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                  <text>POI'"IWOy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Tropical stonn moves m on Louisiana coast

cast on the past, J?resent and future course of the economy.
"I can't help but wonder it maybe Precision Lens can helpout
some of our critics," he said, never mentioning Democratic
nominee Michael Dukakis by name. "I think they could use a
.pair of high·quality lenses, because they've been looking at the
world through mud-colore$~ glasses much too long."
· Over the last few weeks, as the campaign has heated up,
Reagan has briStled as Democrats have disparaged the state of
the economy and his record of the last 7 12 years. In response,
Reagan has become a one-man GOP truth squad, using the
White House as aoplattorm and vowing to "tell the truth" to the
American people this fall.
In his prepared remarks to the governors, Reagan avoided
any mention of the campa lgn and instead applauded the efforts
during his administration to return power from the federal
government to the states.
" I hOpe that history will record that this former governor
went on to practice what he'd preahced," Reagan said, "and to
·fight the use of federal dollars first as bait , then as a Club, and to
return power and responsibility to the states, where they
belong."
Though less successful than he had hoped In completing the
monumental shift of government responsibilities envisaged In
his much-va unted New FederaliSm program some five years
ago, Reagan said the states have been given a freer hand to
pursue Innovative approaches to such concerns as education,
transportation urban development and welfare reform.
The trip Illustrated how the campaign has come to dominate
presidential decisions and actions In recent weeks. After
hearing today from Reagan, the governors were to ·b e
addressed Tuesday by Dukakis, who will appear In his dual role
as governor of Massachusetts and Democratic nominee. •
Ironically. the presiding officer of the governors' gathering Is
John·Sununu of New Hampshire, a vocal critic of New El\gland
neighbor Dukakls and one of at least three Republlcan
governors tagged as possible running mates to Bush.
On the eve of the meeting, Su nunu, who has spearheaded a
GOP effort to discredit Dukakls's record In Massachusetts, said
he wanted to make the event "the most non·polltlcal,
non-partisan ... we've ever had."
The trip to Ohio represented a brief change of venue In the
modified Rose Gard.en strategy Reagan has pursued to portray
the 1988 electlon as a referendum on his.pres,ldency. While his
direct praise for Bush has at times been sparing, Reagan has
gone to great lengths to depict the election as a stark choice: a
continuation of the relative peace and prosperity of the last 7·)2
years vs. a return to the policies of the Carter years.
Reagan has pledged to do all he can to elect Bush, and GOP
strategists consider him to be most valuable in defining the
Issues of the campaign and contrasting the futures offered by
the two candidates. Although the appearance bt'fore the
governors had been scheduled for some time, the White House
jumped at the chance to add a vis it to Precision Lens to
symbolize the strength of the American economy and the
success with which some American companies have withstood
foreign competitlon.
During the Democratic National Convention, aides to Reagan
bristled as Dukakls pointed at the success of Harley Davidson,
the American motorcycle manufacturer, in surviving competition from abroad. In fact, the company owes Its current strength
to Reagan. who deviated. from his phllosophlc abhorrence of
protectionism In ordering Import restraints that gave the firm
the breathing room it needed to become more competitive.

CINCII'&lt;'NATI (UPI) Sixteen
school disttlcts across the country are making significant progress Involving parents In education, detecting potential school
dropouts at an early age and
ensuring better school management and results from teaching,
according to the U.S. Department of Education.
The department Sunday submitted a report, ''Experiences In
School Improvement: The Story
of 16 American Schoo!Dis trlcts,"
to the National Governors' Association, which requested the
five-year pilot project in 1986.
''One of the most notable things
we're seeing Is the Involvement
of parents with the educatiOn of
their children," said Linus
Wright, undersecretary of Education, who addressed the gover-

Birmingham. according to Pentagon and Justice Department
officials.
A senior ·Pentagon official
famlllar with the rangeoflnvestlgatlons Into the three mllltary
services said "the evidence to
date suggests the Army Is no
better or worse than the Navy or
Air Force."
Justice Department spokesman John Russell declined comment on the investigations.
Frank Donaldson, the U.S.
attorney In Birmingham, also
decllned comment, saying: "Allegations may not pan out. If 1
comment, some Innocent defense
contractor or government employee might have his reputation
hurt."
Army spokesman David Harris would say only, "Much of the
information In several cases
being looked at by the U.S.
attorney's office In Birmingham
was developed by Army criminal
inves tlgators on the basis of tips
from Army employees."
The proliferation of lnvestiga·
tlons has stemmed, In part, from
the expansion of a special Army
fraud investigation unit at Redstone Arsenal last fall , a Pentagon official said.
The Army missile headquarters spent $4.065 billion last year
to procure about 20 missile
systems, Including TOW antitank missiles. the Hawk groundto-air system, the Pafriot
ground-to-air system, Pershing 2
ground-to-ground missiles and
portable Stinger shoulder-fired
missiles.

Area deaths

I

Mllltary graveside service wlll
be conducted by the Ell Dennison
American
Legion Post 467.
Andrew Myers, 72, of Rt. 1,
Friends
may
call at the McCoy·
Langsville (Danville Commun- .
ity) died Sunday at Veterans Moore Funeral Home in Vlntori
Wednesday from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7
Memorial Hospital In Pomeroy .
Born Oct. 26, 1915, at Patriot, to9p.m. as well as one hour prior
he was the son of the Ia te Everett to the services at the church.
and Esta Mahan Myers.
·
A member of the Danvllle
Holiness Church, he was a World
(Continued fr(Jll page 1)
War II U.S. Army veteran and a
member of the Gallipolis Area saying that on federal delegation
of programs, "the states have
Ostomy Association.
He married Nellle Miller Jan. res{lOnded to the challenge and
18, 1946, in Ironton.
they've done It with exceptional
Other survivors Include four excellence."
sons, ElliS Myers or Middleport,
"Governors have taken the
Joe Myers of Galllpolls·, and Tom lead In fashioning solutions to
and William Myers of Langs- problems," Donatelll said, citing
ville; four grandchildren; two welfare reform as an example.
Host Gov. Richard Celeste of
step-gr;mdchlldren; and one sister, Mts. Henry (Mlldred) Scur· Ohio welcomed the governors to
the opening session, {JOinting out
lock of Columbus.
Ia addition ~ IU&amp; parents, he this year is the 200th anniversary
was piECt*tl hi ••til ~ two of tbe foundlq of Cincinnati.
''We're here to do serious work
sisters, Nancy Goodall and Alice
and
also to have a good time,"
Waugh.
Services wlll be Thursday at 11 said Celeste. Sunday evening, the
a.m. In the Danvllle Hollness governors and their families
Church with the Rev. Rick were treated to a concert by the
Maloyed offlciaUng. · Burial will Cincinnati Pops Orchestra a}Jd a
·
follow In Danville Cemetery. laser llgh I show.

Andrew Myers

Gavemor's ...

....--- -....--

off Massachusetts, then skirted
the coast on Its way across Nova
ScoUa and Into the Gulf of St.
Lawrence. At last report, AI·
berto, Its winds weakened to 35
mph, was near Prince Edward
Island and sweeping northeast
across the gulf.
Forecaster Max Mayfield of
the National Hurricane Center
said "Alberto will be swallowed"
In the cool north Atlantic.
The storm dumped thunderstorms on Maine and blew cool
rains across New England·, dropping temperatures Into the. 70s
and 80s and endl~~g a heat wave
that lasted more than a week,
forecasters said.
It had been so hotln Boston that
pollee sent four extra supervisors and 20 additional motorcy·
cle patrols to the streets Saturday to quell any disturbances
that could ariSe.
The forecast called for tempel'atures In the 100s today In
Oklahoma, Texas and In the
desert Southwest, and heat records were reached Sunday ln. 13
cities In eight states. It was 100
degrees In Des Moines, Iowa, 103
In Kansas City and 1041nLlncoln,
Neb.
Waco, Texas, wltharecord107,

School reform report
presented governors

Continued from page 1

-Contractors attempting to
cut costs and increase profits
without notifying the
government.
-Companies secretly subs tltutlng inferior, low-cost materials Into products.
A federal grand jury In Birmingham, Ala., Is expected to
return two Indictments tn the
next one to three months based
on allegations that contractors
used substandard materials in
their mlsslle products, a law
enforcement source said.
Most inquiries into Army missile contracting are being overseen by the U.S. attorney's office
In Birmingham. Other probes
are being conducted by the
Army's Criminal Investigation
Command at the missile headquarters and U.S. attorneys In
Los Angeles, Phoenix and
Albuquerque.
The misslle command Is not
the only Army Installation under
scrutiny by federal
Investigators.
At least 22 other Army procurement contracts throughout the
country are under criminal investigation, a Pentagon official
said. Some lnqutrles focus on
fraud allegations Involving
McDonnell Douglas Corp. and
Unisys Corp. , both of which also
have been the subject of scrutiny
in the Navy Inquiry.
These other Army lnvestiga·
lions are being overseen by U.S.
attorneys in Washington, Los
Angeles. Philadelphia, Newark,
N.J., Alexandria. Va., St. Louis,
Tampa, Fla ., Tucson, Ariz., and

'

By JEFF WOODS
United Pret~~~lalernallonal
A tropical storm with winds up
to 50 mph closed In on the
Louisiana coast today, promptIng storm warnings alo~~g much .
of the Gulf Coast just as the
season's first Atlantic tropical
storm blew away from New
England.
The National Hurricane Center
in Miami said a tropical depression gained enough strength over
the Gulf of Mexico early today to
become Tropical Storm Beryl.
Small boats were wamed to
stay In port on theGuHofMexlco
from Port O'Connor, Texas, to
Pensacola, Fla., and coastal
residents In LouiSiana, Mississippi and Alabama were told to
closely monitor weather service
advisories.
·
The weather service said Beryl
had sustained winds of about 40
mph with gusts· up to 50 mph.
Tropical storm Alberto, mean·
while, puffed across Canada's
Gulf of St. Lawrence toward ·a
chilly death today, leaving New
England with sprlilg-like temperatures, while another day of
100-degree heat afflicted the
Southwest.
Alberto sprang to llfe Sunday

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ............. 27)2
AT&amp;T ........................ , ........ 26¥.,
Ashland Oil ......................... 37
Bob Evans .......................... 17Y,
Charming Shoppes .............. 14%
City Holding Co ............ .... ... 35
Federal Mogul. ........ ........... 42¥.,

.

The NGA program runs for
three more years, and though
Galinsky lamented the fact that
his district Is receiving no
financial assiStance, he added
that "It would be tragic If you did
not extend this program through
1991."

'

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) The average closing prices (per
bushel) paid to farmers by grain
elevators In the principal ·marketing areas of Ohio Friday:
Northeast Ohio: No. 2 wheat
$3.45; No. 2 shelled corn $2.94;
No. 2 oats $2.77; No. 1 soybeans
$8.58.
Northwest Ohio: No. 2 wheat
$3.50; No. 2 shelled corn $2. 91;
No. 2 oats $2.87; No. 1 soybeans
$8.70.
Central Ohio: No. 2 wheat
$3.60; No. 2 shelled corn $2.97;
No. 2 oats $2.88; No. 1 soybeans
$8.68.
West Central Ohio: No. 2wheat
$3.51; No. 2 shelled corn $2.99;
No. 2 oats $2.90; No. 1 soybeans
$8.73.
Southwest Ohio: No. 2 wheat
$3.50; No. 2 shelled corn $2.99;
No. 2 oats not avvallable; No. 1
l
soybeans $8.68.
Trends: No. 2 wheat, lower;
No. 2 shelled corn, higher; No. 2
oats, unchanged; No.I soybeans,
sharply higher.

Vol.39, No.e&amp;
Copyrfehttd 1988

·"•
w

.........,.
' .•
.....
'

(-;.:,lSNOW

-RAiN w'~SHOWERS

FRONTS: . . Wann "Cold

.

Nation'S govemors
end annual· meeting

...

:~

i

Map s'-1 rnlrimum t8mperatulal. At iNst 50'11. ot IllY shilled atea iS tou1cast• ~
· to realve prec:ipilalion io4ct"''l .
UPI; "'
WEATHER MAP - Sower&amp; aad thulllleralorrns will be acallered ;· ;;
from Florida acrou sou&amp;lleut Loulslaaa, also ahead of a cold front ' :'
from upper Mlcbl&amp;aa acr011 eaalera Wllcolllln, aortllern Dllaolll, : ~
southern aad eaalera Iowa, the northwest half of MlaNurl and : ~
Kaasas Into central Colorado.
·
••
••

Sou Ill Central Ohio
Moslly clear tonight, with lows
near 70 and southwest winds 10 to
15 mph. Tuesday. mostly sunny
and humid, with a 20 percent
chance of rain and highs of 90 to
95.

'.

CLEVELAND (UPI) - No
winner In Saturday night's Super
Lotto game has raised the
jackpot for Wednesday night's
drawing to $9 million, the Ohio
Lottery Commission said
Sunday.
Numbers In Saturday's game
were 3, 15, 26, 27, 36 and 44.
However, 123 tickets had five of
those six numbers, making each
worth $1,000. The 5,993 tickets
with four of them are each worth
$84.
The Kicker number was 303573,

.
''...

_

with one ticket having those •
numbers IIi . that order. Thah ·
ticket Is worth $100,000.
: ;.:
Lottery officials said sales fou ':
that game were $715,824.
• '·
Seven Kicker tickets have the
first five numbers, each wortl) :·:
$5,000. Sixty tickets have the first :·
four numbers, each worth $1,000: ·:
Another 636.tickets have the first :
three numbers, each worth $100:
and 6,543 have the first two ·
·
numbers, each worth $10.

••

&lt;

Lottery numbers

SALES - SERVICE • TESTING

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Satur·
day's winning ·.O!IIo Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number
564.
PICK-4
2691.
Super Lotto
.3. 15, 26, 27. 36, 44.
Kicker
303573.

BROWN &amp; SNOUFFEI
FilE &amp; SAFElY
EQUIPMENT
172 ..,.h Seulllllft.
llldtl..,t, otH 45760
••• 16141 991·7075
Gary Snotlffw - 992-7446

*OFFICE DAYS
Monday, Thesday,
Thursday, Friday
606 Professional Circle
Ravenswood, WV
273-5335

Sarah Goswami, M~D.
Obstetrics and Gynecology

•

slookholders were hals, aausa1e blaeulls and lhe
new kielbasa sau~;:'ucts being Introduced
In stores and reslau
• (OVP photo)

NEW PRODUCTS - The approximately 2,000
who attended tbe Bob Evans Farms Inc.
stockholders meeting Monday were &amp;lven several
new products of lhe corporation. Given to the

.

By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP Staff Writer
The 25th annual Bob Evans
Farms Inc. stockholders meetIng was held Monday In the
sweltering heat of Its farm In Rio
Grande, with approximately
2,000 attending.
Daniel E. Evans, chairman
and chief executive officer an·
noul\ced the net Income for the
first quarter was $7.5 million or
26 cents per share, compared to
$6.2 mllllon or 21 cents per share
In 1987.
He reported a 10 percent
increase in net sales from one
year ago.
Net Income was $5.4 million,
compared to $4.6 m1lllon a year
ago. The sausage segment contributed $2.1 million, as com·
pared to $1.6 mUUon In 1987.
In the restaurant division, net
Continued on page 5

DANmL E. EVANS
Chalnnan, CEO
Bob Evans Farms IDe.

273-5335

ceremonies
for new finn slated Aug. 19

By BOB BOEFUCB
lleDISnel News Staff
Groundbreakl~~g ceremonies
for Middleport's newest business
- the Family Dollar Store- wlll
be held at 2 p.m. Friday, Aug. 19.
Mayor Fred Hoffman an·
nounced plans for the ceremonies Monday night when Middleport VIllage Council met In
regular session.
The new business will be
located at the corner of Mlll and
North Second Sts. Various dlgnatarles .from the state have been
invlted'toattend, the mayor said.
I'
Mayor Hoffman also an·
nounced the first of two public
meetings on community block
grat:~t funds for 7 p.m. on Aug. 23
at the common pleas courtroom.
The meetings are being held by
the Meigs County Commissioners. The county has been ap·
Executive VP, Chief Oper!Uing proved for $106,000 In community
Officer, Bob Evans Farms Inc.
block grant funds this year and

governmental subdivisiOns must coming Into the village treasury
file applications on their re- ff91Tl the new village lneorne tax.
quested project funding by Sept.
Mayor Hoffman reported that
he and Councilman Paul Gerard
15.
Council last night approved had met with a group which Is
placement of a one mUI tax levy making a master plan of recrea- a renewal for the Middleport tional facilities along the Obio
Fire Department to pay for River and the plan, subj eel to
equipment- on the ballot at the approval by the U. S. Corps of
November election and was Engineers, will Include boating
advised by Mayor Hoffman that facilities near the Diles Park.
the town has been approved for a Council approved the rates set up
state grant of $38,025 for the by the Meigs County Budget
continuance of the public trans· Commission for the •nnual
portatlon system for the elderly budget submitted recently by the
and handicapped. The system Is town.
·
the Blue Streak Cab Co.
A di!ICusston was held on the
Council approved the report of planned bike path along the river
Mayor Hoffman showing re- and Mayor Hoffman will check
ceipts of $3,607 In fines and fees on the 'status of that project with
for the month of July. Mayor Kim Shields, village consultant.
Hoffman reported that several
Attending the. meeting were
village funds are operating In the . Mayor Hoffman, Clerk Jon Buck
red but pointed out that the and Councilmen Dewey Horton,
financial picture should' Improve Gerard, Bob Gilmore, William
In August when money begins Walters, Jack Sattoerfleld and
James Clatworthy.

•
Local news briefs-- Summer heat wave continues around nation
Strike enters ninth day
A strike at the Meigs County ~partment of Human Services
today Is In its ninth day.
·
Union employees went on strike Aug. 1. Unresolved
negotiated Issues Include wages, Insurance, fair share
(requiring non=unton employees to pay .a fee for union
representation), contract duration and management rights.
A new demand was made by the union to the county at last
Thursday's negotiatiOn session, it Is reported. The union Is
demanding a no reprisal clause which would prevent the county
from Initiating any actiOn, discipline or repriSal against any
employees concerning the employees' conduct during the
strike. It Is reported.
It Is reported also that 12 employees out of 30 In the bargaining ·
unit continue to work In addition to six supervisors bringing the
total staff to 18 who are continqlng to provide services to the
· residents of Meigs County.
The department Is open from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Man charged with burglary
Robert W. Bays, Sr. 46, of Sttversvllle Road, Portland, has
been arrested on a charge of burglary, according to the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department.
. Sheriff Howard E. Frank reported that Bays allegedly
el\tered the Kurtis Rltrle home on Eagle Ridge road the early
part of May this year. All Items taken from the home were
recovered by the department.
Bays appeared In Meigs County Court Monday afternoon and
was released on $15,000 recognizance bond to again appear In
court on Wednesday morning.

Man dead on arrival

*Both doctors are on the staff of Jackso~ General Hospital andl
both have supplemental office .hours in their
. Ripley Office
.

array of big-state prQgrams to
Attorney General Cary Edtry.
wards of New Jeraey said law
Florida Gov. Bob Martinez enforcement and education must
outlined his state's efforts to the
be employed In balance to rid
Committee on Justice and Public states of drugs.
Safety;
. Martinez called his state "the .. Edwards said his s~te has
gateway for 70 percent of the
drug·free school zones where
•
..
a minimum three-year sentence
nation s cocaine, with 50,000 with no parole Is ta ked on to the
pounds seized In 1987 and more
c
anticipated this year. He said a sentence of anyone seiUng drugs
major step was In "recognizing within 1,000 feet of a school.
that we have a problem."
Edwar.ds also said a $500
"We could have said once we ~~:da~uge opedn ~~ sfgi:S~ c~~-0
sweep It Into GeoJ'ila, It's not our
r
c
problem," said the governor. local governments for preven''Illegal drug trafficking Is eve- tion and treatment programs.
rybody's problem."
Daryl Gates, pollee chleUnLos
Martinez said Florida has laws Angeles, presented to the gover·
pel'mlttlng aaents to seize Illegal nors his Drug Abuae Resistance
drugs, plus the profits from any Education program tn which
oganized crime. In addition, said uniformed pollee officers visit
the governor, any drug peddler's · schools and "teach kids to 'just
property, such as a condom!- $BY no."'
nlum, maybe taxed by up to half
He said 41 stales aretrytoithe ·
the street value of the drugs sold. program, and It toucheS 1.5 .
''We hit them where It hurts the million young people, mainly
most -In the pocketbook," said from kindergarten throuah sixth
Martinez.
grade.

Groundb~

.Sales up, Bob Evans Farms
,. stockholders told at m

'

606 Professional Circle
Ravenswood, WV

I

. CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
natlon's governors closed out
their 80th annual meeting today
wlthadlscusslonoffederalismthe delegation of authority to the
slates by the federal
government.
The governors planned to
·d
a opt a policy resolution on
federalism - the theme of the
three-day meeting of the ·Na·
tiona! Governors' Association
and a topic on which no concrete
conclusions have been reached
thus far.
The governors heard from
Presldent Reagan Monday on the
subject. Democratic presidential
nominee Michael Dukakls was to
arrive today, and planned an
afternoon meeting with all the
Democratic governors.
During Monday's committee
deliberations, the governors
were advised to use a comblnation of education and hard-nosed
law enforcement io halt the
rampant abuse of drugs, and
they were furnished with a broad

Exleaded Forecast
,"
Wednesday lbrOUih Friday : ~
Very warm and humid W.ed· .\
nesday with a chance of thunder; ~
storms. Highs will be 85 to 95 ~nd -'
lows 65 to 75. Fair and less humid ~
Thursday and Friday. with high$ :
In the 80s and lows In the 60s. · _,..

No one wins Super Lotto game

1 Section. 10 Pai• 2&amp; canto
A Multlmldla Inc. N - - . -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 9 .. 1988

fi

Static "'Occlude&lt;!

•

enttne

.a t

.....:;
'

Every Wednesday

l

•

•

'If'

1nternal Medicine

,..

e

..

....,' .."
'

M•tly clear l•lpt, low 1a
70.. Cha.:e of rain • )181'eeat.
Wedaeedayt Partly cloatiJ',
hf&amp;hlla .... cbaace of nl• •
pereeal.

Page 3

"'J
: "~

Naba Go~wami, M.D.
'

Ohio grain report

Pick 4

7605

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT &amp;I • :

61¥.,~-fr;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;

Heck's .................................
Goodyear
T&amp;R .......... ......... %
Key Centurion .......... .. .. .. ..... 18
Lands' End ....... .. ................ 28')1,
Limited Inc ........................ 22%
Multimedia lnc ................... 73'&gt;(,
Rax Restaurants ............... .. . 4'&gt;(,
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 11%
Shoney' s Inc .............. ...... ... . 7%
Wendy 's Inti... .............. .... ... 5'JI,I
· Worthington Ind ................. 24')1,

Daily Number
979

.-

"I can tell you again and again
and again," he said, "there Isn't
a better Investment than a
program to discover at·rlsk
children at an early age."
Gov. EdwardDIPreteofRhode
Island said his state has Initiated
a llteracy program In kindergarten through third grade to
prevent dropouts.
DIPrete said academic, social.
and occupational counseling for
potential dropouts at Mt. Plea·
san t High School In Providence
has a success rateofmorethan 90
percent.
·L· ''·

there be
light'

In Chicago, the Illinois Envlr'
onrnental Protection Aaency •
issued a smog alert, the lOth this :
summer. People with heart and •
lung aliments were advised to ~
minimize outdoor activity.
··:,

------Weather·-------;.·~

nors' subcomlttee on education.
Also appearing at the meeting
was Harry Galinsky, superln·
tendent of schools In Paramus,
N.J., one of the 16 districts
participating In tlie pUot project.
Galinsky told the governors his
district has started a program to
identify {lOtentlal school dropouts by the time they are In the
fourth grade and soon hopes to
make It a a year earner.

··-·--~·.

and Dallas at a record 106, felt
even hotter with high humidity
boosting the heat Index - the
~omblnatlon of temperature and
humidity- to more than 110, the
weather service said.

Ohio Lottery

'Let

•

Economy... continued from .page 1

Army...

Monday, August 8, 1988 •

Carl Norton, Pomeroy, was dead on arrival at Veterans
Memorial H011pttal emefiency room following a possible
suicide at his residence Tuesday morning.
The Pomeroy unit of the Melp Couaty Emereency Medical
Service was called to the residence at 8:41 a:m. to transport
Norton, who reportedly suffered self·lnftlcted gunshot wounds
to the head, to the bo.lpllal.
Meigs County Sberlff Howard Frank and Deputy Jlmmer
Continued on page 5
l~l

J.r

By JEFF BATER
United Press International
A de!!dly heat wave roasted the
Plains with 't riple-digit tempera tures and drove Philadelphia
thermometers to record heights,
while tropical . storm Beryl
kicked up a fuss In the Gulf of
Mexico and forced at least 3,000
evacuations.
It hit 91 In Philadelphia Monday, tying a 5-year-old record as
temperatures reached the 90s for
the 41st time this year, and It
appeared the mark would topple
today, with highs forecast from
90 to 95.
·
The mercury never dipped
below 80 degrees Monday mornIng In St. Louis; Ottumwa, Iowa;
Kirksville, Mo.; and Kansas City
Monday morning. And by 2 p.m.,
Fort Worth, Texas, tied a record
106; Kansas City had 104, Okia·
homa City 102.
The National Weather Service
said Waco had a record 108,
Dallas-Fort Worth rose to 107,
AusUn Ued a record 105, and
Houston tied a record 102.
,
Four deaths In the Chicago
area last week have been blamed
o" the heat wave, with a fifth
death under Investigation. Ul·
llan Emmllng, 81, was found
dead Saturday In her apartment;
which had ciOII!d windows and no
air conditioning. Officials said
she died of arteriosclerotic heart
disease and heat stroke.
The NWS's medium-range
forecast for Sunday, Aug. 14,
through Thursday, Aug. 18, says
the heat Isn't going away, and
calls for temperatures above ·
normal across most of the United
States. Twenty states from Montana to southeastern New York,

New England, the mid-Atlantic
· states and the Ohio Valley are
expectedto have temperatures

,

..

''much above" nonnal.

Little or no rain was expected
In Texas, Oklahoma, California
and the southern and centtal
Great Basin, while below-normal
precipitation was predicted for
the mid-Atlantic Coast, northern
Florida and parts of Kansas and
Missouri. The rest of the nation
was likely to get near-normal or

above-normal rainfall during the
period.
.
Tropical storm Beryl thrashed
In the Gulf of Mexico with 50-mph
winds early today, throwing
squalls and Hoot waves at
coastal communities for the
second day.
Helicopters ferried 1,[i00 oil
workers over stormy seas to the
safety of shore as Beryl drew
strength from the warm gulf
waters, and at least another 1,500

people evacuated homes tn Loutslana's bayous and along rivers
In Mississippi.
The storm, slow and erratic,
swirled about 65 miles southeast
of New Orleans since developing
Monday into the second tropical
storm of the Atlantic-Caribbean
hurricane season.
The National Hurricane Center
predicted Beryl will drift south
and could gain more strength
Continued on page 5

Racine Council supports
effort for juvenile facility
Meeting In regular session,
Raclne VIllage Council adopted a
res,olutlon supporting the county
eff6rt to secure one of the ~bed
state juvenile detention facilities
for Meigs County
Mayor Frank Cleland reported
that communtty development
block grant Items for the park
have been ordered and council
approvedthepurchaaeofvartous
Items for the street department.
Vacation leave was approved for
Glenn Rizer with Jack Wolfe to
fW In durlnsr vacaUon
Council approved payment for ·
the roUer that lhe vlllaae bldoa
from Letart Township and the
fire cblef was authorized to have
a radio tecbnlclaln check on the
two way radio In the fire truck.
It was reported that Denver
Rice of Middleport and the
Everett Wedge Band of Point
Pleasant will be featured at the
Aug. 13 free program at the

Shrine Park Wtth- the Sumtse
Gospel Group of Chester appear·
tng later In the month.
Council extended thanks to
Carl Hyaell and his group of
workers for recently trimming
bush on the river bank 10 that
park visitors can view the Ohio
river. An Invitation was extoended
to attend ·a get-together with
.officials of National Gas and 011
Corp., at the Sbrlne Park at 7
tomorrow evening.
Council dlaeuaaed aarbage col·
lectlon and will be collllderlng
ralslni rates tor the service due
totncreaze costaatthelandftllaa
well as more time Involved and
greater distance required for
haullnlf.
'!be financial statement of
Clerk Jane Beegle was approved
and Included: cash balance In all
fundi, $147,987.06 lncludllllf
$22,914.06, reneral fund;
$'"
9"" •• • ...~
.... fu nd; ...,n
.................
_.
...,.,176,84,
\ f· .

fire fund; $3,797 .83, state hlghw· say fund; $51,239,69, water fund·
$3,870.15 cemetery; $3,565.97, w~­
ter deposits, and $6,500, cemetery endowment.
Receipts for the month of July
totaled $20,121.41 while expendltures amounted to $11,046.37.
Attendl~~g the meeting were
council members, Robert Beelfle, Carroll Teaford, Richard
Wamsley, Larry Wolfe and Scott
Wolfe; Glenn Rizer, street commllllloner; Mayor Cleland and
Fire Chief Robert Johnson
.
T~I...Lt'B L---lers
UUU8

vauea•
meeting nnatponed
r~
A meeHD1 of lbe MelpAIIIIellc

BoHlen IIClhedaled for 'J lbla
evnlq hM ..... Jllilllllld
.... 1 p.m. Weda•day a1 111e
lltpiCIMol.

�•

•

~ comment
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS..MASON AREA

~lb
tS:mj9
........_..._-r,r-rw.c:l.'qjv

,

ROBERTL. ~NGETT

PubUsher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER o! The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. 1bey should be less than 300 words
long. AU letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be publlshed. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalllles.

,.

MaD

T,.a:•da:f· .Al!!JW! 9.. 1"'
'
By Jack Anderson

•
R
1
pays pnce J.Or etters.__--.:::a=nd~Jo=se:.r::..::ph~S~pea::::.:.r

WASHINGTON - Lewis C.
Thorntori picked the wrong pen
pal when he chose Ronald Rea·
gan and is now serving a 25-year
prison sentence for writing 10
threatening letters to the presl·
dent. For a 62-year-old man, 25
years amounts to a Ute s.entence.
It is particularly harsh consid·
erlng the fact that Thornton was
locked in a menta! hospital and
taking medication wheri he wrote
the letters threatening to kill
Reagan. He was being treated for
severe depression and had been
involuntarily committed for 10
months. Today, more than seven
years after Thornton's Ill·
advised letters, he Is in a federal
prison and wondering why. By
contrast, the man who carried
out his fantasy to shoot the

president, J6Tm W. Hinckley, Jr., he was confined · In a mental
Is in a mental hospitaL
lnstltullon.
Thornton claims he was "menThornton, who calls Florida
Ially Incompetent." His letters, home, now sits In a cell at the
some rambling and senseless, Federal Corrections Institution
laid out an assassination plan In Butner, N.C. He says that after
which that Thornton said would six and a half years of treatment,
resemble the murder or John F. he Is mentally and emotionally
Kennedy, except be "more pre- stable and ready tor life on the
else - better planned - aim low outside.
His stocy doesn't read like a
and aim high ... " Thornton speciblueprint
for an assassin. Thorn·
fied he would snoot Reagan In the
ton
Is
a
former Marine Corps
"head, and/ or below the waist."
.
officer
who
served In World War
Family and friends of the
now·penitent Thornton say the II and Korea. He graduated from
letters were Thornton"s attempt college, has a teaching certlti·
to call attention to his desperate cate and was a Methodist
plight - his wUe was diagnosed minister.
But in 1981, Thornton heard
with Alzheimer's disease, his
brother committed suicide, his voices telling him to kill the
father died and Thornton lost his president. He wrote his letters
house, all within one year before between Dec. 5, 1981, and Jan. 5,

Will Bush
bashing boomerang?
ByARNOLDSA~SLAK

UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON- There is a story, possibly true, that during the
height of the Watergate case disclosures, Nixon aide Bob Haldemann
ran into Dick Tuck, the foremost Democratic practitioner of political
dirty tricks.
"You started ali this," Haldemann declared.
"Yes," replied Tuck, "and you ran It into the ground.''
. Tuck's response Illustrates a tendency, not by any mearis restricted
to politics, to push a good Idea over the edge of usefulness.
For example, haircuts .
When John F. Kennedy burst on the national scene in 1960 with a
great shock of barely tamed hair, every politician with the exception
of Sam Rayburn started telling his barber tolay offthe heavy clippers
and the greasy kid stuff.
The blow-dried hairdo became such a cliche that Jake Garn,
running for the Senate In Utah in the 1970s, did very well
counter-campaigning against the Kennedy-style haircut by advertls·
. ing himself as "experienced, mature ... and bald."
The question this year is whether the Democrats will run the "wimp
factor" into the ground.
Even before the Democratic National Convention, Democratic
(and some Republican) politicians were taking considerable delight
·· in portraying George Bush as a kind of Caspar Milquetoast, the bu ttof
• a 1940s comic strip called "The Poor Soul."
The Idea was to picture Bush as a pallid, effete Easterner Incapable
of exercising the ene,rget!C leadership thought to be deslral;lle In a
president.
Bush's slim physique and somewhat nasal voice combined with his
Ivy League, old-money background made him an easy target for the
kind of zinger delivered by Democratic convention keynoter Ann
Richards. who described the vice president as having been born
·'with a silver foot in his mouth."
In truth. Bush's military record (58 World War II naval air
missions), his business career (founding a successful oil drilling
company) and his public service In tough jobs (CIA director, U.N.
ambassador) suggest just the opposite ·of a wimpish background.
But Bush and his advisers obviously are worried. by this image.
That is demonstrated by the vice president's appearances for "photo
opportunities" in such unlikely places as the cabs of gargantuan
earthmovers or standing In a corn field wearing a John Deere farm
machinery cap with a $500 Brooks Bros. suit.
That kind of thing is supposed to symbolize Bush's regular-guy
qual !ficalions, but for the most part they make him look as silly as
Calvin Coolidge did 60 plus years ago posing in an Indian headdress.
In fact, Bush's political handlers probably are contributing to the
sissy image by making him do such ridiculous stunts.
In fact, . if the Democrats are smart, they now will declare a
moratorium on George-the-wimp tactics. After ali, It only took one
remark. Alice Roosevelt Longworth's comment that Tom Dewey
looked "like the bridegroom on a wedding cake," to fix a derisive
image of the 1948 GOP candidate in the public mind.
It also should be noted that Michael Dukakis, no Rambo-type
himself, refrained from Bush bashing In Atlanta, and he would be
·well-advised to get his Democratic colleagues to go easy too.
To continue heaping ridicule on Bush could invite an outbreak of the
well-known American tendency to sympathize with the underdog.
That is something else that the 1948 election illustrated.

Letters .to the editor
Residents asked to choose event

Taxpayer upset

'.

• 1

Today iri history

t

at the course they would take.
But do not despair, Mr. Next
President. There are some things
we do know something about. We
know about the terrain upon
which unknowable events wUI
play themselves out. We know
there are some questions to
which attention must be paid.
And there are some Intuitions
that are based on more than
capriciousness. Here, sir, is a
first cut:
·
There wlll be demographic
change in America. The Baby
Boomers will all .move into
middle age. There will be a sharp
decline in the number of young
adults (wh_lch allegedly wUiyield
less crime). Our population will
be older (which wlll surely
necessitate more medical servl·
ces). We know these demographic facts because we are dealing
with people who are already
born.
The Sun Belt states will likely
continue to grow faster than the
northern regions, just . as happened in the 'OOs. The census of
1990 will yield
reappor·
. .a poijtical
.

Suburbia rendered

Hilltop grocery, or you may call
742·2103 or 742-2178 to place your
ATLANTA (NEA) - If the
opinion of which you are In favor bizarre tale chronicling the .
of. The choice Is yours and your transformation of the suburban
vote will count. The majority will · community · of Lake Hearn
decide. So if you have a prefer- wasn't a true story, It surely
ence, please call or stop in and would be an exquisitely appropvoice your opinion before Sept. riate fable for modern times.
1st.
The saga began In early 1985,
Thank you, when a Dallas real estate devel·
Chairperson oper announced plans to buy all
Kimberly Willford of the 144 single-family homes in
Lake Hearn, tear them down and
construct an office complex on
the 131-acre site.
The proposed purchase and
demolition of an entire communfrom our elected officals. There Ity was unusual, but the hoLetter to the Editor:
Well !heres goes another $1.25 are hundreds of acres of aban- meowners readily acquiesced to
from a person who like hundreds doned strip mines which looks to the plan because they were
me like would be ideal for Land offered about $225,000 apiece for
of other are on a set Income.
houses whose markel value averI received a bill for trash Fill.
A Meigs Co. Taxpayer aged less than $110,000.
collection for the month of July,
When they moved into Lake
VIrgil Walker
which went from $6.00 to $7.25.
Hearn
in the 1960s and 1970s,
Ohio
Racine,
I am wondering if we are
those
homeowners
explained, it
getting 'alllhat we are entitled to
was a pastoral area Ideal for
families. In the ensuing years,
however, land development produced noise, traffic and other
unwelcome intrusions that Invariably accompany urban sprawl.
By United Press International
DeKalb County planners inToday is Tuesday, Aug. 9. the 222nd day of 1988 with 144 to follow.
sisted that the proposed $981
The moon is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
million project would only exacThe morning stars are Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
erbate an already Intolerable
The evening stars are Mercury and Saturn.
situation.
Those born on lhis day are under the sign of Leo. They Include
In mld-1985, county officials
English author and angler Izaak Walton In 1593. pioneer Swiss child
overwbelmlngly rejected the depsychologist Jean Piaget In 1896, English actor-playwright Robert
veloper's bid for the rezoning
Shaw In 1927, Australian tennis star Rod Laver In 1938 (age 50).
required to construct 10 high-rise
comedian David Steinberg in 1942 (age 46), and heavyweight boxer
buUdings with 3.2 million square
Ken Norton in 19415 (age 43) .
feet of office space on land
designated for housing. One year
On this date In history:
later, however, that dectslon was
In 4$) B.C., after one of history's most famous battles, Persian
overturned by the Georgia Su·
rorcesoverran the heavily oumumbered Spartan defenders of the
preme Court, which ruled that
narrow pass at Thermopylae In Greece.
.
the land must be rezoned and the
In 1936, Jesse Owens won his fourth Qlymplc gold medal in Berlin.
project allowed to proceed.
Dear Editor:
To the people of Rutland. We
have had, in the past, complaints
on having a community Halloween Party instead of trick or
treat. So there for, we are asking
you , the community, to choose
which you would like to have in
1988.
There will be papers to sign on
which you prefer; placed in
Rutland Dept. Store, Joe's Country Market. R &amp; S Sales, and

1982, not only to the White House.
but to the FBI and the Secret
Service. He gave his name and
address in each letter. In court,
he pleaded guilty to 10 counts of
sending threatening communications through the mall.
At Thornton's sentencing hearing, the judge acknowledged that
Thornton needed help, but he
said, "I'm not going to take a
chance or· giving some short
period of incarceration."
Thornton told our reporter,
Dawn Larsen, that he was
disoriented and confused at his
sentencing and he doesn't recall
considering any option except a
guilty plea. He thinks his.chances
would have been good using an
Insanity defence In a trial. Only
brief references were made at
Thornton's sentencing to his
mental state. The judge asked
Thornton·' s lawyer, Steven J.
Baker, or Florida, whether he
had anything to say In Thornton's
behalf. "No sir," Baker said,
accourding to the court records.
"I think that I've made my
position clear to the court before." He also referred the judge
to a pre-sentencing report.
Baker' said it would be "Inappropriate" for him to comment
on the case now, even though
Thornton signed a privacy
waiver giving Baker permission
to discuss the case with us.
With no history of violence,
Thornton's only prior conviction
was on a forged check charge In
1973. He says he Is still not sure
why he wrote the letters, and in
restrospect calls it "stupid and
Idiotic."
Thornton now confines his
letter writing to people who he
thinks can help him get out of jail.
Since he penned a letter of
apology to Reagan, Thornton has
taken the president off his
mailing list.

Dear Mr. Next president ___- =:. .;Be:.;. :.n. . :.:.~ (lt:. ; .:te:.;,:_nb~er:.-'Z.g
In this season of presidential
nominating, It would be useful if
The Next President knew what to
expect. Just 16 months from now,
we will reach one or those
arbitary dividing lines by which
we measure our existence - the
beginning of a new decade. The
1990s are upon us.
The small cottage industry of
futurism has already begun
ritual decade-mongering. We are
told, "The '90s will usher In a new
era, leading to a new world at the
turn of the millennium at the
year 20CHl"
AU right. But what's going to
happen? Do we know something?
Anything? Alas, the decades do
not reveal themselves In ad·
vance. In August 1958 no one
predicted the radicalism of the
'60s. Toward the end of the '60s,
there was no common view that
the '70s would yield economic
turbule.nce. In 1978 the two
dominant figures of the •80s Ronald Reagan and Mikhail
Gorbachev - were tiny blips on
the radar of the future. Even if
we knew they would achieve high
oUice, we could not have guessed

By early 1987, the developer
had purchased the homes for
more than $32 million, then
dispatched bulldozers and other
heavy equipment, transforming
\he once bucolic community Into
a barren tract.
Editorialized the Atlanta Jour·
nal and Constitution: "The topdollar dynamics of the land·
development game (were)
chewing up everything in sight land use plans, zoning decrees
and finally the neighborhOod."
But the story Isn't finished.
Several months ago, the Dallas
development firm announced
that it had abandoned Its ambi·
tious plans and was selling the
parcel to a Boston real estate
company.
That dramatic turn of events
apparently was caused by the
overbuilding of the northern arc
ot Interstate 285, the highway
that rings Atlanta and has been
the focus or much of the region's
Intense real estate development.
That arc already contains
more than 37 million square feet
of office space - the product of a
construction frenzy during the
first half of this decade that has
lefi Atlanta Itself with an excep·
tionally high, 21-percent vacancy
rate.
That phenomenon Is hardly
limited to this city, however. The
mindless construction of office
space In the outlying portions or
metropolitan areas has produced
a vacancy rate of almost 23
percent In the nation's suburbs
compared with a more modest
rate of just over 16 percent In
downtown locations.
In some cities, the disparity Is
even greater. In Chicago, for

Dodgers blanked
.I 0-0 by Houston

Page 2-The Daily Saltine!
Pomeroy-Middleport, ~

tionment that wUI reflect !his
Southwesternliation. That wlll
likely yield somewhat of a tilt In
American politics toward what
have been the more conservative
areas of the nation. Beyond that,
anyone who tells you about the
future of American politics
doesn't understand the situation.
The amount of lllegallmmlgra·
lion may fall due to the new
tmmlgration law. But legal im·
migration will likely continue at
moderately high levels. The new
Immigrants wlll be from nonEuropean areas. America wlll
become an ever-more multi·
hued, universal nation.
Mr. Next President, don't ask
about our economy. It's strong,
but puzzling. The experts say we
will either have to pay tbe piper
for profligacy, or we won't. If we
don't, we'll begin to wonder If
there is a piper. There Is.
Somewhere.
Foreign policy Is also unknow·
able, but we know the right
question to ask: Will the Soviet
empire break up? Just as the
Bolshevik revolution may well
have been the key political event

of the first half otthecentury,lts
demise may be the central event
or the second half.
Science wlll astound us, especially blogenetlcs, communications and superconductivity,
whatever that means. But remembl!r that nature usually
manages to trump science. The
'80s uncovered AIDS and started
us thinking seriously about the
"greenhouse effect." This year
we are worried about drought.
Just like Joseph and his brothers.
Mr. Next President, In the year
2000 America wUI stlll be the
"No. 1" country. That Is not
necessarily because we're so
wonderful, or because you wlll
have been so wonderful, but
because there is no other nation
in sight that can match us .
I do not know where the stock
market will be In the year 20oo. I
do know that people in that year
will complain about conditions.
Mr. Next President, the bad news
Is that, no matter what you do,
people will say the president is a
turkey. The good news Is that
they'll probably be wrong.

B,t Ualletll'reu laternaiiDnal
·.. 'ftle bat or teammate Denny
Walling inflicted the most dam. age to Mike Scott.
:. Scott, who was struck by a lead
weight that flew ott the bat of
Walling Saturday, scattered
. eight hits and recorded his fourth
. shutout tn a 10-0 rout over the
Dodgers MOnday.
, Scott refused to let a b)ack eye
, and bruised cheek keep him from
missing his scheduled slart
aplnst dlvlslon·leadtng Los
Angeles.
"It doesn't bother me," said
Scott, 12·3, wbo walked one and
struck out six In posting his sixth
complete game of the season.
'1t's stlll a little puffy, but -the
only time I notice It is when I look
In the mirror.''
Scott's teammates staked him
, to a 4·0 lead In the first Inning.
Starter ShaWn Hillegas, 3-4,
failed to retire a batter and the
'·. first four Astros scored.
"A four-run lead gave him
some kind of cushion," said
Astros' second baseman Bill
Doraa, wbo ICOred twice and
drove In the Astros' first run.
. "Not tocl;maay teams are going
to score tour runs oH blm."
· , Scott said he felt more relaxed
wltb the four·run lead.
"Having the lead makes It;
easier to pitch," Scott :Yid, ·"But .
· you sdll tell yourself, it's going to ·
. · be a tight game. The lead a1)9ws
. you to challenge guys Uke
(Pedro) Guerrero, (Kirk) Gill. son, and (Mikel Marshall with a
2·0 fastball. whereas In a tight
. game. you can't. n
Los Angeles, who had an
: eight-game lead July 18, has lost
~ ' eight of 11, and now lead the
Astros by 11·2 games.
"It's tough to rome In here and
. lose three oftour," said Dodgers'
. Manager Tommy Lasorda. ''We
just have to regroup and play like
we have. EverythiiJI they hit fell
In, and that's the secret of
winning."
· TheAstrossetaclubrecordfot
attendance In a four·game series
drawing 167,072.
. Gerald Young walked to open
tbe first and scored on Poran's
double. Terry Puhl singled borne
Doran, and Glenn Davia walked.

Tim Crews relieved and was
greeted by a Kevin Bass single
that scored Puhl and moved
Davis to third. One out later,
Rafael Ramirez drove In Davis
with a sacrifice fly to give
Houston a 4·0 lead.
The Dodgers placed two base·
runners as far as third base. In
the first, Kirk Gibson and Mike
Marshall singled io put runners
at first and third with one out but ·
Pedro Guerrero hit into a double
play. In the fifth, Alfredo Griffin
advanced to third with two out on
Steve Sax' single, but Gibson
flied out.
Elsewhere, St. Louis defeated
Montreal 4·2, Pittsburgh edged
New York 1·0, San Franclsco
held orr Atlanta 5-2, and In the
first night game at Wrigley
Field, Philadelphia and Chicago
were rained out.
In the American League, It
was: Toronto 5, Kansas City 1;
Minnesota 7, Cleveland 2; De:
'troll 3, ·.Texas 2; Oakland 9,
Chicago 5; and Seattle 4, Callfor·
BU'lt..ER BEATS TAG- Tbe Glanlll' Brett BuUer,left, beat the
nla 3.
1
tag by Braves' second b1111emaa Ron Gaat aa Butler Illdes ulely
Cardlnala 4, Expos 2
Into aecond·bue on teammale Robby Thompeon's Oyballtocenler
At St. Louis, Bob Forsch
pitched 6 2·31nnlngs and drove in
the winning run, lifting the
Cardinals. Fonch, 6-3, gave one
run on eight hits, struck out two
and walked ~ne In his longest
stint of the season. Todd Worrell
By RICHARD ROTTKOV
competing against O'Brien and
pitched 1 2·3 Innings for )11s 21st
the guys 1 used to play beside,"
UPI
Sporta
Writer
save. Hascual Perez, 8-6, suf·
Tanana
said.
With
the
Idle
second-place
New
fered the loss.
Mike
Henneman pitched two .
. .York Yankees and Boston Red
Plra&amp;es 1, Meta 0
Innings
and worked out of a
At Pltlsbullih, Rick Reed Sox keeping a close watch, more
jam in the ninth for
bases-loaded
pitched a three-hitter over eight than the eyes of Texas were on
innings In his major-league debut the Eastern Division-leading De- his 19th save.
"! never thought Texas had
to help the Pirates break a troit Tigers.
The Tigers, in extending their anything going in the game
five-game losing streak. Reed,
23,.&amp;ave up three singles, walked lead over New York and Boston exceptfor (Ruben) Sierra on that
one and struck out four. Jim Gott to 3 1·2 games, received the kind one fastball he hit for the two-run
refired three straight for his 18th of help that has buoyed their homer," Det roll Manager
save. .Bob OJeda, S.10, was the efforts this season. Detroit edged Sparky Anderson said. "Texas
the Rangers 3-2 Monday night, hit blooper balls but never got the
loser.
scoring
the winning run when the bat on the ball solldly."
· Glanllll, Brav~ %
Loser Jeff Russell, 8-5, allowed
At Atlanta, Kevl Mitchell Rangers' Ed Vande Berg balked
five
hits and three runs, walked
drove In two runs t back the In the winning run in the seventh
one and struck out two in 6 1·3
combined four-hit pitching of Inning.
Darrell Evans tied the score innings.
four carrying San Francisco. ,Joe
'Too bad Russell got the loss
Price &amp;ave up two hits over four with a two-run double, and
outotthat.''saidTexasManager
former
Ranger
Frank
Tanana,
Innings With four walks and four
strikeouts. Ron bavls, 1-1. 13·7, gave up five hits and two Bobby Valentine. "There was ..
earned his first wll) since .June 18, runs over slx·plus Innings. Ta· some good pitching out there." ·
In the seventh Dave Bergman
1986. Scott Garrelts earned his nana had lost three or his four
decisions since the All-Star opened wlih a' double to the
break, but had not allowed more le!Hieldcorner,andChetLemon
than two earned runs in any of was hit by a pitch. Evans th~n
socked a two-run double off the
those games.
"It's been 31-2years since !left center-field wall to tie the score
Texas, and It Is good to be with a 2-2. Jim Walewander ran for
ballclub like the Tigers. 1 like Evans, took third on Matt Nokes·
Infield out, and scored on the

'

.

Inner city and Its third fastest
growing metropolitan area.
Only seven of the 18 counties In
the area are members of the
Atlanta Regional Commission and its recommendations on the
disposition of developers' plans
are routlnesly Ignored even by
participating governments.

Berry's World

,.

Rain mars Cubs first night
- contest at Wrigley Field

EDMOND, Okla. (UP!) PGA president James Ray Car·
penter said Monday theOakTree
Golf Club course was In perfect
condition for the final majQr
tournament of the year and that
his organization would consider
returning to the layout for
another event during the 1990s.
Oak Tree, which in just 12
· years has becomeone oft he most
respected courses In the country,
will make Its professional major
championship debut this week
wltli the playing ofthe 70th PGA. ·
Carpenter, serving the final
year of his two-year terJD as
president or the PGA, arrived at
the site Monday ,jumped In a golf
cart and ·took a ride around the
grounds.
"We were joking that we
wouldn't need any white paint
(used to mark ground under
repair)," Carpenter said.
"There are no blem !shes on the
course. Everything Is perfect."
The weatber, however, was
less than perfect for th~ tour
pr_pfesslonals ..:... many of whom
got their first look at the course
Monday.
Temperatures climbed above
100 degrees and were expected to
stay at that level throughout tlie
tournament.

Sports briefs

GoH
CHICAGO (UPI) ;_ The Chi· I'm sure for a lot of people that
Hopn
Co. Introduced
The
Ben
cago Cubs hosted their first night this was a godsend. But we're a
Edge
line
club - the
the
Hogan
game under the lights of Wrigley little bltfrustrated right now,"
first-ever
forged
perimeterField Monday, but the heavens Ageless Cub fan Harry Grossweighted golf clubs wltb a run
failed to cooperate and rain .• ll)an, 91, had ~!eked the switch
cavity back. Jerry Austry, presiforced the contest to be called off that made history at 6:06 p.m.
dent and chief executive officer,
In the fourth tnniDg.
CDT, Illuminating a $5 million
said the forged clubs are 25
The 74-year-old tradition of lighting fixture at what bad been
percent sorter than cast clubs,
day-only ba. .IJall at the the nation's only major·league
giving
the 11111ter a better feel of
•'Friendly Continel" ended when ballpark without nteht baseball.
ball11t Impact. The new
the
golf
The Cubs took the field an hour
the game got under way at 7:01
will
be delivered to retail•
clubs
p.m. CDT. But the thunder· later, playiiJI host to the Pbillles
era
for
sale
beginning Oct. 1.
storms moved into the area by before 39,012 JubiUant fau who
~plea
tbe middle of the fourth, baiting paid up to $1,500 per ticket for
Sebastian Coe, the only man to
play at 8: 15 p.m. with the Cubs scalpers' seats that normally
win two Olympic 1500 meters
leadllll the Philadelphia Pbillles .• .would cost $10.50.
gold
medals, was left ott Bri·
3-l:
Other fans who were weren't ·
taln's
Olympic track and field
After a rain delay of two hours lucky enough to obtain the hottest
team named Monday. Coe, 31,
aad 10 minutes, the game was ticket In town since the Cubs
who won gold medals at Moscow
called off and It will have to be hosted the 1984 National Le"ague
In 191lJ and Los Angeles In 1911!1,
replayed. Tuesday's scheduled East playoffs gathered outside
failed to reach the 1500 meters
game, agalut tbe New York the North Side ballpark.
f11111l in the BrlttSb Olympic trials
Met1, atso II a aJabt contest.
Innumerable other ~ns who
Saturday.
... NBC aniiCIIIIICed It
'The 111011 Lord Jolt told we're wanted to avoid the conpsdon
bu
hired
journalist
Jolu! Fein·
Prelb'Adabouttbii.He'atelllnl around Wrigley Field mled tav·
to
work
wltb
commentators
stein
111 he'll defermllle wileD the first er1111 thrqbout the city to
Otck Enberg and AI McGuire on
D(gbt J&amp;me 1a," aald Rick Sut· celebrate tbe occasion with "Let
Olympic basketball telecasts at
ctll!e, tile stardiJI pitcher tor the 'lbere Be Llgbta'' parties.
Seoul.
Feinstein, a reporter tor
CubsMondaynleht. Allbedelay
Fans at11!11dlng tbe 11eme said
the
Washington
Post, authored
neared two boun, Cubs General they were lbrUied to be part of
''Season
on
the
Brink," about
Manager Jim Frey laid, "We tbe historic event but were
Indiana and Its coach Bob
bad uummer where IM!I'Y Dflbt concerned about the end of a
Knflht.
'
we llear about tbe lack of rain. . tradition.

AL East Division lead

-

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"Sure, It's hot," said David
Edwards, one of several tour
members who live near the Oak
'rree course. "But when we play
this time of year, no matter
where It is, it Is hot. So that
shouldn't be that much of a

factor.': ·
Nevertheless, tournament off!·
cials were taking no chances. In
addition to having well manned
first aid stands tor the gallery
members, the players had access
to a space-age device that helps
keep them cool. It is a collar
which fits around the neck, like a
bandana and is filled with coolant. The collar is kept in a
freezer until needed, keeps the
back of the neck cold and thus
reduces the body temperature.
Concern was also expressed
for portions of the golf course.
Large fans attached to tree limbs .
. helped circulate the alrabOvethe
13th .!'&lt;!ld 15th greens In order to
keep those putting surfaces from
overheating. Both greens are
sheltered by trees and receive
little air circulation.
Oak Tree, designed by Pete
Dye Is rated by the USGA
handicapping system as the most
difficult par·71 course In the
country. It Is the second course In
as many years (and the third In
five years) to be selected by the
PGA to host a major title for the
first time.
Over the next few years the
PGA will go to two other courses
that have never had a major
tournament - Kemper Lakes In
suburban Chicago and Crooked

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public U111Jiles Com·
mission ol Ohio has sat
lor public: hlarina Case
No. 88-101-EL-Efe, to '
review the fuel procure·
ment practices and
POicies ollhe Ohio Power
Company, the operation
of Its Electric Fuel Com·
ponent, and related mat·
ters. This hearing Is
scheduled to begin at
1:30Jl.rn. on ~r

6, 18118 at City Council

Clilmblll 218"CIMIIntl

A-.J.w.. c.ton,
Ohio 44712.

AI ~111tealed parties wiH

~l"'J.~
I1JIIionmaybeabtllned
by

COIIIICIInD the Com-

mission.

-

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'.,.

....

field during the third Inning of Monday night's game in Atlanta.
The Giants walloped the Braves 144. (VPI)

balk.
Sierra hit his 16th home run In
the fi~th inning, a two-run blast
that put Texas In front 2-0.
In other American League
games, Toronto downed Kansas
City 5·1, Minnesota topped Cleveland 7-2, Oakland defeated ·Chi·
cago 9-5 and Seattle edged
California 4·3.
In the National League, It was:
Pittsburgh 1, New York 0; San
Francisco 5, Atlanta 2; St. Louis
4, Montreal2 and Houston 10, Los
Angeles 0. The historic first night
game at Wrigley Field In Chicago
between Philadelphia and the
Cubs was rained out.
Blue Jays 5, Royals 1
At Toronto, Jeff Musselman
allowed three hits over seven
innlngs,.and Ernie Whitt drove in
two runs with a homer and single
to lead the Blue Jays. Mussel·
·man, 4-1, struck out five and
walked four. Tom Henke struck
out three In two innings for his
21st save. Bret Saberhagen,
12-11, took the loss.
Twins 7, Indians 2
A:t Mlnnea!Jolis, Brian Harwr

Oak Tree course ready for PGA

lifeless_......;....___:R:.!!:!:ob~er:...!:_t~Wal!!:!.:t;~rs
example, the office vacancy rate
Is less than 14 percent downtown
but more than 25 percent In the
suburbs.
A leading cause of that imbal·
ance Is the lack of unified
planning that allows Atlanta, for
example, to be slmutaneously
the country's second poorest

increas~

Tigers

,.,...,

collected four hits and Gene
Larkin homered to send Cleve·
land to Its eighth loss In the last
nine games. Allan Anderson,
10·7. allowed two runs on six hits
.with no walkS over 6 1-3 Innings
and Jeff Reardon recorded bls
29th save. Chris Codlroll, 0-3,
took the loss. Anderson was
helped in the fourth by Minnesota's second triple play of the
year.
Athletics I, Willie Sox 5
At Oakland, Calif., Dave Hend·
erson tied a career high with four
hits and Luis Polonta scored
three times for the A's. Bob
Welch,13·6, allowed three earned
runs in 6 2-3 Innings for his third
straight victory. Dennis Eckersley got one out for his majorleague leading 33rd save.
Mariners t, Angels 3
At Anaheim, Calif., Jay
Buhner broke an eighth-Inning
tie with a run-scoring single and
Mark Langston allowed four hits
over eight innings for SeatUe.
Langston, 8·9, struck out five and
walked three in winning for the
first time in five starts. Kirk
McCaskill, 8-6, had a six-game
winning streak snapped.

The Daily Sentinel

Stick In Indianapolis.
, The U.S. Open, meanwhile, Is
almost always held at courses
traditionally associated with major golf events..
·
''We will never say thaI we
won't go to a new golf course,"
said Carpenter. "But I think
~ginning In the mid 1990s we will
be about through with our piO· ·
neerlng. 1 think we will want to
start returlng to as many of the
old, traditional courses as we
can.
''We are talking to several
courses that . have held major
tournamenls before. I know that
this is a great golf course. The
people here wanted lhls tournament and they are doing a great
job. We went to Shoal Creek (a
Nicklaus-designed course iii Alabama) in 1984 and we are going
back there In ~990 . Something
similar could happen here."
Edwards has played two· or
three holes a day on the Oak Tree
course during the past week and
he agreed with Carpenter on the
conditioning of the layout.
"The course is in great condl·.
tion," he said. "There Is trouble
everywhere and it takes just one
. bad shot here to ruin a round. I
think experience will be an
Important ingredient . Expe·
rience a !ways seems to come Into
play In a major championship. "

(IJSPS IU·9811)
A Dlvillon of Multimedia. l•c.
Published every afrernoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio VaHey Pub·
llshlng Company/Multimedia, Inc.,
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cond class p();tage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.

Member: United Press International,

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Ohio Newspaper Associ alton. National
Advertising Representative, Branham .
Newspaper Sales, 73J Third Avenue,

New York, New York 10017.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes
to The Dally Sentinel, Ill Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio ~769.

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EDDIE ALBEKf FOR BELTON£

''Be/tone had the
answer to
my hearing
problem...jind out
if they can
help you too!''
Bellone Is ofrcrlnfl 1 FREE EL_Ec:rRONIC HEARING TEST.
Dl. IAIIIII PICBI'S OFFICE

509 SOUTH 1HID AYE.. -LEPOn, OHIO
JH.SU Y, AIGUST 11
PIOII t:Ot·121H (IOOflll
UMWAAte UAW 1119•11
So Jake Eddie Albert's advice - visil the Bellone Hearing Aid
Specialist today for a FREE HEARING TEST. Come in with
coupon for test.
Call1bll Fn:e Number ).8()()..634-S26S for immediat• appoin1men1.

~

COUPON
. ..

.:.

-· ....

u·

'·

�I

'

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I

e.. 1988

Ohio

Slaughter retu1·ns to Browns
following early season h0 ldOut
I

SLAUGHTER BACK IN CAMP - Browns' wide receiver
Webster Slaa«hter lalb with leammale and fellow widHlut Brian
Brennan before practice IIi Lakeland CommunltyCo1Je1e Moaday.
Slaughter has resolved contract disagreement with the Browns
and practiced yesterday with the team. (UPI) -"

Seahawks sign free agent
team captain at Washington, has
12 career Interceptions and Jed
the Colts secondary tackles durIng each of the past eight
seasons.
Glasgow's signing Is an apparent effort to bolster a position
that was weakened with the
retirement of Kenny Easley. The
Sea hawks also have signed veteran defensive back Vernon Dean,
a free agent who played with the
Washington Redsklns.
The Seahawks 'also cut three
free agents: defensive end Terry
Bess from TennesseeChattanooga; cornerback Larry
Parharm from Tuskegee; and
Eastern Wa~hlngton punter Eric
Stein.

SEATTLE (UPI) -The Seattle Seahawks have signed free
agent safety Nesby Glascow, an
11 -year NFL veteran and a
former Un lverslty of Washington
player who was cut last week by
the Indianapolis Colts.
Team spokesman Gary Wright
said Glasgow had worked outlast
Friday and the decision was
made Monday to sign him.
Glasgow, 31, played In 128
games - starting 114 - In nine
seasons with the Colts. He was an
eight-round draft choice In 1979
for lndlanapolls, where he
played primarily as a strong
safety ..
The 5-!oot-10, 188-pounder, who
was a four-year letterman and

Majors

st. Lollil t, Mntre., t
Houiiiii:Hlt,

~.:~.,•a

By Unite• Prna btter..a.._.
AMERICAN LEAGUE

W L Pc&amp;.

Gl

Mllwaulee

Toroaio

55 58 .481 1S

Bo!toa

u u .ns

Cle.-el .. d

S7 ,, .331

We~~ I

,. 4S .... I! • .151 7

MlaR!IGta

Callhrllla

T.,..

U\1

ftlll

n n .at

u~

411 II .4..

~

Sullie

(8chlrald1-8), 8:11p.m.
'
Loa Anplee. (S.C&amp;Qa s-1) at Clncln•U
(.lacboalf..S~, 8:11
S....Frandaeo (.,.._U·I) alHoaion
(Andujar 1-tl. 8:P p.m.

,.m.

We~.,·•

Gam•

New York .. Cklcaro
Plltft1JII atMonlreal, nlpt

. 58 5I .SII IS

Lo.

M P•Wtlpllla. nl&amp;fl'
Los An pies at Cl.cln•ll, •laftt

St.

San Dlep at ..tuuna, allfll
San Franclaco at Ho•.Con, alaflt

M.lnlftilla 7, On-elan• f
Dec roM 3, Trxa• Z
SeaiUt t, Calllornla!l

Trans ad ions

Oalclaftd I, lllleqo 5

liMe ball
Chleqo CAL)- AetM&amp;ed pkberJeff

Tile-d~ '" Game~

1~8)

a1 Ntw Vork

Bos&amp;en caemensiUand Smlth110nlo:J)
at Mllwau let (Niew:s t-4 and We pan
lft·Sl, 2, 1: U p.m.
Clntland (SwiiMitll 12-111) al Min~·
!ldo.l t Tolhre r J..l), 8: IS p.m.
Baltimore (Se llmhl 4-lla&amp; Ku•aCky
( allleddrd), 8: 35p.m.
Detrall (Ter~ll 1-8) M Tens (Wit13·
7),8:Sip.m .
s..•t~e (Moore f. IS) 1111 California (Wilt
8-11),10:35 p.m .
Cbl~qo
( Bttll&amp;er J.'!) aJ: Oalt·
lalld (Stewart IHI ), lt:lS p.m.

•

.........

Game!

Oakand

TofOIIlo M New Yofll., rtllhl
Boston al Mllwau ~e . ni&amp;M
CleYeiJIHI atMinneRuta, alpt
, Baltlmn~ at K• . . Clly, nipt
Detratc a&amp; Tex ... nllflt
Suttle .a C.IIIOr ... a. ai!H
NATIONAL LEI\GtJE

SIIMIIhlet ended U111117 "rdln:m..a"
ower .al •Y •Is pUle.
oanaa - Releued defenlolve backs
Tommy a_,.~n and Curila Baham,
qiiU'Ierbacll. Crall a.raett, r ... tn1
backiKariJoneaand u.nehley, wide
recelwn JohD GM'retl•ad Maclt.loaes,

Eut
W L Pel .
l'l t4 .1114 -

11 N

Morireal
Cllllcaro

18 51 .Its 1%
S.1 Sf .4H IS
48 I! .4.

nlladelpNa
Sl . Lfluls

1

u
5t

Green

II\ ~

1!.1

~:

s~

.ss:

38 1S
Monda)' 'lll ReflukA

Pthitlu~h

.34~

Fr~

vision screening for the publiC will be held Wednesday
from 9 a.m. to 12 noon at the Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy
No appointement Is necessary for the screening which will be
for decreasl!d vision, glaucoma, cataracts, muscle Imbalance
and retinal problems. The screening Is a community service of
Marietta Ophthalmology Associates, Inc., Marietta.

Makeup judging set Thursday
:
'
;
'

State A·uto
offers
someth :tng
special

The Buccaneers waived of!en·
slve linemen Chris Symington,
Don Pumphrey and Jim Warne·,
running backs James Morton
and Michael Clemons and de!en·
slve backs Bruce Jones and
Ronald Shegog. Running back
Bobby Howard and quarterback
Mark Maye were placed on
. Injured reserve, leaving 82 players available for practice.

..•
•
•

'

I.t's the a•na

on :au•·=•

l'oliq ... p&amp;01t841ecl protect1on
for reta.11 stores,

oftlces, churches,

•

a.l:lle.

RR£0l:ER~
'""Wf!auranotl llervlcea

'•

214 EAST MAIN

WE SALUTE ALL THOSE WHO 'woRK
SO HARD TO MAKE THE FAIR
.
POSSIBLE.

~=:,:o

II, A.tlanl.a I

PhllldelpNa at Chlcap, ppd. rain

..
I

A twoods accident victims

•lptd

Continued from
Sales...
c'·&gt; sales were 71.7 million, com,.-

Family Practice

&amp;

.Dr. Edward Ayers
Pediatrics and Internal Medicine

announce the opening of their practice
at
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Suite 12

.

TbiSO

st3l \988.
ffet expires jl\ugu
'

.

There iso subaantlal interest penalty for early wilhdrowal •Compounded
doily.

'

pared to $61.5 mUIIon In 1987.
Sausage segment sales were
$29.6mllUonascomparedto$30.2
million the previous year.
Thelncreaselnnetsaleslsthe
result of more restaurants In
operation.
There are 206 restaurants In
operation as of Monday, accordlng to RobertS. Wood, executive
vice president and chief operat·
tng officer or the restaurant
division.
A year ago, there were 180
restaurants open. Five new restaurants opened In the last
quarter. according to Wood, \\'lth
plans to open 23 more In the next
year.
Projected to open during the
second quarler ofthe year are 10
restaurants, Including the first
Bob Evans In Maryland, near
Baltimore. New restaurants will
also be opening In St. Louts,
Pennsylvania and Florida.
The second Owens FamUy
Restaurant Is under construction
In Mesquite, -Texas, a Dallas
auburb, and a third Is planned In
FUchardson,Texaa.
BobEvansFarmsacqulredthe
Texas-based Owens Country
Sausage and Owens Family

Call BANK ONE
For appointmenta call (304) 675-6015
,•

'

before making landfall, and
tropical storm warnings flew
from Morgan City, La., to Pensacola, Fla.
ClvU defense units began prell·
mlnary storm preparations and
the Coast Guard declared a
"Hurricane Condlllon ·Three,"
the lowes I stage of hurricane
readiness. The storm would
become a hurricane If sustained
winds reach 74 mph.
Beryl kicked up tides as high as

~ --Area

7 feet and dumped up to 5 Inches
of rain In squalls along the coasts
of Louisiana, Mississippi and
Alabama, flooding roads and
blowing down power lines.
Thunderstorms rained out the
first night game at the newly
lighted Wrigley Field In Chicago
as the Cubs hosted the Phlladel·
phta Phlllles. The baseball contest, which will be replayed, was
called off with the Cubs leading
3-1.

deaths-del, Jan. 21, 1986, and one sister,
Sophia Parker. Two daughters
survive, Sharon A. Zundel, 201 S.
Pershing Dr., Arlington, Va.,
22204, and Charlene Z. Nevans ot
17612 Berwyn Road, Shaker
Heights, 44120; a brother, Frank
F. Zundel, Denver, Colo.; a
niece, Lucy Klnsall, also of
Denver.
Friends may call at the Bolin
Funeral Home In Zanesville, 2 to
4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesdi!Y.
Memorial services will be held at
3 p.m . Wednesday at the First
Baptist Church In Zan,esville.
The Rev. Larry Griffin and the
Rev. David Good will offlcate.
Memorial contributions may be
made to the Duncan Falls Baptist
Church.

Rev. Ralph Zundel
• The Rev. Ralph C. Zundel, 87,
of 727 Caldwell St., Zanesville,
former pastor of Meigs and
Gallla County Baptist Churches,
died Saturday even Jng as the
result of Injuries suffered In an
automobile accident near Klrkersvllle. He was pronounced
dead at the scene.
The Rev. Mr. Zundel was born
on June 14, 1901 at Germanla,
Pa., son of Leonard and Anna
Gross Zundel. He had been a
resident of Zanesville for the past
25 years and retired from the
ministry In 1974. He maintained
his membership at his last
pastorate, the Duncan Falls
Baptist Church.
The minister graduated from
Penn Bible Ins tltute and Eastern
Baptist Seminary, both In Phlla·
.delphia, Pa. and from . Penn
College In Oskaloosa, Iowa. He
was ordained In 1927 and pastared Ohio Baptist Churches In
Shelby, Zanesville, Middleport,
Cheshire, Troy and Pomeroy,
before coming to Duncan Falls.
In 1983 he was recognized for
his 50 years In the mlnlatry by the
Ohio Baptist Convention. Since
his retirement he has remained
active In the ministry, visitation,
and other volunteer activities.
He was preceded In death by
-~Is wife, Ruthanna Jasper Zun•

Stoeks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:38 a,m.)
.
BJ'7ce and Mark Smltll
ol Blaat, Ellis t1: Loewl

A foreclosure action and a
petition for divorce have been
flied In the Common Pleas Court.
Clay T. lhle, Pomeroy, has
filed the foreclosure action
against Spencer R. Carpenter,
Racine, Cheryl T. Carpenter,
Racine, et al. He asks for $4,452
lor remodeling work and petltl·
oned the court for sale of the
property to recover that amount.
Pat Winebrenner, Pomeroy,
has filed for divorce from Roger
C. Winebrenner , Syracuse,
charged gross neglect of duty
and extreme cruelty. In the court
the marriage of David K. Snod·

Weather
South Central Ohio
Tonight: MosUy clear, with a
low near 70. Southwest winds
:~~e~~- mph. Chance 01 rain 20
Wednesday: Partly cloudy,
with a slight chance of showers.
Highs will be near 90. Chance of
rain 30 percent.
Extended Welliher Forecast
Thursday through Saiurday
Fair Thursday and Friday,
with a chance of thunderstorms
Saturday. Highs will be between
85 and 95, with overnight lows
between 65 and 70.

grass and Mary Beth Obltz has
been dissolved, and Debra ,S.
Halley has been granted a
divorce from WilHam Halley,
with the plaintiff being awarded
custody of two minor children.

Slo pildl tourney
is set Aug 20-21
A men's slow pitch softball
tournament has been scheduled
for Aug. 20-21 at the Middleport
park.
The tournamnt will be a Class
E double elimination event.
Entry fee Is $65 and two balls.
Teams Interested In partlclpal·
lng should call Skip at 992-0020;
Junior at 843-5208 or Chuck at
949-2440.

~~==:;;;;:=======;HELP WANTED
LABORATORY SUPERVISOR
For modern fully equipped physi·

cia~·s office llboratory. Qualifi-

cations necessary: IT (~SCP),
well versed in instrument opera·
lion and trouble sllootinc. COIIIpeten~ in all lib areas. Excellent
benefits. WHklnds off. Apply in
person to or call 446·9620, Tile
Medical Pllza, 203 JICkson Pike,
Gallipolis, btlwtfn 8:30 A.M.·
5:00 P.1.
·

RubyCrum
Funeral services for Ruby
Crum, 63, a resldentofRoute71n
Meigs County, who died June 18
following a lengthy Illness, were
· held at the Vall Funeral Home In
Ripley, W. Va., on June 21 with
the ftev. Steve Atkinson
officiating.
Mrs. Crum was .born Oct. 8,
1924 In Charleston, W.Va.
· She Is survlvled by her bus·
band, Edward; a daughter, Nel·
lie Green; a son, Burl Crum; four
sisters, Bertha Griffin, Middleport; sue Crawford, Gallion;
Bernice, Coca Beach, Fla., and
Marie Selgfrled. Middleport, and
·her father, Amos Fultz, Gallon.
Burial was In Fair Plains
Cermetery at Fair Plains, W.Va.

.. l.Ddge meets

''WHY WAIT?''
FEATURING: Josh McDowell tVideol
FOR: Parents and Teens facing the
issues of Sex and Sexuality
DATE: August 22-25 (Monday-Thursday)
TIME: 7:00-B:OO each evenng
.PLACE: French City Baptist Church .
(Located

1/2

Mile North of Holzer Hospital
on Route 160)

SPONSORED BY:

Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, will
Am Electric Power .............. 27
meet In regular session at 7: 30
AT&amp;T ................................. 26% • this evening with work In the F .C.
Ashland 011 ........................ 35~ Degree.
Bob Evans ..........................l6'%
Charming Shoppes .............. 14~ Roek Springs
aty Holding eo .................. 33~
Grange to meet
Federal Mogul. .................... 42
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................60\4
Rock Springs Grange will meet
Heck's ................................ . '!f.
at
8 p.m. Thursday at the hall for
Key Centurion ....................17'%
election
of officers.
Lands' End ......................... 28%
Limited Inc ........................21 \4
Multimedia Inc ...................731!1
Rax Restaurant&amp; .................. 4%
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 12
Shoney's Inc ..... .................. . 7%
Wendy's Inti .................... .... 5'%
Worthington Ind .................24%
(Bob EYIUIS Farmli tUIIIOUDCed
ftnt-quarter net earniDp of
Ul/llbare vs. Ul/llbare. LImited annoiiDCed second-quarter
net eamklp of $.11/llhare n.
$.30/llbare. Wendy's declared
dividend.)

Elmer Geiser and Fellowship Chapel
Pearl Casto
leland Allman and Church of Christ in Chriatian Union
John Evans and Church of God, Rutland
John Wood and French City Baptiat Church
Richard Vinson and Little Kyger Congregational Church
Marv!n Hocker and Church of God, Rodney
Mervon Sallee and Vinton Baptist Church
Alfred Holley and Elizabeth Chapel Church
Paul Vo11 and Church of God, Gallipolis
Jim Randes and Ughthouse T1barnacle
Robert Colvin and Good News Baptist Church

ex

Hospital news

V eter111111 iloapltal
Saturday Admissions - Leon·
dus Lee, Pomeroy; Ethel Hatfield, Middleport.
Saturday Discharges - Dorothy Thunton, John McKenzie,
Yolan Satterfield, Edna Plckens, i
John Bumgardner.
page 1
Sunday Admissions - Helen
Smith, Pomeroy; Robert Lewis,
Restaurants a year ago.
Jr., Middleport.
The sausagedlvlslonJs looking
Sunday Discharges - James
at moving product Into stores In
Owens, Bernice Fry.
the Tidewater and Norfolk areas
Monday Admissions- Milton
of Vtrglnls, In addition to New
Maxwel~ Chester; Sandra DoJersey. However, NewJersyhas
well, Racine; Erna Frosln, Ply·
no major television outlets tn the
mouth, Mich.; James Bentz,
state, and advertising would
Racine; Frank Imboden, Ra·
have to be through New York , cine; Lena Hellman, Pomeroy.
City stations. The concern 1s the
Monday Discharges- Thomas
poUcy of delivery from the Bob
Roush, Marte Theiss, Linda
Evans plants directly to the
Hudson, Ethel Hatfield.
stores and the New York market
would have to be Included.
"'
New products will be added to
the sausage division, Including a Services chanpd
The Rev. Carl Hicks has been
smoked kielbasa and and Italian
named
pastor cit the Apple
link sausage. Another product
Grove,
Ohio
United Methodist
expected Is an all-beef sausage.
Church,
located
10 miles above
Bob Evans Farms Inc. has
Racine
on
Route
338.
restaurants In Florida, Georgia,
has
been changed
The
church
Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky,
In
a four church
from
one
church
Michigan, Missouri, Ohio, Pen·
charge
to
a
station
with the
nsylvanla. Tennessee, Texas and
United
Methodist
Churches.
West Vlralnta, with planned for
The new schedule of services Is ·
Maryland.
as
follows: Sunday school, 9 ·
Sausace plants are located In
a.m.;
worship service, 10· a.m.;
Bidwell. Galllpoilll and Xenia,
Galva, Ill., Hillsdale, Mich., and Sunday evening, 7 p.m.; and
Owens Sausage plants In Fort Wednesday prayer service and
Bible study, 7 p.m.
Worth and Richardson, Texas.

Mr. and Mrs. Tom Atwood were kUJed and their two small
children critically Injured In an accident In Columbus overnight
Monday. Relatives here report that the Atwood car was struck
headon by a pickup truck on a city street. No other details are
available. Mr. Atwood Is the great-grandson of a .ara Powell of
Racine.

Dr. David Ayers

8:30a.m. - 5 p.m.

EMS has numerous calls

l

MASON, W. VA.

R.i!!leMed klebr Todd

Seeing patients
Monday through Friday

A car found at a Gallla County strip mine belonged to Michael
Scarberry, State Route 338, Racine, according to the Meigs
County Sheriffs Department who reports that the BCI has been
·
called In to assist In the Investigation.
Theft of the car was reported early Thursday morning by the
owner and about noon of the :same day, the 1985 Park Avenue
Buick was found partially stripped and burned at the strip mine
·
on Roush Road In GaiUa Conly.

Numerous calls have been answered by local units, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services reports .
Four runs were made on Monday and Included: 1: 22 a.m.,
Racine to the Bashan Road for Sandra Dowell, to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 9:58a.m. to Meigs Mine 1 for
Marvin Gardner, to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at
3:56p.m., to Pomeroy Health Care Center for Lena Hellman, to
'
Veterans Memorial; Racine at 11:07 p.m. from station took
Shawna Skeen to Holzer Medical Center.
• ,
On Sundayai 1:11 a.m.,PorneroytookBrlanBowersfroman
auto accident to Route 7 to Veterans Memorial; Middleport at
2:11 a.m. took William Adkinson to Veterans Memorial;
Rutland at 7:53 a.m. took Andrew Myers from Route 325 to
Veterans Memorial; Pomeroy at 9: 24 a.m. took Jack Wai'd
from Route 143 to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at 7:52p.m.
took Charles Jones from Spring Avenue to Pleasant Valley
Hospital; Middleport at 8: 19 p.m. took Robert Lewis, Jr., from
Palmer St., to Veterans Memorial and Pomeroy at 11:18 p.m.,
took Erna Frostn from Royal Oak Park to Veterans Memorial.
On Saturay, Syracuse took Ann Sauvage from Dusky St., to
Veterans Memorial; Middleport at 9:35a.m. to Eugene Custer
from Mill St., to Veterans Memorial; ;ruppers Plains at 1:26
p.m. took Elizabeth Belmont from · Sliver Ridge Road to
Pleasant Vlley Hospital.

POMEROY
992-6687

KafecJII. eorM!rtlack Edwla Oweas aad
tackle Brl• Bralll.
K&amp;n . . Cltr - W.t.'ed kkker D•ve
DeLine and pw•er Mark Mo.top.
MIIIDI - Wlllt*t:w dletr ll&amp;elt eo•
I rad.. offer lo q...-trrhek Don Strock.
San Frandlc• - W.aved quarterback
lklb Ga1111an0.

U!of

One passenger compll!lned of an Injury In an accident at 4:47
p.m. Monday In Meigs CountY. on Pine Grove Road, 0.1 miles
south of CR. 32, In Chester TOwnship, according to the State
Highway Patrol.
Troopers said VIctor J. Gillilan, 21, Reedsville, slowed his
pickup truck to make a tum and the vehicle was hit from behind
by a car driven by Patricia A. Capehart, 38, Racine. Shirley A.
Laudermllt, 14, Rt. 1, Racine, a passenger In Gillilan's truck,
complained of an Injury but was not treated.
The patrol cited Capehart for failure to stop within the
assured clear distance.

Car found in strip mine

a.pa.rtments, drug
stores. SlmpW'lecl
1n content, convenient 1n format
a.nd very a.fl'ord·

SUPPORT THE 1988
MASON COUNTY
FAIR!!

Makeup day lor Girl Scout judging In conjunction with the
: Meigs County Fair will be held at 9 a.m. Thrusday at the
. Syracuse pavi!Uon. Anyone needing more Information should
· call 992-2668.
.
'

: · Passenger hurt in accident

free qeal J~~ebackn- Jot. C.ker.
Houlloa - Rele.-d •ftC)' KMrt

1, New Yorlc I

San Frud~o

Vision screening Wednesday

backer M.-t SoiWifllll llltd wide recefv·

5S 55 .Mt 7
51 iCI .451 11 ~

Clnclnfltll

a., -

~traAitOIIAtex•UHISe•R..aell;

It .$51

Middleport's mint golf course at Hartinger Park Is now open
for business.
The new course which was expected to be opened In the'sprlng
but ran Into difficulty on state Inspections and approval was
opened over the weekend and Middleport Councilman Bob
Gilmore reports that business was good In view of the
unannounced opening.
Roger Williams Is serving as manager ofthe new facility with
Theresa Cremeans as his assistant. The course ts open from 5 to ·
11 p.m., Monday through Friday, and from 1 p.m. to 11 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday. Special promotions will be planned at the
new facUlty, Gilmore reports.

Greroln, defea""' end lien Thomas,
d8'e1lln badt SltpiiUIII! Averr, line-

It 48 .5M -

How• on
San f'ranclMO

Mini golf course is open

anfla.aW~~rnlcll.

48 f3 .43% II

w.. ,

Lo!i A.n ,ell!!ll

San Die !(I
A11anla

.sse

Continued from page 1
Soulsby were called to the scene for assistance at 8:48a.m.
Funeral arrangements are being completed by Fogelsong
Funeral Home In Mason.

U(N e.d Bob Dr-.u, kiStt' Dt.vld
C., lor, tackle JefiOIIver, and delenll-e
ltnemen1)rone McCieRdon. Dl.vld8c.al

GB

Ntw Vork
PtU!iiMJ filii

I
1

Football

Oewel ...d - Waived delenllive end
Relate C.mp; wtdt! ~tiUr Wetwter

Olt~aa;n al

Local news briefs...-----. Summer... __c_on_t_ln_ued_tr_om___:pa...:..ge_1_ _ _ __ Common· Pleas Court news

BHUrer from ..e CU•bled Hst; .... JM"fil
' pi&amp;cher CUI Wllllllle Yucouwr • the
Padftc Coalt Le~t~Ut(AAA~.
Kan. . CMy - Recalled pltd1.er l.aiA
Aquino lrorn Omaha ol tlllt Am~trkan
Msod..S.a (AAA). '
Mhunota - PIIICed ,lleher MU'k
Port cal an a 11-d q diM. bled illl;
recalle4 o.Uieldfr John O.n.ten•a
lram Porllalld of du~ Padftc Coaat
l..eape IA.U).
Odluld - Rec.alfd pkll« Joe Law
from Taooma of the PaclncCoutLe IIYe
(AAA); sent plk:her oli.m Corsi to

(Candi!larla IW) , 1: 31 p.m.

Wedneld~'a

TAMPA, Fla. (UP!) - The
Tampa Bay Buccaneers waived
seven players following a morn·
tng practice that marked the first
workout of top draft choice Paul
Gruber.
Tampa Bay signed Gruber to a
five-year contract Sunday, endIng a !our-week holdout for the
l)ntversity of Wisconsin tackle.
Gruber, tentatively listed as the
club's third-string left tackle,
may play In SaturdaY night's
exhibition game against
Cleveland.
"I watched Gruber a little bit
today," Tampa Bay Coach Ray
Perkins said. "He looks like a
guy who's missed a month of
training camp. I'd like to use him
Saturday, but It depends how
much he can catch up."

PICKENS-HARDWARE

Toronio I, Kan•• CMy 1

Toromo ~n-1•

II

have claimed the singer Is still
alive.
"l hear Elvis Is living now In
Michigan or Minnesota," Glan·
ville said. "Well, we'd like him to
come and be on our bench (In
Memphis) . I don't care how
much weight he's gained. We still
love him."
· Glanville said he Is serious
about leaving a ticket to see who
shows up to claim it.

on

ROCKLIN, Calif. (UPI~- The
San Francisco 49ers waived
veteran quarterback Bob Gagll·
ano, reducing their roster to 96
players.
pagllano, a six-year ve~ran,
completed 1-o!-4 pass attempts
for a minus four yards. Saturday
night In San Francisco's 24·10
preseason victory over the Los
Angeles Raiders.
His performance and the play
of promising youngsters Kevin
Murray and John Paye behind
Joe Montana and Steve Young
made Gagliano expendable.
The former Utah State star
· began blscareerwlth the Kansas ·
City Chiefs In 1981. Over three
years with the Chiefs, the
seldom-used Gagliano completed his only pass attempt.
His best season was 1111985 with
the United States Football
League's Denver Gold .when he
completed 225 of 389 attempts for
2,695 yards,15 touchdowns and 17
Interceptions.
Last year, Gagliano started the
49ers strike game against the
New York Giants and completed
12 of 21 passes for 150 yards In a
41·21 San Francisco

New York (FI!!riiMdM 1-11 at C::hlcap

41 IS .418 -~
n " .M4 n~
Moflll-r 's n..e.•s

Cblcaa;o

·

81. Lolllll (DeLHn 8-3) a1 Philadelphia
(Freeman M), 1:31 p.m.
Su Dlep (Siaow 1-11) at A.Uan&amp;a ~Z.
Smldl ~8), 7:M p.m.

u

New- York

Kan- Cllf

Game.

PklliMII'Ih {FIIIIer S.t) at Montreal

117 44 .104 48 .574 3~
n 47 .ns 3111
H H .Ht 11 ~

Detroti

o......

1

(Do.-onS.I).1:Sip.m.

EMI

Balldm•~

~~All pi•

bonus, lowest among the recelv·
KIRTLAND, Ohio (UPI) Cleveland Browns wide receiver ers returning from last year. The
Webster Slaughter, who ended fourth year of the contract, valid
his holdout Monday, said he did through 1989, Is worth $200,000.
so as a result of speaking to Hall
of Farner Paul Warfield.
MIAMI (UPI) - The Miami
"I'm still unhappy with my Dolphins withdrew their latest
situation, but I'm going to play as contract offer to back-up quarhard as I've ever played," terback Don Strock, citing con·
Slaughter said In Monday's edit· tract differences with the 15-year
ons of The aeveland Plain veteran.
Dealer.
''This will mean there are no
"I have reconsidered my posl· compensation rights and Don Is
tlon and will report to camp to free -to deal with any team,"
pursue what has always been my ·Head Coach Don Shula said In a
goal, · which Is to help the statement.
Cleveland Browns win the Na"The feeling of management
tiona! Football League Super was that since the two sides
Bowl."
weren't able to get together, he
Warfield, who worked In the should be given an opportunity to
Browns' front office until after shop his services," Shula said.
the 1986 season, spoke to Slaugh- .. "The backup quarterback job
ter several times.
nowcomesdowntothosewehave
"My first year, (Warfield) In here."
helped me out a lot, telling me
Strock, 37, has been holding out
Whatlcoulddotobettermyself," during training camp seeking a ·
said Slaughter, scouted at San more lucrative contract, a proDiego Stale by Warfield. "He cess he repeats at the start of
called me Wednesday and then each season. He has not been In
he called me a few other times.
camp during the past several
"I thought about what he said weeks.
for a couple days. I looked back
SAN MARCOS, Texas (UPI)at the goals I set when I first
Houston
Oilers Coach Jerry
came here. Even though I'm
very unhappy .with my salary, I Glanville says he will provide a
do have two years on my complimentary ticket for Elvis
Presley to attend Saturday
contract.
Slaughter had demanded his night's Liberty Bowl game
contract be renegotiated because against the New England Patri·
he Is the lowest-paid of six ots at Memphis.
''There will be a pass for him at
receivers returning from last
year, when he had a team-high 47 will call, lett under the name of
receptions. After Browns Owner 'The King,'" Glanville said SunArt Modell refused to renege· day at the Oilers' training camp.
Presley died 11 years ago this
!late, Slaughter, 23, announced
month
and Is burled at his
his retlrment .
Slaughter will earn $170,000 In Graceland mansion In Memphis.
and others
1988, along with a $10,000 roster Tabloid

49ers put veteran
QB
waviers

The Daily S.,ltinei-Page-6

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

I

for more information
992-2133 or
742-2888

••

Eighteen Thousand People Who Care.
BANK ONE. ATHENS, OHIO, NA I ONE PART OF THE CARING TEAM

Member FDIC

Grover L. Riddle. 35, Pomeroy,
and Priscilla lferdman, 23,
Pomeroy.
Jerry Lee Johnson, 41, Middle-,
port. and Barbara Ann Cline, 36,
QalUpoDI Ferry.

Announcemen•.,

r;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;::~-1

II

NEW SHIPMENT OF FALL SHELL
SWEATERS, PLU$ A NEW LINE
OF FALL JEWELRY. '
..OUR PRICE ·- MOST

REASO['I(~BLE

UCINE DEPARTMENT
STOlE
.
RACINE, OHIO

3RD STREET

A Special Edition
In The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, August 30, 1988

Reser"' Your Adfertising
Spaee Today!!!
PHONE 992-2156
ASK FOR BRIAN OR DAVE
...

ADVERTISING DEADLINE IS
MONDAY, AUGUST 22, 1988

MAITERCARO-VISA-OOLDEN BUCKEYE

I

I

,.

�By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
'

Tu&amp;~dey,

·

Auglllt 9, 1988
· Page ·e

--~~--~------~===---~~~--~~~~--~~·

Heredity? Surrounding?
TV71-,.;C.h
~ llry St1i'Onger,)
W fJ
r;,'Q,/,1/
.
•
N'O

#' -

.

T

Dear·Ana Landers: As the mother of three children I simply must
comment on a Jetter that appeared
in your column recently.
Tile m01her who wrote had an
adopted son who caused no end of
trouble. He was drinlc.ing vodka
and smoking pot at B!le 14, was
eKpelled from school and stole from
his mother's purse and his father's
wallet. The thm: children born
after they adopted this boy were
talented, loving and a source of
great happiness.
Tile mother asked why her children were so differen~. You said,
"Genetics has a Jot to do. with it."
Although my story is the reverse
I would not quarrel with your
conclusion.
· We have two sons. The second
boy was adopted. Our natural son
was the one who caused us the
heartache. "Hal" was 0\lr firstborn
and we waited for him for seven
years. No child receivecl more love
and adoration. Halloolred like my
husband's family and was frighten·
ingly like his Uoclc "Joe," a slow
learner with a short attention span,
stubborn. as a Missouri mule and
hard to get along with. 1\ly husband
was the only one of four boys who
amounted to anythins. He took
after this mother's side of the
family. His brothers took afier their
dad.
I am absolutely certain that our
adopted son took after his natural

FeUowship meets

Mr. and Mrs. Steve Haggy and
Mrs. Tom Summerfield were In
Union City, Pa. to attend the
wedding of Ronnie Ell! In and the
daughter of the Rev. and M~s.
Clay Anderson.
Mrs. · Tom Summerfield and
Crystal were visitors of Mr. and
Mrs Holbert Russell and other
relatives recently.
Stephanie Haggy of Wolf Pen
Community Is spending several
days with her uncle and aunt, Mr.
and Mrs. Torn Swmrnerfleld,
Wendy and Crystal of Medina.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Earnheart
of Columbus and Mrs. Iva
Johnson enjoyed dinner out also
vlsiled with Lincoln Russell at
the Care Center of Veterans
Memorial, Pomeroy.
Michael Russell, Racine, Is
spending seven! days with Mr.
and M~s. Robert Russell and Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Haggy and Brad.

Acrobats
'Incredicle'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
The Incredible Acrobats of
China, say their producers, have
_ been In training more than 2,500
• · years lor their performances at
the 1988 Ohio State Fair.
The troup's acrobats, magi·
clans, trick cyclists and jugglers
- all highly skilled . rigorously
trained and breathtakingly
graceful - follow a Chinese
entertainment tradition dating
back to 700 B.C.. said co·
producer Mike Wilson.
"Most 'of these entertainers
started out as street acts for
• villagers," said Wilson, whose
magician-producer f"ather Mark
has been bringing Calnese enter·
tal nment to America lor the past
five years. "They just developed
!rom that."
Their art !onns can be traced
to stone carvings of tile ancient
Han dynasty, said the troup's
publicist, adding tbat Chinese
peasants originally juggled
porcelain food Jars on their heads
to celebrate a bount~l harvest.
"Every winter, my father and I
go to China to select the acts for
the following year," tlle younger
Wilson said. "We piCk only the
most exceptional. All of our
performers have apJll!ared be- ...
fore the major leaders of China."

\

__...

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

Two women are honored

Wolfe Pen
area notes

' "

Gilkey reunion conducted recently

Descendants of the late
Tommy and Mllda Jane Hudnall
Gilkey held their 18th annual
family reunion Sunday at the
ANN IAN'DEIIM .
roadside park on Route 33 south
parents. Tiley were both beautiful,
of
Darwin.
bright and highly motivated. lie is a
c..M.S, X t
Attending were Mr. and Lypicture of his lovely mother.
man Stanley, Opal and Sheb
I know, Ann, that people will reply was, ·can
Rutter,
David Bailey, Mary
argue heredity vs. environment my back."
Wheeler, Albany; Myrtle Gilkey,
until the cows come home and both
Karl often drives drunk. If I call Margaret canter, Scott Wolfe,
sides will remain unronvinced, but
I am ah!olutely positive that chil- the police on him he may lose his Tammy Wolfe, Amber Wolfe,
dren are limited 11r enhanced by the job with the city. He has great Mr. and Mrs. Garold Gilkey,
quality of the genetic material they seniority and the job pays well. We Rick Gilkey, Daniel Gilkey,
inherit. - J.E.B., MONTGOMERY, don't go out together anymore Courtney· Gilkey, Tony Gilkey, .
because he gets drunk so often and Annette Bare, Athens; Cindy and
ALA.
John East, Shawn East, Brandon
DEAR ALABAMA: I'm glad you refuses to let me drive home.
Should I tell Karl's lioss about his East, Joanne Willison and Katie,
wrote. Many sOcial workers conJoe Willison, Columbus.
nected with adoption agencies were alcohol problem? If I do I'm afraid
Samantha Moore, Danlella
upset by my response. They felt my he will lose his job. I'm worried sick · Moore,
Rodney Judson, Trlsh
comments would discourage adop- and don't know what" to do. tion.
·
CONCERNED IN THE CAROLIOne of the great mysteries of the NAS
unive~ is what makes some chil·
DEAR CONCERNED: Are you
dren turn out beautifully while waiting for Karl to lose his life and
others do poorly. We see so many murder a earful of innocent people?
eKceptions to :;o many rules that no
For heaven's sake, woman, tell
one can say for certain whether it is his boss at once. There are pronature or nunure. Surely it must grams for people like your husband
be, to a degree. both. I stand by my
and I'm sure his boss knows about •
original theory that genes are
them. Karl desperately needs outpowerful determinants. If you plant"
radishes you should not expect side intervention. Get moving.
Everyone does drugs, right?
roses to bloom.
Dear Ann Landers: My husband Wrong. And today, more and more
and I have been married for 25 people are aware of rhe dangers in·
years. For at least 15 years "Karl" vo/ved. Ifyou want robe in the know,
has had affairs. I kept telling myself too, write for Ann lAnders' newly rethat he would setlle down eventual- vised bookler, "The Lowdown on
ly and did not scold or nag. His Dope. " Send $3 plus a self-addressed;
drinking, however, was another sramped business-size envelope (45
story. I worried about it a lot and rents postage) to Ann Landers, P.O.
begged him to stop. His standard Box II 562, Chicago, Ill. {i)(jf HJ561.

A program on the history of
Meigs County was presented by
Mrs. Martha Vennarl and
Mike Gerlach at the recent
meeting of the Ladles Fellowship Margaret Belle Weber recently
• · of the Meigs County Churches of hosted a luncheon at the Vennari
Christ held at theHemlockGrove home In the Rock Springs
community.
·
Church.
Guests were · classmates who
Jeannette Carter presided at
the meeting and gave special had attended Ohio University at
recognition to Lynn Runyon, wife the same time. Special recognl·
of the new minister at the tlon was given to Mrs. Vennarl
Bradbury Church · of Christ. and Mrs. Grace Weber who
There were hymns, prayer, and retired recently. Mrs. Weber
devotions by Eleanoor Hoover . retired as principal and teacher
Mildred Ziegler had tile benedic· at the Riverview Elementary
tlon and refreshments were School and Mrs. Vennarl as
served In the social r()()ms of the guidance counselor and former
business teacher In the Meigs
church.
Next meeting will be at Po me· Local Schools.
Others attending were Mildred
roy Aug. 25.
Bailey, who Is spending the
summer here from Lehigh, Fla .,

..

Ann
Landers

and Maxine Whitehead. Wilma
Parker was unable to attend
because of the Illness of her
husband.
The full-course luncheon was
served from a table decorated
with flowers which Mrs. Vennarl
had received as retirement gifts.
The afternoon was spent
reminiscing.

To peiform
The Rev. Donald Meadows will
be performing his magic minis·
try at the Freedom Gospel
Mission, C. R. 31, Bald Knob and
Stlversvllle Road, Portland, Frl·
day at 7:30 p.m; The public Is
Invited to attend.

·
1 •
h
.--- Peopt-e tn t e news--By WO.LIAM C. TROTr
Ulled Press International
JORDAN GOES HOME: Former Texas congresswoman
Barbara. Jordan checked out of an Austin, Texas, hospital
Monday, nine days after almost drowning In her swimming
pOPI. Jordan, who seconded the nomination of vice presidential
candidate Lloyd Bentsen at the Democratic convention last
month, had a "Where Was George" button pinned to her blue
flowered robe as she checked out of Brackenridge Hospital.
Jordan, 52, bade farewell to everyone who had helped her.
"You're my hero, thank you," Jordan said as she kissed STAR
Flight paramedic Trlcla Franklin, who was on the helicopter
that brought Jordan to the hospital. ''Thank you all lor my life.''
Her doctor, WIIBam Deaton, says Jordan ls in excellent
condition and should return to her normal lifestyle within a
couple of weeks.
It is still unclear what caused Jordan to lose consciousness In
her swimming pool, where she was found floating face down by
her roommate on July 30. Deaton said his best guess Is that she
had a disturbance In her heart rhythm.
PICKING AND CHOOSING: Robin WIIUams still hasn't
decided how he will follow up on his successful "Good Morning,
Vietnam." Among the projects being considered, however, Is
"Good Morning, Chicago," a sequel to the role that won him an
Oscar nomination.
Williams's manager, Larry Brezner , told Premiere maga.
zlne there's no scriptwriter yet and there also are problems with
three other proposed projects: "Bumby Pal," about an adult
with an Imaginary friend; "The Foreigner," based on the play
by Larry Shue; and "The Dead Poets Society," the story of a
teacher at a rich kids' school.
Williams Is being very particular about what he tackles next.
"They (the studios) try to bring In talent before there's
material," Brezner says. "Until there's some material to show
Robin, he's not going to do a movie."
SAVE A SEAT FOR ELVIS: If Elvis Presley really Is alive,
football coach Jerry Glanville of the Houston Oilers has a plan to
smoke him out. The Oilers play the New England Patriots
Saturday night In Memphis, Tenn., Elvis's old hometown, and
Glanville plans to leave a complimentary ticket at the gate lor
him.
"There will be a pass lor him at will call, left under the name
of 'The King,'" Glanville said Sunday at Oilers tralnlngcampln
San Marcos, Texas. "I hear Elvis Is living now In Michigan or
Minnesota. Well, we'd lUke him to come and be on our bench. I
don't care how much weight he's gained. We stllllove him."
Glanville says he Is dead seriOus about leaving a ticket and Is
interested In seeing how many people (and what sort) show up
to claim it.
GLJMPSES: Madonna ends · her run In Broadway's
"Speed-the-PloW" on Aug. 30. Her co-stars, Tony winner Ron
Silver and Joe ManlegnA, also are leaving the show on that date
... Bill Cosby Is churning out another book. Sometime next June
"Love and Marriage'' will become Cosby's third book on human
nature, joining "Fatherhood" and "Time Flies" on the
bookshelves. ms publisher, Doubleday, says ''Love and
Marriage" wlll cover everything from childhood romance to
dating to the benefits of marriage ... Comedian Bobcat
Geldtbwalt' s new album, "Meat Bob," bas a special segment
for the people who are always finding backward devil·
worshipping messages on records. If you spin the album
backward you can hear him saying, "Obey your parents, be
nice, d·o n't eat snacks, go to church and give money to Jerry
Falwell."
•

Judson, McConnelsville; Mr.and
Mrs. Kermit Gilkey, Justin Gil·
key, Tim Gilkey, Darwin, Mr.
and Mrs. Jordle Varner, Pamela
Varner, Tamela Varner, Duncan
Falls; Gary Alan Hogue, ShaWna
Wlblin, Glouster.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Glkey,
Lancaster; Ada Waymer, Leroy
Gilkey, Logan; Mr.andMrs.Joe
Judson, Tommy Gilkey, Ray
Judson, Usa Scott, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Gilkey, Malta; GeOrge
Gilkey, George Gilkey, Jr., Vera
Gilkey, New Marshfield; Audrey
Sharpe, Effie Sharpe, Ron Maf·
fin, Albert Carsey, Cheryl Carsey, Nelsonville; Iva Powell,
Alisha and Jim. Duncan, Jason

Duncan. Pomeroy; Evelyn Wlblin, Pagevllle: Mr. and Mrs. Jody
Varner, Jody Lynn Varner,
Sharon Putman, Jerald and
Donnie, Point Pleaaant; WllUam .
Young, Rutland; Marine Wiener,
Tuppers Plains, Charlene K.
Mustard, cash E. Mustard, Dug·.
way, Utah.

R•ffl
1 e b'rthda
1
y
is observed

Heather D. Riffle celebrated
her fourth blrihday recently at
the home of her parents, Charles
Jr. and Lena Bailey, Reedsville.
Cake; Ice cream and punch
were served. Attending were her
parents, her sister, Samantha,
grandparents, Jim and Bev Bat·
ley, Reedsville, Judy Bailey,
Middleport, great-grandmother,
Opal Biggs, Middleport, Marvin,
Sheila, Michael and Becky Tay•
lor, . Chester, John and Jay
Holsinger, Reedsville.
Sending cards and gilts were
Paul and Brenda Holsinger,
Thom(!IOn, Conn.; Rink and Lisa
Linthicum, Webster, Mass. and
Grace Holsinger, Reedsville.

Brits bonkers over Fergie's.baby girl
LONDON (UPI) - The du·
chess of York, with her husband
Prince Andrew looking on, gave
birth to a 6-pound, 12-ounce girl
• • - the couple's first child who
'. 1 beco!lles filth In line to the
British throne.
"Her royal highness the du·
chess ot York was safely dell·
vered of a daughter at 8:18
p.m.," an official Buckingham
Palace statement said of the
birth Monday. " Her royal high·
ness and child are both well."
The new royal offspring holds
the IItle of "princess of York."
There was no announcement of
a name for the baby but
members of the public expressed
a preference for Victoria or
Elizabeth.
•
A red-coated town crier, ring·
lng a bell, shouted the news to
media and well-wishers outside
the downtown Portland Hospital
where the 28-year-old best known
by her nickname "Fergie" gave
birth.
In the duchess's home village
of Dummer, residents packed the
local pub where pink COCktails
were served In honor or the girl
baby .

Lynch birth

_,.loY
_
.. -....._ __ ..
__.....
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tO PlACE All AD CALL ttl-2156
thr• r•AW I Ul to S I'.M.
I A.M. UnMI NOOII SATUIDAY
Cl051D MID.&amp;'f

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co~~~ha~~te~a~,::n~~ ~~ ba~

KEBUI
.BUSINESS SERVICE

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1 0411

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11··-~
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111.111
111. 111
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111110AW

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WIDNfiDoU 'AI'III
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UIDA~ ""''"'~

l t.lfiDUM"A

""'' IIOOfii ....I\..:UIOJI
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• 100'111 IIOlODU

- IDD"" TI,IIIDII ,.
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IOII'IoO l lfUIISDA1
IOII'M IIIIDAY

----

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' . ' .&lt;RfSWS
-UKE
DIAMONDS

-"'',..,~

r•

!•

1 Card of Thanks

Howard L. Writasel

ROOFING

'~
I

The family of Sidney
Burton i!ishes to express
their sincereappreciltion
to friends, pallbe.-ers
and relatives who sent
flowers and boull!t food
and for every kindness
shown to us durinc· our
recent loss. All- wu
anatly appreciated.
Wile, Catherine. Fred,
Chwles, Danny, Billy and
crandchildren and
daupllrs- in·law.

I
I

I

!.

Il
•''
•

••
2

t

~ .
~

•'
~ t
~ ·

~
~

•
&lt;.,

~,....:·

)I

marahallad and the real es-

or on sold property, If any, be

of Groce II. Fr.,dl. do- tate title be quieted and said
. . .otl. l•o of 489 Fill'a property sold in the foreclo·
StrMt. Middleport.
Ohio lUre action and all amounts
46760.

Robert E. Buck.
Probat" Judge
Lena K. N&amp;IHiroad. Clertc

!B) 9. 16, 23 3tc.

due Plaintiff be paid from
the proceect. of the aele.
You ere required to an·
awer the Complaint within

six 16) succeuive weeks.
will remain on the 16th day

7·13-'88·11tlo.

anawar will commence · on
that date. tn the cue of your
failure to anawer or otherwiae raapond u requested

CARTER'S

of All!lult. 1988, and tho
twenty-eight 128) days for

larry E. Spencer,
Clerk of Couns

llahed once each wHk for

(8) 2, 9,

16, 6tc

ltt us canwtrt those old.., is
&amp; Slidts over oo tosy VMS.

&lt;

Ull AMY CARTER

oo IOI'S EIECTIONICS
446-7390

ll/ 2/ U ·IIe

=-~~~~~---

.......

8

Public Sale
Ill Auction

........

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

PUBLIC
('
.,t:, AUCTION

*Both doctors are on the.staff of Iackso~ General Hospital and
both have supplemental office .~ours in their Ripley Offi~e

1'

ursday, Aug. 11

t

10 a.m.

~ -

"LET GEORGE

DO IT"
HAULING
SAND-GRAVEL
LIMESTONE
FILL DIRT

985-4487
8-8·1 mo. pd.

M &amp; S FOODS are going out of business. Will be

~ ~ aelllng tha following reataurantaqulpment at 1114
'!

t:

..
.. i

~·

I':
..

~

••
~

VIand Street, Point Pleasant. Across from Jack
Rouah'a car lot. Watch for Signs.
EOUJPMENT &amp; MISCELLANEOUS· Sear's Coldspot refrig·
e-r. 30' alec. range, Gibson chesl type deep freezer, 2
deck blogget gao pizza oven, 2 compartment slainlen steel
sink, Wasserslrom Hot Dog machine, Sanyo LX 710 Elec· ,
Ironic Cash RegistDr, Manhowe large chest type deep
freezer, GE dougle door refrigeralor, Anets dough roller,
Stimpson food grinder, 6 ft. stainless sll&gt;el work table, 8 ft.
refrigerated make-up table, 2drawer file cabinet, pizza pano
&amp; boJtes. cigarette noel\, 6 alack chai!S , 3 tables, 2 pc. living
room suite, Iampo, oollae labia &amp; end tallies, alum: ladder,
picalres, RCA color console TV, 2 Keroson heaters, Idea
DUll Wet or Dry Food warmer atainless steel, Peerless 2
burner gas hat plaiD, 4 bUlb heat lamp, Globe slicing maohine, 2 metal aiOrage racl&lt;s, 5 ft. alum. ladder, HamUton
Beach btendllr, one blftlar hot platD,Waat Band collae
~118&lt;· pUJI much more miscellaneous.
197 t977 Chevy Von C.IO wilh 76,586 miles,
Ka~ruald, LTO 550 wilh t 2,623 m~as. Wil be selling

r!
'

t

1850

NOW THRU SEPT . 3

KAY'S ·BEAUTY

SALON

1he whic:tea fi!St, be on lime.

AUCTIONIEII: RICk PEARSON 773-5785
OWNEilr CYRUS E. DONLEY
T~MS: C.rJ/r or Check wl1h LO.
Nat Roo~ ,., Aooldonlo or Lou of Propo~y
. LlooMo In WV I Ohio-·

IAUM
LUMBER
CHESTER
985-3301

NEASE HOLLOW ID.

GUNS- AMMO
GUITARS
STRINGS

Follow Signs
on lashan Rd.
PH. 949·2 68

Domestic Vehicles
A/ C Service
All Major
Minor

U. S. RT. 50 EAST

Repairs

614-662-3821

a.

OHIO

Authorized John
Deere, New Holland,
Bush Hog Farm
Equipment Deal or
F1111 Eq•lp~tent
Parll &amp; Sanlu
1·3-"86-tfc

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN
Certified Lic&lt;onuod_

Roger Hysell
Garage

HUDNALL

Rt. 124, P..,.roy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

PLUMBING &amp; HEA nNG
161 Narth Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Alto Trllltlltlttlo•
PH. 9'2·5682
or 992-7121

• IUSINISS PHONE
t6141 992-6550
RESIDENa PHONE
16141 992:71!14

DEAD OR AUVE

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At lea1011ablt Pric11"

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

PH. 949·2801
or ln. 949·2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

We Service

A11110 Ull CCI!I Cll!S
3 Announcements
The MnUII ,_,nion of the
Samuel All_, Eblin end MIIJV
Ann Moore famly wfU be held on
Sot. Aug. 130h ot 3:30p.m. ot
the Kyger Cr•k '-k.
brtng food. drink. '" d your own
tlble eervlce. For more lnforml·

don call 814·992·8398 or 114812·2272.

..........,

!

15

Schools
Instruction

Le.-n to be a Gourmet ExeaJtlve

Help Wanted

EARN

EXTRA MON.EY llrrlng
the Summer. o,t out of the
hou•. become a Dally Sentlnet
.. P• c•rler. Rou•• open In
Mldclltport. Call Scott It lhe
Sentinel Office at 114-992·

2t65.

CHEF

Jobs while training . . Govern--

ment flnanc:i .. aide evallabfe to
qllllifled. Calt Kl'f It 30.... 372·
2932. Culllnary School of
W11hln9f:on.

RE-TRAIN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN 8USINESS

COLLEGE, 529 Ja~son Pike.
Ohio lnatructio,.t Grant Dea4
line Aug . 19. Catt C48·4367.' ..

Rog. No. 86-11·10568.

18 Wanted to Do
Painting att typea. Roa11ng &amp; ·
roof repair. Free •timat81. Call

814-266-8686.

~pantry,

~odeling.

Ellpe.

ru1need, honctst. reasonable.
Free ettimet... References.

G.M. Go,.don. 614-44.e958

Talented, Creative Individual
wanted for an exciting c.._. in
Advertlling Salee. Call for an
appointnwtt, 1·800.. 727·7885.
or 304-727· 7885.

SECURITY

Cream·Of·tt.crop only for thll
~itllltrikeforcel Must be a high
achool gra&lt;klate. age 17-28 In
excellent phvtleal condition.
Must be willing to tlhel .. d
rtloe8fe. Eight 'N'Iek intenatve
t111ining program. Top pay end
benefltt. Call Mr. WHt at

1-800·282-1384. Mondty ·
Tllursd-r. 9 AM-2 PM.

Part·tlme Registered X·ray
Technlclm. V•iad hours· No
weekendl. call or holldsva.
Apply t:&gt; the MediCI! pt.a 203
Jackson Pike, Geltlpolis b•
tween 8:30..5 PM.

Fl'DERAL, STATE AND CIVIL
SERVICE JOBS

evenings. ThMik You .

Q.abrr'slttlng.Oo vou need a stJ).
stltute Mommy during the
school ye~~r while you work1
Mother of 2 ac:hoolege children
will klving c•e for your child ·
during the day or sfter school. 1
lhre 3 mll111 from Bidweii·Portttr
EJem. For more information calt

814-38.8478.

I \Mil betJftlt In my horne.
Reodeble hours. Verv reliable.

Coli 614·367·0248.

Nur191 Aide Care in your home.
Call

614·44.2427.

Mother of 3 wHI babysh: in m.,
horne. Any hours. Callt 614-4462476. ask for Becky.
Babtalttln'"g for working parant 1
In rrrv home. Can gNe referen·
cee. Also wHI do Ironing. Call

814-44.6307.

Now Hiring . Your Aru .
t13~150 10 t59.480. lmm•
.diBie Openinga. Call 1·31!).

733-6062. ext. #f2758.

Financial
Wanted·for ••cher.
Aug .

23r&lt;l .. 7:30·

3:30. 2 children~ 1 toddl&amp;r end 1
blbtf. If interested, p~ .... •nd
ruumewllh 2 refarenOit to: Box
Cle 112. c/ o O•llipolis Deily
Tribune, 826 Thtrd A..-.. GIIIJ..

polio. Ohio 45631.

Babyllltter for ldndergllter 19•
boy. Norttl.lp, Centenary trea.
Ref..,.CII needed. Catl 114-

21

Business
Opportunity
I NOTICE!

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH.
INQ CO. raco,...,_.dl thet you
do butineu whh people you
know, end NOT to tend monev
through the maH until you hate

LF4:4.:4:3:,:o:w:•:"':np~-~~~~~·:w:•:t~~-~od::tM~OrH•~'n:9 ·::::

r
I

··...··aallipolis ...... ,...
····-··········-·-····· ···········

August 8tn ttooough Sop,.mb«

3nt. 315 Condor St.,, Pomeroy.
Clothing. glauwsre, mite ,
It oms.

PH. 949·2969

Tllursdoy llo Ffldoy 11th llo 12th.

YAIDIIAII &amp; ICHO

•Colltctlbl•,
ta 4. 722
··"'"·
cloth&amp;
aunalns.
otc .

....... l't.PTaasanf ......

.......Pomeroy...........

8t Vicinity
-· ........ ... . .·-······--·········

Located HolfWoy be- A t . 7 &amp; loshon.
NEW &amp; USED MOWEIS
Sonlu (Mior for 1,_

"FrM Eltlm11t11"

304-875-3788.

8t Vicinity

•••lu ....

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Ambitious. r•ponsible person
destres 1 position in eeaetat"ist·
wcwd proceuing area. Heve
excellent tnlnlng in typing.
shorth.nd. computer, builneu
mgnt. , filing, buainea commun-lcetiona end office procettues.
Call 814-843-5416.

Pl•-

EAGU RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

•VINYL BIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Lad&gt;( to IN'e· jn there ax pen sea.
No drinking. No druga. No

SALES &amp; SERVICE

WANTED

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •F reezers
•Refrigerators
"Must I• llflllirflblo"

Situations
Wanted

40ak bardoola. Goodcond. Call

Wo·Caroy Fiohing SUIIPiio..j
Pay Your Phone
and Cable Billa Here Ba~sltter
beginning

6·17-tfc

10-8-tlc

NO SUNDAY

GUYSVILLE,

NIASE Certified Mechanic

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

PH. 949·1101
or ln. 949·1860

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Most Foreign end

Will HAUL

SIO.

BOGGS

SYRACUS£, OHIO

H·U.1

RACINE
GUN SHOP

Middleport. Oh .

AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
PRE-FAB
ROOF TRUSSES

169N. 2nd
1120/ 88-1

DENNY CONGO

5328.

••n

SPECIAL
Perm
For 121 00
Cut &amp; blow Dry
1 25.00

YOUNG'S

992-621 S or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
7·13·'88- lin

1 070Won•d Oo buy: Will buy

standing timber. 304·8715-

TourGuid... Male • female. Our
top people
•80()..$1200
per weak. Sel-v to ttlrt plus
comml11ion. Pl . . .nt working
condittoM. A re.tlv fun pleca to
work. Frl•dly. nest a depanda·
ble •• the requirements. Call
1·614-28S...8422. ask for Sue.

992-2725

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Oults
Cash peld for anUque or new
quilts. AppHque, pieced, anv
condhlon. Coli 614-992·5857.

f.IIIP IOVIIII!ri!
Surv I GUS

SIUDENI ONLY

Betw11n 9 o.m.-6 p.m.
or loovs Mosilogt

. (FREE ESTIMATES!

12

BACK 10 SCHOOL

614·742-2617

lmm MOVIES &amp; SUDlS to
VHS TAPE

Uted Mobite Homes. ·ean 814-

11

•DOzer A Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling With
Dump Truck

- Addona and remodeling
- Roofing and gutter work
-Concrete work
a
- Ptumblng and electriefll
work •

Pliny Truck Stop now accepting
appflcetions for cook. C.ll 304-

757-8357 between 10 AM·8
PM.

992-2196
Middleport,

WANT TO IUT WIICIED OR
JUNK CARS 01 IIIUCIS
-FREE ESTIMATESFor coty of thonsoni&lt;tl call

BILL SLACK

Mill•. 304-52.2830

Wtnted to Buv Standing timber
• pulp wood. Cell 814-387·

PAT HILL FORD

. EXCAVATING

CARPENTER
SERVICE

NewiPIP• cln"l• n..ided for
Harokl Dispath. Rou• from
Galtlpolla to Pomeroy back down
to Pt. PINMnt indwdlng Haw
Heven &amp; M•on. Mwat have
deDenihble vehide. Cell Jean

We can repair and recare radiators oncl
heater cores. We can
olso tKid boil and rod
out radio tors. We olso
repoir Gos Tanks.

•Junk Yard Bu1in"s

OAK. LOCUST. CHIERFiv' I
$35 PER LOAD DRIYERID

Junk Cars wtth or wtthout
moton. Calt Larry Uvety.814-

46874.

TRIPLE P

In Memoriam

Babysitter ntteded ·New Haven
area. For 2 chtldren. Call 304882·2427 after 6 PM.

pertlea . Contact :Box .728
R .O.C .• Rio Grande, Ohio

Public Notice

Business
"Services

St.

8487.

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

11) 12, 19, 26:

AVON. AllarUI :ShlrleyoSpears,

Wam to buy: UHd furniture and
•tlq.,.l. Witl buy entire houte·
hold furnilhlng. Marlin Wed&amp;m ...r, 814·245·81!2.

Wented·Minieture or Toy new
born Poodle. Call 614-388-

992-6282

Dated this 7th dey of July,
1988.

18nt VIII., NUrsing Cere Center
It hiring hightv motivatt!ld &amp;
en•getlc pllrt· dme nursing ••·
tiltlnts. Applicant• must be
willing to work lit shitt1. tf
inlereeted elill per~onnel office
304-175-4340. Pleaunt Vallatf
Nursing Care Center ill an Equal
Opportunity S. affirmative
emp..,.,.r.

Wanted: la&lt;tt to wesh few
clothes for elderly lad{ . 400 1st

814-441·3159.

44.0175.

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

by the Ohio Rules of Civil
Procedure. judgment by default
will be
rendered
again1t you and for the relief
demanded in the Complaint.

Call Marilyn

coal heater1. Swain's Furniture
&amp; Auction. Third &amp; Otive,

7619.

614-742·2235

The 1811 date of publication

tr8M.

304-175-1429.

Bill Gene Johnson

814-448-3872

3158. .

OWNDr Joflroy S...lth
It. .I lOX 136, VINTON

AVON · Atl

Complete hou•hotda of furnl·
ture
anttques. Alto wood &amp;

Jim Mink Chw.·Oidllnc.

Furnilure and appliances by 1he
piece or entire houtehotd. Fair
pricee being paid. Celt 814-44S...

SMITH'S SEAMLESS
GUnER &amp;
CONniUCTION

Co1ch and Advit0f1 Needed.
Alllt11nt Football Coach and
High Schoot Junior High School
O.eerleeding AdviMrs positions
avtileble. lnt.,..ted p.-sonure
to contact Or. Den Apt ing, Supt.
of Eutlf'n L.ocat School Dlstricr

TOP CASH peid tor '83 model
and ntM'Itf' u.ed cars. Smith
Buick·Pontiac. 1911 Eastern
Ave., Gltlipolis. can 814·448-

Wanted To 8uy

388·9303. '

BINGO

FlEE ESTIMATES

Public Notice

twonty·oight (28) doys after

the last publication of this
Notice, which will 'be pub·

Public Sale
Ill Auction

a.

3-30.'81 tfn

•Seamless Gutter
•Roofing
•Vinyl Siding
•Roofing .
•Homo Roofing
•Wood Crafts

!~-- ·

~~---­

wtdte Cllt . Ught

2282.

Middleport, Ohio
992·6611

.-... 805-887·8000 Ext. R·
9805 for current Fe dedi list.

HELP WANTED; Ro.ident Cere
Coordin1tor, Pl ..llnt Valley
NuralngCereC.nttris ..•ching
for an experienced andenerger:le
regiltered nur• to auume the
newtv c:re.aed position of r•tdent care coordinator. Sleff
davetopment q..,lhy a11urenot
MPiriMcels n.qutred. Theldell:
cancldate shoutd h.,e 2 to 3
years of Ger letrlc: &amp; Su perW: OfY
experience with Gerentalogiell
Certlflcatton. If you are '"'er·
ested end went to make a
difflf8l"'ce in tomeones tife c:al
Personnel Office, 604·675·
4340. 'PVNCC is an eq..,t
opportunity &amp; lffiriTIItive action
employer' '

9

VALLEY LUMBER
.&amp; SUPPLY

949-2168

·--!ii::
·-

s•-. 4991/:r Aohor str-

!r.

Ravenswood, WV
273-5335

8

Tecumseh

FREE ESTIMATES

·~·-::::=t--

Mitldloport, Ohio 467110, wao
oppointotl EIIOC&gt;Jtcw of the •

.; ..._____.....
•

606 Professional Circle

Weed Eater
HomeUte
Jacobsen

Pain~ing

·--

($29, 139.91) as of Morch 9,
1988. with interest thereon
at a rata of t7.&amp;8. and costs
of thil action: that the mort·
gage named in the Complaint be foreclosed and that
the Iiana and/ or interests in

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Auguot 4. 1988. in the
Meigs Counly Probate Cour1,
Carlo No. 211939, Donald L.

Look down on us from
above Do Da and you
can see we're fine.
You can also see that every day you're still on
our minds.
It's been a year since
you left us, a year
since you went away,
But just remember, Do
Da, you're thougllt of
every day.
Love, Your Family
The Van Meters

~

Every Wednesday

Gutters
Downspouts.
Gutter Cleaning

•Wrecker Service

~

Obstetrics and Gynecology

Briggs &amp;. Stratton

Governm.nt Jobs. t18.040·
f&amp;9. Z30 ¥'•· Now hiring. Your

WoOOIIr 304-882-2645 .
NURSING ASSISTANTS Pie•

ger Parkway. 814..992-5422.

NEW -REPAIR

Call Terri lit 114-446-9510 for

details.

387-0613 or 44•6585.

orange IIIII and ..,,, blue eves. 6
month old. A...wrd. 689Hartin-

Authorized Servi&lt;t
&amp; Porn

Hair StyUttl. Acfott The Street
etytlng talon It INking one
adlfllonel atylist who.ill boldng
for more thM just 1ft other job.

ot 614-986·4282.

rr.

child' s pet. Rewtrd. Cal 814-

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

Help Wanted

LOST: On·Whtte Oak Rd.·e pure
bl.ck .. rt Chow pup. 8
otd

uted cars.

7·14-'118-1 mo. pd.

tate

!•

\.

6 Lost and Found

We pay cash for Ilite model dean

__ .....

Public Notice

WANT ADS GfT

•
:

Ravenswood, WV
273-5335

:J: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
~ Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital ·
. Mulberry Hets. Pomeroy, Ohio

CHESTER, OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS · BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING Ill REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS
985-4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
References·
11 2211 mo.

LEONARD E.
VAN METER
March 31, 1927August 9, 1987

'606 Professional Circle

m~nt .

Devices
Dependable Heanng
· A'd
1 female bl.tek &amp; whh:e ktnen.
I Sales &amp; •,ntic.
oo
u
..r .,.lnod. To giyo --r. C.ll
CJ Hearing Evaluations For All Ages
e14-44•9ztz.
Z LISA M KOCH M S
Wei podded chldl wheol choif
•
'
• •
with hood root. All• 4 to 8 Y"·
~ licensed Clinical Audiologist
old. 614-742·2545.

MARCUM CONTRACTING

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

t~-=:n·:-

Mluionery Paint Creek Baptist

lott In the Middleport aree.

====--

---....

11

Giveaway

long-hsired

In Memory of

*OFFICE DAYS
Monday, Thesday,
Thursday, Friday

. --. \r

;;;:..

~=·a:=-....:.
·~·-

Services

--- •

•

Clrwified pep• cot~~r the
/oUotuin« telephone uc:IJ.np, ...

t:-=4

Internal Medicine

Sarah Goswami, M.D~

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

4

,......,. ..., ....... _ , . , _ , Co • - 1 00 ,..,

Naba Goswami,- M.D.

'---------------------...J

~

• _ _ , _ _ ... _,,..., ..., ,.. IC-

UMW meeting held

"Gospel Clues to Communtca·
lion" was the title of the program
presented by Mrs. Ethel Orr and
Mrs. Bonnie Landers at th'e Aug:
4 meeting of the Cl)ester United
Methodist Women.
The purpose of the program
was to examine the communlca·
tlon methods used by Jesus and
apply them to our contemporary
task of communicating with one
another.
The scripture was taken from
John 1 and Matthew 12. Kathryn
Baum was pianist for singing of
"Tell me the Stories of Jesus.
The leaders pointed out that
words, the basic building blocks
of communication, whether writ·
ten or spoken or sung, are
powerful tools of human lnterac·
tlon, which can hurt, comfort,
praise, degrade, gladden, or
anger someone.

.....,

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

AAUS

~usiness

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Church bA•
r====:~=,:i~;;~~~~~~;;===n Brv-nt
Church dathlng.
giving .way
'Thufld.,
9 AM.niPN Lane

One television commentator
The birth came 10 hours alter
said the baby should be ex - Fergie was admitted to the
tremely lucky since she was born hospital and two hours after
at 18 minutes past 8 p.m. on the officials said she was In labor.
eighth day of the eighth month In Andrew and Fergie's mother,
1988.
Susan Barrantes , were at the
" I'm absolutely thrilled ," en· hospital with her throughout the
!bused Fergie's father, Maj . day.
Ronald Ferguson.
Andrew, who In his bachelor
Champagne corks began to fly days was known as "Randy
to celebrate the delivery for the Andy," drove his wife to the
bubbly, red -haired duchess who hospital from their country home
has charmed much of Britain south of London.
since she married Andrew two
The birth followed an active
years ago.
. pregnancy for Fergie that InThe announcement was posted cluded flying helicopters, skiing
on the gates outside Buckingham and just last month a minor
Palace to the cheers of onlookers au tomoblle accident.
and tourists.
While Andre\f was away, Bar·
It was the filth grandchild for rantes, who Is re-married to an
Queen Elizabeth II, who was Argentine polo player, stayed
aboard her yacht Britannia near with Fergie at the couple's
Liverpool and was Immediately "Castlewood House" residence
given the news. She told well· In Surrey County.
wishers earlier In the day. that If
The new royal offspring Is fifth
It were a girl, she hoped It had In line to the throne - behind
curly hair. .
Prince Charles, Charles' and
A palace spokes!TJan said the Princess Diana's sons William
little princess's weight was 6 and Harry and directly after
pounds, 12 ounces and that Andrew himself. Queen Eliza·
Prince Andrew, 28, who flew to beth U's only daughter, Princess
London Sunday from naval duty Anne, also has two children but
In the Pacific, was presentfor the they come further down In the
birth.
succession.

IOEL A. LYNCH

Keith and Beth Riebel Lynch,
Middleport announce the birth of
their secollll son, Joel Andrew,
July 18 at St. Joseph Holpital,
Parkersburg, W.Va. He weighed
eight poUnda, six ounces and was
21 Inches long.
Mr. and Mrs. Lynch had
another son, Joshua Keith, four.
Maternal grandparents are
Roger and Hazllee Riebel, Long .
Bottom. Paternal grandparents
area of communication. The are Harry and Delores Surface,
.........epo;_r_t._ _.. _ _ _ _ _...,
leaders said that Jesull lllus· r-M_l_ddl
trated the Importance of listen·
lng til his parable, mentioning
Matt.13 in which Christ speaking
of hearing but not listening, and
faUlng to unders land with the
heart. It was pointed out that
lart A. ....., . , CPA
Webster defines a parable as a
611Elft . . mRI
short fictitious story that illusPOMIIOY, 01110
trates a moral attitude or a
religious principal. The leaders
•ACCO.IING
noted that Jesus used parables to
•IOOIIIIIPIIIG
convey heavenly concepts to
•RIAIKIAL SIA1IMINTS
humans.
•lADS.
Llstnlng as an element of
communication was stressed.
•PAUOLL "
The program closed witb a
reading, "Singing a New Song."
MarUyn Spencer presided at
the meeting with 27 sick and
shu tin calls being reported. Ofllc·
ers' reports were given and It
was decided to pay $200 lor
pledges again this year.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

8. 7

Pretlucll

Fl~onalng on

Sorv~

Y•dmon

on All Mokos

We H- MC/Disc/Vlsa

. I,_ _ _ _....,;4-~li-:;.'U::;,::tfll;~

4

Giveaway

Puppl• too gMI to good
ho-. Clll 114-318·8091.

- · to ghrlo _..,_ Cell

114-441-2183.
I monlh old pup-holl boogie.
holf ... ri... Cllll14-44.7837

Middleport

8t Vicinity

..................................
locltyo•d 811•473 lrotdwlrV
SO.. Mlrkl-. Aug. I &amp; 10.

Mon. &amp; T-. 'lug. 8th &amp; 9oh
2211 Joffonon ~.... 4-fllni!V
Mit. Low priHI. Good item1.
1070VIrd Solo: Mondlry, T-.
dl'f, w-........ 2407 Monroo
Aw. MIIC. 1'-t.

�Page 8-The Daily Sentinel
13

Insurance

45

LAFF·A·DAY

Fwnlthed room-919 SeCond
Aw., OllllpoUa. •1~5 a mo.
Utllhiel paid. Slnglemeile. Sh••
both. Call U&amp;-4416oftor7PM.

C81i us for you r mobile h()m&amp;
l nturen~ : Miller lntur•nc•.
30 • •882-2145. Also: auto.
.horM, Hf&amp; h..tt:h.

In insulatlort plumbing. kitchen
c.binm, c•pet throughtout.
••P . . . theera. AIIOWIIher/ d·
ryer, sto\41, retrig . Gil' den · ~PQt.

• 23.000. Call 614-3811-8482or
388-98641H 10 PM.

1915 .Modular home-3·4 8A .. 2
bathl, on 6 acres. Pond, outbuldlng. l'le.- Morcervilo. Call
114-2511-8867.
:Mocl.llar hom&amp; ·On large lot 1,1
Mercervlle. A)ol, AC. n.,..
t ...pol. OulbuAding. Call 814)!511-126&amp;
.

Bv

Ownar-3 BR ., ••till large
.family room, 2.15 acre•. city
'lchoOI dist. immediate oecu·
~ncy. Owner will help f1111nce.

:Call 814·448-9210eveninfil.

"Violence? You call this
violence? If you want violence come to our contrac
negotiations!"

1----------...;,..._________

-l

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Thlngo . . buzzln' ln lho

V\11\NT ADS

'73 28 ft. O'llmpton motor
home. _,f contllned. Vetygaod
cond. 304-875-2341 .

33

Fanns for Sele

Sric:k 4068 tq. ·ft., to•l 12

tooms. 5 BR S., 2% b•hs.

•18x21 family room, large 'k it•
'Chen. pantry, laundry roOm.
tl•krooin, 12x25 ttorge bUilding. 1.52 aaet total or hou•
j."d IIBper•e lots .. Han . . vttleby
appointment. c.n 614-446-

11903.

.

10 8 State 51 .• Pomeroy. 2 or 3
bedroomt, carpeted. No Nel~
hal:lte offer refu•d. Phora 81.C..

Big new 3 ,R . home, built on
your lot Olily. 818,9941!1aup. C.ll
S14-888-7311 . .

tland. 3 bedroom. ·Camilli air,
.vinyl siding, insulated. fu II
twpet. patio, g . .ge. worktoom, fenced yard, garden
ppace. Also 2 bedroom, c11rport.
~ice houae. $15.000. Call 814992· 6277.
.

Apartment
for Rent

BR . apt1. 6 clotets, kitchenIPPI. furnished. WMher-Dryer
hoQk- up, ww c•PBI. n ewty
painted. dec:k.
From $175.
~agency, Inc. Apt1. Call 304~

175-5104. or 675-5386 or
S711-7738.

Farm. TribbleRo.ct. 7mil•from New completely furnithed
At. 82, MHon County. 3Y.i ipartnart &amp; mobile home in
aaet. Hou• and buildngs. Call · Ctty. Adult• ontv. P•king. Cell
304-7515-72SO.
614-4411-0338.

35 Lots 8o Acreage

~92- 3725.

$teGJc,d to $30,000. lri Ru·

44

For Sale :JO acret, Morgen
townlhlp, utility ICC.I, wii•U
aU or 11 lot•. P.O . loJI. 20357,
Ot.-looton. w.vo. 25362.
1h .acre more or I••· Nice
building lot with found.ion. Atl

8E.U11FUL APARTMENTS AT
8UDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES, 536 Jocbon
Pike from t183 a mo. Walk to
shop •nd movl•. 814-4482688. E.O .H.
Ups•lr• unfunUtMHI apt. Carpotod. utHftleo pol d. No children.
No pol~ Call S14-4411-1837.

utiliti81 • cebl1 TV: Good 11 Court St. ·2 BR .. 2 blths.
neighborhood. 4 mil• from klitehen furnlthed. w/wc•pet.
Stlltefy. 2 1tory older home. 4
town. C.ll Smhh Real E1111te, "No pets. Off lti'HI parking.
t326 • mo. plutllllltl•. Dep. &amp;
bei:trooms. 2 full bathl. LR. DR. S 14-4411-e808 or 378-2828.
""· Call .l14-4411-41128.
fA, l•ge eat-in Wtehen, sun
p~reh, b•ament, d•ehed2car
9 plut ilcrea (4
lwei
g . .ge whh st0f11ge SPICe. vinyl building lot• plus 5 •crea Furnithlld- 3 roOm, &amp; bath.
Ming. central heat and air. woode.. . $10.000. 814-S49· Clean. No pets. Ref. 6 depotlt
required. Utlli1ie1 furnithed.
2;189.
g~~ 1:i. ssa.ooo. ean 6~4Adults only. Cell 814-44.6 ·
4
Ashton, large buldlng lOts. 1619.
With orwithouta.cra.ge. 6 mil• mobile homn permitted. public
from Meigs Mine. Alllldlndlr water, also .. river f9t•. Clyde Furmthed ll)t. $160. UtiHiea
pel d. Sh . . bath. Sinal• rnala
School• (good "'acktop r01d) ,
Bowen, Jr. 304-578-2338.
919 Second Avo .. Oalllpollo.
1 &amp; mi181 from Pomeroy or
Athens. Hou• only 10.,..arsold. ee ... tlful river lottoneacreplus. Coli 44&amp;-44 18oft" 7 PM.
3 bedrooms. 1V:r bath. U6,000. public water, Clyde Bowen, Jr.
Luxuriout Tara Townhou•
Coli 614-S911-7231.
304-8711-233S.
, apartmenu. Elegant 2 floors. 2
BR .. full bath u~~~t~in, powder
R)r •leorrent. 23ecreswlth3
Two 1 acre lots with public
. bedroom houtllt. Phons 814- watar. Jerrys Run Road. ,room downatlirt, CA., dit·
hwaahlr. dit~l. private .,_
992-80157 or me Bill Clonch.
$ 4,100.00each, consider trllde.
trance. prlwte ando•d ~tlo,
304-5711-238~.
pool, ployground. U11~1• not
. '
4 bedroornt, 2 full blltht, 1-bu• loti. 304-875-8908.
induded. Starting at t299 per
c•peted bMBment, chain Ink
mo. Coii614-3S7-7850.
fenced back yard. fruit tree., Acreege for Illite 60 acres C~b
satellite dish, 1 b:1 8 barn type Cre!!Jk are&amp; runtl Willi', tob1cco Furnished efflci•ncy-920
outbuilding, 5 miles Wltlt of allotment. mineral rights. priced Fourth, OelliPOIIs. $180. UtiliAlploy, 32,000 sq fl. 304-372· on intpectlon. 304-675-3828.
ties paid. Call448-4418aft• 7
3827 Of 372·3062.
PM.
For -.le H'2 acres. level lend 'h
All etec:tric home In leon on At. mlab•ckGienwoodonblecldop Furnithed apt. New. NeerHMC.
6 2. Phorw 304-468-1806after •ood. Reol NI08. 304-5711-2288.
1 BA. 82S5. UtUhloo pold Call
6 :30p.m.
. 4411-4416 after 7 PM.
Lou.· one acre. Level wooded.
Nice home Greenbrier Estates. city water. Jartcho Road. Owner Furnished upstairs 3 room apt .,
full b•ament w-femitv 10om. 3 firwncing. Good terms. 304- utlhi• paid. 94 Locust. *210
..,. month. 175 d..,otit. Call
bf, 2 battJI, formal dining &amp; 372·8405 or 372-26:76.
living room w-fireplace, kitchen. 1-...:.....:..:..:...:.....:...:..:...:..:.:..:.:.__ 614-446-1340 or 446-3870.
&amp; TV room w -woodbumar.
Screened porch l!lt patio, lrtting
Apartments and hou•s. Otll
Rentols
on 5 acres. For appt. can
304-675-6104.
304-675-23S5.
Furnished apM'tment. 8225 a
Moving: 1-buee for sale by
mo. 1 BR , Utilh:l11 paid. 920
own8f. Call for appt. 304-67&amp;. 41
Homes for Rent
Foruth Ave., Gallipolil. Call
1913. StLJ::co dwelling. IMge
4 4&amp;-441 Boher'7 PM.
lot centnll air, g . .ge. clo• to Nicety furnithed small house.
bank. schoott, store~. hospital, Adultl only'. Rat. required. No
1 BR . IIIJt .• nevv c•pet. Rllng&amp;churches. 3 br, kitchen, living ..... Call814-4411-0338.
/froat frH refrigerator furroom, famity mom, 11ft bMh, lg.
nlthed. Water-garbage paid.
deck. back yerd completely Convsnient 2 bedroom cottage Deposit ntquired. Calll14-448chain link 6ft. fence.
In Galllpolla. $260 per month 4345.
1070Garage apt .. • rMms &amp; plus utiltli-. Call 814-446batt.. with apptl.,cas. U7,000. 1690.
Furnished rldecoreted apt . 268
Coli otter 6:00. 304-675-2669.
St1te St. Aduit1 only. Utlltl•
3 Sr .., utllttv. attached g.age. paid. sso dep. 8200 per mo. 6
1978 14lll70 Wntor. large large kitchen. all elact. ·1 Y•• . !"01. lease. Call 614-«6-3687.
kitchen, bath. •perate lau..try le11e. Firtt mo. ,.nt &amp; deposit.
room. 2 BFI .. CA. stove. refrig.,
3 BR, apt. partially fu rne.hed. In
Call 614-4411-1368.
micro'NIVe, ·dithwasher. Slereo,
Gollipolio. Coli S14-2411-6659.
2 amp disconnect. underpin- Nice 2 bedroom t..ou•. ~i·ce
ning, 6 porch. E~tcel. cond. Call c•petlng. elbinltl, neighbor· Furnlst..ed efficencY apt .-3
304-875-4394.
hood . Middleport. 814-992- room• It bath. Carpet throughout. PrMite &amp; quiet. Single
5858.
2 or more BR .. fun slm bMeworking penon only. Call 614ment. nice lot. EJtcel. cond. 3 bedroom, centn~l air. Cell 4411-4807 or US-2602.
Located on Rt. 2 Apple Grove . . S14-992-6658 d.,-o or 1-814. o 38,500. Call 304-576-2466.
592 - 61!8 evening• end 2 BR. apartment, All utititi81
pold Call S14-446-8723.
week81lds.

•cr•

32 Mobile Homes
for

3 bedroom , 109 Englith
Rd. t250. p• month plu1 utiH·
lleo. 304-675-6542.

Sale ·

St..ultl 1 2x65, 2 BR . with Bx10
expendo. new plumbing. Unfur·
nithed. 84500. Call 614-4482981 .
1974 B4bt:PI 14x60 2 BR ., all'
else.. underpinning, deck. &amp;
ltBps. Asking t7400. Call814446· 8298.
12o85, 3 BR .. 19n Fed.,.l,
total alec. . rt8W' carpet. ws1her&amp;
dryer, ext111 Nice, vinyl underpinning. $7950. Call 614-4460176.
1 979 Liberty 14x70, 3 BR., total
elect. carpet. front porch, un..
d•pinning. S7000. Call 614388-9S44.
1972 Windsor Mobile Home &amp; 5
on George's Creek .Rd.
C1ll Jerry Blnhatn. 814-3889352.

l«lrOS.

1963 Nsw Moon . 1 Ox56,
, 2x:14 lddition. v-v aood
condition. Call 614-949· 2 77.
Three bedroom mobile home
located. Harrl•onvllle area.
t8000. land contN~ PDtlible
with 20. parcent down. 814742·3033.
1974 O.amplon 14x85 totai
electrte. underpenning. Fur·
nilhed or unfurnished. Reilly to
movo . •8.900.00. 304-671·
2383.
1970 Windsor 12d&amp;; woodburner, wa1her Ia dryer, 1ir
conditloflll', Mult be moVed.
:C=•I~I=30=4-=8=9~5-~3~8~0~2· ___ 0
1'9fP i .;;;;10 2·bedroOrn. 2
botho. 304-773-6983.
Reduced ·'S4 SehLitu 14lll85,
101111 Meetrlc, 2 br, uc. oond. :!

dedc•. 304-578-7113.
1979 Boy.,;ow mobllo homo.
14x70 with 7a21, upsndo,
total oloc. cont ... olr. 304-178S141 .
~

\

Nice 3BR., 2 baths, b.am&amp;nl6
gltl'~ge. Call 304-876-3030 or
675-3431 . .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

3 room apartment. S1 00 1 mo.
Call 304-675-5104.

Gracious living. 1 end 2 bedroom ilplrtmeflt's_ al Village
Manor and Riverside Apart·
ments in Middleport. From
8182. Call 814-992-7787.
EOH.
2 bedtoom Apte. for rent.
Carpeted. Nice setting. Laundry
f acUitill available. Cell 814992·3711 . EOH.

2 &amp; 3 BR . All ulllti• paid except
electricity. Conwnlent toc•ion.
Call 614-446-8568 or 4464006.
Furnished 2 SR . Ca. cable, wet8f
sewage paid. Foslet''s Mobile
Homa Park. Call 814-4481S02.
14x70 furnished or urlfurnlthed.
3 SA .• alr. largelot.g•den apot.

53

2 lots for rent Rt. 2 about 5
minutes from ·town. S75 ..month
plus utilttilll. 304-675-3000~

Antiques

Buy or Sell. Rivllrine Antiques,
1124 E. Main Street, Pomeroy.
Hours: M.T.W 10a.m. to lp.m .•
Sunday 1 to &amp;p.m. 114-9922526.

Office room• on main floor,
Hall's Serb.- Shop bu ·ilding, 507
Main St., Pt. Pl&amp;a~~nt . Call

304-875-3861 .

54 Misc. Merchandise
For Lease
Wheelchairs-new or u11d. 3
wheeled elech'ic tcootert. Cell
Rogers Mobltty r;:ollect. 1 ~ 114870-9881.

Approximately 2000 sq. ft.
1506 Jefferson. For store ·
storage or offices . Walk-in
cooler. 304-675-1436.

61 Household Goods.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofas and chairs priced \fro!ll
t395 ·to 8995. Tabla~ 850 and
up to t126. Hide-a-beds $390
to $595. Rlldinen $226 to
*376. Lampt 828 to . $125.
Dlnattal t109aod up to $496.
Wood table w-8 chairs t285 to
8796. Oetk t100 up to $376.
Hutcf:IM 1400 end up. Bunk
bedl complete w-mett,.I8S
$29&amp;and up to $395. Babvbedl
$110. Mattreue~ or box ping~
full or twin t8B. firm S78. and
tea. Queen lilts $250 &amp; up,
King $360. 4 drawer cheat t89.
Gun cabinets 8 gun. BabV
matti'MSM $36 &amp; 845. Bed
frames •20. •30 &amp; King fntm8
t&amp;O. Goodtelection of bedroom
suites, m . .l cabinets, headboard• 830 and up to $66.

Sele

2 &amp;~..,... pure-bred ldttens for
sele. Cell IVIIRingl 814-949·
22110.

2AKCReglo-moleBoogloo.
7 month• old. Jullt nartlng to
run. $311. each ar tiO. pair. Call
814-949-2143.

71 Auto's For Sale
19711 Ot.Vy Mlllbu aooolc.
Auto. 3150 eng. 58. &amp;00 mila.
EXcellent running condition.
lody fair. UOO. 614·949·
2453.
1881 Plymoutll TC 3. 4 opd .• 2
dr. h"'"hbodL Call 814-44&amp;0278 after 8 PM.

Regliter•d Mlnl•tun
Schrwu•r. AltoCoak•Spanlef. . 1974 Monte C.to, 400 cr1ne
Both mel• puppi•. CMh. no cam lbr.. t97/300HPhNCis,
chocb. Call 114-9112·2107.
colt• 4111. Call 114·44&amp;-

1540.

Call Jeff, 614-4411-7307.
Air eonditlohel'l· 2 catemllrt
window unh:a, both for 825. CeU
614-446-0334.

AKC Toy Poi!IOI'IInlon. block
;female. apayed. t200. 3048915-3801'

Boys dothn-all Nke nt~~~V . Cell

AKCregllwedShihTzupuppl•
for •lo. BabY-. 304-57&amp;2880.

1987 FDrd Tempo OL. Auto..
PS. PB. AM-FM. titt, excel. drn.
t 8900 · firm. Call 614·448·
8199.

R- brood pu~eo. Fo•·Bordor
Booglo Tonlors. All moloo. 3048715-n48.

Red Hot b•glllnsl Drug dealen;
c... boltS, planlll ...,o'd. Sur-

814-2511-1669.
SWAIN
.
AIJCTION &amp; FURI'IITURE 62
Olive St., Gallipolis.
NEW· Bpc. wood group- t399.
Uving room tuitel· $199-$1599.
BW~k beds with bedding. $199.
Full tin mattress &amp; foundation
starting- •99 . Recliners
Nrtlng- $99.
USED- Bed1, dressers. bedroom
sulte1. t 1 99-$29 9. Desks.
wringer washer, a compl• Une
of u•d furnltul"lt.
NEW~ Westarn boot$- $30, ·
Workboota $18 &amp; up. (Steal &amp;
soft tool. Coll614·448·3169.

Pets~ for

66

AKC Clef.- Shopt,ordo. 1
whtte 2 bleck tnll• end 1 black
female . Shott aterted •nd
wormed. 304-418-1528.

Need Horses Hoove• Trimmed?

Merchandise

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
W•her•. dryert, refrigerators.
ranges. Skaggt Appliancat,
Upper River Rd. b•ide Stone
Crelt Motel. 614-446·7398.

Mens •uit81, •Porta c:oets- slze
42 regular, brown velour recliner, gr•n vlnvl couch. Call
614-44S·3375.
12HPridingGrhelyModel432.
48" cut. Asking 81100. Coli

814-387·0493.
Tree &amp;

numr ..

mo-At. atone,

mulch. topool. Too dump truck.
goo~ motor- 81760. Don'o
Landtcapes, 614-448·9848.

Wood Ct..'sf Woodburner from
wwe'a . Now. 81~0. 01111 814992·7288.
Wolfe Tanning Bed. Uke NI!IW.
304-882-3711.

Air conditione~. Water bed,.
atereo-ftoOt' model. Gun cabinet.
304-576-2908.
Aaall•tlc sound sy1tam. 4
tpeakar. 100 watt heads, 4
mlkao. SBOO. Call 304-8753238.
.

55 Building Supplies
Building Materials
Blade, brick. 1awer pipes. windowa. lintels. etc. Clanle Wlntart, Rio ~r1r1dll, 0. c;:an 8141 -24_5_·_5_12_1_._ _ _ _ _ __

Concrete block•- all tlzn- yerd
ordeltverv. MMonllnd. OallipoUs Block Co .. 1231h Pine 91: .•
Gallipolis, Ohio. Call 614-4462783.
WESTERN RED CEDAn
n
• Channel Rustle
and Bevsl.t Lap Shlng
· • Deck Mat!flllla
Guaranteed QUality
CETIDE; INC., Athent-114594-3678
90 DaYI •me as cash with
approved credit. 3 Miles out
BulavHie Rd. Open 91m to Spm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 814·44656
Pets for Sele
0322.
Valley Furnhura
New end used furniture and Groom and S4pply Shop-Pat
epplictncta. Call 614·448· Grooming, All breeds ... AII
75.7 2. Hours 9 -6.
styles. lams Pet Food Dealer.
Julie Webb Ph. 814-1448-0231 .
J • S FURNITURE
1415 Eastllfn Ave.
Dregonwynd Cattery Kennel.
4 drawer ohnt. $48. 5 drawer · CFA Persian and Siamese kitchest, $64.95. 6 pc. wooden tans. AKC Chow puppl111. Naw
dinnette Mia. '8 199.95.
Himalayan kittent. can 814446-3844 1fter 7PM.
PICKENS
FURNITURE

2 Ado .. ble Slmoyed .pupl)ie~,
AKC. •17Boaoh.Caii304-B711-

=;;::;::::;:::==

1;27~2~8=.
67

Muaioal
Instrument&amp;

1987 Oadgo Dok. . pldc-up,
PS. PB. AM·FM Catoltto. bod
llntr, running bolrdl. 4 cyl. 5
opood.· 21 mpg. t7600. Call
114·448·8143 or 304-871·
71e7.

{llut. Your .,..._ 8U¥'f'a Guide.
1·1011-187-8000 Ext S-9808.

1979 Dolt. 88 Ohio. PS. PB,
PoMr wlndowt. a trick stereo.
111to. lhlft on tlaor, buck8t •••·
ell 0ew 1im. Vflf'Y good condl11on. 814-949·2~37.
1978 Chryll• La.,.,on. 4 door,
MW plllnt, .,... battery, br1ke1.

Dlacln electric guitar &amp; 1!10 watt
Oorillo ompUfi•. Call 814-248&amp;220.

Loodod. *1200. Call 814-992·
7214 .. 114-992-3224.
19711 Thunderbird. Roll good
lh111&gt;o. CAII814-949-22SO.

lnllvldu.l guhar 1-Dn~ b•
ginnera, serious guitlrlat. Brul- For •labvowrwr. 198SPQntiac
cardll Muolc. 814-448·0887. Trent Am, ,..one 814-949Jolf Wornllo¥ ln11ructor, 814- . 3077.
4411-IOn. U-d 0pMingo.
1911 El Dot8do ll.,.llz. Com·
pleltlv loededl Attroroof,
68
Fruit
looth« Interior. aao 3110 ve.
13.000 mloo. I/OC. Allldng
8o Vegetables
f51100814-912·81133- 8 or
weKtndl.
Home grown peech•· Yellow 1981 810. auto. 4 wheel drive,
Frentone. Wegner Fruit Farm. am-fm radio.
700 or best
Layman, Ohloi14-74S·3312.
off•. 304-8711-4840.
Adams Farrna·Cannlng tome- 1986 8wdc Rlvora. 304-1711toes for tale. lltlrt ·FIIIt, Ohio. 2284.
Coli 11 ... 247·2011.
1978 Cutlooo SupNmo. 3048911-3091 "'Jydme.
I df 111 Sll!ltiiii:S
1981 'c.vaner. 4 door, no air.
&amp; L•ve;tuck
am-fm l'lldio. $4200. 304-8757349.

•e.

61 Fann Equipment
Cll OSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 35 West. J•ckaon, Ot..lo.
814-286-8461.
MIIIIV Fergu11011, N.w Hollmd.
Sulh Hog Sol• • Sonllco. Over
40 uHd t.-ctors tochooaa from
6 comPlete line of new 8a uead
oqulpmont.
•lootlon In
S.E. Ohio.

a..-

4608 J .D.. 6-vlllodo.-nch,
90% tn1ck. 1984 5210 Ford
tnx:k. 302. 4 opel. Coll814-44&amp;3040.
Felr Speolll ... V one 1M'¥ chain
got •oandFREE. 10porcontoff
chetn MWs during Oallle and

Muon County Feirs. Slderl
Equlprnont 304-871-7421.
107002 Cat Pony engine with
Cat w.nch. good cond. *3.000.
otter 5:00 cell 304-8711-2&amp; &amp;9.

63

livestock

Duroc!Tarntwwwth Bo•. 650
lbl. Call814-248-9398.
Reg6ttered Morgen. 'dark dappeledwithwhhemene&amp; tlil, for
Mia or tnlde for guns. Call
814-448-3199.
1 Slmrnental cow. *700. 1 biiCic
•d white f.ae oow. •1500. 1
Sirnmental helf• calf. •350.
Call 814-949-2144.

64

Hey 8o

Grain

t1.50. Ground oholll
tl.50 PO&lt; 100. 8·12, Mon.·SOI.
Morglf'l' s Woodlawn f•IT'. Rt.
35. Pliny, 304-837-2018.
Strow,

1980 COncord. no rutt. high
mle.;, runt goCMI, needs ttre.
$100. or U.t oftar. 304-882-

2055.
79 0111o Cudo... 304-77:).
&amp;482.
1972 VW Super Bootie. Top
lhipl. Don't ..... oil.

304-1711-3802,

72

•eoo. Call

Trucks for Sale .

Tondom Mloc trucll l Tondom
low boy trail•. Good cond. '
$ 67&amp;0 or wfll •II ..,. .te. Call
814-4411-8038.
1913 .,.11 Plymoutll plclwp
with amaH c ...•
top. Only
40,000 ml• Very good condl·
tion. $2600 or wll1'1111de for car.
Call 814-218-8251 .
19711 F-tOO Ford. M4cll. body,
air, compressor, 8000 lbl. Oraf·
thor• hoist. Call 814-2681283.
'
1977 Oat tun pick-up. CAll after
Sp.m. 814-992-n22.
. 1972 Otovy C10 vue!&lt;. cond., 250, I cyl., IUIO. Call
304-8711-1144- S PM.

"Vans 8o 4 W.O.

73

1987 Alltro CS, 4 c..,t. chairt
plu1 bench. AC; cruilll. 1uto
w/00, gegM.. many axtt...
Fectory buh/not cuttomb:ed.
Low mlloogo. Call 814-24151240 or 248-5820 oft• 8 PM.

5943.

1r;JilSIIllrl iiiJDn
74 Motorcycles

71 Auto's For Sele

111711 Horll¥ Dovkllon 8pon•

c.~~

t.r. .Good cortdtt:lon, nan• good.

12xlo unfumilt..ed. eentml AC.
,h mile paltHMConAt. 311. Call
614-4411-4389 .. 304-176·
9780.

11112 Hondo Cuotam cesoo.
ohofl drive. utroo. 17.000
mi-. for •le or tiMe. )041711-1314.

l'llce 3 Bodroom unlu,....hod
and 2 bedroom fu~Md . Kan•·
g... Call 814-44&amp;-7473.

2 bedroom, furnl•hed. Air,
••her.
dryer. •221. pw month
1J1111... lnd dapOIIf. C.ll
~UI

114-912-7479.

~I

814-742-2140.

,7,.

2 bedroom mobile homo, 1200.
month. 304-178-11114.

1cr~~~~~n: Jeoperdyl..,
®Ienton

aD VldaoCountry
7:35 CSJ Andy GriHIIh
8:00 (J) Crazy Ulce I FOI Dead
on Arrival

e CD

!Ill Major League
aaaebaU: An lnakla Look
(!) ClaNk: Summar
Cll
(J) Who'a the Boss?
Mona says no to a barrage
of marriage pr~sals from
her suitor. (R) Q .
&lt;ZJ (!) Nova Archeologists
unearth clues about the Red
Paint Peo~le. 1:1
liiJ eiiJ CBS 'Bummer
PtarJIGUH Big-city adltor In a
seaside community; young
man and a !alentad dog.
e (!]) MOVII!: Emma: Quean
of the South Saaa, Part 2
IDl PttmeHtlwa
® MOVIE: True Conletllonl
(R) (1 :48)

OF LIFE'?

.

i£MJIOO DSABIUW. ..

Pump 11lM •fld aervice. 3048911-3802

flnds his lifestyle cramped
and opts for a place oi his
own. (RJQ
8:00 (J) 700 Club
C1J (J) Moonlighting
Maddie's having a baby;
mirth isl8mpered l!l Devid's
diS81l!M!arance.IR) Q
Cll (!) llniSJIIel loi Poland
Through rare archival films,
look at t11e Polish Army In
action. 1:1
MOVIE: Child'a Cry Q
Lany King UMI
e!DI121h Annual Circua of
the Ita.- Special guest Kirk
Douglas joins celebrity
ringmasters Merv Clriilln,
Della Buri&lt;t and Cesar
Romero under !he blgtop to
watch as a galaxy of stars
temporarily abandon their
usual claims 10 become
circus stars. Performers
include Carol Channing. Tony
Dow, Ma~a Gibbs, Pat
Morita, Bronson Plnchot and
Richard Simmons. IR)
1!J MOVIE: Rada, Part I (PGI
(2:00)

e

Starks Lawn and ShJI.b Ser-vice,
304-675-3956 or 304-576·
2903.

AON'S APPLIANCE SERVICE.
hou• call 18Nieing GE. Hot
Point. wathert• .dr.,.rs 411nd ,•
ltovn. 304-578-2398.

I

MEEKLE AND WINT.HROP

1

15 THAT YOUR FACEo,OR

AAe: 'rtJU BREAKING: IN 'tOUR
HAI.LOWE'l:N MAf&gt;K ?

Plumbing
8o Heating

DO YOO ALWAYS LOOK.
UKE l'HAT,ORARE. 'rt:lU
UNDER A WIK.H'S CURSE 7

IT LOOK5 UKE

INSULT COMEOY'. l~

COMII\IG: B'CK. .

CARlER'S PI.UI'IIBING
AI'ID HEATING
Cor. FoUrth end Pine
Galllpalil;, Ohio
Phone ~14-448-3868 o• 6144411-4477

1:30 (!) Pro Beach v.,.lleybail

Excavating

Trenching service, water, ga~
and electric lin• buried. 304-77:).6839.

•

~

liT II YOU AIN'T

SPONGIN' OFF ME,
GOOGLE !!

Electrical

Women 's,from Hermosa
Beach, CA (T)

BARNEY

121 Haw Country

!! SPARKY JUST WON

10:00 (J) 111ralght Talk
· Cll
(J) thirty-1111ng
Michael finds himself
growing Increasingly jealous
of Elliot. (R) Q
&lt;ZJ II)) Newa

e

TI!N IRAND IN tHE
T-BONE STAKES !!

8o Refrigeration

(!) lrtah R.M.

eiD "-1''"111001"'"'-'""""'re
11J Evening Nawa
121 Crook and CIIIIH

R•ldentlel or commercial wirIng. New 1ervice or repeirs.
Ucenl&amp;d electricil!rl. Estin}ate
free. Ridenour Electrical, 304-

10:01 CSJ MOVIE: Special

.

THE GRIZZWELLS®

&lt;ZJ Eaatandare

.(!])
...- ·
121 VJctaoCounfrr
11:00 (J)
Ramington
··S1sele's
Gold
e CJl Cll • Cll a11 eo
I!J) Newa

J &amp; J Water S8fvtce. Swlrnmifl9 ~

Cll P.o.v. Fonow 1118 vivid

81~

248-9288.

R 81 R Water Service. Pools, •

story of Alllertcana who
!Qughllaclsm 50 years ego.

P111l Au pe, Jr. War:er Service.
Pooll. cistltrnt. vvell!l. C•118'14448-3171.

:=:n:e

.

·

I=

John, M.D.
• AaAIIII8.1 llagniN

1113Hondo V41.Mogno. Oood
ooild. LOw ml•. Call 304-1783833.

-.
t

' 12:DO(J) ........ a...

;. l -·••Q
•
Twlllaht z-

ltlaltla ... PGA Tour (R)

!lfPIIQuj
~

+AKU

•uu

.KI09853

+1
Con!ervative l!l!aders will be rightly { t J 8 3 ·
+to&amp;S2
baffled by West's jump to two hearts.
7
Let me quickly inform them that that
SOtml
bid was a weak jump-llbift response in
+QB2
competition, showing a si1-card suit
.QJ
and S-6 high-cal'(! points. North then
tA9612
+Jet
cue-bid three clubs. to show a big band
for diamonds. East apparently forgot
Vulnerable: East-West
that his partner's bid was weak when
Dealer: East
he jumped to four hearts. North did
quite well to bid five diamonds, since West
four hearts wu going to make, and
3t
now West, caught up In what seemed · 2 •
5t
to be a non-vulnerable sacrifice bid by Pau
Pus
North-South, doubled.
Obi.
Wu the heart king a strange choice
Opening lead: • K
for an opeoing lead? Although that
lead Is usually made from a K·Q or A·
K combination, there was a pressing ·spades. Wouidn't West have led apadel
consideration here. It was not abso- at the second trick anyway, after look;
lutely certain that East had strong ing at the dummy? Sure, UDI- ...
clubs, and If the club holding was pulled a wrong card. I need not cora-;
weak, It might be catastrophic for
ment on the disaster If West's opealuc
West to lead a club. Probably the jump
lead had been his singleton club.
:
to four bearls was made with the ace
· In tbat suit. U so: West could better
James Jacoby's books •Jacob oti
judge bow to contmue the defense af· ·Bridge" 8lld "Jacoby OD CJud ~·
: holding the trick with the heart (written with b1s father, tbe Ja~ dl.,

+

the heart king was led East wald Jacoby) are now available
• •
bookstores. Both are publisbed

at

bY.·•
•·

43 Seeing red
ACROSS
44
Quadra·
1 Snoopy,
gesima
e.g.
45 Crete's
6 Sigil
capital
10 Creighton
DOWN
U. site
1 Mail
II Of local
2 Tentmaker
affairs
3 Western
13 Lustrous
4 Greek
fabric
14 Sports
Yesterday'• Antwer
letter
setting
5 Loaf about 17 - for
29 Filipino
U Three (it.)
6 Word
the book
peasant
16 Political
.20 French 31 Marsh
before
initials
goat
river
bird
'18 Radiation
23 Rreezy 32 Daughter
7 Norse
unit
goddess 24 Kiss (sl.)
10 Lear
19 Arledge
25 Group
36 Head (Fr.)
8 Rather
of TV
ordinary
of certain 37 Region
21 Soul (Fr.)
9 Football
drivers 39 First-down
22 Regret
playe~
26 Synthetic
yardage
23 Culture
12 Judge s
yarn
41 Biblical
medium
chamber 27 Devilish
-~;:::;;,;,.....
24 Meager
27Itallan
city
28 Medieval
weapon
.29 Coal
product
30 Mining
find ·
. 31 Myth.
man-goat
·33Choose
134 "-Skylark"
:35 Greek
b-1--i-letter
1,38 Tropical
animal
40 African
river
42James
Brolin
TV show

.,
'

.

••

.,

.,

'

.
'·

DAILY CR YPTOQUOTES- Here's how to wort It:
AlYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample Ais used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length end fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

P.l.

eo
Cllft\e
::~:.
cu Llll8
':'.~
bllckmalad lor an affair. (R)

=r.

Upholstery

Mow,.Ya Uphol..,lng III"Ving
trlODuMyeree2s,.. ..Thebett
1114 ,.....,o
1200 In fumiftuw uaholltlrlng Call
ao. Wlll•ll ortiOdotorChwyl 304 -171 · 4154 for · frae
Ht....tft.
.
10 truak. Call304-17&amp;-11e7.

(L)

(I)

•

•soo.

87

=--r
~~Q

0 HIIGt CDele PPri'IIIIH.nnltall
a1JYouC.nll8a ...
t 1:30 CD l!ll TOflitlld Show

Water delivery . 1000 gallon•.
Atllonlble prices. lmmerUate
dollvery. Call 814-992-5276.

EAST

+9 7 4

By James Jacoby

~ :ru:Connac:tJon

clttarnt. wall1 . lmmadlate1. 000or 2.000gallonsdellvery.
Coli 304-6711-8370.

w-.r.

v-.

GJ Wa18r Siding Nslklnal
WIIIBrskl Champlonshlpe
from Jamesville, WI (T)

Dillard Water SMvlca: Pools,
Ci1tern1, Wllllt. Delivery Anylime. Call 614-446·7404-No
SundiPf calls.
pool1, clstlrnt.; 'NIIIIs. Ph .

Bulletin

(1 :40)
10:30 (J) Celabrtly Chafe

General Hauling

tKQ105
+AKQU

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Game of 1M WHk
1:30 C1J • (J) Full HOUH Jesse

'C

Rotary or c.bla tool drlllng.

.1

CROSSWORD

C0unld0Wn(PGI(1:44) ·
I!J) NBC Baaaball

l:t5eCD

roT MARRif.D
EARLY

....u

NORTH

+J 105

took 110 chances. He overtook the king Pharos Books
with his ace and cashed fl:ls. A·K .of
®
·

1:05 Ill MOVIE: Tha Final

Moat well• completed same day .

1\ticfl..l'a Ret idential Air Conditklning and retrlgen~tlon, recharge end repair ervice. 304468-1786.

SCRAit\.LETS ANSWERS
Triune - Fetal - Birth - Soviet - TERRIBLE
"I wish I could weer a dress like that," sighed the iden·
lical twin to her sister. "But _if I wore it I'd look TERRIBLE!"

Jhea

1!J T...l of the Go~«! ·
Monkey
121 Haall1rlle Now

'II modo! Hondo. 280 4·
4 - · 11800. Watter1on's Wet•r Hauling,
104-878-8412.
1070'88 Hondo T~X 121. 4- re11oneble ratn. Immediate
2,000 gallon dell\lery, clstarne.
......... • - b......, ond poolt, Vtllll, .tc. call 304-57S.
Good cond.
2919.
8, .... 304-178-2518.
10'10Hondo IIIIIIC. 4-whool•.
· Dump tr~k deUwry llrvlce.
be. Cone!. 304-812-3180.
Bu.tthog mowing. 304-1'161184 Ho- I:R 80. Excol. 3190.
oond. *300. Call 304-17&amp;-

71148.

Nice 2 IMdroom on qulat lffHI
In Recine. ltOJrage room .•
p• !YtOnlh plut uCIIIiel. 1141112·7281.

GJ Surfer Mapzine · ·
CIJ'Entwlllnment Tonight ·
eCil Juctge

e

Fetty Tree TrifMllng, stwnp
remo,.l. Call 304-676-1331 .

86

1171 Electroalld!t. Bulltdownto
Wldo OHdo. Ph- 3 bolt drive,
- · 12100. Colll14-11~2·
70011 oir 814-lt2·3Z47.

12ol5 DoD . &amp; Ref. roqulrod.
Fur. . hod. Wet• pol d. uoo. No
pots. 1 or 2 people only . Call
814-4411-0822.

7:30 e CD HollYWOOd 8q111rei

Electricien, Stats Certified, free
estfmlte1. call Ed Shamblin
304-675-8489.

Mobtle home for ntnt. Water,
sewer. trash pickup furnilhed.
Ref. required. Call 614-4460527.
Porter.

crootc

I

ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

WEST

I!J Alrwoll (NRI (1 :00) Stereo.
aD
end Chait
7:05 CSJ Andy GriHIIh

tJAVJ... I HAD ASER!M

by filling in the missing wards
you develop from step No. 3 below.

Taking
no chances

@--,tine

EEK &amp; MEEK
ltlRE. CTtXJ ()JE (1' 1WS£
\{UJB, ~w.mc Slu::nJTS

Complete the c;h uckle quoted

BRIDGE

®118meyMIIIer

304-5711-2398 or 814-446·
2464.

84

UNSCRAMB~E

e (!]) Stir Trlk

Painting: Interior &amp; ExteriCM".
Fr• •timlltes. Call 814-4468344.

'93

A

,~\~~~~ \Y'-1 ol

ROI'I EVANS ENTERPRISES· •·
Soptlo tank pumping. 890 per
lood. Caii1·SOQ-631·9628.

''Don't say 'NQ' til you'velookad
the puppy- the-."

THESE SQUARES

V

NewaHour (1 :00)
(J) People'&amp; Court

Concrete Septic Tanks · 1000
gal., 1500gli.endJetAIIretion
1ystem. factory trained repair
ohop. ROI'I EVANS ENTER·
PRISES. Jack1on. Ohio: 1-800- '
537·,528.

-K--,1

She hung a sign in her yard:

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN

•

SWEEPER and 18Wing machine
repair, p.-ts, end suppll•. PIck
up and delivery, oav·is V•rinm
Cle•ner, one half mile up
Georg• C,.ek R~. Call ·8 14441-0294.

.

8

GJ~(L)

BASEMENT
WATERPROORNG
Uncordlional lifetime guar~tn­
tee. Local tef•ences: furnished.
Fr• utlmataa. Call collect
1-814-237-0488. dll'p' or night.
Aoge .rsBiltement
Waterproofing.

.

(!) Nlglltly Business Report

Cll CurNIII AH81r
Cll (!) MacNeil/ Leh,.,

pocroR PAvL-ov'.S so
g16 ON iHESE .
WO~/CrNG t.UNCHE.S.

.

5

1:35CSJ C.rolllumett
7:00 (J) Remington Steele Diced
Stoele
e CD PM Megulne

Home
Improvements

.

I 1I I I e

liiJ • a caa Newa
e(!])
ltapl'a HeiOH
0 lnakle Pollllca '81
® Jellerlona
a You C.n h a a._

lT'5 Not A BAD
PI-AGE: e-xcEPT'

.

1.-..1-.JL-....L_..I_..I_.J

e

Serv1cH:&gt;

t

®tnakle 1M PGA Tour

. Cll
(J) ABC N- Q
Cllllocly Electric

FRANK AND ERNEST

i

,-~-0-Y_N_L_I

1:30. (2) 1111 NBC NlghUy Newa

1971 Holliday Rambler trovll :
tren •• 22ft. twin axle. lltepl 8,1
setf contained, Reese hltct... •
~04-875-8394.
•

82

.

I:Gtl CSl Allee

1974 35 ft. Coachman, park ·
model with tip-out air. •ssoo:
114-1149·2389.

875· 1786.

Coli 814-2511-1293.

i1~r::reo4~

I!J c:a- Exp~esa

Scottie 15 ft. camper, u• or
elac. Mfrlg.. stow~ tollat. Asking '
8800. Good lhapo. Call 614,
367·0493.

1

I

a Fanclllngo

17ft. Empire Climper. Sleeps 6 ,
r efr lgeretor. 1t ove, s ho-.Ye r.
..,vnlng. Excel. cond. Call 814- .
25&amp;-6313.

the

- ~l---,1;::;.-;l..:.:.~l'
L. 0 K E'Y
! A friend was having a han:r time
;....:..l--1 ,; - . giving away a litter of puppllt.

®Goodnmea

RON'S Televl•ion Sarvlce .
Hou• cells on RCA. Quezar.
OE. SP4dollng In lonfth. Call

r E'/ t 1~

1

0 lhowlllz Toellly

_ _ _ _ _.,.:_...:__ _.:..._

WOII

FLEMYS

1111 ,....

e (!]) Happy Days

"· Ca ~p~
01

81

I

!iPan
J ~~
~s of Death,
1

79 Motors Homes

....

below 10 f~rm four simple word.1 .

(!) 8potiiLoolc

19711 Otwyllon. Call 814,992·

1975 Hondo 7110. Good co nd.
tsoo. CoiiS14-317·7515.

2 BR. Mobile Home furnished or

.

Mlty intpected. 30dl'flguatantea. We buy transml11lona. Call
I 14·4 41· 01118, Rebull ding

'------------r-___;____..__-l

Reorrange leners of
0 four
scrambled words

1:00 (J) lllg Valley In Silent BatUa
ew Cll eCil Gil ea

ON MV

IYIIIIbte.

304-675-l818.

usltd appliMlc. and TV sets.
Open BAM to 6PM. Mon thru
Sot 614-4411-1699. 627 3rd.
A VII. Galli poll•. 0 H.

EFFI&lt;GT

a

Realistic Nlrvaho Bate 40 channel TRC-440. Mlcronte tetter,
ground oiMe entonno, 40 chon·
net robin mo~le, exn part1,
ext I'll mien:. anten ,.,, 200 ft. r"
coo• all. e180. 304-895·30111-

'~~:t;~' S~\\.c:{llv\-~t.trs·
_ _ _ _ __:;;_:;;: Ukod by CLAY I . POUAN

EVENING

8UOGET TRANSMISSION·
U111d • rlbultt all typet. Qu.rent• 30 d-r• minimum. Price~
$19 • up. Rebu Itt torques
corMrted •• tOw il •39.
Stendlrd clu1Ch81, preuure
pin• throw-out be•ln;t. All
type1 12 mot. werrenty. We buy
Junk t,.,.smilaiont. c.ll 3048711-8758 .. 814-379-2220.

Equipm81)t

Trahr 1p11Ce for nmt 3 miles S ,
Pt. Plelllnt et V off At. 2 &amp; 82.

County Appliance, Inc. GoOd

~·r ~A'it&lt;
~
ADVI&lt;~

1()66'{..

52 CB.TV. Radio

'SpacM for ntnt. trailer splc81.
weter a nwer furnithed. Locult
Rd. Rl. 1, 304-67S-1076.

49

cm:ATION

u..d Trintminlon•. All inter·

Spaciout mobil• home loti for
rent. ftlmily Pride Mobile Home
P•k. Gllllpolil Ferry, W. Va .
304-675-3073.

. . . . . . ,.......,...................... 1·10

l n:usT
~ 'Ill!?

Auto Parts
8o Accessories

The Daily

Television
Viewing

P'

•zso.

COUNTAY MOBILE Homo Ptork.
Aou• 33. North of PorrMWoy.
~entll trail••· C.ll 81.4-9927479.

Compfetely remodeled. . New
wiring. lightS, window., blown-

with eppl•ces. E~eUant oppo"unlty. PriCIIJ' to till , c.ll
S.14-4411-1358.

76

White, black pl81dBroyhlll,
Chlir·,.d upholtter, tufted beck, teo.
Corpot· Coi"'V 8'""·18 ft .o14
ft .• ISO. 20ft. • 14ft· flO. 19
ft. x 3 ft .~ •10 . Dr8Pfi.,.Oei«Y
green Mned-52 ln. wide x 841n.
long-f20, 100in. wldox841n.
long- •so. Hinging wegon
whMI light &amp; 2 metching well
tcOncet-*110. All good to excet.
cond. · Call, 304-1711·11881 ·or
675-2012.

A ttNcthle office sutte. V.y
prtw.te. Located in downtown
Glllipolil. $350 per month. t;all
814-4411-3432.

Sacrifice. 2 BR . home, 1 eere. 2
mil• passed Vinton School.

Boats end
Motors for Sale

27ft. Pontoon boat. Runs good.
For •te or nde for truCk or .c•
of oq ..l VOiue . Call 304-n:).
8974.

Couc~green.

Z large lotL g•den IPOt. hookup, Crown Ctty. 3 river tots. 1
mile below dam. Eureka. Call
114-2811-1293.

1986 Marlette Mocl.lllr Home.
60•28. Allol-ric. Co. 38R .. 2
b•hl. grllt room. dining room.
To r'I1MY eKtre• to lilt. Must ••
to app.-clate. *45.000, owner
flnandng. Call 814-UII-1408
.ft .. 5 PM.

3 BR .• utiUty, g . .gt. kitchen

.

w ........ d ......... Call 814446-2153.

Haines for Sale

Beautiful Holcomb Hill add~
tiorwl lot. 3 BR.. C.. Call
614-4411-0338.

76

&lt;ID'W" (¥1@Wilil

M.,.•g portable w.Mr/ dryer
wltflo...,d. t250. Collt14-44&amp;6714.

46. Space for Rent

31

&amp;~t&amp; -~

WMher &amp; m,..r •t. •195. L.wn
mo-. UO. Call 114-44117359.
'

Rooms for tent-'NIIek or ~onth .
Starting lit $120 a mo. Gellie
Hoftll.8 14-4411-9580.

Real Estate

JOT 'N' CARLYLEe by Larry Wrlpt

51 Household Goods

Furnished Rooms

Pomeroy- Midcllepon. Ohio

Tuaaday. August 9 .. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

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Yettterdal'• Cryptoqaote: GOOD PAINTING' IS UKE
GOOD COOKING: IT CAN BE TASTED BUT NOT .
EXPLAINED. - MAURICE VLAMINCK
.
'
\· C&gt; 1988 King Fea1ures Sync1tc11e 1nr. ! ·

'I

�·Ohio Lottery

Canadians
upset over
hockey trade

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(j(J.,
...... .. ..

Daily Number ·
418
Pick 4
8607

Page 5

.

•

•

at y

e
Vol.39, No.66
Copyrighted 1988

••

Partly cloudy, low In '108.
Thul!lday, .cloudy, hot and
humid, hlghs ' In mid 908.
Chance of rain 30 percent.

enttne
2 Section•. 1 8

Pomeroy-Middiaport, Ohio,· Wednesday, Aug. i 0. 1988

P•v•

2&amp; Centl

A Multimedia Inc. Nowopop.,

Ohio EPA probes waste found at Lake Erie
By United Press International
The Navy acknowledged It Is
the source of medical debris !hat
washed ashore In North Carolina
while Ohio launched a criminal
Investigation Into the dumping of
bloody syringes and o!her waste
found on a Lake Erie beach.
The potentially Infectious med·
leal waste In North Carolina and
Ohio Is only the latest discovered
on the nation's beaches this
summer, and Congress reacted
to public anger with legislation
Tuesday to combat ocean
dumping.
·
The Senate voted 97·0 to
sharply Increase penalties for
the lllegal disposal o! the medical
wastes lhat 'have closed beaches
throughout the Northeast. Under .

WE'RE OFFERING SPECIAL BUYS FOR SPECIAL CUSTOMERS
WHO SHOP DURING THE HOURS OF .10 P.M.-8--A.MJ
"FREE" Coffee While You Shop
SUPERIOR

Chipped Chopped

Ham ·
~
LB.

I Colden

I

"FREE" CoffH.While You .Shop.

Ripe .

I

Lotsa Pop

5

~

JUMBO

3 LITER

.;

I

BAKERY AND DELl OPEN •
ALL NIGHT

Glazed

Frankies
Wieners

~

12

'

FRESH

SUPERIOR

BAKERY AND DELl
OPEN ALL NIGHT

REITER
ASSORTED FLA~ORS

Donuts
oz.

l·ce Cream JUMBOS
QUART PAIL

PER
DOZEN

PI(O.

$ 99

I

Two young men were killed In
separate accidents In Meigs and
Gallla Counties early this
morning.
The Gallla-Melgs Post of the
State Highway Patrol lnvesti·
gated a fatal accident Wednes·
·day morning on .Yellow aush
. ftlla(l, 1.~ 11111es east of SR 338.
The vlctlm was 'ldent1fled as
David M. Talbott, 22, Rt. 2,
Rac.tne. Talbott was found dead ·
at !he scene of the accident.
Troopers said the wreck was
discovered by a passing motorIst. The accident apparently
occurred around 2 a.m: Wednes·
day, but was not reported until
6: 40 a.m., the time the wreck was
discovered.
According to the patrol, Tal·
bolt's jeep went off the road,
striking a tree. The accident
occurred near Talbott's home.
Trooi&gt;ers said Talbott was appar·
ently •enroute home when the
mishap occurred.
It was third traf!lc fatality
Investigated lnMelgs County Ibis
year by the patrol.
Meigs County Coroner Dr.
James Conde reported Talbott
died between 2 and 3 a.m. o! head
and chest Injuries received In !he
accident. His body was discovered about 6:40 a.m. Wednes·
day by a motorist David Proffitt
who was passing by. The Racine
Emergency Unit and the patrol
Continued on page'16

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(UPI) - In a thundering trial by
fire, the shuttle Discovery's
three main engines finally
roared to life today, 11 days late,
In a "super" 22-second un·
manned test ftrtng marking a
giant step toward the first
post-Challenger flight.
~. •'It was agreatsuccesstoday,''
'Rear Adm. Richard Truly. chief
of the shuttle program, said In an
· InterVIew. "The crew Is ready to
fly. The launch team Is ready to
count the vehicle down. We're
just Itching to get !his flight out of
the way so we can get on to the
next one."
NASA Is pushing to launch
Discovery around Sept. 29 or a
few days earlier, but Truly, while
clearly elated at preliminary
results o! the engine firing, said a
firm launch date for the first
post-Challenger ml~slon would
not be set until alter a dellber·
ately {tawed test boGster Is fired
In Utah next week.
In NASA's second attempt in
six days to pull o!f the critical
engine flrlng, the 12 million·
horsepower engines riashed to
life In a staggered burst of dirty
orange flame at 7:30 a .m. and

TEST FmiNG A SUCCESS - The shuttle Discovery's three
mala rocket engines belch orange flame early Wednesday
momlng, as 12 mUilon horsepower of lbrut rocks the craft, bolted
to the launch pad, during an unmanned test. NASA officials said
the crucial tes toward the first post-Challenger flight went well .

jury
...-Local news briefs----. Grand
•
Meigs fair entry deadline near

Future events chamber topic
Upcoming actlvlttes this fall were dlseussed when the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce met for a shOrt luncheon
meeting Tuesday at Trinity Church In Pomeroy, Presided over
by President Paul Gerard, the group discussed a Halloween
party for October, a musical by the Big Bend Minstrel
Association In November and a New Year's dance and party.

Coroner rules on Norton death
A ruling of death by self-tnntcted wounds to the head from a
.12 guage shotgun has been Issued by Meigs County Coroner Dr.
James Conde In the death of Carl Norton at hls home on
Ebenezer St. tn Pomeroy Tuesday morning. Services for Mr.
Norton, pronounced dead at Veterans Memorial Hospital, are
being arranged at the Fogelsong Funeral Home In Mason, W.

.va.

Autopsy being performed

'·

(

•

An autopsy ts being performed on five month Old Mellssa
Large who was found dead by her mother about 7:55a.m. on
July 29 Meigs Coroner Dr. James Conde reports.
· The baby was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital by an
emergency unit from the residence of James and Debora
Barker near Harrisonville where the mother, Debora Hlveley
and the bsby made their home. Thelnfantwas pronounced dead
on arrival at !he hospital. Dr. Conde said the autopsy Is being
performed by the Franklin County Coroner's Department In
Columbus.
'
Continued on page 16

'

I

•
I

We have experts on !he scene."
"I personally view this as one
North Carolina Health Dlrec· of the most disgusting dumpings
tor Ronald Levine said the 'I've seen In Ohio," state EPA
chances of anyone catching an Director Richard Shank said.
Infectious disease !rom the de- "This Is !he first time we' ve ever
bris are "slim to none."
had a lot of hospital waste wash
Saturday, a swimmer found a up on a beach that we've
vial of a dark substance !hat Investigated."
appeared to be blood near
A piece of cloth that washed
Atlantic Beach, and It was taken ashore on Rhode Island's East
to the state health laboratory for Matunuck Beach Monday bore
testing.
the stamp of a Manhattan hospl·
200 Syringes Found
tal, marking the first time that a
The Ohio Environmental Pro- hospital's name .has surfaced
tection Agency began a criminal publicly In the series o! discover·
Investigation Into the dumping of tes o! medical w;~ste along East
about 200 syringes, some still Coast beaches lhls summer.
containing blood, and other medl·
The stamp, "Presbyterian
cal wastes found this week on a Hospital," has prompted .an
private Lake Erie beach In the Investigation by environmental
exclusive Cleveland suburb of o!flclals. The hospital serves as
the teaching faclllty lor the
Bratenahl.

Columbia Unverslty College of
Physicians and Surgeons.
Presbyterian was one o! 50
private and municipal hospitals
In New York City that was fined
between November 1985 and May
1988 lor not separating their
Infectious garbage from their
regular wast\!.
. Large amounts o! medical
waste began washing up on
Northeastern shores ·In July.
prompting the closing of numer·
ous beaches around New York
City, Massachusetts·, Rhode Is·
land and Connecttcu t.
Waste from sewage treatment
plants also has fouled beaches In
the region. Several beaches In
metropolltan New York City are
off limits to bathers because or
high levels of bacteria.

Discovery test ~Iring said a.
success; crew. ready to fly

Closing time for all open class entries of the Meigs County
Fair Is 4 p.m. Friday . Personnel of the fair board will be at !he
sectetary's of1lce on the fairgrounds from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. both
this Thursday and Friday to accept !he open class entries. The
horse pulling contest Is not Included In !he deadline.

.

wasned ashore Tuesday' and a
Raleigh television station broad·
cast film showing the : debris
clearly was marked "Property or
the U.S. Navy."
Capt. Paul Hanley, a spokes·
man for the Atlantic Fleet In
Norfolk, Va., conceded that !he
debris belonged to the Navy.
Hanley said the Navy sent sailors
to clean up the de]lrls and Is
lnves tlga tlng how It liound up on
the beach.
''We emphasize that at the
moment !here Is no Indication of'·
any risk to the publlc health from
this material," he said. "Navy
regulations regarding the disposal of trash, especially medical
waste, are very strtngent, and we
do not yet know how this refuse
came to be washed up as It has.

Two die
on area
highways

ASSORTED fLA~ORS

Bananas

the blll sent to the House, fines for
dumping medical waste would be
Increased from $25,000 to$250,000
a day and prison terms of up to
five years would be authorized.
The legislation also would
Ioree New York City and eight
other New Jersey and New York
sewage authorities to stop dump·
lng millions of tons of sewage
sludge at sea by 1992 or face huge
civil penalties.
" It should be clear to everyone
that we slmplycannotcontinu~ to
use our oceans as a garbage
can," said Sen. Frank Lauten·
berg, D·N.J., chief sponsor or the
bill.
In Atlantic Beach, N.C., two
garbage bags of needles, rubber
gloves, medication and IV bags

.
'

rece-,ves more ·
Celeste data

CLEVELAND (UPI) - A
federal grand jUJ"Y Investigating
alleged wrongdoing by Gov.
Richard F. Celeste's admlnlstra·
tion reportedly Is now reviewing
the awarding of federal grants to
Celeste campaign contributors.
The " Cleveland Plain Dealer
reported Wednesday that the
grand jury has requested and
received records Indicating the
governor awarded federal Job
Training Partnership Act grants
to campaign contributors over
!he objection o! the Ohio Bureau
o! Employment Services.
In one case Involving a $134,608
grant, the newspaper said, Celeste was specifically warned
that the grant was "very strongly
_opposed" by state and local
· business and political leaders,
and was told the school's program "engages In sex stereotyp·
lng" by training mostly women
for low-paying jobs.
Celeste, however, awarded the
grant.
When The Plain Dealer detailed the award of the grants,
Celeste offlclala said !he governor was not aware of the
objections and suspended a state
worker for not fully lnfOI'Jlling
the governor. Celeste later said
he should have asked lor more
Information .

quickly throttled up to 100 per·
cent power In the first such
launch pad flrlng since Chal·
Ienger blew up 2 \7 years ago.
As engine operation stabilized,
the 6,000-degree exhaust
changed to a pinkish. almost
transparent, fire that Instantly
vaporized torrents or launch pad
cooling water, sending a blllow.lng cloud of steam thou$8nds o!
feet Into the Florldda sky,
·
Gulping more than 1,000
pounds of liquid oxygen and
Itquld hydrogen rocket !uel a
second during the critical
"burn," the three engines were
shut down, one at a time,
beginning a bout I9 seconds after
Ignition. The first engine started,
main engine No.3, was the last to
be shut down at about 22 seconds.
"We have a shot at the end of
September," NASA Admtnlstra·
tor James Fletcher said In an
Interview after the test.
In a brief talk to tired launch
crews, Fletcher said: "Congrat·
ulaUons on a super job by a super
team."
Discovery was attached to the
launch pad by four giant bolts at
the base o! each of Its two
solld·fuel boosters and elaborate

computer safeguards were In
place to make sure the spaceship
stayed put on launch pad 39B.
The firing appear~d normal
but complete results awaited
close analysis of test data from
$1.4 mllllon In Instrumentation
and sensors. Good results would
preserve a slim chance for NASA
to launch Discovery In !he last
lew days of September. an option
rpost engineers believe wlll ultl·
rhately slip away as Inevitable
problems crop up closer to
launch day.
In any case, Truly and
Fletcher agreed that a formal
launch dale would not be announced until after the booster
test flrlng next week, the fifth
and final such test required
before Discovery's blastoff.
The engine flrlng came 11 days
behind schedule but It nonetheless marked a critical milestone
on the road to resuming shuttle
flights .
The valve problem !hat derailed NASA's first attempt to
fire the engines )ast Thursday
was not In evidence today; thanks
to the Installation o! a $95,000,
Continued on page 16

President Reagan wants to
sign drought aid legislation_
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Pres·
!dent Reagan Is ready to sign a
$3.9 bllllon drought relle! bllllnto
law as soon as It reaches hls desk,
a step that will send disaster
checks to farmers struggling
with the worst drought In
decades.
The House gave final congres·
slonal approval to the plan on a
383-18 roll call vote Tuesday, and
Wlilte House spokesman Marlin
Fitzwater said the president
wants to sign the blll before the
end of the week.
"Farmers and their families
will know that relief Is Ol) the
way,'' Fitzwater said.
The Iegtslatlon, whiCh shot

through Congress In less !han one
month, Is !he mos I generous
disaster package ever lor agrl·
culture. It Includes an extra dose
o! help for farmers with the worst
crop losses so they will get a bout
half of their usual Income, a
three-month, 50-cent Increase In
the milk support price for dairy•.
farmers and a consolidated ald
program for livestock producers.
"We have kept the faith. To all
who wlll be helped by this .
legislation, our promise has been
kept," House Agriculture chair·
man Kika de Ia Garza, -D-Texas,
said as the ·House roll call
started.
Agriculture · Department off!·

cials say It will takeabout60days
to Implement the bill and
farmers should get !he ald at !he
start o! the fall harvesting
season, when farmers usually
begin seeing pro!lt from a year of
work.
The drought has stunted crops
in many of the nation's key
growing regions. More than
two- thirds of the 3,100 U.S.
counties have been a!fected. The
Agriculture Department has projected U.S. grain production will
be cut by one-fourth this year.
The grain trade says the losses .
may be even worse.
"Despite the huge crop losses
Continued on page 16

Board announces safety meeting
for Meigs school bus drivers
The annual school bus drivers bert 'White, Joann Newsome, and Deborah Grueser. Meigs
safety meeting was announced Elnora Bernard, Eastern Local; Local.
The county board approved a
for 7:30p.m. on Monday, Aug. 22, Bob Dudding, Wendell Ervin,
at Meigs High School when the Milford Frederick, Romaine welding II course of study and
Meigs County Board of Educa· Frederick, Roger Hlll, Thomas discussed an adult baste educalion met In regular ~sslon Hill, Daniel Hlll, Delbert Smlht, tlon'.program which wlll start In
Larry Smith, Ernest Spencer, September. The need for a
Monday.
SchOQI bus drivers approved Dan Smith, Don Smtih and speech and language therapist
for certification during the meet· William Downie, Jr., Southern was discussed. Applications are
lng Include: Paul Baer, Sandra · Local; Debra Burns, Letha COt· still being accepted for the
Cowdery, Flossie DIU, William terlll, Teresa Cremeans, Mary position from certified personHannum, Ruth Masters, Darlene King, Juanita Lambert, Carl nel. A special meeting will be set
Reed, carolyn Ritchie, Nita J. Morris, Carrie Morris, Leo Mor- at a later date to fill the post.
Attending the meeting were
Ritchie, Mary Rose, VIolet Sat· ris, Steven Morris, Minnie Thorn·
terfleld, Keltha Whitlatch, ton, William Thornton, Mont board members, Harold Roush,
George Wolfe, Okey T. PuUins, Vance, Charles Williamson, Lots Orls Smith, Bob Burdette, VIrgil
Gary Dill, Archie Rose, andy Wyant, Katherine Deskins, · King, and Harold Lohse, and
Rector, Bruce Myers, Kathy Donna Daniels, Noami Sroufe, Meigs County Superintendent of
Schools John D. Riebel, Sr.
Barringer, Joann Calaway, Ro-

- ----..-'-' -- _.... .

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