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                  <text>Sentinel

d'notes
da~e. of founding

'Mentorial .
·replica
displayed
•

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.
By IUCH EXNER
CLEVELANp. (UPl) 7 ThElS(Iay
marked the 1~ anrJversazy of
the landing ol Moses Cleaveland on
the east bank lit thli Cuyahoga
River to begbj )lis·surye)'lng duties
of theWesterirflEs!IJ'Ve, i\rblchiater
became t~ · ppitlleaS~ .seCtion of
Ohio.
·· · : .
.
Alter less than three months or
work, Cleaveland headed hack to
Connecticut, never to return and
wlthdut ever expertenclng a winter
In the city that later became Ohio's
lndustrtal center.
The original Western Reserve
stretched frorn the Pennsylvania
border to Sandusky, and south to
Akron, and now is the most
JXlpulated section or the state.
Cleaveland's street design, com·
plete with a New England' style
public square, is still Intact today.
Similar public squares are found
throughout the region.
"His surveying party laid out the
streets - the t:eblic square and the
street configuration- the city still
goes by," said John Cimperman.
director of the Cleveland Land·
marks Commission.
Cimperman said he was qot sure
why the speUing &lt;i Cleaveland's
name was chang~&gt;d for the city, but
said other New England residents
during the time period spelled their

names ·the same as the city.
Cleaveland was hired for the
surveying task by thi&gt; Qnmectlcut
Land Co., which planned to develop
the region.
"He was also commissioned to
meet and negotlatewitht))e Indians
... These were hunting grounds at
that time," Cimperman said.
"There was a small camp of
Indians on the west end of the

river."

Despite little resistance trom the
Indians and a cdmpleted survey, It
was SI'Veral years before the
population began to grow..
In 1815, 19 years after Cleaveland's landing and 12 years after
Ohio became a state, 150 people
lived in the vlllage's 34 llluses,
Clmperman said. Population
reached just 500 in 1825 before the
Ohio Canal, linking Lake Erie with
thE' Ohio Riv&lt;?r, began to attract
settlers, he said.
"Cleveland became a room town
with the qJening of the Ohio Canal
In the 18~s. and again durtng the
Civil War when thE' Governor of
Ohio !John Brough! moved to
Cleveland. CIPveland then moved
Into the Industrial age," Clmper·
man said.
"It becamE' a very lmJX)rtant
Industrial area durtng the Civl
War."

doW!ItAJwn Clevelani 'heada,y over the lois of their
hospitalization and tHe liuurance. (Ul'l)

STEELWORKER&amp; PROTEST - Retired steel·
workers of America picketed LTV headquarters in

Retired LTV workers blast
firm's benefit cancellation
By MICHAEL O'MAUEY
CLEVElAND (UPli-Standing
on top G! a newspaper vending
machine In front of. LTV Steel Co.
headquarters Tuesday, United
Steelworkers leader Frank Valenta
led about liO company retirees in a
protest chant against thE' steel·
maker fdr canceling their hospitali·
zalion and life Insurance coverage.
The coverage ended July 17 when
the company filed for protection
from its creditors under the U.S.
bankruptcy code.
"You're the people who built this
company. You don't deserve thlsdo
you•" Valenta asked the crowd.
"No!" they shouted coUectively
and began chanting, "WE' won't
stand for this! ."
Valenta, director of the union's
dlst rtct 28. said USW attorneys are
meeting In New York to determine
whether LTV has the legal right to
cancel the coverage.
"There's no doubt that what the
company did was Improper," said
Valenta. "It's a travesty o! ju stice.
What they did was morally wrong
and socially unacceptable. Who
more than the retirees dew rvr
better than this?"
Bankruptcy law appears amblgu·
ous on whether companies must
fund retiree IJI&gt;nefits, E'Ven though
federal law requires funding pen·
sion benefits.
There have tEen legal precedents
set on both sides of the issues.
"We have as many precedent
setting cases In au r favor as I guess

,.....--- Ohio Briefs:-----.
Agencies to police plant
WASHINGTON tUPII - An agreement between two U.S.
agencies to police the Fernald, Ohio, uranium pl'OCI'sslng plant has
drawn the approval of U.S. Rep. Thomas N. Kindness, R.Qhlo.
Kindness, commenting on past Incidents at the Feed Materials
Production Center, Tuesday ex pressed suwort for the Interagency
plan to resolve envlronmpntal problems at the troubled plant.
"In thE' midst of the problems reported In and around Fernald, I'm
glad to learn that the investigations and remedial actions at the
Fernald facility are going to follow U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency standards," Kindness said.
The agreement between the !Xepartment of Energy and the EPA
lays out a plan of investigations and remedial actiOns to bring the
plant Into compliance with federal hazardous waste and clean air
laws and regulations. The agreement also specifies that
investigations will be consistent wit)l applicablE' EPA guidelines.
"This agreement looks very encouraging on paper," Kindness
said . " Now let's seE' how quickly it can be t:etlnto action to restore
public confidence."

Farm movement plans protest
ASHLAND iUPli - Members of the Family Farm Movement
planned to parade through Ashland on their tractors today to protest
the Federal Land Bank's treatment of farmers and alleged abuse of
foreelosure authority.
John Wettstein, a SJXlkesman lor the organization, said farmers
would rIde "tractors, or wha lever equipment's left sitUng around on
the farm that hasn't been repossessed," about eight miles from the
outskirts of town to the bank's office.
"AI the very minimum, we want to go there as a body and inquire
as to who runs the Ashland Federal Land Bank," Wettstein said.
"They don't seE'm to have gotten the word that there's a right way
and a wrong way to foreclose on a farmer. It's an arbitrary abu!*'of
JXlwer.
"We will call on the management to an swer the concerns of
members, " he said. "We want thank officials ! to come fonh and
m('('t with their bosses - aft er all. these farmers are all bonalide
stockholders. So why arc these people afraid to walk into their own

they have In theirs," said Valenta.
"And so we're all going to have to
rely on the judge. What they've
done to these people is just totally
and completely UJ~alled for. It was
like dropping a bomb on them."
A rompany spokesman did not
resJXlnd to Valenta's charges,
saying only, "We are following
what we believe to be the law."
The company last week sent
letters notifying Its OO,OOJ retirees or
surviving SJXluses nationWide of the
cancelation. The lettN urged ret!·
rees to seek other medical lnsu·
ranee Immediately .
LTV management retirees also
att&lt;?nded the protest rally.
"Today, we're joining the union,"
said Jim Donnelly, 57, a g~&gt;neral
foreman In the blast furnace
dppartment for 21 years.
"I'm very upset because of the
way they (LTVl did It," said
DonnPIIy. "They didn't even give us
an option to do anything. We have to
go out and find our own Insurance."
Retirees said they will have to .
pay between$150to$»la month for
Insurance.
"I'm a diabetic and have high
blOOd pressure so It wUI probably •
cost me more,"·sald DOJmelly.
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum; D:
Ohio, Issued a prepared statement
durtng tbe rally , pledging his
suppon to the retirees.
"Today I am asking Sen. Strom
Thurmond, Chairman ri the Senate
.Iud1ciary Committee. to conduct
an emergency hearing on LTV's

NORWALK. Ohio (UP!) -A lifr
Insurance JX)llcy motivated James
Young .Jr. to kill his father and
step-mother on Valentine's Day,
prosecutors say. bu 1 the defense
contends the teenager did not have
the mental capacity to can;· oul
such a scheme.
"He !Young) planned that ki l·
ling, " Huron County Prosecutor
Michael Fegen told the jury during
closing arguments Tuesday. Fegen
said that alter being arrested. the
first person Young asked to talk to
was the family's insurance agent.

Mayor considers re-election run
CINC' INN ATl 'ill PI I - D!&gt;mocra tic Mayor Char!Ps Luken says he
is considering running as an independent In 1987 In order to malntaln
the coalition that contro ls city council .
"I hOJX' it won't be necessary, rut I will do it (run as an
indejX'ndent 1 if I have to." Luken said Thesday. "I am totally
committed to the coalition and they flhe Democrats! are hell-bent on
its df'miSP.

"!will not turn my back on this coalition just togellhe Democratic
endorsement."
Luken. fellow Drmocrat James Cissell and Republicans J .
Kenneth Blackwell. StE'Ve Chabot and John Mirlisena comprise the
coalition that formed following the 19ffi election. in whiCh neither
major party won a majority or the seats.
Luken said John Wlethe. chairman of the Hamilton County'
Drmocratic Pan)·. had said when last May's primary was over the
party would ha vr a mccl ing of all DE'mocrats. LukPn said no such
meet in~ has taken place.

James Young Sr., 42, was found
shot 15 times In the back and head.
and Bev&lt;?rly Young, 41, was shot
four times In the chest:
The defense claimed that Young
shot his parents In sell defense or
during a moment of Insanity, but
Fegen !Old the jury Young, 19, had
plenty of time to think about what
he was doing.
Young's attorney, Jack Levin,

sa'ld hls client's IQ was too iow to
cover up such a crlme and that
Young's glrfrlend }l;lrbara Cook
carried out the coVerup.
"She led the parade." Levin said .
"Jamie · had a mental defect
causing an Inability to refrain from
acting."
LE'vln said 26 peoplE' testified that
Young's father was a violent man,
while only eight testified to the
contrary.
"The prosecution had a weak
case." he said. "Nobody saw til&gt;
shooting, there were no !Inger·
prints. The only thing they had was
a girl who lied tor fiVE' hours."
Cook had been accused of
tampering with evidence, grand
theft and obstructing justice, but
the state dropped the felony
charges In returnforherteslimony.
Cook testified that Young called
her between the slaylngs of hls
lather and step-mother. Cook ~ld
til&gt; conversatk&gt;n lasted IJI&gt;tween
live and 10 minutes.

Cleveland on TV in August

•

PIZZA BREAD

J"

\

t

$119

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
Dr. Clodus Smith. outgoing pres!·
dent of Rio Grande College and
Community College, thanked the
Meigs County Commissioners Wed·
nesday for the support they gave
him durtng his time at Rio Grande.
Smith met with the commission·
ers in Wednesday's regular session.
Smith will be leaving Rio Grande In
about a month 10 take over the .
presidency of Lake Erie College,
Painesville. He accepted the new
JXlsltlon last Friday.

•

The boss
has gone

,,,,,.

Smith reJXlrled he is "leaving Rio Community College to a four-year
Grande healthy." He said the facility will probably have a
school's budget is balanced with negative effect upon Rio Grande's
"about $:00,000 on the book" at this enrollment in the future.
time. He reJXJrted that salaries
Smith also told the commission·
have tEen raised and will again be ers that Meigs County has good
raised this falL he also reported a support on Rio Grande's boards.
building project which includes •· The commission extended their
construction of one new ooilding thanks to Smith for his efforts while
and refurbishing of another.
serving as Rio Grande's president,
Rio Grande enrollment "is and extended him their good wishes
sound," Smith said, although fall for continued success.
Steve Powell, county litter pro·
enrollment right now is down about
50 to 1,610 students. He did remark gram supervisor, met briefly with
that thPexpansionoiShawnC('State the commissiOn to discuss aspects

said . "I thlnk that any (l'esident reacting to the four terms of
who will try to get the Constitution Democrat Franklin Roosevelt, the
first president to break with a
chang~&gt;d sllluld not be doing it for
hlmsell; he should be doing It for tradition started by Grorg~&gt; Wa ·
shington to serve only two terms.
thoSE' who will follow him.
Reagan played parochial JXllltlcs
"And I havE' to tell you I think it
to
the hllt on hJs tw&lt;XIay campaign
should be changed because I think
through
the South, promising In
It's only democratic for the people
to be able to vote for someone as Dallas to help the oil and gas
industry, emphasizing his fight
many times as they want."
Earlier, campaigning lor the against drugs and communism in
comeback bid of former Texas Gov. cocaine-ridden and heavily Cuban·
Bill Clements iQ Dallas, Reagan American Miami and planning to
reminisced about hls own trtum· watch the unloading of hay to feed
phant renomination there in 1984 starving cattle In drought· stricken
and mused, "I wooder tnw folks South Carolina.
Reagan cede red Air Force cargo
down here would feel about giving it
planes
to begin flying hay donated
one more try."
by
Illinois
farmers to South Carol·
The audience roared Its appro·
ina
last
week
at the behest of Rep .
val. One sign in the crowd read:
Carroll
Campbell,
R·S.C., who aiso
"Reagan '88. ",
~PI
the
president
to
schedule a stop
The 22nd Amen!lment, Iiitilled by
today
on
behalf
ol
hfs
,gubetnatorlal ,
the states in 1951. was approved in
bid.
1947 by a Republican Congress

S99.00

Wednesday to work with his
administration this fall on a
bipartisan bill providing an across·
the-board cut In tax rates to
eliminate a statE' revenue "wind·
fail" estimated at $189 million to
$432 million.
Senate President Paul E. Gil·
lmor. R-Port Clinton, said he
proJXlsed a tax cut two months ago
and accused Celeste of "loot·

dragging." However, he readily
agreed to work with the admlnlstra·
lion on the reduction.
CE'Ieste said the true impact on
Ohio will not be known until
Congress enacts the Tax Reform
Act of 19S6, probably In October.
The governor, who has hedged on
a tax cut until now, told reporters at
a briefing he made his decision
alter conferrtng Tuesday In Wa ·

GOP directing TV ads at Celeste
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPII -The
Ohio Republican Party has begun a
television campaign which could
last into September, bringing up old
npwspaper accounts of several of
Gov. Richard F. Celest&lt;?'s indicted
cronies. JX)Iitical allies and one
Ca blnet member.
The GOP Is hoping the campaign
will jog the public's memory and
mesh with the "Indictment fever"
which has been encircling a
Franklin County grand jury's
InvestigatiOn of wrongdoing by
Celeste administration personnel.
The :JO.second spot announce·
ments, entitled "Statehouse Update

- July ," feature a man posing as a
TV news anchor and quoting from
newspaper stories and editorials In
Cleveland, Dayton, Columrus and
Akron about "corruptionandcrlmi·
nal Indictments leading directly to
the governor's Cabinet. "
MenUoned are James Rogers,
the former director of thE' Ohio
Department of Youth Services;
former Ohio Building Authority
membl&gt;rs MarVIn L. Warner and
Arnold Pinkney; and Martin J .
Hughes, til&gt; internatiOnal vice
president of the Communication
Workers of America , who has
contrtooted to CE'Ieste'scampalgns.

Terry Casey, media oonsultant to
the Ohio GOP. said four different
ads are airing through next Wed·
nesday at a cost &lt;i $8J,!XX) in
Columbus. Cleveland, Cincinnati,
Dayton and Toledo.
Casey said 10 other spots dealing
with vark&gt;us Issues are ready to go,
and the TV campaign ·could
continue until early September.
Casey said til&gt; purt:ese ol the
commercials is Ill refresh people's
memories atnut the Celeste admln·
istration, and to present "a Uttle
more of an informative" report of
what may not have received
coverage In ~me parts of the state.

85 Buick Skylark
Less than 1?,0()0

1

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··

$7 600
" (

..

85 Olds Delta 88 84 Ford Bronco
~ dr. Roy1le, V-8, tilt,

,cruise, air, P. door lqcks,
split se1tS, !ess than 8,000
,miles.

I

Sl0,900
.
.

4 Wheel Drive, auto~. P.S., P.
B., two.tone paint, ~M/FM
· stereo. local one.o""er. .

satoo,·l

,.

,.

"'v

.

ADOLPH'S

,.
I

DA'IIY VALlEY

BUDGET CONSULTATION - Sen. Pete Domeltlcl, left, R-N.M., ciWnnan ol lbe Senate Bud&amp;'E!t
Commlltee, conferred Wemeada,y dh Sen. PhD

"At tM I·· tf tht P-roy-llat01 .....

POMEIOY, 011.

PH. 992-.255. ,, ' ,.

Gramm, Mexas, as Senate budld , leaders

I
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oc•~·
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.• • J...

Kim Shields. newly hired Meigs
County development director, re·
JX)rted at Wednesday's meeting
that he has been very busy since his
hiring and that the job thus far has
been rewarding. Only one person
has approached him for assistance
in the development area, he said,
oot hE' Is presently involved In three
self-initiated projects.
He told the board he would be in
attendance at next week 's meeting
of the ME'igs County Planning
Commission as well as a Commun·
ity Development Block Grant

training session upcoming tbP filii
of this month. Shields willlt!am al
the training session (t anyguldtlllle
chang~&gt;s in next year's Alndlnl
process. He said ll&gt; ropes to hold Nl .
first CDBG t:e bile healing as _ , •
after Labor Day as posslblr.
The board has been Informed by
Warren J. Smith. director ~ Ulf
Ohio Department rt Transpor1a·
lion. that Meigs County'salloclttiOII
of Fcdfrai·Aid Rural SetwdaJl'
Funds for 19!£ amounts to tlil,l72.
The fullls allocated IO&lt;'IICht'OUIIty
!Continued on Pagt&gt; 121

Eastem

hires 2
principals
Hiring of prtncipals lor Eutt'l'll
High School and Chester Elmll!n·
tary topped the agenda when Ulf
Eastern Board of Education nwt In
special session Monday night.
According to Susan Heines. board
president, the board hll'ed Danil'IL.
Apllng as principal at Eastl'l'll HJah
School and Catherine Bllll'ltlllr
.Johnson as prtnclpal 3t Cht'ster
Elementary. Each were gtwn a
two-year contract .
Apllng Is from Columbua. mar·
ried and the father of two chlldrm,
ages 22 and 19.
He received his bucheiOr's
gree In education tram the u~ .
slty of Toledo. his masters fnlnr
California State College. Loa Aft.
geles, Calif., and~~~~~-~­
till' UIIM!rslty of 'lbledo.
He was a lilnner 1111r111111
superlnlendent for CUITICulum II
Franklin County Schools. Cofum.
oos, fanner junlor hJ&amp;h ldlaDI
principal and ooordlnator ~ tllf
adult continuing education pro.
gram at Syracuse City Schtloal.
Syracuse, N.Y., and was a ill'lllft'
assistant to tilt' d!.J't&gt;etor or penon.
nel Wilmington City Schools. Wll·
mlngton,Del.
Mrs. Johnson is from Pomeroy
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs . .Ioiii
Blaettnar.
She received her bachelor'•
degree In 1982 trom Ohio Untvenlly
and her masters degree from lbe
University of Dayton.
She has been teaching at l'llr·
tland Elementary.
The board faUed to hire a ICIP!IIlf
teacher lor Eastern Htah School.
The vote was 3-2, wtth Jbn
Caldw&lt;?ll, Kathy Manlcke and
Susan Heines voting no and RotPr
Gaul and Jim Smith valil&amp; )ft.
John Reibel, county superlntflllt.
ent and Rlchard Roberts, Euten
&amp;&gt;hoots superlntendl'nt, - .
mended that Robert M. Glulbllnt
iJI&gt; hired for the position.
Heines noted that the bon.
cannot hlre a teacher without lbe
recommendation of the COUll~
superintendent. No other - .
menda tlons were made and 1J1t
meeting was adjourned, llr. ~a
said.

*'

LOVE MY DOG - Bethany Rou8h and her dog Minx, a lour rmnlh
old Elk Hound, wafted pailen~ on the steps of Bank One In Pomeroy,

t,;;a.."!l~.:,;,;:.;m:-...::=~"=~~.:. ·BetiiM!ylt

shington with Rep. Donald J . prepared.
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
Pease, D.Qhlo, a membl&gt;r of the tax
Jr.,
O.New Boston, was not avalla·
bill conference committee, who
ble
for romment. 001 Riffe has
Indicated something between the
House and Senate versions wlll always taken a JXlSition that
excessive state revenues should be
pass.
"We wanted to have a better frel returned to the taxpayers.
CE'Ieste said any tax cut should be
for lDw the Tax Reform BDI was
going to pfOCeell," said CelestE' in "fair and focused," with a halano&gt;
between indivldoal and corporate
explaining the deliJY.
The federal bill will remove some tax relief.
"Obviously, no state action can or
deductk&gt;ns and exclusions. Because
Ohio's Income taxes are basoo oo sll:luld be taken until the federal tax
federal taxable income, state tax reform package is signed Into law
and we've had a chance to examine
revenues will go up.
"Since Ibis amounts to an Its specific provisions carefully,
unvoted tax Increase, I want to said the governor.
Celeste said any changes should
work with you to develop legislation
assuring Ibis does not oo::ur," be "realistic and rPSponsibleso that
Celeste wrote to the legislativE' we don't cut into our current
revenue base and damagE' essential
leaders.
Gillmor said CelestE' was "bow· services." He cautioned that lhPre
lng to JXllltlcal pressure and going may be an economic slowdown
against what I'm ,sore was his llrst while Investors and others grasp
inclination, whlch would ha,•e been the Impact of the new tax law.
The governor also suggested that
to allow an automatic state tax
the General Assembly enact a tax
Increase and spend the money."
The Senate leader said the Senate credit for day care and raise the
Ways and Means Committee wUI Income ceiling from $15,&lt;XXJ to
start ll&gt;arlngs next month or In $16,500 for an Income tax exemption
early September on his wn tax cut lor senior citizen homrowners.
bill, which already Is being

goals.

WITH FliES"""'""""""' l1.7 4

I

of the county's 1987 Utter grant
application which is due in to the
state by Aug. 29. Powell said money
will be available In 1987 for a
feasibility study to determine U a
Utter recycling plant should be
considered In Meigs county. Money
for til&gt; plant would be available In
1988. Meigs County's 1987 litter
grant application will request a
continuation of present funding In
til&gt; neighborhood of $76,!XX), plus an
additional $25,!XX) for the three·
month feasibility study and plan·
nlng grant.

WASHINGTON (UPII - Split
decisions by House and Senate
money committees on raising the
cigarette tax to 24 cents a pack may
provoke confrontation over how to
comply with the Gramm-Rudman
budget law, which already needs
fixing.
The Senate Finance Committee
rejected President Reagan's anti·
tax stand Wednesday and agreed to
meet part of Its Gramm-Rudman
deftclt requirement by raising the
cigarette tax by one-third, or Scents
a pack, In October.
Hours later, however, the House
Ways and Means Committee reJected the same Increase. If til&gt; two
chambers now follow trelr respec·
live committees' will, the tax may
be a sticking point on how to raise
money to meet Gramm-Rudman

, 4 DR. LIMITED

'

•

A Multimadie Inc.

Cigarette tax hike sparks opposition

'

Edra
,Clean

cor61uet1 ellorla to npalr the Gi'MJnl.lladmiD
t.lancetl ~ law• . SeVfnl .JaWIIIIItn llave
Indicated Coqreu needll the lbreM of. 111lomltlc
spendlllg cuts to spur It to i'!Uice the deflel. (Ul'l)

Meanwhile, the Gramm·
Rudman law Itself Is under a cloud.
The Senate expected debate
today on a measure to repair the
balana!d budget act's automatic
cut feature - the key Ill spurring
Congnws to cut the deficit- that
was ruled. unconstitutional by the
Su(X'Eme Court.
Wltlllut the procedure, Congress

still is required to cut the deficit but
faces few consequences If it falls to
do~.

Sens. Phil Gramm, RTexas,
Warrell Rudman, RN.H., and
Ernest Hollings, D·S.C., have Intra·
duced a repa lr amendment to a bUt
needed to llf1 the federal debt
ceiUng from $2 trillion to $2.3
tr!Uion.
They want to fix the automatic
cut procedure by putting the
director of the Office of Manage·
nient and Budget In charge ot cuts.
The original method giving the
romptroUer general that role was
overruled because the comptroller
Is a legislatlveof!ICI'randthepower
to cut must be left U! the executive
branch.
The law was passed last year to
put the brakes on an1111al deficits
that have driven up the national
debt, and Its automatic procedure
kicks In If Congress fails to meet
decreasing deficit targets set for the
next live years.
Gramm said the repair amend·
men! was "a simple effort to put a
new wheel on the car. It Is not a
perfect wbeel, rut It Is a good,
lour-ply, steel-belted radial."
But.House Democrats have IJI&gt;en

dlvldE'd on th&lt;' idea, with 1Dft1t
saying Congrrss sllluld not br
trying to avoid final oodgt&gt;l-aJIIinl!
resJXlnslbllity.
:•
Wedn~ay. the Republican·
Finance CommitteE' voted 11-8 tv' ·
til&gt; fiscal 1987 cigarette tax hlkl-1111
part ot a SJ3.o billion lhrft'·)'t'llr .
packagE' needed to meet next Yt'ar's •
Gramm-Rudman deftclt laJ'11'1 0( ,
$144 billion.
But the Democratlc·ll'd Waya
and Means panel relected thtSftlt(
lncr~ase on a 284 vote despitp lbr~
mandate to cut the deficit by 111:1·
billion.
• '

Home delivery
price to increue
Home delivery (lltce e1 fte
DaJQo Sentinel wlllacr r " SUO to SUS per IWid g M eu
the llni week In AJICIIIL M~Mil
llni rale adJuolu 1111 Ill ~
yean.
Cantersloow~ r~ecelvu L •

"' I lit
Single copy P
d r
,
at 25 Cl!lllll w~ ..,. •
cents oa Sulllay.
cant polt

,I
• ..

Zl Centt
New•r

2 Sections 12 Pogoo

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Thursday, July 24, 1986

Reagan interested in ending
presidential succession rule

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -Gov .
Richard F. Celeste has recom·
mended that Ohio's Individual and
corporate taxes be reduced next
year to offspt any increases result·
lng from a ledPral tax reform bill
now before Congress.
The governor asked state leglsla ·
live leaders from both parties

Sale

A GALLON

enttne

Outgoing RGC president·. reviews progress

By LEE LEONARD

cleane.st!

»-++~+o·o

Special of the Wee•

Vot.36, No.6&amp;
Copyrighted 1986

UPI Statehouse Reporter

4X4 PICKUP ·
Black - one Of the

I

at y

•

Celeste seeks bipartisan support in cutting taxes

85 Ford F-2 50

CLEVELAND I UP! I - Thr City of Cifoveland and its pro piE' will
be I he subject of a nationwide television broadcast next month.
ABC-TV's "Good Morning Ame1ica" with hosts David Hartman
and Joan Lunden will be broadcast from Cleveland Aug. 22, ABC
officials announced Tuesday.
Officials of CIPV!'Iand's ABC affiliate WEWS·TV said in addition to
Its daily guest lineup of major newsmakcrsand celebrities, the show
will provide its nationwide audience with a closer look at Cleveland
and Its people. highlighting the city's resurgenCl' during the 1~'s.
"Good Morning America" airs Monday through Friday, 7 to9a.m.

•

MIAMI (UP!) - Buoyed by
SJXlnlanrous chants of "lour more
years," President Reagan has
come out foursquare lor a constilu·
tiona! amendment lifting the two·
term limit for chief executives.
Reagan firs! raised the idea a
year ago In a chat with Florida
Republicans In Tampa and has
mentioned it occasionally In Inter·
views since.
But In a speech Wednesday night
for the re-election campaign of Sen.
Paula Hawkins, R· Fia., the presi·
dent enunciated his JXlsltlon for the
first time In publ(c.
Reagan seemed surprised when
the partisan crowd, composed
largely of Cuban refugees, began
chanting the 1984 GOP campaign
cry: "Four more years'"
"You know that that's In the
Constitution' that It can't be, rut I
have to tell you something," he

Murder trial nears conclusion

lending Institution?''

l

bankruptcy petitiOn," thE' stall'
men! read. "I will explore LTV's
contention that bankruptcy laws
require a termination of health
coverage to retirees."

ASHTABULA, Obi!&gt; (UP!)- The'
Moving Wall, a half-!1(:8}e replica of .
the Vletn~W Memorial in Washing·
ton. wUI be on display at the ·
Ashtabula campus of Kent State :.
University through July 29 .
More than 250,!XXl people are
expected to view the wall durlng its
first visit to Ohlo, said Thomas
Chubb; chairman of the FreOO!m :
Shrine Committee.
. ·
Nearly :00 people attended. ce;
remonles marking the local open·· ·
1ng ot the display Thes4ax· ntght. . :
The wall, whl,ch Is llgbted. end
open to the publlc_24 hours a day, :
consists of 74 plexlglass frames, ·
containing plaques with the names· :
of 58,022 u.s. soldiers kllled.or ils!ed :
as misSing·It! the Vietnam.war:. .
Nightly memQrial SllfVIces are
scheduled durlng the wall's week-i
long stay In northeast Ohio, said
John J. Kover Jr., state service ·
officer for til&gt; Veterans of Forelgri
•
Wars.
During Tuesday's service,
membl&gt;rs of VIE'Inam Veterans of,'
America Chapter 231 placed
wreaths near the display. Other.
events planned during the WC('k,
Include a patriotic band roncert ·.
tonight and a JX)etry reading by.
VIetnam veteran Steve Mason on
Saturday.
The waD, created by John DeVItt.
and Initially displayed in October .
1984 in Tyler, Texas, will be·
transported to Las Vegas. Nev., for
Its next stop, Aug. 5-11.

�Thursday, July 24. 1986

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERES1ll OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~rh

~m~ ,...,.-.__.~._.,.....~o.~
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The United Press Int ernatio nal, Inland Dally Press
Associal!on and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be il'Ss than .- nl words
long. All lette rs are s ubject to 9:1ltlng and nw st be s~nal wit h namr , address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publi shed . Lelfers should tx&gt; in
good taste, addressing Issues, not pE'rsonalltlt&gt;s .

Letters to editor

WASIDNGTON- Back oo Dec.
3, In its third opinion of the 1985
term, the Supreme Court decided a
case involving tbe calculation of
benefits In Michigan under the
federal program of Aid to Families
with Dependent Children. It was oot
a case of monumental Importance ,
but this Is bow too court came
down:
Justice Rehnquist wrote a majority opinion, supported by Chief
Justice Burger l'md Justices White,
Powell and O'Connor. Ju stice
Brennan, joined by Justices Marshall, Blackmon and Stevms, liled
a dissenting opinion. Justice Marshall, joined by Brennan and
Stevens, flied anotber dissenting
opinion. Justice Blackmun, joined
by Brennen, Marshall and Stevens,
filed yet another dissenting opinion.
Brennan voiced his "strenuous
disagreement" with t~ majortty
and denounced the "fundamental

lnco~rence" of Rehnquist's view
of the 11th Amendment. Marshall
criticized the majority opinion as
" Incorrect. " Blackmon said it was
''sterile.''
A week later, in a case involving
the right to counsel, the warring
factions were reversed. This time It
was 5-4 for the liberal bloc, with
Brennan In the majortly with
Marshall, Blackmun, Powell and
Stevens. Chief Justice Burger,
dissenting, protested that the "bizarre result" of t~ majortty 's
opinion would be to create a new
"right" for habitual criminals.
"With all deference," he said,
meaning no deference at all,
Brennan 's opinion " turns the Sixth
Amendment on Its head ." Burger
found this "Inexplicable," a kind of
"judicial aberration."
After those exchanges In De·
cember, it was downhill all t~ way.
In the term that ended on July 7,

this fractious court decided rr cases
by votes of 5-4. The conservative
bloc, led by Burger and Rehnquist,
prevailed In 22 cases, the liberals in
12. In three cases the troops went
every which way. Amongt~ Issues
tl)ll t turned on a single vat e were
amrtlon, affirmative action, the
law of libel , the admissibility of
aerial photographs In evWence, the
free exercise of rellglon, and the
validity of state laws p.~nishing
homosexual sodomy.
The rr cases decided by 5-4 votes
oompare with 25 such votes In
1983-81. In 1984-85, the court spllt 5-4
In 15 cases and divided 4-4 (because
of Powell's absence owing to
illness) In eight others. While the
number of :'&gt;-4 divisions was going
up, the number of unanimous
decisions was going down , from 61
in 19&amp;'1-81, io 53 In 1981-&amp;5, to 46 this
past term.
The figures remind us once more

Tribute to the teams
A soort time ago, June 29, 1986,
my wife Allee and I drove to the
Seniors Citizen Center in Pomeroy
to attend a celebration mooring Dr.
Roger Daniels and his devoted wife,
Helena Phillips Daniels, on t~ir
Golden Wedding Anniversary.
As I extended my congratulations
to him, I sat down beside him for a
few mlnutes to talk. I asked him If
he remembered the good ball
games we used to play up oo
Skinner's Hill back of w~re ~was
rom and raised. He said he sure
dld. I then asked him K he
remembered those on the Kerrs
Run team. He told me he didn't
remember them all because that
was over sixty years ago.
This stirred my curtoslty and
when I came home I began to
compile a memory record of tmse
who played on those my hood Jm ms
of Kerrs Run against MlnersvilieWelshtown .
Not being able to come up with
the names &lt;i. all of t~m I !J:&gt;gan to
place a few phone calls to Art
Skinner, George Skinner and my
·cousin Russ Brown, for their aid in
completing t~ Jist. Others I would
like to have called but they are not
around to hear their phone ring.
Below Is a partial lis! of those
teams alter sixty some years of

;. ~ ·memories.
::--· KERR'&gt; RUN - Roger Daniels,
Arthur Skinner, Paul Casto, Bill
Rees, George Pharis, Jack Misner,
' : Max Harper, Rich Bearhs, Bill
Burnell .
MINERSVILLE ·WELSHTOWN
· - - Ronald Grindley (Buck), Hiram
- Flsber, Oris Maag, John Maag,
· Foster Thomas, Ha rold Brown Sr ..
.Weaver Wolfe, Clyde Brown , Raymond Brown, TheodoreCuste-, Asa
Custer, Clifford Phillips.
I will now Jell how our ball games
were played In tmse days. We
didn't have a ball diamond. We
played on the crown of Skinner's
Hill, which was used at times ilr a
picnic ground. It was a spoJ on top of
a high hili In a cow pasru re. with
home plate unde r a gianJ oak t rff' .
As much time was spenl in
retrieving the ball as there was in
playing the game.
We had no back stop. That is
where myself and I he at il'f boys, a
little too young to mak e Ihe tm m,
came In: Clint Hood , Russell
Brown, Jake Thomas, Melvin
Thomas, George Skinner, Hugll
Daniels, Rollin Wolfe, Hershel Rose
and Brad Maag. (Many ot~rs but
their names are faded au 1 In my
memory) . We were too young for
the main string but we were part of
the team, anyhow.
Our job was bal my, wate- boy
and ali around flunky. Our part of
the game was to back up t~
catcher, by chasing pitched balls he
failed to catch , and by chasing foul
balls that rolled over the hill. Every
thing would go airighl until some
one hit a foul ball into left field .
When this happened t ~ ball would
roll over the hill down In t~ hollow
to the house w~re .Jerry Roush
now Uves . The game would then
have to be stopped for amut tm
minutes, the time It took lor one c1.
:. us to go get t~ ball and bring It
back.

said, we were lucky If three gloves
could be mustered up among the
whole team . All the boys t~n wore
caps - not bail caps. Our caps
served to protect our heads, keep
t~ sun out of our eyes, a fish hook
tackle box and in these occasions to
be taken off and used as a ball
glqve. We hardly knew what a hard
covered ball was. Back then we
used balls thai were made out of
yarn, wrapped around a hard
rubber ball In the center. Our
mot~rs then would sew and stitch
t~se I~ best they could so the ball
would rot come apart when batted .
Very seldom would a ball last a
whole game. Once in ,_ while
friction tape might be used for a
temporary cover but this would
ooon tail off.
The game would start by some
onP on each team being selected to
represmt it . One then would toss
the ba I to the other and he would
grasp it close to t~ top. Then hand
over hand by each my untll the top
end of the bat was reached. The
hand clasping the Jop end of the bat
with enough grip on the end to throw
It back over his head, his team
would be t~ first to bat.
Those were good games. The
importanl part of each was that no
one long rem em bered who won the
game. There were no Dads and
Morns on the cheering lines to fuss
and light over an error being called
by the umpire. Mom was at home
getting supper for her boy when he
came home tired and hungry or
se~&lt;ong up a ball for au r next game.
Dad was at work or working In the
garden or mending Ihe fence. Meigs
County sure needs a lot of fence
mending today .
In all these games I never
remember there being a fight . A
little fussing and arguing but tha t
kept the game excit ing .
I often think of those ga mes In
lOOse primitive days, compared to
loose of today. Now bats , balls,
gloves, caps, T. shirts and uniforms
are supplied by soliciling money.
The field has to be leveled; slriped
and sewn in grass by Jhe town.
Winning the game by Jhc highest
score by what ever means seems to
be I~ goal, most of the time, even if
by poodlng t ~ grades.
In our games every one

came

away a winner. We Jhat were not
old enough to make Jhe team evm thougll errand mys - were
partoftheteam. Weaiicameaway
thrllled by a good afternoon of fun .
We not only had a nice day - we
made it Jhal way. Thai was what
I~ game was all amut. Memories
tha t have lasted for some sixty
some· years.
Roger, even though you were
handicaped, you were the one that
kept the team together, as George
Skinner told me, now and !hen
making a oome run . You have
played a real game and in my books
you have made the HALL OF
FAME.
Wben I wrote In the Meigs County
History Book, of Minersville, back
In 1979 and stated the Mlnersvtlle
had produced some real people you
were ooe of t ~ many I had In mind
at that time. Even trough you were
on Kerrs Run team, I am proud that
you lived just Inside the western
Then too, at times there would be
mundry on Route 1241n Mlnersvtlle
anotber cause of a slight delay. One . to be ooe of its citizens.
d the mys on the Kerrs Run team
You have made a real hit In the
:Stuttered. When a fuss !J:&gt;gan his
game of Ufe tha 1 few people can
stuttering Intensity would Increase
HAPPY
m a t c h
· as be became more excited in
ANNIVERSARY.
: arguing. After a little cussing and
Compiled and written by
threatmlng by ot~rs on the team
Victor L ·Berger Brown
tiE game would continue.
42900 St. Rt. 124. Box 26
In tmse days, as Art Skinner
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

_:Today in history
By UnMed Press InternatiOnal
:. • Today is Thursday, July 24, the mth day of 1911i with 160 to follow.
The moon is moving toward its first quarter.
The morning slars are Mercury and Jupiler .
The evening stars are Venus, Mars and Saru rn .
; :: · ThOSE' born on this date are under the sign of Leo. They Include South
:. 'American revolutionary and statesman Simon Bolivar in 17&amp;'1 American
-~ aviation pioneer Amelia Earhart In ~.feminist and fonner' New York
.. Democratic Congresswoman Bella Ab.zug In 19:!1 (age66), comedian Ruth
. :Buzzl In 19.13 (age 50), and actors Chris Sarandon In 1942 (age 441 and
Robert Hays In 1947 (age 39).
·

i~ G!T17.E.N'5 &lt;f N\Ct\OO)tt.
Wf:.NT WK~"T W£ b.l.l-Wfi.NT.!!

By United Press International
Ron Hassey beat out an Infield
single with two out and the bases
loaded in lhe lOJh inning to score
Willie Randolph Wednesday and
give the New York Yankees a 3-2
victol)' over U1e Texas Rangers.
The Yankees pulled within tl!ree
ga mes of the fi rst-place Boston RNI
Sox in Ihe American League East.
Ttandoiph's pinch-hit lliple with
onr ou t in the lOth finished l 'harUe
Hough, 9-5, who had allowed JJu·ee
hit s over the first nine innings .
Mtlch William s replaced Hough

of t~ crucial role played by a
handful of mortals in shaping the
supreme Jaw of Jhe land . Recently
the evangelist Pat Robertson, a
pJtmtial Republican candidate for
president, has attempted to revive
a long-abandoned vlew of the
Supreme Court's role as Interpreter
oft~ Constitution. Robertson says
the court is nol supreme; rather,
t~ Constitution Is supreme, and
Congress and the president are
co-eq ua!s In pronouncing on the
constitutionality of laws.
This Is a nice simplistic view, and
Rotertson Is a nice simplistic
fellow, but his tender theory wilts
under the harsh sun of reality. The
farrous observation of Charles
Evans Hughes In 1910 remains
endurtngly true: "We live under a
Constitution, but the Constitution Is
what the judges say It Is." This past
tenn, In a 5·4 case Involving The
Philadelphia Inquirer, the First
Amendment's guarantee of freedom of t~ press was broadly
construed. In another 5-4 case,
Involving advertising by a Puerto
Rico casino, the amendment was
narrowly construed. How come?
Justice O'Connor joined tbe liberal
bloc In the fanner and sided with
the conservatives In the latter.
Members of the court detest the
kind of shorthand analyses that
categorize "liberal" and "conservative" factions, but such unrefined
distinctions help us to understand
I~ court as a human and political
lnst itution. During the past term the
court handed down opinions In 154
cases. Burger and Rehnqulst disagreed only 16 times ; at the other
end of t~ spectrum, Brennan and
Marshall disagreed only 17 times.
The liberal bloc won a few big
ones. notably on affirmative action
and abortion, but It was rot a happy
year for Brennan, Marshall, Black·
mun and Stevens. Together they
cast 199 dissenting votes, compared
with 142 in the previous term. There
is oo reason to suppose the situation
will change when Rehnquist succeeds Burger as chief justice and
Antonln Scalia moves onto tbe
bench. Come October, when tbe
new term begins, the constitutional
quarreling will continue as before.

the cou11 who thou ght they had
carried the da y and had lnvaii·
daled, in onr fell swoop, the
anli·sodomy laws of 24 states.
Kamen's explanalion of Powell's
original view of the case is painfully
c lear. According to Kamen. four
just ices, Jed by Harry A. Blackmun, were prepared 10 ho ld "that a
const itutional righl Jo privacy
protects homosexual s," at leas!
UnlPSS "t hai st ate tcanl SOOW
important reasons" to the co ntrary.
Now , if you happen to have a copy of
the Constitution handy 1any World
Almanac co nJains itl. you will
sea rch it in vain for any referenct' to
a "right to priva cy," Involving
homosexual conduct or anything
else. Never mind: in recent de·
cades a majority of Jhe court has
held that it is I here anyway. and has
been gradually enlarging it.
But four Is not a majority of 1he
Supreme Court . Fear not! "Though
Powell did rot agra&gt; with the
t above 1 rea son ing," Kamen
wriles. "he voiced sufficient dis·

taste for Jhe anti -sodomy law that
1'0' agreed to provide Jhc crucial
fifth vote for an overall decision
striking the Georgia statule."
And t~re, in all it s splendor, you
have as gross an example of what is
called "judicial legislation" as you
are ever likely io see. Kam en goes
on to underscore the point: "The
sourcrs sa id Powell would vote Jo
repeal anti-sodomy laws if he were
a leglslalor. " Nol being one, his firs!
umpu lse was to repeal them
anyway, by casting his crucial vote
with four colleagues who claimed to
have found a "rlghl to privacy"
covering I he matter somewhere in
lhe Const itulion.
To be sure, In this particular case
Powell had a lasl ·mlnute change of
heart: "He was reluct a nt Jo have
the court recognize rrore special
reights not spelled oo 1 in the
Constilution , the sources said." We
mu st te graterul for Justice
Powell's last -minute decision nol to
join Blackmon and the others in
wril lng more brand-new provisions

ATHE NS - Lancaster continued
it s domina lion of the Eighth DistJict
American Legion baseball Jouma .
ment with an 8-4 championship win
over Me ig s ·herr Wednesday.
Lancaster, going inlo thr finals
with Sf'vrn past champion s hi~s
under li s bell, rae ked up another
title in relatively typical stylr to

mount to going to a Communist
rally . Helms wants the a mbassa dor sent hom e for "planting the
American Flag Into the heart of a
Communist ·activity ."
Before you get ups et at Jes se
Helms, Jet's look a t II from his
sta ndpoint. Chile Is one oft~ few
so lid Fascist governmenis we've
got In South America. You don'
turn your back on a head of sta t e
just because he keeps tear-gas·
sing his country's citizens.
Is J esse Helms interferrlng
with our South American poli cy
by giving aid and comfort to Augusto Pinochet at this time? Of
course he Isn't. But the senator
couldn't have dropped In at a
more auspicious moment . The U.
S. State Department has been
trying to persuade the dictator
general to get his country to
s tr aighten up and fly right, and
this was making Plnochet feel
lousy. Whe n your troops are ac cused of kidnapping and jailing
people it's always good to talk to
a senator who understands your
problems.
You can fault Sen. Helms for
many things , but not his foreign
relations know-how. In complaining to the Chilean press
about our ambassador, Sen.
Helms said that Ambassador
Barnes had advised the State Department about the burnings of
the two young people "In a manner calculated ID produce criticism of the Chilean regime."
That says It all. Helms Is going

to do every thing to get Barnes
ou t. If he succeeds, there Is only
one person In the United States
who Is worthy of filling the post,

movr

two-run homers, and Tony Phillips
added three hits and three RBI, to
power the A's to a series sweep of
the Red Sox , who dropped their
fourlh stra ight, their longest losing
slreak of the year, and seventh In
the last eighl games .
AI Seattle, J esse Barfield hit a
two-run mmer, and Jim Clancy
combined wllh Dave Steib on a
six-hiller to lead the Blue Jays.
Clancy. 11-5. has won his last five
decisions. in his last six starts. Stieb
earned his first major league save.
Mike Moore fell to 6-10.

AI Cleveland. Ken Schrom
streJched his ~&lt;mning streak to a
major league-lead ing e ight games,
and Andre Thornton belted the
250th oomN of his cara&gt;r and
scored Jhra&gt; runs 10 le ad the
Indians. Schrom. 11 ·2. pitched his
third complete game. Hr rrJ ired 17
of the las! 18 baiters and has oot lost
s ino.• dropping an 8-1 decision to
Toronlo on May 25.
At Det roil , pinch hitt er John
G rubb hit his third home run in four
at -bats- a sixth inning gra nd slam
- Jhal pJw&lt;'rl'd tht' '11gprs. Jack

Morns. 11·6. los t his bid for a foUl 111
slraight shuloul and hacl his
consf'cutive

into stat p tourn anwnt

gelting on via an error. Lanca sJer
rciicfer Dave Conley got Phil
Bailey to fly OUI IO the SIDI1Stop tO
end t~ threat .
'I'll£' defending champs too k Jhe
lead for keeps in the srvenlh by
scoring two runs when Mike Rotkls
tripled with Ollf' on and then scored
himself on a two-out single from
;\ian BeavNs.

Coach .Jack WrlkPr ' s Mf'i~s r rrw
camr back to tiC' the srorC' at 4-4 i.n
the sixth as they smred llteir las t
two runs ·whilP sPnding flight
lxlttrrs to Jhe plat&lt;·.
8!'ckrr sl artnl tht• rail\ wilh a
lea d-off single and th r·n " ·ith 111u
ou ts Collin s slapped a ba St' knock
followed by walks Jo Seolt MiiiPr

Lanca ster added two insurance
runs in t~ ninth on sin gles Mike
Mck£(' and Chris Rosebf'rl)' along
wilh a pair of walks. Dave
Amburgey came on in relief of
Barn'llm with two outs.
Meigs got a ninth innmg hil from
Bc&gt;Sell but could put nothing
together that resembled anolher
rally.

Other hit s by the MeigsCountians
m the oullng weresmgles by Bissell
and Gheen in the third and one by
Becker in the seventh .
Bissell led Jhe overall Meigs
hitting attack with a tbree for fi ve
day while Gheen was two for four
official trips to the plate and Becker
went two for five.
DursJ struck out one and issued

L:.mc&lt;.~ s tf• r

and onr-l hi rd inni ngs on ttw mouncl

go\ on thr scorclx&gt;m t 1
with J run in 1hP sf'Cond and tliC'n

while Bart11Jm fa nnrn 111 and
walked three.
Meigs had gotlen to the cham ·
pionship final s by defraling Glau s
ter 13-1 Monday.
Lancaster goes into Jhr state
tournament with a 28-16 overall
record.

took 1hr lead wi th t hrl'&lt;' more in I IK·
third on two si nglrs and a pair ol
wa lks off Meigs starter Br ian Dlll sl
hrfon · Mik&lt;' Bartrum can1c nn in
rrlirf to put out thr firr .
I .inC"scor·,·:
l.an cast('r . tm rm 202- 8-11-2
Me igs .
.. 2m tll'2 rm-4-lU 7

two ba ses on ball s dunng his two

FRIDAY, JULY 25th
SATURDAY, JULY 26th

a nd Chris I&lt; E' nnrd~' cmd Barlmm

Lions
ace Sims
•
retires
By United Press International
It was a tal c of Jhr('(' running

back s at NFL trainin g camps
Wmnrsdav as DetroiJ's Billv Sims
rl'tired, the New York Giants Joe
Morris pra cticed after a brief
holdout and John L. Williams,
Seattle' s lop draft choice, si gn('(].
Sim s, who lxx'amP thr Lions'
a ii-limr leading m sht•r in jus! fi1·r
pro Sl'asons. an nouncf.'d his rrlil'£•-

mcnt art cr failing a I raining camp
physical becauSP of a se,·r t elv
injured kn('('.
Sims has noJ played since he
injured the knl'&lt;' aga inst lhl'
Minnesota Vikings on Oct . 21. l!JH-1.
The fo n11 er Heisman Troph~
winne r from Oklahoma wiiicollt~·J
on an insurance policy he look oul
wilh Llovd' s of Lond on in 19!\l Jo
guard dga inst a cnn'&lt;'l'-r lu.ling
inju ry.

Thr Lions l'irnnrsd av signcd
rormrr Lou isiana Sta iC' running
bm·k C;m)· .James. t hPir S('('OIId·

round pick. to a lou r· year cont racl
n ·po•1ed to be wonh $1 million.
Firsl·round pick Chuck Long. a
quarterback from Iowa. is st il l
unsignm .
A t Plmsanlvillr. N. Y., MotTis.
who gained a club r('('OI'd 1. :~'l6
v ards and scorrd 21 10urhdowns

·last vt•ar. reported Jo ca mp and
went throu gh d1 ills with the (;ian is.

The Daily Sentinel

.,.

Gand RSHIIIG UCEIISES,

~ l 'SI'S 11 ~960)
A Oh•l.. lon l)f )(ultlmPdia . lnr .

·uCfl'l-TOBACCtl ~~ and •

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"Have you biHin listening to those people who
say It's panic time In stocks and bonds?"

innings

tl"·

mov«l to thiiTI on n ba sl' kmd by
Ed Collin s. The inning l'Tilhl as
Lancas ter hurler Dan Sidd lt•
fanned Dave Lockha rt.

and that is the senaW'f himself .
Would Helms take t(? Thai's the
burning question they're asking
in Santiago.

I

scorelf'Ss

streak e nded a t 31 when Mi nnrso w
scored an unea rned run wit lo ut a
hit in the first.
.
At Ba lt imore. Steve Balbo1ti and
Frank 1\'hitr each hit 111u · r\111
oomrrs. and Willi!' 1\'ilson added a
two-run double to power
f1oyais .
Balboni's :!Jth mmrr )J?;nited a
!our-111n s&lt;X"ond inning off Seolt
McGregor. 6-10. Mark Cubicza , 4-5,
Pa med lhf' viet on· wit h 4 2-3 iJmiflgo..;
ol no-tut rf'lirf.

RobhiP Young was IJIC'n SJ fl' un a
riPkl1•r's choicP, stole• Sl'(_'Und ami

into the Constilution.
But now you sec w l'(y Bismarck
was oo opposed to ieltlng the public
know oow sausage is madP.
Someone In the Blackmon faction ,
outraged at losing Ihe Georgia case
because of Powell's change of
mind, twilches back the curtain
that normally cloaks the court 's
decision-making processes. and we
glimpse Justice Powell Initially
agreeing to vole to kill tbe Georgia
anti-sornsoy law merely because of
his "distasJe" for it, even though he
"did nol agree with I~ reasoning"
whereby it was declared
unconstitutional.
"It is revolting,'' declared Justice
Blackmun In his dissent, "to have
no better reason for a rule of law
than thai so It was laid down at Jhe
time of Henry IV." Perhaps; but it
is at least equally revolting to have
no better reason for overturning a
rule of Jaw than tliat a key justice
ha s such, "distaste" for It that he
"would vote to repeal titl if he were
a legislator."

Berry's World

Fletcher, who extended his hitting
streak to 19 games, singled to score
McDowell. Fletcher moved to third
on O'Brien's single to right. Larry
Parrtsh doubled to left -center.
scoring Fletcher and moving
O'Brien to third .
In other games , Oakland drubbed
Boston 9-2. Toronto whipped Seattle
6-2 Cleveland routed Chicago 7-2.
ne'troit clobbered Minnesota 12-2,
a nd Kansas City stopped Baltimore
7·3.
At Oakland, Calif .. Carney Lans·
ford went 4-for-5, including a pair of

competition.
Meigs, going into thf' finals with a
16-14 sia Je. would ha\'P had tudcfral
thf' Fairtieid Countian s twJ&lt;'e tow in
thr di sl rict title
That wa s nol Jo be.
Early on. il appearrn Mcti(S
might giv0 Lanrast4?r pmblPms dS
it jump&lt;'d oul to a ~ 0 fi rst innin g
lead on a onr-oul s ingle by B!l•nl
Bissell Joliowm by ponniP llr&lt;'kcr's
tripiP and ;1 singlf' bJ Scut L;tn'('ll

The buming__________A_rt_B_uc_hwa_l_d
No matt e r how ba d a military
dl cta lor you a re you ca n always
find a friend in Sen. J esse Heims .
Gen. Augus to Pinochet, Chile 's
s trongman , is devot ed to the senator and vice versa. Even when
It comes to setti ng people on fire ,
the senator is In the genera l' s
corner
Recenliy a teen- a ge boy and
his girlfriend were doused with a
flamm able substance In Santi·
ago and burned - the boy died
a nd the girl Is fighting for her
life .
The crim e was so heinous that
the senator was one of the few
people who co uld find anything
good Ia s ay about the Plnoch el
government.
As a matter of fact, w~n Helms
wmt to visit the good general In
Santiago to pay his respects , he
told reporters that he was In .
censed - not at what had happened, but at the way It had been
reported . He said, "I am ashamed
of the media In my couniry."
When questioned about a $500 mllllon suit Pinochet was threatmlng
against American newspape-s,
Helms said, " I assured President
Plnochet that the major media In
the United States have a tmdency
to be very unlair to anti-Com·
munis t governments ."
What really bolted the senator
was that the U.S. ambassador ID
Chile, Harry Barnes, attended
the youth's funeral (which was
tear-gassed by the government).
This, Helms decided , was tenta -

and retired pinch-hitter Gary Ro·
enicke on a fiybaii to shallow righl
fi eld. He then walked Don Mal ·
tingly and Dave Winlle]d intentionally to bring up Hassey . The
designated hill er hit a slow gounder
to first baseman Pete O'Brien wWe
of the bag. Williams did not cover
fir st and Has"&lt;'y beat O'Brien tothr
bag.
Texas tied the score 2·2 in the
sixth inning wilh four conSPCulivf'
hils off Yankees starter Joe Niekro.
Oddibc McDowell began the rally
with a single and stole second . Scott

Meigs Legion is eliminated, 8-4, by Lancaster

Reinventing the law______w_ill_iam_A._R_u.s_he_r
An article in the Washington Post
of July 13 affords a fascinating and
almosl uprecedented look al Jhe
pro(.'('SS by which Supreme Court
justices. or a J any rate some of
them, arrive at thei r o!tm exrraordinary concl usions .
The story, by Pos t staff writer AI
Kamen, invloves Jhe alleged origi ·
na l decision of Justice Lewis Powell
to vote with four other justices to
overturn Georgia's a nti-sodomy
staru te, a t least so far as it applies to
two males. and his subsequen t
change of mind. tPowell actua lly
wound up voting with Jhe other four
justices to uphold the conslituttonal·
ity of the Georgia law. 1
From Inte rnal evidence. it would
appear that Kamen' s story is
probably based on information
obtained from a law clerk to one of
the justices In the mlnority in the
Georgia case. If Powell did indeed
send "a brief memo to his fellow
justices saying that he was switch·
ing his vote," it must ha ve come as
a terrible shock to those on and near

The Daily Sentinei - Pagf!- 3

NY Yanks, Indians close in on fading Boston Red Sox

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Thursday. July 24, 1986

Fractious court _________Ja_m_es_J_.K_i_:_lp_at_ric_k_

111 Court Street

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

:!6 Wff'kS. .. ..
$29.12
52 Wf'f'ks . ...... .... ........
..$58.24
Outs ide Mtlllll Counly
13 Wrek s ....
........ ... ......... $18.20

26 WC&lt;'k s ................................ SJ.\.10
52 Weeks ....................... ,.......... $67 .00

t

SILVER·BRIDr,E PLAZA GALLIPOLIS, OH.

�•

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 24, 1986
Thursday, July 24, 1986

Reds, Giants continue second half slide

Scoreboard .. .
Vestee )ackson to a series of tour

Majol'l!

1-year contracts.

Cleveland -

NATIONi\L LEAGUE
By llnlted Pre~s lntematlonal

East

L Pel.

W

Yo rk .
Mo nt real..

63 28
48 42
&lt;6 46
41 52
40 51
351 53

,'\('w

Philadelphia .
ST Louis ..... .
Chicago .. ...

Pittsburgh .

Detro it - Signed running back

GB

.692

.533 14 ~~

17 \'.

_50()

.441 23 -

.440 23
.418 25

~3

Los Ange les. ..
ATlanta.. .... .

H
43

48

3
6
8

.473

8h
9~~

Hou ston 4, Mont real 3, llinnJngs

Los Angeles 6, Pittsburgh 5
Nf'w York 3, Cinc innati 2

HousTon !ScOTt 9-61 aTPhiladelphia
1Rawley JJ -61, 7 35 p.m.
Los A n~ e l es !Valenzuela 12·61 at

Pittsburgh !Wa lk 4-51, 7:35p. m.

Montreal !Tibbs 4-61 at Cincinnati
1Cu ll lckson 7-61,7:35 p.m .
Friday's Games
Los Angr lrs at Chicago
So n Fra ncisco at Plnsburgh, night
Hous ton 1.1 1 Phlladelp hia, night
Sa n Dargo a1 St. Louis. nigh t
\lrw York a t Atlant a. night
Montrra l at Cinrinnati. night

LEAGUE

East

W

L Pet.

CIP\'I'lnd
Toron to.
Da lt1morr .
LX' I mit .

Mi!V.'&lt;JUkP ..

GB

.606

.573
.55-1

.536
.532
.521
.473

3
5
6'-2
7
8
12 h

West
~

Cal ifo rniJ
Tt'Xl.IS

47

KansJ s Cin·

44
48

.532
.495

.') J

.'ioJ

~1

.452

3~1~
o~'2
7~~

Chica go

H
~2

Scalllr
Oakland

43 .\4 .44.1 R\1.
-tO 57 .412 ll'h

.1~ ~6 .411 11 \6
" 'edn('sda)·'s Results
·' rw York 3. Trxa s 2. 10 inni ngs
Oak land 9. Bos!o n 2
Toro nto ll. SPall I£' 2
CIP\'('I and 7. Chicago 2
[}(&gt; t rait 12, Minnrsot&lt;J 2
K a nsa~ f'it\· 7. Baltimorr 3

Minnt'SOiil

C.Jtifnrn ia · .1.

Dave Burnett lor failing physica ls:
signed free-agent defensive end
Dwigh\ Bingham.
Miami - Sign ed de !Pnslve l!neman

T.J. Turner.
Minnesota - Offered a contract to
defensive end Curtis An&lt;X&gt;rson.

New Orleans - Signed free agent
runnin g bark Ea rl Ca mpbell
Philadelphia - Signed defensive
St. Lou is- Signed linebacker Tim

St . Louis 4. sa n F rancisco 3
Thursd ay's Games

57 .17
55 41
51 41
52 45
50 44
49 45
44 49

Dlno Hacke11 and Aaron Pearson to a
ser iPs of 1· yC'ar contrac ts.

tackle Jim Auer .

Phi la delphia 4. Atlanta 2

Bos 1on
~&lt;·"- York

terms with tight rnd Jeff Parks.
Kansas City - Signed linebackers

David DeSilva and offensive tackle

50 .468
51 .457
Wednesday's Resuhs
San Diego 7. Ch icago 5

,\MERIC~N

Ga rry JamPs.
Green Bay - Guard -tack iP Ed
Obrovac rt&gt;tl red.
Houston - Agret'd to co ntract

New York Jets - Waived kicker

West

Hou ston ....... .. o3 42 .55H
Sa n Francisco . 5() 45 .526
Sa n Diego. .. .... 47 48 .495
Cincinnati..

Cornerback Paul

Dom broskl ret Ired .

Mitwauk('C' 2. 10

innings
Thursday'!&lt;i Games
Kan ~,1s \il\' 1Bunkhf'ad .1-~1 a t
[){'i roi t i0'N r~l1 · 41. 7·35 p.m.
Chicago 1 Co wlf'~· 5-51 a t Baltimore'

rF iana,gan 4·6r. 7.:1J p.m .
CJrvf'IJnd INir kro 7 61 at Trxa s

1Lov nd0 111. 8:.15pm

f'rida)' 's Games
at r'\f'w York. ni ght
K&lt;wsas City iJ t DPtroit. nigh!
M in nf'~OI;~

Luras.
Sa n Dirgo- Wa ived running backs
Casey Brown and Ralph Stockemer:

signed gua rd Jeff Walker.

San Fran cisco- Waived offensive

tack le Allan Kennedy.
Sea ltie - Signed luUback John L.
Williams . guards Edwin Bailey and
Jon Borchardt and linebac ker Sam
MP r rlmen

Lea del'!!
Runs Batted In
National League - Sch mid t, Phil
73; Carter, NY 70; Davis , Hou and
Parker. Cinn 66; Brooks, Mt158.
American LPagup- Canst-co, Oak

79; Bell. Tor 75; Joy ner. Ca l 74;
Barfield. Tor 72; Mattingly , NY 70.
Stolen Bases

Nat ional League -Colem an, StL

61; Davis, Cl n 47; Raines, Mtl 44;
Duncan, LA 35: Dora n, Hou 33.
American Lt&gt;agur -

Hen der scm,

NY 55; Cangelosi. Chi 40; Pettis, Cal
and Wilson. KC 23; Reynolds, Sea 22.
Pitching Victories
Na tional League- Fernan&lt;Pz, ~y

12-2; Valenzuela, LA 12-6; Knepper.
Hou 12-7; Ojeda. NY ll2; Krukow,
SF' and flaw ley. Phil JJ -6.
America n League- Clemrns, Bas

16-2; Rasmussen. NY 12·2: Boddic ker . Ba it 12-5; Six pil r hers tied

wir h 1] victories.
Earned Run Average
(Based on 1 inning x number of
gam&lt;'S Pac h·team has played \
Na fional l eag uf:'- HonPycutl , LA

2.15; Ojeda, NY 2.26; Scott. Ho u 2.34 ;
Rhoden. Pitt 2.40; Forsch , StL 2.44.

AmPrlcan leagup- CIPm ens, Bos

259; Higuera , Mil 2.75; Darwin, Mil
2.83; Wilt, Ca l 3. 03; McCaskill. Ca l

117.

Strikeouts
Na I ional League - Sco t!, Hou 17t
Va lenzuela, LA 142; Ryan, Hou ]]6;
Welch , LA JJ.l; Smith, Atl1ll.

By Unlled Press lnlernallonal
Danny Cox allowed six hits over
eight innings and Andy Van Slyke
drove in two runs Wednesday night ,
lifting the St. Louis Cardinals to a
4-3 victory over the San Francisco
Giants.
Cox, 4-8, did not wall( a baner but
needed relief help from Rick
Horton and Todd Worrell, who got
the last two outs for his 18th save.
Mike LaCoss, 9-5. lasted 5 1-3
innings and allowed five hits.
The Cardinals broke open a 1- I
game with a three-run sixth inning.
Vince Coleman led off with a walk
and advanced on a LaCoss throwing error and a wild pitch. Ozzie
Smith singled Coleman home for a
2-l lead and Van Slyke tripled to
seore Smith and chase LaCoss. Van
Slyke came home on a sacrifice fly
by Terry Pendleton.
The Giants made it 4-2 in the
seventh when Chill Davis doubled
and scored on a two- out single by
Bob Melvin.
St. Louis started the scoring with
a run in the fourth. Willie McGee led
off with a triple to right, but he
pulled his right hamstring rounding
second and left for pinch runner
Clint Hurdle. VanSlyke's sacrifice
fly scored Hurdle.
McGee underwent a thorough
examination and officials said he
will be on a "day-to-day basis."
In other games, Los Angeles
outlasted Pittsburgh 6-5. New York
trimmed Cincinnati 3-2, Philadelphia downed Atlanta 4- 2, Hou ston
trimmed Montrea l 4- 3 in ll innings
and San Diego de!l'ated Chicago
7-5.
At Pittsrurgh, Ken Landreaux's
two-run homer in the third inning
snapped a 2-2 tie and led the
Dodgers. Ore! Hershiser. 9-7. went
five innings to pick up the victory.
Rick Reuschel. who dropped to 5-12.
is now l-8 in his last nine starts. Ken
Howell pitched 1 J-3 innings for his
third save.
"Met- mania!" New York rookie
Kevin Mitchell loves it. Cincinnati
veteran Dave Parker hates it .
The truly "Amazin' Mets" enjoy
a whopping 14\-1 game lead in the
1\ational League Eas t and it's al l
one big joy ride for a rookie like
Mitchell.

"It's a big thrill to be on _a team
winning like this," said Mitchell,
who drllled an eighth inning
two-run homer more than 400 feet to
dead center Wednesday night to 11ft
New York to a 3-2 win over
Cincinnati and give the Mets a
three-game sweep of the Reds.
" It 's a dream come true heingon
a team like this," added Mitchell.
"But what really would be great
would be to win the World Series in
my first year."
Parker, whohomeredforthelllth
time in the last six games Wednesday night, has heard too much
about the Mets already.
"I'm tired of this 'Met- mania,"'
he said. "I've seen better teams.
I've been on better teams. They can
be had. I'm sorry this series lswer.
I hope we get to see them in the
playoffs."
At this point, though, that doesn't
appear likely. While the Mets seem
assured of winning their division,
the Reds trail National League
West leader Houston by eight
game~ and are on a four-game
losing streak.
Two weeks ago, the Reds appeared to be rolling when they
breezed into New York and swept a
three-game series from the Mets.
But the Mets repaid that debt in lull
with this week's three-game sweep
in Cincinnati.
"It feels great after the whipping
the Reds put on us in New York,"
sa id Mitchell.
"'llle Reds were the most
awf'SOme hitting team we had seen
a couple of weeks ago," said Mets'
manager Davey Jolmson. "But
they didn 't swing the bats the same

Cincinnati had grabbed a 2-0 lead
oo the homers to right by Milner
and Parker in the third. It was
Milner's eighth homer of the year
and Parker's 21st.
The Mets pulled to within 2-1 in
the Dlth when Rafael Santana
singled, moved to second on a
sacrifice bunt by Darling and came
home on a double down the left field
line by T1ni Teufel, who went 3-forAt Atlanta, rookie Bruce Ruffin
threw a six-hitter and Juan Samuel
and Von Hayes homered to power
the Phillles. Ruffin, 3-1, struck out
four and walked two in working his
second complete game. Doyle
Alexander, 1-2, took the loss.

By ROBERTO DIAS
UPI Sports Writer
KIRTLAND, Ohio (UPll- Like
a birthmark or a scar, a player's
rccentricltles tend to last a lifetime.
And so it is with linebacker
Anthony Griggs, whose jesting
claim he was really a being from
"Planet Funk" irritated Ohio State
coach Earle Bruce when he played
fo r the Buckeyes five years ago.
"I guess peoplE' will never forget
abOut that," said Griggs, who was
obtained by the Cleveland Browns
from Philadelphia in exchange for
an eighth-round pick during the
!'/FL draft on April 29.
"I know Coach Bruce wasn't '
"
•

way hPr£-.''

Jurors
consider
charges
J
A today

save.

154; Morris. Dt&gt;t 145; McCaskill. Ca l
1.11; Will , Ca l lJO; Langs ton. Sea 129.

Chic·ago .:H Ra llimorf'. night
IJosto n a t Cal Hornia. night
Toronto at 0Jk land. night
Milwaukt't" at Sratt lf'. night

&lt;1:\;J~ on .1. 1 plo11 1 '·iiPP '•aill'~ '!;
II'IIITIC'S l':.Cb I('Wll hols pla,Yt'dl.

x no . ll

H all'!. .

llou
Phil
HM · no~l, _ Pit

.l l!l 112 ..129
.'&amp;.1 l 17 .33i
~ :B'l !II .n
94 3oli ]1)1
fll .'l;S 102 .ll!i

dlsablPd list.

!!1~1

(' D,l\t ". SF'

!0 JJS !Jl _2'J.i

C'hi r ago 1NI. 1 - AcllvatC'd OU1 ·
fi('ldrr Bub 'DPrnil'r from disablrd
list
Hous!On - Aclh·all'd ou tfie ldl'r
Trrn Puhl from disablf'd list:

opri0nl'd ou tfiddP r Ty Cainry to
Tursnn of llw Pac if ic Coast Lrag-uf'
1A AA1 .

OaklancJ - PiacPd pit chPr Moosr

Haa s on

1~ - day

lOW CO

I'II'. ._...Le.,..
1 ah h pet.
nrook ~ ..\1'11
7'!.ll) ]01 J3i
13rw·n. SF'
!V 291 97 .m

By llnUed Press International
Base ball
fhir&lt;Jgo rALl - Traded infielder
Bobbv Bonil la to Pi ll sburgh for
pi lchrr .l osr Df' Leon: srnt De !.Ron to
B uf f&lt;~ l o of thr Amf'rican Associat ion
rA AA 1: pu rcha sPd rr lirver Ray
~raragf'
from Buffalo: placPd
pitr hf'r Jop J MrKron on rhr 15-day

so

r.~·.vnn

~

P.ili~. Mrl

369123 .3.13

~
q)

Si!JI LA

OIX•rkfl'il. Atl

$199

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officials said earlier they would
claim Rozelle lacks the power to
implement unilaterally such a
test ing plan.
Joseph Yablonski, a Was lingtonbased lawyer, argued the union's
case Wednesday before Kasher.
William Curtain, also based in
Washington , will argue Thursday
fort he Managemen t Council, which
supports the implementation of the
random tes ting fo r illegal drugs.
League officials have maintained
tha t the NFL Constitution and
by-laws give Rozelle the power to
make policy to protrt the integrity
of the league, all hough union
la wyers claim the clauses the
league cites refer only to discipline
of players.
"The union re;ted its case today
and the NFL Management Council
will state its case before the
arbitrator Thursday. The NFL
Commissioner's offi!F presents its
side next Tuesday in New York
City," league spokesman Dick
Maxwell said after the hearing_
Kasher will judge whether Commissioner Pete Rozelle's new test ing plan unlawfu lly supercedes the
1982 Co ll ective Bargaining Agree-

ment between the players and
management.
The league agreed on July ll to

Griggs, who says he has "one of
the world's best collections of
sunglasses," owns a clothi ng company with Conner teammate Vyto
Kab and was noted lor his
involvement in Philadelphia and
South Jersey charities.
"A man 's got to give something
back 1o the commu nity that
supports his job," says Griggs. "I
hope to help the Cleveland-area
communities as well."

an Anthony Griggs and several
others in camp, you have to rea lize
that no job Is ·totally safe," said
Schottenheirner. "I don't say that
lightly.
"We want to Improve our team,
and now's the time for those who
can help to show they can."
In other training camp news, the
roster dropped to 65 Wednesday
when six-year veteran cornerback
Paul Dombroski announced his

retirement .

Dombroski. who played five
years with New England and one
with Tampa Bay. was signed as a
free agent last Sarurday .
The 29-vear-old from Linfield
tOre.! Coliege, informed Scholtenheimer of his decisio n prior to the
morning practice.
The roster is expec ted to swel l to
103 players when the remainder of
the veterans report by noon Friday.

with free
Griggs,Ken
along
veteran
Fantetti,
wlll agent
push r;~~;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;::::::::~,
incumbent starting, linebackers
lbm Cousineau and Eddie Johnson
in training camp.
"When you cons ider the play of

11-week-old trial In U.S. Dislrict
Court in Manhattan - the NFL's
co-counsel Frank Rothman going
first in the morning and USFL
att orney Harwy Rothman follow ing in the aft ernoon.
Ju dge Peter Leisure is expected
to read a lengt hy set of instructions
on the law this morning estim ated to be abOut 150 pages and then send Ihe fi ve women and
one m a n to be g in thei r
del iberat ions.
None of the jumrs descrilx•d
themselves as footba ll fans during
jury sclr'&lt;'l ion last May . a nd three of
the six had never heard oft he USFL
before the r·aS&lt;' started .
If the panC'i find s the NFL has
viola ted the an ti tru st laws and the
USFL has been inju red by the
NFL' s ac tion. it must set estimate
the amount of damages. Antitrust
law req uires tha t the amount the
jury estima1es be tripled, as a
penalty for the illega l behavior.
The USFL has asked for at least
$lll million and up to $565 million to
get itself back to a competitive level
by 1992. That's before tripling.
The NFL ha s "over!() percent of
all the revenues in the (I'Ofessional
football markf't," Myerson sa ill in
his three-hour summat kln. "We
have a situation where we are up
against the most powerlu I monopoly in the country."
In response, Rothman charged
Ihe USFL's suit was instigated by
USFL owner Donald Trump as a
means of forcing a mer!;{'r of his
team into the NFL and obta ining a
new football stadiu m in New York
City as part of the bargain.
Mverson dJsmlssed the NFL's
"merge r" theory as "garbage."
"The court took the timeover a nd
over and over again to tell you that
merger motive does not go to the
question d whether the National
Football League violated the anti trust laws," h ~reminded the jurors.
Myerson rPViewed the USFL's
charges that the NFL sought a pl an
to destroy the USFL from a
Harvard Business School professor. Michael Porter; presented the
strategy to abOut 65 NFL executives In a February 1984 sem inar
a nd th en impl emented thr
recommenda tions.
The NFL "trea ts you people like
village Idiots" when they deny that
any of the st udy 's suggestions were
carried out, he said.
Rothman acknowledged the seminar was held and that Porter
"went off into left field" In making
some suggestklns.
However, Rothman said under
antitrust laws It was not illegal for
the NFL to discuss strategies or
plans for compelltion. " The Issue
Is: were they Implemented?"
He went through a list ol10 p:&gt;lnts
mentkmed in Porter's presentation
and said, "every single point .. . was
not established."

postpone Implementation of the
plan until Kasher rules on the
union 's grieva nce.

LINE DRILLS - Cleveland's Antlllf\V Grlsgs. linebacker, works
against offensive lineman during Wednesday's drills at Browns trining
camp, Lakeland Community College, Kirkland, Ohio. (UPI)

ented thei r final summations in lh€

MOST U.S. UIS

llttullf'

the Eagles' 57 games, including 48
st raight at inside linebacker, since
joining the team.
However, he was told at the end of
the 19&amp;5 season that hero longer fit
in the plans of Eagles head coach
Buddy Ryan .
"I couldn't figu re out why,
though," sa id Griggs, a 6-foot-3.
Z2JJ-pounder who transferred to
Ohio State for his senior year after
Villanova dropped footbaU ill 1981.
"1 didn't have a great year because
of a sore knee that' s OK now, but I
wound up with 86 tackles.
"I was glad to leave and get a new
begin ning, even though I have a lot
of ties wit h Philadelphia."

By CER~E ANDERSON
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK iUPl l- Six jurors
will begin consideration today of the
USFL's charges that the NFL Is the
"most powerfu I monopoly in the
country" and should be penalized
by a billion dollars or more.
The leagues WPdnesday pres-

American Lf:'agur- ClPmens . Bos

C'lt"\'Pl&lt;lnd a t T Pxas. nig ht

amused by it . He told me to slick to
reality and play football. That
much I've done."
Griggs, 26, of Lawton, Okla., the
same hometov.'ll of Brov.'lls linebacker Chip Banks, has impressed
head coach Marty Schottenheimer
in his quest to make the team.
" ! asked Anthony what he
wanted, and he said 'a job,"' related
Schottenheimer as he presided over
Cleveland's training camp a! Lakeland Communit y College. "I'll say
that he's been very impressive so
far. He's in grea t shape and is a
very hard hitter."
Griggs, Philadelphia's fourthround pick in 1982, played in all of

Expect decision on drug issue in
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - The
NFL Management Council, the
league's negotiating unit, gets its
chance today to explain to an
arbitrator why tbe league's drug
tesling plan should be implemented
despite the opposition of the
players.
Arbitrator Richard Kasher heard
5Y,-hours of testimony Wednesday
from the NFL Players Association,
as he opened hearings on the
union 's grievance contending the
league's new rando"'l drug testing
plan violates the players' contract
with management.
The session, held behind closed
doorsata downtownlawoffice was
Ihe first of three scheduled arbitralion hearings before Kasher. He i'\&lt;
expected to Issue a decision in midSeptember.
Union and league officials would
not reveal the content of Wednesday' s private session. But union

The Mets were trailing 2-l in the
eighth Wednesday night when Gary
Ca rt er singled and Mitchell
smashed his game- winning homer
off Ron Robinson. 7-1, who suffered
hi s first bss of the year.
Ron Darling, 10-3, withstood
back-to-back homers by EddJe
Milner and Parker in the third
inning to post the win. He gave up
just five hits over eight innings,
struck out five and walked two.
Roger McDowell held the Reds
hitless the final inning fo r his ninth

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 5

Griggs .pushing for spot as Cleveland Browns linebacker

"'

At Houston, Davey Lopes, playIng in his first game for I he Astros.
singled home Dickie Thon from
second base with two out ill the lllh .
lilting Houston to it s six th straight
victory. Aurelio Lopez . 2-l. retired
the final six in order to carr I hP
victory. Loser Tim Burke&gt;, 7-:1,
walked five, two inlentionaUy, in 1
2-3 innings. At Chicago, Ma Tvcll
Wynne's one-out tie-breaking dou ble In the eigh th helped the Pad!l's
snap a fiv e-game los ing streak .
Craig Lefferts, 7-4, pitched the
seventh to gel the victory while
Goose Gossage workf'd the fin al two
innings for his 16th save. Ra;Fontenol, 3-5, was the loser.

4.

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.,

URN PI E

446-9800

Upper River Road
Gallipolis, Ohio

The Ohio valley's Auto Warehouse

�Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 24, 1986

,.-.--Ohio Briefs:----. Nuclear waste train nears joumey~s end
A irline plans direct flights

NORTH CANTON (UP! ) - Amertcan Airlines officials say
beginning Sept. 18, the airline will make three direct flights dally
from Akron-Canton Regional Airport to Cblcago's O'Hare
International Airport.
American has not serviced Akron-Canton for mo re than ll years.
airline"spokesman AI Becker said Wednesday.
"We are always looking for stro ng markets withl ong-term growlh
potenti;; t in which to ex pand our company, " said Becker. "We see
Akron and Canton as a growing region."
Becker said passengers ortglnatlng from Akron-Canton wUI be be
able to board connecting flights in Chicago to 40 U.S. cities and
Europe.
A discount, advan&lt;:P·purchase roundtrip fair fran Akron-Can ton
to Chicago wil l be $!1!, he said . The mrmal fair will be $.'ll8.

Kucinich, running mate qualify
COLUMBUS (UPJ 1 - Former Cleveland Mayor Dennis J .
Kucinich and his running mate, David I. Kelley of Medina , have
qu alified to run for governor and lieutenant governor as
independent s on the November ballot.
Secreta ry of State Sherrod Brown determined Wednesday that
Kucinich and Kelley had 8,868 valid signatw-es on petiti:ms of
candidacy. They needed 5,cm.
Socialist Work~rs candldates Roll'rta L. Scherr, Toledo, and Mark
T. Rahn, Cincinnati, furnished only 4,685 valid signatures a nd failed
to qual ify for the ballot, Brown said.

By United Press lntemallonal
A special train carrying radloaclive waste from the Three Mile
Island nuclear power pla nt in
PellllSJIIvanla rolled t!XIay toward a
laboratory near Idaho Falls, Idaho,
and the end of. a 2.:mmne journey ,
officials said.
1be trtp across nine states was
punctuated by a four-hour delay in
Kansas when Nebraska Gov. Bob
Kerrcy refused to allow the train to
enter his state, saying he had not
been given proper notification.
The train passed out of Wyoming
into Idaho late Wednesday without
Incident and was expected to arrive
In Idaho Falls shortly alter sunrise,
said Peter Myga tt, a Department at
Energy spokesman .
The radioactive waste wtll be

moved onto a fla tbed truck fo r the
last :ll miles of the journey, he said.
" We have an old gantry train ta
train ca r with a crane mounted on
it) used by the Navy in World War
II," MygaU said. "They will dr ive a
fl atbed truck under It a nd take it to
the Idaho Nat ional Engi neering
Laboratory."
The waste passed tlu·ough Pen·
nsylvan ia, Ohio , Indian a, Illinois.
Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska and
Colorado.
DOE officials said tlle was te is
less r adioactive than spent fu el rods
shipped from ott.&gt;r nuclear plants,
but tt.&gt; shipment c reated a furor In
Ne braska , where K rrcy ordered it
hal led at the Kansas border
Tues d ay nig ht a nd early
Wednesday.

"They violated the rmst impor ~
tan! part at the agreement we had ,"
Kerrcy sa id. "They notified every
single sta te along the route except
Nebraska."
But an official a t TMI at
Middletown . Pa ., said the sta te was
not notified of the shi pment 's
timeta ble because Nebras ka offi·
cia is fa iled to request that
in format ion.
It 's passage through southern
Wyoming Wednesday was uneven!·
lui, with no demonstrat ions , prob·
terns or significant delay s reported
along tt.&gt; tine.
Before t•nt cring Wyoming at 9
a. m. Wednesday, the train spent
about 20 minutes crossing the
oort heast corner of Colorado; and a
spokeswoman for Gov. Richard

By The Bend

Lamm, said the state had been
notified.
Idaho Radiation Contl'ol Bw-eau
sen ior physicist Lar ry Boschult
said that · Idaho also received
adequate ootice of. the shi pment.
"It 's mt infrequent" for highly
radioactlve materia lt obe movedin
and ou t at the Idaho National
Engineering Laboratory , he said.
The laboratory Is an lro·square·
mile Energy Depar tment nuclear
resea rch center in the desert 30
miles west of Idaho Falls.
The wasiP is the first of 35 to 40
shipments ex pected to t.&gt; trans·
ported to the laboratory during the
next 2'h years. The DOE plans lo
transport about 150 tons of radloac·
live corP rubble from the crippled
1bree Mile Island unit to the
laboratory.

CYC group conducts meeting
The Christ ian Youth Crusaders ol
the United Fa ith Chu rch, Pomeroy ,
held their first honor council
recently·. Awards and troph ies were
awarded to the following children.
Name of award and !irst, second
and third place winners respec·
lively were; Honor Joybell trophy,
Jenni Howerton, Aaron Bowersock
and Brandon Smith; Honor Herald
trophy, Mica h Otto, Hope Decker
and Dan iel Otto: Honor Cadet
trophy, Stephanie Otto. Wlllie
Adams, Mandy Drake; Honor
Cru sader Teen, Christi Adams and
Toby Hill: achievement trophies to
David Carmichael and Erin Smith.
Help at home badges went to
Brandon Smit h, Krlsti Carmichael,
Jenni Howerton and Aaron
Bowersock.
Discovery badges went to Bran·
don Smith, Krist! Carmichael,
Jenni Howerton and Aaron Bower·
sock. Su nshine badges to Kristi
Carmichael, Jenni Howerton and
Aaron Bowersock.
Herald badges , help at home, to
Dav id Carmichael, Eric Hill, Da ~
nielle Drake, Erin Smith, Hope
Decker. Micah Ott o and Daniel
Otto. Do good deeds award went to
David Carmichael, Erin Cmith and
Hope Decker. Know I he Bibft' to
Hope Decker, David Carmichael
and Erin Smith.
Cadet badges, Shield or Faith,
Stephanie Otto, Maranda Drake
and Willie Adams. Lau rel Pin ,
Stephanie Otto, Maranda Drake
and Willie Adams.
Crusader Teens. homemaker
badge, natu re badge and hiking
badge to Christi Adams, and Toby
Hill .
Star pins were earned by Toby
Hill. Christi Adams. Willie Ad ams,
Maranda Drake, Stephanie Otto.
Hope Decker, Micah Otto, Da nif'l
Olio, Eric Hill and Daniel](' Drake
AUendance awards went to Jen ni
Howerton. Hope Decker, Stepha nie
Otto. Maran da Drake an d Christi
Adams; Amba ssador awards to
Aaron Bowersock and Jenni How

UP.TO

FORD SPONSORED
FINANCING AS LOW AS

Justices uphold death sentence
COLUMBUS tUPli - The Ohio Supreme Court has upheld the
deat h sentence lor Reginald Brooks It Cleveland, who was convicted
of killing his three sons in March 1982.
Brooks was apprehended at a Utah bus station en route to Las
Vegas two days aft er the three sons, ages 17, 15 and 11, were found
shot to deat h in their beds. He was convicted in September 1983 and
sentPnccd to dea th two mo nths la ter.
"The hd nous na ture of the carefully orchestrated steps ta ken
preceding and following the murders and the shocking circumstan·
ces under which the murders or his 00'11 sons were committed lead us
to the conclusion that capital punishment cannot be viewed as
excessive in this case," the just ices wrote In an opinion issued
Wedm'Sday.

Annual

CASH ASSISTANCE FROM FORD
1986 FORD ESCORT
Stock " 6954

CLEARANCE

..
"

As Low As
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EXCLUD IN G mBGHT. OPTIONS. STATE &amp; LOCAL TAX ES &amp; FEES .

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1980 FORD
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687 12. 2 doors. V-8. ~ 1 r cond Vlnvl

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root auto trans PS. PB. bH wheel crurse

rad iO . ~ereo taoe. bucket smts.

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ha~d

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WAS

dr r~e.
~wer

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till wheel. crm)e conhll. MVFM radro. steroo
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root

1985 VOLKSWAGEN
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1981 MERCURY
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WAS

$7195.

NOW

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WAS

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Thursday, July 24, 1986

Page-7

Court rules in favor of city
COLUMBUS (UPJ I - The city of Akron is within its rights to
authorize and regulate community antenna telev ision as a public
utility , the Ohio Supreme Court has ruled .
The high court Wednesday upheld lower court decisions in favor of.
W a rner~A rnex Corp. and Akron's al-year oldordinanCl'srecognizlng
cabl e TV.
An Akron couple, Roy and Virginia Vernon, had sought rermval of
the gray metal cable box in front of their borne, saying It was a
nu isance. They argued that tt.&gt; city exceedell its autmrlty in
allowing ca ble telev L&gt;ion as a public uttllty.

The Daily Sentinel

'

/

TO COMPETE - Tammy Kennedy, 1:1-yeal"-old
daugbter of Mr. and Mrs. Junior Kennedy , Tuppers
Plains, will compete in the 15th annual American
Junior Quarter Horse Association world &lt;llamplonshlp Show In 'fu&amp;, Okla, Aug. 3-9. She is one ol U lO

young people to he chosen lor the soow. She will
mmpete with her registered Quarter Horse, Sprin gs
Mingo, a 1981 palomino gelding in showmanship, trail
horsemanship, equitation, hunter under saddle and
western pleasure classes.

Area garden club holds meeting
The Friends a nd Flowers Ga rden
Club of Rutland met n'Cently a t the
home of Tina Stewart .
For roll call memll'rs brought
rec ipe cards o! their favor ite salad
dish for exchangE&gt;.
Du ring the communica tions por·
tlon of the meeting a letter from the
Rutland Garden Club was read
Inviting mem IJ;&gt; rs to a picnic and
workshop on July 28. The dub will
begin the evening by touring the
gardens at Janet Bolin who was
recently insta lled as OAGC
president.
An invitation to enter the inviw ·
tional section of Rutlan d Garden
Club's flower soowonJ uly 26 a nd27
was read.
The Invitatio nal classes included
craftsman ship from 01her coun·

tries in the Japanese man ner and
abstract class on the benefit s of our
mac hine age.
The J unior Sprouts Garden Club
members were Invited to Pnler tlle
junior classes which in clude mari ~
golds, zinni as and polled fo li age ~
Under old bu siness the beautlfi·
cat ion project in Rutland was
discussed and the parade dloat
entries and second plac e r ibbons
were displayed.
Members were reminded of
Gardemcr' s Day on September 10.
Oflicers elected lor next year
were Brenda Bolin . pres ident , Lilly
Kennroy, vice president, Gi na
Tillis, Secretary and Sandy McDa·
niel, treasurer.
The new program hook was
discussed and hostess da tes were

set . A preview of the next meeting
at the rome of Janice Fetty on
August 7 was given.
Gina Tillis gave ti ps on how to
keep annual flowers blooming
longer and more abu ndantly.
Brenda Bolin appointed commit·
tees lor the new year. Committee
named were Lilly Kennedy ,
progra m; Jaet Bolin and J udy
Snowden, horticu ll ure; Gina Tillis,
publicity and publicity book; .Judith
Hill, tours; Sandy McDan iel, Fi·
nance; Diane Ash, Lilly U&lt;ennedy
and Brenda Bolin, civic propjects;
Camille Bolin, librarian; ,Janice
Fetty, m slnshlne: Susan Sisson a nd
Krista! Bolin , telephone.
Twelve memll'rs attended. Tah ~
nee John son was a guest ol Gi na
Tillia.

Community calendar I area happenings
'I'HlJRSDAY
HARRISONVILLE - Scipio Se·
nior Citizens Friendly Neighbor
Club meets Thursday 6 p.m. for a
cookout , home of Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Carr. Bring covered dish
a nd table service.
POMEROY - America n Legion
Auxiliary Unit l'll2 will meet
Thu rsday at 7: 30p.m. at tlle hall .
POMEROY - American Legion
Auxiliary Unit 602 will meet
Thu rsday at 7:30p.m . at the hall .
Those who attended Girls State will
give a report .
FRIDAY
BURLINGHAM - Hymn sing.
sponsored by the youth group at
Burlingham Commu nity Chu rch
will be held F riday at 7 p.m.

the Pomeroy Tennis Cou rt s. Music
by Jeff Miller . Donation of $1 and
refreshments will be served .
POMEROY - The fi lm "Trea sure Island " will be shown at llle
Pomeroy U brary Fr iday at 2 p.m.
and at Middleport Libra ry SaNr·
day at 2 p.m .
RUTLAND - A memoria l be·
nefit gospel sing will be held for the
family of Todd Spaun at the
Rutland Church of God, Rutland
Friday 7:30p.m.
Si\TURD .\Y
LONG 801'fOM - Tccn dance
Saturday at Long Bottom Com·
munity Buildi ng from 9 to 11:30 .
Souther n Local
&amp;hoot Board will be meet Saturday
RACI NE

-

at 10 a .m. In the high school
cafeteria .
SUNDAY
PT. PLEASANT- Dan Hayman
and the Faith Trio wlll be singing at
the Gospel Lighthouse Ch urch,
bark or Krodel Park, Point Plea·
sant, Sunday at 9;30 a.m.
DARWIN - The decenda nt s of
the Iat e Tammy Gil key an d Milda
.Jane Hudnall reu nion, U.S. 33
roadside park oouth of Darwin
Sunday. Potluck di nner at noon.
Bring table service and chairs.
CHESTER - Chester High Class
ol 1931 will hold its annu al picnic at
the Ches ter F irehouse Sunday at 1
p.m. All teachers and classmates
wPirom e.

POMEROY -Teen dance will be
held Friday from 9 to midnight at

Birthday noted
A surprise bi rt hday pa rtv was
recently held for Frank and Mav
Alic BisP at Reedsville.
Gifts were presented and refresh·
ments of cake, Ice croom and punch
were served t he followin g: Wilmer
an d trene Bise, The Plains; Frank·
lin and Anna Mae Washborn ,
Coolville: Ja mes, Cecile and Sa·
mantha Hetzer , Columbus: Eddle
and · Tara Hetzer , Jackie Bigley,
Jeffrey Dolores and &amp;ott Foster,
Belpre: Mary Francis Smi th,
Springfield, Va.; Rallgh and Shir·
Icy Heizer, Akron: Arthur L. and
Nancy Hetzer, Belle, W.Va .; Allele
and Sherry Roberslon, Charleston:
Fred, Diane and Therese Blse, '
Virglna Walton, &amp;le Cowdery,
Erika Boring and Mamie Buckley,
ReedsvUle.

We're Here
To Help
• Prescriptions fUled
• over-the -counter drugs
• Health and beauty e.ida .• Cosmetics a.nd perfumes
• Sickroom; surgical needs
• Vite.minB a.nd diet e.ida.

Pharmacists Who

Care About You

VILLAGE
PHARMACY
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

crton; Christi an Servant award to
Erin Smith; D:&gt;ve award to Ma
randa Drake and Stephan ie Ott o;
homr booth ribbons to Jcnni
Howerton. Dav id Drrmichac l, and
Toby Hil l
CYC (Christi an You th Crusad·
ers) is a church sponsored Chris·
tlan midweek ac tivity prq~;Tam
Joybells, Heralds and CaMts CYC
Clubs are part of the bcal church
Christi an educa tion progra m.
Jovbells a re for ages 3-6, Hera Ids

Neville reunion
The annual Neville fa mlly reu n·
ion will be held Saturday at Krodel
Park in Point Pleasant , W.Va . A
ba sket rl rnner wil l be served at
noon.

-i PI ECE GLIIl ER G ROL IP inr lude•: 2 M
t•at ~ lid.r , • pring rhair.
round c-o fff't&gt; 1 ah It•. De aut ifully Ml y lrd wroul(hl iron
A,·a il ahh• i n 3 co lors : ~· t&gt;llo..., , o l y mp ia n and,·onilla.

~ a~ ~· C'ha ir and
hy L ~· on S h a ~· .

Lifestyle

OPEN OAIL Y 'Til 5
MON. &amp; FRI. 9-8
FR£E DELIVERY
FR£E PARKING

Graduates
Mary MUis Riley a graduate of
Holzer Hospital School of Nursing
and Ohio Univers ity has bPPn
accepted as an anesthetist student
at Charleston Med ical Center.
her husbandk J effrey, a graduat e
of Ohio University and also Holzer
School It !Nursing wUI be employed
at the Medical Center as an R. N.
Ma ry is the daug hter or Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Mil ls of ~ m eroy and
Jeffrey is the ron of Mr. and Mrs.
Marshnall Riley ol Mason .
They will reside at the Medical
Center Complex.

grades 1.2 and 3, and Cadet s grades
4,5 and 6.
Ch ildrm are invited to CYS.
Thost• interl'Sicd are to contact the
Rev . Daid Wiseman, pa" or.

FURNITURE SHOWCASF
- --·
Corner of Third and Olive
Gallipolis. OH . 446 -3045

50°/o SAVINGS ON

ALL KEEPSAKE DIAMONDS
IN STOCK

Greaf birth
Dr. and Mrs. William Grea f. San
Francisco, anm unce the birt h of a
daugh ter on July 10.
The in fa nt was named Ashely
Danielle Wells Grear. The mother is
the fo rmer Carolyn Wells daughter
at the late GeorgE&gt; Wells and Mrs.
Robert Rinehart of Middleport , and
step-d aughter or Roll'rt Rineha rt.
Grea t au nt is Mrs . Marg-MPt
Parsons ol Ru Uand.

Wrth Keepsa ke d i:un ond

ring s. rou 'll both be
g lowtng wit h pr ide.
Cluo sc fro m traJ it1on.JI.

And you 'll alw ays have
m nfidence in your cho ice
bcca use Keepsake ha s stood
for t he finest in qua li ty and

cont empo rary. tex tu red , pb in

cxqu isi1e de si g n for over 90

or rwo -tone

SALE
JULY 21-25

stylrn_gs.

Avail ab le in re llov.: m wh ite
14 Ka" t go ld

yea rs.

Keepsake"

!:~~~~~. ~~-~~ . . $219
ZIPPERS .............. 4/$1

EASTERN HILL
FABRIC SHOP
located on Rt. 7

I ~==S=M=i.:N:o:·:o:f=C=he=st:e:r=:J~!!--""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
f.-

�Thursday.

· Page-S- The

July 24, 1986

Public Notice

-Bike-a-than chairmen announced
The Central Regional O!ftce of St.
Jude Chtldrm's Research Hospital
announced today chairmen iJr the
1986 Blke· A·Thons In their
communities.
Mrs. Peggy Shoemaker &amp; Mrs.
Judy Eblin lor Rutland and Mrs.
Madeline Buchanan ilr RE&gt;edsville
and Holly Lelving for New Haven
Women 's Club, will each ch air
separate Btke·A·Thons this yea r.
St. Jude Chlldren's Research Hos-

pita! was founded by entertainer
Danny Thomas. The Institution
opened Its doors to tiE public In 1962
to combat catastrophic diseases
which afflict our childrrn. St. Jude
Hospital Is non-sectaria n, non·
discriminatory, and provides medl·
cal care to over 4,!ll0 patients.
At St. Jude, scientists and
physicians are working side by side
seeking not only a better means of
treatment, but also the causes,

El'tateFIOUCIARY
of Edna F . wa•er,
Deceased, Clot No. 26,127.
On July 18. t986. in tho
Meigo Coonty Probata Court.
C110 No. 26, t27, Nova F.
Ru11o11. 1802 w. High St•oot,
Springfield, Ohio 46506 woo
appointed Executrix of tho...
t~te of Edna F. Walter. deceased, late of 162 Hamikon
Str..,t. Middleport. Ohio
46780.

-..

RobertEB~.

ProboteJudge

Meigs County, Qhio
Lena K . Nesselroed . Clerk
{7}24. 31 ; {8) 7. 3tc

Alfred community happenings
Sunday School attendance July 6
was 19. On July l3 Sunday School
attendance was 29; church attendance, 211.

Auxiliary meeting held
An ice crea m socia l was plannPd
for Aug. 29 when the Auxiliary of
the Bashan Volunteer Fie• Depart ment met recenlly at the fire houSf'.
Beckie Pullins presided at tiE
meeting which opened with the
Lord's Prayer and pledge to tl»
American flag. The!nna White and
Lou PitZPr gave repons. Thanks
were extended to those who contributed to the last social. Those who
can store ice cream in preparation
for tl» August social are asked to
contact one of the auxiliary
members !Efore the Aug. II
meeting. Others attending were
Margaret Tuttle, Pearlene Lee. and
Mary K. Holter.

Wolf Pen notes
Mrs. Leslie Frank and Sarah
Beth of Texas Road were Wednesday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Haning and Ronald.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith were
Saturday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Harley Smith, Kanauga.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Shuler of
Racine were Sunday visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Harley E. Johnson and
Tammy.
Mr. and Mrs. J erry Holley and
Calvin Lee were Wednesday evening visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Johnson and Tammy.

Edwards birthday
Kr eigh Mi che lle Edwards,
daughter of Roger and Kathy
(Evan s! Edwards, celebrated her
first birthd ay June 14, at the home
r1 her aunt and uncle Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Bowling.
Attending were Charles and Barb
Bowling, Tony, Keesha and Julie,
gra ndpar en ts Bill and Midge
Evans, great grandmother Mrs.
Mildred Evans.
A stand-up Care Bear cake and
ice crea m were served.

Land aaions
Clara L. Sayre, Charles E. SayTe
to Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co., right of way, Olive.
Bonnie F. LeMaster to Columbus
&amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co., right
of way, Bedford .
Donald Edward Whaley, Ida
Colleen Whaley to Columbus &amp;
Soutl»rn Ohio Electric Co., right r1
way, Bedford.
RandaU M. Boston to Columbus&amp;
Sout!Ern Ohio E lectric Co . right of
way, Olive.
Frederick W. Klein , Mart ha E.
Klein to Ronnie Eugt•ne Casto,
Anita Louise Casto, parcels, Porn.
VUI.
Linda Lou Allman to Mart in
Wesley Davis, Carla Raynell Da·
vis , parcels, Columbia .

Joseph Poole was In Houston,
Texas, July 9-13 to aUend the
funeral of ,his brother Randy,
Livingston, Texas.
Doris Avis Is making a good
recovery follow1ng an accident at
IEr home during which she re·
ceived a secere cut on her leg.
July 4 guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Van Meter were his niece
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Chris
Wre n and thr ee childr en,
Chlllicot!E.
Mrs. Wilher Parker returned
June 12 !rom a two-weeks vacation

out

as

a movie, he's not so

restrained. "It's got a nasty tone, a
smarmy edge," Bernstein says of
Ihe book in a Playboy interview. " ...
It is prurient. It oblit era tes everybody's dignity ."
In the movie Bernstein is played
by Jack Nicholson after having
been portrayed by Dustin Hofbnan
in "All the President 's Men." "!
figure tha t by now those guys have
gotten about $8 million or~ million
to play me in movies," he says. " It
makes me think that nex t Iinne out I
should play myself." He did,
however, tum down a chance to
play Nicholson In "Wired." the book
Bernsteln 's Watergate partner &amp;b
Woodward wrote about John Belu·

·n.·eo GM "rond.,, . . 139
1!~~~~"•" ..
115
73 79 •••• Fonde.... .. 039

e can repatr an r~
Core radiatOrS and
heater cores. We can
alSO acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks .

.l~::m

PAT HILL FORD

... _

~t=:.:::c
-~

-a~

,.,.,. ·

992·2196

FREE IN S ULL4fiON
2 ~ WARRA.NTY

SIIO.IKIIOIIGu•r~t~l•d

Middleport. Ohio

1 · 13-tfc

VINYL
SIDING
WE HAY~ MOST ALL POPUlAR BRANDS AT

HEAVY UIGI .. D IATHl
11 .95
CIMINI DOG! &amp; CAll
10"/o OFF
lAMPS &amp; FIGURINES

the Seattle, Washington area. She
visited her son and family, Edward
and Allee Parker and Tamml,
Everett; her grandson and his
mother, Randy and Cindy Parker
Snohomish: her cousins, Eleanor
and Bert Avery. Seattle; Jeanine
and Rex Smith, Greg , Kirk and
Erin, WoodtnvUie: Bonnie and J im
Hess, Tate, Colby , and Brittany,
Lake Sammamish.
Mrs . Parker toured Lake Stevens
shores, Multikeo Beach, diary and
sheep-raising area no rth of Everett,
Lake Sammanlsh shores.
In

NOtiCE OF SALE
By virtue ol an Order of
Sale issued out of the Com-

mon Pleas Court of Meigs
County, Ohio. 11 the c:aae of
The Central Trust Company,

N. A.. Middleport, Ohio,

specially room of Pleasant Valley Hospllal emer·
genl'Y care center. The mobile was made by the
women w keep babies' altelltlon, making the
physicians' woli&lt; a little easier. The group is
commltll'll w communlly service, and try fo lEtter
themselves and brighten the lives of others.

MOBILE GIVEN PVH -The Relief Society of the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints
(Monnon) represented by Letha Thorne, Enna
Brewer and Frances Taylor, JH't'SI'tlted Dr. Sam
McNeill with a baby mobUe w hang In the pediatric

the reason for Nevels' imprison· memorabilia from his stage career, replace the old wire baskets that
ment without a lonna! request.
she said.
were being pilfered a t a rate of 5,1XXJ
Garbage cans trashed by Art per year at a eost of $45 eac h.
Items from Zero Mastel's estate
auctioned: NEW YORK I UPJ I -A Commission: NEW YORK tUPI J
But "The Ari Commission as a
milk can Zero Mostel used as a prop - The city's proposE'd design for whole was underwhe lmed," by the
in "Fiddler on the Roof" sold for bright orange sla te-of-the -art gar· design of the new cans , Sanitation
$15(] at a Manhatt an auction house.
hage cans has been trashed by the Commissioner Brendan Sex ton
The can. used by Mosie! when he Muni cipal Ari Commission, which said .
played Tevye 1n the popular was " undcrwhclmed" by the rotor
He said II» 11-memtu comm ls·
Broadway show, was among 50 of the receptacles.
sion, which must approve the
items from the late actor's estate
The bright orang~&gt; baskets were design of a ll street fu mitu re
auctioned oft at the William Doyle lntrodu cf'd by Mayor Edward Koch ranging from park bench!'S to
Galleries Wednesday.
last Sept em her as the fin al s:Jiution street lights and fire alarm box!'S, is
Mastel died In 1977 at the age of to the problem of rampant theft of accepting recommendations tor
other designs.
62. His "-ife. Kathryn died earlier garbage cans.
this year, and the couple's sons
The plastic basket has a po intf'd
"I don't think oran g~&gt; was thr best
were dissolving their estate, said bo ftom and is inserted into a metal w ior," said Art Comm iss ion Exec·
Maryalice Adams, a spokeswoman frame bolted to the stree t. Without utive Director Patricia Harris.
for the auction houSf'.
the frame, tl» wobbly bas ket will "These baskets potenUally will ix'
Other auc tioned it ems includf'd ·not stand up, end ing Ihe tlu·eat of on every street corner, 00 the visual
furnishings and a few items of prople stea ling them for home use. impact of th:·m Is very grea t."
The orange baskets wrrr to

Brolin says he isn't a bigam ist
beeause the ceremony he recently
went through in a church ina Nova
Scot ian village wasn't rea lly a
wf'dding.
Brolin 's wife of record. ,Jane
Brolin. accused him of bigamy and
is taking him to court in Los
Ange les with divorce attorney
Marvin Mitchelson on her side.
Brolin spol&lt;csman Leonard Grant
says the actor' s "wedding" with
actress Jan Smllll&gt;rs (Ba iley on
"WKRP" I was not legal because
the couple didn 't ge t a maniage
license. RepreSf'nlativ es of both
families were on hand but Grant
says it was merely a symbolic
ceremony of commit ment and that
Smit her.; and Brolin won 't marry
for rea l until hL' divor('(' Is iinal.
TilE WAGES OF MARRIAGE :
Prince Andrew go t a $45.00l-a-year
pay ra ise for marrying Sarah
Ferguson and
got a roya l

Iitle tor marryin g him. But technically, Ferguso n has oo Christian
name any more. Buckin gham
Pa lace said Andrew was mad e Ihe
du ke· of York and. according to
protocol. that means
FE'rgus:m can II'

knm~m

only as

"Her Royal Highn!'Ss the Duch!'Ss
of York. " The Britis h prPSs will no
doubt st ick with II» more familiar
"Fergie."
By tak ing a wife . Andrew is now
entitled to ar annual sa lary of
$/J,IXXI 1h:• had heen gett lngSll,OOli
for ~lng a member of Jhe royal
family. He also mak es $19,500 a
year as a mem be r of the Royal
Navy and picks up an addit1ona l
$3,lXXl for Oying helicopters.
Among tl» guests at the wedding
were singer Elton Join , who wore
roo-rimmed sunglasses , and actor It
Michael Caine,
IF DRAFfEO, I WilL N&lt;Yl'
RUN: Lee lacoct a can' t seem to

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

BARGAIN MA TI NEES SAT - SUN &amp;

WE DNESDAY • ALL SEATS I2.5D
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY 12.50
LAST DAY :

"PSYCHO l I I "
P.M. OHU. RATED (R\

say it enough- he isn't running for
president. The Chrysler Corp.
chairman had a Detroit news
confPrenee to announce the result s
oft he automaker's second financial
quarter and someone couldn't he lp
but ask if he'd chan ged his mind
about running for president In l~.
"There arf' m clrcumstances
under whi ch I'd change my mind,"
he sa id. "You trepon ers l must
have more importan t things to do
!han to wti tc about this sl uff." Not
even a move to dra ft him for the
race wil l do any good . "Let' s put
this thin g to ix'd," lacooca said. "II
isn't fair. Somebody threw my hat
into the ring and t ll&gt;y're heating the
hell out of my hat!"
SPE CI AL LATE N[GHT SHOW!

... n.•• _

Ao

~

Clooot c-.tl

AC/DC

As for nemesis Richard Nixon,
Bernstein says he can't help but be
awf'd by "his ability to come back
from the dead."
NO ROOM FOR MORE WIVES
i\'r 'HIYI'EL': "Hotel" star James

being Case No. 86-CV -139
in said Court, I will offer 1or
sale at the front door of the
Court Hou se In Pomeroy,
Meigs County , Ohio on the

I

COMING SOON
THE HITCHER

SOON! "HOWARD TH E OUCK"
"FRIDA Y THE 13t h PART 6"

SPECIAL WEDNESDAY

MAnNEES
THIS SUMMER I

~~~~
: . rr?.n&amp;~:t. ·
9
cro:dt'u~fciam ,

highway; thence South 47
de g. 05 ' West 81 . 3 feet;
thence North 73 deg . 63'
West 131 . 5 feet to the place
of beginn ing.
containing
0 .30 acres .
Together with the right to
cross the culven at the enuan ce of the drivewav of the
Grantor s, which culvert is
located at the Southeuterly
corner of the above 01 scribed property , for the
purp ose only of permitt ing
said Grant ees to enter the
granted premises at the
Southeastern corner thereof
bv the most direct route af t er crossing said culvert .
Parcel No . 2: The following described real estate situate i n th e Town ship of Sal ·
isbury , in the County o f
Meigs and State of Ohio,
and in Fraction No . 2 and de scribed as follows : Begin ning North 629 feet , East
695 feet and North 43'12
de g . East 138 feet from tha
Southwest corner. of Frac ·
lion No. 2 on the North line
of Norman Russell's 9 .91
acre trac t; thence North
43 112 deg . East 182 feet to
State
Highway No . 33 ;
thence along State Highway
No . 33 South 40 deg . East
122 feet ; thenett atong Stat e
Highway No . 33 South 33
deg . East 22 feet ; thence

South 49 deg. 20' West t62
teet; then ce North 47 deg
1 0 ' West 124'12 feet to the

place of beginning co ntain ing 57 1 100 acres.

REFERENCE DEED Vo l.
289.

Pag e 923. M eigs
Countv Dood R ec ords.
Said parcel appr aised at

s
DRAWER

•

Rea l esute cann ot be sold
tor less than two -thirds of
the appraised value.
Howard E Frank ,

171 24. 31 ;
t817. 14 , 2t.

5tc

Public Notice

OR\' FOAM

SJ995 2':::'m~n
Choice of
Materia Ia
' ,

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto

Trus111lulon

EUGENE LONG

CUSTOM GARAGE BUILDING

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

J&amp;L INSULATION

BISSELL
BUILDERS

$4995

ency lOEPAl lost

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
" At Reasonable Prius'"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16 .' 86 tfn

!PIING SOfl
Now A lnK!U
Mottthly Rental '
Pl111 inlliallnslallation
Puts A Soltonor In Your
Homo lotlay (leall witl1
Option to luy)
LO&lt;olly Owntcl, 20 Yrt. . hp .

DAN'S WATER R(fJNJNG
WHr Srh StrNt

304 -992-2996

-z

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Public Notice

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

1-3-'86 1ft

the date of this notk:e, to
The Environmental Board o f

Review, Am . 101, 250 E.
Town St. , Columbus. Oh .

43215. Notice of any appeal
shall be filed with the diu~::: ­
tor within 3 dav s. Proposed
actins will beco me final un
less a written adjudication
hearing requ est is submitted
within 30 day s of the is ·
suance date; or the directo r
revises/ withdr aws the fi'O ·
posed action . Any person
may submit co mments and
/ Of request a meeting re garding any non -final actio n
witt1in 30 days of the date
indicated . " Action " , 81 und
above does not include areceipt of a verifted complaint.
If significant public interest
exists . a public meeting may
be held . As to any actton, in ·
eluding receipt of verified
COR1llaints. any person may
obtain notice of funher actions, and additional infor mation. Unless otherwise
provided in notices of partie ·
uhu action a, all co rrvnunica ·
tions shall be sent to : Hear ·
ing Clerk , OEPA. P . 0 . Bo~t

1049, Columbus, OH.
43216. PH . !614]468-6037.
Coosult ORC Chap. 3746
end OAC Chaps. 3745 .47
and 3746-5 for requirements.
Draft NPOES par mit renewa ~ Subject to reviston .
Southern Otlio Coal Company Meigs Mine No. 2 .. P.

0 . Box 490. Athens, Oh.
Public Notice Date Juty 21 ,
1986 .
Receiving waters ;
Odgen Run . facility De!lcription : Coal washer , Per-

w ee k.

•ZENtiH

•SYLVANIA
•SPHO QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON RIFRIGERATOR
•SATEIUIE SAlES &amp; SERVICE

W1 H1u ~Full T11111
Shop T1eh•lel1t
n l&gt;•tr

RIDENOUR
TV &amp;APPLIANCE
CHESTER - 985-3307

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addons and remodeling
- Roo fi ng and gulte r work

RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
AGRICULTURAL

Custom Design
Service

CALL 667·3271
Co111p11t tht Quality
BtfOII

v:.t~n mo .

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

F11 All

y,., P•l•ll•l N11ir

PIU5o Olfiu lupplit1 &amp;
furniture, Wtdding
and Graduation
Stationery, Mognffi&lt;

Signs, Rubller Slomp1,
Busin111 Forms,

Copy

ltrvi&lt;H,

Etc.

992 -6215 or 992 -7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

41 5."86·1&lt;

MIDWEST
SEAL &amp; STRIPE
Serving this area
cooling and striping
and making of

Asphalt &amp; Conuete.
1-614-696-1337
1-614-593-8693
6-23." 86 -1 mo .

CLC COINS
Buying/Selling
Gold, Silver

14K Chains, Coins,
Colledor's Amssories
Bullion
SUMMER HOURS
1-7 M-TH
Call for Directions

6· 16.'86- I mo .

*VINYL SIDING
• AlUMINUM SIDING
'BLOWN IN
INSULA nON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"'Free Estimates '"

(7124 Ito

PH. 949-280 I
or 949-2860
No Sunday Calls
l / 11 /t fn

CHEST

FREE!

$4995 1

LAMP

GET ONE

SAVE
'20

FREE

Compare us with the other guy ...
Shoot, we're not afraid!
DISC, 110, 126, 135 FILM ONLY

,-·-·--- -----·---~---SWISHER LOHSE

Sets Only

Mollrts)
BOX SPRING

QUEEN
Aeg 1179.95

59995
Sets Only

LIV. RM. SUITE

Dexter's boa t shoes look great on the h1,;h seas, up
country, or downtown . These authentic, comfortable
boat shoes are handsewn of high qualtty leathers . On
shore or on deck, Dexter boat shoes make vou feel right
at home.
'

5

KING
Roc. 1199.95
,._

••. Jl(.

Sets Only

--- ______________-v---___ --

i! ?

Cl'lt 1t.. AttU• . A 1"1'1

t.1on ,:~u";:t H:n~~~~~~ ~ : 9 m
p

Sund1v 10 30 to 12 30 and '5 to 9 p m
PAESC AIPTIO!'IS
PH 992 29&amp;5

j

:

(

1

I

fl1le

Pomerov. Oh

;------·-- -·- --------Open Nt gh1t ul 9

•

;)

1

MIDDLEPORT

We C.ury Fishing Supplies

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phona Bills Hero
IU!INE!5 PffONI
lbl41 997 -65SO
IE!IliNCI PHON!
lhl41 992- 7754

Happ y 63rd
Birthday Be tty

Satellite Sales
Installation service
All major appliance re{including micro-

waves! . Electronic Organs . Mobile aarvlca.

TV -614-843-5248
APPL.-614 -949 -214 S
7-8.'86 ·1 mo.

(CUI OUI FOR FUTIIRE USEI

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
'185·3561

All M1ku

•Washen •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerator a
•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE

4·S·II C

L&amp;S
TRANSMISSION
REPAIR

Howard l

Writesel

ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

'149-2263
or 94'1·2168

2-17-86-ttn

TOWN &amp; COUN11Y

VETERINARIAN
CliNIC

3 Announcements
SWEEPER and aewing machin e

m)tion s, spec ial tra ining , retire

rep• ir. pan s . and supp lies. Pick
up and del iverv . D&amp;vis Vacuum
Cleaner . one ~all mil e up
Georges C reek Rd . Ca ll 614 ·

rnent prog ram land educational
fundin g . Call to sefl it you

446 -0294 .

Care

tor the elderly , room
board. laundry . 24 hour care.
Reason abl e rates. Lots T.l.C.
304· nJ. sB28 .

4

30 4· 676· 14 29 .
PRIOR MILITARY ' SER VI CE
I NDIVIDUALS -Earn ox tr a mo ·
n~., t he Army Nati o nal Gua r d
An E- 4 oould make &amp;I much as
8131 .96 ku one waek · end 11
month . Other benelltl include
150,000 life insurance. pr omo
tions, spec1al training , ret ire ·

ment pr og ram. and educ&lt;'ltion al
funding . C•ll to IN if yo11
qualify. 304· 876· 3960 or 1

Giveaway

800-642 -J8t9
Fill dirt . You

~ul .

Call614 · 446·

2310.

li censed pr1c . rursfl . mu s t Mv&amp;

ceni flcation. Contac t Barba ra

Good watch dog, 10 mon . old
female. Part Bassett . Call 6 14379 -2435 .
To good home. 2 cute fluffy
kitten s, lemale 8 wk . old . Ca ll
614-379· 2436
Electric

do uble

ovan

ra ng e .

614 ·992· 7647 .

Wethe rholt . 30 4· 762 ·2522
Babysi"er needed in our home
baginning Aug . 22 tor 1 yr old &amp;
6 yr old (in tchool 1!1 dayl . MUST
be mature , depen dab\e, e11ergetic &amp; non· ! moker. Send letter
of interest wit h references 10
P.O. B o~ C22 Pt . Pl. Regi s te r.
200 M ain St. Pt . PI , WV

12

Situations
Wanted

8 week old pupp iM to give eway
to good home . Ha ll Collie. hall
Germen Shepherd . Call 614 ·
843 ·6421

Persona l care . room and board
lor Sen io r C1ti1e n 614 ·992 ·
6873 .

Mother cat hes d ied. Need good

home for 3, 4 wk . old kittens
614 ·98&amp;-3907.

18 Wanted to Do

Pan Pit Bull pen TetTier. 101
S t•ta St . Pomeroy
4 ldttant to a good hoi'T'I6 . 9
wa•kl old . litter box trained .
304 -876 -1285 .
HouN. Fini•h te•ring down

trr~d

Will do mowmg end odd jobs
Call 6 14 · 446· 6266
Need a good babn1tter in t h &amp;
Rodney ar ea~ r'\ges 6 weeks and
~ Cll ll614 · 245· 5626 .

must takfl all material . 304 · 675 ·

6677.

Will do pui"ning m s1d8 and out .
rmwing and other odd ,abs.

1 goou, 1 Qlf'lder, 1 vear old
Young gooae 4 months old

304· 676 ·7991

6 Lost and Found
Maroon lldiet billfold

Pain tfng e xterior . 20 yean exp
Free Estima te1 . 304 · 675 · 63 84

Financial

Vicinity

between Kroger's &amp; little Ky ger

PT. PLEASANT OFFICI
305 Jackson Avt.

5

SMAU AIIIIIAL lOUIS
Mon.·Wod.-rhurs. 3·S pm
Jun. 6:30-1, Fri. 1·2 pm
Saturday 10·11 :30 om
LAIGE ANIMAl. &amp;
SURGERY IY APPT.

PH. 304-675-2441

BEND AREA CALl
Ripley Office
For Hours
304-372-S709

10· 14-ttc

HIGH PRESSURE PLASTIC
WATER PIPE

For Industrial or Residential Use

ThOt'f1)80n 61 4 · 446 · 2939 alt er
_FOUND Pil Bull pup. S t Rt
326, between Rio Grande &amp;
Vinto n . Call 614· 246· 9603 or

614-446-9610
- - -- - - - - · lc losl: t kate board. Mi dd lep o n

area. 614-992- 7636 .
Lo• t : V,.,.largalemate dog . 160

"' '

Reward
lor htr
retum
or infor
lbt . Sandy
color.
biKk
fa ce·
matlon . C•ll 614 -949 -2911 .

Pan Golden Aetrelver Femalfl
lost. 1 yr . old , with co ll ar
Lincoln l-lill ar ea . 614 · 992 ·

PH. 992-7403

Using tltc Classifieds
Is as Easy as .. .

PH. 742-2656
RUTLAND MINE SUPPLY CO.
340 II New limo Ill.
7-7.'86-1 ..,,

A golden ~portunlty . Join
Friendly Ho me Toy P•rtltl, 1fi!
lead&amp;J for 31 years . Opanlngt for
managen tnd dealer•· We he'41e
the larget t and be•t line in party
plan No ciSh inve unwmt. no
.livaring or mlleeting Eam big
money plu s bonu ... and travel
incentive. Galt now toll tree to
Caro l Day 1· 800-227 15 10
laundry equ ipm&amp;nt f&lt;H sa l e on
location. B2 .500 . Call614 446 ·

9662
Sou theastern Busin8St Coll "'gO!
The training you nefld l fOf tf-t ..
tuba you want . Finmn ci el H~i '! r
ance avail•ble . Call t oda'l . 61 4
992 · 5117
Ginger Bre•d House Pre - School
186 N . 2nd M id dlepo rt for 1h e
minimal pricA 51500 \' ou rna\
aquire a go111g busin en. Fl r•1i
tu ra and li"tures locat'Mi h
reAso nab ly priced leiSMI space
Until the date o f our out of ttll\1;
move I will assis t new ownttr '"
transition Saud •11 l uc: kvdO '

Own Your Own J eAn
Sporhwaa r. lad ie s appa rel
chlldrens·matem ity . large tileS,
petitt~ . denoowear. acceuo ries
or br1da l shop . Jorda che, Ch1r
l11e. levi, trod. Gitana _ Guess
Calv rn

Klein.

Sergio Val ente

Evan Pico11e , Liz Claiborn~:~
Members Only, Gallol 1ne .
Haa lttlt ex over 1000 oth ers
$ 14 , 300 to S25. 900 in ,.tm t ory,
training, fi xtu•es . grarod opMi nti
Can open 15 d11y s M •
Sidney 1404 ! 252 -4489

ate

~P rofession al ­

Services
Water wells 58 r\11Ced and drillf't ·
Free estima1es . Call 614 99 /'
5006 or 614 · 74 2· 3147

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

4 bedroom house . f i r eplac ~J, .:1
mi. sou th o i Gallipolia 92 9 .900
Ce ll deys 6 14 -446 1615 lo t
ev&amp;nings 6 14 · 446 6222
3 bdr . home. c lo!e to town , 7
balh s , pa rtly fu rnished . Ga ~

helll , low uti lit ies Ca\\6 14 245

9248 .
3 bdr . large k•t chen , b11t h , u t , l • t ~
roo m. s1ngle garage. 'l ca1
dri11eway. nice yard . ga1dm1
space ,

fin1s hed

g a111ga

C al l

61 4 · 446 · 1358
Rio G rande new to11elv 3 bdr . 2
lull ba ths . full basenum t, 91 eat
v18W, 3 de clu . cedar tidiP g ,
g11biA roo t 54 9 .500 C l'lll 614
446 -8038 W1ll consider lrtii1 A 1n
of mobile home
3 ronms &amp; bath. w+th basAm t"n t ,
$9.000 N a-t 10 lnt1g q hall • '
Crown Ct ty C11 ll 6 14 44fl
1 5 t1

2 bdr hou sfl wi th

b RS«t n 11'1 •' 1\,

garden space Goo d C'J "rl . ~~
Garfteld Ave ( all 614 4 ~ f,

18 28
Complet ely remodP.Iud S 10'" "
home in Evor{:l rfl l!n GarAgP 1~&lt; r1
ext ra small t1 ouse. f'"CP.I \r
con dit ion . Sa ... e re!ho rs '""
127.600. Cltlf 014· 448· 7109 .

Qua lity home. nawly rAm n rl "l "cl
cho+c e location on Cnlll'!g~ nd
Sy racu se. new complete k•t c l ,, •
and laundl)'. air con dot tru-. •rl
largAiot . 614 · 992 ·53]4

Goverment homes h o n1 S 1

il l

repair ! Delinqu ent Ia:. pr o pf'r1,-

R&amp;possesllnn! Ca n 8 05 6U l
6000 Ext H·9805 tm r11 Pr&gt; • '
r11po li st

6roomhou !e 1.2ac rAS Doub le
car ga rage LocatedonR o s e H·l\
Bargam p11 ced S20.000 ( • il''
lower level. Rus t1 c H1ll. S\rl'l
c use 3 bedru om , large kitch '"'
la• ge hvmgroo m, air _cond , rhc ~
w8Shftr . ca rp et ed , hugl't garag e
Pnc e r educed. 614 992 -74 /8
after 5 30 61 4 992 3402 .
4 hedroo m ho me on 7 I Ci f:t'!l
Hunte rs paradis&amp; m C:kesteo
ar ea . 9 32. 000 Call 614 98 5 ·
4 392

5 bedroo m 2'11 baH'I
la1 g1t
k1tchen 5 •t, yflars nfJW 1 nu l p

fl83t of Rullllnd 555 .000 1. 11
ac re 15x30 Poo l 8nd de r ~
614 ·99 2· 3543 .
70• 100 lot 1 '!, tlory houu 3 t o
4 bfldrooms . dishwuher, deuble
range st o 11e. fully car pi'I P-d .
wood and coa l burnin11 tl011 e
C lo se 1o school •nd hotpiul
Call 614 ·992 · 6060. Any reuo
nabla offer may b11 c:onJidared
Modern 3 bedroom horne. re
duced 10 S48.000 00 30&lt;1
675 ·5047

.

yr old hom.• Gallipolis Fer,~ .
1 8 acres wn h out builrli11 g

2 '1r

30 4 ·675 2284

21

Busin ess
Opportunity

! NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEV PUBLISH
lN G CO reco mme nd• 1hat you
M busineu with p80pht you
kl'low . and NOT 10 !end money
throu~ the mail until you hav e

"'"''ll''"' 1ho o ttonng

Bettul! ful 3 bedroom , br ,r k
home. t11r co ndit ion, cen t' "'

heat . ca rpe1ed. built · in kitch r.n
2 bath s , laund r11 room_ ettar.hP.&lt;l
g11 r11ge. f&amp;nc9d bllck yard, st u 1
age buildi ng. C ampC on l~ty are~t
3 miles lrom Poin t Pleata •1\ .
304 675 4338
1973 Douglu 14x66 m ob1t 1
home . 3 br . 1 bath , go ·.rt
co nd111011 304-675-4038

l~··=========~=========-'{ard Sales

8639 .
lol t : l•rge Collie weari ng collar
Loll I n Rock1 pring 1 area
Antwera to Freckles. 614· 992·
6608 or 614 -992 -34H2 .

Wanted To

'Qfl-'li!MPr-'&lt;l&gt;.,~,

GanTpons ·
&amp; Vicinity

Buy

··· -··

.. . ..

We p-v cuh tor late model r:laan
.used urt.

Yard Sale Cen tenary July 24 &amp;
25 . Moto rcycle helmet•. ttereo ,

Jlm Mink Chi'V .·O ids Inc

c lothing . Ho m er laugh li n
dlthet. ki ng tize water bed
mamas, Volkswegon top c ar ·
rier, hend &amp; g~~tdan tool1,
electric motors .

July 2 5 th and 26th ..Cou nty Rtt
25 . ne&amp;r Chester. Ctlrldrl!f1 . ' ""'"
adult c lothtng
__::_

luiak· ~ontlac . 1911 hltem
Ave. Gallipoli•. C1ll 61 4· 446 ·
2282.

\'ard S•le July 26 · 26 Baby
clothel. mite ., bikn, bifd , c r•l1
NPPiie• . boys clothet. etc Rio
Grande EJt•te Aplt. Follow

&amp; Vicinity

WANTED TO BUY uttd wood &amp;

tlgnt fro m

Bill Gent John.an

814·446 -3872
TOP CASH P•id tor '83 model
and ,._.., uHd cars. Sm llh

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

Business
Opportunity

61 4· 678 ·25 13

3 male puppies to give away
Bleck lab end Shepard . 614 ·

9

--

quality. 304 -675 3950 or 1
800 -642 -38t9
AVON , 3 opm te rr ito riss . c1tll

SINGLES : Mee1 others from
your area and e l!ewhere . All
agn . Don ' t btl lonely. H .H C ..
Bo~ 8, , leivasy , WV 26678 .

Rd. If found please call Donna

RUTlAND, OHIO

MILITAR Y SE RVI CE

INOIV IOUALS·Eam extra mo ·
noy in the Army Nntio ne! G uaJd
An E· 4 oou ld mak e 81 much as
$131 .96 lor one week ·eud a
rmnth Other ben efits W'IC iude
850 .000.00 tile inauran ce. pro ·

Paul E. Shockey, DVM

All Work
Guaranteed

~

NOW I II you ar e a good typist .
goo d in shorthand . know a linl o
ab out bookkeeping . and maybe
co~ ut en. we have a good
oponin g ior e girl wl'lo wants 10
work . Collag e or e~pe r ien ce
necessary Send lu ll detailed
resume to AWiican t, Bolt 406,
Pomeroy. Ohio . All apphca ti(lns
strictly confident ial. Pr esent em ploy en will not be co ntacted .
Int erview s will be arran11ed

949-2936

10-8-tfc

I / 2HI11n

6-23·86·1 mo.

l~ SHOE PLACE , .

F , •ndl~ Str~tCI

E M1in

l
i

SAlfS &amp; SERVICE

OPEN MONDAY
THIU SATURDAY

--.....

hcrita~t houst

Now loco lion:
168 North Second
Middloporf, Ohio 45760

7, Pomeroy, OH,
"Free Estimates"

64 Misc. Merchandise
-

PLUMBING &amp; HEA TlNG

Rt.

Happy Ads

589'5

lEG. $319.00

519995

'.'.

POCKET
WITH A
CLASSIFIED AD
992-21..56

179.95

... pt: .

.. W 2 I'C. U.

Pharmacy
M1nn1th M cCutlnugh , R Pn

Posturepedic

.:

~\'1 TO YOUR

FULL
Reg. 1109.95
$69' 5

SEALY

~i"$89...9 5p&lt;.

.

'--- ·"" "'-.:a~o.

REG. 1179.00

ABSOLUTELY FREE!

-, ~:~:::

Reg.
·~9 . 9l

BUY ONE

Simply bring in your roll of Color Prinl
Film for processing, and we'll give you
a roll of Colorcraft Film to play with ...

"SUBTRACT" THOSE THINGS

DRAWER

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

EASY ASSEMBL\' WOAKI
8114 .00 per 100 G uaranteed
paymenL N o sa les Deta il s sen d
stamped oovlllope Elan· 71 5
3418 Enterprise. Ft. Pierce. Fl
33482 .

PRIOR

Annou nee me nls

New Homes Bunt

offices of the Commiuion,

A golden opportunity -J am
Friendty Home Toy Part itl s, tlut
leader for 31 years O penings tor
manag en and daa lers We have
the largnt and beu lin e in party
plan No CfiSh in vestmen t. no
deli11ermg or co ll ecti ng . Etun b1g
money plu s bonuses and trave l
incen t ives . Call now toll free to
Carol Day 1· 600 · 227 · 1510

im mediat &amp;ly

with PoweSeol seal

LEGAL NOTICE

in writing , within 30 days of

Work GuarantMd in Wrlting

TV s, Antennas

992-3345

Th e Public Utilities Commit·
sian af Ohio has set t&gt;r p.Jb'ic
hearflg CMe No. 86-11 -GAGCA. 10 revieo.v 1he 9111 cost
recovery rates ol tho Rud.,d
F uol Corf1J.,V, lhe q&gt;eration
of its purchased gas adjust ment dause and related maners. This heamg it scheduled
t o begin at 10 A.M ..on lues·

posed actions are stated . Fi ·
nal actions may be appealed .

SYSTEMS

V. C. YOUNG Ill

985-3937

317/ Hn

Showroom luster

•CARS •TRUCKS
•BOATS •PLANES
&amp; MORE
ly Midtaol Norton
Prestii'Ves &amp; Seals
From Harsh
'"'2
2038
"WE
COME
Elements
..,.., •
TO YOU"
w / APS OUPQNT TEFLON
719/'86 / t mo .
FREE Est . &amp; Dtmonnration s All

J.R.'s REPAIRS

2ll Mitt St ., Middtoport
104 MuiiNrry .h ., Pomeroy

Public Notice

tin

Restores Faded
Oxidized Finishes To

AOPLE'
POLISHING

pairs

mit No . Otl00028·oo
171 24 . 1tc

an opportur J1y 10 be heard.
Further information mav be
obtained by contacting the
Commission .

8-13

L---------~------;;..;:..;;;;..,&amp; 1

(Free Est imates)

4/l l tfn

ELITE POLE
BUILDINGS

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

- Con crete work
- Plumbing and electrical
w ork

WORK !

3418 E11te!l)rise. Ft Pierce. Fl
33482 .

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Form Equipment

Dealer

ASSEMBlY

payment . No SA les _ Deuuls·send
stemped envelop e EIM · 6847

Authorited Jolin Deere,
Now Holland, lush Hog

7-2 1 mo.

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR "

EASY

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

SAUS &amp; SERVICE

IWtr ....

$16 .040
159.230-yr . Now hiring . Ca ll
005-687- 6000 b:t A· 98 05 for
currant federal list .

5714 00 per 100. Gua rant eed

:3
:t

BOGGS

180 E. Bm.t Stroot Coombus. Ohio 43266·0673. AI in Ef - ter&amp;lted persons wil be gr.,.,

fec tive dates of final actions
and issuance dates of pro ·

4

EA. PC.

-a:

7· 15 ·86 2 mo

SAVE 120
~~-rnlah

CJ Col!1luterized Hearing Air Selection
z Swim Molds · lnte!Jireting Services

20 yaors

21

614 -992 -7177
lady-free to travel Chari EtS A
Joseph , G•llia Cou nty Fa ir
campground a. Lot 73

6_30 _, 86 _1 mo .

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS

Worked in home area

CALL COLLECT:
Ph . (614) 843 -5425

rirtd of Hard
Rutty Wator7
Wo Ho" Tht An·

Help Wanted

Government Jobs

Roofing ol all Typal

or 992-7121
6-17-tfc

11

118 ,000 . No selling, rep eat
bu! in81S. Set your own hou rs
Training provided . Ca ll 1 · 61 2·
93 8 -6870, M -F M , Bam to 5pm
ICflntral S tandard Ti me]

Complete Remodeling

" Free Estimates• ·

STEA M ClEAN
6 -27 -' 811 · 1 11'10

PH. 992-2772

VINYL &amp; AWMitUM
Complete Gutter Work

PH. 992-5682

day, August 5th, t986. at u.,

The following were rec efvEd /
prepared by the Ohto Envi ·
ro nmental Pr o lection Ag ·

Reg.
179. 9l

II, U4, Pomeroy Ohio

Terms of Sale: Cash .

PUBLIC NOTI CE
CO UNTY oMEIGS

•

CHEST

1167-3513

Cleaned,
protected,
...ltiled
c:•rpet 1nd
upholnery

$20.000 .

o f M eigs County. Oh

rna parr
ofDexterF

Roger Hysell
Garage

Servtce s

Rep s Needed , lor butlneu ac·
counts. Full time S60 .000
$80,000 , part time 812 .000·

North 49 dog .. 20 ' East 162

Sheriff

Dec~ yours~lf out

CARPET
CARE

E1111Jioy111ent

Wanted - Enthusiastic and en&amp;r·
getic person. Prefer 18 -26 years
of age, with good communicat ion skills. Poa itiona avaiable to
work for Southeastern Ohio 's
outdoor rBCrflation firm . No
experience needed . Will train l
Start immediately . Call be ·
twaem 10 -6 at 614 - 288 · 22 48
Ask for Pam .

~~(

29th day of August, 1986,

at 10 :00 a.m . the following
lands and tenements . to wit
The following described
real estate situate in the
Township of
Salisbury,
County of Meigs and State
of Ohio. bounded and de scri bed as follows :
Being in Salisbury Town ship and a part of Fractton 2,
Town 2 , Range 13 of the
Ohio Company ' ' Purchase.
beginning at an iron pipe at
the Soulhwest corner of a
.57 acre lot , recorded in
Deed Book No. 174, Page
No . 341, D98d Reco rds of
Meigs County, Ohio; thence

LET THERE BE ROCK

FRt I SAT ONLY 12 oDO MION lGHT!

SALE I

Plaintiff. against Oaby A.
Martin and Mary A . Martin.
et el .. Oefendantl, upon •
judgment therein rendered.

feet to State Higtlway No .
33; thence South 39 deg.
30' East 107 feet along said

liiiiiiii!iiiiiiiii••iiiiiiijiiijjiliili

shl.

we·n ewen
the 111m

THE SAI'I'I LOW PIKES
•Certainteed •Mastic •Aicola

Public Notice

------People in the news-----By WU..UAM C. 'rnOTI'
United Press Inwmalloml
BERNSTEIN HAS BAD CASE
OF 'HEARTBURN': Wa tergate
reporter Carl Bemslein used to
curb his tongue when asked about
" Heartburn," the novel hi sex-w ~e.
Nora Ephron, wrote about the
breakup of their marriage.
Now that "Heartburn" 1s coming

~

Wanted To Buy

Used mobUe homes . Call 614 446 -0175.

I~~;:;;;;:;;;;;~Jr==:;~:;:;~~==ir.:;;;;::;;;;;;;;:iTir::::::::::::::::I::::::::::::::::11
3-DAUTO CENTER
RADIATOR
JO'S GifT SHOP
110'1• W. lllaio St.
SER.,.CE
SYRACUSE, 01110
'-•r.
Ohio,
WI
Th
S 1 1 0 f J 11
"2·6771
W
· d
I II I I ot If

FrweD•Iiwwv in h1 Slate A,..

----Quirks in the news----jp§~i
Inmate's only collateral Is his
leg: MADISON , Wis. iUPI J-Ask
Fred Nevels about something
cosllng an ann and a leg.
Nevels, an inmate at the Oregon
Correctional Center, said the state
has blUed hlnn $94.44 for his
appearance al a clemency hearing
in February.
·
The bill, dated July I , must be
paid by the end of the month. And
Nevels said If he is to make tha t
deadline, he will have to sell a
sizeable chunk of his wooden legh1s only colla teral.
He said it would take about fiv e
months to pay the sta le for the bill
because he makes 12 cents to 47
cents per hour at the institution.
Prison officials said if Nevels has
a problem with the bil l. he can file a
complaint . TheydPCiinPd to discuss

9

Business Services

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF

cures and prevffitlon of these
terrible ldllers.
All findings and Information
gained at tiE hospital are shared
freely with doctors and hospitals all
over the world. Thanks to St. Jude
Hospital , children who have leul&lt;c·
mia, Hodgkin's disease. slckle-&lt;:ell
anemia, and ottEr child killing
diseases now have a better chance
to live.

The

Ohio

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

coli htltert . SWAIN 'S FURNI TURE, 3rd. &amp; Oltvt St. Galllpo·
Ill. Cal1114· 448· 3168 .
Woukl like to buy

u·nc~

treUo r

windowt, moltly tt•ndard tire .

36

6 Ftmily. Fri. &amp; Sat . 9 to 4
Ridg e. Cku he s all
Jlir" , toyt. hou tetlold goods end
more. ~

Sho•trlng

Call 814·268-11860 .
Buytng d1lly gokl . tllv• coin•.
rlnfl. ~elry. l'ltrtlng wlrt, old
IOint. llf'll cuntnov. Top pflott. ld. Burklft 8arblr Shop,
2nd. Awe. Middleport, Oh . 614·
992-3471.

l

HOUSE OVER ROWING?
ClEAN UP WITH

CLASSIAED ADS (\?

__

· · Pt'Piiiasant
. ·-·.

·-·-- · ·- --· ...

Jul y 24.25 ,26 , 9 am till 1 C'J tl
Bur dette Ad dn . Pt. PI ,
2127 Jeff~r1on Ave. fr i.· g:, 5
Sat 9 -1 N• c.: a women ·1 cloth 1.

&amp; ot her misc. 1tems .

.

Sunday. J uly 27, 12 ~00
Warwick A~e . NMN 11
M erchandise . M utt
lmmedi•telvt

'

1R

$ OO
l.i

od

s"8 I I

Yard -Moving Sa le. At. 35 t-i ~";;
erson . O ldJohnOaheiF a,m F
&amp; Sat

11

�Page-10-The Daily Sen~~el
31

Homes for Sale

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

Modern 3 b.ctroom. l1rge kit·

76

chen. lull bllttmlnt. t Heluded
ICt81 B.g yltd, loti of shedl.
1Sx30 pool. 3 mil• from Five

Mewing Sal• Mdae extra nice
dining rm. heavy duty wood
table, 8 chtifl t350; hutch and
china closet t650. bdrm . •ite,
full 111e, triple dr81ttr, night·
ltend, d81k end ehalr t276; dbl.
dren• w-mlrror t125; chest cl
drawera t85; deak, hutch end
chair t125; Hemrnond organ,
drawben 1nd rythm box t850;
atereo stand and 2 apeakefl
W•t1tndl •120 ; kitchen roll Clrt
8215; mmal wardrobe 160; maple bookcatt •415; 2 lg. be~n
bag a t1 &amp; each; pine ahelf at and
eso; bookc ..• •zo; triple metal
lholvlng •eo: humldlfl• •5o: lg.
ceramic owl t20; mlac. wood
table t20; pool tllble w-p111g
pong table top •70. metal office
d•k 136; office chair t30,
wood deek UO; 2 drewer filing
ctbinet
desk a.mp t10;
Black a. Decker t.avy duty
aander •eo. 26" glrla blkt •46;
picnic tablee w-2 bend'tee 126 ;
Oeecon'a bench t76. wood
rocking chair e75; antique
drew11r end table w-leather top
in•ert t86; lot• of misc. md1e.
Frt · Sat 9·6, S.R. 160, 4 mi.
put Holzer Furniture, ull lf'IY time 614-446-7322.

Pointt on county Rd. 82. 114992-8348
1 ~ ltory homo loc1ttd on Sand
Hill Rd 7'h mi. from Pt.

Pluunt 3 br, 2~bttht .. l-room
with flrepltce. large country
kitchen w -breakfMt bar. hobby

room, ut•lrty room, 2 -c.r gertge,
full buement llfge cloMta. Iota
of

ttorage

lth,

deck,

1ir,

conditioned. re ..onabty priced
Call 304 -882 -2481

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

NEW

AND

USED

1972 mobilehomewrthoneacre
land, 2 milee from town CaM
614 446 -4841

1974 Stardust 2 bdr, 2 bath,
0carpet.
R, LR , hot
expando.
furnance
waternew
hHter.
Call,
614 446 3917
1975 Weatern Manor 14x70 3
bAdrooma. 2 bath•. t7000
WVIll TAKE TRADE Call 614949-2801 or 814-949-2860
1980 14x70 Kirkwood, 3 bdr .
many extra., t?,600. Call evenIngs 614 -388·9776.
12x60 turmahad two or thrN
bedroo ms Green Terrace Mo·
bde Homtt Park Celt 614-4469501
1980 l1berty 14x54. 2 bedroom. unfurniShed, vinyl underpmnmg included Must seU Call
304·773·5873
-------- - lc ~

74 Ymdale 1211166 wl1h 14k?
EJ:pando. 2 bedrooma. electnc
E~cellent condit1on t&amp;OOO Cell
514 -992 7673
MOBILE HOMES MOVED· insured reasonable rates. Call
304-576-2338
1974 Homehta 12k65. 3 bedlOoms, all elec: mobile home.
Clean and tn good cond, underpennmg block, elec hookup
mcluded. $6.700 .00 304 8963422
1982 Clayton 12160 all elec:tr1c,
e•c. cond 30•·576-2485
1981 NAihua. 70•14, total elec
3 br. good cond . ••tra cl&amp;an,
S11 ,600 . no trade tn on this
0011 1977 Hollypark 64k12 . 2
br ltke new 1naide and out You
ha\18 to s8e th1s one K &amp; K
Mobile Homes Inc. 304-675
3000
1976 Dodge motor home. good
cond Call 304-468 -1792 or
304-882 -2867

33

Farms for Sale

30 scres. good 1\ouae &amp; pond
$36.000 80 acres. peature &amp;
woodland 818,000 30 acres,
large bern &amp; pond $18,000.
Cell614 246 -9248
Beauhtul home tn Flatwoods
11r8fl of Pomeroy. new ktt .. bath,
c.,pating, ate. H.u 1 7 ec. &amp;
POnd. Sltown by •ppofntment

only 614-4ot6 -2359
49 ecru. 4 br house. tull 11ze
buemen1 , 2 · story garage ,
bldgs . good barn, fence &amp;
Wlltttr Must St~lll S36,000.
304 468· 1067 or 468· 1615

35

lots

&amp;

Ac'.!'age

l ot 1n 8 1g Foot Campground.
alo ng Ra ccoon Craek . Water.
electnc. sewer Contact Cotaa
Tollt\ler Shady Water CampQround, Galh~olis Farry. WV 8
m1les 10uth Pt Pleaaant
16 acrea, gas well all mmerel
nght1 .On Boechgro ve Rd 1n
Rutland 812 ,500 Call 614991 3901
Aihlon buildtng lou With publ1c
watltl mob1le homes permtUed.
304 576-2336 or 304 ·576 -

22 67

n1ce acres Sand Hill Road
304 -675 6287
4

Renlals
41

Houses for Rent

E ~tra n1ce larue
w 1nground pool

modern home
on SR 160, 4

m1 lrn m Holler, reference~ &amp;
secur tty dapo1tt requtred. •475
mo Call 614 -446-7322.
N1ce CII'JI!IR 2 bdr dupiiJJt hOUM
m Cheshire Furnished, water
pa1d . large ysrd 1200 Call
6 14 245 ·5818
Perfect starter rettrement home.
2 bdr . close 1o everythtng,
11• cellent netghborh()(ld. lntfdt
Galltpolts C1ty hmita Nothing to
be claaned ftxed . just mo'ole in.
low vtlh1tes Call 1114· 28651 10
3 bdr home. 1 h batha , 8276
mo or sell for S34,000 Will
t1nan c11 Locat&amp;d At 7 Add110n.
Oh Cell 614 ·992 -6843 after
1

5PM

2 bedroom furniahlld house in
Mtddlttpor1 Ca ll 614 -992 ·
5304
2 bedroom Ouple• houae par ·
uaUy turn1ahed. low utlliti•. in
Pomeroy Call days, 614 -992238 1 or 614 -992 -2509 e-ventngl
Newer J bedroom ranch home
Reterencflt end depos it re
qutred 8250 mo Phone 814
742 3171
4 bedroom house for rent in
Svracuu Cell 814 ·992 7689
aher500pm
Houat For Ren1 6 rooms and
bath 304 -675-6720.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bdr rum or unfurn conv•
ntent location, Upper ANer Rd ..
all utllitiH paid aac:ept electric
Sec. dep . req Call 614-448·
8558

Garden tiller, treetor blade. tlftlll
lawn mower, all good cond. Call
61·· . .6·4428 .

'The doctor says you can
come home just as soon as
I'm up to it."

Moving mult Nil. 187• Volk•·
wagon Super Beetle f800 good
cond 1984 Honda ISO t350 like
niiMI. Cannon AEI etmtra with
fl•h naw •110. Dark pine
cofiMtabla eso. Cell614· 448·
7109 after SPM .

2 bedroom. I 176 per month
plu• e1oo d.-po1i1 . Vou pay
utihti81 No pets. Cell614·949·

Unfurni1hld Z br. apt .. yard •nd
b•aemant . e1 50. 304-8767641 111enmga.

2234.
2 br trailer ., country, newly

remodeled. niiW carpet, front
porch, nice yard. city water. Non
Drinker• on!¥ Raferencw required , plua depotit end pay own
utillt iea . 304 - 895 - 3821
anytime
3 bedroom unfurnl1hed 14x65
tratiiM'. 3 mllea from Point
Plea~ent, Rt 2 north. t2215.00
plu• dePoait, after 7. 304-8763248

44

Apartment
for Rent

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Room1 and
hght houae k•pmg rooma. Park
Central Hotel Call 814-4460758 .

0

79 Motors Homes

&amp;

2 bdr uttht1es partially turn .
$175 mo Call 304 -676 -6104
or 304-676 -7926
Furn1shad ap1. 2 bdr 1176.
131 1/J 4th Galhpoha Water pd
Call 614 -446-441 6 after Bpm.
Older couples 2 bdr , utHti•
pertty pard I 160 mo . Call
304 -676·61 04 or 304-676 6386 Of 304-875-7926 .

Furntahed tptrtment. adutta
onty Call614-446·9623
2 bdr . 2 bath,
k1tchen furnished, no pets. 8325
mo plus depoltt e. reference.
Call e14-446-492&amp;

2 bdr upstatra apt , unfurn11hed ,
carpeted , utilitiee ~id . No children, no pet1 Call 614 -•4$1637
Unfurn . downlttirs apt. good tn
town location, 602 4th A.,.. C1ll
8 14-448· 4897
3 room up•t•fl fum . apt. good
In town location, eo2 4th Ave.
Call 814 -..46-4897
ln town . very nice, 1ptciou1.
unfurn . has range &amp; refrlg.,
ground floor with covered patio.
no pats. 1178 plus dapoait &amp;
rtferenc:". Call Earl Tope, 814448-0332 dtyt or 614· 44e·
o1e1 evet

3 room• &amp; beth. a1ove, refrtgerator , all utiliti• furnished , adulta
onty, no pet1 Call 814-4U2583.
1 bedroom apt for rent B11ie
rent rtarta t216 a month that
mcludel all utlltties Oepoait
required ot $200. Contact VII·
ltge Menor Apt . Middleport
614· 992 ·7787 Equal Hou1mg
Opportunity
PoiTMJrov 2 bdr. Neylora Run.
e176 mo 1100 depoait y&amp;rd.
patro. Cell aftllf 8pm 814-992·
88a6

Niee efficiency HUO lppro..,ed.
ldeel for working lady or gantl•
man 22115 Y, Mt. Yerm6mAw.,
Point Pl. .ant . W. Va 814 ·9925858.
6 room unfurniahed apartment
for rant . Cell 814-992· 15434 or
30.·882-2858.

3 bdr expendo living room, large
yard. C1ll 814 ·«6·7473 314
3rd St K1naug1

1 bedroom apt for rtnt in
Mlddlapon . Call814 -992-87e3
evenlnga tnd 614 -992-8111
d.IY•·

3 br turn. trail• w -front porch,
newly remodeled. depoait r•
quired 304·876·3193.

APARTMENTS, mobile hom11.
housea Pt. Pie• ant and Galllpo111. 814-.U0-8221

OE autome11c wuhar a. dryer
•100 ea., ex. cond. Kitchen
tlble e12, boll apringl 816,
endatenda IS set. heedboard
115 . Trailer ltepa 1 yr old 20 a
set . Call 614-367-7216 or 614·
387-0522
fiberglau pickup truclt
topper Call614-367-7419 .

8 ft

46

ltereo racerver wtth
turntable 1nd cassette deck ,
apeaken 1nd ltand included.
$175 . Bunkbeda wtth bookcase.
ahetves and m111nretaes. 8126
Call 614-446-2629.

51

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 82
Oh'Je St , GalliPOlis. Ntw &amp; uaed
wood -eoalsto..,n. 6 pc wood LA
aurte t399. bunk bed• •199,
antron NChnor~ 199. new &amp;
uaed bedroom auhflll. rangaa,
wringer wash era. &amp; lho• New
INinQroom suites 1199-1699.
lamp a, a tao buying coal&amp;. wood
atO\IU Call 61 4·446·3169
GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

Wuherl, dryers. refrlgerttors.
rangu Sktggl Appliancu.
Upper RNer Rd . b"lde Stone
Cr•t Motel. e14-446-7398 .

Dayton mear &amp; produce scales .
Hoban meet alicer, NCR caa
regrater, Burrowa addtng me·
chine, Kelvinator dairy Clle,
Tyler 6 tt atainle111teel freezer.
NCR deluxe C01Ttf¥1tar ~•h
regilter. e h chest type pop
cooler, atore ahelving, neon 11gn
!open), 18 ,000 BTU err conditioner. 5,000 BTU air conditioner. 6ft. electricftaahltlg 1tgn,
ant ~que c81h rBgister. Call 61 4 446 -4792 after 6.
Car battttries good condition,
512 each Call614-266-1747
Color TV Motorola Quaur toltd
ttate , Mediteranean style. play
good t126 Call 614 -266 ·
1747

55

Buildin g Mater1al1
Blodl. , brick. NWer pipe~ , wan dews. lintei1, etc: Claude Win lira, R10 Grsnde. 0 . Call 614245-5121 .

Vllley Furnitur•. niiMI &amp; uaed
large Melion of ~allty fumitur• . Ute Eutern Ave . ,
Otlllpolia.

Beat the Heat with Emerton Air
ConditK)nere on tale now at
MoUohen Furniture, Rt . 7 North.
Gallipolia. OH Call 614 ·446 7444
Refrigerator t76 Refrigerator
891 . Copportone aKte by aide
1196 Harv•t gold, frolt-lree,
like MW' 8260 . GE &amp; Maytag
walher •1 60 each. Mavt-u
wringer w11her t12&amp; Hoo'Jer
portlbla wathtr e96 Electric
ranoe. Je lndl t96 . Skagga
Appllenc:u. Upp• River Rd .
Galllpolia. Call 814-448-7398 .

Flex. 11111 wall hugger rechnor
brown cordurory . Ca/1614· 448·
4.. 3.
LUta new , Nctroom 1u1te and
dlninQrvom auhe. Refrigerttor,
oe&lt;: ..s~n11 chair. Call 814-4481171 .
Mew Broyhill quean heed &amp;

tootbo.-d uoo. 20
dMP-• ., eo

"'·"BI.

18 ~ ft .
c111 e14-

Of

Gold recliner •7&amp;, tove aeet &amp;
t'NitchWtg chlir floral t7e. End
tebl• (equ••oct-1 t215 N . All
good oond. Coiii14-&lt;MI-1944
after 6 weekdaya, anytime
WHiclndt.

Pidt1n1 Uttd Furniture. Good
quality uted fumhurt. Op1n 9 to
or ettl tor tppolntmtnt.

e

30.·1175-1483 .. 875-1.50 .

THURSDAY

Q

7/24/86

0

Campers

@ News

ill Qreen Acres
ill Mazda SportsLook
f11 CD S1a' T&lt;ek

(J) Reading Rainbo .. (CCI
il]) Under Soil

CAPTAIN EASY

CLOSEOUT'S

SURPLUS

Pets

for

Sale

Dregonwynd Cattery Kenn~
CFA Htmatayan. Persian and
Siameee kittana. AKC Chow
puppies Call 614-448-384t
efter 7PM
AkC Reg . L•h•a Apsa puppi81
born Mev 28 . Wormed &amp; firat
shot, 2 mate. 2 femalee , 1176
each. Call 814-448-0708

German Shepherd pupa. 9 wkt.
old. AKC Regi1tered beautHuiA
very •mart, tBO each. CeU
614-446-0373
lhaaa Ap10 puppiet Reg wnh
AK C 8 weejc.a. wormed &amp; tint
1hota. 2 mtlee, 1 female Cell
614-448-0708
A.K C Buutt Puppttt. 6 weeks
old F .A Benedum. Succe11
Rd , Reedlville. Ohio. C11t lifter
6 DO p m or anytrme Saturday
snd Sund•y 814·887-3866.

Beagle pup1 for 1111 Full
blooded 6 wka old 826.00.
614 -742-2980
Deagle pupp111 8 wks old Pure
Bred $36 814 -742-VBB
6 mo old blk . mix. poodle AKC
reg S75 304·882 · 2811

57

Musical
Instruments

&amp;

h . etum. "an bed . Good cond
C•ll 814-.. 5-13.0.

Good milled hty on the w~on,
...oo. 304-575-1878.

f I dii SIJOrlollllli
71

Autos for Sale

1971 Flbergl111 NO\"a 327- 321
HP chrome engine. M·Z2, 4 1pd.
trtna. Call 814 ·992·6941.
84 Chev.tt• 4 cyl .. 2 door, 5
apd. , AM·FM c:•Htte. low
mituge. C.lt 814-4ot8·0137
aft• 5PM.
1970SSNon41pd 19715Ford
PU automatic. t2,000 each . Can
614·441-8212 w•dna••w. .
kenda or 814-448-7404
m•uge.
1970 ChevetleConvtrtlble. 310
eng., euco.. run• good, new
paint, new tir•. 12100 Cal
e14· 441-1201 ar 814 -448·
8113.

Un

4 ptece drum 1et with carrying
case Drums are Ludw-ig &amp;
Zielg in cymbela Call 614·446·
8633 or 614-367 ·7197

GrMd Pri•. 1800. 1974

1982 Chwrolet Maltbu Cleuic
ltation w.gon. AC, PS, AT. "'"V
uood c:ond .. t2,000 firm. No
rutt or dints C1ll 114·3t7·
7213 .
1979 LTD II AC, PS, PB. 4-dr.

eeoo. Cell 614-4oti·30B3.
58
&amp;

1981 Muat~~nu PS, Pl. AL. 4
~d .. good condhion, tl,100
Coli 8U-387-011•.

Fruit
Vegetables

1986 luer Turbo IUtO, 8,000
mi. exc. cond . Call 814-3792728 .

Glallburna Farm Market . St Rt
160 near Porter Home grown
vegetables &amp; freah fruita
Freezer corn $1 00 bu. Call
614-388-9027 .
Red potaton. home grown.
delivered Pt. Plea11nt arM
86 60 per 60 lb. 304-8963690.
6 lb b11ket home grown tometoet t2 99. FreHtone peech•
49c lb; New red poteto• 10 lb.
11 99; Crim10n IWeet water·
melons t3 .25 B•S Produce.
Viand St Pt. Pl.

F~ r lll

SuppliP.s

&amp; Li ves tock
Farm Equipment
CROSS &amp; SONS

U.S. 36 W•t. Jackaon . Ohio
61 '·288-&amp;451 .
Ma,.ey Ferguaon, New Holland.
Bu1h Hog Sal• &amp; Service.
40 uted trac;tor~to choo.. from
&amp; corrplett tine of new • uHd
&amp;qulpnwnt Lart"t Mlectk&gt;n in
S.E. Ohio .

o..,er

CENTER . SR 38 W Galllpolil,
Ohio. Cell 614-448-9777, ave
614 · 446 ~ 3892 . Up kvnt treetor• with warranty O\ftr 75 uMd
fracto,., 1000 tools.
Uttllty bldg . SPL. 30 '"40'x9 '
WITh 15' x8' llidtr .. 3' letv .
do ur 86.251 erected . Iron
Hone Bldga, 814 · 332-9745
colleet.
M111ey Herrle tractor. wide
front end, low built. 4 apd .•
power take off. works good. runs
good. Greet for fir~oodhaullng
1400. Call614-281-1919
3 blodt: aawfTill t2 ,800 Cell
614 388-8888 .
Alita Chalmer 0 -17 di••l treetor. plowe, 4 row pllftttr, htty
wagon. disc. all for 12 ,500 CaM
614 ·388-9888 .
2 vr old Ouar1er horN. filly,
rocht bar breeding. BHt offer.
Ouar1er hor11 we.nllng. CaU
614· 446· 7339
New ldu 324 2 row corn picker.
NM Holland 273 hay btler, pul
wheel r.... 9 ft. hey IHnd,
manure 1preadera. Dyn1 balll'lce
mowers. Othi grinder mixer.
Auger feed wagon. whMI ditk.
other equipment Hown Ftrm
M1chinerv. At. 124 A Meybeww
Ad . Jackaon. Oh. 814-2Be59 ...
For Nle IN Ford tractor, plowt
and diac . 304 - 171 - 2848 .
t1 ,200 .00 .
16 37 C•• Bob CatHie or trade
for farm tractor . 304· 571·
2328

62

197201daSWrunt, naedawortr..
'200. Coli 11 • -446-8881
1983 Dodge Orml• dr.. 4 •pd.
Coli 5U-3'78·2721

1981 Mozdo AX 7. 5 opd., low
miloogo. Coli 814-&lt;MI-3231 .
19n Carvene. goodoand., new
tiret, Corvet1a acc ..lorlet.
80,000 mlloo, •7.5007 1878
Dodge Colt 2 dr. ted1n. nana
good. good cond., high mllugo,
•king •1.000. Call 114-44e·
0132 .
1186 Chrytler LellfOn 4 dr., all
power, nic:e, fB .ISOO. C11t 111 4·
388·9889.
1988 Plymouth Turitmo 5 apd.
aun roof. ee.~o . 11,000 mil•.
Coli 8u-•u- 1112.

61

Wanted to Buy

Now buvino .tuo~t corn or ew
ouut. ~111 tu••a••tquotet. River
CIW fotm ll......tv. &amp;14·441·

.2188.

.

1984 LTD Ford atltlon wagon.
euto, air, cruite. tHt. wire rima,
*3.481. John '• Auto Salet,
Bulaville Ad., G11Npoh, OH.

7li Pinto P . running cond.,
MOO or trlde for ltltlon wagon
or..,.,._ CeH 114·211·1180.
1974 TRI. Good concHtlon.
New Clrpll: kit (not lnltilled),
Mldl•ln R.. wa~
•noo.

-loc

n...

Coli 814-848· 3031.

C11ollno (VGCI .
1914
AIt ortgmll, 80,000 actuel milw.
02500 firm. Colt AR-18, tmm,
nM, 20 I'OundcUp 1500. C111
814 -992· 1710 0&lt; IU -8126895.
1179 Monte C1rto, euto, tlf, P8,
PB. VI . Wholt .. le prlca~
01491. 1170 Oldo tl OkCIIIIl\t
condition. 415 roakat V-8, auto .
Good rubber, runs rrfect.
.1 291. 814- 7'2-283 .
1980 AMC Splrk. Sun roof, 4

cyl.. • ..... "300
81.·982-3'18.

c.11

81 Fleetwood Cadillac: . Lo...a,
tow miiMQe. CaH 814·992·
1421 .
85 Ptymouth H«b:on. AC. AM·
FM radiO, au1o. lowmtle~ge . C•ll
114-912-8421 '
1978 Pinto 11·8 euto tr1n1," II

t&amp;OO. 8U-M8·2302 "'""inti~

1974 OlclaOmeg .. low mil .....
new mocka. end tailpipe. ell71.
One femlty owntr 814 ·985·
35"0

'82 a-. Collbrhy, ,...., good
cond. pa,pb, am-fm CMS. ac,
cr.,rebuKt motor-IrMa. 304176-2273.
1978 El Dorado. all ft'lllable
options. bw mllt~~e. lmrntcu·
leta, M•utiful oar,
l'llono 304-171-3641 .

••zoo.

1981 Comtro Z21, lOw mil.
304-171-3427.

' 78 Dodtl• ........ -

current •Iaker.
175-7141 .....

Trucks for Sale

1964 lntemllionll 211J ton 14

Grain

Volkawegon Atbblt, 11100.
1971 Dat .. n pldwp, eJOO. Clll
814-367-0437.

1 New aal\lage steel door
blanke, nick a and acratch• •1 8
to 8215 ea.
2. Thtrmal pain an thermal break
aluminum windows severllaizlll
e49 .9&amp; to t79 96 .
3. 8 ' eluminum patiO doora Mt
• 199 96 waith ICrHn
4 Oetogan IN titnev glau
windows t49. 96
5 16 lite pine Fren cf't doors 8
grades t89 95
6 4x8k 11• Masonite under layment 129.98 ea .. 4a4x 'l. t1 00

B~dt. brick, mort•r and rna·
aonry M.tppUII Mountain •••'e
Blodt, At. 33. New Hav•. W.
Vo. 304-882·2222 .

Hay

30 h. •H·contllined COIChlftM
5th - 1 . 04&amp;00. 1881 Dl•ol

JIM ' S FARM EQUIPMENT

7 4x8llt 3A toung groo\le weftla
board extertor glued 8 t8 96
8 4x8xlAt Young groove plywood 8 t10 95 .
9 4x8x~ 4 pty plywood 8
$6 99 .
10 4x0.. 1/t Iavan plywood B
14 49
11 4a8x'l• aalvage paneling
u 99
12 6' redwood stein picn ic rable
wtth 2 bencttes 839.96 .
13 Prehung 1nteuor doors ell
1i1111 and finlahu 129 96
14 Pretlung 1teel panel doora all
lilet $89 9~
16 . Wood pref1nlahed vinyl
wraped colonialtrim7pc t100
16 Pnmed te~rdrop wood trtm
•1 .007pc
17. K-lux brick cornera •1 .00
per box, 12 box t1 0 00.
18 32"x76" 'II th•rmal tem pered glus reg e79 .96 now
029.96 .
19 . Rock flee brown trailer
aklnlng 28 " k60" U .99 ea.
20 . 22 "x33" lleinleslsteel 10 '
deep sinks B grede e59 96 .
21 . 8talnl111 Ileal mrn• ainkt
8&amp;9 .95 B grtdt.
22 . 4pc. soUd oak end btlls b1th
lit 123 .98 11. 3 Sltll tnd up
119.95
23. &amp;g1l. aluminum fiver mobile
home roof coating t22 96 .
Penn' a Warahouu, WeUaton.
Ohio. 8 to &amp;, I deya. Call
814·38•-3U5 .

64

2 1/, year old dog, King DoberiNn
puro bred. real nice c.n 614246-&amp;641 .

BUY BACK 'S

..

WOIO

PUULIR

tAM I

O Aeorranoe

letters of the
four scrambled words below to form four simple words

I I I I 1I I
NIDWWO

EVENING

6:oo a m® G ®® m ~

2

I

r. I II I t .

-,.:.1..;.N;.,..N-,.:.T..;.Hi:c--11 ,
1

,P,,_I~L~_,I
1I I I

@ One O!y at a Time

GIVE 'YOUR GEH'E5' LJP!

6:05
6:30

ffi Fe1her Knows

Bes1

f) (II ·liD NBC News
(ll The R1flemen

•

•

A~D

f.IOW. AI'PRG.6.CHING MIIJPIJ;
, !:M CONIEHT WITH A

HOiiE AHD STEAtll Jl&amp;'

Hang Gliding Championship
I]) Q ([) ABC News
® Doctor~ Who
® Gl ~ CBS News
il]) Body Eloc1ric
(ill Welcome Back. Kotter
CIJ Gomer Pyle, USMC
f) (II PM Magaz~ne
(ll Man f&lt;om U.N.C .L.E
@ SportsCentor
(JJ Entertainment Tonight
ET ta lks to John Forsythe
about hts upcommg TV
movre . ' Man of Ftrt ·.
fl) (I) Hogan's Har0t111
Q ([)Jeopardy
([)Nightly Business Report
G]J News
(j]) MacNeil-lehrer Newsh -

5

t-1

.

ill

J.\SIS
WA&amp; ABOV. I JU!&gt;T
IA&gt;!&gt;!Jfo\EO I ..W.D PU'IC~
AHD fM\0\JS '!lOME; DAV!

72

Building Supplies

BUILCERS

48cu . ft. freeur . '100firm Call
614-W6·8607

56

Girla dr••• alu 4,5, 6 Call
8l4-4ot6 -7240

County Appliance, Inc. Good
u1ad applian~ and TV teta.
Open SAM to IPM Mon thru
Sit. 6U·4ot8· 1899. 627 3rd
A'ole. Gtlllpolis. OH

Ch•ck our everyday low pric•
on 1\trniture &amp; eppliancea. Mollohan Furnhure, Rt . 7 North.
K1n-..ga Ca11614-446·7•« .

"'J A60)0 'OALM~ I

TIIAT DAM.Y

I

.

.

t--Tis',l''l-"11':;--~r-i

- d.

••oo.oo. 304-

18151 lntlmational PIJ, leta than

1.000 mU• on engine Call

814-388-8861 .

1981 Dodgo D-150, 4 opd,
rltdio, *2.489, John '• Auto
SeiN. Bull\'llle Rd., Gallipolia,
OH.
1984 Ford 4x4 Bronoo II, black
wtth red pin ll:rip, exc. cond
B11t offer. Cell 814 - 4ot5 ~ 2707
1974 Chevy Cheyenne 360
englna with PB. PS, AC. lflt up
for towing with bralle control
lnd trana cooler 1nd ~:lua Ill
A ... e hltdt f2.800 . C1ll 814-

•

A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
VI' IN THESE SQUARE S

f)

~7fC!~:~E~ LETTERS

1979 Lw - one owner - Abbie
N.vHie. 304-678-2482

73

Vans

&amp; 4

W.O.

1186 510 4•4 lo.ted
81'·"6-4256.

Cell

1988 Chavv Altro van, com·
plete CCinvenion. 4 captain
Clh airt, couch, air. ttlt, cruiae,
IU1o, V . 3 V-1, l:flty 1. 600 miles
Coll81•·367-0850.
1982 Chn . 4•4. lir, 12,000
plua, IUIO ., 306 V-B. t6200
loan, 11H 16200. Call 814-446 7019
1978 GMC con. van . pt, pb, at,

oc. 304-875-2U9.

74

Motorcycles

1881 Hond1 Goldwing 1100,
fully dr•Md. uc. eond .• Call
814-251-1813 •• 814 -258 1703.
1979 Honda with acceuories,
1700. Coli BU·&lt;M8-2044.

83 Hond1 V-46 M~gna, liken tiN .
2.500 mtla with two Vetterlite
holmoto U .OOO. Coli 8U-&lt;M69~8 . ,.. &amp;.
1182 Yam.., a XT 200 Enduro.
1.800 mite., eke condition.
1100. C•ll 814-245-9127.

1880 Hande900Cuatam Beautiful biko n&amp;oo. c.u 8U-9926710"' 514-992-5895 .
78 Honda Motorcycle 600. 80
Honda CX 500 . Call 814 -9926,21

14' MF8 tri -haul 1981 70hp
Mere. New seats &amp; c.erpet,
trolling motor , ttlt tra1ler
.2900 304-882 3664

.au

1983 KIWauki KX80
882-2425.

304 -

'815 Honda 250 4-wheeler, good
condition •1 900 Call304 · 1176 ·
5478.

76

Boets and
Moton tor Sale

28 toot pontoon boat, 80 HP
M•rcury, g.. grill, fttreo, trailer .
Price: with motor 83800 , with·
out motor t1998. Call day
814-912·2381 ond n!vht 814112-2808.
Aic:h Une Batt Bolt. 35 HP
John10n Motor, 58&amp; Mincota
INa well.
foot control
11500 "'bolt ottO&lt;. 8U-8928190.

•••tad

11n Ramcherger. 180 HP
Marc:ury 19 ft. tri-haul •3500.
Negotiable 304·676·8608 or
875-8715.
IIHBoet, TerryABF 11'78 u.c.
cond. 10~ M•cury, 2&amp; lb.
Mercury thNiter w-foot control,
double INe wena. 2 deep cycle
t.tterlel. 2 gu tankl, CB redlo,
full e~~nvu cover, b1turv
cherger, extr. prop, 1nchor. aid
hamau, skis, aled. Termet11111
drive on •all• w-new wheel
belringa, other Plrll, will dem·
onltrate t4800 firm . 304-8781087.
ltMI hlul Pon·tu n bolt with or
without motor. 16 hpt 304n3-838l.

76

&amp;

Auto Parts
Accessories

4 Camero Rellv Spon whMia
with new NC-.&gt; Ur• t1 00 ut. 2
M.__., Tha"1)ton wide racing
tire~ on wheels • 7&amp; pr C1ll
814-&lt;MI-7322.

:N~..-,.-..-:-.--::bo-:cty-,.-n..
•.-:73=-:::-80-~M
ond fO&lt;d pi'*·•P 11ftden. 039 .
73-88 fiiUooro, •n. Chwy toll
til. ford tellgetw, t711 .

en-.

OYer 1100 ltamt to choon

1873 Ctllrlco, p-lo'*, P•. pb,
r.. lo oope p~orytt oc, VOod lhopo
.1111. 104-571-3222 . 1101

II Mora.v LYftll, 4 111. ~ oyl,
good ...d. 304-1171-3193.

Waottod to buy: NMd d-1111
lor ~ ton Oodgo pickup. 81•·
141-2813 .

LOoj&lt;

Ai THAT' LIT'iLE

CHOLE-.&gt;iE'~OL fv!OLE"CVLf= -.

Services

IC~

!-if':&gt; E'AiiNG

7.35

8:00

C/?E'AM

ANP WAT"cttiNG TV
AGAIN.

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondi11onsl hfet1me guaran tee local references furmshed
Free eatimate1 Call collec1
1-614-237-0488. day or nigh1
Rogers Basemen1
Weterproofmg

.,

ALLEY OOP
WE'RE GOI~G 10 REPLACE
ALL OF KING KOOGIE'S LOOT
WITH ROCKS!

Ex.terior a. 1n1erior stu cco Pl.uter &amp; plater repairs low ra tes
Call614-266 ·1 18 2
J &amp; J'a Home lmprovemMI
Vtnyl 11d1ng. overhang. storm
doon &amp; wmdowa. gutters Call
614-446-8073
Shrubs, mulch, topsml , gravel,
firewood. trees . stump removal ,
chain link fences . lawn cere Don
Waugh. Call 614-446-9646
RON ' S Tei&amp;\IISton Serv1c8
Houn c1ll1 on RCA. Ouazer.
GE Speclel1ng tn Zentth Call
304-576 · 2398 or 614 •46 2454 .

EEK &amp; !\1EEK

Fetty Tree Trtmmlng. stump
removal Call304-676-1331

M 11-IE. ~MILMS
WE-RE. 100 HIGH

RINGlES 'S SERVICE. e•perienced carpenter. electrician.
m•on. patntet, roofing (includmg hot tar appl1cationl 304675-2088 or 676 -7368
Stark• Tree end law n Ser\IICe,
landscaptng 304 -576· 2010

8:05
8:30

9:00

Rotary or ca ble tool drilling
Moat wells completed nmeday
Pump talel and aerv1ce 304895 3802
Call Erme Carpentery, remodel·
tng, room add1t1ons, pa1n tmg,
block, lree astimales, 304-675
5152

82

\1 1- - MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Plumbing
.P· Heating

WHAT C()ES "RECiiJR61T.ATI; '
MEAN , SPOTLESS?

CARTER 'S PLUMBING

.---------ITS LIKE WHEN YOW EAT
SOMETHING BUT IT
COME-S BACK LIP AGAIN .

THERE ARE SOME QUESTIONS

T HAT .ARE BETTER LEFT
U NASKED.

ANO HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Ptne
Galhpolts, Oh to
Phone 614 -446 -3888 or 614 446 ·4477

83

Excavating

Good -1 Excavattng. baaemenll
footera . drl\leweya, upttc tanks
landsctping . Call anytime 614
446 ·4637, JtltTlel l Davison.
Jr owner
J .A A. Conatructlon Co . Ru
tland. Ohio 614 -742 -2903
Baaements . Footera , Concrete
work. Backhoe· a. Do1er and
Oitcher. Cump trucks. and
water · gas - sewer . elec t nea l
hnea Charhtt Hat11eid operator

9:30

BARNEY
LOOKV.PAW!!
TATER'S IN
LOVE WITH
JUNEVLEE

TATER CAN'T SPELL!!
HOW IN THUNDER

DO YOU I&lt;NOW IT·s

JUNEV LEE ?

LEDBETTER ·

85

SHUX·· IT'5

PLAIN AS TH' NOSE
ON VORE FACE

THAT·s
PURTY PtAIN,
All RIGHT
10:00

General Hauling

Jam a~ Boys Water Servtce Also
pools tilled Call614-256 -1 141
Of 614 ·446-1176 or 614 -446
7911

Dropsy- Realm- Irony- Zenith- POTHOLDER
Woman to sleepy husband at breakfasl table. "Sure your
waffle was tough and dry. You )usl ate lhe POTHOLDER."

Coal. hmestone. grave l ate
Deh\lered 1 ton and up J1m
lamer, 304 -675 -1247 or 6 75
7397

Mowrey 's Upholatettng servmg
trt county area 21 yeera Th e best
In furmture upholstermg Call
304 - 675 4154 for free
eatlmetea

ALL R16!-IT, LET'S

START

WITH MATILWI-lAT IS

THIRTV TIMES FIFT'I'

WHEN I GROW U~

I'M
60NNA 60 ON THE

LADIES PROFESSIONAL
.I WON 'T HAVE TO
KNOW THINGS LIKE THAT..

WHAT

ABOUT KEEPING

YOUR SCORE ? YOU'LL
HAVE TO KNOW NUMBERS ...

JUST TWOS, TJ.lREE5

ACROSS

ANO FOURS '

• K 76
• Q 10 8 3
• 742

.9843 2

t9 5
• 86
SOUTH
• 10 9 5

.AQ 5
t AJ 4

+A to 9 3
Vulnerable East-West
Dealer Soulb
Wesl

Nor1h

East

Soutb
I NT

Pass
Pass

3 NT

Pass

Pass

Opemng lead. +3
L _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.

and play a spade back to h1s 10. West
Will wm the k1ng and may well reason
that East has strength 10 the heart
suit A SW itch away from the heart
king will then allow South to make his
contract by means of Lh1s bold SWindle Please don't make th1s play every
chance you get. But keep it m your
bridge arsenal just 1n case.

39 Junt&gt; bt&gt;f'tlt•
DOWN

1 Defunct

basketball 1 E:xptal('

2 Hav(' llw

leaguf'
4 Scrutm1zr
8 Ladder

fn end-

shlp of

3 L1kr ly

run~

9 D1recL10n

4 Salty
5 Nur sery nf'f'd
6 Humonst

symbol

II

Rin~r

12 Clutter
14 Tavrrn

Burhwald
1 Retu:w
21 Small

28 Mtster , m
Monterey
as of ha1r 29 N C c·o lle~f'
10.12 llffi('S 22 r&gt;c·hhif• and 31 South
yearly
EddJt&gt;s
Afncan
I 3 Wh1rl
daug.hwr
htshop
I G Math rauo 23 Wharf
34 Ryre sounrl
18 EngliSh
24 f1dn's call 3~ rompo!:wr 25 Cnrn·c·l
Z('ppt• fm

15 Km
16 Notion
17 Gr1 bad
19 - out

uust
go•l hy)
20

Ouuch ,

rPcepuon
8 Ag1tak'

r'rench
nv..-r

21 NYC
s l rf&gt;et

22 lr r f'rl'am
hold t&gt;r
:!3 fo'ppJ fnr
24 Vtq(Jma
of tenn1 ~
25 Sound of
C'OOlf'mpt

26

Table scrap

27 Rrst
:10 Mm1n~ find
31 "ll lgh - "
32 Alwr's hoss
on TV
33 Work on

sam

musd4's

35 ( "omt&lt;.' .lay

36 Bo• a ham
37 PuzziP
S&lt;·hool
38 Wh1skey -

DAILYCRYPTOQUOTES - Here's how lo»ork 11 ·
AXYDLBAAXR
is LONGFELLOW
One letler stands for another In tlus s;1m p.o ~ IS used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc S1n,.:1e letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the" ords are all
!Unls . Each day the mie letlers are different
CRYPTOQUOTE
7-24

z

R E J S

1./SSK

Dll

V S N

CIJ MOVIE: 'You Can'1 Win
' Em All'

XSANEZK

e oo ® a

EAST

+A Q 4 2

by THOMAS JOSEPH

CROOK &amp; CHASE cove&lt;
Country coast to
coast, tonight at
10:00PM.
NASHVILLE M•

10:30 (ll Children of the Brokenhearted
Q) CD INN News
(]] Tony Brown's Journal
11 :oo
III® ~
llSJ News
I]) Bili Cosby Show
fi) CLJ lo'ole Connection
[j) History Recovered.
1 984 Survey of Custe&lt;"s
Battlefield
@ So1p
11 :03 ()) SCTV
11:30 f)(I) IlSJ Tonight Show (60
min ) In Stereo

WEST

+K 8 6

~-~t.Y

rn

10:15

l ·H-81

+

One strategy in poker ts bluflmg betting as though your hand were excellent so that other players w1ll drop
out. Allhough there is no betlmg m
bndge, players will sometimes make
a bluff mg b1d, hoping to stop the opponents from leading a particular SUi t.
Wh.at •s not so common is to make a
bluffing play , attacking your weakest
suit in an attempt to cajole the opposition mto leadmg your stronger sutts.
With the openmg lead of a diamond.
declarer had e1ght tncks The obvious
source of additional tricks was in the
heart holding. If East had the hea rt
king, a successful finesse would even
prov1de an overtrick. And 1f West had
the heart kmg, perhaps he would not
know to switch to spades. So declarer
went to dummy with a club and took
the heart finesse Defender West was
on h1s toes II South had A-J in dia monds, the club ace and as much as A·
Q of hearts, the only defens1ve hope
waa that East held A·Q of spades and
some spade length So Well! won the
heart king and switched to spades to
set the contract .
What if declarer makes a bluffmg
play' Let him lead a club to dummy

m1 n.)
m m soap
Great RBIIW8'f Journey&amp;
of the World
@ Newswatch
@ News

IVE GOT
A1"HL£iE'5
FOOT II

NORTH
+ J73
• J 10
• K 7 ti 2
K QJ 5

By James Jacoby

® Q ® 20/ 20 iCC) (60

PFJANUTS

R &amp; M FumnureManufacturmg,
St Rt 7, Crow n City . Oh Ca ll
614-266 ·1470. call E\le 614 446 - 3438
Old 8. n e w
Uph.&gt;s11rftd

Try reverse
psychology

M1dgets
From
lndlan a poltl , IN (90 mm) Ltve

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOlSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec Av11 , Galhpohs.
614 ·446-7833 or 614 -446 1833

James Jacoby

lA)

W•tten on 's Watflr Ha ulmg .
ruaonabltt rates 1mmert111t e
2.000 g11llon dehvery . CIStern s
pools. well. etc call 304 576
2919

87

BRIDGE

@ Au1o Racong ·as : USAC

Ken 's Weier Sttr v• c• Well s.
ctaterns, pools and wat erbeds
filled Call 614 -367-0623 or
814 -367 7741 or 30" 675
1247
Ctllard s Water Delivery C1st
ern1. wells, pools Anytime bu1
Sunday Call 614 -446-7404

fi) (I) Tax'
Q ([) G]J Wheel of Fortune
(j) Yes. M1nister
C
IID Entertainment Tonight Ste'.'te Wonder talks
about the new look. and
sound of hts upcom1ng
summer to ur
G]) Ahce
@ Jeopardy
ffi Sanfo&lt;d and Son
0 lil@ The Cosby Show
(CCI Cl1ff u rges h1s father
to come out of retirement
and re101n ht s old JSZZ
b an d (A) In Stereo
(I) Wackrest Shtp In the
Army
@ Au .o Racmg ·a6. CART
Molson Indy Fro m Toronto .
Ontano 190 mtn) (R)
:ID O II Ripley's Behove 11
or Not! (CC) Witness a btla rr e e ndurance contest
and mvest1gate the truth
behtnd Joan of Arcs death
(60 mm I (R)
fl) (JJ MOVIE : 'Red Sun·
ffi MacNeil-Lehrer Newsh
our
® Gl ~ Death of a Salesman (CC) Dustm Hoffman .
J ohn Ma lkov1 c h and Kate
Retd star '" a f il med ver SIOn o f Arthur M1iler's
Pui1Uer-Pme wmnrng pl ay
(3 hiS I IRJ
(!] Eventng at Pops; Manhattan Transfer Th e Man hattan Transfer JOtns John
Wtlltams and the Boston
Pops for an evenmg of mu SIC (60 mtn )
(ill MOVIE: "Pi&lt;anha II'
CIJ MOVIE. "A&lt;rowhoed'
0 (II liD Family Ties Mal ·
lo ry becom es Jealous when
an ol d er . wealthy woman
takes a spec1al 1nterest tn
N1ck 's an c rearrons (A) In
Stereo
0 (1)@ Chee.s Sam pantcs when he become s con
v1nced that h1s best years
are beh1nd htm (A) In
St&amp;reo
(]] 700 Club
® Q ® The Colbys ICC)
A by gone
tnd 1scretton
made publtc tn court
c auses qu1te a shock tn rhe
Colby c lan, changmg Jeff 's
l1 fe for ever (60 m1n) (R)
CID Nova: Return of the Osprey (CC) The osp rey was a
vtrtually ext1nct b1rd of
p rey bef o re the reasons behi nd 1ts populatton de cl ~n e
were brou ght to ltght {60
m'n I IAJ
&lt;IT Myste..,!: Shacles of
Darkness (CC) A new matd
lea rns about the prevtous
mm~ · s ghost when s he
takes a JOb ca nng tor an tn vHitd w o man (60 mtn) (R)
f) (I) [5) N19h1 Court Aller
Harry loses custody of
Leon when adoptive parents are found . Oan a rrange s fo r the judge to
m ee t h1s tdol. Mel Torme
(A) In Stereo
(!) Auto Racrng ; N1kkt
lauda Ekplains Formula
One(RI
f) aJ@ Hil l Strae1 Blues
Funllo
tS
app ro ac hed
about a posstble poit1t ca l
caree r and Hunter blacks
out 1n a basement and believes he 1S a pnsoner on a
Russian fretghter (60 mm )

m

powe'r ooit . E11cellent condition .
Ca11614-992-5224 . Sleeps s1x
t10,600 080

1878 Kewauld LTD. 1 ,000
wlndohield, •uo . 30•-875 ·

11om. C. M"Au1o Pom. Bldwoll.
Ohio. 1:.·"1·8227 or lyrdl
e.-, Choot•ton, W.V. 30•·
141·3111. Dttler lnqulreya
......... 211· 112-·134. .

MooomonC~olo.

19n Champ1on 23 ft 14 000
miiM new IIWntngs. AC . own

441·39~.

1850 FDfd with logbed. t750 .
114-885-3991 .

(!) ~edwoek

IIIIIIII

TO

YESTERDAY'S SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Acres
New Newlywed

Garno

1973 travel tfl1ler 18 h Was
ealtin!J 11450 , now asking
t1300 Cell614 -992-6388 .

81

Cil Groen
fil (I) ®

company and n o t - It"

Complete rhe chuck le quoted
•
•
.
.
•
by ftlltng tn 1he mts.smg words
.
.
.__._..__..__._...___. yov develop lr1&gt;m step No 3 below

0] Wheel of Fortune
7.05
7:30

Ie

T A GA 5 H

&amp;:J lHl 01\lorce Court
G1l Pr~vate BenJBmln

10ft. Oei-Rey Slid e-m Camp8f .
Self contamad E•cellenl condition &amp;1100 Call 614 -742
3026

In response to the teacher 's
question of what etiquette was,
the fourth grader announced lhat,
"E1iquette Is getting sleepy in

N:'

.

out

AM -FM

Build1ng msterials, cement,
btot:b 111 alrea, yard or dt!Nery
Qallipolia BloeM Co , 123 1h P1ne
St.. Gatllpoll1, Ohio Cell 614
446-2783

Bunk beda. 8100 Good condt tlon Call 814 -387-no4
Summer Sa\llnga Vacation Sp•
ciel. Villege Green Apanmenta
are now accepting applicfttone
for occupancy of two bearoom
apanmenta For a limited ltme
1he lirst montha rent Ia h price
For applicatkln• or more infor·
mation ttop by apartment No.
18A or call 814-992·8174
Monday through Thursday 8 00
p m -10 .00 p.m only

1977 Chevy "12 ton pleMup No
rust, rebutlt engtne, t1 000.
1972 360 JD Dorer, engine
rebuilt. $4600 1981 Belt saw·
mill with Ford tnduatriel engine,
12800. 16ft. fiberglass boat 40
HP mottr, runa good, $460 Call
614-388-9354.

Gtrls cloth1ng, exc . cond tile
10-14 allaeuona Chtne diahes
white set for 1 2. extra pteces
Redcarpet9x12 good cond Call
614-446-9324 .

1 1 Court St

Furniahed etfie~ency apt, carpal
throughout. tingle working perton , t185 includtng watl'lr Call
614 -448-4607 or 814 -4462602

For .. Ia trailer and 1 acre lend
$5,000 304-676-6561 .

Furnilhed room $1 Hi Uttlrttea
pd. 919 2nd Gellipohs. Share
bath Stngle male Call 6 14·
446-4416

COUNTRY MOBilE Home Perk,
Hou.e &amp; apanment for alngl., ·Route 33. Nor1h of Pomeroy.
large lots. Call 614-992· 7479
Call 30•·875·&amp;104 Of 304878-5381!1 or 304-1!175-7928
Trailer &amp;paces . Sand Hill Road
Furntahed 2 bdr apt uliliti• conven1ent to 1choola, rtore and
parttally paid Call 304-676· hoapital. City sewer aiitttlable.
5104 or 676-5386 or 304-676- inquire Roulee, 304 -676-4600
between 9 ·00 and 4.00 week
7926
day•
1 and 2 bdr. apts. for rent. Blltc
rent for 1 bdr •176. Bate rent Trailer apac... ttlllll children
for 2 bdt 1212 Al10 t200 sec. accepted, At 1 , locuat Road,
dep req . Cloae to F()(ldlend and bacll of K &amp; K Mobile Home
Spring Vall~ Plaza. Jacbon
Et1ate Apartment., 81 .. -441!1 Merchandise
3997
Equal Houa1ng
Opponunity

C::O t-(OU.

B:3B
7.00

Callahen"a Uted Tire Shop Over
1.000tlr•. sizes 12.13,14 . 16 ,
16. 16 5 8 mit• out Rt. 218
Coli 814-258-6251

Cameron trailer 12a64, John
Deere 2 row corn planter. MF 3
pt. hook up 2 Pt plows Call
514-256-9303

Space for Rent

OOITHIOR

1973 motor home 21ft Dodgo
chuata. self contatnad. central
air tn good shape, sieepe 6 Ca ll
814-446-0668

5 nring banjo, amall riding
horse. 304-676- 2409

for r~mt, day week.
month. Gallla Hotel Call 614448-9580. Rent 11 ffiw as S 120
month.

Room~

FC1&gt;- 'iOVR I~TJOI.l,

Salvage parts ' 82 Dodge Omnl
car or wtll aell complete car
304-676-1319

0

Misc . Merchandise

.Reese hitch complete t260 8
in. Craftsmen reditl arm saw
•100. TRS 80 32K color
computer- joy aticka. cauette.
word proceuor program t1 00 .
Coli 514 - 446 - 38~

Ridge Rd, Patriot t1&amp;omonth
Call 614·4ot6-470l morninga.

C:OCS/J'T iiWJIRE HI'S 'Sa~TAR I
1tJ etT HISCOFFE£!

ARLO

Solid oak hutch chine cabmtt
With glue front t400 CallllftM
5. 51.·388 -8711

2 bdr . lot alec. located on Dry

FQ&lt;:. ~U~ 1 1JFOI&lt;J\IATIQ
MR. HliNDI~ (;CE~'T PA~

16 cubtc ft. up nght freeztr
Excellen1 cond1tion 6 pc
dinette aet. 260 Union Ave

Pl11tic ctatem ltate approved,
planlc septtc tanka, .,tatic
culverta. metal eulverta RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jack ·
san, Oh. 61 4·286 -6930

14x70 furnished three bedroom,
b81h &amp; 1/J, central air. S260
month. t250 depo1it CaN 614'46-3793.

~0\!R I~TIOIJ, 1/f'... ~tJ,;DiN'1

Sentinei- Page- 11

Television
Viewing

209 S. 4th St . Middleport

54

2 bdr trailer furnilhed, washer &amp;
drvttr. 5 mtn. from lawn. nondrtnking, m1rried. worilinu couple Traah &amp; water p1id. Call
before 11AM, 814-446·4063

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

JHIRN LOSER

1974 Ford pi~up . 302 engtn e·
excellent AT , whole truck 6300
1972 Pinto , good 2000 engtne,
AT. whole car t160 Cell
814·268-8650.

for Rent

3 bdr mobile home. 111!1 baths. in
Evergreen on Co Rd . 48. 2 bdr
mobile horne in Rio Grande next
door to the college. fumi1tted . 2
bdr apt. completety turnllhed,
next to Rio Grande College. Call
814-445-1323.

Thursday, July 24, 1986

House full of furniture for aele

t-;;;:::;;:;::;;::;:;::~==~~:;::::;::::;::::;:::::-j
42 Mobile Homes
44 Apartment
for Rent

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Trenamiaaiont. AU types 0\let,
front. raer. 4 wheel drtve Prtces
•tart 1100. Will dehver Cell
614-379-2220

•n;

MOBILE

HOMES KE~SEL'S DUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 Ml
WEST, GALliPOLIS, AT 36
PHONE 614 -446-727 • .

76 K•rkwood 12•60 2 bdr , 111
olec Call 814-379 -2862 or
614 -379-2364 .

Thursday, July 24. 1986

M K V R

VZP S

A ' T - A I S L
E h I

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D RT S V

YEQAZSV

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TZNHE~Z\Ih T

PEH

,,;

Yeaterday'a CI')'Jitoqoote : WHAT Kl~fl • tF Ml 'SIC IS

MOST NECESSARY TO MAN - SC HOLAH L\ • IR
MUSIC• - LEO TOLSTOY

m

(]] Burns &amp;

Allen

@ SportsCenter
(f) WKRP in C1MC1nna t1
fl)

CD One

Step Beyond
0 (I) ABC News Nightl ine •'
([) Austin City LimitS: loralta Lynn (60 m 1n.)

®Allee

Ill II2J

Nigh1 Hea1 O'B11en

a nd (,
• I r l\'

1 ,"'

f()LK

nrn e lnve st tQ.l '
cd a m an .,.,~nq~; d

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.. ocom1ng e•t' C
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r,; ~ 1 ', (R)
GJ. T rapper John . MD t60
m1n l
12;00 (I' Jack. 8prmy

�I

Thursday. July 24, 1986

.--Weal Briefs:·. --

· 5 cited in plane sale scheme

L&amp;D appropriations bill approved
A IIUit by tilt U.S. Hllll!ll! d Representatives lllday rmves !be $.1lO
11a1t r.a!Hpnl!tl..ocks and Dam renovation project me step closer
111 tilt tollllniClton phase.
1\ltlklulf overwbebnlngly approvEd an appropriations blll that
~ad!~ "" mUilon tor real estate acquisition along the banks or
01111 River, I spokesman lor Rep. Bob Wise said today. The
iiiP'+IIltlon Is lor llscall987 that begins Oct. 1.
'l1lt iiiP'+Iattons biD passEd by a vote c1 321-82, Wise's
•p
llld.
1ft addition, the Hou!ll! bill Includes $175 mllUon lor a 51XHoot
llddltlolllo the Winfield Lock on the Kanawha River.
'l1lt GIWpolls Locks and Dam project calls lor the construction of
• - l.Dlfool by by no root lockandanawdllacySXHbotbyUOt&gt;ot
dllmllfr In a by·pass canal a&lt;Jjacent 10 the existing dam, buDt bl
lt.l7.
.
Alllloulb the Gallipolis project became automatically autrorlzed
for t'CIIIJtructlon on May 15, after Congress failEd to enact
Niljn'tllfnllve water resources legislation, construction Is
t'GIIIIftiM!tupon the enactment of leglstation providing for a gradual
allllli11 ol the Inland waterway fuel charge fnm 10 to 211 cents a
1111011 ewer the neoxt decade.
Balli Hclllles ol Congress have pasSI'd versions d the long-delayed
II!PIItton. H.R. 6, wlllcb differ greatly In many areas. Wise Is on a
CCWfllll«' commlttEl' working to resolve tbose differences. He
nprdi~Ct lon by later summer or early fall .
3

. . .

Area bank files suit
Bank One ol Pomeroy has been grantEd a judgment ot $5.~.40 In

M4'IP County Common Pleas Court from George Stitt, doing
bllllneu u T &amp; G Auto Sales, et. al.

Couple seeks to end marriage
Nora Elaine Hughes, Dexter, and Kerry Allen Hughes, Dexter,

" - ftll!d for a dissolution of their marriage In Meigs County
Ccnvnan PINs Court.

P•l Rullt'll PuWns, Middleport, and Diana Lynn Pullins,
Mldlllfport. have been grantEd a dlssolutlon of their marriage.

Ma"iage -licenses filed
Man11C&amp;'

llct&gt;nsrs have been

isSuEd In Meigs County Probate

" to Krllh Alk'n Cook, 211, and Jenny Lyrm Buckley, 211, both of
!WI AIIIOIIio, TI'IW; and to Donald Franklin Hendricks Jr., 26,

('

l'ltU ...

1nd Tina AM Masters, 22. Gallipolis.

daught~·ln·laW, Terry and Doma

Edward Kell
Edward Kell, 84, Hartford,
W.Va., diEd Wednesday In Holzer
Medical Center, Gallipolis.
Born Aug. 31, 1901, In Hartford, he
was the son o1 the late Johnson and
Ann Hunter Kelt
He was a field supertntendent lor
the W.Q. Walters Co., workEd as a
painter, was a member d Hartford
UnitEd Metrodlst Cburch, where he
taught Sunday Schcol lor many
years, was a member of Painters
Local813, Huntington, W.Va., and a
lite member of !be National
Muzzleloadlng Rille Association.
Surviving are his wife, Sue
Knight Kell; one son and daughterIn-law, R.ohen E. and Prlsceila
Kell, Huntington; and one brother,
John W. Kell, Hartford.
Services will he at 11 a.m.
Salurday In Foglesong Funeral
Home, Mason, with the Rev. Rex
Young ortlclatlng. Burial wUl he In
Graham Cemetery. Frten~ may
call at the funeral home from 6-9
p.m. Friday.

Scaggs, New Haven, W.Va.; three
daughters andtwosons·ln~aw, Lisa
and Russell Ridgeway of Colurnrus, RebecCa and Jim Rowley of
Reno, Melody Redmond of Colurn·
bus; eight sisters, Mrs. Rosie
Ashley of Arizona, Miss Ruby
Ferrell of Beckley, W.Va., Mrs.
Mary Shaffer of Greer, S.C., Mrs.
Liz Alston of Yorkville, Miss
VIrginia Ferrell of Gallipolis, Mrs.
Louetta Ratliff of Yorkville, Mrs.
Julie Owen of Gallipolis, and Miss
Barbara Ferrell d Gallipolis; three
brothers, Leroy Jim Ferrell of
Belpre, Ray Ferrell of Belpre and
Charles Ferrell of Gallipolis; nine
grandchlldren; a nephew who livEd
In his home, James Sam Ferrell,
Dexter; and 25 other nieces and
nephews.
Services will be 2 p.m. Friday at
Ewing Funeral Home. Burial will
be In Suncrest Cemetery, Point
Pleasant. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 6-9 p.m.
Thursday.

Hennan Jack FeJTell

Gets suspension .

Herman Jack Ferrell, 51, ol35872
Dunbar Rd., Dexter, diEd unexpectEdly Wednesday evening In the
special care unit of Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
A miner at Southern Ohio Coal
Co.'s Meigs Mine No.2, Mr. Fem&gt;ll
was born May 23, 19:fi, at carbondale, W.Va. His parents were the
late Emmitt Ray and Hazel Ferrell.
He was a member of the United
Mine Workers and the Eagles'
Club.
Survivors Include his wife, Mary
Jane Wells Ferrell; one son and

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - The
Ohio Supreme Court has suspended
former Alliance, Ohio, law director
Gregory D. ftussell from the
practice of law lor one year.

Veterans Memorial
Admissions - Bobby Rlipe,
Pomeroy; David Rhodes, Mason,
Dorset Randolph Jr .. Long Bottom;
John Hunnell, Pomeroy; Jerry
Collins, Middleport .
Discharges- Kelli Clelland .

EMS reports nine calls
C'o~nty Emergmcy

··"==Y·

U.S. Attorney Stephen Cowen
said Libya plannEd to modify tlv&gt;
planes, civilian versions of
mllltary·type lnil\sports, so they
would have aerial refueling capabilIties similar to military aircraft.
"This is ttv&gt; largest diversion of
mUltary equipment to Libya ever
discoverEd," said U.S. CUstoms
Service agent Steven Hooper.
The United States has prohibitEd
the sale and extxJrt of military
materials to Libya since February
1978.
No charges were lodgEd against
Lockheed, the nation's largest

defense contractor, bui Cowen said
the government "took a hard look to
see whether or not Lockheed an&lt;!
Lockheed otflclals were criminal~
Involved In these tnlfictments." :
Lockheed spokesman Dick Mar•
tin said the company "did nothing
criminal In the matter · - we
cooperated totally, right from the
start."
Th~J,Ic;,!I!I..LJ.l3mEd. . In the
Indictment ·were Franklin D.R.
Corcoran and his son-In-law, Carl
Lilly, of Santa Barbara, Calif., and
Edward Elkins, Da/Md Baskett and
Thomas Bumhd all of Santa
Marla, Calif.
The Libyans - Abdulraheem M.
Badlr and Abdurrahmen M. Badl
- are somewhere In Europe,
Cowen said. Thesuspectsfaceupto ·
35 years In prison and lines up to
$500,000.

The Indictment said the suspects
In November 1984 told Lockheed the
South American country of Bolivia
had hirEd them to buy and deliver
two C-130s to it.

The boss
has gone

PGRYGU
FRIDAY'S
U-N TIL

Rutland Cllrdl'll Flower Show w1ll be held Saturday and Sumay at
R11tl1111d United Methodist Cbun::h. Everyone welfX&gt;me.

Square dance set at Long Bottom ·

7 P.M.

'nwrt will bt' 1 square dance Friday, beginning at 8 p.m .. at the
l..oltllloltam Community Building.

MH band camp next week
Hlllh School band director. Lori Klinger, Is asking all
lk'CimliW tmtunm band l!ll'lllbers to attend rcokle camp, to be held
Iii
lllndroom ar Meigs HIR!t from 6-9 p.m. July ~31 . Auxiliary
lllilllt nlfmbfn are aslclod to atiL'nd from July 29-31 from 6-9 p.m.

4X4 PICKUP
Black - one of the

4 DR. LIMITED

less than 17,000

cleanest!

•

:~~':. ' $9900 ~i!~~ $7600
4 dr. Royale. V-8, tilt.
cruise, air, P. door locks,
split seats, less than 8,000
miles.

MANY MORE LATE MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM

Peoples Bank
"The Better Bank"

"We Have the K1ys to 1 Better Deal"

MEMBER F.D.I.C.
2212 Jocksoo A"""uo
Point " ' - '· W. Vo.
876·1121

6th Str""'

Now Hoven, W. Vo.
882-2136

SEE US AND YOU WILL SEE

SMITH-NELSON MTORS

POMEROY

500 EAST MAIN

•

By JIM WEIDEMOYER
OVP staff Writer
The dedication of new admi·
nistrative offices Thursday gave
the superintendent of the Galli·
polis Developmental Center an
optxJrtunlty to silence the com·
plaints made by local residents
for the center tearing down tile
styllsh, older facUlty buildings.
Superintendent Pamela K
Ma tura and two officials from
the Ohio Department of Mental
Retardation and Developmental
Disabilities central office In
Columbus, director Robert
Brown and deputy director
Patrick Rafter, cut the dedica·
lion ribbon lor the new administrative offices around 11: 15 a.m.
In front of more than 100 area
business people and government
offcials.
Alter the dEdication cerem·
ony, tours were conductEd of the
GDC grounds via vans or foot.
These tours, Matura said in her
welcoming statement, were designed to enable the local
residents to witness, first hand,
the advantages of the newer,
more modern buildings.
"Whenever I talk to local
grou~. I have heard rom plaints
asking why did we tear down the
beautiful, old two-story cottages
and replace them with the new
residence modules," stv&gt; said.
"But for those of you tllat take
.. ;@stl@l:I.IJU Jt' ou~. tou~.._yw will
·Jle. ~l:ikl to,_ ·1ftij'ii1!Vantage8 or
the newer bu Ddings:"
Every surveyor and contrac·
tor that has inspected any of the

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI l -Two
top Ohio Democratic fund-raisers
face trial on felony Indictments In
connection with the allegEd political
shakedowns of state vendors and
employees.
Meanwhile. both Republicans
and Democrats girdEd lor battle
over the role the six Franklin
County grand jury Indictments wlli
play In the 1986 gubernatorial
campaign.
Pamela Conrad. finance director
of II~ Ohio Democratic Party, was
Indicted Thursday on five bribery
and perjury counts In connection
with an allegEd scheme to solicit
txJlitlcal contrtbullons from vend·
ors seeking state business.
Larry McCartney, •the fonner

$8100

See: J . D. Story, Jimmy Dean, Ed Bartels,
Brian Houdashelt

1 S..:tion. 10 Pages

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, July 25, 1986

older buildings came to the
same conclusion, that they were
unsalvageable and nEl'dEd to be
condemned, Matura said.
An old sandstone building,
fonnerly a cafeteria, will he the
next building to be demolished.
Malura said she has heard some
complaints but even offerEd the
bu Odlng to the Gallla County
Historical &amp;lciety. The society
decided It was even too costly for
them to renovate It Into a
museum, Matura said.
The lOcation of the new
administrative offices were for·
merly a central dining complex
until the new residence modules
were constructEd. With themodern oottages, the residents
are ableto eat In !be !l'lvacy of
their own apartments.
With the addition of new
facilities In the recent past, GDC
has developEd Into ·one of the
finer growing facilities In the
state. But the real key to CDC's
success is the personnel, especially the managerial, according
to Rafter, deputy director of the
sta te 's 14 developmental
centers.
"It's always a joy to travel to
Gallipolis," Rafter said. "There
seems to be a lot of new energy
here. The per!Dnnel here are
never satisfiEd with how things
are done; and that's good.
"Pam (Matura) Is doing a
great job here. She i'l utilizing
""'w· ti'Chn!que!l "E'I'Y well and
always ttylng to save mo~ ;"
he continuEd.
Rafter said be often sends

992-2174

Ohio weather

personnel director in tile office of
Gov. Richard F. Celeste and now
finance director lor the governor's
re-election campaign, was Indicted
on one count of perjury In connection with an allegEd scheme to
make political contributions a
condition of state employment .
Celeste, in a statement Issued
through his press office, said the
Indictments resultEd from "a polltl·
cal witch hunt" by his opponent for
re-election, Republican James A.
Rhodes. and vowEd not to let them
derail his administration.
A spokesman for Rhodes said the
indictments confirm a pattern of
corruption in the Celeste admlnls·
tratlon which "has reachEd right
into the governor's office."
Democratic State Chairman
James M. Ruvolo schEduled a news

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Proposal
•
worrtes
senators

TRIO DEDICATES OFFICES- Robert Brown, at
rtpt; dlreclor of the Ohio Depariment of Mental
Retardll&amp;lon and DevelOpmental DhabUIIIes, speaks

loa8rnallcrowdof-reeldellts'nllrsdaymomlng
In lronl of Gallipolis Developmental Q!nter's

staff members from other developmental centers In the state to
GDC In attempt to In !llme way
copy the effectiveness ot the
Matura's management .
Development of mentally retarded persons .In· statn'OII·an,
upward SWing, according to
Rafter. Outside of a few management problems In a couplP of
Cleveland centers, Ratter Said

administrative building. He stepped up lo the podium
after he, Pamela K. Malura, at left, 111perintEndent of
GDC, and deputy director Patrick Railer, center, cut
the rlbboo to dedlcale GDC's new administrative
offices.

centers throughout the state
make an excellPnt commit·
tment to their residents.
The morning's ceremonies
were closEd out with Ihe jXcture
hanging rl. GDC superintend·
• ·~·tolow,re.,.,O..BeoBIUld..F. -

Nletun, currently director of
Woodland Centers Inc. on Ohio
160, was the first ro he hung.
Nlehm was In charge of GDC

from Aug. 17. 1970. to Oct. 17.
1976.
Pictures of OMRDD Labor
Relations Direcor John A. Beattie, superintrndent from No¥. 24.
1976 to April :Jl, 19ffi, and
...Matura, whDJ.l01i. \)Qgn in charge

since July 3 of last year - the
first six months as interim
superintendent - were · also
hung.

GOP, Democrats trade charges over indictments

4 Wheel Drive, auto., P.S., P.
B., two-tone paint, AM/FM
stereo. local one oWrler.

Sl 0,900
.

'

•
nr Kin&amp; and Diane Rhodes. of the West VIrginia Dance
,_tn'. wUI bt' INChing a dance w&lt;rkshop from 9a.m. to noon, July
IMIIIII! Allllt. 1. at the Olympiad In !be Heck's Shopping Plaza.
Rll*'t'. W.Va.
~ 11\'18 thnlllgh high school. w1ll be groupEd according to
a111111y and ~training In jazz and haUet. Each session will also
lildlldr a half hour of mltcellaneous dance related exercises, etc.
f\ tor 1111' -uhop Is PI lor the entire wrek. lftterestEd dancers
iiiiDoild t I J72.35tllor rmre Information.

85 Buick Skylark

85 Olds Delta 88 84 Ford Bronco

Includes Lobby.
Installment Loan Department.
Drive-In And Walk·UP
Window

Dance workshop planned

,85 Ford F-2 SO

enttne

Officials hail
new offices

took measures to officially close
two alleys In the unincorporated
village of Cbester In Cbester
Township, one running east and
west on lots 41, 42, 43, 44, the other
oorth and south on the same lots. A
public hearing on the closings will
be held 1 p.m. Aug. 13 In the
commissioners' office In the
courthouse.

Showers and lllunderstonns likely tonight, with
oocaslonal heavy rainfall and
a low In the lower 'ltls. Most~}
cloudy Salunlay, with a
chilli'-" ol showers IUld thundei'!ilonns iilld highs In the

•

at y
Vot.38. No.57
Copyrighted 1986

Number: 829

PICK-4: 2453

•

\

Rutland garden flower slww set

~-,-· Daily

·-Page3

Outgoing __lc_·o_n_tln_u_ed_fro_m_P...:ag_e_l_l- - - - are available for use for eligible
projects on county and township
rural secondary roads. Seventy·
five to 100 percent re&lt;Jeral participation is possible on eligible projects
involving traffic signalization ,
pavement marking or railroad
grade crossing elimination. Smith
urgEd use of the federal funds and
offered assistance In that regard.
In &lt;A her tnatters, the commission

Ohio Lottery

Little League
•
action

Medical Service reports nine calls

f'WfWioy ftlt'departmen l at 4:41a.m. toastructurellreattheDan
l"'''ldmn' on Long Hollow Road. While there, at 7::11 a .m.,
I'GtW:hl)' EMS t!'lllspor!Ed Jay Evans to Veterans Memorial
- ..al: Patk'ruy fire clepartmmt at 10:53 a.m. to a truck lire on
Happy Hollow Role!: Pomeroy fire department at 11:34 a.m. 10 a
Nbldlfd fire on Long Hollow Road; Middleport at 12: 25 p.m. to
Brldbll) Role! lor Edith Forrest to Veterans Memortal Hospital;
RMilll' 11 1: 1~ p.m. to Fifth StrEl'l lor Floyd Cummins who was
tiN ltd 111111101 transportEd; Rutland at 2:23p.m. to Meigs Mine No.2
IQr~ WIUiarnstoHolzer Medlcal Center; Racine at 7:10p.m.
ID Allllqlllty for JoAnn Crady to Veterans Memortal Hospital;
Poltwtoy at U:23p.m. to Country Mobile Home Park, U.S. 33, lor
Dollllrumflc&gt;ld to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

1

ATLANTA (UP!) -Five Americans were chargEd with selling two
LockheEd transport planes to
Moammar Gadhall's government
In what fEderal officials callEd the
biggest diversion of military equipment to Libya ever discoverEd.
A seven-count fEderal Indictment
released WEdnesday said two
Libyans paid $57.4 million for the
two L-10().30 transports bought from
LockheEd's Marietta, Ga., plant.

conference today for a counter·
attack on Rhodes.·
McCartney and Conrad, who was
Indicted on three counts of bribery,
one count of complicity to commit
brtbery and one count of perjury.
a~ to be arraigned In Franklin
County Common Pleas Court Aug.
15, said special prosecutor William
E. Boyland.
Both Conrad, a former Columbus
city councilwoman, and McCartney
categorically denied the charges
against them and · said they are
prepared to answer at trial.
"I have watchEd Jim Rhodes'
25-year technique of cart1paignlng
by grand jury, and I will not allow
this administration to be side·
trackEd by his political ploys," said
the governor.
Celeste repeated he would not

tolera te wrongdoing :n his administration, and addEd he does not
believe Conrad or McCartney
would knowingly violate the law.
"Larry McCartney and Pam
Conrad are Innocent." said Ruvolo,
who described himself as "angry"

at tile Indictments. "The Republi·
cans are going to try to use this for
txJlltica I ends. We are nol go ing to
be dlvened from the campaign.
The campaign will turn on jobs and
Education - the two Issues Jim
Rhodes Is afraid ot."

WASHINGTON iUPli - Authors of the Gramm-Rudman bal:
anced budget act are running Into
some "well-foundEd paranoia"
from opponents of their protxJsal to
put the president's budget chief In
charge of final spending cuts.
The questions delayed acliori
Thursday on a crucial bill to lift the
fEderal debt ceiling to $2.3 trillion, to
which tile sponsors wanted to add
their Gramm-Rudman amendment Intended to repair the part ol
the law found unconstitutional tJY
tile Supreme Court.
Most rl. the opposition came frorn
Democrats, but Republicans, too,
were worried about giving up
congressional power to the admtn:
lstra lion· s Office of Management
and Budget.
"There is a certain well-foundEd
paranoia (about OMB)," a Senate
budget aide said. "We will end up
trying to figure a way of restricting
his discretion and at the same time
make It clear he is the executive
officer."
, GrammRudman's automatiC.
cnl fea ture - the part Intended to
~ sh Congress to reduce the deficit
- was thrown out by the Supreme
Court, which said the comptroUe~
general. originally put In charged
automatic cuts, could not make too
rt'\fuctlons because he Is a leglsla•
live, not executive, officer.
Authors of the Cramm-Rudman
law were trying to fl.x It by putting
the administration's budget dlrec·
tor In ~harge rl. the a_!lt!Jm~J)c cuts.
But optxJnents maintainEd that
method would give too much txJWer
toOMB.
The problPm. aides said, was how
to maintain the discipline of
automatic budget cuts without
either completely turning over
congressional power to !be admln·
istratlon or so severely restricting
the OMB's discretion that the law
would again be found
unconstitutional.
Senate staff members huddlEd,
trying to figure out a way 10 Ox the
law, which ttv&gt;y said could Involve
~tung limits on the OMB's use of
economic factors Io determine the
'cuts.

•Rainbow of fun' day camp theme

ELBERFELD$ JUL
... r
A

•

It's work, It's play, it's firing, it 's
fun. It's learning, It's sharing, it's
Big Bend Girl Scout Day Camp at
Camp Klashuta In Cbester.
About 75 Meigs County girl scouts
have been enjoying day camp
activities all this week. Assisted by
20 adult~. the girls have receivEd
instNctlon in archery, knot tying
and tie dying, not to mention
learning to set up camp, build fires .
lash tables, cook over an open
flame and all the other aspects of
primitive campln~.
01 course, amid the learning
activities have been hiking, badgework, crafts, games, a hayrl&lt;;le and
laughter - lots of laughter.
And for some d these young girls
from troops aU over !he county , It's
a time to renew friendships from
previous day camps and make new
friends from other schools.
· For three nights out olthe week,
day camp becomes night camp too.
On TUesday evening, Brownie
srouts spent the nJg!1t In theca bin at
Klasluta. On ', WEdnesday and
Th~rsday, Junior scouts slept In
tents.
On these nights' come !be traditional ghost.stortes and visits from
wUd animals; ThiS year. lilysterkms "Big. Foot" tracks were
discovered e3!'ly one morning In
the mud under the swlllglllg bridge
spanning the Shade River at
Klashuf4.
Tbursc)ay night was a war~ night
at day camp and lrk'nds and
relatives of the. scouts enjoyEd a

o• ,.., •

pM1 • r

Gfalllwttlandtlaulder·
..... day. wtth blahS
1M middle to upper .
Mii'IIIIIII!IIDWI will be brtiieen

.....

•
WITH SAVINGS OF WELL OVER 50% ON TOP QUALITY, FAMOUS BRAND CLOTHING, AND SPORTSWEAR
FOR· YOU AND YOUR FAMfLY- FURNITURE AND FURNISHINGS FOR YOUR HOME - NOT ALL SIZES
.'
AND COLORS BUT YOU'LL FIND PLENTY OF BARGAINS. HURRY IN!!

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
.

'

t

. '

All COfiNTIOMID ON AU. 1111H FLOOIS

USE OUR FREE
PARKING LOT
. ~

~~

program and bonfire.
Directing camp for the first time
were local scout leaders April
Harmon and Faye Clifford . Both
ladles agree that the week was as
much a learning experience· lor

them as for the children. "But It's
been great," says Hannon.
Theme for tbe day camp, and all
other day cam~ within the Black
Diamond Girl Scout Council area
was "A Rainbow of Fun."

lnfonnation sought
on Meigs area events
Information is being sought by
the Meigs County Park District
Office on events held each year In
Meigs County. ·
The following lnfonnatlon is
being sought:
-Date of event.
-Town.
-Past attendance ligures
(estimate) .
- Name of festival or event.
-sue of event.
- Brief description of event.
-Parade date and time (If any).
-Festival, event hours (each
day) .
-Adn\lision fee.
-Parking lee.
- Special f&amp;!!llltles lor the
handicappEd.
-Name, address and phone
number of. the person to be
published as a contact for the event.
-The name or the organization
sponsoring the event.
The lnilrmatlon wUl he collected ·
and m~Mle avaUable through varIous avenues ~ to !be park

district office, according to Steve
Powell of the Meigs County Devel·
opment Office, who notEd that the
.dftce has received a r8juest for
such Information from the Ohio
Department ot Development, Of.
nee of Travel and 'lburlsm. Information provided to the state agency
will be Included In "The Ohio
calendar of Events," published
quarterly and distributEd nationwide through !be 1.axl-BUCKEYE
number.
The cu1T81t request from the
development department Is for
events held during January, Febru·
ary, March and April 1987. The
deadline lor the requested Information Is Aug. 4, and Powell emphasIzed that responses 'Should reach his

~~d his ~tlce

Is also
lntererlted In au events In the county
tllrouaho\11 -,llle Y,ear. lptJrmatlon
should be 111!111 ., tire Meigs Cou11ty
Paiit; D!ttriCt. In
ot the Melp

Girl Scouts
hold camp
F1r!it they put their mess ldts
In dltly bap. Then the ditty hap
are latlll!' on a line to keep them
clerln .and dry. Hanpng their
·d!Uy hap oolhe One In the above
photo are Emily Heighton, left,
"and Megan Evans, of Jwllor
&amp;mop IOij, Mlddlepoli. ·In the
plroto II rtpt, Lee Lu'-*eydoo,
left, of Mlddlepott Junior troop
111311, fans the llames while
Crylltal llal'lnoll, of troop tiM,
Syncuae, 1111ra the fire, Cooldnr .
over a campftre Is lrecornlnr
lleCOIId DIIUr&amp; for tlae yowii ·
larlea and their friends II 1111
-.&amp;

da.J ~held II Caql

KIMJiata II Cheater ilrllo weeli.

care
c~ryDw~tomce.~
.\~ . l------~--------~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!~~~~~~!J.
!102,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45'7ti9.
,.

.--r· · .....

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