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Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

Local briefs-...... ·Death
Plan early trash service Friday
Manl~&gt;y's Trash Service will be running Its Friday trash
pickup route on South Second, South Third and South Front Sts.
in Middleport earlier than In the past. All customers must have
their trash out by 8 a.m. for pi~.k-up.

Meigs band boosters to meet
Meigs Junior and Senior High Band BoostE-rs will meet in the
high school band room at 7 p.m. on Monday . Preparations for
the fair booth are underway and workers and donations ar("
nffiied.

Orange· truStees meet Monday
Orange Township Trustees will meet In regular session
Monday, 8 p.m., at the home Of Dorothy Calaway, clerk.

Kindergarten meet Monday
A. meeting for parents of children who will attend
kindergarten in Southern School .District will be held 7:30p.m.
Monday in the highschool cafeteria. Any child not registered for
kindergarten should be registered at this time. Birth certificate
and immunization record required.

TB tests being administered
Joan Tewwksbary, R.N., Meigs County tuberculosis nurse,
will be giving skin tests to all Meigs County school personnel
who have not yet received their tests for the upcoming school
year. Tests will be given Monday and Tuesday. from 8:30 to
11 :30 a.m. at the tuberculosis office in the Meigs County
Multi-Purpose Senior Center. These dates also apply for anyone
handling food for the Meigs County Fair. ThE&gt; skin tE&gt;sts are free
of charge. Ca ll the tuberculosis officE&gt; at 992-3722 for further
information.

Plan organi:zational meeting
All Meigs Local Junior High football · players, 7th and 8th
grades, are asked to attend an organizational meeting August
1,1, 7 p.m. , at the junior high gymnasium.

EMS receives seven calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports seven
calls Tuesday; Racine at 7:13a.m. to Hill Road for Ulla Strauss
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at 1:19 p.m. treated
but did not transport William Halley; ·Pomeroy at 2:03p.m. to
114 Laurel St. for Crystal Pridemore to Veterans Memorial
HosiJital: Tuppers Plains at 4:55 p.m. to Chester for Jessica
Pooler to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at 7:39 p.m. to
Pomeroy Health Care Center for Wade Johnson to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at JO: 54 p.m. to Forest Run Road
for George Fblm&lt;:r to Holzer Medical Center. ·

Victim

stil~

listed as poor

Charles A.. Boggess, 26, of Racine, Injured in an accident on
Route 124 at Minersville at 8:1op.m. Saturday, is ~rill offic ially
listed in poor condition at Grant Hospital, Columbus. However,
a nurse in the critical care area where Boggess is confined
reported his condition rhts morning as stable and not poor.
·
Bog-gess was taken Saturday night ro Veterans Memorial
Hosptial by .EMS. He was laier transported to Grant Hospital by
Lifeflight.
Boggess. traveling west on a motorcycle. was struck by an
E-astbound car t'hat was a ttempting ro pass another vehicle. The
incident was investigated by 'the State Highway Patrol. .

Super jackpot at $18
CLEVELAND tUPil - Brisk
ticket sales have pushed Ohio's
Super Lotto jackpot up to at least
$18 million for tonight's drawing
· _;_ the biggest top prize s ince
game began twice-a-week drawings in April.
After the jackpot went unclaimed for a fourth consecutive ,
drawing last Saturday, the top
prize automatically increased to
$15 million. But heavy ticket
sales 'this week have added
another $:l miliion to the ·pot for
tonight's game. lottery commis·
slon spokeswoman Anne Bloomberg said Tuesday.
This is the first rash of lotto
fever to strike since April, when
the rules and the jackpots were
changed, Bloomberg said.
•'I really think folks have been
waiting on this ," s he said.

Meese ...
Continued from page 1
Rep . .Jack Brooks, D-Texas,
was one of those who disagreed
with Inouye.
" In my mind, the attorney
general is part of the scenario."
try ing to said
brea. k "He
the code.
He was
Brooks
(wasl
not
not in the cirde very deeply and
hedoes n'twanrtobeandhe'snot
going to upset the .apple cart at
a II.

· Li&lt;'ense issued
A marriage. license was issued
In Meigs Count y Probate Court to
Timothy Ray Roberts, 21. Reedsville. and Kimberly Ann Schul,
18, Reedsville.

To end marriage
In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Charles A. Ritchie,
Racine, and Lori K. Ritchie filed
for dissolution of marriage.
"

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

GOOD USED
W~SHERS, DRYERS
REFRIGERATORS, TVs
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

COUNTY
APPLIANCES
627 3rd Ave., OalllpoHs
PH. 446·1699 .
HOUIS: 8 A.M.·6 P.M.

•

'

'

-

·-

millio~

Apparently $15 million was the
magic figure that brought casual
players back into thP fo ld and
enticed regulars to dig deeper fo r
tickets, she said.
"This is the first time that we
have exceeded the $3 million
minimum rollover,·' s he sa id.
In April when the OhioLotto
game was ended and the Super
Lot to began twice-a -week draw ·
ings, the minimum Super Lotto
jackpor was reduced from $5
million to $3 m!Hion. Lottery
officials guaranteed that jackpot
wou ld grow at least $3 mllllon
each time no one wo n the top
prize.
Until Saturday, the revised
Silprr Lotto's jackpot had not
grown beyond $12 million. Lor tery Director Ronald Nabakowskl said las( month that lotto
ticket sales were down about
$500,0'i0 a wePk compared with
the combined Super Lotto and
Oh loLotto sa les be(orp the
c hange.
.
The largest jackpot under the
old Super Lotto game was $27.7
million. reached March 4 after
five weeks without a winner.
Three holders of winning tickets

Wednesday, July 29, 1987

Pomeroy MiddlepOrt, Ohio

toll jumps to II due to heat wave

By JACK BEARY
United Press International
A heat wave blamed for at least
11 deaths threatened a lOth day of
misery today from Dixie to the
Dakotas to the desert Southwest
in states where sun rays started
an apartment fire and a court
officer served free popslcles to
cool off employees.
· Forecasters expected blistering temperatures In the. central
United States and warned high
humidity would exacerbate discomfort levels.
"The Eas 1 Coast will continue
to cool down a bit, but the heat
will · be continuing in the Plains
states all the way from Texas to
South Dakota and Texas to
Alabama." said Lyle Alexander

of the National
Weather Service.
.
He said highs within a triangle
drawn between those states
would range !rom 95 to 100
degrees today.
.
'flle East's respite from the
broiling heat. would probably
snap by the end of the week,
Alexander said.
·
Urlrelentlng waves of summer
heat have been blamed for fhe
deaths of at least 11 people In
Indiana, Illinois, South Carolina,
Georgia; Wyoming and Missouri.
Heat-related deaths In Mlssour I and Illinois, prompted St.
Louts health authorities to declare a heat alert Tuesday for the
two-state metropolitan area.
Esther Haynes, 76, was found
dead · .F riday In her home In

Maplewood, a suburb of Sl.
Louis, apparently from the heat,
Investigators said.
Health officials also cited -as
an example of the added &lt;!_lingers
oi the extreme heat In linclosed
places - the death in Decatur,
Ill., of a 3-year-old boy Sunday
who had accidentally locked
himself In the trunk of a car.
"He died as a result of
heatstroke," said M.acon County
Coroner Chris Vallas. "HeQ¥'aS
playing around the car, and his
motjle,r missed him, started
looking for him and found him ~

two hours later
trunk."

lo~ked

Reds
slam
Padres
15-5
Page 3

In the

A 73-year-old St. Louis man
died Monday, apparently of a
heatstroke, In anapartment without air conditioning and a .·
temperature of 110 degrees,
pollee said.
Fire Investigators said heat
from the sun started an apartmen! ilrE&gt; Tuesday In Omaha . .
Neb, that caused an estimated · ·
$15,000 In damage. Omaha's high ·
was 96 degrees. ·
·

Vol.37. No.67
Copyrighled 1987

In final business, Board Presi- personnel, negotiations, finances
dent Robert Snowden was named and pending litigation followed
the open session.
a deleg·ate and Robert Barton an
Present for the last night's
alternate to the annual business
meeting of the Oh io School meeting were Robert Snowden.
Boards Association to be held Larry Rupe, Larry Powelf. RINov. 9-llln Columbu s. Snowden chard Vaughn and Robert Barwas also nominated as a member ton, board mem hers, . Superin, tendent Dan Morris, Assistant
of the All Ohio School Board.
Superintendent James Carpen·
The date of the regular August
board meeting was changed to tcr, Treasure~ Jane Fry, High
Tuesday August 11 at the regular School Principal James Miller
and Assistant High School Princitime and meeting place.
pal Fenton Taylor.
An executive session to discuss

Area .deaths

.

I

Ci2JSNOW
FRONTS:
Warm

II

mJ

-RAIN
SHOWERS
"Cold
. . SialiC . . Occludtd

ters, Janice C. Stanley, New
Maplh0wlfi1irimumltmperatui'IS.AIIellt50~.ofanyshadeda~alll-t
Haven and RebeCca Matheny,
to receive prwelpltatlon tnc:licated
.
UPI
Bessie OhlingE1r. 81, of New · Jacksonville Fla .; three sons,
Haven, died Tuesday In Holzer
d c
WEATHER MAP - Showers and thunderstorms will edend
B Le
R.
..
tarr. I char
..
from the coast of tha Carolinas acr088 Florida and thee. astern Gulf
Medical Ce nt er Hospital, Robert
Mason and Strawford R. , Mount
'
Gallipolis.
Alto: four sisters, Mary Zerkle
of Mf'xlco coast through the Mississippi Delta. Shower11 and
Born Dec. 28, 1905, In Letart, antl Monna .Gibbs , Letart, Nellie
thunderstorms will .b e scattered from northern llllnol8 acrou
she was the daughter of the late Schools. Point Pleasant and
•astern 1\tlnnesota and over the central Rockies acr0881he Great
Ramie and Mary Rebecca Roach Nettle Hemsley , Syracuse. brothBasin Into southern Nevada lllld northern Arizona. High
Edwards.
ers. Willie Edwards , Hartford
temperatures will reach the 90s over much olthe nation.
She was a member of the First and Earl Edwards, Letart : 21
Church of God, New Haven, grandchildren and 17 grrat ·
Smith-Capehart American Le· grandchildr~n
'f'hursday . with a chan~ of
Sou lh Cenlral Ohio
glon Unit Post 140 and the
Funeral services will be Frl ·
thunderstorms and highs beVariable
clouldness
toda)'
.
Stewa'rt Johnson VFW Post 9926 day a t I p.m . at the Foglesong ·
85 and 90.
tween
with highs between 1'!5 and 90.
Auxilary .
Funeral Home, Mason , with the
The
probabilit y of preclplta ·
Parrty cloudy tonight , with a low
She was preceded in a da~g h · Rev. Donald Roach and the Rev .
tlon
Is
ncar zero today and
In the mid 60s . Partly c loudy
ter. Cat her ine R. Stewart, a Freda Turley officiating. Burla I
tonight
ond
30 perGent Thursday .
gra ndson, Raymond "Tim " Sre· will . follow In the Graham
Winds
will
be light and varia·
wart, two sisiers. one brother Cemetery.
ble today and tonight.
and three other grandchildren .
Friends may call at the funeral
EKtended Forecast
She is 'urvlvl!d by two daugh- home from 6to9 p.m ..Thursday .
Friday throu1h Sunday
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Fair through the period, with
Provided hy
highs rangln~ from . 8.~ to !10
Rryc~ and Mark Smith
Frida\' and from 90 to 95
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
Four defendants were fined Hood. Pomeroy, $48: TPrcsa
Sarurday and Sunday. Overnl~ht
and 14 others forfeited bonds in Dailey, Long Bottom, $44; Char·
IOIO.'S will be In the mid 60s ear~v
t'lrm
Price
the court of Pomeroy Mayor lotte Lyons. Racine. $46: Kathy
Friday and near 70Sa turday and
Am El~ctrlc Power .......... .'.. 27\.;.
Richard Seyler Tuesd·ay night.
Fraley, Pomeroy, $44; Roberr
Sunday mornings .
Fined were Don Roush, Mid- Harden, Racine. $50: Dan .A r- AT&amp;T .......... .. ............. .. 31'}1,
dleport , $43 and costs, s peed ; nold , Pomeroy, $49; Margi e' Ashland Oil ............ : ........... 67 )1,
Bob Evans Farms .............. 2~~
Johnny Harrison. Pomeroy, '$63 Shuler, Portland, $53; Kit tle
and cost·s, expired plate; Judith Harmon. Portland, $58: William Cha rll)lng Shopprs ...... ..... ... 30 ~
Knapp, Racine, $45 · and cos ts, Pflefer, Jackson, $46; Connie Federal Mog ul ..... , .............. 48 ~
Veterans Memorial
Goodyea r T&amp;R ................... 72 Y.,
speed; Sherry Cogar, Racine, $25 Thompson. Ne,w Haven , S45:
Tuesday Admission&amp; - Bettv
Heck's In c ... .. ................... :1%
and ~osts. pass ing on double Ronald Arnold, Pomeroy, $63;
Willis. Raci ne: Beverly Spires.
yellow line.
William Lovins, New Haven, $46. LlmltPd lr1 c ....... .. ............ ... 48 ~
Fa irmont , W.Va .; Ulla Strauss.
Forfeiting bonds, all on
Kimber ly Dent , Pomeroy, for- Mull imedla Inc . ...... ........ , .. 70 \'0
Racine; Paul Sayre, Racine:
charges of speed, were Anthony felted .a $43 bond on charges of no Rax Restaurants ........ ....... ... 5th
Bennie Lyons. Pomeroy; New· •
Deem, Racine, $50; Elizabeth protective helmet.
·~ Robbins &amp; Mye rs .. ........ ....... 9')4
a za Smith , Pomeroy; Wade
Shoney's Inc .................. ... .30'!(,
,Johnson . Racine .
Wendy's I nt 1.. ......... ....... ..... lOY.
Tuesday Discharges - Mary
Continued from page I
Wort hlngt on Ind ......... .. ....... 21=r.;
Rl neha rt . Anna Koenig .
Co lumbus &amp; Southern Ohio E lec r. He was named performance , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ric Company's Poston Staflon. In engineer se nior ·In 1972 and .
1972 he was promoted to superin- performance supervising eng!·
tendent of.. maintenance at neer in 1977. He was promoted to
C&amp;SOE's General Office in 1978. plant performance superintend·
He was promoted tO assistant ent at Mountaineer Plant In 1979
plant manager at the Conesville and to opea·ations superintendent
Statton In 1980 and transferred to In 1981.
the Mountaineer Plant In 1985 i~
the same position.
Powell, a native of Princeton,
holds a Bachelor of Scie nce
WITH FliES ......... S1.79
Degree in Mechanic Engineering
from Vlrg.inla PolytE'chnlc lnstl·
FABRIC ' CUfTS/SlWING NOfiONS
tut&lt;' &amp; State University. He also
POLYESTER QUitT IAmNG
has artended the American
(ly Tht Yc,...l
· Electric Power Manage ment
OPEN TUES.-WEO .-FRI.
Program at the University of
10 A.M .-5 P.M.
'•
Michigan Gradua te School of
' THURS. 11 -5 P.M .
Business Administration.
CLO~~~ J~~- ~~ON .
"At the IIIII of tlw·PollllntY·•-Irltlte
He joined the Phlllp Sporn
IOCATD 5 MUS NOmt Of
POMEROY, 011.
PH. 992·2556
Plant in 1969 as a performance
CIIISlll 011 SJ, n 7
~
engineer and transferred to the
PHONE _
•
~ '\.J ,... ~ . . . . .

Bessie Ohlinger

By NANCY YOt\CHAM
Sentinel Staff Wrlt•r
A $.3. 2 rnllllon 100-bed nursing home in
Middleport is wllhln days of beginning construction . Documents regarding the Issuanc e of ta~
free lhdustrial bonds to finance the project were
finalized Wednesday a nd a resolution passed by
the Meigs Cou nty Cornmlssloners to enable the
bonds, Issued In December, to be brought out of
escrow .
Dr. Harold Brown, Pomeroy. serves as
president of Me igs Center Ltd., 'the limited
partne rship which is building the new facility .
Brown. as ow ner or the fa c ility, will now be able to ·
dra\\&lt;on the funds a nd proceed with rhe project.
According ro Brown and Katherine Raup, an
assoclatr with the bond counseling firrn of Peck, ·
Shaffer ~·nd Williams, pre-closing on the project
will be Friday . A few other ''odds and ends'· must
then be eliminated Brown said, after which

Super lotto

1-5·10
11-35-44

•

at y

enttne

2 Sections, 16 Pages

25 Cents

· __ A Multimedia Inc. NeWspaper

Name weaver...

~

~

r;:==========::;-1 \

t

+----..+o·o ·

Speeial of the Week
FISH TAIL

$1.09

•

f.

1·.

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

n......, """"-

915 3909

OR BOTH!

The paving .is being funded by a. loan from
Farmers Bank and Savings Co. The t-ank Is
loaning the money at a six percent lntrest rate and
all monies will be channeled through the offiCe of
Coun1y Auditor William Wicklin e to be certified
and a llocated as needed .
In other business, Commissioner Richard Jone s
reported the county's 1987 Community Develop·
ment Block Grant allocation will total $90,300.
Undivided local government funds for the
county in 1988 li;lVe been estimated at $405,870
according to a notification from the Ohio
Departmen t of Taxation. This amount is within
$1,000 of last year' s total Jones said.
i'n final business, the commissioners approved
· an advance draw of $30,000 for the general fund as
requested by the auditor, .;and scheduled Monda y,
11 a .m. , for a meeting with the budget
••
commission.

question .

wit h Casey and North before

However, pointing to one of the · expqsing the diversion Nov. 25,

. major discrepa ncies fa cing invest igators. the nation 's c hief
law officer said Wednesday he
does not believe Oliver North's
s tory tha t the late CIA Director
William Casey was involved in
the plan to divert money to
Nicaraguan Contra rebels from
secret U.S. arms sales to Iran .
";Casey was I a person I would
believe without ques tion," Mees e
declared when a sked about the
cont rad iction. "I do believe Mr.
Casey's statem ent s to me."
Meese remind ed lawmakers
that when he spoke separat ely

the CIA. chief said he was not
aware of it and the White House
aide said only three people in the
government did know about it - .
himself, his boss John Poindexter, a nd Poindexter's predecessor as natiOnal security adviser,
Robert McFarlane.
Since then , evidence has shown
Casey's role wa s s ignificant and
North has testifi ed under oath
that the spymas ter was deeply
involved, getting excited e nough
about it that he even wanted to
'divert money from the I ran deals
topay for other covert operations
.around ihe world.

Nation's economic index figures up
0.8 percent ·in June, officials say
TEAM IN ACTION - Above arc some of the
Middleport Fire Department Competition Team .
memhcroln action at the State Conference. Left to
rl~hl ar~ Gory Ellis, EMT-P, one of the judges,
and Don Stivcrs, .GN, AEMT-t\E, with back to
judge. Otht•r members of I he learn Include Craig
D11rsl, Kenny Byer and Kyle Woods. The team

finished eighth In slate competition In June
competing ag11lnsl teams from ·columbus Div Ision of Fire, Newark Fire Department, and
several large clly hospltalleams. The team will
put on a demonslratlon Sunday aflerfloon al the
Middleport Fire Station.

:4

Middleport fire department will
obseMTe 50th anniversary Aug. 1-2
Th~ Mlddlcpoprt F'lr(' Depart ·
mcnr will cPiebratc .'ill years of
rmet•gency squad service this
Sat urday and Sunda y beginning
with a dlnn~r for hon ot3ry

members a1 the new AmC'I'I('an

· Legion Ha ll Saturday evrnln g.
Following rhc dinner ·an

awards ceremony will be held
honoring the ear ly member s of
the squad. Louts ,·Bud" Sanford,
retired fire chi e f of Sharon
TownsHip Fire Department and
wel l known Instruc tor In Ohio will
be the guest s peaker.
An open reception will be held

0

A $27,000 CAR •••

Gallipolis.
Separate bids were submilted for each road
which includes apt&gt;roxlmately 13 miles all total.
Shelly's separate bids were $122.968.50 for·
approximately three and one-half miles on Cou nt y
Road 46, Success Road; $113,482.20 for approx ·
miat ely three and one-half niles on County Road
30. Forest Run; and $201,781 for a little more than
six miles on Cou nty Road .1.
The total bid from Shelly is abou l $52.000 less
than the total estimated cost which was $489,147.
The roads will b,e paved according to Ohio
Department of Trans portation specifica tions and
will be leveled with a drag course, exp lained
Coun ly Engirteer Phil Roberts , prior to applica tion of the wearing surface.
Davis anticipated the paving will begin within
30 days and take abou t a monrh to comp lete. He
reported that several Meigs Coun ty concerns will
assist in the project.

WASHINGTON (U P! ) -The
congressional Iran-Contra committees, holding answers from
nearly all the major figures in the
scandal, are mopping up their
public hearings with a question
much like a stain th at won't come
out : " Who' s lying and who 's not
lyinr:?"
.
· A. ttorne,v General F.dwi n
'Meese, who spent mos t of his two
days at tl)e hearings fending oft
criticism of his initial inquiry
Into the casP las t fall on behalf of
his friend President Reagan, was
unable to answer the nagging

Hospital news

''
'

'
following
the earlier evening
activities.
On Sunday beginning at 2 p .m .
the fire department will have
displays and demonstrations
showing the ear ly equipment and
methods In first a ld. Demonst ra tIons of modern day technology
will also be conducted by the fire
department competition team.
· Capping the day's events will
be a demonstration of rescue
equipment In cooperat ion with
Grant Hospita l LifeFiight
helicopter.
"
The public wlll have the
opportunity to see first hand the
extrication of a " victim" from an
.''auto accident" and a close up
view of the Ll feFiig ht helicopter
demonstrating the serices availabie to the people of Meigs
County.

WASHINGTON I UP!)
for what are known as "sensitive
Higher prices for s tocks and for materials," a category that
certa in . materials pushed the includes product s such as
nation's bellwether economic . lumber, scrap iron and cotton,
index up 0.8 perccnl in June, th e for which prices vary by
. Commer ce Department sa id demand.
today.
If these prices go up then
The rise In the Index of Leading dema nd mu st be good, and that in
Indicators follow ed a rev ised 0.5 turn mus t mean the economy Is
p.ercent gain In May . Th e govern- on a roll, rhe government figures.
ment previously estimated thar
The sensitive material s pri ce
change at 0.7percent , but had to increase cons tituted just over
lower it after gett in g a nega tive half the rise in the index, the
report on change in credit.
Commerce Department said.
April's estimate sta yed un- Most of the rest came from a
changed· at a 0.2 percent jump in the va lue of the Standard
increase.
&amp; Poors list of the 500 mos t
The index, which signals commonly traded stocks.
changes in America 's economic
There were two other min or
h e~lth, has fallen only three
positive factors: a modes t rtse in
times in the past 18 month~ .
new orders for cons umer goods
It drew mos t of its strength in
and materials and an increase In
June from twoqfitsll indicators.
the number of building permits
First, prices rose 1. 56 percent

issued.
They helped offset four negative factors in the index: a tick
upward in the number of new
unemployment cl'aims, a drop. In
contrac ts and orde~s for plants
and equipment , improved deliv ery of products by vendors and a
small shrinkage of the money
supply.
The government views im proved vendor performanee as a
negative beCause it Indicates to
them that vendors don't have
enough business to keep them
busy.
Oneoth~r factor .- the average
work week by production
workers - was unchanged. Information on changes in inventories and changes in credit was
unavailable, assuring the index
will be revised next month,

State liquor
•
pnces
go up
0

0

l'ost Times: 730 Evenings (Monday through Saturday)
1:30 Matinees (Wednesday and Saturday)

'

Cross Lanes, IW £Xit off 1-64

•

By JOSEPH MIANOWANY
and E. MICHAEL MYERS

Four fined in Pomeroy Mayor's Court

EASTERN Htll
FABRIC SHOP

Partly cloudy Friday.
Chance of showers and
lhunderstorms. Highs In
the mid 80s. Probability of
rain 40 percent tonight.

Meese does not believe North
told truth about CIA director

Daily stock prices

If you can Pick Six, you could win $25,0001 Starting Thursday, July
23rd, each evening performance we'll offer a $25,000 Pick S1x Jackpot to
anyone who selects the winnin9 dogs for the 5th through 10th races. The
jackpot will be offered eve!}' mght through the end of July or unt1l
somebody wins' Be there eve!}' night and you can have up to eight chances
to win!
·
There is one entl}' per person per night, and you must be present to win
(no purchase or wager necessaf}'). In case of multiple winners, the prize will
be split. Registration ends each night at 8:.15 pm.
And what a car! A reprodvction 1929 Mercedes Gazelle/ For your chance to
win this beauty, register at Tri-State now throug~ July 31st. The more
. ·.
times you reg1ster, the better your chances to wm!
There's no purchase necessaf}', but you must be present to win. FREE
ADMISSION the night of the drawing, so come oil out for your chance .to
win $25,000 or this car valued at $2 7,000 or both!

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

.,

5685

-----Weather------

WIN $25,000 .••

or SHINE"

Pick 4

construction will start.
Actual constructl&lt;i~ costs for the building
amount · to $2.06Q .· million Brown reported.
Contractor on the project Is M&amp;J Construct.ion Co.
of Bidwell.
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Under new laws regarding the sale of ta x·fr ee
bonds, a nursing home would not qualify for
funding. Conflrmat.ion of the financing for th e
Middleport facility was rece ived just prior to
enactment of the new regulations Raup said.
The new facUlty Is expected to provide 160 jobs
in the county . Brown extended his thanks to the
commissioners for their assistance on the project
which has been underway· for two-yeafs·:·•A tota l bid of $438,231.70 from the Shelly Co ..
Thornvllll&gt;, was accepted by the Meigs County
Commissioners for a hot mix paving program for
the county. Shelly's bid was the . only one
submllted for the project and present at tlie bid
opening on ·behalf of Shelly was Jess Davis of

TRI-STATE GREYHOUND INCREASES PICK SIX JACKPOT

"RACING RAIN

089

"?meroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 30. 1987

r~s:h:a:red~~th:a:t:po=:t·::::::::~====~A.~m=o=s~P~Ia~n~t=t~h~e~f~o~ll~o~w~in:g~y=ea:r:
· ~~==~~~~~~~~==~!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::~::::~::~~:::;
,

lnfrlrnMtloll: ·116- fOGO
#flls1rv.tlons: 776-51100

Daily Numher

Construction to start soon on nursing home

Meigs .board... _c_o_nt_ln~u_ed_f_ro_m-=-pa..;:g;_e_1_ __

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~hio Lottery

DOCUMENTS FINALIZED - Conatnctlon of a 13.2 million
nursing ho'!fe In 1\tlddleport Is within days of beginning now lhal
documents regiiJ'dlng the project's financing have been finalized.
1\telgs County Commissioner Richard Jones signs papers along
wllh Dr. Harold Brown and his wife, Lynn, owners of the faclllly.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
Prices will be increased an
average of 10 cents a bottie
Saturday at state liquor across
the state.
•
The Increase is to offset expenses, which have gone up since
the last general price adjilstm&lt;int
seven years ago, said William J.
Flaherty, director of the Department of Liquor Control.
The htke Is expected to increase state Uquor profits by $4.4
million In the next year.
Some customers will nnotice
BEEHIVE OF ACTIVITY - Second Street,
no change, a11d others will
Pomeroy,
at the Intersection ol Court. St.,
encounter higher prices tiecause
Pomeroy
was
like an obstacle course Wednesday
the department's increase coinmor~lng. There were Ohio Power trucks, General
cides with the reguiar quarterly
Telephone truck and a village truck along with
price adjustment by distillers,
employes working In the same area. Unes were
Flaherty said. ·

being changed and old power ,poles were being
removed. Pictured Is George Nesselroad of the ·
Ohio Power Company 888istlng as one. of the old
poles was puUed from the ground. New poles were ,
placed earlier to take the place of the old ones. ,
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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Streef
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE ·~IEIGS- MASON AREA

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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
Pi\T WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publish er / Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manag~r

A MEMBER of Th f' Un il f'd PrC'SS lnT ('rnal ional. Inl ~1 n d Di.\i l~· P rr~ ~
Associati on anc1 1h&lt;' Amf'rlcan Nf'wsp tl p£' r Pub li shr rs Assoc iaTl,on.
LETTER~ OF' OP !N IOJ' :1 1T " "f'lc-o mP . T hC'\' should t&gt;r" l f'ss th an :mo words
Jntfa. All lC'! 1c·r~ arf' ~u·h i ,.,., 10 &lt;'till hi I! ~~ ntl mu o; t bf' ... il! m'tl «·it h n;1 mt •. Htldn•ss ;t nd
ll'lf'phonP nu m hc•r No

u n ~ig nNJ

lrqf'rs will hf' puhli shP(I. LC'IH'I'S sh ould be• In

_good IUSTC ,". ;Jtl() ]'f'SS in g i SS U I"'~. 1101 p f'rsn n; ii \!I ('S.

\

Fifty- more ways
•

to leave your .lover

WASHINGTON- A n~· timc you sing "There Must Be 50 Wa ys To
: Leave Your Lover ." thC' lyrics must make you feel liki&gt; a piker .
· Ot· rather, rC'ad0rs of " Mal0dirta' ' magazine must feel th at way.
· Actuall)·. according to the s~lf- sty led "International Journal of
; Verbal Aggression ," there are more than a hundred wa ys to "sack
• yout· lovcr." and your given name. or nickname, doesn't even have to
: rhYme with "free.
. The authors of an articlrcalled "Scram" lis!lOl insult s "!hat tell an
• unwanted pe0r to depart or le ~IXC' ta group."
; Th&lt;'se ins ults " ma y also bC' used to t'&lt;'jecr an unwa nt~d lovC'r." the&gt;'
: tell us, and I am willing to overlook th e fact that most oft he pu t-downs
originally wct·c coined by high schoolers .
•
"Rather than telling the newcomer straig htforwardly. 'Please
l0ave. this is none of 1·our bu siness.· a member of the clique ma.1· usc
an insult in asking the newcomer to leave." the&gt;· sa)·.
. You co uld. of course. be stra ightforward about it. but that is -nowa~·
· to sell magazines. 1 recommend telling an unwanted lover to "makC'
' likt' a bo~· scout and decamp."
Th at's assum ing. of course. i l is a male lover you arc trying to gC't
rid of. Female lovC'rs. b~· contrast. arc m ore likely lo stick around
awhile aftN being invitC'd lo emulate bo.1· scouls .
, Howc1w. the aulhors ass un• us this Is no invitation at al l. Th ey
. prefer to call the insults "('XI'itarions. the opposit0 of inv it ations."
: And I 'll not at·uge with that .
• On(' mi!Zhl rxvitr a female lo ver to "make like a hotel gues t and
: chC'ck out" but onC' certainly wouldn't sugges t that she "make like a
hockey player and j)'et the puck our of h('re. · ·
Vet')' few femal e lovf.'rs pi a:&gt; hockey. Besides that. she might makC'
like a hocke)· pla yer and smite you with a stick.
. She mi!Zhl also throw the puck at yQ)l. Or fling a golf (')ub in )'OUt'
· direct ion. if one be handy.
ThC' magaz inC' says "'impf'rJ I ivc-s of a s imilar form or stru c turC'also
:exist which make a strong and insult ing request fo r othPr kinds of
· actions. " It warns th at s uch rxvitations as " makC' likCl a d octor and
: operate '· might bP in tcrp t'0tCd as a "request for action."
By "action", though, the author s apparent!~· had more in mind a
· "strong r equest to c0ase speaking' ' as found in the C'xvitCJ t ion to

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"make likC' a lighl bulb a nd click oft"
Be warned, however, that !he fcm aiC's I have known were more
likely to click on. But th en the)· also were inclined to leave li!Zhfbulbs
burning all. over the house.
If you r unwanted lovers insist un talking as well. I t•erommencl
tr1·ing a slru ight forward approach. surh as telling them to "s hut up."
Maledict a says the " ultimat e rrq u0st to lra,·r is thC'requrst todir."
as in imperati,·rs like "make like a mule and kick the bucket, " " make
likP a toad and croak " and "make like a thought and perish."
Yes. and also think tw ice about ex,·iting unwant ('d lovers to "mak e
like a banana and PC'01. " The~· might take you litera l !?.

PICTURE oUR HERo,
RIDING TRIUMPHANTLY
INTo THE SUN~ET. ..

2-The Daily Sen1inel·
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio ·
Thursday, Jjjy 30. 1987

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to tell )Yh&amp;t she knows because internal Investigative report,
she's afraid she will be forced to commission officials broke their
name tier lnfort'llants at the . ·Rledge of protection on three
plant, subjecllng them to possl· separa re·qccaslons : .
ble reprisal. The Government
The last breach occurred as
Accountability Project Is a pub- Atchison was walking out of the
lic' .Interest group devoled to plant moments .after he was fired
protecting whistle !&gt;lowers.
In April, 1982. The NRC 's senior
Garde told our associate Ste· resident inspector, Robert G.
wart Harris that most oftheplant 'Taylor, was overheard to say.
workers and · NRC employees "There goes your 1980 alleger,"
who talked to her did so only with accordi ng to the NRC report. The
the explicit understanding that Labor Department subsequ ently
they would not be ldenllfled.
overturned Atchlson:s firing as
Their fears of retallatio'n are "Improper," accordJng to NR C
understandable; NRC officials In flies .
·
Texas have been accused of
Taylor admits he made the
breaching confidentiality In the comment, .but he told us It did not
past. Charles Atchison, a worker br&lt;&gt;ach the confidentiality agree·
at the Comanche Peak nuclear ment , which he says lastE'd only
plant n&lt;~ar Dallas, was !Ired after as long as Atchi son worked at
the NRC broke It s promise to him Comanche Peak.
and revealed that he 'Was the
More recentiy, th e tar ge ts of
source of Information about an Internal NRC Investig ation
defect.ive welds at the pl ant. were given copies of the Invest I·
Indeed, according to an NRC gators' highly criti cal report

BELZONI. Miss. tNEAl Beneath a b.Jazjng summer sun,
hundreds of squirming,. wrJg.
gling catfish are hoisted from a
pond in a mesh basket held aloft
by a cra ne, then dumped into a
water-filled truck bed for a quick
trip to a processing plant.
At the nearby packing facility.
the fish are dE'capitated. E'Viscer ated, skinned , filleted , ired frozen and boxPd for shipping- an
asset.nbly line process that consumes less than a half-hour.
That' s a summary description
of the harv('sting of Mississippi' s
newesl agricultural produ ct , a
once-lowly fish whose surp rising
rolE' in the reviva l of th e sl ate's
rural economy Is, In great
measure, att ributable to the
visi on and persev('rance of one

Tommy Ta ylor. the newly
appolntPd agr icultura l agenl
here In Humphreys Count y at !hi•
time. waged a determined ca m·
paign to convince local fa r mers
th at their dwindling cotton and
soybean production should be
supplanted not by other tradl·
llonal row crop s but by a
thoroughly unconvent ional alter·
native- catfish .
" We did a lot of staying up late
at night " In those early years.
Tay lor says in describing the
initial trial-and -error process
that since has been repla ced by
sophlsticatl'd management wch ·
nlques, scienllflca lty formulated
feed and automat ed process ing
fac iliti eS~

After going th ro ugh at lea st
four generations of ca lfishrai slng technology , the Mississippi Delta now leads both the
nation and the world In prod uc·
lion of a food .whose domest ic
consumption has regi stered a
fivefold Increase si nce 1980.
A)/proximately 1,500 farmers
throughou t the country have
dedicated 135,000 acres of Jhr ir
land to ca tfi sh production . Mls·

sl ss ippl ac,·ounts for about 70
pC'rcenr of those total s, bYt other
states with significa nt commer· .
r ial producli on includ£' Ark"n sas. Texas. Ldulsla na, Al abama ,
Georgia and Fl or ida .
Humphreys County, th e sell ·
procl almC'd "Cat fish Ca pital of
the World," Is home to 30.000
acres of catfis h pond. - more
th an a th ird of the stat l''s total of
85,000 acres. The fish r aised herr
are born In hatcheries and art'
tran sferred . when they are " fln gPrllngs" 4-to-6 inches long. to
specially constru cted ponds. typIca ll y 4 feet deep, occupying 17
acres each and fed by fresh watC'r
from 1,20-foot -dePp wei is.
Rai sing ca tfi sh Is a seriou s.
complex bu siness . ,;Some peoplr
th ink all you have io do Is build a
pond, SIOCk It with fi sh and ta k&lt;'.
th e m oney to the bank ." says
T aylor. He explains that th&lt;' 'fi sh
must constantly be prot&lt;'Ctrd
a~aln s t oxygen depletion, algae
growth, disease
and ot her
life· threa ten ing dangers.
Thp catf fsh are fed specially
formulated pell ets cont aining
soybeans . corn. wh ea t, fish meal.
v itami ns and mineral s until they

Bork's no death knell for
:T oday

B,v ,l lnih•d Prt•ss Inh•rnational
is Thursday .. lui&gt;' :lO. the 21lth day of 1987 with lo4 to follow .
The moon is ·waxing. moving toward it s fir st quarter.
The morning stars arc· Mercury and .Jupiter.
The c1·cnlng stars nrr Venus. Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this dale arc under the• sign of Leo. They include
English non·list Emil~· Bront0 in 1~18. auto pioneer Henry Ford in
186.l ba seball pla~·cr - managrr Case~· Stengel in 1890. English
sculptor Henr;· MoorC' in 1898.slnger Chris McGuire of thC' McGuire
Sisters in 192!! 1ag0 :,81. actor Ed "Kookie" Byrnes in 1938(age49l,
film dirf'ctor Peter Bogdanovlch in 19:!\l tage48J , singer Paul Anka in
)941 1age ~61, and bod~· buildcr - actor 'lrnold Schwarzcnegger In 1947
1ag&lt;' 41lJ.
·
On this dat0 in his tor;·:
In 1971. Apollo· Hi astronauts David Scotland .James, Irwin landed
on tho moon.
, In 1974. thC' HousC' .Judiciary Committee. by a vote of 21 ·17,
approved a third article of lmpC'achment against President Richard
' Nixon, charging him with Ignoring congressional subpoenas. Nixon
rC'signC'd bPforP th0 Issue came to trial. .
·
In 1984, the last 911 U .S. Marine combat troops in LebanOn left by
sea.
In 1985, South Africa recalled Its Washington ambassadordesignat&lt;' .following the United States' rC'call of Its ambassador from
Pretoria.
In 19R6, fire and explosion from cleaning fluids injured 17 people
• and forced nParly 1,000 passengers to abandon the Miami-based
: cruise ship S.S. Emer11ld Seas off Little Stirrup Cay In the Bahamas.
Toda~ ·

A · thought for the day : HPnry Ford said, ···suslriess Is never so
healthy as when. like a chicken, it must do a certain amount of
scratching for what it gets."

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which Identified their accusers
either by name or by the context
of the Information provided.
The frantic whistle blowers
called NRC Investigator· Geor!:f
Mulley io pr.ol.est their betray11l .
"Most of these Individuals felt
that the distribution (to targered
officials) was done purposely to
expose them to possible futu"re
retaliation ," Mulley testified at a
Government Affairs Subcommit·
tee heaarlng chaired by Sen.
John Glenn, D ·Ohlo .
Mulley was exasperated by the
agency decision to distribute
copies of the report to the targets
of the Investigation . But a com·
mission official told us that the
Informants were. not promised
confidentiality, and ~a id In tern al
reports are often distributed to
regional. offices. But sources said
such r eport s would normally go
to r egional supervisors, not the
official s who were subjects of the
Inves tigation .
In anothE'r case. the NRC
Office of Investigation wa s ac;
cused of ldentify lnll two welder~&gt;
at the Co manche Peak plant wh6
had made allt&gt;gallons about
problems with the fuel pool.
wherl' spent fu el rods are stored .
According to the individual who
relayed !heir Information to ti\P
commissi on, the two welders
expected th at they would remain
anonym ous . Bur when the Office
of lnvest lga t ion published II!
report ; lh&lt;• . two welder&amp; wrre
Identified by name.
As In the earlier case. the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
defended Its exposure or the
whistle blowers on a technicality .
In a letter to Sen. Lloyd Bentsen .
D-Texas . rl\P3'gcncy explained
that It had nPver entered Into~
formal agrecml'nt will\ the two
Wt'l&lt;j~.&gt;rs to withhold their n a m~.&gt;s . ..
Footnote: Orlidals ass\Jrt'd ~s
that current C()mmisslon poll d
Is that lnfor !1'lants' names will be
ava ilable oniy on a neC'd·tO·know
basi s. This, 11\eysal d, means that
offi cials should avoid usln~ the
whistle blowers· names In either
documt'nts or discussions.

Where Catfish are jumpin'-.___R_ob_e_rt_~_al_te_r.~

The Della, the sprawling re·
glon adjacenl to th f' Mississippi
River here in the stat e's nort hwest corner. lor decades suppor ted
a th riv ing cotton crop In Its rich
soil. By the late 1950s, however,
much of that farming had shifted
wes t , to Texas, California and
other states.

•
ID

CINCINNATI i UPH - AI·
though It's been almost a year
since Cincinnati ,Reds' playermanager Pete Rose has played ,
there are Indications Rose will
play again. However, Rose
seems to enjoy being .coy about
what will or won ' t happen.
The two main Indicators that
the 46-year-old Rose will play
again - he declines to talk
specifically about a retirement
date, and he took batting practice
three days last week.

Ja_ck_A_n_d_er_so_n_a_nd_J_o_se=-ph____._:..Sp_ea_:r

WASHINGTON -The Nuclear
'Regulatory Commission Is bela·t ·
edly·draf11ng new rules to prptect
workers who blow the whistle on
safety · problems and incompetence by officials at nuclear
power plants.
.
1}ut the NRC's reputation for
blowing the whistle on whistle
blowers - exposing them to
dismissal or other retaliation by
di sclosing their identities- Is so
widely accepted that the commission's latest assurances have
not been abl e to quell suspicion
among critics.
In fact , one public Interest
lawyer, Billie Garde of the
Government Accountabllty Project, Is so dubious about the
commission' s claims of good
faith tha t she re(uses to testify
about some 500 aHE'gatlons .o f
deficiencies at the South Texas
nuclear power plant near Austin.
She Is resisting an NRC subpoena

Liberal s should put away their
long faces. The nomination ·of
Judge Robert Bark to the Supreme Court may not signal the
twilight of their cause. It could
even open up opportunities .
Assume, for the moment, that
Bark survives tht' hysterics of
Sen. Edward li:ennedy, the measured sanctimony of Sen. Joe
Elden, the broadsides of every
civil rights group In the land and that he Is confirmed In a

narrow vote.
Assume, further, that in the
next couple of years the court
limits or reverses Roe v. Wade,
the 1973 landmark case guaranteeing a woman's right to
abortion.
· That would kick the Issue back
to the states.' Into the tumult of
elected legislatures. In that arena, those who support abortion
rights would have no choice and here's the good news for the
left - but to organize and fight.
To understand the galvanizing
nature of such efforts, recall
what Roe v. Wade Itself did for
the conservative movement. No
other event was as vital to the
birth of the "religious right,"
which In turn rallied to Ronald
Reagan's 1980 coalition.
In the wake of the 1973 ruling,
many conservative fundamentalists jerked )o life after years of
political apathy. Suddenly they
felt under selge.
They hadn't much liked the
general drift of American culture

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any way.:... what was being tau ght
In t.helr schools (or, in many
cases, not taughO and what often
appeared on their TV screens.
Finally the Supreme Court. repudiating 197 years of national
practice, goaded this anxiety Into
action. One of the most relentless, single-minded movements
of recent times was born: the
anti-abortion crusade: '
Admittedly, the overturning of
Roe v. Wade offers the unpleasant prospect of 50 separate
battles over abortion In 50 states.
These will be tiresome not 'only
for the partisans but for those
who don't feel strongly one way
or the other.
Worse, the fight · could be
repeated .annually In some
places.
But, then , democracy has
always been untidy . One of the
dangers of judicial activism and a good reason to support
Bark's confirmation - Is that
Imperial courts can sap democratic Instincts. People lapse Into
the habit of leaving difficult
matters up to. judges, never
coming to grips with Issues over
which they no longer exert
influence.
Everi when aggressive courts
don't erode citizen Involvement,
they distort the political process
by narrowing attention to
themselves.
This has occurred not only with
abortion. Notice how modern
efforts to ba_n the death penalty

art' 18 months old and welp;h
about 1 ~ pouncl s. Th !'y tht&gt;n art
scooped from th e ponds and
haY It'd to th&lt;' processing plant s.'
At Crystal CrPCk Farms id
nea rby Sunflower, Miss.. th41
country's second largest ca tfish
prot&gt;essl ng facilit y . a work force
of about 500 produ ces fillet s.
stea ks, strips and nuggN s In a
moder n, automatC'd. plant tha
can handle mort" than 250,000
pound s or catfish dallv.
:
~rysta l CrPCk F arms Vice;
Pr!,'s ldent Marc M . Lawrence)
t ypi cal of th e sophisti ca tE'&lt;!,
young market ers lncr!'aslngl ~
lnflu&lt;: ntlal In ihe Ind u s tr y,~
spt•a ks of " fu rth&lt;'r processing":
and '·supermarket demOs" wl\11 1:'
dl spatc hln !( tr ac t or- trailer s:
fill ed with ra ff ish to New York. ~
Chicago, Detroit and othN dis·'
rant cities.
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How well has Tay lor 's cxperl-l
menr succeeded? Today, there•
are almost 545 million catfish:
b0Jng raised In Mississippi !
ponds . The Industry employs:
mar C' than 5,700 p('ople and ,
contflbutes In excess of $200jt
million to th e starr's economy .

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left_V_in_cen_t._Ca_rro---!ll:

Invariably focu s on the courtroom . Yet there Is another,
more democratic way to outla w
capital punishment ; ConvlncP
legislators to do the job.

'
the deatb l

Michigan abolis hed
penalty in 1946. Back then It ,
wouldn't have occurrPd to most ·
social movements to concE'ntrare :
on the Supreme Court for help .

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Berry's World

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By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI iUPI J - Dave
Parker 's RBI statlsilcs have
been Increas ing by the halfdozens.of late.
For the second t tme In a week,
Parker drove In six runs Wednes·
day night to pace the Cincinnati
Reds to a 15·5 rout of the San
Diego Padres .
· Parker. who also had six RBI
In Cinrlnnatl 's B· ~ win over
Montreal on July 2:i. slammed a
three-run homer. sln!(led In two
runs and got another RBI when
he wa s hit by a pitch with the
bases loaded.

Majors

Mu".-, ,

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Dt-trul -

"The Reds are a great club. "
said Gwy nn . "'l'hey've go t
power. speed and they do It all.
I t's tough to contai n them. Even
with good pitching you ca n' t be ·
sure of shutting them down . They·
have roo many wea pons. "
Cin ci nnati's 15 runs repres ented a season-high for the Reds
and their 19 hit s tiC'd a season
best.
Rob Murphy, 5-3. pitched 3 1- 3
lnnln~s In relief of starter Ted
Power to gel the win . San Diego
start er and loser Eric Show, 5-12,
was shelled for eight hil s and six
runs In just 2 1-3 Innings.
Cincinnati, nursing a 6-4 lead
going Into the sixth, got a walk by
Barry Larkin, a single from Eric
Davis and a three -run home run
by Parker to right, his 21st of the
year, off l&lt;elih Comstock to seize
a 9·4 adva nta~' " ·

tV.pt-d frt'l'-q:t•nt tkolrn"h' "

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•
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~~t. ·l1•

fall ofr'the next day . But I hope
It's here to 'sta y this tlrne."
Despite Parke'r 's production at·
the plat e, lhe hometown fans
booed him when he dropped a fl y
ball for an error In ·right held.
"The fans have got to under·
stand tllat people are going to
make errors." said Parker. ' 'I'm
sure more will be made this
year."
Cincinnati general manager
Bill Bergesch. who earlier this
week ripped the Reds for a lack of
enthusiasm, round Parker,'s error easy to overlook because of
his aggressiveness In leading the
team Wednesday night.
"We hadn't broken loose for
quite awhile." said Bergesch.
"It's about time and It's exactly
what we nred."
San Diego's Tony Gwynn, who
had tw o hits and scored two runs
Wednesday night , said Ci ncinnati's outburst left him Impressed.

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N-ii"'IIIR f O.t.._flaio-, ., !t- 1) sd

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11111'! tU Ill lt.l
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,"itnlt'n ft a,., ..

( 'olllnlh.t,. ul H.lc·hnUtnd
MKint• Klt•hmond

I

" It was a fun nlglll, " said
· Parker. "A nd it' s g(}!ng to be
vitally Important for us to keep
our offevse In full ge~r as we
head down the pennant stretch. "
Although Parker has 16 RBJ In
his laat nine games. and 73 for the
season, he's dlsapppinted to only
be hltilng .264.
·
" I rea lly haven't been swi ng·
lng the bat all that well lat el y, but
I've beCn lortunate to have mC'n
on base when I'm hitting," said
the 6-foot -5, 230· pounder.
" I don't know If I'm starting on
a roll now or not. Whenever I've
S!'fln sJgns Of a spurt , It seems to

Scoreboard ...

Malnt• 11&gt;1 SyrM·u .~·
Tolo•dc1 It! '11do ·~· "h'r
t' rld~t,\ ' '!0 (;llmf,;

· ~· • IH7 lly NEA,.fll(

NE

BARGAIN NIGHT EACH WED.

~

l'awhn·tlt-t 111 Rut:ltt.,.,•r

•

Ted Power In second Inning of Wednesday's game
ap;alnsl San Diego. The Reds won; 15-5. (UPI)

Parker's 6 RBI paces Reds romp

1llvnod11,v'" (ianu..,
C'ohnnhul&gt;l W Kit'lunund

'

FRI. TH.U THUR.

PG·l~~~~· ' .' '

SAFE AT HOME - c'inclnnatl's Klrt Stillwell
dl•es headfirst into home plate to score on a hit by

Tllh•Willl•r :1, Toh•dn I

•••

Why did he take batting
practice? ·
"I just wanted to see If I could
still hit ."
Can he still hit ?
Rose ' didn't even think that
question deserved an answer: He
obviously ihlnks he can.
Rose sometimes mentions that
his club needs strong pjnchhittlng down the pennant stretch
and tn the playoffs, If the Reds
make it.
" And I've been a pretty good
playoff hitter, " notes Rose.

.
I
----..-~

Rh ·hnHIM I. ( ·utumhu,. :Z
Pawl~tt .. t-t 2. fk.,.h•"'it" I
Main•• 'l, ~riU'USI' 0

•

WASHINGTON (UP!)
Former Washington Redsklns
quarterback Jof! Thelsmann, In
his soon-to-be-released book,
says he often went to practices
hung over and lost as much as
$35,000 gambling one season, a
published report said today.

~

'ndt•walt'f' 1 ~\·· ~l . f
Htll'ht•sh•r IRlll)
Toh•do iiJt•IJ
l'a•'IUt·kt-4 (8t"' f
~riM"Uiit' !Tori

\

Theismann tells aU

m:vE MAJrriN OOtYL HANNAH • .

( 'fthnnhu .&lt;t 1Sl' ·1\l, J

Cdl·-·~- .

The Daily

Will Rose play again?

NRc blows whistle ___

man .

L

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1

�Th~sday. Julv 30, _1987

Pomerov-Midd!eport. Ohio

The

Toledo MAC grid favorite

Bannister stops Tiger streak

TOLEDO, Ohio tUPl)
Slmrell. who takes a flvP.game Michigan bas changed, For four
Toledo was , picked Tuesday to winning streak · tnto the start of consecutive years unttllast seawin the Mid-American Confer- the season. . 1
son, th&lt;' two schools maintained
ence football championship and
League coaches, however,
thl' last two places In the league
Kent State finisht&gt;d a close agreed that several teams could standings.
second as seven of the league's · win the championship.
nine schools received first-place
Central Michigan finished
Kent State Coach Glen__ Ma_~o n
votes from 70 voting media,
fourth at 501 points (8 first - place assumed control In 1986 of a
Toledo received 549 points and votes), Bowling Green !Hth at 452 program that ha d not won more
was the choice of 18 reporters to 171, defending champion Miami than three games tn a season
win its first title since 1984. Kent sixth at 41~ (3). Ball State since 1976, and led the Golden
State had 546 points and 16 seventh aJ 398, (4). Western Flashes. to a second-place tie with
first -place votes and Eastern Michigan eighth av 119 and Ohio Toledo and BoWling Green.
Michigan had 536 points and 14 University ninth at 164,
top selections_
"I'd be surprised If Wt&gt;stern
"We want to win the champ ionToledo Coach ban Simre!l, won and I'd be surprised If Ohio
ship
," said Mason, who wa s the
whose Rockets are coming off a U. won, but if any of the other
league's
coach of the year In 1986.
7-4 season and a second-place seven team s won. I wouldn't be
" 1 wish we wou-ld ha ve done II
finish in the MAC, said he did not shocked at all,' ' Bowling Gteen
last year,"
mind being the favorite.
Coac h Moe Ankney said,
"If the hat fits, wear 11: You try
The preseason ba !lotlng also
to get . In that position_ I'd rather demonstrate&lt;! how quick!)' re- - Eastern Michigan was 6-5 In
be picked first than eigh th,'' said spect for Ke)lt Slate and Eastern 1986 for the sc hool's first winning
season since _1977 _

Pomeroy youth ·back
from junior olympics
MIDGET FOOTBALL LEAGUE OFFICERSOfficers of the newly formed BIG Bend Midget
Football League are ·Bill Spaun, second vice.
president and Judy Williams, secretary (front
•

row) and" Dave Jen-kins, president; M.ike Young,
first vice president; Larry walker, third vice
president and Hank Cleland, treasurer I ba ck
row.)

Fourteen attend .organizational ·meet
of Big Bend Midget Football Leagne
a draft is sc heduled for Sep- E'rs. Parents-may havP to furni sh
By Jim Soulsby·
Plans ro·r the formation of the tember 5th with conditioning pants, with pads. and should er
Big Bend Midget Football · drills set for &amp;&gt;ptember 1. 2. and pads at an esti ma ted cost of $50
L'eagut' moved forward with 5. Full practice sess ions are ' perseL Should this benect&gt;ssary.
slated for &amp;&gt;pL 8. 10. 12, 15. 17. 19. th~ league will purchase any of
some 14 persons present at
22 and 24 and player s mu st have thi s equipment · at th l' tcrmina Monday's meeting at the Cleland
completed the conditioning pro- lion of a pla yer's eligibi lity at a
Realty o!!ices. ·
gram before participating.
price to be detprm inl'd. All
The program. set up for
Th e first game is t~pt a ti ve ly eq u ipme n.t must be l eag~e
youngsters in tht&gt; fifth and sixth
set for September 26 with four approved .
gradt&gt;s Who will nofhave attained
mort&gt; contt&gt;sts 10 be pla yed in
A commitlce or ninC'' was
the ag&lt;&gt; of 13 prior to S!'ptember 1,
be open to 'all who qualify in . successive Saturdays_ All gamPs appoint ed to govern the league In
will be played at the Meigs Junior all aspects a nd will have the final
area schools.
ll 's primary purpose is to teach High field starting at 6 p,m, a nd word on any given s ituation
presented to.tht•m_ A dat~willbe .
basic football skills. the under· wtll consist of 15 minute halves .
The
rules
state
that
each
set
for parent' s- night and the
standing of basic rules, to fo s ter
player
will
play
either
on
offense
serv
ices of a physician will be
good sportsmanship and a posit[ve attitudE' and to gen&lt;'rally _ or defense; a max imum weight sought to administer physicals
wtll a pply for up positions !i.e. on the same date_
llflp prepare those involved for
Ball ca rriers . linebackers. t&gt;lc. l;
Co ntributions a re des pera tely
footba II at a higher leveL
high sc hool rules will apply;
needed and several proje~ts
: To date some 29 youngstprs
pla ys shOuld be similar to thos e were proposPd to raise !unfls_
havt&gt; eriroll&lt;'d in thE' program
used In high school and a ll.,pA mong those proposals was · a
with another sign-up date schedult&gt;d for August lsi from 9 a.m. · rt&gt;ferees I officials) will b'e li( Tag Dag. a "100' ' Cl ub and the
censed, There are other rules raffling of pri zes_ If anyone
IQ 12 noon .at Elbt&gt;rfeld's In
Pomeroy _ When rt&gt;porllng to , listed on I hi' brochure given «"ac h wishes to make a ro'n tribulion ,
they may s!'nd it to P ,O, Box 129.
rrgistt&gt;r, each youngster mu st player.
An
t&gt;stimate
of
$2250
W&lt;IS
giv&lt;'n
Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769,
Il]lng a birth certificate. a signed
The next meetin g has bet'n set
permission slip (copy may be as nePded to start the program _
Helmets will be purchased by the for August 4th at 6 p.m . at the
dipped from this publication)
league and will be fitt ed by Clel a nd Rea lt y offi ces . All those
and b&lt;' accompani&lt;'d by a part&gt;nt
or · guardian. At this tim&lt;&gt; no qualified sports equipmen t deal - int erested are urged to a tt end .
r&lt;'gistration let&gt; will be assessed
but $15 will be required from
each enrollee at a later date.
~ague
: A chet&gt;rleading group is also
!ll'eded and will be composed of
PL,i\ YER RECORD
!ilrls within th&amp; same ag~ grou p
as the players. They may also
Team --------------------~
r~gistt&gt;r at the sam~ . time on
Saturday,
Name _ _ _~--------~-------~
_Teams will be composed of 15
to 20 players, must havt' a
Age
Birth Dale _ _ _ __ _ _ __:___ _ _~
sponsor and will have a coaching
Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ __:__ _
staff of three to five with one
qualified In CPR and si&gt;ort s
medicine. Two_ head coaches
PERMISSION SLIP
have be&lt;'n •elt&gt;Cied in anticipa tion of having enough players for
,----;-,.---:-,----;-:-;-:::-:-c-, is a voluntary member o! the
above named team and league, aod (I We) give our permission for bim/ her to
two squads but there is st ill a
play-practice and travel with the team aod relieve all persons (including Team
need for additional personn el to
Sponsors. Field Owners, Managers. Coaches , Umpires, Team Members and
aSsist in this area.
Fans) of aoy liability or injuries that might occur to him/ her while amember of
Sponsors are needed and will
this Team and League,
be ~cct&gt;pted for a sum of $200
which will entitit&gt; tht&gt;m to have
Signed' ---~ igned _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __ _ _..::.,~

wtll

By Jim Soulsby
friend s. loca l busi ness~s ancl
Te n year old Adam Krawsc: organizations. All t'xpenses cozy n. of '213 Union Avenue. Po me- verro and hP will \x&gt; starting an
roy, rcciO'ntly returned from account for other local yout h who
Provo. Utah wherr he had will be competi ng in !uturr
co mpetiO'd in the shot put In the Junior Olympic events . Adam
Na tiona l Junior Olympic Cha m- .and his fami ly sincerely a pprr·
pionshlps, Adam, a Pomeroy elate th~ support given_ Adam' s
Elem ent ary student. posted his achievements can be a so urer or
best throw of 23 ft'Pt 3 inches but pride t() a ll of us in the Meigs
did not reach 1he finals.
County arPa. ·
The highlight of hi s trip was the
opening ceremonies of the four
da y event when ovPr 4000 ath letes from all fifty states
marched into thr Brigham
Young Universi ty track and field
complex_ Th~rr the assPmbled
ath letes heard addresses and
were led in the Oly mpic Oath by
!or mt&gt; r' Olympic Gold Med a lists
Mac Wilkins. Billy Mil ls and the
Rrvrrend Bob Rich ard s,
Aparticu larly interesti ng ln cl·
dent occurrt'd when thr Olympic
Deca th a lon Gold Medalist of
1956. RevPwnd Richard s. was
asked 10 prest'nl the gold medal
to this year's sevent een year old
cha mpion Jim Richards. hi s son.
According to Adam's father,

By COLLINS YEARWOOD
UPI Sports Writer
Floyd Bannister, who could
make a career out of beating the
Tigers, further padded his stattslies In bringing Detroit's fivegame winning streak to a halt.
Bannister registered his first
shutout of t)le season Wednesday
night and -I mproved his career
record against Detroit to 11-6 by
sca ttering five singles In the
Chicago Whit\' Sox's 4·0 victory
over the Tigers_
Bannlsler, 6-8, has now beaten
- loser Jack Morris In four straight
confrontations _ He Is 8-1 versus
th e Tigers as a member of the
White Sox. winning hi s last seven
decisions against them.
Jerry Hairston, a lifetime ,32]'
hltil"r against Detroit, doubled
and scored Chicago's first run
then hit a two-run homer to cap a
three-run eighth.
. "I like to pitch in this bal-lpark," Bannister said. ''I've just
had s uccess here, I feel comfortable here.'' _
Hairston, who broke up Milt
Wilcox's perfect game a couple
seasons ago, has seven home
ru'11s .and 25 RBI In 134 career .

Ten All·MAC first -team selec·
lio ns return ; fight end Ron
Duncan !31 r eceptions 1 and
defensive lineman TrO)' Schultz
(93 tacklPs) of Ball State; linebac ker Steve Huffman (155 tack·
Ics 1 of Toledo; linebacker John
Hunter 184 tackles ) and de!en·
s lvl' C'nd Greg .Johnson t92
tackles) of Bowl ing Green; defensive linem an Andy Marlatt !59
tackles). wing ba r k Andy Schillinger t46 receptions! and defens ive back ShC'ldon Whit e t6

CORNER C.OLLECTIONS
BUTLER SCORES -Cleveland's Brett Buller
Into home plate salely on a sln1le by Tom

Sidewalk Sales

slide~~

Ry ROBERTO DIAS
UPI S porIs W r II er·
CLEVE I, AND _ Mike Young
w:ts drafted out of high school by
tiev~land, but chos&lt;' to attend St.
Mary·'s Coll&lt;'oc In Cali fornia.
~
B9th· the Indians
and Tom
Candlottt ha ve cause 10 regret
!hat decis ion _
Young played one season at SL
Mar.v 's. and a s tar pitcher on th~
tcam was Ca ndlottl.
" We wcr~ teammates tn 1979.
so r know Tom very well." says
Young , "He's develo~ the

Summer Clearance

Unit~d

rrturn trip hom&lt;' via

howf'Vf'r . Adam was

awed by thCvi£'v.:. E'Sp('c iall y that
ovN thP Ro(ky Mountains. which
W('f(&gt; SOOW COVPrP d ,

ALL
SUNGLASSES

.

Arlam 's rrqllesl for donation:-;

to help defray ~xp~nsps was met
wi th outst a nding respons&lt;' by his

129 MILL STREET
MIDDlEPORT

·~

STORE HOURS

forms and to select the tea m
name. us ing college or pro

time, ruled ineligible
FORD

CLEVELAND tUP l i - Ohio
Statr Uni ver s it y baskC'Iball rl'cr ul t Tr~g Lee will nof play his
freshman yea r with the Buck·
eyes after falling the ACT college
e ntran ce ex&lt;tml natton three&gt;
ttrries,
Le&lt;&gt;. Ohio's top Class AAA
player from Cleveland St _.loseph
Hl~h School . IC'ar ned last weekend· that he did not meet ACT
requ lr ement s a nd will not be
eligible to play for Ohio State In
' his freshman year.
"It 's awfully tough to talk
about it right now ." LRe to! roo
the Clevela nd Plain Dealer . " I
wanted my fii'S I year In college to
be so methlhg pecial and now
everythinJ; has changed ."
However. Lee said he plans t!&gt;
re bound from academ ic
ineligibility ,
"l have worked \:'ntirely too
hard In obtai ning my athlt;tlc
honors to let It all go down the
drain." Lee said, " I am going to
enroll a t Ohio State and push
myself as hard as I ca n."
Lee Is one of two Ohio State
recruits who will be sidelined for
falling ACT exa minations _ Ell
Brewster, all-state guard from

namE's.
• After sign-ups are CO[llpfeted,

Clippers lose
to Braves, 6-2
By United Press International
: Mike Rocj!!ord outdueled Ron
Musselman ~Wednesday night to
lead the Pawtucket Red Sox to a
2,1 victory over the Rochester
Red Wings in an International
League game in Rochester, N.Y.
Rochford. 5-6, pitched 7 1·3 Innings before y ielding to Mitch
Johnson. who earned his fifth
·save of the season. Musselman
fell to 4·3 in pitching a complete
•
game-

Benefit tourney set
A one-pitch softball tourna·
ment benefiting th~ Racine Ball
AssoCiation will be held Aug, 8-9
at Southern Junior High_ Entry
$40 and two softballs, For more
information call Glenn Young at
949·3088 or 949-2606,

CASH

'

FORD BRONCO D
4-Wheel and 2-Wheel Drive Models
s....tt5M.....,rout..r......,.,...e~~

Address

':JDA;6Cr.! 111'111'1 Manual Tr1nlmi1Monon proncoa XLT.

Packagplncludes:

• AMIFM Stereo

• Atr Conditiomng
wrlh Cassel1e/Ciodt
• Power WindowS ILOCks
• AII·Season Tires
• Speed Control/ Tilt Wheel
• SwlflQ·Away Spare
• Rear Wrper, Washer, Defroster • And Other Items

$1,000 CASH BONUS'
• DISCOUNT'
$1,565 OPTION

Helmet filling Monday
'

: There will be a fitting for
helmets Monday' at 4 p.m, at the
high schoOl for members of ,
Eastern's Jun;&gt;r High football
team.
II&gt; ·

Columbus Wehrle High Sc hool.
a lso will Sit out his fres hma n

season.
Jam~s E. Simonis. Lee's high
sc hool principal, says the 6-!oot· H
forward Is "a good kid ," but said
Lee neect s to Improve his study
habits,
" He made progrC'ss In high
sc hool and Is very capable of
progressing at Ohio State provid·
lng he applies himself.'' Simonis
saidSL Joseph baske tball coach
Mike Moran said he Is confident
Lee wit! play at Ohio State,
" He Is far from being a dumb
kid - anyone who speaks with
him realizes that," Moran said,
"But I think he needs to buckle
down more when it comes to
studying on his own,"
Meanwhile, Lee sa id he hop es
his freShman year will become
lea rning experience- both literally and figurativel y.
"The coaching staff at Ohio
State has assured me I'm still
part of the tteam and will get th e
proper tutoring, " Lee said. "I
know that the emphasis has to be
put on my studies. Hopefully . I
can pick up some ground during
the fir st year,"

a

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SALE ENDS SEPT. 1, 1987

Beginning August 1 we will feature a
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~ubsnlbf'r~

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7:20 •

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Gallia, Meigs County area.

TH.E.CEDAR LOUNGE

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ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $2.75

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Jackson, 4-13, look the loss,
Angels 5, Athletics 4
At Oakland, Caitt., Devon
White drove hi t hret' runs an&lt;!
scored twice to spark the Angels.
Mark McGwlre-slugged his 37th
home run In the fourth Inning for
the A's. to tie the American
League record for most home
runs by a rookie. Don Sutton, 7-9,
pitched five Innings for the win.
Steve Ontiveros fell to 5-5.
Mariners 8, Twins 3
AI Seattle, Alvln Davis hit two,
two-run homers and left· bander
Lee Guetterman improved to 9-2
for the Mariners. Davis hit his ·
12th . and 13th homers of the
season off Minnesota starter
Mike Smithson, 4·6. Smithson
was sent to the mlnQrs after the
game.
,
Red Sox 6, Blue Jays 5
-At Toronto. rookie Sam Horn homered and drove in three runs '
and Dave Henderson scored the
go-ahead r un when Mark Etch-- ··
horn walked Marty Barrett with
the bases loade d in the eighth
inning to lift the Red Sox. Calvin.
Schiraldi , 6-5, worked three shu-'
tout innings for the win. Gary
Lavelle fell to 1-3-

go

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hand er allowed 10 hit s as he
struc. k out three and walked two
in not ching hi s secon(l comp lete
game, Baltimore has won 12o! it s
last 14 contests,
"Eric Is pltching·'bett er.'' said
Bait imore manager Cal Rip'ken
SL "•Ea rlier In the year, he would
try to be too fin e and fall behind
hitters . Now, he goes with what's
working and is. more confiden t ."
Candiotl l, "'
'11, took Cieveland's 12th defeat in 16 games.
The knuckle baller has lost five of
his last stx decisions_
" 1 hac;t good s tu!!, " said Candi otti, "Everyt hin g was worklng .
They didn't hit a nything that
hard , r thtew ~~ trikes , and Balti·
more hit good pitches, "
With the score tlod 3-3. Young
spar ked a three-run Baltimore
seventh with a leado!! s ingle to
righL Ken Gerhart fouled out
tryi ng Io sacr ifice. and Jim
Dwyer walked. Young broke for
third as Billy Rlpken hit a
grounder Into th~ hole. a nd the
ball !(lanced oH third baseman
Jacoby's glove a nd into left fie ld
[or an error. Young scored on fhe
play .and Dwyer took second _
· " I saw the ball hit int o the
ground,'' said Jacoby . " I put the
glove up a nd lost the&gt; ball in the&gt;
lights," ,
~al Ripken Jr . followed with a
s ingle to left that plated Dwyer
lor a :i-3 Oriole lead a nd sen t Billy
Ripken to third. Ed Vande Berg
relieved a nd was greeted by
Eddie Murray 's fielder's choice
grounder that scored Billy
Rip ken , Dwyer added an RBI ·
s ingle In the eighth_
Cleveland had take n a 1-0 lead
In the first on Jacoby's 20th
home r. The Indians a,dded a run
in tne third on Breit Butler's RBI
s ingle.
Baltimorewentahead3-2inthe .
fourth, Terry Kennedy singled
before Young's lith homer. Ger hart then hit-his lllh homer_
Clt'veland tied the s core 3-3 in
the fifth on Tommy Hinzo 's RBI
s if\gle,

leader, left the game with contuBy MIKE TULLY'
.·
slons
suffered In a first- base
UPI National BaseJjall Writer
cottision
with Mookle Wilson ,
Howard Johnson, who last year
"That
was the play of the
hit one of the biggest home runs
game,"
Herzog
said. "We lost the
of the season, Wednesday night
game
and
my
first
baseman. "
cracked one Ihal may eventually
Expos II, Cubs ·3
mean as much.
At
Chicago,
Mitch Webster
Johnson hit a two-run homer
slugged
a
two-run
homer and,
with one out In the lOth inning,
Tim
Wattach
and
Vance
Law
lifting the New York Mets to a 6-4
,
added
solo
,sh9ts
to
highlight
a
victory over SL Louts. By hand·
15hit
attack
and
power
the
ing the Cardinals their sixth
s traight loss, the Mets pulled Expos. Bryn Smith, 7-4, scat·
wllhln 6Y, games of first place In tered siX hits over.seven innings.
Every Montreal starter collectl'd
the NL East
at
least one hit. Greg Maddux.
II the Mets complete a threegame series S\Veep tonight, then 6-9, lasted just three innings.
Braves 5, Expos 3
go on 1o overtake the Cards,
At Atlanta, Dale Murphy hit his
Johnson's homer could prove as
27th
home run and Gerald Perry
memorable as the one he hll last
stole
a club record three bases In
year. also In Busch Stadium. 1t
one
game
to lead the Braves.
tied the score In the ninth Inning,
Charlie
Puleo
, 4-3, surrendered
triggering a Mets victory and a
seven
hits
over
six innings for the
!our-game series sweep that
triumph.
Gene
Garber went 1 2-3
s howPd in April how dominant
Innings
for
his
lOth
save. Houston
I he Mets would become,
.
starter
Nolan
Ryan
fell to 4-13_
'
"·I was ready to hit .anything,"
Phlllles
4,
Pirates
3
Johnson said , "In this ballpark, a
Carman
At
Pittsburgh,
Don
line drive like that usually
scattered six hits over six innings
do·es n' t
out."
· ·
"We had chance · after and Von Hayes and Milt Thompchance," SL Louis Manager son hit home runs, leading the
Whitey Herzog said. "We had thl' Phllltes, Carman, 7- 7, walkPd
bases loaded in the 'first inning two and struck out four in
and don't sco re and get a runner registering his third straight
throw n out at home in the second. victory, Steve Bedrosian pitched
the ninth for his 28th save _Doug
1t was one of those nights-" Drabek
fell to 2-10.
New York manager Davey
Giants
16, Dodgers 2
Johnson said his- tea m playe d
At
Los
Angeles,
Chili Davis
poorly also.
drove
In
five
runs
with
a homer
''We really didn't play that
·and
double
and
Mike
Krukow ·
well ," the manager said. "We
really could have been charged earned his - first victory since
with two errors that weren't April 28 to pace San Francisco.
Krukow. 2-6, gave up six hits In
called.· :
The Cardinals lost more than a his third complete game of the
ballgaml', First baseman Jack season_ Rick Honeycutt, 2-11,
Clark, the
RBI suffered his lOth loss In a row.

The Daily St&gt;ntinel

~565TOTAL
.,.
£,
SAVINGS

. Plan softball tourney
Bradbury PfO is sponsoring a
Class D&amp;E
men 's softball
tournament on Aug, 8-9 at Mid·
dleport Park- Entry fee $65 and
two softballs, Call 992· 7195 or
992-25:10 for information . .

knuckleball only In the past
coupl
. e of years . but I romomber
&lt; ~
the rest of his stuff. He's got a
good cutveba ll and slider and
changes s peeds. "
Young'$ me mory served him
we II W«" d nes d ay n1g ht . He hit a
two-run homer and la ter scored
the winning run on a Brook
Jacoby error In Jhe seve nth
" lifting the Baltimore
lnnln ...
~ the
I
I
0-roes to a 7-•·• v1cto ry o Vd'
.
Ci('vela nd Indians_
Eric Bell, g. 7, won his third
s tra ight · dcctston. The left ·

Lee fails ACT third

10:00-S:OO

Big Bend Midget Football

their names imprinted on uni ·

Hlmo In Wednesday's 1ame against Baltimore.
(UPI)

Young's homer propels _Orioles

FRI., JULY 31-SAT., AUG. 1

Airlines.

•

Johnson hits "big'· home run
to lift Mets over Cardinals

r-;:::::::::::::::::::::i:::::::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;::1

J ohn . Adam \·vas a \ittl&lt;' nervou!'.
si n e~ It was hi s first fllghL On thr

at-bats against the Tigers.
"Anybody with any kind of
athletic abtltty ts going to have
success against a particular
.club," Hairston satd_ "I don' t
know what the record shows but I
know I've gotten a lot of chances
to play here."
Harold Baln~~ singled with one
out In the eighth off Morris, 12-5,
and without a victory since
IJefore the AU-Star game. Greg
Walker doubled and Hairston
followed by hitting a 3-2pitch Into
the upper deck In right_
Hatrston·Ied off the fifth with a
double then ·s cored on singles by
Carlton Fisk and Ken Williams to
break a scoreless tie _
Bannister walked two and
struck out five while allowing
j\r'st one Detroit runner to get
past second,
Yankees 4, Royals 0
At New York. Mike Pagliarulo
· broke a scoreless tie wtth a
s-e venth-Inning sacrifice fly and
Mike Easler added a three-run
double to back a combined
six-hitter by thret&gt; New York
pitchers to lea d the Yankees.
Tim Stoddard worked 1 1-3
Innings to improve to 3-2. Danny

.,

\.

CITY ICE &amp;FUEL CO.
Kenny P...-•••

Ask for
.IGnes lutridl &amp;

�•

Thursday, July 30, 1987

•

l

Friday &amp; Saturday,

, Sp.u..tor•.• hy

..,.
,I

Pomeroy

.'

.:
'

•' '

••

erehants
Assoeiation

.

•

•

14K GOLD

•Haeger Pottery
•Fenton
•Lee 8ortin Originals
•Speidel Watches
&amp; Bracelets

•Costume Jewelry
•Figurines
•Clocks
•Billfolds .

30°/o

••• •••

,~(6~~10Y

•

· KIRTLA ND. Ohio !UP! ) a vo ided mak ing a ny predictions
Nine-yea r ~e t era n Matt Bahr as to when Bahr will be r ead y to
does not know when he will · kick compe titively, but 'did say
return to foot ball following last · " it is as bit prem a ture" to say he
-; season 's knep surgery, bu t tha t will no t be ready for the opener
:: does not concern two rookie Sept. 13 a t New Or lea ns.
:: kicke.rs in the Clevela nd Browns'
·.·It would · be wron g to build
· tr~.'~m g ca mp..
towa rd a ny da te," Bahr said.
I m JUs t go mg to go ou t and
Ba hr had bee n a m odel of
• try .. to d~ well . That's all I ca n · consistency _ hitting 92 percent
. do,
s~1 d . J eff Jaeger. the of his fie ld goals ins ide 30 ya rds
Browns th ird -round dra ft p1ck
: !rom Washin gton. :• r spent a ll
·: summer gett ing ready to go
:: against Ma tt , beca use I thought
· he wou Jd be rea dy."
Jaeger a nd Mike Cofer. a fr ee
agent from No rth Carolin a St ate,
· were th e only ki cke rs participat·
:' ing in the !irs t day of u·orkout s
·Wedn esday for the defendin g
;I.F C Ce n t ra J D ivis io n

5 0°/o OFF

PENCILS (Pkg. of 121................................2 Pkgs. For $1
WEBSTER'S DICTIONARY ..................... $1 00
BIC BIRO PEN IPkg. of 1o&gt; ..................... $1 00

STOP BY. AND SAVE

S2 500 ~..
CLEAM SW.EEP SALE
AT

TOP OF. THE STAIRS and
DESIGNER BOUTIQUE

CHAPMAN SHOES
PRICES CUT UP TO

This
Friday
and
Saturday

Pomeroy

IT'S LEE WEEK AT DAN'S

75°/o OFF
1 LARGE GROUP OF
WOMEN;S &amp; CHILDREN'S
CASUALS, DRESS, CANVAS .

CONNIE
FOOTWORICS
a•o
. NATURALIZER

S15 PAl•

2 PAllS $2SOO
1 G.OUP OF

MEN'S SHOES
1/2 PRICE - -

BERNIE KOSAR, Cleveland quarterback, Is shown earlier this
week during his first workout of the 1987 campaign. {UPI) .

•

•

'

-----

VALUES TO $46.00

BAGS
VALUES TO S22.00

SJOO

Open
Friday
til 8 P.M. ·
All Sales
· Final

The brand that fits:M

2 0°/o OFF LEE'S

FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY .
LATEST STYLES IN PILE WASHED, FROSTED &amp; STONEWASH DENIM

las This Fri. · Sat.

CHAPMAN SHOES ·

LAYAWAYS
WELCOME
\)

''

POMEIOY'S OUAUn SHOI nGII

•

290. North Second Middleport:. Ohio

.

DREW • MILLER

AUDITIONS • PIERRE
EASY STREET

0

20°/o OFF

SELECTIONS OF CRAFT PANELS &amp; FABRICS •

1/2 PRICE
DRY CLE4NING SERVICENOWAVAILABLE

$1500 PAIR .

2 PAIRS FOR S2 5°0

STOP IN AND SEE OUR FREE
· KNITTING MACHINE DEMONSTRATION ' . ·

SINGER

Af'PR(NED DEALER

• /1&lt;

Tilldema•" o1 Tl'le S.nqe• COPIPd ~"•

.

•

CLOTHING .BONANAIA

SUMMER SPORTSWEAR SALE · .

FOUl LARGE IACIS OF WOMEN'S AND CHILDREN'S APPAREL

o,ean Pa,ifi,, Devon, Wrangler and Others

Includes alecks, skirts, aiHpwear, dresses.
blazers. blouses and knit tops.

Buy Now for Back lo School

Values ta $60.00

·

ONLy

$2 QO

50°/o

99&lt;

That's Right- Every
pattern in stock is
reduced to 99¢1
Hurry in for best size
selection.

For Back

To School

JR. SIZES

'.---· ·

"

..
j

33°/o
ON ALL HOUSEWARES IN ··STOCK
SAVE

1}2 PRICE

*DISHES *PANS *APPLIANCES *RUBBERMAID
*KITCHEN GADGETS *CLEANING SUPPLIES
*KNIVES *MICROWAVE COOKWARE

Stoek Qp Now For 8ee,k-lo-Sehool
CHILDREN'S

COTY PRODUCTS

SUMMER TOPS AND SHORTS
SOLIDS and PRINTS

Girls Sizes: 12 mos. to Sin 14-Boys' Sizes: 12 mos. to Size 7 .

Small Group of Face Powder, Moisturizer .
and Compads

/2 PRICE

1

VALUES TO 56.99

SHORTS ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •12
KNIT SHIRTS ••:......................... ,.112
SWIM.TIUNIS ......................... 112
DRESS SHiiTS .......................... 112
'
SPOU SHIRTS .:......................-. 112

99&lt;

Si.ewalk Sale FURNITURE VALUES

Sidewalk Sale
MEN'S SUMMER CLOTHING

StORE HOURS:
. "9:30-5:00

1/2 ·PRICE

Don't Miss Out On Our Fantastic
Housewares Sale

WRANGLER JEANS
MISSES~

•'

SIZES 8 to 18

Stock Up for future Sewlag!
WOMEN'S .

OFF

BOYS KNIT SHIRTS

SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

.

. ··

,

DRESSA..SHOES ·
SANDALS

110 West Main St .
·
p-onleroy
,
992 ·2284

VALUES TO 538.00

$500 PAIR

1

SAVE NOW ON BAniNG &amp; FIBER
'FILL FOR YOUR FALL PROJECTS

'

.SHOES &amp; SANDALS

JULY 31st- AUG. 8, 1987

Sidewalk

WOMEN'S

Co•• Early Fo~ Thle Ono ·.

STUDENTS ONLY

111 West ·Second
'
-992-67·20

emphasis is on height to give has practiced kicking off at
your men time to get downfle ld. Wilmington.
lri college, it was mor e emphasis
Wyche, meanwhile , said he
on distance," said Horne, who wtll be paying particular atten·
a veraged 44.4 yards a kick in ilon to the veterans even before
co llege.
they participate In their first
Although Horne Is probably the workout Friday .
favorite to win the job, coach
" What I want to see from the
Sa m Wyche has said the other veterans Is an attitude that they
candidates - free agent s Shawn belteve they 're going to win our
Burdick of Cincinnati, John division and that they're going to
Starnes of North Texas State and go al)out!t right from the start,"
Scott Fulhage of Kansas State- Wyche said.
will. receive long looks too.
"The last couple of years , I
But Horne may have an edge think they 've had the feeling of,
over 1he others In two areas.
'We're pretty good, and we can
In his four years at Arkansas, · be winners tf enough things go
he didn ' t have a punt blocked. our way.' This year, there's no
Last year, the Be(lgals had two reason we shouldn't believe we
blocked. and return e d for are very good already , and that
touchdowns.
we're .good·enough to .rontrol our
Also, Horn e handled place- own destiny If we work hard
kicking dulles In college and he enough .''

.WOMEN'S SANDALS
FLATS &amp; CASUAL

.

~L EVE L AN D

WILMI NGTON , Ohio !UP! ) Be nga ls veterans a re du e to .
report to · tra ining ca mp at
Wilmingt on College today, but
the ba ttle for the pun ter 's job
involves only first-year playe rs.
The Bengals ar e holding whal
amount s lo a n- open tryout for
punter . hav ing re leased Jeff
Hayes and his 35. I·ya rd average
afte r last season .
Beca use the c lub used a fifthround draft pi c k to c hoose him ,
Greg Horne of Arka nsas appea rs .
to have the Inside track to the job.
Rookies and free agents began
prac ticing a t Wilmin g ton .
Monday.
• ".f've kic ked better than I h;.ve
here the past couple of days , bul
I'm not disappointed with wha t
I've done," Horne said Tuesday.
"In this league, because of the
rules (restricting coverage), the

SIN

PERMS .

Bengals' veterans due to report to
train~ng camp. in Wilmington today

Sl ooo '•~.

Sl 39''

ONLY ONE

FOR THESE AND OTHER BARGAINS
ROLL BAGS or BACKPACKS ......... $3SO ... .
ELMER'S SCHOOL GLUE 4 oz ............ ?:For $1

Browns ink RakO(·zy
!UP! ) - Th e
• C' ji!Vela nd Brow ns have s ig ned
• Q((~ n s i ve li nem a n Gregg Ra·
~qp~y. a product of the Un iver·
.s j~ of Mi a mi. tea m officials
~ n ounced Wednesday .
· he 6-foot . .290-pou nd Rakoczy
IY ~f the tea m 's second-round
~ drJ fl pic k this yea r.
. .
: Th e team a lso pladed k1 cker
; M~ tt Bahr a nd de fens ive back
_S teve La wrence on the physi·
cally disa bled lis t.

$500'"·

REG. 1209.99 NOW

BACK·TO-SCHOOL CIICULAI

. Oet Rud, For Baek To Sehool

Bahr, mea nwhil e. was ta lking
ai&gt;Out his bi cyc le and swimmin g
_wprkouts that " won' t put undue
prfssure on the joint." He st ill
. li-f not kicked a nd Wedn es day
· w~~ placed on the phys ica lly
lln•ble to perform list.
Coac h Ma rty Sc hott cnh eimer

TENNIS SHOES

BE SURE TO LOOK IN OUR

SAU ENDS

c~ampio ns.

SINGER ZIG ZAG

992-20S4

JUST ARRI~EP - OOOP SELECTION

a nd 69 percent of a ll fi eld -goal
tri es during his e ight· yea r
career - bu t was forced to
undergo s urg('ry a It er injur ing
his knee on a touchdown-savi ng
tackle aga inst the P itt sbu rgh
Steeler s Nov. 25.
The Browns fini sh&lt;-d the sea·
so n with former Washin gto n
Redskin Mar k Mose ley . but now
have two r oo ki es In ca mp.

TENNIS SHOES

$1 ooo 'a..

.
lATE SUMMER WEARING APPAREL

-:Bahr may not be ready f~r
~ Browns opener September 13

SUPER SUMMER PRICE

MIN'S &amp; BOYS'

&amp; ARMADILLOS

SUMMER CLEARANCE
Cle,,el and opened
their 1987 training camp Sunday and held their

CHILDREN'S SANDALS

WEYENBERY

.

UP TO

FIIDAY 9 TO 8 - SATUIDAY 9 TO 5

MEN'S SHOES

113 COURT ST.

20°/o

SUMMER KNITS &amp; PRINTS

$700'a..

IIANY OTHEI SPECIALS
•

SAVE

SHOES

20°/o OFF
SAVE

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY

60. /o OFF!

UP TO .

NEW STYLES .
NOW

1st &amp; 2nd

0

,,•

lulova·Seiko-Pulsar

~ugust

..

"-"

WE NEED THE SPACE!
COME TAKE ADVANTAGE OF
OUR CLEARANCE PRICES ON
SELECT GIFTS

SUMMER . . . . ,..,
SIZZLER
SALE
WATCHES

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy-MiddlePort. Ol'tio

Thl.l'lday, July 30. 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I Only leg. Ill .., Brawn Plaid

NOIWALK SOFA &amp; CHAII .............................. S593

PRICE
PRICE'
PRICE .
PRICE
PRICE
'

I Only leg. 11091 Jacquard Velvet

KROEHLEI SOFA &amp; CHAIR .............................. S549
I Only leg. IS"

lOWE BROWN VELVET SOFA ......................... S297
I Ollly leg. 1479, llue

IEIICLINE OCCASIONAL CHAIIt ...........:.......;... S188
I Only leg. 1419 Ta,..

ROWE OCCASIONAL CHAIR ...............;............ s188

·ELBERFELDS
POMEROY

flller,eli•
POMCIIOY . CIMIO
1~1*1

tll ·M'l

CHA.IU CAID

�'

30,1987

Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

Fox Chasers Club has meeting .
The Meigs County Fox Chasers
Association held their annual
picnic recently at their club
,house on Eagle Ridge.
·
Entertaining with music and
song were Jackie Little, Eddie

Fife, Marvin and Jim Milliron,
Russ Powers, Dennis Spires,
Everett Grant ~nd Margaret
Tuttle.
,
The door prize was won by
Sharon Smith, Pomeroy.

Harrisonville OES meets
The Harrisonvllle OES Past January, March, May, July,
Matrons and their husbands met September and December when
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jim the Christmas party will be held.
Nelson recently lor their ann11ai Meeting dates were changed to
. picnic.
the fourth Tuesday of the month.
Mrs. Harold Rice who was In Mrs. Harold Rice .was rememcharge of the business meeting bered with a cake and flowers
extended thanks to Mrs. Nelson from her secret. pal on her 45th
for her hospitality, the officers anniversary.
·
for their help during her term of
The next meeting will be held
office and to Golda Reed for the on September 22, at 7: 30p.m. at
success of a yard sale held at the the home of Mrs.Dana Hoffman
Masonic Temple. Belly Bishop · with Mrs. Fred G~rge as cowas extended a vote of thanks for
hostess.
taking the position of chairman
Homemade pie, sloppy 'joes,
'1 at the Jim Sheets sale which , hot dogs and bevera!(es were
netted $177.13.
served to Mr. and Mrs. Robert
New officers lor the year are,
Reed, Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Mrs. Robert Reed, president,
win. Mr. and Mrs. Fred George,
Mrs. Don Wilson, vice president,
Mr. and Mrs, Harold Rice,
Mrs. Robert Canaday, secretaryMr.and Mrs. Harvey Erlewine,
treasure, Mrs. Harvey Erlewlne,
Mrs. Robert Canaday, Mrs . Jack
publicity. ,
Norris, and Mrs. Virgil Atkins.
Members voted •to meet in

/.

USED CAR
INVENTORY
.
REDUCTION SALE
\

NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED
1979 FORD LTD II
2 door. V-8 engine, automatic transmission,
power steering. power brakes. AM/FM radio, stereo tape, r!ldial tires . .

WAS Sl99S

stock

NOW

•osa4-A

$995

1985
OLDS. CIERA WAGON
•

4 door, station wagon, front wheel drive. 6
cyl. engine. factory air. auto. trans .• PS. PB,
Power windows-seat-door locks, tilt star·
ring. cruise control, AM/FM radio, stereo
whitewalls. rear window defogger.
luggage carrier.
St~k IIG1142-I

•-•"" S9995 .

1985 CHEVROLET
•
ARA J . GARDNER
Tara J. Gardner was honored
sunday with a · first ·birthday
party at the home of her parents,
Kay and Terry Gardner, Pomeroy. Teddy bear cakes, made by
Sherri Wilcox, ice cream and
punch were served to guests.
In attendance, besides her
parents, were J.P. and Sooner
Gardner, Rita and Katie
McKibben, Ted and Mary Flood,
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Woolum and
family. Connie · and Shannon
Souls by, and Carl and Katherine
Cardner.
·
Those unable to attend but
seridlng gilts· included Curi and
Carolyn Flood and Bob, Marsha
and Princess Houdashelt .

2 door. 6 cyl. engine, factory air, auto. trans.,
PS. PB, Power windows-seat-door locks. tilt
wheel. cruise. AM/FM radio, stereo tape. radial tires. white walls. rear window defogger.

WAS

ssso~

1981 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88
4 door. sedan, V-8 engine, factory air, s.uto.
trans ..• PS. PB. power win.dows, seats and
door locks. tilt steering, ctujse . control.
AM/FM radio, stereo tape, radial tires,
white walls.

.CalendarI happenings
THURSDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Township Trustees will meet Thursday , 6:30 p.m., at the Rutlan(l
Fire Station.

POMEROY - Free . Clothing
Day will be held at the Salvation
Army, Pomeroy, on Thursday
from 10 a.m. to 12 noon. All area
residents in need of clothing are
welcome.
RUTLAND - Rutland Township Trustees will meet Thursday. July 30. 6:30 p.m .. at the
Rutland Fire Station.
SATURDAY
HARRISONVILLE- The regular meeting of Harrisonville
Lodge No. 411 F&amp;AM will be held
Saturday , 7:30 p.m. Past masters' night will be observed. All
past masters and master masons
are urged to attend.
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT- The regular
meeting of Meigs Chapter Order
of DeMolay will be Monday, 7:30
p.m. , at the Middleport Masonic
..Temple. -The assistant district
governor will .be present With a
special guest." All members and
par ents and those interested are
lnvitetl.

Weekend reunions
The 53rd Nicholsqn family
reunion will be held Sunday,
August 2, at Forest Acres Park
near Rutland. Potluck dinner at
12:30.
The "Lawrence Whitlatch fam ily, reunion will be held Saturday,
August l, at the roadside park on
U:S. 33, south of Pomeroy.
Dinner at 12: 30.
, The Taylor family reunion will
be held Sunday, August 2, at
Poplar Ridge Church on Route
554 back of Cheshire. Potluck
dinner at noon.
The Grinstead family reunion
wUi be held at the Union
Campground, back or New
Haven. w. Va., on Sunday,
August 9. Picnic dinner at 1 p.m.
The Beegle family reunion will
be held Sunday at the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center In
Pomeroy. Basket dinner at 1.
The Eichinger reunion will be
held Sunday at the coonhunter's

. !)

NOW

building on the Meigs Count y
fairgrounds. Dinner at 12:30p.m.
The Weber reunion will be held
Sunday at the picnic area of the
Belleville Locks and Dam,
Reedsville. Picnic dinner at 12:30
p.m.
The 18th annual Teaford reunion will be held Sunday at the
Syracuse Park with a basket
lunch at 1 p.m. A- wiener roast
will be held at ihe roadside park
in Syracuse on !;_aturday night at
6 p.m. Bring lawn chairs.
The Willford family reunion
will be held Sunday . at Forked
Run Slate Park. Potluck dinner
at 12 noon.
'
The WHlford reunion will be
Sunday at Forked Run State
Park. Dinner at noon.
The annual reunion of the
descendants , of Orlando and
Katherine Davis will be Sunday
at Forest Acres Park. New Lima
Road, Rutland. Basket dinner at
noon.

Stock

•out-A

$3495

1985· MERCURY LYNX
4 door. front wheel drive, 4 cyl., factory air
condition. 6 speed trans., standard trans,
power steering. power brakes, tilt steering,
AM/FM radio, radial tires, bucket seats, rear
window defogger.
WAS 56495
Stock •oost-A

NOW

$5495

19861/2 NISSAN
HARD BODY PICKUP
4 cyl . engine. 6 speed. standard transmis·
sion. power brakes, AM/FM radio. stereo
tape; radial tires, rear step bumper. topper.

WAS 58995

Skin testing
POMEROY- Joan Tewsbary,
R.N .. Meigs County tuberculosis
nurse, will be giving tuberculin
skin tests to all Meigs County
school per ~onnel who have not
·yet received their tests for the
87-88 schOol year.
Tests wlll be given Monday and
Tuesday from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m.
at the T.B. office at the multipurpose building on Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy . Anyone handling food at the Meigs County
Fair may also be tested on these
dates:
The skin tests are free and
anyone wishing more information may call the T .B. office at
992-3722.
'

NOW

'

Stock

•ono.a

$7450

1979 CHEV. CAPRICE CLASSIC

·4 door. sedan, V-8 engine. factory air, vinyl
roof, auto. trans., power steering, power
brakes, power door locks. tilt steering
AM/FM radio.
'
'

WAS S1995

Softball tourney
MIDDLEPORT - Bradbury
PrO Is sponsoring a Class D&amp;E
men's softball tournament on
Aug. 8-9 at Middleport Park.
Entry fee $65 and two softballs.
Call 992-7195 or 992-2540 for
informa lion.

NowS995
HOURS:
MON.-WED.-FRI.
8:30-8:00 P.M.
'rUES.-THURS.
8:30-5:00 P.M.
SATURDAY .·
9:00-4:00 p•••

Softball tourney
RACINE - A one-pitch soft·
ball tournament benefiting the
Racine · Ball Association will be
held Aug. 8-9 at Southern Junior
High. Entry $40 and two soft·
balls. For more info call Glenn
Young at ·949-3088. or 949-2606.

·- ·---·- - -' ----~-,--'

Stork 0·21-A

NOW$7495

WAS 54995

CLOSED SUNDAY
PHONE:
614-992-6614
(

-~

- -··--

,:,..

July 30, 1987

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

. Pomeroy- ·Middleport, Ohio

Festivals honor twins, A'nnie Oakley, football and the old. times
liy Fun Day at Blue Rock State
Aug. 8 - Prairie Bike Tour ing County.
By SANDRA L. LATIMER
Aug. 30.
Park
near
Zanesville.
starts near Rosedale, Madison
United Press International
The Interlak'e Yachting Asso-The featured display In AuSome Ohio Historical Society County .
ciation Regalia begins Saturday
Seeing double is a natural this
gust at the Center of Science and
at Put-In-Bay in Lake Erie.
.weekend in Twinsburg where the events require reservations , · The County Fair schedule:
Indu stry in · Columbus is a
The Gallla County Junior Fair . The State Fair harn,ess racing
city, founded by twins, observes which can be made through 624·
Weather Station Exhibit .
297-2606. These include:
Twins Days.
at Gallipolis, the Greene County program begins Aug. 6 at Scioto
On the theatrical schedule:
Saturday "Taking the Fair at Xenia, the Pike County Downs near Columbus .
Forty different contests are
• -Showboat Becky Thatcher
Fair at P.lketon and the Vinton
Special Exhibits
planned Saturday a nd Sunday for Reins" children's workshop at
Theatre's summer season lea-"A 20th Cent ury Selection:
the twins in what's said to be the · Ohio Village, Columbus; " After County Junior Fair at McArthur
lures four melodrama s that
Five" Concert at Ohio Village, open Monday ·and run through The . Weisman Collection" Is
largest !(atherlng of twins.
rotate Mondays through SaturAug. 8.
.disj:llayed at the Cincinnati Art
, At Greenville, where Phoebe Columbus.
day s through Aug. 29. Call 614. Saturday and Sunday - RevoTl!.e Hamilton County !;air at Museum thtOUj1h Aug. 30.
Mo.s es grew up to become known
373-6033 for reservations .
lutionary.
War
Encampment
and
Carthage
opens Aug. 5 and. runs
-"My Daughter, The Scientas "Little Miss Sure Shot," the
. -"The Living Word" ou tdoor .
through Aug. 9..
,
·
Ist'.' is displayed at the Center pf ' drama near Cambridge plays
community ·_plans a festival In .Lantern. Tours at Fort Meigs
The Ohio State Fair at Colum- · Science a nd Industry through ·Thursday s . through Sundays
honor of · the woman, better near Perrvsbunt.
Sunday
Summet
Sunday
at
bus opens Aug. 6 a nd runs Aug_ 31.
known as Annie Oakley. Arts and
through Sept. 5. 614 - 4~-2761.
Ohio
Village,
Columbus,
with
through Aug. 23.
-At the.Cincinnatl Museum of .
crafts, a flea market and a
-" Blue Jack et"' o u'tdoor
19th ceniury IIddle and banjo
On the sports calendar:
Natural History, the " Year of the drama is at Caesar's ord Park
·p arade are also on the agenda
music: Tours of Cedar Bog
The U.S. Mopar Nationals will Cicada" runs through Nov . 29 Amphitheatre east f Xenia,
Friday through Sunday.
Tuesdays through Sundays
The Ohio Shaker Festival Sat - Nature Preserve, Champaign be held Friday through Sunday at and "Unveiling the Future" is
National Trail Raceway in Lick- the planetarium show through
urday and Sunday at the Count y.
through Sept. 6. "Oklahoma!" is
Kette ring-Moraine Museum in
Kette ring focuses on the Shaker
history in Ohio and the 200th
anniversary of the Northwest
Ordinanc e a nd the U .S.
Co nstitution.
In Ca nt on, th e city credited
with thr bi r th of football , the
profess ional football season officia lly beg ins with the Hall of
Fame Festi va l. Thr week- long
fes tiva l begins Sunday and c limaxes with th f' induction of
former footba ll great s Int o the
Pro Foot ball Hall of Fame, and
1he Kansa s City Chiefs and Los
Angel es Rams pla y th e season's ~
firs t footba ll ga me.
Al s o on thi s wee ke nd' s
5rhrou 1&lt;':
· Th e Old World Fes ti val
throu gh Sund ay In Clevel and th e
feat ures music, gam es, foods
and crafts o.f othrr countri es ..
Thoc Northwest Ohio 'Antique
Ma c hin ery Show through Su nd ay
features a dis pl ay of antique
tractors and stea m and gas
ma c hin es at the Hancock Count y
Fairgrounds in Findla y.
Th&lt;' Port Sa ndu s ky Summer
State
New Improved with
AC
Fes tival in Sandusky, Erie
011
&amp; 5W3G
Purolator Filters Purolator Air Filters Sparll Plugs
Co unt y, through Saturda y incl udes a rib burnout , firewor ks.
99t, llmH 12
Motor Reg. 1.09, limit 12 Reg. 3.39, limit 2
Reg. 4.39, limit 2
Reg. 99t, limit 16
craft s, boat dc&gt;cora t ing contpst
and winery tours.
·Department or Natural Re·
HOurct&gt;S event,; Include:
Saturday - Mark Twain Fam-

Ott. .

MONTI CARLO Cl
TYSON LEE
Christopher '"I)-son" Lee recently telebrated !lis fourth
birthday at his home In Middleport. Cake, Ice cream and soft
drinks were served .. Those attending or sending gifts were his
parents. Randy Joe and Crystal
Lee; Buck Hall, Betty Reed,
Denny and Jean Roberts, grand parents; Ardith and Edith Barton and Mrs. Earthel Hall, great
grandparents. Others were
Barry, Judy and Tyler Stewart;
Pearlle and Judy Jewell: Deann
and Brian· Denny; Terry ,
Brenda, Robby, Adam, Michael
and Tara Wyatt; Angie Jordan
and Mia Bass; Ocel Sears; Ted,
Janie and Jarod Woods; Scott
Barton; and David Anderson.

Th~sday,

Mobr Oils,
Motor
10W40
011

asx

staged on Sundays through Sept.
6, 513-376-4358.
-''Tecumseh!' ' outdoor
drama plays at Sugarloaf Moun tain Amphitheatre near Cl\llll·
cothe, Mondays through Saturdays through Sept. 5. 614774-0700.
-Actors' Summer Theatre at
Schiller Park, . in the German
Village section of Columbus,
features Shakespeare and classic American musi.c als through
·
Aug. 29. 614·444 -6888.
-Music in the Air is In
Columbus parks through Sept.
16. 614-221-2000.
-"Queen of the River" at
Players Theatre, Marietta , Fridays through Sundays through
Aug. 9. 614-374-9434 .

'
ACRasistor
Spark Plugs

Non-Resistor

Oil

·74¢ 94¢

339

199 .

Reg. 1.24, limit 16

Huston turns
over movte
role to Mitchum
FAI.L RIVER. Mass. 1UP I ! . Holl)'I.WOQd le{!cnd John Huston,
s fri.i:ken by nn a ttJ ck or emphy·
sema durin~ toca ilon filming In
New En~la nd , has decided to
turn over his rol e in the film " Mr.
North" to hi s longtime friend.
Robert Mit chum.
Huston, . 80. was lis ted · in
serious but s tabl (' condi1ion today at Chariton Memorial Hospi·
tal In Fall River , wher~ he was
admitted Tu esda y alter becoming Ill in thr near by resort tow n of
Newport, R.I. . where the film js
bel n!( made.
Huston, who is also co-author
and cx&lt;'Cutive producer of the
movie, was to play Dr. Bosworth
in a n adaptation of Thornton
Wilder' s comedy of manners set
In jazz-age Newport.
The Osca r-winning dtrccl or
was leaving his rented house to
drivc to a nearby mans ion to
begin filming when he wa s
s tric ken. a spokesman said.
Co-produ cer Steve Haft said
Hu s t on· ~ illness had dampened
spirits on the set, but said the
crew wa s optimis tic he would
recover quickly.
.
"He has s urvived several Jn..
fcctions like lhls and worse,"
Haft said. "The fact Is , John has
faced s itua1ions like this before
and bounced back ."
Directed by the vet~ran director 's so n. Danny Hus ton, the film
Stars a third family member,
John Huston's daughter , Anjelica , who won a n Oscar In 1985 for
best supportin~ actress ia "Prizzi 's Honor," wht ch was directed
by her fa ther.
Mit chum flew from Los An geles to Boston Wednesda y ni ght
a nd was drive n by limou sine to
Newport.
Huston and Mitchum a re Ion!(· ·
time friends, and before Hu ston
left Californi a lor Ne wport he
gave Mitchum a copy of the
script, Haft said.
Huston him self made fh&lt;' decision to replace himself durin!( a
mee ting with his son and daugh·
fer at the hospital, Haft said, but
his name will remain on the
flim's credit s as co-author and
·executive producer.
" Huston Is very concerned
about the picture and does not
want the production to be delayed," said his 'Spokesman,
Ernie Anderson. "Both children
are deeply shocked and hurt (by
1_\is Illness), but they both know w.hat he Wllnls - he wants them
io do the picture, so that's what
they 're doing."
Haft said Huston apparently
had a premonition that he might
(all Ill because he consulted a
local doctor earlier in the week '
on his condition. Huston sugaested hOspltallzatipn, and Tuesday morning's trip to the hospital !
was not rushed, Haft said.
'

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OPEN
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.
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Store ho~~n: 1:30 ,,., to 1:00 p.N. Monday
thtout:,rlday, 1:30 a.111. to 6:00 p.•, Sottrdoy
alld 1
a.m•.te 5:00 p.m. Sunday.
Sale prices :in effect July 30 lhrpugh August 5, 1987.

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Thurldey. July 30,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1987

-People in the news--

•

Tuppers Plains bicentennial celebration belli
A parade opened the Orange
Township Bicentennial celebra tion held in Tuppers Plains on
July 25.
The event was a part Of Meigs
County's observance, headed by
Patty Parker, to commemorate
the signing of the Northwest
ordinance on July 13,1787 and the
United States Constitutlon on ·
September 17. 1787.
Heading up the parade were
members of the newly formed
VFW Post and the Eastern High
School Band. Others taking part
in the parade were several
walking and bicyCle units, antique cars, teams of horses with
wagons, the rescue squad a nd
four fire trucks.
The parade marched to the
elementary school where the
presentation of the flag was
given by the VFW with commander Ke.nneth Hager in
Cha•ge. The band under the

direction ot' William Hall played
the Star Spangled Banner.
The program that was pres-.
ented was chaired by Leah
Arbaugh. The slgniflance of the
Northwest Ordinance and the
Constitution was given by guest
speaker, Marjorie Stone of
Athens. A brief history o(
Tuppers Plalqs· anq surrounding
areas · was given by Leah
A.rbaugh.
A history of Tuppers Plains
postal system was presented by
Esther Smith and the Meigs
County Bicentennial winning essay was read by Lelisha Holsinger. A patriotic presentation was
given by the Chester Daughters
of America, led by Esther Smilh
and a presentation was given by
Patty Parker, Meigs County
Blcenlennlai chairman. Several
selections were presented ·by
Eastern's band.
·
Afternoon activities included a
pie baking contest with Vicky

Gillilan taking first place and
Mattie Pullins second, In ' the
pioneer dress contest the winners
were, 12 and under, Melissa
Harris first place and Jessica
Carr, second; in the ladles
division it was Dorothy Calaway
and Roy Miller in the men's
division.
Games for the youngsters was
headed by Mr. and Mrs. Keith
Weber with prizes supplied by
Farmers Bank, Lodwick's
Market and Keebaugh's Shake
Shoppee. Wagon rides were provided by Mr. and l'yirs . Wald
Spencer.
Indoor exhibits included displays such as quilts and antiques
of all varieties.
Demonstrations of crafts were
given by Mary Jane Wise, chair
caning. Anna Blackwood. knlttln~, Janet Th_
eiss, basket weav·
lng 11nd Nancy Schul, rug
weaving.
Outside dlsplys Included an -

liquefarm tools and implements,
buggies and wagons.
One wagon on display was one
that was brought by the ances·
tors of Lloyd Blackwood from
Pennsylvania to Ohio in the early
1820's.
The Tuppers Plains Firemen
provided food along with home·
made Ice cream. · Events coneluded with a square dance with
music provided by Francis A'n·
drews and the Ohio River
Drifters.
Making up the Bicentennial
commiltee for Orange Township
were Llloyd Blackwood, chairman, Mr. and Mrs. Everett
Calaway. Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Keltlt
Weber, Leah Arbaugh and Anna
Blackwood.
Blackwood extends his thanks
to the committee. sponsors.
partlclpanls. board of education,
sheriff's department and those
who supported the activities.

By WIWAM C. TROTI'
United Press International
FASHIONABLE HORSE: Fashion designer Oleg Cassin I and
Miracle, his beloved miniature horse, have been reunited. The
short-legged horse which )s 221nches tall and valued aU20,000,
was stolen Saturd~y from a stable on Casslnl's Long Island
estate but turned up unharmed Monday In a rented truck
stocked with hay, oals and water about110 miles from the Cassin!
home.
·
"He lost 20 pounds but he's a strong little horse who follows me
around l!ke a dog," Casslnl said. Pollee are searching for two .
men seen running away from the rental truck just before ·.
Miracle was discovered. Pollee say they apparently planned to
hold Miracle for ransom but ~hanged their minds.
Cassin I, 14, was glad that Little Red, Miracle's 19-lnCh·tall
stablemate, was away at the vet Saturday when Miracle was
rustled· because Little Red has been weak and probably would
not have survived the trauma oLbelng kidnapped.
EQUALIZER GETI'ING WELL: Edward Woodward, star of
"The Equalizer," is in a hospital In Warwick, England,
undergoing tests and recovering from an apparent heart attack.
Woodward who was in England to film a spy mini-series for a
British tel~vlslon company, had chest pains at his English
home, about 100 miles outside London and was rushed to a
hospital with his wife. Michelle Dotrlce, at his side.
Woodward, 57, has had a bit of .a weight problem and the
producers of ''The Equalizer" had told him to lose 30 pounds for
the series. Woodward was warned about the stratnsoffllmlng in
the series - , in which he plays a Iough 'guy who fights for
underdogs- and was put on a strict exercise and di et program .
BEAUTY FIGHTS HER BEAST: The Rhode Island beauty
queen who gave up her crown after being cbarged With cocaine
possession has .been accepted Into a program that gives
first-time offenders a break.
Miss Rhode Island of 1986, Toni Langello of Warwl~ k. was
accepted Into the adult diversion program last week. The
diversion program keeps first-time offenders out of a criminal
courtroom but requires them to perform community service,
undergo counseling or make soml' sort of rl'slitution.
Langello was arrested and charged \lfilhcocalne possess ion in
December after a car she was a pa5senger in was s topped by .
pollee. Authorities said they round a small a mount of cocaine in
Langello's mirrored compact .
·
GLIMPSES: David Bowie' says the cost of rOCk ·n· roll is
gelling pretty steep. BoWie. who opens the North American leg
of his Glass Spider tour Thursda y at Veterans Stadium in
Philadelphia. says the production cost tort he tour ls$10 million.
11 took workers four days to put up the stage for the show ...
Funny things are going on In Jackso n, Wyo. Comedians Richard
Belzer. Franklin Ajaye, Louie Anderson. Tom Thomerson and
Richard Lewis are gathering then• next month to film "The
wrong Guys."lt's about five men who hold a Boy Scout reunion
and end up being chased through the mountains by an escaped
convict .

~=======================~

lnduclts 5 ~r. c""t,
triple *nstr, hutch
mirror with light and
palter bet!.

Quirks in the news _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
suing Four and Five

NEW ORLEANS iUPI) -One,
Two and Three say Four and
Five jumped ahead of them in
line. so they are suing to reclaim
the top spots in the struggle to
win coveted oyster beds.
One, Two, Three, Four and
Five are people who have been
sitting outside the Department of
Wildlife and Fisheries Building
waiting for their shot a I oyster
bed leases.
People sometimes wa lt years
to get a good oyster bed lease to
harvest the succulent shellfish.
The litigants - all Yugoslavian
immigrants - say the best
oyster leases go to the first ·
people in line.
The· five got in line May 26,
camping outside the French
Qua rter building in lawn chairs,
drinking beer and listening to
music. They were waiting for
Aug. 3, when 300 leases will be
granted.
Several days after the vigil
began, wildlife officials decided
having people silting outside the
building in •lawn chairs repres- .
ented a legal liability, so tl)ey
sent'them home.
The department then reversed
Itself July 17 and said it was OK
for pe&lt;&gt;ple to sit outside the
building and walt. So, everyone
hustled back to ihe building but did not get back in line in the
same order. That's where the
lawsuit comes ln.
Man beats
groundhog dead ·
MONMOUTH, 111. &lt;UP!)
Warren County officials have
decided against prosecuting a
Monmouth man who beat a
IJI'Oundhog to death with a
baSeball bat In his yard an(l .was
charged with having no huntlng

"

license.
William Martin, 34, told authorities he had killed an animal
that he had seen in the yard
where his children were playing,
but did not know what it was,
police said.
An animal coni rol officer removed the animal's body and
Martin later was cited on
charges of killing or injuring a·
wild animal and ·having no
.hunting license. Groundhogs are
protected under llilnols conser-

$49995

vatlon laws.
campaign . .
lEG.
.SAVE
Police Chief Mickey Tinder
Candidate Winston Cavendish
5729.95
$230
said Wednesday he contacted the . registered for the autumn race
state's attorney's office, but that using the nickname " Magruff. "
:11 .·, rrr•rl AVI' Op.•n'l ,II ·, 1111
officials decided against for Cavendish, a former deputy, Is
•
1 I,
1 I 1 1111
mally filing charges. ·
credited with helping deverop the
'
.•.
lilril'ill,
(Jir
,
Allin a name
1, ., •.. ·
animated dog.
·coVINGTON.
La. 'the
(UP!)
The
group ihat holds
copy- rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~;;~;;;;;;;;;;~;p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

s
'
R'C E

r ight on
McGruff,
the canine
crime
fighter
in a trenchcoat,
said a ·candidate for St. Tammany Parish sheriff can use the
name "Magruff" in his

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II

~

NATIONALWEATHERSERVICEFORECASTT08AMEOT7-3i

i•

••
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••••
••

l,:;·,jSNOW
-RAIN
tTI:j SHOWERS
FRONTS:
Warm "Cold
. . Static , . Occluded
Mao shows minimum temoeratures. At least 5o% or any shaded area rS'torecast

..11

•••
•

to reee,ve prec1p1tatlon 1nd1cated

.

.

,

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.

.

· · UPI

••

. MORRIS. Minn. (UP!) -Two
people from Williams County,
Ohio. were kllied Tuesday night
when ·a small plane cras hed
about 1Y, miles west of Morris in
west central Minnesota.
Stevens County Sheriff Larry
Sayre Wednesday identified the
viet ims as the Rev. Darwin
Clark, 39. and his son, Sterling.
15. The father was associate
pastor of the Living Word Fellowship Church in Stryker, Ohio.

~ UAW seeking job

s~curity
from
GM
..

.1
.
.

••

going to change," Reynolds said. · remain comfortablE' despite the and rooming houses, said AssistUnrelenting heat has been slow retreat north of a rriass of ant Medical Examiner Halbert
blamed for 50 deaths in Philadel- Canadian air 1hat has cooled the Fillinger, a 27-yearveteranofthe
phia and 12 more In Indiana, area since the beginning of the office. who added he had never
Ulinois, South Carolina, Georgia, week; he said.
seen so many heat-related deaths
Wyoming, Missouri and South
The latest reported death from in such a short lime.
Dakota, since high ,temperatures the heat was that of an elderly
"Usually, they 're older folks
_locked in 11 days ago.
Sioux Falls, S.D .. woman who living it\ rooms on the second or
"We have stagnant ~ondltions succumbed to a heal stroke third floor In houses that get too
in the upper air pressure sys- Tuesday . Triple- digit tempera- hot . .The heat gets them down .
tems," explained the weather tures were widespread through- They don't eat· much', they don't
servlce's .Harry Gordon. "it's the out South Dakota Wet)nesday, feE'I like going out for food or
resu lt of a combination of factors and it has been 100 degrees or juice, and they quickly get so
Including no movement from the above . in Rapid City for five weak that they just sUp away,"
jet stream and the fact that its straight days .
the middle of summer," Gordon
In Philadelphia, the heat
over the Great
said.
struck · mainly the elderly in Lak'l:W~dnesday night hurled a
Cooler · weather is forecast stifling rooming hou ses, officials bolt of lightn!~lntoa crowd of
today across the upper Great said Wednesday.
speclators watc
basketball
Lakes and New England where it
In one 36-hour period last week, tournament II' a suburban Chi·
will be in the 60s and 70s, 10 decomposing bodies were cago ·park, injuring 27 people,
Reynolds said·. The region will discovered in city a_partments . authorities. said.

~.~~rstorms

Two, people killed in Ohio plane crash

WEATHER MAP - Rainshowers will occur across northern
New England. Scattered..' tnalnly afternoon · and evening
thunderstorms will occur elsewhere across the eastern third of the
country, most numerous over north Florida. Thunderstorms will
he likely across Arizona and scattered over the Rockle~~ and parts
or the northern Plains. Most of the nation will continue to have hot
weather with afternoon highs in the 90s tn near 100 degrees.

The father and son reportedly ·
were on a fishing trip.
The sheriff safd the plane
nosed into the ground in a grassy
area about 7:45 p.m. and the
victims were dead at the scene.
He said the cause Is not known
but, he s'atd, weather was not a
factor,
Officials of the Federal Aviation Administration and the
Natlonal Transportation Safely
Board were l~vesttgattn~;:.

.

.

l DETRQli (UP)) - Ncgolla·

tors for the General Motors Corp.
. were scheduled to res pont! today
; to demands made by the United
• Auto Workers. Including a gua·
• ran tee to maintain ~70, 000 jobs.
: In the first round of co ntra ct
; negotlalions.
' The UAW told GM late Wedneslday It will seek to secure the Jobs
' or "job slots" in It s new contract
·with the giant automaker . Including the jobs or workers to
lOst in GM's announced plant
~losi ngs .
·
"":• A presentation scheduled by
~ M was .to Include a general
:-economic overview or the auto
:'tndustry and how GM Is faring In
• II . GM 'stop negotiator. Alfred S.
: warren Jr .. said no ''demands or
, requests" will be made today.
~ UAW Vice President Donald F .
•Ephlln, who is heading the
, union 's bargaining team. said
i the 370.000 jobs represents the
' carma ker' s curre nt levels .of
.•employment and that the union
;w'~otstolr!all\lainthatnumber •
·: re~ardle~~s or which. workers fill
;them.
• ' "The exact mechanisms and
~ II lh~ words we haven't tried to
-write," Ephlln told reporters
lfpllowing the union's lengthy
;ptesentatloqs to the carmaker on
~he third day of talks.
: The current three-yea r con~ract expires Sept. 14.
• Ephlln said the UAW will seek
i·io ensure the level of employ&lt;p~ent. we currently have" and
disputed GM's figures published
)&gt;artier 1his week that It has only
!IJ5.000 UAW workers. ,
• :·we have more than that ," he
il&lt;ild, addin!( !hat the UAW's
f!s_tlmate includes about 40,000
workers who are on temporary
)ayofl because of Ihlngs like
model changeover. and workers
Who have not yet been laid off due
lo GM's previously announced
plant closings.
• Since last November GM said
_Jt would eliminate about 35,000
job.s as II closes as many as 1~
plants and facilities between now
p nd th() end o! the decadE'.
&gt; E phlln. in what could be

l

•
••

considered a "first offer" sta nce
outwardly, remained hopeful
that GM could cha nge its mind ori
the anticipated closi ngs, although the No. 1 automaker has
stated repeatedly they will be
shuttered.
"I'm In hopes we will keep
them open, .. he told reporters
and said he is . confident the
carmaker will 'find ways to
Increase its shrinking share of
the market.
· "If we get back that · market
share, we'd have a lot more work
to produce and -t hat's one of our
goals." he said.
Alth,ough he declined to elaborate on how GM can do that in the
face of the growing number or
Import carmakers and joint
venture companies which will
saturate the U.S. market by 1990,
he said the union would)lewlillng
to work with the company to
build It back up from Its current
share of less than 40 percent.
,Wh.en asked If GM 's s.hare will
never regain Us high levels. even the 45 percent seen three
· years ago when the last negotla·
lions were held - Ephlln Ileal·
edly replied: "I did not become
the head of theGM department of
the union to preside over the
dissolution of the General Motors
empire.
Ephlln expressed confidence
that there are ways- GM ca n
maintain the 370,000 jobs . Some
proposals may call for GM to
explore comph!tely new lines of
businesses to maintain that level.
UAW papers passed across the
bargaining table Wednesday also
include a proposal call!n~ for
stiff Increases in overtime paya move Ephllrf said is not meant
lo give workers more money but
to discourage GM from relying
on ovE'rtlmc Instead of keeping or
adding workers to its payroll.
The UAW is also seekipg to
improve Its profit-sharing formula, which left GM workers
without any payouts last year
due to a decline in GM's 1986
E'ar nlngs, AI the same time GM
payed out $169 million in bonuses
to Its executives.

WAY
· TIERE'S NO

TO OUR
SElECT..

wntinue search for Ohio man
• NILES. Ohio iU PI I- A search
was to resume at dawn today for
·man .who shot and killed his
rs,tranged wife In a WeathersJield Township restaurant.
,. 'Paul Smith allegedly shattered
lbc glass door of the McDonald's
festa urant early Wednesday and
@hot Gina Smith. 21. once in the
~ea&lt;l with a .22-callber rifle. said
Weathersfleld Township Pollee
i': hlef Sam Pagano.
:: Pagano said Mrs. Smith appar~'nlly had 1aken the couple's
lltfant child recently and moved
lrom their hOme In Warren lo
Hubbard.
I·Other restaurant employees
fho were preparln~ to open the
testauranl at 6 a .m. witnessed

(.
t

OHIO VALLEY LIVESTOCk
Mark('( Rfport fer ,July 21, ltll'2
Sail' t:very S11turday at 1: 00 p.m.

!. rrrrnds :

Vf&gt;&lt;tl

C;liVf"fl , $4-Sil

Jowl'r:

~Ntf'r CAt tlf'. $~·$10 low('r: Cow s. $1 -$1 ..i0
C't': 'Su•rr·s &amp; Yl'l.frlln g~. m('d . fr:tmt' trl

t

a2, 2!\0-300 lbs. $71·$82; 300-400 lbs.
$110: 400·500 lb•. $72-17~: ~-600 lbs .
SfJb-$75.50; 600·700 lbs. $58.!1().W: 700-1100
lllti. S5.H6.~ . 50: 1'011 lbs &amp; up. S~.S- $62 . 2 5:
Htlfcn, m&lt;:&gt;d. frumC' 11 1 &amp; •2. 250-JOO. lbs ,
$&amp;4-$75: :100·400 lbs. S6H72: 400-500 lbs.
S~$70: 500·1'00 lbl;, $~7 - 169: 600-700 lbs,
$~16.,,:10: 700·800 lbll. 155-$62; 1'00 lbs &amp; up.
S 3·$00.50; Bulls, mf'd~ frame lf1 &amp; #2.
2 300 lbs, 167-178: 30().400 tbs . 164-576:
400-500 tbs . Sfill-174: 500·600 lbs. 162-$71.50;
®700 lb!. $1\UI·I&amp;I: 7ft0.1100 lbs. $56$61.50: BOO lbs &amp; up, S51-S.'i8.2!\; Holstein
Slrors &amp; Butts ..100·500 lbs . S58·S68.50:
B\tlchrr Bulls. 1200 lbs &amp; up, ut\11ttrs.
$~.50-S56. 50i ca nnC'r~ &amp; C'\Jitcrs, $4R-$52:,.
~liiCh(•r . Cows, u1111tlrs. S40-U8.MJ:
canners &amp; C'Utll'rs. S35-S41 : hrlfer&lt;'ll t' I~P&lt;'

~

!he killing, but were not injured .
The suspect drove away and
was chased by pollee officers.
who were contacted by other
employees.
During the elias e. the suspect's
car sheared off a telephone pole
before the auto was abandoned
and the suspect fled into a
wooded area, Pagano said. The
Ashtabula County Sheriff's Department' used tracking dogi in
the manhunt.
Four other pollee departments
and the Ohio·. Hlghway Patrol
assisted in the search.
Pollee were trying to contact
relatives of the victim and her
husband, Pagano said.

'II . up II) SM: Ll . Wt. low fl!:radr cows,

$ -dow_n· Sprlng_cr Cows, $!\2!11-dQwn: Cow
, Calr ~omb. : S'mll-down: Vf'al CaiV('s,
&amp; prlrnt&gt;. ~l ;$9J: mOO. ~radC',
$ S81; S.by Calvf'~. by the he~~d.

ltlO·dlloln .

Top"'Hoos:

,

2110·210 lbs . $54-557; 210-210

..
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•

•

•

•

0 • • • 0 • • • • • • • • • • • ,,
•

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•

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•

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.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.-:·. ..·.·.·.·
..

•

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0

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0

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®.

AUTO PARTS ~PA:~E

......................__

___.....____

Oper•ted by R.A.L. Auto Parts, Inc. a licensee of Nationwise,lnc.

:

.;....

..

f

Market report

C' ole('

'

·

Deadly heat wave stays put over East

By United Press International
A stagnant air mass hung over
much or the eastern half of the
nation for the 11th day today,
stalling a mid-summer heat
wave blamed for 62 deaths, 50 of
them in Phlladelphfa where
many were elderly victims found
In stifling r-ooming houses.
Temperatures ill the 80s and
90s weri! expected from Texas to
South Dakota and Virginia today .
Weather forecasters said the
mercury could climb to 100 in the
Plains.
, The heal wave is threatening to"
spread no~th into the lower Ohio
Valley later I'll the week, said
National Weather Service forecaster Pete Reynolds, and there
is no cooling trend in sight.
"There is no indication that It's

:so

q

Sale
ALKA
SELTZER
PLUS

...Th.•:w~~;•~Y~·~Ju~l~y~3~0~·l1!9!B7!___.____________________.______~P~o~me~~~:!M~~~d~~~~~rt~.~O~~~-o~----------------------~~~~~~D~a~·l~y1S~~~m!i~~-=!P~~29•~!1~1

:hf

• pc. IEDIOOM
SUITE

By United Press International
One, Two, Three

.

..... . .

.. '·.

·.. ..
'

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..... ' .

..

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!.~~ · W_-SMl. MI: Bulch,PrBoan;. 400lb!'i&amp;u~.

$.Jth$oll, ButchC'r So'A !', :l00·400 lb!i . $40-$42;
400·600 lb!'. $43 -M7. ~: Plf,!S by ,1hi" hcwt.
$3~HJown .

-

5;p('('la l Salro: 25 hC'i.itl ofl,. t. 2nd. :ird calf
ttolstr.ln. sprlnJtC'f hC'Iff'fs ,and C"OW!!o. Wt\1
otl: :lO , ~a turda y. Au~. 1, 1 9~7.

~o~('l\

ATHENS LIVESTOC!' SI\L&amp;~
July U. 1987

Slaught"r Stf't'rs : $62.25: Slau,z:ht£'r HI' If·
r r·s : SSR; Cattlr Prll'Ps: Ferdl'r Slf'Ns:
1Good &amp; Cholrol :100·~ lbll, $5H74:
r.oll·700 lb•. $61-$72: Fot'der Heifers: 1Good
&amp; Chol&lt;el :vt0-500 tb•. $49-S.Y.l.lltl: 500-700
lbs. lli4·1.'Wi.50: Feoder Bulls: !Good i
ChoiC&lt;'l JOO.~ tbs, 169·$110: !i00-700 tbs,

..
ls·:· 44&amp;~41oa··-· .·. · . ·.·.·.· .·&gt;:· :·
.'

$45-$61; Slau~hter Bulls: tOv~r 1000 lbsl.

S4Uit:
$44.~;

Slau~hlrr

Cows:

Utllltl... $12·

ca nn€'rs &amp; cutters, $38-140.75; '

Sprtngt&gt;rCows: iBv thrheadl.$360: Cow&amp;

Call Palro: tBy the unh 1. $41B;pl: V••'"
tChalcr &amp;: Prlml"l 1 164·180: DabY Calvf'a:
IBy lht hrad l, Sil2.110·f74: Baby Catv•s:
!By thr pound), $1i).lt38.
HoK PrloM : i&gt;l Barrows• Gllts)2IJO.~
lbs. ~9; Butoh.,. sows, S3H44: Butcn.,.
Boars,; F•NI"" Pl•a: tBY thp h..dl,
$1U'I4 .
,,
...._
Sh ...p PrieM: Old Srroep : •••·124.

'

castroJ .e

�..
P&amp;Qe 12-The Daily Sentin'el

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, J"!IY 30, 1987

July

Wisconsin bank
·official opposes
interstate bill
MADISON, Wis. (UP!)- The
chairman of the Wisconsin state
Senate Banking Committee s_a ys
he strongly opposed the inter~
state banking bill which opened
the door for an Ohio ba nking firm
to propose a buyout of Marine
Bank, Wisconsin' s third largest
bank.
Sen. Russ Feingold, D- Mid. ·: dleton, said. he opposed the
· legislation, which passed .the
Legislature last year. Toe law
allows banks In Wisconsin to
purchase banks In other sta tes or
to be bought by out-of-state
. banks.
· "At the time tne Legislature .
·was considering . regional inter·
state banking, Marine manageml!nt made many public comments supporting the legislation,
confidently indicating that the
bank intended to be a n acqulrer
Institution; buying up other r egional banks," F e ingold said
-wednesday.
: He said Marine; a Milwaukee
firm, has now agreed to be

111 Cowrt St . PoMr.,, Ollio 4SJ&amp;!

Public Notice

acquired by Bane One of Colu mbus , Ohio, a nd had previously
considered an offer from Milwaukee's Marshall ·&amp; Illsey Ba nk.
Marine rejected the M&amp;I offer.
" If Bane One is successful , the
deposits of our third-largest bank
will be controlled by an out-ofsta te institution." he said.
Feingold wrote the Wlscoqsln
commissioners of ba nking and of
securities, as king them to carefully monitor the pu rposed
buyout.
He said state law empowers
the securit ies comm issioner to
prohibit the p'-lrchase of certain
Wisconsin companies if the ta·
keover offer fails to provide
s hareholders with full .a nd fair
disclosure of all infor ma tion on
the o ffer.
The law a lso allows the banking commissioner to di sapprove
the · Int ers ta te acquisitio n or
' merger of a Wi scons in ba nk lithe
action would be contrary to the
best interests of the shareholders
or customers of the in-sta te bank.

Ohioans will vote
on 51 school

•

" COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPli
Fifty-one school issues will be
decided by Ohio voters Tuesday
In special elections across the
state.
· Thirty-eight of the issues seek
iocal funds for current operating
expenses. with 12 issues seeking
money for capltallmprovemen( s
or new bullding conslructlon.
The remaining issue seeks fund ing for operational purposes and
ca pital im)&gt;rovement s.
Of the 38 .current operating
requests, 22 are continuing
Issues. with 11 new emergency
issues, four limited-period issues
and one emergency renewal
issue.
. Forty-five school district s
have issues on the ballot. wlth s lx
df the thOse districts putting two
· issues before the voters.
"The quality education offered
to all elementary and secondary
schools in Ohio would not be
possible without the consistent
aid of taxpayers, " said State
Superintendent of Public Ins truction Franklin B. Walter. "I urge
Ohio voters to continue their
support to~ schools when visiting
polling places pn TUfsday."

len• K. Neuelro•d. Clerk
171 30: !81 6 , 1 3 , 31c

'·

SLACKS

$300

·
HOUSECLEAN~
IS A /l-~
',.-0.

'
officials. The jackpot Is the stat e's biggest s in ce the game began
the twice-a-week draw ings in April (UP)) ·
.

NO ONE claimed l ast night' s $18 million Ohio Super Lotto prize

and this weekend's prize could reach S25 million according to s tate
'

. . ...
.,,
•'

VIANlAD

Ohio's Super Lotto jackpot remains unclaimed
CLEVE LAND (U P! I - The
lack of a jackpot winner in Ohio's
Super Lotto drawing Wed nesday
nig ht is certain to heighten
"Lotto F'ever" as the top p rize
grows lo at least $25 !llillion for
-the weekend game.
·

claimed for a fo urth consecutive
drawing last Saturday, the top
prize automatically increased to
$15 million . But heavv ticket
sa les lhis weekadded 'anot. her$4
million to the _pot fo r Wedn &lt;&gt;sday
night's game. lottery commls·
siqn s pokeswoman Anne Bloomberg sa id.
This is the first ras h of lotto
fever to s trike s ince April. when
lhe rules and the jackpots were
changed. Bloomberg said.
"I real ly think folks hav e J;&gt;een
walt ing on this." s he said .

Although there was no wlnnl'r
of the top prize Wed nesda y night .
389 players pl cRed fiv e of the
numbers to win $1.000 each. Also.
20,083 players chose four of the
numbers to win $67 apiece.
In April. when the OhloLotto ·
game was ended and the SupN
Lotto began twice -a -week draw lngs . the minimum Super Lott o
jackpot was red uced !rom $5
million to $3 million . Lott ery
offi cia ls guarant eed tha t jackpot
would g1 ow at least $3 million
each tim&lt;· no one won lhC' top

prize .
Until Wednesda y, lhe revised
Super Lott o's jackpot had not
grc;&gt;wn bPyond $12 mllli~n.
'l'hl• largest jackpot und er th~
o ld Supe1· Lot to )(a me was $27.7
mll llon. r~ac h ed · March 4 alter
five w~cks withou t a winner.
Three holdrrs of winning tlckNs
s hared that pol.
ln Aprlll986. Waller Morgan of
Indian a won a S25 million Super
Lotto jackpot. whlle eight peop le
sha red a $24.6 mll[lon Ohio Lot to
jackpot in Augu st 191!4 .

DEVON RACK

ACCENT RUGS

Blouses, Jackets,
Slacks

30X50
Reg. $ 13.99.

$480

SALE

.·:A
; ·-·&gt;'~
. .
.•. I

·.!-:·

'

-···· ,. .
_ rq .

• • ..

.", .

'·

.... .

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT 'OF
FIDUCIARY

Proficient i[l Med·
ical Terminology,
Typing and Short·
hand.
Excellent
working
condi tions and fringe
benefits. Apply in
person or send resume to: Personnel. Holzer Clinic,
P. 0. Box 344.
Gallipolis,
Ohio
46631 . No phone
calls.

P.O . BOX 11llll
MT. VERNON , OH. 43060

DAVIS IIETAL SALES is the Nalion's fastul&amp;rowinl
MANUFACTURER of D-RIB meiJI roofinc &amp;_sidinc.
We olfars 4 profiles: D-RIB. HI-RIB. 5-V. COR·
RUGATED. Orders custom cutlo the inch at no utra
char&amp;•. DIIS offers 10 bt.luliful colors plus plvan·
izld and plvalumt. FREE delivery _100 sq~res _or
more. Trims. skyiiahts and accessones. Quality dts·
counts availeble.

_________..:_______________

, -800-826·1648

istrator ot the estlite of Annis
V . Chanin, dRcaased. late of
Salisbury Township, Meigs
County, Ohio.
Charles H . Knight.
Acting Probat e Judge
lana lt. Nesselroad; Clerk

171 30: t8J 6, 13,

SAT..

PIANO TUNING

leceiwe SO ... Off
SICOIDt.... lf
11oM within one

TO SEE, CALL
GLEN CUNDIFF
614-992-3905

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authoriud John Deere,
· New Holland. lush Hog

TAYLOR BUILDERS

IAGIIS Cliii-POMUOT.-011.

401ft OFF Otl WINOOWS

· - -· j ,._,. ...,

THIU JULY
••.w..
..............
CAU

FOI

Fl'l

I!TilUn

992-6116 .. 367-1220-

GoN 11or..p A. . 30, ltll

992-3711

be.'"'·" .... ""'"

•oDI.IPOn, OKlO

MU&lt; tN'IiTID __ _ _

7-1$-17 I 100.

mo.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

I In t'l'

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
" At ltasonoblt Pritts"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

Model
DU4000XR

Day or Njght
NO SUNDAY CALlS

-

Addons 1nd remodeling
Roofing and gutter worlt
Concrete work
Plumbing and electrical
w ork

• 7 Cycles /Oplions including 4 Aulomalic Cycles

• Exclusive in-The·Ooor Silverware Baskel• Energy-Saving Air Ory Option •1•10 Year Warranty
Proleclion • More.
·

(Free Ettimetesl

V. C. YOUNG Ill

"FREE ESTIMATES"

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

PLASTIC CIAFY
. and

CERAMIC BISQUE

-

.

3· 11-lln

6- 29- 1 1'(10 .

VINYl &amp; AlUMINUM
Complete Gutter Work

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO 'tEPAIR

CALl ANYTIME
446·1311

Complete Remodeling
Roofing of ~II Types
Worked in home area

20 veara

EUGENE LOIII!G
CALL:

Ph. (614

John· K. Bentz

S-5· '17· 3

FOR SALE
MODULAR HOME!
Carter French
Residence
Corner of Fourth
and Pal(ller.
Middleport

1110.

ACCENT

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
161 North Second

La! U1 Feftee You In
RESIDENTIAl t COMMEA CIAL

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Must see to appreciate.

PH. 742-2027

We Carrv Fi1hing Supplies

Pay Your Cable 8o
Phone Bills Hete
IUIIHISS PHON!

16141 992-6150
lfltDINCI PHON!
16141 992-1754

Manth of_ ~~~ ..,

FENCE COMPANY
FREE ESTIMATES ,

Midthport, Ohio 45760

1/18/ llll

'

" Free Ettlmates"

Owner I M1ehanic

7-6· 1 mo.

1f2 !'RICE

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL

REPAIR SERVICE ,,

S.nict Call
Onl Sl2SO
IRYIIIG 11.lMJj/JI •Altos Of

Riverine Antiques

.PAllS GUAIANTIID 1 TIAI,
PAITl Alii IAIOII.

HOUIS: Tuo.·Wod.-fri.

,_,.,

1124 Eost Moia St.

.,

s..................~ ..... .

Making your world a little easier.

All Whirlpool appliances
have earned this seal.

...........,.... ,........

ers, A( Cwil•w •ritt ....,,,

hwDihtn, micrtWGYtt. ' . ..
INott ......It, troth co-·

..... CAll 992-6771

H -'IT-1110.

DENNY CONGO

Plaza ·
446·8051 Gallipolis

WILL HAUL

·

JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
.. FILL DIRT
v

lfl-8-llc

II a.m. to 7 p.m.
SunoJay: I p.nt.·7 p.nt.
Ch-• or Appoint-

ly

RUSS MOORE
992-2526
1-J.Ilt ...

EAGlE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

UN TEl
PARTS •· SERVKE
Repel .. on All MlkH
Trenaul1 Rep11 ..

located Hllfway ltlwHII
lt. 7aiMI.......,
HRS: 12:00·8:00

Mondlv·SituniiY
CLOIED lUNDAY

PH. 949-2969

IUY-IELL-TIIADE
1·30·1 mo.

'

~
'

7-21· 1 mo. d.

'

LONG'S

5/1/tln i

Vinyl &amp; Alum. Siding
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of All Types
Worked in Homo Area
2S Yean
FREE ESrtMATI!\

Garage

CUSTOM BUILT
· GARAGES
POLE STYLE or
CONVENTIONAL

PH. 992-2772

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alro TrutMIIIIon
PH. 992.5682 ··
or 992-71.21

.

'

7-30-17-1 mo.

&lt;All
1-614-143-5425

.

.7i i3! 2 mo. d.

Lost and Found

REWARD : N Q q uestions asked
for "return of black and white .
niala, .Siberian.Husky taken frOm
O .J . White·Kemper Hollow area.
Sat . PM - Sun. AM (7 · 18, 7· 19 ).
Answer• to " Mee-sha" . Call
614 -446-3172 or 446· 7216.
LOST: Dog; Shon- hair, !Tli..d
breed, brown an d tan. n.ear Bob
N ame :
M cCo rmi c k Rd .
" Hank " . Has red coll1r. R E·
WARD offered . Call 614·4460352.

LOST Black dog with white .
"pieces on chest• and front legs.
.welghi~g 30 "to 40 lb1, red collar.
name Taboo, lol t near Village
Pizza, il any . information call
304 -675·3678 .

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

R ick Pearson AucHoneer 1i ·
censed in Ohio end West Virgi·
nil]. Estate. antique. farm . liqui·
dation aales. 304· 773-6786.
Au ctioneer Col. Oscar E. Click,
304-896-3430.

9

Wanted To Buy

We PlY cash for late model elean
used cars.
Jim Mink CheV.· Oids ln e.
Bill Gene Johnson

Ann uun 1:~: lilt !-II t s

6-17-tlc

Computerized 'llearit11 Aid Selection
CJ SWim Molds - lnterprelilll Services

z

! .Licensed
LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
Clinical. Audio_logist
~

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
8-13 tfn

'

.

Make a drNm Come tru• hoat
an exchange student A .S.S.E .• •
noncproth organlutton ·Ia tooking for voluntHfl , Ho.t tamiliaa
In rour .,.. for the 1117· 88
school year. Pl .... help now-.
Colt R. L. Mohi814-353-B333
or lindi BIOSIIf COIIHI 419 -

638 -8068.

4
2 Wtlite Mile puppl•- 8 weeks

. Call 814 - 448 · 2~57 ,

·

MONEY FOR COLLEGE; call the
Army National Gu1rd t or FREE
Information peclcet . 1· 800 -642 ·
361$.
AVON . All ereN. Call Marilyn
We.ver 304·882·2846 .
Excellent Wages for spare
auembly work:
craft1 . Other.. Info ,1604)
0091 , Ext. 3667. Open 7

CALL NOW!

R .N . ·apPlications now b•ing
accepted for full lim e position,
Pleaunt Valley Nursing Care
Center. apply personnel oHice
Pleasant Valley Hosp.104· 676·

4340. AA-EOE.

Experien ced prep 1nd breakfast
cook. Send resume to P .O . Box
224, Grove City, Ohio 43123.

Reol Estalc
31

Septic t ank pumping. r8sidential
&amp; comm..-ical. $80 per load.
Ran EVans Enterprises. Jackson,
Oh io. Call .614·286- 5930
Jim's odd jobs paintin g, drive·
way resealing, carpent er worlt &amp;
roof repair, tree1 &amp; hedg es
e~~:perienced . Call 61 4 · 379 ·
2416.
Can do light h1uling and roofing.
Re aso nable rate s. Ma r i o n
Snid er . 614-949 -2629 .
Room and board for elderly and
handicapped with personal care.
In Middleport. Call 614-99 2·
6873.
Grover's l awn Mower Repair.
We'll pick up and deliver. Good,
used m owers f or sale. ~all
614 -742·2393 Of 614- '742 ·

3091 .
Vacancy f_
o r 'lderly lldy . Good
home--eooked meals and good
care. Ca11614-992· 7227 .
Want to babyl it, experienced,
can supply
references. C1ll

304-675· 3774.
Former pre-school teacher with
training and e~eperience wishes
to baby ait in my home,
preferrably 2 to 6 year old
children . Will work with preschool skills. have references.
Christian, ·non· • moking home.

304·576· 2389

Ftnancial
21

1 977- 1980 car from prfvate
owner. Must be in good cond.
Call614 -446· 3376 .·

Own your .own applfel or shOe
store, choose from : J•an/ Sportswear , lldi•s Apparel ,
Men 's. Children / Maternity ,
Large Sius. Petite, . Oancewe•
rl Aerobic, Bridal .- · Ling•le Dr
Aec••orles Store. Add color
1n1tysit:. B,.ndl1 Liz Claiborne.
GasoUne, Hulthtu. l~i. Lee.
Camp Bev•rty Hills, St. Mlehel_&amp;
Cttaus. Outbm Red. O.n111,
For«~za,
Organicllty Grown .
oVer 2 000 others . or •13 .8e
one p~ice de~ign•. mutti tier
pricjng discount Of" f•miiV shoe
store. Retail prices Uf'\beliwabfe
fOf quality stloes.n ormalty pt'iced
rom ' 1 9 . t"o lBO . ov•r 250
brands2600 styln. 114,800 to
$26,900: inventory, training.
fisturn. grand opening. 1irl•••
etc. Can open 16 d.-,s. Mr.
Sidney (612)888-6389.

18 Wanted to..Oo

TOP CASH p1id for '83 model
and newer used ears. Smith
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 Eastern
Ave ., Gallipolis. Call 614·446·

2282.

I NOTICE ·!
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLIIH·
lNG CO . recommend• thlt you
do buain•• with peoPle you
know, and NOT to s~d man-v
t'h rough the m1il until you h8Ve
.invest iglrted the off•ing.

AVON . no unnce cnerge, open

614-446 -3672

Business
Opportunity

MOM'S ! Buy · Sell children s
clo,hing from Annie's Closet
Party Plan-lndNidual Sales- Catalog S2 . Karen Riegel. 205 Star
Place, Jack1on, Ohio 45640 .
Ceii614-286· 2783 ,Evttnings.

Homes for Sale

Lovety new 3 DR homebuittthia
spring. 2 cat garage, nice area.
Clay &amp; city achools. 8 mil• from
Gallipolis. Will eonskter mobile
home as trade-in, 147.500. Call

614-446-8038 .
4 BR . home in Ri o Grande now
r anted, $600 a month- $46.000.
Bud McGhee Realty - Call 81•·
446-0562.

Brick home for sale, tot ..
elee1ric, 3 BR ., 1 % baths. ulltity
room. and " garage. Call 614 -

446 -0722 .
4 rm house and lot -46 Nell Ave.•
Gallipolis . $.9.000 or makeofhtr.
Call614 -367-0425 .
3 bedroom house for sale in
Pomeroy. 614· 992 -2286 .
6 room house. two baths, new
roof , Nussatl windows, garage.
i46 N. Fourth Ave. Middleport .
Make offer . 614 -247- 4672 or
614·247·2532.

3 bedroom. full buement,
Pomeroy. homt!t. Cloae to down· .
tOwn . Well insulated and efti·
cient to opente. lmprovem""t
toa many to · list. Save before
listing witt! reahor. Call 814992 -7277 or 614 -586- 2583.
Nice 3 b ~droom home. Lower
M iddleport . Call 614- 992 -

2684 .
M ust se ll - tranSfered oversen. 2
bedroom house on Oliver St. in
Middleport. Situated on lsrg•
tree surrounded lot clo1e to
schools and grocery stores.
Needs a few repairs but is very
livaable a. is . A good sta;ter
home at only $9500. 814·9922786 tor information.
One mile out Foglesong Rd.
M1son . 2 -bedrooms. front
room . kitchen. bath. carpeted.
3.15" acres. 304· n3· &amp;01 1.

Six . room house on 8 aern.
Lieving Road .. Owner will fi·
nance. 614 ·742· 2266 .

Wanted to buy, standing timber .
Call AI Tromm "a t 614-742·

···--··Galll'polrs···-·--·--

.2 328
QUILTS
An1ique-Pre 1940'1. Call Mare.
614· 992· 2101 (days1 or1 -592·
2461 evenings.

Employment
Services
11

Help Wanted
~N-LPN

Full· time ch•ge rlurse position
aveiable. EOE , loested 6 miles
north of Oak Hill . Applic8tions
accepted 9- 4, Mon.- Fri. Hear·
tlandofJack&amp;on, St . Rt. 93, Box
8668 J1ckton. Ohio 45640.

Hard working 1ggres1ive indi·
vidu1l needed for local oHice
po1ition. Must possess good
acc;urate typing skills. pleasant
telephone voice and ability to
deal witt! people. Send resume
tp: CPC ,Inc.. P .O . Bo~~: 738.
Gallipolis", Ohio 46631 ,
Benender for lo eal busin8u- 6
nights a wlc . Exp. roq'ed . Mail
resume to; Box Cl1.100 c/ o
Gallipolis Oailv Trib•.me-825 3rd
Ave. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .
A FUN BLUE JEANS JOB
Job• without experience ar e
herd to fine but we have an

&amp; Vicinity
July 31 ·Aug. 1, Corner ot Green
Aere! and Neighborhood "Rd .· ,
T.V ,. stereo. bicycle. nice sehool
,clothes.
Yard Sale· 152 Chillicothe Rd.,
Saturday- Aug. 1, 9 :00 to 6 :00.
Rain or Shine. Little girls, girls
and ladies clothing, antique
glassware , Wentzel 14x 10
camping tent , much mor e.
July 31 and Aug. 1 · B9ys
c;lothing -like new,, sizes 6-12.
Wamen sizes 14· 20 . Lots of
Mise. ilems . 9 ·40u li l Creek, lot
6 . 4 Wheeler.
Neighborhood Yard Sale: Baati·
eni. Adrian and Teodora-Ave. off
Fourth Ave. close to Golf
Course. Fri. and Set. 8 : 30 · ?.

5 Family Y•d Sale- 3 1h miles
south on At . 7 . Clay Community
Building . Infant and adult
clothes, tires, dishes , beds·
preads. curtains. Little of everything . Friday . Saturday (blgday }.
V erd Sale- 375 LeGrande. 4467414. 1977 Ford Granada,
1980 Tomas Moped, clothing·
childrens and adults, misc., no
reasonable oHer refused.

Yard Sale; Friday. Julv 31 , 9:00 5 :00, 591 Jay Dr. Lots of good
things .
Yard Sale- 661 3rd . Ave., July
3b,31 ,and Aug .1.
•

pd.

ond
1

return
tran~PQrtion di1cu11ed 1t interview .) Above average earnings
and casual dreu makes thll job
fun. easy, and very desirable to
the younger set. Mult ~ abl~ to
r•locate today . For tnterv•ew
sae Mr. or Mr1. Poner. Thursday
only (Juty 30th) It the &amp;..t
Weltlfn, Gallipoli• 1t 1 1 -~. m . to
1 p,m. or 2 p.m . to 6 p.m. No
phone cell• .accep_eted . Parenls
welcome at mt•v•ew .
Federal, Stete and Cfvil Service
Jobs •16, 707 to •&amp;9. 148- yt~ar .
Now hiring. Call Job Lin•
1· 618- 469-3611 Ext F1122
for Info. 24 hours.
S~meone to care for elderly man
fpr 2 w ..ks in our home. Clll ror
more information 614·367·

7148.

3 Announcements

·!

Jelly making Crab Apples, ~04 -

675· 2267.

nlahed .

. It. 12 4, Po moray Ohio

.

Collie puppies, 304 -896-3430.

614-992-3293

Roger· Hysell

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

\ FREE ESTIMATES

Sm•ll. mixed breed dog . Good
watch dqg. Call614-992 ·6071 .

6

for current fed•allist.

1429.

CALL

CONSTRUCTION

MIKE'S API'liAN&lt;E

1558.

SUPERIOR·.
SIDING CO.

Ca!l 614·4411·3021

DABBLE.

SHOP
Ill!. 2nd AYE.

No Sunckiy Calls

Work Guaranteed
FREE ESTIMATES

ANY liiVIF
l CHI:H SHUP

1· 13-lfc

territories, phone 304 -e?&amp; -

HOU!IS, STOW£ fRONTS, ETC.

PH. 949-2756

992-2196

PH. 949-2160
or 949-2801

h•~·lltllll

PAT HILL FORD

HOWIIOID AI'I'I!Attm. All

I

Now liom11 Built
"Free Estim1tes"

MASONRY IIITOIATION,
SWIM rOOtS. !nit, URNS,
FARMING IOIIfttiNT,

.Susine••
Op'portunity

Buying daily gold, sil'!'er coins.
rings, jewelry. sterling ware, old
coin1 . large eurreney. Top prices. Ed Burkett Sorber Shop.
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh. 614992 -3476.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

I'll Ct•t Tt 1u. Ptrtt.lt

Government Jobt: . t11. 040
*59,230 · year . Now hiring. Call

Autom•tic . W1sh• . C1.1l 256 -

2393.

Would like tO· buy a wringer
walhllf', land Rf)d some farm
machinery (3 pt. hitch), Call
614-379- 2160.

"VINYL SIDING
"ALUMINUM SIDING
•BlOWN IN
.
INSULATION'

7-30-'87- l mo.

Good thru A..,.t I

Middiepo". Ohio

4·22·87-ttn

•N ew ·Roofing

Truck, autp. &amp;
heavy equipment
repairs and
welding .
!All makes 8o models)

P11111eray.

FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY

VISA

~U

949-2263
or 949-2168

•Storm Windows
•R e pla cement Windows

W. knew whott tht 1IHI it.
W. 11110 knew tht ploct for
lotitchoting ond proconiog.
Wt Hl~fy 0&lt; yov olon'l poy
filE IUICHIRIIIG
WlfHII COUPON

992-6215 or 992·7314

ET18NKXR
18.0 cu. ft.
Storage
Capacity

-

ROOFING

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
. Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

' .

Cycles • 3 Drying Temperatures • "No·
Iron" Cool-Down Care • Tough DUAAWHITE '"
InteriOr • More

We can repair and re-

YOUNG'S

'
• 4 Drying

RADIATOR
SERVICE

4-16-16-ltn

Pots &amp; Pans
Cycle

.

Howard L Writesel

WISJDfNTIAl
COMMIICIAI, INDUITIIAI

PARTS and

with

- ···

1·3·'86 tic

WELLMAN'S
I'AIIITING &amp;
SANDBLASTING

•Refrigerators
' •Orvers •Freezers

Timed Dry
System

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

Farm Equl~ment
Parh &amp; Ser~lee

VINYL &amp;
AlUMINUM SIDING

7 ·1 · '87· 1

·BISSELL
BUILDERS

•
10

Farm Equipment
Deal or

HIAlNG! Go11ernmMt jobs. your
•rea. .,5,000 -· 118.000. Call
102-838- 811185 Ext. 1'449 ,

1 -806-687- 6000 Ext . R -9806

To Person Cal\ingAbou t Miuing
Dog: Didn't mlilln to scare you.
only want to inalce plan to 1.0 .
dog and transfer significant
reward, if I. D. is positive. Please
eall614· 446·3172 .

BOGGS

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

1S Yrs. IJr,.riiMI Ill
Sclloels, •-•·
Clt•rches.

With

Bargains Galore_and More!!

614-843-5241
REASONABLE • RUlABLE

•I nsulation
•Storm Doors

...----~

Madel
LE/G5650XM

30°/o... 60°/o

Electronic Organs
Mobile service

IOO's of antique &amp; colledible ~ems from 4 genentioos of the
Baker family will be sold at the 184() fann home on Success
Road IPPIOI. 16 mi. N.E. ol Pomeroy. ott .. by way of St. Rt. 7.
ANTIQUES: 3 p;nales: many !me oak pes. ch ests: tables:
beds: cpbds.; QUilts. pnmll lves; over 200 bo1e sol glassware
&amp; ch1na: over 1.200 pes ol dep gl ; over 250 pes. potte ry.
Addie Baker recently passed away at age of 94 . The tg. 10
room house is ~tacked full.
Terms: Cash or IOOd.check w/ 10 &amp;
clearance. lunch.
INC. .
.
AUCT!OliHRS: Ml
THORN¥ ll£, OH
6851
ol I

•

CUSTOM BUilT

'

TVs, Antennas
·Satellite Sales
Installation
Service

NEW- REPAIR

oo; .......

.

J.R.'s REPAIRS

21

Help Wanted

Black and gray strip~ m.a•
kitt.-n. 7 weeks old need• a goo~
loving home. .C1II 614 -448 -

Registered Wehn1rener , .leu
than 2 veara old with papers.
' 304-676 · 1090.

l .S acres rivirfront
property in ·
Syracuse. Includes
14x70 mobile
home with 10l!30
enclosed porch and
new 24x32 garage,
shade and fruit
trees, flowers and
shrubs. Furniture
also available.

selector • More!

.
Provision for,optlonaiiCE;MAGtC• Automatic
tee
Makar • Adjustabtil Steel-Shelves • No·Fingerprlnt
llxtured Steel Ooora

. 7·15-87 1 .... pd.

..

5 automatic cycles provide tlexibility • Energy-saving water temp control • Water-saving water-level

$1 Q33

GEIIDAl COIITIACTOIS

1, 1987-9:100

Business Services

,1,-379-2764 or 446·
4152 .

4488 .

915-4141

FOR SALE ·
BY OWNER

·c.u

S ht 'h D1l maiton pUppies to
goqd h ome . (:All 614;986 ·

BUILDINGS
. REFERENCES
....... Day or Ewollingo

Real Estate Geoeral

4 · &amp; wlu. old kitten• and 2- I
~lcs. old puppi" to giveaway.

•REMODELING.
•GARAGES • POLE

11

13

'

•ROOFING •SIDING

ROOM AOOITIOI!S

3tc

~iveaway

4

1 1h month .fd bunny. C.ll
614-44&amp; -1f::t after 5:00pm.

•WINDOW REPLACEMENT

C AU

•Waahen •Oithwastters
•Rang es

Model

CUSTII, OHIO

~Auction ,

985·3561
1111 M1kt1

\\liirllH'ol

· MAICUM
CONTRACTING

Public Sale

p

DAVIS METAL SALES, IN

LAS400XS
with
Large Lolci
Capacity

I

EXPERIENCED
MEDICAL
SECRETARY

8

year.

The bishops called for the
"prom pt rel ease" of Ihose arrested Monday, some or whom.
according to lawyers, arc bei ng
held incommu nicado .
They were arrested w he n
troops stormed th e home of
retired Col. Roberto Diaz Herrera, who last mon th had
charged military strongman Ma ·
nu el Antonio Noriega with rig·
gi ng elections and involvem e nt
in the murder of 'political oppone nts. Hi s ~: h arges set off demonstrations in Pa nama'. ,
The church urged Panamanians to follow their consciences In
a search for justice, ·warning
agai nst "becoming accomplices.
· even througll silence, of Injus tice
and of the abuse of human an d
other right s."
Dlaz Herrera, m&lt;&gt;a nwhlle, appeared Wednesday fo r the fi rst
lime since his arrest. Speaking in
a ha lt ing voice, Diaz Herrera
as ked in a t elevision Interview to
be reunll ed with hi s wife

20°/o-70°/o

SWIM-WEAR

Acting Probate Judge
lena K. Nesaelroed. Clerk
(7) 30: (81 6. 13, 3tc

THE BEST

RACKS OF .SUMMER MERCHANDISE

LADIES PULL-ON

Public Notice

the....,.

SIDEWA-LK ALES
REDUCED
'

NbTtCE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

Public Notice ,

On July 23, 1987, In lhe
On July 23, 1987, in the
On Juiv 23, 1987. in the
Meigs County Probo1e Court. Meigs Coumy Probate Coort. Meigs Coumy Probata Court.
Caat No. 17,011 , Jon P. Case No. 16.106, Jon , p. Case No. 16,107, Jon p.
Kerscllnik. P. 0 . Box 339, Kerochnlk, P. 0 . Box 339,· Kerscllnik. P. 0 . Bo• 339.
Tuppers Pilina. Ohio 45783, Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783. T._ Pilini Ohio 45~.
\NOS - o d Speclll Adminwas appointed Speciot Admin- wa oppointod Spoci&lt;ll Adminiotrator of
ot Augu11 iotrator of the - · of 1111 D.
T. Snyder, tfe. IM8d, l.te of Chanin. ~ •od. late of Sot- 11. Help Wanted
Meigs County, Ohio.
iabury
Townlhip, Meigs Coun- I;::;::;::;::;::;::;:;::::;::;
ty, Ohio.
Ch•rlea 11 . Knight.
Acting Prob1tft Judge
Charles H. Knight,

" How ma ny of these plants do
A lotlery commission spokeswe need in a 50 mile radius?"
asked Louis Kinter. a Troy man today said no pla yer picked
Township resident. She referred the six numbers of I , 5, 10, 11. 35
to a n incine-rator oper ating in and44tobecomeeligibletoclaim
Lorain County, which borders We dn esday night 's jackpot,
whi ch had climbed to $19 million..
Ashland County on the nor th .
The lack of a winn er for a fifth
Th e compa ny expects to begi n consecu
1ive (Ira wing Wednesqay .-~~.:.:..:::....:.:.:=~:.::::...:.::::.:::__-:-_...::.:.:__....:.:.
cons truction in late 1988, but
night
mean
s the pot will be at
pla ns must first be approved by
least $25 million for Saturday
local, state and feder a l agencies.
John Trac::y, a vice president night's dra. win~ and could surpass h he gaml'!'s record $27.7
a nd trustee of Ohio Technology. . million
jackpot.
said the incin era tor sys te ms will
be des igned to meet or exceed all
'Th e jackpot was the largest
air pollution regulations and he
s ince the ga me wen I to twice-a said there will be no waste-water
week drawings in Apri l an d
discharge.
Interest. in the ga me increased as
The pla nt would employ HO to players · spent $l1,656. 148 on
100 people and have a n a nnual tickets for a chance to win the big
payroll of approximat ely S2 prize.
million. Another · $306,000 would
Ti cket sales · were repoqed
be generatlo'.d in tax revenues for
heavy across the s tate Wednesthe county, school a nd !Ire day , ru nning mo re than $14.000 a
districts and the township each minute at late afternoon.
year .
After -!he ·jackpot went un- .

In a nother development Wednesday, the government warned
that foreign corres pondent s will
be subj ect to sanctions. possibly
jail sent ences, If they dis tribute
" ba d Information. "
Panama's Roman Ca tholic bi·
s hops, say ing the nation " feels ·
the inti midation of milit ary'
force." urged the government
Wedn esday to release those who
have been recently arrested a nd
to reopen three opposition newspapers shut down by au thorities.
Archbishop Ma rcos McG ragh
and other me mbers of the Bi·
shops Conference , In a strongly
worded statement, warned tha t
the politica l violence whic h has
shak en Panama for the past. two
m6nths "threa tens to esca late in
a dangerous spiral."
"A ll this is hu rling th e na tion.
ll feels the intimidation of
military force and th e arbifrariness of law which prohibit s for
some what it permits for others,"
the sta tement said.

Public No_tice

NOTICE OF ,
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

Panama wams U.S. against r.hostile' criticism
PANAMA CITY, Panama .
-Pana ma has warned the
United States against further
"hostile" criticis m, while the
nation's Roman Catholic bishops
expressed alarm over political
violence that "threatens to esca late in a dangerous spiral."
In a t hree- pa~te sta tement
delivered to the U.S. E mba ssy,
the· Pana manian F ore ign Mintstry said " the pr iv ileges. immunities and considerations given the
U.S. mission ... do not include the
prerogative to make public its
opinions on government acts or
decisions."
. The U.S. Embassy, followin g
the governmenl'sclosi ngof three
opposition newspapers. .c riticized -Panama's "intimidation
and censorship" of the press.
The F oreign Ministry said
Wednesday this and s imilar U.S.
statements a re consideredpn inadmiss ibl e interference in Panamanian affair s."
· "The continua tion of these
practIces will be cons idered as a
hostile action toward t.he Panamal!ian government ." the stat.ernent said.
·
Comments by U.S. officia ls
were beginning to rese mble
campaigns by "seditiou s poll II·
cal groups" to discred it P anamanian authorities, the Foreign
Minist ry s tatement sa id .

Business
·Senrices

PHONE
992-2156
Or
0.,1.
Writl Dlillr StlliMI CIHtititd

'

~UP!)

The Daily

The Daily Sentinel

$25 million industrial waste disposal
· plant is planned for Ashland County
, · ASHLAND , Ohio tUPI) - A
$25 mlllion indus trial waste disposal plant Is planned fo r 280
acr-es of farmla nd In northe rn
Ashlana County, but resident s of
the rural area say the opposes the
" plan.
Ohio Technology Corp. offl·
cials said Wednesday they will
; formally announce plans Tuesday to lii1ild two Incinerators, .
offices, a laboratory , solldificalion systems and a· trucking
. terminal near Nova in Troy
,.Township.
· The proposed plant would
incinerate and detoxify " industrial and hazardous wastes,
offlclais said.
A group of Troy Tqwnship
. residents, however. say they
. oppose the plan and hope to meet
·with compa ny representati ves.
.On · Monday, 27 tow ns hip resi"dents attended trustee meeting
' to ask about 1he proposal.

1987

Friendly Home Pmi• hu open·

Three Familv· July 31 . Aug. 1· 9
AM .. off Rt. 688 an V8nco Rd.,
follow signs.
Yard Sal• Fti. and Sat. 8 mi. out
R1 . 218 aero1s from Te.-ns Run
~d .

Street Sale: Graham School Rd .•
6 milts out 141, turn right . July
31 ·Aug . 1 . Bebv. 6 -7 girl!.
1 8·44 women• clottting and
maternity, wedding dress, furni·
ture. lamp•. refrig'., ete. Call

614-448-2889 .
MOVING SALE : 17 Vinton AVE .
9·5. Fri. and S1t .
Yard Sale: 4 Mil. out Bulwille
Road. 4 tamm... Something tor
ev~onel Clothing- ctlildren and
1d.ults . Thurs.. Fri., and SM ..

9-5 . .

Yard Sale: Fri. 1nd Set. Jct.-7
and 218- Chlldr.., ·• clothes.
some home and offiee

in"g tor m•nao.,. and deal•• In I·~~~~------­
your •r... La~:g•t lin• In pany 1

plln, frH kh , ·brand new christ·
mat cat1k)g. toy, gift, 1nd home
decor eltalog. Over 800 hems.
Top C:ommi11ion .nd hoatftJi
gifts. Call for frM cltelog
1-800.227· 1510 or call collect

0 · 818-452-0081 .

Urge Y•d Sale: Fri. and Sat. •
42 Vifilon Ave . Oallipolil.
Fri...July 3111 .- Aug. 2nd.· 1926
ChnlnUt St. Lo11 of everything.
Yerd Sale: Fri. and S1t .. 501
Jeck.an Pike.
Lincoln Plk• Juty 30th • Aug.
3rd.· Boys. girll, women• clo·,.
thing. ooffee teble. typewriner,
Huffy e~~:ercl1er , Bearcat

Stereo. dining room suit. dinett•
set, 2 bedroom suits, 26 ln. TV.
living room suit, swNel rod!!"'.
·glassware. Salad Master cook· ·
Wire. Plantz Sub. Thur .. Fri., 1nd
Sun. Call614 -446· 7721 .

· --- ·p:om-erov ..........
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

-·-

-.- ·- ....... -...... ---.- .......
Poreh tale: 393'0 Rocksprings
Rd. Ladies clothing, mile. Wed.
and Thur. July 29 and ;10.
614 -992-6019 .
2 family yard sale. July 30th and
31st. Aug . 1. Carroll Street,
Svraeuse.

At . 124. Minersville acro11 from
Ball Park. Frid1y • Monday .
Antiques, elect . stove. fumac-.
glass ware. toys. clothes.
Friday. 31st and Saturdrt1 181.
Baby alothe1. kid's . clothn
much more. Salem St .. Rutlan.d!
38430 Rocksprings Rd. July
31 - August 2 . Oraperiet ,
spreads, solid oak lamp table.
sto rm door, misc.
108 Park St .. Middleport, acrosli
from Imperial Electric. August
1st. 10 : 00 -1 Appliances .
womens and children• clothing,
misc. lots of everything!
4 family yard sale, 1 114 miles on
New Lima Rd. Fri . and Sat :9 :00 -7,
Large sale. tools, dishes. clothes.
misc. 611 Perk St. neat Valley
Lumber , July 31 -Aug . 4 .

' ·lc:-

Garaga sale: Furniture. diahes
cur1ains. luggage." bedspreads:
uniforms, clothing and much
more. Juty 31st. and Aug. 3 .
518 Mulberry Hts. 614-992 ·

7489 .

St. Rt . 124, 2 milus from Rt. 7 ,
easl of Rutland. Aug . 1 .2.3.
9 :00·7. Antique piano rolls. 2
can , clothing. much more.
2 , family . 493 Lin.coln St.,
Middleport . July 31 and Aug. 1 .
9 ·4p.m . Mens, women1, childrani clothing and mite. item 1,
Ridenoura near Tuppers Plains
ti~~u.se . Fri, and S1t., Higtt'
cha•r. )eans , co ats, hu.midllier
misc .

... -- --p--

- ....-~ ----

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

t,. easant
&amp; Vicinity

.............................. .
ThrM Family Y1rd Sale, Satur·
doy Aug 1. 9oOO tlll ?. 107 Fifth
St. Mason. Black •nd whhe T\(.
bedspreNs, draiM'IM, tGtt Q1
dliklrens IC.hoo1 clothtl, etc.
Sat and Suh, Corn• Rt . 33 and
Midway, New H1ven. lov ...et,
c)1air, dish ... tap•trv. la12
Orientlll rug, clath•. hoiiHI•
bed table, chandeli•. book~..
sewin~ and crochet IUpptl•.
matat'lll.

.'

sc~~nner.

Y•d hit.. Rl. 2 Nonh RoMNf·

Gigantic- July 31 • Aut. ' ·
Rout• 7. Ch ..Nre. Fumhure.
glauware. excellent chn~··
school ~lof/'lng ,. good llldults'
ulection.

frl

stown acrots from GuH ltltioQ
ond Sot, t 'OO, tllt 4oOO.
,

Ytfd8tto. July31-A"'I.C
mil~ .

out Jerry•s Run, Apple

GroYI'; 304-57t -2138.

•

�,.

- .,.
31

14 The Daily Sentinel

LAFF-A-DAV

Homes for Sale

b~rooms .

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

•

Why rent wt\en: you ean own 1
· home . .Owner wiH help finance
' thls 1'h story homa. 8 mil ..
north of Point Plusant, :lA acre

o•derl spot. 3

51 Household Goods

eat in

kitchen, woodburner, low 30's,

304-875-4008.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW

-

AND US"EO MOBILE

HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.

WEST: GALLIPOLIS. RT 3~.
PHONE 114·446-7274.

Several handyman specials
Tens, Twelves. and FourteenS .
from '1995 . . Kanauga Mobile
Home

Sales. Kanauga . 'Ohio

64

KiT 'H' CARL YU ®by urry Wrllllt

Misc. Merchandise

1984 Shultz . 3 BR . withe~epand .
Mk:rowave. 816,000 or best
off,... Call 814- 446:6725 . ,

7479 .

••1 remember ·when an apple
pie used to Sit on the windowsill . to cool
not to
thaw."

Twin beds. S100. Call614-266·

1558.

Furn1shed apt next door to
library . .One professionpl Adult
only . Parking. Ph , 446-0338.

4 acres. level ground. SV: miles
from PointPiea~&gt;antonSandHIII
Road. E)lcellent building site.
Ca11304 -458 -1041 .

4208.

·

Furni&amp;hed apartment. 8210
utilities paid. 1 bdr. ~20 Fourth,
Gallipolis- Call 446 -4416 after
8

· ~pm_.- - - - - - - -

Upstairs, 3 BR . 1 bath. kitchen
furnished. no pets. Dep. &amp; Ref.
23S First 8250/ mo
plus
utilities.C&amp;\1 614-446-4926 .

Rental s

2 BR , 2 blith. carpeted, kitchen
furnished, no pets. dep . &amp; ref.
S325 / mo. 11 Court St . Call
614 · 4·6~ 4926 .

41

Houses for Rent

Ntcely furn1.shed small house.
Adutts only . References re·
quired . Off tlreet parking. Ph.
. 614-446-0338 .

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

Brookside · Apartments 446 1932 or 446-4639 One Bedroom apartment with ' large
country kitchen. new applian ces. utility room , water, sewer ·
and trash services provided.
Quiet area

614-446-0444.

New 3 bedroom ranch house
with large fenced in yard . ..,t otal .
electric. 1360 par month. located em Rt. 180, 7 milea from
Holzer Hospital. No inaide pets. ·
Reference required- Available
Sept. 1 Call 614-388-9766
after 6 :00p.m.

For Lease

Lo;ge 1st floor. 5 rOom. unfurnished apartm8nt on city park.
1 1h baths. off Street pArking
$326 per month. Ref. tall
614-446-4425 .

Merchandi se
51 Household Goods

Apartments· New peint. nice,
good locatiOn. Call 304 -11175·

5104 or 875-7738 .

1---.---,...,.---::-:-

PARSON'S FURNITURE

514· 992·6916 .

Oak lumber for sale.. 20 cents a
loo t . Cut an ban taw . 814-247-

For sale: 6000 BTU air conditioner. $100. T.V. Antenna $16.
614-992-6382 aUer 5 :00 . ,
Electric fencer reaches 5o mihJI,
used 2 weeks. S175 . Antique
table, 100 yrs. old. sso. 304-

773-5397.

Lika new ~ manually operated
' hospital bed with mattress and
side ralla. Uaed jult aeverel
weeks. Sold new for $1400,
asking only 1600. Also bhnd
toldini whael chair. Navar
-used outside Used only 3 d-vs
inside. Sold new for e646.

new

2443.

Free1er to.- sale- upright model Lazarus brand- &amp;160. Call 61,4-

446-4412 between 7-9 pm or

448-4746 .

Kinv 1ize bed. clean. verv good
cond . ." $276 or bett offer. Bed
clothing incl. Call 614-256-

CAPTAIN EASY

AMERICAIJ A6ENT5
ARE ALWA"/6 50
8EAI.JTIFLIL. • .

i----.

304-175·1886.

F,Jrm Supplie!;

Chest freezer, 760 lb cap.
$76 .00. 304-895-3686 .

" - · t2795. Call 81•·281·

&amp; L1vesluck
61

8522.

1 9115 Mere. lvn•. 4 apiMd,
AM·FM -Tape. 13&lt;4e9. John 's
Auto Sal•. Bu181WI .. Ad. Gallipolis, Ohio.

Farm Equipment

'715 FOfd LTD. good cond ,
304· 896· 39&amp;5.
'78 Malibu clauic ' 73 Nov•·

304·17&amp;· 1181 alt ... I ,OO.

'76 Cutl~as Supreme, Y-8 lutqmatlc, no rutt , goo4 cond,

304·676· 7376.

1 9'12 Ford f' . 700 Stake Truck.
Hal 1, 200 gallon wat•r tan II and
air braket. Autts goM. 12000 or
bool oH ... Colll14-261}418.
1971 Ford C -eoo. 20 ft . van
bOdv- 12.500. Cell 4!114-441·

3169.

lntarnattoul 1600 wl .. whh
1 B tt. \lin bOdy •2.500. C•ll

114·448· 3119 .

1112 Plymouth A "ow PI ell-"P·
Manu.. shift. aport ~h.unmum
whMis. aun root. AM 7FM atar.o
C:Uia'tlli. 63,000 mil", · gOod
eol\dfUon. 12800, C.ll 814-

1978 Ford F2150 pickup. •••.
low mileage. rta ru11. 4 tpeed
and 1979 Dodge fire -.gon
4•4. automat ic, &amp;4. ~ aetual
m11a1 . Tak• your p ic k
t2 .9!1fi.OO . 4117 utilky trau.,, •H
mttal n.w 1200 00. 304-6711421.

•

73

Vans&amp;

6522.

:t!{) (?ATHER HAVe
GANfAL.OUPES... - :- •
TtfEY fiAVE

AW.

tloR. 01100 . Call 11.4·H2·

THSI~ S~EI?.f

•N oNe pLAce.

, 973 Startratl ~8f'Y'per, 21 tt,
Mt1 eont-'lned, 12.800,00. 304·

7-30

882-2181.

Si![VII.I!S

Homa
Improvements
IAIEMENT

WATEAPIIOOFINU

UnMndldonoll lltet ima; ....,~.
t.oc• ret. . . ces fvrnished.
Fr• aatlmates. Call c.Oilact
1:814-237-0418. di¥ or nfiht.
A o i • ' a l • s a m e . nt
Watarproofift9.

?/

frea stump removal. lrione.
m-,lc;:h , IOPIOII , e'-largr•an
ahrubs, biQ worm 19"ayktg.
Don'a ltlndlc8PM, Call

eu:.

1981 JaapJ -10trlld, 4114, new
transmteaton. 12.200. or best

1981 Ford BLu:ar •••· powlf'
st...-ing, power brat. ... eltcellant condition. 20.000 mil...
plus four new m0t.1ntec( buckthot
fnudders. t8 ,1500. 304-372·

9493.
1977 Jtei)CJ -6 , new pelnt. n.w
tires , t1 , &amp;00 .00. 304· 676-

Motorcycles

1985 Honda Shadow 500 low
mileage . Cendy' Apple
Red . t1496 . Ctll 114· 387-

7410.

1985 Honda Din Bik• CR80·
like mrw. 1971 Motorcycle. GT
80 Yam1h1. Call 114· 38S·

.

19&amp;·3802

.

.

St1rli.1 TrH a~ Lawn S..-vice.
lawn etre, ltindsceplng, stump
removal. 304· 171 -2142 or

MORTY MEEKLE
\M:JLIL.D '&gt;OJ LII&lt;E TO .JOIN
THE FI&lt;IENDSHIPCLLJB,
HAROLD~

luifdlng &amp; remodeting. room
additions. rooHng , layout, level·
ing. lidina. bathrooma. con·
crete. electrical, drywall , plumb-

HAHA HA
HAHAHA

H.AH.AHA!

IT~

KIND OF HARD ID

DI6TINqUI$H B&amp;lWEEN
FRIIENClUN- ~3 AI'-JD DERISION.

I

lno. J04· 8?a· 3713.

..

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

Cor. Fourth end Pint
G•lll~lis, Ohio
Phone 114-448-3888 or 114·
446-4477

'

.

BARNEY.
YONDER GOES
OC SNUFFY WITH

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

HIS Goooesr

~"7:-'

WHO IN THUNDER
COULD THAT BE ?

llcConnlcl&lt;

D (])

Harvest Gold Electric Cook
Stove. 125 Call 814-21!1&amp;-11715.

AM · FM, aun roof. le•ther,
UOOO cooh. CMI 114-311·
97515
5 p.m.
•
'

•tt.,

CARPET- 9x12- as low 11180tot. to pick from . Also cut
carplt, 88 .00 1 yd. and up.
Financing aveil. Swival rockers.
•100 . Mollohan .Furniture. ·
Upper River Rd . Call 81 4 · 4467444.

19111 Ford hcort. Low milexcellent cOIMitlon,

t3600 cuh.
aft., 6 p.m.

2 dOor,

814· 388-97&amp;&amp;

1983 Mame Carlo C.l. T-top.
Evary ava.l llble option. 46,700
miln. Trade for ama!l llutr or
OMC or 11lrfor ttoOO. or offer.
Coli Ron 114-112·7~73 oi

FOur piece. full siza, white
eano·py bedroom suite. t400

HouaeforrentinPortland, Ohio.,
Completely renovated , total
ttectric. c•ntral air. heat pump,
plenty of yard and garden apace..
4 mi. from Aaventwood. 114-

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bact.
room ap.,rtment• at Villaga
Manor and Alveraide Apartmenta in Middleport. From
12115. indaiding utllitl•. Call

!1083,

redial tlr•, Dual u.hault. CJHn. '

3 pc bre·a dfast nook. 4211:30
table and 2, upholatered '
btnch", t715.00. 304· 876-

Wrodlolil1971 Chiorg.... AobuiH

143·8309.

814· 992· 7787 . EpH .

11876.

Silt rDOm housa, Fairview Road.
Camp Conley. $225 p..- month.

FOf rent: Eft,lciencY cottlga, Mt.
Vernon Ave. Pt. Pl..aant . Hud
approv!td. 11114-192-5851.

-Ttble, ch•ir•. -'tctrlc range,
eltctrlc tw•eper, variout kitchen
•nd miac ltema. 304·171- 2012.

-

114-19B·I814.

Kroehler contemporarY atyla
tQve seat and. toft . Rust colo!.
Good condition. Cell 61 4 · 992·

'

' 1971 Coug• XR 7. Now ·R.WL

198111 Honda 250, 4 wh_eelar.

t1.soq.oo. 304·.171-2018.
'74

Hondl 360,

lltlt new,

t400.00. 304171-311a.
19815 Honda ATV 3 whHier
70cc. exc cond. bought naw.
appro• 10 hrsute , call304·11175-

1883.

I

1978 Honda 510 or will tntda for
4 whael•. ••c cond, 304·882·

24ZB.

FRIEND

76

Boats and
Motors for Sale

t1300. Coll814-742·3013.

"He's a slow learner... that's the only trick
he know~.... "

Ukt n.w 21 ft . 1981 ·Aqua
motor t400. · Complett. C•ll Cruise Pontoon houlebott, 815
114-aii2-Ba91.
HP Marcury outboard. 18800.
Aluminum Ia•• laa1 rig, 70 HP
1980 Mu.,.ng. T-top, 4 cyL, 4 Johnaon motor; trailer. Mercury
tpnd. good condhlon, Eng. over trollng motor, treated live welt,
hau-..t.-··nerw clutch. n:lns grea1. , uaed l
(:all Zlnna 4ndlng

1187&amp;. 814-371-8233.

•aeoo.

614-441· 7044.

.

.A lifetime's worth
of deception
By James Jacoby

+ K J 10 9 8
WEST .
.AK94
• A42
t2

..

EAST
+QJ532
• 6 53 .
+K 7 6 5

'

.2

.78543

Night A joyride turns Into a
clealhrlde when a car Is
lo8ded With weaj)ons.(R) .
(!J Trapper John, M.D.
John's Other Ufe

DCDLIIeShow

••""••· 304·171·224a.

12:011 ()) Bumuncl Allen
(JJ~(R)

PEANUTS ..

Dump Trude. Sarvlee, coal, 11m"tonlll, sand. gravel. din. trath
etc. Phone 304-e7S- 3190
'

~~R~t People
II)) "'-INight Uve news
With Pllrk:k Emory and .
Klraten Undqulat. (1:00)
t2:30 (I) lilt .. ~
D (J) IUl LN Night with
Dlvld LltiMn8n
.
(I) AI
1111
8erlll ~rom Louisville.

A &amp; M Custom Couches and
Aeupholstery, St At. 7, Crown
City, Oh. 81•-2158-1.70, Eve. .

,.,_.n ....

114-446-3438 . Open doHy 9 to
4,30; Sot. 9,30 to 1:30. Old 11o
new Uphost..-ed.

Kentucky (A)
(I) Roakhwcl.llha ·
G (I) 111M Reel~
. r ·--

!I

"'

.. ·

..

.-

7i3o

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the' three L's, X for the two D's, etc. Single letters,
a~. the length and fonnation of the words are all

hints. Each day the code letters are different.

·

.

.' -

ORYPTOQUOTE
1-30

s

0

Q X R

KTIBQIBI

QIWCSQ

QEJ(

Q

"'

KXLUIO

•

I!DIIgnOII

.

·.

'

AXYDLBAAXR
iaLONGFELLOW

Ill WI(RP In Clnclnnltl

10:30)
DIIJI 'Night Heel' CBS Late

.'

•'

DAILYCRYPTOQUOTES-Herers bow to work it:

1J &lt;ll Nlghtllne E;l

packed spons hlghllgh1s whh
NiCk Chartes and Jim Huber.

..

4 O'Neill
play

(!) ,SportaCentlr (L)

Ill) Trapper John, M.D.
IIJ) Sparta Tonight Action

5 Guarantee
6 Exemplary
7 Topic for
Dr. Ruth
8 Athirst
9 Exasperate
12 Jamie Curtis
17 Summer
(Fr.)
19Worn out
20 Act
Yesterday's Answer
21 Ascot
fabric
29 Ordinary 36 Franchot
22 Aust. bird
23 Main star 3 1 Doze off 38 Rhymester
25 Goal
33 Shabby
39 Formerly
26 Donald . 34 Trilby e.g. 40 Equa_l
Duck trait
'
42 Fencmg
27 Relay
35 European
dummy
race unit
river
44 - ear

3Tok~n

Miss May Dusa

a CD Love Connection
11:30 D (J) as TonlghtShow

· Formerty Ken' a now John's
Water Sarvi~. John.Waderson.
Jr. Owner. 1.000 or 2,000 gal

Mowrey'• Uphol•t•ing serving
tricountY.rea22yatrs. Thabest ·
ilt furniture upholstering. Call
304 - t75 - 4154 for free
it1tlmi.tea.
\

1 Underlying
6 German
river
10 Nimble
11 -'s
advocate
13 Beer
. 14 Ostracize
lG Sea eagle
16Beverage
18 Sandra
or Ruby
19 Right
21 Brazilian
seaport
24 Post
28 Univ. in
Georgia
29'Watered
fabric
30 Unsullied
31 Spice
32 Humming
'sound
34 Fervid
37Do a sum
38 Mild
explosion
41 Usurp
43 Expiate
45 Basic
precept
46 Relative
· 47 Trust
48 Door sign
DOWN
1 Bundle
2 Seaweed
byproduct

DobbS. (0:30)
® Talao from the Darkalde

2919.

Upholstery

Ill Cll lltl Ill 1121

® The African a Discuss
Africa's long history of
having hs "'sources
explolled.
IIJI Manayllne Current
rePorts on world economics
and financial news with Lou

Walterson 't · Wiler Hauling,
rauonable rataa, immediate
~.000 gallon detNery, ciaterna. '
poola. well. ate. call 304-1571-

87

(IJ

asN(!) Sign Off

1·---,--------

1182 Ford Exp, Pl. PB. olr,

.

10:30 ()) Various
Ill MOVIE: Three Godfathers
INA) (1 :45)
.
.
® Tony Brown'• Joumal
D CD P/ID Products
11:00 ()) Hardcaatle and

tI~==:::::::::.L:=====:::====~
SNAFU ® by Bruce Beattie

6719.

•

of today· s news and a look ·
ahead to tomorrow's news
stories. (1 :00)

Call 614·311·847&amp; .

Y-a XT 100 8, tl60.00.
304-171-3190.

identifKts the next victim.

(JJ Spsaclworld
(IJ . • (J) 20/20 Q
(f) Alllltlcan Ceuar Sunsal

IJ&lt;DSolp

19815 Iuick Rivera. "Laic of the
Residential -or commerCial w irBig on11," charco•! Gray, 3 Wtieelar Bicycle. Call 614ing New servica or repairs.
446-3168.
191 760 milll, lotdad with Ill· ·
lieenailtd eleetrieian, E1t1mate
tra1. t14.500. Ca11 814·448·
free. Aidenour Electrical, 30'41886
Yamaha
YZ
125.
uc.
8289.
6522.
cond. 11200. Call 81•· 319· , 876 -1786.
800 fOf'd 1reetor. t2760. 241
1973 Orand Prht Ponti..::. f\lflS 2161 .
ln1ernational round baler- like' good . Call 114·2&amp;111-1187 .
86 General Hauling
1980 Kawaskl · 440 LTD, new
naw, l3260. International hay
tirn and battary. 1981 Yamaha
conditioner. t291S. Grinder- l9B3 Dodoe Charg•. 2 dr ..
• 4 whHier. Call 114-245M111ar. 8660. C•ll 614-286- hatchbadl, 4 apd .. 4 cyl1t1200. 80
9107
Dillard Watar &amp;arvica: Pools,
8622.
' ·
Call 114-~41-1573 .
Citterns. Weill. Delhterv Any Hoilda CX Cu1tom 500.
time. Call 614·•41-740ot-No
GRAVELY Tractor with mower, 1979 Poiltiac lran1· Am. Blaclt 1982 milellge.
star.o. luggage
Sunday calls.
tiiiM. plow, tnowbllde, and dual , with gold trim, T-tapa. Out- low
racks. be . Cond. Call- 614whe-.ls ,$1600. · Call 614-446- standing condition ! t4500 . 388·B211 Oayo Of 614· 388J &amp; J Wet•r Serviee. Swimming
889e.
·
080 . Call 151 ..-742· 3111. ·
83151 Evenl.noa.
,•
pools, cilternt. wella. Ph . 614 245·9215'.
1983 CheYette. St.,wd..-d. 4 1981 v..,..aha · 2150 belt..-.
tpeed. In good condttlon .
A &amp; R Water Service. Home
49.000 mu... 132 Bunornut. 3,000 mil•. 304-678-2007.
cia1erna. welts, , pools filled.
Pom•oy, Ohio.
·
Kawasaki 2150 LTD, 8500.00,
formerly Jam• Boys' Water.
good cOttd, 304-.882' 2487
Coli 304-875-1370.
1981 Dodge Omni 12-' Mlaer.
614-992·180~ .

+QJ 1098

ACROSS

l:oO ()) 700 Club
IJ (]) IUl Che8Q Norm
helps Sam Into the frying pan
when he ~uys Diane a cheap
ring.(R)
1J (I) Our WOI1d E;l
(f) I!]) llyeterYI·r:;l
!Ill DIIJ MOVIE: 'The Big
Chll' CBS Thuraday ft'lavfe
iR) (1:45) D
IIJ) Lany lOng Llvel In deplh
interviews with top
·
newsmakers and CGiebrltles.
9:30 D (J)
Daya and Nlghla
·
ol Molly Dodd Molly lries to
get a commi&amp;slon check from
her former boss and lover.
t 0:00
Jake'a M.O. When
a string of seemingly random
murders ~aHies pollee , an
~.A. crime reporter no1 only
connects the murders ~ut

Gun

AND HEATING

1 980 · 6150 Suz!Jki, runs iOOd,
looks good. 1500 or b•t off•.

•a

. atWJr~ed' ..

l!ll IBI News
11J1 Evening Newa A wrap up

CARTER'S PLUMBING

84

7-ll-87

4.

e (]) as

WINTHROP

IJ'

a78·2903.

B2

NORTH
+7 6

IM~A

as

166 MF Difllet' treetor. t3960 .
#12 MF bahtf',l11&amp;0. 7ft. NH
haybint;l, t660 . 200 gallpn tpray
tank, e296 Call 614· 286·

PS. PB. AC. ·~~ ohope. t1 250.

BRIDGE

SOUTH
The Bridge World magazine (39 ·
+to s
West 94th St., New York, NY 10025)
.KQJI097
. has been publishing continuously· for·
+A 4 3
.
;]\f=orld
GTP . more tha~ 50 years . Recently tl!e
+AQ
Series from Pontand, Oregon magazine has offered a special on old
Vulnerable: Neither
Issues to clear out storage space. AI·
(!),
Dealer: South
(IJ MOVIE: Dangerous
though someone ordering can't specify
C'ompll)y iNR) (f :40)
individual issues, it's a great deal for Wesl
North Eait
Soulb
D (I) Starman A woman
bridge · buffs. Today's rubber bridge
from Forrester's past is
deal, taken from an issue of 1980, was Dbl.
Pass Pass
Redbl. • ·
de1ermlnild to marry
·
a contretemps between partners that Pass
Pass Pass
Starman. (A) C
still rankled in 1980, 30-odd years af(f) Wild Amenca Host Many
ter it had occurred.
Opening lead : • 2
Stouffer shares his secrets
Both the opening bid by South and
oi wildlife pho1ograplly. C
!Ill • liZ Scarecrow ana
his redouble expressed the ego in- · L-.-,--~---:-~-,--.;;..J
Mra. King Lea learns 1hal ,his
volvernent that is nurtured by our fa·
most trusted source Is a
vorite game. But his declarer play set East on lead: Of course, we' can see
dealer's cbnfidant (R)
a trap for the defenders that was his that king and a diamond would now set
® National A~dubon
vindication. West led his singleton dia- declarer two tricks, but East could-not
Society Special The plight ot
mond.
EaSt did not believe his partner believe that declarer had not started
the Cillfornian condor. now
was
UDder
leading an ace, so he played l'(ith a singleton ace of diamonds.
on the brink of extinction . C
low. South won with the ace. Next (How else could the play at trick llne
11Ji Prim-ws Wrap ups of
came the king of hearts. West won the be ~xplained?) So he returned his
the -day's world news and in
depth feature reports. (1 :OOJ
ace and then played the king of spades. deuce Of clubs. and the doubled and&gt;re(!J MOVIE: The Wet W11110n
East played the queen , a conventional do~bled contract was scored up. Who
(NR) (1:41)
signal that promised the jack, and can blame East and West for still ar·
CD MOVIE: The Outlaw
West underled the spade ace to place going, almost 40 years later•
iNA) (1 :43)
1:15(l) MOVIE: She Wore a
Y..IOw Albbon (NR) (1 :43).
1:30
(2) IUl Family Tlea
Jerm;fer downplays her
. by THOMAS JOSEPH
ln1elligance 10 win a boy's

e

'"

"ot•ry o.- cable tool dfiiNno.
. Moat walt eompfM.wt aame day .
Pump ••• tnd 1ervtce. 304 ·

offw. 304·812 ·2182.

niversary. After reading all the inscrlplions I came 10 lhe conclusion that they wsren'l that HAPPILY m;~rried .

attention.

1910 Wllly1 Jaep. 4a4. Rune
,ood · teoo . Call 114· 742·

2433.

YEsTEIDA Y'S SCIAM-i.Ets: ANSWERS
Epilog - Hoist - Dally. ..:_ Openly - HAPPILY.
·.
I was trying to find a nice card .for my friend's wedding an-~

e

tM .

·2414.

8721 .

1979 Pontltc Bonnewlll4, 2 dr ..
cond. Call 114· 317-0397
after 5 :00 PM .

/

For sale: Sunllne true• camplt, ·
for I h . betd . SIMP• 4. elec-gu
rth ..er•tOf, • burner 110.,. •ith
oven. Furnac:e. a•c.ahlftl eondi-

Fatty lr. . Tr~mlni . ltumc»
removal. Call 304-175-1331 ,

74

e~~e .

21 ft. camp•. Tandl(n wh ... s.
... lf·contalnad. fuM bllth. awn·
iriQ. 1laeps s l• . Good condiHon..
t3200. C111 fl1• · 986· 4411

AON ' S Talavltton l•rvica .
House Calls on AC&amp;. Ouuar.
GE , SpKiallng In Zenhh. Catl
304-671-23tl Or 114·441·

I

UN5CRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER

D(]) as

·ERNEST.:

1980 Ford Bronco. auto .. AC ..
Pl .• PI .. AM -FM -Can .. whha
sport whlltells. Call 8 14· 245·

1986 Che'-latte. atandard ,
28.000 mi. EKCellent condition.
S3500. Cali 81•· 682-6813

388· 9308.

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

~8 - Hotl ,

1009.

late modal 650 tracJor
cocklhut -4 new tires - live
poW"er-3 pt . hitch.S1,660. John
Deere Baler. IIIO. John Deere
Hay Binder, $760. Jqhn De..-e
Rake, 1850. Call 614· 286·

as

2191 orl71· 1113. ·

Call 114· 241·1112.

0577.

Bldgo. 614-332-9745 .

Strliiht I Iuick eogine, newty
r.bullt tranamlasion. 304.-876-

1976 fotd F-250 •••- Call

Massey Ferguson. New Holland. ,
Bush Hog SaiM &amp; Strviee. Over
40 used traclors to chooSe from
&amp; complete line of new &amp; used
equipment. Largett aelecHon in
S .E. Ohio.

1977 Plymouth Volare, 318
engine. good wortl car t400.
1957 Ford F-100, pickup- 2213
engine, 1tand . trans., needs
work. f100. 1184 "ambler
stttionwagon. 199 engine.
12,600 actual miles, n84tda
some work. t100 . Call 814·

II(J)Judge
·
Ill) WhHI of Fortune E;l
IIJ) Cro1111re (0:30)
Ill Q2) . JeQPatctyl Q
(!J Soap
1:00 ()) Daklarl
The Cosby Show
'Cliff's long time friend Scott
files in from Chicago wi1h his

1977 ChtwyPidl:up trueli . aeoo.

5111.

PRINT NUMBERED
lETTER&gt; IN 5QUARE S

James J.acoby

(JJ Speedw. . k (T) ,

Colll14·441-1728.

1171 V.W. Van. 2.000 mil• on
rebult -.,ine, !'lew paint, good
tlr... E.eta. condh'on. 11?00.

Complete the chuckle quoted

.
_
.
.
.
• by f11/1ng in the missing words
L--'--L--1--'--'~-' you develop f r~ m step No, 3 below .

D CD Star Trek .

4W.D.

614·441·3413.

,"

7:30 D (J) (IJ Newlywed Game

289 motor and transmistfon •
ufl Min""• at 304· 875-4817,

I

O E F O I .L

~--,.~,;?:--;TI....:..,I,.::.-;.1'::6.::.,1.--1 C)

• as
®Bllnaon

114-441-0911.

1031 .

I
I

·

ABC Nawa !;I
1111y
Report

a

U1ed and Rabuih tr1n1mlaaklna.
lnterntltv intpected and vu't ran·
teed. lnttallttton wailabl•- We
buy Junk trt1nami11ions. Call

. 81

Ill

llJI!nlerlalnment Tonight
(I) People'a Court
(!) «&lt;I MacNeil/ Lehrer
!ieWIIHour ( l :00)
Ill! Newa
IIJ) Moneyllne Currenl
reports on world economics
· alld financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
~
Wheal of Fortune

992·3419.
1977 c .es t:hl'liy duml' tru&lt;:ll.
920 tire,, 5 s~ transmi11ton.
2 lpMd all ... 14, IQO, 304·418-

i(J) !lu-•
m

(!) -nefa Circle (R) ·

When my son learne&lt;j thi! cost
of a gold chain he let oul a low
.
.
.
.
,:. whistle. "How much for the olher
r-'-::-::-::-:-:-::--, one?" he asked. "Oh, aboutlhrae
~------The clerk smiled.

(JJ SportaC.ntar (L)

7518 tor more lnfotmauon.

18ft. van body, for sale. t1 .200 ..
Calll14-441-31 59.

as NBC Nlglllly News

D (J) .PM Magazine·

Auto Partl

676-671a .

·79

!

S W·I H H
•
-~-.,~;:;._;;1-=.,1:.;5:....:;1;.,&amp;--i ~

~k

BUDGET Trantmi11ton1; U•~·
Rtbultt. All lyp.... Guaranteed •
ml,ln1um of ~30 · day a, will
deliver. cash 6 carrv Qf ina•al.
Call 114 · 379-2220 or 1· 304-

Trucks for Sale

1977 luit* laSabre, four door .
air. nero, cruise, tilt, new paint,
360 V-8 : 11460. Call 814-~6 ·

Ut iUty bldg: 27'1136 ' ~;~9' • 13'd'
track door &amp;: 3' walk door .
$4.444 erected - Iron Hone

304-

175-8414.

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S . 36 West, Jaclcaon. Ohio.

614-288-6451 .

oner,

or belt

8:30·D (J)

',.
"

!II)
iiJ CIS "'WI
.
®Woo-Square
IIJ) ShowBiz Today New~ of
'the anlortatrmen1 world is
anchored live from New
York. (0:30)
7:00 (l) Hardcatlle and

1918 Rink• V-190 wittl Eagle
drive-on trail•. tquippad wtth
..flay bra. .. .170 hp 1/ 0, call

n '.zoo.oo

SEEAL

Dr. Who The Rlbos

Operation

1987 Inv-ader 18Yr ft, " · haul.
opan bow . 120 tip 1/ 0.

1980 Fiat X19 , 31.000 miles.

I I' I I

«&lt;I Secret City
D CD S.tll. .ter Galictlca

•

06,500.00. 304-87&amp;·1239.

cond, coll304-171·4014.

WA R 0 T Y

as-·
(!) Sporlsloolt (T)
(!)

1. 'OUAN

1ow to 1orm 1our simp 1e wor s.

M

EVENING

12 ft Sear• Gam• Fist.. flMr·
glan boat. trtller, swivel nata.
motor, cover, 2 live wetla.

1977 Ford LTD Landau, good

----- l~lro4 ~,CLAY

Qteorron;e tenors oF •h•
four scro mblod words bod ·

8:00()) lig Vlljty
D()) Ill D&lt;ll ~ -~

4,30 pm.

1971 Volvo. S800. Call 814·
218-15158.

THURS.. JULY 30

MO~!

1183 layWner 18 ft. bolt wtth
lrliler.' t8 HP mcm~r. He1 walk
through wind shield. 1•100.
Phone 814· 992 -7163 after

Ca11304·882-2396.

67&amp;-3812 .
J. '

......_c~_,.AtJD coo~

Mornlng1 or Evenifttl.

78

v iewing·

·
M

c&lt;&gt;nd. Call · 114·441·2888 •

861 3rd . Ave .. GallipoUs· 3 IR .
duph"" · unfumlshed apt., t250 a
month plus dep .. Call814-2461695 .

304·171· .

.

11 ft . Merk Twain. 10 h.p.
Mercury motor 1nd traM•. Good

Building Material•
.
Block, brick. HW8f pipM, win·
dowt, llntelt. etc. Claude Win tera, Rio Or1nde, 0 . Call 6142•6-6121 .

Heil 2 ton add on central air
conditioner with thermost-tt .
ssoo. Call 614-992· 5526 or

New wood 6 .pc ltving room Aak;ng 0300. 614·992-2786.
suites, t399 .96; New living
room sui1ea from S179 .96 to TONY'S GUN REPAIRS . hot
reblueing, now taking order
1700.. Chest of drawers. 4
orders for cuatom Mai.laers. call
drawsr, $48 ., 5 drawer. $69 .96 ;
304-675-4631 .
End tables from 169 .95 set.
Used Furniture: bedroom suites.
·full sizeD beds, twin beds and ' AVON . look at us now. Earn
rockers Recliners from $99.95- btra Monay. 304-875-1429.
and up
For fast If! Ie. stove and refrigeraTHE WORKING
tor $360.00. Livingroom furniMAN'S FRIEND
ture $360.00. Craigo Mags
Freezer, upright. good cond. $250 00. 304 -675 -&amp;574.
175 Boii219-E Coli-Mercerville
bee certificates. 304 -675 ·
Rd . Mercerville.
Good used Co~r TV' S , floor
models a'nd portables for sale.
Call614-448-1149.

OOi.F c.£lJil'56.E!I:IQt.l.f~:O~,A
40-IOE LA!'~; FOR ~TIIIIIb
AIJD SAILINMIODeL~

- --&amp;-Accessories
----'--r~~~~~;:~~~~~~~~~T.:.~~~
71
AutoS for Sale

3972 .

Modern 1 BR apartment. Call
61 4· 446·0390. ..-

Kitchen furnished . carpeted. 2
BR , 1 % bath, no pets, . Oep &amp;
Ref . 233 Secon'd Avenue .
8350/ mo , plus utilities
Call
614-446-4926 .
' • furnished efficiency, 701
Fourth Ave. 8160 utilities pd.
6 room house 875 per month. 8 Call 614-446-4416 ~her Bpm .
room house 8175 per month, Pt.Pieas . Call Brok8f A-1 Reel 1 BR apt. 740 Second Ave.
Estate 304-675-5104.
$185 per month . Deposit required . Call 614-446-4222 beFor R e nt ~ Furnis hed 3 room tweer 9 &amp; 5 .
cottage in town , no pets., adults.
Ref. and Dep. Call 614 -446 - Furnished.dOwn .. airs. 3 rrns.
2543.
and bath . Clean. No pet~ . Adults
only._Deposlt and Ref. Required.
Half ol a double. 128 State St. 6 Call814·44f$· 1519.
.
rooms, bath, carpet. $200 a
month Sec. Dep and Ref. Garage Apt .. 2 SR .. Adults only.
Aeq'ett. Call 614-446-0264.
No pets. 322 lrd Ave. Gallipolis. Ohio Call614-446-3748' or
3 bedroom . On lincoln Heights 256-1903
in Pomeroy. Phone 614- 992 7689 after 5 :00 p.m.
Nicely furnished, 2 BR apart ment. Nice location . Adults only.
2 bedroom house overlooking Call 614· 446 -2404.
park in Middleport . Call 614·
992 - 259~ .
.
Upstairs , unturn. apt .. Good
location. Utilit~es pd.. AduH1.
2 bedroom, w . o hook-up, bas• DepOs. Call 614-446-1 457 af~
ment. . Clean. Quiet location. tef 3 ;30 PM:
1dulta· seniora preferred. 1 or 2 1 -------,..-~-­
children .. No ·pet1. Refet"ence. 4 rmt . and bath. Cantrally
1,1 $6-f191 month plus depo1il. loceted . One'or tWo adulta. Ref.
Av•ilable immediately . 614· - and Sec. dep. req'&amp;d. Call

992·5597.

49

~••~~~~A ~-MO!Jii 1J

t9.200.00. 30•·171-2&amp;17.

614-446· 6594 .

3 or 4 Bedroom house in Kyger
Creek School District . Referen·
ces Ph 614-446-8621 .

--.....J

Boot Club. Coil 614-441·4782.

.. ..

11h ac lot on Jerrys Run Rd .
Apple Gr.ov_e. !Nith rural water.
304-576 -2383 .

N6W

~~L.'OPWliJT! we HA~ f'I.A'I'~A
P!.A'ZA ...

1985 ~· ft , Pontoon ftoat~at.
70 HP Evenrude motor. traill!'·
Lo1•Ext,.1 . Saa at Qallipoli•

SWAIN
Concrete blocks all sizes yard or
' AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
14•70 Ca•avan Haolo• 1 acoe
delivery. Mason sand. Glll!llipolla
•
Oli..ie St ., G•llipolis.
Block co .. 123 V~ p;"• St..
61 Farm Equipment
land.' garaga. privacy fence;
NEW- 6 pc. wooc;t group- S399
Gallipolis.
Ohio
Call
614-448·
located 11• mile out Peach Fork
Living room suites- $199- $599.
Rd., Pomeroy. 614·992-24731------...;;-.,.._--,r-----..;;.------f Bun~ bed1 with bedding- $199 2783 .
1980 Ma11ey_ Ferguso" 120
or 614·992·7512 .
Full sin mattress &amp; foundation "Ready mix co"crBte and ell
baler tor sala. t1900 . 614· 247·
starting- $99 . Recliners concrete supplies , Call us Vall.rv
3972 .
4.1 Houses for Rant
44 Apartment
197~ Skyline, 141t70. 3 badstaning- $99.
Brook Cement and Suppl\et,
room, complete with 11 "22
USED- Beda, dreners. bedroom 304· 773· 5234 .
for Rent
9N 'ford tractor whh new 4 ft.
Urban Patio Cover and Ooor
suites , $199 - $299 . Desks,
brush hog. Auna good. B14Canapy. ·Like new ' condition.
wringer washer. a com'plete line
593-8624. Athens, Ohio .
3 bedroom house. 22o!i'N. Main
, . $10, 500. 1974 121'l60, 2 bed· St.,
of used turn1ture.
304-458-1728 .
56
Pets for Sale
One bedrdom apt. in Middleport
room . E•cellent condition
NEW- Western boots· SJO.
Bars, chains. and aprockMa"to fit
par
month
.
CaU614-992·
8176
.
$111300. DBIIvered. blocked and
Workboots
$18
&amp;
up
.
(Steel
&amp;
. almost any SIW . SlpERS
6763
.
leveled on your lot ·Kingsbury 3 bed room house in Hendltnon.
soft
toe)
,
Call
614-446-3169
.
EQUIPMENT CO .. Hen~araon.
. Homes. 900 E. Main St .. Pome-- W. Va. S275 00 month. call
Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
W Va. 304·175-7421 .
614-446 -9662.
Two bedroom apt. in Middle- County Appliance, Inc. Good Qrooming . All breeds . .. AII
roy. Ohio. 614-992-5587 .
port , All utilities paid . •210 . per
used appliances a.,d TV sets. stylet . Julie Webb Ph. 61 4 ·448·
Sp•cl•s Ofl New Holland Hay
month. Call 614-992-67-63.
3 bedroom mobile home. Set up Beaut1ful 3 bedroom home. 2
Open
SAM to &amp;PM . Man thru 0231 .
tools leash 4aalsl . Two Model
bath:s.
finished
basement,
dou
and ready to move into. Pat1o
Sat . 614-446· 1899, 627 3rd.
268. 8'!1 f1 rsk•. 12.200.00.
Efficiency apartment. Private Ava.
Dragonwynd Catferv Kennel
cover. steps, etc. Complete. ble garage, prime location, rent
Gallipolis.
OH
.
One Model 2M. BYJ ft rahwith
~ 450 . 00 month, phone 304entrance. Single working aduh
S6950. 614·992·5587.
CFA Himalayan. Pertian and
dolty whHis. •2.400.00 Two
676-3030 or 875-3431 .
only · Reference and depotit Valley Furnilu_re, new &amp; used. Slam..e kittens. AKC Chow
Model 472. 1 tt ~bin•.
required. 614-992-6942 after
On Morning Star Ad . Racine.
puppies.
New
klrtens:
Siamese
large section of quality , furni 16,950.00. OnaModel474, 7ft
2 bedroOm house. basement.
5:00.
1
Phone 614-354-4084 .
and
Hima.lay8na.
tall614
-448ture , 1216 Eastern A'-le ,
haybine. 18.400.00. TwoModat
304-675· 5214.
3844 a her 7PM .
Gallipolis,
488,
9 It hoy!One, .1.100.00.
3
room
apt.
for
rent.
Partly
14x70 Windsor with 14"30
One Model 489, 9 ft hfl';'bine,
furnished- 614·992-5908 .
addition, 3 bedrooms, pond, Nice house 6 rooms , convenient
AKC
Golden
Retnevara,
Cham·
GOOD
USED
APPliANCES
t7, 500.00, Ona Modal 30,
appro• 3 acres, Gallipolis Ferry, to town. garden ..yard, reference
pion bloodline. Reidy after Aug.
1000 APM blowar, 12.950,00.
required , $150 . 00 month ,
APARTMENTS , mobile homes, Washers .- dryet's. refrigMators.
16th.
Shots
and
worm-.i.
Call
304·675-6930 .
One Modat 482. dit~ mower,
phone 304-736-7898.
' houses. Pt . Pleas•nt and Galhpo· r•nges . Skagljs Appliances.
after 6 :00PM . 614-446-1841 .
Upper River Rd . bes1de Stone
13,450.00 . Keefen Service
li
s
614-4•8
-8221
.
1982 Redman mobile tlome, 3
Crest Motel . 614-448-7398
Can1er. St . Rt . 87 Point
bedrooms, 141'l6S, vinyl under·
AKC Boston Tetr~ers . Call 614 - Ple•ent·FUplev Road. Phone
2 bedroom tumi!ed -apt. ref and
266. 9364 .
penning; call 304-675-6606 or . 42 Mobile Homes
304-895· 3874.
deposit,
New
Haven,
W.
Va.,
for Rent
175-e870.
52
304-882 - 3267 or 304-773 Two msle AKC Pekin~ese pup- Modet 200 M .F. field choppet.
5024.
.
2 bedroom mobile home w ith 1
pies. 3 mos. old. e1 00 each. Call like new cond, •3.&amp;00.00. 48
614-266-9391 .
1 / 3 acre. Pric;ed to sell Call 2 SR . all utilities pd . e)lefipt_
ineh intula,a blower wfth 45 ft
3 rooms and bath. gas heat,
aftet" 6 :00pm. 304-676-6483
elec., furn . or unfurn , sec. dep.
pipe, 1550.00 . Will trade fvr
gfound floor . waaher and dryer Good used color TV 's. floor
Pure bred Siamese Kiltens for 1tve11ock l04-•fie-1 031 .
req ' ed Conventent location .
hook up , no children. immed11te models and portable for sale.
tale.' 614-949-.2290.
Call614-446-85158 .
ocCupancy. No pets, phone Call 614-446-1 149.
Farms for Sale
33
304-675-4480 el{t 53 or 80.
Beoullful P;ck·A·Poo pup,;n. 62 Wanted to 'uy
Two bedroom furnished mobile
and female, had shots· and • - - - - - , - - - , - - - ' - home. Patio. located in Gallipo Apt S199. per m"onth plus 54 Misc. Merchandise nilale
wormed
. t76 .00, 304-937 - 1
Min1 Farm 9.6 acres. 6 rooms , lis. Cell 614· 245•5190
utilities. Rei. &amp; small deposit
· 3286 .or 304-586 -2217.
bath. full basement. Small barn,
requ1red 304-773-9594
Now buying sh.tl corn or e•
1 out building: BI!IShan Ad" 3 SR . t Jailer in city. Total elec.,
~:or n. Call fori lint quotes. River
Mergs Co. 525.000 , 614-378- CA .. S225 per mon. plus dep.
Callahan's Used Tire Shop.·Over
Musical
City F•rm Suppty, 114-448·
Call 614 -256-6338.
.. 6~09 .
1,000 1ires. sires 12, 13, 14, 1 5. 57
45 Furnished Rooms 16,
2911.
16 .6 . 8 miles out At. ~18 .
Instruments
,20 acre farm Hannan Trace 141{65 Mobile home: 2 BR .. shs
CAII614-256-'6 261 .
Rooms for rent, day . week.
- Road, Glenwood. W. Va. for - on 1 acre land . 2 children
'month. Gellia Hotel . Call 614 - Plaltic. ciatern st•te •pproved.
63
~ more information eall 304-773livestock
accepted. S165 per month plus
Drum aet CB 700, 9 pc
446-9580. Rent as low as 8120
5118 or7?3-5186 aftet" 5 :00.
utilities. $100 dep. Available
plastic septic . tank•. ptast•c &amp;700.00. Call 30:4 -676· 8618 .
month.
Aug . 1st . Call 614-388-9881
culverts. meta! culve·ns. RON
EVANS ENfERPRIS~S . JackOuroc Boals. ~r.id jutt like tht!l
Furn ished room. S76 . Utilit ies son. Oh. 814 -286-6930
12x50 · Edge of town At. 588bo•rs -. tlsted •• the Ohio
Fruit
58
Share
bath.
Single
male
paid
Carport.
On~
small
child
Oep.,
Business
34
Tnt._Hon thM gained over 2.6
919 Second. Gallipolis, Call - Solid Hard Rock Maple Chin•
&amp; Vegetables
$140 per .m onth plus ulilitlet .
lbs. per day . Roo• Bentl-v .
Buildings
446-4416 aher 7pm.
Stove and 'Aefrig. No pets. Call
Buffet by Cochr.ln.$300. 36"
S.!Ono. OH . 513· 184·2311.
' 614 -446-7124 or 446-7350.
Heattlator pipes and fan . $60.
Call 614-446-8646.
· Peaches
Yellow free Sione. Reg. • pur•bfad Umousin Bull
46 Space for Rent
Commet"cial butldings for lease
3 BR . trailer for rent. Cilll
Pic;k your own. t,O 1 bushel or Calll14· 251-1 117
Downtown Pt., Pleasant . Stores. 614 -446-1052 .
Car battery-top post, 112 ., e 1 .Oo per 6 lb. Open 6 di!Ys a
offices, A-One Real Est~te
, Power tools ; Stereo , T11ter waMI. CloHd Sunday. Raynor Polled Har.tord 8uH for sale.
Carol Yeager, Broket. Call 304- Nice 3 BR . and 2'/JR , , mobile
frame, Miac: So" 219-E, Co]I·
Office Space lor Rent. E•cellent
Peach Orch..-d, 5 miln bit4Qw Good herd bUtt. C•ll 114-446·
675-6104,
homes . Upper Rt.
urnished.
for Attorneys, Accountant , etc. M'erc::Arvtlle Rd .. Mercerville
Galhpohs. Ohio . .Call 814- 446· 1'012.
Water pliid Call614"- 45-5818.
Close · to Court House. Call
4807, .
Wiseman fteal Estate Agency . STANLEY Homecare Pr oducts.
Boar-(yorll -hampl 200 lb. and
3 bedrDom trailer on Crab Creek
Order"today.
Make
your
office
&amp;
614-446· 3644.
Freezer" corn: Silver Queen. 10 b•r pigs. 80 lba. and 225 IN .
Road , S150 .00 month, 304-·
house cleaning easier &amp; plea- doz . or more· t; .oo 1 doz . Phone 61• ·268 ·6501.
675· 1206.
.sureable Call Stephanie. 614· Gl ..sburn's Farm Market ; St .
-Office Suite. 3 room&amp; including
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
446-8886
bath S225 a month .' Ca ll
Rt . 160. neer Porter. Call Tenri, Walkers. 12 yra old Mar e.
614-446-7699.
614-388·9027
3 yr Q:alding, and 2 ' " old.
Coleman Presideni al II elec1ric
Apartment
0300.00 • ..,.. 304-8tl -3e88
1 . 84 acres , nice flai la nd . 44
fuinace
and
Coleman
3
ton
COUNTRY MOBILE Horne Park,
Halt' Runnet, Horticulture and
for Rent
Conven. location . Call614-446air-conditioner. Call 61 4 · 992 - Blue lake Baaos 112 . bushel. Pigs 130.00 alld'l. Alc1' 1 PIJI
Rout&amp; 33 : North , o1 Pomeroy
7627.
.
Rental tra1lers Call 614-992 - 2894 or 614-992-6236 .
Silver Queen and Senacca Chief Farm. Ten Mile 2 ml• oH At .
7479
Com. Clll614-742· 2322 .
62. 304·•18-1613.
50 acres , 1 mile off 160. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments for
Wurlltrer Piano - A-1 condition,
Between Porter &amp; Vinton . rent
Marcy weight machll'! e. othM
Bas1c rent for 1 bdr . . Space for small tuiilers. AU
Canning tomato·e s. letan Fills,
830,000. Call 614-446-6980·1,.. $183.00; 2 bdr .. $219.00 . Also
exerc1se equip. Call 614-379- Ohio.· Harrv Hill. Bring own
hook -ups. Cable. Al&amp;o efficiency
Tr~nsporl.tllllll
2248
or
446-1910.
required a $200.00 security
rooms , air and cable. Mason,
conta iner.
6 Acres. 4 SR ., Home in country. deposit. CONTACT: Jackson
W.Va: Call 304-nl -5651 .
linkfence. out~ldgs .. frurt tre8s Estates Dept. Ph 448, 3997
6000 BT\J Sears Air Condi·
Canning tom•toes and bell
$53,000 . Call614 ~ 245 - 9595 .
Equal Hou ~ ng Opportunity ·
SPACES FOR RENT - Tra1ler .tlon et _ 60 degrae cool air
p~ppers . ~leked t4 .00 bushel ,
· Autos for, Sale
discharge. El'lc Con d. $160, pick own .t3 .60 bushel. Ray· 71
lots, Rt 1 . lor::ust Road , back of
1 .92 .Reres with 2 BR . mobile Furnished Efficiency S146. Utili61
4-446·
1797
Call
K 8o K. 304-675·1076.
mond Rowe . 614-247-4292 .
home. Central air. storage build., ties pe1d, share bath 607
near M id dleport . Asking Second AYe .. Gallipolis Ph
6 ft , Slate top 'pool tabl ... like
1983 Citation KS Sport. Sharp
S12,000 Hobstetter Realty. .446· 4416 after 7PM .
new - with ace , $560. Call
47 Wanted to Rent
•2795. 1984 Dodge Coh, Like
614-742 -3092 .
Upstairs unfurnished apartment.
Ut1lities paid. C~rpeted, no Children or pets Call -614 -446-1637

liON !Sf

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Chest lreezar.111 .1 cuft:.after
8:00 Clll 304·1715·514111.

Sof• ·a nd chaira prictld from
•391 to t991. Taba.. 160 and 3 PJ: lhting,room suite, 2 end and
1 coffH tlbl... good cond,
ttp" to 8125. Hid•a·bed• •390
$100.00. 304-182-3181.
to 1&amp;915. · Aeclinera . •226 to
1375. Lamps •28 to •1215.
Maple d.n aofa, 2 ~haira end
Dinette• $109 and up· to '49&amp;.
oHoman $200.00. ACA upr;ght
Wood table w -e chaiu 1286 to
freezer, 12 cu _ft. $160.00.
8796 . Desk 1100 up 1o •375.
304-875-4172 .
Hutchea. 1400 and up. Bunk
b.cls compiMa w -mattr.. NI
Baby beet coft" tabla. end
12915 and up to 13815. Baby beds
C.bln. long work 1able and car
1110. M•ttraunorbo11 spfinga
chaina, 304-1715-4892 .
lull or twin 188, firm 178, and
S88 . Quean seta U215. King
14 ft fiberglass boat. 60 hp
$360. 4 drawet chest $69 . Gun
Evanrude, trailer, trolling motor.,
cabinets 6 gun. 011 or lflectric
215 inch color · TV. 304 -1715range *376. B.aby mettresaes
2580 . '
836 &amp; 146- Bed frames 120,
S30 &amp; King frame 850. Good
selection of bedroom suites, · China cabinet for sale, good
cond, 3 yrs old. 1200,00 firm .
metal cabinets, helldboards 130
Cell ·304' 8e2· 3471 . ·
· .
and up to t86.

0322.

., 980 l ibert'JI.· T.o tal electric. 2
bedroom. furnished, wastlj&amp;r and
dryer, central air. Ca11614 ·992·

2 21 acres. $10,000. Rt 2.
Hickory Chapel Road , 304-675-

76

90 Days .same as cash with
approved credit. 3 Miles out
Bulaville Rd . Open 9am to 6pm
Mon . thru Sat . Ph. 614·446-

614·446-9662.

~;;~30~.~1~98~7;_----~------------~~--~~~~~~;:oi~~-~:;~:--r--~:::::;~:;~n.~o;•:·~v;Se~~~~;;:P~~-;:~1&amp;~
BoRN wsER
Television
T::~~~, S©tt,(llA-~t.tfS" :::: ·

30.1987

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

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•

Thll'sday. July 30, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

16-The Daily Santlnel

briefs·- - - Committee rescues

Probe three Meigs accidents

Fann Credit System

lng session Wednesday and secured a strong tentative vote to
Include In the bill a new secon·
dary market. To get a jump on
further challenges, he called for
an early morning session today.
A secondary market would
enable banks ;md Insurance
companl~s to make more long·
term real estate loans incompetl·
tlon w.lth Federal Land Banks,
which are units of the system.
Such competition could
weaken the system further,
warned Brent Beesley, heal! of
Correction
the Farm Credit Corp. of Amer·
an umbrella organization of
lea,
Victor E. Gaul Jr. and Laura
the
FCS.
Dlllhoff will be married In a
A secondary market "troubles
private ceremony Saturday. and
us greatly In our position of
not Sunday as was announce(lln
considerable weakness at this
Wednesday's Daily Sentinel, at
point," Beesley told the commit·
Chester United Methodist
tee Wednesday. He said It also
Church. An open lawn reception
could
have a negative Impact on
In thei r honor will be held
farmers
who own stock In FCS
following the wedding at the
oanks.
home of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Gaul.
But lawmakers agreed they
grandparents ot Victor Gaul Jr . .
wanted
to create an en tity. which
The r,e ceptlim will begin at 2 p.m.
would
pool
farm mortgages for
Saturtlay and family and friends
sa le as securities to investors,
· are Invited.
By SONJA HILLGREN
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
House Agriculture Committee
slowly began an effort to rescue
the weakened Farm Credit System after the panel's Initial
efforts were blocked by angry
Repu bllc ans .
Forced to adjourn an afternoon
session, Chat rman Kika de Ia
Garza, D· Texas, reconvened the
committee for ·an unusual even·

' The Galtla-Me!gs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported
three accidents. Wednesday, two of them four hours apart In
Salisbury Township on Ohio 7, at the Intersection of County
Road 3.
The first, Involving two pickup trucks, QCcurred at 10:30 a.m.
Roberta J. Carruthers; 50, of Pomeroy, was driving north
before she attempted to turn left. The pickup truck behind her,
drtvt&gt;n by David A. Dishman, Tl, of Proctorville, tried to pass
her truck. Dishf1lan's truck hit Carruthers' truck, struck a
guardrail and cmitinued over an embankment on the left side of
the roa.d. Carruthers' truck hit the guardrail an the left side of
the road.
Dishman was cited for Improper passing.
The second accident occurred at 2:35p.m. and Involved a car
and a pickup truck. James A. Wllllams, 40, of Pomeroy, was
· drlvihg his car south when the truck, driven by Charles A. Wise,
48, of Middleport, tried to turn left from Ohio 7 to County Road 3.
Into Williams' path. Williams' car hit Wise's truck.
Wise was cited for failure to yield. Williams was cited for not
wearing a seat belt.
A Dexter man lost control of his car at 8:30 p.m. In Salem
Township, on County Road 4, just west of €ounty Road 10.
Accor!llng to the Patrol, Pete E. McDonald, 18, was driving
east when the rear a;xle on his car broke loose. He lost control
and ran off the right side of the road, Into a ditch, where his car
overturned..McDonald was not injured.
,
He was cited for driving an unsafe vehicle and not wearing a
seat belt.

I~

Public clinic set Monday

Daily stock prices

(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Provided hy
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl

A community tuberculin skin testing clinic will be conducted
Monday,. from 4:30 to 6:30p.m., at the Chester Fire Station.
Joan Tewksbary, R.N .. Meigs County Tuberculosis Nurse,
reports this will be the final evening clinic offered fro persons
who will need a skin test tQ assist In food serving at the Meigs
County Fair. All area residents, Including boosters clubs,
PTO's, church groups, auxiliaries, etc., are urged to take
advantage of this free service. Children who will be entering
kindergarten may also receive their required skin .tests at this
Hme.

Firm
Price
.A m Electric Power .._.. , .. ,..... 27·%
AT&amp;T ... .. ..... , ... ..... .. .. ... ....... 321J,
Ashland Oil . .. .. ............ ....... 68%
Bob Evans,Farms , ....... .. .... 24 'h
Charming Shoppes .. .. ...... .. .. 31 1h

with (he least negative Impact on
th~ FCS. De Ia Garza appointed
an eight· member ad hoc panel to
forge an agreement on a secon·
dary market.
The committee also agreed In
principal to Include In the FCS
legislation provisions to require
forbearance and restructuring
for those who barrow from the
Farmers Home Administration,
the Agriculture Department's
lending agency.
Congress was forced to con· ·

I

4uP.,' 2, 1937· A•s-t 2. 1917
0

"WE REMEMBER"

at y

•
Vot.37, No.68

198S MERClJY
GRAND MARQUIS

PAID

P.C.S.
ADVACARE

.

,.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports seven
calls Wednesday; Racine at' 1:37 a.m. to Tanners Run~r
Loretta Pauley to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 7:04 a .
to Route 124 for Sarah Weaver who was treated but at
tFansported; Pomeroy at 8:23 a.m. to Naylors Run Road for
Hugh Leifh&lt;;lt to Velerans Memorial Hospital; Middleport unit
and the fire department at 10:42 a.m. to an auto accident on
Route 7 but no transport was needed; Middleport Fire
Department at 11:10 a.m. to a grass fire on Hudson St.;
Pomeroy at 6:34 p.m. to the Maples Apts. Jor Gaynell Clark to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 8: 57 p.m. to
Butternut Ave. for Norma Hysell to Holzer Medical Center.

·Stock i 73281. 4 doo&lt;~ !fdiltl. V·8,,. oond.
vrnyt roof. auto. trans.. PS. PB.- windOW ~
doo&lt; llcks. Ill! whee!!, cru"' control
AM/ FM radk&gt;, lldral tr...
.
W£PRIC£

MED. .T

10°/o ' DISC.OUNT

By ROBERT MACKAY
MANAMA, Bahrain tUPfl - An Iranian
comma nder says 365,000 troops are poised for
"kamikaze operations" against U.S. for ces in tne
. Persian Gu lf. where Americans received another
blow when a Navy helicopter crasht'd while trying
to land, killing one man and leaving three
missing.
U.S. military officials said a SH ·3C Sea King
with nine people abOard crashed Into the gulf at
10: 58 a .m. EDT Thursday while attemptin g to
land on the command ship usS LaSalle. One man
was kUled and three were reported missing.
A helicopter fro in the guided missile destroyer
USS Kldd - a member the gulf escor t of the
re·Oagged superta nker Brid geton-' resc~ed five
people from 1he water.
The crash occurred as Ira n stepped up Its
verbal attack Thursday' on the Unlti'd States .

Hojatoleslam . Mohammad All Rahmani, com·
mander of the "Baseej.'' or mobilization force,
told the Tehran newspaper Kayhan his troops
were readying for "any kind of kamikaze
operations" against the American military .
The Baseejis, a paramilitary Ioree that serves
as an auxiliary to Iran's fanatical Revolutionary
Guards, are sent often without proper trainlrig to
the front lines of the nearly 7· year-old Iran-Iraq
war, where they suffer high casually rates.
Kayhan quoted Rahmani as saying 300,000
Baseejls were to head south from the central
Irania n city of Isfahan, with 65,000 more to be
drawn from four .o ther cities and provinces.
Tehran radio in recent days has almost dally
reported small contingents of ." Persian Gulf
Defenders" headed for the gulf.
The helicopter crash Thursday was the fir s t loss
· of American life In the Persian gulf s ince the

llock - I11'JO. A dool&gt;. ~- '"'~" front
ot..m drive. 4 &lt;;y1.. air COO&lt;l. auto tJJns., PS.
Pll, doo&lt; Dd&lt;s.lll! wtM. cruise !IIOUol
AM!FM rocllo.
lites. wlite walls, reM
.. incbw deto,

lid•*

Pharmacy
Ch1rln Rittle, R.Ph

~

RAMPS GOING IN -With the installation ol
ramps ill the corners ol Pomeroy's downtown
sldewalk.o, th .. bu•Jness dl8trlct of the vHh&amp;l" wUI
he muc~ more accessible for the handicapped.
Elden &lt;Whitey) Walburn Is putting In the ramps
lor the vUJase, 17 In all. Work was undersay
Thursday at the corners ol Cuurt and Second Sts.

Mon. thtu S1t. 8 ~00 A .M ro 9 ·p. M .
Sund1y 10:0(1 A.M . to 4. :00 P .M
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH . 992 2956

Fril!ldly Service
' ·

~-

------ -

Pomerov , Oh.

' Open Nighta till 9

.

Ohio weather

BriiUI Mullen Is shown jackhainmerlng one of the
sidewalk sections to be replaced. Money to Install
the ramps 18 lrom a Community Development
Block GriUlt to the vUJage through the Meigs
County Commissioners. The grant application
was su))mltled for the village by the Disabled
American Veterans unit.

Regan says he was misled
1984 FORD
TEMPO
Siod&lt;! 77332, 4 d&lt;m. hard top, ,.,JWJ, front
wheel drive. 4 cyt air cond., auto. trans., PS,
Pll. cruise c:ootr~ • .WFM rad~. tadi~ tires.
wlite wal~. bucket reats, l!ai winlilw deio~
SAlE PRIC£

1986 CHEVROL£T

·SaladBuHet
·Entree ·
·Sundaellllr

56639.
1986 PONTIAC
GRAND AM

11300, 2 doo~. hard top, c,oope.lront
wh&lt;el drive, 4 co,1, air cond., auto Ira"', PS.
PB, ti~ wheel. cruoe rontr&lt;J, AM/FM radio.
SAL£ PRICE

llock H IIll 0, 4 doors, hard lop. !OCI&gt;'1. tront
wteel driv~. 4 cyl.. airrood .. 5 speed trans.. PS,
PB. AWfM radio, ~eroo lap~ tadi~ tires.
buck~ reats.
SALE PRICE

;$10,939.

Hospital news

1981 m.c
EAGLE

Ohio Lottery

He basically acknowledged
weapons were sold to Iran as
ransom for American hostages
- and he revealed he and the
president evPn knew of a cover
story for one of the early
shipments, But he described
himself as out of the picture
otherwise, especially on the
diversion of money to Nlcara·
guan Contra rebels.
"The 'thing was mishandled
from start to fini s h," Regan
grumoied In his first round of
testimony Thursday . He agreed
to come l)ack for more questions
today before a scheduled appear·
ance by Defense Secretary Cas·
par Weinberger .
Rega n, a Wall Streel wizard
who joined Reagan 's admlnlstra· ·
lion as treasury secretary In
1981, moved into the White House

59940.

0

Veterans Memorial
Wednesday Admissions
Hugh Leifheit, Pomeroy; Gay·
nell Clark, Pomeroy.
Wednesday Discharges - Wll·
Ham Morris. 'Ida White, Gertha
Hensley.

WALKER
and .JUDI HASSON
\'tASHI NGTON tUPII - Do·
nald Regan, not reflecting his
image as a White House chi ef or
staff wilh an ea!liC eye, has
portrayed hlmselfto Conllress as
a man who was blinded by a
secretive John Poindexter but
who demanded to make the
Iran·Contra sca ndal public up&lt;in
asking, "What the heck hap·
pened' here•"
Tan and apparently mellowed
fl v€' months after leaving the
Whit e House under fire, Regan
came to the congressional Iran·
Contra hear lnf&lt;S wilh an account
of being misled and generally
Ignored In the covert operations
Involving "sleazy type of charac·
ters" that collapsed Into Prest·
dent ·Reagan's worst crisis.

llock H77002. 2 doors. 4 cyl. 4 speed trans ..
stand. ~a ns. , AM/fM radio, radraltres. king
wide il!d, l!ar &lt;lop bu"'llef, gau(!eS.
WEPR!C£

1987 PONTIAC
GRAND AM
Stock~

By DI\NA

S-10 PKKlF

54754.

1987 FORD
ESCORT S.W.

llock H 15202. 2 dool&gt;. hard top, 4 l"teei
drive, 6 cyl, 4 speed tlln&gt;, PS, Pa AM/fM
radio. steroo tape, radial ·tires. white wall&gt;
bucket seats, 3l.IXXJ milos.

llock H 62401. 4 doo~. !lation wagon. front
wheel drive. 4 c~ .. 4 speed. PS, PB. AM/ fM
radi~ radial tires, bucket ..,tt rear winOO.V

· SAL( Pf11CE

SALE PRICE

S3280.

$6750.

defog.

.

~-1

There's a family feeling at Ponde~~

--.--.-=-=po=Ndtk:-=-.:os=-=-.:"~~;;;;

the eight cities, were mainly
responsiole for the overall lower
bills .
The average utility bill is based
on a monthly co nsumption of 500
kilowatts of electricity. 13, 000
cubic feet of naturai .gas and flat .
rate telephone service plus phone
rental.
Toledo again led the major
Ohio cities with an average
monthly bill of $157.52. followed
by Cleveland at $141.09. down:2.2
percent from a yea r ago. Bills in
Akron and Youngstown, both at
$136.31. were down 3.2 percent : .

Spratley:
Columbus $135.52, down 4 per.'
cent; Dayton $125.10. down 6.5:
percent ; Canton $122.41, down 3.8
percent ; and Cincinnati $118.58,'
down 5.6 p&lt;'rcent.
:
"Ohjo consumers are expe· ·.,.
riencing the bitter with the sweet.
In budgeting their monthy utility;
bilL'' said Spratley. "Natural.
gas and electricity prices have:
gone down but phone usage;
became more expensive with a.
hike of the federal access:
charge."
·,
Spratley attributed effectlve.
Continued on_page 10

. I

SUJISHER LOHSE

E M11in

Rough seas delayed loading of the minedamaged supertanker Bridgeton for a second day
Thursday, out officials ·hoped to send the
damaged oil carrier back down the mine- strewn
Persian Gulf this weekend.
Gu If sources agree that the perceived success of
that initiative could depend on the Bridgeton
completing Its round trip through the perilous
waterway despite the mine explosion that
damaged it last Friday.
The Bridgeton a nd the smaller Gas Prince, a
propane carr.ter, Were to leave under U.S. naval
escort ~ometlm e this weekend, though the
Pentagon has refused to announce a date.
The u.s. Navy meanwhile was trying to mark
and destroy mines believed planted by Iran In the
. area &lt;if the northern gulfwbere the Bridgeton last
Friday struck and detonated a mine believe¢
planted by Iran.

Eastern board appoints Moore
new Eastern High School principal

58200.

On All Prescriptions

Rooold "'";"9· R Ph

frigate USS Stark was hit by an Exocet missile
fired by an Iraqi warplane on Ma y 17, killing 37
American Sailors.
· · •
Officials said the crash was an accident, but the
Navy was invest!gating the mishap, which
· occurred In clear weather as the helicopter
ferried passengers and cargo from Bahrain to the
command s hip USS LaSalle.
" It was a simple accident," a U.S. official In the
gulf said. "There wasn't anything suspicious."
"There is no reason to think that it was anything
but accidental," added a spokesman for the
Central Command in. Tampa, Fla., which direc ts
the Middle East Force. led by the L'aSalle.
The Lasalle - home to Rear Adm. Harold
Bernsen - Is the flagship of the nine·ship U.S.
task force in the gulf and provides communica ·
lions and advice to other warships escorting ·
re·flagged Kuwaiti tankers through the gulf.

COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI) Average monthly utility costs in
Ohio's eight major ci ties decreased $4. 74, or 3.4 percent.
during the past year, Ohio
Consumers' Counsel William
Spratley said Thursday.
All ·eight cltles showed a
decrease in the typical combined
cost of electricity, natural gas
and telephone, ranging from ·a
drop of $7.91, or 5.9 percent, in
Dayton to $1. 70. or 1.1 perce nt. In
Toledo.
Lowe r natura l gas costs, which
·fell an average of 9.4 percent in

1985 CIIVROL£T
..
CELEBRITY S.W.

. 59150.

3 Sections 30 Pages 25 Cents
. A Multimedia Inc. New1peper

Iranians threaten 'kamikaze operation' in gulf

To Those 60 rind Over

Kenneth McCutlough. A.Ph

e nt tne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, juty 31, 1987

Copyrighted 1987

Cloudy tonight. Chance of
'thunderstorms. Low hetween 70 and 75. Cloudy
Saturday. Scattered iho1!1'·
ers.

•

-

Utility costs down·

.

Two cars collided near a private drive Tuesday, at 3:03p.m.,
on Ohio 692 in Scipio Township, according to the Gallia·Meigs
Post of the State Highway Patrol.
' Sherman Kisner, 25, of Rutland, was driving south when a car ·
driven by Elizabeth Garribll. 28. of Albany. pulled from a priva te
drive and into Kisner 's path.
Gambil was cited for failure to yield.

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Wed·
nesday' s winning Ohio Lottery
numbers with ticket sales and
payouts:
· Dally Number - 089, ticket
sales totaled $1,300,526.50, with a
payoff due of $312,668.
PICK-4 - 5685, PICK-4· ticket
sales totaled $189,551.50, with a
payoll due of $85,331. PICK-4 $1 .
straight bet pays $5,652, PICK_.
$1 box bet pays $471.
Super Lotto- 1, 5, 10, 11, 35, 44.
Super Lotto ticket sales totaled ,
$11,656,148.
.
.

Tab-Insert

•

State Sen. Jan Mi~hael Long tD·Circlevllle) announced
recently that the city of Wellston Is eligible for $122,537 In
federal construction grant funds to help fund the construction of
a waste water treatment plant.
Long stated that the Construction Grants progrm, authorized
under the Clean Water Act and administered by the Ohio EPA,
provides funding to Ohio municipalities far a portion of the cost
of wastewater treatment systems . The Construction Grants
program has made major contributions to Improving the
quality of Ohio's waterways, Including Lake Erie, by hefplng to
provide sewage collection and treatment facUlties at a cost
affordable to local communities.
·
"Ohio communities benefit from the Construct ion Gran ts
program by getting Improved waste water treatment without
having to pay the total cost themselves," noted Richard Shank,
director of the Ohio EPA .

COMPENSAnON
GENERAL RELIEF ·
WORKERS
'UNITED MINE
.
BOILERMAKERS

•

South .central Ohio ·
Partly cloudy today. with scat·
tered showers and thunder·
sJ.om&gt;s and highs near 90. Varia·
ble cloudiness tonight, with a
chance of showers and thunder·
storms and a low near 70. Partly
cloudy Friday, with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms and
highs in the mid 80s.
The probability of preclplta·
I ion is 40 percent today and
tonight and.30 percent Friday.
Winds will be variable 'at less
than 10 mph today and light and
variable tonight.
Extended Forecast
Saturday through Monday
Fair through the period, with
highs in the 80s Saturday and
temperatures ranging from the
upper 80s to the lower 90s Sunday
and Monday. Overnight lows will
range from the mid 50s to mid 60s
early Saturday, and be in the 60s
Sunday and Monday mornings . .

Pick 4
4810

WE FlU PRESCRIPTIONS AND DO THE
BILLING FOR THE FOLLOWING:
OHIO WELFARE

Cars collide on Rt. 692

EMS receives seven calls

DaUy Number
618

squad is
50 years old

+-r-*
·- -.....__

Eight fined in mayor's court
Eight defendants forfeited bonds and two others were fined in
the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Wednesday night.
Forfeiting bonds were Greg Pickens, Bidwell. $100,
disorderly manner; Nida K. Unroe, Gallipolis, and Noel G.
Sekaver, N.Y., $40each, speed; Lois Bell, Racine, $50, failure to
control; Ronald R. Braden, II, Cottageville, W. Va., $46 speed;
Richard Friley, Pomeroy, $100, disorderly manner: Gary Keith
Honaker. Mason, and Diana L. Lyons, Racine, $450 each, DWJ.
and $50 each, failure to control.
Fined were Tommy Walters, Middleport, $250 and .rost s,
disorderly manner; Ricky D. Lunsford. Pomeroy, $100 and
·costs. driving under suspension and $240 and costs. speed.

Ohio Lottery

firSt

slder an FCS bailout by its losses
of $4.6 bllllon In 1985 and 1986 as
well as continued losses this year
and In future years.
Last week, House Sp,eaker Jim
Wright, D·Texas, called In de Ia
Garza and said a tight legislative
schedule made It necessary to
get legislation to the Ho\lse floor
by the llrst week of August. The
chairman bypassed subcommlt·
tee · debate of the bill and
lnt~oduced It without the usual
bipartisan agreem.ent.

wellston eligible for funds

Federal Mogul. ........ , ........ .48%
Goodyear T&amp;R .......... :.. ......... 74
Heck ' s Inc . ...... :.. .. .. ........ ..... 3%
Limited Inc . ...... .. .. ... .. ....... .47 ¥,
Multimedia Inc . ... ,........ .... .. 71'(.
Rax Restaurants .................. 5 ~
Robbins &amp; Myers .... .. . , .. ...... . 9¥,
Shoney' s Inc .... ... ... : .. .... ... ... 30 ~
Wendy's In ti... .. ...... .. : ... .. .. .. 1017
Worthington lnd ...... , ........... 22 %

State's

MIDDLEPORT FIRE
DEPARTMENT

LIF"IiFLIPHT IN AREA SUNDAY· - Grant iloepl~ UfeFIIgbt
helloopter Is acheduled to make a scene landln18u•clay afternoon
during the extracatlon demonstration. The public wiD have a
chance to see· the atrcraft upcloae and ask queetlons of the crew.
'it

four years later and soon became
legend for his tight control over
the president' s schedule and
personal tiffs with the pr'esl·
dent's wife. His combative
temper alienated many In
Congress.
It was a very differ en t picture.·
Thursday. Regan engaged In
lively exchanges with lawmak·'
ers, cracking jokes and speaking
bluntly without a lawyer about
the workings or the White House
during the frenetic day s of lat e
last year.
The ex-Marine referred to his
forced resignation Feb. 27 with
some degree of rancor, out
staunchly defended his former
boss . .
Reagan " recoiled" with "ev·
ery manifestation of shock and
horror" when he was told of the
diversion Nov. 24, Regan test!·
fled - a clear Indication, In the
eyes of one so close to the
president, that he indeed would
not have agreed with Poindexter
and Oliver North about the
operation being a "neat Idea.''
Noting Reagan's acting back·
ground, the former chief of staff
said, "I'd give him an Academy
Award If he knew anything about
this. I watched his reaction .... He
couldn't have known lt."
. Regan portrayed Poindexter,
the low-key N11vy rear admiral
who was Reagan's national se·
curlty adviser at the time, as the
one who kept pushing the United
States back Into the failed Iran
policy and who !ought to try to
contain the political bombshell
even as It was exploding.
Poindexter, who testified this
month that he alone approved the
diversion and hid It from Reagan
to spare him political rlsks·,
didn't reveal it to the chief of staff
either because he knew "I'd blow
the whistle," Re·gan maintained.
Regan cli11ed Poindexter "a
Continued on page 10

Charles J . Moore, Gallipolis
was hired as principal of Easterq
Junior and Senior High Schools
when the board met in regular
session Thursda y night.
Moore will assume the duties of
principal August 1 for a period of
two years.
Moore has a total of 22 years
experience In public education,
eight years as a teacher of math
and Industrial arts and 14 years
experience in public school ad ··
ministration. He has, been a high
school principal for eight years.
The board employed Gina
Tillis as language arts -reading
teacher and yearbook advisor.
for orle year only, to fill the
temporary vacancy created by
the one year leave of absence
granted to Carolyn Tripp.
Hired as assistant football
coach was Dennis Eichinger.

They accepted resignations from
Karen Vosler as secondary math
teacher, George Gagai as assist·
ant football coach and Arch Rose
as sophomore class advisor.
The board granted an unpaid
leave&gt; of absence for maternity
reasons to Sue Arnold effective
August 24, through October 23,
1987.
In other business the board
approved, on second ·reading, a
new district -wide policy on the
promotion-retention of students;
approved reimoursement for
professional growth. in the
amount of $150 to Pam Douthitt ,
for having successfully com·
pl0ted the course, Analysis of
Performance in ph ys ical
education.
They directed the treasurer to
make an advance draw of local
tax monic&gt;s for the 1987·a8 school

year: appropved an approprla·
lion modification, from regular
instruction-supplies to voca·
tiona I home economics textbooks: approved member·
ship in the National Assoctlon for
the exchange of industrial re·
sources for school year 1987-.as;
approved an advance payment of
$16,189.14 to the State Teacher
Retirement System.
Adopted a resolution designat·
ing the superintendent as pur·
chasing agent and approved
adding the Band Boosters organ!·
zatlon to the exlstlng district
liability Insurance policy. ·
Ray Karr, new board member,
who was named to fill the seat of
James Caldwell who resigned.
was administered the oath of
office by Eloise Boston,
treasurer.

Chester girl will participate in
AII-Ohio· ·Y outh Choir at state fair
Lau~a

Marie Hawthorne, 16.
daughter of Darrell and Norma
Hawthorne of Chester, leaves
Sunday for Columbus where she
will participate In this year's All
Ohio State Fair Youth Choir.
The youth choir will begin
rehearsals Immediately and
choir memoers are restricted,
unless ll's an emergency, from
leaving the state ·fairgrounds
until fair's end Aug. 22. First
performance of the youth choir
. will be during the fair opening on
Aug. 6. The choir, directed by
Gelenvllle Thomas, will perform
a varied selection of music
. -~

. '

f

'

.
'

LAURA HAWTHORNE

'

including show tunes and gospel
music.

Miss Hawthorne, who will be a
junior at Eastern High School.
had to make application for
acceptance into the chOir as a
first soprano. She was highly
recommended by Valerie Rans·
bottom, vocal muslcl.nstructor at
Eastern.

In addition to being a member
of and piano accompanist for
Eastern's choir, she has also
participated as a plano and vocal
soloist in the Ohio University Solo
and Ensemble Competition. She
is a member of the District 17
Honors Choir at O.U., vice·
president of the Modern Music
Continued on page 10

New drinking age law now
in effect in Buckeye state

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - A new law raising the heer·
drinking age In Ohio to 21 went Into effect today, but ahout
325,000 Ohioans who were 19 or 20 years.old as of yesterday are
excluded.
Tlte Ohio General Assembly last' month passed a state .
transportation budget that Included the new heer·drlnklng age
so the state would not lose $42 million In federal highway aid
over the next two years.
•
The !lrlnklng law sets lhe minimum age for. buying beer at 21,
but excludes residents who are 19 or 20 when the law became
effective. The minimum age lor buying hard liquor and wine
has been 21.
.
·
.
Barry Bennet&amp;, of the Ohio Department of Development's
Data User Center, said using 1984 federal· census estimates, It
appears that 325,000 Ohioans are 19 or 20 years old as ol
yesterday. The new law went Into elfect at 12:01 a.m. today,
state Uquor Department olfl'&lt;lals said.
The statute also provides fines up to $1,000 and jail sentence!l ·
up to six months for anyone who manufactures, sells or
distributes phony state Identification cards to establish a
person's age.
The Ohio Department of Uquor Contro' has mailed notices
· about the ne~ law to about 211,000 alcoholic beverage sell.e rs.
Wllh the notice are sales-~mlnors warning signs}hat must be
posted on liquor permit premises. · .
\,

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