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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
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T'!~•day, July 29, .1988

:Com·m
· ·e ntary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

~~

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............_..,..' .....,c:l,=o

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WIDTEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The

United Press Intern~ tiona!, Inland Daily Pre~s

Association a nd the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcomf' . They shoold bE&gt; less than 300 words
long. All letters are subject to editing and ITIIst be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should hf' In
good taste, addressing issues. not persooallties.

Made in U.S.A.
Patriotism Is In style again with "Made In the U.S.A." becoming the
buzzword in television commercials for everything from beer to clothing.
And while New York City may have captured th&lt;' world's attention
• during Its Fourth of July celebration of the rroovated Statue of Lil:r2rty,
Washington still has the patriotic vacation markt't cornered.
Every summt'r, thousands of Amt'rlcans- and lort'igners too- bravt'
. the SWt'ltt'ring Washington ht'at to St'P the sights of the nation'scapital from
.the While House and Washington Monumml to the Smithsonian exhibits
and Capitol Hill.
But tht're is another way to experience history without leaving homt',
· standing In lin&lt;' or sufft'rlng from ht'at strokt'.
You can write to your St'nator or r&lt;'Prt'St'Otatlvt' and requt'St an
Amt'rican flag that has been flown over the Capitol. And you won't 1:r2
alone. This y&lt;'ar, mort' than OO,!XXl prop!&lt;' are expected to make similar
I'EQU&lt;'SIS.
The flags are not frt'P, but considt'ring that you roceivt' your choice of a
3-by-5-foot or a 5-by-8-foot flag complt'tewith a docummt certifving that It
was flown over the Capitol, it's a barrgaln.
•
WiUiam Raines, the administration assistant in the Office of the
Architt'CI of the Capitol, said proplt' can requt'St that a flag he flown tor a
spec1ai oo;asion, like a birthday or holiday. The datt' and the person's
name art' mcluded on the certUicate that is suitable for framing.
"Right now, we've flown 43,!XXl flags already this year and we won 't havt'
any trouble brt'aklng 90,!XXl," Raines said. The rocord was set In 1984 when
97,lXXl flags wert' flown on request.
It normally takes about thrt't' Wt't'ks or more to rect'ive a flag, but somt'
St'asons art' buster than others. Chrlsimas and Independen&lt;P Day are the
two busit'St limt'S, Raint'S said, with J,&lt;ro re&lt;jut'Sts for this past July Fourth
alont'.
Unfortunat&lt;'IY. not all the July 4 flag requt'Sts cou ld he hooorro this y(&gt;ar,
h&lt;' said.
No, it was not a qut'Stion of manpower- hlsdfi&lt;P ran 10 &lt;OODags up and
down the Capitol's flagpoles on July 4, 1976, during th&lt;' Bl&lt;Pntennial. It's
just that the House and S..nate stationt'ry start'S that supply the flags ran
out of the most popular vari&lt;'ty- the J.by -5-loot nykln flag , that at $7.50 is
the lt'ast expensive.
Both stationery start'S exP&lt;'Ct shipments soon to f&lt;'P l&lt;'nish tll&gt;ir stocks
that also Include a J.by-5-loot cotton flag for $8, a 5-by-8-foot nylon flag for
$17.50 and a 5-by-8-loot cotton flag for $18.25.
Intert'Stt'd persons can caU or write their reprt'Smtative or senator. A
cht'Ck lor the appropriate amount, mad&lt;' out to the Ke!'pel' of tht'
Statlont'ry, must accompany the request, along with infonnationaboutthe
date the flag should he flown and tiM&gt; person or group to whom it will 1:r2
preS&lt;'nted.
But to he frank, there art' flags - and thPn· are flags .
There are huge 8-by-12-foot flags that fly from morning until evt'ning
OV&lt;'r the ffiSI and Wt'St front sol the Capitol and over the wings dthe House
and S..Oate when they art' in St'Ssion.
Thesmallt'r, requt'SI flags havt' a briefer moment d glory - if you blink,
you might miss it.
Till' maintenance crEW of the architect of the Capitol's office !Pup tot he
roof t'ach day and run ttl&lt;' requt'St flags up to the top of ooe d thrff flag
polt'S, 1&lt;'1 tht'm pauSt' there lor a rnommt , and bring them down again.
They are then sent to toc flag ol!ice for certification and then mailro to the
conslltuent.
. Raines said that on July 4, 1976, during the bicentennial, 18 additional
flagpoles wefi' lnstall!'d and the cr!'W worked from midnight until late in
· tht' morning running IO,((XJ flags up and down the Oag poles.
If you want one of the official nags that regularly fly OVt'r theCapitol. you
can ask your mt'mlx&gt;r of Congrt'Ss al:xJut that too. They art' frt't' rut there is
a two-year waiting list for !hoSt' nags that are given away when they are
·
consldt'rro too worn to Oy over the Capitol.

T~E ToUGH &amp;EtiTENCING
LAW HA~NT BEEN

tWI£
HoLD

THAT

Today in history
Today is Tut'Sday, July 29. the 210th day or 1986 with 155 to follow.
Th&lt;' moon is moving away from Its last quaner.
Th&lt;' morning stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
The evming stars are Venus. Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Leo. They Include French
historian Alexis de Tocqueville In ~-novelist Booth Tarkington In 1869,
·· Italian dictator Benito Mussollnlln lB83. United Nations Secretary-Gent'ral
• ·Dag Hammarskjeld in 1900, actors William Powell In 1892 and Richard
. Egan In 1923 (age 63), and Transportation Secretary Elizal:r21h Dole in 1936
• (ag&lt;'50) .
On this date In history:
In 1914, the first transcontinental telephone linkup was complt'tt'd
betwl'fll San Francisco and New York City.
· In 1968, Pope Paul VI upheld the prohibition or all artUlclal mt'ans of birth
· control for Roman CathoUcs.
• In 1974, the House Judiciary Commillt'P voted a second Impeachment
: artiCle against President Richard Nlxoo. The vote was 28-10.
:· In 1981, Prlnct&gt; Charles, heir apparent to the BritiSh throoe, marriro
( Lady Diana Spen&lt;Pr at St. Paul's Cathedral In London.

•,
I

Packers.release Jim Zorn

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
POmeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Tuesday. July 29, 1986

To Heather
EDITOR'S NOTE: Mr. Kilpatrick's column today Is cast In the
form or his annual birthday Jett&lt;'f to
his oldest grancrhlld.
Heather, my klveSome birthdays are more Important than others. I cal\ rememl:r2r
wanting sorely to reach al, IiecauS&lt;'
D seemro so Vt'fY much more
mature than 29. Then I wanted to
hurry up on 4l, but getting to 50 was
oo tluill at all. We wm't talk al:xJut
th&lt;' otl~rs . Any!Dw, today brings
one of your big blrt blays. Sixteen 1
What a lovt'ly age!
It'S l:r2t'n a rremorable year for
you. Twelvt' rmnths ago yoo still
could l:r2 categorized as girl,
teen-aged: blond, blue-eyed, 5 Et&gt;t
5, all arms and legs and freckles
and glgglt'S. Now, quite suddenly,
you're yoong woman - and very
nicely assemblro at that. Your
father swears you !pelld I'M&gt; hours
every morning pu ttlng on your
face. which sounds Hke a fatherly
exaggt'ration In me, but the ttme

------------------------------------~----lng amid the gore. Trees go on for
have happened to you. For t'Ml years and years, you said, regard·
weeks of concentrated criticism lt'SS or wars. Some trees still are
and Instruction, you shared the standing that shaded the Wars of
Intoxicating pleasure r1 talking the Roses, Aglncourt, Hastings,
about writing With fellow writers. Gettysburg, and all that stutf.:Your
You tackled assignments In writing friend said "death." You r(&gt;plled,
ftction, pot'try, radio scrtpts and "the smell d a nt'wbook."That'sa
newspaper stnrles. You worked oo poslttvt' rt'sponse, all right. N..w
copy rolling. You stayed up halt the bool\5, like rew cars, have a smell
night and staggered ctr to class at 8 that ooght to he bottlro like
the next morning. Stamina! That's perfume.
Anyhow, you fell in Jove this
my heatht'r at 16.
You returned with all kinds 'If summt'r - not with a t_x:r, which
Impressions. One of your fellow will come In time, but with a word.
students, a brUIIant boy, arrived The word Is "t'Cit'Ctic." Splendid! A
with a mohawk hairdo and a ring In sup(&gt;rlatlve word! It exactly
his ear. Anotber talkro of commit· descril:r2s your taste In both writing
tlng suicide. He was "all nega- and reading. You quoted Emily
tives." You made up a gametnplay Dickinson: That's a wordtotipyour
with him: Every time he putforth a hat to.
negative word, you would answt'r
You dt'Veloped a crush on
with a positive word. "War," he Garrison Keillor, author or "Lake
said. '"In!es," you rt'Sponded. I Wol:r2gon Days,'' and you wanted to
askt'd how rome. You said that write the way he writes. "I'm OK at
ev&lt;'ry painting you t'Ver had st't'n rt developing charactt'f," you sald,
a battle showro some trt't'S survlv· "rut I'm not much on plot." You
had triro a short story about the old
man who sits in front of Burkt''s
Store at Woodvill&lt;', but you couldn't
tlink or anything to do with him
after you descrtbed him. I said that
plots will rome; just open your
brain and see what comt'S out, Let
the dd Imagination flow. And kt't'p
writing'
Then you said something that
touched me. "I find It n~ary to
-we,tDQ
write," you said. That's the way II
1\'l:i
Is, or wght to l:r2, among the
professionals. We havt' to writ&lt;'. w.,
~JJll
nred to write. It's nt'CE'Ssary tor us,
~~~~~"1
If we would pursue happiness, to put
"'J\1IVI't
OD&lt;' word after another, and one
sentenre and paragraph after
another, just reveling In the rlcht'S
of the English language.
What else do we want to
remember? You also spent a Wt'Pk
this summer at a choral camp,
improving your skills at sight
rmdlngwlthachoir. Youht'ldyour
title as the pre-eminent teen-agro
It was tht' best thing th!!t could

fit'.

This was tbe summer yoo
dt'cldt'd - well, almost decided to l:r2come a writt'f. Three years
ago you were going to l:r2coll\t' an
astronomer, which was OK by me,
rut In l:r2come a writer! Now you're
talking. Your gran&lt;lather Walker
Stone, editor In chief of ScrippsHoward, would be just as )ieased as
I am.
This excitt'ment camt'as illlows:
Your English teach"' at Rappahanoock High School announced that a
two-wt't'k oourse In crEIItlvewritlng
would be offerro this summt'r at the
University or VIrginia. You applied
for one of the slots, got accepted,
and drove the family van down to
Otarlottt'SVllle. (This was also the
summer you got your driver's
licenSt', an expertence calculated to
tum your father's gray hair white. I
Last week you returned, and we sat
for an hour In the Jdtdten talking
al:xJut the course.

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By CERI!SE ANDERSON
UPI Sporis Writer
NEW YORK iUP)I - The six
jurors who have the power to
reshaP&lt;' proft'Sslonal football have
grappled with the USFL' s antitrust
c !aims against the NFL for 25 hours
withOut rpchlng a verdict.
The flv&lt;' WOillt'l1 and one man
resumt' their deliberations this
morning In U.S. District Court In
Manhattan and are slated to
continu&lt;' thejr consultations until 9
p.m. unlt'ss they com&lt;' to an
agrremt'Dt earlier.
The jury is conslderin~ six
ft'deral antitrust claims and thrre
common law c~ against the
NFL. It the jurors lind against the

Sunday at Trinity. And just by
gabbing for an hour In the kitchen,
you madeyourgrandfatheraproud
and happy fellow. Yourjunioryear
should be l:r2ttt'f yet.

Our way or no food ___J_ac_k_A_n_d_er_so_~_v&amp;_·

Gr.::_io_df;e:...!...;:..._:'h__:s!:_p..:_:ea::_r

WASHINGTON - The State
Department's messianic 21eal for
privatt' entt'rprtse has male It
more difficult for needy Third
World nations to get delivery r1
SUIJllus American food crops. Soffit'
reclpient countrit'S are l:r21ng prt'S·
sured to "privatize" their dJstribu·
lion systems l:r2fore food wUJ 1:r2
Sent ·
Foggy Bottom bureaucrats insist
that no one has l:r2t'n starving as a
result or the ideologtcaUy lnspirro
rro tape, but the effort to dtangethe
structure of the recipient regimes
has left a sour taste In some far-off
capitals.
It has also inlurtated u.s.
agricultural exportm and 00 .,
memher of the S..nate.
"I do oot ~llt'veln using food as a
political weapon," Sen. John
Melcht'r, 0-Mont.. told our assoelate Stt'wart Harris.
Melcher was unablt' to lntert'St
his colleagues on the Agriculture
Commlttt't' In the situation, so he

hlrro a stenographer and ronductro a 9lio hearing. He invited
r&lt;'Prest'ntatlves of eight food Importing countries to teD tretr
experiences with the State Departmt'nt's arm-twisting as practiced
by the Agency for InternatiOnal
Development In the Food for Peact'
program.
Ht'r&lt;' are some d the romplalnts
he heard:
- Riots and revolutions were
raging 1n other African countries
alter a devastating famin&lt;' when
AID officials held up food ship·
ments to Kt'nya for three months
until the Kenyan government reluctanlly agreed to Jet the prtvate
sector diStribute u.s. food . As the
Kenyans e&gt;qialnro to Melcher,
ther&lt;' was no ant' outside their
govt'rnment agenclt'S who had the
nect'Ssary expertlst' to handle the
millions of tons of food waiting to
rome ln. They also pointed out that
theft' was 110 guarani&lt;'&lt;' tht' food
would find Its way from tl:r2 private

chasing agmcy l:r2fore rice would
l:r2 shipped under Food for Peace.
"Th me, It typ!tes basically an
a ttltude or arrogance on tit!: part r1.
rur btreaucrals, who sit here In
Washington and ft't'l tl:r2y know
l:r2tter than theSt' governmt'nts do
what needs to l:r2 oont'," Steve
Gabl:r2rt, ext'Cutlvt' vice president
of the Rice Millers Association, told
Melcher.
AID offtclals say they're only
enforcing "St'lt-help" conditions
mandatro by Congress, and insist
tba t emergency provisions In tht'
program allow for immrolate food
deliveries regardless or agrt't'ment
on privatization.
But U.S. agrlbuslnessmen are
concemro that the pressure to
privatize may cause foreign buyers
to buy their grain from Canada and
Australia . In fact, Kenya bought
120,!XXl tons rl. wheat from Australia
while the negotiations over distribu·
lion were dragging on.

distribution firms to the peopl&lt;' who
needed 11 most.
- The same problem - Ito
prtvatesectnrcapabllity-plagued
the Marxist regime In Mozambiqut'. AID ctrlclals tried to strongarm the Mozambiquan government into privatizing food
distribttion, but eventually backro
down when the government stood
firm. Still, the pressure alone
aroused resentment In Mozamlique, where 100,1XXJ had died of
starvation in 1984. "When you drive
down the road and you see dead
lx&gt;dlt'S, you cannot permit (that
kind or agreement) even for the
best of .phJiosophlcal reasons," a
food importer tnld M~lcher.
- U.S. diplomats In Manna told
the Phlllpplnt' government it had to
let private Importers compete with
the governmmt food agency.
- In the Dominican Republic,
· where 00 people dlro In 1984 food
riots, AID offictals Insisted that the

Holy crusade ____- - :-__

B~' ~d:inV'DiAS '

step."
The Jetter also suggests that his
next polltkal goal IS nothing Jess
than capturing total oontrol rt
Michigan's Republican Party:
"Onct&gt; precinct delegates havt'
been elected, they have within their
grasp the power to selt'Ct nominees
for numerous major offices In tbe
state, including candldatt'S for the
state Supreme Court."

R.ol:r2rtson's prt'mature rmction
to the preliminary developments In
Michigan illustrates the danger
Inherent when religious fuOOa1118t tallsm mrets political activism.
For more than I'M&gt; centurtt'S,
most of the nation's polltlcial
leaders - Republicans and Democrats. Ill:r2rais and conSt'rvattvt'S,
have tumro to God for personal
spiritual guldanct&gt;.
"But noD&lt;' has clalmro tn speak
lbr God oo matters or public
policy," ootes ~ormer Rep. John
Buchanan, R·Aia., chairman of
People for the American Way, an
organlzatkln basro In Washington,
D.C. that promott'S ronstttutlonal
liberties.
Reinhold Niebuhr, widely regarded as the natiOn's leading altlt
rentury theologian, has argued
persuasively that "the tt'Ddency to
claim God as an ally for our
partisan values and ends Is ... the
9lur&lt;P rt all religious fanaticism."
Religious leaders routlnl!ly seek
cr hold political offlct&gt;. The Rev.
Jesse Jackson made a bid for the
Democratic presldmtlal nomina·
tion In 1984, while the clergymen In
Congress range from Episcopalian
Sen. John Danforth, R-Mo., chair·
man r1 the Senate Commerce
Committee, to Baptist Rep. WIIUam Gray, D·Pa., Chairman d the
House Bu~et Committee.
But they - unlike Robertson and
other tundamentaliBts - oo not
claim tba t they alone hold dlvlnely
Inspired positions on pullllc poUcy
or that those who disagree with
them are defYing God.
Does Robertson embrace ·those
.Intolerant views? Look at his
response to Kemp when be ells·
agreed with the rEPretentatlve's
caD l:lr stronger sanctions against

South Africa's racist governrnmt:
"I am a proptv&gt;t of God. God
hlmselt wUI fight for fit' against you
- and he will win."
Similarly, In a fund -raising letter
last summt'r, Rol:r2rtson crttlclzed
a U.S. Supremt' Court decision by
claiming that "once agabt, the will
of God and til&gt; wiU of the American
people has been thwartro by a
han&lt;lul rl. misguldro Individuals."
He speaks of the Constitution as

l!ft ~ Wrtter

Cleveland Browns head roach
Marty Schottenhelml'r has a reputatlon or being quiet an'd calm, and
his &lt;'mplayers tend to Jieep mum oo
any controversy Involving the NFL
team.
But those reputations were lgnored Monday. Schonenheimer. his
race apd voice trembling. lashed.
out at Sam Rutigliano and said his
prrot'CE'Ssor's remarks concerning
the death or Don Rogt'rs are "an
annoyanCt'" while Iring "out of
touch and out of date."
In published reports, Rutigliano
said peer pressure on the Browns
caused Rogers to use cocalnt'. The
free safety dlro JuJII'''!I Of cocalnt'
poisoning In his hometown of
Sacramento, CaJU.
Howev&lt;'r. the Sacramento
County Coroner's office stated It
found no evidence that Rogt&gt;rs was
a hablrual user of drugs.
"Sam's remarks are an annoyance," said Schottenhelmer after
Monday's morning practiCe at
Lakeland Community College.
"Does it bother me? That's probably not a strong t'noug~ word In all
candor.
,
."His remarks are out of date
l:r2cause he hasn't been here In two
years and has no idea what's going

"a marvelo~s documt'Dt for selfgovernment by Christian prople
and atheist prople" who are using 11
"to dt'Stroy the very foundatiOns of
our 90Ciety."
In fact, It is Robertson who Is
violating the splrtt If not the Jetter rt
tht' clause of the Constitution's
Article VI that stalf&gt;s "no reUglous
tt'St sha ll ever l:r2 required as a
qualltlcation to any oHice or public
trust under the United Statt'S."

The Daily Sentinel
t VSPS lfi-Hll
~

Berry's World

I
I

IMvtol'"' ol Mulllmodta. Joe.

Published C'Vi'r)l artrornoon . Moftday
throu~h Friday. 111 Court St., Po·
mN4Jt, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
llshtng Company)MulllmPdla, ln·c..

Polll&lt;'roy. Ohio m69, Ph. 992-21!6. S•·

cond class postagE' paid at Pomeroy ,
Ohio.

MC'mber : Unit«&lt; Presi International ,
Inland Dally Press Association and the
Ohio Newspa~rAuoclatton . National
Advf't'tlstnr Rt~prHf'ntlllv~. Branham

N«.'WspaJM"r SaiPS, 133 Third Avenue,
N&lt;'W fork. New York ~0017 ..

PO!ITMASI'ER: Send address cha.,..
Sonttn~ Ill Cooort Sr.,
PomerO)I. Ohio~-

to Th• Doily

SVNCalrriOJif ~TBS ;
BJCanler..-MolwOne Wloek .....•,.~.. :............... ........ ,.$1110

On• Month ..................... ........... SUO
On• Ytar :.. .. ......: .......... ........... 5!)!.20
SINGLE COPY
' 1'111~&amp; •
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Daily ..................... '.............. 211 c.,r.
Su..crlbcrs not dNirtna to pay thl o.~r·
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The Dally s.nttnot oa aJ. 1..-12 111Gllll
boola. 'credit will bo atven !'lrrlfl' 11!1&lt;~
week .
. ~ , . .....

.

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...

. ..

pagt'S or the transcript should 1:r2
givt'D to the jurors - the t'ntire
transcript would he made
a~~aable.

The approximately 7,!XXl pagt'S of
tt'Stlrnony rt'Corded In the 11-wt't'k
trial, with conversations l:r2twt'Pn
the Ia1\Yers and til&gt; judgt' at the
l:r2nch and in his robing 100m
blackro out, were dellverro In the
jury room.
The jurors later Monday smt out
a note saying tht'y Wt're "having
dl!flculty" Interpreting the first two
qut'Stlons d 61 Ilsted on th&lt;'lr verdict
sheets. The qut'Stlorerlng whether
the NFL had m:JOOpoly poW&lt;'r, they
decide who till' NFL's competitors
are and whether the NFL can
control that area d compelllion.

No

~

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KIRTI.AJIW: Oh~ -IUP!)

go_v_er_nm_
..n_ta-l:xJ-IIs-h_ _food
__
pu_r·__

DETROIT iNEA) -Here Is the
analysis of the first round r:1.
-dek!gate selt'Ctlon to the 1988
Republican National O:mvention
being offered by the Rev. Marion G.
"Pat" Rol:r2nson: "THE CHRISTIANS HAVE WON!"
In a Dt'W fund -raising Jetter,
Robertson explains that til&gt; "Christians" are the people recruited
throughout Michigan by his Freedom Council and commlltro to his
stlli·Undt'Clarro candidacy for the
Republican presld&lt;'nllal
nomination.
They "won" l:r2cause, prior to the
May '!I !Uing deadHne, a large
numl:r2r or Rol:r2rtson's followers
officially dt'Ciared themselvt'S candldatt'S for precinct dt'legate posl·
!Ions in the state's Aug. 5 GOP
primary t'lt'Ction.
But It the Christians won, who are
the heathens and the Infidels who
lost?
The only other active candidatt'S
In the Republican prt'Sidential
primary here are VI&lt;P President
George Bush and Rep. Jack Kemp
of New York. Are they- and their
supporters - to 1:r2 dismissed as
pagans or heretics?
Robertson's letter implies that ht'
has l:r2come ltv&gt; Lord's chosen
candidate In the race: "W&lt;' saw the
hand of God going before us In
Michigan, affirming oor every

NFL on any of tht' six antitrust
claims, the USFL has asked lor
damages that could amount to
Dt'arly $1.7 bllllon.
The younger league has not
specified the amount of damagt'S it
wants for the comlnon Jaw claims.
The jury can compensate lor tht'
USFL's lost profits and award
punlt lve damagt'S of any amount II
decides on !hoSt' counts.
The jurot:S had asked to revlt'w
parts of six wilnt'SS&lt;'S' tt'Stimonit's
l:r2fore they rret'Ssed Saturday.
When they rt'Sumed delll:r2ratlons
Monday, Judge P&lt;'ter Leisure said
rat'her than delay the procet'dlngs
- while tbe la~~Yers ilr both
.leagut'S t(ied to agree on which

8~().~~~ cpac~.. upset over remarks

__:R:.:o:::,:b~e::..:.r.=::_t~~~a~l~te~r~s

115

Michael Tllomaa, Don llumell, Sluumn Roush, HDd
Adam Wyatt, bat boy. Second row, David Bees, Sieve
Carulben, Shawn Hawley, L.J. Midi, and Darla
Lopa. 'INrd row are ooaches TetTy Wyatt, Ron
Lopa, and Larry Milch.

decision on antitrust claims

~~tys~~~rr::.ru:~~::;~~~

mWJon.
Dickey, who turns ',)1 Oct. 19, has
been the Packers' main quartt'r·

back for the last 10 years. But
midway through the 1985 season, ht'
askt'd Gregg to l:r2nch him as
starter because he was unhappy
with his performance on the field .

By FREDERICK. WATERMAN
UPI Sports WrUer
SMfrnFIELD, R.I. (UPI) -The
Nt'w England Patrtots are relieved
and reassured that their tralnlng
camp is unlike that of the St. Louis
Cardinals, tht'ir oppont'nts in Saturday's Hall of Fame game.
"This is supposed to be a tralning
camp, not a prison camp," All-Pro
cornerback Raymond Oaybom
said Monday as tht' Patriots began
preparation for the annual contt'SI
in Can ton. Ohio.
"Coach (Raymond)' Berry has
had in-house experten&lt;P, having
gone through this himself as a
player, which l:r2nt'flts us.''
Gene Stallings, tht' Dt'W Cardinals
coach, has recently come under fir&lt;'
for his rigorous practices and not
letting the players have watt'r for
the first Ill mlnutt'S.
"Tht're art' diflt'rent approacht'S
to it. You just have to do what you
fCt'l comfortable with," said Berry.
"One abUity which our team has is
it knows when to work and wht'n to
have fun working.
"There is nothing incompatible
about enjoying your w&lt;rk and
working good . Our playt'rs work

Six.jurors unable to reach

60fN(;

t..

after requesting a 10- perrent
~crease that would have pushed
his annual salary to more than $1

Pats pre-season not
like a 'prison camp'

CONIOLA,..ON WINI'!IER8 - Tile MlddJepoli
Carclnall ·~ tbi! Gtt!Jipolla S!iBIIIon 11-1
!iaA!rday Ill lbe ooiiiOiadon pme ctllbe KYler Creek
Lilt~ ~e IGUI'IIameat to nd .. wlh tltlrd -ace
bo110n, Shown wlblhelr tpOMar tro~ are·beeiiDI
lrom lbe left, Kevlll Lope, bat boy, Rollllle Wyatt,

OLD t(lt\G COLQ WAS A NeRRY oi.D SOU~ ...

~

By UnMed Press lnlernattonal
The Green Bay Packers released
lormt'r S..attle quarterback Jim
Zorn Monday and In a surprise
move announcro an agreement has
been reached with veteran Lynn
Dickey.
Coach Fo!Tt'St Gregg said a
tentatlv&lt;' agrremt'Dt has l:r2t'n
reachro with Dickey, who was
relt'ased as a frre agmt this year

James J. Kilpatrick

must l:r2 well SP&lt;'nt. You look good to

The Daily Sentinei-Page-:--3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

J

'"'. '

(Browns executive vice president
· Rutlgiiano has said that the and legal counseli Jim Bailey, and
a,to)NIIs haY&lt;' reiaxed their attitude W&lt;' wUI decide what to do at a later
'Oil ' drugs. Schottenheimer h;ld a
date."
quick respoDSt'.
Rutigliano. who coached ClevE""I resent the implication that Iand from 1978-SI, Is credlle&lt;' with
WE''ve l:r2t'n lt'Ss vigilant with our founding the lnnt'r Circle, an
playt'rs," he said. "Our policy on ln·houSt' group that helps players
lhls matter Is private, and not to be deal with substance a ruSt'. RuligJJ.
iliscussro In a public forum by ano said the program has Wt'a·
someone stUI connt'Ctro; all:r21t kt'nro since his departure.
remotely, with the Oevt'land
"The Inner Circle Is strong and Is
Browns."
being run under the auspices or tre
Rutigliano, dismissed after the Cleveland Cli~ic." said Kt'Vin
Browns were 1·71n October.1984, Is Byrne, the Browns' vice prt'Sident
l:r21ng paid
per St'ason of public relations.
through 1988. Team owner Art
Schottenheimt'r has severro the
ModE!II sald h&lt;' will discuss Rutlglla - head coach's connt'Ctions with tht'
oo's remarks with his fonnercoach lnnt'r Circle, but maintains the
when the latt&lt;'f rt'tums from a avenut'S of communication " are
coaching Irip to Australia and Nt'w wide open."
Zealand in August.
"I talkt'd to Hanford Dixoo and
Otrls Rock ins cthe Browns prest'nt
"Sam remains under contract to at the bachelor party given for
lht' Browns, and subjt'CI to the Rogers the night before he died I,
clauS&lt;' conrerning conduct detri· and told tll&gt;m not to be distractro
m~ntal Ill tht' learn." said Modell. by
Sam Rutigliano," said
"I havt' - discussed this with Schottmheimer.

sm.&lt;m

·Reid, Vogt are impressive
in U. S. Olympic Festival

Hunter coul'8e slated

•

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9 :00P .M. ONLY .
NE ES.
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SCHOOL AND THE FAIR.
CALL
FOR THE BOTH OF YOU
FOR SALE PRICES
(JUST FOR KIDS) FROM 114-819

FOR THE BOTH OF YOU
3RD

SYRACUSE

992-3982

CAll. UNDA KATHY 01 DEBBIE

SOON~

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THE

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THE 13th

DUCK"
6"

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MATINEES
THIS . . .EAI

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155/8011.3 ......... $39.95
185/75114 ......... S46.50
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225/75115 ......... $55.00
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(NOT ALL SIUS IN AU. TIUD DESIGNS I
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are11 where tmme carrifr aervkt ll ·
available.
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•BURIAL GROUND
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DESIGN

al!l»&lt;rlpUMJ by mob pormtuell·in ·
!

BARGAIN MATINEES SAT - SUN I
WEDNESOAV · ALL SEATS 12 . 50
A!lfoiiSitDN EVERV TUESOAV 12 . 50·

COMING THIS WEEK

EQUIPMENT
•ALL SEASON TREAD

Vogt who will not race In toda}·'s
Onal swimming events, had a time
or 2:19.34 In the 200 backstroke,
knocking more than twost'COndSott
her l:r2st prevlous mark. Vogt Ued
Jet! Olsen, who woo ftve swimming
goldS at last year's Ft'Stlval. Seth
Van Nt't'rden, Wilmington, Del.,
won the men's JOO.mett'r brl.'llstroke In 1:06.01 and swam tbe
trl.'llstrok&lt;' leg or the Wt'St's
winning 400-meter medley relay.
Dady Vincent or Gaint'Svlllt',
Fla., finished llrst Ill the womt'D's
100-metl'f freestylt' and also competro wtth Vogt oo the winning
Reid, a ~foot-9, 240-pound Vlrgl· relay team. MlkeJolrtson,Ankeny,
nla Beach, Va., rt'Sident headed for Iowa, also earned two golds bt the
the University r1 'Nprth Carolina. · men's mmeter bttterlly and tht'
lx&gt;unced back from Sunday's sub- fly It'&amp; r1 tbe Wt'St relay.
Pfll' effort Ji,score 14 politts as the
In basketball, the South evened
So\lth beat . the North ~ · in Its record at 1-1 as South Cwlna 's
secoild· round action. Earlier, Terry Dazier supported Reid with
Jerome Lane scored 24 points to 17 points and Kentucky's Rex
pact&gt; !he ,East to a 96-89 triumph ChapQIIIJI added 12 points and live
aver ~ffi. ·
assists.

PIKE · RT.35 WEST

-4415-4524

~84~J.~5400~~~aft·e~r~6~p,.m~.iiii~;i![iijjjiiiJ

•BUILT FOR ORIGINAL

HOUSTON iUPI) - Budding
basketball star J.R. Reid and
swimmer Vicklt' Vogt each shOwed
lmpresslv&lt;' movt'S down th&lt;' ian&lt;'
Monday night at tht' U.S. Olympic
FesUval.
Vogt, a 14-year-old Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. native, won two mort'
gold mroals to give her five golds
and a silver overall In three days of
competition. Vogt won the 200meter backstrokt' and swam the
second lt'g for the South squad
which won the tm-meter freestyle
relay.

~JI JAC~SON

A huntt'r saft'ty course will bt'
held Aug. 4-9. from 6-9 p.m. mch
evening. at the home of John
Costanzo. Classsizt'limitro. Partie·
!pants must pre-register by calling

•STEEL BELTED

.

~

with more mmtal
intensity
conCt'ntration
oo what
they and
are
oolng. At the same time, they art'
relaxro and enjoy working," he
said.
Ironica._lly. lx&gt;th Berry and Stal·
lings grew up In Paris, Texas.
w~re they playro high school ball
lor Berry's dad, "who was not a
disciplinarian," notro Berry, UPI
Coach r1 the Year in 19851brlt'ading
N..w England to Super Bowl XX.
"I think you can get discipline

without whacking prop!&lt;' on top of
the helmt't. As a matter of fact, II
·rve got to whack tll&gt;m rn top of the
heim&lt;'t.. .. " Berry ht'Sitatro.
"WeU, thert'won't he any, it's not
nt'Ct'Ssary. I don 't St't' that it's
nt'Ct'Ssary to intimidatt' anyl:xJdy
and I oon't intend to," he said .
Patriots guard Ron Wootro said
last season's succt'ss havt' made
this training camp easier l:r2cauSt'
t.ht' requirt'mt'nts for success art'
known.
"This is the first year when W&lt;'
know the lt'vt'l of performanCt'
nect'Ssary to l:r2at teams Ilk&lt;' th&lt;'
.lt'ts, Dolphins and Raiders. Wt''re
not out thert' blind, ft't'llng oor way
through It all.
"This group is much more
maturt' now. Wt''ve won the AFL
championship and we'vt' got unity
as a Patriots lt'am l:r2cauSt' we've
won and lost togetht'r," said
Wooten, "and that's Invaluable."

The I'EQU&lt;'St also It'd to thOughts of
retirement.
But Grt'gg said D:ck&lt;'Y has
assured him he wants to play
footba U and is wUIIng to earn his
spot In th&lt;' quartt'rback corps. With
the rt'leaS&lt;'ofZom, the Packt'rsst ill
have vt'tt'ran quarterbacks Randy
Wright and Vince Ft'rragamo and
rooki&lt;' Rabbi&lt;' Bosco.
At Kirtland , Ohio, Clevelanrl
Browns coach Marty Schottenh&lt;'i·
mer lashed out at Sam Rudgliano
Monday, saying his predecessor's
rt'marks al:xJut the death of Don
Rogers "ar~ out of dat&lt;'l:r2caust' he
hasn't l:r2t'n ht're In two yPars ancJ
has no idea what's going on.' '
In published reports. Rutlglia m:
said prer prt'Ssu r&lt;' on the Browns
Caust'd Ro~rs IO US&lt;' cocaine. The
free saf&lt;'IY dlro June '!I of cocaine
poisoning In his hometown of
Sacramento. Calif.
At St. Louis, plac&lt;'-kickt'r John
Lt'e, the first Korean-oom player in
the NFL. arrlvro Monday with
plans to donatt'to charity a portion
or his new $875,!XXl ron tract with fhf
St. Louis Cardinals. His agent.
Lt'igh Steinberg, said Lt't''s fouryt'ar contract is the largt'st for a
In tht'

992-2094

•.

-- II

SEIVING MEIGS CO. FOI 20 YEllS, 1966·1986

13 Weeki ..... :...:.:... ..... ~........ .. .. . SJU6
:111 w..kl ........... ,.:............... ..... Pl.li

~ Weokloij~;~~·-- .. 1!182C

VISA

w-.. ...

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38 Weoki ....... :..................:.....'.. N5.l0
52 Weeki .............................. ,1.••trl.ll
.
'
'

••

'I

�July 29, 1988

Ohio

Davis end~ slump, paces 4-2
Houston·victory over Atlanta

~SERVICE- More than a lmndred Eastern,
Southern and MeiKS Varslly football pla_vers will wear
mouth pards this season, rourlesy ol Drs. Craig
Malbews and Larey Kennedy, Middleport. Eastern
and Soulbern players were fitted for the mouth
protectors Sunda_v afternoon at lbe denttils' oHice.
Meigs players were lilted Monda_v morning and Dr.
Kennedy (pictured) was at work right away molding

tbe guards. U lbe pards had been sent awa_v lo a
laboraloey, cost lor each would have been from PI to
$25. Materials add another $5 to the coot of each
guard. The local dentWIII are planrmg to make this
free service available annually. Paul Grady oftbeTrl
Coonty Dental Lab, has also been lov&lt;llved In the
project.

•

Bosox rebound with 3-1 wm
over Chisox; Indians beaten
ByiANWVE
UPI Sports Writer
The Basion Red Sox. in lhelhrOPS
ol a 3-11 slarl sine&lt;&gt; lhe AII·Siar
break. resurged Monday nigh!
behind a solid outing from AI
Nipper.
Nipper. 5-7. bee am~ Ibe first Red
Sox pitcher other than Rogrr
CIE'mens lo post a victory after the
mid-season classic when he stopped
Ihe Chicago White Sox 3-1. The Red
Sox's lead over the New York
Yankees in the Alllt'rican Ll'agu£'

East has dropped from seven to
rour games.
Nipper struck out four and
walkE'd on~ in hurling his third
completE' game of the season.
Boston won for only the third time
on ils 11-game post·All· Star break
road llip. He also won for the first
time since June 2.~ and and broke a
three-game losing slrPa k.
Nipper was oot for ovPr a month

~rsonal

earlier ln the season with a severr.d

muscle in his knl'('. He admiltPd
!hat this outing was his best since
re-tu rning to the' rotat ion in Junf'.

The right-hander lost his bid for
his first major-league shutout in the
eighth. John Cangelosi lnl off with a
bunt single and went to third aftrr a
pair of infield outs and srored on
Greg Walker's single
Floyd Bannister. 5-8. gave up just
four hil s and struck out nine and

tossed his first rompletr game of
the season in a

losing rfror1 .

Chicago is in its longest losing

streak sin~ July of 1978 when it los!
ninr in a row.
Elsewhere. Detroit defeated
Cleveland 5-l, Toronto blankE'd
Kansas City 6-0, Baltimore stopped
Texas 4-3. Cal~om ia tripped Oak ·
land 6-3. Milwaukl'(' beal New York
5·4 and Minnesota topped Seattle6-5
in ll innings.
In the NL it \lias: Pittsburgh 7.
Montreal4: New York 9, Chicago2:
Sl. Louis 3, Philadelphia I ; San
Diego 5, Clncinnali 2; Housron 4,
Allanla 2; llls Ango:oles 2 San
Francisco 1.
Tiger!! 5, lnd..,s 1
AI Cleveland, Jack Morris. 12·6.
~xtmdPd hfs winning streak lo Hve
games to pace the Tigers. Morris
stretched his strook to 44 2·3
ronsecutivr innings without .JIIowlng an earned run unt tl Andre
Thornton's one-out sacrifice tty in
the six th. Kirk Gibson addPd a solo
homer. Ken Schrom fell 1o 11·3.
Blue Jays 6, Royah 0
At Kansas City, Tony FernandP7
drovr in four mns with a tlip!Pand
a homer to lead the Blur Jays. Jim
Clancy, 12·5, allowed just four hils
m going the dlstane&lt;&gt;. Charlie
Leibrandt. 9-7. took lhe loss.
Orioles 4, Ran&amp;"rs 3
At Arling1on. Texas, Larry
Sheets· two-out single srorPd Ca l
Ripkrn from ~ond base in the
eigh lh inmng to give the Orioles the
decision. their fifth slrafhl tri·
umph. Storm Davis. 7~8. was rhr ,
winner and Don Aase picked up his

Scoreboard ...
Majors

NATIONAL LE.\GUE
Ea!il
W L Pel.
Nf'W York ..
65 30 .ffi4
Montrral ......
49 47
510

AME RIC AN LEAGUE
By United Press International
Ea!il

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GH

59 .1q

Ne-w York

fill2

56
55

44
44
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Hous ton .

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52 47

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Cincinn&lt;J II. .
l.os ,\ngr&gt; lf's .

4~

47
~~

51
50
52

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.485
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45

53

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flf'nland
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Toron! o.. .
MIIW.i.JUkr£'

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:i2
:13

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4; 50 4R5
4~

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Kan~a s Cit\

St Louis .. .. ... .
Chicago ..

II ""

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44

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56

..117

44

560

Chicago .

42 56 .429 II

Oakland

4.1

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.4:{6 1011;

58

.426 111,1

Mirrnl' Sotu
42 57 .424
Monday's Results
D('trQil 5, CI('VC'Ia nd I

lJI/2

BosiOn 3, C'llicago 1
Toronro 6. Kansa s C!ly lJ
Ca lifornia 6, Oakland ·.1
Ba lllmorr 4. Tt• xa ~ .1
Milwauk{'(' 5, N4' W York -1
Mlnn('so la 6. Sl'alf l(' J. 11 inn in gs
Tuesday's Games
Of&gt;lroir ~ O ' N&lt;'JI 1·5\ at (')('vcland
~Nfekro

7·7l,

7 : 3.~

Boston 1Srl lrrs

p .m .
:1 -~ 1

!Cowlf':"-' 5·61. 8 p.m.

York (N irlsrn 2·2\ at Milwau k&lt;'&lt;' !Darwin 5·6\ , 8:35p.m.
Scalllr ~Bea lllf' 0-41 at MinnPsol&lt;l
tVlola 10-81. 8:.15 p.m.
TQronto !SII£'b2·10t at K&lt;~Mas Ci t\
N l'W

/Bankhead H 1. 8: :!5 p.m.

·

B8111mort- iFianagan 5-61

tLoynd 1·01. 8:35p.m.

&lt;I t

Trxa s

iClladwick 0.0\ at
land 1S1rwan JO\ . 10: 3S p.m.
Californ ia

•

O~;~k ·

Tuesday's GamPS
C' hi c&lt;.~go (n·oul 4-.1 and Moyf'r
ar 1'\('w

2-2 ~

tDa rling 9.:1 and
Andf'r.'&gt;on 0-U\ . 2, !l: J~ p.m .
P lllsburgh r Walk Hil al Montreal

tTibbs 4-61.7:.15 p.m .
Sl. Louis t Conroy .1-51 at PhiladC'I -

phiCJ tRilW]('_\" 11 -7\,7 :35 p.m.
rPaJmrr 6-81 at Hou!ilon

tScOII 10·61.

~ : 35

p.m .

Cincinnati rGullick son 7-61 at San
DIPgo (0r'a\'£'cky 7-8J. 10:05 p.m.

San Fnmcisco 1 Downs 0.0\ a1 Los
An~('[f's t Va[('O ZU('!a 13·6\, 10: 35 p.m.
Wednesday's Gilmes
Chicago a! N&lt;'w York. nigt11
Pillsburgll a t MonlrPal. nigh!

St . Louis at Phlladrlphia , night
Allan Ia ·ar Houston , night

st"Ven-game winning slrt&gt;ak. Kirk

McCaskill, 12-6, wen! eight innings
to heal Joaquin Anwjar, 6-3.
Donnie Moore goll~ lastthr"" outs
for his lith save.
Brewers 5, Y..,kees f
At Milwaukee. Rolln Yount
tripled twice and drove in three
runs to lead Mllwaukl'('. Rookie
Juan Nieves, 10-4, pitched 6 1·3
innings to pick up the vlclory. Dan
Plesac finished ilr his ninth save.
The Brewers scored four limes off
loser Joe Niekro. Jl. 7, In the first rwo
innings.
Twins 6, Mamers 5
At MinnE'apolls, KirbY Puckelt
belled a three-run homer and
singled In the winning run wilh one
out in the bottom of Ihe lllh lo lin
Mfnnesora. Karl Best. 1-2. took t~
loss. Keith Atherton, 5-3, al!owed
OnE' run In the ninth. bul retired the
lasl six in a row for the victory.

Fair Stakes race
begins Wednesday
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI 1 -The
$590.1Xll Ohio Stale Fair Stakes
begins Wednesday nlghl al Scioto
Downs wilh the running of bolh Ihe
$8}.050 Ohio Fairs Filly Trot for
2-year-olds and the $56,700 Pride d.
Ohio Filly Trot for 3-year-olds.
The Ohio State Fair Stakes,
formerly run ar the Fairgrounds.
are being raced al Scioto Downs for
tbe second· ronserutlve yE'ar.
The Ohio Fairs Filly Trol will be
split into two nine-horse divisions,
scheduled for Wednesday night"s
s=nd and third races. Tbetopfour
finishers from E'3Ch return for a
sixlh-race final to d""fde the slakes
winner.

The Pride of Ohio Filly Trol will
be run in a single field d. 11 hon;es.
The entire field raet&gt;S in the seventh
and 10th events of lhe night, wllh the
best finish in both miles winning the
slakes lrophy.

Mash, Durst are
tourney honorees
Chuck Mash. Pomeroy. earned a
new bseball bal for hilling Ihe first
home run in tbe l!l!li KygE'r Creek
Lillie League bast'ballloumament.
Jeff Durst of the champion
Tuppers Plains Tigers walkE'd off
with three of four fndlvldual honors
In the KC even!.
Durst, who was lhe winning
pilcher In tbe championship game,
won rrophles lor most borne runs
t3t, most hlts (10) and most
strikeouts bY a pitcher (35).

night

UPPER MARLBORO, Md.
(UPI) - Brian Tribble, the
friend of Len Bias accused of
giving the basketball star the
cocaine that kDJed him, suiTI!IIdered to authorities Slid his
lawyer quickly SCJUChl a reduction of the $250,000 bond.
Tribble, 24, turned himself In
Monday, after a p~bllclzed
weekend search foiiowJng Ids
lndleCment by tbe f!l"llld juey
lnvetlllgatlng the death of the
' University of Maryland's aiJ.
lime leading soorer.
Prince George's Coonty Sheriff James Aluls~ asked at a
news confereilce If he knew
where Tribble had been over the
weekend, replied: '1 asked him
thai this momlng, he just 111rl ~
smUed. I kmw Where he is rlgtll
now."
Tribble, who has eluded both
pollee and repoJ1ers hoping to
question tmn In the five weeks
lllllce Bias died, is charged wllh
pti8Sesslon and tlstrlbutlon ~
cocaine and of til! baluclno&amp;"nlc drug I'CP.

He and Bias's teammates,
TeJTY l.Dng, 22, and David

Gregg, 19, who were all with
Bias In the CoDege Park, Md.
oonnltory room when be ro~
lapoed June 19, were Indicted
Friday In connection wMh the
cocaine-lnoocetl death.

An

attorney for Tribble Mon-

da.v asked for a hearing In an
altempt to get a lower bond, and
the heamc woold likely be held

'IUalday, tlberHf's omce LL Col.
Art Dlpnnlll"O said. Trlbl)le was
belniJ: held at the eooamy's dll

cletmtlon cenler.
Trlbble'slllTIIIgnment was set
lor Friday, tlberUI's office .,_
kesman lrv Smith said.
In a relata! development,
WUSA·TV In Washlnatm reported .Monda.v thai a oole of
Tribble's roporiedb' liolm l-orn
Ids IJ:Irllrlead's Bladelllburr
apartment within hours of Bias'
ooDapse, was found by pollee
last week In a rt'fiiOie wooded

........

Scioto resu lis
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Stormy Summer, driven bY Gerald
Bookmyer, won Monday night's
Good Time Pacing series finale,
posllng a 1:57 2·5 In the featured
race at Scioto Downs.
The crowd of 2,814 wagered
$253.212.

C~IBINA{ION

DINNER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY

Serwd with Wllipped potltoes, chicbn 1r1vy,

5-6-7, 1986

cole sllw, hot roll, butter and colfte. Sorry,
no substibltes except btverap with lddi·
tional rice.

DEALERS WANTED - BUYERS WANTED
COllE ONE - COllE ALL
Reasonabl1 Set Up Ratu-Utlder New llanapment
We'll See You At The fll1 llarftet
For Information Coli: 304-422·4169-:-614·742·2112

'

Beat of the bet;d

laced alhree·run double and Kevin
Mitchell and Danyl Strawberry
each homered to support winning
pitcher Bob Ojeda. In winning his
sixth straight dectsk&gt;n, Ojeda tied a
career high lor victories as be.
Improved to J2.2. Scott Sanderson,
;.7, was the losl'r.
Catdnalll S. PWIIes I
AI Philadelphia, Alan Knicely
blasted his llrsl home run c1 the
season lo snap a J.l liE' In the ninth
inning and !Itt !he Cardinals. Danny
Cox, 5-8, sca«E'red three ljts to gain
the triumph. BruCl' Ruffin, 3-2,
yielded Knicely's two-run homer
and absorbed the defeat.
Padres 5, Redll 2
At San Diego, Toi\Y Gwynn,
Kevin McReynolds and Jerry
Royster each slugged solo borne
runs to spark the Padres, who
snapped a three-game losing
streak. Andy Hawldns worked 81·3
Innings to improve ro 1·1. Rich
G&lt;»sage finished for hls 17th save.
Tom Browning, 9-8, was Jhe losing
pitcher.
Dodgers 2, Glallta I
AI Los Angeles, winning pitcher
Ore! Hcrshlser gave up only three
hits and helped hlsowocausewllha
fourth-Inning RBI singlE' to lood the
Dodgers. Hershlser improved to
10-8. The loser was Mike LaCoss,
9-6.

INTERESTED IN FREE RENT?
COM£ TO THE MAPLES

~

THE MAPUS "Free Rent" -..,irements

.

By BOB HOEFUCH
Sentinel Staff Writer
SeE'ms Impossible but the Meigs
County Junior
.
and Senior Fair
are ·upon us- see
how time files
when you're having fun.
The Junior
Fair Committee
wanted to call your attention to a
rouple of special events which are
among the many, many junior
acllvflles during fair week.
The firs! Is a talenl show which
has been sci for 4:30 p.m. on
Tuesday, Aug. 12- thai's opening
day - at lhe hill stage. The show
will II' judged and prizes will be
awarded. The commillee Is asking
you lo gel in Ihere and do your stuff
-after all, there's no ou·srness like
show business - so why not?
There's a $2 participation fee and
to enter just send your name. age.
address and the talenl you will
perform. along wilh lhe reglstra·
.lion lee. ro lhe Meigs County
'Extension Service, County Home
Building. Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy.
The serond evE'nt is the junior fair
parade which will be at 2 p.m. on
Saturday, the final day of the fair.
Any club or group is inviiPd ro
partfclpale by leading livesrock.
havlrig a walking unit or displaying
·a !loa!. Those with float s are asked
to use the junior fair !heme. "'NE'w
Horizons for America's Youth"' .
· Participants are to send the dub
name. address. phone number of
who's in charg~ along wilh the type
of parade entry to the entension
office. Deadline for entering the
parade Is Salurtlay, Aug. 9.

r

992-7022

~~~~=g, ~
•
JULY SER~ICE· SPECIALS

1\",

.....

~¥.iller
'

I.
·"special Price S19 9 5
~
I
r----------coUPON ___________JI ·i: f;.
+TAX IIIlTH COUPON I

Good thru July 31

AIR coNDmONING

1
1

I
I

I
1
l

I

oa ADDED

(FIIOH ,

•Performonco Teat Syatem
IIIGHIIY HIGHER!
•Add Refrigeront If Neceoury
•Inspect System lor LNkl
•Checlc Drive Belt Condition &amp; Tension
•Test (with tharmomet.,l Degree of Coldneu
GREAT DRIVING COMFORT BEGINS HERE
REGULAR 144.50

"•tpeelll Prlee

1
I
I

$2 595

Good thru July 31

+TAl

1
1

1
1

t------------cOtJPON
I1 lUI~~!~~ d~~ o~~~re~~~~i~er

u1ing

+TU

Sptelll Prlee

$1995

26 POINT
SAFETY INSPECTION

SAFETY SERVICE INSPECTION

.

TAX

$

SPECIAL

995
+ 1U

•,

:;. Welcomed inlo the family circle

,

:;were Chuck McGilvray. r=ntly

,

• married ro Shari Miller. Fay Roach

:.and

son Br&lt;Jwn, Brf'nl

James

. Lalhey. son of Mike and Vickie
;, La they and Jordan Mark Williams.
"" son of Mark and Trudy Willfams.
;· Attending w~rc: Jack and Virgi·
;. nia MJIIE'r. John. Melissa and Jason
;: Davis, Mike. Jackie. Mlkey. SIP·

I \~ ;·

Kids a !lending the ~nt Rejoic ~
in g L~e Baptist Church Bib!~ school
in Middleport, directed by .JoAnn
Pangfo, raised over $500 bY their
conlrtbutions lo help pay lllftlon lor
a'sludE'ni at the ne w Rejoicing Lifr
Baplist Church school which will
open for Ihe school year in August n.
Average atrendance for Ihe five day
Bible school was 100 per day.
Boy! Does lhe Rutland Emer·

gency Squad have a deal br you!
The uni I will have Captain D's in
oo Aug. 3 bran all you can eat fish
try from 11:30 a. m. to 5 p.m. The
price will be $4 for adufls and $2 for
children . With your support. lhe
squad will make some bucks on !he
deal and lhese will ~ for lhe
Jllrchase of air bags for lhr unil.

Do want to advisr you that Adria
Wilrox has been moved from
Holzer Medical Cenrer ro tbe
ex lendPd care urur al Vet~rans
Memorial Hospital m Pomeroy.
Have you taken 10 lhe highways
for vacat ion yet? If you havE', you
probably nor iced that you and I are
absolutely lhe only ones who arr
abeylng the 55 miles an hour speed
limit. Do keep smiling .

phanfe and KPvin Venox. Vicky,
Annette. Shawn and Brent Lalhey,
Louis and Mary Miller Smith.
Rosemary and David Smith. John.
Wanda. Jeff. Mary Lou and Ja son
Abshir~. Pam Smllh. Jim. Mary
Ann, Briltany, Danlelle Smith and
Ricky, all of Columbus.
Eugenp and Della Miller. Tucson.
Ariz.; Carl and Dorothv Miller
Roach. Tom. Fay Roach and
Brawn. Marl&lt;. l r ud.\. K&lt;Jsc\· and
Jordan

William:-.

Ashh•.\"

and

Charla Roach. Daxin Roach. JIJ of
Pomcro) .
Eim&lt;'r (.lnd P&lt;.tulu MiiiPr. La ·

Grange. Ga .: Willard. J udy and
Loraine Mille r. \\1ooslrr: Rona ld
and Janice Miller. WhilehaU:
Henry and Rrbecca Lemons. Wa ·

.

of Music in Boston, and a master' s

degfl'(' from Miami (Fla .) Univer·
sity . Scholl en was also a member of
lhr group Starbuck, who sang
'"Moonlighl Feels Righi."' Joe
Smylhe. drummer, played with Ihe
Maine Symphony and the Miami
1Fla. I Symphony . The lather of
Sawyer Brown guitarist Bobby
Randall had played in tradilional
country bands, and that had an
influence on him.
Sawyer Brown will appear at the
Ga llla County Junior Fair. Wednes·
day. 7 and 9 p.m.
In a telrphone interview from

Manchester, N.H.. Hubbard said
the band is popular wilh counlrv
fa ns today becauSf' of the "contC'm ·

porary"' style
"We' rp not traditional count!)' ."
Hubbard sa id . noting Sawyf'r

Brown is in what is rrrmPd the
conremporary vrin of today'scoun·
try music.
Pop music grew with its fans. and
so has country- and that is one of
the reasons Sawyrr Brown has
been gaining popularity since lhe
re-leasr of their first album in Parly
1985.
"Actuallv, wr shv awav ITom
labels. w·r term ·it American
Music," he added . The music of
Sawyer Brown. he roled. Is a
culmination of widP-reac hing back ·
grou nds of the individual members.

lwmt COUPON!

Good tlwu July 31

;• . ;
1

Churchwomen conduct meeting
Rock Springs Uniled Methodist
Women mer recmlly al the church
with Mildred Jarobs opening the
meeting with prayer.
The group sang "II Took a
Miracle" and "Open My Eyes Thai
I Mav SeE' ... Sharon Folmer read
from PhiUipfans and gave a
shington. Ind .: Terry, Angie and
Juslin Robinson, Rich and Ronda
Ayres of Columbus: Sieve Miller.
Whitehall: Clyda Allensworth. Mid·
dleport : Marie Francis. Pomeroy:
John and Mildred CXooks, Columbus: Bob. Palrfcia. John and Kelly
Schleppi, Hilliard: Anna Mae Eb·
binghaus and Amy LeFever,
Colum bus.
The 1987 reunion will be held nE'XI
year on the second Sunday in July
ar lhe same loca lion.

. OBB·
C

CHEVROltt
·OLDSMOilE-CADIUAC
......., Ml ..l OIIS..CAI-clliu·i•
.

IPo.IDf, 011. : Pll. 16141tti•MI4

,) .

FOR QUICK SAlE!

JIM COBB

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile-Cadillac
"'FORMERLY SIMMONS OLDS .·CAD.-CHEV."'
301 E. Main St.
~~~ Oh. Phone (6141 992-6614

grac~.

HOURI

Man., Wtd., Fri. 1:30·1:00
Tun &amp; !hun. 1:30-5:30
Sat. 1:30-4:00; Sun. 1:00·5:00

The nrxr meeting willlx• held on
Aug. 12 at 1 p.m.

ALL OLDSMOBILES
(EXCEPT 98'S)

t
I :~
''o'

' '· ~

I1 fi~
1 ::

I ::
II ;:~i

ON ALL OLDS

Celebnty Eurosport 2-dr. Coupe

CIERA &amp; CHEV. CELEBRITY

,·•

l

~.

s

•· '

110•1
..... ·~ ..~. ......zOO
Tt~~t. &amp; lhtn. ltiO·J•IO

Cullass Ciera Sedan

:=-

Jr
'j ;·

301 E•.MAIH ST.

..•
••
,.

;

a,

·• ·

·.~·-~· !

.' .. '

· ~

AS LOW AS

NOVAS
SPECTRUMS

AS LOW AS
AS LOW AS

$5499
$6999
$7448

JIM COBB

CHEVROLO -OLDSMOBILE·CADILLAC

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile-Cad
"FOI.ILY SIMMONS OLDS.;.c:AD •.QIIY."

1~
··:,4

CHEYETTES

OYER DEALER COST
PLUS SSOO CASH REBATE

JIM COBB

~,

1-~~"":""":~------1!1·'··•.~•.•.;.·4.•110 ,•s...-•1•z00-i·.J·~to~J 0'::-"{ r .
·., •. &lt;.

.ALL DEMO'S
DRASTICALLY REDUCED

: •'

I0

'

rea ding "'My Savtor. "
The secretary and trcaurer's
report were gtven by Ann Mash a nd
Tracey O'Dell. "frl'('ie Abboll gave
a rep:Jrl on thOSf' who are sick and
shuHns. It was noted that Viole!
Hysell Is a palient al University
Hospital, room 917, Doans Hall,
Columbus. Ohio 43210. Shr r~n lly
und ~twmr rrtpk' bypass surgery.
Cards would be apprl'('ialed.
In olher activity special futur~
projects were discussed. a Biblr
quiz was given by Dorothv Jeffers
and Virginia Wears gave the
closing prayer as well as 1a blc

CASH REBATE

~

~-------------------------.1 •'
TO BEnEI SERVE OUR CUSTOMERS
·:l
OUR PAllS &amp; SERVICE DEPT. IS NOW
;i
OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK
·. :!
MON.·SAI. 1:00 TIL 5:00
:;

301 L IIUI n.

APPEARING WED~DAY- Sawyer Brown
Jim Scholten, bass. The group has been touring the
will be appearilg at the Gallla Coonty Junior Fair
past 2 years, hoth as an opening act for the likes of
Wednesday, 7 and 9 p.m. The group consists of, from
Kenny Rogers, Dolly Parton, Alabama and the Oak
left, Bobby Randall, guitar; JOE' Smyth, drums; Ma rk
Ridge Boys, and headlining some dales this !IImmer.
Miller, lend vocals; Gregg Hubbard, keyboards and
"'What we do ·~ honest ro who we was to promotr rtv:•ir &lt;Je t :Jnd rrcot·d no! IX'en off the country chart s.
Th£'~' hav(' .also released a second
company. Within iluw da.vs. Sa· ....
are. " hE' was quick to ootr. .. And Wf'
"
album.
"'Shakin."'
have genuine fun pla.ving" in yrr Brown waswinginglheirway lo
Sawyer
Brown no JongN plays
conCX'rt. Of lhe group mem~rs. Ca lifornia for StarS&lt;:arch. and rhe
10
sev~n
sers nfghlly in bars.
fivr
two rombinalions havr been long· group still didn't rmlly believr il.
They have toured wilh major
tim e pals. Hubbard and Miller have Hubbard said.
known each olher sine&lt;&gt; lbe ninlh
But. !herr Ihe)· wrre. playing for rountry stars like lhe Oak Ridge
grade. and Randall and Scholl en the judges, and t hev won Ihat week. Boys, Dollv Parton and Kenny
have been friends s inep lhPv wen'
And !IF~ krpt on winning. ''WC'did Rogrrs . and lhis summPr are
"'lillie kids."
·
what (ell good to us. not what wr hf'adlining somf' datC's.
Currrntlv lhey have been on rhe
Their unique si)' IP may have had IhoughI the iudgl's wanted lo hrar, "
road
"'fwm 21 to 25 months,"
a lot to do with Sawyer Brown's Hubbard satd .
invitation to be on thr naliona lly
The p;rqup. which has been Hubbard said. "But we takeoff two
syndicated srarSearch.
·
toge the r aboul four years. wrrc w('("kS at Chris tmas. "
Th~ group is traveling lhe
At first. thev didn't realizl' Ihey
winners on ti"' nationally rclrv ised
midwesr
with Alabama and will he
wrre OOin g a videotapr for Star·
sOOw . From !herr. 1txo canlf'r of
at
the
Gall
ia Count y Fair Wednes·
Search. Hubbard sa id . Hrlhought it Sawyer B101&lt;11 calapulil'd
day for two pertormances.
Since February 1985, the.' have

ssoo

il'

· .:
I · t;

. -----------COUPON·----------1
REGULAR SJ9.9S

:) games and rrminiscing.

I ··
I

I

I
I
I

Russ was ru I riding his bike when
he suffered a heart attack. AI his
request, his body was returned io
Middleport for burial. At 47, Russ
was af!ilialed with lhe library al
Paraskala and Ihe library will erect
a memorial to him. Anyone wishing
lo mak e a conlribulion may !l'nd il
to Ihe Pataskala Public Llbrarv,!Ol
South Vine St .. Pataskala, ·Ohio
43062.

'.

I ;

I

!I

musicaL-;.

By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP Staff Writer
Their music defies concrete
de!lnllfon. Il's got country .rools.
blended in with a good deal of pop
and boogie. All Sawyer Brown
knows is has mPant success for thr
group.
Gregg Hubbard, keyboardisl for
the band, said their music ts the
resu ll of some pretry diverse
backgrounds of the group's
members.
Lead singer Mark Miller claims
the harmony groups like Beach
Boys and lradilional country from
early on: Hubbard grew up in
church playing goSPE'i and also
listening lo lhe harmony groups:
bassist Jim Scholten has a bache·
lor's degree from Berklee College

I : •:

+TAX (WITH COIIONI

Good thru July 31

1
1

: Ronda Ayres was mistress oi
'.ceremonies. Time was spent play ~
~ lng, ball. plclure taking. or her

1 •·
1 •·

Mr.l1

I'" this special we insist on lllinaqual.ity ll.r- Gootlwr11tt:lt Oil &amp;A/C FilletsI not •• '?fl brand or chup filttt and otl. ThiS tson honast to J)Odnoss l!ltcial
on qualtty Gl Parts &amp;Gl Servica. no substitute lor quality. Limit 5 qts. Oil.
I
IIGULAR 126.95

1

The dE'ath of Russell Roush.
formerly Qf Middleporr. came as a
shock locally.
Russ was a friend from years ago
having been a member of Ihe band
which a~ompanied numerous Big
Bend MinslrE'I Assocfalion

I ~~
z,., .

Goodwrench Oil and AC Delco Filter.

I
I

~ ntindlng.

' :c
~

I •'
I

----------~

lubricate

; .

I ,'

lwmt COUPON!

barge on the river andsomelype of
a mJnc or drilling unit.

reunion held

:: The sixth annual reunion of the
~ family of the !are J. DoylE' and
· Gertrude Russell Miller of Meigs
; &lt;:ounty was held recenlly at the Big
;;Run Park in Columbus with Iii!

IIIGULAI 126.00

&lt;

··--~

~

turro on the coat of arms are a
miner's lantern, miner's tnots, a

~

I
IGiw your hilh tech auto the edp with our ne'w Allin En&amp;hie Anifyier.
:
I State of tfteart dil,nostic center that's way ahead ohnyof the compe· I
ltition. The newtst mthe field of Generalllotots. Trouble shootin1 di· I "
la1nostic equipment with computer and dltaloc capebilities.
l :':

FOR JUST

POMIIOY, Olft

•.

r----------·COUPON·----------1
COMPUIDIIED' EJIGIH.I' ,ANALYSIS ' I -

•NI PICKUPS AS I.An AS 5130 P.M.

S3.25

• Pomeroy recrnlly adopred a flag
:with lhc winning design being
:.'submilied by Melody Roberts of
; Long Bottom.
;: Coincidentally. Karm Werry who
~ Is really into historica l research
:':came forth Monday wilh a copy of
;':tbe Pomeroy Coal of Arms. It was
;;-prlitted in an 1884 edition of the
~ Meigs Counry Republican. Fra·

Equal Housina Opportunit1

1
1

Tuesday, July 29, 1986

Sawyer ·Brown: sound from diverse styles

Fair time is here!

IIOP·OFFS CAN ...... AS IAaY AS 7:30 A.M.

CIOW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
'"· 992·5432

7, Expos f

The Daily Sentinel
Page-5

*Afplicants must apply or man in between June 20, 1986and July
3 . 1986.
*Applicant must meet HUD income requirements
•Applicants must move into THE MAPLES no later than 30 days alter
application paperwork is completed.
•Applicants will receive free rant lor 30 days lollowin&amp; move·in.
*Applicants must make lull setllity deposit PIYmtnl prior to move-in.
•Applicants must live in an efficiency ajllrtment at IHIIIAPi15a mi·
nimum of six (6) months or will forfeit i11e 11ntamooot1rom security
deposit return.
*Applicants must be 62 years olage or must hive proof of handicap or
disability.
·
Call or stop in at THE MAPLES for more information

Bond
reduction
sought

ALL THE KENTUCKY F~IFn
CHICKEN YOU CAN lA I

OCT. 3·4·5, 1986
NOV. 7-8-9, 1986

Pirates

AI Monlreal, R.J. Reynolds
knocked in three runs with a double
and single to pace the Pirales and
send Montreal to its fourth straight
loss. Rick Rruschel. 6-12. earned
tbe victory and Barry Jones
finished for his flrsl major· league
save. The loss wenllo Bryn SmJth.
7·6.
Met.s 9, Cubs 2
AI New York. Howard Johnson

explain II bul I'll just be lhankful. ..
Atlanta manager Chuck Tanner.
though. did some explaining - for
his decision to leave AlexandPr in
the game. Alexander. who had a
five- hiller entering the eighrh. fell

TUE$DAV NISHT SPECIAL

FLEA MARKO

to 1·3.
'"He had thrown less than 95
pitches." Tanner said. "He (ilehed
a great game. He had rommand.
Davis Is strong and he happened to
hll It out."
Bob Knepper, 13-7, earned tbe
victory, which marked lhe sixth
straight lime al homr the Astros
had won a gam~ In their last at-bal.
Elsewhere In lhe Nallonal
League. Plltsbu rgh downed Mont ·
rea I 7-4, New York bomll'd Chicago
11-2. St. llluls sbaded Philadelpbla
3·1, San Diego dE'Ieared Cincinnati
5·2 and Los Angeles nipped San
Francisco 2· J.
In tbe American League, II was
Detroll 5. Cleveland I; Boston 3.
Chicago 1; Toronto 6. Kansas City
0; Calffomla 6. Oakland 3; Balli·
more 4, Texas 3; Mllwaui&lt;Pe 5, New
York 4; and Minnesota 6, Seartlt&gt; 5
In 11 innings.

went out," Davis said. " 1 can't

Cincinna ti at San Diego, night
San F'rancl sro at Los Angf'IE's.

STARTING AUG. 1·2-3. 1986
•
•

71;2
8'12
10

Yor k

MEIGS COUNTY FAIR GROUNDS
POMEROY, OHIO .
SEPT.

.1 ~
7~

Louis ~. Philadolphi a l
San Dif'go 5, Cincinnati 2
Hou ston 4. A tlant a 2
L os Ang(']p s 2. San FranclsC'o I

A llant ~t

ar Chicago

2~)1;2

Wesl

Monday's Results
l'iltsbur):!h 7. Monrrf'al 4
~ C'w York !l, Chicago 2

Sf&gt;atrlC' ..

16~"}

49 4~ 5 18
45 52 .41\4 21
42 53 .442 2.1
4H

PhiliJdPJphia ..

Bos!on ....... .

-

GB

27th save. Charlie li&gt;ugh, 9-7, was
lhr loser.
An&amp;"ls 6, Oakland 3
At Oakland. CaJU .. Doug DeC'ln·
ces ripped a two-run homer and
added a run·scoring double to lead
lhe Angels and snap tbe A's

By LOU RABri'O
UPI Sports Writer
Jus! when Houston Astros
slugger Glenn Davis though! he
rouldn't make It on his own, he
slnglehandedly defeated the
Atlanta Braves Monday night.
Davis, who entered tbe game
mired in an O.for-19 slump, broke
loose lor a three-run homer In tbe
elghlh Inning to lilt the Astros to a
4-2 viclory over lhe Braves.
He also had a flrsl -lnnlngslngle to
drive In the Astros' first run.
Knocking In all his learn's runs
lffled his RBI totallo 71. Not bad for
a 'guy who, before lhe game,
believed he wasn't handling
ma«ers.
'"Not much to say, no excuse ...
Davis said d. tbe slump. '"I have no
excuses or statements to make
aboul struggling on tbe field. I'vr
been fighting an lnwardandmenral
battle.
"I walked oul on the field tonight
in total ronluslon. I wenl to a IIIII~
room we have here In the clubhouse
and said, Tm ronlusPd. I can't
make ll on my own....
Bill Doran starred the eighth·
inning Astros rally with a one- our
double. After a groundoul which left
Doran on second. Denny Walling
walkE'd. Davis then blasted a J.J
pitch from Doyle Alexander for his
22nd home run and 11th game~&lt;1nning hft of lhe season.
"II kind of blew my mind when il

By The Bend

1

1

Phone (6141 992-6614

"FOI.ILY SIMMONS OLDS.·CAD.-CHEY."

HOURS

Mon., Will., Fri. 1:30-1:00
Tues. &amp;Thun. 1:30·5:00
Sat. 1:30-4:00; Sun. 1:00·5:00

301 t MAIN ST.
POMIOY, OH.
PH. (614) 992-6614

HOVIS
Mon., Wed, Fri. 1:30-1:00
Tues. &amp; Thurs. 1:30-StlO
Sat. 8:30-4:00; Sua. 1:00-S:OO

•

.,

�Style revue champs
named for projects
entering Meigs fair

GRAND CHAMPIONS ALL - After judging Monday momng, these
4-R members were named grand dtampions wlh their clothing
projects at last nlgN's revue. Left to right they are Aaron Davis,

"Fashion Renectlons" was the
theme of the 1986 4-H style revue
held Monday night on the hUI stage
at the Rock Springs Fair Grounds.
Besides the nearly liO 4·H
members with clothing projects
modeling everything from swim
suits to formal wear, the Meigs"
County Fashion Board entertained
with a show of period clothing.
Qndy Oliveri, home economics
extension agent, welcomed the
large crowd which braved the heat
to watch the parade of clothing.
Pansy Jordan, 4·H program assist·
ant, Cindy Pitzer, summer assist·
ant and Bill Crane, 4·H advisor,
narrated the style revue wtth Brian
Freeman, Jun.ior Fair king, Dan
LEonard, Jason Smith and Robin
White escorting the participants
whose clothing projects had been
judged earner in the day.
The 198l Meigs County Junior
Fair royalty, Freeman, king, and
Donia Crane, Meigs County Junior
Fair Queen, were introduced.
Grand and reserve champions in
the var ious clothing categories and
those selected to participate in the
Ohio State Fair style- revue on
August 14 were announced.
Selected to go to the State Fair
were Penny Aelker, Missy Cala·
way, Barbara Coleman, Renee
Young, Debra Frost, Sherr! Smith,
Debbie Brooks, Heather Finiaw,
Amy Hager, and Trisha Spencer.
Grand and reserve champions
along with other modeling in the
various categortes were as follows:
Adventures in Clothing: I'Pnny
Al&gt;iker, grand champion; Heather
Francowiak, reserve champion;
Sara Machir, honorable mention;
and Mary Chaney, Melissa CIHford,
Kelley Grueoer, Stephanie Hof·
hnan , Bobhle White, Heidi Hufhnan. Elizabeth Lawson, Melissa
Neutzling, Marcia Robinson, and
Elolda Stegall.
Topping Your OUifit : Jaime

clothing complements; Elizabeth Downie, joyful jumpw; Beth Clark,
clothes for middle school; Debra Frost, sportswear active, (frmt);
Penny Aelker, adventures in clothing; Renee Young, ioWJglng dolbes,
and Jaime Wllsn, topping your outfit.

Wilson, grand champion; Tersa
Molden, reserve champon; Amber
Davis and Michelle Young, honora·
ble mention; and Elizabeth Bryant,
Kristina Connolly, Alt1Y Well.
Joyful Jumper: Elizabeth Dow·
nte, grand champion; Sherr! Wolf,
l't'Sei'Ve champion; Ruby Burke
and Sherr! Smith, honorable
menton.
Oothes for Middle School: Beth
Clark, grand champion; Amber
Davis, reserve champion.
Clothes for High School: Missy
Calaway, grand dtampion; Bar·
bara Coleman, reserve champion;
and MeUssa Miller and Ay Mora,
hooorable mention.
Lounging Qothes: Renee Young,
grand champion; Angela Chapman, reserve champion; and Jo
Ellen Crane, hooorable mention.
Sports Clothes·Actlve: Debra
Frost, grand champion; Sherri
Smith, reserve champion; Donna
CurtJs and Renee Kaylor, honora·
ble mention. and Betty Jo Hunt.
Sports Qothes.Spectator: Debbie
Brooks. grand champion; Greta
Rllfle, reserve champlon;Tara
Clark, Ginger Holcomb, Michelle
Laughery, and Allee Parsons, all
honorable mention.
Dress·Up Outfit (daytime ):
Lauri e Shen efi e ld, grand
champion.
Dress·up Outfit (formal) : Pam
Ash, grand champion; Donia
Crane, reserve champion.
Coats and Jackets: Heather
Flmiaw, grand champion; and
Amy Hager, reserve champion.
Oothing Complements: Aaron
Davis, grand champion; and
Amber Davis, reserve champion.
Dressing for the Job: Trlsha
Spencer, reserve champion.
Members ol the 1986 Fashion
Board participating In the revue of
period clothing were Michelle and
Renee Young Heather Flnlaw,
Missy Calaway , and Elizabeth
Downie.

OAGC recognizes
Meigs clubs at
state conventzon
•

•

\

\

\

#•j
RESERVE CHAl"l'lONS - Selected as reserve champions in the
various categories ol judging Monday and rmdeling their garments at
the style revue "Fashion ReOecllons" were left ID right , Ureta RHDe,

sportswear spectator; /\my Hager, coals and jackets; Donia Crane,
dress-up oul111 fonnal; Trlsha Spencer, dressing for the job; and
Barbara Coleman, clothes for high school.

\

\

I

J

Meigs County GardPn Clubs and
their members were at the front in
recognition and awards at the 56th
annual convention of the Ohio
Association of Garden Oubs held at
the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Cincin·
nati last week.
J anet Bolin of Rutland was
Installed stale president by Suzy
Carpenter. also of Rutland. Donia
Crane received the Shedenbelm
Award for Conservallon, Pal Holter
and Belly Dean of Chester area
received ribbons In the invitational
flower show , "A Touch of Ele·
gance, " and the Rutland Garden
Club, Shade Valley CooncU of
Floral Arts. and the Chester
Garden Club all received superior
awards In various phases of garden
club work.
Meigs County also received
superior awards for roth the
Christmas and Meigs County Fair
flower shows, whik' Pat Holter
acceppted a superior award for a
regional show she chaired at the
Hocking Valley Lodge, NelsonvUk',
for Region 11.
Superior awards went to the
Rutland Oub for publicity, pro·
gram and flower show, while both
the Shade Valley and Chester Clubs
received superiors for progra m
books and flower shows.
In the Dower show Mrs. Holter
look a first In the class, "Ballerina ,''
with a hanging and revolving
motor~ abstrac t arrangement
using coconut palm spades, painted
'"!Ua, fish line, and oran ge lliadioll.
She also received a fourth In the
class, "Old Lace" using a lavender
background with yellow roses and
Queen Anne's lace.
Mrs. Dean look a third l&gt;r her
arrangeiTil'lll in "Cathedral," using
stained glass, a Madonna and
mums on a marble base, lighted In
blue, a red tor ··nv- Tajmahal," an
oriental rrodeon design using red
and white carnations, green ming
fern and red ribbon. She also look
several ribbons for vegetables In
the hort lcullu re classes.
NumL'I'OU• gins were presented
to Mrs. Bolin, Meigs County's fl rsl
state president , follOwing her Instal·
lallon. The Rutland Friendly
Garden Club of which she Is a

Wyatt birth
Mr. and Mrs. CIUford Wyatt
Cheslolro, are announcing the
of a daUghlfr, Tltf.any Jade, hom
June ~ at the Holzer Med~l
Center. The Infant weighed siX
pounds and nine ounces and wu 19

blrtb

Inches 1o111.

·n - f.Hclub

Molden, ....,., . yooar outfll; Heather Francowlak, advt!ntur. In

members were reserve champions In their ciollWig projecls.
, AP-o"""'C' at Mondlql nlgN's revue, the P'OilP included Tereoa

clothinJ: i\mber Davlll clothing oomplemenls; Sberri Smith, ICllve
sportswear; and Sloerri Wol, )oJflal jump«.

VW1111NG PROJECI' RESERVE Clfi\MPIONS -

'

1'

· Maternal IP'&amp;ndpart'lltl are Mr.
and Mrs. Berl Wallace, New
Havt'll, W. Va. and paternal
grandmother II Marpret Wyan,

Pomeroy.

member gave her a sundial, both
the RuUand Branch of Bank One,
and Krogers presented her gilt
certificates, Region 11, an mgraved
pen , the judges council. an In·
scribed gavel, and Region 11
members, four dozen red and white
ca malions, presented Individually
by club members from the region.
Members and guests al the
convenlion were entertralned with
a champagne breakfast at Saks
FHth Avenue, a monnlight crulseon
the Ohio River, and tours of Spring
Grove, Lau rel Court Mansion and
Delhi Garden Center.
Noted floral designers lou Rid·
die, masler judge and National
Council lnstruccor !rom Columbia,
S.C., combined noHv -common
plant material with driftwood to
demonstrate total creativity, while
Donald Vanderbronk, Qeveland
Heights florist , held the a\odlen~
entranced with "Glamour Parties
Across the Country" as he shared
experiences and expertise gained
while providing Dora! decorations
and creating total effects t&gt;r
weddings, parties and other specUa
events.
Tim Jacob, Cincinnati Urban
Forest Mangaer. dlscll!lsed "Ohio's
Champion Trees" and Charles
Harper, artlsl whose work has
appeared In Auduoon, National
Wlld!Ue, dellghled everyone wtlh
his llght·hearted artlslry.
Going to Cincinnati tlr the
convenlion from here werP Ka·
thryn Miller. Wildwood GardPn
Club: Betsy Horky , Jan£'! Horky ,
Dana Kessinger. Dorothy MorrL,,
and Krista Morr is, Mldd lrporl
Garden Club: Pa t Holter and &amp; ny
Dean, Ches1&lt;•r and Shade VaUcv
Council of Floral Art s; Paulin~
Ridenou r, Chr"Sicr Club; Binda
Diehl, Neva 1\icholson, Anna ~ ·
din, Pearl Canaday, Anna E.
Turner. Dorot hy Wooda rd, Rutland
and Star Garden Clubs; Judith Hili,
Krlstal Bolin .•ludySnowden . Janet
Bolin, Iva Sisson. Margie Bishop,
Suzy Carpenter. Mar(!llret Ed·
wards, Rutland Fril'ndiy Ga rden·
ers and Fril'nds and Flowers.

· 284.
South Second
Av•uo.
Mitldiopdrt,
Ohio

417t0, WM """'*""'Admin·
ol tho - . ol Ruby
A._.., •te.
ad. tile Df 118
8 - 8 - Av-e. ·Mid·
Mii9' County. Ohio
' Roborl E. Bu!k,

=.

PIOIIateJudgo

lM11 K. "In pta•. CWk
(71 22, 29; !Ill

e

Public Notice

Bld~~~~~~~:~untH

3 Announcements

11

VISA·MASTERCAADI Getvou•

Gov1mmtnt Jobt. .11.040 ·

by INIII for tho folbwlng
Coli IAtfundoblel H18·&lt;MI9·
~oo~~A~~tt.tH~~;::::::::J~========J~========~:::::::::J;=;~;;;~=~~~-oo~~usro
Servic1 Contr.ct for the
3648 , IJi t . C-1980 for lnlo. 24
1988-87 ochool yoor:
TOWN &amp; COUNIIY
R
H II JO'S GIFT SHOP
RADIATOR
PHYS~i~1~~RAPY
J.R.'s REPAIRS
VETIIINAIIAN
oger yse
SYUCUSE, oHIO
SER~ICE
:;
4 =::;G;;:;:iv=e=
a w=a=v= =
ons~':k:.":~tl: ~:;:.~:~
~Vsr
CUNIC
Garage
TheSalei•O•hrJ•Ifl
can repair andreHOURS

&amp;choot. P. o: Box 307,John
Streot, &amp;yrocuH. Ohio.
Sorvlcoo will bo provided
:..:'::;&gt;;::":~~ '115 chll·
S PKific bid ctotlllomoyba
obtained
by contoc1ing
,KoBitldh ~~ k, 992-1883.
'
ow.b..wordodollho
reAgul~ tBtoard ~Mtlng on
ugu•• ·
u.
" Tho MCBMR / DD IOHrv•l
· :::~I
or
MEIGS COUNTY BOARD
OF II'!ENTAL RETARD·
ATION / DEVELOPMENTAL
DISABILITIES
71271B6, Keith Block
!71 2B, 29, 30 3ic

ate

11

1 98

:C:.cepl

;nte::•

Itt
I
bwtalation senlce
All major appliance repairs (including micro·
waves). Electronic Or·
gano. Mobile l'!fVite.
TV. 614 ·14l- 5248

•.

APPL-614 -949 -2145
) B-'86 1

"==::==·::::·

::m::o~
.

-

Public Notice
JAN. 1, t9B6 .. .. .. .. . 19,895
FUND CASH BAL.,
JUNE 30, t988 .... .... 4,349
NON·EXPENDABLE
TRUST FUNDSOPERATING RECEIPTS:

. Public Notice

lnvettmenu ........ .... 1, 767
Total receipts .. .. ... .... 1, 767

COMBINED FINANCIAL
REPORT OF THE
BOARD OF EDUCATION
MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOL
DISTRICT
COUNTY OF MEIGS
821 S . Third Avenue

Middleport, Ohio 46760
Dote: 7121 / 88
For The Fi1C81 Year Ended

Juno 30, 1988

·This is en untudittd finan·

clal statement.

GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
REVENUE RECEIPTSToxeo ...... .. .. .. .... t.21t.450

·Tuition ...... ....... ...... 46 , 261
Earning• on
Investments .... ....24 ,090
Extrecurriculer

Actlvi1ieo. ·-·... ...... 42,895
Clau Materials &amp;

Feeo. .... ................. 2,656

Misc . Recetpta ... ....... 4.372

Grants In Aid State Sources ... . 2,224,428

(Operoolngl
Excess Rcptt. Over I

(Under) Oiob....... .. .. t ,757

Exceu Rcpti./Saurcea Over
lUnder) Diaburaementt

and Other Uaea ...... 1, 757

FUND CASH BAL ..
JAN . 1, 19B8 .. .... .. . 22.Bt0
FUND CASH BAL ..
JUNE 30. 19B6 ... ... 24,587
TOTALS. FUND
BALANCE
OPERATING RECPTSTuoo ......... .... .. t,2t1,450
Tuition .. .. .... .. ........ . 45.281
Earningt on In·
vettmenta ...... . .... 26,847
Food Servk:11

Soloo ................. t02,t9B

Extracuricultr

Actlvltioo .............. 73.237

Clau Materials &amp;

Foe• ......... .. .... .. .. .. t3.998

Mite. Raceipta .... ...... 4,866

GRANTS IN AID :

State Sourcea .... 2. 224.428
Federal Sourr.ea .. .. 130,642

' federal Scxrrceo .... 130.542 Total Rcpta.
f0Daratlna\ . . .. 3.831 .826
IOperallono) ·
OPERATING DISEXPENDITURE
BURSEMENTS "DISBURSEMENTSInstruction ..... .. . 2 , 136, 626

· Total Receipts ... 3,686.694

Instruction ... .. ... 2,136.526

Supporting

Extracurricular

Extracurricular
Activitiea .............. 94,851

·Supporting
Sorvlcoo.. .. .. ... t.585. 74B

Acllvi11oo .. .. .... ... .. 49.71 o
Oebt Serviceo .. .-..... 7t ,099
Total

Paul E. Shockey, DVM

PT. PlEASANT OFFICE
305 Jackson Ave.
SMAll ANIMAL IIOUIS
Mon.-Wod.-lhun. 3.s pm

Tvto. 6130·1: Fri. 1-2 pm
Saturdoy10-11:30om
LAIGI AIMAL &amp;

SUIGIIY IT APPT.
PH. 304-675-2441
BEND AIEA CALL
•• I Off'
lp ty
ICI
for Hours

DiaburiBmenta

10perotlono) ... 3,822,082
Exc. Rcpu. Over (under)

Dlobur ... .. ......... (t36,3881
OTHER FINANCING
SOURCES(UoHI
Contribution• &amp;
Donations .. ...... .. .. ... . 438
Operations Tr Mtfert-

Services . ...... . 1, 68 6, 748

ELRE POLE
BUILDINGS

RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
AGRICULTURAL
Custom Design
Service

CAll 667·3271

CoMpere the Qtllll..
8' 11" Y:tr6•f mo.

L&amp;S
TRANSMISSION
REPAIR
Rl. 7, Pomeroy, OH.
"Free Estimates"
All Work
Guaranteed
OPEN MONDAY
THRU SATURDAY

PH. 992-7403

6·23 -86·1 mo.

Debt Seoviceo ......... 71 ,099
Employees Salaries

• Wageo ............... 94,9tB
Employees Retirement
Benefiu ....... .... ... .. 41,640

Purch- SIIIYicOI .. .. 3.299
Supplies 6

Materia II .. ... ....... 148.278
Capital

We

Rt . 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
AI 10 Transm 1ss1on

CEMENT DOGS &amp; CATS
IO't.FIGURtiD
OFF
LAMPS
1
'12 PRICE
OPEN Mon Wed

PH, 992-5682
or992-7121

:

ACCENT
FENCE COMPANY
PH. 992-6931
Afhr 5 Call
742-2027

Closed Tuoodo

EUGENE LONG

ROOFING

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

VINYL &amp; AWUUM
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Rooting of ott Typeo
Worked in home area
20 years

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

" Free Estimates"

949-2263
or 949-2168
2· 11-86·tfn

CALL COLLECT:
Ph. (614) 843-5425

CARPET
CARE

Buying /Selling
Gold, Silver
14K Chains, Coins,
Collector's Accessories
Bullion

992·2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-1 J·tfc

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEEO QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATELLITE SALES &amp; SERVICE
We lim AFull Tl1111
Sho~ Tuhtlolu
01 Duly
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

CHESTER--985-3307

4/ 1/ lfn

ICUr OUT fOR fUTURE USEI

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

667-3513
Cle aned ,
prot~eted ,

11ni1ized
cl'l)lt and
uphol1te rv .

SUMMER HOURS

DRY FOAM

$1995 ·2 ::~oommm.

1-7 M-TH

Choice of

985-3937
for

pAT HILL fORD

7- 1&amp;- 88 2 mu .

CLC COINS

Call

core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators . We also
· Gas Tanks.
repa11

Materials

Directions
mo.

6·16-'86· I

STEAM a.EAN
&amp;·27 ·"86· 1 mo.

985-3561

(Not totally transferred)

Yra. Expendituras ...... . 266
Operation• Trantflfl

- Out ...... ...... .. ..... ... .. (695)
Adv. Out .. ...... .. ...(111 ,573
(Not totelly Trana.)
Total Other Fin .
Source• (utes) ..... ... 9.849

Exce11 Recpta./Souroea
Over (Undor) Diobummonll

Exc. Rcpta. Over / (Under)
Oi1bunement1 .. 1324.7431

NON-OPER . RCPTS -

Contributions •
Disbursements ... ... .. 1,026
Sttte Source .......... 12 ,333
Fedtrtl Source .. .. , 149, 608
Operating Transfart ln .. ............... .. ...... .. ... t5!15
Adv. In (Nor Totally

Trano.) .......... .·-lt20. 718)

and Other Uoes ... (128,5391 Totti Other Fin .
FUND CASH BAL..
Sourcet ....... ... .. .. 170.1&amp;9
JAN . t. t9B6 ....... 878,416 Exce11 Rcpts./Sources
FUND CASH BAL ..
Over (Under) DisJUNE 30. t9B6 .... '115t ,B77 bursements and
EXPENDABLE TRUST
Olher Uno ...... . (154.584)
FUNDS
FUND CASH BAL.,
REVENUE RECEIPTS JAN . t , t988 .. ..... 951,09B
. Extracurricular
FUND CASH BAL.
Activitiea ............. . 30. 342 JUNE 30, 19B6 .... 796,509
'Tooal Recpto .. .. .. ..... 30.342 Cash In
DISBURSEMENTSBonks (Nett ..... .... 790,510
.Extracurricular

lnvntmentl ......... 16 .995

Activities .. ....... .. ... 46 , 14 1
Total Ditbune ments ......... .. ........ 45.141
be. Rcpts . Over / Under
Disbursement ... ..(14,79 9}
Contributions &amp;

Total Fund Bal. . .. .. 796, 605

Donations ...... . ...... .. ... 588

Adv. Out (not totalty
Trantferred ..... ...... ..... (451
Total Other Fin .

SourceJ ........... .. ... ..... 643
EKcell Rcpts./ Sourcea
Over / Under Ditbursemenu

Soleo ........... ..... t02, 198

Cla11 M1teritla &amp;

flu ........... ... ...... 11 ,342

Valutdon ..... 96 ,612, 847

Peoperty Ta•
LevMis .................. 24,00
lnsKie 10 Mill

... 3 ,80

Quuide 10 Mil ... ...... 20 .20

ADM ... .

.... .2,620

Non-Certified
Employee~ . . .

. .. . ..93

Certified Empktyeea ... .. 163

SUMMARY
INDEBTEDNESS BONDS

· Bon . .. .. .... ..... .. .. .. ..41 .640
Purchued SeN . ...... . 3, 299
SuppUtt.
Mattrielt .... ... ..,. .148.276

Outlay
- Repltcement . . ........ 932

Oohor Obi octo .......

.. . 28 1

Oioburoomento .. (175.3t~l
NON·OPER . RCPTS -

State Source .. .. .. .... 12.333
Federal Source ..... 149, 608
Refund of Prior Yrs.
bpencflture ..... ... .... 7,028

Adv. Duo (Not1otolly
Trano.t .-..... .. .. .. .... .j9 .t001

:rotel Other Fin .
Sourcea ..... .. ..... .. 1&amp;9, 717
' EKce11 Rcpte./Sourctt
Over / Under Ollburtenwnta

and Other Uooo ... t16,5461
. FUND CASH BAL..

edge:

Jone Fry.
Treaturer of tl'e
Board of Education

(7)

29. 1tc

614-992·5660

HOUSE OVERflOWING?
ClEAN UP WITH
ClASSIFI£D ADS ('/
EEl

ffi ·

,_

...

Showroom Luster

POLISHING
SYSTEMS
By Michael Norton

•CARS •TRUCKS
•BOATS •PLANES
&amp; MORE
Preserves &amp; Seels
From Harsh

"WfoCYOO~~.

Card of Thank•
I ouuld liko to thonk my
lritn~a 111d foriMr rwiPbon

in tho Po'*"'l llddloport
snd 1111111 oroo or lh• 111eny
bdulllul ~u•s ltHors, JIIIOOM
CIIIS, YISits end PriYtrs.tloall
rocoiYid
dwrlnc lilYF.tcl1"'''"'
11111
cOfllln.,.lllt.
noto
lftd Clrt 111t111110 IIWCh to ..
n I •• tblt to lltCI lhloo
••In
toimlll®rlnc
11ooHt ·17tll iod om
dOIIII YIIY .lllf lid tnlorlnl
till lloelllfful 110&lt;11
mont 1111! INE.allntCIIIP·
ter 1172 Ol.S. TMRI.o opln
for ,.., ,....,brllro I
llllly ....., 11.
" Thtl... GIICO Ill•~··

lf-"'·',..
'"'"II'

PRINT SHOP

F11 AH

y,., Pll•ll•t N11it

PLUS: Office !uppitt &amp;
Furniturt, }Yedcting

lusinns Forms,
Copy Stnil:n, lie .

2SI Mill So.,

Middlopo&lt;~

104 Mulberry Av., Pomtroy

992-3345

311/Hn

PARTS and SEFIVIC: E

992-3410

CJ

Co~uterized Hearing Air Selection
fo!olds · lnterpr~ting SeiVices

z

SwiEI

~

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

--

a:

:x:

-z

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

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

VINYL SIDING
WE HAVE MOST ALL POPULAR BRANDS AT
THE SAME LOW PRICES

•Certainteed •Mastic

New Location:

168 North le&lt;ond
foliddteporl, Ohio 4S760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Ca rry Fis hing Suppli es

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Ph one Bill s Here

BUIINIII PilON!
I! 141 992-ISSO
RIIIDINCI PHON!
16141 992 .7714
1' n t'"

FREEZERS! FIEEZERSI
FREEZERS!!
While 1hey LaoU
10 tu. fl. Upri&amp;ht
Only 1339
5 tu . ft. Chest
ONLY 1249
8 cu . ft. Chest
Hotpoint Refri&amp;ertltors
As Low As 1419.95
Black Asphalt Roof
Coatin'5 GAL.

$10

95

Aluminum Asphalt
Roof Coatihl

5 GAL.

$2095

MGM

FARM
CITY
POMEROY
614-992-2181

BISSELL
BUifDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
" AI Reosonoble Prices "

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CALLS
4· 16 : 116 lfn

3-D

AUTO CENTER
ram ....,,. Otlio,
"2·6771

IIQ 1/r W. Main St.
~

•Alcala

VI NYL

i ·~-

·n .·ao GM F.nden .
73 -80 GM
Rocker Pan11 11

RF PLACl Ml NI

. JJ 9

13 · 79 Ford hndeu

WINDOWS

Truck Bed
Lintrt

FRE E ESTIMAT ES

CUSTOM GARAGE· BUILDING

J&amp;l INSULATION
PH.

6_30 ,. 86 1 mo.

992-2772

GREAT BEND ELEORIC, Inc.
N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

••••••

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL · SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

''·. '·

..

•Residential
· •Commercial
•Industrial

10·8-rtc

MIDWEST
SEAL &amp; STRIPE
Serving lhis area
with PoweSeal seal
coating and striping
and making of
Asphalt &amp; Concrete.
1-614-696-1337
1 -614-593-8693
&amp;.23 .'86. J mo.

- Addon• •nd r8modtflng
- Roofing and guner worll
- ConCHte work
- Plumbing 1nd tiiCU'Icel

_,.

!Free Elllmotool

Y. C. YOUNG Ill
t92-621S • tt2.7314

•-•Y•

half beagle. Will payyoo • to ., DO

to take dog . 208 9th St. Pt .

Pt•u•nt.
4 beautiful fuzzy kittam , 3 gra y,
1 yellow, blu e e yes, Bwea ks otd.

304 -676-6118 .

6 Lost and Found
Fou nd : Sk at e board in Middle·
port . Call 61 4-992· 7636 .
l o at childa pitt. 8 wk -kitlan from
7 Maple St . Maaon, white
W· derk gr1y tail 304· 77 3-

9586

9

Wanted To Buy

TOP CASH paid tor '83 model
and ntw er usld c ars. Smith
Buick -Pont iac , 1911 E"tern
Ave., Gallipoli1. C1ll 614 ·446 -

Ua.t mobile homes. Call 814 ·
446· 0175.
Buying daily gold , 1ilver coin a.
ring s. jewelr"'ll , t1erling ware , old
co in s, large curren cy. Top pr ices . Ed. BurkeH Berber Sho p ,
2 nd. Ave. Middleport. Oh. 614 ·
9 92 ·3476 .
Wanted - Chevy l uv moto r,
1 976 and up. 4 cvl. . 304-67 5 ·

EIll PI oy IIIP.nl
Servtcu s

"'
"'

Full &amp;175
Min i 1 18S

FfUE IN STA.lL A TION
:l \11 WARRANTY
Seus llt l lon Q.,,rtnl ..,d
,,.. Dl li¥-"1 r1 Tr&gt; 5 181 1 A •••

Tired of Hard
Ruoly Waler?
W• Han The An !'RING SOfT
Now A Small
Monttliy Renlol

I
Plus hutiallnstollation

Puts A Solhner In Your
Home Today lleaoe wilh
Oplion Ia Buy)

11

RAYMOND E. PROFFm (MAC)
RACINE, OHIO

Offi&lt;e 949-2438

£morgtn&lt;y 949-2516
J.28·86 -1 mo.

For Industrial or Residential Use

PH. 742·2656
.

RUTLAND MINE SUPPLY CO.
34018 New lima

RUTLAND, 01110

ld.

*714.00 per 100. Gu~tentMd
peym*'t. No 111te. Oetllllt ·MII"'d
at1mplld ~nvalop1: Eltn· H47
3418 Errterprite, Ft. Pierce. Fl.
33482.
EASY ASSEMBLY WORK!
f714 .00 p1r 100. Guerant1ed

payment. No sal•. O.talfa u nd
stamp_. envelope: Eltn· 71 6
3418 Enterpri. .. Ft. P*ct. Fl .

33482.
E• eeutlvl Director. Am•lcen
Cancer Sodlt\' nMds 1 petttime dirtctor tor M1iga County,
Person •lflClled will direct the
muhiphHe ptOgFimt of 1he
~gency . Mus1 h.ve tome office
Pperlen ce and enjov working
with people . Prefer torneon•
with up1rienoe in commLnitv
organization• th1t functio n
lhrouW. committees. !Equal Opportunity Employer) Send re·
tume to A. Sommers, P.O. Box
682 . Pom~rov. Ohio 4&amp;768.

houu-cl•ening . Cell 614-99 2-

6673 .

PRIOR MILITARY SERVICE
INOIVIOUALS -hm Utrl money in the Army NaUonlll Guerd.
An E· 4 could m111t • mueh &amp;I
$131 .96 tor on• weftt·end a
month. Other bwlefhe i'lclud e
S50,000.00 life inaurenc., promotiont, IP8Cialtrllning, retire ment program l1nd lduc1tton al
funding . Cell to ... if vou
qualify , 304-87&amp;-3950 or 1 ·

800·642·3619.
AVON, 3 open territoriea, call
304: 615- 1429 .
PRIOR MILITARY SERVIC E
INOIVIOUALS ·Eam IJitra mo ney in the Army National Guard.
An E-4 could make .. much a
•131 .96 tor one week-end 1
m:~nlh . Other b~nefill include
1&amp;0,000 Wf• inturtnct. promotiona, tpec:lel ualnlng, retiremlftt program, and «fucationsl
hmding. Call lo IH if you
quality. 3:14-676 · 39&amp;0 or 1800·642 -3819 .
Ucenaed prac. naae, mull hive
certificelion . Conteel Barblra
W1th1rhoh. 304-782-2622 .
Babysitter needed in our OOme
beginning Aug. 22 for 1 yr old 6
6 yr old (in achool Yz dey) . MUST
be mature, deptndtble. enar·
get ic &amp; non- sm:~ker . Send hrtter
of inter•t with reterenon tu
P.O . BOll C22 Pt. Pl. Reglater,
200 Main Sl . Pt. Pl. WV .
Nead bebylintr In my home. 2

pre-school dlild ren, hours 7 :30
a .m . 10 3:30 p.m. Send resume
to BoJ1 K &amp; K Park area. Pl .
Pleaunt Rag ill er.
Eatablithed C0"1)eny ntJtdl I JI ·
ptrien ced awning inttlller . EJI·
perienced aiding intt alllr, mu st
have a•par ienca, truck, equip mll'lt , telephone. Only ~•lifi .t
·c aller• please. 304-675· 626 2
balween 11 end 12 a .m . Mon
thru S at .
Walking caniar needed for New
Haven • • · It inlare&amp;t lld, pl ease
call Point Pleuant Ragillet.
304· 675-1333 .

Help Wanted

lady-free to travel . Charles R
J o aeph. Gelli a County Fair
campgro unds. L91 7 3 .
Hiring! Fede raii)Ov ern ment jo bs
in your area and overaea1 . Ma ny
immed iate open in gt without
Wliling list or t en . st 5 ·
S68.000. Phone c all rllfund ab ll
16021838-8885 . E11:t . 606
EJi cellant Inco me tor pert ti me
home a11embly work . For info .
c all 3 12 ·741 · 8400 111:1.313 .
3000 Government jo bs list .
$1 6 , 040 · S59 ,230 yr Now
hir ing . CJIII 806·687-6000 ex t.
R-4662 .

Wanted Regiller.t Nur11 tfull·
tim• ) fo r Buckeye Comm unily
Sarvice1, a not-for-profit oo rpo rat Ki n provid ing relid.,t ial alter·
nat rves for people with developm en til diub ili ti et in stYen
South1111ern Ohio Count lll
Current R.N. li cens e, Stile of
Ohio, and two ve ars exp erience
requir.t . EJiper ien ce in servi ces
to plrt on with develop~TJ~ntll
diubilittes end t uperv isio n tklllt
pretmed. Familiarity with Med l·
caid regul ation• helpful . Mu st
have a ccess lo motor vah le la 11nd
be willing to treyel. S 1l1ry range :
S17.600· 23.000 yt ar. bell ·
lent benef it p.cktg t . Send resume to Robin Eby, Buckeye
Community Servicea, P.O . Bo ll
604. Ja ckaon . Oh 46840. Diad rene tor 1pplicarut: 8· 6 ·81 .
Equa l Opponunity Emplo y1r.

GREAT POSITION II
Don ' t Ml11 Thil Oppottunityl
Work from your hom~ hirlruit •
training paop l1. Free tfllnlng
provided . Weektv peychacka.
BonuMI . ldMI job for moth••·
lorme r teach... party ... an
dealen. 1c:hws.For dtteils CALL
(co llect) NOWI! Beny V1rallo
304-7144-0924

Need baby t ilter n my home.
Plana •and raferance1 end
rnume 1Q Box C· 11. Pt. Pit.
Reginar. 200 Main St. , Point
Pleu ant , W. V e.
AVON , 3 open lerritoriea, call
30 4 -676 -1429.

N•ed pen ti me hi~. c •ll 304·

676·2296

18 Wanted 1o Do
Will do mowing and od d jobt .
Call 614-446· 8.266 .
Will do bebyeining, yerdwo rk,
indoo r andoutdoorpelntlng , Odd
)obt . Call 614 -446 -0558 .
P1inlin g IJiterior, 20 years eJip.
Free Ettimetn . 304-67&amp; -!384.
Will do bebv lin ing In my home.
reference~ . Cion to
• chool. 304· 576-3774.

Can giv•

F m ~ n ml

H"d worker ne eded tor dit ·
hwather. Ca ll 614· 446 -7227 .

lnd fv Kiull l who ere will tng to
proYid e room and board 1nd e
family atmoaph" a to amotion ally dis turbed adulta. Raimbur se mant 8460 pet month. For
mo rfl informatio n contact Bab·
' " CoJI at Woo dland Cen t~ra ,
cell 614 ·446 ·&amp;5 00 .

21

Business
Opportuni!y

So uth11atem Buain• • Collage!
Th e t rain in g you need! For th e
jobs yuu want . Financial aaalt l·
an oe available . C11ltod1y: -! 1 4 ·
992 -6177 .

Wtst 5th Str11t

304-992-2996 711 1m .

BOGGS

~A-'IIW~·.,.,_'li

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO
Aulhorind Jolin Ooere,
New Holland, luoh Hag
Form lquipmtnl
Dealfr

Part• &amp; SaI-J.'86
Nlee
rtc
AnIIOU nCl! Ill I)nIs

8Wi£PEA ll'ld t iWing mKhlnl
riP"', p1rtt, 1nd auppliea. Pi d&lt;
up 1nd dtllvlry, DIVII Vacuum
Cleaner. on• htll mile up
G.org11 Creetc R,d . Call . 614·

·aanrjjolis

O.CO.•t4MI Cilk• br any occt-

Allflual fiv e !emily gar~ e u le
Den yer Waber, Reedaille Aug.
18.2 . 9:0 0 am. Children • and
adul ts clothing , bookt , fu rn iture ,

&amp; Vicinity

~OV 5 .

l arg e ya rd 11le. Tflurt., July 31 .
f iflt hou se on rig ht. McCully Rd
New Sa hou 1ehold it ema.
Michiga n •al e-60 Nell. School
clolhes, lawn turn .. pickling
crock. drep11, bedd ing , car
misc.

•••t.

Vard S ale Fri. Aug. 1, Clagg
r11Kien ce on Rt . 688 at Rod ney.
Bedsprellda, curtain a, home in terior, lamps. dithlt. clo ckt .

86g V1rd Sale At. 1 IIbo v•
bowling ell1y. 2 TV ' • IJICellanl
condiUon, 1 color 1 blac k Ill
whitl, building tuppNM , Cl ·
binatl, toola, VKCUUm pu"" ,
ctothing. books, gle11. much
m isc . All wnk .

·· ·

P'omiiro~,.

&amp;

Vicinity

86g garag• Mil , Colem11na,
behind Church of Chrl", Read•·
vile Oh io. Aug. 1, 2 ,3. 8-6. Moll
p.Ooeada g0 10 VFW.

hou .... Wrlghtltreet. Po-.roy.

July 31 ·Aug. 1, 8 :00 to 7.

,

ho u ~e

hold fu rnishings,

jew elry . mtl c.

J f&amp;mtly yard t ete 'h mi. oft Rt 7
on S R 12 4. S1t.,Au g 2 . Adult
c!o t hin11. childr1n1 clo thing ,
stzes 5 . 7 . 10 . Ceramic neliYily
aet. Slein l and1 knick knecka,
to me handmede crefls , oi l paint·
ir1g1, furn itu re, drep• end In·
doo r out door carp11. typewriter.
200 h . ch• in link fence , metal
w • rdro ba. prnau,. can ner, wa·
fer pic, gem• end mite .
Y1rd Sal• July 31st end Augutt
1 . Muin 1 Mlchlll' s ;,l laurel
Clift

....... P... PI .......... _.... _._
t easant
&amp; Vicinity

....... ..

Middleport

US·0284

•n. WlddlnOI a tp~~el-'tv· Will
dtUvtr for tmtll fH. 814-9821101.

'

Street wkt• .,.d , Nlll levw.e

7-7-'16·1 mo.

EASY ASSEMBLY WORKI

DAN'S WATER REFINING

3 Announcements

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

,.,.,g.

U9.23Q.yr. Now
c•
801-·7· 8000 EJ't. R-1101 fof
curr1nt flldar1l Hat.

locallr Owntd, 20 Yn . E•P·

F1r111 Equlp111anl

HIGH PRESSURE PLASTIC
WATER PIPE

Help Wanted

Need tomeone for full time

Halt Australian shepherd and

SALES &amp; SERVICE

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

304-468·1578

WANT ED TO BUY uud wood &amp;
co at heattrt . SWAIN 'S FURNI ·
nJRE , 3rd . &amp; Olive St. Gallipo·
li s . Call 614-446-3159 .

IWtr ....

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALl!

1 goose. 1 gander, 1 year old .
Young goo11 4 monlht old. Call

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS

Stationery, Magnetic

Rubbor Slompt,

Short -haired . C all 814-742 2764 after 6 :00 pm .

J im Min k Chev.·Oids Inc
Bill Geo e John10n
614-446-3872

7/ 9/" 86 / 1

and Grad'Uahon
Sign~

8 wk . old Coll ie- mixed puppies.

used cau .

•Ranges
•Re frigerator s
•Dryers •Freezers

Ele ments
w/ APS DUPONT TEFLON

54 Misc . Merchandioa

OfiLY 1299
1

THE QUAUTY

3143 .

•Was h e rs •Dishwashers

0Kidized Finishes To

to the beat of my knowl-

Cephtl

Totti Operating Oia·
buuementl .. .... ... 289. 346
be. Rcpt1 . Over / (under)

3/ 11 /lfn

port to be oonect and true ,

EmployMt ealariet

1o Wagoo .. ... ........ .. .94.918
Employee• Retirt.

New Homes luilt
"Free Es1imat81"
PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
No Sunday Calls

To good hom~ 2 fluffy kittens,
fem111. 8 wkt . old . Ctll 614·
379-2435

We p ay c111 h for la te model cl ea n

Restores Feded

lfPLEi

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Attassed

Mlac. Rc pta . ....... ..... .... 49 3

Tolol Rcpll .. .. .. .. .. 114,033
OPERATING
DISBURSEMENTS-

"VINYL SIDING
"ALUMINUM SIDING
"BLOWN IN
INSULA nON

MEMORANDA DATE

and Other Uooo ... (14.2561
FUND CA6H BAL.,
Outttanding
JAN . t . t9B6 .... ..... 29.967 Jan. t , 1986 ... 1.085 ,000
FUND CASH BAL.,
New IIIU81 , 1986 .. .. . - 0 JUNE 30, 19B6 ...... t5.716 Redeemed, 1988 ....... - 0 ·· PROPRIETARY FU NOS
Balance
OPERATING
June 20, 1986 ... 1.085,000
RECEIPTSI Certify the following re ·
Food Services

4/ I

1 brown male cat. 1 fe male
tabby . 1 year. Rt ited wft:h kidt .
Call 61 4·388·8263 eva.

2282 .

If 'flJ

"Free hlimates"
lnslallalion A•ailoblt

Call 014·388·8253 ev•.

All Mab•

ln .. ......... .. .. .. .. .. ....... 595 Total DlsbursamenttAdv. ln .. .... .. ........ t20,7t8 i0peri .... ...... .... 4.156.589
Refund of Prior

1 ye llow male tig er, 2 tabby
kittan t, 3lti mo t . dd , liUar
trtin.t . A1ited with children

Femtle min i1ture C olliii Ogive a·
way to good ho me . 614 -742 ·

FREE Eat . Sa De monatr•tK»n &amp;All
Work Gu..-anleed in Writing

Replocornono ... ... .. .. .. .. 932
Oohor Objocto .............. 28t

'

Howard L. Writesel

992-2038

OU11ay ~

,·

\h~~:n:~~· a''ps~o.'

6 17 f
- -t c

NEW- REPAIR

Earnings on

Public NQtica
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF RDUCIARY
"On July 16. 1986. in .....
Mtlgo Coonoy P10blte Coun,
CMI ~o. 211t96, Wlltio C.

B
s
e
'
USiness ervtces'.

7

&amp;7 -68 Burdette Addn . M0ndey
to Frktay Hch w.-_
ren tal unllofma · trelltr tor r"'t.

"'"lu'

304·070·3334.

.

Big 4 f1mlly y&amp;rd Hie, Aut.
1,2:,3 ; St:OO till?, on Rt. 35• .tu M
above 0~ Coaatguard 1111.
First tlmt t hM yur.
Four family yerd Mia, betide
RDLIIh' t Taot lhop. W.. tnd

-

,.,.,,, 10:00 4M 10 1:00 , ...
304·773·007 .
'

'

�..

'

;l"age~~ts~r~he~o~·~·~vlsri811~tinei~~T;~~~~;-...;.;..;.,__""T:::~P~omero:;::;:v~M~idd~lepo~rt;·~o~h;io~::;~r:::====~-=-:-~---21i~uTu;tta;v~.~Ju;lv~29~.~,:9:s;e· .
21

LAFF-A-DAY

Buainea
Opportunity

48SpeceforRent

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO .
thM you
do bulln•o with p-lo you
and NOT to - d monay
threuF •he m-'1 until you have

...,....,..do

lnv•1'alt~

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33. North of PomatOy.
Ltrgelota. Cell 814· 992·7479.

1

len-.

Treller IP•cet . Send Hill Road
convenient to •choolt. ltore and
hospital. City aewer evalllble.
Inquire ROIIIH. 304-876· 4100
between 9 :00 end •·:oo week
dayt .

/.

the offering.

lntematlonal Maullulldlng M•
nut.cturer aeltcting builder·
de . . . in IOml optn ...... Ht;ft
potlntlal proflt In our trowth
indultry. 1303] 719-3200 lilt.

Trailer apec::H. small children
accepted, Rt. 1. Locuat Road ,
back ol K S. K Mobile Home.

2403.
LlundfY equipnwnt for ule on
location. U.&amp;OO. Call 114--M&amp;-

9862.

23

Profeuional
Services

W•t•wellsserviced 1nddrilled.

r

Homes for Sale

4 bedroom hou ... firepl.c:e, 3
mi. eoufh of Gallipolis, *29.900.
Cell dtyl 814-448-1116 or
rwentng1 614-448-8222 .
~

bdr . home, clo11 to town, 2
b1th1, pertly tumith... G11
,eat, low utilitiel. Cell614-245-

9248 .
3 bdr. , targakitehen, bath, util~
room. lingle o•ege. 2 car
drlvtwty, nice yard. garden
IPKI , finlthed garage. Call

614·446·136B.
Rio Grande nMN kJvety 3 bdr .. 2
fUll batht, full b•ement, great
view. 3 deck•. ceder ttding,
gllble root. 649,500 . Call 814448-803B. Will consider trade in
of mobile honw.
3 rooms &amp; bath, with b ..ement,
19,000. Nu1 to lodge h .. in
Crown City. Call 814 -4461511 .

2 bdr , hou.. with b11ement &amp;
gtrdtn tpace. Good cond., 59
Garfield Ave. Call 514-448182B.
Government home from *1 !U
repair) . Delinquent tax property.
Repollauiont. Call 806-887·
8000 Ellt . H-4582 for current
rapo list.
Ouallry home, nawly remodeled
choice locetion on College Rd .
Syraeuse, new complete kitchen
and ..undry. eir conditioned.
large lot. 814-992·6324.
8roomhouaa . 1 .2acrea . Double
c., garage. louted on Rose Hilt .
Bargain priC8d l!zO.OOO . Celt

614 -678-2513 .
lower trial. Ruatlc Hill, Syr•
cuae. 3 bedroom, large kitchen,
largeiNingroom, air. con d., d'ish
waaher. carpeted, larte glf'tge.
Plica reduced. 6,.·992- 7478,
after 6:30 614 - 992 - 3~2

32

M obile Homes
for S ·e le

14x70 Furnil.. .,.d 3 bdr .• beth&amp;
1 h8H. central air, wuhlf·drver.

Hunters paradise in ChMtar
area. 832 ,000 . Call 814-985·
4392 .
Modern 3 bedroom, lltfga kit·
chen. full Mument. 6 ttcluded
1ettt. Big yard. loti of thlde.
161130 pool. 3 milt1 from Five
Pointt on county Rd. 82 . 81 4·

992 ·634B .
5 bedroom 2 1!, beth, l1rge
kitchen. 6113 Yllfl new . 1 milt
e11t of Rutl1nd. *56,000. , .11
acru. 161130 Pool and deck.

614-992-3643 .
70•1 00 lot. 11/J ltory ~H . 3 to
4 bedrooms, dishw11her. doubte
renge 1t0v1. fully carpet«!
wood end coal bum.ng rtov1
Cloae to .c:hool and ho.._l
Cell 61.t-992 ·6080 Any raatontble offer mrt be (;Onstdllfed

304·576· 2331
1~B2 Cl-vton 12dO.ellelectric,
axe. cond . 304-576-24B5.
1975 Dodge motor home.
cond. Call 304-468-179

rod

or

304·8B2· 2867
1972 19'- Scottie camper self
contained 11.500. 9' cempltf

uoo. 304-576-291a .

1969 Buddy 12Jt8fi with 1974
two room add-on, underp.,ning
end porch awning included,
30.. -882-37815.
' 83 doubl.wida, eeteland, wood

tiding , fireplltce, ceiling fen,
outbuilding. near Hennen
School, 130.000.00, 304-743-

7256.

992-74&amp;3
3 bedroom ho use. 15 aeret tn
Morninv St1r aru. ,....., kitchen,
tire pl1ce. large yard. with
children• wooden plrt "'"'"·
Matt. otter. 61 4·949 -2603 .

Buutitul 3 bedroom . briclt
homoe. air condition , central
heat , Clflle1ed, buitt-in kitchen ,
2 bltht, laundry room. etteched
garage, fMced back yard. rtor tgt building, CempConley 1re1,
3 mil• from Point P1e ... nt

304-675 ·433B .
Specloul 4 br·house. beautiful
mhadt setting , countv water.
conv. location. Cell fo r appoint·
ment, Oelllpolit Ferry . WV

304-676· 2026.
New home, 6 ecrea land, 3
bedroom~ ,

2 full bath•. dininv
room. den with wood burner, 9
miltl from twon at Flatrock.
*46,000.00 will conaider trail•
•• ptrtilll paymMt, 304-895-

3336.

Furnished house end lot in New
He\len, t n.ooo.oo . 114-99281159 efter 15:.00 PM .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Farms for Sale

Beautiful home in Fletwoodt
•ea of Pomeroy, new kit., beth,
carpeting, etc. Hat 17 ac. &amp;
pond. Shown by 1ppointment
only 614·448-2359.
30 acres. 3 bdr. hou~t , bern,
pond. 143.000 or sell houae
with 1 acre *25,000. Call

614-246·8248 .

MUST SELLII 4 bedroom r•i·
dence on approx 146 Krea with
in aMy drMng di1t1nca of
Gallipott., Ohio. Owner financing wrth downpaym•t to qualified buyer. Proptwty ia fenced
and has 60 1cr• of crMic
bonom. Priced 11 175,000.00.
Phone814-373-1147 extenston

75

Sot. 614· 446· 1199, 627 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolis, OH .

Velley Fumiture, new l u18d.
Large "ctton of QU elity fum i·
ture . 1216 Eutern Ave .,
Gallipolis.
Checll. our everyday low price~
on furniture
eppliancea. Mollohan FUrnitiJre, At. 7 North,
KanMtgl. Cell614-446-7444 .

a.

Beet the Heat with Emerson Ait
Conditioner• on ule now at
Mollohan Furniture, At. 7 Non h.
Gel11polit, OH Celt 814-448 -

7444.
44

Apartment
for Rent

2 bdr. utMiti• panlally fum ..
1176 mo . .Cell 304-875-5H)4
or 304 -676 -7926 .
Fumilhed apt. 2 bdr 1175.
1311h 41h GaHipoti1. Wet• pd.
CaN 448·4418 after 8pm.

Rafrigeretor 175. Reffigeretor
•s&amp;. Copponona aide by tide
1196. Harvttt gold, frort-free.
like ntw 1260. GE S. Maytag
wa1her *180 IICh . Ma'(tag
wringCH Wllher S126. Hoover
ponable washer 196 . Electric
rang,, 38 inctl $96 . Shggs
Al)fllllfiCM. Upper Rivllf Rd.
Gallipoli1. CaH 114 -448-7398 .

Hou • a epertmant for tingle•.
Cell 304-87&amp;-6104 or 304-

676-63B8 or 30• ·675· 7926 .

Furnilhed 2 bdr. apt. utilittn
peni .. ty paid . Call 304 -6755104 or 175-6388 at 304-675-

7926.
1~nd

2 bdr. epta. torrent . Betic

rent for 1 bdr. 1178 . Betic r.. t
for 2 bdr. t212 . Also 1200 tee.
dep. req , Cion to Foodl1nd and
Spring Veltev Plue. Jackson
Ertete Aplftmentt, 814-446 3997 . Equal Housing
Opportunity.
Furnished apartment, adul11
only. Calll14·441-9523

t300. Call614· 446-1108.
Like new, bedroom tuite snd
diningroom suite. Refrigerator,
occestionel chair. C•ll 814-446-

1171

Gold recliner 176, Dve se1t &amp;
m•tching chair floret S75. End
tabl• (squire-oct .) 125 &amp;a . All
good cond. Ctll614-448-1944
after 6 weakdeys , anytime
wtehnds.
tale. utad refrigetaton,
Mollohan Furniture, Rt. 7, N.
Kanauga. Cell 81 4-446· 7444 .
Piclcens Uud Furniture. Good
qualitv used furniture . OpWI 9 to
6 or celt for appoinunent .

304-876-8483 or 875· 1460.

Queen tize ~hldeway bed ,
*2!0.00, 304-876-2287.

64 Misc. Merchandise

9124.

2 bdr. apt . nMr SiNer Bridge
Pteu . lmmedi1te occupancy,
dip . req . Csll 614 -446-7026

Alhton buikling tot:a wtth public
wet•. mobil• hornet "'miTtH.
30.· 576 · 2331 OJ l04 ·578-

F..-n . ept. 1 bch .. 1236 utilities
paid. 920 4th Ave., Gellipoli1.
CeU 446· 4418 1ftM Spm.

&amp;

Acreage

1637.

Two-third• acrn with run••septic tank , all cl ... lld on
Flodnev Cory Rd. Call81.t-245-

2267 .

lot1cr-*tk:lutldonRt. 2 E•c
location for home. County ..,• .
te., H-wy HoUow Fru;t hf'm.
G•ll fff'ry , WV
4 NU acq,a , No trU.,., Sand
Httl Road. l0.._175 ·1&amp;17

41

Houses for Rent

3 bdr home . 1 'h bl'tht . 1275
mo. or ..- ior 134.000. Will
finance loca:tld Rt. 7. Addiaon,
Oh C.et 814·912-1843 etUr

4 bedroom houM for

Nm

in

Syracuu. Cell 814-192-7111
after &amp;:00 p.m.
3 bedroom double wide wrth

Fwn. apt. 1 bdr .. U25 utilities
p.td. 701 4th Ave., Gallipolis.
Cell "6· 4418 after 8pm

Public Auc1Mion F ectorv Error on
1chool ute MWing mechinn 700 MWing machin• d•igned
2 bdr., 1pt. Crown City, Ot11o. for achool. uu heva ac:cid .. tllv
been wlred lH home aewintil
Celt &amp;1--2615· •96
The cost would have been
3 rm . .pt., LR , kit ., BFI . bath, prohibitive to 1hlp. dinllemble.
ntca. ct.en, ell n• urpet. Some rawlra, realtembla, 1nd r~thip .
utiit._ paid , 1216 mo. C•ll th•e are IPICill high quality
sewing m.chin• with metal
11·· . .6· 75,5 .
tilelfl ~nd h•I'IY duty construcLow incom~ . one bedroom tion. Dual belt drive alows you
apertmenta in Meigs County. to IIIW Ll\lit. leather end light
Umittd to ldutta with emottontl upholstery. Diamond point fled ·
diaorderl. FOf mort information en handle delicate materiel
cal 1111•• COlli , Coordinltor. without snagging, linNr lention
Community Support SlfVices. etlmat• ten•ion problems. All
Wood'-'d
Clll 814- mec:hin• ere open arm. zig 1eg.
buttonhole, etc. Reteil8399.00,
441·61100
sdlool price 1298.86 . Wa tre
1 bedroom apt . tor rent . a.. lc eut:horized to help liquidate
rertt tt.U 121&amp; . • month lt.t th•e mach In• while they lest 1t
indud. •• wtMitiH. D1p011it just 1179 .00. Call 614-386 ·
required of 1200. Contact VN- 4&amp;3&amp; or 814-887-003, for
laae MINH Apt . Middleport. more informetion, atll for Mikt,
lf4-•2-nl7 . Eq.~al Houlling Affordlble Furniture, 1810 N
Memorial Or .. Ltnc..ter , OMo

c_.,.,,,

a..-...

Pol"'''ee''y 2 bdr, N .,~or, Run.
1171 mo . •100 dlpOiit. y11d ,
petio, Ctlleh• lpm t14 ·W2 UII .

garage and tan~e yard . Plf'ti.lll!ot
fumi1hed . J mil• out of Pomt·
roy on At. 143 . Require dapotit.
1275 pet month. 814-992 7,01 .

1 bedtoom apt . In Pomeroy.
Completlty ramodel«&lt; Wtch ..
furnished . An ni'W rug~ . 814 B92 -.6216 Of 614 -992· 2314

4 rooms with bath, nicelocadon.

1 b,edroom apt. fof r .. t in

referenct end dtpatlt nqufred.
Will 1tll with owntr financing,
30- -675-1090.

Middlapert. Calll14-992-6763

...,aninp and 114 -112 -1&amp;11
deya.

3 bedroom hou1e. refer.. oes,
cell 304-895-31518

Country "PIItment. 2 bed ·
rooms. 11h b1th1. Cell 814· 992·
3312. Dolly Wood1.

Two bedroom houM, 1176.00
month plut dtpotrt end refenn ·
en, locatlld at Southside. W.Va.

304-675·1166 .
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bdr . ...-.fum. 1llelee. 2mii"Rt.
588 . PrN1ta lot . •110 month.
C.tl 814-441· 4107 or 114-

446· 2102

441·41 10.
141185 unfurnilhad 1r1ilor, 8
mil• hom Oalllpolla. Cell 114-

614-371· 2364.

614·441·4318 or 304· 671·
9160.
2 bdr . water &amp; trallhpald. 1 mil•
from Holltt. UOO mo. rent plut

d-oil. CoN 614· 441-1364.
3 bdr .. 2 bettw, unfum., llrgt
prtvate lot. 41,.; mil• from
Gallipolis. Dep. ret. required.

a

Call 614·446·2876 aft• 5.
2 bdr. tnler fumlah_. , 8 min ·
Portee from lown. W11tw- dryer,
traeh • Wiler paid. Non·

dl'lnlllng, ...,.,.,. oouplo. Rol, •
dop. Call614·441:4013 .

Girlt drntet 1iu 4 .6.6. Cell
614-U6·72.t0.

One bedroom aperlment. Unfur nilhtd. 11150. per m::tnth plus
utithi•. Calll14· 992· 56•15.
APARTMENTS. mobile homes.
hou-.Pt. ftlauent andGallipo-

lio. 614·446· 1221 .

APARTMENT FOR RENT · Now

accepting IPPiicatton• for r.. ta~
epartm.nt1 In Muon Apts Umf1:ed. Two bedroom 1Ptl It
1199.00 per month. Rental
rat• miV be higher dtp.,dtng
on income. Houling will bl
availlble to aiCh eppliclf'lt ,..
gerdl. . of their race, color,
r~ton, tell or natutel or-tgln.
lntlfMted IPPNctntt lhoukt caM
304· 773-1011 Of cont1c1 Danllt Sttelb Of Watttr Justice 11
the main office, 1178 lrioe
Ro1d, Reynoldeburg. Ohio

43058 "'call 614·163·01114 .
46

Furni1hed Roome

For ""' Slaeping Rooma and

light houoo koaplng too mo . Plflo
Clftlrtl Hotel. C1n '814· 448·

0781.
RoorN for rent, day. WHic .

month. OaMia Hotel. Cal 614·
441·HBO. Rent ae tow at t1 20

monlh.

Futnlahed rOom '118. UtMIUII

43130 .

Dark bt'own •llurninum under·
pinning fOf 141170 trlil• - Mah
"' off.,. Calt 114 -441-7893
lfter 4 .
Mac 110 dl.lins• 11 " and 10"
b. .. 3 dillint. u .. *100. Twin
boll IPflngll. young fllea rabbits

U Call 814 ·441-4610.

15 .5 cu .tt . upright truur .
Honde 70 3 wheeler. Cell
814 -388 -8244 "'o Sund•y
Cllll .
'

CLOSEOUT'S ·
SURPWS
BUY BACK'S

04~ . 95 to e79 .96 .
3. B' aluminum patio dooro ,.,

1199.915 wehh scr ....
4. Octogen led tltney gla11
window• *49.96 .
6. 15 lite plna Frencft doors 8
gredel *89.96.
8. 4K811 1/4 Matonite undar lty·
ment t29.9B ea., 4114lll 1/• •1.00

•••
7.

411811~ tountil groove waffle
bo1rd exterior glued 8 ta.9&amp; .
8. 4~~:8xlA Young groove plywood B *10 .95 .
9. 4xb lh 4 ply plywood B
S6.99 .
10. 411811 1A levan plywood B
U .49 .
11 . ••a.';. talv'lt panaling

$2.99 .

12. 6' redwoodstainpicntcteble
with 2 bend'IM *39.95 .
13. Prehung interior doora all
tizn end finilhet 129.96.
14. Prehung siMI penel door1 ell
sizn 189.915 .
16 . Wood prefintlhed vinyl
wreped colonial trim 7pc. 1100.
18. Primed teerdrop wood trim
11 .007pc
17. K-lu11 brick comert t1 .00
per boll., 12 boll •10.00.
18. 32 " 1178 " % thermal tem·
pered gle11 reg . *79.95 now

029.96.

19. Rock face brown trait•
lkif1ing 28"1150 " 13.99 ••.
20. 22"1133" ateinle11 Peal 10'
deep sinkt B grade 659 .96 .
21 . Stainless atael mmllf links
169.96 B grade.
22 . 4 pe. aolkloak endbr111 bath
set t23 .9fi ee . 3 1ets end up
$19 .96.
23 . 6 gal. eluminu mfiver mobile
home roof co1ting *22 .96.
Penn' t W~tthouM, Wellston,
Ohio. 8 to 6, 6 daya. Call

814-384-3646
sonry IUppliet . Mountein State
Blodt, Rt . 33. New Heven. W.

81

Farm Equipment

71

10 cents eech,

Pete for Sale

Oragonwynd Cattery Kanntl.
CFA Himalayan. Pertien 11nd
Siam•• kittena. AKC Chow
puppi11. Csll 814-446-3844
after 7PM.

1181 DatMtn 2e0

cracton, 1000 toole.
John DHre 310 01•111 Doz.... ln
good condition. Call 114-912·
1976 Qravely walk behind tTector. Roto tiller, 30 in eft mow•
11nd Sulky, electric ...rt.
firm. Tltldan uel Low loy trill•
with ramps. An metal. 1760.

•eoo

~nd

AKC 8uten poppi.el . Ready to
S .A. lanadum. Success Rd .
Reedsvitlt, Ohio. Just off At. 7.
Cell 814 -817-3158 .

a.

Siem•• kittlr'ls. all m11111. 304-

30..._178·•40 and IMVe
~t~•on mechine.

1886 Ch..- 4 opoad, ac.
11.000
milao. 304-175·3313 aftor5:30

304·676· 7421 .
1B hp Power King tractor, 48
indl mower, anowbledt, dttc,
ptow. 3 pt hltdl, hydreullc.
U.400.00. Stfioua caller~ 304-

pm.

.10.100. 080.

896·3517 .

.,
81

'74 Chell. Camero, mutt ....
304-176· 27 37.

. '79 Renauh La Car, no work
car, mult 1111, 304-812·3141.

82 Wanted to Buy

' 68 Cornaro SS Hood, Rally

whMit, 304-676·17•1 -

5

PM.

TNclll for

72

City Farm Supply. 614·446·
29B6 .

S1le

1914 lnteme1ionll 2'h ton. 14
fl: . •lum. van Hd. Good oond.

livestock

Call814·441·1348.
19114 S -10 4-drlvopicllup.
AM-FM cuaatte r ..ia. ClmP•

3 year old Appllootu gelding
for •ale. Broke to rkte. Plut
teddle. Gentle. Good for 4-H.
Calll1.t-!M9-2931 .

top, NMing boardl, 28,000
mllao. · - •7 ,100 or cao ltolp

with roflnandng. Calll14·241·
92014 .

Tenn. Walker mere 10 yaart old.
2 year old cmtt gelding. *400.
each. Both •7&amp;0. 304-815·

1883 Chovv PU. 301 anvma.
tir•. •8.150G. Clll 114-

r'IIW

win-.
hlah mi.... rune end look11100d.
U.IOO. Cal 614·4oii· 43IO.

&amp; Grein

1912 Dodge PU light dollvary,
221 4 tPd., brown with a-eam
flbatgl ... -Call 614·387·

039~.

Hay end field corn for ula. C1ll
814· 949·2237 .

1910 Ford lo9bad. t710.
114-985-3881.

Good mixed t.y on the wagon,

01 .110. 304·178-151579.

1974 Diamond Rio tri Mlo log
vuclr., • nw Ulrll pMU. Cantact:
H1t01d John E._. Raln-

Aktge Rd. 2'h mil• -..t Long
lcmam. Ohio. No Jlfton•.
-.78--Q-M_C_S_arri_a"-01--.,...
---,.21~

Tr.rnsprJrl.i llll ll

pick-up, pt, pb, 310 .utD, 11-

Auto• for Sale

- t , looka good. 304·176·
4ol41.

n--.··-

------1171 Chovy C·10 pi&lt;* up, AT,

1971 Fibefvl•s Nova 327- 325
tF cftromaenglnt, M-22. 4tpd.

Exteriof'

a lnMrior ttucco. Plat·

Ellington upright piano . 1130.
Wented : Aaspon1ibla peny to
lltu mit mall monlhtv plymll"ltl
on pi•o . See locally. Cell credft
manager 1-100· 447·4218.

Player PIInG. 304-175-283&amp; .

""'at ... own• te.mg .,.._
304-675-3734 .

Chavotto 4 cyt .• 2

door, 5
c•..ne. ktw

•d.. AM ·FM
mlloago. Call 114· 441·0137

60,000 mM•. t7,1001 1178
Oodge Colt 2 dr. ndan. runt
good. good eond., high

1111 Chovy 4114 ahanbod. 306
V-1 4 apood, ~ton. AM·FM
lttriO, tit whtel, .,.. tanka.
UIOO. 814·111·4110.

84 Lu• I tpd, air, AM -FM
stereo, other option•. 17,300
fifm. Cal 11 4 ·441-t350 ah1r

5,oo.

84 Esc::ourt 4 dr., eifv•, PI,

Kimb•ll Organ. A41ar;ua. EMY
to pley. lnatructton boob and
"JUlie Included, t1100 .00.

ellltr• whlta wtth rwd -..,.
6nttrior.
mM11. Priced to

7&amp;10.

74

1186 Corvotta loadad -

304·675-1743.
68

I

448·01199 .

814-0146-8073.

e.eoo

1t81

Sltvtr Queen com, larga tll't,
• 1.00 doz. 9:00 to 5:00,

I ,Hill Si lllillll':,
&amp; l iVI::, fl il.k

Right hingacl tz6.00 Mifro 7 qt.
t25. 304·675·2013 or 876·

5uoh Hog a ... •

MMHY Fervueon, Ntw Holland,
aarv~ca.

o-

40 wad tractara to cltooaefTom
• oon.,ttte lint of new I ulld
equlp,..nt. Llflllt •lectk&gt;n In

S.E. Ohio .

UtHity blda- 8PL: 30'•40'•1'
with 1 IS ' xl' IMdlf • 3' 1.-v.
door. •8.211 erected. Iron

Horn Bldp, 614·332-1741
QOitlct.

Cl 7SO I pur·

own•.

4 ....
ely.,
11,000 miMI. nlol c.
12.• 1. 1178 Mto~teCariaV-e,

• - · t2.381. 1180 CMIMioft
2 clr, V•6, 78,1100rrilloat1.1H.
117t HofiiOft 4 dr., AT, air,
18.100 mlloo oi.H5. 44 eyco""'" St. Call l14·4ol8·2100.

w• ..,.,..,._

connected to a mob indisappears. (80

"ome

·78
Hto~tla 304-175·7224
- · ... - or
"00.00.
114-448-7331.

B01t1and

1 ... 1 -TarrvAif11'11aao.
oond. 10~ M-ry. H • .

-.....
-...--.--87&amp;...........--..-........
.....
---··" -- "'
......,t~-·--'""·

-lllo
"'"2 ........
- · 2 ...,
ayoto .
~ott-.
ClrMio,

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

fun

rolllal - · -

........,, ....
- . m-r.
U,700.

Cal 814-44e· 7211.

1t7t c ...., -~7 PI, PI, looir
nM ....·llaltod .... ~., .000.
Col814· 441-4t014.
1810 P - l h Ch-.17.000
Opd.,

auniVOI, U.JIIO or bM1 oflw.
Col e14· 281·6704. t

2 yr. old O..artor ltotM, fitly,
pd. B11 211d O.lllpolia. lh•• Atorl 1200 XL hanw oltlcal 10dlot bar bfOidlng. . .t Dll•.
11i4Calv.-.wan,814-288·
• """·
blth. llnglo mola. con 814· COf11tUter and aCCIPOritl, 304· 0 - • horoe woanlma. Cali air.
_ , . 2PII,
1148·4416.
812-2111, Ilk for J110n.
,614·4ol8·7'...
. . 1201.
'
,_

...

"/

MIW•I oo•er, IMttery

hlm-.a~~~t.

...

MAY&amp;...

_ _ ......... .. - ..
·...... 11 hpt.-

,.,,.

~oo

14' MP8 ..__ 1111

~

trolllne · MGtotf tltt ,,...,,

· -· -Z·88f4,

,. ...
,,.
--IHM.M_..,

. ....--. --00

~~~~····

•

•

11ump

I

_

811-208a .. 6'16·7368.

ltlfb T,.. and l.lwn Service,
,.....aping. 30.. 578-2010.
Roterv or cable tool *illlng.
Moet well• compllled•emeday.
"'"" oal• and oarvloo. 304·
ete-3802

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINrTH;.::::.R;.:.O:-P_ _ _ _ _ , . . - - - - - - - - - ,
1
KAVE 'OJ H&amp;\RD
FROM NA5TY AT

Plumbing
&amp; Heeting

NO.

SUMMER c;to.MP 1

THATS FUNNY. .. Q?'rt:li-J
SUPA::l6E SOMETHING'$
WJ&lt;ONEf'z.

THEVVE PR08A61..Y GOT
HIM IN SOI..ITARY
CONFINEMENT.

obseuivelv-drivon punker
lea\le&amp; a string of bodies in
his wake when he is hired

to eliminate a gang of
jewel thieves. (60 min.) IAI
In Stereo.

Cll700 Club

Cl (I) Moonlighting
(CCI Maddie and David

(I)

make a bet aimed at chang ing each other's personal

CARTER'S PlUMBING
AND HEATING
c ... Fourtto ortd Pi~a
Galloolo. Ohio
Phano 814·441 ·3111 or 814446-4477

Cl) MOVIE: 'Spoadway'
llD Ill (J]J Magnum, P.l.
Magnum 's friend Car~l ~nl ­

83

ists Magnum and H1ggms
in setting up a sting operation . (60 min .) (A).

s1yla. (60 min .) (R) .

Excavating

IIJ) Comrades: M111er cl

Samarkand (CCI A look 1n·

Oaolt-1 bcav•tlno. baHntant1.
toot... drtv.w.,._ upth:tank•.
londocoplng. Co8 anyt- 614·
1148-4137, Jam• L. Oavtaon. :
Jr. owner.

n-

BARNEY
EVER' TIME
1 TELL PAW
SOMETHIN'··

J.A.R . c...
Co.. All'
tland. Ohio. 814-742· 2103.
Dhcher, Dump truolle. and
w•t•r-gat-lewer·el'lctrical
lin•· Chof11o Hotflald oporator.

PAW!! WOULD VOU

IT JUST
GOES IN

CHOP

ME SOME

KINDLIN' WOOD?

ONE EAR

AN' OUT

side a Muslim community
eumines the relationship
between Islamic faith and

Soviet power. (60 min.)
10:00 U illl!ll 1988(80 min)
CIJCI(]) Speneer. For Horo
(CCI Spenser is assigned
to track Sgt. Frank Belson,
whose love lor a woman
may endanger his career .
(60 min .) (R).

TH'OTHER

.

nmiDA Y'S SCIAM·LETS ANSWERS
Flavor- Yours - Twice - Needle - WONDERFUL
Quote from a famou8 6Citvss: "Peln nourishes oourege. You
can't be brave if everything that is happenlng is
WONDERFUL."

-s=-,=-=,o=-G~E=--

Accurate
slam bidding

NORm

By Jomes Jaeoby

.A J 8 6

EAST
The current deal, taken from the WEST
887642
8QS
Devyn Press pamphlet "Slam Bid·
•• •
ding," demonstrates that the tried· • 743
• Q 10 5
tKJ9762
and-true metbod of using the Black·
• Q 10 9 4 3
2
wood convention to ask for aces will
SOUTH
not always get you to the maximum
8 A 10 3
slam contract. A general cue-bidding .
"AK982
approach can be more effective. Via
t A 43
the cue-bid route, the partnership
8K7
tnew that between them they had
flnl· and second-round control of ev·
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer South
ery side-suit. So North bid the grand I
siam, a good gamble.
.
Nortb Ea•t
Sou Ill
Declarer drew three rounds · of Wett
trumps and then played the diamond
Pass
ace IUid ruffed a diamond. He came to Pass
Pass
Pass
his band with the club king and ruffed Pass
Pass
another diamond. Next he. played tbe Pass
Pass
club ace, ruffed a club and was disap- Pass
Pass
Pass
pointed that the queen did not fall. He Pass
now played Ills last trump, discarding
the apade jack from dummy . East was
Opening lead: • 3
boldine the club queen to prevent
dummy's jack from being a winner,
and so had to chuck a spade. When de· Although the grand slam had some
ciarer played a spade to the king and a element of uncertainty it was a good
spade back, be didn't have much prob- contract and would ha~e been a cer·
lem when ~t played low. Since East tainty if either black jack in the North
held the club queen as ~Ill last card, the hand were a queen. But how could any·
spade queen b~d to be m the West hand one know to bid it merely by asking fr•
and declarers skill was rewarded · aces and kings?
when it came down.
,,.,. Nn'SPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

J.,.,... Bofl Water llfVice. Alto
pooh IHiad. Coli 610-256·1141
1-,Z.,

Ktn't Water lertloe. Wells, .

\IIC-

timizad by a street gang .
(60 min .) (A).

(j]) Newlt
10:30 (]) Celof!rlty Chele
(1) INN News
Cl) SCTV
(j]) Roughing II

e

SNAKE!!

1.3.4.

s•s•

~~~a•
"tal
by THOMAS JOSEPH
41 Track t•vf'nl
42 Scnptur~

ACROSS
I Hurt
5 Dlfficull
9 Dilute
10 Musical

passage
43 To be (Fr.)
DOWN

I Rose

show

II Caesar's
garb

2 Selected

12 Syracuse

3 Derring-dn

essence

Univ. color

tale

loi Volcanic

4 Last Spanish Yesterday's Answer

15 Play on

5 Gennan cily 13 Sea du r k 27 European
8 Polynesian 15 "Annabt•l
nver

words

18 Prefix
drink
Ler· poel 28 Umpire's
with cycle 7 Suffer a
21 Po&lt;'lical
"all
17 Turmeric
punishmenl
aduerb
30 Exhau ste~
18 Time for a 8 Depreciate 22 Wager
32 Desirous
lunch date 10 Three
23 Sebastian 33 Babble
19 Owned
minutes.
or Bruce 38 Poll 20 Legal
in boxin~ 24 Ham it up 39 Soul (Fr.)
documt&gt;nt

22 Eng

theologian
23 Pirates

hideout
25 Czeeh river i...+~r--211 Asseverate
27 Curia
6-+-+tribunal

29 Casey
or Vereen
30 Chinese
kingdom
31' Catnip
34 Morsel
35 Set in
opposition

36 Sailor
37 Become
tense
39Seaweed
40 Hoisting
device

DAD.. YCRYPI'OQUOTES- Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and lormatio~ of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different
CRYPTOQUOTE

7·28

CI1 (J) 8 ClllD Ill (J]J
1!11 Newe

J

C1J Bill Cooby Show

J DL

llm•tone. 1'1'111. etc. ._,

(]) SCTV
IIlJ c·rulhlng S..oon The
partnorshlp be1Ween grape

BAWil

·"'

growers and wine makers

•·

DeMvered 1 ton and up. Jim
l.anlor, 304·675·1247 or 675·
7317.

weuer1on'a Water H•ullntil.
rMsonable rat••· immediate
2.000 gallon delivery, dltema.
~·· wall. ate. call 301\-578-

2111.

•

(80 min .)
1t:20 (])MOVIE: 'Tell Them Wll·
lie Boy 11 Here'
11:30 .IIli!IITonlghtSitow Tonlghfo guootl are 1ha L•

·~

.

•

~8;7~U~p~h~o~le~t~~----

HJ L0

agrlbusineu ia examintd .

''THE LABORER IS
WORTH'( OF HIS HIRE
LliKE 10:4

TRII'FATE

UPHOL&amp;TERY IHOP
11U .... ' Aw.. GallooNo.
.,4·4ol8· 7tll .. ., 4·446·
1111.

Beque
11

aiatera

and

(!) 8f)CII'UICenter
(J) WKRP In Cl~clnnatl
81 (1) One 811p Beyond

RaM F-M-Iacturlnu.

.(J)ABC Newe Nlghfllno
(J)
loundllage:
Joe
Cooker
ilJ Alloe
•IDI81mon &amp; Simon A.J .

et. Rt. 7. ClaWit CMy, Oh. Can
114-ZH·1470. call Evo.• 14448 · 1411. Old • now

~"···-

J H ,

J

•

,.

I&gt; fi RTH .

C R W Q l l 1: T

RIJY X I. A

G R C C

0 Y D B Q W 0 ll H . -

ll \

ll y

A R &lt;I f: .I Y 0 R

Yeaterdaf'o Cl')'ptoqUote: IF ALL MAil lE,, ~ STAYED
MAIDENS mERE'D BE NOBODY LEFT. - MALCOLM
FORBES
0 1188 King FMtut"eS SynDQ~; te .

1111:

and Rick oro hired by an

Coverage of th e

advice columnist who sus-

Common we lath Games 15
featured f rom ScoUa nrJ

pecta lhat one of her read-

1966

{60 m tn )
([) Enterwinm en1 Toni ght
ET goes o n location to Israel to talk to Morgan Fair-

ers may know ,pf an im-

pending murder. (70 min.)
(R).

9N.W•

child about her new film .

12:00 ()) JHk Benny
(!) Commonwul1h Qameo

"Sleep ing Beouty" (A) .

•

. . .

H !IA YYt '

LJDLYCT

the

Amezing Randi. (60 min.)
In Stereo.
Cll lum1 &amp; Allen

BAR

WOBQRHII

WD V

G QJ 8 R

In 1h6 New York State wino

f

wee

LY8

(!) ln81de tho PGA Tour
fJ1 (1) Love Connection

euoday . Cal 61•·441·7404.

7 rtt

queen

t1 :00 •

DINwd'a Wat• Oettvery. Ciatema, well. poole. Anytime but '

•

•s

a young doctor ~ttempti~g

to help city reSidents

1·1...1

.KJ9
.QJ 1065
tB

(J]J Tho Equalizer
McCall comes1o 1he aid ol

General Hauling

Complere

.

lD Ill
86

I

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

Chio~to
Me1a (3

Cuba at New York
hrs .)
8:35 (]) Major Loague Baseball:
Atlanta a1 Houalon (2 hrs..
45 m&lt;n.)
9:00 U CII ~ Hunler An

there's a woman saying, "Whal
do you mean you're going to be
late for -?"

A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
~ THESE SQUARES

9 M•Jor League Baseball:

RINQLES'S SERVICE, upa·
rWtelil C..,antlr, lftclridllft,
maon. - .... roofing lmclud·
... hat ... _ _ , 304·

..

fhe chuckle quoted
by fd ling in the missing word1
'--...1.-...&amp;--'--..J..-"'--' you develop from step Nc . 3 below .

.

projec1 Iells in love. (R).

r-al. Coll304-676-1331.

•

Behind every successful man

HADUNN
t-""TI-rl-,1~1'-5"""1.16--1 G)

8:15 9 Load.off Man
8:30 (J) Cl Cll Growing Pains
(CCI Maggie learns that

2~64.

.

r---:-----::--,

she is pregnant. Mike becomes Ben's servant and
Carol 's partner in a school

...... t . . . . .

1017.

·

mala

304·116·2388 or 614·448·

82

I
•
I I I I I" ~

life In oceans around the
world . (80 min.) (R).
8:05 (])Wild, Wild World of Ani·

EEK&amp;M.EEK

2

Q ERI U

is seen at work filming sea

RON"S Television Strvice.
HOUN calli on RCA, Queur,
GE. haciallng In z.,ltlo, Can

Fttty Traa Trlmmln9-

Il 11I l
I ~~ r r i IiI
1

photographer AI Giddings

,...,., reaeonllble ,...._. Cel__,.
American
lmprovm.nt•

I

cEN

A"N I

min) (R) .
(j]) Novo (CCI Underwa1er

· Cal 61 4-367·Ge23 or .
114-317· 77•1 or 304·175·
1247.

MotOI'I for S1le

rabultt ....... ftM • • bel1ecl

oon&lt;t., 4

Rick's romance with an
oddball apace princess
takes a bizarre turn when
her ex·boyfriend. who was

former.

hama. ''

alatama. poole 1nd wat.-bedl

anly 8,000 mllea, exc.

good

our

® Ill il]) Simon &amp; Simon

diHvered, tree61tumpremove1.
Don'a L.nd~e~~p•. Call 114- ·

'84 Honda 110 Night H-•·

76

1878 Oodgo Colt · - 4 cyt.,
I opoad, lloto ol pap) nMiy

mi-.

gala into letting her move
in-and promptly works her
charms on Tony. (R).
Cl) MocNeii-Lohrer Newsh·

.E.,...rMnl, lh.ta S. fruh: trMt,
muldt. ..nd • griVtl. topsoil

COli,

197t Ponti......... Ilia good - d. PI, PI, AM·FM,
CNila. Call 114· 448·2472.

pain~

her husband, she talks An·

ALLEYOOP

Mgr. 304·1t1·3212.

or 114·446·1171 or 814·4•8·
7111 .

18114 Cavallor otallon wagon . •
ntW eng.

hood siren breaks up with

.

117t Kow••l LTO, 1.000.
wlnclablold. OliO. 304·111·
41111.
304-171-1113.

oond ., 04,200. Col 614·:MI64Ge.
Farm Equipment

Honda

milao, •1.100. Cal 114·1148·
7211.

Mike'• AYto lal . . 1114
Chevett1 2 dr .• ted, one
PS, AT, 14,400 mllao, llilanM

•lr.

(CCI After the neighbor·

oh- n•lut~arHI­

1174 Cllavy lmttalo 350, Pl.
PS. AC. •100. Cal 814-4462914 altar I . ·

_n

Live.

'Eitctrolu• autfMwllld .... &amp;
.moe. Cd 0.-y Wiliamson,

1148·1646.

Faceman meets an old
friend at a high school re·J·
nion who involves the team
in a hunt tor buried trea -

Cll Cl Cll Who' a tho Soul

(1•• "' ""-"""

J • J't Home lmpt'Ovemant.
Yktyl lkllng. overh-., storm, •
doorl • windowt. gutt~r~. can . ·

...mentt.. Foat... Cona-ett
work. laddtoe'1. Doz• •nd

•*•·

Nil. Cal 614·446-1384.

• 3.115. 1te1 ....

Motorcycles

115 Honda Sh- 100, low
mMMge. many
ea. oond.
Ca8 altor 5. 614·0148·4180.

1976 Chry~or Cordoba V·l, PS,
Pl. AC. AM-FM radio, cNIM,
r - dltog, Call "4·31a·l311
aft• S or wllkende.

Fruit
Veget1bl11

Vane&amp; 4W.D.

1912 Jaap CJ-7 R.,agado
padiago h•dtop • aoft top• ....,
good eondMion, n .IOO. Ca8
114-448-7219.

1814 LTD Ford ttaiiDn waoon.
•uto, air, cruliae, ttfL wire rhna,
13,G9. John'• Auto 81111.
lulniHa Rd. , Oallpola. OH.

06.1100. 75 Buidl SltyhMk
noo. Call 114-381-trtll.

WITH IT-

' 72 Chevy truck, 304·115·
3630 .

1977 Corvotta, _.t oond .• -

100 w•tt Ftndff Band M•tlf'
guitar amph. 1450. 304-875·

w~oNG

pl111er repelra. Low retea.

PS,PI
.... good, runa _.t,
mlleo. .body

tr.,o. Call 114-812-1941 .

0132.

Co11614-246-6177.

CAN'T FIN!' ANYTHING

Uncondition.t lifltlma guar•n·
tee. Local reftrencet tumiahlld.
fr• lltimatiL Celt collect ·t
1·114·237·041B. day or night.
flloger• Beeement ..
Watlf1'rooflng.
ter &amp;

73

Musical
Instruments

~~ f!E=YONP TH~,- I

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

~ Jeoperdy
7:35 ([)Sanford and Son
8:00 D CII 1!11 The A·Teem

sure. (60 min .) (R) In
Stereo.
(]) Dakteri
(!) Boxing: 1988 U.S.
Olympic Festival Gold
Medal Matchas (3 hrs.)

Calll14·251·1182.

com . Cell forlat ..t quot11. River

mil-.
111dng t1.000. C•l 114-646-

67

TJiOU(;H'r. P~VOf&lt;: ING.

Home
Improvements

510B.

2 ttalnlela stetlfeedtr~lor pivs,
upto80 .,.. MO .OOMch. Small
ltodt trail• with thle made from
picktlp 1715.00. 304-875-7241 .

84

.

I FINP "iHE- PHIL.
PoNAHUE' SHOW" VERY

1971 Buick Sitylart. MOO. Call

'13 Cll....,lot picll up - ·
304-171·3241 .

CR06S. SONS
U.S. 35 - t. Jadloon. Ohio.
614-2116-1451 .

.

wth. bctllenl condhkm. ·--'
Call 114·982-1224. Sloapo li•·

ltlytime after 4 p.m . • 304·1715·

tires. Corvette Hceaaoriet,

Alum. etorm door 31x81, hard·
ware. ~er... and griH included.

Surplul denjm wettem cotton
thirtt t13.00, army cemou·
ft~~ge. rent.l ctoth6nt. army type
hllmentl. frM with kkl1 camou·
t1-oetuhapurdt111. Sem Sonwrville'e • E11t of RaYif'lswood.
12:00 · B:OO p.m. Fri. Sat Sun.
{paint.,. whha cloth•) Trailer
lot rant. 304-675·3334.

pow~~

•m·fm rlllllia, undlr

s..gle puppi", pure brtd . •
weeki old , 304-875-4219.

81

eeea.

1177 Champion. 23 lt. 14.000 ,
miiM, n.w awnings. AC. own ,

mea-

aft• 5PM .

.

cooker us• 1 time

..
.,

Cl) Up Pompeii!
Ill (J]J Entertainment Tonight Academy Award
winner Gene Hackman
talks about his role in the
upcoming film, "Deceit".

•&amp;.600. or bM1 ofloo. No trodo.

AUis Chalmera 7030 tractor,
130 hp. B•• offer, Sldan
Equlp.-nt Henderson, W. Va.,

71

II ((I !II WhHI of F'n"u"•

... Cewlier w-aon 4 cyl. lap.
lllr a rtdia, from wheal drfve.

676-1319.

2890.

pr•.,.,.

ttOO.oo. 304-

B5 Mercury Lrn•. 4 op, 4 cyt.
good eond. 304-67&amp;· 3613.

304-695-3441.

Austrtlian Heeter puppies. Pure
br~ . Red Of bkre . Mal• and
females . •so. Call 614 -7423104 afttr 5:30p.m .

304-675·3260.

18000 BTU Norge Air Condi ·
ttoner, f1tSO . 8 h . trucll topper.
flbtr gl111, MOO. Call81,·949·

.,g~n• .• I
31.•1 mH•. 1111111 tour, ni~!~
oi,IOO. CoM 614-286·1038. , ,

84

1973 &amp; 1871 Chevy '11 ton
trucks. Antique d•k. librery
table. Cell after 7PM. 114-"1·

B11 1.

1178 mini motortlome. 71• ..,

676 ·71141 .....

AT,etr, 71.100mHM.dewt.one

floor, modet oolor

Dodga ch-11. 311

2 female AKC Reg. Plkin•a
puppin, ready in 2 wka. CeM

0 ·4 CatlpiHar dozer 4wav bled e.
good condition. 18,000. Cell
Ponabl•

1986 CartNIO Z28. low ntl.
304-175·3427 .
current llk:ktr.

2-11 -2-38 ,.., tractor tir• •
tubel, 15-800-11 .5 truck wh . .
tir• tor Ford 1-ton truck.

Hay

.

-------- ' I

'78 Oodgo Aopan, good ..,.....

614-992-6146.

83

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Coli 614-266·485.

QQ .

NO, DO "''lll?

mil•. NADA ¥81ul •7300., will
aocapt ..ooo. Col 614-Mt2764 . ,• •,oo,

7401 .

79

German Shepllerd pupt, 9 wka.
old, AKC Registered bearttfvl6
very smart. •ao aach. Call

Sltv... Qu"" Com. You pick.
1.7fi 1 do1en. John Hill at Letart
Fall1. Ohio. Calll14-247-2142 .

TV . Call 114·446· 114B.

zx. 22,000

1912 OMC S-11, V-8. 4opd ..
bodllnnor. ,.., olldlng

Coli 614· 742 -2625 .

child about her new film .
"Sleeping Beauty".
fJ) Cl) Hogan' a Heroes
CICIJJeopardy
Cl) Nightly Busineso Report
®!News
(j]) MacNail-lehrer Nawah·
our
Ill (J]J Divorce Court
~ WhMI of Fortune
7:05 ([) Green Acreo
7:30 G CII Cll New Newlywed
Gamo
CII NFL Yearbook
fJ) Cl) Major League Baseball: Teams 10 be An·
nouncad (3 hrs.)

own•.

31140.

Roulh'• Tack Shop now has feed
and .,ppN• hr •II Trl County
Feir hlbitora.

1 year old femllle Squintt
Monkey end cage . Regiltered
Ou1rter HorN, mere. 7 yrt. old .

raelto talk to Morgan Fair-

304· 773·6244.

P•lln1 •

AKC Bauen Puppies. 8 weekt
old. F.A. 8anedum, Succns
Rd ., Reedt~ille, Ohio. Cell aft•
5:00 p.m . or anytime Seturday
•nd Sunday. 814-667-3851.

6:05 ([) Father Knowo Boot
6:30 D CIII!II NBC Nowo
Cll The Rifleman
(!) Revoo'o World Cla11
Women (R) .
(J) Cl (J) ABC News
Cl) Doctor Who
@I 01 (J]J CBS News
(j]) Body Eleclrlc
6:35 (]) Gomer Pyle, USMC
7:00 II CII PM Magazine
(]) Men from U.N.C.LE
(!) Sport&amp;Center,
(J) Entertainment Tonigh1
ET goes on location to Is·

n-.v lftoclle. •nd tailpipe. tl71.
One fM1lty
114·111·

311-6181.

614· 266· 9391 .

(f) Reading Rainbow (CCI
. (j]) Here's 10 Your Health

Camping
Equipment
---------

3686 .

Canning tomato11 alreadys
pickup, 15.00 a buahef pie••
bring own contlin••· Cal 11 4-

114· 245·9241 .

Auto1 for Sale

1974 Ok11 Omega, low mll1111e.

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER. SR 36 W. O•llipollo.
Ohio. Call 514·446·8777. avo.
614·441·3512. Up lront trletOfl with warr~nty over 11 UHd

304-675· 4628 .
66

Cll GrHn Acraa
(!) Mardi Sportslook
fJ) Cl) Star Trek

1870 ...,... oalf·eontoinad.

V1. 304-BB2-2222 .
600 bricks,

~News

~:===~======r.;;::::;~~;::;:;~ 78

Now buying lheU corn or ••

Block. brick, mortar and ma-

6:00 • ill (J) Cl (J) lD Ill (J]J

W1ntld Chevy Lu\1 moiOf, 1878" .
~ndup, 4 c:yl., 304-171·3044.:
11 ,...,..,._ • .

four ocramblod words be-

law lo lorm four simple words.

EVENING

Wanted 10 buy: NHd dlff.,.,.tlal

POllAN

ORoarrange lettors of 1M

7/29/86

.•

lolvaga parto ·u Dodto Omnl
car or will 1111 corrttlele car.
304-175-131B.

- - - - - - ldltotl ~y CLAY I.

"iewing

inqulrav•. '

216~882·4134.

BUILDERS

Garden Iiiier. trae1orbllde.smeU
lawn mawer. all good cond. Ce•

614·446·4426 .

o..ler

341-•11 .

........

fa• ~ 01n Dodtla pi&lt;*up. 61 4·
141·2883.

Ke~J!

cool with Emenon eir
conditioners. on aale now 1t
Mollohan Furniture, flit 7 North,
Kantuga. Cell 61•--Me-" "·

AutoPertl
Acceaoriea

blocklellsizet, yard or deltvery.
O•llipolla Block Co .. '123Yt Pine
St .. Gellipcllt, Ohio Call 114446· 2783.

aluminum
window a •ev•alsil•
2. ThMmtlpalnlnthermalbruk

.

"Z
•

- · •n.

6

614 -446·0373.

Plastic ciatern ttete approved.
plastic aeptic tankt, plettic
cu1Vtrts. metsl culvertt . RON
EVA"4S ENTERPRISES , Jeck ton , Oh. 814· 286·6930

36 lots

0

Building Material•
Block, brk:k. aewer pip•. win dows, Nntell, etc . Claude Win·
ters , flllo Grandt, 0. Call 8, 4-

For

Callthan ' t Used Tire Shop . Over
1.000tiret. li11112 . 13 , 14 , 15.
16, 16 6. 8 mihtt out At 218.
Celt 614-256-6261 .

2 bdr. wtth eJCpendo on At. 36.
Raf. &amp; dap . required . C1ft

mont lilY"'-'· 2 bdr. 1M ll.c.
e.. cond. let -up on Jot for rent.

used epplilflcet .,-ed ,TV aeta.
Open BAM to 'IPM . Mon thru

2 bdr. lC)Itairupt., unfumithed,
cerpeted, utilities peid. No cftild·
ren , no pe1s. Call 614 -446-

71 Kirkwood 12xl0 2 bdr., 111
ttac. C.. l 114-379-2112 or

8"' o,.,· 117t 14•65 FM·

County Appliance. Inc. Good

Call614-446-4926

PHONE 81'· . .8· 727 • .

WI/ILL TAKE T~ADE . Cal 614·
641· 2101 "'81~ · 841-2110.

40BB.

11 Court St. 2 bdr .. 2 beth,
kitch., furnished . no peta, 6326
mo . plus depo1it S. refer., oe .

446-ptl17 or 614-266·6011 .

1e11 Wetttn'l Menor. 14x70. 3
- -· 2 botha. •7000.

2 bedroom trailer.. Central air,
auhab .. for ooupl' 1nd one child.
I 150.00 pluautllitles, 304-875 -

6388 or 304·675 · 7926.

2 bdr. fully fumilhed , .tutt•
only. utllhl• pakl . Call 114-

NEW ANO USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S PUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES . 4 Ml
WEST. GALLIPOLIS , AT 35.

3 br fum. trailer w-front porch,
newly remodeled. depotit r•
quired. 304·875-3693 .

pertly paid • 160 mo.. Cell
304-876-6104 or 304 -676·

N.wer 3 "-droom rend'l home.
Atference• .nd deposit ,,.
quirtd. U50 mo . Phone Ito\.
742-3!171 .

676-6047

6031 .

Wuhert. dryers. refrigiM'atora.

rang11 . Skegga Appliances.
Upper River Rd. beside Stone

For ule 3 pc . u1ed bedroom ut.

6PM

-Modern 3 bedroom home. reduced to 148 ,000.00. 304-

1103.

Okler couples 2 bdr .. utiltiea
33

lampa,
buying coli &amp; wood
IIOYH. also
Cll1814-448·3159
.

Crnt Motel. 814·446-7398.

, 9BO Liberty 1•x&amp;4, 2 bed·
room, unfumithed. vinyl undtr·
pinning inctuded. Mu1t sail. Cal
MOBILE HOMES MOVED: in·
sured, reuonable ret•. CeU

IMngroom suiles •199·1599.

2 bdr. edutta only. no pets, 322
3rd. AVe., Gallipoli1. Ohio. C.ll

14x72 . Two bedroo,...; with
room addhion. Above Recine,
Ohto on 20 acrea. Free g11.
*250. Pff' month, part can be
worked out. Call 304-372 -

304-773-5B73.

wringor wuhoro .• ohooo. Now

GOOD USEO APPLIANCES

t250 month a •210 " - " '·
Call 614·445·3793.

6 room houM and bath 11!J aete
at intertectKm ot At. 143 and 7
Turn lift . first gr..,-. houM Pne~
reduced to 125 .000 C .. 614-

furnlthod. CaM 614· 742·2831
or 114·742·3100.

::::n..:~.:::o'"~~!: ::'9.~

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

614·446·374B or 614 · 256·

4 bedroom home on 1 acres

1111 Clayton. 14•70. 3 bodroomi. 2 batha, T· Lock aldrtlniJ.
wath• Md dryer; compf•etv

suite t399. bunk beds $199.

'----------..,.-----------i

Real Eslale

Call 614· 245·5815.

56 Building Supplies

1. Naw selvage tteel door
blanks, nicks end tcratch• t15
to 126 ...

~T eotlollb
lt&gt;\I~K ...

1\HS

11n Chewotet rrDtor In good
oond.. 075 . Call 614·216·
1421.
------:~·1•Now •aa1 body parll. 73·80 OM
•d ford pidl·up llndoro. US.
73·16 lui clooro. 078. Chovy !ail
FO&lt;dtait-. •75.
Ov• 1800 · - .. ........
from. C • ,. Auto P - -oil, ·
Ohio. 114-446-1227 • eyrdo; ,
h•orr. Ch-ton, W.V. 304· . •

W. Va .. 304·675· 7421 .

Olive St., Glllipolis. New a used

wood-eo•"••• ... 6 pewo•• LR

.ru.~~!!' July 29. 19S~ ···-~·----:-----------~P~om!!!er~o~v:·~~~~~O~h;io:!,_-;--:---r-:;;::::;::;:;::;::::;:The:;:D:a;i.l~y;S~e~n~tin;e~I:;P~ag;e:......:..9.
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z

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814·378· 2220 .

Fair Special. chain uw chains,
buy one get •cond haN price.
Sldera Eq.~lpmtnt. Hencllnon,

SWAIN

"Of course we look tired.
You told us not to go to sleep
angry Wl.th one another."

1

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front ,..., 4 whlll drtJt. Pricet .

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Truck camper 1300.00. Call

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8ullding materiel•. cement, ·

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614· 992·7177.

78

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Merchandi se

Ginger Brod HouM Pre·$chool.
181 N. 2nd Mktdleport for the
mlnh1lll price •1100. You mey
11CfUil-e 1 going bua6n••· Furniture ltld fixtures lo01ted in
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KIT'N'CARLYU®bri.MrJWrlthl

64Miac.Merchandill

-~

�1()-The

Kindness
attacks
opponent

Area deaths
ROIIClOe Fowler

Opal Kloes

Roscoe (Tony) Fowler, 70, 543N.
Second Ave., Middleport, died
Monday at University Hospital In
Columoos.
Mr. Fowler was born Aprtl 4
1916, In Cheshire, a son or the tat~
Georg£&gt; and Molly Wls£&gt; Fowler. He
was a member of the Middleport
First Baptist Church, whero:&gt; he
served as a deacon. He was a
member Of Feeney-BEnnett Post
128, American Legion, and the
Knights of Pythias Lodge.

Funeral services for Mrs. Opal
WUI Kloes, 70, College St""'t,
Syracuse, wlll be held at 1 p.m.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -Rep.
Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Home, with Rev. Steve Nelson Thomas Kindness, continuing his
attack on Sen. John Glenn for his
of!iclatlng.
Mrs. Kloes was oom June 30, pmklential campaign debt. has
1916, at Tipton, Iowa, a daughter &lt;t accused Glenn of "st~flng" small
the late Berta Eldon and Eunice cr£&gt;dltors who loaned him money or
McCullough Will. She was a retired provided services that year.
Kindness said Glenn owes
secr£&gt;tary, having worked for the
$!1l0,!XXI
to ooslnesses and camlate R.G. Webster In the Insurance
paign
wor~ers who put together his
ooslness and for tho:&gt; late Manning
Webster. Pomeroy attorney. She unsuccessful campaign In addition
was an active member &lt;t the to $1.9 million owed to four Ohio
Syracuse United Methodist Church banks.
According to Federal Election
and of the United Methodist
Commission
reports, Glenn's presiWomen.
dential
committee
owes 25 Ohio
SuiVlvlng are her husband, Karl
companies
$123,!163
bt outstanding
Kloes; lhree stepsons, Sidney A.
bills,
the
largest
of
which
Is $26,280
Kloes, Gahanna; Raymond K.
to
Arthur
Andersen
and
Co. &lt;1
Kloes. Crestview, F1a.. and Jon
Columoos
for
accounting.
The
Kloes, Pomeroy; two stepdaughtef'S, Mrs. Betty Lou Smith, Middle- smallest Is $lll owed t9 ESPAport, and Mrs. Ruth Ann Sellers. Consultlng of Columrus for data
Portland; a special cousin, Clarice processing.
"Hundreds of ooslnesses and
Allen, Chester, and 2lothercouslns.
Individuals
on good faith gave
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by her first credit to John Glenn for his
pmldentlal campaign," Kindness
husband, Henry Dalley.
Friends may caD at the funeral said Monday. "John Glenn rehome from 7-9 tonight and from 2-4 turned the favor by stiffing them
and 7-9 p.m. on Wednesday. Burial with unpaid bills."
Kindness made the remarks
will he In the Letart Falls
outside
the Nitschke Brothers
C£&gt;metery.
Office
Supplies,
a downtown CblumPallbearers wUl be Blll Eichinger, Franklin Rizer, BUI Arnott, hus store owed about $1,668 by
Kenneth Wiggins, Dick Ash and Glenn's presld£&gt;ntltal campaign
oommlttee.
WOllam Winehrl'!lner.
"Candidates for major office In
Ohio have a duty to discuss
programs they believe wlil create
jobs and economic growth," he
said. "I have done that and wlll
continue to propose such policies."
Rupert Ruppert, a spokesman for
Gll'lln, said Kindness' rt'marks
were not true. "He's just continuing
a
oC"gatlve attack," Ruppert said
The remaining $9 billion woold
mostly go toward saving middle- adding that the debt issue is the only
class tax breaks that would other- Issue Kindness has raised and he
thinks poople are getting tired of it.
wise be chopped by the Senate bill.
"There is nothing unusual or
ln a tough stance, Packwood also
unique
that It lakes aa numbrr of
said the $9 bUUon woold "represent
years
for
a candidate to pay off all
all we want to spend to pay for all
the -cllfferrnces we have" between d£&gt;bts, .. Ruppert said. "John Glenn
has pledged to launch a fundthe two measures.
raising
campaign to see that all
Both the House and Senate bills
those
d£&gt;bts
aro:&gt; paid."
would limit tax breaks In exchanl(l"
Kindness
said thert' is nothing
for lower rates. The Senate plan is
more
damaging
to jot&gt;;, especially
more radical and has received most
of the attention because It has In a small ooslness. than SJmeone
Individual tax rates of 15 percent who doesn't pay his bills.
and 'n percent that would almost
halve the top current rate of 50
Tenl meeting canceled
percent. The top rate in the House
bill is 38 percent.
The tent meeting which was to
But the Senate plan developed a
have been held at Forest Acres
problem last Wl'&lt;'k when revenue
Park July 28-Aug. 3 has been
projections showed that Instead of
canceled.
being "revenue-ni'IJ tral," It would
lose about $21 billion in the next five
years. At the same time, senators Two calls answered
admitted they must find at least
another :15 billion to make sure their
Meigs County Emergency 'vledibill gives enough aid to the middle cal SeiVIce reports two calls
class.
Monday; Syracuse at 9:34 a.m.
transported Carrie Counts to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 10:33 p.m. transported
Peggy Yeauger to Holzer Medical
Center.
Revival services will be held July
28-Aug. 3 at the Rutland Bible
Methodist Church. Services wlll
Veterans Memorial
hegln at 7 p.m. nightly with
Evangelist James Keaton. The
Admissions - Donald Husk.
singing of Buddy and Carol Allman
Pomeroy; Esta Roush, Portland·
will be featur£&gt;d on Thursday and Timothy Davidson, Pomeroy .
'
Friday. Public welcome.
Discharges - Clarence Proffitt.
William Young, Lucllle Brandt .
i(_
'on_tln_ued_rr_o_m_Pa.::.ge:_:_J:_r Darrell Krauner. Sue Bentz. John
Hunnell. Donald Husk.

SuiVIvlng are his wife, Sarah
Roush Fowler; a daughter and
son-In-law, Martha and Arland
King, Pomeroy; a son and
daughter-In-law, Mark and Karen
Fowler, Cambridge; five grandchildren, Michl and Marsha King,
and Jonathan, Jason and Jennller
Fowler; two lrothers, Henry
Fowler and Paul Fowler, ooth of
Columrus; a sister. Rilla Rusk,
Gallipolis; and several nieces and
nephews.
Besides his parents, he was
pr£&gt;Ceded In death by two brothers,
George and Clarence.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Thursday at the Rawlings-CoatsBlower Funeral Home, with Rev.
Earl Eden &lt;tflclatlng. Burial wUI be
In Gravel Hlll C£&gt;metery, Cheshire.
Friends may call at the funeral
home !rom 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Wednesday.

Packwood promises
•jolt' for negotiations
WASHINGTON (UPII - Cong-ressional tax reform negotiators
have faill'd to take any giant steps
toward a compromise, but the
leader of the Senate team is
promising to give the process a new
jolt that wUI start the horse-trading.
The House side of the conference
committee that Is trying to write a
final tax rt'form plan Monday
rejected almost all of a Senate
proposal that was mostly structured to fix the Senate bill so it
would not lose money.
The House memhers charged
that at least half of the Senate's I6
suggestions In the offer carne in
areas the conference committee
had no authority over_
The !'l'jection left lawmakers
unable to even begin making
decisions on how to iron out the
differences between the House and
Senate tax refonn measures. Untll
they agree oo a plan 1o ensurt' the
Senate bill wUJ not add tot he federal
deficit. they cannot start molding a
compromise product.
But the leader of the Republicandominated Senate forces, Sen . Bob
Packwood, promised to go back to
the drawing board and ret urn today
with a fresh $30 billion offer.
Packwood. R-Ore.. said the new
proposals would moslly be Ideas
l(l"neratl'd by the Democratic-led
House. and he Indicated they would
Include sorne of that chamber's
tough business tax provisions.
About $21 billion of the money
would go toward making sure the
Senate bUI would not lose money.

_,_______ .o;-,·--- . .

-Page 6

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Ohio weather

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enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio, Wednesday, July 30, 1986
.
~

Ground broken for' major reclamation project
By JIM WEIDEMOVER

OVP Slalf Wrller
CHESHIRE- Ground was broken Tuesday fort he
more than 178-acre reclamation of an abandoned
strip-mine site In Cheshire Township which Is
designed to limit flooding Of roads and prtvate
properties along Little Kyger Creek.
Sen. Oakley C. Collins, R-lronton, various Ohio
Department of Natural Resource officials. Gallla
County Commissioners, engineers, contractors and
land .owners were present at the morning ceremony.
The land. located three mlles west of the village of
Cheshire on Little Kyger Road on Poplar Ridge, wUI
he reclaimed by ODNR's Abandoned Mined Lands
Program with the actual work done by Holley
Brothers Construction Co. Inc .. Rodney.
The oontractlng firm plans to begin work as early

as Friday and hopes to finish by the end of the year.
The Kyger Creek Ill Reclamation Project will move
more than 'IOO,IXXI cubic yards of dirt.
Four watersheds wUI be effected by the
reclamation - Kyger Creek, Little Kyger Creek,
White Oak Creek and Campaign Cr£&gt;ek. according to
Robert Baker, manager of AMLP.
"Some 2,1XMl acres of land here was eHected before
legislation stopped It (the strip mining ruining the
land)," Baker said. "Downstream flooding has
damaged roads and agrlcullure."
Baker said his program's work, combined ~&lt;ith the
efforts Of the Ohio Department d Transportation's, Is
what led to the opening of Ohio 5541n Cheshire. which
had been perpetually flooded for approximately 10
years.
The area the Kyger Creek project lslocated oo was

mined by Ohio River CoOler In the 1900s. As a resuit or
lnadequat£&gt; reclamation practices, the hlllslde has
been actively eroding, depositing sediment Into the
local stro:&gt;ams. and causing severe flooding or roads
and properties.
The reclamation work, estimatl'd to oost $1,293,lXl,
will lnclud£&gt; major earthmoving, resoillng, and
seeding the site. Elimination of acid water
lmpoundm~nts and dangerous highwalls wlll be
reduced while spoll plles will be regraded and barren
spoil material revegetated.
Funding for the project is provided by the OHice of
Surtace Mining Reclamatlon and Enforcement,
Departmo:&gt;nt of the Interior to til' Department of
Natural Resources through a federal grant. These
fuods are generated from current coal and industrial
minerals mining operations through a severance tax.
The money for the grant was made possible

By ANDREA NEAL
WASHINGTON (UPIJ - Opponents of Justice William Rehnqulst
are engaged In character assaslnation, Republican senators charge.
hut some leading Democrats say
Rehnqulst is simply "too extreme"
to he the nation's 16th chief justice.
The Senate Judiciary Committee
began Its second day of hearings
today on President Reagan 's nominee to ro:&gt;place ret lrlng Chief Just ice
Warr£&gt;n Burger.
Democrats planned to grill Rehnqulst about charges he harassed
black voters In Phoenix during the
early 1900s and about memos he
wrote 34 years ago as a SUpreme
Court clerk favoring racial
segregatlon.
·-A ' spokesman · for commlttee
chalmfan Strom Thurmond. RS.C., said an FBI Investigation or
Rehnqulst has been completed and
undercuts allegations that Rehnqulst tried to keep minorities from
voUng In a Republican ballot
security program In Arizona In 1962
and 1964.
The harassment charges first
were aired In I971 when Rehnqulst
was nominated to the SUpreme
Cout1 hy President Nixon, but
opponents say the Judiciary Commlnee never fully explored them.
Witnesses contend they saw
Rehnquist approach black and
Hispanic voters at the polls.
challo:&gt;ngl'd them to read a card and
questioned their qual~l c ati:Jns to
vote.

Rehnqulst responded to the
charges In writing In 19TI, saying,
"ln none of these years did I
personally engage In challenging
the qualifications of any voters."
Rehnqulst, 61, took the stand only
briefly Tuesday, calling his nomlnatlon a "great honor" and welcomIng the chance to answer questions.
With him were his wife, Nan. his
daughter, Janet, and ll&gt;n-ln -law
Joseph Lynch_
The conservative jurist sat expmsloniess as Sen. Edward
Kennedy, D-Mass., ripped Into his
civil rights record before a packed
hearing room.
"Mainstream or too extreme that Is the cp~estion," said Kennedy,
who voted against Rehnqulst when
he w~s first nominated to the rourt
In I9'n. "By his awn r£&gt;COrd of
massive Isolated dlssett, Justice
Rehnquist answers that question.
He Is too extreme on race, too
extreme on women's rights. too
extreme oo freedom of ~h. too
extreme on separati:Jn of church
and state, too extreme to be chief
justice."
Republicans countered the harsh
criticism. Sen. Jeremiah Denton.
R-Aia., said Rehnqulst, In his 15
years on the court, "has quickly
established himself as one of the
gro:&gt;atest jurists of our time."
Turning to face Rehnqulst. Sen .
Orrin Hatch. R-Utah. said no
person In this oountry Is better
quamled to be chief justice.
"When tt comes to competence.

WASHINGTON iUPII - Presld£&gt;nt Reagan says the "the ball Is In
the Soviet cout1" on nuclear arms
negotiatlons amid renewed but
cautious optlrnlsm that plans lor a
second superpower summit could
be back on track.
Reagan told a group of GOP
Capitol Hill student Interns Tuesday that he agreed to a Soviet
"work plan, Involving a series of
pro:&gt;paratory meetings that could
lead to a productive summit later
this year."
Administration sources said
Tuesday that Secretary of State

George Shultz and Soviet Foreign
Minister Eduard Shevardnadze
plan to mept In Washington Sept.
19-:J&gt;, just before the Sept. 22
Ope!llng of the U.N. General
Assembly In New York.
Officials said the United States
and Soviet Union are expected to
make a simultaneous announcemen! soon that the meeting wUI he
held. a signal that plans for the
summltbetweenPresldentReagan
and Soviet lead£&gt;r Mlkltall Gorhachi'V could be hack on track after
months of delay.
While the final go-ahead lbr that

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Stalehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI l -Gov.
Richard F. Celeste says he has no
proof that James A. Rhodes. helped
engineer last week's Indictments of
his campaign finance director and
a top Democratic fund -rals£&gt;r.
But Celeste told repot1ers Wednesday that his Republican gubernatorial opponent Is a "genius" at
sidetracking campaigns by focusIng attention on peripheral Issues.
The governor told repot1ers at
the
Governor's Manslon he will let
'
the voters decide Nov. 4 aoout the
politics of the Indictments, and that
there are many more Important
Issues at stake.
Celeste said the real issues in his
1986 re'E'IectiOn f ampalgn revolve
III'OIInd SECUring ernployml'!lt for
Ohioans and attracting jobs of the
futuro:&gt; to the Buckeye State.
Meeting with reporters only a few
hours after returning from a
four-day perSJnal trade mission to
HEARING OPEN§ - Sen. Strom Thunnond, &amp;S.C., left, chalnnan
Japan, Celeste stllllnsisted he has a
of the Senale Judlclary Commlllee, &amp;poke wlh C1tlef JU!Itkle mmlnee
"gut feeling" that Rhodes and other
WUBIU11 Relmqtdsl Tuesday prior to Relulqulsl'soonllnnaifon hearing.
Republicans put pro:&gt;ssure on
(UPI)
Franklin County Prosecutor MIchael Miller to get indictments ol
when it comes to Integrity. when It from liberal quarters, his confirma- Democrats and string the process
tion Is expected In the GOP- out Into the election campaign.
comes to faithfulness to the law, I
Dressed In shirtsleeves, suntans
believe you get an A-plus In those controlled Senate. During their
ope11lng
statements,
nlne
of
the
18
and
deck shoes. C£&gt;1este held forth
areas," Hatch said. Opposition to
committee
members.
Including
at a picnic table under a S!X'eadlng
Rehnquist. Hatch said, was nothi~
more than "character Democrat Dennis DeConclnl of maple tree on the grounds of his
Arizona . Indicated they have al - home. His eyes were red -rimmed
assassination."
and he appeared fatigued from ooly
Despite objections to Rehnqulst ready decided to vote lor him.
five hours of sleep following a
32-hour day which Included the
Olght home from Tokyo.
The governor, who traveled with
ClaTI'I!ce D. Pawlicki. state devel announcement had not yet been W~~~- must continue our SOl opment director. shed little light 111
given, Ia ra~;,W~~tate~partr~' program on, schedule " he told the his trip to Japan . He said he met
of!lcla ~ t "I .ba
a as~ Interns. "The offensNe and defen- with seni&gt;r executives of a major
1
minute, tch,
s go g 10
slve parts of the equati:Jn are manufacturing company which Is
shortly.
ld the
Is
clearly relaled and both are part of planning a joint venture with
The ol!lclal sa
re
byno our dlscussi&gt;n with the Soviet another Japanese firm to locate In
d£&gt;adllne for the anmuncement
Union we won 't bargain away the United Stales.
the two governments, oot Thursday SOl .. C£&gt;1este would nell her oonllrm
or Friday are the~s;!keplly ~"For the first time. however," he nor d£&gt;ny that the firm is Suharu, a
Reagan
In W n;lngtor a adde&lt;l, "we are not only pointed In Japanese au tomaker rumor£&gt;d to he
1
second su
as
on. the rtght direction toward reduc- loOking at Ohio for possible location
possibly In late November or early lion and eventual' elimination or of a factory.
The governor's office last week
December.
. 1
nuclear weapons we have hegun to
At the same time, hels mamta n- move - ooth sides - down that IssUed a statement characterizing
lng his hard line on the Str~!egtc road ..
the Indictments of Pamela Conrad.
Delense Initiative, known as Star
·
"

'!:f

:::U

GOP legislators blast choice
for workers' comp contract
By LEE LEONARD
UPI SlaleUue Reponer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI I - The
Ohio Buro:&gt;au of Workers' Compe!lsation Is awarding a $44,100 unbid
contract to the firm headed by a
former Ohio Democratic Party
offlclal for writing a "strategic and
tactical pian" for the rureau's
operation In ~ llannon As90Clates, Inc., Columoos, Is being hir£&gt;d to l't'llls£&gt; the plan
It originally developed for 198&amp;37 at
a cost o! $42,450. Bannon_, that
19811 contract when four accounting
firms solicited by the BWC dee.llned
to make an offer.
William J. Bannon, presldeltt of
the firm, was the finance ch8lrtnan
Of the Ohio Democratic Party !rom
1972-74.
He also chaired a commlttee
which was lined $:1,1XMl ~r padding
the state payNll In late 1974 wltll
Democrats who were actuallY
woiklng on an unsuccessful recount

to reverse Gov. John J . Gllligan's
narrow re-election loss.
The contract, which calls for
Banoon and two as!llCiates to he
paid $75 an hour for 73\!, days of
work, was approved eerUer this
week by the state Controlling
Board, 5-2.
The reylsiOn of the plan Is
Intended to carry the hur£&gt;Su
throoglt the 19118-89 flscat pa'lod,
lleyood the c:urnnt term of the
Celeste administration.
"It seems to me we' r£&gt; !armlng
out work
ooght to he done by
state tlDVI!fll.llll!t, and that results
Ill big oocks;" said Sen. Stanley J.
Aroool!, . Jl:Cinclnnatl, who Voted
aplnlt the contract "It's a nevererulngp~." ·

which

-"For aome reuon,

they keep

going back to this company," said
Rep. Robert E. Netzley, R-Laura,
who cast the otbet negative vote.
"This Is !Ike an annual salaJY for
lUll (Banlllnl."

through a law passed by Congress Aug. 3, Im,
levying a severo:&gt;nce tax on all coal currently mined.
The tax, 35 cents per ton of underground coal. Is
collected and distributed by the Federal OffiCI' of
Surtace Mining.
The land Is owned in 10 separate lots, nine owners ol
which reside In Gallia County. One group is located ln
Colurphus, according to ODNR ofUclals.
More reclamation in CalHa County Is expected In
the recent future, Collins aMounced. On Monday, the
State Controlling Board released $133,403 In federal
money to Dodson-Linblom Associates Inc.. of
Columbus. to draft a pro:&gt;limlnary and final design lor
the White Oak I and II reclamation projects.
The work wUI consist of regrading and revegetatlng
350 acres of toxic and eroded abandoned strip-mine
soil.

Celeste: Rhodes
pressured probe

Reagan finds renewed hope for summit

24 Oz.

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8 P.M. 'TIL '.:
12 Midnight

Partly cloudy today and tonight.
Hlghswlll be ln the mid to upper !lis
and lows In the upper 00s.
Mostly SUMY Wednesday with
hlghs In the upper 8ls.
The probability of IX'eclpllati:Jn Is
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Winds wlll be Ugh! and from the
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i Beat of the Benu.·-

• 298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

Revival underway

nothing from Pomeroy Village in
answer to his letter lilggestlng that
land above the Sears Store be given
to Middleport which would provide
sewage disposal ...-vice so that two
new ooslnes"''S could open there.
The ru§lllesses would employ
between a&gt; and ll poo~e. Hoffman
reported. hoWE"Jer, that Pomeroy
Cooncll did not hold Its regular
meeting last Monday so the maner
could not have been discussed.
Council discussed the establishment of a sidewalk area on Pearl
Street, below the traffic light and
!tflclals will discuss steps to he
iaken with the nearby property

j

I

Council protests __
1bomas. The lot has been advertised prE'I'iously and once all bids
were turned down and the second
time there were no bids. The lot Is
appraised at $7.~ but can he sold
for any figure acceptabletocouncll.
Councllman James Clatworthy
voiced a complaint aoout WOUB
being removed from the service of
Consolidated Cbmmunications. He
also rep&lt;Jrted that he had been
called to a home on Third Avenue.
whererats have been found . He was
told that the health department
looks Into these matters.
Drainage problems on Beech
Street were discussed, along with
sidewalk provisions for the handicapped In the business section.
Annexall:&gt;n of territory below
Middleport was discussed with no
new developments being reported.
No news on 101ggestloa
Upon questioning !rom council,
Hollman said that he had heard

Conurtunity events

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.
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~--·--·-"·--·- ·---.-~-···-...,r

James L. Mayfield, administrator r1. the BUJ'EQu of Workers' '
Compensation, said he doES not
havee personnel to do the IDJti·
rango? planning.
Mayfield saki h£&gt;was "very, very
satisfied" with Banoon's work on
the ltlltial contract and that Bannon's l&gt;nner IJI!mocratlc party
post had "absolutely no bearing" on
his getting the jOb.
Mayfield said Banron's plan took
the ooreau out Of a "crisis
managemEilt" syndrome and gave
It a set rl. goals to llii'SUe, and

ta~·W! ~!f~"':: ~ve em

Bannon a contract )1st because lie
formerlY worked with the party,"
.sa!d Maytleld.
,
Mayfield said Banron worlll!d In
8~ 198.'1 wltli deputies &amp;~~d aectioll
chlefiiD deY1!IOp a set or aoaJs and
tactlCI, which he !XII Inti)" •a
Cltlllplllel: proaram. That projp'atn
Is rev~ . rool\thly to cheek oit
accompUsbmEIIts, he said.

finance director of the Ohio Democratic Party. and Larry McCartney. the finance director of C£&gt;leste's re-election campaign. as a
"political witch-hunt" by Rhodes
and Rep~blicans.
Conrad was Indicted on three
counts of brlhery, one count ol
complicity to commit bribery and
one count of perjury . McCartney,
who seiVed as the governor's
persoMel director from January
1983 untll last fall, was Indicted on
one count of perjury.
Celeste Insisted that Rhodes has
campaigned by grand jury for 25
years, oot he repeatedly faDed to
offer any ooncrele proof or a basis
for his allegati:Jn.
"It's right her£&gt; In my gut and
thilt's the best basil&lt;!' -he said, ·
pointing to his stomach. _
"You say you have a feeling
about this In your gut rut no
evld£&gt;nce, Is that right?" asked a
reporter.
"That's right." replied Celeste.
The governor was asked If his
characterization of the grand jury
activity as "a political witch-hunt"
was a statement d fact. "It's a
statement o! my judgml'!lt of the
facts." he said. "My feeling Is that
it's a polltlcal witch-hunt."
Celeste said the grand jury
lnvestigati&gt;n lasted eight months
but could have been finished by last
April 15.
"My feeling is that Uthey wanted
to dispose of this stuff In a timely
way, It could have been," said; 11\e
governor. "There was notltlng that
couldn't have hel'll handled bt 90
davs.

!'

"The politics will be judged on the
fourth of November and then Uuit'il
be over," said C£&gt;leste. "And
prepared to let that he the case.
pro:&gt;pared to let Nov. 4 decide the
political dimensions of this. and t~
legal system wUI work on it."
The governor said Rhodes wants
him to keep worrying about t1tf
Indictments. and wants the n~
inedia to focus attention on them.
The real Issues. said Celeste. are
jobs of the future for Ohio, solving
the LTV Corp. bankruplcy and
solvtng the liability Insurance crisis
for businesses.

I'm
I'm

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