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                  <text>Page-0-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleaiant.

W. Va.

J

Islamic terrorists
free U.S. priest
BEffiUT, Lebanon (UP!\ -The
Islamic Jihad terror group Saturday released the fu&gt;v. Lawren""
Jenco apparently unharmed but
warned of "severe" consequences
to its remaining American hostages
II its demands are not met, police
said.
Jenco was In the custody of
Syrian authorities in eastern Leban·
on's Bekaa Valley and was to be
taken to the Syrian capital of
Damascus, police said.
Hours bef01e the release, the
Islamic Jihad - Holy War movement said In a statement
published in two Beirut newspapers
It would free the 51-year-old Roman
Catholic priest as a gesture of
goodwill because of his "worsening
health" during 19 months of
captivity.
But the group said it would not
rl?lease its remaining American

hostages if its demands are not met
and warned the fu&gt;agan adminls·
'!ration is responsible for the lives of
at least thffi' other kidnapped
Amertcans. The pro-Iranian funda mentalist Shiite Moslem group
claimed it killed a fourth American
last year, but his body has not been
found.
The Islamic Jihad has demanded
the release of 17 of their comrades
jailed in Kuwait for bombing U.S.
and French installations in 19&amp;3.
In Washington, White House
spokesman Larry Speakes said
Saturday, "We'Vf' seen the reports

and we're hopeful:" AState oipartment spokeswoman said she had oo
confirmation of the release.
Brig. Antoine Nasr, head of police
in the village of AI QaJ'iloun, 26
miles southeast of Beirut, told
United Press International that
security forces found Jenco at 10
a.m. Saturday, apparently unharmed, and handed him over to
Syrian authorities.
AI Qaraoun. Is in the Syriancontrolled Bekaa Valley of eastern
Lebanon- a hotbed of pro-Iranian
Shute Moslem ftm:lamentallsts.
Jenco, a director of the Cathollc
Relief Services in Beirut, was taken
to a Syrian post in the town of Anjar,
on the Beirut-Damascus highway
four miles from the Syrian border,
police said. They said he would be
taken to the Syrian capital.
The Moslem Voice of the Nation
radio, which broke the news of his
release, said Jenco was unhanned
and carrying a message from
Islamic Jihad to the Reagan
administration.
The Islamic . jlihad statement.
accompanied by a photograph of
Jenco soowing him thin and
bearded, did not give details on his
health.
But his brother in Joliet, IU., said
Jenco had been treated for high
blood pressure and an eye infe(:tion
caused by his blindfold since he was
abducted Jan. 8,1985, ashe drove to
work in Moslem West Beirut.
John Jenco said family members

Bush trip
will lead
to Israel

AWAITING NEWS - Saturday was a day of
overwhelming joy for the family of the Rev.
Lawrence Jenoo, an American held hostage In
Lebanon for 564 days. Hearing of his reported release
Satul'llal', famUy members gathered In Jollet, ru., at
wpre "ecstatic" and that "all we
havetodo now is hope and pray that
the story Is true."
He said his brother had been
blindfolded, chained and held In
solitary confinement until July 2,
1985, when Presbyterian minister
Benjamin Weir joined him in
captivity. Weir, who was released
last Sept. 14 , gave the family news
of Jencoand said !hey were allowed
to talk and pray together.
The Jihad statement, published
In the independent An Nahar
nev.~paper and the leftist As Saflr
newspaper. said in part that it

the home of Jenoo'sslster,Mae MlheUch, wheretll!y

awaited more news. A picture of FatherJenoo, which
was handed oot by the Islamic Jihad - "Holy War''
~ Friday night Is held up by one family member to
show that he wW soon he home amongst all ol them.
tUPI)

would send a letter withJenco from
the remaining oostages to their
families, the American people and
the U.S. government.
There are four Americans stUI
missing in Lebanon and Islamic
Jihad has claimed responsibility for
aU the abductions and produced
photographs.
Last year the group said It
exe(:uted William Buckley, 56, a
political officer at the U.S. Embassy who was kidnapped in 1984.
His body was nf'Ver recovered.
The other missing Americans:

-Terry Anderson. 37, chief
Middle East correspondent and
Beirut bureau manager for the
Associated Press, of Batavia , N.Y.
He was kidnapped March 16, 1985.
-David Jacobsen, 54, of Huntington Beach, Calif., administrator of
the American University Hospital.
He was kidnapped near his offiCf'
May 28, 1ffi5.
• -Toomas Sutherland, Cil a
Scotllsh-bom American fi·om Colorado and d&lt;'an of the American
University of. Beirut's agricu lture
school. He was seized June 9. 1985.

Statesman, diplomat Averell Harriman dead at 94
YORKTOWN HEIGfiTS. N.Y.
(UPii - W. Averell Harriman. a
New [)('aler whose statesmanship
guided the diplomacy of Democratic presidents from Franklin
Roosevelt to .Jimmy Carter, died
Saturday at his home in suburban
New York. He was }1.
A family spokesman said Harriman, who had been in failing health
for a month, died of kidney failure
and pneumonia . His wife and
daughters were at his hedsidewhcn
he died.
The tall, thin multimillionaire
who devoted his !He to public
service was best known for his role
as diplomat In World War II,
cementing the wartime allianCP
with Winston Churchill and Josef

Stalin and later helping rebuild a
A member of the Republican
ravaged Eumpe under the Mar- Party until the advent of the New
shall Plan.
Deal, Harriman was a polo star,
Born in New York City on Nov. 15, head of the railroad he inherited
1891, he was the son of the head ol from his father. Se(:retary of
the Union Pacific Railroad and was commerce, ambassador to the
educated at Yale.
Soviet Union and Britain and a
Harriman was elected governor guiding spirit In the creation of the
of New York in 1954, was unsuccess- North Atlantic Treaty Organization
ful in his bid for the Democratic and the Marshall Plan.
presidential nomination two years
He was aclive in foreign affairs
later, and then was defeated by into his early 90s.
another millionaire, Nelson RockeAn official State D'partment
feller , in his attempt to he re-e]e(:ted release, sald of Harrtman. "Few
governor in 1958.
diplomats in American public life
He was an early advocate of have served their country In as
Social Security, helped draft the many Important capacities or
first public housing bill and nego- takfn part in so many history tiated the 1963 nuclear test ban shaping events."
treaty with the Soviet Union.
It added, "His advice always

reflected his deep love for his
country and Its best interests. His
loss will be deeply felt.
Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass..
called Harriman "one of the
greatest Americans of his time ...
the Renaissance man of American
public life. In many respecls, we
could not have had the ~th century
without him."
Harriman , who knew f'Very
Soviet leader from Leon Trotsky to
Mikhail Gorbachev, was mourned
in Moscow where Ihe official news
agency, Tass, praised his role in
"arresting the arms race" and for
helping develop "mutual understanding between the Soviet Union
and the United States.
In l9'1J, Roosevelt sent Harriman
to Lond'on to help Prime Minister

By JERRY WOLFFE
DETROIT tUPII - Unde r
mounting prcsSUf(' from Mayor
Coleman A. Young and union
sympathizers threatening to cross
picket lines, bargainers for the city
and 7,0CKJ municipal workers
rE'ached agrrernl'n l on a cont ract,
ending a JU-day strtkr.
The agrermcn l , which rame

three hours after negot iators bf'gan
meeting at8p.m. EDT Friday, was
announced at 11:45 p.m. by lxlrgalnNs for the city and stti king
members of the American Frdrra
tion of State. County and Municipal

Bargainers said they would
release details of the three-year
contract after a ratification vote by
the workers. Nodateforralification
was immediately set and neither
side could say when city services
would b£&gt; resumed .
The strike. which began July 16.
idled 7,00J AFSCME members plu s
5,00J other workers, including bus
drivers and trash haulers, who
hooored the picket lines.
Some ll,OOO tons of garbage piled
up during the walkout, and :ro.ooo
daily buscommuterswereforced to
find other means of transportation .
Teamsters Loca l 214, which

By NORMAN D. SANDLER
FRANKFURT, West Gennany
(UPli - Vice President George
Bush was en route to the Middle
East Saturday amid signs of minor
complications atl!l 'hints his-tt1p to
Israel, Jordan and Egypt might
extend to Morocco to further
Arab-Israeli dialogue.
Bush - accompanied by his wUe
Barbara, a small army of aides and
support personnel and eight Jewish
Republicans whose presence un derscored the political facet of his
trip - spent a relaxed day at
Rhein-Main Air Base before departing today for Israel.
Even as he rest('(! up for a round
of official m('('tings, public appearances and telegenic sightseeing
tours in a region low on the
administrations agend a in re(:ent
months. h1s mission appeared
unsettled.
Key among the wrinkles thrown
into the trip was the possibility of a
side trip to Morocco to follow up on
the mwt ing last week between
King Hussan and Israeli Prime
Minister Shimon Peres.
As U.S. officials considered the
move, Bush spokesman Marlin
Fitzwater said. "We have no plans
to go to Morocco bu t il is certainly
something we will not rule out."
The surprise Hassan-Peres summit produced no breakthroughs but
was significant as the first meeting
between Israeli and Arab leadPrs in
five years.
Hassan complained that Peres
refused to budge on Arab League
calls for Israel to recognize the
PaiPstine Liberation Organization
and withdraw from occupied terri tories as conditions for peace talks.
Howf'Ver, Peres, his Labor Party
associates and U.S. officials in
Washington favored the talks in
Morocco as a welcome if tentative
step.
The prospect of a trip to Morocco
by Bush - a move tha t would not be
taken until after his consultations in
Israel and perhaps Jordan and
Egypt - apparently were an
attempt to maintain the momentum created by the Hassan-Peres
m"'ting.
However . U.S. officials have been
rellX't ant to attach long-range
promis&lt;' to !hat sudden developmentor depict the \1ce president as
an intermediary.
Officials said the addition of
Morocco to Bush's itinerary would
depend on the outcome of his
official talks. especially the reactions of King Hussein of Jordan,
whose refusal to endorse the
Hassan -Peres m('('ting disappointed some Israeli officials, and
Israeli Foreign Minister Yitzhak
Shamir. who had only rest rained
praise for the summit.
Shamir, leader of lhe rightist
Likud bloc. is scheduled to succeed
Peres as prim&lt;' minist&lt;'r in October
and is viewed as less likely to
engage in accommodation with
moderate Ara b leaders, such as
Hassan.
Administration officials also
hinted at problems in nailing down
the attendance Ust for a Tuesday
meeting in Jerusalem between
Bush and a group of Palestinians
from the West Bank. which Israel
has occupied since the 1967 Slx Day
War.

Churchill with Britain' s war effort,
and the next year named him
ambassador to Moscow.
President Harry Truman named
him ambassador to Britain in 1946.
Harriman a Iso became Se(:retary of
commerce and chairman of the
President's Committee on Foreign
Aid, which laid the basis for the
Marshall Plan.
Truman summoned Harriman to
Washington as his adviser and
globa l trouble-shooter when fi ght·
lng broke out in Korea in 19:il.
He played a similar role fo r
President Kennedy, going to Germany during the Berlin crisis in
1961, later to Laos during its civil
war and then to the Soviet Union in
1963 to negotiate the nuclear test
ban treaty.
President Lyndon Johnson also
used Harriman as his diplomatic
tmuble-shooler.
Shortly after Jimmy Carter's
election in 1976, Harriman traveled
represents 600 garbage collectors
who honored picket lines, Friday to the Soviet Union to explain
American politics to &amp;lviet Presithreatened to break the strike by
ordering Its workers back on the job dent Leonid Brezhnev.
His third wife, the former
if a settlement was not reached by
Pamela Bigby Churchill, and two
the wE"ekend.
daughters, Mrs. Shi rley Fisk and
"Our people are putting a
Mrs. Stanley G. M011imcr, were
tremendous amount of heat on us to
return to work," said Teamsters with him at his suburban Westchester home when he died.
official Joe Valenti.
Besides his daughters. he left six
Young also applied pressull' to
grandchildren and Sf'Veral grea tend the walkout.
MUfed at the sta lled negolialions, grandchildren.
Funeral services will b£&gt; held
the mayor Friday pulled the city's
most recent offer df the bargaining Tuesday at ooon at St. Thomas
Church in New YOrk City. Burial
table. But he later met privately
wilh Glass. AFSCME tri-county will be private at his family estate
coordinator Flo Walker. Teamsters in Harriman, N.Y.
A memorial service will be held
official Robert Holmes, and other .
at
noon Sept. 16 at the National
city and union officials, urging a
Cathedral In Washington.
speedy settlement .
"We are willing to continue to
exert as much time and as much
WOlD
effort as is necessary to reach a
UMI
settlement." Young said. "We are
ldtiOd by CLAY R. rOUAN - - - - - ready to bargain ."
Rearrange ti-le 6 acrombled
Bargainers for the city and the
wordt below to make 6
simple words. Print letters of
strikers ended a 12-hour session at 4
ea ch in Its !ine of s~uores .
a.m . Friday and had reported
"definite progress." saying a new
E S CC I N
contract was on the table.
Talks resumed at midday Friday
under the direction of state media tor Charles Jamerson. who imposed a news blackout, IJ.rt they
KOPHOU
temporarily broke off when city
barg-diners walked out, union offi.

Detriot, striking workers agree to pact
Employees Council 25.
"We've hammered out a tenta tive agreemen t which moves
AF'S('ME forward on important
wage and contract language protec
lions. " AFSCME Council 2'i President AI Glass said.
"I know they're hoping to get
their peopiP back as soon as
possible. and the city of [)('troit
wanl!'i to rPStorr city SC'rvicps as
soon as possible," said Roger
Chwk, Labor Relations Direetor
for the city .
Cheek dcscrib£&gt;d the ro ntrac t as a
"good" agreement

'~~~:~' S© 1\4tllA-L&amp; £
0

riJL&lt;i said.

Because of the news blackout, the
reason for the break in negotiations

..•,.,;,£

,~1if::l :

•

HELP FOR TilE SOUTIIWEST- Members~ til!
Elyria (Ohio) Cati10Uc lligh School football team load
bales ol alfalfa for reUef lor stricken Ianners'
livestock from !'*' ro"C•nt drooght In Southwestern

states. Alan Carpenter, donor of tbe at !aHa, plans to
have three semi-trucks lull of his SUJ11Iussmt to fellow
farmers. (UPI)

Drought will cause farm failures
TIFTON, Ga. t UP]) - Agricul
turc Secretary Richard Lyng,
inspecting drought damage in south
Georgia, promised immediate fed eral aid but warned that it may not
be enough to save some farms.
"When we get Into a drought as
big as this one, there's no way that
you can indemnify 100 percent of
the losses. You simply can't do
that," Lyng said Friday as he
;oured the parched brown farmland
ti south Georgia .
The $1.12-blllion drought , the
"Orst In the South in more than a
'fltury, has nearly wiped out the
glon's soybean. com and hay
ops and threatens to star~ '~ ca ttle.
J_yng toured S€'Veral farms with
n. Mack Mattingly, R-Ga., met

with members of Georgia's congressional delegation and reiterated his promise to provide quick
federal relief. But he said some
farmers will go under.
"Can the ~vernment completely
bail them out? This lss&gt;mo&gt;thlngwe
have to think about," Lyng said.
Lyng rejected I be Idea of low-cost
loans because they .1\'0Uld burden
the farmers with more debt. but he
offered no specific alternative.
"We're trying to he responsive,
trying to do the best we can," he
said. "The presklent has asked me
to implement as many policies to
help these p€91lle as we can. This
will be done. II will be done over a
period of. days, not weeks and
months."

27. 1986 .

One to17acco and peanut farmer
who said his crops were a total loss
this year warned Lyng the federal
government would regret abandonIng farmers .
"If you let the food run out, you
plant the seeds forrevolution, " said
WUlls Nash of Irwin County.
Lyng said during a stop at
Abraham Baldwin Agrlcullural
College that farmers are most
threatened by foreign countrtes
dumping commodities in the United
States.
Agriculture agents In thedroughl
area report' soil moisture IS 78
percent very soort and 22 percent
short, meaning there Is virtually no
moisture In lhesoll down to a depth
of six Inches.

was not

I ll I I I'

SKATESVLL£, U.S.A. Will
Be Closed During The
Month of August for
remodeling. SIATESVIUE
will re-open Tuesday,
Sept. 2. We hope to see
ou then.

I

REJETS

I
I
~~

kno~Aon .

Howf'Ver. acting on orders from
.Jamerson and Wayne County
Circuit Judge Sharon Finch, negotiators for the two sides resumed
talks in the evening.
Finch told the two parties~ they
faDed to reach an agreement at the
session, they were to meet at least
eight hours Saturday and again
today . ~
Afl&gt;CME rejected the city's
original offer r:i a guaranteed 2
percent pay Increase in lhe first
year of a three-year conlract and
subsequent raises based on the
city's abUlty to pay with an 18
percent maximum. The union had
demanded 26 percent C1/er the three
years.

trs·

UNNERO
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hUiband while !ryin9. to drive
1--rD:....:.;.A...:L:.,.E::--::;E_T,_-1 through an unfamtliar city,
9 1 1
"but highway interchange
I_ .I 1. . .
signs come--."

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Tuppers Plains
•
wtns
tourney

Dail} Number: 252
Tonight, partly cloudy wllh a
chance of showers and thunder-

-Page 4

Louo: 38, 40, 22,

26, 37, 31.

•

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Vot.36, No.58
Copyrighted 1986

stonns, SGIIIe pGII8Ibly severe.
LGw br the lower 711!1. Ulfrt and
variable winds. Chance of rain
4ft percent. Tuesday, mostly
sumy. High In the upper 8ls.

•

enttne
1 Section, 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 28, 1986

25 Centl

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Area's unemployment increased during June
By KEVIN KELLY
OVP News Editor
Unemployment in all area counties increased
during June, according to preliminary figures from
the Ohio Bl,ll'eau of Employment Services.
Ohio's overall jobless rate reflected a seasonally
adjusted figure of 8.9 percent, as high school studenls
and college graduates entered the job market during
June. The nationally adjusted rate for June Is 7.1
percent.. Figures lor Individual counties were no!
adjusted, OBES reported.
The biggest increase was recorded In Jackson ·
County, which jumped 2.7 percent from a May flgure

of 13.5 to 15.7 in June. Out of a work force of 13,lXJ
people, there were approximately 1,200 out of work
during the month.
Meigs County's joblessness was up 2 percent over
May's 10.~ percent rate, OBES said.
Melgs'l2.9 percent figure for June soowed that out
of an estimated work force of 9,200 people in Meigs
County, there were l,:m out of work. The figure was.
howf'Ver, down from the county's June 1985 jobless
rate of 14 percent, OBES said.
In Gallla County, 1,500 people out of the
approximate work force of 12,11Xl were reported

without jobs, raising the unemployment figure Lei
percent from 10.5 in May to 12 in June. The county's
June 1985 unemployment rate was 11.6.
Lawrence County noted one of the smaller
increases in the area, up five-tenths ria percent from
10.6 in May to 11.1 in June. meaning approxjmately
2,700 residenls oul of a work force estimate ol Zl,!KXJ
were not employed. Lawrence's figure was also up
from the June 1985 jobless rate of 9.8 percent.
Vinton County . which had noted a steady de(:reasc
over the past ff&gt;W months, was back up again by 1.8
percent, from 12.1 in May to 13.9 111 June. OBES said

that out of an estimated work force of 3,400, there
were 600 residenls without jobs.
Vinton's figure for June was down from the June
1985 rate of 15 percent, the service reported .
Athens County, which has noted a progressive
decrease duringahe year and is the only area counly
with an unemployment rate b£&gt;Iow 10 percent,
Increased eight-tenths of a percent, from 7.8 in May to
8.6 in June, with approximately 2,00Jresldentswtri a
work force of 23,800 unemployed. The figure Is also up
over the June 1985 rale of 7.9 percent, according to
OBES.

Remains
located
in cabin

Controversial memo haunts
nominee for chief justice
By JUDI HASSON
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Wil Ham Rehnquist, nominated to
become the 16th chief justice, could
fa ce some tough questions frot:n a
Senate commi ttee on memos he
wrote 34 years ago supporting
racial segregation.
Rehnquist has tried to explain
away one of the controversial
memos, but Democratic members
of the Senate Judiciary Comittee.
which opens confirmation hearings
1\resday, are expected to question
him about contradictions as to the
reason why .he wrote them.
Committee members are also
expected to bring up allegations,
which Rehnqulst has denied. that
he was involved in harassing and
intimidating black voters In Phoenix, where he practiced law In the
e~rly 1~"'"'"' .. ·

fu&gt;hriqulst, 61, who has been on
the Supreme Court since 1971, was

:~~~ ~lll~= r~ir~;'~~:

Justice Warren Burger. Reagan
named federal appeals court Judge
Antonln Scalia to Rehnqulst's seat.
Both nominations require Senate
conflrmallon.
Both men are well -known conser-

vatives, and feminists as well as
civil rights groups have been
campaigning against their nomina tions. The National Abortion Rights
Actkln League said recently Rehn qulst and Scalia were oommltled to
overtUrning the Supreme Court's
historic 1973 ruling legallzin~
abortion.
However, legal observers and
pollticans on both side a the fence
expect Rehnqulst and Scalia to be
confirmed by the Senate.
Rehnqulst, appointed to the high
court by President Richard Nlxon,
has r:iten stood alone on the political
right, and court watchers say his
appointment and Scalia's wUI help
Shift the oourt's ideological makeup
for a generation.
One of the memos In question
came to light in 1971 when
Rehnqulst was confirmed as an
associate JuSt,~. aller ·five grueling
days before the Judiciary Committee. The memo argued that the
separate-but-€Qual racial doctrine
was correct.
Another of the memos said it was
"about time the court faced the fact
that white people in the South don't
like colored people." A third said
there were too many liberal clerks

at the oourt engaged In a "pat rological search for discrimination."
In explaining the memos during
the 1971 hearings, Rehnqulst said
they were written at the request of
Justice Robert Jackson, for whom
Rehnquest was a clerk In 1952 and
1953.
But a fellow clerk at the time,
Donald Cronson, has sa id each
clerk stated his own views for
Jackson, who is dead .
Jackson's fortner secretary said
Rehnqulst's explanation "smeared
the reputation of a great justice."
Several legal scholars haV(' said
Rehnquist's ex planar iln did not
ring true.
"Those memos Dre extremely
relevant. He was not a child when
he wrote them," said Harvard law
professor Laurence Trlb£&gt;, who has
~· Ite!Plng Oorrimlllell' 1OP,m:·,
crats prepare for the confirmation
hearing.
"They are relevant because of
testimony he gave about them
when he was first nominated (in
19711 . Certainly the question of
whether. Justice Rl?hnqulst was
fully candid In the role the memos
played is a legit !mate question."

Meigs County officials were
called to Long Hollow Road Sunday
afternoon to the scene of a oouse
fire at the Don Hood residence
earlier In the week after a relative
of Hood discovered possible bone
fragments and tissue Sunday in the
burned out remalnsofthe log cabin:
Going to lhe scene were Sherlfi
Howard E. Frank and Meigs
County Coroner Dr. James P.
Conde.
The fir(' at the log cabin had
occurred early on the morning of
Wednesday, July 23. The cabin was
engu !fed in flames whl'n firemen
arrived.
Conde reponed that it is oot.
knOwn if the evidence which wascollected is of human origin, but the:
evidence wUI be submitted to the

WASH F1RST - Megan Clark, of Brownie Troop 1271, Pomeroy,
takes time to wash her hand before lunch during the Girl Seoul camp
held a1 Camp Klaslluta at Chesler last week. Wasl\lng up can be a lot of
fun when it's done In a pan ol water under a tree. See additional photos
on Page 5.

Southern board approves 86-87 budget
A 1986-87 budget totaling
$4,385,993 for Southern Local School
District was approved Saturday
morning when the Southern Board
r:i Education met in regular
session.
Included ·in thr total are general
lund appropriations of $3,1ll0,833.
Among other things, the general
fund Includes $1,74l.O'll for regirlar
Instruction; $256,121 special in
structlon: $126,784 vocational instruction; $76,6Z7 for teacher's
aides; $101,641 for nurse, guidance
counselor and librarian; $14,295
board of education; $326,883 for
administrative personnel including
the superintendent and principals:
$165,973 for the treasurer's office;
$459,585 for operations and malntalnence; $402,685 for bus drivers
and mechanics; $00,619 for extracurricular activities.

Included in other ligures approved were s:1!,500 bond ret ire·
ment and $189,850 fo r lunchroom .
Three long range projects for the
dlst rlct are being ronsidered by the
board with top priortty to be given
the removal of asbestos from the
high school. Money for the proje(:t Is
expected to be available next
summer.
Also being considered is major
roof repair at Racine Elementary
and expansion and resurfacing of
the high school parking lot. These
projects are to he completed as
money becomes avaUable.
Employed by the board for the
coming school year were Brenda
McGuire as DH teacher at Portland
Elementary on a one-year contract
and WiUiam Lake as a BOE teacher
at the high school one a two year
contract.

The resignation of Cathy Johnson
as a teacher at Portland Elementary was accepted. Johnson has
been given a posltk&gt;n as teaching
principal In the Eastern Local
School Dlsstrict.
Joyce Thoren was placed on an
extended service contract for one
ninth of her salary for performing
the duties d handicapped coordinator, Title VI-B coordinator and
lunchroom supervisor. Thoren wUI
receive $2,836 forthesedutles which
require her to work at least ~days
beyond her regular coni ract.
Ron Qulllen was employed as
freshmen basketball coach for the
1986-87 basketball season, subject to
his obtaining a valid sports medi·
cine certificate.
Milford Frederick, former substitute bus driver, was employed-as a
lull time bus driver to take over the

Dan Smith route. Smith wUI be
driving the handicapped bus route.
Approved as substitute bus
driver was Deltlle Rizer. Rizer's
name was mistakenly omitted from
the group of drivers prf'Viously
approved by the board .
Employed as a substitute cook for
the coming year was Shirley C.
Evans. subject tO her acquiring a
food handler's card.
Meigs County Board of Mental
Retardation wished to continue Its
agreemen t with the board for
limited mechanical and limited
road service for its vehicles.
It was reporled that the dlstrtct's
food service program passed inspection and has been approved for
the coming year.
It was also reported that the
district's architeet, Don Glenn, will
(Continued on Page 6)

days to complete. Conde reports.
Frank and Conde wcri' joined at
the scene by Pomeroy Fir(' Chief
Charles Legar and other members
of the policr' department and Paul
Gf&gt;rard, Investigator for the prosecuting attorney's oilier.

Syracuse woman drowns
The body of Opal Kloes, 70, well known Syracuse resident , was
pulled from the Ohio River near the Ravenswood Bridge about 9:10
a.m. today.
Meigs County Coroner James Conde s.~ld that the cause of death
was suicide by drowning.
Cone!&lt;' reported that people camping along the Ohio River had
spotted the body approximately 10 feet from shore at around 7 a.m.
this morning. Meigs officials including the Racine Emergl'ncy
Squad answered calls to the scene at about 7:12a .m.
The Kloes car, Condr said, was found parked on the Ritchie
Bridge, about one-third of the way from the Ohio side. Apparently,
Mrs. Kloes had jumped from the bridge, a drop of about 111feet tot he
water. The body had apparently dr~ted to about 10 feet from the
shoreline.
Paul Gerard, investigator for the office of Meigs County
Prosecutor. FrederiCk W. Crow III, said the body was discovered
about a mile south oft he bridge. Conde set the time of deat hat about5
a.m.
It was reported that Mrs. KIQtS and her husband, Karl, had !J&gt;neto
bed Sunday evening but Mrs. K.ioes was not at oome when her
husband arose this morning. Gerard said Ihat Mrs. Kloes had left a
handw ritten note at her Syracuse residence and reported that there
was no evidence of foul play.
On the scene besides Conde and Gerard was Shertlf Howard
Frank.
The body was taken to the Ewing Funeral Home where a family
member made identification late lhls morning.

Freed U.S. priest reunited with family
Joseph said FUpe John Paul II,
WJESBADEN, West Gennany
(UPil - The Rev. Lawrence who phoned Jenco Sunday, has
Jenco, freed from nearly 19 months invited him to an audience in Rome
of captivity in Lebanon, met with 10 when he Is fit again lJ.r I he said
relatives at a tearful two-hour oothlng definite had been set .
Relatives had said they planned
reunion at the U.S. Air Force
oospital where he Is undergoing to bring Jenco popcorn, a new pair
r:i glasses and a small bottle a gin
medical tests.
"The first 10 minutes were very. to make martinis for the reunion.
The family said !hey hoped to be
emotional," Andrew Mihelich, 51,
the prtesl's nephew. told reporters. borne In Illinois by Friday but said
"There were hugs and kisses and Jenco stU! had two or three days of
tests before him.
loiS ol tears.
"He has recovered quite well,
''He always knew this day would
come," Mihelich said. "He Is a very considering the ocdeal he has been
fragile and.emotional man. It dldn 't through," MtheUch said. "You
take long for the tear's to come to could see his spirits were
Improving."
·
our eyes.''
The family gave few detaUs of
The U.S. government provided
what Jmco ro~ them ol ~ an Air Force C-14llransport to fty
captivity at the bands of Islamic 10 of Jenoo's relatives to Germany
Jihad kidnappers.
lbr a reunion with Jenco, wro was
But his brother, Josepb, said released Saturday in easterp LeJenoo, was held by the Islamic Jihad banon's Bekaa vaUey alter being
Moslem extremists In the same
held lor nearly 19 months by tbe
room with three other rostages,
Islamlc Jihad terrortst group.
who he •did IIJt name. ~ proThe family was met at the aiJlX)rt
Iranian group still rolds at least
by Robert Oakley, the Reagan
three Americans ' and three administration's counterterrortst
expert, and Threy Waite, a Church
Freilclunl'!l.
''He lold us heread'tbe Bible, said ol England envoy who has been
the rosaey and HaU Marys," Joseph litvo!ved Ill neg()tlatlons on the
release ~ oostages held In the
said.

Middle East.
Col. Robert W. Gilmore, the Air
Force doctor who gave Jenco a
preliminary examination alter his

arrival from Damascus, said he
would have to und&lt;'rgo several days
of tesls to dPtermine the effects of
his captivity.

White House: no concessions
WASHINGTON (UPll - Despite tbe releaSI' of the Rev.
Lawrence Jenco and an appeal from another captive, the
admlninstratlon is sticking to Its no-deal policy toward t oose
~nslble lor holding Americans hostage In Lebanon.
While House spokesman Don Mathes said Sunday !hat, even In the
face of the videotaped plea from oostage David Jacobsen. the
admlnstratlon stands on lis oft -staled policy ofoo negotla Iklns with
kidnappers.
"We'll be working very hard to 5!'CUI"e release" of the other
Americans held by Islamic lundammtallsts in Lebanon, Mathes
said. "But we're not going to gtve In ... no concessbns."
Asslstant ,Secretary ol Stale Richard Murphy, traveling Sunday
aboard Air Force Two with VIce President George Bush from Wesl
Gennany to Israel, discouraged speculation that Jenco's release
Saturday signaled a sudden change In the mleal.
"The change," he said, ."Is that one more has lx'cn released."
An Air Force plane ferried Jenco - beld for 5&amp;1 days by the
Islamic Jihad - from Damascus to West Germany for medlckl
observation. Bush chose nol ro stay longer In West Germany so he
could greet Jenco, a Roman Catrollc priest.
Jenco brought with him a videotape of Jacobsen. made by the
captors, In which the admlnlstratQr of the American University In
Belnlt, Lebanon, delivered a somber andsometlmes angcy meuage
accusing the admlnlslratiOn of doing too Utile t? free the captives,

�Monday, July 28. 1986

mmentary
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Pomeroy, OhiQ
DEVOTED TO THE iNTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

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Bm~ r-T"&gt;....J._-.-,........,o;::~,""'

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~v

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher

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, c PAT WHITEHEAD

: ; Alllliaat Publlllber/Coatroller

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DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Edllor

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BOBHOEFUCH
,General Manager

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A MEMBER ot The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
; !·AIIoclltlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
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LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They obould he less

::Jon&amp;.

rhan :£()words

~
Alllettersaresubjecl to editing and rrust be signed with name, address and
: •• telepll(llt numb@r . No unsignEd letters wUl be published . Letters. should be in
"'i ..

The question whether the president Is justiOed In sending troops to
Bolivia to help dismantle tbe
cocaine Industry tbere is In two
parts.
ThP first has to do with lbe
lpgallty of the action. There are two
bills, one ancient by American
standards (187ll), the other recent
(1973), which respectively forbid
the use of the mUUary for law
enforcemPnt, and forbid !be use ot
till' mUltary abroad wheretbere Is a
danger of fighting unless Congress
gives Its approval. Mr. Reagan has
acted on the grounds of national
SECUiily. Some Philadelphia law.yer In the White House gave him
that one. You see, It Is a matter of
our national seculity that one of our

. Monday. July 2S: 1988 .

:IOOd tute, addressing issues, not persooaUtles.

allles (Bolivia 1 faces destablllzatlon because of tbe com~ptlon of·
pollllclans and poJ4:1' brought oo by
till' lucrative coke lnwstry. If that
mandate were general, the admln·
lstralion soould Ill' able to argue
wlloout any trouble thai we can
send the Marliies to any country In
the would witb which we are allied
In ordl'r to "stabilize" the regime
there. Much more plausible Is the
shelter given by Congress In 1981,
permitting the limited use of the
military to shield us from the dop!'
runners .
Mr. Reagan Is not going to k&gt;se
this one In court. True, lbe usual
propie (AmeriCan ClvU Llbl'rtles
Union et aLl are contemplating a
lawsuit, but the constitutionality of

the War Powers Act has Itself never
been tested, and Stuart Taylor Jr. of
The New York Times !iates i1 hiS
rundown on the IssuE' that some rl
the president's critics "oonredl'd
that the probabDity that any court
would rule them Ulpgal approaches

zero.

.. .

Moreover, thear~~tthatthe
use of the military for law
enfoi'!J'ml'nl Is inherently· dangerws Is not entirely convincing. It's
true Ihal In basic training you don't
get taught Ill tell the enemy he has
the right to keep sUent and to
consult a lawyer. But such training
rould Ill' added to the curriculum rl
military unlis going abroad without
any )H'Oblern. Moreover. there's
something that satisfies thp.Jnnall'

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J1hio Politics
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EIndictments heat up
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governor's campaign

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By LEE LEONABD
7•
UPI Stlltellouae Reponer
•.: ·COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -Last week's grand jury Indictments of two
~DemocratiC fund-raisers on brlbl'ry and perjury charges pl'f'maturely
~ated up this fall's statewide election campaign, in particular the
.gevernor's race.
::- ;Each skletrted to gain a foothold as a Franklin County grand jury found
·probable cause to beliE'Ve that Pamela Conrad, the Ohio Democratic
:f&gt;iirty's flnanre director, tried to coerce vmdors br political donations In
» m for slatli' business.

-.

~ irbe jurors also indicted Larry McCartney, woo was Gov . Richard F.
l::eleste's patronagP (state jooo I chief bl'fore tx&gt;romlng finance drector for
·~ governor's re-election campaign. for perjury. He denied he had a
~stem for requiring prospective employees to furnish Democratic
i:iedentlals.
·. -For the RepubliCans - in particular James A. Rhodl's, tbe party's f~~=~~
:g.Abematortal nominee - th&lt;' Indictments represmt another nail in :".
r~Jeste's coffin lx'cause now they can point to a trail of corruption that
'!leads light through the door Into the governor's office."
· 'The Democrats screamed bloody murder. saying It was another
examplt' In a series dating back to 1962 whel'f' Republican-controlled grand
julies In Franklin County have indicted Democrats on trumped-up charws
r and reaped th&lt;' bl'nefit of pl'l't'lectlon headlines bl'fore tbe charws werr
WASHINGTON - No adminis"or dropped.
tration has tried harder to court the
••
Jpwlsh community than Ronald
Reagan's - with less success.
In sorting out all this mish-mash. SI'Vcral important thi~ mu st he kept Every time the White Houser lies to
·: In mind.
patch things up It seems to do thE'
',- · First of all. although Franklin County P~utor Michael Miller is a wrong thing, with the resull that! Ill'
~ ~blican ~ho was on&lt;,'(' appointed ,a judge by Rjjo&lt;k's, t~ """'ial
relatlo~ bflrween thl&gt; admlniStra,or p~10r tor the grand juey was Wu.uam Boyland, a tonner Dl&gt;mocraUc tlon and AmeriCan Jewish leaders
.- eandldate for mayor of the city of Columbus and a darling of till' party's
is now at rock bot lorn.
:: librral wing.
·
The latest affront to Jf'Wish
.: ' Semndly, the Democrats arP fortunate there werm'l l!IIY more sensitivity Is a pip: The White
'• Indictments than the OIK'S against Conrad and McCartney.
House liaison with Jewish groups
•. · Strongevklenre was pl't'sented at last winl('f'sOhioSrnatelnvestigation has been downgraded. What's
:;. that Morris Tlp1on. assistant director rl transportation, destroyed records
worse, In the eyes ol some Jews, Is
~ and Daniel Shields, assistant director or admlnlstrativP SffViCPs.
that the current White House
:: Collaborated with Conrad In decidin~ woo did busln&lt;'Ss with Ill&lt;' statr.
"Jewish affairs" man , Max Green.
• Thert&gt; Is no question that th~ Rrpubllcansarrmilklngthe lndictmrnt s for
is actually subordinate to Llnas
~· all they'rp worth.
Kojells, a Llthuanlan-Amerlcan
'
who
has offended Jewish leaders.
~
.,'
Kojells Is a strong advocate of
;. - It's nocolncidmce that lh&lt;'y purchas&lt;'d lei£'Vision time in major markt'ts Eastl'rn Europ!'an ethniC groups
~ to air devastating spot announcemrnts disguisrd as news items about
that havE' urged the di59Jiution of
,.. Indictments against Celesl~ crunies and appointees. Marvin Warncr.
tit!' Justice Departml'nt's Nazi::: Arnold Plnkncy and .lam&lt;'S Rog{'rs.
hunting Office of Speclallnvestlga: Those ads, which may continu£' through August, ar!'takingadvanlag!'of rions. They charge that the rXflce is
:; the' public awarrnPSS of the laiPSt indictmmls against Conrad and
a dup!' of the Sovll't KGB In the
::: McCartney to rPmind propiP of other bad associatl'S of thf' Celrst£'
prosecu !ion of naturalized Ameri "' administration.
cans accused if participating in the
"' At th&lt;' end of the we!'k, Democratic Sta t ~ Chairman James M_Ru,·olo
Nazi Holocaust in World War ll
~ countcr-attarkrd with an 83-pag£' packPI rX old nrwspapiT clippings which
It didn't used to be this way ,
::: )I(' said soowed a conspiracy on RhodE's' part to sic grand jurirs on
Green's predecessor as Jewish
Democrats. gain hradlini'S and win Pl('('tions brfor~ people found out no
liaison , MarshaU Breger, held the
•"",.. oil!'
• was guilty.
ritlr of Spi'Cial assistant to lbe
president. Kojt'lls was then at a
,..;
lower level in the White House
~ Ruvolo cltrd g-rand jury invi'St!Rations in 1!l62, 1970, 19i4 and 1978 In
:t ~ddltion to 1986. &amp;v~ral wrrP r'Un by people appolntro ju~C'S by Rhod!:s.
,_ . Jim Rhodes has hern enlr!'nchrd In Franklin Cou n~" politiC!&lt; 'for, a
~ half-ccntury, and still has spi.r'df't'Jl in th&lt;· fabdc' of thC' stair g&lt;J\'C'\~.~n t ;
:t !Jut Ruvolo's caSC' for a contmua l conspiracy ts spotty at hesl. l': , : ·
His claim for 1970 lnvolvC'd onr g-rand jury app!'aran&lt;'!' by John l
•
:: Cflllgan. the Democratic nomin"" fo r go,·.-.-oor In an invi'St iga lion of
During the 18 years I served in the
::; flepublicans.
' . Se~ate, I came to respect most of my
In 1974. the indlctC'd [)(omorrar wa~ ·arqulrtrd in ApriL long brlorr 1 ~ . fellow senators, includin&amp; those I dis·
'
. ' ' agreed with on many issues. But with
;- ek'Ctlon
:J: : In 1!112. th&lt;'re is no £'\'idPnc£' Iha t Rhoct-s or thl' R!'publicans trkodto uSP · the passage of time, I found the con·
duct of one senator - Jesse Helms of
~ !!"and juli~s to d!'lrat Crlrst£'.
_
North Carolina - increasingly offen·
;: : Did IlK' Celrst~ admlnislration"~d lhP Democrats tL'P hardball
sive and revolting.
.. fund-raising tactiCs to flU their campaign'· coff~rs? Probably. Al1' the
I bave been even more repulsed by
~ Republicans jl(llnl( to tak£' advantagP of th&lt;'lr lfogal difflcult les 7 Sure.
his conduct in the five and a ball years
:- : Ruvolo's packC'I ol clippings showC'd on~ othPr "curious pattern" hesi~ since I left the Senate.·So intense is
Republicans calling grand juries on th~ Democrats. Every timr. Ihe my resentment of this man's ptiblic
. Democrats said It was politiCaL
utterances that I have more than once
tried to analyze why he arouses such
.
strong contempt iD me.
In re,ding his latest outrageous
comments In Chile, where be defended the brutal government of that
country after its anny beat and
"-' • today Is Monday, July :\8, the W!lth day of 1986 with 156 to follow.
burned to death a 19-year-old Ameri·
The moon Is In Its last quarter.
can resident, Rodrigo Rojas, it be• Thl' I)lOrning stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
came clearer to me why Helms so in·
11
furlates me: He reminds me of the
-,' The evening stars are Venus, Mars and sa tum.
!· Those bam on this dale are undl'r the sign rl Leo. They Include surrealist falcilts I fought in World War II.
Helms baa a lucist outlook on the
: · artiSt Mal'Cl'l Duchamp In IB87, comedian Joe E. Brown In 1892. composer
world.
He Ia a bully and a bifot wbo
..:RI~hard Rodgers ("Oklahoma!" "South Pacific" 1 In 1902. singer-actor
afparently
admires the bruta Jactics
" RudY Vallee In 1901. forml'r first lady Jacqueline Kennedy Onassi&lt;; lri 19~
o
Chile's
dictator
Aupto Plnochet.
~
(age 571, ballel danrer-chorEOgrapher JacquesD'Amboisl'lnl93!1 jage52) ,
He Is a champion also of the dictator·
dance band lellder Peter Duchln In 1937 jage 491, actress Sally St"'lhers In
ship In Paraguay - a haven for World
;r; 1HI (qj!·:J!I , and baseball pltchl'r VIda Blue In 1949 (age 3'71 .
War n Nazi climlnals - and he sup~ pn this date In history:
.
po~ SoUth Africa's system of
;: In 1914. Austria dEclared war oo Serbia, lll!ll'klng the start rJ World War fpartheld.
.He publicly praltel Roberto D' Au·
:t In 19Ci, the Senate ratified the United Nations charter by a voted !ll-2, bUllion
- EI Salvidor's "death
~ IIICI an Army B-25 bomber k&gt;st .In tbefogcrashedlhtotbe sided. the Empire
squad" bully and killer. D'Aubilloo's
:tState Building In New Yorl&lt; City, killing 13 prople.
vlctlml probably Include Archbilhop
1,11. In l!rlll, an eartllquakl! struck China's Tanpham Province. killing an
Romero, who wu Ulllllnated wblle
f,elltnlted 1 million people.
offering maa, and four American
·• In 1983, the UnHed States anmunced a rtve-year, $10 blillon agreement to women - three n~ and a IIOCial
worker - who were raped and kWed
•:.ull'lln 10 the Soviet Union.
on
a public road. More rect~~Uy
: • Jq ~· President Reagan opened the Summer Olympic Games mLos
Helma
bu publicly: attacked 1M gcw·
~11 lei Abient were a Sovlet·led bloc oll5 natklns as well as Iran, Ubya,
ermnent
of Mexico - Perl!~~.. the
~ IIICI Bolivia.
.
mOiit lin)JO!'Iant ally tht IJilltid Stltel
~~t&amp;ualrt for the day: 'The English autblr Walter Bagehot wro~:
bu In Lltfu America - u a 1_.
.. ~ li more unprsant than a virtuous person with a r n mind." ment baled on electoral fraud, drul

sense of husbandry In using our
Navy to help wr C1Jast Guard
defend our shores from oontrabond,
11 Indeed we Intend to pursue the
jxlllcy of trying to nip the drug In the
bud.
But here, surely. Is the ultimate
futility of our stratpgy. We know
that lllpgal drugs of almost every
klnd are selling on thE' street
col1ll'rs of America tor less than
they were selling for a few years
ago, which Is testimony to !llr
!allure to keep the drugs out.
Suwose - just suppose - that
our Anny units In Bolivia suCCEed
In greatly reducing the resovolr ri
cocaine availablE' for sale In
America. What wwld happen?
Observation No. 1: Any change In
the supply would prove temporary,
by thl' operation of the same law
that makes wage and price rontrols
Ineffective: Pressure at one end of
the balloon will swell a notbl'r Pnd of
the ooUoon. (Raids on Mexican
marijuana flelch a few ypars ago
Introduced Hawaii to lhl' marijuana business. I
And point No. 2: Duling tbe
Interval bl'forc the supply Is made
up by another country, one would
expi'Ct a rise In thepriceofthe drug.
The Implications of such a rise are
two-fold. The drugs rontlnue to be
readUy available to the upper
middle class. The lower middle
class and the lower ecoromic class
need to exert tbl'mselves more
rner!(l'tlcally to coml' up with !be
money necessary to ~ their
habit. That means more crime.
It would be truly refrcshlnglttbe
fl'd!:ral government were g&gt;lnglnto
lbe question pragmatically, using
simple data. The' Drug Enilrce·
men! Agency soould !I'll us , with
respi'Ct to heroine and cocaine: I I
How much did It cost on the street
comer five y~ars ago? 21 How
much oors It cost row7 31 How
much mort' If it Is being consumed
row than then?

Offending Jews ____J_a_ck_A_n_de_rs_on_&amp;_D_ale_Va_n_A_ua_

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pi'Cklng order as associate director
rX the Public Liaison Office In
charge of ethnic groups.
Then last year, till' liaison chief,
Linda Otavez, reorganized the
setup to Pllmlnate an ethniC
representatives, Including Breger.
H~ an!l ; Kojells were named
co-chairmen of lbe new Foreign
Affairs-Defense Division . In practice, Pach continued to hantiiP
liaison duties as they had previously , Brpgl'r for Jews, Kojells
for other ethnics.
But Brpgpr's aggressivE' tactics
wrre ool appreciated ~ rertaln
eleml'nts In the White liDuse staff
that resented the special status
acrorded Jewish leaders and their
advice. Otlef among tbese was
communications director Patrick
Buchanan. During the controversy
over President Reagan's wreath·
laying visit last year at a West
German remelery rontalnlng the
graves of SS men. Buchanan
scribbled oo a rorepad: " Too much
Jewish pressure."
Buchanan and Chief rX Staff
Donald Regan dEcided to eliminate
the Jewish affairs offlre. To their
surprise, lhey got suworr from
Jewish leaders and the Israeli
Pmoossy.
No less than Gerald Kraft ,

president rX B'nal BI11h Interna- Jewish leaders - even t!Dse who
tional, sent President Reagan a had welcomed tiP klea rl abolish blunt lener urgtng that the Jewish Ing. tiP Jewish liaison of11ce - are
liaison office "Ill' abolished and not dismayed. Tbl're Is ro £Yidence
IDled ." HI' exp ained that the that Kojl'lls himself Is anti-Semitic,
Jewish community "Is not a but he has provided entree'lo the
monolith" and contrnded that the highest circles of the Reagan
rXflce was "countl'l proiluct lvl' and, administration for Eastern Eurooccasionally, damaging."
pean refugee groups that h~re been
But other Jewish !ead!'rs ob- tainted by anii·Sernitlsm.
Jecl.ed when Breger was kicked
TheJewlshcommunityft'arsthat
upstairs and out rl the WhitE' House. extremists In these grwpi wUigaln
VIce President Bush lnslst£11 on credibility within the administrakeeping lbe Jewish office, and tion, and' their goal rl aboDsltlngthe
Regan and Buchanan backed Nazi-hunting OSI will Ill' accomp.
down.
llshed. And there Is now no (Ill' with
But Buchanan, woo has publicly the clout that Breger OIICI' had to
deoounced tbe prosecution of al- expaln Jewish oollCPrns at the
lpged Nazi war criminals as White Hoose.
"Orwellian and KafkaesquE'," was
WATCH ON WASTE: The Navy
dPtermlned to downgrade the spends $10 mUJion on its antlJewish liaison office and enhance submarlnt'w~rtaresystern, but has
the liaison with other ethniC groups. no way of knoiMng If It wwld work
So with Buchanan as his "rabbi," In an actual comt»t situation. A .
Kojl'lls was made director of the General Accountbtg CX!Ice Invest!- :
Foreign Atfairs-Delense Division gallon l'f'ported that the unc:ler- ·
last taU . Wbl'n Otavez ll'ft lorunfor water tests run by the Navy In .
the Senate nomination In Mary- HawallandtheBahamashaveused ·
land, Kojells became acting direc - fixed lest ranges with no diversity. ·
tor of Ibe Public Liaison olflre. He This gives the tests aU the wrallke .
was given the t ltle ooce held by thE' reality of a carnival siDotlng ·
Jewish Ualson officer: special gaUery. What's needed, the GAO :
assistant to the president. Grt'l'n Is pointed out, Is a simulated "threat
his subordinate.
environment" akin Ill combat, but
Faced with tiP growtnglnfiut'nce mobUe underwater tariJ'tS have
of KojPiis In the White House, bren low on Navy budgPt priorities.

..
1.

~~ffoday in history

f

'· I

. ...

Ti\GGED our AT '1111RD -Boston's Hey Qumones 6 tagged out by
California's Doug DcCinces Sunday during AmeriCan League action at
i\nahebn. (UPil

Helms will probably remain in of·
lice as long as he can persuade North
Carolinians to support him because of
his willlnpess to back federal subsi·
dies for the tobacco growers. But at

least the nation should recognize him
lor what be is: a demagogic utremist
who will sell his country down the riv~
er to the wont impulses and the most
dreadful forces in the world today.

By United Press International
Baseball
The president of an Internallonal
Baseball Association is In Switzer·
land this week promoting amateur
baseball and women's softball as
medal sports for the 1992 Olympics.
Baseball has never been more than
a demonstration spor( In the
Olympics. Dr. Bob Smith wUI help
present a proposal Monday to the
program commission for the International Olympic Commltti'P. The
commission will thl'n make a
recommendation to the entire IOC.

' " Baske!ball

Michael Jackson, the New York
Knlcks' second-round draft pick out
of Georgi'town University, dlsloca t.ed his left shoulder SUnday at till'
club's training camp at Lawrenrevilll', N.J. Jackson will Ill' Pxam·
lned Monday. He is expected to
retu m to camp bu 1 will not play in
scrimmages with the New Jl'rsey
Nets, Philadelphia 761'rs and Wa shington Bullets.
Orlanoo basketball boosters try ing to land tbe city a professional
team have m stadium, no players

Majors
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Transactions

Sen Fr.nt\Aco - PIIICfd 1'('1•1 pitrbrr
Crt'!~ Mlntonon214ay dlsabiPd tl~t : l'f('aliMI
pttchtfKelly Oowrw from Pbomlx ol PIK'Ifk'
Cc»lf llllp('.

San rranctsro at Los AlJ#Ie5, nl~ht
.WDI:t\N U:.WUE

·

MondaY'" tiVT\ai
1Morrts

11f1rolt

Cindrmall!l. Mon1rra1 7

CineiMnl rBnM•nifllt 9-7r at S..n DI£&gt;JCO
&amp;71. ~~p .m .
AIIIJI\18 rAirxanltT 2-H at HOUSion
II&lt;IW'PJX'f t:H'r. 1':35p.m.

revolution/"

Officer wins rifle championship

lA-Irolt at ('k•n&gt;land. nlp,ht
Boston at Ctlk';aao. riW!t
Balllmorr at Tt"KaS. niQht
f'a llrornla at Oak land, n1gh1

Relli\ll !oi

t ii Hw kln.~

rhe VCR

'

innln~

Srat1k' iii Mlnnl'50ta. R~hr
Nf'W York at Mllwaukl'r, niRhl
Toronto iii Kansas t'ily. nl~thl

Phlladdphlt~ l. Housron 2
f"lnelru\'111 7. Monrrul S

Yock

Oakland l. Toron1o 0. L'l
MUwa ub-r R, Sl&gt;ar!lr I
Clf'\·t•land II, Tf'Xa'- l

~·.o...,..,.

:t.l. i :l5J.r.m.

a revolution too -

race,

!f.!I!..IUip.m.

Allan!&lt;~

N~·

"I'm Into

light-handed."
HI' did, trough . He look a lie
undl'r a tree and usEd the 9-iron to
ny the baD oo t to 10·12 feet from the
holE', two-putting for a par-5 that
preserved his one soot lead on the
16th.
Two shots oft the lead, was Ed
Fiori who flnlsll&gt;d with a 5-under67
for am.
Davis Love III. who lro or shared
first place alter each of the first
three rounds, finished 71-273 to tie
with Bobby Wadkins for fifth.
The victory pushed Crenshaw's
earnings to $157,702 this season and
to $2.106,424 for his career, which
began going oownhUI the taU after
he won the 1984 Masters.
"11 Wll~ terlibly bleak," CrensJlaw,.,.id. "l,llkln'Liq)oll' w)ijl~ was
wrong. Andwhen)'Ou'refn••JUmP,
you feel like there's no way out."
Crenshaw was loslngweight. And
losing strength.
''I'm a big rater." he said. "And
the more I ate, the more Host. I was
two clubs short. My hands shook
visibly on the greens. My knees
shook and my hands. I didn't know
what was going on."
His earnings slipped- plunging
to S'Zi,814. That may sound like a lot
-but not If your lifestyle is geared
to a $250,00llncome.
But finally the problem was
diagnosed as a hy peracllve thy rold.
Radioactive iodine was the
treatment.
Gradually Crenshaw put back till'
IB pounds he'd lost In his body and
the two cluoo the illness had taken
away from his game. He Is now at
fuU strength.

By RICHARD L SHOOK
UPI Sports Wrller
GRAND BLANC. Mich. (UP)) Ben Crenshaw used a little ambidexterity to prove he hascompll'ted
and no franchise- but thl'y do have
his comeback.
a name for the team , and it's
Crenshaw underscored he Is back
straight from thl' kingdom of from a hyp!'raclivc thyruid that
Mickey Mouse. "Magic" was se- wiped out a year d his career with a
lected from 4,296mtries In a rontest one-strokE' victory Sunday In the
to name a potential NBA. The namE' · $500,001 Buick Open.
was coosen over three other
Thl' Austin, Tex., native soot a
finalists: Heat, Juice and Tropics.
4-under 68 lor an 18-under 270 total
Cycling
that earned him ~.OOJ for a
Greg LeMond, who Sunday bl'- one-shot victory over Doug Tewell
caml' the first American to win the and J .C. Snead. both of woom
Tour de France bicycle race. will closed wil.h 6- under 66s.
emoork on another tmnth of
"It feels· so good to win," said
grul'llng racing Aug. 9 when he Crenshaw, who parlayed leftdefends his title In the Coors handed and right-handed 9-lron
International BICycle Classic. In the shots at the 13th and 16th holes,
Coors
I&gt;eMond will have respecttvely, Into the viCtory. But
flve-tlrneTourdeFrance dlamplon hi' had to survive a nPrve- ratlllng
Bernard Hlnault as a teammate.
warning for slow play to do It
FootbaD
"Those two shots won It for ITIE:',
.Cincinnati Bengals puntN Pat no question about It, " he said.
Mclnally announred his retirement · 'Honeslly, I thought I could get It up
Sunday. Mclnally, 33, has punted on the green, but not at that
for till' Bengals for 10 seasons. He trajectory. Not floatin g 11 way up
was a fourth-round draft choice there !Ike that."
from Harvard In 1975. Mclnally,
The shot came with Crenshaw a
6-foot-6 and 212 pounds, compiled a struke down to TewelL His second
career punting averagE' ol 42 yards shot, a 4-iron. went under a tree
oo 6ll8 punts. He won the NFL near the roge of the green, about
punting title In 19TI and 1978.
20-to-30 yards from the hole.
"I had a good lie from the
left-hand side," he said. "I could get
my club under the ball and gel a
good backswing without my club
hilling anything.
"But I never dreamed I could get
Suedq1• RauJI:"
it six feel from the hole. It was the
NPN )'or1c 4, Mlnfll'SOia 1
Kansas C ity ~ Drtrolt ~
nicest little pitch soot yru ever did
0..111rnorf' 11. Chk"a,!!O .1
SI'P. I'm oot sure I could do It
Callfornl;t 3. ac.1on 0

BaiUmorr ([)avis

l'lltst.JI}th 7. S an F' ranclsro 0
HouMon J, Phllad!&gt;lphia 2

ease

Crenshaw cops
'86 Buick Open

Scoreboard ...

SllndQ'N

Berry's World

Guidry struck out nine over tlve
Innings to rouecr his first victory
sincl' May 10. The left· bander, 5-8,
was making his first appParance
slnre oomlng off the 21-day disabled
list on July 3. He slnlck ~ tthe first
five baners he faced andthrew49d
his 70 for strikes.
In other games, Cleveland
clipped Texas 8-3, Kansas City
edged Detroit :&gt;4, MUwaultee beat
Seattle 8-1 and Oakland outlasted
Toronto 1-0 In 15 Innings.
In the National League, It was:
Pittsburgh 7, San Francisco 0;
Houston 3, Philadelphia 2: New
Yorl&lt; 5, Atlanta 1; St. Louis 3, San
Dlpgo 2; Cincinnati 9, Montreal 7;
and Los Angeles 13, Ot!cago ll .
lndlaas 8, Ran &amp;en 3
AI Arlington, Texas, Tom Candiotti, woo enterro the seaS(Jl with six
career Victories, notch£11 his lOth
tliumph of the season to lead the
Indians. Candiotti, 1il-7. pitched
seven Innings to record his sevl'llth
victory In his last eight decisions.
Candiottl's previous nine vlctork's
were all complete games.
Royall ~ Tigers f
At Detroit, Steve Balooni's twoout single in the ninth scored WilliE'
Wilson from second to snap a H tie
and lift the Royals. WUlie Hernandez. 6- 5, walked Wilson with cneout
and JorgE' Orta singled Wilson to
second. Balooni foUow£11 with a

Sports briefs...

4!)

running and massive corruption.
He equates anti-communism with
patriotism, but In my judgment he is
not a patriot; he is a noisy contradiction of the nation's most enduring val·
ues and a disgrace to the U.S. Senate.
America would not be the America of
Washington, Jefferson and Lincoln if
Helms' t'!flated philosophy were to become dominant. He bas resisted and
ridiculed every Americllllad\ranee toward civil liberty and social justice
durinl his public career. He has tried
to sabotage every revolutionary refonn effort in the Third World that
might mean a better life lor ordinary
people. It is difficult to imagine a military boondoggle or weapons proposal
too outrageous to shake his support.
He fights every effort at arms coatrol
and every move to
the tensions
and paranoia of the Cold War. He baa
always seemed willing to send our
youth to their deaths In the 11101t Ill·
conceived mllltary lntervent10111, In-cluding Vietnam and Nicaragua .
But hi.tllatesi attack on the Amerl·
can news media lind tht U.S. lOVern·
ment - lor cOndemning 'tbe ghoulllb
' behavior of .Cbllean forcet1 ill tile
torcb death of teenager Roju alit! tile
sava~t burnlni of bll YOUIIII female
companion - repre~e~~ts Helms at IIIII
wont. Not content ·with this, be at•
tacked the U.S. ambuaador to Chile
Hnry Barna, for. atteadlni .tht tU:
neral of YOUIIII Roju. To praile tile
sordid reciiiMI of Cblle and Panpay
u our two belt democtatlc allielin
Latlil America u Helml did oa IIIII receat foray lntb Lltlil America u
cbalrman of the Senate FotNn ~lela·

mance from RDn Guidry to bl'at the
Minnesota Twins 4-1 a1 Yankel'
Stadium.

By JOE ILLUZZI
UPI Spotts WrMer
ThE' Yanks are corning, and so
are the Orioles .
Thl' Boston Red Sox, who took a
seven-game lead Into the AD-Star
break two weeks ago, now ookl a
slim three-gatlll' edge over the New
York Yankees In the Atlll'rlcan
Leag-ue East. Thl' Baltimore Orl·
oles have also crept Into the race
and are only five oock In third
place.
The Red Sox closed out a dreadful
West Coast swing Sunday wbl'n
Don Sutton outduelro Tom Seaver
In a matchup of lll-game winners
to lift the Callforn ia AngP!s to a 3-0
victory over Bcl§ton.
"Sure, wl''re getting edgy,"
BOston m a n a g e r John
McNamara said. "We're not panIcking. but we'l'f' uptight. We know
what we're playing lor."
Boston lost six of eight games on
the Coast, with Roger, Clemens
acCfJUntlng for both victories. The
Red Sox, howE.'Ver, make their way
back East today \\ith a three-day
stopover In Otlcago. They will have
a chanre to recover against the
Whirl' Sox, who lost their seventh
straight Sunday In Baltimore.
AI Baltimore, rookiE' Jim 1'rabl'r
smashed a grand sla(lliO highlight
a nine-run fourth Inning that
carlied the Orioles to an 11-3 victory
over Chicago and a sweep ol their
four-game series.
The Yankees, meanwhile, received a superb pitching perfor-

Plllsbr~oth

Demagogue at large ,_____c_e_org_e_M_cG_ov_e_rn

The Daily Sentinet-Page-3

...

Orioles, Yanks close in on Boston

Pon.-.ov~Middlaport, Qhio

J. _

UJ Court Street

'

Page-2-The Daily Sand!MI

Halls of Bolivia______w;_ill~iam_F._Buc_k_tey_· r.

The Daily Sentinel

•..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

"

t

!bell

-

' N8 Ylri: - C\lt pnh Devin Durrant.
Mlilo GaiYf'Z and Jeue PhiUips, ten!('!" J&lt;M'
Glml*t'. ctn~torwlftl Dlwle Kmdill
IDd IO!Wird 'Ibm NifiO.

.

~U-

Puna PatMclnalbr Mired.

Clov&lt;llood-Wolv«lwhlr-~

eo.eman.·ru~ Decb Kylr-Colllnlw and
Cliff Rcld, l\llrd Gry Kill, ud latkiP 'lbi\V

. Ru-

Ciftn Bay -SIP!do........ tattiPG~
K«b lftdllrofW llftt)' Mark MWI*;V•
, ......,.. -

b:Winl

Rflfo~

1J )Uyfn,
fl1dt rfCefvton SMw Bryan! and

loft'lft)1or, ~ObPdArirt , tatitO~ton
Billard, deiNIYt l»cks Wood Clark and
O...H.mw.l'ldlmldt, NN'Ilnfb«kMII1on

Mclnt)'ft, ~ ScottRoblu'm, dtenl.lw
taekle John Robfl'tlml, WJd auan1 JOE&gt;
: pt..Oup tmebooo:"' Grot Bart~;
IIIM&lt;!,Ifii\I.\!Oid P o t -·

NY Joto- -tiiCkletloooaiiWI""'to

t.ltttt!l_or 1· Yfl' mmncts.

CAMP PERRY, Ohio (UPI! -

Benning won the national women's
three-posllion championship wltn.a
score of 2,250.
,
The three-position, any sight
match allows the use of a telescopic
sight whilE' the three- position,
metaUic sight can be fired only with
Iron sights. Both events are shot In
three positions - prone, standing
and kneeling. Forty shots are tired
In each position at a ruDseyr:&gt; the
size ol a dime at a dlstanre of :xl
yards, usllig a .22&lt;:allber rlfie.
Shooters consider these national
matches the World Series of
shooting In the United States. They
are cosponsored by the National
Rlne Association and the Depart·
menr of the Army's Director rJ
Civilian Marksmanship prograrri.
More than 3,001 mllltary and
civilian contestants from all :xl
states are competlhg In 102 pistol,
smaDbore rifle and high-power t1tle
events through Aug. 17.

Lt. CoL Lones Wigger Jr. of Fort

Benning, Ga., once again has won
the thri'P·posltlon rifle champion-

ship at the National Rifle Associatlon shooting matches at Camp
PPrry.
WlggPr has won the IItle 18 out rX
till' last I9 years, chalking up a
score ot 2,313 out of a possible 2.400
this year.
HI' captured tbe IItle by winning
both the three-position, metallic
sight match Friday and the threeposition, any -sight match Saturday,
Major WUIIam Beard of Indianapolls was second with a score of
2,278-47x and Sgt. Marvin Spinks,
also of Fort Benning, Ga .. was third
with 2.278-26x. Tie scores are
broken by the highest numbl'r of
x-ringsoots. Thex-rlnglstbl'center
of the bullseye and carries the
highest point value.
Capt. Joyce Myers of Fort

Mclnally retireS after 10-year career
WILMINGTON, Ohio (UPII Cincinnati Bengal punter Pat Mel·
naiJy has tll1ilOUilCEd his retirement, a decision Berigals dtlelsts
say be reached on his own.
Mclnally, woo made \he announcement before the team's
attemoon workout at Wllmbtgtom
. College, has bl'en "a credit as a
player and a perm," Paul E.
Brown, Clnclnflatl vice president
and general manager, saki SuRiay
In a news release. ''We IPII'I'Cilll'
the things he has done' ilr us and
wish him weD.
·.
i
"Pat has made this decision
his own," BroWn saki. "He Ia
leavlngthegameonhlsown. NoCIIe
Is pushing him out the door."

on

fourth-round draft in 1975 from
Harvard. At 6-foot • 6, 212 pounds,
Mclnally compUed a career punt·
, lng averaged 42 yards mlll8p.lnts
for 29,:t&gt;7 yards. His 1985 average
was 42.3 yards on S6 punts tor 2,410
yards.
Mclnnaly won the Natklnal Foot·
btlULI'agueJIIIn!Ingdlamplonshlps
ill 1978 (44.5 yanls) and 1916 (43.1
yards). HewasselectedfortbePro
· Bowl ream m1981 and was named
to roost aU-pro ll'aii1S that.year.
Hll longest NFL punt was 67
yard:! m 19'77.
He now wrttes a syndicated
column that appears In tll)re than

,

90 newaplpen.

-

r-----------=-

----

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The Daily Sentinel
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A Dlwlllon ef Multimedia, Inc.
Published every afternoon. Monday

through Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
meroy, Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Pub·
llshlng Company/Multimedia, Inc.,

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TO BEmR SEIYE OUR CUSTOMERS
OUI PAm I SERVICE DEPT. IS NOW
OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEI
MON.·SAT. 1:00 TIL 5:00

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. HOP·OFPS CAll • llDI AS lAB.Y AS 7:30 A.M. .;
alii PKDPS·AS LAR AS 5:30 P.M.

J

COBB

CHEVROLET
~OLDSMOILE·CADILLAC ·
''N ar ttn•s OIIS.-CAD•.C:.Y."
HIL . . . IT.
JD 1•r, . . , Pl. (614) ft2·6614

HOlliS

Mon. WMI. frl I:JO.a.eo
TlltL &amp; !llun. 1:30·5:30 ·•
S.t. lr3D·4r00; Suor. I:OO~SIGO •;

'lbe Bennpls now have. thn!e
pimters tn training camp: Rick

Mclnally, 33, has punted ilr the . Ward, Rlclry Ande}'IOII and Jelf
Bengals br 10 seams i&gt;Uowtng his Partrl• .

·~

bloop single In front rl center fielder
Chet Lemon.
Brewen 8, Mariners I
At SeatUe, Tim Leary scattNed
seven hits and BUI Schroeder hit a
two-run homer to cap a six-run
third Inning. Leary, 7-10, snapped a
personal tlve-gatlll' losing streak by
pitching eight btnlngs. Mark Clear
pitched the ninth. Mark Langston,
9-7, took the Joss.
A's 1, • e Ja,ys 0
At Oakland, Calif., Alfrroo Griffin walked with two out and the
bases loaded In lht' bottom of the
15th btnlng to lift the A's to tbelr
seventh straight victory. The Blue
Jays, woo were shut out for the
second straight day, have not
scored In tbelr last 26 Innings.

'

'

..

•. .

I,

'

•

�Monday. July 28, 1986

Pomeroy..,...Middleport. Ohio

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Eri·c Davis leads Reds in
comeback win over Expos

·KYGER CREEK LLCHAMPIONS -'Die Tuppers
P)alns Tigers ended their season Saturday night with
t~ Kyger Creek Uttle League champlon;hlp and a
$~season record. Tuppers Plains, which had earlier
alio woa the Bill Hubbard Memorial IJttle League
WIJmament at Syracuse, defeated VInton 3-0 In the

title game. Kneeling In front Is Bryan

Lo•, Jason

Carllon, Scott Burke, Chris Rood, Jolm CoiiJm and
'Tony Maxey. Second row - Tim Bllliell, Brmt
Balley, Jell Durst, Michael Smith, Wes Holter, Jay
Swatn, and Michael Newland: Rear - Coach Gary
Durst, Coach George Collins and Coach Jbn Smith.

tuppers Plains blanks Vinton
3-0 for Kyger Creek title
•

•

CHESHIRE - Tuppers Plains' fifth innings for game's only
Tigers claimed the Ky~r Creek scortng.
Liaie league tournament chamThe Tigers made It 1-0 In the third
p!opshlp here Saturday behind the when Tony Maxey and Tim Bissell
tWII·hlt pitching of Jeff Durst for a walked leading off the Inning and
3-8;.win over runner-up Vinton.
Maxey scored on Michael Smith's
·ln the consolatlon game, Middle- fielder's choice. John Collins srored
port's Cardinals laid stake to third the game's second run In the fourth
plaee with an 11-5 wtn over the as he walked and following a walk
to Jay Swain, Bissell hit into a
Gatllpolis Senators.
Tuppers Plains, who ended their fielder's choice. Durst cracked his
season with a brilliant 26-2 mark third home run oft he tournament In
and losers of ooly six games In the the fifth over the Ie!tfleld fence to
paSt three years, scored single runs make It 3-0.
Durst fanned nine and walked
In the eac h of the third. fourth, and

Blair skates her way into
V. S. Festival record book
• ~ (UPIY ..:.Bonn~-lr ''

M~ .d,.aarue/N~IIdin,Ji ' ~~ey~:~w~~ ~~~

skated her way Into U.S. Olympic
FesiJval history Sunday. then cordlally invited successors to rEWrite
her section of the record book.
Returning to her fifth Festival,
till! ' 2.2-ycar-old world champion
skater from Champaign, Ill.,
c tured a gold medal In the
en's l .&lt;XXl-meter and was a
mjomber of the winning North team
~he 3,&lt;XXl-meter relay to sweep all
!&lt;fir women's events. Blair, who
~n the world indoor individual title
earlier this year ln Chamontx,
FJance, finished first Saturday In

a 139-pound se~lnal. Kakouris, of
St. Louis, displayed a wicked right
hand in advancing to Tuesday
night's final against Washington's
Gerry Payne. David Moreno, a
1:;5-!Xlunder from Aurora, Calif.,
wo~ a ~1 decision in upsetting 1985
nahonal champ1on Runnell Doll,
representing the U.S. Army in Ft.
Bragg, N.C.
BUiy Asmus, of Lakeville. Minn.,
won the men's 100-meter freestyle
swimming In 51.55 and Josh
Mikesell, from Crawfordsville,
Ind., won the~ gold In 2:!»!.44.

ue:Blair's
500 andsecond
1,500 meter
straightraces.
sweep in

Beres
of San
Antonio
theLaszlo
senior
men's
division
of won
the
modern pentathlon with 4,969
!Xlints. The next four finishers ,
Greg Losey, Mike Burley, Tom
Buning and Harvey Cain, are also
from San Antonio, homeoftheU.S.
Modern Pentathlon Trammg
Center.

=

~competition ,gave her 10 career
g9_ld medals and 16 medais overall
~rot h Festival records for any
atta!cte In any sport. She won the
1.1pl meters In 1:47.80 to set a
fl!stival mark, despite battling a
~s.

~lsewhere.

in the busiest day of
~Festival. Christopher Bowman.
a ~9-year-old figure ska ter from
Vin Nuys, Calif., capped a remar
k~le recovery from a broken IC'~
will\ aflawless tong program to win
the men'sgo ld medal. Bowman had
been off the i('(' for four mcnths and
had lrss than eight weeks to
prepare for the Festival.
&amp;for£' a Festival figure skati ng
=ord crowd of 11.118 at The
Summit , Jill Trenary of Colorado

only one batter In his six Inning
shutout. VInton's strong-armed Casey Staten went the first ' ihree
Innings before coming up with a
sore arm and Adam Breaklron
carne on to finish up.
Collecting TP's five luts were too
singles and a home run by Durst, a
single bY Smith, and Collins added a
single. Vinton's two hits were
singles bY Scott Oiler and BUiy
Potter.
In the consolatlon game, the
Middleport Cardinals were outhlt
11·5 but won 11·5 over the GaU!polis
Senators.
Shannon Roush was the winning
pitcher for the Cards while Ouis
Carmen and Ryan Young handled
the pitching chores fort he Senators.
Hitting safely for Middleport

CHECK lHE

L.J. Mitch and Steve Caruthers,
and a single bY Darin Logan.
GaU!polis hitters Included too
singles and a oouble by Rodd
Young, a single and oouble bY
brother Ryan Young, too singles bY
Jason Brown, a double by Larry
Howell, and one single each bY
Chris Carmen, Bob Donnally, and
Lloyd Evans.
In Friday's semi-Onals, Vinton
defeated the Middleport Cardinals
13-1 and Tuppers Plains whipped
the Gallipolis Senators 11-5.

CINCINNATI (UPI) - In the
past two months, Eric Davis has
gone !rom bad to brilliant.
The Cincinnati Reds outfielder
has raised his average frOm -~ to
.ll4. He's been especially devastatIng the past three weeks, hitting
safely In 18 of the last 19 games and
batting .403 (29 of 72) witlx homers
and 16 RBI during that stretch.
That means the Reds love to have
the speedy and strong 24- year-old
at the plate when the game is on the
line - like Sunday.
With two outs In the bottom of the
eighth Inning, the bases loaded and
the game tied 7-7, Davis smacked a
2-run single to lift the Reds to a 9-7
win over Montreal.
The night before, the Expos had
denied Davis a chance to be the
hero when he was walked Intention·
ally to load the bases with two outs
In the ninth Inning of a 6-6 game.
The next batter, Bo Dlaz, drew a
walk to win that game for the Reds.
"When I came up today, I was
thinking about last night when I
didn't get a chance," Davis said
alter Sunday's game. "!knew they
couldn't walk me this time. I
wanted to get the job done."
Davis' game--winning hit capped
a stirring Reds' comeback !rom
deficits of :&gt;-0 and 7- 2.
Trailing 7-6 going Into the eighth,
Nick Esasky opened the Inning with
his seventh homer of the year off
Jeff Reardon, 6- 6.
After Kurt Stlllwell walked. Da' c
Tomlin relieved Reardon and
walked pinch-hitter Dave Parker.
Ron Oester moved both runners up
with a sacr~lce bunt and plnchhi)ter Tony Perez was Intentionally
walked to load the bases. After Kal
Daniels lined outtoshQrtstop fort he
second out, Davis smacked a single
to left to bring in St Ulwell and
Parker.
"It was an ideal situation for me,
a left-handed pitcher (Tomlin )
against a right· handed hitter," said
Davis. "11 was good for us to come
from behind and win the way we
did. We're · moving up the
standings."

The Reds, who have spent most of
the season In last place in the
National League West, moved Into
third place after their third-straight
win Sunday.
The Expos suffered their thirdstraight loss and Montreal manager Buck Rodgers blamed It on
bad relief pitching.
Starter Floyd Youmans surren·
dered just four hits and two runs in
six lnnlngs and the Expos were
leading 7-2 when Youmans left the
game with a stiff shoulder. But
relievers Tim Burke, Reardon and
Tomlin let the game get out of hand.
"We're hitting Uke heU, but not
getting any pitching,'' said
~ers. "Our buUpen Is dragging
right now. We're going to have to
regroup the pitching.
"We're also going to have to give
Burke (who surrendered four hits
and four runs In me Inning Sunday)
some time off. His arm Is dead."
Cincinnati's rally permitted rookie Rob Murphy to get his first
major-league win. Murphy, 1-0,
pitched the eighth ln,nlng and John
Franco worked the final Inning for
his 16th save.
National League Roundup
By DAVID E. NA111AN
UPI Sports Writer
Na tiona! U&gt;ague teams with
leads Sunday had to keep baking
over their shoulders.
Three teams used late--Inning
rallles to overcome early deficits.
St. Louis beat San Diego 3-2 with
three runs In the seventh Inning;
Cincinnati used three runs in the
eighth to defeat Montreal ~ 7; and
Los Angeles scored four Urnes In
the ninth to top Chicago 13-11.
Cardinals 3, Padres 2
At St. Louis, Andy Van Slyke's
two-run single keyed a three-run
rally that carried the Cardinals to
their sixth straight victory.
"We haven't come from behind
very often,'' St. Louis manager
Whitey Herzog said. "It's a refreshing change cJ. pace."
The rally made a winner of John
Tudor, ~5. who allowed nine hits In
seven Innings. Todd Worrell

moments I've learned to treasure."
Navratilova ostensibly returned
to Prague to play tennis, and this
she did to the top of her world class
raliber. Wlthln the space of six days
she played five singles and five
ck&gt;ubles and won them all, helping
to return the Federatlon Cup to the
United States for the first time In
four years.
At the same time, this week was
unlike any other she has expe
rlenced, and it was made even
more special when Chrts Evert

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THE MAPlES "F

~

j.,r
CROSSING THE BRJPGE - Angel Roberts, left,
and Peggy Caruthers, both of Junior troop 1042,
Racine, got to he waterglrls tiE week at da.v camp. To

1 Wf):,.....'

*Applicants will receive free rent for 30 days following move-in.
*Applicants mu$1 make full sectl'ily dePOsit payment prior to move·in.
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BIC
DISPOSABLE :
SHAVERS .
REGULAR OR FOR

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HOO

FOOD PREPARATION- Cooking In the ldtchen
was never as much fun as tiM. From left to right,
Penny Aelker, of Junior troop 1041, Chester, Ouistlna

On July 1st the Qu(l(&gt;n Befs met at the home

ct SherM Smlth with 5 members and 2

a::lvtsocs ln attendan('(&gt;. The group discussed
the first aldcours£' to be laken on July Jrdand
foods judging. Shfl"ri Smith gave a demonslration on what to do 11 someone is poisoned
and Debbie Frost gave a demonstration oo
IJJw to makt&gt; a good lllt'al. The groopenjoyed
basketball for recl'('atlon. Sheni Smlthservf'd
refre.r~hrnents. ThP next meeting was se1 for
.Julv 8th at the homE' or DE&gt;bble Fro3L
·
Lisa Hoffman
RPpot1('r

..oi'OSUGI
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PICK UP A SUPPLY OF PREPAID ENVELOPES
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'Jifledo race results
'
10LEOO,
Ohio (UP!) -

Sum
Sorta Hy was timed In a llfetlmebP~t o! 1:59 1·5 Sunday, defeating
PII*'Creek Riehle by a length In the
featured $3,200 pace at Raceway

PEOPLES
IJ.ANK

Pf'"lf·

~or Sundance showed.

'e winner, driven bY Mike
· dens!ager, returned $12.40, $4.8&gt;

"The letter lank"

. $3.8&gt;.

MEMBER F.D.I.C.

. · ommy Tar, Princess Jade and
A ans Spartan combined !or an
~ ~lth-race trtfecta worth

~ce was
.1hall&amp; 00.7~.

Second Stnet
IliOn, W. VI.
m-5514

2.634 and the

•

'

'

5th St!wt
New IIMti, W.VI.

812·2135

COLORPIINI'

thE&gt; fair parade and fair bOOth. Chuck ParkO""

gaVf a dp-rmnstratton on making butter by

shaking cream In a Jar. Relreihmmts were
served by the Parkers. The neX1 meeting Is
July 15 at Lakin Sta!P Farm.

)f:'ff Rose
Rl'JXIrtl'r
The HU!blllles met on July 2 at t tv&gt; Pomrroy
PO!il Office wllh 3 members and 1 advisor
attencHng. The group discussed their proj('('ts

and proJect judging. The group ttrn toored
the Post Office. For refreshments thry went

July U at the Oyer residence.
Shcrrl

Ramsbur~
Rt&gt;port~r

Ttlf' Frost residence was thr plare of

meeting of the- Queen Bees 4-H Club when It
met July 8th. There M're 5 advisors and 6
memlx&gt;rs attending. The ('\~b dlscusscd a
variety d flrsf aid lnjul1e~ anti what to do for
them·. They enjoyf!d sw1mmtng for recrrot\on. Refreshments were served by DebbiE'
Fra;t. The next meeting Is July 15.

Usa Hortman

Reporter

Visit.r
Doris Koenig, Tuppers Plains
and Barbara Sargent, Chester
spent a few days recently with their
sister Mrs. Wilma Haught cJ. Akron.

Ft. Meigs: the key to victory

Bank-By-Mail!

I

KODAK

to Pizza Hut. The next mf'f'llng was SP1 for
The Parker rPSidt.&gt;rK'£' was tht&gt; place of
meetlng when the MeigS Betlf:'r Livestock
Club met on July lsi. There were 10 membt.•rs
and 1 advisor In attendan('('. The group
dlscuSSl'd a field trip to Lakin Stall.' Farm and

FREE

I

Eynon, troop 1204, Syracuse, Amanda Wells, troop
1049, and Leslie Qualls, troop 10!11, Middleport,
prepare marslunallows for banana boats.

Meigs County 4-H news reports

CALL :614) 992·2104
304 675·1244

\

RIGHT
GUARD

SPRAY
oz.

"WE HAVE HEARIN6 AIDS"

Springs. Colo., won the final , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __r::======:E:q:u:•I:H:ou:s:in:':Op:p:ort:u:n:ity========~
freestyle long program and the
woml'D's gold medal. Natalie and
W;.vne Seybold, a brother-sister
tehm from Marion. Ind., won the
gold medal In the pairs competition.
(In the opening round of men's
t.)sketball. Mike Mitchell's 19· foot
jurnper with one second remaining
g;lve the West a 93-91 triumph over
tlf South. Doug West of Villanova
srored 21 points and Rumeal
Jt\&gt;blnson, Cambrldge,;tass., hit
~o key free throws to spark the
EMt past the North 91-89.
;Nick Kakouris, a two-time natlqnal champion, continued his road
toi the Olympic roxlng team bY
st!Jpping an outclassed Robert

Ausust VaJuesl

REGULAR OR PoWDER
4
OR BRONZE

Lloyd dedicated the championship
to her In an emotional ~h that
brought wet eyes Ill all lour women
on the American team.
"On behalf of Pam (Shriver).
Zlna (Garrison) and Marty (team
captain Marty Rlessen), when we
heard Martina was committed to
play here and was a little uncertain
of how peoplewouldreact to her, we
decided that was Incentive enough
for us to want to play;" Evert Lloyd
said at the close ol a press
conference.

992-7022

get the water for their campsite, the girls had to cross
the swinging bridge and carry H by buckets from the
cabin on the hill at Camp Klashula.

ANn·PERSPIRANT

NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

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NIHI ClASSifll~

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want it ...

you've gotit ...

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

---::::-...

Monday, July 28, 1986

you

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.

lilt Re.,irements
*Applicants must apply or move in between June 20, 1986 and July
31 , 1986.
*Applicant must meet HUD income requirements
*Applicants must move into THE MAPLES no later than 30 days after
application paperwork is completed .
rll

pitched the Dna! Inning lor his 21th
save. San Diego starter Lance
McCullers, :&gt;-5, took the loss.
Dodllers J3, Cuba ll
At Chicago, Los Angeles overcame three-run deficits three times
and scored lour times In the ninth ta
beat the Cubs, 13-11. MlkeScloscla's
two-run single scored the tying and
winning runs.
"! haven 't seen a wilder game
this year," said Dodger manager
Tom Lasorda of the 34-hit affair.
"Can you Imagine what the ·plane
ride back home would have been
!Ike If we had lost? ""aybe this Is the
game we need to spark us."
Ken Howell, 4-6, earned the
victory while reliever Frank DIPlno fell to 1-4.
Elsewhere, Houston beat Philadelphia, 3-2, Pittsburgh blanked
San Francisco, 7-0, and New York
defeated Atlanta, 5-1.
In the American U&gt;ague, 11 was;
New York 4, Minnesota 1; Kansas
City 5, Detroit 4; Baltimore 11,
Chicago 3; California 3, Boston 0;
Oakland 1, Toronto 0 in 15 Innings;
MUwaukee 8, Seattle 1; and OeveIand 8, Texas 3.
Asti'OII 3, Phlllies 2
At PhUadelphla, Nolan Ryan and
Aurelio Lopez combined on a
two-hitter to lead the Astros. Ryan,
7-7, struck out 10 In five innings
before leaving the game with
tenderness In his right elrow. Kevin
Gross, 6-8, aUowed just four hits but
was the hard-luck klser.
Pirates 7, Giants 0
AI Pittsburgh, Sid Bream had a
career-high four RBI and Jim
Morrison went 4-for-4 and scored
three runs to help the Pirates snap a
five--game losing streak. Rick
Rhoden, 10-6, •and Don Robinson
combined on the shu tout. VIda
Blue, 7-6, took the loss.
Mets 5, Bnwes 1
At Atlanta, Gary Carter, Darryl
Strawberry and Kevin MltcheU hit
consecutive home runs In the third
Inning, !Xlwerlng the Mets. Rick
Mahler, 1().10, yielded the homers.
Rick AguUera, 4-3, won his fourth
straight decision.

"People have been so friendly It . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - exceeded all my expectations,"
NavratUova. said. ''I'U never play
here again for the first time. I
enjoyed living It and I'U sure I'll he
reminiscing arout it. These are

Tr=::::::::::====:;:=====:;:===;::=::J

Senti~
Page-6

Federation Cup returns to U. S.
PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia
tUPll - In bidding farewell to the
country she once called home.
Martina NavratUova told a cheer·
lnf, cl;lpplng crowd, "l hope It isn't
another 11 years before I come back
again."
In 1975 she left Czechoslovakia a
frightened teenager, giving up her
family , friends and country for a
new life in America. When Navra·
tilova departs again today, it wlll be
as a hero of the people.

The Daily

r

High on the southe rn banks of til'
Maumee River In oorthwestern
Ohio lies the site of a major defen se
constructed against combined Brttlsh, Canadian and Indian rorces by
the army of a very young American
republic.
Known as Fort Meigs, this walled
enclosure was buUt by American
soldiers and held durtng too seiges
In the year 1813. Restored by the
Ohio Historical Society to Its
appearance during the first seige,
Fort Meigs marks a historic
engagement In the Northwest
Campaign of the War of 1812 ,
sometimes called America's Second War of Independence.
The United States entered this
war for a variety of reasons ,
Including Great Britain's Impressment of American sea men Into
Brtttsh service and the suspicion
that Britain continued to encourage
Indian hostilities toward American
settlers along the northwestern
frontier.
Ohio Governor Return Jonathan
Meigs Jr. (for whom Fort Meigs is
named ) cited these prominent
reasons In his emotional address of
December 1812: "On the ocean your
Impressed brethren are compeUed
by the torturing lash to raise their
unwilling arms against the country
of their birth ... ," while along the
western frontier, he noted: were
"hordes of barbarians. stimulated
bY British Influences."
Underlying these public state-ments were other rrottves lnclud·
!ng outraged natlonal pride and an
urge to acquire all or part of the
British lands In Canada. .
Regardless of the motives,
Ohioans generally suptlorted Amer·
lea's entry Into the war, although
vol9f!S ot caution were raised.
Thomas Worthington, who as Sen a·
t.Or from Ohio voted against the
~laration of war, stated: "I have
done my duty and satisfied 11'\Y
conscience. Thousands of the Innocent wW suffer, but I have born 11'\Y
testimony against It ... now that the
step Is taken, I am round to submit
Ill the wDI cl the majority, and use
my best exertions to save my
counb!y !rom 111\n."

In his personal diary oft he selge,
Capt. Daniel Cushing noted In his
entry for Wednesday, Aprtl 28:
"This morning we had the pleasure
of seeing about DJ British down the
river an a number of Indians and
British came opposite to our fort
and fired at our men that were on
the river bottom ..." and on the ~h .
"we have been surrounded bY
Brttlsh and Indians for two days."
' The American army's suocess!ul
defense of the fort through two
seiges. one In May and the second In
Ia te July, tu med the tide of the war
in favor of the United States,
roistering llVlrale throughout the
reglon.
Fort Meigs today is one of the
Iar~st waDed forts In America, a
What had begun wlth the naive fascinating stop for all who enjoy
expectation by many Ohioans that the history of the frontier. Here,
more terrttory could he won was exhibits within the restored blockfast becoming a realization that the houses teD the tale of the common
frontier, and Ohio Itself, was soldiers and provide a general
threatened. Ohioans were particu- overview of the War of 1812,
larly outraged bY the lossofDetrolt, Including detailed accounts of the
commanded bY General William set~ of Fort Meigs and the battles
Hull cl Dayton, whose army at the of the Northwest Campaign.
One of more than 00 sttes
time of surrender was largely made
up ci Ohioans . Throughout the operated by the Ohio Historical
state, the loss was viewed as an act Society, Fort Meigs is located In
of treachery and cowardice bY PerrysbUrg, Ohio, on West River
Road (S.R. (i;), Wood County. Take
General HuU.
Realizing the sertous nature of t-475 to the ftrst Interchange, Exit
112, and turn north to S.R. 65. The
the threat Ill the defenses of Ohio
and the Northwest, General Wil- fort is open Wednesday through
liam Henry Harrison, the new Saturday, 9:ll a.m. to 5 p.m., and
commander of the Northwest Sundays noon to 5 p.m., through
Army, decided to make a stand In Laror Day. Weekend hours con·
Ohio and selected the site of Fort tinue I hrough Oct. 31 -Saturdays,
Meigs, at the base of the Maumee 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sundays,
rapids, for this purpose. The lort noon to 5 p.m.
On August 9-10 a special encampwas establlshed February 2, 1813.
ment
of the Northwest Territorial
Enclosing almOst ten acres and
AU
lance,
a military reenactment
oonsistlng c:l seven blockhouses,
five EBrth batteries, and eight gates group, is scheduled at Fort Meigs,
connected- bY an earth-reinforced featuring a lantern tour of the fort
klg stockade, the fort was sturdUy on Saturday evening, AUg. 9, trom8
buDt under the direction of Brevet to9:30 p.m. AluU encampment will
continue throughout the weekend
Lt. Col. Eleazor Wood.
When the British and Canadian with ·demonstrations of weaponry;
armies, commanded by Col. Henry martial music, and mUitary tactics.
For further IntorrnaUon abrut
Proctor, and their Indian aU!es, 1
ulller the command of the famous Fort Meigs &lt;r other sites rl the Ohio
Shawnee chief Tecumseh, an1ved Historical Society, caU (614) 446to lay selge to Fort Meigs In the · 1500, or write ~ Veltna Avenue,
"'ring of·l813; they found General Columbus, Ohio, 43211.

These efforts were soon needed,
for early In the war the direction of
the Northwest Campaign took a
decided tum for the worst. Ohioans
were taken back as news of one
American defeat after another
reached home.
Between June cJ. 1812 and February of 1813, the Unlted States bst
both Fort Mackinac and Detroit In
Michigan Terrttory and Fort Dearrom In Illinois Terrttory. The rnly
northwestern outpost to withstand
the British forces was Fort Wayne
in Indiana Territory. In late
January 1813, the American rorce s
suffered yet another defeat, and
severe losses, at the River Raisin In
Michigan.

Harttson ready.

"'

l

THREE
SUBJECT
THEME BOOK

SVB J ~ C'

~-. J

SPIRAl

102

PAGES

79c

CRAYOLA
CRAYONS

FILLER
PAPER
WIDE
RUlE
PKG. Of

700
SHEETS

59c

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119

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FIXODENT

CLOSE•UP
TOOTH PAm
MINT OR

109

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OF 24

DENTURE ADHESIVE
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GENERIC
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WI •111M litE RIGHI TO UMIT OUAifllllll

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I'IIICII IPPICIM JULY 2t 11W AUGUST 3, ,...

NOT RI~I~LI POl TYI'OGWIIICALIIIOIS

RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
208 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OH.
PHARMACY PHONE: 992·2586

·========:::::::=

'

'

'

�\

..:.,.-6- The

Sentinel

,

GALLIPOLIS.
Livestock 6:30p.m.
Dog obedience judging begins at
barns, project booths and a fully·
'
6
:30
p.m. in the show arena,
stocked midway were failing into
foUowed
by thhe Little Miss Gall!a
place lor tonight's olf!c!a! opening
of the 37th annual Gallla County County Contest at 7 p.m. on the
main stage. The demolition derby
Junior Fair.
"We've about got everything begins at 7:30 p.m., with the Little
together," Fair Board President Mister GalUa County contest set on
Tim Massie observed Sunday as the main stage at 8 p.m.
Selection of the 1986 Gall!a
anbnals, projects and amusements
County
Junior Falr queen begins on
flooded into the fairgrounds for the
the
main
stzge at 9:30 p.m.
event, which ends Saturday. The
fair opened to the public today at Candidates are Rhonda Carter and
Stephanie Carter, Gall!a Academy
noon.
•
High School; Denise Cox and Jody
The falr gets underway at 6 HaD, Hannan Trace High School;
tonight with a greeting from Susan Mllam and Michelle Reese,
Massie, raising of the flag by area Kyger Creek High School; Aim
veterans organizations and lntro· Rodgers and Karen Steele, North
duction of local riflcla!s. The Gauta Gall!a Hlgh School; and Tina
County Marching Band wUI per· Slivers and Laura Terry , Southw·
form on the ma!nstageat5:45p.m.,
estern Hlg!t School.
as wllllhe Gallia Academy band at

Revival begim tonight
"

Drowning ruled in area death
Terry L. Bertrand, 37, of the Hemlock Grove area, died of
drowning when his pickup truck plunged into the Ohio River near the
Midwest Steel Co., East Main Street, Pomeroy, on July 14.
This Is the finding of Ill\' State Examiners Medical Lahoratory at
South Charleston, W.Va., where tlle body was taken for an autopsy
following the Incident.
Bertrand's body was recovered from his truck Which had sunk in
water estimated at between 25 and :Jl feet in depth at 10:02 p.m. on
July 14. The body was taken to the Pomeroy levee by emergency
squad members, was then taken to the Ewing Funeral Home and
!oUow!ng the pronouncement of death by Dr. James Conde, Meigs
County, Coroner, the body was then !aken to the Pleasant Valley
Hospital at Point Pleasant for examination by Mason County
Coroner Dr. John Grubb since the body was technically within the
jurisdiction of Mason County.
Following the autopsy the body was taken to Louisiana for burtal.
It was reported that Bertrand had been in Meigs County only a few
months.

.

. 4-H Style Revue location changed

"

The location of the Meigs County 4·H Style Revue which is to be
held this evening at 7: 30 has been changed from the Rutland Civic
Center In Rutland to the hill stage on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.

Squads report 5 weekend runs

'.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports five calls c:Ner
the weekend, two on Saturday and three oo Sunday.
Saturday at 3 p.m., Tuppers Plains to Reedsville lor Juanita Reed
to St. Joseph's Hospital; Pomeroy fire department allO: 35 p.m. to a
car fire; no lnjurtes.
.
Sunday at 1:34 a.m. , Racine to Apple Grove for Teresa Eakins to
Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 2:12a.m. to Meigs Mine No.2 for
Paul KenllE'y to O'Bienness Memortal Hospital; Syracuse at 4:38
p.m. to London Pool for Marion Snyder who was treated but not
transported.

~ Final touches placed
-~-on 17-day state fair
·'

Zanesville leads off the exhibits
COLUMBUS, Ohio · !UP!) Young people thoughout the state Friday. The rest of the schedule Is:
... are putting final touches on more Dayton, Aug. 4: Mansfield, Aug. 5;
than 65,00&gt; exhibits that will be Lanca~ter, Aug. 7; Ironton, Aug. 9;
· included In the 17-day Ohio Stale Marietta, Aug. 11; Lorain, Aug. 12;
Euclid, Aug. 13: Athens, Aug. 14;
-Fair, which opens Friday.
Wooster, Aug. 15; and Portsmouth,
~· .' Worl&lt;ers have been laboring to
. erect amusement rides, which wUl Aug. 16.
Alumni d the AU .Ohio Slate Fair
' be tncluded In the one-price adm!s·
·i tem along with grandstand and Band and the Youth Choir wUl
return to the fair to perform.
· pavll!on shows.
· :.: ,Grandstand entertainment In· Alumni Day tor the band Is Aug. 10,
eludes the Osmonds, the Beach when band director Omar Black·
. ~s, John Denver, the Oak Ridge man wllllead the perfonnances .
. .Boys, Kool and the Gang, Willie • . Alumni Day lor the choir is Aug .
Nelson, the Pointer Sisters, David 16. Choir director Glenvllle Tho. Copperfield, the Statler Brothers, mas, who founded the choir 24 years
, yermalne Jackson, Kevin Mabry ago, will lead the vocalists.
Other special musicians at the
. and the Thunderblrds. A Soap
falr
include the "The Volunteers"
Opera festival also is scheduled .
Army Field Band and the Navy
,.. Gov. Richard Celeste has invited
Band "Holidays".
ll Ohio cities to set up special
·' displays at the Transportation
Since agriculture exhibits were
'' BuDding for the "Capital For a
thl'
basis for the fair's beginning,
. Day" exhibit. Each city will
the Ohio Agricultural Hall of Fame
~ smwcase its display for OllP day
will honor four members Aug. 8.
• and the gowroor wUI meet local
Being inducted this year are Ohio
·Officials at the exhibit.
State University educators Wallace
Barr, professor emeritus ol agrlcul·
tural economics and rural sociol·
:south
ogy; Lawrence Kunkle, professor
(Continued from Page I I
emerit us of animal scienCP; Dale
'·
'be meeting with Hemlock PipelinP.
Friday, who originated the Farm
Jeffers Excavation and Rose ExcaScience Review In 1963; and the late
D.C. Kiplinger, who worked much
vating on July 30 to duscu ss
of his 40 years at OSU in
=cleaning o1 the septic systems at
betart Falls and Por1land Elemen·
nortculture.
tprtes, to be oone prior to th0
Three other Ohioans will be
inducted
into the Ohio Conservation
opening of school.
· In tiller matters. the ooard
Hall of Fame and five wUI be
.:-accepted the following bids for thP hooored with Ohio Conservation
1986-8'7 year: Burllle Co. for gaso·
Achievement awards at the Departilne and dieselluel; Ashland Oil for ment of Natural Resoureps' Sfftion
the day before the fa lr opens.
' motor oU; Heiners Bakery for
''bread and bakery supplies; Excelsior Salt Works lor coal; Meigs Tlre
Center for tires and tubes; Best
Office Supplies llr maintainance of
B.O.E. typewrtters: Valley Bell for
:muk; Michael's Ice Cream for icE'
cream; Brogan-Warner lnsuranCP
for bus neet insurance.
Present for Saturday's meeting
were board members Denny
Evans, Scott Wolfe, Don Smith, Joe
Thoren and Charlie Pyles, Superin·
tendenl Bobby Ord and Treasurer
Dennie HUt.
The next board meeting will be
Aug. 9 at 10 a.m.
1

.

em

Sally Zirkle
Word has been received of the
death of Sally Duckworth Zirkle, 34,
who died July 22 ather residence In
Warner Robins, Ga., after a lengthy
Illness.
Born July 17, 1952, in Meigs
County, she was the daughter of
Robert and Virginia Duckworth of
Middleport.
Survivors Include her husband,
Butch Zirkle of Warner Robins; a
daughter, Beverly, and a son,
An&lt;I:Y. both at home; a sister and a
brother-in-law, Rolin and Doug
Rodehaver; a niece, Stacy Rode·
haver of Cenlervllle, Ga.; a
brother, Bobby Duckworth of Mid·
dieport; a special friend, Angle
Hood of Middleport; aslster·in·law,
Diana Smith of Middleport; a niece,
Lisa Ashley of MUddle(Jort; and
gran~arents, Fred and Ellen
Smith of Bradbury .
Aunts and uncles include Dolly
and Fred Spires of !Rflance, Ohio,
Pauline and Fred Hoffman of
Middleport, Shirley and Eugene
Smith ri Middleport, Bessie and
Lee Baughman of Bradbury, Ray
and Sue Smith of Cheshire, Carl and
Marcia Kerns of Atlanta, Ga .,
WUoor and Ella Holter of Akron,
and Anna Stacy of Akron.
Services were held July 24 at the
First Baptist Church in Centerville,
G&lt;!. Burial was In Magnolia Park
Cemetery, Warner Robins, Ga.

Used mobile horTII!III. Call 61'1

·41·0175 .

1600 Bbl.

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

Further Information May

Be Obtained By ContBCting
the Following;

Jemes E. Diddle dba J .D.
Drilling Company, P.O. Box
687. Racine, Ohio 46771 .
614·949·2612 or Ohio De·
pertrnent oi
Natural Rn·

RAYMOND E. PROFFITT (MAC)

touroes. DNilion of Oil &amp;
Gas, Fountain Square, Col-

Oflice 949-2438

Arrt J*tCNl desiring to oo mment or to m•e .. objection
with r"""'-tce to any appiica·
tKm for a permit to connruct.
convert or operate a salt wat•
injection project oholl file ouch

We're always by your side.
Every hour of the day,
electricity helps make life
so much better.
Electricity is the security
of a night light, the con- .
venience of a microwave, ·
the ease of a power drill.
It's the twang of country music, the beat of
rock and roll, a late
night movie and the
early morning news.
Our job is to make
sure electricity is
there each time
you flip the switch,
push a button, or
tum the dial.
1\venty-four hours a day, every day of the year.
And, you can always call us for valuable free information on choosing efficient electric heating and cooling systems,
electrical safety, and our equal payment plan.
Electricity . . , making sure you
can get the most out of life.

LEGAL NOTIFICATION
Name .,d Addn. . of Appfi·
c:anl: Jom• E. Oiddle cbaJ.D.
Drilling C~any, P.O. Box
587, Racine. Ohio 46771.
locatH)n of Proposed Sah
Water Injection Well: Section 32. Saliabury Township. Meigs County, Ohio ,
Harold &amp; Penny Brinker .

Cleologicol Nemo 111d Depth
of Injection ZOllo: Morcollous
Shale · 31 00' Appoox.
Maximum Proposed Injection Pressure 890 lbs.

Maximum Proposed Average Daily lniection Volumne

1600 Bbl.
Further Information May
Be Obtained By Contacting
the Fbllowing :

James E. Diddle dba J .D.
Drilin9 Corrc&gt;any, P.O. Box
687. Recine, Ohio 45771 .
614·949-2512 or Ohio De·
parlment of
Natural Resources, Divtsion of Oil &amp;

Gu, Fountain Square, Col·
umbus. Ohio 43224, 614·
265·6917.
Of'

to make .-. dJjection

701 8-Smart !ashton
crochet. Make it of 2
colors synthetic worsted
to wear with pants/skins.

CJ

-a:

The Daily Sentinel

Print-·-·

NY nm.
Zip. Silt, Pa111rn -

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

z Licensed Clinical Audiologist

-z

·

NEW FOR ONLY $1
96·page, full·color Calalog ol Craft•- patterns,
books, supplies. crewel,
cross stitch, needlepoint,
latch hool&lt;, quitting. and

ALICE BROOKS

dren and/ or 1duha.

&amp;poclflc bid dotailo moy be
obtained
by oontoctlng
Kohh Block, 992·84183.
Bids wKt be IWIIdld ott he
rogulot Board moo11ng on
August 11. 1988 .
The MCBMR/ DD IONNOI
tho right 10 occopt 01 rwjoct
any or ott blcll.
MEIGS COUNTY BOARD
OF MENTAL RETARDATION / DEVELOPMENTAL
DISABILITIES
7/ 27/ BI, Kollh Block
(71 28, 28, 30 3ic

'

Public Notice
NOfiCE OF SAlE
lyvftluoofanOtdotllflolo

luuoot 0111 Of the Conotnalo
"'-Court Of Moigo County,
Ohio. In the of Tho City .
Loon ....... Co:, PIMoM',
.,.- Rlchonl 0'. n IOU. II

w.,,

thence north 17Vo
dlgr-.- 170 foot m tho

of

-

oom•olochoollot
thenco IOUih 10 dogrt011-

209 foot: thence north 1o

- -of SUllo
209 foot
10 124:
~·
of w.,
Route
- c e - " " ' •tong right of
117 foot: thence ICuth
287 - 10 Dolph H'lllll'o

l'lOitt alit oom.. 1hance -....:
1024 foot m ploco o1 bogn·
'*'a. oonllllnno 11.1 ocrao
more or 1111 111d boing o p.-t of
troct of tond conwyect by

Emaot H.moon to Ct• .,oo
lnd Edwonl Eboi-o by
-dolodJ... 23. t942ond
In llaak 1!50, Pogo
287 of tho MolgoCounty Dlld

•-clod

Restores Faded
Oxidized Finishes To
Showroom luster
•CARS •TRUCI&lt;S
•BOATS •PLANES
&amp; MORE
ly Michael Norton
Preserves 8o Seats
From Harsh
992·2038
Cy~~~.
Elements
0
w / APS DUPONT TEFLON

"Wf

FREE Est . &amp; Oem onstr1tlons All
Work Gu1r1ntnd in Writing

Roger Hysell
Garage
REPAIR

Alto Tr••••iul01
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6· 17 ·tfc

992-6711
~

Coull, I wll ofllt tit ..... II
tho fronl door of the Court·
....... In Po.-y, Moigo
Couilll'l 0114D, 011 the 2811 doy
of ......... 1W, .. 10:16

o.m., tho ......... Iandi ond
...- . t&gt;...:lot37821
· - Routt 124, Po"*Uy,

of M acre. more or lea.
Rofetence io mode to d-'
of Pout . Sihon to Rich11d

8 - g recorded In Vol.ome

·n .·eo GM

Public Notice

Council of tho Village of
Middleport •• follows:
Sec. t. Thot tho Council of
the. Village of Middleport,
Code accept bid• for the drit.
ling and production of oil
and gas under the real estate
owne.d bv .the Village sitU·
atud m Salisbury TownshiA~

o~oo .en.il

~~ location of any produO·

loon tinea and/ or oquit),

ment.
Sec. II . Thia Ordinena;
shall take effect and be 10
force hom and after the •r~
l..lt date provided ~ lew . ~
Paned tho 14tn doy at

•-clod

....,..Putdl_

r..,..

"We are alwap pulll•t for you!"
Ca·n the Clel••• Cla•l

Oh1o. punuant to Section
72! .03 of the Ohio Reviaejl

situated on the real alta~
and that the Village reservB.
the right to approve the loca~

NOTIC~

Mini 1115

Leuo of Real Ellate.

262. Pogo 833, Maigs County
Dood R8COidl.
APPRAISED AT Meigs CO&lt;Jnly, Ohio . dea12,000.00. The reo! ootote scribed in Volume 227, Page
cannot be .,ld lor lt11 .,., 867, Meigs Coo nty Dee~
IWG·thirdl the appr,;.od val.oe. Reco rd s. The offer to teen
the real estate shall provM:Si
TERMS OF SALE: C.. h.
Howtird E. Fr111k. Sheriff that no well ohell be drilled
of Meigl County, Ohio which will interfere with Itt;
sewage disposal facilitiet
171 28; 181 4, 11 . 3tc

Public Notice

139

. . . . . , ....- .. ...... .... 115
73 · 71 fOfd Fend..-•..... 131
TNdlled
lin..
.. full 1171

An Ordinance To Authorize

GET SOME BRW :
WITH AWANT AD

,.
•,,

CLELAND REALTY INC.
608 EAST MAIN

NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT - Appro•. 12 acres of
woodland plus a seven room brrck home. 4 bedrooms, fA .F.
0. heal plu s wbodburnet. Enclosed porch. Prrvacy!
$27,000 00.
REDUCED PRIC£ - POMEROV - Close to town but se·
eluded. Remodeled and added on to about three years ago.
Large home with up to four bedroo.ms. fully n~lated and
heats with coal and wood for low t.C•IIty brlls. Carpetrng and
other features. Appro•. li acre tot. All for S24,roO.OO.
PRICE REDUCED - Anice ranch type home in Rustic Hills.
3 bedrooms, garage, etec. B.B. heal. Patio and nice lot. tn
good condition $37,000.00 .
NEW LISTING -MIDDLEPORT- Nice home on a oorner
lot with garage &amp; basement. New ~nyl siding &amp; equ ipped
kitchen. Pnced for qurck sale at $28.roO.OO .
CHESTER - Really a nic e 3 bedroom home wifh fuH base·
men I and large level yard. Carport &amp; agreallocalion mtown ..
$34,roO.OO.
OFFICE ......... ............. ....... ...... ...... .................??~· ?'!~!
MENRY E. CLELAND JR ......................... ........ .
.JEAN TRUSSELL.. .. ........... ......... ................... ..
11001£ TUIIIfR
'I

FAEliNITALLATION
2 YR WA"AA.NfY
S.tltf.etioft G'"'e•tnt•d
J,. O.lirlo ... in Tri ltM• A, ..

mo.

312/ Nn

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Ann ou nc em r. n1s

ELITE POLE
BUILDINGS

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

PH. 949·2101
or 949-2160
No Sunday Calls

RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
AGRICULTURAL

Custom Design
Service

CAU 667-3271
,c_••,.,. th a..•uv

••,.,. '!tf!r m:

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSYilll, OHIO
Aulhorited John Deere,
Ntw Holland, lush Hog
Form Equipmtnt
Dealer

Fu111 Equlp111ut
Perfs &amp; Se.-.lce

1·3-'86 tfc

BISSELL
BUILDERS

"At Reasonable Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

Buying /Selling
Gold, SiiYer
14K Choins, Cains,
Collector's Auessories
Bullion
SU-I HOURS

1-7 M·TH

985-3937
(all for Directions

6· 16-'86 · 1 mo.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
•W11here •DIIhWAihafl

•Range•

•Drveu •Freezer&amp;

PARTS end SERVICE
4·5·1fc

54 Miac. Merchandise

If• H••.t AFell Tl•
Sh~ T11hkl11

.. o••,

PLUMIING &amp; HEAnNG

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

Now la&lt;o~oti:
161 Norlh Second

FIIEZERSI FIIEZERSI
FREEZERSII
While tlley Lull
10 cu. ft. Upri&amp;hl

Only 1339
5 cu. ft. Chest

ONLY '249
8 cu. ft. Chest

ONLY 1299
Hotpoint Relriaerators
As low As '419.95

Black -Alpha It Roof
C01tine
5 GAL. $}Q95
Aluminum Asphalt

Roof C01tina
5 GAl. ·$2095

MGM
FARM
CITY
POlE ROY
614-992-2181

SALES &amp; SERVICE

PAT HILL FORD
992-2198
Middleport, Ohio

1 · 13-tfc

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR

SIDING CO.

Ylln &amp; AIIIIIIIIUI
Complete Outttr Wotlt
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of olt Typ111
Worked In home trN ·
20yNra
"Fr• EotimetN"

CALL COLLECT:

Ph. (614) 843-5425
7-11·•

2 mo.

We C1rry Fi1hing Suppl ies

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here

JO'S GIFT SHOP

IUSINIIS PIIONI

SHACIISI, 01110

ne S1ltlt Ot FtrJ•ftl

I.

(6 141 991 -65!0

JISDENCI rHONf
(6!41 9'12·

HUVT lARGE •• UTHSI

116.95

PRIOR MILITARY SERVtCE
INOIVIOUA.LS · Eim extra monrv In tht Army Nationel Ouard.
An E· 4 could make • much •

ll3UMS lor one WIMI·tnd I

... .-- ...,.

month . Other benefitl indu,pe
160.000 lite insuranca. promo·
tion1, tpetill trlininttJ, retk•
ment progr~m, 1nd lduc1tionll
fu. .
Coil .. If . " "

...-fn..

800-M2-J118.

·· ·1

·

Uc:fln..d prec: . I'LU"Ifl, mu1t hive

certification. Contllct Batblre
Wttherhoh. 304·1'&amp;2·2522 .•

home

Baby1in" need.t in our

HOURS.

btglnning Aug. 22 for 1 yt Okl &amp;
8 yr old fin 1chool VJ d1y1 . MUST
be mtturt, "-Ptndable• ..,.,.
getlc &amp; Mn· ln"mlcer. Send ljlftlf
of inttr•t with ,.,....
10
P.O. Bo• C22 Pt Pl. Reogiater,
200 Main St. Pt Pl. 'MI .

4

Giveaway

6 puppiu 10 1 good home . 'h

Llbrldor . CaM 614 ·2&amp;8· 9317 or
814·251-6504.
1 yellow male tigtJ, 2 tabby
kitten•. 3% mos. old. litter
trained . fh iaed with children .
Cal1&amp;1•· 388·8253 eva.
1 brown male cat. 1 femate

tabby . 1 vaar. Railed with II ida.

Call 814· 388·8253 lVI.

Pan St . bmard and p.,-t Collie ,
to good home. Good with llida

Cotl 6t 4-992-2772 .
Kit1en t to gi\le eway . 3 montha

old. liner tra in ld . 814· 911·

388• .

ce.

Netdtd lldy housekeeper to li ~t t
board. S m.W
monthly w-et. 304-175-184().

in for room

a.

Need btbvliner In my home~ 2
Pfl·tchool dl ildren. hourt 7::W
t .m. to 3:30p.m . Send r•IUt'J"'
to Box K a K P.,k area , Pt.
Ple..ant Reg•ter.
Elttbltlhtd

oo~any

n"d' u -

p•lenoad ewning in111ner. Px·

perienOid 11d-.g in.taller. mUtt
hiVt txperitn~. truck, equipment ttlephone. Only CJ.Iallfitd
calltrl pletu. 304 ·6'75· 5252
between 11 and 12 a.m. Mot1

thN Sn
Wtlklng 01nltt ne~td fot Nl*
tnter•tld. piUia
ctll Po._t Pleuent Reglat..-.

••·If

Htvln

30.· &amp;75· 1333.
GREAT POSITIONII · ..

31C3

Don "t M6as This Opportun ity!
Work from your horN hiring •

1 goou. 1 gtnder. 1 year old.
Voong goose 4 .montha old. Call

trelning people. FrM traintng
provkftd . Weellty payehedll.
Bonus•. ldetl job fOf moth••·
fermer

Small long heired dog . :Jl4· n3.

6t78 .
Half Auatralitn . lheph•d tnd
hllfbe.gla. WlllptyyDU •10 .. 00
to taka dog. 208 lth S t. Pt.

tuc:h...

party

plltl

dtelen. tch••.For det1il1 CALL
(collect) NOWII Betty Varano
304· 7144 -0824 .
. .

6 Lost and Found

Wsnted· Enthu•i•tic tnd enlfget lc: ptfaon . Preflf 18· 25 v••fl
of ~ge . with good communic•don 1kiH1. Position I avaitblt fo
work tor Southellttrn Ohio't
outdoor recrNtion ftrm . No
experience needed. Will tr1in l
Start lmmedl•tely . Call be ·
twttm 10· 5 11 114· 288 · 22 ,.8 .
Atk t or Ptm.

Young

Ledy·frtt to travel. Ctlerl a.t "
Jouph, Gtllla County hlr
ctmpgrounda. lot 73

30'-876-61 18.

man1

brown el••••·

found at Frendt Art Colo ny. C1H
6U · 446 - 38~ .

Pan ·llme help kH bookkeeping

Foond: Skatl boll'd in Middle·
pM. Coii614-992-7U6 .

a

LQtt childs pet, 8 wk· kitt.n from
7 M1ple St. MMOn , white

3000 Governrrwnt

w-d1rk erey t1ll . 30•· n l ·
95a6.

hiring . Ca ll

te&lt;: reterill work Flfunble
houra . Ctll 614 -446 ·8817 .
tt~ . o•o

jobs lilt.

. s&amp;t. Z30 ••· Nq;.
805 ~ 88 7 · 0000

~

R·U62

e i t.

"{ ard Sales

YETEIINAIIAN
CUNIC
~aul E. Shockey, DVM
Pf. PUASAIT OfFICI
315 Jack~ Ave.

CARPET
CARE

S. .&amp;L A.UliiOWS
....wott.-Thun. 3-5 pm
T... 6•10·1: lrL 1-2 pm
SlluNiy 10-lloiO otn
UIGIA-Al&amp;
SIIIGII'f IY APPT.

_

667·3513

cr-111.
.,......,..,,
...

DAY

AVON . 3 op., terTitorin . Cell
304-876· 1429 .

3548. alit . C· 1980 for Info . 24

TOWN &amp; COUN11Y

Ill PIICE
OPEN : Mon.·Wod.
Thurs.-Fri. • Sot.
9 o.m. to I p.m.
Ctooed Tuu~

uploollotary.

SER ~ICE

.

aMENT DOGS &amp; C.US
10% Off
lAMPS &amp; FIGUI!ND

carpet lftd

30.-773-5828.

Middleport, Ohio 45760

RADIATOR
We can repair and recore radiators ·and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

c.-..

4 beautiful fw1y kilt., I , 3 gray,
1 yellow. blueeyM. 8 wH111 old,

4/1 / tfn

SER~CE

c... ,feN' till Md~. rocun.
, N-.d. .........,. .N Nut
Reuonlble rei•. Lot• T.L.C .

Pl .. ltnl .

•SAT£1UIE SALES &amp;SERYICE

"

PRIOR MILITARY

Deeorated cak.. tlr eny occ•·
&amp;ion . Weddings 1 specialty . Will
deliver for &amp;mill fee. 814 · 992·
6601 .

30··~8 - 1678

•Refrigerators

ttnie

INDIVIDUAL&amp;· Eam 1.11tra money in lhe Ar my Netion .. Ouerd.
An E·4 oould mike u much •
t131 .98 tor one week -end 1
month. Other benefitl indude
t!O .OOO.OO life insurance, 'IM'Omotlona, _,e&lt;:itl trelninQ, rltlrement progrem l•d educ1tionll
fundine. CaM to SH If you
qutllfy, 30•· 875-3960 or 1·

•u-o294 .

WIV to goo d home. 814 · 742·

All Mebe

Of·

portun1ty Empbyer) Send r1·
suma to A. Sommers. P.O. Bd:l
892, Pomeroy, Ohio 46719. ,

Female m iniature Collie to gNea·

985-3561

WE ARE VOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
.ZENITH
•SYIYAIIIA
•SPIED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRMlERAIOR

tllrout.t co nwnitt••· fEqull

up 1nd delivery , O...,il V~~c:uum
Cle1ner . one half mila up
Georg.. Creek Rd . Cll11i14 ·

379·2435 .

304-992-2996 ). -

4-16 -'16 tin

SWEEPER and sewinQ machine
repeir, p1rt1, end supplin. Pick

To good hom~ 2 fluffy kiHens .
temtla. 8 wka . old. Call 114·

ICUT OUT FOR FUTURE Ulf)

program• of t

800-M2· 31119

card today. NO ONE REFUSED.
Call (Retundabltl 1· 51 1 · 4&amp;8·

Tired of Honl
Rully Wattr?
Wt Ha" Tho An·
swtr....
SPRING SOFT
Now A Small
Monlhlf Rontal
Plus lrutial lnrtollation
Puts A SofiiMr In TOIA'
Homt Today !11111 with
Option to lurl
liKliiiJ OwnH, 20 Yn. hp.
DANS WATER REFINING
WHI 5th Slrtol

Day or Nigh!
NO SUNDAY CALLS

3 Announcements

YISA-MA,STERCAR Dt G1t your

CLC COINS

m.~hiphue

tQency. Mult heve lome otfl
e•pt~ritnce and en)oy woorklftg
with peopl1. Ptefer 10~
wilh experience in community
org~nlutlons th•t functlot\

8873.

6·23 ·86· 1 mo.

992-3345

'

houM·cleening . C1ll 151• · 99~ ·

PH. 992-7403

104 Mulberry Av., Pomeroy

•1.

33.82

Need 1on.one tor full

OPEN MONDAY
THRU SAnJRDAY

25! Mill lt., Middltport

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SEIVICE

Guaranteed

Copy ltrvi&lt;H, It&lt;.

CHESTER-915-3307

POMEROY

NIW LISTING - TUPPERS PLAINS - The righ t ~ze and
the right p11ce' 3 bedroom ranch wtlh attached g;~rage 011
Ievei i acre lot. New ~nyl siding. Elec tnc B.B. heat. EKcellenl
condtt1011! $38.000 00.

7/9/' 86/ l

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

73·111 GM

ORDINANCE NO. 1173·86

lion of any drilling

F.,deu.

l&amp;S

"Free Estimates"
All Work

and Gr•uotion

WORK!

heeutive Director. Ameri
C1ncer Society need1 1 Pll ·
time dir«:tor for Meigs Coun
Petaon 11lected will dirllet t e

Rt. 7, Pomeroy, OH.

ltationory, Magnt!i&lt;

ASSEMBLY

lnstallati011 Availablt

TRANSMISSION
REPAIR

PIUS: Offiu Supplies &amp;
Furniture, Wedding

'

171 • .00 per 100. Guerant-id
psyment . No aaln. Oetail1 HQd
st1mptd envelope: EJ.,.. 71,5
3418 Enterpriu. Ft. Pierce.

4! I

PRINT SHOP
F11 A" rw P•l•tllt N11l1

*VINYL SIDING
·· •ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSUlA nON

Government Job1. S18,04.0:
S69.230 -yr. Now hirine . Cell
806· tl87 ·8000 Ext. R· 9806 fCir
current federlllist .
EASY ASSEMBLY WOR~I
1714 .00 per 100. Guaranteed
payment. No"'" · Detlils-Hf1d
stemp«&lt; envelope: Elen· l5847
3418 Entet'prise. Ft. Pierce. Iii .

"Frte Estimates"

THE QUAUTY

949-2263
or 949-2168

110°/o W. Moinlt.
,_.,, Ohio,

Be it orct.ined by the

Sl!rV It:I:'

EASY

6-23·' 86-1 mo.

31 II / lin

3-D AUTO CENTER

OF
1\PPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
PIC~ . .
Eotata
of Theophlluo Louil
R. . .oo to - 1 0 dood
''
of PIIUI flioeon to Rlchonl Smith, docooMCI, C11o No .. July, 1986.
26,196.
ATTEST:
Jon
Euck.
Cie
ri.
BMIIng
In V....mo
On July 22, 1986, In tho
De~vey Horta?,,
282, Pogo 833. Moigo County
Meigl
County
Probata
c..,n,
Prelid~nt
of CounOil
o.dR-.
'
•· t lli'i fnlm tho ........ c- No. 21. 11e. s... E.., f7l 28; t8l • 2oc
ck Avinuf,
•ulbodrool...,o2.4'1Ct0 Zltldo, 121 P
PO"'"""f, Ohio 41789, Wll
to Wlvnt M.
oppoinlld
e-utot at the ...
tor, II ol. V&lt;*Hno 118, Pll(lo
39. Molgo County Doed - otlheophllolouiiSmllh,
doeoeMd, toto of 121 PH·
R_,.
PARCEL NO. 2: S*'otod In code A..,uo, Pomoroy, Ohio
tho TOWiilhlp of Rutllnd, 41719.
Robert E. Buck,
'
County of Molgo .,d 81111 of
.
Probate Judge
Ofi4D. In 8oction 1. Town 1.
Ringo 14 Of tho Ohio Com- Lent K. Na11olrold, Clerk
17128: Ill 4, 11, 3tc
"

a•••ll. upon • -'u-liWII ....., ......... bolrig "••"*•id
c- No. • CN 23e 11 llld
IL

Cookllltote; lhlllce Iouth t7
rodl; thence ooot 4 rodo;
'*'ce north 8 and 1I 3
dogrooio . . t 16 "'do 11 llnlul;
thence oorth 83 dogrOH WOII
ev. rodl 10 .... place of
boglrving. oontanlng 53/ 100

Ellllll oynwnl

33482.

ligns, Rubber llamp1,
lusiness Forms,

8-13 Hn

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wnlt DarllyStnlintl Clml1 1td Dtpt

Begllning in the center of
tho public rood on tho line
betwoon Milol M. Hyoetl ond

•

l.J-'86 ·1 mo.

742-2027

1·614·696·1337
1·614·593·8693

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

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

~c
Ohio 46769:
Bids will be received until
PARCEL NO. 1: Situotod in
4:00p.m. Auguot 11, 1986, tho Townohip of Rutl111d,
bv mail for the following County of Moigl and State of
Service Contr.:::t for the Ohio, bounded and doKribod
aoiolows:
1986·87 ochoot yoer:
PHYSICAL THERAPY .
Being in Soction 1. Town 6,
SERVICES
Rongo 14, of the Ohio Corn·
Soovlces will be provided pony'• Purdl-. and bogn·
on location It the Cerlaton ningot o point h tho lOUth lilo
School, P. 0 . Box 307,John of the Eboooboch troct and tl'e
rorth line of the Dolph Hyoett
Streot, SyrKun, Ohio.
Saovlcao wNI be provided lrlct, lllid point being 79.5
to oppro•lmatoty 71i chil- foot- of N.Y.C. Ry., Right

4·)5.'86·1&lt;

more.

"CLELAND CLAM"

Public Notice

6-30 -' 86-1 mo.

Co~uterized Ht11ring Air Selection
Swim Molds - lnteiJ)reting SeiVices

~

62·12"""""" Blvd, · - ·

Ill co~ll St . POIIHI I01. 01110 45161J

PUBLIC NOTICE

Pomeroy, Ohio

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS

z

TO HELP YOU BUY AND SELL

Public Notice

304..

Afhr 5 Call

Serving this area
with PoweSealseal
coating and striping
and making of
Asphalt &amp; Concrete.

10·8-tfc

Sotod to:
Aticio Broot&lt;s crsns.
Aut* llall
3•

SEE ONE OF THE

Ohio Power

Upper River Rd.
Rt 7, Golllpoltt
(tOPGit from Alrpotl)

PH. 992-2772

postage , handling, for
each pahern.

Real Estate General

Part of American Electric Power

Saturday Admissions - Willard
Hines, Pomeroy; Leo McMUllan.
Vinton.
Saturday Discharges - Edwin
Burnem, Sharon !hie, Eber
Pickens, Gloria Ward, ErllE'stlne
Wll!tams.
Sunday Admissions - Beatrice
Ra!rden, Hartford; Johnnie Mash,
Middleport.
Sunday Discharges - Jerry
Collins.

J&amp;L INSULATION

Rt. 124, Pomtroy Ohio

Happy Ads

•

Wanted - Chevy Luv mot9r
1978 and up, 4 cyl., 304 · 87fi

FENCE COMPANY
PH. 992·6931

992-3410

Dire ctionsWomen 's
Sizes 36·46 included.
Send $3.25 plus 75e

949-2210.

Public Notice

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992 -7314

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

. CUSTOM GARAGE BUILDING

INTERESTED IN BUYING
APPROXIMATELY 2112
ACRES OF ST. RT. 7 NEAR
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL?
IF SO, PLEASE PHONE
HOME NATIONAL BANK

,-----------~

992 · ~76 .

------ - ~

ACCENT

MIDWEST
SEAL &amp; STRIPE

work

FREE ESTIMATES

Sizes 36·46

Real Estate General

CLEVELAND !UP[) - There
was ooe ticket sold with the winning
Ohio Lotto numbers of 22, 26, 31, rl.
38 and 40 drawn Saturday night.
Lottery officials said sales lor the
drawing totaled $3,287,225. The
person holding the ticket is entitled
to $1,302,00.

Buying deity gold. 111\ler coirM,
ring1, jewelry, llterling ware, o6d
coint, large curr.,cy. Top pli·
en. Ed. Burkett Barber Shdb.
2nd. A\le. Middleport, Oh . 81:11 ·

11 .Help Wanted

(Free Estimatesl

WE HAVE MOST All POPULAR BRANDS AT
THE SAME LOW PRICES
eCartaintead •Mastic •Alcala

CRAFTS

I ticket hits jackpot

Happy 681h
Birthday
AIt

- RoofinQ end guner work
- Concrete work
- Piumbtng end etectric1l

VINYL SIDING

n

Public Notice

•

- Addona and remodeling

tion in the area of review.
171 28 ltc

Addle Jane Burnem, 89, Racine,
died Saturday at the Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy.
Born March 19, 1897, in Gay,
W.Va., ~hew~ the &lt;ta!'Bhter of the
late James Robert and the late
Anna Fields Young.
She was a member of the Rocky
Knob Church at Gay.
She was preceded In death by a
daughter, Mary Louise Roush, in

it:

CARPENTER
SERVICE

(mtrgency 949-2516
7-28·86 ·1 mo.

.-tpoper of gensat cirwlto·

ment

A

34011 New lima Rd.
RUTLAND, OHIO

from the publication date in a

0

The Daily Sentinel

PH. 742·2656
RUTLAND MINE SUPPLY CO.

YOUNG'S

RACINE, OHIO

umbus. Ohio 43224, 61 4·
266·6917.

A"''""'*"' doairlng to oom-

Veterans Memorial

• LOCALLY OWNED
''BY ED and MARIA Al'KINS .

Maximum Proposed lnjec·
tion Pre11ure 880 lba.
MexiiTI.Im Proposed Aver~
age Daily Injection Volumne

writing, with the UNDER·
GROUND INJECTION CON·
TROL SECTION, DIVISION
OF OIL AND GAS, FOUNT·
AIN SOUARE. COLUMBUS.
OHIO 43224. Sum comments 01 objections shall be
ftted with the -ion no IIIII
then fifteen ca-r dlvs

Addie Jane Burnem

5

--

Wanted To Buy

LEGAL NOTIFICATION
Nomolnd Add,... of Appl·
cant:JomaoE . OiddledboJ.D.
Drittlng
P.O. 11m
687. ~~-. Ohio 415771.
Location of Proposed SaH
Water tnj8ction Wall: Sec·
lion 31 , Salisbury Town·
ship, Moigo County, Ohio,
Edith Forrelt.
Cleolot!icol Name 111d Depth
ol lnjoct1011 Zone: Morcotlouo
Sholo · 31 60' Appro•.

comments or objections

Qara Proffitt, 81, Point Pleasant,
died this momlng at Pleasant
VaHey Hospital.
She was born Sept. :Jl, 1904, to the
late Leighton and Leola Lucy
Lathey Proffitt.
She worked as a secretary at the
Marietta Manufacturing Co. and
was a member of a Presbyterian
~hurch in Poln t Pleasant.
Surviving are one brother, Ray
Proffitt of Mason; several nieces
and nephews.
There wlll be a graveside service
Tuesday at 1: :Jl p.m. at the New
Lone Oak Cemetery In Point
Pleasant with the Rev. Bennie
Stevens officiating. Arrangements
are being handiCd by the Foglesong
Funeral Home.

9

eon.onv.

1949, and by five sisters and seven
brothers.
.
Surviving are her husband, Robert Burnem; a daughter, WUma
Henderson, Allard, Ohto; one son,
James R. Burnem, Racine; a
sister, Gladys Slater, Lube\:1!-.
W.Va.; two brothers, Raymond
Young, Miami Beach, Fla., and
John Young, Racine; Reva Norris,
Letart Falls, whom Mrs. Burneril
raised; and seven gran&lt;r hildren
and three great-grandchUdrm.
Funeral services wlll be Tuesday
at 1:30 p.m. at the Foglesong
Funeral Home, with the Rev. Ro!J'r
Grace officiating. Burial wll! be In
Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends
may v!sll at the funeral home from
6-9 tonight.
, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Clara Proffitt

The Daily Sentinel-Page-. 7

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio
Public Notice

Public Notice

Curtain rises on Gallia fair

......--Local Briefs:-A revival will begin this evening at the !ledland Bible Metmd!st
Church with Rev. James Keaton as evan!J'llst and Buddy and Carol
AUman providing the vocal music. The revival wUI extend through
Aug. 3. Services a re at 7 each evening.

Monday, July 28, 1986

Monday. July 28, 1986

FOAM

PH. 304·675·2441
.NDAIEA CAU
llpley OHice
for IIHrl

$ 995 z':.::'.!.
Choice of
Matlriat.
lti!AM CLI!Aot
• •.,••• •, mt

!·

' '

.

...

.......Giilli'pons· ········ ... ·.. p·c; m'iirov
&amp; Vicinity
..... ·-·--···--·····-·-···········

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

LMge yMd ... e. Thuq., Juty 31 .

Ftm ,_Non right. McCully Rd.
.-w • houelhokt ltemt.

Mldilg., 11ie-IO Noll. ldiool
ctotlitl, town tum.. pld!fing
crock. dtap•. Hddlng, Clf IHt,

....

~yollwalet
wlthaWMf~

~

17·111 lurdotto Addn.

•Ill•·

1o
FrldiV- Nntal untfotrna •

304-171·3U4.

:

�8-:-The Daily Sentinel
f1

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Help Wanted

44

LAFF'-A-DAY

Hirlngl hderel government iobl
In YCIUJ er• lnd OYif'HH. Meny
immedlete op.-tlngt without
waiting llet or tilt . t11S ·

"

Monday,

64 Misc . Merchandiae

Apartment
for Rent

76

I ,OOOtlreo. olroo-12.13, 14,11,

117e mo. Col 304·675·5104 Coli 514· 211·1251 .
or 304·675· 7926.

Oldtr coUp Ill 2 bdr., utiHI•
partly ptid • 150 mo., Cell

tor Senior Chlzen. 614 ·992·
6873.

penielty paid. Call 304-675 Will do mowing end odd jobs.
Call 614· 448· 6266.

15104 or 675·5388 or 304-176-

Will do babylinino. vardwork.
indoor ~ndoutdoorpeintlng , odd

1 and 2 bdr. 1pt1. for rent. B.. ic

7821.

Coli 814·448·0568 .

~·- ... · - - . .
,... '11--ll£'~
" 'The car needed to get
washed anyway' is not the
issue here!"

E.r.p•ienced . Shingle roofing.

304-875·7891 .

Fin anc ial
Business
Opportunity

NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
I

lNG CO . reconmtndl thtt you
do butin•s with people you
know, tnd NOT to send money
through the mail unlil you hne
.,ve~tlg1ted the offering.
International Metal Buildtng Me·
nuttcturer ~electing builder·
~•I• in 10me open areu. High
p:&gt;tential profit in our growth

Homes for Sale

A goklen ~portunity . Join
friendly Home Toy Parties, the
)eader for 31 years. Openings for
m.,tglfs 1nd d.tllf1. We h..,.
the lerg11t end bell line in Plrtv
)!~.., . No c.sh investment, no
~livering or colttcting. Eam big
money plus bonu111 and travel
Jn oentivM. Call now toll frH to
prol Day .1 · 800·227 -1510.
laundry equipment for uta on
locttk&gt;n, 12. 500. Ctll61 4-446·

98&amp;2.

•
~outhuttem Busineu CoUegel
The training you need \ For the
lobs you want Fin.,citltui11Mce avail.tJie. Call today: 614-

992·5177.

Ginger Bread House Pre-School.
~ 86 N. 2nd Middleport tor the
mini~n~l price $1500. Vou miY
equire 1 going bu1in111. Fumiture and fillturel iocatld in
teasontbty priced leeaed space.
)Jntllthe deteot our ou1 of ltate
move I will ••itt new CMner in
ttensilk&gt;n . Stndre luckydoo

614 ·992·7177.

41

3 bedroom home in Middleport.
Newly remod1led. hcelltnt
condition. Fenced In back yard.
PJice reduced •23,000. Shown
by appointm11nt ontv. 814-992-

6018.

Modem ~~,am_~,home.

duced ' b
875·5047.

\a;illldJ)O.

r•

304·

leeuii1ut '~3 bedroOm. brick
home, ·1ir condition, central
heat, ctrpeted, buih·in kitchen,
2 blth1, laundry room. 1ttached
gar~ e. fenced bKk yR .•ator-ae buildtng, Camp Coni., aree.
3 mil• from Point Pil. .nt.

lndultry. 13031 759·3200 .. t.
2403.
304·575·4338.

.

Spacious 4 br-houN, beautiful
shade ~ening . county w11er.
conv. loettlon . Cell for appoint·
ment, Gallipolis Ferry, WV.

304· 576·2026 .

.

firM estimat11. Ctll 814-992·

500101 814·742·3147.

NEW AND USEO MOBilE
HOMES KESSEl'S QUAliTY
MOBilE HOME SAlES, 4 MI.
WEST. GAlUPOliS, RT 38.
PHONE 814--.t8-727o\.

78 Kirkwood 12xll0 2 bdr .. 111
elec. Call 11•·379-2662 or

614·379·2364.

1976 WHtern Manor. 14x70. 3
bedroomt, 2 beth1. •7000.

WVIll TAKE TRADE. Coli 814·
949-2801 or 814-949-28&amp;0.

82 Shult Mobile Home. 14Jt70.
2 full bethl. Like new. Call
614-986-.389 .

Coli 614·245·681 5
1986 Clayton ,.•70. 3 bed·
rooms. 2 beths. T -lock skirting,
washer 1nd dryer, completely

14x70 Furnithedd 3 bdr., bath&amp;
helt. centrtleir. washer· dryer.
$260 month &amp; 8260 deposit.

Homes for Sale

Call 81 4·446·3783.

••&amp;•.

44 bedroom houu, fireplace, 3
mi. south of Gallipolis. 129.900.
Cell d1y1 614·••6-1616 or
eveningl614-446·8222 .

1980 liberty 1
2 bed·
room, unfurni1hed, vinyl underpinning included . Must sell. Cell
304-n3-5873 .

3 bdr. home. clo11 to town , 2
beths, penty furnished. a ..
heat. low utilities. Call 814-246·
9248 .

MOBILE MOMES MOVED : insured . re11onable ratet, Call

3 bdr., ltrge kitchen , bath, utility

room. tingle glt'IQe. 2 car
driveway, nice yard. gtrden
spac::e finished g11age. Call

1974 Mamelite 1 2ll65. 3 bed·
rooms. til elec mobile home
Clean and in good cond, under·
penning. block . elec hookup
included, 16, 700.00 . 30•· 896·

3422 .

Rio Grtnde new lo!iety 3 bdr .. 2
full bethl , full basement, greet
view. 3 decks. c&amp;dar siding,
gable root , 149.600 . Call 61 44•&amp;·8038 . Will considertr&amp;dein
of mobile home.

1982 Clayton 12•60 slleiBC1ric,
••c. cond . 304-576-2486 .

3 roomtl &amp; bath. with b11emen1.
19,000. Ne•t to lodge htll in
Crown City . Call &amp;U · o\48 1511 .
2 bdt . house with b1ument &amp;

glfden space. Good cond., 59
Garfield Ave . Ctll 1!11ol-446·

1828
Government home from S1 (U
repair). Delinquent ta• property.
Aepo11111iona. Cell 806-887 ·
8000 Ext . H·4662 for current
repo lilt
Quality home, newly remodeted
choice location on College Rd .
Syracu11, new complete kitchen
and laundry, tir conditioned,
lergelot. 614·992·5324 .
8 room house. 1.2acrll. Double
car garege. located on Rose Hill.
Bargein priced 120. 000. Call

814·878·2513 .

1981 ~11hul, 70•1ot, totatolec.
3 br . goad cond .. eJitra c:l .. n.
•11 .500., no trade in on this
one. 1977 Holtyptrk 84•1 2. 2
br. like new tntide and out. Vou
have to s&amp;e this one. K S. K
Mobile Homn Inc. lOol-6715 -

3000.
1975 Dodge motor tlome.
cond. Ctll 304-468-179

304·882 ·2867 .
1972 19 ' · Scottie camp• Mlf
con11ined $1 ,100. 9' camp•

t300. 304·576 ·2918 .
33

Farms for Sale

30 ecres. good houH &amp; pond
t35 ,000. 80 •cr11, pnture &amp;
woodltnd . 118,000. 30 acrn,
lerge bM'n &amp; pond. 118. 000 .
Call 814-24!5-'9248.
Be1utituf home in Fl11wood1
..-ea of Pomeioy. new kft .. bath,
cerpeting, etc. ·H11 17 ac. &amp;
pond. Shown by 1ppointment

20 or 41 ~~ern for ule. in GaUit
County· h11 pond &amp; building
•ita. C•\1814-281-1140.

892·8348 .
5 bedroom 2 'h bath, lerge
kitchen . 61!1 yurt new-. 1 mile
ellt of Rutland. 155,000. 1.1 1
acre. 16x30 Pool 1nd deck.

814·882·3..3.
70x1 00 lot. 1 Vt storv OOuu. 3 to
4 bedroorm. di1hw11her. double
rtnge stov•. fully carpeted,
wood tnd cotl burning 1tove.
Close to echool end hospital.
Ce\1814 ·992-10110. Any raeaonlbie offer m1y be conlidertd.
A,NUmeble 9Yl percent mon g~gt. 3 bedtooms. femlly room.
h•t pu~. central air. 2.38

""'"· Good nolghborhood. 814·
812·7371 .
.
1 room hoUie end beth. 1 'h ecre
otlntlfloctlon of At. 143 end 7.
Tum left, flrtt grfltn houH. PriCI

roduc.cl 10 121,000. Col t1 4·
9t2·7453.

a acr•

ln

36 Lots &amp; Acreage

Two:thifds acres with run••·
septic t1nk , ell clewed on
Rodney Cory Rd . Cal\814·2•5-

Melli olfa&lt;. 114·141·2803.

I

2 bdr. total elec. loC11ed on Dry
Ridge Rd .. Patriot. 1180month.
CtH &amp;1•·448-4703 mornings.

2 bdr. fultv fumished . adultl
onty, utlliti .. paid. Ctll 814-

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Room• and
light hou11 keeping rooms. Perk
Central Hotel. Cell 814-448-

2 bdr. with expando on At . 36 .
Ret. &amp; dep. required. Call
614· 446· •3&amp;9 or 304·676 ·

8780.

2 bdr . water&amp; tr11hplid. 1 mile
from Holzer. t200 mo. rent plut
3 bdr .. 2 baths, unfum .. larg•
privtte lot, 4"h mil• from
Gtlllpolts. Dep. • rl'f. ,.qulred .

Colt 814·445·2175 oftor 8.

2 bedroom. •175. per month
plul 1100. deposit. You PlY
utilities. No pets. Call81•·949·

2234.
14•72 . Two bedroomt with
room lddftion. Abo'lle Racine,
Ohto on 20 1cre1. Free filii·
nso. per month. pan cen be
worlled out. C1ll lOol-372-

eo.u.·

3 br furn . trailer w-front porch,
newly remod.. ed, deposit r•

quirod. 304·675·3893.
2 bedroom trailer. Central air,
tuittble for couple and one child,
$150 .00 plu1utiliti11. 304-676·

408B .
44

Apartment
for Rent

Furni1hed apartment tdultl

only. Coli 614·441·9523

11 Court St. 2 bdr.. 2 bath,
kitchen furnished, no pets, t325
mo. plus deposit 6. reference.
2 bdr . upstairs apt., unfurnished,
CII'J)etld. utililill paid. No child·
ten . no pets. Call 614 -•48·
1637

2 bdr . apt.

ne~r Silver Bridge
Piau. Immediate occupancy,

dtp roq. Coli 81•·4•6· 7025 .

New efficiency apartment with
gerlgt. W11her·drver hookup,
ditpolll. private y.,d. Nonhup
erea. t185 • mon1h . leMa
required, IVI!i!MJie Aug. 23. Cttl

614·445· 7209 or 814 ·446·
3287.
Furn. apt. 1 bdr .• 123!1 utiliti11
paid. 920 4th Ave ., Gallipollt.
Call 448·44 1 1!1 1fter Rpm.
Furn. 1pt. 1 bdr .. 1226 utilhl•
paid. 701 4th Ave .. G111ipolis.
Cell 448·4418 after 8pm.
2 bdr .. apt. Crown City, Ohio.
Call 814-2511-•96.
1 bedroom 1pt. for rent. B11ic
rent ltartl 1215 . a month that
indudll •• utili1iel. Deposit
requlrld of UOO. Contac-t Vii·
l~ge Mtnor Apt . Middleport ·
614·992 -: n87. Equal Houaing
Opportunfty.
POft'tlray 2 bdr. Neylort Aun.
•1715 mo. 1100 depotit, yerd,

Potlo, Coli ohor &amp;pm 514-992·
8881.
1 bedroom 1pt. in Pomeroy.

Athton buildintjl loti with public
water, mobile hom. permftt:ed,
304 -578 -2338 or 304· 578-

992·1215 .. 814·882· 2314 .

2287.

Lot for Nlelocatldan At. 2. Exc.
loc.tttan for home. County WI·
ter. Happy Hollow Fruit firm.
Gall. Farry, WV .

1 bedroom apt. for rent in

Mlddl-n. Coll814·892·8713
evenings and 814-992-1811
diYICountry apanmant. 2 bed-

,...,., 11&gt;botho. Coll814·882·
3312, Dolly Woode.

Ona bedroom ap.,.mant . Unturnithed. 1160 . .,..- month/'"'

utllhltl. Coli 814·112·584 .

Hou111 for Rent

Eatra nlca ltrge mocl.m home

w - inerou~ pool on SA 110. 4

mi. from Hob:ar, ref•encea 6

IICUrlty depoolt roqulrod, 1475
mo. CoN 114·441·7322.

•m

mo. or Nil tor •34,000, Wtl
finenoe. Lomed Rt. 7, AcWiton,

Oh. Coli 614·882·8143 -

arM.

Aelerenoe. tftd dtpo1h ,..
qulrod. fZIO mo. Phone 114·

742·3171 .

Furni1hed room 11 15. Utiliti81
pd. 919 2nd Gallipolis. Shere
lith. Single male. Call 814-

448 ·4418.

ellm1t11
ten1Jon problenu. AH
wfthout magglng,linMrlenlion
miChln• are opM'I lf'm. zig zeg.

buttonhole, otc. RotaN U98.00,
odlool p&lt;lco 1281.85. Wo ...
4535 or 814·187·0031 for
mora informttion, 1111 for Mike,
Affordable Furniture, 11110 N.
Memoriei Or., Ltnc:uter, Ohio

43130.
Dark brown allumlnum und•r·
pinning for 14x70 ffaller. M1ke
· an offer. Call 614-ot.48- 7593
tfter 4.
Mec 110 chainsaw 18" and 10"
btrs, 3 chains. catel100. Twin
box tpring 16, young Re• rlbbite

Mobile home lot Raccoon Creek
Rd . C1ble TV IIYtillble. •50
dep. , t70 mo. rent. C1ll 114-

13. Coii814·446·41BO.

COUII.'TAY MOBILE Home Pork.
Route 33. North of Pomeroy.
hrgelott. Call 81 4·992-7479.
Treiler IPICn. Sand Hill Road
convenient to 1chool1. store end
ho1pite\. City IIWer IVIillble.
Inquire RolliN, 304-876-4100
between 9:00 tnd • =00 week
days.
Trliler spaces, small children
accepted. At. 1, Locust Road.
b1ck of K S. K Mobile Home.

1&amp;.6 cu .ft . upright frMzer .
Hond1 70 3 whtefer. C1ll
814- 388 · 8244 . No Sundty
Cllll.

BUilOEAS

Olive St .. Gellipo\11. New &amp; uud
wood·co•lstovll. 8 pc wood LA
suite U99, bunk b&amp;d1 1199,
1n1ron reclinlrl $99 , new &amp;
u1ed bedroom suites, ranges,
wringer W1sher1, &amp; sho•. New
livlngroom 1uh11 U99 -1699,
Iampi. alto buying coel &amp; wood
ltovn. Call 81 • ·448-31 69 .
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
WIShers, dryers, refriQ•etort,
rangu . Skaggs Appl/ancet.
Upptf River Rd . beaide Stone
Cr81t Motet 614-446 -7398.
County Appliance. Inc. Good
u1ed tpplimca and TV 1111.
(1,._. MM to IPM . Mon thru
811. d14·441-11•8. 827 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolis, OH .
Valley Furniture. new &amp; used .
Large taction of quality furniture . 1218 E11tern Ave.,
Gallipolit.
Chedt. our everyday low pric"
on furnrture II eppliencet. Molk)han Furniture, Rt. 7 North,
KAinauga. Ctll 61 4-446-7o\44 .
Beat the Meat with Emerson Air
Conditioner~ on ule now tt
Mollohen Furniture, Rt . 7 North,
Gallipolit, OH Cell 614-446 ·

7444.

Refrigerator 876 . Refrigerator
195. Copponone lide by stde
1196 . Harvest gold. frost -free,
like new 1260 . GE &amp; Maytag
wuher t160 each . Mavtag
wringer washer 1126. Hoo\lar
partible w11her 196 . Electric
rtnge, 38 indw t9! . Skaggs
Appliances. Upper River Ad .
Gallipolis. Call 81 4 -446· 7398 .
For 11le 3 pc; . u1ed bedroom111 .

1300. Coli 514·445· 11 08.

APARTMENTS. MObile hom...
hou. .. Pt. PieeMntlndOIHipo·

llo. 114·441·1221 .

APARTMENT FOR RENT· Now
IOCIPIIng IPPiicatlons for rent1l
JPertmtntl Wt MeMn Aptt LImited. Twa bedroom IPIS If
1188.00 per montlt. A..,.ol
.... .... be high• dtptndlng
on 1n......
wilt bo
.nillble to Mdll lppllc.nt ,...
of , _ color,

g.,...

H.......

rollglon. - or _,., origin.
1n1-1.a ...... _ .,_ld coil
304-773·5011 .. coftlaot o ..
oloo • - or Woll .. Juolloo ot
1111 mlln oHtce. 1171 lrioo
Noed . lteynofdtburg, Ohio

43081 • celll14-"3·4114.

I

like new . bedroom suite and
dlnlngroom Illite. Refrigerator,
OOCIIidonal chatr. Ctll614 -446·

1171 .

1
. New ulv~t• ''"I door
bl.-.kl, nicks end scratch• t15
to t25 11.
2. Thermal pain an therm~l break
llu rNnum windows sever1laizes

t48 .88 to 178.95 .

3 . 8' aluminum patio doon set

1199.95 weith 1creen.
4. Octogan led thney giUI
window• *49 .95.
5. 1 6 lite pine French tbol'l 8
liJIMIH $89.96.
6. 4~t8x V• Masonile under laymentl29.96 .... 4x4x'l• 11 .00

••7.

41118x ~

For ule. used refrigerators.
MoUohan Furnjfure, At 7 , N.
Kanaup. Ctll 814·448 · 7•44 .
13 cubic tt. upright Whirlpool
freeJer . 14 ,000 BTU S11n 1ir
candhiontr. tM. con d. Ctll 114-

245 ·8294.
Pidlen• Uted Furniture. Good
qualhy used furniture. Open 9 to
6 or call for 1ppotntment.

304·875·5413 or 875· 1450.

Keep cool with Emerton air
condittonera. on ule now at
MoUohan Furnrture. At. 7 North,
Kaneuge. Ctll 11 4-441· 7444 .
N"'i pop cooklr ham carry-out
ttore. Call 614-992· 2969. · ·
1980 Ford Fairmont . Auto .. PS.
AC. wire wheels. Good condi·
tlon •1 08&amp;. Canning tomato H .

toung groove waffle

boerd e111terior gk.Ject B 18 .96 .

8. 4x8x 1A Toung groove ply·
wood 8 110.95 .
9. 4x8x lf, 4 ply plywood B

16 99 .

.......

10. 4x8• V• Iavan ptywood 8

11 .

4d~~tlf•

f2 .99.

nlv~ge

penellng

12. 8' redwood sraln picnic llble
with 2 benche1 139.95.
13. Prehunu Interior doors •II
size• 1nd tinishn t29.96 .
14. Prehung steel panel doors all
Iiiii 189.95 .
1&amp; . Wood pretinithed vinyl
wrtped colonial trim 7 pc . 1100.
1 6. Primed ttlrdrop wood trim
11 .00 7 pc.
17. K-luM 'brick cornen 11 .00
per bo• . 12 box 110 .00 .
18. 32"x71" V. thermal tem·
p11ed glau reg . t79 .9fi naw

029 95

119.95 .

23 . 5 gal. alumnum fiver mobil•

home rool coatinliJ 122 .9fii .
Penn's WarehouH. Wellston.
Ohio. B to 5. 5 deya. Call
814·38•· 3645 .
Block. brick. mortar 1nd m1·
1onry a~ppliM . Mountain Steta
Blodl;, At . 33. New Haven. W.

Vo . 304· 612·2222 .

Pets for Sale

Dr~gonwvnd

Canlf'Y Kennel.
CFA Himtlayan. Pltf'li.., .,d
Siem81e kittens. AKC Chow
puppi11. Call 1!114-448- 3844
aftet 7PM .

German Shepherd pups, 9 wkl.
old , AKC Regitt..-ed beiUtifula
very '"""· · $80 each. ·Cd
61 4·441!1 -0373 .
2 temalt AKC AIU. Pekin11t
p..~ppin, rel(fy in 2 wkl . Cal

AICC Shelbie male 8 wka. old .
Hu sho11 U71 . AKC 81111R
pups. 3 mal• I 125 eech.

014·117· 8957.
Himalaylan Pen I., kitten I . AK C
reg. 51 4-992· 7303 or 81 •·

178· 1319.

Silver II Goilen

Q.,..,. MM1 .

com. CoH 814·211·1338

lllv• Qu- Com. You pldl.
•.71adolen. Jclln Hlllollllarl
Folio, Ohio. CoN 114-247·21142.

Red potl10•. home grown,
detlvarad Pt. Pleallnf ••·
18.50 per 60 lb. 304·881·

3180.

f d' 1'1 ~ llp : illl' \

61

67

Musical
I netrurnente

Pl'•ture cooktr uHd 1 time

Wontod : R1tp00olbla porly to
ntumt 1nwll monthly ,.ymentl

on pl.,.. SH iocoliy. Coil cr..tH
mon11• 1·500·447·4ZH.
Plaror Pl.... 304·171·•31.

k

Farm Equipment
CA088 &amp; SONS

U.S. 35 WMt. Jackton, OhkJ.

114·2118·5411 .
MIIHY flf'OUIOR, Naw Hollllftd,

Buoh HogS- &amp; Sorvlco. o -

40 Uled triiCtort to Chooo frOm
&amp; OOrf1)let.lli1e at MW • u.ct
equipment. largeet 1tlection in

JIM ' S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER. lA 31 W. GolllpoNo.
Ohio. CoM 814· 441·1777, ovo.
614·441·3112. Up lron1 trac·
tart with wanlftty over 71 ulld
tnctor~. 1000 toolt.

Utillty bldg. SPL: 30'x.a'•9'
with 15'~tti' sUd• I 3' eerv.
door . tl.211 erected . Iron
Hor11 Biql. 81.·332-97.!
collect.

3 blodl -nill 12.100. Coli
814· 388·8818 .
Alllo Cholmor 0 · 17 dloool

triO·

tor. plow., 4 lOW planter, h8'f
w~~gon, dlec, all for •2.100. C•ll

114·388· 8881 .
2 yr. old Quarter hoFM. fitly.
roeket ber breeding. a..t offer.
Ouartar hDru waMiing. CaN

814·441· 7338 .

Jofln o..,. 310 Dielel Dozer. ln

good oondhion . Call 114·8t2·
7401 .

2-11-2·31 t'Mr tractor tir11 a
.,boo, 5·800·11.5truck whoolo
• tir• tor Ford 1 -ton truck.

304·885·3441 .

62 Wanted to Buy

Now buying ehall cam or ••

City Form 8-ly. 514·441·
2985.
63

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

.~

1978 mini motorhome, 78
Dodge chaeis, 318 engine .
38,889 miles. sleeps tour. nice

1973 trtvel trailer. 18 H. Was
uklng •1450., now asking ·

t1300. Coli 814·992·53BB.
1977 Chtmpion . 23 h . 14,000
mlln, new twningl, AC. own
power unit. ExceHent condition.

Coil 514 ·892· 5224 . Slllf)o oi•.
..o.60o. o8o.

1978 Horizon 4 dr., AT, air,

19M Scttty Sportsman 12 ft.
camper .....,. 3. a.. stove, ice
link. good cond. 1495.

own•. t2.• 5. 1110 CHiotlon
2 dr, v.8. 78,000miiM •1.188.
88.800 mloo f1 ,285. 44 sr..
..,,. St. Coli 114·448·2800.

1880 AMC Spirit. Sun roof. 4
cyl.. 4 opood, .,300. Coli
114·882·3485.

Ono fomlly
3540.

own•.

304·1112·3236.

S~rVICeS

Home
Improvements

1174 Oldtmobllo Cullan Su·
mloolon. taoo. 014·992·8287.
311 Wright II. Po.....,y. .
84 Chovy Chovollo 24.000
mNoo. 1218S. 114·192·5421.
13 Toyot1 Corolla. law mlln.

IS Mercury lrN&lt;. 4 •· 4 cyl.
good cond. 304-875· 3883.
Mere Bobcat ua-wgn.

DuiY?

up Valerie when she finds
herself alone on her wed ding anniversary. (A} In
Stereo .

514·448·8073.

CII Falher Murphy
(I) Baskelball: 19B8 U.S.
Olympic Festival From
Hous1on , TX. 13 hrs .) Live.
(I) liJ I)) Major League
Baseball: Teams to ba An·
nouncad (3 hrs.)
fJ) (I) MOVIE: 'To Be An·

Electrolux 1uthorized Iaiii A
NrVice. Call Gary Willi•mson.

Cil MecNeii.Lahrer New1h·

J's Home Improvement.
Vinyl tiding , overhang. storm
doors &amp; windows. gutters. CaH

175·7141 ......

m

,.
THAVE S

Exterior &amp; interior stucco. Pill·
ter II pluter rep1irs. Low retes.

18115 Ctmera Z2B, low mil.

current ttlcker. 1900.00. 30•·

··~iOWDY''

UncondiUonal · llfetime guaran·
tM. loctl references furnished .
Free eatlm..... Calf collect
1-81 4-237·0•88. day or night.
Rogers 8esement
W1terproofing.

Coii814 ·256 ·11B2.

'78 Dodgt Alpen. good cond.

Lasl Fling".
IIJ) Alice
(j]) Jeopardy
7 :36
Sanford end Son
8 :00 DilliBJValerieDev1d and
the twins anempt to cheer

/ L..lfc.E li'EING ON

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

*3885. 114·882·5421 .
304· 875·3427.

leca on the set of her upcoming TV movie, "The

HOW Po You

114·885·

preme. Rebuilt mator tnd tranl·

·n

Game
(I) Inside Baseball
fJ) (I) Taxi
liJ\IJ 11) Wheel of Fortune
Cil Butterflies
Ill liZ Enlertainment To.
night ET joins Connie Sel·

bo•.

B1

~ '"'"'""~

7- 18

....

J •

ALLEYOOP

nounced'

Mgr. 304·788·3212 .

our
il]l 01 liZ Scarecrow and
Mrs. King Amanda is
shocked when she sees an

Evergreens, shade &amp; fruit trees,
mulch, And &amp; griVel. toploil

50.000 mi. weekdl'fiiM corn• deiJvered, tree II 11ump removal.
Ylend·11th Sl. 304·875·4535 . Oon'a landectpll. Cell 614·
aflw 8pm a Sit.
' 448·9848 .
'14 C1v1lier w~gon 4 cyl. 6 sp. Painting &amp; wall ptpering, home

ex-spy revealing the Agency's amateur and civilian
employees on a talk show .

lir a radio. front wh•l dri\te,
•6.1500. or belt Gffll'. No trada.
304-17&amp;.4840 lftd 1...... e mnlll•on mKhine.

replirt, reesonable r•t•. CaK •
American Home lmprovem ..te '

1881 Chevettt 4 tpeed. ac.
am-tm rldiO. undlr 19,000
mu... 304-171·3313 1fter5:30

RON'S Television Service
House calla on RCA , Quazlrl"
GE . Specialing in Zenfth. Ca"
30•· 671-2398 or 614-446-

pm.

Coli 814·258·485 .

(60 min .) (RJ.
River Journeys: The
Nflnwlllt ...., Thom(CC) Pltywrighl en~ ncwol·
ist Brian Thompson journeys from the south of lhe
Sudan 10 1~e Nile De lla .
(60 min.) (R) .
IIJ) Dempsey &amp; Mekepaece
!60 min.)
B:05 ill MOVIE: 'The Swan'
B:30 D ill (j]) Amazing Stories
(CCI A group of 1930's
barflies anemp• to kill a

liD

'

EEK&amp;MEEK

24&amp;4.

WHY ARE. IJJOMOJ '50
DIS.SAi\SfiiD AU. 11-1~
11ME:1

1871 Buidl Skylorfc 1400. Coli
Tree Trimming. 1tump
anytlmo aftor 4 p.m., 304·875· Fetty
removal. Ctlll304-675-1331 .
5101.
AINGlES'S SERVICE, upt·
1881 Mozdo AX 7, 5 opd .. low rlenctd carpanter. electrir.itn,
nilllfl•· Coll814·446· 3231 .
m..on, painter, roofing linclud·
Truck• for Sale

1814 lntRatklnll 2'12 10n. 14
ft . slum. ven becl. Oood cond.

Coli 814·448· 1345.
radio. t2,,..8 . John's Auto
11111, Bul•ille Rd., O..ipolis,

3 year old AppelooiU gelding

tor se\1. BlOke to ride. Plu1
saddle. G•tlt. Good tor 4-H .

CoU 114·848·2831.

Tenn. W11ker mate 10.,..,.. old,

2 veor old ooh goldlng. 1400.

udl. Both 1750. lCM-I!IIIIi·

3U8 .
Hey

72

&amp; Grain

Hay end fMtcl oorn for 11le. Catl
114·849·2237.
Good mlxed My on the WIQOn.

11 .00 . .304·175·8578.

1r dll \ 1,1 111 •! 11111

OH.

11-IEJR FA11-IE.Ii5 PROAl~
"MM a:&amp; GARDW5 ...

drunk for his insurance mo-

point, lookl good. 304·115·
4448.
V•ne &amp;

4 W.O.
Call

AM -FM cantte. low

tfter 6PM.

.

1981 Mu11.,g PS , PI, AL, 4

74

Motorcycles

1971 Kowoookl lTO. 1.000.
wlndohlold, nso . 304·e75·
4515.
'84 Handa 810 Night Htwk.

304·870•8113.
Calll14· •7· 0184.

1911 Kowaookl XX 2'110 din
blko, 304· n3·5244 .

1885 lu:er Turbo IUtO. 1 .000
mi, exc. cond. Cell 114-378-

76

apd .. good condition. 13,700.

2721.

80flta and
Motore for Sale

181~

Dodge Omnl4 dr .. 4 011d .
Colll14·378· 2728 .
1977 Corvotto.goodcond .. -

I-1011. TorTYA8F1&amp; '71uc.
cond. 101'4&gt; Martf!ry. 25 lb.
MtrcutythN.t•w-foOI oonbol,

tlrtl, Corvette 1cceuoriea.
80,000 mllao, f7,6001 1171
Oodga Coil 2 dr. Hd.,, rune

*&gt;ublo lloo wollo. 2 C'/Cio
.....- . 2 . . tonko. ca r..tio,

aokin8 11.000. Coif 114·441·
0132.

1!:'"....

Fod. good oond .. hluh miiMfla,

eltCtrlc IoGb, w-.dowa • ,_...

cruloo.tlh.ltllhorlntorio&lt;, 1-lop.
body good .......... .,

.aoo.

full

Clft\111 cover. battery
c:h..-, extra prop, anchor, lkl
h~m••· lldl. . . ..
.we on •ail• w whMI
belflnDI. other e.. r... wil dem·

onotrllo f4100. lrm. 304·875·
1017.

lteel haul Pon·tun boat wfth or

o .a .o .. -onoon.ll4-44t·
7117.

whhoul ..,..,r, 11 hpr. 304·
773-1313.

1114 LTD Ford oUdon wogon,

14' MF6 w~houf 11a1 70hp
Mere. NM Hltl • Clf'Pet.

ruto, eir, orullt, tilt. wire rlml.

n.••· John'o AuiO Solao,
luf.,Hio lid., Qolllpolo, OH.

trolling rnotor, IHt

trailer.

UIOO. 304·•2·38114.

114 looor I .d. air, AM ·FM
- 114-44
...- .. 1310
. f7,300
firm.·Col
Ill•
S:OO.

..,._k

__ ___- -·
·-

......... '""""'

lnt-c1,808 - · , _ lo
ooil. Col 114-441·nM.

sho• and later abandoned
ara featured !60 min.) Pan
3 of 3 .
® Steto Fair
Ill W Kato &amp; Allie Kale &amp;
Allie find 1hemselves behind bars when lhey take
part in a student protest.
(R).
@
Greetoll American
Hero
9:30 il]l 01 W Newhort iCC)

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

CARTER 'S PlUMBING
ANO HEATING

ISN'T THAT 'IOLJR
MOTHS&lt; CO\&lt;\ING'
THIS WAY~

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Oellipolis, Ohio
Phone 814-441-3888 or 614·

B3

Autos for Sale

"'"'· Coil 814· ..2·8841 .

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

1810 Ford whh logbed . f750
114·1115·3881 .
pick-up, ps, pb, 350 auto, ntw

N01 IT's MY F;4THER .. .

MY MOTHER HAS
A MUSTAO-IE.

SC:W.ET7MES I FeEL
LIKE: Ii-\ !HE ONl-Y
STRAI6HTMAN IN TO#N.

Excavating

Stephanie and Joanna are
outraged when ther sneak
Oood-1 hchating, b••ements.
footltfl, drlvewayt, teptlc tenkt,
1.-wlsciplng. Cell anytime 514441·4537, J1mn l. Devilon.
Jr. own•.

a peek at Michael's diary.
!R) .
10:00 ([) Roundtablo (60 m1n .)
il]l Ill liZ Cagnoy &amp; LICiy
ICC) While Lacey Is on mo.

J .A.R. Construction Ca., Ru-

ternity leave. Cagney is assigned to a new partner
with a reputation as an in-

tlond, Ohio. 814·742 ·2903:·

811emtnt1, Footlrl, Concrtte ~
work. Beckhoe' 1, Doz., •n•
Dlt~ar. Dump hue.. . end
Wiler · gll · llwtr- electrical
lln11 . Charlie Httfietd o~eretor .

B&amp;

BARNEY

'.

EVER' TIME TATER TAKES

former. (60 min.) IRJ.
News
10:05 CD MOVIE: 'Long Way
Home'
10:30 Cil Taking Stock
liD This Old HOuM
11 :00 D ill I)) liJ I)) ® Olll'Z
ll1l News
CII Bill Colby ·Show
CIJ Action Sporto of lhe
80's: Odyuey Cup Yechl
Rea. From 11aly. (R).
fJ) (I) Love Connection
ill SCTV
liD lnlornllional TV (CCt
The plighl of political pri·

liD ill)

WASTE NOT,
WANT NOT

A NAP HE THROWS HIS
PIUER ~TH'FLOOR

General Hauling

'

J•mes Boys Wtter Service . Alii) '·•
pool• filled . Call614 ·256·1 14 (..,;
or 114-446· 1175 or 614 -448 .7911 .
... J

--------------------·
'
Ken ' 1 Weter Service.
W~lls ,

citlern s. poots and waterb&amp;ds
flllad Call 61•· 367 -0623 or
614- 367 -7741 or 304-67fi. -

1247

'~

Dillard's Water OeiNery. Cist ·
erns. wel\1 , pools. Anytime but
Sundav Call 61 4 --U&amp; -7404.

7397

Wttter son ' s Wate r Htul ing. 1
reuonable r•tes. Immediate :
2.000 g1llon deUvery , c:i•ternt , ~
pool,, well . etc. Clll 304-676· •

2919

ined. (60 min.) (Subtilled).

ill) Soap
11 :30 D Cl) ® 8111 af Corson

t

Coal, li mestone. liJfiVel. etc . •
Delivered 1 ton and up J im
Lanier . 304 ·875 -1247 or 676 - !

Tonlghl's gues1S are David

'

Letterman , Victoria Jack-

•

- - - - --.
B7

Upholstery

,

TRISTATE
VPHOlSTEAY SHOP

••

Auto

P•ru

&amp; Acceuorie•

....... peril '12 Oodoo Omnl

........

s&lt;e~~lA-4t.~s·
_ _ __.;....;; 11Ao4 lor ClAY l, POILAII-:....--Roarrongo loHwrs of the
0 lour
sc:ramblod word• b.

low 1o form four

~mple

wordl.

ROLVAF
RU S Y 0

j

i

~

t

•
WECIT
-·-.,F.-6 -TI~,~,,-1 ao

"'
L.---L....JI.-..&amp;.......1.-.J ,.:.

I

E NL E E D

Quote from a famous ac1ress:
courage. You
can't be brave II everything thll

I''

"Pain nourlahn

happening Ia - . "
Compl11e 1ho chuckle quotod

•.--.,;;..;,r,...;;;.,,;,;,...,,..;..,,r--l t)

~

L-.L.-.1..-.L.-.L.-.&amp;.......J.

by fillin; In 1he missing words
3 below.

you develop from step No.

f9 PRINT
NUMBHED 11
LETTERS
1

. . UNSCRAMBLE
V ANSWER

•

FORI

.

111111111

YISTEIDI Y'S SC~IM-111S ANSWEIS
B11C111r - Hteve - Crimi - Ftlgld - OR/Vf l1lt CAR
1111 bell Yll" of a men'a . . . . when the kldl are old
enough 10 hllp w.h and wax, but ltJo young 10 DRIVE the
CAR.

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

Paving the way
for a squeeze

NORTH
IKJ3

l·IUI

.A84

•s

tK842
13

By Jameo Jacoby
Probably the most exciting and fas·
clnatlng advanced play In bridge Is the
squeeze, and many books have been
written about it. For a simple and con·
else Introduction, I recommend a
pamphlet entitled "Squeeze Play," No.
3S in the Championship Brldp Series
published by Devyn Press, lSI Thlerman Lane, Louisville, KY f0207. Today's deal features such a play ·and
dem0111trates correct technique.
Four no-trump invited . slam, and
South was happy to accept. Althou8b
he bad leas tban a 22·point maximum,
be had two suits that could be a source
of extra tricks, plus a belplullO·spot.
After the opening . lead, declarer
took tbe right approach. First he
counted 11 top trlcb. He also noted
that he could make 12 tricks if either
diamonds or hearts split 3-3. If neither
splits. declarer has to put pressure on
an opponent who might have length In
both red suits. To do so, declarer must
reduce hls IOIIei'S tO ooly one. This
tightening of the hand, called "rectify.
inl the count," was accomplished
when declarer played low on the first
club.

EAST

WEST

us

•u

+7642

• J 10 7%
UIOU
.KQ6

U3

+J lOP 42

SOOTH
• A Q 10 S
.KQ65

.AS

tA Ql

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: Soutb
Wnl

Norlll

Paoo
Paoo

s..~

Eu1

2NT
6NT

Pus
Paaa

4NT

Paoo

J

Opening lead: •

the squeeze. If he threw a heart. do!.
darer's last little heart would be a
winner; if be threw a diamond, the
fourth diamond in dwnmy would
make the slam. Now try It If SCMitb
winl the first club. East limply lets hill

clulle.~I lrfte

,

That broulht everyoae
· to· only
seven cards, and East was caught In the count.

e

llolll,.......

ca~~~edtilllire,~1f~1o

. . . ._..
·

t:llilc1.
~·"'
br
JOSEPH
lHOMAS

ACROSS
43 Oistaff
1 New Guinea
Romney
town
DOWN
4 Ooze off
1 Hard· hit
7 Pickle
baseball
flavoring
Z Stout's
8 European
cousin
river
3 Gold or iron
10 Bequest
4 Honorable
recipienl

5 Poem

II Assail

6 Brando
Y"U&gt;rday'o Auwer
13 Unclose
film ( 1954)
(poet.)
7 Ounce
14 Wire
9 Head
18 Bellow
27 Hooray'
measurt'
for home Z I Put on
29 Play
16 Resldenl
10 Speck
the fire
segment
of (suffix) 12 Presl·
22 Pitchman 's 30 Vibrant
17 Earthly
dentlal
talk
31 Penalty
19 Re&lt;H!yed
nickname 23 Bullet
32 Dutch city
carp
Ill Chemical %4 Cognate
37 Hold it!
20 •- O'Cloc k
suffix
2G Defensible 39 Tiff
Jump"
21 Vaquero's
charge
22 Eur. fis h
2G ltsy-bitsy
26 Equal
27 Cartoonist,
Gardner 288adly
29 flynn movie
33 Highest
nole
34 Tea variely h;+-t-t35 Cover
35 River
in Hades
38 Salt water
40 Numerical
suffix
41 Benny's

.

in Bloom"
42 Aniline, e.g.

DAILY CR'I'rJVQUOTES-Here'a
bow to work il:
•
AXYDLBAAXR

II LONGFELLOW

soners in Uruguay is exam.

ton and Patsy Dowoon . !80
min .) (R) In Stereo.
ill Bum1 &amp; Allen
(I) Spo1UC.9tor
I)) WKAP In Cincinnati
• (I) One S111p Beyond
D ()) AIC Newt Nlghtllno
([) In the Tradition
.,
llD Allee
liZ Mognum. P.l. A heli·
copter cra1h Iandi T.C. in e
coma, and MtQnum 'l ·in·
veltigetlon leads him lo
1u1pac1 tltot T.C:o long·
lost brotltor mey bo in·
volvtd. (70 min.) (R).
iiJl TriPI* Jolin. M.D.
12:00 ill Jook Benny
CIJ CommonWMith Gomes
Coverage of lhe 1988
Commanwel11h Gemo1 Is
fe11ured from Scolltnd .
(80 min.l
(() Netlonal CleoiJraphla Ex·

e

- -------- •:
1 1 &amp;J Sec. Ave., Gtllipolis . '
1114-446-7833 or BU-•46 ·

1B33.

78

ney. (R)In Stereo .
ill (!JJ MOVIE: 'I'm
Dancing as Fe11 •• I Con'
iCC)
(IJ 700 Club
([) (j]) American Me111ra:
Charlie Choplin (CCI Sequ ·

1J

ences from films Chaplin

141·4477

73

1971 FibergiNS Nova 327- 321
HP chrome tnglne, M·22. 4 spd.

895·3802

1813 Chovy I'll, 301 onglno,
naw tlrao. U. 500. Call 11 4·
311·8181 .

1818 110 4•4 loadod.
114·441·4250.
71

Rotary or c1ble tool drilling.
Most well• completed semeday
Pump Nln tnd lll'\lice. 30"·

1114 B-10 4whtel drive pickup,
AM·FM CIIHRe r .. io. Camplf
tap, NMing boardl, 28\000
mllee. cle1n *7 ,100 or cen help

'78 GMC Sorrlo Granda 25,

9 :00

Starks Tr" end lawn Service,
l•ndtcaping . 304-1578-2010.

B2

with rofln.,cing. Coiii14 ·24S·
9244 .

D ill Clllll Clll!D Ill liZ
(j]) News
ill Green Acres
(I) Mezde Sportslook
fJ) (I) Sler Trek
([) Reeding Rainbow (CCI
II])
Heelthy
People/
He811hy Business
@One Dey et e Time
CD Down lo Earth
IJ illiBJ NBC News
CII The Riflemen
(I) John Fox Outdoors
(I) Ill Cll ABC News
([) Doctor Who
il]l Olll'Z CBS News
II]) Body Electric
@Welcome Beck, Kotter
CD Gunsmok•
Dill PM Magazine
CII Man from U.N.C.L.E
(I) Sport•Center
(I) Enterteinmenl Tonighl
Barbara Howar 1alks with
members of the British
rock group Genesis about
their new album , "Invisible
Touch", and how their indi-

vidual successes have
helped them ss a band .
fil (I) Hogan's Heroes
Ill I)) Jeopardy
(lJ Nighdy Business Report
il]l News
II]) MacNeii·Lehrer Nowsh·
our
Ill W Divorce Court
@ WKRP in Cincinnati
ll1l Wheel of Fortune
7:30 IJ ill I)) New Newlywed

*8,600. Coli 614·258·6038.

AT, air. 71.1100 mil•, cleen. ona

1111 Dodgo 0.150, 4 opd ..

Liveltock

,,.. c..-......... -

I

olr, 11~0 mHao. nice cor
U,88S.II1lll MonuC-V·B.

ely ..

,

575·2088 or 575 · 738B.

Kimbell Orgen. Aquorfuo. !eoy
10 pley, lnetruotlon booa ond

...............-;.,,;__
.•.

*··

304-773-6244 .

ing hot tlf 1pplicetion) 304·

114
E-rl'II • .......
dr., - · PI,
...ooo.
fiOO. Cal 114·•1·17...

11100 .00.

Mike'• Auto S1lea 198o\
Qavlltta 2
rid. one owntr,
PS, AT, 1•.cm mil•. Ulce ntw
f3,885 . 1181 Leloron 4 dr.. I

8:36
7:00

1970 camper. self-contained.

1974 OldeOmega, low miiMgl.
MW lhodl1, and tailpipe. tl75.

100 wilt Fend• leoti Miller
8Uitlr - h. 1410. 304·171·
7119.
~..u.•l~-j~J:Ju•d

1178 Ciwyoi•Cordoba V·I.PS,
PI, AC, AM·FM radio, cruiu.
raor -~· Call 814·388·8385
Itt• 15 ar.WMk.. dl.

1154 Covollot ota11on wogon.
naw ..,.. only 1.000 mlloo, ue.
oond .. 14,200. Coli 114·245·
1406.

1178 Grond Prlo U modo!

Boogie puppiH, puro brod, 8
weeks old. 304·117!· 4219.

Right hlngodl21 .00 Mlrro 7 Qt .

:JOt·

&amp;

Autos for Sale

1174 Chovy Impale 310, PS.
P8, AC, fiOO. Call 114·446·
2814 ..... ~~.

Fruit
Vegetables

882·1305.

gao can 110. 304· 773-5178 .

Alltl 1200 XL hoON olllco
· · ..Ilk
d occ-ri-.
112·2711.
lor J-n. ·

6B

mllelfla. Coli 114·441·0137

Brown-Nit lov•••t couch, ex c .
cond. 1100.; am·fm l.lmtable
Jterto w-2 sp•ker• $35 .: 2
huge groups yard aile items
UO.OO heh; I gel. milltlry typ1

for rortl. 304·878· 3334.

Ellington uprlgh1 plano. t1 30.
Coll514·241·11n .

epd.,

Sitm•• kittens, alt meln. 304-

(palnt1n white cloth•l Trill•

71

AKC Ba1un Puppitl. I weeks
old. F.A. Beneclum. Suce"'
Rd ., Reedsville, Ohio . C1ll al1er
15 :00 p .m. or •nvtlme SeturdiV
and Sundty. 6,.·617-385&amp;.

3104 aflar 5:30p.m.

12:00 • 1:00 p.m. Fri. lot. Sun.

Mueicel
Instrument•

84 Chovolto 4 cyl.. 2 door, 5

fornol" . 150. CoN 014·742·

ntlla' a - bat ol Rev"'IWOOd,

67

811·281·9391

tlblo. 304·875· 1381.

~ouhopurdt- . Som lcmo-

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

A P~At.J.

Camping
Equipment

Nl

245·5641

lhling room tuite, bed, picnic

Surplue denim wut..-n cotton
lhinl 113.00, army camou·
ftlle. rental clothing, ermy type
helrnen'la, fr• with kkle OlmDU·

7B

6:06
6:30

WE'VE GOT
TO l&lt;e&amp;P THEil'\
APPeA~EP W"ILE
WE COME UP WITH

949·2693

2'17 year old dog. KingDobermtn
pure bred, reli nice. Call 814-

Aultrallan Heller puppies . Pure
bred . Red Of btua. Mal• end

125. 304·575· 2083 or 871·
8818.

Wa'nted to buy: Need differential
tor 1h ton Dodge pickup. 814-

64

114·247·4292 .

AkA m. ttorm door 38x81 , hard·
ware, ICNift end gt:ll lndudH.

6:00

Sentinei-P~----:Q

TIA1 Mll.1
PUIILII

EVENING.

348- 3911. Diller inquireyl '
wetconw. 21 6 -862·4134. ~

corn . Call torllf•tquot... River

19. Roell ftee brown tr1iler
tkirtlng 28 " a80" U .99 ea.
20. 22 " d3 .. lttinllllltMI 10'
deep sinks a grede $69.96 .
21 . Stainl•s lttel oomer 1lnkl
169.96 8 grad•
22. 4pc . lolidoektndbrllsbath
Ht $23.95 ••· 3 11t1 1nd 1.4J

56

Gold rec::linlf •7&amp;, love seat &amp;
matching ch1ir ftofll t75. End
tablft (IqUiri -Oct.) t25 ea. All
goad cond. Call 614·446-1944
efter 6 weehd•y•. anytime
weebnd1.

7/28/86

Exxon, Charl11ton. W .V. 30•- '

S.E. Ohio .

ClOSEOUT'S
SUAPWS
BUY BACK 'S

61 Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 52

I WIN tbu!

Ohio. 814· 441·1227 or Byrdo '

245·5121 .

Building materiels. cement,
blocb alltiz ... ytrd or delivery.
G111ipolis Blodl Co., 1231f.l Pine

...WildS '\Qt'1!

tt.AD~~s....c:91&lt;1~-I&lt;ISS'?..

g~t• . 1&amp;9. Ford t1ilgatn, t76.
Over 1800 ftem1 to choose·
from. C &amp; M .1\uto Parts, Bidwell.

/&lt;, LIVI·S IIII
Building Materiall
Block, brick, sewer pip•, win·
dows. lin1tlt. etc. Ctlude Win ·
tift. Aio Grande. 0 . Call 1!114-

WAIT AMINU'I6

73·85 full doors. 179. Chovy1all

66 Building Supplies

St .. Golllpollo. Ohio Coli 814·
U8 ·27B3 .

Merch andi se

I WV 1£1U,100,'5W~~!

Television
Viewing

lftd Ford pick -up find.,., •39.'

authorized to http Uquldace
· thllemachinllwhnetheylutet
just 1179.00. Cal 114·386·

46 Space for Rent

Range. Ca\18,4 -448-1289 .

tumithed . All n.w Ngl. 81•·

l btlr. homo, 1~ botho,

448-9680. Rent tslow 111120
month.

1•x86 unfumished traitor, 8
miln from Gallipolis. C•\1114·

9124.

41

. Aoonw for rent, diiV . week.
month. Gellie Hotel. Call 1!114·

446· 4110.

Co...,lotolv romotlolod khchen

Mornlnt Slit oree. N""! idll:hon. · Noworl bodfoom ranch home.

lira place. large y11d, wtlh
chlldrltll woodtn piiJ c...t•.

441·3793.

or

4 bedroom home on 7 acres.
Hunters paradise in Chetter
ar11. 132 .000- Cell 614·9815·
Modern 3 bedroom, llf'ge kit·
chen, full blls.-nant . 1!1 Hcluded
.terll . Big v~rd . lots of thede.
1 8ll30 poo l. 3 milet from Five
Poir'ltl On county Rd . 82 . 614·

1 4x70 fum)lhed thr., bedroom.
bath II 'h. cttntrll lir. 1260
month, U!SO deposit. C1ll 814-

rod

only 614·446 ·2369.

3 bedroom hoult. 1

46

441·7911 .

Coll614·446·4926.

Lower level. Ruatic Hill , Svra·
cult. 3 bedroom. large kitchen,
largaiNW.groom, 1ir. cond., dtsh
w11her , carpeted , lerge g~rage.
Price reduced . 614·992· 747@.
ahtr 5:30 814-992 -3402 .

4382 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

30.·576·2336

614·446·1358

-----

7401.

-oh. Coll814·441·1354 .

1

31

___ _

.!)

The Daily

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

_ , ...

th•• ••

446·8177 or 814·251·1011 .

-· 2 CoN
114·742·213e
or
814-74·
· 3100.

lil:.d bl,t/1 '

3 bedroom double wkle with
g•11• _,d 1.-gto Ytrd. Plrtitllty
fumilhed. 3 milll out of Pom•
roy on At. 143. Require dip0 ..1.
t271 per month. 814-992-

446·2102.

Best otfar-1978 14•85 Fair·
mont Bayview. 2 bdr. all .. ec.
Ex. cond. Set-up on 'ol for rent.

'Wiltlf wells serviced and drilled

4 bedroom house tor r~nt In
Svr•eu••· Ctll 814·992-7889
after 6:00 p.m.

•tao

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Cell 614·388·8206.

Professional
Services

Houses for Rent

2 bdr. unfurn. allelec. 2 mil .. At .
!88. Private lot.
month.
Can 814-448-o\807 or 814-

1973 Holly Peril 14d0. 2 bdr.

'

rent tor 1 bdr. 1171. B11ic rent
for 2 btlr. 1212. Aloe 1200 Hc.
ct.p. raq. CioN to Foodland tncl
Spring Velley Pl111. Jecklon
E1t1t1 Ap•nments. 814-4483997 . Equal Houting
OpportunitY'.
___:_

0786 .
31

•

Cameron lrall• 12xM, John

Public Auction Factory Error on
tehoal use sewing mechlnll.
700 sewtng machtn• d•igned
for tchool. utt haw ICcld•tlly
been wired tor home IIWing.
The cost would have bien
prohibitive to ehlp, di..IHmb ...
rewire, reaeaamble. 1nd rMhlp.
apecill high qu•Hty
1ewing machln• Mth metal
geart and hewy duty con.tnn:tlon . Duet belt drive a1Dw1 you
to Lovlo, loolllor and UDht
upholstery. Diamond point fwd·
1r1 handle deliCitt material

LA~ ~ SVPP~r&lt;. I

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1421.
- - - - - -- -·lcN- otool body porto. 73·BOGM

Coli 304·175·51 04 or 304· Gl~o dr•- olro .4.8, 5. Call
17&amp;·5381 .. 304·875· 7928.
014·441·7240.
Fumhlh.t 2 bdr. apt. utilhl•

r

EVANS ENTERPRISES. Joclt·
oon. Oh. 114·281·5830.

',_, ,

7 I'L.L. ~A LITI~

1972 Chevrolet motor in good
cond., •76. C•ll 1!114·265 ·

HouH • ll)trtment for lingl•.

1B Wanted to Do

21

pl•ic
culverts, metal cutwerte. RON

304·171· 5104 or 304·875· Dnre 2 row com pfent•. MF 3
5381 .. 304-175} 921.
pt . hook up 2 Pt. ptowo. Call
814·255·9303.

Per.onel cere, room and board

Painting u:tet'k&gt;r, 20 years exp.
Free hiim~~tes. 304-875-6384.

~.

114· 379·~20 .

Fumlohod opt. 2 bdr 1175. plaltic eeptlo tanld,

13t'h 4th Gtlllpolit. Wttlf' pd.
Call441-4411 after 8pm.

Situations
Wanted

304·876· 7891 .

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Tran1ml11iona . All typ11 . Over,
front, rear. 4 whttl drive. Pric11
111f1 1100;, Will deliver. Call

2 bdr. utllltitl panilltv fum .. 11. 11.5 . .8 mlloo out AI. 218.

Will do painting inside and out,
mowing end other odd jobs,

__
n&lt;1UN toSEit

Monday, July 28, .1 986

KIT 'N' CAlli.YU! ®II, a.., Wrltlllt

PINtle cistern ltete eppiGved,

jobs.

1986

Callihan' I Uald Tire Shop . Ov..-

118,000. Phone coli rofundoble.
(102)838·8885. ht. 608 .
12

J!llv 28.

•

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St. Rt 7, Crown Cfty, Oh. Ctll

S14·2SS ·1470, eoll Evt. 814·
441 · 3438 . Otd I now
Uphottarld.

_. or wll MM coqtfl'tl o1r. Mowr~' s Upholst•lng iilervlng
104-171·1111.
tri county area21 .,..,,, The bnt
In furniture upttoieterlng, Cd

304 · 878 · 4114 for fru

11tlm1tt1.

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One letter slanda for anolller. In thl.a aernple A is ~~Sed
the lhree L'l, X for the two O's, etc. Single letlel'll,
apoatrophes,the lengthandformaUon olthe word.l are aU
biniL Each day the code letlere are different
for

C&amp;YPTOQUOTES
7·28
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DYEFRWV

YXX

WLILFS

X R H B .

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DYXI\LXD

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Y.wr.lar'e CrJ)Itoq-: AN EARTH flT FOR
GROWING CHIWREN IS WHAT EVERY WOMAN
• SHOULD WORK !'OR. -SMml

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l'_!inr

Borboro Howar talks wi1h
membart of the Brllish
rock group Gene•i• tboul
tholr ntw olbum, ''lnvlflblo
Touch", ond how their indi·
vidual oucc11111 have
helped them \1 1 bond. (RI.

(() .Enhlrttlnmont Tonight

• Ill ReWiilct.

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BKRTR'F

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Hewoii 'FI...O
11) MOVIE: 'Iolande in tht
Slretm'
•
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12:30 • ill lli Lt18 NitJht with
' Devld Lenol'!ft8n Tonighfs
guollo ere Kelly McGiilif
end
comedian . ,Jimmy
Aleck . (60 min .lin ·Stt.W.

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�.,
July 28, 1986

Ohio

Possible end in sight for Detroit strike
DETROIT (UPI) - A tentative
contract was approved by the city
and tile union representing some
7,100 sl:(lklng municipal workers,
·paving the way for today'• ratifica·
tlon vote and a possible end 10 a
lJ.day walkout.
The strtkers were scheduled to
vote today oo a three-year contract
proposal. Approval by a simple
majority woold end a strike that
halted bus service !or :100,000 people
and caused nearly 40,000 tons of
rotting garbage to accumulate.
Members of the American Feder·
atlon of Slate, County and Munlci·
pal EmploYees union were to vote
between 10 a.m. EDT and 6 p.m.

today. Union ol!lclals said tile dty's 600 trash haulers were to
results would not available until · resume regular ooDection today.
The Teamsters \ililon rnemli'rs fiiio
after 10 p.m.
The earliest AFSCME emptoyees hooored AFSCME) picket lines,
could be back 10 work Is Tuesday, halting trash collection for the dty' s
union officials said. II the contract 1 rnilllorf!&gt;E'9ple.
Is rejected, AFSCME chief negotia·
Nearly 7,000 members of
tor AI GaiTett said, "We'll do what AFSCME Councll 2i struck July 16.
we have to do, then we'll start !rom Another 5,000 sympathlzers,lnclud·
ingbusdrlversandtrashcollectors,
scratch."
"(The contract) represents the stayed off the job.
The new oontract calls for&gt; a 5
best we could get out of the city o!
Detroit," he said. "I would liked to per!l'nt raise and a one-time $000
have rrore. To get more probably b:mus in the first year. In the second
woukl require rrontll! out there on year, workers are guaranteed a 2.5
the picket line. We are enlbrslng percent raise and the posslbUity of a
hlgher Increase llnder an equity
the package."
Regardless of lhe voting, the lonnulathattleswages to the city's

Titanic mission heading for home
I'M A DUCK WATCHER - You pt a much beUer view of your
friends If you standontopol arookandlookdoMt 111 tbem-alleastlhlli
duck lboupt so. 'l1tls duck W18 dlsrovered swimming along the banks
ol the Shade IUver In the Chesler area.

lng researchers as "very happy
with what they've accomplished."
A news conference til release the
thousands of pictures and video·
tapes of the wrECkage was scheduled Wednesday at National Geographic headquarters In

vessel and the debris field in which
It rests.
They also dispatched a robot
camera known as Jason Jr. on a
200-lool tether to enter and photograph the interior.

Washl~on.
~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~
The 882-!oot. fi,&lt;IDton Titanic I

FLEA MAIKO

struck an Iceberg on Its maiden
voyage and sank April 15, 1912,
MEIGS COUNTY FAIR GROUNDS
kUling 1,513 of the 2,224 people
POMEROY. OHIO
ahoard.
STARTING
AUG. 1-2-3, 1986
The ship, oonsldered "unslnka·
SEPT. 5-6-7, 1986
ble," was the largest and most
OCT. 3-4-5. 1986
Ballard, :woo was expected to luxurious vessel at its day and
NOV. 7-8-9, 1986
Thu!Klerstorms packing go~ hall- make a statement upon arrival carried some of the richest people
sized hall rumbled across southeast today, also headed the U.S.-FJ'€11ch In the world.
DEALERS WANTED - BUYERS WANTED
Missouri and oortheasl Arkansas, team that found the Titanic last
During 13 days at the site,
COME ONE - COME All
and storms packing 55-mph winds September, some 2\-1 miles below scientists completed 11 dives to the
Reasonable Set Up Rates-Under New Management
movedacrosseasternMontanalnto the ocean surlace, about 4011 miles wreckage In a mlnl·submarlne
We'll See You At The Flea Matltet
western North Dakota, the NWS south of NewfOundland.
known as Alvin, pootographlng
For Information Call: 30H22-4169-614·742-2882
said.
Woods Hole spokeswoman virtually the entire outside of the
- - - - - - - - - - - - -·.:.N.::an:.:.cy:::._G:_r_:ee.:_n_descr
_ _tbe_d_the_ret_urn_·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _L _ _ _ _ _ __,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Rain answers prayer
of Georgia reside~ts
By Unlled Press Inlernallonal

WOODS HOLE, Mass. (UPI)The research vessel Atlantis II
cruised toward home port at the
Woods Hole Oceanographic Instl·
tute today laden with a bounty of
photographs and videotapes of the
remains of the fabled luxury liner
Titanic.
The 56-member expedition team
led by Robert Ballard began the
four-day, !JOO.mUe tr1p back from
the sire of the sunken Titanic
Thursday night before tile North
Atlantic hurricane season began.

fiscal health. In the final year, the
raise would bedetennlnal solely by
ilr clfY'SfljjanC!ill llealth. AFSCME President Phil Sparks
said union members were asked not
return to work untO the contract Is
ratified. The dty's bus drivers, who
transport :W,ilXI downtown com·
muters daily, also were expected to
stay home.
During the strike, trash has been
stockplled on streets and In homes
- as well as six city- designated
emergency dump sites.
"We're anticipating it will be too
weeks befOre things are back to
normal.'' said Ron Bush, Teamsters Local 214 vice !l'esldenl.
"There will probably be some
overtime. We don't kilow how much
(trash) Is out tilere."
The tentative agreement was
reached Friday after six murs of
court -ordered talks .and was approved by the union and dty
Sunday. The two sides met ln nine
court -ordered bargaining sessions
ta.St week befOre agreeing on the
pact.

Downpours answered the pray·
ers o!'Georgians seeking an end to
the South's worst drought In a
century, but the faithful and the
forecasters knew that much more
rain- maybe a hurricane's worth
_was needed for relief.
With damages from the dry spell · rsoarlng past the $1 billion mark, .
Georgia Gov. ,Toe Frank Harris
proclaimed Sunday a day of prayer
for rain. Residents responded, and
hours later the heavens opened up
- dumping H Inches of rain on
Columbus and 1.19 Inches on
Marietta. where Harris attended
services.
But Barbara Zwald, an Atlanta
minister's wife woo proposed the
day of prayer, said she told prople
woo asked about her plan that "II
woukl take more than 40 days and
40 nights of rain to give the kind d
relief we need."
National Weather ServiCI' spa·
kf'sman Gary Sealy In Atlanta put
it another way, saying, "It wllllake
the remnants of a lllrrlcane to
bring significant rainfall (to ease
the drwghl). 'Jb&gt;re will also have
to be drastic changl!s In !he upper
air pattErns to allow a trpnta!
system' to move through here." ·
Elsewhere, severe thunderstorm
watches were issued In the Midw·
est, where winds knocked oot power
to toousands. In California, one
fisherman drowned and two others
were missing In lO.foot waves off
the Ventura County coast.
The record heat wave , in the
Southeast and Midwest has been
blamed fOr 48 deaths slnCI' July 7,
but the highest temperatures Sun·
day were in the Plains. II was a
record 106 degrees at Wichita,
Kan.; 105 at Oklahoma City. Okla.;
103 at Lubbod&lt;, Texas, and 101 at
Springfield, Mo.
The storms Sunday and last week
In the South helped keep tempera·
lures In the ~- But they failed to
end the drought because they have
tended to be localized and whatever
rain they bring Is not enough for
areas 16 or more Inches below
mrmal this year. forecasters said .
In Georgia, the heavy rain came
a lew hours alter serviCI's on "Pray
lor Rain Day." It was unleashed by
storms powerfUl enough to produCI'
marbiNizi'd hail and winds of &amp;I
mph.
Sunday's Southeastern storms
also dumped more than an inch d
rain at Whiting Field Nava l Air
Station at Milton. Fla .. and nearly
an inch at Meridian, Miss.
Gusty thunders torms swept
across Iowa, South Dakota, Minne·
sola and Wisconsin Sunday, born·
barding Hyde County in Sou lh
Dakota with golf ball-sized hail and
downing trees at GalesvUie and
Ettrick in west-central Wisconsin.
In Minnesota . the storms
knocked out power tn 9,ilXI North·
ern States Power Co. customers,
spun two fu nneI c lauds near
Mallory and Callaway and hurled
lightning that killed 11 cows near
Pierz.
'
Spring Valley. Minn., was
dl'€11~hed with nearly four Inches d
rain.

..,
.•
i

,.

I

.

..
"

..

... -;

New Cambridge crushes
...

Taste breakthrough

at a generic pricet

Ohio Lottery

the Bend

Daily Number: 345

-Page 5

Brown

•

at y
Vol.36, No. 59
Copvrightod 1986

PICK-4: 9609

Pl!"ib' clouci1

loafgla.

Regular l!t Menthol.
Kings l!t IOOs

Mfr.suggested ratail pr'&lt;o.

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

Cl Philip Mum line. 1111

t1 mg "tar," 0.9 mg nicotino av.par crgarattaby FTC method.

lll8fl8

wW be In the mid 1o upper 11011
and lows In lbe upper Ills. MOflt\f
!iWIIIJ' Wednesd!U' with highs In
lbe upper 8lls. 'The probabUy of
preclpllallon is near zero
through Wednesday.

•

enttne
1 Section, 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohi9. Tuesday. July 29, 1986

215 Cent1

. A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Park commission plans county toUrism levy
By NANCY YOACIIAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
Intentions by the Meigs County Park Commission
to place a countywide, one hall· mill levy before voters
in November were announced In Monday's meeting
of the Meigs County Regional Planning Commission.
Stephen Powell and Steven Story of the park
commission explained the levy, which is estimated
would. generate about $95,ilXI. and ensuing tourism
and recreational benefits, to tmse In altendan.ce at the
meeting. Park commission member Charles Barrett
was unable to attend .
Powell said that within lhenE:xllewweeks, the park
commission would be explaining the levy In detail to

the mayors and village councils of the county's five
municipalities. It was noted that almost68 percent of
the county's voting power is within the live villagesPomeroy, Middleport, Rutland, Syracuse and
Racine.
II was also pointed out that the villages and not just
the county as a whole would benefit if a levy passes
and ·tourism in Meigs County can be promoted.
Although voters will not decide the levy until !aU,
Powell said thai development of tourism has already
started in the county with requests to the Ohio
Department of Natural ResourCI's for studies along
the Shade Rlver.

Although no priorities were mentioned. a list of
proposed locations, activities and programs was
presented in order to show the diversity lor potential
park and recreational development which the park
commission feels ex ists In Meigs County.
Powell pointed out the potential for creating jobs
through the touri sm industry.
"We have the natural assets In Meigs County to put
together an organization and tap into an ignored
resource," he remarked.
It was noted that Meigs County has more than !ll
miles.: of Ohio River shore line which could be
developed.
Story compared Meigs County to Monroe County.

which is smaller than Meigs and where the park
commission has succeeded In promoting tourism.
Potential private opportunities such as hed and
breakfast establishments were also noted.
U the levy would pass. Powell estimated the rounty
could begin seeing a payback within a year.
"The eventual goal of the park commission Is to
become sell-sufficient," he added.
In regard to administering the program if the levy
passes, Powell said it would "not be necessary to hire
a program director Immediately" because the park
commission could initiate development "In the
beginning."

Council protests
pennit's renewal
By BOB HOEFUCII
Senlbtel Staff Writer
Middleport Village Council meet·
ing in regular session Monday night
voted unanimously to protest to the
Ohio Department of Liquor Control
the renewal of the permit lor a
Middleport tavern.
The action to protest continuation
of the Friendly Tavern cam(' after
Middleport Police Chief Sid Little
reported that so far this year, the
pollee department has answered 76
calls lo the establishment .
Little said that the !Uing of only
about a hall dozen charges resulted
!rom the many trips to the
eslablislunent. He added Ihal sev·
eral times the police had closed
down the ~r lor the rest of the
ev~lng after disturbances had
taken place. Chief Lit11e also
commented that he believes the
buUdlQg is unsafe.
· Cou!M'U \)!embers voiced their
dJSllpproval also with some stating
that residents are afraid to walk on
the sidewalk in front of the
establishment. stressing the need
for Middleport to be a "safe
communit y."
Monday was the final me&lt;&gt;tlng at
which councU oould take the protest
· action becauS(' such actions must
be filed with the Ohio Department
of Liquor Con trol at least 30 days
before permits are issued. Officials
said the pe1mil holder is Dorothy
Wyatt.
Cable Issue arises
Kay Logan met with council 10
voice complaints about the servk'f'
of Consolidated Communications
Group Inc.. which serv&lt;'S the
community with cable television
service.
She said it is impossible to get in
touch with the company to air
complaints even though there is a
toU·frcc number. She said Iha l shr
is currently paying lor HilO and is
not receiving that channeL Mayor
Fred Hoffman also said that he has
never been able to get in touch with
the company through the toll -free
number.
Donna Boyd attended the meet ·
lng and voiced complaints against
the burglar alarm at Fruth's
Pharmacy. She said that the alarm
gets accidentally ser off and sounds
for as long as lwo hours before It is
turned off and that the noise
disturbs not only the family but her
lather, who Is seriously ill.
Little reported that pharmacy
personnel has provid&lt;:&gt;d a key now
so Ihat the alarm can b!' shut off by
the poliCI' if it begins to sound .
Hoffman said he wUI contact the
owner to see if a telephone alarm
syst&lt;:&gt;m might be substituted for the
present system.
Bid accepted
Council accepted the bid of thi'
Herald OU and Gas Co.. the only bid
submitted, to drill lor oil and gas on

Air crash
kills two
in W.Va.

village property near the sewage
lagoon.
The company will pay the village
$5 a year per acre until drilling is
done and alter that the• town will
receive one-eighth of the royalties
from gas and oil coming !rom all
wells. The contract will he for a
three-year period. thus ensuring the
action has to be taken to drill within
that time slot . Hollman reported
that attorney Bernard Fultz had
indicated

the

contract

CLARKSBURG, W.Va. (UPI)Two Pennsylvania people were
killed when their single-engine
airplane crashed In dense log after
it was cleared for landing by a
Cleveland airport, West Virginia
state police said.
The plane went down Monday
several miles from the northern
West Virginia airport to which II
was headed.

is

acceptable.
Middleport Chamber of Com·
merCI' President Bill Blower met
with council to discuss the upcom·
ing block party staged by the
chamber. The dates have been set
lor Sept. 12 and 13, Blower said,
with the ooly activity on Sept. 12 to
be the annual luncheon.
Entertainment has been secured
and wUI ·Include rock, country and
gospel music and Columbus Zoo
personnel wUI be present for the
Saturday, Sept. 13, actlvttles with
aJiimais and there will be an flChibil
from the Center of Science and
Industry In Columbus, Blower said.
Cooperate with chamber
The annual paper airplane flying
contest will again be a feature along
with hamburger and pizza eating
contests. and a horseshoe pitching
tournament. There wUI be craft and
refreshment booths and there have
been a rocord number of inquiries
from operators of these types of
businesses, Blowerr said. Council
approved strff't cleaning, use of
bleachers and tables from the park
for the day. some street painting
and other help in coo(X'ra tion with
the chamber.
Approval was also given for.
Hoffman to apply fora$13.300grant
through the Office of 'li'avrl and
Tourism. Columbus. with the rna·
ney to be used to promote rhc
village of Middleport.
Blower would serve as director of
the program with a matching
amount to be provided by the
\1llage via the " in kind" route. Tho ·
money can only be used lor
promot.iona l purposes. A brochu re
showing what Middleport ha s to
offer could he printed and distributed throughout the state. the
mayor commented .
Advertising lwtd
Council gave a second reading to
an crdinanCI' approving updating of
village ordinances and a letter was
read from Consolidated Communi·
cations lndicatingthatthecompany
is not interested in selling any of Its
lacillties in Middleport.
Council approved advertising the
village owned lot at Garfield and
Third for bids alter Hoffman
reported that one person has
ex rressed interest in purchasing
the lot which was given to the
vil lage by the late Mary Hartln=r
b'

iContlnued on Page 101

I

Killed in the crash of the Cessna
172 were Sara Scully , 49. New Hope,
Pa.. and Rober( Jones Jr., 24, of
Perkasie. Pa .. state police said.
Authorities said both were licensed
pllots but it remained unclear who
was at the controls when the plan&lt;:&gt;
crashed.
The Cessna radioed for landing
clearance at Benedum Airport In
Harrison County about 5 a .m. and
received permission to land, stale
police CPL J.E. Braun said.

GRAND CHAMPIONS - Among the grand
champions in clothing judging anoounced a1 Monday
night's 4-H style revue were, left til right, Pam Ash,
dress-up fonnal; MeiL'&lt;S8 Calaw!U', dothes for high

school; Debbie Brooks, sportswear, spectator;
Heather Flnlaw, coals and jackets; and Laurie
Shenefield, dress-up daywear. See story and
additional photos on Page 6.

Challenger disaster sleuths
unsure how crew was killed

By JAN ZIEGLER
UPI Sclenoe Writer
WASHINGTON (UPI I - NASA
has closed its Investigation of tho
Challenger disaster with the star!ling disclosure that. although it
remains uncertain exactly how the
crrwdled, theastronau tsmay havr
been alive during the craft' s
fearsome drop to the ocean.
Evidence from the explosion Jan.
28 indicated at least some of the
astronauts knew something had
gone seriously wrong. and that
three emergency air supplies were
activated 1n a futile bid for life. the
space agency said Monday.
"Uh oh ... " were the ominous
words hea rd at the moment of the
explosion. NASA announced at a
news conference six months to the
day · alter Challenger's flaming
demise.
The space agency, announcing
results of its investigation. said the
cause of death of the Challenger
Seven cannot be positively deter·
mined and that, except for some
remaining administrative details,
the matter was closed.
In
.. a1I effects. I think it's over,"
said R~ar Adm. Rlchard Truly,
chief of the shuttle program.
The space agency released transcrlpts of Intercom recordings made

of crew conv&lt;:&gt;rsatiHlS during
launch and as ex pected , the
convcrsat ions slllW 1he astronauts
were unaware of their Impending
doom until the momen I of the
explosion, 73 seconds aft er blastoff.
when eo-pilot Michael Smith made
the lwo·word exclamation. The
recorder stopped at that point.
Truly revealed the result s of an
analysis tonducted by Joseph
Kerwin. a former astronaut and
director of life sciences at the
Johnson Space Center In Houston.
"The findings are inconclusive,"

Kerwin said. "The Impact of the
crew compartment with rhe ooean
surfacP was so vio lent that evidenCf'
of damage occurring in the seconds
which followed the explosion was

masked . Our final conclusions are:
"The cause of death of the
Challen_gpr astronauts cannot be

positively determined; the forces to
whlch the crew were exposed
during orbiter breakup were proba·
bly not sufficient to cause death or
injury. and the crew possibly, but
not certainly. lost consciousness In
the seconds foUo"1ng orbiter breakup due to in-night loss of crew
modui&lt;' pressure."
Kerwin said thE' astronauts may

have survived up ro 10 so:onds or
longer I'Vcn with decompression.
and he oould not rule out rh&lt;:&gt;
possibility the shun le fliers survived. albeit unconscious. all the
way to ocean impact.

Remains get tentative ID
Fragments taken from the scene of a log cahln fire on the Long
Hollow Road Sun.Ay have been detennlned to he lumlUllissue and
bone, Meigs Coroner Dr. James Co!Kle reported tlti rooming.
It l• believed at this lime that the fragments are the remains d Don
Hood, who resided In the log cabin andhasoot been seenslnoe the lire
which occulTed early on lbe roomln' of July 23.
The lragmentsweredlsoovered allbe sceneolthellreSuod!U' and
were sent til the Franklin County Coroner's Office klr a detailed
examination and testing. Other articles tested are heUeved lo be
item• that Hood might have had 011 hili person at lhe tbne ofthe lire.

"The plane radioed the tower bul
never showed up." he said.
Benedum's tower was not c:penat
the time of the crash but the plane
received landing clearance from
air traffic controllers In Oeveland,
airport manager Paul Stewart said.
"When rur lower sbutsdown,lhe
air space is turned over In the big
center In Cleveland." he said,
"Their mdar can operate this
airport."
The plan" was found by a
property owner on a farmabout2.5
miles east of Interstate 79 near the
Shinnston-Salt well ex it about 7:45
a .m.. Braun said, or about 4 miles
from the airport.
Autoorilies believe the plane
crashed about 5:30a .m.
The plane was enroule to Darksburg from Louisville, Ky ., said
Morgan Hapeman. a Civil Air
Patrol spokeswoman in Bridgeport. Stewart said the plane had
refueled at Benedum on Sunday.
"The same two lkllled In the
crash) were in here yesterday
!Sunday). They fueled the aircraft
from what I am told . I don't know
the time but they must have flown
back Ito Kentucky !." he said.
Authorities said the plane had
been rented in Pennsylvania and
the pair presumably wanted to stop
at Benedum to rrlurl.thencontinue
on to Pennsylvania .

"We lbn'i know thalia he afart."
Braun said.
"From whi'rr the crash is. it
looks Uke the' wm· on lhr propcr
approach to tit!' airport . But wrf«'l
they were too low and the tog didn't
help any," he sa id .
The plane struck a large locust
tree and disintcgrated. he &gt;aid.
'There was no firf'.

Rehnquist faces questions on 1960s race charges

Ohio weather
Soulb Central Ohio
Today, variable cloudiness. High
1n the lower~- Light and variable
winds. ChanCe rJ. rain 211 percent.
Tonight, partly cloudy with a
chance of soowers and thunder·
storms, some possibly severe. Low
In the lower 'lOs. Light and variable
winds. Chance d. min 40 percent.
Tuesday, mostly sunny. High In
the upper.ll)s.
Ohio Exlellded ForecMI
Wedllelday llnup Friday
Fair Wednesday with a dlance d
thunderstorms Thu~Y and Frl·
day. Highs throughout the period
Win range from the mid Ills to lower
.!In! with a low In the ros.

·,

·Sox rebound

Beat of

By ANDREA NEAL
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Th~
chairman of the Senate Judiciary
Committee predicted an easy
confirmation for Justice William
Relutqulst as chief justice, but
Democrats want an answer to
charges he harassed black voters In
the 19005.
· The contirmalion hearings to
make Relmqulst the nation's 16th
chief justice are scheduled to begin
this afternoon, so some committee
members could attend the noon
funeral of W. Averell Harrtman,
diplomat lor four presidents and a
former New York governor.
Committee Chairman Strom
Thurmond, R.S.C., predicted the

hearings would be over by Thursday- and said Relutqulst should "be
confirmed without any trouble" by
the Senate before the Supreme

Court's new term begins In
October.
· But some Democrats and civil
rtghts groups planned to attack

Accident kills Rutland man
Dan· CotlerDI, 35, or near Rutland, """ ldiJeci Monday night
apparently when llruck In the b8cl! ~ lbe neck while brush hogtng
on the Coltertll farm.
Melp County Coroner Dr. lames Conde, caDed to the rt!llldence
about 8: M a.m. today, said that Cotterill had been dolnr the bnJSII
hogging when a piece of wood pollllbly was iJJrowD agabllll u.e back
of his neck or a sapllng !lpnlll( baek and hli Colltrlll -. lhe neck.
It was believed that ihe llll&lt;lldeni OCCUft'ed about 9 p.ni. Monday.
Colterii was found by 1118 falher, ·Don,lta moimlng.He wt11111umped
althe side of the tractor oeai INt wae 11m 4111 ille machine wllldt did
not overtum, Conde aald.

Rehoquist's stand against affirma· challenged the qualifications of
live action and abortion rights. black or Hispanic voters.
They also said they would question
Last week, four people oo ntra·
hlm about 34-year-oid memos he dieted the account .Rehnqulsl gave.
wrote as a Supreme Court clerk Two, including a former Arizona
that supported racial segregation Democratic Party chairman, said
and his role In a Republican ballot
security program In Phoenix In the they actually saw Retmquist apearly 1900s.
proach voters in an effort lo
And Democratic aides said Mon· discourage them from casting
day the FBI is Investigating ballots.
charg!!s that Relmqulst tried to
Among those called to teslity Is
keep blacks !rom vollng In the GOP former assistant U.S. attorney
program aimed at reducing lhe James Brosnahan of Phoenix who
number rJ. votes cast In heavily went to the sile of complaints of
Democratic !l'eclncts.
voter harassment.
.
During his confirmation hearings
"There was WUiiam Relmqulst
In 1971, Relutquist said he oversaw who I lmew on sight," Brosnahan
the program, but never personally
said In an Interview.

\

WIDiam Rehnqulot
I

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