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                  <text>Page- I 2-The Daily Sentinel

June 27, 1984

Ohio

Inside today:

14 referred to
eye specialists
after screening

By the Bend ...... Pages 6, 7, 8
Classllleds ....... Pages8, 9,10
Comics-TV ............ , Page 11

Fourteen persons wcrr referred
to eye special1sts as "s uspects" in
the free glaucoma SCI'('{'nings June
4-8 when 372 people were checked at
Meigs County Senior Citizens Center. The screening was provided by
the Ohio Afflllate, National Society
to Prevent Blindness.
According to the Ohi o Society,
gla ucoma is the lf'ading ca use of
irreversible hlindnPss in Ohio.
affecting 90,00'J resid ents, half of
whom are unawar£&gt; the y have the
disease
SinCf' symptoms do not normally

appear until permanf'nl da mage
has occurred , thP society urgPs
persons over 35. thosP with a familv
history of glaucoma. and those who
have not had a complrt e £&gt;ye
examination within thf' last two
years. to have their l"'Y £-·~ rhrcked
Glaucoma scrr·(•m ngs an• onP of
man:..· sight -saving s£'tYicf's of th(•
Society toPrew•nt l1llndn£•ss. whi ch
is supported so l i'!~ · by \'Oiuntary
contributions from th E' public.

Special Olympics•..Page 7

Weather

Death! .......... ,........ Page l2
Edliorials ...... ,......... Page 2
We R818Mt The Right

Um~ Quantities.

Sports .............. Pages 3, 4, 5

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

Some cloudlness toolgbt. Low
~- Upt westerly wtnds.
Friday, considerable cloudllless
with a sUgltt chance of showers
or llnmderslomls. High around
80. Chance of rain 20 percent
tonlgltt and 30 percent Friday.

POMEROY, OH.
PRICES IN EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., JUNE 30, 1984

Vol .34, No.54

Hall trade pays off...Page 3

•

at y

e

298 SECOND ST.

About the economy...Page 2

Survival. ..
!Continued from pa ge II
hoping that it just won 't be another
fad in :vleigs County.
"The way everybody talks. I think
it will catch on," CarvWillford said .
"I hope it l&gt; herre to sta)' . I will say It
1s just a fad right now. but I hope it ls
here ro for :1 long fimf' ."
Thl? winner is thl? tpam that
captures th e other's na g and returns
to a home base. No prize is awarded
to the winner.
" Il ls just a ga me to set' if you arc

USDA CHOICE

.
$109
Chuck Roast • • •
lB.

By CLIFF HAAS
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON lAP) - Urged on by President
Reagan, Congress has approved a compromise
deficit-reduction package of more than $50 bUllon in
tax Increases and about $13 billion in spending cuts
that will be felt by everyone from welfare I ecipients to
wealthy eoqx&gt;rate executives.
The Senate, voting 8.1-15, gave the measure final
congressional approval Wednesday night, clearing
the way for the president tD sign the package into law.
The House approved it 268-155 earlier in the day.
Reagan sent letters to legislators Wednesday

reiterating his "support ror this major element of the
deficit-reduction package," adding it "will help
ensure that the economic recovery now under way Is
sustained in the months and years ahead."
Under the package:
- The one-year holding period on capital gains will
be estle spending measure, along with previous
actions, represents about two-thirds of the election year action Congress and the president have
contemplated to make a modest "down payment" on
reducing the $600 billion in federal budget deficits
expected through 1987.

By DONNA BRYSON
As.o;ociated Press Writer
COLUMBUS. Ohio tAP) - A
state utility watchdog is evaluating
a report charging that mismanagement at theZimmerpowerplant has
cost more than $1 billion, but one
lawyer says she thinks the charge Is
well-documented.
Ollio C{lnsurners' Counsel lawyer
Janlne Migden helped pf'f'sent a
synopsis of the report Wednesday to
the Counsel's Cittzens' AdVJsory
Committee at a meeling in Cit~
Council chambers.

.
$139
lunch Meats • • •
lB.

smar1er than the other guys -- to S('f&gt;

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL

ThP Long Botlom Community
Asscx:iation will mt't't thiseveningat
7:30 al the community buildrng.
RPfreshments will be servro .

Five fined, nine
forfeit bonds
F ive defendants wen• finN:! and
nine ot hers forfeited bond s in the
court of Pomf'roy Ma yor Richard
Seyler 1\J('&lt;;(jay night .
Fined were Dway11e Qua Us and
Tim Coa ts, Pomeroy , failure to
comply, pay pf'f'vtous fines plus $2.'\
each; Rick ICf'nhower, Pomero,·.
$16.3 and costs. rPCklcss operation,
$113 and costs. df'struct ion of villag&lt;'
property : Jeffrey Russell, PomProy. $.l&gt;, traffic light \'iOlation ;
Benton Pht!l ips. Pomcro\'. open
fla&gt;k, $&amp;land costs
Fortriling bonds were Carl Morri s, Rutland, $50. sp&lt;'&lt;&gt;d; Harold
Meadows, Mascn , $4R, speed; '- inda
CarpcntPr, Middlepon. $.1.1, Wcgal
left tum; Sharo!Snydct·. Wat erford,
$63, taffic light violation; M art in
M cAllgus, Pomerov, $6.1. tllcgal
traffic light vio lat ion; Bill Wails,
Malta, III .. $6.'3. traffic light vtola·
tion; Jimmv Tavlnr. Fostroi a, ll"&gt;l.

GRADE A HOLE

Chickens • • • • • • • • •
lB.

FRESH PORK BUTT

.. 59¢

Steak/Roast • • • •
lB.

The report , made by the independ.
enl consulling firm or O'Brien.
Kreltzberg and Associates for the
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio,
estimated the cost of mismanage·
ment at Zimmer at $1.3 billion if
plans to convert the plant from
nuclear-to fossil -fueled are com~

Ground Chuck. • • •
lB.

By The Associated Press
Scattered showers and thunder·
storms dampened parts of the
nation's midsection early today,
dumping up to 2 inches of rain on
drought -stricken cent raJ Texas,
w hile most of the nation basked
under sunny skies.
Tornadoes touched down over~
nigh t near the South Dakota towns of
Little Eagle and Mobridge, but no
injuries or damage were wported.

BUCKET

Cube Steak ••••• . $199
LB.

'BE A CLOWN- RoUer Brothers Circus arrived in
Pomeroy and with them they brought two clowns who
tolU'ed Pomeroy Wednesday. The tircus will have two
shows today, one at 5:30 p.m. and one at 7:30. The

Granted divorce

GEORGIA

Ci ndy Lou M cCarty wa sgranteda
divorc'C' from T&lt;·rry VlcCarf)' in
Meigs County Common Plms CoUI1
for gross negll'ct of du tv .
In Common Plms l'oun. M ikf'T.
Manlpy of Middlepor t wa' smt enced IU fivp six ·m ont !1 tPrms.

Peaches • • • • • • • • • •
lB.

VALLEY BELL

SCVing l'On&lt;..'UITE'rlfiy.

2°/o Milk • • • • • • • • • • . $159

ManiC'y was cum·ielt'&lt;.i of fin•

CLEI!1·:LAND 1AP1 Th&lt;•
winning numbN drawn Tuesday
night in ihr Ohio Lottery's dai ly
game, " The Number." was 261.
In the "Pick 4" gamP, played
M onday through Friday. thP win·
ning number wa&gt; 3579

Gal.

KRAFT AMERICAN

THRIFT KING

Singles • • • • • • • • • • • •
12 Oz.

Mac./Cheese. • •
]II~

FLAVORITE

DEL MONTE

·=cou
2 QT . SWEETENED

COUPON •••••
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2/79¢

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CAN

~649

Please

•
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THANK YOU CHERRY

Limit 3

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Sat.. June 30, 1984
I

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PIE. FILLING

&lt;;.OF FEE

8A6A5-030 + 8

limit Two Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
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Sat .. June 30, 1984. • •

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MAXWELL HOUSE

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limit Three Per Customer
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SHURFINE SUGAR •
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5 Lb.
Bag

$}49

Limit Three Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Sat., June 30, 1984

By JOHN CHALFM'T
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio iAP)
Taxpayers and school districts
soon will be getting scme extra
cash trom state government.
The General Assembly has
sent to Gov. Richard Celeste a
$.'\0 million bill tapping into
surplus state funds 10 glve
taxpayers refunds of $7 and up.
Alsc head ing for the governor's desk is a conferencc
committee version of a bill
spending $&amp;i million in unex·
pectJ'd profits from the Ohio
Lottery ror primary and secon·
dary education.
After wrapping up work on
those and olher measures. th&lt;"
House and Senate adjourned
until July 31.
Celeste praised Republican
and Democratic leaders for
whal he called "a very, very
constru c tive
l eg isla..ti ve

SPssion."

Ice Cream ••••••••

Catsup • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

1/2

32 Oz.

Free clothing
The Callia-Meigs Community
Action Agency will hold il s fiT'&lt;'
clothing day for low lmcomr
persons on Friday, June 29. from 9
a.m. untll noon. The Agency's
clothing bank Is JocatJ'd In the old
high school building In Cheshire.

circus will be staged on I he grounds behind lhe ronner
Pomeroy J unlor High School building, and is being
sponsored by the Pomeroy Area Chamber of
Omunerce.

Taxpayers, school districts
to receive extra cash

spPt&gt;d : Ortlton (~rn\T'r. PomProy-,

Lott('ry winnPI"!l

affect businesses and upper-income investors,
one-fourth of ihe money raised would come from
eliminating a new tax break for savers and by
reducing the ta' benefit s available from income
averaging.
It also would make it more difficult to take a tax
wMte-off ror expensive cars used for business and ror
hom&lt;' computers and other property uf.r perscnal
U,.,.

At tl1e sw11e time, the measure would lower taxes
for certain low-income working families with chililren
by increasing the earned~i neome tax credit.

pleted and al $1.7 billion - the
amount spenl on the project sc rarif it is abandoned.
The ConsWTters' Counsel said
customers should not be liable for
costs of alleged mismanagement at
Zimmer, but would not say until its
evaluation is complele whether the
estimates by lhe O'Brien Kreitzberg study were legitimate.
Consumers' Counsel William
Spratley could not say when his
eva luation might be complete.
The PUCO must decide whether
Zimmer's ownC&gt;rs can pass on costs
of its con.:;;truction to customers.
Ms. MigdPn said her agency
intends to arguP before the PUCO
that a state law and "what isfairand
decent" should protect consumers
from the costs of mismanagement.
The Consumers' Counsel has
questioned the feasibili ty of convet1 ~
ingZimmer to a coal·flred facility-

scmet hing plant owners decided to
do after learning the cosl to
complete it as a nuclear plan! could
top$3 billion.
"The conversion is lechnically
feasible," Ms. Mtgden said. " However. it may not be economically
feasible."
The O'Rrim Krcitzberg study
was most critical of the project's
ch ipf owner, Cincinnati Gas &amp;
E lecttic Co. Other owners are
Dayton Power &amp; Lighl Co. and.
Columbus&amp; Southern Ohio E lectrtc
Co.
·
The study accused ('(;&amp;E oi
railing to recognize important
differences between building a
fossil -fuel plant and a nuclear
racility . hiring an inexperienced.
under-tra in!'d and underpaid slaff,
and ignoring the importance of
quality-control measures.

Storms hit drought-stricken Texas

$-16. sp&lt;'i'd: Char h !.at h• ., . l.angsville. $17. spc&lt;&gt;d .

count s of brmking and mtcring in
homes in Middlepon . ThP incidents
began in .July l98:l and coni inu!'d
until April191\&gt;l.
Magnet Bank of Parkersburg
filed a lawsu it in Common Pleas
Court TuPSday . The suit S('('kS a
judgrnrnt of $22.3.18 from Clyde .1.
Morland of Coolvllle and Ethel
Mane Morland of Vienna, W Va .
The suit also swks to forN'lose of
the mm1gage of the Morlands.
Eleven df'fcndant s, inducting thf'
Morlands w cff' namc•cll.n thf'" suit .

Still tD be decided are savings to be made in the
Pentagon budget.
Despite the suppott of RPagan and congressional
leaders, only 76 Republicans in the House voted for it
and 86 opposed it. Democrats split 192-69 in favor of
the plan.
Senior senators scrambled to make sure that there
would not be similar defection In that chamber.
On the final Senate vote, 38 Democrats joined 45
RPpubllcans to pass the measure. Six Democrats and
nine RPpublicans opposed it.
While the tax Increases in the measure primarily

Group reacts to study

SUPERIOR

if you can survive."

tonight

2 Sections , 1"2 Pages
25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . NewsJ)Oper

Latest cuts "will be felt by everyone.,

Free litera turf' ma y bC' obtained

Met&gt;L~

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, June 28, 1984

Copyrighted 1984

by writing to thf' soc if'~' &lt;..tl Box 20'JJ,
Columbus. Ohio 432lli.

ADMISSIONS - Helen Beegle,
ful cine; William Smith, Rutland;
Kenneth Keese, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES - Garv Mat1in.
Donna Lambe11, Enlf'st Bn?wrr.

•

..'

'

••
•'"

He said his support for tax
refunds had been a longstanding
matter and was not prompted by
pressure from either polling
results or House Speaker Vernal
C. Riffe Jr., DNew Boston, who
origlna Ily proposed a refund
mechanism.
He dismissed a question about
how taxpayers should spend
their refunds, more than half or
which will total only $7.
"Well, If they're likemeltmay
go with the allowance for their
children In one week. It 's not a
whole lol of money. But It is real
money coming back to them for
the first time In the history of this
state," Celeste said.

A month-long Senate deadlock
on the lottery bill ended after
Sen. Oliver Ocasek. D-Akron,
decided to support it. I t then
drew Republican support in the
Senate, w hic h Democrats con·
trol 17-16, and passed by a
comfortable 24-8 margin.
The House approved it 91 -5
moments later.
Senate Presidenl Harry Meshel. D-Youngstown, said the
compromise was the same one
offered a month ago.
"I think the game they
(Republfcans) played was partisan politics. They simply saw an
opportunity to embarrass the
leadership or the Senate," Meshe! said .
Ocasek and Republicans earlier had insisted that the bUI send
the entire $ffi million directly to
schools Instead of putting half of
it into a rainy day fund.
But Ocasek said thai after
assurances rrom Ce!Pste and
legislative leaders that the rainy
day money would be spent for
OHIO -~ -- -- Proposed Tax Relund

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schools, he agreed to the conference plan .
It provides for a maximum of
$40 million - instead of half the
surplus - to be held In reserve.
About $14.4 million will be used
to cover anticipated shortages in
several education accounts.
Another $21.2 million will be
used fo pay thf' state's share of
school desegregation costs In
Cincinnati, Lorain, Cleveland
and Columbus.
The res I of the money, about
~5 million, will be distributed
directly to school dislricts at a
rate of about $23 per pupil .
Republicans maintained il
was the first time they'd heard
that part of the rainy day fund
wou ld be used for desegregation
costs.
"All of a sudden it's been
revealed to us we're talking
about a court-ordered desegregation busing fund," said Sen.
Cooper Snyder, R·Blanchester.
"This isn't an enhancement
lund, an excellence fund- it's a
hocus-pocus fund."
But Sen. Robert Boggs, DJefferscn , said current state law
provides for state subsidies tD be
reduced to cover the desegrega·
tion costs. He said the lotlery
proposal would avoid the need
for such a reduction.
The tax-refund bill is not
expected to be ready for Celeste's signature until al least
Friday.
Taxpayers will receive 2
percent of their tax liability In
1983 or $7, whichever is greater.
U lhelr total tax was less than $7,
the total tax will be refunded.

Scattered showers also were reported in abroad band rromTexasto
Minnesota, with severa l ovemight
storms scattf'red in New England
and the Camlinas
About 1'!, inches or r am soaked
Abilene, Texas . overnight while golf
ball -siz!'d hail fell on Selfridge, N D ..
and winds gusted to 70mph near E l
Dorado. Texas.
The flood-plagued Plains enjoyed
a day ol sunshine Wednesday, along

with the upper Mississippi VallPV
cast tothe AtlanticCoast. Fair skiPs
also were reportfld in the central

Rockies. the Southwest and Pacific
Nort hwesl.
For the rc'St of today, the weather
SC'rvice forecast sca ltrred ram and
thundershowe rs along the Allantic
Coast. thf' caslem Gulf Coast , the
lower Mic,sissippi Va lley, the
Sout hwest and th&lt;' Pacific
Nort hwcst .

'Cyclist hopes to establish world
record enroute to Olympic Games
POINT PLEASANT Shri
Deepak !~l e, in an attempt to
establish a world r('C()rd, is riding
across the Uniled Slates enroute to
the 1984 Olympic Gam es in Los
Angeles.
Lele, 26. a nali vl'o r India, stopped
over in Point Pleasanl fora brief rest
Wednesday afternoon near Krodel
Park. He was heading to Huntington
for the night.
Riding a monocycle. Lele. and his
companions Prakash Diwan and
Kulkarani Vikas, left the United
Na tions building in Nl'W York Cil y
June 6.
A monocyc le differs from a
unicycle in that a monocyelc is

directly driVl'n by the speed or thr
pedals. which makes 1t a bit more
difficult to ride, :.•elc sa id.
The trio exrx.:&gt;c.·ts to a n·ive in LA
August 6. and will attend the
Olympics. They said th&lt;&gt;y ha,·e
already purchased thf'ir tickcb .
The entire JOUrney Will be O,IJXJ
miles, with I ric pedaling anywhl'l''
from 40 to 45 miles a day.
" We havr had VE'I)--' nicr co-

operation from the Amrrican people," satd lA-Ic. who, in 1982.
powered his monocycle
miles

urn

across India.

The bikers are along to escort Lrlf'
in trafflc, but the 10-spcedbikPs havf'

pruved to be no hmdera nce to !.Ric
and tlis onc-whP&lt;'led vehicle.
··I have had no problem in kCf'ping
up w ith thr bicycles." he sa id .
Staving ovrm ight in campgrounds. motels or chu rchcs has
been an added benefit to lhe
monoc_vciC' rc&gt;Cord a II C'mpt .
"We• hav·r made the friPndship of
the U.S. p&lt;'Upll•," L.clesatd.
One may wonilpr how the trio will
gf't back 10 their stal1ing point in.
Nf'w York after complf'ting the long
tr!'k . L.clr assutl's it won't be hy
monocycle.
"No, I'll takf' an airplane." he
said. rubbing his backside.

•

. ....'

,.a~ ·

. . . '. • .

-..
Pralulsh Dlwan (left),
Deepak Lele (center on monocycle), and Kulkaranl
Vlkas (right) passed through Point Pleasant on their
way to the L .A. Olympic Games, which begin In

CROSSO&gt;UNTRY

August. The trio started their ride June 6 from the
United Nations building In New York City. The ride ls
being perfonned to estahllsh a worid record for
monocycle riding.

�Thunday, June 28, 1984

Comment.a•-y
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE I!'.TEREST OF THE MEIGS.I\{ASON !\REA

A~
~m~ r-T"'L.JL-"""'T'""I~d·~
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
l'ubllshcr
I' AT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLI CH

Asslslant Publisher/ Controllt&gt;r

(Jpn••ral Manal(t'r

DALE IW'fiWEU, ,JH_
News Editor
.\MEMBER of Th(• Assodaled Prt•ss, Inland Duily Press A.ssoda-

tion and tht' American !'\.'(&gt;wspaper Publisher Association.
l.F.TTERS OF OPISIOI\ arf' wt•h'omf'd. Tht' .¥ s hould b1• less ttl an 300 words
,\lllt&gt;Ut't!li arP subjt&gt;l'l to t•dltinR a nd mu!il tw signed with namP, addrns and
tf•ltophont• numht&gt;r "'in umolgru-"tl lt·ttt·rs wlll ht' llllhlistwd . l.t&gt;ttt'rs should hi" In
,~r;ood la."ilt' . addrt's!dng Issues, not Jlt'rsonu.lllh•s.
lun~~:.

A good week for
Walter Mondale
A lew more weeks like the past seven days and Walter F. Mondale will
have a right to feel optimistic about his chances of beating President
Reagan in November.
It was a week loaded with polittcal landmines, but Mondale negottated
with extraordinary skill and, as a result, appears assured he will have a

Page 2__:The Dally SentiNf
Pvmeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thui'ICiay, June 28, 1984

This or not4ing ________J_am_e_sJ_._K,_'lpa_t_ric_k
WASHINGTON - The lmmigra·
lion b111 that passed the House last
week is not a perfect bilL The
similar b111 that passE'Cl the Senate
ln May of last year also has Its
flaws. But when a final compromise
bill Is put together by a conference
committee, this fact of political life
shou ld be recognizE'Cl: It Is this or
nothing. And to do nothing is to
court disaster.
Both versions offer substantially
the sa me dua l approac h to what
may bf&gt; termed. bluntly but honestly, the Hispanic problem. A kind
of amnesty or legalization would be
offered to cer1aln Immigrants who
have bet&gt;n illegally in the United
States for a numbf&gt;r of years.
Second, employers who knowingly
hire illegal aliens in the future
would be subject to fines - and in
the Senate bill, to imprisonment
also. The bills contain many other
provisions for example, a
provision putting a cap on total
legal immigration of abuut425.00l a

year - but the&amp; miscellaneous
provisions are of less controversy.
More than 30 years have passed
since Congress last grappled with
the sensitive issue of Immigration
reform. The three decades have
seen dramatic changes. 1n 1001,
Immigration omctals apprehended
about 40,1nl persons seeking to
enter the United States illegally. In
1970, officers caught 260,1nl. In 1983,
the figure was approximately l.3
million. Despite these efforts by a
pitifully undermanned lmmlgra·
lion service, an estimated 650,1nl
other "lllegals" last year escaped
detection and moved in.
No one knows w:lth any sense of
authority how many aliens now are
living Illegally in the United States.
Estimates range from two million
to 12 million. No one knows how
large the various cohorts may bethat is, how many came here before
1977, how many before 1982, and so
on. It is Far From clear how those
aliens who seek lega lization \\'ill

establish their eligibility. Neither
can It be said what effect the
legislation program will have on
costs of public health, education
and welfare.
These uncertainties will have to
be resolved as time goes on. The
Important thing Is to make a start
toward getting the situation under
some kind of controL If the bill that
comes from thP conference committee falls to win approval, it will
bf&gt; a long time before Its weaiJI
proponents will be willing to tiJI
again.
In a thoughtful paper published
last De&lt;:ember, the Georgetown
Center for Strategic and International Studies took a look at the
consequences of a "do nothing"
policy. If nothing effective is done to
stop the now of illegal aliens, by WOO
we m ay anticipate dramatic
changes in t he makeup of our
society. Lines will be blurred
betv.reen citizens and non -citizens,
and between lawful and unla\\ful

eTrA0t9i~ ro~ -~~·'!F$i"""'­
HU~ME

HEA

,.e

united Democratic Party at tht' San Francisco nominating convention.
As he entered th1s dangerous period. the campaign was over but not
over. Mondale had his delegate majority. but Sen. Gary Hart was insisting
that he would carry his light to the convention.
Hart and the Rev. Jesse Jackson were carrying their efforts into the
party platform committf'f' and the Coloradan was th!'E'atening additional
battles in the rules and credentiaLs committees over what he called
Mondale's "tainted delegates."
It was sounding rf'minisccnt of 19811 when Sen. F:dward M. Kennedy
refused to abandon his challenge to President Carter until he had
exhausted every opportunity to ovcnum the president's delegate
majority.
CartPr nevpr forgave Kenncd)' for that and continul's to blame him for
Reagan's election victory .
So. it was a bit !runic that this ymr Kmnedy emerged as a party
peacemakPr.
Kennedy talked to Hart and apparmtly played a key role in working out
thl' agreement that clean1.1 thP way for Mundale and Ha11 to meet in New
Yor·k on Tueway .
That m eeting's purpose appearE'Cl to be to Prase th'' rE'sidue of hard
feelings from their long primary bat tiC'S and thp often personal rhPtoric
thE'y engendered.
"The things that divide us are modest compared to the things tha t dividP
the two of us from Prf'Sident Reagan," Mondale said after their ml'l'ting.
&amp;Jth said they did not discuss thepossibilitvof a Mondalp-Hart tick&lt;'! and
Hart said he was continuing his candidacv. But he no longl'r said - as he
had so often for months gone by- that he expects to be the nominl'l'.
Under their agreement , Ha11 dropped aU plans to chaUmge Moondale
delegates to the 1984 convention. Monda!&lt;• consented to lower thE' point at

which candidates in primaries and caucuses would receive delegates and
also to cut in half the number of unpledged deleg&lt;:&lt;te slots given to party and
elected officials . Those concessions don't apply this year, but would m the
19S8 campaign .

Widespread affect
on the economy
By thl' standards of recmt years, the tax bill that emer gE'Cl from
Congress last weekend is not "major" legislation.
It doesn't ca ll for any1 increaSC' or cut in ba~ic iincome tax ratC's. likf' thr
tax -cut mcasulT' President R.eagan pushC'd for and won in 1981.
II doesn·t make any fundamental change in the tax system. as would
other prop:Jsals that ha\'f' txoc&gt;n put fon~.·ard but not yet acted on_
: But the bill. expecte-d to g('t speedy final approval and Reagan's
· signa turf' soon. is likPly to hau~ a widespread imparl on the E'COnomy and
the investment markets_ It is hf'avily ladrn with changes in the rule'S that
\\111 affect "the p:.ckcts of mnr;;,ttaxJJ&lt;1~ ' ('T'S, .. as th e accounting firm of Ernc;;t
&amp; Vihinney says
The Hous.:&gt;-Senatf' conff'rf'nrf' committf'f' 1hat shaped thf' final version of
the biU early Saturd.1y-· morning has finishf'd ils work. Now. armu ntants
and other people who make thrir living giving tax adviCI' are putting in long
' hours c hurning out booklets that explain 11 , and fietdmg phon&lt;' calls from
their customPrs
You need not C'Xpt:'nd much s~mpa th~ · on thC'SC' toiiPrs, how£'vrr. Thf' bill
falls on thPm in about thf' samr wa _v that a bli77.Ltrd hits the snow -shovel
businpss . II is also r?QuirE'Cl stud)' for proplr with any signifi cant amount of
- savings or im.:Pstmf'nts.
The biggest surprtSP is a reduction in thr minimum holding prriod to
qualify for famrabl&lt;' long -trrm trmtmmt of capital ga im on invl'stmrnts
like stock s This prriod. which was lcngthcn&lt;'d from six months to 12 in the
late 1 ~7[;;, ts to ll' shoncnf'd again to six months. effective lor assets bought
after last Saturdav. Shor1 trtm ca pitol ga ins arr taxed as ordinary income,
and arE' subjf'('t to. ratf'S up to JO percent. The top rate for long-term gains is
W percent .
People from Wall StrE'E't lobbied for the six month holding period for
Sf'Veral ymrs. The)· had a clear motive for doing so. since a shorter period
naturaUv tends to increase the amoun t of potentia l buying and selling of
stock. ,.;ith a commission to be collPC ted on ev&lt;'ry trade.
Securities industr&gt;' tcadf'rs also argued that it will contribute to the
health of the securities markets. and bPncfit thP U.S. Treasury to boot. by
: encouraging investors to tak&lt;' morp taxable profit s- Pven if some of those
· profits are taxed at lower ratE's than previously .
Thl' president of th&lt;' SecuritiPs Industry Association. onl' trade group
pushing for enactmen t of the six -month period. Edward I. O'Brien. said. "I
guess it shows that persistence paid off."
It will probably take some time to gauge the new holding period's Impact
on the stock market. Half or moll' of all stock trading in today's market is
done by investing institutions like pension funds , which are not subject to
the same tax rules that cover individuals.
Technically, the six-month holding period has not been permanently
adoptE'Cl. It is scheduled to rever1 to 12 months after 1987. But in a country
that has pnacted sweeping tax legislation almost every year of late, and
where preliminary work has already begun on a likely 1985 tax bill , just
about all the tax rules are only temporary.

:Today in history
Today Is Thursday, June 28th, thr 100th day of 1984 . Therr ar&lt;' 1i4i days
Iert In the year.
Today's Highlight in History·
On June 28th. 1914, Austrian Archduke Ferdinand and his wifP were
assassinated in what is now Sarajevo. Yugoslavia. by a Bosnian
revolutlonaiJI - an !'vent which triggerE'Cl World War I.
On this date;
In IT78, Mary Ludwig Hays gained the name "Molly Pitcher" and a
place in U.S. history for aiding American Revolutionary forces at the
Battle of Monmouth in NPW JerS&lt;&gt;y.

residents. Over much of the
Southwest, Spanish-speaking encalves will spread In Increasingly
Influential numbers.
Consider a lew figures: In 1950,
the combined populations of Panama, Costa Rica, El Salvador,
Guatemala, Nicaragua and Honduras totaled nine million persons. By
2001, their populations will total 40
mllllon. Mexico had a population In
1975 of 60 m!Uion; by 200J that figure
will grow to 131 mllllon. The Ideal
solution. of course. would bf&gt; to "'
Improve the economies and job
opportunities of our southern neigh·
bors that no resident ever would
want to leave. Ideal solutions are
beyond anyone's reach.
"Without sovereign control over
national borders," says the George·
town study, "the United States can
lose control over the size and natul;'l'
of Its labor force, population size,
and linguistic and political unity.
Furthermore. the size of the
nation 's population will deten'tline
the adequacy of natural resotd-ces
and the extent to which damllje to
the environment can be mitigited.
This in tum will Influence the
productivity of the economy and the
ability of the U . S. to compete
successfully internationally.
"F'lnally, U.S. foreign policy may
be greatly undermined by a
continuation of the currently fluid
nature of immigration policy:
foreign powers will increaslllgly
use the emigration threat to Induce
U. S. concessions or threaten
retaliation should the United States
move to strengthen Its immigration
statutes."
A sense of compassion supports
the legalization program. Co11'llll&lt;11l
sense underlies the employer sanctions. and prudent foresight should
prompt us to Invest heavily In
border controls. Our Hispanic
people have nothing to fear from
this legislation. The couniiJI as a
whole ha s much to gain.

Soviet clout in gulf _______Ja_ck_A_n_de_rs_on
WASHINGTON - Like somE'
df'adly car icaturP of a tP!Pvision
game show. thf' Persian Gulf \\•ar
has a mystery pla yer behind the
curta in : the Sov iet U nion. And U.S.
intelligence sources arc afraid the
Kremlin will wind up t hi' winner
aftrr the years of slaughter and

stalematE'.
When the war exploded In 1980.
thr Sovtets saw what they thought
was a golden opportunity; By
simply doubiP-crossing their longtime client. Iraq, they hoped to win
Iran's allPgiance. So they cut back
dra stically on s hiJJmPn l of arms to
Iraq.
But ttw prdgmalists in the
Politb uro misr ead the depth of the
A.v atollah Khorneini's fanatical d&lt;'tnrnination to maintain his own
pf'rsonal power in I ran and pursup
his goa l of fundanwntalist Isla mic
rC'volution throughout thr Persian
Gulf.
Thr SoviPts were counting on the
TUdC'h - thr I ranian Communist
Pan.v. wi th its powPr base in
southwrst I ran - as one arm of a
Moscow -directed pinrers that

would ultimately cow · Khomeini
unabl!' to bully Khomeini. abruptly
into subservience. The other arm.
r esumed arms shipments to Iraq
of course, was the 26 Soviet
aft er a two-year Interruption. By no
divisions poised on Iran's northern
coincidence. the Iraqis' rhetoric has
border.
become noticea bly more anti The remorseless Khomeini was
American in recent months.
not at alllntimidatE'Cl by theTudeh's
What worries U.S. analysts is
power to shut down otl production.
that the Soviets' reconciliation with
He suppressed the Communist
Iraq appears to have finaUy mad&lt;'
Party with his usual ruthlessness;
Khomeini blink. I'm told that
Its leaders were rounded up and
Tehran asked the Kremlin for a
executed as spies
high-level meeting. and the Soviets
Meanwhile, the victims of the
grantE'Cl it.
Soviet double cross. ·the harassE'Cl
A top Irania n official flew to
Iraqis. played their own poker
Moscow and begged the Soviets to
hand. They used what one intelli·
c ut back on their arms shipments to
genre source described as "the
Iraq. The spectacle of Khomeini
American card '' Top Iraqi officials
craw ling ro any suPf&gt;rpower was an
vistted Washington, ostensibl y in
unprecedentE'Cl development.
hopes of persuading the UnitE'Cl
The upshot of the Soviets' bf&gt;hind·
Statf"S to rrplarP the Soviets as their
t hP-SCf'nPs maneuvering is that
munitions su pplirr.
they now have clout with both
As onf' source Pxplained to my
combatants in the Persian Gulf
associate LurPTtP Lagnado. the
war. This puts the Kremlin. not lh&lt;'
Iraqis nrvPr sProw;ly expN?ted to ... Whit e Hou S&lt;', in the position of
get arms from Was hington . They
playing the role of "honest broker"
were simply trying to makP the
and negotiating an end to lh&lt;'
Soviets unf'asy .
slaughter. Any Soviet-negotiated
The Iraq is got no arms but the
si'rtlem ent . of course, will be in
Russia's bf'st in1f'rests.
srratf'gy worked. The SoviPts.

I've never met
The troubiP all startPd when I told
my wife's sister that I had bef&gt;n
taken to the Orlando airport by the
same chauffeur who had driven
Michae l Jackson the previous
WC'f'k .

:vJy sister-in-Jaw apparently got
the story mixed up and told her
15-year-old daughter I had driven
Michael Jackson to the airport.
The next day I got a call from my
niec&lt;'. "U ncle Arthur. I have to go to
the Michael Jackson concert or I'm
going to die."
"I'm sorry to hear that ," I said
··Mummy said you know him
persona lly."
··1 don't know him personally," I
said . "I told your mother I met the
man who took him to the airpor1
from Disney World."
"What's he like?"
"He's a very good chauffpur ."
" I don't mean him. I mean
Michael Jackson."
"I've never met Michael
.Jackson."
"Please, Uncle Arthur. I'll never
ask anything from you ever. This Is
the most importa nt thing I'll ever
do In my whole life. I told all my
friends you knew Michael Jackson
and you'd get us seats. I'll never be
able to show my lace again If you
can't get us Into his concert."
"How many friends did you
promise?"
".Just W."
"I have no Idea how to get seats. I
swear it ."
The next day I got a call from her
father. "What thP hell did you say to
LU!y?"
"I told her the truth. I don 't know

BELATED FBI CLEARANCE;
With the 12th anniversaiJI of the
Watergate break-in last week, It
seems an appropriate time to
report that the FBI has finally after years of prodding- cleared a
Greek journalist of spurious
charges. The accusations played a
crucial role In derailing the first
Watergate investigation,
The defamed journalist, Elias
Demetracopoulos, Incurred the enmity of the Nixon administration by
disclosing financi al ties between the
firs t Nixon presidential campaign
and the CIA-backed militaiJI junta
tha t seized power in Greece in 1967.
His early enroilment on the Nixon
enemies list earned Demetracopou tos constant harassment by the CIA
and the FBI.
As I reported. the CIA last fall
admitted that 1ts suspicions about.
DemetraC'Opoulos were baseless.
The Intelligence agency's files
contained no evidence - none that the charges and innuendoes
directed at him by his political
enemies had any foundation in fact .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Indians trip Twins, 6-4; Reds' lose, 14-9
CLEVELAND (API -It took Mel
the Reds a 6-5 lead by crashing a
Hall several days to get to the
two-&lt;&gt;ut double.
Cleveland lltllians once he'd been
A!Ollver'sdouble,apassedball,a
traded by the Chicago CubS, and
walkandJoeL.Youngblood'sslngle
several more days before he felt he
created a tie In the bottom of the
was really pulling his weight.
inning. &amp;Jb Brenly singled, loading
"It's about time I got my first
the bases, and Charlie Puleo
RBis." Hall said Wednesday night
replaced Ochinko.
after driving in five runs- two on a
Davis hit a wind-tortured foul pop
game-tying double In the eighth and
that eluded Wayne Krenchlckl.
three on a game-wtnnlng homer in Given a second chance , Davis belted
the lOth- in the Indians' 6-4 viCIOIJI
a 2-2pitchlntotheri ght fleldseatsfor
over the Minnesota Twins.
his 1l th homer of the year and a 10-6
The homer and RB!s were his first
Giants lead .
in the American League.
"I thought that pop fly was
"I think I can put some decent .--.:.....:::::::.:::.....:.::.....:.::__::__ _

caught," Davis said. "But this Is a
welrd place to play. This park can
give you breaks and take them
away."
Krenchickl agreed. ·'This was the
wtldest wind I've ever played in,''
the Infielder said. "I had no chance
at that ball. It ended up falling closer
to the catcher - and he dldn 't even
move."
Randy Lerch, 4-1, was the winner
on only one-third of an Inning. The
Giants Iced it with four runs in the
seventh, collecting consecutive singles by Youngblood, Brenly, Steve

stadium."
"I don 't even know if he's playing
RFK stadium."
"I get it. You don't want anyone
to know you're financing the tour .
Your secr et will dl!' with me. But
this is serious. II I don't ge t my
banker a box lor his kids. he's going
to call in the loan on a shopping
center I'm building in Seven
Corner s.··

numbers up,'' said Hall, who had
four homers before being traded by
the Cubs in a seven-player deal.
Hall and tearrunate Joe Carter
were unable to report to Cleveland
immediately, because of a foul-up
by the Cubs ' front office that forced
the two to clear waivers in the
National League.
"Nobody wants to lay off for a
week. It affects your timing," Hall
said.
He enterE'Cl Wednesday's game
with a .238 average in six games. But
he said he welcomed the chance to
bat at crucial moments in the game.
"Showtime. Either you do It or you
don't. That's no time to be seared,"
he said.
The loss snapped the Twins'
three-game winning streak, while
the Indians won for the fifth time in

six games.
Minnesota r eliever Ron Davis,
3-6. who has 14 saves this year, gave
up both of HaU' s hits.

Giants Outlast Reds

SAN FRANCISCO (API- Chili
Davis, who has missed three stat1S
with a bruised hip, proved he can
sl ill hit. Dusty Baker, sidelined
much of the season with a hamstring
pull, proved he can still run.
Consequently, the San Francisco
Giants romped to a 14-9vlcto1Jiover
the Cinc innati Reds Wednesday
with Davis contributing a pinch-hit,
grand-slam homer and Baker
steal ing three bases in one inningtwo on one play.
Davis' power under pressure and
Baker's daring on tile base paths
were the highlights of a raggedly
played contest which includE'Cl
urpredictable wind gusts, 27hlts, sJX
unearned runs, two passed balls and
two wild pitc hes.
"That wasn't baseball,'' said
left-hander &amp;Jb Ochinko. 3-4, who
was involved in Baker's heroics and
Davis' grand -slam. Ochinko also
a six-run fifth that gave

He was spPaking in a low volre.
"One of my patients tells m&lt;' you
savE'Cl MichaPI Jackson's life In
Orlando."
"I can't get Lilly any seats fnr a
conce11,'· I sa id.
" I wasn't calling about her. I'm
trying to get some for my kids. I'll
g1ve you a hundred dollars a ticket.
no questions asked."
" I don 't have any tickets."
"O kay, $200. But that's m y final
offer."
''I'm not scalping tickets. If you
want to get Lilly well persuade her
I've never met Michael Jackson In
my life."
"That doesn't solve my problem.
I already told my kids 1 knew
someone who could get them
tickets . What do I do .tow?"
"You better call a doctor. "
Apparently the word had spread
all over town. One friend said, "1
hear you're booking the Michael
Jackson tour. I 'II trade you my
Mercedes Benz for a box at RFK

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"I ca n' t help you." I said.
"Thanks, rat. I won·t forget t hi s."
The final call came from a friend
at the Pentagon who is developing a
new supef death ray that can wlpe
out an army with one zap.
He was desperate, "You have to
get me a pair of tickets to the
Jackson concert or my 13-year-otd
son will kill me ."

rat.

Great
Give-a-way•.

...!::::::...::::....:.:.:::::::.:.:.::.:.::...:.....::..:._______________--j

him~._________A_rt_B_uc_h_wa_ld

Michael .Jackson. What's wrong?"
"She doesn't believe you. She's
go ne on a hunger strike, until you
com e up with the tickets."
"I can' t get her any ti ckets," I
said. "Look, f have friends at the
Department of Interior. I can
arra nge for her to SE'E' the Beach
Boys on the Mall on the Fourth of
July . But that' s as far as my
musical connections go."
"You·~ one rotten person," he
sa id and hung up.
T hat night I heard from thP
doctor who was trymg to get Lill y to

Ponderosa presents

Nicosia , Duane Kuiper and Dan
Gladden.
The Giants also scored four times
in the third. With three runs In,
Baker on second and Brenly on first,
Ochinko replaced starter Frank
Pastore and Baker went to work.
Brenly was trrapped between
first and second on a pick-off play,
while Baker scooted to third. Brenly
kept averting the tag and Baker
bolted for the plate, beating Ochlnko's throw. Brenly stole second on
the bizarre play.

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�June 28, 1984

Sentinel

June

Summer
league
results

1984

Ohio

*
*

We Buy &amp; Sell Stocks
And We Save You Money
When We Do It I

ThP Easlern Eagle pony leaguers
dropp&lt;'d !heir second in a row , .3-1.
10 thr hustling Mason Mrrchanls.
l hPn bouncPd back Wllh a &amp;-3
&lt;:k'cision ovrr NPw Haven.
.'\gains! \'!ason. B Marshall
pirked up thp win for the West

Ask Us!
Ph . 446-2631

n
.
u
ll
u.,

c.~:::;~E~: OhioY~!\ey ~~pk

\'irgi nians. al lowing onl~· thr(&gt;(' hits

with 11 s t rikeouts and four walks.
F:ridiP Colli ns hurled for Eastern.
gi\'in g up four hits. sf ru ck out righ t .
•md \\·at ked four .
Mason 's hittrrs we-n' R Red men
ll'il h a double. and C. Noble, R
I&lt;P;uns and G_ Zus pan with a single

ON WHEELS!

t'&lt;tl·h . For Eastern. Mar k Griffin ,
( ~n"g Leac hman. a nd Mike Martin
Pd c h singled .
In the New 1-l dn'n ga me Bryan
Ours! pickf'd up thC' lvin wit h reli('f
hPlp from .Jeff Cal dwell and Eddie
Collins . Thf'y gave up fou r hits.
struck out six. and \.l.'alkC'd C'i ght.
Wolff' of New H avf'n wa s r hdrged
w tth thC' loss and W d S r ('lirv(&gt;(] b~
IIPsson . ThPy a llow('() srven hit s.
fan nf'd sh. ~1nd w a lk('(j o n l~ · ant' .
Eastern's hittC'rs w(' rf' D urst with
a trip lr . Ronnif' M axson' s doublt'.
C"a ldw~ll.
Collins. K )·lp Da,·is.
Cri ffin . and Brian Fk&gt;Pirt· had :.l
:--;ingle Parh F or :'&lt; f'W Ha\"l'n. C ibbs .
H('SSOn . Crimm . ami Si gmJn f'tiC' h
h :.~ d .:~ singl f' .

T-BALL TFAM- Pictured are members of one?'
two T-Ball team• al Syrncuse, s poll'!Ored by Baer s
Market. Pictured tront row , 1-r. Kevin Fields, Michael

12 EXPOSURES

The Daily Sentinel
~ UWS 1-15-960 I
.\ l)j,·i!&lt;. io n o f :\1ultinu&lt;dla, hu·.
l'ut)li~h~ &lt;l

t " \ ' ~'r'
aft r rnonn . \'l o nrlil\
Vnr!av . ! 11 ( "ou/1 S1rf' !'1. b\ 1h1•
Ohm \' ,l! lt•\ J 'uh l ishing Com p.;.~n _v Mul
! lllltd l. t, l m · . I 'on ll'rO\ . ( )hi n -l ~1jli~ . 9 1t2
:!\.')r, ~ ·nmrl ci a ... -. J:H~ 1agt' paid .tl Po

lh.!ou~;:h

' inglrd .
lwd a
ft.J hulous U C'&lt;m sPi ' Uli\'f~ hit s in as
mt.~n_\ · turn s al thr · pl ~t tP bmkPn in
1his gJmf'
RU!X'

of

f{ut!anrl

1J1

Th~ ·

\ 14 •TJlb o•r

,\~'-.ocic~tPd

PrP~ ....

lr1

l and U.ti l·, 1-'r-,·~ -~ A~stX' iClt011 ;r nd ltw
i\m('l' lt'i ln' ;-,('VI:-, p &lt;Jpl'f J'ubliShf'I'S r'\ S
~rx · i&lt;tliim , :'\ati OIWI ,.\dw•nising Hf'PI'I'
Sl' nt.Hi \'('. Branham 1\: (•ws paj)( ' l' Sa IPs.
';".11 T l-11rd ,\~Pnw • . :"Jf'w Yo r k , ~"'"
Yo rk I!H I17
l~ TMA S T FR
SPnd a d dri' ~S 10 Th t •
]).ul• ~·nlin t• l. 11\Cu unSt, Pomt• r u.\ ,

Pt

( lh i.-i .J ;J';'ti~

Sl ' 8.~( - H.WTI0r\'

th· l 'arr1 t'f'
Ont · w.:, .k
Ont ;..t oni h
&lt;!nt Yl'.ll

RAT E."'

or :\11110r ltnuh •
$ 1 ] II
$~

KO

$:1';' '..'1!

&lt;01'\

s l~( ; u·:

PKI('ES

1

lI

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
PHYSICIAN OFFICE LOCATIONS

:
1
I
I
I
I
I
I

J

I

Po me1oy 011

Optn
,_---------- I---- - ---I
~ ~ ~~~~ 1111

';tti

-

~:1

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HI

·n

"~

13os!on

41
1."&gt;

li

479

:"'('Y.' York

.1.3

~

.jj l
-1( 1

ll&lt;i tr im.-w• ·

rt

Mil w :u • k•~ ·

Chlc~u

:J~

If your baby was born
between 1979 and 1984, let
us publish a photo of him
or her in The Sentinel's
BABY EDITION
Monday, July 23 1984

\\( ' 4·k ~

~'2 '.1

I'!

~~:-:

'2 l

OhiH

.)1'1 1-ll )
$: 11 ~I I
$."1 11_XII

W t·t · k ~

W t •• · k ~

ONE RACK

-11

\\F.-IT

C'.alllomla
Only

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t.lot"fl

:lbt

al

-

l'&gt;

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17
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-1-r.

1' int'lnn..•lt
•.:..an FT ;mrl'il,l

.15
To

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;11

-19.1

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1X7

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29

n
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.1."&gt;

n

~~~ ~·

Phlladl'lphht ), N('\1.' York l
Mo nt rNI 4. S1 Lo.J.is 2
'.ffi A u ~ 1t &gt;:. J. Sim Di~o 4
'11lunda)''s Gumts
AllailliJ tMt•M\111!1' ~ ~ a l NN.' York
rBf"''('l'\)'] 4-ll l . !Ill

Hcuston 1Ruhl t&gt;
;!I

llo:l'i !nn
Chir ·a g~l

Milwaukt&gt;l'

tK{X)Sm;,m ~1 . ( nt
S1 Louis tD&lt;ty lt"' Mo a1 S.tn D l~

rThurmond 4-31. 1n1
C'hlca,ro oTtwl ;
oP.'fl&lt;J P..l !, 1n1
Plllsl:lur~th

Chti '&lt;4!t• ;,! l.o.&gt;~-.
l ~l!, IJI!l"J!I&gt;

\)f•'&gt;:rland. 111 1
Oakland a1 TonXliO. ! n 1
SC'illlll' i.l l l~ t on, m 1

&lt;t l

Di ~l.

Twenty-three ladif'S allended Ia dies d ay al Jaym ar Golf Cours~
Tuesday.
Guesldaywillbelx'ld onA ugusl 14
at !he club.
Winners for the day wpre Sue

REFUNDABLE SECURITY DEPOSIT

144.
48
150.00

CASH DOWN PAYMENT

0

MILEAGE PENALTY OVER 60,000
STOCK NO. 4897

AND

,

REDUCED

WHITE

DRESS SHOES
REDUCED

20o/o
ALL MEN'S &amp; BOYS'

ALL THOM MeAN

RACK OF SUMMER

WOMEN'S SHOES

CANVAS
PURSES

htrif(lgt house:
~ic

SHOE PLACE

OFF

Rl 2.

V~nlon .

S4995

~._.--"""1

SAVE 115

5

DRAWER
~--='11S5995
~----'"'-"SAVE 115

I

I

I

1

I

:

Deadline
for photos

:

IS

I

.

Saturday,
July 14,
1984

.... .....

. . ....

Parent's Name .... .. .. .......

.. .. ..

I

I Srr&lt;:'et m R.F.D. .. .. ......... ... .. .. ...

1 Bo y (
I

...... .... .

I
I

1
I

l

. . . . . ..

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

Phone .

) G irl (

I Date of Birth ...

1

--··

..

,

-

.-( '"''; .,,:1
-. . ~

' ~/

__

-

\ ~

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

NOTE: Photo of Twrns

Will

Stock No. 48851

When You Buy Two New

Matchi'tfl End Tables

$6~ 95

EA. PC .

REG . SJ99.95

l
PILLOW

1

ARM

....... ..... .. ......... . 1

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

I

1
I
1

1

J

New 2 pc. Early American
Pillow Arm livmg Room
Suite With Maple Trim.

,
s
RICE

Covered With Herculon
Solid Cover Only

$299 95
SAVE
$200

FURNITURE
STORE HOURS
854 Second 446·9523 . 9:30-5:00
Gallipolis, Oh .
Closed Thurs.

WAS

NOW

$6495°0 ._,_1__9__8__1_F~O~R~D:-::-f.-:::'250 RANGER

NOW

6495 00

5

TRAILER TOWING PACKAGE

1982 DODGE AIRES
K·SE

1978 BUICK
SKYLARK
Stock No. 46312
4-drsedan , 6cyl. , fact . ac. hea ter .

auto. trans, ps. pb, !Int. glass. tilt
st-wheel , C ·C, am-fm , wsw, wh -

auto. tra ns . ps, tint . gl ass, am -

co'iers.
WAS

WAS

649500

fm . wsw , wh -covers.

5

329500

NOW

$2595 00

1981 FORD LTD

1979 OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS SUPREME

4-dr sedan , V -8, fact . a -c, vinyl
roof, heater , auto. trans, ps. pb,
bodyslde m ldg , tint . glass. c-c,
am -fm , wsw. wh-covers w ire .

2-dr hard top . v.a. tac t. ac, v inyl
root. heater . aula. tra ns. ps. pb.
tint . glass . am tm . wsw tires. wh covers

WAS

WAS

$699500

NOW

$6695 00

Reg. 1499.95

I

.. .. ................... I') .... .. .. . I

Baby Edition, The Daily Sentinel
Box 729, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

WAS

SPECIAL

I

Mail coupon, baby photo and $5.00 to

Stock No . 41351
4 cy l. ps, long wi de bed , rear step
bumper. am fm , s tereo tape,
blue, dl x topper

ton pickup. 6 cy l. eng . 4 sp.
trans. od, ps, pb, sliding rea r
glass. rear step bumper , am,
wsw, dl)( t-tone paint .

Stock No. 47361
4-dr sedan. 4 cyl, tact. air , hea ter,

:

:

be handled as one picture

1983 FORD
RANGER XL

1983 FORD F-100

.._...

Couch. chair, 2 end

I

On The Spot Financing To Qualified
Applicants At Ford Motor Credit And
Bank Rates.

': ~ .:-..'. :~.:__ _

tables. coffee table .

I

: City ... ..
I

·~-. .._-

..... _.

I

Baby's Name .. .. ........... .. ... .... ....

Slock ~

$}44.77 *per month

5 PIECE
WOOD GROUP

--------------------------------------)
PLEASE PRINT

Sttl('k , 023

FREE

REG.

74.95

1

Delivered!

Stu&lt;"k. ~ 4564

*(GALLIA CO. TAX STRUCTURE APPLIES)

COFFEE TABLE

64.95

4
~~§"~:1 DRAWER

Oh 10

nut ion requested in th e coupon below . w gcr hcr w1rh $5.00 which includes 1he cost of
process ing, publicat ion and postage fm safe rL'rurn by mail A bi;l( k-and -whirc glossy phmo
in sures rhc bes t re production. Howeve r. co lor
photos, Polaroid phows and snapshot s will he
accepted. Photos of babies born anywhere will
be acce pted, ((X &gt;. Send inyo ur baby \ ph111o 11&gt; da y. Deadline for receiv ing photos is S:lturda y
J uly 14, 1984.

Herc··s e1 n orporrunity for pare nts, g rand pa ren 1s, au n rs :111 d u tK lcs or god pare n rs to
h:I\'C' their ·· baby 's" pho1 o appear in The Sen tin e l' s BABY EDITION Monda y. july 2.'&gt; All
bab1es born herween I ')7') and 19tl-i Jre e ligible to hav e the ir phoros publi shed . _lu st rhi11k
how your "baby" will save and che ris h thi s
s pecial erl irion th roughout hi s or her life1im c.
It's easy to have your photo pub li shed. Jus!
br ing or ma il i1 "'The Sen 1inl·l wi1 h the in for-

PRICE

Jam es and Debra Gooder ham

Glenn and Barbara Kmca1d
PSR. Ga ll ;poiiS, Oh10

Get This New

1

Crystal Dawn Gooderham

Susanne Renee Kincaid

Rl. 3. Box 643
B;dwell. Oh10

ALL WOMEN'S

20°/o

REG .

Allen Phillips
811! and Monna Phillips

0

SANDALS ........... 1 2

NEW MAPlE CHESTS

defogger , tint. glass, am. ru st
proofing .

1984 FORD LTD BROUGHAM 4 DR.
Was $13,041.00 NOW '11,514.00
1984 FORD THUNDERBIRD ELAN
Was $14,949.00 NOW'12,926. 00
1984 VOLKSWAGEN JEITA 4 DR.
s,......,"
Was $10,163.H NOW '8987 •00
1984 AMC ALLIANCE 4 DR.
Was $9021. 00 NOW '8555.00
1984 AMC JEEP GRAN WAGONEER
uo:1
Was $20,361.00 NOW '18,043. 10
1984 VOLKSWAGEN SCIROCCO
Was $12,410.00 NOW '10,408.00

319.112
6948. 96
60,000
6' Per Mile

TOTAL MILEAGE ALLOWED

Only

SUMMER SHOES

Stock No. 4367
3 dr . liftback , -4 cyL, heater, r ea r

"SPECIAL DEMO SALE"
77

TOTAL AMOUNT OF PAYMENTS

Arno ld . .Joan Chi lds and Kalhy
Ca rel.
All ladies who af'f' inter esiPd arr
indtPd lo all end l'Ve ry 1\•oscl av
tx•g inning a1 ~ : 30 a. m .

0

ARITHMETI

TOTAL AMOUNT DUE AT INCEPTION
Guest Day Aug. 14

1984 AMC ENCORE

LEASE IT FOR LESSIII

NUMBER OF MONTHS
1111

'726000

OR YOU CAN

1n1

~ -l ,trld"--.-' ·

WAS

6999°

MONTHLY LEASE PAYMENT

1\nJ!"I''!-.. 1n1

.11 Sa n

5

SiJn

&lt;il PhilariPlphii!.. m 1

S1 l.nu t." !11 'i.m

Ganw,;

~i1

1Cando&gt;laria

L 4-dr Diese l, 4 qd . 4-sp ., rust
proofi ng , floor ma ts .

Now

at ! h-. !\ngt&gt;ll'S

.11

F randS&lt;'f' I Davis Jb f. 1nf
( ln!v ~am("; sctw&gt;dull:'d
FTkiiQ''!i GIUlle.
Monl!'l·al ul l'lnt&gt;lnnal l. rn 1
At l.llll.t al ~· ou· York. on 1
Ho., , h ~l

~;um~ sdt~, lu lf'l l

I "&gt; 1 al 1--'hi ladf-lphla

Stock No. 4133

Stock No. 4897
•

\\'tdnf'N:iay', &lt;iamt""
\hi&lt;'&lt;~O )\, l~ ii L~burgh -,-, ll IJlnlnL~
S:tn F1 anrlst"' 14. Cint·mn.m '&lt;
Atlanta 6. Houston 4

Mlnnr:;o!a a l IA'troil .'l

ttussiz9

-

!i&gt;l

--1,'1

~

TC')(,L~ al

I

n

·l'cl.'l

tnl
frid~ 's

ti

~11

4 cyl. , 4 speed trans., rear step bumper , rust
proofing , radial tires, Bright low mount mirrors.
Stock No. 4897

-

ll~IOf\i

:-\i rn 11it't.'"
/\llan la
I.11'1 ,\ 111 !1'14 "

1

!Haas

~I

~~

~~

'211

Sea nlr 1\'anck lk'll: -\ 71 at
•G&lt;JI(• 1 - ~1. tn
; ~,,

:1!1

~~

l!l' 1

- 1~2

.l -21 , (rll

tfianaRan

.ll)

.41il

1L"onroo.· 1-11 ;11 To ron1n •l~t!

1\alll rn •n•

.M&gt;

Munl n ·,• l

't2ll

." Iii

~

tu

·~

1984 VW RABBIT

ltH

n
r;

f'lut'a~~o

( ) &gt;l!b

rt·t.
- ~;~

11 1.. !
l!ol

,,n .. r-.m.: h

L
t!
.11

41

~('W York ~. ()(&gt;troit ~
C'a litomla 2. T••xas I
Oakland !l. Kansa-. C'i ly :,
'lbursday'!oi G~
n •xa!&lt;. 1Darwtn '&gt;4 and Tar1ana 1'4i•
Clr-«"land !Smith ].()and ~ hu li.f' ~Hit .

' Oakland

\\'
l'htlddt •lph!.t
:-;,'\\. 'r' ork

Ba llimorr ]. lb!on 1

printed

DRESS SANDALS

.13
.11

qH

.o£.'0 '!2

-kt
\lo't•du'Niay'"' (Oun•~
1\'lllwuukf'f' :i, Torooto I
Chl &lt;"&lt;~RQ ~- Sl&gt;anlfo 7
('1,-.,·,•Ja nd 6. Mlnnt"SSO;t ~

Photos
will be

SANDALS

:r,

SPan~

SUPER VALUE!

ALL CONNIES

~·

Trxas
Kansas Cit}'

SHOES

WOMEN'S FLAT

l' c·t

'll
"-DT un•f\Klf'li
.f!
ll!
~.1

4Q6FF

PRICE

f

L
'.111

~- 1

:t~

Pre July 4th Celebration
SUPER SUMMER SALE!
STARTS FRIDAY

1/2

I Eu! Maon S!

\\'
!)(&gt;troll
Tonm1o

Dakland

Hl-,1;

734400

1

EAST DrYfo\10~

I

n1111lih

1 \ \.\'1·•·h

REDUCED

Mo~ tllru Sa l 1:00 1 m. to 9 ~ m
s ~n4a1 10 301m to 1l'JO ~ m and 4 to I p rn
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH 991-1955
fl of"dty Stt ~ •ct

.r

:..'+,
'l:.!

CANVAS

1---l

: ~;

\ 1.-\11 . S l 'IlSCHli'Tli l ' S

WAS
5

C tliforni&lt;l ;11 M ilwaukf{&gt;, in !
\;puo Yurk ;11 Kansa~ C!rv, m
N.-\ TIONAL LEt\atJt :
E.-\ST UIVI!iiO~

Ry 'J1Mo t\.'iiKILilllMI r MUlUC\.'\' l.t.:\G1 Jt:

I

Ke~~elllltlcC~IIoyJ~ . R Ph .
Cltar.lts Riffle APh
to~ald Hanntnt I Ph

( 'Jt-.·rlimd

,oil dhlo·

2-dr, 4 cy l., heater. auto. tra ns ,
ps, pb, bodyslde mldg, rus t
proofing , am -2 speakers, accent
stripes .

Ba ltlm&gt;l'f' at C'h.lc&lt;tgt:J, I m

~1tnnf'S()t il

Out~idt•

WOM E#N'S;::::::::

PharmC¥y

C;; IHut-nia

2f·

20°/o
=

Majors

Tlu· ! l. 11h "-;•·n!md on .1. ti •Jr 1'2 rtwn th
b;1 ~ i~ ( ·n·d i t ~~ · i l l ht · gl\ 1 •n C.t f'l"i o·r t ' dr h

'•:.! \\' ( '4 ·k ~ '

REDUCED

SWISHER LOHSE

$7399 00

1984 FORD ESCORT

.. - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -r

ri .--' t m,1•. l l 'n111 111 ;l&lt;h.Jil('(' dirPf'l l o

, I\

'8009""

Scoreboard ...

OHE.fl O.PIR[S 118134

I

NOW

Stock No. 4904

Offer goad on
. C 41 process films
Kodacolar II &amp; other .

lL______________________________ ,

' (' ~ Ui l ~! ' 11p 1 1 0 il ~ I!\ m.ll l j_ll-·l'mlll!'(lln
I ~ ! V.H ~ 11ht ' 14 ' t HJHII' ( ' , I ITIPI ~ t ' l \ ' 11 ' 4 ' 1.~

L 2- dr . 4 cyl. eng, hea ter , 4 sp., ps,
bodyslde m ldg, dual r emote
mirrors, rust proofing , bumper
rub str ips .

21.

Per Ro ll

110 126. d,.c, 3 5 mm

: .
1
1
I
1
I
I
II
:

Stock No . 4735

PRIZE CATCH - Randy Moore, 11, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, caught thls
li&gt;-pound Great Northern Pike on a fishing trip to McGregor Bay,
Ontario, Canada_ Moore, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gary Moore, took 15
minutes to land the catch. He reeled In Ute fish on his birthday on June

$599

$ 3;e~Roll

1984 FORD TEMPO

WAS

36 EXPOSURES

24 EXPOSURES

Sul)'-.l ' l'li lo'!' " nol lil-~lt tn~ lOP••.\ til t' l' &lt;ll"

1.1 \\'o'l'k\

SANDALS

lI

PHYSICIAN
TELEPHONE LOCATION
Georgianna Burns, M.D., Pediatrics
675-1095 " M.O.B."
Mark Cheng, M.D., Internal Medicine
675-5012
"M.O.B."
67:'&gt;-1666 '" M.O.B."
Young Choi, M.D., Surgeon
675-51811 "M.O B."
Jsmael Jamora, M.D .. Internal Medicine
John Grubb. M.D .. Obstetrics-Gynecology
675-3400 "M.O B. "
Richard Slack. M.D.. Surgeon
675-5267
Hospital
67:Hi060
"M.O.B"
Shrikant Vaidya , M.D., Urologist
John Wade. M.D ., otolaryngologist
675-1244
" M.O.B."

$299
Per Roll

Per Roll

Physician's at Pleasant Valley Hospital are In lhe process of
I relocating lhelr offices from lhe ground floor of lhe Hospital to lhe new I
I Medical Offlce Building. As a convenience lr our pallenls, Pleasant I
: Valley Hospllal wl1l publish lhe physician's oHlce locallons until the :
1 relocation to the new Medical OHice Building "M.O.B." is completed. I

ln!-Oidt• Ohio

ALL GIRLS AND
INFANTS

:

84 FORD
RANGER

..-----, 20 EXPOSURES

$199

r------------------------------~

nu- r !l\ , ! 1111 0

Hut ldnd ~ ~~ scun'll !ou1· ru ns in
lht--. fir &gt;;~ inning ami four more in t hr
:-. ix t h 1o capt un~ a 10-.'~ v.:in ovpr· Wrst
CGlum bia in Pt:'l' WPr t.lC'tion
Winning pi tC' hPr '.\ JS T0rr~·
Yl cGu irC' as hP Jlluwpd thnx--. hi ts.
fJnned 1-l. J nd walkPd o n ]~· onC' in a
brilliant Pf'rforrn;;~n('P. J . J ohn son
wa .. , thP losr•r. givi ng up 11 hit s. fi\'('
·.•:a lk s. Jml h cJ d 12 strikC"'u ts.
Hit ttTs for 11utl Jnd includf'd Tim
PPtPt·...,on with 1v.-n d o ublP~ ancl two
..;ingll's. :vk&lt; ;uirr " 'it h two s i ng If's
and J doubl f' .. JPt'C'nl_
\ · R UJX' had a
1riplf' and doublf'. Jnd Ho.s0 and
:..:hOC'm ttkf'r P&lt;Jch smg lN l oncr · .I
.iuhnson lf·cJ \'('W Ha \ ·t'n with ~~
tripiP v.-hill' TurnrT and l .f' Wt s (\wh

KODACOLDNTRFIIILM
COLOR PRI
DEVELOPED &amp;PRINTED

1\sh, Tom Powell, Adam Sayre, Travis Lisle; back.
Bea Usle, Toni Pizzino, Robby Crow, Jeremy
Buskirk, and Trudy Justis. A.hst&gt;nt we n&gt; Amanda
Quail and Adam Green. Coaches are I~ Fields,
John Lisle and Mick 1\sh.

446·9800
195 Upper
River Road

$499500

NOW

$4495 00

�Page

t-The

June

Sentinel

Honors
scholarship
awarded

1984 '

By The Bend

lhundoy, June 28, 1984

Page-7:

class, student council . vocal music

class, yearbook staff, Fellowship
Christian Athletes, computer club,

SUNGLASSES
(IN STOCK)

Genealogical
member
elected
The Meigs County Genealogical
Socie ty, a chapter of the Ohio
Genealogical Society. announces
the e lection of one of their
members . Keith Ashley. as a
trus tet:• uf the state socie ty.
Alter s ubm itti ng hi s gPnea logica l
qua lificalluns for th&lt;• office . Ashley
wa s lhPn placed on a statP-wide,
mail -in ballot. He was om_
' of five
c hosen by the 5,500 me mber bodv.

He is the firs t person to be elect~
from District Six -West. He will
seJVe a thr eP...year term.
Ashley wa s a c harter membE-r of
the M eigs County society and is

serving as the corres ponding sf&gt;C' rE&gt;tary. newslettH editor , and surname index chair man .
He is a member of First Fam il ies

of Ohi o. tht' honorary arm of the
sta te societ y. His other genea logi ·
ca l c redi ts Inc lude members hip in
the Sons of the American f{evolution . Sons a nd Da ughters of Pil·
grtms, Sons of Union VPtPr ans of
the Civtl War. Cla n Buchanan. the
Roush Famtly of Amenca, the
Zirkle Family Association, a nd
trust t'(' oft he Meigs Count y Pionf'f'r
a nd Historica l Socictv.

....

The Middleport Recrea tion Com .
mission is s-ponsoring tPnnis lessons
for adult beginner s. youth beginnf'rs
and inte nnedia tes.
The lessons will be taught by
Shawn Baker. Baker plays on tlle
.Junior Davls Cup team and has been
a district qualifier for three years in
the Mid ·Oillo VaUeyTe nnls Associa ·
lion meet in Springfield .
The lessons ~~&lt;ill begin July 9 in
Gen. Hartinger Park . The hour long
sessions willlx-schE'duled according
to interest. The week-long sess ions
may a lso be rt&gt;pE'ated if interest
demands.
The fee is $10 for fi w one·hour

sessions.
To register, call BakPr after July2
·
at 992 . 5,')2..1.

Auxiliary meets
A special meeting of the Ladies
Auxiliary of the Bashan Volunteer
Fire Department met Monday
evening in Ule fire house.
Plans were discussed about
helping witll an a uction in Bashan in
July. An Ice cream social is being
planned fur July 28forthefire house.
The auxiliary and firefighters
thank a U those who contributed to
the June 'Z2 ice cream social.
It was reported Charlotte Grant Is
a surgical patient in Holzer Hospital .
Pearlene Lee is home from Veterans Memorial Hospital.

50 m dash, 3rd place, softball throw ,
participation; Maurice Smitll, 50 m
dash, 3rd place, softball throw, 3rd
place; BID Lehew, softball throw,
2nd place , 50mdash, participation;
Charles (Andy) Boggess, 50mdash,
1st place, long jump, 1st place ;
Deanna Freeman, softbaU throw.
3rd place, 50 m dash, participation;
Billy Neutzllng, softball throw, 3rd
place, 50m dash, participation ; Bill
White, softball throw, 3rd pla ce, 50
m dash, participation and Ma ry
Jane Curry , softball throw, 3rd
place, 50 m dash, participation.

Business College graduates class
HELPING HAND - Traclllariels and Usa Frymyer, members of
Sacred Heart Catholic Chureh, Pomeroy, help load the truck of food
donated by the parishioners for tbe needy In Meigs County. It was
delelverdd to Heath United Methodl.st food pantry In Middleport.

Calendar
THURSDAY

BEDROOM
LIVING ROOM
RECll NERS
END TABLES
lAMPS
GUN CABINETS
SLEEP SOFA
DINETTES
BEDDING
DINING ROOM

UP TO

MOSTLY ONE OF A KIND
FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED

FAMOUS
BRANDS

FLEXSTEEL
BASSETT
SINGER
LANE
RIVERSIDE
BENCHCRAFT

RllfLAND - Rutland Town·
ship Trustees will meet in
regular session Thursday a t 6: ll
p.m. a t tlle Rutland F ire House.
The public is invited to attend.
POMEROY - Twin City
Shrinettes will meet Thursday a t
7:30 p.m. a t the home of Mary
Grueser.
POMEROY - The Trinity
Church of Pomeroy will sponsor
an ice cream socia l Thursday
and F'riday from 11 a.m. until 8
p.m. daily. Homemade ice
cream, hoi fudge topping, sand·
wiches, cole sla w, baked beans,
potato salad and pie will be
available.
POMEROY - There will be
an A.A. meeting T hursday a t
7:30 p.m at Ule Senior Citizens
Center from 7: 30 p.m . tto 8: ll
p.m . For additional information
ca ll 949·2425.
CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge 453, Chester, will meet
Thursday, June :&gt;8. Work in the
E .A. degree. Ali Masons
welccme

SATIJRDAY
ALBANY - Albany R iding
Club will hold a n open horse

shown Saturday a t 7 p.m. There
willlx- $100 junior barrel race for
tllose 18 and under, $100 barrel
race for 19 and over, $100 open
placer, speed racking class and
open walking horse class.

SUNDAY
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
First Church of God wiU hold
Bible School lx-ginning Sunday
tllrough August 3, from 6:30p.m.
to 8: 30 p.m . for c hildren ages
three tllrough 15. Theme is
"Jesus Is My Answer." Closing
program wiU be held AugustS, a t
7 p.m.

Happenings
Band meeting
RI.JTLA.liiD - PAll members
of Meigs High school marching
band Iexcluding incoming fresh·
men and new members) are to
meet at Ule park on Depot Street
in Rutland at 9 a. m . on the4lh of
July for Ule annual parade .
Summer uniforms are to lx. worn and music is to be
memorized.
Percussionists wiU have a
section rehearsal Tuesday, July
3, from 6p.m. to8p.m . in tlleband

room .

Girls' State delegates
learn in government
FLEXSTEEL

SOFA
WHITE
REG. '1199.95

TWIN RIVERS

SOFA, LOVESEAT
AND CHAIR
REGULAR '1199.95

·

Tennis lessons
offered in area

The group, who resided in Bradley
HaU, went through an opening
ceremony in St. John 's Arena along
with 3,axlother Special Olympians .
Evening highlights included sing·
ing of "The Star·Spangled Banner,"
led by the vlsually impaired
olympians and speeches by Ohio
State University a thletes .
While others were particlpa ting ir.

r-----------..J__-----------------------_j------------------------

meeting held

Refres hments Wf'rC' S('rved bv

athletic events, others chose to Swim
in Larkins Hall. After dinner the
group went to see "Return of the
Jed!."
Breakfast Sunday morning was In
the Olllo Union. Along with athletic
competltlons, the athletes enjoyed
"Tent Town and Fair," where all
games and refreshments were free.
Every athlete received a medal.
Each Carleton a thlete brought
horne a first, second or third place
medal.
Participants were Bren t Larkins,

'Zl-24.

Patda S. Chancey

Asbury UMW
The Asbury United Methodist
Wom en of Syracus&lt;' m et recently.
The meeting was opened by
President Opal Kloes. Devotions
was read by Bernice \Vinebrenner.
Seventeen shut -in calls were
reported . The frcewiU offering was
taken . A flyer from the district
preside nt was read aswcU as a letter
from miss ionaries Stan and Betty
Whitlock .
Helen Teaford 's program . "God' s
Luggage Shop ... was next on the
agenda.
A carry -in dinner wUI be held S
p.m . July 10 in the chu rc h instead of
the planned picnic.

The Special Olympic athletes of
Meigs County's Carleton School
returned home from tlle State
Olympics in Columbus held June

FOR MEN OR WOMEN

collegium m usicum, chorallers,
volleyba ll. She was the 198.1 Ma·
rauder Spirit Chicken. 198.1 Home·
coming Queen and 1984 Meigs
County Junior Miss .
She graduated valedictorian of
her class.
Chancey a ttends United Pentec·
ostal Church and recently married
Charlt's Frede rick Chancev.
Chancey plans to m'a jor In
Ele me ntary Education at Rio
Grande. She is the daughter of Mr.
a nd Mrs. E . Ned Swindell of Shade.

· Wesrern show

Special Olympians end competition

ALL

Paula Swindell cti1fncey or
Shade , Ohio has been awarded the
District Honors Schol arship to
attend Rio Gra nde College and
Community College.
The District Honors Schola rship
is a four year full-tuition scholarship aw arded annually to an
outstanding senior from each or the
four county area hig h schools.
Cha ncey graduated from Meigs
County High School whe re she was
artivf' In National Honor Society as
treasurer, president of the senior

Beula h Ward .

The Daily Sentinel

$488 8 8
FLEXSTEEL

RECLINERS
REG. '699.95

$344 4 4
BASSETT
BRASS &amp; GLASS
REG. '399.95

ETAGERE

$

88

SINGER
OAK CONTEMPORARY

BEDROOM w/WALL UNIT
REG. '1499.95

4
DAYS ONLY
FRIDAY, JUNE 29
8 A.M.-8 P.M.
SATURDAy JUNE 30
8 A.M.-5 P.M.
·MONDAY, JULY 2
8 A.M .-8 P.M.
TUESDAy I JULy 3
8 A.M.-5 P.M.
I

100' s OF ITEMS
REDUCED

$58888
CATNAPPER

ROCKER RECLINER
REG. 5549.95

LANE
OAK AND WALNUT

campus of Ashland College In
motion. Elections and appoin t·
ments of city. county a nd state
government officials, membe rs of
school boards and judges have been
completed.
Billi Jo Gordon, 862 Eas t Main
St. , Pomeroy, who atte nds Meigs
High School, has been e lected lo
Cou nty Treasurer.
Miss Gordon resides in the city of
Gage, Ullum County, belonging to
the Nationalist party of Gi rls State.
By practical partic ipation, she,
with 1,300 other girls, is faci ng the

func tions a nd problems of govern ·
ment as well as rights, duties and
responsibilities of American citl ·
zensh lp. Each girl holds an office on
one of the thrPP government levels
actually carrying out her specific
duties.

DINETTE TABLE

A no·gain week was reported a t
TOPS OH 1456, Rutland.
Best loser was Linda Ba iley with
Donna Fry as runner-up.
A centes!, beginning July 10 . will
allow all losers to pick an item from
a grocery bag.
For more information. contact
992-6212.

BEDROOM SUITE
REG. 51999.95

e

FREE PARKING ON THE MUNICIPAL PARKING LOT
"Over 48 Years In The Same Place
Under The Same Management "

Morris, Associa te degree in MicroCompu ter Administration; Debra
L. Niber t, Associate degree in
Micra..Computer Administration;

r~S:he:rrv=·~L~-~R~~:·:se~,~Ju:n~io:r~A~cc~o:u:n~tin~g~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Car wash set
The Word of Faitll yooth group
will sponsor a car washJuly7from9
a .m . until 3 p.m. at Burger Chef in
Pomeroy .

SALE STARTS JUNE 29
1 LOT MEN 'S

SPORT COATS

MEN 'S LEVI

SUITS

Values up to 170

Valuel up to '165

\11 PRICE

\11 PRICE
$35 TO $8250

$20 TO $35

FASHION JEANS
Values to !530

SALE

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

MEN 'S SMALL FLAIR
and COLORED

$1 2

REDUCED

SUMMER PANTS

2 0 °/o

REDUCED

Florist Since 1 95 7

~/4..

#

FLORIST
PH. 992-2644
362 E. Maln •. Pomeroy
Your FTD Florist

MEN'S UNWASHED

MEN 'S SHORT SLEEVE

LEVI DENIMS

COLORED DRESS SHIRTS

Straight Leg &amp; Boot Leg

SALE PRICE

25°/o OFF

DAN ' S IN THE MASONIC TEMPLE BUILDING

$1950

REDUCED

ALL MEN'S

REDUCED

LADIES '

SUITS &amp; BLAZERS

DRESSES

30°/o

PANTS

l

40°/o

LAOIES' LEVI

DENIM JEANS
Striped &amp; Plain - Values to '32

SALE PRICE

LADIES '

SPORTSWEAR

JUNIOR PANTS

REDUCED

3 0 °/o

REDUCED

SHORTS &amp; KNIT TOPS
REDUCED

2 0 °/o

ALL LADIES'

BENDOVER PANTS
Sizes

8~ '20

-

Many Colors to Choose From

GROUP

REDUCED

WOMEN'S SHOES
$5 OO PAIR

LADIES' BLOUSES
" REDUCED

WOMEN'S
SANDALS
MILLER. MORGAN QUINN

1 2 PRICE

MARGUERITE
SHOES
102 E. MAIN ST.
PH. 992-3639
POMEROY, OH.

20°/o

SHORT &amp; LONG SLEEVE

UP CHILDREN'S

2 0 °/o

1 RACK LADIES '

\

);

$2495

1 RACK WHITE STAG

JANTZEN'S

SALE--SALE--SALE--SALE--SALE

2 0 °/o

REDUCED

30°/o

REDUCED

1 RACK LADIES
LEVI BENDOVER

By Jantzen &amp; Castaway

2 0 Oj0

REDUCED

20 °/o

LADIES '

REDUCED

SWIM WEAR

STRAW HATS

From Regular Stoclc.

20°/o
LADIES '

MEN 'S

SUITS &amp;
SPORTCOATS

REDUCED

TENNIS SHOES
PRO KEOS, CONVERSE &amp; SMURFS
$
00

2 0 °/o

Ypur "Extra Touch "

by Lee &amp; Levi's

SHOES
$1 Q00 PAIR

$J588

MEN 'S

KNIT SHIRTS &amp;
SPORT SHIRTS

LEVI DENIMS
SALE PRICE

SHORTS AND TOPS

WOMEN'S DRESS &amp; CASUAL

992·2 192

Students graduating in absentia

BOYS &amp; GIRLS

GROUP

Pomeroy

from the m ai n campus were: Steve

The Grubb Family singers will lxa t tile Church of Christ, Dexter
Sunday a t 7 p.m.

GROUP CHILDREN'S SANDALS ................ Sl ooo PAIR

FURNITURE CO.

Junior Accounti ng diploma; Kathe·
rine E. Wilfong, Associate degree in
Mic ra..Comput er Administra tion ;
Delores Wooldridge. Associate de·
grees in Accounting and Business
Admin istra tion , a nd Bre nd a
Wright , Associate degree in MicroComputer Administration .

REG . S699.95

MAPLE BURLINGTON .
6 PC. EARLY AMERICAN

Woodland Centers

OPEN FRIDAY EV.ENINGS
UNTIL 8:00 P.M.
STOP IN AND REGISTER
BETWEEN 5 and 8 P.M.
FRIDAY EVENINGS FOR
FREE GIFT CERTIFICATE
TO BE GIVEN AWAY

AND 4 CHAIRS

$344 4 4

Professional Counse l ing
and
Fami ly Services

rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;;;~;

Computer Administration and a

Singers to appear

DAN'S IN MIDDLEPORT

1/2 OFF
STONEVILLE

TOPS meets

diploma.

lene Elliott, Melanie
Associate
in
Accounting:
Suedegree
Haskins,
Associate degree in Business Ad·
ministration: Grace E . Mullins,
Secreta rial dipl oma: Fra ncis
Queen, Associate degree in Business Administration; Gloria J.
Taylor , Secretarial diploma; Me·
linda Rae Thomas, Associate de·
grPP in Micro-Computer Adminis·
tration ; Traci Denise Weese.
Assoc iate degree in Micro-

fr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ti

CONTEMPORARY TABLES

$988 88

$744 44

Cam paign slogans. songs and
promotions of a u types have been
the scene of the Ohio American
Legion Auxiliary's 38t h Buckeye
Girl s State. The Federalist and
Nationalist parties, the mythical
two parly sys te m, have set the

main campus \\/ere: Patricia Dar-

Graduation ceremonies we r e
held in the Commons Room at
Buckeye Hills on Saturday , June 16 ,
for Gallipolis Business College.
G raduates included students from
tlle main campus in Spring Valley
Plaza, as well as from the branches
in Wellston , Portsmouth a nd
Chliilccthe.
Leo Blackburn , cha irma n of the
board, and Julia Corporation.
Introduced to the graduates a nd
guests Clark Devol. the assista nt
director of the state approving
agency for veterans' training.
Devol spoke on the present and
future trends in employment and on
Ihe proposed veterans' educational
benefit packages. At the conclusion
of Devol's speec h, Blackburn pres·
ented associate degrees or dipla..
mas to the graduates. An associate
degree is earned with 96 credit
hours of training while a diploma is
ea rned with 48 credit hours of
training.
Graduates attending from the

POMEROY - The Fraternal
Order of Pollee will sponsor a
country western show on F'riday,
July 13, a l Meigs Junior High .
There will be two shows, one at
6 p.m. and one at 9 p.m .
Sponsored by FOP and WMPO
Radio .

SPORTSWEAR
1/2

PRICE

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

3 0 °/o

�Page

8-The Daily Sentinel

,

PHONE
992-2156
.,_.It• DllfiJ SIMiHI
ClmifiH D.,t

Of

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS

Ill eo.1 SL. Po_,.,, OWo •57n

*¥1+

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l ll .n! P• P S!Pd r1 \1Lf&gt; n&lt;; I' ' O livP
1 lOV o'l'i hr,l fh,- rnf""' ton 1 /V I I bo

8 oard J f th8 M 31 11S l oc al
Scnool D•s tr 1C t dcs a e:; 10 rr&gt;

th f' prnpr&lt;;pd h udQ P. l .ln rl th f'
lc-l a'r ( Oil 'ih lj or r•&gt;venue s ha rlnq
I nd s 10 1hP t)u ('J QPI A I nter
0',]1' 1'1 0)1 / l'fl~, •Niil 'l,Jvl&gt; ! hP
'lj't)rY! orn oly tn '1o\f' V;l ! lflr &lt;1 nd
) I j ] ( Qm rTIPfl \ 5;"11(1 1
1\1!1° fY

to att end ffrP
•'n to•r o •onoc; Pd bu dr'J(' t v-.•11 tw.
,y&lt;r l"ih l' hi n rh lor lll 'o:"lf'( to on
,J'
m v hrl rll (' M on].l\ " l 11 llv
liP encou l cHJ IJ fi

and son-m \av., Mr
and
Dwame Jordan and fam1lv
ThP~·

Mrs

wcrr accompanuxi

b\

anothf'r daughlf'r and son-m !em
M r and Mrs Alfred Ricr of Pr n&lt;.
Crurgw.

Those' clt trndtng

th r

Mothf'r

Daughtr1 Banquet 111 thr Albam
Unttrd M et hodist ChUJc h included
Kathy. E: lrzabi.·th and JpssiCcl J01
dan . West ina Cra b!IL'C' , M url Cdla

wa v. llazel Stout and guest a nd
Freda Smit h and a guest from
Temple Unit&lt; &lt;I M et hod lSI Chu1ch
Mr and :vtrs rx-nnt s Oc\'mf'
Columbu "'. wPrf' ~Ati'Ckf'nd guf'sts of
hf'r parf'nl s, M 1 and Mr s lJor o.;(&gt;\

.Ju nlm

Stet ani Piekms

Pickens birthday
StPfam l .aDonna P1ckens Cf'lr
bra ted her tlurd birthday recentl y m
the home of hN par0nt s. Stew and
Dreama P1ckens
Cake. ll'l' cream . pop r h1ps and
candies wC'rf' servPd Attending
were: Chnstophcr Pi ckens, V1 ck 1
and Bonrue Smith . Crl Tim a nd
Aly sia Jenkin s. Bcch and E:n ra
Arnott. Sally and A.aron Pnt"P
Lan&gt;' and Scott P 1ckens. K dl&lt;
\Vhitla tsh and Paula Luck0tt .

M1
and :viiS Brn Grvctko.
Annapolis. Md . visited wllh hrr
mother. Golden Stan sbert&gt;' While
v tsttmg. oth('r meml:x'rs of thr
famll )', :vtr and Mrs. Cldll and
Bobby .Ju Stansbrfl)". M 1 and Mrs.
Larr) St ..m s'tx'rr-:- dOd son" and M r
and MC' Harold Oxir&lt;
l\1J s ( ~t'nf' Jeff PI s sr.x-·nt somt •
ttm(' tn San F't a ncisl'u. v.:h{ 'It· sht'
\'lsll f'd hC'r parC'nl s. Mr &lt;~ncl Mrs
M ,HTO I :-,cobat cmd other rf'lalt\'f's
Dale DVP .J r . ol Ca lifomia. \"ISlll'd
h1s fat hPr. and other rclatiV&lt;'S m
Mf'igs County 0 1hrr rr ld r tvrs Dvr
\'IS ti C'd Wf' IT' ~.u cv Jo a nd Chf'slt'r
I{Jum ga1dncl of Coshocton. Oh1o.
C!Pn .Jnd CC'll d ]1\.\'tn uf M(:l tvsvUlP.
Oh io O.nvn (-Inc! Cly df' Walkrr o f
Thu rman , Ohto; Ma r-v Dye l\:('pn~H

Hart fOJ d , Rrbr'&lt;'C'J
Pr 1n • o~nd farmlv uf

of

H,Ymum (lf-' rk
0 1-. r· Twr 5 1r16 l
SH )&lt;IH
Iron 1 ll rJ\ I(.JO!l O h •l)
.1b /. IJ

~1nd

G1 ant

C(Jiumbu s .

M.Jdg~

DVl' .md Mr .md M rs Th.Jd
D"' and famil1
A tam11\ gdlhC'rtng m lhrhomPnf
R:" and Ma Jgall'l B1ooks .Jun(' 11
\\,ts att('ndPd b\ .lim .Jnrl ls.Jbrll
T hompson. t allln CJIY'k. \\ \ "c.
.John Thompson . l"hcl&lt; .m. \\ \ ".1 .
Blll&lt;1' and Cmd) Thompson. Oak
Hill. W \"o . Du1 1rl .Jn&lt;l Lnrriun~

Brooks.
Mel' in and Summe1
Brooks. Hebron Ohio. T om and
~a nc\ Thompson. Port Nrchcs.
TPxas: Tcrma and Rodne:v Onf'y,
HPbron , Ohio and Bill , Moi\Jr and
T om a Brooks.
Mr and Mrs Harold Oxley hav r
rrtur ne'&lt;l from a tn p through the
~o rt h"- l'SI U S and into Canada
Thl'y v isit ed h1s son. Mr and Mrs.
Harold Ox lr)• .Jr and famJIV m
Ka nsas Cilv . Mo Then thry VI Silcd
h1 s daugh t C'I and h('r tam1 ly, 'I er("S&lt;J
and Run Turne1 m Blai n '-.akf'.
Saskatc·hP\\.an. Canada Thr~· also
attPnded the graduation of Tma
Schmldl

Laurel Cliff
area happenings
Mrs K.1n•n Tur

\ 'lsJtffi m ·pr thf' wrr kPnd wllh M r
a nd Mr s Lo\'d Wn g ht and allf'nded
m01 nin g o.; Pn lC' f's at r he loc al
church

..

Sf'Oil MJIIPI . son of

Vi s1tors Mothp r' s Dav at thr

Nelson birth

Property transfers
Penny E Crf'mf'ans to Steven L

Cre m eans, 1 acrP, Orange
Oliver Earl McKinley Jr.. Betty
L. McKlnley to Carl Platter Jr.
Kay Platter. Pt Lot 2. Middleport
VIllage.
Francis Biggs Adkins to Sharon
L . Biggs, 124 acres. Sa li sbury
Rhonda J . Stockwell, lka Rhond a
K K och, Sleven M . K och lo Jeffr~y
T . Welch. Dawnette E. Welch. 5 !T7
acres, part of S. half of SW quarter
of Soc. 7. Scipio.
Howard A . Seldenabel. deceased .
Eva G Seldenabel. Affidavi t,
Salisbury.

Pas tor Rohfort

.1ncl Mr~ MII IPr has i:JN:'n returnf'd
ho rnP fi om C'h1ldr-con' s Hosplt.ll,
l ' olumbus. fl'Cilng much beller .
Mrs RPula h O('hiPr has hf&gt;f&gt;n
rrturnPd hom C' from U nt\f'T'Stt y
Hospll al. Col umbus

Sa ra Bet h ~ c lson

StPvc and Kim Nelson of Pomerov
announcr thP bu1h of the1r flr.-il
child, Sa r a Heth
Sara Beth w as born M ay h at
Camden Clark Hosp1tal. Pa r kers ·
burg Shr weighed eight pounds 10
ounces and was 201;, inches long
Grandpar~nt s are Mr. and Mrs
Dale Eaton of Parkersburg and Mr
and Mrs . .Jim NPison of Pomer oy
Great-grandparents are M r and
Mrs. W .O. BuckleyofVJenna , W Va.
and Maxine N0lson of Columbus

nt•r . Out ton . r.a .,

..

Chriltopher I.L'e

'"'

Lee birthday
Christopher "Tyson"" Lw. son of
Randy and Cryst;; l Lee of Middle·
port was dedrcated on his first
birt hday. June 10, in the morning
worship service in the Laure l Cliff
Frw Methodist Church
The Rev. Robert Miller per·
formed the cesremony. A party
followed in the Lees home Lee
received gl!ts and cards from Bet ty
Reed. Buck Hall, Denny and Jean
Roberts, Ardith and Edlth Barton.
Mrs. Jay Hall Sr .. Ban-y, Tyler and
Judy Stewart. Ten-y, Brenda ,
Robby, Adam, Mike and Tara
Wy att , Joey Barton, Angle and Mia
Bass. Richard, Sandra, Jennifer
and Ritchie Neal, Dr. and Mrs.
Averton, Lesa and Erin Simms,
Pearlie Jewell, Judy, Deann and
Brian Denny, Gary Mohler, Orel
Sears, Mack and Bea Stewart and
RayTryall.
A private pool party in the
M lddlepon pool was held in the
evening.

hornl' of Mrs. 8f'rtha Par kC'r

wr r e

hPr son . Ci'dnc 0 P ar ker , hl s son,
Ertc Parker. wh o has rece ntly been
promoh"d to F'il s t LiPUIPnant al
Fort C 1mpbell. K y .. !VIr and Mrs.
1-lr rman Kaspa r. Daylon, Mr a nd
Mrs L0nc A lkire. M ISs Cleo
P.1rkf'r , Columbus. Jamrs fprgu son. Colum bus: Mr and Mrs.
'J homa s J Parkrr. local.
J\ llrndancP at all servicf's F atht'r's nay· wa s ln . Choir memtx&gt;rs
pn'srnl wp r p 12. A special song wa s
sung b; Mr and Mrs. Franklin
M&lt;.~11in a nd son Bib les wcrP. glvf'n
lo Stf'vf' F.b!m forth(' o ldf's l fathpr
and

Harrv

Wy&lt;:~tt

thf'

vuungest

father
RP" i va l v. as hf'ld a l'f'Cf' nt
w('{'krnd wit h RPv Jim M a nning.
Mr and Mrs .\/Ianning wPr e gups ts
o f Mr..,

E mma

F'ox

Mr •nd Mrs. N orman Schaefer
VI sited r&lt;'&lt;'f'ntl y with thei r daughter
and

so n -tn -law ,

M1

and

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OPPORTUNITY
KNOCKS
Tr•vel .

r, l

18()

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I ll • 1\

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\., II "'( 1

Tl1

1• 1 I 1

AUCTION

Every Friday Night
At 7:00 P.M.
At The American
legion Hall
IS

Cou nty

lownsh rp M ergs
ptoposed use H earmg

of Reven ue Sha r•nq money wilt
be h eld July 5 1 984 a t 7 00 P

M The mee tm a wil l be he ir! at
the F.re Hall The am oun l of the
u nus f'd Re ve nu e Sha 11nq r und
rs S5 54981 S235900 rs vet
I J be rP.CP iverl r he PubiLC \\oi l
hf&gt; q1v('n l hr&gt; OPPO II UTl lly 10
m ake o• at atr w• ·ttron suaqes
11ons re uard•ng po:.S•b iP usc ot
Rev r nu e Sh11 r 1 n~ rr onPy
.S,liP M f o v..n s h1p T•uSl P P S
2 6239 LPq oo n Ad
l.1 M l'&gt;v rl le O t1 4 5 74 1

498 Gen Hartinger Pkwy.
Middleport . DH.

B•d s will be rece•ved by the

Village of

Ohro

M•ddl epor t

Meogs County at th e Mayors
Ofllce at the Vrl!age Hall 237
Ra ce St•eet until 3 PM July
16 1984 to t the fotlow1ng
ma te r oals

I 000 tons mcnP or les s
/l. sph alt• c Co•1uetP t1 pla c e and
tO lp(j
(,trf'Pt'i l)e rnq co ns• der ed l o t

resu rl ac 1n'l ,,. f' dvaol abiP at

PH . 992-2549
OPEN;
MON.-SAT. 10 to 6
POOL SUPPLIES &amp;
MAINTENANCE
C. L KITCHEN
512211 mo

Fr »d Hr.;ft11ran M ayor

(hi 28

m

2tc

5

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT

50

GUYSVILLE. OHIO
Real Estate General

M~GKEE

Free Water Analysis At Store or Pool Site

•

Wide Range of Chemicals &amp; Supplies

WVa 304 ·773 · 6785 or
304-173· 91B5

498 Gen . Hartinger Pkwy.
Middleport, OH .
PH. 992:2549 or 773-5634

Auction every Fri night at
the Hartford Communi1y

M. L ""Bud"" McGHEE
Broket·Auct1on ServiCe
Cheryl Lemley,
Meigs Coonty Associate
Phone

742-3171

Authomed John Deere .
New Holland. Bush Hog
Farm Equ1pmenl
Dealer

Form Equipment
Ports &amp; Service
I

CHECK THE

atr cond1t1oned

w1th smoke eliminators

Apply

CIRCUS
54

Misc. Merchandise

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeltng
Roofing of all Types
Worked m home area

20

CONTRACTING
·ooZER - BACKHOE
"RECLAMATION WORK
'DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
"CONCRETE WORK

•wATER GAS &amp;
Olll!NES

Call 742-3195
Or 992-5875

CLIFFORD

992-7201
-

- fn

FISHING REEL
REPAIR

] ,o,

ORDER &amp; TAKE
DELIVERY OF
YOUR SPRING
FERTILIZER ,
SPRING SEED &amp;
SEED CORN
l ow. l ow Prte es

Don ' t B P. M 1s lPd
W P. W rll N ot R"
Un d Hr sold

CAl l JUN E WEL L

On Beech Grove Road
In Rutland
Publ1c &amp; Dealers
Welcome

MGM FARM

~-iJ"QpQ,..~~ower

Jack W. Carsev. Mg1

614 9q1 ?IRI

Weekend Special
LEVEL WOODED

CAMPSITE

NO MONEY DOWN

*RETIREMENT SPECIAL*

2 Bedroom home on waterfront.
Almost new Travel Trailer for
Florida in Winter.
See At Bigfoot Park

Big Foot Park

N LINES .
County Cerhfiad

'

SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED
FREE ESTIMATES

5·8·2 mo . pd.

TOM'S
SHOE REPAIR
"' ·.. !

,

._-

:.'"'

.
"
'------'

~

A
.. ;;p

2nd St.
Pomeroy, OH .
Open . 9:00 to 5:00
Closed Thursdays

Wolfe
Investigations,
Inc.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

614-992-7626
PRIVATE
INVESTIGATION
OF ALL TYPES
\ Ill

WRITESEL
ROOFING CO.

THE
DITCHING

NEW-REPAIR

SERVICE

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutters Cleaned
8o Painted
Storm Doors
&amp; Windows

949-2263

GAS Ll NES
WATER LINES
SEWAGE LINES
FREE ESTIMATES

Middleport. Ohio
I I 3 li e

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
- DOZERS
- BACKHOES
- OUMP TRUCKS
- LO ·BOYS
- TRENCHER
- WATER
- SEWER
- GAS LINES
- SEPrtC SYSTEMS
lARGE Of SMA[[ JOBS
PH . 992-2478
6, 201 1 mo pr1

WE AR E YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVAN IA
•SPIED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
We Hove A Full Ttme
Shop Trchn1c:1an
on Duty

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

CHESTER - 985-3307
4

Also Some Car
Fenders Available

APPLIANCE

SERVICE
985-3561
All Makes

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refngera1ors
•Dryers •Freezers

Stzes from 6"K6 " Up

New Homes-Extensive
Remodelmg
Insurance Work
-Custqm Pole Bldgs .
&amp; Garages
Roofing Work
Alummum &amp; Vmyl S1dmgs
15 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583

Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racme. Oh
Ph 614 -843-5191

LIVE BAND EVERY
WEEKEND

"Mud River Band"
Featuring Lanny Tennant

Something Special
For The ladies
Every Sunday Night
9;00 to 1:00
6/ 14 / 1 mo

2 -7

or 992 -2282
11 I It(

Vtnyl &amp; Aluminum

Installation Available

OFFICE OPEN TILL DARK

No Sunday Calls

949-2860
l ll nr

I 4

S~•vi Cf' tha t

NOW AVAILABLf! '
The most powerful pre ·
miUm casoline 1n The Big
Bend area.

Call for free siding estimates, 949-2801 or

11

"Free Estimales"

BISSELL

Directions: Rt. 7 South of Gallipolis,
cross Raccoon Creek Bridge. Turn right
8o follow signs.

992-6931

Antenn1 InstallatiOn

"SUPER 94"

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"

PH .

House Calls and Shop

SIDING

SIDING CO.

ACCENT
220 E. Main , Pomeroy

Serv1te Avallat»lt
Towers Abov!'
The Rl'~t h ~ ~. I m~ r&lt; l

94 Octane
Ethanol Enhanced
Available Only At

RITCHIE'S
MASON SERVICE
CENTER
Ma1on, W. Va.
6/20 ' 1 mo

wk

old kittens

Call

446 -8594

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Female Sprmger SpanreL
2% yr o ld Call 614 388 -

8253

- Addons and rem odehng
- Roofong and gu11er work
- Concrete work
Ptumb1ng and electTICal
work
(Free Estimates}

Full blooded Chow Chow. 1
yr . 4 mo . People rettrod Can
not take cere of h1m Call

V. C. YOUNG Ill

6 wk o ld pupp1es. 1h Lab &amp;
'h Malamute. !ookrng for
good home Call 446 -3539

Pomeroy, Oh1o
.

'

614· 256-6020

Small house dog &amp; onole
Cocker Sponrel Call 614 -

DOZER
AND
BACKHOE
WORK
AL TROMM
742-2328
We Have the
Lowest Rates

1 1/ 1 yr old black &amp; wh11e
male cat . 1 yr old long
hatred whtte female spayed
cat, male &amp; female kittens ;
1h scottv &amp; % pekinese dog.
'h German shepard &amp; %
collre puppies Call 614992 · 6505 Metgs Co Humane Soc1ety

Roger Hysell
GARAGE
Rt 124.Pomeroy Oh1o

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission
992-5682
or 992-7121

PH.

l ,, "'

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE
We 'd like to mtroduce you to
Enga&amp;e-A-Cir. the modern way

G&amp;W PLASTICS

to duve the vehicle of your

GAS - WATER
SEWAGE PIPE
REULATORS &amp;
FITTINGS

cho1ce
No Down Payment
Lower Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
BoK. 326
Pomeroy. OH . 45769
For Faster Serv1ce

Call

614-992-6737

&amp; SUPPLIES

VOLUME DRIPS

w...t.o ....- 985-3813

A.Oden.e- 985-3837
6/1 8/ 1 mo pd

Will do custom combtmng .

-lc Water wells. drilled &amp; ser viced Free es1rmates Call

614-992 -5006 or 61 4· 742 ·
3147 .

Wanted to buy 3 bdr house
with small acreage withm
approx. 8 mr!es of Galhpolis
rn city school dtstnct Reply
to box 1010 rn care of the
Gallipolis DoilyTrrbune, 825
3rd
Ave , Gallipolis, Oh

614-992 -5403
Wtll do house cleaning,
office clean mg . or take care
of the elderly m my home

Call 614-985 -3861
Horse

614 -992·

shoerng .

2711

7760

Employment
Services
11

Help Wanted

H omemakers Dreaml No
needed to earn
25% commission demon stratmg tn htends ' homes
You control hours and tncome Absolutely no mvestment! Also booking parties
Call 446 - 1270 or wrrte Toy
Plan. Johnstown . PA

e~peJtence

Homemakers Droaml No
experience n ee ded to earn
25% commtss1on de mon stratmg rn friend s' homes
'You control hours and in come . Absolutely no rnvestmentl Also bookmg partres
Ca11446- 1270 or wr1te Toy
Plan. Johnstown. PA

15904
Homemakers earn x -tra tn come
W e need several
re pre sen lat•ves m th1s aroar
Party ptan exp a plus G1ft!..
1oys. home decor No mvest ment Car &amp; phon e nee Call
fr ee 1 800 - 553 -9077 Also
bookmg part1es
Homemakers earn x- tra tn como
W e need several
represenlet1ves 1n th1s area!
Party plan exp a plus G1fts.
toys. home decor No rnvest ment Car &amp; ph one nee Carll
free 1 -800 553 9077 Also
bookmg part1es
Babysitter wanted for new
born referen ces reqwred 32
lo 40 hr s per week Call

614-245 -9187
I would !1kc a ret~rod or o lder
lady to hve 1n w1th me , no
work to do JUSt want com
pany Would expect pay for
112 of the electrrc btl! She can
hAve her own krtchen or
bedroom 1f she lrkes Must
have refer en ces C lal 446

30aO

Asststant Organist needed
at Grace Eprscopa l Church

2 wh1te k1tt ens. 1 multu: o lored k1teen
7 wks old

Call 614 992 3968

992 · 3666

Government Jobs S16 559
S50, 553 year Now Htrrng
Your area Ca ll 1 - 805 - 687 -

Bartender , appfy tn person
Anchm Club. 320 M a ~n St ,
Pornt Pleasant

9 week old kitten . female,
blue eves. 304 -675 6145

12

Small dog and dog house

Situations
Wanted

304 -675 -2592

t7aO

Wr11 care for elderly person rn
my home. over 1 4 yrs of
a11penence Call 614 - 256-

6509

18
6

Call 304 -675 -9769

Financial

Wanted to Do

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VAllEY PUB·
USHING CO recommends
that you do busmess w1th
people you know, and NOT
to send money through the
ma1! untt! you have mvest1
gated the offermg
Local route for sale No
selling, collection on ly W1U
n et approx $400 per week
Reqwred 3 -4 hours per
week W11l take S1 8,000
cash Write P 0 Bo11 59247,
Blfm rng ham , AL 35259 9247
Include your telephone number and address
Own your own Jean Sportswear, Ladtes Apparel
Combmat1on, Accessortes.
Large S1ze sto re NatiOnal
brand s Jordache Chrc. lee.
levL Vanderbilt . !zod .
Gunne Sa11, Espnt Bnttanra,
Calvin Klem Sergto Valente,
Evan Prcone , Cla1borne .
Membe rs Only, 8111 Blass.
Orgamcally Grown Healthtax , 600 ot h ers. $7 , 900 to
524.900, rnve nt o ry , a~rfare.
tramrng fBctures. grand op enrng. etc Mr KeAnan (305)

678$3639
Wator delivery bu smess.
Gallla &amp; Mason Count1es
Senous rnqutrtes only 304 675 - 1619 evenmg s, 6 to 9
pm

22

Money to Loan

HOME

LOANS

FIXED

RATES Below market rates
F111ed conventronal FHA VA Leader M ortgage.
Athens . collect 614 - 592 -

3051

23

Professional

Servrces
PIANO TUNING Lower
pnced regular tun1ngs
d1scounts to Se n1or C1t1z ens
Churches &amp; Schools Ward's
Keyboard, 304 - 675 3824
Ptano Tun1ng and Reparr
Brunt c ardi Mu s1c Co . 446
0687 Skill and 1ntegnty our
trademark
Lane Dantels,

Lawn Mowmg &amp; Trrmmmg
Reliable and dependable
Reasonable rates Call 614 -

5395

Roofing and gutter work ,
metal work, housepainting ,
carpenter work . E11c. ref
Free estimates. Call 446 -

Lost. 8 wk old Blond Cocker
spaniel in the Rockaprings .
fair ground area. Child's pe1
Cell after 6 p m 992 -3110

256· 6261 after 5 :30

3171

Lost large gray rabbit. RE WARD. New Haven &amp;rea

General Hauling. For sale
Limes1one. fill din. and 1op
soil
Call Call 614- 256-

304· BB2 ·3672

1427

Found Camp Conley area
amall Terrier Beagle female
dog wrth collar 304-675 -

Ban player wanta JOb wi1h
well es1ablished country
square dance or polka band
Call Ray 614-446 - 3109

7666

li11~!~11'-"·~st\llill~fi!~~'\1i~-·~il'llic'W! ,"'"'· ""'t ';;~''•"-""""'

······Gaiiipiiiis ····
&amp; Vicinity

Owner tran1ferred -mus1 sell
home, family room has 20ft.
of windows for past oral
view, finished double garage , fireplace, large porch.
40ft deck . wooda . prtvacv.
near Royal Oak Park

Fraz•ers B o tt om Flea
Market
Every weekend
U S 36 Frazters Bo ttom .
WVa 25082 D ea lers We t
come
D o n Fraz1er
Op e rator 304 -755 -2779

$63 .900
6420

'Yard Sale Thurs . Fr1 June
28 - 29. 9 5 1 h m1le o ut 160
pa1t HMC Clothes . toys .
books, mis e

Call 614-9 92 ·

112 Maple Place. corner of
Lasley. 2 bedrooms_ fem1ly
room, kitchen Must sell 1o
settle estate Call collec1
V1rgtnio Crew 1 614 -891
0442 or 431 -0633

Btg 'Yard Sal e Fnday J u ne
29 , Saturday June 30 9 00
to
Bes1de B1g Wheel
Carryout, Rt 35 Men 's,
women ' s c hildren ' s clo thtng, krn ck knacks. etc

Ntce home tn country , near
mmes. full ba sement, cellar.
2 bedrooms. 12 acres m
Langsvt!!e . $29 ,000
Ca!!

Yard Sale Ftrst trade r Cl1pper
Mtlls, Wednttsday - Saturday
Clothes, chairs. stereo Pro ceeds t o
She ave s for
Chnst

614 · 742 · 2261 .
12 m1les hom Pomer oy.
outstandmg 8 sidttd homtt, 3
srdes decked, 3 bedrooms. 2
baths Fun basement. barn
plus 9 acres $45 ,000 Call

For sale by owner, Clar ence
Hill lmmedrate possessto n.
prrce negot1abl6 or owner
will help finance Br -level tn
Rustle Hills , Syracuse. Oh1o
2 full baths 3 bedrooms .
famrly roo m wtth f1rep!ace.
spiral sta.rcase. hvtng ro o m ,
k1tchen wtth dtshwasher &amp;
garbage d1sposal, cham lmk
fence 16x12 barn for stor Age, rnsulated Call 614 -

New 3 bedroom home, 1'/t
bath. large lot. below Wa
hama High S c ho o l

$25.000
6277

Call

614 · 992

L1ke new. 3 bedr m sect tona l
home on beautiful % acre lot
tn Arbaugh addttron,
Tuppers Plarn s. exce! lenct
neighborhood S32.900 In cludes new refrtg , range.
washer &amp; dryer. frnancang
ava1lable w1th tow dow n
p11yment to quoltft ed part1 es
Call 614 -992 -7034 days or
614 - 992 -7671 eventngs
Middleport, hou se for sal e
on Gravel Hill , 2 hdrms
large lrvmg rm , bath, central
a~r . carpeted . newly pamted
basement w1th 2 car garage
Shown by appomtm ent

only 614 992 5310
TO BUYnt 14 t1 wrde three
bedroom. bath and h alf
mobr!e home s1tt1ng on n•ce
lot. ready to move mto
S225 00 down S225 00 per
month 304 - 576 2711
Seven year old home. three
b e droom s. garden spot
2605 Lmcoln Ave B 111 p et
assumable loan 304 -675

Carport Sale 167 Woo dland
Dr Mon Tues . July 2 3
Bedspreads. shee1s gre en
glassware. 4 cushton couch .
good cle an clothes lots of
goodtes
Ba c k yard 62 Sy c Amore Frt

&amp; Sat Jun e 29 &amp; 30 8 5
D1shes, tools cl oth1ng
Large Garag e Sal e St Rt
160 acros s str eet NGHS
Frr &amp; Sat

4 bed roo m h o me. f enced
yard . great for tamr!y behmd h1gh school 304 -675 -

2855
- -- -For sale by owner 302 Staff
House Rd
3 bedroom s
c ompleh1 ktt c hen , bath .
large family roo m wtth woo d
burner u111rty r o om wrth
washer and dry er carpeted ,
2 car garage. dec k and
covered patto , s1tutated on
large lot For apporntment
ca rr 304 - 675 -4369 or 675

6220

4 M1 WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
AT 35 PHONE 614 4467274

ITY MOBilE HOME SALES .

304·675· 5568

Rea I Eslale
Home s for Sale

4 bdr , 1 h bath 5 acres .
garden spot. vl ml bel o w
Eureka Work shop with carport $29 500 Call 446 -

4222
For Rent m town wtth opt ton
to buy, 3 BR fen ced yard
Call 614 -446 -2081 mghts
Summer Ttme IS Savmgs
Time on thrs remodeled
home Save N owll Mrddle
port 614 992 -6941
Three bedrooms. centro! atr.
vmyl wall poper. carpet
throughout . well tnsulated .
new paint, attached garage.
gas outdoor grill, awnmgs,
many eMtras. Call 446 - 2583
td 5 .00PM . after 6 OOP'M
call 614 - 245 -5869
6 rooms , besemen1 . double
garage. 1 &amp; one -third acre
lot. Rose Htll
Pomeroy

$32.900 Call 1-614-678·
2513
8 yrs old. 3 bedrm, 2 baths,
1amily room wi1h wood
burner Single car garage. on
8 fla1 acres w1th stocked
pond. City water in Racine

1979 3 bdr mobtle home on
1J2 acre lot , well shad ed
Must sell both together Call

614 388 9957
1973 12 1160 remodeled
tratler. n ew carpet . doors.
plumbmg, olc ctn c. AC Call
446 -0221

Fn , Sat 9 -d adt B•cycles .
baby be d
chtldr~ns - adult
clothmg Name 11 We go t 111
1 m rle ou t Teens Run Ad ott
At 7 ne ar Eureka
Th e Gallrpolts Flea Mark et
362 Jackso n P•k e, Rt s 35 &amp;
160 Indoor-outdoor every
weekend
year tound
mark et Pup 56 25 cHse
Call 446 7 037
Yard Sale June 29 &amp; 30
9 - 4 332 LeGra nde Toys,
good ad u lt &amp; b aby c lothes
appl tan ces , bed spr eads
Fnday June 29 th onty
9AM 4PM
Old Rt
7.
Crown Crty, follow s•gns
fr o m At 7

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
3 tamrly yard sate Jun e 30
lo July 2 01shes , opphun
ces baby cloth es &amp; ad u lt
c1othmg 483 Beech St
Mrddteport Ne:..t to SA

$16 .000 Call 614 -992 7467 or 742 -3164
1972 Skyline 1 bedroom
12x44. stove, refngerator .
a c . underpinntng Se1 up
on rentad lot $4350 Call

992-7479

3017
Yard Sa le Dogwood Al le y
Mason Bedspre ads, cu r
tam s, &amp; lois m1s c

2325 Jefferson Pornt Plea sant June 28 thru 30th.
10-8 p m Hou sehold, babf
c lothes, furn1ture and r111s~
ce lla neou s Ex cell ent '
Yard Sale 22 17 Ook St
J une 29 and 30 Tabh: ,
cha1rs , gam es. toys c lothin g ffii SC
Fr1d ay only 8 00 5 00 868
Raffert y Dn ve, Tara EstatesAddr so n , Ohr o
Anltq ues
glas sware al l kmd s clo
thmg 1ean s to1s mo sc
Thurs Fn, Sa t 9 4 Fourth
ho u se o n n gh t past Good
Shepard Church
At
2
Pomt Pleasan t
FLEA MARK ET
Case.,.·s
Park mg lot 2 mrles n ort h
Pomt Pleasant Rt 62 , every
Saturday
Set up 53 00

3 famtly yard sal e
Monroe Ave

2 110

Tw o f amily ya rd sa le 11 0
Th1rd S t Mason July 2 and
3 Bo cy c les kn•ck knack s

200 N orth Park Dnve Potnt
Plea sant Small app!umces
glasswa,e, d 1shes and clo
thm g m1 sc •terns June 29
and 30

~;:;;:;;:;;:;:;::;::;::;::;::;:;.4..:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;

ffge looKi1Jf-lli Allin lJe WAKT.A/)j
Renlals

32 Mobil e Homes
for Sale

1 981 Hollyprnk
14K70
e:..c
cond . 1 2x8 d eck
underpenn•ng and l arg e
room arr co nd
mct uded
304 - 895 - 3895 o r 895

77 Cameron, 14 x70 c:..
pa nda. 3 bedroom
new
und erpenntng fron t porc h
ga s heat , exc co nd ,

sa ooo oo
2700

304 675

' 77 Cameron. 141170, e:..
pando. 3 bedroom
new
underpennm g fr ont porch.
gas h eat. eKC co nrl

$a . ooo 0 0
2700
33

304 675

Farms for Sale

Lots &amp; Acreag e

Lot f o r sale rn M erce rvill e
C all 6 1 4 256 6618
for sale 6 a c , es o f grou nd tn
Le banon TP Good b u1ld1ng
s1te on hard rop roa d Askmg
$5000 or best offer Call

61 4-843 · 5231

256· 606a
1977 14x70 Schultz on
52x 1 00 lot, concrete porch
w1th awnmg, storage build
tng 3 bedroom . 1 % bath
1tove &amp; refrrgerator , dispo sal, &amp; range hood Mu st sell

4 fa m dy yard salem Danville
on Red H1l l Rd C om plete
Avon Dolt collectton &amp; o1her
Avon col lect1bles
Home mad e QUilts &amp; many m1sc
1tem s Juty 2 &amp; 3 614 742 -

ole

BR . 1969$4900 Call 614
446· 017S

Richardson h o use
$2,800 Call 614 ·

4 fa mily ya rd sale , July 2 &amp; 3
a t Don Walker s restdence
Aactn e. Ohro

304-675 4808

35

1959
trailer

Yard sa l e Thursday &amp; Frr
d ay 19 CaYe Street. Pome
roy Lot s of Children 's tt ems

· Pt ·Pieasant
&amp; Vicinity

1 4X65 3 BR
gas heat
1973
good cond
S7900 12X60 all gas, 2

446 0175

G1gant1c yard sa le. June 30
through July 4 Helen Mil
ho a n. 1 6 m1l e West o f
Darwtn on 681

Yard Sale 3 Fam t1y thu' 2 8 ,
Fnday 29 , 9 111 1 Matern ity
c lothes baby, boys women
mens extra ntc f! cloth1 ng
Toys , h o u se hold , kn1ck
knac k s, m1 sc
3 1' 1 m rle s
below Galhp olrs on At 7

446 0175

1974 1 4X70. 3 BR 1 't1
bath , t o tal e l ec , g oo d
cond , $8900 Call 614

2 f am1ly ya rd sa l e July 2nd
through July 7th 9 am ttll
dark
l o ts of children's
cl othes
lots more
Jack
R1ch ard s res 1de n ce. Bald
Knob

June 30 9 -6 July 1 , 1 6
St:or. famdy . M v rnmg Star
Hts
Co
Ad
30
Small
applran c es
cl o thes
c ur ~
tam s f urn1tu r e

Smal l farm { 18 25 acre s) on
Po rtlan d Ohto b or d er ed by
Oh1o Rtv e r &amp; h1ghway N o
buddmgs some trees 1' :
mm eral rtghts Fa11 mark et
pn ce. 540 ,000 Fo r mfo r
matt o n wnte B Graham
4615 Emerald . Na cog
doc hes , Texas 75961

14X65 3 BR . gas hea t ,
1973 . goo d cond
57900 . 12){60 all gas . 2
BR , 1 969 S4900 Cal!614 -

Yard sate July 2. 3 4 10 am
to 6 pm M oore's res•dence
m Bradbury
Bedspraads,
drapes , sheets , clothes . ar\ttqu es, old d1shes. furniture.

Yard Sale on Woo dsm1 ll Rd
toward Tycoon lake be twee n R1o Grande V1nton &amp;
Btdwell Everythmg 614 388 -9791
June 29 thr u
July 10

3600
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Yard sa le at Ira Ebhn '.a. :
Hubbar d St
Syracuse June 29th &amp; 30th

Fnda.,. &amp; Sat u rday behmd
licen se Bure au 1n Pomtnoy
Lots o f bed spread s, cut
tams . toots &amp; nusc Gerbils
&amp; co mplete set up

3 bedroom hom e 3 years
old, 8 '1l percent . assumable
loan, low 50's 304 - 675 6713 after 5 p m
3 years -old total etectnc .
deck &amp; fenced 1n back yat d,
8 1/z percent assumable loan .
s 10.000 down or Will con
stder trade for land . low 50 ' s
after 5 304 -675 6643

Garage Sale · June 30·
through July 3rd Daily 8 ain:
to 8 pm Furn•ture , clo1hea,
drshes. avon tte ms. mucb
more Tur n left 1 mile N of
C he sttn on SR 7 o nto Texa'
Ad and f ollow s1gns 1 m11e:

Garage Sale June 29 30 .
9 00 to 1 SA 775 JU St o ff
141
Cloth1ng Rll s1Tes
Jeans albums

5047

Professronal Electrolysis
Clrnrc Probe Type Electroly SIS
AMA , FDA &amp; FCC
approved Doctor referrals

Call 614 · 949·2641 .

n

FOR RENT WITH OPTION

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL ' S OUAL

31

Huge Atttc sa le 5 Famtlres
Thurs. Frr &amp; Sa1 1 0 -? 25
Smtthers Furmture, mtsc
Ram postpones

House &amp; 1 acre in Pomeroy.
city gas &amp; sewer, 5 rooms &amp;
cellar for under $1 0.000 or
best offer Will constder land
contract Call after 6 p m .
Athens, 614 - 593 -3269

614 742 2951

Lost and Found

Found. key ring With 1 set of
car kevs &amp; Honda motorcy cle key Found on Popular
Ridge Strrp Mine Lea1her 10
on r1ng ts a G 614 -992 -

Sales

247-4134

6000 Ekl R-9805

2 gray k1ttens . bfue eyes. to
good home, 304 675 7677
or 675 - 2474

3 yr neutered male cat . Yery
affectionate. almost bhnd.
needs loving care 304 -675 -

Work wanted w1U do house
cleamng or office c leon1ng

21

1414

3 04 -

675 1573

COMPlETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE
Beds. ~ron ,
wood , c upboiuds. chaus,
chests, baskets. drshes ,
stone JOrs, an1iques. gold
and stlver
Wrrte - M D
Miller. Rt 2. Pomeroy, Ohto
45769 or call 614 -992 -

House for Sale bv owner 4
BA houae on Lower Rtver
Rd 3 milea aouth of town :
Woodburning fireplace. garage , basement , new furnaco, and roof. overlooking
1he Ohto Aiver .Call davt1me
446-1615 . night 446 -

614·9B5-3575

304 - 773

Interior and extenor pamt ing, textured ce llmg s 304-

Cash paid for fancv iron or
heavy iron beds $160 and
up for certam Meigs Co.
Old time cup s1one J&amp;rs
board
call 1 - 304-882-

5 month old fema le b o xer.
fawn c olor Call 614 742 -

Pupp1es. good h ome

AND

We Servtce All
Makes &amp; Models

Call 446 -

4599 after 6 OOPM

675 · 7322

FENCE &amp; SUPPLY

46353 Seoul Camp Rd .
Chester. Ohio
Ph . 985 -4269
II No Answer. Call 985·4381

5824

379 · 2216

S&amp;W TV
SERVICE

German Shepherd pupp1e s.
8 wks . old Call 614 245

YOUNG'S

992 -621 S or 992 -7314

Call

Wtll give ptano &amp; organ
lessons in my home to
begtnners , adults , &amp; ad vanced s1udents Also teach
chordmg &amp; transposmg Call

15904

Giveaway

Tobacco plants
111 1-"

PARTS and SERVICE

APPLIANCE

4

to 24"K36"

) 11 lift

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

614-446-2156

UTILITY BUILDINGS

~~~

West Columbta

KEN'S

12"xl6"

Try se!hng the New Avon
Way For information call

Beagle pups. 7 k1ttens Call

6!1811 mo pd

" CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

61 4 · 655 · 2840 after

446-2329

JONES BAR
WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS
PH 992-7013
New Chevy Truck .. ..
FENDER ....... '76 9S
DOORS
. '149 9S
HOODS
&gt;t749S
BUMPERS ...... '69 95
GRILL. .... ... . . '42 SO
R. SUPPORT.. . . &gt;84 95
TAIL GATE
•as 00
FORD FENDER .. '69 .9S
BUMPER ............ '69 95

S12es Start From

tobacco

Wan1ed to buy used coal 8t
wood hea1ers Swam Furniture, 446- 3159. 3rd
8t
Olive S1 , Gallipolis. Oh

KARATE

456644

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

446·3672

The Best In Self -defense.
Pnvato Lessons . Phone 286
3074 Jackson. Ohro

5PM M L C . 4753 Ho!!sville Ptke, Ktngston , Oh

BUS.: 985-3813
RES.: 985-3837

l2 tin

Balloons for Get Well. Anniversarys , Birthdays, parties
Smging Gorrilla Call Bal
loons &amp; Co 446 431 3

Wanted overweight persons
to trv our all natural herb
d1e1 100% guaranteed . lose
up to 30 pounds a month
Call or write 614 - 775- 2316

992 -2196

EUGENE LONG

Ph. (614) 843-5425

Announcemen1s

SWEEPER and sewmg ma chine repair, parts , and
supplies
Pick up and
delivery , Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
George• Creek Rd
Call

or

$50 PER MONTH

*GOOD BOATING
*GOOD FISHING
*WATER &amp; ELECTRIC
*BATH HOUSE

HILL FORD

PAT

•TRENCHING
•BACK HOE •DOZER
•END LOADER
•DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
IJ''•VIIATER. GAS. SEWER

We pav cash for late model
clean used cars
Jim Mink Chev -Oids Inc
811l Gene Johnson

Middlopon . Oh
3476 .

Announcemenls

614·446 0294 .

years

CITY , INC.

lt-----------...:.----------"1

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

plow

5207

Rt. 1
L _ _ _ _ _ 5· 14 I mo

Wanted To Buy

Buymg daily gold, silver
coins, rmgs , jewelry, sterling
ware. old coms, large cur rency Top pr1ces Ed Bur ke1t Barber Shop, 2nd Ave

3

Long Bottom, Oh.

Wilt

45631

For Garcta, Zebco, Shlmano, Johnson, D1awa ,
Qutck .

STEVE FINLAW
PH . -985-4266

1 8 Wanted to Do

Call 614· 245· 6485

Residential
&amp; Commercial

'CUSTOM BUILT HOMES

PH .

9

Homes lor Sale

1244

614- 256 · 1528.

For all your wiring
needs ; furnaces repair
service and installahon

·oiL FIELD SERVICES

JIM

3069

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

J&amp;F

"" Free Estimates'"

113 W.

MGM FARM CITY . INC
Servmg M e1~s Ga ll 1a M,lsnn

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO .

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

•t·

Center. Truckload• of new
merchandi1e every week _
Consigmenh of new and
used merchandise always
welcome Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer 304 - 275 -

Parts, Service &amp;
Cleaning

EAST

31

Air:k Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Estate. Farm. An tique 81 liquidation aalee.
Licensed &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp;

th~

O H1rP
2 3 7 Acce
$ 11f f't M odj lf'O Otl Oh1 C
Thf' V1 liA qe oese rves I he ro ght
to 'P.J,..Cl a ny o r all brds
Voi iJr)P of M• (1d t.,port

~ud·

MAINTENANCE. SERVICE &amp; INSTALLATION
FOR All POOLS ABOVE &amp; IN-GROUND

Mlv CJ •"

b) 2 7 ?8 21 :::

money.

BROS.

"

Public Sale
&amp; Auct1on

BUildmg

S•v•

ROLLER

1y C:. So il ' &lt;, (&gt; IJ H '&lt; I I

LAi.~
II JWI
\WAitT ADS}
8

Salf&gt;-n

CIRCUS OFFICE AT
Old Jr. High Grounds
Thurs . June 28
ONLY

f 011TTH lf l l, () l oon ,1 1') 7()' ) r JUf l fHJ
' ;o, , If t o , ,1 If &lt;,r ' 11 11 ,I' , 1()1 , 1

[)f' l l(o(j

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBUC NOnCE

board furnlah.ct. Labor·
ers, drlvera, mech•nlc,
cfflce help, mualelen•,
dishwasher, cook, equipment operator, animal

Ir

,,, Jl id illl !I

Public Notice

Public Notice

PERSONALIZED
POOLS

LAFF-A-DAY

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

PERSONALIZED POOLS

"00
uoo
"00

........

Business
Opportunity

tendonto

PUBLIC NOTICE
I · lll'io' II •rornn I " ''" ' J'J O
j

o~• ••• ~

Vp&lt;otl_,,
lk•o•h• " - " ""
lJp iO l lWio«lo III M •o"OIM""'
''"t&lt; OOIO'"O&lt;do- omoO

Good wages. Room end

Pubhc Not1ce

I r 1 h,

"'" '" ' l'""'"'

U7 - l.tlolo

••7- C.. '•"•

Business Services

1

"

" 'I

f iJ - N..,.H ow1 " - loo&lt;NI

H l - ll"'lo""

Now Accepting Listings in Meigs Co

r, '

'

I '.

11

Jn _,...,,.,.,

'

I'• '

1

•

8·

171 - -000tiiW

171 - .... _

1 01 - 1110"'

""''"'"'"' ~ "

Joo•d S UI P'

I)

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,,

8 1! c .... ..
JU - ...,nlo""

8

The

__...~-..._, Jl

1&lt;

Ml

~;

,,

I•

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tn - "" " " - '

oU - ~

J -.. - wa~"~'

'Ranft*"

tc ' 11
r II
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I

t

N&lt;ldl.. o&lt;t
p , ..... ..

Mf'l()&lt;; L• I( ,ll

1• \ , ] "
ll•&gt;lno
C. , r ,,
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Ill

1ll h o.-.S

• r&lt;• l l\ '~ '· '" ' It ' ll • ••
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I I n 1 o1

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1,11, I '
II I)(\ 1 ••
1

"'•••CM o ll l

lf'Sf'f'"'" ttw r or; h! I&lt;) d L f-' 0 1 or
rr

PUBLIC NOTICE
ll •

We Use Von Schrader
Equipment Recommended
by leadmg Carpet Manufacturers.
'FREE ESTIMATES"
6 6·1 mo

... _c:.....

,.,_..,..,,o,,

fc1 ur:a toon

Mrs .

William Per ry. Athens
Word has bel'n received of the
death of Mrs Cecil Harrison,
Piqua. Ohio. Mrs. Harrison was
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Stahl
of thJ s community. She wa s a sister
of Mrs. Edna Schaefer. Mrs.
Clarabelle Gilkey and brother,
John Stahl. Graveside services
were held In Piqua .

,

rl ,Jr .,

Public Notice

v.err: Sam a nd V1ck1f'Joh.nson
a nd "ems . C'irc!('Villt-&gt;. Linda Harri -

K~r·hs

d" ~

Mrlk

4

5 Bt Pad o~ n d b akNV DtOI'1u ct;

6 2 1 l,
M 1ddlr P&lt; Jrt :)1 '" 4 r) 71')0
If; 7fl r7tiJ 17 )r.

1ng

12

'

frP P7P

SC11ool Do'- lr oc l
' ut h Ji-, r' f Avf' n ur'

Blam Lak&lt;'
Mr and Mrs Wilham CheadiP
hosted a fam1 lv ga thrrm g A ttend ·

son . Bill and Cmdv Ross. Stuuts
\1.llc Don s R oss. NC'Isonv!llf';
Mella F1 sher. M r. and Mrs. H.Px
ChPadlr•. Don. K at hy and B1adlcy
Chmdlr. Mr and M rs Rexrr
Chradlc. Hex Ill and Christy
Chracll&lt;'
A gathering was hdd in the homp
of Mrs. :\-laude Holcomb for Mac
Bla nP's A !lf'nd mg Wf'rf': Mr and
Mrs Don Vl acBiane. San F ran ·
CISCO. M1 and Mrs. Carson Pl'Ck.
T olr'&lt;lu. Ja\ and F: il,~·n Fromm.
Canton: C huc k and Hf'lf'n F:sscx,
Bob and Adrran F1shn and ltay a nd
Sus.m E ssex. Columbus, Ja n a nd
Darla Pickrt and Pam Holcomb.
Pomrro~ : Estrll-knthornC', Sardis .
Frl'da K r nnm' . A thens; Mr a nd
Mrs I-:1PI rtt Holcomb. Gingr1 , B ill
H olcomb and friend ancl l.c~ura

(\I I clnd .lPI•

Gasol on P

l h('lr gr anddaug htf'r m

A IIPnd ancP a1.1 ll S('IY ICPs .J u nr 10
d 1 lhP FrN' :\.1Pthorh sr C hUJ f' h wdo;
1r,x Chou mPmbr&gt;rs prt •sp nt 1..1. PH'

·\

l

13.Jt !J&lt;l l,l

Carpenter area happenings
M1 and Mrs. W1ll1am Cui"l'll. vf
S&lt;muma . Fla. haw rNuml'd homl'
aftN spendmg sC'vcr al day·s m
:11!~1gs Coun ty with th01r daughll'r

2 l ores dnd tubPS

I

IJ In

1h e

F l ~l'l o'I C,U f II 'CP

1

r rol 'l .l!th P R~&gt;e d sv •II P ''' ("' 'lQ,J C.P
lr11 t hl-' OUtiJO'iP n l di5CU' 1 '-i•OP ot

.,..,._g.,.,,...,.

IIMH I I - •

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lOt

..,

(

Loo M

h orls

_..,.. cC:""""
... •••

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• ..._

n a....... ... .......,

~.q .

c e. M '
&lt;if'.l lt&gt;rl
fo lowon11

c'"'""''

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

NOTICE TO
BIDDERS

6. ll uclr,Pt h e a1onq W I I tJ'-' llt&gt; IU
f1fl July 9 1984 at 7 30om to t

77 .. - -...
11
r.~

''"-·'--"
u [, ..........

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
BUDGET HEARING

7 11,.101 ....... .
7 1 .., ........... .o.a:........

I t ...,m....,.IHoot"'l

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

......... ~ocflooo

PH. (614) 985-4212

JnHn u rro;t lo ,,.,Ouoll ,.,, lann)(f'•

, .. _. . .,,.ft

UL••"'"""
....... o....

•• lp..o ...... ~-

llo~o ~

~~ , , ...h ,.. ....
JJ ll"'ol&lt;ll WD

)45 - ll lo Q, ... ..
JN -~ ... m"

w... ,, ~,. Bur

U

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Cftt.,lj1Nit•n;tf'81UI&lt;'f th r

317 - c .......

l l Poom h u -nt

~.,.,

Public Notice

9

...

lo•
...................
...

............ ,.o.

!1 1)111 7

-

lf f o•lolo.,Tt -

OJ M 01olo ~ .,.,., ., ,,.llo~o

' ··~···· w......
I l '"'"''""''
oI h""""' '""'na

princess; Lisa Miller, recorder and (back) Keruzy
Wiggins, associate guardian; Beth Mayer, mw;ician;
Mandy Hill, first messenger; Kim Adam., marshal
and Julie Byer, guardla.n.

l l iOI~...:ol l"' .'""" ""

llfiMif•oooW.~•-'

l l

as officers of the Bethel

a• -• '""'""...,_,
,,.,,,.,.,v

l • l•nl .\~• 0110

I I &gt;&lt;. lo ..........

INSTA!.I ED - lnstaUed

_

..........

35185 Oak Hill Road
long Bottom , OH . 45743

HM&lt;M.,c~-

t •Joi•K .... .......... .
ftl . ........ &lt;&gt;o ... _

n ,....,.• .,_ .. ,.. , , ••

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...
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.............
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Ohio

Business Services

·- --·--l

The Daily Sentinel

I

62, International Order of Jobs Daughters in
Middleport Masonic Temple are (front) JW Nea.'ie,
chaplain; Drea.ma Bentz, senior princess; Carol
Smith, honored queen; SheJTy Sisson, junior

June 28, 1984

Thunday, June 28, 1984

Syracuse
several n1ce
burldmg lots w1th o ld brr ck
house on Water St over
lookrng nver C all 614 - 992 -

41

Hous es f or Rent

3 bd r house d eluxe central
pool etc C all 675 5104
01 675 -5386

11 1t

Home f or rent good loca
t1on Bo b M cCormtck Rd .
3BR full basement , partfy
fmrshed n 1ce, 2 bath , kit
chen , !l v tng area. beautiful
v1ew no children . no pets
Ctttl 614 446 - 3643 Wtse
m tin A eat Estate Agen cy
3 BR h o m e lor rent At 160.
5 m 1 from hosprtal c arp ort .
nr ce k•tche n &amp; 11vmg roo m .
w ood fl oor, S3 00 m o plus
sec urtty
n o c htldren no
p ets
Ca 1J 614 - 446 3643
W1s em &lt;tn Real Estate
Ayen cy
Untur n1sh ed 6 room hou se
1 ', bnth glAs sed m Paok
por ch ga1age With 10 tt
d rrve st or m wmd ows no
p et s dcp o stt &amp; re f re Q1med
Catl 446 2543
larg e ho m e
l arg e Yilrd
S350 mo . 5200 d ep os1t
Catl 446 7157
Avad a bte soo n 2 bdr ho use
w 1th g ar d e n &amp; utt1 rty bml d
rng 4 m1 o ut At 58 8 by
FA Jrh eld C hurc h Ref &amp; dep
req111r*'d Cil ll 446 4 3 44
3 bdr hous e 2 m1 from
HM C S195 m o S100 dep
C all 446 - 3617
2 bdr h ouse 1n Ga llip oliS
hardw oo d floor s. gaG fur
nan ce adutt s no pets Call

446 0958
3 b edroo m h o u se tm rent
52 5 0 pet m o nth Call 614

5974

992 6879

10x50 trailer on large
wooded lot 7 m1les below
Gallipolis o n Racoon

Four ro o m &amp; b ath h ous e at
1650 Lrncoln Hei gh ts ,
Pom e• ov
Call 614 -9 92

S10.995 304 675 644a
L o ts 1n Henderson 50 x 1 19.
$3,000 00 each
Scottre
Soledean , Smtth St ,
Henderson

3874
4 room house near Point
Pleasant , crty water . refren ces requ1red , 304 - 675

5884

�10-The Daily Sentinel

Page
41

3 bedroom , 1 112 baths, basement , garage, fenced yard ,
HP , A.C . 144 English Court.

Point

Pleasant .

S350 00

p lus deposit. ref . required .

304 - 676 - 7789 or 675 7 467 af1er 5 :00 PM and
week -ends .

42

They'll Do It Every Time

Houses for Rent

54

HOWN'EWIS

Misc. Merctlandise

4 -H hor1e show outfits for
girls, hat•. boots . Call 814 -

A lr'EW l!/001&lt; :&gt;

446-7711 .

..OUR HEW DieT
6a1l&lt; IS VERY
SIMIL.AF'. 10

Firewood S 16 per level
pickup loaded by you . Free if
you cut yourself . Cell 446 -

DR.EPSQ\1'5

I7I6T 8001&lt;··-· .-£---

4267 eve.
17.000 BTU air conditioner ,
good cond ., $360 . Call

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr. tra iler ful ly furn i shed,
good lo cation . sec . dep . req .
Cell 446 -8558

F o ster!l

446 -2300

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
3 bedroo m trailer . extended
livingroom , S1 00 deposit,
S250 mo . plus utilities. also
have room s for rent . Prefer
males . Se e at 314 3rd . St .,
Kanauga .
2 bdr . mobile homes . ref . &amp;

dep . required
256 · 1922 .
House

for

rent

Call

614 -

in Crown

City Call 614 -256 -6058
2 bdr with wa ll to wall
c arpet , AC . in Gallip o lis Call
446 -1409 5 -8PM .

1 2 .. 60 2 bedroom mobile
ho me, panly furnished . Ra cine area . Call 614 -992 -

5858 .
2 bedroom mobile home .
adults only . For sale or rent .
Call 614 - 992 -2598 .
2

bedroom .

total

electri c

with central air . on East

Main St ., Pomeroy above
car wash, fully furnished
Call614 - 992 -7314 or 992 6215 .

APARTMENTS , mobile
homes. houses . Pt . Pleasant
and Gallipolis 614 - 446 -

B221

3 rooms and bath , edra
n ice Good location . Deposit
an d retrences required
S225
m o nth
304 - 675 -

1090

44

A part men!
for Rent

be droom apt in New Haven
304 -882 - 2525 from 8 :00
am to 6 :00pm

Furnished Rooms

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

Cell 614 -446 -0756
Sleep;ng room S125 . utili ties paid Share bath , male
only . Range &amp; refrig . 919
2nd . Ave .. Gallipolis . Call
446 -4416 after 7 PM .

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park. Route 33 , Nor1h of
Pomeroy large lots . Call

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal
Housing

Opp o rtun ity)

has

one and two bedrooms. rent
starting at S 15 7 for one
bedro o m and S193 per
month for two bedroom,
with S200 deposit loc ated
near Foodland and Spring
Valley Ploza , pool and TV

Warehouse or storeroom .
25x50 . for furniture.
lumber, roofing, insulation,
paneling, equ i pment or
other use. Call 1- 614 -486 -

5553

Merchandise

messago

446 -3786
Furnished apt 919 2nd .
Gallipolis S 175 . Men only
Call 446 - 4416 att~r 7PM
Newlv remodeled 2 bdr .
aqu 1pped kitchen . c entral
air , S250 . 821 1h Sec ond
Ave .. Gallipolis . Call 446 2158

4 rooms &amp; bath . unturn1shed
pal. utilities paid . 11dult!&gt;
only . no pets Call 446 3437 or 446 3111
Unlurnished 2 bdr in Crown
C ity . Call 614 - 256 - 6520
2 bdr . apr. newly decorated ,
S60 to S200 per mo . utilties
part . paid Call675 5104or

675 -5386 .

513 Third Ave , S135 mo .
adults only , dep o sit re quired . Call 614 446 -4222
betwe en 9 -5
DeiUJ(e 1 BR Apt . Gal lipOliS .
garage. CA . no pets. no
ohildren . dep &amp; re f . Call

614 -256- 152 9
Nice 3 bdr house. base ment , C -A . close to t o wn .

Call 446 -6678 .
5 1' 7 acre . levelland .
w ith frontage on 2 roads ,
M C
tor building or m1n1
fArm . all utilities near bv. on
old Rt . 160 near Porter.
Appro~t

S9 .000
8801

C all

61 4 - 388 ·

1 bedroom Apt S 196 mo
including utilities . Equal
Housing Opportunity Con tact Village Manor Apts

614 -992 -7787
Riverside Apts . Middleport
Special rates f o r Senior
Citbens . S 130 . Equal Housing Opportunities . 614 -

992 -7721
Furnished 1 &amp; 2 bedroom
apartments . Middleport
Adults , n o pets, security
deposit. Call 614 - 992 -

3874 .
1 bedroom apt. in Middleport . 8136 a month plus
utilities . Call614 -992 -6646
days or eveings 614 -949 -

2216 .
Newly remodeled 2 bed room , equipped kitchen ,
8226 . Deposit required . Call

614- 992 - 5319
2816 .

51 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St .. Gallipolis . New
&amp; used wood &amp; coal 5toves.
6 piece wood living room
su ite with 6 inch flat arms
$399 . bunk beds c omplete
with bunkies $199 . 2 piece
antron livingroom suites
S 199. ant ron reclin~r s $99,
other recliner s
maple
dinelte sets S 179. box
springs &amp;: mattress twin or
full S 100 set regular -firm
S120 . maple dineue c hairs
S35 . wash stands S34 ,
ma. ·le ro ckers S59. 7 p~e c e
chrome dinette set S 149. 5
p1ece dinette set S99 . used
be droom suites . refr igera tors. ranges . chest . dressers.
wnnger washers. TV 's, dry ers. &amp; shot~s Call614 -446 -

sao.

3159

4 room~ &amp; bath . furn1shed .
dean . no p ets . adults o nly .
depos•t S. referen ce re qu iHJd Call614 -446 - 1519

or

992 ·

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sof a. chair , ro cker . otto man . 3 tables . /extra heavy
by Frontier). $685 . Sofa.
chai r and loveseat. S275 .
Sofas and chairs pnced from
$285 to $895 . Tab les. S45
and up to $125 Hide - abeds . $440
and up to
S525 . Recliners , S175 . to
S375 . lamps from S28 . to
S75 5 pc . dinettes from
S99 . to 435 . 7 pc . S189
and up . Wo o d table with six
chairs 5425 to 5745 . Desk
S1 10 up to $225. Hutches.
$550 . and up, maple or pine
finish Bunk bed complete
with mattresses. 5250 . and
up to $395
Baby beds.
S 1 1 0 Mattresses or box
springs . full or twin , $58 .,
firm . $68 . and $78 . Queen
sets , S 195 4 dr . c hests,
S42 5 dr c hests, S54 Bed
frames . S20 .and $25 ., 10
gun
Gun cabinets . $360 .
Gas or electric ranges $376 .
Baby mattresses . 825 &amp;
$35 . bed frames $20, S26,
&amp; 530 . king frame S50.
Good selection of bedroom
suites. cedar c hests ,
rockers . metal c abinets .
!IWivel rockers
Used Furniture -- Chairs,
dryers, and TV ' s. 3 miles out
Bulaville Rd . Open 9am to
6pm, Mon . thru Fri.. 9am to
6pm, Sa1 .

614 446 -0322
TV &amp; Appliances . 627 Third
Ave ., Gallipolis. 614 -446 1699. Spin washers. gas &amp;
electric dryers . auto
washers . gas &amp; electric
ranges . refrigerators , TV
sets .

Newly redecorated , 1 bed room . partially furnished ,
$225 . DeposH: required . Call

Electric refrigerator 8t elect ric stove in good con d . Call

614 - 992 - 5319
2815 .

61 4 ·256-6230 or 614 -2566002 .

992 ·

Cell 614-985-4335

6426

Sears generator, 2200 wan,
used 2 hrs, cost 5650 . new,
will sell 5500 . Call 614 -

Comer bar with 2 stools like
new, $150 . Couch 9 chair,
good Cond. , $76 . Call 446 -

18ft. c1mper self contained ,
awning wi1h screened in
room . $1 , 500 or best offer .
Call446- 1943 anytime.

Toop soil and fill dirt deli vered. 304 - 675 -7771 .

so yd . Cell 614-992-6173 .

Metal buildings built to your
needs . Garages, storage.
warehouse . farm . etc . Free
Estimates _ 304 - 675 - 3981 .

Se\1 - frost refrig . S100 ;
Washer &amp; dryer, S1 25 ; 30
in . elec . or gas range. $66;
gas clothes dryer, $65;
automatic washers, $65 .
and up . Call 614-742-2352 .

1100 lbs.

$100 .00. 304-675- 2226

446-7348

Musical

Fa~m

Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Clothesline posts. swing
frames, ell types
Picnic
tables . Free delivery . 304 6 75 . 3 6 77 _

Awning, lifetime guarantee.
4x8 . New sold S200 .00 will
sell $50.00. All hardware
included. 304-675 - 6262 .

Tractor. model 8 with culti vators . Call614 - 256 -6417 .

Sears Coldspot, chest type
freezer . 10 2 cu ft .
S100 .00 . Phone 304 -675 -

Shag carpet with pad, red
12x12 also pink 10x12.
Trampoline . 304 - 675 -

1714 .

21in . RCA console TV, exc.
cond, S200 .00 Call 304 -

1973 school bus, 66 pas sanger . 6 . 800 btu air cond .
Two gas lawn mowers .
Riding lawn mower. Elec
weed eater. Used referiga tor . 1304- 675 - 6512 aftftr

675-3485 .

54

Misc . Merchandise

450 Farman tractor, wide
front end with loader. 3 pt .
hitch . good condition _

Motorcycle

614 -388 -

V - 45

Mas .

S3. 100.00 . 304-675 -7337
day 675 - 6574 evenings.

62

Wanted to Buy

4 :00 .
Used stern ESS speakers,
Kenwood 40 wt Am -Fm
receiver, BIC cassette JVC
turntable
Chain saw
McCulloch Mac 140, 14in,
10 months old. 304 - 895 -

Knauff Firewood Reduced
prices thru July 31st . Have
your own seasoned wood
this winter . 614 - 256 - 6245 .
Limestone. Sand. Gravel.
Delivered in Mason. Meigs.
Gallia or pick up at Richards
B. Son . Call 446 -7785.

Wanted to buy, a nice boys
bicyc le, 16 in. Call 458 -

3 window air conditioners .

304-675 -2267.

6417 .
Shrubs pruned. lawn re seeded , retaining walls .
sidewalks. patios. fill din,
topsoil. bark mulch &amp; saw du&lt;it Contact Bruce Davi sion . Call614 -256 - 1427

55

2783 .
LUMBER -Rough cut , oak ,
pop lar, 2x4, 2x6. 2~t8, 1x4,
1x6. 1x8. length available. 8
fl . through 16 ft . Hogg &amp;
Zuspan. 304 -773 -5554.

Large 16ft . overhead garage
door , complete , also 8ft .,
door , e11. . gas f lo o r furnace ,
reasonable Call 614 - 256 -

3 yr . old pure hereford bull .

Call 614 -992 -7458
Pigs, S25 .00 each . law rence Ric e. 10 Mite Creek ,
leon . W . Va . past Yauger
Church .

1;;::::::::=::::=:;:::====
64

Hay &amp; Grain

Good miMed hay S 1 .25 bale.

6509
Hay. 1972 Ledgerwood 25
ft Camper . 1963 Chevrolet
Impala Call 614 - 367· 7866
after 5
Air conditioner , 1100 BTU ,
good c ond. $175
446 -

1522 or 446 -7572
Table &amp; 4 chairs in excellent
cond $150 . Radio stereo
c onsole S40
614 - 446 -

Good miMed hay, S 1 .25 in

992 -7384

l;eld. 304- 675 - 5579

56

147B .

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds . Heated
indoor - outdoor faci l ities .
AKC Doberman puppies
Stud Service . Call 614 -446 -

Firewood c ut up slabs S 15
pickup load Catl 614 - 245 ·

5804 .

Cell 446 -0373

For sale . 500 h . 2 i n pipe
threaded . good condition.
best offer Call even1ng!),

Now open for business.
Mountain State Slack. Rt
33 . New Haven . Complele
masonry supp lies, 4 ". 8 ".
12 " block . Delivery ser&gt;Jice
Ph o ne day 304 -8B2 - 2222 .
evening 882 - 3239 .

7795

Call446 -81 14.
Porcelain double sink. with
drain bOArds. 925 . Com mode 826 , electralu)l(
sweeper - power nozzle

1979 Chevy Caprice Classic. 2 dr, ac, ps, V -8 engine,
body good condition, e11.c .
performance. Will consider
all offers. Call 614 -992 7412 after 5 p .m .

Transportation
71

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH paid for la1e
model used car s.
Smith
Buick -Pontiac , 191 1 Eastern Ave ., Gallipolis. Call

eptl. Call 614-992 - 6434 or
9112 - 6914 or 304 - 882 2666 .

1980 Ford truck Explorer
F100,
exc
cond ,
$4, 500 .00 . 8 h . topper for

73

Vans

&amp; 4

W.O.

1 979 Chevy 8eauville Van.
loaded . 85200 firm . Call

614-446-0930 or 304-675 7446 .
1976 Chevy Silverado sub urban. trailering speci111l.
a.c. , tilt wheel, 3 seats, sun
visor, running boards with
lights, good tires . Excellent
condition . 1 owner . Call
614-742 - 2511 before 5
p.m .. after 6 , 742 - 2271.

1976 Ford Torino station
wagon . 4 door, auto, PS ,
PB , AC , good condition .

19BO Ford Bronco. very
clean and good shape ,
priced to sell 304 - 675 2663 after 5 pm .

4-wheel drive.

74

s 1600.

Call

Motorcycles

2734 .
76 Grand Prix S .J ., good
condition . Will sa le or trade
for pickup . Can 614 -992 -

7384 .

1978 Ford LTD, 4 door. new
paint , PS , P8, A -C. 351
Interceptor. no rust.

61.950. 304-882-3376.
1981 Honda Prel ude. 5
speed, many options .
53 , 000 miles, $6,400 .
Phone 304 -895 - 3326 after

5:30 304-372 - 2798 .
1978 2 door Pontiac Grand
Prix, PS, PB, air, cruise
control,
301, black,

1977 Harley Davidson low
rider. Call 446 -7015 after

5PM .
1980 Harley Davidson
Roads1er 1000 CC, ex .
con d., S3200. 1983 Honda
E)l(press Moped. brand new.

Yamaha YZ 125 J , water
cooled . Must see to appre ciate, priced to sell. 614 -

1984 CR 80 5850. Brand
new. Call 446- 3231 .

bika. 1 000 mi les.

s 600. Call

446-4803 .
1976
6,600

Honda CB 360T
miles. S700 . Call

614-985 - 4418.
1980 Harley Davidson
FXWG. Wide -Glide, Can be
seen at Charley Fry res ., or

ca ll 61 4 -742-2468 . $3500 .
1981 CR 450. call 304 576 -2738 before noon or
after 5 :00PM .

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1982 Camero Z - 28. black.
gray interior. l oaded with
eveything. must se l l .

Sea Cloud 2 person vinyl
boat . brand new trade for
queen size bed frame . Call

$9 . 200 . 00
2189 .

446-7475 .

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

1977 Chrysler , station
wagon, AC , AM -FM radio.
S750 .00. Runs good. 304 -

S1000. Cell 446-1326.

773- 5392 .

614 · 367 -7220 .

1983 Plymouth Colt 18,000
mi .. stand shift plus economy shift. air Call61 4 - 379 -

2726 .
Briarpatch Kennels Profes sional All -breed grooming .
Indoor -outdoor boarding fa cilities . Pick up and delivery
service . English Cocker Spa niel puppies _ Call 614 - 388 -

9790 .
Dragonwynd Cattery Ken nels . AKC Chow puppies.
Siamese kittens , new litters
CFA Himalayan and Persian
kittens . Call 614 -446 - 3844
at1er 6 .

1649 .
1978 VW Rabbit , good tire .
good cond .. good mileage,

$1550 .
4230.

Ce l l

614 446 -

1976 Monte Carlo, good
cond . S1400 Call 614 446 -3243 after 5pm

1984 Pontiac Fiero S .E.,
black, fu l ly loaded, 3 months

Correct Craft &amp; Ski Su preme, fami ly ski boats .
New &amp;. used. Parkersburg,

WV 304 -422 -8433 or 304 422-2367 .
For sale or trade, 16ft.
fiberg lass boat with 40hp
motor and trailer . 304 - 675 -

1978 Diesel VW Rabbit
sunroof . good tires . great
mileage, $2,000 . Call 614-

245-5016 .

PS.

with Major Hoople®

WHO 5P..ID YOU

AAE. Tt-\E

16ft. Bass boat. 55hp mo tor, trolling motor,

81,800 00 . 304-675 6521

PB.

some

AM -FM .
body

Needs

76
&amp;

after 6PM.
1976 Volare. body rough.
runs good, $260.00 . 304 -

675- 2838
Wanted to buy. 1979 to
1983 Subaru or Toyota
Hatchback or wagon , Good
condition, 814-446 - 2072
or 304- 676-3761 evenings .

Trucks for Sale

Aiding mower, good cond ..

1971 GMC Step Van. trade
or sell . Call61 4 -446-4337.

$376 . Call 446 -4426 .

PAINTING - interior and e)l( terior, plumbing, roofing ,
some remodeling. 20 yrs.

1118~~

7 :30

8:00

2398 or 614-446-2454.

1331 .
rienced roofing , including
hot tar application, carpen ter. electrician, mason . Coil

or

675 -

your

carpet

SHIP

WITH

CAPTIAN

ALLEY OOP

STEAMER . Water removal.
furniture c leaning, free estimates . 304 - 675 - 2295 .

BE ANY PIVBLEM NOW!

8 :30

WATER -

9:00

PROOFI NG . Unconditional
lifetime guarantee _ local
reterences furnished Free
estimates . Ca ll collect 1 Basemen1

Remodeling, siding. interior
and exterior. textured coat Ing, simu lated brick and
stucco, thermo repl acement
windows . 304- 675 - 1560.

82

ff only one of
us brotherG had
a ~ey t' th' do'!

Plumbing
Heating

You does?

&amp;

CAATER ·s PLUMBING
AND HEAT ING

61 4 -446-44 77
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING . At . 1. Box 355. Galli polis . Call614 - 367 -0576 .

83

WINNIE
i'ILLr

HE HAD SOME

YOU'RE

!!&gt;AD NEWS FROM
MARGE AND WENT

HOME EARLY.
HOWNICEI

6ACK TO
STRAIGHTEN
TH INGS OUT

Excavating

Good -1 Excavating, base ments. footers, driveways,
septic tanks . landscaping .
Call enytime 614 - 446 4537, James l. Davison, Jr
owner .
J .A .R .Construction Co .Ru Basements, Footers. Con crete work, Backhoe's.
Dozer &amp; Ditcher, Dump
1rucks, &amp; water -gas - sewer electrical lines.

Cell 614- 256 -9354

BARNEY

I CAN'T SAV AS HOW 1
84

&amp;

Want 10 buy two 1 5x 1 0
Chevy Railey wheels. 304 -

Electrical
Refrigeration

BLAME '{QU, LOWEEIV --IF IT WUI MV HOUSE-· ·

676 -3126 or 676- 3915 .

78

Camping
Equipment

19 ft. Krown - foldout
camper . Sleeps 8, 3 burner
stove, ice box, furnace, new
screened in awning, good

shape . 81000 . 614-9927863 or 992-6433 .
Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

-· I COULDN'T
STAND TH'
SIGHT OF IT
NEITHER

James Boys Water Service .
Also poo ls fil led. Call 614 -

256 -1141 or 614 - 446 ·
1 176 or 61 4 -446 · 7911

PEANUTS

JIMS

WATER

SERVICE .

Call Jim Lanier, 304 - 676 -

1977 Chevy 360. P. B. , P.S.,

1 171 .

26.000 milat, good cond .

1972 19% Arlstocra1, self
contained. bath, trig., stove,
slaapt six, air conditioned,
l1rge 1wnlng, good condi -

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

tion, U,4&amp;0 or offor. Col
448-1228 dayo. nlgh1s 1304-522-9469 co lloc1.

614-446-7833 or 614 · 4461833

7397 .

THIS NE)(T HITTER 15
PRETTY 600P, OIARLIE
BROWN.. .I Ti-l INK WE

l-IE LOOKS KINO
CUTE ... WALK !-liM
OUT M'&lt; WA¥ :

1.2:•

NOBODI' EVER WALKS

OUT MY WAY ..

Upholstery
1 1 :1 5
1 1 :30

1 163 Sec . Ave ., Gallipolis.

20120

MOVIE : ·M oddle Age

Crazy'
~=~ MOVIE : 'The Playbirds'
3"J Another lite
4) SportsCenter
·' J.J News/ Sports/Weather
liTl Tony Brown ' s Journal

S~OULD WALK ~ 1 M ...

87

e

tO Knots Lan di ng
Press ures mount for M ac k
as K a 1en co nt1 nu e s h er de·
r ende ncy on f11ll s a nd h1 s
fn endship •l•,llth Greg or y
Sum ne r show s s1g ns o f
stra1 n (A) (60 m1 n )
:g , MOVIE : ' Red Shoes '
11 Newswatch
tD Major league Baseball:
Pittsburgh a t San Franc isco
10:30 ~ ) AF : Waylon Jennings
("I) My little Margie
\fl TBS Evening News
f11J Bits and B'i!BS
11 :00 0 CD® O ~ · ®I IE :Il
News

614-266 -1743 or 614 -256 1120.
BURDETTE CAMPER
SALES &amp; SERVICE. Open
daily 9 to 6 : 30, Sat. 9 to 4 ,

Fam;ly

cz·

• IE i2

General Hauling

Johnson Water Service _Call

MOVIE : .The

Jewe ls'
8 (.£ _7 Fami ly Ties Al eK
face s d1 s aster wh e n h e
w1n ds up w1th tw o d at es
f a r th e prom (R)
A Top Rank Boxing from
Merri vitle, IN
~; Cl) t_l Bliss
0
i' Cheers F eel1ng
lonely , t he Co ach d ec1 d es
to atta c h h1ms e l f to Sam
and D1an e (R)

(J

SEWING Machine repairs.
service . Authorized Singer
Sal es &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors
Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy 614 - 992 - 2284

85

Gimme a Break

9 Up Pompeii
11 Mystery ! T h e L Hnbn
Con n eC ti On · F1rs t u f 3
p .&lt;H! S A ft er an o th er argu
n 1e nt Mark ancl ClaJr e p art
o n ba d 1e1m s and a rrang e
to mee t at th e1 r w ee ken d
co tt age b ut Cla 1rc never a1
n ve s (R) (6 0 m m ) [C l osed
C apt10n ed]
9 :30 8
~ ' 7 Nig h t Co u rt Bu ll
co nfr o nt s h 1s In secur ity
abo ut h1 s s•ze wh en he IS
reJeCt ed as a V o lunte e1
Fath e r b ecau se the gr o u p
th1 n ks th ey b e l1 e v e he
w o uld sc are th e k1d s (R)
Snea k Previews Co
9
h os t s N ea l Ga b le r and J e l
fr ey L yons tilk e a spe c1al
took at w o me n d• re c tors
an d th eH lllm s
10:00 0
2 7 Hill Street Blue s
Capt at n Funllo do es so me
·ho use c le an1n g' and a love
t11 ang le amo n O three Blu es
erupt s 1nto gun f 1re ( A) (60
m1n)
2 life or Dea th 1n the
Emergency Room T h1s do
c u me ntary film e d J ! S t
Mary's M ~ d1 ca l Cente r In
l o n g Beach. Cal1forr11 a, el(
am 1n es
th e
da y -t o -day
p ress ur es of th e m ed1 c al
p ro f ess iO n

Cor . Fourth and Pine
Gallipo lis, Ohio
Phone 614 -446 -3888 or

SHULAW'S Plumbing and
Heating. 21 1 Sixth St .,
Point Pleasant . W . Va . 304 675 - 5420. licensed and
insured .

0:V

:! 700 Cl"b
·_Q_ Gl ,:_u lotteryl Flah erty
and Ru sh a ward w1nn 1ng s
t o man who 1nvolved th em
w1th th e und e rw o rld . a l1 br a r1 a n wh o I S t r a n s form ed
1nto a be auty and to a hos·
Pl tal, zed h e&lt;~rl p a t1e n t f A)
(60 m1n ) [ C lose d Cnp tlone d ]
(] ' 8 10 Simon &amp; Simon A
v et e r an W o 1lrl W nr II p1l 01
co n v 1n ces A J ar1d R1 ck
Into h e lp 1nq h1m f1 nU h1 s
los t B-25 he fl ew Ill n1e
wa r (R) (6 0 m 1n)

614 -237-0488. 9 a.m . to 5
p .m
Rogers
Waterproofing .

I]J

ell

I DON'T THINK THAT'S GONNA

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

BASEMENT

0

N ell's plan to improve her
memory backfire s _ (R)
T ' MOVIE : ' Between
Friends '
2._ MOVIE: 'Oklahoma!'
a_:· C ircus
T NFl's Greatest Moments NFl 's Greate s t M oment s pre sen t s h 1ghl1ght s
of Supe r Bowl I l l ' fe atur Ing th e N ew York Jets vs
th e Balt1m ore Co lt s
§_ aJ ~ Happy Days
Q Q H! Magnum P.L
W he n TC's c ho pp er 1s hi Jack e d fo r us e 1n a pn so n
bre ak 1t be g 1ns a dan ger ·
ou s c.:h a1n of ev ent s fur
Magnum (A) (60 m1n)
(~ ' Great Railway Journeys
of the Wor ld
ll Forum

OF COURGE NOT! EVEN fON'G
5L Y CONNIVANCE AND 811CH5TA881N~ COULDN'T O~CUf!E
.o!Y 6ENIU5 FOREVER! I TOO
HAVE LIMITLEG:S
FUNOIH(i NO'III

RON ' S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola . Quazar. and
house ca ll s. Call 304 - 576 -

3386 .

100. Call614 -388-8282 .

Cf CDMlt-lblDMC-;?;

Gone Smi1h. 992 -6309 .

Call 614-446-1294 .

614-388- 9331 .

IIJ~

scotchguard-water e)l(trac tion, deodorizers. FREE estimates. Reasonable rates .

C losed Sunday. U .S. Rt. 60,
Coolville, Oh 614-667 -

t 979 Chovy Pickup. 8 cyl.
Coli 814 -992-2046 for
de1till ,

~6\~MG
ADRI~KQ-1

GENE'S DEEP STEAM
CARPET CLEAN.

Used Furniture: Livingroom
suite, upright freezer, king
sira bedding . Corbin &amp;
Snyder Furniture, 956 Second Ave .. Gallipolis. 446-

For 11le alec . t1oveWee1ing house, hervftt _gold, like
new, motorcycle Yamaha

Fi&lt;aJD, WCUD 'b&gt; TAKB '1tJlR
Ti'n&gt;BI.ES 1D A !3ARTB~~I2'

'OJ

H Be S Home Improvements
vinyl siding. roofing. room
addition. storm windows,
stone . Call 614 - 367 -0409
Of 614 -367- 7244 .

1983 Pop-up truck camperwill sell camper on ly-or with
1982 GMC % Ton Truck.

Twin bed complete with
mattress &amp; bo~e springs .
Twin antique iron bed . Call

W~E'i-1 HA~

exp. Call 614-388-9652

Parts for 76 Dodge Colts .

79
72

Auto Parts
Accessories

work .

$1 .800.00. 304-675-2266

Ceii614- 38B -9857

\.lttl'(, IN 1\lt::; NAME Cf ~UND

11and, Oh, 614 -742 -2903 ;

old. pa;d $14,000 .00 will
sell 611,000.00 . st304 676- 71 10.
'77 Brown Chevy halt ton
pickup with 350 V - 8 .
48.000 mi les . With fiber glass top. AC. s liding win dow, clean interior, auto,

~~==========J.:==========•
OUR BOARDING HOUSE ®

1975 VW Rabbit, gasoline
type, good tires, brakes and
e~ehaust_ S700 .00. See at
Cochran's Exxon, 304 -675 -

BORN LOSER

Sanford and Son
Entertainment Tonig ht
:I) Wheel of Fortune
0 I]) Wheel of Fortune
~
Nightly
Business
Report
@News
G.]
MacNeil/Lehrer
News hour
(E)
r]].'
Entertai n ment
Tonight
f!) Jeffersons
0 '21 Tic Tac Dough
@ ESPN's Speed week
(1) Major league Baseball :
Atlanta at New York
(§] Family Feud
ri;. Love Connection
0 (I, Fa m ily Feud
~ Or. Who
1
1 ] Wheel of Fortune
(E @ People's Court
f1) One Day at a T ime

KZ250 CS A straet

304-675-7966.

614 -446 -2282 .

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spouting . Now installing rubber
roofs. 30 years experience,
specializing in built up roof

GET

rxxrxxrJ

Print answer here:

®
CL

3802 .
1 981

16 ft. Sea Star. open bow.
convertible top. side cur tains. back enclosure , 1 15
hp Mercury, power tilt,
power trim, low hours,
custom trailer . Call 614 379-2822 after 6pm .

1975 Camero l T, new tires.
new paint, AC, TW, AM -FM
cassett . 304- 675-2226 .

(fi) High Feather
PM Ma9azone
(]] Here Come the Brides

Home
Improvements

304-675 - 2088
4560.

Now arrange the Circled leners to
form the surpnse answer, as sug gested by the above cartoon .

I I I XJ

News
News

0 1TI

367-7197 .

' 77 Cadillac Coupe DeVille.
fully loaded, body and anterior A -1 shape. Runs good .

304 - 675 -

81

SHAPE

75

' 71
Monte Carlo , good
engine. body, anterior, ral ley
wheels, bad transmission,
tires . $600.00 or best offer .

7:00

AL.COHOL WILL
P~E5ERVE Ai.MOST
EVE:F;:YTHIN6
EXCEPT THIS.

I WEFTESt

Numero Uno

® IE !I2i ABC
0 I]) IOi CBS

50 CC. $425. Cell 514 -446 7310 after 5:30pm .

va.

304 -675-6286 .

t
J I I Jl

(J) Carol Burnen

AINGLE·s SERVICE expe-

6048.

Judy Taylor Grooming Call

®

I

tRULTSY

News
·savage

Harvest'

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
removal Call 304 - 675 -

61 4 · 992 -6945.
79 Fairmont FuturA 8 cyl.
auto; 79 Fairmont Futura, 6
cyl , auto; 78 Cougar XR7 ;
77 Olds Vista Cruiser, 77
Monza; Foreman's used
cars, langsville. 614 -742-

MOVIE:

(I) Rifleman

Services

truck $50 .00 . 304- 675 5393 .

614-742 -2261.

79 Pontiac Trans Am, T-Top,
new tires, 48,000 miles.
outstanding condition . Call

iTI 0:V NBC

r

I I

(Answers tomorrow)

@ SportsCenter

Call 614-992-2065

$400 . Call614-992 -6161 .

0

CD

$3.200 . 00 . 304 - 882 2241.

Trucks for Sale

77 Jeep Wagoneer p.s .. p.b ..

83800. Ph . 379- 2748.
1 &amp; 2 bedroom furnished

72

73 Ford Torino Station
Wagon, runs good. $300.

304-895-3654 .

days,
. Rem
20 ga .BAM
slugsto$210PM
.76 for
5. . ~
55 gal . aquarium complete
with stand, lights, motor
filter , gravel, plants. ther mometer. tropical fish, big
Angel fish , &amp;200 or best
offer. Also 19" B Panasonic
ex . cond . $60 or best offer .

1977 Dodge Aspen, slant 6,
4 dr. , clean. ex . running
cond., 82,000 miles.

Reg . Quarter horse mare .
gentle . healthy. well trained
cosy rider . Call 614 -446 -

For sale - Reg Holstein bulls,
out of high producing dams .

Just received 2 loads of
Cresoted buildings . barn
type, good selection. Gall ipolis Block Co ., Pine St .,
Gallipolis, Oh Call 446 ·

Cell446-0989 or 614-256 6796 .

1978 Olds, 4 door, V - 6. air,
PB. PS, AM-FM, cruise ,
phone 304 -675 - 6286 . Call
aher 4 .

Ce ll 614 -286 · 2496

Coffee table stereo. stereo .
dinette table . Call 614 -256 -

1978 Volkswagon diesel
rabbit. good cond. $2.000 .

livestock

63

7711 .

286 -5930 .

62.000. Call after 6. 614388-8896.

1981 Celica ToyotA GT,
lif1back, 304 - 675 - 5149 after 5

Stereo $75 .00. 304 - 7677

Building Supplies

marquis

1997.

3349 .

Plastic cisterns state ap proved , plastic septic tanks,
plastic culvert, metal cul verts , RON EVANS ENTER PRISES, Jackson, Oh 614 -

loretta ' s Guns. 446 - 1822.
rear 2310 Eastern Ave ..
Gallipolis . Varmint huntartarget !hooter, we have a
selection of Smith &amp; Wesson
bolt action high power rifles,
light &amp; medium weight
barrels. These are the deluxe
finish versions and reflect S
&amp; W's peerless workman ship and quality throught out . Retail prices &amp;436 $456.
loretta ' s
S 310 - 8320 laupold scopes
&amp; mounts in stock . We have
a good selection of S S. W
and Colt handguns at similar
discounts . Class 3 items
avai lable by July 1 . Open 7

Farm Equipment

Call

Mercury

S1.350. Ca11446 -8158 .

Black raspberr i es, Point
Pleasant , 304 - 675 - 1365

S1 .900 .
9367

Autos for Sale

S1.400 . 1977 LTD Squ;re

Fruit
Vegetables

&amp;

71

wagon 51,500. 1979 Fiesta

Piano for sale, Wanted :
Responsible party to assume
small monthly payments on
spinet, console piano. Can
be seen locally . Write : (in clude phone number) Credit
Manager . P 0
Box 521 ,
Beckemeyer, II 62219

58

~~~~~~=====::r.::::::;::~=~::;:~~
1975

Instruments

6 :30

18ft. Prowler tandem axle,
rear bath and AC . Sleeps siM .
Complete Package

304-675- 6267.

57

News / Sports/ Weather
®
MacNeil/Lehrer
News hour
(fl) Powerhouse
fB) Star Trek

con. Cell 614-992- 6030.

8 week old registered Seagle
pups, 2 yr . old registered
Beagle, call after 6PM ,

~

m Andy Grilfi1h

8 h . 1980 Coleman folding
pickup truck camper. sleeps
4, gas stove. ice box. Exc .

2 AKC Silver female Poo -

61

3519

0 :lJ ':J:i 0 o
:JJ 1 ]1 IE

AKC Alaskan Malamule
(dog). 1 'h Year . gentle,

S5o .oo . 304 -675-4210.

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

6 :00

lD

S475 .00.

Sickle bar mower, Gravely
tractor 42in . S100 .00. Rell
type mower for Gravely

Building, remodeling , vinyl
and alumn siding . Free esti mates . 304 -675 - 3981

I I K )

19 ft . Fan camper, self
contained . Bath, trig . stove
furnance, sleeps six. excel lent, 82,000 . Call evenings,

dles. 304-882 -3672 .

byHenrl...,.noldondBoblH

Unscramble these lour Jumbles.
one letter to each square. to form
lour ordinary words .

6/28/84

Terry camper 21 ft . sleep• 6,
self contained, air cond .,
very nice, reasonable . Call

\

992 -7138 .

304 -

~ ~ ~~ ~

THURSDAY

614-266- 6472 .

pen;on dog. S75 .00
458-1721 .

ltjtl}~ fji}l} ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAllE

Television
Viewing

MURKY s.A.VS. "TMP..T
SO.U NDS LIKE THP..T
BLANKETV-I!IL'"-NK
DICK TA~YI"

BUSINESS SIGNS
COME TRUE!

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11

News
:]J New Treasure Hunt
'::!) Mazda Spor1slook

Hereford cow, freshen Aug.

1st.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

EVENING

Doberman pups. registered.
sho1s. tails docked. Cell

985-3571 .

6678

IF WE CAN GET TtiE

CISTS?IBUTORJ_~E
CAN Mr'II&lt;E THOl&gt;l:

GOING-OUT-01"-

Rabbits and ducks for sale

$1 .00 eac h. Call 614-379 2216 .

Thursday, June 28, 1984

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

8ft . truck camper like new .
sleeps 4 , ref .. stove . Call

S 100. Call 614 -388- 9809.
Washer! &amp; dryers 869 .95 &amp;
979 .95 -- This week only .
Hupp ' s Appliances 8e Glasswere, corner Rt. 141 Be Rt .

7 . Cell 446- 8033

or

wringer type
Call 614 - 256 -

614 -992 -7479

ant Call 446 -2745 or leave

3 bdr . unfurn . garage ap1. .
S250 plus deposit . Call

Maylag
washer .

Carpet for rentals tor S3 .99

2 bedroom apt and single

46

For sale or trade. air condi tioner 8500 BTU S75 . 1974
Chevy Caprice . Infant car
seat e•c . con . Toddler's
snowmobile suite. size 3 .

614 -446 -7398 .

Nic e
and 2 bedroom
u nfurnished ap 1utments
304 - 675 - 2218 before 6
p.m .

45

Washers . dryers, refrigera tors. rangu Skaggs Ap pliances, Upper River Rd .
beside Stone Crest Motel.

79

446-4312 .

pherd puppies.
12 wks Sheold,
Registered
Australian
exc. watch . stock and com Storage and utility build ings . Quality construclion .
As low as S475 . Call 614379, 2205. no Sunday calls .

by Larry Wright

614-388 -9790 .

Kiuens for sale. par1 Himalayan 8t Siamese . Call 614 -

8000 BTU Gibson air condi tioner . $200 . 23. 1 cu .f1 .
freezer , $260 Both exc
cond . Call 614 - 256 -6582

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®

Professional All 8 reed Dog
Obedience Training. Individual &amp; clasaea available . Call

Reese trailer hitch. with
away control . like new _ Call

1 -800-472-2316 other 1800-828 · 1209 .

2 bdr un fu rnished , extra
n ic e, 2 m i. o ut on At 588.
$200 m o .. adults only. Call

Pets for S ala

614-992 -7358 .
- - -- - -- - - lc-

New ell steel buildings
60x100 - S4 .25 per square
foot on your foundation state code buildings. Ohio

Tntiler Park Call 446- 1602.

56

446- 1 61 6 or 446-1 243.

446-0784 .

Mobile home furnished , AC ,
ideal for 1 or 2 men.
beaut1ful riv erwiew

Thursday, June 28, 1984

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

®

0

Mazda Sportslook
CD 0:V Ton;gh1 Show

(I) Best of Grou c ho

Cfl c;atlins
CU WKRP in Cincinna ti
0 I]) Trapper John , M .D.

Yeste lday s

Jumbles FETC H

I Answer

HITCH

CA TILE

PARODY

Wh al th ey called I he team 's psyc hiatrist THE ·' HEAD '. COACH

Just oU the press , Jumble Book No. 28 1s awallabla tor 52.25 plus 55 canis po1t-ve
and handling lrom Jumble. c!o this newspaper, BOA 34, Norwood, N.J_ 07848 .
Include your nam&amp;. address . ~lp code end maka check peyablelo NewspaperboOkl .

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

The 4-2 bugaboo
tract of six spades, which
will net an overtrick if all
the key suits behave and
NORTH
t.-18-U
split three-three. However,
+Q5
bridge hand:! usually don't
.AK8542
+K 8 7 3
work out that way.
+A
A good declarer tries to
give himself extra chances
WEST
EAST
to make his contract by pro+10843
+92
viding for uneven suit splits.
•Ja
•Qt076
In this deal, the important
tJ5
tQ!096
suits are trumps (spades)
.KQ!093
.542
and the long side suit
SOUTH
(hearts),
which will be the
tAKJ76
source or tricks.
To cater to the possibility
t A42
that
both of these suits
tJ8 7 6
might divide badlr, declarer
Vulnerable: North -South
made an unusua play. At
Dealer: East
trick two, he played a low
heart from dummy . East
West
Nortb Easl
Soutb
won the 'lueen and played
Pass
1•
back a diamond, won by
Pass
3•
Pass
3•
declarer's ace. Now South
Pass
I+
Pass
5+
ruffed a club low, cashed the
Pass
64
Pass
queen of spades and ruffed a
Pass
Pass
Pass
low heart, both opponents
following.
The A·K-J of
Opening lead: +K
spades picked u~ the
remaining trumps m the
West band and the king of
diamonds provided an entry
By Oswald Jacoby
to dummy for the good
aod James Jacoby
hearts
It is true that South gave
After North had made a
up
any chance for an over~
strong jump-shift response
trick
. That's a very small
and had then raised three
spades to four, South felt he price he paid for greatly
should show his diamond ace mcreasing his chances of
control. This bidding deci· making a borderline slam.
sion resulted in the final con- (NEWSP A.PER ENTERPRlSE ASSN.)

.9

s•

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 Sri-fi
1 Ml::lledi ctlfln
neuturr
5 Frutt decay
3 Emlyn
9 lleplancd
Williarns
10 Ag1La trfl
play
slnte
4 Greek INter
1:: Lat \1 t&lt;:t n ~_· tt y
14 Cling
15 Alkali
16 Tree
17 ·Vihat" s up .

S Pres i r!L' nlt ~li
candiLI &lt;J lr
10 188~

6 Large s poon

, ..

7 Anglo--SiJXOn
letter
8 19.'18 Fly·nnN!ven f1lrn
II Eaten away

18 Twtst a bout
20 Amencan
playwnght
21 Neck hair
22 Was in debt
23 Force
25 Jockey.
Earl 26 l n cas•·

12 :v1ovr
CIWLl)-

16 Culonng

Yesterday's Answer

19 Dcpnvatwn 29 Greek letter
22 Malt kil n
30 Crown
23 Bello"-ed
31 Famed
24 Lament
violinist
25 Dress
36 Indian
adornment
farmer
2i Cured
37 Expert

27 Fa stening
de V! l't.''

28 Likely
29 1.-cm.: tn ga
valirt wt!l

32 Moroccan
JllUU/llc:tln

range
33 Wha t a laug h'
34 Sesame
35 Tooth

h -+-+--+-

su!Jstam·e
37 Ancient
Syna
38 Cance l
39 Mr. Dithers·
wifP
40 Burden
41 Sptnt
DOWN
I Vermont city
DAILY C'RYPTOQUOTE - Here's how lo work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is

I. 0 :\ G F E I. I. 0 W

One letter s impl }' ~ tand s fo r an olh C' r In th1 s s ampl~ A is
used for the lhr re I. 's. X £or th e tw o o ·s. etc Single letters,
apostrophe s. th e l ength and formation of the words are all
hinls. Ench da y th r ('Ode lt•ltprs arc difft&gt;rt•nt
CR \'PTOQUOTES

VH

R

su

RS C ilJY .

D V Z Z.
R

XHP ' I

OWRFROKUF

KWUFU·I

FUZRKVGP KG

I R E

DWRK

PGSGYE
YG

KWU

VI

KG
EGC

ZVQU

SCIVPUII.

DVZ Z VRX
KWROQUFE
Yeslenlay's Cryploquote : RESPONSIBILITY IS THE
GREATEST RIGHT IN CITIZENSHJP. AND SERVICE IS TiiE
GREATEST OF FREEDOM'S PRIVILEGES. - ROBERT

KENNEDY .

�Pa11e

12 The Dally Sentinel
I

I

Newton concert

I ooncelled

Area deaths

Grace Stoops
Grace C. Stoo~. 73, 629 31st St.,
Parkersburg, W.Va .. dled unexpectedly Wednesday evening at
Camden Clark Memortal Hospital .
Mrs. Stop~ was bomatConstltutlon and was the daughter of the late
Clarence and Clara Parkes
Chambers.
She was preceded in death by one
sister .
She was a f01mer employee of the
American Vicose Corp.,
Parkersburg.
Surviving are one son. Carl D.
Stoops Sr., Coolville; two brothers,
Jack Chambers and Brooks
Chambers, Vienna, W.Va.; three
sisters. Fay Dailey , Parkersburg;
'!'willa Price, East Livef1JOOl; Hope
Gant , Orlando, Fla.; seven grandchildren and one great-grandchild.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at 1 p.m . at the WhiteEthridge F'uneral Home,l25 Lee St.,
Belpre with the Rev. A. K. Thomas
officiating. Burial will be in Gravel
Bank Cemetery, Constitution.
Friends may call at the funeral
home atrer 2 p.m. on Friday

Garnet L. Harbrecht, 72, Wehe
Terrace, Pomeroy, died Wednesday morning at her residence.
Mrs. Harbrecht was born Dec. 21.
191lln Salisbury Township and was
the daughter of the late Herbert
Joseph and Dorothy Leifheit Giles.
Her husband, Norman A. Harbrecht, died Dec. 9, l%7. She was
also preceded 1n death by one
brother 1n Infancy.
She was a bomemaker and a
member of the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church .
SuJViving are a daughter and
son-In-law, Dorothy Debra and
Gary Ellis, Middleport; one
brother, Willis Giles, Mesa, A7.. and
several nieces and nephews_
F'uneral services will be held
Friday at 11:30 a.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home wlth the Rev. James
Corbitt officiating. Burial will be in
Beech Grove Cemetery . Friends
may call at the funeral home
'l1111rsday from 2 to4 p.m . and 7to9
p.m .

or~163

Squad runs

Board to meet

CLEVELAND tAP) The
winning number drawn Wednesday
night in the Ohio Lottery 's daily
game, "ThP Number," was 444
In thl&gt; "Pick 4" game, played
Monday through Friday , the win ning number was 2766.

Singers to appear

London Pool 1n Syracuse will
resume nonnal hours beg1nn1ng
July 2.
Hours wUI be from noon until 5

The Grubb Family singers will be
at the Church of Christ, Dexter
Sunday at 7 p.m.

. The community birthday calend·
ars sold by members of the Meigs

Bandarelnandmaybeplckedupat
Meigs High School, band room,
Monday, July2, from7p.m . toBp.m .
The Meigs Band Boosters will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the high
school.

p.m. except on Thursday when the
pool will remain open until8 p.m.
!£
,

Advanced 1uesaVJng

Car wash set

Advanced llfesa vlng will be
offered at London Pool from July 21
to Aug. 3.
Interested persons must sign up
by July4. For more information call
Biswa Ganguly at 992-9909 or
992-7019.

Apply for license
One couple has filed for a
marriage license in Meigs County;
Jeffrey Jay Warner, 26 to Linda Rae
Eason, 21, both of Pomeroy_
Two couples filed to end their
marriages. Neva Jean Cleek of
Racine and Robert Brian Cleek of
Portland filed for dissolution. KJ .
mali Jean Mash of Rutland filed for
a divorce from .James I ..eroy Mash
of Pomeroy .

The Word of Faith youth group
will sponsor a car wash July 7 from 9
a.m. untll 3 p.m. at Burger Chef in
Pomeroy.

Business meeting
The Full Gospel Business Men's
Chapter 419 of Fellowship Internationa! will meet July 9 at Duff's
Smorgasbord, Gallipolis for dinner
at6: 30p.m. followed by a meeting at
7:15p.m.
The group will meet on July 21 at
7: :.J p.m. at Foreman &amp; Abbott's,
Mlddlepcrt. All members are urged
to attend.

Hospital news
\lEI ERANS MEMORIAL
ADMISSIONS - Mabie Kesterson, Rutland.
DISCHARGES- Florence Quivey, David Ohlinger, Daniel Jeffers,
Allee Jones, William Smith_

Playtex· Cross 't&gt;ur Heart·

E.O.M. SALE

Summer Sale

SERT A FLEX QUILT
MATTRESS AND
BOX SPRINGS

20°/oOFE

~:~. ~%o. ~Om$ulppo rt
1----E_ _..;.._ __. SALE
Selected Popular Styles

Funds distributed
Statew AudltorThomasE. Ferguson· s office reported today the June
distribution of $5,211,660 to the
state's rounties, townships, cities
and villages in revenue rollected
from the state's seven cents per
gallon gasoline tax.
Distribution to Meigs County was
as follows: Middlepcprt Village,
$2.141; Pomeroy, $226; Raclne,
$462; Rutland, $375; Syracuse, $77!i.

7

.O.M. SALE

DRESS SALE

SHIRTS
S

Qguiltg0

FuiiSizeSet

Our ent1re stock of s ummer dresses is included in this
sale. Knit dresses. 2 piece suits, mtnt dresses and jacket
dresses_

SAVE 35°/o

SALE PRICES-BOYS' 19.95

SWIM TRUNKS

Sizes 8 thru 18 - Good style
and color selection. Save now.
Reg. 11l.OO ................................ SALE 17.19 By LeTigre.
g. 120.00 .............................. SALE 112.99
Reg. 136.00 ................ ............ SALE 123.39
Reg. 145.00 .............................. SALE 129.29

Knit Shirts, Sport Shirts, Vari Heusen Dress Shirts-All Short
Sleeve Styles, Patterns and Colors - Regular and Extra Large
Sizes.

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

Junior. Misses and Extra Sizes

$730

SALE!-MEN'S

SALE! -

MEN'S

UNLINED

SUMMER CAPS

COVERALLS

AdJu stable stze. So ltd colors in ltght and
dark Ione s Straw har vest hats tncluded.

Reg. S26.95
Reg. S28.95

Sizes
I

I

I

I

I

Sizes
I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

LITTLE BOYS' and GIRLS'

I

SUMMER OUTFITS

48 and 50
I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

Includes sunsuits, one ptece romper s, two piece short outftts
an d btb covera ll s.

Girls Sites: 6 to 24 mos., 2 to 4, 4 to 6X, 7 to 14
Boys' Sites: 6 to 24 mos ., 2 to 4 , 4 to 7

REG. SG.OO ........................ SALE $4.79
REG. sg.oo ........................ SALE S7.19
REG. Sl5.00 .................... SALE Sll.99
REG. S2l.OO .................... SALE SIG.79

Special group of Devon , Atleen and Dotty Mann
Sportswear in Pettie, Mi ssy and Extra Stzes.

MEN'S and BOYS'

TUBE SOCKS
Boys sizes

7 to 11.

Men's

9 to 15. Big

color se lectiOn . Buy now lor ba c k to
sc hool wear .

s
Wh't
c T
1•59
1 e w1 o1or ops ... sug

LITTLE GIRLS'

SUMMER
SLEEPWEAR
Nile-Shirts. Baby Dolls
long Gowns and Rompers.
Sizes: 6 to 24 mos . 2 to 4 and 7 to 14.

15.00 ............... SALE 13.75
18.00 ............... SALE 16.00
113.00 ............. SALE 19.75
118.00 ........... SALE 113.50

S}8.00 .............. Sale
s27 ·00 .............. Sale
SJ6.00 .............. Sale

S1Q.80
s16 ·20
S21.60

E.O.M. SALE

MEN'S 18.95 SHORT SLEEVE BLUE CHAMBRAY

WORK SHIRTS

$10.00 ............................... SALE 17.99
113.00 .............................. SALE 110.39
118.00 .·............................. SALE 114.39
125.00 .............................. SALE 119.99

t-------------------1

9.95 Long Sleeve Style ................................... '8.30
110.95 Extra Size long Sleeve .......................... 19.30
BOYS'

SHIRT
SALE
Our entire stock ol boy s s hort
sleeve shirts in sizes 8 thru 20 ln ·

SALE!

BOYS'
SHORTS
Stzes 8 to
styfe s

20.

Good se lection of

eluded. Knits, Tank Tops, Western s, Sport Shirts.

Save This Weekend!
16.95

POMEROY

Partb' cloudy tootpt with a
sB~b* chance of tllullderlltGrn '
Low ~.uptnorlherl.ywiDda.
Saturd!Q', IIUIIDY period&amp;. HJab
near SO. &lt;llance otralna&amp;paeeut
tonight and~ perom&amp; Saturd!Q'.

On interest rates ...Page 2
Legion loses tilt...Page 3

e

Vol.34, No . 55

•

Shirts ........... 15.40
15.95 Shorts ........... 14.68
18.95 Shirts ........... 16.90
17.95 Shorts ........... '6.48
110.95 Shirts .......... '8.50 18.95 Shorts ........... 17~ 08
112.95 Shirts ........ '10.00
'9.95 Shorts ........... '7.88

•

at y

enttne

2 Sections, 12 Pages
25 Cenlt
A Multimedia ln t N~wspapet

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, June 29, 1984

Copy,;ghted 1984

Fire marshal will try
to pinpoint blaze that
levels prison structure
CHILLICCYI'HE, Ohio (AP) - A
fire that destroyed an honor dining
room and recreation building at the
Chillirothe Correctional Institute
was so hot it may be days before a
cause is known, prison Superintendent Arthur Tate Jr. said today.
One firefighter was treated for
smoke lnhalallon and two others
suffered minor burns battling the
blaze 1n the wood frame building
that housed a firing range 1n the
basement, officials said.
Tate said state Fire Marshal's
office investlgatorshavebeencalled
to pinpoint thecauseoftheblazethat
broke out about 4:35p.m . Thursday.
"The fire was so hot , It burned in
the basement area through the

night. I'm not sure they'll even be
able to get in there today, "Tate said.
"The building is completely
gone," said Richard CUnningham. a
corrections officer at the Institute.
"We've lost it."

Prison officials said no Inmates
were hurt or escaped during the fire
at the south end of the CCI complex
across Ohio 1()1 the main prison. The
highway was closed dwing the fire.
Tate said a small quantity or
small-arms ammunition and tear
gas were stored tnthebasementand
helped feed the fire. ClarkStaffon, a
Scioto Township firefighter at the
scene, said there were three
explosions, but eight tear gas
cannisters were safely removed

from the basement.
About 25 flreflghting units from
around Ross County were on the
scene at the height of the blaze. ·
The fire also caused a pcwer
outage which darkened much of
northern Chillicothe, according to
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric
Co. officials.
The dining hall was the last
remaining bullding of Camp Sherman, an Army training center that
was built durilng World War I and
later was taken over by the state.
About 75 honor inmates normally
ate in the building's dining room,
and prison officials didn't know
what arrangements would be made
to feed them .

Redistricting decision delayed
By ,JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP)
Ohioans will have to wait until at
least mid-July before learning if the
state's 21 U.S. representatives will
be elected from their current
districts this year or from new ones.
Three federal judges who in
January ordered rongresslonal district boundaries redrawn have
g1ven parties in the case time to file
more briefs before considering
whether to issue a final order.
The judges met privately wlth
attorneys for the first time since the
U.S. Supreme Court on June 4
upheld the lower-court ruling that
the districts are unconstitutional
because they are not sufficiently
equal in population.
They agre'ed to give attorneys for
the governor and secretary of state
live days atrer the receipt of

documents from the Supreme
Court, expected sometime next
week, in which to file a motion
asking that this year's elect ion
proceed under the current
boundaries.
Secretary of State Sherrod Brown
has argued that if new boundaries
must be drawn for this year, a
special primary costing $5.5 million
will have to be held. He also ron tends
that election timetables for absentee
ballots and other matters required
by law effectively would block
holding a second primary.
Congressional candidates were
chosen in the May primary based on
the existing districts.
Ptalntllfs in the case will have
another five days to respond to the
state motions. Then the judges will
meet to decide if another hearing
will be held or an order issued .
U.S. District Court Judge RobeJ1

Duncan offered no clues Thursday
about when a final decision might
come.
"That depends on what they say.
A:; soon as we get (the briefs l we· re
going to act on their motions (and )
decide what to do next," Duncan
said.
John McDonald, the attorney who
successfully challenged the redis·
trictlng plan, maintained there was
time to hold a second primary.
"The governor could call a special
session of the Legislature. And II
doesn't takeailorderoftherourt to
make it happen. If there had been a
(legislative) response Jan. 30 we
wouldn't be here talking about a
special election," McDonald said.
"The Supreme Court has affirmed a decision by this rourt that
the plan is unconstitutional and its
use for 1984 shou ld be enjoined," he
said .

. ~.--......

By LARRY C. EWING
OVP News Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Charges against all but one
defendant 1n a multiple action, "wrongful death" suit
- brought against three Gallla County Sheriff's
deputies, two Galllpclis pollee officers, the county
sheriff, the city pollee chief. the city manager and the
county commission - have been dismissed.
On Aug. 6, 1982, Helen Sharp. of Sprlngfleld.
administrator of the estate of Bryon D. Redrnon, filed
a $1.7 million suit in the eastern division of U.S.
District Court's southern district in connection with a
shooting and subesequent death at the county sheriff's
department on Sept. 12, 1981.
Redmon, then 22, was shot In the abdomen by cit y
pclice officer Jack Owen In the sheriff's offices located adjacent to the courthouse - around 1:30
a.m., after Redmon. who was being booked on an
intoxication charge, allegedly shot and wounded
dispatcher Tony Haner and jailer Oliver "Bud"
Raygo.

Redmon died of his wound nearly two hours later at
Holzer Medical Center.
Sharp, who Is identllied in the August, 1982 suit as
Redmon's mother. charged that her son's " ... ronstitutlonal rights were violated when he was verbally and
iJhysically assa ulted, and ultimately kliled ... "
The action further charged that Redmon was " .. ,
wlthout provocation or just purposed, wrongfully shot
and killed ."
In a summary judgement issued on June 14, U.S.
District Judge Robert M. Duncan dismisses as
defendants all parties named, with the exception of
city police officer Jack Owens.
In his ruling, Judge Duncan writes that in no case.
of those dismissed, do the facts show that Redmon's
ronstltutlonal rights were violated.
He a lso notes - in reference to the conduct of
deputies Haner, Raygo and Hamilton ao&lt;l city pollee
officer Keith Elliott- that the evidence L1dicates that
the force used against Redmon was "not excessive

----·

CHILLICOTHE CORRECI'IOSAL INSTITUTE
F1RE - Fire rages out ol control at the Chillicothe
CoiTectional Institute's honor dining room and
recreation bulldinK Thursday afternoon in Chilli-

All charges but one are dropped

•
Ill

cothe. Clark Staffon, a Scioto 'I'O\\'n.."'h.ip firt&gt;fightf•r al
the scene saJd thrf'e (&gt;xpl01iiiom~ oceurrPd at thr height
of the blazt~ which wa.·~ still hutning two hours after it
was reported. No injurie~ wPn" rr-portt&gt;d. c.:\P

Laserphotu ).

•

'wrongful death-&gt;

when viewed in the light of lh~ fact s and
cin:umst.ances .. .''
In failing to dismiss officer Owens as a d!'fendant.
Judge Duncan writes. "The rourt cannot sa)' as a
matter of law that this uS&lt;' of deadly force was
reasonable under the crrcum srances confronting
Officer Owens ... the com1 Rnds that. even given
decedent's rampage, reasona ble minds mighl differ
as to whether the deadly force used was reasonably
Jl{'Cessary .. .
" Therefore, in an abundance of caution. the court

finds tha t defendant Owens· motion for surrunar:v
judgment is not well taken and is thcrpforP denied. "
Allegations made in the suit ronllict with repor1s at
the time of Redmon's death .
Redmon was anY'sted by ihe Stat e Highwav Pab·ot
for intoxication and while being processed at the
county ja!l he a llpgedly assaulted jailer Raygo with a
razor believed to have been concea led on his person .
After temporarily restraining Redmon, Raygotook
him to the sher iff's offices where Redmon reporiedly

SUit

agam ovcrpowe11'd thr • jaitl'J and look his R1J n.

Redmon is thf'n a lll"i!l&gt;d ru
Ft1~'go

ll&lt;::t \' f'

shot and woundc•d

and disp&lt;.Jt chpr Haner. \\ ·ho \\ ·; ~ -. r ;rrl ro ing for

assistance .
[)(:-puty Hamilton, who v..·as working a ~ shift
commander. responded lo the call and repcrl edt\'
fou nd Redmon holding Ra vgu's _E;U n to Ha ner's head .
\oVhm Redmon released h.is hold. Ham ilt on rushed
him . Redmon allegedlv shol d ispat cher I Ia ncr in lhr
leg and Pngagf"CI offkf•r Hamilton -

who v.·.-.s

subS('(jumtly clubbed on t he back or lhl' ~cad l\Jih the
RUn - in a SII\Jggle .
City officprs ()v;f'ns ;:~, nd t :Jiiot t arri\'f'd at t hr- sc·~ ~ n P .
Elliol t mtered first and w as ali&lt;'gcdt\- ;~ n ·ost i'(J b \
Redmon. who strugglf'd \\'i lh him for ]XJSSC'ss in n of ;I

shut gun thf' officer "'a s can y ing
When Redmon - a ll q:~C'dh · wir ldin g a b r ll ~ C'luh
hP'd pickPd up du r ing thp strugg lf' - tunl&lt;'d on { lll iC(' r
()v..·en. lhf' city poliCf'man f1n 'CI onl' shnt .mel wo•. md hi

Redmon.

Three seriously injured by falling debris

GOP: Glenn's words will haunt M ondale

$730

,

Juntor s izes tn Slacks. Knit Tops. Jackets, Blou ses, Mi drtff Tops and Mini -Shirts Sizes: S-M-L and 3 to 13.

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

By lhe Bend ......... Paces 8, 7
. ClassUieds ...... . Pages 8, 9, 10
Cornles-TV ............. Page ll
Deaths ................... Page l2
Editorials ................ Page 2
Sports .... ............ Pagc!!!3, 4,

SizesSmaJJ(l414'h). Medi um(l5· 15 171.Largell6· 16'h)a ndExtralargell7
17 17) Two pocket. ful l length ta1ls.

SPORTSWEAR

Grey w/Color Tops ...... 11.49

E.O.M. SALE

su.oo ................ Sale s6.60

1----------------1
WRANGLER

1--------------1
1 1.89

FLOOR LAMP
SALE

36 thru 46
I

SPORTSWEAR SALE
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

M}SSES AND JUNIOR

E.O.M. SALE

E.O.M. SALE
LADIES'

Odds and Ends grouping of Carousel and Hang Ten Sportswear.
Great Values!

E.O.M. SALE

¥2 PRICE

E.O.M. SALE

JUNIOR
SPORTSWEAR

E.O.M. SALE

'79.00 Swing Arm o
One group of Misses &amp; Ju·
Six-Way Styles. Polished
nior styles. Not all sizes.
Brass Finish.

Choose grey hickory stripe or blue denim. Big Ben by
Wrangler quality . S horts . Regu lars and Tali s. Presh runk 100%cotton . zips fr om top and bottom . Six deep
roomy pockets.

MEN'S 12.95 CAPS ........ ... 12.30
MEN'S 13.95 CAPS ........... 13.00
MEN'S 14.95 CAPS ........... 13.20

S8.95 SHIRTS ......................... S7.19
SI0.95 SHIRTS ....................... ss.79
SI2.95 SHIRTS ..................... S1Q.39
Sl5.95 SHIRTS ..................... Sl2.79

JEANS SALE

Church directory..•Page 5

Weather

There will be a teen dance
Saturday at the Long Bottom
Community Associallon building
from 8 to 11 p.m. The dance will be
chaperoned.

MEN'S

BEDDING SALE

Inside today:

Teen dance

FRIDAY, JUNE 29th and SATURDAY, JUNE 30

1/2 PRICE
!.01 JACH.SON PIKE · RT. 35 WEST
PhOne 446-45:24

London Pool hours Calendars arrive

END OF THE MONTH SALE

The Meigs Counly Fair Board will
meet Munday at 8 p.m. a t the fair
board office.

Lottery winners

Meigs County happenings ...

ELBERFELDS

Four emPrgPncy runs were made
by Ioca I units WPdncsday the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service reported.
A1 10: 59 a.m. Pomeroy went 10
WeheTerraceforGarnct Harbrecht
who was dead on arriva l; at ll: 33
a .m . Pomeroy went to Union
Avenue for Rnndell Cornell. taken to
VC'tcrans Memorial Hospital; at
3: 15 p.m. Middleport to Locust
Street for Mable Kesterson. taken to
VMH; at 6:26p.m. Pomeroy wenllo
Pomeroy Heallh Care Center for
false alarm.

I

MANSFIELD, Ohlo (AP) Promoters Of a Wayne Newton
concert at Songbird Centre Outdoor
Amphitheatre have canceled the
event, citing inadequate advance
ticket sales.
Orig!nal.1y planned for July 8, the
show probably will be rescheduled
for Aug. 31 at an indoor facility in
Cleveland or Columbus, said Bill
Bader, president of Songbird
Productions.
Bader, beginning hls first year as
producer for Songbird, said he came
to the ronclusion that an outdoor
faclllry is "inrompatlble wlth
Wayne Newton's style of
en tertalnment _' ·

Gamet Harbrecht

Citizens still
concerned in
Eastern District
Even though schools are out for
the summer. the roncemed parents
and taxpayers of Eastern Local
School District arc sUI involved in
improving the education available
for the children and young people of
the district.
Citizens for Better Schools is a
group composed of parents. taxpayers. and teachers who are working
to advance the quality of academic
programs found in the district's four
shcools.
The group will meet Monday,July
2. at 7 p.m. at the J oppa Church near
Thppers Plains.
Members will be discussing Ole
hall-day kindergarten program as it
relates to the current situation ln the
district.
Those in attendance will a iso plan
activites and programs for the rest
of the summer. Officers and
committees will a lso be selected.
Free child care will be provided.
Anyone interested in strengthening
education is urged to attend . 'Those
with questions or who need directions to the church may call667-6730

Thursday, June 28, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) -Just In case there was
any doubt, Republicans have made it clear they have
no Intention of letting U.S. Sen. John Glenn's
uncomplimentary remarks about Walter Mondale
fade from memory .
Republican legislative leaders called a news
ronference Thursday at the request of the Republican
National Committee to praise President Reagan's
record, tie Mondale to Jimmy Carter's policies and
use Glenn's words against the former vice president.
"It takes a great deal of hypocrisy on the part of
Walter Mondale to crlllcize President Reagan for the
deficit when at the same time he proposes new
spending that would Increase 11 by mega-b1lllons,"
said Senate Minority Leader Paul Glllmor, R-Port
Clinton.
"Senator Glenn said that If Walter Mondale fulfills
his spending promises, that Mondale would break the
U.S. Treasury. His estimate was that Mondale's
promiseS would add around $00 b1lllon to our national
debt," GWmor said.
Assistant House Minority Leader Wa !do Bennett
Rose, RUma, said national Democrats had rejected a
moderate Democrat from Ohio to be their nominee.

l-Ie made a pitch for Glenn supporters to back
Reagan .
"Before Ohio Democratic voters had a chance to
bring their views to bear on this important national
selection process, national Democrats had knocked
John Glenn out of the box," Rose said.
"We would suggest to those loyal Ohio Democrats
that having lost their candidate they might well wish
to turn to Ronald Reagan," he said.
GUimor said Glenn's ronunents about Mandate
during their battle for the-nomination were relevant.
" I think not only lnOhlobut in other states when you
have a prominent local Democrat wlth the kind of
opinions John Glenn has expressed that that will be
utUized. I would guess that this won't be the last time
you'll hear what John Glenn said about Walter
Mondale," Glllmor said.
Rose traced Glenn's campaign troubles to national
Democratic Party leadership.
"A large portion of the problem he had 1n raising
money and 1n doing wellln primaries and the Iowa
caucuses was a result of his repudiation by
Democratic leaders of those states and by
Democrattc leaders nationally who were pretty much
on board for vice president Mondale," Rose said.

COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP! - Heal
and age ma y have caused the
collap'*' of a cornice on a five-story
downtown building that seriously
injured tlu-ee people, including a
Columbus city councilman who tosl
part of his leg, officials say.
"lt sounded like a bomb." said
Michael Henderson. who was walking across from the 60-year-old
Nitschke Building when the nonhwest cornice crumbled in a sudden
shower of stone and brick. "Nobody
had a chance to do nothing."
Officials said dozens more might
have been injured if therornice had
roilapsed during the noon or evening
rush hours in the heart of the city's
central business dlstlict.
"It started to rain roncrete," said
Leo Savage, who had planned to buy
a notebook In the bulldlng's firstfloor office-supply store.
The Injured were ldentllled as
City Councilman Ben Espy. 40;
Carolyn Mitchell, 33; and Horace
Jackson, 3); all of Columbus.
Espy, whose right leg was severed
below the knee 1n the 2: 45 p.m.
accident, was in serious but stable

~un · t h e~ -,.f'cifl llt 'l l

condition With leg trar tun:'s. cut s

sa it! . " I'm

and a bruised lung, said .Jud,GJ!boy , nurslng supervisor a1 Mr
Carmel-West Hospital.
"He seems to be doing fairly w~ll.

.\'Pars. but 1hi'..lllle' I l!Ti f'. th .l t" ;1" 11 ·

undrr t hf' circumstanCC"s." said

Espy a ide Mirhad Coleman .
:'.15. Mitchell was in stable
condition at University Hospit a ls
with two broken legs, said spok&lt;'Sman Rnbert Helber. Jackson wa s in
stable but poor condition at Grant
Hospital with injuries to hi s !('ft leg,
said spokesman Alan GensnPr.
A fourth person was grazed as the
di'bris fell50-60feet. but managed to
walk away without serious injury,
witnesses said. Several cars wen'
smashed. and the sidewalk below
caved jn.
''I'm blaming It on the heat and
age," said Nell K. Mills, assistant
fire chief In charge of emergency
services. The temperature in Co·
Jumbus was 84 degrees at the time.
"A:; near as I can tell, there are
some steel tlerods that are supposed
to hold it on and wlth the heat they
expanded and that was It," Mllls

h1r l111

Thf' :'-J itSl' h\\1' ()uild l!l J:: l ~'C'Uj)l( 'S
nhou1 onP-QU:JrllT h kx.' k. Police
Ca pt . Cur1 is M &lt;1 1·cum s~lid it a nd two
npighOOring lluiklin g~ ,.~, · pr (' f'\ ac u H1C'd aftl'r 1hl' cull &lt;'l pS(\ T h1· rf' ·
m aind('r oft hi ' 1'fJrnice w t~s kno('kf'd

to the g1n und .
Mark Ka rram . :!2. a m utirr for a
titl&lt;' insuram' P com p~n \. ~ a iel hP
hrar d " a big cr ;Jcki ng noise. llkf' un
a\·a lanchf' _"
K aJTam s3id one of lhC' mjurl:'d
w as us in~ a sideu·alk pa y tf'!C'phonf' .

He first tended to that ma n. thf'n
went to help a wom a n who al,;;o had

been stJuck .

"She kept tcllinu m0 to help her .
help her," he said .
Charles Wenner. administ rator in
the regu lations division of the city
Development Department. said
buildings In the city usually are not
inspected for structural safe ty
unless thcr&lt;' Is a complaint .

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