 .

3 bdr. deluxe good location.
869.500. 3 bdr. $29,500.
can 304-675-5104,

Rentals

bdr . $7,995.
t 980 Clayton t 2•55 2
bdr . $7,495 .

1971 Buddy 12x60 2 bdr.

13051878·3639.

cond. call 304 -675-1578

1973 Shamrock 14x65 2

Water wells drilled and serviced . Prices on request. Call

inventory. Tr~~lning, fiw.tures,
grand opening, ate. Can
open 115 d•v•· Mr. Keer.an

1979 Windsor 14a70; 3
bedroom, total electric, mic rowave. stereo. kitchen ap ·
pliances, owner will 1ell at
substantial lou, trailer in axe

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

bdr. $10,900.
1978 Schutt 14a70 2 bdr.
$10,900.

Application's now being
taken for drivers. Must be 18
yean or older. Dependable
car and insurenc•. Apply at
Domino's Pizza, 800 Second Ava .• G'llipolil, Oh.

Own your own JeanSporttwaar. Udies Apparel,
Children•. Large Size, Com·
bination Store, Accaaeorlai.
Jordlcha. Chic, Lee. Levi.
E11y StttHit. lzod. Esprit,
Tomboy. Calvin Klein, Set·
gio Valente. Evan Picone. l11
Claiborne. Members Only,
Organically Grown. Gasoline. Helthtex. Over 1. 000

1979 Schult 14x70 3 bdr.,
1 1h bath, axe. cond. French
City Brokerage, French City
Mobile Homes. 269 Upper
River Rd .. 614- 446 -9340.

USED MOBILE HOMES
CLEARANCE

1976 Nashua 12x60 2 bdr.

othora. $7,900 10 $24,900

446-9340 .

bathsm 304· 675-6858 .

2123 or 614·446-1081 .

Own your own JeanSportlwear. Ladies AppArel,
Childrens, large Site. Combination Store. Acce11orlea,
Jordacha, Chic. lee. Levi.
Easy Street, lzod, Esprit,
Tomboy. Calvin Klein, Ser·
g'i o Valente, Evan Picone, liz
Claiborne, Members Only.
Organically Grown, Gaao·
line. Helthtex., Over 1,000

1986 24x40 Clayton sectional 3 bdr .. 2 full baths.
complete set S19,900 .
French City Mobile Homes,
269 Upper River Rd .. 614-

6871 .

Bookk'eeping and secretarial
Work -ell type. Your office or
mine, no account toO big or
small. Call Bert at 614-446·

t-614·887-6921 betwaan
2~ 5 pm daily.

Vemco mobile homes Addi1ion 'Ooublewide your present singlewide' . French City
Mobile Homes. 269 Upper
River Rd ., 614-446· 9340.

1974 · Town and Country.
split level. 3 bedrooms, 2

bdr . $6 ,995.
Professional

614·388-9746 or 614-3888589 .

1980 Liberty, 14x70 mobile
home, fire place, central AC.
total electric, must sell. for
information 304 - 675·

1973 Ladonti

23

1981 Nashua Governor.
14x60 with 7x21 expando .
All electric, 2 bdr , gard.en
tub. asking $14.600. Call

14x70. 3 bedroom mobile
home. 1 acre lot, with ••c.
wajl and septic system .

32 Mobile Homes
for S~le

1979 Fleetwood 14•65 2

22 Money to Loan

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S OUALtTY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 Mt. WEST. GALLIPOLIS,
RT 35. PHONE 814-446·
7274.

304-675·5855.

Man 10 work in service
station. Experience helpful.
Apply in penon, Mon. or
Tues. 471 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis.

Easy Assembly work. $600.
per 100. Guaranteed payment. No ex.perience-no
sales. Oe1ails sand selfaddressed stamped enve·
lope; Elan Vital-175. 3418
Enterprise Rd., Ft. Pierce, Fl

241h, 10:00 tilt 7. Ctotho1.
dishes, lots of other items.
turn right across from Beale
School , coming down R1. 2.
everything cheep.

bedrooms, garage . On
Gravel ' Hill. Middleport,

3 bedrooms. living room,
dining room, kitchen . Fireplace. 202 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy. Ohio. $2800.00.

Wanted: Two position•
available at intermediate
care facilities for dawelopmentelly di•able adults in
Gallia County:
(1) Housamanagar. full time, live-in (hours are
morning• and evening•. 5
dayt-week). Bidwell. Ohio.
Salary: $4.17 hr. plua. depending on qualifications.
Ex.cellent benefit package.
(21 Relief Hou1emanager,
34 hours-week (weekends
and holidays). Gallipolit,
Ohio. Salary: 84.17 hr.
Both positions require a
current Driver's License and
a high 1chool degree. Experience in working with development'ally disabled person
is preferred. Send resume
with cover letter indicating
which position applying tor
to Robin Eby. Buckeye Com·
munitv Services, P.O. Box.

6 family yard sale, Wed,

In Pomeroy . 2 or 3bedroom .
$B,OOO. Call 614- '----------------Will carefortheeld8rlyinour Asking
992 . 5 937 . No land con· T
home. 15 years experience. · tracts.
Openings for male and fa- 1 -------~--:­
32 Mobile Homes
male. 614-992-7314.
7 room house. Ph bath. 4
for Sale

Need carpet installed . Call
Mark Griffin , 614 -446 ·
3282 work guaranteed.

othora. t7, 900 to t24, 900

Good uMd kitchen cabin eta,

Yard Sale. 516 Robinson
St., Wed, 9:00 AM . Have
Every1hing.

11 . Help Wanted

(3051878· 3639.

RICK PEARSON AUCTIONEER SERVICE. Eototo,

Pomeroy, Oh.
OPEN

GENE GIEENE

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

25th, Fri . 28th ., 29th.

3419.

CFt. July 27 8o 28, South

inventory. Training, fixture•.
grand opening. etc . Can
open 16 days. Mr. Keenan

5/28/1 mo. d.

8

"·-----.... ------------

rooms, 2 COJ11plete baths, dining
room, living room and large .recreation room. Located on 8
acres. Large farm pond. · Racine
area.

7026.

Galtipotia, OH

10. - - - - - - - - -

SPLIT LEVEL HOUSE with 3 bed-

Full blooded German Shepherd just over 1 yr. old. To a
good home. Call 614· 446-

5646.

tho month of July witt

5hodtey,

ROOFING

AT A SUPER DISCOUNT PRICE

••
•
•'

Giv.eaway

Metal Honda crate1. PU at
Batz Honda. No phone calls
,pteue.

NEW--REPAIR

1
ANNOUNCES
The Expansion of Service Ia our Customers
To Include:
•Complete Front End Repair 8s Alignment
•Computerized Wheel Balance
•Tires (All Sizes-Car, Truck, Farm)

..

vaccinations, worming,
and routine work during

E.

OH. ·

6· 3-

1 Oth ANNIVERSARY
Small animal• receiving

PIM

Iadner

St • •

Howard L. Writesel

PH. 949-2777

Classifieds and

Savell I
own·.d n oniOr by

4664, 273-5297. Anawo•-

ing service til 6 pm.

4

Situations
Wanted

Female companion. would
consider marriage. Charles
Richards. C.all 614-446-

614-446·21 56 or614·446·
3358.

6 t 4-446-3005.

I

31

Extra Ex.ka. Need money for
school? 86 apeciel stanlng
fee. Avon. . Start today.

colors. Call 614-367-0293.

Ph. 614-843-5191

12

Ex.pBfienced part-time LPN.
Apply in parson between 9 &amp;:
4 to: 203 Jack10n Pike.
Gallipolis. Oh.

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
l'nsulated DQ&amp; Houses

&amp; Vicinity

3 Announcements

2328.

24th . 9;00· 4:00. Lota of

Household items, records.
tapes, s1ereo. 2 bdr. sui1e1 .

Services

R &amp; J Mobile Home Movers .
Reasonable rates, complete
line of · service. 304-372-

Cab Corntrs .................. '20
Grillts .............~............. JS
New and lhtd Auto Gl~ns:-Late Modtl Ports

4
1

(11141 843·5425

Yard sale. Main St. in
Rutland. July 23th and

·--·---pnsieiisa-rit .....

Ernplnvrne nt

You can allm upforaummer.
All Natural Weight· Loll pro·
gram can help you lose
10-29 plus pound• in your
first month or your money
back. Call now 614·742·

-····-····- ··--···-··· ··-·· · --

Sale 56 Garfield Ave. Thurs.

Point.

Bridge Plaza. Catt 614·446·
3688.

Yard Seta 25th 8o 26th.
Storm do'or, old clock, porta
crib; rugs. dl'thet, · large
mens 8t womens &amp; baby
clothing. 9-6. Orchard Hill

Now taking application•.
qualifications: 18 years-old.
own car, good driving re·
cord. proof of in1uranca.
Domino'•· 420 Viand
Street, Poin1 Pleasant.

1-614-632-0677.

Special thru July 31 tt. Present thi1 ad &amp;: get 12 tanning
session• for 836. Sunta·
tionaf Tanning Salon. Silver

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Vicinity

Rd. off Rt. 218 .

875-3574

Thanks 10 the friends and
naighbora on Hr•ell Run Rd.
for your sincere klndne11
and alto to the other friends
in the Surrounding area.
Tina Rae Ro~enbt.um

til

.......F,.omerov ... ,.....

area. 304-876-t 429.

Ford pick up truck wrecked
or junk 1973thru 1979. 304

614-446-0294.

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area
20yean
"Free Estimates"

Hourto11 Tricker Available-Other Options Available

Carrie Kennedy wi1hea to
thank all those who sent
cards and flo.wers and to
those who offered preyera
during her recent holpitalization . Thekindramambrancas were much appreciated.

------Gaiifpoiis--.. ·.. ··

b.a by items.

Colt 614·99'2·5928 or 814·
992-5008.

SWEEPER 1nd aewing machine repair, pans, and
Pick up and
supplies.
delivery. Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
George• Creek Rd . • Call

EUGENE LONG

open Avon territOries
available In Point Pleasant

Want to rent or buy a private
lot with trailer hook-up or at
least septic ayatem. Want
wilhin 10 miles of Pomeroy.
Need 11 1oon aa pouible.

Card of Thanks

Call 614-992-6737 '

1 0' U.P. WilE MESH DISH

3

County. 614-992-3488.

For fnter Service

. Drake 324 IlK., Dralle 100 dogroo LNA

•Washtra •Diahwaahen

Plaintiff

Automobile

I 1

'

We'd lib to introduce you to

'

91.5-3561
All M•k••

SHERIFF'S SALE OF
CHATTEL PROPERTY
Michael C. Huddleuon .
Plointilf

Chottllo, to-wit
1 - 1984 T· IOOO Pontiac

773~t~

I '

Public Notice

Court Houu In SaW&amp;blrf
Township, Meigs County.
Ohio on Friday tho 2nd day of
Auguot 1986. ot 10:00 o'c·
tack in the forenoon of uld
day, tho lottowing Goodt end

,1:.:

992-2549

"Frn btimatn"
lnstallatien hailablt

TPaul S. Moore,
Ctorlc

Front Door of the

•••1 PI

•

PARTS •nd SERVICE
Hffc

premi~e~~ of

Tokens Can be purchated by Sr. Citizens, the elderly.
and the handicapped for 60C each. and the general
public for •1.00 each at Frulh Pharmacy, Village
Pharmacy. Swisher &amp;I Lohae
Pharmacy, C. K. Supermarket
and Sr. Citizens Center.

A

· Enpet-A-Cor, the modern way
to drive the vehiCle of your

'l----------------~--------~~~-8~-l~m~o~
- ~d~
. _.

lait &amp; I.P. Gao Available
lasiwtbol c - &amp; !winl !til.
Ftt Tlto Iliff I• Olllle~t FMII,

.._1104 .

11-.

s c•

morlcod "Bid oo 1967 Dump

Pleu of Meiga County, Ohio,
oo tho 15th day of July 1985,
and to me directed In the caaa
above mimed. I wiM expo1e to
Sate ot Public Auction, on tho

PHONE 992-7075

191 Goo. ......... l'kwy.
rt, Ollio.
1111. II·._,._ lo S ,..,,

PH. 992-6931

Truck."
The Board of Sutton. Town·
ship Truat•• reserves the right
to acoept or rfljact any or aM
bido or .,Y port theruof.
Sutton Township

Defendant

107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.

."SPAS"
IITDIORCII CIIMICAU

ACCENT

•Retrigeratora
•Dryers •Frwzera

In pursuance of an Execudon issued from the Clerk's
offiCe of the Court of Common

; BLUE STREAK CAB CO •

INTERESTED IN
NEW VEHICLE

Part tim• tecretary. Mature
pat"IOn with good typing
skills end general office
experience. Send resume
with references to Box P-18,
care of the Point Pleaunt
Regisler.

Aluminum 1crap. Sell your
aluminum JCrap direct to the
smelter. Buying all gradet of
aluminum. Premium paid for
larglll! loadt. Call for quote.
Scipio Energy. located 13.4
miles ent of Pagetown on
Township Road 141. Meigs

Ann ouncr.m ent s
1

'

ACRYLIC WALL POOL
ABOVE GROUND POOL
o..r4DOC....H

~14

JIM CUFFORD
PH. 992-7201

l '.

no guatBntlll. Bids to be
oubmltted in oootod .....topoa

VI.

3960 or 1-800-642-3819.

Middleport. Oh. 814-9923478.

Pri•at1 lnnstigator
LKtftWCI jn Ohio 71 U 1

Help Wanted

BIG BUCKSI Your prior
teNice is wonh a "lot of
money. Monthly paycheck•
•315.000 Life Insurance·
New training. Call304-676·

Buying daily gold, silver
coins, ringa.jewalry.ttarllng
ware. old coins. large currency. Top prices. Ed. Bur·
kett Barber Shop, 2nd. Ave.

WISEMAN
INVE$TIGATION
&amp; SECURITY
PH. 614·446·6211
RICHAID L. WISEMAN

DOZER, BACKHOE,
TRENCHER. SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER,
GAS 8o SEWER LINES.
RECLAMAnON. PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT

I

COMING
JULY 29, 1985 at 7:00A.M.

3·24·tlt

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

8-t3 ""

I

't

VINYL LINER POOL

.

!Froo Eotlmotetl
REDUCED WINTER RATES

Vehicle may be i._od ot
tn, Sutton ~ownlhip Building
during daylight hours,
Vohido to be oold • is with

Gladys Sue Huddteoton

· 1-13-tfc

PEISONAUIED
POOLS

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Dump Truck

171 23, 30, 2tc

Middleport. Ohio

YOUNG'S

Wt HtwJ AFill Thilt

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

Tanks.

992-2198

l·l·tfc

7111/tfn

Licens!d Clinical Audiologist

PAT HILL FORD

E••l•••••
Plrll &amp; StrYIII

•I•

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

out radiators. Wnlso

repair Gas

firM

IEiec .. Sewer, W•te,-)

FOR SALE
TOWNSHIP OWNED
VEHICLE
Punuantto Section 307.12,
O.R.C. tho SUtton Townohlp
Truoteot
'"""""'
bido et thowilt
home
of tho -Ct.k.
Paul S. Moore, 32781i, TR
110, Racine, Ohio 46n1.
unlit 4 a'ctoc:k PM on Augult
8. 1986. with bido to be
- - ' ot 8 o'docl&lt; PM ot tho
NgUtor ...-ng of tho Boord
ID be hold at tho · llylocuae
M1011dpol Building, Syracuae.
Ohio. and Mod aloud for tho
tole of tho following vllllde:
1 - 1967 lntomotionll

and recore radiators and
heater cores. We t:Jn
also acid boil and rod

S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

"W• htl F•' l11r"

re~ir

We can

U.

. Cam~ng - Daity,
Woetdy, Monthly, Soooonol

Nonce

Jackson.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

446-4522

Television Usteni~ Devices
Computerized Heanng Aid Selection
Hearing Evaluations Far All Ages

RAOIATJER
SERVI., '

· BOGGS

RENT A CAR
CALL

CHESTER-915·3307
Ill Hn

Public Notice

11

Wanted To Buy

We pay c11h tor tete model

' L---------------~----------~71~8~/t~m~o~.~~~----------~1~0~-8~-t~lt~

Business·Services

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

992 9932

By Bruce Williams
DEAR BRUCE - My husband
and I have a small mobile-home
. park here In Flortda .
When I say small, I mean small .
We have only 10 spaces on one acre.
When we purchased the mobile·
home park, It was In the county, but
now we've been annexed by the
city. Tile city recently passe&lt;i an
ordinance stating that only eight
mobUe homes can be parked on one
acre, and we have been told that we
must conform to the new ordinance .
I ' ve been to planningcommission meetings , zoning·
commission meetings and council
meetings, but so far the city
officials say we have to go along.
What are we going to do with our
two tenants that we have to get rid
of? How do we handle this? W.M., FT. PIERCE, FLA.
DEAR W.M. - First, there's no
way that any city can zone you out
or b.u siness. You are what Is called,
· In the language or zoning, a
non-confirming use.
That means that you were there
legally prior to the enactment of the
zoning ordinance. (I'm assuming
that 10 to an acre was proper when
you took over the property·)
City officials can prohibit you,
• without a vartance, from expandIng, Improving or altering your

u,. • 11 w......11a ..,

Jnhs, Muffle"

SfRVICE STATION

Smart money

0MMf-...rt~

.. SPUD QUEEN lAUNDRY
.. GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
.. SATUUTE SALES &amp; SERVICE

MGM
FARM CITY

Tile donation to Rio Grande College
consists of the resldua!S5,00lfor the
fund, and the new scholarship will
be named the Thomas A. Jenkins
and Mabel W. Jenkins Memorial
Nursing Education Fund, thus
continulng.the original purpose In
the use of the money . .
Thomas A. Jenkins was Ohio
congressman from the lOth dlstrl~t
!rom. 1924 to 1958. The scholarship
will be restricted geographically to
permanent residents orthecounties
of Athens, Gallla, Jackson, Law·
renee, Meigs and Vinton, which
comprise Jenkins' district.
Those receiving the scholarship
must demonstrate financial need,
and preference will be given to
nursing students who require financial assistance to complete their
nursing education. Tile first schO·
larshlp award will be made for the
fall of 1981}

u,.. 1lW....
.,.,,,.,l4.10
u,..,,w
........ T..,_..,.._...................
.eo

Complete Cur
lPI VI(!', lube Joh1,
Oil Cltonqe,
TolllP -Ups, Br"ke

tl hrttcr

The .Daily Sentinei- Page-'1

-------------------r--------------~----~~-----------------T----------~--------1 cleanu~c•~Jim Mink Chev .• Oids Inc.
Bill Gene John1on
614·446·3672
Hospital Supplies For Home Use
DENNY CONGO
Roger Hysell UHd mobile
home• preferad
SALES &amp; RENTALS
'WILL HAUL
3 bdr. modota. Catt. 814614-446-7283
Garage
446·0175.
Out of Town Customers Call Collett
JUST CALL!
Rt.
12
4,Pomeroy
Ohio
•Oxygen •Ho1pit1l Beds •Wheel Chairs
•
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
•Bathroom Aida •Walkera •Crutches It Canes
992 - 3410
•
FURNITURE. Bodo, iron,
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
wood, cupboard•. chairt
Many ·Other Item• .
Ll MESTO NE
REPAIR
chesu. bukete, disHes,
WE IILL WDIUIE AND OTHER INSURANCE
. . ·
atone Jars. antiques. gold
Also
Transmission
:
CURlERS WHEN ELIGIILE
GRAVEL - SAND
and silver. Write-M . D.
Miller, R1.2, Pomeroy, Ohio
PH. 992-5682
! BOWMAN'S HOME CARE MEDICAL SUPPLY
TOP SOIL
46789 or colt 81 4-992·
7780.
•,'
" " • s t.. Ganipoli•
FILL
DIRT
or· 992-7121
We Delinr
24 Hr. Service

•oor

u~, WI' (Oil do

9

'

Ohio

1

..... _...

T1y

Pomeroy-Mid~leport,

Business Services

.

,..

Mnn In lhe flrPu.

Nursing students at Rio Grande
College and Community College
will benefit from a newly established scholarship named In
honor of the late United States
Congressman, Thomas A. Jenkins,
and his wife, Mabel W. Jenkins of
Ironton, Ohio.
Tile endowed scholarship has
been established with a $5,000
donation from the Jenkins MemorIal Nursing Education Fund, which
~ • Is part of the "Mabel W. Jenkins
,- ~ Trust. The Trust was set up In 1964
by the will of Mabel W. Jenkins. The
Nu~slng Education Fund was
created in 1978 to assist deserving
students to become registered
nurses, prererebly residents of
Lawrence and Jackson Counties.
Tile Jenkins Memorial N urslng
Education Fund Is terminating its
existence, because most of Its
ortginal funds have been ~xpended.

PHON~
992-2156
ar_D.ioo,-a,...,...,..

-__

:m.

check are, lrom lelt, Harold Rolph, truoiee, lrontoo;
Janet Byers, Dean, Rio Grande College Holzer School
ol Nundng; Georae .J. IAdulc, Rio Gr&amp;llde Conege
Vice President for Developmenl; Mrs. Dean MaMie,
trustee, Ironton: , and Mrs. John Zimmerly, trustee,

23, 1985

Tuesday, .July

Ul CnriSt.. ........ CIIID4S1it

Be1t fll•qnmrnt

NURSING EDUCATION FUND - 'l'nuiCees of
lhe Jenkins Memorial Nursing Education FUnd Inc.
bave -te'+t 4 tbe Thomas A • .JenldDs and Mabel
W. Jenkllls Memorial Nursing Education FUnd at Rio
Grande College and Community College. Taking part
In lhe ceremony presenting the Sii,OOO Scholarship

.

expando 2 bdr . 17.495.
French CiW Mobile Homes.
Inc .. Upper River RD .,
Gallipolis, Oh. Call 614-

446 -9340 .
14x70 82 model mobile
home, 3 bdr ., 1 V:~ bath , total
electric, 8x1 0 s1orage build ing. 8x10 wood deck porch,
underpinning . $12,500.

Colt 614-446-6231 .
74 14x70 3 bdr . mobile
home on 1 0 acres of lend.
$16.600. Vinton area. Call

614-388· 9949 .
1976 Festival 14x70, · 2
baths. t8undrv room, Iota of
closetl . Call 614-446-

41

Houses lor Rent

Small 3 bdr . house, 2 baths,
mostly furnished . 2 working
adults. across from K- Mart,
$300 mo. renter pays elec1·
ric. Call 614-446 -1822.

3 bdr .house, 2 baths. Call

304·675-5 t 04 or 304-6 755386.
3 bdr . house with 7 acres of
ground , recently remodeled .

Call 614-446-7447.

- - - - - - - --lc 3 bedroom, partially furnished . 2 blocks from Main
St . Pomeroy. 10 months
lease . SecurHv dapotit.
Must be employed . 614-

843·5446 .
Redecorated five room
house in Middlepor1 (Gravel
Hill area). Basement and
garage . Carpet and drape•
furnished . Adults. No pe1s.
Phone 614 - 9~2 - 3364 .

2 bedJoom house for rent .
Stove and refrigeratitt, furnished, AC. References and
deposit required . No peu .

Call 614-992 ·2012 .

3 bdr. brick frame house. 3120.
4 room country home. S1ove
close to town. central air, 1- - - - -- - - - -lcend refrigerator, low utili ·
woodburning fireplace. 1979 14~&lt;.70 mobile home
ties. yard a~Jd trees, near
large livingroom." full baaa - on 1 acre lot . Excellen1
Meigs High School . No petl.
ment, sundeck, one car condi1ion . Double car
Available by 1st of August.
garage. chain link fen~ed 20x24 garage: &amp;18.500 . · Call during day 614-992yard, Green School d1tt, Call 614-992· 6509 .
2318 . After 5:00pm, 614 ·
*46.000. Call 614-852 · 1 - - - - - - - -992 - 2627 . 0"13'posit
1376 after 5 .
1972 Champion trailer in
required ,
Portland . 10x&amp;·o . Partly furJay Or ., 5 yr. old. 3 bdrs., nished. new Coleman gaa
2 bedroom house. depo1it
1'1h: bath. large kitchen &amp; furnace . $2,400. 614-843and reference required , 501
eating eraa, FR or DR, LR, 2 5310 or 614-843-6406.
Burdette St. 304 - 675·
car garage. gas heat, CA.
7207.

Colt 814-448-3427.

1971 Belmont . 12•60. 2

For ule by owner. large
picture~que tri -leval home
on wooded 11f.acres makes
thla home on Bulaville Road

bedroom. partially fur ·
nithad. $6 ,000. In long
Bottom. Call collect ·614·
247-7332. Don Stollings
after 4pm .
--~------­

Small couage. 2 ' rooms and
bath, $55 .00 week, utilities
paid. 304-676 · 3100 after

Insured , 20 year's eJtpe rience . 304·576- 2866 or
576-2998.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

your boat buy ot $67,000 . 3
or 4 BR 2'h baths. largo MOBILE HOMES MOVED .
kitchen Wtth custom built
charry cabinets, LR, OR ,
woodburner. 16x24 family room partially finished and
carport . Solid panel doors
throughout. KC School Dl1·
lrict. Cloae to town . Call
614-446-0088. shown by
appolntmenl only.

.::.::.::___:___:.___1

5:30 PM 675-6609 It no
answer 304· 875-3000.

-----~---­

Appro• acre on Greer Road,
mobile home. 14x86, 2
bedrooms. 8x10 building.
Many ex.tru , 304- 67&amp; 6044.

2 bdr. furnished, u1ilities
paid. $200. Apple Grove
acro11 from Goodyear Plant .

Colt 304·576-2479 .

�•

Page 8 The Daily Sentinel
42

Tuesday, July 23, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
64 Misc.

LAFF-A·DAY

Mobile Homes
for Rant

Marchendiae

66

Pets for Sale .

KIT 'N' CARLYLE

&amp;

rates-big loads. May ht·
July 31at. Doean't lpply to
HEAP. 614·266-6246.

pd.. except elact ., convenient location. ••curity deposit reuqired. Ca11614-•4&amp;8558 .

SPECIAL cut aloba 8 PU
load• delivered In dump
truck t 1 00. or 21oada t180.
You pickup f15. Coli 614245-6804.
.

2 bdr. 2 mi . from HMC et
Evergreen . Partially fu r·
ni1hed, children accepted.

2 bdr . fully furnish-ed ~C .

utilities paid. adultt only.
Call614-446 ·4110.

66

For rent mobile home lor 1
or 2 adults, working people.

Building Supplies

44

Apartment
for Rent

JA C KSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal
Housing Oppor1unity )
monthly rent starts at 1$169
for 1 bedroom and $204 tor
2 bedroom. dapo$it $200.
located near Spring Valley
Plaza and Foodland, pool
and Cable TV ava.ilable,
hours as possible 10 am to 4
pmand7pmto9pm
Monday-Friday, Call 614446 .- 2745 or leave
massage.
Nicety furnished mobile
home , eff. apt., central air
and heat in c::ity, adults only.

Call 614-446-0338.
Furnished efficiency 701
4th Ave .. Gallipoli1. $160.
utilities paid. share bath.
adults. Call 446-4416 after

8PM .
Furnished efficiency $145,
utilties paid . share bath, 607
2nd . Ave. Gallipolis, adults.

Call446-4416 after SPM .

Furnished Rooms

Furnished room, range. rafrig . $125. share bath. single male. 919 2nd. AVe.,
Gallipolis . Call 446-4418
after SPM .

46

Space for Rent

Mobile home lot . 1 2 ' .~t50' or
smaller. 8 76 water paid, 4th
&amp; Neil. Gallipolis. Call 446·

4416 after BPM .
Green Terrace Mobile Home
Park now has lots available.

Call 614· 446-3643 or 614·
446-0254 .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park. Route 33. North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call

614·992-7479.
Trailer spaces. Small children accepted . · 304- 676-

1076.

47 Wanted to Rent

51

$40.

Nicely furnished apt, central
heat. air. parking. next doqr
to library. One profe11ional
adult only. Call 614-446-

Large Anic apt., furnished
8176, utilities pd ., 919
Second Gallipolis, male preferred , share bath. Call

Merchandise

2 bdr . duplex, new kitchen,
bath, new carpet, fenced
backyard, 656 Third Ave.

Call 614-446·0690.
Furnished apt., 920 4th
Ave ., 1 bdr., $225 , utilities
pd., adults. Call 446-4416
after Spm.
Furnished efficiency, adults,
920 4th Ave., S185 utilities
pd.. Call 446-4416 after
8pm .
Furnished apt. 2 bdr., S195
water paid, 131 % 4th Ave ..
Call446-4416 after 8pm.
Apartment for

rent .. Call

614-446-9244, 9AM -6PM .
Furn . upstairs. 3 rooms &amp;
bath. clean, adulu only . No
pets, references required.

Call614-446· 1519.
New efficiency apt . with
garage, Nonhup area. pri vate yard . disposal. small
deck. Lease required, water
included, washer &amp; dryer
hookup . Call 614 -446 -

7209 or 614-446-3287.

2 bedroom apartmeJ)ts .
New Haven. WVa. Newly
remodeled. In town. 614-

992· 7481 .
1 bedroom apt . for rent .
Nicely located . Contact Vii·
lage Manor in Middleport.

614 · 992 - 7787 . Equal
Housing Opportunity .

2 bedroom furnished apt. in
Middleport . All .utilities paid .

Call 614-992-5084 .
2 apartments for rent in
Syracuse . 1 furnished and 1
unfurnished. Call 614-992 7889 after 5 :00p.m .
3 room furnithed apartment . 1st floor . No pets . Call

614-949-2263 .
APARTMENTS . mobile
homes. houses. Pt. Pleatant
and Gallipolis . 614- 446-

8221 .
Furnished apartment Point
Pleasant. Utilities pilid. 304-

896-3450.

614-384-3645

SWAIN

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

pc wood LR auite $399,

S125. Call 614-379-2836.

bunk beds 8199, antron
rec::linen 899; new &amp; used
-bedroom tuitn, ranges,
wringer washers, &amp; shoes.
New livingroom suites
8199- $699. lamps, also
buying coal It wood stoves.

Coll614·446· 3159 .
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofas and chairs priced from
8285. to $895. Tables, 950
and up to $125. Hide-abeds , $390 . and up to
$560 .. sofa beds $145,
Recliners, &amp;225. to 8315 .,
Lampe from $28 . to $125.
pc . dinettes from $109 .• to
435. 7 pc . $189 and up.
Wood table with six chain

8285 to $745. Desk S110
up to S225. Hutches, $660.
Bunk bed complete with
mattresses, S275 . and up to

8396.

Baby bods, $110.

Mattress•• or box spring•.
tull or twin. 858 .• firm, $68.
and 878. Queen sets, 8225 .
4 dr. chests, $49 . 5 dr.
chests. S69. Bed frames,
820.and $25 ., 1 0 gun - Gun
cabinets, S350. Gas or
mectric ranges $375 . Baby
mattre11e1. &amp;25 &amp; $35. bed
frames 820, $26, &amp; $30,
king frame S60. Good selection of bedroom suite!,
rockers . metal c::abinets,
headboards $38 S. up to

$65 .

Coli 814-448-0756 .

mechanical regitters
ea ., good working
condition . One documentor
register -muter $660. good
working condition . Call
614 - 446- 1066 ask for

Gary.
% acre lot for aale or trade.

614-448-8558.
30 inch electric renge. aelf
cleening oven, h1rvest gold,
used 1 month, paid $800.,

will toke f400. Coli 614·
742 ·3092 .

614·256-1271 .
AKC BaSsett Hound pups.
Tri - colored. Cal 614- 266-

1652.

Blue carpet 1OY2 x 15, rust
carpet 10x15. Call after 5,

614-446-0026.
Community silver plate, flatware. Service for 8 . Call

614-367-7678 .

Call614-992-6140.
Amana High Efficiency Air
Conditioner for sale. 1 8.000
BTU's. Used for 2 months.
Has4year guarantee. $600.

Coli 614-992-3454.
1982 Gravely with tiller and

buah hog . 81600. Coll614·
742-3161 .

304 · 675 -6762 or 675 2991 .
REPAIRS,

304-675 ·4631 .

Dragonwynd Canary Ken·
net. CFA Himalayan. Persian
and Siamese kittens. AKC
Chow puppies. Call 4463844 after 7PM .
AKC Reg. Chow Chow
puppies, all colors, 2 litters,
taking deposits now. Call

&amp; SONS
U.S. 35 Wast. Jackson,

PHOTO KEY CHAIN free
with roll of color print film
procesaing . Now thru july

Service. Over 40 ueed
tractors to choose from &amp;
complete line of new &amp;
used equipment. Largest
selection in S.E. Ohio.

Gravely tractor It brush hog.

Coli 614-379-21 1 5 .
Kolar engine. Hone model
with attachments. 81,660.
Used less than 20 houn . Call

614-446-1670.

6100. Calloftor 5 614·256·
9350 . .
1962 Farmall Tractor. &amp; ft.
blade. 5 11. buah hog. 16
inch single plow. All for

$2000.
6424.

Call

Homelite

614 - 669·

water

pump

sprayer $70.: A model Inter
with cull 81800.; Homelite
EZ chain saw 11$100.; 3 pt.
Fert &amp; Seed tpre.a der 850.;

6' 8uih hog $350.: 26'
tobacco pipe trailors $600.;
62" tobacco sticks 15c
each ; tobacco b&amp;lers 860.

each . 304-736 - 2342 or
676 . 1286,
livestock

Pi g• for sale ,- 304- 896-

3683.

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Hay tor sala . Mixed and

clover. CoQ 614-742· 2592.
Hay for •ale, pick up or
delivered. 304-B95-3450.

'

Tran sp ort atiOn
71

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH paid for '80
AKC Reg . Beagle pups,
males and females available.
It interested call1 -304-6847094.

whJie

rutt, new rubber. 4 dr.,
cruite. PS, PB, 4 cyl. front

P8, .U .SOO. Coli 614·379·
2682.
81

model and newer used cars.
Smith Buick-Pontiac, 1911
Eastern Ava., Gallipolil. Call
614-448-2282.

They'll Do It Every Time

304-676 -6483 or 676 1460. Bunk beds, Dehumidifiera, Dinning room 1uit1,
Uving room suits. Baby Bed.

ft chett freezer.
$100 .00. 304· 675-4174.
20

cu

t2,200 .
2682.

Coli

76 Pinto 72.000 mi. AM·FM
couetta. 11.300. 73Comet
40,000 mi. •1 ,400. Both
V.G. Coli 614-446·8131 .

1978 Ford

F150.

Four

wheel drive. Uft kit. aluminum slots. 814-992 ~ 7847.
1

1985 Chevy • Dalu•a 10
Truck . PS. PB. Auto, V6.

1977 Fa&lt;d Ltd. II. Good
Cond. 81400. Coli 614·
256·6892 .

$9200. Only 900 miles. Call

814·949·2850.

1975 left It right front 1970 Chevy 'VJ: ton pick-up.
fendert . No rust. Alking : Good condition. •eoo. Cell

t126 aoch. Coli 614-367·
0493.

814·742-2421 .

Price 'raducad-1978
Chrysler Cordoba, one
owner. good cond .• 2 dr.,
air, PS / PB, AM/FM tadio.

Up. helf ton. PS, PB, Air

1977 Chevy Bonanza pick
cond. tilt wheel. new tires,

304·676·4893.

Coli 614-446-28&amp;7.

w. vo., 304·

W.

73

Vans &amp;

4W.D.

t981 F-260 4•4. All now

1978 Pontiac Grand Safarre
stationwagon, loaded. good

c::hrom4. rim. Actual mileage

35,000.
2806.

cond. Coli 614-446-3945
offer 4PM.

.

CIJ Entertainment Tonight
CD Wheel of Fortune
0 (I) Wheel of Fortune
()) Se&lt;:ond City TV .
®News
@
MacNeil/Lehrer
Newahour
tJ (jJ Toys of Yesterday
al!P Clooe and P"""""l
7 :30 D C1J nc Toe Dough
(I) Cisco Kid
(!) 1985 Sen Francisco
MaadkH1
Cll Major Loogue Baoebell:
Atlanlll at Montreal
(I) D (I) Family Feud
(!)Jeopardy
'
())
Nightly . Buolneoo
Report
®Wheel of Fortune
II (jJ Enterlllinment
Tonight
Major Loogue Bnebell:
Cincinnati at New York

ing. Now inslalling "
roofl. 30 years experience',
speciali;ring in built up roof.

Coli 614·388·9857 .

Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local reference•
furni...ed. Free estima"J;ea.

Coli collect 1-614·;237·

o•se.

d1y or night. Rogert
Basement · water~roofing .
O.and M. Contractors. Vinyl
siding, replacement win dow•. Insulating, roofing ,
new and remodeling. con -

creto. Call304·773·5131 .

ANNIE
- '100 JOST Tff'l

E~CH

OM!! UNTIL ONE OF
T!iEM f70E'S THE

a

JOe&gt;.' 1;0T IT?

J .and L. lnatallatibn . Roof Ing, vlnylaiding.stormdoors
and windowt. Free esti·

Mota
8 :00 81])(!)A·TeomiCC)The
A-Team steps in when a
power-hungry mobster tries
to gain control of the local

RON'S Televi!lion Service.
House c::alls on RCA, Ouazar.
GE. Speeialing in Zenith .

boKing scone. lA) 160 min.)
(I)G-Ban
(1)81 (jJ Three'o o Crowd
ICC) Jack, with some help
from Mr. Bradford, begins to

Call 304-576-2398 or 61 4·
446-2464.

question how successful he
is after Vicky ' gets &amp;f'!. in·
crease. IRI

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Call 304- 675 -

1331 .

CJ

RINGLES'S SERVICE . e• ·

Coli

614·379·

liD Nova ICC) 'Edgerton and
His Incredible Seeing Mach-

Rotary or cable tool drilling .
Most walla completed aame
day. Pump sales and servi -

ines.· Dr. Harold E. Edgerton's latest invention, a
device thet allows the human aye to view what was
once unseal'), is explored. (R)

coa . 304-895-3802.
Starks Tree and Lawn Set-·
vice. etump removal, 304·

j60 min.)
[H80l MOVIE: 'The Stor
Chambllr'
!MAXI MOVIE: 'Without a

576·2010.
Plumbing

Has yo~

74 '" Motnrcycles
1979 XR 186, been rebuilt,
e111.cellant condition. a&amp;oo.

Call 614· 367·7506.

1984 V-65 Sabra 1100 CC
with faring. 2 helmets &amp;
covor, 13.200. Call 814258·1436.

1979 two . door hardtop
Oldsmobile Cutl111 Supreme; cream over metallic
brown. Air, pow,r ateering
and brMes; AM-FM atereo.
snow tires. Excellent condition; under 28,000 milet.

'74 Hondo CB 360, runs
good, price negotiable. call

ol1er 4:00 PM 304-675·
7749.

l4800. Hoeflich, 992-5292
1fter 6:00 weekdays: enytime weekandt.

75

1980 Chevette. Auto, 4
door . good condition.

a

'2200. "lao ft. topper for
truck, 1100. Coll '814· 986·
4418.

Boata and
Motors for Sale

15 ft. AlumaaCraft bolt. 7 112
HP Mercury motor with
controle
tr1iler. *1 . 800.-

a.

Coll 614-367-0447.

82,400.00. Phone 614· 1971 MFG, tri hull, 60 hp
992-2413 ifter 5:00 pm. JohnsOn. stainless steele
36 -40

prop ,

1981 Corvat, 10,000 mil81,
juat like new. phone 304-876-4384 .

1nd

Truckaundort100 .00.Now
•v•l..ble In your 1rea. Call

1·819-616 -1522 . .

1977 Cut1111 Solon, AC,
V-8 350 engine, •1.500.00,
good cond, 304-675-5636.
- - - - - - - - - - lw08
'79 Camero, dark blue.
T-top, auto 3150, AC. crUite,
AM •FM cauette, new draa,
axe cond, a3.300.00. 30~-

882· 32118.
1983 Subura. 2 door, aun
roof, euto. AC, radio nareo,
exc cond. one owner. 304-

oticka. 304-676-2848 oftor
6:00.

tor, exaeflerit running conll-

19711 Pinto with 1878 motlon. 304·176·1145, ony
time.

'79 Chevy Monzo. V-1, AC,
PS. outo. AM· FM coaaotte,
n.aoo.oo 304· 875·3613.

younger?

suit qot

614·446-4477

(I) (jJ MOVIE: 'Skokie'
[CCI
9 :00 D ClJ (!) Riptide Cody,

Nick and Boz try to tr.ack
down the murderer of one of
Boz's close friends. lA) [60
min.l

CIJ 700 Club
·
(I) Ill (jJ Who' a tbe Bou7

Good· 1 b .cavating, basements, footers, driveways,
septic tenks, landscaping.
Call anytime 614 - 446 ·
4537, James L. Davison, .)r.
owner.

eundry

[CCI

His Incredible Seeing Machines.· Or. Harold E. Edgerton 's latest invention, a
device that allows the human eye to view what was
once unseen, is explored. (R)

or 814-992-7119linytime.

160 min .)
liD Ufoline (CC) 'Or. James

Co.,
Rutland. Oh . 614 -742 ·
Construction

H. Duke.· The Trauma Surgeon at the University of
Texas' Herman Hospital is
seen in action . (R) (60 min.)

2903. Baaementt. Footers.
Concrete work, Backhoe' s,
Dozer &amp; Oitcher, Dump
trucks. &amp; water-gas-sewerelectrical lines.

9:30

BARNEY

17 ft . Crastliner. 166
inboard-outtNilrd,power. trim
prop, power trim tabt. tri

hull. 304-875· 286.
16"1/a ft. Invader Bowrider.
126 hp Johnton. beautiful

murder. (A) (60 min .)
I]) Auto Racing . '85:
Formula Ona Britloh Grand
Prix from Silverstone.
England
(I)
(jJ MacGruder ond
Loud (CCI Malcolm and

a

Jamet Boys Water Service.
Also pools filled . Call 61'4·

160min.l
I])
MOVIE:
'Goliath
Awaits' Part 2
(jj) Newawatch
[HBOI PhUip M-we: 'Tha
Pencil' [CCI Marlowe must

Ken ' s Water Service. Wells.
cisterns·. poOls filled . Phone

614-387-0623 or 614 · 3~7 -

78

Waugh 's Water ServiCe .
~ells. cisterns. pools . Fast,
reliable service . Call 61 4 ·

Auto Perts

Jenny have trouble captur·
ing a jewel thief who seems
to be just out of reach. (R)

2S6 - T141 or 6i4- 446 ·
1176 or 614-446-79H .

7741 night or day .

&amp; Acceaaories

YEAH,
AW..RIGHT

confront syndicate hit men
while guarding a gangster
marked for death .
[MAXI MOVIE: . 'Hot Dog,

"!'HEN!

256·1240 or 614· 266 1130. Reasonable rates.

Shop hoiat. 3 ton . Continan•1 400. a,.nd n1w, never

beon uiod . •400. 614· 843·
6310 or 614·843·5406.

The Movie' ICC)
10:15 (I) MOVIE: 'Sholako'
: 1 0:30 IIl Celebrity Chet.
liD Innovation 'Starting Life

Haul limestone. sand. gta·
vel.dirt. bulk or bag fertilizer
and lime. Excelsior Salt
Works Inc. 638 E. Main St..

Pomeroy. 614·9 92·3891 .
Ford pick up truck parts

1973 thru 1979, 304-175·
3174.

87

Upholstery

PEANUTS
WALKING T~ROVGH T~E
WOODS NEAR -mE GOLF
COURSE LOOKING FOR
LOST BALLS TO SELL ...

' It Olds transmltelon
•15.00, old dloaol enulno
parts. M011te Carlo radiator.

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

304·195•3131 ol1or 4 :00.

1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis.

Wrockod '71 Ford Pickup for

1114-446-7833 or 614-446·
1833.

pertt, . all pe111 eacept en-

gino, 304-1711-4863.
1171 Oldo Cutlooo Supromo. AM·FM. PS, PB, Air,
good lhape. Nil or trade,
304-n3-1145.

Holl to the Chief

Steele laura and Rem1ngton
compete when they are
drawn to Malt&amp; by an eccentric millionaire who challenges them to solve a

General Hauling

cond. *2.950.00. 304-676·
2517.

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

Ill (jJ

with a beautiful KGB spy . [R)
10:00 D (J) ill Remi~gton

SEWING Machine repairs,
servic::e. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Sci119rs . Fabric Shop .
Pomeroy. 614-992-2Z84.

85

(I)

(CC) Zolotov threatens to
publicly expose the film of
Oliver in a romantic Interlude

top ,

.1. 300.00. 304·676·8363
oftor 5:00.

repU1otlon

(I) Novo (CC) 'Edgerton and

motaa. Call 614-446-8038

Electrical
R!!frigeration

Angela's

may be ruined by'a snooping
talk show hostess . (A)

Dozer Work land clearing,
landsclping, etc, Free esti·

84

1 GANYM

I DOLFYN!

riJ

I

ICLOPEMj
I KI

Now ll'Tange the circled lettera to
form lhe surpttse answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

I I I I I )

Prfntanswerhere: (

(Answers tomorrow)
Yesterday's

·r.

I

Jumbles: VALET

BUNION QUENCH

OITTY

Answer: What he did aftet stealing a pair of
sciasora ....::.''CUT OUT''

"*
the .JumtM l.JMI'I Fan C::IUO a!MI ~~ II• alahl.woNf !MIPer JumbtN ~
mtMtft. F« ''" *"""""· MAd ~ki.U to; JurnbHI lOftfS "''" ctub, clo thaa
~ . P.O.

1
eo. tll1, PMmyuo,
N.J. 01015.

H.G.I.F. (horse
goes in front)

.,

By James Jacoby
The combined heart holding of the ·
North and South hands gave declarer
lots of flexibility in today 's deal. He
was free to guard against four to the
jack held by either East or West. Not
one to put the cart before the horse, .
South lint tried the club finesse. That
lost and East played back a second
diamond. Now declarer played the
king of hearts. East followed with the
four and a guileful West produced the
eight. That false card was enough to
sucker' toclay's declarer. Next came
the heart queen from dummy, and the

i -23- 85

.A

WEST

EAST

+ J 109 532

••

• J865
• J 10 g;
• 7 54 2

• 6' 2

•K s 3,
SOl1TH

+KQ4
• A9 73
t K Q4
.Q9 8

Vulnerabl., Both
'flealer: South

contract was one away.

In fact , declarer failed In his
efforts 'beeause he did exactly what
he was trying to avoid doing. He did
p.u t the cart before the horse. Mter
the club finesse loses and the k1ng of
hearts is played from dummy, South
can and sbould 'postpone a second
play in the heart suit. He should first
play out all his high cards in the other
suits. He will soon discover that East
olarted with aix spades and has lotlowed three times in each minor suit.
Declarer will not need a personal

NORTH
+A 8 6
• K Q 10 2
t A 83
J 10

West

Nortb

East

Soutb
1 NT

Pass
Pass

6 NT

Pass

Pass

Opening lead: +J

to determine that it cannot
be East who has !our hearts . He will

computer

thus play to the heart ace and make
his slam.

Trace'
(!) PKA Full Contact
Karalll: Nine Round U.S.
Ught Heevywelght Dennis
Downey vs. Rob Salazar.
(1)81 (jJ Foul-Ups Bleeps/ .
Blunders fCC) Tonight's in·
house guest is Phyms Diller.

0

Excavating

J .A .R.

b
I I I

-- ..\

(A)

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·

&amp;

One owner 1980 Datsun,
B-210, blue. 2 door. 6 apeed
manual trantmisaion.

Carl

Cor. Founh and Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 614-446· 3888 'or

2250.

1980 Turbo Trans Am.
lndianapolit Pace Car.
Loaded . 51,000 actu11
mila1. A - 1 condition . Call
61 4· 742-3154 for more
information.

radio,

Rufus,
or hasyer

8:30

1978 CJ 600, 6 cyl, 3

$8,500. 4· Ford truck
wheel• &amp; rima. 2 rim• for
cor. Coli 614-388-8824.

~gr:8:6~;u~~- FM,

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

83

Jefferoona iCC!

Newahour

lNG . At. 1, BoK 355, Galli-

speed, good gas mileage,
anume loan. 304- 6715 -

®

to Atlantic City. (A)
(I) MecNeil/lohror

application) 304-676-2088
or 876-7368.

82

(I)

Florenc::e convinces George
and Louise to take her with
them on their gambling trip

perienced. carpenter. electri·
cian. mason, painter, roof·
ing (including hot tar

polis. Coli 61 4· 367-0576 .

815 l TO Ford II ait con d.,
radio, tilt wheel, power,
crui~e, RWD. 2.700 mi..

Surplue

=

1966 Ford 11h ton, 304·

1 976 Dodgo Aapon ltotjon
wagon. A I C. Good mechanical cond. 8160 or belt
offer. Coli 614-379-2350.

Good c::ondltlon,
milaa per gallon.

Weatem Thuter
(!) SPorucentllr
Cll Senford ond Son ·

&amp; Heating

896-3570.

176·1103.

Conloy, 304-675 -1435.

614- 446-

t3800. 1976 Chevrolet 1
ton· dump truck. $2600.
614·992·31 94.

614· 379·

Bunk beds, girls '3 apeed
bicycle, 3 tob•cco pres•••
and approx 1 100 tobacco

Sofa bed and love 1e1t,
wOoden ttorm door, good
cond. Fairview R·oad, Camp

Oh

1978 C60 Cbevrolet 2 ton

Chevatte auto,' ajr,

Gov't

Pickens Utad Furniture,

26th,

motoa. Call614·992-2772 .

truck wjth 14 ft. eargo van.

304-675-5185.

weightl 81 ,995.00. 304882-3421 .

no motor. • 1 .700.

Coll614·266·6302 or 814·
886-8089.

1969 Chevalle Mollbu outo-

1973 Dodge Custom• Polar, neW lirea, new sticker,

16 hp Roper Lawn tractor,
turn plow trailer, snow
blade. 42 In mower deck,
dual wheels. chaint, wheal

peru.

niatic:: 327 2 barrwl, for ule

::;:;:;:;::::::::::::1:::;:;:;:;::====:.-l ~:-:--:-:--::-----::
supplies 11980 Chev Chevette, 4

~~~~ookonberry Pharmacy

Soloa, Bul~lllo Rd. GollipoUo, Oh 61 4·446·4782.
6
1979 Chevy •t.4 new body

78 Ford Granad1 Ghla body.
new point. Call 614·379·
2116.

27. limit one key chain per I

customer

19n Ford R•nchero auto.,
air. U.399. John'• Aulo

muat aee. Coli . 614·448.0677.

Coll814·949· 2017.

614-256-1271 .

1

ville,lo•ded, full power, new
tires, vary good condition,

Truckl, for Sale

Gallipolis,
4782.

Pigs for sale. $30. apiece.

446 •7373 or 304- 676 2395.

72

1972 Codllloc Coupe Do·

82 Chevette auto. 4 dr.. PS.

Lab. pups, black, AKC Reg-·
istered . 6 weeks old July

AKC registered female
Cocker Spaniel, 6 % months
old,· Buff c::olor, phone 614-

July

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

l--(r;!,CiSSi;iiQ;5;-

63

Fish Tank and Pet Shop.
2413 Jackson Avenue,
Point Pleasant, 304-675 ·
2063 . Fish. birds and more.

Women
(I)GreenAc:reo
()) D (jJ ABC NIIWI [CCI
G (I) GJ CBS News
(I) Dr. Who
(jj) Body Electric
• F-Troop
· 7:00 D (J) PM Magazine
I})
Chuck
Connor'o

81

Rd,'Golllpolla, Oh 614-4411·
4782 .
. '

whool drive. Call 614· 266'
6632.

AKC Bassett puppies. 2
litters to choose from . $100.
apieca. Call614-667· 6967.

26th. Call 614-992- 5181 .

Have king size w•terbed.
Need to sell. Will take $300.

GUN

Registered AKC Cocker
Spaniel puppies. Champagne and 1:1uft in color. Call
614-992-7102 attar 4pm.

e2.

tape. •unroof.
799 .
John's Auto S•lea. luleviUe

.6iiF:an;-Ecj-;;iP,;;Emi:
Farm

161

$200.; Solo 6 gol. beck poll

614·446· 7544.

1699, 627 3rd. Ave. Gallipolis, OH .
Valley Furniture. new &amp;
used. Large section of quality furniture . 1216 Eastern
Ava ., Gallipolil.

AKC Registered ChOw
Chow puppies . One liner.
Taking deposits now. Call

Tomato juicer, 7qt. pressure
canner. colander. seal -ameal . S66 bUys all (must go
together) . Call 814-4462494.

1-::--=-:---------

hot dip reblueing. all types of
gunsmith work. faat service,

Mon thru Sot. 614-446,

Pets for Sale

2 mo. old Reg. Doberman
puppies, 5 male. 2 female,
all black with rust. Call

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

County Appliance, Inc .
Good used appliances and
TV !lets. Open SAM to &amp;PM .

56

1-971 Ford Mav111ic;k, 4door.

V·B. 28,000 mlloa, 304·
676-2916 oftor 5 PM .

1983 Chevy 3.4 ton. ,auto.
AM-FM tape •.topper. John's
Auto Salea. Bulaville Rd.

International A·Model trac·
tor &amp; cultivators, $500. 12
Kutter discs. 3. pt. hitch

Call 614 - 448 - 3243
evenings.

TONY'S

614-446-7398 .

2222.

1976 Chevy van 350 auto .

614-446-0322
Washers, dryers, refrigerators, ranget. Skaggs Ap pliances , Upper River Rd.
beside Stone Crest Motel.

Block, brick, mortar end
masonry supplies. Mountain
State Block, Rt. 33,
Haven , W . Va . 304-882

6 ft . Rollyson slidin.g door.

Firewood 820 .00 pickup
load. $30.00 delivered . Call

Partly furnished apt.
7187.
level . 2 bedrooms, •au.&lt;J_Ut - - - - - - - - - - week. utilities paid,
Fine oak &amp; mahogany furni·
675· 3100 alter 5 ,30 PM ture from England some
676- 5609 if no answer call antiqUet : clocks . dining
676-3000.
chairs, carver, occa11torial
lablf!is, drop leaf &amp; draw leaf
Duplex 106 Highland Ave .• lablea . pictures. mirron,
unfurnished, $176 .00 plua marble top w.. h stand,
utilitiel, phone 304-875- cheat of drawert, aide board.
4624 ofter 5:00PM.
nett~ of three tables, and
more. All at a fair price. Call

For rent SIHping Rooms
and light houM k"plng
roomt. Parte Central Hotel.

614· 245·6671 .

Used Furniture -- Refrigerators, range1, metal office
desks, electric range. 3 miles
out Bulaville Rd . Open 9am
to 5pm. Mon. thru Sat.

614.·446· 7444 or 614-367-

Furnished Rooms

South Bend ben,;:h lathe 9 in.
a.,..,ing, 115 volt motor,
tooled &amp; ready. $800. Cell

1982 Pontloc T-1000 outo,
oir, AM·FM t2,999. 1982
AMC Splrh 4 apd., AM-FM

367-7533.

1985 Troybllt tiller 8HP,

54 Misc. Merchandise

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St .. Gallipolis. New
&amp; uted wood-coalstoves. 6

Ed's Appliance Serving air
conditionen, refrigerators,
waahers, dryers. In Gallia,
Meig• &amp; Maaon Co. Call

45

Penn's Warehouse
WellstOn, Ohio

Nowo
(II Rifleman
(!) Revco' a World Cluo

Homo
$250.00, 304·675·4853.
Improvements
1973 Corvatto, 350 41 - - - - - - - - - - - - ; :
apeed. AC. T topo, 304-1175Marcum Roofing &amp; s,~~~;~
4210 ol1or 6 :00.

1980 Oldamoblla Omogo no

F,nm Suppl1r~s
&amp; L1vestu ck

14 . Drive way tile
Ohio. 614·288·8461.
( 1 2 · • K 7 2 "- $ 1 9 . 9 5 1
Maney Ferguson, New
11 0 · ' • 6 0 " · s 1 2 . 9 5 ) Holland, Buah Hog Salu &amp;

(B"x60"-$B .95) .
1_
6 . 4 " K10' PUC sewer and
· drain pipe 11 pc. 83.49 ea .l
[26 pc.- $3.25 ea .) (100
pc. - $3.00 ea.).

J!A.Y.

BORN LOSER
'74 Muttang II. tlnglne bad,

1879 5-1 BOO aerletlnternationel eir braket, air cond ..
very good shape. Cell 614·

13. 5 gal. aluminum mobile
home roof coating• $21 .951
ea . 6 and up 819.96 ea .

12' wood on clad &amp;199 .00·
$299.00-$399.00.

P~A~rATIONo

Services

Autoa for Sale

or trodo. Coli 614·266·
6532.

Call614-992-3161 .

Andirons made with bombs,
brass doornobs and horae
shoes. Antique bra11 bed
full . Crotcheted bed spread
tull. 2 tub chairs, bown
textured vinyl. 2 antique
mantels . 304-676-6858 .

ttousehold Goods

pole

beans. $6.00 bu. 304·675·
2437.

manl pane 6' high by 8' - 10' .

Nice 2 or 3 bedroom~ 2 bath
home to rent. Charles Kie-

51

Kentucky Wonder

Queen size water bed. Ex.cellent condition. With heater.

53

.

676· 2026.

12. Picture windows ther-

446 , 0468 or 614- 446 0666.

sling. Call614·446-4436.

Silver Quean corn. Happy
Hollow Fruit Farm. 304-

30" by 8'·10'·12' 50 cents
aq.ft.

992-7401.

trol. Coli 614· 446·8217
ofttr 6PI\f.

buohol. Call614-949-2084.

9 . Deluxe 1 pc . fiberglass
bath tub's with grab bar.
Color or white $199 .96.
10. 17K19 white &amp; gold
vanity with top fiberglass
$29.96 marble top 839 .95.
1 1. Plastic counter top.
Solid pattern wood grain's

Autos for Sale

AM-FM Clll8. Cruise con·

Half-runner beans for sale.
Pick your own. 86.00 per

8 . White twin rib. chanel
drain siding or roofing
$41 .96 sq. · or galvenized

Maple student desk. 876.
Maple bed and cheat ot
draw•!•· like new. $8~ .
Older type three piece bookcase bedroom suite. good
condition, $80. Call 614-

Fruit

614-448-7299.

139.95 IQ.

71 .

58

Silver OuHn sweet corn.
$1 .60 doztn. 11h mi . from
Holzer on At. 160. Call

S28 .00 sq .

pedestal type logo,

Borbouraville,

1982 Chevy Chotlon 2 tlr. ·
hotchbeck, V-6, 4 'spd.,

Coll614-256· 1684 or 614·
2&amp;6-8571 .

whiter thermal break sliders
an singlahung windows at
below wholeaale pric::es.
7 . Embostecl wood grain
twin 4" end 8" pattern,
aluminum aiding with foam
back. colou end white

Floral queeri-size sofa bed,
new mattress. $60. Nice
walnut dining room table, 2

dloploy od

71

Sweet c::orn yellow &amp; white.

plato t39.95.
6 . New shipment of Keller

Country Oak tables, chairs.
cupboard•. desks, ice boxes.
Conkles, Tupper~ Plains. Rt .
7 . Hand c::rafted and
finished .

Htrti'• A
IMP OF THE ·

Seltzer's World of Camping,

Coli 614·992·3893 .

&amp; Vegetables

6 . Wood door panels
13Ax34x78 with full gla11 1.4

2131, AM or otter 4PM .

304· 676-6104 or 304-6766386.
.

446-4416 after 8pm .

Maestro foot ped1l.
*600. Excellent condition .

I')Ung door's $19. 9&amp; and

large dinette set. 8 chairs,
reasonable. Call 614-446-

• Hopn'• Heroet
IHBOI MOVIE: ' Conen the .
Deotroyer' ICCI'
[MAXI MOVIE: 'SpiHII'
!CCI
6 :30 D (]) ill NBC Nightly

CAPT.AIN EASY

one dly. NO TRADE. See

lAt:B/__.
ILJ:ll:ffi

He'll never oet anywhere
with that allltudel

Th&lt;Nrlre

i~

.600,000.00 mult go

1 .1 ~

Unacraool&gt;lo
lour Jumllloo,
one lift• to a.:h tqUAte, to lomt

(jj) PoWerhouoe

Has

hung 879.96.
3. lnt&amp;rior hollow cora

1171 .

13 ft . Yellowstone puH type
trailer .ieeps 5 . 11 fl. self
conteined truck camper

~2::-:4
-::1:-3-:a:-ft_•_r-:-5-::::-00,;,p_.m-:-.--:- I~~e~·:.,:":"':•:~::::::::::::;:=========~ Va
738-6287; Chorlooton,
RMI Elec::tric Piano for sale. +
"-f 304-346-CAMP.

300ea.
2. Steel embo11ad in1ulatad

aut. 5 pc . wood dinette,
recliner. Corbin &amp; Snyder
Furniture, 956 SSec::ond
Ava., Gallipolit, 614-446-

Z·

0338 .

$300.00 . Phone 614·992·

$29.95. '
Used furniture ; bedroom r' 4 . 9 ft. steal insulated
suite, student dllk Ia &lt;:hair. entrance door'• with aida
2 pc. living room tuite, love- light $275.00.

Wanted to rent or lease farm
house with barn &amp; acreage,
good reference. Call 614-

bdr. apt .. utilities partly
paid-nice. &amp;149 mo. Call

Finish. Excellent condition.

1 . Interior hollow core doors

Household Goods

Chicago

!Upright Piono)MedulmOok

8 panel exterior d.oor'a pre-

45

4, full bath 85 ,600. Coli
814-388-8164.

Musical
Instruments

Davia and Son,

BUILDERS
Surplut·Sal..,age-Cioseouta

"But enough about me ... let's
talk about life insurance!"

(]) (I) ill • (I) ® •
(jJ Ne(I)HotPotata '
(I) Andy Grifllth
())
Audubon
Wllcllfo

6 :00 •

'
1973 Argosy 26' air cond~,
awning. good cond.; rtleept

I-

1}fljl~ fi)'it ~THAT SCRAM9LED WORD CIAME
~ \!:II ~~·
by Honrl Arnold and Bob Loo
fot.wordnory-

EVENING

Uqi.tidation S•le. July 27th",

0 . Coll614-245-5121.

7-,u

7/23/85

3648.

aloepa 6. Coli 614· 367·
7139 or 614-367-76&amp;&amp;.

Claude Wintera. Rio Grande.

miles above New Haven, Rt.
33. Call 304·882·2466.

UNCLE SAM
NOW!

3&amp; ft . Bon1nZ1 travel trailer,
utra nice. Call 814· 446'-

aionel ~11-breed ,grooming.
Indoor-outdoor bo•rdlng fa-

Block. brick. sewer pipea,
windowt , lintel•. etc .

3 bedroom . furnished . AC . 1

child. no pets. l:ar9a lot. 4

Coli 614-992-9903 or 614 ·
992- 5949.

Brierpafch Kehnela Profet·

67

Building Materials

Television
Viewing
.
'

'tQU TRAI'TCRS N?.E
GOINIS 10 ANSWER 10

&lt;(46-2109.

AKC Reg. Garman She·
phard pupa, "'m•l• •so
uch. Coli 61 4·448· 0373.

Coli 614-446 ·0508.

Mobile home for rent. 2
bedroom on nicelpt. 3 room
efficiency apt. Utilities paid.

AKC
Stud
7796.

Pool People Special ;
niel puppiae. CeU 614·388Polaris auto pool vac;:cuum . 9790.

· .1125. M iddleport 61 4-9$2·
6 724.,. GoIIipolio 814-4463061.

PUT 'EM UP!

Fully self contained truck
camper. sleepl 6, renge,
oVen. 11.. • electric. 110
volt or 12 volt furnace, eKe.
cond., mutt tell . Call 61•-

cilttlet. Englieh Cocker Sp--

Co11614-446 -3697 or 614246-5223 .

Homes
Campers

The

Ohio

DICK TRACY

®by Lllrry Wright
'

Knauff Firewood Summer
2 bdr: furnished , ell utilites

Tuesday, July 23, 1985

R &amp;. M Furniture Manufacturing. St. Rt . 7, Crowr-

Dl D 'IOU MAKE
ANY MONEY?

JUST ENOUGH TO
PAY FOR T~E
POISON OAK SHOTS!

11

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACJIOSS

8 Beyond

1 Great
female

4 Minus

salvation
~

clown
5 Asoenible
9 African

6 omclated
7 Food
floh
8 Undertake

plant
lOHurts ·
12 Soap-frame
bar
13 Dormant
15 Plans
a weddinli
17 Incarnadine
18 Sweet roll
19 Booed
23 Gannent
U - Pork,
Colo.
25 Fry a bit

II Loca1.e
14 Nucleus
16 - bien
19 Doctored
20 Of
Muslims

21 Pool
office

devices
22 Gel Ule

ragged
28Thrash
29- Vereen
SO N.Y.
36 Shed flab

37 Per.iian
poet
38 Greek
.isl011d
39 Cut of
beef
40 Satisfy
41 Poker term
DOWN
1 Raimondi
or Siepl,
e.g.
2Toward
shelter
DAILY CRYPTOQUIJTE')- Here's how 1o work it:
AXYDLBAAXR

Is LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In thi s sample A is used ·
for the three L's , X for the two O's, etc. Single letlers,
apostrophea the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letlers are different.
CJ.YPTOQUOTE

(I) Bill Cosby Show
.
()) Uvlng Double LlvH

MZB

m • m ()!I a

Host Colleen ·Oewhurst explores the hopes, fears and
uri'cenainty of life in the nuclear age.
(jj) On the Money
lanny HHI Show
(HIOI MOVIE: 'Circlo of

Iron'

3&amp; Irish river

27 Make

H V KJ I

m

31 Willow
genus
comics, e.g. 32 Indian
25 WiUlout (Fr.) weight
27 Touchdown 33 Egyptian
29 K.C. Royals'
deity
hitting
34 Possum
star

SMNQZYE

(jJNewt~

Yeeterdoy'o Answer
23 Felix
of the

28 Wings
(Lot.)

eiNNNews
(I)

:oo •

Like some
potatoes

Too Soon.' The complications that arise from infants
being born prematurely are
discussed.

e

City, Oh . Coli 614-2561470, coli Eve. 614-446·
3438 . Old &amp; now

~Hc.W"rr

7·23

XQ

KH

KX

JMZZQA

SNMPZYE
HVKZ

ARNHQZ

AN M H 11 Y .p E

DY

U.

KX

SY

XQ

HI'RY

ANMHHYPE
N K I Y

K 11 . -

XVYYZ

Y-rdaJ'a CeytoqDOte: BEAUTY IS NOT IMMORTAL. IN A DAY BLOSSOM AND JUNE AND RAI'I'URE
PASS AWAY.- AJmWR STRINGER

Upho1terad.

r

I

�Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 23. 1986

Local briefs:--.

.er
.... . festivaL••

rlt.
:.

.

'

.::'

Porter arraigned in Meigs Court

. ;

Thomas C. Porter, 45, of Middleport, was arraigned Tuesday
morning In Meigs County Common Pleas Court on a grand ju ry .
Indictment for aggravated assault. The charge stems. from the
alleged stabbing of Matthew Dillard on July 3 outside a Middleport
bar.
Appearing before Meigs County Common Pleas Judge Charles
Knight, Porter was represented by Attorney Jennifer Sheets.
A tri(i) dateof0ct . l6, 9:30a.in .. was set bythe judgeandPorterwas ·
released on a $5(XXJ recognizance bond.
Tracy Franklin Hysell; 21, Syracuse, In custody In Meigs County on
a charge of murder stemming from the death of a Rutland area man,
Douglas A. Rosembaum, wUI be arraigned 11 a.m. Wednesday before
Judge Knight.

.
'

'

~ ..
.

NATIONAL WINNER - Joe Seymour, Middleport, reoolved a 19115
Ford 4-wheel drive truck after being named a winner In a national
contest by Corvalr stores In the area. Manager Bill KeUy,lelt, presents
Seymour keys to the new vehicle.

...

Joseph C. Taylor, 40, of Long Bottom, appeared Monday afternoon
In MeigS County Court before Judge Patrick O'Brien on a murder
charge in connection with the Sunday evening shooting death of hls 35
year-old w ~e. Mar ilyn Kay Timmons Taylor.
.
Judge O'Brien set bond for Taylor at $100,!XXJ and appointed
Attorney Karl'fl Story to se1ve as counsel for the defendant
A preli minary hearing in county court was set for 2 p ,m .
Wednesday, July 31. Taylor remains In custody at the Meigs County
.Jail af t his lime.

TRI-sTATE CONTEST WINNER - Rus!!CD Wheeler, right, IU. I,
MI. 'Alto, W. Va., was presented a Valvollne mini car by Corvalr's
manager Bill KeUy Monday. AU Corvalr stores In the tri-state area
participated In a contest concluded recently.

President Reagan confers with Chinese leader

By HELEN THOMAS
Later, the two leaders will meet In
Reagan wUI skJp some of the social and Reagan Is expe:ted to approve
UPI White House Reporter
the Blue Room for talks on a rangeof
formalities, such as lhe receiving it '
WASHINGTON iUPI) - Presi- issues, including the easing of
An administration official lndl·
line, but aides say heJs up to hosting
dent Reagan makes his first official tensions between China and the
the dinner and making a loast.
cated tha i a major obslacle a pparpublic appearance today since his &amp;!viet Union.
On the eve of Li' s White House ently has been overcome: The need
cancer surgery In welcoming ChiReagan also was expected to
to persuade U.S. officials that China
nese President Li Xiannian iii a discuss with Ll pending U.S.-Slno reception, Reagan announced he would abide by U.S. law and not
will nominate Winston Lord, presiceremony pared down to accommo- · nuclear cooperation agreeJI!ent,
Heavy SI1)0ke and water damage destroyed the two-story frame
dent
of the prestigious Council on supply other countries with nuclear
date Reagan's recovery.
which is expected to he naUed down
home of Inez Spurlock, Tuppers Plains, when fire struck the dwelling
. Foreign Relations, to succeed explosives .
Deferring to his convalescence, shortly.
la te Monday morning. The Orange Township Volunteer Fire
veteran diplomat Arthur Hummel
Reagan, 74, will sit iii stead of stand
Reagan met Li on his visit to
Department was called to the scene at 11: 30 a.m.
as
ambassador to Peking.
with Li, 76, during the red-carpet Peking a year ago and they will he
.
According to Roger Wilford, Orange Towru;hp fire chief, the origin
Reagan
took it easy Monday, two
reception
on
the
South
Lawn
of
the
resuming
their
acquaintance
In
the
of the fire was of an electical nature and began In the attic where
days after returning to lhe White
White House.
talks and a state dinner tonlghl.
burning insulation caused extensive smoke damage to theupperfloor.
House after a week In Bethesda
The lower (loor was damaged by water. Anestimateoftotallosses was
Naval Hospital where he underwent
not avai lable.
•
Intestinal surgery 'July 13 to remove
Hospital
news
Family members were out oft he home by the time firemen arrived
NEW LEXINGTON iUPII a cancerous tumor.
Holzer discharges
Mrs. James Lambert and daughter,
Wilford said.
Aboul 100 miners a t the Sunny Hill
He relaxed in the fa mily qua rters,
July 22
Grace Monroe, Mary Neff, Terry conferred for about 50 minutes with
The CooivUie Volunteer Fire Depa11ment was called lo assist.
Min e failed 10 reporl · to work
Henry Anthony, Mrs. Dona ld Roberts. Bull Scott Sr., Jay Sharp, Vice President George Bush and
Monday 10 protest changes In job
Barnett Jr., and son, Donald Joy Sharp, Jessie Waugh, Drusie other advisers and had a haircut.
assignment s at the Peabody Coal
Bloomer, Dorothy Brandum, Mrs. White, Mrs. Donald Wothe Jr., and
Co.-owned facility, a United Mine
"The president's on the mend,"
Charles Chapman and daughter, daughter.
Workers union offici!! said.
\\'hite House spokesman Lany
A Rt . 3, Albany teenager was cited by the Gallia-Melgs post of the
Evelyn. Copenhaver, Patricia Elli·
Birth
Herb Stallard, UMW Local 1340
Speakes said. "Things are going
Slate Hig hway Patrol following a two-car accident Monday evening
Mr. and Mrs . Stefan Sturgill, son, headlong toward normalcy here."
ott
,
Betty
Friend
,
Virginia
Grover,
official,
said miners scheduled for
on Meigs County l.
Nathan Holler, Joann Johnston, Jackson.
the
flrsl
shifl ln the mine's Nine
Much attention has been focused
Troopers said a car drive n by Dennis R Carman, 35, of Rt. 4,
North
seclion
took the day off, but all
on the nuclear pact between thP
Pomeroy,was northbound on 1, when a car, operated by 17-year-old
workers
reported
as usual for the
_co_nt_In_ued_tr_o_m..:..pa..:.ge_l_-'-- United States and China. Under its
Pamela Wessels, allegeclly pulled from a private drive and struck
second
shift.
terms, American firm' could bid to
Carman' s·vehlcle in the right side.
He sa id the mi.ners were upset
provide
peaceful nuclear power
No injuries were report.ed In the 9 p.m. accident, which troopers
Mayor Hoffman should proceed to eilminaled but council took no
aboul
the job r ea lignment the
equipment
including
radioactive
sai(l caused light damage to both vehicles. Wessels was charged by
have that done if cosls are nol too jlct1on.
company
announced after calllng18
materialsto
China.
the patrol with failure to yield.
Councilman Bob Gtimore rehigh.
fu
r
loughed
miners ba ck lo work las I
The National Security Council is
Council voted to name the Centra l ported that the block party held by
Friday.
the Chamber of Commerce will revlewilig Ihe proposed agreement,
T,------Ar-:-----":"--~:----.----..... Trust Co. as lhe official depository
Include aclivlties over
actually
for Inactive a nd active funds for the
several
days
this year starting wilh
nexl two years effective Aug. 23.
golf
tournament
on Sept. 5; a teen
a
contlnuedfrompagel
Mayor Hoffman read a letter
_r,
... - - - - - - - grandchildren;
and
several
nieces
John Evans
from the 'Ohio Department of Liquor dance on Friday night ; the block
and nephews.
party on Saturoay from noon to 7
Contrj!llndicating thai a il permits to
$55,(lX) 10 ODOT and $9,92.3.00 lo the ties to gel clariflcallon on the
He was preceded In death by a sell intoxicating- beverages must be
p.m., and a picnic al Diles Park on
John A. Evans, of Rt.l,Cheshirc,
engineers. leaving the village with mail ers.
daughler, Beverly Sue Parks; a
Sunday. lt was brought out that the
died Tuesday morning at Holzer
renewed by Oct 1 and that lhe
$12,076.40 of the $77,00 grant .
Council ended Monday in regrandson, Ryan Null; 2 brothers,
police will arrest bar owners who
Medical Center In Gallipolis.
village has until Aug. 31 lo make
Council is a lso concerned that the cessed session. If an immedlate
Paul Null and Randall Null .
serve carry out drJnks to customers
Among the suJVivors are his wife,
objections to any ~Tnewal. No
slippage may worsen through the decision Is needed , the gi'Oup will ·
Services will he3p .m. Wednesday objections to renewal s were voiced during lhe block party and tha t
E lizabeth. Arrangements wUI be
winter and end up costing even reconvene. If the lmmediale need of
at the Whit e Funeral Home, last nlght.
drln king will not be ~rmitt'i'(l on the
announced later by Raw ling-Coats·
more.
.
the $30,00 is proven, council may
Coolville, with Ihe Rev . Joe EmerBlower Funeral Home .
II was repor1ed thai Cenlral Tru st streets since that would he an open
"'I don't mind pull,lng Ihe project consider borrowi.ng pa11 of the
ick and the Rev. Seldon Johnson
has dona led $3631o provide anolher fl ask offense. Gilmorewasnamed to
off until spring as long as we still get funds .
will
be
In
the
o!ficialing.
Burial
light for lhetenniscou rtsal the park. cont acl Meigs Juvenile Officer Carl
Marilyn Taylor
the funds and don 't jeopardize other . Present ,ln addition to the mayor,
Torch Cemelery. Friends may call
Hysell on working towards the
A tolal of eighllights at Ihat cost will
planned projects," said Anderson . Walton, Anderson and Baronick,
al the funeral home ali day Tuesday
eslablishrnenl of a crime watch
Marilyn Kay Taylor, 35, of Long
he needed for thecour1 sandseverai
"But ~we can't hold the money over were Co~ncilmembers BUl Young,
and unlil Ihe time of Ihe seJVIce on
organization ln Ihe town.
busin esSE'S ha ve a l ready
Bottom, died Su nday at Veterans
until spring then we ~tler givelhem Bruce Reed. Heniy Werry and
Wednesday.
Councilman Jack Satterfield
contributed.
Memorial Hospita L
the $30.(lX)," said Cou ncilmPmtrcr I ;ury Wehi'Ung and Pomeroy
A homemaker , Mrs. Taylor was
Ma yor Hoilman repo1ied that the broughl up the need for improveBetty Baronick.
Sol icier Jenntler Sh eets.
born February 17, 1950 al East Thomas Edwards
genera l fund balance and the meni s at the sites of fires a l the Cily ·
Anderson was au Ihorizcd by the
Umils and a property on Pear l St. It
receipts for the year are down this
LlvellJOOI, Ohio. Shew as adaughler
Thomas E dwards, 79, of 604
was agreed t ocontact SoiicitorStmy
group tomorning
make to
telephone
ca ll s 1
~iii~~~~~~~ilqi
of Edward Jackson Timmons and
year compared lo lasl year. Council
Tuesday
staiP author!Harmon Rd .. Oak Hill . died at
the Ia te Mary Louise Tim~ons.
agreed to ha veA ttorneySieveStory for Information on action Ihat can he
taken If these iocallons are not
In addillon to her fa ther she is Holzer Medic al Center Sunday. He
prepa rt~ an ordina nce in regard to
cleaned
up. AI the requesl of Police
survived by five childrl'!l, Joseph, was a relired coal miner.
dogs not being per m itted in certa in
SuJVivlng
are
three
sons.
Jack
Chief
Sid
Little, it was agreed to
areas of the , town . An ordinance
Jason, Jerem y, Mary and Sarah;
EdWards
of
Maryland.
Charles
have
some
center lines done on
two brothers, Terry Timmons , of
changilig North Second fmm B-2 to
Coni lnued from pa~e 1
Edwards of Virginia and William
various
streets
In the near future
B-1, local businesses, was given a
Portland, and Samuel Timmons, of
Edwards of Racine; five da ughters,
since December, the prices of beef
with Mayor Hoffman to arrange
third reading and was adopled.
Easl Liverpool; four sisters. a twin,
LuCille Young of Columbus, Donna
and pork alone wen I down in June.
Carolyn Mae Taylor, of Long
Council agreed lo look lnlo the wilh a company 10 do the work.
Higgins of Kentucky, Coieen VanPrices of fruits and vegetables
Botlom ; Jacquline (Jacki e)
purchase of cquipment which will Others attending the meetin-g were
Meter
of
Pomeroy,
Betty
Pugh
of
also
declined for the lou rth st raighl
Rhodes, Susan Lunsford , and Kathy
measure noise levels made by Councilmen Dewey Horton and
Racine,
Ruth
Parker
of
California;
monlh
and produce now cost less
William Walters and Clerk·
Ewing, all of Akron; a nd several
motor veh ic les inch,1ding motorcYone sisier, Susie Edwards of
than il did a l the beginning of the
nieces, nephf'\\.'5, uunt sand uncl es.
cles and to look into an ordinance Treasumr Jon Buck.
Pome roy ; 23 grandchildren and 24
year.
Funeral services wlU be 11 a.m .
providing fines of owners of vehicles
great grandchildren.
TOM HANK S is
Dairy products got 0.2 percenl
Thursday a t the Reorganized
crea ting noise over a certain level. Switch meeting date
will
he
Wednesday
a
t
Services
cheaper.
"[HEMANWITH
Church of J esus Christ ofLatterDay
Cou nci l accepted recod ified
iii Oak
Kuhner
Lewis
Funeral
Home
prices
went
up
0.3
C!olhing
The
regular
Augustmeetlngofthe
Saints with Law rent'PGiuesencamp
ordinancC's.
Ot!IRED SHOE
Hili with R ev. Danny Boggs
percenl after faliing OJ percent In
a nd Bill Rou sh both officialing.
II was agreed 10 borrow, if Meigs Band Boosters has been
lfthl! ~hoe foh ... ,
officlallng. Burial will be In Hili
May.
bewore ,,1
PQ ..U.
Buria l will he in Ba ld Knob
possible, from within vill age funds changed to July 29 al 7:00p.m . All
Cem
etery,
Thurman.
Friends
may
·
band
parents
are
urged
to
attend.
Entertalflment
costs
went
up
0.5
$.'i,!XXI for the operation' of I he new
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
Plans for the fair booth and other
percent and a miscellaneous cateRawlings-Coals -Blower Funera l call from 7 to 9 p.m..Tuesday at the
taxi cab service which starts on July
funeral home.
plans
for
I
he
year
will~
discussed.
gory
of goods and services also went
Home from 4 Ia 9 p.m. Wednesday.
29wilh Middleporl Villageadmlnis·
one-half
of a percenl.
up
terlng the pmgram . The village will
With the s lrength of the dolla•· on
be nrmbursed for the amount. The
Robert C. Null
foreign exchange market s waning
money will be borrowed from a bank Free 1·lothing day
slightly, many analysis are consld·
if such a h·ansfer wit hin v illage
Ro~rt C. Null, 52, 201 Blennererlng
lhe consequences if the trend
funds
iS
not
possible.
Thecabservice
Free clolhlng day at the Salva tion
Mosliy sunny today, with highs in
hassel Aw .. 13elprc, died Saturday
continues
- higher prices for
in
Pomeroy
and
Middlcporl
is
to
be
Am\y, Buttrernul Ave., Pomeroy,
al Camde n-Clark Hospll al In Par- lhe low 80s. Clear tonight , with a low
shopper~ as imports
America
n
operated with federal and Slate will he held Thursday from 10 a.m.
in the low OOs. Sunny Wednesdav
kersburg. W.Va. afler an extended
becOme
tess
of a bargain.
funds. It was informally agreed tha t unlil noon . AUarea rsidenls ln need
·'
with highs In the mid 80s.
Illness.
Bul
that
point
is apparently stili a
Ihe lwo cabs of Ihe Blue Streak Cab of clothing are welcome to com e.
'!be probabilily of precipitation is
Born at Torch, he was a son of the
off,
even
with the dollar
long
way
Co. can be parked on Mill St.
ncar zero through Wednesda y.
Luther a nd Virginia Webb Nu ll.
conlinuilig lo ease.
Winds will be from the northeasl
Council man Allen Lee Klng
Mr. Nuil was a former employee
"We are not expecting any (dollar
five to L'J mph today and llghl and
at
suggested Ihal the county commis· Tour reminder
of Penn Mel a! Co., Vienna, W.Va.,
effect) unleos the dollar ·goes
sloners be contacted about the poor
and was a se lf-employed carpent er · caslerly tonight.
considerable tower," sa id Georgia
OhloExtendedForecasi-Thursconditions at the Hobson railroad
and designer with Belpre Barns. He
The Meigs Soil and Water Sta le University economist Donald
crossilig and he commended Litter Conservation Dlstricl and the Meigs
was a U.S. Army Veleran having day through Salurtlay : Fair Thu rsRalaj czak.
Control Director Bernard Gilkey for County Extension Service are
served in the Korean Con nie! w ith day, with a chance of showers and
work being done·on tho river Qank. sponsoring a twUighl da iry tour al
Company C of the 1092 Combat' lhunderslorms Friday a nd Sa turHighs
will
be
In
the
80s
each
day.
He
suggested Middleport Village the Nease family farm on Tuesday
Baltalion' s engineering division. He
wilh
overnlghl
lows
ranging
day,
become
an agent for the Ohio Lotto at 7:30p.m . The farm is located on
a lso seJVed 12 years with the Wesl
from
the
mid
60s
to
I
he
low
70s.
program
and 't:ouncii will look ilito Forest Run Road (County Rd. :ll) at
VIrginia Naliona l G uard and a t·
that. He also suggested tha t left Nease Settleme nl in Sutlon
!ended Torch Methodis t Church.
turns iii the bus iliess &lt;)lslrict be , Township.
In addition 10 his parents he is
survived by hi' w~e Velma Leeson
NuU. at home; 3 sons. Robert D.
Null. Denver City, Tx.; J oseph M.
Lottery winners
Null, Belpre; David C. Null. Fori
Lewis, Was h.: 5 brothers, Kenneth
CLE~LAND (UP!)
Monand William Null. Belpre; John
day's winning Ohio Lotlery
Null, Coolvillle; VIrgil Null, Aurora,
numbers : Daily Number
Served with
IlL , Stephen Null , Parkersburg,
115.
Mashed Potatoes,
W.Va.; 8 sisters, Louise Mason,
Ticket sales tolaled SUE0,185,
Choice of Salad, Roll &amp; Drink
Belpre; Lynda DC(&gt;Ier. Tulsa,
with a payoff dueof$654 ,61l8. P TCK-4
Okla. ; Marlha Penske, Sylvan ia ,
~li·--~~~--~~----. . . . . . . . . . . .; ;. . . . . . ..
111
Ohio; Carol Strong, Torch; Alice
PICK-4 'ticket sales totaled
Jean Wheeler, Belpre; l&lt;alhy Male,
$160,740.withapayoffdueof$72,397.
Little Hocking; Theresa Null,
PICK4$1stralght het pays$5,100.
PH. 992-5432
Pomeroy, OH.
Torch; Marjorie Cain, Belpre; 7
PICK-4$1 box bel pays$215.

Tuppers Plains home destroyed

•

Voi.36.No.70
Copyri hted 1985

at y

•

PfiTSBURGH (UP! I -Andrew
"Lefty" Palm, director of United
Steelworkers District 15, said tooay
union members were contacting a
num~ of Insurance companjes In
an effort to line up coverage for 8,200
striking employees of the WheelingPittsburgh Steel Corp, In Pennsy Iva·
nla, West Virginia and Ohio.
"We're contacting all three states
and the Insurance companies to find
out about any grace period that
might he Involved In the poUcy and
what conversion plans might be
available," Palm said.
The company notified the union
. that it had terminated all major
medical, sickness and accident , Ute
and accidental death and dismemberment Insurance for the strikers
and laid-off union employees when
they walked out at 12:01 a.m .
Sunday.
·
Picket lines were up a t nlneplants
In Pennsylvania, Ohio and West

Property deal. ..

I

llomeroy

Consumer...

L?~r~Y. !!}~~~o~~U

.

I

Ohio weather

I

$3 3 S

CRQW'S f AMIL Y REST AU
· RANT

•

SAVE ON SUMMER CLOTHES
FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY

ELBERFELDS
'

2 Sectionl .. 14 Pages 2~ C•nts
A Multimedia Inc. New1paper

usw ·seeks
insurance for
steel workers

Patrol cites driver after wreck

ea deaths

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio; Wednesday, July 24. 1985

100 Ohio miners
protest assignments

I

..4

Girls in state••

enttne

a

I

.....

By the Bend ...... Pages G. 7, 8

Claullleds .... PagelllO, 11, 12
Camlc&amp;-TV ............. Page 13
Dealhll .................... PageS
Edllcrial ........... ...... Page 2
Sports ................. Pages 3, t

e·

Taylor's bond set in county court

Victory Circle•••

Inside today:

ADDRESSES PROBLEMS- Paul Kamora, right, who has served
lor 40-years at the Wheellng-Piltsburgh Steel Plant, addresses some of
his problems to Emle Reppert, president of Local 1229 of United

Sleelworkers In Monassen, Pa. Tuesday. The Wheellllg·Piltsburgh
Sleel Corp. cut out aU the employees' Insurance heneftts. W·P
employees went out on strike J.uiY 21; (UPI): '

Tayl~r

found competent, will
stand trial on murder charge

Lindsay Taylor has been found
competent by Meigs County Com·
mon Pleas Judge Charles Knight to
stand trial for aggravated murder in
connection with the October, 1983
shotgun slaying of Danny Wayne
Melton at a trailer In Forest Run.
. Judge Knight's decision was
based on expert testimony given·by
Dr. DanielL. Davis, PhD, during a
Wednesday morning competency
hearing in Meigs County.
Davis is a psychologist with lhe
Timothy B. Moritz Regional Forensic Unit In Columbus where
Taylor, since April 17, has been
undergoing competency restoration
treatment und er Davis'
supeJVIsion.
Taylor was found Incompetent 10
stand trial for the aggravated
murder charge during an earlier .
bearing before Judge Knight In
mid-April.
While hospitailzed a t the high
secmily Moritz Unit, Tay!qr received competency training
classes, Individualized counseling
and was Instructed in elementary
legal terms Davis said. He also took

part in mock trial proceedings and
according to Davis is now "able to
Identify the charges before him,
work with his attorney and describe
courtroom functions ."
Davis told the court that 9
treatment team had met weekly to
discuss and document Taylor's
progress while at the facility.
He also told the court he believed
Taylor could understand more
complex legal terms, such as plea
bargaining, If Ihe procedure were
laid out iii simple, specific terms.
Davis said Taylor's Intellectual
skills are very low In comparison to
th&lt;' general public and his socialization skiDs are "not of the average
adull male" and"marglnalatbest."
When Tay lor was first admitted to
the Moritz Unit he was "incompetent due to his lack of appreciation
for the seriousness of the charge"
before him and his "lack of ability to
work with an attorney," said Davis.
He a lso sta ted that Taylor's severe
dependl'fJCy on hls mother did
sometimes lnt.erfere with his functioning and concentra lion span.

A final discovery date In the case
was set by the judge for Aug. ~­
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney
Rick Crow will be taking a
deposition from Taylor's mother
prior to thattlme.
The court granted a motion from
Attorney Steven Story to separate
from the murder charge a five-year
old felonius assault charge pending
against Taylor. Taylor will be tried
on the felonlus assault charge on
Oct.21.
Taylor will be tried on Nov . 4 for
the aggravated muroer charge and
a charge of possession of a weapon
while under a dtsabllity. However,
Story said following the hearing that
a motion is also pending before the
court to dismiss the weapon charge.
Taylor Is being represented by
Story and Gallipolis Attorney Ron
Cox.
Taylor was returned to the
custody of Meigs County sheriff
Howard Frank.
Taylor is being represented by
Story and Gallipolis Attorney Don
Cox.

OPEC ministers consider
price cuts,, seek credibility
By JOliN A. CALLCOTT
United Press Inlemallonal
GENEVA. Switzerland iUPI) - OPEC oil
ministers, seeking to restore some ciedlbillty to lhe
13-member cartel, entered a third day of meetings
today on proposals lo realign prices, prevent
discounting and enforce production quotas.
Bul oil industry analysts said it Is unlikely any
major decisions would be reached at the latest OPEC
conference - the sixth In 12 months. The meetings
began Monday.
They said the Organlza lion of Petrol~um Exporting
Countries has very f&lt;W options and basically can do
little to agailJ control or Influence markets as It did In
the 1970s - when OPEC production cuts sent gas
prices soaring and had cars queued up tn long Unes at
gas Slaticins across the United States.
Saudi Arabian oil· 'minister Sheik Ahmed Zakt
Yamanl Tuesday predicted compromise on a
realignment of differentials - the range of official
prices for different grades of crude oil.
Conference sources said Yamani wanted the
current $3 spread Increased to $5, with the price of
heavy crude golng down . .
OPEC prices at present range from $26.50 a barrel
for heavy crude to$29.50 a barrel for top-quality extra
light oil.

'

Despite hts proclaimed optimism about a com·
promise. Yamanl faced bitter opposition on price
modifications from light -oil ·producers such as
Algeria, Libya, Nigeria, Qatar and United Arab
Emirales, who fear a cut In the price of the heavy
crude would make their more expensive light oil less
a ttracl ive to C'ustotners.
·
Saudi Arabia, backed l)y other heavy-crude
producers such as Kuwait and Venezuela, argues !hat
prlce cuts would lead to greater demand.
If that happened, OPEC theoretically may one day
be a,le to regain Influence by threatrolng to again
reduce output unless customers pay higher prices.
Free market prices are $1 to $2 a barrel lower than
the official OPEC prices. Most OPEC members are
offering under-the-counter discounts and violating
production limits to compete In the present buyer's
market .
OPEC currently has only 3l percent of the
non-communist market compared tom percent In Its
heyday.
Members trled but , failed to reduce production
ceilings In a move to bois~ prices. Discussion of new
production quotas has ,been deferred until yet another
conference sometime In the fall, possibly September.

PUCO approves
GTE rate hike
COLUMBUS l UP!)- The Public
, UtDitles Commission of Ohio has·
granted General Telephone Co. of
Ohio a $13.4 million rate hike rcquest
but also ordered the company to

•

undergo a

m anagement

audit

because of seJVice problems.
In granting the rate request
Tuesday, commissioners said they
had ·serious reserva tions about the
quality of seJVice provided byGfE.
They said they expect lhe audit to
make

NEW EMPLOYEE
Ned
Dooley,Soil Conservathml..t with
the USDA Soil eo.-rvaUon
Service, has been stationed at the
Pomeroy office working wllllthe
Meigs SoU and Water Conserva·
lion District. Ned Is a 1911.'1
graduate of Ohio State University maJoring In Natural Re&gt;ources Development. He Is originally from BrecksvDle, Ohio,
near Cleveland. Ned wru be with
the Pomeroy ollloo lor approx~
mately two years.

Virginia Tuesday, but no trouble
was reported at any of the mills.
Patm criticized the company for
its act ion, saying health benefits had
been continued during previous
labor disputes .
"This Is typical tof Wheeling·
Pittsburgh)," he .s aid. "In the past,
we a lways-worked this out as men
but, In this case, I guess we're no~
dealing with men ."
The walkout is the first USW
strike against a major steel producer since 1959. Some 14,(lX) USW
members took part iii a four-month
stlike in 19'78, but that walkout
Involved mining operations in
Mlnnesot a and Michigan.
The work stoppage occurred aftl'r
the union rejected a company offer
of a $17.50 an hour wage and benefit
package.
·
The offer was made July 17 a few
hours alter a federal bankruptcy
Contiliued on page 8

suggestions on

how

to

improve seJV ice to 561,(lX) GTE
customers In 80o!Ohio"s88counties.
A spokesman for GTE, which
requested a $58milllon rate ilicrease
last September, sa id lhe company
has calculated that the $13 million
ra te hike may increase the average
customer's bill by aboul 00 cents a
month .
"Wewere disappointed with the
total amount the PUCO granted,"
said GTE spokesman Don Del.
weller. "We felt we could justify a
higher amount ."
·Detweiler also said the company
would welcome an audit .
"This has happened before to
soin.eotherutlllties," he said. "It can
he an. l'flilghtenlng experience for
the PUCO to see how a telephone

company is run, especially one like
ours that encompasses a large
segment d rural Ohio."
Ohio Consumers' Counsel WOllam Spratley hailed the PUCO
ruling as a major vlclory because of
the unusual amounl d dirt'cl public
Input into Ihe case.
"This is the most pleasing case
I've been associated with In eight
years," said Spratley. "It feels like
we hit a grand slam. A great deal of
effort from the staff Wl'fll Into this.
We didn't even a sk for a management audit."
In a record 10 hearings held on the
case, more Ihan 200 people tesmied
they had pmblems as GfE customers, including having lheir telephone calls Interrupted In the
middle of a conversation or of
hearing backgi'Ound voices and
slatic on their lines. In other cases,
false rlngs were reported.
"We heard a lot of testimony and a
lot of it was justified," Detweiler
said. "It showed a need for some
Improvement ln our service and
we'm working on It. But I should
point out that the compliance
division of Ihe PUCO concluded that
we met or exceeded the minimum
standards of se1vlce."

Tobacco firms offered cuts
to .p revent future surpluses
'.

By SONJA IOLLGREN
UPI Fann Editor
WASIDNGTON iUPI) - Agrl·
culture Seqetary John Block Tuesday offered tobacco companies
price cuts and rebates to buy this
year's crop ·to · prevent pUing up
more surpluses that threaten the
tobacco program.
CongressiOnal sources said the
plan, which will go into effect
administratively Wednesday with
the opening of nue-cured tobacco
markets, would be a transition
between cun-ent policy and a
controversial pi'Oposal to offer
tobacco companies adlscounl to buy
surpluses left over from past crops.
A congressional stalf o!IIclal, who
asked not to be identified, said the
plan to give tobacco companies an immedia te dtscount Is necessary to
move the 1885 crop lnlo the market .
rather than place it under pricesupport loans.
"'This is what's necessary for
Helms' legislation to work," the
official said. Sen. Jesse Helms,
R·N.C., chainnan ·of the Senate
Agriculture Comrnlttee, and other
tobacco state senators have lntro-

duced legislation to seil exlsling lion can he passed to address the
tobacco surpluses to tobacco com· burley tobacco situation before the
panies at a generous dtscount in burley market opens In November.
exchange fort heir help In paying the
A source said flup.cured tobaeco
cost of the tobacco price support producers,. ..,ho will he as&amp;'Rsed 2'\
program financed ·by fanne rs. cents a pound to finance price
However, if enacted, Helms's supports for this year's crop, would
measure would not cover the not immedi~tely feel the impact of
current crop.
the admlnislrative pian. But it
Congressiona l sources sa id the would prevonl a worsening of the
administration's new plan calls for situation, which could force them to
opening tobacco markets with a pay roore nex l yea r if supplies
price support of $1.55 per pound , mounted .
·
reduced' !rOm $1.699. with a l().ccnt
The Senate proposal has been
rebate from fees paid by tobacco criticized as a mass ive windfall for
growerstosupporttheprogramand tobacco companies, selling them
a !kent discretionary cut by the morethanS3billionworthoftobacco
agricu lture secretary that is a!- at about 10 cents on Ihe dollar.
lowed under current law .
Supporters of the new admlnlstraTo give tobacco companies an tlon plan said II would give lobacco
Incentive to buy more tobacco, they companl~ a chance lo show they
would receive another 15-cent can be partners In · solving the
rebate retroactively If together they tobacco program' s problems.
However, Rep . . Charles Rose.
bought 715 rniUion pounds of
tobacco. The company.· purchases D·N.C., opposes the Helms plan.
would include t:ro million pounds saying il would cost the taxpayers
from warehouse markets and 125 about $1.2 bUIIon . Rose supports
· million pounds from a surplus pool earmarking 2 cents of the federal
that Is an Integral part of the price · excise tax on cigarettes to PaY for
the tobacco price support program.
support lunctlon.
Framers of the plan hope legtsla·
Continued on pageS

,.

•

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