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                  <text>Inside today:

ick Cavalli

WINTHROP®

By the Bend ............. Page 5
Classllleds ........ Pages 6, 7, 8
CornJ&lt;s.TV .............. Page 9
Deaths ...... ..... ......... Page 6
Editorials ................ Page 2
Sports ................. Pages 3, 4

SHE HATES ME AND

I THINK MRS. STENGLE'
HATES ME.

SHE' DOE5N'T E:-'v1=N
TRY TO HIDE IT.

. '·

Vol .34, No.46
Copyrighted 198-C

MR. MEN™and LITTLE MISS™
N..AJV\E ..

MR.FUNNY

Pl-EASE?
•

Partly cloudy tonight with a
chance of thunderstonns. Low
near 10. Southwesterly winds
cloudiness and scattered thunderstonns. High near 90. Chance
of rain 40 percent tonight and 50
percent Tuesday.

e

by Hargreaves and Sellers

~ omo- MeUssa Anne Bradley, 23, of Mansfield, was named
Miss Ohio 1985 Saturday in MansHeid. She was competing as Ml..s
Clayiand and was Hrst nmner-up in last year's pageant. She is 5-fooH,
weighs 113 pound!; and graduated this year from Ashland CoUege,

where she majored in poutlcal science and broadcasting. She will now

NO!

compete in the Miss America pageant in September. (AP Laserphoto)

AT THE
SOOAPOP

POINT PLEASANT - Agreement In princ iple has been reached
for the purchase of the M ason
County Bank of New Haven and
M ason by The Peoples Bank of Point
Pleasant , it was announced today.
The transaction is subject to the
approval of shareholders of each
bank.
M ason County Bank President
Rlcha~d Ord and The Prop\es Bank
of Point P leasant Presidenl Vitus
H artley. Jr .. while jointly announcing the agreemenl. emphasized the
benefits to be derived by present and
potential customers of the facilities.
"Combined. we will have assets in
excess of S-14 million , giving us the
capability to m eet th&lt;' borrowing
needs of practically all Mason

,_:_ 1984 Hargreaves and Seller-.
D•stnbuted by NEA Inc

PRINTEO IN CANAOA

By Cris Hamm
SIRE, !tfQfffl61fT SfA, IN
SEARCH OF TH£ GREilT
FISH... _ _____,

/l81)UT BEING JL......--.....-;
R!illfK!fAN.

IV!ANSFIELD. Ohio !AP I Politics is important to the new Miss
Ohio. but she says she would rather
rPport on politicians than ixo one
herself.
Melissa Anne Bradley . who
entered the pageant as Miss
Clayland. received a $6.00J scholarship for winning thf' title Saturday
night and will represent Ohio in the
Miss America pageant at Atlantic
City, N ,J. , in SeptPmber.
Miss Bradley. 2.1. graduated
magna cum laude from Ashla nd
College earlier thi s month aft er
pursuing twin majors of polit ica l
science and television broadcasting.
She has hosted her own program
on the college's cable telev ision
station. She also has been hlred b~ a
Cleveland televlsion station hut

won't be able to begin work as a
reporter until after her year's reign
as Miss Ohio.
ShP said she decid&lt;&gt;d agai nst a
career in politics because "Att itudes toward politicians are formulated by the media. I decided I
wanted to ixo where the power is.
That' s why l havedecidl'd to pursUl'
a career in tei Pv i s ion
broa dcasting."
Miss Bradley was a champion
sw immer at age 12 and won several
trophies and ribbons as a swimmer
and tennis player throughout her
teens.
" My P'lrents raised me to ixo an
achiever," she said.
ChOS&lt;'n first runner·up in the
climax of the three-day event a t the
Renaissance Theater was Cynthia

.•. WEEK AFTER WEEKI Wtm
NOTHING 10 DO BUr FISHAND FIX

County rrsident s an d businesses,''
Hart lev and Orrl commented.
Mason County Bank. established
in 1919. expanded ils Bend Area
opera tion in 1Y83 with the opening of
an a ttractive ne\v building in the
midd le of Mason. The main building
of M ason County Bank. in New
HavC'n, was constructed in 1965 and
Pxpanded in 197H.
Hartley said ThP Peop les Bank of
Point Pll'asanl . if the purchase
agr eement is r al ifil'll by shareholders and gowmment al rPgulatory agenc ies. will co ntinue to
opera te both the Mason and New
Havrn facilities.
Board memlJ&lt;&gt;rs of the M ason
Countv Bank, in addition toOrd, arC'

Don Foglesong. Cha irman: Lloyd
Roush, Michael Shaw. Howard
Burris, Jim Layne and Ray Weaver.
Randy VanMeter i s board
secrPtary.
D ir-pctors of The Peoplt'S Ba nk of
Point Pleasant are Hartley, Forrest
Clark. Chai1man of the Board : Jack
E. Fruth. Chairman of Ihe Executive Commitlee; DalP N1berl, Vice
President : Cecil Williams. Russell
B ibbee. Vaught Smith, Robert
Wingett , 1\. Dale Taylor. Paul
Somerville. Jr.. Babara J. Brown
Leac h, Aarom Boonsue, MD, and
John R. Felkf'r II. Don Swisher is
board sec rf'tary.
"Tlle boarrl of The Pcoplcs Bank
of Po int Pl easant gav~ much
considerat ion to th&lt;' effocls of taking

such a bold step." said Hartley.
"And cam e to thr conclusion it was
the natural ly progressivr artion to
take.
"Th£&gt; Ma son County Fl&lt;Jnk has
ahva ys been operated in .a proff'S·
sional and profitable manner and
the acquisition of it wouldprovc tobe
of benefit to all concerned ... Hartley
concluded.
The Peoples Bank uf Poin I
Pleasant was founded in 1965 and
was loca ted in I he building that now
houses Musgrave, Musgra,·e &amp;
Casey law firm in downtown Point
Pleasant until acqu iring it s presen t
Point Pleasant location in 1972.
II is proj£'cted it will take about six
to 12 months lo finatize the propos&lt;&gt;d
acquisition. Hartley sa id.

7HE

80~T. ..

AND FISH- FRJ&amp;o Fl~

BOllE() FISH~ FISH

STEW, FLAKED
F/511 CW
TOllST...

... t..EEKS AND WEEKS
OF WET SOCKS.

Both counts against Mrs. Plummer dealt with the employ ment of
her son. Jeffrey, for par1 ·1imc janitorial work that was "not
pertorrned." ThE' contracts questioned WE'll' alll&gt;gi!d ly written in
1979, while Jeffrey P lummer was paid $~ ..17121 on C&gt;4 vouchers issue-d
between January 1978 and February 19ffi.
M rs. P lummer, who was the tilR boan:J's e'ecutive director for 12
years prior to her dismrssal by the board last Septemlx-r, was the
subject of a state-appoint&lt;&gt;d review group panel's study of her
operation of t he board and it s r·elationship with the fotmer G-J -M
Community Menta l H ca llh Center.
The rl'port. in addition to wriltm charges preparr&lt;l by thl' board
las I Augus t , led to lhf&lt;'(' nights of hearings bv thP board in Sep tt•mtx•r
that resu lt ed in her firing.
Mrs. Plummer pl£&gt;aded not guilty tu both indictml'nts. Prior to
winning the change in Vf'nuc motion. s lw had f'arliC'r ~·titionc&gt;d
Judge Richard C. Roderick to step down from the• cas&lt;' .
Roderick refu sed, and tlw matter was left to CelebrcZLe, who
requ£&gt;sted Roderick to t&lt;'mOv(' himself from lhP cast.' lu rvmow anv
indicat ions of prejudice or'' lmproprif'ty.'' C(' lehn_rap latf'r assigned
Stilwell to the cas&lt;'.
Cain wa s not available for comment this m o rning .

Straub, 2.'i. of Westervi lll'. who was
Miss Will ard .
The othpr three finalis ts wC'rf'

Cat herina Gy£&gt;nes. 22. of Miamis
burg, who was Miss Miami ValJPy :
Aim('(' Felde1man. 21. of Crneinnati.
who was Miss Tol&lt;&gt;do ; and Suellm
Cochran, l9, of! Ieat h. who was Miss
Southwest Ohro.
The new Miss Ohio was rrowncd
by her predecessor. Pamela Rigas.
Miss Brad ley made a clean sw('('p
of the preli minary awards bv
winning swimsuit honors Frida:--:
night and the talent com pet ilion
Thursday night . She sang a modi£&gt;)'.
"Piece of Sky" and " Papa. Can You
Hear Me?" from the Barbra
Slreisa nd movie. "Yent l."
&amp;i ng selected as the sw im suit

winner was pa rt icularly grat ify ing
for M iss Bradlev, who missed
winning thr Miss Ohio pageant by:
one&gt; point las t ~ ·l'ar bE'c·a use some
judgf's gan' lwr lm~ · scorC's in the
swimsuit rotf'gory.
She spent most of thE' past vmr on
a gruC'Iing \..\·orkout sc hC'dul&lt;~ runn ing, a tt0nding two daily· Jazzf'r ciSP rl asSC&gt;s. jumping rop0 and
lifting wf'ights- to shape up what
s lw jokingly rf'fC'rrC'd 10 a ~ her
"t hunder thighs ..
Miss Bradll·~· i!-. :l- foot .+) and
wrighs 11:1 tXlu nds. Shf' wa s chosen
Miss t&gt;&lt;otional Tc'Cn ·i\.grr in 193)
Silf' i!-. 111f' sC'Cond Mis.-, Ohio from
:vtansficld in the pageant's :r:.vear
history. Mansfield' ' Lmda Ka v
Hatnnan won t he CTO\.\TI in 1957.

Peoples Bank of Point Pleasant purchases
Mason County Bank of New Haven and Mason

FACTORY.'

EVEK SINCe I WAS A lfTTLE
K/0, IVE 1/AD 7/IIS FIINTIISY

I Se(tion , 10 Page,
25 Cents
A Muhimed1a Inc . Newspaper

Ashland College graduate Miss Ohio

PHY51CI5T

SPEEDWALKER, PR V

enttne

LOGAN - The tlial of Maxine Plummer ended before It started
today when one of the charges against her was dismissed and
another was left up to the presiding judge's review.
Mrs. Plummer. former executive director of the Gallia-JacksonMelgs 64ll Mental Health Boa rd . was indicted by a Gallia Count y
grand jury in December 19R.1 for thdt in offic£&gt; and using her office to
influence a public contract.
Today was to be the first day of a projected week-long trial in
Hocking Coun~; Comm on Pleas Cour1. The tria l was to be held there
after Mrs. P lummer's defense attorney, Daniel M Hunt of
Columbus, won a motion for a change of venue fromGallia County in
May.
In an agreement reached by Ga llia County Prosecutor JOS('ph L.
Ca in and Hunt . the theft in office charge was dropped wi th the
agreement tha t Mrs. Plummer repay $6,500 of the more than S9,!XXJ
listed as taken in the first count . On the second count. Mrs. Plummer
pleaded no contest.
However, Judge James E . Stilwell. who was assigned to the case
by Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice Frank Celebreue. said he
would decide Wedn esday if the contracts mentioned in the count
w ere "public" contracts.

••-4
AT "THE
UN IVER'S'ITY?
•

at y

•

Dismiss one Plummer charge

•

REALLY~!
••

•

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio , Monday, June 18, 1984

ME FEEL 8ETTE:R.

OCCUPATION'?
•

wins three tilts ...Page 3

5-10 mph. Tuesday, variable

I q'UE:SS THAT W/¥.3
SUPP05E:D TO MAKE:

f THINK 5HE JLJ5T I&lt;.EFUSE6 TO
ACKNOWL.Wc;{E YOUR EXISTENCE.

I DON'T THINK MR5 .
5TEN6l'LE: HATE:5 YOLJ,
WINTHROP...

ohless health care...Page 2

Weather

NEXT TIME I HINE
A FflNTASY- II

5711Y Ol/fOF /T•.

Midwest hit hard by more tornadoes

.... ...

.

, _,,_.,., ,.

By JIM PENSIERO
Associated Press Wliter
Stonns pac king 70-mph winds
spun off more than a dozen
tornadoes and dumped uplo7inches
of rain on the soggy Midwest.
keeping l,!XXlpeople in Missouri out
of their homes today after injuring
four people in I owa and ripping the
roof off a Wisconsin chu rch.
Flash llood walches for low-lying
areas w ere in effect today across a
broad band of the na lion's midsection from Texas to WE'StE'rn New
York as scattered heavy rain
showers were rpported this morning, the National Weather Service
said.
Officials In Nebraska. Missouri,
Iowa, South Dakota, Wisconsin and
Kansas are waiting until the water

goes down from the wecklong
deluge before making formal damage estimates. But in Nebraska
alonealleast1,500 homes have been
damaged and more than 1 million
acres off arm land was flooded or too
w£&gt;1 to fa1m.

In northwe-s t MbsouJi, where a
week of heavy rain pushed th&lt;'
Missouri River ovpr its banks and
onto more than 70,!XXJ of prime
bottomland, a t least l ,llXl families
spent a third night in shelt ersorwi th
families and friends.
Atchison County Sheriff Jack
Millsap said he hoped some familiPs
would be able to return home laiPr
today. Bu t the continuing rains
made It doubtful.

"We have a town in Nebraska
report 7 inchf's of ra in in a half-hour
and we recpived a hmvy rainfall. so
it is still not cer1a in what we wil l do, ..
Millsap said.

Six tornadoes toucht'!l down
Sunday near the Nebraska tO\.\.·l l S of
Tekamah. West Point, E lgin. Elba.
Madison and Ceresco, bu I no
injuries w ere reported .

Harry Gordon of the Nationa l
Severe Storms Forecast Center in
Kansas City, Mo., said £&gt;arly toda y
that the storm systPm was expected
to pick up intensity after dawn.
"Normally these kinds of storms
die out after sunset," Gordon sa id
today. "But these just keepon going.
They keep on rumbling and drop·
ping rain."
In Madison, Neb., about 85 miles
noriheast of Omaha . aboui7lnches
of rain fell Sunday, flooding severa l
county roads bul forclngnoevacua·
tlons. pollee said.

There was widespread stfC('t
fiooding overnight tluu ughout west rrn Iowa. but no injulies or
evacuations were repo11ed.
In Wisconsin, where70-mph gusts
were r eported in M adison, the roof
off thl' Calvary Baptist Church near
Platteville was tom off only an hour
before dozens of worshippers were
arriving for a Sunday evening
serv ice.

"We will thank the Lord for its
timing," the Rev. Patrick Wilson
said.

Stick of dynamite found on 1-71 today
MARENGO. Ohio (AP) - A
hazardous materials crew from the
State Fire Marshal's office detonated a stick of dynamite Jourid
early today on southbound Inter·
state 71 in southern Morrow County.
There were no injuries, and no
damage resulted.
The Ohio Highway Patrol briefly
closed the interstate near the Ohio

Route 61 interchange while the
dynamite was exploded . The Highway Patrol called for a hazardous
materials unit after an officer noted
that the device contained t he word
''explosive."
Randy Chandler, a lieutenant
with the Marengo volunteer fire
deP'!rlment, said two m en sent by
the fire marshal's office determined

the dynamite was unstable and set It
off where they found It about 4 feet
from an emergency parking str ip of
· the highway.
"Som e passerby round It In the
road and threw It off to the side."
Chandler said. "We got the call at
7:43a.m . We don't know who the
passerby was, but he took h.ls ll!e in
his hands by doing t hat."
Chandler said the stick ofdynam -

ite, about 12-14 inches long, was
taped between and a I one end of two
metal rods, each about 4 feet long
and less than a half inch In diameter.
Chandler speculated the device
was rigged lobP lowered into a well.
The patrol recelv&lt;&gt;d a repor1 that
the device fell !rom a truck, but had
not dett&gt;rmlned the truck's
whereabouts.

___,_
SEVERAL OF TilE PARTIE5 involwd in til&lt;' pun:ha.'W of the Mason
C.ounty Bank of New Haven and Ma.'&lt;On lly the Peoples Bank of Point
Pleasant go over the agreement. From leftlo ri ght in the front row art'
Vitus Hartley Jr., pn-'Sident of th•• Peoples Bank 'Uld R ichard Ord.
president of the Mason Cowtty Bank. In th&lt;• hack row left lo right an'
Fo!TCSI Clark, chairman of the hoard of l'eoples Bank and Uoyd Rou.&lt;dt,
longtime member of the board uf diredo"' of til(' M"""" Count) Bank.

Knight asks court for
hearing replacement
Common Pleas Judge Charles
Knight will not ixo the presiding
j udgP for the hearing on the Orange
Township E lect inn dispute.
Kn ight fikodapetitionThursd av to
remove himself as the presiding
judge. HC' has asked thf' Ohio
Supreme Cour1 lo appoint a judge
from another LDunty.
Knight said he emphasized in hi s
letter tha t a hearing is schedu led on
the matter for Thursday. He said he

hope-s thC' cou11 \\rill appJin t anothf•r
judge bv· that lime.
CharlC's C Ca l awa.\· and H.ogpr
Fortn&lt;'Y of 'l\Jp'P('r ~ Plains r arlif' r
filed a pc'lttion, olkging Knight w as
prPjudic&lt;&gt;d . Knight said in his lct tPt
to the Supr('mf' Cour1. h£&gt; w as not
prvjudic&lt;&gt;d. Howf'ver, he did removP himSC' lf.
'' If somronr in 1he caSC' f(l(&gt;ls 1hen•
i' J problem. then I do not " ·ant to
cause hard !('('lings." Knight sa id .

Vandalism probed in Meigs
Meigs County Sheriff's office is
investiga ting two separate vandal
ism Incident s.
Ed Daugherty. of Belpre reported
Sa turrlay to Sheriff James,!. Proffitt
his cabin in Boston Hollow In Olivr
Township was vandal17.ed .
Daugherty repon ed the fiv e posts
had been pushed over. a comer of
the porch was tom off and an outside
toilet was destroyed. Fourteen blue
spruce trees were also damaged in
the incident.
The sheriff's office is looking for a

four·wheel driw pickup truck in
connection wilh thC' inciden t. 111£&gt;
vandalism OCC'll.JTI.&gt;d sometime last
week. the rPport said.
The second incident hap(X'ned
around Junr 4 or o. thp sheriff's
report stated 11m'&lt;' fence pos ts
were tom from the g~uund along J
lane off F latwoods Road, the repor1
said. The shpr iff is looking for u
1976-78 white Chevmlet or GMC
tlatlx.'!ltruck with racks. according
to I he rcporl .

�MorJday, June 18, 1984

Commenta•!
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Stl'ftt
PotlW'roy, ObJo
DEVIJI'ED TO THE 1N1'EKE!!T OF THE MEIGS-MASON ,UU!A

~~ ~~.....-o....--doo=o
~v

ROBERT L. WJSGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
.\.sslslaoc Publlsher ' Controller

BOB HOEFUCH
General Man.acer

DALE ROmGEB, JR.
~ews Editor

.\ 'IDIBER of Tbe Assoela&amp;ed Press, Inland Dally P""'o Aoooclation and the ..\merican Sewspaper Publisher ..\uoclatlon .
LETTERS OF OPISIOS &amp;rf' W4"1comed . They !lhouJd be lt'JIAihu M worcls
subjeet to ~ltla&amp;;ud musl be !!lped w-Ub name , addrMt ud
!"io u.nsicned letten wUI be publlsbH . Leuen lboald be l.a

loa~~: ...\11 Idlers an
le'l~one 11umber.

rood

lute , addre..tos: bi~e~~ .

noc

Pf!rHO&amp;litle..

~ajors

Anti-Reagan professional __w_iLL_w_m_F._.B_u_ck_ley_J_r.
In the currmt issue of The New
York Review of Books, Robert
Kaiser of The W asblngton Post
n"Views no fewer than four books by
or about Ronald Reagan , and I
guess it's only fair to say that the
tocsin has sounded for - despair~
Why?
All the usual things . Ronald
Reagan is not-quite-brig"L He is
lazy. He is shallow. He is a
hypocrite. rMind you. that may be
good: See how nice he was to the
Cblnese communists he used to
oppose so vigorously? 1 He is . on
such matters as abortion. a lunda ·
mentalist. though he doesn't go to
church much 1and maybe just as he
thought the Chinese communists
were aU bad, so he w!U grow up and
realize that God isn't aU that

good? 1. He Is above all an actor, a

per1ormer.
But you'w got to watch it.
because he is not exactly
surrounded by: he Is surmuro:led
only by Callfom!a m!lllonalres - In
Ideological contact With Cbristlan
fundamentalists who talk as If
Armageddon is other than merely a
biblical nursery tale, and who
knows, Ronald Reagan might think
It an excellent cap on his theatrical
career If he blew the Incremental
bugle, and just as the Bible says, all
the walls Will come tumbling down~
Robert Kaiser is a very brtght
man who wrote a very good book
about the Soviet Union. and for the
two reasons It really is a pity that he
should give so much time to this
schadenfrt&gt;ude on Reagan.

Then&gt; Is the problem , for instance, of slleerexaggeratlon. " The
White House, ever attentive to the
presldeot's Image. doesn't even try
to pretend that Reagan reads
anything besides the newspa!lf'I'S."
Well, If that's what the White House
is telling Mr. Kaiser, the White
House Is simply unaware of wha t
the president does In his closet. The
Hrst time I mpt Mr. Reagan. he
threw at me a passage from one of
my own books. A personal letter
from Mr. Reagan dated a couple of
months ago quoted from a r!'\1ew in
a highbrow fortnightly .
But Kaiser Is so bent on his
mission that he doesn't even see
great big banana peels. as witness.
"Even the intellectuals who wUI
vote for Reagan again this year -

vered tha t the horse had an
insatiable appetit e for th£' finer
things in equ ine life.
The trouble with feeding Ala main
a carrot Is that " he get~ t hf' ca rrot
and stans on the finger. " t he
pres ident remarked to aidPS . "You
have to be careful or he'll eat you off
to the elbow ."
That 's pretty much how Lopez
Portillo and his cronies devoured
his rount r~/ ·s rPSour('('s while hP
was president from 1976 to 1982
With a zeal unmatc hed sincf&gt; the
Spa nish conquistador s, Lopc•z Por
tillo m ad£&gt; hirnSPlf one of the world 's
rlchPSt mt:~n - while Mexico was
rf'ducrd to nf'nr bankruptcy. bent
to its kn('('s under forei g n drbt s of
morr than $&amp;1 billi on.
\.Vh~n I first disclosed detail s of
Lopez Port illo' s self-enrichment
and ·suggested that th&lt;' corruption
cxte)lded to his former budget
director and handpicked successor .
Pr esident M tg-ucl de Ia \li adrid. the
~1exic a n
governmf'nl rai sfld a
predictable howl.

But m y a ssociatp DaiP Van Alta

coiTIJption in

~exico

for more than
a year . and facts are facts. no
m a tter who may be embarrassed
by their rf'\'elation .
With a smgiP political party
dominating Mexico for decades.
corruption was probabl y inevitable.
It became an accepted fact of life
that Mexican presidents and their
closest cronies would becomP
wealthy during their terms of
office.
Lopez Port il lo's good fortune and M exico' s misfoi1une - was
that he came to power just when
discovery of the country's huge oil
reserves promised to make Mexico
a " have" Instead of a " have-not"
nation . Internationa l bankers
rushed to extend credit to the
nou veau ric he country.
Like a lottery winner w ho doesn't
know how to handle his unCX[)('('ted
wealth, Mexico under I.opn Porti llo embarked on costly projects
that reliPd on an uninterrupted flow
of dollars from the black gold.
When the worldwide price of oil
tumbled . Mexico was caught short .
By that t ime. though, Lopez
Porti llo and hls buddies had stashed
thrir billions in foreign bank
accounts and real estate . Figures
uneovered in a secret investigation

has """n im·estiga ting high level

Jobless health care
effective next week
Effect lve June 28. Ohio will have a tlPW law to help the unemployed retain
health care in.suranCP for themselves and thelr families for up to six
months after they are laid off.
The coverage isn ' t free, but the law SpPCilies tha t employers must make
available to certain laid-off workers a basic ht&gt;alth care plan at the same
group rates they would pay if still employed.
Under the nPW law. sponsored in the Legislature by Rep. Thomas P.
Gilmartin , DYoungstown , coverage would not have to include dental care,
vision cat"(', or other add-on sel'\1ces which may he included In the
pmployer' s group contract for basic medical and hospital care.
But GUmartin, who introduced the legislation after a give-and-take
sess ion with a group of utlPmployed steelworkers, said '' the po1rpa;e of the
bill is to protect thP hmlth of unemployed workers and their families by
making ava ilable to them insurance tocoverthelr basic healt h needs at the
lowest possible cost ."
The veteran Mahoning County lawmaker said the steelworkers told hlm
that the loss of health car r became a m ajor problem for them as they
joined the r anks of th!' unemployed .
Cilmat1in 's bill requ tr!'S employers. when a layoff situation arises. to
notify the a!ff'&lt;'ted cmployf'CS of t h!'ir right to continue group coverage . In
addit ion, the employer must notify the employees of the amount they must
pay for continued coverage
The employee will have to gi ve written notice to the employer of his wish
to con tinue cuVl'rage, and thl' first monthiy premium -.ill be due 31 days
after tlle date on w hich the coverage would have ended by r eason of the
terrninination of his or her employment .
All six monthly paymen ts must be madP in advance.
To qua!Jty for the extended coverage, a worker m ust be entitled to
unemployment compensation and have been covered by the group po!Ucy
for at least thrl'e months. Workers cover!'d by Medicaid or Medicare, or by
other group insurane&lt;&gt;. would not qualify for the six -month extension.
"Now tha t thls bill is golllg into effect. it is !mpon.ant to both employers
and employees to be aware of their rights and responsibilities," Gilmartin
said .

•

Today In history
Today is Monday ..lun!' 18, rllr, !70th day ofl 984. There are 196days left in
the year .
Today's highlight in history:
One year ago, on June 18, 19Kl, astronau t Sally Kristin Ride became
America's first woman in space as she and four colleagues blasted off
aboard the space shuttle Challenger.
On thls date:
In 1778, American forces enterro Philadelphia as the British withdrPW
during the Revolutionary War.
In 1812, the United States declared war against Britain.
In 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte m et his Waterloo as British and Pruss!an
troops defeated the French forces in Belgium .
111 1873, suffragette Susan B . Anthony was fined $100 lor trying to vote in
the 1872 presidential election.
In 1940, In a radio broadcast from London, Gen. Charles DeGaulle called
on fellow French citizenS to resist the Vichy goverrunent.
In 1953, Egypt was proclaimed a republic.
In 19'72, Britain saw Its worst alr disaster ever when 118 people dled
aboard a British E uropean A!.rways Jet that crashed shortly after takeolf
!rom London.
Ten years ago: Pri'5ldent Richard M . Nixon completed a week·long tour
of the Mideast.
Five years ago: President Jlrruny Carter and Sov1et President Leonid
Brezhnev signed the Salt II treaty in VIenna. To date, It has not been
ratltled by the U.S. Senate.
Today's birthdays: Actor E.G. Marshall is 74. Lyricist Sammy Cahn Is
71. Rock star Paul McCartney Is 42.
Thought tor today : "Frailty, thy name Is no longer woman." - VIctor
• Riesel, newspaper columniSt.

conducted by Lopez Portillo em barked on costly projects that relied
on an uninterrupted Oow of dollars
from the black gold. When the
worldwide price of oil tumbled,
Mexico was caught short
By that time, though, Lopez
Portillo and his buddies had stashed
thei r billions in foreigo bank
accou nts and real estate. Figures
uncovered in a secret investigation
conducted by Lope;' Port!llo shortly
before he left office concluded that
at !east $14 billion had been
deposited in foreign banks during
his term as president, w hile another
$30 billion had been invested in U .S.
real estate.
With incredible hypocrisy, Lopez
Portiilo said in his four -hour
farewPil add ress that " a group of
Mexicans, led , counseled and supported by private banks, have
taken more money out of M exico in
the past two years than imperialists
ever exploited during the entire
history of our country."
ThP outgoing president claimed
to h ave a list of the " sacadolares"
- the dollar removrrs. My sources
confirm the existence of one such
I ist. gathered by investigators
combing through deeds in a dozen
CS cities. Favorite investm ent
sit es tnci uded South Padre I sland
and Houston, Tex_; Aspen and Vail,
Col o.; Las Vegas, Nev.; and La
Jolla, Calif.
Lopez Port illo neglected to menli on his own expensive proJX.'ni£'5 in
Miami. Rome and Seville , Spain. as
wf'll as hi s lav ish esta te in M exico
Cit y. The estimates of the former
president's persona l wealth range
from a low of $J. billion to a high of $5
billion.
Footn ot~ : PreSident de ia Mad rid'!:i press secretary has angrily
den red that his boss has any foreign
bank accounts. But I should point
out that foreign holdings a rP oft pn
pur in the names of friends and
r elativPS .
Almos T 80 p&lt;&gt;rcent of ll ,(O)

r~al

estate properties owned by Mexi can~ in this cou ntry, for example,
were found to be listed in the names
of minors.
EXECUTIVE MEMO: The Na
tiona! Security Agency. repository
of the&gt; nation's most sensitive
secrets. is worried about evidence
that information is leaking to a
foreign power. Likeliest suspect is
not a human "mole" but laser or
ra dio-wave snooping syste m s.
known to be under development by
t he Sovil'ts. Private SpPCial ists
have been called in to check t hings
like window vibrations and radio
clrcu!try emanations that might be
picked up by high-tech eavesdropping devices.
- After six years' work . the
Occupationa: Safety and Health
Administration' s guide to dealing
with the press ha s been distJibuted
to the agency's 4.000 employees. To

cope with stage fright. the booklet
advises employees to "pretPnd the
camera is a person, your brother or
your Uncle Steve," and to " look at
the host or the reporter and
visualize that person without any
ciothes on."
- Many federal agencies havp
prepared ominous scenarios on oU
price increases caused by tht&gt;
Persian GuH war. But administration a nalysts ar e more sanguine.
Like President Reagan . they believe the effect on oU prices has
been overstated. They don't see
prices at the gas pumps making
any dramatic jumps - certainly
nothing like the increases of recent
memory. A confidential Treasury
Department st udy. nPwrthclcss.
predicts even temporary· closi ng of
the Persian Gulf would push oil
f rom its current price of$29 a barrel
to $39 a barreL

..

~

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Philadt&gt;lphi.a. 46:
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.:m 11

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C"aUDTUa

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Mll\t.'lillkl'-'
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Sitnd lrf1i, ('hlc~o. 17: GC'art('r, Mon
tl'('al. 16: Hubbard . Atlanta. 16: Samuf'l,
PMadrlphla , 1 ~ .
TRIP~ :
Samuel . Phlladc-lphla. Ill:

Call farnla 7. Clf•\:rJand
Trxa ~ 'i. Sc&gt;anrr 1

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Gwynn. San Di&lt;'Ro. 7; M(."(;(oc. StLouis. ~:

NfW York R, Bal!i1TIOl'f' 1

Toronto 'i.

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S.:..1011 1

Mc~·nold~ .

ChlcaRo 9. Oakland 4
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Mll"'-'&lt;ttJkrl' a1 Toromo. 101
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('ll"\'(•lund al Mlnnl'!&gt;ola. 011
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EAST DIVISION
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S;m f r ancl.'\('(1 ~- San 0 1~ .1

AMERIUN L.EAGUF.
BArnNG 1l 'i0 at ba1s 1: M attingly.
N 1'W
Yor k. .1"11: W\nfl f'l d . Nf'Y.· York.
.118: GBI'Il. Toronto. ..129: Upshaw. Ton;rl!o, .l!i'; Trammrll. uetroll . ..m.
RUNS: DwEvans. Bosloo, 41'; Tram
rn•ll. [):&gt;U'Oit. ~7 : Mrw.&gt;bv . TOI'Ilnlo. 411:
Rlpkm. Bait i~l'f'. -1.'1 : whilakf'r . !Xtroll

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51;

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AJ)avl.,, Sf'alllr. 47:

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:tl:

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HJ'I'S: Gart'la. Toronto. !fi: T ra m111!'11.
[)(&gt;troll. R2; Manln.W. NN· York. 1'9:
Ywnl. Mllwauk«•. '19: GBt---11. Toronlo, ill
Ripkm. Balti~rt'. ?S: Whltakl"r. Drrroit

DOUBLES: TrutC'I . Mlnrwsota. 17:
G&amp;&gt;ll, T(I'OO!o. Hi: Gan·ia. Toronto. lti:

Gatne'l

Tramrrell . Dl&gt;rrnlr . 16: lAParrlsh. Tl'xa~.
15: M a rtin~~ - N('\1' York.. 1~ : 0Br1f'n.
Trxa ~ . I ~

TR!Ptn : M~· . Toronro. fl: Ov,·f'n.
St•all lr . 7: Col l in~ . Turooto. n: U p&gt;oh;IW,
Toronto_ li: RL...aw. Otlcil,llO. 5
HO~lE R LJ:\'S: Kln1m1an. oak land. 1 ~:
Annas, Boslon. 16; Kl1tll', C'hleaj;!o. IIi:
~vis. &amp;&gt;a tlll'. H:
Bavlo,-, !\1"" Yur k.
l.l •: Mw-rav. Bal!lrmn" .· 1:1: Ripkl'll. Rat

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tlmort'. 1.1
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St l .u..~ b r D;:o~tt':\' B ]1 al M orurt•aJ IRo'~ rrs :!":&gt;1. ' " '
On I\ gam!" ~hMuJr'(j

l'ul&gt;!td~'H GIUllt'JI

~!OLEN BA."&gt;~
"'i:
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land. To : Gan-la, Tcron1 o. 2\ Prn1 ~ . Call
fur-nla . 'll: Butlt'f. f'II"VPii'lfld , ll.: ( \~lin '

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tli 0"-&lt;i sloo.•&gt;~ IA'al . T01 onto.
t -1. .~. 2_'/9 ; Caudill. Oakland. ti- l. .8''11,
2.tfl: RUack.o;on. Tcronro. ti- l. _lfi7 1.1:1
("I(';H. Eb&lt;;ton . '.1 , .R..'\.1, 4 ffl : L"\an, -h...-1 .
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Morr1~ . Df'frol t. iti; U&gt;al , T OI'Oni O. 7:1.
Sth'l:l. T &lt;Xunl o. 7.1: Ni1-luU, !\""'' York. 71'1
~ VES: QuiSIMll:x'rry. Kansa..' C'lty. IIi:
laudill. Oakland. 14: RDa\'ls . Mlnnf'!;(:~a.
12: sran lf'\o. lb&gt;l on, U ; F'l n~ rs. Mil ·
Californi a.

St Louis a t Montl'f'UI. 1111
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fhif'U£0 at P ilts bur£h. 1n1
Jn; Arll(:rii'S a1 CinC'Innali . 1n 1
San franelsm a1 Atlanta. r n1
Sd n DH'I-!O &lt;II Hw,ton. 1n1

waukf('. U: Hrrnandt&gt;J:. DPtroll. 11.

'Gambling_biggest
threat'
Modell
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) -Cleveland Browns' owner Art Modell says
gambling Is the biggest thl'f'at
facing the National Football
League.
Modell described gambling player s as "the one thing we fear more
than anything cise. I hope it isn't
prevalent ."
The subjec t was raised as Modell
was asked if the indefinite suspension of Art Schlichter should be lifted
a!ter the Indianapolis Colts' quar·

-..

offie&lt;&gt;rs are on the milita ry p ayroll
with nothing to do In t he combat
roles for whrch they are trained .
Senior officers in the armed forces
do not come cheap but the Reagan
administration keeps them on
anyway to run blood banks. pension
progra m s, public relations and any
number of other j obs for which
civilians trai ned for such work
could do a better job.
The study draws no conclusions
but does ~ve the Pentagon an
exc use for the large officerenlisted -men ratio. They argue that
in case of war enlisted personnel
could be called up by draft and the
officers to lead them would be
rea dily available. This leads to only
one conclusion: The Reagan administration. w htie talking peace In
this election year. is actually
planning a WAR. Other presidents
have been content to retire unneeded personnel to be ca lled back
to active SPrvlce il needed. The fact
that the administration chooses to
keep 19,(0) top ranking officers on
the job at a cost of over a billion
dollars a year show they are NOT
planning for peace as they claim.
Ever since Ronald Reagan entered politics In 1964 with the
nominating speech for Sen . Barry
Goldwater, he has been harshly
critic al of the Communists and the
Soviet Union. Since he assumed the
office of president, his remarks
about theSovlets havebecomeeven
m ore vitriolic . That, m ore than
anything eise, is the reason the
Soviets withdrew from the arms
talks In Geneva and are unlikely to
return even If Ronal~ Reagan Wins
reelect!on. That would mean at the
best, If Reagan Is reelected, lour
more years of fear and uncertainty
tor the American people. If a war
does come, there will be no winner.
Only losers! What may start as a
conventional war would Inevitably
end with a nuclear exchange and a

nuc lear w int ('r 11 i s frig ht ('nin g
even to co nt empl ate~
Remember that Ronald Reagan
is an actor , not a soldif'r. Y rt, he has
publicly voiced his opinion that a
"limited" nuclear war is feasiblf' .
He spent his soldi er year s in th('
trenches of Hollywood , not on thl'
Beach of Normand y on which he so
pxcellently capitalized last wwl&lt; on
world-widP television . He knows
how to "act" like a pres ident but not

ro tx' one. No president shou ld be
willi ng to f' ndangcr the lives and
propertv of 220 m ill ion people just
becau se of a personal phobia. He
has let hi s fear and hatred of
Commun ism L1 ndanger us a ll without oncr makinr an C'ffort to hold a
~ummit meeting with the Russians.
Thi s is the first tlm f' in m any years
a prl'Sid&lt;&gt;nt has failed to do so.
Thr onlv· remPdy I can think of Is

tcrback sat out one season.
"Yes," Modell replied, " if in a
clinical sense he's recoverro. U he
still has a problem, I wouldn't take
him back. Just like I wouldn't want
any drug addict playing for the
Browns."
Modell's team runs what It calls a
voluntary program, Inner Circle,
for its players who have developed a
chemical dependency. About 10
players have taken part In the
program, Including former Heism an Trophy winner Charles White.
Modell addressed a meeting of
The Associated Press Society of
OhioandtheOhioAPSportsWriters
Association on Sunday.
Schlichter, the first player taken
by the Coils in the 1982 dra!t,
admit ted gambling away $389,000
duriog and afier his rookie NFL
season. The former Ohio State
quarterback cooperated with the
F'B I and four Maryland m en were
arrested, with three of them

changP presidrnts!

Berry's World

Rozelle called Schlichter to his
New York office this spring for a
hearing but has not announced any
decision. Meanwhile, Schlichter has
continued to workout, sometimes in
Ohio Stadium.
"I'm down to :.n&gt; pounds, about 10
pounds under my normal playing
weight ," he told The Associated
Press.
Schlichter says he has no idea
when the commissioner will makp a
ruling.
Modell on the U.S. Football
League - " I give them high marks
for the courage of their convictions .
But they are committing hari-kar i
and murder at the same time."
On television- "Idon'tevertblnk
we will take our major games off of
free, network TV. 1 don't tllink we
could ever get away with it. "
On players' agents and player
relations - "I'd rather have a
player retain an attorney on an
hourly basis. The Jim Browns, the
.Jim Houstons, the Bob Gains played
professional football as a way
station In life. Not now. Kids want to
retire at age 28 and not worry about
their future."

304-773-5710

Millon, W. VI.

2 Free Dlnnen At DuH's

~
,____
~ .....

-::;··

BARGAIN MATME$ SAT &amp; SUN
ALl SEATS S 2.00
ADMISSION EVf:R'i' TUfsa.4Y IZ.OO
{ EXtEPT "GR[MLI NS " &amp; " IKDJAiiofl JONES ")

LJUNE 15 thru 21 J

--

FRIDAY thru THURSDAY !

MEIGS Third Baseman Brian Shepler puts tag on a
sUdlng Parkersburg South runner In second game
action. The South runner was trying to stretch a

double, but was called out. South won the second tUt,

"

7-5, after Meigstooktheopener, 111-5. (Sentinel photohy
K eith Wisecup ).

In Gllllpotls, Ohio

If We Install Your Wind shield
During The Month Of June.

Meigs Legion claims three
triumphs over weekend foes
Despite the absence or sever al
players due to previous commit tments, tlle MP!gs Legion played
what Coach J ack Welker called
their best baseball of the year and
won three of four games over the
weekend .
Saturday, at Syracuse, Meigs
split witll a strong Parkersburg
South squad , winning the open&lt;'r,
111-5, and losing the nightcap, 7-S.
Sunday, Meigs traveled to McArthur and defeated the Vinton
Countlans, 10-6 and 13-2.
In the first game Saturday, Tony
Riffle w ent the distance for M eigs.
He had five RB!s on a single and a
bases·loaded double. Rlffle fanned
four and walked seven. He allowed
10 hits.
N ick Riggs , who had nine hits in
the four weekend games, had two
singles and a double in the first
game.
In the nightcap. Meigs r aUied
from a 7-2dcficit to put the tying run
on second base twice in the final

three Innings. but couldn't gel the
big blow.
Rick Wist• started for Meigs and
was charged with the loss. Dan
Thomas and Cassell hurled in reli&lt;'L
Brian Shepler paced Meigs at the
plate with a single and double.
In Sunday's games, M eigs raced
to an 8-0 lead after an inning and a
half. and hrldoffM cArt hurin the the
first game.
Thomas started, but was relieved
by Cassell in the second. Cassell
picked up the w in.
Thomas led M eigs' 12-hit at tack
with a home run and a single.
In thesccondgai'Tl{', Meigs scored
seven runs in the sixth inning to

Ill. 33

" ... snd now, turn off your TV set snd svold the
negstlvelnstsnt snslysls to follow. "

•

•

• ~ Smict "'"'...

304-77S.S710

''WI A,.,.RICIAJI POUI 8USINIIJ"

~

rEitii'U II' 1 1 -.
HAJI!t!SONFOO

SORRl NO PASSES - NO ruiRSAIN
S ~OW S THIS ENGAGEME~T.

winners.
Meigs. now 5-9 on th e year, plays
at Wellston Tuesday and will host
Marietta T hursday. Bolh singiP
games will beRin at 6 p.m.

4th WEEK: 7:15 &amp; 9:30P . M.

SAT &amp;SUN MATINEE 1: 5

PEACE OF MN&gt;

MARY C. KEBLER, E. A.

/,!!.IIDn~

ADS7

··En rolled to Practice Before The
Jm erru,/ Revenue Service ''

TRI-CX)UN1Y

BO()KKEEPING SERVICE
61H. 111111 St.

,....,.,, Oil
H&amp;R

Loc:lllon

could
When your children ask about electricity, read them these safety
reminders. Let your son or daughter know electricity
is one of the most convenient and dependable fonns
. of energy we have. But care must be taken when
you're around it, or it am injure or kill. Make sure
your children know and follow these safety rules:

LNever fly a kite or model airplane in the rain and

never fly one near utility poles. Don't use wire or
any metal parts in your kite. If the kite should get
caught in a power line, don't try to get it down.

2. Never touch any power line.
It .could kill you.

3. Don't climb trees near power lines.

4- Don't build treehouses near electrical wires.
5. Don't climb utility poles, towers or other electrical struc.tures.
6. Never stick fingers or any objects into electrical
outlets or appliances.

A Safety Message from

I :

I

~

2nd WEEK: 7:00 I g : lO A.M .
SAT I SUN HATtNEE :

break open a 2-2 tic and added four in
the seventh.
Donnie Swat2f'l went the distance
for Me igs. He fanned 10 and w alked
six. giving up only two hit s. Vanover
was charged with th£&gt; loss.
Riggs had three singles for thP

L.ALU
Ill THE

'

'

~

SORRY NO PASSES - NO BARGAIN
SHOWS THIS E~GAGEMENT .

AI Cclfllnl &amp; Sl•ff o1 Polni·Millon Auto Gl..s would tlkoto say llllnks
to 1111 People olllle Tri-C.Unty Aru lor lotlllll us Hrvlc• your gtou
needs lor tho PIIIU y.. n ... WI RHtly Appreclalolll

POINT-MASON AUTO GLASS
•-.w.

~~- z

"

GIVofUNS

convicted In the case.
NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle
suspended Schlichter Indefinitely In
June 1983. The player then under went treatment for compulsive
gambUng In an Amityville, N.Y ..
hospital last summer and has been
under the ca!'f' of a SpPCialist from
w ashington.

POINT-MASON AUTO GLASS
Rt. 33

531 JACKSON PIKE -RT. 35 WEST
Phone 446-4524

.lr.!l. 2.!'11:

76

~onttT'al .1. Plt!.~bur~h 2 . U lnnln0i
P hllotdl:' lphia !I Chlea,gu 2
t tnclnnall 2. Atlanla I
N~· York t ~1 . I..1JJ!s 1
Hou •too 7. (.n; An~lc-5 ~
S&lt;t u f'ranl'i'-l.lJ ti. San Dr~ 'I

H011 ~ ton

.!I'm. Ui: Soto. Ctnclnnall.

Mahlrr, Allan ta, ')-] , .KH 1.111, Ll'a . Mon
ft'('[)\, 11 ·.1. _'j)lti, 2.&lt;12
STJUKEOtrT'S: \ 'a lrmg:ola . Ia A n ~
If"'. 9R Gooden . New Yor k . 9t i: Ryan.
H1JJ slon. 94; Solo, C'lnrlnnatl, Kl Carllon.

Basion,

~

:J3

.l J

san t~ranci!;('()

Pet. GB

"34

"
:J\
\\'EST DIVISION

~h m ldl . Phlladr-lphla . 14: GCartf'r. Mon
tn·a l. JJ: Durham. C'hiC'JW), 12: Marshall.
IA'I Anfi:f'l('S, 12 .
SJ'OU:N BASF.S: WlfiWn.~. San Dlf'l{O
:n: Samuf'l. Ph.Jia,rlphla ..1.1:: Rruus. lln
rinnatl. ~- DrrN&lt;'r. &lt;'hirll.I&lt;O. 2"lc : Ralnl"'.
Monll'l'al. 21.
P ITC'HING tli d('('I!;IQru; t: L.l'rtl'h , N N '
Yo:.·k. 7-1. 8'71, 1.1i4: P?t&gt;IT"Z . Atlanta. i- l

12

N.o\110NAL I.FAGllt:

Phlludl.•lphJa

~-

Phll.adc&gt;lohla. 7\:i.
SAVES: Sunr r. Stl..o.its. Jri; Holland.
Ptllladrlphla. L';; (;a;sa,(.!r. San Dlf&gt;Ro. 13:
Otnscd. Nt'W York. IJ. IPSmil h . ('hJc&lt;t~.

Only l!:am&lt;" s.:·llPdulro
~ay'li

San 011$0.

HOME RUNS: Murph;• . AUanfa. 1\

&amp;lTlmorr li, N~W York 2
Drtroh 7. MUwauk('(' t
MinnrsoJa .l Kan.~as Citv 1
C'lr\'r land 4. Ca lHumla 3

•

JDavi.~.

Monlrt.'al.

.))

'fl
34
.&amp;-13
28 :II .·124
Satunilty'" GIUJ'Iell

~:

J'-'1

-~

The 3-year-&lt;Jid, with driver-owner
Alvin Long!ntheblke, won by ahead
over Shady Deal and paid $9, $2.!ll
and $2. W. Shady Deal returned $2.40
and $2.2ll and third-place Cagey
Hero paid $2.60.
The winning time was the second
fastest of the cut1l'nt Scioto Downs
ra cing meet. It was the filth victory
in 10 starts for the colt and his llth In
20 starts ovPr the past two seasons.

cago, 44: WIIQtlns. San Dk-Ro. -M: 0\lr·
ham , Cllk'DRO. U; Raines. Momrral. 41;
SChmidt, P tllladl'lphli. 41.
RBI: Durham . 0\klij{O. ~: GC'a rtrr.

4

.1.1

Tororno 7. Ros1oo 0

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP 1- G!ft.ed
SpPC!al paced a best -ever 1: 56
Saturday night to win the $17,500
Meadow Skipper Pacing Series at
Scioto Downs.

BATTING 1110 at batst: Gwynn. San

E'Acrf' DIVIIIOI'Iro'

Pentagon burden ________L_o_we_LL_W_i_ng_et_r
Cri ticisms of the Defense Depart ·
ment by th~ columnists and editors
is directed at the Pentagon in a
genera l wa y and is not often against
thP Sp!'&lt;'ific bra nches of the armed
forces . The reason for not dJr~ tlng
their complaints at more SJX"Cific
tar gets is the fea r of rousing the ire
or various veterans' organiza tions
w hose members still rega rd their
particul ar bra nch of the service as
beyond r eproach.
VPterans who becom e incensed
a t the slight PSt criticism of the
armed furcl'S should remember
that they have been demoted to thP
ranl&lt; of taxpayers . It is now their
concern t hat the armed forces ar €'
spending 24 hours a day, seven days
a week spending their tax dollars In
w ay s never dreamed of whC'n they
werP on actlvr duty. A ccording to a
rcc~nt report Issued by the watchdog group. Project on Military
Effectiveness , the Pentagon is now
so top-heavy with high ranking
brass It would Up over If It were not
such a spraw ling structure. Gl' s
who Si'rved in World War li had one
active-du ty officer for every 12
en!!sted men . Now they have an
officer for every six enlisted men.
The recruit today must have a
full -i!me job just saluting all the
offi cers. No one ca n argue that the
World War li anny was not
effective. It was. History proves
that.
The rai!o of officers and common
servicem en exte nd s to every
branch of the mllltary. During
World War II, the Army had 14
generals for each active dlv1sion;
now there are 24. When the war
ended in 1948 the Navy had one
admiral lor every 130 ships; In 1982
they had one for every two ships.
The Air Force had one general for
every 244 airplanes In 1945; now
they have a general for every 21
planes or about a general for every
air squadron. Other high·ranldng

Scioto Downs
racing results

Leaders

By'lbr..WOC.'WN.....,...
AMEIUfAN ~..~:AGUE

and ther e wilt doubtless ( f like that,
"doubtless " As in, "There are
doubtless people around who believe in the Protocols of Zion") by
many - will probably do so With a
gulp. What l'lse could you do when
you support a president who
returns from his first voyage to
South America to announce. 'Well, I
learned a lot ... You 'd besurprtsed .
They're all individual coun tries.' "
Mr. Kaiser is evidently untamUiar
with the complaint of Latin Amer·
lea Intellectuals: That all Ameli·
ca&lt;.s beliPve all Latin American
countries are more or less the
samr.
John Gunther's famous com·
plaint was. "Americans Will do
any thing for Latin America, except
read about it.' ' A presidential tour
of Lati n American resulting In an
insight at once simple and profound
is the right stuff. The Latin
American trip happened at about
the time that the bookish president
of Fra ncr wa s discoverin g that
socialism does not work. A pity he
hadn ' t toured the Soviet Union with
eyes lifted from his books, and
r epo11ed: " I learned a lot. You'd be
surprised. Socialism doesn't work. "
The anti-Reagan professional
!'f'aches the highest orders of his
ca lling when he is able to describe
Mr. Reagan's article, "Abortion
and the Conscience of the Nation,"
now avai lable as a t:xxlk, as "a
passion a If' dPnunclatlon of abortion
and of those who would decide that
some terribly deformed newborn
infants should not live." One ca n
imagine Col. Oscar Wilde of
Virgi nia back In 1850 denouncing
William Lloyd Garrison as "a
passionate opJXJnent of slavery and
of those who beliew that !!litera te
black mor ons freshly imported
from AJiiCCI should no r vote and
uwn proP&lt;'rty.' • ..., -.~It!

.,..

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 3

Scoreboard ...

Page 2-The Daily Sentinel
Pametvy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, June 18, 1984

Insatiable appetite ____________Ja_ck_A_nd_e_rso_n_
WASHJ :\GTOI" - Alamain is a
handsome Arabia n stallion pres
entf'd to President Reaga n bv the
former prPS ident of Mexif'o. Jr&amp;
Lopez Portilio Reaga n soon disco-

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

POWER COMPANY

Contact us for your free safety folder.

'

�J11

g1

Monday, June 18, 1984

4 1he Doily Sentinel

Virgil's hot bat gives Phils
sweep over Cubs; Reds lose
B)' KEN RAPI'OI'ORT

AP Spal'l8 Wrtt.or
Ol2il&gt; VIrgil is playing on a SOI1' leg
these days - and enjoying I'Ve!)'
minute ot it.
" It ·s been lxJib&lt;oring me a lit tie
and as a result I've been trying to put
the bat 011 tbe ball," said the
Philadelphia Phillies' catcher. who
claims that the strained ligaments
in his left leg have actually hl&gt;lped
his hitting.
Virgil's hot bat helped the Phillies
,.i pe out the Oticago Cubs over the
weekend . including a 9-7 triumph
Sunday that capped a four-game
swe-ep. Virgil had four hits Sunday.
including a hotner. and knocked in

VIRGIL'S HOMER - Philaddphia Phillit.-,' Tim
wrwrdll welcomes Ou.l" Virgil honw
\'irgil ''
two--nan homer drove (--"'o ru tran in to ~J rf' during

aft•.,.

Norman~

.

Zoeller
eye title

'

,

By ,JOlt:'\ SEI.'iO\'

t\.1' Sports Wrll&lt;•r

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fnurth r ouwl ,,, th1· I ·. S. ( )J)( ' rt ( ~ 11lf TinUTtamf•nt at "lngPd F oot Golf( 'luh
in :\1 wnarnru '4 ·k . .'\·. \ '. S und.a.v . ( ,\ P l ..a."i.4 ·rplw)to ).

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as N o r rn ;tn l lfH 'II u p hi'-&gt; l1m g .

pa r sa vln,L! pull Nr.rm ;HJ har! hit hb
s.f '&lt; 'O nd shol on lhr • ·t4X- .vn rd . p;rr ,1
ho lf· Info fhf• h lf';w hr' r s. fi r· h x1k a
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ti l)naJ f{ ; w~·wa .v

bleuch(•rs ln rlis l &gt;l lt•f . ··said N t wrn :1n .

who joltH ' l tlH• !'(;,\ Tour i,J., t ·' ' '" '
and won thf' Krmpl'r Opi'n two
Wl'ekS ago .
Aftl'r h&lt;' pitched up, hf' said h~
"could fepJ thf' putt . ll 's hard to
expla in. 1 hJd a fclfllin g in m y hands.
All I had to do was hit it tht• righ t
s pePd . I rould Sl'f' ttl&lt;' b.a Ugoing in .' ·

I

• • •

ll• ·•m ralh ol s... o r tJoroug h, Onta
r-io, tqok th.- · IP.:td un lap 1 ~ uf Ow
l2 IJp t;1 m ilr r·&lt;Jn•
Omv in lhP lt•;.~ tlp r 's seal. Hl' im ·

r ~tlh np\·c·r lookc'(l ba{'k r nroutP to a
ni nl' St '('Ond \'i(' 100' O\ 'f' f P Pt f'r
Mr.I(Klif' of K ingston . . li:l m a lca .
1.1-: MAI\S, Fra nce· tAI'1 F ra ncf' ·s Hf'n r i Ppsr:·il rolo and
r·rm an KJJ us l .udw ig, fought be~c k
! rom I hc· dPplhs of I hf' fif' ld to w in I hf'
-Jl ncl 1.. : · Man s 24 Hour Pndu ra nce
rac1· SundJ }' - a fourt h v ictory for
P('s('.:.11 ulo .:Jnd t ht • S&lt;'C'und f or

Lud w ig .

'11w v l• 'fl hom e• a fl('(' t of s ix
Por sC'hf's w hic h won" d own two
faC' !Ot:,.' l .anr ia.s in a m agnifi('f'nt
hu lllP. onr nf the• h a r df'S1 foug ht a t
l .t. · M ttn s for m an v y f'a r s.

r - -- - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - -

0 ( I hf' J.! ll'('O

"On m y ba(' k~wlng. "om' ' adrr·
rwlln rushed in ond I tll(ht&lt;•n('(J up. I
wa tc h&lt;'!! lh• • ba ll go int o th~

r;;;;;;;;;~;;~~~~;;.-

DALE HIU
FORD TRACTOR
Yout Fann
Equipment
Store

The Daily Sentinel
(l 'SPS l4 S-960)
.4. Dl vhfion of Multlm~la, Inc.
P ublls hl'd ('V('rv after noo n, Monday
through f r iday . 111 Cou rt Srrt&gt;e1. by rt\(.
Oh io Va lli.').' Publ is hin g Co mp a ny . Mul ri med lil , Inc Pomeroy , Oh lo 45i69, 99'2·
215ti. Sf.cond class posta ge pa id at Po·
m&lt;' r oy, Ohio.
!\1 pmb£•r · T hP Assoc i&lt;ll f'd P r Pss . In·
la nd Dall y P rl:'SS Assod a ton and l ht'
AmNi r an r"\C'w s pape r Pu blt sh£'rs As sociaTion. Na Tional A dv &lt;'r ll s in ~ Rl'prP'i&lt;' nl a t l vr, Br anh am Nf'w sp ape r Salt's.
7.1.1 Thi r d 1\ vf' nuf' , Nr-w Yo r k . New

Yor k 10017 .
POSTMASTF: R Sf. nrl ad d rPss to ThP
Da lly Sc&gt; nrtn r l . 11 1 Co urt St . Pome ro v.
Ohio -1 57 6\1

·

Sl'BSCRIPTION RATES
8)' Ca rrier or Molor Re ub!
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Onf' IA.'f'l"k
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Subsr rl br rs no1 df'sirin ,e l o pa y the r ar ·
n r r m av rrmLI in ad v anc r dlrN'l ro
The D all.\ · Sr&gt;n lin f'l on .1. 6 or 1! month
ba s i!; CrPdir \I. Ill bt• ghl'n carr ier £&gt;a c h
m onrh
:\ o su h.r;r r ip!lo ns b;.· m ai l ('lf'r m irr f&gt;rl In
!O wn s wtwrf' hOmf' ca r r ier Sf' T\'iN' Is
a v &lt;~ il a bl&lt;'

MAll 'l l' RSC RI P'T JOI\:S
lnsidf' Oilin
u w r r k&gt;
st.c&gt;6
26 1\'('&lt;'k&gt;
. S29 . t2
12 WP&lt;' kS
$58 14
o"'''d•· Ohl"
· ·

992·2668

t.l W&lt;'&lt;' k'

PomeGry, 0 h.

~ti W r ek ~

,2

w.... k,

·

Sl5
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•·J t ·20

$,9 ·M

J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-============-=~~

Cuvahoga
County Commo n P leas J~
Coun .

:\r Jillt; t n . w h11 \)f·g : tn

" IH1h b.11 k Jrw rn t,.- ·g; 1n th1· d.n ; tl
~) UJidl ' l ' IJU1 .L d(}ll l i lf • IJI J)-:1' \ '-. IX / Jf l
!t il ' 111 11 U1 hq Jr • pu l hilfl li; w k 11Jt '\ ·r·rJ
1r Jt 1lr• · 11 !lll rr;, rr u ·r1 t . ;llld I H · I J ~ ~ ~ '\ 1"1
fu u r m •Jn · tJI, ]f ·&lt;., IJO th1· IJ; wk n Jn1 ·
/1 W d '. ].If '! h;tp!., th• · \.\ 'lj ('L., l 1" S.

and David G=n followed \\1t h

CLEVELAND rAPt - A legal
showdown bcrwN'n Rober t D
C r iPS, one of the owne r s of thP
Cleveland Brow ns, a nd the Na tiona l
F ootbaU League ream's princ ipa l
ow,...r , Art Mode ll. was expected to
begin today in a c iv il tria l in

(' o rJ...,~ 'f ' U

1\ola n Ryan came off the l!Hiay
cilsabied Jist and pitched eight
overpowering innings to !rod Hous ·
ton over Los Ange les.
R yan , 7·2, won his six th straigh t
decision, a Uowing jus t three hits and
striking out nine beforegettingre lief
he lp in the ninth from Dave Smith ,
who ga ined his ' second save .
TPny Puhl delivered the game's
onl y run with a fifth ·irming RBI
double off Bob Welch,;,. 7, who lasted
six innings.
The Astros won thplr founh
straight game for the first time this
season, sweeping the fo ur·game
series w it h Los Ange les, while the
Dodgers have lost five in a row and
21 of thei r las t 36.

Da rrt&gt;ll Pon er's RBI single keyed
a thri'E'- run rally in the fourth inning,
leading St. LouL' over New York.
PonPr' s base hit sna pped a 1-1 tic

Trial begins
in Cleveland

l i\'1• h in li1..., tm N o ~ :t 1; Hut hr·
l :w Jgl'\'l'fJ ltl f ~&gt;f ' lli J!f •...,t Jn thr · l l;wk nrn1·
ll •l l nJ '-&gt;h w1ttl p ,t l · 7(Lrnd 27h. 1 und1T

t\stros I, Dodgers 0

1983.

RRI s incC' ~1av 13. Oz·zie Smit h

o., hol '-. :rtw; ul ~ ~~ N w ·rna n allt •r ninr ·

Oliver singled off Lefferts' first
pitch to score LeMaster. One ou t
later, Jack Clark grounded to short ,
where Garry Templeton lumbled
the ball for his sreond of three errors
in the game. Jeff LL'Onard followed
wl th a single to score pinch-runner
Scott TOOmpson with the second run
of the inning .
The Giants had tied the game 3-3
off rellf'Ver Dave Dravecky in the
eighth when Lemaster singled ,
advanced to second on Dravecky's
ba lk a nd scored on Oliver' s single .

The Pirates closed tbe margin to
:;.3 in the eight h on a solo homer b&gt;·
Benn,· Distefano, his second. Lea.
11 -3. w ho allowed sevl'!l hits, lett the
game with Oil(&gt; OUt in the inning afte r
gi\in g up a single to Lee Mazzllli.
and Je ff Reardon worked thefinall
2·3 innings for his lOth save.
Braves 6, Reds:;
Dale Murphy's two- run home r in
the seventh inning helped P ascua l
Perez gain his seventh 'ictory as
Atlanta trimmed Cinc innati.
With the score 3-3. Murphy
connectPd off reue..-er Bob Qw .
chinko. 3-3. for his 15th homer of the
year a fte r Gera ld P e f1!' dn'W a
lead-off wal k.
The Bra,·es added another run in
the seventh when Chris Chambliss
doubled and pinc h·runnPr Alben
Ha ll scored on Bruce Benedic t' s
double .
Perez. 7 ·1. allowed nine hit s a nd
struc k out s ix in 8 1·3 innings to gain
his fourt h \' i&lt;.·tory in a row .
Giants 5, Padres 3
AI O!iw r ' s RBI single fo llowing a
thrO\o\i ng em1r by c archer Bruer
flochy sna pped a 15tl1·inning tie.
lifting Sa n Francisco owr San
Diego.
J ohn nie LeMast&lt;'r , who had four
hits . opened the 15th w ith a sing le off
Cra ig Leffens. 1·3, the founh San
Diego pitcher. LeM aster stol&lt;'

another run -scoring single , hi.s first

/\..,.'-l,ll( 'ld l Jrm ·.., ( Jp.- ·n frHTn; Jt Tr 'f · IJ II
w; t, J· J:.pm I&lt;JJT
Sundcn ·· , !rJu r th rr 'und lurw·d ml rJ
.1 u. : tr " ' &lt;t ll d ti rJn ; tl
thr · IIJUg h ,
u ny it ·ldi ng \\' mgr'(l 1-'11 •! ( ~olf ( 'luh.
i'n · ll t •t v.: a ... 7 undf •r d ll d ltlll'f '

field.

Jim Wohlford belted a two- run
homer. his first in more than a year.
and dreoJ.· a bases·loaded walk while
Charlie Lea became the NL ·s first
11-game "''inN'r as Montreal de·
fpated Pit tsburgh.
With the EXJXl' leading 3-2 in the
se\'en t h. W ohilord followed Tim
Wallach 's single ~&lt;i th his home run
off reliE•&gt;er Cecilo Guante . it was
Wohlford· s first homer since April 6,

Cardinal• 6, M~ 3

: MA\1Al(( J\' IIK . '- Y &lt;.\ ! ' 1 bn -g "\rJrm &lt;.J n c aJir;J 1h&lt;· pull~ J lr·d .
!t pnJha tl lv w,:_~,.., clrJSt·r f ( J ~J . Vw .;r:.·
Zo- ·lh ·r t hrJug h t it u.·a .'&gt; f&lt;Jr b in .l ir ·. &lt;J nd
tw wa ~ rt•Jd\' 1fJ t hp J\.1.' in t ht · tuwd
l n~lr ·J d . tho · pull u. &lt;J ~ frJJ pa 1
:"-icJnna n li m'fl 11 u p . h~nJ &lt;., Ufl ' t hat P
w ;,s ~ g1Jin g in . cm d wh1·n it d 1d . hr · a nd
/'J',II( ·Jh·r WPrr · hr ·; Hlf ·d f rJI tht · L71h
piJV' IH in L' S. &lt;J!J(·n hi.&lt;., TI Jf\
11 wr1uld rak1· lk hrJ il·'&gt; tr.11J;n t(J
~ · Ji h · t hr· j&lt;.,sur· undr-r rh r· (; S &lt;;r!H

S&lt;jUff'Ze

chance."
Expos 5, Pirates 3

"I !eel pretty good ," said l 'irgil.
retlecti.ng on the pain or his injury .
"Today in batting practice I didn 't
!&gt;"ing too -.·eU and then I "''ent out
and got four hits. Winning four
straight from the Cubs is a big boost
for us."
The \i£'tor~&gt; . the Phillies' flfth
straight. boostPd throl back into
first place in the \'ational League
Eas t owr thP Sew York Ml'ts. who
dropped a 6-3 decision to St. Louis .
In o ther \'L ac tion. Montreal
defea ted Pittsburgh '&gt;-3: Atlanta
c-&lt;lged Cincinna ti 6-5; San F rancisco
tripped San Diego :;.3 in 15 innings
and Ho uston blanked Los Angeles
1.0.
\ 'irgil drow in three runs ~'&gt;ith a
tv•o- run home r and a sac ri!ice fl y
a nd he a lso hi t a pair of s ingles. Tim
Corcoran. \'on Hayes and Mike
Schmidt a l&lt;;O holl1Pred for the
P hi Uies in a game tha t saw ei ght
balls ny ou t of windy Wrigley F iel d .
Keith Morelan d hi t a pair for the
Cu bs. a nd Bob Demler and Ron Cey
a dded solo shots as a 14-mile ·an ·
hour ~'&gt;' ind madP it tough on the
pi tchers.
"O'lZre ' " 1l11g the bat we U the
whole series." sa id Phila dP!phia
\la nagcr P aul Owens. "We've ix&gt;cn
t"·rng to grt him to be more
a ggress ive . '1\'e hit well in this series .
1\' h~n we · re playo ng good , w~ can
score runs and get yo u with the ba t ...

fourth inning action again:&lt;! the Chicago Culloi Sunday.
Th e Phil' won, fl. 7. C..\P La-;ellllrJW J.

capped the titn'e-run upris ing off
l3rucl' Ben&gt;nyi, ~. " 1th a s uicide

The OICO&lt;TY' eMed a Cardinal
lasing slrPak of four games and
snapped New York· s winning s treak
ol the same Jen~tlt
" It was a big inning by our
standards, fo r sur&lt;e ." saXl Porter of
the fourth . " I just think it I offense t
be!ter COTnP it we' re to have a

threl? runs .

MONDAY

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

111&lt;' cas&lt;• will lx- hPa rd by Judge
Jo hn L. Angeiotta s inL\' sta te law
prpc!udcs juries in suc h contract
rquil y caSf's.
(;r ir"i , who owns 4.1 perC'C nt of thr
Bro'v\.'11.&lt;... filed a la wsuit in 1982
c halle nging the fra nchiSP 's pur·
chase of Sta dium Corp . from Modell
wit h $6 million of Bro\l&lt;ns ' money .
Gries argued tha t th&lt;&gt; dea l
amounted to SPif.Jealing by Modell
and hurl the Browns fi nancia lly.
Modell owns 03 percent of the dub
a nd serves as it s prrs iclent . He has
di scounted the c harges, calling
thrm " totaUy frivolous. unwar ·
ranted a nd without found a tion "
ThP d is pute ('('n ters on thPva iueof
thP Sta dium Corp., which controls
'i'll.[~n sea t
C!r vPiand Stadium.
Whi!r the Browns paid $6 million ,
Crirs argues the deal w a s worth
bPtw('('n $1 .5 million and $2 million.

Reg.
900

1

ssgggs

Save

POMEROY - The Mens'
Fellowship of the Me igs County
Churches of Christ will meet
Monday a t 7: 30p.m . at the Zion
Church of Christ.
MIDDLEPORT - Heath United Methodist Women will hold
their annual picnic Monday at 6
p.m . at the home of Betty Fultz.
Persons to being a covered dish.
All wompn of tl1e c hurch are

inv ited . Juanita Bachtel will be in
charge of devotions.

RACINE - Racine American
Legion Awdllary, Unit 602 will
meet Monday at 7: 30 p.m . at the
hall. Potluck retreslunents will
beseiVed .
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Chapter 255, Order of
the Eastern Star, will meet at
the home of Pauline Atkins,
Monday.

Happenings
Bible School
CHESHrnE - Vacation Bible
school will be held at the Poplar
Ridge Freewill Baptist Church
June 25 through June 30.
There will be clas ses for a U
ages. Those needing transrortation are to call 367.0169 or
742·22'!&gt;. A wiener roast will be
held forllowing tl1e program on
June 30.

Bible School
RUTLAND - Bible school at
the Rutland Church of the
Nazarene will be held Monday
through Frtday with classes
from 6: 30 to 9 p.m.
Fern Grimm, directo r, announced the theme, "Choices
and the Bible ." The dally
schedule provides tJme for
crafts and recreation a s well as
learning experiences with the
Bible.
Te achers are Tammy Black,
three year aids; Marlene Barrett, four and five year aids ; Jeff
Carson, primary; Sharon Black,
middie rs; Sharon Barr, juniors,
and Gloria Grate, young te&lt;&gt;ns.

The publlc is invited to
participate and further information may be obtained by calling
742-2202.

Ice cream social
BASHAN - An ice cream
social will be held by the Ladles
Au.xlliary of the Bashan Volunteer Fire Department on Friday
evening, June 22. It had earlier
been announced for August.
Members of the Auxiliary are
currently soliciting in the com
munlty for donations of money
with which to purchase the
ingredlents.

Budget hearing
POMEROY - The Orange
Township Trustees wUI hold a
public budget hearing on July 2 at
8 p.m. at the home or the clerk,
Nina Robinson.
All citizens, and especially
senior citizens, are invited to
attend and provlcle the township
with written and oral comments
concerning the proposed budget
and the use of revenue sharing
funds.

Garden club takes part in project
Rivervi e w Gard e n Club
members, meeting recently at the
home of Delores F'rank, voted to
participate in the county-wide
project on the landscaping and
orchard project at the Carleton
School, Syracuse.
A trip toMountwood Park was set
for July 21 and Margaret Cauthorn ,
Marlene Putman, and Ruth Anne
Balderson were thanked for provid·
ing flower arrangements used at a
banquet at the Riverview School.
Devotions by Ella Osborne carr!Pd out the Father's Day theme,
and members resronded to roll call
by naming a song with rose in tl1e
title.
Kila Young was a guest at the
meeting and will present at the July
meeting a program on recyling and
litter control. For the program ,
Maxine Whitehead gave a program
on roses and de tailed requirements
for healthy vigorous roses.

The Doily Sentinel- Page- S

.
.
Hospital lists cancer s seven warn1ng s1gns
Pomenly-Middleport, Ohio

Calendar

second and continued to third when
Bochy 's throw sailed into center

runt

Monday, June 18, 1984

She said theplantingslteshould be
sunny, well drained and have
slightly acid soU . She also said the
roses should not be in competiton
with large shrubs or too close to
large trees. Leaflets on different
varieties of roses and their planting
and care were distributed to the
members.
Games were conducted by Ma ·
rllyn Hanuum and Grace Weber
with prizes going to the winner, Mrs.
Whitehead won the door prize.
Refreshments were served by Mrs.
Frank, Mrs. Hannum, and Cathy
Spencer to those named and Debbie
Pickens and son, George, Mark,
Janel and Jared Spencer, Kimberly
Ke llar, guests, and Mary Allee Blse,
Janet Connolly, Margaret Brown,
Mary Grace CowdPry. Margaret
Grossnickle , Opal Harris , Paulne
Myers, Ella Osborne, Nola Young,
Janice Young. Ceramic favors were
given to those attending.

The last day of April m a rked the
e nd of the Amertcan Cancer
Society's educational drive for 1981.
As a sal ute to the work of the
Amertcan Cancer Society, Veterans Memorial Hospital would urge
yo u to learn and heed the seven
wa rning signa ls of cancer .
1. A c hange in bowel or bladder
ha bits.
Col~rectal cancer is character·
ized by constipation or diarrhea or
both a lterna tely, a nd is s igna led by
rectal bleeding a ppearing in the
stool. People with hemorrhoids
te nd to ignore r ectal bleeding, but
this Is a dangerous practice.
Col~ rectal cancer also is characterized by a n Inc rease In in testinal
gas, causing stomach discomfort.
2. A sore that does not heal.
Skln cancer Is indicated by dark
brown or blac k pigment a tions tha t
s ta rt small a nd ine'fea se In size,
c ha nge color and bleed easily. You
should also wa tc h for pale , waxllke
pearly nodules that may eventually
ulcerate and c rust. Wa tch also for a
r ed, scaly, sha rply outlined patch

,

on your skln.
3. Unusual bleeding or d ischar ge.
This symptom , In addition to
signa ling colo-recta l cancer, mig ht
Indic ate the first signs of le uke mia,
multiple m yelom a or stom ac h

cancer.
Leukemi a Is a lso c haracterized
by easy bruising, nosebleeds or
other hemorr hages, fa tigue , pa le·
ness, los s of appetite a nd weig ht
loss , repeated Infections , nig ht
swe ats, pain in bones or joints and

fever.
Multiple Myelom a Is s ig naled by
back bone pa in , weight Joss ,
anemia and weak ness . bone frac -

tures, a bnorma l bleeding a nd
r epeated Infections.
Stom ach ca ncer could be Indicated by blood In the stool. vomiting
and rapid we ight loss. Also look for
Indigestion thar consists of nausf'a,

heart burn a nd a feeling of fa tigue

after meals.
4. A thicke ning or lump in t he

puckering or d impling In the breast ,
or redness or a skin irritation t ha t
pers ists. The breast nipple may
develop a whitis h scale , dis torted
shape or a discharge.
Lymphomas cancer is indicated
by a painless enla rgement of a
lymp h node in the groin , neck or
armpits. The liver or spleen maybe
enla r ged. And there may be
sweating, fever, itching , weight loss
and weak ness.

5. Indigestion or di fficulty In
swa llowing.
Thyroid cancer . in addit ion to
sh0\\.1ng up a s a lump or mass in the
nf'C k , is i ndicated b y persistent
hoa r se ness o r diffi c ul t y in

swallowing .
Oral cancer is characterized hy a

sore that fa il s to heal or bleeds
easily, a so n? throat , difficulty In
c hewing or swa llowi ng food , a
sensat ion of somet hin g in the
th roat. and a Jump or thickening m

whitish pa tc h in thP mouth and

breast or elsewhere.

throat area .

Breast ca ncer is c ha rartl"rizeU
by a lump or thicke ning, swelling,

mole .

6. Obvious r hangf' in wart or

7. Nagging coug h or hoarseness.
L ung cancer is Indicated by a
persis te nl coug h , blood in the
s putum, a lingPrlng infection of the
lung or pain in the chest.
Two other fo rms of cancer bone a nd testic ula r - do nor have
symptoms that a re included in the
list of SPVPn wa rning signals. The
most common symptom of bone
ca ncer Is pain in the bone or joint,
especia lly In the knee, thigh, upper
arm. ri bs or pelvic area .

Testicular cancer Is characterized by an enlargem ent o r a change
in t he consistency of the testes,

whi ch may be accompanied by
s ha rp pain if the tumor is growing
ra p idly or he m orrhage is present.
The re mi ght also be a du ll ache in
the lower abdom en a nd groin ,
accom panied b y a sensation of

dragg1 ng or heavi ness.
The emP rge ncy de partment physicians of Ve te ra ns Me moria l
Hospital urge you to be a lert to
thPSf' symp tom s a nd seek medical

care should one of them become
ohvi ous

Legion post plans VA hospital party help
Assistance with the July birthday
party at the Chlllirothe Veterans
Hospital was planned during a
meeting of Lewis Manley Post 2li3,
American Legion, at the home of
Tomiko Lewis in GallipoUs this
week.
The unit not only sent money to
assist in carrying out the party , but
several members wll attend and will
be taking cakes from the unit. !twas
also voted to sent a contribution to

Washington for the Blind Veterans
Association. It was noted that the
Memorial Day weekend sale of
poppies was a success.
Members hea rd a repon from
Margaret Bowles , unit president, on
last week's summer convention of
District 8 held at the Middleport
legion hall, and in response to her
extensive report , she was g1ven a
vote of thanks by unit members.

Harrisonville area news notes
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Duane Stanley were Mrs. VIrginia
Wiseman and son, Noel, Chilllrothe,
Mr. and Mrs. F'rankln Townsend,
Westervllle; Mr. and Mrs. BUI Scott,
NeisonvUie; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Hoback, Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Ross, Ona, W.Va., and Mr.
and Mrs. StPven S tanley,
Groveport.
Penny Cla rk, Middleport, spent
the weekdnd with her grandmother,
Mrs. Lola Clark.
Mrs. Frances Alkire spent Wed·
nesday and Thursday with Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Gibson and Ray Alkire,
Columbus.

Mrs . Margaret Douglas visited

this pastweekwlthDr.andMrs. Don
Gibson, Rockville, Md .
Mr. and Mr. Cecil B lackwood
were rcent guests of hl'r aunt. Mrs .
Ellen Burgess in Dayton.
Mr. and Mrs . Ralph Anderson,
Canton, were the weeker.J guests of
Mrs. Pauline Atkins .

Group to meet
POMEROY - The Me ns'
Fellowship of the Meigs County
Churches or Christ ,,;ill meet
Monday, June 18, at 7:30p.m .. at
the Zion Church of Christ.

It was noted that F lorence would grant a mnesty to illegal
aliens. Shereportcd on rPSults of the
Richards had been named to the
dis trict constitution and by·laws ame ndment for vocal prayer in the
sehools, and noted that about half of
committee. Uni t 263 received
the 60 Libyan dipiomatesexpeiled in
aw ards in ali categories including
1981.
have re-entered the United
being over -goal in me mbership for
the curren t year. Me mbers we re
States.
Mrs. Hampton's report from the
asked to gPt their dues in early for
ieglsla tiv~ bulletin noted a change in
the 1985 membership yPa r.
procedu re on filling prescriptions,
New officers to be insta lled by
the inc rease in G. I . home loans from
Mrs. Richards, a past district
a maximum of $27 .!00to$:ll,OOJ, and
president , at the J uly m eeting are
said that nat gray markers will now
Mrs. Bowles , president; Lucille
be used in national cemPterles.
Saunder s. first vice president ;
The prayer for peace was given by
Dorothy Ca sey , second vice presi·
Mrs. Winston and the group sang
de nt; Mrs. Ric hards , secretary;
" Ame rica." Refreshments were
Ru th Brown. assistant secretary;
served by the hostess after Mrs.
Lula Hampton . treasurer; Annette
Winston had grace.
J ohnson , c haplain ; Ne llie Wins ton ,
sergeant at aim s. and Mrs. Bowles , r-;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
historian

Cha irmen to srrv P another year
are Mrs . Richards, children and
youth; Mrs. Saunde rs, community
service; M rs. Brmvn . vete rans
affairs and r ehabili ta tion; Mrs.
Hampton, naliona l securi ty and
legislat ive; Mrs. Casey, em ergency
and foreign re lations; Mrs . Bowles,

Amer icanism.
A report from the F iring Line was
gi ven by Mrs . Richards who noted
that the LPgion remains in st ro ng
opposition to a ny program whic h
'

1~64R

J . RfYNOLO STOBACCOCO .

1300

Mother -daughter banquet held

MR. PINE
Includes triple dresser, hutch mirror ,
5 drawer chest on chest. cannonball
panel headboard and footboard.

RICE'S

FURNITURE
854 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, OH.

Open 9 :30-5
Clo•ed Thurs.

446-9523

,--------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

A mother ·daughter banquet was
hPid recently by the Laurel CUff
WMFI at Shoney ' s in Point
P leasant.
Brenda Haggy was program
chainnan, with Shirley Meadows,
Janice Haggy, and Bonnie Friend
assisting. ThP program book lor the
event a s planned by Linda and
Shirley Friend. Jean Wright gave
thP welcome and opening prayer,
Shirley Friend read "What is a
Girl," Bonnie F'r!end had "How
Mother's Day Began", and everyone sang, "ll You Know the
Lord .' '
There was a song by the children,
"I'm Bananas for the Lord ," and a
skit, "Mother's Love · Symbol of
God 's Love" by Linda Frend, Becky
Anclerson, Karen Stanlev. Donna

SECOND HALF 1983 REAL ESTATE TAXES

•

,, .

.; : .

• •

Local4-H acttvtttes

EXTENSION GRANTED

Th&lt;&gt; Out sldPrs 4- H Oub mPt Ma y~ a t Paul
Gra dv 's hufll(' with si x m Pmtx-rs and rwo
advtsOn. plT'SI'n l. Dur lnj;: rhe mN'tlng,
mt&gt;mbt•n; discussed havtn ,e a r&lt;~ r was h.
ca mp. a fld hav1nj;: the silf&gt;rlff co mr to ,2'\ vf' a
talk on ahdt~cl l on _ Also. Pac h mrmbf'r ga ve a
n opcn1 on lhP p rogress of his p ro)f'C' L
Kl'nnv C1ark was ln cha r,ee of l'('('rf'a1lon.
Ry an Eva ns Sf'f\.'l'd ff'ff('S hJTl('nts. - Kevin

CLOSING DATE JULY 20, 1984
Second Half Penalty-10% of Total Unpaid Current Taxes

Gra dy.

1) On December 1st, each year interest is charged against the
full unpaid balance of taxes for period of time from day
established in ( 1) above to date.
2) On first day of month following second half closing interest is charged on unpaid balance of delinquet taxes from .
previous year for period of time from preceding December
lot to that day.

G!lmore, Iva Powell, Ida Martin,
and Diane Johnson.
Others attending were Belind a
Soulsby, Pam and Kim Haggy,
Jenny and Missy F'r!end, Frances
Martin, Angle Sellers, Alme Frtend.
Sharon and Tammy Wright,
Beulah Oehler, Kelly AndPrson,
Sandy and Jessica Wright, Hyllta
Eblin, Kristen Stanley , Joyce
Bowen, Evelyn Stanley, Judy
Wolfe, Wanda and Becky Eblin, Kay
Clark, Bernice Swartz, Delores
Surtace, Beth Lynch, Hazellee
Riebel , Darla Hawley, Margaret
Sheridan, Patty Barton, Brenda and
Tara Wyatt, Eula Odegard, Eva
Robson, Ginny Ward, Linda Powell,
Marge Fetty, Mary Braley, Deanna
and Alicia Haggy.

''

fl('WS

re(Xlrt f'r .

The CotJn try Bo:vs 4-H Club ml!l rl'&lt;.'£'nl ly at
th&lt;' hom(' of David lhle. There werE' 17
mem bers and fou r ad\1so~ u t1l'llllln!l:. Item s
dlscusSI'd tnctudf'd softball RamPS . rollecl\ng
bartl'Ti~ and F our1h of Jul y floa ts.
Thf' Sf'&lt;'rPta ry 's report was ~vPn by Scoll
Bl ckt&gt;r s &lt;~ nd 1hf' trf'asun"r'&lt;&gt; rt&gt; port was give n
bv J ohn Hoback. [)('Ol(lnstrarlon." on roping
afld t•lt'Cldc wrre gi ven by La rry Greif' a nd
Ruger Holter. F'or rf&gt;&lt;'reallon , the club p layed
softba ll and football. Refreshment s were
S('rvro by M axin(' ROSf' .

The Litt le Rascals mer JurK' 8 a1 Klla
Young' s hOm&lt;' wi Th eight mPmbers. thrf.'f.&gt;
i\Jf'Si s and one ad visor a rtif'ndinR. M embers
made out a ffi('DU for th(&gt; neJ~~T cookout and
flllt'd our proj('('l books . They also cooked the
nrst m{'al from !h{'lr Outdoor Coo kery OOok." .
11K' mmu IncludE-d ham~r s . bakPd
p&gt;~ a toos. rPIIsh tray, punch and fresh
strawtwr rles . David Rice. assistant

FAILURE TO RECEIVE BILL DOES NOT AVOID PENALTY AND INTEREST

OFFICE HOURS: 8:30 A.M. TO 4:30 P.M.; PHONE: 992-2004

served rt'freshments. the next m et&gt; tln~&lt;: wtll hP
at Rltctues ' hofl')(&gt; Junf' 19 at 2 p.m . a t which
lime m embers should all bring something
from thf&gt;tr food proj ects book. - Jen nifer
Roush. news reporter .

The M eigs County SwtiK' Oub m('l J une 3 at
Mr. and Mrs. RJtchies' 1\QJTI(' wllh two

reporter.

advisor s

prt&gt;sE&gt; nt.

compare our taste.

Compare our price.
Now you have a choice.
If you think you r prese nt low- priced cigarette offers sati sfy ing taste.
wait until you try New Dora!. It's a rich bl end of our quality tobaccos. so
the flavor is consistently smooth - pack after poc k, carton aft er
ca rton. And besl of all , the price is compara ble to generic cigarettes 1
We invite you to try a pack today. You'll discover why New Dora] dares
challenge any and all low-priced cigaret tcs on the market.

Diseases In swine wert" discussed.

m embfr s a nd

tw o

Also available in
Filter IOOs &amp; MenthoiiOOs.

advtsors and 12 members a nendin~ . Advisors
went owr project books wi th mE'fllbf&gt;rs.

The F.lghl I s Enough 4-H Club had a
Thf' Cheste r U nit('(! M ethOdist
Churc h Junf' II rrom 6 to 1: l) p.m . wl!h sb&lt;
m et&gt; tln~ at

----

The' Count ry Cousins mf'l Jun(' 12 at Al!re
and Amy Rllchl(&gt;' s hoJ1ll' "1th l'lghl ffll•mbt'rs
and thre&gt;e advisors a1rendln!il . Mt:&gt;mbt'rs
d iSNS&amp;'d !h(' 4·H booth . projoct s and bJok.o;
a nd Stanley ordt'r s. MPll&lt;;sa Scarbrough

The Country Cousins had a meettng at the
ho!'11f' of LOri and Scol1 Burk JW&amp;E' 5 with 10
members and three advisors at1£'ndlng
ProjE'd books. judJO~. and the fair bJoth
were dLscus!led. Gay Ann a nd Lor! Bu rkP
St'f'Ved retrt'S hrTIPills. - Jennlfr&gt; r Roush.

~r1 N .

Meigs County Treasurer,
George M. Collins

Membf'r s d&lt;'cldl'd To jZO horsebar k riding and
c an()('{nji! at Bob Evano; F arms Aug. 21.
M ('miX'r s 1as r£&gt;-tested rhf{&gt;(&gt; dlff£&gt;rf' nt kinds of
spagheTTI. two of w h\C'h wer&lt;' hom&lt;' made, wi th
sauce. They also had bn:&gt;ad whlch was madt•
by Tl1sha SrK'nrer. Susan Wo lf. Ca r rlf'
MorrlsS(&gt;y, Me lissa Millt&gt;r and Tr\s ha SpellCE'r
~avt&gt; dt"lflonstrallon s. Demonstrations Wf'H'
on lloust&gt; plants. prPparln~ a relish Tra y.
la undry and brPad demonstr ations. The next
m eeflrig will be June :!i from 2: ,'l lto 4 p.m . at
thC" rhurch . A.! Thai tiiTI&lt;' members will bf'
working on booth derora 1lons and f'('v\f'Wtn!Z
4-H proj ects. HeathN" Fln taw. new s
reporter .

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

·'h"a i lahlt• in l i m i t&lt;'d a re a ~ on I) .

14 mq ta1· 0 9 mq nlf nt .ne av

~er

c.•ga&gt;etl e llY FTC metlud

�Page

t - The Daily Sentinel

Monday, June 18, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

--Ohio Briefs:·-----.. Fonner
Bond set in murder case
employees
file suit

The Daily Sentinel

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wnte D11ly Stnlllltl Cla111fitd Oept

Rinehart's brother under fire
CO LUMBUS OhiO t AP ! - Republicans and DPm ocr ats ha•e
traded charges of pollll cal par1L&lt;;anshlp followmg a C1v!! Service
rev1ew comm ll tee's repor1 tha t found five employees m Mayor Dana

Rmeha rt s admtntstra tton werr unqua lihf'd
One of the five IS the ma vor"s b rother Pa ul, who IS munic ipal
gar age super mtPndcnt
The Republican mayor 1s backm f( the work ~rs. saymg he detests
··rh e par1Lsa n m anner 111 w hich the w hole episode has been
conducted "
Cit) Councilman Ben Espy " Democra t, suggPsted that the
mayor had t ned to sub, er1 the Civ il SPrv1ce sv stem by appomtmg
unqualif1Pd prople Espy has another comm111ee mvesllgatmg the
acllv11 1es of the Civil Sen nce Comrruss10n
The commissiOn, meanu. hilc, ts to mff't M onday to discuss w hat
action to take on the fC'Vt~ panel s r C'port

Teachers honored
LANCASTER, Ohio 1AP 1-Two Lancaste1 H1gh S&lt;:huol teachPrs
crPditPd Wil h saVIng the lift• of a hpa rt attack vtCIIlll have rece1ved
cen ifica tes of m enr from the Amt•JJcan Red Cross
ThE' Cllallon sa 1d James F PoS(•y and Wilham D Guue-Lke took an
ill CO·WOI ker home last FPbrua1y and were present when the person
suffered a hear1 attack ThP\ dett•rnuned the VICtlffi had neither
pulse no1 respU"atmn and appi1Pd card1 pu!rn!nary resuscitation until
an ambulance and emergrncy tPChnicJans a rn\ied
The v1ctun was not Jdmlilled

Service agency demands greater
COLUMBUS, Ohio 1AP 1 - Wmter's snow and cold have g1ven
way to sunny and warm wmrher . but most agenctes that deal with
the ar ea s hom ei&lt;&gt;Ss people sm dPmand for services lS greater now
than earlier
K ent Be1ttel. executiV e director of thP Open Shelter , sa1d the
to!E'rance level of relatives or neighbors who put people up dunng
bad w eather goes down w hen the wea ther IS better
"Another problem IS the gener a l pubtic 1s more m obtle when rt' s
warm Doorway s, bus stallOns and places like that which wt•re
ignored when 11 was cooler are now hack m the pubtic domam and
they aren 't as forgJVmg of people usmg them , ' Beitte! said
He sa1d the shelter turned aw ay a record number of prople smcc
April wh&lt;'n the weat her turned w armer The faci lity houses 00 m en
and nme wom en
At the F a1th MISSion, asSistant d~rector E d Bynum sa 1d there has
been an increase m the number of prople commg m for free m eals
Larry Baker of the V olunteers of Amen ca sa1d there had bPen no
letup in t r ansJent s seekm g sheltc1 smce the w arm weather returned

Production ends at glass plant
BE LLA.IRE, Oh10 IAPJ P roduction has ceased at the
fmanc1ally troubll'() lm)X'nal Glass Cu plant, the sta te's !asl glass
handcralter and no one know s 1f It w11l re;wne
But Bellau e reSJdmls who attmded a pubilc ml'&lt;'tmg Fnda} mght
are lrymg to SdW th&lt;• far il1t v ThPv pledged at least $30,00J towar"d
buy mg the company from ownpr Robert Sta hl
Stahl has been wmkmg on a plan to sell some of the plant 'smolds
and cqu1pmmt to Jalst' money In a bid to 1emove Jmpenal from
feder al bankruptcy pl oc'r'Cdmgs But sornP residents say losmg thP
molds would cnpp!e lmpenal' s chances for recovery
If a plan to save lm)X'na! 1s not arranged by June 29, federal
bankmpt cv coun plans to havl' the compan} liQUidated
lm)X'nal s gtft shops, meanwhile w ill r emain open two m orr
weeks

Commercial properties sold
HEATH, Oh1o 1AP1 - 1110 Southgate Dr• e!opment Corp has
announce'() the sale of two of 1t s commerna! prope111es he1 e - the
Southga tp Shupp111g Cmt l 'l aml l hl' Southgate Apartments- to the
M arch Co of Boston
Sa le pnce of the pro)X'I tll•s was l'St IITla It'&lt;.I at $1" m illion
Thl' t ransactlon wa s announced Sa turda; bv Southgate President
.Jack O' Neill
Southgate Corp w1ll 1etom ow nersh1p of the :JOO acre Newark
Industrial Park man agement of l h&lt;• M&lt; Millan Townhouse
proper1!es and ot her mdu slnal a nd commer cial ac t1v1ty Ill Licking
and Franklm counti&lt;&gt;S
March Co sa 1d 11 was ato acted bv the strong cconom1c base 111
central Oh10
The shoppmg center was built 111 196"1 The adj acent apa rtment
complex was bu ill Ill 1% 4 and mc ludes 100 apartment units

o

Officials, residents lay bricks
COLUMBUS, Ohio t AP ! A r il y counr1lwoman and a
)congressman spent part of the weckend cleanmg , stacking and
laying bricks m the hiStone Germ an V1llage neighborhood
The Saturday gathering was a cooperative effor1 between
neighborhood r eSidents and the c 1tv to rPplace wtth r emf'nt the
gravel base of bnck st rPets, a project c &gt;ty offiCials sa1d would be roo
costly without the neighbors· help
Jlm Daley , the project 'sco-chaJ rrran. says hr was thrilled w1th the
turnout of volunteer s
He said that at one pomt Saturday 75people wereworklng H esrud
the pyent was the first of what he hopes w lll be many prorects on the
ne!gborhood 's brick st rPets
Alongside the volunteer s were c1tv councilwoman Dorothy T eater
and U S Rep John K as!Ch, R WPstr n 111e Kas1ch said he hopes to
get federal funds to hPip w ith the proJect, but that It won't be easy

'Lave' quilts on display
ATIIENS, Otllo (API - A current art exhibition shows that love
letters c an provld&lt;&gt; warm feet as well as warrn thoughts.
Love letters have bePn stitched together to form one of thP 79 quilts
on display at the "Patterns Worth Repeating" quilt show at the Dairy
Barn arts center
The love letters quilt Is displayed under glass because It ls fragile,
but many of the other quilts show great dur ability, Including one
made of patterned feed sacks.
S!nle of them have lasted since the early 1800s, and many were
mad&lt;&gt; In the 19l1s, when the Dl'pression Induced people to save cloth
Other quUts are newcomers. dating from the quilting rf'V!v al that
began In the late 197!B
Show coordinator ChrL•tlne Duffy said ahout 600 hours of work
went Into each quUt , which represent the work of many quiltmakers
In 16 southeast Ohio counties

1

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"We're bemg pressured to pass
more kids. and kids that don't
d&lt;&gt;serve to pass, " said Brenda
Petruzella, another ~gl!sh teacher
at South
She sa 1d that during a m eptmg
Wi t h admmlstrators last fall,
teachers were given a computer
pnntout listing thP number of F's
they had given the previous year
"We w ere told to cons!d&lt;&gt;r It a
grade card of our teachmg," she
said
South High SpaniSh teacher
Donna Grorge said admlnistra tors
told teachers at the meeting that
they " deemPd our success by the
number of faU!ng grades we gave "
South Principal Michael O'Leary
said there has been a thruSt thiS year
to cut down on flunking grades, but
he said teachers have rn!slnter·
preted the purpose of the action
"We're not saying you have to
give so many A's and B's, " be said
" It's never been laid outtolhemthat
they can't fall kids. We're trying to
motivate the staff to get personally
involved with their stud&lt;&gt;nts and to
try different methods of teaching to
lmprove grades."

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NOTICE TO
HEAVY EQUIPMENT
OEALERS
In nc:r:orr1 ance wrth SP.c t1on
30 7 86 ol the Oh o Rev1sed
rode ~ea i Pd b1dS Will be
rece,._,ed by th e M e gs Cou tl ty
Cu rnrr rr ss toners rn lhe tr off ce
June 26, 1984, th e brds w tl l be
op e11ed al 2 PM June 26.
1984, and read aloud tor the
foltowrnq spec thed bulldoler
fach brd to meet the con dr tro ns
and mrn tmu m soecr f,c;n rons OJ S
fell ow s
I - Used D !) Bull dozer or ti S
eau valent ..v11h tess l ~ar 1000
hou r s on eng ne lransmrs'iron
and l tna l dr lVf~
Sa1d hullrlo;er &lt;&gt;hall have th e
lr:JIIowrng
Roll bar All wedthPr cab 1
Sh ank Ba r A•oper 2&lt;1 HlCh track
pa ds 15 X .S U 111 1 Blarle
In addrtt o r, ! 'lf.l re shall be a
m •n m um o f 75 pe :::enr VI. ea r
remarn nq en eac h rac k roller
sproc ket and eac h fr o'&lt;t •r1 1er
Btdder 10 be able to furnrs h
records
uoon request
on
ove rhauling ot engrne !rans
mrss1on and tr n at d11ve
Th e M ergs Coun ty Commt'i
sro ner s reser,..e thP. r1 oht to
ft j P~ I flny Or all brds .3 n::! TO
wn vP il'ly il nrl all .ntc rma l t1es
or o seiPC t the bPs l brl l or t he
1nl end ed pu rpose
Mctgs Coun ty
Cum rn1 ss oners
M ary HobsteHer
Cle rk
(6 I I 18 2rc

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORT AnON

~· -

REMARKABLE HOME IN MID·
OLEPORT SeYen room
home on a large double lot
Three bedrooms. equipped
k~chen and a part basement
N1ce and neat and owners
want s an offer Askmg

$36,500 00
NEW LISTING - SYRACUSE
- A beaubful spht entry home
wrth 2 3 bedrooms, new
k~c hen !hat ~ equipped wrth
range, refngerator, d~hwasher
and d~posal Carport and a
mce ~ze lot Just $44,900 00
POMEROY - Large 6 room
house, wrth a huge liYtng room
2 beaut~ul fireplaces, ongmal
woodwor~ and a huge s1olage
bUilding and garage Just

Lf""

l 41 -

8"

f Q - II oe~ no

l 000 11

t l 7 - a..ilol0

142 - ""'"""
111
C: .... I~ ...

IJPI O """"'''

uoo

()roo O.., " " ""'"

uoo

\J o e l&amp; .. .,.~,'~"""' " .. '' ""
IJp e I &amp; Wordo
S&lt;• ~• • "" ' " on

b ooog o •

.,. ~

Public Not1ce

At hens Ga llra Hockinq
MP. rqs anrl Vr nton C01Jnt1es
Ohr o on twenty I ve br•d aes on
v ar1 :J u ~ rOtJt P.s and sPr lrons hy
clea n r.g and pa,nt•nq and
other retatea work
Pro1ect Leng th - 0 00 lee t or
0 00 rntle
Work l enq th - 0 00 fee t or
000 mtlf!
Tre da te set for com pl et on
of 1hr s .Nark shall be as se t fort h
rn rhe b1j d1r g proposat
Eacr brd dcr shall bE r equ11ed
to i le \1\r th h s b rd il ce rtil cd
chcrk or cash1e r scheck for an
Jmoun! equal to five per cent
of hiS btd. bu t rn no evP. nt more
than ltlty tho usanrl rloii;Hs or a
honrl lor ten per cent of his bid
navabl e to th&lt;=&gt; D•rPctor
B1 dders m us t a:Jplv on the
pr oper lor TJ s for QLCI II IC8 1to rr
at least 'en d avs pr 101 to •he
dale ::.et lor optm.n;J btds 1n
acC01d unce wnh Ch apter 5525
Oh10 Aevrserl Code
Plans and specrfrca trons arP
on 1rlt&gt; tn the De part ment ol
Transportal on and the olftCC of
the D1 Str rct Deo uty Orrec10r
The Orr ector re serves t he
r1(Jr t to re1ec t an,.. nn:l i':lll hJcts
WAR! k N J SM I1 11
Oln[ CTQR
11P.v8 177l

-Qto"'

H J - MoO&lt;l n
I l l ,..,,.. ,... ..

f o lio

~·

~-

Parts 1 lhru 25

1!11 - leo&gt;•
!11

" 00

• • Pt • no

Lost and Found

answf'r or 01he rw1se respond
.n reQ ltlrl'd bv thP Ohro Rules ol
('"'I Pr oce dure tudq mefl t wr ll
bP rr-nrl ered illil ns l vou tor the
r PI Ff dPma .. de d rn t h e
compla ro t
Larry E Spencer
Cler k of Court5
Mergs County
Common Plens Co urt
(61 d 1 1 18 25 !7) 2 9 61C

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNlY.
OHIO

..

NOTICE BY
PUBUCAnON
TO
MARY

MATLACK

de·

ceased, the unknown spouse.
if any, whose name and
address ant unknown. the
unknown hatn, devtsees. legatees, admintstrators, ei'.ecu·
tors, end / or aSSigns of Mary

Matlack, dec
RICHARD ROBERT MA·
TLACK. deceesed. the un·
known spouse. if any, whose
name and address are un
known the unknown hetrs,

T!"' V 11 qr 1 1 M td diF f\Of l 15
~1111 11111rJ · rnnr ~ 1 1 s lr nm 1 ! ~r
P ~l rl I) 1rl , ,~ I "1 m l()dflF 11fh I
j(f'll •lll tr •1 th• r n n•lr1rrl111t1 ol
nrw
'" rl ro J,rn ol y home&lt;&gt;
ttH nr ,, .-. tn•' HU O ComrnrJniiV
O•~vl lr 1\1' 11 r11 Bl1 r I&lt; Gr rr •l Pro
ln
Prn 1 al• s 1r011 rl tr&gt;
c
t\n'JII r1 ,n IV' 1 n
1nl post
1 Jl ~• ~ r j II) I,JI &lt;
I f 1rJ J 1 nP 22
I!J I.)el mr1 t1 1 rl~ "" f d 11 M r1
dl1 p !I H1 nq D Vf'ii' Pin'1
Ptnnr 1rn P () Rq • 2044!)
( n i•Hnl , ,&lt;; ()h 1 1 {/20
'""t Ill

$3990000
REALTORS
Henry Clellnd, Jr.
992-6191
Dottie Twner 992·5692

J1111 Trussell 949-2660
Jo

Hill98~

AW

"OIL FIELO SERVICES
' OUMP TRUCK SERVICE
· coNCRETE WORK
·cusToM ""''THOMEs
"WATER GAS"

•Ranges
" Free Estimates"
lnstallatron Avatlable

I 4

OIL LINES

•orve•• •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE

JIM CLIFFORD

992-7201

PH.

, ~ II

't'

GARAGE
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission

PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121

•Ill r ~1P 11 rr1 1, w II h• hP ir1
1 f' VII, I• nl Mtf di•JJO rl l 1
i 10 PM ( II 1111' 20 198.1
1n1 710PM J nr&gt;:?l 1984
•0 ') hi :i n , .t • • •nf]u! hPior P
Iff
r l 11""lr&gt; I •t •r ( T I AP!l f&lt;l
R• h rt ' .t ~t.r ' 1 l'•i' '' 1t10n
t' ,, HUD [ lmr~r r n tll,
1nrl r
n( .,I II I '11 • I I RI(H ~ Gr 1rt
P n nr rT
I)

"GKEE
M

614-992-7626

Rt 124 Pomeroy Oh10

.,

'

f eatunn2 Lanny Tennant

Roger Hysell

Public Notice

J

Ml DDLEPORT, OHIO

PRIVATE
INVESTIGATION
OF ALL TYPES

6/ 14 / 1 mo

1

' '"

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes-ExtenSIVe
Remodelmg
Insurance Work
CustQ.m Pole Bldgs

&amp; Garages

Roofmg Work
Alum1num &amp; Vmyl Stdmgs
15 Years E•penence

GREG ROUSH
PH . 992-7583
or 992-2282
II 1 Itt

G&amp;W PLASTICS
&amp; SUPPLIES

f.l

GAS - WATER

FISHING REEL

REPAIR

Parts. Service &amp;
Cleaning

Broker-AuctiOn ServiCe
Cheryl Lemley
Me1gs County Assomte

SEWAGE PIPE
REULATORS &amp;
FITTINGS
VOLUME DRIPS

Phone 742 -3171

wo.. hou&lt;e- 985-3813

STEVE FINLAW
PH. - 985-4266

•••den&lt;e- 98 5·383 7

Rt. 1

M L . Bud ' McGHEE

Now Acceptmg Listings m Meigs Co .

for Garm. Zebco, Shr·
mano , Johnson Drawa,
Qurck

Long Bottom, Oh.

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS

chotce

35185 Oak Htll Road
Long Bottom, OH 45743

No Down Payment
Lower Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box, 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
For Faster Servtce
Call 614· 992-6737

PH. (614) 985·4212
We Use Von Schrader
Equtpment Recommended
by Leading Carpet Manu·
facturers
'FREE ESTIMATES"
6 6 I mo

WRITESEL
ROOFING CO.

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutters Cleaned

We Have A Full Ttme
Shop Technrc1on
on Duty

&amp; Painted

RIDENOUR
TV &amp;APPLIANCE

Storm Doors
&amp; Windows

949·2263

CHESTER-985-3307

3 2 tin

41 / tin

Also Some Car
Fenders Avatlable
J a li n

' - - - - - - 5·141 mo

$AVE ON USED TRACTORS

Vinyl &amp; Alummum
SIDING

1983 16 HP Twin Allis Chalmers
w/42 in. mower
1979 12 hp Wheelhorse w/42 in. mower
1979 10 hp Wheelhorse w/42 in. mower
1975 10 hp Wheelhorse w/42 in. mower
10 HP Massey Ferguson
w/42 in. Mower &amp; Snow Blade

Vinyl &amp;Aluminum

SIDING CO.

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roolrng of all Types
Worked in home area
20 years
· Free Estimates"

949-2860
No Sunday Cells

~
II '1111

~

Announcements
3

Announcements

SWEEPER and sewrng ma
ch10e repan . parts
and
supplies
Ptck up and
deh11ery , Dav•s Vacuum
Cleaner , one half mtle up
Geqrges Creek Rd
Call

:~
· ~~~

c:~~·#
113 W 2nd St
Pomeroy, OH
Open 9 00 to 5 00
Closed Thursda s
6I

AT

MGM
FARM CITY
Grand
Opt' ninK
Sn/,

At Ohio Job Service
39350 Union Avenue
Pomeroy, Ohio

Friday

June 22, 1984
6 P.M. till

742-2328
We Have the
lowest Rates

Call lucas Tours and Travel
today reservattons llmtted
on following trrps Altenttc
Ctty
June 21 thru 23,
Opryland July 13 thru 15
Worlds FEur July 13 thru 18
and Aug 10 thru 15, Myrtle
Beach July 13 thru 16
Cmctnnatl Reds vs l A • Aug
3 thru 5
2 mghts 3
games" , Also, Btg B~ngo at
Cherokee. N C July 6 thru

$75

and

$7.500 00

Bmgo games at Charleston
Ctv1c Center June 27th Call

BOGGS

304 346· 7542

SALES &amp; SERVICE
•TRENCHING
•BACK HOE •DOZER
•END LOADER
•DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
•WATER GAS SEWER
RAIN LINES

County Ce•ltfied

SEPTIC TANKS INSTAtlEP
FREE ESfiMATES

367· 7560-367-761
CHESHIRE OHJP

U S RT 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

4

Aut homed John Deere
New Holland , Bush Hoi
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Ports

&amp;

Service

''

3 1 . t

Giveaway

6 small breed pupptes, 5
male 1 female Call 614

446 8104
4

ktttens

Call

614 256

t665
2 k1ttens . 1 female cat very
good natured, very loveable

Cell 614-446· 7069
Ftve

Midnrght

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

PAT HILL FORD
992-21 96
Middleport. Oh1o
1 13 11&lt;;

You Won't Want to

An Equal Opportunity Employer

puppies

to

a

good

YOUNG'S

K•ttens , 245 6804

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Adorable seven wk old kn
tens, both gray and black
ttger strtpes, also calhco

- Addon1 and r8modehng
- Roofmg mnd guner work

- Concreta work
- Pfumbmg and elecl rrcal
worll

!Free Estimates]

992· 2181

•1

Card of Thanks

CARD OF THANKS
The Famrly of Gene
Wrlson wrsh to express
!herr srncere thanks and
deep apprecratron to the
lrrends, nerghbors, rela trves, all the frre depts ,
rescue squads . Corps of
Engrneers and Dept of
Natural Resources for
lherr asmtance, support, the food they
brought and the flowers.
Thanks to Rev Roy Deeter and Whrte
and
Ethrrdge funeral Home.
It has meant so much to
us rn our loss.
Wrfe, Nell; Daughters
and their famtlies

S&amp;W TV
AND

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

46353 Scout Camp Rd
Chester. Oh1o
Ph . 986-4269
If No Answer. Call 985-4381
We Sarv1ce AU
Makes 81 Model•

Antenna Installation
House Calls and Shop
Servtce Avall1ble
SPfYi ce lh ~ l Towers Abo~ e
Th e Rest 6 tSt t m~ pd

Call 614·949 2614
Free to good home. part
border collie &amp;: part austral
tan shepherd female dog.
spayed Call after 5 p m

614 ·742 · 2445

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Grve away, 1 whtte female

992-6215 or 992 -7314

cot Call 614-992 6250

Pomeroy, Oh1o

Miss This Event

MGM
FARM
CITY
POMEROY

992-7113

AL TROMM

Ouatl Chtcks Will be ovatlable June 20through June 24
at Yz pnce at LaBonte Quad
Farm 36160 Bashan Rd
Long Bottom For tnforma·
hon call 614 985 - 4345

home Cell 614 256 -675B

JUNE 20, 21 and 22

ARMY. BEALLYOU CAM

WORK

54 M 1sc Merchandise

WILL BE TAKEN

In today's Army, there are Uterally hundreds of sktlls to [hoo;e from
And tf you Sigll up under our Delayed Entry Program, you can do the choosmg
Of cour.;e, whether you choose surveYing or air traffic controLyou
must qualify And you may have to watt abtt for an opemng m the sktll trammg
of your chotce. But If you qualify,we wtll guarantee your chOtce up to twelve
months madvance.
For achance to serve your country (and tram for the sktll of your choJCe).
11s1t your local Army Recrutter Or call Army Opportumttes,

5-8 2 mo pd

TOM'S
SHOE REPAIR

FOR EMPLOYMENT

SKILL

Pn (614\ 843-5425

DOZER
AND
BACKHOE

8

APPLICATIONS

GET

EUGENE LONG

l ]! &lt;

Help Wanted

BIG BEND FOOD LAND
SUPERMARKET

BISSELL
"Beautiful, Custom
BUilt Garages"
Call for free srdtng est;mates, 949-2801 or

BAUM
LUMBER
CHESTER
985-3301
11

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

PERSONALIZED
POOLS
498 Gen Hartmger Pkwy
Middleport, OH

PH . 992-2549
OPEN:
MON.· SAT. 10 to 6
POOL SUPPLIES &amp;
MAINTENANCE

C l KITCHEN

512211 mo

7 German Sheppard type
pupp1e1 6 male 1 female
Can see both parents In
qutre at 244 Sycamore St.
Middleport
K11tens &amp; cats to g1ve away
Pearl Haw1horne Call 614

843· 5345
Kittens . free to good home
Coli 614· 992 5382 or 992

7339
To gtve away Found small
black and tan mtKed breed.

female
3610

GAS LINES
WATER LINES
SEWAGE ll NES
FREE ESTIMATES

BUS.: 985-3813
RES.: 985-3837
6/ 18 / 1 mo pd

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Srzes Start From 12'xJ6'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Aacme, Oh
Ph 6U-843· 519!

Call 304 896

3 k11tens to a mce home

304-676- 2474 after 6 00

6

THE
DITCHING
SERVICE

Lost and Found

Lost ba1eball glove on field
behind Salisbury grade
school
Please c•ll 992Blue luggage containing infant clothing In gerbag bag
lost on Rt 36 approk 12
miles from town. reward .

Phone 304· 988-3794 .

part beagle, malo, 304-675·
3424 or 676-6632

1•

A u ctton every Tuesday
mght, Pt Pleasant, WVa
Auct Lonme Neal Youth
Center Bldg , Camden St
R1ck Pearson Auct1oneer
Servtce Estate. Farm. Anttque &amp; hqu1dat1on sales
L1censed &amp; bonded m Ohto &amp;
WVa
304 -773 5785 or

304 773·91 B5

3069
Auctton Mt Alto, Thursday
June 21 , 7 00 PM Cons1gn
ment accepted Emma Bell
Aucttoneer 429 84

9

a.

lawn Moweng
Trtmmmg
Reliable and dependable
Reasonable rates Call614

258 · 8261 after 5 30
Roofing and gutter work .
metal work housepamt1ng.
carpenter work Exc ref
Free estimates Call 446·

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars
Jtm Mtnk Chev Olds Inc
Btll Gene Johnson

General Haultng For sate
Limestone ftll d1rt, and top
1011
Call Call 614 - 266

Will

plow

tobacco

Call

614 -256-1528
Dozer work ground clearmg
$25 per hr

&amp; excavatmg

Call 446 9638
Baby Sitter needs work 1n her
home or wtll Sit wnh elderly
mthe~rhome Calt614 - 446

Call Ray 614-446 · 3109
· lc Water wells . dulled &amp; ser
vtced Free est1mates Call

614-992·5006 or614· 742
3147

Financial

THE OHIO VALLEY PUB

Employment
Services
11

Business
Opportunity

Help Wanted

Homemakers Dreamt No
expenence needed to earn
26% comm1ss1on demon·
stratrng tn fnends' homes
You control hours and 1n
come Absolutely no 1nvest
ment I Also bookrng parttes
Call 446· 1270 or wnte Toy
Plan , Johnstown, PA

15904

I NOTICE

I

LISHING CO recommends
that you do bus tn ess w1th
people you know. and NOT
to send money through the
matl untrl you have mvestr gated the offermg

TOOLS

Inter·

ested 1M owmng your own
busmess and be1ng mde
pendent? Ex1stTMg dealer
shtp ava1lable m Me1g end
Galha Count1es No fee
inventory mvestment re
qu1red Buy back guarantee
Above average mcome
Complete company tre1mng
Celt Vern Roe 1 -800 582
7497
or Gene Schroer

1 614 687 4708
Own your own Jean
Sportswear. lad1es Apparel
or Chrldren's Store 300
Brand names 514.900 '"
eludes 1n1t1al Inventory,
store fixtures tratnrng and
much more Mr Tate 704

Ass•stant Orgamst needed
at Grace Eptscopal Church

Call 6 t 4 992 3968

oiled

Call

1 614 992

2111 and ask for Jtm
Snodgrass tor your career
mtervtew
Benefectal Oh.
Inc 300 W Second St
Pomeroy Oh 46769
Part 1tme JOb 1 8 years and

older Call 304-675-7873
Baby stttar wanted for 2 year
old boy Greer Road Area
References requtred 304-

675 · 2921
Part ttme JOb. takmg epphcattons Tuea 19th 1 00 PM
Fort Randolph Terrace Matn
St , we need 6 good people
willing to work Ask for Mrs

Lethev

31

Homes for Sale

32 Mob1le Home s
for Sale

6 rooms. basement, do uble
garage, 1 &amp;. one th1rd ac re
lot. Ro se Htll, Pomer oy

$32 ,900 Call 1-6t4 -678
2513
8 yrs old, 3 be drm . 2 bath s
famtly r oom w 1th w oo d
burner Stngt e c ar garag e o n
8 flat acres w1th stoc k ed
pond C1ty water tn Racme

614-742 2261
For sale by owner , Clarenc e
H1tl Immediate possession ,
pr1ce negot1abler or owner
w111 help ftnance 81 -levet tn
RustiC H1tls, Syracuse. Oh10
2 full baths 3 bedrooms .
fam1ly room With ftreplace.
sptral sta1rcase ltvtng room .
d1nmg room . kitchen w1th
dishwasher &amp; garbage diS
posal
cham hnk fence
16x 12 barn for storage
msulated Call 614 - 247

Rutland
10 room s on
4 7•150 lot North Mam
54995 Needs work , but lots
of poss1b111t1es Call 216 394- 6741 or wr1te Box 723 ,
Pomeroy OH 45769 Is 8th
house from corner of Salem
on west s1de Make an offer
Rusti C Htlls Syracuse 3
bedroom fam1ly room . cen
tral a1r cham hnk fence
storage bu1ldmg S32 000

Call 614 992 2521 or 304
882· 31 97
Owner transferred must sell
home famt1y room has 20ft
of w1ndows for putoral
v1ew. f1mshed double gar
age , f1replace large porch
40 ft deck. woods pnvacy
near Royal Oak Park

$63 ,900
5420

HOME

LOANS

FIXED

RATES Below market rates
F1xed conventtonal FHA
VA leader Mortgage .
Athens . collect 614 - 592

23

Cell 614 992

7 Room house
laundry
room, 4 bedrms . F1tth St
Syracuse Can be seen at
Orts Hubbard res Call 992

22 Money to Loan

Add1t1on 3 bedroom
1 Yz bath. full base
famtly room carport
a c . S57 000 Call

614· 9B5 4201
Pomeroy 3 bedrooms 1 1/:i
bath all ut1httes ac car
peted, 1nsulated remodeled
mstde, carport , basement

Call 6 t 4 992 2602
FOR RENT WITH OPTION

Professional
Services

PIANO TUNING Lower
poced regular tun1ngs
dtscounts to Sen1or C1t1zens
Churches &amp; Schools Ward s
Keyboard 304 675 3824
Ptano Tumng and Repan
Brumcardr Mus1c Co . 446 0687 Sk1U and mtegnty our
trademark
lane Damels,

TO BUVItl 14ft w1de three
bedroom bath and half.
mobile home Sltttng on mce
lot. ready to move mto
6225 00 down 9225 00 per

NEW AND USED MOBIL~
HOM ES KESSEL 'S OUAC
lTV MOBILE HOME SAL ES,
4 Ml WEST GALLIPOLI S:
RT 35 PHONE 614 446.
7274
197 9 3 bdr mobrle home on
11:1
a c re lot, wt~ll shaded
Mu st sell both t o gether Ca H

Seven year old home three
bedrooms garden spot
2605 lmcoln Ave 8 % p et
assumable loan 304 675

5047

Professional ElectrolySis
Chntc Probe Type Electroly

sos

675 6425

614 742 -2951

AMA.

approved

FOA t!o

FCC

Doc1or referrals
For sale or trade 2 1'2 bed
room all modern house w1th
bath attached garage vmyl
steel alumn Sellortradefor
late model 2 or 3 bedroom
trailer and land 304 - 882

304 675-5568

Real Estate

3590

31

Homes for Sale

- - -- - - -- - One acre lot With large
tn · ground pool torn ltner.
and part1ally f1nrshed base
ment For tnformat1on call

Reduced 2 - story, 3 BR
fenced yard , 2 car garage
separate entrance 15 Vm
ton Gtps $29,900 Call
446- 2081 n1ghts
House for Sale by owner 4
BR house on Lower R1ver
Rd 3 miles south of town
Woodburnmc ftreptace gar
age, basement new fur
nace. and roof . overlooktng
the Oh10 Rrver Call dayttme

446 · 1615
1244

noght

446 ·

Reduced 2 story 3 bdr
2 - car garage, fenced vard
separate entrance, 1 5 Vm
ton , Gathpohs. 446 - 2081

noghu $29 ,900
8t barn
614 256 1640

N1ce house

Call

Attrecttve small home. small
yard at a small prtcel Mtddle

port 614·992 ·6941
Two story. 7 room house
bath screened poh. carport
on 4 acres. 5 m1 southeast

Oak Hilt, OH off St Rt 279
$16,000. Cart 614-682 ·
6173
4 BR large eat 1n kttchen,
large hvtng &amp; fam1ly rooms.
also , 16i'.32 tnground
heated pool all on a one acre
fenced lot. many other ex tras
Fmancmg avatlabe-

859 , 500
5B77

Cart 304· 773 ·

1 9 79 14x70 3 BR , 2 fuH
bath s on 441 acre w eO
shad e d lot Call 614 3 88995 7 aft er 5 PM

1972 12 X 65 Ftam 1ngo e x
cond1t1on S6500 Cal1614-

379 2314
8 X 3 2 Trat ler 2 BR ne w
pamt new carpet 1de al fot
c ampsrt e Call 614 44 6 .

9283
1976

Bayvrew 14 X 70
stov e. CA . W8 , good
cond Call 614 -446 - 1506
Aefr~g .

Mob1l e Hom e D etr o 1t er
12X60
AC
2 po rch es
underpm nmg fue l 0 11 borelt
$5 , 500. good cond CaU

614 25613t7
1973 Baron 12x65 2 BR
many e~~:tras
exc
co nd
Fren c h Ctty Brok erag e S er·
v1 c e Call 446 - 9340
Schu lt 50th Anmv er sa ry rebat e S 1000
rebat e any
Sc huh purc hased th roug ~
Jun e 30 Fren c h C1ty M ob rl e
Ho mes Call 446 93 40
Ctosmg Out Trad er Re n ta L
Bust ness Had 22 ONLY 6
LEFT
S1z es 1 Ox 5 0 &amp;
12x52
2 b e dr oo m fur
m sh ed A comf o n abte home
fo r a low Pr~c e Brown s
Trader Park
Mrn er sv tll e.
Oh1o Call 6 14 992 3 3 24
N ear Racme m co untry 3 1:
ac r es w1th 14x70 m o b rlohome 2 bedroom 2 bath '
ce ntral atr p orc hes &amp; 1 2x 1 6,
barn Call after 6 00 p m /

614 · 843 5240
For sal e
1969 1 2x 60
Schultz mob1le home Com "'
pletely furn1shed mdu d1nQ
ac . washer dryer m1 c r o ...
wave 8t 60 tt woo derr
porch Call 614 992 2889 :
1980 Hotly Park 14x 70 2
bedroom 1 1/, baths tota l
electnc central a ~r cond
drshwasher
por c h w rt h :
awnm g underpenmn g st ar ..,
ag e butld1ng
3 0 4 67 5 ~

2604

33

Farms for Sale

- - -- - - .

month 304 576 2711

New ltstrng movrng need t o
sell 3 bedr o om 2 full baths
Meadowbrook addn 8 1h per
cent assumable loan lots of
extras pn ced 60s 304

813-665· 1232
Servtce RepresentatiVe Be
assoctated w1th one of the
leaders m consumer fman
Ctal IBFVICeS Immediate op
ening for quahf1ed mdtv1dual
tnterested m consumer ft
nanc•et servtce - consumer
loans Home mortgages In
surance Sales Credtt Cards
Income TaM preparauon and
General office adm1n1stre
tton Successful candtdate
wrll be self -motivated , hke
challengtng work have good
commumcat1on akiii!J , rntel llgent aggresstve and able
to absorb end apply comprehennstve tramtng programs
to perform succesfully in
credit , nles. collections ,
and admm1strat1on Com petitive salary commensu rate w1th expenence and
excellent benefits If Inter-

----------

Baum
br1ck.
ment
pat10

6000 E•t R 9B05

Ml 4B429

24 Sot ups 614·775·4966

pu p p1 es,

ntghts

2239

Government Jobs $16 .559
S50 653 year Now H1rtng
Your area Call 1 806 687
Home Work opprtun1ty m
Multi level Markettng Un
1tm1ted earnmga No selling
for deta1ls mall a se l f
addressed , stamped enve
l ope to Bo• 142 Durand

B eaut1ful Col t. e
446 3 8 9 7

753·4738

3051
Part t1me Instructor for
Mental Health Technology
Program 1 year. posstbrUty
of renewal Teach one 2
hour lab and superv1se fteld
work students
Ph D
or
Masters degree 10 Psycho!·
ogv or Gurdance and Coun ·
seltng. chmcal exper1ence
requtred $4, 200 Send re
sume transcnpt and three
references to Thomas 0
Oellench Chatr, Depa1t
mentof Soc1al Work, 631
Morton Hell. Oh1o Un1ver
stty, Athens. Ohto 46701
Oeadhne June 29. 1984
Oh10 Uneverstty IS an Equal
Opportunrty Employer

Set 16·

Flea Market Sternwheeler
Regatta. nverfront Ports
mouth, Ohto June 22 23

4134

SNAP -ON

614 992

614 · 446· 9584·

614 388 9957

Moddloport. Oh 614 · 992
3476

45769 o• call
7760

Yard Sal e Kanauga 429 4t~
ave
Galhpohs
M ens S
Womens C h1ldrens c lot h es;
10 2 5 5 0 c e nts
61 OU
small appliances $1 00 c an
Wed 2 0

N1ce home tn country n ear
mtnes full basement e el
Iars. 2 bedroom s, 12 acre s m
Langsvrlle
$29 000 Call

21

FURNITURE
Beds, 1ron,
wood
cupboards. cha1rs ,
chests. baskets, dtShe.s,
stone J&amp;rs, ant1ques gold
and sliver
Wr1te M 0
M1ller, Rt 2 , Pomeroy, Oh10

Operator 304· 756 2779

Bass player wants JOb w1th
welt established c ountry
square dance or polka band

Buymg darly gold, stlver
coms nngs, J&amp;welry, sterlmg
ware old co1ns, large currency Top pnces Ed Burkett Berber Shop. 2nd Ave

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS

Fraz1er s B o tt o m Flea
Market Every weekend
U S 35 Fraz1ers Bottom
WVa 2 6082 Dealers Wet
come
Don Frazter

Coli 6t4 949-2641

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heater s Swam F urmture
446 - 3159
3rd
&amp;
Olrve St Galhpohs Oh

2711

Vicinity

7475

446 3672

Cash pa1d for fancy tron or
heavy 1ron beds 6160 and
up for cortam Metgs Co
stone tars
Old ttme cupboard
call 1 304· 882 -

&amp;

3171

1427

Aucteon every Fn ntght at
the Hartford Communrty
Center Truckloads of new
merchandtse avery week
Comugments of new and
used merchandrse always
welcome R1chard Reynotds
Auct1oneer
304 · 275 -

· Gaiiipolfs · ··

•"-P•·

Wanted to Do

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8250 .

LOST 1n v1cintty of B Mtle
Road, light brown &amp; white
10 fl Mr

Situations
Want ad

Denny ' s Auto Pamttng. gua·
renteed pamtmg at reaaon• ·
ble rates . CollisiOn work
welcomed
yra
nence 614·843 - 6468

18
8

614-367·7101

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE
We'd ltke to mtroduce you to
[ngage-A·Car 1he modern way
to dnve the vehtcle of your

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS
PH. 992-7013
New Chevy Truck
FENDER
'76 95
DOORS
't49 95
HOODS
'174 95
BUMPERS
'69 95
GRILL
'42 50
R SUPPORT
'84 9 5
TAll GATE
'85 00
FORD FENDER
'69 95
BUMPER
. '69 95

loot Black glooaeo whh
black c..e, loot in Pomeroy,
Tueoday around Netoon &amp;
Brogan Warner Call 814·
992 ·3160

61!1-446 -0294

$4190000
BEAUTIFUL REBUILT HOME
- large hvtng room, 2 large
bedrooms, and a guest room
Cen!ral a11, basemeoL deck
large patiO, and a garage Frurt
trees and a garden space
Home ~ 1n great rondllron

'RECLAMATION WORK

All Makes

"Mud Rrver Band"
For The ladres
Every Sunday Night
9:00 to 1:00

Public Notice

Three acres with

If interested contact
The Home National Bank
in Racine. 949-2210.

APPLIANCE

985·3561

LIVE BAND EVERY
WEEKEND

Something Special

(1) HOUSE IN CHESTER·
a nicety
constructed conaete block
home 26x30, 3 bedrooms,
one bath. 12xl5 livil1
room and 24x24 family
room Partralty carpeted,
fuel orl furnace with factlihes !of woodbumer. 12xl5
block sttlllllle building,
20x30 block Jlilrate. Right
off Rl. 248, countJy setting,
y, mrle east of Chester,
Ohro.
(2) TWO STORY HOUSE
IN RACINE:
Downstairs equipped with
kitchen, living room,
dinrng room and den;
upstatrs has two bedrooms and one bath;
house also has basement Lot srze approx .
48'x308' . Needs work.

KEN'S
SERVICE

Wolfe
Investigations,
Inc.

54 Mise, Merchandise

Case No 83 -CV-3

CONTRACTING
' DOZER . BACKHOE

•Refrigerators

6118 / l rn o pd

West Vrrgml8 Pulp and Paper
Company et al ,
Defendants

FOR FUTURE USE"

Ca II 742 • 3195
Or 992-5875

James W Suttle
Pla~ntiff ,

J&amp;f

•Washers •D•shwa shers

West Columbra

Real Estate General

'R•n'~

" CUT OUT

Restdentral
&amp; Commercial

JONES BAR

f6) 1 1 18 21 L

Public Notice

11·

12

lo1t Dog, Rew1rd offered

Public N ot1ce

devisees, legatees, admmlstra tora, executors. and/ or assigns of Mary Matlack dec
You are hereby not !ted th CJt
you have been namrrl d PIP.nrl
ants rn a le ga l &lt;Ki ro n f'n t1ti Pd
J&lt;J mes W Suttle Pl a1ntlll vs
West Vrrgrnta Pulp nnd Paper
Comoany rt at defPndant s
ThtS ac!lon ha s been ass1qned
Ca~e No 83 CV 3 and IS
pend•n q n the Corrrrno n PIPas
Coun ot M erqs Coun ty Po me
roy O hto 4 5 76 9
T'le ob1ect o f the : amp arnt ~ ~
a pan Ir on and Qu1et t1tlr ilCt on
co ncernrnq Otl and qJS undP.r ly
mq th e lollowtn q di'SCitbPd rpal
estate
Srtuatc rn Lebanon Town
sh rp Me• qs Countv Ohto .n
Scc!ro n 36 f own 2 Rnn(]P 1 I
J nd ber nq l hr no rth p1 r1 r:f NW
OnP. qua rt er " on til. nt nq -"~8
acrP.s mor e or r ss
nnd !hP. prety er s tha r rhc r~bo;e
rl escn bed o il and qa s 11q n1s bP
par11 110ned and 111lr rherPt O be
q u1e ted as aqa1nst all rlPienr1
ants
that Urp rnterest be
d et en 111 ned and set off or
o rdered so ld II 11 c.t nnot be
part 11 10ned for an J I I ONanc ~-- ol
ana nev fre e- hf' u' tn and co::; ts
You ar e re qurr r d to answP.r
the co mpla tnt wrthrn t.\ Pn ty
e1q hl davs alter the last puhlt r:il
Iro n of t h r~ noltCP \l\h1ch w1ll bP
prthhsherl oncf' each w ePk lor
S•x consecu trve weeks The last
pubhca tron v1. rll l:lf' n1 ade on
July 9 1 984 and the t ~\ e rrt y
etqhl d.,y s lor ansv\ er w It
co m mPnce on th a fl rl tfl
In ~ a &lt;&gt;P o f vour l,l tlurP to

"''..Uif,•
v X

&amp; SUPPLY

220 E. Main , Pomeroy
PH · 992· 6931

needs . furnaces repair
Se!V!Ce and tnStallattOn .

'" . . ..........

"""'"
...
c ......

FENCE

for all your wrrrng

WV

...... c.co uo

) I ] - fo rO ' ""'

l11 - '1'101nuo

1J U1&gt;h0 " " '

FOR SALE

NEW KITCHEN - Middleport
- 2 bedmom horne w1th a
new b&lt;eaklast noo~ new
k~chen new ublrty and a mce
yard $27,500 00

~~ -

IIlli"-"

Copy No 84·686
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT

POMEROY,O .
992-2259

n t - v...... ~
aa- ll oG''"''

..........."..,•oo• ••

,,.~,,..ol,
· ~~ ~

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

IU - Mod4..,..,.,

1 2 ................ Ho01 ~

••

Columbus, Oh10
June 1 . 1984
Contract Sales legal

Sf'aiPrl proposals wrll be
rf'r PM'!d at th e olhcP ul the

Ul- lhl-•1

Muon Co

~

lll - (;•u•• •

13 h 0&amp;'" '"''

nw.... •olw

Ouec to• of the Ohro Depart
me nt of Transport al ton Co lum
bus Ohr o unt tl 10 00 AM
Oh10 Stand ard Trme T ..Je5d ay
Ju ne 26 1984 for tmpr ove
men ts tn
P8r ts 1 to 25 rn clus1ve are
o ffered as one con tract and will
be cons td ered on the bJsrs 0 1
the total amounl b•d

Public Not1ce

.... ,, c.. ... ,
,.,., c..ue••

..."c""••••

71Co..,...,,E ... ~-•I

I J.. u -1....
u....,&amp;Grol•

.. ..od .,...

a .... c .....

U l - lrObiOOII I

PUBUC NOnCE
Budget Heonng

Wanda L l:: hlrn
Clerk Salrsbw\o lwp
161 18 l! f

A u l D . . . . . . A,CCIOH I Ofl

n ,..,., ,.,..

11 -·-ID·t-"11

Public Notice

All c II!Pn&lt;; (PSpPCtdly Serrror
C.t11t"'nst .:lfe 1nv led to .J!! Pnll
Jnrl woll h;JvJ.&gt; OIJPOrlun•ty to
'1 vP vvnrtPn ,J11d 01al ro rnmen ts
L0 f1 Ce'l11 fl[j thF 1&gt;l tr1\1 FI and the
f") rll PUSI-lrl r •SP ot RPvPnuP
St 11 fllJ Frr nrjs
ThP prnpo spr Bur rJe t can be
tnsper.tPd Jt thP horne o f the
Cleflo; af ter th(' above datf•

,. ,_........... .

71 MM...,yoll'o

11 , ..... 1_......_

Public Notice

R n &lt;~rl

11 y., ,,IWD

211 - 0..oo• D•"

~··""''llont
4 .. E4~'!&gt; -ntto&lt;

ThP Salisbury Townshrp T us
tees w II hold a pr1b lrr h uc1 rw t
h ~ J n q on J t.l y 2 1984 at 1
P M ot hf' homP ot t ~e cler k
W anrln rhlm on Laurel Clrlt

..

""--"'''
n ••~-' ""'"''
1t

ACCENT

MILLER
ElECTRIC
SERVICE

I I , , , ..... ., f•odo

~---···w.-

Public Not1ce

COLUMBUS, Oh10 tAP) -Co·
Jumbu s public school admm1str a
tors say they' re try mg to encourage
teachers to work harder to prevent
student fm!u res
But some teachers say the
admm1stra hon IS pressuring them
mto pa ssm g students, even 1f their
grades are failmg , as a way of
unprov lng the diStrict's llllage.
An Enghsh teacher at South H1gh
f1led a gr1evanee this spring,
accusmg her pnncipal of criticizing
her lor fai!mg too many students.
After the Columbus Education
A ssociation also fiiPd a gr!PVaneeon
her behalf. admmrstra torsagrped to
re-evaluate h('l this fall The teacher
and admmJstra lors have refused to
d1scuss the griPvance specifically

._. •• . -.
)

I ll ...., A..

• u . ..... ..... ...

-.

......
.......u,......
...
•._•......
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I J Cl TYIIIWIIOI~ ..-

[~ 1ft~··

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Associalecl Press Writer
CHARLESTON, W .V a (API

Teachers
feeling
pressured

6

The Daily Sentinei- Poge-7

-===~~~~::::::~J,::::::::::::::::::::;-r;::::::::::::::::::::::::::;-r;::::::::::::::::::::::::~
Gray
male
r
with red
coll•rWeimenaraner
448· 4928

By ANDREW KATEU.

SPv en retU'I'es from Monsanto Co ' s
N nro plant are leading a pack of
about 170 plaintiffs who allege they
suffered long-term health problems
from exposure to dioxin.
The worker s contend that Mon
sa nto was aware of the health
dangers but faded to warn them.
The smts, seeking a total of more
than $2 billion, were filed from
1981·&amp;1 by current and form!'r
M onsanto w orkers. and the estat!'s
of some dec!'ased employo&gt;es The
seven pia m t lffs whose suits W!'re to
go to trlal today contend that they
suffPred chemical contamination
from 1949 to 1981
US DISt riCt .Judge John Copen
have1 has estimated the tna! could
last siX months
DIOXin, COnSidered by some
scientists to be among the most tOXIC
of m anmade substances, was produced at M onsanto's N1tro plant as
an unwanted contammant mmgre·
dients for the herbiCide Agent
Orange Monsanto manufactured
on&lt;&gt; Agent Orange mgredient 2,4,5-T - from 1949 to 1969 and
supplied it to the Army for use as a
d&lt;'foliant m V1etnam.
In March 1949, an autoclave used
m the production of 2,4,5-T exploded
at the N1tro plant , spewmg chem1
rals on workers Monsanto memo·
randa released as part of the suits
indicate thai the company knew as
early as 1949 that workers contarru·
nated m the explosion were suffer ·
mg from c hloracne, a severe skin
d1sease caused by dioxm and other
chemicals.
Dr. Raymond Susklnd, a Umv er ·
s1ty of Cmc1nnati professor sche·
du!ed to testify for the defense m the
tnal. studiPd Monsanto workers
from thP Nitro plant m 1982 But
Susklnd r eponed that he found no
long term liver, nerve or hear1
disease disorder s resultmg from
exposure to th~ va r ious chemic als
present at the plant
The sull s, however , contend that
worker s mv olved m the production
of 2,4 ,5- T suffered higher than
norrral mc1d&lt;'nces of heart , liver,
lung, nerve and skin maladies. The
plamllffs also allege that Monsanto
was aware of the possible harmful
effects of the chemicals but neuher
warned them nor provided safe
wor king cond1110ns
M onsanto officials contend that
they acted responsibly m adv1smg
worker s about health dangers and In
ensunng safe working conditions

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Business -Services

Ill Court Sl P0111f11W Oflicl 4576t

TOLEDO, Ohio tAP I - Bond has been set at $100,00&gt; for a
M lctllgan man charged w ith aggravated murd ~r In the strangulation

d&lt;&gt;ath of a 23-year-old Maumee woman
Michael Hamilton, )), of Ad nan , M 1ch , entered no plea at the bond
hearing Saturday In Toledo Muruc1pal Coun Arraignm ent m ay be
scheduled nex t week
Hamilton was taken Int o custody b} E r1~ County authorities
Thursday and charged With reee1vmg and concealing stolen
property The property 'l as 1dmllfied as a billfold and automobile
ix'longmg to L mda C. Klmball, w ho had been m1ssmg smee June 11
Toledo pollee smd the} found M s Klmball 's body In a downtown
hotel early Thursday The L ucas County coroner s office sa id t he
Vlelllll had been beaten and strangled
Toledo Pollee Sg1 Ron N avarro sa1d Fnday t hat H amilton also Is
wanted for escapmg Ja il m Adnan

Monday, June 18, 1984

32 Mobile Homes

17 ACRES 1n Ewrn gt on ...
al o ng Racco o n Creek R o ad ~
fr o ntage on St Rt 1 6 0 nr ce ..
bu1ldtng s1tes. barn c h1 ck en•
hou se
sept1 c t ank
and:
mmerat rtghts
Call 388 •

8510
Smal l farm (1 B 2 5 a c re s) m
Portlan d Ohro bord ered by
Oh •o R1ver &amp; htghway N o ·
butldmgs some tree s, '12:
mrneral nghts Fa1r mark et '
prtc e 540,000 For rntor •
mat1on wr1te B Graham :
4615 Emerald , Nac og ·
doc hes Texas 75961
Ashton area 5 1h acr es 2
2 ca r
h ou se s 2 barns
garage pond S55 0 00 00 ,
Phone 304 576 2320

34

Busmess

for Sale

Buildmgs

Ltke new 3 bdrm secttona!
home on beautrful % acre lol
1n Arbaugh add1t1on
Tuppers Plams
excellent
ne1ghbor hood
532 ,900 ,
mcludes new refng , range
washer &amp; dryer ftnanc1ng
avatlable 'With low down
payment to quailfeed parttes

B u tldrng tor sale rn Rutla nd
30x60 block burld1n g w •t ho
r e str o ams &amp; n ew er fur
nance Lo c ated on S A 124 .
ha s suo. tenths of a n acre •
Call J o hn S Evans Past or"
Chu rc h of God Rutl and at:

614 742 2060

Cell 614 992 7034 davs.
614 - 992 7671 evenmg s
You Bauer Hurry for 11
comfortable mobtle home at
a low prtce Had 22 only 3
left 12:rc62 &amp; 12X44SIZ8S, 2
bedroom turmshed Closmg
out rentals Brown ' s Trtu)er
Park . M1nersv1lle Oh 614

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
4 1/2 acre lo t restrtced 2 Vt'-'
mtl e f rom G a llrp o lr s
H o l zer
_Bedu ce d t o..

&amp;:

$10 600

carr 446

3485

•

•

a._:

992-3324
1971 12x68 Rttz Craft
Royale w1th 6•12 expando .
gas heat good cond1t1on
Ftrst 85000 buys Wtlkes

voila Call 814 ·669 6101
Trailer on large wooded tot

BOAT

RAMP

space

Call

end

dock

5 8 evenmgs

304 675 644B Terms
1' 991 Hollypark
14x70.
exc
cond
1 2"8 dec k .
underpenntng and large
room alf cond mcluded

Survey ed lot wtth water
electn c ho okups appro • 1J7 ,
a tn q u1et subdtvts•on near\
Rodney 2 m1 from H olzer~
Medtc!ll Cen t er Ca ll 446 4.
1380
..,

--------------------:
Lot for sale m M er c ervrlle •
Call 6t4 256 6618

1 Ox. 50 tratler on lar g f!l\
wooded lo t 7 miles below
Gallrpolts on Ra c oon ..

$10, 995 304 675 6448

Renlals

304 · 995 3895 or B95 ·
3600
1 9B2 Clayton, 14•70, 2
bedroom, 2 baths, d1 s
hwasher, stereo, ceiling fen .
ftreplace, mtcrowave . cen
tral atr concrete steps and
underpennmg , 816 ,600 00

form 304 773-5550

•

41

:

•'

Houses for Rent :

-------------------'
'

3 bdr house deluxe c entra l :
l'lltr pool etc Call 675 -5104 •
or 675 5386
"

�The Daily Sentinel

Page-8

They'll Do It Every nme

Houses for Rent

41

54 Mise. Merchandise

3 bdr . house in Rio Grande.

Knauff Firewood Reduced
prices thru July 3 ht. Have
your own seasoned wood
this winter. 614-266-6245 .

accept children . deposit re-

quired . Call 446 -0157 .

Modern 3 br house. full
basement, garage , central
air, heat pump, fenced yard,
144 English Rd . Pt . Plea sant
9375 . month plus
damage deposit . 304 -675 7789 or 304-675 -7467 after 5 p .m and weekends

Limestone . Sand. Gravel .
Delivered in Maaon. Meigs,
Gallia or pick up at Richards
llo Son . Call 446 ~ 7786~

Mobile home for rent Ref &amp;
Dep. Call 446 -0508 or
446 ~

1609.

ideal for
or 2 men,
Mobile
home1 furnished.
AC.
beautiful riverview _ Fosters
Trailer Park Ca11446 -1602

2 bdr

unfurnished. Holley

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~
44

51 Household Goods

for Rent

Park mobile home. 121160

mile past HMC . Call
446-4369 or 675 -9760

1

Apartment

1
!1

2 bdr . mobi le home at
Evergreen Call 446 -7032 .

2 BR . AC . close to hospital

Call

614 ~ 388 ~ 9760

12~~:60

2 bedroom mobile
home, partly furnished , R a-

cme area
5858

Call

One bedroom furnished apt.
Pt . Pit . Very clean . nice
Audits only , no pets . Phone
304~675~1386.

1962 0'

675~4580 .

6 14 -992 -

Furnished Rooms

45

2 bedroom mobile ho me,
adu lts only For sa le or rent

Cal l 614 992 · 2598
2 bedroom . to tal electr ic
with ce ntr al air. on East
Main St .. Pomeroy above

car wash . fully furnished
Ca ll 614 - 992 - 731 4 or 992 -

6215
2 bedroom trailer, kitchen
furnished, cou ple one small
child accepted . 304 -675

For rent Sleepin g Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms . Park Central Hotel.

Cal l

614 · 446 ~ 0756 .

Sleeping room $ 115.
ties paid _ Share bath.
on ly _ Range &amp; refrig
2nd . Ave . Gallipolis
446 -4416 after 7 PM

utilimale
919
Call

Cal l614 ~ 992 ~ 6173.

Refrigerator, AMC Avo cado. side by side, 22 cu . f1

$200 . Coli

5 pie ce bedrm suit, c ost
S 1 200. new will sacrifice for
$600. 1 N o rg e upright
freeler. $ 150. 1 Hotpoint
dishwasher. same as new .
$200: 1 10 in . elect. Homelite chai nsaw. S35: Call

614

985 ~ 4322 .

GE refrigerat or -freezer &amp;
elec tric Magic Che1 stove,
both almond co lor &amp; 6
months old . $800 pair . Call

46 Space for Rent

614 · 367 ~ 7438

COU NTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots . Call
614 · 992 ~ 7479

Housing Opportunity) ha s
o ne and two bedrooms. rent
sta rting at $15 7 for o ne
bedroom and $ 1 9 3 per
month for tw o bedroom,
with $200 deposit located
n ear Foodland and Spring
Valley Plaza . pool and TV

Wareh ou se or storeroom.
25x75. for furniture .
lumber . roofing . insulation.
paneling , eq uipm en t or
other use Ca ll 1 -6 14 -486 -

5553
Trailer lots tor rent . 304 -

675 ·1076 .
Large lot tor trailer.
electric. city water

3 bdr _ unturn . garage apt ..

$250

plu s

deposit

304 ~ 675 ~ 4072.

Refrigerator , stove. table
and chair s_ Mise 304 -895·

3885
3 tables , sofa and c hair.
vict orian style. 3 yrs_ ol.d .

gas.

54 Misc . Merchandise
Desk . 2 h . 6 in . by 5 ft . by 2
ft. 6 inches high 5 drawer
with chair. Like new . Priced
right . Call or see George
Hobstetter, 215 Mulberrry
Ave. Pomeroy. Ohi o. 614 992 ~ 7763

304 ~

675 3216 .

Maytag washer &amp; dryer _Call
614-992 -535 7 after 5 p .m

Call

remodeled 2

bdr .,

equipped kitchen , ce nlral
air, S250 . 821 Y2 Second
Ave , Gall ipolis. Call 446 -

2 158
Furnished Apt , 920 4th .
Ga ll ipolis
S225 Utilities
paid . Adults . 1 bdr . Call
446 -4416 after 7PM
4 rooms &amp; bath unfurnished
pat .. utilities paid . adults
on ly . no pets Call 446 446 ~ 3 111

Unfurnished 2 bdr . tn Crown
C1ty Ca ll 6 14-256 -6520
2 bdr unfurnished, extra
nice , 2 mi out on At . 588.
5200 mo ., ad ult s only Ca ll

446 2300
DeluJC.e o ne bedroom apt ..
Gallipolis, garage. no pets.
no children, reference . avail ableJune16 Ca l l6 14 - 256 -

1529
1 BR Apt , furnished
nicely,$100 mo , also will
pay woman to stay 5 days a
week . not much work re qUired , mu st be able t o drive
my ca r. Ca l\614 -446 - 1414.

3 RMS &amp; bath. st ove,
refrigerat or. all utilities in cluded. adu lts on ly. no pets
446 ~ 2583

One bf!droom apartment .
turn or unfurn $ 190 per
month. utilities p~tid S50
deposit . 6 month IAAll.e. no
chi ldr en. no pets 446 -3667
aher 5
Fir st floor furnished apt .
utilit1es furnished. ad ul ts
preferred. reference re quired In quire 631 - 4th
Av e .. Gallipolis
1 bedroom Apt S196 mo
inc lud ing util1ties Equal
Housing Opportunity . Con tact Village M anor Apts

614 992 ·7787 .
Riv erside Apts . Mi dd leport .
Special rates for Senior
Ci tizens . $ 130. Equal Hous inR Opportunities 614 -

992 · 7721 .
Furnished 1 S. 2 bedroom
apartments . M idd l epor t .
Adults , n o pets. security
deposit . Ca ll 614 - 992 ~

3874
APARTM E NT S. mobile
ho m es. house!!l . Pt . Pleasan t
and Gallipoli s . 614 - 446 -

8221
TWIN

Murray garden tractor with
mowing deck &amp; snow blade.

Call

Merchandise

RIVERS

TOWER .

51

S150. 4000 BTU AC $100.

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St.. Gallipolis . New
&amp; used w ood &amp; coal stoves,
6 piece wood living room
suite with 6 inch flat arms
5399. bunk bed s co mplete
with bun~ies S199, 2 piece
antron livingro o m suites
S 199. antron reclin~rs S9 9,
other reclin er s sao. maple
dinette sets S179. bo x
spring s &amp; mattress twin or
full $ 1 00 set reg ular -firm
S1 20. maple dinette c hairs
535. wasp sta nds S3 4.
maple rockers 559. 7 plAce
c hrome d1nette set S 149. 5
piece dinette set S99. used
bedroom suites. r efrig era tors. ranges . chest. dressers.
wringer washers. TV's , dry er s. &amp; shoes Call 614 -446 -

3159
LIIYNE·s FURNITURE
So fa, chair, rocker, o tto man . 3 tables. (BJC.tra hea\ly
by Frontier! . S685 Sofa,
chair and l o~Jeseat, $275
Sofas and ch airs priced from
5285 . t o S895 . Tabl es. S45
and up to S 125. Hide-a
beds. S4 40
and up to
5525, Recliners. $ 175. to
S375 .. lamps from 928. to
575 .5 pc
dinettes from
599 .. to 435 7 pc . S189
and up. W ood ta bl e with siK
chairs 5425 t o 57 45 . Desk
S110 up to 5225 Hutches,
5550 and up, maple or pine
fin ish Bunk bed com plete
wit h mattresses. $250 . and
up to $395
Baby beds.
S 110 . Mattresses or box
springs. full or twin, S58 .
firm. S68 . and $78 . Quee n
sets. $195 4 dr . chests.
S42 . 5 dr chests, S54 . Bed
frames. $20 .and S25 .. 10
gun - Gun cabinet s. S350
Gas or electric ra nges S 375 .
Baby mattresses. S25 &amp;
S35. bed frames $20 . S25,
&amp; $30. king frame S50 .
Good selection of bedroom
suites. cedar c h es t s.
rockers . metal cabi n ets.
swi v el rockers .
Used Furniture .. Cha irs,
dryers. and TV's . 3 miles o ut
Bulaville Rd . Open 9am 10
6pm, Mon. thru Fri , 9am 10
5pm, Sat.
614 ~ 446 ~ 0322

TV &amp; Applian ces, 627 Third
Ave .. Gallipolis , 614 -446·
1699. Spin washers. gas ,,&amp;
electric dryers. a u) o
washers. gas &amp; electric
ranges . refrigerators , TV

"""
GOOD USED APPLIANCES

10 HP Sears riding lawn
mower 36 inch cut $450, %
HP electric drill $60 . Call
614 ~ 949 ~ 2749 .

2 1 room air c onditioners
5000 BTU's . S75 each Call
614 ~ 992 ~ 5498.

446 ~ 3875.

Tractor. model B with cultivators . Call614-266 -6417 .
130 Farmall tractor whh
cultivators, axe. cond. &amp;
tobacco baler . Call 446·

7838 afte&lt; 5PM .

614 ~ 245~92t2.

New Holland 850 large
round bailer 8r. hay rake . Call
614~742~2038

742~

0'

2521.

Monclair chest type freezer,
ex c. working cond ., $100 or
best offer . Call 446-8114

Ford 2.000 diesel Massey
Ferguson 66 . 4 ft . Hico
bushhog $340. 5 ft. Hico

anytim~ .

bushhog 8350 . 304 ~ 676 ~
2328"' 304~576~2606.

TV, chest, couch. rug. Ya maha organ, 446 - 4052 or
446 ~22 48 .

63

LUMBEA · Rough cut. oak .
poplar, 2x4, 2x6. 2x8, 1 J~;4.
1 x6. 1 )(8, length available.
ft . through 1 6 ft . Hogg &amp;

a

304 ~ 773 ~ 5554 .

Now open for business ,
Mountain State Block. Rt .
33, New Haven . Complete
masonry supplies, 4", 8" ,
12 " block. Delivery service .
Phone day 304 -882 -2222,
evening 882 -3 239.

56

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds . Heated
indoor· outdoor facil ities .
AKC Doberman puppies :
Stud Service. Call 614 -446 ·
Judy Taylor Grooming . Call
614 ~ 367 ~72 20 .

Briarpatch Kennels Profes ·
sional All -breed grooming .
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa cilities . Pick up and delivery
service Engli sh Cocker Spa niel puppies. Call 614-388·

9790
Two

Farm Equipment

446 ~2 177 .

King wood &amp; coal burner

Call 446 -4416 aft er 7PM .

Ca ll

Queen size hid ·a· bed sofa .

s tall

horse

trailer,

$650 . Call 614 ~ 992 ~ 5382
0' 992~ 7339

Professional All Breed Dog
Obedience Trainin g . Individ ual &amp; classes available . Cal l

Used lawn mowers, sweep ers Repairs on mowers,
sweepers. c hAin saws and
misc. B &amp; S FiJC. -it-Shop .

614 ~ 388 ~ 9790.

8 wk . old Beagl e pups. $25

ea. Call

614 ~ 256 · 9352.

304 · 675 ~ 6512 .

12 mo. old Reg . Pit Bull Call
Kirby vacuum cleaner. good
co ndition. ell attachment s
S40 . 1 eJC.ercise bicycle like
new SSO. 304· 675 -7141 .
Remington 700 Bdl . V armit
25 .06 . 15 power J Unertl.
Bipod . Dies
304 - 675 -

4103 .
loretta's Guns,

Ga ll ipolis.

614 ~ 446 ~ 182 2.

8 :00

614 ~ 446 ~3 249 .

Full blooded bla ck poodle
puppies, 9 weeks old 304 675 ~ 2288 .

2 Beagles, 1 male 2 11'2 years
old. 1 female 3 years old .
Both very good hunters . Will
sel l together only . $150.00

both.

304 ~ 675 ~6 145 .

livestock

5 yr. o ld Sorrell Quarter
horse mare. 2 yrs. Eques trian training. Merideth
manor, $650. Call 614 992 ~2 488 .

Sears walking -jogging ex ce r cisor: welded steel hame.
tubular steel h o nt and side
rails ; S65 .00 . Cal1304 -675 -

4302 .
6 wheeler ultra t err ain . good
co ndition , $400. 304 -882 -

2887 .

Musical
Instruments

57

256 ~

1528.

Reg . Polled hereford bull &amp;
cattle . 8ft . homemade metel
pipe cow rack . Call 614·
256~9364.

Sell or trade 18 HP 6 speed
ga n en tractor 3 pt. hitch.
Too big for my yard . War ranty good til 5-1-87 Cell
Reg . full blooded Arabian
stallion. 5 \ItS . old, purebred.
bull Simmental. Call 614·
367~0493

room cond. Call 446 -0648
after 6.
1978 Mercury Cougar
loaded, new tires, 12.800.

negotiable. Call 446 ~ 0269
or 446~9613
1978 Chevy Impala AC.
62,000 miles, $2 .300. Call
446~0963.

1974 Ford Comet 2dr, 6 cyl,
64,000 act .mile1. ax. cond.

$1000.
0193.

Call

614 ~ 446 ~

1979 Ford Courier XLT
sports package. PB, rack-inpenning steering.new tires.
auto. transmission. 4 cyl, 32
mpg, selling price 82496,

retail $3025. Call
9905 .

6t4 ~ 388 ~

1981 Z28 Camero, blua 11o
silver, 20,000 miles, 86500.

or

614~

614~379 ~ 2314.

1978 VW Rabbit Diesel,
good cond. $2200. Call
1979 MGB Convertible A - 1
condition . Call 614 -245·

5294.
1979 Dodge Omni, 4 spd,
AC, PS , PB. radio , 47. 800
miles. Call 614· 446 -2510
after 5pm.
1977 Chevy Malibu Classic
V ~ 8.

306.

0212 .

owne,. Cell

Reg . polled Hereford bull, 2

Y" · old, S600 . Call
256~6043.

614 ~

3 yr. old polled hereford bull .

Call

614~388~9900

ofte' 9

p .m . or all day Saturday or
Sunday
Quail Chicks will be availa ble June 20 through June 24
at 1h price at LaBonte Quail
Farm. 36160 Bashan Rd.,
Long bottom, For information . ca ll 614 -985 · 4345
R eg Quarter mare with colt .
2 year old Aqha mare .
Reasonable . 594-5816 eJC.t

167 days:

614 ~992~ 7300

evenings
Greenbrier Stables now
boarding horses . 304-675-

4dr. ps.pb.ac.at.

35.000 miles. nice car. 1
614 ~ 246 ~ 9493

1975 Toronado; good cond .

Call

446 ~ 2647 .

1972 Mustang Grande,
302, auto. , good on gas,

$1400. Coli

446~ 1326.

1153

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

1978 Olds Cutlass Su ·
preme, good condition,
$2000.00 or best offer.

Phone

1979 Che\fV Caprice Clas·
sic, 2 dr. ac. ps, V -8 engine,
body good condition, exc .
performance . Will consider
811 offers. Call 614 -992 7412 after 6 p.m.
1982 Cavalier, auto .. p .s.,
a.c.. a.m . f .m .. rear defogger. 20.000 miles. like

new 28 MPG . Call614 ~ 992 ·
6810.

Greenbri&amp;r Stables, we buy,
sell or trade horses . 304 -

1979 Mercury Capri. 6 cyl.,
AM -FM cassette. AC, auto.
radial tires. $3,000 .00 firm .

675~6799 .

304 ~ 676 ~ 1 t

46 .

"78 two door Pontiac Grand
Prix, PS , PB. AC, cruise
control , VS-301, black.

Hay &amp; Grain

64

304 ~ 675~6286 .
614 ~ 388~9792 .

Good mixed ha\1. S 1 25 in
304~675~5579.

Transportation
71

Buick Electra Limited, 1981,
fully equipped, excellent
condition, AC, PW, PB, PS,
PO Locks, cr uise control,
AM-FM cassette, tilt wheel ,
asking price $8995,$1,000
under book . By owner. 304676-2975. Don't wait - this
will go fast .

Autos for Sale

1976 Triumph Spitfire. convertible, 2 tops , new paint,
$1 , 500 . 00 . Make offer.
304 ~ 676 ~ 6397 .

614 ~ 446 ~ 2282 .

72

1963 Ford Fairlane 4 dr ..
200 6 cylinder, auto .
65 ,000 miles, new paint .

Coli

afte&lt; 8 :00PM,
458 ~ 1874.

304 ~

614 ~2 56 ~ 6200 .

Trucks for Sale
246 ~ 9441 .

1983 StO P.U., 4 spd, 4
cyi,AM,FM,Iike new $6995.
1982 S10 P.U., 4spd,6 cy l,
AM

FM, vinyl cover bed

$5696. 1981 Chevy luv,
4opd,4 cyl, AM FM, tape,
Rd Gallipolis , 614 ~ 446 ~
ol782
CJ6, 304.

4159

white spoke wheels, sharp,

Sell or Trade, 1977 Jeep

$2800
1300.

V ~ B.

Ca ll

heodere,

1975 Dodge 3A ton truck VS
good 1ires &amp; body. must

2101 .

sala. call

992 ~ 6886 .

1973 KW 290 Cummins,

RTO 9513, SQHD.

RTE

Why pay more. Trade Center
Furniture Outlet. Rt . 7.
Kanauoe. Oh . Open 9 · 7PM .

All for 885. Call
8280.

Freezer. 23 cu . ft . Gibson

1 0 gallon aquarium with
ace . &amp; fish . Also _;;ad bed&amp;.
matress . Call 61 4 -3 88 ·

rear

9767.

topper. 304~876· 1388 .

before

6

p.m
Apt . for

rent

304 ~ 676 ~

1972.

Hendenon .

Upright. $200 . Call
245 ~ 6032 .

614 ~

304~675 ~

1- - - - - - - - - - 74

Motorcycles

1977 Honda CR 126 Elsi~
nore. Call 614 ~2 56 ~ 1778
eve .
1 976 Kuuka Street Bike,
3400 miles, price $226 . Call

1979 Kawasaki KZ750 with
faring &amp; radio. excellent
condition . Asking $1200
614~992 ~ 3630

Colt

ofte'

5:30p. m
1980 Kawasaki 1000 LTD .
excellent condition. 7.000
miles. new tuneup. extras.
$2300. or best offer. Call

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

1331.

or

675 ~

carpet

SHIP

GET

your

SHAPE

WITH

CAPT IAN

mates.

304 ~ 675 ~ 2295 .

Water wells commercial and
domestic, test holes, pump
sales and service . 304-895-

3802.

1974 Triumph Bonneville.
hardtail. $450. Sell or trade .

614 ·23 7 ~ 0488 ,

Cell

614 ~ 992 ~ 3846 .

Harley Davidson motorcycle , pan head engine.

61900.
6846 .

614 ~ 992 ~

Colt

1982 Honda V-45 Sabre,
exc . cond .. 5 .000 miles,

$2,000.00.

304 ~ 676 ~ 6486

1968

3
/~ finished .
304 ~ 675 ~ 6397 .

Harley

Make offer.

75

Chris Craft cabin cruiser, 36
ft. with 40 ft. trailer .

$11.000

304~676 ~

Call

1731 aher6pm.
19 1h ft. Aristocraft fiber glass boat.inboard-outboaJd
with trailer. Call 614 -2 56·

6472

WATER ~

ALLEY OOP

9 a.m to 5

AWRIGHT, NOW, LISTEN UP!
YOUR KING ISN'T KING OF
THIS PLI&gt;.CE ANYMORE!

p . m . A oge rs Basement
Waterproofing .
Remodeling , sidin g, interior
and eJC.terior, textured coating. simulated brick and
stucco. thermo replac em ent
windows. 304· 675 - 1 560 .

1978 Chevy Scottlldelo, '4
duty, outo trono. PS, I&gt;B,
360 V ~ B . AM radio, olldlng
Bh.

•lumn

?.

LOST IT T'KING
GUZ: OF MOO, BET~
liNG ON THE
OLYMPIC GAMES!

THOUGHT
MY NAME IS ALLEY .. ~THIS IS OOOLA,
COP AN' I'M HERE
AN' SHI:'S GONNA OUR KING
WENT
T'RUN THINGS UNTIL
HI:LP ME~
HUNTIN•?!
OTHER AAF!ANGEMENTS

ARE MI&gt;.DE!

304

675 ~2 440

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

GASOLINE ALLEY

CARTER'S PlUMBING
AND HEATING

off in d

ih' Skinners
isn't in
!----::'-1
so's we

Cor . Fourth and Pin e
Gallipolis, Ohi o
Ph o ne 614 -446 -3888 or
614 ~ 446 ~4 477

kin

'You hurt
his fool

If I has offen'

Rufi.jS ~oniwa~

mus' apologize!

fee/in's!

qo

Newshour
fi) Jeffersons
7 :30 II (f) Tic Tac Dough
(f) F'aggle Rock
(!) Inside Baseball
(I) All 1n the Family
I]) 0 CIJ Family Feud
Cl) Love Connection
(])Dr. Who
(!D Wheel of Fortune
Ill (j}) People's Court
fJ) One Day at a Time
8 :00 II (f) (I) TV's Bloopers
and Practical Jokes Dick
Clark and Ed McMahon hos t
th1s look at scenes never tn ·
tended for .viewing by a
public audience. (60 min .)
(l) Willie Nelson &amp; Family
This specia l was [aped at
the Opera House in Au stin ,
Texas.
CIJ MOVIE: 'Snoopy.
COflle Home'
Cl) Cisco Kid
(!) USFL Football: Okla ~
homa at Michigan or San
Antonio at Houston
(I) MOVIE : 'Sex and the
Single Girl'
(j) Ill (j}) Majm league
Baseball : T earns to be
Announced
0 (]) QQI Scarecrow and
Mrs. King
(]) (jj) Frontline 'Man's Best
Friends.' Tonight's progr am
looks at the conf licting ethical arglJments over th e Use
of animal s 1n med1cal test mg . (60 min .) [C losed Captioned]
@I MOVIE: 'With Six You
Get Egg Ro11'
9 :00 II (I) (I) MOVIE: 'Family
Reunion' Part 2
Cl)700C iub
0 CIJ@ One Day ata
Time A weekend babysitting for Annie St irs pangs of
motherhood in Barbara _ (A)
CIJ (fiJ Great Performances
'Buddenbrook s · After tn herittng the family business .
Johann forces his daughter
10 marry a wealthy man Instead of the man she loves.
190 mm.I!Ciosed Captioned)
9 :3D C1J MOV1E: 'The Hunter'
C1J MOVIE: 'St. Helens'
0 CIJ @ One Day at a
Time Mark and Barbara deCi d e t o consider adoption

10 :00

16 ft. inboard with 1 .17
overdrive; V -drive. 2 propellers. 427 Chevy engine.
This boat will run all day on
14 gallons of gas; picks up
siM skiers out of water easily.
runs 60 mph with power
props &amp; 80 with speed

home!

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT ·
lNG . At. 1 , Box 355. Galli·
polis. Call 614 - 367 -0576.

props . 1974 model 63000 .
includes trailer &amp;: new battery . Call 614 ~ 446 ~ 1822
after dark .
Correct Craft 8t Ski Supreme, iamily ski boats.
New &amp; used, Parkersburg,

wv

304~422~8433

0'

304 ~

422 ~ 2367 .

jackets, $150.00,
6912 .

304 ~ 675 ~

304~676 ~ 6397 .

ffi

of Modern Life .' The work s
and life of Edouard M anet,
who has been ca lled the fir st
modern p a•n tcr. are eJC.am -

®

Good-1 Excavating, base·
ments. foot ers , driveways,
septic tanks. la ndscapi ng .
Ca ll anytime 614 - 446 4537. James l. Davison, Jr .
owner .
Oh~614 ~ 742 ~ 2903;

Basements. Footers, Con crete work . Backhoe's,
Dozer &amp; Ditc her, Dump
trucks. &amp; water-gas -sewerelectrical lines

·

1

614 · 443 ~ 9751 0,614 ~ 592 ~

2 Craiger 14" rims and tires .

78

614 ~ 256 ~ t

84

628 .

Camping
Equipment

1 5 ft. truck camper. Self
contained . 8660 , or best

offe,. Cal1
167, days;

594 ~6 816

Ele ctrical
&amp; Refrigeration

MAW!! DON'T TRV

SEWING Machin e repairs,
service . Authoriz ed Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharp en
Scissors . Fabric S hop .
Po meroy . 614 · 992 · 2284

evenings .

85

&amp; Campers

General Hauling

James Boy s Wat er Serv ice
Also pools filled . Call 614 256 ~ 1141 0' 614 446 ~
1175o,614 ~ 446 · 7911

Camper; good cond., sleeps
six, gas stove. ice box . Call

Johnson Water Service . Call

614 - 388~96t8 .

614 ~ 256 ~

1743 0' 614 ~ 256 ~

1120
JIMS

WATER

SER VICE .

Call Jim Lanier . 304· 675-

7397

87

Upholstery

top, 11eep1 6. Hlf contained,

good cond. tBOO.OO. 304~
878·5115 otter II PM .
1972 22ft. Holiday comper;
oolf•oontolned . Colt 304 ~
671•1423.

TAl STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 163 Sec. Ave ., Gallipolis .

LIFTIN'

THAT HEAVY OL' LOG
ALL BY YOURSELF

a•t.

614 ~ 992~ 7300,

Newswatch
fl) Love Ameri can Style
11
II CIJ 00 0 Cil @ Ill G)
News
Cl) Another Life
C!) SportsCenter
ClJ News/Sports/Weather
Cil Dave Allen at Large
(fi) Inside/Out
1i1J Odd Couple
11 •15 (!J Mazda Sportslook
11 :30 II (f) (I) Tonight Show
(f) Comedy Store' s 11th
Anniversary Show Richard
Pryor, Father Guido Sarducc1
and Jtmmte Walker perform
(f) MOVIE : ' The Brood'
Cl) Best of Groucho
(I) Catlina
(I) WKRP in Cincinnati
0 (]) Han to Han II Jon a ~
than look ~ alike plot s the
murder of the real J onathan
so he can tak e over the Hart
empire (AI (60 m1n.)
(J) Latenight America
f1l) All In the Family
CID Memories of Monet
lllll2l Nightline
fliJ Gunomoke
11 ;46 (!) USFL Football : Okla ~
homa at Michigan or San
Antonio at Houston
12 :00 Cl) Sums &amp; Allen
(I) Catlina
(j) Nightline
@ MOVIE : ' Pickup on
101'
Ill (JJ Eye on Hollywood
12 :30 II (f) (I) La1e Niaht with
David Lenerman
(l) MOVIE: 'Psycho 11'
Cl) Jack Benny Show
(I) MOVIE : 'No Way to
Treet a Lady'
(I) Solid Gold
0 CIJ Columbo ·swan
Song.· Columbo 1nvesti·
gates a singer's death af1er
she died unexpectancly in an
ai,plane e&lt;esh . !AI (90 m1n.)

oo

5685 after 5 p.m .

Coli

TBS Evening News

(]J Edouard Manet 'Pa inter

oned (R)

Constru ctio n Equ ipment .
Ditch Witch used Trencher
with backhoe. Daytime ca ll

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

J

,• .

r

1

WAIT TILL JUGHAID
GITS HOME FROM
SCHOOL

II~Newa

Ill Wild , Wild Weat
1 :00

61 4 ~ 446 ~ 7833 or 614 ~ 446 ~
1833

1 :30

CJ) I Married Joan
(I) Entertainment Tonight
(jJ CNN Hndllne Newa '
CJ) Love That Bob

e

Cil Ne.\1111/Sign Oft
Ill Honeymooners

HOW 10 &amp;HOW THE:
WORL.D' Wl-lEiHER:
YOU'RE A MAN
OR. A MOUSE .
Now arrange the circled teners to
form the surpnse answer , as sug ·
gested by lhe above cartoon

tJ

rr I

I I I I I

Answer here:"[

]I

(Answers tomorrow)
Saturday"&amp;

I

Jumbles ABBOT

LUNGE CANYON GUZZLE
h
Answer The hard part of being broke is watchmg I e
rest of the world do fhis-GO "BUY"

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Is third-best best?
NORTH

6-11-14

.54

+H3
+A K J 10 4 2

+53
. WEST

EAST

+t62

•~ ~~

.Q72

.AKJIOI3

u

tu

+KJ10876 +AQ9t2
SOUTH

•u

+AKQ10874

• Q 9 78

•~ ~ ~

Weot

r.+

Pus
Pus

North

Soutb

~·
Pus

Pass

••8+

2+

Pass

"Before I discuss the
hand, I'd like to interject my
own opinion about leads. In
the Reisinger, Edgar Kaplan
and I played old-fashioned
defense such as fourth-best
leads and high cards for
strength. Almost all our
opponents led third ~ or fifth~
best, which I am too old to
learn, but which I think is
probably the best system. It
didn't bother us at all. As a
matter of fact, we never lost
a trick in dummy play or
defense. I overbid one hand
to get to a 50 percent slam,
which went down .
Anyway, here is Dr.
Lyons' hand . He doesn't give
the bidding or mention that
East and West are cold for
siz beans. As for the lead, if
West were an expert defend~
ing against experts, he
would lead the heart queen.
Even if he led the aeuce
(third-best), an alert East
would realize that his part·
ner would not have bid five
clubs without a six-card suit
and hence would try to cash
the second heart. Of course
the hand as set up is a good
example of the advantage of
the third~best lead, but 1t is
not a valid argument.''
Jim : " I know Dr. Lyons IS
a good friend of youn. Why
do you criticize him' "
Oswald: "He's such a good
friend that he won't mind.
Nearly everythmg he does is
perfect."
41

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North

Opening lead: \'2

By Oswald Jacoby
uu1 James Jacoby

Oswald: "The opring issue
of the American Bridge
Teachers' Association Quarterly Is a gem. It has the
usual article by Frank
Thomas, who gives me some
undeserved praise. On the
negative side, I do not
entirely agree with the arti~
cle on third-best leads by Dr.
Lyons (who, by the way, is
actually older than I am by
a year or so).

{NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)

ti~tr•YJt&lt;'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
5 Climbed

1 0 30 Cl) Shkley &amp; Pat Boone

Excavating

tland,

tQUINUEj

lsbecki's lt1e 1s endangered
when h1 s co\ler 1S blown dur·
tn g the mve st 1gation of a car

News

and
St..
3 04·
and

- - - - -- - -83

t

1 Reliquary

theft "ng (R) (60 m1n I

J .A .A .Construction Co .Ru -

10 ft . John Boat, oars, life

76

SHULAW'S Plumbing
Heating , 211 Si )( th
Point Pleasant , W . V a
675-5420 . li ce nsed
insured .

I SCAMK
( J I (J
ICAUPTE
· I KJ J

(RI

0 CIJ @Cagney &amp; Lacey

fj) Independent Network

1 971 Scotty Comper, hard ~

ton, 4x4, utra cle•n. heavy

~~~HE

AU building and remolding.
Interior-Exteri or. Con cret e.
roofing. electricaL etc. EJC. perienced and aff o rdabl e.

82

Boats and ·
Motors for Sale

ot1 NO YOU OON'T! HMM? I'IHAT OH
YOU'LL 00 110 SIC1 EA~TH AFIE YOU
THIN~. DR. 'IIOT!
,"'-"'1'" ABOUT.

STEAMER . Water removal,
furni1ure cleaning, free est i-

PROOFING . Unconditional
lifetime guarantee. local
references furnish ed . Free
estimates Call c oll ec t 1 ·

1979 KDX 400, runs good .

ANNIE

4560 .

BASEMENT

614 ~ 949 ~2 162 .

'

•

0' 614~446~2454.

614 ~ 992 ~ 5747 .

Cal1

LOSE~

RON 'S Tel evi sio n Service
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola . Ouazar, and
house calls . Call 304 -576 -

304 ~ 675 ~2088

304 ~ 876 ~

614 ~ 388 ~

window.

scotchguard -water eJ~;trac ­
tion , deodorizers . FREE esti mates. Reasonable rates.
Gene Smith, 992-6309

.,___ ...

0 (]) Wheel of Fortune
(I)
Nightly
Busine5s
Report
®I News
(fi)
MacNeil/lehrer

GENE'S DEEP STEAM
CARPET CLEAN,

1983 V 66 Magna; 2856

mil'es. E~c . cond. Call 446·

BORN

atone. Call 614 ~367 ~ 0409
or 614 ~3 67~ 7244

614· 388~9696 .

· 1979 Skylark travel trailer.
1&amp;V2 foot, tandem axle. Self
1977 Chev. truck, Vt ton, 6
contained. Care free awn cyt atd shift, PS. spoke
ing . Exc. condition. Call
wheels. Good condition.
614- 992 ~ 5170 .

f1,600.00.
2196.

614 ~3 88 ~ 9662 .

RINGLE 'S SERVICE experienced roofing, including
hot tar application. car pen ter. electrician, mason . Call

__
·--

._,

Tonight
(!) Wheel of Fortune

H &amp;. S Home Impro vement s
vinyl siding, roofing, room
addition, storm windows,

2398

vitle. Ca11 614-669-6101 .

Nice 1 and 2 bedroom
unfurnished apartments .
304~675 ~ 2218

1982 Chevy Van loaded,
trailer pll:g. 360 engine,

380. priced to sell. Wilke• -

Washers. dryers, refriger&amp; ·
tors. ranges . Skaggs Appliances . Upper River Rd .
beside Stone Crest Motel.

Pony cart driving harness.
bridal &amp; lines, pony saddle.

304 ~ 675 ~ 7746.

79 Motors Homes

Apartments now available to
elderly &amp; disabled with an
i ncome of leas than
S 12.300. Renting for 30
percent of adjusted income.
Phone 304-675 · 6679.

614 ~ 446 ~ 7398.

.' .

PAINTING - interior and eJC.terior. plumbing, roofing,
some remodeling. 20 yrs .

exp. Cell

8

(l) (I) NBC Newe
(l) MOVIE : 'The Pony
Soldier'
Cl) Rifleman
(!) Mazda Sportslook
(I) Carol Burnett
(]) Ill ~ ABC News
0 (]) ® CBS News
(fi) Hitch Hikers Guide/
Galaxy
7 :00 1J (l) PM Magazine
(]) Here Come the Brides
(!) SportaCenter
(I) Sanford and Son
I]) Ill ll2l Entertainment

'.
. ' ..

614 ~ 446 ~

For Sale - R&amp;d velvet antique
love !!leat. chai r; antique oak
couc h; Cabei -Nelson piano,
wicker lamp _jCall614 -643-

446 ~ 3732 .

firm .

1974 Ford l,t.; T., super cab

pickup. $650.

Ca bin8t Model Whit e Sew ing Machine with cams . Ex .
condit ion
Call 614 - 446-

20 gallon fish acquarium.

1979 Chevy Beauville van
loaded in exc. cond , $6,200

offe,,

vinyl cover bed $3696.
John 's Auto Salas Bulaville

Call

1984 Chevy 6 t 0, 4 wheel
dirva, 304~ 882 ~3 184 .

16ft. tri -haul, 55 HP. make

TOP CASH paid for late
m o del used cars.
Smith
Buick -Pontiac. 1911 Eas1 ern Ave ., Gallipolis. Call

Coli

naw 6179 .00 sell $75 .00
Call 614 ~ 448 ~ 9584 .

245~5294.

446~3836 .

6799 .

1981 Chevette one owner ,
exc . condition. $2,999 firm .

Wood &amp; Coal Stova $75.00. Odessey II - Retail

1978 Chevy window van .
A - 1 condition. Call 614 ·

aft8f 5 :00

614 ~ 949 ~ 2677 .

304~453 ~

Vans &amp; 4 W.O .

0051 .

efta' 6PM .

614 ~ 446 ~ 4807

Repossessed Kimball Console piano , low monthly
payment s, Dan Fergu son
Music , Rt . 60, Ceredo, W .

73

26,600 miles.
1423.

Reg . Polled Hereford bull 3
yrs . old. $750. Call 446 -

Spinet Piano, eJICcellent con ·
dition, $500 . Call after 5

58

Show~

33,000 dry mlleo.

614~388~8824.

field .

Vo .

Cheverolt Corvette
with rad interior,

6t4 ~ 446~0989

One Upright piano for sale,

p m.

1981
black

1980 Pontiac Grand Prix,
lot s of extras, $6300. Call

Will cut and bale hay, terms .

5400 Call

Autos for Sale

71

Black Angus bull . Call 614 -

Coli
Blonde Wulitze r spinet piano. $600 . Call 446 -0254.

1!11 Star Trek

6:30

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout ing. Now installing rubbe r
roofs, 30 years experience.
specializing in built up roof.

Call614~367~0221
367 ~ 7242.

am

10 :00 pm, 7 days weekl\1.
N ew Remingt o n 30 -30 ammunition 2 boxes, 40 rounds
.$15 .00 . All staniless 22
auto target pistols with 6in
and Bin barrel I length, regu lar 5269. loretta's S240
includes 100 cartridges.
Bingham 22 all steel auto
rifle ventilated sleeve over
barrell. carbine length 50
round magazine reg S2 39
new S180 includes 100
ca rtridges . Also. have S &amp;
W . 44 mag . S 360_ Rugar
Stainless Red Hawk 44 mag .
$340. We arA 11 cl11ss three
dealer. law enforcement or
individual . Call us on your
class three wants

Newahour
(Ii) Powarhouae

Call614~388 ~ 9857 .

61

110 111

(I)
llJ
News
(I) New Treasure Hunt
(I) Andy Griffith
ClJ News/Sports/Weather
(])
MacNeil/lehrer

304~ 675 ~ 1413.

Home
Improvements

81

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

5 hp rotortiller, Sears brand,
5spd, used 1 season . Call

7796.

Furnished apt . 919 2nd .,
Gallipolis . S175. Men only

3437 0'

9441 .

Zuspan,

446 ~ 3786

N ewly

10 in . Homelite chain saw.
brand new. never used, $85;
gun ca binet . hold s 12 .
$125 ; swing set, $25 . 245-

614 ~ 388~9792

6:oo a rn CIJ a

I

LAPID

EVENING

Services

9~ 100

plants· 2;

55 Building Supplies

304 · 675 ~ 7746 .

ant . Call 446 - 2745 or leave
ffi8 $SI!I9P. .

mobile home as trade in.
Shrubs pruned, lawn re seeded, re taining walls,
sidewalks, patios. fill dirt.
topsoil. bark mulch &amp; saw dust . Contact Bruce Oavision . Call 614 -256 · 1427.

Call

roy, Ohio.

59 For Sale or Trade

beds Coli

6/18/84

36h. camping trailer, AC ,
new stove, new shower.
patio screened in . Can be
seen at Hidden Lakes, Pome -

246~9657 .

Tobacco

Television
Viewing

614 ~ 266 ~ 6472

nice. Call

245 ~ 5121.

Built on your lot a new home
you can afford over 1 , 1 00
sq .ft .. 6 rms. &amp; bath, carpeted, ready to move into.
$26.500. Al so garages &amp;
basements . Call Patriot
Home Builders anytime
446 -8038 . Will consi der

&amp; Campers

Perry ~1 ft ., sleeps si~. very

Strawberriee. Taylor's Berry
Patch . 8AM· 8PM, Mon.·

Strawberries Pick \lOUr own.
Call Cl aude Winters, 614-

Exua firm full size matness
and bo K springs, very clean.

Trailer spa ce for rent . Call

JACKSON ESTATES
APA RTM E NTS [Equ al

992 ~

0'

5655 .

$40.00

Apartment
for Rent

614 ~ 992 ~ 2740

614~992 ~ 5017

1076.

44

Carpet for remals for $3 .99

sq . yd.

All new 3 room. bath apt
Close to Pleasant Valley
Hasp Private. quie1 . 304 675 ~

1 0 pc. Pit So fa , win e color.
orig. $1000. pric e S475
firm Call 614-682 -7164.

Call 304~!82~2237.

The Daily Sentinet-Page-9

Ohio

1984

79 Motors Homes

BURDETTE CAMPER
SALES 11o SERVICE, Open
daily 9 to 6 :30. Sat . 9 to 4 ,
Closed Sunday. U.S. Rt. 50,
Co9lville , Oh 614 ~ 667 ~
3386.

Strawberriel . You pick 76
cen.tl or we pick •1 . 00 per
qt. 2 miles back of New
Haven, WV of Union Camp
Ground. No Sunday pjcking.

•orts, RON EVANS E NTER ~
PRISES. Jackson. Oh 614 ~

6417 .
446 ~ 8868

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARlYlE® .

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Sot. Call446~ 8692 or 614 ~

Coffee tabla stereo. stereo.
dinette table. Call61 4 -256 -

2 bdr trailer fully fumished.
good locatiOn , sec . dep . req .

58

Plastic cisterns state ap proved, plastic septic tanks ,
plastic culvert, metal cui ·
286 ~ 6930 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Call

Monday, June 18, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

t1 State
(Fr .)

chest
DOWN

I Abyss
Z Old
Greek
colony
3 Certain
batters
4 - Aviv

11 American
inventor

1% City in

Miss.
13 Indigo
plant
14 DeSpicable
15 Rest
1&amp; HosUilties
11Federal
power
authority
(abbr. )
18Sewing !O Chapeau
%1 Retained

zz Lavish

Yesterday's Answer
~"­

Z% YoWJg

5 Shore

&amp;Heart
(Ita!.)
7 Ukely
8 Attack!
9 Ennoble
10 Gave
18 Feral
l9 Base
feUow

Parisienne"

Clydesdale

30 "-Rae"

23 Spirit
worshiper
24 Italian
commune

(Field film)
31 Finch
sound
36
Author
25 Beaties
Bunlline
film
27 East Indian 37 Before
(prefix)
sailor

party
23 Throbbed
~Directed

towanl
a target
!I Brad
Z'7 Jacob's
first wife
28 Follower
of an ism
Zt Valiant
szconvened
33Snake

HSacred
pledge
35 Peaceful
3'1 Father
(Fr~J

38 Geological
layers

38 Frost
to Sampler

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE _ Here's how lo work It:
Jo

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

to:

On 1 tier simply atanda lor another. In lhio somple A io
used

the three L's, X lor the tw.o O's, etc. Single letters,
ol the worda are all
h
I
apoe rop e • • the \en"'h
e• and format1on
d .If
l
bla1a. Eoch day the code letters ore t eren .

C'IYPTOQUOTES
RJCQ

J

TEHUAXQW

MQUI

MG

PJEQ

HU

X Q WM

M RQ

MRQ

MRQ

NJPQ

RQJEM ~-

QK~

IQ

CJXGHW
.
Yettlenlay's CrypUiquote: Acr THE WAY YOU WOULD UKE
TOBE AND SOON YOU WILL BE TilE WAY YOU Acr. - DR.

CRAJIE.

'

�Page-l 0--The Daily Sentinel

Area deaths
Helen M. Engel
Helen M . Engel. 69. Pomeroy,
died Sunday morning in Pomeroy
Health Ca re Center.
Mrs. Engl'l was born Oct . 21. 19H .
at Toledo. thl' daughter of the late
Frank and Marinda Ridley Byers.
She was also preceded in death b~·
her husband. Franrls Yates Sr.; by
a son , Francis Yates Jr.
Mrs. Engf•l was a homema kPr .
She was affl llated with the Baptist
church
She 1s survived by· one daughter.
De~ r lr nf' Curry ofPomcro~~ : Ollf' son,
Jack YatPs of Pomcro:v: two

da ughiN·in -laws. Gladys Yates of
S~Taruse. and Kathryn YatPs of

University's Ohio Valley Experimental unit ln Point Pleasant. He
was a member of American Legion
Post 23 of Point Pleasant, and he
attended Cllfton Methodist Church.
Surviving are one daughter.
Shirley Cline of Point Pleasant; five
sons. Emil of Point Pleasant , Bruce
of Pomeroy, Roy of Point Pleasant,
Ray of Point Pleasant, and Danny of
Clifton:
two sisters, Beatrice
Thompson of Letart . W.Va .. and
Gladys Wolfe of Bartlett, Ohio: one
brother, Lloyd of Pomeroy: and H
grandchildren.
Funeral arrangements are in·
complete and will be announced
later by the Foglesong Funeral
Home, Mason.

Point Plf'asant: rwo sistf\rs . M atX'I

Shra of Toledo. and Bernice Fuller
of Marwlhead. Ohio; one brother·.
William B~·ers of Toledo; ll
grandchildren and three g~·Pat ­
grandchildrrn.
Funeral Sl'rv icrs will be held atlO
a m . Wcdnesda:v in Ev. . ·ing Funpral

Home. Pomeroy. with the Rev.
Dm·id Mann officiating Burial will
be in Mrtgs Memory Gardens.
F'riends may call at the funera l
homf'fro m 7·9p.m toda:--·andallda y
on TlJC'sda~·.

Emil L. HoHman
F:mli L. Hoffm an. 60, Mason. died
this morning in St. Ma0t··s Hospital .
Huntington. W .Va .
Born April22. 191H, he was the son
of lh&lt;' lal&lt;' l .uuis and Anna R1rkard
Halfman of Clif tun. W.Va.
He workt&gt;d at West Virginia

Virginia Kennedy
Virginia "Ginny" KPnnedy dit'&lt;l
Saturday a I her home in Collierville,
Tenn ., following a lingering illness.
She is survived by her husband,
Joe, formerly of Pomeroy: a
daughter, Giner; her parenls, Roy
and RuthMyers ofMennphis, Tenn.;
a brother, Roy and wile: her
father -in law and mother-in-law.
Bill and Carrie Kennedy of Pomeroy; two brothers-in -law and their
wives, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Kmnedy of
Pom&lt;'roy, and Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Kmnedy of Hudson, Mass.. and
s~era l uncles, a unts, nif'Cl's and
nep hPWS.
An-angements are being completed at the CollierviUP Funeral
Home.

Weekend emergency runs
Loca l units were' kept on the move
ovpr thf' weekend ansu.·'f'ltng numf'mu s ra ll s, the Meigs County
EmergC'nC_\· Medi cal Services

reports .
Sunday ralls included Pomeroy at
1:117 p.m. to Burlingham for Ralph
Kern, to Holzer Medtcal Center:
Middleport at R: 4.1 a.m . to South
Fourth Stri'Pt for David Ohlinger, to
VetPrans Memorial Hospit al; Mid·
dlcport at 7: ll p.m. to Syca'1'orc
Street for Clyde Taylor, to Veterans
Memorial; Middleport at !0:15p.m .
to Hudson Street for Dorol h\'
Jenkins to Vetf'rans Memorial.
Rae in~ at7: 5~ p.m . to Ohio 1.24 tor
Pam Wise, to St. Joseph's Hospital

in Parkersburg , W.Va.; Rutland at
3:54 a .m . to Horner Hill Road for
Ann Quivey to Veterans Memorial.
On Sa turda y at 11:37 a m ..
Pomeroy went to the Pomeroy
Health Care Center for Donald
Grimm, to Veterans Memorial;
Pomero:,: at 5: 19 p.m. to Pomeroy
Pike for Rrva Simms to Veterans
:vremorial; Pomeroy at 9:30p.m. to
Kingsbury Road for Clifford Plantz,
lo Veterans Memorial; Pomeroy at
10: 54 p.m. to Pomeroy Health Care
Center, aga in for Donald Grimm,
who was returned to Veterans
Memorial; 12:09 p.m. Tuppers
Plains to Reedsville for Rob
Bennell, to St. Joseph's Hospital.

Sunnyhill's fate left
• •
to state commission
8y FREDERICK STANDISH
As.o;oclated Press Writer
L\NSING. Mich . !API - A
Michigan s tatC' r onunission takE's
up J request tonight tha t some say

"'ill c lean the state's air at thr
expens&lt;' of an Ohio 10"11 wh ich
thrivPs on coal mining.
At issu~ is whether two of the lht'('('
unil s at a Consumer Power Co.
JXIWC'r pla nt may continuf' to bum
high-sul fur coa l for thrc&lt;' more
yPars whiiC'other plants in thestdl l'
bum low -sulfur fuel that gives off
less pollution .
The utilit .v says it w~nt s more
limP to find a sourt:'r and sign
contracts for low-suUur COd I. PPabooy Coal Co.. which supplies
CunsumN Powe•r's Jann1•s H .
Campbell plant. says it needs more
time to find another market for tJw
coal from its Sunnyhill Mine in
southeast Ohio .

But C'nvimnmcntalists sew timf'
has run out . Thf'y contend continued
sulfur emissions from th~ plant will
contribute to acid rain and health
pmblPms for some people.
"Our as..'10Ciation and several

others havP bf&gt;en working on these
issues for a long limP... sa id Alex

Louery winners
CLEVELAND ( AP 1- Holder s of
two winning tickets ron·ertly nam·
ing all six numbers selected
Saturday night in tht• wL&gt;ekly "Ohio
Lotto" game get to share a j ackpot
estimated before the drawing at $3.4
million. lollery officials said.
Th~ winning numbers were 7. 24.
26.
28 and 38.
Lottery officia ls have y~t to
announce the exact amount of lhc
jackpot and the Identities of the two
winners. Thrnumberofplaycrswho
correctly picked fl veofsix numbers
or four of six and what thPy win b
also yet to be announred.
Sa les totaled $4,965,566, officials
sa id.
Next week's estimated jackpot
for the game is $1 mUlion.

n.

File for marriage
Two couples are planning marriage In the near future In Meigs
County.
•
Michael Eugene Rinehart. 29. of
Racine plans to marry Sharon Sue
Barnett. 26, of Racine. Frederick .J.
Blaetthar, 22, of Gallipolis, plans to
marry Jamie Lynn Sisson, 21, of
Gallipolis.

Monday, June 18, 1984

Pom-y Middleport, Ohio

Sagady of the American Lung
As&gt;'Oeiation of Michigan, which
oppo,;p, the utility's request. "This
is the very last t Michigan[ plantthat
ha s to get controlled ."
Sagady said the request doesn't
meet statr requiremPnts for an
ex tens ion. Jar Holmes of the
Michigan Department of Natura l
fu&gt;sourres A ir Quality Divlsion
agrff'S
Holmes said lo get the extension.
the utility must prove that com pliance with the low-sulfur regula ·
lion wou ld be impossiblE' or
unreasonable.
"We don'l feel there is ei th~r ." he
said. " We don't see wh&lt;'re that
1compliance 1 would put undue
hardship on the company or the
customer.''

Inside today:

Court
approves
• •
•
ffiJeCtiOnS
WASHINGTON (AP) The
Supreme Court today agreed to
decide whether states may continue
executing condemned murderers
by injecting them with deadly
drugs.
The court will review a decision
barling that method of execution
unt U the federal Food and Drug
Adminstmtion determines whether
lethal Injections are a "safe and
effective" way of killing death row
inmates.
In other cases dealt with today,
the court :
-Agreed to deride how long
police officers may detain someone
suspected of a crime when they do
not have sufficient reason to make
an arrest. The justices said they wUI
use a marijuana-smuggling case
from South Carolina - involving
detention of 3() to 40 minutes - to
decide how "temporary" such a
temporary stop must be.
-Left intact a ruling that the J.C.
Penney Co.'s medical Insurance
plan for its employees does not
discriminate illega lly again st

women .
The court, without comment,
refused to hear arguments that the
plan-which deniescoverageforan
employee's spouse if the spouse
works elsewhere and has a larger
salary than th&lt;' J.C. Penney
employee - unfairly limits coverage for husbands of many female

workers.
-Barred members of CongrPss
from using the federal courts to
force President Reagan to withdraw military advisers from El
Salvador. The justices, without
comment, rejected an appeal by 29
House members who filed suit in
1981, contending Reagan had not
given the required notice that U .S.
soldiers were being sent into areas
where hostilities were Imminent.

Practice set
The Voices of Liberty will be
pmctiring a 1 Pomeroy United
Methodist Church this evening
tJu·ough Thursday at 8 p.m. nightly.

ThP practice sessions are in
prPparation for a concert to be held
at Royal Oak Park on Saturday,
July 7. for the American Cancer
Society.
The group will be featured
Friday, June 22, at Roush'sLanding
in Racine with the flatboat Advm ture Galley II atTivcs.

Co-op orders

By the Bend .......... Page 5, 6
Classifteds ........ Pages 6, 7, 8

Cornlcs-TV .............. Page 9
Death§ ............. ... ... Page to
Editorials ................ Page 2
Sports ........ ......... Pages 3, t

28.
Thls will be the last time to on:ler
unt USeptember.

Leonard Bass, Syracuse, has
retunred home following surgery at
Camden-Clark Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.

Games cancelled
The weekly public games party
Friday night at Racine Fire Station
has been cancelled due to the vis i 1of
Adventure Galley II barge over
Heritage Weekend in Racine and
Pomeroy.

Deadly chemicals...Page 2
Zoeller Open champ ...Page 3

•

e

Vool .34, No.47

at
Pomeroy

Ashland Petroleum Co .. Ashland,
K y. filed a lawsu it Monday in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court for
payment of $15.615fromCoaiPower
Inc.
Stanley D. Hunt. Sun Cha Hunt of
Charlestown. Ind .. Patrick O'Brten
and Larry Hunt were also named as
d~fendants in the suit.
The suit alleges the defendants
agreed to pay Ashland Petroleum
"any and al l monies dup" by Coal
Power.
The agreement, signed on Feb. 7,
1983, was an "unconditional and
continued guarantee." The suit Is
asking for money due the company,
court costs, as well as l2 percent
annual Interest, beginning on Sept.
22,1983 .

Hospital News
Saturday admissions - John
Hoffman, Mason; Diana Starcher,
Dexter.
Saturday discharges - Edith
Reiser, Linda Cozart .
Sunday admissions - Clltford
Plants, Middleport; Donald
Grimm, Pomeroy; David Ohlinger,
Middleport; Kathleen Oonch,
Middleport.
Discharged Charles King,
Margaret Julian, WWJam Pugh Jr.,
Martha Roush. Dian~ Starcher.

••6\

ONE MD..LION RICHER - Anne M. Sonuners
faces reporters in her College Park, Md. home
Sunday, alter she won the grand slam home nm hit hy

derby pairs a player with a contestant and pays Hthat
player hits a home nm in a designated inning. The
biggest prize, 00 annual installments of $50,000, Is
awanled for a grand slam. (AP Laserphow).

Baltimore Orioles player Gary R&lt;lenlcke against the
New York Yankees. Sponsored by a local bank, the

Woman wins $1 million homerun
COLLEGEPARK.Md.iAPi - A
woman who hadn't been to a
Baltimore Orioles game in 25 year s
and had never heard of outfielder
Gary Roenirke has become a "fan
for life" after his grand slann homer
won her $1 million .
Anne M. Sommers. 45, a secretary
from College Park. won a bank
contest thank.s to Roenicke's home
run in the eight h inning of the
Orioles' &amp;-2 win over the New York
Yankees on Sunday.
"I'm sure going to follow them
now," said Ms. Sommers. adding
she'd like to meet Rornicke. ''I'm

ecstatic."
Ms. Sommers, whowasautomall raUy entered in the contest by using
her 24-hour banking card, was the
first person tow in thecontPst since It
began last season, said .Jane Allan

Bowie, an Equitable B ank
spokeswoman.
Her name was r andomly drawn
by the bank when Roenicke, whose
name was also randomly selected.
stepped up to bat in the eighth
inning, Ms. Bowie said.
Prizes are awarded to contestants
if the selected player hit s a home
run, with the biggPst prize going for
a grand slam .
Ms. Sommer s sa id sh&lt;' hadn 't
derided how to spend the money, bu 1
wants Jo m ove out of her 16th floor
apartment.
"I'm going to be very conserva tive with it," she said .
Ms. SommPrs will recei ve 20
installment s of $50,00l a year. Ms .
Bowie said.
"My mom 's an Orioles fan fur lifl'
now,'· said Tommy Sommers. 18.

Carol Ga uger, Ms. Sommers'
daughter, broke the good IIPWSafter
her husband. Bob Gauger, called
from a friend 's home where he was
watching the game.
"Nobody deserves it more than
she does," Mrs. Gauger said. "She
always put us kids first before
herself. She's a great ladY, thoughtful, considerate and caring."
Ms. Sommers said she had no
plans to quit her$18,200-a-year job at
Emerson Electric in SPabrook.
"No, why should I? I have to go in
tomorrow and let those people enjoy
the excitement," she said.
"I know two people who are going
to celebrate tonight," Roenicke said
after hearing his home run had also
made Ms. Sommers a winner.
"She's go ing to celebrate and I'm

going to celebrate."

Swale's death remains mystery
NEW YORK I API - Swa le, thC'
said. There were no signs of foul As a stallion pros(X'Ct. his value
champion race horse that won two
play, she said.
was clOSI'r to $50 million, sources m
legs of the Triple Crown and was
"If it was done, it was done the breeding industry told The New
worth up to $50 million, probably
extremely subtly," she said. "We York Times. The newspaper said he
died of heart failure. stroke or
don't always know the answers . was insured for no more than $15
"somP toxic substance." an attend Tbere are cases where don'1 f'Ver million.
Ing VE'terinarian sa id.
find out the cause.'·
The winner of thl' Kentucky
Fritz said the three most likely~-----------­
Derby and thP Belmont Stakes
causes of death, in order of
collapsed suddenly early Sunday at
probability, were "heart failure of
Belmont Park after a routine
somP kind, a stroke, or, and I hate to
Middleport. Ohio
I '!, -mile gallop.
say it, some toxic substance.''
The 3-year-old colt, whose death
'' He was nevE-r sick one day in his
came just eight days after the
life. He never had so much as an
victory at Belmont, had been
aspirin ," said trainer Woody SteT·Shirts, Caps, Jackets, Etc.
considered "a picture of health, the
phens. "On his way back to the barn.
SPECIAL PRINTING
healthiest horse in America," said
he was very playful, and seemed
Dr. Rohert Fritz, the veterinarian
fine .... Swale was being sponged
who pronounced the thoroughbred
SPECIAL NEEDS
do\\11 by a !'!fOOm in thP walking
dead at 6:55 a. m .
circ l&lt;' outside his barn when he
It was initially bel ieved Swale, a
J'l'ared. flipped over and collapsed ."
AFTER 5 P.M.
son of 1977 Triple Crown winner
Seattle Slew. had suffered a heart . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ _ . __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
attack, but veterinarians who did an
autopsy sa id they were unable to
Immediately find out why the horse
died .

CUSTOM SCREEN
PRINTING
FOR YOUR

" The cause of death is unknown at
this stage," said Dr. Helen Acland,
who flew from thP University of
Pennsylvania's New Bolton Center
for the autopsy.
It could be two weeks before
results of Jests on Swale's brain and
other body parts are known, she

sears
Home Appliance

By The Associared Press
.
A young girl and a ronstruct1?n worker·dred and at
least 15 other people were mtured when thunderstorms moving through Ohio lifted the roof off a ·
motel. snapped power lmes and sent debns flymg
through communities.
The g irl died Monday night at the Young;to\\11
Hospital AssociatJon's North Unit hospital. several
hours after she arrived from the damaged Days Inn
motel in Libertv Township. hospital spokesman Mark
Hein sa id early today.
He identified the girl as Audry Plucinski of the
Traverse City. Mich .. area.
Hospital spokPsmen said today two other people
from the Days Inn w!'rc in guarded condition, while

seve~ ":'&lt;'re tre~ted and released.
In ]un~s va;•ed from laccrat1ons to ncurolog;ra l
problems, Hem sa rd.
.
lnCol~bus, ~onstruct ion worker Patnr kVanpaepeghen, 34, of Columbus, was killed when a 20-foot
concrete block wall collapsed on him dunng a wmd
gust, police said.
. .
F our co-workers esra JX'(l tnJUI'Y when th~ w~U fell
over as they were lrymg to brace rt about 6 p.m .
Monday.
.
In Cleveland, a 9-year-old boy on a tnrycle was
severvly burned by a downed power line on the city's
west side and three rnen werv hurt by flying debris
near the ronstJ11ction site of the Standard Oil Co.
!Ohio 1 headquariPrs downtown.
Two ot her peoplt&gt; sustained minor injuries whPn

? Ser:tioni, 18 Page!.
'25 Cents
A Multimedia In( N1Pw1pape1

By KATIE CROW
Sentinel News Staff
U aU goes well, Pomeroy Villag&lt;'
will have a 12f.l.bed nursing home
Jhat will employ 00 to 85 people.
Thls infmmation was rpvealed
during last night' s meeting of
Pomeroy Council.
Mceting with council were Alan F .
Scali, vice president of The Wallick
Companies . Columbus, and Stevl'n
C. Go ld ston. d eve lopmen t
roordina tor.
Scali told council the new nursing
home will be known as Carefree
Health Center. It will be located on
the George Brown prop&lt;'rty on
Mulberry Heights. They have takm
an option on the property.
The property where the nursing
home will be lora ted \\ill hav&lt;' to be
annexed by the vlllagl', Scali said .
Scali stated between 80 to 85
skilled and unskilled individuals
would be hifl'd. HP also stated thC'y
would hire all Pmploy{'{'S thPy can
from the area.
Scali said he mu st file with the
Stat!' of Ohio by .July l , for a
certificate. They will be notilif'd
sometime in SPptcmberorOrtober.
Scott noted it wiU be a year befor~
construction will begin .
Scali also noted they need three
things: water, sewag~ and lax
abatPment. He also commented

that from all indications. Veterans
Memomrial Hospital would not
hav~ any troublE' supporting thP
home. indicating a nN:d for an
addilonal nursing home.
Scali stated they needed help on
watf'r and sewage and a tax br£'ak in
order to pursue the huilding of thr
nu r.;ing home.
Counc il agreed to hav~ the villagl'
solicitor draw up a r esolution to
provide a larger wat£'r tine. £'X tend
th£' sewage and to annex the
property and dir&lt;'Cted Mayor Ri
chard S..vler to sign therPsolutionas
soon as it is ready .
Jn other matters, it was an nounced 14 new park benchl'swillbe
placed in Pomeroy. compliments of
the Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
Club.
Lions Bruce Teaford and the RPv .
William Middleswarth told council
the benches will have concrctPsides
\\ilh two by fours and wtll be set in

concretf'.
The benches wil l be placed in front
of the courthouse. Municipal Building, tennis courts, jun ior high
building, ncar the stage on the
parking lot, and two ncar th~ levi'&lt;'.
Expt'l'ssing their thoughts. coun cil felt the project was an cxccll&lt;' nl
one and gave their full approval.
It was announced Tom Reed has
secured workers through Commun il v Action. who will assist th~ rest of

the summer mkeeping Beech Grove
Cemetery mowed and cleaned.
The traffic light at the bridge will
be repaired as soon as they can find
someone to do the work Mayor
SPyler informed council.
II was reported weeds need lobe
cu t nea r the bridg&lt;' and at Naylors
Run. There is also a drainage
problem on the highway that gars
under the bridge.
A rC&gt;quest was read from Tom
Reed to block off the upper parking
lot from noon on Saturday until 5
p.m . on Sunday for Hertilage
weekend . The d('('ision was left to
I he disrtvation of Mayor Seyler.
A resident m el with council in
regard to the fine job the poli('('are
doing on th.- parking lot s. The
resident also suggested that trash
barr'£'ISbe placed on lh&lt;' two parking
lots.
:Ylayor Seyler staled extra policemen will be placed on the parking lot
for the summer to control any
p rob l~ms. Th&lt;• m ;idmt also sug gested issuing parking tickets to
eliminate ~ percent of the
probl!'ms.
AttC'nding were Mayor Seyler.
William SnouffPr. clerk: Betty
Baronick, Henry Werry. Bruer
Rl'cd , Bill Young, John Anderson
and Larry Wchrung, council

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GREGG &amp; PATTY GIBBS

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HOURS: Mon.·Tues. ·Wed Fri.
9:30 to 5:00
Thurs. 9:30 to 12:00
Sat. 9:30 to .2:00

playing the Star Spangled Danner. The corrununitiL&gt;s
of Racine and Syracuse are hosting the Ftiday
Oatboat vlo;lt with the publk invited w altl.&gt;nd the
riverfest type event. i\t left in the above photo l' Mrs.
Ro&lt;Lsh.

rehabilit al ion of the ex istmi( dam
The location of th~ curren t
s t rueturP makes locking roncllt ions
difficult and dangprous. offiCials
have said. The small size of t he lock
chambers result s in dela\'s ami
higher barg&lt;• transportation cost s.
Tlle water bill also aulhori2Ps:!.11
million for navigational lmprovpmmts to Lorain Harbor, $7 .~ milliun
for a beach eros ion proj&lt;'CI at
Maumee Bay State Park and $6
million for nav igaTional improvf'm~nt s tot he Cleveland harbor.
If th~ House approves the bill. it
sllU would have to clear thC' &amp;&gt; nate
before becoming law. It wasn't
immediat ely clear when the House
would votC' on the measurP.
The bill also included au thoriza -

Cain wants opinion

Dryer with easyloader door

$37500
While

Mason County Fann Musewn commission and a
fonner Mason County superintendent of school•. will
give his talk on river Jon' starting at 7 p.m. The
progr:un, which includes toors of Adventure Galley
0, hegin' at 5 p.m. with the Southern High hand

House debates Gallipolis Dam
bill Monday, takes no action
As.o;oclat.ed Press Writer
WASHINGTOI\ !API - The
House is expected to vote soon on a
water resources bill that inrlurtPs
the authorization of$260million for a
dam and locks project nca r Gallipolis, Ohio.
The House dPba ted 1hr bill
Mondav but took no final act1m1
TheG;llipolis project is part of I hr
water drvelopmPnt act. wh ic h
would authorize studies. dt•sign.
cons111Jclion and modificat ion of
water projects by thrArmyCorpsof
Engin('('rS.
The provision calls for cons truction of two n('w locks in a cana l that
would bypass thp existing Otuo
River structure. I I also prov id~s for

23701

2-speed, 5-cycle
Kenmore washer

RIVER WRE SPEAKER - Walden Roush of
Point Pleasant, right, shown here thi~ spring
receiving the 1983 West Virginia Communlty
Volunteer of the Year Award from Gov. John D.
Rockefeller IV, will present a brief talk ahout the
area's river heritage as part of the program when
Adventure Galley II, the reptica of an hi•tnric ll!OO's
Oatboat. swps at Roush Landing, off Route 121 near
Racine, F'riday. Mr. Roush, who is pN'Sident of the

By J i\MES HANN .\11

SPRING
REDUCTION SALEI

Sale Ends June 30, 1984

TllP &lt;'astern wing and upper floor of I he two-stm:,.
Days Inn wC'fc hardtost Int. The Holiday Inn had
brokPn w indows.
ThP storm caused a total of at least $1.5 million in
damage to th~ arl'a. said LibertvTow nship FirrChief
Arthur Carnahan .
A. downburst , rathPr than a torna do. caused the
damage. sa id Joe Vazw uf the 1\at ional Weat her
Service at Youngstown. who visited the s('('nc. Vazzo
told the newspap&lt;'r thercw~re no re-port s of a tornado.

mf'mlx'rs.

SALE

.. Final 2 Weeks"

they reportedly were struck by lightning aboul 4: 30
p.m . at the T anglewood Country Club golf course a 1
Pcrrvsburg in northwestern Ohio.
A Cl&lt;'Veland Electric Illuminating Co. spokPsman
said as manv as 2a.OOJrustomcrs lost elect neal power
for a time Monday night because of do"11ed lines.
At least 50 or 60 people from the Days Inn and the
Holiday Inn next door were evacua ted to other nearby
hotels after a downburst hi t. The ! Warren I Tribune
Chronicle reported.

Option taken on land
for new nursing home

G11

5th Street

ent1ne

Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 19, 1984

For those who have an interest in
the area 1hat depends on the
Sunnyhill mine. the issu~ goes ,--------------------------~
be:,:ond rules and regulatlon.s.

Suit filed

•

Ohio storms kill 2 persons., 15 hurt

614-992-7626

Returns home

Clear tonight. Low near 60.
Winds noriherly around 10 mph.
Sunny Wednesday. Hlglt near80.
Chance ol rain near zero pereent
tonight and Wednesday.

Copytightod 1984

Specialty Graphics

Meigs Food Co-w will be taking
orders Thursday, Junp 21. from
1-3: 30 p.m. at the SPnior Citizens
CmtPr for delivery Thursday, Jun&lt;'

Alcohol abuse•.. Page 5

Weather

GAlLIPOLIS LOCKS AND DAM - 1be HOWie Is

expected w vote soon on a water .-.rces bOithat
Includes the authorization of S2IJD mDllon for a dam
and locks project south of GalllpoUs. 1be House
debated the bill in Washington Monday, but took no
DnaJ acUon. The Gallipolis project Is pal't ollhe water
developmenl act, which would authorize studies,
design, construction and modification of water
projects by the Atmy ColliS of Engineers. 1be
;

provision calls for constmctlon of two new locks In a
CAIIal (on right in photo a hove) that would bypass the
existing Ohio River structure. It abio provides for
rehabilitation ol the exl.tln~; dam. 1be location of the
current structure makes locking conditions difficult
and dangerous, officials have said. 1be small size of
the lock chambers results In delays and higher harge
transportation costs.

Maxine Plummer will makf' a
payment of $6,500 in re turn for
dismissa l of a theft in office charge.
although to whom the payment will
be made remain s in doubt for the
momen1.
The paymmt was pa11 of plea
bargaining ag;-eement reached
Monday by Gallia County Prosecu tor J oseph L. Ca in and Daniel M .
Hunt . Mrs. PlwnmPr's Columbus
attorney, which slopped an anticipated week-long trial in Hocking
County Common Pleas Court .
Ca in said the money could go to
either Gallla County or to lhe
GaUia -.Jackson -Meigs 648 MPnt al
Heaith Board. over which Mrs.
Plummer presided as executive
director from 1'l71 until last
Sept&lt;'I"Tlber.
But Cain said he wants an
opportunity to get an opinion on the
Issue before the case Is settled .

Mrs. Plummer was secretly
indictl&gt;d by a Ga llia County grand
jury last December for thPft in offt r~
and for using hPr o!fice to influence a
public I'Onl rJct.
The charges surrounded jXlym&lt;&gt;nt
of more than $9,00l to her son.
Jeffrvy, for work " not performed"
between Februarv 1978 and ,lanu arv 19&amp;1. and for three contracts
wii h Jeffr'l'y Plummer issued in
1979.
While the trial has been short circuited by the agreement. both
sides wlll appear before Judge
James E . Stilwell in Logan aga in
Wednesday . Cain said Mrs.
Plummer is toenlerawritten plea of
no cont est to the second charge.
Although she rntered an oral plea
on the record Monday, Cain sa id
state l aw requires a written plea .
Stilwell is to study statutC' for the
definition of a pubiic contract. but

lion for the fol lowing Ohio flood
control projects:
~~~ .2 mill ion for the Miami Hi\W
at Fairlrl'ld;
- $9.1 million fur I hl' St·iuto Hi\"('r
north of Chillicot he;
~$6.7 million for the Hoc king
Ri,·er at Nelsonville;
- $6.4 million for the Muskingum
River at Killbuck:
~$6.2 million for the llrx·king
River at Logan:
-$6 million for lh~ Lillie wl iilmi
Ri,·rr south of Da~· t o n :
-$.1.5 million lor the Muskingum
River at Mansfie ld:
Thr mra s ut"f'al ~owould a u!hor i;.c
loans of ~ ~ ~ .i m:llion for " Wi! lrr
supply· pmjN't at Wilir am H . Hi!rsha
Lake at Oh io R 1\'Pr Basin. Ohio

•

OD ISSUe
Cain said hf'!' mJintuining 1he
p;sition of the indictmmt.
"We feel it 'sa public ('()nt rac t that
was issu('(). ·· hf• !-&gt;a !d .
Cain d('('lined further comment
untilth£'rasc is scllll'd
The trial wa s to ha ve been held in
Logan alter St il well. ass igned to 1he
case by Ohio Su preme Court Chief
.Justice Frank Celebrc:z:ze, reconsi dered a change of venue motion
introduced before Gallia Common
Pleas .Judge Hi chard C. Roderick in
March.
At the time. Roderick declined to
consider the mol ion until attempts
to seat a jurv were made and the
effect of n~wspaper coveragp of
Mrs. Plummer 's activities werl'
detl'rmined.
Prior lo Stilwell's approval ofthe
motion in May. roughly 60witnesses
each had been subpopnaed by both
sirlf's.

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