<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12889" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/12889?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-16T23:49:05+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43861">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/41d860151cdbe051e6fc8d6cd29f0f5d.pdf</src>
      <authentication>6344e7723d48fcd4a9c5b37ab3ce2dad</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="40442">
                  <text>t ,..

'

.

Page 8- The Daily Sentinel

Monday, July 21, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

· ~ . .Qdefs:. .~ . .........
...., ~pg seeks bridge closing impact relief
Squads answer 15 weekend calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Se1v1ce reports fltteen calls
over the weekend; seven calls saturday and nine calls Sumay.
saturday, at 12:26a.m., Racine Rescue with boat was called tot11e
Letart Falls area to assist a motor boat back to sh:lre; Pomeroy at
7:39 a.m. to Butternut Avenue for Emma Hoffner to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 2: 56 p.m. 10 Langsvllle for Ek!anor
Redman to Holzer Medical Center: Pomeroy at 3:00 p.m. 10 Epple
Road for Ebna Epple to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 3:02p.m.
to Addison Road for Dan Barrett to Holzer Medlc&lt;ll Center·
MlddleJlort at 3: 28 p.m. to Nichols Road ror William Capehart ~
Holzer Medical Center; Racine at 8:14 p.m. to Letart Falls lor Dale
Riffle to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Sunday. at 10: 21 a.m., Middleport to Plum Street for Mary Casto to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at 1:10 p.m. to Fourth and
John streets for Leona Cooper; Racine was called at 1:18 p.m. to
assist Syracuse and transport Mrs. Cooper to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Racine at 3:56 p.m. to Brewer Rood for Edgar Brewer to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 4: 25 p.m. to Mechanic
Street for Steve Haning to Veterans Memortal Hospital; Middleport
at 6:41 p.m. to Middleport BaD Park for Jody TIUls to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Racine at 6:50p.m. treated ootdld rottransport
Bob Campbell; At 8:ffi p.m., Racine transported Campbell to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 8: 19 p.m. iJ Llevlng In
Mason County , W.Va. lor Aaron Stone to Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Couple files for marriage
A marriage license has been Issued in Meigs County Probate Court
to David Wayne Shamblen, 26, Portland, antl Pamela June King, ;t!.
Ravenswood, W.Va.

Bank files suit in court
Bank One, Pomeroy, has filed an action In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court against WilHam H. Nelson, Pomeroy, requesting
judgments of $5,815.04 and $2,757 on two separate claims ,
An entry confirming sale has been flied In an action by Central
Trust Co., Middleport, against James Bailey, et al. Central Trust Co.
was granted a deficiency judgment of $17,235.93 in the matter.

Two couples seek dissolutions
Filing for dissolutions of marriage In Meigs Coonty Common Pleas
Court are Donna Lynn Upton and Benjamin Franklin Upton Jr., both
of Reedsville, and Wanda June Lambert and James Paul Lambert,
both of Pomeroy.
Filing for divorces and charging gross neglect rt. duty and extreme
cruelty are Glenda Marlene Donovan, Coolville, against George W.
Donovan, Coolville, and Anna D. Clonch, Pomeroy, against Ellis S.
Clonch, Pomeroy. A restraining order has been issued against the
defendant in the Clonch case, pending final court action in the
matter.

MRS Boosters meet tonight
' meet tonight (Monday) at 7::.! p.m.,
Meigs Athletic Boosters will
to discuss fair plans and the upcoming football season.

Pomeroy cancels council meeting
Monday night's regular meeting of Pomeroy VIllage Coo nell has
been canceled so that council members may attend the a meeting
with representatives of the Ohio Department of Transportation to
discuss ODOT's plans for repairing the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge.

Weekly Rutland dance cancelled
The weekly F.rlday night dances at the Rutland Civic Center have
been canceled until school resumes. Times and dates of future
dances wUI be announced later.

Jan Michael Lang, Democratic
candidate tor state senator for the
17th District, announced today his
efforts toward relieving the finan·
cia! bnpact of the closing of the
Pomeroy Bridge.
Long revealed today that he has
contacted various state agencies
and nonprofit corporations to try to
obtain state supported financial

"Each tbne that the Pomeroy
Bridge Is closed , we realize the
tremendous financial bnpact that
this closing has upon the citizens of
this rtver valley," Long stated.

AKRON, Ohio (UP!) - Union
members at a Goodyear Tire &amp;
Rubber Co. metal products plant
Sunday voted to approve work-rule
changes that are expected to save
125 murly jobs.
Local 2 of the United Rubber
Workers union voted 243-87 to
accept the changes, just one week

Reunion cancelled
Due to the serious Illness of Mrs.
Douglas Circle, the Ztrcle-Ctrcle
family reunion for 111!6 has been
canceled. The reunion was to have
been held this Sunday at the home
of Larry Circle, Racine.

A hunter safety course is being
offered Aug. 4-9. from 6-9 p.m. each
evening, at the home of John
Costanzo. Class size is limited and
all participants inust pre- register
by calling 843-54m.

Veterans Memorial
saturday Admissions - Emma
Hoffner, Pomeroy; Chloru s
Grbnm, Racine.
Saturday Discharges- None.
Saturday Admissions - Leota
Cooper, Syracuse.
Saturday Discharges - James
Milliron, Kathleen Anthony .

Weather report
Soulh Central Ohio
Partly cloudy today and tonight
wlth highs In the mid80sand lows in
the upper 60s. Mostly sunny
Tuesday with highs in the mid 80s.
The probability of precipitation is
20 percent today and near zero
tonight and Tuesday.
Winds will be light and !rom the
rorth today and light variable
tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Fair Wednesday and Thursday
wlth a chance of showers or
thunderstorms Friday. Highs will
be In the 80s. Lows will be In the 00s
Wednesday and Thursday and in
the upper 60s to low 70s Friday.

One ticket nets jackpot

the plant's 500 union jobs. The
concessions package, rejected by a
297-49 voted, would have cut
average hourly wages by $3.50.
Union officials said the proposed
wage cuts were too much to accept,
but beli!'Ve the work-nile changes
wltl give the plant a chance to
survive.
'
"They (the workers) are not
happy, but It's a last-ditch attempt
to save some of the plant," said Dan
Kelly, Local 2 vice ~resident.

RUTLAND
FURNITURE CO.

FOR JUST..,

Served with whipped potatoes, chicken gravy.
cole slaw, hot roll. butter and colt~. Sorr~.
no substitutes mept beverage Wtth addt-

Vol.36, No .54
Copyrighted 1986

$3.25

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

PH. 992·5432

POMEROY, OH.

hoturi'""

Kentucky Fried Chicken

PHONE
992-2156
01 Wrilt
Stntintl ClusititO Dt'l
D~ illy

Ill Co~tl St ., Pom1roy, Ohio 4$769

Public Notice
IN THE
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY . OHIO

Dena H. Raymond ,
Administrator of the Estate
of Martha Robineon.

vs .

PLAINTIFF

Floyd Gould, ot al.,
.
DEFENDANTS
Case No. 24,708
NOTICE OF SALE
PURSUANT TO THE OR DER oftho Probate Court of
Meigs County, Ohio, in Case
No , 24.708, I will olfa• for
sale at public auction on Au gull 1, 1988, at 10 :00
o'clock A.M. at the front
door of tho Meigs County
Court House . the following

described rMI estate. sit·
uoted in tho County of
Meigs, SteteofOhlo, to-wit :
An undivided one-haH in·
terest in and to the following
real estate situated n the
Countv of Meigs, in the
State of Ohio, end in the
Township of Scipio and
bounded and described as
lotlowo;
PARCEL 1 : Being ott that
part ot Lot No. 63. in tho
Town or Village of Pageville .
Moigo County, Ohio. and be ·
ing ume premises as con veyed by Caroline Golden b¥
doed' of record, Volume B6.
Page 216, nid Deed Re·

corda.
Said parcel being aame
premises a1 conveyed by
Carrie S. Chaoe, at al. , by

thence South 81 rods 16

llnko;
degrees thence
West 22South
rods 11
16
links; thence West 96 rods

1 Card of Thanks

I would like to elqlress
my deepest gratitude~
everyone who remembetld me with prayers,
flowers, cards, vists
and thoughts, dtring
my stay in Holzer Medical Center and Veterans
Extended Can! Unit. . I
send a special thanks
to Pastor Roger Grace
and Pastor Steve
Deaver for the visits
and. prayers. May God
bless everyone of you.
Flossie Badgley
3 Announcements

G. E. D.
HIGH SCHOOL
DIPLOMA
CLASSES
•lndiridual At11111ion
eNo Cost for lntlruclillll
oNo Coli for loolu
oW11111 family AtmotpliM

REGISTRATION
In Person Or
By Phone

RUTLAND FURNITURE

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY

The Daily Sentinel

CARD OF THANKS

This fuel is one of the country's most versatile sources of
energy. It is both portable and easy to regulate. Its most common use is as a straight source of heat. It cooks food, warms
homes . dries clothes, heats water, and barbecues for homeowners located in suburban, small town, and rural areas. It can
also power refrigerators and air conditioners . Portable L~· gas
brings city comfort to families everywhere. It can do anythtng 1n
the wilderness that it can do at home, and LP-gas has long been
a major comfort for campers.
LP-gas is also a staple on farms , where it's used for crop dry·
ing, flame weeding , tobacco curing , defoliation, poultry and ptg
brooding , stock tank heating, and frost protection . lt also powers
trucks, pumps, standby generators, and other farm equipment.
Commercial establishments, such as hotels, motels, and res·
taurants,use LP-gas much like the homeowner. Industry relies
on it for brazing, soldering, cutting, heat-treating, annealing,
vulcanizing, and many other uses.
As an engine fuel, its minimal emissions allow it to be used
indoors, which explains its wide popularity in ,fork-lift trucks.

at y

have rejecting a concessions pack-

CLEVELAND (UPI )- Officials deed dated July 7. 1907, re cordad In Volume 9'1 , Page
ol the Ohio Lottery Sunday said one 98 of said deed records.
ticket was sold bearing all six
PARCEL 2 : Situated in tho
numbers In Saturday night's Lotto township, county and state
aforaaaid . Baing in Town 7 ,
drawing for a $2,716,002 jackpot.
Range 14; Ohio Company 's
The numbers drawn wer e 22, 36, Purchase. Beginning in the
16, 31, 40 and 19.
cat1ter of the State Road at
The jackpot for this coming the N. E. corner of lot No.
66 of the Town of Pageville,
saturday's drawing is estimated at thence
South 86112 degrees
$1 million.
Eaot . 41 Rods 8 links:
The Dally Number drawn satur· thence South 20 degrees
Eall, 28 rods 17 links;
day was 7ll9.

USES OF LP·GAS

BOTTLE·GAS

•

age that would have savedd all of

Safety course set

USES FOR LP-GAS

AND

"The citizens of this area reaUze lessen this fin ancial crunch," Long
that the suocesses of their oosi· noted.
nesses and Industries depends upon
LoQllndlcated that he roped that
the now of commerce between the State agencies would respond
West VIrginia and Ohio at the point positively so that Mel~ CountlaJ1s
of the Pomeroy Bridge. Therefore, . would not reaUze such. a financial
1 have been 1n touch,with both the strain · durfng the closing of the
Department of Development, the bridge.
.
State Controlling Board, and Gov·
Anyone wtshlng additional In for·
ernorCeleste, seeking assistance to mation may call614-477-1684.

Goodyear staff OKs changes

I~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiljt

•PERSONAUIED
SERVICE
•FAMILY
OWNED
•WE ARE AS CLOSE
AS YOUR PHONE

assistance so that a lower cost ferry
service would be available to Meigs
Countlans durlng the closing of the
bridge.

Southeastern
Business
College
529 J1ckson Pike
GIIUpolls, Ohio
446·4367
102 Court St.
Pom~roy, Ohio
992·5ln

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

and 221inks; thence North 1
rod 5 links; thence North
84l!.. degrees East, 10 rods;
thence South 84'12 degrees
East, 11 rods 91inks; thence
north 48 V2 degrees East,
19V&gt; rods; thence North 70
degrees East,
19 rods 17
links; thence North 32 rods;
thence West 4 rods; thence
North 72 rods10 links to the
place of begining. Also Lots
Nos. 64 . 65 and 66 in Pogo·
ville, containing in all about
40 acres, more or leu. being
·the same premises as con·
veyed by Elmer Haning to
Pearl and Martha Robinson.
July 16 , 1907 deed of re cord Volume 97, Page 83, o1
said Deed Records.
PARCELl ; Situated in the
township, county and state
aforesaid , in Section 16,
Town 7. Renge 14 of the
Ohio Company's Purchase .
Beginning in the center of
the street 14 foot South of
the Southwest corner of a
piece of land known as the
Mill Lot in or near the Village
of Pageville. at a stake,
thence east 13 chains 46
links to A stake: thence
South 1 chain 6 links to a
stake; thence East 2 chains
90 links; thence South B
dlains 141inkstotheAthens
and Pomeroy road where a
wild cherry tree 12 inolloo in
diamet8f boars North 8'11
degrees East thence Chtant
14 finks; thence North 88
degrees West 6 chains 70
links; thence SQuth 87Va
degrees Welt, 3 chains 21
links; thence North 86 1/ •
degrees West, 3 chairrs 64
links; thence North 85
degrees West 2 chains and
94 links to 1111 point oppDsite
the center of the street,
thence North 8 chains 55
links to place of beginning,
containing 14.36 acres,
more or less.
PARCEL 4 : Situated in tho
Northwest quarter of Section 16 , Town 7 , Range 14
of
the Ohio Company
Purchase. Beginning at the
SouthweS1 corner of the
Academy lot, then ce East
10 chain s 22 links to a stake:
thence South 3 chains SV'h
links to a stake; thence w'est
13 chains46 links to center
at street; thence North 14
feet , thence East 3 chains
28 links t o Southeast comer
ol Mill Lot; thence North 3
d1ains 65 3A links to place of
begining, containing 4 .2
acres, more or leas .
PARCEL 6 : Also a trect ol
land 3 rods wide oft the
so uth end of a certain parcel
of land known as the Mill Lot
situated near the middle at
North half of tho Northwest
Quarter of Section 16 , Town
7, Range 14, Ohio Company' s Purchase. and in the
Village of Pageville. County
of Meigs. State of Ohio.
Said parcels 3, 4 , and 5
being the same premises 11
conveyed to Pearl and Mar·
tho Robinson by Sarah M .

16, 1~24 , of record Volume
1 28, , Page 23, said Meigs
County Deed Records.
Reference Deeds : Volume
254, l&gt;age 1026, and Vol·
uma 21 3, Page 309, Meigs
County Deed Records.
Said
premises are appraised at $9,985.00 and
rnus.t be sold for not less
than one-half (V.I of uid appraised value. The terms of
sale and payment of the
purchase money are: one·
third 11 / 31 cosh on hand on
date ot sail, the remaining
two-thirds (2 / 31 to bo paid
no later than two {2) weeks
from date of sale.
Dena H. Ravmond,
Administrator of the Estate
of Martha Robinoon ,
deceased,
40804 State Route 684
Albany. Ohio 46710
{7) 7, 14. 2t, 3tc

the Ellate of Cl•a EtlzHoineo, Doco- .
ESTATE NO . 23791 Founh Current AccQJnt of
Paul A. Bomott, Tru•ee of tho
Tru• under tho Wil of Ella B.
Kimes, DtceMKI.
ESTATE NO. 24817 - Final
and Distributive Account of

Brooks, a widOw, by deed
dated August 8. 1916 , of re·
cord Volume 115, Page 65,
uld Deed Records of Meigs
County .
PARCEL 6 : Situated in the
Township, County and State
aforesaid, in Section 16,
Town 7 . Range 14, Ohio
Company's Purchase . Beglnntng at a point in thlt West
line of Section 16, at E. P.
southwest comer
Allen'r
abOut , 82 rods South oft he
Northwest corner 'of aald
Section 16, thence South
along said Welt line. :r1
chains, 38 213 rods to o
beech tree; on tho point of
tho hilt, thence South 76'11
degrees East 4. 34 chain o;
thence 82 degrees Eall 2
ch1ins; thence North 48
4 chains;
degrees Eall
thence North 50 dogr••
Eall. 3 chaino; thence Eaot2
chains to 1 gum tr•;
North 8 chains to a com
and center tine oloeid S !
tlon 18; thonce Wool ·" 1'
chain; thonce North 15¥1
chains; thence North 2 •2
chains to tho Charry Ran
Road ; thence North wlththit
State Road to E. P. Allan's
Southeast corner; thence
Wall on said Allen ' s south
Una about 4 . 5 chains to the
place ol beginning, contain·
lng 44 acres. more ar .....
Said Parco! 15 baing tho umo.
prornloeo •• conveyed by
Harley H. Haning and Eva L.
Haning, hlo will, to Peorl
Robinson and Martha Ro binson by deed, s,..,tombar

thei

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice is hereby givM thlt
the Board of Education of
tho Meigs Local School District, Maigo County, Ohio,
witt offer lor sale by ••led
bids for eight (BI school
buses and two 121 vans and
two 121 trucks. at tho Trea surer' • office. Meiga local
School Dlotrlct, 1121 South
Third Avenue, Middleport,
Ohio, ot 12:00 noon. July
22. 1986.
The vehicles are it tol·
lows :
·
1. 19!68 Chevrolet buo 4B pa11onger
#SS528F11B24
2. 1972 International bus
66 p111enger
#13662DH348030
3. 1972 International bus
66 pa11enger
#1 38620H346036
4 . 1974 International bus
66 pa11onger
#13672DHA19920
5. 1975 lnternotlonal buo
66 pa11enger
#DOB22EHB37766
6. 1972 lnternotlonal buo
66 pauenger
#136820H348044
7. 1973 lntemotionol buo
88 passenger
• #138&amp;;!CHA20793
8, 1972 International bus

1

66 pauenger
#CSE622V113504
9 . 1176 Dodge Tradaomon
Von - #B21 BB6XD46288
10. 1965 GMC Handi-Von
- #G1001 PE3718A
11 . 1966 Chevrolet (2 toni
Stake Body
#C6538F132745
12 . 1973 GMC Chevrolet
'VI Ton Pickup
#TCY1 43F7D2259
Additional information on
these vehicle• m1y '- Ob·
talned at the Meigs local
Buo Garage. Rutland, Ohio,
742-2990.
erma of Sale wilt ba cosh
or check with positive I. 0 .
Said Board reserve• the
right to waive informalities,
to accept or reject eny and
aU or parts of any and all
bids.
Jane Fry, Traaaurer
Melgo Local School District
621 S, Third Avonu e
Middleport, Ohio 45780
{6130; (717, 14. 21, 4tc

T

-a. ..

_, =·

filuclerloo ...... boon lllod .. the

l'lobato Court. Mtigo C...nty
Ohio, lor approval ' and
ESTATE N0. 24941 - Fi1ol

and Dlobtbuttva
Norma
D• Vmmon,
ol tho ~e ar Ro

tw.a.

II

[low

'

nt of
'Haw-

ESTATE NO. 248&amp;9 '- Final
and .DlltriJutlve Acotillnt of
Joan M. May, Admlnlttrotrtx
of tho
o1 Rova J .

e-.·

iSnel., Snowdon, D«MIId.

ESTATE NO. 215004 - Final
and Dlltributlvo Aacount of

William P. M...... E o! tho~ of Uta L Mdaclo.
O.:und.

ESTATE NO. 2150111 - Fhol

and D....... Aacount of

.lanai 1M GN-. Admlnlotratrbc with tho w•Amllll&lt;ad o1

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
: Plans for repairing the PomeroyMaSQII bridge are finished and
ready to go to bid, acrnrding to Tom
lledrick, the Ohio Department of
'Jransportalion's district planning
engineer out of Marietta.
Hedrick said the six-month job
wUI be sold as soon as ODOT
allocates the $750,1XXJ needed to fund
the project.
M
About 50 Pomeroy, Middleport
and Mason ooslnessmen, officials

and other .concerned Individuals
were In Pomeroy Monday night to
discuss the upcoming bridge repair
with the ooor representatives.
Opportune tbne
Everyone at the meetings tres!al
the priority to consider In the
matter was the safety of the bridle
itself and all were In agree!Tiftlt
that repairs are necessary.
It was alro felt by tbose attending
the meeting, that because the work
will require closing down the
bridge' ooor should make !'Very

e11ort to carry out thr project at the
r111111 opportune time for local
reside! Is.
Local n'!lidents were divided,
howe'Ver, on what the most opportune time for the closing would be.
A show of hands Indica!~ a Feb.
1, 191!7 closing was preferred by the
m'jorlty of those present. A few a I
the meeting were In lavor of a later
closing date of Aprll1, because the
posslbllty of river noodlng would be
Km~ter In February and March and ·
Would bt likely to hamper or stop
ferry service.
More tnOJie)' sugesied

EXPLANATIONS GIVEN - George Dougan,
nations d. the work Involved In repalrlag the
George Dougan, ooor deputy
seated,
and
Tom
Hedrick,
both
o1
the
Oltlo
Pomeroy-Mason bridge at a public meetlnll' held
director, sald the department Is
Monday
night at the Senior Clttuns Center Iii
Department
of
Transportallon,
gave
detailed
explaaware that closing the bridge will
Pomeroy.
be an economic hardship on the
area, and although the job Is
expected to take six months, the stressed th at local oo sinesses on ODOT has no objectio n to foot into the st ructure." He compared
brilge may not be closed to traffic both sides of the river will suffer traffic, the decision wou ld ulti- the work to that of remodeling an
tilt e~ttlre time.
when the bridge closes and rest- mately be up to the cont ractor. old house.
It was suggested that more state dents going to and from places of Hedrick noted that. pedestrian
Ample tbne needed
.
It was also pointed out that some
money be allocated for the job so employment on opposite sides of traffic would be doubtful due to the
proviSions to work double shifts the river will also be greatly nature of the repairs to be made and work can be ca rried out with traftlc
the Uabil ity factor in volved.
oo the bridge and that ODOT would
could be Included In the contract. inconvenienced.
Jones also urged mnsideration of not permit the contractor to keep
thereby decreasing the amount of
She roted thai effons were made
oouble shifts.
the bridge closed longer than
time necessary to complete the during construction of the Silver
"We will admonish the contrac- absolutely necessary. Quick SB!e rt.
work.
Bridge to finish that project in "less
H~rick explained that 35 or 40
than normal time." She urged the to~ to work as fast. as he can," the ~rojec t is Imperative, according
men could possibly do the same same consideration of this project. Dougan commented. "The mntract to Dougan, to allow the contractor
will have a ('()mpletion date and ample time to secure needed
amount ol wcrk In one shift as 20
Pedestrian traffic doubted
men working two shifts.
Dougan assured Sheets that time limits on the length of time the materials, thus saving additional
Speaking to all three ODOT ODOT has considered the project bridge may be closed . But we must tlnle.
"We can 't point out exact tbnes
repreRE!ttatives, Including Howard urgent "or plans would not have give the contrac tor sufficient tbne
unless we know the exact work ,"
to complete the work," he added.
GUJord, dellgn and planning engi· been done 9J fast."
(Continued on Page 6)
Dougan said ODOT believes the
neer, Pomeroy attorney Jennifer
Meigs County Commissioner RISheets voiced concern that she did chard Jones Inquired If pedestrian work can be done in !jlx months or
not ."hear urgency" In their v9J~.. trafllc woold be maintained during less oot there are "no guaraqtees• Ec
~
·as •the3! dlsc:usseQ.the prQject. !!hi?~- ~Irs but was
attmugh until worl!ers begin to actually tear. "
,

c...

. ODOIJ!.y

Notice

·expan~s

LEGAL NOTICE

Sealed bidl will bo · by tho Boord of Putiic Affair,
Poma10y Vilage Hal, 320
Moin St., Po,...,y, Ohio,
12 :00 o' clod&lt; roon, July 24.
1986 for tho following

purpose.
Pointing wat• wortco bulding, locelod on Eaot Main St
Point only Wth will bo ln·
nilhod b¥ the Boord of Putiic
Afleirs. All aqulp"*'t mu• bo
lumilhed b¥ biddora.
Tho Bo.d of Puliic Affairs
hereby rooerv• the right to
rejact anv and 111 bido end to
the bell bid lor tho
purpou,
By ordor of tho Boord of
Putiic Affairs.
JonoWolton
Clork-Tr•o.
VNiago of
Po,...,y
17118. 21

Public Notica
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO ·
Eotata of George M. Ft""·
land , deceated. C111 No .
26.147.
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On July 1. 19B8. In tho
Moigo County Probate Couri.
No. 25.147. Milton E.
Roush, Box 157, SyracuM,
Ohio 46779, wu appointed
Executor of tho Illata of
George M . Freeland. dece-. lito of SyracuH.
·
Ohio 46779 .
Robert E. Buck.
Probata Judge
l.ona K . Nanelroad. Clerk
(717. 14, 21, 3tc

c-

Public Notice

the following -

Pomeroy-Mason span
repair set for bidding

Smith, Docoolld .
ESTATE NO. 24997 - Firiol
and Dlltrlbutiva Account of
E l - AmWebller. Ex..,_
trix of tho Ellate of Ethel E.
Chopmon, Doceoold.
ESTATE NO. 23799 - Final
and Distributive Account of
Keith K.,nady, AdminillrR&gt;r
of tho eotato ol Dw9lt
Kennedy. D..,_od ,
Unlell exceptions are filed
thereto. Mid ecoounto wll bo
for hearing-· Mid
it
on tho 22nd dey of August.
19B6. It which time 'uld
eccounto will ba conoidand continued lromdayto day
... utmolty diopoood ot.
Arry intrnotod mey
file Wrillll1 oxoapllo.. ID llid
IICCOUnta or to rMH. . pertaining to the uecution of tho
trull, not loll th101 ... doyo
prior to tho data ... t&gt;r
heoring.
Robert E. Bud&lt;.
Probate Judge
(7121 . 1tc

Public Notice
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATrER OF SETTLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS, PROBATE COURT, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Accounts and
of

1 Section, 10 Pagao
25 Canto
A Multimedia Inc. NIWIPIPeF

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Tuesday. July 22. 1986

RiehM! Rooenbaum, E o! tho Ellete of utllan G.

Pu~lic

en tine

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
Eotato of Jenaalle R. John·

son, dece11ed, Case No.
25 .188,
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On July 1, 19811. in tho
Moigo Counly Probate Court. ·
CaM No. 25, 1811, Haul A .
Johnoon. 43011 Azalea D~
Columbia. South Caro._,a
29205. wu -intod E. .
cutrix of tho llbta of Jan111ie
A..Johnton, dMinect ..ttof
3e738 PMch FOnt Rood, PD."*"Y· Ohio 487119.
Robofl E. 11uck.
ProbatoJuclgf
Lon a K , NtiMiroad. Clerk
1717. 14, 21. 3tc

sluggis~ly

Reagan to urge
quiet ·diplomacy
with South Africa
.

~

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Repot1er
'. WASHINGTOW{UP!l '-" Pres!J,;;t Reagan hopes to stave off
!jfOwlng congressional pressu re for
11\0re aggressive action In South
J\frica by stressing in a speech
t(lday that the United Stales can be
more influential In Pretoria work·
titg with leaders for racial reform .
Aides said Monday the president
would deliver a "comprehensive
slaternent to lay out his views and
cbnvtctlons with regard lo his South
Atrican policy" before a gathering
~ fore_'c.".~~lcyl~~~~rs i~-~~~ East

R-Kan .. chairwoman rt.lt ssubemimit tee oo Africa. who has draWII ~
&lt;i package of possible sanctlolll to
~je · Invoked against the wltlteminority government
. Dole described the delegation as
'!messen ge rs" dispatched to ' let
Reagan know "something must be
oone" about what he has caiH!d a
"domestic civil rights Issue."
' After the 45-mlnute CNal Oltlce
meeting, Dole told reporters: "I
would say the status quo Is
unacceptable.
, "Ithinktherehastobesorne,_,
aredlble initiative," he said. "I
Room
think It's fair to say there is growing
Reagan planned to reaffirm his concern in Congress that we need to
opposltxmto economic sanctions he be more aggressive and havt&gt;
describes as "punitive," the aides results."
said .
Dole also indicated that unlt'ss
In a preview of lhe speech. there were new ·proposals In
Assistant Secretary of Stat e Allan Reagan 's address, an amendment
Keyes, a black political appointee. calling for sanctions could be
said the administration opposes attached to the bill to raise the
majority rule In South Africa unless national debt, a necessary piece d.
It Is accompanied by safeguards to
Ieglslat ionexpectedtocomeuptllis
p,rotect the white minority popula· week.
lion and also opposees sanctions
Kassebaum. whose sanctions
that would isolate whites.
package Is less sweeping than a
Reagan was expected to stress plan passed by the HO\ISP !lilt
that a trade embargo would hurt month, said she bell!!Ves Reqan
black workers and would deprive could make Smith African Pml·
the United States of rare minerals, dent P.W. Botha underslarid 1M
~eluding manganese, chrome and
revulsion Americans feel for the
diamonds - a po,lnt' stressed by a;parthe ld policy ol racial
White House chief of staff Donald segregation.
Regan last week.
Kassebaum said she suggested
. Reagan had been expected ·to Reagan press Botha tor the rele.se
li)lnounce that he was opening new of Nelson ManerIa , jailed leader of
channels to South African black the African National Co11gre15, and
ltaden. by naming Robert Brown, a f9r legalization rt. -the outlawed
black North Olrollna bu~SJ'IIllll, ANC.
$ u.s. amllassador to .Pretoria, · "We'vP got to be more per-suaBut Brown · withdrew. his name slve," Lugar SB!d. "I think the
trom conslderatlo.n .Mohday totiolf- pres_ldent urxjerstaitc!S lliat he
tng questions abOUt JlliSI business really has to address the tact that
dealings.
.
, the · !J9uth African government,
· Reagan said Monday that · · really basn't rnoyed wry muc:b In
wOOE!Ver Jto. chooses -lor the post ..: the, last ~ar. "
· .
,,
"will be the best one available for
The JIOWie btl!, ·offi!ml by Rep.
the job, and I'm not going to look at Ron Deiluma, D-Callt., and •
\!'hat color he is."
proved on a surpt1sing voice vote
. 1n a prelude to loday's speech, June 18, would cut dt all trade
Reagan met with Senate GOP between the United Stille&amp; and
Jel!der Robert Dole rt. Kansas: Sen. Soutlj Africa and ocdet_ all u:S..,
Richard Lugar, R-l!ld., ,chairman companies doing buAinessln Soulll
Of the Foreign Relations Commit- Mrlca to leave,within six ,months ot·
tee: and sen. Nancy Kassebaum, Its beCOrt'li!Jg law.
•.

111· '

' '

· ."'-" · ·

·.
•

mws -

Fonner Ohio Slate Unlvers~
Ioeeblll OOileh WOOlly Jla¥81 Is greeted by VIce
PI w!llt Georp Bush, left, lonner Gov. James A.
RHdN, ric~Jt, lllld Republlcan eUie dJalrmaa

Michael CoUey, center right, tlurtns tte fund-raiser In
Columoos Monday lor Rhodes' 11186 guhematorlal
campaign. Behind Bush Is Columoos Mayfl' Dana
IUnehart. (UPI)

Bush campaigns for Rhodes
during Monday fund-raiser
B:r LEE LEONAIW
l[PI8bl&amp;llllou8e lltp&amp;rl.er
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - Vice
Presldrnt Georgi' Blllh told rmre
than 1,!Dl Ohio RepubliCans Monday evmlng they must help contlnue the '"Reagan revolution" this
laii by eltct1ng a Republlcan
gowm10r and senator.
1n addressing a $1!10-a-plate
fund-raising dinner, thr vice presl·
dent also tOOk the opportunity to
laud Pre.ident ~apn for his

opponunlty for their school-age
children.
"We cannot rest unt Uevery man
and woman that wants a job wit h
dignity In the priva te sector has a
job," said Bush, "oot we're on the
road to oolng this, and we~ men
lllce Jim Rhodes and Bob Taft to
keep that recovery going."
Bush said Rhodes "cares about
the working men and women~ this
country, He never forgot how he got
elected In the first place, and he
~s._llgalnstworldterrorDI!Ver will. It's jobs and trying to
ISm and conununlsm In Central
help people . oo t there that are
Ameica, and call~ lor an ''all-out working ror a living.
natloltal crusade" against drugs In
"Your election Is going to be
Alnl'riCan·schools.
watched as a major signal of the
H he was hoping Reagan's rooodofthiscountry," saldthe vlce
popularity would propel hbn to the president, adding that the Demo·
Republican presidential nomina· crats "want to show that the
tion In two years, Bush dld .r otsay Reagan I'I!Vdution Is over."
so.
I&gt;
"They want the status quo," said
But In reftlrn tor 1t11 e&amp;rts in .Bush, "a Democratic governor and
ral!tlngaal!lltlmatedfi!O,!Dltlrthe a Democratic senator."
OOP tlcltiet In 01110, B!IIIU'I!Celved a
Bush said he belleves "this 1s a
btiolt ttiWirtl the Wht~'Houaetrom gQOd year for upsets" which could
gu~to,lal IIOIIliiiee James -A. send Rep. Thomas Kindness, RRilodes llld former Olllo State Ohio, to the Senate In place of
footl;la,lJ coach Woody Hayes, who Demoeratic Sen. John Glenn.
lnii'Oduced ,him.
Before the dinner, the vice
· Bulb ti!'Jed the Ohio Repub!Jcans president appeared at a $1,001111 , ..n llf,'tiel RIIDdH u(l his a-penon tund-~g reception atN I a •• Harlllltlll Cowlty ' tended' by about 100 Republicans.
~Robert A. 1'atlll, tn , All )X'OCeeds trom the reception and
prOvide joba .• l'llr Ohlo1111 and
·
•,

~ '

...

· --~-

dinner went tq the Rhodes·Taft
campaign fund . Officials estim ated
about $250,000 was rai sed.
"In just a few months, Ohioans
can send all America ns a message," said Bush. "Show them tljat
you believe that we can stlll create
opportunity, jolls in this great
country and in this great Buckeye
Stat e.

"Give us a goverror In this state
who u rrlers ~mds what opportunity
rea lly means. Give us a lieutenant
governor who'~ going to stand
loyally by his side, Give us two men
who've smwn tbne and again that
they care about jolls - jobs for all
the people of this great state,
q:&gt;[Drtunlty for !'Very yoong kid In
school here In the state of Ohio. And
that ml'llns rei!lect Jbn Rhodes,
elect Bob Taft and send that tealn
so they can gov11f11 this great state
the way It ought 10 be."
Busll sald 9Jme critics have
q:&gt;posed the use of American
support troops In raids on cocalneproressing centers In rural Bollvla.
"I strongly bell!!Ve that It Is not
only the right thing for us to do, It Is
our obligation to act," said Bush. He
said It will not oiuy help Bolivia
control "narco-terrorlsm," but
"we're acting to protect our own
schools, our own neighborhoods,
our families."

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
real gross national product expanded by $9.8 billion or a lbnid 1.1
percent at an annual rate in the
second quarter of 1986, the weakest
quarter In more than three years,
the Commerce Department reported today.
The government also announced
an upwardly revised Increase of 3.8
percent for the GNP for the first
three months of the year.
So far this ye~ the GNP has
Increased by 2.4 percent at an
annual rate, according to analysts
wlth the Bureau of Ecorornlc
Analysis.
The $7.5 bllllon positive adjustment to the first quarter growth
figures, from $26.1 billion to $33.6
biUion, was accounted for by
upward revisions in net exports,
non-farm Inventories and national
defense purchases. analysts said.
1nven tory growth was the biggest
contriootor, with auto Inventories
accounting for about half of the
revision, they said.
The annual rate of growlh for that
quarter was originally reported·a~
2.9 percent.
The second quarter GNP was the
weakes t sinCl' th~ final quarter Of
1982, when the economy expan~
by just 0.6 percent.
:
A $l) billion or 3.4 percent gain 'In
real ftnal sales was partially offset
by a $aJ.4 llllion det::llne In rM!t
ex(DrtS, Indicating a large share:or
consumer spending Is sUI! bel!'&amp;
drained off by Imports In spite Q-r
sharp declines in the value of Ute
dollar aga inst major fo reign
currencies.
:
Real personal oonsumptlon Increased $31 .3 billion In the seconil
quarter and real ooslness lnventorfes Increased $19.6 billion, down
from $39.9 billion In the fl~t
quarter.
:
Government purchases or goqis
and services Increased $f.7 bUIIod,
oot non-residential fixed lnVj!St·
ment !ell back S3 billion.
Real GNP Is measured .IJI
constant 1!MI2 dollars. Measured In
cu!TEIII tt)llars. the economy t&gt;X·
pen~ by 3.2 percent last quarter,
Adjusted gross rl'lll GNP In ~
dollars was $3.666trillion at the enil
d the !ll'COnd quarter.
Altlllugh the weak !ll'COnd QUI!!'·
ter gain came as no sut')ll'lse allll!l
Indications that lite trade dei!Cit
had ~creased and ln~iitnal 'pro.
wction declined during the perbj;
It stU! spells trouble for d.f\Cl$1
forecasts of 4 percent G~ (II'Owth
In 1986.
'
•
'

�•

Comment·

.. &lt;·

Page-2- The Daily Sentinel ::
PomerOy-Middleport. OhiO ::
Tuesday, July 22, 1986
·

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

=•

!Slm~ ~L-r • ..,....,., d ..
~v

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

A MEMBER ol The· United Press Internatio nal, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

:DJ

LE'ITERS OF OPINION ar~ welco me. They Sloold be less than
words
long. All letters are subject to editing and ITII St be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned Ieuers w111 be published. L etters should be In
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Fix Gramm-Rudman
The Gramm-Rudman law was written !n Congress could avoid ultimate
responsibility for cutting the deficit. When that part of the law was
Invalidated, It's sponsors solemnly vowed to get Congress off the hook
again.
By Ceding respollsibllity for automatic budget cuts to a nearly invisible
high-level bureaucrat - the comptroller general - Gramm-Rudman
assun!d both Congress and the j:f'E'Sident that there woold be someone else
to blame If painful budget cuts were made at the end of each year until the
budget Is balanced In 1991.
But the Supreme Court dumped that au tom atic cut provision, say lng the
comptroller general is unqualified to make budget cuts since he is a
creature of the legislative branch - not the executive, which, under the
Constitution, Is th~ only branch that can carry out laws.
Opjxmmts of Gramm-Rudman hailed the court ruling, saying It was
time Congress took back Its constltutllnal responsibility for the nation's
purse.
But those who wrote Gramm-Rudman said they would rewrite it this
time and "fix" it -a fix aimed at gu a ran t~P in g Congress could once again
avoid its responsibility.
Without the fix, Congress and the president - If they wantto comply with
the law- will likely have to make nearly across- the-board budget cuts this
fall just before the elections.
Nobody really wants to do that, although opinion is spilt on whether
Congress will have the fortltudeanyw-dy. Some say there are more political
points to be gained by cutting the deficit than sparing favored trograms.
Others see an advantage in the q:&gt;poslte course.
No matter, say the authors of the Gramm-Rudman law, SPns. Phll
Gramm, R-Texas, Warren Rudman. R·N.H.. and Ernest Hollings, D·S.C.,
we'll take care of any lack d congressional stomach.
Their solution Is to change the office of the comptroller general,
currently held by Charles Bowsher, so tha t tt fit s the Supreme Cburt 's
constitutional definition.
ThE' authors would transfonn the comptroller general, and the agency he
heads, the General Accounting Office, into a quasi·lncrpend&lt;&gt;nt executive
branch agency , something like the Federal Reserve Board or the Fecrral
TradE' Commission.
That might not !nUnd like a big deal, but to members of Congress, who
depend on the GAO to watch (lller executive agencies. it is.
The GAO currently "Is a principal means by which the legislative tranch
conducts oversight of executive bt anch programs and expenditures,"
according to a 1979 update of the 1921 law tha t authorized the agency. The
of6ce, among other things, makes sure "tunds are used fort heir lntencrd
purposes."
Changing the GAO "would deprive Congress of much of Its Investigatory
capability and would drastica lly compromise the value of the General
Accounting Office." complained Rep. Jack Brooks, D-Texas, in qJpOsing
the shift.
Rudman, while saying Brooks is probably sincere In his doubt s,
questiOns the commitment of others who q:&gt;pose the comptroller change.
"ThE're are others who don 't want any change In spending and they wUI
come up with their own highfalutin' reasons Ito oppose the chan ge!."
Rudman said.

Letter to the -Editor
Ripped off again
On a trip to Columbus this past
wet&gt;k I not iced quitE' a dlffprence in
the priCI' of gasoline.
Regular leaded gasoline was 59
cents per gallon. Now these are the
same brand of stations that are in
this area. Super America. Suooco,
Sohlo. Shell, etc. If they can sell it
lor 59 cents there, why not here?
Also stopped off In Lancaster to
look at two major construction
sit es.
On the east side of of Route 33 is a
joint vocationa l school just about
finished .

On this date In history:
In l86C.In the first battle of Atlanta, Cbqfederate troops under Gen. John
Hood were defeated by Gen. William Sherman's forces from the North.
In 1933, Wiley Post completed his first solo flight aroum the world In
seven days, 18 hours and 45 minutes.
In 1972, Pres~t Richard Nixon chose Vtce President Sptro Agnew as
his running mate In their rHlectlon bid.They defeated Democrats George
McGovern and Sargent Shr1ver In a record land!llde vote In November.
In 1974, a cease-fire agreement was reached on Cyprus be!wl!en Greece
arid Turkey.
In 1983, the Polish military government lifted martlallaw.
In 1985, Pres~! Jean· Claude Duvaller d Haltl became tresldent for
Ute 111 a constitutional referendum that critics said was rigged.

A thoughllortheday: Psychiatrist Karl MennlJ:IIlerwrote, "You cannot
really ~yourself and do yrorself a favor wttlllut doing other people a
favor, and vice versa."

•

TO~\'

WAST!: ANP UMVEI«S@UNP

NUKE TESTS ANV PUMfS
B~LOVol US

;J

(

;::

: ·
·; ·

:: ;
'·, ·
::: :
: ; .;
•
· :•
·: ·
•

Giants Joe Hanis is
•
wantmg more money

•
:

•

r

}

STOPS REDS - NewYoli&lt;pltcher RkkApilleraflresastrlke during
Munday night's ABC-TV "Game of the Week" In Cincinnati's
Riverfront Stadium. The Mels hurler scattered l!lpt bits and fanned a
career hilh nine Reds as New York snapped a three-game .,sing
streak, 4-2. (UPI)

'

Scoreboard ...
'

WASHINGTON - When two
competing government contractors
get involved in a hissing match, the
results can be.unexpectro(y rt"Veal·
lng. That's what ltappened In a
controversy that has pitted two of
the largest manufacturers of drug·
testing equipment against each
other In a battle for the lucrative
Pentagon contract to test service·
men and women for llleg al
substances.
Syva Co. had the origin al con·
tract to test military personnel with
Its EMIT urinalysis kits. But two
years ago , responding to coniplain ts that the laboratory results
were Inaccurate, poorly controlled
and unfairly Implicating lnnorent
servicemen, the Pentagon reopened the testing contract.
Syva argued that the Inaccuracies were due to bad lab work, not to
its EMIT kits, but the Defense
Logistics Agency awarded the

contract to Roche Diagnostics
Systems Inc. Its Abuscreen test kit
was slmllarto EMIT, but reUed on a
sllghtly different trehnology. .
Syva protested, but the General
Accounting OO!ce ruled early this
yearthatthe Pentagon had not been
unfair In givbtg the test contract to
Roche.
The legal documents filed by both
sides have been reviewed by rur
reporters Brian Bloch and Donald
Goldberg. They provided a !asci·
natlng Inside glimpse of the drug
tests now being administered by
government agencies, schools and
corpora tlons across the country.

.

In fact, If what the two &lt;parrellng
contractors claim Is true, the
urinalysis tests being given are not
only Inaccurate but cannot detect
the difference between legal and
illegal substances In many cases.
For example, Syva's claim -

undlsJNted by Roche - Is that
neither the EMIT ror Alniscreen
test can "distinguish between the
use c1 heroin or codeine," and
\mUld slmp\Y Identify the presence
of an "opiate" In the tested person's
bo~. Heroin Is highly addictive and
Ulegal; codeine Is a common
Ingredient of prescrtptton cough
syrups and other medications.
The documents show a similar
problem with testing for amphetamines. Abuscreen detects the
presenre of amphetamines, but
wesn't single out the presence o!
"the abused drug methampbetam·
lne," according to Syva. On the
rther hand, Syva acknowledged, Its
EMIT Identifies methamphetam·
lne but doesn 't Isolate other abused
~shoots ol the parent drug
amphetamine.
· In addition, neither test does well
in singling oot the presence of PCP,
an extremely dangerous substance

w.ee.iQ'I G"""-"

Majors

....

B:J ~ 1on

..

i\'1'\"' Yor~ ..
Clr\•f'l and

4~

4\ . ~
H ..\17

Tor-on1o .

~1

lla lrl mon' ..
DM n:ur

.. 49 43 .53.1
... ~1 4~ . ~1 1

MUwa ui«'f' ..

4.1

~

.47.1

Nrw York at Cloclnnatl. nl£ht
Monll'l'wl 1111 Houston. n l~thl

Leaders.

7
7 1,~

R
1(1

......

I Eiasrd on 11 pll111· ap~ arun N'S x no. of
II IUll f'~ t-BCh tram has p ~yed 1 .

NaUoniLI Le111Ut•

\.ll jJ

K ahhpd
Ca lifo rnia ..
Trxas.

... 49 4.1 .i.11 .47 .J6 .SUi 21-1
L'hicaJ!o ...
.-i2 ~ 9 .f62 fil,
Kansa~ f"H)
t 1 ~ .462 6 ~;
Sf'a!llf'
.......... .. .oa:l i1 .442 K\J
MiiUl('S()I.a . . ...... .. ... ... ..:fl ~ 4l!l 10\.)
Oakland
........JR .~7 .400 121-:.
_
Mc:inday's Resullll
rvw York K Tf'xus 4
Clf'vf'land 5, Cllk~ 2

Milll¥'00ta 1. [)(-troll n

that has caused widespread crime
and vlotenre In many U.S. cities.
Both tests gave positive·results for
"closely related analogs" of PCP,
rut also for high concentrations cl a
common rough medicine Ingredient called dextrornetborpban,
according to a Syva document.
The oompany documents also
detail other problems In drug testa,
such as variations In testblg
temperatures and the presence d
other substances In the blood·
stream. For example, a pinch of
salt added to a urine sample can.
neutralize the testing chemical and
result In a "clean" test.
The problem revealed by the
companies' documents Is not that
Innocent parties will be wrongly
identified as drug users, but just the
opposite: Drug users will escape
detection because o! the (other
company's) faulty test kit.

K.11 nsa~

f'l fy G. &amp; l!lmorr 1

Mllw&lt;~u l«~· ~.

C'a lltornta J

Tortlnto fl. &amp;-all k' J
Ook land 5, Elo!lton 2

....._.Q'II GIUIHII
tSI:'avC'I'
4-71 .at

l:bston

tMctl )ar

~2 1 .

'J'Mws

Oak llind

3:15 p.m.

ICOI'l'l'a

6-TJ

~~

Nt&gt;w

Yor k

rRasmu.\Sl'n 11-21. j:,10 p.m.
Ollrago IDolson 7·91 at f'lf"Vf'limd
1f'andlolll fl.71. 7:3~ p.m
Mlllrli'~&gt;OI&lt;l 1Biylf'vf'fl 9-AI al frlml l
!Trr l1'11 Mlr. 7:.1."i p .m
K.an!&gt;&lt;ts Cih
iSa llf'rh a~:l'n ~ 101 il l
Balli m011' IOiWL'&gt; &amp;tit 7::fl p m
Mllw.·uukw I Nif'\·~ R-1 1 111 C'a l lfo rnl;~
1Su11on 1411, JO·.l.'i p m .
Toronto 1Kr,· 9-f.L ar Sl:-&lt;~llk• r i.&lt;J n ~ ron
9-6 1, 1U:15 p.m.

7R lXllm xr.
A.1 :1.11 111 :tl."'
7R 2R3 ~ ..112

Brooks, Mil
BalfY"o&gt;. Mi l

Brown. Sf'

!12 :ffill9 ..lll
!II 350 \14 .J'lti
fli 2R7 H9 JJO

G" ynn. SO

Sou, LA
OberiCJC'II,A tl

Baros. Hoo
P\11 .

!12 344 1m .399
~ 316 94 .:m
l l a~·f'S. Phll
!+I :!J6 ~ .'8!
Si:hmldl. Phil
!ll .r.! l 9..1 .NI
t\merlcan Leaaue
Bo~ . 8o5
If, J'll 11fi .Jiil
Matllni/;IY, NY
9r4 400 136 .:WO
Easlf'r, NY
fl6 313 I(f, ,J,J;
Ra~· .

1~

Puck!"! I. M lnn

9.'1 400

~.

{() 362 ):1) .33.1
18 291 95 .3:li
93 3'73 J2l .:m
!W 2R8 92 .11 9
92 369 "117 .117
a-1 395 1%1 ..1 16

&amp;&amp;

You m. MU

Brll. Tor
F'Jfol chrr . Tex
·JL!t'I'K'r. Ca l •

F'm.andf2:. t o

-.. ...

J.'fi

~

National l.t'iii(\K' - Schm idt . Phil :ll ,
Da\'l&lt;o. Hoo ~ Par.-r . Cln 19: Mar!l haU,
L4. lR: Hornrr. All and Slubblo;. 1./i. 17

1\mt'rk'an LcaRUf' Paj!llarulo.

NY

and

CallSf'CO. O;Jk.
Ratflf'ld.

Tor :1.1.

11l'I J, Tor and Kln,ICITJan , Oak 22.
KM•IWif41n
National LA&gt;~ - Schmldl . Phil

n:

w~"''" Ci.un~~o
Tf'lta~ al Nrw York
Bo~to n at Oakland
Toronto a t Sf'a ltlf'

fanf'r, NY 70: Davis. Hoo G.'): ParKl' r.
Cln 6.1; Brooks. Mil 511.

OI ICIIj!U a t CIC"P l:md . n12111
Ka nsa.~ C'h a t Bllllimorr . n ]J!hl
Mlnllf'!'IOia 3r OMrolt. niJEhl
M U•·a u ~N' a t r.~~ nroml u. n ight

St•a Ill: ManlrtRIY , NY 6R

Amf'rk'an l.taguf' - Can..'it'NI . Oak 1\;
Brll. Tor 74: ~nrr. Cal T.l: f&gt;m;lf'r .

--

Nationa l U&gt; ~ r - COk&gt;man. Sri . ~ :
Davi-;, Cln «1: Ralr~Ni , Mil oM : Durcan .

lA ~: Doran. Ho.~ 33.
NA.110NAL LEAGUE
Eo...
WLPtt. Gll.
.vl

Mon t n&gt;;~l

Sr.

.. 11S2 .a! !l

Loul~ .

......11 ~I .t!'i Zl

. ..... .. ~~ tl .M.'l. ~ -Ll 5.Jl 1

s.tn Oif'RO ...... .

~

. ~1

~

-1.146

ri nclnll&lt;! ll
Arlanrot .,

ILYi Aru.'r!N. ... .. .. .

Among them are misleading adver·
tlsing, high-pressure sales tactics,
overpriced and unnecessary accl·
dent coverage and hidden add-on
char!J!S."
· Many vt-teran travelers no longer
expect the airline, hotel and rental
car companies to be part of the
solution - hut they continue to hope
(usually In vain) that the Industry
will cease being part o! the
problem.

.. .. . . . 46 47 .495

...... . l'l 49 At1j 71&gt;1
. .£! ~ .-l.'i7 II' .'

Montlu,)" " ~

C"hlf'ns:o ti. Sun Dlf'5!0 I
Nf"'4· York • . Clncln natl ::

TUMCIIQ''J GameK
Sa n Dlf1;!o ,Mrf"llllf'l'li "t-31 ill ClLira$1P
i l..v nr h 111. H~ p. m.
l ao fviW~ ll"r n&lt;~ 1·1 1 at Pl ll ~bull!h
~~ Cin&lt;'lnna!i

G. i 1 a1 Arlanw

.Mahlrr H~9i. 7: .M) p.m.

! VOumill'\'l 10~1 at Hous10n
f.7 L. IU"i p.m

Mo niiY'lJI
1R,~·11n

Slln FranrLo;ro IBluf' 7-h
1Thdor 1~ 1. ll::ri p.m .

~~

SF and

Rawlf'y . PhU l l-6.

AmC'rk'WI l.(oliR\lf' - ('If'~ . 80': ]f, ~ ·
Boddk'kcr. Bal! 12·:'1: Rasmu.'i.Vfl . 1\'Y l1
2: &amp; yd. lb U-6; HiRUl'ra, MU U 1.

lianrttl 8ua AW'"If'
on I lnnl nji; ~~; numbl:•r &lt;i ~mf'!&gt;
rnC"h tram has P,yf'd 1
Na llonal Li'~ - O}f'da, NY 2. 11:
Hora•~NII. LA 2. 1~: Srofr. Hou l :n:
F'o~h. S1L 2.+1 : Rtw:ldrn . Pill 2-l.'l
j Ba~

-·

!\1.

Lou~!~

SERVICE
BRAKES

MorTis. Dl'f 1.19: WI!! , Cal 1l1: Hl)o. 0&lt;1k
1.2.1: Hl~f'l'll. M il an d lan~ton . S&lt;-a 120.

.....

Amf'rYM Li'a,Rllf' -

Aa~ .

Balr ?1:

Rlgh(1tl, flo"V 22: HPrnanck&gt;z, fA-r IS :
H1rt11. Trx L~: Hf'nki'. Tor and !'~an~) .

.... u.

Berry's World

:-ia

SEll MOAI11C
EXTIA

CLEVELAND (UP! l - Pat
Corrales received word of his
four-game suspension just before
Monday night 's game with the
Chicago White Sox.

ALIGNMENT
MOST AMERICAN MADE CARS

The Oeveland manager went to

.'
' .
..

......-.

- ' ,

•

....

, ~~
'7-G

"OK .- EVEIWIODY TO THE DISPENSARY

FOR URINE 7'1!STSI"

'',.:',

.

,. '
.. '

)'

. t ···'
.'

·.' ~ --~~~

the clubhouse at 6:30 p.m. EDT,
shOwered and ~merged in a
business suit.
"I figured I might as well leave it
In (coach) Johnny Goryl's hands ,"
said Corrales,. who went up to ~
press room to have dinner with
team president Peter Bavasl. "I
don't really have much else to say.
"I'm not going to appeal this. I'll
pay the flnl' and I'Dbe back Friday
night (In Texas) .''
Corrales, who has managed the
Indians since July 31 1983, and has
gone 213-262 In that span, was
suspended and fined along Monday
with oakland pitcher Dave.Stewart
by American League President Dr.
BobbY Brown.

.,

Bank·BY·Maill

..

"" oo:J5 10GE

,.,cr
""'""v
, .... .. . o

... '"'

., ,., , 10 1u1 n

f l\OM

$25 66

suspended 4 tills

'•

following a walk to Ozzie Smith. It
was the second two- homer game of •
McGee's career· thP first coming In
Ga me 3 of the 19!!2 World Serif&gt;•
against Milwaukee.
Elsewhere in th e NL. Philadel·
phia beat Atlanta 3·1. Chicago
defeated San Diego 6-1, the New
York Mets topped Cincinnati 4·2
and Houston nipped Mont real 8-7.
In American League games, the
New York Yan kees topped Texas
8-4, Cleveland downed Chicago 5-2,
Minnesota bian ked Detroit 1-0.
Kansas City Jxoat BaltimorP 6-1.
Milwaukee tlimmed Ca lifom ia 5-:l.
Oakland defea ted Boston 5·2. and
Toronto handled SPa ttle 8-3.
PhDiles 3, Braves 1
At Atlanta, Mike Schmidt hit a
two-out, two-run single in the ninth
inning to lift thco PhiUies . Kent
Tekulve. J 1, pitched two innings to
earn the victory an d Stwe Bedro
sian pitched the ninth for his 12th
save. ReliPVer Jeff Dedmon. ~-5 .
took the loss.
Cubs 6. Padres I
At Chicago, rookie Jamil' Moyet
allowed five hit s over eight inni ng&lt;.

WE INSTALL FRONT
1 .~~ BRAKES ON MOST
. '""""-", AMERICAN CARS

J...--0.,.,.

Pat CorTales is

\

•••
..
.

..----------....
FREE

So!; 2 . ~:

Na rklnal l .f' a~ l' - Hf'arOOn . M rl ~ ­
Smith. Hou li: VL'orf"f'~. SrL lfi: Franco.
('] n, ~if'. SO, ilrwl ~ lt h. Chi L't

._,
·.'

KEABAUGH'S OF CHESTER RESTAURANT

NaTiona l IL&gt;.,;IK' - Slxltt. Hou lit
V11kmlll'lol. LA 142; Wf'k'h. LA U.l:
Smllh. All lll : f'trnantt-1. NY 110
i\mf'rlc'an LU,iUC' - Clmw&gt;ru; , Ibs 1"14:

7·~

p.m
Phriml&lt;'lphl;• 1Gru;s

K r~·.

7: O}f'da. NY U-2:

Amf'rlcan Lt•ag1u• - C'Jf'mtns ,

Hou ston R Montrr ul 7
sr . J.wi:o; 11. Si:LII rrant'l'-&lt;'0 :1

1TPrn 0.21.

t' ffna nrh. ,.,.., t!
2: Vstm;.urla. LA 12-': Knt'JlPl'l" . Hou l2

N&lt;I IIOI'IDJ U'a,l\lr -

with the Giants.
McGee got St. Louis a 1.() lead in
thE' first when he blasted a Carlt on
offering into the upper deck In left
field. The home run was the fi rst hit
In the upper deck at Busch Stadium
since Cincinnati' s Nick Esasky's on
Aug. 14, 1984. The run marked the
seventh consecu tive game the
Cardinals have scored In thE' first
inning.
"Willie really smoked th at one,"
St. Lou is manager Whitey Herzog
said. "We have tJUr homers In oor
last fi ve games and no stol en bases.
It's been a crazy year, ain't it ?"
Ca rlton gave himself a 3-1 lead
when he drillrd a 3-2 Mathews pitch
into the right. field stand! to drive in
Chris Brown and Bob Melvin. It
was Carlton 's 13th car~P r home ru n
and his first since May 16, 1984 when
he hit a grand slam off Fernando
Valenzuela In Los An~les.
"He pitched well enough to win ,"
Craig said . "He just didn 't hit
enou gh home ru ns. Eliminate
McGee and it's different."
McGee tied the score with a
two- run homer In the fourth.

••

By United Press lntematlonal
after he, his agPnt , attorney John
One All-Pro began a holdout
Langel. and team officials spent
Monday and another virtually ruled
sevE'ral hours reviewing the agreeone out.
ment. J aworski said that a four·
Joe Morris. who want s a ra isf
hour meeting on SatW'day pro·
after rushing for a New York
dul'ed the co ntract agreement.
Giants' record 1,3.'36 yards last
Running back Hennan Hunt er
season, was missing Monda y when
t.&gt;camp thP third player toleave thl'
the team 's veteran s were required
Eagles' training camp In as many
to report to training camp.
days. Ryan said HuntE'r , who was
In Miami, Dan Marino said a
thP club's kickoff rl'turner as a
repeat of his training-camp walkout
rooki e last sPason, left camp after
of a year ago is unlikely, although meetings Sunday night.
little has changed in his contract
Eagles guards Steve Kenney and
situation with the Dolph).ns.
Gret:t Namn have also left ca mp
Morris is in the opt ion year of a witlout permission. Kenney left
contract that will pay him $157,300 Saturday after he was demoted to
this season. He wants to renegotiatl'
third string and Naron , who had
and reportedly is asking for a been a starter. joined him on
signing bonus of close to ~1 mUlion. Su11day becau SP he apparently
Besides Morris, tight end Don want ed to return home to OC' with
Hasselback was the only other his fi ancee.
veteran not to report to the Giants'
At Gr('('if'y. Colo.. the DPnvPr
camp. He has an Injured hamst iing Bmncos announced fi ve ru ts at
and is expected to retire. The their rookie and free-agent camp.
Giant s also signed one of thei r four Wi&lt;k• receivers James Quates of
second-round picks, safety Gret:t NE'bras ka -Omaha: and J ohn De·
Lasker.
Baer of C&lt;:'ntra i Mich igan; ki cker
Marino reported to the Dolphins' Brad Burditt !rum Missouri; and
training camp at St. Thomas cent er· gu ard MikP Mon·is of N.E.
University along with olhpr vetP· Missouri St.. were lti mmrd .
ran s Involved In lhP passing ga m ~ .
Defe nsive back Van ?Parry,
For reporting, he received an from Notre Dame, was placed on
$8'i0,00l bonus, which will be paid in thf:o injured reserve list. but a
three yearly insta llmentsof$:W.OOJ Broncos spokesman sa id he has left
and one pay ment of $100,00! ca mp and will not return whcn hi s
beginning in 1987.
left hip strain Ls heal ed.
Marino staged a 37-day walkout
At Smithf ield, R. I. , the AFC
last summer. Marino's rontrac t champion New F.ngl and Patriots
expires aft er this season and he waived second -yea r running back
would become a free agmt if the Jon Williams for failing hi s pt\Vsical
Dolphins do not sign him before and put missing rookie free-agent
Feb. I.
defen sive end Aaron Moog on thc
Ma rino and Morris could learn "resPrvP- did-not -report" list.
from AI Harris, who sat out last
season and missed the Chicago
Bears' run to the Super Bowl.
At Platteville, Wis .. a s&lt;ire bui
happy Harris says his feeling for Scioto results
the game is returning after 1'h
ONE WAY TO BEAT THE HEAT -Detroit (JiarterbackErtc Hipple
years away from football and the
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI I cools
of! alter the first ful day of Lions training Monday at Rochester,
Bears.
Livlus paced the fas test mile of his
Mich.
(UPI)
Harris. a starting linebacker for career to sco re an upset victory in
the 1984 Bears, sat rut last season In Monday night's featured race at
a cont ract dispute. He signed last Scioto Downs.
week.
The win ner. driven by William
At Thousand Oaks, Calif .. run- Wa tters. led all the way to beat out
ning back Darryl Clack. the SPa Stonn by three- qua rters of a
Cowboys' second -round draft pick. iengt h. Livlus covered the mile In
1: 57 J.5 a nd rl'turned $2l ffJ to win.
reached a oontract agreement.
Th&lt;' l'Ontest was billed as a
Cowboys vice president Joe Bailey
CHESTER. OHIO
malchup between SPa Stor m an d
sa id he and Clack's agent, Bruce
(FORMERLY CLAY'S. S.HAKE HAVEN)
Allen. worked out a coni ract during Stormy Summer. who finished
third. Sea Stonn brought a thr('('·
a series of telepho ne conversations
~~·
~~--~
race winning st ~ak In to the contes t
Sunday.
OPEN
WATCH FOR OUR
BREAKFAST
7 DAYS
At West Chester. Pa .. VE'teran and Stormy Summer had won six
GRAND OPENING
SERVED
Phil adelphia Eagles qu arterback strai ght.
MON. THRU FRI.
In tiv' S('Venth race, the 5-3-l
SUNDAY
Ron Jaworski reported to training
camp, cred iting owner No nnan
trlfecta l'Omblnat lon of Skipper 1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~9~:3~0~~~~~~~
Ivan. Aunt Minnie and Cro wn Time 1Braman with resolving his co ntract
Lee was wort h $2,ffi.Ul
dispute with the team.
A crowd of 2.R77 wagered
Jaworski , 35. signed a fo ur· year
cont rac t worth more than S2mlllion S26R.43.'i

HI~. Mil Z.15: Dllrwln. Mil 2.Kl: WITt ,
Ca l :un: MrCBJklll. Cui .126.

Pblladrl phla l , Atlan ta 1

rRholrn ~r. 7:.-r; p.m.
Nrv.· York 10jN11 U Z1

Hf'i'D'r.IOn . NY

l'lk'*'•
...........

121

46

..+!

Hoo!'!on... ..
Sun F ranclw:l ..

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

4(1 ~~

. ~ 17''•
......1} ~ ..L'E 'll

PtllladPiphia ...
f'h \c ;t~ .

Amf'rlcan LA'aJNl' -

:'!4: C~mwolo!!l. ("Ill tl: Pl'Uis. Cal 2.1:
~· ookl s, Se-a and Wli!IOn, KC' 22.

lill'l . ~ ­

..

r-;ry.· York

Robert Walters

tracts, carefUlly structured to make
the customer responsible for Virtu·
ally everything that goes wrong.
When the Wall Street Journal
recently surveyed the Industry, the
newspaper suggested that the field
was rife with "chicanery" and
summarized the situation In one
pltl\Y paragraph:
"Rental car companies have
many ways c1 separating naive
customers ' from their money.

Ph tlack&gt;Jphla at A Hanra. n ~hr

M' L 1\"1. GB
. . 57 :l'\ .6ll ~I 41 .:'164
S

l'lti SIIJ fl! h

unusually heavy.
Frontier Is hardly the on(y airline
that routinely lnconveillenres Its
customers. For example, here at
O'Hare, Unlt(l!l, the country's
largest air ca rrler, has eleva tal the
overloading of a hub airport to a
fine art.
" I! I were a passenger, I would be
skeptical about an airline bragging
about its service, " says MUton G.
Kuolt, the unusually candid presl·
crnt of Horizon Air. "Airlines are
getting away with advertising
that... borders on deceptkln.','
Kuolt's company, the country's
seventh largest regional airline,
provides first-rate service In the
Northwest - but lie Is accurate
when he suggests that "airlines bt
general" rank only "from fairly
awful to pretty good.''
Consumer Reports magazine
recently reported that a survey of
Its readers produced a similar
characterization of the nation 's
hotel chains: "Guests seemed
unenthusiastic about what they'd
bought. Only about Jl percent were
willing to award hotels top marks
on rur satisfaction scale.''
That's really not surprising In a
business where reservation snafus,
qverprlced service, noisy accommodations, bllllng errors and front
desk delays abound.
Almng the oompanles rated
worst were the country's two
leadbtg oldllne hotel chalpll Hlltm Blld Sheraton. 'lbose ranked
most favorably Included La Quinta
and Red Roo! Inns In the low-price
category and Stouffer, Marriott and
Westin among the more expensive
chains.
Finally, there are the auto rental
oomptll\les, wbose UIICOIIIclonaiJ
gasoline prices are matched on~y:
by their lnQOmprebenslble ron~

Scm 0 \&lt;ltf.l 81 Ctl btj~O
l Di AnRl'les at Pltlslll fl!h. n\£hl
San Francbco a t St. Loui~ . niJ!:hl

Dy UnLd P'n!H..~i Wei'WIIIonal
1\MEKil'AN LEAfjUE

Inaccurate testing ____J_a_ck_A_n_de_rs_on_&amp;----=-Jo_se.. .L.p_h.. . JSpL.. . :e.. :.:. :. . ar

CHICAGO (NE M - It's a
steamy summer afternoon at
O'Hare Inlerna Ilona I Airport. AI·
though the Frontier Airlines flight
to Denver Is l!X)re than an hour late
In departing, the hapless passengers have no Idea when they will
take off.
The derrorallzed !11ght attend·
a pt s' a ttitud e to war d th e
perspir ation -soaked customer s
ranges !rom condesrenslon to
contempt. One passenger who
pressed for an explanation of the
delay Is warned that he wUI be "met
by g?Curity" guards when the plane
lands in Denver.
A few miles away at the Hyatt
Regency O'Hare, the hotel's tete·
phone operators cannot oonnect
potential guests with the employees
who are supposed to take reserva:
tlons. "It's not just an lsolatro
Incident," admits an embarrassed
hotel of!lciaL "We probably haven't
gotten oor act together."
Inside the airport terminal, em·
ployees c1 Hertz, Avis, National and
rther rental car oompanles are
attempting to convbtre customers
to pay $6 to $8 per day for a
"colllsk!n damage waiver" - an
overpriced extra that duplicates
many drivers' existing Insurance
coverage.
Renters who return cars without
refllJing the gasoline tanks are
charged exorbitant rates for the
fuel - usually $1.tll or l!X)re per
gallon at a time when the trice at
area service stations Is ooly half 8ll
much.
Even In the best of tlnuis, the
natlgn's airlines, hotels and rental
car agencies seem to have a
penchant for dlscorntort!ng If not
antagol)lzlng their custome!ll. The
situation has deteriorated this
summer when domestic travel Is

By United l're8s lnt.rnatlonal
Today is Tuesday, July 22, the ~rd day of 198i, with 162 to fo llow.
ThE' moon Is moving away fronflts full phase.
The morning star Is Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury. Venus, Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign cl Cancer. They Include poet
Emma Lazarus. whose poem "The New Cblossus" Is carved at the base of
the Statue of Uberty, In 1.849; painter Edward Hopper In 1882; Kennedy
famlly matriarch Rose Kl'nnedy In 1800 (agl' 96); psychiatrist Karl
Menninger In 1893 (age 93) ; Senate majority leader Sen. Rohert Dole (R·
Kan.) In 1923 (age 63), and BrltlshactorTerenceStampln 19:11 (age47) .

·' :
:::
· ;··

r

cents for rEgUlar.
Next year you wilt be able to shop
a lot closer to home, be able to flit
your car up a lot cheaper than here
In Meigs County and save pnough
money to eat at some of the new
steak houses already built.
J im Lucas
3(;636 Smith Ru n
Rutland

Today in history

'

with outrage. He called the tests machine wouldn't work as claimed.
blasro, preJudiced, incompeteni The JX"Ophecy proved sell·~·
Newman's charge !hat the tests
and worthless, and through a JNbllc
relatklns adviser he railed at "the were Incompetent Is buttressed by
Invisible monster of Injustice" that astaternentfromRDgerHasttngs,a
had doubted his Invention. The principal physicist for the Sperry
JNbllc relations adviser Is wing Corp. "In the NBS testing," he
Newman no good ..In the judgment Writes, "the Newman motor was
of reporters and scientists who have connected directly to ground." As a
talked wttb Newman, the gentle· result, the excess power was
man Is no crackpot, but he certainly . shunted away. The NBS tests did
sounds like ooe In his vainglorious not measure the output of New·
man's motor; Instead, says Hast·
press releases.
The charge of bias may be lngs, the tests rreasun!d the output
supportable. Before he had begun of parallel resistors. "Their mea·
his llrst test dNewman's machine, surements are therefore iiTelevant
Hebner had flled an affidavit to the actual functioning of the
stroDgty Implying that Newman Newman device."
Other reputable physicists and
was trying to pull o! a hoax. Hebner
sent the District Court a magazine electrical engineers also have come
article, "1, Fraudulous,"ln which a to Newman's crfense. Nicholaoo
sell-confessed "fraud and charta· Tsoupas, a research associate and
tan" deSQ'fbes his bogus perpetual physics Instructor at Yale, has
motion machine. The inference Is described Newman's theories as
unavoidable that Hebner, who "earthshaking," and has W'ged that
would supervise the NBS tests, was the patent be granted. Newman has
oonvbtced In advance that the !llbllshed a book describing his
machine and quoting affidavits
from his supporters. Half a dozen
AC.I~ RAIN A~'YT~E
members of Congress have IntroGRIENI-\OUS! EFFEC.T
duced a bill to award him a
"pioneering patent," and Sen. Thad
Cochran, R·Miss., has scheduled a
hearing for July Jl before his
subcommittee on energy.
Meanwhile, Newman's lawsuit
against the Patent Office remains
active. A trial date has been set for
Dec. 8 In Washington, but the
prospects are hardly promising.
Newman will be up against the
same district judge who threw out
the special master's report and
lined Newman's lawyer for contempt. Willy-nlliy, Newman will
li'S SnL.~ A ~ICE PI.A&lt;.E TO
persevere. He hopes by December
LWE, BUT WOUL1)N'T COUNT
to have an "operationally efficient
electric car," powered by his
ON A LONG 'TERM LEASE
revolutionary machine, to demon·
strate Its rrertts.
· ·
Con artist or genius? It wouldn't
surprise me II Newman turns out to
be a genius, but I wouldn't know a
walt !rom an oltm and must rely m
the judgment of experts. The
experts plainly are divided on the
Issue. Maybe Newman's unor·
thowx theories will revise the laws
of physics and bring him farre and
llrtune. And then again maybe not.

Aeove.us

No vacation

:ro

.. '

.

In 1979 he applied for a patmt. He
described a motor that wruld
produce an output of energy far In
excess d Its lnJNt. 'Ibe Patent
Office scorned the device as an
unpatentable perpetual motkln machine. Newman went to court, and
there he has suffered vicissitudes
that would exhaust the patlenre ct.
Job. He ran Into a skeptical federal
judge who rejected the recommen·
dation of a court-appointed master
that the patmt be granted. The
evidence was "overwhelming,"
said the special master, that
Newman's machine worked as
claimed. Unimpressed, the ju~e
arranged lor the NBS to run some
elaborate tests. The tests were
designed and supervised by Robert
E. Hebner, supervisory physicist.
This was the bureau's oorrlu·
slon: "At all conditions tested, the
Input power exceeded the output
power. That Is, the device did not
crllver l!X)re energy than It used."
Neman reacted to the NR'l report

On the west side of Route 33 is a
new shopping mall just getting
sta rted. I was told It will cover
acres. Gasoline In Lancaster is 67

'

'(

WASHINGTON - On June 26,
the National BW'eau of Standards
flled Its court-ordered report oo
Joseph Newman's "revolutionary
energy machine." To Newman's
disappointment, but not to his
surprise, the NBS found that his
machine didn't work. At least It
didn't Uve up to the lnvmtor's
claims. Newman is now further
than ever !rom obtaining a patent
on his device.
I wrote last month about the long
struggle that Newman has waged
with the establishment. He Is fl, a
self-taught backyard Inventor who
lives and thinks In Lucedale, Mlss.
Nearly ~ years ago he began to
develop new theories about · the
nature of electromagnetic energy.
Starting with Einstein's famous
equation, he thought his way Into
new concepts of subatomic gyros·
copic phenomena. Seven years ago
he JNt together a machine emboey·
ing his theories, and behold - the
theories worked.

By FRED McMANE
"I can't explain It, " McGee said.
UPI ~slllalanl Sports Edllor
"It's baseball. I'm just trying to do
Somebody has put In a wake· up my job and do what they want.
call to Wlllle McGee, onlylt'scome
"Usually, he owns me bu t today
too late to gpt the St. Louis was just my day. Stev!'Carlton was
Cardinals out of their season long a great pitcher, Is a great pitcher
slumber.
and will be a Hall of Farner."
Playing the first half of the 191!6
Rookie southpaw Greg Mathews,
season as If In a deep sleep, the 1985 5-2, benefitted from McGee's ho·
Natloruil League Most Valuable .. mer and went seven innings to get
Player has begun to show the skilL~ the victory. He was fo rced to leave
that earned him the NL batting the game alter gett lng hit below the
crown a year ago.
right elbow by reliever Jeff Robin·
McGee unloaded a pair of horne son In the seventh. Mathews
runs off Steve Carlton Monday allowed only four hits.
night to spark the Cardinals to an
Carlton, 4-10, pitched six innings
8-3 triumph over the San Francisco before !Paving for a pinch hitter. He
Giants. McGee now has hit three allowed five hit s and three earned
homers and a double In his last two runs. He struck out one and walked
games.
one in his third start slnCI' signing

James]. Kilpatrick
. ~~.

Energy machine .

Ul Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

PAT WHITEHEAD
AsslsiBIII Publisher/ Controller

Astros in first all alone; Giants beaten

~.

The Daily Sentinel
•

'"rb

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

.. .

S1450
214 EAST. MAIN

.POll £ROY
992·6687

•.

....,

State Auto
Ct•p't II•

,.·.....

.,

li 9

''

We Pay The
Postage Both Ways!
PICK UP A SUPPLY OF PREPAID ENVELOPES
AT ANY OF OUR THREE CONVENIENT LOCATIONS

PEOPLES
BANK

PAllS EXTIA
600 EAST MAIN ST.

PO.IOY

"The letter lank"

992•2094
.IVIIIJG .. IGS CO.
POl 20 YUIS, 1966·1916

! ...

..

...

. r
'·

..

MEMBER F.D.i .C.
Second Street
Mlson, W.Va.
773-5514

2212 Jackson Avenue
Point Plelsanl, W. Va.

5th Street
New Haven, W. Va .
882-2135

.

�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday. July 22, 1986

--Local Briefs::-..... Viking probes find .life fortns on Mars
OU band schedules concert

Members of the Ohio University Communlversity Band will be
iierformlng at a concert on lhe green at Ohio University Tuesilay,
1J uly '!7, at 7 p.m.

•

GDC open house set Thursday
Robert Brown, director r1 the Ohio Oepartment of Mental
Retardation and Developmental Disabilities. will be one of the
dignatarles attending the open house for the new administrative
office complex at GalllpoUs Developmental Center Thursday from
10 a.m. untll 2 p.m.
Brown wlll be joined by Patrick Rafter. deputy director of
developmental centers, along with representatives rn 13 other
developmental centE&gt;rs in Ohio and area residents, staff and
busini'Sspeople. .
Brown, Rafter and GDC SupE&gt;rintendl'nt Pamela K. Matura will be
gui'Sts on thE&gt; "ChattE&gt;rbox" program on WJEH-AM Radio at IU: 00
am. Ribbon-cutting will take place at 11 a.m. at the entrancro to thE&gt;
new offiCI'S. Tours will be available and repri'Sentativi'S from
various departments will be on hand to answer qui'Stions on servici'S
at the center.
· 'Refri'Shments will be served in the new complex, and thE&gt; !llblic is
iijvlted. II interested, contact Lucy Earwood at 446-1642, extension
310, lor more information.

EMS units record 12 runs
TwE&gt;IVE&gt; E&gt;mergl'ncy runs werE&gt; made by local units Monday the
Meigs County Emergency llpedical Service reponed.
; At 8 a.m. Middleport was called to Ohio 71br Mirl Ratliff, who was
dead on arrival; at 10:50 a.m. RutlandwascaUed to Meigs Mine No.2
for David Gatchel who was taken to O'Bieni'Ss Hospital; at 12:51
p.m. Syracuse was called for Albert Hemsley , Syracuse, taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 1: 10 p.m. Pomeroy to Lincoln HiU for Grace Whaley, taken to
~terans Memorial; at 3:53p.m. Tuppers Plains to County Road 25,
Chester, motorcycle accident, Darrell Krautter taken to Veterans
10emorial; at 4:12p.m. Pomeroy caUed to assist Tuppers Plains,
Sheila Sinclair taken to Veterans Memorial; at 5:57p.m. Rutland to
Kingsbury Road for Edward Brevlck, taken to Veterans Memorial.
At 6:11 p.m. Syracuse to Morning Star Road, auto accident,
Jennifer Arnold taken to Veterans Memorial; 6:21p.m. Racine to
accident on Morning Star Road, Sharon !hie and Kevin !hie taken to
veterans Memorial; 6:29 p.m. Racine' s second squad caUed to
Morning Star Road for Melanie VanMeter who was taken to
V'.eterans Memorial; at 10:31 p.m. Pomeroy to Lasley Street lor
William Watson, taken to Veterans Memorial; at 11:55 p.m .
Middleport to Oliver Street for David Milburn. taken to Veterans
Memorial.

Scipio seniors cookout Thurschly
The Scipio Senior Citizens Friendly Neighbor Club will hold a
cookout Thursday at 6 p.m. at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Carr,
across from Harrisonville Grade School. Public is invited . Bring
covered dish and table se~icc.

Hymn sing set for Friday
There will be a hymn sing Friday at 7 p.m. at Burlingham
Community Church sponsored by thE&gt; youth group.

Energy conservation loan set
· Homeowners in southeastern Ohio who want to make their homes
more mergy-eflicient may be able to borrow up to $2,000
interi'St-free or at a 5 pE&gt;rcent interi'St rate for up to five years,
according to Stale Rep. Jolynn Boster.
Thl' program maki'S available home energy-conservation loan to
familii'S whose income fa Us below 80 percent of the county median
Income. Loans with a five-percent interest rate are available to ttose
famllles with an income between 81-150 pE&gt;rrent of the county's
median income.
Those lnteri'Sted in an Energy Conservation loan should call
HOl-521-1756 for a free booklet explaining the eligibility
reiJUirements and how to apply.

School bus funding available
·::Thl' state will help purchase 19 new school bu ses for transportation
of students in Gallia, Meigs and Atlrns counties, aceording to State
Rep. Jolynn Boster.
Thl' State Controlling Board last week approved release of more
than SW million for the purchase ol1,006 school buses In 350 school
districts. This purchase of school buSI'S will enable schools to !ulfUI
the transportation requiremmts of resident pupils in their districts.
. The Gallipolis City School District will receive $75,390 for the
purchase of three school bu ses and thl' GaUia County Local School
Dsltrict will receive $28,334 for the purchase of one bus.
In Meigs County, the Eastern Local School District will receive
Sif;,2M for the purchase of two school buses. The Meigs Local School
District will receive $57,193 for three buses and the Southern Local
School District will receive $38,432 fo r two buses.

Iridian casino is ruled illegal
ClliiClNNATI (UPI J-Commer·
cial casino gambling operations
conducted on Indian trihe grounds
In MIChigan werP illegal under stat&lt;'
law, 1he U.S. 6th Circuit Court of
Appeals has ruled.
In 1!184, the tribunal council of the
Keweenaw Bay Indian CommunIty, located In the Upper Peninsula
of MichJgan, Issued Frederick and
Sybil Dakota, enrolled members of
the community, a license to operate
a gambling business lor profit .
1be Dakotas subsequently con·
dueled blackjack, craps and poker
games at a building located within
the territory controUed by....!.he
community.
,g:.The Western Michigan District

Court In June 1985 issued a
declaratory judgmmt that thl&gt;

Veteral18 Memorial
Admlsslons - Goldie Lawson,
Racine; , Kelll Cleland, Pomeroy;
Paul Michael, .Pomeroy; Ed Burnero, Middleport; Lucille Brandt,
Coolville; Albert Hemsley, Syra·
cuse; Grace Whaley, Pomeroy;
Sheila Sinclair, Racine; Darrell
Krautter, Racine; Sharon Ihle,
Racine.
Diacharges - Opal Barr, Robert
Campbell.

Dakotas' operations were in violation of federal law and urdered tbe
lxlsini'Ss closed. The district court
also ordered thl' tribunal council to
stop issuing commercial gambling
licenses.
The Dakotas appE&gt;aled, contend·
ing that the district court erred In

finding their gambling enterprise
violated Michigan law. The appE&gt;I·
late court unanimously ruled the
district court was correct.
"The activities at Issue in this
case are not, as defendants would
have It, simply poker and black·
jack," the appeals court wrote.
"Rather, as the district court
concluded, the Dakotas arl' en·
gaged in commercial casino gamIll ing. Such enterprises are lllegalln
Michigan.
"For example, Michigan prohibits laking or receiving money
contIngent upon the result of a
gam!' not known ... (and) keeping
or occupying a lxllldlng where
gaming Is pl'rmltted."
The appellate court pointed out

that the federal law on which it
based Its decision, the Organized
Crime Control Act of 1970, extend&lt;;
ledetal rather than state jurisdiction ovl'r Indian b'lbi'S.

WASHINGTON (UPil - Ten
years after tbe VIking probi'S
landed on Mars, some scientists are
fueling the debatE' over whether the
rei planet harbors life by contend·
lng Ills "more likely than not" the
robots detected mici'QSC()plc life.
"All the data are compatible with
something alive in the soU," said
Gilbert Levin, president of BIOS·
pherlcs Inc.. during a spirited
discussion Monday at a NASA
conference about Mars.
The conference was timed to
mark the lOth anniversary of
Viking l's landing July 20, 1976 and Levin, who analyzed a key
VIking expE&gt;rlment di'Signed to
search lor signs of life, said a
10-year study indicates that
possibUity.

His view Is not shltred by most
planetary scientists, however. and
tbe session was heated as a leading
biologist moved to debunk theories
of Martian life based ori such
factors as the planet's harsh
environment, Its lack of water and a
VIking e)(pl'riml'nt that detected m
signs of organic material In the soU.

"VIking not oilly found no life on
Mars, but it showed why there IS no
!lie," said Norman Horowitz,
another former VIking scientist and
professor emeritus c1. blobgy at the
California Institute of Technology.
"VIking found that Mars Is even
drier than was Jl'evbusly thought,"
Horowitz said. "The dryness alone
would suffice to guarantee a lifeless
Mars. ItnowseemscertalnEarthis

the only ·Jnhab!ted planet In the
solar system.
"We've come to the end of the
dream. We are alone," he said.
The experiment Levin Jl'E&gt;Sented,
one of three blobgical studii'S on
each robot lander, involved the
release of radbactlve nutrilents Into
a container with a sample r1
Martian soli to measure metabolism. It was based on the fact that
terri'Strial organisms consume organic compounds and give oH
carbon dioxide.
The results were consistent with
the presence of !lie processes and
when the expE&gt;rtment was repeated
with a sterilized soil sample, the
carbon dloxldl' release stopped.
Levin's CO·worker, biochemist
Pab'icla Straat, took a more

22.1986

By STEVE HAGEY

.JJo:H L'SALEM (UP]) - Prime
~!mis ter Shinnon Peres flew to
~1 11rocco for a meeting today with
Eing Hassan II, the first talks
b('tween an Israeli leader and an
Arab head of state since the Camp
llavid Accords in 1978, Israel Radio
'" id .
In a swift reaction, Syria today
e~t·cu led Hassan of treason, said it
wets severing relations with Mo·
mcco and called on other Arab
w&gt;vrrnments to follow suit, state' "" Damascus radio said.
Prres's surprise trip Monday
spat ked speculation of a new
Middle East pE&gt;are initiative and
r&lt;'po t1s that Hassan might be
arranging a summit between Peres

adminiStrator for space scjl'nce, and supplies to the Jl'oposed space
said the agency's scientific re- station of the mid-1990s.
search effort Is in serious trouble
Hodge said It now appE&gt;ars
and officials are considering any- deUvery of the various moduli'S and
thing that wOI keep the program other pieces r1 equipment needed to
going - including using airplanes, construct the orbiting station startsounding rockets and baUoons to ing In 1993 Is likely to require 20
gather space data.
shuttle flights over a pE&gt;rlod of 2%
John Hodge, deputy associate years. In addition, he said 14 supply
administrator for NASA's space flights arP likely to be needed
station project, said the shortage a between 1993 and 1995.
future shuttle missions Is forcing
Not only has the shuttle fleet been
the agency to consider unmanned cut to three, but NASA has said it
rockets to help supply the y;roposed wlll reduce significantly the
station and an Apollo-typE&gt; Earth number of fUghts that can be
return capsule to serve as a crew carried out annually when shuttle
lifeboat.
missions resume. The first post ·
The National Aeronautics and ChaUenger flight Is expected In
Space Administration always con· early 191l8.
sklered space shuttlE'S the only way
NASA has said lour shuttles will
to ecooomically ferry components be needed to !,'1'1 a space station

Mirl Ratliff
Mirl Ratliff, 86, of Rt. 2, Cheshire,
died Monday at the home of her
daughter, Martha Stewart, Rt. 2,
Cheshire.
A housewife and member of the
Kyger Creek freewill Baptist
Church, she was born Feb. 11, 1900,
In Meigs County to the late Charli'S
and Daisy HyseU Rice.
Surviving are three daughters,
Freda Jacks of Langsville, Nora
Spears r1 RosevUle and Martha
Stewart of Cheshire; two sons, Bill
Ratliff r1 Pomeroy and Jack Ratliff
of Shade; one niece, Teresa Manley
of Point Pleasant; and one neph!&gt;w,
Walton Manley of Reedsville; ll
grandchildrl'n; 49 great grandchildren and three great-great·
grandchildrl'n.
In addition to h!&gt;r parents, she
was preceded in death by her
husband, Thomas Ratliff; one
sister, Gay Manley; and one
grandson, Sam SpE&gt;ars.
Services will be Thursday at 2
p.m. at the Kyger Creek Freewill
Baptist Church with Rev. Miles
Trout oHiclating. Burial wOI be In
Gravel HUI Cemetery. Friends may
caU at Ewing Funeral Horne
anytime after 2 p.m. Wednesday.

W.W. Shaffer Sr.
Woodrow Wilson Shaffer Sr., 70,
Livingston, Texas, died Friday In
Fort Worth following a long Illness.
He was born AprU 18, 1916, at
Reedsville son of the late Forrest
David and Glenna May Bailey
Shaffer. He spl'nt his early life at
Reedsville having moved several
places before settling In Livingston.
He was Baptist by faith and a
traveling paint contractor.
He is survived by his wife cl. 40
years. Catherine Ann Kovar
Shaffer; one son, Woodrow Jr.,
Belpre; three daughters. Glennie
Woodruff, Pasadena; Sandy Cantrell, Pickerington , Ohio; Anna
Harper, Fort Worth; lour sisters,
Mrs. Virgil (Sarah I Snider, JacksonvUie, Fla .; Margaret RDtlnson,
Orlando; Jo Ann Sickle, Sumner,
Washington ; Ruth Shaffer, Jack·
sonvUie, Fla., and 12 grandchildren.
He was preceded In death by two
sisters, Marie Shaffer and Edith
Ucklighter, and one brother, Harry
Shaffer.
Funeral serviCI'S wUI be held
Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the
Spencer Funeral Home, Belpre,
with Murray Gregg and the Rev.
BUI Harper olflciatlng, Burial Will
be In the Kovar lamUy cemetery,
Clarksburg, W.Va. Frlend'i may
caU at the funeral hometodl.ly from
2 lo 9 and untU time of S8'Vlces on
Wednesday.

John R. Mar8hall
John Radford Marshall, 73, New
Haven, died Monday at his
ri'Sidence.
He was born March 31, 1913, in
Ambrosia, to the late Radford E .
and Sarah L. McDermitt MarshaU.

Chairman Lyle Everingham
Monday said the mass of Kroger's
retail drug store group will be
"repositioned." The options rangp
from a partial divi'Stiture in which
KrogPr would maintain an owner·

He was retired from the maintenance department of the Foote
Mineral Corp., a member of the
Hickory Chapel United Ml'thodist
Church and a member of the Ohio
VaUey Gem and Mineral Society in
Parkersburg, W.Va.
Su~ivlng Is his wife, Alma Fell
Marshau ol New Haven; two
stepdaughters, Mrs. Judy TurnPr
Burdette of Delaware, and Mrs.
Jane Turner Smith of Lexington,
Ky.; one sister, Mrs. Wanda ~oni'S
of Leesburg, Fla.; and four nleCI'S.
Funer a! servlCI'S will be Wedni'S·
day at 11 a.m. at thl' Fogli'SOng
Funeral Home, Mason, with the
Rev. John Campbell officiating.
Burial wlll be in New Lone Oak
Cemetery In Point Pleasant.
Friends may caU al tbe funeral
home today from 6-9 p.m.

Russell L Roush
Russell L. Roush, 49, Pataskala,
a lormer Middleport resident, died
Sunday at Mount Carmel East
Hospital, Columbus.
Mr. Roush was employed by
Southwi'St Licking Schools as II·
brarlan. He was a member of
TriVUiage Church of Christ and a
consultant for Pataskala Library.
HI' Is su rvlved by his wife, Emma
C. Hysell Roush; two sons, Eric
Roush, Columbus, and Christopher
RDush, at home; his parents,Alfred
L. and Mary E. Russell Roush,
Middleport; and a sister, Maida
Long, Chester.
Funeral services wtll be held
Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the
Warren F. Kauher Funeral Home,
Pataskala, with the Rev. Kenneth
Joy officiating. Gravi'Side services
wOlbe held at 2:00p.m. Wednesday
at Riverview Cemetl'ry,
Middleport .
Memorials may be made to the
Pataskala Library. Friends are
being reCeived at the funeral home
in Pataskala today from 24 and 7-9
p.m.

Kathryn Craven
Word has ~n received of the
death mKathryn Henni'SsyCraven,
63, La Mesa, Calif.
Mrs. Craven was a former
resident of Pomeroy, a member of
the Pomeroy Sacred Heart Church
and a Pomeroy High School
graduate. She served as a Wave
durtng World War II .
She was preceded In death by her
husband, Ethridge Craven; her
parents, Thomas and Ruth Roberts
Hennessy; and one brother, Thomas A. Hen!)eSSY.
She is survived by two lllns,
David and Michael; a sister, Mary
Ellen Eubanks, Pennsylvania; a
broilEr Pat Hennessy. Maryland;
sister-In-law, Phyllis Hennessy,
Fklrtda; several ntices and nephews Including Bernadette Ander·
son of Pomeroy.
She was wried with military
hooors beside her husband In Fort
J:Wsecrans Cemetery, Calli.

ship position to a sale of the drug
store group, he said, and a final
decision is expected in about 60
days.
Kroger's retail drug store group
consists primarily of 891 Supi'Rx
and Hook Drug Stores.
,
In recent years, Kroger has
Invested heavily in large stores
which combine grocery and drug
departments. 01 the 1,100 Krogername stores nationwide. 347 are
combination stores.
"WI' believe that a rep&lt;:6itioning
of the drug stores will enable that
portion d the company to better
lllrsue its market niche as a health
care«&gt;nvenlence retailer, while
Kroger concentrati'S on the devel·
opml'nt and refinement of drug
merchandising within the combination store setting," Everingham
said.
President William Kagler said
the 100 storE'S, which are scattered
throughout tbe couniiJI. cost the
company $23 mUlion in lossi'S in

Business Services

By BRENDAN BOYLE

.JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
1UP1) - President Pieter Botha
mpt with Bishop Desmond Tutu but
rrjert('() his argument that South
Africa's crisis was worsening,
sa ying thr !;.week-old state of
r metgency ha s helped stabilize the
CIJUnlry.

During the m('('ting Monday,
Bot ha refused Tutu's requests to lift
the state of emergency and rl'lease
jailed black activists.
"11le state president did not
agrl'£' with me that the situation
was dPteriorating ," Tutu,
archbishop-elect of thl&gt; counhy's 2
mUIIon Anglicans and a leading
opponent of Pretoria 's racial policies, told reporters after tbe
ntef'ting with Botha.
The meeting marked only thP
SI'COnd time the Nobel Peace Prize
ldurea te and Botha had lll('f .
F'acing photographers and television cameras, Botha and Tutu
smilro and shook hands after
meeting prtvatrly for tlParly two
hows at Botha's Pretoria mfice. It
was t!r first time the two men
appE&gt;ared side by side In public.
They first met June 13, a day
after emerg'ency rule began, but
did not appE&gt;ar together In public.
Botha, In a .five-page statl'ment
Issued through the Bureau for
inlonnation, said that when he
lifted a previous state of emergency
- imposed a year ago Monday "a new wavl' of violence Dared up
and started to escalate" In March.
"The reimposition of the state of
emergency on June 12 brought
about an improved natlohal situation," he said.

1985. Additionally, he said. some
underproductive Kroger food manufacturing facilitii'S will be sold.
A Kroger spokesman said hi&gt;
could not identifY which stores will
be closed because some of the sales
arc still in negotiation.
Expenses at Kroger 's corporate
headquarters in Cincinnati will be
reduced by 25 percent, primarily
through a voluntary ea rly retirement program for nearly 300
management and administrative
employees, Everingham said .
Everingham said he anticipates
the after-tax costs of the restructuring will be in tiE range ri$75miltion
to $~ million and that yroceeds
from lhe disposal of the stores and
the retail drug segment wtll be used
in the reduction of debt and
reinvestment in the company.
Last week, Kroger anoounced it
was splitting the shari'S of its
ootstanding common stock on a
2-for·l basis and raising_ the annual
dividend by 5 percent.

The Daily Sentinel

CALL COLLECT:
Ph. (614) 843-5425

NOTICE OF

PUBLIC SALE
Tho fotto-g described
otem wiN be offered lor p.lblic
oolo to tile highMI bidder oo
the 291ft day of July 1988 II
tO:OO o'clod&lt; a.m.

1979 Pontioc 2 mor Grond

PriK, . . # 2K37Y9A140837

5 ole of the acurily tilted

above witt

be held on 1ho
prerni- ·of tho City Loon

Public Notice

Public Notice

SYRACUSE, OHIO

PH. 992-2772

1t8 EMI Main Stroot
Po""'"'Y· Ohio 46769.
Terms of S.: Call
Seller ....... 1ho right ..
bid 8ld 1ho rigllt 1o reject 111'1'
.,dol bldt. Prior to tho dotool
... ......... ,ta may e.
mode 1o lnopoc1 thit mordlon·
dilo Ill' c:olting 992-2171
~~otw•' 1hl r-ro of 9:00
o.m. ond 6 p.m.
(71 22, 1tc

"On July 18. 1911. In the
Meigs County Plobote Court.

dltport. Meigo County, Ohio

Coot No. 2&amp; 196, Wit1io C.
B -. 264, Sou1h Second

Av111uo,

Mlddloport,

Ohio

411780. waiJI)IIoOitod Admn·

46780."

OPEN: Mon.-Wed.
Thuro.-Fri. &amp; Sot.

POLISHING

9 a.m . to 8 p.m.
Ctosod Tuotdo

SYSTEMS
ly Mi&lt;haof Norton

YOUNG'S

992·2038

CARPENTER
SERVICE

FREE

Addons and rtmodellng
Rooting encl guner work
Concrete work
Piu mbing tnd electrictl
work

ted to secure or fund ferry service.
He said he has been contacted bv
fprry ~rators and that · he put
them in touch with the local
chambers of commerce.
No help i&gt;r laming
State Sen. Oakley Collins said he
was in touch with ODOT in
Columbus and was also told th!&gt;y
cannot help with ll'rry service.
0001' cannot help with Improvements to th&lt;' landing in the
Pomeroy parking lot either. Collins
added. He said he may check with
the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources to determine if their
funds could be used to at least pay
lor landing lmproveml'nts.
In comments after the !l'leE'ting,
Jan Michael Long, Collins' oppo.
nent lor the state senate seat, said
he has urged Gov . Richard Celeste
to IL'II! his powers to ensure any type
of financial assistance to a nonprofit
organlzatiln for ~ratbn ct of
ferry service.
Long said hi&gt; is baking toward the
Ohio Oepartment of Development
lor possible asSistance and may
also contact West Virginia r111clals
to see II !llrne typE' ol COSt·Shartng
arrangement could"bl' made.
The bottom Une at the !l'leE'tlng
was that repairs have !o be made,
.••
the bridge has to be closed lor the
repairs, wt ODOT .wm determine •.,.•
the fastEst way lo get the job done
and will take any legal means to do
just that Said Dougan, "That's all
we can promise."

...

TOWN&amp; COUNnY
VETERINARIAN
CLINIC
Paul E. Shockey, OYM

a:
~

Pomeroy, Ohio ·

4-15·'86-tc

PI. PUASANT OFFICI
305 Jadc1011 Ave.
SMAll ANiMAL HOlliS

z

-

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SE~YICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST .
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized John D•re,
Now Holland, lush Hog
Farm (quipmenl
Dealer

Farm Equlp11ent
Part• &amp;Ser.lee

1-3-'86 tfc

Mon.·Wod. -Th~n. 3-1 pm

Tun. 6,30 -1: Fri. 1-2 pm
Saturday 10 -11,30 om
LAIGE AIMAL &amp;

p•room
995 2....,m

'D:~sOW~.~~~d·
Wilt 1111

304·9U·

SUIGEIY IY APPT.

PH. 304-675·2441
BEND AREA CALL

8-13 tfn

FH AN l't• ,..,, fiN

s.l:."lng&amp;
Fornitoro,

rws.

OHice

oiNI Gr..,._n

Stof._.y, ....llic
Signs, 1111*• 'St...,,
..... F....
[•y Sonk-. Etc.
JU M St. •Jilt! srt

"frtt Estimat11"

104 M nmr Aw. rooltoroy

lnttollatien A••llallil

64 Misc. Merchenditt

•DWESI
SEAL &amp;'STIIPE
Serving this 'a'"
with PoweSeal seol
coating il!ld striping '
and making of
Asphttlt I Concrttt.
' l-614-696-1337
! 1-61.·593·1693
6-23·'•·1 'MD.

992-334\12/ffn

Roger Hysell
Garage

... 124, ,_,., Ohle .

AUTO l TRUCK
I

lin WI

7·

PIINI SIIOP

Ripley Offlct
for Hours
304-372·5709
10-lof.tlc

TNclllod

......,.....,.,.,.._
Wt.IIHJ AflU 11•
.

PH. 949-2101
or 949-2160

REPAIR

AIN ,,.. .1..111 '
PH. 992•5612
or 992-7121

16 14) 992-6550

Day or Night

RISIDINCI PHON!

NO SUNDAY CAUS

t6141

Usi ng the

4-16 .'116 tin

~2 - 775'
\128/ !ln

Cl~ s sifitds

ELITE POLE

', ,Is ·as £a.s!I. as ,,..,
.•1 ,,

··iJUftDINGs ·

~

RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
AGRICULTURAL
Custom Design
Service

L&amp;S
TRANSMISSION
REPAIR

CALl 667-3271

Co•p•re tile Qaelllf
Bthrt
~~f mo.

t:.,.

"Free Estimates"
All Work
Guaranteed

AIIIIOli II CCIlleIllS

OPEN MONDAY
THRU SATURDAY

3 Announcam!lnts

6-23-86-1 mo.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND

TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

10·8-dc

SWEEPER end uwing mtchlne
repair, ptr1s. ancltuppli•, Pick
up tnd delivery, D1vis V1cuum
Cleaner, ont h1lf mile up
Gtoru• Creek Rd. C1ll 514-

448-0294.

NOAH 'S ARK ANIMAL PARK .

Schoolt, church•. C0"1J . .Y
picnic:.. birthday penlel .. d
family reunions. Cell l!li14-38ol·
2 t 08 or t ·100·212-2t 17.

4
3 htlf Slberl.n httf German
Shtphwd puppl•. I wb. otd.
Ctlll514-448· 7907.

2 mind Betgle puppl•, 8 wits.
old . One malt, one female. C•ll

8t4·441· 2124 .
Fill dirt. You keul . CJII114 -441!1i -

Howard L Writtsel

SER~CE
We can repair and recore radtators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gu Ttnks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-~196

Middleport, Ohio

ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949-2168

2-17-86-tfn

1-13-tfc

Purtbred German Sh~11d 2 yrs
old . 814· 742 ·2028 or 814-

992-7e03.

3 puppl11. Mothlf mintture
Collie. Very cute. 814-742 ·
31•113.
8 puppill, I WMIII, Ill COioJI,

part Pit Bull •nd hound, little
ICIUirt f1a... Wkfl lit .-;"H.
dollbllbi•. 103 Wolf Or. 1!114·

992 ·2277.
Electric double

I t4· 992· 7147.

O'tlen

renge.

5 kittens, 3 gray, 2 yeUow.

304·176·5tt8 or 1175 -2474 .

honw. 9
trained .

915-3561
All Mtbt

1 Serv 1c1:s

11 Help Wanted
Wtnted - EnthusiMtlc end., •.
getic p•son . Pref• 18-21 YMri
of ~ge, whtl good conmunlca·
tion skills. Positions 1v1ilble to
work for Soutt'te11tem OtltD'e
outdoor recrution firm . No
experience nMded . Will trtinl
Stlft immedlettly. Cell bl·
twtem 10-5 at 814-281!1· 2248 .
Ask for Pem.
Rtps Needed, for bulin•s IC·
coun11. Full time $80.000180.000. port time 112,000·
•11.000. No selling, rtp•t
bu1in . .. Sit your own hours.
Trelning provided. Cell 1· 812-

938-6870. M-FM. 8om to 5pm

A-1 Company looking fur lndl·
vidual to hirt, train .w~d m•IU!I
toy p.-ty personnel. Th•• pliOpie will demonltrate our Na. 1
line of toys, gifts .-td Chriltmat

23t0.

RADIATOR

992· 3478

PH. 949-2801
or 949·2860

PH. 992-7 403

Sunday Calli

Buying deity gold, tllwr colne.
rings, jewelry, ll•llng were. aid
coins, large currency. Top prl·
c... Ed . Burkett Berber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh. 11•-

Collet 4-2&amp;1·93et .

Rt. 7, Pomeroy, Olt.

New Home1 Built

Would like 10 buy u11d traiiOr

wiutows, mostly standard 1t1e.
Ce118t4-268-8660.

"At Rtasonable Prim"

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER--915-3307

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

6t4-446-8272 .

SALES &amp; SERVICE
IUSIN!SS PHON!

•SATEWTE SALES &amp; SERVICI:

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

·

We CaiTy Fishing Supplies

•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

(CUT OUT FOI FUTUI£ USEI

Cell8t4-441· 3189 .

(Centrtl Sttncl•d Time).

6-16-'16- I mo.

Rocl• ,.,. ... ·•· ··. ,,,,., .• ,,
73 · 71 Ford ftndert ... Ill

WANTED TO BUY u... wood.
coal heaten. SWAIN'S FURNI·

CUSTOM BUllT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

•UNtTH

"71-"10 OM Fond.., . . . 131

2282.

New location:
11;8 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 457~0

WE ARE YOUR SALES
ANO SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

Buying/Selling
Gold, Silwtr
14K Choins, Coins,
Collector'• Accessorii•
Bullion
SU. .R HOURS
1-7 M-111

73-10 OM

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here

CLC COINS

Str~ti

T.. QUAUTY

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

~~

New A !mal
DRY FOAM

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

J:

Call for Directions

MlftlhiJ Rental
PI• lnitiorl IMialltitn
Pull A Softttttr In Your
• - T*y ll•u with
Optien to lllyl

"WE COME

oCARS •TRUCKS
•BOATS •PLANES
&amp; MORE
Preservet &amp; Seats
From Harsh

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
CJ Cot11Hiterized Hearing Air Selection
~ Swim Molds • InteJPreting Services

992 -'621 S or 992-7314

~

Ellt.,.

Ava .• Gallipotia. Call 81 ........

Etn pl oytlll:lll

985-3937

swtr.SPitNG SOFT

Est. &amp;:

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Lone K. N-od. Cieri&lt;

Tired ef Hard
llllly Wellr1
Wt H"t Tht An-

Buick-Pontiac. 1811

Work Gu••nteed in Wri11ng

Robert E. Buck. j L------.!!~!!!W
PJOblto Judge

Business Services

6·30.-86·1 mo.

TO YOU"
Elements
w I APS DUPONT TEFLON
04t,.monstr1tions All
7/ 9/'86/ l

(free Ellimatesl

(71 22. 29; (81 5

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
lnd niM'If' used urt. lmtth

Rettoree Faded
O•idized Finishes To
Showroom Luster

lfPLEi

lfr PRICE

No

·

Wantild 1o buy c::anningjara. C . .

INSULA nON

iltrlllir of tho - t e of RutJv
R.....rt, - -· toto of 669
Soutll Sooond Avstuo, Mid·

Wanted To Buy

Jim Mink Chlv.·Oidl Inc.
Bill Gene Johnton
814· ...8-len

1~.

•BLOWN IN

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

I

lURE . 3rd . • Olivo St. Gallpe-

CEMENT DOGS &amp; CATS
IOOfo Off
LAMPS &amp; FIGUIIH£l

"Free Eatim1t111"

Bonk,

l'

Wt pay cuh for l1t1 model cte.1

J&amp;L INSULATION

liD I.UIISI
I.IIUVY lAIGI
$16.95
.

Public Notice

'

FOUND Pit Butt pup. lt. ljt.
325, botwoon Rto Gron• •
Vinton. Coli 114-Z45·1H3 Or
114-441-lltO.

9

CUSTOM GARAGE BUILDING

ne Selelt 01 Fer J•lfl

•VINYL SIDING
• ALUMINUM SIDING

!Continued from Page 1)

Hedrick acknowledged that the
project grew ooce ooor reaUzed
they would have to close the bridge
to traffic. "Why come back lor
more work three years later?" he
asked.
Hedrick said 0001' "may do
some beefing up" of the bridge to
carry the structure through winter
before the contractor moves ln. HI'
ennphaslzed that ooor·s bridge
mglneer has given assurancros the
structurewlll be sate untU spring. II
necessary, Hedrick said ,load llrnlts
could he reduced on the span.
The repairs are Intended to
Increase tbe ll1e span of the bridge
by another JJ years he added.
For the. tlme being, the problem
of paying ilr a ferry service while
the bridge is closed i:lr repairs is
strtctly a local matter.
Dougan said ooor 1s not permit·

I

Public Notice

~

5.

FREE EST IMATES

JO'S GIFT SHOP

PHONE
992-2156
0.
O.pt

2

used car1.

7· ,11·81 2 mo.

Wntt Dailly Stfttilltl OnsiUd
Ill C0111t $1 .• POIMrtW, 01\io 4S7&amp;9

As of pri'Sstime, no one had been
to Veterans Memortal Hospital cited lor fault of the accident.
An accident occurring on Chester
Monday alter they were involved in
Township
Road 87, involving a farm
a two-car accident on County Road
tractor and a motorcycle, resulted
3 in Sutton Township.
Sharon L. !hie, 33, Kevin !hie, 19, In both riders of the motorcycle
and Kimberly lhle, 3, ali of Racine, being transported to Veterans
were reported to have serious Ml'morial Monday.
Wayne S. Michael , 68, Portland,
visible injuries at the scene,
was
driving the tractor southbound
according to the state highway
at 3:50p.m. and was struck by the
patrol.
eastbound motorcycle, driven by
Sharon lhle was driving a Darrel L. Krautter, ~ . Racine,
vehicle, exiting a private driveway , according to the patrol.
and pulled onto 3 into the path of a
Krautter and passenger SheUa D.
westbound vehicle driven by Jen- Sinclair, 35, Racine, were reported
nifer J . Arnold, 16, Racine. Ihle's with serious visible injurii'S at the
Yl'hicle was damaged heavUy; scene. No citation for the accidl'nt
Aroold's moderately .
was distributed as of presstime.

Span lllnuture safe

VIN YL
RFPLACtMfNI
WINDOW S

20 yBilra

-

t'

MoN&gt;on lodlol bH!f&lt;!ld. Vtalnlty
between Krogw'o • ·utde KfP
Rd. If tound p i - ool D'"'ilo

Found: Femllt Ptt lui on
Mulborry Holghto. C.M 11 " ·
992·7708 .

•Certainteed •Mastic •Aicola

"Free Eltimatet"

Three injured pE&gt;rsons were taken

Dougan emphasised. "Anytime
you're talking about rehabilitation
work, there are unknown factors."
The sizable project wUI Include
truss repair, complete replacement
d the first span on the Ohio side,
widening of the approachi'S on both
sides and new sidewalk and
guardrail, reworking of deterlorat·
lng girders and beams, new
decking and epoxy overlay, electri·
cal rewiring and cleaning of all
bl'arings where they louch down oo
piers. The bridge Will then be
painted rut a separate oontract will
be sold lor that job. Painting wUI oot
affect traffic.

THE SAAI LOW PRICES

VINYL &amp; ALI-IM
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodollng
Roofing of all Typeo
Worked in hOme aree

4/ 1/tfn

Accidents injure five people

Span repair

VINYL
SIDING
WE HAVE MOST All POPULAR BRANDS AT

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

rejects Tutu's appeals

""6~
Lo-17t -.nd_..,..,F;:-ou,-;-:-::n-:;d- · .

ThOf111'10n 814·441-21 . . ., .

EUGENE LONG

s. African president

opE&gt;rating, but there is growing
doubt as to whether President
Reagan wOI approve construction
of a replacement shuttle because of
diHicuHies In finding the $2 billionplus· to pay for it.
HodgE' said NASA Is considering
use of unmanned ex pE&gt;nda ble
rockets to replace shuttles in
carrying equipment to the station.
He added that the agl'ncy is
looking in to possible use of an
unmanred capsule that would
carry supplies to the station as an
emer!,'l'ncy return ship for astronauts If a shuttle was not available
in the event of a space station
emergPncy. &amp;lch a capsule could
remain attached to the station
Indefinitely to serve as a lifeboat, he
said .

Kroger planning sale of 100 stores, drug chain
CINCINNATI iUPI I - In a
major corporate restructuring
move, the Kroger Co. is disposing of
100 unprofitable stores and its drug
store division, company officers
say.

panled by senior advisers and a
number ot Israeli journalists, left
lor Morocco Monday afternoon
from a rnllitary airfield.
Rafl Edrl, parUament whip of
Peri'S's Labor Party, was among
the aidl's accompanying the Jl'ime
minister, the radio said. Edri, born
In Morocco, has visited Rabat, the
capital, several times recently.
Hassan has met previously with
members of the Knesset- Israel's
parliament - and one report In the
United States speculated he and
Perl'S might try to arrange a
summit betll'l'en Peres and Jordan's King Hussein, who, like
Hassan. is regarded as an Arab
moderate.
In Washington, diplomatic !llurces said Peres and members of tbe
Knesset stopped in Amman, Jordan, lor secret talks with Hussein
before flying to Morocco. Israeli
radio did not say II Perl'S and his
entourage stopped in Jordan.
One diplomat In Washington
Botha said he told Tutu he compared Peres's b'ip to Morocco
expected him to abandon his to Sad at's 1977 visit to Jerusalemsupport lor economic sanctions and a Jl'elude to the Camp David
to resist foreign meddling In South Accords. Sadat was assassinated in
Africa 's affairs.
1981.
Hassan was an early rupporter ot
Tutu said he and the president
Sadat's visit to Israel hut he, along
had a "friendly exchange."
But, he added : "It eould have witb thP rest of the Arab world,
been better. I obviously would waM denounced the Camp David talks .
to see a situation where this country
Israel army radio said Hassan
becomi'S what it has in itself to consulted with King Hussein, Pri'SIdent HoSili Mubarak of Egypt, King
become."
Botha said Tutu did not represent Fahd of Saudi Arabia and President
all Christian churches in the Hafez Assad of Syria In advance of
country and urged a "single voice" the meetings with Peres.
Hassan has suggested that the
in approaches to tbe government.
"Only after all the dlUrches have Arab world l'lect a single repri'Senarticulated a considered opinion on tative to negotiate with Israel and at
the many facets of oor national life one point suggested he be named to
should they approach the govern· the post, the radio said.
Under Hassan, who has ruled his
ment with a position which can be
interpreted as the voice m thl' north African nation since 1961,
Moroccan policies toward Israel
Christian church ," Botha said .
He said he told Tutu that traditionally have beeh a mong the
churches and clergy shared "moral most moderate of the 21 Arab
responsibility" to defuse wides· League states, which have been ina
formal state of war with Israel
pread disturbances.
"Their mi'Ssage stould be the since 1948.
true Christian message, and not
Morocco has endorsed caUs lor
pollticaUy colored messages such Israel to withdraw from all land
as the theology of revolu tlon and captured during the 1967 Middle
liberation, which subtly encourages East war and for the establishment
violence by means of veiled incite- of an independent Pali'Stlnlan state.
Although It was not immediately
ment," Botha said .
Gunmen stot and kUled a black clear what I'Hect the Hassan-Peres
police officer In a black township meetings would have oo the search
past of Johannesburg and the for peace in the Middle East, it at
wrned body of a black man was least could raise hopes for compre·
found at Nelsrpu!t in eastern hensive Arab-Israeli talks.
Transv!lal Province, governml'nt
"We would m course welcome
any
contact betwl'l'n Istael1 and
r111cials said Monday.
The IdDings raised to 181 the Arab countries," State Department
number killed in political violence spokesman Pete Martinez said in
under the state of emergency .
Washlngton.

and Jordan's King Hussein.
Israel army radio said Perl'S and
the Moroccan king were expected
to meet at Hassan's summer
residence in Efrana In central
Morocco.
The meetings today and Wedni'S·
day would mark the first official
talks between an Israeli leader and
an Arab head of state since Prim!'
Minister Menacllem Begin and
Egyptian President Anwar Sadat
met at Camp David outside Wa·
shlngton In 1978 to negotiatE' a
bilateral pE&gt;ace agreement.
PoUtical analysts In Jerusalem
said the talks probably would locus
on efforts to settle the Arab-Israeli
dispute.
Israel Radio said Pl'ri'S, accom-

7"1

The Daily

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Israeli-Morocco talkS anger
&lt;'Syria; diplomatic ties broken

cautious approach in concuiTing
with him, saying that In her view
the results indicate "a slightly
better" than 50 percent chance
oome kind of lite process may have
been observed.
The other two life science expl'ri·
ments in tbe VIking landers obtained oo such findings, however. A
summary prepared In 1977 by the
National Aeronautics . and Space
Administration said some unusual
chemical characteristic of the
Martian soli might have produced
the results.
Levin pri'Sented evidence he
claimed showed otherwise and said
recent analysis showed the expl'rlrnent to detect organic materials
was not sensitive enough to deal
with extremely low concentrations.

NASA considers using older technology
WASHINGTON (UPI) - NASA's near future may be a
not-s(}{!istant past. The space
agency Is now considering the use
of old technology such as unmanned
rockets, Apollo-typE&gt; capsules and
even balloons for space fi'Search.
Officials concedE' that evl'n alter
shuttles resume flying in·the wake
of the Challenger disaster, there
will be far fewer missions than
previously planoed and many
important projects have been
delayed for years.
The latest ramifications of the
Jan. 28 shuttle explosion were
revealed at a hearing before the
House space science subcommittee
Monday.
Burton Edelson, associate NASA

--

.

\

l
I

Nted bebysitt• In my home,
lnftnt • toddler ref. requlr ...

'

•'•
'•

''
I

'I

dtcontione. No inv•tmlnt wtekty ehedls. Cel today collect 304-738·8330 .

I

••

We '" looking tor lndividu...
whh tiling, typing • tpod
telephone communication aldlla.
.,.sHy
"" ...........
If
-- .. ....
p............
....

..

I'

~ ~-~-'

,_.,. to CI'C, fno. ,,0, lo•
201, Ootlljlolil, Ohio 4113t. -

I

,

8abyslner' ' Medtd . Ref. re-

qulrad. Bldwon -

•

· Col e14,

•••

388· 8794 tnytime Sun .WHkdiV• tftlr lp,m .

••

Govemnwnt Jabs. U8,MO .

'

t59 ,230-yr. Now hiring. C•l

I
t

10e-ee7-IOOO Ext . R-9801 1o1
currtnt *-terti lilt.

l

EASY ASSEMBLY WORKL

••'

'

t71ot .OO pet 100. Guaranteed
paym~nt . No 111•. Det•lls-""ct
111mplll envelope: EIM-1847
3.18 Enterprtse, Ft. Pierce, Fl.

•
•

••

33482.

'

A golden opporturiity-Join
Friendly Honw lay Plltl-. the
INder for 31 .,..,._Op~nlngt tor
m1n ~gen end dt.,..., Wt hive
thel•rgllt Jnd best Nne m ptWty
pl~n . No cat'! inv..tfMt'lt, no
dllivering or miiC1:ing. Elm tMg,
money plus bonu ... end trev..
lncentlvll . C1U now 1011 fr• 10
Cuol Dey 1· 800.227· 11510.
EASY ASSEMBLY

\

l'
'•
•

••
•

•

WOR•I

'\'

t714.00 per 100. OuerentHd
No tel•. Detailt ...d
st1mp.t lflvelope: Elen· 711
ptym~nt.

I

34 tl EmetPII... Ft. P - . Fl.
33482.

I

NOW! If you tre 1 good typllt.
good in thorthtnd, know 1 Mtta.
about bookk11ping. •nd ,...,._
co,.,..,utert, we h1111e 1 gooCI•
op1ning for • girl who went1 te
work. College ar IIJtP•ilnoe
nec•11rv . Send fuM ....._.
,_..,.to Apptfotnt, Boa 40&amp;."' Pom,roy, Ohio. AleppMCIItion1
a'l:ricttv confklentltl. PrtHnt.,.. _ ;
ploy.,. will not be co"tact ....• ( j
lnterv~._,n wiU bt
immedl•tefv.

!•
•
•

._
:
.J,

'"'"1.. .

PRIOR

MILITARY SERVICE

INDIVIDUALS -Elm ••tre mo- ' , ·. . ,
ney in the Army Nat6onll OuenJ.
·
An E-4 mutd mike • mud! • · ~"' 1
t131 .96 tor ont w .... lftd . ~ .· ' "
rmnttl . OtMr ~efittl ~duct.
160,000 .00 tift kuurtnc::e, pj6. • "1 · ·1
nYJtlons, IP4K:Itl trlining, retW..'" ..;_ ' .
nwnt progrem lend •ueltionll 1 '
funding . C1M ta ... if you , .
qutlify, 304-875·31150 or 1-' ·~ . ...

800-t142 -3et9 .

. "

- : : - - : - - - - - - - ·' '. '..'
-AVON.
3 op~n te"ltorl•. c• ' • ' "
304-175-1429.
'"'\
--------,.
..
.
. ~~ ,
NEWI NEWI NEWI friO rrip to · ·
•'J

H.wtii ctn be yours. Get tn M 111 ;.
tht VfVUnd floor of._. MWMt • -

party .,.., witt! ldllbl....... , t:
CO"lJ any . lldfesl Hiring fOf ' • .'..,.

~ork 11 hom~

"*"II"

pat'"" l "" \ i""

tiOns . FlexWIIthOurs . Orettpey,
·Details without oblgetiDn, CAIJ. "-V" •
TODAY! lcalltct)30ol- 74., 11 , .... ..

0924.

HIGH

•Wtlhln eOIIhWIIhlrl

•Rongeo
•Relrlgorotors

•Dry•a •Free~-~
PARTS end SERVICE

PlASTIC
WATER PIPE

For Industrial or Residential Use

4-~Hc

I

:::::~ '

J.R.'s REPAIIS
lnttalitloa MrYice

AI mejor eppllenoe t•
ptirtllftcluilng micro·
WIVII) •. Electronic Or•
g1n1. fo'obile HtVIce.

7-8-···1 1110.

' '' \

We also have black Qll pipe for
ind11strial use, s.eptic·.tank pipe
II! •
and a II ntttngs.

IYs, late•••
Satellte S.lis

TV ·614-143-5241
APPl.·614·U9·2l45

.'

PH~

742•2656
RUT.LAN.DMINE SUP·PlY(0,
1

'

34011 Ntt(f lilllll ltd.
. •"'LAND,· OHIO

.......Gai1Tpolls........ .
8t Vicinity
July 2t -23. Mon.·Wad . Blodon·
tor

M••-•H• Rd.w""' •Ill••·

1·4.

Yofd Soio Contonory July ZU
21. Motorcyclt hlimel1, ....,.
clothing, Homor Loughlin
d.,_.., kine •lzt w•t• bed
mottr-. Vo-ogon top Cit·
nw. h...t • ........ tooto,

7-].'tli-1 mo.
-._~
__o_mo__ro_,._.________
~~~;;~....:.u::•::::::::..~~~~~~~~~

••

.......p......................... .
omeroy
.... ,
Middleport
:._ .,;!
8r. Vicinity
,-..,n
............. .......... : ........... .' .~

~

July 21tll ond 21tll. c ...nty Rrl.

.

"-u.

21. '"'" Ch-'•· Chiki,., INin ~·••.t·~
edult cknhlng.
• ' .,

----=-----....:·
'""
.....:.PfPiiialanf..... · ;·A
8r. Vicinity
····· ········· ······-·······-

.. ·--

_:..,.:J

21t4 MadiiOft Avo. July • · • ·

21 . Antlqu11. furn ., tvola

d6atl•,~;wrtllnl, WDOI ruft.

•

\ •

�...
The

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Porrierov-Midd
11

LAFF-A·DAV

Help Wanted

44

GREAT POirr!ONIII D'"''tmilll
tllio apponunllytWortt I!Omyour
t&lt;&gt;,. hlriiJI end tTIInlng _ .
pt-. FREI tnlnlntt ,...vldod.

-tv
ldool

tll~lrl.

..,._,

includoo oil utlltlloo. Oopooll

for moth ... lor-

raquirld of 1200. Contact Vii·

lotto Monor Apt. Middleport.
8f4-882- n87. Equot Hooolng
Opt&gt;_ortunlty.

t ft, Rboral• plollup truoll
IOPfllr. Coli 114-317-7411.

1 ~m 1pt. for rent. Bille
rant ...,., t215. tii month thll

party . . . • .....

CALL IOOioct) NOWII For ...

11111. Bony Vorollo. (304)744-

0924.
APARTMENT FOR RENT· Now
tccepting lpplloetiona for rent1l
apertmants In Meson Apta Li-

PRIOR MILITARY SERVICE
INDIYIDUALS·Eein eortfa mon.. in tho Army Notlonil G_,.,

•P'•

mited. Two bedroom
11
1198.00 per month. Rental
rtf• m.., be high• depending
on income. Houalng will be
tvalllble to e.ch •ppllcant . .
gardliu of their rece, color.
religion , HX or naturtl origin.
lntenltediPPIIetntl should c1ll

An E-4 could mike • much 11

•131 .98 tor one wMk·~ end 1
month. Dthor bonollto hdudo

.ao.ooo lite lnaurence. promo·

tion1, IPftill trllnlng. red,.
ment program, Md .tuCitionll
funding. Cell to ... if you

quotHy. 304·875-3950 or 1·
800-M2-31119.

304-n3-5011 or conllct D•
nile Streib or W11ter Juatice 11

tho moln oNioo, 1178 Brice
Roed, Reynoldsburg, Ohio

Need babylin• n my home.
Mu1t l.,d reftrenCII to lox

C-17. Pt. Pl. Rogiotor, 200 Moln
St. Pt. Pl. WV .

Wanted · Motor Route DrivM
ntlded for the Poi'lt PIHiant

'7-Z:.

"When W8S the fj~t time YOU
StuCk a feather in your hat
and Called }'t macai'Qn1,
•?"

Aoglll11. Only honiOI dot&gt;ondoble peraons with reliable tqnt-

portotlonneodopply.Notogood

income for juat 3 or • houra •
dty. Apply i"l ..t80R 1t cal the

Point PIA1ont Roglotor ot 304.
S .ttuations
Wanted

31

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Be•utiful 3 bedroom. brick
horne, air condition, centre!

hut, corpotod, bulh-ln khchon,
2 botho, lound&lt;y room, ~ochod

Expltfitnc.d ,.,,... 1id1 IVIIII·
ble for private duty ifl your home

or the hoapitel.

Homes for Sale

Avei~e

g~rage.

11

fencecl blck yard. Mr-

ouo building, C.mp Con tor oru.
3 mil• from Point Ple.,nt,
304·176-4338.

hout'l. Cell 814-982-7440.
Per10nel cere. room end boerd

tDr Senior Chilen. 614-992·
8873.

1973 Dougla 14~~:15 mobile

homo, 3 br, 1 both. good

2 bdr. fum. or unfum. convenltnt loution, UppM River Rd ..
Ill UIHitiN pekl except eltcllic.

Soc. dop . roq. Coli 814·4468558.
2 bdr. odulto Ollly, no peto. 322
3rd. AVe.. Gllllpolit, Oh . C1l

814-448-3748 or 814-2881903.

condition. 30•·8711-4038.
3 bdr. e~~:ptndo living room. large

yord. Coli 814-441-7473. 314

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

18 Wanted to Do

: Will do pii\ting iftlidl and out
, mowing .nd other odd job1,

lrd St. Kaniuge·· ·.

3 bdr. mobf!ahome. 1"Ytbathl. ih
E-vroon on Co.Rd. 48. 2 bdr.

NEW AND USED MOilLE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME BALES, 4 MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS. RT 35.
PHONE 814-448·7274.

. 304-871-11191 .

Fin anml

76 Kenwood 12x80 2 bdr .. all

oloc. Colt 114·379· 2852 o•
814-379· 2314.
. 21

Buainen
Opportunity

1972 mobUthomewithon .. cre
lend, 2 miiM from town. C1ll

81 4·441-4841 .
.
I NOTICE I
· THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·

197• Starduat 2 bdr .. 2 bath,
DR,LR,expando, ntwfurntnce,
Ctrpet, hot water heater. C1H

• lNG CO. Noonwnends th.c you
• do bustn•• with people you
' know, 1nd NOT to .... d mone,

814-448-3917.

~ ~:~~:: :~~:::/n~~ hiVe

197&amp; Wtatem Manor. 1*~~:70. 3
bedrooma, ! baths. t7000.

WVILL TAKE TRADE. Colt 114·
949-2801 "' 814-948-2810.

· A golden apponunity. Join
· Friendly HorN Toy Pani•, tlte
· lllld~rfur 31 ve•ra. Op.n6ngsfor
•nd de.... : We have
: the l•gllt and belt lfne in .-rtv
. ~ ... No c•h invlltment. no
. dtlivaring or CDHecting. Elm big
money plu1 bonu . . and tr.v.t
•incentlvll. C•ll now toll fr.• to

1980 Liborly 14x54, 2 bodroom, untumillhed, vtnyl under·
pinning inctuded. Mu1tsell. C1ll
304-n3-6873 .

·"*'"'"

1977 Chomplon. 23ft. 14,000

Corot Doy 1-1100-227-1510.

milet, new awninga. AC, own
pow• unh. E~~:cell.-.t c:ondl1ion.

Laundry equiprMnt tor ule on

Coli 514·982-5224. 91oopo olx.
110.100. DBO .

- - -- -- - -·le&gt;-

. tocotlon, *2,500. Coll814·448.9112.

74 Vind•lt.

12~~:65

with 1••7
bpendo, 2 bedrooms, electric.
Excd.nt condittan. •eooo. Call

114-982-7573 .

mobile home WI Rio Grendl n•t
door to the college. furnished. 2

2 br traiter in country, newty
remodeled, niiW' carpat. front
pon;:h, nice y.-d. city Wlttr. Non
Drink . . only. Aeferencea ••
quirtld, plu1 depositandptyown

187• HonWtta 12~~:81. 3 bedroO,.., lfl .,.., mObile hOme.
Cle111 and in good cond, underpanning. blodl:, elec: hookup

8313.
23

included, tl,700.00. 304-896·
3422.

ProfeAional
Services

Water weU1 serviced and driled.
FrM 11tim1t11. Call 614-992·

1981 Ne1hua, 70~~:14, tot1lelec.
3 br. good cond .. e~~:trl cl81n,
111 ,500., no trade tn on this
one. 1977 Holtypork 84x12. 2
bt. like new inside and out. You
hne to 1M this one. K &amp; k
Mobile Hom• Inc. 304 -87&amp;-

5008 or 814-742-3147.

Real Estate

3000.

31

Homes for Sale

33

4 bedroom houM. fir~pl.c:e, 3
mi. aouthofG•IIIpolil, t29 ,900.
Cell days 814·446-1616 or
.-venlngl 614-44tHI222 .

30 ac:rn. good houH • pond.
136.000. 80 acrll, puture &amp;
woodland. 118.000 30 letN,
l1rge bam 6 pond. 118.000.

Call814-246·9248.

3 bdr. home, close to town. 2
beth1, ptrtly fumilhld. o ..
hH1,Iow U11Utl•. C1ll &amp;14-245·

35 lots

&amp; .Acreage

Ashton building lot• with public
w1tar. moblla komea permitted,

304 ·578-2338 or 304-576 2287 .

Must Sell Log Ctbin on Rtcc:oon
Creek by July 26th. From
O•ll~lil t1ke Rt. 1•1. go 10
mi.. right on Cort Mill Rotd,
croll l:ort Birede. first rolld to
the right. dead end. cabin on
right.

5 nice

acre~.

Sand Hill Flotd.

304-876-8287 .

1\,:nt,Ji s

Nice eucutive type ho me. 3100
tq . fl . Wv . area. lnground pool,
with or without acreage. SR
1t0. 4 mi. from Holltf. Le ...
option a poulbillty. C1ll &amp;14-

448-7322 .
Outlity home. newly remodeled
c:hok:• locttion on College Rd.
Syracuse, new c;ompletekitchen
end laundry. 1ir conditioned.
large lot. 814·992-&amp;324
Gov•ment homn from •1 . !U
rt~~~airl . Delinquent till: property.

R-Hiolono. Coli 805-187·
H-9805 tor current

41

H ouaes for Rent

4 bdr. houat. 3 mil•. South of
G11Upolls on Rt. 7. 1300 mo ..
sec. dep. required. C1ll d.,,
814-448-1818 .... 814-4458222.
Extra nice ltrge modern home
w-inground pool on SR 180, 4
mi . from Holzer, rt~ftrencea &amp;
1ec:urity deposit required. •476
me. Call B14·U8 - 7322.

'"""llot.

B bdr. tu.ll booornont, tlOO

8roomhouta. 1. 2acrM. Doubll
cer g~rage. Loc.ted on RoM Hill.

cothe Rd.

month. •300 deposit. 80 Chilli·

Borgoln prlcod UO.OOO. Colt
814-178·2613.
Lower '-'tal. Ruatlc Hill, lyracue•. 3 bedroom, 1-ve kitchen.
l•t•llvfngroom. •"· cond., dhh
wah•~ carpetad. lerga t•ll•·

Nice. CIMn 2 bclr. dupl111 hOUM
In Ch•hlre. Fumlehed, wtter

pllld. l•rv• yard. uoo.
814-248-5818 .

c.n

leeuttful bllrglin. 3 bdr, 2 bl1h,
walk to achool Of' town. e 300.

Prt.. roducod. 814-982·7478, Colt 114·441-1410.
oftor 5:30 814-982·3402 .
Perfect ttlrttNetlrerntnt home.

4 bedroom home on 7 •cr...
Hunters pared .., In .Ch•t•
.,.... •32,000. Call 814-915-

4382 .

2 bdr .• cioN to everything.
e~~:cellent n.tghborhood. in1kle&gt;

Goillpolls Chy Hmlto. Nothing to
be cl ... ld ·fiXId.

tun move ln.

Low utllltioo. Coil 814· 218·

4 room C8bin .. d 2 acrn. Next
to Add~ro~ille School. Tex IP.

&amp;11 0

proilod ot 05000. High lot oNor. 3 bdr. homo, 1'A botho, t271
1-278 ·4801 .
mo. or ooll fat t34,000. Wll
fh11nca. locltld At. 7; Alkfiaon,

8 ooom houoo In Rudond. 2 Dh. Coli 814-982-8843 oltor
Mdroom 5PM .

...tot... Aoconttv
remodtled. fumllhtd. a•aae.
outbuilding. loll of toolo. Will
. . toorytiNI~ lor t20,000. Col
814-742· 22 1 ·
Modorn 3 bedroom homo, • ·
ducocl to t4I.OOO.OO. 304871·11047.
ond both -

2 bedroom furnished houe•

In

Middleport. Coli 114-1825304.
2 bedroom Duplox hou" per·
tiolly lurnlohod. L4w utMhlto. In
p..,_,., Colt doyo, 514·88223S1 or 814-982-250t ...,..

.....

Z\loyr. oldhomoGollfpoltoForry. IH
- oo
.:,_oo- :,-. ,- R
- ont
- .- - -roo mo
-ond
5
l304-178-2214.
.S . with out-building. ·~
.
304-a71-S720.
_ ..

,

,1......

or :IIM-878· 782CI .

Fyrnithtd 1pt. 2 bdr •178.
131~ 4th Gtllipalil. Wat• pd.
CaNI514·oMI-4416 efter 8pm.

-

portly pold t160 mo .. Coli
304-876-5104 or 304-676·
6388 or 304·875· 7926.
Hou11 &amp; apartment tor aingl•.

antron recun.. eaa. nerN &amp;
uHd bedroom .,it.., ,.,....
wringer . . ..,.,
~ . Ntw

a

fivingroom iuk• 1111·•599.
lamps, elso buvlng coM &amp; wood
1tov11. Cell &amp;14· 448-3169 .

QOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washera, dryers. retrigentor1.
r1nges . Skaggs Appll•ncu.
Upper River Rd. b•ide Stone
Cr•t Motel. &amp;14· 448· 7398 .

c.n 114-

BUILDERS
CLOSEOUT'S
SURPWS
BUY SACK'S
ulvage ltHI door
blenka, nlcka •nd scretch• •11
to 121 ...
2. Th•melp•tnanthermelbreek
alu rnfnum windows lwMitllll
1. New

2 bclr. ••telrtfll)t., unfurnished,
cerp ..td , utiNtl• paid. No child·
ren. no
Call 6U·446·
1637 .

P"•·

3 rooms &amp; bath. nice a. clean, 1
bdr, •II new c1rpet, convenient
to shopptng. aome utilili• paid.
Ctll 61.·446· 7&amp;1 II.
In town : very nice, spacious.
unfurn ., h11 range &amp; refrig.,
ground f~ with covered Pltlo,
no PIKS. e175 plus deposit &amp;
rllferencea. Call E1rl Tope, &amp;14-

448·0332 d..o or 614·4460161...,11.
One bdr. hlrnlshM or unfur·
nilhed , no children. no ptts, e
mos. le11e, 1190 mo., t&amp;O dep.
utilities Plld. C1ll 814-4•&amp;·

Be.t the Heat with Emetton Air
on 11le now It
Molloh1n Furniture. Rt. 7 North

11 . 4~~:8x'4 11ivege paneling
12.99.
12 . 6' redwood stain picnic table
with 2 btnch11 •39.95.
13. Prehung Interior door~ all
tizea end finil:h11 •29.81.
14. Prehung lttel p•n~ doors •II
liz• 189.9115 .
15. Wood prtfinilhed vinyl
wraplld colonial trim 7pc. e100 .
1B. Primed t•rdrop wood trim
n .oo 7 pc.
17. K-lux brick com . . 11.00
ptr bolt, 12 belt •10.00.
18. l2''x71" .. thermal tem Ptrtd gl•• Ng. •7e.81 now

l~o~nk beda. •100. Good condi-

Ranga. Call B14·UI· 1209 .

Flex tt•l Will hugger recliner
brown cordurory. Call 814-4484413.

doop oinko 8 u•octe t5B.81 .
21 . Stainlau JtMI com• ainU

169.95 8 grade.
22. 4 pc. tolid oak end brua bath
111 123.95 11. 3 setl 1nd •

019.96.
23. 6 g1l. lluminumfNM mobile

Picken• Uaed Fumlture. Good
qutlity uaed furntture. Op .. 9to
or call for .pointmtnt .

e

304-876-8483 or 871-1450.

Ve. 304-882·2222.

58

Pets for Sale

Dregonwynd Cattery Kennel,
CFA Himtltyan, PmiM Md
Siem•e kittens. AKC Chow
puppill. Ctll 81•· 448·3844

born M•v 28 . Wormed • tlrtt
shot 2 m•le, 2 fem•l•. •175
loch . Cell 614·448-0708.

2Ya y..rolddOg.KingOobtrman
pure bred, real nice. C1ll 114·
245-64141 .
AKC B•aett PuppiN. I WHU
okl. F.A. Benldum, SucCIQ
Ad .. RHI:Iavlllt•.Oh6o. Cell eft•
5:00 p.m. or tnytlme SeturdiY

ond Sundoy. 814·!1417-381511.
Bugle pups for nle. Full
blooded. 8 wkl. old. 125.00.
814-742 -2960.

57

••um

like new Lowry organ C1ml'llel
with Magic Je1nnia,
how

booko, •soo. Coit s1 4·441·
0708.

4 piaca drum Mt with Clrrying
Dru,_ are ludwig &amp;
Ztotgtn oymboto. Coli 114-448·
8833"' 114·387-7197.

54 Misc. Merchandise
68

S.

Cllllhan' s Utacl Tire Shop. Ov"
1.000 tir•. llz• 12. 13, 14, 16,

Fruit
Vegetables

Pomeroy 2 bdr, N8VIort Run.

PIMtic clltem llete approved, · e14-3Sa-toa7.

9t2-1215 or 114·982· 2314 .

ApL Oft M1in St. In Pomeroy.
Coli 814-882-1011.
Summer &amp;twinge VICIIion lp•
clol. Vlllogo (1.- Aportmonto

:; :::::.c:t~:-.:
r.,

Gl111burna F1rm Martc.t. St. Rt.
110 nHt' Porter. Home grown
vegetebiM &amp; tr•h frutts. Call

plutlc IOptlc tonko, pilotlc
culvert1, metal culv1rt1. RON

EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jock·
oon, Oh. 814·218-Q30.
For Hie: H•rtequln Romanoe

booko 270 for
wooden t1ble

•2s.

Red potttoM, hofM grown.

dollvorod Pt. P I - t oroo.
ti.IIO por 50 lb. 304-SDB3590.

t7B, whh
SN at

2se

I

8o. Fourtll Avo.. Mlddt-.
Oh .

IIII I

1\ )

Solid Olk hutch chin• clbk"tet
with gl011 lnmt MOO. Coli oft•

s 11111111~·
\I : 1111

k

oli tlml

11to AMC Sptrti. lun roof. 4
eyl., 4 tpood , t1300. Col
114-112· 3481.

See 01 , Addilon, 1ll campairight • you pall c..polgn
Crook Bridge

1181 Thunderbird 112.800.
Low mllelll1. exc. condition,
ID .. «&lt; with aldrat. C•ll aft•

1982 32ft. tr1vel treilor, Park
I'I'W:Jdel, layout, living room,
kltch.,, btthroom, bdr, fur -

S:OO. 304-871·4278.

niohod. Holding tonk, AC , own·

Autos for Sale

1173 Plymouth Duotor. Good

61

Farm Equipment

CRoSI .IONS
U,8. :18 Willi. Joilll-. -Ohio.
S14·2SB-1411 .
IIIOuoy F-oo~;N- Moitond,
illolh tl.. SoiOI. 1 - . Dvtr
40 ,.odt-toatio9oolnim
• oo..,lolo 'tliio of • ~Old
equip ...... Llrlllll Ollootlon In
U.Ohtp.
·

247B.4

·n Chov. lmpolo; '74
""!:'"'· 304-175-7375.

AMC

1978 Com- 327 outo. po, pb,
uc. body, nwt tlr•. 13.000. or
bitt ollor. 30•·982·2418.

... '

.,

...

""

CAPTAIN EASY
Wf'VE GOT l'OU 'l:""----.:.......,

NO WA~- ~~ND
THE PRE~5
IN HERE .

63

· livestock

Hens for ..... 9 monthl old BOc
- : toying good, 1'A Y" old
40c - ; l..ing obout 50 pet.

Coli 304-937-2288. No onowor
coll-lngo.
64

Hay

S.

11 .00. 304-878·5571.

1178 El Dorodo, oil ovolloblo

l'hono 304-871-3841 .

71

Auto1 for 'Sale

72

Tn1ck1 for Sale

1183 Ford Rongor 13,800. 125
8uzulcl 3 whoolor tSOO. 200
Hondo UOO. Colt 814-4484793.
18n Ford F-150 plakup. a cyt.
11800. Coli 814-248·5040.

1,000 mllto on ongino. Coli
114-388-SD81.

t2,48t. John'a Auto

ndlo,

lolol, SulovNio Rd .. GolllpoNo.
OH.

1178 ctlovrvtot C10, body
good, Nno - · 88,000 mtloo,
AT. TJ,. Pl. IWV. mull Hit

3734.
73

Vans

S.

4 W.O . .

14 Chnl'ttt 4 cyl.. 2 door, II
tpd., AM·FM c•Hite, low. 1981 810 4•4 loodod. Colt
mllolgo. Colt 114-448-0137 814-448-4251 .
Ill« SPM.
1871 Chevy van. runa good,
197018 Novo 4opd. 1171 f&lt;&gt;&lt;d good llr•• , _ bOitory. t1250 . .
PU outomotic. t2,000-. CoN Col814· 211·1711.
814·448-6282 ovonlngo•w. .
kondo or 814 -441 · 7404 1985 ChtWY ,..,. .... commMMge.
ploto mn-n. 4 cOptoln
ch81ra, couch. 11r. tilt. crulae,
1883 Ford Eaoort 1U1o, cndee, outo, V .3 V-8, ..,tv 1.100 mil•.
AM·FM low mlloogo U,498. Colt 814-387-0550.
1182 Ford F - n t outo. olr,
AM-FM low mllolgo U,181.
John'o Auto Solw. lulovlloRd .. 1950 Joop V-8, 4 Whooi drivo.
tlolllpoll~ OH.
t375. Colt 514-742·2111.
• •.. Mo., runt good, nM

point, tlroo. 12100. CoU
814-448-6201 or 814-448·
8113.
11n tlrllld Prbl, 11.0 0. 1874
30 ft. ool-contolnod c -....
lllh - 1 . MillO. 1111 Ololol
Volkowogon Robblt. t1SOO.
1975 Dotoun piolwp. t300. CoH
814-387·0437.
19B2 Chomllot Mollbu Clo10to
••tlon wogon, AC, PI, AT. vory
go&lt;ld cond., t2,000 firm. No
"'" or donto. Colt 814-387·
7213.
1882 Chl't. 4x4, olr, 12.000
pluo, outo .. 301 V-8. t8200
loon, oolltUOO. CoH 814·4417019.
1978 LTD II. AC. PS, PB. 4-*.
•aoo. cott 814-448· 30t3.

1115 Lozor Turbo outo, 8.000
mi. uo. - d . Col 114-3792721.
1872 OldoiW run~ " " " ' - ·
UOO. Colt 114-441-81S1 .' ·

·

10ft. Dei-Aey Slide-in Camper.
Self contain.:! . Excellent condi·

FRANK AND ERSIE

tlon. n100. Call 814-742·
3028 .

-.t

For Solo Or Trodo - 1973
lntomotlonol
4 whool
drive, 304 v -a, 78,000 ICIUol
mtl•. 3speed, lots of new partt,
304-n:s-&amp;148 .

NoW, ~t:/VIfE;M8ffR -

t1300 . Call 614-982 -6388.

No ''f&lt;Noc.rc·tc:Nocf&lt;''
..Joi&lt;E~!

Servi ces

I

ing town to look for a missing precious-metals expen

and end up finding a lynch
mob. (60 min .) (AI .
Cil Oaktari
@ Roller Derby (60 min.)
(AI.
CIJD ())Who's 1he Boao1
(CC) Angela is astonished

Home
Improvements

Uncondltion•l lifetime guaran·
tee. Loc•l reteranc11 furnilhed .
Free •llmetn. C1ll collect
1-11•· 237-0488. dey or night.
Aoo•r• B11ement
Weterprooflng.

by her girlfriend 's reaction

ALLEYOOP

to one of Tony's poker buddies. (A) .
(]) MacNeil-Lehrer Newlh·
our
® Cll 0 Simon
Simon
The Simons help ou1 a fa-

a.

Exterior II Interior llucc:o. Pl-.
tar • pl•ter rep1ira. Low rater.

'

mily of vacationers who

J &amp; J '• Home Improve man~

volved in a mob vendetta .

514-448·8013 .

IIll Nova:

Cell 814-265-11B2.

have unwittingly gotten in-

VInyl siding, overh~r~g, Ito""
doors &amp; window•. gunera. CaM

(60 min .) (R) .
Rlllurn altho 0.
prey (CC) The osprey was a
virtually extinc1 bird of

)

Shrubl, mulch, topsoil, grM~
fir..-wood, cr .... atump remOytt;
cheln Mnk f.noes, IMNn ctrt. Do•

prey before the reasons be-

hind its population decline
wer~, b.r9ugh t to light. .(!10

Wough. Coll814-4411-8848. ,,

RON'S Television Service ~
HouM calls on RCA , Quaur,

,

EEK&amp;MEEK

QE . St&gt;oolollng in Zenhh. Coli
304·1'18-2398 o• 814-441. ·
2454.

RINtlLES ' S SERVICE . expa-

9:00

1hough all clues point to
poli1ical auassinalion . (60
min.) (RI In Stereo.
Cil700 Club
(!) AWA Wreotling (2 hrs.)
([) G Cil Moonlighting
(CC) Maddie seeks revenge on her former financial adviser and winds up
in • high-slakes card game.
(60 min .) (R).
(])
MOVIE:
' Harum

Starkl TrM 1nd Lawn Service.

londocoplng. 304-878· 2010.
Rot•ry or ctble tool drilling. ·
Moet well• compleud umedey . .
Pump ul• end 1ervice. 30•· •

885-3802

Clll Emie Cerpentery. remodel·
ing, room addhlon1, plln1ine.
block. frH eltimltll, 304-876·'

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

5162.

MY DAD.sAYSiHEWRL.D
16 REAU.Y FLAT HE eA't'!?
IT &lt;JUST~ ROUND...

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

BECAUSE Ot.IR "'YE E!AL.L.S
AR E ROL.J ND A NDTHATS

HOW TI-lEY SEE THINc:;-5 .

Sea rum'

MY MQ\1\ SAYS 5H!O ca:sN'T

® Cll 1Hi

Magnum. P.l.
Magnum muallight fa• his
life when his surf ski cap-

CARE WHAT HE TI-ItNK5 Ae
L.ONG A S HE /\IIAKE6
A EiOOD LIVING-.

sizes miles from shore. (60

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

1182 H..,dl XR 500 R uc.
oond. Colt 114-317·0518.
1181 Honda outtom tx . cond.
ont; 1.000 tBOO. Coli
114-RB-17N.
1174 Vomoho171 Endurol. Lmlloogo. USO. Col 814-4481348.
1181 Hondo Goldwing 1100,
lui¥ - · oxc. oond .. CoM
814-258-1113 or 114· 211·
1703.
.
.
1tl0 HondoiOO CullOm. luulllul blko t1 100. Colll1•·982·
1710 or 814-112-Hts.

Phone 814-446-3888 o• 614·
448-4477

83

Excavating

BARNEY
DOC PRITCHART TELLS
ME TO SHAKE UP TATER'S
MEDICI IV€

J.A.R . ConatructkJn Co .. Ru·

tlond. Ohio. 814-742 -2903 .
luements, Footer1, Concrete
work, lecll.hoe' t. Dozer end
Dltcher. Dump trucks, end
Wlf er· au· llwer- elactrlctt
lin•. Ch•rlie Hetfleld operator.

BUT HE

KNOW MV VOUNG·UN

REAL GOOD
'10:20
·10:30

85

76 ·

J1mes 8o~ 1 Water Service. Also

Boats and
Motora for Sale

10:00

Good· 1 hc1Vfl1ing, b11emant1,
footlrl. driveway a. septic tenkl.
landscaping. Ctll anytime 114·.,
448-4137, J1m11 L. Davison. ·
Jr. owner.
(

11n H_,oy H... otoctrto olldl,
lui • - 304-171·4018.

General
Hauling
.

pools f;ttod . Coll814-256-1141
or 814-448·1176 "'614-4467911 .

1181 MNdo ftJC 7, S rpct., low
mllolgo. Colt 814-448·3231 .

Ken 's Water Service. Wells,
claterns, poo11 •nd w81erbedl •

unc..-o.goodoond.. -

tir11, Corvltl• HOfllorles,

SNAKE!!

10:45

lllod. Colt 814·387-0823 • •
814-387·7741 or 304-676 ·
1247.

*·

so.ooo ""'"'· .n ,1001 1t71
Docitto Colt Z
oodon, 01111
11004.
good """"" hlgh,-it.
•lclnt •1 .ooo: cotr 114-+J&amp;0132.

1, :00 • Ill ([) • ()) ® Ql (Ill

()}News
Cil Bill Cosby Show
Ill Inside the POA Tour _
1111 (l) Lovt Connc11on
(]) SCTV
(j]) lnnav11lon &amp;peclol This
call-in program feature• a
report and diacu11ion by , \,
experts ebo~t atroku. thw' ·

f

Dlll•rd'1 W1ter D•ltvery. Ci•t·
· ems. w.ll1, pools. Anytime but
Sundoy. Coil514·446-7404 .

11n Mon1o Corio. 310 outo.
olr. F*ohopi. 1788, 1171 Flot.
Noodo MNI,- bo&lt;foi, U2B
010. Co1111.r:~z-1111.

Coal. limettone, gravel. etc.

.

Dlllvertld 1 ton and up. Jim

hit•

11 ft. -boo1. 49
H,, Chryolor, onglnowldltl-·
fUll. Cotii14-88Z-7177 of.

1111 MGiGT CjiUpe. Now
ontllno, -~ I n - , otc. Col
81l·lll-1101 doyo ontl 114.
112-7JS4nlghto.

'"'

1111 riniCor.4Mr.-.
•· 88,000 mllol
II4-IIZ·7177 if·

~we,m.

llld. Llno looi. ' 31 HP
J - .M-. HI Mlni!OIO
.... """""' lvo wtll.
UBOO •.o r - - · 814-IIZ·
1110.
.

1174 Till. - · .......
N-·.. tiit
lri6tolltWJ,
Mloltlllnllod
Wolltiot
Tlioo.
UIIOO.
Col 114-Mf,IOR. '

11n R....... orpr. ·110 · HP
M"'-Y ,.. ft. -~- tSSOO.
N.,..lblt, 104-171·110t or
171-1711.
•

,.,._

.

'

.

1114. ,.. ......... 140 ""

ln...,. ..,,..... low pro.
11!1- - · · 104-17S·UI4.

-

71

Auto

Parts

• AccaiiOrle'

...l...:.... , ••

=· .v...,.. _
.

~

l .,

Lonior. 304·178·1247 o• 876 7387.

.,

Wttterton ' s We t er H1ullng
r•aontble rat", l mmedlat ~
~.000 gallon diiNery, cl1tern1.

pooto. welt. otc. ooll 304·1712819.

~87;:::::;:;;.:;;::::==
'
Uphol1tery
TRISTATe
UPHOLSTEftY IMOP
1113 loo.. A.... Gollpollo
114· 441•1133 ~r 114·441:
1UJ.

min .) (R).
Comrades: Trial of Tamara Russo (CC) Soviet
justi.!; e
is
examined
lhrough lhe trial of a 50year-old hospi1al orderly
on trial for 1helt. (60 min.)
IJIIl® 1986 (60 min .)
([)II([) SpenHr: For Hire
(CC) Sponsor inves1igatas
when the weal1hy hutband
of a gorgeou1 ex-model is
mu•dared. (60 min.) (Rj.
®I Cll 1Hi Tho Equallzor
McCall comes1o tho aid of
his ex·wife when, her husband is s1alked by avengeful ex·con . (60 min .) (R).
IIlJ NIWI
(l) MOVIE: 'Murdarer'e
Row'
Cil Celebrity Chlfa
fJI CZl INN No(]) My Mother Married Wll·
bur Slump This blnerswee1
love story explores the unlikely second marriage of ·a
proper grandmother 10 8
former alcoholic who has
been divofced seven times.
IIll Roughing It
ll1i Nowe

IIll

Cor. Founh 8nd Pine
Gallipoli1, OtHo

Motorcycle•

his problems with violence.
(A) .
IJ IIl 0 Hun1or When a
public figure is killed. Hun-

ter suspects homiCide evan

875·2088 or 678-7388 .

VI ' 1\ lilf/ 111/1 ~ I ; _..III/I
L.-..:1Yll:.:.;'l-~--_. 11 ~.~

1

ill/

I

PEANUTS
I(QU'RE MV NEW
TUTOR; ~OW' I:' VOU
EVER FIND ME ?

I

r. I' I I I .

..,.;;..N..;;.o..::.o..,:E:...:L~~ 11

t-1-r.I~. . ;A,_l

=-Lr.M....;Yr---11

•

15 1
. .

~~~**~nubM~

;.!

...

hMrd 111m mumble, "Eating like
a bird tlktl on new -lng lfltr
. - - - - - - - . . , ~·ve bought food lor thlm -

,,....,.;0;...;;.0 ..;.M;.,.E::.....:;B_Y~~~-·~omplete

.~ I I ·~ I I'

""' chuckle quoted
by filling tn i11o mtostng word•
you devolop from ifop No. 3 below.

'-...1.-'-_......JL--'-"""'

YESYIIDA Y'S SCIIM·UIS AJISWIIS
/npltt- sratt - Ntwey- Ration - ~NT
FII'IICIUI quote: "Lovund lime, thole arelhe only two lhlnga
in aH the world and II of lh lhat cannot be bought, but only
SPENT."

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

Lou's coup
is a lulu

NORTH
.K 10 6

By James

.104

.AH3
• QJ 9 6

Jacoby

•u

EAST

WEST

Lou Bluhm ill an expert nol known • 7 4 3
for estolUna 1111 own bridce virtUell. • K 10 e 4
He hardly needs to do so, since be bss • 10 7 4

won at leut sil North American •

Championships. Laat sprli1g be e.iecuted a rlay that I am now JIYIIIJ aiW!Ie.
I cal it the Vu-Grapb Coup. Al-'ous
fans know, play Ia World Championships llld late I'OIUida of Natioaal
Championsb,lpa

1-ll.at

lor

when a competiJIII plltyer makes asuc-

us

A Qa

.H653

SOUTH
.QJ652

•a

.AK62
.K72

il frequeDtly project·

ed on a screen llld isolated from tbe
actual playlac area. Tbe v1e•1 apparatus Is called Vti-Gripll, and it ill
common :two or lbree e~pertl to
serve ss coninteDtaton, predlctlnc tbe
biddin&amp; pllty IDd pl'llbab)e outcome of
each deal. Tbe Vu-Grapb Coup occurs

.Q 9 7 2

Vulnerable:

Neither

Dealer: Soutb
Weal
Eut

s•

Pau

!NT"

Pus

PUB
Paaa
P011
Pw Paaa
•Forcin(l lor one round

play that II overlooked by tbe
Opening lead: • 4
eotnJDelltlton, even tbouP.tbe)' have .
the aciYantace of seelq all four llands, L - - - - - - - - - - 1
of tbe deal.
1
Bluhm, deelarer at four IJ)IIdel, re- · er heart, played a diamond to the jact
ceived a trump lead. Eut wou the ace llld trumped dwnmy'1laat heart. folow
and continued spades. Tbe COIIIllltlltl· be played A-K of diamonds. U Welt
ton IIIIW lindlctecl that the .contract ruffed, be .would . be end-played in
would flif. fOr a Club to the. kin&amp; and clubl. U Welt tllacarded, declarer, wbo
ace WOIIld allow Wat to play a third . IIIIW had Dine trlclt:l, would &amp;et to ruff
round of tpatlel. But Lou muhm COD• a club in dwnmy for billotb triCk. Lou
founded us an.He played tbe heart ace had added to 1111 other dlatinpllbed
and trumped a heart, playW a dla· creclltl by eucuUn1 tbe VII-Graph
monel to the queeallld trumped anotb· Coup.

ceuful

. ~·

by

..........

THOMAS

Acaoe8

8tRUSIIan

•no•

1 River

In Kenya

5 Built:
I Beloved

DOWN
1 Well)'

IWonhiP
a
Be unpre1oC:::.OO
pem~ for
12 Vlllk:an
4 WinS (I&amp;)
aibunal
II French
18 Dinner
painter
coune
8
Hl3h (mus.)
t4 Hlltorlc
7 Merry event 11 An Alrican 17 Rooting
period
8 Dilltlft
republic
material
15 "Chlnces
prophet
II R11111lan
18 Type
•
10 Poe1ly
tea urn
foce
Ul Prior 10 II Feeta
13 BitlnC
Z9 Maiden
(pref.)
Ill Englllh
remark
etrott
17 D.D.S.
n14 Philippine 34 Inferior
It l'1ery
li Corrlda
Island
horse
ao 1Ment1ec1 beut
16 Stow awa,y 811 Preserve
II P'1dl to
...,.,,......,.....,,....
make It

12 Filii«
13 Slepl'e
voice
24 NH. river
25Pri~

cuUing

event
18 Friend (Fr.)

27 Unecl
SO Swab
81T-

81 PUb order
liS lneamlllon
of Villllnu

•

J.n.++-

811 NWRI)'
ftx1ure

31 Flightless
bird
37 Aieutlan
illland
liS AnaiDmlcal
network

DAD.Y CRYPIUQCJan:8-Ben'l lllw to work It:
AllYDLII.U XR
IILONGFELLOW

One 1e11er llandllor another. In lhil sunple A 1s 111ec1
for the U.... L't, X for tbe t,fo O't, etc. Single letters,
kpiMdlctplilll,llle ._and ,fcm~~Uon ~ tbe words are all
blntl. Eleb diJ the code leUerl are different.

~

'1-11
N

UYNOLW

UYA

0 IDA

TNUY

QGIOL

OADAC
N

u ,YIWA

01

YQDA

N

XICA

tmro 1e101ng killer Ot"Amer~.... .

•
icana. (60 min.)
· ..
11 :30 IJIIl9TonlghtShow(60
mili.) (A) In Stllroo.
Cil Bum. Allan,
I])Sportaeen,.,
Cil WIIRP In Clnolnntltl
&lt;Il One B1op Beyond
8 ([)ABC NIWI Nlghtllno
(]) 8oundataga: 'rlna Tur·

a.

- LQKCNAOQ
XNWUC ,QG
l""'n..,'t CIJ........ II A GEim.EI!IAN WILL
NOI' INSULT ME, AND NO IIAN NO!' A ot!NTLEI!IAN
CAN INStJLT ME. - ~ERICK DOUGLAS

e

WELL,Tl-lEV ~AVE TJ.lESE
NUMBERS ON THE f:RONT
OF 140USE5, SEE. AND...

ner

·

·

®AIIoe

..

• ())Simon l Simon A.J .
1nd Rick 1re hirod by 1
m1n eccutld of murder~
who can't rememw whore
h•'• ~n for th.-pelt lhre 0
montht. (70 min.l (R).

R • M ,u:,_
ltur• M1nufitaturlng. ':
II. -Rt. ·7, C~ City, Oh. CoM •,
114-211· 1470, ooll evo 114· :•
Otd • ' niw ..•
..:•u;;:"":::o=·*~-:•~
""
=
::·:-:-:-~.......
•
·
,
~owroy I Upholollf'ing ~ .• ,.

He·. sue .

(JJ Tl'lli!Mr John, M.D.

,\

movit. "A Prtton of Child·
ron". (R).
(l) Rowlllde ,
(J) Hewalf Flve-0 .
MOVIE: 'Cincleralll Llb-

12:00 ()) JIOII lenny .
C1J Tap flank

I

ioxiM from
Atlll!lkl City, -NJ (~ h"~-

!;J·· EnMin~
. . Jonl(flt
.
· John Rl,.r tolki •bout ,hll
role In the upcoming TV

~·--ntv-11-fhoi!Jot ..lOo

,IIi lurltliuoo -"""e ·COfl
IO:t·IU •4114 ·i for ' tru ·
IIIII...... .
~~ .

I

REVAWE

K.;;;.,r ' ·

Ben to think he can solve

rienctd cerpenter. electriciln,
me10n, painter, roofing (includ- ,
lng hot tar application) 304-

82

1~n~l:flf: 'KI; t

8:30 ([) II Cil Growing Pains
(CC) Jeson's fight · wi1h
Ban 's hockey coach leads

Fet1y Tree Trimming, 1tump
remov11. CaU 304· 876-1 331

1978 OMC con. von . po, pb. 11.
... 304-871-2498.
74

Cil Green Acret
(!) Mezd8 SportaLook
fi) (l) Star Trek .
ill Reading Relnbow (CCI
IIll Hera's to Your Hoolth
Ill Fothor Knowo Ble1
0 II) ())I NBC News
Cil Tho Riflemen
(!) Rovco'a World CIOII
Woman (R) .
ill D ([) ABC News
ill Doc1or Who
®I ClliHI CBS Nowa
1Ill Body Eleclric
Ill Gomer Pyle, USMC
Bill PM Megerlno
Cil Man from U.N.C.LE
(!) SportaC.ntor
([) Entortalnltlllnt Tonight
John Riner 1atks about his
role in the upcoming TV
movie, "A Prison of Child·
ren ".
fJl (l) Hbgon'a Heroes
Jeopardy
ill Nlghlly Buainoaa Report
®Nawa
IIll MacNoii-Lohror Nowahour
Cll@ Divorce Court
(j) Private Bonjemin
~ WhHI of Fortune
Ill GrHn Acres
D 1Il Cil New Newlywed
Game
(!) NFL Yearbook
til CZl Major League Be...
boll: Now York Mota at Clnclnnl1i (3 hrs.)
Dill® Wheel of Fortune
(]) Fawlly T owors
Cll 1H1 Enlertainmon1 Tonight 'ET goes on loca1ion
to lsrael1o ialk to Morgan
Fairchild about her new

1973 tr1v1l treiler. 18 ft . W•a
liking •1460., now uking

81

~NIWI

()) liD Ill 1Hi

film, "Sleeping Beauty" .
(j) Alice
®Jeopardy
7 :35 (l) Mo]o.r Loaguo Bauball:
Philadolphia 11 Atlanta (2
hrs .. 45 min.)
8 :00 DIll ())I A-Team B.A. and
Mul'dock go to a small min-

BASEMENT
WATERPRDDFINtl

owner IIIVing IJH. 304-1711·

1971 Flborglooo N""• 327· 325
HP m.rv.. ongino, M-22, 4opd.
trono. Colt 814·882·1841 .

siza

448-1766.

•ezoo.

1181 Dodtle D-110. 4 rpd ..

f rdll S!I II II dill lll

~uH

tllbly. Set up at Gallla County
Fair Campground . Call 614·

1878 Z28 Com... 11 ,360.:
1978 Chovollo, t3SO.; 1973
Novo. t250. 304-881-3530.

19&amp;11nternatlon•IPU, leis than

Good mil.ad hiY on the w-eon.

lhower.-

refrigerator. Sleeps •ill: comtor·

875-2273.

AM·FMc81Htte. Ex. cond. HIIYe
to 1• • wreclat8. Alklng

Grain

a.

7 :05
7 :30

cr .. rabuilt motor-trMa. 304·

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT 1t78_.toc-.-·•·'''
,
CINTEII. IR R W. G~llo. ,._ 111. Wltolooolo prloOtl
Oftto. Co!' 114·-~· .... •t411. '11'!'0 Oldi II ooUIIIIt T
•
Up """' ooncllttiMt,411-V·I.-. ' . . , . . _... Rldiog•
rv!Otllior lor 114·441·RII.
tan wldi\AWia11y _. 71 u.id 'Good r u - runo ._ . . .. hrtt. - · 4wMol
o. Prf....._ Col B14-44S·442S.
ti21B. 114-HI·It:M.
' -e1~ W l l -. Col
•
'
.
1 114·J1i'ul0.
l · -... 1000 - · .

me- ..

Mired• •1600. 8oth e.ll . cond

lng1. tub

Bill CIJ a

a {))

'82 Chov. Colobrity, vory good
concl. pa,pb, em-fm cau. •c.

.·'

•·'

8;06
8 ;30

··

condition. C•ll 814-8815-4406.

71

optktnl. bw miiMtl, immecullte, baeutlful car,

AC. 4
fll88. .

5. 814-:188-8711 .

R - hltoh .. ..,toto t2BO. S
ln. Crattaman t'ldl•l erm HW
·the lim montho
to 'A prloo. t1 00. TRS 80 32K . color
For oppNcttloilo or moro lnlor- . oomput•· Joy otloko. • ..,.....
mltion ..., 1ry ~~~~~ No. word pra011eor program •100.
IIA or Gait 114·882-8174 Coil 814·448•3914:
MondttY tttroulh Tllurodor. e:oo
19n Cholly 'A ton plollup. No
p.m.- 10:00.p.m. only,
..... rebuilt •oino, t1000.
Nloo olftOtonoy. HUO •""""'od, 1172 310 JD Oeoor. ongin' .
. 11111!011..W·
ldoollor w!Midnt lody or gontt• . ...... . men. 2215)/o Mt. VormomAvo .. mll.,lth Ford incluotrlolongino.
PolntPI•ont. W. Vo. 114-ttZ· t2100. 1llt.flbortlooo boot. ..,
HP mot.,, runo gOod, MSO. Col ·
ISH .
114·RI-1354.
IP~-. 'or o II .

oom. Clllforllt_.quot•. River

1881 Muotong PS, PI, AL, 4
rpd .. r.•d condition, t3. 700.
Colt 8 4·317-0114.

Musical
Instrument.

18. 18.1. 6 mlloo out Rt. 218.
Colt 814· 286·6251 .

1 bedroom apt . In Po"*"oy.
Complllelv' remad•ltd kitchen
fumllhed. An new Ngl. 11C.

Now buying oholl com or o•

1970 ChovolloConv. .lblo. 310

2683 .

t 175 mo. t1 09 dopooh, yo rd.
polio, Colt •"-r 8pm 814·992·
8888.

62 Wanted to Buy

CIH.

clop. Tlq . Colll14-448-7025.

3 rooma &amp; bath. llove, refriger•·
tor\ ell uti1111• furnished. edulta
only. no pets. C1ll 814·*4&amp;·

home roof col1ing U2.95 .
Penn'• Warehouae. Wellston,
Ohio. 8 to 6. I diY•· CaN

Houu full of fumhure fOf 1ale.

209 s . 41h 8t. Middt-n .

ond dloc . 304· 875·2841.
•uoo.oo.

t28.85.

19 . Rock race brown trtilll'
skirting 28"x60" t3 .99 ...
20. 22"11:33" Jteinl"l IIHI10'

AKC Rog. Llhoo Apoo puPfllto

tion. Coil 614-387- no4.

•400. Coll814· 251·1818.

2 ooddlo ho"•· goltod, whh
tock. Coli 814-388-toiO.

Gtlllflollo. OH Colt 514·448:
7444.
Rlfriger1tor '75. Aefrlgera1or
S96. Copportone tide by tide
•1 95. Harveat gokl, troat· free,
like new 1250 . CJE &amp; Mayttg
With• f1&amp;0 uch . Maytag
wrineer wuher *125 . Hoovlf
portlble washer •&amp;&amp;. Electric
range, 3e lndl •95. SkiSiJg•
Appll1noes, Upp• River Rd.
Gtllipolil. Ctll 11 4-441 -7398 .

Ma..; HarTII tractor. wide
front end. low buitt, 4 IPd..
powertekeoff. worb good. Nnl
good. G1'81tlorflrMoodh1uUng

4d~~: 1A toung groove w1ffle
botrd exterior Qlu.:l B 18 .95.
B. 4x8•% Toung groove pty.

1,....
•••
7.

efler 7PM.

3887 .

2 bdr. apt. nur Silvllr Bridge
Plar1. lmmtldlete occuPincy,

Utility bldg, IPL' 30'x40'xl'
wllh 11'111' llkl• • 3• HN.
door. ti,28B erected. Iron
Horoo Bldgo. 114•332_1748
colloct.

City Form Supply, 814-448·
2985.
.

Candlt6oner~

Coli 814-448-4928 .

614-448 ·4807 o• 814·4482802.

Farm Equipment

t49.81 to t79.81.
3. 8' 1luminum patio doors ••
'199.9&amp; weith scr..,.,
4 . Octottn ltd tltney giUI
windowa 149.915.
I . 16 lite pine French mora B
t89.96
. •x8x 1/4 Muonite und•r IIY·
ment 129 .96 81 .. 4~~:4•'t. 11 .00

Block. brick. morttr end ma·
sonry •PPII•· Mountain Stitt
lk)c:k, Rt. 33, New Haven, W,

Furnilhed efficiency apt., CIIPet
throughout. lingle working per·
son. 1186 i1cluding w11er. Ctll

61

Motora Homes
S. Campers

1873 ..,,., t&lt;&gt;.-. 21 ft. Dodde
oh•sll. 11lf cont•ined, centrll
oir in good ohepa, , , _ I . Cell
814·448-0518 .
-,9-8_B_K_en_ok-il_l_ce_m_p_.,-, ,.-,f.
contained . 11600. 1980 Dodee

t-';~~~~~~;=;~;;~~;=:::::~~~7.~~~"1

For ule IN Ford tr•ctor. plows

Valley Furniture, new a used.
Large 1ectlon of cp.tallty tumi·
ture . 1218 Eaatern An ..
Gellipolia.

48 cu. ft. freezer. 1100 firm . C1ll

8 :00

Camping
Equipment

79

N- Hollond 487, 7ft hoyblno,
good oond. u .25o.oo. 304273-4216.

81 4·384-3645 .

Cheek our everydty low prices
on furniture &amp; epplienee1. Moltohen Fumilure. Rt. 7 North,
K1nauge . Call 814-446-7444 .

EYENINQ

8 :35
7:00

1871 C.-nero. 310 auto.. Nns
end looka good. 304-6711 ·

Ave. Gallipolis. OH .

mo. plus depoatt • reference.

7B

Alto Cholmor D-17 cll•ol troator. plows. • I'Ow plant•. hey
wegon, disc. aU for t2,1100. Call
814-388-9811 .

furn;.h.t 2 bdr. IPt. uditl•
partially paid. C•tl 304-875·

1 11Rd 2 bdr. t pts. for rent. Ba1ic
rent for 1 bdr. 1176. Buic rent
for 2 bdr , 121 2. AIIO 1200 IIC.
dep. req. Clo11 to Foodl_,.. 1nd
Spring V1lley Plu1. J1ck1on
E1t1te Apartmenta, 614-.WIS3997 . Equ1l Hou1ing
Opportunity.

7/22/88

SURROtJ~PBDl

248-6121 .

Ccunty Applilll'lce, Inc. Good
u11d appll.nce~ 1nd TV set1.
Open 8AM to &amp;PM . Mon thru

Sot. 61 4·448-1699, 827 3rd.

A.8A.DCH~K

•

Now otool body pono. 73-10 0~
.,d Ford pick-up tlndera, •38.
73-15 fuH doo,., t71. ChovytoH
ga.... el59. Ford tail geta. t7,1 .
Over 1t00 hemt to choose
from. c • MAuto Pono. Blclwoll.
Ohio. 814-448·8227 or Byrdo
Ex~~:on, Chsrl•ton. W. V. 304·
348· 3911 . Daaler inqulrev•
woloonw. 215·1162-4134 .

·
1171 Cemaro. black with bllck
Interior, good oond. one owner.
cal 304·171-11570.
·

Coli 304-675-5104 o• 304875-5388 or 304-176-7928.

11 Court St. 2 bdr., 2 , bath.

lot in Big Foot Campground,
1tong Atccoon Crllk. Water,
el.ctrlc. sewer. Contact: Dol•
ToiNver, Shady Wattt Cempground. G•lllpolil Ferry, WV. 8
miles eouth Pt. Pl. .lnt.

Rio Grande new lovely 3 bdr., 2
ful i baths, full b•ement. grel1
vi.w, 3 decks. ctdlf siding.
gable root, •49.1500. Call 81•446-1038. Will constdtr tr•d• in
of mobile home.

•· . "" •••

2 bdr. utllltl• P8rtlally fum ..
•111 mo. Call ao•-176-51 o•

kltohon fumlohod, no peti, 1325

814-446-1368.

'

Olive St .. Gallipolis. New a utld
WOOd·COIIStov•. 8 pc wood lR
suite 1399, bunk beds '189.

only. Coli 814-441-9523.

3 bdr.. \art• khchln. bath. utility
single awaoe. 2 c•
drlvewey, nice y1rd, garden
IPKI, finilh.:i garage. Call

bedrooma upatetrt.

SWAIN

614·446-8607.

mom.

E~~:t

51 Household Goods

!31JT JU'7T Lf:T /-IE- WIZITe

.::_~:_:..:.:_-:---:::-:: · IC­

3 block MWrriH •2.800. Call
1111'1, Afo Grinde. 0 . Cal 814- 114·318·8881 .

04.49 .

AUCTION • FURNITURE 62

Apartment
for Rent

Bku*. brick, IIWtr pip•. win~
dow1. lintels, etc. Claude Wln-

10. 4•8x'!. Ieven plywood 8

Merchandi se

3248.

44

Building M1ttrillls

wood B t1 0.81 .
9. 4~~:8xYl • ply plywood 8
06 .99.

Furniahed apartment. 1dult1

9248.

8000

Body Shop. 304-676-1436.

875·3334.

15104 or 876·5386 or 304-8767928.
Farms for Sale

For Lease

Beaament under Montys Mett
Mkt. Mechanic or Storage. No

2 bedroom mobile home. 304·

Okter couplll 2 bdr .• utittiM

1982 Claytori 12x80 Ill electric,
exc. cond, 304-578-2486 .

49

1nytime.

rHSOnlble l'lltll. Call

304-571-2338

LOGI grocery and diU but~n . .
for 111e. priced to, ..,. 304-8715-

Trtiler sptces, afNI\1 children
accepted, Rt. 1, Locust Road.
back of K a K Mobile Home.

ut11111eo . 304 - 895 - 3821

3 bedroom unfumiahed 14x65
trelltr, 3 mil• from Poi1;1t
Pleenm. Rt. 2 no"h, •226.00
plus depo1it. after 7, 304-876·

55 Building Supplies

446-2783.

dtY•·

utlliliOI, 304-876· 40BB.

1970 cemper aMf contlintd;
1981 Kowollki KX250; Bunk
bodo. 304-n3-1244.

St .. Gallipolis. Ohio

Treiler spaces. Send Hill Road
convenient to schools. store and
holpit11. Ctty sewer aveil~e.
Inquire Ao11lee, 304-875-4600
between 9:00 and 4:00 week

2 bedroom trailer Athton Upland
Rold. •110.00 mcnth plul

*• W~NIIMI

wat•bld.
mott•••· liner. hootor. 5 poddod
""'· Mke norw. UOO.OO. 304875-3713 otter 4 p.m.
King

tlolllpollo Blod&lt; Co .. 123'-1 Pin 1

46 Space for Rent

SANI&lt;e~ WF!IT£;7 A 81\0

lftbW·

Building mattt'lals. a.ment,
b6odc1 tlltil:ts, yard or dtllvlr'f'.

2 bdr. trailtr turntlhM, wathtr a
dtyer. &amp; min. frOm ·town. non·
drlnldng, married. working cou·
pie. Treah • w•t• paid. C•ll
boloro 11AM. 814-441·4013.

MOBILE HOMES MOVED ' inlUred,

448-4418.

C:0 l COMPLAI~ W~e~ M"'

u.celltnt . AT, whole truck e30.0 .

0758.

814· 448-1323.

2 bedroom. •111. P• month
pluo t100. d-h. You poy
utilttt. . No peta. C•ll814-9492234.

cut.

304-175·1138.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33, North of Pom.-oy .
Largelo11. Call814·992-7419.

bdr. opt. C0111Jiototv lumlohod,
n•t to Rio Gr•nde College. Call

In~

Unturnilhed 2 br. apt., yard and

Furni1hed room •1 115. Utiliti•
pd. 919 2nd G•lllpolls. Share
bath. Singlt male. Call 614·

~T !

.....,_{.JDIM~Rl~IAL ~ ~0!

1972 Pinto, good 2000 .,gino,
AT. whoto cor t150. Coli
814-211·11850.

blode. t400. Coli 814 19853839.
Pomer•nlan, lilac-point Slam•e
kitt•. and 1918 Dodge pick-up.

month. Galli• Hotel. Cal 8 14·
441-9580. Rent 11 low •• 8120
month.

STAR'IINb, ~l.f

H-e Dynomorl&lt; Riding

Mower. 31

•oleronco.304-876-2861.

Room. tor ren1, day. week.

f~H NOAmNTION IDME ... I'M

1974 Ford plctwp. 302 onginio-

1125, wood buNot t75, •oroo
&lt;OOOid ptoyor tso. Soon dtoh
wuh• t95, couch US, wool
rug flx11 116. 814-882- nn

For 111• beartttul nmmyTopper

For rent Slteping Rooms 1nd
light hou1e kNplnt room1. Perk
Centre! Hotel. Call 814·446·

Auto Parts
Acceuories

Television
Viewing

'V

''JII.JbLI:'' FOR A RAC~o_,

burning stova •1711,
din~t rvom tlble and chlire

.adult 1.200. month, depoalt,

Fumt'shed Rooms

'· v

Wood

11

~45

&amp;

20 guogo Remington Pu..,
Modol810. Goodcondhton . Colt
114·882-5204.

Fuml1hM 1 bedroom lperl~t
on Mt. Vernon Avenue, newly
remodeled carpat, eir condition.
heat end weter peld, 1at floor

booement. t160. 304-175-

76

pt. hook uP 2 Pt. plowo. CoH
814-255-8303.

after 8pm.

duplex, . prolor lolngle worldng

KIT 'N' C~ YU ®br

Camervn tr•l• 12x14, John
DMre 2 row com plant•. MF 3

43088 or coli 814-883·4614.

~~::;~~~:;::::;;;::;:::"r;~;:~~:;;::::;:::::::::::~ -7;64~1=..
:;;;:·=ni=ng~·~·;::::::;;;::==

676-1333.

12

Merchandiae

tlE ' outomotlc wooh• • diYor.
u . cond. Kltch.n table, box
opringo, ondlllndo, hoodbolrd.
Coli 814·387·7218 or 114·
317-0522.

paycllocb.

~b

54 Misc .

Apartment
for Rent

· .B&lt;1RN LOSER

Tuesday, July 22, 1986

Ohio

11'1'(

..

..•
·'

•

.

'12:30 • (I) 9 Lllte Night with
Dlvlcl Lll,.rman

.,

.,

.,

..
•,

..

�·,

•

Page 10:-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'Tuatday, July 22, 1986

Fourth earthquake in two weeks jolts ·C~ifomia residents
'

By &amp;D::HAEL COUJNS
CHALFANT VALLEY, Call!.
tUPI) -The state's fourth major
earthquake In two weeks Jolted the
Sierra foothills, damaging nearly
150 homes and panicking residents,
In a S~XJrt 11 ~lsmlc rumbling that
officials said could portend a more
dangerous tA!mblor.
The eanhquake, measuring 6.2
on the Rlcl!ter scale, struck Man·
day at 7:42 a.m. PDT and was
followed by aftershocks every two
minutes, Including two described
by federal selsmoklgtsts as "In·
tense" temblors of 5.2 and 5.3
magnitude.

The quake knocked homes off
foundations, broke sewer lines,
forced the evacuation of hundreds
of campers, collapsed a 1.5!1-yard
section ot highway, broke windows,
cracked walls, sent dishes and
other household objects crashing to
floors, rattled merchandise off
shelves and touched off rockslides.
· Not a single home In Chalfant
Valley escaped damage rut no
sertous Injuries were reported.
Centered close to Chalfant Valley
In the eastern Sierra foothills, the
quake was felt as far away as Los
Angeles, San Francisco, Salt Lake
City and Las Vegas. Olalfant

Valley, 2~ miles northeast of Los
Angeles, Is a popular hunting and
fishing area near Nevada, east of
Yosemite National Park.
" It was unt:ellevable. It was
terrifying," said Carol Bustos, a
resident of nearby Bishop, a dty of
5,&lt;mwherethe relllngof a fast food
outlet collapsed, walls splintered
and plate glass windows shattered.
"Things started falllng &lt;if the
walls. Everything was flying
around my office," said Bustos.
The quake was the second to hit
the Chalfant Valley area In two
days. On Sunday, a 5.5 quake
caused minor damage.

In Washington, Director Dallas Coast Monday afternoon.
L. Peck of the U.S. Geological
Caltech selsmiJlogtst Kate Hutton
Survey said the region could expect stressed that none of the quakes
potentially dangerous earthquakes was directly CQnnected.
for the next SEVeral days, Including
Dozens of residents left Chalfant
ooe In the 7.0 range.
Valley to stay In motels or with
A quake 11 that magnitude is friends. Those who stayed were
capable 11 causing widespread, warned against drinking well water
heavy damage.
:because of possible contamination
Two other big quakes, each on from broken sewer llnes.
different faults, have struck South· ; A special federal-state-county
ern California this month. A 5.9 U~Sk force trucked In bottled water
quake rattled the Palm Springs . and rmblle tnilets. Task force
area July 8 and on JulY 13, a quake spokesman Ray Schaaf said alll45
centered cilshore shook Oceanside. : homes In Chalfant Valley were
A quake measuring 4.0 was re· ; damaged . and that 18 to 20
corded off the San Diego County , residences, mostly mobile homes,

.

Detroit seeks court action to end week-long strike ~~~~g~~~~~=
By BOB TRIPI
DETROIT (UPI)- City officials
pressed for court action tn get a
week-old strike by 7,!nl municipal
employees declared illegal, and
elect Ions officials vowed to hire ·
nearly 50 non-union workers to save
next month's primary.
City officials said they will fOe
papers today with the Michigan
Court of Appeals to overturn a
judge's dental of a restraining order
against striking members d. the
American Federation of State,
County and Municipal Empklyees.

In Phlladelphia, returning
workers continued to clean up the
cluttered streets following a :~~May
walkout, and a strike by Plttsrurgh
trash haull'rs set for today was
averted by progress In contract
talks, city officials say.
Wayne County Circuit Judge
Sharon Finch rejected Detroit's
request Monday to end the walkout
by enforcing a 1947 state law
forbidding public workers from
striking. She also denied pleas to
force "essential" employees back
to work.

Dairy Twilight Tour
slated for Thursday
By Jolin C. Rice
County Extmslon Agent

)lst ~XJlling them out and taking
skin with you.

AgrlcuXure

POMEROY -DatryTourSiatal
- The annual Dairy Twutght Tour
will be held oo Thursday, July :II at
7 p.m. The Dairy Tour, which Is a
cooperative venture between the
Soli Conservation Service and the
Cooperative Extension Service, wlll
he held at the Roy Holter Farm.
The. tour should be a very
Interesting tour which will constst cl
viewing equipment, alfalfa and
corn production, construction d
manure storage, the cow feeding
operation and mllklngparlor, plus a
machine and shop area. Refresh·
ments will be served at the md d.
the tour.
Farm Sclenre Review - Please
mark your calendars now for Sept.
23, :!A, and 25. This will be the dates
for the Farm Sclenre Review this
year at the Molly Caren Center west
of Columbus. Some of the highlights
or changes wUI be new hours, rldge
planting, sheep dog trials, and a
rew home for the Home, Yard, and
Garden program.
The biggest change this year wtll
be an extension of the Review's
hours. Activities are scheduled
from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Tuesday
and Wednesday and from 7a.m. to4
p.m. on Thursday. The review
again wlll consist of many displays
and derronstratlons and advance
tickets to the 1986 Farm Science
Review are $2.00 and will be
availablE' here at our office as well
as !Dme ether local agrtbusinesses
later this summer. Tickets sell lor
$4.00 at the gate during the review.
Spotted Fever Takes First Victim
In Ohio - To many cl us a dog tick Is
just perhaps nothing more than a
nu isanre and Is (icked and disposed
d. (J"omptly without little regard to
the dangers that It can present.
Recently, DICk Mlller, anentomolo·
gist at The Ohio State University,
talked about ticks and the importanre for their proper handling and
disposal.
A person recently died In Coium·
oos from Rocking Mountain Spot·
tal Fever. The big reason was that
the problem was not caught soon
mough and because of lack of quick
diagnosis and treatment'lhe person
did mt recover. He had a fever. but
ti&gt;Jught he could ride it out and
decided not to go to a doctor. The
!Pver got worse and before any·
thing could be done, he was gone.
Ticks should really be handled
with tissue or something and then
disposed of. You really should not
handle ticks with your bare hands
and especially ~they are fastened
you nredtoremovethemotherthan

City attorney Donald Pallen said
he wlll cite the Michigan law In
asking the appeals court to order all
employees back to work.
About 7,(00 AFSCME Councll 25
employees walked off their jobs
Wednesday, and another 5,1XXl
workers, Including bus drivers and
trash haulers, are honoring picket
lines.
Chemists for the city's sanitation
system, which provides water for
the metropolitan area's 4 million
residents, returned to the job
Monday night with pollee escorts.
The chemists voted earller to honor
the picket lines.
Election director Ed Wilson said
he Is planning to hire nearly 50
non-union workers today to save the
Aug. 5 primary, and warned the
National Guard would he alerted If
violence broke out between strikers
and the non-union help.
"We're In bad shape," Wilson

said. "We're he hind on absentee
ballots, voter registration and
preparing the ballot boxes."
" the two sides
Talks ""tween
""
broke off · early Monday after a
17-hour bargaining session ended
with no progress reported. TalkS
were scheduled to resume today.
Residents, meanwhile, lugged
their own garbage "to six city·
operated dumps, and :OO,!m dally
oos riders found other mmns of
transportation. An estimated 13,1XXl
tons 11 garbage had pled up around
the city since the strike began.
Three private trash rompanles
were haullng garbage from six
emergency dump sites to area
landfllls In hopes of preventing a
major health hazard, officials said.
They were not, howi"Jer ,"scheduled
to assume additional duties.
The union wants a 26 percent pay
raise during the next three yearn,
oot the city Is offertng raises tied to

Its finaliclal situation with a :~:.~of the four oa:upants w~
guaranteed2percenttheflrstyear
"It was a jagged quake, not a
and a cap of 18 percent lor the rolling one," Ron Baran, manager
three·year cont ract··
.of the Bishop Chamber of Com·
In PhOadelphia, blue-collar city merce, said of the quake. "It felt
employees returned to work with· like It went on for 45 seconds. We
out a contract Monday and regan sawtreesstDiswayingtwomlnutes
restoring munidpal services that later."
had been halted or llmited during
the strike, which began July 1.
Sanitation workers were on the
job for a third day, haullng the
45,tro tons of rotting garbage that
JULY 21•25
had piled up during the strike.
•
District Council 33 of AFSCME,
TROPICAL FIUIT S ~~
which represents blue-collar
workers, voted Sunday to return to
IIPPDS ..............
work without a contract, just two
days after a judge ordered trash
collectors to return to work or face
$40,(00 a day In fines.
A spokeswoman in the state
located on Rt. 7 •
media tor's office said no contract
talks were scheduled with Council
5 Mi. No. of Chester !:"
33. ·
••

r;:==:;;:;;.;;;:;;::==:;
60'' Wide._............... 2 "
4/Sl

EASTERN HILL
FABRIC SHOP

'

.

Editorial, Page 2

SeeP8ge9

Reds lose

Fair weather

Spor1s, Page 3

story, Page 12

•

at y
Vol.36, .No. 55
Copyrighted
... 1986

•

enttne
2 Sections 16 Pagea

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, July 23, 1986 ·

25 Cent•

A Multimedia Inc. NewiP•P•r

ll~igs • bo~ approves student·reassignment
·By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Sial! Wrller
TWenty-eight Salisbury Elernentary ~1\Jdents from grades one
through six will be reassigned to
Pumeroy Elementary for the 198687 school year. This was the
recomrnenlla tlon given by Meigs
Local Superintendent Dan E. Morrls at Tl!esday night's meeting of
the Meigs· Local Board of
Educa tlon.
Morris said the first consldera·
tlon In developlnl( a recommenda.
tlon was·to eliminate overcrowding
of SalisbUry's first grade, wiitch
would consist of 46 students · If
reassignments are not made. The
decision to reassign chldren In the
other grades-was made to prevent
children from the same famutes
having tn · attend two different
schools.
Areas Involved In the reassign·
ment Include Crew Road, Enter·
prise, Dark Hollow, WU!ow ·Creek

and Laurel Cliff. These areas were
chosen because very Httle rerouting
. of buses would be necessary In
transporting children from these
areas tn Pomeroy.
Thirteen of the 46 first graders
llve In these designated areas and
their tran.Sier would Ieiive Sails·
. Jll!n: With a.ctasj1of 33 first graders
·'arid)nerease·Poniemy'sclass to 51
...,pvetall with a 25-26spllt between Its
two first "grade units. SailS bury has
·space !Dr only one unit.
Also to be reassigrled from
$allsbury to Pomeroy · are five
second graders, . three 'thjrd graders, one fourth grader, tour filth
graders and two sixth grac;lers.
mJ.llaklng the decision.'b reassign students, Morris said every
attempt was made to stax.as close
to Pomeroy boundarlesaS'posslble.
Crew Road was included because
six of the 46 live on that road and
those children attended Pomeroy
kindergarten last year. he added.

Whether or not the reassignrnents wlll continue beyond the
1986-87 school year wUl depend on
enrollment changes In either of the
schools involved in the reassignrnent Morris said.
"We understand that some par·
ents will be happY and some
unhappy'.. Morris commented .
"rut we cannot have 46 chlldren u\
one classroom. We were looki~ ,
first to balanre the first grade."
RoiJ:ort Snowden, board pres!·
dent, pointed rut that the responsi·
blllty cl assignment of staff and
students rt-sts with the
superintendent.
About 20 concerned parents,
three with children Involved In the
transfer, were at -the meeting and
all seemed satisfied that Morris had
been fair in his declsloq. Some said
that If theJr children begin at
Pomeroy they would rather they
oontbtue at Pomeroy for their six
years of elementary school.
~

'

Morris said he could not make
such guarantees but based on
compiled figures, he did not
anticipate significant changes In
the student population of the two
schools In the next few years.
"The decision was based on what
would he of benefit to all students In
the district, " :ne emphasisEd: . .
Parents with chlldren Involved In
reassignment ·are to ·re notified
soon of the changes Morris
remarked.
Parents, the board and the
administration first discussed the
matter of overcrowding at Salis·
b.Jry at the Jure meeting of the
board.
In other matters. the board
acknowledged the superintendent's
transfer of John Lisle from prlnci·
pal and federal (J"ogram director at
Sallsbury Elementary to fulltime
prtncl~ at Pomeroy Elementary,
~tve this coming school year.
Lisle acted as Pomeroy principal

...{*

.

for a portion of last year, In addition
to carrying out his duties at
Sallsbucy.
The board accepted the resigna·
lions of head teachers Theresa
York and Ed Bartels, and teachers
Virginia Poston and Joyce E. Selig,
all effective July 22. · •
Acknowledgment IJy the board
was given a letter from Robert B.
Morris. Pomeroy elementary prln·
cipal, announdng his Intent to take
disability retirement upon the State
Teachers Retirement System of
Ohio's approval, expected In March
1987.

Maternity leave was granted
teachers Kim Adkins and Emma
Ashley and Pauline Snowden, bus
driv er, was granted a leave of
absence for the coming school year.
Employed as teachers for the
coming year were Phoebe Carey as
elementary art teacher and Gina
Til Us as secondary English teacher.
Employed as gjbstltute teachers

of ~riticism . greetS ·

By ·IIEJ.EI'I. 1110MAs

UPI White Ji~ Reporter

WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan Is reaping a whirlwll)d
of critic~ for refusing )o toughen
U.S. poUcy toward South Africa
with diplomatic and economic
sanctions, but. an aide said the
wliue HOtilif dld ~~expect "cheer:
OnB . . .

14;,
'N':'.:'l! ". ', " -

thA ..,......

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

.

~n/ ~,, ~~ beff 1\11

. 'l~ .· ' ~..r~l.!Jl!):¥111·. .

!lian
ca,led , "'" Ill." aowMent .In
~torta . to ,set .a ·!.ln)etable for
~ndlng apartheid and starting a
ll!alogue with b!a~k leaders. but
warried Congress that cutting U.S.
ties to South Africa woufd be an
"act qf folly" that would benefit
only the Soviets.
"The West can go to hell. ..
responded South African Bishop
Desmond Tutu, a NoiJ:ol Peace
Prize winner. after learning of
Reagan's remarks.
Reagan's failure to shift from a
"quiet diplomacy" policy has
stokf!d the fires of a Capllol Hill

revoft. Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind.
. and Foreign Rei at ions Commit tee
; chairman, is ready to propose
limited economic )XInctions.
"I! Congress Imposes sanctions.
· It would destroy America's flexlbll ·
lty, discard our dlplomatlc lever·
age• .and deepen the crisis,"
Retigan said. "To make a differ·
enre, Ameri~s·- who are a force
l'olf ~ lahd ~i lit :the
world•!... nilst rematn tnvolvt"d."
Tl1l&gt; president renewed calls for
the released all·polltlcal (J"Isoners
- Including Nelson · Mandela, the
black African National Congress
·leader ja"iled lor:M years- and new
efforts IJy the white-mlnortty gil·
verriinent to make peace wllh its
black people and its black
neighbors .
Reagan, who stands against
sanctions with British Prime Minis·
ter Margaret Thatcher among fi'W
world leaders, urged Congress "to
resist this emotional clamor for
~XJnitlve sanctions."
Moll', not less, Western Invest·

rnent til SOuth Africa Is needed. he
said.
"We need not a Western wlthdra·
wal rut deeper Involvement by the
Western ooslness community, as
agents of chan~ and progress and
growth," he said. asserting a strong
South African econoiny w~ld luilp
raise the standard 111Mng lor the
en!tre oontln~'· •
,
,
~- ~ ilot . uij~-tbl.mr­
"conslrucilveo eilPI!elnent" ln. his
speech, tlllugh lie restated Its ·
tenets, saying, "Weare determined
to rer11a1n Involved, dlplomatlcally
and economically, with all the
states of !Kluthern Africa that wish
constructive relationS with the
United States."
. In restating his belle! the United
States must maintain a presence In
South Africa to help oppressed
blacks, Reagan did not call for
renewal of the one-year limited
sanctions he imposed last Sep·
tember - a move that forestalled
congressional action - but aides
Indicated he would do !Kl.

for the coming school year were
Grace Hawley, Betty Hutchison

and Kate Jarrell, all for grades one
through eight .
Employed on a supplemental
contract as girls' varsity volley~all
coach for 1986-87 was Molly
Feasler.
The rate of pay for substitute
teachers was increased to $00 per
day for this coming :.ear.
The length of day for kinder·
ga rten aides was increased from
six to seven hours.
Robert Snowden was named by
the board as the district's delegate
to the annual rosiness meeting of
the Ohio School Boards Association
to bP held In ColumtJ.Js on Nov.
10.12.

And in final bUsiness, the board
accepted the bids of Davls-Qulckel
Agency, Pomeroy. for school ace!·
dent Insurance coverage ;
Downing-Childs Agency for tJ.J s
(Continued on Page 12)

Senators
drafting
•
sanctions

Reagan's S. Afric~· 'stand

By E. MICHAEL MYERS
WASHINGTON (UPil- Senate
RepubliCan leaders, abandoning
the administration's South African
policy , are drafting new economic
sanctions they hope wUI Ioree the
government In Pretnrta to make the
transltkm to black majority rule.

said he
sanctions tl)is week ;n~~~~~~
tary of State
appearance before the panel today
to discuss administration pollcy.
Republicans said they were
disappointed by President Rea.
gan' s speech Tuesday, in which he
TOP DESIG!IiER - Taldn« top honors .with her de$1gn of a flag for
condemned apartheid oot refused
the village of Pomeroy was Melody Roberts of Long Bottum. The
to endorse new sanctions against
conlelll was spon!IOred by the Pomeroy Merchants Association. The
South
Africa.
design will be made Into a Rag and the ftag placed, along with the
Shultz
and Reagan argue that
American Flag, on the pole on the parking kit. For her contribution
tougher sanctions will hurt South
Melody, rl«ht, was presented with a $50 savings bond by Sandy
Africa·~ economy and black
Iannarelll. presldenl of the 8880Ciatkln Tuesday. Ordel'!l for -add.llklnal
workers and leave Washington with
Pomeroy flags may be placed by re~ldent.s of the 0011n$y by comactlng
no lnfluenre In Pretoria.
lannareW.
Lugar, R.fnd., had appealed to
Reagan bt an Oval Office meeting
Monday not to abandon the idea of
sanctions that go beyond the limited
Pt-naltles he signed Into law last
September.
Communica tions Is to meet with Indlstrial Commission SQ firemen
Obvi:lusly lrrttated that Reagan
council in the nearfururetoanswer would be covered In case of Injury
ruled
them out. Lugar fueled the
any questions regarding the change while fighting a fire.
Senate
drive Tuesday for sanctions
In service.
The park committee repdrted the
that could include a trade embargo.
Approved by council was a free entertainment last Saturday
"The preskjeQt~ needs to do
contract with the Industrial Com- night at the Shrine Club Park was a
mission of Ohio providing for success, with just u.r~r 100 peqple more," he said. "We need to take
coverage for the firemen. The attending. Another . !I"Ogram has acllon. For Congress that means
legislation."
contract spells out responslbllltles been slated for Saturil~y. Aug. 2.
Lugar said he Isconsidering such
of the department 1)114 vlllage:to Included on the proiifa'm that night
sanctions
as a lreeze on the U.S.
keep a cun:ent Ust on file with the
(Continued ·on ~ 12)
bilnk acco411ts 11 South Alrtcail
citizens, a~ ·mlanding rlgbts for
South AfriCan Airways and a deQ!al
of visas {or·· white South African
.
. businessmen and others to visit ihe
"The question 15, do yru pass It about taxes.
Unital States:
"''d IJ2 cautious about changing
"These sanctions do mt clqse
back, do you pass some cllt back,
how do yoo pass it back?" Celeste state law before the (J"e!lldent signs down any mines, they .dO not hurt
ihe (federal! law," Pfiilse said.
employment," he said. "It 'hits to
said.
During
a
day-long
trip
to
Wathe heart of the leadership group.
Michigan Gov. James Blanchard
shington,
Celeste
met
with
d.flcials
They are targeted, not pJnitlve. It ts
on June 20 said he would lower
Michigan's personal lncrime tax of two unions, the Communication different from total withdrawal.''
rate by 0.2 percent If Congress Workers of America and the
Senate GOP leader Roben Dole ·
passes a taJt reform bill similar to ·American Federation · of Staie, of Kansas and Sen. Nancy Kassethe Sena,te plan. The flnal tax .bill Cou nty and Muninclpal Em· baum, R-Kan .. chairwoman of the
now Is IJ:olng written by House a11d ployees. Also on his schedule was a Foreign Relations Committee's
$100 a person fund -raiser for his
Africa subcommittee, joined Lugar
SeniM'tiegotlators.
:
Pease'said he had no advice tor campaign. AbOut 125 pj!Opie were. in the meeting with Reagan.
expected
to
attend.
·
Dole
had
called
for
·
a
"Credible
Celest~ on what; Ohio should do
tnlllatlve" from Reagan to block a
drtve fo r tougher peoalUes, and
Kassebaun: proposed that the
sanctions Ihe (J"esident &lt;rdered last
year- due to expire tn September
-he extended , Including a ban 'on
bank loans to the South African
gi)Vet'llfl1erl t.
• .
"I !m deEply disappointed that
, the Jiealdent chose nottoan(IQul\ce
· a new direction for u.s. poucy·
South Africa,'' Kasseba'IJ'II said; ~I
do nqt believe the United States «:an
yas~e!Y accept the, stat\1' quo~r.
Silns. Lowell Welcker, R.:confl:.,
, ·and Ed'Nard i&lt;ftmedy, 'D-¥atSi· ·
have called'br jJii it ti • Houle .
blll baDnlni all tnlde wltb !Ditll.
Afrkla ' except stratNtc ~
an~ requiring u.s. films to' pundit ··
It the ii:bubled iloUntry. ' '
. ,The pair t61d bliat&lt;t!M!y ~ .
'. sill¢'~' li!S, Dmlted. tlllftcl!oi\l, '~~ .: . .
fni ltofhpt action Iii vtt11 ID ~·'
blac~ hope and help avert a~ ·

c;;,rge

Racine Council hears sewage system complaint~_.,; :.

generic compebttonl
Taste breakthrough

.••

..

',.

•.,
.

Regular &amp; Menthol.
Kings&amp;IOOS

...
.......

Thursday throu(lh Salurday

...
...
..,_,

Fair Thursday, with a chance d.
showers and thunderstorms Friday
and Saturday. Highs will be in the
8ls each day, with overnight klws
ranging from Iii to 70.

..,.·.,.
"'~

...

..·'..

Mlr suggested retai price.

...
.....

O~io Lottery

~. ,

'

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Quitting Smoking
Now. Greatly Reduces Serious Risks to Your Health.

C PhiliP Morrie Inc. 1M6

'

12 mg "tar:· 0.9 mg nicoline av. per cigarette-by FTC method.

...,•,
.,
.'
•
~

.'

I

.,

Complalnls of odor from the
sewer line and charges · thai Ihe
sewer system does not work
properly were heard from James
Snodgrass Sr., Mrs. Mary Roush
and Mrs. L. Chancey at Monday
night's meeting of Racine Village
Council.
The three reported they had
al!l'ady attended a meeting of the
Syracuse-RaCine Sewer District

but were comlngtocouncU seekinR
assistance In getting thP problem
corrected.
It was explained that the (J"Oblem
does not fall under councll"s
jumldlction because the sewer
district Is a political entity with
complete control over the sewers.
Council did, however, ·say they
would send a lrtter urging prompt
action in attempting to solve the

problem due to health and safety
factors Involved.
It was reported that Consolidated
Communications Group inc. wlll be
switching the Racine area to
Supercable by mid-August . After
the switch, Racine c;ustomers wUI
get15channeisforthebaslcprlceof
$ll.!lllnstead of n. SupercablewUI
alsolncludetwoColumbusstatlons.
A representative of Consolidated

Celeste urges c~uiion in considering tax ·red1;1ctjO.n.
,

at a generic price!

South Central Ollio
Mostly suMy today, with highs In
the upper 80s. Partly cloudy
tonight, with a low in the upper 60s.
Partly cloudy Wednesday. with
highs in the upper 8ls.
The probabllity of precipitation is
20 percent tnday, near zero tonight
and 20 percent Wednesday.
Winds wlll be light and variable
today and tonight.
Ollio EJdended Foreclllll

'.

·,.

~

S~ornt

Ohio weather

ClEVElAND (UPI) - Mon·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number
048
PJCK-t
686f

··~- Pageant winner

New savages

we " r e perm a·n en t l y
"uninhabitable.''
He said a monetarY estimate on
the. amount ol damage . was not
avajlable.
"I was just cleaning up from
yesterday's mess when It started
shaking again," said moblle horne ·
resident Shirley Bw'rett. "One part
of the house went up and tile tiber
went down. I panicked. I ju$1
wanted to,get out of there."
In Btsi!Op,l5 miles to the south!"
the ceUlni. of · a. Burger Kill/!
restaur~"(rollapsed, as did the
brick ·f~e of the First SlerriJ
Bank: ?
'7
A ~yard section of highway

WJ\SHINGTON (UP! I - Ohio
Gov. Rlchaf!l Celeste dislikes the
idea of· the state .geJ.tlng a windfall
from federal tax reform but he also
Is wary of giving away money
IJ:ofore It materializes.
"My instinct Is the taxpayers In
Ohio shoukl not end up having to
pay more" In state taxi'S, Celeste
· said 'l'\lesday after dlsc\!ssiiJg,
· federal tax reform wit~ Rep. Don
Pease. D·Ohlo, a member of the
committee writing the tax reform
plan.
Celeste said' several options wlll

be considered, Including the idea of
a reduction In lncoll!elax.rates.
A state windfall Is possible
because tax reform Is expected to
broaden the tax base. Ohio Income
taxes are based on oow much a
taxpayerllstsonfederalilicometax
returns for adjusted gross lhcome.
Cele5t~ said Ohio mlgjltcollect $:D)
mllllon to $:1i0 .mtllt6n,rmrl! under
:· tax•.. reform IJlck8ges now being
considered.
Former Gov. James Rllodes, the
Republ,~ait nornln,ee t&gt;r gpvernf1r,
has promised
requci\, OhiO's

to.

Retail prices po8t :~~~rea8e
.

.,

~

WASHINGTON tUPil- Consu·
mer prices rose 0.5 pertent In June
to finish the first half of 1986 a
comfortable 0.2 percent lower than
theywereattMendoflllstyear,the
first such decline In 30 years, the
Labor Department said today. .
It was the steepest monthly rise
In the se;tsonally adjusted COI)S!I·
mer Price IndeX since November
when consumer costs ro!je ' 0.6
percent, analysts at the Bureau of
Labor said.
/ I ii. ~

first time the ·lndex has declined
over the first halt of a year since
· 1955.
·
·
· It .was mate~~: \'&gt;' a 0.2 percent
decline In t))e siX months ended
October, 19fill.and J.Sllt•exceeded by ·
the slx·rmM!_I 1 pes:t?c~ ended Augllst
· 19ffi, the ailaJYstl! tlll.id.
Over~~~ hill 111986, the cost
::&lt;91~ergy ·~.ties - fuel oll,
{ coal, bottled ·1~-.~JIX)tor fuels-,
' deciDed ·at ·;ill ~rate of 40.2
~ perce'n t' 1 T~'"T;;~\ . I
.... fell back at
! ., ''':t;
· . , .;. The pr.lce «(~-. ..,..,.
A2.3~ntriselnener&amp;YPrtCes. 'l anannall&gt;ra~ , t1pattentdurtng
accounted for more than halt"~~· : .llhe.period.w. . ~food~sts·
gail), the 'analySis said. Excl~ ·~,~ bY~ ~~1.
energy ql~ retail prices I"O!Ie by a ' . ~. Jrl.'i! ~~jle~l"e IEaSSOiiaJ
more ~st O~~tit In June,
4ll}uJtml!llti;•~Z'IW&lt;!B :at J27.9,
The l!llf·year prjce !!!'~. 'J d· . meanllti,..;~t',l !"''''ket
lusted for•~tislli!al dlffefl!\res and ·bUllet !lf' ~. fifld ~ ·(hat·
extended ~r 12 rmnths; 111arks the
cost $lQO 'in ~ qow rosts $32"1.90.

.

•I

'

,

.

.

I

personal Income tax dollar-fordollar to get rid of the windfall. He
has said it could mean a tax cut of
up to 15 percent.
Caution Is appropriate now,
Celeste said, because tax reform
stlll Is llelng debated.
"When you start giving back
revenue yru nPVer received, you
can make some serious mistakes,"
the governor said.
Celeste said IV' Is ronsldertng
ways to engjre the money "Is
passed on to the peo ple

In

:v .

,,

• •'!

clv'nV.ar.
•

l

\~

)

'' ,. 'I

,,

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="170">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2760">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="40444">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="40443">
              <text>July 22, 1986</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="7033">
      <name>craven</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="362">
      <name>marshall</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="556">
      <name>ratliff</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1074">
      <name>rice</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="258">
      <name>shaffer</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
