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                  <text>Pllga D-8-

"'

Jhe Sunday Times-Sentinel

City lee &amp; Fuel set that last yea r
when It paid $20 for the grand
champion lamb.
Mason County Area Cham ber of . The 130-pound reserve ·cnamCommerce a nd t he fa ir board. pton lam b: s hown by Bethany
Paying $13 per pound t he second Watters on. a 4-Her from New
time ar ound were Johnson's Haven , was purchased by Fruth
Super m arket, McDo na ld 's, Ph arm acy at $7 per pound, or.
Smlth·Bulck- P ontiac and Valley, $840.
Inc.
Two business es pu rchased
Neit her pr ice was a record ; lambs to donate to t he Mason
County Fair Board's a pprec iation dinner sc heduled for Sept.
26. Shinn's Tractor bou g nt Deb-.
bte Shell's ittth place la mb and
Valley Brook Far ms bought Pa u l
Barnett 's 20th place la mb:
The 34 lambs ln·Frlday night's
sa le grossed $10,648.50, averagIng $2.74 per pound . Excluding
the top two lambs. prices ranged
from $1.40 to $4.00.

Mason buyers.........---=-·- - - - - - - - - - - - - Continued from D-2
Lamb Sale
P eoples Ba nk paid $12.50 per
pound for Rlcla Meadows' grand
champion m arket lamb at Friday night's Mason Cou nty Fair
Livestock Sale. T he a nim al,
weighing In at 130 pounds.
brought $1,625 for its owne r, a 4- H

member from Sou thside, and
$1,690 for the Mason County Fair
Queen Pageant.
Alter the bank purchased the
lamb, it donated it back for
resale. with proceeds gotog 10:
ward the fair queen pagea nt,
s ponsored annually by Peo ples
Ba nk In cooperation with the

'
• LAMB CHAMP - Peoples Bank bought the
grand champion lamb shown by Ricla Meadows
for Sl%.511, or $1,625 lor the 130-pound a nimal, at .
Friday night's Mason County Fair Lives tock Sal e.

August 16. 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant W . Va.

Pi ctured abo• e, from lefl, are Fair Queen Sherr!
Hughart, banK officials Dale Nibert, Jim Lewis
and Forrest Clark, Meadows and Little MIss
Ma&gt;;on County Cary Shinn.
CHAMPION STEER - Cltl·
zens Na tional of Point Pleasant, a division of First
Huntington National Bank,
purchased Brian Mc Dermitt's
1,251}-pound grand champion .
steer for $3.90 per pound - or
a totid of $4,875- at the Mason
County Fair Liv estock Sale
Friday night. Bank officials
pictured above, from le ft , are
R.G . Greene, Mario Libera·
lore, Tim Morrison, Bartow
J ones and Charles Lanham'

Hog Sale
Three businesses pu rc(lased
the gra nd c ha mpion m arket hog, '
shown by Opte Stalnaker, a 4-H
mem ber from Point Pleasant. at
Friday's Mason County Fair
Lives tock Sale .
·
John Wade, M.D. and NAPAAu tom otive Supply, both of Point
P leasa nt, a nd Bob's Electronics
of Ga llipolis, Ohio, pa id $9 per
pou nd for the 240-pound a nima l,
or a tota l of $2, 160.
The reserve champion, shown
by Bird Wilson, a mem ber of t he
Fut ure F armers of America
from Fraziers Bottom , was pur·
chased for $9 per pound by
Save-A -Lot. B&amp;Q Mach ine and
Repa ir, Inc. a nd Mont y ' s Mea t s
of Poin t Pleasa nt. Weighin g In at
the sam e weight as the' reserve
champion, it also bro.ught Its
owner $2, 160.
·
Sixty-two young people so ld
hogs iu the sale Frid ay at an
average price of $1. 98 per pound.
The sale grossed $26,612.61, ac·
cordi ng to Fair Board T reasurer
Kevi n Durst.
Prices fe ll sharply fo liowlr)g
thP sa le of the top two hogs, wit h

"WMERE TME ACTION IS"

.

Visit Meigs
Co1;1nty's fair
this -week

220
Pi&lt;'k 4
1570
Super Lotto

•

•

CINCI NNA TI 1UPI 1 - Inspectors said they
fo und' li ving cOndi tions sq ua lid a nd · appalli ng
du r ing . a s urpr ise vis it last February to a
Clerinoni County home lor mentally retarded
people, but t he superint endent of the hOme said
I he problems have been corrected.
An Pl!(ht-page report to a federal jud ge obtai ned
by T he Cleveland P lain Deale r sai,d Inspectors
found some reside nts of the Soul hern Ohio
Developme nt Center In Batavia wa nd~ring
arou nd in uri ne-soa ked cloth ing, while ot hers
used their fi ngers to eat becau se silverware was
not available .

l ..

19 8 5 OLDSMOBILE
TORONADO

luxury is here - fully equipped . · Astro roof.
leather trim. We sold it new. Only 34.000 miles.
Must be seen to appreciate

Soap and deodera nt were locked up and t he
people had to wipe thei r fi nger s on their pant s.t·hc
inspec tors said, adding that not e nough employees were on ~ and for adequate care.
" We were appal led · by what we saw," the
Inspectors said.
The inspection was ordered by U.S. District
.J udge .Joseph Kinneary as part of a lawsuit tha t
led to t he clos ing of t he state's Orien t
Deve lopment Center for the retarded in 1981.
Several retarded people who lived al Orient were
moved to I he facilil y a t Batav ia a nd are being
monitored lo see how they have fared.

MASON LANES

Corner Pomeroy St. &amp; 3rd St.
Mason, W. Va.

'

;

WHAT MADE YOU DO IT?
Soma decis;olu oaly warrant
ptriiODal j\IJtificatloa, Ofae cannoL upect
hit or her JaaijhtFJr fHling1 LO
be embr1e:ld by othtrl at all timeoa.
ThedutyiO lriol&gt;do and family ,
perHDa!Nliafadioa, and peace o( mind
onltuu law of tbaoo. They aro
the porMUirea-·lor prw·plonniDJ
-orillli&amp;llioD with
Lop a MoauiDiat.
. .
Lopn M - t ) COD•
oultant.o an triiiDed IG1oolp- )'OW' ploDI
tllroqll- ""-lD•Ina 10 tDd
by prOYidJna -~~~~ illform8tloo aDd tho
. IIMiot q...tlty producll.
.
WhtD )'OU 'N ...... tbo p,.·plallllioJ dec:i·
lion, YOOI 't juotlfy 1110
..,._ - 111111 of olluo ..•

It·,.,.,.,

wo uDderacad -

·

LOGAN MONUMENT CO.

POIIIIOY, OHIO
IIIIGS coum
DISI'UY YAID RIAl
POMDOY·MASDN IIIDGE
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PHONE 992-2SII

YINTDN.J 01110
GAWA l.OUNYY
DISPLAY YAID
JAMES 0. BUSH
MANAGEI
PHONE 311·1603

Northwest Flight 255 carr ied
144 passengers. a crew of six a nd

New "88 " Beretta trade . Fully equipped with air.
cruise. tilt AM -FM stereo w / cassette, sunroof.
and only 12, 109 mles. We Sold It New!

1982 FORD BRONCO

4 wheel drive. auto. trans .. air. vinyl trim. sport
·
wheels. Priced to Sell Now!
MIDWAY ACI'IVITI ES - E mployees of the
Ba tes Amusem ent Co. wr re ha rd al li in sc.-degree
temperatures Sund ay s rttln ~e up the midway In
preparation lor TueMday's opening oil he -annual

Melli" County Fair. The Ro ck l'i prln~'S Fai r grounds, reh1tl vely quiet 51 weeks o f the year ,
hecome• a hcehl vc ·of activity lor one week
annually when th1• fair is staged.

Quarterly

Stated Rate

Compounded Rate

7.1.9%

7.00%

'

.

A.P.R.

A. P.R..

-...- - -.... ~

---__
------

--••••'

.-

...,

-

'-'WV
The Commercial &amp; Savings Bank
Silver Bridge Plaza
Member FDIC i

Spring Valley

By RICH EXN E R
CLEVELAND flJP I I - The
fi na l Sfftion o r Intersta te 4RO an eas t-wes t bypass of dow nt dw n
" CievPla nd - opens Tuesday,
h~av tn g only
two Inco mplete
Inter sta te hig hways In Ohio.
1-490. co nnecting int erstil tes
71. 90 and 77 just sou th of
do wn town Cie\'eiand, Is to be
completed in September 199(1.
And (,fi70. whi ch wil l lake
motor isls from 1-70 west of
dow nt own Columbw&lt; to l -270 on
the northeast side of the ci ty. is
also to be compi&lt;'ted "sometime" in 1990. Ohio Department
of T r a nsporation offi c ials sa id.
Both 1-480 a nd 1-670 will signi fi ca ntly reduce road tr ave l time to
a ir ports in Clevela nd a nd
Columbus.
The nat ional Int ers tate hi!'(h·
way system was des·tg ned in I he
early 1950s, a nd feder a l funding
for up to 00 percent of co nstruct ion costs was provided for under
lh~' Federa l Aid Hig hway Act
s igne d in 'I9f\6 · by P res ident
DWig ht Eisenhower.
Howard Wis e. m a nager of
Indu s trial deve lopment for the
Ohio Depa rtment of Developm ent, said th e Int ersta te sys tem .
as well as othe r four - lane roads
in the s tate are very Important to
Ohio' s fu ture.
" Virtu ally every pros pect that
contacts my office that ts consld·
e rlng Oh io has a plac e to do
busin ess always asks for infor·
mation on the s tate' s highway
. sy stem . and the sta te' s ' entire
transporatlon network (a ir, water and rail).," Wi se sa id. "It' s

' ,,

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~··

_.....

~.-

.

-

-·...

lhree non-work ing a irline e m ployees fl~ing for free. ~ ~~ be. lieved kill ed in the cras h. If the
dea th toll Is confir med a t 15.3. it ·
woul d be the third · dead lies t
domestic a ir disa s ter ever.
A I least s ix peo p le on th e
g.-oun d were inj ured. Two, in cluding a young gir l. rem ained
hosp italized toda y , bot h in cri ti cal condition .
S he riff' s depu ties said they
found the plane's black box ,
Co nt inu ed on page lll

MA AND PA T~IK E - Harold and Betty .Ne welltraveled to the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds Sunday on their Ma a nd Pa T r lkc whlc h
Newell made In his s pare time at his service station In Ch ester. The
Newells , who frequentl y use the • ehlcle lo gel to variou s
destinations, were at I he fairgrounds helping set up th e food hooth
of the Chester Fire Department. The trike can haudle 55 t o 6IJ miles
a n hour without any prohlems.

one of our strongesl assets."
In J a nu ary 1985, Gov. Ric ha rd
Celeste s igned a bill to co mplete
remaining projects· fr om the
or igina l pla n fo rOhlo's lnt ers ta te
hi ghway sys tem , which now
includes 1,318 mil es . .
1-675 in Greater Dayton was
completed in Oc tobet 1986, upgrad ing of l -74 ln Great er Cinc in·
nat! Is to be completed In Jun e
1988, upgrading of J,280 In
Greater Toledo Is to be completed in .October 1988 and the
upgrading of l -71 in Grea ter
Cinc innati is to be completed In
October 1988. Most of the upgradIng work de,als with. wide ning
highways.
F ew pro jects have taken as
,I

""-'•-

~~,...

long to com plete as J-480, wh ich
r uns 43 miles lhrough 14 cq m mu nit les In Lorai n, Cuya hoga,
Sum mi t and Port agt• counties.
The first co ntract was awar d e d
Oct.. 23, 1962, nearly 25 year s
before the com pletion of the fi n a l
2.45- mll e section, w hich cost
$49.6 million.
.
The $391.1 million road.-most of
whi ch Is eight lanes w ide, connects with Interstat es 80, 77, 71
and 271.
" It will bas ically take a lot of
traffic aw ay from downt own
Cleveland," ODOT spokesw om a n Carol Marsalek sa id. "It'
Wtll probably be the most heavily
traveled highway in !':uya hoga
County."

AWAIT WORD - A couple walks to the gate at Sky Harbor
Airport in Phoenix Sunday to get word about their loved ones on
Northwest Flight 255 from Detroit to Phoenix. The plane crashed
on t a keoff in De troit. (U PI )

U. S. plans Saudi arms sale

.
WASHINGTON tUPI) - T he
White House. concer ned abou t
Saudi Arabia's abil it y to defend
the Pers ian Gulf, Is p la nni ng a $1
bil lion arms sale to the Sa udis. a
State Departm ent official sa id
today .
T he official said the sale
inc lud es 12 F -15 jet fighters and
1,600 Maver ick anti -ta nk mis·
sties, whic h were withd rawn In
J une beca use of co ngress ion a l
.
oppos ilion.
Sources told The Was hington
Pos t that the Reaga n ad ministra tio n planned to notify Congress of
the intended .sa le shor tly aft er It
retur ns from summer recess
Sept . 9.
A S tate Depa r·tme nt offi cia l
said member s of Congress had
been advised of plann ed sa te a nd
tha t it should come as "no
surprise.''
T he proposed package also

Highway
system
almost
complete .
higher interest ·
on our 1-Year
Certificate of Deposit.

25 Court Straat

overpass.

198.7 CHEVROLET CAVALIER
z~24 · ·

announces

before."
Report s of patient abuse and fi nancial mis man·
agement have p lagued ma ny of Ohio' s cen.ters for
ment a lly relarded peopl e.
.
·
After repor·ts of fi na ncial m ismanagem ent a t
the Southern Ohio Development Cent er in 1985,
Gov. Richard F. Celeste ordered a Sta te Highw ay
Pa trol investigat ion that led to crimina l c harges
against state officials and priva te cont ractors
who ran the home.
The fi nancial mismanagement charges are
schedu led to ' be heard in Clermont Coun ty
Commo n' Pieas Court.

By Si\BAH FAKHOURY
ROMULUS , Mich. (UP !\
The FBI and the Na tional Transporta tion S.a fety Board today
investigated a control tower
report tha t an engi ne on a
Nort hwest Air lines DC-9 ex ploded in fl ames just before the
jetli ner cras hed, appa rently kil li ng all 153 on board.
T he airplane punched through
the roof of a car-rent al agency a t
Detroit Metropoli tan Airport a t
8;47 p.m. Sunday shor"t iy alter
takeoff. burst into fla mes a nd
· plowed through a par king lot .
the:n skidded a long a st reet a nd
smashed into an In terstate 94

1986 CHEV. S-1 0
·EXTEWIDED ·CAB

The C&amp;S Bank

The ins pec tors, who were paid by the court. not ,
the stale. said the o n,Jy place that seemed to be
c lean at the f.acility. loca ted 20 miles east of .
Cincinn at i. was the office complex where the
center's supervisors worked.
·
The facili ty's superin tendent John San tose told
the newspaper there have been changes si nce th e
ins pectors visited.
·
" We 've revamped our dietary departments a nd
improved a tot of t he qualit y . .-. Santose ·said. "If
a nybody came out now. I hey would not find those
kinds of problem s. The roo-'s a whole gamut
availa bl e to ou r cli ents. that was never availabl e

fiery Detroit jetliner crash·

New S-Biazer trade . Fully equipped. All power
options, lumbar front seat. charcoal gray exterior
with contrasting bucket seats. You must see this
one!
·

-- -

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspap-er

FBI, NTSB teams probing

1984 MERCURY COUGAR ·
XR7

·hev.-Olds

1 Se c t ion, 10 Pages

ConditiOn of home for retarded said filthy

Factorv·Program car. only 4.900 miles. Gold ex·
terior with doeskin 60 -40 interior. Rear dack
rack, power w indows. tilt wheel and much more.

TOP HOG- John Wade, M.D .. NAPA-Automotive Supply and
Doh' s Electronics paid $9 per pound, or $2, 160, for Ople S talnaker's
240-pound grand champion market hog at F riday night 's Mason
County Fair Livestock Sale. Pictured above, from left . are John
Coen of NAPA, Dr. Wade, Fair Queen Sherri Hughart and Bob Cox
of Bob' s Electronics. Also s hown are Utile Miss Mas on County,
Cary Shinn, and Utile Mister Mason County Branden Shirley a nd
Stapleton.
·

enttne

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Monday, August 17, 19.8 7

1987 CHEVROLET CELEBRITY
EUROSPORT-

MASON LANES HAS OPENINGS
for 9 P.M. Leagues on Monday,·
Wednesday &amp; Friday _nights.
Interested teams or persons should call
(304) 773-5600 for information.
Both Men and Women Bowlers
Are Welcome.

Showers a nd thunderstorms. High In 90s. LingerIng s howers tonight . Low
near 70. Cloudy Tuesday.
.High In 80s.

•

at y

Vol.37. No.69

USED
CAR SPECIALS

Daily Numher

7-9-22
23-32-41

'Copyrighted 1987

4 wheel drive, it is ready to go. Black and silver
two-tone with sunshine striping. ju.mp seats. air,
cus.t om topper. running boards . local truck, new
88 Silverado trade!
·

UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
MASON BOWLING CENTER

Ohio Lottery ·

Jr., Miles S. E pling a nd Peoples
Ba nk, netting a total of $885 for
the school organization.
Heck's Fu nera l H om e of Mil ton bought a hog from Jay Adkins
and resold It to Tow n &amp; Country
Veterinary Clinic at $1.35 pet
pound, or $256.50, to benefit the
Ha nnan High Sc hool F HA a nd
cheer leaders, and L!!SI. Cha nce
Carry-Out of Ga iltpoils, Ohio,
resold the hog it bought from Scot
Muncy for $1.50 per pou nd, or
$300, to City Ice a nd F l,ie l to
benefit the Mason Coun ty Fair
Board.

Heather Meadows' third place
anima l selling for $2.75 per
pound. Fro m there, prices varied
from $1.40 to $2.25, holding fairly
steady-throughout the sale.
Several area organizations be·
nefitted from t he resale of hogs.
Mountaineer Fax Che k and
Shinn's Trapping of A;:&gt;ple Grove
purch ased three hogs a nd resold
them to benefit the Sunnyside
Elem enta ry School PTO. Those
anima ls, shown byMlke Facemler, Jeremy • Long and ')'odd
Robertson, were pu rch ased ' on
the resale by Da mon B. Morgan

inclu des improvem ent s for exists ion in th e gulf, where U.S. Navy
in g Sa udi F -15s a nd other weawarships are escorting Kuwa iti
pons Sa ud i Arabi a already has in tankers fly in g the American fla g
its stockp iles. congress iona l through th e war- torn waterway.
sources told the Post. whi ch
Iran and Iraq have been
initially reported the pla n.
fighting a virtu ally sta lema ted
The move m ay touch off a war for near ly seve n year s.
major stru ggle betwee n the Kuwaiti s hipping has com e under
a dmini s t ra t io n a n d l h e a ttack because Kuwa it s upport s
Democratic-led Congress. where Ir aq in the long war.
pro- I sraeli mem bers and others
In Israel. govern ment sources
disenchanted wit h Sa udi inten· could not confi rm the report 'but
ilons foughl the Whit e Hou se to a said Jerusalem is opposed ta t he
s la nds lill on the $360 m tliion sales of a ny arm s to the Saudis.
Maveric k sa le. ·
" We are aga inst atTd we are
Pres ident Reaga n was ·barely worried a bou l any arms sales to
able to susta in his May 1986 veto co unt r ies that a re at war with
of legisla tion that would have Israel," a Foreign Min is try offi.
blocked a sa le , of Sidewi nder cia! said. " We of cou rse arc not
air-to-a ir, Harpoon a ir-to-sea · happy Wit h reports or tha t kind.
and Stinger ground- to·air mis"The F-15 is one of th e best
siles to the Saudi gover nment.
wa rp la nes in the world and it
A sen ior a dmlnis lral ion offi- worries us." he said. a dding,
cia l told the Post the tim ing was "Our position wi ll bt&gt; hea rd in
dictated by the increasin g ten- Was hi ngto n."

Carlucci defends U. S. gulf policy
WAS HI NGTON I UP ! )
Frank Carlucci, President Reaga n 's new na tional security ad viser, says increased U.S. milit ary presence in the Persian
Gul f "is not an open-ended
commitm ent ," but congres sional critics worry about tha t
vague ness.
"Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-Ind .,
chan·m an of the House Int ell igence Committ ee, appearing on
NBC's "Meet the Press" S4nd ay,
·sa id there is "a n uneasiness,
ther e:s a nervous ness in t he
Congress" on the administration's gulf policy and, " It goes . ..
to that question of o pen-ended
commi tment.' ·
" How long are we committed ?
At wh at point will we withdraw ?
· Wha t kinds of tens ions have to be
redu ced? Wha t' s the evidence of
those tens ions that Ca rlu cci
refer r ed tp before we would
withdraw?" H a milton asked .
Ca rlucci , also appearing on the
NBC's "Meet the Press," de fended the administration' s Pe r s ta n Gulf poli cy as well as its

decision not to invoke the War
Powers Act . which demands
congress ional notification if U.S.
troops face imminent danger.
"This is not an open ·cndcd
commitment ot her tha n In the
sense tha t the U.S. Navy has a n
o p~ned -e nded commit ment to
defend America n-fl agged ves·
sets w he never th ey're in
danger ." Carlucci said of .the
cont roversial American policy of
giv ing Am erican fl agS a n d U.S.
Navy protection to ships carry -.
ing oil from Kuwait and threa tened by Ira n in it s war against
Iraq.
" If the danger recedes, the
escorting can s top," Carlucci
said.
Hamilton said that wh ile he
" persona lly ha d some doubts"
about the wisdom of the refl aggtng policy. he agrefld wit h
the administration that the Perstan Gulf " is a v it al pa rt of the
wor ld for us, th at we oug ht not
now to cut and r un , that we have
to stay a nd we ~\ ave to s how
.• y

rest ra int in our m ilitary postu re.
but we cer tai nty ca n't pu ll out."
Carlucci sa id the Reagan adm in istratfon "is wor king VC'ry
hard at t he U.N ." on a Securit y
Council r eso lution dema nding
cease- fi rC' in the 7- ycar·old
con fli ct between Iran a nd Iraq .
"And we hope very shortly to
nave a follow-up resoluiion which
wou ld pu t some teet h in th e fir s t
resolutio n by imposing some
sa nctions· on wh ichever pa rt y
does nOt ad here to the fir s t
resolutio n ," he said. "So we a re
hopeful we ca n redu ce te ns ions In
the gul f to the point where .
escorti11 g is no lo n ger·:
necessary."

a

At the same li mP, Car lu cci satd :
Whit e· House lawyers saw no
need for format invocation of the
War Powers Act.
Ca lling it "a legal issue"
Ca rlucci said the Whit e Hou~e •
l~ wyers " have been foll ow ing the
s rtu;J,Hon very closely" a nd have ,
been . " m aking the appropr ia te '.
decrstons ."

�'
Monday, August 17. 1987

Commentary

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Esasky belts two h~mers to keep·Reds
in tie·for first ·p lace with SF Giants

Page- 2-The Daily Sentinel .
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Monday, August 17, 1987

.

.The Daily . Senti(lel·
Ill Court Stre&lt;•l
Pomeroy, Ohio
nEVOTEO TO THE· INTERESTS o•· THE MEWS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Puhllsh~r

BOB HOEFLICH
GPneral Managt•r

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant PuhlishPr/ Co ntroller

A M F.:\1 RFR ro t ThP t 'ni tP&lt;I PrC'&lt;.:&lt;.: I nr• •r nat inn a I l nl. 1ml D.1ih PI I'~"
Ar.; r.:rwi:lli n n b nd rhP .-\mNi('a n !'t 'W"papPr Publ l~"i h l 'r" A:--snd :1tinn.
I. FT I' FRS OF OP il\ 10~ ,o1o · 11 •· lr ,, m, Tht·l s htoulr\ hr · 11 ·"" t han .llWI \l ni CI ~
]I•Ol' 1\ l \ 11'1 11 •1 ~ , Il l ' ~Uh!l'l 1 to 1t •t liliO !.!_, IIH\ m11 ~ 1 h1 • "'IL:OH\ \\ 11 h O:tnll ' . l d(ll :I '~IO &gt;I Od
tf•h ·ph1 1f11 numtwr . !\r ' un ... r~::n•~l II'll • I" 11 ill lw p11h ll~hl'd !.l'llo ·t:- ~hr JUld h•· in
':_'IH I!I I , t&lt;.; lf' ,

od(ht '-" 10 J.! l'•"lll'"

Company pension ·funds
funds be Sl't aside In an Inviolable
tru st. But many companies havl'
been deferring their payments
Into tht' trust (unds for years with the tacit approval of the
federal governmeqt. The pay ments are s upposed to be made
·up, of course, but companies In
fina ncia l trouble are using the
money they should 1&gt;1' putting
into .the pension fu nds for ot her
expenses - and thl'n going
bankrupt anyhow.
Even hea lthy corpora tlohs
often trl'at the pension fund s they
manage as a source of monPy for
v arious expc?nses or even a t temp-

ted takeovers. Th ey have perverted their pens io n plans Into a

WA2N\~ 6\~~

To a:t'~l~ r A. P\i OOLJ.,M ~ \llCIOUS .•.

It's a dangerous
world out there
By ARNOLD SAWISIAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON 1UP il - We were told a number of times during the
Iran-Contra hearings that covert operations are necessary because
we live In "a dangerous world."
That asser.tio n got practically no argument from the 26 senators
and represen tatives w ho listened to three months of testimony about
secret deals and undPrcover operations that reached from the sa nds
of Iran to the jungles of Nicaragua .
Some me mbers of the commi ttees - as well as some members of
President Reagan 's Cabi net- thought the Iranian ca per was a dumb
tas opposed to " nea t") idea, and somP thoug ht the scheme to pipe its
. profits to the Contras was fiat out illegaL
The reason that was volunteC'red for keeping both projects secret
was that " it 's a dangerous wor ld" in which governments had to keep
their citizens 1n the dark to avoid tipping off their enemies or
embarrassing ers twhile allies.
·
About the only reservation the law makers had abou t the sE'crecy
was that John Po indexter and Ollie North hoodwinked them along
with th~ American public while they confided the government's
sec ret ope rat ions to a mixed bag of American and Middle Eastern
fixers , go- betweens a nd arms m erc han ts.
Bu t no one b&lt;Jthered to directly address or even to define the issue of
whethpr the United States government , which is req uired to conduct
mos t of it~ domestic operations in the open. ought to be engaging in
secret ·foreig n policy activities.
From a pragmatic viewpoint. the adva nt ages of secrecy are easy to
see. II is unlikely, for examp le. th at R ichard Nixon and Henry
Kissinger co uld have ended decades of U. S.-Chinese hostility and
isolation without the benefit of secret negotiations .
A deal like thai is cons idered a diplomatic cou p if the public and its
e lected representatives approve or don't care. If it offends public or
congress iona l opinion, there usua lly is an opportunity to reject the
deal in the Serla te, which mus t ratify treaties .
But there is far more to covert opera tions than secret diplomatic
negotiations. Th e~ also ca n include selling missi les to countries that
in recent m emories ha ve kidnapped and held yo ur dip lomats hostage,
mining the harb&lt;Jrs of count ries you are not at war with, subsidizing
rebellions aga jnst government s you don 't like and a whole menu of
other under- the-counter tactics.
These activities arc ke pt secret for several rea sons, not the least of
which Is tha t some of them involve activit ies that would be rall!'d
terror is m . subversion or worse if practicl'd against us or our fri end s.
What this rea lly boil s dow n to is the question, " Is it proper for the
United States to do anyth ing ·11 fl'el s is necessary to prot ect it s own
securi ty or to advan ce the politica l principles we believe arl' thl''best
hope of freedom elsew hl're in the world ?"
We know the answer Poindextl'r and Nort h ga ve to th at ques tion.
The res t of us never were as ked .

Maybe vandals should
hire new publicity agent
By DICK \\lEST
WAS HI NGTON iV Pil -When something untoward happens in
this countrv -the toppli ng of a n elect ric tower In California be ing a
recent case in point - it is co mmon practice to put the blame on
,·a nda ls
A tra ns miss ion line carryi ng a million volt s of power from the
Pacific Nor thwes t to Southern Califo rnia hit the ground nC'ar
Ind epe ndl'n c~ aft er wires supporti ng thl' 120-foot tower were cut.
I am wondering whether the bla me-throwers a ren't giving
v anda lism a bad nam e.

His tory Wl ls th at Va nd als, a t the capitalized term applies to
Germa niC tril;&gt;('s th a t in vaded the Roman Empirl' in the fou rth
('enlury, probabl\· were- no more- destructive than an y oth €-r
ba r ba ria ns.
Yet the word in d ~cap it alized form has come to m&lt;:&gt; an persons who

dam age va lu abl e prop~rty belonging to othl'rs.
The kcv v..'on l rn a\- be " bcu barians."
If you· think of. barbarians as evil people who maliciously
devas tated valuable propert y for the fun of it, I hi' term va ndals ma y

well be a ppl!ed and the utilit y pole probably was va ndalizl'd.
But if yo u lhmk of barbarian s as pea ce-loving people who movC'd
thl'ir civ iliza tion west ward to escape the Huns. then you ca n see
Vandals left us a diffe r e nt sort of legacy .
I mean, didn't the Hun s b~atth~ Vanda ls, a nd not in th ~ 1920 Rose
Bow l, and wcrcn·t th ey respons ible for mu ch of the pillage in the
wor ld until they themse lves wer e vanquis hed by I hi' Vislgofhs around
450 A.D'!
Of co111·sc they wPre. And did .
But you rarely hrar of Ca lifornia pole-pushing b&lt;eing blamed on
huns. Nor or such de libera te acts of wanton des tr uction often called
vis igot hic. It's al mos t aways vandals who did it.

Letters to the editor
Says jobs going to big citie8
I wou ld like to s a~ a fC'W words
a boul the front page of our Da lly
Senti ne l on August 4. 1987, It had
head lines say ing Task Fore!'
Plan Des ig ned lo Aid Economy
Along River .
This really tickled m l'. Thl'y
spend good mane~ . taxpayers '
mon&lt;ey, to plan and des ign how to
make jobs for our area .
WPII , I can say this. WI' sure do
hav e a bun ch of th e m in
Columbu s .
Do n' t wl'? Now WI' a ll can say
this. You build a new highway
from Rock Springs to our bridge
to nowhere, finish U.S. 35 In
Ga lli a Cou nt y· and finish U.S. 33
I

priva te slush fund s, In effect.
Thirteen yea rs ago, Congress
passed the E mpl oyee Retirement Inco me Security Act, which
was Intended to guarant ee that
pension benefits are actua lly
paid· out. The Pension Benefit
Guara nty Corp. wa s ~et up to
m akl' good on pl'nslons ln the
event of bankruptcies , m ergNs
and outright thiev ery. It is
funded by modest pre mium s
pa id by co mpanies with pension
pl ans.
The PBGC currently Insures
th e pensions of 38 m illio n
workers covered by 112,300 pri vate pension plans. ERISA Im poses strict regulations des ig ned

111 11 Jli ' \Sio ll,l] lll l ' &lt;;

Commentary

(

Ander:son and Joseph Spear- :

from Darwin to Ath&lt;ens and build
a four la ne highway around or
through Nelsonville and you all
up at Columbus watch Southeastrrn Ohio boom. ThIs I am sur&lt;'
won' t fix all our woes but It will
make life In this area a lot better.
So for our Task Force how
about forcing some highway
construction monl'y down this
way lor once.
We have bel'n left out so long
now aid for our econ6my might
cost more than the state takes in
which Is quite a bit . from this
area.
Floyd H . Cleland
Middleport, Oblo
. I

SAN DIEGO 1UPO - Nick
Esasky. hit two home runs and
Ron Robinson gave up two hlts
over eight Innings Sunday to
spark the Cincinnati Rl'ds to a 2-0
vJctory ovl'r the San Diego
Padres .
Robinson , 6-3, who tired because of the "warm weather, did
not allow a runner beyond secc;md
base and was In difficulty only
once wlien the Padres put the
first two r unners aboard In the
third Inning. He retired the next
three batte rs In order .
Robinson walked one and
struck out a career-high eight
beforl' John Franco pltchl'd the
ninth Inning to gain his 23rd save.
Ed Whitson. 10-8, started for the
Padres and was lifted for a pinch
hitter after giving up five hits a nd
striking out six.

~

WASHINGTON - Millions of
Aml'ricans have planned their
retirement on ttie basis of their
employers' pension ,, plans
which were often set up after
hard bargaining by emp loye!'
unions.· Unfortunately , many · of
thl'se future pensioners are building their retirement dreams on
sand .
Co ngressional Investi gators
havl' uncovpred evid!'nc&lt;e: seen
by our associate Michael Bi nstein. that some corporations
that manage pension funds on
th eir employel's' behalf have
a bused and misused the money
outrageously.
The law requires that pl'nslons

....:,...---tl!~ C~ 'iJOCH A~
' eeE!I2 ~· lC:a,.."
'

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

to protect the pension funds .
But still, some co mpanies ha ve.
s uccess fully exploited the law ,- ·
w.elshed on their pe nsion prom-: :
lsi's and le ft the federal govern-.
m e nI holding the bag. The PBG C :
is si nking deeper and deeper In ;
the red . It s deficit shot up from
$1.3 billion In 1985 to $4 .8 billi on In .
1986. As . more co mpa nies go. ·
bankrupt , parti cul arly In thl'. •
Midwest an d Northeast Indus-:
trial r~g ion s. the sit uation can';
o nly get worse.
One example illu s trates th e :
threat : A year ago the natio n's .
bi ggest steel maker. LTV, filed_
for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection . l t had m .c rged with
Republic Steel tw o years earlier.
Th e problem was that Repu blic's ;
pe nsion fund was committ ed to
pay m~nt s of $2 m;'tion a month yl't it ront .1t ned a gra nd to ta l of
$8.000.
"
ERl SA will protect I hi' co m -·
pany 's pC' nsioners. But the LTV RI'pubtlr ba nkruptcy will cost
the ~ovcrn ment $2 .2 bi llion to
kc·cp the retired s tel'lworkers'
pl'nslon c hecks c·omlng .
Two other ras~s s how why the
PBGC' Is broke : Whl'ellng Pltt•tJUrgh Steel's co ll a pSI' 1n
1985 lr ft $o00 m illi on In currc•nt
un&lt;l futu r&lt;' pc•nslo n debts for the

Esasky homered on firsl
pitches In the third and the
seventh. giving him 16 homee
r uns on the season. Whitson has
yielded 29 home runs In 161
Innings.
National League Roundup
By CHARLm McCARTHY
UPI Sports Writer
Darryl Strawberry; who has
been cr lliclzed for not playing
hurt, nearly hit for the cycle with
•
a sore hlp .
Strawberry drove In five runs
with fou r hit s a nd scorl'd five
limes to lead the New YorkMets
to a 23-10 trouncing of the
Chicago Cu bs.
Ron Darling, 10-7, won his sixth
co nseculive start while Greg
Maddux, 6-11, lost his fi r st start
si n~e bl'ing recalled from Triple-

A Saturday .
Thl' Mets, who avo ided a
four-game ser ies sweep, remained In third place In the NL
East, 4 ~ games behind the St.
Louis Cardinals. Th ey trail
second-place Montrea l by one·
half game.
Strawberry, who smacked a
three-run homer, a two-run triple
art d two doubles as part of a 21-hit
attack, missed hitting fo r the
cycle when he , doubled to left
Ins tead of singling in his last
at-bat.
First base co ac h Bill Robin son
discreetly signaled Strawberry
to stop. at first but Strawberry
went on to second.
"That is a double a ll the way ,"
sai d Strawberry, who tu rned
down
Davey John so n's
offer to sit
se·of a

ins ur.,nce fund with $170 m illion ·
In pensio n o bll ~"tlo n s.

series sweep.
Aslros 6, Braves 2
AI Houston. Billy Hatcher
drove In a career- hig h four r uns
• a nd J im Deshaies, 10-4, won his
firs t start s in ce coming off the
disabled list .
Phlllies 4, Cardinals 3
At St. Louis , Juan Sam uel
delivl'red a two-r un go-ahead
single and Lance Parrish homered to he lp Shane Rawll'y
earn his 15th victo ry.
Giants I, Dodgers 0, 10 innings
At Sa n F ranci sco. Mike La"
. Coss. 11-?, fir ed a three- hitter
a nd Edd ie Milner doubled home
Chili Davis in the l Oth Inning for
the victory to keep the Giants tied
the wit h the Recta for first place
in the NL Wes t and co ncluded a
9-2 Giants homl'sta nd .

ESASKY HOT - Clnclnnali's Nick Esasky hit two hom e runs to
pace the Reds to a 2-0 \'lctory over the San Diego P11drcs Sund11y In
thl' Red s llnlli game of the c urrent road trip In which the NL
Western Division leaders were 4-7. (UPI)

govPrn nwnt 10 p lf'k up: Allis·
C hC~lm r l:"' b&lt;lnkrup t cy' !-i lul'k lh('

said. "You can't think about
what you've done when you g&lt;'l a
hit like that."
Len Dykslra and Howard Johnson also s lugged homers for the
Met s, who seared In every Inning
except the seco nd and .the ninth In
setting s club record for runs
scored)n a game.
Elsew her e, Montrea l out s lugged Pittsburgh 10-7; Houston
defeated Atlanta 6-2; · Phlladel·
phia edged St. Louis 4- 3:
Cintlnnalj blanked San Diego
2- 0; and San Francisco nipped
Los Angeles I -0.
Expos 10, Pirates 7
At Montreal, Tim Raines hit
for the cycle and Tom Foley
sm ashed a three- run homer to
ke) a five- run seventh Inning and
·give the Expes a four-game

Con gTC&gt;~ s h:Js raiS(-d the annual
pr 0 mlu' m ~ t ha t corpor::~ ti o n s

•

must pay for pension-fund lnsuran cr . but that won·t bl' nearly
rnough Io keep t h£' PB GC solve nt

B

Salute for a fa)) en
When I was an undergraduate
at Princeton in 1941, I was
required to read a book called
"The Managerial R evolution" by
J a m es Burnham. Burnham had
noticed that ' corporations were
no longer being run by their
owners , but ralht'r by a bra ndnew group he called lhe " man agers.'' He futher noti ced tha t th l'se
managers closely resembll'd the
ff'chnocrats who were increasIngl y running thin gs In the Soviet
Union . and concluded that we
might 1&gt;1' witness ing the birth of a
new class . in the s)rict Marxist
sense. which would seize power
from both the capllalist owners
and the Marxist Jdrologues.
In later y&lt;&gt;ars, a lt &lt;er Burnham
had helped Bill Buckley found
Nationa l Rl'vlew in 1955and I had
become its publisher In 1957, I
had th e pri vilege of m &lt;eet lng Jim
and getting to know him well. By
the n the focus of his a tt entio n had
shifted from the m anagerial
"class" to thr ·Cold War a nd th ~
worldwide a dvance of communism , but the ba s ic cast of his
mind rrmained unchanged : He

Likt- a ll point s of view, of
course. this one has It s limita tio ns. AI National Rev iew, it
precipitated man y an intramural
qu arrel between Burham and our
house m etaphys ician. the la te
Frank Meyer. MeyN, whose
in

morf'

Majors

wrltf' !)f'&gt;n ~ lon chf' c ks lor o nl~' ~~
f pw mor £' x rar s hf'fon• 11 gof's

the ma gaz ine was

e ntit led "Principles a nd Hl't'es ·
Jes." liked to disc uss such ma rIPrs as whethe r political frl:'rdom
is a moral nC&gt;cessi t y . Burnh am ,

wh ose co lumn was long ca lled
" The Third World War" a nd
later "The Protra cted Confli ct ,"
was much morr Jike lv to want to
kn ow what the notrd Kurd h:;ader
Kh alld Bagdash was !loi n ~ In

r un-In or 1wo of m y own wil h

.Jim 's some ti mes .-a th r1· ruthless
pragma tis m . I vividly recall the
day early ln•l968 when he ca m&lt;'
Into my office a t Nati onal R\'v lew
and suggested w~ for m "n
inhouse coa llllon 10 \\for k for n

Rockefeller· R!•aga n tlrkr t tin
that order) to he ad off Ri chard
Nixon at tho pass. I frostil y
dec l ln~d wha t .Jim would un ·
doubt ed ly have admi tted was. In
techni cal terms. as ··unpri ncipled coa lition ."
But o n lhC' b usic:-; -

o n the ner d to stop ·commun ism
- .Jim Burnha m wa s a roc·k.
Presi dent Reagan g~n~rous l y
recogn ized this when. in IBS.l. he
co nf ~rred on him our na ti on's
hl g hesl civili an award . the Me·
da l of rreeclom . By the n ,Jim had
rf' tlr£'d fro m Na!l o n al Rc•v!pw,
fel led ~ y a sl rokr In 1978. Out hr
sol dler~cl on. largely s ilent now
but susta ined by hi s fa mil y and
frie nd s , until his dc·a th from
cancer on Ju ly 28. at •t he ag&lt;' Of 81.

Berlin learns to ·Jive with
During a recent \'Is it to Be rlin , covered by graffiti of .eve r.v
I obser ve d aga in a la rge, d y- co nceiva bl e ty pe from political
namic city cut in two bv a jabs ("Kill a Comm l&lt;' for Mom m a n-made. wall and isola ted mie" ) to love messages 1" Marie
from it s longtime position as the a nd Richard , 1985" 1.
ca pita l of a unified GC'rmany . I
Wha t imprPssed me is how
was s truc k, howevPr, bv the lac k Germa ns h av(' come to terms
of urgency on th e · part of wi th the wall. If there Is a n.v
Germans in · the Western or urgent mov&lt;' ment hPrr e ilh~r for ·
" freE' " zone In tearin g down thP unifi ca t ion or !Par ing down lhf'
wall or reunifying the country. wall, I wa s unabl E' to sense II.
Th£'y seem reluctant to rock the Many Germans In the Wl'stern
boat.
zo ne fee l that the construction of
PrE'sldE'nt Reaga n was here a the wall &lt;&gt;nd eci a politica l crisis
while ago a nd calll'd on th!' that might have erupted into a
Russ ia ns to tear down the wall. ser ious milit ary conflict. The
The speech was greeted with grea ter prosperit y a nd freedom
polill' applause a nd a yawn. of Wes t Ber lin IS so obvious thalli
BerlinC'rs saw the pl' rformanc ~ needs no sta tin g.
as an artifici al political gestu re.
There is a lso a feeling here that
The Berlin Wa ll was built , Am!'rica n fo rces in West Gerbeginning Aug . 13, 1961, lo s top many- some 300,000 men - ar&amp;
the flow of East Germans to the not so much a source of Irritation
Wes tern SI'Ctor. It -was the Soviet as a stabilizing fa ctor. II is not
answl'r to a crisis, which th ey s impl y th at West Germans are
la rgl'ly created . It stemm l'd a pprecia ti Ve of l he deterre nt
from efforts to halt the move- l'lfec t lhP American presence
ment of pl'ople between the two has against Sovil't moves; there
zo nl's , and frlct Ions, again lar- Is a lso a reluc ta nt recognitio n
gPiy crea ted by the Russians,
that the American prese nce
among the four sectors of Berlin. safeguards aga inst thl' rlvlval of
Tho sl' Sl'ctor~ are apportion!'d to German militarism. The ml'Britain, France, the United mory of Nazism Is stlll alivl' In
States and the Soviet Union.
. the Germ an mind .
I came to Germany ti)lnklng
The concrl'tl' wall Is just under
100 miles long. Its height varies I he lime ma y havl' come to begin
between 10 and 13 feet. The withdrawal of Aml'rican troops
eastern side of the wallis backed over the next decade . That Is an
up by an open area about 100 opllon we should keep In mind If It
yards wide containing land can be doni' with thl' cooperation
mines and barbed w.l re barr.le(~;~&lt; of
with armed guards posted at
towers. Thl' chll'f activity along Sovil't troops . But I am more
the western side of the wall inclirled now to go slowly on this
consists of tourists peering Into possibility . .
I continue to feel that we must
thl' Eastern zone from platforms
arranged for that purpose, The press ahead with diplomatic,
WI'S tern side of the . wall Is political, economic and cultural

above 311.

to bui ld bC'tt r r re t.1
lions be tw ee n Eas t and Wpst
Sov iet lea der Gor bachev has
obvi ously struck a fa vorabl!'
rf'sponsf' hrrr with hi.'i · arm s.
control initi atives, in eluding thl'
ban on nulcea r tes tin g he invo ked
in Augus t 1985.
Thf' sures t rontrfhu t ioh Wf' ca n
make to the sC'c urily of Germany, E urope and ourselves Is to

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Jt ,.u ... un

Ry colnc l&lt;kn ce ,lames R ~sto n .
th e lonAtlmc New York Times

,ll rnost th&lt;' arc hetypa l itbNa l lwd of loo king at th&lt;' world .
In hi s larewcll column . Rr•wn
clulv noted th e• worldwide J"Nrcat

fi WNI I 'rt"'~

I

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)l tm4•)" - tlanw..
\fll• :1 11 lo:•••· I Knucf,.nn '!.:11 :.t.l

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bankrupt its&lt;•lf.

Damascus las t we£'k
As a conservative ld£'ologul'
with my own fi s h to fry, I had a

fhalll*ld 8. (

"i \TtO~ \1, l.f. \ IH
ft ~

CO tnrade ____:.W.:__:i~ll•:.ar_:_n
:.:. · :.:R~
.:. w-...:.;h.er
:. .:. .

wa s the supreme rea list. coldlv
a nalytica l, Implacabl y Jogica i,
proudly unsentimentaL In hi s
youth . h&lt;' had toyed a t some
l£'ngth with Trotskyis m: a t National Revll'w he "conce ntra t&lt;'d
undeviatingl y on the me na ce he
now believed co mmunlsm repres&lt;'niPd . But th roughout hi s
life the Cl'ntra l ' question of
politics remained. for him , "Who
sha ll 1&gt;1' ma ster in the ho use?"

column

.. U nr or tun;)tC"ly .

large terminations and even
h ighcr defi cit s;or·e Iike ly ... P BGC
('Xeru tiv(' director KathlN•n Ut JlOf! told the &amp;na te Ftnanr&lt;'
Comm ltt l'e . In fa c t. officials a rP
ufrald the insurnnc e fund r an

SYR1\CUSE LITTLE LEAGUE TEAM FIRST
- This Syracuse Utile League team. sponsored ,
b:y Hubbard'• Greenhouse, won first place In the
Sy racuse Little League Tournament. Members
are, front , I to r , Michael McKelvey, Eddie
Friend, Andrew Fields. Scott Hubbard; second. I

·canse~o

to r, Aaron Drummer, Joey Hensler, Andy
Gru~cr, Ray Proffitt, Jr., Jeremy Northup;
hack, I lo r, Tucker Williams , Jamie Smith,
Bobby Moore, Jeremy Dill, Clifford Smith.
Coaches are ,John Northup and Ray Proffitt, Sr.

regains HR stroke

By JOHN TORRES
UPI Sports Writer
Jose Canseco ha s recovered
his power stroke In time for a
toug h pennant s tret c h , thanks , in
par r to Mark McGwlre.
Ca nseco beltl'd his 25t h homer
nnd co ll ected twO doubles Sun day to power the Oak la nd Athlet Ics to a 9-6 victory over the
Ca lifo rnia Angels.
" There's no doubt tha t lhe
att e nt ion tMarkl McGwire ha s
go tte n has helpl'd Jose gl'l Into
hi s season," LaRussa said.
C'a nseco. who clouted :!3 home
runs a nd 11 7 RBI as a rook II' last
year. stru ggled earli er In the
season but ha s found the groove
s ince the All-Star break. He ha s
31 RBI In thl'30 ga mes since the ·
break .
The A's pla y 13of the ir next16
ga m es aga inst th e first -place
Toront o Blue Ja ys and the
third -place New York Yankees of
the America n Leagul' East.
The A's trail the flnl -place
Minnesota Twins by fo ur games.
Canseco delivered an RBI
doubl e w ith two out in the sixth to
cap a th ree-run Oakland rally
th at .catried the A's to their third
st ra ight ·victory over the falterIng Angels.

Greg Cadare t , 2-0. pit ched 3 2- ~
innings and De nn is Eck ers ley
recorded I hi' final seven out s for
his ninth save. A ngels re liever
Chu ck F inl ey, 2-5, who gave up
two unearned runs In th l' sixt h,

took the Joss.
Th e Angels had taken a n early
5- lll'ad off s ta rt er Steve Onlive"
ros, who surrendered three homers in Ca llfotnia's fo ur-run
second inning .

EYE THE

lf' ar in g down lh(l
Rf•rl in We~ II CPrrnan'i du apprC'-

pf'aC't' th an

WANT ADS
FOR Gr,EAT BUYS

c lat!' th e&lt;•asirr mo vem ent that is
ail' c&lt;Hi)• poss iblr through th~
wall' s C'hr·rkpoinl s. Thr\· woultl
w(' !C"(lmf' t hC' rnu l'h f'a sie r aecess
tha t m:1v eomr with lmpro \'ing

I

Tht' Daily St'nlint'l

East ·Wl' St r &lt;'l.lti ons .

( PW~ lt $-9titll~

A SPECIAL EDITION IN THE
THE DAILY SENTINEL
AUGUST 27,1987

A 01\'l!&gt;olun nf Mullinwdla . ln t•,
Puhl h..lu~l t '\'t ' l \
lhH •UJ.!il F t itl:-~ .

Berry's World

rrtt-to\ '.

Oh\(). In

.1111'1 nnf •f\ . M flnl l:t.'
111 CtiUt' l St .. p,,.
lht ' O h it l \ 'ul ll•\ Pt11l

Cf1m p:;n, Mull lmi'C IIa lnf', .
PnmN m Ohio .1:1i"H. l'h. !~:! ~ l fttl . St •

MONDAY, AUGUST 17

'7: 30 P .M . Opening Night Service

li " hln'g

Me igs Co. Ministerial Assn .

l'll nt l 1l.i~~~ p11.,l :tJ,!i ' p:lld at Jl nnwrn\',
Oh ln.

''

l\11-mhl'l " t 'nlh•d Ptt ' '~" l n H' t' Mtlllnn :l1,
Inland n .~ ll, F•t t• ..:!' 1\ '- ~ ot · lat l nn :1nc l 1111 •
Oh ln :'\rw ~ p.! pt • t i\s~ n i'Lttit•n . N:ttlon :•l
Alht •J ti."'ln P Jkpll'" l'nl.lil\1 ·. At .tnh llm
1"\t&gt;" -.p, 1p4 1 S,lll'' . 'j'U Thlrcl 1\\ f' f\tll'.
!'\'''\ Ym ).: , Nt '\1 \' f\ 1k lfllll f

POSTMASTER · St•ncl .ulclrr"'s ! 'h :tn j.:: t'S
~ · n llnd . 111 ('t•LU,' I Sl ..
Pnmt•n•.' . OhiP ~!l7ti~t . .

In 'llll' T)ltll\

SliHS(' RIP'riO N ft ,\TI'~S
Rv f. trrlt•r or ~1nlor Rflltlt•
Ont • Wt:i ·k .... . . .... .. . ........ . ~ l . :l!l
On• • M nnth

....... ................... :;:.ii A5
O n•• Y P:n ......................... $1l'i,((l
!'iiNGI~ E

C'OI'\'

I~Rrn•;

~~. (\ •ni l'

O:dl \ ... '""""""'" .. . .
Sub!'f ' tlb i' J '~

nnl

tit&gt;&lt;: I I ' ll! ~

to pn,v lhf' c·nr·

rit•r m.n r·rmiT In lHI\'ll nt'f" {11tl'&lt;'1

111

Th•' Dalb Sf'nli nt'lc1\l ,1 '\.li PI' 12 m o nTh
ba ~ i ~. C'rf'tl ll will be· _g l\'C"n C', ll' l'lf'r &lt;'ac·h
Wl 'l'k .

No "ub~c · t · iplinn -: hy mall pt 'rmlliNI In
al'f'.t s . whf'!'f' home• t•:u rlt•r "f'ITic ·t• b
ti \'OIIIabiP.

TUESDAY, AUGUST IS
9:00A .M.
10: 00 A .M .
10: 00 A .M .
1:00 P .M .
1:00 P.M .
2:00P. M.
3: 00P.M .
4:00P.M .
4:00P.M .
5; 00 P.M.
6: 30 IP . M.
'7: 00 \P .M.
8:00 'P.M.

Admission will be charged at gales
Draft Horse Show-4-H Horse Show
Weigh In Swine , Steers, Lambs
Flow~r Show Judging
Jud gin g 4-H Rabbits
Judging Sr. Div . Poultry
,J udging 4-H Poultry
Kiddie Tractor Pull-Show Ring
Jr. Fair Market Rabbit Sale
Talent Show-Hlll Stage
·
Johnni e BertnCia. Gospel-Hlll Stage
Demolition Dl'rby .
Junior Fair Swine
Showmanship &amp; Judging
New Grass Express-Hlll Stage

~-

"

992-2156
ASK FOR BRIAN OR DAVE

''

********************
.•

Mall SumK•r1pllon!tt
lmtld fl Mri~M ( :ounty

1:\ Wf't'ICS ......... ........ .... .. .... 517.29
16 W£'&lt;'ks ........ .. .. ....... .. .... ... . $."\4.00

AD DEADLINE IS AUG. 19, 1987

~2 \\'f't' kS ....... ... .. , .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .... $.titi.!ifi

"Igor, go Into town and bvy a football. We 're
going to make MILLIONS."
,

I

O.t!'ildt• Alf'IJ(!tl Count)'

1:l WPC'kS......... .. .... .... . .. . . $1R20
~fi \Vf"C'k:-- .. ., •. .,,.,, ,., ,,. Co'"' •• $."\~UO
fl2 \Vf"C'k'&lt; ...... , . .... .... '"" ..~ti7.ti0

- - - - --------'------·-

----'-------~

•

I,

.

,,

�Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend
.

Monday, AuguSt 17, 1987
Page-5

.

Four area families conduct annual reunions
.

Biggs reunion
The an nua l Biggs reunon was
held recenlly at the hom e of
Nat han Biggs with about 40
attend ing.
Out-of-town fa mil y members
a ttending were-Murrlel a nd E ula
Smith, Delaware: Jean Chap·
man a nd family, Parkersburg:
Homer and Helen Biggs, Union·
port. Local rela tives and lde nds
at the reunion Included David
and Penny Hysell, Carolyn arid
Bill Biggs a nd family, Annie
Miller and L. C., Blan.che Biggs,
Sa nd ra McKa y. E li zabe th
Hayes. Opal Biggs, Charles and
Lena Baley a nd family, Kathryn
Chapman. Jack Frederick and
family , Jerry Frederick and
family . Sa m Wams ley a nd lam·
ily, Goldie F re derick, Jodi ·
Brown, Kermit McElroy. Virgil
McElroy, Mary Buck, and Bon·
nle Landers. ·

t

\

-

OPEN DOUBLES (MEN) -

•••

Left to right,

\
Shawn Baker, Middleport and Mark Thompson,
Ravenswood .

t

Johnson,
absent. Wlnnel'!l, Rl~k Crow
~tn/1 Diane Lawson, Syracuse.

MIXED DOUBLES - Left to right, second
place team of Shelly Haskins, Gallipolis, Brent

Announce Syracuse tennis winners

LADIES DOUBLEs - Left to ri ght, second
place, Kelly Snyder , Pomeroy, Karen Blrchfleld,

.,

Galllpolis, absent; winners, Terry Hagge rty and
Shelly Haskins. Gallipolis.,
·

Browns and Bengals capture
exhibition triumphs Saturday
CLEVELAND (U P]) - Satur·
day night' s :11 -16 ex hibit ion vic·
torv over St . Louis ha s give n

Clevela nd Coac h Man y Sc hot ·
tenh eim&lt;"r problems.
Not heada ches. though . Even
the ca utious Schottenhei mer is
willi ngtoadmil thai thcc!fortsol
severa l players means fashion·
lng a 45-man roster ma.v be a
pleasa nt dil e mma.
Wide receiver Gerald McNe il
and qu arterback Mik e Pagel.
bolh battling for reserve ro les ,
were the ob,·ious heroes ol a 2-l·
point Brow ns ral ly in the second
half .
But rookie co rnerback Ste phe n
Braggs .tan e ight -yard intcrcep·
lion) , r unnin g back Ma jor Eve·
rett 1 1 :~yard TD r un 1, li nebacker
Nick Miller IIG-)•ard lnterccp·
tion1 a nd rooki e fullback Tim
Manoa 122 ru shing ya rd s and
stro ng blocking) also were
impressive.

" We reac hed both of our
object lves." said Sc hottenhe i·
mer. " We got a n opportunit y to
look at a lo1 of players and Mike
Pagel and a lso gain a victor-,· lor
ours0!ves.

" This is the kind of game a
co ach likes to sec. Yo u win the
gam e, but there's a m ultitude of
th ings you ca n work on."
St. Lou is led 16· 7 at halftime.
buoyed by two Neil Lom ax
touchdown passes to Roy Green.
before ·McNe il a nd Pagel went to
work .

TAMPA. Fla . !UP! I -Vinn y
Testa ver de has becomr No. 1 unolflcially.
The Hrisman Trophy win ner ,
the first player se lected in the

NFL dr aft , was supposed to be
brought along s lowly by Tampa
Bay Coach Ra y Perkins. Veteran
Steve DeBerg s tarted Saturday
night' s exhibit ion opener against
Cinci nn a ti, but it wasTes taverde
who was around for the ·rra nt ic
finish . AftPr just 60 minutes of
pro footba ll. Tampa Ba y's quarter bac k duel a ppears finished .
" There is a tremendous quarterback over the re," said Cincl n·
na ti Coac h Sam Wyche a[ter the
Benga ls survived three fourth ·
quart er touchdow n passes by ·
Testavfrdc in a :n .30 triumph .
" He is a legitimate s tar who
does n' t have to have every thing
go r ight for him to make big
plays . Tampa Bay is on its way
wit h Testaverde ... they 've got
their cen terp icce."
, Testaverde played the final
hal f a nd completed 16 of 29
passes for 233 )•ards . The fo rmer
Miam i All -Amer ican wa s inter ·
cep ted !wlce, incl ud ing a 10-yard
return by linebacker Ema nue l
King !ha t put the Bengals a hea d
:n 10 with 11 :07 rema ining. The
crowd of 52,747 bega n to file out of
T a mpa Stadi um, but Tes ta verde
shredded Cincinnati's second·
si ring defensP a nd only a botched
extra -poi nt attempt prevented
overt ime.
"Tha i fou rt h quarter showed a
lol ol gut s." ' sa id Testaverde.
who th rew touchdown passes to
rookie tigh t end Ron Ha ll from 10
ya rds. Phil Freeman from 28
\•ards a nd roo ki e free-agent
Bobbv Banks ton from 40 ya rds .

important to win the battles than
the war . . ·
Thus, the New York J ets' 13·.10
triumph Sat urday night over the
Phttactelphia Eagles -in the exhi·
bition opener for both was
somewhat hottow. The· Jets won
despil e a pass r ush slowed by a
grou p that las t year s mashedthe
record for mos t sacks y ielded.
The Jets registered three
sacks. But none came In the (lrst
quarter agai ns t the Eagles' No. I
line and qua rterback. Randall
Cunningham . Philadelphia per·
m itted 104 sacks last season.
Cunnin gham abandoned his pen·
c hant to run a nd s tayed in the
pocket to co mplete 5 of 7 passes
for 48 yards 'li nd directed the lo~e
offensive touc hdow n of the game.

I ---

SAN DIEGO !UP!) - D1j)las
Cowboys ru nn i.ng bac k. Tony
Dorsett downplayed the tmpor·
tance of a 29·0 los s to the San
Diego Chargers In the ex hibition
opener for both teams.
The Cowboys were he ld to 20R
yards on 56 offensive plays
Saturday against a team annu ·
allv known lor its strong olfense
a nd wea k de fense.
"This ls notime to pa nlc ," sai d
Dorsett. who ran for 32 yards.
" We made a big first step a s a
team . Ou r bright spot was out
offensive line.,.,

EAST R UTHERFORD, N.J .
During the ex hibi tion
season. it is almos t always more

1UPfl -

The Syracuse Racquet Club
recently hosted thei r sixth an·
nual open tourname nt, lea turlng
women's and men' s singles and
doubles, along with mixed dou·
bles. While certainl y not on a par
with the U.S. Open It featured
som e of the best pl aye rs from
Ohio counties of Meigs, Gallla,
Was hington and Athens a nd
Mason , Jackson and Wood coun·
ties of West Virgin ia .
Middleport 's Shawn Baker was
the winner of two men's even ts,
being the Open Singles champ
with a convincing 6·1, 6·0 victory·
over his doubl es part ner Mark
Thomp so n of Ra ve nswoo d .
Baker and Thompso n delea ted
Bruce Modesitt a nd J ay Carte9 of
Parkersburg 6·2, 6-0 In th&lt;' m('ll 's
double final.
Me igs Cou nty's Rick Crow and
Diane Lawson repeated as mlxt'li
doubles c hampion when th e
Gallla Coun ty team of Brent
J ohnson a nd ShPil y Haski ns
forfeitl'd .. Mrs. Haskins defeatt•&lt;l
las t ycar's · slngl£&gt;s champ ion.
Diane Lawson 6·1. 6·4 a nd then
t!'anied with her ··sis ter Tl'rry
Hagge rt y to win the Women's
Doubles eve nt 6·4. 6·1 over Kelly
Snyder a nd Kar en Birc hflpl d .

Gilkey reunion
Descendants of the late Thomas and Mllda J a ne Hudnall
Gilkey held their 17th a nnual
lam ily rcu n ion recent iy at the
roadside park on Route 33.
Atte ndin g were Mr. a nd Mrs.

..

:r

MEN'S OPEN SING I,ES- Left to rlxht, winner, Shawn Rake r ,
Middleport : Second placr., Mark TlloOJpson, .Ravenswood .

MONDAY·
RACINE - Southern Local
Board of Education will m eet In
special session Monday. 7 p.m ..
In the high school cafeteria.
RACINE - There wlll be a
Monday, 9 a .m :, a t the
footba ll building at Southern
High, for all boys .Int e rested In
playing "lu nlor high" football at
Sout hern.
mce tln~

MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Chap·
ter Order of DeMolay and Moth·

Elliott wins third
straight 400 race

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FUMBLE - The hall bounces aw;ty froni Patriots' Gene Taylor
as Taylor ' Is hll hy Giants' ' Robbie Jones while running a punt
return during Sunday's preseason tUt a t Foxhoro. The Palrlots
recovered. (UPI)
~~·

SAVE ON
ROOFING

If your old roof is
rusting owoy, put up
one that won't rust.

..,•',
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The Lifetime Rooftng

·''

4'•6'7" -26 Square Foot Sllett
Carrugalod lspllalt Roofing and
•

Reg. '10.99

Now
SENIOR AMERICAN LEAGUE ALL STARSFront Row (L·R) : Dream a Bentz, Wende Barker,
MellsBB Kearns, Chris Richmond, Karla Osborne,
Nancy Rollins, Gina Roach, Diana Simpson. Back

Row: Elson Long (coach), Junle Beesle, Sllelly
Winebrenner, Darla KID If, Donna I.ong, Sheila
Hendricks, Kim John110n, Jody Taylor, S~annon
Newsome, Stacy Dalton, Pele Hendricks (coach).

114. Grltll,

lrow~ -

0114 Gror

..•.

a,....looohly too

...........tylo
'

ers' Club will meet Monda y, 7: 30
p.m ., at Middleport Masonic
Tempi('.
WEDNESDAY
·EAST MEIGS- Eas tern Local
Board of E &lt;!ucatlon will mee t In ,
s pec ial sess ion Wednesday, 7
p.m ., at the high sc hool .
CHESHIRE - Gallla· Me lgs
Com munit y Action Agency will
hold fr ee clot hing day for low·
Income persons on Wednesday,
from 9 a.m . to l:i noon. at the old
high school building in Ches hire .

..-----People in the news---

-WOMEN'S SINGI.ES - Winn er of the t987 Syracuse wonwn 's
M eigs ' s 1w o scores ca m ('
singles tennis tournament wa..• Slu•lly Haskins. Gallipolis. Diane
mostly as the re ult of the · Lawson, Sy ra•·use plated second.
passing gam e as they connect I'd
on severa l long gai ners via the
ai r route . Mara uder Coac h Bob
Ashley feel th e sq uad is progress Ing well a t this point In time but
said that , obviously, th!'re a re
some a r!'as that need attenti on
a nd work prior to the season
opener on Aug. 28 against Pt.
Pl easa nt.
Me igs will travel to At hens
nex t Saturday to scr imm age the
B,ulldogs a t 10 a. m .

Celws In Sttclu

Lyman Stanley, William Kerr , Rodney J ud son, Shawn Burgett,
another year. Wilbur Weber
Linda Kerr , Billy Kerr, Becky Malta: Linda Smith, Langsville:
announced the birt h of a great·
Ker r, Albany: h-)r. a nd Mrs. Paul Vera Mae G ilkey, New Marshgrandchild, Elsie Lou Hawk, a
Gilkey , La ncaster; Ada Way - field: Mr. and Mrs. Larry Hubnew granddaughter; and Doris
mer, Leroy Gilkey, Logan: Mr. bard, Syracuse.
Koenig,
two great and Mrs. Ji m Douglas, Jesse
grandchildren.
.
Penny Bingman, Kyle Bing·
Douglas, Amanda Dou glas, m an, Jesse Gingman, Brook
Numllrous gifts were· 'distribJames Douglas, Florence Dou- Bingman, Glouster: Mr. and . uted during the day . The 1988
glas, Shade; Samantha Moore. Mrs . Dwight Sturgeon, Brandon
reunion was set for Sept. 13 at the
Danlelle Moore, Trlsh Murphy, Sturgeon, Erica Dugan, Racine: . Rodney Keller farm on State
McConne lsvil le: Lisa ·scott, Shelly F1,1ller, Les Dav idson,
·
ROute 248.
Chesterhill.
Presented
prizes
were
Marcia
Reylnoldsburg: Teddy Forbes
Garold"GIIkey, Myrile Gil key, a nd son, Jackie Forbes and son,
Keller. the oldest one there : Mr.
Joanne Pierce. Katie LePierce. Marcy Forbes and son. Colum·
and Mrs. Leonard King, Jr., the
Jesse Brickles. Mr. · and Mrs. bus: Mr. and Mrs. Roger Hayes,
most children prese nt, Mr. and
Scott Wolf, Amber Wolf, Cindy J eremy Hayes, J ason Hayes,
Mrs. Wilbur Weber and John
Gilkey, Shawn Wes t, Brandon Alba ny. and William Donahue of
Weber, McKees Rock, Pa . fo r
Wes t. Athens: Mr. and Mrs. West Virginia .
.traveling the farthest.
Charles Gil key, Kenny Perry.
Others attending the reunion
Angellcka Bush, The Plai ns;
were Mrs. Elizabeth Hayes ,
Weber reunon
William Young, Mr. and Mrs.
Chester: Mr. and Mrs Summers
The annual Weber reunon wa s
Guy Thoma, Sheryl Thoma, he ld Aug. 2 at the Reedsville
Haught, Cuyahoga Falls: Mr.
and Mrs . Roger Gaul, Lea Ann ,
Rutland: Mr . and Mrs. Jordle Locks and Dam picnic area.
Varner, Pam Varner , Tam
Rosemary and Russell Keller,
Presiding oflicers were Doris
Varner, Duncan Falls: Mr. a nd Koenig, president: Olive Weber.
Pomeroy: Mrs. Elsie Hawk and
Mrs. Samuel Sudduth, Freeport . secr tary: Cieo Smith, treasurer.
Ken, Mansfield: Tiffany Camp·
Mr. a nd Mrs. Kermit Gilkey. Summ ers Haught gave the bless·
bell, Mt . Vernon: Christie, Bonnie, David, Leonard Koenig,
Tim Gll)\ey. Justin Gilkey . Dar· . ing preceding a basket dinner
win; Mr. a nd Mrs. Jim Dunca n, which featured a decorated cake Terry Fife, Mr. and Mrs. NorJason Dunca n. Milford Dorst.
man Weber. Rick' and Susan
prov ided by Barbara Sragent.
Middleport: Tom Gilkey, Mr.
Koenig; Sanih and Joshua Hof·
Roger Keller was elected presi·
a nd Mrs. Frank Gil key, \l'lr . and dent for 1988 with the other
fman , Tupers Plains, and Ronald
Mrs. Joe J udson; Ray Judson . current officers to continue lor
and Ella Osborne, Long Bottom.

Calendar/ happenings

In a ninety minut e Sa turday
scrimmage at Marauder Sta·
dlum , Me igs s pott~ th e Mariett a
eleven a .field goa l th en camo
ba ck to pos t two touc hdowns for
the win In a session desig n&lt;:'d to
eval uate ta lent a nd determine
those ar&lt;·as needing attention
be lore regular season play .
Alt hough neit her team re·
vea led muc h to vis iting sco ut s,
the Mara Uder defense looked
good In not )X'rmittlnl( a first
down a nd pressuring th e signal
ca ll er on passing a tt empts.

Whi~

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S989
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Ptr Shott

ID£Al FOR RESIDENnAl, AGRICULTURE
&amp; COMMERCIAl APPUctnONS

LUMBER
OHIO

iltsulattt atintt htot

l~t weifht ••••

WNI' rl.tll or corro• ..-itltr ·th• rMtol
gon up fatt like metal ....; to iMtol
iiAitl ftr NEW rMil"' or rtroefittg

BONDED TO POUT~CS: Julian Bond has some problems Incl udin g a reputation tar nis hed by a llega tions ol coca in!' use but Is con sider ing a return to politics .
He doesn't ha ve a specific office In mind yet but says a run for
the Se nate isn't out or the ques tion . But first he ha s to take care
of' the $200,000 debt from his unsuccesslul campaign for
Co n~:ress last year. "I can't think aboul running for dogcatcher
un til I get tha t qut of the way," Bond said.
·
The one-tim e civil right s supers tar came under Investigat ion
In March when his es tranged wife , Allee, told authorities In
Atla nta he was a coca ine a buser.
Bond didn't like the scrutiny a nd referred to the media as
· "v ultures" a nd " hooligans" lor prying Into his priva te life but
hE&gt; has softened his opinion. " It 's jus t my bad luck, you know.
that this st ory occ urred a t a time when people were loo king for
Pulit zer prizes," he said.
KENNEDY CONFAB: There was a gathering o[ the
K&lt;' nned ys In Wlnn&lt;'tka, Ill. , Saturday for the wedding of
Christopher Kennedy , 24, son of Robert F . Kennedy. A crowd of
thc curious gathered outside the Sacred Heart Rom a n Catholic ·
Cnurch to ca tch a glimpse or the Kennedys, who welcomed
Chris topher' s bride, Sheila Berner, 24, to the clan.
BernPr, .a North111estern University law stude~t. ·and
Christophe r. who works In the planning divlslon of the Kennedy
foundation· owned Me rchandise Mart ,'m e t while they attended
Boston University. Sen. Edward M. Kenned~ D·Mass .. was
greeted with loud applause as his son, Teddy J r ., the groom's
mothl'r. Ethel, a nd cousins Caroline and Rep. Joseph Kennedy
II . D· Mass ., waived and smiled.
The no-shows Included former lirst la dy Jacque line Kennedy
Onassls and Marla Shriver and husband Arnold
Schwarzeneggcr.
SOAPY WEDDING: Kristlan Alfoll!lo' s character was
mar ried las t season on the "Days of Our Lives" soap opera and
she wowed the fans with a backless, pearl-laden !(OWn of Paris
s ilk. Th e NBC show gave Alfonso the $20,000 gown and design e r
Lee Smith even flew to Boston when Alfonso , 23, married British
real Cliti.l te developer Sl"'on MaLoCauley, 29, Saturday In glit zy
cer!'monles at Boston's historic Old South Church.
"Days" producer Shelley Curtis was among the 11
brld!'smalds. The couple planned a Caribbean honeymoon.
Alfonso, who m et her hubby last SepteD)ber ·on vacation In St.
Martin, has left " Days" but wUI next appear lor fans in the
season opener of ABC's ·" Who's the Boss" as Tony Danza's new
romantic interest.
SALUTE FROM OPRYLAND: Frankie Avalon and Barbara •
Mandrell will be hosts of the syndicated television special
"Opryland CelebratE'S 200 Years of America's Music." The
one-hour musical variety show will feature music ranging from
country, rook and jazz to Broadway show tunes . The
enlertainment Includes comedian Arte Johnson, Charley Pride,
the MarJne Drum and Bugle Corps, the Tennessee State
Univ!'rsity Marching Band and stars ol the Grand OleOpry, like
· Minnie Pearl.
·
Mandrell and Minnie will play "Broadway babies" In one skit,
which casts Mandrell as "Dolly" of "Hello Dolly" itnd Pearl as
" Marne" from the Broadway hit of the same name.
"The surprise of the skit's that I get tq wear something other
than my traditional gingham dress and white cotton stockings,
Pearl said. "And you know .what happens to girls who wear
white cotton stockings, don't you? Nothing."

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Elberleld reunion
Md.
The annual E lberfeld reu nion
Mrs. Gary Brenning. Kathe·
was he ld Sunday, Aug. 9 at the .rine Brenn ing, Robert Bre nning,
Elberfeld Farm.
Ryan Brenn ing, Jamie Veltri,
Attending werf/. Mrs. Jo Ruhl,
Mr. and Mrs . Robert Lytle, Mr.
Bobby and Jeff Ruhl, Mrs. Jacob and Mrs. Martin E lberfeld , ·
Elberfeld, Mr . a nd Mrs. David
Byron Don, Chlllcothe: Bob
Deever, John Deever, Amy Lytle, Liver more, Calif.: Mr .
Deever, Harriet Hlalswajo, a a nd Mrs. Robert Slagel, Ironton:
Mrs. Jani ce L. Mah oney, David
student frQm South AfrlC&lt;i, Wes·
tervllle; Mr . and Mrs. J·a ck E. Mahoney, Allison Park, Pa.:
Elder, Peter Dodglon, Katie Mr. .a nd Mrs. Allan E l berfeld.
Elder, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Elber· Andrea Eliza beth Elberfeld,
feld, Columbus: Dr. Jake Elber· Barsboursville, W. Va: Mr. and
feld , Marysv ille; Dr. and Mrs. Mrs. Steve Elberfl ed, Katie
Jerry Dola n, Darien, Conn .: Mr. E lberfeld , Ga llipolis.
a nd Mrs Frank Rovere, Portola
Mr. and Mrs. George E . .
Morris, Mr . a nd Mrs . Jim AnderValley. Ca lli.
Mr. and. Mrs. Brad Sa rgent and son, Mr. a nd Mrs .. John Ander·
Brad, Ceendale. N. J .: Mr. and son, John Hew it Anderson. Brad
Mrs Richard Elberfeld, Hamil· Anderson, La uren Anderson , Bi ll
ton: Mr s. Ann Elberfeld Clark, Anderson, Jr., Mr. a 11d ·Mrs. Don
Allen Cole, Robert Elberfeld, Anderson , Barbara Ander son.
Robert Elberfeld, Jr. , Rachel Sara h Anderson, David Ander·
Elberfeld. David Elberfeld, all of son. Mr. a nd Mrs. Robert E lberCincinnati: Mrs. Kristin Gragan , feld, Mr. a nd Mrs Wilia m B.
Andrew Gragan, Mrs. Lydia Downie. Willia m B. Downie, Jr ..
Siddall, · Mr. and Mrs. Mike all Pomeroy: Mr. a nd Mrs. Scott
Siddall, Rebecca Keller, Rachel · Dillon, Chester: .Mrs. Katherine
Keller. Marietta: Earl E lber· A. Sidda ll, Kelly Siddall, and
feld , Logan: Dr. Harrold Elber· Karen Siddall, Mechanicsburg.
leid, John Elberfeld, Balt imore. Pa.

Organizations · conduct rpeetings
APPLE GROVE UMW
A report on her trip to a mission
school was given by Eileen Buck
at the · recent meel,lng of the
Apple Grove United Methodist
Women held recnetly at the ·
church annex.
Sue Grace also noted that there
will be a special speaker a t the
church on Oct. 13 at 7 p.m . to
whi ch everyo ne is Invited.
Members were reminded to ta ke
their baby packages to the next
meeting along with any Cainp·

AMANDA HOYT

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Amahda Kay Hoyt celebra ted
Yost, Mr. a nd Mrs. Ronnie
her fir st birthday recently with a
Lew is, Mr . and Mrs. Troy
party at the hom «' ol her Brooks, Darryl SwaTtz. Jenny
grandparent s, Mr. a nd Mrs. Wiloughby, Harvey, Glenda ,
Milla rd Swartz .
Mandy, and K&lt;.&gt; nny Swartz.
A clow n and ba lloon them e was Brenda and Jamey May, Ric k
carried out with cake, Ice crea m, Ca dl e, Cora l McDa nie l. Me lissa
chips: coffee and koo iaid being Workman, Tim J ohnson, Reta
served. Atendlng we re Char les Roush, Teresa Walker.
Swartz. James Hoyl. Mr . and
Sending gi fts were Mr. a nd
Mrs. Chuck Williams, gra ndpa r· · Mrs . Ted Swartz, R. D. Swartz.
ent s. Mr. a nd Mrs. Curt Jenkin· The youngs ter a lso received a
son. her great-gra ndpa rent,s, ca ll from her great au nt Mary
Sa ndy Hoyt, Mr. and Mrs . Dencll Jane Jenkinson. Fl orida.
·

scrtm~age

Only ONDULINE con cover
your roof with a lifetime
warranty

'

H;oyt birthday observed recently

Meigs ~cores
twice in first .

BROOKLYN, Mi c h. iUPil Bill E lliott, who won his third
stra ight champion Spark Plug
400, says he has always felt
comfortable at the Michiga n
Int erna tiona l Speedway.
E lliott , 31, ha s won three
straight Spark Plug 400s and six
of his last eight races at the
two-mile MIS oval.
Sunday's victory , his third this
year , moved Elliott Into second
place in the Win ston Cup Point
Standing with 2,653.
·
Two laps before the finish.
Ellioll slipped past Dale Earnhardt .

.

bell. S\)Up labels the)' have . A
thank you note was read from
Julia and Clarence Norris for
flow ers.
Dolly Wolfe ha d the opening
prayer and Vicki Abies gave the
sec re t a ry -treas ur e r 's r epo rt.
Next month 's meeting will be a
plcnlc at th'e chu rch at 6 p.m·. lor

everyone.
Denise and · Edith
served refreshments.

Manuel

TOPS
Weekly best loser s for TOPS ·
OH 1456, Rutland. In the past
m onth have been Nancy Vance,
Jackie Justice · and Shirley
Turner. Runners-up have been
Marcia Barrett , Teri Smith, and
Sandy Sergent. Winners of the
fr uit baskets were Sherrie Darst,
Jackie J us.tice. and Sandy
Sergent.
The club meets every Tuesday
at 6 p.m at the Rutland American ·
Legion building on Beech Grove
Roa d.
·

Ohio State Fair selected schedule
By United Preso International
Monday, Aulf. 17
2 p.m . - Roosler Crow o:;ontest.
Bob Evans Barnyard; Ohio Sta.te
Fair Strings, Flnt- Arts Theater.
2: 30 p. m. - Judy Rodman,
Count ry Mus ic Pavilion (also ~ ~ 7
p.m .)
l p.m . - J e rry Clower and the
Klngsmen , McDonald's Grand·
stand : Fun Fashion Show. DIS·
a ~le Building .
3:30 p.m . · - 4·H Fashion
Revut-, Rhodes Ce nt e r~
4 p.m . - Sheep Breed Club
Educa tiona l Exhibits. Brown
Are na.
4:30 p.m. - Ha nk Arbaugh,
Natural Resources Amphi·
thea tt&gt;r : Cons erving Foods,
Franklin County' Extension Ser ·
vic!', DISalle Building.
.
7: 30 p.m . - The Greenes,

Gos pel Music Pav ilion.
8 p.m .- Survivor, Mc Donald' s
Gra ndst and .
Tuesday, Aug. ~8
R a.m.- Junior Yorkshire and
Landrace Showmanship, O'Neill
Arena .
8: 30 a. m. - Junior , Polled
Hereford, Cooper A rena.
9 a.m . - 4-H Food and
Nutrition, 4·H Demonstrations
and Illustrated Talks, Lausche
Building: 4-H Fashion Revu e and
Clothing judging, Rhodes Cen·
ter: Ohio Morgan Horse Show,
Taco Bell Coliseum: Open Red
Poll Show, Cooper Arena : Open
Poultry, Waterfowl and Turkey
Show, Exhibition Hall: 4-H Dog
Show , Davey Arena: Junior
Yor kshire Show, O'Neill Arena .
10 a .m . - Open Yorkshi(e
Show and Salt-. O'Neill Arena:

Open Merino Show , Brown .
Arena .
10:30 a.m. - Junior Limoudin
Show, Cooper Arena.
11 a .m . - Spring and Summer
Fashion Show (over 45 1, DISalle
Building: Chlcken Scratch Con·
tes t, Bob Evans 'Barnyard .
12:30 p.m. - Rainbow P rom·
ise, Gospel Music Pavilion.
1 p.m. - Morgan, Ga it ed,
Harness Pony and American
Silddlebred Horse Show, Taco
Bell Coliseum (also at 6 p. m.):
Open Santa Gertrudls Show,
Cooper Arena: Open R a m·
boulllet Show, Brown Arena . .
1:30 p .m . - Fall and Winter
Fashion Show (over 45), DISall e
Building.
2 p.m . - Hog Calling Contest ,
Bob Evans Barnyard: Tom Bat·
ten burg Trio, Fine Arts Th ea ter.

2: 30 p.m . - McGuffey Lane,
Cou ntry Music Pav ilion (also at 7
p.m .l: Governor's Open Horse·
shoe Pitching Tournament , Hor·
seshore Courts.
3 p.m . -Blue Ribbon F as hion
Show (over 45 ), DISalle Build·
ing: Open Targhee Show, Brown
Arena.
3:30 p.m. - Ail·AmericanAuto
Stunt Team, McDonald 's Grandstand: 4- H Fas hion Revue,
Rhodes Cent er.
4 p.m . - J ubil ation, Gospel
Mu s ic P avi lion (a lso at 7:30
p.m .).
5:30 p.m . -Lives tock P ara de
of Champioh s, Taco Bell
Coliseum .
6 p. m. - Open Corr ledale
Show, Brown Arena.
8 p.m . - Way ne Newton,
McDonald's G rands tand .

Pioneering movements featured in festivals
By SANDRA L. LATIMER
United Press lnlematlonal
Some Ohio River communities
a re rolling out the red carpet lor
s i pioneering visitors this
w . end.
1
ommunlties along the river
down to Marietta are antlc)pat·
lng the arrtval of a group of
marchers who have been on the
road since ea rly July. They are
covering the steps pioneers took
200 years ago when they settled
the Northwest Territory. These
are the same men who reenacted that journey 50 years
ago.
They're expected to visit Bel·
pre during that Washington
County community's homecom·
ing through Sunday: also at
Stuebenville Thursday, and ar·
riving in Martella Frlday
afternoon .
Further downriver, at Ripley
In Brown County, is the Ohio
ToQaCco Festival Friday through
Sunday.
The Blue Angels, the Navy's
flight demonstratin squadron,
are leatured performers at the
Military Open House and Air·
show Saturday and Sunday at the
Rickenbacker Air Force Base In
Franklin County.
Also on the agenda :
Heritage Days will be held
through Sunday In BrOOkfield,
Trumbull County, wlt'l a parade,
car show and 5K run.
·
A FloWer Show wUI be held
Friday through Sunday at the
Canton Garden Center hi Canton.
And nearby at the Civic Center
will be the Grecian Festival.
An Antiques Fair wDI be held
Saturday and Sun&lt;lay at lhe Bob
Evans Farin near Rio Grande,
Gall Ia county.
Historic homes and churches
are open for the public Satur&lt;lay

In Ironton, Lawrence County.
rivers in Marielt a.
The Folk Festival saturday
The NEC World Series ol Goll
and Sunday at the Cultural Arts will be played at the Firestone
Center 1n Columbus features a Country Club In Akron Aug . 24·
variety ol music and folk art and 30.
crafts.
Special Exhibits
The Great Trail Festival at the
-At the Cleveland Mus eum of
Great Trail Farm near Malvern, Art: "Gauguin &amp; His Circle In
Carroll COilnty, depicts life on the Brittany: the Prints of the
Ohio frontier during the 18th · Pont·Aven School" Is on dis play
century. Activities will be held through Sept. 27 . ,
Saturday and Sunday and con·
- At the Cincinnati Art Mu·
tinue Aug. 29 and 30:
seum: · "A 20th Century Selec·
The Cleveland Orchestra will tion: The Weisman Collection,"
perform at Blossom In the Flats ·through Aug. 30;1 "Matisse Prints
' Sunday
evening on the
banks in
ot
the Cuyahoga
River
Cleveland.
A Food Preservation Demon·
stralion will be given Sunday
afternoon at the Shoenbrunn
Village State Memorial In New
Philadelphia.
.
The Mid·ohlo Antque Car and
Rod Show and Swap Meet wUI be
held Sunday at the OSU-North
Central t~hnlcal College Cam·
pus In Mansfield.
Summerfest Is an arts and
crafts show In Dayton Sunday.
The Mercer County Fair In

from the Museum of Modern
Art," through Sept. 6.
-"Dutch Post ers 1890·1940" is
a display at the Toledo Museum
ol Art through Aug. 30.
-Sunday is the fina l day lor
the National Midyear Ex hibition
at the Butler In stitute of Ameri·
can Art in Youngstown .
-At the Ce nter of Science and
Industry in Columbus, " My
Daughter. The Scientist" and a
Weather Station Exhibit are
dis played through Aug. 31.

r;::~::::~==================;-

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.
.

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAl
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE HA~E HEARINC AIDS"
CALL (614) 992-2104

(304) 675-1244

and the
County 1
~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~;;;~~~~;;;;;:~~~~
·· Celina
Fair In Troy
closeMiami
Thursday.
' The Muskingum County Fair In
Zanesville, the HuronCounty
Fair In Norwalk, the Holmes
County Fair in Millersburg and
the Meigs County Fair In Pome·
. roy close Saturday.
The Jefferson County Fair in
COMIINATION DINNER ONlY
. Smithfield and the Ohio State
(Dining loom. Only I
Fair at Columbus close Sunday.
Served-with whippecf'potatots. tlticken eravy, cole
sin, .hot roll, butter and coffH. Sorry, no substi·
On the spona calendar:
tutu uctpt beverqe with addillontl price.
The National Tractor Pulling
Championships 'tUI be held at the
NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE 0
ROLLS
Wood Count~ f alrground~ In
Bowling Green.
The U.S.C.A. Ohio State Cham·
plonsl)lp Canoe a!ld Kayak races
PH. 992-5432
POMIIOY, OH . .
wUI be held Saturday and Sunday
FrW Chicken
on the Ohio and Musklngum

FOR JUST

$3.25

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

"

�Pomeroy-M~Ieport, Ohio

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

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Monday. August 17. 1987
Monday, August 17, 1987

Boeing wants to bill .~ASA for stiit
CLEVELAND (UPH- Boelftg
Co. officials have reportedly
asked NASA for permission to
c harge legal fees from an antitrust sull to the government,
even though the lawsuit was
unrelated to the company's governm ent contract work.
In a memo obtained by the
Cl eveland Plain Deal er, an officia l at Boein!!' s Huntsville, Ala . •
Computer Support Services dlv·
Is ion requested· permission from
the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration to am end a
contrac t to Include the legal fees .
Charles Astle, a Huntsv ille
Boeing official, reporte&lt;jly suggested that legal fees from a

,.

private antitrust suit be billed to
a contract with the Marshall
Space Flight Center as an indl·
reel overhead expense.
· According to court documents.
the Seattle-based Boeing company's le~a l fees in !he case were
estimated to exceed $1 million .
The paper said Astle enclosed
what he called a "suggested
formal for a l etter," which NASA
officials were supposed to rew rite on government stationery lo
approve the lega l fe11 charges.
The letter said "unless we hear
to the contrary , we shall com m ence collectln~ and invoicing
such costs accordingly .

a

The bonding is supposed to
produce an evolutionary shift i!l
human government , social and
eco nomic sys tem s from a basts
of l ea r. separation and destruction to love. unit y and peace.
Serpent Mou nd is one of

severa l har monic
FAMILY TEAMWORK -Gov. RithardCeleste
and son Steven team up in the tel chrity
hricklayilig contest in Columhus, Sunday at the

Ohio State Fair. The Celeste team finished third,
with first pla ce going to fair Queen ,Joy&lt;e Scott.
. (U PI)

Fans. cry, sing ·for ~)vis
·.

By ,JOHN SWENSON
MEMPHIS. Tenn . I UPil
E lv is Presley Interna t ional Trib·
ute Week c ulmina ted with an
all -night procession of25.000 fans
carry ing ca ndles in a tear ful
process ion pa st the Graceland
m ansion grave of the rock star
'\'hO lives in their hearts.
· The week of activ ities com ·
memoratlng the 10 1~ anniversary of Pres.iey's death at age 42
from a heart allack linked to
d,rug abuse then ca m e to · an
·official end with a m em orial
service Sunday at Memphi s Sta te
Universit y ..
"Elvis wa s a lot like Abraham
Lincoln , they were both common
denomin ators ." Knox Phillips.
whose father. Sam. produced
Elvis' s fi rs t record sa id at the

service.
·: .. Most kid s I knew kind of
looked the sa me, but he didn'l do
a~v or the 'sa m e."'
·M anv of the 2o.OOO fa ns at the
~andl el l g ht process io n th ai
lasted fr om 9 p.m . Sat urday to
6:30 a.m . Sunday carr ied bou quels of fi all'ors and tri nk ets to
la,y at 1he gr ave of I he I at c sInger.
" There's nobody el se w ho ever
touched mC' the way h ~ did. " said
Nancy rarswcll o f South Bend.

I ncl. " To m e. he· s like a line p ieee
of porcelain."
A t the ser\'lce, th&lt;' light s in the
theater were dimmed at .3:30
p. m .. the time of P resley's 't 9i i
deat h. and his songs were played
as huge snaps hot s of lh&lt;' legendarv star wpre shown.
:. L ook at those eyes," one
\.\'Oman su id . gazi ng a l a pa rtic ularl y sexy pic ture.
·
On fa ster numbers. such as
"Don' t be Cruet. " fans snapped
thei r finger s and sa ng along .
T he last frame w as o f gr affl t I
on the wall ~ urrounding Grac eland say ing. " I love y ou El v is.
you still live in my hear1. .,
" What has happened her e Is
far beyond all our ex pecta tions...
Jer ry Schilling. an aide. road
m an ager and bod yg uard to Pres ley said of the t r ibute w eek . "A nd
I r·ca li y feel it's ju st a sta rt."
On Sa turday nigh!. the drivi'W&lt;J Y of Graceland, P resley's
man s ion . was lin ed with
hundr eds of el abora te, hand mad r flora l arra ngement s that
arr ive&lt;) steadily throug hout the
week as mourners wailed lor the
process ion to begin . .
By 9 p.m .. a huge c rowd had
spilled on to E l vis Presley Boule-

vard . ca using po lice to e t as~ the
bu sv thor·oug hfare to trat"fic.
The mood was a mixtur&lt;' of
grief and cel ebration. Many fan s
sang "Ca n't · Hel p Fall i ng In
Love" and cha nted " We wa nt
E!l·is " a s t he"· pressed agaifi'l
the gate. The quarter- mile long
crowd bega n to press forward
and shou ts of "s l op pu shing! "
wen t up.
AI least lour peopl e. including
a \~·oma n in fl. wheelchair. were
overcome by the humid weat her
and given oxygrn .
"EI\·ts Is waiting for us, " one
!an shou ted as the gates fin all"'
swung ope n .
Mourn ers lit their Ci.indlps
!rom a cNemonial torch and
proc(&gt;('ded 'si ngle · file up thP
dr ivewa y to the gra ves ite. As
the_
, . slowly filed past th e g r ave.
som e fan s began to sob uncont rol l abl y. wh ile o thers knelt .a nd
wcpl quif'li:; .
" Y ou know . when your m othPr
or fa 1her di e. the grief seem s to
lesse n b&lt;'cause you used to tal k to
them . wr ite lett C'rs -co mmuni ·
Cat£' ... sa id La uri&lt;' Cousin s, :16, of
Winn i peg. M anit oba.
·· But with Elv is ~· ou didn ' t rw•r
sre him . so the pain j ust goes on."

hea ling process. I feel so much
energy that I ha ve chills all over
m y body," she said.

gat ion Monday after heari ng !he
By MICHAEL BURNS
CINCINNATI (UP!) ·- Th e
testimony of Drake admlnislra - ·
tor Jan Taylor, the final wllness.
special Hamilton Count y grand
Ten bodies have been exhumed
lur11nvestigal ing the m ore than
as part of th e gra nd j ury's
t wo dozen deat hs linked to
investigation.
hospita l orderly Donald Harvey
is expec ted to release il s f rndings
today. ·
" 1'm curious to know how
Harvey, a form er order ly at
many cou nts Har vey might . be
the cou nty-owned Drak e Hosplcharged wit h," M al hews sa \a_,
'
.·'
t·ai, has r eport edl y confessed to
" Thtrt y -four seem s to be the
killin g 34 people, most of !hem
number fhal comes up m os t
patients. He was charged with - oft en ."
the cyanide dea th of one patient
The judge said his sta tem ents
In ApriL
were based on news repor ts of the
Hamilton . Count 1· Common
affair.
Pleas .Judge Wiill~m Math ew s
"The grand jury could go a
said Sat urday prosec utors and
couple of ways," he sa id. "If he
defense at tor neys have as ked to confessed to a number of th em
m eet with him Tue'sday m orning, withou t collabora ting evidence.
presu,.,ably to discuss a plea
they m ight not be able to return
bargain arrangem ent.
Jndi c lm~t s against him in those
" They have I ndicat ed they dea ths. But it 's m y unders tand have a tape of somet hing they in g th ey do have collaborating ·
want meto v il; w ," thi·jud gesal d. evidence on some of them ."
" I r eally don't know wh at it i s,
Harvey's attorney, Willi am
butl think I t would be saf e to.say Whalen, ha s sa til he ex pect s I he
II has to do w it h hi s co nfession. "
grand jury to Issue additio nal
Mathew s sai d the m eeti ng Is Indictment s.
conli ngenl upon whe ther the
A tel ev ision sta tion reported
grand jury concludes it s lnvesli· this week that Harvey confessed
~~

According to . Bhalt , Serpent
M ound Is one of the 36 energy
.spots In the world that ac t as
co nduct ors to give lhe human
splrif Increased ener gy and hea lIng pow~r . Other sit es Include
Mount Everest and certai n
mountains In Japan .
" T hf"re Is a vpry uni ve r sa11ov~
here. We arc born very pure and
our environment soils u s. We' rc
going back to puri fy ourselves, "
she said.
Steve and Ca role Zcrucha of"
Columbu s, Ohi o. said th ey ca me
beca u se they arc Int eres ted In
the u ~e of crvs t a Is for hra ll ng and

channeling energy.
" We ' r e using the teachi ngs lor
positive , spi r itu a l de ve lop m ent . " Carol said.
The Zcrucha' s sa id that Carole
had been sick for a long per iod of
time. and using crystals for
hea ling appeared to be working .
A lthough there wasn ' t any
stru ctural ceremony. parlicl pant joined ha'nd s to celebrat e
peace. others dances and music
floated over Serpent Mound .

. . ...
ftATEI

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Cl•uifled Pl611• cover

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Joflou,.fJ r el•plwn ~ rtttclt• ,.,r; . .

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Computerized Hearil18 Aid Selection
~· Swim Molds - Interpreting Services

-

a:

SondiC:
Alldlr'llttll

'

~

2 g!all top. end tables, 1 gold
lounging chair, Good cond . Call
614 -446-740.0 .

3 small puppies. appro". 6 wks .
old. Part poodle, btack ilnd

8-IJ

white. Call 814-446-0770 .

Howard L Writesel

Gray long haired mqt~er cat •
three kittens. Call 614 -387-

BOGGS

ROOFING

0683.

- -- - - - - - -lc-

SALES &amp; SERVICE

NEW- REPAIR

6 males. 1 female mixed braed
Call61

U. S. RT. SO EAST

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleani-n g
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Authoriud John DHre,
New Holland, lush Hag
Farm Equipment

949-2263
e~r 949-2168

Far111 Equl~lilent
Parts 8. Service

Great Dane.
months old . Call

GUYSVILLE, OHIO

4288.
Yellow refrigerator . Looda go o d,
needs timer . Call 614 -985 ·

3839.

Dealer

4-22-87-lfn

::

Beagle pup. 6 months old, to
gi"e away . Call614-992-7634.
Kittens. 304 -5?5 -5419 .

6

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION
Vinyl &amp; Alum . Siding
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling

Found; 2 sei of kev•- 1 for Ford
for Datson. Found at JC
Penny-Silver ~ridge Plua .· Call

ear, 1

__

41' ... _

...

11-o&lt;

__
,. _
-•-·
,.••-v
____
,_· ...._.
n--•·,,.., .._,-. .......
,_

:.:::r:::-:.~-:.

~ :1~1t.::""-

OPEN FOR BUSINESS
314 E. Main S!.
Behind Cit1 Mlll

.. "' '-.':"; __
··---·
........... ..

···--- -~~

Gift Shop &amp; Toy Store
Collectors Items.
Costume Jewelry.
Action Toys, Mustcal
Toys &amp; Trinket Boxes

L'tr:TWS

rrrE tl,· r·:,.·r··' ti .·,..J
nn-1 cr~r.Gr~ l r : s

1

Family of G11" Cllrk
wishes to llill!k friends and •

lllifllboo and rebliws for

loss of 011r loved one. Aspecial thanks to Rev. AI Hart-

son, lht

MEDITATES - (;crard Gt&gt;ary ol Waltham, Ma~s . rln~s a hell
~:tvln~ out harmonic tones at the fool of Brll Rock In Sedona, Ariz ..
a people rr;at!M!red in various s pot.~ nationwide lor the "Harmonh·
(;on•crl{en•·e." ( U PI)

420-An American worl&lt;
ol an. hrstorrc ftlel crochet
pattern tor Statue ol L•b·
ertv . lnstruct1ons lor
handsome 27x27" panel
to lr ame or hang.

'
Girl sues Disney over 'bear
.

pallbelrers. Ewin1

Funeral Home and those
wlto sent flowers. food,

CMI!s. or assisted in any
wy in our hour of SOOOIII.
Your kindness will always

be remembered.
llay God Bless all of you .

0

YINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
0 ILOWN IN
INSULATION

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
CENTER

992-3410

Repairs on All Makes
Transaxle Repairs
locatH Halfway Between
It. 7 and Iashan
HRS: 12:00-6:00
Monday-Saturday
CLOSED SUNDAY

lETART ·TOWNSHIP - DEER COUNTRY-, 29 acres ol
mostly woO&lt;Jed la nd, butlding Stie tor home or hunttn gcabtn.
MAKE OffER. $14,00000
•

:·
•

..;
.
.•'
·'

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

EASTERN DISTRICT ON RT. 7- Are you lookmg lor a min •·
larm 1 Oo you want an older 4 bedroom house wt!h most ol
the remodeltn g com pleted ' Large rooms wtth modern lealures. Barn. storage shed &amp; t hrcken house complet e this
18 \? acre mmi-larm. PRICE REDUCED TO $40,000.00

New Hom's Built ·
"' Free Estimates..

lnstallatie~n

Service
Electronic Organs
Mobile service

.,·'•

,614-843-5248

FEEL QOOD ABOUT YOURSELF

v.w.

•'''

.'
I

~·

.. -..-

PARTS

..
m.,
Cell the Cleltltd 1'etttl

NEW AND USED
WIDE
SELECTION
ALL MAKES AND
MODELS
CALL 742-2315

)

HENRY E. CLELAND, JR ....................... .. 992-6191
JEA" TRUSSELL .................................... 949-2660

DOTTIE TURNER .................................... 992 -5692
TRACY RIFFLE ...................................... ,949-3080
OFFICE......... ................. .................... 992-2259

,,

•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows

1-13·1 mo.-pd.
I'

Serv1r.es

/

8- 7- 1 mo.

11

Must

see to

JOB PLACEMENT: High school
grads. ltrt us help you discover
the job that ftts you best. We
place people in over 70 e•eer
fields. Jobs are Nil time perm an·
ant posttiona with solid benlifits.
Applieantl between 17-30 vears
old will be considered. No Fee
Involved. Call toll free 1 ·800·
282- 1384, Monday - Thursday,
9am-2pm.

appreciate.

CALL

YOUNG'S

CERTAINTEED VINYL
THERMO • BOSS
8-4-1 mo. pd.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

11

Help Wanted

LPN : Want to broaden your
nursli'lg skills in long term Care?
Pinacr"t Care Center has full·
time and part -time positions
a"ailllble. Ventilator a•perienee
helpful. lntet"otted LPN 'a miiY
contact Marg•et Ba ker Don at
Pinecr•t Care Center, 5&amp;5
J1ekson Pike, GeUipolit M -F
from 9 AM .- 4 PM . or ca ll
614-446 -7112 . EOE
Plumbing, heating and air condi-tioning rpechanic with at laett ~
years eKpfH'iance. Apply In per·
son at Carter's Plumbing and
Heating, 4t!l. Ave. and Pine St.,
Gallipolis .
Would you stu ff enveloped for
1.000 Weekly7 $2 for anvelopH
you stuff. Simp Ia; pleasan1 work.
at home! Send self·addr'itlled
envetoped tp HT -ENT- Dapt.
ACT, P.O.Box 7304, Huntington W.Va. 25776.. ·
Currentty accepting appli cations
for full or pan- time dental
hygiaoe position . Must be lisenead to praetice in the state of
Ohto. Resume~ may be·sent to:
Box Cle·8 1 2 , in car a of the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune. 825
Third Ave . Gallipolis. Ohio
45631
Contract Po sition AvailableClerk. Typing skills required,
knowledge of 'office practices
and pro cudures. ability to meet
the public, computer skills and
word prOcessing helpful, experience preferrad. Applications
will bit taken through Thursday,
August 20. 1987, at the Gellia
County Health Department In
the Bnement of the Courthouse . Equal Opportunity
Employer.
Govarnment Jobs. · s16.040 •
859.230 · yaar . N""'-'hiring. Call
1·805-887· 6000 Ext. R-9805
for current federal list.
Friendly Homo Part ies has open·
ings for managers and dealers in
your area. largest line in party
plan. free k it. brand new christmas catalog, toy , gift, and home
decor catalog , Over 800 items.
Top commission and hostess
gihs. Call for free catalog.
1-800-227· 1610 or call collect
0 -51 8-452· 0091 .
Needed : Dental Hygentist for •
people oriented high quality
dental offic~tJ Sand complete
resume to Daity Sentinel Box
729·K Pomeroy, Ohio.
We need • career minded people
oriented person to work in a high
quality dental office. The parteet
job for tho right person. Plo•e
send complete resume to Daily
Sentinel Box ?29-K, Pomeroy .
Ohio.

.,---.,------lc-

Stan earning mon9y now for
Christmas. Sell Avon. Free b~c ,
kit . Cell614-992·7180 .
_.,.

AV()N - All areas. Call Marilyn
Weaver 304· 882·2645.
·
R.N . applicatiOns now being
accepted fo• full time position, •
. . ,Pleasant Valley Nuning Care
Center, apply personnel offiCe ~
Pleasant Vallf!V Hosp, 304- 6764340. AA -EOE.
Sorr-ething New
Under The ;;iunl
,"'
Reps needed for Business Ac ·
counu , part time. 818 ,000 '
potential: full time, 860,000
plus potential. Work own hours,,
tr_aining pro)lided. Call 1· 612 93B -0019 M -F, 8 a.m. · 5 p.m.·.

IC.S.T.)

•

riET PAID FOR REA01NG"1
BOOKSI $'100.00 Per Titla.•
WrHe: ACE -517, 2 Pima, Naper·
villa. ll 60540.
'
BABYSITTER NEEDED when
schoolstans. 2 vaar- old and first
gradflf lifter school. Point Ple'a- '
sent area. Reference pref..-red- ,
but not necessary. 304-676·
32B1 after 6 p .m.

.'

LPN for private duty. part time:
start immediatety. Need good
clinical skills. t&amp; .OO per hour.
Call Mr. Hutctlins. 1·304· 757- ,
7858, 9 -4 Monday-Fridav only:
,
Grocery store manager needtld
in Gallipolis area. To be aligable
you must have prior manag&amp;- '
ment experience and po11esa ,
good supervision at skills . We ·
offer an excellent opponunity·
for the right individuaL Send ·
resume to: 8011 Cia. 102.
Gallipolis Daily Tribune. 826 '
3rd . Ave . GaltiA.olis, Oh i'o
45631 .

..

12

Situations
Wanted

.

-'
. -.

- - - -- -••
Experienced Chriltien Mother:
would like to babysh in
home. Roferenc• available. Catl..,'
Su~an Coleman at 614-742 ·..,
2778 afternoons or eveningi
after 9 :00.

h.,... ,

18 Wanted to Do

..•·,,"'
~

Jim' s odd ;obs painting, driv..::·
way resealing, c•penter work
roof repair. trees 81 hedgOI '
experienced. Call 614 -379 · "
2416.
• ..

a:

Babyahting in my home. Conv. " •
location. Ro•onablerates. Days;
onty. Cell614-445- 2251 .
..._'
Can do light hauling and rooting. : ,
Reasonable rates . Marion ..
Snkler. 614· 949·2'6 29.
- ~-,

Gr~var~s Lawn Mower Repair~ .;
We II p1ck up and deliver. Goad: l,,
used mowers tor sale. Call ·61•· 742- 2393 or 614· 742 - ~
3091 .

~====~====~ I
BISSELL ~=========-~=:::::::::::::::;:::...
Roger Hysell
BUILDERS
Yard Sales .

Addons and remodeling
Roofing and gutter work
Coneret' work
Plumbing and electrical
work

tor.
from568
9 AM
Jackson
.· 4 PM
Pike.
., M ·Gallipolis
f or Call
614-448-7112 . EOE

Garage

!Free E stimatea}

V. C. YOUNG Ill
9~:1-UT S ar

RN : Want a change end a
challango plus .- good salary?
Then look to Pinecr"t Care
Center where vour full.timo or
part· tlmo supervisor skills are
dnired and raward.cl with a verv
competetrva ulary and shift
dlff.-entlaland benefh package .
AN's interested in quality patient
c..-e may contact Margaret
Bik• Don, Pineerett C1re Can-

FOR THE BEST IN
REPLACEMENTS
WINDOW'S

7-30-' 87-1 mo.

-

Baby sitter naeded in my home
fOt' 13 month old 2-4 devt per
weett. Please mail ret . and phone
number to: Rt .4 Bo• 147.
Gallipolis. Ohio 46631 .

992 .. 2772

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

--

7

mv

Full -time babsit1ar in
home
for eYenings. References required. Call814-446· 9723 after
6pm.

INSULATION

"FREE ESTIMATES"

Help Wanted

Easy telephone work at home.
E•cellent income. For information call 604-849- 7922 ext ..
T-313.

MODULAR HOME!
Carter French
Residence
Corner of Fourth
and Palmer,
Middleport

J&amp;L

•New Roofing

J.R.'s REPAIRS

POMEROY- A home lor a coo k' II you spend alot of lime in
the k&lt;tchen thrs one tS lor you. Beaultlul modern kitchen
comp liments thrs 3 bedr oom home wtth a ntce wood en deck
lor outside eating. Convemenlly loca led lor access to your
kitchen. full llasement. lots ol closet space.

F111pl nv men I

l /2 8111n

'·
TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales

Wanted to buv: scrap steel and
metals. Riders Salvage 614992 -646., . '

•Insulation

No Sunday Calls
3-11-ttn

MIDDLEPORT - OWNER WANTS AN OFFER - Cut e lttlle
one floor plan hometn Midd leport at a Reduced pltce. Lar ge
lol, 2 lledrooms, bath &amp; porc h. MAKE OFFER. $16.200.00

2461 evenings.

BUY - SELL - TRADE

' Pay Your
Phone Bills Hore
IUSlNEIS PHON!
16141 992-6550
RISilENCE PHON!
(6 141 992-7754

&amp;

614 -992-2t 01 (days) or 1-592-

Ph. 949-2969

We Carfy Fishing Supplies

ALUMINUM SIOING

PH. 949·2860
or 949-2801

MIDDLEPORT - PRICE REDUCED - Nt cely remodeled I ~
slory hom e on a quiet street tn town Fenced •n back yard,
cute front porch. slofa ge bu ilding. Many other mce lealures
MUST BE SEENt $19,900.00
.

''•

VINYL

QUILTS
Antique-Pre 1940' a. Call Marc.

PAllS - SEIVICE

SAL.ES &amp; SERVICE

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Wanted to buy. standing timber.
Call AI Tromm at 614 · 742 2328 .

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

New location:
161 North Stoond
Middltporl, Ohio 45760

Business Services

Want to buy used Mobile Homes.
Ca11614-446-0t75.
Buying daily gold, silver coins,
rings, jewelry, sterling
old
coihs, large cunency .
ces. Ed Burkett Ba rbflr
2nd. Avo . Middleport. Oh. 6'1
992 -3476.
..

8-4-1 mo. d.

10-8-tfc

NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT - Th ts remodeled homer s
located tn one o! the most des ~ra bl e ne&lt;ghborhoods tn the
counly. II Iealures a large itvtng room wrth W.B. F.P., opgtnal
. woodwork, 2 bedrooms wrth a !utur e third bdtm.. I new balh
new krtchen. dinin g room &amp; basement. ASKIN G$32.000.00

2282.

PH. 992-2772

LIMESTONE
'
.
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

'

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and newer ua&amp;d cars . Smith
Buick-Pontiac. · 191-1 Eastern
Ave .• Gallipolis. Call 614 ·446-

" FREE ESTIMATES"

4-l ·tlc

lhett' sympathy durin&amp; tilt

l

•FURNACES
•AIR CONDtTIONI!RS
•HEAT PUMPS

. •Ranges

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash fOr late fllOdel clean
used cars.
Jim Mink CheY.· Oids Inc.
ill Gene John ton
. 14-446 -3672

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

•Refrigerators
•D!"tBU •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE

The

9

J&amp;L
INSULATION

•Washers •Dishwashers

.

.

Store clerk. Silnd resume toP .0:,
BoK :U . Racine, Ohio 46771 .

7-30-87-1 mo.

All M•kl• .

•

3430.

PH. 992-2772

985-3561

Card of Thankl

Auctioneer Col . Oscar E. Click •
licenu # 7 54-88. Call 304-895-

FREE ESTIMATES

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Paanon Auctioneer licensed in Ohio and Wut Virginia. Estate, antique, l•m. liquidation sales. 304-773-6785 .

POLE STYLE or
CONVENTIONAL

8-10-1 mo. pd.

t 15-Easy ~ Crocltet

8

CUSTOM BUILT
GARAGES

Open 10 A.M. to 4 P .M.
Mon . thru Fri . ,o r by
·
Appointmenl
Call(614 ) 992-7204
Wholesale &amp; Retail

~3,--A
.,n_n_o_u_n_;_c_e_m
_e_n_t:-s-

Found: medium sizfld bhlck male
Call 614- 992 -6833 to
identity.

doQ.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

ANN'S

:::::""..:.:.,_

lost : Fo.11 Hound, white with
light tan head and ears. Wearing
orange reflecting collar. Shy Of
strangMs. Call 614-843-5346.
Harry Richard.

1~614-843-5425

511/tln

----·-

~-

614-446-3625.

CALL

: '

Lost and Found

LOST: Vicinity of Milt CreekWhite Toy Poodle. Answers to
''Tiny' '. C.ll614-448 -2309.

Worked in Home Area
2S Years
FREE ESTIMA m

'\':'..

'

1-3-' 86 t!.c

ACCENT

FREE OFFER
3 Craft Books (value $8.85)
when you order one of the
$2.95 booltl bled below.
t t t 4lalrpln Croc:het

~~----------------------------~~ .

5 Mixed breed puppies, Call

614-446-3791 '

ICUT OUT FOR FUTURE USE)

RED CROSS BLOODMOBILE
WEDNESDAY I AUGUST' , 9
Pomeroy s,nior Citizen Center
1:00-5:30 '
'

367-7750.

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·6601
417 Second /lvenue, l!ox 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

::;:. ..
·-

=~ t.:::T-~ '

CRAnS
AT T E R N S

P

12-GI flarttwn lhd., Wt 1lldt,
NY nm.l'rtrtt 111m1, AdtiNu,
zt.Sill, l'llllm IUtlrlt.

,

H•lf a..gle Pups· IS main· 1
f81'!'1ale. Call 614·367-7214 or

J: Licensed Clinical Au!lil;'logist

.11 ,

The Daily Sentinel

GIVE BLOOD

·BIKk poodle to fOOd hom e. C.li
614 -446-7571 .

;5 LISA M. KOCH, M.S. .

.,_,_,
______,....,_

·-·- .. ··
·..01----···- -........
.,_,
..---. . ,_... ·-

117-M ot'Ne811epoint
t35-{)olls and ClOthes
- I I .0!5 "" pooflgenlll&gt;dNng.

Each pattern $3.25 plus
75c postage/handling.
(N.Y. I8SidotU acil sales lalt.)

SANTA ANA . Calif. tU Pli -A
Shan to Storm Pt'. J:l. Clai med In
Whl'n Storm rr 's famil y co nl&lt;' cnager who c laims she ca nn ot
il lawsuit ihat her encou nter last taclrd Dlsnry land to discus s thr
pla y vo lleyba ll beca use of a · y ear with ",John Doe Bear "
medi cal bllis. olftcla ls at the
v iolent allack by a bear- cos - caused lasti ng Inj uries that pre- theme park dented the Incident
tumed emplo.ve&lt;' in t he Frontier - vent h!&gt;r from play ing vol leyba ll , ·ever happPncd, Hughes said .
land section of Di sney land Is the Orange Count y Register
Hospita l officials could not
reported Sunday .
suing the amu sem ent park.
tmml'dlatel y confir m whether
" II was pr&lt;&gt;tl y v iolent ," her Stormer wa s admitted to lhf'
all orncy. David A. Hug hC's, laid
hos pita L
the newspa per. " The child had
a n image of these bear~ being . - - - - - - - - - - - - friendly, like W&lt;' all do."
A Disnl'ytand spokeswoma n
LEGAL NOTICE
said sh&lt;' was unaware of thr suit .
The Public Utllltlllll Com!lied Friday in Orang&lt;' C'ount y
mlaalon or OhiO hu let
Superior Cour t, and declined
for publlo he&amp;rlllll
Immediate comment.
No.
67 -102-EL-EJI'C, to
Stormer, who llvrs in Perris,
review the fuel procuresai d she was with her cousin Aug.
ment
praot101111
and
17, 191l6, In Frontterland . a
pollclee of Columbus &amp;nd
section of th e them e park, when
Southern Ohio Elootrlo
thr bear motioned to her .
Company, the operation
or Ita Electric Jl'uel Component, and related mat·
She decided to post• l or a
tara . Th18 hll&amp;rtng Ia
photograph with the character
eohedulllll to begin at
and turnE,'d her back when the
10:00 a.m . on September
" bear" grabbed her", the suit
21. 1987 at U\e ornoea or
contends.
the Publto UtUitlea Com"The person In the bear suit
mlaslon , 180 East Broad
grabbed her around th e n&lt;'ck and
Street, Columbus, Ohio
spook her ," Hug he~ said . "She
43266--0873.
tried to get away and couldn't .
All lnt&amp;1'118ted part.lea
The bear kind ofslayed with her
will be given an opporfor a second, then she ran ."
tunity to be heard. F\ir·
The girt was lat er given aspirin
U\er Information may be
at a Disney land first -aid station
obtained by contacting
and taken by ambulance to
the Commission.
Western M edical Center In Ana·
helm, Hughes said. She was
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
treated lor a soft -tissue Injury to
CO!OliBSION OJI' OHIO
By: Nanoy L. Wolpe,
the spine and neck , runnlng up a
Booret&amp;ry
bill of about $700.

614-256-6089 .

Roofing of All Types

REASONAIL£ • RELIABLE
8-20-'86 tfn

,.-

M•ke good w•tch dogs. Call

Nell Neidhart, his wife and
fO 1\A(( AN AI UU . .U I U
IIONUf .ltw• F. . AY I&amp;.&amp; 11 S r.a.
I A.a. U.lil ,..,_ JAMOU

Giveaway

Shepherd puppi~ . Very cute.

to po lice inves tigators he killed
23 patient s during the year he
worked at Drake, fi ve patient s at
th e Cinc innati Veterans Adminis tration . Hospital and six other
people. He allegedl y sa id he
killed l)lem by poison. suffoca tion or inj ecting ai r int o their
bl ood.
Police and ot her uuthori1ies
ha\'(' r·cfused Ia eo m fi rm or deny
H atvey's co nfess ion.
Mathews sa id 11 was likel y
prosecutors have agr·eed lo a
plea ba rga in beca use wit hout
H arvey's confession II wou ld be
difficult to make a case aga inst
him .
Mathews sa id it was his understa nding Harvey, 35, would plead
guil ty to all charges brought
aga·i nst him and thai a plea
ba rga in agreement wi ll likel y
ca ll for three co nsecu tive 20year-to-·llfe senten ces.
Th e j udge sa id . " I could l ive
o f s uc h an
w ith !h at, "
agreement.
" That wou ld m ea n hewould be ·
pu shin g 90 by the 1ime he's
el i gibl e f0r paro le.

FREE ESTIMATES

duaghter. came dow n from Co·
tum bus to join the m ed it atio n.
" II' s a conversio n of people
&lt;'nhanc lng something revolutio nary, " he satcl .

4

Free to good home: h•lf German

RESIDENTIAl/ COMMERCIAL

.

fans attended a candlelight memorial on SundaY 111 commemorate
the singer's 10 anniversary of hill death. (UPI)

Business Services

Let Us Fane 'I ou l11

ea...

DEVOTION - Kim Epperly, a de\'oted El\'ls fam, lights a
ca~~dle of a young boy as other fans circle a miniature replica of
· Elvis' Graceland bodlt on the Epperly's back yard. Se\'c~al dozen

The Daily

FENCE COMPANY

c on\'er~ence

spots around thr world . Som e
ot hers ar e the M aya n Temples at
Pal cnqu e, Mexico: · the great
pyra mids at Giza. Egy pt : Mount
Sh asta In Ca l ifornia.: Mount
Rainer In Washin gton state an d
Stonehcn gr ncar Gl asonbury. •
E ngland .
Charl es L ung of Lou isv ille.
Ky .. a devo tee of a ncient Indian
teac hin gs. said h~ cam e to t he
&amp;•rpenl Mound with a pra yer
f~a thN fr om a medicine man, a n
aufh&lt;'nl lc Indi an blanket and " a
lill ie magic."
·'The one thin g that under li es if
a ll is th at WI' arc one." Lung sa id.
" It 's a perfect place to bu ry the
old and star t anew ."
Lung said t here will bea subtle
· purificat ion proc·ess du ri ng the
nex t 2:i yea r s. rul min at ln~ In a
visible tra nsformation by thr
\ 'Car 2012.
· G loria Bhatt, a y og" instr ut or
! rom Huntington. W.V a .. said lh!!
co min g era ts necessa r y to h£'al
t he eart h.
"We ha ve m anaged wlf h missi les and o th er dev ices to dam·
age t he ou ter part of the ea rth .
Thi s focused energy is part of a

•

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Grand jury to releas·e finding

The Plain Dealer said Boeing
s tands to make 15percent profit
on legal fees charged to the
government because profit Is
added to overhead charges on
contrads.
Boeing officials declined comm ent, saying the legal fees were
related to c urrent litigation.
"The attempt to do this Is
obnoxious," said J . Allen Brinkley, a Huntsville lawyer whO
represents BCI Co mmunications
of Huntsville, which sued Boeing.
"From a resources standpoint.
it gives them an unlimited supply
of funds to defend I his case. ' '
Brinkley said.

Harmonics charit New Age
HILLSBORO. Ohio 1UPil
Approximat el y 3.000 people at l&lt;'nded a mass meditation as
dawn broke over the Serpent
M ound in Hilisboro, Ohio.
T hey ca m e to chant, m editate
and p'r ay musi c lor peace. love
and the unification of the world . ·
Participant s !rom W es t Virginia. Kentucky. Ohi o and even
Iowa ca m e to the ancient Indian
burl~! grounds Sunday lor a
two-day ~armonic convergence
celebra tlo.n .
·
According · to ancient l&lt;'xt s.
dating back 7,000 yea rs . begin·
n ing at dawn, Su nda y. 144, 000
hum ans will be called on to
·comp l&lt;'le a "!leld or trust " by
surrendering them selves to the
planN
and hi gher gal ac tic
in tel l igencc.

.

·~.

992-7314

Pomeroy,

we can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil,and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas lanks:

Rt. 124, Pamo~oy Ohio

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR .

"At Reasonable Prices"

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

"

~-'tilt

....... Giilllporrs________ ··

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

-...

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

11.1 mile ou1 Bulaville Rd. T.ucn~.~
Friday, Saturday, 9 ~4 . Corner right . All clothing • . 50. Furnt-y
Firlt • Pine. Misc. household ture &amp; c hildren• books . Tuei .·. f'
and handyman items: gas heM- . Thura.
. : .~,
era, mantels, grele. trunk. c.n·
nlng
lton.ware jugs,, clay
Plower pott, carpeting, light
fiitu,.., kindling, log splittflt',
exhiUtt fan. ETC .. ETC .

4-16-86-tfn

i••·

Announce menls
3

-.....-•,.

8t Vicinity

Day ar Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

6·17-tfc

MAKE IT ARUlE...
USE WANT ADS.
AHANDY
TOOl

675- 3638.

CUSTOM BUllT'

Al•o TrluMIItloll
PH. 992~5682
or 992·7121

RADIATOR
, SERVICE-

Babysitting in your home. References and have own transporta tion . .Poin1 Pleasant are1. 304·

.,..

....... P.omerov ........:"""'
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Announcements

Would like lo buy homem1de
qulha. Call114- 24&amp; -6682.
Reduce ..re and flit whh
Qolete Tabl.. l &amp; E-V1p ··w•t«
pills". Fruth Ph•rmaev.

.,.

'

·'::
.:

O.rage tools, carpenter toolt,
1ppli1ncu. costume iiJ'Ntlry •nd
houtehold item~ . Aug. 17, 18,
and 19 . 288 Miln St., Middleport, Ohio .

1

�•

'
P~ge-8-The Oilly
Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
49

FllldiiCIOI

21

LAFF-A-DAY

Business ·
Opportunity

51 Household Goods

·-

•

o"

Professional
Services

-· -

•·•7

Au ctioneer Col. Oscar E. Click.
1icens&amp; # 764-88. 304-896-

3430.

~.·

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Homes for Sale

4 DR .. fp .• full basement, 3 m i
ao. o1 Ga llipolis. 34 ,900. Call
Oays -614 -446 · 1615 . After
5 :00· Call614-446; 1244 .

3

BR .. brick, 2 baths, 40x60
metal garage. Nice locationCrow n City . Call 614-256-

6813.
For Sala by Owner: 4 -5 BR . 3
baths. Approximately 4000 aq.
ft . 26 acres with tennis court.
$173,000. Will sell with only 6
acres for $155.000. Call for
eppointment 61 4· 446-3386 .

1 . 84 acrt a, nice tlatland .
Conven loc .. ion . Call614-446-

7827.

Lot for sale, Clear.~iew Eltates, 6
miles 10. of Gallipolis on Rt . 7 .
For more information call Angi•
8 :00 AM -6!00 PM , 614-4469446 , Night•. 814-258·8888 or
256- 1140.
1 1h ec lot on Jerrva Run Ad.
Apple Grove. with rur~l water.
304-676-2383 .

6 room. bath, fully carpeted.
new de ck. 1 acre ground.

p14 -992-6654 .
House in Racine,. near river. fully
furni shed. $13.000, 61 4 -949·
2263 or 614· 949-2168.

Rentals
c4~1,-7H'""o_u_s_
e_
s""'fcor -=Rc-e--,
nt X

Nicety furnished small house.
Adults only . Referenct~• required. Off street parking. Ph.
614 - 446-0338 .

2 BR .. unfurnished house wrth
garage. Accept one child. Ref.
and Oep . Catl 614-446-9886.
4 SR . houaeforrent . 3 mi. so. of
Gallipolis. 1300 a month plus
dep . -Ref. required. Call 814446-1615. After 6 :00PM .. call
446-1244. "..: "

300 W. Main St .. Pomeroy.
Open House deily. 9:00-7:00
p.m. Check ltlis one outt You
may be able to buy for less th an
• rent. Call614· 992· 3841 .

location. Ref. Celt A-1 Real
Enate Broker. C•ll 304-8755104.

3 bedroom home, like new.
Rur" l water. 4 .8 acres, Meigs
Cou nty. RedtJced to $28.'000.
Call 614 -742-2295 after 5 :00.

3 BR ., 1 1h baths, fDmily room .
Refrig. and stove included.
located on Rt . 588. Ref . and
Oep. required. $325 a mo. No
pets . Call 6, 4 -256-8789 or
256 - 6206.

3 bedroo ms. '2 full ba1hs. 10
acres . 1 VJ months Old. Must see
to appreciate. Call 61,.·949·
2748.
1 21(65 mobile home. 12x24
add -a-room , good.condilion. c:all

304-576-2347.
1983 14' x54 ' liberty mobile
ho me: all e: lect ric. set up on
re ntal lot . 304-675-7653 after 5
p.m.

4 ·DR. house on 1 acre. Exc81

6 roo m house: Portet' area.
S 1 75 / mo. plus utilitiea, Dep. •
Reference. Ca11814-388-8423 .
2 BR . house. fullsi.ze baument,
fuel oil furnace. In Eureb. $200
Pflf month plus utilities. Call
614-256-6647.
2 BR , 12:.:60 partty furnilhed .
Deposit requWed. located in
.C entenary. Call 614-446-4292.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

3 bedroom houM for rent in
.Svrac'u ••· Also 3 bedroom on
lincoln Heights, Pomeroy. Call
614-992 -7689 after 5:00.

N EW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST. GALLIPOLIS , RT 35.
PHQNE 814-448-7274,

Houtea .nd eptt. for rent . Call
614-992 -2403.

1984 Shultz. 3 DR . withe•pand.
Microwave. $16.000 £lr best
offer . Ca ll614-446· 6725 .

New 3 bedroom ranch house
w ith terge fenced in yard. Total
electric. U60 per month . Lo 'c ated on Rt . 160, 7 mil11 from
Holzer HospitaL No inside pets.
Reference required. Call 114-

14x70 Me mory 1980.2 8RS .~1
bath . Qua il Crk. No.6. Call
61 4 -245-9629.

304-675-4384.

1 983 Liberty (Mobile Home),
1 21(56. total electric. Excel.
eond . Priced to sell! Call 614 -

379· 222 7.
1973 10~t50 Freedom. Total
P.lee .. 2 BR .. underpinning inc luded. S3 800 . Call 614-388972 4 .
14x70 , 1974 Concord 3 BR ..
to tal elect., new carpet. Very
nice cond. S9950. Call 614-

448-0176.

.

1979 Lib&amp;nv. 3 BR .. on 1 '/~
acres off Rt. 160 at Porter. Call
614-245· 9234.
New 3 bed room ranch house ,
wit h large fenced tn yard . Total
electric. &amp;360 per month. located At. 160, 7 miles from
Holzer Hos pital. No tntide pets.
Reference required. 614-398975 5 ahor 5 p.m
1 2x60 Mob ile Home. Complet ely furn ished. 614 -992·
51 46 or 614·992 -3048.
4 acres an'd 3 bedroom trailer 1or
sale. Call 614-992· 6352 o r
6 14 · 698-6407.
With large livi ng room and
bedroom addition . lo cated on 3
acres. Call614 -742-3149 aher
5 :00pm.
14x70 Windsor with 14x30
addition. 3 bedrooms , pond.
approx 3 acres, Gallipolis Ferry,
304 -675 -6930 .

388-9766.
3 bedroom. Aduhs. No pets.
Beautiful J bedroom home. 2
baths, finished baaement, double· garage, prima locatton. rent
&amp;450. mornh . Phone 304-6763030 or 87&amp;-3431 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 BA ., 12x80, on Ingalls Rd. oft
Rt . 218. UOO a mo. plus
utilities. 1100 dep. C11i 614388-9717 1fter 6 :00PM .
2 SA . trailer, furnished. natural
gas. Adults onty . No pets. Call

614 -367-7438 .
2 DR . trailer below Eureka.
Adultl only. Na pets . Call

614 -266-1167.
For Rant: AC ., furnished, 2 BR .,
mobile home located at K &amp; K on
Eutern Ave. t186 a month.
Dep . and Ref. required. Call

814-268·1187.
Modern 2 BR . turnlatt..:t. elt pando living room . City school.
314 3rd. St. Kanuaga. Call614446· 7473.
3 bedroom mobile home fot rent
in Syrecuu. Call814-992-7689
afler 6 !00.
2 bedroom trailer for rent in
Pomeroy. 1200 month. 614-

992-8783 .

PRIC~O RIGHT - 1971 Schultz:
mobile home 121160, 2 bed·
rooms on rented lot. block and
underp enn ing included. Partially
furnished . $4200.00. 304 -8822048.

Two bedroom mobile home. Call
after e p.m .• 304-875-6483.

1974 Hill crest, 12.~~:56 , 2 bed·
rooms. furnished , water bed,
washer / dryer. block and under. penni ng, $5500 . 304 -6765849.

12•66 3 bedroom trailer. window air cond. Plymale Rd ..
Gallipolis Ferry. 30-4-875-3693.

1972 Windsor, 1211170, 2 bed·
rooms . woodburner, air cpnd..
deck. awning, $6,100. 304-

675 -1568.

33

Farms for Sale

6 acres wi1 h 4 OR . remodeled
house. Fruit trees. and outbuildings in Rio Grande. Call 6142 46-9596.
2 0 ac re farm wtth 3 BR . house.
Hannan Trace Road. Ghmwood,
W. Va. for more inform.. ion call
304 - n3· 6118 or 773-15186
after 6 !00.

34

Business
Buildings

Commercial buildings for lease.
Downtown P'l. Plenant . Storea.
offices. A·One Real Estate.
Carol Yeager. Broklf. Call 304,
676· 6104 .
•

Apartment
for Rent

1 and 2 bltdroom apartments for
rent. · Basic rent for 1 bdr.,
t183 .00; 2bdr., l219.00. AIIO
required a 8200.00 tecurity
deposit. CONTACT: Jackson
Estatea Dept. Ph 448-3997
Equal Housing O~portunity.
Furni1hed Efficiency 1146 . Utilities plid. 1hare bath. 6()7
Second Ave., Gallipolia Ph.
446-4416 after 7PM .
Upstairt unturnishtd,epartment,
Utilities paid. Carpeted, no children or pets. Ca11814· 448· 1837

-lc---

3 bedroom , 1 'h bath, corn" lot.
Close to schools end town Call
614-992-3585 evenings.
-lc6 room hou se. two baths. new
roof, Nusash w indows. garage.
246 N. Fourth Aw. . Middleport.
Make offer. 61.4 -2 47-4672 or
614 -24?- 2532 .

44

3 bedroom . Gallipollt Ferry.
$275. month plua utilities. 304-

675-4088 .

Furnished apt . neu door to
Library. One profeulonal Adult
only. Parking. Ph. 446· 0338 . ·
Furnished apartment. t210 .
.utilifies paid. 1 bdr. 920 Fourth,
Gallipolis. Call 446-4416 after
·
Bpm .
Modern 1 BR apanment. Call

814-"!48· 0390.
Brookside Apartments: 4461932 or 44&amp;-4839. One Bed'rdam apar1menl with large
country kitchen , new appliancn, utility room. water. sewer
and trllh aervicn provided.
Quiet area.
Furnilhed.downstairs. 3 rm1 .
and bath. Clea!1, No pets. Adults
only. Deposit and Ret. Required.
Call614-«6-1519 .

67~ - 5104 .

Furnished Apt., 1 lA ..' t22 6
utiliti81 paid. 607 2nd . Ave.
Gallipolis. Call 614-446-4418
attar 8 :00PM .
Furniah..:t apt., 2 BR . 1196.
Water paid. 1136 2nd . Ave.
Gallipolis. Call 614-448-4416
after 8 :00PM . ·
2 BA·., with stove and refTig , 3rd.
P,.ve . 1260 a month plus dep.
Call614-245-9696.
Furnished. Woodburning fi r•
place. Utilitiea paid, cable available. One man only. Foster's
Mobile Home Park. Cell 814·
446-1602 .
513 Third Ave .. 1 BR .. $180 per
month. Oepo1it required . Call
614-446-4345 after 6 :00 PM .
2 BR unfurnished garage apart·
ment . No pets. Call 614-4461873 between 8 &amp; 5 .

lio. e 14-..8-a221 '
2 bedroom furnl1ed apt , ref •nd
depoah, Naw Heven. w. va.,

Sofu and ch.;rs priced h o m
*396 to t99&amp; . Tablet •so and
up to $126 . Hid•• ·b.ts $ 390
lo t696 . Reclineu 1225 to
*376 . Lempa t28 to •126 .
Dinettes t109 and up to $495 .
Waod table w -6 chairs 1286 to
t795 . Desk t100 up to 1376 .
Hutche1 1400 and u·p. Bunk
beds complete w -mattreues
U95 ar:td up tq *396. Baby beds
8110. Mattreues or bo11 aprings
lull or twin 168, firm $78, and
eas. Queen seta U25. King
1360 . 4 drawer ch"t 869 . Gun
cabinets 8 gun . Gas or electric
range 4375 . Baby mattreues
136 &amp; 146. Bed ftam" t20,
UO &amp; King 1rame S50 . Good
selection of bedroom auttes .
metal cabinets, headboards 130
and up to t65 .
90 Days same a1 C:llh with
approved credit . 3 Miles out
Bulaville Rd . Open 9am to Spm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph . 614-446-

0322 .

PARSON ' S FURNITURE

54 Misc. Merchandise
1978 Franklin Skidder . new
chains, transmiasion, steering
pumps. Prenten ce loader on
1965 Chev. truck . 2 Ford
backhO&amp;f. 1977 John Deere
do1er. All good cond . 1974
Inter. log trutk w ith buncks.
Ph o ne 606 -836 -3267 etter
6 :00PM., 606-836· 5823.
10 Speed Touring Bicycle .
french Jeunet. like new. a 100,

614-256-1454.

7 Church seatt, 14ft. long, C1ll

81.·446-4344 .

--'------- - ·1•-

Used M-475 and V434 Verma~
Trenchers. 1 -614-694-7842 or
6006.
Kirby Vacuum cleanet" with
attachments and scrubber,
$168. Rebuilt and still guaranteed . Cash or terms Ca ll 814-

992 -7142.

Catalytic conver,ters. o nly
tB8 .95. Mott modltl!. Installation llao available. Muffler Man.
9 ·Stlmpaon Ava .. Athens, Ohio.

46

Cllmatrol Air Conditioner,
17.000 BTU . 1 year old. 1320.
Call814-992- 8820.

Furnished Rooms

Rooms for rent, day . week.
month. Gallia Hotel. Call 614446-9580. Rant as low u 1120
month.

1-800-843-3767.

TONY 'S GUN REPAIRS . hot
reblueing, now taking order
order• for custom Mauser a. call
304-676-4631 .

Furnished room . t75 . Utilitiea
paid. Share bath. Single mala.
919 Second. Gallipolis. Call
446-4416 after7pm .

Maytag wringer washing machine "&amp; Se•a consote humidififlf'. Both In excellent cand.

Cool alaeplng room for 2 construction men . Privilte entrance.
off-itreet parking. ret rig . ,
1howei-. Corner of Park St. and
Broadway. below V1lley
Lumber. 614-992-n91 .

Trl Star

46 Space for Rent
Office Space for Rent . Excellent
for Attorneys. Ac'c ountant, etc.
Close to Court HouM. Call
Wiseman Real Estate Agency.
814-U&amp;-3644.

Sp1ca for 1m111 trailers. All
hook-ups . Cable. Also efficiency
rooma, 1ir and cable. Mason,
W.Va. Call304-713-15651 .

APARTMENTS. mobtle homes,
houtes. Pt. PleasantlndGalllpo-

LAYNE "S FURNITURE

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Manor and Riverside Apart·
menta in Middleport . From
1215. including utilities. Call
814·992-7787 . EOH .

For rent: Efficiency cottage, Mt.
Vernon Avt. Pl. Pla11ant. Hud
approved. 814-992-&amp;858.

614-992-8783.

GOOD USED APPUANCES
Wathers. dryert, refrigerators ,
ranges . Skag~a Applian ces.
Upper River Rd . betide Stone
Cre1t Motel. 614· 446-7398.

a

COUNTRV~· MOBILE Hom• Park.
Route 33; North of Pom.-oy.
Rental trailers. Call 814 -8927479.

1 bedroom apt. In Middleport.
All utilitin paid. t210 month.

Valley Furniture, new &amp; usltd .
Large aaction 'of quality furn iture . 1216 Eutern Ave ..
Gallipollt.

76

Two commerciM cool•• for
sale: 3 doors and 2 doors. Good
cond. Call 814-«6-4731 .

304-895-3393 .

Groom and Suppty Shop-Pet
Grooming . All br .. da ... AII
stylaa. Julie Webb Ph 614 ·4480~31.

Draganwvnd Cauerv kennel.
CFA Himalayan. Persia~ and
Siamese kltt•nt . AKC Chow
puppi ... New kitlens: Slam••
and Hi'm alayans. Call &amp;14 -4413844 after 7PM .

'12 Chow Chow puppl•. Mother
AKC registered , Fath..- 7, 2
mal81 , 2 temslet- 6 wits. old,
Aug. 30th. Cutel t40 eectt. Call
114-446-2108 ar 446· 9tiU.
Full blooded 8eaol pups for aale.
Call614 -44&amp;-0373.
AKC Boston Terriers. 2 femal81·
10 weeks old. Call 614 -2689354 .
AKC Reg . female Golden Retriever pup. Worm..:t and shots.
Rudy to go. Call afler 5 :00,
814-446-6641 .

good

condition,

Must Seil· Slllllng Farm. 360
International tfllct:or, P&amp;. goad
tires, live
plows. di~~ea ,
cultklator, gr-., bl~•. cult ipack• lncluHd. t2200. Call
all" 2,00 PM . 814-..8·40110.

1872 Ford G•luy. •uta. good
conditkm klskle and out. tiiO .
Cash. Can 814- 985- 35119 or
614- 992-2807.

pow•.

lntern•tion• 31!10 dl• .. tractor
wlthlo..:ltr, t2395 . 120001vkl
Brown diesel tractor. 12496.
Grindtt, Mixer. 1880. Call 814·
281-e&amp;22 .
·John O.•e 40. 3 paint ~ru;: h .
Wide front end. Auns good.
Brush hog included. 12200. Catl

814-742-2574.

Bars. chain a. and sprac.. tts to fH:
almost any uw . SIDERS
EQUIPMENT CO .. H4nderaon.
W. VI. 304· 878· 7421 .
New Ho lland 717 ForgaHirVfll·
11r, New Holand 7' Hayblne.
G1hl 95 Grlnd•-mi•lr- AM •• cellent condition. 304-273-

4216.
1 6 ' Flhh Wh ... Cattle Trailtr.
14' disc, 24 ' grain co n~ o r.
creep tHd..-. 304- 87~ - $979 .
lobac;co au~ • • 15 . per 100,
Morgan's Woodlawn Farm, Rt .

Musical
Instruments

1985 Buidt Som•WI LTD. VI ,
PS. PB, air. etuiH. loaded , dft
chwcoal pay•terlor. dO¥egr..,
int..-kH-. 21!1 .000 mil•. for more
infDrm .. ian calll14-949- 2120.
1 9B3 Ford Escort ·w aoon . Good

condition. 12800. Call 614·
247-4&amp;76 1fter 3 ;00 .

18x98 lalh•. brown 111nci

304·876-1789,

s~•P

1- - - - - - - - - - Now buying thelt corn or e•
earn. Call for l.. nt quat•. Aiv•
Chy Farm Supply, &amp;14-441·
2915.

Fruit

Red raspberrin. Pick your own
or we pick. Call Tt~VIor ' l Barrv
Patch. 614·246 ·5084 or 448-

8892 .

PEACHES : W~ite and Ytltow,
1hi1 waek. Kaiter Fruit F1rm, one
~~~:_ ~~~ At~alia. Call 61~-

1-------------------'71 FOfd lTD . good con d. Make
offet. 304· 896· 3951.

6

198,t Oldt Cutlall Supr.m._
37.000 milft. 111cellwtt condi·
lion. Take over ~ym~~nla . Muat
SMI. 304·175-3838.

GRAPES
Pick your own Of availetHeat the
sat" roam. Also appl ... honey,
and assorted food items. Dun
Ao'llin Fruh Farm. Rt . 881 ae of
Albany. Call &amp;14-898-6298.

Canning tomatoes . 14. 00
picked, t3.00 you picll. Me;ahaU
Adams, Letart Falls. Ohio. 614·
Ou11ity Fruits end Vegetabl ..
retail and wholesale. B I S
Product acro11 from Pina Hut.
Gallipolis, Ohio.

72

8210.

Siijljliii~S
LlVI~SIIIt:k

F.Hill
lit

1983 Ford R_,g..-. Sh•p, light
blue. 4 tpd, , 4 cyl.. low mw. .,
,....._ tir• . Aak lng 13100. Call
&amp;14· 3•8· 9768.
1983 Ford Cab Over Dump
Trucri. 12000 i fr m . Cell 814·

992·11092.

-2802.

Hay &amp; Grain

Miud h.,- 11 : btl a on wagon.
Hey for bedding IOc. 304-&amp;75-

5579.

Feed Special tor Auguat. Olt·
AlfMft-Hay - Strtw t1 .50 ~e.
Morgans Woodlewn Farm. At .

36. 304· 878·1211.

1988 S -10, 4 whMI drive. ex c.
&lt;:ond. 32.000 miln. te , 700,

Tr.HIS pnr Lrl111n

1914 Dodge Ram 50 truck,

Autos for Sale

304-876-2737 .
1978 Ford C1rrier, tutone blue.
4 cyl., 6 speed, f950 , 304· 671i·
2683.

1983 Ford Fairmont- ona owner,
like ntw. t2'\95. 1181 Ma1d1
pick· up truck . Nice. No rust .
11195. Csll &amp;14-288-&amp;622 .

1978 lA! ton Chl'\ily truck, V-8 , 4
tpeed. 56 ,000 miles . One
owner. cal sher 5 p.m .. 304678-2375.

1 983 Nissen 280-ZX, 2 plus 2
turbo coup, auto.trans., AM ·
FM-C1n. with st..-eo, T-top.
crul11 control, PW., power door
locks. Silver with bleck ttrip ...

1989 Cha11y pickup , 1977
Dodge Asptn, automatic, will
1811 motor or trans million or 111.
304-875-8394 .

t8300. Coli 114-371 -2183.
1973 o.tta 88. goad cond .. new
axhauat. new brak•. V-8 . auto
trans. Ca11814-441·8115 .

74 . Motorcycles

814-448-9814.

1985 HarllfV Oe.v idaon FLTC.
E.C. alwayt garag~. Many
eccMaorl... Asking $11800. CeM
Oaf'- 114 · 441~ 8336 . Evening·

e14·448·"11 .

e14-241·94t7.

1981 Hond• CR -125. Good
shape, weter c:ooled. C•ll-814-

1983 Ford Fairmont, 4 door,
AC .. Pl. AM -FM -C811, 4 apd..
Call 814· 448·13&amp;2.

378-2882.

1984 Handa Nighthawk 810.
Sale or trade. t1300 . Call
814-2&amp;e-1Z82 or 258-173a.

1911 FOrd Musta~g. V-B motor,
r•built, over· 11000 spent on
motor. Body nMds finished . Call
114-441· 1~12.

1971 C::h..-ger SE . Good work
c•. 1979 Muttang, • cyl. , 4
spd. Good work c1r. C•ll 11.4-

379·2882 .

1171 Dodge Aspen Station·
wagon, e300. 1 977 Dodge
Aspen ltatl(llnwagon. t500.

Coll814-lil8-1724.

1980 Kawasaki, new tlrft, new
b•ttery . heel. cond.-garage

k1P1- Coli 814· 245-9507 or
"8· 1767.
1184 Honda II Sabre Magnum.
3700 mM•. showroom condi·
tiDn. Full Faee Bell Halm .. Mid
Cycle COYef. All tor *2300. Call
814·192·2737 or 882-3031
Ext. 321.

1987 Thunderbfrd Olemond Ju.
bllee. Moon roof. 24,000 mil•.
Very good cond. t2100 as a..

3 or 4 Bedroom house in Kvg•
Creek School Dittrlct. Refwences Ph. 814-446-8821 .

Coll814·288·1704.

76
Boat1 and
· Motors for Sale

3 rooms and bath. gQ hMt,
ground floor, wtsher 1nd dryer
hook up, no chlldren.lmmecUate
occup•ncy. No pets, phone
304-875-4480 Ht 13 or 10.

49

1883 Honde Aaaord. 4-doar,
cruiM. AM · FM·CASS
Stereo. 12.000 m1.. •a.ooo.

trlllor. uno.

Apt. 't199 . per month plus ·
utllhl•. Ref. &amp; 1mall depoeh

FOR LEASE: one- bedroom
•P.-tment overlooking city park.
11715. per month. Ca11814-448·

30~ · 773-9694.

·

5·-

Joaklon 814-Zal-1571.

1883 Chwette. 11•nderd, 4
apeed, In good condition.

41.000 mllw. 132 8uttlmU1.

2325 or 448.·4426.

P~eroy.

Ohio.

Pontoon

suNGLA..&gt;S"ES WITH

n. fully

ZOOM L,~N.SE&gt;

304 - 816 - 5~89 .

;

?.

'

(R)

Cll Ill (I) Tho

i'

8ot~l·

&amp;0 HP. John100,

eou 814 -44a.

Hope Dlvlolon

C!l

(!]) River Joumeya Wood
travel on the Congo from

•

Kinshas past Kisinganl. t;J
1111 m il2l Kele lo Allie Emma.
years.(R) 1;1

@ Prlmenowo Wrap ups of
the day 's world news and in

depth fea1ure reports. (1 :00)
® Sono of Scarface: New
Mafia Hosted by Geraldo

RASEMENTUnconditional lifet ime ou•en·
t ... localr.-fllranCIII lurnlahad.
FrH •tim.. ea. Call oollec;;'l
1·114 -237-0488, dt¥ a.. ntght ,
R og• r •Basamen l
Waterproofing.

Rivera

e (ZJ Gersldo Rlvorit: Sons
anempt been made to
expose the mob in all its

fury. This program will
coincide with a major news1

breaking sting opera~on .
8:05 [l) Honeymooner•
8:30 8 (I) I!J) Valerie Disaster

EEK &amp; MEEK.

Roofing. nrpeting and gen•af
hom•rapalr. Ca11Gttrv&amp;,4 · 381 ·
8642 .

a.!ERr' DISASTER ·LATQY
Hf\'i BmJ WE R£llT OF

RON ' S l•levia io n Serv ice
tiOUM cana on RCA, Ou•z••·
GE . Spltclaling in Ztnith Call
304· 571 -2398 Or 814 -448 -

A·~

IIJDUSTRIAL

strikes when Valerie musters
her sons for weekend

IT USED 10 E£ t.UE. I-lAD
TO DEF€1JD AGAI.UST

campout(R)

®J til tl2l My Slater Sam
Sam reluctantly agrees to be
the subject ol a TV profile .

IGl'ORAIJCE . .

A CCIDEUT.. .

(R) I;!

---y--

8:35_(]) Mojor League Baaeball
9:00 Cil 700 Club
8 C2J I!J) MOVIE: 'Note and
Hayoo' NBC Mondey Night
at tile Movlea [PG) (1 :40)
Cil Q (JJ MOVIE: 'Lace, Part
2' ABC Mondor Night Movie

~ '60o Folk-Rock Reunion:
Crossroads This historic

concert. taped In 1984,

MORTY MF:EKLE AND WINTHROP
DID YaJ KNOW M Y DAD
WAS /H E: HE:AVYWciGHT
CHAMPION 0 1= HI S

recreates the folk &amp; rock
tuslon of the sixties.
Featuring former members of

~----~------~~
HE WA'S A GiOOD
1=16 HTER, HUH"?

NO... HE' WEIGHED
275 FI:JLJND5.

1he Band. the Byrds and
others. [0:50)
1111
il2l Newhart On a long

m

H I6 H ~ HOOL~

weekend, Michael Is
excluded from everyone 's

plans. (R) 0
(!]) American Masters

Featured are movies Chaplin

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

made lor fun . 0
@ Larry King llvel In depth

interviews with top "
newsmakers and celebrities.
CARTER"S PLUMBING
~NO HEATING
COf. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis. Oh io
Phon• 614· 446- 3888 or &amp;1444&amp;-•477

84

9:30 [!) Surfer Magazlna IT)
1111 !II il2l Designing Women

,,

Suzanne's ex husband 's

BARNEY

autobiography puts her on
lhe hot seat (R)
10:00 ® Another Classic Summer

YOO FERGOT
SOMETHIN; MAW

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

(T)
[!) Rock and Roll: Tho Early

Daya Artists such as lhe
Everly Brothers . Fats
Domino. Buddy Holly and
Elvis Presley broughl the

R11identlal or eommercl1l wir Ing. New service or repaiu.
Licensed electrician. E1t.lmate
fr. .. Ridenour Electrical. 304-

world to its feet and they're

ali here. in this special. [NR)
(1 :00)
1111
(12) Cagney and Lacey
Mary Beth is arrested for
jo[ning a protest
demonstration. (R)
·I!D Legends of Llllghter
Dick Caven pays tribute to
two of Amarica·s comic
legends. Jack Benny and
Groucho Marx. Based largely
on film interviews
@ Evening Newo A wrap up
of today"s news and a look
ahead to tomor1ow's news
stories. (1 :00)
®New•
fll (!) Ohio State Form Sale
of Chomplono
10:30 (2) Veriouo
11:00 CD Hardcastle and
· McCormlctc

876 -1788.

m

General Hauling

0

Water Service: Pools,
Cisterna , Wells. Delivery Any·
time. Call 814-446-7404-No
Sunday calls.
J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming
. pools, ciaterns. wells. Ph. 614246-9285 .
A • R Watef Service. Home
ciaterns. wells. pools filled .
Formerly Jam .. Boyt Water .

Co11304-875-8370.

Waltenon's Water Hauling,
r•asonabla ratet , Immediate
2.000 gallon delivery , claterns, •
pools. . well, etc: . call 304-676-

2919.

Form•lv Ken's now John 's
Water Service, John Watterson.
Jr. Owner. 1,000 or 2.000 gel
tervice. 304- 576-2248.

87

a rn m a

(JJ

1111 111 tl2l

II}) Newo

® Surfing

BillabOng from
Oahu. Hawaii (T)

PEANUTS

~

8

Complete the chuc kle quoted
by fi ll ing in rh e missi ng words
you develop from step No. 3 be low.

PRI NT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
TH ES E SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

BRIDGE

NORTH
tQJ1084

., K Q 3
t A' Q J 5

James Jacoby

+;

Today"s greedy declarer counted

nine winn~r s : seven club n·icks, the diamond ace and a heart trick. If he
tried the diamond finesse and it lost.
the defenders could take no more than
the A·K of spades and the heart ace,
for a total of four tricks. So. not want-

WEST
tAK63
.,875
+108 7 3

EAST
+97
"AJ109

t K964

+84

• 9 73

SOUTH

ing 'to sacrifice a possible overtrick,

• 52
South cheerfully played the queen of
., 6 I 2
diamonds. East won the king and • 2
surprise - led back a club . Declarer
+AKQJ 1062
won and began running all his club
Vulnerable: Neilher
tricks. Can you look ahead far enough
Dealer: North
to see what happened?
On the first five club tricks, declar- West
Norlb Eas1
South
er discarded a diamond, a heart a.nr. .
It
Pass
2+
two small spades from dummy. What Pass
2+
Pass
3t
could declarer do on the sixth club? He . Pass
Pass
3NT
Pass
Pass
could not safely throw a heart honor · Pass
away, and letting a spade go would
Opening lead: t 3
make the A·K-6 of spades in West"s
hand all winners. He had to pitch th&lt;
· diamond jack. Now what? He could hearts.- the defenders are· helpless.
play the last club, but that would They cannot stop South from making
squeeze dummy out ol ~n qutright nine tricks. It was shortsighted of de·
winner or a st?ppe~. An~ If he pla~ed clarer to assume that East would
one of dummy s smts without cashmg tamely lead back a diamond if he won
the last dub, he wo~ld not have the king. Instead, South should have
enough t~1cks to make h1s game.
anticipated the possibility of the devThe mistake was made at trrck one. astating club return by East and
If declarer takes the ace of diamonds should have forsaken the diamond fi.
and · immediately leads the king of nesse at trick one.
.

3.,

I CAN'T MOvE.. M'f
ARM IS ASLEEP...

IF I WAKE IT UP.
IT'LL GET MAD. AND
STING AI&gt;ID f-IURT..

SOME PEOPLE
1-lAVE HEADACHES ..

reports oo world economics
• and financial nows with Lou

I HAVE AN ARM
Ti-IAT OVERSLEEPS!

Dobbs. (0:30)

®

Toletl from 1111 Dorkollll
(II Love Connection
11:t5[l) llonlnza
11:30eal 11})-t of Coroon

e

[)] lpor18Center (L)
Cll WRKflln Crnclnnlll

Mowref• Upholtt..-ing serving
trl countyarea22 veers. The beat
1983 18 ft. a.ylln• boat with · in f~rnlture upholstering. Ca\1
tren•. 85 HP (:hryller motor. 301\ - 676 - 4154 fof free
514·112·7883 eflor 4,30, ·
estimates.

'

.

lay THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS.

.

..

J

•

-

eIIDJ .(JJ!HINlghttlna
C
Tro~r /Olin, M.D.

-,.

•••

40 Challenge

41 "3"
1 African
in cards
fox
DOWN
5 Military
installation I Brazilian
parrot
9All wound
2 Place for
up in
a soiree
10 Assumed
3 Re frank
name
12 Windward 4 Garcon's
13 Stop!
"summer"
(sl.)
5 Beauty
15 Kiwi
treatment
16 Tree
6 Swan
17 London
genus
gardens
7 Wayne in
: 18 Turkish
"- Lobo"
I city
8 Discussing
20 Pit
11 Earthy
21 Ry mouth
pigment
•22 Katherine 14 Twixt
· - Porter 16 Frazzle
23 "The - Pit"

19 Spor:'-\

30 Speechify
place
31 Type
20 N.Z. native
of race
23 Very
33 Czech
(mus.)
river
24 Narcotic 36 Japanese
25 Woman
city
of rank
37 Frequently
27 Harsh
,.-,.,.....,...~-

(1986 film)
25 Boston
,airport
·26 Annual
golf match
27 Bombay
attire
•28 Hartman
1
of "Knots
. Landing"
129 Newspaper
: job
32 Cap style
,33 Creeper
134 Pay dirt
,35 Idle
'37 Face shape
38 Stage
direction
39 Greek
cheese

DAILY CRYPI'OQUO'I ~-Here's how to work It:

8117

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three. L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
·hints. Each day the code letters are different.
'•
CRYPTOQUOTES
8·17
CQT

W N Q ·p

C!l Sign Ott

I!]) Moneyllne Current

U pholstary

R &amp; M Custonl Couches and
AeuphoiBery, St. At. 7 , Crown
City, Oh. 814· 251-1470. Eve.
11 1\~448~ 3438 . Open deily 9 to
4:30. Sat. 9 :30 to 1:30. Old &amp;
new Uphoate.-ed. '

5

'-...JL......J--L...J-..1.......1

Never before has such an

SWEEPER and sewing m.chlna
tapaW. pans. and auppU•. P ick
up and dtlivery,. Oavli V~um
C leanet , one h•lf mil e up
Oeorgn . CrNk Ad Call 114446•0294.

82

I) 11.I I I 1I e

ot Scarface, The New Mafia

'

I

witnessed a murder in the
nel(.t door neighbor's home.

4043 •ftl!ll' I 100 PM .

i

I

MIR,x"o~ED

Oilier~

304· 882-3217 or 304-7735024.

requlrod.

Gei

COUL.D WE:

1984 Shadow 700, low mil ea.
Many extfas. Priced to sell . Call

1983 Z-28 C.m.,o. 32.000
mil" on body. IOO mil" on 350
•n~ne, I spd. laeded, lou"*'·
bra lnd e..- cover included. Call

For Lease

Of TIME AT T'He
g~ACH

m

'
&lt;0

Home
lmprovelnent1

85

6~4- 6006 .

4.7 Wanted to Rent

81

304· 895-3082 .

Used M-476 and V434 Vermeer
· trencher a. 1 -614-894-7B42 or

SPACES FOR RENT - Trail•
Iota, At . 1, Locust Roed. back of
K lo K. 304:875-1076.

,....

01200. 304-578-2815.

61 Farm Equipment

SNAFU ® by Bruce Beattie

WE SPENt:&gt; .A . LOT

==-

2_• _s _
• _- - - - - - - - - - Cirs. Jeeps and Trucb undllf _
$300. luy dlrKt l Local Go-v '1 ·
Feuv TrH Trimming. stump
.. 1... Slued and Repo nhld81
C•ll Now! 1 · &amp;18· 459-353&amp; E• t. removal. C•ll 304-876· 1 33 1
J1el2 1or ~eetary. 24 hra.
Rotary or c•ble I~ dfitting.
1972 White Fre'ghtllner COE Most wells co mpletad 11medey.
350 Cummins Englna, 1 16,000 Pump salu and urv'lce 304 ·
mit .. out of frame m-tor. ATO 895 -3802
9610 1ranamiulon. Rockwell
4 :11 ratio reau . 10:22 1ir11 on Starka lrN and LAwn S•rvlee.
lawn care. landacaping. atump
buddo. e14-985 -4422.
removal , 304 · fi 78 ·2 84 2 or
1987 5·10, PS . PB. 4 tpo... He-2903 .
longbad. 1500 lb. paylftad. for
sele or trad1. Call 814 -892- OLIVERS Tr•e Trimming, l opping. trimming, pr\lning dead
8576,
wood. 11orm damage, take
1916 Ford Pidl;up. t8 .000. Call downs. FrH Estimat•• · 3 04·
304-&amp;75·7475 aft« 4 p .m. &amp;75- 3811 .
we ... day anytkne on Seturd-v
WIGGINS MASONRY . Wilr do
and Sund-v.
·any brick, b6ock, stone, fir~l•
1973 Dodge lh ton pidl.up, 318, cet. Yurs e~tpariiiRCad . Call
at. pa. pb, good condition. 304-372 ·8244.

$175 .. 304-675-2583.

30x40 lovely bevtled mirror.
Aea1onable, t26 . Call304-6767208. 2 p.m . - 9 p.m.

Trucks for Sale

Coli 814· 3&amp;7· 7218 .

59 For Sale or Trade
TRADE or SALE 1979
Charokee Chie1 4x4. good
shape. Will trade tor light duty
plcku·p truck , phone 3Q4-676-

OPTICIAN

WATER~ROOFIN()

1972 Ford Ranger XLt, V-8 ,
auto. Good .,_.nr,tng trueet·. •800,

MOVED · Must &amp;all: 2 ponl... 1
mare. 1 lelclng. Make aft .. . C111

71

FRANK AND ERNEST·

faceS importanl and difficult
decision about the next 4

878-7213.

245:9170.

247-2055 .

7:05 (]) Sanford and Son
7:30 I) (2) til Newlywed Game
[!) FGA Golf
Ill [J) Judge
@) Wheel of .Fortune 1;1
@ Croaoflre (0:30)
il2l II}) Jeopardy! 1;1
IBI Soap
7:35 rn Honeymoonera
8:00 Cil DakUiri Goodbye. Mike
Makula
I) (2) II}) ALF ALF thinks he

StJrVICI!S

1 973 Old a 91 . 11200: 19 71
llncoln M1rk V, 14300 304For s ... - 1877 Monte Carlo,
1350: and 1977 Oodga pldlup,
1350 .. cafl 304-458· t 518.

'

fll (!) Star Trek

3Q4-e75·4439.

8 Hol1teln h.it. . due to &lt;:alt in
fall . Cell 4114· 44&amp;· 1323 or

64

Dobbs . (0:30)

79 Motor.s Homes
&amp; Campers

aelf-.eonta lnld.

There are three ways you can
sizo up your boss, aCCording to
my Old grandpa. One, he's a born
leader. Two, he likes to be In
~,--P-A_J_S_E_R-~~ charge. And thrae, he's, hungry
.
for-.
.

Killer ....:. Fetid·- Offal - Layman - FRIENDLy"
Appllcallon form for a college loan asks, ''On what terms
do you wlah this loan?" A young applicant wrote, " As
FRIENOLY as possible."

ml!2l iiJl Wheel of Fortune
~Benson

379· 2233.

Slid" in h uc k umper, 11

~- , . :. .P. .:u;,. .:. :. N~N...:I;........~I.:.!

YEsTERDA yrs SCRAM-i.E'JS 'ANSWERS

a) Monayline Current
reports on world economics
and tinancial news with Lou

Gal tabl1 top stov•4 burn•· na
own, 120. G11 and elee, r.tfltl .•
1100. 2 pc. btu a tot a · malt•
into bed. 125. Gas and alae. hot
w1ter h1at1r. US. Call 814·

'80 Pontiec Phoenix auto. ac.
httchblck, ger-ee klll)t·nin c•
11500. Can SH FIIUO~ . AI . 2.

Watll Hana for 1811. Appro11.
1,000-1,200 lbt. 1300. Call
814· 317-7118.

81~ - 37

Camping
Equipment

78

198423Ft. Pr owler. 2BR .. AC .
slov•. ov.n. rafr111.. furnace.
awn ing . ulf -uouno jacks .
lo~ed . like n.w. Calll14 · 44$1 352

Hammond Elegante with Lesll•
sputter, top oflhellne. e11ctftent· Ouroc"'8oars. Ired )u~ lik• the
~;ondltion . tl900 . Proctorvlll•
bo1n '"' t81ted at the Ohio .
614-886 -5440.
Tntatlon th81 e•ned over 2 .8
lbt . I * dey . Rog• lentlrt.
Silvar Back Stra v i'llarius Sabina, OH . 513- &amp;84-2391.
tr\Jmpet . E~~:c . Cond. 1376 .
304-576 -2321 .
1 &amp; month old Ch•oUaa lull. A.l .
bred. Cell 114· 448 ·4447.
Trombone for aale. year·old.
uled tw ic e. 1225.00. Phone Halatein Bull Cahret . Call 114304· 876 -8862 .
381-8624.

&amp; Vegetables

1-800-843-3787.

1182 Pontiac. J2000 2 dOor
PS, PI, AC. Auto Good
condhkm. t225D. 080 . 43. 000
origin .. milft. l14-742 -2211 or
114-992·1717.
co u~M,.

WWIJJOOooooo"

Struts, I 1 19.96 pair, ln t talled.
Most models. Muffler M•n. 9
Stimpson Ave. Athctn l. Ohio .

simple word1.

h~R...:.A~V.:;.O...:.Pr=---~1
~_
2
I I 1 I, . t1

e

York . (0:30)
® Jefforaons
6:35 @ Loove It To Beaver
7:00 []) Hardcastle and
McCormic:tc
1J (2) PM Magazine
® SpottoCenter (L)
Cll Entertainment Tonight
Ill (JJ People's Court
· C!l (!]) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NowoHour (1 :00)
1111 News

..-----'-~-..

the
b.-

PHEEWN

anchored live from New

ARLO AND JANI S

1979 FleldWing, 8 f1 . P.iek- up
camper. Stove, oven, i afrlg.,
furna ce. Sleeps 4 Good cund.
Call 814 -446· 1362

Livestock

63

58

®GoodTimeo ·
fll (!) Buck· Rogers
6:05 (]) Down to Eerth Stereo.
6:30 8 C2J IBl NBC Nlghdy Newo
fl) John Fo•'• Outdoor
.
Adventure• (R)
Cil Ill (JJ ABc" News t;J
(!) NlghUy Buolneoo Report
1111 Ill il2l CBS Newo
(!]) Voyage of 1he Mimi
I!]) ShowBiz Today News ol
the entertainment world is

CLOCK ~T RIK~~
T WELV(: -

Auto Repair

77

Stalnleu steel •lthtllllf ayu•ms.
Now custom mada for your
tiuck, motor ho me or cla11ic car.
With lit•tirne warranty. MuHiat
Mert . 9 Stimpson Ave,, Athena,
Ohio . 1 ·800-843-3787 .

35. 304-el.l5-128e.

62 Wanted to Buy

sweeper. 1600.00.

b~.

1988 Pontiac Le Mans. 2 !MOr,
heril top, high p..-formanee bu!lt
tngine, 4 . apeed. Good condition , $2-400 , Call 814- 742 ·
2373 •ft~r 4 :00p.m.
~_.::_:_:;_.....::;_::..._.__ __
1977 Ford Wagon Ll02 . 1700.
814- 949-2283 or 814 · 149 2188.

2 AK C Reg . P8k inge.e pupa for
ute. 1 AKC Reg . Dachshund
puppy. Ca11614-448-7920.

304-675-3893 .

Water

CROSS. SONS
U .S. 35 W•t. Jackson, O'hio,
e14-288-6411 .
,·
MIIMV Ferguaon, New Holland,
Bush Hog Sal .. • Service. Over
40 used tr11cton to choose fJom .
a complete line of new &amp; used
equipment . larg"t telfM:t~n In
.
S .E. Ohio.

111 il2l

(!]) Secret City

7 0 WHHI THAT

to form four

CLAY l . 'OLLAN

~

rn Dr. Who Androids of Tara

Will Sell For Parts - 1 978
Sub•u; 1973 Ef Camino; 1974
Clmtto; 1977 Dodge pickup
4x4: 1974 Datsun; 1978 Ply·
mouth Vol..-e, 304-468-1618.

m~l.

57

low

WOII
IAMt

I I I I II

(JJ 1111
II}) Newo
.
[!) Spor18Look (T)

Ou•l e11hau1t kits. t99 .9&amp; Installed. Moat Forda. C hevy
trucks , Vant, 4M4's, MuHI•
Man. 8 Stimpson Ave., Athens,
Ohio. 1· 800· 843-3757.

AKC Rag . Brittany Spaniel pupa.
earn May 13 , 1987 . Call 614448-1673.

AKC Ronweiter pup. m1te 12
wkl . t ,31!10. 304·875-121!141 .

Rearrange lenen of
0 four
1crombled words

8

Oisapperance

--------~
· -le-

55 Building Supplies

Pets for Sale

I&lt;IIM4

8:00 CD Big Valley The

Chevrolet ang!n": 2·-350 . en- .
ginn. 1· 400 small block•. 1 - V-1 .
front wheel d~MI O! 5 · 10 .
plck-up. 3~0 aUtomatic trani .,
fits Olds .. Buick or Ponta le! Cell
614- 246-6087.

Magnavox conaole stereo, AM FM radio turn table. reel-reel.
heel. cond" t76 . Call 814446-1561 .

56

'::~::~' s~~~lA-~t.trs·
_;.;;.;;.;;.;_;.:__:::..._:=
~y

EVENING .

Auto Parts
&amp; Accesaories

814-446·0988.

$1500. Ca11814 -448-7019.

Rudy milt concrete and all
concrete auppliea. Call u1 Valley
Brook Cement and Supplies.
304-nJ -5234.

MON., AUG. 17

a rn m a

1978 Pinto. uto. t800, tr1de
1or pi~k- up - cash better price.
Holiday Rambh~·- trade for tractor hi-lift loader. 16 ft. Aluminum boat, Mercury 9 .9. trailer.

2783 .

•

Used and Rebulh transmiuiona.
lnt•n•lty lnspegtflf and guaran tee&lt;~ . lnst.llatlon available. we
buy junk transmluions. CalL

17,500 BTU AC . t7&amp;. Call
&amp;U-446-7816 .

Concrete blocks all aires yard or
delivery . Mason ~and . Gallipolia
Block Co., 1Z31h Pine St..
Gallipolis. Ohio Call 614-448·

Television
Viewing

314.4· di'I O- 614-U8·3791·

County Applianu, Inc. Good
used appliances and TV sets.
Open SAM to &amp;PM . Mon thru
Sat. 614-«&amp;· 1699, 627 Jrd .
Ava. Gallipolia. OH .

NeW wood 6 pc. living room
Nicety furnished . 2 BA . aptrt- suites, 8399.95; ' New living
ment. Nice location, Adults only. room 1ultes from 8179 .95 to
Call 614-448-2404.
8700 .; Ch•t · of drawers; 4
drawer, 148., 5 drawar , 1159 .96;
Nice, 2 Br. Apt .. Stove, refrig. - End tables from 169.95 set.
Furnished. Water paid. Ne• Used Furniture; bedroom suites.
OrNe-In Theatre. Ca11814 -446- full sized beds, twin beds and
7026 .
rockers. Recliners from 199.96
and up
Furnished Apartment : 4 rma ..
THE WORKING
bath. Centrally located. one or MAN "S FRIENO
two adults. Ref. and Sec. Oep.
req 'ed . Ctll814-448-0444 .
CARPI; T- 9 1(12 - aalow as •solou to pick from. Al•o cut
Furnished Apt. Adulls only. All carpet. t6 .00 a yd. and up .
utilitin paid. Get re.dy for Finan cing 1v1il. Swinl rockers.
winter. Call 614-446-9623.
1100 . Moll o han Furn itur e.
UpPer Rive r Rd . Call 614-4462 BA . Apt. Close to Rio Grande 7444 .
College. Cell614-245-9417.
Lazaru• upright free1er . Good
Nice 3 BR . Apt.. ttove. water. cond. 1150. 614·446,· 4347 or
gas. AC ., fumithed . Dep. and 448·4748 .
Rei. required. Call 114 -446154~ .
Automat ic wuher , hon &amp;
wood en bed. co •prlnga, cou ch .
2 BR . ap11. 6 closets , kitchen· antique folding chain, tra sh
· appl. furnished. Washer-Dryer burning barrels. Call 614-446hook-up , ww Clfpet, neWly 2857.
ptinteCI. deck. Regency , Inc.
Apt1. Call 304-675-7738 or

Apartment
for Rant

44

SWAIN
AUCTION 8o FURNITURE 82
Olive St .. Gallipolja.
NEW· 6 pc. wood group- t 399.
Living room suites- 8199-$699.
Bunk beds with bedding- e199.
· Full siJ!a manrna &amp; foundat ion
starting- t99 . Reclinen
starting- 199.
USED - Bedili, dreasara, bedroom
suites, t199 - t299 . Deaka,
wr!nget' washer. a complete line
of uHd furniture.
NEW- Western bclots- t30 .
Workboota t18 &amp; up. !Steel &amp;
soh toe). Call614-446- 3169.

•

...,ening.

Me1chonrlise

For a service type busines, with
an ~cellent income potential
that requires on ly a smilll invest·
meru7 This is an opportunity
Wortk investigating if you are
willing to und.e rgo o11 extensive
tax training program. Franchise
available in the· Pomeroy area.
For. more· jnform ation wrice:
OanTax. Inc., PO Bol( Cla-81 1
c/ o Gallipolis Da ily Tribune, 825
3rd . A\le. Gallipolis . Ohio
45631 .

BORN LOSER

Bosh and
Motors for Sale

T_h8 Daily ~~-Page-9 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Olif6

Outbo•d motor-li ke 1\ifW. 1984
Mariner 40 HP elactrlc •tartlong shaft. Shift bchc lgniUon
penet. Hu had verv Hmit~ usa.
R•duc~ price. Call 814 7 441-

ueo.

inve1tigated the oHerlng.

31

76

b1th, bedroom end llvingroom. Cellehen'a Uted Tire Shop. bv ...
1.000 tires. ai1:11 12, 13, 14, 1 &amp;,
Awilable middle _of Augutt.
11. 1e.s. B mil• out At. 211.
Second floor. corn•Stcond end · Ctlll14·
21158 ·82&amp;1 .
.
Pine. Perking . ,.. prOVided.
*226 . per month. or
with
cittern 1t1t• approved.
kitchen tppliencn turnithifd. Plattlc
pltltlo tepj:ic tenks , pt.,tlc
Ctll eu.--.t&amp;-2326 or •••· culvetta. m..tl culverts. AON
..2!.
EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jockton, Oh. 814-286·5930.

know . tnd NOT to nnd monl!fY
through the meil until you hro~a

Estate

KIT 'N' CARLYLI! ®by Larry Wright

completltly remodeled kitc:hM.

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ·
lNG CO . racomm.nds that you
do butineu with people you

Re~l

54 Misc. Mercha!ldiae

FOR LEASE: Ap.n:m11nt with

I NOTICE I

23

For Laase

Monday, August 17, 198.7

Monday, August 17, 1987

SBG

WNQP

SBG

XZBNG

XHKKXZ

C QT

OHSKQN .C

XZBNG

ZOZNCKRI:lGA

YZWZBK . -SRNHEKC

P 8 K R Z M E Q G
Yeatei-day's Cryptoquote: IF THERE BE AVALUE IN
SCALING THE MOUNTAINS, IT IS ONLY THAT FROM
THEM ONE CAN BEHOLD THE PLAINS. - CHESTER·
r&lt;)N

'

�Page 10 The Daily Sentinel

Monday. August 17. 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

.

'

--Local briefs----- Chicago gets ino~e rain·· ovel\ weekend
'

Four hurt in two accidents

Two youths were injured Saturday, at 4:30p.m., In Sutton
Township, on Ohio 124, W·hen a pickup truck overturned,
according to the Gallla-Melgs Post of the State Highw ay Patrol.
RichardS. Riffle, 17. of Racine, was driving west when he lost
control a,nd went off the r,ight side of the road before hitting a
telephone pole. He then went back on the road and overturned.
He and his passenger. Charles Buckley, 17, of Pomeroy. were
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Meigs EMS. Both
were treated and released.
Riffle was cited for not wearing a seat,_ belt.
In a n accident Sund ay, at 11: 30 a.m ., a n Albany youth a nd a
Langsv ille man were injUred on Ohio 124, In Salem Township.
Tracy L. Green, 17, of Albany, wa s driving west when she ran
off the right side of the road on a curve and overturned. She and
her passenger, Kevin D. Thoma, 20, ofLangsv.ille, were taken to
Vetera ns Memorial Hospital by the Meigs EMS. Both were
treated and released.
Green was cited for failure to control.

Council meets at 7 tonight
A recessed sess ion of Racine Village Council will be held at 7
this evening at the Shrine Clu b Park Building.

Game will not be played
A s low pileh soft ball game between the Baron team and the
Rutland Tire team a nnoun ced ear lier in The Daily Sentinel fo r
Tuesday even ing a t Hartinger Park in Middleport will not be
played . Th0 a nnouncem ent was In error .

Man questioned on incident
Char les Cr is lip, Hockingp&lt;irt. is being questioned by the
Meigs County Sperllf' s Department for calling In an apparent
false report. Sheriff Howa rd 'Frank says that Tuppers Plains
EMS was called at o: 46 p.m. Sunday to the Shake Shoppe for
Cris lip. Crislip had told people at the Shake Shoppe that he had
been shot while walking past Lodwlck:s Store which is loca ted
nearby . EMS personnel examined Crislip and no bullet wound
was found. He was then taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital
lor furt her examania tion but no wound was found at ·ihe
hospital. The in cident is u.nder Investigation .

Area deaths
Donald Pullins
Donald B. Pullins, 63. 5398
Roche Dr ive. Columbus. died
Sund ay night a r Rivers id e
Hospital.
Born o n Nov. 11. 1923 in the
Texas Com munity · of Meigs
County , he was the son of the late
' Raymond a nd Add ie Wolf
Pullins .
He is sun·ived by his wife,
An na Glaze Pullins. one son and
daughter-in-law. Donald a nd Loretta Pullins , Columbus; two
daught e rs and ·so ns · in -law.
Dea nn a and Ronald Reed. India·
napolis , Ind., a nd Deborah and
William Toundas, Worthington:
a siste r , Dorothy Chaney. Shade.
• seven gl'a ndchildren, one"great gra ndc hild . He was preceded In
death by a brother. Raymond, Jr.
a nd a ·s ister, Donn a Jean .
Retired from Sears. Mr. Pul·
Jins was a m£'mber of the
Wor th ington Chur ch of Christ.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesda y at the RutherfordCorbin Funeral Horne in Worth ington. Serv ices will be held
here at t he Mt. Hermon Chu rch,
a lso on Wednesday. with the time
to be announced lat er . Burial will
be in. the Mt. Hermon Cem etery.

Ellt&gt;n Eht'rsha('h

I

Ell en N. Ebersbac h, 67. died
Sunday ev ening a t her ho me on
Depot St . in Rutland.
Mrs. Ebersbach was born Sept.
17. 1919 in Ga llia Count y, a
da ugh ter of the late Clarence and
Neva Caldwell Might.
She is survived by a daughter.
'Jovc0 Ebersbach. Rutland; a
daught er and son-in-law. Chery l
and Bob Sea rs . Pickerington:
two grandch ildr en, Ma rc Fry of
:;poka ne . Wash., a nd Amanda
Fr)·. Pic kerington, and a sister.
Lucill e Sisson of Ravenswood, W.
Va. A nu mber of nieces and
nephews also s u rviv~.
Besides hH parents and her
hu sband , she was preceded in
death by fivr brothers , La wre nce, Cha rl es, Stephan . David
a nd Cla re&gt;nce Migh t. J r.
Priva te graves ide services will
be conducted at th~ Miles Cemetery. Th e re will be no ca lling
hou rs and the family requ ests
that fl owers be omitt ed. The
Hunt er Fune ral Horne in Rutland
is charge of serv ices.

in

Fran('t'S Harri~S
Frances Fayr Dye Harris. 74,
Col umbu s. fo r m~rl y of Pom eroy ,
died Saturday a t Riverside Methodi st Hospit aL
Accord in g to report s received
here, Mrs. Harr is died as th&lt;:&gt;
r esult of injuries rece ived in an

a ut o -tru c k
accide nt in
Columbus.
· A retired teacher· from Gra ndview Heights Edison School.
.Mrs. Harris was a graduat e of
Oliio Uni versity. She was a
member of the Trinit y United
Methodist Church. Riverside
Methodist Hosp ital Volunteers,
Golden Circle' of Alpha Delta Pi
Sororltv . the Ohio and National
Educa iion Associat ions. Grand·
view Heights a nd the Meigs
Coun ty Historical Societies.
Surviv in g are his husband.
Robert W. Harris, former Mid·
dleport resident ; a daughter and
son-in -law, . Susan and Steven
Rotly of Napoleon ;· a brother. W.
H. H. "Tippy" Dye. a well known

'

Ohio Lottery

.

By PETER ROWE
United Press International
Thunderstorms dumped more
rain today on Chicago suburbs
still afloot from an earlier
gullywasher blamed for at least
four deaths , and . wlnd·drlven
rains rolled across the Midwest
a nd the Plains.
Winds of up to 69 mph whipped
Sprin gfield. Ill.. Sunday nig ht , ·
co ll aps ing the Old Style beer tent
and another tent at the Illinois
State Fair; State Pollee ·capt.
J ack Ryan sa id. He said about 40
people · were lnju r~ two
serious ly . Severe thunderstorm
watches were In e ffect today for
parts of lllinols. Texas, Okla·
homa, Indiana and Michigan the result of a cold front stretch·
ing from northwest Ohio through
Southern lllinois to Oklahoma.
Almost 3 Inches of ra in fell at
Chi cago's O'Hare International
Airport In just over. an hour la te
Sunday and scattered thunder. s tor ms persisted early today as
th e rainfall total for th e month
reached 13.23 Inches -a record
for August. The previous record
was 11. 28 inches. set in 1885.
Torrential downpours hit the
area Friday, dumping 9lnches of
ra in and touching off floods th at
forced hundreds of people from
their homes a nd left a t least four
people dead. Ris in g rivers a nd
creeks Saturday . forced m ore
evacuat ions , bringing t he
number of evacuees to more than
1.000. .
'
Many remained out of their
homes today - and the latest
bout of r ai n threat ened to keep
them ou t for several days to
come as runoff pours into rivers

I

and streams still out of their
banks · because , of Friday's
storms.
Sunday's storm produced
winds of up to 64 mph and
dumped 2.9 inches of rain by
early today. with rnore expected.
" It's going to really aggravate
the t flood ) situation In some
areas," said Jim Purpura of the
. Nationa l · Weather Service in
Chicago. "It's going to slow down
recovery for a day. "
Skies were expected to clear
later today .and Tuesday, with
only scattered s howers. But at
least 29 roads in the Chicago area
remained closed early today
beca use of flooding, state De·
partment of Transportation officials said.
·
Storms battered eas tern Wls·
consln. The heaviest dam age
was reported In the Wales area,
where a tornado was reported at
about 7:30 p.m., authorities sa id.
" In the Wales area , 15 to 20
homes ha ve, s uffered damage all
the way from major to Jesser
degrees." said Jim Malueg.
southeastern Wi sconsin area director for the · s tate Office of
Emergency Government In
Milwaukee.
Ughtning struck two trans·
formers at Unit Two of the Point
Beach nuclear power pla nt near
Two Creeks. Wi s. : Sunday night.
ca using the reactor to snut down
au torn atlca lly .
Officials of th&lt;' Wisconsin
E lectric Power Co .. which oper·
ates the plant , said no radiation
escaped and thel'l' was no danger
·to the public or plant employees.
Unit One at the plant continued to

..., _

...

function normally.
Storms in McClain Count y,
Okla . Sunday produced wind
gusts of up to so m ph, while 60
mph winds . raked low e r
Michigan.
A line of thunderstorms hun g
over northern and central Mlssour!, where 50 mph w'tnds were

Geraldine Joy Foreman, 66, of
Ripl ey. was qied on arrival
Sa turda y at Pleasant Valley
Hos pit a l.
Born Feb. 14. 1921 in West
Colu mbia. she was the daughter
of the late Ephra im Lace a n(!
Vic a Marie Stewart Foreman.
She was a foster grandparent.
Surviving are one daught er,
Mrs. Delores Louise Neal, RI pley: one son. Larry A. VanMe·
ter, Gallipolis; one sister, Nannle
Louise Roush. New Haven; one
brother, Woodrow L. Foreman,
Lorain. Ohio: six grandchildren
and three great-grandchildren.
Funer a l will be at 1 p.m.
Tuesday at Foglesong Funeral
Home with the Rev. Gerald
~yre officiating. Burial will
follow in Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7 to 9 p.m. Monday.

Seek divorce
Betty L. Bayes, Middleport.
has filed for a divorce in Meigs
County Coinm&lt;,m Pleas Court
from Ralph C . Bay es,
Middleport. .

Seek judgment
Milo Hutchinson and Betty Ann
Hutchinson, Rutland, have filed
a Me igs County Common Pleas
Court action for a judgmenf of
$4,150 from Wilford C. Hill,
Ches hire, et al.
A reciprocal action for child
support has been filed by Summit
Co., Ohio and Jerry F . Teeple,
against Larry D. Carpenter. ·

338
Pick 4

8056

VoLJ7 . No .70
Copyr!phted 1987

m

G::BsNOW
FRONTS:
Warm

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Tuesday, August 18, 1987

11

ft

to receive precip.tatJon mdicated

WEATHER MAP - Show ers and thunde rstorms will be
scatte red along the Gulf Coa.•t from soulhea.•t Louisiana through
southern Georgia and the northern half of Florida. Ralnshowers
al!d thunderstorms will be scatteted from the hlt:h Plains of
Montana and North Dakot11 through the upper Mississippi Valley
and upper Great Lakes. Showe rs and thunderstorms will also he
scallered from the lower Great La ko•s through the low er Ohio
Valley and New England. Hi ghs will he In the !lOs and !108 across a
majority of the nallun. '

..,..,_

ct~ remoni es.

'" .

Eastern schools open Aug. 25

South Central
In creasing cloud iness with
shower s a nd thundrr s torms
llk ~ l .v
tod a y. Som ~ thu ndl'r·
storms rould be severe. H l~ h 90
to ~;, , Mostly southw sl winds
abou t 10 mph . Chancc of rai n 60
J&gt;&lt;'r ernt.
Partly cloud y with a chance of
l l n gerl n~ s hOw rs tonight . Low
nC'a r 70. Lig ht northwest wind s.
·rhan 0 or rJ in 40 percent . Partly c loudy Tu esd ay . Hl~h In
the mid 80s . Cha nce of rain 20
percent.
Extended Fore&lt;'ll!lt
Wectnesday throu~~;h Friday
Fa ir with se&gt;asonablc tempera·
tur cs Wedn !'5day and Thursday.
Highs will be ranne from the mid
70s to the low&lt;:&gt; r SOs Wedn('Sda y
a nd In the !lOs Thursday . Low s
will be between 50 and W . A
r ha nre or thundN storrns Friday .
with hlllhs In th e 80s and lows In
the mid 60s .
PICT UR ES QtlE TO Ll. IIO USE - This pichi·
toll house Wil.."i lo, ·atNI on the PomeroyMason BrldgP for man.v yt•a rs afh•r ihc s pan
opent•d and ~' 'L"' insl·rlbed ~&lt; P onu•roy Bend
Brldi •'' . Th~ lao US&lt; ' was on I he M&lt;LiOn ( 'ounty side
of lhP bridge. It wa.o; UM•d for Y&lt;'&lt;l rs Into the 1940's
r~ue

Jackpot ·unclaimed

Softball tourney

Meigs Count y E merge ncy Rut land a t ll ::n a .m . tra nsMedical Services reports lour· ported Tracey Gree n a nd Kevin
1een calls over the week end : fi ve Thoma from a n au to accid ent on
Sat urday a nd nine Sunday.
Route 124 to Veterans Memorial
Satu rday at 6: 2!\ a .m .. Tuppers Hos pit al: Tuppers aPial ns at
Plains tra nsported Edna Ha ning 12: 14 p.m. to No. Nine Road for
to Veterans Memorial Hospital: Carl Smith to St. Joseph' s HospiRacine a t 9: 26a .m . to Por tland tal: Middleport a1 3:16p.m . to
for Lakie Reed to Ve teran s Pearl St. for Roger Reynolds to
Memo r ial Hospital: Sa le m VE•terans Me morial Hospit al:
Towns hip Fire Departme nt at Tuppers Plains a t 5: o2 p. rn .
1: 4R p.m. to a br ush fire a t the tra nsported Charles Crls lsip io
Lambert residence on Briar Veterans Memorial Hospital :
Ridge Road; Racineat4:36p. m. Porn~roy a t &gt;:55 p.m . to Bur·
transportro Shannon Riffle a nd !Ingham for . Ralph Kern to
Charles Buckley from a n a uto Veterans Memorial Hospita l:
accident on Route 124 to Ve tera ns Rutland at 7: 15 p.m. to Depot St.
Me mori al Hos pit a l; Rutland a t for E ll en Ebersbach who was
6:46 p.m. Ca rpen ter for Fred dead on arrival ; Pomeroy a t 7: 37
Brady to O'Bieness Mem orial p.m . to Ches ter Road for. Dic k
Fra ley to Vet erans Memor ial
Hospit al.
Sunday at 2:28 a .m . to B uck- Hos pit al; Pomeroy a t 8:22 p.m.
town Road for Bennie Rhodes 10 to East St. for Cathy Pridemore
Veterans Mell)orial Hospital: to Veter ans Memorial Hospit a l.

A Cla ss E softball tOur nam ent ,
s po nsor ed by Mlddlepo rl Tro·
phlcs. wi ll be he ld Au!!. 22·23 at
Syra cuse Park . Entry IN' is .'6~&gt;
and two sottbali s. F'or more
Inform ation . ca ll 992 ·2754 and as k
for Bill.
Lottt&gt;ry numl~t&gt;rs

•. ·

CLE VELAND \UP I ) - S atur·
da y's winning Ohio Lott er)'
nu m be rs : •

Daily Numb&lt;·r
220.
PICK · ~

l!i70.

r LEVELA ND tUPI I - The re
wer·t no w innin g ticket s In
Sa turday's Superlolt o !!amt'.
me an ing We dnesday's ' jackpot
witt grow to $6 million .
T here were not lcke ts sold wit h
1he win ning numbers , 7, 9, 22. 23,
:12 a nd 41, Th e unC! alml'd jackpot
wa s worth $3 mlitlon.
Then · wPrc 148 tickets with five
or rh~ ! lx wl~nlng n~mbers·. for a
prize oi $ 1,000. Official s said
anot her 6,lno ti ckl.'ts we rp so ld
with four co rrec t numfx&gt;rs, fo r a
prlzl.' of $77.

when the hrldgc was paid for through the toll
c harges. The photo, copyrighted In 1928, Is the
property of Esther Frecker Ward. Follwlng
repairs the bridge Is ex pect ed to be officially
reopened this Friday.

OUR MASON LOCATION

YOU WORKED HARD FOR THE MONEYNOW MAKE IT WORK HARD FOR YOU!
Your savings plan should help you attain financial se·
curit~as quickly and safely as possible . We offer a va ·
riety of options to help you achieve your goals. like
savings accounts, money market accounts, certifi·
cates of deposit. and I.R.A.s . You'' II find the maturity
terms you want at competitive interest rates - and
the safety of FDIC protection .

v

ONE OF A KIND - The l\le lgs FFA
Woodcook er Is one of the most unusual food booths
you'll see at this year's fair. II. I the front Is an open
fireplace and lor looks, the fireplace Is s ur·
.rounded hy a wooden mantle and old-fashioned
tools. From le ft to right around the fireplace are

'

MEMBER F.D.I.C.
)

Second Strwt
Mason, W.Va.

773·5514

BANK
.
~
''Tite letter Banlc"

Jackson AVll!ue
Point Plll.-rt. W.Va.
&amp;75·11Zl

5th Avenue

New HMI, W.Va.
. 112·2136

FF,\ · members Todd Price, Timothy Knolls.
Randy Birc hfield, putting more wood on the
fireplace, Bill Scarbrough and Everett Ilolcornb,
Me igs High vo·ag ins tructor and engineer of the
Woodcooker . The Wood cooker is located nex t to
the Coonhnntcr' s Building.

.Meigs County
Fair Schedule

YOU CAN OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT AT ANY OF OUR
THREE CONVENIENT LOCATIONS!

PEOPLES

Plans for the opening of the day of school.
1987·88 school year In the Eas tern
All bus routes rema,in the sam e
Loca l School· Distr lct have been
as last year except for the
announced by Dr. Daniel L . following: st ud en ts on Bigley
Apling, superi nt ende nt .
Ridgo; an d Mount Olive Will be
Teachers of .the dis tri.ct wit!
transported by Dolly Reed in the
report nex i Monday wh ile s tu morning and by Violet Satterdent s will report on Tuesday for a field in the afternoo n. Pickup
full , . regular day of instruction time a nd arr iva l homet imeswill
with startin g and e nd ing rim es
remain essentiall y the same. Th e
the sa me as last yea r :
above junior a nd senior high
Lunches wil l be serv ed the fi rs t school stude nts will be tra nsday of school with prices to IJ&lt;' ported to Reedsville in the
elem enlary s tudents. $1.10; hig h
morning to meet Violet Satterschool stud e nt s, $1. 20.·and River·
field' s bus 7. In the aft ernoon. all
view student s only brea kfa st. 50
students from Reeds ville to Long
cent s.
Bott om, including those student s
El e men tary stud e nt s new to
fro m Mount Olive and Bigley
the district are to report to th e
Ridge , will be transported home
schoo l nears the ir home on by Violet Satterfi eld. All st udent s
Tuesday; · St uden ts In grades from Reedsville, north of Route
seven throug h 12 are 'fo report to 124. will be lranspor ted home by
the high schoo l ~ometlrur before Dolly Reed. This arrangement s
thr open ing of scho ol. between will be accomplished by a st u·
the hours of 8 a.m. and 3 p.m .
dent tr ansfer taki ng place at a
lnformalion on workbook fees, safe loca tion a long Rout e 681,
et c .. will be furhi~h ~d on the firs t

'J'UESDAY, AU)!'USt l8
4:00P.M. Kiddie Tractor Pull-Show Ring
4:00P.M. Jr. Fair Market Rabbit Sale
5:00P.M. Talent Show-Hill Stage
6:30P.M. Johnnie Bo:&gt;Jinda, Gospel, Hill Stage
'7:00P.M. Demolition Derby
8:00P.M. Junior Fair Swine
t
Showmanship &amp; Judging
8:00P.M. New Grass Express, Hill Stage
WEDNEDSAY, Au)!'ust 19
9: 15A.M. Junior Fair Beef Showmanship
. and Judging
12: 00 Noon 4-H Flower Show Judging, Jr . Fair Bldg.
1:00 P.M. Qpen Class Beef Judging
Cp ntinued on Page 10

·~ ~ .- - - ~ -------

-

--------·--------- -· ---

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
It 's different . It's o ne of a kind.
And it 's making its de but a t the
Meigs Count y Fair. It 's th&lt;&gt; ·
"Me igs FFA Woodeooker, .. and
it's the brain child·of Me igs Hig h
vocational agri cultu r e ins truc tor
Evere tt Holcomb.
Holcomb might ha ve thought
of the idea. but he' ll tell you that
his s tuden t s gave the final
approval on the project. Co nst ru ction of the mobile wood -·
cooke r. which starte d out:as an
old Meigs sc hool bus, didn 't
rea lly get int o hi gh gear until the
last two six-weeks of school. The
work took place In t he schoo l' s
vo-ag shop.
Now that it's finished and
covered with grooved plywood
stai ned a redwood color, you
wouldn 't know I he Wood cooker is
a sc hool bus unless you walk
around back for a view from the
rear. From the front, it just looks
like the mos l unusual fooq booth
you'll ever see.
Heai for the "stove on wheels''
co mes from an open wood
firepla0e a l the front of the bus
and a la rge woodp il e Is kept
nearby for refuel ing. Two stac ks
ou t the top draw the heat bac k
tha:ouglj the cooker. The stacks
are controlled by dampe rs. If the

Rudolf Hess dies
in prison at age 93

...

. Hess, who publicly maintained
his loyalty to Hitler throughout
his Imprisonment, was the last of
(Continued on page 10)
....
.
..,:___

heat get s too hot, th e front
damper opens au tomat ically for
a quick drop in temperatu re. And
·if for some rea so n the fire is n' t
hot enough, a gas backup unit
au toma tically comes on. Th ~
whol e con tr apti o n is we ll
insula ted .
For a smoked fla vor, food can
be cooked ins ide the Woodcook·
er's specially designed drawers
on both sides of the unit. Food ca n
a lso be cooked on a gri ll on top of
the woodcooker . Deepfryi ng is
a lso done on top of the uni t and
there' s ·even a spec ia l sec tion
where food s from the deep fryer
ca n be drairted.
Jn the bac k of the bus are a
freezer, refrige rator and sta inless s tee l sink .
About $3,000 worth of dona tions
made the project posslble Hoi·
comb says. The ac tual coo king
unit, m a de from tit a nium whi c h
was donated by Ohio University,
was constructed in two pieces
and then connec ted. A few parts
for the projec.t ca me from as far
away as Ten nessee.
Holcomb go t the idea for
woodcooking in 1954 when he
vis ited suc h a n es ta blishment in
Lockhart, Texas. where he was
servi ng in the army, 'l' hat partie·
ular 'pla ce began operation in
l!lOO he says, a nd is still in

bus iness today.
The woodcooking principle
may be the same as what
Hol0om b saw in Texas, but tha t' s
where s imilarit ies end. The
Meigs Woodcooker is unique.
And it's built in such a way that it
goes from e ight feet to twenty
feet wide , when two expa nding
un it s..one on each s ide of the
bus ..a re pulled out . If the Wood·
cooker were being used at a
banquet type func tion where
ma ny people had to be served at
once, both sides of the coo ker
would be ope n for serving.
However, serving will take place
from only one s ide at the fair.
Wh en it comes time to move the
Woodcooker. the s ides are folded
back i.nside. The unit still rests on
wheels and is pulled by truck
from place to placr.
Th ere wer e s till a few last
minute jobs le ft to do when
Holcomb and some of his FFA
students wer e preparing the
Woodcookel' Monday for it s fair
dl.'but. By th e tim e the fai r '
opened th is morning. a picket
fence had bePn put up around the .
open firepla ce a nd red carpeti ng
had been laid ins ide. T he unit Is
nO\v fully opPrational and ready
for customers. Look for the
Woodcooker rnPnu on an old
Con tinu ed on page 7

Night courses for degree in
engineering will .be offered~

WEST BERLIN iUPI) - The
body of Nazi leader Ru dolf Hess
wur be handed over to relatives,
allaying fears among his family
.that the re mains would be
secretly disposed of by authorities to prevent his grave from
being turned Into a s hrine for
neo-Nazls.
Hess, Adolf Hitler's form er
deputy, died Monday attheage or
931n Spandau War Crimes Prison
after serving 46 years of a life .
term.
·
·

e

west of Reedsville.
Bill Ha nnum' s route, Bus 11.
will remain essentia lly the sa me,
excep t that he will tra vel count y
road route 28 fro m Ken to to State
Rou te 7.at Locust Grove, where
he will pick up a ll junior a nd
senior high sc hool st udent s.
Keitha Whitlat ch's rout e, Bus
10 , will be ex tended to include
Fire Tower Road a nd Pine Tree
Drive.
Ruth Master 's route. Bus 17.
will be extended to include Joppa
Road ; she will also transport a ll
students on Route 681, from
.Joppa Road to Tuppers Plains
E lementary School.
Nita Jean Ritchie. Bus 4. has
hecefi transfe rred to Darlene
Cassady's old route. The route
will rema in the sa me as it has
been run. Flossie Dill. Bus 18. has
been transferred to Nita J ea n
Ritcie' s old route in the Chester
area.

Meigs FFA members build
mobile woodcooker for fair

,,

Contin ued from page 1

Daily sfbck prices

1 Sect ion. 10 Pages 25 Cents
~ultimedia Inc. Newspaper

A

REOPENING FRID!I.Y The official re-o pening of the
Pomeroy· Mason Brldge , fol·
lowing extens iv e repair work,
l• schedul ed for 11 a.m .
Friday on the ramp ofthe Ohio
side. This photo, tht• property
of Esther Frecker Ward, wa.•
copyrighted In 1928 soon art ~r
ihe span between Meigs and
Mason Co unt ies was completed. Ohio Department of
Transport!Ukm officials as
well as Sen. ,Ja n Long and
Rep .•Jolyn Boster will be on
taand f or th e Fri d ay

BRAIN
SHOWERS
"
'Cold
. . Static
Occ.luded
Map shows minimum temperatures . At tea.st 50% or any shaded area •S tor~\

Squad lias 14 weekend calls

Hospital news

enttne

.

RESERVE CHAMPION STEER- The reserve · Twin River!&lt; Foodland In Point PleMant, Brent
t harnplon steer, shown at the Ma:ron County Fair . Eastman,' Joe Calv ert, rn01nagc,r of Point 'Piea.•ant
Foodland and Crank . Also pictured are Mason
la.~t week by David Crank , of He nderson , was
purchaSed at Friday night's livestock sale by County Fair Queen Sherr! Hughart, Little Mis ter
Foodland. Pldured above, from left, are Bob Ma.oon County Branden Shirley and I.JIIIe Miss
Eastman, pres ld~nt. John VanMete r. mana~ter of Mason County Cary Shinn. Foodland paid S2.:z5
per pound. or S2,H23.75, for the 1, 255- pound steer .

which carries the fli ght record- through the wreckage in a searc h
ings, and in vestigat ors with for bodies a nd clues to the ca use
spec ially trained dogs m oved of the wreck .
The Detroit control tower had
ins tructed the pilot to make a
right turn just after takeoff, said
Mort E delstei n. a spo kes ma n for
Veterans Me morial
the Federal Avlatlon AdminisSaturday Admissions - E dn a tration In Chicago.
Ha ning. Pomeroy; Beth HenE delst eln said one avenue of
dric ks, Middleport ; Ruth Ann inves tlgallon was an air traffic
Sellers, · Portland; Lake Reed, controller's report of an explo·
Portland; William Guthrie, Mid - slon In the craft' s left engine
dleport ; Kelly He ns ler, Raci ne; shortly after takeoff.
Barbara Pratt, Pomeroy.
Satu(day Discharges- G le nn
Hudson. Ronald Sykes, Harold
Lawson .. William Kennedy , Opal
Barr .
•
(As of 10:30 a .m.)
Sunday Admissions - Be nnie
Provided by
Rhodes, Racine: Ralph Kern,
Bryce and Mark Smith
Pomeroy.
of Blunt' Ellis &amp; Loewl
Sundl)y Discharges- Ta bitha
Faw. Dorothy Demos)(y, Aretta
Firm
Price
Brickles, Virginia BOwers.
Am Electric Power ....... .. .... 28'!.
Marriage licenses
AT&amp;T ........ .. ................. .... ..... 35
Ashland Oil ........................ 67'!.
Marriage licenses have been Bob Evans Farms ........ ...... 25~
Issued in Meigs County Probate Charming Shoppes .. .... ........ 32 %
Court to Rhett Allen Milhoan, 21, Federal Mogu1... .. .. .......... .. . 48\-2
Pomeroy, a nd Carla Sue King, Goodyear T&amp;R .. ........ .. ....... 741-2
18, Pomeroy; Robert'Carl Ram· Heck's Inc . .................. ........ 41-2
sey, 24, Middleport, and VIrginia Limited Inc ........... ...... .. .. ... 52\1,
Mae Pat.terson, 21 , Gallipolis; Multimedia Inc ................... 70\-2
Brian Keith Willis, 20, Meigs Co., Rax Restaurants ............ .... .. 4J'io
and Davina Dee Matthews, 18, Robbins &amp; Myers .. .......... :... 103,4 '
Meigs Co.; Kenny Eugene Luns· Shoney's Inc .....: .... :........ ....... 31
ford, 19, Pomer oy, to June Wendy 's Inti ............ ........ ... IOJ'io
Martha Hayman, 20, Pomeroy.
Worthington ·Ind ....... ........... 24'4

•

at y

Weather

FBJ. ••

Partly cloudy tonight and
W,ednesday. Low in the mid
60s. Highs · Wednesday In
the mid 80s.

'·

e

Lakie Reed

Gt'raldinl:' Foreman

· Daily Number

. NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FOREC.AST TO 8 AM EDT 8-18-87

former
Pomeroy High School
a nd Ohio State University athlete
of Port Charlotte. Fla .. and
grandchildren. Christ I Dia na and
.Robert John Roby.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In deat h by a brother.,
Max D&gt;·e.
Friends may call atthe DeyoDavis Funeral Horn e. 1578 W,
First Ave., Grandview Height s
from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m. today.
Serv ices will be held at th0
funeral home at 1 p.m. Tuesday
with interment in Glen Rest
Cemetery.

Lakie Zonie Reed, 67, of
Portland, died Saturday night at
Veterans Memor ia l Hospital.
Born Feb. 15. 1920 In Burning
Springs, W.Va., she was a
daughter of the late John and
Rebecca Snyder.
Survivors include two daughters, Kate Evans of Portland and
Wanda Buchanan of Belpre ;
·s ~ven grandchildren and three
grea t grandchildren: thr ee
brothers. Glen Snyder and He nry
Allen . both of Parkersburg , and
Virgil Snyder of Canton; two
s isters, Louise Smith of Parkers·
burg and Dorothy Smith; and
severa l nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents , she was
preceded in death by one grand·
child. Kenneth Smarr; two brothers. Russ and Lindsey Snyder:
and one sister. Viola Wise.
Services will be 1 p.m. Tuesday
at Whit e Funera l Home with
Pastor Roger Wilford officiating.
Burial will be lh Randolph
Cemet e ry. F riends may call at
the funeral home Monday fro m 4
to 9 p.m .
·

Visit Meigs
County's fair
this week

reported Su nday in Morgan
County and baseball· size hall
pounded parts of Benton Count y.
Wet weather In Minnesota was
blamed for the death of an Iowa
rnan , whose car spun out of
control on Interstate 35 near
Burnsvllfe and slammed Into a
truc k.

••

·:- "1-•

RUDOLPH HESS

There has never before been an
opportunity to obtai n a n engineerin g degree In this area by
attending night classes. West
Virginia Institut e of Technology,
with the coope ra tion of Marshall
University,. is now prepared -to
make this possible.
There wlll be a meeting for
those Interested a't the Mason
Count y Vocational Center In
Point Pleasa nt on August 31, at
6:30 p.m. Representatives from
West Virginia Tech and Marshall
Univers ity will attend to provide
details and to answer questions .
The first courses 'to be offered
will be Co lle~~ Algebra (Math

___ _________ _____
,

130) a nd Co ll ege Trlgonomet ry .
(Math 122).
This educa lion appor t unity will
be offered to both West VIrginia
a nd Ohio residents a t a cost of
$110 for. each co'u rse. Class ;
sessions will be Monday a nd
Tuesday night s at the Vocational
Center in Point Pleasant.
To assist ln determining the
probability of success enrolled a
test will be given and evalua ted. ,
Degrees to be offered are ,.
Bachelor of Science In Meehan!"
cal Engineering and Bachelor of
Science In Electrical
Enginl'erlng.

·~

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