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                  <text>Page 10-ll)e Daily Santilli

Monday, August 11, 1986

Pomeroy-Middi8PQ11. Ohio

---EOcal .~riefs:----..W.Va. man ·faces coal schem~ charges .
Portland PTO cancels meeting

PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (UP!)
-A Parkersburg man arrested by
the FBI Is to appear In U.S. Dlsbict
Court In Memo)lls. Tenn .. Wednes-

The Portland PrO m~lng scheduled for Tuesday has been
canceJe4 due' to the Meigs County Fair. The meeting Is being

reschedllled tor Tuesday, A,ug. 19, 7 p.m., at !be school.

Squads respond to nine calls

day to answer his Indictment In an
alleged·scheme to bilk Investors of
$1.2 mWJon.
Samuel Morehead, 54, was taken

tD CharleStown were he ·posted a

$10,1XD bond and then released.
Morehead Is accus.d ~being one
of six peoJie and four defunct coal

InsPectors.

State finds misplaced files

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports nine calls
over !be Wl!l!liend, five Sunday and four Saturday. .
Saturday, at 11: 58 a.m., Racine to RIVerfront Road, Letart Falls,
for John Hall who was dead on arrival; Racine at 1:01 p.m. to
Pomeroy Health Care Center for Gertrude Dittmar to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; l'omeroV at 4:24 p.rll. b Country MobUe Home
Park for Mariln Oiler to Veterans Memorial Hospital; later to
Pleasant V~ HQspltal; Pomeroy at 5:59p.m. transported Charles
Whittlngton to Veterans Meroorial Hospital; Rutland at 8 p.m. to
Meigs Mine No. 2 for Charles Flynn Jr. to O'Bieness Memortal
Hospital.
.
Sunday at 2:41a.m., Racine to Ohio 338 for Henry Lemley to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse F1re Depar1ment at 4:23
a.m. to a tree lire at !be VIctor llyl!ell residence (II VInegar Street;
Middleport at6: 14 p.m. to the Middleport Pool for Toby Hill to Holzer
Medical Center; Middleport at 10: 59 p.m. to North Fifth Street for
Gwennie While to Veterans Me1110rtal Hospital.

COLUMBUS, Ohto (UP!)- The
que:; don ot how more than 100dairn
rues from the Ohio Bureau of
Workers' Compensation ended up
In a carton destined for a flea
market is what the Ohio State
Highway Patrol is trying to answer.
The rues, containing ortglnal
medical bWs and records of
workers Injured on the job, were
sent to !be Columbus office ri. the
Cleveland Plain Dealer which
turned them over to the State
Highway Patrol, the newspaper
reported Sunday.
The newspaper got the carton of
lUes from Carl Whitaker of Marysville, an Injured worker who said he
got them from a friend who Is an
Investigator lor the bureau.
Wh!Jaker said !be Investigator,
Scott Van Hom, recentzy gave him
several boxes containing stereo
equipment 1o sell at a flea market.
Whitaker said he took the boxes to
his traDer In Marysvllle.
"I thought it was like speakers

Area church slates homecoming
Hazel Community Church between Portland and Long Bottom rn
Ohio 124 wW be having Its homecQ!IIIng this Sunday with Rev. Carl
Hicks as speaker. Singers wUI be !be Bissell Brotbers, Linda
Dallli!WOOd and Jan Lavender. Services wiU be at 9:30 and 1:30.
Potluck dinner at noon.

London Pool closed Thursday
London Pool. Syracuse, wiU be closed Thursday lor the Meigs
County Fair. The pool will also be dosed Aug. 26-29 and then reopen
Aug. J0.31. Sept. lis the last day !be pool wiU be open and swimming
wUI be free that day.

and stuff," Whitaker saw: "Scott
called me up later and said I might
want to bum the boxes he gave me
because there were roaches in hJs
house and trere might be roaches in
the boxes. That's when I looked In
the boxes and found the Illes."
Wllltaker said he took the files to
!be newspaper because he was
concerned that it might he illegal
for him to have other people's
confidential medical claims.
Aroong the claims In the box was
one he had ftled
being tnjured
In a dlemical spill wbUe working as
a security guard.
"Under no circumstances can I
possibly think of any reason why
anyho(\V siDuld have anything like
this," said bureau Administrator
James L. Mayfield. "We consider
lUes to be a sacred thing. This just
doesn't make any sense. It's weird
as hell."
It appeared that most of the
records and lUes in the carton had
been recentlY referred to the

Columbus ciftce of Investigations,
where Van Horn works. He is
responsible for Investigating claims
made by workers In central Ohio,
and nearly aU of the workers whose
flies were in the carton live in
central Ohio.
Highway Patrol investigators
have questioned Whitaker and Van
Horn, but have refused comment.
Mayfield. said !be bureau had 5
mUUon active claims and that it
was not uruwal t&gt;r lUes to get lost
In the bureau. Mayfield said that
was why no one noticed the missing
documents.
The bureau processes, Investigates and pays medical bills and
dlsabUity benefits for people Injured oc kWed on the job.
Some workers said they have
been wailing a year or roore for
word from the bureau on the status
of their claims.

after

Ida Denison

son of !be late Louts A. and Susan
McGarvey Rlepenhoff, he was the
Ida Denison, 94, Rt. 3, Albany, owner~ Wellston Bottllng Co. from
died Monday morning at O'Bieness 1923 untU his rellrement In 1972.
Memorial Hospital, Athens. FunHe was a member of St. Peter
eral arrangements are to be and Paul Catholic Church, Wellannounced later by Blgony-Jordan ston. was a life member of the
Funeral Home, Albany.
Eagles Lodge at Wellston, was a life
member or Elks Lodge 466, Jackson,
was a member of !be WholeBy ElAINE S. POVICH
But !be second big loophole could John W. Hall
sale Beer and Wine Association of
WASHINGTON (UP!)- Three show up In that ~ay period.
John W. Hail, 74, 'l:lJ'Sl Riverfront Ohio, and was a founding member
loopooles lurking In the Gramm·
Since the dellcitesdmate Oct.11s
of the Wellston Recreation
Rudman balanced budget law may also based at1y on full-year appro- Road in Letart Falls, died Saturday Department.
at
his
home.
allow Congress to meet this year's prtations bWs alreadY passed, It is
Surviving are his wife, Nell
A retired farmer and coal miner,
deftcit target - ( I I paper-but they possible O&gt;ngress could roll aU of
Riepenhof!;
a daughter, Mrs. Fred
could wreak fiscal havoc with next the large money measures - such Mr. Hall was born in Grayson, Ky .. (Mary Lou I Michael of Jackson;
year's limits.
as defense, agriculture and foreign on Jan. 18, 1912, tn the late General three sons, Joseph J. Ril'penhoff of
The first Gramm-Rudman loop. aid - Into a huge "continuing and Carrie Burton Hall.
Survivors include one sister, Jackson, Charles A. Riepenlxlff of
hole appears next Friday when resolution" that would stop short of
Allanta, Ga., and James P. Riepen congressional and administration funding the programs for a lull Stella Fleshman of Letart Falls;
hoff
rt Wellston; 10 grandchUdren;
economists take their "snapsoot" of year. Thus, !bey would not "count" ooe daughter, Marguerite Truman and a brother, John P. Riepenooff
of West Virginia; and several
the economy to detennlne tbe size in !be Oct. 1 picture.
of Columoos.
nieces and nephews.
of the llscal1987 deficit.
"You could .. . IJ'OVIde a short
He·was preceded in death by four
Graveside services wUI he TuesBecause of the way !be law is C.R. to get you below ... to get away
brothers and ope sister.
wrttten, the estimate wiU be based from the bigger," Panetta acknow· day, 2 p.m., at Letart Falls
Services wW be lD a.m. Wednes·
Cemetery
with
Rev.
Uoyd
Grimm
in part either on llscal1987 federal ieged. He said the shortfall could be
day
in St. Peter and Paul Catholic
officiating. There wW be ro visiting
funding bWs already passed or made up !be next year or in a
Church,
WPIIston, with the Rev.
hours at Ewing Funeral Home.
and ·thls Is the catch- last year's separate pieced Iegltdation.
John Swickard offlciaiing. Burial
presumably lower allocation If no
The result woold be a much
wiU be In Mount Calvary Cemetery,
bill for thlsyear'samount has made higher deficit estimate for fiscal (:harles Riepenhoff
Wellstm. Friends may call at J.P.
It through Congress. .
1988, the year Gramm-Rudman
Rog&lt;!rs Funeral Home, Wellston,
Charles A. Riepenhoff, 84, 1 from 24 and 7-9 p.m. Tuesday.
Not rne flscal1987 approprtations calls llr the red Ink to be reduced to
Hickory
Drive, · Wellston. died
bill has been sent to President $l08 bUUon.
An Elks service wU1 be held in thl'
Reagan.
·Loophole No. 3, not a direct Sunday In Jenkins Memorial Nurs- funeral home at 6:30p.m. Tuesday.
"There's no question that !be consequenre of the Gramm- Ing Home, Wellston.
Rosary wUI be said In !be furerai
Born Dec. 11, 1901. In WI'Uston, home at 7 p.m. Tuesday.
snapshot Aug. 15 is not going to be Rudman law, is that slower ecoan accurate reflection or what nomic growth itself wW add to the
ultimately wiU he adopted by deficit. The Congressional Budget
Congress and put In effect In '87," O!ftre and the administration's
said Rep. Leon Panetta, 0-Calif .. Ofllce of Management and Budget
South Central Ohio
who helped last year to dralt the predict slow growth for the rest of
Oblo Exlalded Forecast
Becoming
partly cloudy today,
Wednesday through Friday
House's version of the Gramm· this year· though they predict an
A slight dlance of showers or
with a chance of showers and highs
Rudman bill.
upturn next year.
Aug. :!&gt; Is when the "snapshot" is
"II wedowhatwe aresilpposed to In the upper 70s. MosUy clear thunderstorms Wednesday and
developed and wUi probably show a do, we meet the largo!!," said Sen . tonight, with a low In the mid 50s. Thursday, with fair weather 00
deftclt in !be neighborhood of $lro Warren Rudman. R-N.H., co· Mostly sunny Tuesday, with highs Friday. Highs wlll range from the
low to mid 80s each day. Overnight
billion to $165 billion - requirlng author of the balanCEd budget law. near ro.
lows wDI be in !be 50s early
Congress to cut Sll bUUon or $25 Rudman said he had not heard the
The pr~habUity of precipitation is Wednesday and rang&lt;! from the low
bUUon to meet the $144 billion fiscal talk of delaying bUls to get around
30 percent today and near zero to mid ros Thursday and Friday
1987 Gramm-Rudman limit.
!be law.
Congress then has untU Oct. 1 lo
But he cautioned that slow
Windsand
wiUTuesday.
he from the west 1o
meet its obllgation to reduce !be growth could leave the deficit tonight
northwest
near
10 mph today and
deftcit or face another esdmate of topping $00 bUlion even with
the excess and a pollticaUy difficult congressional action.
light and northerly IDnlght.
vote on broad automatic ~djng
~;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
cuts called for In the ballinced 1
·1
budget law.

Deficit law foophole
studied by Congress

Ohio, area weather scene

The Indictment says theconsplra·
tors would tell prospects of quick
returns 6n no-risk Investments
while knowing investors would lose
their rroney.
Morehead and his company,
M.P. Coal Corp., had otfices In
Parkersburg, Germantown, Tenn.,
and Lexingtoo, Ky.
Also arrested and named in the
same Indictment as Morehead
were Manuel Yopp, 61, and M.
Wesley Yopp U, 30, both of
CorOOva, Tenn.; Bertsll Smith, 47,
of Memphis; Walter Powell Jr., 50,
of Barbourville, Ky.; and James
Sullivan, 47, of,Bowllng Green, Ky.
Other companies Indicted were
First Unkm Coal Corp. of Memphis,
Coal ResourCes Co. rl. Memphis,
and Powell Minerals Corp. cl.
BarllourvUie, Ky.
Morehead and the others were
charged with Ulegalltles in the coal
brokertng business, resulting in
conspiracy, mall fraud, wire fraud,
and aiding and abetting violations.

Figuring the odds
of Ohio's lottery

Courthouse offices to close
O!fices of the Meigs County Courthouse wiU close at noon on
Thursday so that officials and employees can attend the Meigs
Coonty Fair.

companies char!Jed In a scheme lor
allegedly cheadng Investors IE·
tween June 1981 and June N!:l. The
charge• resulted from an blvestlgation by the FBI and postal

COLUMBUS, Ohio (.UPii Mathematicians know that the
history of hits and misses in a
lottery drawing has no hearing on
the outcome d. the next drawing.
But what the heck, it's stUIIun to
figure out which numbers are hot
and which are sleepers.
Statistically, the numbers drawn
in last Wednesday's Super Lotto
game - 13, 30, 32, 33, 38 and 40 have the same chance of coming up
this Wednesday as any other
six-number combinations: 1 in
7,ffi9,52.
But who would play them again
knowing numbers on tl]e numbers.
So far. there are two holdouts.
The numbers 35 and 36 have yet to
be drawn in Super Lotto, but 23 has
popped up seven times.
Ohio Lottery security measures
ensure that none of the numbered
balls used in the televised drawings
has any advantage or handicap.
The aroount of paint, for example,
used to number the balls cannot
give one boll a weight advantage
over another.
II the paint were a factor, ball No.
1 would be the mostapttobedrawn,
but It has come up only once.
The rrumbers 1 through 9, in fact,
have hit a total &lt;1 ll dmes, which Is
two·thirds t1 t!~expected total fora
random group of nine numbers If ali
numbers came up the same
amo\lnt of times.
Higher numbers have enjoyed an
edge on lower ones. Numbers 23
through 44 have been drawn 85
. times; tlxlse from 1 to 22 have been
drawn 65 dmes.
Ev
en numbers have mme up 74
tlmes
and odd ones 76 times.
L
" ucky" 7 andslx ctherrrumhers1, 2, 6, 10,11 and 17- have oome up
only once, wbUe "unlucky" 13 and
four other numbers -31, 32, 34 and
40 - have hit six dmes.
Many gamblers believe that

run, numbers that haven't been
drawn very often are sleepers that
can he expectEd to come up soon.
One thing that's rertaln Is the
lottery's abWty to draw players.
This week's Super Lotto jackpot Is
estimatEd at $7.5 million, enhanced
by a ro win, rollover drawing last
week.
In 25 drawings, 14 have had no
winner. The larg&lt;!st jackpot bi
Ohio's Super Lotto thus far was $:J:1
miiUon. The'smallest jackpots were
$2.5 million each to two winnerS
July 30.

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Saturday Admissions - CarlQs
Snowden, Pomeroy; Gertruile 'tifitmar, Pomeroy; Ondy Sexton,
Middleport; · Steven Bachner,
Middleport.
Saturday Discharges - Leona
Wallace, Clifford Icenhower.
Sunday Admissions - Henry
Lemley, Portland; wuuam Hart,
Athens; Anne Davis, Middleport;
Annette Boyd, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges - Anna
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Daily Number: 270
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•

at y
Vol.36. No.69

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel staff WrMer
Strong complaints against ConsoUdated Communications Group,
which serves the town with cable
television service, were lodged by
Middlep'o rt Village Council
members Monday night.
Present to hear the complaints
was Marty Crawiord, Point Pleasant, firm representative,
CouncUman Jack Satter1leid
complained that the company had
made promises to the community
and has not fulfWed those promises.
He said he had received more
complaints from townspeople
about television cable service than
all other complaints put together.
Satterfield commented that he wUI
never vote for another rate increase

for the company.
Sei'Yice 'terrible'

Councilman James Clatworthy
commented that ro percent of the
complaints he receives from constituents Involve the cable televi·
sion service. Clatworthy said that
service in his own home is terrible
and that a television serviceman
has advised him that the trouble Is
not In the Sl'l.
Clatworthy told Crawford if one
more Ohio station Is removed from
the channels provided by the
company, the company can take
out the service to his home.
Crawford agreed to send a serviceman to the Clatworthy home
Tuesday morning to look at any
problems.
CouncU President Dewey Horton

stated that the community is not
going to he happy untU WOUB Is
restored to the service and remarked that "we don't want any
Ohio stations taken off the service."
Horton charged thatthe company is
rot listening to its customers. He
Indicated that he has received
many complaint calls about the
company.
CouncUman Bob GUmore said
that he has had many problems
with the service In hJs home and
they slarted after the company had
gone through an updating of
~ulpment.

Several &lt;1 the oouncil oomplalned
also that it Is difficult to get through
on the toll free Une to lodge
complaints. ·

Wood noted more specific
By PAM MeCALLL'lTER
chang&lt;!s
which helped !be restauOVP staff Writer
RIO GRANDE - Bob Evans rant prosper In flsca1198i. Among
Farms lnc. may le a corporation !bern were Increased business for
"down on the farm," but as meals besideS breakfast; the addiMonday's annual shareboklers' tion of luncheon salads and sandmeeting made clear, the year for wiches for the business cUentele;
the corporation was shaped by and lncroosed business lxlurs for
events reaching far beyond the Rio restaurants that show a prol!t.
In the past year, the company
Grande farm.
The decrease in American tour- opened three new restaurants, a
Ism abroad, lor Instance, helped number consistent with the 15-to-20
account for the 26 percent growth in percent annual growth rate Bob
restaurant sales over the past year. Evans Farms tries to maintain,
Robert S. Wood, executive vice Daniel Evans said. An expanded
president and chief Ioperating of. menu - utUizlng suggestions from
fla!r tor the restaurant division, customers and shareholders - was
said the ret~taurantli are "In a added In May.
"We'want to capitalize (II trends,
perfect posltbn to Jake advantage
ot Increased domestic travel." but not maketre mtstakeol going in
President and Director Bob Evans on fads," Wood said.
· Bob Evans Farms Sausage also
said the company has always tried
made
changes last year. Kielbasa
to capitalize on the business of
and
Itallan
sausage, Introduced last
travelers, doing especially well in
year, wUl be avaUable In all areas
warm months.
However, the restaurants were by !be taU season, according to
hampered by an()lber trend - the Larry Carroll, executive vice presidecrease in numbers within the dent and chief marketing officer of
1!1-22 year-old group who have . the sausage division. Next year, the
traditionally made up most Bob sausage division wUI Introduce
Evans employees, according to sausage biscuits and ham-andBoard Chairman Daniel L. Evans. cheese biscuits In !be next year.
However, Bob Evans Farms
Bob Evans restaurants are In the
midst of what Wood called "the Sausages has suffered from this
most drastic employee shortage year's 15 percent increase In hog
ever," a trend expected to last live prices. Last year, Carroll said, !be
to seven years, Daniel Evans said. average price was $40; last week it

was $55.
Carroll said the high volume at
which the sausage shojll operate
helps cut the losses this year. "We
can absorb the klsses for a short
period of dme as long as we don't
lose our volume," he said.
"That's one of the reasons we
diversWed our (4)erations many
years ago. Raw materials can give
a business llke this a shock,"
CarroU said.
"The bog market has a 10-month
cycle," Daniel Evans noted. "For
the farmers this year, wheat
doesn't make rooney, com doesn't
n:w.kl! ,JIXlllj!Y.. ca!l~. are tQugh to
i'Mkl\ moli!y wltli ... hogs are !be
only real rmneymakers."
Daniel Evans said he expected
the crunch to last about eight roore
months.
However, Bob Evans Farms as a
whole Is "In very, very, soUd
financial condition," said Keith
Bradbury, vice president, treasurer, chief financial officer and
director.
Daniel Evans drew loud applause
from the crowd of 1,500 at Bob
Evans ShelteriDuse when he anoouncEJ a 5-for-4 stock ~lit of Bob
Evans shares, certified by !be
corporate hoard of directors Mon·
day rooming, which wUI result In a
16 percent IncreaSE' In dividend
paywt.

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Working on problem
Crawford said that he is unable to
dlscu,.; the removal of WOUB
because the firm is involved in
litigation over the removal of the
station from !be service. Another
phone line has been installed which
wUi relieve the situation in reaching
the company, Crawford reported.
However, he commented that the
company is trying to get it all
straightened out and he assured
council that efforts wUI continul' in
that direction.
Council also heard strong complaints from Kenneth Darst and his
daughter. who charg&lt;!d that young
people at and near the Super
America Station at the comer of
Beech Street and General Hartinger Boulevard are creating dlstur-

bances aU night long.
They had names and photos and
Darst said that he ~ having the
plxltos enlarged so that identifjcation of the persons in the pictures
wUi be clear. They charged that ~
the young people are ordered from
Super America property they go
across the street and shout to an
employee &lt;1 the station all night.
Middleport businesswoman,
Ruby Vaughan, reinforced the
complaints of the Darsts, and she
and they charged that pollee should
he able to do something to correct
the situation. Mrs. Vaughan said
she wUi be wW!ng to rue charges
and that she wUI give police written
permission to rooveontothe nearby
Vaughan business property to
make arrests.

Qufew bourll
It was also brought w t that there ·

an 11 o'clock curfew In Middle- :
port for young people wxier 18. Mrs. :
Vaughan said that several of !be ·
young people hanging wt near the
tocadon In question are under 18. It .
was pointed oot that Super America .
does have a "no kliterlng" sign but
that the employees aUegedly do not ·
back it up. Doubt was expressed
that Super America offlctaJs wiU
provide pollee with written permission to rmve onto its property to
make arrests.
PoU&lt;r Chief Sid Uttle said that
pollee wiU take care d. the matter
and he completed arrangements
for Mrs. Vaughan to supply written
permtsskln for pollee on !be
(Continued 011 Page 7)
Is

Increase in domestic travel
boosts Bob Evans profits

sion compa red to the previoualy
popular and successful original
version.

Pilll OHtMUt .tU Deily

en tine

0

Cable complaints aired at Middleport U.uncil

the tltm

.

Partb' cllllllly ton'chl. will a
low In the upper lMIL MollllJ
suaay w~. wWI Jtl&amp;la In
the lllw 801. 'lbe probablllly ol
preclpllatllln Ia near zero
lllrough Wetbnay.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 12, 1986

Copyrighted 1986

ed the data in the study. It alsopnll'ed
conclusively that the powerful~ ill'
gredients combined with the placebo
~ w!ll enable )00 to Jose wei~
"o&gt;.&lt;erlllmesfilsrer"withthis~vef' .

.

Ohio Lottery

Beet &amp;howmanshlp

Steve Sachs, who~andanalyz·

··

Two winners named
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Two
Ohio · Lotto players wUI spilt the
$1,317,740 jackpot from Saturday
night's drawing where they held
tickets with !be numbers 6, 10, 14,
17,.28 and 36.
Lottery officials said $3,32ti,&amp;'i5
worth of tickets for !be drawing.
The number of partial winners
wUI be determined today.
The esdmated jackpot lor next
Saturday Is $1 mUUon.

wwrlng
Jr. lalelll sbow4: 30 p.m., hOI

"Remarkably, ALL people in the
Super PiliD leslgroupsha.Yeddrarnllic:
weight loss over 14 !la).'s," Silted Dr.

CHEc Kl NG
Ac C0 U.NT'S

We'll ewen :••:rnlah

Kiddie lndor puB .... 4 p.m.,

year

W~aya.m.

tors in Beverly Hills.
A/1/.mt up 16 U /bl, ill U 0.,.

CHARGE

Veterans Memorial

Toaicht

Robyn Barnelt, Mary Edwards, 11na 111118ell, Amy
PREPARING - BraYing the warm weather of
Louks and Erica Ke!llllnpr. Their advisor Ia Mrs.
Auguli, thele ltU\Jon!jtel are WDI'klltl to prepare
Valerie Ransboltom.
their roles willl the E•'Jtent lOp School band when
~ope111 tiU momh. From the left are ,

CROPS - VlsitDrs to lbe Meigs County Fair wW
llnd that garden crops have done well this year
despite the Jack at rain. 1,1sa stethem, 6, Is pictured

with a display of huge squash, meloll!l and pwnpldns
lealured at the lair. There are 365l!lhiJilsln the tann
crops tJU year.

Poll satisfies Rhodes, Democrats
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPII Republican gubernatorial nominee
James A. Rhodes says he is
satisfied with a newspaper's mali
poll showing he is within 5
percentage points of Gov. Richard
F. Celeste among likely voters in
November.
And Democratic strategists say
last week's survey of 6f.O voters by
the Columbus Dispatch shows that
the governor is strong despite a
recent pasting he has taken in the
media over indictments in his
administration and the Democratic
Party.
Forty-eight percent of the respondents said they would vote lor
Democrat Celeste, 43 percent said
they woo id vote for Republican
Rhodes and 9 percent said they
. would vote for former Cleveland
Mayor Dennis Kuclnich, running as
an Independent.
The margin of error in the
sampling of adults who said they
wUI vote in the Nov. 4 election was
plus or minus 5 percent, meaning
Celeste could have 53 percent or
(lily 43 percent or the vote.
"Yes, yes, yes," Rhodes said
Monday when asked ~ he thought
the poll shows he is catching
Celeste.
"It moons we're right on schedule," said James A. Duerk, the
former governor's business assoctate and campaign aide. "We're in
excellent position.''
Duerk said that in August 1974,
Rhodes was 15 to 17 points behind

Democratic Gov. John J. GUUgan
and ended up heating him by a
whisker.
Democratic State Chairman
James M. Ruvolo pointed out the
poll was laken right after Celeste
was pummeled In the media for the
indictments d a member ~ his
Cabinet and two top Democratic
fund-raisers, Including his own.
"I think they took It at a time
when yw would expect !be goverror to he at his klwest ebb, yet the
governor had a lead, and not an

Insignificant one," said RuvolO.
Gerald AU511n, !be governor's
campaign manager, said the poll
Showed a "temporary glitch" hecause of !be Indictments and the
resulting Republican TV
commercials.
Austin said he's glad the pou
showed Rhodes so close. "I always
C4)erate like I'm 15 points behind,"
he said. "A klt of people are
C4)eraling Hke we're Ill points
ahead. U this gets their attention,
floe."

ODOT urges shorter
shutdown period for span
State Rep. Jolynn Boster, D-GaWpolls, anoouneed today that !be
Ohio Department of Transportation's Dlsbict 10 Deputy Director,
George Dougan, has recommended that clowre of !be Pomeroy.
Mason Bridge on U.S. JJin Meigs CountybeUmlted to a four-roonth
time span rather than the previously stated stx-roonth estimate.
"Given the importance of this structure to the ecoromlc well-being
and livl'lthood of the Pomeroy community, I am certainly pleased
wllh the recommendation to shorten the dme of closure," Boster
said. "This decision, if carried through, wiU reduce not only tre
anxiety of many local merchants who are faced with the posslblllty
of lessened business activity, but also the personal inconvenience to
the residents on both sides of the river," Boster continued.
According to Boster, !be reconunendation o1 ODOT's District 10
office wiU now have io be forwarded to !be central dlice in Columbus
for !be ultimate decision.
Boster explained that with this provision, It may be necessary for
the contractor to employ additional workers or possibly utUize
double shifts. "It Is encouraging to koow that efforts are underway to
speed this project along," Boster concluded.

Gallipolis charges franchise violation; sues cable company
GALLIPOLIS - Alleging fran·
chlse vk&gt;latlon, !be city of GalUpolls
filed suit today in GaiUa County
Common Pleas Court against Con·
soUdated Conimuntcatlons Group
Inc., the firm that provilles cable
television service to !be city and
se\leral area communities.
The suit stems from !be city's
displeasure with CCG's 'dropping
WOUB-TV, Athena, from 11.11 basic
service In pJa.ce of an electronic

program guide.

Because the roove represents a
violation d. the franchlle agreement between !be city and CCG, !be
city aUeaes, !be city II seeking an
lnjuDctlon orde.i btg CCG to restore
fl

WOUB ~the basic service list, an
Injunction preventing the cable
company from making further
deleilons :til Its prograinmlng and to
maintain the p~ ti has been
offering, and action to prevent ccG
from ret1)0IIIJig WOOB from basic
service wlthout 1the'apiJ'OVal ri. the
citycornm1s810n
Thecityls.wc;seekingaddltional
relief fneasUres, b)cludtng finding
CCG In violation !be tranchlae
'
&amp;gu!lmJa~t, l'i!voldDa
the tranchlae
with CCG, paymeilt of $ro,IXQ in
punttlvedarna8esandendlngthe
rate Increase appi'oved by the city

or

in~.

Tlie,Iatter request also calls for

em

reimbursement to
customers
"for all such Increases from !be
dme of !be deletion of WOlJB.TV
from tts service to Its subacrlbers
untU !be reinstatement ~ such
service."
The city claims that CCG assumeclthe "rights and obligations"
of the oJ'illnal cable frandltse set
whenCCGaskedthecitycommlsston to become the cable servlceto
serve GalUpoUs. In :19M, CCG
bouglltthe',.;,'cable
.....-!rom
_..
"'_,,
Cablelltertalnrnent, which had
served !be G•IUpoUs area since

1!i8l

One of the obllgatbm, !be suit
alleges, was to rontlnue otJerlng

WOUB, a public television station electronic program guide that one
based at Ohio University.
Gallipolis of!lcial at !be dme
"The defendant has removed labeled "Inane."
WOlJB.TV without 9Jtftcient cause
The city alleges that when CCG
from its basic servke In villation ct requested a rate increase in AprU
its franchise agrrement with the 19!11to flnanoo imporvements In Its
ci\Y," the suit claims.
service, "the defendant addttkln·
In late March, Marty Crawford, ally contracted that certain chan·
CCG's general manager, told city nelsweretobeavallabteooltsbaslc
olflclals vta letter that the firm servlcc!,lncludlngWOlJB.TV."The
wwld drop WOUB In June because rate Increase was app:oved, but
CCG ttas rmre subacrlbers In West WOUB was dl'opped "wttlxlut
Vlr"'nla
than In Ohio ' and "one notlcetotheclty," according to !be
"'
public broadcast station Is sufll- suit.
cient." WPBY-TV, Huntington,
The suit also points wt that
W.Va., would then be CCG's only educational Jll'OIII'IIRIS broadcast
fuU-dme PBS d.lerlng.
ed
schooby
tbe 11_!;!.,slllctstionadrew!Uusedbebyloloca1
1 ...,u, an
In WOUB's place wa.s plac an
•1 w

students If WOUB is not restored to
ba5lc oervtce.
The city's actbn follows a suit
filed against CCG In Masoo County
Circuit Court agaJns! CCG, whfCb
also claims !be statbn was deleted
wltlllut notice to city of!lcla1s after
approval d. the rate Increase .IQ
lllncl trnprovernents. Point Pleasantilalsoasldngforrevtlkationat
the rate ~and l'C!fundlng at IIUIIII
collected byon thethecltylncreue after tti
1
approva
CXlllltcll.
;
•
~
(,. _. •
lhe pllvw If
aneputyflllllnMuat•ultddOei
nat 1epa r 1M boUl lltiN ' If •
tot.le.l
'
::

•

�l '

•

-'

Ttllllday,

12, 1986

Free agent
eyes spot on
Browns teapt ~

.Special olympics cagers,
.. Jhinclads have banner year
GeniUS Or nut?___.;. . ,______J_ame_sJ_.K_i..:,.lpa_.t_ric_R
Paga 2-The Diily Sentinlil
Pomeroy-Middieport. .Ohio
TU81dey; A'!!:e 12, 198~ __

.

The Daily Sentinel
lll Court Street
PomeroJ, Ohio
DEVIJl'BD TO THE INTEBI!STS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

tllb

t~mll r'T'1.-IL...""'T"'I~=·~

q:Jv

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Pmtillsber
PAT WIIITEHEAD

Alsllllul Pabllllber/Co•lroUer

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manacer

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Edllor
AMEM,BER of The United Preas international, Inland Daily Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They llhauld ~less tban 300 words
long. AU letters are subject toedltlng and rrust besJgnOO with name, address and

lelepbone number. No unsigned letters wUI ~published. Letters should be In

JOOd taste, addressing Issues, not persooalllles.

Literary effort
Possibly lbe most lntrigulng aspect d Sen. Paula Hawkins' first literary

WASHINGTON - JO!Iiph W.
Newman, lbe backwoods lnvmtor
from Lucedale, Miss., defended his
energy machine last week before a
Senate subcommittee. After lbe
three-hour hearing ended, he deomonstrated his device before an
audience of enthusiastic boosters
and skeptical reporters. Is the guy a
genius? Or Is lbe guy a nut?
I think he may be both. The
combination Is oot unknown. In
case you came In late, the
49-year-old Inventor applied In 1979
for a patent.on an energy machine.
He described his device as a motor,
or generator, that produces more
energy than It consumes. Its output,
he declared, Is greater than Its
Input. An Incredulous patent exa. miner gave him the brush-off. An
appeals board concurred In rejectlng Newman's application. In 1983
Newman went to court; the court
ordered a test of the device by lbe
National Bureau of Standards. In
June ·the NBS reported that the

device dkln't work as claimed.
Newman responded that lbe tests
were rlgged by prejudiced officials.
That Is rougbl.y where the matter
stands now. Newman's suit ag!lfnsl
lbe Patent Office has been set for
trial In December. Meanwhile,
Newman Is drumming up public
and political support. He ts a
natural-born showman, a volatUe,
voluble, hard-driving man with a
mission.
Is he a fake, a fiake, a screwball?
I cimno. I don't think so, bull came
away from the subcommittee
meeting with mixed Impressions.
Newman said repeatedly that he
was not waging his battle to make a
rundle rut "to benefit humanity."
At lbe press table, winks and
nudges. In this town we have rarely
met a person out tn benefit
humanity. In an autnblographlcal
lxlok be pubUshed privately last
year, Newman tells how he lost his
faith In God rut then recovered It
when God sent a message about the

number 14. Ever since then lmpor·
tan! things have happened to him on
the 14th of ltv! JIJ)nth.
Newman has a wayofexaggerat·
lng things. He and his counsel Insist
that "more than :J)" experts have
"tested" his machine and found
that tt works as described. But lbe
experts wmse affldavtts appear In
Newman's book Include his pubUc
relatklns counsel, a Louisiana
dentls~ and tre manager of an air
condltklnlng seiVIce. It Is oot clear
how many truly qualified physicists
and electrical mgjneers actually
have "tested" lbe device as the
word ordlnarUy Is employed.
Ohio's Sen. John Glenn kept
asking Newman If be would consent
to Independent testing by some
agency oilier than the NBS. New·
man ducked and bobbed and
weaved. How about tre famed
Battelle laboratories In Columbus?
No way. said Newman. He would
agree to tests by the Sperry Corp.,
provided his good friend and

effort Is lbe price - an astonishing $16.!!&gt;.

.
·
There Is DOihlng wrong with lbe book "ChUdrEn At Risk" (Adler &amp;
Adler), which recounts her personal experience as a victim d d!Ud abuse,
her work In the Senate·on behalf ct chDdrm and manydo'sandoon'ts- all
surely good - tO' keep•.klds out o1 the clutches of evildoers.
But 'Hawkins long 8go wmt public with ber personal trauma - an
lncldent that happened when she was 5 years old and kept a secret, except
tlpn her mother, for about 00 years.
:·t.nd li'IICh dtherest Is gleaned !rom testimony at !llbllc Senate hearings
4d !nm previously complied slatlstlcs, liberally punctuated with letters
trdm victims or parents of victims woo !ll!fered as did Hawkins.
: :~ seems to Jle revealed In lbe book that Is not public krowiedge
ll)ared by tbo6e Involved In lbe problems of abused chUdren.
: •The book Is l86paaes of easy-to-read type, but starting at page 129, the
~ begins and llle .appendix Is nothing rut a compUatlon of lbe
al!JUJII that help.~ or exploited chUdrm -courtesy of tlw! National
Ci!nter for Mllllllg and Exploltel! Children.
·: Perbape. Hawldns deserves credit llr putting tOgether within loose IB6
Pages a compact primer on mw to aafeguard chUdrEn from abuse. The
Question Is woo can afford to read it?
• Among lbe conditions Hawkins cites as having the capacity to breed

;: "In me rural area, social workers wen! called In because cnws, pigs and
other animals wen! Uvlnli rtgbt In lbe mme," Hawkins wrltm. "Animal
~ covered ltv! beds and floors where the four chUdren were spending
1J111Cb of their time. When lbe you~ers would go to school, their
elllslniates wwld poke tun at them.
;."Theae QOIIditions fostered periodic running away by one r:l. ttw! chUdren

.The Lighter Side

.Hair of the berry
By DICK WElT
WASHINGTON tUPI) - We are, I preswne, all famUiar with the
heart-warming story of a government agency permitting sales of a
.genetically engineered human vaccine for the nnit time.
.· Well, I ask you, now that lbe Food and Drug Administration has acted,
·.can Agriculture Research SeJVIce be far behind?
- I mean, If It Is possible to gmetlcally engineer a new vaccine against a
::strain of hepatitis, why wouldn't It be equally feasible to genetically
::mglneer a new strawberry leaf?
:· OIIJy Instead rl prescribing It lor human beings, we use It to repel black
ivtne weevUs?
: Already, the Agriculture Department has p-oposed regulations for
:·."gelietleally engineered organisms." A spokesman predicted In advance
:d public hearings here next week that manipulation ct tre genes rlllvlng
Ul!s "wUI play a major role In Increasing plant yield and Improving

'·~Illy.

: It Is, mwf1'Ver, difficult to believe that anything could Improve on a

rocltroaeh Insecticide that recently went to tlw! market. This product not

:Only kUis roaches but sterUizes any SU!VIvocs.

: I'd like to !ll'f' genetic engineers top that.
.. Another challengt' comes fnm electronic senliOrs. Agriculture scientists
·have developed 0111' that can tell at least in percent of ltv! time when cows
')Ire ready to mate.
· When I tell you that human farmers miss about half of trelrcows' fertUe

jlerio&lt;B, yw can Inunedlately see the value ct that senliOr. It lets farmers

)&lt;now when buDs are needed.
• In case you might want to know what else Is new In the Insect world, be
advised that researchers may have found WI MW Insects that don't have
J!Onventlonal noses can tell if crops are maturing OK.
• The Insects appear to use their antennae to find and home In on scents
itven off by ripening fruit and other crops they can attack.
• So what may be needed Ill a bit of i!@lletlc mglneering that would keep
Crops smelling forever y~.
: Research alliO Is preceding Into Insect blomylhms.
.• "What you find In Insects, yw will probably find- In a general way -In
.higher ronns of life, Including humans," says one biochemist. "In theory .
)Ne may be able to enhance or proklflt life by perlodlcaUy resetting our
'biological clocks."
: It's anyobody's guess as to what genetlcmgjneersmlght make of jet lag .
·: Speaking of the discovery that hairs on the ID!derslde ci wDd strawberry
:jeaves repel black vine weevUs, one of the W!l'se enemies ct domesticated
:plants, one scientist has speculated that "hairiness Is a genetic tr&amp;lt."
·: He was quoted as saying ''perhaps II can he bred Into commercial
•strawberry plants," thus discouraging weevDs from i?astlng on them.
·: A reasanable-enough hypothesis. But how can plant specialists be sure
:Jhe experiments refiect a genuine black vine weevU aversion and oot !lOme
~I bias on the scientist's part?
'• Suppose It turned out that weevUs at'l'l'l't repelled by leaf hairs at all. but
:jllant physlologlsts are.
.· Further experiments might just smw that black vine weevUs are
·i-epelled simply becauae they don't like the taste of wUd strawberry plants.

rroday in history
;
By Ualletll'relllnlenul&amp;blal
: Today Ia Wednesday, Aug. 13, the 225th day o1 1986 wtth 140 kl follow.
: The moon Ia In Its llrst quarter.
• The momlnl stan are Mercury and Jupiter ..
: The evmllla' stan are Vmua, Man and Saturn.
: 11me born on this date are UJI(Ier the ·~ of Leo. Tiley include )1oneer
aoc1a1 rmmier Lucy Stoae In l8l8, aha~IIK&gt;Ier Annie Oakley In 1800,
$cottilh lnve!ltor and teievlllori!A!clulolo&amp;Y pbnel'r John Baird In 1888, film
4Jrector Alfred Hitchcock In 1899, goltH Ben Hopn In 1912 &lt;ace 74), and
tubln leader Fidel Castro In 1977 (age !18).

•

•

--

: In 1898, duq the Spanish· American War, US. forces In the PhUipplnes
oaptured ManDa.

111119.'11, Capt. Frank Hawkes lEt an ab: CJEed record by flying from Los

~ ~les to New York

If 12 mun, 25 minutes.

•

supporter,

Roge~

Hastlnp, super-

vised them. Glenn rolled his eyes.
Later on, when we all troopP&lt; '

down to a basement auditorium bl
lbe Dlrksm BuDding, Newman Ill\
III quite a smw. A spokesman tlr
lbe NBS had said skeptically that If
ooewanted toactlvateaslrnpleran;
ordinary copper wtres would worll
better than Newman's electromag·,
netic motor. Newman )1ugged Into
a wall plug a store-bought 16-lnch
fan, madelnTalwan.Heturnedltt&lt;i
"high" and held a wand, adorned
with five pink streamers, In front r1
the tan. The streamers waved
sluggishly. Then he _turned on ari
apparenUy Identical fan, hooked tO:
his own tllltor through 2iO rjlne-volr
wtterles, and beoold! The strea,
mers waved madly. Newman'stan'
pulled 6.9 watts. At the same speed,
the store-bought tan drew llur
times as much. Newman gleefully
challenged any Ph.D. In lbe a-owd
to argue thermodynamics with
him. He was ready llllck any man'
In lbe house.
'
Opposed to the nut theory Is,
Newman's own rhetorical ques·
don: Would he he Inventing !II yean'
of his lfe and three years of costlY
litigation to get a patent on a pmny
Invention? And tre thing is, he IDes
In !act have !lOme highly qualified.
people who say that he~ Is III to'
something - that he has
Einstein's lamed equation ant~
carried It to new realms ol
theoretical physics.
Among tre experts \IIIlo say IK:.
deserved a patent Is William E.
Schuyler Jr., a former comm!s·
sloner of the Patmt Office. Serving
as a Special Master for lbe court,
Schuyler found "overwrelmlngevl·
dence" that Newman's device
works as claimed. Hastings, a
senior staff scientist for Sperry In
St. Paul, Minn., made an Impressive witness before the subcommft·
tee. He Is convinced that far from
being a fraud, Newman Is a
genlunely original thinker wmse
theories could have a rf1'Volutlonary
Impact. Come Decemil!r, If lbe
case goes to trial on schedule, Joe
Newman may be vindicated yet.

tak"''

&amp;~~use ts poverty.

l!itd lbe Sl!lllllllnvolvement of a daughter with an older man."
·:Is this lbe famUy that can pay $16.95 llr Hawkins' bJok? Not hardly.
:·It &gt;WUid have been better for Hawkins to !Ill her suggestions for
piutEctJng children Into a Senate OOcument !I' IIIe printed by the
Department of Health and Human SeJVices and have It mailed - tree r:l.
(IUIJ'III! - to f1'Very household with chUdrm.
• Mast people can carry on wi!Mut anotber go-around of her personal
experience and Parade magazine periodlcaUy IDes a better pb than the
letters In lbe book of detaiUng the abuse ci chUdrEn.
·: ADd the book also raises another Immediate question. Why is It coming
ciQt In September, right In the- beat ct Hawkins' campaign-against Gov. Bob
Graham for lbe Florida Senate seat.

...

·~-

.

-:--...-....... .

. -""-

Holding together_______Ja_ck_A_nd___ers_on
MANII..-\ -AquestlonhangsUke people on !be ruards of 180 about the time she put her male . In 1961, the United Slates mught
the sword of Damocles over companies. This has sent a neJVous advisors Ill tlw!lr place. She had sugar lilly from the Phlllpplnes and
President Corazon Aquino: Are rer lreroor through the business com· listened pal!ently while they, talk· Cuba.
apron strings strong enough to mid munlty, which largely supported lng down to her, explained some
Then the market.was divided up.
the Phlllpplnes li:lgetrer•
Aquino's lakeover. Now business- political Issue and told her what she among several countries. SWI, lbe
Not long ago, she would pour tlw! men are worried about government should do. She responded ever so United States continued to ruy
coffee while the men talked poUtlcs. control - a lear that has also softly. "Gentlemen," she said, "this more than 25 percent · of Its
Now she has become ltv! chief topic scared rlf foreign Investors.
Is the last time you'll tell me what to Imported sugar from lbe Philip-·
of tb&gt;lr discussions- a modern
AqulnoalsofreedpoUtlcalprlson- do."
pines until President Reagan cut
Joan of Arc whose dramatic rise ers and opened talks with commuYet this remarkable woman the armunt In hal1 four years ago.
from housewife to president has nlst Insurgents. 'The cnmmunlst canoot put Humpty Dumpty back This has brought economic devas·
made her appear larger than Ule. Ingrates merely Intensified their togetlw!r again by herself. She wUJ tatlon to lbe sugar cane fields.
Public expectations may have guen1lla attacks. Army officers, need Ire help of the United States,
The country that benefited most
soared beyond her abUity to make whose Uves are . on the Une, which gaVE\'i' the PhU!pplnes Its from the Philippines' loss was the
good. Shehasoomaglcrureforthe complained to me that Aquino Is Independence and Its democratic Dominican Republic. Colnclden·
bleak poverty that ooids thrll'· naive.
tally, tlw! Dominican government
traditions.
fourths of the FUiplno people In Its
I found Mrs. President, as she
President Aquino Isn't asking for hired as Its fixer In Washington
grip. Some day those hurgry peoJ;ie likes to be caUed, In firm command · ald. She believes lbe payments now Reagan's former aide and adviser,
wUI forget that she Inherited the at Malacanang. She spoke with coming from Washington ($lnl Mike Deaver. But other countries,
economy, that she didn't cause quiet authority, wasting no words million under a five-year agree- Including South Africa, also got
their misery. In fact, tlw! wpmrta on political flummery. I asked ment) smuld not be counted as akl sugar quotas al the Philippines'
that followed President Ferdinand many questions, but they all but as rental forlbe useofOarkAir expense.
Marcos' ouster Is already begin· centered on one overriding Issue:
Force Base anp Sublc Bay Naval
All President Aquino asks Is that
nlng to lade.
Can this de Ocate but determined Base, lbe two largest U.S. military her Impoverished country be given
Meanwhile, she has formed a woman, this housewife-turned· bases outside America.
back Its historic sugar share and
Good Government Commission to preaklent quell a communist lnsurShe also mpes to blcrease trade also be given fair trade trealrllent.
recover the 01-gotten wea~h that gency and heal a ravaged with tre United States. particularly As she would like to remind
Marcos squeezed out rl the FUiplno ecooomy?
the sale of supr. The Phlllpplnes Washington, poverty Is the molber
economy for himself and his
I think so. I sensed a character r1 have been shipping sugar tn of rebellion, arid the best way to
cronies - loot estimated at more steel beneath her sUken manner, America since the trading ship defeat communism In lbe PhUipthan $10 billion. The commission also a pragmatism that keeps her Astrea trough! back the first cargo pnes Is ll ftgbt poverty.
has seized assets or placed Its ldeaUsm In check. Aides told me In 1796. Until Cuba went communist

Nuclear safety____________,:R=o=be:.:. .,:rl_::W&lt;_.:::al::::::te::.!:..rs
NEWPORT, Mich. (NEA) - AI·
most three decades after the advent
or commercial nuclear power, the industry that was supposed to trans·
fonn the genera lion of electricity into
a clean, cheap and ~fe process remaillll profoundly troubled.
Nowhere are the problems that
plague the domestic industry more
apparent than at the Enrico Fennl
Energy Center, operated by the De·
troit Edison Co. near this rural Michl·
gan community on the shores of Lake
Erie 25 miles southwest of Detroit.
Fermi I, the original nuclear gen·
eratlng plant at the facility, was shut
down more than a decade ago. But It
stands today as a mute reminder of
what one book, "Perils of the Peaceful Atom 1" characterizes as "an event
as close to Annageddon as this country has ever known."
On Oct. 5, 1966, Fermi I experienced a partial meltdown of its fuel
assemblies - a major accident as serious as those that occurred at Windl·
cale In Great Britain In 1957, and at
Three Mile laland in this country In
1978. However, there were no deat.bl
or Injuries, unUke what happened at
Chemobylln the Soviet Union In 1986.
Undaunted by that near-calamity,
Detroit Edison aet out In tho late
18601 to collllnlct Fermi 2 for f329
miWon. It now hal beet! completed at a coot of f3.8 biiUon.
That maulve coot overrun Is only
one of the dlfflcultlel faced by a facll·
lty ll'hole "mlamlnlllment" bas
eamed It a 111ace on the Nuclear Re1·
ulatory Comrnlallon'a dlaltoaor roll the Ill! of U nuclear faciUtles the fed·
eral ·~ ranb as tho nation's
II'OI'It • prob)em planlll'
· .
The IICOJIO of the Inadequacies detalled on that lilt suue~lllbat the In·
dustry atlll bas not rb.atured to the
point where It can deliver the rellabll·
lty, efficiency and - moat lrnporlant
- 10fety It lonR bas promised.

At the Rancho Seco.plant In California, llii! NRC .says the operator per·
formJ only "the least amount of corrective action which the NRC would
accept and (does) so as ,slowly as the
NRC would accept."
At the Browns Ferry site in Ala·
bama, the NRC IBYJ, "performance
failed to Improve" even after It
worked with the plant mana1or to
mount a determined effort to up..-ade
management controls. The Fort St.
Vrain facility in Colorado suffers, the
NRC says, from "a management
mindlet of isolation from the rest of
the Industry."
Other nuclear power stations on the
NRC's problem list include DavisBeue in Ohio, Plll"lm in Massachusetts, Turkey Point in Florida, LaSalle In llllnols, Peach Bottom In
Pennsylvania and Salem In New
Jersey.
Typically. the Fermi 2 plant here
has suffered through design deficlen·
cles, security lapses, component failures and operational Inadequacies,
according to the NRC.
The most serious incident occurred
on July I, 1185, wben an inexperi·
enced, unsupervised employee Initial·
ed a reactor startup In an improper,
highly dangerous manner that led to
premature crlticaUty - a self-1111talnlng nuclear reaction that could
have gone out of 'control.
Detroit Edllon was operatina the
plant at the time under a low·power
llcenae luued by tho NRC but exjlected the full-pow~ llcenae to be l"••t·
ed Imminently.
·
In an apparent attempt to avoid ondanlerinl that final Ucenae, ibe uWJ.
ty company did not lllfonll Ute NRC Qf
'the aerloul deviation !rom acce)l!ed
procedures until .after the full.poWer
license was luued OD July 10, 1911.
Mter belne belatedly notified, offJ.
clala at the NRC were so furious

'

about the delay that they revoked
both the low-power and full-power operating licenses for Fennl Z, then
launched a major lnvesti&amp;atlon of uie
plant.
An independent probe commls·
sloned hy the NRC concluded early
tbls year that "vlflually -no" Detroit
Edison managers JIOIIsessed the experience necessary to oj,erate a nuclear

power plant and that company employees "often don't know wbo Ia in
charge and In some cases have the lm·
pression that nobody Ia In cbar1o."
Although Fermi 2 has been completed for more than a year, nobody
knows when It will attain full power
and bealn generating electricity tothe Detroit metropolftan area.

By NANCY YOACJIAM
Sealmel Newo Stall
During lbe past year, the Meigs
County Specll!l Olympics IJlsket·
ball team and track and field team
!)ave captured top honors In local
~nd state special olymplcs
tournaments.
The basketball team, sponsored
by Carleton School, came In third at
the state basketball tournament In
lJowUng Green, Ohio, this past
winter.
: This spring and summer, lbe
track and field team, also spon$0red by Carleton, won 10 percent r1
all medals possible to win In special
olympic track and field f1'Vents. The
highlight of the track and field
season was the team's partlcpation
1,n the 1~ Ohio Special Olympics
State Summer Games.
·
This was the third year lbe
Carleton School "River Racers"
participated In the state summer
~ames . Ten of the River Racers
t;etumed to Meigs County with
medals In their respective events.
, Special olymplcs Is an athletic
training and competition program
fpr multi-handicapped Individuals
and this was the J6thyearfor0hio's
special games.
Six official sports were Included
IJllbe three day state event held oo
the campus of Ohio State Unlver-

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Jl!(f
ChriStensen may be just a tree
agent with little experience, but hi!
Is confident that he will win a job
with lbe Cleveland Browns.

Taking third places were Lisa

Montgomery In softball and the 00
meta' run; Maurtoe Smith In
softball; Sarah Hannon, 00 meter;
Mandy Jeffers, softball and Mary
Jane Curry, shot put.
Fourth place winners were
Deanna Freeman, Mary Jane
Cunv and Ben Skinner, all In the 00
meter; and Ben Skinner In softball.
David KaJT took fifth In tb&gt; 50
meter and Deanna Freeman sixth
In softball.
The Meigs County Special Olym·
pies team Is coached by Patty
Hays, a Carleton School slaff
member, woo stated, "The athletes
worked very hard tills year and I
am extremelY proud of their
accompUahmmts."
Coach Hays further stated that
addltklnal support Is needed to
continue to strengtren the Meigs
County Special Olympics program.
Hays Is mplng that In 1987, the
Meigs program will be better than
f1'Ver before and able to ]l'OVkle
addltk&gt;nal sports In which the
athletes may participate.
Anyooe wishing to help support
lbe local special olymplcs program
may send contrtrutlons to Meigs
County Special Olympics, P.O. Box
307, John St.. Syracuse. 45779,
attention: Coach Hays.

HAPPY GIRL - Melp
Special ()bmples team
member LwmneSo,"eealer,IVlll
tlriled to lake f1nl plaee In the
ill meter run and aeoonc1 plaee In
softball durin&amp; Ibis IU!tmen'
stale special oiymplcs pmes
held al osu In Cobnbo:a.

~

Norman blows lead;
Tway captures PGA

By JOE ILLUZZI
UP! Sports Writer
One of these days, the California
Angels are going to realize how
fooUsh they were for not acquiring
BertBiyleven. Thelrfalluretodoso
could have cost them lbe pennant
last year and may cost lbem
another one this year.
The Angels had a chance to pick
up Blyleven last season for tbe
pennant drive. They passed III the
veteran right-hander and lost lbe
AL. West by one game. Last night
Blyleven beat California 2.0 on a
.three-hitter for his 27th career
victory against the Angels, and the
Joss sliced their division lead to two
games.
Blyleven struck out six and
walked two In running his career

allowed one run In lbe sixth Inning,
Gary Gaettl's 24th mrner of the
season. Gaettl sensed that was all
Blyleven would need.
1n other games. Baltimore
clipped Toronto 3-1, New Yorl!
edged Cleveland 6-5, Detroit
blankl!d Bostoo ~. O.lcago de·
feated MUwaukee 6-1 and Seattle
topped Oakland 4&gt;4.
Orlales S. Rae lays I
At Baltimore, M1Jte Flanagan
pitched a two-hitter aver 8 1·3
Innings to help the Orklles snap a
five-game losing streak. Flanagan,
6-7, nashed his Cy Young llrm of
1979 by outdueUng Jimmy Key,
10-8. The le!t-hander retired 17
straight battersuntU Ron Shepherd
walked with ooe wt In lbe ninth.
y.,~oees 1, ..,._ 5

Frank Wll!s, ().1, was lbe loser.
11gen I, Red Sox 0
At Detroit. Jack Mlrrls pitched a
three-hitter for his fourth shutout
and Jom Grubb and Lou Whitaker
bit home runs to help the Tigers
stop a three-game sUde. Morris.
14·7, loiW!I'ed his earned run
average to 3.00 with his lOth
complete ganie. Dennis Boyd, ll-8,
took the loss.
WNie Sox 6, Brewers I
At Milwaukee, Russ Morman
drove In three J:Uns with a two- run
homerandaslngjetoleadtheWhlte
Sox.FioydBannlst5',7·9,hurledhls
third complete game. Loser Chris
Ballo, ().1, was Impressive· In his
first major-league start. pltchlg
hitless ball br 4 2-3 kmlngs before
giving up Morman's homer.

markooly
against
to 27·12.
The
hitslbeheAjlgels
allowed
were

At New
MattlniiiY
singled
mmeYork,
WayneD&gt;n
-nlDe.ooi
Wltil
two out and lbe bases baded In lbe
ninth Inning to help the Yankees
snap... •g llle Indians' tlree-game
,.... streak. Brian Fisher, 7-3,
winning
was the winner despite allowing tbe
tying run In tlw! top of lbe ninth.
·

Ma+ll'lCaut:.
I, A's· 4Fernando
At ' oaiciariCI,
Arroyo, making his first big-league
appearanre since l982, walkedlbe
IJl)y three batters he faced, forcing
•-me two runs
. with two out In the
,.,
ninth Inning. The decision mded the
Mariners' six-game losing streak.
-

this year- gave him a 6-under Z18
aggregate.
"Bob 1\vay played extremelY
weUanddeservedtowln.''Norman
said. "ObvX&gt;ualy, lTG' sll&gt;otlng a 76
means I didn't play well."
Norman did not seem especlaUy
perturbed over !be turn of events
!hat gave Tway, a s«ond-year

Blyleven blanks Angels, 2-0;
Yanks close in on Red Sox

singles by Brian Downing, Watzy
Joyner and a bunt single by Rob
WU!ong.
Blyleven, who has 224 career
victories and 52 shutouts, defeated
:lffi.garne winner Don Sutton, woo

The Daily Sentinel
Published t'very af!Nnoon , Monday
throogll Fr id ay, 111 Court St ., Pom('roy. Ohio. by thf' Ohio Valley Publis hing Company tMultlmt'dla , lnt" .,

Poml'roy, Ohio t5769. P!t 992-215&amp;. SE-cond cla ss posta~P paid at Pomtroy,
Ohio.
Me mbPr : Unlled Press lntPrnatlonal,
Inland DallY Press Association Md thf
Ohio N£&gt;Wapaper Association . National
AdV(ITfllln~t Rflr,resentatlve, Branl\am
NPW spaper Sa rs. 73.1 Third A.venutt.
Nt"W York , Nt&gt;w York 10017.
PO~ER :

,Send addrt'U charqtet
to 11lf' Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St .,

Po,.....oy, Ohio 15781.

8UMCIIJPtloN UTE!I
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Astros. 'The Astros have won 18
games In their last at-bat.
"It was a very emotional game
for us," said Ashby. "It almost felt
like a playcif game, like 1981
again." Ill the strike year o11981,
the Dodgers and Astros met In a
dlvlsionalplaycif,withlbeDodgers
eventually winning lbe World
Series.
Denny Wa!Ung led orr lbe ninth
with a single and Glenn Davis
walked. Kevin Bass then ripped a
baD over lbe head r1 center fielder
Rep WllllamJ. WUilams retrleved the IJIU r1f 1be wall and
relayed to secolld waeman Steve
Sax, wm pegged Walllnl tlytng to
score with a pafect thtow to
catcher Mike Sclosda. With
tumers on S«&lt;Ott and third, Kar
HOWell, t-11. ln~tbnally wulltied
Jose Cruz Ill pitch to Albby. AJbby .
lbendoubledona2-2oountdownlbe
right field Une to make a winner r1
Dave Smith, 4-6.
In other games, San Francisco

skid of his career. He earned his
lint victory since June ll. Ed
Whllson, H, was lbe klser.
Ctu'!llnalll s. Exp~~~ t
At MJntreaL Mike LaVaUiere
belted a two-run mmer In lbe
eighth Inning to Uft the Cardinals.
LaValllere's second mme run of
the 81!89ln carne with two out after
a walk to Ctlnt Hurdle against
starter and loser Floyd Youmans,
ll-8. Greg Mathews, 8-3, was lbe
winner. Todd WorreU notched his
:mth save.
Mela 8, l'lllllel f
At PhDadelphla, Gary Carter,
Ray Knight and Darryl Strawberry
knocked In two runs apiece ·t lr the
Mets. Dwilhl Gooden, 12-4. struck
out 10 and walked none tor his ninth
•......
•
complete~-. Don "·-·~
~ .. ..-·took lbe loss. The Mets,. '~So !i,
cUmbed 411 games over .500 IJiftlle
l!nttimelnclubblstory.

Pete Rose.
The Dve-1111 game was
despite
a Rose's
5-for-5
pertJrmance by
lbe 10th r1
cll'ft!r,
a National
League record. The major league
record belongs tD Ty Cobb, with 1f.
lltnwM II; P.._ I
At Atlanta, Da~ MuiPbY drilled
two homers, lnch""tW a three-run
siDt
ldchJ!Ibl a u·run second
lnnintr. to 11ft tile Braves. Rick
Mahler, ll·ll, hral!e a personal
·slx·game ~ sti'Mk, lbe ~~

Secon4 Avt.

State Auto
ln•ura·nc1
CoMpanies

Mitldltport

~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~======;
•.

..

..

Scioto Downs

COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPI) - Go
Wager charged from seventh place
In the final tum to win Monday
night's featured eighth race pace at
Scioto Downs with a lifetime best
clocking of 1:59 4-5.
Driven by Ray Paver Jr., the
3-year-old winner bettered his
previous best time by more than
three seconds In beating out
Minstrel Hill and Two Above
Prime. Go Wager paid $6.al to win.
Paver also had a winner In lbe
third race, guiding T.D. Bret to
victory with a 1:59 2-5 clocking.
Zallre Grey A captured the ninth
race, kicking off a 4-1().9 trlfecta
combination that was worth
$3,341.20. Shannon Pace was second
and Double R RaJ! showed.

..
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'

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OPEN: 8·t MON.·SAT.; 8·8 FRI.
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Mall~-·

lllldelhlpCWMJ'
13 WHkS.................................. S\7 .29
26 WH'ks ......... ...... .................. . S34 .0S
52. \\'t'(lkS.... ....... ... .. .. ....... ... ...... $66. ~
Out.tde Melp Co...&amp;)'

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THRin SHOP

said. "It was a stJ:Uggle from the
word 'go."'
Norman woo $9),(8) and In·

No subscriptions by mall ptrmltlE"d In

TIME RUNMIN6 OUT
ON SUMMER READING
GOOD INTENTIONS. _

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

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y $l OO AT
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HUMANE SOCIETY

LOWm PliO$ 011 PASSIJIGEI CAIS

SubSt"rlb£&gt;rs not deslrlnl(lo pay thf car·
rlcr m il)' r£&gt;mlt In adYanC't' direct to
Tlu• Dally Sen tin('! on a3, 6 or 11 monlh
I)Bals. Crf'dll will bE&gt; glwn carrlf!l" etch
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MEIGS COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY

RUTLAND·
TIRE· SALES
"8mlllt101 TBE SlfEL1"

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Da lly .

II

,

:~~ i:c= 1~: St~'=

edged Montreall)-4 and New Yorl!
de~ated P.blladelphta 8-4. In lbe
compJetron ct a suspended game,
Pittsburgh beat Cl!lcago ~In 17
Innings. In lbe regularly scheduled
game, Pittsburgh wm 10-7.
a...u. Reds 4
At Clnclnnat~ Bob Brenl.Y and
BobMelvlneachhltahDmerunand
drove In four turB '&gt; leitd tltli Giants

creased his record for winnings In a
season to $644,129. 1\vay, woo
pocketed $140,(8) Monday and has 11;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
won $600,005. joined Norman as the
first players to top the $100,(8)
plateau In sealiOnal earnings.
"The key for me Is kl maintain
the same good emotlonallevell've ·
had the last four rronths," Norman
said. "I can't think and dwell oo lbe
wd shots."
Norman caJded two bogeys on
Inverness' front nine when he Dew
the green on the third and seventh ·
mles. rut got a shot back when he
..., you ltlld us..... be
birdied the ninth from 18 feet and
..... . 'will pro; tiP!. can-.
restored a four-shot lead as Tway
cerllltl iniii1IICI .w:e. WI
double-bogeyed 1be oole.
. . . " . ., be ft1lntll vou
e111 iJipentl on. Cll • llltlly.
";===:::;=====::;~

Dodaers~~;~':!.~~:or=f~ix,ts
e
wllh a lot of had results," Norman

Houston keeps rolling., tops
By MIKE TUlLY
UPI National •·-ehel1 Wrllet'
The Houston Astros are using
their past to create a future.
Alan Ashby, recalling his post·
season appearances ofl.98Jand '81,
delivered a two-run, bases-loaded
double In lbe bol!Om of the ninth
Inning Monday night to rally the
Houston Astros to a 7-G victory over
the Los Angeles Dodgers.
"I was as exctted as I think I've
ever been," Ashby said. "I think
probably the reason lbe emotions
were so high on this ballclub were
lbe number of times we seem to
haye something going and fouled up
by 0111! form or another. It seemed
things-just weren't going to go wr
'WilY and for us to come back after
being down 6-3, It just made
ermtions fly."
. The victory enabled Houstoo to
maintain Its four-game lead over
secOnd-place San Francisco In lbe
NL West. The Dodgers are In third
place, eight games behind lbe

"I think lbey (the Browns) got a
steal," Christensen said.
The tmner Eastern IUinols star
reported to the Browns' camp In
Kirtland this summer as somewhat
of an unkoown behind veterans
Bernie Kosar and Gary Danielson
and fonner Indianapolis Colt star·
ter Mike Pagel. After all, Chrli·
tensm has been on an active NFL
roster for just 20 games In three
seasons and has never attempted II
pass.
'
After stints with the Cincinnati
Bengals, the Los Angeles Ram)!
and the PhUadelphla Eagles, he got
his nrst chance In a BrownS'
uniform Saturday against tlie
Bu11alo Bills and responded l)f
completing 10 of 14 passes for 116
yards.
·
The 2&amp;-year-old quarterback
plans oo lw!lng aroond when the
season begins Sept. 7.
· .
"I'm planning on being here,"
Christensen said. "I'm getting a
real good shot. I !eel good,amut the'
sltuatkm."

Sllat' PI1F - Ray Loudermilt, a Melp County Special
O!Jmplcs learn member, displayed oullltalldiDr ability In lhe
lhot pullllrow a1 thlll summers'
stale apeclal olympic gameo III
tbe cam)lW! of Ohio Slale
Unlvenlly. Cohunbus. Lauderma caplured aflrsl place medal
In lbe shot pulevenl. Laudennlk
took seoo!ld place In the 50 meter
run.

By ROBERTO DIAS
UPI Sporls Writer
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - Greg
Norman says he's not a failure.
Norman, who led the PGA
championship by lour strokes
entering Monday's conclusion ct
the final round, lost to playing
partner Bob 1\vay on lbe final mle.
1\vay sank a :.»foot bunker soot
from In front of the 18th green for a
birdie to win his first major title.
Norman Is the only golfer to lead
after three·rounds In all four of the
Grand Slam tournaments In one
year. He bristled at a reporter's
suggestion that he "has 1be monkey
back on his back."
"I can hardly think that's a fair
statemen~" said Norman, woo won
the British Open last roonth. "I'm
planning to win lbe next toumament and the one after that.
"Look, 1be point Is that I payed
well enough to win In aU1ourevents.
All rlgbt,lt's a dlsappolnlment that
I didn't win the US. Open, the
Masters and now the PGA. But It
doesn't mean I'm a faUure."
1\vay soot a closing l·under· par
70 to compUe an 8-underhl276 !Dial.
Norman's 5-over 76 s worst
final-round score In a major event

(USPS tU-•1
A Oivbilon of Mulllmtdla, l•t.

Berry's World

slty, Columrus.
Participants also mjoyed movies, recreational clinics and lbe
colorful opening ceremonies.
Fol.lowfng the opmlng ceremonies and the traditional lgbtlng o1
lbe olympic flame, athletes Wl!re
treated to a tlanre and fair puvlded
by hundreds ct wlunteers. Athletes
and chaperones were mused In lbe
Ohio State University dormitories
and were )l!'IMled two tree meals
from Central Ohio McDonalds
restaurants.
The Ohlo Special (lymplcs program Is now reaching rmre than
:M,(ll) multi-handicapped athletes,
with major anphasls on athletic
training.
After successfuUy competing In
local special olymplcs events, local
special elymplc athletes were
chotJen b represent Meigs County
at lbe slate level.
More than 3,100 were Involved In
lbe state f1'Vent.
Taking first place mnors In
Colwnbus for Meigs County were
Mandy Jeffers, Luanne So and
Maurice Smith, all In the 00 rreter
run; Sarah Harmon In !llftball and
Hay Laudermllt, shot put.
Second place medals went to Ray
LaudermUt, 00 meter; Luanne So,
sr1tbaU and David Karr, shot put

!3 Weekl ....................... ......... .. !lUO

26 w..ks .................................. i.1!..1o

l

52 eeks ................................. . S67.&amp;0

Cincinnati: 51~/~1-8760 Ohio: 8001&amp;82-7391
. Ou_tside Ohio:. ~/543~733,1

I

..•

�.I

PIQI - 4 The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 12. 1986

·Cardinals sign
Bell; Eatman is
.bound for KC
.

By Ulllled l'reu Jata I H eel
And then there were elgllt.
The St. l.wB Cardinals' signing
Monday of lblebaclter Antlx&gt;ny Bell
left eight lint- round draft picks
wltlwt contracts. Bell agreed to a
foUl' year deal that could be worth
more than $1.7 mlDion.
The Cardinals caused a stir when
they selected Bell with tile lltth plck
overall. The Michigan State product was projected as a second·
round selection.
The Cardinals made Bell tile
highest paid rookie ln team hlstocy.
Bell's agent, Edward Sewell, saki
tile deal includes a signing bonus r1
approximately $665,001, and an
Incentive package that could Increase its value to more than $1.7
mUIIon.
Bell said he Is ready to play
despite rnlssiJig four weeks r1
training camp -and two exhibition

'
'

games.

"The mental part will be more
dllllcutt," he saki. ''The physical
part won't be a problem at all, I
OOn't think."
· The eight llrst·rounders unsigned
asri.MOII!Iayare: quarterbackJim
.Everett by Houston, tackle John
Rienstra by Pittsburgh, Unebacker
Joe Kelly by ClncinDatl, quarter'back &lt;hide Loag by Detroit,
nlllllq back Rollllie Hannon by
Buff&amp;io, Unebacker Tim Green by
• Atlanta, tackle WW WoUQrd by
.·Bulfalo and nmn1ng back Neal
: ::Anderson by Chicago.

' .

Species

Draft picks are oot tile onlY
players tile NFL Is look!~ to sign.
With the U.S. Football League's
decision last week to cancel Its fall
schedule and !tee Its players,
another talent pool has opened.
The Kansas City Chiefs grabbed
one of tile USFL's most talented
players, tackle Irv Eatman, and
quarterback Doug Wllllams sald
tile Washington Redsklns are dose
to signing him.
Eatman reached agreement with
the Chiefs over the weekend, agent
Leigh Steinberg said. Steinberg
said Monday the only thing prevent.
lng Eatman from n&gt;porttng to the
Chiefs were last-minute negotiations with the USFL Baltimore
Stars.
Despite Williams' claims he Is
near an agreement with Washington, the Redsklns said the move ls &lt;t
limited Importance.
"We have a starting quarterback
In Jay Schroeder," a Redsklns
spokesman said. "He (Williams) Is
oot a priority with us right now. "
Schroeder hecamp the Redsklns'
starter last yl'ar after Joe Thelsmann sullered a sev..re lpg Injury.
Thelsmann was rel81SI'd by Washington earlier this summer aftpr
falling his preseason physical.
Taylor would oot conflnn nor
deny the Redsklns have negotiated
with Wllllams, who played five
years with the Ta111pa Bay Buccaneers beforP he signed with the
USFL's Arizona Outlaws.

.

Scoreboard ...
Majors

San F'rancam (Btit 841 at Clnctnnatl
tGWit'bonS.71 , T:: l'S p.m
San DIPgo ! Hoyt ~~ at Atlanta tSml lh
HOi,7: tO

W LN. Gl
Boston

~ ~ .591 -

NY
Btnv"

62 52 .st1 5
fll 52 .s.16 6

()(it roll

Ill 5.1 .!1.11

-

ClYlnd
~

MJwtft

·'

Calli
,_

-·

""KC

NIM

5I

~

!§18

I!

~YI!il8
~ 56 .t!l!5

8

Sl'lMI
~ 5.1 .571'
~ II .B
e 62 .tn
•9 63 .dl
.50 85 .U'I

-·-

""'"""

f,~

t!l

lOi,:r
l
10

m .w u

-

SNttr al CJallnd
~at New York. n~Jt~t
1'l:roMo It~- niJhl
M o.-m.ll, n!Rftt
!biOI! at Kanas c~- - n~l
M»walllft
IQbl
MiNH~~~ at Cdanla.. .. ,.,

-

Montft:or&amp;l

PbUa
011

....

fl'ls,tqh

W L l'tt. Gl
~l5 a2 -

55 SJ .D 19
5t !I&amp; e1 n
SJ 57 .«2 %!
• '-1
r.~
6 61 ..Q J 29',

.m

538Sl-

-·-

PmlblrJft XI, Odc.L 171M UDI'f1). of
...J

Plttarp 1ft.~. . 7, "'1- IIIYIP
Sl . W1111.1tblfrN.I4
NPwYart!.B.~a4

Sail ~ 1.1. C'lndnnat14
Mlln11 11. S. 0...,'
H...,. '7, Los AntriM i
T Eililllqt'ell--.
PlftlbiiJitl tMcYt'UJiarns 2-71 11 Clilri!F
IS.odtt . . WI . t&lt;a p..m.
Sl . l...olil t'l\lcb' 11 ~ 1 ar MontrH I ~~
1·21. 1'1~~
Nrw Yart: (Apll&gt;n &amp;-J1 .11

tG1'0117..1.

t.~

('ff('("ll\"(' 1\les&lt;la.\

Ml!VIl'S&lt;Ila - Plact'd liJflt · llandK Frank

clisal*d Ust; rKalie&lt;l
.m-handl'r Mark F'oMupl trom Tok&gt;do of
Pa.slOn' on

ltlfol~ay

.........

lhP lnll'l""nillklnal l.elf(UI' 1AAA1

Uta h - s~ fn"('oagt"JJt ~rd Darwll
Grtrrtt h to munl- )"f'&amp;r coctract
WISC'OIISln 1CEA
SaiTit'CI Ball KtuC'as
11tw1 roor:'h and Killian Spanbeut&gt;r Rl'l"ll'tal
1

Ru~

dllwl&lt;r ol

-

-

......

·-

Named Kt--.•111 MacCOOJ'I"'U

~port.-t

Om~

rT'It'&lt;la rf'latlons.

- Exlendtod lt. rontraM olti,ll:ht
MJ~~ i.ltlr lormol a Sl"'ii.'Sol
o rr- )'Mr C'Ofllrlict llllroi.IJcll thr l!lllil'amn

GrMI Bay - Cllt ~ tnr:1 MIAP
&amp;.itiH , rwum, bad! John F'a r ~· and
llnrbK-ken Darry ~I and

Sl\a""''"

...,....,

lrlllanapoUs- RetNdled nQI(&gt;tacllll' Brad
Whltf' and t tftto tNt lll@ftts: 111M' tartdr
Fnnk Wr-W!t and fWlMia backs Nfwton
Eatm~~ n

Miami - Sijmpd ~ allfnt ollmsh-·E&gt;
taC'IUP Gf'f'fil Korh : ~ v.~ rl'('(lfver
Stl'\."t' 4 •1l' Md n.anninJ back Dan.1n
MIDN': Hnlllul'l'!'l:l 11\at s tartlnj{ riJttat
llUMd Sip.·(' (lark ~ miss tt.&gt; !il'lllilln
llaW&gt;f' ln iW)' \

" 5.1 ..Jii •
!D57 .et s
5r2 5I .CJ 10
Sl ,. .t&amp;11 101!,
52 !II .• 1~

~- lnc"fnln

Sl.lvndNf Elo!ton

Kansa&amp; C'll)" - Slpll&gt;d tiK'"Idr lrv

NAft)f(AL I.&amp;AOltf:

s.. l.clu

Amrrlt-.. I.Ragut' -

!=iiCilfr ~ Clemen!; for IWO II"~.

WUIIam 5a l"ldMeMnCa~ .

••Taa.

NY

-...

Transactions

P~a

p.m.

Mln..-sota- S ~ kli:'ktr BIWI Franco
and ronrrbaclc Oa\1d Evans.
1\" ' Jets .- ~ Jf'fl Ml&gt;1t.-r IPII
C'MTip.
P1nsb .II'Rh - fl"f't&gt; flll('tll &lt;tk&gt;nslv(' guard
!!Ins Wil"drf"Whf •tt camp.
5I l..mls - Sl.gnl!d lwt.citl'!" Arlthort&gt;"
BPU to .a 4-~"f'U oortnlct: ll'a l\·fd ruMIIIJI
bad!. Qlilonlln WallaPt", ..........~"mil \'k-101'"
IMIIPn andCU"~ Fn!dtiP Thontm"San OW., - Sle'f'd ~ltnsM linfoman
~In

Lutv: CUI

ll)!f' ta~

Sron GamPn,

.Y~}'

Mllcf' TnYb , kil1lttr Jlrn Nk'Mtl
linrbldtrf" Mark MI'VriJh. dril'l1$k'C' IWK-nu Jom Ardr'ftrs. dP!hst&gt;."' l:llrtt Srm!
Oykl!s and rk'ft.~ John Estfb&amp;n llfld JoE&gt;
Smhh

SeanJp - Signpd ~'t tarklt' Ron
Ealnk. ~ guard AIYI11 A:w.'ril:
I'E'IN¥'&lt;1 llnMlackK Glenn cam.-ro"- KQHnl
11m Bumham. t!ahl t&gt;rll MUch o. ~,~ rn
dPIPnslvf' t.ciu. Jimmy Wamon and Cll.ris
¥o'hltl'. and punlrf Buci1y Srrtl:lnfr.
~'a.shlill'on

- 1'radi!d l!lln'lhll cMno to
Tamp~ 8a)o lor thr l1jtD ki~J~o~rt~
DouR \\'Wilms; tradtd 1987 lhll c hlk:v to
New El\llMd tor 1~ ~ 111 Wltlf' rt.'t"f'tWr
~- s..tPn.: Qned wtdt r«ft\'ft" ~
Holk:M'iiy. IIJ[ht E&gt;nd 0.0

Mr&lt;'\1~·

and

~M(!Pio~

First Day

approves Denny
for special program

Lasl Day

Squirrel

Sep. 4

Dec. 13

Deer (lon11bow, crossbow)

Oct. 4

Jan. 31

Groun

Oct. 10

Feb. 28

Deer (prim. weapons, 3 sp. 1reas)

Oct. 27

Nov.1

Fox

Nov.S

Jan. 31

Ouall

Nov. 7

Dec.13

Pheasant

Nov ..7

Dec. 13.

Rabbit

Nov. 7

Jan. 31

Raccoon, Opossum, Skunk, Weasel

Nov. 14

Jan. 31

Deer (gun)

Dec. 1

D~c.

Deer (prim. weapons, stalewlde)

Jan. 8

Jan. 10

Turkey

Apr. 27

May 16

PHlLADELPHIA (UP!) - Cin-•
clnnatl Reds pitcher John Denny,
charged with assaulting a Cincinnati Pest n&gt;porter, was placed In a
rehabilltatlon program Monday
wltlx&gt;ut going to trial.
The program - Accelerated
Rehabilitative Disposition - Is
designed llr defendants who have
oot hel!n n lrooble before and are
not facing serous charAes. In
Denny's case, he was ootaccuSI'dof

By The Bend

Fox, Opossum, Skunk, Weasel

Gallla Christian School, located
near Cheshire, rerPived ~s chartPr
for gradi'S klndergarti'O throogh
eight by the Ohio Department of

Education.

"Charting has always been a
long-ranAe goal &lt;t GaD!a O.rlsUan
School during Its JO yPars ol
operation," said Cynthia Langona,
administrator. "But It Is due to a
concentration of effort by a very
dedicated faculty and statf In the

Jan.31

Beaver

Jan. 15

Feb.28

The annual reunion of the WPber
family was held at the Rl'edsvllle
Locks and Dam picnic area
Sunday.
Summers Haught gave the blessIng for the picnic which concluded
with a decorated cake provided by
Barbara Sar~nt. Presiding offlc·
ers were Roger Gaul, president;
Marcia Keller, secretary, and Cleo
Weber Smith, treasurer. New
officers named were Dorls Koenig,
president; Olive Weber, socretary.
and Cleo Weber Smith, treasurer.

From the wild
Squirrel season opens on
September 4 in Buckeye state
By 1WT11 WOOD
Melp Cauly Game I'Mectdr
With the Sept 4 opening day of

squirrel """son ftl'aring I can't help
to keep asking where did the spring
and summer go. It """1111 ooly
yesterday tile turkeys w..re gotilellng and we were !letting mush·
rooms orenjoymgflshlng oo the old
Ohio. But, with the J98G.87111ntlng &amp;
trapping season nearing lt Is the
tlrnp to start row p-eparlng for
those days we anticipate each year.
Recently John Olstanm an Ohio
Hunter Safety Instructor with tile
Ohio Dlvlskln &lt;t WUdilfe rompleted
a course for those first tiJ1ll' llln!e's
ln Meigs County. U you are Clle r1
those that need a rourse bellre &gt;""
can obtain your l986111ntlngila!DSI'
&lt;lon't fret because we are going to
&lt;iter another rourse this month
prior to the openmg day of squirrel
EithercaDmeat~&lt;r

John Costanzo at 1113-MOO after 6
p.m. to register llr a lllnter safety
course.
We wtU also be otfprlng a trapper
educa~n course In Meigs County
sometime during the month r1
October. Governor Richard Celeot,.
has proclaimed October as Trapper
Educa~n Month. Trapping in Ohio
provides healthy rECI'Eiltion and
enjoyment to more than :JI,IOO
Ohioans r1 all ages. The Governors'

Tway says he
was trymg
to stay close
0

By GENE CADDI!:S
UPI !!poria Writer

TOLEDO. Ohio (UPII - Bob
Tway said he was just trying to
come close to the cup with his
OOnker shot on tt.e 18th hole at the
68th PGA chnmplonshlp. The bot·
tom r1 the cup proved close enough.
"No, I wasn't trying to make It,
I'm not that good," said Tway, who
shot a 1-under par 70 oo the
Inverness Club course Monday to
overcome a 4-shot lead by Greg
Norman entering tile Onal round
and win his llrst major champion·
ship. "I was just trying to get lt
close. It's just Uke a lag pun that
goes ln."
Tway earned $140,100 tor the
victory, his fourth of the year. He
has won $8ll,&lt;n; In 1986 and called
his first major triumph "a dl'Eilm
rome trUe ...
"I just hung In therP today," he
said, "and to make a shot Uke that
on 18, whieb mlgllt never happen

again In my career, Is
unbelievable."
Tway and Norman came 10 tile
18th hole I!Vt!ll and botb mlsSI'd the
green. Tway sent his ball Into a
bunker In !root r1 tile green after
having missed tile fairway. Nor·
man's second shot came to rest just
df the putting sw1ace In tall grass.

"My husband and I have had oor
last two years that the chartering
older
daughter enrolled since 1979
process was successfully
and
our
younger daughtPr since
accomplished."
1!m,"
said
Mrs. Langona, "and It Is
A member of the Association of
Christian Schoools Interna~nal, Imperative to us that (their) sdlool
Gallla Christian School Is a parrot- offer an education that Is acadl'ml·
run Institution whose board t1 cally strong as well as spiritually
trustees, faculty, staff, parmts, and and morally sound."
Beskll's being recognized for Its
students srek to uphold tlllse beliefs
quality
of education, GaUia O!rls·
that all christians share and to
provide an excellent academic Uan School will recelvp benefits
Pducatlon from kindergarten !tom tax dollars spent for !'ducatlon, said Mrs. Langona.
through 12th grade.

proclamation went on to say that
recognlzlng that trapper education
Is an appropriate means to trl"
serve and enhance the ligh level &lt;t

but &lt;1o sign up now.
locations wiD he determined later
This yl'ar at the Meigs Camty
Falr for the first time the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources
will be having a departmental
booth In the GranAe Ifall. Represm latlves !tom the Division cl. Parks &amp;
fl.rerpation, Forestry. OU &amp; Gas,
LlttPr Control and Wlldllfe wlll be
therP to answ..r questions along
with handoots from each respective
division. The Meigs Country Fairboard and the GranAe has been
excellent In the past and thls :,oear,
to provide 5pacl' for the O.D.N.R.
booth. This booth as ln the past
Jl'(lVIdes lor the publlc a lPtter
understanding on how their state
government operates wltiUI their
CIJUIIty and the state r1 Ohio.

Butler top choice
By Unlled l"reis lnle"a alloaal

ButEI" University Is the top pick
In a pre-season poD of Heartland
Collegiate Conference football
coaches.
The Indianapolis school garnered
lour first-place votes and 34 total
points In the poD.
Ashland Collegl' (Ohio), 19115HCC
co-champions along with Butler,
received two lint-place vctes and
31 points, foDowed by the Unlversity
of Indlallapolls with Clle llrst-place
wte and :II points.
Rwndlng out the poll were
Valparaiso University I:JI points),
Franklin Colieg1! (16), st. Joseph's
College In Renesselaer, Ind., (10)
and the University of EvansvUie

~

t::OOm
OAIB BiUifiJEf Dr
ronui.o.L

.I

•Cu

...... ' · e.Mit. tiMmc&lt;

Weber, McKres Rock, Pa., Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Weber, Mrs. Doris
Koenig, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Caldwell, Mr. and Mrs. Rick
Koenig, and Pam Murphy. Tuppers
Plains; Mr. and Mrs. Rogpr Keller,
Rodney and Russell, Marcia
Keller, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard King.
Jr .. David, Bonnie and Chrlsty, Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Gaul and Lea Ann.
Pomeroy R.D.; Barbara Sar~nt
and Cleo Smith. ChesiPr. ,Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald OsbornP. and Mrs.
Floyd Wehl'r, Long Bottom.

'-'•

MEIGS COUNTY
UTTER CONTROL
992-6360 or
992-3371

and Jan Eichinger. Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Seyfried traveled the farth;
est .to attend thl' reunion. Special
recognlzlon was also given to John
Eichinger who has SPrved as
secretary for the family for the past
thrre years.
Attending wpre Chock and Clara
Sayre. Paul and June E ichlngpr,
Joyce, Cheri and Joy Sauters and

ABE students honored
Students ol the 1\Jmproy Adult
Basic Education Program were
lllriOI'I'il for their achievements
recently at the V..rn Riffe Joint
Vocational School ln Pike County.
Certlflcati'S of award were pri'Sented to tlllse who obtained their
GED, certificates of achievement
to somp for academic gains. and
certificates ol apprPCiatlon to those
who wtunteered their tlrnl' and
hard work to thl' program

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 13
9:15 A.M.-Junior Fair Beef Showmanship and Judging
12: 00 Noon-4-H Flower Show Judging (Jr. Fair Bldg.)
1:00 P.M.-Open Class Beef Judglng-FeedPr Calf
Shows Follow

2:00 P .M.-Horse Harness Racing
2:00 P.M.-4-H Style Show-Hill Stage
4:00 P .M.-Kiddie Tractor Pull- Show Ring '
4:30 P .M.-Little Miss &amp; Mister Contest-Hill Stage
7:00 P .M.-Youth Awards Night- Show Ring
7:00 P.M.-Antique Tractor Pull-Tractor Pull Area
6:30-7:30 P .M.-Jim &amp; Connie Prenger-Hill Stage
•s: 00 P .M.-Girls Next Door

~

Fourtl'en students, their guPSts
and three lilstructcrs attended.
Those receiving cerrtiflcates were
Donald Annentrau~ Brmda Watson, Oretha Snider, Joan Landers,
Debra Krautter, Pamela Judi'.
Tina Gr,...n, John Brannum, Wll·
lard Miller, Debra White, Kenneth
Gr,...n, LOretta Timmons, Dewey
Autherson, and Karm Blankl'n·
shlp. Instructors pi'I'Sellt werp Pat
Neece, AwneD AIPSlirP, and Una
Green.

~:~~'::;d'~~~~ &lt;:.:.eit:~-~ome:

p ri k Clel d D Ia S
crd Dean ' Jar lf taats,
Rath
lc a .
nlse, enn Pr and
Jason Mora, Allen and Polly
Eichinger, Max Eichinger, Jr., all
of Pomeroy.
Also attending were Kelly
Thompson, Portland; Mr. and Mr.
RolPrt Seyfrll'd and Alexis, Charles, Susan and Suzie Eichinger,
Columlr.Js; Linda and Amanda
lloyd, Kimberly Shively, Mary
Janp and Randy Gibbs, Rick
Marshall, Parkersburg; . Charles
Fritz Sayre, Long Bottom: John
Eichinger, Lancaster.
Kristina and Paul Northup,
Gallipolis; Opal Eichinger and
Laura, ChPSter; Don, Jan, Tillany
and Justin Eichinger, Reedsville;
Rob and Becky Smith, Belpre;
Nancy, Tracie Roger Lei' Hubbard
and BUI Eichinger, Syracuse.
Thl' 1987 reunion wll be held on
thl' nrst Sunday In August.

roy; Angela, Terri. Patti and
Timothy Paulsen and Nlda

r~M:cC::::Iu~re:·~A:lba=n~Y-~_

_;,_ _;,_

Arthur J . Strauss, Beulah E.
Strauss to Bret A. Wyatt, Kathleen
Wyatt, parcels, Porn. Vill.
Therrtll S. Ran&lt;lolph to T.P .
Chester Water Dlst., right of way,
Ollvl'.
Wanda Lou Teaford, 0.11' C.
Teaford Jr. ill, Carla S. Tl'aford,
Demlls D. Tl'aford to T.P. Chester
Water Dlst., right &lt;t way, Lebanon.
Faye Newllluse, Lucille Deeketo
'r.P. Chester Water [)lst., Lebanon.
ClydeR.Smlth,StellaJoSmithto
Calvin Roy Dowell, Arlene Faye
Dowell, parcels. Chester.
Frank Williams. Marion E. Willi·
ams to Danny F. Bricker, Lin
Brinker, parcels. Scipio.
Patrick B. Morrissey, Nancy L
Monissey to Raymond L An·
drews, Megan L Cale. parcels,
Chester/Long Bottom.
Waltpr A. Crosby, Dec ., to Phyllis
M. Crosby, ~ Int. , cert .. Salem.
Clara Jean Franre to David R.
Wlloox, Shercy L Wlloox, parcels,
Salisbury.
Amy K. Jones, by atty. in fact, to
Debra K. Buck, lots, 1\Jm. VIII.
Federal Sav.&amp; Loan ins. Corp., to
Mary J. Murray, lots 63 &amp; 64, Porn .
VIII.
Clarence W. Barnett. Georgia E.
Barnett to Forrest R. Barnett.
Janl't s. Barnett, parcels, Olive.
ChariPS Mc!Jolp to Rodney Lei'
Wood, parcels, ChPster.
Pl'opii'S Bank of P. Pit., to JamPS
E. Johnson, Betty Johnllln, lot 5,

C..CU S. Mcleod, Mae McleQil to
Gene Q. Wolfe, Esther Wolfe,
parcels, Lebanon.
Clifford Manley, Dec., to Rosanna Manley aka Rosana, Affld.,
Mldd. 'VIII.
James W. Duvall, Mary Belle
Duvall to James W. Duvall, Mary
Belli' Duvall, parcels. onv...
Charles E. Sayre, Clara Sayre,
Mary Ruth Rogers, B.J. Rogers,
Martha Jean DrennPr, Dari'ell
DrenDI'r to Eill'en A. Welker,
GenPIPve Well, lots, Porn. VOl.
Nicholas Prachthauser, Dec.,
Marion Ebersbach, Affld .. Metis.
Leonard VanMeter, Sr., Dec..
Mary K. VanMeter, Affld., Porn.
Vlll.
·
Joel Keith Jones, Joseph w.
Jones. Ruby J . Jones to Columlr.Js
&amp;Southern Ohio Elect Co.• right &lt;t
way, Chester.
Mark. S. Moore, Diane L. Moore
to Columlr.Js&amp; Southern Ohio Elect.
Co. , rtght of way, Chester.
John Fisher Jr., Sarah Flshet to
Columlr.Js &amp; Southern Ohio Elect.
Co., right of way, Chester.
George D. Miller, Pamela Miller
to Columbus &amp; Southern Ohlo Elect.
Co., right of way, Chester.
Raymond E. Donohue, Delores
Donohue to Columlr.Js &amp; Southern
OhloEIPCt.Co .. rightri.way,Sclplo.
Francis H. Andrew to Columlr.Js
Gas Trans. Corp., eaSP, Olive. · ·
MayS. Mason to Ernest Mitchell
Jr., llt 114, Harrisonville.
.
Robert A. Murphy to Sue ·P.

_!M~kkl~.V~ll~l.:__~'-----2~~!.£:~~~Ches~~ter~.:__.::·
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,.....,,.,....,-r,"""r==;:-:-= -:::7:"-:-::--1

Star garden meets
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A tour of historical paci'S In Point
Pleasant along with the garden of
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Pullins
highlighted the July m,...tlng of the
Star Garden Club.
Mr. and Mrs. Pullins are
members &lt;i the American Rose
Socll'ty andhaveaboutlJOvarletles
of roses, some since 1947. They also
have dahlias, lmpatlenc. cannas.
and other flow..rs and trees. The
tour followed a luncheon in
GaUipHs .
Or! the tour were VlrglnlaNPison,
Stella Atkins, Ruby Diehl, Paullne
Atkins, Martha Chapman, Binda
Diehl, Mildred Jellers, Neva Nl-

cholson, Anna Ogdln. Wanetta
Radekln, Marjorie Rife. and Allegra WUI with gui'Sts, Edith Stro~.
RoMie RHI', GA. Radl'kln, and
Nonnan Will.
Plans were anmunced for the
August m,...tlng whclh wiD take
place Thursday at 1 p.m. at the
rome &lt;i RoMie and Marjorie RHe,
The flower arranAem~nl

AYAIWLE AT

SUGAR RUN IILL-992-2115

..

TUESDAY, AUGUST 12 thru
SATUIDAY, AUGUST 16, 1986
BUY IN CASE lOTS AND SAVE, SAVE, SAVEll!

~

Plans have been completed for
the open church wedding of Linda
Marte Thoma, daughter t1 Glen
and Grace Thoma, Chester, to
Jellrey Dean Jones, son of Frank
and Diane Jones, Reedsvilll'.
The open church wedding will
lake place on Saturday at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ. Music
will begin at noon and the ceremony
will be perfonned at 12:~ p.m.

/() J../!6,

t4.19

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ALL TIRES PRICED PLUS RECAPPABLE
TRADE 01 CASING
CHARGE
MOUNTED FREE

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: Thoma, ]ones to wed

(8) .

BIAS

1ioount
'on
.,

The six chldren ct the late George
and Clara Paulsen of Hemlock
Grove gathered at the homl' of
Robert and Diane Paulsm, Albany,
Saturday for a r..unlon.
Attmdlng were Jim. Vada, JanP
and Cynthia HaZPiton. Ht&gt;mlock
Grove: Bl'rnard and Eileen
Paulsen, Mesquite, Texas: Earl
and JeanDI' PaulsPn, Annapolis.
Md.: George, Ruth, Roger and
Kathy Paulsi'D, Ashland; Charles
and Wanda Paulsi'O, O.llas.
Texas: Charll's, Jr., and Sylvia
T
Tim

f

The Eichinger reunion was hPid
Sunday at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds with 45 persons
attending.
Mrs. Joyce Sauters gave lhe
blessing before the dinner.The door
prize was won by Jason Mora, son
of Richard and Denise Mora.
Recognized as the yoongest prPSent
was Justin Eichinger, son of Don

~jiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiijj

STAITIIG
AT S1630

..IIen
P.a11+.

•
' tS' condUC,ted
lf/OL)unton
Etr• htnger
~

Let's ol do our shore!

ethical and responsible behavior
among Ohio's trappers. Again yw
should either call me to sl.gn 141 tor
this cour.Je or you can contact Jolll
Hetzer of Reedsvllle, who Is an
Instructor with the Division &lt;t
Wlldllfl' at :J78.&amp;28. The date and

Numerous prizes were dlstlbutea
in a drawing during the afternoon
and pictures were taken. Given a
special welcomP wpre Mr. and Mrs.
Rick Koenig, newlylll'ds. Dorls
Koenig reported the tjrth ri a
great-granddaugher to Mr. and
Mrs. Marion Koenig, Mansfield,
and the marriage of Mr. and Mrs.
Pete Kohl (Pam Hawk) Gallon was
note!.
Attending the l'l'Union were Mr.
and Mrs. Summers Haught, Lel'slr.Jrg, Fla.: Mr. and Mrs. Wllhur

Property ·transfers

"It Is nice tor parents &lt;t students
at GCS to know that now some of
Ohio's tax money alloCated lor
education wut directly benefit their
children."
WhUP these benefits ooly apply to
students K-8, the charter under
which gradi'S 9-12 will operate in the
fall does o11Pr hem!flts as well, she
added. Those benefits, according to
Mrs. Langnna, are the certainty
that the child Is receiving an
education that meets stall' standards; the acceptance by collpges
and universities of GCS's diploma.
and Improved lpgal statUs.
Gallia Christian School hegins Its
11th yPar on Aug. 25.

Weber gathering held recently

Jan. 31
Nov. 14

Tuesday, August 12, 1986

Gallia Christian School receives charter

6

Raccoon, Mink. Muskral

The Daily Sentinel
Page-6

InDicting semus bodily Injury as
di'Oned by state law, assistant
district attorney Eugene Boggia
said .
Post n&gt;porter Bruce Schoenfeld
had filed a privati' crtmlnal complaint against Denny, chargl-,g Mm
with simple assault, terrorlstlc
thrl'ats and harassment. Schoenfeld ctainii.Tiienily attacked him
for no reall&gt;n Ina Veterans Stadium
runway.May 14.

Trapping

season.

·~·Gamel
Plttsb.llih
at O.lc~
New YOI1c al Phlaielpt-.a, nJ«hT
S!. louis a t Montn&gt;al. right
San OW., at Atlanta, nliht
San Frat'IC'IJc() at Ct octnnal!. night
La A.rlwiPs a t Hous10n, rtgfll

11~

12
11'-!

Dftrvfl !1. Bo5ton 0
BIJI!morfo 1 Tarolfo 1
Ne- York i . Oevf'land ~
C'lllr1110 '- MUwlulft I
Ml.mfti;U 2., C&amp;l.llrN• 0
SHtUP &amp;. OakAad 4
........~GSMrdt IF\reovkl l-411 .11 O;ak1and Ir\n
• , , 7-4). 1: 1! p.m.
8:Axl tHurst 7~ lftd ~ 5.31 ar
Kana~ C1t)' tJacbln '- R..t eutrz. ~~ I,
l. :lo:C6p.m.
Clf'o,.~ !Schrom 11-11 at NNt York
INk&gt;llro 1411. 7:30p.m..
~ tOancy 12.4t II Blhii'I'ICJft'
tMcGI"l"fP" &amp;lOt . 1: ~ p.m.
Chk'IF tuDrldPd l ar 0Pttou !ThutlnOIIId 2-U, 7: !i p.m..
MllW&amp;~ tlary 8-11\ at Texas tHolc h
W I, lZ p.m.
MNNca ~~ '-lCH at C.lilomla
tMcCuktll THl, 10:~ p.m. "' '
p ·,

OUr_,

p.m.

Los An~ fHOfW'YC\Itt !1-61 a t Houston
tRyan HI. 8: :tl p.m.

-

~Judge

HUNTERS' AND TRAPPERS' READY REFERENCE, 1986-87

i?trD SkJN

~UP6RIOR5
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f30u;&amp;NA
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DO.S PIE-PLANNING HELP THE FAMILY?
Jennlller LlewlnJ

~Lieving, Harris to wedl
· · Mr. and Mr.. Joaeph Uevtng ot

ALIGNMENT

CIIOST .aKA~ CAISI

S1450

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"Smlu Pla ... AtiMIIH " l&gt;tltll"
IIIUa FISill

lllllOWEI

New Haven anoounce the engaaement and lorthcomitll mar!Tiage
of their dllltlhter, Jennifer, IQ
CharleiLarryHarriiJr.,smri.Mr.
and Mn. Charles Larry HarrlsSr.,
ReediVillll.
: The couplt! wm be married on
: All4l. 19, at thll Hope Baptist
· Chureb, Grant St., Middleport, at
: 7: :JI p.m. wlthllll! Rev.Dave Bcyan
• pertortlillll, Ott dln!MDn.Y. Mulic
: will be proVtclid by Mary Bryan. A
: recejltiOII wlil be hold at the church
· rouowtna tht tltl'ti1\ClliY·
: MI. lJIYII\I II 1 (p'lduate of
: Wlhllll&amp; Hlill IC!hool fi1d Ia
• emplo)'td 1t Jl\MMI'I In Pomeroy·
: Hii't'la II a ll'tlillll~ r1 Eutern
: Htall !!t!tuil Nltl It llfnployed at
: InJIII'• i'llnlnllrund Jewelry.

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WOII

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·6001QJIIAII ST.

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Sv'P£RIORS
Pou~~

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�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Tuesday.

Photo
judging
announced

'

The United States Postal Service anmunced today an examination
· will be given later this month lor clerk and earlier positions at the
Gallipolis Post Office.
GalUpolls Postmaster George Graves said appllcatlons will be
accepted Aug. 18 through Aug. 22, and examinations will be given to
establish a register of eligibles.
According to Graves, duties and requirements are posted In the
glass bulletin board at the entrance to 1111! post office. Graves urges
all interested parties who meet these requirements to apply.
'

Monday.

Patrol tickets Ky. man

'Bowen's entry, a color snapsoot,
was judged best It soow, and Riebel
won reserved best of soow w1th a

A Flatwoods, Ky. man was cited lor drtvlng lei! of center alter
striking a car driven by a Racine woman Monday morning.
According to state highway patrol reports, James D. Hut, 22, was
driving an Ashland 011 truck eastbound on Ohio 124 when the vehicle
reportedly struck a car driven by Jill Arnot~ 19, of Racine. Arnott
had been westbound on 124 making a left tum, the patrol said.

c:Oior snapshot.

John Lochary Olase, Pomeroy,
took live first places lnnors In the

~A~B. &lt;;ategnl)l.

L

EMS responds to eight calls

YOUNG WORKERS - Youlb ot Meigs County
were hard ai I In ille jumor fair buDding Monday
Jllllllnl: Che llnilldng loudt 011 the JllJIII!I'OU8 dtspla.v .

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports eight calls
Monday.
Rutland at 8; 57 a.m. to Wllkesvllle for Brenda and RandY Faulk to
Pleasant Valley Hospital; Racine at 10:42a.m. to Mile HliiRoad for
Ed Kaiser who was treated but not transported; Middleport at 2:48
p.m. to Zuspan Hollow Road for Brenda Barnettwoowastreatedbut
not transported; Syracuse at 5:06 p.m. to Rose Valley lor Maria
DeVietro to Veterans Memortal Hospital; Racine at 5:09p.m. to
Syracuse for Robert DeVietro who was dead oo arrival; Racine at
8:41 p.m. transported Karen Turley to Veterans Memortal Hospital;
Columbia Fire Department at 10: l5 p.m. to a structure fire on
County Road 'll; Salem Fire Department was called to assist at 10: 23
p.m.

hoolhi to be featured In the buDding. Shown working
In lbe Flatwoods Flyers f.R booth are Ay Mora, left,
and Donna Curt)j.

, PHOTO JUDGING - Dale Lear, Galllpolls pllllographer, revleW!i
some of the blue ribbon wlnU!g photos he oelected Mo. .y when
judging the Meigs County Fair pllllograph oompedllon which b10 138
entrtes this year.
· Winners In the color snapsoot size
judging were Bobby Porter, Route
1, Rutland, first; Karen R. Smith,
Chester, second, Iand!cape or
seascape; John Riebel, Pomeroy,
first; Maxine Dyer, Route 1,
Bidwell, second, animals; Deborah
Grueser, Enterprtse, first; Carolyn
Nicholson, Middleport, second, portraits &lt;r per!Onalllles: Thxanna

Well, Pomeroy, first; Judith Hill,
Grove City, second, pictoral; Brlan
Bower, Tuppers Plains, first;
Sharon Card, Racine, second,
nature closeups.
In the black and white snapshot
division Patty Dyer, Bidwell, won a
second In the landscape-seascape,
and a first In abstract judging.

2 couples get marriage licenses
Marriage licenses have been issued In Meigs Cotinty Probate
Court to John David Follrod, a!, Middleport, and Melissa Lynn
Howard, 18, Rutland; Tad Alan Lockard, 21, Wellston, and Julie Ann
Willis, 20, Syracuse.

Divorce, dissolution filed
Filing for a divorce In Meigs County Common Pleas Court are
Charles B. Wllllamson, Rutland, from Anna Jo Wllliamson,
Middleport, charging gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty.
Filing for a dis!Oiutlon of their marriage are Connie S. Gilkey.
Rutland, and Frank Gilkey Jr., Middleport

Salem trustees set meeting date
Salem Township Trustees wUI meet the last Friday of each month,
9:30a.m., for the rest of. this calendar year. The meetings will be held
at the Salem fire house.

Blaze destroys area home
SCHOOL REPRESENTA~ - Students of
Melp CoqJay llchools are weD represented at the
Melp Caanly Fair lhlll year wtlh approxlmolely 9!'Al
exNblls llf·lildlvldual worll ot sludents done Ia the p1111t
year. 'ltie H 'Ilia will be
Wllh c~ pr&amp;.es and

A Columbia Township family lost their horne to fire late Monday
evening.
The Columbia Township Fire Department was called at 10: l5 p.m.
to the Ron Saunders residence on County Road 'll, just off County
Road I.
Saunders rented the large, two-stoJY frame house from owner
G:A. Radekllt ·Saunders, his wile and three children were mot at ·:
rome at the time the fire slarted. A JlfiSSI!I'hY eal!&lt;!d the fire
department. According to a fire department spokesman, the house
was already engulfed In names by the time firemen arrtved and
Salem Township Fire Department was called at 10:23 p.m. to assist
Columbia. Firemen were on the scene untn about 3: lJ this morning.
An estimate of damages has not been released and origin d the liaze
Is stili undetermined.

ribbons to be awarded, Putting the 111merous entries

Into place Monday were Jolm Costanzo, lEft, and
Rwi8eD Moore, sdtool111pervlrlon from lbe cftlce Ill
Meigs County Superlntmdenl of Schoolll Jom Riebel.

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GOODIFll GALORE - Sharon Weyant, left, 1111d
Maey Belldb&lt;on, home eronomics leathers at GaiDa
Academy, got their share of "goodies" as they

Bicyclist dies from injuries

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ASHTABULA, Ohio (UP!) - A
Maine man who sold most of his
personal possessions to finance a
cross country bicycle trip has died
of Injuries suffered when his cycle
was struck by a car near Ashtabula.
Ellsworth J c Green Jr., 43,
Windham, Maine, died Monday at
University Hospitals In Cleveland,
autooritles said.
He was Injured July 31 when hts
bicycle was hit by anautooo U.S. a!
about five miles east of Ashtabula,
an Ohio Highway Patrol spokesman said.
Green left Maine on July 13 for a

811111pletltbe approximate 308 iSilli Ito 101bey Judaed
the approximate 3011 entries Ia the 111kktJ •deamlnc
competition of the Meip County Fair Monday.

Longworth reunion conducted
The annual Longsworth reunion
was held Sunday at the home of
Gordon and Margie West with a
basket dinner at noon.
Attending were Ernest and Helen
Longsworth of Charleston, W.Va ..
Evelyn and Charles Dobbins of
Pawtucket, R.I.; Harold Longsworth of. Winchester, Va.; Scott
Longs""rth of. Wichita. Kansas,
w~ traveled the farthest; Edith
and Dale Longsworth of Newcomerstown; Sue and Nick Konnovi!Ch and daughter, Ronda, Logan,

W.Va.
Lois and Barney Armstrong,

Cabin Creek, W.Va., Katena and
Tom Willis. Cabin Creek, W.Va .;
S&lt;:ott and Teresa Armstrong of Fan
Bragg, N.C.; Martha Wutiams and
son. Eric. Hinton. W.Va.; Betty and
Ray Posey and daughter, Kathi,
Weirton. W.Va.; Steve and WendY
Baker, Weirton, W.Va.; Glenda
Atmstrong of Cabin Creek, W.Va.
Melinda Adams of Williamson.
W.Va.; James and Judy Dobbins of

Wlnston.Salem, N.C.; Stevie and
Mikey Baker, Weirton, W.Va.;
Therma Hickenbottom, Newcomerstown; Sonda, Sharla and
Sharman Dobson, Newcomerstown; Rhonda and Mike RolPrts,
Pomeroy; Debra West, Jackson;
Bea and But Cornell, Racine;
Gordon and Margie West and
daughter, Melody, Racine; AbbY
West. Hilliard; Esther West, Racine; Beulah Bradford, Racine;
Kevin Snider, Somerset.

Layette shower given in Meigs
Denise Spires Sexton was guest of
honor at a layette soower given
Te('l!ntly by Irma Bales and llita
While at the rome of Mrs. White.
Games were played with prizes
going to Marie Spires and Rhonda
Marklnwhoalsowonthedoor prlze .
Gifts were placed on a table
coveredlnwhiteabovewhichwasa
handelie trimmed with pink and
~lue stn:-arners and an infant
themed obU After Mrs Sexton
opened
gl~. refreshm~nts of a
deco ted cake. ice cream. chips
d ra h
served
anPi:Ot.;e~s 10 · her were
Flo
Caldwell Betty Willis
M re;ce d Jtllle' Spires Rev~
ar an
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I\' a lker, Alice and Bill Chapman.
&amp;11 ~ Stewart . Sandy Butcher.

Pat sy ~pin•s . Diana Wears ,
ilhnnde. Coogr, Jet emy and Joshua Markin. HeiPn Lemley,

Yvonne Sexton. Irma Bales, Ralph,
Connie and Rachel Bales, Muriel
Spires, Junior and Rita White,
Dennis Spires, Joyce Wooten and
Shel)ll Walters.

pefSOOa1 flOteS ff0ffi MetgS
•

Mrs. Mm1on Barnes and t~rt'&lt;'
chlldren have returned to Burie&gt;on,
Texas after a six weeks visit he:-e
with h&lt;'r parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Manley, and, Morton's
mother, Mrs. Dorothy Y.oodard.
Mr. and Mrs. George Dallas and
daughter. Missy. Bill Dallas, a
friend, Lisa , and his son, Adam, of
Los Gatos, Calif. spent the past hvo
weeks here visiting Mrs. Juamta

TUESDAY
KYGER - Cheshire Township
Trustees, Tuesday, 5 : ~ p.m.,.
township bullding.

BEDFORD- Bedford Township
Trustees meeting Monday, 7 p.m.
at town hall.
HARRISONVILLE - Free blood
pressure clinic by Harrtsonvme
SenlorCitlzensCiub, 10a.m. toruun
Tu~ at the town house with
Femlora Story, R:N., tn charge.
Ri\CINE - Racine Lodge ~61
, F&amp;;\M rileets Tuesda\7:00 p.m.;

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ollwo JudKI"' busy at the Meigs
County Fair Monda7 aflemoon selecting wlnnen In

Pat Holter, Almeroy, a member
of the Shade Valley Council of
Floral Arts, wW present the
program at the Jackson fall dlstr1ct
meeting of the Gar!k!n Clubs ot

=~cM:to~l~::~~;;:_the

gram. There wUI he a luncheon at

ooon.

_Luncheon reservations are to be
mailed along. with $7 per member

by Aug. a! to Mrs. Jenny Junk,
Jackson Distnct treasurer, 31
Climer Lane, Frankford, Ohio,
45628.

Racine Legion has ·meeting
Plans for taktng parlin Veterans
Day activities and the annual fall
festival were made durtng a
meeting It Racine Post 002, Amencan L&lt;&gt;glon, held Thursday night at
the hall.
It was noted that the pee wee
baseball team sponsored by the
post had won the league champion·
ship and a picture and trophy won
bY the team were presented to the
post by the team manager.

Guests ·at the meeting were Bob
Walton, dtstrtct. first vice commander; ·CliiUde Brooks, sergeant
at arms, aoo.•Fred Gibbs. fourth
divlson comm~nder.

yearlong trip across the nation to
visit his birthplace In Aberdeen,
Wash., Jackie Armstrong, a clerk
with the Alrtland (Maine) Press
Herald, told the Ashtabula Star
Beacon.
Armstrong said Green !Old most
of his JX!ssesslons, Including two
houses, to pay for the tr1p.
She said the tr1palsowas to be tiP
basis for a series of magazine
articles entitled "Long Distance
Rider- A Bicycle Journey." The
articles were to appear beginning
next month In a magazine called
Maine Impressions.

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A carry-In dinner was held at the
FIJI'l!5t Run United Methodist
Church lor the Rev. and Mrs. Steve
Nel.m and f~Oy. the nltnister ts
returning to !lie church lor anotlll!r
He wasaJsocopgratulated for
his ordination of eldership at tile
annual conference. ·
The Rev. Carl Hicks, one of
Nelson's two 1po11110rs at conference, gave the table grace. A
decorated cake~ till! Methodist
emblem was baked lor till! occasion

rear.

We wish to llq)IISS Oil
IJititltde to Ill Ohio, Auguot 4, 1881.
llat l'ls hiiPtcl in the To All Whom It Moy Condelllt of our SOli, Do- cern:
On Tu-y. 1M 18fl doy
111111 Hoocl. 1111 to 111 ~ of Augu11, 1181, Ill 9:00
fritttduttd nelillbcn of o'ciodt A.M.. 111 1M olffco of
Con11 .111ID1W1 of JLnn
1.011 Hollow .Rd. W. . the
of MtlrP -Coun1\'. Ohio, Jw·
1110 wish to lhlnt Ill ... wlf bo ...~
lor
the friends lttd tt11&amp;b· 1M 1-tbol 11...T1r111 of,
Cornrnoi1 Pr..,Cour1pf
ben IIIIo btotllht food the
uld Coun1\'.
1ttd sent 11Gwet1.
WIMocolr-d
1.0. McCoy
Arthur 1nd Stew

1/

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wrilt Oar Senlillel Ctmilied D•pt

Card of Thanks

AHANDFUL
OF CASH

Public Notice
NOTICE OF DRAWING

·•

Veterans Memorial

I

Pastor welcomed with gathering

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Robert P . DIVietro, 59, Syracuse,
died unexpectedly late Monday
afternoon while walking In the
woods In an area known as Rose
Valley near his home.
Meigs County Coroner Dr. James
Conde said that Mr. DIVtetro was
walking In the woods when he
apparently suffered a heart attack
about 4 p.m. His wile, Marie,
returned home and started looking
for her husband. He was alive when
she located hbn. She gave him
nitroglycerin and went for help.
When she returned with !MJ young
men who were to help, Mr. DIVIetro
had died. With Dr. Conde on the
scene were Sheriff Howard Frank,
Deputies Kenny !Oein and Rick
Johnson and the Racine and
Syracuse Emergency Squads. Mrs.
DIVletro was taken to Veterans
Memortal Hospital.
A miner at Meigs Mine 2 of the
Southern Ohio Coal Co., Mr.
DiVletro was born July 28, 19'!1, at
Camden, N.J., a son of Lawrence
and Mae Severs DiVIetro. He was a
member of the Sacred Heart
Catholic Church In WestvllleGrove,
N.J., and served in Korea with the
U.S. Army. He belonged to the
American Legion and the Veterans
of Foreign Wars at Westvllle, was a
member of United Mine Workers
Locall886, and the Fraternal Order
of Eagles, Aerie 2171 In Pomeroy.
Surviving are his wl!e, Marie
Strogelos DIVietro; a daugher and
son-In-law, Unda MaeandTeri)ID.
Moore, Syracuse; three grand·
children, Robert Christopher
Moore, Rebecca Marte Moore and
Alan Douglas Moore, all of Syra- 'Jise.;, . h,j.s mother, Mrs. Mae
I!JIVJetro, Collingswood, N.J .; lour
brothers, James DIVtetro, Collings·
wood, N.J.; Henl)l and Lawrence
DIVIetro, both of Westville Grove,
N.J.; Joseph DIVletro, Bayoone,
N.J.; six sisters, Maye fuwalskl,
Westvtlle Grove; Lena Allesrendl,
Annie Billicks, Teresa Mayer,
Marte Trzaska, all ci Collingswood,
N.J., and Margaret Shaffer, Wood·
bUI)I, N.J .
Besides his lather, Mr. DIVIetro
was preceded In death by two
brothers and a son, Lawrence
Anthony DiVietro.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Thursday at the Syracuse Mission
with Rev. Jim Evans Jr., ol!lctat·
ing. Burial wW lP in Gilmore
CemeteJY. Friends may call at the
Ewing Funeral Home from 2-4 and
7-9 p.m. on Wednesday.

!It
Ill Ceu11 St .. Pomt•G1. Dh111 076t

and Long Bottpm, will be having Its
annual lnmecomtng on Sunday
Aug. 17. Spooker will be Rev, Cart
Hicks. Singers wiD be the Blsllelt
Brothers, Unda Damewood and
Jan Lavender. Servtcesat9: ~a.m.
and 1:lJ p.m. Potluck dinner at

I

Robert P. DiVietro

JURORS
Office of Commilroionoro
of Jurors, M11Q1 County,

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Commletloner• of Jurott

181 12 1tc

Services

4

Giveaway

Kin1n1 to • good homt m• I
female 2 months ald. Cell

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I
BmllllavNble bleckdog, tamity

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addono ond IOmodoJ;ng
- Roofing and gutter work

-- Plumbing
c""'"" w"'
and electrical
wook
(Free Estimate&amp;)

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

Pomeroy, Ohio

4-15-'86-tc

BISSELL
BUILDERS

I&lt;UT OU! FOR FU!URI USIJ

CUSTOM BUILT
·HOMES &amp; GARAGES

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

"At Reasonuble Pri&lt;es"

98 5·3561

PH, 949-2801

oro949-~8h60
oy or Nog I
NO SUNDAY CAUS

4-16-'116 !In

All MtUI

•R=~~gnor.~...

•Doyors •Froozers

and

lamlly PM

Small lovoble

block god, 8

;;:.:r

old . Call

mo.

Sl

m -:n

18
old milo Codclf Sp.,IOI
to good home . Dog accea:~ '
;nclvdod. Coli 814-441· 7782.
Kmana. Coli 110-446-3!188 .

•Washers •Dishwashers

PARTS

:~-4-:S~.:::

SERVICE
45-Jic

Puppies to give IWI'f. CoiHe M'd
Shepherd. Very pretty. Cell

614-9-49-2906 .
Grwy end white feme .. kttt.. to

give awey. Call 614·•2--191 -'

3klttens, 1 en 304-876-8118: .

RADIATOR
SER~ICE

We can repair and r&amp;core 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 -tfc

EUGENE LONG

Tirotl of Han!
lusly Wator?
Wo Ha¥1 The An·

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

swer•...

SPRING SOFT

VINYL &amp; AWMINUM

Now ASmall
Monthly Rlntol
Plus lrutial lnstollation
Puts A Softener tn Yow
Home Today lltose with
Option to Ivy!

Complete Gutter Work

local!! Owltld, 20 Yrs. lxp.
DANS WATII REFINING
Wtlt Sth Str•t

CALL COLLECT:
Ph. (614) 843-5425

Complete Remodeling
Roofing of oil Types
Worked in home area

20 years
"Free Estimates"

6 Lost and Found

- - - -- - ··
FOUND brown &amp; whitt dog in .
vicinty of Fairfield Acr• Subdi·
viakln. C1ll 814-441-0800.
·

LOST Medium 1in femele

doli-

Black with white markings on ..'·
neck &amp; feet. Leat .._.. on . ."
Kerr-Harrisburg Rd. Call 814- ,
246-15588 or 814-245-6301 .

FOUND cemera in hone blm at ,
Oallia Co. Fair. Cell &amp; identify,
614-388-9046 .ttlf ?PM.
.

1· 16 -88 2 mo

:304-112-2996 7-2 .

FOUND Black, Lib. O.J. White

Rd. Call 614-448-8198.

WE ARE YOUR SALES

AND SERVICE

HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYlVANIA
•SPE£0 QUEEN lAUNDRY

•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

•SATElliTE SAlES &amp; SERVICE

lit Hm ~ Full Tl1111
Sho~

Tuhltei ..

on D1ty
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER-915·3307
4/ 1/ tln

.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL · SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

MIDWEST
SEAL &amp; STRIPE
Serving this area
with PoweSealseal
1oating and striping
and making of
Asphalt &amp; Conuete.
1·614-696-1337
1-614-593-8693
&amp;-ZJ-'86·1 mo.

10·8-tfc

Found; large white ~rd dog In
Hemlock Grove lrtl. H11 culler
CeiiiJ14.-992-8919.

Found on Ball Run Rd. Honda car
or truck k~l- Owner ml'f claim-·
by c1\llng 814-992- 3652.
,
lOST - Beagle. tri-colored~
mala. 8 montht·old. Chein on •
coll11 Name luke. Call 304- '
875-5451 . Bellemeade A,.., · ' '
lOST, Sat. M"on County Flir.
St. Albini clut ring, 125.00 ··
REWARD, 304-1578· 2681 or ...
576-2217

FOUND female Dachshund •."
Rayburn Road area. 304-8756253.
: .~

..- --~.

Howard L. Writestl

ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
.
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949-2168

2·17-86-ttn

RED'S
CARRY OUT

..

BOGGS

9

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Woods Mill Road

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO

HOURS :

Authoriz..t John Dlore,
New Holland, lush Hog
Form ' Equipment

2 Milos fiom lilwell
3 Milos from VInton
Monday- Thurodly
tO A.M .-9 P.M.
Fridoy 8t Saturday
10 A.M .- It P.M .
Ctoold Sunday

388-9338
8-7-1 mo.

Dlallr

Farm Equltment

Part• &amp; SeNIIee

~~

Wanted To Buy

We pay c•h for late model clnn·
used cart.
• ••
Jim Mink Chev.-Oids Inc. • :·Bin Gene Johnton
... •

114·441--72

•.

TO:" CASH paid for '83 mod;._:
and n..wer used cafl. SmiUJ-.
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 Ealterrr·
:2:iGalllpollt. Call 614-44&amp;-::

WANTED TO BUY used wood • '
coal helltu. SWAIN'S FURNIT\JRE. 3rd. &amp; Olive St. Gellipolls. Cal\814-448-3159 .
Ulhld mobile homea. Call 814-,.
~..:

448-0176 .

ACCENT

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
Co111111terized Hearing ~ir Sele~ion
Swim Molds - Interpretmg SeMces

FENCE (OIIIIPANY ·
PH. 9112·6931
lft.r 5 Cal

. 742·1027

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Buying deity gold, ailver coil\1.&lt;
rings. jewelry, tlwling wara. dd"·
coins. large currenq. Top pd.'•
c•. Ed. Burkett Barber Shop~· •
2nd. Ava. Middleport, Oh. 814·'
992-3478.
~ :

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

t lllpi11V IIIi' lil
S1: rv11.1 :

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

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

,, AN

y,., ,,.,,, NOIII

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

PIUS: Offito Suppti" &amp;
furniture, Wedding
and Graduatiln
Stolionory, Mcrgnrtit
Sigm, Rubtror St..,ps,

SIUU ANIMAL HOURS
Mon.-Wtd.-Thurs. 3-5 pm
'""· 6:30-1; Fri. 1-2 pm
Scrturdoy 10-11,30 om

LAIGE ANIMAL I
SUIGIIY 1Y AI'I'T.

PH. 304-675-2441
BEND AREA CALL

Ripley Office
For Hours
304-372-5709

10-14-tlc

Htrlngl Flde,.l govwnnm jobt
in your ar11 and ov•••· Many
immec:Uate op.-.lnllf wfthout
waiting llat or teat. 11&amp;-

•ea.OOO. Phon•ullrlfundabl,.
11021 838-8886 . .... 808 .

•••mbly

BMylitter in my horNiflrtlng in
Sept. Send r•umaa 6 r.terence• toRt. 4 Box 148, GaHipola,
Oh 46831.

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

•g•

for children
5 I I . Call
114-448-2615 or 114 - 448~- ·
8171

RAYMOND E. PROFFITI (MAC}
RACINE, OHIO
Olli&lt;e 949-2438

VINYL SIDING
'ALUMINUM SIDING
'ILOWN IN
INSULA nON
1

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

New Homes Built
"Fraa Estimates"

PH. 949-2801
or 949·2860
No Sunday Calls

3/11/tfn

64 Mile . Merchandise .--------------;

Roger Hysell
Garage

.·

BabyslHing po1ition at ruidence

992-3345312 / rtn

l'T. l'LIASANT OFFICE
305 Jackson bt.

Help Wanted

Excellent lnco,... for Pllrt time
hon-.
work. For irrfo. •
cal\312-741-8400 •t. 313. ~

IUifnftl Forn,
Copy StrWictl, Etc:.
2Sl Mill St., Middloport
10• MuiiNrry A¥., PoiMroy

TOWN &amp; COUNliY
VnEIINARIAN
CUNIC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM

11

Emergen&lt;y 949-25 I 6
7-28-116·1 mo.

Antwu ncemenIs

GovernrNnt Jobs . 118,040 t59, 230·yr. Now hiring. Cal.. •
ao&amp;-ea7-t1000 Ext. R-98011 tor .·
current feder•llilt.
Signing up c»alen now tor . 1
Frlendt¥ Home Pan ill. Earn vour .

kit by heving Fri.ndly Pllrtiu.
Toys and Olftt. 1 good w.,y tO :.
rna. . extra lnco -.. Call your
Friendtv HorN Deel• now . Also '
booking parties. M111nolla Nltz
.. 81•· 912· 3181 .

· 3 Announcements
SWEEPER 1nd t8W'ing mtchlne

repllir. p1rt1, and auppli•. Picll
up end delivery, OIVIt Vacuum
Cluner. one hllf milt up
Georg• CrMk Rd. Ctll 814 -

441-0294 .
Oecor1t_. cak• tar any occ.lion. W-'dingt 1 tpeelllty. Will
deliver for lrhtU fte. 114-992·

not .

-

-:-:N-old-:-oot-,-,-mo--noy-7::-F=A::::IE~N=D:-:-:
LY ~

HOME TOY PARTIESh•lmme- ..,
ell ate optningl tor mlllllltfl tnd
dtmOn .. r•tort- in thil area . lt 'a
llld profitable. We'
hr-11 ovtr 700 exchlng toya
(lifts ftlltllrlng the new animatld
talking doll Cricket which will be
8dvertlted M national t .v . NO '•
c..h lnveatmtnt. no coll.:ting,
no deUvarlng and no lll'\lice
chargt. All you neld It tdNireto ~
m~ke nVJney, h.--efunandafew . -:
hOurs of tpara time. Na ••P•··
rieoce necenary. Call 1 -800·

••v. fun

an• . '

227- 11510.

C•t for the elderty, room,
bo•d. l1undry. 24 hour e1re.
RHtOnlble ret•. lott T.l.C .

304-773-!828.

.'

.,

3000 gDvemment jobs liat . ' ·
t18.040 ·t69.230 VIII . Now .. '
hiring. Call808-887-1!000 bt. ·t ,
R-91105 .

'"

lt. 124, Pomoroy Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Members of the post were
reminded that at the next meeting
two new lrusrees wlll .be elected. ·
· A turf&lt;ey dinner was served
following the meeting by Tom
Diddle. ·

Attending were tiP Kev.and Mrs.
Steve Nelson, Donna and St even
Nelson, All and Hilda Yeauger,
Roy. Rose Ann and Rochelle
Jenkins, Rayan Young , Rev. and
Mrs. Carl Hicks. Rick, Debbie and
Brltany Hauber, Don and Kellee
Nease, Vernal and Betty BlackMJOd, Mal)!: BUlle and Amanda
Wells, Mal)lbelle Warne~. Naoini
Wyatt, _l~thiee n · Scott, Ma l)! K.
Roush, C3rotyn·Salser, and EVel)•n
Hollon.

cUed early Monday morning at
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital.
A oousewl!e, Mrs. Denison was
rom In Salem Center to the late
Robert Edwin and Francis Elizabeth King Wllllams.
She Is survived by several nieces
and nephews and in addition to her
parents, was preceded in death by
her husband, Howard, one sister,
Anna Faye Jordan, and one
brother, Wlllle D. Wutlams.
Services will be 1 p.m. Thursday
at Btgony.Jordan Funeral Home In
Albany wtth Rev. Robert Mussman
cttlciatlng. Burial will be In Salem
Center Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 2-4 and7-9
p.m. Wednesday.

Admissions - Gwlnnle White,
Middleport; Sue Bentz. Middleport; Leona Wallace, Pomeroy;
Ella Rcush, New Haven; Okey
Kaiser, Racine; Karen Turley,
Racine.
Discharges - Clint McNQlee,
____::(C::_::o:::nl::::lnu::::ed:::..;fro::.:::.m:..:.P.:oag""e-=-1)c.___
Eher Pickens, Grace Wh~ ,
lng that schools wlll be ~nlng and James Pullins, Bernice Fry, Paul
urging that they use l'!lre In driving. Michael, Robert Rhinehart Helen
Council approved the report of Augustine, Janet Henline.
Mayor Fred Hoffman slnwlng
recelptsd$5, 776.221n !lnesandfees
Registration urged
for the month of July. A letter was
read from Dr. Edward Lewis, New
Students who wUI lP In the
Hampshire, again thanking the
seventh or eighth grades at Meigs
councillor naming a street for his
Junior High this fall, and did not
Jrother, the tate Art Lewis. Dr.
attend a Meigs Local school last
Lewis, woo earller had sent a gift of
year, should register at Principal
$1,&lt;00 to the community, sent a
John Moore's office tn Middleport.
check br another $liOO to assist the
O!Oce oours are8a.m.-noonand1-3
village with its project of purchas- p.m. d8Jl6.A birth certlttcate,
Ing new street signs. Mayor
immuntza%'~ record and last
H'otrman announced that the new
year's report card are needed to
truck for the fire repartment is
register. Classes will begin Tuesscheduled to arrive this evening.
day, Aug. 26.

1

by Marcia Arnold anp t~ welcome
back·decorations were prepared bY
Kathleen Scott.
_
,
Pastor-parish chairman, Betty
BlackMJO&lt;t, assisted by Marcia
Arnold and Debbie Hauber, com·
mlttee members, had a program
following the . dinner. Dan Nease;
lay leader,- gave three · s)rort
readings, tlll!re was rruslc bY Riel!
and Debbie Hau\lfr, tile R.e}l. Mr.
Hicks had commenis, aqd the
program clOsed with Singing of
"Blest Be till! tte that- Binds."
'

Ida E . Denison, 94, Rt. 3, Albany.

Cable com plaints. __
Vaughan property.
Mayor Fred Hoffman also commented that ltflciats will see I! they
can't get 1111! problems stralgtened
out In that section of town.
Mrs. Vaughan also met with
council to discuss parking near the
bakery bulldlng and how parking Is
planned for around the new addt·
tion which Is being added to the
Vaughan business. Possibilities d a
store employee helping with the
safety of children going to and from
school were discussed. Mrs.
Vaughan reported also that before
school opens each fall, the store
puts printed matertalln the grocery
sacks of every customer announc·

GCO will conduct workshop, .meeting

Bachtel, Carol Tannehut, BiU Matlack, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Knight
Mn. Holter will lnoo!pOrate
and other relatives. Mr. and Mrs.
baskets and woven material with
Dallas and Missy went to Maryland
flowers. Clubs soowd take plants,
from here to visit relatives, while
seeds, bulbs, dried materials, vethe others returned to California.
getables, and fruits marked with
Steve Knight and Cathy Crumb of the jrlce by 9: :.1 a.m. lor the sales
California have been here visiting
table.
his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Col!ee hour and registration will
Chester Knight.
. start at 9:00a.m., with the business
meeting to llUow. Bert Merl)l,
distrtct ~rttculture chalnnan, and
Shlrley Sadley, GCO, Inc. !X'es!·
lEnt, will give ole morning pro-

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT. - Middleport
Amateur Gardeners will meet at
the Mldd leport ftre station at 7 p.m
GRANVILLE
'I1Ie annual
Wednesday lot· a ptjtluck suwer. reunion ot the descendants of Holt
MemlPrs are to take a flower and Maly Fbster 0u1ta will be lll!ld
arrangement.
Aug. 17 near GranvDJe, oo' the
former site ot the counw lxlme
Homecoming
State Route '11, mrth of Luray:
PORTLAND - 'I1Ie Hazel Corn· Frlendirand relatlves are Invited to
munJty Chord!, between Portland atti!nd.
~

the c1omes11c .lll'llr area of the fair. There are
dome1tlc ariiJ entries lhlll year. Mrs. Kuhlls pictured
examining an embroidered calendar oampler, lbe
entry of Mrs. JIIIJH!8 Wan!, Pomeroy.

Pomeroy, WM -

Community calendar/ area happenings
master mason degree.
PUMERO\' - Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce meets
Tuesday, noon, Pomeroy Trinity
Chu rch. Luncheon.

•

m •

DOMJ!l!I'DC DISPlAYS - lkmny Kohl, of near

The Daily

Ohio

,---Local Briefs:---. I Area deaths I Business
Accepting postal exam applications
Ida E. Denison

'

Brian D. Bowen, Tuppers Plains,
aDdJolmRiebei,Route3,Pomeroy,
walked away with top lnnors In the
competition of the photography
judging of the Meigs County Fair

black and white enlargement judg·
lng Including the best land -or
seascape, best animal, portraits
aDd personalities, abstracts, and
na;ture closeup. In the black and
white englargement judging Steve
Bowen, Tuppers Plains took a first
ln,:.plclural with Lochary taking
second and a second In the
mlscellaneous category. Bowen
also took a second In the anbnal
categol)l and the portraits and
personality division.
.:Winners In the color enlargements categnl)l were RolPrt A.
Bailey,
Long Bottom, first;
Carolyn Nlclnlson, Middleport, second, land or seascape; Jill Holter,
LQng Bottom, first; Sharon Card,
Racine, second, animals; Card,
first, and Sandy Bowen, Tuppers
Plalna, second, In portraits and
personalities division; Steve
Bowen, Tuwers Plains, first, and
Bailey, second, In plctoral; Bailey.
a Second In abstracts; Card, first.
and Steve Bowen, second, nature,
an_d Bailey a first In the miscellane-

12. 1986

''

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
Al11 Trt•••luloa
PH. 992·5682
or ,992-7121
6-17-tlc
GtriGI• Sal• Firat nme 108
Circle Aw.• actOn from Don-'·
ll't on 31. Tu•day only, 1-1

. BETTER

PLUMIING &amp;IIUnNG

THANA

161 North S.ood
Mlddllport, Oltlo 45760

GARAGE·FUL
OF STUFF .
992-2156

..... 'Giillipi:ilis- ........
&amp; Vicinity

Now Loatti..,

SALE 5 &amp; SERVICE
We CerYY Filhirlg S"pplin

Pey Your Cable 8o
Phone Bill1 Here

. IUSifllS PHONE
16141 992:6UO
IIIDINtl PHON!
16141

Antlquea. ftetwaU, dr••••·
ltone J•, gun-. ueld fumlture,

tooll, much more. C.,len.-y.
Thurs. • Fri.

lolo Thu;odoy

Auguat

14. 2

""... from Porhlt on Cieri!
Ch.pel RoM. Evlr(thlng 21

centa. Rein, no ..... 114·311·

Yard Sale Thura. &amp; Fri. Children
• women clothing, Old 180 at
bergreen.

...... ·p·t .Pleiiiiiiif ... ·:
&amp; Vicinity
Jllty 5th, yard •le 9 till dark.
Qalllpolit Ferry. Ruga. bicycle•

mite.

,1

·-···--pc;;n&amp;·rav··--·--·--

.,

Middlaport
&amp; Vicinity

·r

1448.

4i3 · o;~~; - s;_·-~ - Mi,;dt;;;i:

o ...,. &amp;Me Auo. 13. ,,., 111 .
1:30-1 Tum off At 7 Ill
lulwiii•AddiiOn Ad. First Rd.
to ltfl bllflnd AddaYIItt School.

Augulf 14th and 11tt.. 9 :00-·.- 1
4 \00 .

white hou.. wllh rtd bem .

Clothing.

w.W•. mite.

01rtge Bale: W.dn•dev Auf. ~
13th e:oo om unfll!, 1 t 21 hot"·•
Maln.jiometOY- ltllnntt'lana. · ·

!•

�Page-8-The Daily Sentinel
11

LAFF·A·DAY

Help Wan1ed

44

Help w.nt~ : Clert!t, appty in
pttaon M VIIUgh .. l Cerdinll in
Mlddl~11 - Persona po11. .1ng
abovt av..,.. , lbilhi• in work

Apartment
for Rent

1 and 2 bdr. apta. torrent. Batie
rent tor 1 bdr. $170 . l11lc rent
for 2 bdr. 1212. Alto 1200 sec:.
dep. req . Clo11 to Foodllf'ld .nd
Spring VIIIIY PIIU- Jadlton

Wented: C•hl.,,, apply in perton et Vaugh ... Cerdlnal in

Em1e

Ap~rtmenta,

Equal

814·448·

Middleport. Pertant pos•••ing
above av~raga abihtlu in
nu mbeu lftd fri.ndlln••·

3997.

EASY ASSEM8LV WORKI

clfl)eted, utllitlet Plid. No children, no pett. CaM 814-448 -

Houalng

Opponunlty.

2 bdr . ...,,talrs~t . ,unfurnllhed,

t714 .00 p., 100. Guaranteed
PIYmWII. No tal•- Oatailt· tend
lttmped env.topa: Elan-716,

1837.
Furn. apt. 1 bdr .. 12315 ulllltl•
~id . 920 4th Avt .. Otlllpolil .
Ctll 4'1-M18 tfter lpm.

3411 EmiH'Priu, Ft. Pierce, Fl.

33.S2 .
Babylittet" needed in Ponland
ar• . Cell after &amp;:00 . 814 -843·

2 bdr. unfurnt&amp;h.ct tp1 . 1nCrown

5401 .

City. Cell614-258-8820.

AVON, . 3 op., tarritori•. call

2 bdr. unfurn. wrth tppl. It 811
Third Ave.. O.Uipolil. 1250
month plut utilltiet. Call 1142415-9696.

304·876· 1C29 .
HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES .
It your future llill unsettled?
Check l'lto the Army National
Guerd. We hava good pay,
training, and up to t18,000

in educltionelbenafitl.
Serve part-time. 304-675-3950
or 1-800-642-3619 .
OPENING AVAILABLE selling

Furn. 4 room1 • blth cle.,.. No
~11 , adults only. Ref. &amp; dep.
required . C..l814-... 8-1!i19.

"We want to play house,

Regency Inc. tpanrnent 2 bdr.,
utHitln panty paid, nlca. Call

Dad. Can I borrow your

7926.

apron?,

304-8715-6104 or 304-878-

Me"i Mac's gusrantted line of
ll
toys, gHts. hotnl decor items.
1 bedroom apt. for rent. Basic
etc . NO delivering. collecting or
rent starts $215. a monttt ttlat
inv•tnwnt . Your houtt. Call ~~~~=~;;::;:;;~~~;=:~~~~~==::::1 includts all utiliti... Oeposh
304· 876 -6768 or 1 -800-992- 13 1 Homes for Sale
required of uoo. Contact Vil.
34
8 USIM8SS
1072 .
lage Menor Apt. Middleport
Buildings
614-992-7787 . Equal Houting
Opportunity .
REPS NEEDED for busines
4 bedroom home on 7 acres.
accountt . Full-time. UO.OOO·
Hunters parMiite In Ch•1er Fire damegad building, 609
Pomeroy 2 bclr, Naylort Run,
180,000. Part-lima. 812.000- area. 132,000. Call ea-98&amp;·
M1in St., Point PI61Unt, 304- 8175 mo. t100 deposh. yard,
118,000, no selling. repeat 4392.
882·3368.
patio, Call after 6pm 814 -992buain••· Set your own hourt.
8886 .
Tr~ining provKied . Call 1-6124 rooma, b1tll, partly fumillled,
938 -6870, M-F, Bam to 6pm
carpeted throughout. Forc&amp;d air 35 Lots S. Acreage
1 bedroom apt. in Pometoy.
(central 1tandred timet.
fuel oil furnace, air conditioned.
Covered patio, metel building. 1- - - -- - - - - - Completely remodeled kitchen
locettd on Story's Run Rd. Call 80 ecres more Of" l•a on St. Rt. furni1htd. All new ruga. 81412
Situations
114 -387-7588 or , 814. 387· 233 lndtowf"'lthip road. 01kHill, 992·8218 or 614-992 -7314
0395.
Ohio. Pond and ehtctric. Aaklng
Wanted
122,000. Charltt Delanry, 814· Apartment on Main St. in
Pomerov. 1126 p• month. Call
For u ia: Apartment houae in 882·6173.
614-992-8069
.
Pomeroy. 814-992-8022 .
Will care for elderly in my home.
1 ecra 2 car glf'ege elM:. water
Train.:! end 1111p . 614-992-6683
Take overpayments. 2 bedroom. 1eptic tank on atate route 664, One bedroom epenment. Unfuror 614-992-7314 .
nished. •160 per month plu1
home In Syracute. Clotatoperk. will consider trade. Call 814utiliti11. Call 814-992-6646
388·8745
.
pool, and llf'O~ nore. Alum!·
Special nuraing care for elderly
days ud 614 -949 - 2216
num tiding, Clrpat. tome furniin p-iv1te home. C1ll 81 4·992·
ture. Storage building, small lot. 36 acre ftrm 6 rooms &amp; blth, evenlngt.
3695
814 -992· 3533 or 814 -992- gM wall, free g•• &amp; oil, 1100 lb.
tobacco bite. Rural water, One bedroom unfurni1fled, total
2088.
Room and board lor low income
aevaral building tots. 6 miles out electric apt. Water, MWage and
Senior Citizt.ns . Call 614 ·992·
7 rooma, Bath %, Ch11ter Bulaville Rd. 169.500 meke garbage collection lree . 8143696 .
Villege. Move in before school offer. Melvin Mooney, 61 4·446· 992 -2094.
atarts . Reduced 126.000. 614- 3006.
Looking for odd jobs. Contect tt
For rent: 2 bedroom furnished
986·3671
.
234% West Main St. Upstairs
Aahton building Iota with public ept. Adult• preltned . 814-992beaida Kentucky Fried Chicken,
Modern 3 bedroom home, re- water, mobile hom• permitted, 2749
Pomeroy, Ohio .
duced to 148,000.00. 304- 304-1576-2338 or 304-578 f:i room unfurnished apt. lor rent
2287.
675-15047 .
Call 814-992-5434 or. 304Will &lt;t1 babysitting in my home.
Full Of pan-time. Yard ftnefHt.
12x80 mobil'e home and lot on 2 cemetery lots. Ohio Vall.,.,. 882 -2686.
Behind School. 304-675-2784.
Heretord Ulna. Will contidtr Mtmorv Gllfd.,.,l, Gampolis.
Ohio, 11,000.00. 304-876· 1 bec:froom ept. in Middleport
trlde. 304-578-2953.
1175. p11 month UOO d&amp;polit
3107 or 304-882-2476.
814 -992 -6611 dl'fS, 614-992·
1B Wanted to Do
3 br ranch atyle, family room,
8783 avening1.
good ioc.ation . Naw Haven.

I;;;::;=;:;;:::;:====

-

304·882·3120.
E.llperienctd bookkeeper taking
new accounts . C1ll 814 -4487093 .

F1nanml

.,

.:•. . 21
,,

Business
Opportunity
I NOTICE I

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . recommend• that you
do bu1 in•• with people you
lmow, and NOT to tend money
through the mail until you have
ll vestigated the offering.
Need extrtl money] Friendly
home toy peniet het immediate
openingt for m~n~gars and
demon1tr1tors in thil tree. It's
ea1y, fun and profitable. We
have over 700 a~~:citing toy1and
gift a featuring the new animated
talking doll "Cricket" which will
be advertised on nationallY. No
ca1h investment , no colltctlng.
no de livering ar1d no 1ervice
charge. AHyou neltd it a deaireto
make money. have fun and 11few
hewn of IPICe t ime. No llllpe·
rienct neceuarv Call 1 -BOO ·
227-1510 .

23

Professional
Services

W11ter wellt serviced and drilled .
Fr ll!6 attimatel . Call 614 -992 5006 Of 814-742-3147
Ray' t Detail Work. Interior and
E•terior of automobile at your
location for $38 .95 . 304·6756777 .

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

3 bdt . home. don to town, 2
batht. partly furn ished . G.n
heat, low utilities Ca1161 4-24692U .
House &amp; one acre. cion to Rio
Grande in Soutflw ettern acho ol
district. Mu1t n il. 126.000. Call
614-245-9248 .
2 atorv. 3 bdr. hous&amp;on N. Main
St . In \l inton Call 614-245 ·
9434 before 5, 614-388 -8147
after 6.
Houae wit h 2-90ft. loti, 180ft
on At . 7 go• to riv&amp;r Will trade
for late model larger car. low
mil eage or atationwagon. Call
614-894-3327 .
3 bdr. raneh e11 cond .. nice level
lot, Rt. 7 Crown City. Call
814· 268-8752 .
Quality honw. newly remodeled
choice locatton on College Rd
Syracult. new complete kitchen
and laundrv. air conditioned,
large lot. 814-992-6324
8roomhCK.IIe . 1.2acret . Double
car garage. located on Rote Hill .
Btrgtln pricl8d 120.000. Call
&amp;1•· 878-2513 . •
Reedav llla. by owner. Two for
the price of one. 2 bedrooma,
liv ing, dining room, kitchen.
bltfl with extra room. All fully
carpetMI. Ltrga porch. fenced
yard with ,.tillite T.V. Also
apanment whid"l includ• 1
btdroom. living room, kitchen
,,.. with bath, wotklhop and
garage. Foretd tir g11 heat, own
wattf wtfl. large lot and mainte·
nanc.lrM tiding . 1415 ,000. Call
814-378-61 &amp;6.
7 n:tOrM with blttl. glfagt tnd
buildings, 2'.1- ecraa. Clo,. to
achool and ttore. 61tilllte with
rotor end power box . 614-742-

Hou11 for aela or rent Gallipolis.
Georges Creek Road , tmall
l•m. 25 acr11. 3 bedroom
house. 304-882-2714.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sala

_;_---.,.,--.,---:--· lo-

36

Real Es1ate
Wanted

1 to 2 .ern, Green School Ditt.
or r•l nlct home. Call 614-4-48·
4307 ~•nlngt .

Rt!IILJI S

Houses for Rant
NEW AND USED MOBILE 41
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY - -- - - - - - - MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 MI . 3 bdr. hou11. Spring Vallev
WEST. OALUPOLIS. AT 36 Pl1n. no patt, 1 or 2 children
PHONE 614-441-7274.
Ref. • depo11t . 14-00 month
Ctll814·«1-1323.
1981 Buddy. 2bdr., 12d§O
12800. Cali 814-446-0390.
6 rooma houae for rent lnquira
918 Second AVe.. G1lllpoUa.
1970 Champion 12x60. 2 bdr. Oh. No phone cells .
13995. Call 814-317-7410 after 6
2 minut• from new O•lllpolil
Pooll Mint condkion. 2 bedroom
76 141170 Rosemont. 3 bdr., 1 houM with new plustt cerpttlno.
bath. AC. WB hook-up. 19000. draperl•. wlndowe. inaulation,
Poneulon 30 deyt. C1il &amp;14- wiring. Hou1e it spotl•tl U50
379 ·2866 or .814-379-2508.
per mo. Call 614· 288 ·6110.
1982 14•70 Fleetwood, 3 bdr.,
~ ba1ht, total eiM:tric. For more
mtormetion 614-388·8833 al ter 4PM .

Duplex for rant 648 Second
Ave .. Glllipolll. 3 bdr .. INingroom, dinlngroom. new kit·
chen. backyard, refrig. &amp; range.
8310 plu1 utiliti• &amp; •ecuritv
d&amp;posit. Call 814-448 -0690.

12•60 Shultz lully furniahed
Waahar &amp; d,.,er, 1ir conditioner
on 8511171 alllevellot. on•third 2 bedroom mobile flome at
acre garden space. Located in Evergreen. Call 014·4•8·7032.
Porter, St. Rt. 160. Prictt
reduced for quick ule 115,000 Available Sept. 1 . 4 mile~ from
takes all. Terms miiY be avaialbe Hobar holpitll. Jutt alf 110.
lo retponilble pllftOn with sua- t350 dep .. t360 pet month.
tantial down paymenta at 8% Ref. required . Call after BPM ,
interest. Cut! prefer1ble. Call 614·441-7167.
614 -388-9893 If no anser call 1-,-- -----,---Hunt WVA 304-429-3395 .
Available Aug. 13th completalot
nerw interior. 2 bdr . unlurnilhad
1981 Oakbrook 14x70 ex- houtt. Garaoe ltOrtge building.
pando. eltctri c atove • refrigera- Ref. • dep. req . Call 814-448·
tor. gas furn~~ee. woodburner, 3 9688.
bedroom1, garden tub, 2 full
bath•. new carpet, curtaina &amp; 3 roomt &amp; bath. turnithtd.
underpinning includtd. utillte• furnished. 1200 par
t14 ,000 . Cell814-379-2587 .
mon. a200 depoait, no children.
no pata. Call 614-448-3793.
HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES Is your fulura Ifill unsettled?' 2 bdr. good cond .. 69 Garfield
Check into the Armv Nationtl Ave. 1226 mo., plua 1160 dep
Guard . We have good pay. Call 1114·441-1828.
training. and up to 118,000
available in educational benefits. 2 bdr. house unfurnllhad. no
Serve part-lima. 304 -675-3960 pets, .-.terence needed 118ft a
or 1-800-&amp;42 -3819.
month, 1100 depotil . Call814446-3817.
141170 3 BR . 2 bath mobile
home . 17000 or b•t of1er. Will Newer Ranch home . 3 bed·
take trade. 814-949 -2801 .
rooms. Ref . end depoait required. Rutland area . 614· 742MOBILE HOMES MOVED : in- 31 71 .
sured. reatonable r1tet. Call
304 ·678-2336
6 room house for rent in
Pomeroy. Call 1114-992-641 J
1978 Governor 12x60. 8x16 after 6 :00.
porch with twning, allapplianc&amp;t, uc cond, 304-895-34!56 A Frame Houae. 2 br. new yard.
after 5 :00 PM .
•175 . plus depotit and referen·
ces. Located Southside. WV.
1979 Holly Ptrk. with e•pando. 304 -876-1185.
haat pump, e•cellent condition.
304-875-1810. aher 4:30.
Hou1e for aate or rent , Krodel
Pttk , relerenctl , 304 -882·
1978 mobile home, 12•60. all 3746 .
elect ric , partially lurnilhtd
t6600. 304-676 -2809 . 304578-2283.
42 Mobile Homes
1982 Cl1yton. 12x80, allelclric.
uc cond. 304-671-2486 .

33

Farm• for Sale

50 acre farm near Galllpollt. 8
acras tilllble. 40 acr• pasture &amp;
woodland. Farm pone &amp; grHn·
hou1e. Oood 3 bdr . hou11 with
central air &amp; rurel Water . Fie·
duced price to aell. Write to
Htrokl Kregor. At. 1 lox 201A .
Bidwell. Oh 45814 or ctll
114-317-0135.
Beautiful home In Flatwooda
ar11 of Pomeroy . 17 ecrtl •
spring led pond ll'tllllabla. can
114-441-2359 .
21 ecr• with tobacco bue end
) outbuildk'lgs. Y, milt up Sugar
CrM nMr Crown Citv . Cell
114-388-9923 .

34

Business
Buildings ·

2&amp;81.
Government hom• from t1 ./u
repakl. Dellnqu«&lt;t tax ptoperty.
RepotaHtion• Call 808·1878000 Ext. H-9805 for current
rep() list.

Del. etyle '"teurent for 1111
D-1, llcenae. lltceflent bu-'n. .
opp. Located at 31 Cour1 lt.,
GelllpoUt. Priced to tth . Cell

814 ·«1·0021 .

for Rent
Trailffl for rent , Air con d., cable,
beautiful river vitMI, Kanauga.
Foster's Mobile Hom• P11rk,
114-448-1602.
1211:50 2 bdr. petio, adgeoftown
588, 00 plrtl, depOiit 1160
monthly. Call 114·441-7124
before 1:OOPM .
2 bdr. ITallar furnished. W.O ..
quiet ma"ied couple, IS min.

from town. Calll514-448 ·4013
2 bedroom. mobile home. I 1715
monttt, 1100 depo1h. You Pl'f
utllitl•- Adulta, no pelt. 614·
949·2234.
-:-:--::::-::--~:---:::-· lc-

14ll70. Two hdroom with room
llcldltlon . Above R1clna. Ohio on
20 acr•- Fr11 gaa. t22D pit'
month, part can be worked out.

Call 304·372·1031 .
3 bedroom Unfurnlthld trail• In
country. 1200 per month. UOQ
depot it. You ~y gat and tltctrlc
bllta. Call 814-992-2791 tfter
6 ,00 pm.
2 br trallw, central air, M.titable
for couple and one chlkl. t160.
plut utllhlta. 304-871-4018.
2 bedroom utMer. add on room,
g.,age, 3 mil• from Point
Pl.,..nt At. 2 North above old
" Y", 1200 .00 unfurnih•ed.
n2e.oo Mnillhed plut.vtltt•

,_.of

For Sale: 15011:90 ft. commercial
building. Brick conltrull'tlon. l.Mga tarlfe ctoore, Iouth
Fifth Avt. Mkldl~rl . Phon•

114·112·3143.

114-112·1111 dlya.l14·882· 110.00
1113. 114-112·2021 ovlfllnga. ( '.. 7 ,00.

6 btdroom 21/J bath, large
kltchan. 8 11! years new. 1 milt
Rutland. e55,000. 1.11
ecre. 15130 Pool end deck.

61 Hou1ehold Gooda

KIT 'N' CARLYLE

73

Ulrry

ron~

-·h.

304·111·324S

APARTMENTS. mobile homn,
houtet. Pt. Pltatant andOallipolia. 114·446-8221 .
APARTMENT FOR RENT · Now
accepting 1pplication• for rental
ap1rtment1 in Maaon Apts li·
mited. Two bedroom aptt at
8199 .00 per month . Rental
rat111 may ba higher depending
on Income. Houaing will be
available to uch applicant re-gerdltst of their race. color,
religion. 1e11: or natu111l origin.
Interested applicanta should c1ll
304-n3 -601 1 or contact De·
nite Streib or Walter Juatice at
the main office, 1878 Brice
Road. Raynoldtburg , Ohio
43068 or cell 814-8&amp;3-4614.
Ona bedroom furndhed apt.
ground floor. privete entrance.
all utilititl peld. ouuklrts Hendeuon . 12!50. 00 . 304-876 ·
6730.
Furnished -epanmant on Viand
Street. 304·~95 · 3460

45 Furnished Rooms
For rent Sleeping Rooms and
light houte keeping rooma. Park
Central Hotel. Call 614 -446·

0766
Rooms for rent, day. week .
month. Oallia Hotel. Call 814448-9680 . Rent aa low at 1120
month .
Futnished room 1116. Utilitl•
pd. 919 2nd Gallipolia. Share
bath. Single mala_ Call 8t4·

446·4416.

46

~pace

for Rant

wan~

Uaad Furniture: W11her 6
dryer, 011 range. electric renga.
tmall color TV. wood teb.. &amp; 2
bench•. beds. drftMI', •
recliner. 3 mU11 out Bulavtlla
Rd. Open 9AM to SPM. Mon.
thfu Set. 814-441-0322 .

2320.

20 gal. thott hot w1ter haater,
workl good. e&amp;5. Cell 014-3170254 after 5.
Kenmore waahtr 171, Ktnmoft
waaher avGCidO grten e11,
Whirtpool dryer n&amp;. Whirlpool
waeher t91. Gibaon retrkt•ator
trOat frH 191, Philco refriDIIf'l·
tor tvocedo green t95, Whirlpool troll fr" rafrigeretor eta.
refrigerator harveet gold tide by
ada t195, refrlglfttor white
lkle by 1kfe t195, 2 electric
rang11 30 ln. coppertone 1121
ea., 20 ln . gu renge 171. wood
• co.t burning 1tove 1200, GE
Wither IYOCidO green 1150, 12
cuft. freezer 1125. Skaggs
Appliencet Uflllet Riv• Rd.

814 ·«8·7398 .

Plutlc clatem atate approved,
plastic teptic tankl. plutlc
culvertt, metal culvertt. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jack ton, Oh. 814-288-6930 .
Chlldert Stw Suppty, \linton.
Ohio. Ctll 814 · 388·8684. Au·
guS1 Speclels. "20% off Echo
aaw•. 20% off Echo ttimrnera.
Hu~qvamaa.w•. chalnaawl18''
811 .60. Bar oil gal. 14.00 .
Chein ttlarpening, repair work.
Open 8-6 Mon .-Su Closed
Wed . &amp; Sun
Wedding ring 6 diamond, 12
gauge single ahot ttlotgun. Call
614 -448-2761 .
New country dream home. Built
to.- you . t18.996. 4 bclr .. 2 blth.
See thia model todey. Cell
81 4-888· 7311 .

11 .200 Lilly tiraplace insert will

0000 USED APPLIANCES
Waahert, drvert, rtlrigeratort,
ranget . Skaggs Appllenc•t.
Upp" Rlvlt' Ad. betide Ston1
Cr11t Mottl. 114· 441·7388.
County Appllllftct, Inc. Good
uiMI appllanca~ and TV Mtl.
Open BAM to IPM . Mon thru
Sat. 114-441·1819. 127 3rd.
Avt. Galllpol'-. _OH .
VIlli'( Furnlt\lr1, nM • Ultd.
Llrgt ltCtlon of CJ.IIIity fumi·
tuft , 1211 E11tern Ave ..
Oelll@ollt.
Ctttck our etrlryd~ low prle~~·

on furniture • appl•anon. Mol·
lohen Fumlture. R1. 7 North,
Kan ..ge. Cal ·814·441-7444.
Electric range gopd CDnd. Ctll
114·441-4413 lf?Ytlmt or 114·
441·4347 .eft« 11 or tltCifPt
wttklnde.
Ma tchln Iii ·•__._Loo
•ro ..,ttlt:Or • ttovt.
lrend ,..., Hot Point. tlrnound .

IOih 11.1 0. Cell 114·«S·4413
Of

814-441-4347 8fttr IPM.

Jlllc*IM UMd FurnitUre. Good
ulld l\lmltu11. Op., 110
• or ... tor mtntment.
· 1 " · 1410 _..
304 ·171·1413 .,

'!'"'"'"

. ·.

76

Musical
lnstrumen1l

71

PHY-r Mlrk 2 MCI I dl .. ntl
1t1r10 mixing boJrd e110 . ,.,.
vey zeo boon• emp 400 wen
1100. CIIII14·.JII-1800.
Haw111n Koe wood guttar 1040
D.-ougho AIVIrU wl1h herd
thlll cne. Eltclll•t condldon
1400. Celll14-448-1117.
Special Pt1n0 Pw~ua ahlp·
men1 )ult 1rrhfed. Cttici:ering.
Spinet PIIPOI, W1tnut or PR~f'·
Rag. U,:lll. hie .1.418.
whHt th"V left. No rtln dttckl or
apecialo,._, CloMout prlcee on
al ramllining Kimblll Plenoa In
rtodt. The Pled pjptr toll fr• In
WV 1-100·142·3448; lnOhloot

.... 1-IOO·S24·3488.

.

a.

814·«6·3381 .
Start 10 HP glfden trectorwkfl
mower attachmant. used 1
summer 1850 over t1, 100 new.
Calll14-448-2235.
Salel 60 percent off! Flllhing
arrow algn 12891 Lighted, none"ow 12691 Non-ligflted 12291
FrH lettenl Few left. SH
locally . 1- 800- 423 · 0113,
anytime.
Commodore Computer kly·
boll'd wlttt T.V. ediP1tr end
inttNclion books. Also full aile
Wilt Bend Humidifier. C1U
814-982-7440.
Smith and Wtllon 9nwn, atml·
auto pi1tol. Two 14 rd mege ..
custom tight•. bcellent condl·
tion . 1350. 114-992-7270 from
9 to 6.

Surplu1 rental clothing 50 cents
tnd up. Sam Somrvllle'a, /MovingJI7 Burdette Addn. trailtr for
rant. 304·175-3334.
Dinette let with 4 swivel chain.
Retrtgeratot. Onl Ntl oil tank.
Phone 304·875-1381 .
Locuat potts for tale. 304-578-

2406
delivered,
304-676-

66 Building Supplie1

Red rubtni•. TIYiort Beny
Patdl. Cal 114-441-8182 or

814·241·1511084 .
Cenning tomato•. Supply own
conttlner. Pick own U.OO bu·
thtl. Deb Mllllom 114·2'7·

3471.

Canni.tg tomato•. 14.00 bushel picked, 13.00 you pick.
(bring container) Marshall
Adamt. Letart hilt 814-2-'7-

2011.

248·6121 .
Building materiala, camant,
blocks all silas, yard or dtlivery .
Galllpolla 81odl; Co .. 123'/a Pine

1910 Tr.,t AM rebuilt eng.
euto, Pl. Pl. lllr. tilt. 11er10 &amp;
cond. Atklng •4.950
t.at off• or trede. looktl for
•a.ao, nlld ~t~tionwagon or
paeungtr van. Moving 814-

441·2741.
1971 Pontlec FWabitd good
oond .• new tlr•. e•hlult. p~int.
Celll14-441· 1&amp;22.

79 lonnwlle. 2 dr'.. 301. V-8,
71.000 mil•. Oood condition.
Air, crulla. AM·FM. '3500. Call
I14-44S· ZI72.

Can you buy'Jaepa, Cert, 4x4'a
Milad In drug ralda tor un,der
e100.00? Cell tor factt tod1yl

11111261·11701 Ext. ltB.
1982 Z-28 Pace-Cer, T-Top,
loeded. 11871 firm. 814-992·

72118.

1971 Pinto. Body IOUah. .,..
dunlctlty aound. Celllf4-992 -

1116.

Canning totn1tot1 for ula. Call
814-247-3081 .
YtUow FrH Stone Cennlng
P11ctlt1 now available. Cell tor
prlc11 end varletiea . Bob'•
Market, Meeon, W. Ve. 304173-1721 . Open 7 deys.

or wMI1ell per1a. Call814-949·
3007.
1980 Chevatte 4 c»or. 4 epeed,
"dtt, ,.., d.togger, good condition . t1271. 114-2.&amp;7-4292 .

59 For Sale or Trade
For 1111 or trade. Glrla 10 •lid
bike, will trade for glrla "'IIUlar
blkt or eetl for *71 Of beat offer.
Call 814·992· 7304.

1871 Conrette. 17,000 mil•. 4
IPted. Asking tiOOO. Celll14·
841-2102 afteri:OO .
1981 ChiiVtnl. &amp;ttndant; 1ir, 4
door. brown 4 cyl. 51.000 mites.

114·M9·22S3.
1880 Thundlrbkd.

r lr'll

~I !

bcellant

condition. Ctn bltttn In Darwin
on 81. Rt33 M Mertln rat .

1 I'

1

II' I ,/. ' '

1171 Chevy Y.t ton pick-up.

114·992·1241 .

61

1812 Chrvlltr labentn. Shlfll.
AC., Powlf' 11eta. power win ·
dowt, AM-FM. 114-112-1241 .

Farm Equipment
CAOIB .IONI

U.S. 31 W•t. Jedc.eon. Ohk).

114-281·1411.
MllltY Ferguton, NIW Hol._,d.
Bulh Hov I.a. 6 ltrv~. Ov•
40 Uled tractorato ohooaa from
6 OOR't)letalite of new • uiMI
equipment. L.-g..t •ltctlon In

S .E. Ohio.
JIM'S FAAM EQUIPMENT
Cl! NTEA . SA :II W. Uellpoia,
Ohio. C.lll14·441·8777, IYI.
81,·441··12. Up franl tree·
tDn wfth WMTenty OYir 71 uiMI
tractOra. 1000 tools.
Utllhy bkla. IPL: 30'11140'~tl'
whh 11!1i'x:l' tlld• 6 3' eerv.
door. e1, 211 erected. Iron
Horse Bldge, 114-332· 1741
collect.
1970 5000 Ford dl•l tr.:tor
U,910. 4 bottom Int. plowe

nn e

tt. -oc1 buill hoe

t350. New ldt1 dvna bounce
mowtng machineli•enMt491 .
Cal 11 4 -211·•22.
1250 OMvtr tractor. Can

251·fleOS.

8"-

'79 luid!; El«:tta. ell U1rat.
e2.000.00. '81 Ford Fairmont.
i':tt tl~':: .J:J.:ti~d3o'i·m~

2762.

1871 Plymouth Fury In telr
oond. Cell 304· 8715-7729 betwllf'll-10 p.m.
1882 Chr.nolet Ctllbrtty, ell
utr11, rtlnrtn motor end trent·
ml..lon, excellent condition. call

304-1176·2273.
1177 Pontiac Grand Prix, good
NMinl oond, AO, PI, PS, PW.

CNiae, :104-1171· 1511.
1814 Chevy, 4 door, brown,
good oond, clfl 304-875-7411
af'l• 4:00 PM to 8:00 PM.

1911 FOfd Ftlrmont lquiJt
lletion Wllgon. 304-882·2211.
'71 Muatang II, ntw peirl1 and
rtllulh motor, t800 .00 01 beat
offer. 304-S71·2tiS4.

72

f:iiO ln1ematlonal lnctor, far·
mil wklt front and commerlcal
loedar, 4 plows, 2 roM no til com
piMtM', 40 tDot elwetor, 1 old
com pldl•, tr~M~Ntrt cllc.
mowing mechlne. 1xtre dual
w...ll. c.n 114·31S·I300.
J .D. 410 doltr, I WIV btlda,
Windt, c.-.opy. 8U.. 742· Z.328.
Michlgen 71 IE 4 whttl drive,
rubblf tired loedtr. 141112-t"tlr•. e cyt. dlt1ll anoln•. 2%
yerd buckat. n.ooo. can 304·

62 Wen1ed 10 Buy

Trucks for Sele

441·2748.
Now buying lhlll com or elf'
oom. Ceaforl. . .tQUOtta. Rivet'

City Ferm Suppty, 11,·441-

1178 Chewy pic*up \;ton tflor1
btd, 3 •d., Y-8. body .ouah.
11M Chevy lcottdele \4 ton
pickup. Cell 114· 211·HOI.

63

Llves1ock

1174 UMC lnlok ~ ton. hiY'I
duly. 1173 , _ CJI. Pllone
304-1171· 1311.

e yr. oldimlat•td gray . . ..,
horae
k\g tlrtd by Jay
Jemtl. idbroki.Call814· 381-

79 M01ors Homes

a. Campers

1979 Wildem•• camper sellcontained . C1ll after 5, 614 ·
441· 3918.

.,.,.,,.,...,---.,.,,.-:---

nlgh1 Perry King discusses
his villainous role in the upcoming mini-series . 'Til
Take Manhaltan· ·.

1980 Champion 19ft. trensvan.
Hlf-cont1W1•t alaepa 8, rebuilt
engin1. niJW tirft, brakea, interior. Air auto. tr.-.s., PS , PB ,
cn.tilt, cargo box , roof air
avalleble. Asking 110,100. Bell
offer o.- trade, book• for
e12.000 need 1t1tionwegon or
pettengtr van. Moving 614448-274!5 .

I &gt;FE ALL '(ou
!-'AVE UN~
''AccoMPL.I.s'HME?Ni.f
l.f "COMPLET'Et&gt;

22ft. Covered Wagon. Excellent
condition. Call 814· 992-7362 .
1978· Cru ile M•ter Motor
Home Of' Mini Home. Cah
614-742-2408 . Fit. 124, Ru tland. Ohio.

@Alice
liiJJ_.ty
7:35 [IJ Major League flneboll:
San Diego a1 Atlanta (2
hrs .• 30 min.l
8:00 8(l)iliJA-Tee111Theteam
h81ps out an old friend, ea
Chinatown restaurant owner
under ••ige by 1 Oriental

syndicate. (60 min.I (AI.

THI.$' ~E:JUfr!E"f'

CIJ IWttiwl
CD Roller Dttby (60 min.!
(I) 0

6-ll.

1985 Faxfira CMYtp•. 28ft, AC .
21 ft ewrMng.
up TV amen a.

......

'71 Ford XLT Aenglf, thrH
qgan. ton, 410 . . . . . JU1o-

1171 AlUlA '""" ....... 11M

.,..,, PS, PI, 304·fl2·3231.

...... _ .... c..

73

been ehown n Wlat1em , . _ , .
end ahOwnmenehlp. boell...

814-3111111 .. 114-381·1212.

Van1

a. 4 W.O.

Cha¥y · C· 30 C1F10 Vlf'l with
1117 C:arv.n:t .,gin&amp; A- 1

. '11"1111'11111"'

· 1111 or troda. CoH 114241·fle11.

ICC) Tony offers a large

ro"
304· 1176·1423.

sacrifice in an effon to help

Angola land a profitable perfume account with a gorgeous French billionairass.

SEr VICes

IRI.

• ClJ MOVIE: 'Blue Hewail'

81

14 Ch-e 4 cyl .. 2 door. I
apd.. AM.f'M • - low
- ·· Col J14-44t-0137

tft•-·

.

MUll Hlf J palrt ot ring rtte*td
teo. Cal
114
..-.7

Chryateo IIIII A-0.

u.ooom~~~.

-·

I ~1:-1011
-:-.-pu-,-,:. -:~:-.,.1 ,-,,~2:-:-~-:tm.
r.:f. Ill .
..,,
br · e3 .. ,; ;;; ~·•. 114-742· 2711 .

®J a

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

1'41 rt. cal .1 . . .....

1uo.. - ·· •

c,_•

"'I·

71 """
110
- · ..... AC . 0111114-24 ·

··-lot

1 -114-237·0418, dty or night .
Rogers Beeement
Watlf1)roof1"9bttrior &amp; interior stucco. Plas1er • pl11ttr rep1ir1. Low rates
Cell 114-261-1182.
RON'S Telavialon Service .

~HEFE.

Hou11 call• on RCA. Qua.:ar.

2414.

00 THE.Y t3£T N.J.. ~

T_,
I

8:30 (I)

a•a Rooflng 6 Pelnting. up.
roofing, rtpllr, paln1ing insld' or
out. Fr11 Eltlmatt. Locel Aeferenew. 304-871-7991 .

•

UNSCRAMBlE LETTERS
FOR ANSWER

Seesaw
battle

'IAK81

ByJameoJacoby

IJ 81

u

t~~,.~
ACIIOSS
I Deadly
8 Lean-to
10Span18h
city
II One of
Santa's
reindeer

a ·(I) GIVWing PM.

13 Vlsi!A!d

cArbine

G W Magnum. P.l.
mav be

core

31 Discharged
33 Hire
34 Badly
35 Caddoan

though1 dead. (60 min.! (R).

® Comradto: Stlltl MIll
Soccer ICC! The members

of a soccer 1eam from a So-

83

Excave11ng

Oood-1 Ellcavating, ba~em~s.
footers. driveways. aeptic tankl,
landsceping. Call anytime &amp;1•448-4137, Jamn L. Davison,
Jr. own•.

86

General Hauli~

I WeNT DOWN TO TH'
SlORE THIS MORNIN:
ELVINEV. Alii' WHEN I
GOT THAR ··I PLUMB
FERGOT
WHAT I
CAME
FOR

:I WOULD BUT I FER60T
WHAR 1 PUT MV BALL

(CCI Spenser searches for a
high school student who

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

(60 min.! (RI.

~ i ~ EqUIIIzer A

young

journalis1

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for lhe three L's, X for lhe two D's, etc. Single letters,
BpOI!rophes, lhe length and fonnaUon of lhe words are all
hln!R. Each day lhe code !etten are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE

needs

McCall's help when sho is
threatened

by

her new

neighbor. (60 min.! (AI.
(jj) IBJ Nowo
tO:Ofi (I) MOVIE: 'Captain Hore·
·tio Homlllowor'
10:30
Cel1boft, Chela
llJINNNewa

I

f"f"S

UNLAWF'UL-

8-12
Gy J

~IJl».ilJI(JIJ

. , , :00

A MAN \('ll"f'HHUT

BJDLJCJDEXWJ

(I) Ill Colby Show
OHliN World of Sports
Ill Love ConnKtlon

I

AH~ING!!

LGAXEWR
ITGJX

8CTV

(jj) l - " The hiotory of

LGDIXF

treoh Cfiopoul and lho po- '
tentlal uses of garbage are
. ·~ · (60 min.IIRJ.

:

Uphols1ery

11:301~ Beet of Canon

,
VOU COULD WRITE
ABOUT ~E FUTURE

HATTJDJXWJ

Tonigh1'1 guOitl Ill 'Tony

.Buck Beagle in
the zsth Century

Aa!ldlll. AI Jerroou and
~~ Santiago. (60 min.l

LS::·Min
lportiCenter

WKIIP In Cluclrmtl
fi&lt;~~ leroold

~Mghdlt•

I G YJ D

AL

I N.

GYE G

IXJ

WIZJL

TDIZ

PAUU

T DI Z

N.IGPJJX
E X If

NIWI

'TOCONDEMN

Wattenon'1 Wa1tr Haullnt .
rHeonable rate1. immadifta
2.000 gellon delivery, cllte(fh.
poolt, well. etc. call 304-en.

1-11
·- - " "
tl,tll ~"""
mu .......
.,..' ...
'''·
IDidell, TV, llle ,...... tU,IOQ,
Cl. C11114-441-~11.

45 Corundum
DAILY CRYPTOQUOI'FS- Here's bow lo work It:

(l).((J S - : For Hire

witnesses a murder and is
taken hostage by the killer.

Dillard's Wtttr Oellvary. C~t ­
.,-nt, wella, PGO'-- Anytime fiut
SundJV. Cttl 114-441-7404 ..

Mowr..,·• Upholstering aarvirfv
trl eountv ar11 21 ye.,.. Thelteit
In Nmiturt upholltertng. CtM
304 · 178 -4114 for h . .
lltlmette.
y :

« Gravita!A!

(60 min.) Pan 2 of 6.

O'TWINE

Ken's Water Service. Wells,
clttam1. pools end wttarbl-d•
filled. Catl 614·317 -DeU•:.or
114· 387-7141 Of 304-1751247.
·•

'

river
42 Latin
43 Original

amount of personal violence
in our iociety is explored.

.

114·«8·7833 or 814·441 ·
1133.
".

mm role

40 ltalilll

amlneo the Humon Ani·
11'111: War and Violence The

Jamea Boy• Wet• Service. Ai.o
poolt filled . C111 114-268 ·1111
or 114-446·1176 or 814-4-oM7811 .
•

2819.

lndilll
38 Burstyn

viet republic fat;tory town
are profited. (60 min.)
10:00 • CIJ (JI Phil Donahue Ex·

NEXT TIME··
WHV DON'T VOU

!:::-+-+++-

:U Derision
27 Watchful
28 Bastinado
29 Uncle (Sp.)
SO Wooden

IJUina'

losing his mind when he
spots an old friend he

BARNEY

!

malA!

Magnum lhinks he

..

'
passenger

2 Caucasian
language
3 Hint of
color
4 Fatima's
husband

22 Mining find
23 British

IRI.

Plumbing

DOWN
I Cab

hastily
6 Diogenes
14 Like an old had one 20 Old facts 27 Sky path
womM
8 Meager
23 Blacklllom 29 Sesame
U Work unit 1 Sweetie pie fruit
81 Monster
18Siannum 8 High Arab 24 Ladder· 32 Impetus
18 Tenlh
office
like
36 Czech river
or a sen
9 Show
25 Vanessa 37 SUpper;
19 Choose
results
Redgrave 38 Calaboose
21 Frankie's 121nhabil
film
41 Monk'•
second
17 Frost
26 ErslwhUe
title

(I) MOVIE: 'Night Of The

a. Hee1ing

..,

by THOMAS JOSEPH

invol\led with more than
they bargained for when
they help David's married
e111 ~girtfriend locate some
missing jewalry. (60 min.)

(JIJ

EAST
IJ
'IJUSZ

I

CD AWA Wrntling (2 hrs .)
[IJ Moonlighting
(CCI Maddie and David get

Call Emia, cerptntry, Nmodtl·
ing, tiding, roofing, concrete
work. blodc, peinting. FtH eati·
met11 . :W.-178·5112.

tsu

ed wbe.a Weal defended well. Against
fotll'spadea,clubswere led and coolin- : ~08\
usz
ued, declarer trumpina the third • AKQs
• 10 714
round. South played the spade aee.
SOUTH
When the jack appeared from East, he
IAKB!4
toot tbe safety play of leadlna up to
'IQ7
the 10. Weal now took biB best shot by
t A K Q 10
ll'abbiDg tbe queen and playing still
II Z
anotber club. Since declarer could
Vulnerable: East-West
nenr win by trwnplna with dummy's
Dealer: South
10, he dllcarded a diamoud and
t lnlmptld low In Ills band. There was
Norll Eat
now a lingle blgb trump In his hand Weal
and - In dummy, but Weot bad two Pus
Pus
~mps temalnin&amp;.
Pau
Pw
U
apparent that declarer must Pus
Pus
cub out billllde-sult tricks and bope ·
to make biB hlp trumps separately,
Opening lead: • K
but he bid to do It carefully. U South
simply assumed that West might f o l · p . - - - - - - - - - - - '
low three Umea in hearts, and he tried to draw t:le lui trump
that ault flnt. tbe contract would fall.
ll'a worth remelJlbefq the ufety
illltead, bil right coune was 10.play A- · play with tbll particullr IIIII comblnaK-Q of dlamoadl. UWeal lollowed, de- Uon. Play your 1ee. an bonor di'OJII
clarer could then play two hlp hearts from either bind or If Weot playa tbe
and CI'OIIl'Uff with blah trumps. U Dine, ne1t lead low up to dummy'a 10.
Weot trumped tbe tblrtf diamond, de- You can guard aplnst Q.t-1-1 in elclarer could overruff in dummy and tber band or Q-J-•·•In tbe Eut band
return to his band with the beart queen
.,. ~APD 11uw._ AIIN. ·

(I) 8

HOROSCOPE.

NORTH

e 1078

Tbla simple deal became complicat- : : :3 2

(RIIn Stereo.

OWN PEi&lt;SaNAL Cl&lt;'.ILY

IIIIIIII

BRIDGE

(lJ 700 Club

l .. ,......._.,r.. r ·.,-7HI: PIJ8WSHER5
OF THE 'Gt:JINNE95 BOOK
OF RECORDS' IM.MEDIA-rt=l-Y.'

I

We/low - Verge - Favor - Jagged - FORWARD
Women to lrlend: "I'm happily married, run my own ·
bullr!MI and have no welghllo loee. Whet do I have to look
FORWARD to?"

find the kHier who framed

'IF 'rQ.J WERE BORN ON
THIS D"'TE IN 1815...

by filling in the missing words
you dev1lop from step No. 3 b1low.

YISTEIDAY'S SCIAM·IIlS AIISWEIS

him for the murder of his
boXIng mo'nager. (6() min 1

"GiREE:nN&lt;;;S! THIS 15 WWR.

jult
10 prove,
shouldn't
llhrowout-."
Comp loto tho chuckle quo1od

,__,,_,.___,_._..._,-.L.__.

helps out an 8J(·con trying to

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Wnile viewing an 11111ract coilage at a local art gallery, one

;:-==·:::.:., goes
woman commented,
you "That
JUT ANy
~-,r=-..,,r-.,,~7...:;.1..:..."18~ e

the nalghborliood collacling

St•rkt Tree end Lawn StrviCA.
landacaping. 304-&amp;78 -2010.\

!

~

mona_11 for 'charity'. IRI.
9:00 8 CIJ llli Hu- lttimar

AINOLES'S SERVICE. lliPI ·
rlenced cerpanttr. alectrlcltn.
m110n, painttr, rooting tincltJd·
lng ho1 tar application) 304175-2088 Of 8715-7388.

881· 3802

Simon l Simon

r.

:i

&lt;ll.,
1--+.R...:.Wr.H::...;:.l...:Ii-11
s I' I I 7
l
=·::::-

ICCII.n order to raiH money
for a birthday presen1fO&lt; Jason, Ben gqea goes oround

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
removal. C_all 304-176-133 t .

• 12.000
... . ..._ lhort4114
Mel.• 1111
lo., 'fi,IOO aol 11,000. Cel
114-441·~11.

1 1 1

~MOVIE:·~·

(1-\I&lt;W..IS MID HAM8U~
~ N.J. HS£. fAST·RXlD R!(€S 1

QE . Sptcialing in Zenhh . Call
304· 678·2398 or 114 -4;16-

A • M Fumhur~ ManufKturing
8t. At. 7, Crown City, Oh. Cali
114-211·1470, ell! Eve. 814·
4'8 · 3438. Old 6 neW
Uphoatered.

n•.

1

tHnagad daughoera. (60
min.! (R) .
(j]) Novo: A Magic WOlf of
Cloir!g: The Staoy of Tholllllghbi idt ICCI 1'he mo.
roughb&lt;ed racing indu•trv i•
e..mined. (60 min.l (II).

Frtl tltlmltef. Ctll collect

Aot1ry or cable tool drUiir\g
MOlt well• completed temeday
Pump 11111 end tltfYice. 304-

~

MacNeii·Uhrer

A.J. and Rick install securily
for a client's priceless Inca
medaHion--and are soon
saddled with the man's two

111. Local ,.,....... Nmlahad.

TRISTATE
I
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1113 Sec. Ave.. Gelllpoi~a.

1114.

dov•
0111
.. .with
. . SO.

, lint -

Newohour

Au1o1 for Sele

Or~Qonwynd

11114

Ill

Home
lmprovemanu

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFINQ
Uncondltionll M•ttme ouan•n-

87
71

(() Who'o the llou1

I
II

hi'-0,_N...:;G.,;U....;Y..,.--~1

ClJ Hogan's HeiOH

Game
CD lnslde1he PGA Tour
am Taxi
Q Ill (JIJ Wheel of Fortune
Ill U_p Pompeii!
ID W Entanainment To·

1171 Chwy C10 pldtup, IUtO.

or.... ,., pb, 111011 -

21S·I200 .

r\f

Trantmlttlont. All typee. Over.
frant, rt•. 4 wheal li'tve. Prices
lten •100 .• Will delhler. Call

wordt.

four simple

I II

(I) Nightly Busineu Re·
port .
(JIJ News
(jj)
MocNeil-t.hrer
Newshour .
II (JZI Divorce Court
@ WKRP in Cincinnati
Gil Wheel of Fortune
7:05 (I) Green Acres
7:30 D CIJ (I) New Newlywed

Au10 Parts
&amp; Acce11orias

uoo. Cell 114·44S·2111.

Pole lulldino• by Ouellty
Build••· Workahopa, c..,ons.
~nlmal atltlter•. garag•. FrH
ettlmltll, Phone 114-8197121 .

aeoh. CIM 114·241·1171.

76

tht

be-

TOOTAP
2
1

Q(l)Jeoperdy

CARTER'S PlUMBING
ANOHEAnNO
Cor. Fourth lf'ld Pine
G1II~Nt . Ohio
Phone 114· 448-31B8 or 114441-4477

•s.ooo

low to form

EVENING
• Clllll Q (() (JIJ. ~ (JIJ
Newo
Ill Green Acres
CD Mazda Sportsl.ook
am Star Trek
Ill Reading Rainbow (CCI
llll Here' a to Your Hoahh
(I) fa1her Knowa Best
• Cll (jji NBC News
Ill The Riftenum
CD Rovco' s World Clan
Women IRI.
(I) II (() ABC Newo
(() Doctor Who
(JIJ G ~ CBS Newo
(jj) Body Elec1rlc
(() Gomer Pyte, USMC
D Cll PM Magazine
Ill Ma1 from U.N.C.L.E
CD SportsCenter
(I) Entenalnment Tonight
Tempestt Bledsoe of "The
Cosby Show" 1alks about

a

Cell 114·992·7883.

1812 Dodge PU llgttt duty. 221
4 tpd., '-own with erMm
fkal•topp• . Cell814-3170314.

1t1t Oodgt~ton 41114club ceb
pictlup, low mllllll•· 310 811·
alnt.IUto, Pl. Pl. air, new tlrlt,
bnk11. ffont .,d. with lodt-out
tubt, ... cond . ......
bMt oHtr or trlde. lookl for
tl, 'JOO, nMd atetlon'"IOn Or
P8111RifJ Yin. MoWtg 814·

0 Rtorrange
lettlrt of
lour ocromblod words

her upcoming ABC Afterschool Special, "The Gift of
Amazing Grace".

14 fl. Semi-V ••·.ninum filfling
boatwlttt&amp;HPmotGrandtrell.,.

82

446·2783

Al(l. lugle pups 4 m ... 14
-.old.
A2 yr. old...,. •10

6 :35
7:00

1871 Chwy luv 4 IPd .. rtdkl.
eh...,, ,, ••1 . John' a Auto
IIIII, lulavllla Rd., Oelllpolla,
OH.

..... :104-1171-3734.

Cett..., kennel.
CFA Hlmaleyln, Ptnltn and
81em•t khttnt. AKC: Chow
puppl•. Call 114·441·JI«
after 7PM. ·

TO TALl&lt;. AIIOUT FAM IIoJ!.

742·3142.

lmall mare pony very gentle.
Good wtlh r:hUdran. call 11 4·

Pe11 for Sale

THeRE'~ SOMETH I"G STRANGe
ABOUT COMING TO BcVcRL~ HILLS

_9"C37"CO_.-:-~~-:---:--:-

1182 Chevette. 4 ~peed. E•CIIIIf'lt corulition . t1800. 814-

•• 000 mil•, body good, Nnl
good, ....,. ••· Owl'lllf' leaving

Bktdl, brick, mortar end maaonry tuPflll•. Mountltn ltlte
Blodt, Rt. 33. NWI Hevan. W.
Vo. 304-182·2222 .

CAPTAIN EASY

114· 379·2220.

8101:

St .. Oelllpolla. Ohio Call 114·

6 :05

6:30

Boats and
M o1ora for Sale

ca. ••c.

1873 Pont* l.l Ment for Ale,

2988.
Building Materitll
Blodt, brick. IIWir pip•. windows. llntets, etc. Cleudt Win·
tert, Rio Grandt. 0 . Call 114-

1984 WV GTI 5 ed., air cond.
Clll 614·218-1203.

14 fOfd Faloon good th1pe. Call
114·446·1311.

418·1031 .

One set wedding rlnga. cntmalt
wedding band. valued 1300.00
will aell 11215.00 . 304-8823612 or 882-2478.

Autos for Sale

1873 Dada• Dart e400. Call
114-44S·7217.

Fruit
Vegetables

r\ l

King silad Somma flot1tlon
manr111 and foundation . Rataill
for 1175 , 11king e478. Call

6:00

~~========~~==::::::::::::::~ wheeler
85 Honde ATC 250 R racing 3
11,500. Cell 814· 448-

81 4·«8 ·8278 tftlt' 3PM .

66

- ~1~LB~

1881 Honda XA80. exc con d.
1471.00, Clll 304-87!5-15272
·after 1:00PM.

For 1111 lowar kitchen cabin.tl
In very good condfdon. Cal

Trailer spaces. 1mall children
accepted, ~t . 1 , LocuS1 Road ,
back of K &amp; K Mobile Home.

SWAIN

'14 Honde 850 Night Hawk .

304·1171·1113.

Call 814-448-7106 .

Color TV . 21 inc:t. Admiftl. For
Information call81 4-992-11523 .

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 82
Olive St., Gallipolis. New &amp; ustd
wood·coalttoves, 8 pc wood LA
suite 1399, bunk bed• 1119.
antron 111clin . . 198, naw &amp;
used bedroom tuit•. ranges,
wringer wethers. &amp; thoea. New
livingroom 1uit• e199· 1&amp;89.
lamps, also buying coal &amp; wood
110Vft. Call814·448-3159 .

85 Honda Shadow, IDwmll~~ge ,
uc. cond.. U.ZOO . Cal 1144,1-4110 rh• 5:00.

aell for 1300. Uud only 1 year.

Bh.Ja Eartv Amaricen coudl .-.d
chair. Good condition . t100.
814-985-3&amp;37 .

51 Household Goods

AfJIJIVER'EARV...

19M Hond1 lhldow low mi IMg•. uc. cond. Call 814-266·
19.t1 lfltr 15PM .

68

Ctlllhen'a Uted Tirt Sttop . Ovtr
1,000 tires, 1i1n 12, 13 , 14. 15,
18, 18.6. 8 miles out At. 218 .
Call 814-2156-6251 .

Mo1orcyclea

Cell 114· 441·7414.

54 Misc. Merchandi1e

Firewood, t30 .00
126.00 you haul,
6839,

00 ~R25'!l

Television
Viewing

aaoft top, f'IIIW haeders.

1181 K1Wellkf 450. 111182 860
Madrn Yemlha. Sell or trlde

Light green couch 1100. Ken· J
more wath• 1210. ttackab .. ~
WIIher· dryer aat UIO, be·
th&lt;Oom veniov with marbl• alnk
67
with metching mtdteineclbinl't
mirror 1180. Call 814-379·

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Route 3) , North of Pomeroy.
Large Iota. Call614-992-7479.

Merchomli se

74

Okltttn t101 and up to Mtl.
Wood 11blt w·l dtalre t281 to
1715. Duk •100 up to un.
Hutch• e400 and up. lunk
bldl comptett w-m•nr .....
t295 end up to tlllii . laby
beds eno &amp; n7!1i . Menr....
or bo,. IPringe full or twin M3.
firm e73, end en . Outtn lltl
U25, King tJBO. 4 drew•
chl!llt 181. Dr.,era eat. Gun
cabin ... a. 10, . 12 gun. o••
or electric range U75. Baby
mattrn'" 13! • e41S. Bed
fram11 t20. 130 &amp; King fremt
160. Good "lectlon uf
bedroom tuittl, matel Cll·
blnttt, tt ..dbo•d• eao and up
to 1815.

Seaaontd ffrawood for nle. Call
81 4-981· 4484.

New Ellstern High School pricipal and wife need house to rent.
Preferably in E11tarn local District. Have 7 room1 of furniture.
need large home. Call81 4 ·98f:i·
3329 between 8 :00 am end
4 ;00 pm.

a. 4 W.O.

CaiiS14· 441·1173.

8of11 1nd chelr1 priced from
UBI to til&amp; . Tlbl• MO .. d
up to 1121. Hide·e· IMdt 1310
to elll!i . Atclin . . U21 to
1371. L1mps 121 to •121.

Mobile home space. good location. Call 614-446-3617.

47 Wan1ed to Rant

Vans

19n CJ·I JIIP I cyl .. 3 apd ..

LAYNE' S FURNITURE

athla and frlll'ldlintu.

~•liable

Tuesday, August 12, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

EXH
E

E
GYJ

LGDIXF

PIX'G .
YJXDR
P. NJJWYJD
Yeoterdq'a CI'JPtOQIIOtet THERE IS A SIGNIFICANT
LATIN PROVERB, TO WJT, WHO WILL GUARD THE
GUARDS?- JOSH BIWNGS
.•

C 1 - Kftg F.._lpndiaalt.lne.

achool Special. "The Gift ol

Am~Grace". (R).

ern llewhlde

Allot

1Jt liinon • Simon A
blh ilil
tht Simoni
for pt Olectiou liter her life Is
lhltlltned. 170 min.IIRI·
.'Ill TIIPI* John, M.D.

'*"•

e(l)Hioitioi!F~ve-a

11!1 MOVIE: 'llle Ethct of
GemiNI :'::, on ~-in­
the-~
....go-1111'

�..
~~; 10-The Daily Sa1tinel

Tuesday. August 12. 1986

Pomeroy.:._Middleport, Ohio

:B urger's final speech reflects on profession's problems
By ANDREA NEAL
NEW YORK (UPI) - OUet
Justre Warren Burger, deUverlng
. hls last state of the Judlcla!y
address, saJd public OOs!Wty toward the . legal prol!ssion comes
from unscrup!)ous lawyers and
legal advertising •'that would make
a used car dealer blush."
Speaking to the American Bar
Association for the last tbne as chief
Justice, Burger reflected on problems facing the profession and

dlscus9ed his personal accomplishments during 17 years leading the
court.
"I SEnSe that the hostWty toward
our profession Is growing and has
grown sharply In the last eight or 10
years," Blll"gertoldthegatherlngof
lO,&lt;nl lawyers. "One of the consequences Is an Increasing demand ·
lor legislation to regulate the
profession."
"But regulation of the practice rJ.

law, Uke that ct medicine and SOOle
other professions, lias been left
largely to the professions up to
now," Burger said. "Regulation
from the OU5Ide has come about
only whell there was an overstepping of the bounds and the public
Interest ~ulred action which the
professions themetves failed to
take."

Bur&amp;er announced In June he
would step down as chief justice so

he could spend more time heading
the Cornmlssk&gt;n on the Blcenten·
nlal r1 the Constitution. Justice
WUIIam Rehnqulst has been nominated by President Reagi!D to
replace Burger and Judge Alrtoaln
Scalla has been tapped 1o fill the
vacancy.
Since Bur&amp;er Joined the court In
1009, he has appeared each year to
address the nation's lar&amp;est associ·
atbn of lawyers.

S. A&amp;ican convention to ponder issues.
By BRENDAN BOYLE
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
(UPI) - President Pleter W.
Botha's National Party prepared
today Ill open Its annual congress In
Durban, where the Supreme Coort
ruled he mlght have exceeded hls
powers under the state of
emergency.
The Durban high court Monday
.overtumed two key provisions of
the June 12 emergency decree In a
movethatlegalexpertssaldcould
pave the way for the release of an
estimated lO,&lt;Xn detainees.
Political observers said Botha
could use hls keynote address as a
fQrum to comment on the court
decision, possibly going as tar as Ill
circumvent the judlclaJY by declar·
lng martial law.
Botha's Cabinet met In Pretoria
Monday to discuss the agenda lor
'the two-&lt;lay congress, which could
Include the Issue of economic
sanctions, finance and reform.
. A three-Judge Supreme Court
panel ruled that Botha overstepped
!Us powers when he declared the
emergency two months ago, giving
pollee and the military sweeping
powers that Included the right to
detain people wltoou t warrants or
:charges.
Government lawyers who were
given the green light to appeal the
decision In the counlJY's highest
court, tiE Appeal Coort, said the
process could take up to a year.
The challenge to the state of
emergency was launched on behaH
.of Lechesa Tsenoll, publicity dlrec·
tor of the anti-government United

Democratic Front and one of the
first 1.&lt;XXI people detained on the
first day of the emergency.
The court declared Botha exceeded his powers when he gave
pollee and soldiers authority to
detain any person for 14 days,
subJect Ill renewal on orders from
the Minister of Law and Order.
UDF sources said Tsenoll was
released Monday afternoon. The
court ruled that Tsenoll's expenses
must be paid by Botha, Law and
Order Minister Louis Le Grange
and Justice Minister KobleCoetsee.
The court struck down two key
provisions of the emergency act:
section 3.1, which empowered
pollee and soldiers to make arrests
wltoout WBITant, and 3.3, which
allowed automatic extension qWhe
detention period as long as thei'fllte
of emergency existed.
"It Is of course clear that In
promulgating these regula lions, the
first respondent (Botha) Is bound to
observe the powers thus conferred
upon him by the enabling statute
(the 1953 Public Safety Act) and

During that t!me, B~r said he

has seen "many desirable
chan&amp;es" that have Improved the
quality ol the countJY's attorneys.
But he saldotherchan&amp;esln the law
have contributed to a public
perception that lawyers only want
to make 1!1lney.
Burger said lawyer solicitation
and advertising - a practice
authorized by the cow11n 1977 on a
!&gt;-4 vote - have undermined
ronfldence In the JI'(lfesslon.
"Few things have oone more
serious damage to the standing of
the legal profession than the
unseemly ,Indeed shocking, specta·
cle r:t ~ !nllcltatlon by a handful
of lawyers who rushed off to India tO
sollcH clients after the tragic
muHiple disaster In Bhopal," he
said.
"One need only klok at the Yellow
Pages ct some r:t the telepoone
dlreclorles and tiE television adver·
tlslng by some lawyers to see that
those advertising lawyers have lost

consequently soould he stray
Jules Browdle chatrman f the
beyond these powers, he wUI have Lawyers for Hu~ Rights ~roup
acted ultra vires (beyond his said the Natal ruling "would ~
powers),"thewrittendeclslonsald. VeJY persuasive to other courts If
Lawyers said the ruling was the similar appUcatlons are made
most slgnlllcant rejection d the there."
state of emergency so far and set a
In other developments, the Buprecedent that could lead to the reau for Information In Pretoria
eventual release of an estimated said three black men were found
8,000-lO,&lt;XXI people detained over the burned 1o death Sunday 1n Cen·
past 61 days.
treton a black lownshlp north ot
They said however the court's Port Elizabeth
rulingwasblndlngon\YintheNatal
·
province, where some 500 people ""===========-4.
are detained. Those detainees wtU 'automatically be released upon
Individual application to the lower .
courts.
Max Coleman, leader ct the
anti-government Detainees' Par·
ents Support Committee lauded
• WPY .IACI filA·
the decision, but said 'u could
g11 II . . . _ ldlla
prompt the government to declare
martial law to circumvent the
courts.
""'· 1111....... "U the courts are being troublesome to (the government), then the
only thing they can do Is declare
martial law," Coleman said.

...., ___
....._

--......................-·-II
,. .............

sight of the tradlttmal values ct wr
profession," he said.
Bur!J!r, who dissented tr001 the
ruUng authorizing advertising, said
he has no ob)oction lo ''the
announcement by a law firm of Its
name, address and telephone
numbers and perhaps a lrlef
statement that It specializes In
probate matters, for example."
But he said IE opposes more
blatant advertisements. "Some of
the advertising would make a used
car dealer blush wlh shame," he
said.
Burger, kloklng back at his
tenure, singled rut his accomplish·
ments In the administrative area ct
law, especlaJii hls drive Ill bring
IX'Ofesslonal administrators Into the
courts.
There are now executive admln·
lstrators In all the b!eral appeals
court circuits, Burgler said, adding
that he hopes oomeday there will be
administrators In all district courts
asweU.

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY

Served with wllipped potatoes. chicken gravy,
cole
hot roll, butter and coffee. Sorry.
sub,stit11tes except beverage with addi·

FOR JUST

$3.25

Tonight
.
Kiddie tractor pull4 p.m., hDI

stace

.

Llltle Miss, Mr. Conlest.4: so
p.m., hDI stage
.Jim A Coanle Prenger .. 8: SO
p.m., hDI stage
Youth awards ni«ht .. 7 p.m.,
llbowrJna
Antique tractor puJ .. 7 p.m.,

Ohio Lottery

tractor pul area
Girls Next Door ........a p.m.
Mlldd Casto Clogen9 p.m.,
hiD stage
'l'lrursday a.m.

Daily Number: 952

Dairy llboWlllBII8hlp, Judi·
ing ..........................1 a..m.
Dairy catlle JutJPig, open
class ........................ 1 p.m.
Ho1'!1e harness racing .2 p.m.

PIC.f5.-4: 2332

•

at y
Vot.36, No.70
Copyrightod 1986

'

B~r~=
It remains to be seen whether or
not the Pomeroy-Middleport area
wllJ have a ferry when the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge Is closed
for repairs.
"Doc" McCoy, a Hender!on,
W.Va. based terry operator, reported Tuesday 1o Pomeroy Area
ChamberofCommercethatltcosts
him $19,518.00 a week to operate two
ferries _ with one working 241Klurs
straight and the other 12 hours a
day.

Included 1n the operator's costs
arecrewsalarles,leases,lnsurance
(Including llabllty), malntalnance
and fuel. "In a month's time, this
amounts to $78,014.40," he said.
McCoy, who has provided ferry
service two other times 1n Pome·
roy, said that wttoout a dally traffic
count of vehicles using the bridge,
he could not give an exact figure on
the cost to brtng his lftVIce to
Pomeroy again.
In 1976, the !raffle count was 9,&lt;XXJ
vehicles a day. However, that count
was made during construction of
'

the Mountaineer Power Plant in

Mason, W.Va., he ooted. With that
construction over, with Foote Min·
eral no longer operating at fuU
capacity, and since the Ravens·
wood Bridge oowtakessomeo!the
traffic that used Ill cross at
Pomeroy, a new count would
probably be substantially lower, he
added.
Cost per trip to ride the ferry
would also depend on the traffic
count, McCoy said. (It was 8J cents
a car, per trip, when he operated ln
Pomeroy 10 years ago.) And

~ause the terry traffic would be
"Interstate" between Ohio and
West Virginia, It would ultimately
be up to the public utllltles
commission to set the rates, based
on recommendation !rom the
operator.
McCoy said he would need
advance notice If his ferry Is wanted
In Pomeroy or Middleport so he can
work out necessary requirements
with public utilities or any other
agencies.
He also suggested that If the
bridge Is closed for repairs as early

as Febru8JY and March, when
flooding Is likely to occur, the old
Middleport levy should he reopened
foruseslnceahoatcantandtiEreln
high water. His boats could not land
at the Pomeroy levy In high water
~ause of the walls along the side,
he explained.
For the time being, chamber
officials and local government
officials continue searching for a
way to pay tor tiE ferry servlce.
The Ohio Department of Transpor·
tatlon, which ordered the upcoming
bridge repairs, reportedly cannot

pay for such service. And altoough
the Idea of local merchantssubsld·
izing the ferry In some way has
been discussed, the majority ft
merchants at the meeting did not
feel this wasecooomlcallyfeaslble. ·
Chamber President BW Nease ·
also discussed briefly the romblned
efforts underway In Pomeroy 1o
construct pedestrian parks on an
L-shaped lot on West Main and
Court streets, and on a smaller lot,
also on Court Street .
Nease explained that Pomeroy
. (Continued on Page 13)

Fried Chicken

DELIVERED - Middleport's new Sl'/0,000 lire
truck was delivered by the Sutp!BI Corp. Tuesday
nqtst, Pictured with the new vehicle are members &lt;I
lbe tftlCk COIIIIIIillee- From lbe left 111'1! David

.

"
lloflmul, Jolm Byer, Jeff llrkt, Sutphen Ql.

repream'•t!o(e; Bub Fisher, Tom

Darllt

and Jeff

Dan&amp;, who Is lll8o lire cblef.

PURCHASED - Rep-tatlv.e ol the Oraa&amp;e

headquartered at
Tuppen Plains, were In Middleport Tuesday ntpt IAl
pick up a 19811 truck which ha8 heen purdlased from

ToWD!ihlp F1re

Department,

Middleport for SU,OOO. Plctlll"ed at the ~ ovf'r ol

the vehicle from Middleport lo lhe Orange TOW118hlp
group are, I 1o r, Jeff Darst, Middleport Fire Ollef,
and from the Oran&amp;e ToMISblp Department, lMnar
Lyons, eeeletant !Ire chief; Ouuies Savoy, captain;
Joe Buchanan, president; Wayne Bennett and Mike
Connolly.

'Fwp·· ·area · fire d~~ents ~accept . -additions to truck fleets
By BOB HOEIIUCH
Sentinel stall Writer
There was big !Ire truck business In Mkldleport

Tuesday night.
The new $170,&lt;XXI fire truck for the Middleport Fire
Department was delivered and a 1965 !Ire truck
owned by
1101d to tiE Orange
Township Fire
headquartered at
TUppers Plains, lor ~...,,,WJ.
The
Middleport

In lire flghilng eqtilpment, Is being paid lor with a , which was provided recently through the Meigs
three mtU levy approved by voters of the tOWriJt can · COun!Y Emergency Medical SeMce. ·
pump 1,500 gallons of water a minute and has a
The Orange Township Department made arran&amp;e·
1,000-gallon water tank. It has an electrically
ments to purchase a 1965 truck, which w1ll no longer
controlled top pump mount panel. The new vehicle
he needed by the Middleport department. Last night,
was onlered 1n April, 1985, from the Sutphen Corp.,
representatives of the Oranee Township Department
Amlin, and Jeff·Britt. company representative, was
werelnMiddleporttoptckupthe1965vehlcleandtake
· In MiddlePort last night for the delivery.
it Ill their quarters In Tuppers Plains. The purchase
Middleport also has a new emergency vehicle . price Is $15,&lt;XXI and the Orange Department received

.. ·..

BANG! CRASH! BOOM! -Tbeannuald~lon
derby at the Melpeou&amp;y fair alwaysdrawsa!I'Owd
- aad no wonder. There' sa lot rl adlon In that circle

Taste breakthrough,
generic price!
Regular&amp;Menthol.
Kings&amp;IOOs

~

PMp Morrl&amp; lnc 1986

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

'

.,

Mtr.luggelled retlil prica.

12 mg "laC 0.9mg n~eDtine av. percigaratta bv m method.

rl can.~ lilt aiJhl'sfeatuft.-the final eveat In
tbe clerb)o -12 drivers took lo lheir !leering wheels to
prove lllelr vehldell bad what It tak.e to win a derby.

Demolition derby thrills fair crowd
It was slam 'em up, bang 'em up

time at the Meigs COunty Fair
TUesday night, much to the delight
ot a huge crowd on hand to view the
annual demolition derby.
There were four heats . In last
night's oompetltlon with first. second and third place winners and
these drivers look p&amp;rt In the biggle
..)

an Sll,&lt;XXI community block development grant
through the Meigs County Commissioners to help
with the cost of the truck.
Orange Township Fire Chief RDger WllHord
commented that the truck purchased from Middle-·
port will enhance the lire protection his department
can provide for Tuppers Plains and Orange
Township. Tuppers Plains firemen look the truck to
their headquarters Tuesday night.

Reagan rejecting demands
·for tough S. African stance

BARGAIN MATINEES m · SUN I
WEDNESDAY • ALL SEATS 1!.50
~ISSION EYER! TUESOAl 12.50

...'

25 Centa

A Multimedia Inc:. NewiPIP•

POMEROY, OH.

PH. 992-5432

!t31 JACKSON ptKE • RT. 3!1 WEST
Phone 446-4524

T1lll

2 Sections. 16 Pages

Ferry senrice for area remains unresolved

..

·,

........

enttne

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

Sooth Central Ohio
. Mostly sunny today, with highs In
the upper 70s. Partly cloudy
lonlght, with a low In the upper 005.
Mostly sunny Wednesday, with
highs In the low 80s.
The IX'Obablllty of jreclpltatbn Is
near zero through Wednesday.
Winds wtU be light and variable
today and tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Tlunday llnulft Saturday
Fair Thursday, with a chance c1
showers Friday and Saturday.
Highs will range from the low to
mld Ills each day, with overnight
lows mostly In the OOs. ·

'

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Wednesday, August 13, 1986

Ohio weather

IPICIAL WIDNIIM'I

Partly cloudy tnn!pi; and
Thursday. Lows wOJ be l!lllle
low at&amp; and hllfts In tbe mid ...
The pro~ of preclplla&amp;loD
Is near zero throu&amp;b 'lbuncllly.

ot the derby, the final leature race.
Heat winners were, first place

through third pii!Ce, respectively,
were: first heat: Randy Lee,
Middletown; Fred Kittle Jr. ,
Athens; Jerry Copplck, Portland;
second heat: Brent Manley, Mid·
dleport; Cluck Stotts, Pomeroy;
Alea Shulea, West Columbia,

W.Va.; third heat: Bob Bauer,
Long Botlom; Danny Marr, West
Columbia; Rob Spires. Rutland;
fourth heat, Carbs Wood, Gall!po.
Us; Brian Whaley. Shade; and
Richard Cooper, GuysvWe.
First place In the feature heat
went 1o Brian Whaley with Chuck
Stotts coming In second and Carlos
Wood, third .

.Gallia court sentences Mrs. Gilman
He added, however, that If Mrs.
· GALLIPOLIS "- Overruling de- of her husband, Jim Gilman, at
Gilman was determined by
tense motions for a newtrlalandfor their home Jan. 12.
Rodf1r1cksetbondatSlmtUionoo wardens at M&amp;JYsvWe to be
setting aside the jJJIY yerdlct,'Gallla
Coonty Common Pleal J\at!Ce the grounds that Mn. Gilman could MrloustY mentally Ill, 11M! Warden.tl .
Richard C. Roderick Jr. IOdaY prov11 a danger to !IOCiety If were authorized to have her
sentenced Grace Gilman to 5-25 re!e&amp;~. "l'do notwlllhherrele&amp;se. transferred to a mental-care
years In the Olllo RefimnatoJY for ~' It the doctor called me from facWty.
Atherls, I WOUld not (relea.e her on
Prior to her sentencing, Mrs.
Women at MaryiVIlle. ·
.
·
Gilman ~ke before the court tor
Donald Andrew Cox, Mra. GU· IJJnd.l" , · .
·Mn. Gilman wW be traut!pOrted the flnl time during lhe Proceed·
mui's . court-appomltd ~=d,
to
M~svllle Thuridly.
lnp against IEr, ans--mg QUE8saill he .would appeal the
' wn11ct. .
ROderlck said he did not have the tiona posed by Cox as Ill her
Roderick denied a ~uest by Cox power to cilnvey Mrs. Gilman to wellbeing at AMHC and her
to set appeai bond for Mrs. GQman AMHC and tltlit the state specltled memory of the shooting.
She saJd she had been treated
at S5,1Dl, housing her In the that persons convicted d. crimes of
thlilnature.erveat"*tiiXmontha "lulll Uke one ot the famlly" at
meentlme at Aihenl Mental Helllth
of their senteatu
At1»111. 01 the iihootlnl. •he l!8ld
Center,~ w hlilayed lliite
"1
had
no
leeway
at
aD,"
he
said
.
"Sometimes
I think I did Jt,
convicted J~ J8 d. ..olunwy
of
the
verdict.
sunetlmes
I
think
I didn't."
manalughter In the siK&gt;otlng death

By NORMAN D. SANDIER
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Prest·
dent Reagan, rejecting ecooomlc
sanctions as useful only to "the
most radical" forces In South
Africa, has served notice to congressional critics that his poUcy of
quiet diplomacy to end apartheid
wtU not change.
On a day that began with a trip to
the IIUnols State Fair and promises
of ald for farmers, Reagan used a
prime-time news conference Tues·
day night to reject calls fora harder
U.S. line toward South Africa.
"I just think that up on the Hlll
there, well-lntentloned though they
may be, they're asking for some- ·
thing that would not be helpful,"
Reagan said of Congress.
The Tle\W cooference, the 38th of
his presidency, was held at an
airport hotel outside Ollcago,
where Reagan predicted he and
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev.
meettng later this year, could
"make more progress than proba·
bly has been made In a number of
years" on anns control ~ause of
economic (X'Oblems confronting the
Kremlin.
On the 25th an nlversary ct the
Berlin Wall, Reagan also said he

"would have no hesitation what· sanctions was a firm rejoctlon ot
soever" placing the status of that punitive steps urged by Congress.
divided German city on tiE agenda and !llme black leaders.
d a future superpower summit.
"The rne group that 5 D1 support
Reagan gave an Impassioned and oa them In South Africa Is a group
adamant defense c1 his South that very definitely has been the:
Africa pollcy, even with members most radical and wants the dlsrup-:
of hts own party leading the charge lion that would rome !rom massive
In Congress for tougher measures unemployment and hunger and:
to Increase pressure on the white- desperation of the people," he said,_
minority government.
"because It Is their belle! that they.
"Yes, we're Impatient. And yes, could then rise out of all of that
we feel as strongly about apartheid dlsruptkln and seize control."
.
as anyooe does. And It soould be
Reagan acknowledged he was:
done away with." he declared.
referring to the outlawed African:
On the olher hand, Reagan
National Congress, the group the
added: "This Is a sovereign nation. United States and the CorrunonYou can't go In and dictate to them wealth nations have said should be
and tell them how they must run part ct any negotiated settlement In
their countJY."
South Africa.
Offerlngdlplomatlcactlvltyasan
In his speech Tuesday to
alternative for unilateral action members of hls ruling National
against South Africa, he embraced Party, Botha called the U.S. push
a suggestion by South African ~?r sanctions a ~faring exa mple ct
President Pleter Botha lor a
political fraud.
meeting altended by leaders of the
"We are probably no bfttcr, but
United States, Great Britain. West certainly no worse that l'h'e rest or
Germany and France to discuss the world," Botha said. " The
"how something could be planned International campaign against
ro bring along an end to apartheid South Africa. especially !rom the
earlier."
ranks of certain leftist Western
Jmpllclt tn hts acceptance of leaders and countries, is one ct the
coordinated diplomatic activity by most extreme forms r1. political '
as an alternative to fraud ct the lith centucy."

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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="40498">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="40497">
              <text>August 12, 1986</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2108">
      <name>denison</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5525">
      <name>divietro</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="305">
      <name>williams</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
