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                  <text>r-age- I~-. I he Dally

~tinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, August 6, 1986

r---Local Briefs:-- Ohioan helps ~ab rob~ry suspect
Celebrezze managers named
PETERSBURG, W.Va. (UP!)Foster H,edrlckdld Ids duty, and the
suspect In the tlrst robbery of the
66-year-old Potomac Valley Bank
was captured within two hours.
Grant County Sheriff Larry Ours
credited Hedrick's actions for
nl'ltlng tbe admitted professional
bank robber following hiS $3),00l
heist.
Bercha Ray Snyder, 51, of

Attorney General Anthony J. Celebrezze Jr., announces the
appointment of D. Michael Mullen and Ernest Wingett as Ids
campaign managers In Meigs Crunty.
·
Mullen Is an attorney in Pomeroy, having received Ids law degree
from Capital Law School In Columbus. He is a member of the Ohio
and Meigs County Bar Associations, the Meigs Jaycees and ts a
member of the board of directors of Meigs Jndustrtes. Mullen
residents on Lincoln Heights In Pomeroy.
Wingett, a retired school teacher and a farmer In Racine, was
mayor .of Racine for 18 years. He has also been engaged 1n the
newspaper business and Is active In Democratic circles. He has been
on the Meigs Boand of Elections. HE' and Ids wife. Maxine, reside In
Racme.
Meigs County residents who are interested In wlunteertngto work
on the Celebrezze campaign may contact Mullen at 992-6417 or
Wingett at 949-2441.

Goodyear

(Continued from PagE.&gt; 11

Goodyear's board of dlrl'Ctors
met Tuesday afternoon to approve
the expansion plans which call for
the construction of additional units
and the refinement of the existing
faciUty at the Apple Grove site.
J.O. Carver, plant manager at
Apple Grove, said engineering will
begin at the md of next week, with
construction expected to begin In
about six months. The expansion
should be compiE.&gt;ted by thE' E.&gt;nd of
1988, he added.
Carver assured that Goodyear
will uSE'd local craftsmen In the
construction phase r:i the rroject.

Clarks return from convention
Joe and Susan Clark of Clark's Jewelry Store in Pomeroy and
Gallipolis havE.&gt; returned from New York Qty where they attended
the four-day JE.&gt;Welers of America 1986 July lnll'rnatlonal JE.&gt;Welry
Trade Show and ConvE.&gt;nlion.
In addition to attending a convention program for retail jE.&gt;welers,
Mr. and Mrs. Clark also previewed the DE.'wesl jewelry styles and
trends on display by more than 1,100 leading manufacturers and
deslgnE.&gt;rs who exhibited from the United States and abroad. Many d
the new styles will be available in lime for fall and Christmas
gift-giving, the Clarks report.

Cleveland .was heldlnGrantC014nty
Jail in lieu of $100,00&gt; bond. Snyder
was arrested after pollee hurled
tear gas Into a mobile home at the
rear of a motel whl'n he faDed to
respond to commands to emerge.
He offered no outwand resistance,
but was a pistol was taken from
him, Ours said.
Snyder, believed by authorities to
be crlglnally of D:xldrldge County,

In a meeting with members of thE'
Mason County Development Authority's executlw committee
Tuesday, Carver commended thE&gt;
governor's officE.&gt; for the coopE.&gt;ratlon and assistance It has given thE'
company. "A good strong job has
bel'n donE' by the governor's
pl'Ople," he said.
The local Goodyear plant currently produced polyesll'r resins lor
packaging, powder coatings, adhesives and other specialty typE.&gt;s of
resins. ThE' plant Is In operation
seven days a W!!E'k, 24 hours a day,
Carver said.

Pre-kindergarten meeting set

4 fined for Monday brawl

A meeting of childrl'n who will enter kindergarten In the Southern
Local School District this month and their Plrl'nts will beheld at 7: 30
p.m. Thursday at Southern High School.
Pupils who havE.&gt; not registered earlier may do so at the Thursday
night mi!E'ting. Parents arE.&gt; to takE' the Immunization rl'Cords and the
birth certificatE's for thl'SE' children.

Four pE.&gt;r~ms Involved in an
altercation on the PomE.&gt;roy parking
lot Monday night were fined and
given jail sentences when they
appE.&gt;ared before PomE.&gt;roy Mayor
Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
Facing the disordl'rly conduct

Mason County fair schedule
Tonight
Market lamb show
5:30p.m.
Sarrow Way Singers
6p.m.
Uttle Miss, Mr. Masoo County
7p.m.
4-H Leader Memorial Award
7 p.m., Jr. bldg.
Jr. open dairy show
7 p.m.
Demolition derby
7 p.m.
Junior style show
7:30p.m.
Gospel Harmony Boys
9:30p.m.
Thursday a.m.
Kid•' Kid Show .............................................. 9 a.m., show rinK
Open beef show .... ........................................................ 10 a.m.
Pie eating mntest ......................................................... ll a.m.

EMS answer8 five calls
ME.&gt;igs County Emergency Medical ServicE.&gt; reports five calls
Tuesday.
Middleport at 2: II a.m. to Hobart Street for Roy Boggs, who was
ll'!'alro but not transported: Pomeroy at2: 34 p.m. transported HE.&gt;Ien
Jones to VE'terans ME.&gt;morial Hospital: TuppE.&gt;rs Plains at 5: 22 p.m.to
Long Bottom for Josephine WE.&gt;lis to St. Joseph's Hospital; Racine at
8:41 p.m. to Ohio 124 for Karl'n Turley to VE'terans Memorial
Hospital: Racine at 10:17 p.m. to Ohio l241or Mina PlckenstoHolzer
Medical Center.

Ohio weather
South Central Ohio
Mostly cloudy with a chance of
showers and thundNstorms
through Thursday. HighS today and
Thursday will bE' In the mid Ills.
Lows tonight wUI bE' In the mid OOs.
The probability of precipitation is
50 pE.&gt;rcent today and tonight annd
ll percent Thursday.
Winds will be light and from the
south today and light and variable
tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday
Chanoe r:i showers and thunderstorms Friday and Satunday. Fair
Sunday. Highs will be in the Ills
Friday and between 75 and 85 by
Sunday. Lows wUI be in the 00s.

cha~s

werE.&gt; Dean Whlltlng1on,

Pomeroy,$100andcosts,l5daysln
jail and six monthy probation;
Charll's Whlltlng1on, Pomeroy,
$:50andcosts,30dayslnjallandsix
months probation: Don Icenhower,
PomE.&gt;roy. $250 and costs. JOdays in
jail and six months probation. and
Rhonda Phelps, Pomeroy , $150 and
costs, five days in jail and six
months
Othersprobation.
lined Tuesday night were
Richard Friley. PomE.&gt;roy, $113 and
costs, Intoxication, and Charll's
Ducan, Star City, W.Va., $63 and
costs, lmpropE.&gt;r pa~slng. BUI
Childs, Middleport, forfeited a $47
bond posted on spl'edlng charges.

Racine
(Cont inued from Page II
table for Ihe park.
Council recessed until 7 p.m.
Monday, Aug. 18.

Is wanted by the FB!forburglary ol
banldng Installations. He admitted
to authorities Tuesday to robbing
sE.'Ven other banks since December
cllast yE.&gt;ar- four in CI!'Veland, one
in Salem. W.Va., one In Buckhan-

Ohio Lottery

In the
spotlight
-Page 9

mn, W.Va., and one in North
Carolina, au thortties said.
Hedrick. 40, and his 11-year-old
daughter werE' Inside the Potomac
Valley Bank durtng the Monday
morning robbery.

li~nses

Vo1.36, No.66
Copyrighted 1986

Marrtage Urenses have reen '
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Donald Gondon Yeater, 62,
Torch, and Ada Louise Barnhart,
68, Reedsville; Henry Eblin Sr., 76,
and Helen Dorothy Johnson, 71,
both of Pomeroy; Ronald Ray
WUllams. 18. Mason, W.Va., and
Christy Ann Dye. 20. Middleport.

and
Trudy R. Spradling have bl'en
granted a dissolution cif marriage In
Meigs County Common Pleas

111 Sec d s

Case dismissed

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

an

A case by Ohio Power Co. against
Lillian Marlene Hall, et al, has bl'E.&gt;n
dismissed In Meigs County Com·

Sentinel Stall Writer
Indications from the Meigs County Commissioners
are that the Carper's Nursery access road projl'Ct Is
not dead In the water yl't.
Meigs County Engineer .Phil Roberts reported to
the commissioners Wednesday that he ml't with
George Carper last week to determine another site
(rom which to enter thE' CarpE.&gt;r propE.&gt;rty with an
access road from U.S. 33. The proposed location for
the road was one of the state's main objections to the
project, which has bel'n in thE' works for SOmE' lime,
Roberts said.
It was believed by those who have bel'n Involved In
thE' project at the local ll'vel that proposed

p
t., omtroy

WE WILL BE
CLOSING AT
NOON THURSDAY
AUG. 7th, TO ENJOY THE MASON CO. FAIR

By ELIOT BRENNER

WASHINGTON (UP! 1 - The
Navy's plan to build more ports for
its growing fleet remains afloat
today, kept alive by SenatE' supporters who rejl'Cled a challE.&gt;nge from
opponents who branded It a porkbarrel project on a grand scale.
The 65-34 vote against an effort to
cut money for the port construction
- Initially at Staten Island, N.Y ..
and EvE.&gt;rl'tl, Wash .. and later along
the Gulf Coast- marked a day of
slow progress Wednesday on the
$292 blllio~ 1987 defenSE' approprialions bill on Capitol Hill.
ThE' House was unable to get to
the but but hoped to return to It
today once a hitch on ground rules
goyernlng dE'ball' was resolved. An
altiim)i(' li)cut ~g lor ''Star
Wars" ·research - from the $3.7
bllllon contained In the House blllto
just $3.1 billion - was E.&gt;xpected
when debate resumed.
On the Senate side, membl'rs
expl'Cled to reach debatE' by latE'
morning on efforts to stall a nl'W
chemical wE.&gt;apon, the troubled
BlgE.&gt;ye bomb, and to challenge a
NATO rerttfication that cleared the
way lor the nl'W binary wE.&gt;apons, an
artlllery shell and the BlgE.&gt;ye. The
weapons mix seperate chambers of
two relalivE.&gt;Iy harm!E.&gt;ss chE.&gt;mlcals
Into a IE'lhal concoction after being
!Ired.
The Navy port plan, which is not
contained in thE' HouSE' bill, would
build facllllil's at the NE.&gt;W York and
Washing1on state locations and
E'ventually at sevl'n Gulf Coast
points to sprE.&gt;ad out the fleet.
Supporters claim this would redure
the risk d a devastating SDE.'ak
attack llke PE.&gt;arl Harbor.
The move against "strategic
homeporting" was launched by
SE.'n. Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M., who
proposed laking $141 million out of
the blll and spending it Instead on
ammunition lor the Navy.

SEE YOU THERE!

CLIP AND SAVE

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$2995
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MED. EGGS ........... JlJT-..69&lt;
Hllt-N-DAlE

CHEESE .................... S1.89
I LB. BLUE BONNET

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MARGARINE ... A~.1t'A8~. 79&lt;

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HEAD
95 CT. SUNK IS!

LEMONS ............. 2 FOR 69&lt;
3 LB. LODI

COOKING
APPLES .................... SJ.19

The Navy puts the price tag at
under $1 billion. but critics likE' SE.'n.
Barry Goldwater, R-Artz .. chair-

5 OZ.. BANQUET OR MORTON

-

COOK IN THE BAG ••.••••• l.tos •• 99&lt;
12 OZ.. STOUFFER$
STEAK &amp; ONION GRAVEY .••• S2.S9

By ANDREA NEAL

MUSHROOM SOUP ••••••••• l.~os •• 99c
15 OZ.. SHOWBOAT
PORK &amp;.BEANS ..............t~oa .. 79&lt;
15 OZ; CHEF-BOY-AI-DR
ROUER ' COASTER .....~ ....... ~ot4••• 89&lt;

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SIN'lCMrC •gnmon. Yf't'll&lt;ll'S
t'QUippt'd W lttl qrt&gt;itle'r thtm l·bOI
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TEA •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••M S3.69
11 OZ.. KELLOGG'S

~----(&gt;ri~;.Portofino--~s-e-:6...,.-----Pri~~;;:);an pie--;s:;:s...,
ltaljan pie

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I S3.00oft'any luge,orSl.OOoft'anymediwn,
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S2.50 ofhny large, or $1.50 off any medium, or

Pizza

S2.~ off any l;qe, or $1.50 off any medium

rr~r ; :r•' lralr;an pw avarlablt afnr 4PM Monday · Fr~ay nnd all d~~
Sawi.day and S uroda~
f"ltaM" pruent coupon when llrdrrrflll Qrw. coupon rer par~ y IX' V~&lt;n
.rt parue~paunt Pr:u Hut "rtJta\.nants Valid on rr~lu menu ptrc~~
only N01 valid rn combkllnion with any 01Mr c~ or promrnional
nHer G()O(( on eat-In OtCU'f'l'OUI. ~rvinR ume' may
v~ r ~ m snmt r~1tauran11 Offer aood rhrmJ!i!h

r ru~w · hahan pr~ ~va.lah!t afler i PM Mor.d1v · Frtdav and ~ 11 d~v
Saturday and SuOOay
Please prevnr toupon ""~" orderma One- ~(rupc&gt;n per pany per \' ISH
at panicip;mnr Pr:za Hut ' rtltluranr~ Va hd m t('jlul~r menu pncu
only Not valid rn combinarioo wuh any mhtr coupon or ptomouonal

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offer

Good on eat·in or curyoul. Scrvn~ umn

w m• rurau;ants. 0Hf r tood rhMtrgh

4115 Wool Main St.
Pomeroy. Ohio

r,,.,,,., " a rq;~trf'r«i rradrmul 1.( Pr::a Hur. lnf

lOr 111 bnnd Ill' haliRn ~
t1 1111!6 Pizza Hut [Me IIZQf

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APPLE JACK ....................... S1.89
24 OZ.. SWEET SUE

CHICKEN &amp; DUMPLINGS •••• S1.19
6'12 OZ.. CHICKEN OF TIE SEA

or Sl.OO oft' any IDiall

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416 Welt Mein St.
I
Po.......,y. Ohio
I Pro~: :(•" a rtt~srertd lftdtmlrli of Pita Hur. lfl(
r.f li1l1111 ~
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3 OZ. UPTON'S DECAFFEINAI,ED

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Chrylser • Plymourh

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TUNA ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.•.•••• 99C
4 ROLL WHITE CLOUD

TOILET TISSUE .................... S1.39
151ft OZ.. ftOPICAL

FRUIT "SALAD
••••••••••••••••••••••••• 89c
"
.

24 OZ. WILCH'S

GRAPE JUI ••••• ~&lt;~·············· $;1.19

business was greatly e!!ecled when the 33 lour lanE'
was constructed years ago, cutting his nufSE'ry off
from the main flow of traffic.
Roberts also reported that county highway
dl'partment workers havE.&gt; Installed 150 feet of drain
pipE.&gt; in front of the SyracuSE' EIE.&gt;mentary SchooL The
pipE.&gt; was Installed to eltminate a rl'Currlng flooding
problem durtng rains.
Ted Warnl'r, county highway supE.&gt;rlntendent,
reported that County Road 31 has bel'n grader
patched and that patching started Wednesday on
County Road 28. Mowing Is underway on the Leading
Creek section of County Road 3, he added.
At thE' request of Michael Swisher. director of thE'

Meigs County Department of Human Services, the
board accepted a two-year contract with Racine
HomE' National Bank lor the handling of food stamp
transactions, at a rate of $1 to the bank per
transaction. The said lee Is to be retroactive from
Aug. 1, pE.&gt;nding approval by the stale. Without state
approval, the fee will be in effect as of Aug. 6.
ThE' board !hen met in executive session with
Carson Crow, assistant Meigs County prosecuting
attorney, to discuss pE.&gt;ndlng iitigatlon.ll was reported
by Jones thai a suit by Belty Williams against thE'
county is scheduled to begin trial this morning at 9
a.m. The suit stems from the letting go r:i Williams In
August !983 as an employee at the county Infirmary,

Janrik-7

man of the Anned Services Com·
rnlttee, said It could run into thE'
billions.
Goldwater, noting t~ political
clout the extra ports would give the
Navy, sarcastically said more than
a quarter d thE' SenatE' Is "Indebted
to the secretary of the Navy."
"The whole thing Is ludicrous. It's
a total waste of money," Goldwater
chargl'd. "It'll cost SlO billion before
you're through fooling around with
this homeporting."
Supporters countered thE.'ir motives were baSE'd on national
security nel'ds, not political greed,
and said the nl'W ports could cut
travel limE' to Europe and the
Pacific In the evenlofwaras well as
reduce rtsk to the neet. which wUI
hit 600 vessels In a .few years.
But Sen. James Exon, D-Neb.
and a supportE.&gt;r of Bingaman· s
ammdment, said tt "could better
be described as 'home-p:Jrking'
instead ct homeporting."
"There's about as much politics
in this Issue as we'll deal with" on
the defense bill, said Sen. Alan
Dixon, D-Ill., terming lie Drst-year
costs "chicken feed .... It Is going to
cost billions of dollars."
In other actions, the Senate:
-Told the Pentagon to set up an
offiCE' to supervise special opE_&gt;ratlons forces such as the Army Delta
IE.'am and Navy Seals and to
esta bllsh a special rommand within
the military structure to oversee
their opE.&gt;ratlons.
- Directed the Strategic l:RIE.&gt;nse
lalllallve office to report on what
the near-term posslbllitles of the
"Star Wars" anti-missile resoorch
program are to make t~ administration sharpen the focus ri thE'
program. Critics say Presldl'nt
Reagan's staunch insistenCE' It can
proll'Cl wtw;lle populations, whE.&gt;n a
morE.&gt; !risible option might be
protecting misslle fields, Is hurting
thE' program on Capitol Hill.
-Rejected 57-43 an attempt to
boost cigarettE' prlres at base
commtssarll's and post exchanges
to the rost at nearbycivUian stores.

• •

recipient
dies at 54

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olthe leltertng, numbering and art work on the entry.
which is spon....,red by the L.T.D. Carry-Out of LaiTy
demolition derby at the Meigs County Fair. Bob wW and Terry Deem. Bauer has driven In derbies at
be driving the entry In the pboto. The mechanical Marietta, butthls marks his flrstllme to participate in
work m the vehicle was done by Terry Qmgo and BW the local event.
Milhoan,
and Unda GOWan, at. right In ..cture, did all
.
READY- Bob Bauer, Ohio 248, near Olester, left
in photo, is ready lor Tuesday night's IUimal

-

•

Rehnquist document review
turns up nothing offensive
when hE' worked lor Attorney
By JUDI HASSON
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Senale General John Mitchell in the early
Judiciary Committee Democrats 1970s, Including writings on domesare reviewing sensitive documl'nls lie survl'lllance and the student
JusticE' William Rehnqulst wrote as killings at Kent Stale UnlvE.&gt;rslly.
Sen. JosE.&gt;ph Blden. 0-Del.. said
a Nixon administration official. but
a key Republican says nothing In Democrats had not completed
rt"&gt;~lewlng the dowmenls, which
the memos could "hurt him."
As the commlttl'E' wound up two
President Reagan last week refused
to tum over to the commlttl'E',
days of hearings Wednesday on
Antonin Scalia. another Supreme clllng executivE' privilege.
Court justiCE' nominee, Democrats
"TherE' Is nothing In thoSE'
said they had not ruled out bringing documents that can hurt him," said
RE.&gt;hnqulst back for more testimony Sen. Strom Thu!TllOnd, R·S.C..
on his nomination to he chief chairman of the committee. Sen.
Charles Mathias. R-Md .. said thel'l'
justice.
Rehnquist tesmted lor two gruel - werE.&gt; no "smoking guns" In the
ing days last wl'E.'k, denying materiaL
Earlier In the day, ThulTllOnd
charges hE' had harassed black
voters In the early 1900s. He also disclosed he was asking the FBI to
said hE' was unaware hE' had owned look into a possible IE.&gt;ak of thE'
two propE.&gt;rtles with deeds prohibit · documents. which have been the
lng their sale to blacks or Jews.
subjl'Cl of controversy since Rehn·
Democrats demanded andflnally qutsl's confirmation hearing ended
obtained key documents he wrote last week.

Bur Blden said the incldl'nl "was
much ado about nothing."
Mark Goodin. Thurmond's spokesman, said the chairman would
wail to see if any of thE' material
was published or broadcast before
deciding what action to takE'. ·
"TherE.&gt; was genuinE' concern thai
the security of the dowments had
been brl'ached, " Goodin said.
Goodin said his offiCE' received
several calls from reporters indicating they knE.&gt;w the contents tithe
documents that had bel'n rl'leased
to the committee.
The documents sparked a confrontation b&gt;tween Congress and
the administration when Reagan
assened exl'Cutivl' privilege and
refuSE'd to make the malE.&gt;rla t
available durtng RE.&gt;hnqulst's conftnnatlon hearing.

Scalia appointment to high court appears assured

1OJf• OZ.. CAMPBELL CREAM OF

• MjuSl .Cir ~ed

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

74 CT.

LETTUCE ...................... 59&lt;
KRAFT 12 OZ. 16 SLICE
AMERICAN PROCESSED

rrtct" tnc 1uae ~ (For f"nqtnt&gt; \ w1!ti
f'INtlonrC IQili(IOnl
• ln~t ~111 Mo ~rtChrtmp1or1 sp.-ul. ph J!.i~

E•pirel 8115188

HAM SALAD ................... .UI.••••• 99c
PACKAGED WIENE.RS ••••••P.to.S1.29

S34!~ S39!~

Budde up lor sat'etyl

HOMEMADE

16 OZ. LUTRER OLD FASHION

~ make Priano"Ponofmo Italian pie cheese and bake it to perfection.
with thick, tangy sUces ofltalian sa usa~.
Thats new Priazzo• Portofino Italian
green peppers, onions, our special sauce pie.The newest recipe in our line of
and mozzarella and cheddar cheeses.
l'riazzo'ltalian piE'S. So delicious. we
layer it between two light, tasty crusts.
could only think of one way to make it
Sm,nrhPr it with even more sauce and
better. Coupons.
·''•

399 SO. THIRD
MIDDLEPORT
614·992-6421

SHREDDED LB. S2.39
$
BOILED HAM ••••••••••••••••••••
ll· 2.1 9

SLICED BACON ................... S1.19

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

Dodge, Inc.

AGAR

1 LB. CRISP·N·SEIVE

itzes

construction of the access road had a verbal okay
from Ohio Deparlrnent of Transportation officials.
Costs for the construction were to be shared ~ Carper
himself and a grant which the county secured through
the Appalachian Regional Commission, It was
believed.
HowE.'Ver, when finished plans were sent tot he state
lor final approval, the project was rejected, with one
reason being that the road would Interfere with the
entrance to the northbound roadside park on 33.
The commissioners and Roberts are hopE.&gt;fu I ODOT
will rE.'VeTSE' the dl'Cislon to scrap thE' projl'Ct once
plans have been revised with an alternate routE.&gt;.
Commissioner Richard Jones noted lhat Carper's

Senate approves
Navy port plans ,

r~m;o~n~P~I;ea~s;e~C;ou;rt;.::;:::::::~~::::::::::::;;~~;;;~

Crash injures officer

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2 Sections, 16 Pagel 25 Centl
A Multimedia Inc . Newapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, August 7, 1986

By NANCY YOACJIAM

INSURANCE

Court .

enttne

Nursery's access road project not dead yet

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

Dissolution granted
Franklin w. Spradling Jr.

and thunderstorms.
wW be in the mld.s&amp;.. The
of precipitation ill 211
tonight and ~ percent

•

at y

COME IN AND CHECK
OUT OUR SELECTION.

•

Super Louo: 13, 32,

•

Veterans Memorial

MANSFIEW, Ohio !UP! I -A
Galion pollee ill'Utenant was in
unstable condition In MansfiE.&gt;Id
Gi'neral Hospital with injurtE.&gt;s
suffered when hi s cruiser colllded
Tuesday with a car carrying three
boys fl('('ing police. authoritil'ssaid.
Lt. Richard Mackey, 43, suffered
head and ehl'St injurtes and a
broken leg. while Ihe thrl'E.' boys, all
14 and all from the Manfield arE.&gt;a.
were in stable condition at a
hOspilal in Ga lion .

Is

expired license, and $25 and costs,
expired registration; Robert Scar·
bl'rry, Middleport, $50 and costs,
disorderly manner, and Scott Frazier, Middleport. $100 and costs,
theft.

MalTiage

I c~~!~Frlday with a chance rJ

40, 38, 30, 33

PICKENSMASOHARDWARE
W.VA.

Admissions - GracE' Whaley.
Pomeroy; Karen Tur!E.&gt;y , RacinE'.
Discharges - Ruth Betzing,
JamE.'s Bennett Helen CarpE.&gt;r.

Daily Number: 231

Bonds forfeited in area court
Six defendants forfeited bonds
and three others were fined in tile
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were George A. Spradlin, Cheshire, $40; StE.'Ven E. Nunn.
Gallipolis, $41; Robert Hickl'l.
Hartford, W.Va., $40, all posted on
speeding chargfes; David C.
Fisher, Middleport, $00, no opE_&gt;ra·
tor's license; John D. Hlll, New
Haven, W.Va., $450, driving while
intoxicated, and · $00, weaving
courSE', and Stanley LanE', Portsmouth, $100, disorderly mannl'r.
Fined were Carl D Hughes,
Pomeroy. $425 and costs. driving
whilE' intoxicated: $Zi and oosts.

Partly cloudy tonight wl&amp;t
in the mid 60s. Becoming .

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WASHINGTON (UPil - Supreme Court nominee Antonin
~alia E.'merged unscathed from his
SenatE.&gt; confirmation hearings, despile criticism he has "Ice water In
his VE'ins" and Is opposed to equal
rights for women and minorities.
Hearings on President Reagan's
nominee to be the Supreme Crurt's
106th member ended Wednesday
after two days of subdued debatea sharp contrast to last week's
raucous hea!'!r~Q on chief justice
nomlnl'e Justice William
Rehnqulst.
In addition to being calmer. the
Scalia hearings were eclipsed by
continued controversy surrounding
the Rehnqu!st . nqmtnation and
memos hE' wrote from 1969-71 while
an attorney for the · Nixon
administration.
Republican senators said Scalia,
50, smuld have little trouble
winning SE.'nate con!trmatlon, Sen.
Orrin Hatch, R· Utah, called Scalia
"among the best avallable for
appointment to thE' Supreme
Court .••
Evm Democrats on the Senate
Judiciary Committee, diSillllyed ~
the way Scalia avoided thl'lr
questions durtng his testimony
Tul'Sday, seemed Inclined to vote
for him on Aug. 14 when the

committee considers both
nominations.
Sen. Dennis DeConctni, D·Arlz ..
called Scalia "one of the more
E.'Vaslve nominees I've ever seen."

but said he probably would wte lor
him because of his fine reputation .
Sen. Paul Simon, D-Ill., also said
he was "leaning toward voting lor
him," altlx&gt;ugh he was not convinced Scalia could be open· minded
on the high court.
U the committee recommends
them, the fuU Senate Is expected to
take up the nominations In Septembl'r after tbe Labor Day recess .

SCALIA

· o~­

Sen. Edwlll'd len fly cldrlftd
'lhe American _, 4_....•HM
Weclnelldlly filr not riDnga IQOd
job ·Ia evllualla1 nominees for
lhe Supreme Coon by &amp;he ABA
gave 118 lop l'llllng to Judge
Anton~

Scalia. (UPI)

Some dozen wltnl'sses who testi·
fied for and against Scalia unan lm• oosly praised his legal acumen, but
ctvll rights groups said they feared
the appE.&gt;llate judge would work to
turn biick the clock on abortion,
affirmative action and other social
Issues.
1
"Judge Scalla's got Ice water in
his veins when a ~preme Court
justice really OUght to hav~ com·
passion,' ~ saldJosephRauh, repres. entlng the Leadership Conference
m ClvD Rights. ·"He makes jokes
about things about which
feel
deeply. He laughS at a!llrtniltlve

we

actiOn. "
National Organization lor
Women. President Eleanor Smeal
said Scalia's !oui yE.&gt;ars oti the U.S. .
ClrcuU Court of Appeals for the
Dlstrtct of Columbia have dis-

played "a hostility toward the
E.&gt;nforcemenl of rl'medlal antldtscrlminatlon laws pasSE'd by thE'

Congress:·
She said Scalia Is oppoSE'd to
abortion and affirmative action and
"has Uttle Inclination to help move
this country towand equal rights
and equal opportunities for all Its
citizens. In fact ... he Is willing loUSE'
the Constitution and laws to
olxitrucl the advancement of equal
rights."
Kate Mlchelman. executive director r:i the National Abortion
Rights Action LeaguE', said Scalia
and Rehnqulst - taken together pose a JVajor threat to the 1973 Roe
vs. Wade ruling legalizing abortion.
'"This nominee and thE' nl'Xl
nominee to the Supreme Court wUI
l:E the deciding votes on whether
the Roe vs. Wade dl'Cision remains
as precedent,'' she said.
On those same Issues, ScaUa won
a strong endorsement from the
conservative group, Concerned
Women br America.
"Hill vlinant philosophy o! judi·
clal restraint wW helP protect thE'
Constitution from jud~made erosion,'' tesUded the group's JreBI·
dent Bevevly LaHaye. "We need
judges who Uve by an acttve
conunttm'l!llt to judicial restraint."
President Paul VerkuD of the

CollegE' of the WOllam and Mary
also tl'Stifll'd in Scalia's behalf,
saying. "I have never seen a bl'tler
coalition builder. He uses his
charm, humor and lnteiiE'Cl, frequently in thai order, to bring
prople together."

LOUlSVlll.E, Ky. (UP!) William J . Schroedl'r. who died
alter a rl'Cord 620 days on a Jarvtk-7
artificial heart. "took a chance'.' '
that has saved lives and wlll save
more when future permanl'nl
pumps are Implanted, his doctor
said.
Schroeder, the longest-living pE.&gt;rmanenl artificial heart rl'Ciplenl
and the first to llve outside a
hospital, died Wednesday from a
SE'ries of strokes. respira.tory problems and in!E'Ction. HE.&gt; was 54, and
his family was with him.
·

Dr. William DeVries, who pl't·
fonned thE' surgery on Nov. 25, 19!11,
mourned Schroeder as "a pl'rsonal
fril'nd and a pionP.er" who proved
pl'Ople can nve on arti~clal hearts.
IRVrtE.&gt;s voW!'d to continuE.&gt; ImplantIng the paslic-and-ml'tal pumps as
permanent devices.
"WE.&gt;'re roody to go again," he
told a nE.&gt;ws confE.&gt;renre at Humana
Hospital Audubon. "We're looking
lor another patient."
Schroeder, a plucky Air Force
vetE.&gt;ran who asked for a bel'r after
surgery and fussed at President
Reagan about a late Social SE'Curtty
chE'Ck, was the SE'Cond artificial
hE.&gt;art recipient - following Seattle
dentist Barney Clark.
The family of Schroeder, a
JaspE.&gt;r. Ind., munitions Inspector,
bad decldl'd against the use of a
rl'Splrator It onE' was ever needed.
DeVries said, "When he stopped
breathing, we honored their
dl'Cislon."
"We have been through many
rough limes In the PIS I 21 months,
but the PISl two days have been the
handest," his famlly said In a
statement read by a son. "We are
all saddened by the loss ct our
lathl'r, a truly great pl'TSOn.
Schroeder suffered his first
strokE' Dec, 13, 1984, but was well
E'DOUgh by Aprtl6,1985,tomovelnto
a special aparlment across from
the hospital. A month later, howE.'Ver, he suffered his second stroke
and moved back to the hospital. HE'
suffered a thind stroke Nov.lO and
multiple strokes on Wednesday .
DeVries said dE.&gt;spltE.' the trOblem
of strokes - four of the llvli:
pE.&gt;rmanl'DI Jarvlk-7 reclpil'nts·
havE.&gt; suffered them - thE&gt; perman·
ent Implant program had made
progress. He pol nted oo r tha (
Schroeder had been well enough 10
an end a baSE'ball game and return.
to JaspE.&gt;r lor a day while living on.:
thr Jarvlk -7

Convicted slayer awarded
new trial by appeals court
LOGAN. Ohio (UP!)- DalE' Johnston, whO has served 2~ yE.&gt;ars
on death row for the dismemberment slayings of his stepdaughtPr
and her boyfriend, has won a new triaL
The Ohio Fourth Dtstrtct Court of AppE_&gt;als Wednesday reversed
the conviction that gave the Logan man the death prnalty.
Defense lawyl'rs say they wUiseek a jury trial thi s timE' and lry to
get the case heard outside of Hocking County.
Johnston was convicted and sentenced to death ilr the CX:tober .
1982 slaylngs of Annette Cooper and Todd Schultz. Pieces of their ·
bodies were found in the Hocking River and a cornfield.
:
Johnston was arrested the following June and had a trial by three ::
judges In Hocking County Corrunon Pleas &lt;::ourt in ~uary ~~- •
· Tholl!! three judges convicted him and sen ter10ed him to die In the :
electric chair.
:
Defense· lawyers say they have new lnlonnatkm and will present ·.
new witnesses In the !je('Ond trial.
:
The appeals court said Its decision to overturn the conviction was :
based on teslirnOny by one wltnl'SS who was hYJllOIIzed during the ·trial. Defense attorneys say ansWE.'rs !tom that witness varied •
greatly from his normal state to that of being hypnotized.

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Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, August 7, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Foster released by Mets; LA tri11mphs

.Con·t rol 'anode ________J_am_e_sJ_._K,_'lpa_t_ric_k

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pom~roy,

Oblo

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

~fb

rs:m~ ......_,._...,..,,.......,o::::;~,=

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
Generai .Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The United Press International. Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publtshers Association.
LE11'ERS OF OPIN ION arE&gt; welcofTl(' . Tht&gt;y sllookl 1x&gt; less than m words •
long. All letters aresubjectlo ed lting and rYI.ISI b.e signEd with name, address and
telephon4:' number. No un slgnOO letters will be published. Letters should be In

good tastl', addressing Issues. not !X'rsooalill&lt;'s.

Keeping tradition
When Averell Harrtman died, a television commentator called him the
"last of the patrician statesmen"- wealthy Americans woo devoted their
lives to public service instead of yachts, polo pmlesandtheothertoysofthe
super-rich.
Harrtrnan, whose railroad magnate father was considered one of the
most rapacious robtJer barons of the 19th Century, certainly qualified as a
patrician statesman, but he was not really the last descendant of the
'"economic royalists" denounced by Franklin D. RooSE'Velt 50 years ago to
tum his talents to government.
The country. in fact, still is getting some yeoman service from the sons,
daughters and more distantly removed offspring of the industrial and
financial giants of yesteryear.
The Senate. for example, has at least seven n&gt;presentatives r1 nationally
known old-money families, several memrers of famUies whose fortunes
are regionally based and some self-made rich men.
Ills unlikely that these people are in politics tlr the money- a oouple of
them are rich enough to regard their federal salartes as pocket change.
1lley might be seeking fame or power cr to advance m kleology, butit also
is possible that some are motivated by a wish to serve their country.
The most visible sena tor In the Harrtman son-of·a·lycoon category Is
Democrat Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts. His father was a Wall
Street operator of fearsome reputation and some historians of the New
Deal believe he was appointed to head the Securtties and Exchange
Commission to police the stock market because he knew first hand how it
coukl be manipulated.
Three of Joseph Kennedy's sons went into public service, all serving in
the Senate, one of them becoming presldent and a sa:ond attorney general.
Now, third generation Kennedys are rrovlng Into politics: JOS£Ph liJ in
Massachusetls and Kathleen Townsend In Maryland.
The Kennedy wealth pales next to that r1 the Rockefellers, whoSPcurrent
repri'Senlative in government is Jay, the Democratic West Virginia
senator. &amp;&gt;fofl' him , the family had potent figures in the Republican
Pat1y: hi s uncles Nelson. former vice president and governor of New
York. and Winthrop, former governor of Arkansas.
Other "name brand" senators include John Heinz. R-Pa ., or the ketchup
family, John Danforth. R-Mo., woose family founded Ralston -Purtna, and
Lowell Welcker, RConn., of the Squibb toothpaste and pharmaceuticals
family . Another in the inherited big money class Is Claiborne Pell. D·R.I..
whose ancestors once owned some of the choicest realest ate in Manhattan.
1'wo senators whose families made money and reputations in their own
areas are Republicans Barry Goldwater of Arizona !department stores)
and Jaml's Broyhill of North Carolina tfumlturel.
Finally, self-made rich sons. Rudy Boschwitz, R-Minn., made a pile In
the plywood business, Frank Lautenberg.D-N.J ., founded Automatic Data
Processing Co .. which in 1982 produced the paychecks of one out d every 14
non-government workers in the United States , and HowardMetzenbaum,
D-Ohio. who made a fortune from airport parking lots.
rjone of these men has yet contriruted as much to the country as
Harrtman. who spent almost 00 yea rs in high -level government service.
Buf they give half as much as the man they called '"The Crocodile."" the
na~on will have reason to be thankful that some who have prospered in thi s
country have recognized a debt to be r[f&gt;aid in service.

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Berry's World

WASHINGTON - Stick with the argnments against a peacetime
following few sentences lor just a · draft are to this e!fect: To .compel '
moment, if you will, because they an 18-year-old man or woman 1D
provide a starting point for serve for some specified time In tbe
discussion.
armed forces is a gross Intrusion by
"To prevent damage to the helix government upon the llfe d a free
structure, If the helix Interception citizen. No matter oow sincere an
becomes excessive, the intercept effort might be made to conduct a
protection circuitty must react and "fair" draft , there always would be
reduce the intercept current to an unjust exceptions. Besld4is, the
acceptable level within a few argument goes, the Army, Navy,
microseconds. This is done by Air Force and Marines are getting
Interrupting the TWT beam with along ju~t fine with volunteers. ·
the mntroi anode. The anode
This Is the other side: If free
modulator must then switch the citizens are to remain free citizens,
anode from the ground to catoode they soould recognize some obliga·
potential ... "
lion to defend their freedom . If all
That passage comes from an 18-year-olds were required to serve
instruction manual for an elec- for two or three years. the Intrusion
tronic warfare radar jammer. upon their lives would fall equally
Arthur Hadley qootes it in his upon everyone. West Germany,
stunning new book, "The Straw Denmark, the Netherlands - and
Giant," In maklngacaseinfavorof perhaps more to the point, the
universal military training.
Soviet Union - all rely upon
Let's think about this. The compulsory military service. Many

~~

Those were days of Innocence.
of their recruits can understand
control anodes and intercept cirrul· Today's sailors, airmen and soldl·
try. Though educatlonallevels have ers deal not in hours but in
improved am&gt;ng our own volun· microseconds. They do not plot
· teers, one'fifth oft he Army remains · ranges In yards bUt In miles - ·In the
In category IV, not much heyond case ot· ballistlc mtssUes, In thousands of miles. Navy captains no
functional llllteracy.
The nature of weaponry has longer fight their ships from the
bridge. but from a darkened war
changed mof!! radically in the past
50 years than at any time In the
room down below. Their weapons
are marvels of electronic wizardry. ·
history of warfare. Once upon a
time It was enough to master the Proponents of universal military
service argue persuasively that we
club, the spear, the sword, the
longbow. Later we trained soldiers must have a constant stream of
In the rifle and the cannon. As educated -or at least educablerecently as 1940, Midwestern col· ra:ruits If these weapons are to
lege students did their reserve work In a crunch.
This further argument Is ad·
training at Fort Riley, Kans., In the
oorse-&lt;lrawn ·oeld artillery. The vanced: The present all-volunteer
cadets hauled French 75mm pieces force Is expensive in all kbtds of
up a hill and there used visual ways. The armed services pay
range-finders to bracket their
hefty bemuses on enlistment and
targets. The exercise took 12 hours;
re-enlistment. Many recruits must
and then the horses had to he be intensively schooled, first in
basic skills of reading andcompuia·
groomed and fed.
tion, then in the mastery of their
intricate weapons. Today's jet
fighters don't run on rubber bands.
Skilled trechanlcs must he care·
fully trained, and this takes time.
The ratio r1 students to instructors,
Hadley reports. averages a costly
1.5 to 1.
Intangible considerations affect
the debate. The all-volunteer sys·
tern tends to draw largely from
lower Income groups. The middle
class, says Hadley, is "conspicuously absent." So are the sons and
dauliilters of the rich. A moral
question will not go away: ''Should
a great nation lay so much of the
rurden of defending itself upon the
poor and the outcast?"
For my own part. I am not quite
so ready to opt for universal
compulsory military setvice. Other
measu res could well be taken first.
Hadley himself suggests a far
greater use of women in the armed
forces. He urges colleges and
universities to offer majors In arms
just as they offer majors in
oconomics. In some fashion it must
be made socially acceptable for
young men and young women to
undet1ake a career in the uniform
of their country. But if half·
measure!. fail, a draft may yet be
required. Someone has to run the
radar jammers. and the job can't
well be left to !JJme kid who can't
ev€11 wad the manual.

HERSCHEL Walker, a member of the USFL's New Jersey Generals,
Wednesday considered himself free ol his contract obUgatioll! and will
announced later this week If he wiD with sign wlt.hthe DaDas CAlwboys or
consider other career Interests. See loday's NFL wrapup on page 4.
(UPI)

the mishap, VA officials sought to
terminate the contract with Execu·
tive Elevator Service Inc.. a
15-employee company that had
serviced the center's elevators
since 1979. Loss of the contract
eoukl put the firm out of business. !JJ
it has been battllng the VA for
nea rly two years.
Two VA detectives. Richard
Gardner and Stanley Blasco. were
assigned to Investigate the ace!·
dent. They took statements from
witnesses, examined the errant
elevator and made dozens of
photographs to document their
findings.
111e detectives concluded that the
accident had been caused by
sabotage and that a criminal
Investigation was called for. They
recommended that the FBI be put
en the case.
Instead, VA officials ordered
Gardner and Blasco to stop their

investigation. and ordered tll'm not
to c-ontact the FBI. The management memo containing these In·
structions was placed in the
deta:tives· klcked file cabiriets.
along with the photographs and
other evidence.
"Well. the only thing 1 can say is
one day Detective Gardner and I
were coming to work on a
Monday." Blasco testified later.
"We went to oor office and all of our
files were gone. Including the
cabinets."
Blasco tesmied that he was never
told why the files were removed.
The man who ordered the files
removed was assistant security
chief Robert LeBlanc. He stated
under the oath that he ordered the
files destroyed - including all the
evklence gathered in the elevator
accident investigation - because
"I believed that the way the files
were kept was illegal." He ex·

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" OK! Just as long as you're nor smuggling
Salvadoran aliens!"

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Today in history
By United Pre..s ln.d'rultlonal
. Today is Thursday, Aug. 7, the 219th day of 1986 with 146 to follow.
•The moon is moving toward its first quarte r.
:The morning stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
' The evening s tars are Venus. Mars and Saturn.
;Those born on this date are under the sign ci'Leo. They Include the World
War I Dutch spy and courtesan known as Mata Harlin 1876, American
s(atesman and Nobel Peace Prize winner Ralph J. Bunche in 1904, film
director Nicholas Ray I "Rebel Witoout a Cause") In 1911, comedian·
plvclucer Stan Freberg in 1~ tage 00\, and actress Loni Anderson In 1944
(4ge 42) . . .

:on.this date In history:
;In 1782. the Order of the Purvoe Heart was est.abllsbed by Gen. George
Wasltlngton to honor Americans wounded in the Revolutionary War:
;In 1942. U.S. Marines launched America's !lrst dfensive In World War II,
~lng on the Pacific Island o! Guadalcanal.
•In 1963. Jacqueline Kennedy became tbe first wiled a president to give
li-th while he was in the White House since the days of Grover Cleveland.
~ Jntant ,died two days later.
·In ].971., the ApollD-15 moon ship returned to Earth safely despite !allure
' ~one
Ill three parachutes during ~laslxlown In the Pacific.

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dlOUilb
. ~ tor the day:

St~tesman Ralph Bunche said "I have a

,eatEd.blu
against hate and Intolerance."
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1Art Buchwald has taken a lew
weeks off. He left behind several
oolumrL~ which he found in his
trunk. )
PARIS - One of the rarest
species in France these days is an
American tou rtst. No one can
remember the last time the French
. sawone,andsolcausedasensation
when I arrtved in the French
capital.
As soon as I checked In at the
Hotel George V, I noticed that
things had changed for Amertcans
In the last few years. First. the
concierge broke into tears, then the
doorman ran to tell the hartender,
the bartender called up the chef, the
chef tokl the waiter. Everyone
ca me out to see II was true that an
American had checked into the
hotel.
They stood around In a circle.
"C'est formidable," said the chef.
" It is an American. I would know
one anywhere."
·
The young page stared as if I
were a man from Mars.
The bartender said to him, "It
was before your time, son, but once
Paris was filled with thousands and
thousands of people just Bke this."

because of the Americans. You
cou ldn't get Into a restaurant or a
nightclub. They had money to
burn."
The doorman wiped his eyes as
the memortes came back. "They
were so numerous we took them lor
granted."
The bartender soook his head.
"They liked their marit inls very
dry."
The waiter said, "They always
talked pidgin English, thinking we
would understand them."
The chef said, "1 never saw one
witoout a camera."
"They could never keep the
French m&gt;ney straight."
"They made terrible jokes about
Frenchwomen."
"But they had hearts of gold."
The manager finally broke it up.
By this time word had gotten out
that an American tourist was
actually in the mutnry and the
press started to arrtve.
The lobby was jammed with
newspapermen and ~ametamen
fighting to get near me.
They were sooutlng qoestions
such as, "Why did you come? Was
your plane forced doiM'! ~ bad

them.''
·
The page lookt!d as If the walter
were putting him oo.
The conclerlll! said, "He Is not
lying, son. You couldn't p:et a taxi

"Are you really an American
tourist erda youworkfortheCJA?"
"Who paid you Ill come to
France?"
"AS 'the l!rst American tourist to
come to Franoe, will you grant the
Prime Minister an audience?"
While the press oonferenoe was
going on the pollee art1ved. 'j'he
lieutenant came up and saluted.
"The Minister of the lnta-lor has

•jJt's 1rue," tre waiter said.
"They were everywtuire. You could
see them at the llidewalk cllfes, In
the shops, at the FoUes Bergeres
and .the Udo. At one ltme there
were so many dthem therewerl!ll't
enough hotel rooms to take care of

ordered us to protect you while you
are here. As the only American
tourist in the country .•vU have been
declaroo a national monument."
I muldn't help but be touched.
The last thing I heard is that they

plained: "I thought the Veterans
Admisnlstration was involved in
keeping files that were Ulegal
because they were not in proper
format ."
But one of Blasco's reports
charges that the ftles LeBlanc had ,
destroyed mntalned information on
"his own \LeBlanc's) friends; that
there was blackmail Involved,
perjury Involved; that there was a
referral to the U.S. assistant
attorney for destruction of govern·
m~nt property." •
Blasco testified that one of the
vanished files contained informa·
lion on a VA klcksmith, woom
Blasco described as "a personal
friend of LeBlanc's." The deta:tive
stated I hat only two keys existed to
his locked file cabinets. and that
witoout a key "" they had to pick the
lock."

-.J

should never feel that way."
By United Press International
The Rangers had the opposite
In the slug!est between the
Baltimore Orioles and victorious premonition.
·•we knew their bullpen was a
Texas .Rangers (13-11\ Wednesday
night, the hitters long will re· little short," O'Brien said. "So we
member the 24 runs and six just kept swinging the bats. You
homers. including a major· league never like tothlnkyouareoutof it ...
record three grand slams. Some they kept scortng yet we didn't lose
pitchers may have sore arms to momentwn.''
Texas suJVlved a nine-run Ori·
remind them of the 346 pitches
oleS fourth, highUghted by grand
thrown.
"When you have 10 pitchers and slams from Sheets and Dwyer.
Singles by Gary Ward and
you have used them all you don't
have any choice:· Baltimore man· Parrish plus a walk to Don Slaugh!
ager Earl Weaver said. "\Loser loaded the bases for Texas In the
Rich) Bordl had been doing a second Inning before Buechele
coaxed a run· scoring walk off Ken
tremendous job."
Larry Parrtsh doubled in two Dixon to give the Rangers a 1-0
runs to climax the Rangers' six-run lead. Harrah, who had five of
fexas · 19 hits, drUled his lift h
eighth inning rally.
Trailing 11-6 in the eighth. Texas career grand slam to make it 5-0.
Ward dellved an RBI single In the
got a solo homer from Steve
Buechele and a three-run blast third to make it &amp;-0.
Ratigers starter Bobby Witt, who
from Pete O'Brien before Parrish
pitched
hitless ball for three
connected for his two· run double
lru'llllgs,
walked
the bases full in the
down the third base line that made
Mitch Williams, 8·3, the fourth fourth. Sheets, homering in his third
strlllght jarpe, blasted a first pitch
Rangers pitcher, a winner.
Bordl, 4-2, took the loss after over the right-center field fence for
giving up all six elghth·lnnlng runs his first career grand slam. Tom
. on six hits. Dale Mohorctc, the !Uth O'Malley singled to bring on
Texas pitcher, got his fourth save. relieVer Jeff Russell, who walked
"I had the feeling it was over, Rick Dempsey and Fred Lynn with
that's a bad feeling to get in two out.
O'Malley scored when third
baseball." Weaver said. "You
baseman Buechele booted a Cal

Ripken ground ba ll and df''ignat&lt;d
hitter Dwyer follow&lt;•&lt;! with a sh:J t to
center fi eld lor his nrsl grond slam
to mak e It 9-6.
Lee Lacy hi! a two-run ho m~r In
the sixt h to give 13altimorr an IH
advantage.
Buechele's 15th home 11111 ignitPd
the six-run eigh th innin~ Singles by
Harrah and Oddilr McDow~ll
preceded O"E!ricns lfith h&lt;,me tun.
Pete Incaviglia and \\1 a ni sinp;k..i(l
N&lt;~lr Snell
with his doublf' tu m,1k• ' 1t¥' Sl1'WP

before Parrtsh gtw lm

12-11 .
Texas made il U II whPn ii,ll ra h
doubled

and

Sf •o r1 d

011

S! ·ntl

Fletcher"s sing!&lt;·.
Elsewhere in thf· AL. Mit•ncsnta
beat

C11ifomia ;,.2, Ncv.,r York

00\.VJ\E'd Milwau kf't-• ~, ..1, To1onto
shut out Kansas Citv ~- U. Boston
blanked C11icago 9-0. Clcw iand at
Detroit was rained out. and t l~k
land topped Seatt le i -:i.
Twins 5, i\ngels 2
At Minneapolis, &lt;;a!) C;wtti hit a
solo homer and a I\'-10·nm doublP.

and Bert Blylev&lt;•n pildu'!l a
five-hitter to lead the Twins.
Blyleven. 11 ·10. sttuck out S!'V&lt;'n
and walked none u1 his lOth
complete game. Don Sutton. IO·K
took the loss.
V ankees 5, Brewt·rs :1
At Ne w York. DavP Wi nnl'ld

with his 17th oomer. to pace the
Yankees and Ron Guidry, 6-9.
Winfield led off the third inning with
a homer off .Juan Nieves, 110-5.
Winfield al.o;o singled home the first
of Ne1v York·s
lift h-innlng runs.
n rian Fisher W!'!ll 1 1-3 Innings for
his sixth save.
Blue ,Jays R, Royals 0
At Toronto, Jimmy Key and Tom
Henke combined on a five hitter.
and Garth Iorg drove in three runs
to pace the Blue Jays. Key, 10-7,
&gt;eallerm four singles over seven
innings before departing due to
stilfn ess In his left forearm. Danny
.J;wk,;on. ti-8, took the loss.
Red Sox 9, White Sox 0
AI lloston. Marty Barrett's twotun first -inning homer and Bill
Bucknet s bases-loaded second·
innin~ double supported Bruce
Hut~ f's three -hit pitching helped
lht• IW Sox snap Chicago's fourgame winning streak. Hurst, 7-5,
won his srocond rorr;ecutive start
after two losses since returning
from the 21-day disabled list.
A' s.7, Mariners 5 •
AI S&lt;-a ttle. Jose Cansecodoubled
lurnc Alfredo Griffin to start a
IWO·t1.1n ninth-inning rally for Oakland . .Jav Howell, 14. worked the
fin al 2 2-3 innings for the victory
whil~ Matt Young dropped to 7·5.

I

I""

By ROBERTO DIAS '
UPI Sports Writer
TOLEDO, Ohio \UP!) -From
the locker room to the firsttee atthe
Inverness Club Is a short walk.
That distance is all that separates
Jack Nicklaus from reaching a
special milestone - his 100th
professional start In a major
championship.
Nicl&lt;laus is scheduled to tee off at
1: 18 p.m. today along with Fred
Couples and Wayne Levi as a fiekl
of 150 players compete In the first
round of the S8X\,IXXI PGA
Championship.
"I think It should be an exciting
tournament." said Nicklaus .
"There's so inany playing well now

- Greg Norman isootandsols Bob
Tway, Fuzzy (Zoeller) and Calvin

Peete.
"I just hope Mother Nature
cooperates. Actually. the greensthe smallest I've ever seen. by the
way- need any rain they can get ...
Rain may well be a factor in the
first round. The National Weather
Service forecasted a 00 percent
chant't' or rain Wednesday night
with a 40 percent chance of soowers
and thunderstonns today, along
with tempetatuii!S In the 70s.
Nicklaus maintains a humble
view of a career that has achieved
71 PGA Tolir victories and lifetime
earnings approaching $5 million.
"I'm a fortunate man to have

gone this rar,"lte says. ""An athlPIP
at my stage ol lttf' gamP tends to
think what Lou GPhrig sa id that &lt;Ia)
at Yankee Stadium - thai h&lt;' w;~ s
the luck iest man on tht' r:wi' of th!s
earth .""

\

RELEASED BY MEl'S- George Fosler, pinchhlttbtg in the tlrsl
game ol Wednesday's game at Chicago, wDI be released today by the
New l'oli&lt; Mets. Foster is the second highest paid player in basebaU.
(UPI)

Ballesteros upset with policy
SAN DIEGO (UP!) - Seve
Ballesteros. two-time British Open
and Masters champion. con·
demned the current use of suspen·
sions by PGA Commissioner Deane
&amp;&gt;man.
Ballesteros. who is sitting out the
1986 PGA season because of a
Beman-imposed suspension for not
playing in 15 Tour events last year,
said he feels that nothing is gained
by taking away a player's right to
participate.
lost." Ballesteros""!lost.
said everybody
of his suspension
In a
telphone Interview from Toledo,
Ohio. "Nobody gets any benefit
from my suspension. That's my
philosophy. I feel very sorry about
what has happened to Mac
(O'Grady) . He's a good friend to
me, He's a ~entieman; he's a great
player. It 's very sad about him."

Nicklau s, a 41i ~Par- ol d na th-f' of
Columbus. Ohio, and now a rf'sirlf'n l
of North Palm &amp;;~rh. !-"Ia .Ita' \\"on
20 major tou ma men t s - s ix

Masters. live PG A l"hampionship.
fou r U.S. Opens. thrt'f' Brit ish
Opens and two U.S. Amateurs.
In the 99 events Nieklaus ha s
entered to datP; he ha s linisllf'd
second 19 limes and third nine
times with ill placu1gs in ti JP. top 10.
His first major even t as a pro was
the 1957 U.S. Open at Inverness.

The '" (;olden Bear·· won the PGA
in 1963. 19il. 1973. 1975 and 191Jl.
"There·s no question I get
pumped up for the majors." ' says
~ i cklaus , a live-time PGA Player
O"Gradyas suspended for six
of thP Y(·~r whose numerous Tour event earller this year for
IJ.J siness int erests include goU what Beman called "conduct WJbe·
co urse architecture. "There's a bit coming a professional." He was
rrltlll' pr~sure fmm fans and from also ftned $5,IXXI. The Tour veteran
within, but there's also a bit more lost an appeal of the suspensi:m in
fun."
San Diego federal court last week.
Nickl aus thrilled the golf world In
However. while O'Grady has lost
April wht' n he won the Masters. He his lawsuit, his legal ~~~!lion may
linistn l tied for fifth in the have gained him en try Into the
Memorial Toumamenl on a layout World Series of Golf Aug.· 22 in
of Ius ow n design and tied for eighth Akron, Ohio. Ballesteros, despite a
in thP U.S. Open at Shinnecock victory In the Irish Open. has not
Hills, winning $194.715 to date for been invited to play.
24th en the money list despite a
Ballesteros, a Spaniard, said
limltrd schedule.
what angered him most about his
'"But since then. I've been ruspension was that players from
swinging fairly inconsistently," he Japan were not required to play in
said. "" I did change the position of 15 Tour events. He said he felt
my hands last week. though , and Beman had broken the rules.
now 1 have some idea d where the
"Just because one person broke
baD's going" "
the rules- and thaperson is Deane
Nicklaus 5ays he receives many
letters advising him on his soYing.
'"&amp;lmebody'll wrtte and say 'Why
don't ym do this like you were doing
whPn I saw you in Fargo in 1956?"'
he sa id . ··But I keep an cpen mind .
"I think my chanoes are hetter
than rrost In the field, and certainly
hetter than they were in the U.S.
and British Opms."'
Fb"st prize this Sunday is worth
$140.IXXI. Nicklaus expects the
6,!*12-yard Inverness Club course to
play up to Its reputation.

Berry's World

Beman, I will not change my mind
about this country . I love I his
country. but Beman was wrong,"
Ballesteros said ,
Japanese players have been .
allowed to play less than the
required 15 tournaments without
losing their playing prtvlleges. B e ,.
m a n cited the traditional "oome
muntry" rule which puts no
restrictions on the numbl!r of.
tournaments that the Japanese.
must enter.

r-.fili~~~~~~il~'

!531 JACKSON PtKE · AT. J~ WEST

- -·4520
BARGAIN MATINEES SAT - SUN I
WEDNESDAY • All SEATS 11 .50
AlJ1tSSI ON EiERY TUESDo\Y 12 .50
---LAST lloiY! - - -

"OUT OF BOUNDS"

RATEO· tRI

9,10 P.M . ONLY.

RALPH M\CCHI
PAT MORITA

riiiiilliili~~jpf;i;!;,·~

The.,Iili
!l'il." .

Part

n

7th !lEEK! 7:00P.M . ONLY ••
SAT/SUN/WEO MATINEE 1: P.M ,
tnOING SOON ! "THE FlY" I

"Atw:O AltO DA!tGEAOUS"

VCR RENTAL

1 NIGHT '8, 3 NIGHTS 115.

SPECIAL WIDNUDAY
IIIATINIII
THIS sur•IERI

t;:::::::;::;::;::;::;::;:::::;:::::;::;::;::::::::::::::::::::==.

"I'm more than just interested In
Inverness because I'm playing on
11... he said. "It's an excellent
example ct golf archlt£Cture.
"I wruld've liked to 'lave been I·
able to talk to IarchitECt) Donald , ·
Ross about what his goals we In I
buDding Inverness (In 1903). The
. course Is very heavUy wooded, and
', ·It's Interesting how be kept the
natural bol&lt;."

weather?"

iWe're HereTo Help
• Presorlpt1ons filled
• Over-t.he-counter drugs
• Healt.h and beaucy- &amp;l.ds
• Cosmetics and pe~es
• S1okr00m; surgtO&amp;l needS.
• V1tamlns and ~et atds.

Ph&amp;rma.c1Sts Who

O&amp;re About You
.

~'

.

'

FLORIST

~ on Wednesday, Aug. 27, In lhls year's

Kldlolf ()IaMie at The Meadowlands .. New Jersey.
(VPI)

•

with 13 home runs and l! RBI in 72
games.
Former Met Lee Mazzllil will be
recalled from Tidewater d the
International League to replace
Foster. Mazzilli, released by Pitts·
burgh last week. was signed to · a
minor· league contract by the Mets
earUer this week.
Foster was told of his release
Wednesday in meetings with Ca ·
shen and Manager Dave Johnson.
He then reportedly left for his home
in Greenwich, Conn.
"He took the news very poorly,"
Cashen said . "He was quite brokHI
up. It's very difficult for me and for
him, but mostly for him. He
indicated that he still wants to play
rut first hewouldgohomeandtlink
about it. He's a proud athlete.
"But we don't want unhappy
people around. He hadn't adapted
to his part-time role. We've had a
rocky road together. Now his rocky
part is over, and that's sad."
In NL games Wednesday, NP\\ ::
York edged Chicago 7-6 in 12
innings, Los Angeles beat Houst on
74, San Francisco topped Cincin ·
nati 2-1

drovp in twu runs, including one

'Bear' starts. lOOth major championship

want .re to ride in the leadcarln the
parade down the O!amps-Elysees
on the 14th of July. I guess I'll do it,
for no ~her reason than to keep the
memmy of the American tourist
alive.

l

.'I

committed to the young players in
their organization, espe&lt;;lally the
young talented men on their
pitching staff.
"With Mike Krukow eligible to
come oft the disabled list tomon;ow,
I've decided it Is in the best interest
of everyone involved to announce
my retirement at this time."
Foster's situation Is entirely
different. He wants to stay In
baseball, rut the Mets don't want
him. The Ml'ts are liable forthe$17
million remalnlng on the contract,
which includes two q:~tlon years
rumlng through 1988.
Only Jim Rice of Boston earns
more money per season than
Foster's $2 mllllon and It will be
Interesting to see if any team
claims him.
Foster, who has hit 347 career
homers, lost his starting position in
lefi field to Kevin Mitchel! several
weeks ago and has been an
Ineffective part· time player. Since
July 11, Foster is 2-for-28 with 10
strikeouts and one RBI In 12 games.
Foster, woo struck out as a pinch
hitter In the first game of Wednes·
day's double· header, batte:l .m

Baltimore-Texas tilt; Orioles lose., 13-11

Paris· goes wild ________A_r_tB_uc..:..:..:.hwa==-ld
•

dlsmaJ 4-S start with a 6.18 ERA. H£&gt;
Immediately broke from iradltion
by holding a news conference. The
last time Carlton had talked to a
press gathering was durtng the 1978
playoffs.
With the Giants, Carlton has a 1·3
remrd with a 5.10 ERA. His only
vict ory came July 26 against
Philadelphia when he threw seven
ilmings of three· hit, scoreless bail.
lie lost 8-3 to St. Louis on July 21, fell
B--1 .July 11 and dropped Tuesday
ttight's game. He also received two
no decisions in Giants vtctortes
against Atlanta and St. Louis.
In his last start, Carlton lasted rut
3 2 3 innb1gs. giving up seven hits.
sev!'!l earned runs and three walks.
Ca rlton said he was stepping
down to allow San Francisco to
make space on its roster for Mike
l&lt;tukow. woo romPS off the dis·
abied list 111ursday.
"Upon reflection, I realize I've
rrarhrd a career milestone never
&lt;l!Tornpllslwd before by a pitcher
s pt•ndin~ his whole career in one
league," he said. "Further. I realize
thai !he San Francisco Giants are

Record number of grand slams hit in

lVIt()£11Jilil_·______________I_a_ck_A__nd_e_r_so_n_&amp;__Jo_s_ep_h__Sp_e_a_r

WASHINGTON -An accident at
the Veterans Administration Medi·
ca l Center has developed into a
federal case. II might be ca lled
"The Mystery of the Runaway
E levator. '"
I has already produced charges
of sabotage and destruction of
ev idence. DetectivPS have been
removed from !he investigation.
and a sma ll company has become a
scapegoat of VA officials.
Agency brass hats refused to
comment on the case. bu 1 our
associate Donald Goldberg has
pieced the story together from
swom statements. court records
and interviews. Here's what he has
learned:
On Aug. 25, 1984. an e levator at
the medical cent er failed to stop
going up and crashed into the
ceiling. There was damage but no
lnjurtes.
Blaming a maintenanC&lt;' lapse for

By FRED McMANE
UPI AMistant Sports Editor
After a long and luxurious tide,
Steve Carlton and George Fost~r
have reached the end of the road.
The 41 -year-old c.-.r)ton, a fourtime Cy Young Award winner.
retired from baseball Wednesday
after a 21 -yearcareer while 37-yearold Foster was placed on waivers
by the New York Mets for thr
putpose of giving him his uncondi·
tiona! release.
Carlton. who on Tuesday bf•mme
only the second pitcher in baseball
history to amass 4,000 career
strikeouts. won 319 gam&lt;" during
his career, the l Oth bPst mark of
all-time. He also lwd struck Ott t It!
or more batters in 83 games.
"He was the most consl,trn t
player l"ve played with or aga inst,"
said Cincinnati managPr PPte
Rose. who played with Carlton fo r
five years at Philadelphia . ··Hr was
great to be around and great to play
behind."
Carlton earne to the San !-"ran
cisco Giants just two weeks alter he
was released by the Phillies after a

..

Ill\

'1'

l

.i

Moigo Counly'• Oldeu Floriol

JUiistp•

,...,, •

45m

VILLAGE ' .
PHARMACY·
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
J

�Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Page-4-lJie Daily Sentinel

Thursday, August 7, 1986

Thursday, August 7, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Falcons outlast Giants 31-24;
Walker, Bryant jump leagues
By United Press Intematlonal
David Croudlp highlighted an
opportun.. tic Atlanta defense by
returning an interception 49 yards
for a score Wednesday night,
helping the Falcons to a 31-24
exhibition victory over the New
Yori&lt; Giants.
The Falcons were also backed by
Sylvester Stamps, who caught a
6-yard touchdown pass and made
several Impressive kick returns.
TraDing 1-kl, Atlanta tied the
score In the flnal2:08 of the first half
thanks mainly to Stamps. Stamps
set up Olff Austin's 9-yard TD run
with a 25·yard punt return. Dave
Archer connected with Stamp for a
6-yard TD pass 15 seconds before
halftime to tie the score 14·14.
Atlanta went ahead to stay with
7: 31 left iJ 1 the third quarter on a
17-yard TD pass from Turk Schaner! to Ron Middleton after the
Falcons recovered a fwnbled punt.
Mike Prindle's 46-yard field goal
put Atlanta ahead 24-14 with 22
seconds left in the third period. The
Giants closed to24· 21 wlth 3: 13 ~ne
in the final quart er on an B-yard
pass from Jeff Rutledge to tight end
Mark Bavaro.
The Falcons improved their lead
to 31·21 when Croudip stepped in
front of a Rutledge pass intended
for Stacy Robinson and raced do\\11
the right sideline before cutting
Inside at about the 15·yard line to
score with 9:05 left.
Elsewhere, Kelvin Bryant, the
running back who led the Baltimore
Stars to consecutive USFL titles,

.•
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•'

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,•

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..

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..
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~~ ~:UU:~!:~:.!v~=ai) ._A~:,.~,!:~~;

:·New York Giant defenders Wedoffiday In Atlanta
'·

do ring a pre-smson contest. The Falco!ll; won, 31·2&lt;1.
Andrews ._ recovering from a knee Injury received
two years ago. (UPI 1

.Carlton announces
:r etirement Wednesday
'

'

•: SAN FRANCISCO rUPi i- The

~nd came with a whimper for

!our·time Cy Young Award winner
Stev~ Carllon.
:· The 41-year·old struck out three
batters Tuesday night to become
~nly tllr second man ever to reach
~career 4,000. strtkrout plateau .
But he went on to balk in a run and
then uncork a wild pitch to allow
iulother as the Cincinnati Reds
Q0\\11ed the San Francisco Giants,

po!i.

•: Less than 24 hours later. Carlton
~nnounced his retirement.
.: "Upon reflection. I realize I've
(l&gt;ached a career milestone never
~complished before by a pitcher
Spending his whole ca reer In one
league," the veteran left·hander
~d in a prepared statement .
•:Further. I realize that the San
trancisco Giants are committed to
the young players in their organiza ·
llon. especially the young talented
men on their pitching staff.
:: ~'With Mike Krukow eligible to
t;ame off the disabled list tomorrow,
I've derided it is in the best interest
~I everyone involved to announce
ftly retirement at this time."
· The announcement ended what
could have been the crowning touch
tO:a fairy tale season for the Giant s.
c ar lion had fallen on hard times the
last two Sfiasons. In 1985, the 21-yea r
vetera n managed just a 1·8 record
with a 3.33 ERA for the Philadelphia PhiUes.
This year. the Phillies cut him
loose after he got off to a 4·8 start
with an ERA of 6.18. Carlton's
mice-legendary fastball had slowed
to: speeds of the upper 70s.
Still the resurgent Gian ts decided
to take a chance on him. signing
Carlton to a cont ract on Jul)' 4th.
'file first thing "Left y" did upon his
amval in San Francisco was to hold
a press conference - a seemingly
n¢mal thing to cb, except that
Carlton hadn't talk to the press

since the 1978 National League
playoffs.
Carlton's derision to retire was
announced by AI Rosen, the Giant s
president and general manager,
after San Francisco beat Cincinnati
2-1 in 14 innings Wednesday. He
said the rrove cleared the way for
younger pitchers - Kelly Do\\11S
and Terry Mulholland- to stay up
on the Giants staff .
"I had hoped to keep the
youngsters in the minor leagues a
llt!le longer to eontinur their
development." Rosen said. "But
due to injuries we've had to bring
them up at thLs time. I have the
grea test respec t and admiration for
Sieve Carlton. Hf' gave us 100
percent and was a posit ive
influen('('."

Carlton . who fini shed the year
o-11. st ruck out Wade Rawdon.
Mario Soto and Eric Davis Tuesday
ni ght to reach 4,&lt;XXJ st rikeout s.
Nolan Rya n of the Houst on Astros is
the only pitcher to have struck out
more baiters.
Ca rlton PndPd his ear&lt;Pr \\.it h a
lifetime record of 319-226. No active
pitcher has won more ga mes than
Ca rlt on. His 319 victories place him
lOth on the all·time list. He a._o
compiled 83 games In which he
struck 10 or mo re batters.
Rosen said Carlt on - wtu was 1 -~
with the Giants- told him he had
pitched his last game alter Tuesday's ou ting in whic h the veteran
gave up seven runs rn seven hits in 3
2· 3 innings of work.
"StPVc indicated to me tha t last
nlght was the ru lmination of a lot of
things," he sa id . "It was the
rulmination of his record. of his
pitching performance and the
knowledge that we had to mak e
room !br Krukow...
Cincinnati man ager Pete Rose, a
former teammat e of Ca rlton's
while both were with the Phillies,
said he was sadden by the
announcement.

CARLTON RETIRES

Forty state
race licensees
••
test postllve
COLUMBUS tUPI I -Forty of
the Ohio State Racing Commission's licensees have tested positive
lor cocaine, marijuana or both,
com m Is s io n officia Is said
Wednesday.
The commission conducted 214
urtne tests between Jan. 1 and July
31 . Licensed personnel were tested
at each of Ohio's commercial race
tracks, except for Beulah Pa in
suburban Columbus. which has
been closed since December 19!6.
Two of the 40 twice tes ted positive
and havemrolled in sta te-a pproved
rehabUitatlon programs.
Forty-eight tests were admin"'·
tered at River !))\\115 in Cincinnati,
23 of which turned up positive.
At Northfield Park near Cleveland , 106 urine samples were taken,
only four showing up positive.
Tests were administered to 39
licensees at Lebanon Raceway, and
ju ;1 one tested ~sitlve .
Fourteen Individuals at Thistle·
down in Cleveland submitted urine
samples for testing. Eight were
found to be positive.

will play for the Washington
Redsldns this season, the Stars'
owner told the Washington Post.
"We can't deny Kelvin Bryant's
right to play football," Stars owner
Stephen Ross told the Post. "We'll
negotiate with him. We have a lot of
money tied up in him . But the end
result is he'll play for Washington
th._ season."
The Redskins own the NFL rights
to Bryant, the struggling league's
second all·time leading rusher
behind Herschel Walker.
Walker has scheduled a news
conference for Thursday to d._cuss
h._ future. New Jersey Generals
owner Donald Trump said he may
free Walker and quarterbacks Jim
Kelly and Doug Flutie from their
contracts to pursue NFL deals.
At Smithfield , R.I .. rUMing back
Reggie Dupard of Southern Metho·
dlst. the New England Patriots'
first -round pick and last draftee to
sign, ' reported to camp. The
Patriots are expected to use
Dupancl primarily as a kick
returner.
At Miami. Dolphins Coach Don
Shula said quarterback Dan Ma·
rino, will missed two days of
practice last week, will miss
~turday's exhibition game at
Mmnesota because of sore legs.
Marino has had knee surgery
followin g eac h of his three NFL
seasons. Shula sa id Don Strock will
play no more than a half. Rookie
Jeff Wickersham and Jim Jensen
will split the second half.
At San Diego. the Olargers

Rookie QB hopes to
win spot with Browns
KIRTLAND. Ohio iUPll- Most
of the Cleveland Browns are
studying overtime. trying to learn
the complex system being Implemented by new offensive coordlna·
tor Lindy Infante.
However, it is simply a refresher .
course for rookie quarterback Mike
No rse! h.
"We ran the same offense at tthe
University ofl Kansas," Norsetth
said. "Our coach. Mike Gottfried,
picked it up when he was at the
University of Cincinnati and coach
Infante was an assistant with the
Bengals.
"Being familiar with the offense
has helped me out quite a bit here. I
felt very comfortable,' ' the seventh·
round draft pick said after a
morning practice session.
Norseth, who is Involved in a
battle with veterans Mike Pagel
and Jeff Christiansen for a reserve
role behind starter Bernie Kosar
and. if healthy. backup Gary
Danielson, isn' t expected to see any
action in Saturday night 's opening

exhibit ion game against the Buffalo
Bills In Clcwla nd.
"That' s out of my hands. It' s all
up to the roaches. so I can 'Iconcern
myself with il ." he sa id .
"I'm just trying to do everyt hing
the coaches tell me and look at my
own progress. I have to let the
coaches judge the rest of it."
The verdict won., be known for a
few weeks.
"Every time I go ou t there. 1
lea rn somet hing," Norseth said. "I
had a pretty good scrimmage
(Sa turday aga inst the Bills 1. I
made some mistakes, but ovrra ll.1
thought I did a pretty good job. I
threw some good passes and from
tha t standpoint , I was happy with
my performan ce."
At Kansas, the 6- foot -2. 2()().
!Jlunder performed well enough to
set 16 Jayhawk and Big Eight
Conference passing records, includ·
ing school and league marks for
most passing yards in a game.
when he completed 24 of 38
anempts for 48l yards

16 year-old upsets Mayotte
in Volvo International meet

signed their lone ooldout, 1l.rst·
round pick Leslle O'Neal of Oklahoma State. O'Neal-refused to sign
until he personally !)'let Owner Alex
Spanos. Tuesday's meeting lasted
about ftve minu tes. and ended with
O'Neal signing a four·year
contract.
At Olarleston. Ill.. St. Louis
Cardinals safety Lee Nelson has
knee suegery Wednesday and t lght
rod Jay Novacek will undergo
surgery Friday fo r a fractured
thumb in last week's loss to New
England.
At Carlisle, Pa., the Redskins
waived kickers Jess Atkinson and
Steve Willis. leaving two players
vy ing to unseat Mark Moseley.
·At Rochester, Mlch., Philadel·
phia Eagles coach Buddy Ryan
criticized the Detroit Lions for a
lack of clfort during the team's
combined practice Tuesday.
"The tempo was terlible and we
didn't really ge t a lot out of it,"
Ryan said. "Our players were
up-tempo. It was no problem with
ou r players. It's just that they 1the
Lions! ruined our tempo because
they just laid down and wallowed.
Ryan a lso expressed displeasure
with his team 's accomodatlons a t
Oakland University, where the
clubs havP been working out
together sin&lt;P Sunday.

By FREDERICK WATERMAN
UPI Sports Writer
STRAT'IUN, Vt. (UP! ) - Displaying a forehand and serve as
striking as his two- tone punk rock
haircu~ H&gt;·year· old Andre Agassi
showed he may be tennis' newest
wunderkind with a stunning defeat
of Wimbledon semifinalist Tim
Mayotte.
The leen·aged qualifier, ranked
211 in the world and playing In his
fourth pro tournament, advanced to
the third round of the $315,000 Volvo
International with a 4-6, &amp;4. 62
triumph Wednesday over the fifth
seed.

Agassl, from Las Vegas, blasted
his top-spin forehand at every
op(llrtunlty and equalled the serves
of the powerful Mayotte, ranked
12th in the world.
"Agassi Is exceptionally talented
and has a great future," acknowl·
edged Mayotte. "He has a tremendous forehand and moves very
well."
Agassl' s brown hair is dyed
blonde on top and he wears a
" rat·tall" down the back, a style he
calls "my own little idea ." He says
he entered the match "with an open
mind. I have a lot of respect for
Mayotte, but he was just another
player trying to beat me. "

The Daily Sentinel
I US PS 111·9611)
A Dl vlo; ion or !'tlultlnwdla, Inc.

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GOOD EFFORT - Cincinnati shongop Kirk
Stillwell knocks do10n a sharply hit ball ~ the middle
by San Francisco's Chill Davis In the flr!il kmlng of

Subs&lt;'rihNs not d&lt;'s ir ln~ to pay th&lt;' Car rl&lt;'r may r&lt;'mit tn adva nc(l direct to
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SAN FRANCISCO iUPii Rookie Mike Aldrete hit a two· out.
two-strike pitch to drive in the
winning run for San Francisco in
the 14th inning after fellow rookie
Will Clark tied the game with
Cinci nnati in the ninth with an RBI

Majors

single.
"Before, once I had two st rikes I
would have thro\\11 in the towel,"
pinch hitter Aldrete said Wednesday after the Giants handed the
Reds a 2-1 defeat. "Toda y, I had the
confidence to get the hit."

PhlladC'Iphl u t K .Gr(~-' -;"-I'll a1 S1
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Transactions

St...,· .lrrSf"o - f::drnd'dl' Onlnt l' l~nl \'IC'I'
l''l~&lt;llkk'nl Cifon rral Manag('r M .tJC Mr:-..a h
!'l"lill' h Dou~ C'ar·p • w •r . Dir('(' lor rt l'ldlt"t
Prr.;onnPI M arshaU .lo iTt§O n. ,\S:.t-tanr
Dlm'tor d Plli\'C'f Pi'niti!VJ('I DavKI Contr
a.nd CA(l('rnl M~lij!rr and foar h of M.tlnr
Mar11'1('t"!&gt; Tom !\-k\'h•. nami'd llnn Smith
aWianii'Oitt'h: ~i!1lld fm • :ijlt'fll forw,trrh
l :lidd Andro~n . l1ou.IZ BI'OYo'n .t nd T im
!.marOOn

~u:.p.

.: Winners announced
• Winners on Ladles Day Tuesday
:at the JayMar Golf Course after 18
:holes of play were Margaret
·Follrod, low gross; Sue Arnold, tow
:net; Sue Arnold and Carol Crow
:woo tied for low putts. Making an
·eagle on number six was Carol

:erow.

COWMBIAGAs

Clark, who collected three hits for ble over first baseman Nick
the aft ernoon to lift his average to Esasky's head. Candy Ma loonado
.545 on a 12-for-22 performance was walked intentionally to load the
since his return from the disabled bases. Randy Kutcher !breed Clark
list July 14, said. "I hope I'm back. I at the (iate. and then Aldrete, pinch
hit one in the upper deck yesterday hitting for Luis ~!nones, lined the
and I had three more hits today. U game·wlnner to center field .
I'm not back now, I don 't know if I'll
Giants manager RDgo?r Craig
ever be back."
w._ecracked ahout Clark's perlorThe rookies were bolstered by an mance: ·'Once he learns tu hit, ·
eight -inning, three-hit pitching per- , be a good ballplayer. "
formance by starter Vida Blue. The · Jeff Robinson. 6-2. who retired
veteran southpaw gave up the Cllly the Reds In order In the top of the
Reds' run when Dave Parket hit a 14th, picked up the victory.
bloop single in the siXth to score
Dav._, playing right field, cut
Buddy Bell. who had walked and oown a (lltffi Ual anclnnati ~­
moved to second on a wild pitch.
ahead run in the 12th when, with
Esasky on third, Kurt StUJwell
Lefthander 1bm Browning went lofted a shallow fly. Davis raced In
the first seven Innings, allowed only to catch the ball and then llred It to
three hits and striking out four. He catcher Bob Brelly to nail Esasky.
yielded a one-out single to ChUI
The Reds kladed the bases with
Davis In the first Inning and then one out in the lith. Scott Garrelts
retired 19 consecutive batters until then retired the side on a pop-up and
Olrts Brown singled In the seventh. a grouncbut. Cincinnati also had a
"Browning pitched a good bal· runner on third with two out In the
!game," said Cincinnati manager 13th, but Bo Dlaz grounded out to
Pete Rose, who ultimately used end the Inning.
four relievers. "In fact, all my
Clark had tied the score 1-1 in the
pitchers threw well today."
ninth with a ground single up the
With the score J.lln the bottom of middle. RDb Thompson led off with
the 14th and one out, Clark singled a single and Davis sacrificed him to

: First practice for Eastern Junior
;Htgh School football has been
·rescheduled tor Monday, Aug.l8, at
:9: 00 a.m. Those wishing to partiCI·
;pate musi have had a physical by
·!Jilt time. '
'

qualifier Martin Laurendeau of
Canada . ranked No. 416, defeated
ninth seed Paul Annacone 6-3, 4-6,
7-6 19- 7) ; Pablo Arraya of 1\!ru
beat No. 13 Tim Wilkison 6-4, 4-6, 6
2; and Milan Srejter of CzechosJo.
vakla beat No. 16 Ramesh Kr .. hnan
6-2, 4-6, 6-2.
Top seed Ivan Lend! and No. 3
Connors won In straight sets. The
day's last singles match, between
No. 4 John McEnroe and Peter
Fleming, his long· tlme cbubles
partner. was halted after five points
due to rai n, which ended Wednes·
day's play.

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Scioto results
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Eighteen Karat set a track record
for two·year-old colt troers atScloto
Downs Wednesday night when he
won his dl""'lon of the Ohio Sires
Stas In 2: 01 4·5.
Eighteen Karat. drlvey Hakan
Wallner. eclipsed the previous
mark for freshmen coltrotters of
2: 02 set in 1983 by Scotian Rebel.

Now You Can Enjoy More

Wallner put Eighteen Karat lntoe
lead past the haif·mile post and held
off early leader Action tor ID post a
three- qua rter lmgth win. McMa·
cho was third. The win was the third
in six lifetime outings for Eighteen
Karat.
Moncb, driven by Bryan Weaver,
won another division of tbe Ohio
Sires Stakes. beating out Fistful of
Dollars. It wathe third win In his
last four outings and he went the
mile in 2:05 2-5. Stormin' Johnny
was third.

To start drills
Meigs High School cross country
practice will begin Monday. Those
interested are to meet at the lllgh
school at 9 a.m.

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•
Middleport

S19 9 5

Brown
·and-run
to rightoounced
off Carla hit
WUils,
1-3, oouand .. the game· tying single to Clark.

WE ARE YOUR
BACK TO SCHOOL
HEADQUARTERS

:nrms rescheduled

rolling," said Agassi, who turned
Mayotte's strong serve to his own
advantage, driving effective returns down the lines and at his
op~nent's feet.
Agassl' s father used to strtng
racquets In Las Vegas for Jimmy
Connors.
"I was put on a tennis court a;
soon as I could walk," he explained
at his first·ever press conference.
"I hit with Connors when I was four
years old and Bjorn Borg when I
was eight."
His victory was one of five upsets
on Wednesday: Greg Holmes defe ated No. 8 Johan Kriek 61, 6-3;

Agassl turned 16 on AprU ~ and
says his youth is not a handicap, but
a shield, sparing him from competitive pressure .
"I just hit ali -out on every shot, I
have nothing to Jose. My age gives
me a little moreronfidence tecause
I'm lllt supposed to teat these
players.
"When I go?t on a roll, I keep on

14th; Browning sharp

Li'Uglj('

C1t1· .c;uiJi rza .·~;, , at Toronto

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DN'roit 1M orn~ I.!-; and Thurmooo 1 11. ".!.

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8oSlon - ·~-·uf'Odl'tl runr nwr of \1 ana.'lf't
.John Mrf\ amant Throu.(!h lhr l!ltlll 'tl'u-.on
Olk·a~o.'O t:"o:Lt- rlarf'd plkhc- r'\!'ilAI ~ ·o

Thul'!&lt;idu,\· ·~ lillllll'..

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and you 'll be billed that amount every
month. Your meter will continue to be
read as usual, and each month's bill
will continue to show the amount of
gas you used. A review in March determines if your budget amount needs to
be adjusted because of weather.
Anolher good idea : sign on for
Checkfree~ too. It automatically makes
your gas payment from your checking
account each month, so you save time,
postage and check charges.
Join the Columbia Budget Payment
Plan. You'll take lhe ups and downs
out Of your heating bills ... and leave
the High cost of winter behind .

In

Scoreboard ...

Dakl.mrl

When temperalures take the plunge
this winter, your heating bills needn'l
climb. Not if you're on Columbia's
Budget .Payment Plan .
The plan averages your bills into 12
equal payments, so there are no peaks ,
and valleys because of the weather.
Instead, the monthly amount stays the
same .. . higher than you now pay in the
summer, but a lot lower In the Winier.
Rather than ups and downs, your
gas bills stay on a smooth, even track
all year 'round.
It's easy to be a Budget Payment
customer, too. All you do is pay the
"Budget Amount" on your August bill,

•

Giants edge Reds 2-1

No suhsr rlptl ons by mail prr mlttf'd In
avai labl f' .

Wednesday's game at Candlestick Park. Despite the
good effort, Dav._ was credited with a single on the
play. The Giants went on to win Z.l In 14 Innings.
(UPI)

SINGLECO PV
PRICE
.......... 25 Ce nt s

Dail y ....

The Daily Sentinel-Page-&amp;

675-3398

UMITED nME OFFER

00

�Page-6-The l)aily Sentinel

Thursday. August 7, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

--Local Briefs:__;_---. Meigs County Court concludes 30 cases
Mason County fair schedule

'
Tonlpt
Rufles l Flourishes ..... ...... .... .... .... .. .. ...... .. .... .. .... .... .5::11 p.m.
Sugar .to Spice ..... ........ .. ...... ..................... .. .... ........ ... 5: :II p.m.
Baby beef show ...... .. .. ..... ......... ...... ............. .. 6 p.m., show rtn11
Harry Rhodes ...... .......... .......... ...... .. .... ........ .................7 p.m.
John M!lCausland Award .. ... .......... ...... ........ .......... ......... 7 p.m.
Fu,n tractor puB ..... ............................ .... .. .. ................. 7 p.m.
Samml Smith ......................... ..... .. ... ............ 9 p.m .. main stqe
Friday a.m.
Sandloned dairy goat show ...... ,....................... .. ............. 8 a.m.
Guinea cakh .... .. ................... .. ..... .. ......................... I0:30 a.m.
Pedal tractor puU ............... .. ........ .. ...... ............ ....... II: 30 a.m.

Bean dinner set for Saturday
RIO GRANDE- The 116th Annual Rio Grande Bean Dinner will
he held from 11 a.m. until 3 p.m. Saturday at the Bob Evans Farms
Shelterhouse, Rio Grande.
Opening ceremonies will begin at 11 a.m. foUowed by the dinner,
navy beans cooked in iron kelt ies over an open Hre.
For a donation o!$1.50, 75 cents for children between ages 3 and 12.
adults can eat all the beans and crackers they can. Community
groups wUI supplement the fare by the sale of soft drinks, Bob Evans
Farms Sausage sandwiches. fruit pte and ccrnbread.
Live entertainment will be provided by Smith, Brown and Jones.
Ltd., at 12:30 p.m.
The bean dinner is sponsored by the Rio Grande Memorial
Association and all proceeds are used to JXJrchase and place
American flags on the graves of vpterans of war in ten area
cemeteries and to support community projects that hooor American
veterans.

REACT team forms plans
Guy Hysell. chairman of the Meigs REACT Team, reports that
plans are in the works for the upmming Laoor Day weekend safety
break to be staged by REACT at the 9Julhlx&gt;und park on U.S. 33.
REACT members will be serving motorists coffee and
refreshments over that weekend, Hysell says.
He further reported that the trailer from which refreshments will
be served is being donated for use that weekend by Nathan Biggs. A
special REACT meeting will be held Aug. 22 at Pleasers Restaurant
to iron out final work details for the Labor Day activity. Hysell
wishes to make io&lt;'at members awa re that the Meigs Team has
adopted a new dress code using International REACT mlors .

Foundation giving away trees
The National Arbor Day Foundation is giving 10 free trees to
people who become Foundation members during August .
The free trees are part of the Foundation's effort to promote tree
planting throughout America.
A sugar maple. white now!'ring dogwood, pin oak. white pine. rPd
maple, birch. American redbud. silv!'r maple. red oak and Colorado
blue spruce will be given to members joining in August. The s!J( to
12-inch trees will be shipped this fall at the right time for planting
1- between Oct. 15 and Dec. 10. They will be sent postage paid with
enclosed planting instructions.
These trl'Cs were sel&lt;'Cted to provide benefits every season of the
year- spring flowers, summer shadP, autumn color, winter berries
and nesting sites for song birds according to the Foundation.
The National Aroor Day Foundation, a non-profit organization, is
working to improve the quality of life throughout the country by
encouraging tree planting. The Foundation wUI give the 10 free trees
- only to members contributing S10 during August .
To bet'Ome a member of the Foundation an d to receive the free
I. t!l'es, a $10 membership contribution should be sent to Ten Trees.
: National Arbor Day Foundation, HXJ Aroor AVP., Nebraska City,
. .,. Neb .. 68410, by Aug. 31.
;

CAA plans food distribution
The Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency will be distributing
: U.S. D.A. food commodities consisting of cheese. dried milk. and
: .rice. the last week in August 10 eligible families in Gallia and Meigs
- counties.
·
Pcrs:ms rPCPiving C'OmmOOitiPs mu st havf' applied and not I:Jppn

:: denied a food distribution card.
.~

ThP day , tim(' and place wi!l bf&gt; announcrd at a later date.

...
~

Ea'itern ]r. High practice reset

~

First prac tice for East ern J unior High School football has been
r&lt;'scheduled to Monday, Aug. IR, at 9: 30 a. m. Those w1shing to
' partiCipate must have had a physica l by this time.
•.

Court sentences arPa man

•'

Phillip Michael Shoema ker. 30, Shade, entered voluntary pleas of
·· guilt v to complicity 10 commit grand theft 1aiding and abetting I and
obstructing justice. when he appea red Wedresday moming in Meigs
·. County Common Pleas Cou r1 hefor'£' .Judge Charles Knight.
:.

The charges wPrr• r ont a ined in an indictment o.btained in .Ju~ of

· this year by Prosecutmg Attorney Fred Crow ll1 and resulted from a
shoplifting mcidrnt on May 30 at Fisher's Big Wheel.
.
Knight acceptro Shoemaker's pil'as d guilty and sentenced him to
1-: six months in prison on eac h charge , to be served concurrently.
. · Shirlev Yates. a co-d~fendenl with Shoemaker. had earlier entered
·. a plea oi gull ~· to grand theft in connec tion with the same incident.
: Yates was senl!'nced to six months in prison .
Michael F:. NoiTis ..17, of Rt . 2. Alba ny. also appeared before
.: Knight and entered a voluntal)· plea of no cont est to a charge of
-:: escape. The charge came after an inddent on Aug. 3.
Norris was originally arrested for driving under the influence.
During the booking procedu!1' at the Meigs County Jail, NoiTis
reportedly bolted and ran from ih P building. Hr was recaptured
some dist.anc'&lt;' away by sheriff's deputi"'.
NoiTis was sentenced to six mon ths in prison.

Squads respond to four calls
~·
•

Meigs Count y Emc'rgf'n&lt;)' Mediea l S,.rvice repo11 s four calls
Wednesday.
Pomeroy at 10:41 a.m. to the Pomeroy Health Care Center for
Ruth McElroy to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 6:42
,· p.m. to &gt;41 S. Second for Cathryn Werner to Hol2er Medical Center;
.• Racine at 10: 19 p.m. tra nsported VIcki Boso to Wterans Memorial
1
Hospital: Pomeroy at 11:33 p.m. to Highland Road for Leona
Wallace to Veterans Memoria l Hospital.

Outdoor dance slated Friday
Eastern Athletic Boosters are sponsoring an outdoor dance Friday
• nlght, 8 p.m. to midnight, at the high school.

_ Marriage licen.~es issued
:
Matriage licenses have been Issued in Meigs County Probate
: 'Court to Dale Clair Teaford Jr .. 23, and Linda Kay O'Brien, 21, both
•· · or Racine; Jeffrey Dean Jones. 22. Reedsville, and Unda Marie
• ·Thoma, 20; Chester: Mitchell Charles Holley III, 19, Racine, and
'
. ·: Beverly Sue Kauff, 17, Middleport.

~:

••

Court grants divorce decree

~

Donald F. Hendricks has been granted a divorce from Mary E.
• Hendricks In Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
1
••

'•

Area grange meets' tonight

::

Rock Springs Grange wUI meet at 8 this evening at the hall.
1~ Ofllcers will be . elected and the buDding will be vacated In
J·v preparation for ihe Meigs County Fair.
~·

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

Thirty cases were processed
Wednesday In Meigs County Court
by Judge Patrick O'Brien.
Fined by O'Brien were Maurice
S. Chevalier, Reedsville, $Zi0 and
costs, three days in jail. 00 day
license suspension, DWI: costs for
failure to control and costs for
expired registration: Maurice S.
Chevalier, Reedsville, $300 and
costs, six months In jail with all but
12 days suspended, 1~ day Ucense
suspension and one year probation
on a second charge of DWI; costs
for no motorcycle endorsement;
costs for no eye protection; costs for
no license plate: costs for no
headlight:
Michael Norris, Pageville, $2'i0
and oosts, s!J( months in jaU and
license suspended indefinitely,
DWI: slx months In fait and costs
for no q&gt;erator's license: costs only
for failing to display registration:
Garcle L. Workman, Athens, $2'i0
and costs, s!J( rnontffi In jail with all
but 00 days suspended, five-year
license suspension, one year proba·
lion, DWI; six months in jail
suspended to 00 days, one year
probation, expired operator's

.--

license.
Also !In~ were Brian Hayes,
RuUand, $100 and costs, one year
probation, reckless operation;
Shelby J . Pickens, Racine, !Kl days
in jail with Kl days suspended, costs
and one year probation, theft;
James Acree Jr., Pomeroy, $00and
costs, three days In jail !llspended,
s!J( months probation, no motorcy·
cle license or permit; James Reed,
ReedsvUie, $10 and costs, assured
clear distance: Darrell Krautter,
Racine, $15 and oosts, failed to
display proper reglstratkm; Carla
Wamsley, Poinl Pleasant, W.Va. ,
$20 and costs, passing bad checks;
Donna Johnson, Pomeroy, restltu·
tlon, 10 days In jail !llspended and
$20 and costs on each of two charges
of passing bad checks; Dean
Whittington, Pomeroy, six months
in jail suspended' to 30 days and
costs for assault; $~ and costs for
disorderly mnduct; Maurice Che· ~
valier, Reedsville, 10 days in jaU,
restitution and oosts, criminal
trespassing.
Fined for speeding were Vaughn
Grigsley, Albany, $ZJ and oosts:

Area deaths
•
Amsbary and David M. Amsbary,
both.of Huntington; brother, Jack
Amsbary of Huntlngton; .15 grand·
children; several nieces and ne·
phews; and a special friend, Felicia
Monl(,&lt;lmery.
Three brothers preceded him in

Loren Amsbary
Loren Byrd Amsbary, 84, Hun·
tington, W.Va., died Tuesday at his
residence.
The founder and president of
Amsbary and Johnson Inc., he was
oorn June 26, 190l, in Gallipolis, a
son of the late Byrd and Blanche
Fulton Arnsbary.
Survivors include his wife, Margaret Mary Magner Amsbary;
daughters, Mrs. ,John (.Joanna!
Brennan of Columbus, and Mrs.
John (Margaretl McGarrity of
Charleston. W.Va .; sons, Joseph B.

death:
Billand
Amsbary,
Dr. Kenneth
Amsbary
Wayne Amsbary.
Mass of Christian burial will be
conducted at noon Friday at Our
Lady of Fatima Church, Hunting·
ton, by the Rev. Cesidio Federico.
Burial wtll be in Forest Lawn
Memorial Gardens, Huntington.
Mr. Amsbary's grandsons will
serve as pallbearers.

Glen Wheeler, Wocelleld, $ll and Newark, $24 and costs; Steven..
costs; Rhoda Gomez, Rudand, $'}3 Clippinger, Canal ~inchester, $23-;;
and costs; Robert Hickel, Hartford, and oosts; Jon Merrifield, Fair· •
W.Va .. $25 and costs; Margaret mont, w .Va.,$24andcosts; PauJM.;
Scott, Luna Pier, Mlch., $Z2 and Haynes, Chesapeake, $2i and
msts; Lisa Honaker, New Haven, costs: Linda Johnson , New Marsh·
W.Va., $22 and costs; Glenn field, ~ and costs.
..
Forfeiting bonds In county court, ,
Matlick, Newburg, W.Va., $21 and
costs; Joseph Borowiec, Orlan!lo, . were Mark Napier, Troy, $&lt;l'i. and .
Fla., $2i and costs; Carolyn Eagle, Marion Davis, Portland, $.'ll.
''

MEIGS COUNTY FAIR
PRETTY BABY CONTEST or
UTILE MISS or UTTLE MISTER MEIGS COUNTY

stop by and share their opinions
with him. This summer's poll
involves issues of current ooocern
to the Congress and includes
questions on such subjects as
terrorism, tax reform. product
liability and the farm credit crisis.
The mobile office will be staffed
from 1·9 p.m. dally by the congress·
man's fair representative, John
Carey of Lancaster .

Cargo plane lands by error
COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPI) -A
Boeing 7'!1 that had landed at
Bolton Field by mistake has been
flown to its horne base at the Flying
Tigers Line hub at the Rieken·
backer Air National Guard Base 10
miles away.
This was the second time in 19
years that a plane had landed at the
wrong airport In Columbus.
Them , carrying 10 tons d cargo,
had landed on the5,7JJ().foot runway
before dawn Wednesday. It was

·.

Girl... .... .. .. .. Boy .. .. .. .. ..... Phone No ..... .... .. .. .. .. .. ............ ........ .
Blrlh Date ... .. ...... .. .. .............. .. .......... .. .... .. ... ...................... ..
Parents' Nam!&gt;i .. ............................... ..... .. ............... ........... .
Address .... ...... .. ..... ............. ...... ......... ......... .. .. .... ....... .. .. ...... .
Contest Entry : (Check l
( ) Pretty Baby Contest
( ) Little Miss Contest
( ) Little Mister Contest

Delicious Ribeye steak with .
golden fried shridmpll~ero~~::Z~~at Salad Buffet.
baked potato an a yo
__-~-'!"'--- I 1/:3 U~ and Fries
Sirloin Tips Dinner
$1.99'~-'::::V:~·
•

I
.
1
.
I StHk
Big Chopped
I
All·You·C-·Bat .I ·
Dinner
salad Blllfet
1··
I
99
s3
•ti111· 1~~t.1HIIiall~llil\e!l II~nMtbe u5C0WllftO$2.~!!.:7!:·
I!te:I ~IKOVlS
I
I
'''"oh"s"A'
PONDER
I •'~""" PONDEROSA •a"• I •'"":_.--= o...c:;o~':;,~:: w.lh

~IH()(Iked

1111

_

Atllarllclfltllt

I

lfll!ll

Allllr11dpt1illltiiHMUit1 -

----

~'

1986 PONDEROSA, INC

ADC funds received
Meigs County received $253,178
for 2,661 recipients In thE' August
distribution of Aid to Dependent
Children money . In Ohio there were
633,791 recipients receiving a total
of li62.911.191.

CLEVELAND (UP! l - Ohio
Lottery o!flclals say there were no
winners In Wedresday night's
Super Lotto game.
Lottery officials said $4,015,732
worth of tickets were sold, and with
no slx-of·slx winners, the jaekpot
lor next week's game will be at
least $7.5 million.
Numbers drawn were 13, 30, 32,
33, 38 and 40.
However, 102 tickets had five rl
the six numbers, giving their
holders $611. Another :1;034 tickets
had four numbers worth $49. StUI ·
another 85,m tickets had three
numbers, E&gt;ach worth $3.

Veterans Memorial
· Admissions - Eber Pickens,
Portland: Rickie Icenhower,
Pomeroy: Ruth McElroy,
Pomeroy.
Dllchaq;es - S&amp;Ah MCCarty.

Judging will be based on appear·
ance, 10 percent, workmanship, 50
percent, style, 10 percent, and
materials, lJ percent. Janet Ko·
blentz and Esther Mays are in
charge of domestic arts for the fair
this year.
In children's clothing, there are
classes for cotton and cotton blend
dresses, fancy dresses, boy's clo·
thing, blouses. shirt, T-shlrts,
shorts, jacket and coats, and
miscellaneous. The adult clothing
classes are dresses, cotton or
blends, fancy or formal attire, knit
dresses, blouses, skirts, T-shirts,
coats, capes, shorts, slacks, suits.

navors in preserves, jams, and
jeutes; with apple butter, peach
honey and sandwich spread In·
eluded In the spread division. As for
pickles,. the classes are dUI, bread
and butter, cueumber, zucchini and
lime: and In relishes, the classes
are end-of-garden, sweet pepper,
and corn relish. Other classes are
tomato catsup, chili sauce, corn
relish and spaghetti sauce whlle the
only classes for juices are tomato
juice and grape.
On the canned fruit division,

WORLD'S BIGGEST
SHOCK ABSORBER SALE!
·'

',

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
The ccmmunlty was saddened by
tbe tragic death
d Donald Harris,
Rout!' 2. Coolville
- his actual resl·
dence being In
Thppers Plains
- kiUed on Aug. 1
when he was apparently struck by a tractor-trailer
while enroute home from his
employment at Harrisville, W.Va.
Authorities are stUI trying to
piece together what happened , but
it Is assumed that Donald had
dltficulty wtth his car which was
pulled oH the road on Route 50 nl'ar
Parkersburg. He had left work at 11
p.m. headed home.
.Only :r1, helss~JV!ved byhlswlle,
Sblrley, an employee of Francis
Florist, two daughters, Missy and
Mandy; his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Mayford Harris of Route ·1, Long
Bottom, and a number of brothers
and sisters.
~ Services were held Monday,
foUowtng an autopsy, at the Leavitt
Funeral Home in Belpre and burial
was in Rainbow Ridge Cemetery
near Long Bottom.

'

Although the Meigs County Fair
wut not officially open untO Tues·
day morning, savlces by llhe Meigs
County Ministerial Association will
traditionally umffldally open the
fair at the grandstand at 7:30p.m.
Monday.
Speaker will be Cbarles Lusher
who has spoki&gt; at the opening
services several Urnes il the past.
He Is now retired rut his Iastchurch
was llheTabernacle Baptist Cburch
in Chillicothe. He Is a retired
member of the Ohio Baptist
Convention and resides at Crown
Oty.

FREE
SPARK
PLUGS
WITH A STANDARD IGNITION TUNE-UP!
ASK US HOW
TO GET YOUR

FREE
SET OF SPARK PLUGS

public auction ootices are
mentioning "ylng yangs". I asked
about the dflce for aexpanattonon
just what "ying yangs" are - I'll
spare you the answers, I got.
&amp;&gt;Jlevl' me, you're better off not
knowing. I'm almost afraid to pose
the question, but what are "ylng
yangs"? Forgive me and do keep
smiling.

®

- ~ - .,
ISTANOAR01

. TiflliJ1I

AlSO AVAIUILI AT PARTICIPATING GARAGIS &amp; SIRVJCI SIATIONS

WIRE SETS
PRICES SrART AT

$3995
I XC H.

~5001

122f.50

W/\GNE.R' ~ 501 4..

... ....

..

•u!

Le~gue

7MM- -

$453

8MM--

$8 56

eMainttnaMI·frH
Nt¥tr acid water

•Atllilablt in lide
and top~pett terminal

logen Beams

$4695
mtt.

#H-.5ool

DURA POWER

$6647

#H·sooti

ENGINE REBUILDING KITS
SAVE UP TO 40%
DBLOCII KITS DTIMING KITl
DR£. RING KITS DCAM &amp; llFTE R MITS
CAM &amp; UFTIR liT
FOlD 6 CY. 1200 &amp; HO) #591 ·9

0650 cold uanklng
amps in an-inch ftlll

#H-4651, H-4656 ...

·~

~ IUY AN ARviN MUFFLER
AND SAVE

$947

Arvan.

uaooo seliu

EXO-STAI MUFFLER
ADIY • - . rltti..lli lor -of
IMtal\ot\oo. ....... d on 1111 \o.

.- te •tch up tlt"lint n• ..

··-"'
.51995

ONLY

DISC BIIAIIE CALI'EIIS
roo .,n

t

.:J- · J-

$2·4 99

••
1~(11.
POl . .II,AifiiCAIIOtG

$19 95

"rs MOST ,ON.II .wtK.&amp; noNS

••Amlil·
'MASTER CYLINIIDS

will meet

uhaustSystomoSpeddsts ' ""HA&lt;..,&lt;I

ArVIn.
ORANGE PEELER MUFFLER
lht IIW celt .,...,, 11111Hitt ..,
\ithl lrockt 11011 IV's

ArVIn.
IMPORT MUFFLER

o~•· ty,.rqllllity for '""' ...
., iml*f (• 01141ight trud.

AI'VIn.
ORIGINAl EQUIPMENT
TYPE MUFFLERS
•tdtn .,
I

••CIIIh f1rmc.~yf•¥:
otiglnol

loll•

-r13oart~f'J',. co'iuiUC,t #!.eeti?jg.;
· ~. '

·~ ~n~· ~~ .toad .noted. Net.deci to move equtpqient

~:U...:....t

(Available at par1icipat;ng NAP4 Auto Parts storet).

448·2982

Past Meigs Fair royalty sougqt

The

~r 1fi .- )$air, ,cle4nup ·and,

922·2131

. I'

And - schools ar e (,&lt;ling to be
qJening before you know it. The
Meigs Local Board of Education
will he meeting In special session at
I p.m. Friday to wrap up hiring of
personnel for the new year. That's a
sign.

The Pt,;.t P!easanJ · l.al..eche series. There will be an Informal
Le~ wUI meet Monday at 7 p.rn discussion, and mothers will be
at lhl!' )lOme of Tricla Knight, D.l3 allowed to browse through the
Broolc Drive.
· group ·ubrary. )'dore tp(ormation
Prolrim wUI be entitled "Needs -maybeobtalnedbyca1llng67544.'ll.
as l'labY Grolvs, Nutrition and the new series wlll begin oo Sept. 8.
Welin:W.g," the last In a !our part ·

1·800-LET·NAPA

162 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, OH

wheat, white, banana nut, ruchinnl,
baking powder biscuits and muf·
fins; cakes, angel food, butter cake,
chocolate and loaf; oookl~, oat·
meal, plain sugar, chocola,!e chip,
drop orange, peanut t:IJt~r. and
brownies; .. pies, apple, 'cherry,
pecan, peach and raislt.; and
candles; divinity, fudge, chocolate
and peanut butter, seafoam, and
peanut brittle.

It's homecoming time and the
Carmel United MetiDdlst Church
will observe Its homecoming servl·
ces on Sunday. There wtll be a
potluck dinner at noon followed by a
program of special readings and
musical selrettons at 1 p.m.
Services will bl' held as usual on
Sunday morning wtth Sunday
school at 9:ll a.m. and worship
services at 10: ll.

Abbut 100 attended lhe program Colleen Davis, Helen Scott, Allee
and weiner roast which closed the · Lelving Kathy Oleadle, Denise
annua~ Bible school at the Temple Sc;ott, Barb Bolen, Lou Chaney'
United Methodist Church. ThemE' Elizabeth Jordan, and Carolyn
was "Jesus I Love You" and for the Wires.
p.;:ogram, tie Bible lessons, songs.
Others assisting' wtlh." the Bible
and rrafts were enpyed.
school we!'(! the Rev. James
'J:)Il:ector for the classes was Sui' Stewart, Shauna H01vath, Artll.lr
~li. who was assisted by Leah and Westina Crabtree, Hazel Stout, .
Ctallilw and VIckie Stewart Walter and Kathy Jor!lan; Made·
Teatihers and helpers were VIckie Ilne Stilneart, and Patricia Bowen.
sOlen, Mal)' Loudner, Candy Th,e, socljll was')leld In the Temple
Ph!ppl Jenny En is, Crystal Phipps, Church grove picnic area.

l.ateche

When you buy a pair of shocks during our
big sale, we'll sell you the second one at
half price.
It's the World's Biggest Shock Absorber
Sale. From the world's biggest auto
parts store.

157 Walnut St.
Middleport, OH

there are classes for applesauce,
sliced apples, blackberries ,
peaches, plums, cherries, and
rhubarb, while the canned vegeta·
ble classes are for beets, beans,
nearly every kind, carrots, cab·
bage. corn, kraut, pepers, squash,
sweet potatoes, whole white pota·
toes. tomatoes, and vegetable soup.
In the baked goods department
the classes included: breads, whole

Bible School held at Temple U

Right now, get your second
shock for half-price.

THE MOTOR PARTS CO.

baby 118ms, wall hangtnp, and pot
holders.
The classes for qullts Included In
the show are applique, cotton
patchworit, painted, embroldred,
baby quilt,.comfort, Ued or knotted,
and a quOted wall hanging; while
lor rujp the clases are crocheted,
latch hook punch hook and loom
woven.
In the hobby ·comer there are
classes for embroidered, needle·
point, ·cross stitch, quOted, crewel,
and liquid embroidered pictures;
handmade puiWS, ceramics in age
categories both glazed aildstained,
macrame, stenciling, and other
hobbles.
·

jackets, I:Obes, all for women, and
rnen's 'jackets, shirts, trousers, and
miscellaneous.
The needlecraft classes are
pillow cases, cross stitch, embrol·
dered, crocheted trim: eushlons,
crocheted, embroidered, patch·
work, cross stitch, candlewick:
tablecloths, painted, embroidered,
crocheted: pot holders, dressed
doll, latch hook wall hanging,
stuffed toy, and miscellaneous
items.
In knitting theclassesareafghan,
sweaters, slipover, button front ,
and baby; while the crochet classes
are afghan, plain or fancy, beds·
pread. vests, capes, ponchos, dolly,

Previous Meigs County Junior they srrved. They are aSked to
Fair Royalty are being invited to mntact the Meigs County Coopera ·
participate tn the parade on the last tlve Extension Service, 992·6696, for
day oft he fair, Aug.16, 2 p.m .on the addltionallnfonnatlon on where to
AT FAIR_ Mikld Casto's Country Cloggers wUI appear on the hUI
race track
meet to line up for the ~ade.
stage of the Meigs County Fair, Wednesday, 9 to 10 p.m. The doggers
R.N., will be the supervising nurse.
The Junior Fair Board is inviting Theme of the parade is · New
and dancers range In age from 4 to 15. Pictured arc· Travl• and 1\m~
all previous klngs and queens to Horizons fo r America's Youth.
Hutchins, 7 and 8.
In the birthday corner 5 Homer r~tak~e...!p!:art~~reg~a~rd~less~~o~f_:th::e~ye~a::_r_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __ __
Bradshaw, a resident of the Pome·
roy Health Care Center. He'D mark
his !llth on Aug. 10 and loves getting
cards.

The Senior Ottzens Oub at
Harrisonville has set it~ free blood
pressure clinic for next Tuesday, 10
a.m . to noon, at the Town Hall. You.r
frte nd and mine, Ferndora Story,

Ohio weather

No winners named

Classes for everything from
children's clothing to ceramics
have been Included In the domE's tic
arts deparbnent for the Meigs
County Fair next week.
·Entries must be made before 4
p•m. Friday with Murlel Bradford,
s&amp; retary, at the fair board office on
t~ Rock Springs Fairgrounds. The
oi)Iy entry fee Is purchase of a
membership ticket. Articles for
judging must be on the grounds by
nQon Monday with judging to take
pJl!ce In the afternoon. Ribbons and
premiums will be awarded In three
pl8.ces, with two bests of show to be
se1ected with premiums of $3 each
to; be awarded.

404.

That's a big claim, but we can back it up. We don't just carry the
high-volume stuff-we have shocks for just about everything
on wheels.
Newer cars. older cars, domestic or imports, light trucks,
heavy-duty trucks, vans, RVs, postal vehicles, Army
trucks ... everything from street cleaners to Edsels,
we've got your shocks.
So whatever you need, come on in and ask.
We bet you can't stump us. But don't waitour Shock Absorber Sale is on now!

were dtscuUed

~~~~~~of:

~~~ten

Alto available at participating Dealers.

...
All the right parts in
all the right places:·
• 191!6 N1 tional Alllllii\Oi twt P1rtt ~tl«i • tion

:
•

Domestic Arts deadline for fair Friday

You might havE' wondered about
Mary Ann Rankin, Tuppers Plains,
who was seriously Injured whPn she
was hit by a car on June 26 in
Tuppers Plains.
She is recovering slowly and is In
fair condition. She has' been at
Children's Hospital In Columbus for
the past five weeks but has now
been transferred to the Good
s.4maritan Medical Center, tlXl
Forest Avenue, Zanesvute. Ohio
43'7ol. Ca rds may be sent to Room

r-----------.....JL..------------------------

South Central Ohio
Partly cloudy today v.ith a
chance of showers and thunder·
storms. Highs will be In the low EOs.
Pa rtly cloudy tonight with lows In
the mid OOs.
&amp;&gt;coming cloudy Friday with a
chance of showers and thunder·
storms. Highs will be in the mid·8ls.
The probability of precipitation Is
30 percent today, 20 percent tonight
and 50 percent Friday.
Winds wUI be light and from the
southwest today and Ught and
variable tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Saturday lhroup Monday
Chance d showers and thunder·
storms Saturday and Monday and
fair Sunday. Highs wt11 be In the Ills
an tow.; In the 60s.

Page- 7
"

·Dangerous machines

ShrimP

llrt"'' Jlrl1' till. IIJ-IIl

'

Beta of the bend

r---:-,!!!!!!iliiji~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~-

ta•pu

\

.bpen judging wtll take place this
ye'ar in the baking and cannlng
c&lt;vnpetltlon on Monday at the
Meigs County Fair with the exhibit
to' remain In place until Sunday
afternoon.
Exhibitors are restricted to one
exhibit il each class and the rules
specify that the canning must have
been done In 1985 or 1986. Lids are
not to be covered.
There are several dasses for fruit

CONI'ES'IS SET - Registrations are heing taken for the annual
pretty baby Wid the Uttle Miss and Mister Meigli County Fair coraests.
The Little Miss and Mister event is set for 4:00p.m. Wednesday on the
hill stage Wid the baby contest will be at I p.m. Saturday In the show
ring. 'lbe Middleport Business &amp; Professional Women's Club wUI again
stage the two fair attractloll'i, sponsored by Elberfeld's Department
Store. Parents are to complete the accompanying application fonn.
Checks are to be made payable to the Middleport BPW Club and are to
he sent with complete lnfonnatlon. Little Miss and Mister contestants
must be 5 through 7 years of age and entries iJ all conle&lt;ls must he
residents of Meigs County.

01

Thursday. August 7. 1986 l'

Baking and canning judging set for Monday

-•

Send application with $1.00 for each child entered to 915
Park St., Middleport, Ohio 45760.
Fair Child Contest

lnl lul!eS Sl'il~ 8ufl~t 1111111_HOI ~~ISCO~"ts lil• n~ ,rei

apparently lured to the small
airport when lights, turned on by
airplane microphones, had been
left oo and the pilot, unfamiliar with
the area , thought he was at
Rickenbacker, said Bolton Field
manager Woodrow Moore.
Officials of the Flying Tigers
summoned a special crew from
California headquarters to fly the
jet to the larger field .

-.

Name ... ... ........ .. .... ............... ... ................ ..... .. ... ........ ...... .... .

Miller mobile office at fair
The mobile office of lOth District
Congressman Clarence Miller will
be at the Meigs County Fair, Aug.
12-16, to assist area constituents
wtth any concerns they may have
involving the federal goverrunent.
In addition to the public service
aspects of the mobile office, the
congressman wut also be conduct·
ing his annual summer poll during
the fa ir and Invites area residents to

:..
7

The Daily Sentine(_

·By The Bend

.

...
'•'

held In

at~'

r.:J: ·
·

U 8/14/H

are pickup ·trucks and vans and
.iJIYOIIew!J!II!g to assllt 1s,Ukl!d to
~~· 111 .~ .booth Saturday .at 1

... P

. PT. f~JA$ANI
SIS Main St. 611 Jadlton An
675·1520
675·2731
a o.m. till SoOO p.m.

PW!JforapooiJ!¥rtY~r-llebe.nd .

members afler ~ camP were
dllclliled. .
.
· .·
~~ 10 have a •. . rc:Ukllllu!tt ·.~ N~Un~ettna was.~nou.need foi .
IM!!'IIt'',flO ........... at .·~ ~lgi &lt;. 7 p.m. in tile band I'OOIIl Sept, ~
,, _.. ~ts and tluderltl who
Wlll'-'asllllqlnthefalrbqotllare

count).~'~t.ttwaa .

'

..

'•.)

. . . ·.

on

~OMEBOY

I(

W.2nd An.

992-2139
77 3· 5511
1:00 a.m. till 5:30 p.m.

. '
..

•

•

MASON

'iOuf:'ir

'

�...•

Thursday, August 7, 1986

Porn,

In the spotlight

'Mildew: .prevention and cleaning it up

By CINDY S. OUVEiU
Counly EJtmslon Ageat
Home Ecooomlca
When summer's heat and humid·
lty arrive, so do mildew problems .
Mildew, produa!d by molds always
present In the air, flourtshes In
damp, warm, poorly aired, poorly
lighted areas. The thin,. usually
black, sometimes white, even
bluish-green, growth appears In
basements, closets, crawl spaces,
shower stalls, and clothes hampers.
Mildew creates an unpleasant
musty aoor and can causeconsklerable damage to clothes and furnish·
lngs If permitted to grow. Mildew
can eat so deeply Into fabrtc that It
will llteraUy fall into ptea&gt;s. It also
can discolor and eventually dam·
age leather, paper and wood.
Clean and dry are the l&lt;ey words
In mildew control. Keep any area
where mildew Is likely to grow closets, basements, sro wer stalls 'clean. Soil - &lt;JI dirty clothes,
upholstered furniture, even a
greasy !Om on kitchen walls supPlies food lor mildew to grow
when heat and darrc&gt;ness are
present.
Get rld of dampness - mUdew
needs moisture to flourish. Let In
sunshine and dry, fresh air whe·
never possible. Ventilation vmts
damp air away and dry outside air
absorbs moisture, too. If necessary,
use electric fans, air rondltloners or
dehumidifiers to supplement natu·

raJ breezes. If the house Is very .
damp, It may be necessary to tum
on the heat for a short dme, then
open doors and wln&lt;DIW to let the
moist air out.
Mildew Prevention Tips:
Dry solied clothes before (JJttlng
them Into hamper. Spread wash·
clothes and towels. Stretch rut wet
shower. curtains. Wet fabrics
bunched together or sticking to the
wall or tub are most apt to mildew.
Dry washed garments oc fabrics
quickly -fabrics dried slowly may
get sour and musty smelling.
· Open closet doors or Install a fan
to Improve air clrcula lion. Hang
clothes loosely so air can circulate
around them. Dry wet clothing
he fore (JJttlng It away In drawers or

~

Page..,..S-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, August 7, 1981

'

James Halph Turner to T.P.
Chester Water Dlst.; right of way
Lebanon.
'
· Raymond J. Fowler, Patsy R.
Fowler to AnOia Fields, par&lt;!!ls,
Rutland.

Property
transfers

Raymond J . Fowler, Pasty R.
Fowler to Earl Fields, Kresha
Fields, parcels, Rutland.
' Don Eynon, WUma Eynon to
Russell Rivers, para&gt;ls, Oranee .
Elmer Edson Roush, aka Edison

Roush, Mary Roush to Carl Salser, Frapk E. FCl'lter, Anita M. Foster,
par&lt;!!ls, Sutton. ·
parcels, Mldd. ~Ill.
Genn H. Lambert, Dec., to
·Susan Thompl!Qn to Myrtle
Paddy Jo. Doolittle, Cert., Midd . . Phlillps, parcels, SCipio.
VOL
Relno Lind, Dec., by Exec., to
William D. Childs, Trustee, to Hazel E . Grate, Mary L. Birchfield,

Harold K Grate, parcels,

vm.

Central Turst Co., N.A.. to Lacy
Barton, Madlne S. Barton, lot #JB;
Oranee.
·

-.
•••

15,000,000 YEAR END SALE!

•

,,.,•

.

•

,,,.

.-

TURNPIKE OF GAUIPOLIS SAYS
"YES" TO SAVING YOU flllN EY
WE HAVE WHAT YOU WANT AND WE WANT YOU TO
SHOP US. WE MUST MOVE OUR 1986 INVENTORY TO
MAKE ROOM FOR THE 1987 MODELS. SELECTION HAS
NEVER BEEN BffiER AND PRICES ARE LOWER THAN
EVER BEFORE! DON'T MISS THIS CHANCE TO GET
YOUR ABSOLUTE BEST DEAL. .NOW IS THE TIME TO
BUY ANEW FORD, LINIXlLN, MERCURY, VOLKSWAGEN, AMC, JEEP OR RENAULT FROM "THE OHIO
VALLEY AUTO WAREHOUSf'!

~:c

",.

,.
"

YEAR END SAVINGS

•

•

'

,,J
I

UP TO

sso.o

FORD .
. cyl.; q., 5 sP8ed riilln~, OD
tr.~sL short ytheel belt, . P,

REBATES ·.

185175RX14SL BSW Tire5,"'$1ttJ

bu""'.

·

WAS

'9168.

~ow

'6,666

·

\

Z.9 V-6 q., cloth &amp; vinyl s•t 5
speed trans., oulsidlspn t:arrier,

NOW

'11 ,777

BACK

CASH

6 cyl., 4 speed, 5450 GVW, step
buqler•.minm. ·

NOW

growth, are sometimes noticeable
In such plaees as basements and
shower stalls . Take special preca~
lions tn get rid d. musty odOrs ·as
soon as possible; thus, ·you wUI
prevent turtn:r. 'really objeetlona·
ble and damaging mold growth.
Usually musty odors disappear If
the area Is well heated and dried. II
the ocbrs remain, additional tre.at·
ments may be necessary. ,
In cellars with dirt tloors, use
chlorinated lime (commonly called
chloride of lime or bleaching
powder) to remove musty odors.
Sprinkle thiS chemical over the
tloor, let It stay until aU mustiness
disappears, then sweep It up.
On cement tloors and on tiled
walls and floors In bathrooms, get

Star Grange elects new officers
New officers were elected aI a
r\'('ent meeting of Star Grange held
at tile haD .
Elected were Patty Dyt'r, master; Larry Montgomery, overseer;
RubY Lambert, lecturer; Linda
Montgomery, steward; Ric Ma ·
comber, assistant Steward; Max·
lne Dyer, lady assistant steward;
VIrginia Carson, chaplain; Opal
Dyer, secretary; Wald Nicholson,
treasurer: Ben Rife, gate keeper;
BeckY Rife, Ceres; Bernice Mid·
klff, Pomona; Anna · Halliday,
Flora, and John Holliday, executive
committee.
Chairmen named by Miss Dyer
were women's actMtles, Unda
Montgomery; legislative, Ray Mid·

Granee has a surordlnate and
youth display at the Ohio State Fair.
Those wishing to contribute to the
Meigs County Fair exhibit for the
granee are asked to be at the senior
lair building on Sunday, 1 p.m.
A eet-well card was sent to Adria
WUcox.

Jd!f; agrlculture, Ben Rife; mem·

hershlp, BeckY Rife; youth, Opal
Dyer; juniors, Linda Mmtgomery;
deaf activities, Neva Nicholson,
an&lt;l publicity, Unda Montgomery
The natklnal needlework contest
was held wtth Maxine Dyer, Opal
Oyer, RubY Lambert, and Cindy
Midkiff placing In the variOu~
classes. Patty Dyer placed first In
five categories of the national
photography oontmts. In the na·
Ilona! stuffed toy oontest, Patty
Dyer took first place, and VIcki
Macomber received second. Ber·
nice Midkiff plaa!d first In the state
sewing contest and Patty Dyer took
second.
Pany Dyer announced that Star

Golf winners named

rtd of m~stlness by scrubbing with
a dilute solution r1 sodium hypochlorite or other chlorine bleach
available In grocery stores. Use 'h
to 1 cup of liquid household bleach to
a gaUon of water. Rinse with clear
water and wipe as dry as possible.
Keep wl(ldows open until walls and
noors are thoroughly dry.
Precaution: Work quickly and
carefully on plastic and asphalt tOe
to avoid spotting the surface.
Aerosol sprays lor cleaning and
sanitizing bathroom walls are also
avatlable.
If mildew occurs. don'! give It a
chana! tn create damage. Brush
mUdew off clothing or household
fabrics outdoors so spores do not
scatter In the house. Sun and air
fabrics t horoughiy. Launder wa ·
shable Items with soap or detereent

and chlorine bleach II it Is safe for
the Iabrie.
Soak chlortne-sensltlve labrlcs In
oxygen bleach, then wash. Take
non-was hable Items to the dry
cleaner - he sure to Identity the
stain so It can be treated properly.
For additional Information on
cleaning speclflc Items that have
mildew, contact the Meigs County
Cooperative Extension Service at
992-0096 or wrlte to Box 32,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Old You Know That .. . Both sUica
gel and alumina can he used over
and over ~dried between times. To
dry simply place moist granules In
a ve1 ted CNE!I at llO degrees F. for
several hours. Then JXIt In an
air light rox and cool before reusing.
Read manufacturers label for
additional Information.

LEVI'S AND TENNIS SHOES

20°/o OFF

SUMMER CLEARANCE
40°/o OFF

ALL SUMMER MERCHANDISE

Winners on Ladles Day Tuesday
at the JayMar Golf Course alter 18
holes of play were Margaret
Foltrod, low gross; Sue Arnold, low
net; Sue Arnold and Carol Crow
who tted for low putts. Making an
eagle on number six was Carol
Crow.

~ . ~ ... ~ .. ····· ·~--=--- =- - - .....:;

' -~-1]1

290 N . SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT

®.

SJOOO

1986 F·150 4X2
WAS

closets.
Use exhaust ·fans In moisture- producing areas - kitchen,
. baths, laundry. Cooking, launder·
lng and bathing may add as much
as 2 gallons of water a day to
household air.
Dry air In closets and other smaU
areas by burning an electric light
continuously, using a 60 to 100-watt
bulb. Locate the bulb weD away
from clothing or other flammables
tn prevent fire danger.
Use chemical moisture absorbers to retard or prevent
mUdew. Silica gel Is particularly
effective In smaU closed areas such
as drawers and Closets because It
ooes not harm labrlc.
Musty o&lt;Drs, which Indicate mold

UPTO

P 195-75RX155l 8SW AT. ·

'13, 175.

· {IWJ 9 In StoCk)

ON SELECT NEW VOLKSWAGENS

J-986 BRONCO II

WAS

·

The Daily Sentinel-Page- S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

'

Corey Daniel D8nl

Darst birthday

'1 1;209.

'8,477

• . '

.

•

if' . . . '

1986 Lincoln Mark VII

1916 Lincoln Town

Car

#6932

WAS

NOW

WAS

NOW .

'24,89goo

$12,141 110

·,

...

&gt; .

NewCambrid
blowsawa

WAS

$13,333110

'15,259"

Corey Daniel Darst observed his
eighth birthday recently with a
parry at his home. A baseball theme
""'"" carrted out In the ,cakes ,an!S.
decorations. Favors were ·gtven tn
the children.
Gifts and cards were presS~ ted to
Corey bY his parents, Danny and
Sherr! Darst, his !rather, Chris·
topher, his grandmother, Bonnie
Darst. grandparmts. Bud and
Wanda VIning, great-grandmother,
Goldie Graham. Terrl Smith, Shannon and Matthew, David Park,
Delilah Cox. Dawn and Adam.
Sending gifts were his great.
grandmother, Gertrude Stivers,
Rita and Junior Smith, Charles
Smith, and Ondy Park.

22,0Q500

5

OVER 200 NEW FORD, LINCOLN, MERCURY, VOLKSWAGEN, AMC, JEEP &amp; RENAULT$
TO CHOOSE FROM ••• ALL AT "YEAR END SAVINGS" PRICESIII
•

TURNPII&lt;E USED CARS AND TRUCI&lt;S
--------

1986 FORD

.Stock H sJ&lt;IUIW~..LM~ont wheel
drive, 6 c~~~lYulo"1r.ns . PS. Pa
· power "ndows. tx&gt;Wer seat. tx&gt;Wer door kld&lt;s,
•tit wll&lt;l. cruise rontrd, Mt/FM r!lio, ~"'"'
"iot br~ rear .;ndow defomler"2,810
'mi~
'

1985 VOLKSWAGEN
JETTA

Stock
Stoclc H 60701. 4 &lt;ixll'$. O!dan, front wfleef

drive,4 C)l.; air oond.. 5SIJ!O(l, PS. Pll AMIFM
000, 0&lt;!) tape. radi~ tir~ bucket 9!0tS.

$A~; 9295

w.si995

.. '1984 cHEVROLET
·CAMARO Z-28

IN
5

NOW

H 67121, 2 daol'$.

hard top, V-8. air

~ speed, PS. P8, power wir&lt;lows, II ·
ofleel. cruise oonlrol. Mt/FM rlld~. !len!il

oond,

llpe, oadiol tns, bucl&lt;et !IIIII. '

IN

.'

NOI

$10,995

'9995

1984 MERCURY
COUGAR
Stoclc 67551. 2 doon, V-8, lif ex&gt;nd,
H

$8295

1983 OLDSMOBILE
FIRENZA S.W.
Stod&lt; H67621, 4 doon, !llli&gt;n -~ ~orrt
wf1eel drivt, 4 C)1. 1ir cood., outn tmns., PS.
I'll lit what cruise Clllllnl, AMIFM r!lio,

.,..., tape. 111di!l ties, w!lile
; 1011s, .- winmw debtiller.

·ill

"'5895 .

TrnAm

1982 CHEVROLET
MONTE CARLO
II¥AS

.

NOW '

'$599~

•

com. llito. ms. PS. PB..pa,~~r window~

~doof~·-cruie
'conb'li,AMIFM
radio, oadiilliw,IMI iulll,
&lt;

.

.,

•,

'4195

..

Slllclt N61;61, ~ doon, V-8, air rond., aut•
trn., PS. Pa, poiillr'llindaw~ tit wiled,crli!e
_., IIMII.rallio, -.. tiPe. lldialliw,
wlilt Will, • !lilibr illfl!tllr.

..

'6895
'
.
' ' " '·

'6395

NOW

1984 RENAULT
. FUEGO
Slid ~ 68311, 2 doon, coupe. front wt1e11
drive, 4 qt, 4ir oond., 5 stJeed, WIFN radio.
r111iJ1 ties, bildoet stlll!, IJn fJJIJI. •

'·

IIOW

:&amp;595

NOW

ESCORT .·.
,.

Stocl&lt; N 68251. 4 doors_ !btion ~ Iron( ...
wheel drive, 4 C)1 .. 5 stJeed, bucket !8lls.

IMS

$4595

'

1101

i

i

'latl

&gt;

Alison Marie Hayes

Hayes birthday

1983 FORD
'

·r·.·.

'6395

-~

'U95

.\.CAPRICE

GRAND PRIX

..

bucl!et

'7295

-------------

1982 CHEVROLET

1982 PONTIAC
Sloclt U8452, 2 doon, h•d tap, 6 C'jl, 1ir

Sloclt N~912. 2doof~Cilllpe, 6c~ ..~r rond.,
IUto. Iran~. PS, Pa NMFM radio, whitewlil1

walt~

""~

roo!, auto. ~.,l, PS, P8, wildoo~
pooer seot power 00o&lt; IDdls, • wiVlll, cruise
oontrd, Mt/FM rlllio, !lers tape, !Dol tns,
wllite _._
WAS ..., boDe! seots. IW wincllw
deioge!r.
NOI

-

.

'·~ ~-!sj 4~ ~ ~ IM1fll rd;

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.t
!

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. *5595., · ., .~. •ats
.

'

..

A swim party was held recnetly
to honor Alison Marie Hayes oo her
fourtil blrlhday at the home of her
grandmother, Janice Hays, Ma·
rletta. A cookout with cake and Ice
cream was served and gifts were
given to Alison.
Attending were her parents,
Randy and Jo Ann Hays, and her
sister, Amanda; her maternal
grandmother, Mona VaUance. Gallipolis, an aunt, Linda Ru\811, and a
cousin, Andrea Rutan, Bidwell.
Sending gifts were Alison's
grandfather, Clem Hays, New
Matamoras, her uncles, Troy Bar·
Uey, VInton; Mike Hays, Marietta,
and a oousln , Gina Rutan. Bidwell.

...

,. .

·.

•

Homecoming
The Zion Oturch c1 Christ annual
homecoming wUI be held on Aug.
17. A potluck dinner will be served
at noonandaprogramat 2p.m. The
·progtllm Will include special music,
blth vocal and Instrumental, a
momlogue and a play entitled,
· "Crlmlny. It's the Preacher." The
pastor, Bob Purtell, extends an
Invitation to the (JJ~IIc to share the
day of actllittlesat the diUI:l!JI which
·· Is loCated orl State ROute 143, five '
mUes off Route 7.

"; r .

Regular &amp; Menthol.
Kings&amp;IOOs

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Now Greatly Reduces Serious Risks to Your Health.

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�Ptue

10-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, August 7, 198~

Porneroy-Middlqlort, Ohio

•

wms new support
"overwhelming majority" of his
committee.
Although the Republican controlled Senate ap!X'oved the
Norfolk Southern offer. DingeU
announced E!llriler this summer
that be would block any House vote
on It
"Conrail's sale to Norfolk Southe-n stU! makes good sense," the
foundation said. "But I the deal Is
stuck in legislative gridlock, other
alternatives must he considered.
The most promising is a public
dfering of stock."
The foundation noted that a
Jll bile stock offering would end
concerns about reduced competition because Conrail woold remain
an Independent railroad .

"While there oow is an overwhelming consensus In favor of a
sale, this may not last for long, and
Conrail could he Iooft indinitely in
federal hands," thefoundationsaid.
Conrail was formed by Congress
In 1974 out of the rE!llalns of the
bankrupt Penn Central railroad
and several smaller lines In an
effort to prese-ve freight rail
service in the Northeast and
Midwest.
After suhstantial losses. the
railroad became profitable in 1981 ,
ll)aking a sale back to the private
sector feasible.
The foumation's new stance 'nLippert.
um, said spokesman David
rornes at a time when Reps. James
Because the process is cheaper,
Fbrto, D-N.J., and Edward Madiflexible
and llf'l'ds fewer adju st·
gan, R-IU., are circulating a new
proposal cling for a Conran stock
offering !bat could generate up to$3
billion In proceeds fo he
government
A House staffer close to the
Conrail controversy said the JTOP·
osai was mt yet in bill form but
NORWOOD, Ohio iUPI) - A
added that Florio's House energy
decision by General Motor Corp. to
and comme= subcommittee may delay swltching·to plastk! bodies for
act soon. If only to provide some
certain makes of cars leaves more
hope that Congress can approve a
than 4,300 johs at a local plant safe
Conrail sale plan before the current
until at least 1993. plant and city
legislative session ffids later this officials say.
year.
GM said earlier this month plans
"My feeling is that we have to do
to build Pontiac Fireblrds and
somelhing next v.wk." ' said lllf'
Chevrolet Camaros with plastic
staffer.
rather than metal bodies have been
1\ lobbyist for Morgan Stanley &amp;
put on hold Indefinitely. The
Co., a New York investment suburban Cincinnati plant Is oot
banking house seeking to conduct a equipped to handle plastic cars.
Conrail stock offering, said the
Heritage foundation woold not
"It's our understanding that the .
haw issut:'d the new position paper plastic body project, If it does come
"uniPSs they had the apJTovat of aboul, wlll not occur before 1993,"
some people in the White House
said Richard Dettmer, Norwood's
The foundation pap··r said the community development director.
Nmiolk Southern proposal was " It's enco uraging for the GM plant
dlorned because many rongress- in the soon term. It gives us some
men clearly were unhappy about
breathing space and time to plan
the artirompelitive Impact of a for the fUture."
Conraii-Noriolk Southern mer~ r
GM's Detroit headquarte-s deon shippers in the Northeast and clined to say when or if the No. 1
Midwest.
automaker intends to revive lhP
It said the antitru st concerns plastic program, known as GM-HI.
were strengthened by the rece nt
Also two weeks ago Lloyd Reuss,
Interstate Commerce Commi"ion a GM vice president in char!" of
vote to block the mergpr of two Not1h American operations. said
major western railroads. the Sante three GM assembly plants could
Fe and the Southern Pacific.
close by l!ro hecauseof overcapacAs a res ult . the foundation said it Ity and the influx of Japanese
was unlikely the administration automakers.
'MJUid be able to overcome objecPlants in Norwoo ; an Nuys,
tions mised to the Norfolk Southern Calif .. Tanytown. N.Y .. and De·
bid by Rep. John Ding&lt;-U, D-Mich., trait are considered probablecandichairman d. the House Enerzy and dates because d their age or
Commerce Committee, and an locations. analysts said.

s

•

CLOGGING - 'The we!Hlostumed Shady River
Sbu111ers, a local area clogging K"JIIP directed by
Gerald Powell ol Pomeroy, \\ill perfom1 on the hill

ments after products are cast,
Lippert sa id some of the affectffi
workers may be transferrffi to tha t
unit H initial production of cylinder
heads proves successfUL
"If it is successful, it could offset
other layoffs," he said.
Officials have declined to speculate on how many jobs that would
mean.
The two units will be phased oot
over the nex t two years. heginning
this month. GM said. Officials are
recommending the Massena operations be tran sferred to Eledford,lnd .
Som e workers aiso could be
transfenffi to other plants.
A plant in Saginaw, Mich., also is
sc_heduled to closed rosting 1.700

!tage at the Meigs County Fair at 8:30 p.m . on
Thursday, Aug. 14.

SS995

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"The only thing as far as I know Is
they were dentonatlng Bangalore
torpedos out there and whether
they iRudess, Arrold and Thornson! falled to duck or not - that's
under Investigation," said Capt.
Charles Aycock, spokesman tlr 1st
Special Operations Command at
Fort Bragg.
"They were obviously exposed
during the detonati:m. All personnel
should have been behind some sort
of cover. Why they were (exposed)
is under -Investigation. Whether It
was the Individuals' fault or not , I
wouldn't want to speculate," Aycock said.

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have voiced concerns about JTodUC·
tlon costs. In January, workers
voted to enlar!;" job duties in (]'der
to save some 132 piston production
johs.
Max Ryan, president of Local465
c1 the Unitffi Auto Workers represmtlng the GM workers, said the
employees are resigned to losing
their johs.
"Most are In a state of disbelief
loot) there's nothing we can do to
save the johs," he said. "GM did
what they thought they had to do.
They made a study and we came
oot on the short end of it ."
Sen. Daniel Moynihan, D-N.Y ..
accused GM of walking out on New
York and Its workers.

DUE TO TREMENDOUS RESPO NSE WE
ARE EXTENDI NG OUR EAR LYBIRO
SPECIAL THR U AUG. 31st

•

119.91

johs.
A recent study showed GM had
an excess of Iron and aluminum
capacity. Division General Manager Georg&lt;- Johnston said GM
needs fewer foundries to remain
competitive.
"It Is clear we will need less
foundry capacity than we now
have," he said. " Th help oor
competitive position, we need to
q&gt;erate with a smaller number of
plants."
Johnston said the excess capacity
results from smaller cars with
smaller engines and fierce competition from foundries in the United
States and abroad.
In recent months, GM officials

Toledo suburtl of Oregon. Ohio, was
killed Ju(Y 30 during the Gallant
Eagle 'f*i mllltaiY training excerclse at Dugway Proving Ground.
Pic. Steve Arnold, 21, of Marietta,
Ga., and 1st Lt. Burdett Thomson.
24, were Injured In the accident.
The Gallant Eagle was an ll-day
exercise that ended ~nday and
involved 35,!lXI troops from ali
branches of the military. The
biennial war games, at Dugway
Proving Ground about Ill miles
west of Salt Lake City, are!Pslgned
to prepare forces for desert
warfare.

r-------------------------------------...;_---------:-

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log.

•

Pic. Michael Rudess, 19, of the

GM decision
spares jobs

DRAWER
CHEST

The Daily Sentinei- Page-11

FORT BRAGG. N.C. (UPI)- A
training accident that killed one ·
Army ranger and Injured two
others occured when the men faDed
to take cover after tollJedos were
detonated over the Utah desert, a
Fort Bragg spokesman said
Wednesday.

Automaker to close production units
MASSENA, N.Y. iUPI) - General Motors Corp. is cutting two of
three production units at Its Central
FOUMJY Division plant In the next
two years, affecting 1.~ )ohs, but
officials said the remaining 100 johs
may increase.
GM announced Wednesday it
would close the die cast a nd
permanent mold aluminum casting
operations, leaving only the foam
process for making castings and its
100 jobs.
The Massena plant is the only
plant In the world equipped to
creating castings from the so-called
"lost" foam process, a state-of-theart process using disposable foam
covered with. sand to mold alumi·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Training
accident
kills one

·Sale of r'il stock
By GEORGE LOBSENZ
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Heritage Foumation, a Washington think-tank closely Hnked to the
Reagan administration, · has
sWitched signals and called on
Congress to consider a public stock
sale rl ConraiL
The foumatlol,l previously urged
Congress_to approve the administration's proposal to sell the
government-owned freight rail carrier to Nortolk Southern Corp.,
another major eastern freight tine
and Conrail competitor.
However, in a new position paper
released Wednesday, the founda·
lion spoke favorably of a public
stock offering as a "promising
alternative" to the Nortolk Southern offer, which It said was caught
in legislative gri&lt;jlock.
The foundation said Congress had
to act quickly to end uncertainty
over Conrall's future and to take
advantage of the general oonsensus
that the government should get out
of the freight railroad business.

. · Thursday, August 7, 1986

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�Thursday, August 7, 1986

Thursday, August 7, 1986

GALLIPOLIS

Restringing

DONE BY HAND IN
OUR STORES

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

PH. 742-2656
RUTLAND MINE SUPPLY CO.
3401 8 New lima Rd.
RUTlAND, IJIIO

113 COURT

mass arrangement including red
and white: Neva Nicholson, Eva
Robson, Pearle Canaday, and Ruth
E:rlewine.
"Beauty In Common Things" .
modern : Pearle Canaday, Eva
Roll;on, Pauline Atkins, and Binda
Diehl.
"Peace and a Spot of Beauty",
religious feeling: Pearle Ca naday,
Pauline Atkins, Eva Roll;on, and
Ruth Erlewine.
"The Fruits of Our Labors" .
including fruits and vegetables:
Eva Robson, Roberta Wilson,
Binda Diehl. and Pearle Canaday.

POMEROY

" Nature's Sculpture", including
treasured wood: Pearle Canaday,
Eva Robson, Anna Turner, and
Neva Nicholson.
"Craftsmanship from Other
Countries". Japanese manner:
Joan Stewart, Susan Sisson, Krista!
Bolin. and Eva Robson .
"The Benefits of Our Machine
Age" , abstract: Krista! Bolin,
Pauline Atkins, Jaon Stewart , and
Pearle Canaday
'Our Feathered Friends" , including bird aecessory, junior class:
Shelley Smith, Cheryl Lynn Jewell,
Lisa Riggs, and Zachary Bolin .
"Ecology ", using discarded !tern
as container: Bill Smith, Zachary
Bolin. Cheryl Lynn Jewell, and
Joey Sisson.
Horticulture
Roses, hybrid tea: in reds,
Pauline Atkins, first and third, Ruth
E r le~&lt;ine, second . and Ruby Diehl;

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
A PUBLIC SALE wilt be held
by The Bank Josephine on

the 16th day of August,
· 1988 1t The Bank ' s equipment lot located one (1) mile
North of Cheshire, Ohio , on

in pinks, Pauline Atkins, Judy
Snowden, second and third, and
Robert Snowden, !ourth; in yellows, Roterta Wilson, Pauline
Atkins, Eva Roll;on. third and
fourth; in whHes: Judy Snowden,
Pauline Atkins, Ruby Diehl, and
Pauline Atkins; and other ector
blends, Judy Snowden, Paullne
Atkins Pearle Canaday, and Eva
Robson.
Floribunda roses: Judy
Snowden, first and second, Lori
Snowden, and Pauline Atkins.
Grandiflora: Judy Snowden, Robert Snowden, second and third.
Gladioli: Ruth Erlewine, Eva
Robson, second and third, and Octa
Ward.
Zinnia, cactus; Neva Nlchoison,
Eva Roll;on, Oct8 Ward, and
Pauline Atkins.
Zinnia, other variety : Pearle
Candday, Eva Robson, Octa Ward .
Marigold, large: Roberta Wilson.

Community calendar
THURSDAY
FIVE POI~TS - Gospel group
Saved will be singing Thursday

C'Vening at the tent revival presently underway on the Don Mora
property , Five Points. Services.
with Evangelist s Herbert Inscoe
and Patricia Eastham. are being
he ld nightly through Aug. 15. On
Sunday. a Christ ian fellowship
covcrect dish dinner will be served
at 3 p.m . E veryone welcome.
RACINE -

RacinE' America n

Mar:hine #9662
Long -AirdoK Feeder Breaker

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

OBC3068

Ohio Route #7 . Time of sale
will be 1:00PM . Sakt is for

Joy 16 RB 4 -whael dri\le
Cutting Machine 440

the purpose of disposing of
the following mining equip ment :
14 BU 10 Joy loading

S&amp;S 488 Scoop, Charger.
and 2 sets of new bat ·
terias #1 144

#17781

Legion Post 602 and its auxiliary
will hold a special meeting at 6p.m.
Thursday. The regular l.egion
meeting will follow at 7:30p.m. with
refreshments to be served follo,.1ng
the meeting
POMEROY - Meigs County
Historical Society will ccnduct a
workshop on writing articles fort he
upcoming history bOOk at 7 p.m.
Thursday at the Rock Sprtngs
Grange Hall. Free help will be
provided for all interested persons.

Ruth Erlewine, Eva Rolxlsn, Octa
Ward.
Marigold, small; Roberta Wilson, Ruby Diehl, Roberta Wilson,
and Eva Robson.
Dahlias: Ruth Erlewlne, first and
second, Eva Roll;on, and Octa
Ward.
Otber annuals and perennials:
Neva Nicholson, first, second and
fourth, and Binda Diehl, third.
Potted Plants: African violets,
one crown: Pauline Atkins all four
places; more than one crown
Pauline Atkins, three (1aces; other
blooming plant, Ruth Erlewine,
Dorothy Woodard, Pauline Atkins,
and Binda Diehl. Other foliage
plant, Margaret Belle Weber,
Binda Diehl, Dorothy Woodard,and
Pearle Canaday.
Cacti: Binda Diehl, Pauline
Atkins. Dorothy Woodard, and
Anna Turner.
Fern: Judy Snowden, first and
second, Dorothy Woodard, and
Margaret Parsons.
Junior horticulture: marigold,
Zachary Bolin, Bill Snnlth, Lisa
Riggs, with fourths to Shelley
Smith, Joey Sisson, and Derrick
Bolin; zinnia, Bill Smith, Joey
Sisson, Zachary Bolin, and Shelley
Smith; and potted Plant, Cheryl
Lynn Jewell, first and second.
Jennifer McDaniel. and fourths to
Ashley Great, Zachary Bolin, Amy
Elliott, Clint Stewart, Joanna Bowersock, and Bobby Jo Stewart.
In a special educational display,
entitled "Welcome to Our Special
Display ol New Guinea Impatiens",
the winners were anna Elfzabeth
Turner, Pearle Canaday, second an
third, and Dorothy Woodard.

600 KVA line Power lntide

Schroeder Drill Model

Public Notice

31 , Salis bury Townatlip ,
Meigs County, Ohio, Edith

Forrest
Geological Name and Depth

2

PRICES ARE GOOD THRU MONDAY, AUGUST 11TH

25°/o OFF

1/2 PRICE

JOHNSON'S

15

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$329

oz.

MG. '1.02

55(

Clair L. Newell

ANACIN

who passed away

1DO's

Aug. 6. 1985.

SUNTAN
PRODUCTS

MEN'S

In Memoriam

In memory of

ONLY

DISPOSABl£ RAZORS

BABY SHAMPOO

1/2 PRICE

Public Notice

May we rise together
GROUNO INJECTION CONto sing anther song, TROL
SECTION, DIVISION
when Jesus comes! OF OIL ANO GAS, FOUN TAIN SQUARE. COLUMBUS,
Loving Wife and Son OHIO 43224. Sudl oommants or objections shill be
Mary and larry filed
with the dvision no later
than fifteen

54 Misc. Merchandise

atlendar days
tom the publicatmn date in a
RI!IINIIPBP• of general cirOJlation in the ar• of rO'Jiew.

NOTEBOOK PAPER

5 SUBJECT

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fton .. d H~lng , R. Ph.

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Sundl¥ 10: 30 tO t2 :30 lftd I to I p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
l'tt . 112-29&amp;1

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Public Notice

Serving this area
with PoweSeal seal
&lt;oating and striping
and making of
Asphalt &amp; Concrete.
1-1114-6911-1337
1-1114-593-8693

Woods Mill Road

HEAVY lARGE liD lATH!

2 1111tt 1r- lltlwoll
3 Milts froM Vlntoo

HOURS:
Monday· Thursday
10 A.M.-9 P.M.
Friday &amp; Saturday
10 A.M.-11 P.M.
Closed Sunday

10% Off
LAMPS &amp; FIGUIIINII

1! PRICE

1

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6-23·'86-l mo.

(CUT OUT FOR FUTURE Ulll

BOGGS

KEN'S
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SALES &amp; SERVICE
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GUYSVIllE, OHIO
Authorizool John Deere,
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PARTS and SERVICE

10·8-tfc

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FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
&lt;!' CotrC&gt;uterized Hearing Air Selection
z Swim Molds- Interpreting Services

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

-a: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

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Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Typeo

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CALL COLLECT:

Ph. (614) 843-5425

8-13 tln

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CLC COINS
Buying/Selling
Gold, Silver
141 Chains, Coins,
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Bullion
SUMMER HOURS
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PHONEStnllntl
992-2156
Claw l•td

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OIIID ( ~ 1£9

Public Notice

OF OIL AND GAS, FOUNTAIN SQUARE. COLUMBUS,
OHIO 43224. Sum comments or objections shall be
filed with the division ro later
than fifteen calendar days
from the publication date in a
newspaper of general circula tion in the area of review.
11!17, 1tc

Public Notice
NOIICE OF SALE
By vinue of an Order of
Sale issued out of the Com·
mon Plaaa Court of Meigs
County, Ohio, in the aue of
Ttla Central Trust Company,
N. A., Middleport, Ohio.
Plaintiff, against Osby A.
Martin and Mary A. Martin .
et al .. Defendantl , upon a
judgment therein rendered.

baing Case No. 86-CV - 139
in said Court. I will offer tor
sale at the front door ol the

Court House In Pomeroy,
Meigs County, Ohio on the
29th day of Auguat, 1986.
at 10 :00 a.m. the following
lands and tenements. to -

located at the Southeasterly

NOTICE OF SALE

corner of the above de: ·
scribed propany. tor the

Offers will be received un·

tU 11 :00 O'Clock A.M. on
the 8th day of September,
1986. et the Mayor'toffice,
237 Race Street, for the 11le
of the following described

purpose only of permitting

said Grantees to antar the
granted premises at the
Southeastern corner thereof
by the most direct route at-

real estate, to-wit :
Re1l e1tate situated at the
comer of Garfield and Sou ttl
Third Avenue in the Village
of M;ddleport, Ohio. The Vllllge acquired title to said
re•l estate by deed recorded
in Volume 270, Page 703,
Meigs County Deeds Re-

tar crossing said culver1 .

Parcel No. 2: The follow ing described real estate situate in the Township of Salisbury, in the County of
Meigs and State of Ohto .
and in Fraction No. 2 and de·

scribed u follows : Beginning North 629 feet, East

Sale of taid real estate
was authorized by Ordinance adopted Jan . 12,
1981. The village reterves
the rtght to reject any and ell
bids. The ule is pur11uant to
SeotKJn 721 .03 of the Ohio

Ravload Code.
Real estate appraised at

t7500.
Fred Hoffmtn. Mayor
Vill1ge of Middleport

17131 ; 1817. 14, 2t, 28:1914

South 49 deg . 20'West 162
~eal

feet : thence North 47 deg .
10 ' West 124% feet to the
place ol beginning containing 57 I 100 acres.

Furthlt lulot madon May Be 33; thence South 39 dog .
~od By Contll!)ting tho 30' Eolt 107 fwlt along oold
highway; thence South 47

deg. 05' Welt 81.3 !wet;
thence North 73 deg. 63'
Welt 1 31 . 5 feet to the place
of beginning, oontalning
0.30 acr•s -

Geo. S. Hobstetter, Jr.
Broker
MIDDLEPORT - 5th Allf!.
Corner lot -'lh tlvee bedroom,
two sl!lfY home. Si• large
100111s with l'h baths. Well kept
home lor $26,500.00.
CREW ROAD -StOlle ran ch
home three be&lt;lrooms. living room, kitchen .. d dining
comb .. b1g double car garage sits on over on e acre.
$46,500.00 .
WHilE HILL RD. - Pnce
Re&lt;Iuce&lt;l $5,000.00 011 this
ranch three bedroom home.
f.ull basement with wood burner, in-ground swim ming pool. .83 acre. Best
,buy around for $33,000.00 .

$20.000.
Terms of Sale: Cash.
Real estate cannot be sold
for less than two-thirds of
the appraised Vllue .
Howard E. Frank ,
Sheriff
of Meigs County. Oh .

Dhlilion of 01 • Goo.
Togotho• wltll the •illht 10
Ftunllln lquoq, C&lt;*'mlluo, ,crou tho culvert at tho ..tr·
Olllo &gt;43224. 114·21e-1817. 'inco of tho drtvawoy of tho
Any·- g 10 CDm- G•onton. which oulvm to

on July 18, 1986, in tho
Meigo County Probete Coon,
Spl'lngfMIId, Ohio 46506 Wll
appointed hecutrix d the • ·

HAPPY HOUOW - Three
l!edroom home, living room ,
dining room, equi(lped k~·
dl81, ulility room, private patio, storage bldg. Big corner lot

tlte of Edna F. W••er. de ·
ceased, late of 162 HamUton

St•eot Mldd'-rt· Ohio
4117&amp;0.
Robert E. lludc,
ProMte oludge

Melgo Ccoonty, O~lo
lena K. NPn•lroad, Clllrk'-

17124, 31; 1817, 3tc

Estate General

HOBSTEnER
REALTY

289. Page 923 , Meigs
County Deed Records .
Said parcel apprais&amp;d at

Cue No. 25.127. Neva F.
RuueN. 1802 W. High St•elt,

f81t to State Hlghwev No .

We Hm AFall Tl'"'
Sho' Teeha1olen
•• Dulf
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

Utwr S C..

Furniture, Wedding

7U-2027

PT. PLEASANT OFFICE
305 Jaclloan a...

ond Groduahon
Stationery, Magnttic
Signs, Rubb11 Stomps,
8usinKI Forms,
Copy Serwius, Eh.
2ll Mill S!., Middlepon
104 Mul.rry Aw., Pomeroy

"free Estimates"

992·3345

Installation baila•lo

. ..

)n subdiv~ion .
, V,!rnl Nicinsky, Assoc.

.. Pllont (614} 742·:1192

SMALl AIMAL HOlliS
Mon.-Wtd.-Thun. l·S pm
Tun. 6:30·1; f•i. 1-2 pm
lalurdoy 10-11.30 am
LAIGE ANIMAL I
5UIGEIY If APPT.

4/ I

3/ 2/ Nn

PH. 304-675-2441
BEND AREA CALl

CHESTER-985-3307
4/ 1/rtn

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TYs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
IMtallation service
All major appliance re·
pairs (including micro·
waves). Electronic Or·

gans. Mobile service.

TV ·614·843-5248

APPl.-614-949·2145

Roger Hysell
Garage
At. 124, Pome.oy Ohio

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transltllulon

For Hours
304-372-5709

Rt. 7, Pomeroy, OH.
"Free Estimates"

Ann oun ce men Is

All Work

Guaranteed
OPEN MONDAY
THRU SATURDAY

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

PH. 992-7403

6-23-86-l mo.

6-17-tfc

Ripley Office

L&amp;S
TRANSMISSION
REPAIR

7-8-'86-l mo .

10-14·11c

3 Announcements
SWEEPER and sewing m~~ehine
reptir, p1rt1, •nd supplia&amp;. Pick
up tnd delivery, Dewit Vtcuum
Cluntr. ont htlf mile up
Georg• C,...tt Ad . CtH &amp;1• ·

448-0214 .

DIICOreted c.altes lor eny ocusk&gt;n . Wlldding• 1 specielty . WiH

Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING

NEW - REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
.or 949-2168

2-17-IS -tfn

REFERENCE DEED : Vol.

11100 Bbl.

1111 Dllily I~ Vo~me North 49 dog .. 20' Eoot t82

•ZINITH
•SILVANIA .
•SPIED QUEIN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON RIFRIGIRATOR
•SATILLITE SALIS &amp; SIRVICI

ow .. Suppt;.,

FENCE CO.ANY
PH. 992-6931

&amp;

Pws,

TOWN &amp; COUNIRY
VUUINARIAN
CUNIC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM

ACCENT

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP
Fot All y.., Ptloll•t N1111

cords.

695 feat and North 43V:J
deg . East 1 38 feat from the
Southwest corner of Fraction No. 2 on the North line
of Norman Russell's 9 . 91
acre tract: thence North
43% deg. East 182 feat to
State
Highway No. 33;
thence along State Highway
No . 33 South 40 dog . Eut
122 feet; thence along State
Highway No . 33 South 33
deg . Eas l 22 feet; thence

Deceased, Case No. 26,127.

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

Public Notice

Public Notice

tion .. 890 lbo.
No. 341. Deed Recorda of
Muimum Plopooed A-- Meigs County, Ohk,; thence

6-30-'86-1 mo.

11'81

20 years

417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

CUSTOM GARAGE BUILDING
PH. 992·2772

deliver tor until fte . &amp;U -992-

ELITE POLE
BUILDINGS

6&amp;01 .

PLUMBING &amp; HEA nNG
Ntw location:
161 Norftt Strand
Middfeporl, Ohio 45760

RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
AGRICULTURAL

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Custom Design
Service

CAU 667-3271
Cot11p1re lh Qllillf
811111 v:.t~,·r mo.

Cere fOf the elderly. room.
boef'd. leundry. 24 hour cere.
AtetOnlblt ratn . Lon T l.C .

304-773-&amp;828 .

4

Giveaway

We Ce"y Fithing Supplies

Pay Your Cable 8o
Phone Bills Here
IUSINISI PHONE
16141 992·6550
!lliiiNCII'IIONI
16141 992-7754

•

1178/tfn

Old pl1n0 to heul IIWIY· Call

614-4411-3119 .
Aluhtn Husky 1 yur old perler
country home. Hu "'-d all 1holl.

Ctll614 ·.-,6-8201 .
Puppy

to good hOrN. Cell

614-379·2103.

3-D AUTO CENTER
IIO'I1 W. Mailll St.
r-oy,Oiilo,

RADIATOR
SER~CE

f92.6771

,if:-

"73-'80 OM Fend•• · . 139
73 -10 GM

Rock• p_,p ............ .. 115
73· 78 Ford F~d.,l ..... U9
TNdl llld
Lin.,. .......... ..... . -~=:

:u:

FAEE INSTALLATION
2 V.. W.t.tUIIANT"f

l1tillat:tlo11 O~Mtlftt•d
J,..Otli¥rtln Tri lt111Ar•

lost:1 Red -whi1e. 1 bl.c:k-whi1e
Bugle. Hytell run area. StfiYe
StiM"art 614-992-6349 Of 614992 -7008.

Reward if found

alive.
Found: July 27 et Succen Road

in Reechville. Coon dog wi1h
coli..-. Call 614-687-3126.

9

Wanted To Buy

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

PAT HILL FORD
992· 2196
Middleport. Ohio

1-13-tlc

YOUNG~S

CARPENTER

SERVICE

- Addona 1nd remodeling .

- Aooflng 1nd guH1r work

- Concrete warll
- Plumbing and el.ctrie~~l
worh
(Free E1tlmate1)

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

Pomtroy, Ohio

4-15-'86-tc

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGIS
"At Reosona•lt Prim"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Hight
NO SUNDAY CAW

4-16-'16 tfn

•VINYl SIDING
• ALUMifUM SIDING
•llOWN IN
INSUlADON

BISSU.L
SIDING CO.

1 yr. old dog . Moth• came from
champion lint of B..giM, ftthlf
bird dog. good nltUred. Cell

814-441·2274
F,.. fill dirt. You haul. 413 4th
Ave. KaniUg~ . Cell 8t4-448-

2310.
Frw Collia puppiM. 5 wkt old.
Reel cut• pupa. 114-185-3931 .

114-9815·3839 Of 814·981 ·

43&amp;8.
Smtl houee dog to give twey to
good horN. Famlle. C1U 81 4·
742-2318 .
8o1tet typl pupp'-. They need
homes now. 8• at 225 Bro.dwr,, M5ddlepon tfttf' 4 pm.

Colllt milled puppl• to give
.,..,_ Fh'lt tteiler on Rutland
end of Happy HoUow Ad .
&amp;14 ·742·27&amp;4.
9 weft old puppiel. Pert German Sheplrd pM1 CotHe to glvt
11111/'f to good home. 114·843·

842t .
3t72.

"Free htlmet•"

lltolltnd Ten Coon dog, 304173·1122.

PH. .949·2101
or 949·1160
St~~flay

Cal1

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and nMer used cars. Smith
Buidc -Pontiac . 1911 Easlam
Ave .. Gelllpollt . CeH 614-446-

2282

1111/lfo

One toweabte bllck mlllk tnln 10

good homl, 304-171·t21B.

• 0.. OOOklto~l, :io4-f71· 8711 .

11

Help Wonted

Finanwl

AVON , 3 open territories, call
304-875 -1,29
HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES ·
lt your futur• still unsettled?
Check i'lto the Army National
Guanl. We have good pay,
tra1ning, and up to •18.000
available in l!lducellonal bflnefl11.
Serve part-time. 304 -875-3950
or t -800· 642-l6t9.
Airline Jobs S17.800 to
$68,600-Yeer now hiring . CeH
JOb Line t -618-469 -3636, eltt .
A· 1980 for information 24
hours.
leg1l teeretarv. typing and
1horthand skills nec81Nry. word
processing f1elpful . Send resume
to Box C4, care Point Pluunt
Ragi1tar, 200 Main St. , Point
Plusent. W. Ve.

WANTED TO BUY utedwood&amp;
coal heelers. SWAIN'S FURNI ·
TURE. 3rd. &amp; Olive Sl. Gallipo lis. Cell814-446 -J159 .
Us_. mobile homes.
614-446-0175 .

Situations
Wanted

Will care for elderly in my home.
Train ad and e•p . 61 4 -982-6683
cy;f1 4 -992 - 73t4 .
S~eciel

fW..Ifling care tor elderly
in p-ivate horn~ . Call 614-9923595

looking for odd jobs. Contac111
234\7 Weat Main St. Up!tairs
beside Kentucky Fried Chicken.
Fflmeroy, Ohio .

18 Wanted to Do
Hiring! Federal government jobs
in your erN and overseas . Many
immedlltl openings without
waiting list or 1111 S15 S68,000. Phone call refundable
!802) B38 -8886 . ht. 806 .

Will ro bebysiHing in my home
Oaya. Monday through Saturday . Rio Grande-Rodney area .
Cell 614-246-5604 .

3000 G~Nernment joba list .
S16,040 - 169 , 230 yr. Now
hiring. Cell 805 -687 -6000 ext
R-4662

Rey '1 Detail Work. Interior or
Eltterior of automobile at your
location for 138 .96. 304-6766777

E•pMitlllOII'd building materials
uln!TIIn to c111 on conlractor

Baby sining job nMded etll
anytime 304-675-6777 .

Need mature a:tult to care for 2
yr. old boy WI wr home . Nead lor
•II 3 lhift1. Canten•rv area. Cell
814-446 -9415 after 2:00PM .
Bebysitter needed in the evening
tws . fur 2 dlildren . Ages18 mo .
&amp; 4 yrs. Cell 61 4 -367· 7496 or
614-J88-8689 .

..1.

'latu

Fri. 9 to 5 . Sho11trlng Ridge .
HouMhokl goods, toys, clolhll
ol Ill IIIII, oddl lnd lndl .

LooM lcMol Oiltr6ot !. posting
the foMDwlnl VltCMcy for hi
, . . ular tllchlno 1t1ff: Otf
Ttedi•·Rvtland Etem.,t1ry. '"

Former Town I Count/r;- Beauty
Shop for rent . Equipmant complete. 304-676-l388 or 676 -

2930
Steel Building Dealership with
Major Manufactluer · S•l• A
Engineering support. St1rter edl
fumiahed . Some trees like!),
Cal1303-769-3200 . ext. 2401 .

23

Professional
Services

Wiler well1 serviced and drilled.
Free ntirnetes. Call 614 ·9926006 or 814 -742· 3147

Real Eslale
31

Homes for Sale

3 bdr . home. close to town, 2
bltha, pertty furnish-t .
hnt.low utiliti ... Cttl614-2469248

G••

·Pomiirav ···--· ·

··· · Gallipolis ····
&amp; Vicinity

EASY ASSEMBLY WOAKI

Df tht Nlaodltld Agrtti'Mnl
bltwwn the MLTA .nd the
loerd vi l!!duclltktn, tht M...1

u

Funci nisen ~r ule. minimum
invntments. Maximum poten tial. 304-895.:J036
·

UI\'\&lt;¥W"-~'Il

Keylfone Rd. Vinton . Rein or
1hine. lota ol flower.. Everything ch.. p. Fri. • Sat . Toys.
misc.

At per Arlklle DC , Tt-ftrt ll'ld
Vacaru:ll•. hction I , 'o.tlng.

- o - - - - - -- --

Sa\eS

Wented: C11hlars, 1pplw in per10M It VIU~Inl ,Ctrdlnal in
Middl.,.-t. l'traonl poa•stng
•bove enrege tbilillet In
numblrs and fri.,dlin••·

13482.

Sunday sales C-1, C· 2 licenu.
Nesr Meigs mines. CaU 6U742-2t32 .

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

Glassware. canning jars. misc.
Gov.,-nm.nt Joba. t16,040 - 141 tum left2milesonRI . n6.
169 ,230-yr. Now hiring. Call Thurs., Fri. I Stt.
80 IIi -88 7. 60 00 E11. A· 980 6 for 1:--:--::-,.--:::----:-:c-current federellltt.
Yard Sale Thursday &amp; Frid1y
South on Rt . 7 . Old Clipper Mill
EASY ASSEMBLY WORK! Church .
t714 .00 per 100. Guaranteed
Plvmant. No uln. Details send 3 Family Btby clothes. misc.
ttam~ed envllope: Eltn· 7t6
Rodney Village. Thun .. Fri. I
3418 Enttfl)rite . Ft. Pierce. Fl. Sat.
33482.
Yard Stle Aug . B. 9 &amp; 10 . Lawn
Signing up dealers now for mower. chain sew. boat, di1tlt1,
Friendly Home Parties . E•mvour 10me antiques. 9 -1 464 Lariat
kit by hr.llng Friendly Parties
o•.
Toys and Gihs. • good wev to 1- - - - - - - - make extra income. Call your 2 Family Garage S1le boys I
Friendly Home Dealer now . Also girls clothing, toy1, redwood
booldng per1ill . M~gnolie Nitz lurniture. misc. Rain or shine.
It 614 -992-3661
Thurs . and Friday . Aug 7 &amp; B 4
miles out Bulaville Rd .
Need 10meone for ligh1 houM
cleaning in my home. Days and Poren S1le 714 2nd . Ave. Aug . 6
some weekends. 614 · 992 · &amp;7
8583 or 614 -992 -7314 .
4 mi ln out 141 on left . Thurs &amp;
Need ex.ua money? FRIENOl Y Fri. 9-1 Clothing
HOME TOY PARTIESht~imme­
diete op., Wigs for m~n IIIJers and YerdSaleAug. 7&amp;8 . 10· 5. 1'h
damonllt~tors in thil area. It's
mi. pelt HMC on 180 . Clothes
111y. fun and profitable. We all sins. books. toys and misc .
hive over 100 exciting toys end
giftt feeturlng the new animated Fri. , Set. 9 -l Many household
talking doll Cricket which will be itemt, school clothn. glass·
advertised on national TV. No ware, Iota of goodiet . 446 Jerrv
c11h invlllfment. no collecting, St.
rm delivering end no service
charge. AM you need lsed11ireto Moving Sale Thurs .. Fri &amp; S.t.
mike money , have fun and a lew- Furniture • household items. 3
hours of spere time . No ellpe- mites out 160 hom Holrer
rienoe necetllry. Call 1-800- hospital. Calll514·446-6fi93
227-1610.
Ytrd Sale 4 Ftmity Riding
3080 govtmment jobs list. mow..-, bunk beds. toys, much
t18 ,040-S59,230 year. Now mort. Right off 180 on 564 . Fri.
hiring. Call 806-687 ·6000 ht . I Set
R· 9805 .
Oaragfl Stle 601 Jackson Pike
Service Mechanic -Technician Fri. &amp; Set
needed . Hours :B-5 Monday
ttlrough Fridey. hperienced Gigenlic Community Ytrd Sales
mly . Ctll 614· 992-6421 for lmm on• end of Shoe~tring
eppolrttmenl .
Ridge to the other II! ComtJdown
Rt . 7 to Clipper Mills &amp; follow
Parton needld for parts and thuigns. Aug 8- Fri. I Aug . 9·
••vice, write up and shop help. Sat. From 9 ·6. Aboui 215 FamiCell 614 - 992 - 6421 for lies. little bit of everything.
appointment.
W11her &amp; drver. 1ho taxephone
S100. Little Tikes kitdlen set.
Need pert-time bllt-y sitter. Call 614 -446 - 2847 Kevin
Reference• required . Rtcine Dennis .
ere•. Send retu.,. to Otily
Sentinel, Bo11 7298. Pomeroy, Yard Stlelngin Rd . off Rt . 218.
Ohio
Fri .. 511. &amp; Sun . g. dirk . Clutap
prictl
The Meifls Loctl Sctlool District
Ml seeking • drive, to trtnsport 1 Yard Sala Seturdey. 240 1st
hendieepptd 11udent to 1nd Ave. 9-3.
from Bredburv Elementary
School on a daily balsit. The Ytrd S1le Fr i. &amp; Sat. 9 to 4. Big
driver rrult h1ve • vllid Ohio •election &amp; 1 mile North of
Oteuffeur'• license. 1 life Hol.:ler Hosp . on 180. Tum right
vtfllclt with 1 current tafety on O.J . whitl Rd . follow ligns.
inapecdon and be eligible for
IPPfOPriate insurance coverl(la. 5 F1mily Augu11 8 &amp; 9. 1924
The drlvar't dutiat will com- Eattem Ave. acrou from Smith
mane. Augult 28. 1986. and Buick , park in rear . Also going
ODntinut through the 1986-87 out of busNt•• · Rawley Prod
school yur wh .. the handi cepp«&lt; ttudent Ia in att~~r~dlnce . Ytrd hie Fri. Aug. 8, 9-4. 302
lnt••tld peraon• should oon - l.Orende Blvd . Nice d"lildrens
tlct the Meigs I.Octl School clothing, loll ol misc.
Dtltrict It 614-992-2153.
3 Ftmity Yard Still Fri. &amp; Su
Help wantld : Cletb, 1ppty in
Aug. 8 • 9 . 27 Henkle Ave. 9-1
perton at VeuV..,• C1rdinal in
Mkldlepon. Person• po11111ing Ytrd 5•1• 4 mtll out Bul...,ille
lbove t't'tl'tgt abltltl• in work Ponar Rd . on right. Ch1111p. Aug.
.thlct and frian dfin ....
8. 7-1

1714.00 per 100. Outranttld
.-rment . No ...... O.tllils· Mnd
M1mped lf'nl'tlope: Eltn· 71 I ,
3418 Emttprile. Ft. Pierce, Fl .

Ceny Cl.ll, grocery&amp; dll!lli tor .. le.

12

1 1 Help Wanted

retail induslrill
lumberytrdcuatomers
. Mua1 be wil·
tnd
tor
ling t locate in Meigs, Gallia,
Mason 11r1111. Send retume end
selerv requirtments to Sales men, P.O. Box 445. Gallipolis.
Oh 46831 .

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO . reconvnlfldl that you
do busin •• with PlOp Ia you
know, and NOT to tend money
through the mail until you have
invntigeted the otfaring.

Southeastern Busin•• Coll~gel
The uaining you needl For the
jobl )'(IU want . financitl •silt·
anoa available. Call today : &amp;14 992-5171 .

cell

Have vacM"Icy for room and
Wanted good used 12.000 btu . board for elderly Reasonable.
AC, 304-676-3248 1f1er 8:00 1 6t4 -992-6022
PM
- - - - -- - - Room and bollfd for low income
Senior Citiums . Call 614-9923695
fmploym~nt

Se rvi ces

Business
Opportunity

REPS NEEDeD for busin•
accounts. Full-time. eao.ooo$80.000. Pert -time, t12,000 S16,000, no selling. repeat
busin•• · Set your own tlours
Training p-ovided . Call 1-812938-8870, M-F, Bam 1o 6pm
!central stendrad time) .

b :perienced lleirdrt~ur,
Hair-Port, 304-876-2037

Call

Buying daily gold . silver coins,
rings, jewelry, sterling were, old
coins, l1rge currency. Top pri·
ces. Ed. Burkett Berber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh . 614992-3478

21

Need llltraa money? Friendty
~me toy parties hu immediatl
op.-.ings tor mtnl!l8rl and
·damonatrators in this 1ree. lt'1
euy, fun lf'ld pmfitllble. W•
heve over 700 exciting toys ..,d
gifts featuring thl new animlted
talking doll "Cricket'' which will
be advertised on n1tlon1l1V . No
cesh inv•tment. no collecting,
no delivering and no service
charge. All you need iltdetireto
make money. have fun tnd tfew
houra of space time. No experifllloe n8(:MIIIry. Call 1-800227-16t0.

,.

ltnty Roosten , 304-881 -

New llemls luilt

No

Jim Mink Chev.·Oid•lnc
Bill Gene John10n
614-446-3672

Now Holland, lush

::t: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

LEGAL NOTIFICATION
Namo ond Add..., of Appt;coni:JomeoE . OO!dlecl&gt;aJ.O.
Drillilg Cofr4&gt;ony. P.O. Box
587, R-o, Oh;o 4677t .
of Ohio, bounded and de· 171 24, 31 :
1817. 14. 21. 5tc
Location of Plopooed Sak ocribed 11 followo:
WltOI' Injection Wei: Section
Being in Salisbury Town 32 , Salisbury Township. ahip and 1 pan of FractKJn 2,
Public Notice
Melgt Coonty, Oh;o, H0101d I&lt; Town 2, Ranu. 13 of the
p..,y Brinker.
Ohio Company'• Purcha11,
Oootogicol Name and Depth beginning at an Iron pipe at
NOTICE OF
of ,....., Zone Mo.,.lou, the Southwest corner of a
APPOINTMENT OF
- 3040·3090.
.57 ecre lot, recorded In
FIDUCIARY
MulmJm Propooed Injec- Ooed Book No. 174. - Page
E1tate of Edn1 F. Walcer,

Jo"* E. Diddle dba J .D.
Drltlng COft1'any, P.O. Box
1587, R-o, Ohio 45771,
lt4-949·2512 o. Ohio 0..PIIIIIWit of Nnlrol A.our-

MIDWEST
SEAL &amp; STRIPE

~

wit:
The following described
real estate situate in the
Townthip of
Salisbury ,
County of Meigs and State

Following:

ur

RED'S
CARRY OUT

SYRACUSE, 01110
The SalelsO•forJulfl

WE HAVE MOST AU POPULAR BRANDS AT
THE SAME LOW PRICES
•Certainteed •Mastic •Aicola

ment or to make an objection
with reference to an applicaShote - 3010-3080.
Maxiroom Proposed Injec- tion for a permit to oonstruct
convert to. or operate a salt
tion Presa~re 880 lbs.
Maxiroom Proposed Aver- water iljection project shal file
age Daily Injection Vollme sudl oomments or objections
in writing, with the UNDER·
1500 Bbl.
Further Information May Be GROUND INJECTION CONObtailed By Contacting the TROL SECTION. DIVISION

Following:
James E. Diddle dba J .D
Drilling Company, P.O . B011
687. Racine. Ohio 46n1
614-949·2512 o. Ohio De:
panment of Natural Resources. Division of Oil &amp; Gas.
Fountain Square, Columbus
Ohio 43224, 614-255-6917.'
Arry person desiring to oom~~ or to make ., objection
with referenoa to an application for a permit to oonrlruct.
convert tD, or operate a sSt
water i"ljection pn;tject sheA file
SJdl comments or objections
in writilg, with the UNOER -

IWtr....

SIRING SOFI
Now A Snwll
Monfhly lonfal
PI• lallial lnotalla tiOft
Puh A SoftoMr Ia Yo..H- loday (loaso wiftt
Option lo luy)
t... Ownod, 20 v... hp.
DAN S WAHl REFIIING
Will Sftt lr.•t
;304·112-2996 7-2 -

LOST Smlllpackega.containing
wldding picture.. leh by mil·
t .. e et aorneonn front porch or
in screen door. Reward . Call
614·446·0810 .

Uled Clfl

JO'S GIFT SHOP

VINYL SIDING

of lnjec1ion Zone Marcellous

1817, 1tc

CANDY BARS

7-28-86-l mo.

6-JG.'IS· I mo .

OriHing Co~.-.y, P.O. Box
687. Racine. Ohto 46n1 .
Location of Proposed Satt
Water Injection Well: Section

GROUP

RACINE, OHIO
Office 949·2438
Emergen&lt;y 949·2516

member. Please cell 6U -3&amp;70688

Tirod of'Hanl
Rusty Warer?
Wo Ha" lito An·

We pay ceth for leta model clean

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

RAYMOND E. PROFFITT (MAC)

0• Wule Oitll~
Ill Court St

r:ant: Jam01 E. Oiddlecl&gt;a J.D.

COMPLETE STOCK

Work Guaranteed in Writing

OPEN : Mon. -Wed .
Thurs.-Fri. S. Sat.
9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

The Daily Sentinel

Bo• 4160 to 48'0 and 560
2000- A Se•. #2&amp;5
to satisfy a commercial loan
#9452-9oc6
Galis 300 oof Bolter 440 agreement dated I he 4th day
AC 0157
of June. 1985.
Galis 300 oof Bolter 440
THE BANK JOSEPHINE
AC #1473
RESERVES THE RIGHT TO
Joy 21 SC Shuttle Car IIET BID .
12437
TERMS OF SALE: CASH
Jov 21 SC Shuttle Car uET 171 31: 1813. 7, 10, 14, 61c

TOOTH
BRUSHES

SYSTEMS

t----"'----------------.-----

13143
480 to 4160 #A536J- S&amp;S Service Vehicle
1070
#SS100

LEGAL NOTFICATION
Name and Addreu ot A,_,li.

TIMEX WATCHES

POLISHING

Closed Tuesda

600 KVA Pemco Substation

#64·1477
36 inch X 100 Foot New Ra dial Stacker #8618
100 HP Joy Salt- Drive,
Starter 8r Tailpier:e 440

Faded
Oxidized Finishes To
Showroom Luster
•CARS •TRUCKS
•BOATS •PLANES
&amp; MORE
By Michaol Norton
Preservu &amp; Seala
..
From Harsh
992-2038 WE COME
Element*
TO YOU"
w / APS DUPONT TEFLON
FREE Eal . &amp; Demonalrations Atl
7/9/'86/1 mo.

CEMENT DOG! &amp; UTI

342 2ND
GAlliPOLIS, OH.
446-2691

Rutland Flower Show results announced

"Our American Heritage", a line

7-7-' 86 -1 mo.

Restor~

116.95

992-2054

In the artistic arrangement s
division. the winners. listed first
through fourth respectively, were
as lollows:

APPLEi

For Industrial or Residential Use

STOP IN
TODA\'

Krista! Bolin won the best of show
and Eva Robson the reserve best d
show In artistic arrangements at
the recent flower show of the
Rutland Garden Oub held at the
Rutland Methodist Church.
"Gardener's Enjoy" was the
theme of the show judged by Janet
Bolin, with Mrs. Robson as general
chainnan.
Other winners of special awards
were Pauline Atkins, horticulture
sweepstakes; Shelly Smith, junior
best of show in artistic arrangements. and Cheryl Lynn Jewell, BUt
Smith, and Zachary Bolin. a tie for
junior horticulture sweepstakes.
An education exhibit on corsages
was displayed by Pearle Canaday,
Pauline Atkins, Marsha Denison
and Ruth Erlewlne.

NEVER WAX AGAIN!

HIGH PRESSURE PLASTIC
WATER PIPE

FREE
ESTIMATES

RESERVEBE'ITOFSHOW-EvaRolllontookreservebest(lsmw
In artistic design with her "The Fruits of our Labor" entry.

~~~~:~:,:~.~:.ON::. ,~

Elkhound.
area.YicinityoflittleKyger
She need1 medica·
----------~---------~---------'T"---------T"---------~ CrMk
tion I ..,e is a valued family

No need to have your pearls or
beads mailed out any more. All
work done in our store by
trained professionals.

BE'IT OF SHOW - Kn!taJ BoUn was the winner~ the best~ smw In
artmtic arranll"menls at the Rutland Garden Club's Oower show With
her entry In "The Benefits of Our Machine Age."

The Daily Sentinei-Page-13

Business Services

, .rJA Pearl &amp; Bead
@~oMERov

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Porch S•le 1 -e . Frl. • 111. 2216
Entem Av111 . Lot 21 . CtothH.
mltceiiWteout.
Vent Sate Fri . • Set. ht bridl
hou• on right J*t Layne's
Furniture, llulwilt. Rd.

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
133 Bu«~~mut Ave ., Pomer-oy.
friday tnd S•turday. Aug .Sih

10d 91h. Rollewev bed , porch
IWing, babv bed . htghd'lair,
dinnette. dtlk. trip .. drllter,
rockers. lugg~~ge, L.A . ehlirs.
television. bike, bar ttools, lin- ·
ent. di1he1. much more.
234 Mulberry Ave. Thur . 1nd Fri.
10 am.- 1. Bilby 10 lduN
clothing, kerot.-.ah•ter, Home
Interior items.
Big 6 family y1rd 1111 in Mason .
4th and Brown St. Aug. 8 -9.
9 :00am. t color CDfl1)uter ~ft
WIH .

Yard ule August 6&amp; 7. 9-5. &amp;40
Grant St ., Middlapon. Clothn,
booka, whatnot, dishtl .
Fridrt tnd Stturd•y Aug. 8th
end 9th. 3 famity . 1166 Yin• St.
in Middleport . Bookl, clottles,
toys.
Friday _Aug. 8 only. 8 -4. S.wlng · .
maehtne, eurttins, drtpe 1 ,
wHd -etter, dish... houtaltokf
itflms.
chair, c'othtl, pic·
turM, frames, typewriter. much
more. June Street Rustle HINt,
$yrecuse.

•••Y

friday Aug. B off Rt . 7 North of
Chnster on SurmM Rd. hi .
house. Rain cancals.
2 ltmilyQirlgeule. Stt. Aug 9.
George White '"· Old At.33 .
Clolhtl, tnd etc. 2- 16 in . snow
lir• with studs, 2-14 ln . .,ow
tiret with studt.

Hunne4t on Roll Hill. 'h mile
north of Pomeroy oft SR l3 .
Clothing. household ittmt. tirH.
Friday. Aug . B. 9tm-7pm
New Yard Sele. Mondty &amp;
Tuesday Aug. 11 &amp; 12, 9am . 1
Top of Rotehill. Guitar l30 . niee
lad ill clothes size 10 , and rmre.

Augurt 7-9 Flatwoods Road.
behind Five Points Grill. Ch ild ·
ren1 cloth as. toys.
Si11t" St . off Rt . 124 in
Sytacuse. FridiV end Snuday.
August 8th end 9ttl. 10 ·004 .00. Ch!ldrens clothn. iun1 .
sweaters. blouaes. et c.

Pf'Pieasiint
&amp; Vicinity
Jul-, 5th, yard ule 9 till dirk .
Gallipolis Farry. Rugs, bicycle &amp;
mise
Yard S ~tlt! . one mile west of Mt
Alto on At . 33, Thursday tnd
friday . Aut 7 tnd 8 . 9 :00 to

HO
Lumbe r out of old building,
alreadv down . ptlone 304 ·89!,3968
Yard Sale. 112 PlHunt 51 ..
Seturday. 9:00 AM to 1
L.,ge Y.=~rd S1le, At. 1 Ttvlor
Rol!d, C1mp Conley, Fri. end
Sat. Ctothet and IPPiitnCH.

MAKE IT ARULE...

'"'"·

~·:

•

,.

USEWANTADt
AHANDV
TOOL

Ntlohbamood YO&lt;'d Stlo 92
CNiiocrtN ftd . Tlturt. a Fri.
ftlfrle .• now, ridlll'lg mo...-,
Ill•. tttteo, clathlnl, much

...

'

•

.•
..
~

•

'

•
~

. ...."':

"

�•

Page-14-The Daily Sentinel
31

Homes for Sale

LAFF-A-DAY

45

GDWm"*'t home from t1 (U
repair). DellnquM'It ,.. prop.-.y.
Repolletsiont. Ctll 805-887&amp;000 Ekt. H-4582 for current

64 Misc . Merchandise

For rent Sl...,ing Roome and
light hou1e kMping rooms. Perk
Central Hotel. Cell 61 4·448-

Callahan' s Utld nre Shop . Over

HouM • one ICJI, clast to Rio
Grtnde In SouthWHt.m tcl\ool

48 Space for Rent

t14·248·9241.
ThrM Bedroom rsnch, 1475

Large lat on Addison Bull'lliHe
Sm1Uiot on Rt . 7. CIIIIJ14-448 -

sq.ft . scre1ned porch, fully
equipped kitchen. diningroom.
family room, full basement. in Gallipolis City and five
min. walk to city sc:hoolt. low
pric.of t82~ 900 . Clll814-448·

g•••·

ForrMt trail• lot OeorgetCrtek

614·246·8131 .

lflet' • .

Own your own home P ayment1
of only *228 mo. Includes tax &amp;

inlurtnca . 9 Y..% mortgage

Asking

125.900 Ranch home jutt off
Lower ANer Ad. on Neighborhood Ad. Call J1m 1t 614-446·

"What do you say next year
ouau.., home. nttWiy "'modeled r_w_e_f_o_r_g_e_t_t_h_e_wrh_o_le_t~h:"in....;g;,.?_.,_,-~~5~1~H~ou~l~e~h~o~ld~G~oo~d~schoice loc .. ion on College Ad

Ohio. Colil14·388-8684. Au·

Syracute. new completekrtehen
and laundry, air conditroned,

&amp;awl, 20% off Echo trimmers.
HuaqvamatiiNS.
cheinMWJ
16''
gu&amp;t
Special1. '20"
off Echo
111 .10. Bar oil gal M .OO.
Chain sharpening. repair work.

614-678-2513
4 bedroom home on 7 ecret
Hunters paradile in Chester
ar.. 132 ,000 Call 614-986-

4392.
R Beds ville. by ownm Two for
the price of one 2 bedrooms,
living, dining room, krtchen,
bath with extra room All fully
carpeted Large porch, f&amp;tlced
yard with satillrte TV Also
1ptrtment which includn 1
bedroom. INrng room . krtchen
ar.. with bath, workshop and
gll'age. Forced air gas heat. own
water well. large lot and mamta·
nance free siding 546.000 Call
814-378-6168
7 roomt wrth bath. garage and
buildings, 2 1h ecrBI . Close to
school and store Satillite w1th
rotor and power box 614-742-

2566
Go11arnment homes from S1 lu
repair) Delinquent tax property
Repossessrons. Call 805-6876000 E11t H-9806 tor current
repo lilt
4 room cabin on 2 acres tn
Addrson Call 614 -279-4908

~

32 M b'l

H

o ' e
omes
for Sale

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEl'S QUALITY

MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST. GALLIPOLIS . RT 36
PHONE 614· 446-7274
1986 Buddy , 2bdr., 12Jt:'50.
$2800 Call 61•-446-0390

Houae 1n Middleport for sale
Priced to sell. 614-992-6803
In Middleport. 3 bedroom house
1 YJ story. living room and family
room with ftreplace Has had lots
of remodelmg Fenced -In side
yard S19,600 Cell 614-992·

2593.

33

Farms for Sale

Beauttlul home tn Flatwoodl
ar .. of Pomeroy 17 acres 15t
spring fed pond available. Call
614-446 -2369

34

Business
Buildings

For Sale 50x90 ft commercial
zoned building. Brick eonstruc
I ton large garage doors, South
Fifth Ave. Middlepon Phone
614-992 -6668 days. 614-9926113, 614-992 -2026 evening&amp;.

35

Modern 3 bedroom home, re ·
duced to S48.000 00 304

675·6047
1 2x60 mob1le home &amp; lot on
Hereford lane. Will cons1der
trade 304-576 -2953
8 room house. 26 acrM. 16 x32
btoek building. other oulbuild·
1ngs, Gallipolis Ferry area Movrng. must tell. As~1ng $57,000
304-175· 3628

For Sale (S88.000 00) Rent
11460 001 month 7% m1les
from Po1nt Pleaaant on Sand Hill
Road 3 bedroom•. 2'h baths,
ltvangroom with fireplace, large
country kitchen w1th breakfast
bar, hobby room . utility room , 2
car garage. basement . deck, arr
cond . 6 acret Call 304 -882
2481 evanmgs
6 room hOute. full basement on
Yr acre. 5 m1ln up At 35 on left
30.·675 -7149

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1970 Champ1on 1 2~~:60 , 2 bdr
13996 Ca ll 614-367 7410 af
'" 6
1977 Skylyne 3 bdr Mobile
home gable roof with shi ngles
houtelap s1dtng Call 614-99 2-

6306
1911 Wm chester 3 bdr good
cond Call 614 -245-9422
12 ~50 fully tu rnrshed on
8h111 all level lot , one thlfd
acre mo re or 111111 Lo cated
Porter, St At. 160, near Sl At.
664 Centtroftown S17.000
Call 814 -388 -9893
76 1olJC70 Rosemont J bdr . 1
bath. AC. WB hook-up, 19000
Potttuion 30 day s Ca ll 614

379 2886 O&lt; 614-379 -2&amp;08
1982 14•70 Fleetwood, 3 bdr .
2 baths. total eleetric For more
i nform~t io n 614 -388-8633 af ter 4PM

60 acres more or leu on St At.
233 and township road . Oak Hill,
Ohro Pond and electric. Asking
122,000 CharlesDelaney,614·

662 ·6173

O&lt; 1·800· 642·3619 .
14~~:15

Sherwood Park Mobile
Horne Aslting 15600 &amp;1• ·742-

2145 .
14K70 3 BR . 2 bath mobile
horne 17000 or bNt offer. Will
teka tr.dt 814-949-2 801

MOBILE HOMES MOVEO· In·
wred, ra"onable r1t... C•ll

Call 614-446· 7473
Mobile home for r.-.t 2 bedroom
1n eountry, I 160 mo 176 dep

1 acre 2 cat garage elec water
sept•c tank on state route 664,
will consrder trad e. Call 614388-8746

Ashton bUIIdrng lo ts w1th publrc
water, mob1le homn permrtted,
304 -676 -2336 Of 304-676-

Renl als
Houses for Rent

5 rooms house for r~tnt inquire
918 Second AVe . Galhpolrs.
Oh No phone calls

2 mmut es f rom new Gallipol is
Pool' Mmt condition, 2 bedroom
hou1e wrth new plu~h carpeting,
draperres , windows. in1ulatlon.
wmn g House ts spotl1111 l 1360
per rno Call 61 4-286-&amp;110

Avail1ble Sept 1 4 mil• from
Holzer hosprtel Just off 160,
SJ60 dap ., 8350 pftl' monttl
Ref required Call after BPM

614·446·7167.
3 bedroom double wide wittl
garage and larg e y11d Partielty
furnished 3 miiM out of Pomeroy on At 1•3 Requ~re depo11t
$275 per month 614 -992
7401
Newer Ren ch home 3 bed
rooms Ref &amp;nd deposit re·
qulfed Rutland area 814 7423171
3 houses fo r rent 1906 N Main
St 4 bedroom• 5300.00: 2324
ltn eo ln Ave 4 bedroomsl260 ;
2207 Oak St 2 bedrooms 1260.
Oepos1t &amp; Refeutncet 304-

676-2130
Nice 3 bedroom house on Staff
Houae Road near Mason County
Fairgrounds tJOO 00 month.
depo1it and reference requ~red.
304-676-2697
3 bedroom houut 1n Henderson.,

304 -675 · 7448

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

10 ~ 50 1160 includal water and
garbage. plus 15 0 11curity dip·
osit. No drinking, flohtlng or
pets 614 -367·7217 weningt

Trailer tor rent in Tuppers Plailnt,
• cro11 ttrMt from Shake Shop.
Couplt ontv. no pet• Call

814·887·3808

2 bedroom. mobile home 1175
month, 1100 deposit . You pay
utilitifll. Adults, no pets 814 -

614- 44~ · 1602 .

1211.60 2 bdr. patio, edge of town
588. no pl!ts, depotlt , 1160
monthly. Call 814-446 -7124
before 1 OOPM .
3 bdr. houu , Sprrng Val1ey
Plaza, no pets, 1 or 2 children.
Ref . &amp; deposit. 1400 month
Call 614-446 -1323.

Apartment
for Rent

2 bdr utilitret partially furn .,
t176 mo Call 304-876-6104
Older couplet 2 bdr., utihi•
partfy paid 1160 mo , C111
30•· 675-6104 or 304 -675-

5386 O&lt; 304-175· 7926.
Hou&amp;e &amp; apartment for &amp;ingles.
Call 304-676-5104 or 304-

676·5386 o• 304·676 7926.
Furnished 2 bdr. apt. utiliti•
partially patd Call 304-675·
5104 or 675 -5386 or 304-8761 and 2 bdr apts for rent Bas1e
rent for 1 bdr S176 Baic rent
for 2 bdr 1212 Alao 1200 sec.
dep req Clolfie to Foodland and
Spring Valley Plaza. Jaclc1on
Estatfl Ap1rtments, 614·4463997 . Equal Housing
Opponunity
Furnished apartmttnt . adults
only C•ll81ol-.,.6 -9523.

Pomeroy 2 bdr, Naylor1 Run .
• 1 75 mo t 100 depoait. ytrd ,

patro, Call after 8pm 814-9926886
1 bedroom apt rn Pomeroy
Completely remodeled kitchen
furnilhed All new rug1 61-t-

992· 6216 or 614 -992-7314

1 bedroom apt. for rant in
Middleport Call61 4-992 -8783
eveningt. 814.002 8811 deya
4 room apt. bedroom. bathroom.
hvtng room, kitchen All new
carpet, most u1ilitin paid, liP·
plrances furnished , con'&gt;lenient
to lhopping, t21&amp; mo . Call

614-446-7615
Aparcment on Main St in
Pomeroy I 1 26 p..- month C•ll

814·892·6059.
One bedroom 1partmen1 . Unfurntthed 1160 pet month plus
utilities C•ll 814 -992- 6545
days and 614 - 949 - 2216
evenings
APARTMENTS. mobile homt1,
hou1t1 . Pt. Pleattnt and Gallipo·
Itt. 614-440·8221 .
APARTMENT FOR RENT · Now
accepting applic1tkHt1 for rental
apantMntt ~ M~ton Apt&amp; LImited Two bedroom aptt It
•199 .00 plf month. Rental
rattl may be higher deptndlng
on Income. Houaing will bl
a'&gt;lailable to each appllcent ,..
gtrdl•s of th,.r r~ce. color.
r..lglon, ••• 01 nMu,.l or~m
lnter•ted •Hcentt 1houkl call
304-nl-&amp;01 1 1M' contact D•
nita Strtib Of Waher Juetlot ~
the main offlct, 1676 Brice
Road . Reynoldtburg. Ohio
43051or coM 114·113·4514.
2 a.droom fumlthld tpllrtmw~t ,
Mlddf._,ort, Otllo Alto 2 room

..... 304·812·2851.

1977 3 br. Shultl' mobile home,
furn ithed 10cludes
ttove, refrigerator. dl1hw11her.
deep frMZI. WISher, dryer, new
!tying room auhe. 211" color TV,
3 bed• • 2 c.. llng f1n1, patch,
th4td • underpenning. C1n be
ltft on rentad lot. 111 ,000

14x70 Twobedroomwithroom
addition. Above Racine. Ohio on
20 acfll Fre1 g1s. 1220 Ptr
month , pan ctn be wo,.ed out.

One bedroom furnished apt,
ground floor. p.-IY1t1 IMranee,
all utllitlltr.kl· outtktfti Htnd•

304-871· 15U.
12118 mobftt home on .98 acre
lot. loe.tt«&lt; 3 milee out Crab

C&lt;NII Rood. 110.000.00. Coli
304·575· 1120 otter 4·00 PM .
1971 Govtrnor 12xl0. 8•18
porch with twnlng. alltppll•nc•. 111c cond, 304· 895-345&amp;

otter 6:00 PM

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wuhms. drytrt. refrigeretors.
rangu . Skafags Appliancet,
Upp1r Rhlar Rd . bMide Stone
Crl!llt Motel. 614-448-7398

Sot. 614·445 ·1199. 627 3•d
Valley Fumiture, new &amp; used
large sectton of "'ality furniture 121 I Eutern Ave ,
Galhpolil
Check out 1'\/tf'jldey loW prices
on furniture • appliance• . Mollohan Furnituft, At. 7 North ,
Kanauga. Call 614-448-7444

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofas and chair&amp; priced from
1396 to t996 Table~ t50 and
1$ to •126 . Hide·• · bedt 1390
to t596 Recliners 1226 to
137&amp; Limps 128 to •us.
Dinettes 1109 and up to 1496
Wood table w -6 chairs 1286 to
t796. Dille 1100 ~ to •376
Hutch II
and up . Bunk
beds complete w-manrea1e1
t29&amp; and up to SJ96 Baby
beds •110 &amp; $175. Manre11es
or box spring• full or twin 183 ,
firm t73 , and 183 . Quean &amp;ett
t226. King 1360 4 draw~r
chett e&amp;6. Ore&amp;sln S89 Gun
eabin111 8 , 10 , &amp; 12 g.tn Gas
or elactrlc range U76. Baby
manresaes 136 &amp; t46 Beet
trame1 120, t30 &amp; King frame
S60 . Good teleettOn ot
badroom tuitM. metal cabinett. headboard&amp; UO and up
10 186

••oo

Used FurnitUre Wuher &amp;
drver, gas range. electrrc range,
small color TV, wood table &amp; 2
banch11, btd1, dreqlf, &amp;
rec:lln•. 3 mit• aut Bullville
Ad Open 9AM to 15PM. Mon

mru Sot 614· 446·0322 .

Refrigerator-18 foot fro11 free, 2
door unit in service . Very clean .

Coli 114-246·5131 .
Hotpoint washer heavy dU1y,
wuhn good 136 Call 614-

446·7665.
2 "'Y ch•ira, eh111t of dra\olllerl,
twin 111e youth bad . C1ll 61•446-7313
light 9'"" couch e100 . Kenmore Wtther 1260. ltlckabla
wa1her· dty1r ut 1250 , bl·
throom vanity with marble &amp;Ink
with m1tehing medaclnecltbln et
mlnar •uo. Call 814-379-

2320

Picken&amp; Uald Furniture. Good
quality uttd tumiture. Open 9 to
8 or caU tot IPPOintment.
304-875-6483 l)f 876-1460
Coueh, lo'lleteat, chair. end
Qlblll end lampt, cofiM tlble,
good cond. all 1200.00. Phone

304-875·8889.
Couctl, convtrtl to bed . 2 end
tlbl•. coffee table New full
mattreu. drtlser 231 1 Lin ooln
A'&gt;le , Pt. Pit .

54 Misc . Merchandise

onon . I 10 .00. 304· 175·
8730

Bathinette with dr111ing table.
UO 4 piece Brownie suit, siu
12, new-, t1&amp; . CaU 814-992 -

7138.

Couctl snd chair 1160. Call
814-992· 7121 Kimb•ll wg1n,
plays IIV'eral diffetent lnttrumenta, great .....e 2 year• old .

Coli 114·992·2772 .

Fait Special, chain 11rw chain•.
buy one g .. MCOnd half price
Skters Equipment, Handerton.

w. Vo ..

0511 .

1871 Community 14a70 2 bffumiJhed , ac:. front porch, un·
d1rp1nnlng. w-watar bed,

woohor• dr;o&lt;. 304·773·1f48.
2 bedroom trtller with ldd on·
1nd garage. 3 mM11 from PolnJ
PIMMnt on Rt. 2 North . 304·

175·3241 oftor 7:00PM.

614-446·8175 .

Wedding ring It di.wnqnd. 12
gauge s~nglt thot lhotgun. Call

614-446· 2781 .
New country drHm homa. 8uih
for you . 118,996 4 bdr . 2 battl.
See this model today Cell

8539

Firewood tor 11le Call61 4 -742·
2646
Commodore Computer keyboard with T.V adapter and
~nstruetron bookl . Also full 1U:e
W111t Bend Humidifier. Call
614 -992-7440 .

65 Building Supplies

Furniehed Roome

Roo._ for rent, 4flt . week.
mon11!. OoMio Ho1ol. Col 114·
441· 8810: R_,. I I lawN 1120
month.

OatH &amp; corner potts rncluct.d .

304·676-2911 .
SALE! 50 pet . OFF! FIHhlng
tlgn U88: LIGhted , non anew 1269.; Nonl~f,ted U29 .:
FrH l1tter1. Few left IM
loeally 1 -(800)423 · 0183 .
anytime.

pet. FFL holdor 304·865· 303e

d.__

1484

Block , brick, mortar and ma-

tonry supplie&amp;. Mountain State
Biock . Rt 33, New Haven . W.

Vo 304 ·882·2222.

56

Pets for Sale

Dragonwynd C•nery Kennel
CFA Himalay1n , Peflian and
S1arn•• lcinens. AKC Chow
puppies. C1ll 614 -446-3844

ottlf 7PM .

Good riding horstl for 11111 Call

8U-4415-1758 .

Chihuahua F., sm1ll. 6 mos ..
house broken . Liliac point Silmfllekinen F . AKC Pomeranian
dud ltrYict 1m1ll. Call 614 -

446· 8169 .
Mun tell 3 pltr&amp; or ring necked
doves With C8gl I 60. C11t

614-143·2760.

8 h,o Meulo For.,_ rototlnw
13.250.00 'orlllolt M wa•h.-. 2112 Metd~&gt;Wbtoo~
Drive, PcHnt PJMtent.

11 lndt Crill- Chllln IIW

IIIII 11at.OO. ·n Cltovy
307~nt6neawmau._. ""'" "'"
ueo.oo. ·n Trlu . . h 1110

moiOooyclo 'Tiaw" fiOO.OO.
Rod. 304·175·.,11 .
I

AKC BatHn puppies. Aeldy to

Coli 814-867·3858
Regiltlfed AKC Cocker Spaniel
puppi" Champagne •nd buff in
color
814-992-7102 bl·
fo1e 4:00. 81 ol-992 -3006 after

61

AKC regltterad Yorkshire Ter·
rio r, male , 9 w etk t ol d .

57

Phone 304 · 675 ·

Puvev Mark 2 MCB 8 channtt
lltreo mlaing boerd 1150. Peavey 210 boo&amp;tlf Imp 400 watt

1100. Coli 114· 388 ·8800.
TrumpllandcMaforaale Good
condftion 150 C1ll 814-911-

4411 .

Upright priM, 1800 00. Dkl not
Mil earlltr. 304· n3 -&amp;378.

68

Fruit

&amp; Veg1teble1
A«t rHbltrltl. T"ton ltrry

Pt11dl. Col 114-446·11812 o&lt;
511 · 215-55064.
Cannfnt tometot1 Plclctd
f4.00, plcll vou• own U .OO
"-vrnand fllowa . Iring oontaln -

""· 114· 247-4212 .

..,....,•.'"* -n u .oo

CIMini tomet:a11. luppty own
bu·

lllol. Dolo MNIIorn 114· 247·
3471 .

C-9

10-01. 14.00 bu·
..... pldolld,
plcll.

u .oo -

(brlno conuinerl Manh1ll

Ad.,., Llllrt Folio 114· 247·
2011 .

Yellow FrM IIOnl C-log

.viiWtll.

C1ll for

prtoe1 aftd varletlea. lolt'l

M...... M -. W. Yo. 304·
773·172t . 0,.. 7 cllyo.
llvor lind Goldin Qu- swelt
oom.
Ftnn. 304·481·

D'"' '"'

1721.

1983 Ford Escort auto, crui1e,
wire rims, $2, 399 John' I Auto
Sale1 , Ruleville Ad , Gallipolis,

(lJ

ll1 m !ill

I

GNROP

Auto Parts
Accessories

Cil The

(I) Doctor Who
®I Cl) (I2J CBS News
(j]) Bo&lt;ly Electric
CHI Weloomo Back. Konar
6 :36 Cil Gomer Pyle, UIIMC
7:00 GIIl PM Magazine
(])Man from U.N.C.L.E
(]) SportaCentar
()) Entertllnment Tonight

~I'S"~

Johnny MathiS and Dion ne
Warwtck du~~uss the re turn to soft htts in the mu sic industry
Ill (7) Hoeen·s Heroes

Transmi11ion1 . All typ;_. 0 .,;;;,
front. rear, 4 wheel drive Prioet

oten 1100 .. Will doiNar. Call
4- ,4rndl dnomenms, made by
Rocftet . fits Ford Condition fair,'

® News

1980 AMC Sprrit ~•rv clean. in
very good cond Call 614 -245-

78

Camping
Equipment

9511
1979 Buick Riviera. Loaded to
the max leather rnterior
68.000 mil01. Will constder
partial trade Atkmg 13960
Negotiable . Call 814 "742 -

1970 camper. self-c:ontelned, ·

79

a

1986 Foxfirec:emp..-. 28ft. Ac;:
21 ft awning, mil up TV antlll\la•

CENTER SA 35 W GaHipoli&amp;
Ohio . Calle14-446-9777, eve.
e14-4415-3&amp;92 . Up ft-ont trac tor&amp; wrth warranty over 75 used
WICtofl. 1000 tOOl&amp;.

3544.

304·675· 7375 .

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

1978 Grand PriA, mce car,
S 1.100 00 or best offer 304-

1970 6000 For-d diesl tractor
13, 9fi0 4 bottom lnt plows
1296 . &amp; ft wood bush hog
1360 . New Idea dyne bounc1
mowing machinelike new 1495

S75-7248.
1976 CtliYy Now-1 , 2 door, 8 c:yl,
3 apeed . clean. n~~w pamt.
$1,11)0.00. Phone 304-676 -

Cell 514 -286-6522.

Supreme.

' 76 Ouster, good cond, good
tires. NO rust . $600 .00 304676-6218

Now buying ahell corn or eer
corn C1U for latest quotes River
City Farm Supply, 614 -446-

1974 Fordf -100 KLT . PS . PB,
auto . Topper goo d oond 304882-2293

2985
livestock

f Of tale Regil1ered H1~reto rd bull
3 yr. old. Call 61ol-4'8-3886

72

8 yr . old reg Ittared grty q.~ artet
horae gelding. 11red by Jay
Jam .. . Kid brolce . Call 814 -

1982 Dodge PV light duty, 226
4 1pd , brown w•th cream
fibergla11 toppftl' Call614 -367-

388 -8801
Hay

Trucks for Sale

0394
1979 Chevrolet Yt ton pickup,
4x4 wtth utility bed Good
co"dition . Cell 814-448 -8201
or 614 -446 -8113.

&amp; Grain

Hay and field corn for sal• Call

hoy . 114·869· 3848 .

=;.-.; - -o:-::c::-::--;:c-c;;-,,.71
Autos for Sale

1978 Caugar XA7 PS . PB . four
n...v tt•l·b•lted radials t1 , 000.

Colll14· 441·4844.
1985 Hotilon 4dt , 10.000
mUH. red . Ju11 like new . Call

814 · 248 ·9665 •• 614· 246 ·
5131
1880 Oattun 200 sx 6 apd.
30- «&gt; mll11 p..- g..lon, good

cond. 12100. Coli 614-446 3040
88 Ford Etoort fT PS. P8, AC, 6
apd.. '•• than 5.000 mllet.
Black •terlor, gray \lltour Inti·
rior . AM -FM c•ntt• take over
peymentt. Calll514·281· 70•4 .

1974 GMC truck 1~ ton . havy
duty 1973 Jeep CJ5 Ph one

304 ·676-1386.

73

Vans

&amp; 4

W . O.

1982 Chtlly v1n, new conversion . Railey wheels, AM -FM
cassette, earth tone color plcg .
Call 814 -246 -5131 or 61•1979 Plymouth Trail Dutter (lik e
Chevy blazer! 318 V-8. auto.
&amp;6 ,000 orgin1l miles First
U.900 tahs it Call614 -246-

6566 .
Chevy C-30 cargo van with
1977 Corvette engine. A- 1
cond SaM or trade Call 61•-

246 ·9616

flereo, dltwhHI, dull tankl ,
tube grill. 18500. C•ll 814-986-

1t77 Oldomollh

euu.,

lu·

l l f - " · ' " olr, rtlly wMoll.

-bo&lt;ly.~OIIf100411100 . CoM

114·441-4803. .

I

Shrubbl 114 00 each. guaran,
teed Tree &amp;: ttump removal,
mulch. 11r1d &amp; gravel &amp; Stone.t.
dehv~tred Oon'a landscaping~
RON ' S Tele'llrsion Service .'
Houl8 calli on RCA , Quazar,"
GE Specialing in Zenith Call'
304 -578 -2398 or 814-448-

Eil (7) MOVIE : ' Super Fuzz'
CiJ MacNeil-lehrer Newshour

Cl) li]l MOVIE: 'Christo·
pher Columbus' (CCI Part 2
ol 2. IRI.
(fl) Evening at Pops: Tony
Bennett Smger Tony Be nnan joi ns John Wii11ams
and the Bo9ton Pops for an
evening of mtJSlCal enter-

tamment. (60 min.)

EEK &amp; MEEK

@ MOVIE: 'The borcis(

~CHHH ... WHAT's IN

ll1t.St. IX:mHWTS ?

2464.

IT~ A t.J(VJ oo..GitJUT ..

W\JG· LASI1~

8 :05

ciJ MOVIE: 'The Three Mu·

8 :30

8

WmlCU" AtJr'

(lJ ® femHy Ties Alex
race1 to stop Ellen from

CHEMICAL PR£5£Rv'ATIVE.S..

marry1ng
~art

lor tho rest of the famtly
(60 min) /RJ

(I] Nova: The Plllne 1he1

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Call Ernlt. carpentry, remodel-'

ChangH tho World iCC)
The 50th ann1versary of

I

I SAW 'lOLl IN THE LIBRARY
YE5TERDAY WiTH A BIG
STACK OF BOOK6.

ing. tiding, roofing, concrete:
work. biodl, painting. Free eat;.,
mates. 304 -676 -6162 .
·

OH, IWAsNT

IT'LL TAKE 'ltXJ

FORE'vER70
6011'M510
READ iHEM ALL. READ TH&amp;'.I ..

I

I

the DC-3 is celebrated (60
min J (R)
illl Mys1eryl : Sh6des of
Darkneu /CCI Whe n a

r

WAS TRYING 10 RE.4CH
THE C:OIN- RETLJRN SLDT
ON THE 50~ MACH INE .

\

woman returns to her o ld
home aher bemg away severa l years she becomes
drawn into t he spell of t he
home 's garden maze (60

\

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

m1n I.(RJ

fen~

441·4477

1ht men who mugged
her (RIIn S1erao.
1 0:00 8 1Il (j)l Hill S.,..t Blues
Aher Fwrillo 1s shot. Joyce
mairta ins a vigtl over h1m
1
'ind recalls their first meetmg . (60 min.) iRJ.

BARNEY
NEXT THING I
KNOW, IT"LL BE
.-..-~ INSTANT

Excavating
batemantst'

Good-1 Ellcavating.
footert , drivewav•. &amp;eptlc tanka.·
landaeaping. Call anytime 814:'
446-4637, J1me1 L. Oav ison."
Jr owner

85

@ Auto Racing '86: USAC
Mldgeta

polis, IN (90 mtn.J
II Cil 20/ 20 (CCJ !60

~

1247

Dllla rd ' a Water Delivery. Cin.,
erns. wells , poolt Anytime buti

Motorcycles

I] -·

1178 Herloy Dovldeon 8pono·
tw. Col 814·112-7714 of1•
7:00pm.

'R • M FumhurtMtnuftcturinlt
St. At . 7, Crown City, Oh. c;~

'14 H'"'do 180 NIQht Hflll.k.
304-171·1151 .

Uphost•r~

U78.00 lkm. 301·112-2191
..,.ln
...

WHAT·s

SEE, I TOL-D
YOU 5HEWA'5
NO ORDINARY
ADDER!!

3+4::&gt;

8 •7

I MEAN,'IOU
HAllE CLIENTS COMIN6
TO 'IOU EVERY PAY
WHO ~EED AOI/ICE ..

DO '1'0\! 1-!AYE A
lEAAI8LE FEELIN6 OF
RESI'ON5161UTY Wi-lEN
VOU TALK iO THEM?

.

' -- ~

Mowrey'• Upholtterini tll'\llng
trl countyare121 Yllr&amp;. Th1 btit
in furniture upholatarlng. Caft•

304 ·.175 · 4,
estlmat11.

u

lo• .....

(]) [J) D ·Cil rD Ill li]l
Bill Coolly Show

Cil Lo.. Connection
SCTV
Grizzly: Tho Shining Mir·
ror
11 :30 IJ IIJ(j)I Tonlgh1 Show To·
nigh t's guest is AIJn
Thlcke. (60 min .) In Stereo
(J) But]11 • Allen
SponoCenter
WKRI' In Clnolnnetl
(7)
ltlp Beyond
• ()) AIC N-o Nlthlllno
(I] AIIMin Clty Umlg:
Jilftmy llolfmt Jimmy Buf.
fllft II tile f11.1ured tWM\

I

114· 268·1470, otll Evo. 8t4 1
441 · U3B . Old • now

'

~~·

'NeWs~

-

1163 Sec. Awe., Glllipoll•·''
814· .t48 · 7833 or 81ol·4~e -::
1833.
1_,_,

MOVIE: 'The loot D•

11:00

•

15 Hondo 3·WhMior. 2001 w~h
btd"ock. 1100. Ctll IU-118·
4180.

luzakl 10 QuMI runner 4
Wh....,, •~«: aond. eood Urn,

Newa

, light hauling. 304-876-6720

TRISTATE
,,
UPHOLSTERY SHOP ,, o

By James Jacoby
North's aggressive raise to three
clubs had merit. For one thing, 1t
meant that the opponents could not
back in and compete with two of a ma jor suit. For another thing. if South de·
cided to bid three no-trump, he might
very well make 11. Since South was
looking at only 13 points, he made a
conservative pass. In fact. there would
be nine tricks at no-trump with a nor·
mal club split or a double-dummy
guess by declarer that the club jack
was a singleton. Meanwhile declarer
carelessly failed to make three clubs
He won with the spade ace an"
played the king and ace of clubs, and
that was it. He had to lose two spades,
a heart, a diamond, plus a club tnck to
East's 10. Other than looking at West's
hand and seeing that the jack was a
singleton rather than a deceptive
false-card, what could declarer have
done? Declarer does not have to rush
to pull trumps. Instead of trumps he
should play a diamond alter winning
the opening spade lead. East will win
the king, and the defenders will no
doubt take two spade tncks and shift
to a heart. But now declarer is in con·
trol. He can win the heart king, play

.
.

.•

EAST

WEST

+Q LO 8 4

+K J 9

• J 983
tA 1064
+J

• 10 6 6 'l

• Q 10 5
t

K 97

SOUTH
+A 7 2
• K 72
t 5
+AQ9 752

Vulnerable Easl West
Dealer· South
West

North

F.as t

Soulh

Pass
Pass
Pass

It
3•

Pass

2+

P t~ ss

Pa s~

t+

Openmg lead • 4

_,
ace of clubs and a club to dumll&gt;) ,
king. noting that West had the io n•·
jack He ca n now ruff a diamond pi c'
to the heart ace and ruff anollll'r "'"
mond He is now lefl w1 th lht• Q 'J '·'
cl ubs and can ex1t w1th

h l ~:, 1:!'; 1

n•'df'

He w1ll then make bo1 h du b tr l&lt;:" '
against East's r e m .i1n1n g IO·Hof rlub:-

~.. ~,,r
by fHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
45 Scoff
DOWN
I V. ~'.W

I Trattoria
spt'C i al ty

6 Summ•t

hranc h
2 (J rt&gt;ek nwr
3 Italian

9 Wmd ow

st yli•
10 F1rst

uty

4

person

Or1 vin~

s1ngu lar''

plac t'
12 Me tal
5 Prren mally
13 TowPr
grt&gt;at
of 1&lt;'1'
6 Sap l&lt;hly
15 Color
7 Pindar
20 Au na lun·l 31 Ed
16 Makt• lau·
s j H.'II.d! \
23 Faalun •
32 p, .,., J, . . ,
18 Coach
8 Modt•l l!f
isl.l
!J6 Forrn••rl v
Pan-; 1 ·~1uan
pPrff'cllnn 24 &lt;i••t lm-a• 37 Anll'lnp" "
19 Put up with II Ol ••an11
25 Ht•I:IX 1
p laym :1ll ·
2 1 _ lizz
14 A st.ar 11 1 26 ( ·r art .. man 39 li11 •Pk
22 ASSO('
"Sp la.'ih"
27 l h• l;.~y
]1'1 \Pr
17 (&gt;klatu Hna 29Thnll '
41 llrr••r •lotl
for M () "

23 no'i

r:---"r:".:;Y-r,-,.,-.,.,._;_
( Lat

24 Ternfy

27 SwN·I 'luff
28 Nu{ ' lt· u~
29 f )nl' uf ct

I

I

ymha!

t.....+-+-+-+-

IIUlPcJ I rtD

30 llel'ay
3 1 "Th t•
loa.-.1 " nf
tht• \ OW JI
33 Fa11111 a~
son

34 Fon Call f
351 snw li

&lt;llrpon
38 N•AAard

40 Kmd
of oxygt•n

42 !lril ish
far••wr ll
43 llraw

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES-Here's how to""'' II

10:30 ~Con You Be Thinner?
(7) INN News
tony Brown's Journal

~NA KE!!

8-7-!1

44 No volt•

(I) Gre•t R•ilway Jo1.1rnays
of tho World

10:35

NORTH
+603
• A64
tQJ6 32
+K I

:-; wo rds

!ill mSoep

2919.

Upholetery

Sidestepping
a bad split

mtn.)

General Hauling ·

Ken s Water Service Wells,
cistern&amp; . pools and waterbedl
filled Call 614-367-0623 oi

Indiana-

From

[J)

EGGS

J 11 mes Boys Water Sir'\/ ice .tOIQ'
poo ls filled . Call614· 261 -1 tift
o~ 614 -446-1176 or 814 ·441:1,.
7911

87

.
Night Court

Cht!Stine IS humiliated
when she 1s forced to de-

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gal1rpohs, Oh io
Phone 814 -446 -3888 or 1514-

83

D 1Il iJll

9:30

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

James Jacoby

Cheers Carla de·

As Filion prepares to
marry Jeff, trouble tnew s

Rotary or cab le tool drilling.
Most wells completed tame day.
Pump sales and ter\IICII 304-

82

Fifty - Uneasy - ANALYSTS

BRIDGE

man .

(RI In S1a•ao.
(]) 700 Club
Cll U (I] The Colllys (CCI

Starks Tree and Lawn Servictr,'
l1ndscaping. 304-676 · 2010. :

Bl B Roofing &amp; Paintrng. up.
roofing , repair, paintinglntidaotout Fr. . Ettimate. Local Referen c.• . 304 - ~76- 7991

. another

cides to team With her
sleazy e~e-h usband in an effort to win a dance contest

675·2088 o• 675-7368 .

Watt eraon's Water Htuling;
reasonabl• rataa. lmmediat•
2.000 gallon d1llvery, ci1tarn1'
poOII, Wi ll, ttC1 call 304· 871

74

Island - Brawn -

ANSWERS

Have you ever noticed department: People tod ay are
wee,rlng things on their T shirts that they ones wouldn'l tell
their ANALYSTS.

2 of 2. IAI In S1oreo.

0 IIl ®

9 :00

RINGLES ' S SERVIC E. expe.:
rran ced carpenter, electrician,,
mason. painter. roofing (includ ~·
mg hot tar applica tion) 304-'·

696·3802

e....-.:

A

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
remO\Ial. Ca ll 304-675-1331 . '

1979 Chevy 12 passenger window van. AC , cruile, tilt whHI ,
capUin't chait'l. A· 1 condh~n.
1978 Ford van. 8 cyl. 3 apeed
e750 . B•t oHer, •tt•moona
30ol· 675· 4883 . No Sunday
call&amp;.

1114 Chevy Covollot ltotlon·
w..an. new engine, onlY 1.000
mllot, ¥WI' good oond. 14.200.
CoM lt4-241·54~ or 5t4·
441·0212.

mm.l (AJ.

..

Sunday . Coli f14-445 ·7404. :

1113 Ooclgo Omnl 4 dr.. oulo,
41 ,000 mN•. 12.900. CoH
114·371·2728 .

owner ml,_, n.w l'ldllls. ••·
Mum. •hockt, balta, holtl, no
r.... or 8'1ow, tltt. cruil•. RWO.

-·

4180 .

*3500 . Coli 114·992·3194 .

1177 Oldo Cutlooo 35,800 2nd

lHOSE BUNDLES WH EN IT HIT'

~

614 -367-7741 0&lt; 304-176 1
liS Chevy 4114 ahonbed 306
V-8. • IIPMCI. 1h ton, AM ·FM

1112 DOCI!Io 024 4 11&gt;d .. 2 dr ..
biKk 01lnt. Coli
114·371-2728 .

2428.

Witness a e~eh1 bit10n by
tea m ro pe Jumpers (60

BOTH HANGIN' ONTO ONE OF

245·9655

II&gt;Ortv ood •

1810 8ubaru 4 dr .. auto .. aJtc.
aond .. 11 ,1100. Call 114-441·

Army

@) 1986 PGA Golf Championship First Round (2
hrsl
CIJ 0 Cil Ripley's Boliovolt
o r Noll (CCI Meet o famtly
that has be co me known for
its 'safe' demoh1ton s and

Exterior &amp; inter~or stucco. Pl6't;
ter &amp; pleltllf repairs. Low ratn .

OH.

11tl Mullang V-6. auto, t800.

Coli 814 ·446·0016.

(J) Wackiest Ship In tho

IT LOOKED LIKE lHE'( WERE

c•1

1978 Chevy Luv 4 IPd .. fldio .
sharp . 11,499 John' s Auto
Sales, Bul1ville Ad , Gallipoli&amp;.
1968 ford v, ton Good condi·
tion Runs good Call 814 -9928711 or 814 -992-6891

Tr~nsportalion

-rur-rur·:

19 79 Dats un pickup run, good

tl.OOO. Coli 614 -446-0924 .

StriW for ule. 11 .60 per bale
Call 814 · 949-3069 1fter fiva.

Rudy and her tnend Pete r
plav havoc w1th Cl1ffs
prized new JUICer (R) In
Stereo

••

Uncondltkmal lifetime gulrantee Local references furnished'
Free ntimltet.
collect
1-614-237-0488, day or night.
Rogers Batement
Wat•rproofing

Call 614 -446 ·9648.

304·862· 2762 .

Wanted to Buy

@ Alice
@ Jeopardy
7:35 Cil Sanlord and Son
8:00 0 IIl [II Cosby Show (CCI

ALLEY OOP

J &amp; J 't Home Improvement,
Vinyl siding, overhang, florm
door1 6 Window&amp;. gutter~ . Calf
614•4.t6•8073
I

' 79 Buidl Electra, all extras.
12,000 00 ' 81 Ford Fairmont,
new tires, ne cond. 13,700 00

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

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

1982 Fo rd E&amp;eort statiOn
wagon , newty rebuilt engine,
3,200 mil•. Very clean. white
wtth blue .,terlor New nldial
tirft , J\C . $2,200.00 . 304·882-

' 79 Bonnev1Ue, loaded . s harpe, 4
door , $2,400.00 firm . pho ne
304-676-2663

pod 1130.00 304-882· 2762

'·.•

Coli 614 -2&amp;6 -1182.

'71 Olds Cutlllt
304-876-6241 .

plow 3 pt hitch. hydraulic.
13,400 00 Sertous caller• 304 -

••fc:1Nc;

\

5384.

3200.

18 hp Power King traetor. 48
inch mower. snowblldt. d11c.

64

. ..
Home
Improvements

WHO CHIDt=C&gt;

HI.) pfupL.e- ON iH~I~
MOf?AL). HE WA5' /CNOWN

'

Services
81

'73 Camaro Z 28, AM -FM. new
t~rn . good cond . $1.300 .00.

PHA~AOH

•

' 81 Chevfltte. ae . am - fm
cassette. 4~peed , 11895 firm.
After 5:30 call 304-876 -4831 .

Utility bldg . SPL: 30 'x40'1t9'
with 16 'x8' slider &amp; 3 ' ten~
door . &amp;&amp;.2515 erected . Iron
Horse Bldgs. 614-332 -9746
collect.

fESTERDAY'S SCRAM-LETS

Acres
CI J' New Newlywed

th e upcomtng release of
h1s second solo album ,
"Three f.iearts rn the Happy
End1ng Machme"

li:&gt; A80Wi THE'

..

304·67S-1423

1976 T-8ird. All original. like
new . 12400 . 1961 Pontiac 4
door sedan. All re-done. 11800.
7 ft tandem di&amp; c In fair
condition $150. Call614-687-

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT

IIIIIIIII

Court

Game
(]) Speedweek
Ill (7) Taxi
8 ([)® Wheel of Fortune
()) Yos. Minister
OJ [2) Enlertoinment Tonight Daryl Hall discusses

22ft. Covered Wagon . E11celle'ht
condrhon Call 61 4-992· 7382

1979 Ford ltinto . Run&amp; good but
pauanger sid1 11 damaged.
Make offer Ca1161 4-992-3690.

63

0 IIl

Motors Homes
8t Cempers

5685 .

S .E Ohio.

~NSCRAMBL E FORI

ANSWER

ill Groen

7 :05
7 :30

!1.000. 304-773-6244

3007.

a

11

@ WKRP in Cincinnati
[II Wheel ol Fortune

614· 286·8451 .

Ma1tey Fergu10n, New Holland ,
Bu&amp;h Hog 5•1• &amp; Serv1ce. Over
40 Uled tractors to choose from
COfTllleteline Of new Uted
aqutpment . largel1 Mlee:tion 1n

e

PRINT NUMBfRED
lfTTERS

our

OJ il}l Divorce

1973 Pontiac le Men• for sale,
or Will sell parts. Call 614-949-

GROSS &amp; SONS

8

ITIJ MacNati-Lehrer Newsh·

1972 Jayco 20ft campflr with
extraa. 1978 Blazer. Both exe
cond ao4-876-3346 or 676,

62

(i) I]) Jeopardy

IIJ Nightly Business Report

·

6186 .

U S 35 West, Jackson. Oh•o

Rifleman

il) Beat of IIHI Danca
(lJ II ()) ABC Newo

'

175. Call 614 ·388·8895.

Father Knows Best

1J II). (j)l NBC Nows

OH

1976 Pinto. Body rough. medlarncally sound Ce11614-992-

Coli 814-441·1748.
now

8t

Cil

6:06
6 :30

7268

84 Chh'ette 4 cyl ., 2 door. &amp;
spd., AM-HI! ca~tetta , low
mileage Call 614 -446-0137
after 5PM.

Musical
Instruments

IIl ()) o

(I) Reeding Rainbow (CCI

- - - -- -- - - - ;''::;-'

1982 Z-28 Pace·Car. T-Top,
loaded $6976 firm. 814-992-

Farm Equipment

c.n

'•Mh•

Ht- 4 owlvol ""••·
both. SI!\Ofo milo. Colt 114· RohieeriiUr. O.oi hlol oil tonk.
......
304-1711-1311.
441-4411.
.

Supp l1r. s
&amp; L1 ves t11ck

Hay for salt •1 15 bale Naw

lnf157 .. rclotto Adolo, trolltr lo•
r.. t. 304-171-:UU.

F100111uro, W - ..d dryer,
rolrlalrllar, 304·678-11410.

F~rm

614· 949-2237

go. S .A. Benedum, Success Rd

1200 .00
4317

Autos for Sale

2057

Pony saddle 140 .00 , n.w watt ·
em pleasur1 laddie 1160 .00.
nii'W' hunt seat laddie, brktle 1nd

Mayllt eutomatlc w11hlf. Hldl·

o· boclllllo n- . 304-675· 30N.

With trailer, life jackets &amp;: 30
thNit el•ctric motor &amp; battery.
Call 814 ·446-1612.

Pole Buildings by Quality
Builden. Work&amp;hop&amp;. carportt,
an1mal shelters, garage~ . Fret
eatimatet Phone 814 -689 7121

5:00. 304-178-5112

40A t1isttwyvinwlth
Coel
no~•. good oond. 30•·176-

For sale or trade for pcltup 16

ft . Weaver John Boa1 3 Vfl - old.

895· 3517.

waning&amp;.
Walk behind Grl\ltlfy, caN ah•

For ••Ia or trade Girl• 10 tPead
bike, will trade for gitll regular
bike or tell tot t?&amp; or be&amp;t offer.
Call814-992-7304

446 -2783.

atTOW

Gun• for tale, deelerco&amp;tptus 10

71

For Sale or Trade

8urld1ng Mater~als
Blot*, brick, sewer plpM , wrn dowa, llntals, etc Cl1ude Win - John Deere 350 OieteiOorer In
ten , Rio Grenda, 0 . Call 614 - good condition Call 814 -992 245-6121 .
7401

tOO h . antique tron tencln9

Furnlthtd room t11&amp;. UtNhl•
pd. 811 2nd OIHipollo. lhwo Dllllllo

59

450 dour. 6 way bllde.
winch . canopy 814-742 -2328

..,d up . hm lo'"""'lt'o, (Mov-

45

~.!:==========~=========~J

J .D

Building materials. eement ,
blodtt all&amp;iln. yard or deliver-y .
G1llipolit Block Co .. 123YJ Pine
St . Galllpollt. Ohio Call 814·

HAMME Y

Cil Groen Acres
ril Mazda SportsLook
fi) Cil IItar Trek

Boets and
Motors for Sale

76

S1lal 60 percent offl flashing
arrow 1ign 12891 Lighted, non arrow U691 Nan-lighted 1229!
Free latttfll Few left. SH
locally 1 - 800 -423- 0163 ,
anytinl41

1972 Ford lTD t160 Small
table with 2 chairs, t10. Lo\le
see1 and matching chair. no
Sofa, 810 loveuat , 110 . Twm
bed wlttl manreaa and box
tprings 116 Rocking chair with
stool. S10 . Straight - back
ch .. r, 110 Admrral black tnd
white TV. $15 . AM -FM ftlght
track stereo pl1yer t1 0 . Antique
piano , •soo. Call 814 992-

817/88
[II News

$5.000. Cell 614·388 ·9783; ·

614·986·7311 .

For Sale: Seart fuel oil stove,
56,800 B.T.U output, with pad
and pip• 2-75 gaL tank wrth
stand all for tUO . 814-9926620 after &amp;·30 pm

low to form four simple words

u

6 :oo

614-379-2220

Kerotun heltlf radiant 8. like
new, e&amp;&amp; . Turbo u• grin like
new. 8ft. redwood picnic bench
8r table •100 for both . Call

THURSDAY
E'(ENING

76 Mark Twain tri -haul inboard·
outboard, 140 t-rorse. open bOW,
walk through wlnd1hield. al
covert Shoreline trailer ,

e. Sun .

304·576· 7421

lutplul rtntll clothlllgiO 01nt1

3 btdroommobiletlomefor rent.
1 kid , no pttt. Ctll &amp;14 ·317·

Wa:t

Aeedaville, Ohto: Juat off Rt 7

Partly furmshed Call 614-992-

5908.

949-2234 .

Coli 614·372-6031

Ito••· Coli ~14 · 446 · 3159 .

Ave G1lllpolil, OH

2 bdr upttairsapt., unfurntshed ,
carpeted , utilltiu pard . No ehildren , no pets Call 614-4462 bdr h1 1n Middleport. AC , 1 637
dishwaa her-. e11 lo eat ion IS2 50 : - - - - , - - - ,, - -month Call 614 -446 -9205 at • f urn apt 1 bdr . 1235 utilitret
ter 5 15
patd 920 4th At«~ . Gall ipoli1
Call446-4418 after 8pm.
Hou se tor rent in Addi1on
towndHp Call614-367-7466
Modern 1 bedroom apanment
Call 614 -448 -0390
Modern 3 bdr home. lg IN ingro om. all carpeted, modern 2 bdr. unfurni&amp;hed apt rn Crown
krt chen dlahwashftf'. range. re- Ctty Call614 -256-6620
frigerator, centr•l air , gas heat.
partial basement . 1360 per mo
1 bedroom apt tor rent Basrc
No pets Located near golf rent ltartt 1215. a month that
cou rs e Cell 614 446 2573 or includes all utihtin. Deposit
614-446-11 7 1
required of S200 . Contact Village Manor Apt Middleport
2 bedroom mob1le home at 614· 992-7787 Equal Housing
Evergreen. Ca ll 614-446 -7032
Opportunity
3 bdr house lo cated at 28
Vrnton St No pen. f300 dep
$300 mo nth . Call Ri ck 6144484113

Olive St .. Gallipollt. New &amp; ulld
wood-eoll•tov•. 8 pc wood LR
IUitl 1399, bunk bedl U99 ,
antron reclin81'1 189, n-. &amp;
uMd bedroom &amp;Uit•. r.ngu,
wringer wnhers, &amp; sho11. New
llvingroom &amp;U/111 1199-1199.
lampt. allo buying coal&amp; wood

Traders for rent. Aircond , cable,
beautiful river view. Kanaugt.
Foster· s Mob•le Home Park,

7926

41

FURNITURE\ 62

Call 614·379· 2435

304-578· 2338
coq~l ..ely

75

Op .. 8·6 Mon.·Sit. Closed

SWAIN

AUCTION •

County Appliance, lnc. Oood
u&amp;ed tppllances and TV Hit
Open 8AM to tiPM Mon ttlru

or 304-675-7926

HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES
Is your future sttll unsett led?
Check into the Army N1tion1l
Guard We h1ve good pay.
training, 1nd up to 118 ,000
avallabletn ~ucational benefitt
Serve plr1·time 304-675·3960

14x70 1260 include~ Wlttr &amp;
garbage. 160 security depo&amp;it.
No drrnkrng, fighting or pets
Call evening&amp; 614-367-7267.

44

2 blockt out Ma1on 3 bedroom,
garage. 2 acres 2 bedroom
rental. Make an offer Call
&amp;U -367 -0611

0395

2 bdr. fully furnrshed . adult&amp;
only. ut1ht1M pard. Call 614 446-4110

lots &amp; Acreage

2267

4 rooms , bath. partly futn1shed.
carpeted throughout Forced atr
fuel oil furnace. arr conditioned
Covered pat1o. metal bwld1ng
Located o n S10ry's Run Ad Call
1,4-367· 7568 or 614 -367 ·

Mobile Homes
for Rent

3 bdr with exptndo llvlngroom.
Nicfl yard. 314 3rd St Kenauga

- - - - - - - - ·lc6 bedroom 2 1h bath. large
kitchen . 6 1h years nii'N. 1 mile
east of Rutland S55.000 1 11
acre. 1611.30 Pool and deck
614-992-3543

42

·

0

WOlD
r::~:t;~' S@\\(\1¥\-~'El/JSII UMf
fdllld by CLU R. "'UAN - - - - - 0 four
Rearrange letters of tke
scrambled words be-

1TIJ Under Sail
ill1 One Day at a Time

Ctliklen Sew Supply, Vinton,

Rt-'ter-OW"ner

L~ST 'EAR'S rL'"'-~

1982 K1Wa11ki Spectfe. 4900
milel. 12000. Call 814· 742"
2086 or 614-742 -2703.
,~

2574 .

7881 or 614·446 -6610

... 1\IE ~S I/OIJ51'1LLW
MAFI.f 9/RUP OfoJ AT

1986 Yamaha 4 wheeler 80C&amp;
shah drtve 1800 firm Fir•
houll BIBSsing Rd. off Linool~
Pike.

. 2 1pace~ in Qhh) Valley Memory
COUNTRY M081LE Home Park, G1rdens in prime location. Call
Route 33, Nonh of Pomwoy. 814-446-7032 .
Largelott. Call 814-992· 7471.
1186 model ATC 3&amp;oxoo,..,•
Trailer tpiCet, tmaH children tition 1~ehau1t, tire~ , rim&amp; •
ttCWPted. At. 1, Locutt Rold , apae11r1, u:c . cand. • · 13 ll'ld'l
back of K &amp; K Mobile Hom -:
Ford 4 lug rim1. Jennings
COfT1Jound bow. Can 814·379-

St m Vinton. Call 8 14-246·
9434 before 5. 614 ·388-8147

Television
Viewing

1983 Honda Shadow. Call81 ""
448-31 12 evenings.
:

D-4 Catlplllar donr ol way blade,
good condttlon. 18,000. Call

Air condltionll'l. (2:1 1 1 6 wit
window Kerry ICool unht. {21
2:30 voh CWitrll unitt. c ..

BOON LOSER

"

Motorcycles

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 15 .

Ohio

Cell 614 ·446·7414.

EVANS ENTERPRISES . Jock·
oon, Dh. 514· 281· 5830.

Mobile home 1p1ce. good location . Calll514-4415·3817 .

7,1986

1985 Kewauki 460. 1982 660
Maxim Yamaha Sail or lf~l1

Plattic ciltem ttate IPPrDVed.
teptlc tenkl. pleltic
cul'&gt;lertl, metel cuhrerta . RON

614-245-9241.

Rottd. Coli 114·441-HII.

2 ltorv. 3 bclr house on N M11n

6 room hou1a 1 2 acrM. Double
cer garage. Loc1ted on Rose Hilt
Bargain priced $20 ,000 Call

74

1,000 ......... 12. 13. 14. 18.
16, 11.8. 8 "'II• ouiAt. 218.
Cell 814· 256-1251 .

4215.

3880.

lo'llelot. 614-992-5324

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by L1rry Wrighl

pla&amp;tic

dlttrict. Must 1ell 1215.000 C1ll

t21.900 btlance

Thursday. August 7, 1986

Furnilhed Rooms

0781

repo list.

Thu11day,

..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

one

Allel
.
• .
(iJI Nltht Helt Gttm·

bono and O'Brien oro baf·
fled when they receive
differing repom of 1 ·w~al·
thy mon't deeth (70
(R).
(gl Trapper John, M,O. (60
!llin.J
12:00 (I) Jeok 8enny
·
I)) MojO&lt; I.Nt.. 8eM. " ..._., ,. ,..tiiat Hhl! Toko

'"'"·I

•MIOUitDIMitAI'IM
I·

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another In !Ius samp ., 1 " ll.'&gt;ed
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. S"'"·' lc ttrl &gt;.
apostrophes, the length and formatiOn of the" '''
r al l
hints. Each day the code letters are differen1

I·"'

CKYPTOQUOTE
8-7

I II K
~

F W Z P

SKWI.OM

W

c-

w

I. M

s

I

1\ \

T F 1.: \\ II \ II I '

S X F K

w

I' I I

w

A K ll

A W N

XN

\

I
~

\1
II

I)S
IJWYWii
Y.. terday'a Cryptoquote: TifF: flll IT' , Jf TIW
TREE O F KNOWLEPGE ARE VA.Rilii JS I if. \ II ' T m:

STRONG INOEEO WHO CAN IJI(;E;sT Al.l.' II I il l· ~1
• MARY COLERIIlGE

611 Cil Rawhide
Cl Cll Hawaii fivo-0
liD

MOVIE : 'The Diary of
Anno Fronk"
12:20 ciJ MOVIE: 'Plan 9 lrom
Outer Speae'
12:30
(lJ (iS Late Night with
David Lettermen Tonigh1's
gue11 is comedienne Carol

e

Le1fer (60 mm ) In Ste re(l

IT

Bo SI of G•oucho

••

(]) Surfrn g: Ptpeline M as- ters From Oah u. HI
'
(]) Entertai n ment Ton•ght
J ohnny Math iS and Ot onne
W arwt ck d•Sc uss th e re turn to SOft hils In the r'f'IU •

sic indu stry (RI.

•

...•.

�,.

..

Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

"
Thursday, August 7, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

United Steelworkers picketiQg Ohio bus assembly plants
DELAWARE, Ohio (UP!)- The
Flxlble CoJ:l). was struck Wednes·
day by .some 700 United Steelworkers In a dispute over wage and
work· rule concessions.
Pollee said picket lines at Flxlble
plants in Delaware and Loudonville
were peacefu I.
About 400 work at the Delaware
plant and 300 at the Loudonville
plant. There are some 100 nonproduction and supervisory ' employet's In Delaware.

After several months of negotiations between the bus manufacturer and the union, talks broke off
late Tuesday. The contract ex~red
at 12:01 a.m. Wednesday.
Dan Martin, subdlsttict director
for the USW, said there are conflicts
over several non-Eeommic issues,
including seniority, workforce reductions, transfers andork rules.
In addition, he said, an Insurance
package offered by the company
requires the employees to pay too

much.
No new talks are scheduled, but
Martin sald an official of the
Federal Medlatkln and Oonclllatipn
Service was an ol:6erver at Tuesday's negotiations.
Flxlble President Mark Olbert
said ttl&gt; treekdown In talks was
"100 percent work-rule related ."
"We are ronvlnced the basic
ecommlc Issues can he re;olved,
but we have been unable to resolve

certain work-rule issues ... that in
the past have created unnecessary
and disruptive lneffldendes," 01bert said.
Another union ttflclal said the
two sidles also are far apart on
proposed pay Increases, but Olbert
said the company cannot afford to
offer larger hikes until rroductlvlty
is boosted.
"Obviously, if we are more
efficient, then we can sweeten the
wage offer," OIIJ&gt;rt said.

.•.

Ohio Lottery

,

Fair tabloid
inside today

'
The General Automotive CoJ:l). of city beginning in June 199J. WithlrJ
Ann Arbor, Mich., purchased Flxl· six months, 637 of them had been
ble from the Grumman CoJ:l). In removed from service because of
1lm..As recently as 1981, there were cracks In their Mrames andengln~
cradles.
~
about 2.700 employees.
There
were
851
Flxlbles
Iii
Grumman Flxlble blses were
;
removed from service In New York service at the time.
During tile next three year(
Feb. 7, 1984, after offlls of the
Metropolitan Transportation Au- numerous other defects were dlsro: ·
thority mmplalned that npea ted vered. Last March, the city anmechanical problems madle them munced that the last of the busei
had been sold, 814 of them bou~
unsafe.
back
by General Automotive
The buses were delivered to the

•

at y
Vol.36, No.87
Copyrighted 1986

WOMEN'S

Sport Socks
White terry with colored toe
and top. Size 9 to 11.
REG. SJ.99

CLEARANCE

BOYS' SHORT SLEEVE

SUMMER
JEWELRY

KNIT
SHIRTS
8 18.
Vour Choice

NOW
BACK·TO-SCHOOL
SPECIAL!

WESTLOX

1/2 PRICE

RCA 19 INCH

Alarm Clock

COLOR PORTABLE

Electric · Iighted dia I sweep second hand · dependable accuracy.

-XL-100 Chassis
-High Contrast Picture Tube
-Pewter or Walnut Finish

.

CHILDIIEN'S

JACKET SAlE
SAVE 30%

Lined and unlined jackets.
REG. 19.00 to 136.00

Hanes
Back-to-School
Sale!

Sale Prlee•

29 $
Sizes 29 to 42 waist - famous brands. Pre-washed
blue denim. Straight leg or
boot flare styles.

you can

By CHARLES MJI'CHEU
MOSCOW (UP!) - Former
American spy Edward Lee Howard, who betrayed U.S. secrets
: after he was dropped by the CIA,
has been granted Soviet political
: asylum In Washington's most dam. aging defection In a quarter of a
century.
Howard, in his mid-30s, ls
· considered by U.S. officials to have
personaUy destroyed the U.S. spy
. network in the Soviet capital and Is
· the first known CIA officer ever to
· detect to the Soviet Union.
: Soviet radio, the Tass news
agency and the evening newspaper
Izvestia all carrted the announce. ment Thursday that the Presidium
of the Supreme Soviet, the coun. try's parliament, had granted
· Howard's request for asylum.
"Guided by humane consldera. lions, the presidium of the U.S.S.R.
Supreme Soviet compiled with the
request of Edward Lee Howard. He
has been granted the right to live ln
the U.S.S.R. for political motives,"
the government announcement
said.
"He has stated that the motive for
request is that he has to hide from
U.S. secret services which unfoundedly persecute him," the threeparagraph anoouncement said.
Howard had been the object da n
lnternatklnal manhunt since he
slipped wt of his New Mexico home
on Sept. 21 while under survelllallce
by the FBI '011 susplcJon of ~ylng
ior the Soviets.
O!ficlals In the United States
described Howard's betrayal as the

MEN'S AND BOYS

SALE!

BACK-TO- SCHOOL

MEN'S

MEN'S SJ0.9S

CHILDREN'S

SHORT SLEEVE

SWEAT
SHIRTS

JEANS
SALE
lH

SHIRTS
Includes all of our knit
shirts, sport shirts and
Van Heusen dress shirts.
Good selection.

and· Wrancler jeans
for ittle boys and girls.
Includes the new &amp;no
straight legs. Pin slriped . '
jeans, elastic waist styles ,. ,_,
and cowboy cuts. Com- ··
plete range of children's

1/2 PRICE

S. M. L and XL in a big
selection of colors.
Long sleeves, crew
necks - Wrangler or
Springfool. Save.

sizes.
Back-to-School time is super savings time when
buy Hanes®Men's and Boys' underwear.
in a range of styles, sizes, and colors, Hanes offers
um;urt)assed selection lor all the men in your family.
savings you can measure with Hanes special
rebate on Boys' Red Label®and Boys' fashion
lunri""''"A' during this big Back-to-School Sale.
!Remember, Hanes gives you value and quality you
d~p~nd on .

BACK-TO-SCHOOL

PLUS BIG SIZES
~-

/': JEANS
SALE
lee and Wranlier quality
stretch jeans. strai~t
lefl, tapered sties. pt ·
lites, 5-pockets.
Junior Sizes 3 to IS
Missy Sizes 6 to 20
Extra Sizes 32 to 44
Reg. 120.0 to 137.00

MEN'S AND IOYS'

TUBE SOCKS

Sale Prle ..

$1397 to
$2587
•-------------'-~/

OPEN FRIDAY
TIL 8 P.M.
'

.••

'·

UNIFORM
SAlE
IY CIEST

SWEAT SHIRTS Bla
Wranaler 1nd Sprin&amp;foot
- lon&amp;liems.

sa·95 Matching SW.I Pants...

. 19 · 4
7 S7 19

_________.___________ '

..,_

~D.S

ion colors, Comfort ' ·

. •·.' ..
.'
· . ;•.1t.

R~g. $2.25 ............ '1.65
Rig • 12 • 50 ''""'"""' 11 • II

sus ............. sua

Regular panty hose,
to-waist, knee hi&amp;fls,
trol top, Ultra Sense

REG. Sl.29 TO S4.3 l

BOYS $895

!~:'.~.~o~i\h~~~~~t~.~-- White

~~'P RI!J.

PANTY
HOSE
SALE

S9,00 ........... S7,19
su.oo ....... '11.99
S21.QO ....... SJ6.79
S29 .00 ....... S23.1

selection of solid colors lncludln&amp; school',.~
'·
colors. Sim6$to 20

First qUIIIty by Hana - Boys

NO N9NSENSE

ladies' sizes 6 to 20 and
14% to 24'h. Pant suits,
dresses, lib colts, tops,
pants, skirts.

Reg. $10.00 ..... S7.98
Reg. 514.00 .... 511.18
Reg. S19.00 .... 51 S.18
~~Reg. 524.00 .... 519.18
Reg. 532.00 .... 525.58
.SCIIOOL SALE!

Russell Roush

SI0.9S Sweat Pants
to Makh ........ '8.44

Our new fall collection of
girts' dresses is on sale
now. Pinafore Dresses
Jumpers, Pageant Dresses
and Drop-waist Dresses.

INCLUDES RED LABEL AND BLUE LABEL

WOMEN'S

SAl£ PRICES
START AT ONLY

DRESS
SALE

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Fri~ay, August B. 1986

•

·)

Sale Prleed

99C to

'

. .7

f if.;. ..
-""'~~:
:rff':~c
I

·.

' I

• ? ( '...

•

$345
-~-------

· -. . .

Elkrloll
.......,..,
...j '
,,,.,.., •...
,

most serious blow to U.S. Intelligence operations in the Soviet
capital since 1900.
The information he gave to the
Soviet intelllgence agency KGB led
to the death of Soviet engineer AG.
Tolkachev, who was considered the
CIA's best contact in Moscow,
according to U.S. inteUigence
sources.
Soviet reports during the search
for Howard said that at least five
U.S. "diplomats" were caught
spying in the Soviet capital. The
latest Amertcan thrown oot for
~ytng was Ertk Sites, caught In
May.
Numerous Soviet contacts also
reportedly disappeared In the wake
of Howard's dealings with the KGB.
Howard's activities were uncovered when Soviet spy Vltaly
Yurchenko defected to the West on
July 28, 1985, bringing with him
information that a "Roger" had
been seiling informatkln on the
Moscow operation.
Yurchenko, who later returned to
Mosrow, did not know his precise
Identity, but the CIA Instantly
rocognlzed the description of the
man as Howard.
A 1972 University of Texas
graduate, Howard was recruited by
the CIA in 1981 and led his classes In
countersurvelllance and other spy
craft, but a probe Into his personal
IHe found him unsuitable for a
Moscow posting.
After....JJI,r.ll!!.lr. " lnvest!gatiQns
showed deep problems, the agency
dropped him entirely .
Alt!Dugh he apparently did not

Pataskala mourns
area native's death

JACKETS
Perfect for early lall wear -

boys'
s1zes 1 to 18, men's $, M and XL.
School colors included .

BACK-TO-SCHOOL SALE

en tine
1 Seclion, 10 Pogeo 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newapeper

Ex-agent's defection
called most damaging

Sizes to
Good
selection for back-toschool wear.

Beads, Chains, Earrings, Pins, Rings
and Children's Jewelry.

Daily Number: 63 7

Russell Roush, formerly of
Middleport, died unexpectedly
on July W in Pataskala. He was
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred
Roush of Middleport and a
brother to Mrs. Maida Long, ·~
teacher In the Eastern Local
School District.
The following editorial appeared In tribute to Mr. Roush In
The Pataskala Standard:
"When Russell Roush suddenly and tragically passed
away, Sunday, July W, this
community lost much more than
just the librarian for the schools
and a valued lrlend and oftlcer
for the Pataskala Public LIbrary. It lost a person whose
mere presence added a touch rl.
class to whatever activity Russ
engaged ln. It lost a person who,
In the words . of Dr. Terry
Higgins of the Southwest Licking
· Local School District, 'provided
expertise to the Dlsb'lct ln so
many ways - from serving as
District Librarian to organizing
the ~ummer enrichment and
summer school programs to
working with disadvantaged
students.' Dr. Higgins said,
'Russell will be sorely missed .
His death was a loss to thfi entire
community.'
"Russell Roush came this way
but once, this graduate r1.

Middleport High School. arriving here in 1970 to take over as
Ubrarlan at Watkins Memortal
High School. Enroute to Pataskala, he graduated from Rio
Grande College in 1952 and
attended .Ohlo University, Marshall University and the University of Utah. picking up a total d
189 college credit hours. He held
a professional teac bing certlfl·
cate in English and Library
Science, and utilized his teaching sklll throughou t his career.
In 1962, he took a posltkln with
Oak Hill Local Schools as an
English teacher. In 19ffi, he
became Oak Hill Schools librarIan and served In that capacity
until 1968. He came to Central
Ohio and a posltkln as librarian
aat the · Liberty-Union High
School In Baltimore, staying
there until 1970 when he came to
this distrtct.
"Russell was a recipient of the
Martha Holden Jennings Foundation Grant for the Pataskala
Public Library and a recipient r:l.
the Ohio Arts Council Grant for
the Library, enabling the library
to establish and continue a
center for the Preservation of
the Lost Arts. He was a board
member on the Lost Arts
A~latlon serving as coordlna·
tor for all the Lost Arts
Festivals.
"Ru9sell served his communIty as clerk-treesurer and consultant for the Public Library In
Pataskala. He was a familiar
face to aU at the library.
"Russell died last Sumay, but
his life will go Ill In the minds d
the many peo~e - young and
old - wrose lives he touched.
"There's an old saying that
tells of a person who wishes that
the world may be a better place
because of that person's rres·
ence here, and that Is the
measure of success we all wish
for. ·Russell attained that success, for Russell's ..wrld In this
community Is a better place
because he was here.
"The Standard and the community sharenf In the tremend·
oos lo~m felt by his wHe, Emma,
and their two sons, Erk: and
Olrlstopher."

know the names of the American
spies already working in Moscow,
he handed over details of their
operations to the Soviets, who acted
on the information .
Howard, bitter over being fired,
began making trips to Austria in
1984 where he allegedly sold the spy
Information to the KGB.
The FBI set up surveillance, but
Howard and his wife , Mary- who
also had been trained by the CIA for
Moscow- were already practicing
evasion techniques.
Although FBI agents were outside their house, Howard slipped
out of his Santa Fe home and Into
his wife's car as she drove slowly
past on the night of Sept. 21. The
FBI did mt realize for 24 hours that
he had escaped.
He Is beUeved to have arrived in
Moscow by way ct. Cen tral America
and Finland, according to a trail of
credit card slips.
Mrs. Howard, who had refused to
cancel her husband's credit cards
even as he was evading the
International manhunt, has told
neighbors she plans to move to
Minnesota with her parents.
According to the experiences of
other Western spies who have
defected, Howard may never enjoy
the trust of the Soviet Union and
could be submerged into a routine
life harshly different from the one
he knew in the United States .

'

••

•

Muriel Bradford. Deadline for open class entries lor
the lair which IEglns Tuesday was 4 p.m. loday
(Friday) . Entries were accepted oo both 'lbursday
and Friday.

Kaiser, union agree on principles
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (UP!)- aft er two days of meetings this receivership within 00 to 00 days H
Principles considered crucial to the week.
its financial situation doesn't
firm's survival have been accepted
"The rrltlcal is~ue is survival. To Improve.
In wrtt!ng by Kaiser Aluminum &amp; achieve this we must meet our plant
After showing its first net rroflt In
Chemical Corp. managers and the challenges in the fastest and most years in the first quarter d 1986, the
union work force at the firm's cost-efficient manner."
company lost $2!.6 million In the
Ravenswood plant.
Comment was declined on both second quarter.
"These principles wUI govern sides of the fl&gt;nce.
The two sides, in this week's
how we work with each other and
However, workers who sat in on signed agreement, vowed to coopresolve problems," read a docu- the meetin~;s said rompany offi- erate with eac h other.
ment signed by company and cials Indicated Kaiser's lending
United Steelworkers union officials instllutlons might place the firm in
(Continued on Page 10)

Alleged Deaver perjury investigated
WASHINGTON !UPI) - Rep.
John Dlngell says his House
subcommittee will be asked to refer
evidence of possible perjury by
Michael Deaver to a special
prosecutor Investigating lobbying
activities of the former White
House aide.
Dlngell, D-Mich., sald Thursday
an uncompleted staff report for his
Energy and Commerce subcommlttee has found "serious conflict"
with several aspects of Deaver's
testimony to the panel last May.
Dingell said the panel also would
be asked to adopt the staff report,
based rn a lengtby Investigation of
Deaver's multimillion-dollar lobbyIng business, Including an Inquiry
by the General Accounting Office,

when It is completed .
Randy Turk, a lawyer for
Deaver, said of the matter. "My
sense is It's Inappropriate to
comment until such time as we get
dllclally notiHed ofwhat'sgo!ngon
and ha ve an opportunity to read
whatever Jeport they ' ve
romplled ."
On May 29, a specia l federal murt
named Whitney North Seymour
Jr., a former U.S. attorney from
New York , as a special prosecutor
to investigate charges Deaver
violated three provisions of fl&gt;deral
et hics laws by lobbying for Canada
and Puerto Rlco.
DingeU said in a leleplDne
interview that the panel will be
asked to refer to prosecutors
"matters which possibly involve

•

perjury in his !Deaver's I testimony
undler oath tJ&gt;rore the subcommittee, Including matters with which
Mr. Deaver's testimony is In
serious conflict."
He said there are "several
instances of possible perjury" by
Deaver. a longtime friend of
PresiMnl and Mrs. Reagan, who
was allowed to keep his White
House pass for about a year after he
left office on May 10, 1985.
Deaver. who has steadfastly
maintained his innocence, testified
in executive session to the subcommiltff' in early May about his
lobbying for Canada on the acid
rain issue, a matter ln which he
participated while al the White
House.

Michael Deaver

Union leader terms drug tests "public relations'
By IRA R. ALIEN
WASHINGTON iUPli - President Reagan's eagerness to .un·
dergo a drug test to set an an
example for civil servants Is "a
public relations gambit," says a
spokesman for the largest federal
empklyees union.
To advance the president's crusade for a drug-free workplace,
Reagan, Vice President George
Bush and 78 high-ranking a idles are
to take part ln the test administered
by Nayy doctors at the White House
starting Monday.
White House spokesman Albert
Brashear said Thursday that the
testing, suggested by presidential
drug pollcy advtser Dr. Carlton
Turner and chief domestic adviser
John Svahn. Is strictly voluntary.
But he added , "I'm sure It would
be noted" Hanyone not on vacation

Dry days assisted,
hindered fanners
By United Press International
Last week's dry days meant both
good news and bad news for Ohio
farmers.
The Ohio Agricultural Statistics
Service nported Wednesday that
the rain-free weather provided
excellent harvesting weather for
small grain and hay, but some
crops srowed signs r1 wjltlng,
especially In the southeastern
sections of the state.
There were 6.2 d&lt;!YS suitable for
fleldwolil In the week endled
Friday, wlth field activities tnchKI·
tna sma11 grain harvest. baling hay
and straw, spraying Insects · and
weeds and preparing tor taU

sEedlngs.

CN lf!U n~ "

ENTRIES - Joanne Lawrence and sons, Howle
and Danny, were among residents registering t!Eir
open class entries for tiE upromlng Meigs County
Fair Thursday afternoon with Fair Board Secretary

.

or sick-leave refused to give a urine using drugs," he sald. But if the expects to require tests of federal
sample.
tests show presence of marijuana, employees In safety and national
He said results, which take 10 to cocaine, PCP, heroin, ampheta m- securtty jobs.
12 days to determine, would not be Ines or barbiturates, he said, they
By giving four days notice r:l. the
announoed for privacy reasons.
will be re-exa mined .
White House tests. anyone using
But It Is the rrtvacy question thai
Anyone found to be using drugs hard drugs could escape detection.
has unions representing many of after a second test would be dfered Brashear said residual amounts of
the 2.8 million civil servants angry . counseling by the White House
cocaine, heroin and PCP In the body
"God, I'm mad," said Red medical unit , run by the Navy, disappear within one to four days.
Evans, spokesman for the National which is adm inistering the tests.
Only marijuana could show up for a
Federation of Federal Employees,
Brashear said the adminlstrat ion period d up to 10 days. he said.
the oldest and largest such union,
representing 150,00J workers.
"It's nothing more than a jJJbllc
relatklns gambit," Evans said.
"NFFE is not at all opposed to
testing a worker whose conduct or
manner would indicate something
Is wrong. But just wllly-nllly
PORTSMOtrrH, Ohio (UPII - An lnvestlga t!on into the cause of a
deciding everyone ought to be
leak
of an undetermined amount of uranium hex~ nuoride from a
tested is a violation of prtvacy and
roof
vent
at the Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant was Wlderway
reasonable-cause statutes, a very
today.
clear Invasion of privacy. It's
Tim Matchett, a spokesman for Goodyear Atomic Corp.'s fa cility.
terriblY unfair to federal workers."
said
the leak Is believed to have begun at approximately 3 p.m.
Although there are no plans for
Thursday
and continued for two hours.
first lady Nancy Reagan or her
Matchett
said that based on the short duration of the release and
staff to be tested for drugs, press
the
nature
of
the material, plant oltlclals do not anticipate any
secretary Elaine Crispen said the
adverse
effects
on employees, residents d the ares or the
president's wife "certainlY would
environment.
volunteer."
"We believe the cause to be Improper valving," Matchett said. "A
valve In an Incorrect position caused the rompound to he discharged
A memo was smt Thursday to
through the plpe."
the 78 staff members, with the rank
Results of analysts r1 the rontentsofa special air sa mpler attached
of assistant to the president or
to
the vent pipe are expected to be available today, Matchett said.
higher, Informing them or the
Technicians
will use the analysis to determine the quantity and
voluntary testing program.
enrichment
of
the matertal tha escaped.
"On Monday, the White House
The
leak
was
detected by a plant operator.
senior staff led by the president and
December,
the plant, operated tlr the U.S. Department of
Last
the vice president will begin
Energy by Goodyear, reported the VEI!ting r1 a quantity of uranium
voluntary drug testing to set the
hexafluoride over a three-week perkld.
example and lead the way tlward
The lnvestlgaUon into the cause or that leak concluded that there
the president's goal of a drug-tree
was no significant Impact on the envlronmen t, employees or
workplace." Brashear announced.
residents rl. the area. It was caused by "mlsoperatlon and a Ieeklng
"He believes !Ill federal emvalve," Matchett said.
·
ployees deserve a drug-free envlrMatchett
said
the
Incident
Is
being
Investigated
t1i
Goodyear
OIIIIlellt and that federal employees
offtclals.
should set an example," he said.
"We do not expect anyone to be

Goodyear investigates cause
of leak at Scioto facility

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